{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-01-31","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1951-02-28","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0424081\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Pleven Asked to\nContinue Govt\nFrench Premier Offered Resignation\nAfter Winning Vote by Narrow Margin\nBy JOSEPH E. DYNAN   '\nI PARIS, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014Premier Rene Pleyen's three-party\n[Government offered to resign tonight because it won by only\nlo narrow margin a vote of confidence on the French election\nlaw issue, but President Vincent Auriol refused to let it step\nout of office.\n1 The National Assembly voted 243 to 216 to consider\nI the Pleven Cabinet's plan for revision oi the French electoral\n[system, a question on which Pleven had decided his Govern-\n|ment would stand or fall.\n] An outright majority of the Assembly is 311, but the\n\u2022Government's 243 was enough\nllegally to permit it to remain\n|in office,\nAuriol urged Pleven to continue\n(his government's efforts to revise\n(the election laws and the Assembly\nI was reconvened to. begin considera-\n|tion of the government plan.\nOne of the three main parties of\nithe Pleven Coalition Government,\n[the Catholic Mouvement Republic-\nlain Populaire (M.R.P.), abstained in\n[the vote. The M.R.P. is determined\nto retain the present proportional\nI representation system, which other\n[parties in the government want to\n| abolish.\nThe government's plan provides\nIfor combination election slates in\nleach department (county), with\n\u25a0run-off elections where no slate gets\nla full majority in the first election,\nlit retains some features of propor-\nItional representation, but not enough\nJto suit the M.R.P.\nProportional   representation,\nPleven has said, benefits the Communists, and one reason for rewriting the country's election system Is to reduce Red strength In\nnext November's national election.\nUnder   the   present   system   the\number of deputies elected by each\n\/arty is in proportion to the number\nI of   voters.   Under the compromise\n[plan, any party which gets more\nI than half the votes in any of the 140-\nlodd election districts gets all itscan-\nfdidates in those districts elected.\nAll non-Communist parties agree\nIthat this cutting of Red strength\nmust be accomplished, but they differ on how to do it. Each party in\n[ the Government Coalition, of course.\nI wants at least to conserve its present\n[ strength in parliament.\nOne difficulty within the Govern-\nI ment is that proportional representation   also   benefits the M.R.P. On\nI this one issue the party has a tacit\nalliance with the Communists. The\nI M.R.P. decided that rather than op-\n[ pose the Government of which it is\nI a part, it would abstain in the vole\nof confidence.\n[Gov't Ownership\nOf Gas, Oil\n[Pipelines Asked\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) - Gov-\n| ernment ownership of gas and oil\nI pipelines was advocated in the Com-\nI mons tonight by Stanley Knowles\n[ (CCF\u2014Winnipeg North centre).\nHe spoke amid indications that\nI the house is going to'see a renewal\nI of last year's pipelines battle that\n[ revolved about wether proposed gas\nI oil lines went by all-Canadian\nI routes.\nGeorge  Cruickshank   (L\u2014Fraser\n| Valley), spearhead of the 1950 fight\nI for  an  all-Canadian  route  to  the\n[ coast, told the commons he is going\nI to do everything possible to prevent\na line\u2014which he did not name\nfrom carrying Alberta fuel to the\nUntied States. He said this company\nwill have an application for incorporation before the Commons later,\nMeanwhile, members gave approval  In principle to an  Incorporation   bill   for   Trans-Canada\nPipe Lines, Ltd., after hearing the\ncompany plans to transport natural gas from Alberta to Montreal\nby an all-Canadian route.\nMr. Knowles, urging the govern\nment to get into the pipeline-con\nstruction business, said pipelines are\nnatural   monopolies   and   as   such\nshould   be   in   the   hands   of   the\npeople's representatives rather than\nprivate business.\nHe said competition for business\nmight result in private firms building parallel, competing lines, with\na great waste of money and manpower. The public would have to\npay for this eventually.\nJohn Decore (L\u2014Vegreville),\nsponsoring second reading of the\nTrans-Canada bill, said the proposed,\nline would cost $250,000,000 and\nwould have 2200 miles of main line\nand 900 miles of spur and connecting lines.\nIt would touch at Swift Current,\nMoose Jaw. and Regina, in Saskatchewan; Brandon, Souris, Portage\nLa Prairie and Winnipeg in Manitoba; Kenora, Sudbury, Fort William, Port Arthur, Toronto. London,\nGait, Kitchener, Kingston, Port\nColborne, Brockville, P r e s c o 11,\nCornwall, Smith Falls and Ottawa\nin Ontario, with a line from Ottawa\nto Hull, Que.\nMr. fSecore said it was hoped eventually to extend the line from Montreal to Quebec City.\nHe emphasized that no gas could\nbe carried now. pointing to a recent\nruling of the Alberta Petroleum and\nNatural Gas Conservation Board\nthat none is to be released outside\nAlberta until the province's proven\nreserves are larger.\nFIVE CHILDREN\nDIE IN FIRE\n11-Year-Old Saves\nLives of Two\nAs Home Burns\nSULLIVAN, Que., Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014\nFire took the lives of five children\nearly today but two others were\nled to safety by a 11-year-old girl\nwhen their parent's frame cottage\nwas destroyed at this Northwestern\nQuebec mining village.\nThe heroism of little Pearl La-\njeunne was credited by an unidentified taxi driver as saving the lives\nof her brother and sister, Ludger,\n8, and Diane, *0.\nThe dead: William, 14, Robert 12,\nRichard 11, Gloria 7, and Marie\nMartha, six months.\nMr. and Mrs. William Lajeunne,\nthe parents, were visiting friends\nat Val d'Or when the fire roared\nthrough the wooden structure shortly after midnight.\nThe cab driver, first to notice the\nfire, turned in the alarm. But firemen arrived too late to fight the\nblaze.\nThe driver said that when he returned to the scene, Pearl was leading Ludger away to a snowbank\nwhere Diane, clad only in pyjamas,\nwas lying.\nHe said that ,he had to persuade\nthe little girl from re-entering the\nbuilding in an effort to bring out\nthe other children.\nWoman Pronounced\nDead, Recovers\nTORONTO, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 A\nyoung Toronto woman who was\npronounced dead and was almost\ntaken to a funeral parlor is recovering in hospital from an overdose of, sleeping..tablet*^-.\nA funeral director's assistant,\nsent to a house to pick up the\n\"body,\" is reported to have detected a faint heart beat,\nThe woman's name has not been\nmade public. Authorities said they\nhad little information about the\ncase but one theory was that the\nwoman took an extremely large\ndose of a barbiturate.\nRECORD NARCOTICS TERM\nNEW YORK, Feb.. 27 (AP) \u2014 A\nconvicted narcotics peddler today\nwas sentenced to 10 to 20 years\nin prison\u2014said to be the longest\nprison term ever imposed in New\nYork State in a narcotics case,\nGeorge Angelet, 26, had been described by police as an \"associate\n6t a Harlem narcotics syndicate of\n2000 drug peddlers who preyed on\nschool children for the purpose of\nmaking them addicts.\"\nm\\\nWEATHER hORECA\nKootenay \u2014 Variable\nLittle change in temperi\nlight. Low and high at\nS and 30; Crescent Va:\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 28, 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 261\nLeap Year Can't Come Too Soon for 3>Year-Old (?)\nCanadian Army Officer\nOn Eisenhower Sta\nMost people are only too glad this February      wonderlng-today\u201elf she'll .haveijto visit until Ji)!>2-\n28 days, buffer little\" Georgia Bbkblbskl\" of? ''to1 cerebrate  her first  Birthday!  Georgia   Is  the\ndaughter of  Mr. and  Mrs.  Fred  Sokoloskl.\n\u2014Alice Stevenson  photo.\nProcter IrVJust one big perplexing problem. She\nwas born  In  Nelson  Feb. 29, 1S48, and so she's\nU.S. Unfreezes Some Prices but\nSets New Freeze on Retailers\nWASHINGTON,. Feb. 27 (AP) \u2014\nThe United States Government today unfroze the retail prices of\nclothing, furniture, rugs, lamps,\ndrygoods and household textiles,\nand'clamped a new freeze on the\nretailer's \"margin\" between what\nhe pays and what he receives.\nMany prices increases are expected but officials say they expect\nsome price cuts. Price Director\nMichael V. Disalle told reporters:\n\"My guess is that the rollbacks will\nbe greater than Ihe roll-forwadrsj.\"\nCanada Expects No Free\nGifts From U.S.-Howe\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nThe Economic Cooperation Administration announced today allocation of $153,000 to Austria for the\npurchase of American tractors and\nagricultural equipment in Canada.\nCHICAGO, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 Can-\nada's Trade Minister, Rt. Hon. C. D.\nHowe, said tonight that Canada will\nshoulder her full burden in the\ncurrent emergency, without the expectation of any free gifts from the\nUnited States.\nThough the United States has 12\ntimes the population and 18 times\nthe\\ productive strength, Canada\nnever has asked the U.S. for gifts\nnor will she do so now, Howe said\nin a speech to the Chicago Com-\nmecrial Club.\n\"We expect Jo carry a fair share\nof the sacrifices and costs of collective defence. On a per capita\nbasis, we shall probably carry more\ntlian many of our Allies.\"\nHe said it seemed clear to him\nthat there had to be a frank and\nfull discussion of what Canada was\ndoing in view of what some of his\nAmerican friends and American\npublications were saying.\n\"Some of you may think that\nwe Canadians are touchy, too\nready to resent the suggestion\nthat we are doing less than our\nduty In this'time of peril. That\nmay be so, but I doubt it. What\nI am concerned about Is that my\nAmerican friends should have a\nclear explanation of the Canadian\nposition.\"\nHe lashed out at the \"insane ambitions of the Kremlin\" which were\ncausing such a \"colossal waste of\nhuman and material resources,\"\ntouched briefly on the thorny question of compulsory training in Canada and intimated that when the\nneed arises, Canada will not be\nfound wanting, either in the quantity of ber fighting men or their\nquality\nHe told of Canada's plans to send\nadditional ground troops to Korea\ni?nd to offer troops for Europe's\ndefence, as well as an air division\nof 11 fighter squadrons,' two of\nwhich* would soon be sent to Britain\nto join one squadron already in\ntraining there.\nCanada's defences, he said, will\nbe framed on the basis of possible\nattack by air and sea. There was a\n100-ship naval force now in the\nmaking.\nOn the ground, Canada,,working\nwith the U.S., was planning a huge\nradar warning system, to bolster\nair defences. One-quarter of tho\nsystem would be located in Canada,\nbuilt and paid for by Canadians.\nAnti-aircraft guns were being modernized to supplement air defence\nand protect vital points.\nBut all this effort led to problems, and some of them were:\n1. The St. Lawrence seaway\nmust be built. Without it, the\nsteel industry now on the Great\nLakes area would have to migrate\nto the Atlantic coast.\n2. Commodity controls in Canada\nwould'have to be extended \"to all\nwar commodities.\"\n3. Canada was placing eight times\nas many war orders in the U.S. as\nthe U.S. was placing in Canada.\nMore contracts and sub-contracts\ncould \"with advantage\" be placed\nin Canada.\n4. Inflation was a big headache\nin Canada. The $5,000,000,000 three\nyear defence program on which the\nGovernment has embarked was\ncomparable on a per capita basis\nto what the U.S. now was spending,\n5. Canada could not hope for a\nmeasure of stability in prices without stability in the U.S. Said Mr.\nHowe:\n\"We earnestly hope you will succeed in attaining a reasonable\nmeasure of stability for only if\nthat happens can we in Canada\nhope to avoid serious trouble .\n\"Canada is pursuing fundamental\nanti-inflationary policies,as vigorously as ever. All I say is that if\nyou irt the U.S. succeed in your\nefforts to stabilize prices, one of\nthe most powerful external pressures toward rising prices in Canada will be relieved.\"\nDisalle's Office of Price Stabilization issued the first of a series of\n\"margin-type\" orders designed to\nput price controls on a \"fairer and\nmore workable\" basis than could be\nexpected from the freeze of Jan. 25.\n-. The action affects about 233,000\nretail   companies.   It   covers   an\nestimated 200,000 different items\nof merchandise.\nThese, retailers must get on the\nnew  basis  no  later than, March\n29. They must mark their goods\nwith selling prices by July 1.\nDisalle announced: \"The basic objective of this regulation is to establish typical pre-Korean markup practices at retail.\"\nBut the percentage of margins,\nor mark-ups, was not rolled back\nto a pre-Korean date.\nOn the contrary, each retailer\nwill base his percentage on the\npercentage he received last Saturday, Feb. 24,\nThis was the second major move\ntaken today on the controls front.\nIn the other, the national production authority set up a system under which business men, farmers,\npublic and private institutions and\nothers can use a priority rating to\nget limited supplies of scarce goods\nfor maintenance, repair and operations.\nMajor Items not affected by the\nnew retail prices ,01'der are food,\nbeverages, gasoline and oil, automotive equipment and supplies,\nlarge appliances such as refrigerators, drugs, cosmetics, lumber,\nbuilding supplies, hardware, stationary, fuel, jewelry and housewares.\nLater orders will put margim\ntype rules into effect on such items\nas those and on wholesalers and\nmanufacturers, too.\nParliament\nAt a Qlance\nBy The Canadian Press\nCitizenship Minister Harris said\na new bill amending the Indian\nAct Is basically unchanged from\none Introduced and withdrawn\nlast year.\nStanley Knowles (CCF--Wlnnl-\npeg North Centre) advocated\nGovernment ownership of gas\nand oil  pipelines.\nJames Sinclair, Parliamentary\nAssistant to Finance Minister\nAbbott, said, farmers have borrowed more than $170,000,000\nunder the Farm Loans Improve,\nment Act.\n'Two  Senators  debated   reform\nIn the Upper Chamber and both\n. agreed there was room for improvement.\nWEDNESDAY\nThe Commons will consider\nGovernment business. The Senate\nwill sit.\nFire Burns for Hour\nAt Vancouver Dock\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27* (CP)\nA fire at the British Columbia\nPackers, Ltd., steamship dock was\nbrought under control tonight\nabout an hour after it mushroomed\nin the congested waterfwnt area.\nFiremen remained at the scene\nlong after the blaze was brought\nunder control as a precautionary\nmeasure. There was no immediate\ndamage estimate but the toll was\nnot expected to 'be high.\nTULSA, Okla., Feb. 27 (AP) \u2014\nA Texas-bound airliner crashed and\nburned on, takeoff today but 20\npassengers and four crew members\nmiraculously walked away..Four\npassengers and two crew members\nwere injured\u2014none seriously. The\nMid-continent Airlines craft had just\ntaken off for Houston when the\naccident occurred.\nTITO ONLY ONE\nESCAPES ARREST\nClementis Seventh\nRed Leader To\nBreak With Moscow\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (CF) \u2014 Dr.\nVladimir Clementis, former Czechoslovak foreign minister now under\narrest in Prague, is the seventh top\nCommunist in'Eastern Europe to\nbreak with Moscow.\nOnly one got away with It \u2014\n^Premier Tito of Yugoslavia. Four\nothers were executed as traitors,\none has disappeared after arrest\nand Imprisonment and another Is\nreported awaiting trial.\nTito's quarrel with Moscow, culminating in his expulsion by the\nCominform in July, 1948, was the\nbombshell that set off the purges\nby satellite countries loyal to the\nKremlin.\nDespite announced confessions in\nmost cases, there is no real outside\nevidence that the purged top Communists really had anything to do\nwith Tito. But the mere fact that\nthey put the interests of their own\ncountry over those of the Soviet\nUnion put them in Tito's camp.\nThese are the top Communists\nwho paid the price for deviation\nfrom Stalin:\nRomania \u2014 Lucretia Patrascanu,\nMinister of Justice who resigned\nin February, 1948. Months later reports filtered through the Iron Curtain of his arrest and imprisonment. Up to his arrest his record\nwas \"clean.\" A clue to his arrest\ncame from opponents who said he\nwas \"a real Romanian Commun\nist\" and not \"a Moscow Com\nmunist.\"\nHungary\u2014Tough Interior Minis\ntcr Laszlo Rajk' confessed he had\nplotted for years to overthrow the\nGovernment and turn Hungary\nover to Tito. He was hanged Oct.\n15, 1D49.\nBulgaria\u2014Deputy Premier Trai-\ncho Kostov, friend of the late Communist leadsr Gsorgi Dimit'rov, was\nhanged Dec. 11, 1949, on. charges\nof plotting with Tito to turn his\ncountry oyer to the Yugoslav marshal as a step toward forming an\nindependent South Slav federation.\nAlbania \u2014 Interior Minister Lt.\u00bb\nGen. Koci Xoxe was executed before a firing squad June 11, 1949,\nfor trying to link Albania with\nYugoslavia rather than with Russia.\nPoland\u2014Vice-Premier Wladislaw\n-W; Gomulka was purged from the\nCentral Committee of the Communist party for Titoism. Since that\ntime he has been reported arrested\nand awaiting trial for treason and\nspying.\nGreece \u2014 Gen. Markos Vafiades\ndisappeared in 1948 from leadership\nof the Communist guerrillas in the\nill-fated Greek civil war. He was\nvariously Reported interned in Russia and executed for being friendly\ntoward Tito.\nIn all of these countries, and in\nCzechoslovakia and Romania, hundreds of lesser officials, party men\nand army officers have been jailed\nor executed on similar charges of\nspying for or plotting with Tito\nto overthrow their governments,\nExpect Decision of\nCoast Loggers Today\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nDecision of 32,000 coastal loggers on\ncontract offer will likely be\nknown \"sometime tomorrow,'1\nWoodworkers' Leader J. Stewart\nAlsbury said tonight.\nThe referendum ballot asks acceptance or rejection of contract\nterms hammered out this month by\nthe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica (C.I.O.-C.C.L.) and Forest\nIndustrial Relations Ltd., representing operators.\nMr. Alsbury is district president\nof the I.W.A.\nTerms provide for a general wage\nincrease of nine cents an hour, a\ncost of living bonus based on the\ndominion index and other concessions,\nThe contract would* be dated Jan,\n1, 1951, and would run 18 months\nThe present master contract does\nnot expire until June 15.\nSON-IN-LAW OF\nCRANBROOKITE PASSES\nEdward George Sprout, resident\nof Port Coquitlam and son-in-law\nof Mrs. Laura Haney of Cranbrook,\ndied 'at the coast last week at the\nage of 27 years.\nOther survivors Include his wife,\ntwo brothers and his father of Port\nCpquitlam.\n\u2022MARK CROSS, Sussex, England,\nFeb. 27 (Reuters) \u2014 Ernest Shinwell\n32, son of the British defence minister, today was fined \u00a32000 or three\nmonths imprisonment for spending\nmore money on repairs at his Sussex farm than his government building permit allowed. A local court\nfined the builder \u00a31000 or three\nmonths.\nDRIVERS' TESTS\nADVOCATED\nEDMONTON, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nDrivers' tests for motor vehicle\noperators in Alberta today were\nadvocated in the Provincial Legislature by H. B. Macdonald (Ind.\u2014\nCalgary).\nMr. Macdonald, speaking in the\ndebate in reply to the throne\nspeech, also asked the Government\nto initiate compulsory, twice-yearly\nsafety tests for motor vehicles.\nCompulsory alcohol tests where\ndrivers are suspected of drunken\ndriving also were recommended as\npart of a campaign to stem the\nclimbing traffic fatality rate in Alberta.\n\"Mr .Macdonald, now the sole Legislature member of the Independent Party which provided the official opposition from 1940 to 1948,\npraised some of the policies of the\nSocial Credit Government, partic\nularly in civil defence and natural\ngas conservation.\nSharpest criticism of the Government in today's debate was\ndirected by W. F. Gilliland (S.C.\u2014\nPeace River) against brush burning regulations announced by Provincial Forestry Director E. S.\nHeustis\nPlan To Send Ground Forces To\nEurope Strengthened With Appointment\nBy DOUGLAS HOW\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Canada's intention to fulfil\nher offer to send ground forces to Europe was underlined today by appointment of a lieutenant-Colonel as a staff officer\nat Gen. Eisenhower's Supreme Headquarters in France. He is\nFrench-born Allen L.Brady, 34, formerly of Sault Ste. Marie,\nOnt. .\"<\nAppointment of an R.C.A.F. officer to a similar type of\npost will be announced shortly. Canada's contribution of art\n11-squadron air division, involving about 7000 men, in time,\nbe jthis  country's   main\nBill Introduced\nTo End Petroleum\nIndustry Controls\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb.'27 (CP)\u2014\nA bill to remove Government controls from the petroleum industry\nwas introduced in the British Columbia Legislature today by Premier Byron Johnson.\nThe bill would remove completely from the Coal and Petroleum\nProducts Control Board all power\nto regulate prices in the petroleum\nindustry.\nThe board's control over grades\nand standards would also be wiped\nout,\nIt would be given power, however, to control and supervise construction of service stations and\nother premises where petroleum*\nproducts are kept for sale.\nControls were placed on the sale\nof oil and gasoline some 11 years\nago in British Columbia.\nRemoval of controls was forecast\nin the speech from the throne. Pri\nvate members have stated the lifting of controls would encourage\noil companies to expand in the\nprovince..\nThe Legislature was told management and labor should get together and agree to rules on which\nlabor legislation can be based.\nArthur Ash (Cln.\u2014Saanich) said\nhe believed an agreement could be\nbased on acceptance of certain\nprinciples:\n1. That Increased prosperity for\nall involves the highest degree of\nproduction at wages assuring a\nsteady advancement of the standard\nof living. '.. .\n2. That the rights of private property >and'\"free choice of action are\nthe foundation of our province's\nexpanding economy.\n3. That management has an Inherent right to direct the operations\nof an enterprise.\n4. That labor has fundamental\nrights to organize and engage in\ncollective bargaining.\n5. That cooperation must govern\nthe building of an economy which\nwill protect the individual against\nthe hazards of unemployment, old\nage and physical impairments beyond his control.\n\"Politics should be taken out of\nlabor and management relations,\nstated Mr. Ash. A permanent council of management and labor could\nbe created to concern itself not\nwith collective bargaining but with\nthe broader aspects of relations.\"\nshare in European defence.\nMeanwhile, the plans to send an\narmy brigade of 5000 men to Europe\nsoon have been sidetracked by de?\ncision to send the brigade to Korea.\nCanadian officials now are discussing in Washington arrangements to\nship the brigade, called the 25th,\nto Korea and discussions about the)\nmovement have been going on here)\nwith Brig. John M. Rockingham,\nthe 25th's commander. They may\nend tomorrow.\nA question about embarkation\nleave for the 5000 men going to\nKorea was asked in the Commons\nby George Hees (P.C\u2014Toronto\nBroadview) today but he got no\nanswer other than a promise to get\nan answer. The subject still is under discussion. One factor is tho\nshipping date which emerges from\nthe discussions in Washington.\n. At the same time as these discussions are going on, cabinet and\ndefence headquarters also are pondering what to do about ground\nforces for Europe. The appointment\nof Col. Brady as a general staff\nofficer at the Eisenhower headquarters indicated that it is far\nfrom a dead issue.\n60 Rebels Killed\nSAIGON, Indo-China, Feb. 27\n(Reuters) \u2014 Sixty Vietminh Rebels\nwere killed and 39 .taken prisoner\nduring the last 24 hours by French\nunion forces operating in Cochin\nChina, a French Army communique\nannounced today.\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (AP) \u2014\nPte. Robert L. Smith, 20, quadruple\namputee of the Korean war in hospital here, today was told that an\nAmerican Legion trust fund has\nbeen established for him that will\nprobably total $100,000. Legion officials told Smith that donations to\nIhe fund already total $81,000.\nCaptured Alter\n$6700 Robbery\nMONTREAL, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Two\nheavily-armed men, believed to be\nthe \"Kissing Bandits\" wanted for a\n$3000 holdup of a North-End Rose-\nmount bonk three weeks ago, and\na female accomplice were captured at gunpoint today after tho\n$6700 robbery of the same bank.\nPolice declined to identify tha\ntrio. -\nPolice said they forced a taxi\ndriver to take part in the holdup\nbut made the mistake of bringing\nthe man inside the bank with them.\nThe driver, also unidentified,\ngave his licence number to one of\nIhe customers who passed it on to\npolice.\nChief of Detectives Wilfrid Bourdon said: \"We have every reason\nto believe the two men robbed the\nsame branch recently, and they\nmay be connected with other un\u00bb'\nsolved robberies.\"\nTwo veterans of the police holdup squad. Detective-Sgts. Pat Me-\nlancon and Adrien Cardinal, captured the trio after a brief chasa\nduring which police pumped three\nbullets into the getaway car. The\nsuspects gave up without a fight\nafter the officers stopped their ca'\nin the city's East End.\nBroadcasters Elect\n11 New Directors\nQUEBEC, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014' The\nCanadian Association of Broadcasters, meeting here for its annual\nconvention, today elected 11 new\ndirectors.\nThe new directors Include F. H.\nElphicke, Station CKWX, Vancouver; Dr, Charles Houde, Station\nCHNC. New Carlisle, Que.; Gordon\nLove, Station CFCN, Calgary-\" E.\nP. MacDonald, Station CJCH, Halifax; D. Malcolm Neill, Station\nCFNB, Fredericton; E. A. Rawlin-\nson. Station CKBI, Prince Albert,\nSask.; and William Speers, Station\nCKRC, Winnipeg.\nKidney Transplanted\nGLENDALE. Calif.. Feb. 27 (AP)\n\u2014The kidney of a dead man was\ntransplanted into the body of a 38-\nyear-old woman today at Monte\nSano Hospital.\nDr. H. W. Merrill, who performed\nthe operation, said he knows of\nonly eight such previous cases. All\nbut two of the patients died.\n\"I think she's going to live,\" Dr.\nMerrill commented. The operation\ntook three hours.\nThe kidney came from the body\nof a Malhambra, Calif., printer who\ndied of a stroke. Dr. Merrill said\nthe widow consented to the removal, which was made within 20\nminutes after death.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014Transport Minister Alfred Barnes told\n, the House of Commons today he will Introduce \"a system of unilateral\nwaiting for cars\" In some mid-town streets to ease traffic congestion.\nAsked what the minister meant, a Press officer explained:\n\"Parking on one 6lde of the street only, old boy.\"\nWINGHAM, England, Feb. 27 (Reuters)\u2014Brilaih's answer to f.'ii\nToonerville trolley\u2014the 11-mile East Kent Light Railway\u2014will end\nits days tomorrow.\nFormed to serve Kentish collieries, the little line\u2014steam, unlike\nthe trolley\u2014has been a meeca for students of Britain's \"joke\" railways\nsince before the First World War.\nSince the Second World War its earnings were sometimes only\n10 shillings a month.\nSPRINGFIELD, O., Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014A state \"chicken of tomorrow\"\ncommittee which alms at better chickens by ordinary means heard\ntoday of a Rhode Island Red hen, owned by Mrs. Minnie Wells, which\nhas been laying two eggs a day for more than a month. The, hen\nhas two egg-laying outlets.\n\"We're licked,\" said a committee member.\nFORT WAYNE, Ind., Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014An iratev housewife threw\nthe car keys out of the car. window Monday and four men, including\nher husband, landed in the hands of the law.\nMrs. James Gibson got angry at her husband on a highway. Gibson\njammed on fhe brakes to retrieve the keys and a three-car smashup\nresulted.\nGibson was booked on charges of reckless driving.. The driver\nof the second car was charged with operating a car without a driver's\nlicence. His companion, the owner of the car, was charged with\npermitting an unlicenced driver to operate his car.\nThe driver of the third car was arrested on a charge of impm\ncar registrstion..\nNo charge was.placed against Mrs. Gibson.\n 2 -r.-NBlSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1951\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 SHOWS AT 7.00-9.00\n' . \"     '\nClark Gable        Barbara Stanwyck\n\"TO PLEASE A LADY\"\nStarts\nThursday\nc\/wc\nOn the\nLO-Pin Alleys\nThe ardent bowling teams of\nMrs. C, Deferro and Mrs. C. 0.\nAnderson both accounted for a win\neach on the Legion 10-pin alleys\nTuesday night, in the Kootenay\nBrewery Cup play.\nThe Anderson quartette took top\nhonors with their 492 score in the\nfirst frame while the Deferro's\nchalked up 439 pins in their high\ngame.\nHigh single and aggregate were\ntaken by Mrs. DeFerro with 156\nand 308, respectively.\nScores follow:\nMRS. DEFEHEO-Miss J. Mc-\nDonld 124, Miss F. May 190; Miss O.\nTedrick 200; Mrs. DeFerro 308.\nTotal 822.\nMRS. C. O. ANDERSON \u2014 Mrs.\nRichardson 185; Mrs. W. G. Leslie\n229; Miss J. Thomas 222; Mrs. C. O.\nAnderson 276. Total 912.\nFINNEY 4 POINTS\nAHEAD OF KILBURN\nREGINA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 Sid\nFinney, Calgary Stampeders' sophomore centreman, last week overtook Edmonton's Colin Kilburn in\nthe Western Canada Senior Hockey\nLeague scoring lists. Kilburn had\nled the race since early in the\nseason.\nThe leaders:\nGp G A Pt Pe\nFinney, Calgary .... 50 40 33 73 12\nKilburn. Edmonton 52 31 38 69 120\nScott, Calgary  48 23 42 65    4\nGrant, Calgary   48 27 35 62     9\nBarry, Edmonton .. 52 25 35 60 36\nAnderson, Calgary 49 23 32 55 20\nDevicq, Calgary .... 42 28 24 52 6\nLarson, Calgary .... 40 21 29 50   18\nColor and infra-red photography\nhave shown special possibilities ih\nsurveys of Canada's forest re\nsources.\nTop Skiers fo\nBanff Trials\nBANFF, -Alta,, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Approximately 30 of. Canada's top\namateur skiers will invade this\nRocky Mountain resort March 15-\n30 for ski trials which will decide\nthe members of the 1952 Canadian\nOlympic squad.\nFor the first week of the gruelling tests, downhill and slalom\nstars practice their art on the steep\nslopes of nearby Mount Norquay,\nscene of several Canadian championship meets and the only North\nAmerican tournament ever held in\nCanada.\nThe second week has been tentatively set for the time trials. On\nthose days Olympic prospects will\ncompete in races against time for\nberths on the squad.\nTo date, there are 17 hopefuls for\nthe Western prospects.\nAmong them are two Banff\nskiers, Gordie Morrison and Lois\nWoodworth. Morrison, only 18\nyears old, ,was a member of Canada's 1951 team at the world championships held at Asjjen, Colo. Miss\nWoodworth, another-member of the\nCanadian team, won the United\nStates national women's combined\nchampionship1! in 1950.\nGeorge Merry of Rossland, B,C\u201e\n1951 Western Canadian champion,\nis also considered certain to rep\nresent the Went at trials.\nMay Play Hockey in\nCalifornia Again\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014\nHockey may bloom again in California next season.\nThe brothers Forsythe, Jim and\nBert, of San Diego, Calif., are here\ntoday for the Art Schuman Memorial Hockey game, and they disclosed their plans, for next'seasonti\nA five-team league to'include two\nteams operating out of the Pan Pa'\ncific rink in Los Angeles, one in\nSan Diego, one in San Bernardino\nand another in Fresno.\nThe brothers, wealthy restaurant\noperators, own 25 per cent of the\nSan Diego hockey rink. The For-\nsythes owned and operated the San\nDiego Skyhawks in the Season 1947-\n48,\nTwo Objectives\nFor Canadian\nFood Producers\nSTE. ANNE DE BELLEVUE,\nQue., Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 Agriculture\nMinister Gardiner said today that\nCanadian food producers have two\nprimary objectives \u2014 to produce\nenough food for \"our own people\"\nand to sell at a sufficiently high\nprice to encourage them to keep on\nproducing.\nMr. Gardiner spoke at Macdonald\nCollege here and formally opened\nthe ' fourth Macdonald College\nRoyal\u2014a students' show designed\nto show the public how the college\nassists Canadian agriculture .In the\nsolution of its problems.\nMr. Gardiner, who returned yesterday from England where he discussed possible food contracts between Britain and Canada, said the\nagricultural picture has' changed\ngreatly during the 38 years in\nwhich he has been associated with\nthe Government\n\"There is less difficulty in selling\nagricultural surpluses than at any\nother time that I can recall,\" he\nsaid.\n. Canadian farmers were always\nhopeful that they could produce\nsufficient so that Canada would\nbe able to sell to other countries\nin need.\nBut there was less to self today\nbecause Canadians were consum\nIng more than ever before. There\nwas practically no difficulty, with\ntha exception of cheese, In sell\nIng all the dairy production In\nCanada,\nThere was no difficulty in disposing of beef and pork products\nand little difficulty In disposing of\ncrops except in the case of potatoes\nand apples.\nOne of the main'reasons it was\ndifficult to sell the potato surplus\nwas because the United States had\nsubsidized too high production in\nthat country, making it difficult to\nsell Canadian potatoes.\nMr. Gardiner said there Is al\nways  difficulty  In  disposing  of\nbutter surplus  Canada   has. because of the high production cost.\nNew Zealand butter, which Mr.\nGardiner   said   the   Government\ndid not want to see brought Into\nCanada, was laid down at Halifax\nat a cost of 40,4 cents a pound.\n\u201e The floor price in Canada was 53\ncents. Canadian farmers could not\ncompete with New Zealand butter.\nThe butter dealers were selling the\nimported   butter  at  56V4   cents   a\npound.\n\"The market price in this country\nmust be comparatively high,\" said\nthe minister.\n- He had no comment about wheat\nnegotiations in Britain.\nM.O.H.L PLAYOFFS\nThe  Mainline-Okanagan  Hockey\nLeague   playoff   schedule,    which\nopened Monday, follows;\nROUND ROBIN\nFebruary 28\u2014Kamloops  at Vernon.\nMarch 1\u2014Vernon at Kelowna; 3,\nKelowna. at Kamloops; 4, Vernon\nat Kamloops.\nBEST OF THREE PLAYOFF\nMarch  7, 9,   10\u2014Between  teams\ntopping round robin.\nCOAST PLAYOFF *;:>\nFebruary 27, March 2, 3, 5, 6, 9,\nand 10.\n>    <n Ac\/u>U the. GontcHeHi\nMOVING\n1500\nMILES\nAWAY?\nWe're specialists in long-distance moving\n... we know how to crate and pack and\nload for a transcontinental'haul as well as\nwe do for a cross-town job. If you are moving\n\u2014 no matter where \u2014 call us! You can\nleave the entire matter in our hands.\nPHONE 33\nfor full information, estimates, etc.,\nfor your MOVING, STORING or\nPACKING PROBLEMS.\nWEST TRANSFER\nTop Men Canadian Chamber, Boards\nHere in March for Associated Annual\nSeveral top officials of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, the Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nB.C. and Board of Trade delegates\nfrom 16 district boards will attend\nthe 50th annual meeting of the Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nB.C. in Nelson March 12 and 13.\nTho two-day event will include\nboth morning and afternoon sessions\nwith a banquet to be held on the\nnight of March 12.\nF. G. Winspear, president of the\nCanadian Chamber of Commerce\nfrom Edmonton, will be guest\nspeaker at the banquet.\nOther Canadin Chamber officials\nattending will be Donald Morrell of\nMontreal, General Manager, and L.\nW. Cunningham of Montreal, chairman of the executive council. L. G.\nEcroyd of Vancouver, field repre\nsentative of the Chamber, is also\nexpected to attend.\nDelegates from the 15 member\nboard will represent Grand Forks,\nRossland, Trail, Castlegar, Slocan\nDistrict, Nakusp, SalmojValley and\nDistrict, Nelson, Kaslo, Creston,\nCranbrook, Marysville, Kimberley.\nFernie, Lower Arrow Lake and\nLardeau and District.\nDr. C. H. Wright oi Trail, President of the Associated Boards,\nJames White of Fernie, First Vice-\nPresident, M. C. Donaldson of Sal\nmo and Guy Constable of Creston\nwill also be on hand for the meeting.\nThe Inland Empire committee of\nthe Spokane Chamber of Commerce\nwill also be represented together\nwith several other Board of Trade\nrepresentatives from the Province,\nAsks To Be Excluded\nFrom Nobel Prize\nNominations\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (Reuters)\u2014Attorney-General Sir Hartley Shawcross said today he had asked the\nNobel Peace Prize Committee to\nexclude his name from the nominations for this year's Peace Prize.\n\". . . such small interventions in\nthe field of foreign affairs as I have\nbeen able to make .,. in no way entitle me to be considered,\" he said.\nPHONE 33\n719 BAKER ST.\nUrges Canadians\nTo Continue 1', \u25a0.: r\nPeace Contributions\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Feb. 27 (CP)\n\u2014On the eve of his departure for\nMontgomeryshire, North Wales,\nwhere he will serve as high sheriff\nfor a one-year term, Senator W.\nRupert Davies, Torontp, formerly\nof Kingston, Ont., in an interview\ntonight left a two-fold message for\nCanadians.\nHe urged them to continue their\nindividual and collective contributions to world peace, and also\nanswered criticisms aimed at the\nCanadian Senate.\nSenator Davies, who with Mrs.\nDavies will sail tomorrow, said he\nfelt the attitude of Parliament \"is\nthat Canada must do her part In\nthe international situation ...\"\nSenator Davies said \"that the\nSenate \"Is doing, and has been doing, an excellent job for Canada.\"\nCAB FARE KILLED\nWHEN HORSE BOLTS\nNEW YORK, Feb.- 27 (CP) \u2014\nMorris Yorshis, 55, a passenger in\na hansom cab, was thrown out and\nkilled today when the horse bolted\nin Central Park and ran for two\nblocks with the cab and its driver.\nThe horse stopped only when the\nhansom cab wheels became locked\nin the wheels of a truck; The horse\nand its driver escaped injury.\nThe Weather\nSynopsis:\nThe weather disturbance which\nwas developing in the Gulf of Alas\nka is now moving rapidly Southward\nover the Pacific but is not expected\nto affect B.C. appreciably during the\nnext 24 hours. The weather will be\nclear and cold in most sections with\nsome increase in cloudiness over the\nSouthern coast.\nNELSON      13   37\nHalifax     31   35 tr.\nMontreal    25   29 .18\nOttawa   \u201e    28   34 .27\nToronto -..   29   35 .03\nNorth Bay  -    21   34 .25\nPort Arthur       0   13 .68\nKenora  .....      3   11 .08\nWinnipeg    10   15 .16\nBrandon        7   12 .08\nThe Pas    -5     3 .02\nRegina  -11    2 nil\nSaskatoon  -18     3 .01\nPrince Albert    -6    6 .05\nN. Battleford  -13     2 .02\nSwift Current   -21     3 nil\nMedicine Hat  -11     7 nil\nLethbridge :    -4   23 nil\nCalgary     -1   14 .02\nEdmonton    _     0     8 .15\nKamloops   _     4   30 nil\nPenticton       18   37 nil\nVancouver     25   45 nil\nVictoria   \u201e    31   43 nil\nKimberley       1   29 nil\nCrescent Valley      1   36 nil\nKaslo   ' 17   33 nil\nPrince Rupert    29   42 nil\nPrince George   -17   29 nil\nGrand Forks      1   32 nil\nSeattle  .,...   25   44 nil\nPortland     29   48 nil\nSpokane     19   37 nil\nChicago       33   48- nil\nSan Francisco     32   52 .03\nLos Angeles     44   54 .32\nNew York      46   61 nil\nWhitehorse        8   17 .04\nKilling Reds\nMain Objective\nBy ROBERT EUNSON\nTOKYO,- Feb. 28 (Wednesday)\u2014\n(AP)\u2014United States 7th and 2nd\nDivision infantrymen today probed\ndeeper into Central Korea's soggy\nmountains after taking eight miles\nof a vital East-West highway.\nThe main objective was to find\nand kill Reds withdrawing after\ntheir East flank defences were crushed Tuesday. A secondary objective\nwas to win control of the road which\nbisects the Peninsula from Kang-\nnung on the East to Seoul on the\nWest.\nCROSSED HAN\nOn the long-quiet Western front,\nan Allied patrol Tuesday night crossed the Han River and fought its\nway into the suburbs of Red-held\nSeoul, It later withdrew.\nCanadian, British and New Zea-\nlnd troops sloshed through the\nthawing, slppery terrain to capture\na hill five miles Southeast of Yong-\ndu in one of the stiffest of Tuesday's\nfights. New Zealand artillery helped\ndrive off the Chinese, estimated at\nbaftalion strength.\nThe hill, barring an Allied advance, had been defended fiercely\nby the Reds for a week.\nThe hill is in the triangle formed\nby Yongduri, Chipyong and Hoengsong. It was in this area that the\nCommonwealth 27th Brigade, with\nthe 2nd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, Tuesday fought off an enemy force estimated at 2000.\nA communique from Gen. Mac-\nArthur's   Headquarters   said   patrols, hampered by the thaw, encountered determined enemy positions one to three miles beyond\nthe United Nations' positions.\nSouth Koredji sources today dij-\nclosed a commando-type raid Sunday to the Republic's marines on the\nWest Coast within, five miles of the\n38th Parallel.\nThe Marines stormed ashore from\nnaval vessels near Ongjin, 90 miles\nWest and slightly North of Seoul,\nIt is on a Peninsula which juts\nSouth from North Korea.\nCAPTURE DOCUMENTS\nKorean sources at Pusan said the\nraiders killed' a Communist Brigade\nCommander and 20 other Red offic\ners. They also captured enemy\nequipment and documents before\nreturning lo their ships.\nThe main weight of a 100,000-man\nAllied drive, aimed at shoving more\nthan 110,000 Chinese and North\nKoreans out of South Korea, press>\ned on the Central front.\nTanks and troops of the 7th Division Tuesday crumpled North Korean defences North of Pangnim and\nsent the Reds fleeing into the mountains.\nIt was West of Pangnim that .the\ntroops seized eight miles of the vital East-West highway. It winds\nWest for 28 miles from Pangnim\nto the highway hub of Hoengsong.\nU.S. 7th and 2nd Division soldiers\nseized dominating hills Norlh of the\nhighway. Men of the second won\nHill No, 825, after beating off five\nNorth Korean counter-attacks.\nThe U.S. 1st Marine Division,\nholding high ground around war-\nwrecked Hoengsong, said Chinese\n\u2022North of the highway junction appeared to be withdrawing North.\nHoensong itself was a \"No Man's\nLand.\"\n1950 Police Depl.\nRevenue Up 19%\nNelson Police Department revenue last year was up almost $3000\nor more than 19 percent over 1949,\na report from the City .Clerk's office\nshows.      ,\nIncome from parking fines, parking meters and Police Court fines\ntotalled $17,367.60 as compared with\n$14,578.91 the previous year.\nBiggest gain was in Police Court\nfines and costs levies which rose\nfrom $6911.67 in 1949 to $8519 in\n1950. Parking meter collections rose\nby $1162.36 to $7750.60 during the\npast year.\nThe $1 fines levied for overtime\nmeter parking showed a slight increase from a total of $1080 to $1098\nduring this period.\nPeak period for parking Infractions is during the Summer season\nwhen traffic is heaviest with Saturdays, especially with hockey\nhockey games or other events on,\nbeing the heaviest day for infractions.\nMost penalties are incurred, according to Police Chief Robert Har-\nshaw, by motorists parking carelessly and obstructing driveways.\nParking in pedestrian lanes or too\nclose to hydrants are also common\noffences.\nYoung Liberals\nMeet in Vancouver\nNext Month\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nThe Young Liberals' biennial convention will be held here next\nmonth, it was announced tonight.\n\"It will be the first time the convention has been West of Winnipeg,\" said James J. Proudfoot, Victoria lawyer who heads Ypung Liberals in British Columbia.\nHe said decision to hold the convention here was made in Ottawa\ntoday at executive meetings of the\nNational Young Liberal Federation\nof Canada.\nMr. Proudfoot said top members\nof the Liberal Party are expected\nlo attend the convenlion, the exact\ndate of which has not yet been set.\n\"The Prime Minister and most of\nIhe Cabinet ministers usually attend the biennial,\" he said.\nThomas Rosiand.\nSeveral Years in\nRossland, Dies\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014Thomas Rosiand, resident of the district\nfor many years, died in the Mater\nMiseracordiae Hospital here Tuesday after a brief illness.\nBorn 54 years ago at Slavenger,\nNorway, Mr. Rosiand came to Canada in 1926. Ten years later he came\nto Trail and Rossland from Vancouver and had lived here since.\nHe was a member 'of Aerie No. 10,\nFraternal Order of Eagles..\nSurvivors include his wife, Ed-\nwina, five daughters, Elsie, Astri,\nGunhild, Erna and Thordes, all at\nhome; his mother, two sisters and\ntwo brothers in Norway.\nHypnotism Show\nIs Held Over\nDr. Robert (Tex) Morton, the all-\nround showman who won over his\naudience in Capitol Theatre Monday and Tuesday nights as well as\nhis \"committee\" of hypnosis testers,\nis staying on tonight and Thursday.\n'He packed the house with his\nstunts and demonstrations of combined hypnosis and mesmerism. He\nhad his dozen or so \"guinea pigs\"\nfrom the audience go through the\nlaughs (and tears) of a movie, row\nboats, play the violin before the\nKing and Queen under his spell, and\neven woke them up amnesia victims\ntemporarily.\nOne of his final and most applauded acts was of post auto suggestion,\nwhere he drilled into one of his\ndead-asleep \"committee members\"\nthat, when awake, he would return\nto his seat and stand and shout\n\"cock-a-doodle-do.\" The lad did just\nthat.\nSurvey Canadian\nMilifary (amps\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\nDefence Department has been quietly surveying many of the military\ncamps which sprang up i in 'the last\nwar and have not been used since.\nConsiderably more space will be\nneeded by the armed forces because\nof their expansion. But, .officials\nsaid today it should not be assumed\n\u2022that the visit of military officers on\nan inspection trip necessarily means\nthe revival of the camp in any given\narea. ,\nThey were commenting on reports that the wartime air base\nat Claresholm, Alta., is going to\nbe reopened as an R.C.A.F. training base In connection with the\nthe plan to train more than. 1000\nAtlantic Pact airmen In Canada\nannually.\nAn R.C.A.F. spokesman said no\ndecision has been reached about\nClaresholm and that no statement\ncan be made in the meantime.\nFigures published today by the\nDefence Construction Limited pointed up another feature of the rearmament program \u2014 a heavy\nslurge on construction or renovation\nof barrack blocks.\nContracts for barracks and living\nquarters were announced for -the\nnavy base at Deep Brook, N.S., the\nair bases at Chatham, N.B., North\nBay Ont.; Clinton, Ont., and Whitehorse, Yukon. And Army bases at\nPetawawa, Camp Bordon and Bar-\nriefield, Ont,\nOfficials said contracts are being\nplaced under three general headings\nfpr the R.C.A.F. and that the same\npattern applies fairly generally to\nthe other services.\nFor permanent bases, certain new\nbuildings are of masonry and steel.\nOthers are of steel superstructure\nwith wooden walls, not only on the\npermanent bases butalso on certain\noperational bases being put into\nuse again'.\nThe third category includes new\nconstruction and repair of wartime\nbuildings on the new training\nschools. The new buildings will be\nof the same type\u2014primarily wooden\u2014as those erected in the last war\nexcept that they will have concrete\nfoundations instead of wood.\nContenders for\nCoast Rookie Award\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nNew Westminster Royals' Bob Koch\nis reported the current favorite for\nthe Pacific Coast Hockey League's\n\"Best Rookie\" stakes.\nThe prize is a crisp $100 bill and\nWill be paid out sometime next\nmonth. The only provision is that it\nmust be the entrant's first year of\nprofessional hockey.\nOthers high on the list are Denny\nHuddleston and Butch Houle of the\nRoyals and Reg. Abbott, a 21-year-\nold Victoria graduate from junior\nto senior ranks.\nPortland has a single nominee in\n21-year-old Al Miller, goaltender,\nwhile Vancouver has Thomas Man-\nastersky.\nIdentifies Collazo\nIn ShoOtihg Attempt\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 27- (AP)' \u2014\nWhite House Officer Donald Bird-\nzell, cane in hand, limped across\nthe courtroom today and identified\nOscar Collazo as the man who shot\nhim down during an attempt to assassinate President Truman last\nNov. 1.\nCollazo, charged with murder in\nthe death of another White House\nguard, showed no emotion when\nBirdzell, asked if he recognized the\nman who shot him without warning\nreplied:\n\"He's sitting right there behind\nthe defence attorney.\"\nAs the murder trial completed its\nsecond day, the government demanded that Collazo, 37-year-old\nmember of the Puerto Rican Nationalist party, dies in the electric chair\nfor the death of White House guard\nLeslie Coffelt.\nPay for Restrictions\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014John\nMcDowell (PC\u2014Ibvcrvillc) said in\nthe Manitoba Legislature today that\nthe people of Canada now are paying for wartime price restrictions.\nSpeaking against a C.C.F. resolution asking Federal price controls,\nMr. McDowell said controls during\nthe Second World War are responsible for present conditions.\nHe used wheat as an example. He\nsaid there are no price restrictions\nin Ontario and Ontario No. 2 mixed Winter wheat sells for $2.22 a\nbushell at country points. Control\nof wheat prices in the Prairie Provinces means that the farmer three\nonly received $1.87 a bushel for\nManitoba No. 1 hard, a substantially\nhigher 'grade.\nThe debate was adjourned by\nGeorge Oliver (CCF\u2014Kildonan-\nTranscona).\nDon't be Vague    SAY\nHaig^Haig\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nThe Oldest Name in Scotch \u25a0 Famous for 323 Years\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nU.S. \"Catch-Up\",\nWage Formula\nOrdered Into Effect\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (AP)\nEconomic Stabilizer Eric Johnston\ntonight ordered the 10-per-cent\n\"catch-up\" wage formula into effect at once and asked the wage\nstabilization board to approve\n.promptly seven amendments further\nliberalizing the wage ceiling,\nJohnston told a Press conference\nhe \"hoped\" his action would bring\nthe board's three labor members,\nwho have walked ojtt, back to the\nboard. .    (\nThe formula, designed to replace\nthe present wage freeze, provides\nthat pay increases shall be limited to\n10 per cent above the levels of Jan,\n15,   1950.\nIt was approved by public arid Industry members of the Wage Board.\nThe chief amendments proposed\nprovide that wage \"escalator clauses\" be recognized if contracts providing for Ihem were signed on ur\nbefore Jan, 25 of this year.\nThe order issued tonight expires\nJune 30.\nJunior Piano,\nVocal Pupils\nPresent Recital\nElementary and junior piano and\nvocal pupils were heard in the Trinity United Church Monday evening\nin a public recital presented by .the\nNelson Branch of the British Columbia Registered Music Teachers\nAssociation,\nTaking part in the program were\nstudents of five members of the\nbranch in Nelson, Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, Mrs. James Fraser, Mrs.\nLawrence McPhail,'Mrs. Bain Oliver and Mrs. C. W. Tyler.     *       \u2022   j\nSenior pupils pf the branch members will be presented in a recital\nearly in May.\nParticipating were Alex Hanna,\nBetty Duckworth, Tannis Foxall,\nMarilyn Kary, Arnold Bate, Billy\nFraser, Donald Livingstone, Louise\nAnderson, Peggy Wright, Leulla\nBate, Maureen Johnston, Billy Lambert, Bobby Lee Brown.\nDiana Armstrong, Wanda Lind-\ngren, Molra Carmichael, Francis Eberle, Gordon Jeffs, Marlene Der,\nMike Horswill, Anne Postlethwalte,\nJBernie Monteleone, Jo Ellen Kary.\nBarbara Williams, Jane Pierson,\nDenize Greenwood, Doreen Evans,\nAlbert Deloise, Rachelle Crawford,\nMarylynn Waterer, Anne Fawcett,\nJoyce Stewart, Elsie Abfalter, Louise Scott, Eddie Thompson, Scott\nOwen, Jackie French, Carol Coventry, Sheila McPhail and Dorothy\nFoster.\nAnother Basketball\nStar Admits Bribes\nNEW YORK, Feb. 27 (AP) \u2014\nDistrict Attorney Frank Hogan\nsaid today that another of City\nCollege of New York's championship basketball stars admitted taking part in the fixed games.\nHe is Floyd G. Layne, the 10th\nmetropolitan star or former player\nto be .questioned about collegiate\nsports'  greatest  scandal.\nThe purposed confession came\nshortly after C.C.N.Y. quit basketball for -the rest of the season, its\nofficials disgusted with the spreading scandal.\nSome Societies\nRule Branded Sex\nPractices Normal\nNEW YORK, Feb. 27 (AP) \u2014\nAlmost all sex practices branded\nwrong by Americans are considered\nnormal by some other human societies today, two Yale University professors report in a new book, 'Patterns of Sexual Behavior.\"\nTheir book is a kind of expanded\nKinsey Report comparing 190 different human societies over the\nworld, and sex practices among\nmany animals from apes to mice.\nThe authors are Dr. Clellan S.\nFprd, associate professor of anthropology, and Dr. Frank A. Beach,\nprofessor of psychology. The publishers are Harper & Brothers.\nA man can have more than one\nwife in about 80 per cent of these\nother societies, \"If he can arrange\nto do so.\" But in half of them, the\nman has as, a rule .just one wife.\nA woman can have extra husbands\nin two groups, the Toda of India\nand the Marquesans of Polynesia.\nIt's preferred that she does.\nSome groups encourage women\nto take the initiative in sex.\nSome encourage children to in,\ndulge in sex play to learn about\nsex.\nAnd under certain conditions,\nsome societies even permit homosexuality.\nAs for sex appeal, there are \"few\nif any universal standards.\" But in\na majority of societies, the plump\nwoman rather than the slim one\nis more attractive. In some gorups,\nthe shape and color of the eyes, or\nshape of the ears, .is significant in\nsex appeal,\nTheir book is a fact-finding study\nto give humans a more intelligent\ninsight into human sexuality, Drs.\nFord and Beach said, with no attempt . at moralizing.\nThe only universal taboo, the\nauthors report, is against incest.\nCHARGED WITH MURDER\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Ont., Feb.\n27 (CP)\u2014Anthony Maki, 60, was\ncharged with murder late today in\nthe razor-slashing death of James\nCox, 65, at the Algoma District Old\nPeoples' Home in suburban Taren-\ntorous Township.\nMaki was taken to hospital with\ncuts about the head and face. At\nfirst his condition was described\nas critical but doctors said later\nthat he will probably live.\nCox was fhe barber at the Davey\nHome for the Aged, newest in\nCanada, as well as living there.\nTRUCK DRIVER KILLED\nCHILLIWACK, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP)\n\u2014 Norman George of Chilliwack\na 53-year-old truck driver was killed today when struck by a rolling\nlog on Chilliwack Sawmill's property. An inquest was set for tomorrow.\nRAN DICE GAME\nHE COULD PAY FINE\nNEW YORK, Feb. 27 (AP)\nCharged wilh running a dice game\nthe day after he was fined for collecting numbers-game bets, Robert\nFranklin, 30, told the court today:\n\"The only reason I ran the dice\ngame was to get enough money to\npay the fine in the numbers case.\"\nThe judge fined him again\u2014$75.\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nWithout Calomel-And You'll Jump Out ol\nBed in the Morning Rarin1 to Go\nThe liver should pour out about 2 pint* of\nP'^Juico mto your diceiiLive trnctevery day.\nIf this bile u no t flowing freely your food may\nnot digest. It may juat decay in the digentive\ntract. Then pas bloata up your stomach. You\nget constipated. You fool aour. aunk and tho\nworld looks punk.\n.It takes those mild, gentle Carter's LIttI\u00bb\nLiver Pills to got these 2 pinta of bile flowing froely to make you feel \"up and up.\"\nGet a package today. Effective in making\nhilo flow freofy. Ask for Carter's Little Liver\nI ulii, 36j! at any drugstore.\nDon't suffer with\nARTHRITIC PAIN\nBe active again\nYou an get fsit, comforting relief from arthritic\npain. ^Hundreds of satisfied users report\nT-R-C's bring real relief quickly. Why suffer'\nwith serire pain? No matter how many modi,\ncinea you have tried-no mailer how littls\nsuccess you hare had you can probably get the\nrelief you long for wilh T-R-C'e-Canada''\nlargest selling proprietary medicine for arthritic\nand rheumatic pain. Gel T-R-C's today ... gel\nrelief you long for tonight. (Oc'and JUS.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET  RESULTS\nBY\nPUBLIC\nREQUEST!\nOwing to the HUGE success\nof the Dr. Robert Morton\nshow \u2014 (thousands turned\naway last evening), we have\npleasure in announcing that\nthis amazing show \u2014 probably the most successful in\nNelson's history\u2014will show\nagain\ntonight!\n-AND\nTHURSDAY NIGHTJ\nONLY\nCAPITOL\nTHEATRE\nBefore proceeding to\nVancouver.\nDOORS OPEN 7 P.M,\n8HOW  STARTS 8  P.M.\nCompletely\nNew\nProgram\nTonight\nPlease Be Early\nFarewell Show.\nDefinitely no return.\nPlain end or corfc tip*\n'Genuine imported cork\n IP\nShoe\nClearance\nSale\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n553 Baker St.\nCouncil lo Press\nFor Chatham\nArterial Route\nCity   Council   decided   Monday\n[night to continue pressure to have\n\u25a0 Chatham  Street  in  Fairview  de-\nI clared  a  part  of  the  Provincial\n[arterial highway through Nelson.\nAt a recent Finance Committee\nI meeting, City Clerk W. A. Gordon\nI had  been instructed to  write to\nWalter Hendricks, M.L.A. for Nel-\nI son-Creston,  to  do  everything in\nhis power to have Chatham Street\nj named,  but Acting Mayor R.  J.\nRiesterer said he had been advised\n| by the Public Works Department\nthat Chatham Street was \"definite-\n[ ly out\"\nAldermen Joseph Kary and Alex\nI Sutherland protested, and the latter\nmoved that a letter be sent to the\nDepartment at Victoria and to Mr.\nHendricks pointing \u25a0 out the suitability of Chatham Street compared\nto Anderson Street, (choice of the\n[Department), and also\/the cost to\nI the City in having to acquire prop-\nI erties if the'route followed Ander-\nJton Street.\nThe letter will be sent if after\na meeting the Council will seek\nwith H. T. Miard, Divisional Engineer at Nelson, it is found the\nDepartment is adamant in using\nAnderson Street If necessary, a\ndelegation will be sent to, Victoria,\na suggestion made by Alderman\nKary, who deplored any further\ndelay but felt Council should not\n\"give in.\"\nTRAIL SCOUTS,\nCUBS, FATHERS\nATTEND BANQUET\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 Some 240\nScouts, Cubs, their fathers and\nleaders attended the sixth annual\nfather and son banquet of the Fifth\nTrail Cubs and Scouts held in the\nElk's Hall last week.\nJ. Kemp, president of the father's\neommittee, acted as chairman for\nthe banquet while toasts were proposed to the King by Cub Garry\nBurkholder and to the Chief Scout\nby Scout Lome Howlett. Toasts\nwere responded to by District\nCommissioner Jack Nickolson who\ngave an address on scouting. He\nlater made a ..presentationT of a\nbronze arrow to Lome Howlett.\nScoutmaster Laurie Garvin then\npresented first class badges to\nScouts Nyron Barge and Lome\nHowlett.\nRover leader Steve Sappronoff\nIntroduced the recently formed\nRover Crew during the evening.\nThanks were given to the\nMother's Auxiliary for their cooperation and \u00abupport in making\nthe banquet a success.\nDuring the remainder of the\nevening the boys entertained their\ndads with various games and dis\nplays. The grand final was the\nsounding of Taps led by Cubmaster\nJack Hand.\nKASLO MEN BUY\nNORTH BAY CLAIM\nKASLO, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014Mr. Logan\nand Mr. Cunningham, both of\nKaslo, were the recent purchasers\n.of a mineral claim at North Bay,\nnear Riondel, from A. J. Curie of\nKaslo.\nThe property consists of 36 acres\nof land arid three buildings, and\nadjoins the CM. & S. Company\nholdings at RiondeL\nNORTHAMPTON, England (CP)\n\u2014Workmen in Grcyfriars Street\nhere found two skeletons on the site\nof an old monastery that had been\ndestroyed in 1539. The bones are believed those of monks.\nA Treat\nTor You and Your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\nHolding a bunch of rather wilted flowers, Alfred Krupp, head of\nthe once-mighty German steel and munitions empire, Is shown with\nhis U.S. attorney, Earl Carroll, left, and his brother, Berthold Krupp,\nas he left Landsberg prison. Krupp was one of 29 war criminals\ngranted clemency by John McCloy, U.S. High Commissioner. In addition to his freedom, Krupp was given back his huge business Interests.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nLt.-Col. T.H. Mundy...\nTurning Sunday Into Funday Works\nAgainst Achieving Balance in Life\nRepeal Shows an\nUnqualified Hit\nKASLO, B. C, Feb. 27-On the\nevening of Feb. 22 the Kaslo Board\nof Trade reproduced the program\nof the floor show and Jamboree in a\ndouble feature in the Musicland\nTheatre. .\nThe first show was for the 'benefit of young people who were unable to attend the original entertainment held in the Legion Hall.\nThe second show was for adults,\nThe' entertainment was under the\ndirection of E. J. Leveque. The personnel of the acts were made up of\nmembers of the Board of Trade,\nwho gave much. time and effort in\nmaking the floor show and jamboree an unqualified success. .\nW.M. Cunliffe, Here Since 1910,\nPreviously in Rossland, Passes\nKiwanis Broadcast\nTo Be Heard Here\nBroadcast of the Kiwanis Club\nprogram from Vancouver Thursday, commemorating thev 36th anniversary of Kiwanis International,\nwill be carried by CKLN. The\nprogram at 1:30 p.m. will include\nmusical as well as instructive\nfeatures.\n\"Our great purpose is to serve\nthe youth and children of Canada,\"\nLieut.-Colonel T. H. Mundy, Salvation Army Territorial Young\nPeople's* Secretary, Toronto, said in\nNelson Tuesday.\nLieut-Col. Mundy spoke at Nelson Monday night on \"Faith in\nGod,\" and also gave a talk to the\nSalvation Army hobby class. He\nwas in Rossland over the weekend for the annual Young Peoples\nCouncils which include Cranbrook,\nFernie, Nelson, Trail and Rossland.\n\"We endeavor by various means\nto balance youth in a decidedly\nunbalanced world,\" the speaker\nsaid. There were four major\nfactors in accomplishing this: the\nright home life; the influence of\nthe church; the contribution of the\nschool and the general community\nservice.\nA real balance in life could\nbe obtained by spiritual, social,\nphysical and mental tuition. No\none could achieve a healthy condition of life If the church life\nwas neglected, he continued.\nSport and recreation were necessary, but must not become the\nmain platform, Just a plank in\nthe platform.\nThe Salvation Army had in Canada 2000 young men and women\nenrolled in a six-year course of\nBible study. Each year, mpre than\n1000 gathered in music camps\nwhere they were trained' in the\ntheory and practise of musical instruments and voice. Fellowship,\nGuide and Scout camps were also\ncontributing to help youth find a\nbalance.\nThe Army maintained that youth\ncould not be ultimately helped\nuntil they were willing to tread\nthe way 'of life as revealed by\nChrist. Once youth fell in love\nwith Him, He provided the necessary balance.\nOne of the chief contributing\nfactors of child and youth delinquency was the breaking down of\nfamily life, lack of church attendance by parents, \"and certainly\nturning Sunday into Funday did\nnot produce a balance personality.\nIf Christ is the way for youth today, then certainly He is the solution for life in all age groups.\"\nThe Canadian territory of the\nArmy included Bermuda and Newfoundland. In that limit were 400\ncenters of religious work. This\nwas in addition to the many-hospitals, hostels for men and women,\nEventide Homes for_men and Sunset Homes for aged women and\nmany children's homes.\nRubber Ban Will\nHave Little Affect\nOn Sporting Goods\nCHICOPEE, Mass., Feb. 27 (AP)\n\u2014How will the American sportsman\nfare under the government's new\nedict curtailing the use of natural\nrubber in 40,000 products?\nAt present it looks as if he won't\nhave to forego any of his cherished\nathletic activities in 1951 for lack\nof sports equipment,\nLuther E. Coleman, vice-president\nof the leader in the sporting goods\nindustry, A. G. Spalding & Bros.,\nsums it up like this:\n\"I feel that we can operate with\nthese new percentages allowed under the rubber order.\"\nThat order, issued Monday by the\nNational Production Authority,\nlimits the use of natural rubber to\n85 per cent in golf balls, 10 per\ncent in baseball centres, 81 per\ncent in tennis balls, and 53 per cent\nin inflatable athletic balls such as\nfootballs and basketballs.\nColeman, a member of the industry group which sat in on government meetings concerning the rubber order, says that natural rubber\npercentages allowed \"approximate\"\nthose now being.used in golf balls\nand the other items mentioned.\n\"With the new order, we'll be\nallowed to continue production of\nmost of  our rubber  Items,  but\nthe over-all  production will  be\nlimited to the monthly allowance\nof    rubber    permitted    by   the\nN.P.A.,\" Coleman says.\nIt looks as If golfing duffers\nwon't be able to blame their 90-\nyard drives on the equipment \u2014\nnot this year.., ...\nConference on Cily Bus Service\nProposed as Council Hears Prolesfs\nRepresentatives of Interior Stages,\noperators of the City bus service in\nNelson, will be invited to meet City\nCouncil in a conference on the\ntransportation service. Interested\nmembers of the public will be invited to attend, or to turn in written submissions.\nCouncil on Monday night discussed the situation after, reading\na letter from Guy Mayo protesting\nvarious aspects of the bus service.\nMr. Mayo had been invited to offer suggestions for improvement\nof the bus schedules, recently\nplaced on a 40-minute basis.\nMr. Mayo said he was not in a\nposition to do so, for it would require a lot of study over some\nweeks, a job for an expert n transportation.\nHe thought Council could obtain\nfigures on the number of passengers carried on uphill and Fairview\nroutes from which a \"fair schedule\ncould be arrived at.\" As a route\nalternative he would want more\ninformation on street conditions, as\nhe was sure \"a good number\" were\nnot fit for heavy buses.\nIf one bus continued on its present route, the other should travel\nthe opposite way and take income\nstreets not served by the present\nroute, but which had been served\nby the streetcars, he claimed.\nCouncil \"at the very least\" had\na strong moral responsibility to use\nits influence to get service for former streetcar patrons \"considering\nit was the City Council who used\ntheir influence to deprive these\nresidents of the streetcars and then\ndid not see that the buses covered them.\"\nThe matter of times and stops\nshould also be inquired into, Mr.\nMayo said. He said he had found\nhe could not rely on scheduled\ntimes, and that in order to be sure\nof catching a bus he walked six\nblocks rather than two blocks up a\nsteep hill to the nearest stop. At\nsome points the buses stopped at\ntwo or three intersections in a row,\nand in others at every other one.\nHe thought they should stop at all\ncorners if requested.\nHe sometimes wondered, he\nwrote, if the' bus company cared\nvery much about the Nelson business and wanted to \"pull out.\" \u2022\nHe said ,a three-week check of\nthe bus leaving Fairview at 1:10\np.m. daily had beeh made, and \"on\nno trip\" were there less than 18\npassengers, \"generally 22 or 23\", but\nthat \"inspite of this\" the trip was\ntaken off.\".\nUnless Council \"gets a little\ntough\" there would either be -no\ntransportation services within\nyear or so, or he feared patrons\nwould be paying 12% or 15 cents\nor more for bus rides. Because of\n\"lack of interest shown by Council\nto the last concession, they will be\nforming the opinion they can get\nall they ask and will be applying\nfor a raise in fares,\" Mr. Mayo con\ntended.\nAid. Alex Sutherland said the\nservice was \"very unsatisfactory\"\nand he had heard \"another company\" was ready to \"take over tomorrow\" if Interior Stages wished\nto \"dispose of it,\"\n\"It looks as though they don't\nwant it,\" commented Aid. S. J.\nNewell, who said it seemed to him\nthat the City had been \"sold a lem-\nW. M. CUNLIFFE\nWilliam M. Cunliffe, Rossland\npioneer and a prominent figure in\nNelson life for 40 years, died Tuesday morning in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nBorn in Port Glasgow, Scotland,\nin 1872, he spent his early years\nin South Africa. He came to Canada and to Rossland in 1898 and\nwas manager of' the Rossland\nEngineering Works. He moved to\nNelson in 1910, and became president of the Nelson Iron Works. He\nretired about 10 years ago.\nMr. Cunliffe served the city as\nalderman in 1921, 1922 and 1923,\nHe was a member of Nelson Board\nof Trade all his years in Nelson,\nand earlier this month was honored\nwith a life membership. He was a\nmember of the' Nelson Municipal\nLibrary Board for several years,\nand was also a Mason.\nHe is survived by his wife, a\nson, James, in Cloverdale, B.C., and\na daughter, Mrs. Henry McLaren\n'in Ancaster, Ont. There are three\ngrandchildren. ,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1 Ml ~- 3\nMonfy Has Lunch\nWilh Eisenhower\nPARIS, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014Britain's\nField Marshal Viscount Montgomery lunched with Atlantic Army\nCommander Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower today. This raised new speculation that \"Monty\" would be named soon to a job as Eisenhower's\nDeputy. ..\nThe two soldiers are in Eisenhower's headquarters of the Supreme\nHeadquarters, Allied Powers in\nEurope', which Eisenhower com-'\nmands.\nThere has been repeated speculation that Lord Montgomery, now\nchief of the Five-Country Brussels\nPact Defence Alliance, would be appointed Deputy Commander of the\nInternational Army being formed\nby the 12 Atlantic-Pact countries.\nCOLCHESTER, Essex, England\n(CP) \u2014 Britain's fuel crisis didn't\nupset 1,500 school children here.\nTwo schools announced time off because there was no coke to heat the\nbuildings.\nBLETCHLEY,. EnglanB V'(CP) \u2014\nThe stone stairway at tljjsi Buckinghamshire railway station,\"nieknam-\ned \"Train Catchers' Despair\" because it slowed up persons hurrying\nto catch trains, has been removed.\nCranbrook Offices Rushed Handling\nKimberley Car License Applicants Too\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014\nLack of a Provincial Government\nlicensing office at Kimberley was\ncomplicating affairs this week at\nthe Provincial Government office\nin Cranbrook when the localpeak\nof applications for new car licences\nwas nearly submerged under the\nflood of Kimberley applicants.\nUntil .this year the Provincial\nPolice have issued the car licences\nat the Kimberley Police Station for\napplicants'of that area but the ser\nvice was discarded when the R.C.\nM.P. contract came into effect.\n, Cranbrook office normally issues\nunder 1000 licences during February, about half of them the final\nweek of the month. The Kimberley\napplicants, who total around 1500\neach year, began with a rush Saturday. There was some doubt as\nto whether the combined business\ncould be handled by months' end.\nProperly filled out applications\nfrom Kimberley are also being\nhandled by mail.\nCHINA LONG\nCUCUMBER\nUNEXCELLED  FOR\n.CRISPNESS, FLAVOR\nA remarkable Cucumber that\ngrows up to 2 feet long and\nonly 2 or 3 inches in diameter.\nSmooth, deep green, few\nspines, flesh'white, solid, crisp.\nNearest seedless of any variety\nwe know. Vigorous grower\neven under adverse conditions.\nAs China Long produces few\nseeds the supply is short. Order\nearly. Pkt I0<>; ox 4tty, postpaid,\nFREE-Our Big 1951\nSeed and Nursery Book\nDOMINION   SEED   HOUSE\n! ,':'\u2022 \u25a0\"-'\u2022C E OR GETOWH.0KT. \u25a0'-\nSchool Expenditure\nEstimate $424,439\nNelson School District No. 7 estimate of expenditures for 1951 of $424,-\n439 was received for study by City\nCouncil Monday night. The estimate\ncompared with 1950 expenditures of\n$410,466.\nBARTIBOQUE BRIDGE, N.B.\n(CP) \u2014 William J. Connors, who\nhas just marked his 93rd birthday,\nhas been an almshouse commissioner for Northumberland County\nfor 65 consecutive years, a mark\nequalled by few county commissioners.\nINT, PETROLEUM\nEARNINGS INCREASE\nTORONTO, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 International Petroleum Co. Ltd., had\nestimated consolidated earnings in\n1950 of $24,800,000 (U.S.) or $1.71\na share, compared with $13,051,000\nor 90 cents a share, in 1949. These\nwere the best earnings since 1938.\nThe company's announcement,\nmade by L. P. Maier, President, said\nthat gross production of 121,000 barrels daily set a record, and compared\nwith 111,500 barrels daily in 1949,\nan increase of 8% per cent.\nPrincipal improvement was in\nVenezuela, up 15.7 per cent.\nAnnouncement\nWe wish to announce the opening of\nTHRING'S\nSHOP EASY MARKET\nm\nNEW DENVER      '\nON\nMARCH 1st\nWe intend to provide a complete\nGrocery Service in a modern\nself-serve store.\nW. G. THRING\nMANAGER AND OWNER\nMail Delivery For\nEdgewood District\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014Arrangements are now complete to\nbegin rural delivery of mail.and the\nroute will be opened March 1,\nJohn Ewings will be the driver.\nThe route will begin at Edge-\nwood, proceed North through the\nInonoaklin Valley to the Charles\nFlick ranch, return over the Crossroads pass and South to Edgewood\nby the Lakeshore road. There are,\nto begin with, about 40 patrons.\nFive R.C.M.P.\nMembers Suspended\nKELOWNA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014\nFive members of the R.C.M.P. have\nbeen temporarily suspended from\nthe force.\nInspector J. H. McClinton of Kamloops confirmed the suspensions today but declined to comment on reports that certain charges will be\nlaid against the men.\nHe said any comment would have\nto come from R.C.M.P. Headquarters in Victoria.\nEDGEWOOD PLAYS HOST\nTO NEEDLES CLUB\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., Feb. 27-\nNcedles Badminton Club met\nEdgewood Badminton Club in tournament Feb. 23, in the Legion Hall,\nEdgewood. This was the second\nmeeting of these clubs in friendly\ncompetition and marked the second win for Edgewood.\nAfter the games the Edgewood\nClub was host to the visitors and\nrefreshments were served in the\nhall. A crowd of about 70 watched\nthe games.\nWynndel Man Tells of High Prices,\nFuel Shortage on Return From Germany\nfriends .and relatives, has returned\nWYNNDEL, B.C., Feb. 27t-OUo\nSteiner, who has been in Germany\nfor   the   past  six   weeks   visiting\nurn's *m\/\/*$m\nSeagra\nram's \"V.O.\"       Seagrams \"83M\nSeagrams Crown Royal\nSeagram's King's Plate      Seagrams Special Old\nthis advertisement is not published or displayed bythe Liquor Control Boarddr bythe Government of British Columbia\nhome after a crossing on the\n\"Gripsholm\". Visiting his brother\nand family at Franklin, Man., he\nreceived word of the washout on\nhis ranch from the C.P.R. tracks.\nRelating some of his impressions,\nMr. Steiner told of the stores carrying all kinds of goods and food, but\nthe lack of money to purchase more\nthan the mere necessities by the\nworking man. Milk was not in\nevidence, as it was very expensive.\nThe fuel situation was most critical, only the big hotels were heated, the inns or rooming houses going without. He noticed all trees\nwere limbed as far as a stick could\nreach and there was no underbrush.\nWood was sold by the basket load.\nThe new buildings are of brick\nor stone, he said, with no lumber\navailable. The rubble of the bombed-out towns was still in evidence.\nThe towns are being rebuilt in new\nspaces instead of on old sites.\nMr. Steiner was unable to visit\nhis relatives in the Eastern zone.\n. Mr .Steiner said he had been\napproached by black marketeers in\nthe American dollar on his arrival\nin Germany.\nAn Important Discovery\nin \/^RELIEF OF PAIN\nScience never accepts without question.\nTo science, even what is good exists only to be improved.\nNow\u2014after many years' careful research\u2014science presents an\nimportant step forward in the relief of common pain.\nIt is called DISPRIN.    ,\nDISPRIN is soluble and substantially neutral. When taken in water\nas recommended, it enters the stomach as a true solution and not\nas undissolved particles. It is therefore less liable to cause\nstomach discomfort.\nDISPRIN is readily absorbed. Because ft definitely dissolves (not\nmerely disintegrates) DISPRIN permits speedy absorption and\ngives quicker relief.\nDISPRIN \u00abV palatable. Even children will take it readily.\nScience Progresses.\nFor 50 years we have used little\nwhite tablets\u2014acctylsalicylic\nacid\u2014for relief of pain. Today\nthis familiar pain-killer is available in a new form without the\ndisadvantages of acidity, insolubility and bitter taste. It is\ncalled DISPRIN, and is sold at\ndruggists everywhere.\nScience steps forward with\nDISPRIN\n...FOR  PAIN  RELIEF\nDISPRIN is now available at your\nDruggist. Bottles of 26 tablets\nor Handy Pocket Folders of 8-\nSAFE       SPEEDY       PLEASANT\nBY THE MAKERS OF T)l:iTOL' ANTISEPTIC... RECKJ^T & COLMAN (CANADA) LIMITED, PHARMACEUTICAL DIVISION, MONTR$A%\n m\n-x.      X.    \"\u25a0\nON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1951\nLo^pWIblems\nTHESE GIRLS ARE BETTER\nOFF WITHOUT THEIR PALS\nBY JANE ATKINSON\nDear Miss Atkinson: *\nWe are two girls who are invited\nto many parties. Lately our friends\nhave been indulging in heavy necking, which we Would rather not\nhave any part of. They say we are\nunsociable and that we think we are\n(Djoal lAp. With,\nIfYlaJiiatt TyiaJiiitt\n9370   SIZES 14\u201420     32-42\nALWAYS  APPROPRIATE\n, Step right into a smart casual!\nAlomst sleeveless, with a really\nflattering, handsome collar, panel\npockets and step-in closing. A\nclassic you'll wear everywhere\nknowing you are \"best-dressed\"!\ni, Pattern 9370 comes in sizes 14, 16,\n18, 20; 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16\ntakes 4 yards 39. inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete,, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(2.5c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRE6S,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of ' Nelson Daily\nNews Pattern Dept., Nelson.\nHvae you seen . . . The new silhouette? The new Spring Suits?\nEnsembles? The new wrap-on? Order our new Marian Martin Pattern\nBook, read all about your beautiful\nSpring wardrobe. Send Twenty-five\ncents for your copy today! A FREE\npattern of a new Spring hat is\nprinted in book.\np__-,^_\u201e\ntoo good for them. We don't mean\nto be unsociable, but we think there\nare other ways of having fun. What\nshould we do? We don't want to\nlose our friends.\n.    \u2014M.M. and L.O.\nDear Girls:\nI don't see why you want to hang\non to friends who can't think of\nanything better to do than \"heavy\nnecking.\" You're much better off\nwithout them. If they want to think\nyou're unsociable because you're\nsensible enough to believe there\nare better kinds of fun than cheap\nflirting, let them think so.\nIf, when you go\" to parties, you\nare-constantly put in a position of\nthis sort, pass up those parties and\ngive some parties of your own with\npeople'who think .the way you do.\nThere are so many interesting activities for girls your age these\ndays, that you shouldn't have any\ntrouble finding ways to spend your\ntime. If you go in for healthy things\nlike sports and hobbies, you're certain to enlarge your circle of friends\nand meet plenty of boys and girls\nwho have the same standards of\nconduct that you do, and in the end\/\nyou'll have lots more fun, too.\nRecipes. . .\nThese Take\nEggs Aplenty\nBy  MARGARET  CARR\nWe've been waiting somewhat\nimpatiently for the time -to come\nwhen we could go hog wild- with\neggs, and it would appear that now\nis the hour..\nActually, eggs are one of those\nthings which we should never economize on unless we absolutely have\nto do so. They are an excellent\nsource of protein and iron, and are\nrich in vitamin A and the B-com-\nplex vitamins. At least 3 or 4 eggs\nper week, and preferably an egg a\nday for every member of the family is one of the rules for adequate nutrition.\nEGG CROQUETTES\nThree tablespoons fat, Vi cup diced onion, Yt cup flour, 1 cup milk,\n1 cup grated cheese, % cup fine\nbread crumbs, % teaspoon salt, Vi\nteaspoon dry mustard, 2 tablespoons\nhorseradish, 1 tablespoon chili\nsauce or catsup, Yt teaspoon powdered thyme, 5 hard-cooked eggs,\nchopped.\nMelt fat, add onion and cook 5\nminutes. Add flour and blend well.\nAdd milk and cook, stirring constantly, until mixture thickens.\nContinue to cook 5 minutes. Add\ngrated cheese, bread crumbs and\nseasonings. Stir, until cheese is\nmelted. Add chopped hard-cooked\neggs and mix well. Chill thoroughly. Shape into patties or croquettes\nand roll in bread crumbs. Saute\nuntil brown on both sides. Serve\nwith a tomato sauce. Serves 6.\nCREOLE BAKED EGGS\nSix eggs, salt and pepper to taBte,\n1 tablespoon butter or margarine,' 1\ntablespoon chopped onion, 1 tablespoon chopped green pepper, 1\ntablespoon chopped celery, 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce, 1 cup\ntomatoes, canned or fresh, dash\ncayenne.\nBreak the eggs into a well-buttered baking idsh,. sprinkle with\nsalt and pepper. Saute the onion,\ngreen pepper and celery in butter\nor margarine. Add cayenne, Worcestershire sauce and tomatoes.\nPour over the .eggs and bake ih a\nmoderate oven (350 degrees F.)\nabout 15 minutes, or until the eggs\nare done.\nEGYPTIAN WOMEN\nMAY GET VOTE\nCAIRO, Feb. 27 (AP)-A bill\ngiving women the right to vote\nand to be elected to Parliament\nwas introduced in the Egyptian\nChamber of Deputies Monday\nnight. The measure, Introduced\nby Wafdlst Party Deputy El Had-\nnr-l,- modifies present electoral\nlaws to make them equally applicable to both sexes.\nHalifax Shipping\nStrike Theme\nOf New Play\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 Halifax and the shipping strike of 1949\nis the theme of a new Canadian-\nwritten play introduced to theatregoers tonight by Ottawa Drama\nLeague.\nThe play, \"Argus Banks!', was\nwritten by Montreal-born Graham\nFerguson, now a free-lance writter\nin New York. Jn three acts and\nsomething like two hours it tells the\nhuman side of the strike story and\nthe violence involved.\n\"If we meet violence with violence we end in destruction,\" was\nauthor Ferguson's summary of his\nplay in a recent interview. It is\nthe first he has produced in Canada\nalthough he has met with some\nsuccess in the United States.\n-Mr. Ferguson, who has worked\nwith the Peterborough Summer\nTheatre, received his training in\ndramatics in New York.\nROBSON GROUP\nHANGS PICTURE\nOF ADOPTED W.I.\nROBSON, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 A pic\nture of members of the Huntington,\nEngland, Women's Institute, adopted institute of Robson W.I., was\nhung in the W.I. hall at the organization's monthly meeting.\nThe Kiwanis Shield, won by the\nRobson First Brownie Pack( was\nalso hung.\nReports of all committees were\ngiven. The education committee report was presented by Mrs. R. Waldie and Mrs. S. Humphries, who attended a meeting in the new Castlegar High School at which special\nplans were made for Education\nWeek.\nPlans were made to make another\nquilt, which would be kept on hand\nin case of emergency.\nMr. Thomas, high school principal,\nwill be guest speaker at the Inarch\nmeeting.\nWOMEN NEEDED\nIN EVERY PHASE\nOF CANADIAN LIFE\nTORONTO, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Ontario women serving in public\ncapacities were guests of honor\nlast night at a dinner sponsored\nby five international women's service clubs.\nMrs. Ellen Fairclough, only woman member of the House of\nCommons and one of the guests\nof honor, told the gathering that\nCanadian communities need the\n'energy of women with a purpose.\n\"They need us in every phase of\n' community and home life to train\nour children and to preserve heritage\", said Mrs. Fairclough, Progressive Conservative. Member of\nParliament for Hamilton West. .\nDespite the increasing number\nof welfare tasks being taken over\nby the various levels of Government and by service clubs, women can play an important part\nby giving a personal touchUo such\nwork, she said.\nTbadtecActfL\nby. Sbuuia, Whswkk.\nREAD  THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nHIRAM\nWALKERS\nSPECIAL OLD\nCANADIAN WHISKY\nTHE QUALITY  WHISKY\nAT  A  POPULAR  PRICE\nThe superior quality of\n\"Special Old\" is not\nmerely a byword.\u2014It is a\nHiram Walker traditionl .\njsiiutm, ur  rHfc miaous  (oaauutian t%tu6   WHISKY\njs advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nntrol Board or by ihe Government of British Columbia.\nGAY CROCHET\nYou'll enjoy making this set!\nCrocheted scarf and mat are done\nin a flower design with plain mesh\ncenters. It's fascinating!\nScarf is any length you want,\nmat 12x16,inches. Use heavy cotton. Pattern 713; directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins, (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Nelson\nDaily News, -Needlecraft Department, Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\n, Send Twenty-five cents more (in\ncoins) for Laura Wheeler's Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of patterns\nfor . crochet, embroidery, knitting,\nhousehold accessories, dolls toys . . .\nmany hobby an,d gift ideas. A free\npattern'is printed in the book.\nWAKE DP\nMORNINGS \u2014,x\nLIKE A GAVE MAN\nGet relief from constipation\u2014Indigestion. Positive results from\nFRUIT-A-TJ.VES proven by tens of\nthousands, FRUIT-A-TIVES contain\nextracts of fruits and herbs.\nHis Mother's Hero\nThree-year-old Lewis Qlosson of Atlanta, Ga\u201e hands his mother\na glass of water after the little hero engineered hor revival when\nshe fainted. When Mrs. Glosson became III while washing dishes,\nLewis calmly moved his baby chair to the sink, filled a cup with\nwater, then bathed her face. After she recovered, Lewis summoned\nhelp.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nB.C Flagstaff Towers\nOver Festival Grounds\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Seven\ntons of British Columbia, timber,\nshaped into Britain's largest unsupported flagstaff, were formally\ntransferred today to the sponsors\nof the Festival,of Britain.\nL. Dana Wilgress, Canada's High\nCommissioner in London, ran up\nthe first flag on the 102-foot-high\nstaff, remarking in a speech that\nBritish Columbia has been famous\nfor tall timber since the day Captain Cook, the explorer, remasted\nhis ships off Nootka Sound.\nThe ceremony took place in a\nrestaurant in the Royal Festival\nHall, a square, multi-windowed\nbuilding which is expected to be\none of the main attractions for visitors when  the festival opens in\nMay. The restaurant overlooks a\nwide sweep of the Thames River\nbetween.the Houses of Parliament\nand St. Paul's Cathedral.\nThe flagstaff is a gift of the British Columbia Government to the\npeople of London. It was originally\nintended for the London County\nCouncil, whose flagpole was damaged during the war. An L.C.C.\nspokesman said he believes the\ndonation was made partly because\nthe Council has long encouraf\nthe use of'B.C. wood in Britain.\nOther flagstaffs of B.C. timber\nhere are the 82-foot staff at the\nTower of London and the 215-foot\nstaff in Kew Gardens. The latest\none is said to be the largest unstayed flagstaff in the country.\nAYouthful\nThroatline\nBy IDA JEAN  KAIN\nIn Hollywood an actress must\nnever, never acquire even a suspicion of a double chin or a dowager's hump. So let's look into some\nof their tricks for warding off these\nsigns of age that seem to plague\nthe rest of us.\nNinty-five percent of keeping a\nbeautiful throat is balanced head\ncarriage. Here's the test; the lobe of\nthe ear (the earring spot) should\nbe on a straight, vertical line with\nthe shoulders. The tip of the chin\nshould be level\u2014not tipped up or\ndown, but held level. With that head\ncarriage, a double chin hasn't a\nchance. Nor has a tell-tale hump at\nthe back of the neck,\nFor practice in correcting head\ncarriage, keep pulling,up with the\nline at the back of the neck. Try\nto hold that line almost straight.\nAnd keep shoulders down and easy.\nI like to think of it.as squaring\nthe shoulders in a beautifully relaxed way.\nNow we're ready to tackle a\ndouble chin or a lined throat. What\nit takes is a bit of bracing exercise\nto firm muscles and tissues on the\ninside, arid cream to keep the skin\nsmooth on the outside. Massage the\ncream into the skin upward with\nthe muscle structure. It's a good\nplan to put cream or oil on before\nexecising as this makes the skin\npliable.\nWith throatline exercise, the trick\nis to work the muscles wtihout\nstretching the skin. For this reason\nthe easy exercise of turning the\nhead to look over one shoulder,\nthen tipping the chin up and .down\nfrom that position is foolproof.\nWhen head is turned first, the skin\nis not stretched as point of chin is\ntipped up and down. Repeat four\nto six times alternating sides.\nAnd here's a Bracing exercise\nthat brings in all the neck muscles.\nLying on back on bed, shoulders on\nbed. let head hang over the edge . ..\nthen bring head up to a straight line\nwith the body. Get the feeling of\npushing your head out from your\nneck as you lift. Repeat not more\nthan three times.\nFinish the routine by splashing\ncold water on a thin coating of\ncream . . . most of it can be wiped\noff and still leave the skin soft.\nHigh Wage Boosts\nThreaten Taxes\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014\nVictoria is confronted with wage\ndemands totalling more than $257,-\n000 from its civic employees.\nThis is equivalent to about 5%\nmills. It is exclusive of other increased expenditures such as added\nschool costs, debt charges and superannuation costs.\nIndications are, however, that the\ncity intends to oppose to the limit\nany wage boosts it feels are not justified.\nCity policemen, refused wage increases earlier this year, settled for\nncreaped superannuation benefits,\nfiremen have asked wage boosts\ntotalling $58,800; -the city's inside\nstaff, $45,700; outsiHe staff, $78,000;\nteachers, $70,000 and- electricians,\n$4500.\nEcho Flight of\nSnow Owls Seen\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont.-, (CP)\nSnowy owls, which appear in large\nnumbers at the Lakehead at four-\nyear intervals, are making an \"echo\nflight\" this Winter.\nFew snowy owls have been re\ncorded in the Eastern part of the\ncontinent, but they have been ob\nserved here in large numbers.\nAn echo flight is one following\nan appearance of large numbers of\nbirds, but is of smaller dimensions\nand confined to a smaller area. A\nsimilar echo flight occurred in\nWestern Canada ill 1946-47 following the regular flight'of' 1S4S-46\"\nMore than 40 snowy owls have\nbeen reported by members of the\nNaturalists Club and others at the\nLakehead this Winter. They perch\non high vantage points, telephone\npoles and flagpoles, and remain mo\ntionless for long \"periods.\nThe snowy owl is the only white\nowl without ear tufts. It stands 25\ninches tall, and has a wingspan of\n5lA feet. It hunts by day,' preferably at dawn and twilight, and invariably in the open. Its whistling,\ntremulous call is seldom heard. Its\nplumage is white or greyish, darker\nin females and immature owls.\nThe feathers may be barred, and\nflight is erratic.\nGREY OWLS TOO\nUnusual numbers of great grey\nowls have also been recorded at\nthe Lakehead this \"Winter. This\nowl is normally an inhabitant of\nthe Arctic tundras and forest regions of Northern Canada from\nHudson Bay to Alaska. It invades\nmore Southern latitudes when its\nfood supply, small mammals and\nbirds, runs short.\nThe great grey owl stands 28\ninches tall and has a wingspan of\nfive feet. It sits hawklike, at a slant,\nand puffs ils plumage out to increase its bulk.\nThis owl lives in dense forests\nond wooded mountains and rarely\nhunts in the ooen. Great grey owls\nhave not visited the Lakehead in\nnumbers for 40 years.\nBritish Rainfall\nExceeds Records\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014Britain\nhas had more rain since New Year's\nDay\u2014a total of 7.85 inches^than\nin any other January and February\nsince 1879. That's when the Weather\nBureau started keeping such*rte\nords. Previously the wettest January and February came in 1937-\n7.80 inches of rain.\nPower Workers\nJoin Slrikers\nAUCKLAND, N.Z., Feb. 27 (Reuters)\u2014New Zealand's Industrial crisis worsened today as more than\n1000 electricity workers walked out\nIn support of dock workers who\nwent on strike a week ago.\nArmy convoys poured onto Wellington docks and troops began\nmoving food unloaded by airmen\nfrom two coasters earlier.\nAt Auckland, 80 servicemen began discharging butter from two\nships, while hundreds of Idle stevedores lined the' pavements 'around\nthe dock area. No incidents were\nreported.\nOther groups who came out In\nsupport of the dockmen after the\nintroduction of servicemen were\ncoal miners, railway engineers and\nabattoir workers,\nWellington butchers have only\nenough meat for today, and killings\nwill take place only twice a week\nfor priority needs such as hospitals.\nShortage of flour has led to fears\nof a bread famine.\nNo ordinary road or rail transport\narrived at Wellington piers today.\nNew Zealand dockers have been\non strike for wage increases. The\nGovernment has declared a state of\nemergency. Almost every port in the\ncountry is at a standstill,\nFirst Details of\nDefence Projects\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\ngovernment gave its first details today of the big defence projects construction program being launched\nin Canada, including the building\nof new and improved barrack\nblocks at most sea,- air and army\nIn a statement by the government's crown agency\u2014the Defence\nConstruction Limited\u2014contracts of\nalmost $13,000,000 were announced,\nincluding one for construction at\nWhitehorse, Yukon, on the important Northwest staging route.\nLargest of the contracts\u2014one for\n$1,646,000\u2014went to Bird Construction Ltd., Lethbridge, Alta., for bar\nrack blocks and messes at Camp\nShilo, Man., big artillery and paratroop training centre.\nRADIO STARS FIND\nVIDEO ABSORBING\nBy WAYNE OLIVER\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Jack Benny\nsays radio programs will have to be\ngood from now on to stand up to\ntelevision competition. If they are\ngood they can hold their own a Ions\ntime.\nWhen he was here for his sec\nond television\" show recently the\nHollywood comedian said; \"I don't\nthink people are going to watch\nweek in and week out just because\nthey hove television. I think if they\nhave both'radio and television\u2014and\npractically everyone who has television also has radio\u2014they're going\nto pick and choose.\"\nEnjoying the highest audience\nrating for any individual radio performer, Benny is nevertheless a\ntelevision enthusiast? ' .-\n\"I like it because I'm stage\nstruck,\" he confesses. \"It brings me\nback to the stage\u2014and I got my\nstart in vaudeville.\"\nHAPPY ON TV\nAnother television star is likewise a radio veteran\u2014Fred Allen,\nThe ' nasal-voiced comedian had\nbeen doing'radio in Hollywood for\n6ix years including a 13-week full\nnetwork stint last Summer when he\ncame East in December to start a\nfive-a-week television series for\nCBS. Two weeks later, when\nArthur Godfrey was delayed on a\nflight back from Miami, Allen took\nover that night's \"Talent Scouts\"\nprogram and was a sensation.\nAllen is continuing his own early\nevening TV series and has just done\ntwo more turns as a substitute for\nGodfrey. The \"Talent Scouts\" show\nis claimed by CBS to have the largest broadcast audience of any program on the air. The network figures its total listeners at 22,000,000\nevery week.\nHe is an excellent example of\nhow a veteran star can capture\ntelevision. Both on his own show\nand on Godfrey's Allen has demonstrated his ability and versatility as a cornic. More than that, he\nhas shown a gift for making stars\nout of his guests, including those\nfrom   the   studio   audience.\nModern Romeo Sentenced\nCosta Kephaloyannls (right) sits In the courtroom at Canea,\nCrete, during his trial on charges of forming an armed band to\nkidnap 19-year-old Tassoula Petracogeorl (left). They were married\nlast September, 12 days after'he seized her and carried her off to\nMount Ida. Costa, who was arrested when the couple went to Athens to seek the blessing of the church, has been convicted on a\ncharge of carrying arms without a permit and sentenced to two\nyears In Jail.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\n21sff Prospector Fails lo\nReturn From \"Lost (reek Mine\"\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nThe legend of the -abulous \"Lost\nCreek Mine\" was recalled today\nwhen police search opened for Alfred Gaspard, 60-year-old prospector.\nTwenty persons have died in the\nlast half century in search of the\nmine in the upper reaches of Pitt\nRiver, a mountainous district 45\nmiles North of Vancouver.\nAlfred Gaspard may be the 21st\nvictim. He has not been heard .from\nin seven months. He was flown into\nPitt Lake headquarters in July and\ntwo weeks later a second plane\ndropped him 400 pounds of food\nenough to last a bush-wise prospector about five months.\nProspectors saw him the next two\nor three days in the rugged country\nand then he disappeared.\nIn November, R.C.M.P. officers\nmade an aerial search, but bad\nweather halted the hunt. Today an\nR.C.M.P. constable and a guide\nstarted a ground search.\nFriends said Gaspard had been\nfacinated by the tales of the lost\nmine.\nLegend  has  It that  an   Indian\ndiscovered the mine In 1890, com\nIng out with a fortune of gold to\nNew  Westminster,  B.C.  The   In\ndian, named Slumach, made sev\neral trips to the mine, each time\nreturning with a pack of gold. He\ndied on the gallows In 1892 at New\nWestminster, after confessing the\n. murder of eight women. Each trip\nhe took an Indian woman to the\nmine. None returned and he kept\nthe  location of \"Lost Creek\" secret.\nOne American, who came back\nwith a fearsome tale of hardship and\ndisaster and a packload of $10,000 in\ngold, died a, short time later.\nHe said the creek lost itself in a\nmountain   tunnel,   but he gave no\nother details.\nTwenty other men have hunted fc\nthe lost mine. None returned.\nCYCLONE BATTERS\nNEW CALEDONIA\nNOUMEA, New Caledonia, Feb.\n27 (Reuters)\u2014A cyclone lashing\nthis 260-mile-long French Island\nin the Pacific has caused damage-\nlikely to run Into millions of\nfrancs. All 'communications hav\nbeen Interrupted.\nHEROD ON JOB\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014William\nR. Herod arrived from New York\nby plane today to take over his\npost as coordinator of defence production in the Atlantic-Pact na-\nitons. He told reporters: \"We have\nto increase the per-man output,\nnot only in Britain but in the.United States and all other countries;\nof the pact.\"\nVACUUM PACKING MEANS\nRICHER CAKES'\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nANTI-COMMUNISM OATH\nFOR LAWYERS\nCHICAGO, Feb. 27 fAP) \u2014 Ttie\nHouse of Delegates of the American\nBar Association today ruled that\nall lawyers should take an anti-\nCommunist oath. The policy-making body ratified the loyalty-oath\npolicy adopted last September.\nBuy and  Sell  the  Classified  Way\nDIES AT 103\nBALTIMORE, Feb. 27 \u2022 (AP) \u2014\nMiss Clara Howard, Baltimore's\noldest native resident, died today\nat 103. She could hot read nor write;\nshe had never been out of the city.\n\"Behave yourself,\" was the frail\nlittle Negro woman's formula for\na long life.\nWHEN YOU CANT\nSTOP -COM!\n*\nWhen other cough drops fail,\nGET REAL 3-WAY RELIEF!\n1. Ease dry throat tickle\n2. Sooths Irritated mombranos\n3. Help loosen clinging throat\nsubstances\n\u2022du* ta eotdt, tmoklng\nSTILL'\nOA\/LY i\nSMITH BROTHERS BLACK\nCOUGH\nDROPS\n... is the place for:\nCommercial\nPrinting\nRUBBER STAMPS\nINVITATIONS\nWEDDING INVITATIONS\nBONDS\nFINANCIAL STATEMENTS\nPUBLICITY MATERIAL \u25a0\nBOOKLETS\nPROGRAMMES\nENVELOPES\nLETTERHEADS\nREPORTS\nMENUS   \u2022\nRAFFLE TICKETS\nCATALOGUES\netc.                                             ; -\nJfatatt latig Jfattig\nPHONE 144\n266 Baker St                                 Nelson, B. C.\n\u00bb\n It Pays to Buy Quality\nGolden Pheasant\nBlue Calf Tailored Stripe\nPUMPS\nD'Orsay style, Cuban heels.\nAAAA-AAA-AA and B.\nSizes 5 to 9.\nPrice $13.95\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\n24-Year-Old Singer Taking\nBig \"South Pacific\" Role\nWi\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014Martha Wright had to make the\nkind of decision every girl in show business dreams of having to make\nsome day.\nShe had to decide whether to take over Mary Martin's part in\n\"South Pacific\" or take a lead in \"A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.\"\n\"Oh, It,was terrible,\" Martha says.\nKaslo W. I.\nGives Blankets\nTo Hospital\n' KASLO, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 In celebration of the 54th anniversary of\nthe founding of the Women's Institute movement, a special open house\ntea and bake sale was held here\nat the home of Mrs. H. Carlson.\nDuring a short business meeting,\nthe secretary reported that six woolen blankets received from a woolen\nmill had been donated to Kaslo\nVictorian Hospital.\nA donation was made toward furnishing a room in the new women's\nresidence at University of British\nColumbia.\nMrs. Carlson, secrelaryy, was appointed delegate to the Women's Institute convention in Kinnaird in\nMay.\nMrs. M. McGregor conducted a\nprogram of contests. Mrs. R. N. W.\nShillington gave an amusing monologue and Mrs. J. Tonkin read a\nshort story written by a Kaslo girl.\nMrs. Page also gave a reading entitled \"A Green- Girl Goes\nHarvesting.\"\n\"For three days and nights 1 could\nnot sleep. I almost had ulcers.\"\nOf course when, she made her\ndecision it was \"South Pacific.\" How\ncould a girl only a few years out\nof Duvall, Wash., turn down what\nshe herself calls \"the most wonderful part in the world\"?\nSo along-about June 1, when Mary\nMartin leaves \"South Pacific\" 24-\nyear-old Martha will take over the\njob. |   ,\nMartha now sings nightly, at the\nMayflower Hotel here. At the end\nof her three-week engagement she\nwill knock off work except for a\nfew\/ television appearances and get\nready for \"South Pacific.\"\nLEARNED FROM GRANNY\nThe girl from Duvall got her start\nfrom her grandmother, now 77, who\ntaught Martha music.\nMartha's first professional job\nwas in Seattle as a radio singer.\nWhen \"Up in Central Park\" played\nSeattle in 1947 she tried out for\nchorus, made the grade and moved\nout of town with the show.\nCentral Park\" played Washing\nton, but Martha went unnoticed in\nthe chorus. Which shows you how\nfast things can happen in show business. This time she was invited to\nbe a luncheon guest of the Washington Stale Congressional Delegation\nMartha's first big break came\nwhen she was hired as understudy\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 Smaller hospi\ntals throughout Nova Scotia always\nseem short of nurses and it's a\n\"chronic condition.\" said Miss Mai\ntie Miller, President of the Register\ned Nurses Association for Nova Scotia. She said \"Nurses think there is\nnot enough room for advancement\nin the smaller hospital.\"\nllllllllljllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nHandy\nCooking\nAid\nfor \"Music in My Heart,\" which had\nsongs based on music by Tschaikov-\nsky.\nBIG CHANCE\nShortly before the show moved\ninto New York the leading lady was\nlet out, and Martha was giyen the\nrole. She sang it only five times\nbefore \"Music in My Heart\" moved\nonto Broadway. This was no smash\nhit, nor was Martha's next show,\n\"Great To Be Alive.\"\nBut there were radio and television shows\u2014\"Looking back, I do\nnot know quite how I managed,\nIt was just fate, I guess. Anyway,\n5 didn't have to go to work in\nMacy's basement.\"\nMore.recently she's been singing\nin hotels and night clubs. She says\nthis is excellent experience.\n\"It's tough,\" she says. Just before\ntime to go on here oomes a big\ncrowd and sits down\" to eat. They\ndon't pay any attention to you. All\nthey want to do is eat and drink.\nTrying_ to get them interested and\nwatching your show is real tough.\"\nMartha gives the customers a little\nof everything \u2014 comedy, special\nstuff and even opera.\n\"In Montreal,\" -she says, \"They\nwere simply crazy about my opera.\"\nMartha is five feet five inches\ntall, weight about 118 pounds, hair\nsomething between blonde and red,\nand right now starry-eyed.\nNelson\nSocial.\nFood and Drug Act Topic\nOf New Denver P-TA Talk|K,mber,ey\nWedding Has\nAlberta Interest\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB, 28, 1951 \u2014 5\n. PHONE 144\n\u2022 Miss Lorraine Burton and\nMrs. L, R. Burton were co-hostesses\nat a miscellaneous shower in Kokanee Lodge for Miss Laura Livingstone, whose marriage to Robert\nCoventry is a March 7 event. The\nbride to be entered the room to\nthe wedding march played by Mrs.\nE. B. Harlan. Covers were laid for\n16, and the centre of attraction was\na mock wedding cake embedded\nin an heirloom wedding veil.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Terry and Mrs. J. G.\nMurray, Elwyn Street, have returned from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho,\nwhere they attended the Gaudal-\nTerry wedding Saturday.\n\u2022 T. S. Shorthouse is confined\nto his home by illness.\nNEW DENVER, B.C.. Feb. 27 \u2014\nMiss Ruby Dunn, public health\nnurse, spoke, on \"The Food and\nDrug Ate\" at the New Denver Parent-Teacher Association's meeting\nin the new high school.\nA film entitled \"What's Under the\nLabel,\" shpwn by F. B. Tessman,\naccompanied her talk.\nMrs. M. K. Nicholson was appointed P.-T.A. delegate to the community award meeting March 15.\nA discussion took place on the\nlibrary, and it was decided to have\nthe school open Tuesday from 3 to\n4 p.m., with the teachers in charge\nand Fridays from 7 to 8 p.m. with\nmembers of the P.-T.A. in charge,\nfor anyone wanting books. Mrs.\nHarry Butler, Mrs. P. J. McCrory\nand Mrs. J. H. McDonaugh volunteered.\nMembers also decided to buy SO\ncups and saucers for the high school\nauditorium.\nAnother series of vanishing teas\nare to be started in April, with\nMrs. Quentin A. Forsythe as convener. Mr. Tessman announced open\nhouse in the high school March 9\nand a Junior Red Cross bazaar and\ntea in the elementary school on the\nsame date.\nAttendance prize for the month\nwas won by C. Tuck's room.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rateB on-\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 The\nformer Marion Stabback of Chap\nman Camp and Calgary became the\nwife of Laurice Patayn of Kimberley in 'a quiet ceremony at the\nUnited* Church Manse here, with\nRev. G. A. Affleck officiating.\nThe bride wore a grey suit with\nwine accessories, and was attended\nby Mrs. Margaret Prus of Chapman\nCamp and Taber, Alta., who wore\na cherry red suit with red accessories.\nA reception for immediate friends\nwas held at the Oasis and the couple\nleft by car for Banff and Calgary.\nThey will  make 'their home\nKimberley.\nELECTROLUX SALES \u25a0 SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR 653\nNew coals, dresses and skirts for\nSpring. THE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nMakeup King Predicts Return\nOf Moustache to Popularity\nNow Vitamin D increased,\ncreamy-smooth Pacific Milk\nodds extra nourishment to\nfavorite recipes. Its uniform\ngoodness makes it ideal for\nbaking, cooking or beverages. And Pacific whips\neasily for party meals.\nPacific Milk\n\"Vacuum  Packed and\nHomogenized\"\n4IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD. Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014\nThe return of the moustache to\npopularity was predicted today by\nMakeup King Max Factor, Jr.\n\"The moustache is bound to in-\nrrease in public esteem,\" observed\nFactor, \"because it can't get any\nlower. Take a look at some of the\nfilm stars who have shaved theirs\noff\u2014Tyrone Power, Robert Taylor.\nErrol Flynn.\n\"Movie .stars lead the. fashions\nbut they also follow. And when\nthe public says it doesn't like moustaches, they are shaved off.\"\nBut factor, an expert on male\nas well as female beauty, feels a\nreaction setting in. He attributes\nthis to United States' mobilization.\nREMEMBER THE WAR\n\"Remember the moustache crop\nin 1943 and 10447\" he cited. \"Men\ngot away from their mothers and\nwives and sweethearts and fulfilled\nlong-held desires to grow moustaches. But nearly all of the men\nwere forced by the women to shave\nthem off on the return from the\nwars.\"\n\"Soldiers in today's army will\nhave even more motive for growing\nthem. Most of them are boys in\ntheir teens or early 20s. Like all\nboys, they want to look older..\"\nMoustaches need as much care\nand thought as a garden hedge,\nFactor said. For those with ambitions of growing one (a moustache\nnot a hedge), he offered these words\nof aavice:\nDon't try to gfow a Ronald Col-\nman moustache on an Oliver Hardy\nface. In fact, don't grow anything\non an Oliver Hardy face. It would\nonly do what it does for Hardy-\nget laughs.\nThe Ronald Colman moustache,\nclipped but not too military, offers\nthe best model for the average face.\nCranbrook\nNewlyweds\nGo to Island\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Feb. 27-Of\ninterest here was a quiet ceremony\nperformed in the minister's study of\nthe United Church when Rev. W. H.\nMcDannold united in marriage\nPhyllis May, daughter of Mr.. and\nMrs. John Clark of Remville, Manitoba and George Owen Webster,\n6on of Mrs. Webster of Cranbrook\nand the late George Webster.\nThe bride wore gray .tailored gabardine suit and corsage of red roses\nMrs. Hilton Webster as matron of\nhonor wore a brown suit. Mr.\nCharles Rosevear was groomsman.\nA reception was held at the home\nof the'groom's mother.\nOn their return from a wedding\ntrip to Vancouver Island the couple will ftiake their home in Cranbrook.\nHot buttered popcorn at WAIT'S\nany hour of the day.\nBoswell\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nBOSWELL, B.C.\u2014Miss Blanche\nBoyd of . Creston was visiting her\naunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nScliaub.   ,\nMiss Barbara Bainbrldge was\nhome from Nelson to visit her par-\nelns, Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bainbridge.\nA party of Teen-Agers from Boswell attended the dance sponsored\nby the Students' Council Saturday\nnight at Crawford Bay.\nWANTED - CLEAN   COTTON\nRAGS 12c PER LB.\n' NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCome in and see our large supply\nof steel sinks. All sizes.\nMc & Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nEnough insurance in sound companies  is  sound  business.  \u2014  See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY\nIF YOU WANT SMARTER SHOES\nFOR NATURAL WALKING, BUY\nNATURAL-BRIDGE SHOES AT\nFINK'S. \u2014 $15.00 PAIR.\nWHITE  FLANNELETTE   NOW  IN\nSTOCK.  27\"  AND  36\".\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\n436 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C.\nWindolite, $1.65 per square yard.\nGlass-O-Net, 85c per square yard.\nThese glass substitutes are ideal for\nhot - beds, cold frames, poultry\nhouses, barns, etc.   HIPPERSON'S.\nIf ' BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow it away. Prompt service on\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nSKATES\nSharpened, Riveted  and Repaired\nSAM BROWN, Repairs, Nelson, B.C.\nCHIROPODIST\u2014FOOT SPECIALIST, R. Bourchier, D.S.C., 1178 Bay\nAvenue, TraiL Phone Trail 1750.\nMoyie\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nButcherteria\nWynndel...\nWYNNDEL, B.C., \u2014 R. Dalbom,\nwho has been visiting relatives at\nVancouver for the past month has\nreturned home.\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. Abbot have left\nfor a motnhs visit to their sori-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nSmith at Vancouver, and other\nfriends at the coast.\nMrs. Roth and baby son of Calgary arrived last week to visit Mrs.\nRoth's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nJensen.\nF. Kirlzinger who has been employed at Cranbrook, has returned\nhome.\nMrs. J. Fehr and son are visiting\nat Nelson.\nPHONE 627\nMOYIE, B.C., \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Williams have returned from\nSpokane where Mr. Williams received treatment on his foot,\nMrs. H. Pearson who suffered a\nparalytic stroke three years ago, is\nimproving, and for the last few\nweeks has been able to walk around\nwith little assistance.\nMrs. J. Chernoff is a patient at\nSt. Eugene Hospital, Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Williams and\nlittle granddaughters, motored to\nKimberley, and visited their son,\nMr. and Mrs. L. Williams.\nGeorge Hogarth spent the weekend in Cranbrook, visiting his\ngrandmother Mrs. N. Hogarth.\nAndrew Anderson is confined to\nSt. Eugene Hospital at Cranbrook.\nPhil Conrad has returned home\nfrom the Stella Mine where he was\ntimber foreman.\nREAD  THE   CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBe Bright \/\nLister...\nStriped flannelette in a pleasing\nassortment ot colors. Also white.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFor stove and furnace work,\nphone Pounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 1541-L.\n'Wonderglow', the luminous paint\nof many uses\u201460c per bottle.\nBURNS   LUMBER  COMPANY\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.    .\nRESERVATIONS\nWohelo Spring Fashion Show. \u2014\nMake reservations now. Phone 377,\nPatients In the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 144, Circulation Dept,, Dally\nNews.\n20%.\u2022\nDown Payment\nPUTS ANY ARTICLE\nIN YOUR HOME\n\"The House of Furniture Values*\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115-NELSON\nPH. 1020-R FOR RESERVATIONS\nfor    Sizzling    Steak    Supreme\nand    melt-in-your-mouth    Biscuits\nstraight from the ovenl\nGERIGH'S LODGE\nTrail Couple\nWed in Trinity\nTrail will be the home of the\nformer Elizabeth Margaret Kissell\nand James Christian Vipond, who\nwere wed in candlelit Trinity\nUnited Church Saturday by Rev.\nA R. T. Dixon.\nGiven in marriage by Mr. L. M.\nQuance, the bride chose an olive\ngreen suit with a French crepe\nblouse. A halo hat of coq feathers,\nand beige accessories complimented her suit, and her flowers were\nviolets. Mr. J. Watson was best\nman.\nAt a reception in Hume Hotel,\nthe bride's table was centred with\na two-tiered wedding cake embedded in pink tulle and sweetheart roses.\nSlocan City\nSocial a Success\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014A\nsocial sponsored by the Slocan City\nbranch of the Canadian Legion was\na decided success here.\nCards and other games were played, and there was dancing. Supper\nwas served by members of the\nLadies' Auxiliary.\nIN MEMORIAM\ndear\nwho\nIn, loving memory of- a\nmother, Margaret E. Spence,\npassed away Feb. 28, 1946.\nEver remembered by daughter\nHazel, and Clarence and family of\nBath, Ont.\nCARD OF THANKS\nI wish lo take this opportunity\nlo express my appreciation to the\nCitizens of Nelson for the wonderful support given my son Eric and\nhis rink, and for the hospitality\nshown me during the School Bonspiel.\nMr. Wilfred Bisgrove,\nKimberley, B.C.\n' Just received! The latest in Wes-\ntinghouse refrigerators. 7 cubic foot\nfor only $345.00. See it today at\nHIPPERSON'S.\nMake his pipe dreams come true\non his birthday with a new Briar\npipe and his. favorite tobacco, or\ncigarettes. \u2014 VALENTINE'S.\nPreview of Art Exhibition for\nArt Club members,- associates and\nartists, Thursday, 8 p.m., W.I. Room,\nCivic Centre. '\/\nBenefit from\na DELICIOUS\nKeep-Fit \"Cereal!\nLISTER, B.C. \u2014 Albert Worknitz\nof Kimberley wasa visitor at his\nhome in Lister.\nMiss_Dawn Huscroft left for Toronto where she will take,a business course.\nMrs. W. J. Skerik spent the week\nend in Creston visiting her son and\ndaughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Wes-\nby Skerik.\nMrs. Charles Huscroft returned\nafter spending the past month at\ncoast points.\nMrs. Alvin Gorrill and children of\nWardner are visiting the formers\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Gorrill.\nMiss Isabel Millner returned to\nher duties at the Jubilee Hospital\nin Victoria, after visiting her parents\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Millner and\nfamily,\nlovely De.lighffu,\n\u00ab\"P milk\n\"P Post', \u00bb,\u201e\u201e\u201e,,,, 3\/4t,\";P\u00b0<\"> salt\n'   \u2022B\u00ab,*sllfc,if,n\n\u2022>   loWnipooti,\n\"\"\u2022lied bulier\no r> \"' \u00b0'l\"r \u25a0'\"'rteniiiii\n\"\u00bb\u2022\u25a0 Sift fl0urP *\u2122y \u2122\u00ab\u25a0 P\"\u00bb\u00ab to bran mix.\npwd\u00ab.\u00b0altandsl ' TT' add baki\u201eg\n\u25a0\u00bb><) butter to bran, miv, f \"gaia A*i \u00abSB\n*\u25a0\u00bb'\u25a0 \"eating ZgZZuTj? \u2122 ** A%\n\u00bb --notes. UeVlT\n'    \u00abn>.ttt\u00abm0UI.\nm '\u2022\"\u25a0\u2022Poons fcoklno\npowder\nBake in ceased\n<4\u00ab\u00b0F.) 25 to\n*Fk*. date.\n!* \"' raisin\u00bb may replai\n[M prunes.\n\"Post's mnrntes\nB.n WITH OTHER PARTS OF WHEAT\n\u2022 Banish that logy\nfeeling often due to\n\"irregularity\". Be\nsure to include enough\nbulk foods in what\nyou eat. Appetizing\nPost's Bran Flakes\nprovide the bulk you\nneed ... make breakfast more enjoyable;\nEat Post's Bran\nFlakes regularly \u2014\nthe \"keep-fit\" cereal\nthat's GOOD TO\nEAT.\nRegulates\nNature's Way\nPost's Bran Flakes provide the natural roughage you need to help keep food wastes moving\npromptly.\nYou also benefit from wholesome wheat\nnourishment \u2014 Post's Bran Flakes are made\nwith other parts of wheat.\nAdd to your breakfast enjoyment . by\nserving Post's Bran Flakes every morning.\nMany other delicious ways to serve them. Try\nthis recipe. It's a winner. Insist-on Post's \u2014\nthe better Bran Flakes.\nA Product of General Foods\nReg. Gen. Meeting Nelson Legion\ntomorrow (Thurs.) evening at 8:00\nsharp. Members please make every\neffort to attend.\nOne 6-pce. Walnut Dinette Suite,\nSpecial, $94.50.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture and antiques.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1660 413 HALL ST.\nBoswell Social\nAttracts Crowd\nBOSWELL, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014A social evening in memorial hall here\nattracted a large number of Boswell\nand District people.\nA variety of games were played\nand later there was dancing.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nWatch lor Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET\u2014Phone 832\nWYNNDEL W.I.\nMAKES DONATIONS\nWYNNDEL, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014Donations totalling $6 were made by\nWynndel Women's Institute at its\nmeeting in the cooperative building.\nCommittee reports were given,\nand Mrs. Packham was appointed\nsick visiting convener.\nIt was announced that the birthday of the group will be celebrated\nat the next meeting March 29. A\nsuggestion was made that each\nmember bring a gift suitable for\nparcels'for England.\nThe representative on the Creston\nHealth Committee reported on the\npossiiblity of having a mobile dentist attached to the publia health\nunit.\nEdgewood ..,\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\u2014J. Languille\nhas been a patient in Arrow Lakes\nHospital, Nakusp, for the past three\nweeks. Mr. Languille is reported\nmuch improved.\nMr. and Mrs. H. P. Coates will\nleave shortly to spend a few days\nin Trail. \/\nThe Edgewood Church Helpers\nheld their annual tea and sale of\nwork in the Auxiliary Club room\nFeb. 24. Mrs. Vrooman won the\nlinen tea cloth. After the sale of\nwork was completed the crowd\nsat down to well appointed tea\ntables and enjoyed a~ social hour,\nWynndel Whist Held\n- WYNNDEL, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 A\ncourt whist party was held in the\nschool house under the sponsorship\nof Community Club. High score\nprize went to Mrs. Lowdan and\nFrank Merriam and consolation\nprizes were taken by Mr. Vegan\nand Mr. Hess,\nRossland Circles\nDefer Meetings\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 St;\nFrancis Circle of Sacred Heart\nChurch, meeting at the home of\nMrs. C. Maletta, continued its study\nfrom the book \"O Really\".\nSt. Anne's Circle met at the home\nof Mrs. Harold Shannon, with the\nhostess' molher, Mrs. E. Litster of\nVictoria, as a guest. An article from\n\"The Canadian League Magazine\"\nwas read, andv tickets for the St.\nPatrick's Day tea were distributed.\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. O. Patenaud*\nPHONE 293        NEL30N, B.C.\nLOVELY HATS\nIn\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nI\n\u25a0\nI\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\nI\nROBSON, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014Further j \u25a0\nplans for an April Fools' tea and [ |\nbake sale were made by members'! a\nof the Robson- Evening Group meet- i * _\ning at the home of Mrs. Gordon\nHett.\n\u25a0 More materials were handed out\nby Mrs. Grant for making into finished articles for the bazaar.\nRobson Group Plans\nApril Fools' Tea\nHere's An Easy,\nPleasant Way To Help\nPREVENT\nCOLDS\nAt the\nfirst symptoms\nRelax in a\nSoothing\nHOT MUSTARD.BATH\nMix 2 or 3 tablespoons of\nmustard in a little cold water\nand pour into hot bath. After\nbathing, give yourself s brisk'\nrub-down ... then off tb bed\nfor a' good night's rest. Your\nmuscles will relax with relief I\nColmans\nMUSTARD\nCK273\nSirdar\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014Mrs. Alf Hornseth\nis guest of Mrs. Edna Hornseth and\nArlene, en route for her home in\nVancouver.\nBob Wagner C.P.R. operator has\nbeen transferred to Midway B.C.\nMrs. E. Martin of Creston was a\nvisitor to Mr. and Mrs. R. Heap.\nMrs. Sandberg has left for Kaslo,\nwhere she will take up employment.\nMrs. Oscar Ofner is visiting\nfriends at Kaslo' for a few days.\nKaslo\nKASLO, B. C, \u2014 Miss Sonja Augustine of Nelson visited her parents\nMr. and Mrs. Axel Augustine,\nMiss Louise Surina of Nelson was\nguest of her great grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Mikulosic, and her aunt,\nMrs. Annie Bendis at Shutty\nBench.\nMr. and Mrs, A. W. Riley of\nShutty Bench entertained about 24\nguests on Saturday, honoring their\ndaughter Leona who was eighteen\non Feb. 14. Games and dancing\nformed the program. Dainty\nfreshments were served when Miss\nLeona was presented with many\nuseful gifts. |\nBACON AND EGG PIE\nEasy baking, good eating!\n\u00bb Vi package Monarch Pie Crust-Mix\n6 eggs\n' 6 slices rindless bacon or;\n2 slices cooked ham        \u25a0!-'..-\nSalt and Pepper\nFresh tomato, sliced\nSet oven temperature at hot, 425\u00b0. Line pie pan with pastry\nmade from \\i package MONARCH Pie Crust Mix. Break\nin 6 eggs, season to taste with salt and pepper. Cover eggs\nwith bacon or ham, and tomato slices. Slit pastry to allow\nsteam to escape. Place over pie, sealing the edges. Bake\n30 minutes at 425\u00b0.\nServe hot with hot oMi Bauce as a luncheon dish, or cold for\na lunch box treat.\nUNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED BY THE MILKERS OF MONARCH  FiOUR\nRossland\nROSLAND, B.C.,\u2014Friends of Mrs.\nSam Irvin suprised here at her\nhome on the afternoon of her birthday with a tea in her honor, with\nMrs. Gerry Long and Miss Nancy\nPlotnikoff as hostesses. Mrs. Irvin\nreceived several gifts to mark the\noccasion, including a bouquet from\nMrs. David Morse at Anchorage,\nAlaska.      v '\nmm ii i\niiiiiii i=\nfills i\nilfli\n!!!!!\nIllll\nPIE   CRUST   MIX\n'\u25a0.\u25a0.\n-*-\n ifatemt &tUg iNVlliB    Random Corner\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBrifish Columbia's\n'  Most interesting Newspaper\nI Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNews publishing company, limited,\nI 266 Baker Street, Nelsom British  Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost  Office   Department,  Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1951\nEnd Isolation for\nArrow Lakes Settlers\nDramatic emphasis to the need of\ntheir community was contained in the\nexperiences of a three-man delegation\nreturning to, Deer Park from the semiannual session of the Kootenay-Boun-\n.dary Central Farmers' Institute. At\nthe meeting' they had successfully won\nthe support of the Central Institute in\nthe bid of their Arrow Lakes section\nfor a Deer Park to Syringa Creek road\nor trail. Returning to their ranch\nhome's in an open boat, they came near\nlosing their lives from a storm and the\ncold.\n\"... the spray from the waves\nI turned to ice as soon as they struck\n| us. Our clothes were frozen so hard\nthat we had great difficulty in walk-\nLing after we landed ...\" they (Patrick\n|.; Romaine,  Roy  Coleman  and  A.  A.\nPhelps) wrote to Central Institute Secretary Kenneth Wallace of Boswell.\nImagine the plight of a sick or injured\nperson under such conditions should\nnecessity decree he be brought  out\nfrom the isolated-ranching area for\nmedical attention. One such injured\n,vman could not be moved to^ hospital for\nthree  days  because  of  Winter  lake\nconditions.\nThe communities and Deer Park\n| and Broadwater, and across the lake,\nRenata, have been long established.\nThey make important contributions to\nthe fruit'and egg production of the\nWest Kootenay; in the area exists one\nof the District's few sizeable sheep\nranches. Their need for an additional\nlink wilh main travel arteries to end\ntheir isolation and improve economic\nconditions is a real one. Certainly their\nrequest for an emergency trail, if not\na road, to cover the four miles barring\nthem from access to the Southern\nTrans-Provincial Highway, is not unreasonable.\nBy GRETCHEN GIBSON\nThis is the delectable season when it Is\nsaid we have two Summers and one Winter\nahead of us. Pleasant thought, that,\u2014even\nthough in six months the reverse will be tr(ue.\nAfter all, in spite of the cold snap of six weeks\nback and the present show and ice, or slush\n(depending on the thermometer), it has not\nbeen a bad Winter this year; and although we\nmay envy our friends who roam the Southern\nlanes, there is something in the hardships of\nWinter faced and-grappled with that gives us\na certain equal-to-the-occaslon satisfaction.\nThere are'times when the month of February presents much the same aspect as November\u2014the same dismal days, the same\ndreariness of landscape, skeleton trees and\nleafless shrubbery against drab evergreens;\nand yet how diversely these two months affect\nus! It makes such a difference towards what\nwe face! In November we face Winter, in February, Spring. Almost subconsciously February brings us an uplift of spirit. Although we\nmoan that we have had enough of Winter\n(and goodness knows we have!), while snows\ncontinue to fall and winds to swish \/through\nour blocked highways, and we continue to\nbreak, our hips and artkles as we make our\nslippery ways hither and thither\u2014yet in spite\nof all that the days are lengthening, the first\nrobin has been reported, the first snowdrop\ndiscovered, and we know Time must presently\nreach Spring in its inevitable March . . . (No\npun intended.)\nFebruary has brought us some beautiful\neffects \u2014 snow-laden trees \u2014 a crystallized\nworld \u2014 Kokanee, a monarch \"clothed in\nwhite samite, mystic, wonderful\".... A week\nor so ago newspapers stated that in certain\nsections of the country the planets Venus and\nMars in conjunction had been mistaken for a\nflying saucer. Early one clear evening, about\nthat time, we here, looking above the C.P.R.\nstation, could see these two planets, with the\nnew moon slanting over them. They did not\nappear as a saucer, but as twin planets, one\nslightly rudy, the other dazzling white. It was\na vision of promise in the evening sky\u2014Venus,\nthe Goddess of Love, and Mars, God of War,\nmaking together this stellar appearance with\nearth's own satellite, the moon. February gave\nus this tableau, which we will not see again\nfor a long time. We .would of course pooh-\npooh the thought, but how cheering its \"significance might be!\nExperiment to Better\nChildren's Teeth\nThe Windsor Board of Health is\nundertaking an experiment by arranging to have 200 school pupils receive\nsodium fluoride treatment to their\nteeth. There is much support for the\ntheory fluoride is effective in prevention of tooth decay, effecting a 40 per\ncent reduction\" in test cases in the\nUnited' States.\nIf it is found effective, there will be\n(or should be) an irresistible demand\nthat all children have their teeth so\ntreated. It is a fact defective teeth contribute to many physical ailments.\nBefore the war, the teeth of Nelson\nDistrict school pupils were described\nas having \"more holes than Kootenay\nroads\". The public program since'has\n., had some success in improving Kootenay roads; just what success any teeth-\nimproving program that may have\nbeen undertaken has had has never\nbeen announced. At' any rate, the\nWindsor experiment can probably be\nwatched with profit.\nLook Ndi*th\nTravel North and South across the border\nhas been growing by leaps and bounds, and\nbids fair to expand further as employment\nand buying power rise.\nJohn A. Kennedy, Manager of the British\nColumbia Pacific Great Eastern Railway, is\nspending a few days seeing Seattle\u2014seeing\nthe city where most of his tourist trade comes\nfrom.\nHe says Seattle people know more about\ntheir 347-mile P.G.E. Railroad than the people\nof Vancouver;'more of them travel it to see\nthe scenic wonderland which the road penetrates.\nImprovement of the Oroville-Wenatchee\nHighway is another step encouraging greater\nNorth-South traffic, and the same applies to\nthe Stevens Pass Highway.\nAll of our tourist trade is important to\nus, but these British Columbia folks are our\nfriends and neighbors. The more we see of\nthem the belter, both here and up there. So\nif you haven't been up thai \\yay and are uncertain where lo spend next Summer's vacation, look Northward.\u2014Wenatchee World,\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be' published.\nThere Is no oharge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy. ,\nHousewife, Creston\u2014What Is a simple way to\nclean and polish aluminum?\nAluminum articles can be cleaned with\nsteel wool, or a very dilute solution of potash,\nwhen the surface will assume a bright appearance. Wash well with warm water afterwards and dry with a warm cloth. >\nMrs. K., Nelson\u2014My linoleum is a poor color.\nCan you tell me how to get it bright?\nWash with a mixture of equal parts of\nmilk and water, wipe dry, then rub in the\nfollowing mixture by means of a cloth rag;\nYellow wax, five parts; turpentine oil, 11\nparts; varnish, five parts. As a glazing agent\na solution of a little yellow wax in turpentine\noil is recommended.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014Is it true that the Department of National Health and Welfare conducts   investigations  into  the   purity   of\nvarious brands of cosmetics?\nThe Department of National Health and\nWelfare,  in  collaboration  with   the   United\nStates Food and prug Administration, carries\nout investigations into contents of cosmetics,\nincluding lipsticks, hair tints And dyes, skin\nlotions, colorings and depilatories.\nSportsmen, Kimberley\u2014To settle an argument,\ncan you tell us where Charles (Chuck)\nConacher was born? f.\nToronto, Ont, Oct. 10, 1909.\nReader,  Nelson\u2014Why   are   model   elephants\nconsidered lucky?\nThe superstition pomes mostly from India. Hindus wear mascots shaped as elephants,\nbelieving that by doing so they will gain wisdom and foresight as well as ensuring for\nthemselves that all obstacles are removed\nfrom their path.\nPrayers in Support of U.N. Bullets\nLooking, Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Feb.\u00ab?, 1941\nNelson's City water works program is\nnearing completion, City Council was told\nTuesday night by H D. Dawson, City Engineer. Approximately '$3000 must be provided\nout of revenue this year to completely finance\nCity water distribution improvements. The\nbylaw provided $40,000 for the program, but\nan additional $3000 is still required to' complete Ihe job.\nJ. A. Turner of the Imperial Bank staff\nhas left for Hepburn, Sask., where he has been\ntransferred to a new post.\nHold Three Canadians on\nCustoms' Evasion Charge\nBELLINGHAM, Wash'., Feb. 21\n(AP)\u2014Three Canadians with an\nunnamed and undocumented $10,000\ncabin cruiser are in custody of the\nU.S. Customs here for entered the\nport of Bellingham, buying and\nloading merchandise and attempting\nto leave without declaration to the\nCustoms office. -\nA fourth man with an automobile\nknown to be in on the deal also is\nin custody, and boat and car are under seizure. .\nThe Canadians are Robert A.\nBrooks, 30, New Westminster, B.C.,\nowner-.of the boat; Roy A. Bertram,\n41, Gibsons, B.C.; and Kenneth Es-\ntensen, 20, South Westminster, B.C.\nThe fourth man under arrest, owner of the car, a 1947 sedan valued at\n$1500, is Christopher C. Orcharde\nVancouver, B.C.\nThe men were taken into custody\nlate Saturday at the Bellingham\nEngine & Equipment Company's\ndoct by Deputy Collector ot Customs Thomas E. Murphy, who found\nCargo p,U\u00a3chased from the company\naboar'Yb-,\nBrjp'U.S. .Commissioner T. B.\nAstaMt fn. the four men were\nplai J 'A' er $250 each on Criminal\ncUr? j barges preferred against\ntheifttoy A. S. Atheron ot the U.S.\nCustoms Service, Seattle.\nThey were given until 4:30 p.m.\ntoday to furnish bond. Several civil customs charges also were preferred.\nImmigration charges will be\nbrought against them by Howard M.v\nCatoh, immigration officer here,\nwho will take them into custody\nin the event bail is furnished on the\ncustoms charges.\nFervent believers In the power of prayer, these South Koreans\nkneel In the snow of a bleak Korean Winter near Taegu and pray\nfor the success of United Nations forces. They are members of a\nCatholic choral group which fled Seoul when the Communists swept\ndown from the North.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nUranium, Base Metals, Gold CSiiaf\nSubjects at Prospectors' Meefin\nIntended Victim\nGems of Thouf lit\nCONFIDENCE\nLet none falter who thinks he is right.\n\u2014Lincoln.\n* # *\nGo not into the way of the unchristly, but\nwheresoever you recognize a clear expression\nof God's likeness, there abide in confidence\nand hope.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* * *\nSociety is built upon trust, and trust upon\nconfidence in one another's integrity.\u2014South.\n* * *\n' I do not ask whore I am going, I do not\nknow, but I have complete confidence In Him,\nin His power, His wisdom, His love. Therein\nis a power that gives serenity and peace.\n\u2014Bishop William Lawrence.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Feb. 27, 1926\nJ. E. Annable, Chairman of the Industrial\nCommittee of the Nelson Board of Trade, told\nthe Board of the possibility of starting a Cottonwood veneer plant and industry in Nelson. -\nAllowing $05,000 for the mill and $30,000 for\nthe working, capital, a capital of $100,000 at\nthe lowest would be required. He. suggested\nthat financing mjght be retained wholly within. Nelson by g'etting local subscriptions to\nthe amount of $50,000;\nPRESIDENT ELPIDIO QUIRINO\nReliable sources In Manila, P.I.,\nhave reported that a group of\nChinese \"triggermen\" have been\narrested In a Communist plot to\nassassinate President Elpldlo Qui-\nrino. and other Government officials. The plot was said to have\nbeen directed by Co Pak, a Chinese millionaire business man\nnow being held for deportation\non charges of being a Communist\nand aiding Communist-led Hbk-\nbalahap peasants fighting Philippine Island troops.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nRough Ride tor\n(oast Charter\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014City\nofficials in Vancouver expect the\ncity's proposed new charter will\nreceive a rough ride before the private bills committee of the Provincial Legislature.\n\u2022The Canadian Manufacturers' Association has advised the' city its\nrepresentatives will appear before\nthe Legislative Committee to demand-that the entire bill be \"hoisted\" for one year.\nThe C.M.A. is supported b\" the\n\"Municipal Conference\", a grojp of\norganizations representing almost\nall tax paying properties in the city.\nIncluded in tlje group which will\noppose the proposed charter are the\nVancouver Board of Trade, Retail\nMerchants' Association, Associated\nProperty Owners' Association,\nDownlown Business Association,\nand the Vancouver Real Estate\nBoard.\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nSpeeding up of production of\nstrategic metals and minerals will\nbe a major concern at a joint gathering in Toronto March 4-7 of the\nProspectors and Developers Association and the Geological Association of Canada.\nUranium, iron, oil, asbestos, base\nmetals and gold will be principal\nsubjects of discussion. There will\nbo a \"special message to prospectors of war metals\" from F. V. C\nHewett, recently-appointed director of non-ferrous metals, Ottawa,\nwhile   George   Prudham,   Federal, wealth.\nMinister of Mines, will speak on\n\"the Federal Government ond the\nmining industry.\"\nStill on the subject of mining,\nthe Ontario Mining Association\" has\nissued a well-illustrated 48-page\nbaaklel called \"The Tools Dur\nMiners Use.\" One of its objects 13\nto show how production, markets\nand the people employed in many\ndifferent industries depend on one\nanother's progress. It Is a successor\nto previous publications, \"Tha\nMiner at Home\" and \"The Miner\nat Work\" and it outlines a half-\ncentury's improvements in technique-?     in     recovering     mineral\nTerse Reply on\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (CP). \u2014 Hugh\nGaitskell, chancellor of the exchequer, gave a two-word ahswer\ntoday.: when asked what additional\nson? would be paid to Canada under! to\"bV\"\\stroVg jn\"canada\"\"but\"these\nPagan Seedbed\nTORONTO, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 A\nspokesman for the United Church of\nCanada said today North America\nhas an unhealthy pride which creates \"the seedbed for paganism\"\nRev. J. R, Mutchmor, Secretary\nof the Board of Evangelism and Social Service, said \"more people\nshould be fighting the devil In their\nown backyards.\"\nIn a report released today prior\nto presentation tomorrow to the\nBoard he heads, Dr. Mutchmor\nadded:\n\"The.,forces o( materialism and\nthe lure of the secular life continue\nAccuses Reds of\nBullying Workers\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 A\ncharge Park Board employees are\nbeing \"browbeaten and intimidated\"\nby Communists within their ranks\nwas made last night before Park\nCommissioners.\nSam Lindsay, Park Board foreman, made the accusation during an\nexplanation of why he has been on\nindefinite leave from his job.\nMr. Lindsay Is President of Civic\nEmployees Union, Local 407, and a\nformer leader of the union's Local\n28.\nHe said he was referring to Local\n28. which at present controls the\nmajcrity of park employees.\n\"The majority of your workers\nare not Communists,\" he told Commissioners,\" \"but they are being\nbrowbeaten and intimidated by a\nsmall group of Communists within\nLocal 28.\"\nMr. Lindsay has been on leave\nsince he was named to head the\nTrades and Labor Congress sponsored Local 407 in an attempt to\noust the allegedly Red-dominated-\nLocal 28,\nSues Police Officer\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nEvidence was given by Dr. Donald\nGordon Patterson in Supreme Court\ntoday that seven-year-old L. R. Eas-\nlon struck down by an automobile,\ndriven by Sgt. Thomas Stevenson,\nof the City, Police, was still suffering from injuries received in the\naccident.\nKenneth   Easton,   father   of   the\nchild, Is suing the City Police office\nfor $2041 and general damages.\nThe trial Is continuing.\nthe final settlement of the four-year\nAnglo-Canadian wheat contracl.\n\"None, sir,\" Gaitskell told the\nHouse ot Commons. He was replying\nto Col. O. E. Crosthwaite-Eyre, Con-\nForest.\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Feb, 27, 1911\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Alexander Buchan  have |sfrvative   member   for   the   New\narrived  in Nelson  from Grand  Forks;' and\nwill make their permanent home here.\nThe ardent curling ririk skipped by J. H.\nWallace carried off top honors in the local\ncurling Points Competition recently completed. The Wallace rink chalked up 33 points.\nOther winners were W. R. Richardson with\n32 points,. Dr. E. G. 'Smyth with 30, A. T.\nWalley with 29. George Thurman and Jack\nSmith tied with 2^ points each.\nIt's Been Said\nThe only people who make no mistakes\nare dead people. I saw a man last week who\nhas not made a mistake for four thousand\nyears. He was a mummy in the Egyptian Department of the British Museum.\u2014H. L. Way-\nland. .-.'\u2022    -,.-,;\nYour Horoscope\nIn this next year of your life you would\nbe wise to stop worrying, for most likely the\ntime will be propitious for you. Making a new\nstart should help. A studious, ambitious character probably will develop as today's child\ngrows toward adulthood.\nThe Johnstown flood in Pennsyl-\nvannia took an estimated 22D0 lives\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner of\nCanada came to London last week\nhoping to obtain from the British\nGovernment what Canadian officials\ndescribed as a \"final adjustment\"\nunder the terms of the four year\ncontract, signed in July, 1940.\nAfter four days of negotiation,\nGardiner admitted defeat. He told a\npress conference in London last\nFriday he had been unable to persuade Britain that any adjustment\nshould be made.\nCanadian hopes ot an adjustment\nwere based on a clause in the contract which said that regard would\nbe paid in the last two years of the\ncontract to the difference between\nthe contract price and outside prices\nin the first two years.\nRepresentatives of Canadian far\nNot a day passes over the earth but men\nand women of no note do great deeds, speak\ngreat thoughts, suffer noble sorrows.\u2014Charles\nReade.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nToday's Bible Thought\nDon't make a show of your religion. Forget yourself In honest devotion.\u2014Thou  when  thou   fasteth,\nanoint thy head, and wash thy face.\n\u2014Matt. 6:17.\nQimL %\u00a3\nfalse teachings lack an authentic\nnote. The fact is that man cannot be\nsatisfied merely by physical comforts.\n\"The pride that stems from North\nAmerica's power to produce half of\nthe world's goods by its 10th of the\nworld's population is not a healthy\nprido. It has led \"to profligacy and\nwaste. These evils in turn provide\nthe seedbed for paganism.\n\"It is North American paganism\nthat threatens the Christian Church\nin Canada and the United States.\n\"A measure of tension and competition Is healthy but too much ot\nit hurts a people. Many thousands\nof lower-paid families . . . are suffering becaiife of excessive profits,\nhigh-wages in many strongly-organized industries, top-level prices for\nseveral farm products , . . and\nhenvy taxes. . .\"\nDr. Mutchmorc spoke of \"mounting tension\" between industry and\nagriculture.\n\"This is most noticeable in Western Canada where farmers now receive less for their grain and nay\nCAMBRIDGE, England (CP) \u2014\nThree boys were accused of damaging $1,800 worth of stock at a garage\nhere. In juvenile court they were\neach fined the equivalent of $3 and\nordered to pay out of their pocket\nmoney.\nmors contended they should receive: more  for freight  rates and  farm\nan additional $100,000,000- under the\nclause and alleged the British refusal to make any adjustment constituted a breach of contract.\nWhen a man calls attention to\nother women's pretty ankles, and\nhis wife don't care, she's mighty\nsure of him or she's sick of him.\nClaims Five-Year\nDriver's Licence\nCausing Discontent\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nThe five-year driver's licence, payable in advance, is deeply resented\nby \"ihe man on the street,\" A. R.\nM a c D o u gall (Cln \u2014 Vancouver\nPoint Grey) told the Legislature\nyesterday. . ,\nHe said:\n\"Inasmuch as I stood on the\nfloor of this House at the last session and raised very great objection\nto the imposition of the five-year\nmotor licence ond at that time accused the Government of great ingenuity, indeed, of financial wizardry, in finding a way to borrow\nwithout Interest, I only propose to\nremind the House that the amendment to the Motor Vehicle Act\nwhich made this possible has caused widespread discontent.1'\nThe Vancouver member asserted\nalso that the white strip which\nmust be attached to last year's licence plates \"does not create an esthetic impression, and is not particularly good publicity for British\nColumbia motor cars travelling\nabroad.\"\nSOUTHAMPTON, England (CP)\n\u2014 Mrs. Fanny Cole. 100 years old,\nstill reads detective novels and\nother thrillers, averaging two books\na week '\nachinery.\n\"There is the tension between\nthe well-organized strong unions\nthat get the wage rates they de\nmand and .the weaker unions that\ncan't win high pay levels. The members of the weaker unions nay more\nthan they can afford for the products of the farmer.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nSt. Catharines, Ont\u2014Herbert L.\nCope, 44, Secretary-Treasurer of A.\nCope and Sons, Ltd., Hamilton.\nOttawa\u2014Charles H. Larose, 73.\nforrrfer gentleman usher of the\nBlack Rod in the Senate.\nToronto \u2014 Elwood White Young,\n68, retired Canadian Pacific Railway District Superintendent.\nDelray Beach, Fla. \u2014 Lewis H\nBrown, 57, Chairman of the Board\nof Johns-Manville Corp., ond Canadian Johns-Manville Company.\nLtd.\nJust\nask\nwhat's good for a\nCOUGH?\nASK FOR\nBM-I\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nBISHOP'S   STORTFORD,  En;\nland (CP) \u2014 Because of recent rah\nby   dogs   on sheep, Hertfordshire\nfarmers and their wives are keeping f^ SINGLE SIP TELLS WHY\nall-night vigils with shotguns. ... .,     . , _\t\nYou can't mistake\nits character!\nYou simply cannot mistake the Buperb\nflavour and individual character of\n\"Black & White\". Blended in the\nspecial \"Black & White\" way, it is a\ntruly outstanding Scotch that has no\nsuperior.\nBUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITi\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nVhe Secret li In the Blending\nBy Appointment\nto H.M. King George VI\nScotch Whiiky Dlitlllon\nJomei Buchanan & Co. ltd.\n53-50\nDistilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland\nSOLO IN 26fc OZ. BOTTLES\n*w*\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquoi\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n SPORTS\ngggTt OQO\/\nJhsi\nfa\nThe very thing which, t-\ndidn't want in the - playoWs,\nabout. Even after decid -\nWestern International Hockey IfJa-\ngue meeting down in Spokane that\nall the playoffs would have referees from the cities not playing in the\n[series, a , Nelson arbiter and one\nKimberley ref are calling the plays\nin the first two games of the semifinal series between the Leafs and\nthe Dynamiters.\nTrail referees Curly Wheatley and\nJimmy Morris, who were supposedly\nin line for the whistle chores in\nKimberley, can not be held responsible in any way for not being able\nto 'get to Kimberley. It was'poor\nmanagement somewhere along the\nline by the loop officials to have not\nironed out all details well in advance.\nAs far as we know, Gerry Petti-\ngrew and Ron Pickell, who have\nhandled   games   very competently\nwithout bias in Spokane, are\nstill supposed to handle the games\non Nelson ice.\nBilly Hryciuk and company got\nthe first bite of the playoff cake, and\ntook a big one, smearing the Leafs\n9-2 in the opener, That sliced any\nNelson odds considerably, though\nthe Dynamiters may have done their\nscoring for a couple of games.\nGeorge Barefoot, who has been\njinxed tor years by playoff time injuries, may be in action tomorrow\nnight as the Leafs \u25a0 ontlnue their series in Kimberley, and Roy Allen,\nbedridden leftwinger may be able to\nanswer the call if Wares needs him.\nIn any case Roy will likely' be ready\ntor the Saturday game if needed.\nWo will be able to contact Eddie\nWares today for any changes of\nplayers or- policy. Definitely something has to change to combat Kimberley's fast-breakers.\nStrikes V Spares\nThe.Koehles fired the big guns in\n| Mixed Commercial League games\nwhen Lena Koehle took the ladies\nhonors with a 326 high single and\nan aggregate of 766. Fred Koehle\n\u25a0 knocked the maples for men's high\naggregate of 786, just 20 pins bet-\nter than Lena Koehle, while \"high\nsingle went to Ted Cole of the\nJonella crew with 286.\nThe Koehles sparked their team\nto the single and aggregate honors\nwith 1186 and 3245 respectively.\nLeague standings \u2014 Sad Sacs 26,\nAtoms 20, Accidentals 16, Kelly\nDouglas 13, Jonella's 12, Hudson\nBay 9.\nScores follow:\nACCIDENTALS - D. Wassick.\n490; C. Mills, 697; W. Valantine, 483;\nh. Piatt, 412; R. Wassick, 513; Spot,\n345. Totals\u20142440. \u25a0\nATOMS \u2014 H. Kennell, 594; Mrs.\nL. Kennell, 568; Mrs. L. Koehle,\n766; L. D. Waterer, 531; F. Koehle,\n786. Totals\u20143245.\nSAD SACS \u2014 B. Apostoliuk, 475;\nM. Thain, 386; L. DeGirolamo, 530;\nL.- Wild, 597; D. Allan, 524. Totals\u2014\n2512.\nKELLY DOUGLAS \u2014 B. Nield,\n432; T. Sewell, 474; V. Postnikov.\n434; L. Cartwright, 489; L. Anderson, 594; Spot, 33. Totals\u20142456.\nHUDSON BAY \u2014 M. D. Brodie,\n390; S. Gull, 477; A. Ward, 700; E.\nWho's Who\nIn W.I.H.L\n\"RED\" SUTHERLAND\nVeteran of many WIHL campaigns, the 30-year-old Kimberley defenceman, came to the\nDynamiters after a three-year\n\u2022tint with the Trail Smoke Eaters\nwhere he was a member of two\nB,C. championship teams. Before\nthat played with the now defunct\nSan Diego entry in the PCHL.\nAlso saw service with Victoria\nArmy team during the war.\n\"Red\" hails from Estevan, Sask.\nand packs 190 pounds into a 5\nfoot 8 Inch frame.\n\u2014Charles Wormington  photo.\n; Spot,\nDICK PONTARELLO\nA leading scorer last season\nwith Bellevue of the Western\nCanada Junior League, Dick. Is\nanother promising rookie In Dynamiter colors this season. Comes\nfrom Coalhurst, Alta. and saw juvenile and junior service with\nLethbridge. A converted defence-\nman, \"Ponty\" now patrols left\nwing.\n\u2014Charles Wormington  photo.\nUnser, 424; L. Fileatrault, 327\n105. Totals\u20142423.\nJONELLA  \u2014 I, Liness, 441;  B\nIceton, 540; P. Gillott, 371; G. McCulloch, 425; T. Cole, 767. Totals\u2014\n2544.\nGovernment League;\nLadies' high single \u2014 Marie\nRamsden, 305.    '    '\nLadies high aggregate \u2014 Marie\nRamsden, 679.\nMen's high single \u2014 Clyde Mills,\n293.\nMen's high aggregate \u2014 Clyde\nMills, 679.\nTeam high , single \u2014 Terrible\nTermites, 993.\nTeam high aggregate \u2014 Eager\nBeavers, 2687.\nLeague standings \u2014 Terrible Termites 33, Timber Wolves 27, Eager\nBeavers - 29, Atom Smashers 26.\nChipmonks 18, Flying Eagles 16.'\nTERRIBLE TERMITES-L. Taylor, 429; A. Boyce, 434; D. Drew.\n410; M. Ramsden, 679; Low Score,\n417; Spot, 150. Totals-2519.\nATOM SMASHERS \u2014W. Wicken.\n524; J. Jennings, 437; F. Litster,\n420; J. Cone, 516; Low Score, 477;\nSpot, 12. Totals\u20142386.\nFLYING EAGLES - F. Gill, 482;\nG. Cone, 415; P. MacLeod, 426; B\nRobinson, 479; O. Christie, 499. Totals\u20142301.\nCHIPMONKS \u2014 A. Sien, 582; B.\nWaters, 302; M. Gordon, 547; J\nWatson, 471; M. Shewchuk, 387.\nTotals\u20142289.\nEAGER BEAVERS \u2014 C. Mills,\n679; M. Litster, 345; F. Jennings,\n663; B. Wicken, 523; F. Ozeroff, 477\nTotals\u20142687.\nTIMBERWOLVES \u2014 A. Breth-\neur, 333; D. Thompson, 536; B.\nBishop, 447; J. Wallach, 402; T\nYoung, 541; Spot, 285. Totals\u20142544.\nWith Stane\nAnd Besom\nResults of Tuesday night's games\nin the Nelson Curling Club's Round\nRobin Competition follow;\nR. Saunby 8, H. M. Whimster 11.\nR. Riesterer 12, A. J. Hamson 11,\nN. R. Sardich 0, W. MacLeary 1.\nF. Carmichael II, R. E. Horton 4.\nG. A. Fleury 10, J. Kary 4.\nGreco To Defend\nWelterweight Title\nMONTREAL, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014The\nCanadian welterweight boxing\nchampion, Johnny Greco, today\nsigned a contract to defend his title\nagainst Gaby Ferland in a 12-round\nmatch here March 12.\nIt will be the second meeting between the fighters, both Montreal-\ners. Greco scored a knockout over\nFerland in 1948.\nDynamiters Drub Leafs 9f2\nDominate Play in First Semi-Final\nGame; Leafs Weak Defensively\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014Kimberley hockey fans went home happy tonight. Their home town Dynamiters jumped to a one game lead in\nthe Kootenay semi-finals by.- soundly trouncing Eddie Ware's Maple\nLeafs 9-2, and they looked good\ndoing lt. The Leafs, terribly weak\ndefensively, never did get really going, and the West Kootenay club's\npuck blocker, Ed Matwick had more\nthan his share of work to do. For\nKimberley, the. powerful Hryciuk-\nLlvingstone-Sanderson line starred,\nscoring six of the nine local goals.\nKimberley led 2-1 at the end of\nthe first period, 6-1 by the end of\nthe end of the second. The two\nteams play here again Thursday.\nKimberley was without Injured\nRay McNiven ahd Red Sutherland\nwhile Nelson saw defence star\nGeorge Barefoot'and Roy Allen out\nof action.   '\nThe first period, marred by three\nminor penalties by the Leafs, was\nusually, too close checking to be sensational, but several times fans were\ntreated to fast break away hockey\nthat brought them to their feet.\nKimberley dominated the play, but\na tight Leaf defence and some nice\nstops by Eddie Matwick slowed the\nDynamiters considerably.\nFirst scoring of the evening came\nat 6:33, of the initial canto, Bill\nHryciuk pushing the puck around\nMatwick who had sprawled, just\nas Wares returned to the ice after\na holding penalty.\nWhen Niel McClenaghan was\nthumbed for holding at 14:00, Kimberley pressed for several minutes,\nspeedy Bill Haldane broke away\nand Johnny Harms scored on a long\nscreened drive, time 16:28. Wares\nwas sitting out his second penalty,\nthis time for boarding, when Barre\nscored after a Kimberley goal had\nbeen disallowed on Pontarellos rebound.\nMATWICK STARS\nThe second period was a penalty\nfree session, with Kimberley completely dominating the play. Only\nstellar net minding by Eddie Matwick, who was never afforded much\ndefence, kept the Dynamiters to\nfour goals. Twice the Leaf custodian\nhad to stop Sammy Calles in. the\nclear with no Leaf near to help, and\nconstantly he was called upon for\nunusually difficult saves.\nSanderson parked, himself In front\nof Matwick to sl\"0 Hryciuk's' pass\nhome at 4:14, mc I ng the score 3-1.\nSully Sullivan sent'Bell in for Klm-\nberleys fourth marker at 6:53. As\nthe game roughened Sanderson took\nadvantage of weak defensive play,\nHryciuk and Livingstone assisting,\nto add the fifth. At 15:03 Livingstone\nfinished second period scoring on a\nplay with Hryciuk.\nThe final period saw Kimberley\nagain outscoring the Leafs, 3-1, Hryciuk had made it,7-1 on a lovely\nrush at 1:50, and then assisted Livingstone on the eighth Dynamiter\ngoal at 9:17. Johnny Fargher, assisted by Jack Steele and McClenaghan,\ngot Nelson's second marker at 15:19.\nDoug McDonald, along with pontarello and Barre, finished the scoring at 16:07.\nThe game was on a whole, listless\nunspectacular hockey, with only\nplay of play-off calibre evident in\nfar-spread portions,\nStops by goalies McLay 4-5-5\u201414;\nMatwick 12-14-13\u201439.\nLineups:\nNelson \u2014 Goal, Matwick; Wares\nGare, R. Koehle, F. Koehle, Haley,\nCrothers, Steele, Hergert, Haldane,\nHarms, Matthews, McClenaghan,\nFargher.\nKimberley\u2014Goal, McClay; Tatchell, Barker, Barre, Ponarello, McDonald, Cruickshanks,. Jones, Livingstone, Sanderson, Hryciuk Sullivan, Calles, Bell.\nReferees\u2014Lang and Llayfon.\nSUMMARY:\nFirst period\u20141 Kimberley, Hryciuk (Cruickshanks, Livingstone) 6:33\n2, Nelson, Harms  (Haldane)  16:26;\n3, Kimberley,   Barre   (McDonald,\nPontarello) 19:05.\nPenalties\u2014Wares (2) McClenaghan.\nSecond period \u2014 4, Kimberley,\nSanderson (Hryciuk) 4:14; 5, Kimberley, Bell (Sullivan) 5:53; 6, Kimberley, Sanderson (Livingstone,\nHryciuk) 12:54; 7, Kimberley, Livingstone (Hryciuk) 15:03.\n, Penalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20148 Kimberley, Hryciuk (Cruickshanks) 1:50; 9, Kimberley, Livingstone (Hryciuk) 9:17;\n10, Nelson, Fargher (Steele, McClenaghan) 15:19; 11, Kimberley,\nMcDonald (Pontarello, Bane) 16:07.\nPenalties\u2014Calles, R. Koehle, Sanderson. -\nB. C. Allan\nCup Playoffs\n.WIHL SEMI-FINALS\nW   L   F   A   Pt,\nKimberley     10    9    2    2\nNelson     0     1     2    9     0\nKimberley leads best-of-five series 1-0.\nMOAHL SEMI-FINALS\nW   L   F   A   Pt.\nNanaimo    1    0    5    3.2\nKerrisdale      0    13    5    0\nNanaimo leads best-of-seven series 1-.0.       ' ' i\nMOAHL ROUND ROBIN\nW   L   PI\nVernon       10     7\nKelowna   'l     1     8\nKamloops     0    13\nW.I.H.L.  CHAMPIONSHIP\n(Not Allan Cup play)\nW   L   Gf Ga Pt\nTrail         10    5    3     2\nSpokane      0     13     5     0\nTrail leads best-of-five series 1-0.\nA\nPt.\n4\n2\n10\n2\n4\n0\nTrail in Opening\nBasket-ball Draw\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) -\nVictoria High meets John Oliver\nHigh of Vancouver in the first\ndraw of the annual B.C. High\nS c h o ol Basketball Tournament\nopening here March 7.\nSixteen teams are entered in the\nfour-day tournament. The opening\ndraw includes: Trail vs Vancouver\nTrapp Technical; Chilliwack ' vs\nKamloops' and Vancouver College\nvs Coquitlam.\nVies for Vezina Trophy\nTORONTO, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Al Rollins, six-foot-two goaltendlng thin\nman .started the National Hockey\nLeague season as understudy to\nveteran Turk Broda with Toronto\nMaple Leafs. Now he's threatening\nto walk off with the goaltending\nVezina prize and the league's rookie\naward as well.       .\nThere isn't a hotter goallender In\nthe league than the boy from Vanguard, Sask., who was in the nets\nfor Edmonton Flyers when they\nwon the Allan Cup Senior Hockey\nCrown in 1948.\nIn 31 games\u2014including one from\nwhich he had to withdraw after being hit over the eye with the puck\n\u2014He has won 19, tied eight and lost\nfour. He's allowed 57 goals for an\naverage of 1.83 a game.\nThe Vezina Trophy goes to the\ngoalie who plays the most games\nfor the team with the lowest goals\nagainst total over the 70-game\nschedule. So far Rollins and Broda have allowed 116 goals In 57\ngames. The closest competitor Is\nDetroit rookie Terry Sawchuck\nwho has been beaten 125 times In\n58 games.\nMost goals scored against Rollins\nin a single game was four. That\nhappened only once when Detroit\nRed Wings turned the trick Dec. 13.\nHe has had three shutouts\u2014against\nthe Wings, Montreal Canadiens and\nNew York Hangers. His four defeats have been against Detroit,\ntwice, the Rangers and .Chicago\nBlack Hawks.\nThe last-place Chicago Black\nHawks are his toughest opposition.\nThey've scored on him 21 times in\nnine games for an average of 2.33.\nRollins hasn't pushed Broda off\nto the sidelines yet. Leaf plans are\nlo  leave  the rookie in  until he's\nR0LLIN8\nbeaten\u2014or looks bad, Then the Turk\nat 36 in what is probably his last\nseason, may get the call again.\nTOUGHEST OPPOSITION\nAsked aoout the opposing player\nwith Ihe. toughest shot to handle,\nAl says: Rocket Richard or Milt\nSchmidt\u2014and I guess, Gord Howe.\nHowever, the Rocket hasn't scored\non me yet and Howe got his first\none here last week. It hit me but\nI never knew where lt was.\"\nAl says he'd had help in polishing\nhis net technique from Hap Day,\nLeafs assistant general' manager,\ncoach Joe Primeau and the Turk.\n\"They've been getting me lo stand*\nup a little mdre and'arc helping to\nsmooth out the rough spots,\" he\nsays. \"Turk helps too. We talk over\nIhe games all the time.\"\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nMARITIME MAJOR    .\nCharlottetown 2 Moncton 2 (overtime tie).      . .\nHalifax 3 Saint John 4.\nCAPE BRETON MAJOR        ,\nGlace Bay 2 Sydney 5:\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nToronto St. Michael's 2, Guelph 8.\nStratford 3, St. Catharines 5.\nToronto Marlboros 5 Gait 3.\nQUEBEC MAJOR\nQuebec 3 Chicoutimi 7.\nQUEBEC JUNIOR\nQuebec 5 Montreal Nationales 4.\nEASTERN CANADA SENIOR\nCornwall 4 Pembroke 2.\n(C o r n w all  leads \u2022 best-of-seven\nsemi-final 1-0).\nCAPE BRETON JUNIOR\nSydney Millionaires 3 Glace Bay\n2.\n(Sydney leads best-of-seven final\n3-1).      .\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nSEMI-FINALS\nWinnipeg Monarchs   7   Winnipeg\nBlack Hawks 2.\n(Monarchs lead best-ofseven series, 1-0.)\nTHUNDER BAY JUNIOR\nSEMI-FINALS\nFort William Hurricanes 4 Fort\nWilliam Canadiens 4 (overtime tie).\nFirst game of best-of-five series).\nQUEBEC JUNIOR\nThree Rivers., 1 Montreal Canadiens 2. i\nUSHL\nOmaha 10 Tulsa 5.\nSASKATCHEWAN JUNIOR\nSEMI-FINALS\nHumboldt   5   Flin Flon 7 (overtime).\n(First game of best-of-five series).\nSaskatoon 3 Prince Albert 4.\n(First game of best-of-five series),\nWESTERN CANADA JUNIOR\nSEMI-FINALS\nMedicine Hat 2 Regina 12.\n(Regina leads   best-of-seven series, 3-1).\nLethbridge 1 Crow's Nest 7.\n(Best-of-seven tied, 2-2).\nMOAHL SEMI-FINAL\n'  Kerrisdale 3, Nanaimo 5\n(Nanaimo wins first game best-of-\nseven Coastal series)\nKamloops 3, Kelowna 4\n(Kelowna wins second game Interior round-robin series.)\n27-\nDENVER, SLOCAN\nCITY TIE UP\nHOCKEY SERIES\nNEW DENVER, B.C?, Feb.\nNew Denver seniors came through\nwith a convincing 7-4 victory to tie\ntip the home and home series with\nSlocan City with three wins each.\nForsythe and Hayashi put on a sterling effort on defence.\nJ. Hicks,' J. Heslop, Graham and\nTed Hicks scored for Slocan City.\nE. Crellin with'two goals and Sakura, Hashimoto, J. George and\nRussell counted for New Denver\nIn the second period J. Hicks put\nthe puck into his own goal to score\nNew Denver's other marker.\nA brawl broke out in the third\nperiod between J. George and J.\nHicks both sitting out five-minute\npenalties.\nLineups:\nNew Denver: J. Tateishi, Q. Forsythe. K. Hayashi and H. Tanaka,\nF. Russell, E. Crellin, D. Campbell.\nD. Hashimotor, J. George, I. Sakura\nand J. Oyama.\nSlocan \u2022 City\u2014A. Clough; Ted\nHicks. T. Graham and D. Hood: G\nMcDonald. J. and S. Heslip, J. B.\nand A. Hicks, B. Terakita, P.\nGreenwood and D. Elo.\nTrail Downs Flyers\nIn First of Playoffs\nSPOKANE, Feb. 27 (AP)-8po-\nkane Flyers, champions of the\nWestern International . Hockey\nLeague, tonight lost the first\ngame of the league playoffs to\nthe Trail Smoke Eaters, 6-3,\nTrail got off to a fast 3-1 lead\nin the first period, but Spokane\ntied it three-all in the second.\nTrail's Johnny Rypien, a former\nSpokane Flyer, scored the third-\nperiod goals that brought Spokane's downfall.\nThe teams meet here again\nThursday night,\nSPOKANE \u2014 Fodey; Marchant,\nMandryk; Snider; 'Carrigan, Scott.\nSubs \u2014 Nadeau, Macauley, McNally, Cirullo, Wylie, Horhe, Luke,\nBentley.\nTRAIL\u2014Sofiak; Pasquallato, McDougald; Rypien; Kromm, Cook.\nSubs \u2014 Dockery, Nicol, Appleton,\nSecco, Sinclair, Palyga, Cronie.,\nFirst period \u2014 Cook (Rypien)\n2:01; 2. Trail, Sinclair (Secco) 5:32;\n3. Trail, Dockery (Turik, Nicol)\n8:26; 4. Spokane, Nadeau (Macauley, Marchant) 18:31.    '\nPenalties\u2014None,\nSecond period \u2014 5. Spokane, Nadeau (Mandryk) 10:31; 6. Spokane,\nHorbe (Cirullo) 11:04.\nPenalties\u2014Kromm.\nThird period\u20147. Trail, Rypien\n(Pasquallato) 1:41; 8. Trail, Rypien\n(Kromm)  18:42.\nPenalties \u2014 Marchant, Secco, Na\ndeau, Pasquallato.\nPackers, Clippers\nAdd Victories\nIn MOHL Playoffs\nKelowna Packers bounced back'\ninto contention for playoff honors\nin the Interior section of the Main-\nline-Okanagan Hockey League\nTuesday night by edging Kamloops\nElks 4-3 in a rough and bruising\nround-robin encounter.\n\u2022 Packers now are tied with Vernon, eacli with two points, in the\nround-robin playoffs. Vernon will\nhave a chance to move out front\nagain when they-take on the Elks\nal home Wednesday.\nMeanwhile Nanaimo Clippers defeated Kerrisdale Monarchs 5-3 to\ntake a one-game lead in the Main-\nline-Okanagan coast finals.\nSummaries:\nFirst period\u20141. Kamlodps, Wy-,\nwrot (Evans) 1:52; 2. Kelowna, Kuly\n3:47; 3. Kamloops, Wywrot 19:56.\nPenalties \u2014 Bathgate, Wywrot,\nHanson (2).\nSecond period \u2014 4. Kamloops,\nCampbelK Mellor, Andrews) 1:15;\n5. Kelowna, Durban 9:08; 6. Kelowna, Daski (Durban) 13:i0; 7. Kelowna, Sundin (Lowe)  15:10.\nPenalties\u2014B. Middleton, Carlson,\nTerry, Hanson, Kusmack (major\nand misconduct), Fischer (major\nand misconduct), McNaughton (misconduct.)\nThird period\u2014scoring\u2014none.\nPenalties\u2014Daski, Campbell, Wyrot (2), Andrews.\nFirst period\u20141. Nanaimo, Kirk\n\u202212:07.\nPenalties-Wsldriff, Carr, H. Lovett, Holmes, Mutcheson, Fennell.\nSecond period\u20142. Nanaimo, Waldriff (Cully, Jackson).1:50; 3. Nanaimo, Clovechok (Carr, Lundmrak)\n18:46; 4. Nanaimo Clovechok (Lundmark, Carr) 19:45.\nPenalties\u2014Lundmark, Carr, Ritchie, Holmes.\nThird period\u20145. Kerrisdale, Rittinger (Wilson)' 1:22; 6. Kerrlsdale,\nCchmiel (O. Schmidt) 5:36; 7. Kerrisdale O. Schmidt (H. Lovett) 14:03;\n\"8. Nanaimo, O'Hara (Kirk) 19:53,\nPenalties\u2014Holmes, Chmiel.\nFIRST FOR U.S.\nBUENOS AIRES, Feb. 27 (AP)\n\u2014Brooklyn's Curtis Stone won a\nthrilling 10,000-metre race today to\ngive the United States its first\nchampionship at opening of the\nPan-American games. The Penn\nState athlete beat out Argentina's\nhardy Ricardo Bralo by five yards.\nCROYDON, England (CP) \u2014 Britain has a fuel shortage and it was\ncold outside, but diners at a banquet\ncomplained of the heat in.the building. The banquet was given by a\ncoal merchants' society.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 23,\nPocket Clubs for\nGolfers Lafesf\nWings Three Up\nOn Leafs\nMONTREAL, Feb. 27 (CP)\nEvery. team won a game in the\nNational Hockey League last week\nexcept the league-leading Detroit\nRed Wings. But that didn't make a\nbit of difference to the Wings, who\ngot two points on ties to stay three,\nup on Toronto Maple Leafs.\nDetroit's  Gordie  Howe  still  Is\nleading the individual scoring race\nwith 69 points, garnered from 31\ngoals and 38 assists, But Maurice\n(Rocket) Richard of Montreal has\njumped back to the second slot he\nheld so long earlier in the year.\nNone   of  the   netmlndcrs   Improved their shutout position, Do\ntroit's Terry 8awchuk remaining\n' In  front  with  seven.  Toronto's\nTurk Broda and Al Rollins still\nhave the best combined average,\n2.03.\nToronto's   Gus    Mortson   and\nMaple Leafs still head the list of\npenalty-servers, Mortson with 130\nminutes and Toronto with 71,1.\nThe leaders: G A Pt. *P\nHowe. Detroit   31 88 69 60\nRichard, Montreal  36 17 63 69\nAbel, Detroit  20 33 53 26\nSloan, Toronto   28 22 50 92\nSchmidt, Boston  19 31 50 29\nM. Bentley, Toronto 17 33 50 30\nLindsay, Detroit  21 27 48 99\nKennedy, Toronto   12 36 48 30\nGardner, Toronto   21 25 46 28\nR. Conacher, Chicago .. 24 21 45 16\nSmith, Toronto ,  25 17 42 10\nSTANDING\nW L T   F   A Pts.\nDetroit     34 12 12 189 125\nToronto  32 12 13 179 116\nBosjon   19 24 15 146 163\nNew York   17 23 18 138 165\nMontreal   19 27 12 134 154\nChicago   13 36 10 150 213\nBy WILL GRIMSLEY\nNEW YORK, Feb. 27 (AP) - Imagine playing golf and toting the\nclubs around In your pocketbook.\nYou can do It with the gadget\nMatty Matthews is showing around\ntown. It's a novel seven-clubs-in-\none idea.\nThis is a streamlined golf set designed to do away with caddies and\nbulky caddy wagons. Actually you\ncan carry most of it in your shirt\npocket. The full set weighs three\npounds.\nThe set is composed of one shalt\nand four club heads which, screwed\nin properly, make seven different [\nimplements\u2014a driver-brassie, putter, chipper, and one, four, six and\nnine irons.\nYou can. carry one club in your\nhand and all the rest\u2014club heads,\nballs and tees\u2014fit into a neat packet about the ,size of an average\nladles' purse.\n\"It's quite a handy tool and proving very popular In Florida and\nCalifornia,\" said Matthews, a former newspaper man turned drum-\nbeater for the manufacturer.\nThe pros haven't accepted it yet\nand neither has the U. S. Golf Association, which has a rule against\nremovable heads. \\\nMatthews said -expert golfers,\neven pros, find the streamltoied\nequipment costs them no more than\nsix strokes over round on first try.\n\"Most of them said,they could, get\naccustomed to. the set and play\njust as well as with a full bag,\" he\nadded.    \u2022\nIt has an added time-saving device for the tempermental duffer.\nWhen he lobs one into the lake, it's\nnot necessary to break up a whole\nset of clubs. One whack across the\nknee and he's out of business.\nTURPIN EUROPE\/\nMIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMP\nLONDON, Feh, 27 (Reuters) \u2014\nRandolph Turpln of Britain won the\nEuropean middleweight . boxing\ncrown here tonight with a first-\nround knockout ever Luc van Dam\nthe Dutch champion.\nAbout 28,500 Canadians, including 10,000 women, participate in\ntarget or other types of recreational\nrifle shooting.\nDARTMOOR, Devon, England\n(CP) \u2014 Highlight of Festival of Bri\ntain activities here will be a flypast\nof model planes. Best performances\nwill receive prizes.\n7\n\/to\/\/m&f om\u201e.\nrmcar\nistnyBwM'k\/''\nALSO IN POUCHES\nAND\nHALF POUND TINS\n0F\"\u00bb\nROLLDNE..,LIGHT ONE... ENJOME\nKireto Scores 5\nIn Denver Midget\nWin in Silverton\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb. 27\u2014\nNew Denver midget hockey team,\nvisitors on Silverton ice, were victorious 13-9, have not lost a game\nthis season. The game was wide\nopen and free scoring,\nKireto counted five, Campbell\nfour and Bergren and Oyama two\napiece.for New'Denver while Miller and B. Morrison with three each,\nErickson with two and W. Morrison\nscored for Silverton.\nLineups:\nNew Denver\u2014P. Butler; H. Tanaka and R. Broughton; T. Kireto,\nD. Campbell, J. Oyama, T. Ida, R\nOkura and E. Bergren.\nSilverton\u2014G. Detta;- W. Morrison,\nI. Millar and G. Fairhurst; A. Avison, B. Morrison, L. Erickson, W.\nWelch E. P. and L. Harding and\nB. Leask.\nlORDtoVERT^\n- Served with pride u\n._on those special decasions\nj JL when only the finest m\nNELSON BOWLERS EYE $10,000 JACKPOT\nIN VANCOUVER BOWL-A-CAR TOURNEY I\nAlthough the big event is still six\nweeks off a strong contingent of\nNelson bowlers are making plans\nto enter a Vancouver $10,000 5-pin\nhandicap tournament April 14 to 21.\nSome of Nelson's best trundlerg,\nincluding Carl Locatelli, Harry\nKennel, Al Herchuk, Don Iceton,\nBernard Kelly and Win Hallman\nare definite entries with several\nother likely additions when tournament time comes.'\nTop prizes in the bowlers' jackpot are three new deluxe model\ncars, one for each member of the\nwinning team. The first eight teams\nshare in a variety of other prizes.\nIn addition there are special cash\nprizes totalling more than ,$1000 for\nParis Awqrd for\nSugar Roy Robinson\nPARIS, Feb. 27 (Reuters)\u2014The\n\"Companions of the Ring\" French\n.Boxing Critics Association, today\nwarded their Best Boxer of the\nMonth\" cup to Sugar Ray Robinson,\nWorld Middleweight chamuion, for\nhis title victory over Jake la Motta.\nRobinson will receive his cup when\nhe comes to Paris next May.5\nSKATING TODAY\nGeneral: 2:00-4:00 p.m.\nWEDNESDAY NITE\nPROGRAMME SKATING\n8:15 to 10:15 P.M.\nAdults 35c\ndaily   high   team   and   individual\nscores, including special awards Ior\nout-of-town entries.\nThe week-long tourney Is in aid\nCALVERT DISTILLERS (Canada) LIMITED\nAMHERSTBURG   \u2022   ONTARIO\nCThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nFund6 Vancouver Elks' Benev\u00b0lenti Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nHockey Playoffs\nNELSON vs KIMBERLEY\nSATURDAY MARCH 3 - 8 p. m.\n(Doors Open at 7 p.m.)\n TICKET SALES ~_~~\nFOR SEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nFRIDAY 10 A.M.-6 P.M. \u2014 SATURDAY 10 A.M.-1 P.M.\nIf a.second game is necessary on Monday, March 5th, season ticket holders\nmay pick up their tickets for both games at this sale.\nOpen Sale of 700 Gooa\" Sears\nSaturday 2 p.m. to Game Time-Civic Centre Office\n\"BOOST THE LEAFS THROUGH\nTHE PLAYOFFS\"\n.-\n \u25a001 p\nL\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\n-22L  HOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\n1UJ* SPECIAL CHENILLE BEDSPREADS   $10.95\nNELSON\nB.C.\nMp\nOf     i i       Vrrrr-r i \u2014\nP\n^^%m^^Whg^mri^msr\n{~j\u00a3\\\nImSWm\nm\n\u00bb31 ^Esvraful'\nS^^^K\n^  \/^* \u00ae\u00ab*8\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nConvicted as Spy,\nHopes to Escape\nExtra Jail Term\nSudden Water Rise Traps Unwary Motorists\nMany motorists were caught in'the waters of\nHighland Creek, Ont., when it rose three feet,\noverflowing roads and bridges. One driver had to\njump for his life and wade through fast water\nwhen a bridge gave'way under his car. Here firemen stretch a rope across the remains of a brldgo\nwhile a deserted car awaits the flood's subsiding.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nSentenced to five years In Jail\nIn 1946 for conspiring to communicate confidential Information to\nRussia, David Gordon Lunan may\nbe In court again to apply for, a\nreversal of the additional sentence of one year on charges of\ncontempt of court One of the\nmost sensational of the trials In\nthe,spy ring court proceedings,\nLunan's case at one time nearly\nhad the late Prime Minister Mackenzie King on the wltnesB stand.\nLunan's counsel will apply for his\ndischarge on the grounds that it\nIs illegal for a judge to sentence a\nman on a contempt charge with\nthe sentence to run at the expiration of another prison term.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nKorea-Bound\nOttawa Endorses Free-Wheat-to-india Plan\nCanadian farmers may save the lives of thousands of famine-stricken Indians, according to an\nannouncement from Ottawa. The Government has\ndecided to answer pleas of the Indian Government for assistance, and will make an outright\ngift of an unspecified amount of wheat that will\nbe sent In addition to the 11,000,000 bushels ordered by India in trade agreements.\n\u25a0    \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nTwo Jets That Comprise Canada's First-Line Air Defence\nCheers greeted Brig. J. M. Rock-\nIngham, above, when he announced to the men of Canada's\nSpecial Force now training In\nFort Lewis, Wash., that they were\ndue to embark for. Korea soon.\nCoinciding with his announcement waB the news that the Princess Pats have been In battle for\nthe first time In Korea, advancing\ninto Communist-held territory\nwith little opposition.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHere, photographed for the first time together,\nare the two fighter aircraft chosen by the R.C.A.F.\nto meet its defence needs. Left is the F86 Sabre\nday fighter, being manufactured at Canadair In\nMontreal, and right Is the CF-100 day-night, ally\/easier fighter made by Avro Canada at Malton,\nOnt. The Sabre holds the world's air speed record\nof 670 m.p.h., while the CF-100 pictured went from\nToronto to Montreal at 632 m.p.h., believed to b\u00bb\nthe fastest any aircraft has travelled In Canada.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nON THE AIR\nWEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1951\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News ',\n7:05\u2014Top oi the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast -Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madam\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n' 9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Musicale\n9:58\u2014Train Time\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies Choice\n10:15-T6ons of the Pioneers\n10:3*Oliver's Choice\n10:4?-Robin Hood Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:00\u2014News\n12:01\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News ,    .,\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Wednesday Serenade\n1:45\u2014Our Children    \u2022\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Kootenay Concert\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014DorfMesser's Islanders .\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News\n3:59\u2014News\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shields\n4:15\u2014Music by Goodman\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45\u2014Something in Harmony\n4:55\u2014On the Air\n5:00\u2014News x\n5:01\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Myrt and Marge\n6:00\u2014Teen Time\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00-=*Tews\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014U. N. Today\n11:15\u2014Cathcart Calling\n11:55\u2014News Kite-cap.\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1951\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n-7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madame\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Musicale\n9:58\u2014Train Time\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n10:15\u2014Tel Oliver Show\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary '\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:00\u2014News\n12:01\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014From Parliament Hill.\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Thursday Serenade\n1:30\u2014Wife Saver\n1:45\u2014Deeds That.Live\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Journey to Melody\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News\n3:59\u2014News\n4:00\u2014The Sunshine Society\n4:30\u201420,000 Leagues Under the Sea\n4:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n4:55\u2014On the Air\n5:00\u2014News\n5:01\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Myrt and Marge\n6:00\u2014Your Hit Parade   '\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Barry Wood Show\n7:45\u2014Frankie Lane Show\n8:00\u2014Playoff Hockey\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Dateline Victoria\n10:30\u2014 CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014U. N. Today '\n11:15\u2014Encore\nu:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS      6. Extort1        27. River (PoL)\n1. Conform 7. Sharpened,   28. Remove\n6. Puff of air as a razor from one\n11. Greeting 8. Girl's name       place to\n12. A round-up    9. Bog another\n13. Island of 10. HaM 30. Fluff.\nNapoleon's 14. Bread made 32. Egg-\nexile                 of cornmeal       shaped\n14. The betel 18. Anger 33. Organs ot\npa|m 19. River (Ger.)      smell\n15. Average 20. Calm 36. Metal\n16. Undivided 21. Places 37. Temple\n17. Monarchies 22. Grows old     38. Allowanca\n22. Stick to        23. Delineated\n25. Perish 24. A circle\nansHH'-aasae\niiiflHHH aaaae\nasiniicaffl uaaoi\nan guana hml\n300 HBHSHQC\nansa ana\nanaaa aaaais\nhuh aigai;\nflHflUlflldlJ HGlIu\n1BHU  Hliad  air.\naaiaa Hassan\naiauaia aHaHfi\na&gaisa mmi\nMl\nYesterday's Attswe^\n40. Self\nof light\n26. A class In\nschool\n27. Silvery  .\nfood-fish\n29. Lamprey\n30. Scottish lords\n31. Fainting\n34. From (Useif\nin German\nnames)\n35. Fissure\n39. Cast again\n42. Sandarac\ntree\n43. A size of '\ntype\n44. Make\namends for\n45. Common\nfashions\n46. Doctrine\nDOWN\n1. Exclamation\n2. Take out\n(print.)\n3. Medieval\nlyric poem\n4. Covered\nwith planks\n5. Toward\nDAILY CEYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work k:\nA X Y D L B A A X R\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A 13 used\nfor the three L's,'X for the two O's, etc.   Single letters, apo\u00ab.\n. trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hurt'\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nAMK   BVK   KXM   SVBSMOK   TD   O B K M A\nA M S K   XOBTMI   KXMM   DIVE   N V I H X O *\u2022!\nTOBL.EJHKMI J\u2014K C Y Y M I\nYesterday's Cryptoouote-HE IS A FOOL WHO THINKS BT\nFORCE OR SKILL TO TURN THE CURRENT OF A WOMAN'S\nWILL\u2014TUKE.\nOl.lrlbuttd by Kins Atiuns imiitu.\n M\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED STEN-\nographer, capable of, doing typing, shorthand, filing and some\nbookkeeping. Applicants please\nwrite,-stating experience and references to Box 4844 Daily News.\nWANTED - STENOGRAPHER\nand assistant bookkeeper. Will\npay $125 per month plus Hospital\nService dues, plus Medical Service Association dues. Write Box\n3568 Daily News.\nWANTED \u2014 FENCE-POST   MAK-\ners. Zeeben Lumber Co,, Ymir.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG GIRL DESIRES WORK\nof any kind; clerking, baby sitting, housework; by the hour,\netc. Phone 547-L.\t\nCAMP COOK, HUSBAND HEL?\ner. Two small children. State\nwages. Box 4919 Daily News.\n-Deadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\n\u20144- . : : !\t\nPhone 144\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurance Co., D. L. Kerr, Agent.\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE- EF\nfective. 2 weeks' supply $1; 12\nweeks $5; at all druggists.\nCRESS BUNION SALVE \u2014 FOR\namazing relief. \u2014 Your druggist\nsells CRESS.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles. Vancouver,  B.  C.\nPERSONAL SUPPLIES (RUBBER\ngoods) mailed postpaid in plain\nsealed envelopes with price list.\nSix samples 20c, 30 samples $1.00.\nD. Ralph Mailing House, Box 120,\nAsbestos, P.Q.\nilEN! PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries: 25 deluxe samples, $1.00.\nMailed in plain, sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDistributors, Box 1023N, Vancou-\nver. B. C.\t\nLADIES ! DUPREE PILLS. IM-\nproved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 per\nbox. Western Distributors, Box\n1023 AN, Vancouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\u20142 RANGES, I KITcS\nen set, 3 store display tables, hand\nwringer and wash boards, meat\nsafe, folding Summer camp table,\nwall clock, pictures, glass case.\nApply 77 Freight, 321 Baker St.\nRECORDING MACHINE, $185.00;\nFrancis, Brunette, power back,\n$100.00; guitar,' $25.00; shoe patch-\ner $50.00. Phone 476-LI, or write\nP.O. Box 105, Nelson, B.C.\nCONSOLIDATED ELECTRIC\nironer, in good condition. Phone\n188-L1. -\t\nFOR SALE \u2014 STOVE, WASHING\nmachine and other household furniture. 310 Carbonate St., Nelson.\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X49347\nThere will be offered for sale at\nPublic Auction, at 9:30 a.m.,\nSaturday, March 31st, 1951, in the\noffice of the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., the Licence X49347, to\ncut 9,230,000 f.b.m. of Fir, Larch,\nWhite Pine, Spruce, Cedar, Balsam,\nHemlock, Lodgepole Pine, Birch\nand Yellow Pine and 127,000 lineal\nfeet of Cedar Poles and Piling on\nan area comprising of vacant Crown\nland adjoining Lot 14713, situated\nSoutheast of Sentinel Lookout,\nKootenay Land District.\nFive years will be allowed for\nremoval of timber.\n\"Froyided anyone unable to attend the auction in person may\nsubmit tender to be opened at the\nhour of auction and treated as one\nbid.\"\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister of\nForests, Victoria, B.C., or the District Forester, Nelson, B.C.\nNOTICE    '\nApplication has been made by\nthe undersigned to the Public\nUtilities Commission at Victoria\nfor an adjustment and increase in\nmotor freight rates between Nelson\nand Vernon to take affect April 1st\n1951. Copies of proposed rate adjustments may be obtained at\nNakusp Motors, Nakusp Arrow\nLakes Motor Freight Garage, New\nDenver, A. Peachcy; Silverton\nAny objection must be filed with\nthe Public Utilities Commission at\nVictoria before April 1st, 1951.\nJ. R.. MILLER TRANSPORT,\nArrow Lakes Motor Freight\nand Garage.\nMACHINERY\nFOR\nEQUIPMENT AND GENUINE REPAIR PARTS\nQUALITY FARM EQUIPMENT AND PARTS\nMINE EQUIPMENT AND\nHARDWARE\njit\nONE, TWO OR THREE\nDRUM LOGGING OR\nDRAGLINE.HOISTS\nIWlg\nLOGGING HOOKS,\nBLOCKS AND OTHER\nEQUIPMENT\nCALL OR WRITE\nRENTALS\nCOTTAGE, THREE ROOMS AND\nbathroom. Partly furnished.\nThree minutes Walk from Nelson\nFerry. Con Cummihs, Ph. 738-L2,\nevenings.\nFURNISHED KITCHEN AND\nbedroom for rent; preferralily 2\nworking girls. Phone 1084-R or\napply 107 Chatham Street.\nFURNISHED SUITE FOR RENT,\nclose in. Suitable for 2 business\ngirls. Phone 1418.\nFOR RENT \u2014 TWO-ROOM FUR-\nnished suite. Close in. Immediate\noccupancy. Phone 437-X.\nWANTED \u2014 3 ROOM SUITE\nclose in by business couple, no\nchildren. Phone 467-Y.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFOR SALE \u2014 ELECTRIC WASH-\ning machine. 110 Chatham St.,\nNelson, B.C.'\t\nPIPE - FITTINGS \u2014 TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Tradipg Co.\n935 E. Cordova St.. Vancouver.\nPIANO    FOR    SALE \u2014 PHONE\n799-R,\nTHE   MICRONIC   HEARING   AID\nSales.- P.O  Box 39  Service.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.,\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\n AUTO WRECKERS\t\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson. B.C.. Surveyor, Engineer.\n-INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY  AGENCIES  LTD.,  IN\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H. Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   acetylene  ond\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon SL\nUtisan Satli} Nrma\nClassified  Advertising  Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion. 16c per line\neach subsequent insertion.      .\nALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription  Rates:\nSingle copy         $   .05\nBy carrier, per week;\nin advance    25\nBy carrier, per year   13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month    1.00\nThree months    2.50\nSix months     4.50\nOne year         8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne  month        1.00\nThree   months       3.00\nSix months     6.00\nOne year       12.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nNEW 1951\nAUSTINS\nIMMEDIATE\nDELIVERY\nNew A-40 Austin\nCountryman\nNew A-40 Devon\n... \u2014 Sedans-\nUSED CAE\nSPECIALS\n1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Ford Panel\n1948 Plymouth Sedan    \"\n1948 Prefect Sedan\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Morris Coach\n1947 Ford Pickup\n1941   Dodge Pickup\n1940 Ford Pickup\n1940 Dodge Sedan   .\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan\n1938 Plymouth' Sedan\n1933  Dodge Pickup\n1930 Model-A Coach\nTERMS AND TRADES\nSpot Cash for Late Model\nUsed Cars\n\u25a0Empire Motors\nPhone 1135   803 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nTractor & Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\nNelson,\nPhone 930\nB. C.\nBox 119\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nCO., LTD.\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver. B. C.\n1 LARGE WARM SLEEPING\nroom, suitable for two girls. Ap-\n\"ply 210 Vernon St. after 5 p.m,\nDOUBLE CABIN FOR RENT. ALL\nconveniences. Lakeside Bungalow\nCourt. Phone 864.\nBRIGHT, COMFORTABLE 2-RM.\ncabin for rent. Apply Ferry Auto\nCourt; Phone 387-R1.\nBEDROOM   FOR   RENT.   PHONE\n351-Y or apply 213 Victoria St.\nROOM  FOR RENT, \u2014 BOX 4546,\nDaily News.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. CALL AT\n923 Vernon Street or phone 371-Y\nNEWLY   DECORATED   2-\"ROOM\nunfurnished suite.. Phone 464-L2.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Closing Prloes)\nAcadia Uranium  '.       .37\nAkaitcho    ...         1.25\nAmerican Y K   ;      .lift\nAnglo Huronian  13.00\nArjon\nArmistice .......\nAumaque   ....\nAunor\t\nBagamac \t\nBase Metals\nBevcourt \t\nBobjo  \t\nBonetal   \t\nBralorne  \t\nBroulan \t\nBuffadison\n.37\n.14\n.24\n3.35\n.24\n.59\n.47\n.16\n.59\n7.15\n1.03\n.10\n1.54\n.21\nBuffalo Ank\nBuf Can \t\nCalllman   ....\nCampbell R h _     2.70\nCan Mai __      .70\nCariboo Gold  .'.      1.29\nCentral Patricia  _      .59\nCentral Pore\nCentremaque\nChimo G \t\nCochenour   ..\nCons Beatty\nROOM AND BOARD\nCOMFORTABLE HOME AND\ncare for elderly person or con'\nvalescent Apply Box 4012 Daily\nNews.\nBOARD AND ROOM VACANCY\nfor young business man. Phone\n1392-X.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC,\nAIRDALE, TWO YEARS\nPROLIFIC MOTHER\nTrail keen, gentle with children,\nhome guardian, $50. Papers extra.\nMrs. L. M. Morton, P.O. Box 136,\nNakusp, B.C.\nFOR HIKE OR CONTRACT\u2014D-4\ncat, equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n588-R or 1376-L, Nelson.\nWINTER TRACKS FOR D6 AND\nRD7 cats in slock. Diesel power\nunits new and rebuilt. Bayes\nEquipment Co., Cranbrook, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 1 STAR MARINE\nconversion, marine clutch, water\npump, shaft and propellor. All\ngood running order. Apply Box\n4016 Daily News.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n2\nFORD TRUCK, 1%-TON. RE-CON-\nditioned engine, three good tires.\nVery cheap for quick sale. Good\nfarm truck. Apply Con Cummins,\nPhone 738-L2.\nPROSPECTIVE BUYER OF LATE\nmodel car from local garage can\nbuy credit note at reduced price.\nApply B,ox 4833 Daily News.\n'40 DODGE PANEL TRUCK IN\nexcellent condition, $850.00. or\ntrade on Jeep. H. D. Bargery,\nNakusp, B.C.\n1948 HALF-TON DODGE. LOW\nmileage, in good running order.\n(No agents). Terms cash. $1475.00.\nLicensed. Box 4534 Daily News.\n1029 BUlCK ENGINE FOR SALE.\nIn good condition. New parts.\nPlenty of power. John Osachoff,\nPerry Siding.\nFOR SALE-1047 FORD COACH\nin good running order. Fair price.\nPhone 321-R.\nFO RSALE\u20141941 CHEV. 5-PAS-\nsenger coupe. What offers? Phone\n711-L2.\nA 3-year-old house, beautifully\nsituated across the lake, 2 minutes walk from the Nelson ferry,\non a fully landscaped corner lot.\nMain floor has living room with\noak floors and picture window\noverlooking the lake, fully modern cabinet kitchen with large\nnook, two bedrooms, with provision for a third to be added.\nBathroom is 4-piece with Pembroke tub. Basement is cement\nwith hot and cold washing machine connections. Furnace gives\ngood and economical heat. Garage attached.\nThe owner is leaving town and\nis offering this house at a bargain\nfor quick sale S'l2'lO\nTERMS ARE AVAILABLE\n\u25a0    For Inspection See\nR. D. P. GILDAY\nThe\nGildayA^encIes\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\n542 BAKER ST. \u2014 PHONE 1460\nOpen Saturday Afternoon\nFor Weekend Inspection\nPhone 692-R2.\n4 ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE,. 4 MI.\nfrom town, with full basement.\nWell insulated. Write P.O. Box\n108, Nelson. B.C.\n5 ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE IN\nYmir on 3.lots. Apply Sid Popoff,\nYmir, B.C.\nTIMBER LIMIT FOR SALE \u2014 175\nacres, situated at Perry Siding.\nW. H. Cowley, Perry Siding, B.C.\nHOUSE FOR SALE IN TIUIL\nApply Box 4172 Daily News.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nOrder your Baby Chicks from the\nAPPLEBY\nPOULTRY  BREEDING FARM,\nMISSION CITY, B. C.\nBreeders of Large Type White\nLeghorns,   White   Rocks,   New\nHampshires and Cross Breeds.\nThis farm is successfully operating on a completely non-forcing\nprogram.   Out-door environment\nWinter   and   Summer.     Hardy,\nvigorous, disease resistant stock.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS; WANTED\nFINEST QUALITY R.O.P. - SIRED\nRhode Island Red and New Hampshire Chicks. Mixed sex $5 for $25,\n$10 for 50, $20 for 100, $95 for 500.\nPullets at 36c. Cockerels 10c. \u2014\nTRIANGLE HATCHERY, ARM-\nSTRONG. B. C.\n'OSCO\nBLOCKS1\n, Wherever Cables\nAre-Used'\nManufactured by the\nOPSAL STEEL COMPANY,\n. .     LIMITED\nRecognized as the\noutstanding blocks for\nthe lumber and mining\nindustries. A block for\nevery specific purpose,\nbacked by the \"Op-\nsal\" guarantee, these\nproducts are recognized\nas the best on the\nmarket.\n      .25\n 14\n 28%\n      1.75\n        .63\nConwest      2.30\nCroinor    _      .36\nDelnite     1.50\nDetta R L  14V<\nDiscovery          .37\nDome       18.65\nDonalds  _ 59\nEast Malartic -     1.42\nEast Sullivan      8.75\nElder Gold  51%\nEldona 26\nEureka        1.08\nFalconbridge      10.65\n     3.70\n     7.35\n 45\n.19\n._      6.B0\n 29\n       .17 Vi\n 40\n 65\n 13\nFrobisher\nGiant Yel  \t\nGod's Lake \t\nGoldale      > \t\nGolden Manltou\nHardrock\nHarrlcana  \t\nHasaga    ;....\nHedley Mas \t\nHeva   .\u201e\t\nHollongfer       14.75\nHudson Bay     59.50\nInspiration    48\nInt Nickel     39.50\nJellicoe\nJoliet Que\nKayrand   ....\nKelore   \t\nKenville  ....\nof every description.\nManufactured by the British Ropes Canadian Factory, Ltd. Included in\ntheir steel rope products\nare Ferry Ropes, Guy\nRopes, Logging Ropes,\nMarine Ropes and Mine\nRopes for oil occasions.\nWrite us for further\ninformation.\nSUPPLIED AND SERVICED BY\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n314 Hall St. Phone 18\nMining,   Milling   and   Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and\nContractors' Supplies.\nIf   it's   machinery   you   want\n 11%\n      ,.80\n 17%\n 13%\n 23\nKerr Addison     18.35\nKirk-Hudson Bay 61\nKirkland Lake  96\nLabrador              8.75\nLake Dufault  96\nLakeshore    ;    10.50\nLuke Wasa  38\nLamaque ,     6.10\nLeitch            1.10\nLexindin  10\nLittle Long Lac  85\nLouvicourt 24\nLynx    18\nMacassa     2.15\nMacLeod Cock       3.45\nMadsen R L      2.47\nMagnet      ' .28\nMalartic G F      2.55\nMarcus G         10\nMclntyre    66.25\nMcKenzie R.L 48\nMoneta    37\nMylamaque 10\nNegus       1.01\nNew Calumet     3.00\nNew Goldvue  35\nNew Jason  18\nNew Lund       2.16\nNicholson 21.%\nNipissing      2.05\nNoranda     80.00\nNormetals  ....;.    5.70\nNorseman  13\nO'Brien      1,45\n 18%\n 10\n      1.28\n       .67\n \u201e     1.80\n..:      2.88\n      1.35\nB.C. Forest   \t\nB.C. Packers A ..\nB.C. Packers B\nB.C. Power A ....\nB.C. Power B ....\nBrown Co.\n8%\n15%\n13%\n32\n6\n12%\nBrown Co. pfd       147\nBruck Silk A\t\nBruck Silk B \t\nBuilding Products .\nBurl Steel\t\nBurns A  \t\nBurrard A  ,\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Cement \t\nCan Malting  ,\nCan Packers A\t\nCan Packers B\t\nCan Bakeries \t\nCan Breweries ...;...,\nCan Canners\t\nCan Car & Fdy .\n23%\n13\n33.%\n22%\n42 Vi\n8%\n64%\n67\n51%\n42\n33\nn\n10%\n26%\n17\n18%\n22\n48%\n15%\n33\nCan Car & Fdy A\t\nCan Oil\t\nCan Dredge\t\nCan Ind Alcohol\t\nCan Steamships\t\nCan Marconi :      4.20\nCan Pacific Rly         28%\nCan West Lmbr  8\nCockshutt        28%\nCM&S       144   I with\nCons. Paper 37%\nDist Seagram  31\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28,1\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014The\nmarket plunked down today and\nstayed there. The abrupt fall carried prices down by $1 to $2 a share\nbut they held fast at that level.\nDespite the lower quotations, the\nvolume of business remained at an\nunusually-low level.\nCanadian issues fell with Dome\nMines losing %. International Nickel and Mclntyre each %, Distillers\nSeagrams, Canadian Pacific and Hiram Walker each %.\nOn the curb, Royalite Oil fell %,\nLake Shore and Giant Yellow\nknife each dropped %,\nTORONTO (CP)-Prices declined\nover a broad front in quiet dull\ndealing.\nThe   drop   was   similar   to   last\nTreated at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 27 \u2014 Ores and\nconcentrates received by The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Limited, Trail, for\nthe week ending 'January 27 1051,\ntotalled 6127 wet tons of which 3779\nwet tons were for treatment in the\nlead smelter and 2348 wet- tons were\nfor treatment in the zinc plant,\nOres and concentrates for treatment at the lead smelter were received from: Albion, Paulson, B.C.,\nAnismore Ainsworth, B.C.; Buchans\nMining Co.,  St. Johns,, Nfld.; Canadian   Exploration,   Salmo,   B.C.,'\nCork    Province,    Retallack,    B.C.,\nGrace   and   Co.,  New   York,   N.Y.;\nweek's sell-off in that there was no I Highland   Bell,   Bcaverdell,   B.C.'\nbig rush to sell. Trading was fairly | Iola,   Hedley,   B.C.;   Intsel   Metal\nquiet and volume of about 1,450.000;Corp:, New York, N.Y.; Mercantile\nshares was in keeping with the slow Metals Corp., New York, N.Y.; New\npace ot the last week. j Calumet,   Campbell^   Bay,  'Que.;\nEa?e metals posted an almost Philipp Bros., New York, N.Y.;\nsolid column of minus signs. Head- Reeves MacDonald, Remac, B.C.;\ning the group lower was Noranda Sheep Creek Paradise, Lake Win-1\nSilver Trail, Evans,\nO'Leary\nOrenada \t\nOsisko   \t\nPaymaster \t\nPickle Crow\nPioneer\nPore Reef\nBUDGET 8LIW'\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357\nCEDAR POLES. ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch poles, peeled\nor unpeeled. Glacier Lumber Co.,\nBox 450, Nelson, B.C.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company,\n910 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nSHIP    YOUR    HIDES   TO   J.   P.\nMorgan, Nelson, B. C.\nL<nu^\nA COW, FRESH OR    r\ncoming in. For sale. 1 new 900 lb. I GET A\ncream separator with AC motor.\nOf no use to owner. D. J. Mcln-\nnis. Willow Poinl. R.R. 1. Nelson.\nWANTED  -  HIGHEST PRICES  Up to $1,000 AT NO BaRAKOT\npaid for cattle of any kind or age:\nby Dick .Kleef. Phone, wire or\nwrite to Dick Kleef, R.R. 1, Nelson. Phone 401-L-4.\nFOR.SALE\u2014BUCK KID SAANEN\ngoats. Henry* Knowles, Crescent\nValley.   .\n>\u00ab\u00bb $1,000 k'fTo5!\nUna\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON   BUSINESS   COLLEGE-\nDay and Night Classes.\nCG.TrOflATlON LTD.\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Baker Sr.\nPowell Rouyn      1.08\nPreston E D       1.65\nQuebec Lab  21\nQuebec Men     2.80\nQueenston 62\nQuemont    26.75\nSan Antonio      2.85\nSen Rouyn   \u201e 21%\nShawkey   ..  \u201e      .22\nSherritt Gordon  \u201e....     3.75\nSilvermiller   :..._      1.45\nSilanco   32\nSiscoe      85\nSladon Mai  68\nStadacona \u201e...._ _ -   .42\nStarratt, Olsen 65\nSteep Rock  \u201e \u201e    9.00\nSurf Inlet   11%\nSylvanite       *      1.22\nTeck Hughes      2.41\nToburn  40\nTombill    ,...      .32\nTorbrlt      1.80\nTrans Cont Res :..      .75\nUnion Mining  14\nUnited Keno \/    10.00\nUpper Canada      1.95\nVentures      13.35\nViolamac  75\nWaite Amulet    12.00\nOILS\nAnglo Can  _     6.05\nAtlantic Oil  .      2.70\nB A Oil  \u201e _    32.00\nCal & Ed  _.    11.50\nCalmont  _     1.12\nCentral Leduc     2.80\nChemical Research     1.27\nCommonwealth Pete     2.00\nDom Bridge\nDom Foundries \t\nDom Steel & Coal B ....\nDom Stores  . .-:,..\nDom Tar & Chemical .\nDom Textiles \t\nEddy Paper \t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFleet Air\t\nFord A  v\t\nGatineau   \t\nGatineau 5% pfd\t\nGen. Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear '.':   \t\nGoodyear, pfd \t\nGypsum Lime\t\nH. R. MacMillan A \t\nH. R. MacMillan B \t\nImperial Oil  \t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInt. Metal   \t\nInt. Nickel \t\nInt. Pete  \t\nKelvinator   \t\nLake of Woods ,\nLaura Secord\t\nLoblaw A   \t\nLoblaw B    \t\nMaple Leaf Milling \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMercury Mills \t\nM  &O Paper\t\nMont.   Loco   \t\nMoore Corp \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nNat Sleel Car\t\nOgilvie Flour \t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp    \t\nRuss Industries \t\nShawinigan \t\nShea Brew \t\nSimpsons A  \t\nSimpsons pfd \t\nSoutham        \t\nSteel of Canada  \t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nStandard Paving .....'.\t\nStandard Chemical \u201e\t\nTaylor Pearson    \t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Corp B\t\nUnited Fuel A \t\nUnited Steel\n.61\n\u25a046%\n.32\n.14\n.35\n\u2022 10%\n.22\n.18\n.33\n2.50\n.65%\n.20\n1.05 14\n\u202220%\n1.02\n.52%\n.24%\n.10\n.10%\n.36%\n.12%\n.48\n\u2022 .39%\n.15%\n.17%\n.33\n.15\n.34\n.33 %\n.15\n.57%,\n5%;\n31%\n. 18%\n2514\n22%\n31\n24%\n55%\n72\n26\n23\n33%\n16\n30\n99%\n20\n33%\n33%\n15\n12%\n7\n19 '\n33%\n60\n' 10%\nH. Walker        56Ua\noss of more than $2. Next\ncame Consolidated Smelters, down\nabout $1. Steep Rock was among\nthoce losing fractions.\nWestern oils drifted lower wlthj\nlosses ranging from pennies to 35\ncents.\ndermcre. B.C.;\nWash.; Star Mine, Ainsworth, B.C.;\nTorbrit, Alice Arm, B.C.; Violamac,\nSandon B.C.\nConcentrates for treatment at the\nizinc plant wore received from Ains-\nMclntyre dropped more than tflS^'S'J^ffiiWf^\nto lead senior golds fractional down- P1*-   *'\u00b0','   Britannia    Britannia\nward. Junior producers eased pen- S?f* ^. ?\"\"\u00ab\"*\u00bb Exploration,\nhnimn   B.C.;   Cork   Province,   Re-'\nSalmo,\nlallack, B.C.; Goldfields, Northport,\nWash.; Reeves MacDonald, Remac,\nB.C.; Sheep Creek Paradise, Lake\nWindermere, B.C.; Sheep Creek\nZincton, Zincton, B.C.; Silback\nsimilar to that of Monday's trend. \\f*f%\\ p\u00ab; B.C.; Silver Stan-\nIndustrial' losses near the close *> '\u2022 gej* Hazelton, B.C.; United\nranged io three points or more in Kc\"\u00b0 H'\u00bb' Mayo Y.T.\nleaders ond ruled over a wide front. I Average quotation, for the week\nSteels: constructions and textile? en^s January, 27, 1951\n\u2022-\u25a0'\u25a0\u2014-  New York, 00.16 cents per ,\nnics to quiet trading.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 A hesitant\nsecurity list eased under late selling\npressure in fairly slow trading.\nThe market followed a  pattern\nwere prominent losers in the industrial section, where all groups displayed a majority of minus signs.\nFord \"A\" provided the largest decline in the list, when it fell 3%\npoints to 63.\nNoranda arid Consolidated Smelt\ners featured senior metals with\ndrops ol .Vf, points to B0 and two\npoints to 141 respectively. Consolidated Paper and Abitibi each lost\nnround a point in an otherwise fractionally lower paper group.\nSilver,\nounce. Lead. New York, 17.00 cents,\nper pound., Zince, St. Louis,  17.50\ncents per pound.\nU.S. exchange premium\u20145.3437%.\nWestern Grocers .\nWestern Grocers A .\nWeston George   .  ,v\nWinnipeg Electric com .\n46\nWinnipeg Electric pfd       101\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nBralorne      7,25\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold ...\nGolconda\t\nHedley Mascot .\nHighland Bell .\nInt C & C \t\nKootenay Belle\n.15\n1.33\n.27\n.65\n1.05\n.40\n.64\nDalhousie \t\nDavies Pete .\nDecalta .........\nDel Rio \t\nEastcrest\n 35 1\n 22%\n 25Vi\n      1.18\n 16\nFederated Pete      7.45\nHighwood  iey\u00ab\nHome     17.50\nImperial Oil     34.85\nInter Pete\nMacDougall Segar\nMid Cont \t\nNat Pete\t\nOkalta\nPacific Pete \t\n15.50\n.34\n.14\n.1.90\n2.75\n9.55\nRoyalite    13.65\nRoxana\nTower Pete\t\nUnited Oils \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma 'Steel \t\nAluminum  \t\nArgus       \t\nAtlas St\t\nBathurst Power .\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian\n.27\n.37\n.65\n54%\n31%\n98\n11%\n15\n4B\n41%\n32%\n6.20\n.43\n11.50\n1.15\nPlacer Development   25.50\nPend Oreille   8.75\nPioneer Gold  ..:.. 2.85\nQuatsino  _ .is\nReeves MacDonald  4^0\nSheep Creek   1,65\nSilver Standard   2.70\nVan Roi  \u201e [52\nVahada  ]['\u201e,_ [19\nWestern Exploration ..Z.Z. ,B0\nOILS\nAnaconda ton\nAnglo Canadian ,\t\nA P Consolidated\t\nCalgary & Edmonton .\nCalmont \t\nCommonwealth  2.20\nHome  17*75\nOkalta Com LZ1I 2 80\nPacific Pete .'  9 go\nVanalta         \u201e. ',. '36ia\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries   475\nCapital Estates- Z.Z. 2400\nInter Brew  \u201e..;. 325\nAlberta Dist \"\"\"\"' 355\nAlbertn Dist. VT ..'.'\u2122 3,90\nCalgary livestock\nCALGARY, Feb. 27 (CP) - Receipts were moderate on the Calgary Livestock Market today, with\n468 cattle and calves on offer, and\ntrade was fairly active. Good butcher steers and heifers were steady.\nGood light cows and canners and\ncutters were about steady.\nYesterday's sales were 694 cattle,\n89 calves, 206 hogs and 10 sheep.\nHogs reached an all-time high\nfor the Calgary market yesterday,\nclosing at $36.00. Sows were steady\nat $21.00. Good lambs brought\n$34.50, while good ewes were up 50\ncents a $14.00-16.50.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n31.50-33.50: common to medium\n27.50-31.00. Good to near-choice\nbutcher heifers 30.50-31.50; common\nto medium 26.50-30.00. Good cows\n24.50-25.50; common to medium\n22.45-24.25. Canners and cutters\n$19.00-22 00. Good bulls 27.50-28.00:\ncommon to medium 24.00-27 00\nGood stocker and feeder steers\n31.00-33.50; common to medium\n27.00-30.50. Good to choice veal\ncalves 35.00-38.00; common to medium 2B.00-33.00.\nLONDON (Reuter\nneriod ended quietly with industrin\nshares mainly steady  and British\nGovernment     stocks     fractionally\nhigher.\nAmong Ihe former, investors\nshowed some interest in motors and\nengineering but other groups were\nneglected and recorded a few narrowly   irregular   movements.\nAnother batch of good dividends\nkept interest in rubbers at a high\nlevel and prices were firmer.\nFreestate Developing Gold issues\nwere helped by a borehole result\nfrom (he area, while copners improved with some Paris support for\nnew account reported.\nVANCOUVER. Feb. 27 (CP) -\nTrading showed a little more\nstrength but prices were sluggish. .\nIn base metals Western Uranium\nwas off .05 to 1.80 and base metals\nmining was down .01 to .59.\nHospital Insurance\"\nSaid Should Be\nSelf-Supporting\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014\nThe compulsory hospital insurance\nThe trading: scheme  should  be  self-supporting,\n A.   R.   MacDougall (Cln\u2014Vancouver-Point Grey) said in the Legisla-\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK, Feb. 27 (AP)-Spot\nnonferrous metal prices: Copper,\n24% cents a pound, Connecticut Volley. Lead, 17 cents a pound. New\nYork. Zinc, 17% cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis. Tin, $1,827 to $1.83\npound New York.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 27_(CP)\u2014 Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 1.01%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, .1.54%.\nBUTTER STOCKS DROP\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Stocks\nof creamery butter in nine Canadian\ncities on Feb. 23 dropped sharply\nto 8,093,000 pounds from 25,871,000\nMarch 1, 1950, the Bureau of\nStatistics reported today.\nHoldings by. cities with figures\nfor March 1 in brackets, follows:\nQuebec 276.000 (432,000) pounds;\nMontreal 1.773,000 (5,695,000); Toronto 1,216,000 (6,703,000); Winnipeg\n1,812,000 (7.995,000); Regina 169,000\n(676,000); Saskatoon 112,000 (249,-\n000); Edmonton 1,623,000 (2,055,000);\nCalgary 447,000 (770,000); Vancouver 665,000 (1,236,000).\nture.\nDuring 'throne speech debate, he\nsaid: \"I cannot agree with those\nwho would increase the Social Security and Municipal Aid Tax for\nthe purpose of bolstering up the\nhospital insurance scheme.\n\"This (three percent) tax was\nnever meant to bolster up a scheme\nwhich was supposed to be self-\nsupporting.\n\"To raise the sales tax at this\njuncture would in my view tend to\ndiscourage the growth of industry\nin British Columbia.\"\nOne method of putting the\nscheme on its feet would be to\nraise premiums to a point which\nwould -take care of additional beds\nresulting from an increased population, he said.\nIndians in Ottawa\nTo Discuss New Act\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014A rep-\nrcsentative group of Indians from\nacross Canada will meet Citizenship\nMinister Harris tomorrow for a\nthree-day discussion on the proposed revision of the Indian Act.\nPurpose of the meeting is to better acquaint the various Indian\ngroups with the proposed amendments and changes in the old Indian Act and give them a chance to\npresent their views.\nThe amendments are based on an\nextensive study by a Joint Parliamentary Committee. The bill was\nfirst''introduced at the last session\nof Parliament but was withdrawn\nby the Government to give interested parties more time to study\nthe bill. '     \u25a0   . '\nThe group is composed of 18 representatives of the more important\nIndian Unions in Canada. The first\nsession will be open to the public\nwith the remainder of the discussions held in Camera.\nBLAIRMORE, Alta., (CP)-The\noldest old-timer of the Crow's Nest\nPass District, James Paden, recently\ncelebrated' his 100th birthday. He\nand his wife left Sprlnghill, N.S.\nabout 1901 lo settle here.\nPRINCE ALBERT, SASK. (CP)\u2014\nAbout 13,000 aircraft passengers\ntouched down at Prince Albert last\nyear. They included trappers, teachers, missionaries, prospectors, medical men, miners, nuns, fishermen,\nconvicts, outpost nurses, business\nmen, housewives and ordinary vacationists.\n8ELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nMCyty\/WftSez:\n\u00ae\nADVICE IS THE ONLY tl\nTHINS I KNOW WHICH IS\nvMORE BLESSED TO\nGIVE. THAN  RECEIVE'\/\n<\u2022\u00ab WMfWwoc ntnxrs \u00abr*   78.\nWe'd like to give\nyou some advice\non the care of\nyour car-bring\nit to our station\nfor the finest in\nexpert, quick\nservice.\n\u00ae\nTueetc\nB.C. Electric    ,         87%   CLASSIFIED  ADS GET  RESULTS\nm,  '...   '    .    LTP..\n\u25a0Xl \u2022\u25a0\u2022 .:  PH0NE43'NE150,N,.B.C., .: ,   '.  .\n>'\u25a0,. FQRD TRACTORS  DEARBORN IMPLEMENTS .\n 10 -4 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNSEDAY, FEB. 28, 1951\nHEAD COLDS\nSTUFFINESS  QUICKLY\nK. RELIEVED     _\nIBsf\n*; VICKS\nVatro-nol\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nLondon Dockers\nTake Little Walk\nLONDON, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014A walkout by 7490 London dockers marked\nthe resumption today of a court\nhearing for seven men charged with\ninciting illegal strikes in British\nseaports.\nAttempts to bring on similar\nstoppages in Liverpool and Manchester fizzled. Thousands of dockers in those two ports stopped work\nlast Tuesday, first day of the court\nhearing.\nThe National Dock Labor Board\nsaid 17,910 men stayed on the job\nin London. However, 37 ships were\nheld idle and another 32 were un\ndermanned.\nThe seven men were charged\nIn connection with a wildcat dock\nwalkout several weeks ago in Liverpool, Manchester and London,\nThe stevedores said they were protesting union acceptance of a wage\nIncrease they considered inadequate, but union officials charged\nthey were Communist-inspired.\nWINDSOR, England (CP) \u2014 An\neight-year-old horse called \"Foxy\"\nwhich had never won a race fell at\nthe first jump in a steeplechase\nhere, then bolted the course. Hours\nlater he was found peacefully grazing near the far side of the track.\nFOR   DEPENDABLE\n'   PAINTING AND\nPAPERHANGING\nMURPHY'S\nPhone 555 745 Baker St.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker SL\nPhone 327\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\n(i^ed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n615 Kootenay St.        Phone 361\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302\n446 Ward St.\nDonald E. Hunter\nOPTOMETRIST\n431 Baker Sr.     Phone 333\nHAVE YOUR   FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall St.\nPhone 146\nTHE WARDROBE\nART   TARLING,   Prop.\nLadles'  and  Gents'  Tallon\nCleaning \u2014 Repairing\nAlterations\nPHONE  1256\nP.O. BOX 36 - NELSON, B.C.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   &   REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301  Ward St. Phone 63\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n;.\u2022'\"RASTER   PLUMBER\n':'\u2022'\u2022;    PHONE 815\nUrges Canadians\nTo Use Powers\nFor Controls\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 George\nD r e w, Progressive Conservative\nLeader, tonight urged Canadians to\nwrite their' members of parliament\nand demand the imposition of con\ntrols.\nIn a speech on -the nation's bust\nness program of a CBC National\nnetwork, Mr. Drew said he is con\nvinced emergency controls have be\ncome \"absolutely necessary\" to hold\ndown the cost of living and to com\nbat inflation.\n\"Inflation Is your business and\nmine,\" he said. \"We have presented\nevery argument we can in the\nHouse of Commons, but the govern'\nment refuses to act. You still have\nit within your power to demonstrate\nthat democarcy is in fact government of the people by the people\nthemselves.\n\"After all,\" he continued, \"in (\ndemocarcy the members of parliament are bound to pay attention to\na clearly expressed demand from\nthe people of their own constituency.\"\n\"I respectfully urge you to write\nyour own member to say that you\nwant some definite action taken\nright away to bring into operation\nthose emergency controls which are\nrequired to hold, down the cost of\nliving . . .\"\n\"It is possible for confidence in\nour free economy to be destroyed\nunless steps are taken without further delay to bring inflation under\ncontrol.\"\nCoasl Colorful\nFigure Retires\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP) -\nVancouver's \"King of the Snow-\nfighters\" has retired,\nMichael (Big Mike) Abrahamson\nwas Canadian National Railways\nroadmaster and a colorful figure\nthrough 46 years of railroading in\nB.C.\nMr. Abrahamson was born in\nMandal, Norway. He worked as a\nlaborer when the Canadian Northern was built through the Rockies\nand B. C. By the time the steel hit\nVancouver, he was roadmaster.\nHis biggest fight came a year\nago when big slides tumbled into\nthe Fraser Canyon near Boston\nBar. Ho worked almost without\nsleep for 10 days before the slide\nwas cleared.\nCost of Living\nUp 6 Per Cent\nGENEVA, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014The International Labor Office reported\nthat the cost of living in Canada\nwent up six per cent in 1950, the\nsame as the United States.\nLiving costs rose in 25 countries\nlast year and dropped in only six.\nThe I.L.O.'s report, based on statistics from countries whose figures\nwere complete through November\nor December, showed that the only\ncountries where living became\ncheaper were Burma, JrVestern Germany, Iran, Portugal, the Sudan and\nTurkey.\nFinland showed the greatest increase, 21 per cent; Iran the greatest decrease, 17 per cent.\nAmong other increases were Australia 12 per cent, France 12, Greece\n14, South Africa and Sweden 6 and\nthe United Kingdom 4.\nNew Anti-Moscow\nParty in Rome\nROME, Feb. 27 (AP)\u2014National\nheadquarters of a new anti-Moscow\nCommunist Party will be opened in\nRome next week,.Rome newspapers\nreported today.\nAbout 50,000 copies of a manifesto outlining the reasons for their\ndesertion of the Stalinist ranks are\nreported to have gone out from\nAldo Cucchi and Valdo Magnani,\nleaders of Reggio Emilia Province\nin the \"Red North\" who rocked the\nparty by their resignations.\nThe anti-Communist press is saying that many thousands of Italian\nCommunists will follow Cucchi and\nMagnani in the independent movement\u2014the Italian brand of Titoism.\nThus far the newspapers have listed\n28 Communist leaders throughout\nthe country who have bolted,\nWarn Parents of\nCyanide Danger\nLEEDS, England, Feb. 27 (Reuters)\u2014Police today scoured the back\nstreets of this industrial city, telling\nparents their children might have\npicked up enough potassium cyanide to wipe out their families.\nThey found late last night that\n200 balls weighing 25 pounds of the\ndeadly poison had been taken from\na dyeworks. and immediately spread\nwarnings to the city's 500,000 Inhabitants.\nThe BBC broadcast warnings in\nits news bulletins, police radio cars\nwent through the streets giving a\ndescription of the missing poison,\nand messages were flashed on the\nscreens in local movie houses.\nPolice .thought children might\nhave broken into the dye works\nduring the week-end and taken the\ncyanide, which when mixed with\nwater forms prussic acid. A shed\ndoor had been smashed vvith a crowbar.\nFriendly Chat Brings Fortune\nH. D. Rife, 29, a Hayward, Calif., automobile painter, Is shown\nwith his wife, Marvel Jean, and their 4-year-old son, Carey, as they\nplan a conservative future after Rife had been Informed he had been\nbequeathed $437,500 by a New York woman, Mrs. Emma Rivers. Rife\nrecalled he had frequently talked to her as.they sat on a park bench\nIn Long Beach, Calif., when he was on liberty from tlje U.S.S. Lexington. Her will stated In parti \"I leave this share of my estate to a\nfine young man who, with so many places to go, so many things to\nsee, still found time to put a little more happiness Into a lonely old\nlady's heart.\"\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nNew Respirators\nFor Gas Masks\nBeing Studied\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP)-Canada\nis studying new types of respirators\nfor gas masks and other equipment\nto combat a largely ordorless and\ninvisible poison gas the Russians\nhave in large quantities.\ns Officials, commenting on reports\nthat Danish scientists- have started\na research program to find a remedy for what they called the \"sneaking death\" gas, said Canada has\nbeen studying its potentialities and\nuses for some time.\nIt is known here as the \"nerve\ngas\" because it can swiftly destroy\nthe nerves and bring death. It would\nbe quite possible for victims to be\nstricken before they were aware\nanything had happened,\nDefence authorities here say It\nIs not the worst gas yet developed\nbut it Is the worst than can bs\nmanufactured and put In weaptns\nfor effective use.\nThey say Its qualities have been\noverstressed but that It Is a \"very\npowerful\" gas. It Is described as\n\"much better\" than mustard gas.\nIt was developed by the Germans\nin the last war and both the Russians and the Allies seized quanties\nof it in Germany at the end of the\nwar.\nAt least small quantities of It are\navailable in Canada and have been\nused in the drive to find an answer\nto It.\nLargely in secrecy, Canada has\nbeen doing important work on\nchemical or gas warfare at Suffield,\nAlta. In fact, Canada did important\nwork in that field in the last war\nwhich has never been made public.\nNew Indian Bill\nIntroduced\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP)-Citizen-\nship Minister Harris said today a\nnew bill making broad changes in\nthe Indian Act is basically the same\nas one introduced in the Commons\nlast Spring and later withdrawn.\nHe made the statement in the\nCommons during debate on a resolution preliminary to the Indian\nbill.\nThe Minister said this year's bill\ncontains little new from the 1950\nversion, but there are \"improvements\" in some sections.\nThe 1950 measure \u2014 withdrawn\nby the Minister for further study\nafter Indian bands had complained\nthey hadn't enough time to deal\nwith it\u2014rewrote the old Indian\nAct.\nThe bill would have set up an\nIndian \"register,\" In which only\nthose of predominantly Indian\nblood would be recorded. It set\nup new procedures for management of reserves, simplified provisions for control of Indian\nfunds and adopted new and uniform systems of electing chiefs\nand councillors. Tax exemptions\non Indians' real and personal\nproperty on reserves were to be\nmodified:1        \" 5\nSpectators Included some Indian\nleaders called from all parts of\nCanada by the Citizenship Minister\nto discuss with him the amendments to the Act.\nThey heard a wrangle over\nwhether a Special Committee of\nthe House should be set up to deal\nwith the changes, as asked by\nWilliam Bryce  (CCF--Selkirk).\nMr. Harris said he would like\nto see the bill approved In\nprinciple, but would not object\nto a committee after that. C.C.F.\nand Progressive Conservative\nmembers argued that a committee could be set up without\nthat formality, urging the House\nshould  not proceed  hastily.\nMembers generally agreed that\nthe Indian Act should be revised\nand brought up to date, wilh a\nwide range of suggestions made.\nMr. Bryce said the Government\nshould stress on the education of\nIndians, and they should be compensated for loss of their ancient\nhunting and fishing rights,\nURGES  EQUALITY\nJohn Blackmore (SC-Lethbridge)\nalso said they should be given adequate education facilities. And they\nshould be given equal'fty. before\nthe law with the white man.\nDouglas Harkness (PC--Calgary\nWesl) said Indians.should be given\nthe right to appeal to the courts\nfrom the decisions of the minister.\nUnless this basic right was given\nthem Canada's adherence to. the\nnited Nations bill of rights was a\n\"farce.\"\nE, D. Fulton (PCKamloops)\nsaid the Indians In British Co-\nlumbla had problems far., different from those In other parts of\nCanada. There were no treaty\nIndians In British Columbia. The\nB.C. Indians felt either that\nthere should be a separate act\ndealing with their problems or\nthat they should be covered by\na special section of the main act\nJ. A. Simmons (L-Yukon-Mac-\nKenzie River) urged that more be\ndone now to improve housing and\nhygiene. The schools should teach\ntrades. They should give courses\nin mining and in the handling of\ntractors, trucks and other vehicles\nused on construction projects.\nR. R. Knight (CCF--Saskatoon>,\na schoolteacher, urged that more\nbe spent on Indian education,\nwhich in the past had not been too\nsuccessful. There should be more\nadequate facilities for manual\ntraining and home economics\nteaching.\nBuy and Sell tho Classified Way\nHERE'S A $7000\nGROCERY BILL\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014Mothers\nwho buy groceries for growing\nchildren may be interested in this\n$7000 food order:\n1000 pounds of cocoa; 4000 pounds\npowdered milk; 1500 pounds lard;\n1000 pounds spam; 6000 tins sardines; 1600 pounds jam; 3000 pounds\nmacaroni; 1250 pounds meat balls\n4000 pounds sugar; 1600 pounds of\ncheese.\nThis is the order'Dr. Lotta Hits'\nchmanova of Ottawa has just put\nin for child war-victims in Europe,\nyoungsters who are supported by\nCanadians under the foster-parent\nprogram of the Unitarian Service\nCommittee of Canada.\nDr. Hitschmanova, executive\ndirector of the Committee, has consigned the food to foster-homes in\nAustria, Italy, Greece and France.\nThis is the first large food order\nthe Committee has put in this year.\nAll purchases are made from voluntary donations.\nPoullrymen to\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Feb.\n27 (CP)\u2014British Columbia poultry-\nmen will meet in Vancouver March\n10 to discuss preliminary plans for\na national marketing service for\neggs and poultry products.\nThe plan is sponsored by the B.C.\nFederation of Agriculture and, it is\nclaimed, would be a safeguard\nagainst inter-provincial dumping.\n\"Six provinces have already enacted legislation under the national\nProducts Marketing Act and at least\nAlberta, Manitoba and Ontario are\nready to follow wilh marketing restrictions,\" said Charles Walls, Federation secretary. \"They will dump\nsurpluses here if we are not under\nthe same umbrella.\"\nA similar scheme was rejected by\nB. C. poultrymen at a convention\nlast year.\nHIGH VARIATION\nIN HOSPITAL RATES\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP)\nThere was a variation amounting\nto as high as $5.75 in per patient-day\ncharges at main hospitals in the\nProvince during December.\nHealth Minister Douglas Turnbull\nmade this known today in replyin;\nto questions asked in the Legislature\nby Eupert Haggen, (C.C.F.\u2014Grand\nForks-Greenwood).\nPer patient-day charges at Van\ncouver General Hospital in Decern\nber were $13 while at the hospital\nat Quesnel  they were $7.25.\nOthers; Royal Jubilee, Victoria\n$11.30; SL Joseph's, Victoria, $10.80;\nSt. Paul's Vancouver, $10.15; Royal\nInland, Kamloops, $9; Royal Colum\nbian, New Westminster, $11.20; Koo\ntenay Lake, Nelson, $9.75; Mater\nMisericordiae, Rossland, $7.75;\nQueen Victoria, Revelstoke, $8.25;\nGrand Forks, $9; Kelowna, $7.50;\nKimberley, $8.50; St! Eugene, Cranbrook, $9.40.\nEnd Restrictions on\nWorld Trading of\nGov't Securities\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\nForeign Exchange Control Board\ntoday announced virtual elimination\nof wartime restrictions on international trading in long-term government securities. '*\nThe order applies to all Canadian\nGovernment domestic securities,\nother than those due or callable\nwithin three years.\nThe move has' twin action:\n1. Americans or other non-rest\ndents now will be able to trade Ca\nnadian Corporation bonds and\nstocks for long-term Canadian Government securities, cracking the 12?\nyear ban which forbid cross-trading\nbetween4he Government and non-\nGovernment field.\n2. Canadians can trade Canadian\nGovernment securities in the Amer\nican market, and acquire a wide\nrange of Canadian securities or\nreadily marketable U.S. securities.\nPreviously, re-investment in the\nU.S. was restricted to the kind of\nGovernment bonds sold.\nA  uniform  penny  postage  rate\nstatred in England on Jan. 10, 1840.\nTrappers Hold Festival at The Pas\nHelen Lundy, crowned \"Queen of the North\" at the fourth\nannual Northern Manitoba Trappers' Festival at The Paa, chats with\nMrs. W. A. Cox, Queen of the 1921 Hudson Bay Dog Derby.\u2014Central\nPress Canadian.\nWe Look Like\nDinner to Him\nYou are looking Into the face\nof one of nature's most vicious\ncreatures, the man-eating piranha\nof the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers. This fellow is a resident of\nthe Bronx Zoo, but Is just as\nbloodthirsty as ever. The piranha\nrarely exceeds 10 inches In length,\nbut a swarm of them can demolish a 400-pound pig in 10 minutes.\nMany an unsuspecting boatman\nhas lost a finger by letting his\nhand trail In the water for a minute. In the closeup photo here,\nonly a few of the needle-sharp\nteeth are visible, but he has a\nlot more.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nPermanent Basis\nFor Special\nForce Benefits\nOTTAWA, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\ngovernment signified today It is\nready to put veterans' benefits for\nCanada's Special Force on a permanent basis.\nVeterans Minister LaPointe placed\non the Commons Order Paper notice\nthat he will introduce legislation\n\"to make certain rights, privileges,\nand benefits applicable to persons\nserving ... in the Special Force.\"\nThe bill will put on a permanent\nbasis those privileges now guaranteed on a temporary basis by Or-\nder-in-Council and will provide\nCabinet with authority to extend\nother privileges such as education\nand land settlement.\nThe rights already guaranteed include re-establishment and civil employment, pensions and hospital\ntreatment as well as unemployment\ninsurance.\nA Veterans Committee of the\nCommons will be established to\nstudy the bill.\nBroadcasters\n(hart Course\nFor Emergency\nQUEBEC, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 Canadian broadcasters\u2014the men who\noperate the privately-owned stations\nin the dominion\u2014went behind closed doors toda^* and charted the\ncourse they will folljw in the event\nof emergency, be it caused by nature, civil disaster or, enemy action.\nThe meeting was one of the most\nimportant discussion of the 26th\nannual convention of the Canadian\nAssociaion of Broadcasters.\nDuring the discussion it was\nbrought out that the mas communi\ncation potential of broadcasting had\nalready been broken as effective\neither under the threat of enemy\naction or during the civil emergencies as the floods of 1950 In Mani\ntoba and British Columbia.\nUnderlining the value of radio\nbut apart from the discussions\non emergency operations, was the\naward of an lllmulnated address\nto Ken Soble of Hamilton, Ont.,\n(station CHML), The award was\nfor his promotion In the Summer\nof 1950 which played a large part\nIn making the Manitoba Flood\nRelief Fund campaign to successful.\nThe award was from the five Winnipeg broadcasting stations \u2014 CWB,\nCJOB, CKRC, CKSB, CKY.\nThe Winnipeg station CJOB and\nits manager, John Blick, were\nnamed the winners of the John J.\nGillen Award. It was presented for\nthe first time for a station's service to its  community.\nThe awnrd was based on the work\nof. Mr. Blick and his station in connection with the Red River flood\nwhich threatened for a time to make\nthe Manitoba capital uninhabitable.\nThe broadcasters also held a'panel\ndiscussion of various surveys classifying radio audiences.\n5-Man Committee\nTo Meet Turnbull\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 27 (CP)\u2014A\nfive-man Civic Committee, headed\nby Mayor \"Fred Hume, will meet\nmembers of the Provincial Cabinet\ntomorrow to discuss Vancouver's\nhospital bed shortage and a new\nbridge over the Fraser River at\nMarpole.\nThe group will meet Public\nWorks Minister Carson at 4 p.m. to\ndiscuss the bridge problem, and\nHealth Minister Turnbull at 8 p.m.\nto talk over the hospital bed situation.\nAccompanying Mayor Hume will\nbo Aldermen George Miller, Alex\nFisher and J. D. Cornelt, and City\nEngineer John C. Oliver.\nDuncan Highway\nNearly Finished\nDUNCAN, Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014 A\nmajor highway construction job\nhas been ivearly completed with\nplacing of seven 15-ton wooden\nbeams to form a trestle across the\nisland highway at Koksilah, two\nmiles South of Duncan.\nEach 72-foot timber contains\nabout 8000 board feet of lumber.\nCompletion of the span across the\nhighway almost finishes many\nmonths of work on a seven-mile\nroad linking tidewater at Cowichan\nBay and the logging road network\nin the Koksilah and Seymour\nranges West of Quncan.\nPreviously logs from the woods\nhad to be transferred from truck\nto railway about six miles from the\nhighway crossing. Now they will\nmove directly to tidewater without\ntransfer.\nWHITE\nSHIRTS\nBy Forsyth\nFor Spring\nWhite shirts are still the\nmost popular. Made with\nregular or double cuffs in\nthe new collar styles.\n3.95 to 6.50\nEmory's\n\u25a0' LIMITED\n\\ The Man's Store\nRescue Sailors\nFrom Open Boat\nGUAM, Feb. 27 (AP)-A dozen\nshipwrecked sailors, including a Canadian teen-ager making his first\nvoyage, were brought into Guam\ntoday after five days in an open\nlifeboat.\nThe food and water was almost\ngone when a searching plane discovered ihem 275 miles South of\nIwo Jima. They had sailed and\ndrifted 185 miles from the spot\nwhere the Norwegian freighter\nFlorentine sank in high seas Feb. 19.\nThe Canadian was 17-year-old\nTommy Magnusson of Great Falls,\nMan.\nTwenty-one others, including the\ncaptain, were rescued by the British freighter Silvermaple last week.\nThe cargo of gold and copper\nwhich the 4986 ton cargo ship was\ncarrying from Manila to San Francisco shifted in heavy seas, and\nthe Florentine developed a 50-\ndegree list, said Boatswain Harry\nAlbigtsen.\nThe 12 brought in today by the\nUnited States tug Takelma said\nthey had given up hope of being\nfound.- They were trying to sail\nback to Manila, although their lifeboat mast was rotted and almost\nuseless.\n8-Year-0ld Saves\nDrowning Man\nPETERBOROUGH, Feb. 27 (CP)\n\u2014Eight-year-old Gary Teneycke,\nheld 27-year-old William Chamber,\nlain afloat in the icy Otonabee river for 10 minutes last night until\nneighbors arrived.\nChamberlain, a construction\nworker who boards at the Teneycka\nhome, fell in when the ice broke\nunder his weight. Gary, kneeling on\nthe ice beside Chamberlain, held\nhim by the hair and shouted until\nneighbors helped the pair to the\nshore.\nGary said he heard a cry froml\nthe river behind the house, andl\nrushed to the bank. Some distance\nout, he saw Chamberlain, a non-.\nswimmer, struggling in the water.l\nChamberlain's legs were almost J\nparalyzed by the cold water.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS!\nOur Vijo Pancake Waffle Mix|\nNow  Packaged   In   New . Slzeo\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR A\nPACKAGE TODAY\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCompany, Ltd.\nPhone 238 523 Front 8fc\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountanti\nAuditors\n660 Baker St.\nPhone 238\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuit 206 Phone 141]\nST. MELLION, England (CP) \u2014\nFarmers in the Cornwall County\narea suggested it was a case of \"unprovoked aggression\" when a cow\nnamed \"Red Lady\" kicked farmhand Morley Tamblyn. His leg was\nbroken in two places.\nSEND US YOUR\nOUT-OF-TOWN\nMAILORDERS\nWe Ship Out Same Day\nAs Received\nYour Rexall Store\n. City Drug Co.\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone:\nDay 34, Night 807-R\nBOX 460\nYOU ARE INVITED TO LISTEN\nTO  THE  BROADCAST OF THE\nKIWANIS PROGRAM\nFrom Vancouver, commemorating the\n36th Anniversary of Kiwanis International\nOver CKLN Thursday, March 1\n\"-\u25a0}}-.        1:00-1:30 p.m.\na ton of fmism\/\/ is a ton\nof Satisfaction\nSISTERS BENEFICIARIES\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 27 (CP) \u2014\nFive sisters of the late wife of William P. D. Peroberton, former part\nowner of the National Motors Ltd.,\nhere, who died on Jan. 27, are chief\nbeneficiaries'listed in his will probated in Supreme Court today. The\ngross value of his estate amounted\nto $410,188.\nThe will instructed that one-half\nof the net residue of the estate to\n\"be divided among the sisters of\nmy late wife. Muriel Rant will receive $65,189; Gwynneth Mclllree,\n$49,229; Audrey Clarke, $49,206;\nGladys Marriott, $16,354 (ind Ethel\nTye, $10,466. *\nPhillippa Holmes, neice is to receive $28,247; Armine Duke, $28,133\nand Yoder Moyie, .$28,176.\nOther beneficiaries are listed\namong the relatives. Among these\nis J. D. Massey Pemberton. who was\nleft an income for life from $42,033.\nNO\nsoot\nannoying gases\ndink$r$ \u00b0 Q\n^or Heal Home Comfort\nuse\nFUEL and\nTRANSFER\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_02_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0424081","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1951-02-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1951-02-28 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0424081"}