{"@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":"1951-04-17","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0425452\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" r':\/\nGov't Opposition\nAttacks Abbott\nBudget Called Inflationary; Want\nSteps \"to Deal With Profiteering\"\nOTTAWA, April 16 (CP)^A three-pronged opposition\nattack on the 1951-52 budget, accompanied by two motions of\nnon-confidence in the Government, was.launched today in\nthe Commons. -\nThe Progressive Conservative, C.C.F. and Social Credit\nParties joined in 'criticizing the tax-boosting budget as inflationary and in deploring Finance Minister Abbott's action\nin raising the general sales tax to 10 per cent from eight\nper cent.\n' \" , As the traditional budget debate, opened, the Progressive Conservative and C.C.F. Parties introduced their customary motions of non-confidence, containing specific criticisms.\n3>\u00b0i\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014A few olouds. Light\nNortherly winds. Little change in\ntemperature. Low and high at\nCranbrook 28 and 60, Crescent\nValley 25 and 65.\n?*>* <\nNpLSON, B.C., CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 17, 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 301\nThe C.C.F. motion, moved by\nParty Leader M. J. Coldwell, called (or limiting the new 20-per-\ndent defence tax on Incomes to\nsingle persons who earn more\nthan $1500 a year and to married\npersons earning more-than $3000.\nUnder the budget, the tax will apply to Income tax payments beginning July 1.\n.' The Progressive Conservative\nthrust, moved by J. M. Macdonnell\n(PC\u2014Toronto Greenwood), specifically expressed regret at the Government's \"failure'.',to take effective\nsteps \"to deal, with profiteering\".\nIt also said:\n\"The proposals of the Minister of\nFinance' are unsatisfactory -because\nthey will inevitably Increase the cost\nof living for all and especially for\nthose least able to bear it.\n\"This house condemns in particular, as inflationary, the increase by\n25 per cent of the general sales tax\nand is of .the opinion that the increase is unnecessary and unwise.\n\"This House further condemns the\nheavy Increase in excise taxes on\ncertain essential commodities and is\nof the opinion that much of the\nGovernment's- firoposed huge in?\ncrease in taxation is due to its own\nextravagance.\"        ;.\nSolon Low, Social Credit leader,\ntermed the budget an \"Inflationary budget-.'and said It would do\nnothing \"to put value back Into\nthe* Canadian dollar and to bring\ndown the cost of living to manageable proportions.\"\nMr. MacDonnell, official Progressive Conservative financial critic,\npredicted that the budget, though it\npurported to cure inflation, will\ncause a \"substantial\" rise in the\ncost of living, with the inevitable\nresult that organized labor would\nseek further wage increases.\n\"It will have only one effect\u2014to\nstart off the deadly spiral,\" he suggested.\nBoth the Increases ln commodity\nand corporation taxes, he said,\nwould be translated into prices and\nthus help to swell living costs.\nAlong with these higher prices\nwould go to the new defence income\ntax whiqh would lessen the taxpayers' capacity to pay.\nHe hid the Government js rejy.\nIng on the United States to \"bail\nthem out\" of the present situation.\nNO PROTECTION\nMr. Coldwell said he does not\nagree that Canada has to rely on\nconditions in the United States as\nfar as living costs are concerned.\nCanadian conditions could not help\nbut be influenced by events in the\nU.S. and in the world. However,\nthere was much the Government\ncould do to protect the Canadian\npeople from the devastating results\nof inflation.\nThe Government had done nothing and the'budget'did nothing lo\nprotect people from high prices.\nPrices had risen spectacularly since\nlast Fall's budget, which had been\ndescribed.as anti-inflationary.\"\nRailways Need Plan for\nCompetition\nOTTAWA, April 16 (CP) \u2014\ni Donald Gordon, Canadian National Railways President, said\ntpday highway competition Is the\nRailway's big problem but lie\n!' does noV mink-they should try\nto meet It by stifling the opposition.\nInstead, he told the Commons\nRailways and Ship-ping Committee, It is up to the railways to\nImprove their service and try to\nwork out some arrangement with\nhighway operators that will enable each carrier to do Its Job.\n; In the Committee's annual examination of the CNR's affairs, Mr.\nGordon said the railways have\nbeen losing' many millions of dollars to their road comoetitors. They\nwere threatened with being put out\nof business in some .sections of the\ncountry.\nIf railway service was to survive in these sections, the CNR\nwould either have to go into the\nhighway business or work out some\nsort of cooperation with highway\ntransport operators.\n'. In an all-day questipn-and-an-\nawer session that ranged through\nmany phases of railway matters,\nMr. Gordon also said:\n1. The boxcar situation Is Improving rapidly as Canadian-owned\ncars returning trom the United\nStates cut down the Canadian\nshortage.      ,   ....'\u25a0'.\n2. The CNR does not yet know\nhow big a freight-rate Increase will\nbe asked to meet the cost of the\nnew 40-hour week going into effect\nJune 1.\n3. The Company's potential revenues from a five-per-cent rate increase application, heard by the\nBoard of Transport Commissioners in January, and on which no\ndecision has yet been given,'would\nbe about $1,100,000 a month.\n4. If the company gets'authority\nto impose penalty charges on shippers and consignees to increase\nutilization of freight'cars, it will\nCAUTION TO END AT ELECTION\nOnly War Would\nWismer, Straith,\nWinch Tangle Over\nElections Act Plan\ntry to see that these are imposed\nas equitably as possible.\n5. The general rail strike of last\nAugust cost the CNR $3,300,000 in\nlost.business,. ...-\u2022\u25a0     jjaijjtvBfc'\n, 6. The CNR does not propose\nto go Into the pipeline business,\nIt (eels there would be no spe'-\nclal advantages In Its operating\na pipeline and, If tho Government\nwants to get Into that traffic, It\nwoqld be better to have It handled by a separate Government\ncompany, *   ;\u25a0\n7.' There\" Is no Immediate prospect of cutting the CNR's running\ntime on transcontinental trains.\n8. The twd-per-cent jump In the\nsales tax under Finance Minister\nAbbott's new budget will cost the\nCanadian National between $2,000,-\n000 and $2,500,000.       \/\nWilliam Evans\nNamed Juvenile\nCourfJudge\nThe appointment of Stipendiary Magistrate William E. Evans\nto the position of Juvenile Court\nJudge lesr the Nelson-Creston\nelectoral district has been announced by Hon. W. T. Straith,\nProvincial Secretary.\nMr. Evans will continue his\npresent duties as Stipendiary\nMagistrate for the Nelson district\nalong with the new post.\nThe. appointment marks a departure from the previous practice of naming local police magistrates to serve as Juvenile court\nJudges as required.\nU)ahk. e^wdL\nNelson, Monday\u20141.05 feet above\nzero.\nSpecial to the Dally News\nVICTORIA, B.C., April 16-Elec-\ntiohs Act changes stirred tha Legislature Monday with Attorney-General Gordon Wismer and Provincial\nSecretary W, T. Straith defending\nthe preferential vote system planned\nin the face of a bitter attack from\nthe opposition.\nC.C.F. leader Harold Winch opened debate on second reading of the\nchanges, describing the legislation\nthe most weird, fantastic and\nshameful bill ever introduced in a\nParliament of.Canada.'\nHis adjectives were directed to\nthe .preferential ballot, or single\ntransferable vote, as well as to the\nmethods to be used in its application.\nWinch charged that the Legislation was introduced for matters of\npolitical expediency only.\nHe said this was. obvious with the\nGovernment straying from the usual\npractice of appointing a committee\nof members'from both sides oj.the\nHouse \/to study and recommend any\nproposed Elections Act amendments.\nHe noted, too, where such a committee in recent years had recommended against the-single transferable\nvote.; .. ' \". '\n. \"There is no doubt that the Liberals and Conservatives want to.\nbreak up in this Coalition, and are\ngiving themselves every possible'\nprotection,\" he said.  \u25a0\nHe thought it Was wrong that the\nofficial opposition candidate's had\nto take third place on the ballot\nwith Liberals, ond Conservatives\ntaking the first two positions depending oh the'party affiliation of\nthe sitting-member.\nHITS LISTING -   .\nTlie listing of candidates ><\/ alphabetical order was displeasing to\nthe opposition leader also, who said\nthat 'iri '-multiple'seat ridings Where\nseparate ballots \u2022 will .be distributed\nfor each of the seats, opportunity\nshould be given for a party to rdn\nits strongest candidate against the\nstrongest of another party. Also independent candidates should nave\nthe -righttb-choose which candidate\nhe. will oppose, and not have to\n,tfike-any one, of tbeiballots according .to,alphabet.\"'\u25a0'.\"... . -  ..\nMany of the electors voted (or the\nman and not the party, Winch continued, and in the proposed system\nhe might have two favorites on one\nballot. But He would be able to give\nonly one of them'his first-choice\nvote.    .   ,,\nHe thought the multi-seat ridings\nshould be broken down to single-\nseat ridings.\nAfter hearing from W. A. C. Bennett, the Independent from South\nOkanagan, who favored the Legislation in principle, but wanted some\nchanges, to the amendments; Leo\nNimsick C.C.F.-Cranbrook; Rupert\nHaggen, CC.F.-Grand Forks Greenwood; and Randolph Harding, C.C.F.\nKaslo Slocan, who opposed; and\nMrs. Tilly Rolston, the second Independent from Vancouver Point Grey\nwho favored the changes but said\nthey were giving the Government\ncandidates undue advantages, big\nguns of the Government opened up.\nma'jority rule\nAttorney-General Wismer spoke\nfirst He said the amendments had\none principle\u2014that thb majority of\nthe people shall rule.\nIn the past, said Mr. Wismer, Candidates had been elected to office\nby minority votes.\n\"We feel this is wrong, and we\nare doing something about it;\" he\nsaid.\nIt was the Government's belief\nthat the majority of people wanted\nthe preferential vote because it was\nfeared that a Socialist form of government could be elected by a minority of the people which would\nchange their entire way of life and\nbring ruination to the province.\nHe stressed that the Legislation\nwas being enacted for proclamation\nwhen it was decided Coalition\nshould end. In answer to a question\nhe said it would be ridiculous to use\nthe new system in the coming Esquimau byelection because Coalition was still in operation.\nIn his contribution to the defence\nof the amendments, Mr. Straith\nsaid there would be little difference\nin coming elections under the new\nsystem than at present.\nGovernment candidates had first\nplace on the ballots now. With Coalition, provision had to be made for\nthe candidates of the two parties\nof the union. The official opposition\ncandidate would move from second\nposition to third for the first election\nonly after the end of coalition.\n\"There has to be some order of\ncandidates laid- down,\" he said.\nTo the suggestion that multi-seat\nridings be broken down into single-\nscat ridings, he said it would be next\nto impossible to draw new boundary\nlines in some constituencies.\n\"And in Victoria, for* instance,\nwhy shouldn't all of the- people of\nthe city vote on who their three\nmembers will be?\" he asked.\nSix-Year-Old Boy\nDrowns in Trail Creek\nTRAIL, B.C., April 16\u2014The body\nof a six-year-old Annable boy was\nfound ln the swollen waters of Trail\nCreek Saturday night about' six\nhours after he had been reported\nmissing.\nDrowned was Russell Berton\nHowel, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A.\nHowell, Violin Lake Road, Upper\nAnnable. His death was the second\nsuch tragedy in.the family. About\neight years ago, a two-year-old son\nof the Howell's disappeared. His\nbody was never found but it was\nbelieved he also had been drowned\nin the creek. The Howell home is\nwithin a few feet of the creek.\nOver 100 Trail district men under\nRCMP direction, scoured the Annable area, the city and highways\nout of town Saturday night before\nthe body was found about midnight,\nby Mr. Howell.\nThe youngster was last seen by\n.the family at. about'3:30 p.m. Saturday, when he. was refused permission to ride his bicycle down\nto a service station at Lower Annable. Apparently the youngster\ndisobeyed his mother and went off\non his small, girl's type bike. The\nfamily reported he was missing\nabout 5:45 p.m.\n\u2022Police, -using powerful searchlights, discovered the bicycle in the\ncreek, some 20 feet below the\nbridge, at about the same time as\nthe father discovered the' body,\nsome 500 yards further down the\nstream. The body was caught on a\ntree branch and a large boulder\nin.the swift current, with one hand\nbreaking )the surface.\nDeputy Coroner Dr. D. J. M.\nCrawford said he would conduct an\ninquiry into the incident. He did\nnot feel an inquest would be necessary.\nBesides his parents, the boy Js\nsurvived by two sisters, Mrs. H.\nO'Keefe in Toronto, and Louise, 8,\nat home, and one brother, Richard,\n8, at home. , *       .\nNew Wage Scale\nRecommended\nFor trail Firemen\n(Special to the Dally News)\nVICTORIA, B. C, April 16 - A\nConciliation Board has recommended unanimously a new wage\nscale, (or firemen at Trail,' '.\n:\u25a0'\u25a0 TheiBoard,\/composed b( '.Holland\nK. Bate, Chairman; C. H. Clegg,\nand Harry Foster.'reported through\nthe .Labor, Relations Board today\nthe following rates be paid:\nProbationer $200 a month; third\nclass fireman $210; second class\nfireman $230; first class fireman\n$255; lieutenant $270.\nA fireman is a probationer for\nthe first six months of employment:\nthird class Is from .seven to 18\nmonths; second from 10 to 30\nmonths and first after 31 months.\nThe Board, ruled that a fireman\nshall be paid the next highest rate\non his commencing the month of\nservice set out as the minimum for\nthat rate.\nIn making the unanimous reoort,\nthe Board stated: \"In view of the\nhigh cost of living and the wages\npaid the firemen in similar muni\ncipalities, we think the above scale\nis fair and equitable.\"\n. The Board further recommended\nthat the new schedule be retro\nactive to Jan. 1.\nIt was suggested also that the\ntime it takes to become a first-class\nfireman should be extended beyond'\n31 months.\nIranian Senate\nSupports Premier\nTEHRAN, Iran, April 16 (AP) \u2014\nThe Iranian Senate today unanimously supported with a vote of\nconfidence the policies of Premier\nHussein Ala in handling the crisis\nover this country's vast oil wealth.\nAla also has asked the Majlis\n(lower House of Parliament) for a\nvote of confidence. This was delayed last week when angry national front members\u2014vanguard of\nthe move to nationalize Iran's oil\nIncluding the huge British-controlled holdings of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company \u2014 walked out,\nleaving the House without a\nquorum.\nSeven-Mile Route Lined With Cheering\nHonolulu Welcome for Gen. MacArthur\nBy FRANK H. KING\n- HONOLULU, April 16 (AP) \u2014\nHawaii gave Gen. Douglas Mac-\nArthur a hero's welcome today on\nAmerican soil.\nIt was the first unfolding of\n\u2022America's public fanfare for the\ngeneral on his return home to present his side of the Asiatic policy\ncontroversy before Congress Thursday.\nThe general, relieved from his\ncommands by President Truman,\nwas. paraded in Honolulu through\ncrowded streets this evening.\nIt started more than 12 hours\nafter he arrived with his party by\nplane from Tokyo where he got\na send-off ovation from the Japanese people and the Allied forces.\nIn the afternoon he placed a\nwreath at Punch Bowl national\n\u2022cemetery in honor of its dead.\nThe cemetery contains the bodies\nof men who died in the Second\nWorld War, including some who\ndied in the Japanese Pearl Harbor\nattack Dec. 7, 1941.\nThe seven-mile route from Pearl\nHarbor into the outskirts of Honolulu was lined with cheering men.\nwomen Ind. children.\nThe procession stopped at an\namphitheatre, there MacArthur\nwas given the honorary degree of\ndoctor of laws (LL.D.) by the\nUniversity of Hawaii.\nTha university President Gregg\nM. Sinclair, acclaimed the general\n\"one of the greatest Americans of\nall time.\"\nWASHINGTON, April 16 (AP)-\nCongress whipped through formal\narrangements today for Gen. Douglas MacArthur to tell his story to\na loint session\u2014and by radio and\ntelevision to the United States \u2014\nshortly after 6:30 p.m. PST Thurs:\nday.\nSenate Republicans called unanimously for an all-out congressional\nInvestigation of the Truman administration's foreign and military policies.\nRepublican objections to the Truman program mounted to a roar of\nprotest with President Truman's\ndismissal of MacArthur last week,\nand the deposed general's flight to\nWashington \u2014 he's due here early\nThursday \u2014 fanned the flames of\ncontroversy.\nA kind of \"MacArthur fever'\nswept the capital today. It brought\nthese developments:\n1. The House of Representatives\nagreed unanimously to a joint meeting with the Senate to hear the\ngeneral Thursday.\n2. Thirty-three Senate Republic\nRadioactive Belt\nAcross Korea\nNot So Easy\nBY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE\nAssociated Press Science Editor\nNEW YORK, April 16 (AP) \u2014The\ndehumanized radioactive belt across\nKorea, proposed today by Representative Albert Gore (Dem. Tenn.)\nlooks almost as easy as child's play\n\u2014 on paper.  \u25a0\nActually it involves: 1. An intense\natomic engineering feat; 2. Doubtful\neffectiveness; 3. Something quite\neasy to bridge. <\nThis belt would be radioactive\nparticles, in'the form of dusts and\nsands. Some liquids might be used.\nThe result q( any of these would be\nto carpet' the ground with radioactive, atoms. There are many kinds\nwriiali: could be used.\nThere   are iqnly.,. a.few which\nMlSffr.\u00bb\"even^emo'tc|y eftecuve.\nWhat Is wanted Is radioactivity so\nhotymeanlng Gamma or X-rays,\nthat   anyone   crossing the belt\nwould become seriously | III, and\n'might die. The hottest atoms almost Invariably expire the quick\neat \u2014 some In seconds, some In\ndays \u2014 and not\" many last more\nthan a few weeks before their radioactivity weakens to the point\nof being useless.\nThe   illness   and death does not\nstrike immediately, or even quickly.\nFighting men, without any protection, would be able to advance effectively for hours at least. The kind\nof death dealt by these radioactive\nsands would not. be likely for sev\neral weeks after, exposure.\nThe materials 'can c8me from two\nsources. One is to place the right\nchemical compounds- in atomic reactors and keep them there for\nquite a long time. They become radioactive. To make enough to carpet a square mile would require a\nlong full-time job by one of the\nsix U.S. reactors.\nWASHINGTON, April 16 (AP)\n\u2014 Atomic and military experts\nmay have found deadly radioactive poisons can be put to practical use In war.\nThat Is the conclusion to be\ndrawn from a plea by Represent\natlve Albert Gore (Dem. Tenn.)\nthat President Truman order the\nuse of such \"cataclysmic\" poisons\nto \"dehumanize\", a belt of territory across the Korean peninsula,\n\"We have It Please consider\nusing It,\" Gore said In a fetter to\nTruman. As a member of the\nHouse of Representatives appro\nprlatlons sub-committee which\nhandles funds for the Atomic En\nergy Commission, he la In a post\ntion to know about atomic developments.\nans agreed at a \"closed meeting to\nback the proposed investigation of\nTruman policies all over the world\n\"in the light of , General Mac-\nArthur's dismissal.'' '\n3. Truman assigned his military\naide. Maj.-Gen. Harry -H. Vaughan,\nto meet MacArthur at national airport. It appears that Truman would\nnot see MacArthur unless the gen\neral asked for an appointment and\nthe White House said he hasn't\nasked for one yet.\n4. Plans were rushed for a big\ncivic reception at the Washington\nMonument\n5. MacArthur wired that he would\nbe willing to testify before the Senate- Armed Services Committee\nsome time after his appearance at\nthe joint session. The House Armed\nServices Committee then voted to\nask the general to appear before it.\nCommons Pays Final\nTribute to Bevin\nLONDON, April 16 (Reuters) -\nThe House of Commons today paid\nfinal tribute to Ernest Bevin who\ndfed Saturday. \u2022\nHerbert Morrison, who succeeded\nhim as Foreign Secretary, said\nBevin kept the maintenance of\npeace and avoidance of war patiently before his eyes.\nAnthony\/Eden. Deputy Conser\nvative Leader, paid tribute to Bev\nin's  \"massive  integrity.\"\nClement Navies, Liberal Leader,\nsaid Bevin fcas an implacable- en\nemy of tyrahts.\nA memorial service will be held\nin Westminster Abbey April 24.1\nBevin will be buried Wednesday.\nParliament\nAt a Qlance\nBy The Canadian Press\nExternal Affairs Minister Pearson said he hopes that five Canadian nuns held In China will be\nallowed to return to Canada.\nThe Progressive Conservative\nand C.C.F. parties moved motions\nof non-confidence In the Government\nDr. \\v\". G. Blair (PC\u2014Lanark)\nsaid the.dairy Industry should be\ngiven protection against margarine,\nTUESDAY\nThe Commons will consider\nGovernment business, The Senate\nwill not sit\nFINANCE   MINISTER. ANSCOMB\nRedi Screen\nWith.moke\nBY DON HUTH\nTOKYO, April 17 (Tuesday)\n(AP) \u2014 A smoke screen pall roll\ned up over a 300-square mile area\ntoday In- central Korea where\nChinese Communists set fires In\n- efforts to mask what may be\neither a withdrawal or an impend\nIng attack.\nA Southerly wind at times\nopened clear spots In the smoke\nblanket \u2014 an area about 30 miles\nwide and 10 miles deep.\nAllied planes bombed and strafed\nthese openings in support of advancing United Nations troops.\nThe srabke pall extended 15 miles\nNorthwest of Yanggu, one of the\nlatest towns inside Red Korea to fall\nto the advancing allies.\nIn Western Korea, the town of\nYonchon on the road to Chorwon\nwas abandoned by the Reds. Allied\ntroops had.not yet occupied it but\nheld high ground on all sides.\nTIGHTEN CENSORSHIP\nRigid censorship regulations ordered by the new supreme allied\ncommander, \u2022Lt.-Gen. Matthew B,\nRidgway, forbade all references to\nthe size and location of Chinese and\nNorth Korean Reds,\nThe  allied  capture  of Yanggu\neliminated   the-last   Communist\npocket on the. South shores of the\nHwachon reservoir, it ripped up\ntho Eastern anchor point for Red\nlines which had used the 11-mlle\nlong   lake   as   a water obstacle\nagainst the allies.\nEleven miles Southeast of Yang\ngu,   South   Korean   troops   drove\nNorth Korean troops out of ridges\nabove captured Inje.\nThe Communists, however, clung\ndesperately to the 275-foot-high\nHwachon dam on the Western end\nof the reservoir.\nOn the Western front the allied\noffensive crept forward against\nReds stubbornly defending the approaches to Chorwon, a road hub 17\nmiles North of the 38th parallel.\nThe Reds abandoned a large sup\nply dump East of Yonchon in what'\nlooked  like . a general withdrawal\nin that sector.\n(Reuters News Agency reported\nthat on the central front, Australians, supported by British trbops\ncharged with bayonets to storni another hill north,of the parallel.)\nHalt Plans\u2014Anscomb\nVANCOUVER, April 16 (CP)-The Coalition Government will be a thing of the past at the next general election unless Canada is involved in a world war, Finance\nMinister Herbert Anscomb said tonight.\nThe Provincial Progressive Conservative leader,in an\naddress over the provincial network of the CBC, made the\nstatement as he referred to the transferable voting system\nwhich the Government has introduced during the current\nsession of the Legislature.\nIn the event the world is \"reason-.\nably stable\" at the time of the next\nelection \"the Conservative Party\nWill have a candidate in every riding in British Columbia who will\ncontest each seat as a straight Conservative.\nIt was a fighting speech delivered.,\nby the finance minister in which,'\nseveral political blows were landed.'\nSELFISH VIEWPOINT\nRight at the start he struck at \"a\"\npersistent and very determined\nmove by the C.C.F., and some members of the Liberal Party\" in saying\nthat his party and himself opposed\nsocial services and social security in\nB.C.\n\"That, of course, is done from a\npurely selfish political viewpoint,\nand is not a statement of fact,\" asserted Mr. Anscomb.\nThe government was spending\n$13,080,259 this year on social services from money paid ln taxes by:\nworking people, a good deal of,it\nfrom the proceeds of the three-percent sales tax, the minister said. iV\n\"In other words, without the ability and willingness of the people)\nwho are now actually employed to\nsubscribe that money, through taxes,\nthese social allowances and great\nhumanitarian-programs could not go\non,\" Mr. Anscomb added.\nHe emphasized that unless th*\nIndustrial    development   of   tha\nprovince    and    the    number of\npeople   working   In the province)\nfor wages and salaries Increases ao\nfast or faster than the social security costs  Increase, the  social\nsecurity services \"will either com*\nto an end or have to be,reduced.\"\nHe said his party had noi only\nthe welfare of the people at heart,\n\"but we are very anxious to' mako\ntheir positions secure , , .\"\nThe finance minister described at\njust \"political chatter\" C.C.F. statements that the.province could get\nlarge sums'of money from the big\nindustrial, mining and timber organizations in B.C.\nGenerally speaking, he said, tho\nprovince is not allowed to impose\nan income tax in British Columbia\nand cannot make different laws \"for\nthe so-called rich and the poor .,.\"\nFREE ENTERPRISE\nExcessive income taxes imposed\non the large concerns would immediately put out of business ever*\nsmaller operation.\n, Later, Mr. Anscomb declared hit\nparty was a free enterprise party in\nevery sense ofithe word \"and opposed to the government being in business.\" J\nAs leader ,of B.C. Conservatives,\nMr) Anscomb appealed directly' to\nmembers of his party to take an ac?\ntive part in the party organization\"\nso that we may assume our proper\nplace in a free-for-all election.\"\nUSHER ROBBED OF $2600\nMONTREAL, April 16 (CP)-A\ntheatre usher was held up today\nand robbed, of an estimated $2600\nln small bills and silver.\nThe victim, 20-year-old Andre\nHervey, was en route to la nearby\nbank from' the Chateau Theatre at\nSt. Denis and Belanger Streets\nwhen 'accosted.        <\nFaces Starvation\nPATNA, India, April 16 (CP) -\nNearly 40,000,000 Indians In Bihar\nState face starvation unless substantial help reaches them, before\nthe rainy season\u2014due ' iri about\neight weeks\u2014disrupts transportation, officials said today.\nThe Bihar State Government1 is\nbelieved to consider the situation\ndesperate even now. However, it\nhas been reluctant to declare the\nworst-affected district famine\nareas because of the panic such an\nannouncement would bring.\nlabor Fails lo\nHave Hospital\nRales Reduced\n(Special to the Dally News)\nVICTORIA, B. C, April 16 \u2014\nOrganized labor attempts to revive\nthe hospital' insurance financing\nquestion with a petition signed by\nover 205,000 citizens failed in the\nLegislature Monday night. .'.'.,\nThe petition, calling ori. the-Government to withdraw the $9 increase in premiums and co-insurance charges or place the question\nbefore the electorate, was filed by\nOpposition Leader Harold Winch.\nWhen tha CCF head jnoved that\nthe petition be considered by a\ncommittee of the whole House, he\nwas voted down.\nA division called by Winch on\n' the\u201emotlon showed Tom Uphill,\nLabor member for Fernie, and\nW. A.ig* Bennett, Independent\nSouth Ojkanaqan, voting with the\nseven-man CCF grouo. Absent\nwere Capt D. J. Proudfoot, CLN\n\u2014Victoria and Mrs. Tilly Rolston,\nIndependent \u2014 Vancouver-Point\nGrey.\nPublic galleries of the Leglsla\ntine Chamber were crowded for\nthe filing of the petition.\nWith four two-foot high bundles\nof the petition stacked on his desk,\nWinch told the House the sheets of\npaper carried 205.770 signatures\nand there were 10,000 mete in the\nmail.\nAn attempt was made by Reg\nMacDougall, CLN \u2014 Vancouver-\nPoint Grey, to block the opposition\nleader in his move to file the petition on the grounds it contravened\nstanding orders in that it called for\nexpenditure of a charge on public\nfunds.\nPremier Byron . Johnson cleared\nthe way, though, saying the Vancouver member's point was well\ntaken but suggesting that the move\nbe allowed.\nPlanes to Fight\nIran Locust Plague .\nTEHRAN. Iran, April 16 (AP)\u2014\nAn American DC-4 transport arrived here today carrying two light\nplanes and' thi^ee tons of \u25a0 poison\nwith which to fight a locust invasion in South Iran. About 180,000\nsquare miles are being blighted by\nthe swarms.\nBERLIN, April 16 (AP) \u2014 The\nRussians have refused to return\n920,000 German art treasures carted off to Russia since 1945, the\nnewspaper Welt Am Sonntag reported yesterday.\nFall From Runaway\nHorse Kills Woman\nLILLOOET, B. C, April 16 (CP)\n\u201470-year-old woman was killed Instantly when she fell from the bach\nof a runaway horse 11 miles North\nof here during the weekend.\ny Mary Milgow was found dead beside the road shortly after the mishap.'\nLondon Operates\nTea Market Again\nLONDON, April 16 (Reuters)-\u00bb\nLondon's tea market reopened today after nearly 11 years during\nwhich the Government has handledi\nbuying and distribution. Dealers\nmust still make their purchases\nwithin the framework of price controls. Tea will remain rationed at\ntwo ounces a week per person but\nselective buying is expected to lead\nto more variety in the stores.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nLONDON, April 16 (CP)\u2014A hosiery dealer In the bustling Oxford\nStreet shopping district hit upon a hovel stunt todlspose of his stock\nof nylon stockings.\nA slqn In the- window offered a pair with a genuine Churchill\ncigar-butt, guaranteed to come from the Conservative leader's home\ndust-bin.\nThe stockings sold for 12 shillings, sixpence (about $1.88) a pair.\nAll the customers were men.\nMOMBASA, Kenya, April 16 (Reuters)\u2014Ships' officers adopted\nthe role of water cowboys today when a cow jumped overboard from\nthe freighter Tayari\nSeamen chased the cow in a launch, lassooed her and towed her\nback to the ship with sharks converging from all directions.\nWICHITA, Kas., April 16 (AP)\u2014Now they're using baby diaper*\non the Air Force's B-47 stratolet planes.\nWhy? !\u00bb'\nEven Don Penner, senior material buyer for the Boeing airplane\nplant, didn't kno'w. He got a requisition for 12 diapers for the big\nbombers, scratched his head a while, then checked with the superintendent who put In the order, j\nThe superintendent gave this explanation:\n'       The diapers are used to clean the bomb-sight lens. The soft, lint-\nfree material Is ideal for the job.\n ^\nNELSON DAI LT NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991\nTONIGHT-WEDNESDAY: COMPLETE SHOWS 7:00 - 9:00\nRICHARD WIDMARK\"-   \"_\/\u00bb_\/_#__*\/_*#\nLINDA DARNELL 2a UflrfC\nSTEPHEN M'NALLY \"' wmaSmm\nComing Thursday: \"I'D CLIMB THE HIGHEST MOUNTAIN\"\nlex Morton, Queens. Plenty of\nAction Planned for Kin Stampede\nDr. Robert \"Tex\" Morton, sharp-\nahooting hypnotist and balladcer,\nmay pay a return .visit to Nelson,\nthis time in the role of M.C. for\nthe big Nelson Kin Stampede June\n22 and 23.\nAlthough his return visit is not\nyet definite, the Kinsmen have approached him and have high hopes\nof, a favorable reply.\nj The versatile Australian should\n\u25a0be right at home in this type of\nshow with his cowboy singing and\naix-gun skill. He might even be\n(prevailed upon to mesmerise a few\nbulls for the Stampede crowd.\n. Meanwhile, Nelson Kinsmen are\n:golng all out in a promotion campaign for the mammoth event. Six\n(contestants for the title of Stam-\n'pede Queen have been selected and\n.Kin committees and the girls themselves have launched a vote-getting\n'campaign to name the queen.\n; Contestants are Joyce Goodwin,\niWynn Valantlne, Lois Taylor, Daisy\nTattrie, Joan Will and Katherine\niMorrlson with the winner being\ncrowned at the Stampede wind-up\n.June 23.\nI   Also started is a \"Name the Kin\n'Pony\" contest for kids of 12 years\nand under. The club is importing\nthe pony within a short time and\nplans to parade it on Baker Street\nfrom time to time as well as display\nit in neighboring towns. Winner of\nthe contest will receive a cowboy\nor cowgirl outfit.\nHoward Peelgren and Joe Kelsey,\nowners of all the stock which Will\nappear In the Stampede, will come\nto Nelson this week to assist Kins\nmen in preparations for the event\nThese corral-wise showmen have\nrecently purchased some of the\ntoughest Brahma bulls they could\nround .up and promise plenty of\nthrills and spills for.the cowpunch\ners and bronc busters with the temerity to climb into the stirrups.\nAlso promised is the participation\nof aome of the top riders- in the\nPacific Northwest who will compete for more than $1250 ,in prizes\nin the ridin' and ropln' department,\narid an equal match for them is\npromised In \"Snake\", touted by\nRodeof Magazine as the toughest\nbronc in North America.\nGeorge Wallach and Bob Kidd\nare heading the spirited Kin committee sponsoring the whoop-de-\ndoo. \u2022\nNekon-Salmo\nRoad Work to\nBegin Next Week\nStorms Construction Co. (Pacific)\nLtd., has begun some road .improvements to the Nelson-Euphrates stretch of the Nelson-Salmo\nhighway how that mud conditions\nhave improved.\nCrews are placing gravel on the\nroad at present in an effort to put\nthe road in travelling shape and\nto eliminate roughness.\nActual road work is expected to\nbegin in about a week. Work will\nlikely beginon the first three miles\nof highway South of Nelson.\nSome grading has been done near\nApex by Public Works crews.\nOther district highways are said\nto be in fair shape while some minor break-up of temporary highway\npavement was experienced on the\nWynndel-Creston highway.\nLoad and speed restrictions in\nCranbrook district are being 'removed at 12:01 a.m. Thursday.\nKaslo Qas'lce\nBe Operating\nKASLO, B. C, April 16\u2014Under\nC. T. Gorse, President of. Gas icp\nCorporation (Canada) Ltd., development operations at Kaslo are being carried out by a geologist\nHe is geologizing the property\nwith the idea of being able to execute an economical drilling - program to facilitate production of a\ncommercial quantity of gas so that\nthe firm may comply with plans\nfor a minimum of a 12-ton plant to\nbe in production by July 15.\nIt Is necessary to examine quite a\nlarge area in and,around Kasio for\nthe Veason that in recent weeks\ndiscussions have taken place with\nprincipals of three ujrge concerns\nwhich may wish the firm to expand its plant and production to\nmaximum capacity at short notice,\nMr. Gorse said today.\nThe firm has endeavored to use\nfunds provided by the public in an\neconomical manner. To date this\nlimited amount of finance has satisfied  the  firm  of  sufficient   gas\nPlant May\nby Mid'Juty\nand analysis warranting a larger\nand more - expensive program.\nMr. Gorse Is here to discuss further plans for drilling and additional equipment made necessary\nso that pattern drilling may be\nstarted.\nDuring his absence, Henry\nDaighnault and Tony Gardiner,\ndriller, pierced a location ln the\nmain formation and at .about 20\nfeet established a blow in of gas\nlhat resembled smoke from a chimney. The hole has been cemented\noff awaiting drilling and sinking\nof casing^\n\"From evidence shown in the\nKaslo basin, we feel we can em\nbark on the second stage of pattern\ndrilling under the guidance of R.\nE. Renshaw with a view to drilling\nadditional productive wells,\" Mr.\nGorse said.\nThe company was given local\nrepresentation at its annual meeting with the election of John Erb\nof Nelson and'Roy Logan of Kaslo\nas directors.\n130 Attend St. Saviour's Scout\nGroup Father and Son Banquet\n\u00abjj \"{More than 130 attended the an-\n' r'nual  Father  and  Son  banquet of\nj       \"Sixth Nelson St. Saviour's Scout and\nI       .s'Cub group in Memorial hall Mon-\nLday night.\nT Don Ure, .district commissioner,\n~ addressed the Scouts, Cubs, leaders\nSand group committee, and Very\n9\u2014\u25a0- .\t\ni      LIVERISH?\nvt? \u2022\u2022Troubles never come Bingly\" they satl\n. So take Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills\n;i and get two treatments in onel This\nU proven remedy helps you feel better\n\" faster\u2014because it relieves both liver and\n' kidney disorders and the backache and\n,' painful Joints which bo often result. Dr,\nChase\u2014a nante\ntodependon.    50\nIDRCHASE'S\nKIDNEY-LIVER PILLS\nRev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean of Kootenay, Chaplain of Nelson and Dis\ntrict Boy Scout Association, as chair\nman introduced the leaders and\ngroup committee, of which J. Wood\nis chairman.\nRt. Rev. T. P. Clark, Bishop of\nKootenay, as a father thanked Mr.\nUra for his services to Scouting.\nAlan Ramsden and W. L. Thompson\nrepresented the Association.\nAt a special meeting of fathers,\nJames Cherrington and W. McDonald were elected to the group committee.\nScouts and Cubs gave, a demonstration of their activities and films\nwere shown. The Ladies' Auxiliary\ncatered to the banquet\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nAll around your home\n... indoors or out\nBUILD TO LAST\nC H O O S E\nf f ww0 Bofor* you\nbuild or remodel, lentf for\nfroo litornturo on J-M Flox-\nboard. Contact your J-M\ndcalor or writs Canadian\nJohns-Mctnvllle, Dept, N-16,\n199 Bay St., Toronto.\nJohns-Manvilie\n\u2014 IEJ32H3*3HH__a \u2014\n\u2022 An amazing building board that meets exacting requirements indoors and the most\ntrying conditions outdoors . . . that's J-M\nFLEXBOARD! It is made of asbestos and\ncement \u2014two practically indestructible\nmaterials. Flexboard is literally a sheet of\nstone... it can't burn, won't rot, never needs\npaint to preserve it! Yet with all its toughness, Flexboard is light and easy to handle\n... it can be sawn and nailed with ordinary\ntools and may even be bent to fit curved\nsurfaces. Flexboard comes jn a pleasing gray\nshade which may be painted if desired. Its\nhard; smooth surface resists scuffing and is\neasy to keep clean.\nJohns-Manvilie\nArctic Insulating & Roofing Ltd.\nsi APPROVED APPtlCATORS OF\n| feJ-M  \"BLOWN\"  ROCK  WOOL  AND  BATT8\n(j'.1: \"S  ' '    \"WE SERVE THE KOOTENAYS\"\nJj PHPNE 965                                                NEL80N, B.C.\nNelson Machinery Co. Ltd.\nFestival Begins\nToday in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., April 16 \u2014 \"Next\ncompetitor please!\"\nThat is the call that will be heard\ntoday and throughout the week as\nthe Eighteenth Kootenay Musical\nFestival gets underway in Trail\nTuesday.\nApproximately 1000 competitors\nwill do their best as they take to\nthe stage during the next five days.\n\"The Musical Festivals are organized for the purpose of developing and stimulating a love for, and\nan appreciation of music and the allied arts,\" the foreword of the Festival program says.\n\"The love of competition, particularly amongst the younger performers, can be utilized for the noblest\nof purposes- ,in helping to give the\nstimulus and zeal required to secure\nearnest work. The aim of the competitors, however, should not be to\ndefeat each other, but to pace one\nanother or the road to excellence.'\"\nOpposition Sees Victory in Gov't\nChange in Dentistry Act Amendment\nOsprey Back\n-And Protected\nThe Osprey or fish hawks have\ncome back to Kootenay waterways\nfrom cold weather travellings, anrj\nconservationists have been quick to\nwarn- that the hawk is protected.\nMarksmen in the past have been\ninclined to look on the Osprey as a\nfair mark for target practice, and\nin some West Kootenay sections\nhave almost' wiped out flocks.\nThey are protected under the Dominion Migratory Birds Convention\nAct.\nSportsmen make no claim that tho\nOsprey doesn't prey on game fish.\nBut they contend the Osprey kills\nmore coarse fish than 'most fishermen, and accordingly should be considered to be entitled to a few game\nfish.\nCATHOLIC YOUTH\nRALLY SLATED\nFOR FERNIE\nFERNIE, B.C., April IB\u2014Fernie\nwill be the meeting centre of Catholic youths from throughout the\ndistrict this weekend when the\nCatholic Youth Rally will be held.\nDate for the, event has been set\nat April 21 and 22, and a large\nattendance is expected.\n\u25a0Included on the program will be\na rally banquet and dance Saturday, a communion breakfast Sunday morning and the rally program\nSunday, afternoon.\nCalf Tenders for\nSlocan School Work\nTenders to construct addltldns to\nthe South Slocan, Slocan City and\nNew Denver High Schools are being called by Paul A. Barber, Secretary-Treasurer of Slocan City.\nDeadline Is May 2.\nWork will include the erection\nand completion of one additional\nclassroom to each of the schools.\nTo Victoria\nRoy Pollard, district engineer,\nWater Rights branch at Nelson, will\nfly to Victoria Wednesday for a\nJoint meeting of the Columbia River\nBasin Water Forecast Committee\nand Western Snow Conference\nThursday and Friday.\n214 HALL ST.\nPHONE 18\n.NELSON, B.C.\nLazareff & Company Ltd.\n1705 BAY AVENUE PHONE\/-M TRAIL, B.C.\nLazareff & Company Ltd.\n-\u00bb1940 FIRST AVENUE PHONE 86 ROS6LAND, B.C.\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON, April 18  (Reuters)\u2014\nResults of soccer games played today in the United Kingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision III  (Southern)\nPort Vale 1, Colchester United 1.\nDivision III (Northern)\nBarrow 4, Accrington Stanley 0.\nMansfield Town 1, Rochdale 0.\nRotherham United 0, Chester 0.\nYork City 2, Lincoln City 2.\nSCOTTISH  LEAGUE' .\nDivision \"A\"\nCeltic 0, Partick Thistle 3.\n2000 Take Part\nIn Doukhobor\nYouth Festival\n'BRILLIANT, B.C.. April 10 \u2014\nAbout 2000 members of the Spiritual Union of Christ and the Union\nof Spiritual Communities of Christ\ngathered here over the weekend for\nthe annual religious festival sponsored by the Doukhobor youth\ngroup, Spiritual Union of Christ.\nDoukhobors from East and West\nKootenays represented their respective branches from such points\nas Creston, Nelson, Taghum, Crescent Valley, Slocan Park, Appli\ndale and others.    '\nEach branch divided its members\ninto five teams, each team presenting either singing, oration, literature, dramatics or temperance talks,\nThe teams work on the presentations all year and the festival is\na method of showing what they\nhave accomplished during the year.\nJohn Verigin, Secretary of the\nUnion of Spiritual Communities of\nChrist, officially opened the festival with a speech of welcome to\nthe visiting members. He said that\nthe festival was a fine method for\nthe people to express themselves\nand that it was well worth the\ntime and work Involved.\nJohn Stoochnoff, Secretary of the\nSpiritual Union of Christ was chair-\n(Special to the Dally News)\nVICTORIA, B.C., April 16 \u2014 The\nC.C.F. may have scored a victory in\nits opposition to proposed changes\nto the Dentistry Act requiring written prescriptions from dentists before laboratory technician* can\nmake and repair false teeth.\nHealth Minister Douglas Turnbull\nin his statement to the Legislature\nMonday said he was prepared \u2022 tb\nwithdraw \"the bulk\" of an amendment to the Act providing for the\nprescription when the legislation\nreaches third reading.\nIt was taken by the Opposition,\nthought, that the wishes expressed\nlast week by the two Winch C.C.F.\ners will be granted.\nBoth Opposition Leader Harold\nWinch and his father, Ernest Winch,\nhad charged ' the prescription requirement gave dentists dictatorial\npowers\"\"\u2014 that dental technicians\nwould not be able to take on denture repairs without having blessings from a dentist.\nThey   pointed   out that dentists\nGas Self-Service\nBrings $100 in Fines\nFor Slocan Miners\nThree Selkirk Mines employees\npaid fines totalling 9100 in R.C.M.P.\nCourt Monday when they pleaded\nguilty to stealing gasoline and causing a disturbance at a Passmore service station early Sunday morning.\nVictor Curley was fined $50 on a\nc'-arge of stealing six gallons of gas\nwhile his companions, Albert Van\nKoughnet and Robert Fedina, were\nassessed fines of $25 each for causing a disturbance.\nThe men were arrested Saturday\nnight by R.C.M.P. highway patrol\nfollowing a complaint front the\ngarage owner. He said the three\nmen had driven up to the service\nstation long after closing time and\nhad roused him from bed to demand\nservice.\nWhen they were refused, the man\ntold police they had disconnected\nthe hosepipe on the gas punip and\ndrained off the contents of the pump\nbowl, then driven off.\nThe charges were heard by Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans.\ncould abuse the powers being given\nthem by charging a \"middleman\nfee.\n*   *   *\nWhen debate on the issue was resumed Monday, Dr. J. J. Gillis, a\nmedical practitioner, sided with the\nWinch team, saying the legislation\nwas- giving dentists too many powers.\nHe urged the government to withdraw the amendments to which opposition had been raised.\n\u00ab   .   .\nIt-was at this point that the health\nminister said he was prepared to\nwithdraw \"the bulk\" of the \"prescription Clause.\"\nHe said the clause had been included to regulate a group of dental technicians, not members of the\nDental Laboratory Association, who\nwere carrying on business illegally\nThe College of Dental Surgeons\nhad fairly wide powers, though, and\napparently the \"weeding out\" of\nthese unscrupulous technicians\nwould be left to that organization\nTRAILITE CHANGES NAME\nEmanuel Kuehn of Trail, . hai\nchanged his name lo Emanuel Keen\nunder the Change of Name Act.\nA resident of 1484 Bay Averiue\nnotice of the change was given ir.\nthe current issue of the B. C\nGazette. . \u25a0-\nRELIEF AT LAST-\nCONSTIPATION GONE!\n\"After trying many kinds of remedied to relieve constipation, 1 finally turned to a daily helping of Atx-\nbhan.   No  conati-\n?ationnow!\"Mme.\nrene Leonard,\n1262 Lafontaine,\nMontreal, P.Q. Just\none of many unsolicited letters from\nall-bran users. If\nyou, too, suffer from\n constipation due to\nack of dietary bulk eat an ounce\n(about L\u00a3 cup) of crispy Kellogg's\nALL-BRAN daily, and drink plenty\nof waterl If not completely satisfied after 10 days, send empty\ncarton to Kellogg a, London, Ont,\nGet DOUBLE YOUR MONKT BAOKl'\n90 Canvassers\nIn Cancer Drive\nMembers of various Nelson\nwomen's organizations turned out\n90 strong Monday night to take\npart In the Cancer drive canvassing blitz In the residential districts. I \u25a0\nThe oa'm'palSh w'asi'tbeVtsored\nby the Nelson Cancer Soolety and\ncanvassers covered the territory\nin one night.\nCampaign Chairman H. Lupton\nsaid Monday night that figures\nwould be totalled Tuesday, but\nthe (total collection In the one-\nnight drive would be higher than\npast 'residential canvasses and\nthat the residential, objective had\nbeen reached.\nObjective of the overall drive\nhas been set at $3000.\nFined $25, Pays\nCosts of $103\nIn l^. Denver Theft\nNEW; DENVER, B.C., April 16 \u2014\nCosts exceeded the fine in a theft\ncase heard here by Stipendiary\nMagistrate W. E. Evans in ,R.C.M.P.\ncourt.\nCharles Kaleta was fined $25 and\nordered to pay costs of $103.60 when\nhe pleaded guilty to the theft of galvanized sheet iron from the Alamo\nmill.   .\nCosts mounted when Kaleta and\nseveral witnesses, all resident in\nthe Prince George area, had to be\nbrought to New Denver for the case.\nThe case had been adjourned twice\npreviously when Kaleta had pleaded not guilty,' necessitating the\nbringing in of witnesses.\nRATEPAYERS OF\nNORTH SHORE\nSEEK CITY FIGURES\n\u25a0 Wishes of the West Arm Rate\npayers Association had been met in\nconnection with survey of the\nC. M. _ S. power line to be con\nstruct'ed along the North Shore, it\nwas noted at a well-attended meeting of the Association last week.\n.It was decided to advise the B. C.\nForest Service of the matter of fire\nhazard in clearing.\nA motion regarding oiling of the\nroad for dust prevention was. tabled\nfor one month, as it was felt that\ncontinuous grading of the road\nwould result in a better ultimate\nroad.\nR. H. Dill was appointed to head\na committee of his own choice to\ncheck the h'azard of children cros\nsing the ferry on their way to\nschool.\nR. G. Simms asked that the City\nof Nelson be approached to furnish\na balance sheet for the North Shore\npower line. This had been promised by the city some six months\nago. *   \u25a0\nTha Road to Failure is\nPaved with Wasted Assets\nGeorge S.May Company\nOvAvntt*- C-navnwi\u00ab4\nWestern Division\n291 Grary Street, Son Franilics i, Colli.\nEstablished 1925\nSudbury Man to\nManage Trail Bank\nTRAIL, B. C., April 16\u2014Arthur\nJ. Sutton of Sudbury has arrived\nin Trail to take over as manager\nof the new Bank of Toronto branch\nin Trail which is expected to open\nshortly on Cedar Street.\nMr. Sutton has had all his banking experience in Eastern Canoda\nand was accountant for the Sud.\nbury branch for the past three\nyears.\nThe Trail branch will be the\nBank of Toronto's 225th in Canada.\nThe first branch in B. C. was. opened in Rossland in 1899, but closed\nin 1907.\nHunter Bags Five\nCougars, Total 200\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C, April 16\n(CP) \u2014 Harry (Cougar) Brown, Alberni Valley hunter, had a big Saturday. ,\nHe bagged five cougars to bring\nhis total kill to 200 in the last\n44 years. He has killed 80 since\n1936.\nThe Weather\nNELSON   ...  32\nSt. Johns \t\nHalifax  \u00ab.. 40\nMontreal ,  39\nOttawa    34\nToronto   33\nNorth Bay  28\nPort Arthur   24\nKenora  ;. , 17\nWinnipeg   17\nBrandon   lo\nThe Pas   10\nRegina     18\nSaskatoon    22\nPrince Albert \u201e... 05\nN. Battleford   23\nSwift Current   22\nMedicine Kat  29\nLethbridge    20\nCalgary , 28\nEdmonton   20\nKamloops  32\nPenticton  :.  30\nVancouver  40\nVictoria    46\nKimberley  rt. 24.\nCrescent Valley   25\nKaslo ,. .           29\nPrince Rupert   30\nPrince George   26\nGrand Forks  29\nSeattle   \t\nPortland  41\nSpokane  _  36\nChicago     29\nSan Francisco  48\nNew York   42\nWhitehorse   24\nSin, Disease, Death\nReal? Asks Sermon\nDiscordant conditions and effects\ncannot be theoutcome of the primal\ngood and perfect cause called God,\nwas the topic discussed in all\nChurches of Christ, Scientist, on\nSunday. The title of the Lesson-Sermon was Are Sin, Disease, and\nDeath Real?\nThe golden text was \"He that is\nour God is the God of salvation; and\nunto God the Lord belong the Issues\nfrom, death.\" Psalms 68: 20\nThe Lesson-Sermon Included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"Yea, surely God will not do wickedly, neither will the Almighty pervert judgment.\" Job 34: 12.\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Science te.xtbook,\n\"Science and Health With Key. to\nthe Scriptures\" by Mary Baker\nEddy, was the following: \"Sickness,\nsin and death, being inharmonious,\ndo not originate in God nor belong\nto His government. God is not the\nauthor of mortal discords. Therefore\nwe accept the conclusion that discords have only a. fabulous existence, are mortal beliefs which divine Truth and Love destroy.\"\nDiamond Leaves for\nC. M. & S. Meet\n.TRAIL, B. C April 18 \u2014 R, W.\nDiamond has left for Montreal,\nwhere he will attend j the annual\nmeeting of the Consolidated-Mining\nand Smelting Co. of Canada, Ltd.,\nto be held April 26.\nVice-President and General Manager of Cominco. Mr. Diamond will\nbe in the East for about two week6\non business.\nHOWE WORRIED\nOVER STEEL SHORTAGE,\nOTTAWA, April 16 \"(CP)\u2014Defence Production Minister Howe\nsaid today in the Commons he is\n\"very worried\" about the steel\nshortage.\nHe said,that if anyone is considering a project requiring steel he\nwould advise him not to start. If\nanyone had firm plans to go ahead\nWith, a project requiring steel he\nwould advise him to reconsider.\n1792\n1951\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS\nNEED COMPLETE ,\nINSURANCE PROTECTION\nORTH AMERICA COMPANIES pro-\nvide broad and complete forms of\nInsurance and Guaranteeagainst losses\nfrom all physical and financial risks.\nEquipment may be insured while in use, while\nin transit or while in storage between contractsi\nBuildings under construction may be insured\nfrom the moment the work commences until\nits completion.\nContract Bonds will be issued at Standard rates\nfor Standard risks, and est minimum rates, to\nContractors of financial strength and satisfactory past experience. Ask your Insurance\nagent or broker to get you a proposal from\n\"North America\" Companies.\nWSPRAfVCE C0MPAHY0F\nNORTH AMERICA\nCOMPANIES\nCANADIAN HEAD OFFICE- TORONTO\nY .\nFIRE \u2022MARINE \u2022 CASUALTY\nService Offices throughout Canada\n; .'      -1,     ,   t -_.-' ,,   , .      \u25a0 ,.    -\nINSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA      \u2022' '\nINDEMNITY INSURANCE. COMPANY OP NORTH AMIRICA\nPHILADELPHIA PIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY\nC W. Appleyard\n& Cos Ltd.\nReol Estate and Insurance\nPhone 269 Nelson, B. C. 392 Baker St.\nRobertson, Hilliard, Cattell\nRealty Co.,\n456 Word St.\nFOR A QUALITY WHISKY\nmm\nmMMmit\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by tho Liquor Control\nBoard  or  by   tho  Government  of\nBritish. Columbia.'\nNo Order Too Small!\nLet one of our Experts\nsolve your Hard-to-get\nPart Problem.\nColl! Write! Wire!\nSEATTLE TRUCK WRECKING\n'Wc S\/i\/p AnyWhcrcj.'\n9798E MARGINAL WAY   KA6262\niThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board ot\nby the Government of British Columbia. \u25a0\n t5VO\nQjtvunwt\nShoes for Men\n\"As Advertised In Life\"\nDistinctive models that artfully\ncombine  style  correctness  and\nluxury leathers from the world's\nfinest tanners-\nSold Exclusively By\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n653 Baker St.\nMrs. Lelilia Bill,\nOldtimer. Dies\nNakusp, Aged 85\n, NAKUSP, B. C, April 16\u2014Mrs.\nLetitia Bill, one of Nakusp's loved\ncitizens, died Sunday in the Arrow\nLakes Hospital at the age of 85\nyears and 11 months.\nMrs. Bill, wife of Ernest W. Bill,\nwas born in England and came to\nCanada with her husband in 1912\nto reside in Nakusp where she has\nalways been an active worker both\nin the earlier Methodist Church\nand the later United Church. For\ntwelve years she was President of\nthe Ladies' Aid, for 19 years served\nas a capable leader of the Canadian\nGirls in Training, and was also' a\nSunday school tacher.\n^ Until ill-health prevented attendance, Mrs. Bill was a member of the\nNakusp Women's Institute of which\nshe was a life member; she was\nalso a life member of the Women's\nMissionary Society.\nLeft to mourn her ore her husband, Ernest W. Bill, and one\ndaughter, Mrs. Hugh Jones, Vancouver.\nOn July II, 1950, Mr. and Mrs,\nBill celebrated their Golden Wedding Day.\nLEICESTER, England (CP)\nPartners in a firm of real estate\nagents here are Messrs.  Sparrow\nand Chicken. They're hoping that\nno Mr. Hawk turns up.\nEasf Kootenay\nCoal Production\nShows Decrease\nNATAL, B.C., April 16 \u2014 Coal\nproduction in the East Kootenay\ndistrict took a slight drop in February- this year, as compared with\nFebruary one year ago. Total for\nthis district in February 1951 was\n83,781 tons, while a year ago it was\n90,017 tons.\nThis reduction is probably due\nto car shortages towards the end\nof that month, which shortage is\ncontinuing and disrupting shipments. Elk River Colliery produced 23,093 tons of coal in February\nand Michel Colliery 59,788 tons. In\naddition Michel produced .12,969\ntons of coke during the same month.\nTotal production of coal for the\nProvince of British Columbia in\nFebruary 1951 was 132,744 tons as\ncompared with 151,551 tons in February 1950.\nMichel F.O.E.\nElects Officers\nNATAL, B.C., April 16 - At a\nmeeting of the Fraternal Order of\nEagles, Michel Aerie No. 1864 the\nfollowing members were duly\nnominated and elected for office at\nthe termination of the present officers whose terms expire in June\nwhen the annual installation of officers takes place at the St Paul's\nChurch Hall at Michel.\nThe officers elected included\nHarry Robertson, Michel, as Worthy\nPresident; Tom Littler, Michel, as\nVice-President; Fred Nasi}, Michel,\nas chaplain; Robert Myles, Michel,\nas conductor; James Linn, Michel,\nas Inside Guard.\nJ. K. Mitchell, Michel, was retained as Secretary for a three year\nterm by defeating John Still of Michel by a majority vote; Earl Tabor, Michel, replaced George Man-\nnion, Michel, as Treasurer by a\none vote majority. \"\nThree trustees elected were Steve\nOrdyzuk, Paul J. Chala and Fred\nAndrews. It was decided to celebrate the 42nd anniversary of the\nMichel F.O.E. by holding a social\nevening,\nPublic Health Lab Opens\nMISS MARY YEARDYE\n\u2014Vogue photo.\nNakusp Forms\nStudy Group on\nSocial Credit\nNAKUSP, B.C, April 16\u2014F. Colborne, M.L.A, for Social Credit\nGovernment of Calgary, and Orvls\nKennedy, national organizer for the\nSocial Credit League, were the special speakers in Nakusp recently.\nMr. Kennedy explained that the\nLeague was based on Christian\nfaith and the recognition of the importance of the people to the government with the basic principle of\ndemocracy.   \"\nA comparison of hospitalization\nplans in Alberta and British Columbia was given. A IJudy group\nwas formed at the close of the\nmeeting with C. S. Sinclair in\ncharge.\nMr. Sinclair was also chairman\nof the meeting which was held in\nthe Legion Hall.\nIT'S GARDEN TIME\nAt Your Friendly Food Store\nONION SETS No. T, firm ond dry .\nPEA SEEDS Homesteader. 8 oz. _.\nIlAWN   SEEDS  SK*Ie- Briggs   __\n lb. 29c\n\u2014 pk. 20c\nlb.pk.95c\nORDER VIGORO\nfor delivery on arrival this weekend. For quick growth and abundant yield on\nlawn and garden use.\nI lb. 50<S       10 lbs.  90*      25 Ibs  $1.90\n50 Ibs __ $3.05       100 lbs  $5.23\nSWEET   PEA   SEEDS     6 pkgs-, assorted colors \u00a3OC\nBuy your garden seeds while our stocks are qomplete now.\nListen to Garden Tips over our regu lar broadcast Wednesday and Friday\nover CKLN \u2014 8:55 a.m.\nHead Lettuce \u00a3rr\\.....      211\nMiracle Whip 32 0_ _ 87^\nSola Jel g*^ 2(K\nCrisp Celery\nOlive Oil  Pure\nPer lb.\n15*\n47*\nCrabmeat6c\u2122\u00a3\u00b0r.d's: 590\n8 oz. tin .\nl Crawford's.\nField\nTomatoes\nCello-pak\nLb. 19c\nFresh\nGreen Peas\nLb. 22c\nPink\nGrapefruit\n96's\n2 for 25c\nft&WUfc $W)Sl)lL \u2014 CtwL J\/wajl 3dw, (phksiL\nPork & Beans f5tb:\u201e... 4 for\n49*\n39*\n$1.45\nMaple Buds gffi 75*\nArrowroot Biscuits ptf?8 33$\nSpaghetti Catelu\n5 lbs.\nGrapefruit Juice \u25a0%%\nCrisco\n3 lbs.\nUnM\u00bb!\u00bb\u00ab Parkay with red\nMargarine flap \u201e&, Lb\t\nCheese fpredeasy-\nI Per lb.\nJello\nAll kinds.\nPkt.\n3 for 27*\nCatsup S2'\t\nTomato Soup Aylmer. 3\nfor\n71*\n36*\n49*\n27*\n29*\n-Qualify TftudL\nThe 'newly - established Nelson I\nbranch of the Department of Health\nand Welfare division of laboratories, is marking time until business\nstarts pouring in from every corner\nof Kootenay-Boundary.,\n\"Work is just beginning to come\nin,\" according to Miss Mary Year-\ndye, who has come from Vancouver\nwith Miss Lorraine Handlen to operate the new unit.\nThe, branch has been set up in\nthe isolation hospital, and while up\nto November public health services\nwere part of the job done at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, they,\nwill now be carried out independently. Since November, tests have\nhad to be sent to the main provin-\ncail laboratory in Vancouver.\nWith  the  Nelson  branch, the\nprovince has four branches, The\nothers   are   at   Victoria,   Prince\nGeorge and Kamloops. Ths Nelson\none will serve the entire Kootenay\ndistrict, principally Nelson, Trail,\nCreston, Fernie, Kimberley, Cranbrook and Grand Forks.\nCommunicable diseases and milk\nand water tests form the branch's\nbusiness. Samples may come from\ndoctors, sanitary inspectors, public\nhealth nurses or individuals, such\nas in the case of anyone digging a\nwell and wishing to have the water\ntested.\nA public health nurse' may send\n\u2022in a swab from a, school-student with\na sore throat; a doctor may suspect\na case of diphtheria, tuberculosis or\nvenereal disease, and whatever the\ncase, the branch gives an answer.\nThe branch will also supply preventatives for disease to doctors.\nThe isolation hospital has been\nsplit into a serology room, bacteriology room, kitchen and store\nrooms. Equipment such as incubators, a refrigerator, a centrifuge,\nsterilizing oven and test tube shaker\nhas been installed.\nThe public health work was divorced from the hospital because\nit couldn't handle all the work, Miss\nYeardye explained. \"There is\nenough work here to keep two\npeople busy all the time.\"\nCAME HERE \"BLIND\" i\nMiss. Yeardye (pronounced \"yer-\ndee\") and Miss Handlen, both in\nthefr early 20s, came to Nelson\n\"blind\", except for what they had\nheard of the city from Miss Lois\nWhimster, a Nelson girl who is employed in the Vancouver lab. Miss\nYeardye is Winnipeg-born and a\ngraduate of University of British\nColumbia, and her assistant is a native of Kelowna. They were both on\nthe Vancouver lob staff before coming here.\nMiss Handlen is an ardent swimmer, and can hardly wait until West\nArm waters warm up to limber up\non her strokes, and Miss Yeardye\nwas an enthusiastic bowler in Vancouver.\nMISS LORRAINE HANDLEN\n\u2014Vogue photo.\nJaycees Plan July\nTourist Promotion\nJunior Chamber of Commerce\nunits in Nelson, Trail and Rossland\nare going to form a welcoming committee to greet American tourists\nat border points on the July 4th\nholiday.\n. First step in Jaycee plans to promote tourism in West Kootenay, it\ncalls for representatives of each city\nto act'on welcoming committees to\nbe posted at Northport and Nelway.\nJayce.es will answer questions and\noffer suggestions as to accomodation, recreational facilities and\npoints of interest in 'West Kootenay,\nwith Special reference to Trail's\nJubilee Week celebration and Nelson's Midsummer 'spiel.\nThe idea was presented in the\nform of a resolution by Jack Mor.\ngan of the Nelson Club at Saturday's district meeting in Nelson,\nJune Production\nGoal of Estella\nMine; Mill Rushed\nConstruction of a ISO-ton mill\nEast of Wasa, near Kimberley, is\nbeing rushed by Estella Mines, Ltd,,\nwhich has applied for listing on\nthe Vancouver Stock Exchange.\nA financial group from Spokane\nhas been buying the stock put out\nat 30 cents to $1 a share and now\nquoted over the counter in Vancouver around $1.75.\nFormerly owned by the Alex Pol-\nson lumber interests in Washington,\nthe Estella includes the old Rover,\nscene of the discovery in the area.\nAn adjoining group of 22 crown\ngranted claims at a lower elevation\nis owned by Mrs. John Ehlinger of\nSpokane. Several surveys of the\nclaims have been made which might\nprovide a tunnel site that would\npermit opening of the Estella property at 3000 feet depth without\nsinking.\nWhile the area lay dormant for\nyears, the recent financing by a\nToronto house, later joined by W.\nM. Rand & Co. of Vancouver, is\nsaid to have provided more than\n$1,000,000 in less than three months.\nNothing can hold back production by June unless there is delay\nin delivery of mill equipment, R. B.\nLamb, Vancouver, managing-director, was quoted as saying.\nConnection is now being made\nbetween the old Rover tunnel in 700\nfeet and the Estella 150 feet lower\nand a third tunnel is being started\nlower down.\nNELSwN >>Ai_T iStt.j, \u00ab'\u00ab\u00abi*JAVi AfiiiL Vt, Hi! \u2014 i\nHoliday in Mexico\nDescribed\nTo Rotary Club\nAn interesting account of a\nlengthy holiday in Mexico was\ngiven by C. B. Garland, K.C., at\nthe Rotary Club meeting at the\nHume Monday. J. A. Stewart accompanied Mr. Garland.\nTwo new members, George L.\nPhillips, Kootenay Division Superintendent of the C.P.R., and Inspector J. B. Harris, RCMP, were\nwelcomed into, the club.\nPlans were made for the visit\nof the University Players who will\npresent a play with a cast of 12\nin mid-May.\nlount Tina in the Dominican\nRepublic is the highest point in\nthe Caribbean at 10,301 feet.\nWindsor Lauds\nBritain's King\nNEW YORK, April 16 (AP)\u2014\nThe Duke of Windsor said today M\nstill feels he did the right thing\nwhen he abdicated the British\nthrone and married American-born\nMrs. Wallls Warfield.\n'I'm a very happy man ana Great\nBritain has a very fine King,\" the\nDuke told a press conference in\nconjunction with publication of his\nmemoirs, \"A King's Story.\"\nThe Duke said lt took him four\nyears tb write his memoirs. He said\nhe and the Duchess expect to remain here until next month, then\ngo to Paris and possibly \"do a little\ntravelling in Europe.\"\n10 Confirmed af\nChurch Redeemer\nTen Anglicans were confirmed\nby Rt. Rev. F. P. Clark, Bishop of\nKootenay, at Church of the Redeemer Sunday night.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood\npresented the candidates. Bishop\nClark preached at the service, and\ntwo lessons were read by John\nApplewhaite, lay reader.   ;\nReceiving the Laying on of\nHands were Mr. and Mrs. Marwin\nQuance, Mrs. Elizabeth . Ozeroff,\nMrs. Gladys Ioanin, Eileen Quance,\nRowena House, Jeannie Davey,\nSusanne Bailey, Maurice VanSacker and Kenneth VanSacker.\nAnnual Cleanup\nDay Wednesday\nTidying up of Nelson gardens, already under way, will reaoh its\nheight Wednesday afternoon, set by\nCity Council as the annual cleanup\nday.\nResidents are being asked to clean\nup yards, alleys, attics and basements, to repair fences and to do\neverything possible to improve the\nappearance of the City and eliminate fire hazards.\nBurning of all brush, leaves or\nother'combustible material is also\nasked. Unburnable refuse placed in\na handy spot for pickup will be removed by Public Works trucks.\nBurning is permissible without a\npermit between the hours of 9 a.m.\nand 7 p.m. until April 19 under supervision.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nSalvation Army\nTag BringfJ 427\nA total of $427.42 was realized\nfrom the Salvation Army tag day\nSaturday.\nAround 80 taggers, including the\nschool children from the Hume,\nCentral and Junior High Schools,\nparticipated. In charge of the Hume\nschool taggers and Fairview area\nwas B.C. Stallwood, school principal.\nProceeds from the tag as well as\nproceeds from a series of coming\nrummage sales will -be used for welfare work to supplement the Red\nShield budget.\nMIDLAND'S\nMARVEL FEEDS\nsupplemented with\nBURNS & CO. \"VIGOR\" PROTEIN AND\nMINERAL CONCENTRATES\nWe carry a full line of\nPOULTRY, HOG AND DAIRY BALANCED RATIONS\nOur feeds are properly mixed and analysis guaranteed.\nOUR PRICES ARE THE LOWEST\nOur feeds give the beat returns.\nWrite or call at our office for full Information.\nMake arrangements with your trucker to\ntake  delivery of your feed  requirements\nfrom\nMIDLAND & PACIFIC\nGRAIN CORP. LTD.\nat\nCRESTON, B. C.\nLATE ARRIVAL\nSALE\nWOMEN'S\nBACON '\/.-ib. pkt,.\nPORK CHOPS\t\nLEAN BRISKET - \u2014\nSHOULDER VEAL STEAK\nea. 35c\nlb. 59c\nlb. 45c\nlb. 70c\nRemember Liberty Offers You Low Prices Every Day\nSHOP and SAVE at the LIBERTY today for greater savings\nCountry Orders Welcome\nLIBERTY\nFor Greater\nSavings\nEX-NELSON ITE'S\nMOTHER PASSES\nIN LETHBRIDGE\nWord has been received here of\nthe death in Lethbridge of Mrs.\nDaisy Wright, widow of the late\nDr. Frederic W. Wright, and\nmother of Mrs. G. Stuart Macintosh, formerly of Nelson. She died\nat her daughter's home.\nMrs. Wright, who had visited\nNelson several times when the\nMacintoshes resided here, had\nlived in Amherst, N. S., for a number of years. In August, at the age\nof 85, she made her first airplane\nflight when she left for Lethbridge.\nShe was well known in literary\ncircles, and for some years was a\nmember of the Canadian Authors'\nAssociation. Her poems appeared\nin the Nelson Daily News.\nFuneral services were held m\nAmherst.\nAPPLIES FOR\nNAME CHANGE\nApplication for a change of name\nhas been made to- the Director of\nVital Statistics by Fetrb Stec of\nTrail. ,\nMr. Stec is applying Jo have his\nname changed to Peter Walter\nStatz, a notice in the current B:C.\nGazetteastates.\n25     OFF-TUESDAY\nYOUR  OPPORTUNITY  TO  SAVE tuP  TO  $10.<f>\nON   YOUR   NEW  SPRING ,COAT        #\nHere they are...'. \u2022  -   S*\u00bb\"*# .'.'; \u25a0\n\u2022 WOOLS, COVERTS, TWILLS AND GABARDINES\n\u2022 COMPLETE  ASSORTMENT OF NEW SPRING SHADES\n\u2022 ALL NEW FULL-LENGTH MODELS\n'  COATS Reg. 39.50 COATS Reg. $35\nSALE PRICE 29.63     SALE PRICE 26.25\nCOATS Reg. 29.50\nSALE PRICE 22.13\n(iMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniin\nBE EARLY - TUESDAY\nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiMiiiimiii\nCLEARANCE!   NEW SPRING NAYY\nDRESSES REDUCED ONE-THIRD\nNew Spring Crepes and Nylons in Navy with crisp pique trim. Sizes 12 to 18.\nDRESSES Reg. 16.95\t\nDRESSES Reg. 14.95 - __\nSALE PRICE 11.30\nSALE PRICE 9.9?\nSTORE HOURS\nMon., Tues,, Thurs.,\nFri.\/r- 9 a.m.-5 p,m.\n\u2022 Wednesday \"'\u25a0>,\n9 a.m.-12 noon\nSat \u2014 9 a.m.-6 p.m.\nINCORPORATID   \u00abW *** MfO. *V\u00abt\nPHONES\nDrygoods  ....\n49\nReady-to-Wear\n49\nHosiery   \t\n62\nGroceries.  .;,.\n193\n...Men's Wear .i....\nv         %   f\n29\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 17.1M1\nFewer Canadians Divorced;\nStill Above Pre*War Mark\nOTTAWA, April 16 (CP)~Can.\nada's marital ship of state is sailing\nsmooth seas nowadays\u2014In fact has\nb'een for the last three years,\nThe Bureau of Statistics today\nissued the annual divorce report\nfof 1850, It shows fewer divorces In\nall provinces except Nova Scotia\ncompared with 104P and a continuation of. the decline in the,number\n0AMJL lip. ''With,\nmwiicut WUvdw\nSLENDERIZING \/\nHere you are, lady! All the youth-\nAll, new-season details, that you\nwant! Envelope-flap pockets, bias-\nband trim, coat-dress opening. All\non a smart frock!\nPattern 9259 in sizes 34, 36, 38,\n40, 42, 44, 46, 48, Size 36 takes 4%\nyards 35-inch; Vs yard contrast fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart .shows you every step.\nSend thirty-five cents (35c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to Marian Martin,\ncare of Nelson Daily News, Pattern\nDept, Nelson, B.C.\nHave you seen . . , The new SU\u00bb\nhouette? The new Wrap-On? Order\nour, new1; 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 prlnt-\n(fcjvin book.    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 ii    '   \"\"\"  \" \"\nby, cXautia. Whnskk.\narid rate of ceasa which began Jn\nIn the three years the all-Canada\nrate has dropped from 85,3 to 87,7\ndivorces per 100,000 population,.\nThe 1850 figure- was 5208 divorces,\ndown from 5|)34 in the preceding\nyear, 6881 In 1948 and the 1847 peak\nfigure.of 8108,\nBut, as the Bureau pointed .out,\nthe 1850 total atiji had a long way\nto drop to reach the level of the\nyears before the war.\nIn 1040 there ware only 2380\n,  divorces,   excluding   Newfoundland which then had no divorce\nfacilities. Newfoundland, joining\nconfederation In 1949, atlll'has no\ndivorce coiirt and   Ilka Quebec\nnow  fiends  cases  to   Parliament\nfor decision. AH other provinces\nhave divorce courts.\nParliament, with 8 standing Senate committee doing the actual investigation work, does a big divorce\nbusiness   every   session.   In   the\ndouble session of 1849 it handled\n350 cases. It heard 250, including\nNewfoundland for the first time, in\n1950 and so  far this  session has\nhandled about 220 cases with more\nto come, and it wants to get rid\nof its' job.\nLast year the Divorce Committee\nof the Senate expressed \"regret\"\nthat Parliament has \"not yet seen\nfit to solve the problem of parliamentary divorce by setting up suit,\nable tribunals before which the\nnumerous cases from Quebec and\nNewfoundland can be heard.\" Nothing has yet been done,\nB.C. SECOND HIGHEST\nOntario had the highest divorce\nrate for 1950, 2063 compared with\n2306 in 1049. British Columbia again\nwas second with 1377 cases against\n1491 and Alberta third with 534\ncompared with 594.\nDivorces in Manitoba fell to 309\nfrom 411; Saskatchewan to 280 from\n289; Quebec from 234 from 350; New\nBrunswick to 194 from 202; Prince\nEdward Island to 13 from 20. The\ntotal for Nova Scotia was up to\n109 from 181.\nNewfoundland had five cases in\nits first divorce year as a new prov-\nince.\nBritish Columbia had the highest\nrate of divorce per 100,000 population with a figure of 121.0 against\n133.8 in 1849. Alberta followed with\n69.7 compared with 88,2; Ontario\n45,7 against 54.3; Manitoba 38.9\nagainst 52.8; New Brunswick 37.2\nagainst 39.1; Nova Scotia 30.:\nagainst 28.1; Saskatchewan 32,0\nagainst 33.6; Prince Edward Island\n13.5 against 21.3 and Quebec 5.9\nagainst 9.0.\nThe 19S0 rate for Newfoundland\nwas 1.4 for 100,000 population.\nAl Butt's Songs\nWell Received at\nArrow Park Concert\nNAKUSP, April 16 \u2014 Al Butt,\nPresident of the Nakusp 'Board of\nTrade, was Master of Ceremonies\nat the repeat concert given in Arrow Park. Friday the 13th held\nno terrors for between 30 and 40\npeople who left Nakusp to attend\nthe hillbilly concert put on by\nmembers of the Board of Trade and\nFire Brigade members and helpers.\nA number. 01 the .hillbilly songs\nWere\"' composed by President AI\nButt and were'much applauded as\nlocal names of the Arrow Park citi.\nzens were used.\nAfter the program a dance followed when refreshments were\nserved by the Arrow Park ladies,\nThe funds taken were divided between the Arrow Park Agricultural\nSociety and Nakusp organizations,\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nPasses Ranchers'\nAssistance to\nB.C. Government\nOTTAWA, April 18 (CF>-Agrt-\nculture Minister Gardiner said in\nths Commons \u2022 today the Federal\nGovernment feela the question oi\nfinancial assistance (or British Columbia fnilt growers who suffered\ntree, damage by frost is one for the\nProvincial Government.\nThe Minister was questioned by O,\nL. Jone\u00bb (CCF-Yale) end H, W,\nHerridge (CCF-Kooteney West)\nwith regard to either direct Federal\nassistance or long-term, low interest\nloans for B,c fruit growers,\nThe Minister said with regard to\nfinancial assistance, it was felt that\nthe amount involved was within\nthe power of the province to handle,\nHe said the same applied with re-\nspeot to long-term low interest\nloans, ',\nIn reply to a question by Mr. Her>\nridge regarding tabling of correspondence with the Federal Gov-\nernment in the matter, the' Minister\nsaid \"some documents\" hed been\ntabled,\nWismer Orders\nInquiry Into\nRitchie Case\nVICTORIA, B.C., April 18 (CD-\nCharges that a pregnant woman in\nneed of emergency treatment was\nrefused admittance to hospital are\nto be Investigated.\nPremier Byron Johnson and\nHealth Minister Douglas Turnbull\nsaid in a Joint announcement today\nthat in view of the seriousness of the\ncase as reported, it was felt a full\ninquiry should be made.\nIt was charged ln Vancouver last\nweek that 18.year-old Mrs. Donald\nRitchie lost her unborn child because hospitals were unable to give\nher a bed.\nThe story was brought to the attention of the Legislature by Saan-\nich M.L.A., Arthur Ash who asked\nthat all details of the case be made\navailable.\nScots Footballer\nDies in Nanaimo\nNANAIMO, B. C April. 16 (CP)\n\u2014Robert F. Thompson,- 84,'a former\nScottish international soccer player,\ndied at his home here Saturday. He\ncame to Nanalmo from Scotland 30\nyears ago.\nN. DENVER FIREMEN\nPLAN KLONDYKE NIGHTS\nNEW DENVER, B. C, April 16-\n\u2022The New Denver Volunteer. Firemen met In the flrehall with the\nChief, W. E. Rowe in the chair.\nRoutine business was dealt with,\nA new siren has been ordered and\nalso 400 feet of one and one-half\ninch hose.\nThe holding of Klondyke Nights\nwas discussed and dates set. Messrs.\nR. E. Crellin, L, B. Campbell and\nW. G. Thring were appointed to\nlook into the possibility of games\nto be played at the above.\nRENEW  LAMPSHADES\nSpring Recovery Plan! Keep that\nold; lampshade\u2014recover It or make\na hew shade on the old frame. Ten\nsmart ideas here!\nModern or period shades in'Pattern 597. Step-by-step instructions;\n10 phades or shade covers,\nIiaura Wheeler's improved pattern makes crochet and knitting so\nsimple with its charts, photos and\nconcise directions.\nSend Twenty-Five cents in coins\n(stamps cannot be accepted) for this\npattern to Nelson Daily News, Needlecraft Dept., Nelson, B.C. Print\nplainly PATTERN NUMBER, your\nNAME tend ADDRESS.   -,\nSend Twenty-five Cents more (in\ncoins) for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book, Illustrations of pat-\ntors for crochet, embrojdlry, knitting, house|oId accessories, dolls,\ntoys \u25a0.., many\" hobby'riiid gift ideas.\nA free \"pattern is printed ln the\nThey're amazing good\nMade With Amazing Now Fast PRY Yeast!\nJULY BUNS\nMeasure into .mall bowl, 1 c\nlukewarm water, 2 tsps. granulated sugar; stir until sugar is\ndissolved. Sprinklp with 2 envelopes Fleischmann's Royal\nFast Rising Dry Yeast. Let\nstand 10 min., THEN stir well.\nCream a?4 c shortening-; gradually\nblend In 1 c. granulated sugar, 2 tsps.\nsalt, 1 tep. grated nutmeg-, Gradually\nbeat In 2 well-beaten eggi. Stir in\nV. tap. lemon extract,'\/_ c. milk which.\nhas been scalded end cooled to luke-\nwarm, and yeaat mixture. Stir In 3 c\nonce-iifted bread flour; best until\nsmooth. Work in 3 c. more once-\naiftcd bread flour. Knead until smooth\nand elastic) place in ffreaied bowl\nand brush top with melted butter or\nshortening*- Cover and set in warm\nplace, free from draught, Let rise\nuntil doubled In. bulk. Punch down\ndough and cut into 36 equal portions;\nknead into smooth balls. Brush with\nmelted butter or msrgtrine, roll in\nfine granulated tugSr and arrange\nVi* spart on greased baking pans.\nCovsr end 1st rise until doubted in\nbulk. Twist tha handle of a knife\nin tho top of each roll to form sn\nIndentation! fill with Jelly. Cover and\n1st rise IS min. longer. Bake in moderately hot oven, 375', about 18 min.\n\u2022 No more disappointments\nbecause the yeast has spoiled!\nFleischmann's Fast DRY Yegst\nreplaces old-fashioned perishable\nyeast because it keeps fresh and\nfull strength \u2014 right in your\ncupboard! For fast-rising dough\nand grand oven results get\nFleischmann's Fast DRY\nYeast to-day!\nPRICES  EFFECTIVE\nAPRIL\nSavings that bloom in the spring! Pardon us if we seem poetic, but we\ncan't think of a better way to describe the terrific Uneup of values being\noffered in Safeway'g Big April Sale, There are great buys in every section 1 \/1L   f A   71 _ f\nof the store. Check the low prices featured in this ad. Then bring your I \/ III   |U  4*1)1\nshopping list to Safeway... and watch your savings grow.   ; .\n\u2022 BRAISED STEAK\nGoblin.\n\\sy% n, eon\nChoice,\nLima Beans u \u00ab. m\n\u2022 BRAN FLAKES\n\u2022 PURE LARD\nKellogg's. Send box .\ntopi for Snack and\nTeast Set. 14 o\u00bb. pkg.\nNorth Star brand.\nIS 01. pkg \u201e\nCanmd. jAuitA,\nChoice Rhubarb W$ 2.** 35*\nGrapefruit Sections^\u2122 22*\n33*\n30*\n'J0 oz, can .\nAuitralian Tropical,\n20 oi. can  .,\u201e\t\nFruit Salad\nChoice Raspberries J\u2122**.,\nQimmd. eSjoupA.\nCampbell's,   m m smj.\n10 oz. can    _=, for d. IT\nVegetable Soup\nGreen PeliSoupTo\/r^'fpr1]?*\nflaking.Tbmdtt\nDomestic Shortening 16 oz ctn\nRobin Hood Flour\nMazola Oil\n9 lb. bag\n16 oz. can'..\nPancake Flourtmt Jemlma\n37*\n38*\n53*\n' 3 lb. bag   54*\nCream of Wheat ?_ VpwMlnu,e' 28*\nCorn Flakes 8K^t 2 for 29*\nGrape Nuts Flakes f_ t pkt.     20*\nPerfex Bleach 32 or b0ttl6    340\nChore Girls Each    9c\nGlass Wax ^can 49*\nDreft, Duz, Lux, ga$\u00a3iL__pi*4,*\nQamsucL OsqstabkL\nWhole Kernel Corn #\u00a3 % for 350\nChoice Peas \u2122hTn 2*>r31*\nPeas and Carrots \u00a3\u2022\u00a3 \u2122*Choe' J 5<fc\nGreenBeans.Woez.S....'2for35*\nRed Plum jam $%%?\u00a3\u00a3 ; 63*\nPure Strawberry Jam 4E8mflpre0_   \\ .29\nPeach jam \u00a3_*\u00a3.\"_* 87*\nOrange Marmalade faToz8^* 71*\n\/BlMUlilL\nChristie's Sodas ltiz cln .29*\nGinger Snaps ls <_, co,i. ; 27*.\n- _j. A\u00abwrtBd;'    . 3 *<* *i_\nBaby Foocfc \u00bb\u00ab*\u25a0 **     '    ^\nmm ju,m *ot reB 45*\nCornea'       aoi\u00ab,     2** \u00bb'*\nTamataJ\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab^,-_2K\n \"\" _Z2*\n21*\n_-.: IS\nBoiled D\u00bbn\"8r \u00bb0I \"*\"~~\" 47*\nCorned Beef\u00bb\u00ab ^ \u2014^\nSpaghen o\"\u00b0 \u00a3. 41*\nrtfradPWd*\"*1*\"\"-   37\u00ab\nChiU Sauce .n^M^\nSliced Beet*\n20 01. can \u2014\nJ\"\"\"\" .  yancy.\nSaw\u00abrkrew* n ^\\f\nMixed Vegetables w.\nCawuuL (jiuaitL\nUnsw't'n'd.   \u2022%        3 _| _\u2022\nMex. 20 oz. A for  3JV\n2 for 25*\nPineapple Juice SSTSfe.2\nLemon Juice\n6 oz. can .\nGrapefruit Juice g\"^* 2 ^ 33*\nGrapefruit Juice %\u2122hT..v\u2122. 37*'\nWUMsdJknsouA.\nMiracle Whip 16or. jBr.\nChicken Haddieji'^Sf....\nLong Grain Rice u oz pkt.....\n49*\n29*\n21*\n* FIELD TOMATOES\nFirm, red-ripe.\n14 oz. cello tube\t\n20c\n\u2022 CRISP CELERY\nImported.\nGreen stalks\nlb. 14c\n* SIRLOIN STEAKS lb. 92c\n* LEG OF LAMB\nHalf or whole\nlb. 89c\n* POT ROAST .bns     lb. 69c\n\u2022 PORK ROAST\nShoulder\nlb. 61c\nVeal Steak ,Choiceveal\n>Per lb.\n97*    Cottage Roll \u00a7\u25a0?_\u2022 ^ 74^\nRib Lamb Chops ^'ib.Iamb 88* Mae and Cheese Loaf & \u00b0Lrb 58*\nThick Rib Boiling Beef Lb 59^ Smoked Cod Fillets Per ,b 470\nVeal Shoulder Roast Per Ib   74*    Fresh Salmon.eTib.r..5li!ed:      58*\nClip-Top Carrots\nLocal.\n4 for 25*\nNew Cabbage ?errSJlb\u00a3rflen...head.s:  9*\nCooking Onions &1 *\"*\u00bb'$ lb, 25*\nBananas .irrmibgol.d:n...rip!: 22*\nEmperor Grapes:.\u25a0&\u00a3& .,;........ 22*\nDelicious Apples _S.   2ibs 25*\nSUNKIST NAVEL\nORANGES\nfull of juice ... .   X IDS. Z\/C\nCANTERBURY TEA\nCanterbury l\u00bb a luxury tsa In evary re\u00abpaot, yet It'a\neconomloally priced. Try It today,\n. 91*\nTea Bags,        \"fiC^'6 oz.\nPkg. 60 \/ O   pkg.   _\nAIRWAY COFFEE\nIf you like a mild, mellow ooffee\u2014try Airway. Flavor la\nlocked In the whole bean till coffee Ib ground when\nyou buy.\nSLICED\nSIDE BACON\nCello-wrapped. '\u25a0\/\nVi's, each  L\n36'\nCHOICE\n16 oz.\npkg. -\nQO<    3 lb.\n***       bag _\n$-1.72\nBACON STRIPS\nPiece only.\nLb.   \t\n\u25a0 t \u2022\nWe Reserve the Right to LlJWt Quantities CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n SI\/\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nTHE CLINIC SHOE\n.   Arriving this week\n*  '\u25a0:.    exclusively at\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nNakusp Event Buys\nBazaar Materials\nNAKUSP, B. a, April 16..- A\nrummage sale and afternoon tea\nsponsored by Robertson Memorial\nUnited Church Ladies' Aid in the\nparish hall, brought in $64 which\nwill be used to purchase materials\nfor a Fall bazaar. S\nMrs. Bob Hopp, Mrs. J. Olson,\nMrs. H. West, Miss, Jean Fawcett,\nMiss R, Hamer, Mrs. Rorick and\nMiss A. Bowes were in charge of\nthe tea, and \"sales women\" were\nMrs.H. L. Miller, .Mrs. N. Woldum,\nMrs. G. P. Horsley and Mrs. B. S.\nS. Hartley. Mrs. P. R. Henke was\ncashier.\nIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nProtected\nGoodness\nPacific's wholesome- pure\nmilk goodness is protected\nby vacuum packing, homogenized for easier digestion\nond Vitamin D increased to\ngive added nourishment.\nGrand in coffee and in babies' formulas. Try convenient Pacific Milk today.\nPacific Milk\n\"Vacuum Packed and\nHomogenized\"\niiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nREAD  THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nJhsLWifxldLof\nWOMEN\nNelson Their Home\nLiberal Women\nTo Meet in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., April 16\u2014Premier Byron Johnson will be guest\nspeaker at a banquet at the annual meeting of the'B.C. Women's\nLiberal   Association   here   April'\n26 and 27.\nThe president of National Federation of Liberal Women of Canada, Mrs. W. T. O'Regan, will attend the convention in the course of\na tour of the West.\nMrs. O'Regan was born in Montreal, daughter of Mr. aftd Mrs.\nPierre Gauthipr and a descent of\nPierre de la Verenderye, one of\nthe founders of the Canadian\nWest. Married to a Nova Scotian,\nand mother of two daughters and a\nson, her home-making has been important in her life. Years ago, how\never, she began to take an active\nand important part in the Liberal\nparty.\nShe has been president of Lady\nLaurier. Club of Ottawa since she\nfounded it in 1936, is treasurer of\nthe East Ottawa Riding Association\nand has been a leading I figure in\nOntario Women's Liberal Association. In 1936 she was a Liberal-candidate in the by-election in East\nOttawa.\nMrs. G. W. Kissick of West Vancouver, president' of the provincial\nassociation, will be in the chair.\nNews of the Day\nRATES:\/30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY  ALL THE WAY.\nELECTROLUX SALES \u25a0 SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR 663\nRevising your Insurance? Let us\nhelp you. BLACKWOOD AGENCY.\nWANTED \u2014 CLEAN   COTTON\nRAGS 12c PER LB.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nFLOOR SANDING   _  FINISHING\nHardwoods supplied, laid.\nPhone 1108\nCongowall \u2014 Wall covering tile\neffect, 20c per sq. ft.\nBURNS  LUMBER  CO.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nCustom-made drapes to fit any\nwindow in your home.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nJust received\u2014New shipment of\nsmart handbags.\nADRIAN   MILLINERY\nCheck. Your Fishing Tackle Now!\nNew stock just arrived.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nP.-T.A.\nReserve Saturday, April 28, for\nShamrock Tea, Civic Centre, 3-5\np.m.\nEVANGELISTIC CRUSADE\n,at\nEvangelical Mission Covenant\nRev. C. Reuben Anderson\nof Mr. Vernon;,Wash., Guest Speaker\nSpecial.attraction each night for children and young people.\nSCANDINAVIAN NIGHT \u2014 Saturday night, with 16 mm.\npictures of Scandinavia.\nAll weekday services at 7:30 p.m,\nYOU are invited. .' .\nCanvas and leather-face Garden\nGloves at WADES'.\nWEDNESDAY\nMORNING\nSPECIALS\nSHOP AT THE BAY AND SAVE\n\u2022 Reg. 17.95\nKitchen Tables\nDrop-leaf style kitchen tables for natural fin-     J _\u25ba   A\u00a3\nish. Wednesday Morning Special       \u00ab*\u00ab73\n\u2022 Reg. .59\nGood Quality Broadcloth\nIn 36-inch width. Plain colors of light blue, deep       jtf%\nblue, red, sand and black. Wednesday Special       \u2022\u2022# '\n\u2022 Reg. 1.95 to 2.25\nTennis Shoes\nClearance of men's and women's canvas tennis shoes.\nBroken lines and sizes. Wednesday Morning Special\n\u2022 Special Purchase\nMen's Grey Flannels\nStyled with drop loops, double pleats, regular\npockets, cuffed bottoms. Sizes 30 to 44. Wednesday\nMorning Special ,\t\n\u2022 Reg. 1.39 to 1.59\nNylon Subs\n.99\n5.95\nLight   Spring   shades.\nMorning Special \t\n51-54-66   gauge.   Wednesday\n.89\nifeg. 5.98\n* Wool Coat Sets\n2.99\nBoys\nFor boys 5 to 6x in brown, navy and green. Wednesday Morning Special\t\nTomato Soup\nCampbell's. 10 oz. tin\n6,\u201e63<\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nRUMMAGE SALE\nSalvation Army Hall, 513 Victoria\nSt., Saturday, April 21, 9-12 p.m.\nLEGION  MERRYMAKERS\nWhist and Dance, Legion Hall,\nFri., April 20th. McEwan's Orchestra. Adm. 60c. Come one, come all,\nClyde pattern pruners, Woodyatt\n8- and 10-foot tree. pruners, all\nstyles of pruning saws, snap-cut\nhand pruners. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nRose   bushes,   shrubs,   bulbs \u2014\nEverything for the garden at\nCOVENTRYS' FLOWER 8HOP\nPhone 962.\nSoft,  white  flannelette,   suitable\nfor diapers, 27-inches wide, 44c a\nyard. Diapers, per dozen, $4.49.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nMacDonald's strawberry rhubarb\nplants, 50c each.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nNEXT CIVIC CENTRE \u2014 PH. 910\nLADIES' FASTBALL\nmeeting Tuesday, April 17th, 7:30\np.m. In The Percolator. Everybody\nwelcome.\nAlways a BARGAIN on our\nSPECIAL rack. ,We invite you to\nlook these over.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP ,\nNelson\nSocial...-.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1951 \u2014 5\nWedding vows were exchanged In SL Paul's United Church\nIn Nelson by the former Bernlce Ellen Langlll,vdaughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. L. M. Langill of Nelson, and' Mathels James Kuntz, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. M. Kuntz of Nelson. The principals are shown here\nwith Philip Bailey, best man, little Vivian Tanner, flower girl, and\nMiss Joyce Elmore, bridesmaid. Rev. A. L. Anderson read the\nservice. The newlyweds are making their home In  Nelson.\n\u2014Renwick  photo.\nHollywood Makes True Film of\nLife Behind Hospital Scenes\nCORDUROY VELVET8, 36\" WIDE,\nREG. $2.25, ALL COLORS, TO\nCLEAR, YD, $1.89. \u2014 TAYLOR'S\nDRY GOODS, BAKER 8TREET.\nKeep up-to-date with current\nnews and fiction. All the latest\npapers and magazines'can be found\nat VALENTINE'S.   \"    \u00ab\nBy BOB THOMA8\nHOLLYWOOD, April 16 (AP)\u2014\nHaving tackled all other kinds of\nproblems, Hollywood is taking on\nis the issues of the medical profession. ''        ~\nTwentieth Century-Fox has already dealt with anti-Semitism,\nanti-Negro feeling and snobbery- in\ncollege sororities. Its latest \u2022 \"problem\" feature is \"The Dr. Pratetor-\nius Story,\" a comedy with overtones of medical controversy. It Is\nbeing written and directed by Joseph Mankiewicz, who won four\nOscars in the last two years.\nDr. Ben Sacks, a retired New\nYork heart specialist and technical\nadvisor on the film, explained the\nissues in the film:\n\"It's the story of the conflict of\ntwo schools of medical thought. Dr.\nPraetorius, played by Cary Grant,\nbelieves in modernizing hospitals\nand medical treatment. He is opposed by an anatomy professor, who\nbelieves Pratetorius is destroying\nthe dignity of the profession. .\n\"Pratetorius believes that a doctor has theduty to. treat the patient,\nnot just the disease. In other words,\n'he feels that it is not enough to\ncure the ailment alone; the doctor\nalso must get the patient in a\nhealthy mental and emotional state.\n\"The modern principles of psychi-\nFibreglas   range   boiler   jacket*,\n$8.65 each. Easy to install. Electric\ntank heaters, immersion and side-\narm type, and thermostat controls.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nWATCH REPAIRING\nIS A JOB FOR EXPERTS\nOur Work assures your Satisfaction\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\n491 Baker. Street\n1 piano in good condition. Cheap\nfor cash.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture and antiques.\nHOME  FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560 413 HALL 8T.\natry and psychosomatic medicine\nare followed by Pratetorius. He\nknows that many disease, organic\nas well as functional, are caused by\nmental conditions. Also, he has a\ndisregard for hospital procedure,\n'I will not have my patients awakened from health-giving sleep so\nthey can take a pill on schedule,' he\nsays.\"\nThe hospital of Dr. Praetorius\nwill be a glimpse into the future. It\nwill be brightly decorated with bed\nheadboards containing everything\nof convenience for the patient.\n\"Of course, we realize that economy is the reason that hospitals are\nso cheerless\" admitted Sacks. But\nhe indicated that the picture will\nshow how future hospitals can be\nmade less forbidding without too\nmuch extra cost.\nOne of the chief problems In\ndealing with medical subjects on\nthe screen js censorships, Dr. Sacks\nsaid. The industry code contains\nrigid rules forbidding such things\nas the injection of hypodermic\nneedles, the showing of blood,\nwounds, and so on. Many words are\nverboten, such as forceps in connection with childbirth.\n\"But the censors are' getting much\nmore broad-minded,\" he reported.\n\"In 'Prateorius' we are.actually allowed to use the word 'pregnant'.\"\n... By MRS. M J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George, W.\nTucker and daughter Gloria, of\nBristol, N.H., have arrived in Nelson and will reside in Robert Cleri.\nhew's North Shore cottage during\nthe Summer. Mr. Tucker is super\nvising the construction of the Con\nsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany's power line to Kimber\nley.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. E. Butchard, Kerr\nApartments, has as guest her sister-\nin-law, Mrs. N. Carney of Edmonton.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. King\nof Trail have returned from Van\ncouver where Mr. King was attending a convention.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. Mclnnes, Latimer\nStreet, has left to make her-home\nin Vancouver and visited en route\nin Grand Forks with her son and\ndaughter-in-law.\n.. Michael Kinahan spent the\nweekend in Trail with relatives.\n\u2022 Rev. Sister Anna Mary, C.S.J.,\nhas been discharged from the Mater\nMisericordiae. Hospital in Rossland\nwhere she has been a patient. She\nhas resumed her duties on^the staff\nof St. Joseph's High School.\n. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Stewart,\n703 Carbonate Street, had as weekend guest their daughter, Miss Den-\nise Stewart of Trail.\n\u2022 Miss Helen Wilson and Miss\nC. Barnhart spent the weekend in\nTrail, guests at the home on Riverside Avenue of Mr. and Mrs. W. M.\nCarlson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Leo Atwell of\nthe North Shore have returned\nfrom a few days spent at the Coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A, H. Wilson.\nGyro Park Road, who have spent\na fortnight at the Coast where Mr.\nWilson attended a convention, have\nreturned.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Haskell,\nMill Street, have -as guest their\nyoung nephew, Neil Murdoch, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. G. Murdoch of\nTrail, whose mother has left for\nVictoria where she is delegate as\nregent from I.O.D.E. Trail to the\nannual provincial convention.\nChoir Sings\nAt Nakusp\nNuptial Mass\nNAKUSP,.B. C, April 16 \u2014 The\nSlovak choir sang at the nuptial'\nhigh mass celebrated by Rev.\nFather E. A. Frank in Our Lady of\nLourdes Church for the former\nHelen Rose Juras and Francis\nHugh Nixon.\nThe bride Is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Albert Juras, anil the\ngroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. A. Rehill, all of Nakuspr\nThe bride's traditional white satin gown featured a sweetheart\nneckline and lilypoint sleeves. Her\nchapel veil was held in place by\na coronet headpiece and she carried a bouquet of red roses. Mr.\nJuras gave his daughter in marriage.\nMrs. A. Seward as matron of\nhonor was in an apple green taffeta gown with a bouffant skirt,\naccented by mauve accessories, and\nthe groom's sister, Miss Eleanor\nNixon, wore a gown of mauve taffeta with. white accessories as\nbridesmaid. Both carried pink carnations.\nMr, Emil Juras, the bride's\nbrother, was best man, and Mr.\nWilliam Likus ushered the guests.\nFather Frank proposed the toast\nto the bride at the wedding breakfast at the home of the bride's parents. The . guests were entertained\nby a dance during'the latter part\nof the day. \u2022\u2022\nNakusp is where the couple will\nmake their home.\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\n\"The House of Furniture Value**\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 - NELSON\nGuild Meeting Held\nQUEEN'S BAY. B. C, April 10\n\u2014The monthly Guild meeting w i\nheld at the home of Mrs. J. S. Hir\nTAKES HIGHEST HONOlii\nOur stock of chrome furniture is\nat its greatest height. We suggest\nthat you make your choice now as\nwe have received our shipment for\nan indefinite time.\nMc & Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nMrs* Mattia\nPresident of\nTrail CWL\n' TRAIL, B.C., April 16\u2014Mrs. A.\nDelia Mattia was elected President\nof St. Anthony's Church Catholic\nWomen's League at the organization's monthly meeting ih tne parish hall.\nMrs. A. D'Hont is First Vice-\nPresident; Mrs. S. Caputo, Second\nVice - President; Mrs. I, Muzzin,\nThird Vice-President; Mrs. C. Martin, Secretary, and Mrs. J. Schiavon,\nTreasurer. Mrs. E. Muzzift was\nchosen Press convener; and Mrs. R.\nCocchioni and Mrs. A. Bertuzzi,\ncircle conveners. Mrs. Cocchioni is\nRossland Avenue Circle convener,\nand Mrs. Bertuzzi,- convener for the\nNelson and Binns Street Circle.\nWINDOW GLASS\nWe   have   a Complete  range  of\nstandard sizes in single and double\nstrength. We can cut to your individual requirements.\nT. H. WATERS _ CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.      Nelson,      Phone 166\nMR. KOCH, THE PENSIONS\nADVOCATE, may be expected in\nNelson around the middle of May,\ndependent upon enquiries received.\nVeterans wishing an interview\nplease contact Secretary, Nelson\nLegion, immediately, giving full\nname and regimental number. Our\nlisting closes Saturday next.\nLOVELY HATS    v\nin\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nRebekah Tea,\nSale Success\nThe Spring sale and tea of Queen\nCity Rebekah Lodge No. 16, held in\nI.O.O.F. hall, was an outstanding\nsuccess.\nMrs. W. A. Tickrier, noble grand,\nand Mrs. F. J. McAvinn, district deputy grand president, welcomed the\nguests. Convener was Miss Ann\nBielby, assisted by Mrs. F. Andrews\nand Mrs. T. Imming.\nMrs. J. Draper, Mrs. A. H, Whitehead, Mrs. Hutton and Mrs. Joseph\nBradshaw poured.\nThe bake table was in charge of\nMrs. J. T. Brown and Mrs. Charles\nBlunt, the sewing table, Mrs. Jack\nWood and Mrs. F. Andrews; novelty\ntable, Mrs. Sinclair and Mrs. T.\nWood. Mrs. E. Bereau, assisted by\nMrs. G. S. Strong, Miss Beryl Andrews, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Jack McLellan and Mrs. L. Bealby, handled\nWillow Point\nW.L Hears\nOf Welfare\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, April 16\n\u2014Mr. Knowles of the Social Welfare branch at Nelson was guest\nspeaker at the monthly meeting of\nWillow Point Women's Institute.\nMr. Knowles told of the aims of\nthe service and its endeavors in\nhelping those in need to solve their\nproblems.\nMrs. B. Townshend reported proceeds of a Red Cross canvass of the\ndistrict by members were $133. The\nsum of $10 was voted to the Conquer Cancer campaign.\nDr. Anne Norrihgton was appointed delegate' to the district\nW. I. conference in Kinnaird in\nMay,\nThe annual plant sale will be\nheld at the May meeting. Mrs. J.\nArichuk\" ari'd Mrs. Philpot were\nnamed .hostesses, ipr a,,lHJdge\u201e_nd1\nwhist party.\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293        NELSON, B.C.\nWinnor tells secret\n\"It is no secret that white clothes\nare a \"must\" for a tournament\ntennis player and they must be\nreally white. I use Reckitt's Blue in\nmy rinse water to prevent any'\npossibility of- a yellow, tinge and\nmy 'clothes are always safe from\nharmful chemicals. Out of tho bluo\ncomes the whitest wash\u2014and\"\u25a0\nReckitt's Blue costs just a few\ncents a monthl\" \u2022 \u2022\n.   B-S-W .'.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED!\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nThe League has been asked by j the tea tables, and Mrs. Fisher con-\nthe Trail Jubilee Committee for! ducted kitchen , arrangement with\nsupport in celebrations if its help -the help of Mrs. A. G. Lane, Mrs,\nis required.\nQueen's Bay ...\nQUEENS BAY, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. J. S.\nHirst has returned from a visit to\nVictoria where she was the guest of\nher brother and sister-in-law.. Mr.\nand Mrs. Alec Attree.\nRev. T. A. Chapman of Kaslo\nspent a couple of days'here. He celebrated Holy Communion and visited the parishioners. He was a guest\nof Mrs. J. S. Hirst.\nMr. and Mrs. Q. G. Whishaw have\nreturned to their home here, after\nspending'the Winter at Remac.\nRobin Scott-Lauder and Robert\nLanyon of Vancouver were recent\nguests of Mr. Lanyon's cousins, Mr.\nand Mrs. K. R. Attree. R. Scott-\nLauder is the son of Harry and the\nlate Mrs. Scott-Lauder who lived\nhere for many years.\nMr. and Mrs. William Merz left\nhere this week, Mr. Merz has gone\nto Bridesville B.C. on a bridge building job. Mrs. Merz is staying with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J.\nMacEwen of Nelson and will join\nher husband shortly.\nEx-Nelson ites'\nChildren Baptized\nTwo children of former Nelsonites\nhave been christened in St. John's\n(Shaughnessy) Church in Vancouver by Rev. A. M. Trendall.\nJean Elizabeth, were the names\nbestowed upon the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Arthur Joy, and the son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dando was\nbaptized in the same ceremony. Mr.\nJoy, formerly of Nelson and Trail,\nis the son of R. G. Joy of Nelson,\nand Mr. Dando is also a former Nelson resident.\nTea was served afterwards at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Joy.\nM. Towriss, Mrs. Hong, Mjss Bielby\nand Mrs. Imming.' Mrs. George\nLangridge sold tickets at the door.\nWorld's largest tanker, the\/Atlantic Seaman, carries 257,900 'Mr-\nrets of oil on each trip from the\nPersian Gulf.\nMission Covenant\nL.A. Holds Tea\nBright Spring daffodils decorated\nthe Mission Covenant Church Hall\nSaturday for the Ladies' Aid Spring\ntea which attracted many.\nEach of the tea tables was centred\nwith bouquets of the flowers.\nMrs. L. Nelson and Miss Bessie\nPeterson were in charge of the bake\ntable while serviteurs were Mrs. E.\nPlaydon, Mrs. J. Harris and Miss\nDolores Stenberg.\nNakusp...\nMrs. E. F. Edgington entertained\nat the tea hototwo afternoons irf\nhonor of Mrs. B. Robinson, whos|,\nhusband has been transferred to\nNakusp as C.P.R. agent. The tea\ntable was centered with Spring\nflowers anoYfern, and Mrs. Edging-\nton was assreted in serving by Mrs. _f-MI\nF. B. Maxfield.\nNew Denver. \u2666 \u2666\nNEW DENVER, B.C. dQ ETHT\nderson, who has been in New Denver with relatives for the past four\nmonths, has left' for his home in\nFusilier Sask., accompanied by his\nsister-in-law, Mrs. Alf H. Anderson\nand two children, Karen and\nRicky.\nMrs. Frank Seklne of Albert\nCanyon, who was. called here owing\ntb the death of her father, is visiting her mother, Mrs. K. T. Kato.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Wetterstrom and\nfamily were weekend visitors in\nNelson.\nJohn. Taylor Is a patient In the\nSlocan Comunity Hospital.\nMrs. Arthur M. Ham of Silverton\nhas been discharged from the Slocan Community Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Black were week\nend visitors in Nelson.\nN. Mutabzifa has left the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital.\nJot-n-JsuuL Shop-\nS63 WARD STREET\nNELSON, B.C.\nDon't trust your eyes\nBrings out their sweetness\nand natural juicy goodness.\nThat's how Sugaroasting\ndevelops the flavor of Post's\nGrape-Nuts Flakes ...\nmakes them crisper, tastier,\nmore appetizing. Delicious\nGrape-Nuts Flakes\nsupply nourishment for\nquick energy. They're so\neconomical.\nMAKES GRAPE'NUTSRAKK\n\u25a0\\W,,,,.,,.  I  (   \" ,;,\n\\m&ty$^&AWrvm'\nKWLB'Z-EXTRA QUICK ENErW\nA Product of Gansral Foodi\npeanut\nfmfio\/yottM\nOptical illusions prove you eau't always trust your eyes.\nVhen it comes to paint, your eyes can fool you badly.\nAny paint looks good when you first apply it But how\nwill it look in five years ... yes, even one year?\nC-IrL PAINTS have not only bi-pvd.\u00bb\nbeauty you can see, but quality\nyou can trust You can depend\non them for the high hiding\nqualities, the enduring resistance to wear and weather which\nmake your paint dollars go\nfarther.\nWhenever you point, ii pays to tee your\nC-l-l Paint Dealer first.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n446 Baker* St, Nelson, B. C.\n Established April 22. 1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nI Published every morning except Sunday by the\nI NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\nBaker Street, Nelson,  British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost Office  Department, Ottaw,a\n| MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nI THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTuesday, April 17, 1951\nFrance and Auriol\nPresident Vincent Auriol of France-\nhas convinced President Truman of\ntwo things: His nation is now a determined   and   buoyantly   enthusiastic\nbacker of the North -Atlantic Treaty;\nand it has reached a point of political\nstability likely to make its cooperation\neffective in furthering the varied defence projects of the grand alliance.\nThe warm accord reached at the conference of the two Presidents in Wash-\ni ington is seen by a Toronto newspaper\nas introducing a different kind of international reciprocity in which faith\nI-end confidence are the values, instead\nKf commercial commodities.\nThe political and economic instability of France, following her military \u25a0\n^collapse in 1940, raised.practical doubts\n\"'which other Western democracies\n\" have been slow to abandon. On her\npart, France has had some apprehension concerning the ultimate purpose\nbehind the liberal dollar aid poured\nInto her country and others by the\nUnited States. But the genuinely cooperative principle underlying Paul\nHoffman's administration of Marshall\nAid has now been recognized by the\nFrench Republic. And the disinterested efficiency of General Dwight\nEisenhower's preliminary survey of\nhis new defence command under North\nAtlantic auspices has further promoted\ngrowth\" of the new confidence within\nFrance of which President Auriol is\nthe spokesman.\nThe decline of Communist influ-,\n\u25a0 ence in French politics and the well-\nplanned revival of French industry,\nhave been recent factors in fostering\ngood-will for France among her allies.\nAnd now that the French-born Schu-\nman plan for the pooling of steel and\ncoal resources under long-term agreements is moving toward adoption,\nthere is even more impressive evidence of France's will to fight not only\nfor heir own galvation but also for the\ncollective security of democratic ideals\nIn the Western World, ,,,\u201e\u201e.....\u2022\"\u2022<\u25a0'\u2022\u2022'-\nHer best, friends never believed\nthat France lost her soul in the 1940\ndebacle. President Auriol's personal\nactivities at that time and for the remainder of the war bespoke the essential patriotism of his people. He opposed the surrender to begin with, and\nlater went underground to build up\nthe resistance movements which did\nso much to frustrate the Nazis direct-\n. Ing the Occupation. In his own person\nM. Auriol thus symbolizes not only\nthe French will to survive, but the\nrenascence which brings her once\nmore into an honored position among\nher natural allies.\nPresident Auriol revealed that his\ncountry is spending one-third of Government revenues for defence, and a\nrecent U.S. Senate report indicated\nthat she has 70 men in her armed services (active and reserve) for every\n1000 of population, against a total of 34\nfor'the United States and 31 for Great\nBritain. France has for long been engaged in fighting Communist aggression in Indo-China; and if the President's pledges of all-out support for\nthe Atlantic Union's defence program\nbecome effective this year, her contribution in both men and money inevitably will swell the above figures.\nBut even as they stand the figures\nare remarkable, as they represent a\ndefence effort equal to 10 per cent of\nthe gross national product at a time\nwhen internal reconstruction is costing relatively much more than in any\nother treaty nation.\nM. Auriol thus gives heart to all\nnations in the alliance who will feel a\nnew confidence knowing that such\nstaunch support is being sponsored in\nContinental Europe.\nO S~\\ * r\\ Lark in Report.\n\u2022 Questions.' Slow Growth of Koofenay Lake Trout\nANSWERS\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual name of the\nwriter must bo given to the Editor as\nevidence of good faith. Anonymous letter!\ngo In the waste paper basket.\n\"Government Has Failed\"\nTo the Editor:\nSir: Will you be so kind as to print the\nfollowing letter in your newspaper, and sign\nmy name to it?\nOur present form of government has\nfailed us. Daily, we can pick up our newspaper or go into our stores and find the prices\never increasing. There seems to be no stopping it. Meanwhile at Ottawa, they Insist\nthere is still no necessity for controls. I fail\nto see their reasoning\u2014it just doesn't- make\nsense. Inflation is raising its ugly head higher\neach day. Is it not time to have a change?\nSurely no other form of government could do\na worse job or put things into a worse mess\nthan they are today.\nFar be it from me to begrudge anybody\nan Increase in wages these days, but I notice\nthat our civic employees have been granted\na raise in pay without so much,as a fight.\nTherefore, our City employees are now receiving more pay than most Federal' employees. It hardly seems fair\u2014especially so, when\nwe consider that civil servants are obliged to\nsit for and pass two difficult examinations\neach year In order to keep their pay up to\n. the measly maximum it is now. Instead of our\nworking conditions getting better, they are\ngetting worse. There is, for example, the postman, who is paid for and is supposed to work\n44 hours per week, but now finds himself\ncarrying heavier loads and working from SO\nto 60 hours per week. This, they tell us, is for\neconomy reasons and to aid in the stepped-up\ndefence program. Where do they always start\nto economize? At the bottom\u2014naturally\u2014and\nhit the \"little fellow\" and his small income!\nThere has been a standing regulation in\nthe Civil Service to the effect that an employee cannot perform another job on the\nside. However, it wa\u00bb announced on the radio\nthe other night that this is now changed, ,A\ncivil servant can now augment\" Mis\" meagre\nsalary by .having'Other' work so long aa it\ndoesn't interfere with his Civil Service job.\nThis appears to be an admission that the salaries are not enough to live on. After a day's\nwork as a postman, though, there is little else\none is capable of doing1 but passing out in a\nsleep of exhaustion.\nThen there is the condition that exists\ntoday in our Provincial Government. Although\nthe Coalition advocates- \"free enterprise\",\nthey have taken the dictatorial stand that we\nmust submit ourselves to a Government\nscheme of hospitalization or else. Although\nsuch a scheme can work, and is working, as\nhas been proven elsewhere, our Government\nhas made such a mess of it and raised the\npremiums so high that few of us are able to\ncope with them any longer. Meanwhile, our\nlocal M.L.A. at Victoria is backing the Government's stand, and has not lifted a finger in\nprotest. Is he, then, representing the people as\na whole? I think not I have yet to meet one\nperson in this district who is agreeable to the\nlatest increases in the hospitalization premiums.\nIn closing, I will say I take my hat off to\nW. A. C. Bennett and Mrs. Tilly Rolston, Who\nhave crossed the floor of the House\u2014thereby\nsupporting the constituencies who elected\nwhen such an issue as confronts us today is\nbrought to the fore.\nF. J. THOMPSON.\n711 Mill Street,\nNelson, B. C.\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not bs published.\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014When was the first Grand\nNational run, and where?\nIt was established in 1837, over a course\nof four miles, for 4-year-olds and up. The first\nrace was run at Maghull, and then without a\nbreak at Aintree, near Liverpool, except ln\nWorld War I, when, from 1814 to 1918, it was\nrun at Gatwick.\nBird-Lover, Nelson\u2014Where can I obtain a\ncopy of Taverner's \"Birds of Western\nCanada\"? *\nWrite to the International Book Shop, 117\nHastings Street, Vancouver. Taverner's book\nis out of print, but International may be able\nto procure a second-hand copy for you in good\ncondition. , '\nA. B\u201e Marysville\u2014What does an airmail letter\nto Morocco cost? -\nTwenty-five cents each quarter-ounce.\nDesperate, Nelson\u2014Is there any way to cure\nan inveterate chain-smoker?\nThe following ways have' been recom;\nmended: Dissolve teaspoon of alum In cup of\nhot water, let solution cool and use as a gargle\nor mouth-wash vAenever the desire for a\nsmoke becomes uncontrollable. Another treatment Is to touch gums, palate with glycerite\nof tannin or quince jelly. Also, when the craving is unbearable, eat a few crackers and\ndrink a glass of whole milk.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of April 17, 1941\nThe old-time minstrel show, with all its\nlaughs and variety, came back to a Nelson\naudience Tuesday night as the Nelson Kinsmen Club's Kin Koon Minstrel Show was\nstaged. Charles King, J. B. Stark and Edward\nStromstead, who appeared as Negroes, made a\nhit with the audience, while other leading\ndarkies were R. _. Crerar, Arthur llodson and\nKirby Grenfell.\nJack Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. H J.\nWilson, left Monday for Calgary, where he\nwill enter an air training school,\nDue \u00bbo Lack of Intermediate Food\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of April 17, 1938\nFred Ritchie, Jack Madden and Jfmrnle\nKinahan started this season's swimming when\nthey tried the West Arm water for the first\ntime Wednesday. They said the plunge was\nfine, but, that three times was enough. Silas\nBalcom and Fred Scott also took their first\nplunge at Lakeside Park.\nCol. Goode was elected President of the\nBonnington Fruit Growers Association at their\nannual meeting. Directors elected were Major\nLee, C. Gray, G. Noel Brown, Secretary, Colo-,\nnel Murray and O. W. Humphry.\u2014'\"\n, < \u201e \u00ab. *'r''' \"\"\" 40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of AprH 17, \u00bb11\nJohn Blomberg and his niece, Mies Alma\nNelson, leave Monday via the Great Northern\nfor a nine months' visit to Europe. On their\nreturn they will spend three months in California.\nSgt. J. G. Potter, Editor of the Kaslo Koot-\nenaian, will represent Kaslo at the Coronation\nexercises In London. C. W. Webster will take\nMr. Potter's place during his absence.\nIt's Been Said\nShow me one couple unhappy merely on\naccount of their limited circumstances, and I\nwill show you 10 who are wretched from other\ncauses.\u2014Samuel Taylor.\nYour Horoscope\nUsing your originality for novel ideas\nshould be of assistance to you. A child born\nunder these vibrations may be expected to\ndevelop a strong, fine character.\nCALL FOR GOLD\nOur half of the earth is not going to have\nsound money until it builds up bigger gold\nstocks. The way to get these is to raise the\nprice of gold to the point where production is\nencouraged. We have a feeling that, as war\ntensions increase, Governments will become\nagreed on this, First among the sinews of\nwar is a strong and confident currency. Surveying the fresh inflation everywhere, who\nhas got one?\u2014Northern Miner.\nEditor's Note: This is the second\nof a series of three articles written\nby P. A. Larkin, Fisheries Biologist with the Game Department,\non the recently-published findings\nof investigations of the Fisheries\nResearch Group in 1949. Today's\narticle describes survey work on\nKootenay Lake, including its limnology and statistics of catch.)\nThe work was conducted from\nMay 1 until September. 1 and collections from resort owners were\ncontinued until the end of the fishing season ln December. The information collected by this survey\ngroup is very extensive and the analyses of all the different phases of\nthe work have not yet been completed.\nThe Umnologlcal Investigations indicate that the lake is uniformly\ndeep (between 450 and 500 feet)\nThe water Is well oxygenated and\nhas a low mean temperature. The\nquantity of dissolved mineral elements is small by comparison with\nlakes In other parts of North America and more sedimentary parts of\nBritish Colunibla, The shape of the\nlake and chemical characteristics\nmarked it as a primarily oligotrophy or unproductive type.\nLAKE CHARACTERISTICS\nThe water-masses which enter\nKootenay Lake show peculiar characteristics, which have prompted\nplans for further investigation in the\ncoming season. The Kootenay River,\nwhich enters from the South, is\nwarmer than the surface water of\nthe lake and for this reason the Kootenay River waters flow on the surface ot Kootenay Lake after they\nenter the lake at the South end.\nThe Lardeau River and the many\ntributary creeks in the North end\nof the lake all have temperatures\nlower than that of the surface of\nthe lake, and for this reason they\n\"dive\" to a considerable depth as\nsoon as they enter the lake. The distance over which these under-water\ncurrents may maintain their identity is an Important factor in the\nstudy of migrations of trout and\nother species of fish. -\nFERTILIZING EFFECT\nThe bottom fauna of the lake is\nsparse, but compares favorably with\nthe Great Lakes and the large lakes\nof Northern Canada, which are similar in type to the Kootenay. The\nSouth' end of the lake shows a\nhigher bottom-fauna production\nthan the North end, and tills difference is chiefly apparent at depths\nbelow 180 feet. The fertilizing effect of the Kootenay River is believed to have an important effect\nln producing this condition.\nPRODUCTION\nThe production of plankton Is\nmoderate and is also greater at the\nSouth end of the lake. The absence\nof any species of large shrimps from\nthe deep-water bottom-fauna plank\nton is a notable deficiency in the\nfauna of Kootenay Lake i.s compared to lakes East of the Rocky Mountains.\nFish production is, to a large extent, related to the abundance of\nplankton and bottom organisms. The\nlists of species ijf fish which occur\nin Kootenay Lake Is extensive so\nthat estimates of fish production ln\npounds per acre are complex; how\never, a yield of approximately\n35,000 pounds per acre of sport\nfishes is Indicated from the catch\nreturns.\nThe assistance of approximately\n30 resort owners on Kootenay Lake\nwas invaluable in the collection of\nstatistics pertaining to the catch of\ngame.fish in the lake. The analysis\nof catch records Indicated that flies,\ngang trolls, wobblers, and spinners\nform a group which all yield catches\nof approximately tWo fish per hour\nor better. Plugs, flatfish and spoons,\nwhich are used extensively in the\nSpring and Fall, form a second\ngroup which yield catches in the\nvicinity ot one fish every four\nhours.\nTROUT LURES\nThe first group of lures mentioned\nare used for catching fish of all\nsizes, but the second group are used\nalmost, exclusively for trout-fishing\nduring the Spring and Fall, so that\ncomparison of the two groups is not\nentirely justifiable. It is conclusively demonstrated that the group of\nlures known as gang trolls select\nfish of smaller sizes on both Kootenay Lake and on Paul Lake. This\nphase of the work was separately reported to the Game Department and\nis available ln mimeographed reprint form.\nThe study of catch statistics has\nindicated a period of slow growth\nin the life history of the Kamloops\ntrout between the ages of one and\nthree years. This highly-important\nfeature of the growth-rate reflects\nthe absence of intermediate food\nitems in sufficient abundance to\nprovide adequate nutrition in the\nperiod between plankton-feeding\nThe Introduction of two species of\nBhrlmps (Pontoporela and Mysls)\nfrom Waterton Lake, Alta., had\nbeen attempted as a first step to\nimprove this condition.\n(To Be Continued)\nUKRAINIAN CATHOLICS\nDEDICATE CATHEDRAL\nWINNIPEG, April 16 (CP)\nCanada's first Ukrainian Catholic\nCathedral, the $500,000 structure\ndedicated to SL Vladimir and Olga,\nwas opened Sunday in ceremonies\nrich in the tradition of the faith-\nUkrainian and' Roman Catholic\nclergy and civic and provincial\nofficials attended while 5000 persons watched.     > > \"\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nThis Week\nAt Victoria\nBy LEO. T. NIMSICK\nM.L.A. for Cranbrook\nAnother week has slipped by and\nby all indications we will be here\nfor the major part of this week.\nNine bills were introduced Friday.\nUndoubtedly many of these are to\ncorrect mistakes in previous bills,\nbut they must all go through a procedure which takes plenty of time.\nDuring the last week there have\nbeen a few interesting days. The\ndebate on the want of confidence\nmotion was very interesting. This\nwas a field day for the review ot\nall that has been done and what\nhas not been done. The resolution\non the liquor question also created\nmuch discussion, especially among\nthe Vancouver Members. Such a\nresolution is usually good for the\nmajor part of a sitting,\nThe rent control bill was completed and will take effect as soon\nas the Dominion Government steps\nout of the field. The same controls\nwill continue under,the Provincial\nGovernment. In view of the Government's introduction of the bill\non rent control, the C.C.F. withdrew its motion which had been on\nthe Order Paper for approximately\nfour weeks.\nI am glad to say the teachers won\na major victory last week when\nthe Minister of Education stated\nthat the Government contribution\nto the pension fund would remain\nat seven per cent for another year\nuntil the case was reviewed. This\nchange was already in the estimates\nand it Was only by determined opposition ln the House, and ft the\nopposition of the teachers, that the\nGovernment retreated to their former position. If the same policy had\nbeen effected by the Government\non the hospital question I am sure\nit would have saved a lot of ill\nfeeling among the people.\nDuring the labor minister's estimates I asked for the Compensation\nAct to be changed in order that\nrecipients could receive compensation in relation to the cost of living.\nAt present the rates are based on\na maximum wage of $2500' of which\n68 2-8 per cent is the maximum\npayable on compensation! This\nwould give only about $1600. With\nthe cost of living as lt is this is\nonly worth about $900 in 1939 purchasing power. I requested that the\nrates be based on a salary of $3000\nand that the percentage be 75 per\ncent instead of the present rate but\nthe minister said that nothing will\nbe done until the Royal Commission\nbrings ln a report\nRecently I asked the premier if\nthe Government had any intention\nof increasing the 3 per cent exemption on meals from 50c to $1 and\nwas informed that it was not the\nintention of the Government\ndo so.\nThe week ended with the quel\ntion still to be settled as to whether\nLittle \"Margarine\" is to be allowed\nto use a little coloring to make herself more attractive.\nSecret Clause\nKeeps Russ in\nHungary's Army\nFRANKFURT, Germany, April 18\n(AP)\u2014A secret Russian-Hungarian\nagreement permits Soviet troops to\nremain in Hungary indefinitely and\nassures Russian control of the Hungarian army, political refugees from\nHungary reported today. -        <\nAccording to the Allies' Pea'ce\nTreaty with Hungary, Soviet troops\nare supposed to leave Hungary as\nsoon as a treaty Is signed with Austria\u2014Thus removing the need for\nRussia's protection of supply lines\nto its occupation troops ln Austria.\nHungarian refugees claim, however, that this provision was nullified by a secret clause in the Soviet-Hungarian Mutual Assistance\nand Non-Aggression Pact, \"which\nwas concluded after the Peace\nTreaty.       ,\nThis_ clause, they say, authorizes\nthe Russians to transfer their military headquarters in Austria t\u00bb'\nHungary and to keep troops stationed in Hungary after the signing\nof an Austrian treaty by the Big\nFour FoWers.\nNo Change in Price\nOf Heating Oils\nTORONTO, April 16 (CP)\u2014tape-\nrial Oil Ltd., today announced that\nthe wholesale price of gasoline is\nbeing increased by three-tenths of\na cent a gallon and the wholesale\nprice of diesel fueis by two-tenths\nof a cent\nThe announcement states that the\nincrease is due to the increase from\neight to 10 per cent in the sales tax\nannounced in the recent Federal\nbudget.\nThere will be no increase ln kerosene or heating oils which are not\nsubject to the Federal sales tax.\nThe Increase applies across Canada, except in British Columbia\nwhere the situation still is 'under\nreview.\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Manitoba li\none of the best duck-producing\nprovinces In Canada, said Dr. Robert McCabe, Assistant Professor of\nWildlife Management at the University of Wisconsin, in an address\nhere. i\nFOR A QUALITY WHISKY\n%M\nSPECIAL SELECTED\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the  Government  of\nBritish Columbia.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n-.,\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 c 1 f_\u2014\u25a0 O*-\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nmiRRA, wurra! WIFE\/\u00a9 SICK-\nSEND FDR THE DOCTOR.,\nQUICK, QUICK, QUICK\"\"\nDown the R34D comes rX\/CAREenwq,\nWHILE WIFEy DOES HER WHOLE\nSPRlHG-CLEAMlMQ \u2014\njfcOME AS FAST AS WU CAN,\ndoctor! no foolin;SHE'S\nREALLY SICK >\u2022> CANT HARDLV,\nAKJVE- JUST TOOK HER\nTEMPERATURE\u2014ITS UP\nTO 104%\"\nToday's Bible Thought\nWhen this earth was only gaseous\nvapor, God had His complete plan,\nYou are a part of God's plan, Don't\nlet your freedom of will defeat a\ngreat and beautiful purpose and\nplan for you.\u2014The earth was without form and void.\u2014Gen. 1:2.\ndunL dist\nI never said no to Pa ln my life.\nAnd if any man asks a little favor\nand his wife says a flat no, you can't\nmake me believe she loves him.\nThe Southern United States had\nabout 4,000,000 Negro slaves at the\ntime of the Civil War, 1881-65,.\n-*'\"'' \" ... '-\u25a0''.'\u25a0' -,'.\"\u2022': ' '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0'\nQuarter- Millionth Telephone\nInstalled by B.C. Telephone Co.\nTotal Doubled in Only 12 Years\nThe B.C. Telephone Company recently installed its 250,000th telephone, bringing the\ntotal number of instruments in service in the system to twice what it was in 1939.\nAlthough it took nearly 60 years to install the first .125,000 telephones, it has taken\nonly 12 years for the second 125,000.\nNearly 90,000 of these new services were installed since the end of tha war during a\nperiod which saw a record Increase in British Columbia's population.\nIn order to make possible this record telephone increase, millions of dollars were spent\non additional central office and outside plant equipment in a vast expansion and\nimprovement program.\nThe company is continuing this program in an effort to provide service for thousands\nof waiting applicants in various parts of the system.\nHowever, the total of the projects needed to further expand and improve the system\nis far beyond the maximum which can be carried out in any one year, -and it is\nnecessary to spread the work over a period of years. This condition is general among\nall large telephone systems in Canada and the United States and is a situation which is\nnot peculiar to the telephone business. The same condition prevails in regard to\nother essential public services such as roads, streets, housing and sewers, etc.\nBRITISH    COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE    COMPANY\n 3\/Q\nSports\n#   by pi.iv\u00ab cujmino mr- w  \"\nIt takes money and lots of money\nto sponsor a senior hookey dub,\nand no one knows it better trmn\nthe Kimberley Dynamiters. Unless\na \"rich uncle\" or some other solution comes up in the near future,\nthe Dynamiters rosy become a\nthing of the past,\nEven though the Dynamiter play-\ner payroll was one qf the lowest\nin B,C, Allan Cup hockey, the Kimberley plan once more operated at\na loss, and now face a WOO deficit,\n$2600 of that amount a carryover\nfrom last season, Jt cost the Dynamiters $21,0011 to operate last season,\nand took in a more Sll.OOQ at the\ngate, so but for other funds, they\nwould likely have sunk completely\nout of the picture.\nTuesday night, at their annual\nmeeting, it will be decided whether\nthey will continue to operate in\nthe W.I.H.L. next season.\nNot only because of their color-\nful history in B.C. hqpkey, are the\nDynamiters necessary for the W.I.\nI H.L. True they are somewhat iso-\nI lated from the other three clubs,\nI the'handicap which has cost them\nI most of their money, but they are\nimportant to the success of the\nothers,\nTrail and Nelson are fortunate\nthat they can take the two-hour\nI jaunt back and forth without too\nI much  expense,  and  the  loss  of\n| either would absolutely wreck the\nW.I.H.L, There has been some agitation to have Spokane put out of\nthe league, and it is still n debatable point about the success which\nwould be enjoyed by Kimberley,\nNelson and Trail in a three-club\ncircuit.\nThe best way would be to have\nanother Kootenay entry, or two, but\nsuch a setup would be impossible\nuntil the price of hockey drops,\nIn any pane, Kimberley in a vital\nppS.\nThere has been talk of Kimberley\ndropping to .Junior hookey, but it\nIs hard to find a league which they\nwould be able to fit into, and make\na gp of It, A good Junior club costs\nmoney, too,\nOf Jast year's olub, only Stew\nCrulpiishanKB and Gerry Barre\nhove- left town, so most of the remainder should be available for\nnext season, Jt would be too bad\nto drop hockey, with almost an\nentire olub settled down in the\npantre, and with Buck Knvanagh\nand Tank Johnston returning from\na fling of overseas hookey,\nUBAF8 LOSE TOO\nNelson \u2022 may not be In quite so\nbad s position, but they lost money\nthis season, the amnunt likely to\nbe disclosed at the Leaf annual\nmeeting slated for Friday, If Nelson\noquld opei'ate'qn the same basis as\nlast season, they wnuld be able tq\nenter a club in the W.I.H.J*.\nThe big IP Is whether the pro-\nvineia! fire marshal's ruling whereby tiekets pan be snld qnly fnr the\nnumber qf seats there are In the\narena will be enforpad, If the ruling\nis upheld, it will likely be the end\nof the Leafs, too,\nAnd about the rumor whiph appeared in print saying that Jqhnny\nSqflak la tqying with a \"1400\nmnnth deal, epmes from Nelson's\n'hard pressed' Maple Leafs\", it Is\nJust hqt air apparently,\n\"It's news to me,\" said heat\nCnaoh Eddie Wares; who would like\nto know what, the setup will be\nnext season so he will know what\nhe pan offer the players.\nIt seems that Trail and 3pokane\nare the only clubs who are in enviable positions. The Spokes finally\nmade money last season. (It can be\nunderstood, because in one weekend series with the Leafs, a big\ndrawing card there, record attendances were established, and more\ndollars were taken in that weekend\nthan the entire mnnth qf January\nthe year previous.)\nTrail packed over 3000 for a large\npercentage of their games, but dissatisfied most of their players when\nthe splits, tapering from $350 down\nto $50 over the $50 a month they\nwere already paid, were mailed to\nthe players. More than one Trail\nplayer was discontented about the\npay, especially when Coach Bobby\nKirk collected 28 per cent of the\ntotal $16,000 payroll.\nHockey bosses hereabouts weren't too happy over the showing of\nthe W.I.H.L.-M.O.A.H.L. games,\nthere's trouble in every corner of\nthe hockey picture,\nPirates Open Season in 4*3\nWin; Others Start Today\nBy JAPK HAND\nNEW YORK, April 18 (AP) -\nSnow flurries iwlrled around\n30,141 blanketed Cincinnati fans\ntoday on Plttlhuroh rncliod up\n*well BlaoKwell for n 4-3 vlotory\nthat opened the baseball season\no day early,\nRain washed out the spsdai\nceremonial opening at Washington, i\naiven a better break from the\nweather man, all 18 olubo will be\nbusy tomorrow when about M&-\n000 oiiotomorn are sxnaoted to\nattend an eight-game schedule, it\nhad better he warmer at Philadelphia where they're daring the\nelements with a. night game, the\nflnt aro-llght opener In American\nleague history.\nBlaokwell was as cold as the\nbreejes, The Pirates hopped on the\nlean sldeurm artist for r!1 of their\nruns   in   the   first   three   Innings.\nThen Blacky left fnr a pinch hitter.\nAfter  Blacky  departed,  Harry\nPerkowski, Howie Fox and Frank\nSmith rooted off six shutout innings,\nMBTKQVIOH TOP HITTER\nCliff Chambers helped Branch\nBiokey off to a gqod start in his\nfirst season as Pittsburgh\"\" general\nmanager, But Cliff lust his stuff in\nthe seventh, When Bub Usher hit\na grqund rules dnuble into the left\nfield overflow crowd. Bill Werle\ncame -to the rescue,\ndeqrge Metkovleh, drafted from\nOakland, led the Pirates with, a\ndouble and twe singles.\nPresident Truman\u2014and 30,ooo\nother people\u2014didn't get to iee the\nNew York Yankees and Washington Senators open the American\nLeague baseball season ot Washington, due to a gentle but steady\nrain,\nThe two teams now are scheduled to meet Friday in Washington's delayed npenlng day game.\nThe Yanks and Senaters already\nhad been scheduled tq meet that\nnight making it a day-night double\nheader,\nThe Yankee-Red Sox opener in\nNew York with Rasohl \u00abt-B) facing lefty Bill' Wight (10-18), Bos-\ntqn's Winter acquisition frqm Chicago, shares top billing with the\nBrooklyn-Philadelphia feature in\nthe National, According to the experts, the Red Sox and- Dodgers\nwill displace the, Yanks and Phils\nIn the 1051 World Series.\nIn addition tn watching their\nworld champs wrestle with Ted\nWilliams and Co., Yankee fans will\nget thejr first look at Mickey\nMantle, 10-year-old rookie phenom,\nNarwoods Rye\nThis advertisement Is not published er displayed by fhe Uqui\nBoard or by the Government <S, British Columbia.\nihe Liquor Control\nNOTICE\nApplications for the use of the\nCIVIC  CENTRE\nRECREATION   GROUNDS\nmust be submitted to the\nCivic Centre Commission\nin writing\nbefore April 27, 1951\nSTORAGE\nFort Frances Beats\nClippers; 2 Games Up\n\u2022 WINNIPEQ, April 18 (CF)-Fort\nFranpps Canadians tonight tqok a\nstranglehold on the Western Allan\noup finals with a i-i overtime vlotory over Nanalmo Clippers, coming from behind to foroa-the extra\ntime and leap; the best-of-seven series 3-1 in games,\nDespite a slim crowd of less tihsn\n1000, the fifth game will be played\nhere Wednesday night,\n. Vern (3'pqnnell scored what\nproved to be the winner at 4iM in\nthe extra session on a double relay\nfrom Alex Kurceba and John Irving, Blok Rlpard netted the clincher\ninto an empty net after Clipper\n(Joalle pinny McManus had been\npulled with only 40 seponds Jeft.\nIrving and Willie Tnninatp were\nthe other Fort Frances' marksmen.\nClippers drew eight of the 11 penalties. :' -  \u25a0\nDon Culley and playlng-ooaeh\nEddie shamlock bagged the Nanalmo counters, fflcManus turned\nIn a nice effort between the pipes,\nturning aside 37 shots against rival\nHarry Barefoot's 24.\nNanalmo Held a 1-0 lead In the\nfirst period and stretched it tq 3-0\nin  the  sepqnd  before  Canadians\nbroke into the scoring. Fort Frances tallied the enly gqel of the third\nsession to send the contest into overtime.\nThe game started out at a fast\nclip, but Napaimo appeared to tire\nfaster than the younger Canadians.\nThe winning goal came just after\nWaldrlff had returned from a tripping penalty, O'Donnell, standing\nat the side of the.Nanalmo goal,\nflipped a high Bhot into the corner\nover McManus' shoulder, Clippers\npressed as Canadians sat back on\ntheir one-goal lead,\nWith only 40 secqnds left, Shamlock pulled bis, goalie, Ricard broke\naway from a power play to score\nInto an open cage and salt the game\naway for Canadians.\nLineups!\nNanaimo\u2014McManus; Kirk, Fennell; Jackson; Lundmark, O'Hara,\ngubs: Conway, Waldriff, Carr, War.\nwiokn, Shamlock, Ooudreau, Clove,\nehok, Culley.\nFqrt Frances\u2014H, Barefqqt; Samp<\nSon, Fedorqk; O'Donnell! Toninato,\nIrving, Subs' Fero, Kurpebe, Eisen-\nitoph,' Kliner, Ricard, Saplywy,\nLynch, Johnson,\nOffioials~-Maur|pe Walsh, Ajax,\nOnt; vie Llndquist, Winnipeg.\nSUMMARY\nFirst perlod-=l, Nanalmo, Culley\n(Waldrlff, Warwiok) 17U3,\nPenalties^'GuUey, Sampson, War.\nwick. I\nSepqnd period >- t, Nanaimo,\nShamlock (Carr) 1)121 3, Fort Frances, Irving (Tcninatn) 18:07.   '\nPenalties\u2014Waldriff, Kliner, Clov-\nephpk,\nThird peried\u20144, Fort Frances, Toninato (Fedoruk) 14:30.\nPenalties \u00a3. Conway, Barefoot\n(served by O'Donnell), Carr, Lundmark, .'\nOvertime periods, Fort Frances,\no'Dennell (Kurceba, Irving) 4:41;\n6, Fort Frances, Ricard 9:33,\nPenalty-Waldrlff.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nALLAN CUP\nEASTERN CANADA\nDqlbeaU Castors 4, Owen Sound\nMercurys 0\n(First gams of best-of-flve final\nseries)\nE. CANADA INTERMEDIATE\nNoranda Copper Kings s, Fred,\nertotqn Capitals 4\nI    (Flfst game of best-qf-three final\nseries)\n| MEMORIAL CUP\nWESTERN FINAL\nWinnipeg Monarchs j, Hqglna\nPate 1 '.-;.'\"\n(Best-qf-seven series tied I'-l, am\ngame tied),\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1951 \u2014 7\nCHICAGO, April 18 (AP)-Dap-\nper Lloyd Mangrum, with $11,773.03,\nnosed'out Jim Ferrier as tqp mqney\nwinner qf prq golfs winter toiune-\nment tour,\nFerrier collected $11,254.10.   . ,.\nWY\nWE IT\nII POPULAR\nPRICl\nOLD iM WHISKY\nThU, edvirlliesunl ft not published oi\npjsRlsvid by ihe Liquor Coolrol Board \u00ab\nW the Government of BfltHh Columkta\nbuy meat nt\nGUUTTE\nEnjoylhe\nBest-Looking ^\u00a3\u2122_*\u00ab\nShaves Ever EW^\nmm      l;\"\"\"\nIMC*\n\u2022 You skim off tough beard slick as\n\u00bb whistle with today's Gillette Blue\nBlades. Their super-keen double-\nedges far outlast the ordinary kind\nTsave you money. Always use\nGillette Blue Blades. Precision-\nmade for your Gillette Rawr.\nOIUITTE 20-BIADE DISPENSER WITH\nUSEDrBlADE COMPARTMENT-M\".\nWHY TAKE A CHANCE?\nYour most precious effects are\nperfectly safe in our hands. Take\n|    advantage of our clean,  dry,\n| i spacious warehouse where you\n,   j: may store your belongings for as\n:  long as you wish,\nPHONE 1106 TODAY\nARROW Van-Storage Ltd.\nX\n12 STANLEY ST., NELSON\nSport\nBriefs\nBIRMINGHAM, England (AP)-\nBandy Turpin, British holder of the\nEuropean middleweight champion\nship, knocked out Billy Brown of\nHartford, Conn., in 1:30 'of the second round of a scheduled 10-round-\ner. Turpin weighed 184, Brown 161 _\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Boxing promoter Eddie Quinn has announced\nthat he has tentatively set May 7 as\nthe date for a 10-round bout between Armond Savoie of Montreal\nand Pierre Montane, European and\nFrench lightweight champion.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Dominion.\nAmateur wrestling championships\nwill be held at the Black Watch Armory in Montreal May 4-S, it has\nbeen announced.\nST. LOUIS (AP)-Manager Mar-\nly Marion of St. Louis Cardinals is\nbeing placed on the disabled list,\nit was announced. This means that\nMarion, who underwent a knee operation last September, won't be\nable to play for at least 3d days,\nCLEVELAND (AP) \u2014 Cleveland\nIndians have announced the signing\nof Johnny Vander Meer, the aging\npitcher who chucked two consecutive no-hit games for Cincinnati in\n1938. Vandy, now 38 years old, got\nan unconditional release April 6\nfrom Chicago Cubs and since then\nhas been trying out as a free agent\nwith the Tribe.\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) \u2014 Blix\nDonnelly, 38-year-old right-handed\npitcher, was sold by Philadelphia\nPhillies today to Boston Braves.\nIt was understood the purchase\nprice was close to the $10,000 waiver\nprice,\nLONDON, (AP)-Henry Cotton,\n,'ormer British open champion, and\nDai Rees, professional match play\nchampion, will coach the British\nWalker Cup golf team, It was announced.\nMIDLAND, Ont. (CP) \u2014 The\nAlexander Cup semi-final series\nbetween Sydney Millionaires and\nValleyfield (Que.) Braves will\nopen Wednesday at Sydney, N. S.,\nGeorge S. Dudley, Secretary-Manager of the Canadian Amateur\nHockey Association, announced today.\nTrail Student\nGolf Surprise\nAl (oast Play\nVANCOUVER, April 18 (CP) -\nMax Swanson, 19-year-old college\nstudent from Trail, B.C., was the\ngolf sensation here today.\nHe pulled off the golfing upset\nof the season in the second round\nof the Province match play open\nat the Langara Golf Club Sunday.\nSwanson came back from a four-\nhole deficit to grab a 2 and 1 de-\nclsion over Quilchena veteran Ernie\nBrown.\nDefending Champion Stan Leon-\nard from Marine Drive turned in a\n4 and 3 verdict over Dave McBeath\nof Bellingham, Wash.\nSwanson, a student at U.B.C,\nwill meet Medalist Freddie Wood\nof Shaughnessy in the third round\nWednesday,\nROME TENNIS\nTOURNEY WINNERS\nROME, April 16 (AP)\u2014Doris Hart\nof Jacksonville, Fla., second-ranking\nAmerican star, today defeated Shirley Fry of Akron, On,, fl-3, 8-6, in\nthe finals of the Rome International\nTennis tournament\nMiss Fry and Felicislmo Ampon\nof the Philippines conquered Miss\nHart and Sweden's Lcnnart Berge-\nlin. 8-6, 6-3, 6-4, in the mixed doubles.\nDick Savitt of Orange, N.J., and\nJaroslav Drobney of Egypt won the\nmen's doubles title by defeating the\nItalian team of Gianni- Cucelli and\nMarcello del Bello, 6-2, 7-9, 6-3, 6-3.\nCanadiens Have\nEdge Over Leafs\nMONTREAL, April 16 (CP) \u2014\nCoach Dick Irvin did some fast figuring today and came up .with the\npronouncement that \"the edge is on\nour side\"\u2014in favor of Montreal Canadiens over Toronto Maple Leafs\nin the best-of-seven Stanley Cup\nhockey final.\nTwo overtime games in Toronto\nlast week left the teams all even at\na game apiece, They meet tomorrow and Thursday ln Montreal, followed by alternating shifts for each\ngame until the series ends.       .\n\"The series is now three of fiv%,\"\nsaid Canadiens' Irvin. \"We have\nthree of the possible five games\nright here in Montreal. There's our\nedge.\"\nDefenceman Doug Harvey, with\na knee injury suffered in the semifinal against Detroit Red Wings,\nwas an absentee today when the\nsquad held a workout, The knee\nstill troubles him. *\nCanadiens have recalled Eddie\nMazur, forward with Victoria Cou.\ngars, as insurance protection for\nleft wing. The Cougars have just\nWon the Pacific Coast League\nplayoff. Mazur may not see much\naction,but will be held in readiness\nin case of injuries.\nTORONTO, April 16 (CP) \u2014\nConn Smythe sounded the pralaea\nof Maurice (The Rocket) Richard\ntoday and left a goaltendlng\nquestion unanswered as hla\nMaple Leafs entrained for Montreal to resume their beat-of-\nseven Stanley Cup hookey final\nwith the Canadians, The series Is\ntied 1-1.\n\"I've just seen the moving pictures of the goal Richard scored to\nbeat us Saturday night and it was\na beauty, perfectly executed,\" said\nSmythe.\n\"He's the three musketeers of the\nNational Hockey League. He's\nd'Artagnan, Porthos and Athos all\nrolled into one.\"\nTo the literary point that d'Artagnan wasn't one of the three\nmusketeers and that he'd left out\nAramis, Smythe had a ready Te-\njolnder: \"AratoU?. That's the Coach\nDick Irvin on the bench.\"\nThere'll be no decision on a Leaf\ngoaltender until tomorrow night\nbefore Wn third game of the series,\nsaid Smythe.\nDISTINGUISHED   FLYING   CROSS\ni Far \"m actor acts of vdm\\~em\u00bbg, or devotion to duty\nI performed whilst flying in active operations against tbt\\\ntueviy  \u00bb..,! q&\nDuring the Second World War, the Disting_hhed Flying Cross\nwas awarded to 4,028 members of the Royal Canadian Air Force.,\n^... exceptional fearlessness in the face of the enemy\" ..,\n\"outstanding courage and determination\" . . ,\n4,028 citations\u2014each one a tribute to service in the defence of\nfreedom^ by men of die R.CA.F.i\nToday, in Canada . rapidly expanding\nAir Force, more young men are needed\nto train as Air Crew Officers\u2014Navigation\nOfficers, Radio  Officers and Pilots.\nTo be eligible, yon most be between 18\nand 24\u2014be a Canadian citizen or other\nBritish subject\u2014be physically fit\u2014and\nhave Junior Matriculation or better..\nRoyal Canadian Air Force\nConsult the Career Counsellor at\nyour nearest R.C.A.F. Recruiting\ncentre or- MAIL THIS COUPON\np\"\n\u2022\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nR.C.A.F. Recruiting  Unit,\nS45 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nPhone PAclflc 6736 or TAtlow 2822\nPleas* moil mo, without (p_aii piVNtT'\"*\"' \"\"\"\nObligation, full particulars STREET ADDRESS....\nregarding appointment  rt-   CITY.\u201e.._i;\t\n PROVINCE..\nqutrements   and   openings   EDUCATION\t\n-m- _ \u25a0_      (ST OSADS ANO MOVINCt)\nnow available in Ihe R.C.A.F.\nAGE..\n-SAW\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0\nI\n ,\u201e-, HOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\n*WJ_lr Folding Boby Strollers. Easy to take on bus. From $9.95 to $13.50\nNELSON\nB. C.\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\n(WWBE VOU COULDN'T ___\nTWENTY <3RANP\u201e,0R'AIAVBe\nYOU'D RATHER LEARN A TRADE\nIN SOME NICE PRISON!\nH,NICE|\u00abtO,\n\/Meanwhile, phil has arrived in town.,he visits\nthe\u00abwefo__g_ge i'\/.,._,\"-,. \u25a0?\n\\  \u25a0 ..'.v        ^1\/ V6S! wanted for .\nP0BSIN6 BILLS OF SALE\nAND DRIVERS'LICENSES\nFOR A CAR-STEAUNe\nRINS!\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nFace and Spirit Lifted President Auriol Has Whirlwind Itinerary\nFirst visit In history of a French President\nto Canada was observed ln Ottawa by saluting\nartillery, full-dress parades, banquets and a recep\ntion.-Here President Auriol, centre, Is seen with\nGovernor General Viscount Alexander, right, and\n-Prime Minister St. Laurent.\nBig Jim Thorpe, Carlisle Indian\nfootball player, smiles despite his\nbandages after a face-lifting operation In New York City as he\nhears he's been named member of\nthe All-Time American football\nteam. He and Red Grange now\nare eligible for consideration.for\nfootball's Hall of Fame. Both\nThorpe and Grange were selected\nfor grid's \"dream team\" in Associated Press poll of sports writers\nand broadcasters. Thorpe's facelifting job was in preparation for\na forthcoming movie depicting his\nlife.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\n'\"      \u00ab   '\u25a0''\u25a0 *   '\u2022   ''\\l_i_l''   li V '   ' *'    '\u25a0    '   *\np. \u25a0    _^rt       i ''\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb_\u25ba'     \u25a0 -     **'\u25a0  ****\" \"'SI*- '*r'*\/^Jil_\nNamed\nDavid 6. McKay (above), 77,\nhas been named President of the\nLatter Day Saints (Mormon)\nChurch. He succeeds George Albert Smith, who died recently.\nMcKay, of Salt Lake City, Is a\nformer school teacher.\u2014AP Wlrephoto. \u00ab       \"\"\u2022-''\nAfter a day In Ottawa, President Vincent\nAuriol travelled,to Toronto, where he was tendered a civic reception and a tour of the city. Here\nhe Inspects an honor guard of the Canadian School\nof Infantry In front of the Union Station. Premier\nFrost can  be seen  In the background. President\nand Mrs. Auriol left on the same day for Quebec\nyy.f \u25a0:'.     \u2014Central Press Canadian photos.\nGovernmenf s Curb on Spending\nForecasf of Conditions Ahead\nBY FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nPeople are being told not to buy\nor build things unless they are really necessary.\nThis is about the strongest possible forecast that troubled world\nconditions are expected to continue\nfor some time.\nNot so long ago financial author-\nities would have been afraid to put\nsuch dampers on spending as they\nnow are doing.\nIn early 1948, for instance, they\nwere somewhat worried about the\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL'\nTUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1951\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n.7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n: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\n59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies Choice\n: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\u2014Sport News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Tuesday Serenade\n1:30\u2014Wife Saver\n1:45\u2014Allison Grant\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Journey to Melody\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Easy Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time \u2022\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News\n3:59\u2014News\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:30\u2014Tall Tales\n4:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\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\u2014Doctor's Orders\n6:15\u2014Here's Health\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014They Saw It Happen\n8:00\u2014The Commodores\n8:15\u2014The Nations Business\n8:30\u2014Frankie Lane Show\n8:45\u2014Barry Wood Show\n9:00\u2014Piano Playhouse\n9:30\u2014Ray Norris Quintet\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Miscellany\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n1.0:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014U.N. Today\n11:15\u2014Hostess House\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cao\nhigh volume - of what is known as\n\"capital expansion\" \u2014 all the building, repair and maintenance carried\nout by individuals, industries and\ngovernments. Especially they were\nworried about the rate of expansion\nof industrial plants.\nIt wasn't that they didn't want industrial plants to expand \u2014 but they\nwanted industry to go a bit slower\nuntil the* supply of goods was more\nplentiful, so that prices would not\nbe bid up.\nAt that time they decided, through\ninfluence on interest rates, to discourage capital expansion slightly.\nBut they were careful not to discourage it too much \u2014 they\/.were\nafraid,, they might reverse the\ntrend too'strongly.\nIndustry, for the most part, went\non a tremendous expansion spree.\nAnd, as it turned out, it was justified. It is not clear just why business\ndid get so expansion-minded; but\nthe fact that it did was a major reason why we didn't have a post-war\nrecession. ... .\nPlaying with forces like that can;\nbe dangerous, and financial author-'\nities and governments know it. They\nknow that even as business and industry can be fi^e-handed in spending, they can almost with one accord\nturn too cautious. And, in ordinary\ntimes, that has the makings of a recession or depression.\nIn fact, some circles today think\nthat already too much repression\nhas been put on spending: and1 government statements seem to indicate\nthat it is1 ready for a quick switch\nif it finds this is so.\nAt the .moment, however, government opinion seems to be that international stresses will force spending\nto a higher level than can be borne\nunless non-essentials are cut down.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1951\n\u2022News\n10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Laura Limited\n:00\u2014BBC News\n15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n:30\u2014Morning Concert\n00\u2014Morning Visit'\n15\u2014The Happy Gang\n:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:15\u2014A Man and His Music\n:15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014Five To One\n:00-^This Week's Composer\n:30\u2014Arthur Godfrey Time\n:45\u2014My Own Mother\n:56\u2014'Women's News Commentary\n00\u2014B:C. School Broadcast\n:30\u2014Program Resume\n:454Today's Guest\non\u2014'Brave Voyage      'V\n3:15\u2014Dbn Messer\n3:30\u2014Listener's Choice\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shields.\n4:15\u2014Music by Goodman\n4:30\u2014Maggie. Muggins\n4:45\u2014Something In Harmony\n4:55\u2014News\n5:00\u2014International Commentary\n5:10\u2014Rawhide '\n5:30\u2014Prelude to Dusk\n5:45\u2014The Question Box\n6:00\u2014Neighborly News\n6:15\u2014Introduction to Wednesday\nNight\n6:30\u2014Showpiece\n7:00\u2014News\n7:^15\u2014News Roundup\n7:3p\u2014\"Cosi Fan Tutte\"\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014Recital\n11:00\u2014U N Today\n11:15\u2014Collectors' Items\n11:55\u2014News\nACROSS\n1. A son of\nAdam\nS. Asterisk\n9. A gauzelike fabric\nto. Blends\n12. Externa*\nseed\ncoating\n13. Sift again\n14. Paddle-like\nprocess\nIfi. Gratuities\n16. Electrical\nEngineer\n(abbr.)\nVt. Abounded\n19. Part of\n\"to be\"\n20. Demanded\n. 23. Mild\n26. Prices\n27. A leading\nstar\n29. Undivided ,\n30. Strangest ,\n34. King of\nBashan   r\n(Bib.)\n35. Sharpen,\nas a razor\n37. Eskimo\nknife\n38. Wretchedness\n40. A constellation and\nzodiacal sign\n41. Trap\n42. Way\n43. Gazelles\n(Tibet)\n44. Projecting-\nend of a\nchurch\nDOWN\"\n1. Discoverer\n?  of radium\n2. Arrange -\nin a line\n3. Sick\n4. Northeast\n(abbr.)\n5. A stair\n6. Throw\n1. Keel-billed\ncuckoo\n8. An arbltra-\n21. SuK-un'a\ndecree\n22. Variety of\n\u2022 chalcedony\n23. Flowers\n24. Yearning;\n25. Any fruit\ndrink\n28. Man's\nnickname \u25a0?\ntor (games) 31. The south.t\n9. U. S. east wind. ?!\npresident\n11. Horses\n(poet.)\n13. Frees\n15. Waits on\n18. Belonging\nto me\n34. Kind at\nrock\n33. Flexible '\nline for\nliquids\n35. Queen of '\nthe gods\n1\nM. Siamese coin     (Gr. myth.)\nBEZIHIJ   0l_HH_\nhehshbi as\n_bh am- au\naHHUIJH   HIIEt\nuaaam hhi_r_\nHDirao manitmv\noh aran Hsir\n_\u25a1 Dfmat-Q .\nbhhim Etaam\nTciniRMfV Ancrvcy\n136. Native\n\u25a0     metals\n39. Annam\nmeasure\n40. Conical ro\" .\nof thread\n42. Sun god\n__\n34\n58\n41\n43\n25\n__\n__\n35\n_.\n3o\n%.\n44-\n32\n4\nDAILY CBWTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work Wt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A n need\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoe-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints..\nBach day tba eode letters are different  .\nL\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n\u00ab R G O S S O S D  W S I C S O S B, \\ G T B  B W\n'\\.,Ji %\nYUL HYUL, ERGE ERSDS CDS _ C E J R S M|\nK-WDBLU\nJ\na\nnit!1!1  Yesterday's Cryptnquofc:   HE IS ALWAYS LATJGHBjtG, KNgl\nIIS HAS AN INFINITE DEAL OF WIT\u2014ADDISQ^\/^    i\t\nButatuMi m urn r-ftm.iumm <*\n so\n1 PER$o^\u00a5mo^mMtis\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m..\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nPENDRY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Arthur\nPendry of Kimberley at MacDougall\nHospital, April 7, a daughter,.\nKERVIN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. R.\nKervin, (nee Anne Cannon of Kim-\n\"berley) at Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.,\nApril 8, a son.\nSHAW\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Garnet\nihaw of Kimberley at McDougall\nHospital, April 8, a daughter.\nVANDER MAATEN\u2014To Mr. and\nMrs. S. Vander Maaten of Kimberley at McDougall Hospital, April 8,\na daughter.\nTHOMASON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Thoniason of Kimberley at\nMcDougall Hospital, April 10 a\ndaughter.\nHELP WANTED\nPROFITABLE BUSINESS\nThe J. R, Watkins. Company require an active, reliable man to\nhandle their products in the City\nof Nelson. This is an opportunity\nto take over a profitable business.\nApplicant must'have car. Credit\nmay be arranged.' Write The J.\nR. Watkins Co., 1010 Alberni St.,\nVancouver, for full information\nand names of neighboring.dealers.\nWANTED \u2014 CONTRACTOR TO\nlog 40 M per day and maintain\nroads already in. 4-5 mile haul,\ncomplete camp in bush. Near\nNelson. Please state equipment\nand last operation. Over 15 million to come out and price to\nright man shall be above average.\nBox 9313 Daily News.\nCHIEF STEWARD FOR ROSS-\nland Canadian Legion. State qualifications; Salary expected. Address, letters to secretary. Only\nveterans need apply\nWANTED - YOUTH FOR SHIP-\nplrtg room automotive parts\nwholesale. Apply In own handwriting to Box 9065 Dally News.\nWANTED \u2014 FIRST AID ATTEND-\nant. Write or telephone Western\nExploration Co. Ltd., Silverton,\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED\nwaitress. Apply New Star Cafe.\nAGENTS   WANTED\nFOR STEADY INCOME ITS HARD\nto beat selling everyday necessities, \u2022 Rawleigh quality Products known everywhere. For\nmore information write Raw-\nleigh's, Dept. WG-D-153-223,. Winnipeg, Mam   \/\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE\nMODERN. CAFE .-'.  ..\nFully equipped. Situated ln the\nheart of one\" of the fastest growing towns in the West. Kootenay.\nThis is a money maker. Full price\n$5500.00 For details contact Carriers' Real Estate and Insurance,\n1460 Bay Avenue, Trail, B.C., \u2014\nPhone 1589.      ,-.'.'\u25a0\"' :*.- '-\nFOR SALE\u2014FREIGHT LINE BE-\ntween Nelson and Trail. Apply\nBox 9036 Daily News.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 BLACK  SUITCASE . BE-\ntween Nelson and Salmo. Reward.\nContact Bill Kline, Salmo. B.C.\nFOUND \u2014 BOY'S LEATHER\njacket   Apply   G.   F.   Hodgson.\ncorner of 7th St. and Gordon Rd.\nLOST \u2014 BROWN PLASTIC RIM-\nmed glasses. Phone 562-X.\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AVERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.  W. WIDDOWSON  & CO.  AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH.  S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND.  B.C.,\nAssayer, Chemist. Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST..\nNelson. B.C.. Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND. REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY  AGENCIES  LTD,  IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK\u2014\nContact H. Harrop; Phone 117.\n MACHINISTS\t\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\n.Sfolemi Sathj JfouiB\n. Classified  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 consec- .\nutlve  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,     ... v.\nIn advance    %.   :;.25\nBy carrier, per year     '\"13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month      _ ;....   ,1.00\nThree months  ;5,S,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        ... fc      12 90\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus Dostaue.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSealed lenders for the General'\nContract, including all trades, endorsed: \"Tenders for Additions to\nSouth Slocan, Slocan City, and New\nDenver High Schools\", for the erection and completion of one additional classroom to each of the\nabove named schools will be received by the Secretary Treasurer,\nSchool District No. 8 (Slocan), on\nor before 5 p.m, Wednesday, May\n2nd, 1951, at the office of the Secretary, Slocan City, B.C.\nWorking drawings and specifications with addenda will be available at the office of the Sec.-Treas.,\nSlocan City, B.C.\nThe bidder will tender his bid\nto the owners as one lump sum for\nthe above three buildings and shall\ncary out the work as though it is\none contract.\nA certified check for five per cent\n(5%) of the tender must accompany\neach and every tender and shall\nbe forfeited if the party tendering\ndeclines to enter into Contract\nwhen called upon to do so. On\naward and signing of the Contract\nthe successful tenderer Bhall furbish to the Board of School Trustee's\na surety bond equal to fifty, per\ncent (50%) of the Contract price.\nOn receipt of this bond the certified check submitted With the ten*\nder will be returned.\nThe Board of School Trustees and\nthe Department of Education reserves the- right to reject any or\nall tenders without explanation. No\ntenders having any qualifying\nclauses will be considered.     .\nA deposit of ten dollars ($10.00)\nis required for each set of. plans\nand specifications and will be returned upon receipt of the same In\ngood condition. . ''\nPAUL A. BARBER,\nSecretary Treasurer,\nSlocan School District No. 8.\nDated at Slocan City, B.C., this\ntwelfth day of April, 1051.\nLAND REGISTRY OFFICE\n(Section 161)\nIN THE MATTER OF Block 42\nof Lot 393, Kootenay'District, Plan\n827.\nProof having been filed in my\nOffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 35521-1 to the above mentioned lands in the name of William Francis Herchel Waterfleld\nand bearing date the 14-6-33. I\nHEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my intention at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first publication hereof to issue Provisional\nCertificate of Title in lieu of such\nlost Certificate.- Any person having\nany information with reference to\nsuch lost Certificate of Title is -requested to communicate with the\nundersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C., this\n14th day of April, 1951.\nR. G. Slmms,\nRegistrar of Titles.\nDATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION\nTuesday, April 17, 1951.\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X45284\nThere will be offered for sale\nat Public Auction, at 11 a.m., on\nFriday, May 18th, 1951, in the\noffice of the Forest Ranger at\nCreston, B.C., the Licence X45284,\nto cut 16,560,00,0 f.b.m. of Larch,\nFir, Cedar. Balsam, White Pine,\nHemlock, Spruce Lodgepole Pine\nand Yellow Pine, and 62,000 lineal\nfeet of Cedar Poles and Piling on\nan area covering part of Surveyed\nTimber Licence 2950p and 2952p,\nsituated on Dodge Creek, Inter\nnational Boundary, Kootenay Land\nDistrict.\nFive years will be allowed for\nremoval of timber\".\n\"Provided anyone unable 16 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 thp Deputy Minister\nof Forests. Victoria, B.C., or the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\n\u2022   (Continued)\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X26895\n. There will be offered for sale at\nPublic Auction, at 10 a.m., on Saturday, June 2nd, 1951, in the office\nof the Forest Ranger, Creston, B.C.,\nthe Licence X26895, to1 cut 14.730,000\nf.b.m. of Spruce, Cedar, White,Pine,\nLarch, Hemlock, Balsam and Fir,\nand 205,000 lineal'feet of Cedar\nPoles and Piling on an area covering part of Surveyed Timber , Licences 9163p. 9164p and 11648p, situated on the East fork of Mission\nCreek, Kootenay Land District.\nSeven years will be allowed for\nremoval- of timber.\n\"Provided 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\nof Forests, Victoria, B.C., or the\nDistrict Forester. Nelson. B.C.\nMACHINERY\nBLOCKS'\nWherever Cables\n'Are Used\nManufactured by Ihe\nOPSAL STEEL COMPANY,\nLIMITED\nRecognized as the\noutstanding blocks for\nthe lumber ond mining\nindustries. A block for\nevery- specific purpose,\nbacked by the \"Op- '\nsal\" guarantee, these '\nproducts are recognized\nas -the best on the\nmarket.\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 all occasions.\nWrite us for further\ninformation.\nSUPPLIED AND SERVICED BY\nNelson Machinery\nCompany Ltd. \u25a0\n214 Hall St\nPhone 18\nMining,   Milling   and   Sawmill\n, Machinery, Building and\nContractors' Supplies.-  -\nIf   It's   machinery   you   want,\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X49132\nThere will be offered for. sale at\nPublic Auction, at 9:30 a.m., on\nSaturday, June 2nd, 1951, ln the\noffice of the Forest Ranger at\nNakusp, B.C., the Licence X49132,\nto cut 12.545,000 f.b.m. of Hemlock, White Pine, Spruce, Fir,\nCedar, Larch and Balsam and 572,-\n000 lineal, feet of Cedar Poles and\nPiling covering Surveyed Timber\nLicences 11207p, 10557p, 10559p and\npart South 14 of S.T.L. 38966p. situated on Wilson Lake, East of Nakusp, Kootenay Land District.\nTen years will be alowed for\nremoval of timber.\n\"Provided anyone uhable 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\nof Forests, Victoria. B.C.. or the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.\nProvince of British Columbia\nDepartment of Public. Works\nLOAD AND SPEED\nRESTRICTIONS\nAll special load and speed restrictions will be removed from\nhighways in the Cranbrook District\neffective one minute after midnight\non the morning of Thursday, April\n19, 1951.\nDated at Cranbrook, B.C., 16th\nApril, 1951.\nJ. A. Dennison,\nDistrict   Engineer.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY   \u2022'\nCO., LTD.     -     ,'\u2022\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE\u2014NEW 12\" BAND SAW\ncomplete with motor and stand.\nBeaver wood lathe, complete with\nmotor. Phone 687-X after 5 p.m.\n\u2022   .(Cont'ntred)\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR, SALE-.22 MARLIN MODEL\n81-DL 18-shot bolt action repeater.\nEquipped \\Vith 4-power Mossberg\n'scope and leather sling. $35.00.\nPhone 1240-R.\nM c C L A R Y CANADIAN ALL-\nenamel wood-coal range; also Mc-\nClary all-enamel high-oven electric range. Phone 132-X.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS    NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1951 \u2014 9\nAND\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nUSED CAR\nABOUT 10 TRUCKLOADS OF\ndirt for sale; can be used for\nfilling in purposes. 820 Mill St.,\nor phone 1231-L.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CAMP STOVE IN\ngood condition, $25. 1 Army bunk\nwith mattress, good as new.\nPhone 1409-R.\nFOR SALS'-- BEATTY WATER\npump with pressure switch and\nelectric motor. Apply S. Fisher,\nBonnington, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 OFFICE SAFE,\nstandard size, heavy duty. Phone\n1500.\nPIPE -, FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E  Cnrdovn St.. Vancouver.\nEMPIRE OIL RANGE, BEATTY\nwashing machine and sin,gle bed.\nPHone 1326-L.     '\nFOR SALE \u2014 SMALL RADIO,\nchild's crib and mattress; Phone\n945-R.\nHEAVY  DUTY  SEWING  MACH-\nine; Ideal for leather. Ph. 1223-R.\nPIANO   FOR   SALE.\n798-R,\nPHONE\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT - UNFURN-\nished house, 2 or more bedrooms,\nin or near Nelson, by business\nexecutive. May 1st or before.\nRent no object. Apply Box 8725,\nDaily News.\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 4 OR 5\nroom house. Modern, by middle\naged couple. Good references.\nFairview district preferred. Box\n9055 Deily News.\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY-4\nor 5 room modern house on North\nShore. Apply Box 9206, Daily\nNews. '\nHOUSE FOR RENT - CLOSE IN\nto business section. Rent $60 per\nmonth.   Apply   Box ,8681   Dally\nNews,\nFOR RENT - LARGE. MODERN\nstore on Baker'St. Full-size basement. Apply Murphy's, 745 Baker\nStreet.\nFOR RENT - SPACE SUITABLE\nfor office or small store at 639\nBaker St., next door to Reibln's\nGrocery. Inquire in store.\nFOR RENT - 1,. ACRE STRAW,\nberries and 1 acre raspberries.\nApply Mike Androshak, Canyon,\nB C. \u2022\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED 2-RM.\nsuite. Apply 116 Vernon St. or\n- phone 712-R.\nWANTED TO RENT AT ONCE-\n2 bedroom house, not on hill, on\nbus line. 2 adults. Phone 804-R3.\nDOUBLE CABIN FOR RENT. ALL\nconveniences. Lakeside Bungalow\nCourt. Phone 864.\n4 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT OR\nsale on Ymir Road. John K. Pos-\nnikoff.  Gen. Delivery,  Nelson.\n5-ROOM MODERN HOUSE FOR\nrent. Immediate occupancy. 711\nVictoria. Street.\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED SUITE\nfor, couple from May 1st to Sept.\n1st. Phone 394-B evenings.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT; USE OF\nhotplate. Close in. Phone 653-R.\nLARGE BEDROOM FOR RENT,-\nApply 210 Vernon St., after 5 p.m\nBEDROOM   FOR   RENT,   CLOSE\nin. Phone UU1-Y.\nFOR   RENT \u20143'ROOM   SUITE.\nApply 401 Silica Street.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1 MODERN JOHN\nDeere tractor with double plow,\ndisc and harrow. (Model M). Apply Sam Fame. Box 42, Trail, B.C.\nFor hire or contract\u2014d-4\ncat,    equipped    for    excavating,\n' roadbuilding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n1506 Nelson.\nFOR SALE - X-RAY DIAMOND\ndrill. First class condition. 118 ft.\nrods.' No motor. $350 cash. Box\n9070 Daily News.\nWANTED \u2014 DIAMOND DRILL-\ning equipment and rods. Box\n9069 Daily News.\nTRUCK  &  TRACTOR  WINCHES,\nlogging arches, etc. Bayes Equip-\n, ment Co.. Cranbrook. B.C.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE \u2014SINGER SEWING\nmachine, Norge electric fridge,\nElectrolux cleaner, home-made\nchest (5 drawer), stand lamp and\ntable lamp, china cabinet, Rogers\n. mantle radio (L. and S. wave),\n\u25a0 new drop-leaf table, magazine\nrack, card table. Apply Apt. E,\nStrathcbna Hotel.\nDO YOU BREAK DISHES? YOU\ndon't with a set of Evorlast unbreakable dishes. Drop a penny\npostcard to Box 9030, Daily News,\nand an agent will call with a\n-sample moderately priced.\nFOR SALE \u2014 GOOD QUALITY\nand size Netted ' Gem potatoes;\n$1.40 per 100. Smaller size, suitable for seed, $1.00 per 100. Stock\nfeed potatoes, $10.00 per ton, it\nCrescent Valley. Apply J a aft;\nKosiancic.\nUSED CHESTERFIELD SUITE,\nrug and small oak table, all for'\n$45. Phone 622-L or call at 1421\nFront Street.\n(Continued in Next Column)\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nGIVE RESULTS\"\nFor over 30 years thousands of\nsuccessful Poultrymen have been\nraising these famous chicks. You\nwill make no mistake by following their example. Ten different\nbreeds and cross breeds available\nto suit every operation. Write for\nparticulars and prices \u2014 and remember \u2014 \"It's Results' That\nCount.\" Rump & Sendall Ltd.,\nBox N, Larigley Prairie, B.C.,\nVernon, B.C.   '\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS\nLeghorns, New Hampshires, Leghorn-Hampshire Crosses. All our\nchicks are R.O.P. Sired. 26 years\nexperience wjlh chicks and poul\ntry. Send for our catalogue and\nparticulars. Apply our agent, Nelson Farmers' Supply Ltd., or write\ndirect-to New Siberia Farms, N.\nBalakshin. R.R. 2. Chilliwack, B.C.\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 300.\nPullets at 36c. Cockerels 10c. \u2014\nTRIANGLE HATCHERY. ARMSTRONG. B. C.\n1949 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1948 Austin Sedan\n1947 Ford Light Delivery\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1940. Ford Light Delivery\n1939 Dodge Sedan\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan\n1939 Chevrolet Coach\n1939 Ford Sedan\n1938 \"Plymouth Sedan\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1934 International Light\n- Delivery\n1936 Ford, $200.00\n1930 Oldsmobile,   $100.00\n1937 Hillman, $150.00\nTerms and Trades\nSPOT CASH FOR\nLATE MODELS\n-EMPIRE\nAUSTIN AND PACKARD\nSALES AND SERVICE\n803 BAKER ST. - PHONE 1135\nTHE BEST\n. '     OF NELSON'S\nUSED CAMS\nWANTED\nROUND AND SPLIT CEDAR\n.FENCE POSTS\nCEDAR, FIR AND LARCH\nPOLES\nFIR AND CEDAR PILING\nFor specification and top prices\n' Contact:\nThe Kootenay River Lumber\n& Pole Co. Ltd.,\n560 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nTelephone 1413\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. R C   Phon\u00bb Pacific 6357\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch poles, peeled\nor unpeeled. Glacier Lumber Co\nBox \u25a0t'-n. Nelson, B.C.\nSHiP _o YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Compnny.\n916 Powell-St., Vancouver. B C\nWAWTED\u2014SEVERAL LOADS OF\ntop soil. Phone 1484-L.\nStill'   YOUR    HIDES   TO   J    P\nMorn-in   Nelson. B   C\nTORONTO STOCKS\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nA GRAND PET, FREE TO ANY-\none who would give her a good\nhome; a Cocker Spaniel 3 yqars\nold. (Mrs.) R. Ramsay, Balfour.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n3-BEDROOM HOME .IN-\nFRIENDLY  NEIGHBORHOOD\nLiving room, dining room,\nkitchen with built - in- cupboards, bathroom lias tub and\nshower bath; den, cement basement, hot-air furnace; wired for\nelectric range; scrccned-in back\nporch. On 4 lots; fruit trees.\nAlso selling Westinghouse frig,,\n3-pce. | chesterfield suite, and\nother items.\nSEE THIS AT\n1807 STANLEY ST.\n\u25a0_ .SPECIALS .\n1936 Lafayette\nCoach \u2014$150\nFisherman's Special \/\u25a0'\"\n1948 G.M.C. l\/Jton\n5-Speed Transmission\n\u2022.$1350    \\w\nALSO\n1940 Mercury Sedan\nHeater and Defroster .\n1950 Forgo V_-Ton\nHeater and Defroster\n1949 Chevrolet\n\u2022V_-Ton\nHeater and Defroster\"\n1949 Mercury\n1\/_-Ton\nHeater and Defroster\nBILLDeFOE'S-\nSiiper Service\nSTUDEBAKER\nSALES AND SERVICE\nPhone 1234    Nelson, B. C.\nINTERNATIONAL 1-TON HEAVY\nduty. 4-wheel drive, 5-ton winch,\n150 feet of cable, 2 sets of chains,\noverload-springs, good tires. \u2014\nTruck in A-l condition. Selling\nout. Price $1300. Apply Box 9244,\nDaily News.\n1937 DODGE 14-TON PANEL FOR\nsale; $500.00. Good condition. Apply Columbia Bottling Works,\nPhone 412'\nFOR SALE\u20141937 CHEV. SEDAN.\nAll good -rubber, good condition.\nPhone 731-L or call at 1105 Mc-\nQuarrie Avenue.\nFOR SALE\u20141935 114-TON FORD\ntruck. Short wheelbase; dual\nwheels. Apply E. Smith, at Fln-\nnlng Tractor Company.\nFOR SALE\u20141 BLACK HORSE, 6\nyears old; gelding, suitable for.\nlogging and farm work. Gentle.\nWeight 1500 lbs. Apply John\nFlegel, R.R. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nWAN'i'hD - HIGHEST PRICES\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 S.ALE \u2014 GOOD, CLEAN\nmeadow hay, salted and baled;\n$30.00 per ton. I. A. Williams,\nKaslo. ..B.C. ' \"'\"\u25a0;-\u00ab,:\u201e-:\u25a0\u25a0\t\nFOR SAL_\u20141 HORSE, 9 YEARS\nold, weight 1500 lbs. E. Rosen, 1\n'rrliilfli South of Ymir, B.C.\nHORSES WANTED\nDICK  KLEEF\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON   BUSINESS  COLLEGE-\n\u25a0Day ami Night Classes.\nFOR SALE\u20141940 FORD DELUXE\nsedan. Very good condition. \u2014\nPhone 161-L2.\nf5r\nSALE \u2014 1937 FORD COUPE.\nComplete recent overhaul. $550.00.\nF. O. Hampton, W. Arrow Park.\nFOR SALE\u2014MAN'S BICYCLE IN\ngood condition. 413 Richards St,\nBOATS and ENGINES\n15-FOOT CABIN CRUISER, POW-\nered   Star   motor.   Full   marine\n' conversion. Good running order.\n$250; Apply Box 9235 Daily News.\nWANTED\u2014SPACE FOR  16-FOOT\nrowboat. Phone 750-R after 5 p.m.\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\n6 ROOM SIUCCO BUNGALOW\nwith pantry, front and back\nporch, workshop and woodshed,\nsmall hen-house. 8 lots, 50x120; 33\ncherry trees, 6 pears, 4'aooles,\n'1-3 acre of strawberries. This is\na very nice place. Will sell or\nexchange (pr small farm near\nNelson. C. E. Misener,,Kaslo. B.C.\nFOR SALE - SEMI-BUNGALOW.\nLiving room, dining room, bedroom and bathroom downstairs, 2\nbedrooms upstairs. Full basement,\nautomatic stoker .hot water system. Garage' and chicken house\non 7 lots all in garden and fruit\ntrees. P. E. Poulirj, 582 Ward St.\nNORTH SHORE PROPERTY FOR\nsale, practically new house, over\n4 acres land, lake frontage, 3 bedrooms, -fully1 modern, fireplace,\nfurnace. Write owner Box 8695\nDailv News. *\u25a0\nFOR SALE-OWE OF THE BEST\n\u25a0dairy farms ln^Ge'nlrel.,]B.C. Might\nconsider Nelson home-;,as part\npayment. P.O. Box 22, Red Deer,\nAlberta. '   'f, U\nMINES (Closing Price.)\nAkaitcho      1.10\nAmerican   Y  K      .1014\nAumaque       .2714\nAunor     '.      3.30\nBagamac 20\nBarymin         1.08\nBase Metals  69\nBobjo    : : 14\nBonetal    ...!       .59\nBralorne  \u25a0  6.20\nBrewis R L 12$\nBrdulan            1.14\nBuffalo Ank       1.5B-\nBuff Can   , 26\nCalliman  33\nCampbell R L       2.40\nCan Mai  63\nCariboo Gold       1.25\nCastle Treth            3.00\nCentral Pore         .10\nChesterville 33V4\nChimo G      -. 20\nConiaurum  05\nCons Beatty   1 50\nCons M _ S  145.50\nConwest             2.55\nDetta R L   17\nDiscovery    35\nDome          18.35\nDonalda        52\nEast-Malartic       1.11\nEast Sullivan       8.55\nElder  Gold    58\nEldona   2214\nEstella       2 02\nFalconbridge      11.00\nFrobisher         3.70\nGiant Yd          6.80\nGod's Lake         i \"9\nGolden Manitou     6.00\nHalcrow        .1414\nHardrock     17\nHarricana      - 11\nHedley Mas  1214\nHollinger          14.35\nHudson Bay   01 Vi\nInt  Nickel        381i\nJoliet Quebec  65\nKayrand       11.50\nKenville  211\nKerr Addison    17 _j\nKirk-Hudson    82\nLabrador          8.50\nLeitch           1.07\nLexindin    11\nLouvicourt   24\nMacDonald      1-15\nMacassa       1.85\nMacLeod Cock  ,      2.70\nMadsen R L      2 22\n.Malartic G F        2.15\nMclntyre     64 no\nMcKenzie R L  48\nMining Corp         18.75\nNegus .:       .90\nNow Calumet       3.05\nNew Goldvue  31 Vs\nReeves Mac       4.45\nSan  Antonio       2.55\nSen Rouyn      19\nShawkcy      , 33\nSilvermiller        1,75\nSllanco    40\nSiscoe         1.14\nStarratt Olson 58\nSteep Rock      fOS\nTeck Hughes. - \u25a0  2.02\nToburn 30\nTorbrit          1.95\nTrans Cont Res 71\nUnited   Keno    1U4\nUpper Canada      1-72\nVentures    11.85\nViolama'c       -85\nWaite Amulet     -11.85\nINDUSTRIALS\nCan Pac Rly ..,   .    ..'.:.,\nCanadian West Lmbr .\nCockshutt\n09ns Mining _Smelt.\nCons Paper     \t\nDist Seagrams\t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Foundries .\nDom Magnesium\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nImperial Oil'\t\nImp Tobacco ...._\t\nInt Metal\t\nInt Nickel\t\nInt Pete \t\nKelvinator\t\nLake of Woods\t\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss Industries\t\nShawinigan\t\nShea Brew\t\nSicks Brew \t\nSimpsons A  ...\nSimpBons pfd \t\nSoutham \t\nSteel of Canada\t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nStandard Paving \t\nStandard Chemical ...\nTaylor Pearson\t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Corp A\t\nUnited Corp B\t\nUnited Fuel A \t\nUnited Steel \t\nWestern Grocers \t\nWestern Grocers A\t\nWeston George ...'\t\nWin Elect com \t\nWin Elect pfd \t\n28%\n8'\/.\n29 li\n145V4\n3914\n31 Vt\n63 Vi\n48\n14\n34\n38%\nil_\n48\n38%\nlfi=,4\n1614\n33\n7714\n25-n,t\n2414\n35 y*\n16\n20\n3914\n98 Vi\n19 Vs\n32%\n34\n14%\n14.14\n6%\n19 Vi\n30\n42\n5714\n9%\n50\n36\n33%\n4114\n90%\n\u2022Tory duplex for:;sale in\n.' City. 3 rooms;,.downstairs, 4 upstairs, 2 bathroom's -'-complete, on\n2 lots with garage. $6000. $3100\ncash. Ann'y Box 9329 Daily News\nFOUR MILES FROM NELSON -\n2 acres. 5 room modern house;\nalso cottage, garden, fruit trees,\ngarage and outbuildings. Must be\nsold. Phone 640-L.\n.ARM -:,17 ACRES FOR SALE.\nClose to Nelson-Castlegar Highway. Water and light. Good\nbuildings. Write or call Mrs. C.\nLnff. Shoroacres, B.C. \u2022\nNEW HOUSE FOR SALE, 5 RMS.\nand bathroom. Plumbing, modern\nkitchen cabinets and coal-wood\nrange. For particulars write Phil\nMerry, Silverton. B.C.\nAbitibi ,....\nAlgoma .Steel \t\nAluminum \t\nArgus    \t\nAtlas St ;\t\nBathurst Power .\nBeattie Bros\nBell Telephone ...\nBrazilian .'\t\nB C Electric pfd .\nB C Forest   \t\nB' C Packers A ...\nB C Packers B ...\nB'C Power A \t\nB C Power B \t\n58 Va\n3214\n9614\n12%\n15%\n51\n11\n40%\n2514\n82\n9\n16 Vi\n14\n3014\nbVi\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nBlirance Co.. D. L. Kerr. Agent.\n5 ROOM BUNGALOW ON 1 ACRE\nland. Attractive buy at $4500. P.\nE. Poulin, 582 Ward St.\nFOR SALE OR RENT. \u2014 4 MILES\nfrom Kaslo. 63 acres. 40 cleared.\nFurnished house and orchard.\nApply 9057 Daily News.\nDUPLEX ON 5 LOTS; GOOD REV-\nenue. 4 rooms available for owner. Phone 517-X.\nFOR SALE\u20146-ROOMED STUCCO\nbungalow; good location. Terms.\nPhone  1069-Y.\nFOR SALE \u2014 MODERN 5-ROOM\nBungalow. In excellent condition.\nPhone 588-L.\nUNFINISHED HOUSE FOR SALE.\nClose to Glacier Lumber Co.\nPhone 161-L-3.\nFOR SALE \u2014 5 ROOM BUNGA-\nlow on 2 lots; cash. Phone 893-X.\n3 LOTS WITH BUILDING 20 x 24\nft., fully fenced. Phone 253-L-3.\nCRiSSS BUNION SALVE - FOR\namazing relief. \u2014 Your druggist\nsell's  CRESS.\nM I C a O NIC HEARING AIDS.\nFree Consultation Free. Write\nP.O. Box 39. Nelson\nAbMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R. jj\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single. $2.50 to '\n'$3.00 doubles.  Vancouver.  B.  C. '\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBralorne .-...\nCanusa . ....t\t\nCariboo Gold   :...\nGolconda \t\nGrandview  -\nHedley Mascot\t\nHighland Bell\t\nInt C & C ,\t\nKootenay Belle \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Border\t\n.Quatsino\t\nReeves MacDonald\t\nSheep Creek\t\nSilver Standard \t\nVananda\t\nVan Roi \t\nWestern Uranium\t\nOILS\nAnaconda \t\nAnglo Canadian\t\nA P Cons   \t\nCal & Edmonton\t\nCalmont \t\nCommonwealth \t\nDalhousie\t\nHome\t\nMercury \t\nNational Pete\t\nOkalta Com\t\nPacific Pete\t\nRoyalite .. \t\n.INDUSTRIALS-\u2014-\nInter Brew\t\nAlberta Dist  ..-.\nAlberta Dist vt\t\n.-(\n6.20\n.10\n1.25\n.24\n.42\n.58\n.98\n.38    '\n.7414\n2.25\n.28V4\n.18%\n4.50\n1.74\n2.49\n.-17\n.57 <4\n1.99\n.19\n6.40\n.46.\n12.25\n1.25\n2.10\n.38\n16.25\n.15'A\n1.90\n2.70\n9.65\n14.15\n4.00\n3.45\n3.40\nTHRIFT\nPLAN\nTO MEET INFLATION\nAsk your Investment Dealer\nor Broker for prospectus;\nand details of this unique\nsavings plan\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nLtd.\nFIIIMII       tO  AN!     tltlll\nBORROWING\n,VlEN!    PERSONAL   DRUG   SUN-\ndries:  25  deluxe  samples,  $1.00\nMailed in plain, sealed wrapper\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed   \u201e\nBargain   Catalog   free.    Western   \u201e\nDistributors. Box 1023N, Vancou-   m\n1 ve.r. B. C. , I ..\ncan be\nGOOD\nBUSINESS\nLADIES ! DUPREE PILLS. IM-.| \u00ab\ntproved Formula Dupree Pills to! \u2022\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and \u201e\ndistress associated with monthly \u201e\n. periods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes .\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 per ,\nbox. Western Distributors, Box ^\n1023 AN. Vancouver. B. C.\n\u25a0-'..FOR' SALE \u25a0\n(EXCLUSIVE LISTING)\nDefinitely one of Nelson's best homes.\nBungalow-type, stucco finish..\n$10,500\nConsists of living room, 24 x 16, and dining room 16 x 15. Open\nfireplace, maple floors in these rooms and in entrance hall. 3 bedrooms, polished Coast Fir floors. Large cupboards, linen cupboards.\nFully modern kitchen. Hot-air piped furnace, full basement, A-l\ncement floor. Fuel bins, fruit room, etc. Garage, cement floor (basement entrance). This is situated on 3 lovely corner lots in best\nresidential district. Property Is in excellent condition. Could not\nbe built for anything like the asking price.\nSEEDS\u2014BULBS\u2014ROSE BUSHES,\nshrubs, fruit trees. Grizzelle's\nFlorists and Greenhouses. Nelson.\nHAVE YOUR GARDEN ROTARY\nplowed   Phone 451-Y.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nc.\nCITY PROPERTY \u2014 INSURANCE\nLIFE \u2014 FIRE \u2014 CASUALTY\nInsurance Dept.\u2014T. C, Lambert Viola McGinn, Secretary\nEstablished 38 Years\nTake a tip from the businessman who knows that borrowing *\ncan be 0 good move -at the\nright timel' He will borrow\nanytime It's helpful to him.\nAre.you confronted with a pile\nof bills ... an unexpected call\nfor ready cash ... a business\nopportunity? Ai such times a\nquick, friendly loan from\nNiagara Finance makes good\nbusiness sense. Loans are made\nin amounts up to $1,000 and\nlife-insured at no extra cost\nto you. Repayments can be\nspread over many months.\nLike the businessman, take\nadvantage of the friendly\nloan service which Niagara\noffers to you.       , ..-.,,\ntil! I in if wcim iritmirr n,\nSUITE 1    -\nPhone 1095    660 Baker St.\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 17,1951\nOccasionally . . .\nwe have something queer\n\u2022 \u25a0;.-\u25a0\",'\u25a0 \u2022   tb sell.\u25a0;':.'.: A\nand this time it is a\n20-Drawer\nMetal Kardex System\nIt cost $350.00 but, we don't want it\nand we will sell it'for\n$175*00\nfri ANN s\nDRUG STORE\nAppeasement Always Fatal Error\nWhen Dealing Wilh Aggressors\nBY DEWITT MACKENZIE'\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe gravest danger which the democracies face in the conflict with\nCommunism is. as I see it, political\nrather than military.\nThat is the danger, of trying to\nachieve peace by appeasement,\nMaybe your columnist is a bit hipped on the subject of appeasement.\nIf so, his excuse is that as an obser-\nPhilco Radio\nSales arid Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302 446 Ward St.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\u2022\u2022Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St.        Phone 361\nCUTLER'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 Years' Experience\nPROMPT SERVICE\nRexall\nEffervescent\nHEALTH\nSALTS\nRecommended for\nHeadaches,   Heartburn,   and\nRelieves Constipation\n55c and $1.00 per bottle\nAt Your Rexall Store   .\nCity Drug Co.\n\u2022 Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day \u2014 807-R Night\nBOX 460\nver he had the harrowing experience of following Britain's Prime\nMinister Chamberlain through the\nlatter's fatal efforts to appease Hitler.\nYou can't appease an aggressor.\nThere is only one thing a bully understands, and that is force or a\nthreat of force.\nPresident Truman, explaining the\nMacArthur dismissal, said:\n\"We are ready at any time to negotiate for a restoration of peace\nin the area. But we will not engage\nin appeasement. We are only interested in real peace.\"\nCATEGORICAL STATEMENT,\nThat is a categorical statement:\nThe United States will have no part\nin trying to avoid trouble by appeasement.\nHowever, there are other countries which are not as fortunately\nsituated as the U.S. They are Asiatic\ncountries which lie in the path of\nBolshevist aggression, or Western\ncountries which ; ave territorial in\nter'ests in the Far East.\nThe Russo-Chinese alliance makes\na powerful combina''on which towers over the rest of Asia It is a\npower which a Western country\nsuch as Britain, with important Asiatic colonial interests, cannot treat\ncavalierly.\nThus it perhaps isn't strange to\nsee Britain and India recognizing\nthe Chinese Communist Govern\nment which is waging war against\ndemocracy. One doesn't hold these\nrecognitions up as striking\nampies, but as reminders that people\nwho live at the base of precipitous\nmountains have to watch out for\nlandslides.\nThe question of appeasement is of\nparticular importance now because\nit is quite clear that the Communists don't want peace in Asia. Their\nstrategy is to weaken the democracies by keeping them involved in\nmilitary operations such as the Korean war.\nSuch a harrowing situation Is calculated to inspire concessions from\ncountries which are endangered.\nEvery concession to force is a loss of\nground for the principles for which\nthe United Nations stands. \"\nThe English first adopted St.\nGeorge as their patron saint in the\nreign of Edward III, who died in\n1377.\nAutomatic Electric Water Heater\nactually costs less to ownl\nThe Inglis Glastecl Water Heater costs\nless to own! Life-lime glass protects the\nsteel tank from rust and corrosion . . .\nguarantees that you can spread the first\ncost over many, many years of trouble-\nfree, efficient, economical use.\nFused to the heavy steel lank of the\nGlasteel Electric Water Heater is special\nglass . . . mirror-smooth yet flexible enough\nto expand and contract without chipping,\ncracking or crazing. Over 350,000 of these\nheaters are now in use in the United States!\nCome in soon to see this\namazingly different water heater.\nIt's 100% automatic ... thermostatically controlled . .. streamlined in design.,. economically\noperated . . . costs less to ownl\nMomifattured under Ikenie frwn A. O. Smith Corp., Mllwaukos, Wlfc. U.SA\nMcKAY & STRETTON LTD.\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\nOpen New Aclion\nOn Thomson Will\nWrits on Behalf of\n2 Hotel Employees\nVANCOUVER, April 16 (CP) -\nAttorney-General Gordon Wismer\nwill,order an investigation Into the\n$800,000 James Thomson will case.\nThe will of the Wealthy, hotel\nowner, who died here in 1948, was\ndeclared a forgery on Saturday by\nChief Justice Wendell B. Farris.\n\"We will investigate the whole\nthing,\" Mr. Wismer said today in\nVictoria.\nThe investigation, it was reported,\nwill be made by the Vancouver\npolice.\nVANCOUVER, April 18 (CP)-A\nnew court action was opened today in the $800,000 James Thomson\nwill case.\nThe, will of the wealthy hotel\nowner, who died in 1948, was declared a forgery on Saturday by\nChief Justice Wendell B. Farris.\nToday, Barrister Thomas A.\nDohm said he will issue writs\nagainst the estate on behalf of W.\n\u2022F. Young and Albert Siegerstrom,\nemployees of the Ivanhoe Hotel\nwhich Thomson operated for many\nyears.\nMr. Dohm said he will sue the official administrator for \"unspecified\namounts\" for the two men. ,\nIn the forged will, Slgerstrom,\nwas listed for $1000 or $100,000, depending on a legal ruling on the\nplacement of a comma. Young was\nlisted for $75,000.\nOTHERS MAY FOLLOW\nOther employees In the hotel,\nlisted for sums ranging from $5000\nto $30,000, may also take court action, it was reported\nThomson had often told friends\nthat he planned gifts for his employee's from his $1,000,000  estate.\nChief Justice Farris ruled the\nwill had been forged by unknown\npersons. He said the signatures of\nThomson and two witnesses were\nforgeries.\nIt left the bulk of the estate to\nGilbert Campbell, 47-year-old Vancouver fireman whose father was\na life-long friend of Thomson.\nFifteen others were to share in\nthe estate, most of them employees\nof the Ivanhoe Hotel,\nNow, unless the judgment is upset, six cousins will share, the major beneficiary being 74-year-old\nMrs. Margaret Millen of Vancouver,\na first cousin, of Thomson. Her\nshare would be $250,000.\nBobbies Remove\nWhirlwind Wendy\nLONDON, April 16 (Reuters)-\nMiss Wendy Wood, Militant Scots\nNationalist who came to London\nSaturday to fight for possession of\nBritain's. Coronation Stonei today\nwas remanded on bail because of a\nSaturday night fracas in Trafalgar\nSquare.\n\u25a0 The 57-year-old President of the\nExtremist Scots Patriots' Association\nwill appear in court May 2 to face\ncharges of using insulting words and\nof police obstruction.\nShe had been lifted into an army\nvehicle and taken to a police station Saturday night when she attempted to address Scotsmen ' in\nTrafalgar Square on self-government for Scotland.\nPolice broke up the meeting because no advance notice had been\ngiven. The Scotsmen were in London for the annual soccer match\nwith England, which Scotland won\n3-2.\nThe Coronation Stone, the historic\nStone of Scone, was removed from\nLondon's Westminster Abbey on\nChristmas Day and after a three-\nmonth search, was dumped in Arbroath Abbey, ancient crowning\nsite of the Scots Kings, a few days\nago. It was brought back to London\nlast Friday.\nFORMER DISTRICT\nRAILROADER\nDIES AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, B.C., April 16\u2014A'\npioneer B.C. railroader who helped\nlay the first C.P.R. steel through\nthe Crow's Nest Pass in 1897, Cyrus\nO. Van Camp, was buried with\nlodge honors in the Masonic Cemetery, North Burnaby, Vancouver.\nMr. Van Camp died in Vancouver\nhospital last week at the age of 79,\nHis home was in Penticton where\nhe moved from Vancouver in 1942.\nBorn in Kempville, Ont., he Went\nto work for the C.P.R. near Ottawa\nin 1892, later, coming West to work\nat Golden in 1896.\nWhen the trans-continental line\nreached the Crow's Nest Pass, he\ntransferred to the bridge and building department until the line\nreached Nelson.\nMr. Van Camp was later appointed bridge and building foreman in\nthe Kootenay district and in 1911\nwas transferred -to \\ Victoria as\nbridge and building department\ndirector for the Esquimau and Nanaimo Railway.\nIn 1929 he was sent to take charge\nof bridge construction in Alberta\nand Saskatchewan and held that\npost until he returned to direct\nKootenay district biidge building\nin 1933. \u25a0\nMr. Van Camp retired In 1935\nafter 43 years' service and made\nhis home in Vancouver until 1942\nwhen he and his wife mdved to\nPenticton.\nHe was a member of the I.O.O.F.\nLodge for 42 years and a member\nof the Vancouver and Quadra Lodge\nNo. 2, A.F. and A.M., for more than\n32 years.\nBritons Urged To Migrate\nTo Commonwealth Countries\nNelson Jaycess Qet Charter\nNelson Junior Chamber of Commerce attained official recognition as a member of the Jaycee International body Saturday night\nwhen the unit received Its charter In a ceremony at the Legion.\nAlex Freeman, right, Past President of the Nelson Jaycees and\nthe unit's first president, receives the charter from B.C. President\nBob Innes, left, of Kamloops, while Irwin Black, 1951 President\nof .the; Nelson unit, looks on at centre.\nTrail and Rossland units were alto represented at the gathering.\n -        \u2014Dally News photo.\nCanadian Baptist\nSaid Imprisoned\nBy Chinese Reds\nCALGARY, April 16 CCP)-An\nEdmonton-born Baptist missionary\nhas been imprisoned by the Chinese\nCommunist government in North\nChina.\nRev. J. A. Cunningham, 34, has\nbeen seized by Communist officials\nin the Province of Szechwan, hear\nTibet, his brother-in-law, Stanley\nJespersen of Calgary has learned.\nThe information came from a missionary in Shanghai, who had received a message from Mrs. Cunningham. Mrs. Cunningham is in\nSzechwan with three children!- a\none-month-old baby, a five-year-old,\nand one seven years.\nMr. Jespersen believed Communists suspect the missionary of being\na British spy.\nMr. Cunningham, who has' been\nin China 12 years, was educated la\nThree Hills.\nCAPETOWN (CP) \u2014 SmaHest\nbaby recorded at the Salvation\nArmy non-white maternity hospital\nhere is Myra Ka'twya, who weighed\ntwo pounds-at birth. After dwindling to one pound, 15 punces, she\nbegan making satisfactory progress.\nMalay Husband's\nPlea Postponed\nSINGAPORE, April 16 (AP)-The\nSupreme Court today postponed indefinitely hearing of a plea by the\nMalay ex-husband of 14-year-old\nMaria Bertha Bertogh asking that\nit reverse a lower court decision\nawarding the child to her Roman\nCatholic .mother.\nThe reason for the postponement\nwas the absence of chief counsel for\nthe appellants, who are the ex-husband, Incho .Mansoor Adabi, and\nthe child's Malay foster mother, Che\nAminah. .\nA lower court last December ruled the child should be given to her\nmother, Mrs. Adeline Hertogh of\nBergen-Op-Zoom, the Netherlands.\nBoth the mother and the child are\nnow. in the Netherlands. The court\ndecision last December touched off\nbloody Moslem rioting in which 18\nwere killed. :\nMink-Farmer Leaves\nLondon for Canada\nLONDON. April 16 (CP) \u2014 Ger\naid Barraclough, 23, the first Briton to breed Canadian mink in Lon-\ndon't metropolitan area, sails for\nCanada tomorrow. With him will be\nhisbride of 10 days.\nThe Barracloughs said they are\nlooking forward to their new venture. Everything they had heard\nabout Canada was good.\nThey will be greeted by Barra-\ndough's 19-year-old brother, John,\na former steeplechase jockey who\nimmigrated to Toronto last July.\nBarraclough became interested in\nmink raising through Canadian ser,\nvice men he met during the war.\nHe imported three Canadian silver\nblue mink and set up a ranch ln\nthe backyard of his home. He had\nbuilt up a thriving business when\nhe decided to migrate.\nFOUND INNOCENT\nOF STABBING FRIEND\n\u2022 VICTORIA, B.C., April 16 (CP) \u2014\nFound innocent by an assize court\njury today of stabbing his friend\nJohn Novak, 70, with intent to murder, Anton Konkon proudly walked\nout of the courthouse in company\nof his attractive daughter, Eleanor.\nKonkin's daughter could hardly\nsuppress her tears of joy when the\njury acquitted the Russian-born\nhouse builder after deliberating an\nhour.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor!\n660 Baker St. Phone 235\nwiginton\nMotors ltd.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nNo Formal Charges\nAgainst Five Nuns,\nOTTAWA, April 16 (CP) \u2014 External Affairs Minister Pearson\nsaid today the government hopes\nthe five Canadian nuns being held\nby the Chinese Communists will\nbe allowed to return freely to\nCanada.\nHe told the Commons no for\nmal charges appear to have been\nlaid against the five, all Roman\nCatholic Sisters of the Immaculate Conception who were operating an orphanage In Canton. The\nagitation against them appeared to\nbe \"chiefly local.\"    '\nGirls in Launch\nFollow Ontario\nSYDNEY, Australia, April 16\n(Reuters)\u2014With a girl in every port,\n.dockslde farewells might be a little\nroutine for most sailors.\nBut there was nothing routine\nabout the farewell given 30 Canadian sailors of the Canadian cruiser\nOntario Which steamed out of port\ntoday after a 10-day visit.\nThirty Sydney girls came to the\ndock to say goodbye to sailors they\nhad met.\nPolice barred their way. The cruiser slipped moorings and headed for\nsea.\nNot to be .thwarted, the girls hired a motor launch atid followed the\nOntario all the way down the'harbor, waving and shouting to sailor\nfriends on the ship.\nSaid one: \"We were all late for\nwork but it was worth it. We just\ncouldn't let them go without saying\ngoodbye.\"\nThe Ontario \"has been- visiting\nAustralian ports for jubilee celebrations and combined fleet manoeuvres. Next port of call Is Melbourne.\nLater come Tasmania and New Zea\nland,\nCanadian Money\nLikely to. Be Used\nMore in World Trade\nTORONTO, April 16 (CP)\u2014Canadian money Is likely to become\npopular in the world of tomorrow,\nand to be used to an increasing extent in international transactions,\nS. M. Wedd, President of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, said, in\neffect, today.\nAddressing the Canadian club, he\nstated:\n\"It now appears that we are en\nlering a period when our natural\nresources and our manufactured\ngoods- will be greatly sought after.\nThis fact holds much significance\nfor our future pattern of trade.\nSues Operators\nOf Grouse\nMountain Ski Lift\nVANCOUVER, April 16 (CP) -\nLawyers for a girl injured in a ski\nlift accident on nearby Grouse\nMountain today sued operators of\nthe liftfor unstated damages.\nBetty\" Davidson is asking general\ndamages because full extent of her\ninjuries is not yet known. She was\ninjured with 27 others when the lift\ncable collapsed March 25.\nThe girl is still in hospital.\nTuberculosis was the- leading\ncause of death in Canada in 1900\nbu,t now it ranks fifth.\nSALISBURY, 8oitthern Rhodesia, April 16 (Reuters) \u2014Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle, Inventor of the. Jet.aircraft, said today\nthat five well-placed atom bombs\ncould destroy the economic life\nof Britain.\nWhittle,\"chairman of the United\nKingdom Migration Council, also\nappealed  for  large-scale   migration from Britain to the Commonwealth countries.\nHe told the Rhodesia National Affairs Association that strategically\nthe very existence of the Commonwealth might depend on large-scale\nmigration as a matter of policy.\nThe contribution to Empire defence' would be far greater, he said,\nif the \u00a34,700,000,000 ($13,865,000,000)\nthe British Government planned to\nspend on defence during the next\nthree years were spent on large-\nscale immigration to commonwealth\ncountries.'\n' The strategic position of Britain,\nthe heart of the Commonwealth, had\nbeen' weak for some time. With the\nadvent of the atomic bomb the\ndanger from blockade became much\ngreater. Britain had about five principal ports\u2014any one of which could\nbe knocked out by a single atomic\nbomb.\n\"Britain is weak because she' has\ntoo many people and not enough\nnatural resources,\" he added, \"other\nparts of the Commonwealth are\nweak from the opposite reason.\"\nIt was agreed that 30,000,000 per'\nsons was about the number for\nwhom Britain could produce food\nfrom her soil. For any number above\nthat, staple food had to be Imported as well as commodities that\nwould not grow there.\nLimerick City\nFathers Face\nDress Problem\nLIMERICK, Republic of Ireland,\nApril 16 (AP) \u2014 The city council\ncalled today for a full-dress inquiry\ninto that long-standing puzzler: Are\npyjamas better than .he old-fashioned night, shirt? \"\nThe city fathers were prompted\nby recent fist-figbiing between py-\njama wearers and defenders of the\nnight shirt at the poor house hospital.\nThe hospital is maintained jointly\nby the Limerick County Board and\nthe Limerick City Council.\nWards of the county are outfitted\nwith pyjamas. Those of the city receive night shirts.\nThe county's pyjamaed paupers\nhave held.themselves aloof from the\ncity poor and the latter have responded with unkind remarks about\nthe appearance of elderly men In\nfancy sleeping pants.\nTwice last week this small cold\nwar erupted into open combat.    .\nThe city council cecided to have\nCity Manager Matthew Macken investigate the cost and respective\nmerits of the two modes of night\nattire. ,\nSwiss Reds Lose\n8 Seals From 12\nZURICH, Switzerland, April 16\n(AP) \u2014 The Communist Workers\nParty lost eight of the 12 seats they\nheld in the 180-member Zurich Can\ntonal (State) parliament in unofficial returns from yesterday's elections.\nUnofficial results Indicated the\nSocialists won 51 seats, for a gain\nof two; the Farmers Party, 37, a gain\nof one; the Radicals, 26,. a gain of\none, and the Social Christians, 20,\na gain of four.\nCrows' Nesf Coa I\nNet Profit Up\nFERNIE, B.C., April 16 - Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Co., Ltd., had net\nprpf|t in 1850 of $802,970, or $9.70-a\nshare, compared with $448,555, or\n$7,22 a share, in 1949.\nWorking capital at year-end was\n$3,094,275, up $697,856. Deficit account has dropped to $156,412 from\n$510;919.\nThe company has started commercial production of lumber, and plans\nto produce 9,000,000 board feet this\nyear.\nCOMMITTED FOR TRIAL\nON CHARGE OF     1\nBEATING DAUGHTER\nDUNCAN, B.C., April 16 (CP)\u2014\nMrs. Rose Cole today was committed\nfor trial on a charge of causing\ngrievous bodily harm to her three\nyear-old daughter, June. The child\ndied March 6.\nMagistrate G. A. Tlsdale refused\nMrs. Cole's application for bail.\nR.C.M.P. Constable Wilfred Cam-\nbei-t told the court he went to\nMrs. Cole's home March 6.\n\"I was told June had died as a\nresult of' falling from her crib,\"\nLambert said. \"I examined the room\nand was not satisfied. Mrs. Cole then\nadmitted beating June with a stick\nsntl belt after June refused to eat\na meal.\"\nLambert quoted her as saying that\nshe had lost her temper after her\ndaughter had thrown the .food over\nthe bed.\nOne of the oldest schools ln the\nCommonwealth outside Britain is\nHarrison College at Barbadoes,\nfounded in 1733.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical  Arts Building\nSuit 206 Phqne 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED  _   REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St Phone 63\nBe Sure to Listen to\nDOCTOR'S ORDERS\nOVER CKLN TONIGHT \u2014 6:00 P.M.\nWE FILL YOUR\nDOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION\nexactly as your doctor orders\nDay Phone 1203     (24-Hour Service)     Res. 394-L\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"   '' \" '\nD. M. SAMPLE, DRUGGIST\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203 WE DELIVER Res. 394-L\nTrade Balance\nDown in U.K.\nLONDON, April 16 (Reuters) \u2014\nBritain's balance of trade deteriorated badly in the first quarter of\n1951, it was revealed today.\nThe gap between imports and exports was \u00a3235,000,606 ($693,250,-\n000), almost three times the average\nof the four quarters of last year.\nThe offioial figures released today\nmay exaggerate the position because\nas imports costs soar, so do Britain'r\ninvisible earnings which are not yet\nincluded. But the deterioration remains serious.\nIt was known that last year's f av7\norable balance could not be maintained this year. But the government\nhad hoped to keep the deficit down\nto \u00a3100,000,000 for the whole year-\ntaking the loss as an inevitable result of rearmament stockpiling.\nA sharp rise in the costs of imports is responsible for the renew\ned appearance of a big gap.\nEire Envoy Hopes\nTo End Prejudices\nWINNIPEG, April 16 (CP)-Sean\nMurphy, Republic of Ireland Ambassador to Canada, said today that\n\"a section of Canadian opinion\"\nunfriendly to his country \"is based\non ill-informed prejudice.\"\nThe Ambassador made the remark in a prepared speech at a Canadian Club luncheon. He did not\nelaborate, but said:\n. \"We hope that personal contact\nmay have the effect of modifying\nthese prejudices.\"\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nTHE WARDROBE\nR. TARLING, Prop.   '\nLadles'  and  Gents'  Tailors  \\\nCleaning \u2014 Repairing\nAlterations\nPHONE 1256\nP.O. BOX 36 \u2014' NELSON, B.C.\nDonald E. Hunter\nOPTOMETRIST\n431 Baker St.     Phone 333\nHAVE YOUR  FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall St.\nPhone 146\nT\nSHIRTS\nin\nLatest Styles\nStripes and Plains\n,*\n$1.95 to $3.95\n\u2022 li\nEmory's\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nWater buffaloes have increased\nso greatly in Northern Australia\nthat thousands are shot annually.\nOur Ellison's Best Flour\nIs Available In Tea Towel Bags\nSizes 24s and 49s '.\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCo. Ltd!\nPhone 238\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER       \\\nPHONE 815 '\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St\nPhone 327\nMAKE YOUft CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n.PHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER 8T.\nJf stubborn drains     <     '';\nShould get you clown\nCell ui for help\nWe're, best in town.\nYou'll know where to\nturn  next  time   that\nplumbing acts up. Call\nus and we'll  send a\nman   right  over.   We\nare always  ready for.\nany emergency.,-,.  .,... ,.\nKootenay\nPluntbiHg&JIeating Co.lti\nT.S. JEMSON\n351 BAKER STREET      PHONE 666\nSteam, Hot Water & Hot Air Heating\nPlumbing Installations & Supplies\nGET  SET  FOR\nHAPPY   VACATION\nMOTORING!\nDrive in, before you go anywhere\n. . . make sure your car responds\nto your every command! Competent\nmechanic on duty, to help you.\nACCESSORIES\n& TIRES'\nCheck your vacation car needs,\ntoo! Everything\nfor Summer driving comfort!\nL:\u00a3flf\nNELSON TRANSFER\n.Company, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped\ngarage in the Interior of British Columbia <\n35  PHONE* 35\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_04_17","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0425452","@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":"1951-04-17 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1951-04-17 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\/1.0425452"}