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(jr. Kootenay West.\n{ tSi'jr ltp:Zx  ''.:'*\/,-\u25a0' .1 ''\u25a0\"-' .-'\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0-\noAinsworlh,. wharf repairs $500..',.\n,    Arrow; \/Park   East renewal of\n#s^.|a._oo''.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;.\u25a0:, \u25a0     .-.-.\u2022; ,\".\".,, .\n1 .jAijro'fy.pirlllWie.s*, new plles'$200.\nBurton, wharf repairs $500.  , ;<?. s\n\u25a0rawfbrd-'-Bay,** wharf ..repairs\nI *#\u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0' ,   '\u25a0-   *\n'Peer ._!_r_, wharf repairs '$16,000,\nEast Robson, wharf repairs $2500.\n?_i_qiiiers.'float reri.w'al'512,000\nJohnson's Landing, wharf recon-\ni.ifruc.lpn$H,0d0,      \"**,   '\".*-\n*'JCo_n.rej_, flbat repairs $00\n-Cootehay Bay, float repairs $500.\n*nw\nPROVINCIAL.,\nLIBRAfi\n^\n190| -^;\/Fifty l^arg of Party fetvfce to the Kootenay-Boundary \u2014 195?\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Cloudy with scat-.;'\ntered showers rain or snow. Little\nchange ln temperature. Light winds.\nLow and high at Cranbrook 28 and \u25a0\n40 Crescent Valley and Bevelstok..\n82 and 42.\n\u00ab?._.\n1 Nakusp.\n$18,<KKV  ' -., \"v.\nN-kusp,' moo;\n(Departmental) >\nNelson  Mooring l\u00bb,   .'-..\npiles $7(_),       \u2022'-\"        - . \"\nRenata, wharf repairs $_.\n,; Strickland   Point,   float *K\n$itiofl.- ' \u25a0:\u2022\u2022\u25a0 \u2022\u2022- .\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0' \u25a0\nArrow Lakes, drift .'removal $2000.\nColumbia River Narrows, remove^, of.gravel bajf $5000.      ..'.\nDuncan Riveri channel maintenance $5000.       '* ;\nKootenay River and Lake, snogging and drift removal $1500.       *\nr4'S0\nME-SON.BrO.,CANAPA.rMOW)AYMOiR*NINa MARCH 31,1952-\nNo. 288'\n*v\n\u25a0w?&\nPo V\n2UMAN WON'T BE\nItfrican Racial\nchallenged parliament's authority, to\npass laws. Anyway, he said, tffe\nSouth Africa., Act,.\u2014 the JJnloitfs\ncohsUtution t, is an act of: the British parliament.        \u25a0-,*'\u25a0 .\nThe \u25a0\u2022 United Party -countered that\n,-he . ,et. was written by South -_f.\nricans and'accepted without change\nby the feritish parliament; that Uie\ncourt's rejectlSn took place only be\ncause Malan's.legislation was passed by a bare majority instead of the\nrequired two-thirds.    .\nOpposition legislators warn the\nbloodshed and revolution, may lie\nahead if Malan tries to apply the\nlaw outlawed by the courts; \u2022\nSporadic outbreaks already have\noccurred.     .'*. .**    v.;-.- .\"*:',. :\"\u25a0 ';-\nMalan's lje~dnilli.st -Party, su*.\nress.arosr *_rbh. its-' pfo__ii__'!6f\n\"Apartheid.'*'<vhich'.riveani?\"BetHhg\nthe whites apart from non-whites\nat ell leVels. Their policy Implied\nwhite,, black, and colored \u2666compartments ahd sub-cpmparimen_i with\nUie Whites as paternal guardians of\nUie color bars and the whole variegated society.  ....... .       j\n..;.'\/:.. ,   By Arthur o'avshqn '   .\n\u25a0,\u201e_\u25a0 ; ^APETOWN,:March 30 (AP)--Ugly .shadows of .racial\nStrife hang oyer South Africa; today. The Nationalist\" GoVem-\niinen .'sidetorminatiori to battle the courts and the constitution\nqn behalf of \"White supremacy haS iplit .this country into\ningry, bitter camps.    . ~  ----\nZ-Opponents of Prime Minister\nDaniel P. Malan cry\".fyizil\" at- him\nbut; he* has hardened his policies\n\u2022gainst both whites and non-whites,\n(ijj'i foe-ral-minded \u2022 whites* have\nlaunched an all-out fight against\nwhat they say is a government- cf-\n-tbit. to side-step the constitution;\nipmrissentful \u2022 non-whites have\nniMe.secret plans to defy the country's strict race la*v_.\n.\";That\u201e_\" the picture today dn the\nEolith \u2022 African. people, celebrating\nthe'-SOOth anniversary of the first\nWhite, settlers and afraid of what\ntbm'pww niay bring. -\n\u25a0 Oravest crisis \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0-.:.\u25a0\n: Thfre' Is little doubt that. South\nAfrfci is- facing .'her. gravest jj'risis\nsince,*, four, war-bruised British colonies Joined to form amodern state\n*2. years ago; \u25a0 '.\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n. Itls'a land where Negroes, Asiatics and those known  as Cape\nColored \u2014 people pf mixed racial\norigin \u2014 outnumber the whites by\nMOO\/WO to'2,50.,000. -'...-....,:-.,'.'-.\u25a0 ..\n\" R_cJal unrest has been troublesome for n long time; events piled\nnip quickly last .week to heighten\n\u2022tt\u00abjidi\u00abR\u00abilties;,- \u25a0:- '\ngftutli Africa's highest\u2022i.ourt nil*\ned.that orieof Malan's most, important racial* laws was against the con*\nJjia^tlori', Thl? law Slished the Vo.\nI right* of sonie 5_,000 Cape Pol-\nid win. .could awing  the..vote\nt Malan's Nationalist lh-about\nj marginal electoral divisions. .  , \u25a0\nfW^T*4!\"R_U\"NO\nMalan struck back, saying his\nhgQv.rnment would not accept 'the\nI court's ruling and would take'away\nJ thtf.eoittt'. \"constitutional right to\nj test the law of.the land.\n]'-;ThB;United Party' under J. ON.\nStrauss'assailed'Malan; This is the*.\npa_ty*of ihe 1-te.Field Marsha, and\nPrime 'Minister,\u201e Jan.   Chrlstiaan\nSprat*.   Sijuth , Africa's   foremost\nCommonwealth statesman. It ls the\npialn' Opposition party, of the Nationalists.-  '-. '- \u25a0\u25a0'-\u25a0 \u25a0'\".\u25a0   .,      \t\n, Under .the law the Cbloreds could\nI J\u00abid .four white',meh-Jto represent\nI themvin p\u00ab(rliamei.t.: this would be\ndone in, a seperate little election.\nI '..fhe ftthiSrs of; the Union, wrote\nI into the 'constitution that only  a\nI tyroithird -perllamftntary - majority\nI eould change two basic \"entrenched\n[.'eto-.e't*\"'': *\u2022'<\t\ni. ,vQne provided that nobody o\u00bbuH\n;li_ jdeprived of the right to vote on\n\u25a0grounds _f any race or color. The\n;6Uier   provided,, eqiial    language\nrights'!or English and Africans.\n\"Hie court i said in its Judgment\nthat' if. the gevefflment arguments\nwere accepted, 'Jews or any other\nracial-group could be deprived of\ntheir votes simply by the recording\nof a bare majority in parliament\nCHALLENGE\nMalan   retorted   that the, ijourt\nNixed Reactions\np0 Years A&o\nin Kootenay\nand Boundary:\nW, C. Morris, assistant manager\nind general counsel of Uie Republic\nand Grand Forks railway, is a guest\nat, the Hume. In speaking about his\nroad last evening he said, \"Track\n.is now laid to within nine miles\nof Republic and wUl be completed\nwithin the next Week. In ten days\nwe.wUI be delivering ore in Grand\nForks from whence lt will be taken\nra the smelters of Trail, Nelson and\nGreenwood. . :\".\nOf.course, considerable will be\nbandied in the smelters at Grand\nTbrks; We will transport ore from\nRepublic to Grand Forks and the\nmine owners can elect at what smelter they will have It reduced.\n': .Pretty soon you will see our line\ndelivering hundreds of tons of ore\nmined In Washington to Canadian\nsmelters..Hitherto, the shoe has been\nph. the other foot and thousands of\ntons o, ore mined in the Kootenays\nl h*s been sent to the States for treatment. These inequalities always\nright themselves in time. We expect\nto bring many thousands of dollars\np profit to the smelters from the\nother side,-as there are large reserves of ore in the mines of the\nRepublic at^d vicinity, which are\nwaiting our arrival to be shipped,\nWe will have our opening ceremonies and excursion from Grand\nFoj-ks to Republic on April 12th.\"'\n(From* the pages of the Nelson\nMiner of 1902.)\nLONDON. March. 30 (CP)\u2014Europeans greeted with surprise, regret\nand a slight case of jitters today\n___sldeht Truman's announcement\nthat he will not seek re-election.\nSome were surprised at his voluntary reUrement because they hid\ncome tb regard him as a scrapper'.\nSome were regretful because they\nregarded him as one of their\nchampions-in plumping for overseas\naid. Some were nervous that it\nmight lead to a change in United\nStates foreisn policy.\nMixed with these feelings was\nthe caution of Euronean official*\ndom. They traditionally keep out of\nU.S. Internal policies.\nIn London. British officials warmly praised Truman's determination,\noften In the face of fierce domestic\ncriticism, to help forge the Atlantic\ndefence community.\nIn France. Gen. Dwlght D. Eisenhower, a prospective Republican\nnominee for president, greeted the\nnews with silence, In seclusion at\nhis villa five miles from his headquarters outside Paris.\nThe, French Were less reticent.\nThey were sorry to hear that T_u-\nman is leaving the White House.\n,..,,  LEEDOM, . 8, astud-\nent at Seattle University, died of\nan Injection, of bacterlally-con-\ntamlnated blood given during an\nexperiment connected with war1\nreiearoh. He iwas one of 40\nvolunteers taking part\/ In the\nProject to find better means of\npreserving whole blood longer\nthan 21 days.\u2014Central Press Canadian.   .-\n'NEW CARBURETOR\nNOTNEW-PROF.\nTORONTO, March 30 (CP).\u2014Professor E. A. Allcut, head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at University of Toronto, said\ntonight that amazing claims'for a\nnew Carburetor are \"not new but\nvery dangerou?.\"\n.Professor Allcut said the gadget\ndescribed has been used'in experiments at universities for years ahd\nwould give \"at the most, a five or six\nper cent Increase in' efficiency.\"   :\nThe claims were' dangerous because publication of. them without\nscientific corroboration in Uie.past\nhas sometimes led people to invest\nmoney which they did not get back.\nThe Inventor, George Hastings,\nclaimed1 that his carburetor breaks\ndown gasoline to aA atomized state.\nProfessor Allcut said: \"Atomising\nhas nothing to do with developing\nthe latent atmlc power ln gasoline.\nFor this, a much greater atomic\nplant than this Inventor would have,\nWould, be necessary.\"   '\nAtomizing\u2014which means the g<u\noline is very finely divided*\nImprove distribution to\ners and how Is used ii\nmany airc._ft engines,\nThe   professor* said\nclaims Mr; riiW carl''\nbeen made for ydapis\nthey were, checked thi\ned false.    .'. .' .\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\n\"Rod Shoe-^tdr \u25a0 W\nMay Go, Fishing     ,-'\nWhile at Victoria \u25a0\n, VICTQIUA, B.C., March 30 (CP'\n\u2014Red-haired Moira Shearer, prima\nballerina of Sadler's Wells- Ballet\nCompany, was in Victoria today to\nrelax while her writer-husband\nLudovic fishes pn the Cowlchan\nRiyer* next week.\nThe distinguished visitors are\nguests of Lieutenant-Governor and\nMTs. Clarence Wallace at Govern\nment House. They arrived by plane\nyesterday evening frqm California,\nwhere Miss Shearer has just completed a picture in Hollywood bf the\ntrilogy, \"Three Lpves;\"\nAlthough.her husband is a keen\nfisherman, the star of: the famous\nballet \"Red.Shoes'\" has neve, gone\n-Ish'iii'g.iri'her liK.'.\".'\" .\". ZiZ'i\n\"Irtay gel Upthe.bburage to. tfy\nit buC;shWSaid;'\"I.ut I'm hot m__-\ning any promises. I just want to put\nmy feet up and relax.\"\ntlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n2-Year-Old Mishap\nVictirn Leaves\nHospital - Blind\nVANCOUVER, March 30 (CP).-\nTwo-year-old Cora Dezwarts, who\nsurvived a car-train crash that took\nUie lives.of her parents and two\nbrothers, is oiit pf hospital.\nBut she'Is blind and may never\nsee again. She suffered a fractured\nskuU and an optic nerve was injured.\nDaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.\nWalter Defwarts, who came from\nHolland a year ago, she was Injured\nwhen her father's.tar crashed into\na train near Chilliwack, Feb. 3.\nA brother, nine-year-old Peter,\nand a sister, 13-year-old Anja, sur*\nvlved the crash.\nA Chilliwack committee has raised $5300 as a trust-fund to educate\nand care for the orphan trio.\nMartial Law Clamped\nDown on Tehran\nTEHRAN, March 30 (AP) \u2014\nIran's government today decreed\nmartial law., for Tehran for a\nmonth to tstave off a recurrence\nof Friday's rioting In which at\nleast five persons were killed and\nmore than 200 Injured.\nThe ruling banned meetings of\nmore than three persons-and\nplaced the capital under a dusk\nto dawn curfew-.   ' \u25a0\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nFARMER'S _^RBURftbR INVENTION\nWOULD GIVE 200 MILES TO GALLON\nNEW LISKEARD,-;6nt., March*30 (CP)-George Hastings, 40-\nyear-old crippled farmer, says, he has Invented a carburetor which\nhe claims will enable an automobile to trtvel up to 200 miles on a\n. Ballon pf gasoline. The average car goes about 18 to 20 miles on a\ngallon,  ... ... \u25a0'-\u25a0\u25a0,\n_ Representatives' ;of three oil companies, a bank manager and\nMayor w J, Ban.attended a recent demonstration of the carburetor.\n..\u25a0','.\"MS-Hastings said he\" has worked on his invention since 1045.\nIt la still unpatented:-'\n_ The inventor said the carburetor breaks down gasoUne'to an\natomized state. The 'carburetor is, about, the same size and weight\nof a.standard one,and could be used with variations on aircraft as\nwell as on automobiles.\n;,;New;Li.skeard)i5.55 miles South \"of Kirkland Lake.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'lllllllllll.lllll.ll Illlllllllllilinillliilllllllllllll\nPrevent\n27 itt Bre\nSTOUFFVILLE, Ont., March 30 (CP) - Two heroic\nnurses aides early tpday prevented panic among 27 crippled\nand near-blind elderly patients before they were rescued\nfrom the _hjrd floor of thsj, smoke-filled Brier Bush private\n~~~- \" hospital\nFirst Underwater\nStrike Ends . ;>\nGENOA, Italy, jiarch Sfc(Reuters)\n\u2014Th* world's first, underwater,\nstrike ended Saturday night In victory tor the strikers.\ni .^hlrty-eight wo.kerji.iOir a new\npier..project stopped \"Work Friday.\nadd by turns climbed down Into two\nqoh-rtrucUon ehamb_rs, BO feet below water level and ventilated with\ncompressed afr,   ,'        - '.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nThe strike ended when the management agreed to discuss the Work-\ners' grievances.   ........\nThe patients, .rapped oh the top\nfloor, were carried down ladders to\nsafety by Uxbridgeand Stouffville\nfiremen, assisted by ciUzens on their\nway to morning church service.\nSix of the patients were made ill\nby. the smoke which came frbm a\nsmall fire in the basement of the\nhospital, a converted house on the\nlimits of this village, 30 miles northeast of Toronto.\n\\Fire Chief Del Jennings credited\nPirses aides Lois King, 17,. and\nHelen Grose, 35, wiih keeping the\npatients, many of whom rahged in\nage from 75 to 90, calm and quiet\nuntil they were cajried out\nPRE8II.ENT' TRUMAN\nMHJB Killed, 3 Wounded li.\no Juvenile Gang Fight\nImmigrant Ban Asked\nVANCOUVER, March 30 (0P)\n\u2014The United 'Fishermen- arid\nAllied Workers Union (T.L.C.) Is\ndemanding that Canada * bar Immigrants, until all Canadians are\nemploye^.\nA resolution passed - at the\nunion's, annual convention here\nalso urged the government to\nmake \"such changes' 'In International policy to allow full\nemployment of all workers In\nCanada. It It being tent to Prime\nMinister 8t. Lauren . the Federal\nLabor Department and the T.radei\"\nand Labor Cengreti of Canada,'\nRIOTS.\n[IG.ER,. March- .30 (AP). \u2014\n'ijiobt of\" Moroccans ran\ntl-French' demonttra-\n|jla North African Inter-\ni today. At least six\n'.lied and. several\nIn the rock add\nBus Kills 65 SF\nCASA GRANDE,\n80 (AP)\u2014Seven pati\ninjured and \u00a75 head |\nedijoday when an\nLlnet but overturn\nning into a herd ofi\nhighway 18 mllet west!\nJED\n(PO (CP)^-T(ie\n; Melton, Oht,\n5,600,000 oon-\n[locations and\n: Orenda let\n|hter Jet and\n\" o  Defence\nannoune-\n*    8AN   FftANCI_CO,   March  SO\nCAP) .\u2014 A Ji-venlle\/gang.feud\nerupted * In- gunfire early, today,\n, , leaving, two youtlwdead and three\n-mieiiiftyotibHpir*A $\u25a0 \u25a0-\u2122\nThe dead iire Norman Bothelb,\n20, and Andrew unburn, 19. - *\nJames Bennett, 21; Thomas Hln-\nan, 20, and James Erlckson, 21,\nWere wounded.\nInspector Al Nelder said Robert\nA. Ranson, 19, admitted firing the\nshots.\n. Ranson wat charged with suspicion of murder and suspicion of\nattempted murder.\nNelder said Hanson told him he\nwent to the annual Butchers' Ball at\nCivic Auditorium Saturday night\n\"for a good time, with a couple of\nmembers of 'the Portola mob'.\" Also\nat the ball were members of other\nyouthful .\"gangs.\"\nRanson, who carried a loaded .45-\ncalibre automate in a shoulder holster, told Uie Inspector he had several drinks at the ball.\nNelder said Ranson continued his\nstory:\n\"I heajd these Fillmore mob guys\nhad been' looking for me, so I Went\nup to this guy Bothelo and called\nhim outside,\n\"I said, 'I hear you been lookln'\nfor me. Let's have it out in the park.'\n\"He says, 'All right.'\n\"He brought 15 or 20 of his guys\nalong. \u2022 I don't even, know him by\nname. He had glasses on, I know.\nMy friends, six or seven, come\nalong.\"\nThe youths met In Civic Centre\nPlaza, shortly after midnight .Two\ngirls Were present\n\"There were so many of them,\ntrying to get behind me, I took out\nmy gun,\" Ranson codtlnued. \"Onfe\nJoker had his coat off, figuring to\nthrow it at me, over my head, A guy\nwas kind of edgin' around my side.\nI told, him to freeze. Ho did.\"\nThe two girls, sensing trouble,\ngot behind Ranson..One girl grabbed\nhim by the arm. He shook her off\nand cried to the other youths: \"Who\nwants it first?\"\nNobody took him seriously and\nBothelo said \"Put ddwn that gun\nand I'll take you.\" ,\nRanson said one \"guy edged up\nclose\" and he shot him; \"I turned\nahd tried, tb run ';*';.'. I couldn't stop\nshoot, h,\" .'\"'\u2022 .*',.'*,-'\n.* RansonSflftct- 'end fook: a--bus*Ue\n\u2022Daly City; .sbiijlt. ojt-Sah. FranciScft\nwhere'tioliee'\"found'him. \"\"\"\"\"J **\"'\nThey, topkhlm to Uie hospital,\nwhere* the wounded HInmbn took:\none \"lock tad said: \"Thats the guy\nWho shot us.\"\nPEOPLE OF SPOKANE\nACCEPT'MONSTER'\nSPOKANE, March 30 (AP)'\u2014The\n\"apnsterV.has been here Just-about\na. year now. and the people of \"The\nFriendly City\" . are, over their\nqualms and have adopted it as one\nof their own.\n\u2022Hie monster is the biggest thing\nof its kind ever built \u2014 the B-36\nPeacemaker bomber. It's also the\nbiggest noise maker that ever hit\ntown.\nThe fearsome B-38, American's\nforemost atom bomb carrier, has 10\nengines and the vibration -. has\nraised goose flesh, trembled windows and rattled dishes In Spokane\ncupboards.\nKOREA CASUALTIES\nOTTAWA, March 30 (CP) - The\nArmy today Issued its 100th casualty list of Uie Korean war, reporUng\none soldier killed in acUon and\neight wounded in action. The last\nlist was issued two days ago.\nReported killed in action was Pte.\nWiUiam John Fawler of Uie 1st\nBattalion. Princess Patricia's Canadian! Light Infantry, of Toronto. He\nwas injured in action last October.,\nHis next-of-kin ls his father,\nGeorge Fowler, of Toronto.\nThe latest list brings to 748 the\ntotal number of Canadian casualties reported from Korea, including\n140 dead, 540 wounded, 81 injured,\nfour missing and one man reported,\nprisoner of war.\nB.C. wounded:,\nBuxton, Richard George, Sgt.; 1st\nBattalion. Princess Patricia's Canadian Light.Infantry; Victoria, Mrs,\nOrion.F. Buxton (wife) Melfort,\nSask, \/\nWATERS RECEDE\nTraffic Not\nBack to Norma I\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., Mareh\n30 (CP)\u2014Spring-thaw fed South-\n\\ ern and Central Alberta creeks\nwhich began rampaging over their\nbankt Thursday causing heavy\nproperty damage, leaving 30 persons homelett and disrupting rail\nand read traffic tonight were reported to be subsiding.\nBut*the end of.the trouble was\nnot evident\nRail and road traffic, ls still pot\nback to, normal .New road bed\nwashouts have been reported. Two\nfiremen In the. Medicine Hat .area\nhad a brush with.,a, watery death\nand the weatherman predicted\nwaifm weather will continue to melt\npiled-up Winter imow\nWASHINGTON, March 30 (AP)\nCharles E.. Wilson. Quit, today,\nmobilization boss because President\nTruman sided with his wage board\ninstead of Wilson In a disagreement\nover how best to ..avert a crippling\nsteel strike.\nWilson, in a tart letter of resigns*\ntibn submitted Friday and made\npublic today, said he could not \"accept public responsibility\" for Government actions ln the steel dispute,\n\"which I cannot control.\"\nTruman accepted the reslgnaUon,\neffective Monday.\nTruman told Wilson he does not\nregard as unreasonable the proposals for settling, the.steel wage\ncontroversy, and said they do not\n\"constitute any real* breach in our\nwage stabilization policies.\"\nOTTAWA. March 30 (CP) \u2014 Defence Minister Howe today expressed regret at the resignation of\nCharles E. Wilson, as. United States\ndirector of defence mobilization.\nHe ssid that not only was MrJ\nW'son a \"good colleague but a personal friend.\" , \u25a0\nU. S. President Says He\nHas Done Duty in v\n7 Years in White House\n-WASHINGTON, March 30 (AP)-President Trumaja\nannounced Saturday night he will not be a candidate for reelection. , \" ; \u2022'\nThe historic pronouncement, before 5000 Democratic\npoliticians at an annual party dinner, came as an off-the-cuff\ninterpolation in his prepared address, which had contained\n\u25a0no intimation of his intentions. Millions heard the tinnouncer:\nment by radio and television. \u25a0' *\n1        A chorus of \"noes\" from the diners greeted Truman'*\nstatement that he will not ac-\nParked outtlde the police station In Danvert, Man., It the\narmored truck^f the.lf.8. Trucking. Co>poratlbn, from which threa\nunmasked .baijdltt looted $600,000 in cam. The big haul wat mads\nWhile the three guards of the truck were enjoying aandwlchet and\ncoffee In a Danvert drug itore. The getaway car ef the banditt wat\nfouMabartdenedJn Everett,^Mat^&i mllet from the scene of the\nrobbery.\u2014Central Preet Canadian.\nNew Sales Group\nFor Island Growers\nNANAlMO; B.C., March 30 (CP).\n\u2014More.than 300 Vancouver Island\nvegetable and- potato growers have\nbroken away from the B.C. Marketing Organization and will set up\ntheir own sales staff.\nA meeting last night set up k di*\nrectorate Which-is expected to be\nconfirmed within three months. The\nnew sales organization will be called\nIsland Vegetable cooperative Association. \t\nGrowers on the island feel they\nhave a better quality product Ulan\ncompetitors on the mainland and\nhave been agitating for a long time\nto gain control'over their own affairs.. .\u2022'\u25a0''; I *\nThe split wasdescrlbed as amicable. \u25a0 \u25a0-.-\u25a0,..-.     :,;\nNEW HIGHWAY BRIDGE TO\nBE! BUILT NEAR DUNCAN\n1 VICTORIA, B.C.* March SO (CP)\u2014\nThe; old Wagon Bridge;-or White\nBridge, * on Uie .Island Highway.\nSouth of Duncan will be blown up\nnext week to make way for construction bf a new bridge.\nBARGE REFLOATED    .\nVANCOUVEH. March 30 (CP).-\nOfflclals pt ther-B-C' Bridge and\nDredging Company reported* today,\na' comp_Jly Barge\" and the \"tugboat\nLa'MSrs, which was towing if, have\nbeen refoated after going aground\nduring a snowstorm;.40 miles from\nKemano.   ',: .   \u25a0 >_\nHERO FATHER DIES\nMERftITT,  B.p.; , March  30 \u2014\nWalter  8chmldt  died   today   of\nburns  received, In- rescuing   hit\n\u2022five.children from ttje.r burning\n\"home Thursday.       \"v-   -\n\"\u25a0 '\u25a0:'\".\u25a0'.\"'' *>_     '*.\ncept a renomination.\nAt a reception today Truman told\nfellow Democrats he will work \"Just\nas enthusiastically\" for the Demo\ncratic Ucket this year \"as if I were\non it\"- He said he was sure the\nDemocrats would pick a winner\nand added:\n\"I. will be in there just the same\nas if I were the nominee.\"\nTruman's- announcement touched\noff a free-for-all scramble today for\ntho Democratic presidential nomination. :. \u2022 . \u25a0 .\nDemocrats predicted the party's\nJuly nominating convention will be\nwide open, although they, looked for\nTruman to take no back seat role\nin the choice of a nominee.\nThe announcem _ftt caught off base\neven those who had been predicting\nhe would bow out of the picture.\nThe immediate effect was to step\nup the Campaigns of Senator Est_s\nkefauver, of Tennessee and Senator\nRichard B. Russell, of Georgia, pre*\nviously avowed candidates for the\nnomination, and it brought Senator\nRobert S.;Kerr of Oklahoma for,\nmally Into the rade. \u2022\nKerr previously had sala he would\nbe a candidate only,if Truman stepped aside.-.The Oklahoman is match-\ndagaihst \u2022\u25a0Kefai'ver ip Tuesday's\nNebraska presldentia,! primary,\n(ttt'lTUDEUNKNOWN\" 'ZZ:\nTrtimani however; has yet' to give\nany kind of a public nod to Kerr,\nand he is reported to be cool to\nKefauver's candidacy. -Russel  was\npersuaded tp'run; by anU-Truman\nSoutherners whose prlipary bbjec*\ntive was to keep Truman from be.\nIng re-elected if he decided to _un.\nTruman has neither denied nor\nconfirmed published reports that his\nown. choice for the nomination is\nGovernor Adlai Stevenson of Illinois. Stevenson sat just, six places\nremoved from Truman at Saturday\nnight's dinner, and was- nearly mob\nbed by reporters and photographers\nwho rushed to his side the moment\nTruman's announcement came,\nObviously enjoying the hub-hub\nStevenson reiterated.that he Is a\nCandidate only for another tern)\nat governor and  has \"no other\nambitions.\"    But,    when    asked\nwhether he would consider becoming a White Houte candidate,\nStevenson replied:\n\"I'll crois that \"bridge when\ncome to It.\"\nSenator Hubert Humphrey (Dem.-\nMlnn.) said he talked to Stevenson\nshortly before Truman's announcement and was convinced the Illinois\ngovernor \"never. will seek the\nnomination.\" Humphrey added,\nhowever, that he is \"equally sure\nhe would not turn it down If it were\ntendered to him.\"\nTruman made his announcement\nwith every appearance of calmness.\nHe told a reporter there ls no\nchance \"whatsoever\" he will change\nhis mind and run,\nIN TEARS ; -\nMrs. Truman has always expressed a hope to be back in Indepen,\ndence, Mo, after her husband announced t- the first president since\nCalvin Coolidge to do so \u2014 thst he\nwas relinquishing Uie White House\nof his own accord, Mrs. Truman\nsaid:\n\"Anything he says goes.\"\nTruman made his announcement\nafter a scathing assault on what he\ncalled Republican \"holier-than-\nthou\" pracUees and a prediction that\nUie Democratic candidate \u2014 \"whoever he mdy be\" '\u2014 will be elected\nnext November.\n-Reading from  hit  own   handwritten notes In a leather-covered\ncopy of hit speech, Truman tald:\n\"I shall not be a candidate for\nre-election.\n\"I have terved my country long\n\u2014 and, I think, effeclently and\nhonestly. '  ,:;\n\"I .shall net accept a renon.lh.ik\ntion.\n\"I do not feel that It It my duty\nto ipend another four years In the\n' White Hbuie,\".   ..   \u2022\u25a0. .    \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0.\nTruman, 67, who succeeded to5tj\u00ab\npresidency *upon the death , at\nFranklin D. Roosevelt and wqn tn#\npresidency In his own right in 1049,\nmade his announcement after seven\nyears and 79 days In, the White\nHouse. \u25a0    -. \u201ei'   , .\nPresidential Secretary Joseph\nShort later told reporters that Truman decided \"about a week ago*!\nto make an announcement to the\ndiners.\nTruman's announcement cama\nwith suddenness near the end of hla.\nspeech. It climaxed months ofspi\u00ab\nculaUon during which newspapeV\nmen and political figures had tried\nrepeatedly and without success j&\nlearn his poliUcal Intentions.',   \u25a0'.' '\nIn Portland, Ore., Margaret Troi\nman, there for a singing concert,\nsaid Saturday night* the announcement was ** .io surprise\" to her; \/\n\"I've known, about it before and\nI' learned this afternoon that ho\nwas going to make the: announce.\nment tonight,\" she said.* :,-\u25a0\u2022, ,;;- i\nTruirlante speech; , featuring'\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022 \u2022\nslashing attack, .on the .Republican.,\nParty and its candidate's eVt'r'sihea\nthe beginning of the New Deal, appeared to be his over-aU summary\nof what he\".regards as the .accomplishments', of the New Deal and\nhis own \"Fair Deal!\" ......   , - \u25a0\"-.\nTruman let fly with a eounter-at-;\ntack on the Issues of corruption\nand Communism In government. Be\nsaid that on both Uie' Republicans\nwill try to fool the voters wltl\\ a\n\"white is blatk\" type pf campaign.\nHONEST\nAs for honesty in\" government\nTruman said be has probably dono\nmore than any. other president tn\nreorganize the government-'-'___(\u2022\niently and to extend the civil service system. -\nOn Communists - _n - government\nchar*ges, Truman said:        \u25a0 \u25a0;\n\"The real test of antl-Commun- \u2022\nism \"is whether we are willing 'tn\ndevote our resources and our\nstrength to stopping Communist aggression and saving free people\nfrom its horrible tyranny. , That\nkind of anti - Communism takes\nmoney and courage \u2014 not Just\ntalk ....\n\"I say to you, In all seriousness,\nbeware of those who pretend to be\nso violently anti-Communist in this\ncountry, and at the same time vote\nto appease Communism abroad. -In\nmy book, that is talking out of both\nsides of the mouth at once; and I\ndon't think the American people\nare going to be taken ln by-it\"\nOTTAWA, March .30. (CP). \u2014\nPresident Truman't announcement that he will not again be a\ncandidate for office wat received with restrained Interest In Ottawa.\nNone of Canada's political leaders had any public comment to\nmake. If they had any special\nthoughts on the subject and What\nIt may mean In the next-United\nStates presidential election they\nwere keeping them to themtelVes,\nThis Is In keeping with the generally accepted rule that what\nhappens politically In the United\nStates It that country's own business, Just as what happens en the\nCanadian political tcene It regarded at Canada's business alone.\nHowever, most political leadert\nhere seemed agreed that Canada will continue to enjoy good\nrelations with her big Southern\nneighbor no matter who becomss\nprejldent or what political paHy\nholds sway across the border,\nAnd in This Corner...\nHAVRE, Mow., March 30 (AP)\u2014George Lapat didn't want to take\na chance on getting through a large puddle of water In the road. So\nhe wheeled hit car off the road to by-patt It. !_T\nLapat swam out of the tlx-foot-deep water-filled ditch.\n'       LONDON, March 30 (Reuters)-The Junior Chamber of Commerce\nin Napier, New Zealand thinks 22 minutes and 15 seconds Is a Ion*\ntime to take In finding a needle in a haystack. ;T\nIt figures to Improve on the time, set recently by a London nurse\nBrltato\"  \u25a0aunchlng the National Needle Arts Bureau sewing week ta-\n-.. \u2022    The New Zealand haystack'hunters plan to try the same competition to open a trade fair at Napier.\nThey will use a three-inch darning needle, fcilded to distinguish\nit from ordinary needles. , a    \"\n.,. pARI|, March 30 (Reuters)\u2014A cartoon In the Paris newspaper\nL'Aurore Saturday thowt two young lovert strolling In the park.    . .\nSays hel Tu m'almes?'' (Do you like me?) - .  *\n\u25a0 Says the: \"I like Ike.\" \u2022\n \u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\nDQHA6er)\n2 ~-NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1952\nBACK BY POPULAR DEMAND\nRebooked because of the hundreds turned away during\ny it's CURTAIN AT 8.30 engagement.\n_\u00ab\u2022\n-int.-\n\u00abfirst!\nTHED-HAS \"\n\" NtV_\u00abB_eN\nMOTION PICTUM\n\u2022   tlKI...\n. So brealhlaklngly\nDIFFERENT\nSo thrilling!\/\nBEAUTIFUL\ncoio_ iy TECHNICOLOR starring\n\u2022ANTON WALBROOX \u2022 MARIOS GORING \u25a0 MOIRA SHEARER \u2022\nlMppl^.Umtliim'ldMtumm.tmmtA.UmiMM\nf nun, Min. ui D___ tr tiki, P__ ul Knit _S_m\n-.   \u00bbr___>_n,ij_,_._ii__._u.rn__B\u00ab.____\u25a0__,__\u00bb\n* Extra on the Same Programme\nLgt.it World Newi \u2014 Cartoon in Color\nTonight\nTuesday\nc\/wc\n7.00\n9.00\nHERE AI REGULAR PRICES\nNelsonite Candidate . . .\nJaycees (o Seek More Emphasis\nOn Kwlenay in Tourist Publicity\nCan Build Homes for Under\n$1000 Down; Jaycees' Told\nCould you afford a three-bedroom houte at $6080 er a two-bedroom\none at $5300 It the down payment wat only $J000 and payment* toread\never 80,'yeartf   <_\u25a0\u25a0,*. \u2022'*...; \u25a0 ' -      \u25a0        .\n, A contracting firm that hat become Interested In Nelion effort!\nto launch a low coat housing' project here tayt It hat built hornet In\nBlairmore ahd Sparwood on that basis.\nOver 100 families have Indicated their desire to participate In a\nhomo ownership project In Nelson. There Is also Interest, but on a\n.letter,   batlt,   In    m_r\u00bb   rental \u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0-*\u2014rrfi\u2014: n\u2014\u2014\naccommodation, ..;' ...*'\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'\"\n. In .Blairmore,  there  existed \"an\nacute housing shortage similar to\nthat, in Nelson. The people needed\nhomes, but' ca_h available for down\npayments were below that required.\ni Nevertheless a scheme was developed in Blairmore arid Sparwood,\nand homes are being built;\nTheir project \u25a0 homes range in\nprice from (9300 for a two-bedroom\nhouse, to (6060 for three bedrooms,\nHli price provides a home built\n\"entirely in accordance with N.H.A.\nrequirements\"; 'full concrete basement, furnace, floor covering, kitchen cabinets, full plumbing and\npainted to the occupants wish.\n'Down payment required li (1600\nor less.\nIn Vaneou.ver three-bedroom\nhomes are being oftered at 11780\ndown and a full price of $8900.\nThese homes offer many extras,\nopen fire places, Mr, and Mrs. closets, and others, lt has been pointed\nout during the course of the jaycee\nhousing need survey.\nWould-be home owners have expressed ' the feeling that what is\npossible in other centres ihould be\nfeasible here. '\nA meeting of prospective owners,\ncontractors, finance men, Central\nMortgage and Housing Corporation\nofficials is planned; for the near future by the Jaycee housink committee.\nPremier Assures Slocan of Place\nIn talks on District Power Needs\nTRAIL,,.'j_,C.-rrjraefc Morgan of\nNelson was .nominated for the pc\nfiUoB of next-reglohal vice presl-\n<_git of. ;?..,, Jaycees at a district\nnfteltng -in -   -Rossland    Saturday\nrnMnp,-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0-':'\u25a0 \u25a0;;\n\"^\u2022^bpti .'of Trail, '.Nelson\" and\nMd?, Juriiora  Chambers . dis-\n['\u2022hftttrfB' of Import -O the dls-\n__W; following, a dinner. Regional\nDirector   Don   Brown,   chairman,\nI the Chambers to set up com-\n,-\u00abs who would take an Interest\n|n*w Immigrants to this country,\nnvite them Into Junior Chamber\nppshlp and activity, and in every\n!.possible.assist them in adapt-\n,' themselves to the ways of the\nritry. -\nhe  B.C.    immigration   officer\nlild be supplying names of these\nS** Canadians\n\u2022fOOTENAY* NEQl-ECTED ,,.\nit A lengthy discussion on encour-\njWnjf t^iiristi to come and stay for\nir-.time was entered Into. It was\npqlhted out that considerable publicity, wai given coast areas by the\ngovernment While the Kootenays\nneglected ln this regard. A\nmotion was approved that a Joint\nc6mp_Itt.ee.be setup of the three Ju*\nnior,.Chambers to cooperate, with\nthe senior bodies in working on\ntourism for the district.\n.Better accommodation for tourists In this district was one point\nstressed as a means of holding Uie\nvisitor;\".\nBill Her. reported that. 30 B.C.\nChambers   to   far   heard   from\nwould be represented at the pro\nvlnclal convention In June to be\nheld In Trail. Af well there would\nbe repretentatrvet from Alberta,\n8 a t k atehewan,   Manitoba   and\nSpokane, and White Horse, Yukon. A caravan of 80 wai expected\nfrom the Wett coast.\nBesides the B.C. final oratorical\ncontest to be held in Trail during\nthe convention there also will be\nheld the Western Canada final oratorical^ . contest... with the winner\n\"going to Banff to compete in the\nCanadian final at the national convention there ln June.    ,\nThe Jaycees ended their district\nmeeting with a bowling, competition.'     .',,.....,',,...   ,-,, ;.,..;\nSX Moyie, Stranded Near Kaslo;\nFerry\nIJ. Moyie,. veteran sternwheeler\nwhich plies between Procter and\nLardeau once weekly* was rescued\nSaturday after floundering ln choppy waters for four hours.\n. M.V. Anicomb went to her rescue\noff Johnion's Landing after the\nveiiel'i stern wheel shaft had-brok*\n\u2022a.\nTh* mishap occurred at 1 p.m.\nMotori were cut immediately, leaving tht-Moyie   tossing  aimlessly\n. about Kootenay Lake. Strong stormy\nSouth winds' drifted-the vessel dan-\nSLOAN'S\nliniment\nwwmat\/cpam\n___e_m___ pains, as well at\nthose of arthritis, 'sprains or\nbra-sea yield quickly to the\npenetrating, .eoothing hunt of\nBloan't Liniment which actually gets to where the pain Is.\nJust pat it on . .. and Sloan's\n\"deep heat\" dba the retfc\nAt all drug .tone.\nsoe&oc&ot\ngerously toward the North ihore-\nline, but She eventually found shelter in a calmer area.\nM.V. Anscomb left Kootenay Bay\nat 3:49 p.m. arriving .on the scene\nsome.three hours later.\n-. Passengers from the Moyie boarded, launches, leaving only Captain\nNorman MacLeod on board.\n.- -The last of three attempt to toss\na line to the stranded ship, finally\nwas successful. No further damage\nwas caused . during the tow and\ndocking at Procter. The boat was\ndocked by midnight.\nThe 22-foot shaft, nine inches in\ndiameter, will take several weeks\nto replace.\nMeanwhile, SS. Grant Hall will\ntake over the Movie's regular run\nand other lake chores.\nOttawa May Enter\nA.H.L. in'53\nCLEVELAND, March 30 (AP) _-\nOttawa Senators will apply for admission to the American .Hockey\nLeague at the league's next meeting,\nthe Cleveland. Plain Dealer said tonight.\nOttawa il in She Quebec Senior\nHockey League. For years lt had\nteams in the National League and\nhad more Stanley Cup world cham-.\npions than any other city.\nThe Plain Dealer said: \"Tommy:\nGorman,, wealthy Ottawa sports -figure and prominent In hockey for 40\nyears, has written asking the American League to consider taking in his:\nSenators.\"\nIn Ottawa, T. P. (Tommy) Gorman, Senators owner, said he was\napproached with regard to entry in\nthe American Hockey League of his\nclu'b.\nHowever, Mr. Gorman said he has\n'no -comment\" on a report from\nCleveland that the asked the A.H.L.\nto take ln the Senators' at its next\nmeeting. Senators now are In the\nQuebec Senior Hockey League.\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 Discussion\non Kaslo-Slocan riding power needs\nawait recoyery of S. R, Weston, B.C.\nPower Commission chairman, now\nin hospital, Premier Byron Johnson\nhas advised Slocan District Board\nof Trade.\nThe premier was replying to a\ntelegram from the Slocan board* asking that the board ot trade be permitted to participate in discussions.\nPremier Johnson's wire also assured the board pf trade thp't the district would be represented-in these\ndiscussions. .    , \u25a0\nThe wire to the premier signed\nby President A. L. Harris referred\nto a story in the Nelson Daily News\nof March 25, which \"quotes you as\npromising to arrange discussions on\ndistrict power prob-ems.between\nRower Commission an<TWes__Koo-\ntenay' Power Company. Strongly\nurge these discussions be instituted\nearliest possible date and that both\nthis board of trade and the governT\nment be permitted to participate.\"\nThe premier's reply:\n\"News report not entirely correct.\nDuring questioning on floor of\nHouse, I read suggestion from\nmemorandum from B.C. Power\nCommission that a committee re.\npresentative of the residents of the\narea, the .West Kootenay Power and\nLight Company, and the B.C. Power\nCommission be formed to settle the\nwhole power situation in the Slocan\narea.1\n\"I said I felt that there might be\nsome merit In this suggestion, that\nthe government would be pleased\nto look Into the matter, but that\nMr. Weston, chairman B.C. Power\nCommission, was ln hospital at\npresent and a discussion on his proposals could not be held until be\nhad fully recovered.\"\nMISS ZO BROWN\nWINS CRANBROOK\nORATORY CONTEST\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Mount Baker\nHigh School oratory competition,\nsponsored by Cranbrook Knights of\nPythias Lodge, ended with Zo\nBrown Judged champion,; and she\nwill represent Cranbrook at the\nEast Kootenay finals at Creston in\nApril.    \u25ba\n\"Subjeet'ln this international competition this year is Abraham Lincoln, and local competitions lead to\ninternational scholarships after district eliminations. Awarded second\nplace here was Marianne King, and\nthird place went to.Colene Reid.\nAdde dthis year* was a Junior\ncompetition on the topic of British\nColumbia development since 1921).\nWhich will go only to East Kootenay finals. This year's winner wes\nArthur.Marguet        '   .\nCranbrook K.P. Lodge made all\narrangements and Thomas Smith\nwas chairman, with Judging done by\nMayor R. E. Sang. M. G. K.ln_t-\njiamee'and Mn. F. B. Miles.\nThe Weather\nA Pacific storm moved rapidly\nover the British * Columbia coast\nSunday and will be moving across\nthe divide into the Prairies.\nThe-passage of the disturbance\nwas marked by showers of rain and\nsnow along the coast and at exposed\npoints there were Northwest gales.\nMMBttg\nFIRST FOR...\nMILEAGE\nsafbtt\neconomy!\nf'^\/^iii<;ana[ia-the.Voiceof.Tr*rc*tone\n: mow rwii^rB\nSt. Johns.\nHalifax   \t\nMontreal......... ..\nOttawa  _.\nWinnipeg  \t\nLethbridge ._.\t\nCalgary\nEdmonton  .....\nKamloops\t\nPenticton  _\nVancouver ,......._.\nVictoria  ...\nKimberley\".. :.......\nCrescent Valley\nPrince Rupert -. _.\nPrince George ....\nSeattle '.:.;;-.. _,\nPortland j ,...,.....\nSpokane\n29\n25\n28\n22\n3*.\n28\n25\n23\n33\n25,\n32\n27\n16\n37\n43\n33\nLos Angeles ,    64\nSan Francisco  \/ 48.\nChicago          43\nNejv York :.,    38\nWhitehorse I   -B\n.50\n.01\nVancouver Water\nRales to Increase\nVANCOUVER, March 3u (CP) -\nSlashes In department estimates and\nincreases in water rates and various\nfees have been decided on by Vancouver aldermen in efforts to close\na $5,000,000 gap between estimated\nrevenues and expenditures for this\nyear. ?.'\u25a0. * '\nFinance committee chairman\nalderman George Miller reported\nyesterday that estimates of the\nboard of works have been cut by\n$392,000 from the $4,365,000 sought\nby the department.\n, Work board chairman \u2022alderman\nJ. D. Cornett said the reduction will\nmean a slash of 20 per cent in public works and force some staff lay\noHs.\nOther departments to suffer are:\nfire department, cut by $198,000;\nwaterworks operating and maintenance, down $1771,000; library board,\ndown $135,000; park board $200,000;\npublic health, cut by $24,000,\" police\ndepartment, down $75,000; schools,\n$154,000; administration $11,000; electrical department, down $14,000; and\nsocial assistance down $10,000.\nAldermen decided to increase\nwater rates by 10 per cent, retroactive to Jan. 1. This will mean an\naverage increase of $2 tb home\nowners when they get their annual\ntax bills next month,\nMotor vehicle inspection and bicycle registration fees will be Increased from 75 cents to $1, starting\nSept. 1.\n<00 Front Three\nCentres al Final\nReligious Meet\nTRAIL, B.C. \u2014 A successful two\nweek \"Christ for' Trail\" campaign\nwas completed in Trail district with\na service at the Junior High School\nauditorium Friday night Special\nbuses from Nelson and Castlegar\nbrought people In from those districts bringing the attendance to\n600 at the final gathering.\nThe edqlt series followe da successful week of services held particularly for the children, with\nfrom 200 to 400 attending the lasti\nweek:\nThe campaign was sponsored by\nThe Trail District For Christ Council with the cooperation of local\nchurches and other Christian organizations. The main speaker was\nRev. $. M. Jensen, pastor of Centtal\nBaptist Church, Seattle Song leader\nand soloist wis Leland Haggerty of\nSeattle.\nNarrow Escape for\nMembers of Quebec\nLONCi BEACH Calif., March\n(AP) \u2014 March 30 (AP) \u2014 Four of\nthe top personnel of the Canadian\ncruiser Quebec narrowly escaped\ninjury -Saturday night as their rented automobile catapulted off a\nbridge end landed upside down ln\nsix feet of water.\nThe four are Capt Frederick T.\nBurgess, 41, the skipper; Lt-Cmdr,\nJohn R. Rose, 30;,Cmdr. M. H. iLttle,\n381 the ship's chief surgeon, and\nJohn E. McGregor, 31, a Canadian\nNavy civilian official.\nRockets Eliminate\nSeattle Iron men\nSEATTLE. March ?b (AP)-Ta-\ncoma's young and hustling Rockets\ntonight skated into the semi-final\nround of the Pacific Coast Hockey\nLeague playoffs when they kept\nbuilding on an early lead to beat\nthe Seattle Ironmen 8-3.\nThat triumph gave Tacoma the\nbest-of-flve serlei three games to\none. Rockets now will head for the\nPrairies to meet the winner of the\nother preliminary round between\nSaskatoon ahd Edmonton, In which\nSaskatoon holdi a 2-1 edge ta\ngames.\n80 DISTRICT FOLK\nATTEND COLVILLE\nKIWANIS EVENT\nAbout 80 Kiwanians, their wives\nand guests of Castlegar, Nelson and\nTrail attended a Kiwanis Club ladies' night program at Colville,\nWash., Friday night.\nTh? Colville club was host to\nabout 260 persons at a dinner and\ndance. The dinner ws held in the\nnew city hall auditoriu-i and the\ndance at the lyks Hall. Guests returning to Nelson, said one of the\nhighlights was the splendid music\nprovided for the dance by. a group\nof businessmen,\nOf a couple of dozen door prizes,\ntwo were brought back to Nelson by\nMrs, K. W. Jensen and Mrs. Frank\nEberle, whose husbands are president and inter-club Committee\nchairman, respectively, of Nelson\nclub.\nFour Nelson Babies\nAre Baptised\nFour children received the Sacrament of Infant Baptism at the morning service in Trinity United Church\nSunday. They were' Valerie Anne\nRoss, infant daughter df Mr. and\nMri..James Ross; Richard Charles\nRobert Lancaster, infant son' of Dr.\nand Mri; Robert Lancaster; Gary\nJohn McClelland, infant ion of Mr.\nand Mrs. James McClelland and\nBarbara Marie Kelsch, infant daugh.\nter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Kelsch.\n8EEK PUBLIC OWNERSHIP\nVANCOUVER, Mar__ \u00bb (CP) -\nCCF. leaders have again demanded\npublic ownership of the B.C. Electric Railway,' following announcement that the-public utilities commission had approved fare boosts.\nA statement issued today following a C.C.F. civic council meeting\nsaid the latest transit fare increase\n\"proves conclusively that public\nowner, hip is the only solution to the'\ntransit problem.\"  .\nfrH^in\nCrash as\nTireElows\nTwo women were injured when a\ntire Blowout caused their 1950 sedan\nto crash Into a telephone pole, one\nhalf mile West of the South Slocan\nrailway crossing, at 0:15 Sunday\nmorning.\nMrs. W. A. Weatherhead, .14\nFourth Street received facial cuts\nand bruise*,ai)d a severe hip injury.\nShe was taken to a Vancouver hospital on Sunday's passenger train.\nHer daughter and driver ot the\ncar, Mri. Lance Stacey, 410 Victoria\nStreet, ls in.Kootenay Lake General\nHospital with a broken knee and\nfacial cuts. Her condition was reported good, Sunday night\nThe two women were.enroute to\nSpokane when the accident occurred,\nAfter the right front tire blowout,\nthe car travelled aome 68 feet along\nthe shoulder of the road before\ncrashing into the pole.\nThe impact of the 'crash pushed\nthe right front wheel into the seat,\ncausing an estimated $600 damage\nA motorist arriving' at the scene\nminutes later notified police and\nsummoned West Kootenay ambulance.\nR.C.M.P. are investigating.\n\u2014\u2014*\u2014--'\u2014> \"*v-* - \"\u00ab\u00ab,. *\u00bb__<_- iii.ui uuu _oo_ use oi me pause were\nnay* and. Boundary Drama Festival evident although she could watch\nThursday;   Friday .and   Saturday to keep voice under control and\nStudents Encouraged to\u25a0\u2022\nFurther Dramatic Training\nROSSLAND, B.C.* - West Koote\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\n.1, .-..;\u2022:.     .,-\u201e..;\nFORT FRANCES\nGO1&7W0UP\nON LETELLIER\nFORT FRANCES, Ont., March 30\n(CP) \u2014 Fort Frances Canadians ran\nroughshod over Letellier Maple\nLeafs Saturday night, defeating\nthem 10-3 to grab a two-game lead\nIn their Western Canada senior hockey semi-finals.\nOne game in the best-of-seven\nseries was tied.\nFourth game will' be played in\nWinnipeg Monday night Canadians\nwon tbe first game 7-2 and the second ended in a 4-4 .deadlock.\nWinner of the series will clash\nwith either Trail Smoke Eaters or\nEdmonton Pets for the Western\nchampionship, and the right to\nmove into the Allan Cup finals.\nLeafs kept up with the high-flying Canadians in the firit period\nand then withered under terrific\npressure.\nThe blitz started at 2:07 of the\nsecond, when leftwinger Mike Hup-\nchuk blasted a short shot past Lionel Wright In the Leaf nets'. Before the period ended, Canadians\nheld a 6-1 edge. . \u2022\nHupchuk also accounted for a\ngoal in the first period. Other Fort\nFrances players, to score doubles\nwere Vern O'Donnell and Rich Hi-\ncard. Singles went to Sambo Fe.\ndoruk, Frank Eizensoph, Dune\nSampson and Ed Kllner.\nDon Stay potted two for Leafs.\nGeorge Ballance got the other.\nHAMMER-HEAD^\nEveryone hai heard of Woody\nthe Woodpecker, who it \"quite _\nbird\", but he -en't hold a candle\nte the woodpecker commonly\nteen on the Trinity United Church\niteeple. Thlt bird It really en Jill\nmettle, fer not content with peck-\nhelet. through the ihlnglet on the\niteeple he hai taken to trying to\ndrill holet In the loudtpeakeri,\nAn ambltleut bird, It It difficult\nto tay whether he hat atplratlont\ntoward \u00bb broadcasting career er\nalms to be a pneumatic drill and\nJoin the mlnert union.\nFor dlvenlen he cllmbt up the\nmetal tldet of the loudspeaker\nfunnel and slide* down, A mott\nremarkable blrdl\nbrought before the footlights talent\nthat promises to bud'forth in coming years to produce many excellent\nactors and actresses.\nThe young students taking part in\nthe non-competitive festival have in\nthe past three days learned much\nto improve them in the acting field\nthrough the\/adjudications of Mias\nJanie Stevenson whoi* Judgments\nwere on* constructive basis, aimed\nat spurring students on to greater\nefforts, nbt to discourage them.\nPerformances Saturday afternoon\nat Rossland High School Auditorium\nproduced evidences of this promising talent as Grand Corki High\nSchool, Stanley Humphries Junior-\nSenior High School of Castlegar and\nJ. Lloyd Crowe High School of Trail,\nstaged three highly contrasting\nplays, one historical, one sentimental\nand one tragedy.\nMin Stevenion In adjudicating\nthe afternoon performancei told\nplaytn \"batlt ef ail good acting\nIt ilnoerety \u2014 making wordi\nmean tomething before laying\nthem,\" Thlt, Milt Stevenom laid\nwat evident In teveral character\nIzatlont Saturday afternoon.\nABILITY OBVIOUS\nPlays and the adjudicator's re\nmarks were;, .   ,\n\u25a0 \"White Queen, Red Queen,\" Grand\nForks High School production by\nT. B. Morris, cast: Barbara Fox as\nElizabeth Hammond,' Adell' Hewitt,\nMadge Skelton; Jane van der Gles-\nsen, Mary Wyatt; Doreen Steele,\nJane Seymour; Violet Rezansoff,\nMary Tudor; Nancy Jones, Margaret Pole; Moyra Henderson, Anne\nBoleynj Lily Rezansoff, Katherlne\nof Aragon;. Arthur Heaven, a page.\n\"White Queen, Red Queen\" li a\nplay of emotion, good but difficult\nbecause of dialogue written in blank\nverse which must have a certain\nrythm. Playen to H)li TroductloA\nmust create atmosphere of tragedy\nwhich in turn muit be projected\nover the footlights to reach the\naudience. Miss Stevenson was\npleased with the play which, she\nsaid, demanded much of a cast to\nput lt over. Players could still have\ngotten more from it. Ability was\nobvious here as the play tame to\nlife through the sincerity of the cast.\nThe entire cast had good stage\nvoices and worked ln teamwork\nalthough Katherlne of Aragon delivered her speeches, too much to\nthe audience and suspense was not\nsufficiently built up. The obvious\nsincerity of the cast turned aside\nlaughter in many scenes.\nCostuming was effective, makeup\ngood. Acting of Elizabeth Hammond\nshowed promise. She had good head\nand body movement in speaking\neven while sitting. Speech of Madge\nSkeltoft came gustily,- \u00ab\u25a0< breathing\nfault, and room for stronger- interpretation was evident in her char-\nacteri-atiori, Mary Tudof carried her\npart well and Jane Seymour had\nnice interpretation and good exits\nthroughout, A nice voice of good\nquality was evident in this part, also\ngood emotional feeling, Mary's\nhands could have been used more\neffectively. Margare* Pole acted\nwith deep -sincerity at times and\nlistenattentlvely as though hearing\nthe words tor the* first time, while\ncarrying out the part well\nGood characterization was evident\nin the part of Anne Boleyn who-suc-\nceeded in entering completely into\nthe part. Good feeling, body move\nment and good use of the pause .were\nheeded better timing. The part uf\nKatherlne of Aragon could . have\nbeen stronger with more feeling inside. The page was in character\nwith the play. \\\nMADE A SUCCESS\n\"The Royal Touch\" by Elsie Park\nGowan,. produced by Stanley Hum-\nPtales Junior-Senior High School\nat Castlegar, cast: Peter Obetkoff\nas Nicola; Acjrlenne Brewster, Serena; Mercedes SChwartzenhaurer,\nMaria; Doug Burrows, Joseph; Don\nJenks, Nata; Philip Sherstobltoff,\nIvan; Bernadette Acheson, Flower\nGirl; Joe Irving, A Child; John\nRoss, a Passer-By.     '    ,'\n\"The Royal Touch\" ls a rather\ndisconcerting mixture oi reality and\nfantasy, Miss Stevenson felt and\nadvised a play containing better\ncharacterization opportunities be\nused. Sincerity of the cast made the\nplay a success, she said. \u25a0\nGood setting, atmosphere, cos-\nturning were evident In production. Possibilities' of cut were\nseen although more vitality wat\nimportant.\nSerena was effective; Joseph was\ngood in places, having good changes\nof tone. Teamwork between Marie\nand Joseph was' evident although\nMaria was a little stiff and needed\nmore relaxation on stage. Nata and\nIvan made, good attempts to bring\ndialogue to life. Nicola, paper.boy\ndid well and showed excellent possibilities, having a clear voice and\nability for pantomiming,\nCONGRATULATED\nMiss Stevenson In her adjudication recalled Nicola and Ivan to the,\nstage to demonstrate for the audience how they had brought their\ncharacterizations to life by continually thinking the part they were\nacting, hot Just saying words' Miss\nStevenson congratulated the cast\non a nice little production;,which\nmight easily have been a complete\nflop.\n\"The Underdog\" written by Robert Middlemass and produced by J.\nLloyd Crowe High School at Trail,\ncast: Kevin Mpbney as Harry Bel-\ndon; Maureen Marshall, Beatrice\nBeldon; Dave Somerset, Eddie\nMorey; Marion Heslop, Mrs. Williams; Harold Jones, Police Officer.\nThe'Play, which centered on a\none time criminal   now reformed\nPassengers Escape  ' t\nTruck-Train Mishaps\nVANCOUVER, March 30 (CP) *i-\nTwq trucks were demolished in collisions with trains last night, but\ntheir three passengers miraculously\nescaped death.\nEric Forsland \/fecelved slight in-\nJuries and driver Fuga Singh wa'\nuninjured when their truck was'\ncompletely demolished after a Great]\nNorthern train struck \u2022 them at an\nintersection.        \u2022\nJulius D. Straumford received'\nonly head injuries when his panel\ntruck was dragged 190 feet t#:-a\nCanadian Pacific Railway train at\nanother intersection.\nThe folklore archives of the Fin'-\nnish Literature Society at Helsinki,\noldest such collection in the world,\nhave 1,300,000 items.\nand living in a tenement building,\nwas considered weak by the adju-\ndicat'or as too much rested on contrived situations. However'it was a\ngood play with characterization'\nwell drawn. Miss Stevenson voiced\ndisappointment in the production;\nexpecting more than was presented\nInaudibility was evident and'more\nattention to characterization neo-\nesshry. The play failed to\"come;tO\nlife as It should. ..':'.'\" ' '\nABILITY NEEDS WORK\nHarry Beldon held good stage\nvoice although his speeches were\nInclined to be rushed and articii.\nlation poor. Inaudibility was a\ngrave fault Ability evident wasln\nHarry with hard*work needed* to\nbring it forw&rd. tiood acting ablt.\nity was also evident in Beatrice\nBeldon. Mrs. Williams'! make-up\nwas good end she grew into her\npart as the play progressed. Miss\nStevenson said she would like to\nsee mbre of Eddie Morey who in a\nsmall part had shown. excellent\nmovement and good characterization.\nSTOPS\nFAST\nASPIRIN\n.YOU _AN COMPLETE.\nHIGH SCHOOL\nNow - At Homo -. Low Payments - All Books Furnished \\;\n\u25a0\u25a0'  No Classes   ....',\t\n:.*yy .D'J^P L Qjyl A X.W.A,R^;.E t>iy^L\nIf You Are 16 or Over Write for Free Booklet' \u25a0\u2022* Z -^v\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiIiiiih\namerican school, dept. n325\n5560 Klng't Road, Vancouver 8, B.Q,-\"\nGentleman: Send me FREE information covering special\ntraining in subjects checked below. No obligation on my part\n.... HIGH SCHOOL\n.... Air Conditioning\n.... Architecture\n... Automobile Mechanic\n... Automptive   Engineering\n... Bookkeeping, Practical\n.... Business Management\n.... Contracting, Building\nName  _...._ _,.\u201e......._.., .\nAddrets \u201e.\u201e,. Z.Z\u2014.:..'i.iZ...\nDiesel Engineering\n. Drafting and Design\n. Electrical Engineering\n. Mechanical Engineering\n. Merchandising\n. Private Secretary\n. Refrigeration\nAge\nCity\nReality,\" Subject\nOf Lesson-Sermon\n\"The iplrltual fact underlying our\"\nhuman experiences (i the. reality-\nindestructible and eternal,\" Explanation of this may be found in the\nLesson-Sermon entitled \"Reality\"\nwhich Was read in all Churches of\nChrist Scientist Sunday.\nth* Golden Teit was: *'\"HoIy,\nHoly, HOly Is the Lord of Hosts: the\nwhole earth il full of His glory.\"\nISAIAH 6:3\nThe Lessori-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible;\n\"Acquaint now thyself with Him.\nand be at peace; thereby good ihel)\ncom* unto thee.\" JOB 22:21\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Science textbook \"Science\nand Health With Key to th* Scrip-\nturn\" by Mary Baker Eddy, Wat\nthe following: \"Let us learn of the\nreal and eternal, and prepare for\nthe reign of Spirit the kingdom of\nheaven\u2014the reign and'rule of uni.\nversa! harmony, which cannot be\nlost nor remain\" forever, unseen.\"\nHE PAGE\nyoung and old alike, every one a prospective\nim a 10-ton truck to a tricycle, from a house-'\n* a herd of cattle to a pair of budgies!\nFIND IT IN THE\nPAGES -OF THE\nR CLASSIFIED SERVICE\n --_-_--\u2014\u2014\nwm,\nCasual Shoes\nComfort   and   Elegance\nIn Every Stylo\n'Such Famous Names as\nTOGA \u2014'HANNA and \"8U8AN\nALL COLORS AND'SIZES\nTHE SHOE\n\u2022CENTRE;\n553 Baker St.     Phone 895\nKootenay Rail Protection B. C's Job,\nSays Garson; Ottawa's Says Wismer\nWild Truck\n| Spreads Damage\nTRAIL; B.C. \u2014 A truck, travelling\n|, along Riverside Avenue near Co-\nI lumbla Bridge, caused considerable\ndamage Saturday afternoon before\n| lt came to a halt end-up, in a\nbasement excavation.\nJ:.: The truck, said by police 'to have\nI been driven by George Plotniko of\nI Rossland, apparently struck a cem-\nI ent retaining wall. It then pulled\nI out to the left striking-an approaching auto,, causing minor damages,\nsideswiped a second' car, jumped\nI fhe sidewalk, knocked over ten feet\n\"of a cement wall, swept away an\niron railing and -finally landed in\nthe excavated basement\nI 'Plotniko was charged with driving while ability was Impaired by\n| ..the use of alcohol. The owner of\n; the truck, a passenger at the time,\n> was charged with being intoxicated\nln a public place.\nDistrict Centres\nfnjoy Pirates\nNelson will have an opportunity\nFriday to see one of Gilbert and\nSullivan's most delightful operettas.\n'\".- \"The Pirates of Penzance,\" a comic\n\u2022Mra, was applauded by capacity\naudiences in Rossland and Castlegar.\n\"Presented by the1 Rossland Light\nOpera Company, it is produced and\ndirected by William Baldry. and\nGordon Giff in, assisted by Miss Margery Hall.\nNelson's Junior Chamber of Commerce are in ch_r*ge of ticket sales\nfpr th* performance here Friday.\nFather.of Fruitvale\nResident Passes\nra___VAL_; B.C. -   Mr. and\nlbs.  Stephen  Maclsaae  have re-\n: eeived word of the passing in his\nI home at Antigonlsh, Nova Scotia, of\nI the former's father,   Angus.Mac-\nIsaac, ln his 83rd year.\nI   Besides Stephen, his only living\naon, he leaves a sister in Vancouver,\na grandson in Trail and two grandchildren in Calgary.\nFILLMORE, Utah (AP).-,-,- The\n| -body of a 58-year-old game Warden\n(was found upside down in a collapsed coyote hole near here today.\nClark Huff apparently died of suf-\nI Enoatipn when the coyote hole he\nwas enlarging to capture some\ncoyote pups collapsed on him, burying all but one of his feet.\nIn Person\nLOUIS\nARMSTRONG\nand Hit\nAll-Stars\nCONCERT and\nDANCE\nMonday, April 7, 8:30 p.m.\nONE NIGHT ONLY\n. Nelson Civic Arena\nFeaturing \u2014 . \u00ab'\n* Coiy Cole   it Barney Blgard\nir Dale Jones   it. Russ Phillips\n\u2022*\u25a0 Marty Napoleon\n\u2022 Velma Middleton\nTicket* Now. On Sal*\nKootenay Stationers\n12.50, tax included    \u2022\nDoora Open 7:30 p.m. Night of\n'\"...: Concert\nGREYHOUND\nAnnounce\nCHANGE IN\nEXPRESS\nRATES\nOn All Routes\nin\nBritish Columbia\nEffective   r-   .   *\nAPRIL 10\n(Subject te consent of the\nPubllo Utilities Commission)\nRepresentation may be made\nto the Superintendent ef\nMotor Carriers, 1740 Wett\nGeorgia St, Vancouver, B.C.\nup till April 4th, 1952.\nGOLDEN, B.C.\u2014 Funeral services\ntook place here at the United\nChurch for Wilfrid Laurier Hunter,\nage 36, one of East Kootenay's most\nwidely known lumbermen: He died\nsuddenly at Kamloqps where he had\ngone for treatment\nBorn ln Oak. Lake,. Man., son of\nMr. and Mrs, George Hunter, they\nwere among the first permanent\nresidents In Cranbrook, arriving ih\nB. He grew up in Cranbrook and\nsefcved overseas in.the First World\nWar. Following, demobilization he\njoined tbe B.C. Spruce Mills Ltd.,\noperation at Lumberton near Cranbrook where he was planer boss\nuntil the company: suspended oper.\nations about 1-40.\nHe was with B.C. Timber Pre-\nOTTAWA (CP)-The JBritish Columbia Government\nis trying,to pass; to Ottawa its responsibility for handling the\nSong,of Fr^fedOm problem in B.C., Justice Minister Garson\nsaid.'      ,. *- .\nMr. Garson told a railway-union group thpt lawlessness among the Doukhobor Sons of Freedom sect .comes\nClearly under the provincial government's duty of maintaininglaw an*order;under the British North America Act.\n\"There is no ground .whatever for Ihe suggestion1 that\nthe Federal Government has any _esponsibility,\"'h_ said to\nthe* Dominion Joint legislative Committee of. the Railway\nTransportation, Brotherhood-. J\nThe committee, ln its annual sub.\nmission .to the Cabinet, had asked\nthat the Federal Government take\naction to protect rail service in the\nB.C. areas where the Sons of Free-\ndopi have been active.\nIt quoted Attorney-General Wismer. of British*Columbia as saying\nFeb. 13. that safe train operation is\nthe responsibility of the Federal\nGovernment and the Canadian Pacific Railway, whose line runs\nthrough the Kootenay region where\nthe Sons of, Fredom have created\nviolence.  :\nDescribing the B.C. situation as\n'grave,\" the unions, said they are\nadvise., that ln the next two months\nthere * will be \"intensified; acts o_\nviolence,\"   \u2022       :   _..;\nThe justice minister admitted the\nrailways were under Federal juris-'\ndiction, but he said that th'e suggestion of Federal responsibility for\noutrages would be tantamount to a\nheld-up bank suggesting the Fed\neral Government should provide its\nguards because banks are, under\nFederal jurisdiction. ..,-':*\n\"It is completely a provincial re*\nsponsibility, and we have always\ntaken that position,'.' Mr. Garson\nsaid.   ..-'.'      \u25a0 .;'.-' \u2022-''\nW. L Hunter, Pioneer Lumberman\nOf Cranbrook, Buried al Golden\nserver at New Westminster tor a\nfew years, then came here to join\nSelkirk Spruce Mills at Ponald^He\nwas a longtime Mason, current Mas.\nter of Mountain Lodge No. 11 here,\nand a Royal Arch Mason. He was\nalso a longtime member of the Canadian Legion in Cranbrook and\nhere. ','\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0''.'\u25a0\nSurviving him are his wife, the\nformer Harriet. Kennedy, at their\nhome here, two daughters, Mri. D.\nW. Niles, Golden and Graeme in\nVancouver, two grandchildren, his\nmother In Vancouver, two .sisters,\nMrs. Reg. Rose and Miss Jessie\nHunter, Vancouver, and a brother,\nGeorge Hunter in Marysville.\nCableway and\nCoffer Dam\nIn at Waneta\n\u25a0 WANETA, B.G. - An 18Q0-foot\ncable has been, strung, across the\nPend d'Oreille River td-corivey cohi\ncre'te to points where it is required,\nas Cominco's $30,000,000 Power Plant\nproject continues to forge ahead.\nTo prepare for pouring of concrete to block the North section of\nthe Pend d'Oreille, the river bottom\nmust first be bared. This has been\nachieved by construction of a timber\ncoffer dam leading, from\/the North\nbank, angling-downstream to a point\nabout one-third of the distance\nacross and continuing downstream,\nparallel to.the shore and then cut\ninshore.\nThe coffer dam is reasonably\nwater tight and has been pumped\nout leaving the river bed dry.\nDuring- the flood period this\nSpring work will concentrate on\nthe power plant, the upper parts of\nthe completed section of the dam\nand shore excavation.\n2& MILLION BAGS\nAn estimated 450,000 cubic yards\nof Concrete and the equivalent to\n2,500,000 bags of cemdht* will be\nrequired to construct the dam and\npower plant. Gravel is trucked over\none mile from Clumbia Gardens to\nbelt cqnveyor which transports it,a\ndistance of 4000'* feet to a site dose\nto .the location for the dam and\npower plant.\n..By i9|>4, a;massive JHXWoot wall of\nconcrete will block the narrow river\nrock-walls, where the Pend d'Orellle\njoins the Columbia River, 11 miles\nSouth of TralL     \u25a0\u2022\u25a0--    .\nMoisture Conditions Ideal for\nCranbrook Farms; Grains Tested\nCRANBROOK, 'B.C. \u2014 A little\nlater than usual, snow ln fields is\ngradually dwindling, -but Spring\nplowing is not-expected to get underway for another month. Runoff\nhas been gradual, ahd witb the wet\nFall Which preceded Winter leev.\ning.a good moisture, early Spring\ngrowing conditions should be excellent unless there ' i\u00ab another\nApril drought \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u2022'\u2022\nProvincial agricultural agfent, J.\nW. Awmack has compiled results, of\nhalf-acre experimental planting of\ngrain varieties last season carried\nout by farmers under irrigation and\ndryland conditions in various parts\nof East Kootenay under his supervision.\nTests of Spring wheat under both\nconditions showed .Red Bobs and\nMarquis yielded best _} dryland\nearly.planting,*and Garnettn late\nplanting. In irrigated landTSratcher\nahd Red Bobs yielded best. Wheat\ntestSs were, at -Canal Flats, St\nMary's Prairie and Rbosvllle.\nOat seed tests at Fernie and\nEdgewater under irrigation conditions resulted in better yields of\nboth Ajax and Eagle than of Victory, which has been, the standard\nvariety for the district, though Vie-,\ntory yields were good. Best yield\nwas from Eagle.\nTwo smooth varieties of barley\nwere tested,- Titan and Vantage.\nBoth showed good yields in irrigated area, with Titan showing up better than Vantage in Edgewater and\nCanal Flat tests. .   '\nMaTquis wheat was tried but due\nto the late date for ripening was\nnit sampled. Regent! wheat yields\nwere low, and were affected by\nrust.\nCranbrook teachers\nName Delegates\nCRANBROOK, B.C. \u2014 Cran-\nbrook local of the B.C. Teachers'\nFederation has named *> its delegates to the annual Federation convention at Vancouver during' the\nBaiter holidays jl! A. V. Clod, of\nCranbrook and Leonard Weaver of\nWardner, Many other members of\nCranbrook local expect to attend\nthe meeting. Copies-, of resolutions\nto be presented at the- convention*\nwere thoroughly discussed et the\nMarch meeting.   .\nABERDEEN, Wash., March 30\n(AP) \u2014 A\" six-year-old boy was\nkilled on a Grays Harbor ocean\nbeach Saturday when a giant wave\nswept him off a log and rolled the\nlog over htm.\nV V ^      \u201e c\n-f*\u00bbs.,\u00abtii\nY\u00bbv\u00bb\nFined $75 for\nSupplying Liquor\nTo Indian Girl\n'It'ii unlawful for anyone to\nsupply liquor of any type to an\nIndian,, outside, th* premises, of a\nbeer parlor,\" Chief of Police Robert\nHarshaw said following a formal\ncharge in City Court Saturday.\nChester Hmiawsky of Nelson\npleaded guilty to supplying liquor\nto'an Indian girl, and was fined $75\nby Magistrate William Brown.\nThe offence occurred in a Nelson\nHotel March 20.\nJayceeslaunch\nSafely Campaign\n* The Junior, Chamber of Commerce\nwill, present Nelson's pity Council\nwith a suggested plan or' location\nof stop, caution, and other traffic\nsigns on Nelson City Streets.\n\"Douglas Road is a speed-way,\"\none member said, \"and where is\nthere, a stop sign.?\"\n\"There is no uniformity in the\npresent sigh system,\" it was pointed\nout \"You've got to be able to read\nand to recognize the meaning of the\nsighs if they are to be useful; here\nsome are oblong, some round and\nsome octagons. Many of the stop\nsigns are obscure.\"\nArmed with* two detailed maps of\nthe city,. Jaycee's Civic Affairs Committee will meet Thursday to mark\npositions of present signs en one\nmap and indicate on the other where\nit is felt signs are necessary.\nJaycees have co-operated with the\ncity in street sign matters since their\ninception two - years ago.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nAdjudication Lauded\nFirst Scliopk Dramfl.\nFestival \"Success\"\nJackson Basin\nVein Goes Deeper\nB.__, Nesbitt, managing director of\nthe Jacitson Basin Mining Co. Ltd.,\nreports that diamond drilling to test\nthe main vein below No. 5 level,\nthe lowest at the mine, shows the\nore continuing below the level with\ngrade undiminished and increased\nwidth;\n.. The deepest hole, which cut the\nvein 90 feet down dip from the No.\n5 level, yielded 18 feet of core\naveraging 3.5 ounces silver. 4.7 percent lead and 18.3 per cent zinc.\nThis would indicate between eight\nand 10 feet .true thickness .to. the\nvein at that depth, it Is stated. The\nbottom seven feet of the _a_\u00bbsection\nassayed 4.2 ounces silver, 8.5 percent\nlead and 33.9 percent zinc?\nThe company owns 17 claims' near\nRetallack. It recently secured a firm\ncommitment for 200,000 shares at\n40 cents per share, giving options\non further blocks,\nTrail Firm to Take\nOver Arrow Here\nUnited Truckihg and Storage Ltd.,\nTrail, is taking -over operation, of\nArrow Van Lines, 212 Stanley\nSfteet, April 1.\nRoy Hermanson will manage the\nfive \"Unit storage-transportation\noperation.\nThe firm is engaged mainly in\ntrans-Canada and United .States\nshipments of \u25a0 furniture.\nGolden Kinsmen\nClub Organized\nGOLDEN, B.C. Z. Under sponsorship of the Kinsmen Club of nearby Field, about 20 young Golden\nmen haye been organized Into a\nnew Kinsmen Club which will\nmake' application, for a charter.\nServing as temporary officers until chartering and election of a, permanent slate are Stuart Tait'as president, George Estey secretary, and\nFrank Old treasurer. Initial meeting Will be on April 2 when the\nField club will send a delegation\nof members to outline purposes and\nfunctions of this service club..    _\nROSSLAND,' B.C. \u2014 Final curtain o_ the school drama festival,\nwas ning down Saturday'evening on\na highly successful undertaking.-\u25a0'\nIn-the Words of D,.Of. Chamberlain, Rossland Senior High School\nprincipal and chairman,of Festival\ncommittee, the three day West\nKootenay and - Boundary Schools\nDrama Festival- was \"very successful; and it is .very likely more such\nfestivals'will follow.\"     '\nAdjudication, Mr. Chamberlain\nfelt had much to do with the\nsuccess of the festival and Mile\nJanle   Stevenson   with, her  sincerity In criticizing and praising\nthe\/players won the warm* approval of the audiences and casta,\nNo\/awards were given for best\nactors, actresses or productions, as\nthe  festival   was  rion-competitive,\nheld only.to aid young players^\nfurther developing their dramatis\nability.\nHeld in the auditorium of Ross-\nland's new Senior High School, the\nfestival drew entries from 10 schools\nwith 14 plays produced.\nNEAR .CAPACITY HOU8E\n, Final three' plays, by Nelson\nSenior High School, Nakusp High\nSchool and, J. Lloyd CroWe High\nSchool at',__ail, brought the festiyal\nto a close With \"a very enjoyable\nevening,\" Miss Stevenson said. The\nthree schools, playing before a near\ncapacity audience, captured the\ncomplete meaning of the plays, presenting them .with a vitality and\nability that delighted.\n.. Plays with the adjudicator's remarks, were:\n\"Growth\" written by Lynn Grant\nand produced by Nelson Senior\nHigh School, cast: Mervyn Williams\nas Tom Allanson; Beverley Lythgoe, Mrs. Allanson; George Robinson, Richard; Trudy Pentland,\nMary; Jeanne Stringer, \"Gran\"';\nBob Greyson, Robert McCurdy;\nSylvia Shorthouse, Driana* Pulaski;\nBert Young, Jan Pulaski; Lome\nLoomer, Radio Announcer.\nGrowth,\" a play depicting a\nfeud and the bitter struggle between two men and their pride was\nwell handled by Nelson High\nSchool, said Miss Stevenson. Tom\nmust completely dominate the play\nfrom start to finish. His, the part\nof the enemy, was difficult to\nhandle, however, he did exceptionally well-\nPace throughout _)e play was\nwell*sustained, cues well picked up,\nand the cast held a good sense of\nthe Idea of the play and put It over\ncompletely. Building up of climax\nwas* well handled, also tone ..and\neffective entrances. The play was a\ndifficult one as a definite atmosphere had to be created arid the\naudience made to feel it Splendid\nteamwork was put into the pro*\nduction.\nMERVYN WILLIAMS\nTorfi was excellent having a\ngood Interpretation of the part\nand dominating the play completely at was necessary. Tom\nholds a good sense of drama and\nIn a characterization that held\nwide scope for acting, he succeeded In filling the part completely. Miss Stevenson congratulated him on a very good performance.\nMrs. Allanson grew into her part\nas the play proceeded. More sullen\nrebellion would have improved\nRichard's characterization, although;\nhe improved later in the play. Mary,\niri a negative part slowed the pace\nof play once or twice. \"Gran,\" in a\ndifficult part did very well Robert\nMcCurdy didn't appear easy with\nhis lines but general characterize,\ntion was well attempted. A good;\nvital performance . with splendid\nmovements was given by Driana\nPulaski although her voice was\nheld at too high a level and lacked\ncontrast. Also giving a gocid, sincere\nperformance was Jan Pulaski.\nSUCCESSFUL\n'The Boatswain's Mate\" by W- W.\nJacobs and Herbert N. Sargent presented by Nakusp High School, cast:\nIrene Macdonnell as Mrs. Waters;\nDavid Thexton, George' Ben; Kenneth-Stanley, Ned Travers.\nIn a well,constructed play that\ndemanded careful handling of dialogue, Nakusp High School gave n\ncompletely successful performance.\nSituations in the play were.at times\na bit impossible but should be and\nwere played as comedy. Definite\nfovements, good timing 'and players\nMIS8 JAN IE -TBVBNSO'N\n\u2022 >. students gain from her  ,\n*..,; adjudication.\nmaking most Ot their opportunities\nhelp to make the play a success.\nHowever, George Benn and Ned\nTravers did not afford\" sufficient\ncontrast in character for so small a\ncast Ben showed tine acting ability.\nTravers' although acting well as he\ninterpreted the part, could have afforded more contrast to Ben.' Mrs.\nWaters held a good sense of timing\nand movement but voice, although\nclear, Was too stilted,\nThe production Miss Stevenson\nfelt was good and cqnvinclng.\n\"Cinderella of Loreland\" by Frances Homer, produced by J. Lloyd\nCrowe, Senior High School, cast;\nJim Lynch as the Lackey; Catherine\nMurray, Cinderella; Barbara McLean, the Stepmother; Gene Kennedy, GladlOla; Kathleen Ramsden,\nLlllibell; Anne de litorvay, God-\nmbther; Dennis Webb, Biff, the jester; Edward Gaines, Prince; Elaine\nLa Rose, Ashes the Cat\nAlthough usually it was difficult\nto present one act from a three act\nplay, this production was an exception, Miss Stevenson felt, everyone\nknew the story of, Cinderella and\nunderstood what had previously\ntaken place in the fairy tale thus\navoiding loss of continuity possible\nWhen staging only the last scene of\na play. ,\nIh \"Cinderella\" actors found, wide\nscope especially suited . to young\nplayers.\nProduction wai good, especially\nmovement* of oast The \"play, In\nplaces failed to, come completely\nalive as voices and tenet of players became too much alike, A nice\npel.ee of pantomlnlng by two sisters and stepmother wat evident\nIn doting scene.\nThe .Lackey could have Improved\nhis part by making more definite\nmovements. Cinderella was played\nquietly with simplicity as the par-\ncalled for, but lacked in vitality.\nThe stepmother was well defined in\ncharacter.and movements Jmt Glad.-\nola could have acted' more the part\nof an ugly sister. Llllibell. successfully drew the dislike of the audience for her ugly ways. Good-stage\nvoice was. evident in- Godmother,\nbut variation in tone, of voice was\nnecessary. A good characterization\nof Biff, the Jester, was given. Miss\nStevenson regretted that Ashes, the\ncat, was seen only in the closing\nscenes for his part was very well\nhandled.\n\u25a0 Committee in charge of the Drama\nFestival was:\nChairman, D. G. Chamberlain;\nSecretary, Miss M. Bennett; billeting, A. E. Loft; properties Miss J.\nCrawford; stage equipment, J. Hook;\nlighting, S. Fisher; tickets and advertising, C. B. Olafsson; production\nmanager, W. S. Potter; student representatives, Miss. Evelyn Zahari-\nchuk, Miss Isabell Collins, Miss\nPatricia Bradley. '.'.,\"'\"\n!#\u00bb*\u00bb\nCOMING TO NELSON It this hardy pirate\nband featured In Rossland _ Light Opera Players\nproduction, \"The Plratet of Penzance.\" The group\nwill appear at the Capitol Friday night after play-\nIng before capacity audlencet at .Rossland and at\nCastlegar. Baok row, Bill Ashwell, Erie Bouchler,\nMax Phillips, Bob Eyre, Sid Potter and Bill Ruck.\nFront, row, Harry Douglas, Bob Cattle, John'\nHughes, Ian Waterlow, Herb Otlng and Bob\nTweed.*\" .    -   .   I \".-\",.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MARCH-31, 1952 \u2014 $\nKimberley Local Favors\nUnion Death Benefits\nJAYCEES TO DECK\nTOURIST PARK\nNelson's tourist park is going to\nget it's face lifted.\nThe Junior Chamoer of Commerce\nwill paint buildings and spruce\" up\nthe grounds before annual tourist\ntrade fills the camping and trailer\nground on Nelson Avenue.\nWhat color will be used in paint,\ntag the pavilion? That \"ghastly\ngreen\" is taboo, Jaycees say. .allow,\nbright red and sky blue were among\nfavored colors. ,\nJaycees will ask the city council\nto supply the paint They will\nfurnish the labor.\nToPresenl\nSlrange Bedfellow\nTRAIL, B.C. - The nlghtsot April\n. and 8 will be exciting ones for\nmembers of the Trail Little Theatre.\nTheiy -will prefsent their first major\nproduction, \"Strange Bedfellows\",\na three-act comedy by Florence\nRyerson and Colin Clements.\nSan Francisco at the turn of the\ncentury, a rowjy colorful seaport,\nIs the setting of.the play, lending\nItself well to the. advance guard of\nthe suffragist movement, the theme\nof the comedy. \u2022\n. Miss Jane Stevenson of Nelson,\nprofessional dramatic teacher and\ndirector, will direct the play.\nThe cast Includes:\nTommy Simpson^ Fred Pollock,\nHelen Fitzsimmons, Donna Perrta,\nDorothy Calder, Betti Hall, Richard\nCalder, Grace Poole, Mae Williams,\nStanley Bennett, John Ferguson,\nJimmy Fitzsimmons, Connie Nicholson, Gina Landueci, and Percy\nHalliwell. Stage Is under the direction of Jimmy Fitzsimmons and\nPhillip Baron.\nVan Roi Imports\nEastern Miners\nSILVERTON, RC-Skilled mine\nworkers are being brought from the\nEast by Van Roi Consolidated Mines\nLimited so that the new base\nmetals operation near Silverton can\nstep up development work and increase the milling rate.\nShareholders at the annual meeting Friday in Vancouver were told\nthat 16 men are coming from Eastern camps to ease a shortage of\nminers and timbermen.   j\nPresident. W. B. Milner said that\nmore men are needed for exploration and tp increase the* ore supply\nfor the mill. Mill tonnage is expected to be up to 175 or 200 tons\nby June and will be raised to 250\ntons when feasible.\nCurrent liabilities at December 31\nwere listed at $607,535 and Mr. Milner told shareholders that this has\nsince beep reduced by about $40,000\nand he hoped it would .not take\nmore than a year to pay off the\nbalance.\nAt present operating speed, he\nadded, net recover, is $23 to $24\nper ton and costs-are $14 a ton and\nshould be down'to $12 soon.\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - A referendum-vote taken by Local 651, by 668\nto 130, favored adoption df the district union death benefit plan.   .\".\nUnder this, widow or beneficiary\nof any union member killed on thi*\nJob or going to or from the job will\nbe. immediately paid $1000. Owing\nto lack of participation by .Trail\nand Kimberley, this plan, which has\nbeen porular throughout B.C., haa\nha, a higher per capita cost than\nwas necessary. The affirmative vote\nwill change this.\nAlso approved was'the change ot\ndate of the annual convention from\nthe first Monday in December to\nthe third Monday ln January.\n\\_he Royal Regiment of Artillery,\nfounded in 1716; has become '.he\nlargest individual regiment of the\nBritish Army. *.'  \u25a0'_!';\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR, FORTRESS OF\n'HEALTH\"\n\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\n\u00bb SUNDRIES\nPHONE . RES.\n1203; 394-L\n433 Josephine St.\nh\/kf\nSINUS\nSUFFERERS\/\n\u25a0 ft\"\n.\u25a0_\nM\"Mii[iiiiiiissiiiiii)[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiisirti.\nPIP VOU HAVE ANY\nRflRTlCULAR FIRJA IN\nMNP TQ MOW VOU*\nTUMI..*!\n?!  4\n\/VOU 8ET-N0MN\nJMM Mmamj\n^nRMOFAU.\/.\nPlanning to mover CaH ies\"'\nfirst Our modern vans an*\n\u25a0killed movers assure a SAfB .\"\nmow wherever yon ta.'.Hi\u00bb'>'\nar* agent* for North American Van Line*, Amerl_a_ |-\nleading Ion. distance movtar '\norganization. K costs bo mora '\nto enjoy tbb finer MnieH\nWest   i\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.  Nelion, I.C\nPhontS) '?\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiniii\n!*;\n^\u25a0ThaiVreaHy rich\nffee...lhat,s Edwards!\"\n\u25a0   *> \u25a0 \\*\nExtra-rich Edwards\ncosts' no more than well-\nknown quality coffees sold\nin paper bags\/\n\"Nothing like rich coffee,\" tay thousands of\nhomemakers who've turned to Edwards\nfor more flavor. No weak, watery coffee\nfor them! They want that full, deep Edwards\nflavor-and they get it in every fragrant   '\npound. Roasted only to order...roasted in\nsmall, rich batches...rushed direct to Safeway.\nThere's the reason for Edwafds'popularity.\nAnd your reason to try a pound today 1\nBlended\/roasted and vacuum-packed\nin Western Canada. Featured af\nSAFEWAY\nM\n .4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS\/MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1952\nSavings that bloom in the spring! Pardon ua if we seem poetic, but we\nean't think of a better way to describe the terrific lineup of values being\noifered in Safeway^ Big April Sale. There are great buys in every section\nof the store; Check the low prices featured in this ad. Then bring your\nshopping hst to Safeway;.. and watch your savings grow,\nfanned $ukaA\nAppJtJuiee^r-a^    2for'\nBlended Juice ^.MT!t\nitimpotm Jwct%%t^:x*\nSallad (hhcAAtiujA.\n\u25a0\u25a0 Mayonnaise m!^....,....,,.....\nMiracle Whip&%n\u2122 %*\u00b1.\nSandwich Spread Tey'r'\nfanned. VupdaAIu,\nJamA. VtaAtnalMA.\n29*\nmi\n36*\nAsparagus Cuts W3&2M8* Raspb-rry Jafti fff*- *T $1.05 Kippered Snacki 5MR.2M2*\nStrawberry Jam &mS:\u00a3'_.\u00bb $1.23 Cohoe Salmon K^mc_:  -37*\nPineapple Marmalade 3rt0S:t\u201e55* Sockeye Salmon.fiT^T?  46*\n.... 97* Wet Shrimps J\"Sr\u00a3t*\"f   .45*\nGreen Beans & .FST-ft-S.*. 33*\nGolden Corn IOTc^'2for 35*\nChoice Peas \u2014 *eU>'A\"wrte<,i\n15 ot. can .\nBeverly;\n\u00a3haaiput 3&odi*\n18*  Peanut Butter K\nTomato Soup &\u25a0***\ndtoii&afwld\nob jar\n62* Corn Flakes Hflfi      2 for 31*\n49* Shreddies   _\u00ab*&-    2 for 33*  Heins Soups\n51*  Shredded Wheat J?\u00a3w 2*. 33*\nVegetable Soup ?-'\u00ab\n25* ^g FOOd ffifi ein.       6 f_r 69*\n20* Joyox Bleach 3. -\u00ab.beta.    \"\u201e   33*\n10o_ ^2for 27* Powdured Bleach'ShSFU .... 47*\n10 d\u00a3- can,',,....'., Z,for\nSlim. Noddle, Chicken,\nlushrodm; 10 or. can .\nKing Peaches\nr_Jmp- yom proa yot\/r\nr EASTER WNN\u00a3R-reod\nifrnr i Aflfir\n.j* it 4^ few\ntown sat St\nStandard quality ... exceptional value. 15 oz. can.\nFull O'Gold 48 ox. can __\n(Boldnq, VbudL\nlt\u00bbssi.-,l-,-, Bakeasy or Domestic;\nshortening J6 w pfcg, \t\nAll-Purpose Flour .$S*fifg,_\nPastry Flour }\u00a3\u00bb*\u2022, b.g:..... >\nVolnut Pieces YSfflS, _.___\nD:u.JTl\u00ab._. Martln'fi Sair;     ...\nrittea wares 8jo_.c*iio pkg. ., i_.\nWuoJlamoM,\nVelveeta Cheese'?\u00a3. _*\u00bb\t\nJelly Powders ?SprP^* 3\nMargarine ^^c!^___-__:\nH.P. Sauce g 07 botti.\"..., .\t\nSpiced Beef\nMayfair, Australian. 12 oz. can ...\n2I<\n7\\f Skykrk\n^M I W Skylark Bread, are fancy new 0\n^^\\   m   ~\u25a0 Itu .     . Aiititlhriln-  nmrfuotB thi\n32c\n29*\n65*\n37*\n38*\n45*\n59*\nfor 27*\n-39*\n-33*\nBKAO\nSkylark Breads are fancy new or\u00bbadt ef exceptional quality .. , outstanding preduots that Safeway li very proud\nto offer te the public ... Try a loaf todayl\nRye Loaf JfSW* p\"!.h.!*.'...B__0.:.. 15*\n100% WhOleWheat SOT*** 15*\nRalslnLogfjgg^gg!^ 18*\"\n \"It Pays To Buy Quality\"\nChildren's Shoes\nPACKARD\nGOODYEAR WELT\n. * BROWN OXFORDS\n* WHITE BOOTS\n* WHITE STRAPS    .\n* 'PATENT STRAPS.\n* RED GILLIE OXFORDS\nFull Size Range\n| $5.50-$6.75-$7.50\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\n.LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nFruitvale Temple\n(as Initiation\nI FRUITVALE, B.C. - Mrs. Jack\nwiodward of Rossland, District\nDeputy grand chief, paid her first\nofficial visit to Rosevale Temple,\nfythian Sisters.\nf* Accompanying her were Mrs. F.\nTalmer of   Rossland,   deputy supreme chief and Mrs. D. Downie,\npast representative, ot Trail. Other\nIsitors were Mrs. T. Alty, Mrs. D.\nMrs. H. McKay,    Mrs. L.\nEmerson, Mrs. A. Pirle, Mrs. W.\n|Wallington, all of Trail, Mrs. E.\nRTalters, Mrs. C, Olmsted and Mrs.\nt. Maitland, all of Rossland.\n.SB. was also the first fnitiation for\nthe hew temple. Mrs. C. Eraser was\n|admitted td membership   and the\nt_>wlyrformed degree staff, under\nthe direction of Mrs. J. Woods, put\nwm the initiatory degree. Most excellent chief, Mrs. E. Sims thanked\nhe Trail temple for the loan of\nashes for the staff and the Ross-\nend temple for the loan of the officers' regalia.\n'Mrs. Woodward spoke on the\ntorthcoming shield competition's\nleing-held late in April, assigning\ni part for the Rosevale temple; She\nComplimented the degree staff on\nIts achievements and expressed the\nnop* it would take an active part\na the shield competitions,\nMra. Palmer spoke on the\nnvention.\nTh* World Health Organization\nif the United Nations now has.a\nriembership of 78 countries in all\n' i of the world.\nNelson Social\n.**      ' PHONB 144\nA visit overseas is oh the social calendar for at least\none District resident; while the sunny South is beckoning\nanother.\nALBERTA VISITORS .., .Mr.\nand-Mrs.W Walton of Calgary arrive today to visit, Mr. Walton's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. W. R. Gibbon, 621 Silica Street.\nThey stopped at Procter Sunday to\nvisit Mr. and Mrs. M. D. MacKinnon.       '..,'\u25a0\u25a0\nOFF TO FLORIDA '.' . . Stafford-\nT, Wilson of Trail left for Florida\nSunday to attend an Insurance company convention. Mrs, Wilson will\nvisit her sister, Mrs. Johri Hopwood,\nFifth Street ... '\n\u2022 \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nLEAVES   FOR   BRITAIN:. . .\nMiss Frances Ward, formerly  of\nNelson and now residing in Trail\nhas left for a holiday in Britain.\n-     .   \u2022   1\nTO MAKE HOME IN SALMO\n. . . Louis Pohti arrived In Nelson\nfrom Blairmore, Alta., Sunday en\nroute to Salmo where he and Mrs.\nPontl plan to make their home.   '\nWEEKEND VISITORS ... Mr.\nand Mrs Ernie George of Remac\nwere visitors in Nelson on the\nweekend.\n\u2022 *   *        *\nFROM SALMO'.,. . Mrs. L. JJon-\nti of Salmo was in NelBon over the\nweekend.\n\u2022 *   .\nTO CRANBROOK . ; . Mr. and\nMrs. R. B. Smith, Jr., of Sixth\nStreet, and young son, Morey, leave\ntoday for Cranbrook for a few\nweeks.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. F. G. Dunkin of\nBarrhead, Alberta, announce the engagement of their only daughter,\nNina Marguerite, to John Albert,\neldest son of Mr. and Mrs. J..C. B.\nWallach of Esquimalt, B.C. The\nwedding is to take place to Edmonton', Alta., on April 8,   -\nFruitvale Baby\nReceives Names \u25a0<\u2022:-.\",\nFRUITVALE, B.C. - In the St.\nJohn's Anglican Church, Archdeacon B. A. Resker conducted christening rites for the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. David Ewings, giving her\nthe names Shirley Anne.\nGodparents are Mr. arid Mrs.\nRonald Hill, uncle and aunt of the\nbaby. . .   s.        .  .\nSoropfomisls Told\nEfforts lor Aged\nMiss, K, Cameron, Social Welfare\nWorker addressed tbe Nelsoh Sor-\noptomlst Club at their regular\nmonthly meeting at the Nurses\nHome when Miss Marjorio Whitmore and Mrs. Helen Butling were\nco-hostesses. :'.''.\nMiss Cameron told the club what\nthe government is doing for our\nelderly citizens and of the many:\nthings that.are not being done on\ntheir behalf.       *,        -   ,        *.'.-..\nIt was reported that a letter had\nbeen received from Mrs. G. Huitt,\nimmediate Past President of the\nAmerican Federation of Soroptom-\nist Clubs, asking for information on\nlegislation regarding the Illegitimate child in Canada, to be incorporated in a report to be given by her\nat the coming convention of Sorop-\ntomist International Federations to\nbe held at Copenhagen (held every\nfour years). At this convention reports are to be given by the European, British and America!) Federations on legislation in each country with respect to juvenile delinquency, the handicapped child and\nthe Illegitimate child.\nThe club appointed Leona Boss,\nMarjorie Whitmore and Eileen Mackenzie, official delegates to tbe conference to be held in Nelson in\nApril-\nA donation of $10 was'given to the\nRed Cross-.and a gift is to be sent\nto Soroptomist House!' in London.\nMiss De Wolfe, the Club's first president was sent a thank-you note for\nher donation\" to the club, and arrangements were made for a tag\nday to be held in April. Miss Eileen\nMackenzie reported sick members\nbad been visited and flowers had\nbeen sent.\nAfter practising music for the\ncoining conference, refreshments\nwere served by the hostesses.\nFRUITVALE, B.C. - Plans for a\npainting \"bee\" were made by members of \"B\" Branch of St. John's\nAnglican Church Woman's Auxiliary .t;'_ meeting in the parish hall.\nMaterial for a sale of work was distributed by Mrs. J. Comeau, sewing\nconvener.    \/    ,\nroman Traveller in Arctic Finds\nEskimos\n^OTTAWA, (CP) \u2014 Many of oivll-\ntation'i so-called necessities aren't\n\u2022ally necessary. That's the word\nrom \u2022- SO-year-old housewife who\npent 15 months in the Arctic.\nDark - haired Vivian Wilkinson\nMined the cook-business manager\nnd of a trio that travelled the Arc-\nle to take pictures of Eskimos for\n.\u00ab National Film Board.\" Companies wer* her 32-year-old husband,\nlouglas, and Jean Roy, 23, bf Mon-\nreaJ, cameraman.\"\nTha termer Vivian Jean Latre-\nlouille of Toronto says she is one\n. th* fe wwhite women to live, act\nIlk and think like an Eskimo.\nThe trio joined an Eskimo camp\nleaded by Idlouk and composed of\nour families. The women of the\namp taukht Mrs. Wilkinson to cook\nlwnut\" \u2014 Eskimo style. Idlouk,\nather of eight children,, disclosed\nhe secrets of leal hunting and camp\nbr*. \u25a0 .v.-\nScenes shot in the l.loo included\nhe. birth of a baby boy early in\nhe Spring. He was called Allak.\nForm Chesterfield they went to\n'ond Inlet, on the north shore of\niaffin Land, with Idlouk. It was\nin thii trip that Mrs. Wilkinson\nived Eskimo-style.\nWARM AS TOA8T\n\"I really got to know the Eskimo\nind was astounded by their intelli-\nience, warmth and terrific sense of\ntumor,\" she said.\n' _*_essed in two layers of cloth-\ntig, one outfit, with the fur inside\nent\u2014 and Witty\nMon* 889\nTOWL.ER\nFuel A Transfer\nNelion, B.C.\nand the other with the fur facing\noutward, we were as warm as toast\nOur faces'got cold, but a frozen\nnose .is nothing in the Arctic.\"\nThe expedition started at Chesterfield Inlet, an R.C.M.P, post a few\nhundred miles South of the Arctic\ncircle on the West coast of Hudson\nBay.\nAt the end of the trip the team\nhad shot more than 30,000 feet of\nsound and silent film. The film ls\nbeing divided into two 30-iptaute\nshorts. Tentative titles are \"Eskimo\nHunter\" and \"The Life of an Eskimo.\" ,\nMrs. Wilkinson set up house at\nChesterfield ta an old wooden home\nabandoned years ago. She, fashioned\nfurniture from packing cases and\ntasted Eskimo fSod for the first\ntime. That was late Summer of 1050.\nThe life of an Eskimo was filmed\nthere. They built a huge igloo to\nhold elaborate film * and lighting\nequipment Around it was constructed four smaller igloos opening into\nthe main house. These were used\nas working bays, from which they\ncould take shots in the big igloo.\nCLEVER ACTORS\nThe next job was to find actors.\nMri. Wilkinson held a \"tea party\"\nand her husband mingled with the\nguests, studying them in their\nnatural habitat,\n\"I picked out the ones I thought\nbest for the job and they turned out\nto be wonderful,\" he recalled. \"They\nweren't in the least tempermental\nand did their best all the time we\nwere shooting.\"\n\"At Pond Inlet we moved into a\ndouble-walled tent. -Doug followed\nthe Eskimo's example and built a\nsnow sleeping platform covered with\nfurs. I took care of the kitchen \u2014\nall I had was a small oil stove and\nsome canned vegetables.   '\n\"The four families of the camp\nlived as one. We didn't have modern\nconveniences, but the Eskimos didn't\nmiss them arid t eventually forgot\nall about them. : .\"\n\"The boys ate well, I couldn't roast\nanything, but I had plenty of meat\nto fry over my little oil stove. It's\nsurprising, how good fried seal liver\nand onions with canned vegetables\ncan be. . '\n\"Narwhel, a small whale, was one\nof our favorites. We never touched\nthe meat The Eskimos fed that to\nthe dogs. But the skin was wonderful boiled or fried. For fish we had\nArctic char. It was just like salmon\nwhen fried. We didn't have any\nbread, but I made bannock' from\nflour, lard, baking powder and\nraisins.\"\n0MA&, tUfLU)itL\nWlcuuan, OflaAiin,\nwir*>k\nHALF-8IZE STYLE\nGOOD SPORT! Good worker I\nThis dress is designed for action I\nAnd those tucks at front and back,\nthe eight-gore skirt are fashion\nnews as well! Designed for the\nshorter, fuller figure \u2014 makes you\nlook slimmer, taller! No alteration\nworries I\nPattern R9126: Half Sizes 14%,\n18%, 18%. 20%, 22%, 24%.-Size 16%\ntakes 4 yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis easy:to-use patterq,. gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\n-Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care' of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson..\nJfoldtotdbg.\nMM\nRecurring Questions\nAnswered by Actress\n'By.JOAN BENNETT\n_ Year in and year oyt there seem to he problems \u2014\ndilemmas\u2014for which women must seek external .counsel.\nAfter the teen-age, these; problems fall briefly, only into two\nmajor situations. Here are my\n. TRADITIONAL. GIFT Of $50 from the .community\nwas oversubscribed when Mr. and Mrs. T. \\V. Harvey df\nNakusp: marked' the 50th anniversary of their marriage\nrecently.'The couple, \/married, in Sot^hall, Middlesex,\nEngland; were honored -by, organizations, and received a\n\"wedding\", cakje from Mrs. Harvey's sister in,England.\nJldtxa Hopper Refuses\nT_p Surrender to Age\nNEW YORK, March 30 (AP)-Edn\u201e Wallace Hopper,\nthe toast of Broadway at the tUrn of the century, is still fight*\ning. a winning battle against\nwoman's worst enemy, .age.\nShe is one of a quartet the theatre\nof another century produced, \u2014\nbeautiful ladies who believed that\neternal youth was possible arid who\nor less proved It \",    ,.\nfllsie de Wolfe Mehdl, in turn\nst-ge actress, interior decorator and\ninternational hostess, was 84 when\nshe died last Summer at Versailles.\nFanny War died of old age to\nJanuary. She may have been 79 \u2014\nor84.    ,   . ;';.-, ;'.-  .\u25a0'\u25a0....\nTwo hardy perennials remain:\nMiss HOpper and: Misttaguptte,\nFrance's lady with the famous' legs.\nThe. two women, dissimilar to\nevery' respect\" are illtp, .th' twd\nthings. They seemingly defeat .age\nby. the simple tactic of ignoring it.\nSecondly, they won't tell their ages.\nAn old theatrical record states\nthat Miss Hopper was born on, Jari'\n17, 1874. But an equally, good: source\nmakes her 88. . '*\nWhatever her age, Miss Hopper\nisn't discussing it\n\"People have been guessing my\nage since 1918,\" she said. \"I just let\nthem go ahead. All records pf my\nbirth were destroyed in: the Sen\nFrancisco fire,!'\n: Miss Hopper has the figure,! un*\nveined hands and legs and agility of\na young woman. She lives quietly\nto a mid-town Manhattan apart\nment. Six days a week she goes to\nthe' office of a Wall Street broker\nand puts to a full day taking care\nof her investments. \u2022' \u2022\u25a0 i .\n\"My secret?\" she asked. \"It's leading a normal, full life, I keep busy.\nI take exercise. I'venevei; smoked.\nI never drink. I eat sensible things\n\u2014lots of proteins and no fats. I go\nto bed early during the week \u2014\nnot later than 9:30, and I get up at\n\"30. Weekends I entertain or am\nentertained..! go to the theatre a\nlot\" *   \u25a0\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30e line, 40e line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two Unci. 10% discount for prompt payment\nIf lt'i worth owning, \"it's worth    ROTARY LUNCHEON TODAY,\ninsuring. See BLACKWOOD, A6CY HUME HOTEL,: 12:15 PM.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1952 \u2014 >\nf|\nanswers for them:\nQ.,I have just\ncome to a big\ncity where there:\nare. more women than men,\nBesides, I don't\nknow anybody\nwho can introduce, me to men.\nHow* can I meet\nthem?\nA. Despite the\nstatistics which\ninsist that women sadly outnumber men, a\nmoderately attractive girl can\nstill meet men \u2014 and ge( dates with\nthem. True, she needs more Ingenuity and energy than ever, before.\nThe first approach is through a\nchurch's young people's group. The\nsecond Is through further education,\nwell selected. She isn't apt to meet\nmen In. a course on voice culture,\nor a series of lectures on art. But\nadult education in all fields has\ngrown enormously popular, arid\nthere are many courses that attract\nas many if not more men than\nwomen \u2014-engineering, drafting me*\nteorology, languages and writing, to\nname only a tew. More than one\nromance has budded 'and bloomed\nover mutual anguish and aid before\nan examination, if not simply over\nmutual interest to, any given subject.   ..'\u25a0-.\nThere are many other avenues of\nestablished social contact, from organized groups of bird-watchers to\ngroups that spontaneously band to*\ngether for some favorite sport. Making friends with other girls often\nleads to being introduced- to their\nbrothers or cousins, or their boyfriends' friends. And don't be too\nstuffy if a pleasant-faced, well\nmannered young man sharing .\ntable in a restaurant you picked be*\ncause men eat there should engage\nyou in conversation,\nWHAT TO DO?\nQ. What should a girl do when a\nman gets \"fresh\"?\nA. In one form or another, this\nquestion pops up on the women's\npage daily. It's a nice vague question \u2014 dpesn't exactly define the\nsituation or the degree of the offense. And I'm go)ng to answer It\nby offeridlng many,women.\nWith a few exceptions (the treat\nment for which Is a sound blow or\nju-jitsu), women bring \"freshness1\nupo nthemselves and act extremely\nsilly about tbe situation. Ninety-\nnine per cent of the masculine population wants' to avoid a turn-down,\nwhether it be for a kiss or greater\n\"favors\" When a man \"forces his\nattentions\" upon a woman, she* has\nusually, given all the signals that\nmake him believe the attentions\nwill be favorably received.\nIf you don't want the man to show\nhis desire'for you:\n* a. Don't drink to the degree where\nyou are affectionate and hazy.\nb. 'Don't   lean    against him or\notherwise be, however innocently,\nphysically chymmy. This is \"teas-\ntog\"\u2014and unfair.\n. Dont use earless \"sophisticated:' language \u2014 either profane or\nthe kind that indicates how, loosely\n\"modern\" you are.        ,\nd. Dont go to a place where there\nis every opportunity for physical\nintimacy \u2014 to a. mah'e room, or\nfor a twosome weekend.\ne. Don't indulge to ardent petting'\nand kissing, You have no right to\nexcite-yourself sndthe man almost\nto the borderline: or gratification\nand then be indignant or hysterical\nwhen the man assumes you area\nwilling partner.\nf. In short don't promise more\nthan you will perform.\nJUST\nARRIVED\nNEW 1952\nBaby Strollers\nand\nCarriages\n7leedts\u00a3Aagt\ntily. 3ojuml Whaehh.\nCROCHETED LEAVES\nNEW TABLE FASHION 1 Color\nand plenty of iti Make each leaf\ndifferent\u2014shades of Spring greens.\nAutumn yellows reds and browni\nPineapple and shell crochet 1\nLarge doily is 13 _. x 18 inches in\nNo. 30 cotton; smaller, 9 jf 12. Pattern 860; crochet' directions.\nSend. TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyour NAME and ADDRESS.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RE8ULTS\nDisfricf Nurses\nElect Officers\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - At a dinner meeting here, members of Reg- j\nist.red Nurses' Association chapters\nto Fernie,. Cranbrook and Kimberley chose Miss Doreen Glfford of\nCranbrook as their new. president ;\nMiss Rose Hartwig of Kimberley\nis vice-president Mrs. Susan Tadey\nof Cranbrook, treasurer and Mrs. A..\nT. RiChaTdson of KimbeHey, secretary. . Mrs. J. J. Halle of Fernie\nwas chosen as district councillor.   .\nA report was given on thecurrenf'\ncourse for chapters on civil defence and atomic warfare nursing\nbeing given to Southern East Kootenay Sentres.\nThe course consists of six lecturei\nto each centre, the first by Major\nPeter Mathisen of Nelson,\" civil die.-?\nfence coordinator for the. Kootenay\nreception and mobile support area,,\nthe second by Dr. W. G. Watts, on?\nmedical aspects, the third by-the\nlocal physics teacher and the re-';\nmatoder. pf the course by two district nurses. They are Miss. Rose,\nManchuk and Miss   Nora   Wood.\"\nwho recently took' the, provincial\ncourse to this aspect of nursing at.\nVancouver. Miss Wood will instruct\nin Fernie and-Creston   and Miss\nmanchuk to' lmberley and Cranbrook. . l;\nPythian Sisters\nHold Successful Sale -\nA successful bake sale wai held!\nSaturday by the Pythian Sisters\nLodge.\nThe committee to charge Included\nMrs. L. Ott, Mn. E. Morgan and\nMrs. J. Bereau.      >\nFRU.TVALE, B.C. \u2014 Mri. Wai-.\nter Duncan and Mrs. Marie Matsen\nwere winners when Mrs. D. Shbrt-\ning was hostess to members of th*\nCircle Bridge Club. There wen\ntwo tables to play.\nTRAVEL REFRESHED\nOwn a\nKEMAC\nFOR.LOWEST COST OIL HEAT\nFine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\nMoir's chocolates at WAIT'S.\nFurnaces and Stoves cleaned, odd\njobs. Pounder Chimney Service,\nPhone 1541-L.\nWhy not give us a call tp Increase\nyour fire insurance protection today ?-C. W. APPLEYARD.    :   {:\nSHEFFIELD LIQUID P*ORCELAIN\n'Waterproof\" \u2014 2 oz. bottle _5c\nBURN8 LUMBER CO.\nBeautiful   new   Criskay   dresses\nfor girls. $2.95 to $5.05.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nBraided  cotton  rugs,  241', oval,\n$1.98; * woven   cqtton   yarn   rugs,\n40?x24\"\u2014$4.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\n: 8ervlee, salesman wanted Immediately. Steady Job, good wages,\npleasant working condition!. Apply\nl\/i person. Peebles Meteri\n.     WATCH REPAIRS \u2022\nFor reliable repair! at moderate\nprices try COLLINSON'S JEWELLERY STORE, 581 Baker Street\n\u25a0   FREE - FREE\nWe. patotithem tree.\"Order your\nwindows and screens now. Phone\n1474-R. - VALLEY MFO. Ctf.\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant fix lt,\nthrow it away Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices\nEAGLES' PIE 80CIAL.T6-N1TE\nEagles, Au_., and Social Club\nmembers welcome, Ladies bring pie,\n8'p.m.  \" -.\".-:' '\u25a0:\nOrder East_r fhiweri early \u2014 for\nchurch, home, and distant loved\nones from VALENTINE'S, Phone\n125.. |      \"    '\nNAVY LEAQUE ANNUAL MEETING, Council Chambers City Hall,\nApril lit 8. Bif\/L Public attendance\ncordially Invited.\u2022\"\u25a0',.' ,\nYou've read about it: in Reader's\nDigest, now you can buy Lamorene,.\nthe wonder rug cleaner, ait\n*      HIPPERSON'S.\nEverything in fencing. Poultry\nfencing In all heights, bantam\nfencing, hog fence, double scroll\nlawn fencing..barbed wire, etc:\n\u25a0-.; ^PERSON'S\nSUITS TO MEASURE\nFOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN\n-. -.    . $59.75.\nFit Guaranteed.\nRobt Nolte, Maajer Tailor.   *\nSpring is here, picnics and holidays are to store, A radio is always\na wanted companion. Come ln and\nhear the Stromberg Carlson AC\/DC\nPortable..\nMe A Mo (NELSON) LTD.\nWINDOW GLASS   \"\nWe have a complete range ot\nstandard sizes to lingle and double\nstrefagth. We can cut to your individual requirements.\nT. H. WATERS A CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St      Nelion,     Phone 188\n1951-52 RADIO LICENCES\nEXPIRE MARCH 31st, 1952\nNew Licence! may be obtained\nfrom 8. Bentley, Supervisor during\nthe house-to-house canvass, April,\nMay and June. Phone ,505-L-l, 616\nFifth Street    .,\nImperial Cook Stove Range $199.\nWe will allow $50 exchange ori your\nold rariga.   '\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0#:\u25a0.\nWe buy and .sell new and* used\nfurniture.    \u25a0.* -, ',\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST. . : PHO,NE 15\u00ab0  \u2022\nNOTICE\nTO THE BERRY GROWER8 OF\nTHE KOOTENAY DISTRICT\nThe McDonald Jam Company\nmust have an estimate by April 15th,\n1952, of the amount of berries you\nwill have to' offer this season in\norder to .operate the Jam factory\npart of our business.\nMcdonald jam eo., ltd:\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nPETERS -r Funeral services fqr\nthe late Mrs. Margaret Peters, of\nYmir will be held from the Thompson Funeral Home to Nelson today\nat. 1:30 p.m. The Venerable Archdeacon , B. A. Resker will officiate\nand interment will be to Nelson\nMemorial Park,\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nMcLAREN \u2014 FunerH services fqr\nthe* late John P. McLaren will be\nheld from the Thompson Funeral\nHprne Tuesday at 2. p.m. Rev- Ian\nM. Presley and Rev. T.: J. S. Ferguson-will officiate. Interment will be\nin Nelson Memorial Park.\nAT YOUR GROCER'S IN 4 HANDY SIZES\n .    \u2014\u2014\u2014-.\n\u25a0\u25a0\nEstablished April __   1901'\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper      '\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the'\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY., LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street  Nelson,  British Columbia\nAuthorized ai Second Class Mali\nPost Office  Department Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND '\n; THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nMonday, March 31,1352\nCarefulness Yes, But\nSelfishness Never1 in\nConsidering Immigrants\nTeletype wires the other day carried this Associated Press dispatch to\nnewspapers across Canada:\n, , \"tfE \\V YORK-More'than any-\nthing else, Martha. -Statnatiadou\nwants to be kissed... and loved.\n\" Nobody wants to kiss me,' she\nsaid.     -\" \"\u25a0..'.\u25a0'  '.\n\"The 7-year-old Greek girl and\n;    two other Greek children, all, of\n:. .them.severely disfigured by injuries in Communist-guerrilla warfare, arrived here today for plastic\nsurgery.\n\"Little Martha said her playmates tease her, and even her baby\nI    brother refuses to kiss'her.\"\n\u00bb,.I We in. this comfortable country,\n''barely scarred by war, might well re-\nfleet'on that little story. And in doing\nso it miglvt be well to note again that\ntHia is just a 7-year-old who is victim\nof the democracy-Communist struggle.\n'; Then, with the possibility of a new\nFlight in our minds, we might consider\nUie\" arguments of those who would\n'^jjpep all of this broad, rich country's\n\u25a0*\u25a0 benefits for themselves, who would ban\nthe immigrant, and abandon, to what-\n; aver fate remains for him, the dis-\n: placed person in his homeland. Ordi-\n* nary, commotl sense cautions are no\nj doubt valuable, but the kind of heart-\nlessness that inspires those arguments\n\u25a0is hardly impressive.\nPatience Thwarts\n_;>.    Red Korea Strategy\n\u25a0'', ; it'is'hardly surprising that nerved\n. should have become raw and tempers\n' thin over the course of the so-called\n\"negotiation\" in Korea. It has been\napparent for a long time that there has\nnot been, and perhaps never was, any\nreal meeting of minds.... The various\n^Communist gambits designed to prolong and confuse the discussions have\nbecome increasingly transparent. . . .\n\"Under those conditions it is only\nnatural,\" suggests the New York Times,\n\"that many persons should feel that\n. the' logical course for the United Nations is, to put an end to the nonsense\nand to avoid at least the appearance, if\nnot the supstance, of continuing hypocrisy. We are fully convinced that'-,\nthere will be peace when, and only\nwhen, .the Communists are persuaded\nthat it is to their advantage and to our\ndisadvantage. It is therefore frequently\nsuggested tha't we might do well to\ntake some abrupt action to put. an end\nto what is an exceptionally irritating\nstalemate.\" \u25a0_ , ,  \u25a0\nThis point of view, however, warns\nthe Times, does not take into account\nthe factor of Communist motive. \"It- is\nclearly the intention of the adversary'\nto evoke precisely those sentiments\namong us. The negotiation, in ihe Communist book, is part 6f a real war of\nnerve* .It ig expected that in any such\ncontest we, as, against our more\nstolid and better-disciplined* antago-,\nnists, would be the first tobreakt' '\n\"For that reason this 'is the time,\naboye all, when we must meet guile\nWith guile and obduracy with resolu-\n. tion.... There should be no diminution\nof firmness on the one hand, but there\n( should be no purely adventurous attempt to force an issue on the other.\"\nThese Deadly Weapons\n; Men in high place, in military and\ncivil circles, speak from time to time\nof the, remarkable new weapons that\nare on the way. Latest to do so.is the\nAmerican Chief of Staff, General J.\nLawton Collins. They will \"astound\neven the most sanguine, planner,\" he\nsaid. *\nNo doubt he's right. The fact is,\nhowever, that these new Arms are not\nyet in existence, ahd years may elapse\nbefore they pass the proving ground\ntests. The breathless way in which they\nare announced often indicates they are\nin production. Yet the shooting war in,\nKorea shows that, apart from the jet\nfighter and the napalm bomb, the weapons of war today are substantially\nwhatthey were in 1945.\nPerhaps it is just as well. No one\ncountry can hope to have a monopoly\non the deadliest- weapons. If somehow\npeace *can be preserved) and there\nnever will be any need to use the\nastounding arms that are on the way,\nthat will be the real achievement.\nSuch Lan&ua&e\nIt ii a shocking business if the vocabulary\nof the North Atlantic Alliance is to1 be cluttered with horrible words like \"infraitruc-\nture\", impossible to pronounce without iput-\nterlng, meaningless to most people, and quite\nunnecessary.\nN.A.T.O.'s infrastructure, lt ls explained,\nls the system of airfields, communications,\nharracks and so on the Allies will build ln\nWestern Europe. The Idea apparently is that\njust as \"infra dig\" means beneath a man's dignity, so \"infrastructure\" ought tp mean the\nitructure beneath N.A.T.O.'i armed forces. Ai\nHumpty Dumpty explained to Alice, the question ln these cases is who li to be master\u2014the\nword or the man who uses it If anybody wants\nto make infrastructure signify the groundwork of N.A.T.O., there iq no law against |t.\nBut what ls the matter with \"groundwork\" or\n\"ground needs\" to convey that meaning? The\nonly thing the matter with these words is that\nthey are too simple and easily understood to\nsuit the pompous asses who invent officialese. .\nFrom \"Infrastructure\" the bewildered\nreader moves on to \"the hard core of the third\nslice of the infrastructure,\", an'actual-phrase\nfrom-a N.A.T.O. document. Men who make up\ngibberish like this are certainly not to be\ntrusted; and It must be charitably assumed\nthat the leaders of N.A.T.O: do not write such\nstuff themselves but hire a man to do It for\nthem. In that case, they could save money by\ndispensing w\"h him and using English Instead.\u2014Toronto Globe and Mall. \u2022   ,\nThe Pl__mtoit_!\nA teacher at a progressive school In the\nUnited States observed to her dismay one\nmorning a small puddle outside the classroom\ndoor, as Editor Klngsley Martin tells it in the\nNew Statesman and Nation.\nMost unhygienic. As she' walked to her\ndesk she thought: \"We mustn't set up any guilt\ncomplexes.\" Inspiration catoe.\n, \"Children, she. said, \"I've noticed that\nmess outside the door. We must, of couri.;\nkeep our school clean. So we will'all put our\nhands over our eye! and whoever* was responsible\" will go out quietly and mop it up. Then\nhe or she can return to the room, end no one\nwill know who did it.\"\nThey covered their eyes. The teacher heard\ntiny footsteps, going to the door. It opened and\nclosed. Pause! Opened and closed again! Pitter-\npatter of little feet back. '\nAfter, a decent interval she said; ''All\nright, children, we can open .our iyet again;\"\nBlinking, she made her way through the door\nto Bee that all w_b sanitary again.     \u25a0   t\nOutsid. th* door wer* two puddlii, .rid i\nnote: \"The Phantom strikes agaliil\"\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpop te any reader, Names ot persons\nliking queitloiii will Hot bl publlahed.\nThere li no charge fer -thla service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE AN8W6REP\nBV MAIL except where there li obvious\nneoetilty for prlvaoy. ,\nReader, Nelson*\u2014Please give address of some-\none v\/ho can analyse handwriting.\nMn. G. S, Strong 708-2nd Street Nelion,\nand J. B. Elliott, 1438 Cedar Avenue, Trill,\nhave both had experience ln this.\nI. S., Salmo\u2014Where can I get Jerusalem ant\nglobe artichoke.? Where can' I buy pedigree dogit.\nWrite to Grii.elle'_ Greenhouses, Hoover\nStreet, Nelson, about 'the Jerusalem and\nglobe artichokes. For the dogi write to Haven\nKennell, Steveiton, B.C.', Or to Shepherd Kennels, 291 East 18th, Vancouver.\nG. W., Nelion\u2014How old is Ginger Rogers and\nis Clara Bow dead?\nGinger Rogers wai born in 1911, The last\nwe heard of Clara Bow, who was born ln 1005,\nwas that ahe had retired from films and wai\nliving with her husband on a catUe ranch.\nCurious\u2014please tell me if among the world'!\nten loading scientists any are atheists or\nagnostics? Hai anyone the right to act aa\nScout Master who has,not had previoui\nScout training?\nEinstein li a deeply religious man, Some\nof the remaining nine may be agnostic but as\nmolt keep iuch views to- themselves it is\ndifficult to tell. Probably only a minority are\nactual atheiiti. As for the Scout question\u2014the\nanswer ia Yes, providing he serves three\nmonths' probation period to the satisfaction\nof the Scout Group Committee.\n3. M., Castlegar\u2014Ii there any breeder of\nNutria, the South American fur-bearing\nrat, in Canada?\nTher* leemi to be no one in B.C. who\nbreeds these animals. Write te Dr. Lionel\nSteveneon, vice-principal Ontario Veterinarian College, Guelph, Ont,; and to Dr. W. R.\nGunn, Livestock Commissioner, Parliament\nBuildings, Victoria, B.C.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\nFrom The Nelson Dally Newi, Maroh 31,1942\nRequest of George Truscott, wooden side.\nwalk foreman, for retirement on superannuation March 31 wai granted Monday night by\nthe City Council, F, H. Dalrymple, street car\nrnotorman, will be superannuated because of\nUl health.\nRepair of the street railway switch on\nFront Street at an estimated cost of $285 was\napproved by the City Council.\n25 YEARS AQO ..'\nFrom The Nelion dally Newi, Maroh 31,1827\nOn the eve of hii departure to a new post\nW. G. Hail, locomotive foreman at the Canadian Pacific Railway shops, Nelspn Division,\nfor the past six years, was presented by his\nfellow railroaders with a club bag, gold fountain p\u00abn and holder, and a cigar and cigarette\ncase.\nEDGEWOOD, B. C.-Farmera in this district intend to go in .for tobacco raising this\n\u2022eaidn. Small ..patches have been grown In\nrecent years, but an organized effort is being\nmade by the Farmers' Institute tb put it op a\ncommercial basis.\n50 YEARS AQO\nFrom The Nelson Dally Miner, March 31, 1.02\nThe iteamer KaslA brought in one car of\nRambler-Cariboo ore for the Stlby smelter at\nSen Francisco, one cer of American -Boy ore\nfor Trill, end one car of Surprise ore for Nelson. The Kokanee also ibrought in a car of\nMolly Gibson ore for th* Nelson smelter.\nForty-five men are at work on the bridge\nwhich the C.P.R. 1. erecting td take the place\nbt the present 'wooden structure across the\nKootenay River at a point four miles from this\nCity. Th* bridge Is to be of stone and steel.\nThe three piers ar* to be of stone, and alio the\nabutments. ThCre are to he three steel plate\ngirders and one lattice trust. Tbe cost will be\nin the neighborhood of $80,000. The work at\npresent is confined to the building of the two\nWestern piers.\nYour Horoscope\nHappiness, new friendships Snd pleasant\nfinincial surjWlsti Kern Ih th* offing for y*u\nlh the nixt ihonthi. A . tflhed tnd artistic\nhatufe ihould bring today's child success ind\nJocularity.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Efotlo\nToday's Bible Thought\nIt is will to start accumulating\n- wisdom in youth in sChCdl. But he\nWho'ito_ I adding wijdofti tc- hli\nstore wil) soon ctia* ib b* wis*.\nOh teach \u00bb\u2022 (o number our days,\nthat we may apply our hearts unto\nwlidem.\u2014Pi, 9:12.\nOiwLdisL\n_JETON-A LOAD OF\nTHE PRODI0AL SON WHO\nNEEDS MORE PROPOINfi.\nv\" TUANXANOA MATIO HAr\nLIFT TO.C.W. RHODES,\nThere ain't no perfect men, an'\nanybody ae free o' faults aa Bill\nleemi on the outside, is certain to\nhave sometbln' wrong on the ,ln-\nside. !'\nLetters to\n':   > y -v   ' ,.\nThe Editor\nLetters to tho Editor ot sufficient Interest but ot too great\nlength for tho usual letters Column will, on occasion be reproduced in newi oolumns All let-\nten to the Editor must be signed,\nthough a nom-de-plume may be.\nused for publication.\nFinds Private >\nEnterprise Noble. ,. .\nTo the Editor:       ;\nSir\u2014Regarding Social Security 1\nmaintain that the alley cat living\npn his wits, or as lt were, private\nenterprise, is a far nobler creature\nthan those fatuous! felines to be\nfoi*nd in Mr. G. A. Butling! mew\ntophia.\nP.F, GRIFFITHS\nCanada Jef for\nA^Powertargef\nBy po.Gjl.A8 HOW        ,\nOTTAWA, March 3. (CP) - A\ncrown company will take command\nnext week of Canada's atomic effort, empowered to map plans for\nwhat has been described as \"greatly\ninc-eased activity\" In this vital field.\nThe big,target Is the harnessing of\nthe atom for power, something Dr.\nC..J. Mackenzie\u2014Canada's Mr. Atom-sees coming within the next\nfive or, 10 yean. .\nThe shift in command will come\nTuesday, April 1, with a minimum\nof fuss and formality.. However, it\nIs an importnt milestone in the 10-\nyear Canadian courtship bf the at-\npm. It means the greatest expansion\nin Canada's atomic program ls beginning to take shape.\nWith work already a__.ted.on the\nnew\/Chalk River reactor or nuclear\nfurnace, Dr. Mackenzie says he no*\nwill be able to devote himself full,\ntime, to \"preparing for the greatly-\n-ncreased activity\" that will swing\nInto full stride when the reactor ls\ncompleted within the next two\nyears. The increase in activity, he\ntold a reporter, is already \"coming\nalong repidly.\" ,   \\\nDENVER, March 30 CAP) \u2014 A\ndeadly king cobra is believed loose\nin Denver today.       *\nThe snake apparently slithered\nout of the automobile of a reptile\ngarden* operator during at attempted burglary of the vehicle.\nThe,snake, said to be from five\nto six feet long, wai In a'carload ot\nreptiles* end animals being transported to Bergen Park, Colo., by\nScott Lamb,\nViews\nFrom the\nNews Fronts\nBy JOHN M. HlBHTbyVER\nWASHINGTON, March 80 (AP>-\nPresident Truman's dramatic announcement that he li out of the\nrunning poled r vital question tonight for United States' allies and\nfoei alike In the global atructure\nwith Soviet Communism!\nDoei hli decision to retire' increase\nthe chancea , tor change ln U.S.\nforeign policy?\nIndications are that the line to be\ntaken by U.S. diplomat! in. world\ncapitals ii that the chancea tor a\nchange are no greater now than\nthey were before Truman'i aotion\nThe assumption of administration\nforeign policy experts is that the\ndemocratic party will have to run\nessentially on the record which\nTruman haa made during hli seven\nyeas a chief executive of the most\npowerful country in the antl-Com*\nmuniat coalition,   .\nThe Republican position on for*\neign policy la still a subject of Intense debate and will continue to\nbe until the party convention three\nmonths hence resolves fhe controversy In the adoption of a platform\nplank,\nTruman'i decision would appear\nto have no vital bearing on what\nthe' Republicans will elect to do\nabout foreign policy.'    '\nTruman himself hai been identified with the moit revolutionary\nperiod of change In the history ot\nthli country'i relatione with the\noutside world. Beglnnln. with the\nTruman doctrine of 1947, In which\nhe laid down the principle of helping other countrlei to defend their\nIndependence,' through the present\nmutual leeurity program of. aid to\ncountrlei ln Europe, Africa and\nAsia, he haa presided over the for-\nmt.tion of a peacetime coalition un-\nprecendented in extent.\"\nNO JAP FISHERMEN\n100 MILES OFF COAST\nOTTAWA,\" March SO (CP) '\u2014\nFisherlei Minister Mayhew told the\nCommons an inquiry hai produced no basli for a Vancouver report that Japanese fishermen are\nfishing 100 miles off the British\nColumbia, coast\nHe was replying to a question,\nfrom James Sinclair (k-Coait-\nCanllano), parliamentary assistant\nto Finance Minister Abbott, about\na .eport to that effect ln the Vancouver Sun:\nMr. Mayhew said a check through\ndepartmental coastal patrols and\nother authorities proved the report\nto be \"utterly untrue.\"\nCapable ef blowing a hole In a\n\u2022teel-plated warship, thla mine\nbecomes an attractive display\nwhen exploded harmlessly. It wai\nplanted by the North Korean\ntoroei te Interfere with U.N.\nnaval action but was iet off by a\nminesweeper. \u2014 Central Pren\nCanadian.\nCopyright Fees\nTough on Small\nRadio Stations\nTORONTO, March 30 (CP)\u2014111*;\nCanadian Association of Broadcasters uid Friday a new formula tat,\ncopyright fees to be paid by Canadian radio will Increase operating\nexpenses of radio stations and cut\ninto the funds broadcasters set aside\nfor tbe development of Canadian\nmusic and talent\n\"Unquestionably, tha severe\n\u2022cale of payments will materially\naffect the financial petition ef\nmany of the smaller Canadian\nbroadcasting stations whole feel\nmay be Increased mere than tenfold and there li tome possibility\nthat smaller communities may eo-\ntually be deprived ef broadcasting\n\u2022ervloe,\" a statement Issued by\nthe Association's board of directors iald.    '\nHenceforth, royaltlei for performance of copyright muilc will be\nbaled on a percentage of revenue.\nThe change was made by an award\nof the copyright appeal board ln\nOttawa Thursday.\nIt Seems That TV Critics Have\nReally Something to Criticize\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, March 30 (AP)\u2014\nPeople in the televiiion induitry are\nalwayi meaning, \"everybody's a critic.\"\nAnd it'i true, Everybody hai ideas\nabout what ii good and bad bn TV,\nOn the theory that enough critlclim\nmight bring improvement* to the\nmedium I'm going to get into the\nact and offer some thoughts about\nwhat coirtei over th* home \u00bbcreen.\nFbr instance ...      ,\nWhen will comediani leern.that\ngetting messy with food isn't es hilarious as their writer* think it is?\nThe thrown pie was funny .when\nMack Sennett Introduced it But TV\ncomici hive worn the gimmick, out.\nLast weekend, two young eom'lci\nstrained for laughs by putting butter and Jam on their arms and\nthrowing food wildly. Funny? Nope.\nThen two flirt with the herder* of\ngood taste more than molt others.\nThey're funny enough without\nseeking comedy from physical Ih-\ncapacities or Imitating girls. That\nmight gb |n night clubs, but not on\nhome TV,\nTALKING COMMERCIAL\nWhy oh why, do all the soap ads\non TV have .to be sung? Some day\na smart ad man will come up with I\nan old-fashioned talking commercial. It will revolutionize the indui*\ntry.\nOne of the most exciting ihow* I\non TV ii the Ed Murrow program,!\n\"See It Now1\", It emphasizes the fact |\nth\u00abt .TV'rgreateit worth li ln thfJ\nfield of news. But\u2014 It li dliappoint'l\ning to lie more than half the Mur-I\nrow show being presented on the!\nfilm. Viewers can see that sort of I\nthing In any newireel theatre. What!\nthey went Is newa as lt'i happening-, ,\n5_ie \"I Love Lucy\" ihow li one of 1\nthe most musing of the comedy!\nhalf-hour*. Lucille Ball ls undoubt-1\nedly the best of the low comedianil\n(and Imogene Coca the queen off\nhigh comedy), But\u2014 I wish the]\natory situations wouldn't be quite sol\nfar-fetched and unbelievable. \"Mir I\nFriend Irma\" geti almost aa many!\nlaughi with plausable happening*!\nand leaves a better Impression.     I\nLowest of the low: The Huckster*!\nwho shout at'the children in the!\naudience. \"Now, kiddiei, go tell!\nyour mother that ihe'i got to go to!\nthe jstore and buy the jumbo lln\nbox of erunchie wunehies.\"\nSWING.\nV*\ncomes the promise *ef vacation fun at woodland\ncottafls ... or In sun-drenched beach resort.\nEvery year, we eagerly look forward fo th* |oy of\nsummer holidays  that  savings  make  possible.\nRegular deposits Into your Savings Account can soon\nmount up to a sizeable lunS, Through saving, your\nmoney will be available for vqcqtlom or for q new home\n\u2014when you need It.\nYeu will find us delighted to arrange a Savings Plan to fit\nI\u25a0'\u25a0 , your budget. Drop In for a\nfriendly visit today\u2014and\nwe \"can  talk  It over\ntogether. Remember,\nthere Is always something to \u00bbave fori\nV3.-C. -'-   -\n_X-5*\u00a7\n*.\"\u00a3'\nf m\ni *\n'iMitk\n-  .->*\u00ab:**A>:> ' V.\n-m m\ntoJL*5-\nh**!\nVOURS    FOR    SERVICE\nIMPERIAL   BAC.K\nOF      C  ANA DA\nfor ffct address qf yevr Imperial Bank Branch, tee your Telephone Directory\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Wey\ns    v X\n<-\u2022<--.\n fl\/iound. ihst.\nGERRY  REYNOLDS\nSURE SIGNS OF SPRING DEPT. . . Saw a youngster Watching\nthe. final day oi skating last week plopping a baseball in and out of hi*\nglove ... Hockey and basketball are well Into the stretch, and' baseball\n. is luring the attention of at least one eye a* March makes its filial bow,\nWith baseball, it's just a case dt moving into.a hew phase. Thanks\nto a high pressure sales job by American sportiwriteri, the game ia kept\nln the news 11 months of the year although actual playing time extendi\n-only from, April. 15 to the tint weak it] October. World Seriei postmortems consume OotCbet, the annuSl Winter meeting and subsequent\ntrade talk take care of November. Thlnga'ebb s little In December but\npick up again in January when players and mantgament itirt Jockeying* on contracti. This builds, up until twining camps op\u00bbn and tjitn al)\nthe eto.i are out for another six months ., -.',.*',..'\nThese camp stories are the best exemplei of the *baieb\u00abU writer'i\nart for my money. It seems'every one of the 16 major lelgue club*\nhas an excellent chance of winning a'pennant IF a oertain- outfielder\n. pans out at first base, IF the staroitoher returns, to -form and IF the.\nrookie whiz gets discharged from the Army in time ,.,,, Don't get m\u00bb\nwrong, I admire the skill, an example whloh Canada,'! hockey wrlteri\nare following more and more to glamorise our national Winter Sport,\nCurling enacted Its swan song for thii season here Sunday with\nthe winding up of the Little Bonspiel. For molt curlers in these parte,\nthe leason was lots long enough ..   Not for Ted Waltjen, a 49-year-old\nDawson, Yukon carpenter who move* on to, Vancouver this week; with\nthe hopes of getting Into the wlndun ipiel there. Ted, who can prove\ndt by his diary, curled in no less than 184 matchei this TJMnter , . .\nwhich must be a provincial, if not Dominion record . . . Average\nNelson curler may play 45 or 50 games ln a season.   *.\n*  Ted estimates he averaged 10 games a week\" this year, achieving\nthl. by being on hand at the rink to fill In at every opportunity in addition to hli regular licks with, the C.'H. Parrish rink. He took Part in\nevery local spiel* as well ai the provincial event at Kimberley and the\nButterfly at Creiton where he aided Walter Duckworth In. winning the\nprimary competition . . . Needle** to lay, Ted oame down from the\nYukon for the express purpose of curling and certainly made the most\nof lt... Slack season in his trade and the fact he hadn't been out of the\nYukon for 12 years prompted hli Winter vacation. Ted thoroughly enjoyed lt and would Uke to do the sameeihing again next year. In the\nmeantime, he'd like to extend his leason mark at Vancouver before\nheading North again. .. ' . * ',\n\u25a0- - '\u25a0;:.'*    *' ,'\u25a0\".\"* v\"\nSHORT SHOTS ... There's'still nothing doing yet on the baseball\nfront here but Ron Nash informs me his Tigers will be reptganlred this\nweek .. .Ron sees the possibility, of both Benior and intermediate nines\noperating under the Tiger banner thii year, . ... If plans for night ball\nhere materialize,' a^step most executives .feel- is necesiary to revive\ninterest, it would ppen the way for an expanded West Kootnay senior\nloop to include Trail and\/or one or two Northern Washington clubs .. .,\nKimberley boxing promoter-Herb Stanton inform! he is trying to arrange\na bout for his Golden Boy, Jack Butula,,with a Lethbr.idge or Yakima\n' fighter'.\";. Butula is also prepping for the Dominion championships and*\nOlympic trials the end of April... Ouy Taron, the Kootehay champion,\nlays he would like to fight Butula again, in Nelion .:. According to Don\n(Lethbridge Herald) Pilling, ex-Smokie coach Bobby Kirk hai applied\nfor the coscfiing job with the junior Native Sons... ex-Dynamiter coach\nKen McAuley is receiving plaudlti* for taking the mediocre Edmonton\nOil Kings into the Weitern Canada, League 'final this season,.\nOxford Defeats Cambridge,\nCanadian Bows for Winner\n6*2\u00a3^\nLONDON, March 30 (Relate..)\u2014\nThe Oxford Univerilty orew pull-\n\u2022ad a stunning upiefby defeating\nCambridge Saturday In the beat\nrace. Oxford strained along the\n4.4-mlfe wlnd-and-mow driven\nThames River course, winning by\n\u00ab loant quarter-length. . ' -\nHeavy snow and a biting wind\nmade fbr the worst conditions In the\nfciitory of the race, .first rowed in\ncover: mor\u00a9\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"_<_\u25a0_----\nWhen in Spokane.\nMOTOROLA\nCar Radios\n$49.95 to $89,95\nFree Installation\nRecapping\n600x16-$9.30\n:'    \u2022'*\nSeat Covers\n,   Fibre $11.95\nPlastic $19.95\nPRIESS Tire Co.\n716 W. 2nd\nSpokane, Wash.\n1820. Choppy water and stinging\nspray combined to make it as uncomfortable as possible for crowi\nand spectator!. - '\nDiehard benda of spectator* \u2014\nwell short of the 1,000,000 who\nwould have turned out In good wea-.\nther-^lomped .through the inow-\ncovered towpaths along the river to\nfollow the stralnink crews,\nHundred! of thousands of other\nBritons followed the race in cozy\nliving roomi or cheery pubs, watching the television screen or trying to\ncatch the commentators' running\naccount\" through barking static.  .\nRowing bow: for Oxford wai\nChristopher Milling of St John's,\nNfld., a law student at Marten\nCollege. He Is believed to, be the\n- first born-bred  Newfoundlander\nto take part In the annual classic.\nHe has  lived In  Britln for the\nlast four years. ' ','\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nMilling'!   British-born   father,\nGeoffrey\", wen hli blue with Oxford In 1922 and emigrated to Canada two yean later.\n'  Other Canadians to race in the\nSpring classic in modern time! include Peter Macdonnell ot Toronto,\n(Cambridge 1945) and Hart Massey,\nformerly of Toronto (Cox of Oxford 1939,)\nThe Cambridge stroke oarsman,\nmaking his first bid to lead his college to viotory in the boat race, col*\nlapsed after the race. The Oxford\nNo. i oar also had to be helped from\nthe boat.\nIn keeping with tradition, the Oxford Cox was-heaved into th_e icy\nwaters by his victorious teammates.\nBy The Canadian Press\nHal Layeoe, bespectacled defenceman, sparked Boston\nBruins to a 4-1 decision over Montreal Canadiens Sunday\nnight for the Bruin? first victory in the best-of-seven Na-\nti\u00abiai jfjoekey league, semi-final playoff, *   \u2022\nMontreal leads the series 2-1 on the strength of two\nvictories at Montreal.\nDetroit Red Wingi, riding high\non a power-laden front wall and\n* solid defence, plastered Terente\nManl* Leaf* 6-2 Saturday to take'\na three-nome lead In their best-\nof seven Stanley Cup leml-flnali.\nTha   Wingi   should wrap It up\nTueiday,\nThe National Hockey League\nchampion*, winneri by 3-0 pad 1-0\nscores In the opening games at Detroit, showed the partisan crowd of\n14,402 just why they are at least\neven money to take the series in\nfCur straight. They had too much\nall-round know-how for the* Bluet\nand Whites even Without the injured Red Kelly, starry defenceman.\nBRODA SUB-RAR\nThe-Leafi lint chubby, 37-year-\nold Turk Broda into the nets and\nthe overweight Turk, itale from in*\naction during the regular 70-game\nseason and his reflexes dulled to a\nwalk*, couldn't cope with the freewheeling Wings. He whiffed on a\ncouple but he wai given poor protection by the Toronto defence*and\nthe blame, If any, Certainly wasn't\nhli.   - \u2022'''.\"',\nIt, wasn't the Broda of old The\nbeloved hero pf Toronto.fan* who\ncame out of Brandon, Man., ln the\nearly 30s and caught on with the\nLeafs In the 1936-37 season, was in\nhot water moat of the night His\nclearing wasn't up to par end the\nWings whipped in fast, to man un\nthe rebounds and test The Turk\nagain.    \u25a0 .\nThe; , Bruini scored three times\nwithin 62 secondi early in-the second period and Layeoe launched\nthat, blistering attack by scoring on\na 50-footer,through goalie Gerry\n-McNeil,    . -\u25a0'\u2022   \u25a0 .\nThirty-three secondi later, Dave\niCreighton clinched matterafor Boi-\nton by taking Jack Mclntyre's pass\nfrom behind the net and poking the\npuck past McNeil.\nIn addition to setting up the third\nBostoh goal for Eddie Sandford,\nLayeoe turned in a sensational defensive performance before the\nBruins pulled'into a 4-0 lead. Their\nlast marker came early in the finale,\nwhen Fleming Mackell grabbed a\nloole puck and blasted home from\nabout 10 feet out\nHENRY STARS\nWhile Canadiens were out-shooting the Bruini by .a 30-23 margin,\nSugar Henry was superb in the Bostoh net He turned in several\nbreath-taking eaves before Tloyd\nCurry, scbred from \"close-up, with\nless than five minutes to go.\nThe Bruins kept Maurice (Rocket) Richard, a thorn in their sides\nin the other two games, under\nCheck and much of tht Montreal\nattack waa carried out by Paul Meger and Dollars St. Laurent\nThe. fourth game in the series\nwill be played here Tuesday,\nNothing can be taken away from\nCrawford Resigns\nHershey Post\nHERSHEY, !?a., March 30 (AP)\n\u2014Jack Crawford, coach of th* Hershey Bears of the American Hockey\nLeague, today announced his resignation saying he felt it was unfair\ntq his family to transfer them twice\nyearly between Hershey and their\nBoston home.'\nCrawford, former defenceman\nwith Boston Bruins of th'e National'\nLeague, has coached Hershey for\nthe last three seasons. Last night\nhis team bowed out of the A.H.L.'s\nCalder Cup playoffs, losing to Pittsburgh Hornets.\nHe did hot indicate what his fu-\nture plans may be.\nThis advertisemei-f is]riot'published or disployed by'the t,iquojr\nControl Board bf by the Government, of British Columbia\nScoreboard\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nDetroit 6 Toronto 2.\n(Detroit lead! best-of-seven semifinal 3-0)\nPACIFIC COA8T LEAGUE\nNew .Westminster 4 Victoria 1.\n(New Westminster leads best-of-\nseven lemi-final 2-1)\nSeattle 3 Tacoma ,2 (two overtimes),\n(Tacoma leade best-of-five quarter-final 2-1)\nEASTERN LEAGUE\nJohnstown 6 Springfield 2.\n(Johnstown wins best-of-fly* seriei 3-0) ,     ,\nALLAN CUP\nWestern panada Seml-Flnal\n-.Letellier 3 Fort Frances 10,\n(Fort Francei leads best-of-seven\nseries 2-0, one game tied)\nEastern Canada Seml-Flnal   *\nJanduler* 2 Pembroke 3.        '\u2022 .,-\n(Pembroke leads best-of-five series 1-0)    ;\"'-.'\nAll-Ontario Final\nStratford . Sault Ste. Marie 3.\n(Stratford leadi best-of-seven final 1-0, one game tied)  >\nMEMORIAL CUP\nQuebec Final\nMontreal S Quebec 1.\n(Montreal ledi best-of-seven fl*\np'alS-2)   . '\u25a0 \u25a0.-.',\nOHA Jr. Pln*l ' .\nGuelph S St Catharines 6.\n(Guelph leads best-of-seven final\n3-1)\nEastern* Canada Quarter-Finals\nHalifax St. Marys 2 Ottawa East-\n(Ottawa wins best-of-five series\n3-1)\nSundiy\nQUEBEC JUNIOR FINAL\nQuebec 1 Montreal Canadiens 2,\n(Montreal wins best-of-seven series 4-2)   .V-..\nQUEBEC SENIOR FINAL\nChicoutiml 3 Quebec t.\n(Quebec lead* best-of-nlne series\n1-0)\nWESTERN CANADA\nSEMI-FINALS\nRegina 6 Flin Flon 2.\n(Regina leads best-of-seven eerie*\n8-0).    \"'\u25a0\nFort William 8 Winnipeg 8 (over*\ntime),* '\n(Best-of-seven    series    tied 1-1,\none game tied)\nWESTERN CANADA\nINTERMEDIATE-'SEMI-FINAL\nKeewatin*   Millers   8    Dauphin\nKings 5.\n(Bcst-of-flve series tied 1-1).\nAHL PLAYOFF I\nCincinnati 1, Providence 3.\n(Providence leads 1-0 tn best-of-\nfive semi-final).*\n* V MAX BENTLEY\n... best for Leafs\nthe Wings. The Production' Line of\nSid Abel, Gordie Howe and Ted\nLindsay set the pace and their two\nother.lines gave them a high-powered threat for the 60 minutes.\nGoalkeeper Terry Sawchuk, Ve\nxlna Trophy winner, baoked up\nthe Detroit defence In big-league\nstyle and he   wai   particularly\nbrilliant In the third period when\nthe desperate Leafs tried hard to\nmake It a game. Sawchuk had 25\nstops against Broda's 30.\nToronto's, first goal of the series\ncome at 11:15 of the opening period\non a 40-foot high drive by Joe KIu\nkay that caught an upper Corner,\nSawchuk didn't look good on that\none but he made ud for It with\nsome nifty blocking of close-in shots\nthat were labelled.\nKlukay's goal matched a counter\nby Ma-ty\/Favellch at 10:54 and Detroit went ahead for keens at 16:57\nwhen Lindsay broke in fast oh the\nToronto defence to take his rebound\nand slap the puck past Broda,\nBut it'wai the third-string Detroit line of rookiei Johnny Wilion\nand Alex Delvecchio and five-year\nVeteran Metro Prystai.thit took the\nheart out df the Leafs.\"With Wilson\nthe marksman, they figured in' the\nthird and. fifth Wing goals, the last\none giving Detroit a'5-2 lead at 48\nseconds of, the third period and\nsnuffing out any hope the harassed\nLeafs had of salvaging the game,.\nREI8E'S FIRST\nWing defenceman Leo Reise got\nhis first goal of,the season at 5:22\nof the second pe rlod bn a long shot\nthat Broda didn't see and Ben Wolt\nended the scoring midway through\nthe third period. His drive from the\nbluellne h't.Broda's pads and slithered into the nets: behind the Con*\nfused 202-pounder.   '\u2022 *.\nIn his hey-dey Broda could have\ntaken Woit's drive in hii hip pocket. ,\nMax' Bentley, the best for -the\nLeafs, scored Toronto's second goal\nat 12:20 of the second period, with\nassists going to Klukay and Fernie\nFlaman.\nSnow Puis Hall\nTo U.K. Soccer\nLONDON, March 30 (Reuters) -\nThe Football Association Cup semifinal between Arsenal and Chelsea\nwas postponed because of sonw. It\nwas the first time ln F. A. Cup hla*\ntory that a semi-final match had to\nbe postponed because of the weather.\nGroundkeepers struggled to keep\nthe field markings clear but the\nwind kept sweeping the snow into\na he?p at one end of the pitch.\nThe leferee called off the match,\nexpected to be played at Tottenham\nhere next Wednesday   .\nBlackburn Rovers and Newcastle\nUnited were scheduled to meet in\nthe other half of the semi-finals.\nArt  Ronmark'*  Emerald   Mine\nfoursome  carried, oft  th* major\nprize* last night ti Nelson's ljith\nannual, Little Bonspiel concluded,\nwinding up the local curling season,\nRonmark   with   buddlai  Stan\nHill, John Duval Snd Ro.s Wakely\ncaptured the Hampton Gray Memorial trophy by virtue' of an 11-*\nprimary event victory over Len\nPeerless of Nelson,\nNelion rinks Won the secondary\nand consolation events, L. J. Maurer took home tha Putnam Cup by\noutscoring the ipopular Chinese entry of J. D. Hingwing 15-12 in the\nsecondary final while Jim Milne\ntook the Consolation and th* Chamber ot Commerce Cup by downing\nIvan Staplea and his Creiton rink\n15-10.      * i\nThirty-eight rinks, including 21\noutside entries, participated In the\nthree-day event which opened Friday.\nNelson' foursomes dominated the\nprize lists with Milt Ryalls and\nJim Harvey taking third and fourth\nln the primary event while Alt\nFarenholtz was third in the secondary.  !   .\nAn all-southpaw rink, skipped by\nD. K. Archibald of Creiton, earned\nfourth in the secondary while Bill\nDefoe of Nelson and P. A, Bateman\nof Rossland took third and fourth\nrespectively ln the Consolation.\nHAMPTON GRAY\n(Primary)       ,     \/\nRound.2     i\nMilne, Nelion 11,'Vaniacker,. Nelson 9 ..'\u25a0'\u25a0\nPeerless, Nelaon 11, Defoe, Nelion By\nHallbauer, New* Denver t, McMynn, Salmo 7\nMaurer, Nelion 11, Farenholtz,\nNelson 1     .\nRonmark, Emerald S, McKelvey,\nCreitoh 3\nRound 3\nMaurer, Nelion 4, Ronmark, Emerald 6\nHarvey, Nelion 1?, Tinling, Nelson 9 ,      '\nRyalls, Nelson 13, Hallbauer, New\nDenver 4       ,  \u2022\nPeerless, Nelson 8, Milne, Nelion .1.. '\n8eml-f!nali\n' Peerless, Nelson 11, Harvey, Nelson 7      .'*'\u2022\u25a0-.\nRonmark, Emerald 8, Ryalls, Nelson 7\nFinals\nRonmark,  Nelion,' 11;  Feerlesi,\nNelson, 8,\n.PUTNAM CUP\n(Secondary)\nRound 1\nPostlethwaite, New \u25a0 Denver 10,\nBateman, Rossland 9\nFahrni, Kaslo 5, Thompson, Invermere 12\nJemson, Nelson 8, Albo, Rossland 2\nMoir, Salmo 6, Seccombe, Roll-\nland 10\nClark, New Denver 8, Bruce,\nNelsoh 16\nHingwing, Nelion 11, Campbell,\nNew Denver 9       . .\nOrtner, Trail 14; Parrish, Neleon 6\nPascuzzo, Cranbrook 6, Archibald,\nCreston 12 **\nSeccombe, Rossland 11, Thompson, lnv*rm*re'7\nDickinson, Creiton 8, McMynn,\nSalmo 9\nJandrell, Trail 5, Gold, Nelion 9\nVansacker, Nelion 3, Defoe, Nelson 8\naFrenholtz, Nelaon 11, McKelvey,\nCreston 1\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAR.H 31,' 1952 - 1\nFIVERS, IRONMEN WIN FIRST;\nROYALS LEAD IN P.tll. PLAYOFFS\nBourque. Nelson 10, ftltptt,'N\u00bbl-\nson t\nRound | .     , '\nJemson, Nelson 7, Ortner, Trail 9\nHingwing, Nelson 11, Bruce, Nel*\nSbP'Vf\nMaurer, . Nelson   13,   Hallbauer,\nNew Denver 8\nHorton, Nelion 6, Seccombe, Ron-\nJendlO,\nHingwing, Nelion 10, Geld, Nelson 0\nArchibald, Creiton t. Postlethwaite, New Denver Bi \u25a0\nBourque,' Nelaon 7, Defoe, Nelion 9 .        '\nFarenholtz, Nelion 10, McMynn,\nSalme, 8\nTinting,  Nelson  10,  Milne, Nelion 8\nTinling, Nelion 6, Maurer, Nelion 9 .\nOrtner, Trail t, Archibald, Creiton 13\nSeccombe, Rossland 7, Hingwing,\nNelion 10\nFarenholtz, Nelson 13, Defoe, Nelaon 8 \u2022',-..'i\n. Semi-finals!\nMaurer, Nelion 10| \u2022 Farenholtz,\nNelson, 8.\nHingwing, Nelson 12; Archibald,\nCreston 11 (extra end).\nFlnalt\nMaurer, Nelion-18, Hingwing, Nelion 13,\nCHAMBER OF COMMERCE CUP\n(Consolation) ,\nRound 1\nFahrni, Kailo 8, Parrish, Nel-\nson 14\nAlbo, Roisland 18. Paicuizo, Cranbrook 12 (11 end*)\nClark, New Denver 13, Campbell,\nNew Denver 8 .\nFaritad, Creiton 8, Olbion, Trail\n17 ;..**;\nHorton, Nelign 7, Bruce, Nelson 13\nJemson, Nelion 11, Postlethwaite,\nNew Denver 9      . -\nBateman, Rossland 15, Vansacker,\nNelson 15\n,Albo, Rowland 10, Parrish, Nelion 9\nPalmer, Nelion 8, McKelvey,\nCreiten 10 \u25a0 '\nGold. Nelion 1, Thompson* Invermere 10      .\nMoir, Salmo 6, Staplei, Creiton 7\nBouraue, Nelipn 13, McMynn,\nSalmo 7   ,       ,',: ,\nDickinson, Creston 8, Jandrell,\nTrail H ' ' *;\nMilne, Nelion 10, Hallbauer, New\nDenver 4 ...  .     ....'.-\nRound *-.'\nJemson, Nelson 11, Thompson,\nInvermere 8   . ' ' \u25a0\/\nTinling, Nelson 11, Defoe, Nelion \u00bb ''-,,. '\nBourque,.'Nelion 8, Milne, Nel-\nmi     'v\/,v-;   '-'.'.\nP-ccdmbet\/Ronland '8, Ortner,\nTrail14     \"fl.-'..'\nAlbo,. Rossland 6, Gibson, Trail 9\naBtemin, Rossland 13, McKelvey,\nCreston 7 .'..'   '\nJandrell, Trail 7, Bruce, Nelion 6\nStaple*, Creiton 9, Clark, New\nDenver 5\nRound 8\nBateman, Rossland 10, Jandrell,\nTr\u00bbiI8.\nMilne, Nelson 11; Jemson, Nelson 6.\nGibson, Trail 8; Staplei, Creiton 8.\nOrtner, Tral) 7; Defoe, Nelsoh 10.\nSeml-flneln\nStaples, Creston 10; Bateman,\nRossland 6.\nMilne, Nelson 10; Defoe, Nelson 4,\nFinal:\nMilne, Nelien 15; Staples, Creiton 1ft\nEDMONTON, March 80 (CP) -*\u25a0\nEdmonton Flyer* Saturday- night\nkept alive their Pacific Coast Hockey playoff hope* by defeating S_i-\nkatooh Quakers 3-1. Beaten in ihe\nfirst two garnet at Saskatoon, the\nFlyer* prolonged  the  best-of-flve\nicriei at least to a fourth game to\nbo played at Edmonton Monday.\nA crowd of 6052 fans who paid\nsaw   sensational   netmindlng   by\nboth  Bill Brennan of Edmonton\nand Gump Worsloy of Saskatoon,\nEach mad* 27 stops, many of them\n.when apparently beaten,\nEdmonton   scorers   were   Elder\nThomas, Hartley McLeod and Colin\nKilburp, The lone Saskatoon goal\nwai fired by Johnny Chad.\nNew Westminster Royals took a\none-game lead in their semi-final\nwith Victoria Cougars, scoring a de*\nCiiive 4-1 victory,   - . ,   .\n. Royals lead the best-of-seven\nSeries two games to one with the\nfourth game to be played at Victoria\nTuesday, ^\n, Chubby Bobby Love soered two\ngo*alr for the winners, with singles\ngoing to Amle Dufault and Gordy\n- Fashoway, Bob Frampton ruined\nLuclen Dechine'i' ihuoiit In the\nthird perlpd. '\nDOUBLE OVERTIME\ni George Homenuke's rebound goal\nat 5:01 of the lee .nd overtime period\ngave Seattle Ironmen a 3-2 victory\nover Tacoma itockets Saturday\nnight in their quarter-final game.\nIt was Seattle's first victory In\nthe three games played.\nWhile it was HOmenuke who came\nup with (he overtime clincher for\nSeattle, lt was veteran centre Rudy\nFillon \u2014 and some fine goal-tending\nby Phil Hughe*, who kicked out 01\nshots \u2014 that kept Ironmen in the\nrunning.\n[WHEN ONLY\nNanllobans Down\nEilers in West\nSenior (age Final\nWINNIPEG, March SO (CP) - A\nnear point-a-mlnute scoring performance by King Carl Ridd Saturday night led Winnipeg Varsity\nGrads to a 68-81 victory over Vancouver Filers in tbe first game ot\na belt-of-five senior men'* basketball final at the Vanity Field\nHouse.\nAbout' 2600 fam  Jammed the\nUniverilty   Arena,   site' of all\ngames. Second conteit Is scheduled for Monday night and the\nthird on Tueiday,   Fourth   and\nfifth, If neoossary, will be played\nThursday and Friday.\nRidd accounted for 37 points of\nhll team's total, including 18 field\ngoala and 11 free throws.'He was\nably supported by   Roy Williams\nwith 12 and   Mike Spack   with\nSeven . Jack Willet did a tremendous job of checking Vancouver's\nstarry Reed Mitchell, who counted\nonly eight polftts. Nev Munroe topped the Eilers with 13 point!, John\nForsythe had nine points.\nMontreal Hebrews.\nEast Hpop Finalists\nMfc-NTREAL, MarCh 30 (CP) \u2014\nMontreal Y.M.H.A. Bluei Saturday\nwon the Eastern Canada senior basketball semi-finals, overpowering\nOttawa Brookes Broncoi 75-48 in\nthe second game of a total-point\nhome-and-home aeriei.\nY.M.H.A. won 63-53 last. Saturday and takes the series 138-101,\nThe Blues now meet Tillsonburg\nLivingitom in a best-of-three eerie! starting here Tuesday, for the\nEastern Canada championship and\nthe right to meet the Western win*\nner! for tbe Canadian title,\nWILI* DO\nA.   A\nNelson Junior Cagers Down Kaslo\nVIENNA, March 30 (AP)--Aust.\nrla will: meet Chile ln the first\nround bt thi* year'* Davit Cup Tennis Tournament in Vienna May 3-5.\nEdmonton Laces\nVernon Juveniles\nVBftNON, B..C, March 36 (CP) -\nEdmonton Maple Leafa. thrashed\nVernon Juvenile* 13-5 tonight ln the\nfirst game of their best-of-three\nB.C.-Alborta championship playoff.\nThe heavier, faster skating Alber-\ntans wore their lighter opponent*\ndown in the first two periods and\nthen-came through with a seven-\ngoal barrage in the final canto..\nNorm UUman Scored four goals\nand assisted on two others to pace\nthe Edmonton team. Other Edmonton marksmen were John Bucls\nwits three goals, Lionel Repka with\na pair, and Orria Mandryk, Ron\nTookcy, Chuck Holmes, and Dick\nDunningan with singletons.\nTony Spelay paced the Vernon\nteam with' two goal*-and an assist,\nHarfold Thorlakson\" scored the\nother Vernon goal.\nPAT8 WHIP  BOMBER8\nFLIN FLON, Man., March 80 (CP)\n\u2014Regina Pats Saturday night whipped the Flin Flon Bomberi 6-2 here\nto take a two-game lead in the best-\nof-seven Weitern Canada Memorial\nCup semi-final.\nThejefl-l now moves to Regina\nfdr games Monday and Wednesday\nNelion junior high ichool basket-\nbailers won both ends Of an exhibition doubleheader against Kaslo\nquintets here Friday.\nThe: Bruinettes had little trouble\n\u25a0with the Kaslo girls, winning 43-\n'10, but the Ramblers had a tight\nsqueeze before shading the visitor! 22-20 In the boys'tilt\nBruinettes Jumped into An 11-2\nfirst-quarter lead ahd breezed in,\nJoan Will and Margaret Farenholtz\nled with 10 points 'apiece while\nEdith Grundy had six. Dolly Jotter\nwa* beat for the losers with four\npoint*.\nTom Marshall led th* Ramblers\nIn a lait-quarter drive thit erased\nan 18-12 deficit to give them the\nConmore Intermedes\nTwo Up on Kamloops\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., M*rch U\nCOP) \u2014 Canmore Legionalres moved within on* game of winning.the\nWestern Canada intermediate semi,\nfinals tonight as they beat Kamloops Bessette Loggers 7-5. Legionalres copped the opener in the best,\nof-five series Thursday night 7-4.\nThird game will be played Mon*\nday\/bight \u25a0\nCONNAUGHT HIGH WINS '\nSCHOOLS'HOOP TITLE\nVANCOUVEAj March 30 (Cp) t\nNew Westminster's Duke of Connaught team Saturday night won\nthe British Columbia Highschool\nBasketball Corwn by whipping, Million 38-26..\nIt was the Duke of Connaught'*\nfourth straight win in .the four-d>y\ntournament and gave the team the\nGeorge Sparling Trqphy for the\nthird consecutive year.\nAlberni gave Vancouver' Island\none consolation by dumping Victoria\nHigh 38-39 to grab third spot and\nthe D.C.H.S. Bsy'i Trophy.\nvictory. Ramblers had a 12-10 half-\ntime le\u00bb4 but were held scoreless\nin the third period as Kaslo built up\ntheir nurgin.\nMarshall scored eight points while\nBrian Greenwood was next with six\ntor the winner*. For the losers, G.\nLind and M. Moody matched these\nefforts with eight and:six respectively.      \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0      ' >\nPHONE   144  FOR   CLASSIFIED\n__**\u25a0__,-\nw\nThis advertisement li not' publfshegl, or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board or\nby the Government of British Columbia.\nROLL-YOUR-OWISI SMOKERS!\nProtect Your Eyes ond Throat\nCIGARETTE PAPERS\nWill not irritate \u2014 They are pure!\nWHITE COVER\n\"Thin Paper\"\nSlow Burning\nBLUE COVER\n\"Egyptien**\nFree Burning\n\"EGYPTIEN''\nCIGARETTE PAPER STRIPS\n40*Strips \u2014 200 Cigarettes \u2014 5 Cigarette* in one operation*\nSuch Economy!\nESSO and ESSO EXTRA\u2014there's\nno better buy! Backed by Imperial\nOll'g 72 year* of refining eiperi-\nence i i . by (he most extensive\nresearch i;. the \u25a0 most modern refineries. . Buy anywhere in Canada\n\u00ab(the sign that says quality\u2014the\nESSOiigo.' n\n'Glad I switched,\nto\nEsso.\nGASOIINES\"\n \u25a0 i\nN\nI\nQi\n1\nc.\nM.\nP.\nOiKTAs\niSCAPr *\nFROM THE.\nPWATES\nSEEMS\nH0PEI.65S,\n' KM**\nNOTICES\nAN CUt>\nCONSOLE\nRAblO IN\nTHEIR\nSTt-REB-OM\nPRISON\/\nMAfiSIS WASSOINSTO\nINvlTB HER aSTgR. AMD\nWER HUSBAND AND HE_\nSIX KIPS TO COMB HERE\nAND LIVE WITH US-BUT\nI THINK IVS TALKED\n\u2022JS6S-DBAR-Va! WERE RBHW\nTHERE SNT. ROOM IN THIS HOUSE\nPCR EISHT MORE PEOPLE.?. \u2014*\n\u25a04SIDE FROM EVER*\n Etse-rrvwuLO\nBEB_TOO\n...__P'HERE'Mrt.\n>T BIS FAMILy-\nDURING  THEIR  SHIP'S  STOP-for  fuel-at\nMidway Island,* on It* W4y from Hallfajc fo the \u2022\nFar East. four, crew memben of HMOS Nootka\nmake a*close-up Inspection of the Island's famous\ngoonle birds. Left to right are A.B.:Alex Souchuk,\nMontreal; , A.B, John Vln dent,. Peterborb, . Ont;\nA.B. David Clelland, Guelph, Ont,, and A.B.\nWilliam Deailoy, Toronto.\u2014Central .Press Canadian\nBARGAIN HUNTERS will an-\nvy Barbara Manauia, 13, \u00bb ihe .\nadmires a $25,000 chlnohllla coat\nbought by her father for her -for\n$600 at a Chicago auction sale of\n, the famous Insull furl; The 78-\nyear-old widow of -utility, magnate Samuel Insull declared that\nthe garment had been rarely worn\nand had cost more than $10,000 In\nstorage charges. \u2014 Central Press\nCanadian\nTHE ESTABLISHED V6TE-GETTING TEdHNIQUE Ii followed\nby presidential, candidate Robert Taft, campaigning for the Republican nomination. In Medford, Wisconsin, he dutifully poses with\ntwins Jimmie and Johnnie Lemke.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n' HUNDREDS of citizens Joined the Toronto police -force honor'\nguard of 160 to pay their last respects to 8ergeant of Detectives Ed-.\nmund Tong, hit by gunman's bullets and dying 17 dayi later. Her*\nhll coffin la taken from Angll_a_> Church of the Nativity to begin\nthe solemn parade to the cemetery.\u2014Central Presi.Canadian..,.'\nTHESE.RUSSIAN-TYPE TANKS, captured In Korea, are being\nconverted into scrap to make tank* for U.N. forces. At the Aberdeen\nProving Proundi-In Maryland, a worker, right, li retidy to start\nreduclng the tanks to small pieces with a torch.--Ci.nt.al Press\nCanadian,. -.\" \u25a0   . \u2022 ... ..\nAbout 160 Ontario. Government and local clvle official! toured\nthe Hydro Electric .Power Commission's $182,000,000 project a*\nNiagara Falls, Part of the party Is seen Inspecting the outlet of the\nnew power stream, which. It tunneled,under.Niagara Falli for-\n\u2022everal miles at the Niagara River, not,far from the Queenstoa\npower plant. Power will be derived from the new project. In 195*. ,\n\u2014Central Press C*n*dl__.\nDAILf CROSSWORD\n4. Core for\nmedically\n.B.FU-l\n9, Sick \u25a0 ' \u2022\nT. SoUrfe\n8. Remove\nfrom\nWgh \u25a0-.\"\u2022 '\noffice*\niftAhoiy\nperson\n11. Condiilt\n16. Sweet\npotato'\n19. Tarry\nai-Marshjr,\nmeadow\n22. Placed\n25. Speck of\ndust\n27. Men-ipent\n20. Fresh\n31. Sheds     \u25a0\"-:\nfeather* * -.'\n32. Biblical\nmount\nS3. Color\n35.Neweat\n36. Appearing\n, as if eaten\n30. Writes\npoetry^ :\n(vw.) -.\n42. Duration\n44, Pierce'_ .'..*\nwith horns\nHBHi-y   -HSWl-J\n_IH___I_  wauiHffl\nass ________ aa\nam hhhw hhh\ni_0na i:]qhh\nmnmnmiKr-irjiid\n.   aritlH  ffl!___\nl_l_l._l   Hlr.'aill.\n.si\n(.aturdsy'i Amwtr\n47. Long,\nfeather   '\nneckpiece    \u201e\n48. Audience\n80. Biblical name\n_ ACROSS\n1. Finest\n8. Bind with\na belt\n0. Of the eun\n10. Fragrant\nwoods\n12. Arrange;\n\u25a0  In aline\n13. Slant\n14. Fish\n15.Merry -\u25a0.'\n17. Pull along\n18. Fresh\n20. High   ,;'\n23. Selenium\n(iym.)'\n24. Streetcar\n(Brig.)\n26. Scanty.\n28. Electrified\nparticle\n\u25a030, Trouble\n3L Signify,:\n34. Erase\n..print)\n87. Gold (Her.)-\n38. Pitcher with\na lid\n40. Audience\n41. Monetary\n,    unit (Latvia)\n43. Excavate\n49. Toward .','..\n46.. Clan  '*'--,;\n49. Fashions    .\n51. Pacific\nIsland\n62. Rub out\n63. Rip    -.*'.'\n54. Dispatched\nDOWU\nLMore\ncourageous\n2. High priest\n3. Warbled\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOXE-Here's how to work it:\nA X Y D L B A A X B\nULONGFELLOW\nOtie letter simply stands for another. In thla example A Is u_e_\nfor the three L'a, X for the two 0_, etc. Single letters, opos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of th* words art all hints.\n.Bach day the code letter* are different \".\"\nA Cryptogram Quotation \/\nYKTN    BT    rVY    RHTMS    OVH    M   \"S V.\nBTfX   V6   YfCT   RTJLW   VO   HTETFYSTFY\n.*-,-.  \u2022 \u25a0     \"\u2022       .\"\u25a0\nYKLE BMH 8 L ,W W MHVOET \u2014BTWWE.\nSaturday's Cryptoquotc. HE HAD A HEAD WHICH STATUARIES LOVED TO CpPY\u2014MACAULAY.\nOlilrlbuKd bv \u201e_n\u00ab J-Mlurti Sin-kit.\n\u25a0 ..--.,.:,..     \u2022 .\u2022_.-.\u201e\u25a0\u00bb-\u25a0 .\"\u2022:\/\"\u2022\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... ,\u00bbio..bi. na-i\u00bbM.\n;'. \u2022\u25a0   pacotc ST^ABD'iiira, y;    ','\nMONDAYlj;AAARCH 3;I, 195ii \u2022 \u2022\n.7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Nprm's Coffee Club^   ,-'\u25a0'\n7.30-rNews     ;l:\n7:35\u2014Norm's Coffee Club \u2022\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\n8:00\u2014News    . \u2022'\u25a0 Z<\n8:10\u2014Sports. News ;\u25a0\"\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club \u25a0   ';'\n8:45\u2014Towler;Serenade\n8:55\u2014Meal of the.Day \/       .\n,9:00\u2014Western tune Show\n9:30^-Morning Concert.\n10:00\u2014Morning: Devotions\n10:15\u2014Sons of Pioneers .\n10:30\u2014Kenny Baker\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News    ,.'.\/.\n11:05\u2014Dorothy Douglas   ''...'\u25a0\n11:10\u2014For You Madame\nll,_|0-*-Aunt Maty\" \u25a0 \u25a0 ' ..\"'.-\nll:45r-Forbiddeh j Diary. '...... s\n12:00\u2014Notice BoaTd\n12:15\u2014News ,.'?\"\n12:25\u2014Sports News* ,\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\nJ2;55\u2014Ogilvie Reminder Time\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:45\u2014Cooking School\n1:58\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Album of\",Mel_dy     \u00bb\n3:00--Sacred Heart \u25a0   ...\n3:15\u2014Charlie Kims * Plane\n3:30\u2014Pacific New* \u25a0\n3:45-^*Novel Time .* .\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society.\n4:30\u2014The Sun Horse . -\n4.45\u2014Young Man-With* a\n4:55\u2014Report from* Parliament*\n5:00-rH-whide i .'\n5:20\u2014Meet Louis Armstrong\n5:30^SppttaS.wa..\n5:35\u2014Superman   :\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Red Skelton Show,\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade ol Melodr\n7:00\u2014Newa \u2022\n7:15\u2014Newi Roundup\n7:30-Club Date- .\u25a0...\n7:46r-Bobm Towns '\n8_-0\u2014Linger Awhile   .\n8:30\u2014Natiohal Farm Radio\n9:00\u2014Songs ,ln the Night\n9:30\u2014Muleskinners\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Pred HiU\n10:30\u2014\"Affectionately Jenny**;\n11:00\u2014News Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD'TIME\nTUESDAY, APRIL 1.1952\n:00\u2014News;   .\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club\".\n:46\u2014Laura Limited\n:00\u2014News '\n:15\u2014AuntXucy .*, ,.-\";,\n:30\u2014Concert Hour\n:00\u2014Morning: Visit\n15\u2014The Happy Gang .\n45\u2014Guestin'  With\/-KesUn\n:00\u2014Kindergarten of ,the Ail\n.15\u2014A Man and bis Music\n15\u2014News  -. j- v-\n:25\u2014Showcase;\n:80--B.C Farm Broadcast\n65\u2014Five ,to One\n.00\u2014Afterhoon Concert\n:45\u2014CBC School for Consumers\n_6\u2014Women'- \u25a0 Commentary\n:00\u2014B.C School Broadcast\n:307-Album' of Melody\n:00\u2014Brave Voyage\nl:15^-Program Resume   '    ..\nSSO-^-Party Line\n.:45\u2014Novel Time \u25a0\u2022\"\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society '\n4:30\u2014Cook of the Seven feel*\n4:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\n4:55-News . '\n5:00\u2014Tony the Troubador\n5:15\u2014John Fisher\n5:20\u2014International CommentB-j\n; 5:30r-Piano Playhouse\n6:00\u2014\"bt. Dogbody^s Leg\"      .\n6:30\u2014Now I Ask\" You\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-rLeicester* Square\n8:00\u2014The Nation's Business\n8:15\u2014'ihe Commodores\n8:30\u2014Mystery Tfieatre :'\n9:00\u2014Sweet and Lovely\n\"9:30\u2014Barrie. Craig\n10:00\u2014Newa\n10:15\u2014Trans-AtlantlcT-aveBee-\n10:30\u2014Nocturn \u2022*-\nlltOOr-UN, Today\n11:15\u2014Judy Canova Show\nll:45-^-Nightcap       '\n11:57\u2014Newa\n M\n1 PW01\/W-P\u00a3RS0\/I\/WANT ADS\n\\    FOR Q(MRRESULTS7\nPhone 144\nDeadline lor Cloulfled Adi\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\n;:-;-MAFF,y'';\nzf dSlflON\nA' permanent position* ls* open\nwith e national firm for a person with some.accounting experience. The position offers\nentrance   I n t o  administrative\n. work eventually. A wide range\npf staff benefits is available in--\neluding sickness, accident and\nlife Insurance, pension and holidays.   Write   Box   9446   Daily\n'__*!__.' \"\".'\u25a0'* ','     '.' .'   -* *,\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY\nTwo first-class automobile\nmechanics arid turie-up\nmen. Excellent opportunity\nfor experienced men, Chrys-.\nlet, Plymouth a g e hie y.\nSteady' employment, top\nwages\/ Write, -giving, age.\nand' qudlifleaf ions.      .   *\nPEERLESS MOTORS LTD.\n' Kimberley,-PyG.\nWANTED AT ONCE BY LEADING\nNelson garage^Ambitlbui, intelligent young man for office and\nfront-end service. Apply Box 9432.\nDaily News,\n\"WAITED.\u00bb<- YOUNG: MAft FOR\nshipping department automotive\nwholesale. Must be Nelson, resident. Apply ip own handwriting\nto.Box 9353, Nelion'Daily Newi.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nWANTEb - AN   EXPERIENCE^)\n.   farm Hind, able to.milk.If required. Room and board- State wage*\nPllm Drake, Bqx 27, Rossland.\nWAJ^-^-STENQPRAPHE-rFSR\nuptown radio station office  Ap-\n. ply in writing to P.O. Box 250,\n,   Nelion, B,C.\nWANTED-OPERATOR FOR EM-\nco  104  Loader.   Apply  Emerald\n-   Mine, Salmo,,B.C.\t\nWanted -machine doctor.\nApply RO, Box 44, Salmo, BC.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nkemalb cook, wants work in\n.   email camp or as helper.in large\ncamp, Phone 381-L, Rossland. ,\nBOATS end ENGINES\ni|ii}OT_3--lGOOD.SMALL:ROW-\nboat, 14-15 ft. preferred. Square\nitem, round bottom; oars. Must\nbe in A-1 shape. Also Elto Service\nTwin,; heavy, duty, 13 h.p, for sale.\n|iS_lletW_^i^lH\u00bbl^''-Pljone':\"-__-Ff:.\nFOR.AS*A___ \u2014 5 HP. GENERAL\n- Electric motor, overload \"breaker\n\u2022Witch, and'main switch. All A-1\nCondition.\"T\\vo'motor cycle generators and other parts of 1937\n-LD,, single cylinder. Write W. R'.\nJJndgren, Kimberley, B.C.\n\u00bb\" FOOT CAB-N CRUISER, 7 I\"IY\nI   beam, tonnage approximately 324.\n'    Phone 404-L or write 323 Nelson\nAve.\n.TOR SALE \u2014 18 FOOT CLINKER\nbuilt-boat. 5'6\" beam. Like new.\nI    $180. Phone 1383-L.\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nBUSINESS AND\nAS8AYERS AND MINE\n*:-.    REPRESENTATIVES\nt w widdowsCjn &._&. A_:\nflayers 301 Josephine St., Nelson\n_T\nS. ^LMES.  ROSSLAND.  B',_.\"\nAssayer, Chemist. Mine Rep.\n1938 Plymouth Sedan $450\nlW_d FcStd Coupe $550\n1938-Willys Goupe $350\n1938 Ford Sedan $306\n.19,3? Ford Sedan $300\n1936 DeSoto Sedan $350\n1936 Ford Coach. $350\n.AND   .\"\u25a0'\nNew 1951 Ford Sedan   .;'\n1951 Austin Sedan      .-<.:_'\n1950 Mercury Pickup\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1951'A-70 Pickup\n1949 Dodge Express '\u2022\u2022\u2022*.'.\n1948 International 1 %-Tori\n1948 : G.M.C. Pickup'\n,1947 Chevrolet Pickup    _-,-\n1948   .tymbiith Sedan\n1947 Ford Sedan       *\n1941 Chevr. let Sedan ':'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nMACHINERY\n803 BAKER ST. - NELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1133\n-,' Austin Seles and Service\nFOR SALE-1951 CHEV. ***_-TON.(\nBed color with all chrome deluxe\ncab. 3800 miles. Save $400. Price\n$1300. Phone Passrnore, Store,\nPassmore, B.C. ' .'\u25a0'-'\n1947 FLAT DECK, STEEL BODY,\n' 2 ton Studebaker truck. .Oversize\n.  dual: tires.   Low mileage.' First\nclass   condition; P.O.   Box   40t\ni Silverton,', B.C.\nFOR SALE-1950 B.S.A. 500-TWIN\nmotorcycle. Excellent condition,\nOnly 6000 miles. Contact D. Marshall ot Dally News after 8 p.m.\n,j;O^MJi_^B%__l?I-VATR .0WN-\ner, 1050 Oldsmbbile sedan,, radio,\nair conditioner and heater. Low\nmileage. Phone 1553; ' .* .\" '\nFOR \"SALE\u2014WELL-KEPT. 1950\nAngUa, 16,000 mileage, only $885,\nor best offer. Phone 359-Y or Box\n9356, Dally News.\nDAMAGED 1951 HILLMAN SEDAN\n\u2014Only 1600 mile*. Price $850. Also\n1947 G.M.C, 2\u00ab-ton dump truck.\nv Phone 530,\n1948 CHEV. SEDANPANEL DLY.\nOne owner, in first class condition.\n$1300. Box 9222 Daily NeWs.\nFOR SALE-1941 FORD SEDAN;\ngood condition. Apply 130 Chatham St, or phone 306-R,\nFOR SALE\u20143 MEN'S BICYCLES,\nvery cheap. Phone 508-R3.\nUSED A-.ACHINERY\nOJ.E HOBART ARC WELDER\n800 a_ip\u201e 40 volt 1500 r.p.m.\ndirect connected to 8-cylinder\nChrysler gas engine, mounted\non steel skids.\nPrice $1075\n\u201e   F.O.B. Nelion, B.C.\nONE LINCOLN ARC WELDER\n375.amp.,* 440 volt, 60 cycle, 3\nphase, frame F.K.L., mounted\non steel wheels.\n.Price $550\nF.O.B. Nelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALiy\nTORONTO STOCKS\nONE DODGE TRUCK\n4x4 Army type. 4 wheel drive,\nnew recap fires. In excellent-\ncondition, i\ni-Price $]?5Q\nF,0;b. Nelson, B.C.\nNELSON*\nMACHINERY\nCompany, Ltd.\nIf If* Machinery: You Need,\nCohsulfty**\"\n214 Hall Sit. ;   Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE-rDISMANTLBD\" SAW-\nmill plant We are dismantling a\nsawmill breakdown plant at\nOcean Fall! Majority of equipment ii for disposal including log\nhaul chain and drive, log loading\nequipment, 10-foot Clark band\nmill, lump saw. 60\" Sumner edger\nwith synchronous drive, trimmers,\netc. All or part for sale For additional d.tails write or wire Mr'\nA R. Dyrsmid, P.O Box 879.\nVancouver. B.C.\nBULLDOZER FOR SALE\u20141 T.D.9\nInternational with Isaacson angle\ndozer and Isaacsbn logging winch;\nElectric starter and-Operator's\nlogging guard.'All in'good condi-.\ntion. Apply Moynes Motor* and\nTranafer, Trail, B.C,\nNATIONAL MA(.HINER_ 66.\n\u25a0\u2022* \u2022\u25a0'-r-r*i__ii_m!D\"\"T\"'*-'.T'- -\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS'1 EQUIPMENT   \"\nEnquiries Invited^\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014NO. 30 GAS \u2022 CATES\npillar Tractor, wide gaupe, overhead cable angle.dozer and Winch\nln good running condition. Recently overhauled. Price $1200.00\nCash, App)y Box 8, Nakusp, B.C.\nFOR RENT\u2014ONE LeROI MODEL\n60 air compressor and breaker.\nApply Creighton - Horswill Construction Company. Limited, Caa-\ntlegar, B.C. Telephone 3721.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nAUTO WRECKERS\ntlAVTES TRAl_S__.R A.JD AUW)\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR W   HAGGEN   Land Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Enginetr,\nI Grand Fbrki and Rossland.\nBOYD C AFFLEC.K. 218 GORE Stf\nNelion, BC, Surveyor. Engineer\n'INSURANCE AND REAL ESTAtfe\nMCHARDY AGENCIES  LTt>_]   _N\nsurance. Real Estate- * Phone 135\nLIVE8T0CK   OEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LlVEST6e_r-\nContact H Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine  Shop,   acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\ngj Phone 593 :   324. Vernon St\nI CRUISING,\nTIMBER\n5B__BER\n, ETC,\n-  CRUISING  ANYWHERE\nIn B.C.   E. H. Hird. Slocan City.\nNrlautt laity 5-PW0\nClassified Advertising Ratei:\n15c per ilne first Insertion and\nnon-consecutlve   Insertions.\na   lie Ilne per consecutive Insertion sfter first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions.      *\n$1.58 line per month (26 consecutive insertions)   Box  numbers lie extra   Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c'per line,\nfirst Insertion.   ISc.per  line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Ratal: .'.\n(Net More Than Listed Here) -\nBy carrier, per\" week,\nln advance JO\nBy carrier, per year 15.60\nUnited States. United Kingdom:\nOne month  $ 1.25\nThree \"monthi 8.75\nSix monthi        7.50\nOne year             15.00\nMai] in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month .,..     1.00\nThree months  \u2014..    2.75\nSix monthi    ___.._....    6.50\nOne year             10.00\nWhere extra pottage li required,\nabove rates plus postage.\n\"Nu-Lifo\" Stainless Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer a special trade-In allowance\non your old cookware. Box 333.\nNelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE - FOUR-HOLE UNI-\n. venal deep freeze. J,ike new.\nCheap for cash. Ph. 1'80-R after\n5 p.m.\t\nFOR SALE \u2014 SEVERAL 2 WHEEL\nlumber buggies in good condition.\nApply Glacier Lumber Co. 905\nGordon Rd.\t\nBUNION  SALVE\nCRESS\namazing   relief.\nsells CRESS.\nYour\n- FOR\nDruggist\nFOR SALE-MODERN HOME OR\noffice de^sk. Blonde birch finish\nPhone 1474-R.  Valley Mfg. Co.\nFOR SALE - HOTEL-SIZE-SlSF-\nplex electric ironer; also pool\ntable 4'6\" x 8'9\"   419 Baker St.\nFOR SALE - BEATTY WASHER\nand   2   galvanized\nPhone 884-R.\nwash    tubs.\nFOR SALE - HAND-CROCHETED\ntable cloth. Phone 723-L before\n5 p.m. '.'\u25a0\u2022.\nFOR YOUR WOODWORKING RE\nquirements ph. 1282-L evening!.\nAmoroso end Fazio, 518 Sixth St.\nFOR. SALE\u2014BLACK PIP**, IV,\".\nGood; used. 16 cents per foot.\nWrite 2017.2nd Ave., Trail, B.C.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES Sj>_\u2022\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n935 E Cordova St.. Vancouver\nMICRON IC HEARING AiDS.-\nWrlte PO   Box 89   Nelson   B.C\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron, iteel, brass, Copper,\nlead. etc. Honest grading Prompt\npayment made Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250 Prior St, Vancou-\nver, B.C Phone Pacific 6357\nWANTED - 4 BURNER PROPANE\ngas stove tn good condition..Cottage type preferred. Maple Leaf\nCafe, Salmo, B.C .\nSHIP US YOUR SfcRAP METAi_S\nor Iron. Any quantity Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n918 Powell St), Vancouver, B C,\nWANTED TO RENT, GOOD PIANO\nor will store for use of same. No\nsmall children. Phone 1558-X.\nCEDAR POLES. ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 460. Nelson. BC\nSHIP YOUR HIDES T5 \" J P1\nMorgan. Nelsbn, B.C.\nTRUCK. .TRACTOR AND LOAD-\nIng winches available from stock\nLeRoi 105 Compressor for rent\nBayes Equipment Co,-Cranbrook,\nBC, '   '\nWE SUGGEST\nYou lilt ydiir property with u*\nTODAY. W**can help finance\nand get you all cash. Give us\nyour listing, and we will ad-\nverUie regularly. Our: window\non Baker Street attracts many\nbuyer*.  ,-.'-,\nPHONE 269 TODAY \u25a0\nc. w. appleyArd\n& CO. LTD.\nFOR, QUICK SALE\nImmediate occupancy. IVt story\nhouse. 2 lots. Fairview dlstrici\n$6300 CASH\nF. A. WHITFIELD\nReal Estate, Fire and Car Insurance\n302 Baker St.\nPhone -312,or 408-L\nWHY RENT, WHEN YOU CAN\nbuy a 5-room house (needs some'\nfinishing), 9 acres land; good garden, soil, fruit trees, small fruits:\noutbuildings, all fbr $4750. On\nmain highway to Trail, 5_ miles\nfrom Nelson. Phone. 189-X1 evenings. D. A. Helliksoh, Taghum.\n20 ACRES, BEASLEY. WONDER-\nful for auto camp. New 7000 gal.\n.wat* tank. Must sell. Apply H.\nClark, Cona Linn, B.C.\nACRE, ALL a__VB_D, WITH 2\nhouses, IK miles on Ymir Rd.\nPrice $2500, For further informa-\ntion, write Box 7854, Cjiily News.\nFOlt SALE 5 5.ROOM H_tM\nReasonable terms. Phohe 617-V.\nFOR SALE\u20142-BEDROOM HOUSE,\nuphill   Phone 484-R3.\nRENTALS\nWANTED IN NELSON OR District, house br apartment suitable\nfor family, two boys aged 10 and\n8 (well disciplined). Advance rent\nand references, Apply Box 9223\nDaily News.. \u25a0    '        .\nURGENTLY NEEDED - TWO ,OR\nthree bedroom house for couple\nwith 9-year'-old daughter. Reliable\ntenants with permanent employment in city. Bo. ; 9363,* Dally\nNews;' ' ;'.' .*.' ..'\u25a0\u25a0 *.\u25a0 :,.-  , '; ;\u25a0>';,\nWAMTEIl,^8 <J|l. fcBEDRQlJM\nhouse. Must have w April 1st.\nPhone 458-L mornings, or phone\nRoyal Hotel. '    '.;,'\"\u2022 \u2022.'*.    \u25a0'' '.   \/\nFOR RENT\u2014SINGER PORT_IbLE\nelectric sewing machine. $6.00 per\nmonth, delivered and picked up.\nPhone 41, Singer, Sewing Centre.\nMODERN FURNISHED HOUSE\nfor rent for 5 months'from. April\n15th. Apply Box 9045 Daily News.\nWANTED TO RENT-2-BEDROOM\nhouse,   furnished.   Adults.\nReinhardt, phone 265.\nMrs.\n2-BEDROOM\nby April 1st.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nR.O.P SIBED-ORDER ^0\u2122 RE*\nquirements now from one of the\nmost popular breeds: S.C' White\nLeghorns, New Ham.pahirei,\nRhode Island Reds Now available\nat the Triangle Chick Hatchery.\nphone 3201, Armstrong, BC\nWANTED \u2014 THREE OR FOUH\ngood milk cows, recently freshened or to freshen soon, Ayrshire or\nHolstelp preferred. Apply Box\n167, Trail, B.C. Phone 1719.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2 AYRSHIRE BULL\ncalves ,from excellent cows and\nShannon stock. Wanted: 1 laddie\nhorse, young and well broke. L.\nBourgeois. Creacent Valley, B.C.\nIF YOU INTEND BUYING BABY\nchick* or pullets this year, write\nfor catalogue of breeds and prices\nto APPLEBY POULTRY FARM,\nMISSION'CITY, B.C.\t\n1 HOLSTEIN COW, 6 YHS. OLD,\ndue to freshen July. 1 sow, heavy\nIn pig. Apply Hood. Creek Street.\nPhone 602-Y.\t\nFOR SALE \u2014 ALFALFA HAY, 12\ntons, alio 4 tons timothy. Alex\nIvsny, Lister, B.C. .\nHAY, SELLING! BALED 1.0. 1\nalfalfa. Two miles South of\nLister P.O, Hutchings, Lister, B.C.\nFOR SALE - PUREBRED HOL-\n' stein bull, 2 yean old, about 1200\nlbs. Price $223.00. Quln, Harrop.\nMILK COW FbR SAtE - TO\nfreshen 1st week in April. A. V.\nNash, 7 mi., North Shore.'\nPEtS, CANARIES, BEES\/ETC.\n7 Lovely\nCO.LLIE PUPS\nMOTHER \u2014 PEDIGREED\nFATHER \u2014 DOUBTFUL '\nSacrifice at\n$10 Each\nDelivery approximately April 15\n'   H. HARROP     .\nROOM ANP BOARP\nFOR BOARD AND ROOM, APPLY\n920 Edgewood Ave. Phone 859- Y.\nWANT TO RENT -\nhouse, unfurnished,\nPhone 378-L1,\nWARM BEDROOM FOR RENT -\nApply 210 Vernon Street,\t\nNEW 2-BDRM. HOUSE FOR RENT,\nN. Shore. Box 9408, Daily News.\nAcadia Uranium,\nAkaltcho     ,\t\nAmerican Y.*K. ..\nAnacon .<;\u201e,\u201e.\nBate' Metal* ........\nBevcourl ..\u201e,\nBobjo '.   \t\nBoymar Gold _^,\nBralorne    ,, ...._,\nBrewli R. U ......\nBroulan      ...\u201e.\nBuffadison ......._\nBuffalo Ark >'_*,\nBuff. Can. '....\u2122.\nCalliman ::ii..i\nCampbell R. U.\nCan. Mai     \t\nCaslle Treth. \u201e..\nCentremaqu* ....\nCheitetvill* \u2122\u00ab\nChlmd G. ...\t\nCochenour \u201e\u201e,..,_\nConlaurum\nWANTED TO RENT-FURNISHED\"\nsuite. Business couple Ph. 1409-L,\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, CLOSE IN\nPhone 653-R.\nPERSONAL\nI, R. WATKINS QUALITY I_.OD.\nucts, Pjione 816-Y2.\nWAWANESA  MUTUAL FIRE IN*\nsurance Co., D L Kerr Agent\nALMERHOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and moderate\nrates-$1,50 to $2.00 single, $2,50 to\n$3.00 doubles   Vancouver.  B   C\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts Incurred In my\nname by \"anyone other than myself after this date. Signed Carl\nClifford Linn, Fort Steele, B.C.\nRESPECTABLE GENTLEMAN DE-\nsires lady companion between 30-\n40 years of age for dances, Shows\nand bowling. Apply Dally News\nBox 9373. \t\nADULTS i .PERSONAL RUBBER\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment $1-\nbill. Tested, guaranteed.* fine\nquality Mailed in plain sealed\npackage, including tree Birth\nControl 'Booklet and bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hygiene\nSupplies. Western Distributors,\npox 1023-PN. Vancouver\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\nQetiiuP\n^iXtdiJbU^\n1 LOAN HANI\n\u25a0^rnm-urciiwuM\") at n, extra cos-\n1\nFINANCE COMPANY LID\nWill. \\___T mmm - n\u00bb \u00ab__.\u00ab,\n\u2022oWMum ire\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, March 30 (CP) -\nWinnipeg grain cash prices Saturday: j, .\nOats, No. 1 feed. 89v..     .\nBarley, No. l'feed, J.22H.\nCons Min tt Smelt._,\nCrolnor \t\nDelnlte  \t\nDetU R. U .....\nDiscovery* .......\nDonalda  \t\nDuvay      ........\nEast Amphl\t\nEast Malartlc1.,\nEast Sullivan\nElder Gold ......\nEldona  ...,.;.:....\nEstella \t\nEureka ,\u201e.\nFalconbrldge ..\nFroblsher\t\nGiant Yel\t\nGod's Lake\t\nGold Eagle \t\nGold Arrow ....\nHardrock _......\nHarrlcana  ........\nHasaga  _..._\u2014.\u201e.._._.\nHeath ....: .. _.;\t\nHeva ,   i,\u2122,._\u201e \u201e. ...\nHolllnger  \u2014.\u2014__..\nHomer Y K ...__J.__\t\nHudson Bay \u2014.\u201e\u2014.\u201e_\u201e.,.\nInspiration  .'.__&..'.'\u201e..\nInt Nickel   \u201e.\u201e_..,.\nJack Waite _.., \t\nJollet Que ,\t\nKelore    \u201e._.\u201e....._\u201e\nKenville \t\nKerr Addison  _...,-\u2014.\nKirk-Hudion Bay ...__\u201e.\u201e.\nKirkiand'Lak*  \u2014..\nLabrador _.\u2014\nLake Dufault '. _....\u2014_\nLouvlcourt  \u2014___^\u2122._\nLlnx        :\t\nMacDonald   ..... ._.___.\nMadsen R L ......\u201ei. _.\nMagnet     __.\u2014_.\u2014_\nMalarUc G F \u2014\u2014.\nMarcusG   ..\u201e..\u2014'_\nMclntyre  \u201e ____.\nMining Corp \u201e._____\u2014,\u201e.\nNegus , .....\u201e.\u201e\u2014_.._...\nNeW Calumet ..........\nNew Goldvue \u201e.\t\nNoranda     _._.\u201e\u2122....;\nNormetals  ,..\u201e\u201e_. _.\nO'Brien  \u201ei\t\nO'Leary ....... \u201e.\u201e\u2014\u201e.\u2014.\u201e\nOrlac .._.._._w.__~.___._,.\nOsisko   .\u2014'\u2014___.\nPamour  _......_.._\u00ab.\u201e.\nPaymaster , _,.,\nPickle Crow   . :. ,^^\u201e\nPlacer Development .._\u201e\u201e\nPowell Rouyn \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0   '\nPrestdn E   D ....;...\u201e__\u2014_\nQuebec Lab ..______\nQuebec Man, .,\nSan Antonio  \u201e,,,,__\u201e\u201e_.\nShawkey  \u201e\u201e\nSherritt Gordon .,\u201e...\nSilvermlller  \t\nSilanco       \u201e_ _\u2014\nSteep Rock      \u2014 _..\nSudbury Cont ...__..._\u201e\nSylvanlte  J. .\t\nThompson-Lund .._;.\u2014_\nToburn    ..\nToipbill \t\nTrans Cont Res ._...\nUnion Mining  ._._...\nUnited Keno   ......\u2014_.._\u2014.\nUpper Canada .....j.........\nVenturei ...._\u201e...^,.;..\nWaite Amulet .......\u201e\u201e\u201e..\nOILS\nA, P Consolidated ._._\u2014...\nB A Oil   \t\nCalgary St Edm  \u2014...\nCalmont   .._' \u201e.,.,\u201e..\u201e,.\nCentral Leduc  ^\u2014,\nChemical Research \u2014~\nBalhousie        _._...--,\nDavies Pete \u201e.._.._\nDecalta  \u201e___..\t\nDel Rio 1        ......._._..._..\nFederated Pete ,\u2014\u201e,.,.,..\nHome  _.\t\nImperial Oil \u201e..\u201e.\u201e\u201e:,,..\"\u25a0\nInter Pete  \u2014..,\nKroy :..     .* _,__..:.\nMacDougal Segur ...\u2014_-.\nMid Cont    ......\t\nNat Pete    I\u2122.....\u2014\nNew Facalta .......\u2014_\u201e...-..-\nOkalta ...    ,.__.-._____...._.\nPacific Pet* ,\t\nRoyalite  .____...._-..._..\nRoxana , \t\nTower Pete ...\nUnited Oils ....\n.18%\n1.47\n.64\n1.25\n.49\nU\u00bb\n_.\n.12\n8.00\n.15\n1.43\n.14 ;\n1.15\n-2_l\n* ,2V\/,\n8.10\n.60\n3..80\n.15\n.33%\n.16\n<  1.55\n.70\n34.25\n.35\n1.40\n.17\n.SOW\n.42\n.1514\n. .10H\n-1.95\n$.25\n__\n.30%\n1.W}\n2.04\n13.00\n'7.25,\n10.75\n.37\n.14\n.13\nMV,\n.14\n.27\n17%\n.12\n13.75\n. 31\n55.25\n.40.\n44.25\n*  .14\n.43\n.19 _\n.30\n17.80  i\n2,04\n.78\n8.75\n1.14\n.35\n,14\n1.41   '\n1.95\n.13\n1.90\n\u25a0 aim\n79.00\n15.50\n.65\n2.28\n.40\n78.00\n8.00\n1.25 ,\n.20\n.10\n\u20221.02\n.86\n.\u00ab0\n1.80\n44.50\n.85\n1.38\n.28\n2.50\n2.50\n.10\n4.30\n1.65\n.35\n7,00\n.18%\n1.44\n.18\n.32%\n.45\n.54\n.45\n13.00\n1.78\n18.00\n12.25\nINDUSTRIALS\nAluminum .......\nAbltibi\nAtlas St   \t\nBsthurst Power\nBell Tele\t\nBrazilian   ..   \t\nB C Power B ...\nBrown Co pfd .\nBuild Prod .\nBurns B   ....\nCan Malting .........\nCdn Breweries .....\nCanadian Canners\nCdn Car tt Fdy ..\nCan 01) \t\nCdn Celanese  .....\nCdn PacRly\nCdn West Lmbr .......\nCockshutt . .....  .....\nCons Min tt Smelt....\nCon's Paper .   \t\nDist Seagram\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nEddy Paper\t\nFord A     \t\nGreat Lake* __\nGypium Lima ._._\u2014\nImperial, Oil ...\u2014-_\nImp Tobacco ..._____\nInt Nibkel  .__i,\nInt Pete\t\nLaura Secord .............\nLoblaw B      ....\nMaple Leaf MiUing\nMassey Harri*   .   _.\nM tt O Paper \t\nMcColl Frontenae'....\nPage Herihey  \t\nPowell River\t\nShawinlgan \t\nSimpsons  pfd  ...._._\nSte*l of Can.    _\nTaylor Pearson    __\nWpg Electric com \u2014\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, March 30 (AP) -\nProposal! to end the steel industry\ndispute with both a wage and price\nincrease sent steel shares up sharply\ninto leadership.\n'\u25a0? Canadian issues were unchanged\nto higher. Canadian Pacific and International Nickel each added %\nand Mclntyre wa*' up one. Dome\nMines, Hiiam Walker, and Distillers\nSeagram all remained unchanged.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Pricei were\nirregularly higher.\nFractional advance! wer* ln a\nmajority from the opening, with decline! appearing in only a few section*, There were few wide movement*, and a good number of issues\ntraded unchanged.        -\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Western oil*\nposted a long lilt of gains. Industrials also were' generally ahead,\nbase metals broke Better than even,\nand the gold index reached into new\nhigh ground for 1952. .\nVolume was about 2,500,000 shares.\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK, (AP) - Spot non*\nferrous metal prices: Copper 24%\ncents a' pound, Connecticut Valley.\nLead 19 cents a pound New York.\nZlh-i 19% cents a pound East St\nLouis., Tin $1.21% a pound, New\nYork. -\nVancouver Stocks\nMine*- **\nBeaver Lodge  1.15 s\nCariboo Gold....\u2014.. _._.\u201e 1.45\nGiant Maico. _ ..i.  1.00\nHighland BeU :_..:\u201e __     .?5\nInt C tt C ..:,_ \u2014 __     .66\nKoot Belle \u201e..\u201e      .73\nPend Oreille   \u2014..: 7.20\nPioneer Gold ..,\u201e...\u2014_ .. 2,20'\nQuatslno1 \u201el      .55\nSheep Creek _... .* , 1__\nSherritt Gordon \u25a0\u2014 : **3(1\nSUver Ridge     .._      _9\nSilver Standard  \u2014 2.35\nSurf Inlet ........ .      .11\nVan Roi    ....;..,\u201e... ._._     .50\nWellington \u201e..'. :.___.     Hi\nWestern Exp \u2014'.  1.15.\nWestern Urftnium.:.......__ 155\nWestern Mine* -...,..:_*_\u2014     .45\nOIL8\nAnaconda  \u2014\u2014     ,19\nAnglo Cdn .\u2014:\u2014\u2014. 9J\u00bb\nA P Cons ....\u201e\u201e\u2014\u201e..     .56 \u2022\nCalgary & Ed ,\nCalmont\t\nHome\t\nMercury\t\nNat Pete\nOkalta Com .\nPacific Pete\nRoyalite \t\nVanalta\t\n16.50\n1.99\n15.50\n.32%\n8.60\n4.00\n12.50\n18.75\n.67\n.56\n21.85\n16.00\n1.95\n3.80\n1.28\n.42\n.48\n.42\n2.90\n.12\n14.85\n38.25\n38.00\n2.48\n. XI\n.48\n3.55\n,  .18\n3.85\n11.75 .\n.17%\n.45\n.44'\n2.20\n106%\n18%\n21%\n46\n35%\n11\n\u25a0 8%\n107\n32\n29\n45%\n17%\n30%\n13%\n27\n39%\n87%\n8%\n17%\n34%\n35\n22%\n16%\n15\n59%\n18%\n30%\n38%\n10%\n44%\nSB%\n13\n32%\n8\n11\n25%\n39%\n66\n25%\n42\n85\n31%\n7\n39%\nBritish Soccer\nResults of soccer matches' played\nin tha United Kingdom Saturday:\nFootball AHOelatlon Cup 8eml-final\nBlackburn Hovers 0, Newcastle\nUnited 0.\nChelsea vs Arsenal, ppd       '   .\nENGLISH LEAQUE\nDlvlilon I        .\nBolton Wanderers 1 Liverpool 1\nBurnley 0, Sunderland 1\nCharlton. Athletic vs'Aston Villa,\nPPd.\nFulham yi Derby County, ppd.\nMiddlesbrough 2, Manchester City\n2.\nPreston North End 3, Wolverhampton .Wanderen 0,\nStoke City 2, Portsmouth 0,\nDivision'II\nBirmingham. City 2, Hull City 2\nBrentford 1, Weit Hun United 1,\nabandoned at half time. ,\nDoncaster Rovers 1, Coventry City\n0.      \":'--'\nEverton 2, Swansea Town 1\nLeeds United 1, No'tta County 0.\nLeicester City 1, Barniley 2  ,\nNottingham Foreit 0, Sheffield\nUnited!\nRotherham United 1, Queen'1\nPark Ranger* a   .\nSouthampton 4, Bury 2.\nDlvlilon III \u2022authern   \u2022\nAldenhot vs Gllllngham, ppd.\nBristol Rovers 2, Millwall 1.\nColchester United vs Raiding, ppd\nCrystal Palace vs Northampton\nTown, ppd. '\nExeter City 1, Newport County 4.\nLeyton Orient vs Bristol City, ppd\nNorwich City va Southend United\nppi ..-.'.:'\nPlymouth Argyle 4, Bournemouth\nand Boscombe Athletic 1.\nShrewsbury Town 1, Torquay United 1.\nSwindon Town vs Port Vale, ppd.\nWalsall 1, Ipswich Town 3.\nWatford vs Brighton and Hova Albion ppd. -\nDMilon III Northern!\nAccrlngton Stanley 1, Lincoln\nCity 3.\nBarrow 2, Hartlepooli United 1.'\nBradford 3, Crewe Alexandra 2.\nCarlisle United 0, Cheater 0.\nChesterfield 1, Gateshead 0.\nGrimsby Town 3, Oldham Athletic\nL\nHalifax Town 0, Southport 1.\nMansfield Town 3, Tranmere Rovers 0. ..\nRochdale 1. Scunthorpe United 2\nStockport County 3, York City 1\nWorkington 0, Bradford City 1.\nWrexham 1, Darlington 1,\nSCOTTISH CUP Semi-Flnali:\nMotherwell 1, Hearts 1,\nThird Lanark 0, Dundee 2.\n8COTTI8H LEAGUE\nDivision A:\nCeltic 2, Aberdeen 0.\nQueen of the South 2, Rangers 2.\nDlvlilon B, supplementary cup, first\nround: \u25a0\nAlbion Rovers 0, St. Johnstone 3.\nAlloa Athletic 3, Stenhousemuir 3\nClyde 7, Forfar Athletic 1\nDumbarton 1, Dundee United 0.\n' Hamilton Academical* 1, Queen'*\nParkl.\nKilmarnock 1, Falkirk 0.\nArbroath 0, Dunfermline Athletic\nAyr United 2, Cowdenbeath 0.\nIRISH LEAGUE\nArds 0. Cliftonville 0.\nColeralne 2, Distillery 1\nCrusaders 0, Linfield 5.\nClentoran 1, Glenavon 2.\nPortadown 2, Bangor 2.\nCompared with an average of\n597 deaths from measles in the\nyears .1926-30, Canadian 'deaths\nfrom measles in 1950 totalled 173.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MARCH\":3T,- T9S2 \u2014]*\n*; '*ynp\n. \u00a3?J}[Zt NEV_8 pHOTO li thli one of fireman helping a guetl\nIn the flame-swept St. George Hotel In Lei Angeles. At featt ilx*\npersons were known to have died In the fire. Five bodies have beeTn\nrecovered. Another victim leaped to death. Twelve other* were\nInjured. Firemen figured In spectacular' reieuei of trapped gue\n\u2014Central Prats Canadli\n'ife'\nAusterity Is Daily Living\nIn Buddhist Priesthood\nBy BILL BO88\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBANGKOK, Thailand, March: 80\n(CP) - Rev. Praslddh Klttisiddho,\n24, has lived in a Buddhist temple\nfor nine yeari.\nIn all that time he has eaten what\nfood was given to him by Buddhists\noutside the temple.    \u2022_.'.\n\"But we do not beg,\" he iald emphatically, \"We do accept alms. We\naccept them ln order to live; and we\naccept them to help others fulfil a\nspiritual exercise.\"* ,..s*\nSeated cross-legged and barefoot\non the floor of his cell, Praslddh described the daily routine of a Buddhist monk's life. As a novice he entered the temple at 15, became a\npriest at 20. He had studied English\nonly three months but had a'good\nbasic knowledge of the language.\nBetween t and 7 a.m., while housewives do their shopping (they get it\ndone early in semi-tropical. Bangkok) the streets teein with priestly\norange. Some monks walk slowly\nalong the sidewalk. Others stand ln\nsen_TCircIes at particular corners\nand at street-merchants' counters.\nAlUcarry a covered bronze-brass\nbowl and sometimes a covered aluminum canister. Occasionally the\nwalkers pause at a doorway where\nthe woman of th* houie _\u2022 1\nbehind a table with a \"great bowl\nof cooked rice. ...-\u2014\u25a0\n\" Ai the monks stop, the housewife\nclasps her hand* in prayer, then\nscoops two or three ladlesful\" of\nrice into each pricst'i bowl. She\nprays again and the priests mavPSP.\nThe monks standing ln the wmi-\ncircles are grouped about tables at\nwhich dealers sell dishes of food.\nEach dish hold's cooked rice, a boil,\ned egg, and perhaps a tomato or si\napple. They sell ip* five _n_;l\u00bb\nGIFT8 AND PRAYER. ' \u00a3_\nHousewives doing their shopping,\nor men and boy* on the way te\nwork, atop and-buy an offering.\nThen they kneel before thi priest,\npray briefly, step forward to empty\nthe dish Into the priest's bowl, then\nkneel tb pray again, . _^\nUp at 4:30 a.m. for individjial\nprayers, tha priest hai a'light.me'al\non returning to the temple about\n7 a.m. His main meal ls at 11 am,\nand must be finished at noon, After\nthat no food ii permitted, but' a\npriest may smoke and consume nonalcoholic liquids.\nThe rest ot the day It ipent in\nstudy and meditation. 'At 10 p.m.\nhe goes to sleep-on th* floor of hi*\ncell, without even a \u00bbl*_ik\u00bbt\nFlorida Asks Missing Beauty's\nHusband for Volunfary Evidence\nKEY WEST, Pla., March 30 (AP)\n\u2014What really did happen to Hugu-\nette LeMay, the young Hanadlan\nbeauty who vanished so mysteriously in the Florida Keys?\nA Monroe county grand jury believes she may have'been killed\nand would like to have her husband\nGeorge, a 26-year-old Montreal real\nestate dealer, appear as a voluntary\nwitness \"and waive immunity when\nso doing.\" \u00bb\u2022'\nThe 18-man Jury feels this \"could\nmaterially aid in the, solution of\nthe alleged disappearance.\"\n(In Montreal, however, LeMay\nsaid in a statement to the Press\nhe has decided not to return to\nFlorida. He said the decision was\nmade after consultations with his\nlawyers and other advisers. It added that he might make a further\nstatement later.)     \u25a0,\nMrs. LeMay, 31, petite, brown-\nhaired, and French-speaking, was\nfishing with her husband on a\nbridge on ihe overseas highway between Miami and Key West the\nnight of Jan. 4.\nGeorge said she was cold and went\nback tp their convertible to put On\nwarmer, clothing, The distance, was\nbetween 100 and IH yards'. It was\ndark and swift water swirled under\nthe bridge.\n.The husband said she did not return and he' did not see her again.\nPolice searched for weeks under the\ndirection ot Sheriff^ Deputy ,\nO. Barker. Her brother, Raymond\nDaoust, a Montreal lawyer, and.*\nprivate investigator, Joined her husband in the hunt for three week*.\n\"MAY BE DEAD\"\n;..., The Jury began Iti probe Mart*.\n21. It heard testimony by lnvestlgat- ,\ning officers and otheri_and drove\nout to'Tom's Harbor bridge no. 4\nwhere the couple had been fishing.\nT_e jury reported Friday that\ntestimony Indicated- \"Huguette lie-\nMay may be dead, and if dead, she\n(net death as a result of an act of\nviolence.\n\"It 1* the opinion of this body\nthat George LeMay, husband of\nHuguette LeMay, could materially\naid ln the solution of the alleged\ndisappearance of Huguette LeMay\nif he would voluntarily appear as e\nwitness before thii body and waive\nimmunity when 10 doing.\n'The jury alio urged law nrifrir**\nment agencies to continue their: __.\nforts to solve the case.'.. \u25a0: -. \u2022 . *;\n. State Attorney 3. Lancelot L**t*r\nsaid the, sheriffs office Would Imp\nat it until the case was ioh_d___.\npointed out that under Florida law '\n8 grand jury could not issue an indictment unless there waa a body\nor a confession had been made..\n\"So far, we have neither,\" he said.\nThe grand Jury recessed after\npresenting the report to Circuit\nJudge Aquiline Lope*, Jr. R can ba\ncalled back into session at any time.\n$13 Million Pulp\nMill for Red Deer\nRED DEER, Alta., March SO (CP)\n\u2014A special session of the Red Deer\nCity Council Saturday endorsed the\ngeneral plan whereby International\nResources Ltd. of Seattle will proceed with initial steps to construct\n$13,00,000 pulp plant here.\nRichard Randle, financier of New\nYork and Seattle, and H. M. Simpson of Seattle told the council they\nhave 'completed arrangements for\nraising $16,500,000 of which $3,500,000\nis to be working capital.\nTO LONDON POST\nOTTAWA, March 30 (CP) - The\nNavy is shifting Cmdr. Harold V. W.\nGroos, 39, of Victoria, from command of the destroyer Crusader to\nbecome Naval member of the Canadian joint military staff in London.\nThrough the Middle Ages and\nTudor Times, Fowey in Cornwall\nwas probably the most important\nport in the Southwesi of England.\nAdenauer Prepares3'..\nTo Meet Big Three h\nBONN, Maroh 30 (AP) \u2014Chan-\neellor Konrad Adenauer haa announced the Weitern big three\nforeign mlnliter* will come to\nGermany In Ma'y to algn an allied\nGerman peace contract\n\u25a0Adenauer said the contract, living West Germans almoit Kll\ntoyerelgnty will be signed in the\n.   latter half of May. \\ *-S\nAdenauer and the Western-Allies have been working on .the\ncontract since laat September;\nTORONTO. March 30 (CP) -\nTwenty-three production! by 13 billet companies will be listed on programs of Canada'* fourth ballet festival to open May 5. '\u25a0\nSelection of companies and productions was based on a report presents^ by Guy Glover, Ottawa dance\nexpert, following a cross-country\ntour of pre-festlval adjudicati\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nilFlEC\n 10^- NELSON DAILY HEWS, MONDAY, MARCH Jl, WM\n\u25a0KB \"*\nII  Beauditul Sprigtibe\nfl  beans code id the head.\nand cold in the head can be quickly\n\u25a0   relieved by the judicioiis usp of\nNyal Vaporizing Salve\nRub well Info threat and chett and Insert\na imall quantity In each noitril\n2 sizes: 35c and 50c\nFlAllll  i_i\nDRUG STORE\nand Are\nFascinating Studies for Everyone\nJ* By PERCY GHENT\n[Spring ii (he time to learn birdcalls. It's..a fascinating game, with\nthe charactefistic calls and songs\nprovided by species after species\u2014\nseveral hundred of them In Canada\n.lone.   '\u25a0\n:; Canadian* well know the call1 of\nthe crow and,the rhythm of the job-\nta's song is almost as readily identified. Obligingly, some birds tell you\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHFS LINE\nOUR TELEPHONF LINE\n18? BAKER 5T,   PHONE 1175\nj- U8E REXALL\nb     Moth Fume\n_-:    Crystals        _,\ny ' 7Se per Lb. Tin\n;.;To Protect, Your Tuts, Etc.\nSold, Only at Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug\n.:-\u25a0\u25a0',      .OMPANY\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 84 Day - 807-R Nieht\nBOX 460       .\ntheir names ta their songs, the whip-\npoor-will, .bobolink and pUplt are\namong them. .'       .\nIn that expanding zone df South--\nem Canada where the cardinal has\ntaken up residence, the high, tuneful\nWhistled call is one of the happiest\n\u25a0notes of Springtime. .\nthroughout that wide range from\nNewfoundland to Alberta, white-\nthroated sparrows tell of their joy\nat being home again after'wintering\nin the South. \"Sweet, sweet, Canada, Canada, Canada,\" ls plainly\nenough what they are singing, and\ndefinitely not \"Old Sam Peabpdy,'-\nIfa_.od*_ *etbo*r \u00bbs listeners\nSouth of the border so mistakenly\nsuppose.,   \u2022'-,., \u25a0\n| The long-ipirrnw'i.iong, a tune-\nflil and chttry oiie, declare! he's a\nPrei-prtl-preiby-teer-ian.' and that\n*_ffi&f\u25a0.\u00ab\"\"*\u2022 hoi dOubtl***'\nearned th* auld Klrk'i bleiUng. Ahd\nshfluldryou, hear; ta _oma_wflodland\naB\u00ab_rt_m*la*tlc(iall thatioUfldilike\n\"vely,* very .ileaied* to* meetcha\"j\nyou may be lure you are liitening\nto a chestnut-sided ..warbler.' \"Hip-,\nthree cheeri,\" cilia the olive-sided\nfly-catcher. Or, as translated by the\nfacetious ones, it's amlldly tipsy,\n\u25a0'hie-thr** be\u00abri.\" \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n-elide* shouting hi* nam* ill _v\u00abr\nthe Spring landscape, that golden-\nwinged woodpecket the flicker,Alio\ndelights in instrumental- music \u2014\ndntomihg on any available tin roof.\n'\"\"\" '''\u25a0 ''\" '-' \"'   '    \u25a0' \"    i    '    i   '  : ; i\n(rifles tike\nMar gar el, Bui\nNofHer Voice\nSEATTl.. , March 80 (AP. - Mu'\nsic* critics'of .SeittJe'i   two daily\nnewspaper* agreed 'that.Margaret;\nTruman had perional charm in her\nThursday night tinging appearance\nhere \u2014 butsuggested that she might\nbeta the wrong'celllng.:' \u2022\u25a0 ,''\" '\u25a0:'\u2022\u25a0-\n, The Poit-lntelllgeneer headline\noh her performance was: \"Mlsi\nTruman Charms \u2014 But Not With\nVOlO*.\"*-- \u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0 -,\"\u25a0 ... ..-\u25a0\"\u25a0\nThe Time*;headline wan \"Mlsi\nTruman Shows Courage: She\nNeed* It'*\nA capacity crowd heard her at th*\nMetropolitan Theatre.\nCritic Louis K. Guzzo of the Times\nwrote:      '. -,' \u25a0\u25a0;.. \u25a0\u25a0 - \u25a0 \u25a0\n''Lt's face it. Margaret Truman has\npoise, charm, *ttractiv_hess, stage\npresence an dambitlon \u2014 but the\ndoesn't sing.very well.,..'..\n\"It was a sad disappointment We\nwanted the likeable, modest soprano\nto be a success; we wanted her to\nsing so well that we might be able'\nto refute lome of the adverse criticism ahe has received; we -strained\nwhen ahe strained to reach tfie high\nnotes, and we suffered when she\n\u00abt__ered with the\" tow ones   _\u2022'.-,;\n\"The're.w** an uneailneu\namong the patron* \u2014 ahd It wasn't\ncaused by the* presence   of the\n8eeret Service.\"\nMaxlne Cushing Qray wrote In\nthe Post-lntelllgencert\n''HeV veeal gift I* \u25a0 parlor ao-\ncompllihment blown up to the\nblg-tlme.!* '-\u25a0'\u25a0\nShe added the bajbed critique: -\n\"MissTruman Is unique, in our 29\nyears of liitening to singers, in her\nability to. .go. off pitch at any point\nta her range.\"   '\n..'She added that \"those who came\nto* see Miss Truman as a stage personality and a comedienne were\ncharmed and drew her back again\nfor bowi \u2014 but- not for many\nencores.\"   ','\u25a0.,.\nFIERCE FIGHTING continue! In Indo-China\n'between French Viet Nam troops and the rebel,\nCommunist-led Viet Minh. Photo shows French\nI troops debarking from an amphibious craft te\nbegin a raklng-up operation: againat scattered\nenemy reilstance. In the iwampy delta around\nTonkin. While thl* operation wai going on, French\nplanet bombed and itrafed Viet Minh eonoentra-\ntions Just South of the Chlneto border at Red dlvlt-\nloni battered anew at th* Southern flank of the\nFrench defence rlno around Hanoi.\u2014Central Pren\nCanadian,\nBritain Snowed Under\nBy Sweeping Blizzard\nOnion Fires Six\n. DETROIT, Mich., March 30 (AP)\n\u2014The United Auto Workeri (C.I.O.)\nadministrative bd'aia that Is running Ford Local 600 has fired another six men from their union post\nPreviously 'five had been dismissed.\nThe administrative board took\nover-en order* of the U.A.W.'i ln-\nterntlonal executive' board after witnesses, testified before the House\nUnamerican Activltiei Committee\nthat Communists dominated local\n(SOO's leadership. Carl Stellato, local\npresld*ht, denied - the'accusations.\nStellato's appointed assistant, Wil-\nHam Johnson,-ahd Percy Llewellyn,\nthe local's director of human relation! and political action,\" were fired\nfrom BOO'I itaft'Tbey still can go\nback to their factory jobs.\nThe othCr four fired from Union\npelts were committeemen in the\nDearborn Engln*. plant All _i\u00bbd\nbeen Ippolnted by Paul BOatln, tor-\nmer chairman of the engine plaht\nUnit who was among those named\nas Communists before the House\nCommittee. -\"-.'. \u2022\nLONDON,, March 30 (CP) \u2014 The\ncoldest Spring blizzard ta. 38 years\nlashed the British '\u2022 Isles Saturday\nand snow and cold gripped most of\nEurope.\nShipping ln the churning English\nChannel Was virtually at a standstill. A number of small boats lent\nout distress signals.\nRoad and rail transportation in\nSouthern: England was blocked tn\nmany places by drlf ta piled as high\nI as two feet Three double-decker\nbuses overturned on ley roads but\nho deaths were reported.\nAir transportation onto London\nwas slowed. One planefrom the United States was five hours late after bucking gale winds.\n8WPPING. DELAYED\"\nMid-Atlantic galea delayed; the\n13,000-ton liner Parthla, due at Liverpool today from New York. She\nTHREAT OF CHILE\nCOPPER WORKERS\nPOSES BIG WORRY\nNEW YORK, March 30 (AP), -\nDefence metal planners and copper\nconsumers got a. new worry last\nweek \u2014 e strike* threat at two of\nthe blggert. copper-mtaei ta Chile.\nThe strike* would involve about\n7000 worker! at, PotreMloa and S500\ncopper niineri and construction\nworkers at Chuquicamata. Both are\nproperties of Anaconda Copper\nCopper Mining Company.\nTin' producers of the Belgian\nCongo agseed to supply,the United\nStates with at least 7000 tons of tin\na. year over a two>-year period at\n81.20% a pound at U.S. port*. This\nequals J1.18 at ports of shipment,\nthe saifae level agreed to by Britain\nand Indonesia in their Vecent tin\ncontracts with this country. Bolivia's\ntin negotiators are still trying to get\na better price.\nwas i expected to dock tomorrow\nmorning. \u25a0 \u25a0  \u25a0*\nMaximum temperature In London\nwas lowest for the date since 1916.\nTh emercury dipped below freezing\nta most ot Southern England early\nyesterday.-.   . .,-\u25a0   Ui\/, \u2022-    \u2022\nWeather observers gloomily predicted mote.of the same*for the\nnext few days, They blamed a cold\nfront sweeping across Northern Europe and Scandinavia from the: Siberian \"ice-box.\"\nMarch, which entered like a lamb\nrOared out like a lion in other countries, too. ;.  '.,\nA blizzard swept most parts of\nHolland .threatening the endless\nacres of tulip bulbs which were just\nbeginning to bloom.\nStrong winds and heavy snow\nwere reported in Belgium and Ger.\nmany. Moscow.radio said the Rue*\nsian capital had It* deepest snowfall\nin 10 years.\n\"VU Wait for ftim? Says\nQirl; Loves Wanted Man\nNot Possible or\nDesirable to Stop\nWinter Immigration\nOTTAWA, March 30 (CP) \u2014 immigration Minister Harris lald.re-\ncently experience has shown that lt\nis \"not possible or desirable to stop\nall.immigration to Canada during\nthe Winter months.,\nAnyone, he told' th* Commons,\ncould argue that the flow of Immigrants should be stopped from October, until April\u2014the months of peak\nunemployment ta Canada, but experience had shown that could not\nbe done.-   :    >'. ;   ':\u25a0-\u25a0\nFarmer*, for Instance, wanted\nhelp to.be available ta April. That\nhelp had to be brought in during the\nWinter months. It was possible to\nprevent certain types of workers\nfrom coming to Canada') but he did\nnot think it would be wise to stop\nall Immigrants from coming during\nthe Winter months. \u2022',..'\u25a0\n> DEATHS\n. TORONTO-rW. P. Near. 73, for-\nmer senior vice-chairman' of the\nOntario Municipal Board. \u25a0')\n, CAPETOWN-Bir, Alexander. Fra.\n_er Russell, 75, former acting giver,\nho* of Southern Rhodesia. ;i\n. MONTfl-AL \u2014 Alphonse Belan-\nger,,74, Outremont city councillor,\nauthority on civil engineering and\nfofmer director of the Montreal\ntechnical school.\nVANCOUVER, March 30 (CP) -\nThe 19-year-old girl known a* Shirley McBeth, who put the \"finger\"\noh Melville Wilkie, the mad Ontario\nkiller, called him \"the finest man I\never know.\"\nThe tragic,ending to the strange\nlove story came here Friday with\nthe capture of Wilkie, who escaped\nfrom the Ontario hospital atPene-\ntanguishene July 19, 1950.\n\"I'll love him till the day I die,\"\nShirley told newspaper interviewers. \"I'll never love, anyone else.\nCan the police blame me for falling In love with a killer?\". .'\n- Wilkie, 42, who was computed to\nthe hospital.for the criminally insane, for the arson murder of his\nwife and child at Owen Sound, Ont.,\nin 1933, met Shirley in a Winnipeg\nboarding house. Her parents live in\na Saskatchewan town, but she did\nnot disclose Its location, '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'-\nShe was working as a domestic\nin the Winnipeg boarding house in\n1950 when she met Wilkie. Later\nshe went to a small town and lt be\ncame a correspondence romance.\nPARENTS CONSENT .'.'*\n'\u25a0\u25a0 Shortly before last Christmas she\nreturned to visit her parents in Sas\nkatchewan. While at home friends\nheld a bridal shower for her.\nHer parents never met Wilkie,\nshe said, but they were willing for\nher to marry him. She couldn't get\nmarried here until she was 21 unless\nher parents consented.\nIf We'd been ln Manitoba we'd\nhave got married,\" she said.. \"You\ncan get married, there when wou're\nis:\"\n, But she didn't explain why she\nhad* not sought formal consent of\nher parents for a wedding here.\nBefore; she returned to the coast,\nWilklp had converted'the shack into\na three-room -suite. Since then she\nhad lived with him as his common-\nlaw: wife.v        \u25a0   '  ,    . V ' .\nShe never had the faintest Idea of\nhis true identity until police informed* her. The man; who-looked old\nenough to be Shirley's' father, bid\nher goodbye ta a telephone call from\npolice headquarters. ,\nHe told Tier he would be returned\nto Penetanguishene, and vyheh he\nfinished she said simply: \"Goodbye\nAndy,\" \u00bb\n\u25a0For reporters the had a final\nword: \"If there's'a chance that lje'11\never be free,' I'll wait for .him.\"\nPENTJ.OW, Erig. (CP).-Residents\nof this Essex County village are hop-\ntag for a wet Summer. The village\npump now- takes 40 turns ot the\nhandle to bring up a bucket of water, although it was once considered\na pump of the most modern design.\n*-\nHARDi.DWli.80N\n'DURING a U.K.' Parliamentary\ndebate on economic affairs, \u2022 Harold Wilson, a Left Wing, Labor\nMember, charged that Hon. Douglas Abbott,. Canada's Finance Minister, had .prevented Britain from'\ntaking a. policy of discrimination\nagainat the dollar at the meeting\nof Commonwealth Finance Ministers In London last January. He-\nreferred to Abbott at \"a. Skeleton\n\u00abt thi feait'.for It wai Abbott\nwho prevented the Chancellor ef\nthe Exchequer from proposing\noutright discrimination agalntt\nthe dollar by the Commonwealth\ncountrlei, Debate wa* touched off\nby Australia's decision te'tlaih\nImports from the U.K. Instead of\nfrom dollar and non-sterling\ncountrlei. ~- Central Pren Canadian,\nToy Farm Pastime\nFor Farmer Father\nFOX VALLEY, Sask., March 30\"\n(CP) \u2014District Farmer Albert Bur-\nkart has ibme up with a new solution for \"keeping them down on the\nfarm.\"\nBurkart has built a neat pint-sized model of a typical prairie farmstead for* his youngsters: Diana, 7,\nGilbert, 6, Sharon 5, and Arleen 3.\nIt's a big hit with them.\nThe farmstead consists of a house,\nbarn, two car garages, outhouse, dicken coop, a windmill that goes, a\npump that actually draws water, a\nmanure spreader, hay rack, wagon;\nbobsleigh, two toy tractors, cars,\nsheep, cows and everything you'd\nexpect to find on a real farm.\nOn warm, sunhy days, th? young:\nsters carry \"the farm\" outdoors\nWhere their make-believe Is invig.\norating as well as keenly interesting.\n\"The _#m\" also' entertains father.\n\"It's a darn good pastime when\nthe wind; howls, and the mercury\nhangs around SO below zero,\" be\nsaid.. :->,.      '\u2022-.'\nHopes for Peace\nWASHINGTON, March 30 (AP)-\nA sudden peace' move by .he iteel\nindustry spurred hopes that * scheduled. April 8 steel strike may be'\naverted.\nIhe industry's ti_c largeit produc*\nera arranged to begin meetings on\nMonday in' New -York with CIO.\nPresident Philip Murray,'head of the\nUnited Steelw-orker* of America.\nThe fact that thebid tor the meet\ntags came from th* companies and\nthat they are willing to take the unprecedented step of bargaining as a\ngroup with the Union seemed promising.    ;.-..-\u25a0-; ,'*':.:\u25a0'\u25a0\n\u25a0Thl* Indicated; possibly the in*\ndustry had -been passed the word\nthat the government was ready to\ngive it the brice relief industry has\nsaid was needed* before It could\nmake a wage deal With Murray foi\u00ab\n650,000 basic steelworkers.\nGerm Bomb Phofo\nLONDON, MarCh' 30 (AP)-ion-\ndon's Communist Daily Worker published, three photographs Saturday\npurporting to show \"Ameritan germ\nbombs\" and disease-laden flies they\nare supposed.to have carried into\nNorth Korea.\nThe Workeri laid the picture*\nwere flown trom Pyongyang, capital, of North Korea.\nOnebfthepictureiIn the Worker\ntoday showed a \"bomb\" in two Part*.\nThCfe are three separate compart-\nrhenst\" where \"the infected insects\npte carried,\" the, caption said. The\nsecond picture showed the bomb reassembled. It appeared to be about\n18 inches long, and\" the Worker said\nit explodes on impact. The third\npicture shows a. mass of \"infected\nDies found in the vicinity; of an\nAmerican bomb dropped behind tbe\nlines ta the Northern [Art of Korea.\"\nBoth the United States and Britain have termed \"disgraceful lies\"\nthe Communist charges Of bacteriological warfare.\n-\"'   - '- i        - \u2022     ' '\u25a0_\nCARRiGTOwbHiliL. Ireland,\nMarch 30! (AP) \u2014Incensed villagers\ndecided yesterday lt isn't the-leprechauns but hooliganism that has. bedeviled Carrigtowohlll the last two\nyears. They voted to form * vigilante committee to aid police in tracing down those 'responsible -for\nHooking the sewer lystem, poiion*\ning wells, burning crops and cutting\ntelephone wires.\nGolden Chariot\nTakes Seneyake\nfo Last Riles\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon, March 88\n(AP)\u2014A golden chariot carried the\nbody of Ceylon's lit*: Prime Mtali-\nter, Don Stephen Senanayake, to\nFreedom Square Saturday for cremation before 1,000,000 mourner*.\nA 19-gun salute thundered is the\nbody Wai carried, down it*fi *eftV-\nered with white ctoth from the\nMouse of Representatives, where''it\nlaid ta State for seven days. The\n87-year-61d prime\"mtaiiter died oh\nMarch 22 of head injuries suffered\nwhen he was thrown front a- bolting\nhorse. . >..      .  \u25a0; > .\n' The dead prime minister'has been\nsucceeded by hi* son, Dudley.\n1      j\nRhubarb Winner\nOf Pahy Oscar\nHOLLYWOOD, March SO'(AP)t-\nTop prize'in the Patay awards \u2014\ncomparable among animal movie\nactors with Oscars among humans-\nwent Friday to. Rhubarb the Cat\n\"Patsy\" stands for \"Picture Animal :.Tf\u00bbp Star' of the Year.\" TTie\nawards are presented by. the American Huniane Association.   \u2022\nChela, the chimp, led the cheering for a runner-up Award he received. Other \u25a0 runner-up awards\npresented in ceremonies at the Car-\nthay Circle ^Theatre were;\nFrancis, the talking mule, (top\nwinner in the tint.Patsy awards\nlaat year); Diamond, a:black horse;\nCorky, a dog of mixed ancestry,\nand Chinook, a'white Alsatian dog.\nA special award in honor of Richard C. Craven, who negotiated an\nagreement between fhe American\nHumane AssociatIOA and movie producers some yeara ago, governing\nuse of th inula In pictures, went to\nSmoky, the fighting stallion. !\nBONI\nDRYS\nTar. the.outdoor work-\nmen we-hove o good\nStock of; DryboMoth-\nIng.-.. ,..,.-.-'\nYOU'R. GOING TO\n;''\"';HtiDf:iT''\"y\n\u2022Jackets \u2014 fia.80\nPants'    \u2014(fiftiiM'\nHats: ''rr ;\"'.*t3W.\nEmpryittd.\nThe Man's Store\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERT. V: RECOVERED\n^ -ft the\" .-' \u25a0\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone IM\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPreicrlption*\n'   Accurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arti Blk.\nPHONE 25\nHare ithe Job Done Right\nViC-JtAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815      .\n' WATCH REPAIRS\n70 YEARS EXPERIENCE\nNELSON. II C\nStep Out\nfor Easter In\nFresh-From-\nthe-Cleaner's\n* Garments. . .\nWhen your clothei are dirty,\n\u2022potted er wrinkled and yeu\nWant quality service \u2014 yea\nwant ua. Our work li exceeded only by our reputation.\nBring your clothes In today\nso you'll be \"aparklti-g ready\"\nfor that Enter Parade I\nRemember Our\n2 Day\n: \u25a0 Ftee-?' i\nKck*tlp\nDelivei^\nJust\nPHONEYS\nEmpire\nCleaners\nJanet Wright Shows.\nImprovement Signs\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e March 30 (CP)\n^-Janet Wright, 13-year-old accident\nvictim was reported able to recognize her mother for the first time\nsince she was struck down by a\nmotorcycle a week ago,\nThe girl suffered skull and leg\nfractures.in the collision with the\nmotorcycle,\nOne Man Expedition\nMOKTREAl. Match 30 ICPJ \u2014\nA one-man Arctic expedition-Is In\nMontreal preparing for a battle with\ntime ln the land of the midnight\n\u00bbun.      .\u2022\u25a0:.\u25a0\u25a0     .,..-' \u2022; , '\u25a0\nDr; J. C Troelson, Danish explorer, i .scheduled to leave Monday\n(or.Eureka, VBllesmere, Jiland, 700\nmiles from the North Pole; ;\nDr. Troelsoh's battle with,time\"will\nstart when he moves into an area\nWhere one can't tell night from day.\n''Keeping track ,of time is difji-\ncult up there,\" he sayi. \"Sometimes\n1'Work for 24 hours at a stretch and\nsleep If. hour*. If I forget to win^\nmy watch, one day merges Into the\nnext. It becomes very confusing.\"\nTry Our\nRoyal Pat.\nPastry Flour\n.  For Better Baking Results\nRHONE 238\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCompany. Ltd. ,\nRADIATORS\n. CLEANED 4 REPAIRED\nRECORINQ ;.\"-\u2022'\u25a0\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Wart) ft -   Phone 03\nCAMPBELL, SHANKtAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountant*\nAuditor*\n670 Baker St   , ....... Phone 239\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\n- AMBULANCE SERVICE\n.13 K-obtenajf St .    Phone 361.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\n'    OPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAININ<3\nMedlcal ArU Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHaigh\nTro*Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone. 327\n676 Baker St\nk sure you cm\nARE TOUR\nBRAKES O.K.\nIf you con push the pedal, dowri wlthli. \"fib\n.inches of the floor... , 6t if Voti h_iy\u00aby<^>\n;''pump\"yooi; brakes ^^^rtZiZ^^ir'ii:\ndrop over ond let us chick them ^sr you\n.,   right owo'y.        ' *.-;.\nIn o few minutes we corv tell.whether It-\njust a matter of getting air-bubbles out of\nthe hydraulic lines or reploelrig the brake\nshoei. . .JUT. Z . those few minutes may\n,  sovei you serious woe on the road.  ,*\u2022 \u25a0: '\n'\" \u00bb' '     \u25a0 \u25a0 ';'    *   \u25a0    '.    -. * \u25a0 ,\nCpME IN TODAY \u2014 DON^f DILAY\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped garage\nin 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_1952_03_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0426212","@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. <br> Damage on pages 1 and 2 affects legibility.","@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":"1952-03-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1952-03-31 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\/1.0426212"}