{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-02-15","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1952-03-11","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426434\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" **mmm\nFavor\nCharity Sweeps\nT. G. Ewart of Fernie Elected , \/\nPresident Eastern B.C. Association\n: \u2022 CRESTON, JB.C\u2014Amendment of the Criminal Code\nto permit operation of lotteries, sweepstakes and raffles for\n'charitable and community purposes under strict 'supervision\n\u201evas asked here today by the 51st annual convention of the\nAssociated -Boards of Trade of Eastern British Columbia.\n1 The meeting held in the Canadian\niDaUn IStmi\n'\u25a0'o\nLegion hall also elected. T. G\nEwart ot Fern'e president to succeed Dr. C. H. Wright of Trail, T\nD. Rosling of Nelson first vice-\npresident and V. I. McNaughton of\nCranbrook second vice-president\nMr. Ewart is president of Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Comoany. His unanimous election followed advice\n'from retiring first vice-president\nWalter Millar, of Cranbrook that\nhe was unable to .accept the presidential nomination.\nSEUPERVISION\ni-Jrha resolution on \"sweepstakes.\nBpbiisored by Fernie Board of\nTWljie, .noted; \"public opinion .av-\nOrtd fheir operation with supervision _hd recognized nothing morallyi'M. eesehtlaM. disruptive in the\nCSAadian Way of life. Communities\nand charitable organizations relied\n(n varying degrees on.n-lenient in-\ntepretation or disregard of this law\nIn-order to-raise'\"money'-for projects which could' not be supported\nby other-means.\n'.-'-\"The Iaiy prevented people from\ndoing something they Wished to do\nf_|f beVeftt '_n'd -Ipi. roy_ments'of\ntheir cbnirjinn'ties. and. was Incon^\nlisten, with thp .interests, desire.\nprii way pt 'life ;j6f: Canadian people\nas- a whole. There wpre sections\nwhicji In effect*'were mere subter-\nfti_e_*5ld _oni__ry'\u25a0to, public policy\ntor $ebj>te td _e.'t0-ced''to adopt\nalieH 'Weansi-ih- order to-acconipHsh\neach perfectly legitimate and lawful.purpose's.   -\ni *_7itai_m-.j\nting was permitted ostensibly In\nthe interest of horse betting, the\nprinciples Involved therein moral\nand otherwise being indistinguishable from those pertaining to lotteries sweepstakes and raffles.\".\nThe resolution will be sent to\nthe Federal Minister of Justice and\n\u2022Agriculture and to'Kootenay members of Parliament. \u25a0' \u25a0 \u2022 . \u2022 \u2022 .\nCHANGE NAME '\n' The 31 delegates approved changing of the Association's name to the\nAssociation of Boardsof Trade and\nChambers of Commerce, of Southeastern British Columbia. The Nelson-sponsored resolution had asked\nfirst that the organization's pioneer\nname be changed to Association of\nChambers and the words Board of\nTrade were added after cohsider-\nable objection was met.\nUniversity dormitory   '\nTrail's request that high priority\nbe given in, University',(pf British\nColumbia construction program\"'to\nsuitable dormitory accommodation\nfor those students' who .live beyond reasonable,*' living *dlst_nce.\nfrom the University won1* approval,\nThe *.;. resolution also asked rites\nequivalent to -the.average eost :of\nroom and board incurred by parents of students living at homes\nwithin daily driving distance. Outside student, were at a'disadvan\ntage by- reasbn of overall- costs and\nas a result excellent material for\n_   . higher .education was Ming lost to\n'!W\u00bb _j_ri.nm_i-l._ystem,of bet-.Lthe provJhce arid t_ Canada'.'-       *\np|| Statement Today \u00a9nr\nCHESTON, B.C. \u2014 Prompt atten-\nUon by Provincial Government\nauthorities' on recommendations of\nthe Doukhobor Consultative Committee was urged By the Asosdiated\nBoards of Trade of Eastern British\nColumbia at lts-Mst annual meeting\nhere today.     , . ',-\n: The .meeting wired. Attorney General Wismer asking for a reply stating the present position of the government so that a report could be\nmade to Tuesday's session of the\niriual meeting. \"\n'Mj...... The, ^edition strongly deplored government Indecision aiid Inaction on the Consultative com-\nmltt\u00bbA:\/r(icommendatlons In con-\"\nnee-Ion wftfi Relocation of the\nSon. of Freedom. The recommendations had been submitted last\nSeptember after months of strenu-\nOUJ Investigation and effort by the\nCommittee on. which the boards\nwere strongly represented and\nwere reaffirmed In December, -\nIt was felt the matter, should\nreceive prompt attention If deterioration of the situation was to be\navoided.\nCopies of wires were sent to Dr.\nO.- C. Andrew, consultative commit.\ntee chairman at Vancouver, Hon.\n,A. D.,Turnbull, Walter Hendricks;\n\u00bb:_\u00a3__\u25a0 for ^Nelson-Creston, R. W.\njlaggen,'M.L.A.'for Grand Fprks-\nSreenwobd. and Randolhp Harding,\nM.L.A. for KasIo:Slocan.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNelson Man Places\nWreath at Ottawa\nTo Fulfill Pledge\nOTTAWA, March 10 (CP) \u2014\n\u2014 William Melneczdk, a Ukrainian of Nelson, B.C., today. \\\nfulfilled a promise made during the First World' War.\nHe placed a wreath at the\nfoot .of the riiomiment of-Sir\nWilfrid Laurier, who, aa. Opposition leader,in the Common^\n...inte^ene .-ionShls bdhaifcjnjl:,-\n.saved ___\"\"'from Internment \u00bb\nduring the First World War. \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nMr. Melneczuk, whose two\nsons were wounded in the Second World War, had -promised\nthat on retirement he would\n;  travel   to   Ottawa' to pay his .\nrespects to Sir Wilfrid.'\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n15 ESCAPE CRASH\nLA CIOTAT, France, March 10\nCAP) -A U.S. Air Force C-47 made\na forced landing In the Mediterranean 10 miles East of here today. All 15xpersons'abqard escaped unhurt. The plane was en, route\nfrom Athens to Wiesbaden,! Germany, when an-engine caught fire;\nforcing, a landing at* sea 200 yards\nfrom the coast.    . :.*.\nlo\n*4\nBCofcTo\nCome Colored\nVICTORIA, B. C, __arch 10 (CP)\n\u2014Third and final reading was given\nin the British Columbia legislature\ntoday to Tilly Rolston's bill allowing\nmargarine manufacture!- to color\ntheir product\nThe bill now requires only Royal\nassent to become law. This will be\ngiven on the last day of the session,\npossibly around the end of the\nmonth.... . ,.,*.'\u2022\nWhen this is done, B. C. will join\nNewfoundland as one Of two provinces where coloring of margarine\nby the manufacturer is,allowed.\nMrs. Rolston (Ind-Vancouyer-Pt.\nGrey) introduced a similar bill on\nmargarine last year but it was defeated at second reading.\nThe bill passed through committee after the house voted down an\namendment, introduced by dairy:\nman Alex Hope. (PC-Delta) which\nwould have, retained the* ban on\nyellow coloring for margarine.\n- On a show* of hands, only seven\nMLA's Voted for the amendment\nSecond reading was given last Wednesday by a vote of.34'-<_\nAnother amendment, \"introduced\nby Attprney-Gg|ie_al Gordon S. Wis-\nmer, ..was .passed. This amendment\n\"sets.down*rules* for inspection of\nmargarine, factories, wholesale and\nretail firms'_. testing -of margarine by government inspectors. .\n'\u2014- Fifty Years of Daily Service to the Kootenay-Boundary \u2014 195f2\nWEATHER FORECAST   '\nKootenay \u2014 Cloudy with a lew\nshowers of rain or wet mow. A few\ntunny penodi In the afternoon. Little change In temperature. Light\nwinds. Low and Ugh at Cranbrook\nand Revelstoke SS and'ST. Crescent\nValley SO and 40.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA - TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH II. 1952\nNo. m\nTRAiL,'B;C. \u2014 A revised budget\nof $816,583.29' submitted by Trail\nSchool District No. 11 was approved by City Council Monday evening. .    ,\nThe original estimate of\n$853,374.24 was reduced J>y $36,810.95\nmade possible by the removal of a\nres'erve capital expenditure of\n$25,943.42 and a change in the plans\nregarding the conveyance of pupils\nto and from school. The Board of\nSchool Trustees consented to omit\nan item of $32,000 for purchase of\nnew, buses.,      ,\nThis entailed an'Increase ln contract expenses for transportation\nof the pupils.;.---.       ;. '. \u25a0':-. .\nThe tax requirement to be raised\nby the components of the* district\nare Tadanac 84.90' per cent\n|^i293.^.^-^all-v;25.77*\u00ab,^-!''ic|\u00abt:.\n$2111,428.36, Rossla'hd; 7.68' per cent\n$02,548.75, rural area 11.67 per cent\n$95,292.93.  * \u25a0'\u25a0', \\ ,-,'\nNew Wall thrown\nAround Regina Area\nBV JOHN LEBLANC,\nCanadian Prew 8taff Writer\nREGINA, March 10 (CP) \u2014The\nFederal Government today threw\n: out a new wall around the Saskatchewan area affected by foot-\nand-mouth disease.\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner\nannounced that no livestock or\nfresh meat may be brought Into\nthe quarantine area around Regina which-'\u25a0 already had been\nbarred from shipping out livestock and meat\nes for Small Operator Possible\nar\nVICTORIA, B.C., March 10 (GP)-\nBighteen small logging operators\n\"ttom the Revelstoke area today\nwere given assurance by Lands and\n.Forests Minister ,E. T. Kenney that\n\/they have nothing to fear from the\n\u25a0 giant .Celgar Development Company\nLtd.' pfdpdsed project at Castlegar.\nThe company has applied for a\nforest .management licence covering\n3,000,000 acres and intends to manu-\n'facture newsprint, hardboard, plywood, and pulp. About \/$65,000,000\nwould be invested;\nThe* conference'with the, minister\n-end br. C. D. Orchard, deputy for*\ne\u00bbts .minister, and'F-'S. McKinnon,\nassistant deputy, was .'arranged by\nCelgar pfficials. The operators were\nbrought here as:Quests of the big\n-firm.\nMr. Kenney,told the meeting\n.', ,the government has made no decision yet on the,Celgar application. He said he has received a\npetltlonjilgned by 472 persons who\napprove of the big, development.\n' There bavje been) some protests\ntoo, he added.,\n'In answer to a question from Gor-\nJbrr'Hoo., Celgar public relations\ndirector, the minister said the areas\nreserved f6r;small..operators,in the\nlicence are \u25a0; \u2022not; rfifjii: Hjs department is still ^prepared to adjust the\nareas, he statedi. \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0,'\u25a0,.\nCHANGES POSSIBLEv:\n\"If It Is shown th.rV.ls not sufficient; areas In ittU_tot:the'small\noperators, we are prepared to make\ni_han|(es,\"; Mr. JKehney said:\t\nJ ,Ohe operator.:told the minister\n^the'^ biggest cbpib\\a\\ht Is that most\n,6f: tht. timberi'iiet \u25a0 jplde, for small\nOperators is hard-to nit ..t, and not\nnear their preienf holdings* Moving\nto another areii'jneant building expensive, new' rbkdj;. Ije-iseld.\nHe uhdersto^dCGel^ar was. willing\nto .Allow the Aiil ;\u25a0 l_?erato)'B as tar\na\u00bb jwsnbJe:tt.'__..aye,holdlng6tadjac-\nent to.present ones.        ,;.\n\"Well, If you are in harmony, we\nhave   no   objection   to   making\nchanges,\" said Mn Kenney. \"By. an\nmeans try and solve'your problems\ntogether   by   negotiations.   If you\ncan't get together,, maintain,, your\nprotests, and then come to us.\".\nMr. Root told the conference.\nCelgar has no Intention of cutting\n, out the small operators..\n\/ \u25a0 \"We  want thi ; smallj loggers,\nWe're prepared to sUppoi^t then)\nIn  any  reasonable   request,... he*\ndeclared.'\u25a0*\u25a0 ',      ,' ,-,  );\u25a0 i'Z.'^fi ...\nAn unidentified opfefatbr: rose to\nsay there Isn't a single small operator In the Revelstoke area who is\nopposed td the-proposed development:  They   just; want , assurance\nthey .will be protected, he said.\nOPPOSES MONOPOLIES . ,\\\nMrs* .Sidney Leary,'whose';late\nhusband owned Big Bend Lumber\nCompany, said she had . nothing\nagainst Celgar. but insisted, she is\nopnosed to-monopolies. ,',;, , ...:\n\"When we allow a monopoly such\nas this wil! be., the future is danger-,\n6us.\" she said. \"Buying offithe small\nloggers isn't going to satisfy. them.\nYou can't buy the Canadian spirit.\"\n. Mr. Root replied that Mrs.- L_ary's\nstand \"confused\" him: He said she\ndeclared she liked Celgar but doesn't want it to have the merchantable\ntimber.   \" .;-',,:\n\u25a0 \"You've got to give us a chance\nto operate,\" said Root.\n\u25a0 \"There's' lots of, waste,\"; replied\nMrs. Leary.\nW. H. Gray, representative of the\npresent owners of Big Bend Lumber\nCompany, was in favor of the Celgar project and urged everyone to\n\"lake the*broader view.\",'\n>Th'e meeting- adjouriie'd'so' oper*\nators could discuss Individual ^prob-'\nlems with; Root and A,xel Bririd-\nstroid, Celgar's wofds manager.\nWaffle Iron Stops\nWould-Be Shoplifters\nVANCOUVER, March 10 (CP) \u2014\nA \"booby-trapped\" waffle Iron was\ntoo much -,- for ' shoplifters in the\nhardware store of J. A. McCallum.\nThe waffle iron was wired to an\nelectrical alarm set to operate when\nthe Iron was lifted.\nWhen the alarm;was tripped.a\nman! and his woman companion\nfled the store. They were arrested\na block away in a hiding place be*\nside a house. '\u25a0', ,\nRewards Mount for\nSchuster's Murderer\nNEWvY.pRK, March 10 (AP) -\nSalesman Arnold Schuster, wanton\nly slain after tipping police on the\nwhereabouts of bank.robber Willie\n(The Actor) Sujton, was burled today while this city echoed his moth-\ner!s .wail\u2014\"Why did they do this\nto him?\"\nRewards for the seizure of the\ngangster-type slayer mounted; and\nmay reach $50,000. The city,was\nexpected to put up $25,000.\n4 Missionaries Lost\n\u25a0 EDMONTON, Mareh 10 (CP) \u2014\nFour Roman, Catholic mlsslonor.\n-les were unreported tonight on a\nNorthern flight\nRev. William Lelslng, 39-year-\nold Oblate Father known as the\n\"Flying Pries ti\" left Edmonton\nSaturday.. In ,a bright, red. Norseman aircraft, With him* . were\nthree clorlpal passengers.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nArrow Lakes Doctor's\nCase To Be Heard\nAt Coast March 15\nVANCOUVER, Mareh 10 (CP)\n\u2014Tha ease of a doctor who haa\n' been denied a permanent lloenoe\nto practice by the College of\nPhysicians and Surgeon! will be\nreviewed March 15.   .\nA col lego official aald today .\nthe application for registration\nof Dr. Steven Norvell, Jr., at\npresent practicing under a temporary  licence', In  the  Arrow j\nLakes,    district, will be heard\nby the college council In view'\nof \"additional Informahtlon how .\navailable rega, dln'j the ease.\" '\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n<as\n'LONDON,'March 10 (CP)-Brl't'-\nain's budget sebi-ets come . put- of\nthe time-honored dispatch box\nTuesday. A^.lot of people1 look to\nthe occasion as a turning point in\nthe country's history\nPerhaps: more than ever before,\nthe -1952-53 budget is regarded _\nof decisive significance\u2014partly because it is the first by a peacetime\nConservative government In 13\nyears, partly* because of diminished\nfaith in the pound sterling and partly because this seer, a a time when\nalmost anything might upset the\npolitical applecart ;V    '\u25a0>..\u25a0:\nTwo main lines of opinion are apparent on the eva of the.budget\nwhich Richard Butler; as chancellor\nof.the exchequer, will unfold in a\n2%-libur House of Commons speech.\nOne if the 'clanuu; iby right-wing*\nand Independent'financiol commen.\ntators for a severe budget one' that\nwill snatch upwards of \u00a3200,000,000\nfrom the collect} _e,-British pocket\nThe second school of thought Is\nthat although ttevfiwiiScial situation\nmay be criticaJi.-ttoDOdy.',should go\naround chipping .'at- the, foundations\nof the welfare btPrT\t\n' IB\nOn German Treaty\nLOltoQN.'.Marchi' M%&eadaja\n-(.VP) .^Blissia -Sfikedi the'Big-Tlifee\nWestern Powers: last night to speed\nup a,;peace treaty,.with' \u25a0 Gerrnany,.\nthe Moscow radio announced early\ntoday.       :..',:. ,. \u2022,\nNotes proposing that the peace\ntreaty be accelerated were handed\nto' envoys of Britain, the U. Si and\nFrance in Moscow by the Soviet De-:\nputy Foreign Minister, Andrei A.\nGromyko.    . -   ,,.,\nThe Russian notes declared that\nthe treaty \"must be worked out with\nthe direct participation of Germany\nin the form ofan all-German government. It follows from this that\nthe U.S.S.R., the United States, Brl-\ntain, and France which are fulfilling\ncontrol functions '\u25a0 in Germany 'also\ndiscuss conditions conducive for the\nspeediest -formation of \"an\" all-German government expressing the will\nof the German people.\nVICTORIA, B.C., March 10 (CP)\n\u2014Hospital Insurance li the great-\n.est humanitarian service* since the\nadvent of Christianity, Sydney J.\nSmith (L.\u2014Kamloops) declared\ntoday In the British Columbia\nLegislature.\nMilitary-Backed Revolt Ousts\nCuban President Socarras ll\n';\u25a0 DEEP IN CANADA'S forests, en army 'of some 275,000 lumbermen Is feverishly finishing, this year's record harvest of pulpwood\nfor tho pulp and paper Industry. This Industry accounts for almost\na quarter of Canada's total exports, with Canadian newsprint alone\nsupplying more than half the world's needs, Here, a woodworker\npiles logs on to truck which hauls the pulpwood to nearby frozen\nstreams or lakes .to await the Spring thaw and the colorful drive\ndown the waterways to the mills.\u2014Central Press Canadian;\nMerizies Explains Cuts\n1p6 Australian People\nCANBERRA, March 10 (CP) -\nAustralia would risk International\nInsolvency If her overseas balances should.run below the safety\npoint.   Prime' Minister   Menzles\ntold tho Australian people today\nIn a national broadcast explaining hla Import-licensing policy.\nHe said, \"otherwise-we would, be\n\u25a0\u25a0^le^S^X-''^^\na great idrouiiht occurred or wool\nand wheat prices slumped.\"\nHe promised that \"these controls,\nproduced by the emergency will he\nmodified, then repealed, as the\nemergency: fades.\"\nAris\\vering criticism that the res-\ntrlctionsare a negative approach,\nMenzles said the problem must be\nsolved in a year and that Australia,\nIn that time cannot suddenly increase export production of wool,\nmeat and butter.^Therefore, he appealed to growers of the only short-\nternjcommodity\u2014whea.-to step up\nproduction, and emphasized that\nevery additional bushel of wheat\nmeans another $2 saved by the sterling, area.' ' .\nTO 8AVE COUNTRY '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMenzles said the government's\nimport-slashing plans will saye th'e\ncountry more than \u00a3200,000,000 a\nyear, i.\n'. The !new controls' cut Australia's\n.imports by half, affecting both doN\nlar and stealing products and rang-!.\ning from every-day items, such' as\nJ. W, Burgess of Nelson lo Become\nPostmaster al Prince Rupert\nOJctlon.tXtwelA.\n\u25a0\u2022!\nNelson  :\nSaturday Monday\n 2,23       2.10\nJ. W. Burgess, an employee of\nNelson Post Office for 23 years,\nhas been appointed postmaster at\nPrince Rupert He will take up\nhis now duties March'23.\nMr..Burgess, who,is well known\n_i| Nelson having received most of\nhis education here, while looking\nforward to his ntw work, Monday\nexpressed   regret  at  leaving  this\nctty with Its lovely, lake and scenery. It was here he began his career- with the post office and here\nhe  has  remained   throughout  bis\n20-odd years .service.    . .\u201e ,'v\n'Bom in Liverpool, England, he\ncsme to Canada and to Nelson with\nbis parents in 1922 when he was a\nlad of nine.     \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'. '\nMr. Burgess.took a' Summer Job\nin \"1928 in the | post office, and in\nSeptember '\u25a0 stayed, on as; postal\nclerk. Since then he has done every\ntype of Job in the office and in\n1949 was promoted to Postal Supervisor. \u25a0'\u25a0' '',*\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\nSERVED OVERSEA8\nHowever, his career was infer-\nrupted.in 19.43 when he Joined the\nair force srtd served as ah air-\ncralt elects ician in Canada and\nE__Kla_id for* about three years, returning to the office in 1945. .\u25a0\u25a0.'\u2022\nIn 193B, Mr.. Burgess hiarried a\nNelson . girl,.' .Miss .Agnes Gray,\ndaughter of the lat'e.O. A, Gray and\nMr. Gray. They have resided on\nthe North Shore since 1939.;'\nAs a hobby Mr. Burgess makes\nfurniture, does other woodworking\narid tends a j flower - and vegetable\ngarden His parents,'.Mr. and''Mjra.\nJack Burgess' live \"at 3I5;;Elwyri\nStreet.\n:  The Post Office In Prince^ Rupert,\nJ. W. BURGE88    \u25a0\nVogue photo\nwhich Mr. Burgess will .take, oyer,\nis a grade 10 office similar to that\nat Nelson.\nMr. .and Mrs. Burgess were honored by the Nelson Branch of the\nCanadian Postal Employees' Asso*\nelation Saturday night at the Hume\n_*__n'vW..,G.' He\", postmaster! oh\nbehalf of the employees presented\nMr.'.Burgess with a desk'.set and\ntiling system.\ncigarettes and beer, to major con.\nsumer goods.\nMenzles said that without the cuts\nAustralian credits overseas would\nhave fallen in the' year^ehding next\nJune from \u00a3843,000,000 to \u00a3334,'\n000,000..'.\n. He said cuts were necessitated by\nthe tall in wool-prices. A;i__r ago\n'wool Was selling at fantastically^\nHigh prices and 'Australia- steppe'4\nup her' foreign buying 'as .money\npoUred into the country. \u25a0 ',\/.     - ';\nThe eventual drop ln wool prices\nwas worse even than the experts\nhad anticipated but the spending\nwave continued.\nBatista, Former Army Ruler of Cuba\nBack in Power; Little Bloodshed. '. ''\u25a0 y\nBy BENF. MEYER .? \"     \/  :'_$\nHAVANA, March 10;(AP)\u2014Ftjlgenoio tym*, tomeri\narmy sergeant-whoruled Cuba for 10 troubled yeijs, vaulteiy\nback to power.today on the crest of a militayy-backed' repi\nvolt. The coup was staged three months ahead of-C-ibaii1\npresidential.election, in which Batista was an annouhcj?a*\n- 'v- \u25a0\u2022 \u25a0 .-- ~~: r~ candidate.' '.\"'' '*'\"'?! \u00b0Z:\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nBerlin Fire\nDepa rtment Outfoxed\n\/ BERLIN, March 10 (AP)\u2014Fdr\nthree days \"_ie:Lankwltr.'fire'\ndepartment has been outfoxed..\n' The   boys   were  Uummbned\n[ Thu_.aay.fo ftlwft'i fo* \"which\n\"had crawled up'a pile of ruins\ntp the top of! a 40;*fpOrt chimne^.\nlip went ^he big. ladder ,and a\nfireman tried to grab' the fox.\n'Reynard1 scurried   Inside ' the\n... chlmney.i where he\": braced'Ua\npaws so he wouldn't fall.\nThe .firemeni'rtturned next\nday : with i a  atone Suspended\nfrom a rope. They lowered the\nstone,igehtly..until the fox waa-\"!\nforced to the bottom of.the.;\nchimney; There two.men'\u25a0wilted*' i\n. with a big sack, The fox slipped\npast them and climbed back up\non the.chimney....'  *\nSaturday' night the firemen\ntried again. .The'fox found'*\nrecess in-the damaged chittiney\nand crawled into It.'\nThe firemen'decided- to let the\nfox st_y there.-       '\u25a0-\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDisease Carrier\nPLANT TO CLOSE ,\n^VANCOUVER, March. 10 (CP) \u2014\nThe Sweeney Cooperage Limited\nestablished here 60 years ago, will\nclose its plant because of union\nwage demands.\nOTTAWA,. March 10 (CP)\nWilli Bruehtjen will fly back to.\nVancouver ,tomorrow'-,night-\u00bbWittt\nU* In his poiket; ajd^ th** happy\nf-ellhg ihat he.ii;not.the carrier of\nthe, fpot-and-mouth disease virus.\nBiat he'll leave, behind hlrn a: mystery \u2014 the source and origin of the\nscourge which has struck' at South\nSaskatchewan livestock and\nbrought turihoU\u2022 to Canada's live,\nstock and meat-marketing Indus-\nfry..  \u25a0 .        rV;     .:\nAfter 11 days of laboratory, testsi\nthe big, blond, 27-year-old German\nimmigrant was cleared today at any\nsuspicion that he might be an in\nnocent carrier of the virus.\nThe revolt .forced President Can.\nlos Prio Socarra- to flee his palace -,\nwhere two men were, slain ta the\nonly reported bloodshed. Later Prld\nwas reported, under guard at hit\ncountry estate outside Havana. .,.\u25a0'*\nMachine-gunners backed by two\narmy tanks took over the palace \u2014\nwhere white flags were seen flyinf\n\u2014shortly after. Prio departed.'; f\\ I r\nThe revolt lasted only 77 minute*.' -   '\u2022\u25a0\u2022 -.'.\u2022> '' i: '   - : \u25a0\u25a0   ': , :.\u25a0\nThe lightning coup i.wa\u00bb aprunj\nat Camp Columbia, chief army, bate\nwhich, followers of the 51-year-oJd\nBatista-had seized before dawn today. Within a few hour* _,ey. had\ntaken over-police heid<lu\u00bbrteta,aiJ!j\nseized control of communleatloiui.-\nBatistasa(d the revolt was<\u00bbtage\u00ab_\nbecause \"I hadnows from themoit\nreliable source that President Prio,\nfaced..with tho-defeat :bf.'his'caht\ndidato In the- June 1.- elections, wai\nplanning \"rphoney-rtvoiatlDn'\"^';\nAprU 15* ;-..\"v    '\"A       -      '\nIn a radio address to the .Qitban\npeople tohlght, Batista,said he;w*j\n\"not impelled by ambitions for^pqw-\ner but to restore public peace whloh\nln recent times hatjbeeh. a matter of\ngrave concern for-all Cuba. It'hai\nbeen impossible to sufferany longer\na govemmeht. of 'tBeVery ranj^of\ncrimes, v. '.i_e acta of;\u00ab?\u2022:_*\u00bb\ngovernment liave;dembn\u00bbtratWtiw\nwere heading toward a savage dictatorship.\"    M    '\"'.-'-- '->: IT .'i?   '\nYoung Girls Spend\nMight in Tfirroir^\n\/PITTSBURGH, March__t_t. '\u2014\nJhree^ wung-vglrls enverged ..from. <\nsSptne)'\n,. ie^ftr\u00bb#. tft,\". tappfttSuA P&ii'\nweak i^bm* sobbing, iaftet'ipqidln^\na night In terror among'dihoaeun\nand Egyptian ipummles.-Locked W\nthe.'blg museum Saturdaynlght bf\nmistake,' they were found huddled\nin a' woman's wash -room yesterday\nmorning by a watchman.    ; >',:\nPtoudfoot Fined $200\nNANAIMO, B.O., March 10 (CPJ\n\u2014City prosecutor James J. Proud,\nfoot of Victoria was' fined $200\ntoday for driving hla ear wlillo\nhla ability was Impaired-by alco.\nhqlJ :'\" \u25a0 '\nHaggen Urges Better Bargain for\nBvC. in Granting ^\n(Special to the Dally News)\nVICTORIA, B. C.\u2014BUpei. Haggen,-.(CCF, .Grind. Forks-Greenwood), advised  the,  government\nMonday night to drive harder bargains with the big timber com-\npanic; under tho forest management licence plan.\nHaggen, , continuing ' the  budget\ndebate, said a report'filed ln the\nLegislature last week showed a \"considerable portion of B. C. crown\ntimber land already covered by license or under application.\n\u25a0 \"I'can understand that an industry will want to ensure its supply of\nraw material,\" said Haggen. \"That\nIs reasonable. But the- forest management applications in many cases\ngo beyond all reason In the areas\nthey want to have set aside for\nthem.\"      \t\nHe said one mill is applying for-a\nlicence covering the whole Quesnel\nRiver watershed which is capable'\nof supplying englemap spruce in\n.perpetuity. With only the' crudest\nof foreit management, for two pulp\nmills the size of Powell River.\nWHY RUSH ?\n\"Why the mad rush to give away\nthe assets of our people?\" asked\nHaggen. \"A very thorough check\nmust be made \u25a0 of all applications'\nand their areas limited to what is\nactually necessary. We d6 not want\nfuture Canadians deprived of their\ncountry with no chance to become\nanything but coolie labor.\"\nThe Grand Porks-Greenwood\nmember' said a lot of the promises\nin Premier Johnson's budget were\n\"just a repetition of the 1919 election promises\u2014and no action.\"\nPROPOSED.MERGE\nHe was alarmed at a suggestion that the mines and lands department, be merged, Since earliest days,'ho'said, tho mines' department always has had Its own\nhead ahd whenever It had a minister who was really interested In\nhis department, and had practical\nknowledge, |t has been .a progr.es-.\nslve,-useful'department.'-     -   \"\nHaggen urged a policy that would\nresult in - the checking bf stream\nerosion on various rivers in, B. C.\n' \"We: are no. making- the progress\non rural 'electrification wa 6_o.ld\nbe' making,\" the member told the\nHouse. \"I believe the great handicap\nil the incorrect financial approach\nto the problem, particularly In those\nareas depending on the large privately owned power companies.\"\nHe granted that all power services must be operated to yield a\nprofit, Haggen contended there are\ntwo alternative methods of achieving this end. Firstly, heiaid, every\npower service must yield its ppund\npf flesh so the-system, as a whole\nmust pay. Secondly, he said, the\nsystem as a whole must pay its\nway even though .some services are\ngiven at a loss.   -\nWANTS POWER\nHaggen said he has made progress in getting power to his riding, but. it' is \"uphill work\".,Still\nwithout services are North Fork of\nthe Kettle Valley, the, pialn' Kettle,\nBeaverdel land-part of Anarchist\nMountain.\n\"Subsidies here may be the\nquickest way of ihtlnging. about a\nresult that. everyone \u2022 wants.\" he\nstatei \"The parts of the province\nthat are not fairly closely settled\nreally, need, power, to go ahead;\nThey need   telephones . and they\nneed better roads if people are ta.\nstay on the farm. I am satisfied'\n.that if these services are .pilt'.in&\nthey will not prove, unprofitable\nand will have a beneficial effect __&\nour provincial economy.\"  ,-..'._   '\u00ab\nPENSIONf '\u2022\u25a0 '. \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u2022-_i   -  - r\nDealing with older workers, Hag-\ngen said there should be a universal rather than industrial .penslbn\"\nplans for those who get beyond the\/'\nage at which they can e'arti. theln.\nway and the age of retirement:\nshould not be arbitrary. .-Man*!\npeople are capable of rendering\ngood   service   to   70 or more\/ he,\nadded.   -     \u25a0 \u25a0-\u2022-  \u25a0 '    \u25a0'\u25a0-'-' *\u25a0\nHaggen expressed regret that this\nrecommendations of the Hospital\nInsurance Inquiry board -ate, not\nbeing implemented at the currirjt''\nsession. . _ < \u25a0*; ; :- -..- ;'; };;'\nHe hoped that the allocation for\nhighway capital expenditure wUl .\nprovide for completion of' the link\nbetween Boundary Falls and Christina Lake. When the Works Minister went through the district last\nyear the road was graded ahead o'f.\nhim, he said. Preparations on a:\nscale with the. Queen.; of Sheba'*\nvisit were made, he said. .   ;.,\nAnd in This Corner...\n,'..'-, HEILBRONN, Southwest Germany, March 10 (Reuters)\u2014A feet-\nball fan had to bet 1000 bottles of wine before anyone would Investigate his claim that the local football field was filled with high ex-\n\u25a0 plosives. \u25a0'''..,        ff-\nAt the end of the Second World War tons of bombs and ammunt-.\ntion were dumped Into a hu_e bomb crater and covered with earth.\nPeople forgot about the ammunition. The site-became a football field,.\nAuthorities refused to believe the fan when he told them what\nwas under the players' feet Only after he made his bet did anyone\nthink It worthwhile to dig up the field. -\n, It took bomb-disposalIquads several days to cart away III the.\nlive ammunition.   .      - -    -\nDALLAS, Tex., March 10 (AP)\u2014Grocer N. J. Shaw, suspected\nshoplifting Saturday when a woman tried to leave with a screaming\nbaby. .\".' '-. ,\/ -       - .\n.^ ^. He. called police, who probed the infant's blanket. '        -\n\/  The baby-stopped howling when police removed a frozen rabbit\n\u25a0 PERTH, Australia,.March 10.(Reuters)\u2014A;vulture brought up at.\na pet otWarrle Station, West AustralFa, has adopted the family's baby,\nseven months ago, farmer Nick Guise's wife had a baby boy. Several\ntimes a day the bird files over the baby's cot on the veranda and trial\nto drop worms, scorpions and centipedes In the child's mouth. a\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1952\n,i\u2014_..._,\nTONIGHT-WED. \u2014 Complete Showi 7.00-9:18\n____t__\nNOW\n' you can\nsee Queen\nI Elizabeth and\nthe Duke of\nEdinburgh\n.   CLOSE UP\nIn the first\n. complete\nNational Film Board      ftJf  \\\\   story of tHeir\ntour of Canada\nENTIRELY IN iJnaiOTKTIFV' I\nGLORIOUS JUUJ-UlJLI. X J\n*.SJP :  A FULL-LENGTH\nC0L0> FEATURE -V,\nM.U_ -    '-\nCable Crossing May\nQet Under Way Today\nUnless there is a third hitch in plans, overhead cable\ncrossing of Kootenay Lake in Consolidated Mining; and Smelting'Company's Kootenay River to Kimberley,power transmission line, will begin today, '\n44<\nThe Unknown Man\n\u2022>_\u25a0\nWith Wilfer Pldgeon-Anne Harding\nTonight\nWed.\nc\/r\/c\nComplete\nShows\n7.00    9.18\nJayceesfo Ask\nFor Traffic Control\nTraffic ln Nelson during rush\nhours ind on Saturdays, is \"getting\n\u2022tit of hand,\" Jaycees iald at a\nmeeting ln the Round-up room.\nJaycees will approach the Police\nCommission eh the traffic situation\nind ask that a police officer be\nplaced on one or two of the Baker\nStreet Intersections to direct traffic\nduring rush hours and. on Saturdays.\n;>R11Z\nemwMT.\nA COMPLETE CHOICE OF\nWIU-APPOINTEDANO FULLY\nRV1CED APARTMENTS AMD\nI ROOMS ^ MODERATE\nJchr-Cn*. RATES __>__\u00ab\/\u2022\nVANCOUVER B C\nTRAIL APPROVES\nOUTDOOR RALLY\nTRAIL, B.C. - Trill City Coun\nell Monday night, gave approval to\nthe \"Christ for Ttpll\" Couneil for\nan open air service on March. II.\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police\nreport for February revealed that\n22 doors were found unlocked.\nThirty-nine court eonvlctioni were\nmade.\nAn increase ln the cost of market\nstall feea trom 11.50 to $3.00 was\napproved. V _\nThe Weather\nNELSON \t\nCalgary   \t\nEdmonton\t\nKamloops\t\nPenticton\t\nVancouver \u201e\nVictorii ....' \u201e*,\nKimberley\t\nCrescent Valley\nKaslo ,\nSpokane \t\n\u00bb  49\n10   13\nt\nS3\n.70\nIS  tr.\n32.41\n30 45   ._\n38 48   .39\n30 38   .20\n32 43\n32 45\n33 47\n. Him im all tee common! .Then\nfoil build or remodel, Indoors or\nont. use the modem building board\nthat emit burn ... J-M Hexboud.\nSmooth, washable, to .proof,\ntlexboard Is suitable for ill kinds of\nconstruction. Although tough, It is\nTOST IH\neasily worked with ordinary tools\nind .ends to fit curved surfaces.\nPinboard doesn't need a preserve,\nfive but can be painted if desired. .\nFor fne folder en I\"Inboard, ite your\nJ-M i_Wt or write Canadian Johns-\nMonvllli, D.pt. 36,1.9 Bay St., Toronto.\n.-'.'', 1-581\nJohns-Manville\nBUILDING MATERIALS\nThe operation of hauling the first\nof three lines from the East to West\nside of Kootenay Lake, twice delayed already,, Monday night was\nscheduled to start early this morning,   , \"\"',\nthe tagllne which will be used to\ndraw the conductor across tha lake\nwas secured to the East shore Sunday after a windstorm upset pro\nceedings. The first delay last week\nwas caused by. falling rock on the\nWest aide.    '\nPlans Monday ware to take the\neentre conduotor aorosi today. The\nhauling of each line may take as\nlong'aa two days each.\nWhen ^h'e job is., completed the\nlongest overhead power cable ln the\nworld will have been erected.\nColumbia Member Makes Farewell . \u25a0.'\u25a0'\u00bb\nPainl Gov'f Cars Special Color Io\nPrevenf Private Use, King Advocates\nTravellers Plan\nft Provide\nClinic Equipment\nTo help the Arthritic Society in.\nsupply a permanent piece of equip\nment to the new clinic is the elm oi\nthe Associated Canadian Travellers\nfor 1032. Thli decjslon was made al,\ntheir March meeting held at the\nhome bt. M. A. Browne, president\nof the Nelson branch of the Association. '\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0, .-   > ' \u2022\"\nAlso among: tbe club's plans for\nthe coming year la a Christmas party for underprivileged children, '\n. After the meeting was adjourned,\nclub members served coffee ind\nsandwichei.\n(Special te the Dally News)\nVICTOHIA, B. C\u2014Premier Byron\nJohnson got a little free advice  in\nthe legislature Monday from Tom\nKing (Gov't, Columbia) who Was\nmaking what probably will be his\nlast speech before retirement\nKing said whanever a momentous question of government Is to\nbe deolded, the government loader should call In ill the members\nand git their advice.\n\"In counsel of many, there is wisdom,\" said King.\n' Be may have been referring to\n\u2022Premier Johnson's firing ot former\nFinance Minister Herbert Anscomb,\nleading to the coalition breakup,\nAnother Idea King toiled thi\ngovernment way:,\"Have all government * owned can painted \"a\ndistinctive color to prevent their\nuse for pleasure by olvll servants.\"\n. He Slid there ire cars all over\nthl province being used privately\nat a tremendous oost to the gov-\nernment\nIn laying what amounted to \"good\nbye\" to the House, the Golden member said he couldn't find wordi to\nadequately express himself.  '\n\"It'a been wonderful experience,\"\nhe said.\nHe has been a member for 30\nyeari. \u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0 '\"',-,\nRotarians to Discuss\nConvention. Standi\nThe executive arid .meihbers ot,\nNelson's Rotary Club will meet Friday at the: Hume to discuss resolutions which will be: presented at\nRotary International Convention in\nMexico City. .-..'. '\u2022\nR. A. Peebles: Is Nelson's official\ndelegate to the convention.\nShowman George Haddad Astounds\nGyros; District Officer Honored\nThe ability pf hypnotism combined with a fine sense of showmanship and humor won rounds of\nlaughter and applause for George\nHaddad, amateur magiclanvand hypnotist from Cranbrook, who stole\nthe show it Nelson Gyro Club dinner Monday night at the Hume ln\nhonor ot District Vice-President of\nGyro District, Russell Carter.\nMr. Haddad who makes hypnotism\nand slight of hind a hobby, chose\nfive from the near 100 present at\nthe dinner meeting and Indies night,\nput them,in a hypnotic sleep and\nmaking use of a sense of humor,\nand the power ot suggestion compelled them to do many humorous\nacts, from scratching flees he told\nthem a dog had left behind to rocking a baby to sleep and scrubbing\nclothes.\nHighlighting hli act, Mr. Haddad\nperformed aerial suspension or leva-\ntatioh when he placed a hypnotised\nperson on a board which apparently\nremained Iri mid-air unsupported.\n' Mr. Haddad, with the aid ot a\nlittle \"waffle dust,\" performed\n\"magic\" as a professional would,\ndrawing coins from the air, making\nhats from torn bits ot paper and\nraising a spirit from the grave to\nvisit friends ln the audience. '\nA natural showman, Mr. Haddad\ntook up the art ot magic and.hypno-\ntlsm from 10 to 12 years ago as a\nbobby and how aids ln charity\nshows, performs for other useful\norganization! and for clubs on invitation.\nFRIENDSHIP CLUB\nSpeaking at the banquet, Vice-\nPresident Russell Carter spoke of\nGyro principles, emphasizing that\nlt was a friendship club not a service club although they have carried\nout many civic projects.\nIn explaining the meaning and\nspirit of Gyro Mr. Carter closed\nwith the quotation \"go often to the\nhouse of thy friend lest the Weed!\nchock up the untrodden path.\"\nAccompanying Mr. and Mrs. Russell Carter, who came from Edmonton, were Mr. and Mrs. Burney\nBrown of the Edmonton Gyro Club.\nAlso a guest was the president of\nTrail Gyro Club, G. Fennell Le\nFluty who .spoke briefly on the\nmeaning of Gyro,\nPlans for the aiming fashion Show\nand bake sale for whlcnMhe .Gyros\nthemselves do the baking were discussed. Date.of the show is March\n28.\n< A dance wound up evening festivities.  ,\nNelson Machinery Co. Ltd.\nPhone 1139 Nelion, B.C. 214 Hall St.\nDistributors for the Interior\nArctic Insulators & Roofing Ltd.\n1424 Cedar St. Nelion, B.C. Phone 955\nAGENTS   7.\nNelson Woodworking\n273 Baker St. Nelton, B.C. Phone 1150\nAGENTS\nthe Fabro Building & Supply Co, Ltd\nKimberley, B.C.\nAGENTS\nPhone 46\njD.B. Merry Lumber Co. Ltd.\nPhone444 Troll, B. C 1080 Spokane St.\n--\"-AGENTS     ,\nB.C.DA. Official\nTo Address Group\nH. 8. Hum of Victoria, executive\nsecretary of the B.C, Drama Association, will speak tonight at a general meeting of Nelson Little\nTheatre. The public has been invited.  '\nFrederick H. Wheeler, chairman\nof the Kootenay zone of the B.C.\nD.A., will report on a recent zone\nmeeting ln Trail and on a meeting\nat Nakusp Sunday night. Flans for\nthe coming drama festival to be\nheld in Trail were discussed at the\nmeetingi.\nSeeks Exploration\nOf Salmo Group\n_. B. Clubineof Salmo Is endeavoring to arrange for further exploration ot a lead-zinc prospect\nnot far from Salmo, It Is understood. The claims are the property\not a group called Silver Dollar\nMines Limited. According to reports, lenses of lead and zinc ore\noccur In. a sheared zone which has\nbeen traced for 700 feet averaging\n18 feet wide. Previous exploration\nentailed a 200-foot shift, and 1200\nfeet ot tunneling. There is no connection with the Ontario Company\nof the aame name,\nGiant Mascot-\nInstalling Ball Mill\nDuring the Week ended February\n22, Giant Mascot Mines Limited.\nSplllmacheen, treated an average of\n250 tons of ore daily. Thli represented a material Increase In tho\nrate from the average of 17S tons\nlate ln 1051. Installation of an additional ball mill to facilitate treatment of approximately 450 tons\ndally li expected to be completed\nby the end of March. !\nCouncil Committee\nMeeting Cancelled\nCity Council, which usually holds\na committee meeting Monday nights\ncancelled last night's meeting owing\nto the fact that several councillors\nplanned to attend the Nelson Maple\nLeaf-Trail Smoke Eaters hockey\ngame ln Trail.\nBusiness which was to have been\nattended to at the meeting will\ncome before Monday's regular meeting.\nSmelter Workers Ask\nSilicosis Decision\nVANCOUVER, Mareh 10 (CP)\n\u2014An amendment ip the -Workmen's Compensation Act thit\nwould make eases of silicosis complicated by tuberculosis or ether\nconditions compensable may be\nbrought before the Legislature\nthis session.\nThli was Indicated today by\nHarvey Murphy, director of the\nMine, Mill and Smelter Workers\nUnion (Ind.).\n\"We hava been assured that the\nLegislature will take action soon,\"\nMurphy iald.\nKEAOACHE?\nASPIRIN\nHOUSING NEED SURVEY\nIf you want te own your own heme, or need housing In Nelson\nand area help us to help, you\nMAIL THIS AD TO JAYCEES HOUSINO  SURVEY,   \/\nBOX 82, NELSON, B.C. .\nNAME .._ ! i  ________\nA_TiHESS .\nTHONB .\nDONTT HESjTATE BECAUSE' OF LACK OF CASH\nAll Information will help In launching a possible housing pro.eet\n.   (Information confidential)\nNELSON JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE\nBREAKFAST\nCEREAL\nSAVINGS\nCorn Flakes\nKellogg.\nGiant\n2 for\n47c\nShredded\nWheat\n2 for 33c\nAll-Bran\nKellogg's\nili\n__s\n25c\nSPRING\nCLEANING\nNEEDS\nPERFEX\nBLEACH\n64 ox. for\n64c\nPowdered\nPerfex\npk 47c\nSPECIAL    --\nLUX\nLargo\n2 Pk 57c\n-   - ' \u25a0;\n2 Reg. Rinso\n2 Sunlight\nAll 4\nfor\n_79c\n1 SCRATCH\nCOVER\nOld English, 4 oz.\n1WOODBRITE\nPOLISH\nFor Furniture\nALL FOR\n89c     '\n1. More Foods for Your Dollars.\n2. More Variety tp Choose From\n3* More Clerks To Look After You\nat the LIBERTY\nYOUR FRIENDLY INDEPENDENT OWNED FOOD STORE\nBe sure to sjhop at Nelson owned stores and be ahead.\n* Miracle Whip\n* Orange Juice\nic Tomato Soup\n* Tuna Flakes.\nSalad Droning.\n32 ox. _____\nHoney's Famous.\n48 oz\t\nHeinz Cream .\nChallenger.\n\" oz.\t\n-_86c\n3 tins $100\n-3 tins 44c\n3_in*89c\n(pirn <\/am,Satti -Shaft \u00a3wdy\nStrawberry Jam\nCherry Jam S\nPeach Jam-fmo,mhoh'\nPure, Marigold,\n48 oz. tin\t\nPure, Nabob.\noz. tin'._.\n48 oz. tin\nPure, Nabob.\n48 oz. tin ....\nSeville Marmalade\nBlack Current Jam WESi\nRed Plum Jam' Sft.______\n$1.03\n-98c\n\u2014Mc\n\u201449c\n95c\n37c\nfiio\/cuty, TbieddL. SwinyL\nCAKE FLOUR\nSwamdown. Pkt.  __\u2022.\t\nPASTRY FLOUR  r     JC*\n-Monarch.\nSHELLED WALNUTS   gO*\n~23*\nLb.\nPITTED DATES\nLotus. Lb. ......;.,.. ...'..,\nSL&auL JsurtuMA,\nbiscuits        2   \u00ab*\nSweet mix  '*** lbs. *****\nCHOCOLATES *l-oo\nPolly Potter. Lb. box ;      \u25a0\nDIGESTIVE ir.\nHuntley.. Pkt. .....;-.. ****** \u25a0\nEASTER CANDIES ARRIVING DAILY\nCHIPIT COOKIE MIX  39*\nVAN KIRKCHIPITS     JQ*\nPkt           '. *** *?.\nJEWEL SHORTENING \u00a39*\nit*\nSUGAR\n25 lb. bag ...\nPUREX TISSUE    2     27*\n  __':.___-_    *** Will. ***l\n65'\nrolls\nWAX PAPER       7\n,100 ft ....!. \u201e ***\nREDBIRD MATCHES     11*\nPkt :-. \u2022** I\nJauL (pJwduaL\nNEW POTATOES\n\/    \"I   Florida, Early\n5 lbs. 59c\nWASTE FREE\nLETTUCE ...Ib. 15c\nCRI&P CELERY\nIb. 14c\nSunkist\nORANGES\n7 Ib. bag 79c\nPrices Effective\nTues, March 11th to\nSat. March  15th\nLIBERTY\nFOOD STORE\ni\nBE WISE - Stock'up on Canned Meats\nand Fish at our special low prices\nSPEEFiiS*^L-.,_ 3 tins 93c\nCORNED BEEF.-\u25a0___&__\u2022\u00bb_\u2022 ____2 tins 75c\nCASSEROLE STEAK\u25a0-\u00bb________ tins 98c\nRED SALMON ____$\u00bb_ 3 tins $1.05\nPINK SALMON '_&_. \u2022__ -3 tins 79c\n3ins_L7H_atL\nAre\nova ilqble\nfor normal\nbuying.\nLiberty has\nlooked\nahead, and will be able to\nserve your needs at lowest prevailing prices.\nBe Sure - Shop Liberty\nQuality Meats v\n I\nW-.\nFool\nTroubles?\nBring Them to the,\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n\u2022'. Expert Scientific Fitting\ndf proper shoes will ensure\nprompt relief arid continued\ncomfort.\n553 Baker St,   ' Phone 895\njMEXIGO CITY, March 10 (AP)\u2014\nfMexico has granted political as.-\nllum to the Czechoslovak commer-\nIdal attache here, Dr. Jiri Vojtech-\n|oj_sky, The '3(l-year-old 'diplomat\nI quit his desk, at the Czech Embassy\n\u2022 Friday and asked the foreign of:\n[flee for asylum. He said he was\nI \"i.ot in agreement with what' is\n\u25a0going on in Czechoslovakia.\"\n\u20ac0\u00a3PS\nVOU. CAN'T, EAT\nmmmm\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR PORTRESS OF\n' HEALTH\"\nFeaturing\nNationally Preferred\nDrug Store Product!\nPHONE\n1203\nRES.\n394-U\n433 Josephine St.\nLakes Hi\nPace With Growth Are\nCRESTON, B.C \u2014 Resnrvey of\nKaslo-Balfour highway, and pending any major reconstruction immediate removal of blind corners\nand major rock outcropplngs was\nasked ln a resolution passed here.\nAssociated Boards of Trade of Eastern British Coulmbia backed the\nKaslo supported resolution. It also\nasked that the road be adequately\nsigned. It pointed out that the provincial government had made numerous apparently definite promises\nto the Kaslo Board that, lt would\nmake permanent improvements to\nthe road.-\nNumerous cribbings or. the road\nwere giving away and others were\nunsafe for heavy loads. Continual\nheavy s!oughin_ at other points had\nreduced the road for long stretches\nto one-way traffic resulting in commercial operations being unable to\nmaintain schedules and economic\noperation. With increased Industrial\nactivity in this area existing road\nconditions gave promise to increased\ntraffic accidents, curtailment of industry and financial losi to the district.\nINDUSTRY GROWS :.    *    \u2022\nAlso endorsed was a Nakusp resolution asking that the Public\/Works\nDepartment act immediately in its\npromise for .early consideration of\nmore adequate land transportation\nfor upper and lower Arrow Lakes to\nkeep pace with economic expansion.\nIt recalled that the department advised a resolution endorsed by district board at a 1950 meeting in\nNakusp had been referred to the\nHighway Committee. As yet there\nhad been no reply as to whether\nconsideration had been given or action planned, Meanwhile private\nenterprise was investing vast sums\nin establishing industry ir the region and a much larger population\nwould soon need better road\nfacilities.\nI.lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllll.\nJh diiqhwayA,\nHope Princeton Highway \u2014 Good\ncondition. Watch for rolling rocks.\nOne inch fresh snow.\nOkanagan Valley \u2014 All main\nroads open. Good, condition. Light\nsnowfall throughout district.\nRossland-Castlegar \u2014 Open. Five\ninches fresh snow. Plowing and\nsanding. , .\nNelson-'Gpatfeil \u2014 Bare. Gravel tn\nsections and muddy.\nRossland-Patterson \u2014 Five inches\nfresh snow. Plowing and sanding.\nNelson-Nelway \u2014 Bare.\nCranbrook\u2014One inch fresh snow.\nSlippery. Sanding iri progress.\nFernie District\u2014four inches fresh\nsnow. Sanding and Plowing.\nRevelstoke \u2014 All roads open.\nSmall slides lake area.\nColumbia \u2014 All roads open. Two\ninches fresh snow.\nFraser Canyon Highway \u2014 Open.\nPavement bare.\nIll 1111 f 1111 \u25a0 111 \u25a0 1111111111 \u25a0\u25a0 11111 \u25a0 1111111\nAUTO\nACCESSORIES\nFog Light*\nMlrrori\nLighten\nExhaust Extensions\nOrnaments\nNovelties\nTop Dressing\nPatching Kit*\nLicense Frames\nReflectors\nCertificate Holder*\nClearance Lamps\nSwitches\nWire and Cable\nPolishes\nCar Wash\nWashing Mitts\nChamois - -  -\nWash Brushes\nTar Remover\nShift Knobs\nRubber Cement\nA HOST OF OTHER ITEMS\nDrop In and Look Over Our Display.\nNELSON\nHARDWARE CO.\n446 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C. Pf$NE 21\nWarner President\nSlocan P-Cs;\nParker Nominee\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C. - The local\nProgressive-Conservative Association at a meeting at Slocan City attended by 30 people, elected the\nfollowing officers: president, R. G.\nWarner, re-eleoted; vice-president,\nZ. Kinoshita; secretary-treasurer,\nMrs. R. Warner.\nThe main object of the meeting\nwas to nominate a candidate .from\nthe local Asosciation to represent\nthe Kaslo-Slocan Riding at the\nnominating convention to be held\nat New Denver March 15, juid a\nunanimously passed resolution heartily endorsed the nomination of\nHoward M. Parker of .Slocan.\nMr. Parker delivered an address\nin which he described the policy, of\nthe Progressive Conservative party,\nand 'what the party stood for.\nHe stated that the district Association was. usually concerned in\ncampaigns for:\nFirst, an electric power line for\nthe Slocan Valley and north to New\nDenver and adjacent mines;\nCompletion of the Arrow Lakes\nhighway from Edgewood South to\nconnect with the main highway at\nRobson, and\nSuport of thl Kaslo Association\nof their plan for the continuation\nof blacktop of the highway from\nBalfour to Kaslo\".\nResolutions were also submitted\nto the -Provincial Association con-'\ncerning the government hospitalization plan and co-insurance and\nautomobile insurance within the\nProvince. ~ .-  \"_\u00bb\nIt was incorrectly reported Monday that Mr. Parker waa nominee\nof the Kaslo-Slocan Progressive-\nConservative Association, instead of\nthe local group.\nROTARIANS SEE\n\"CONNORS CASE\"\n\"The Connors' Case\", a National\nFilm Board production depicting the\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police operation in solving one of Canada's\nmost baffling murder cases, was\nshown Rotarians at i luncheon at\nthe Hume Monday.\nWith nothing to go on, but several\nunidentified fingerprints, bloodstains in a missing man's auto and\nbits of straw, R.C.M.P. and other\npolice squads searched city after\ncity harbors and waterfronts in a\ncombined effort to find a transient\nlast seen entering .Walter Connors'\nauto, the day he disappeared.\nWilliam Finn was eventually located at a waterfront warehouse\nand was later convicted of murder.\nInspector J. B. Harris of Nelson,\nin charge of Monday's program, Introduced the film.\nGuests at the luncheon included\nWilliam Evans of Nelson, A. Coun*\nsell of New Westminster, P. J.\nMoore of Calgsry, B. Hum of Victoria and William Stern of Nelson.\nBURIN, Nfld., March 10 (CP)-\nThe six-man crew of the auxiliary\nvessel Thomas J. Hodder landed\nsafely at Lakes Gut near this Pla-\ncentla Bay port Saturday after their\n90-ton vessel piled up on the rocks.\nSandon Oldtimer\nIs 73 Today\nILLIAM CLIFFE\n. . resident of Sandon since 1807\nis 73 years old today.\nDuring.his years'In the mining\ncommunity he has been active in\nits affairs, a member of the volunteer fire department and a player\non the oldtime hockey team'who\nwere champions o. {he Kootenay for\nthree successive seasons. He being\nthe only member of the team surviving is now possessor of the cup.\nOn his arrival in Sandon from\nBrandon, Manitoba, Mr. Cliffe ob\ntained work cutting; wood for the\nold wood-burning engine used on\nthe narrow guage railway to Sandon, and'later was employed by D,\n3. Robertson, now of Nelsonl who\nwas in the furniture \u25a0 and under\ntaking business.\nEventually he turned his attention\nto managing concentrators and has\nbeen in charge, at various times,\nof* the Cork Province Mines at Kaslo, the Bluebell Mine, at Slondel,\nthe Providence Mine _t-Greenwood,\nthe Cede* Creek and Mpyi? Mills'\nfor Cominco.\n\u2014 Photo Courtesy R. G. Joy;\nCathedral Choir\nReorganizes\nThe home of Miss Pat Scott was\nthe scene of a novel and enjoyable\nchoir parctise, at which reorganization of the senior choir of the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate was\ncompleted. Vi\"\nThirty five of the young people\nof the church sat down to a delightful pot luck supper to put them\nin fitie fetle for singing. Rev. Father\nL. R. McKenzie stated that he disapproved of \"boring practises,\" and\npromised to conduct the choir only\nif they took enjoyment from their-\nsinging.\nThis .Sunday.the choir will sing\nat the 10:30 a.m. mass, their first\nduty since reorganization.\nSteelworkers\nRenew\nTrail Effort\nVANCOUVER, March 10 <CP)-\nTHe United Steelworkers of\nAmerica (C.I.O.-C.C.L) today ri*\nnewed Its two-year fight to gun\ncertification li bargaining igent\nfor 6000 workeri it. Trail, B.C.\nUnion officials hero laid a new,\napplication for certification wai\nfiled today with the British Co.\nlumbla Labor Relations Board.\nB_l_alnlng rights now are held\nby the International Union af\nMine, Mill ind Smelter Workers\n(Ind.) for tha 6000 employees of\nI Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany at Trail.\n; qteel'i original application for\nbargaining authority wis turned\ndown by the Labor Relations\nBoard Miy'6, 1060.\nSteel took Its case to the B.C.\nSupreme* Court and Mr. Justice\nJl V. Clyne .ruled that the Board\nhear representations from tha two\nUnions to determine If refusal to\ncertify the Steelworkers should be\nreconsidered.\nThe Board heard the represent*\ntlons but refused to reconsider Its\noriginal decision.\n. Steel claimed that Mine-Mill\nwis dominated by a Communist\nfaction but the Board, on May 7,\niald this had not been prover).\n(Mine-Mill) was'ejected from\nthi Canadian Congress of Labor\nand Congress of Industrial Organ\nIzatlons on charges of Communist\nInfluence In Its leadership,\nThe Labor Relation! Board said\n'that If Mine-Mill wen dominated\nby Communists, union members\nthemselves wera responsible If\nthey wished the condition corrected, i\nCalls Volunteers\nTo Finish\nFruitvale Hall\nCMrnibers AjMsed\nCRESTON, B_0.-T_._ Associated Boards of Trade of\nEastern British Columbia should keep up its efforts to promote agriculture in the district's .Valleys..\nDr. C, H. Wright of Trail pointed this out in his annual\nptesident's address to the organization at its 51st annual\nmeeting here.     \u2022 -\"*.'\u25a0  \u25a0'.\"\u25a0'.\u25a0 -\u2014 \u2014\u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1952 \u2014 3\nThe first money mint for manufacturing a medium pt exchange Is\nbelieved\" to have been at Lydia in\nAsia Minor iri the 8th century B.C.\n\"In view of thi extensive industrial development, thli association\nshould continue to encourage in\nevery possible way the improvement of agriculture and scientific\nfarming in our valleyI to provide\nas much local food as possible for\ntha large and increasing potential\nmarket for food products,\" he said.\n\"This is of. prima imp_ tance, ind\nour association and all our member\nboard! and  chambers  could well\nIndustry, Population Grow\nLast year a \"spectacular new \u00abra\nof development and growth\" opened\ninthis region, Or. Wright told his\naudience. He noted the current expansion program of Consolidated\nMining-. and - Smelting Company\namounting to. $65,000,000, Including\nthe (30,000,000 power development\nunder construction at Waneta, the\ntransmission of power from the\nKootenay River to, Kimberley and\nthe proposed 70,000 tons annual ammonium phosphate fertilizer production at Marysville, together with\nexpansion df coke oven capacity at\nMichel, and the proposed 'multi-\nmillion dollar pulp and paper Industry for the Arrow Lakes. \u25a0*\n\"Power li \u25a0 gnat iirvint of\nexert strong and continuous efforts\nin this direction. The areas of Creston and Prand Forks have illustrated what ean bn dons In this\nregird.    .\n\"With better and more direct\nhighways \u2014' and these may. now\ncome rapidly\u2014ondwith* better rail\nand air services, I suggest thai the\nwhole agricultural Industry of this\narea, has great possibilities for expansion* and profit.\"\nThrough Power\nmodern Industry, and with the\nlarge .developments In progress,\nthere li practically bound to be\nextensive growth of Industry and\npopulation as li evidenced by tha\nresult! In many other locations\nluoh as Niagara, 8hawlnlgan and\nIn the Northwestern 8ts_e_\n*Thi othir large prospective\ndevelopments for power and flood\ncontrol thlt hold great Interest\nfor thi Kootenays are thl Libby\ndim proposal and thi possible\nwiter storage on the Arrow Likes\nIn thl Big Bend area North -of\nRevelstoke,\" he said. \"Your ai-\nsoelatlon has taken an active Interest In thus matters.\"\n'Pressure'' for Cutoffs Must Be Kept Up\nFINED FOR DRIVING\nAFTER DRINKING\nFred Peter Soukeroff of Crescent\nValley, charged with driving while\nability was impaired by the use oj\nalcohol, pleaded guilty in Proving\ncial Court here Monday.\nHe was fined $300 and costs or;\nin default, three months imprison^\nment by Sipendiary Magistrate William Evans.\nSoukeroff was apprehended early\nSunday morning at Beasley.\nSclaneo progresses... for SO years we have used little white\ntiblets\u2014zcetylsalicylic acid\u2014for relief of pain. Today this familiar pain killer is available in a mm form without the disadvantages\nof acidity, insolubility and bitter taste. It is calltd DISPRIN and it\n1    sold at druggists iturytuhin.\nDISPRIN is _>\/__.\u00ab and substantially iii-tnl. When taken in water\nas recommended, it enters the stomach as a true relation and not ,\nas undissolved particles. It is therefore less liable to cause stomach\ndi-domfort.\nDISPRIN is rtadily nbsorbid. Because it definitely dissolves (not\nmerely disintegrates) DISPRIN permits speedy absorption and gives\nquicker relief.\nDISPRIN is palatable. Even children \"will take it readily.\n'.-\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022: DISPRIN li now ovallabl-otyow\nScience steps forward with ttX^r_Z'_T\"\n__m______MF**w*_amam*w**\\wm*wt__.\n! I_) U 8 \\P ii] U LIM \u25a0        \"\"DY\n|i.     B-_-___fl-_-__-___i      \\\\W PLEASANT\nV   ,  -       .    'Vt THE MAKERS OF \u2022DITTO. ANTISEPTIC\ntBCKrrr _ oQIman (Canada, limited, pharmaceutical division. Montreal\nMOTORISTS\n----- s'      ,i \/\u25a0\nMiniature License Plate Key-ring Tags fbr Hie year\n1952 are now available to the motoring public at a\nminimum cost of 2Se each.\nHOUSEHOLDERS\nUse our SECRET TAG for your home or office key*\nbecause it is the KEY to no more lost Keyi. For juit 25e\na year you can guard against lou, by attaching one of\nour SECRET TAGS to your Key-ring. If your keys are\never lost, the finder maili them FREE to us and they\nare back in your hands immediately. REMEMBER when\nyou send 25c for this Tag Service \u2014 you help the T.B.\nVeterans in B.C.\nllllllllllllllllllMAIL THIS COUPON TODAYiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\n8ECRET TAQS REQUIRED ._ \u201e__\t\nLICENSE  NO  I  .... ~LZ ...\nADDRES8  _  _\u201e_   ...........\nNAME\nT.B. Vets\nRoom 100, 603 VV. Hastings St., Vancouver 2, B.C., PA, 2851\nSUPPORT A B.C. ORGANIZATION - Est. 1948\nFRUITVAIiE, B.C.\u2014\"If every man\nin this district would donate eight\nhours of his spare time working on\nthe Memorial Hall, we would be\nable to use the hall within a month,\"\nPfesldent Fred Haines told the annual meeting of the Fruitvale Community Welfare Society in the.Institute Hall. r -\n\"He also spoke of the baby mortgages. This method of financing had\nbeen worked out, he said, as it was\nvirtually impossible to get a loan\nsufficient to finish the building. Not\nenough interest is shown by the\ngeneral public that they really want\na hall and are willing enough to\ndo their share towards getting one,\nhe concluded,\nLast year, approximately $19,-\n154.55 was spent on the hall, bringing to date $33,602 spent. Of this,\na big item was for labor, which\ncould be greatly reduced if more\nwould volunteer, the gathering was\ntold. This financial statement was\ngiven by Mrs. Donald Shorting,\ntreasurer, who also gave the financial sheet for* the Welfare Society.\nTotal receipts for the year were\n$6041.89, .while expenditures were\n$5177.07. Of this, $1026.60 was a donation for the Memorial Hall, $1000\nto the Recreation Association. To\ndate, the Welfare has donated to\nthe Memorial Hall $5502.11, largely\nmade up from the monthly contributions from the CM. & S. employees.\nHAMPER8 TO 22\nLocal relief and Christmas hampers totalled $693.41. Of this 22 families received hampers,, two families\nreceived coal, 8 families direct relief, and 3 other families clothing.\nThe fire fund turned over to the\nfamily burned out last year totalled\n$343.35. James Bothwell, chairman\nof the Belief Committee, gave this\nreport and also stated that his committee had made seven calls on\nneedy families.\nOther reports included Red Cross\nby Fred Haines, Cancer Society by\nMrs. i Shorting, and the Arthritic\nSociety by Ralph Leckeft.\nThe following directors were\nelected for three-year terms: Andrew Zuk, Alfred Webb and Joseph Simpson.\nThose present voted tn favor of\nthe resolution to change 'the name\nof- the lOdety from \"the Fruitvale\nCommunity Welfare Society\" to\n\"the Fruitvale Community Chest\".\nMembers also approved of donating\ntwenty-flve per cent of the gross\nreceipts for 1952 to tfte Memorial\nHall Fund.\nDr. Wright added that activity in\nmany smaller , enterprises marked\nthe Southeastern B.C. scene in 1951.\nThe Association continued to press\nfor more adequate .transportation\nservices and facilities. An airport\nsurvey Was undertaken in West\nKootenay and Boundary and is still\nIn progress. The organization was\npleased to see improvements to the\nCastlegar airport.\nWith opening of the new North-\nport bridge and completion of paving on the Rossland-Paterson high,\nway, traffic increased considerably\nand customs hours at Northport and\nPaterson were extended to 11 p.m.\nwith a promise of 24-hour service\nwhen traffic warranted it Promise\nwas also given that there would be a\n24-hour service at Kingsgate and\nEastport starting April 1 this year<\nAssurances have been given by\nthe Department of Public Works\nthit the proposed Victory Highway through the State of Washington la' a dead Issue, and thlt \u25a0\nhighway survey from  Christina\nLake to the Columbia River on\nthe Canadian side of the border\nwill be. undertaken In 1952 and\npossibly some construction work\nstarted on this highway relocation\nthli year.\n\"It is recommended that strong\npressure be maintained on the provincial government to undertake\nthe highway survey from Salmo to\nCreston as well as over the Cascades\nin order to get construction started\non both of these high priority sections as soon as posible.\"\nGOVERNMENT CHARGED WITH\nINDECISION ON 80N8\n\"Considerable progress,\" wis\nmade on the complicated Doukhobor problem. \"A most important\nsubmission, recommending relocation of the Sons of Freedom, prepared by the Consultative Committee after months of careful investigation and discussion, was presented\nto the government in September,\nAlmost six months have passed since\nthe  recommendations  were made\nand we have not received any decision from the government, .\n\"In the present state of affairs\nof this Intricate problem, Important locally, provlnclally and nationally, It Is considered thlt the\nlick of decision and lotion onthe\npart of the proylnclal government\nmay prove to be very serious and\ncostly, and may cause a bad setback to the definite progress thit\nhas been mide during the pist\ntwo years,\"\nMembership ln member boards\nand chambers has Increased from\n1043 to 1060. Prior to the end of the\nyear, the Castlegar and district,\nCranbrook, Fernie, Marysville, Nel.\nson, Salmo Valley and Trail boards\nchanged their names to Chambers\nof Commerce, and sevjeral others\nhave had the move under consideration since then. \u25a0'\u25a0\nDr. Wright expressed appreciation\nbf the \"interest, cooperative spirit\nand generous support\" .given member boards and chambers by the\nindustries and business concerns of\nthe area.\nIt has been estimated the family\nof one clothes moth can destroy 100\npounds of wool in 12 month..\nAnother\ndistinguished\nproduct of\nThe BRITISH:\nCOLUMBIA\nDISTIUERV\nCo\/Ltd.\n\u00a9\n\u2022MillM.\"\nBC\nRESERVE\nTill British Columbia Distillery Ci. IM.\nHEW W-ITMINST-R, S.S.\nThis advertisement\nis not published or. displayed by\nihe Liquor Control' Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia.\n10 ARE FINED\nAFTER RAID\nNelson City Police conducted a\n.aid of,612 Lake Street Saturday\nnight Eight men and two women\nwere arrested.\nMary Adams, charged with keep\ning a disorderly-house, was fined\n.200 by Magistrate William Brown.\nA $100 fine was levied against Mary\nJohnson, charged with being an in.\nmate oj the house. Both pleaded\njuilty in City court Monday.\nThe eight men, who pleaded\n.uilty to charges of being found\nin a disorderly house without law*\nful excuse were Norman Palmer,\nC. Layman, H. Starchuk, R. Girardl,\nI Popoff, John McDonald, J. Payne\nand William Jones.\n-They were fined $25 each by Magistrate Brown.\nWednesday Morning\nSpecials\nPersonal Shopping Only'\nV_lu_i.o3.98   ; :,\nBOYS'ODDMENTS\nBoys' ill wool sweaters, cotton sportshirts, ilpper\njackets, cowboy-shirts. Brdken sliest*'V\nWednesday Morning Special ...-. ,..\u201e- _.\nR_g.3-45\nCHILDREN'S DRESS BOOTS\nChildren's dress boots, neollte soles, rubber heels,\nmoccasin vamp style. Sizes 9!\/_ to 12.\nWednesday Morning 8peelal _. \t\n1.9*\n2.69\nReg. 2.98\nGIRLS' FLANNELETTE HOUSECOATS\nBright  attractive   design   on   light   background,\nStyled for Juniors; sizes 2 to 6x.\nWednesday Morning Special  \u2014\t\nReg. 3__0\nSAUCEPANS . z-\n48 ounce-f._me_.__i saucepan complete with lid.\nWednesday Morning Special -\t\n2.49\n1.99\nKRINKLE CREPE\nA good selection of small attractive patterns on pastel\nbackgrounds. Ideal for Summer pyjamas. Reg. .69.\nWednesday Morning Special \u2014...... \t\nReg. .39\nLINO MATS ,\nA good assortment of lino mats, size 18x27. Handy\nby sink, stove or door. Wednesday Morning Special ....\n44\n.19\n\u25a0   mcowonAT_ro err may i_.a ..-'\nA Tip to\nHousewives\nFor Better Cooking\nand Good Matured Husbands\nChange to\nIt's the  lucky lady who's\ndiscovered the joy of ROCKETGAS COOKING \u2014 with temperatures.\nresults \u2014 just right.\u2014 AND \u2014 it's\ncleaner \u2014, and faster \u2014 Spare hubby the\n\u2022 \"Slavery of the1 Woodpile\".  ROCKETGAS  means\nhappier  (ivirigf* \u2014 and,  labor saving \u2014 AUTOMATIC\nCOOKING \u2014 WATER HEATING AND HOME HEATING.\nCOR APPROVED APPLIANCES AND DEPENDABLE SERVICE\nMcKAY & STRETTON Ltd.\n1 \\      \u25a0 V. .'' ,      . (Nelson) ,.\u201e;. -,  . ,..-\u25a0'\n532 Baker St.\nPhone 1555\n Mium Baila tf-inB    LETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nfCstabliihe- April 2..* .1003\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished eviry morning except Sundiy by thi\nNEWS PUBUSHINQ COMPANY. UMITBD,\n268 Baker Street, Nolson.  British Columbia\nAuthorized os Second Class Mall\n1   Post Office Department. Ottawi.'.-,..:\u25a0\n.MEMBER OT- THS CANADIAN PRESS AND\nI'1:'\"lip AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTuesday, March It, 19S2\nW    - Solution Needed to.\nGrowing Nelson\n.,:   .     Traffic Problems\nM    He who. hesitate, on Baker Street\nm on a Saturday is, in all pjrohability, in\n:r..'i_jo peril of becoming lost, as the old\n^'saying suggests. He is, however, In\n.''\u25a0--. definite danger of being knocked into\n''''\"the next block. <\nV1, It is altogether obvious that incr .sse\n\"'\u2666ih traffic in Nelson, especially on Sat-\n.^urdays and rush hours, has reached.\n\"\u2022the point where controls of some kind\n\u00a5z or another are necessary to eliminate'\nsome of.the dangers both to fivers\n* _.' and pedestrians.:.     ... '\u2022\u2022' \u25a0\u25a0\nThere are two ways traffic can be\n\u00a3-;; controlled; either, by placing traffic\n'officers at strategic intersections to di-\n, rect the flow, or by automatic signals.\nDay-long controls, except on Satur-\n^.;;days, which are made especially busy\n; | by influx of district people to this\nShipping centre, are not yet necessary.\ni,'. -A'-Wvey by City Police has,shown that,\n,  the* busiest periods, at.-least in the business, seetipni are from '12 noon to 2\n. p.m. and from 5 to 8 p.m. on weekdays,\nand from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturdays. I ' \u25a0\nProvisions exist, apparently, under, -\nthe arrangements by which the Pro-\n' \u25a0* vincial Government maintains arterial highways  through  municipalities,\n: _ whereby the Province will assist in '\ninstallation of traffic control lights and\nsignals. Inasmuch as the Ward Street\nintersection of Baker is the busiest of\nall during rush hours, there is perhaps\nan inexpensive solution for that corner\nin this arrangement. It would possibly\n1 raise, however, the matter of the City\nproviding and maintaining synchro*\nnized signals at the non-arterial Stanley and Josephine Streets intersection.\nWhether this would be 'necessary, or\nwhether it would be possible for control officers to handle the traffic in\nconjunction- with a single signal, are\nmatters open to study. The point is\nthat- the situation has developed to a\n, point where a study and a solution are\n,..'  essential.'\nThe Sadr\nThe Saar, involved in controversy\nK \"between France and Germany, is one\n..\"  of the reasons pointing up the desirability of a Federation of European\n' -   States.\nTha Saar is a small border area in\nwhich  French  and  German  soldiers\n1  first fired on each other during the so-\ncalled \"phony war\" period'at. the-be-\n.\u00bb- ginning of World War II, Earlier, it\njj_   was one of the territories, with Alsace-\nLorraine and the Rhinelarid, involved\n;j  in the World War I peace settlement.\nIt is a region slightly smaller than\n..Luxembourg,   which   it   adjoins,   in\n..   which are mines producing around 12\nmillion tons of coal a year. After 1920\n|   it was administered as part of France\nuntil 1935, when a plebiscite joined it\nto Germany. Now it is again part of an\neconomic union with Fiance, Btrorigly\nLetters may bo published over I nom\ndo plume, hut tha actual signature et tho\nwriter must bi given to thi Editor as'\nevldcnoo of flood faith. Anonymous letters\noo In the waste piper biskit\nPaid Fair Fee\nTo the Editor; ;.-: \u25a0 \u25a0   .  i ,. -\nSir\u2014-A| I momber of the Women's Inst!-.\ntuto and Treasurer of the Granite Hood\nWomen's Institute, I would Ilk* to point out\nthlt an entry fee wm charged to ill compotl-\ntori in the Women's Institute Section in thl\nWest Kootenay Agricultural and Industrial\nExhibition of 1050 and 1081, ,\n. \"This fn was paid by our Institute for both\nyears, 1080 ind 1081. Wa hive In our files a\nreceipt (No. 117) for S3, paid to Wilt Koote-\nn*y Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition, by\nthe Granite Road Women's Institute, dated\nSept. 7, .1051, md signed by D, Mlllor.\nI fell that the public should know that\nthe statement, \"yet no entry fee (to Worsen'!\nInstitutes) hit* bun charged heretofore,\"\nwhich appeared in your piper on Saturday,\nMarch l, is Incorrect,\nI would'also like to suggest to the Wilt\nKootenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition Board that they state in this year's book\nthe entry fee for Women's Institutes entering\nthe Womon's Institute Section;\nMARGARET I. LEAHY (MRS.),   -\nr . \u25a0    Treaiurer,\nKnox Road, City,\nAlte\nrnative to. Taxes\n(Windsor Dally 8tar)\nThl neweit Shangri-la is thi Cayman\nIsland!, that group of coral formations several\nhundred miles Northwest of Jamaica. Perhaps\ntha Islands hive a.particular appeal as a British\nShangri-la, because they're sunny, tropical, ind\nhardly know the meaning of taxes.\nImport duties and the sale ot postage\nstamps, many of which an bought by collectors, yield the small sum needed to keep the\nGovernment functioning.\nLife on those islands has its disadvantages, -\nof course. A reference work says their economy rests on the sale of turtles, cocoanuts and\ncattle. That doesn't offer much scope to one\nwho feels his talents don't run to cattle raising,\nthe climbing of palm trees, or turtle farming.\nThen, for the resident who could afford to\nloaf, there's always a chance a tropical hurricane might blow him right oft the islands.\nIt's considerations like this that give the\n.tax collector the last laugh. He can be escaped,\nbut only at the risk of Jumping Into something\nworse. Hamlet, found himself ln the same\nquandary when he sought an escape from the\nslings and arrows of outrageous fortune.\nSplitin^ Infinitives\nTo knowingly split an infinitive is a crime\naccording to the best minds in the country. It\nIs, in' fact, one of the worst crimes a person\nwho tries to correctly write English can commit. At any rate, that is what we have been\nreading in a series of articles on the split infinitive in a widely-read migazine.\nThe trouble with the split infinitive Is that\nmany people don't know what an Infinitive is.\nIn fact, we are willing to confidently wager\nthat half the people who read this don't know\nwhat one is. To them we can only say that\nthey are ludky, because to know and to wholly\nunderstand an Infinitive is to bitterly hate it.\nWe bate infinitives. They have been \\ a\nsource of frustration for. years. To tell the\ntruth, it haa taken us years to really get to\nknow what one looks like, and an equal length\nof time to finally learn to completely avoid\nsplitting the fool things.\nWe hope to never mention the subject\nogaiii\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\napproved by its voters in 1947, and\nFrance holds a 50-year lease on its coal\nmines, signed in 1950. Vet it is largely\nself-governing, and its final status is\nto be settled in the peace tre_aty not yet\ninitiated with Germany. .\nMeanwhile coal from the Saar: goes.\nto sustain steel production in France,\nthe German Ruhr, and the Saar itself\nWith the Saar, French steel product\ntion closely approximates that of West\nGermany; if West Germany had the\nSaar, its steel production would be half\nagain as much as France's. As for coal,\nGermany has the preponderance witb\nor without the Saar.\n\\   \u2022  :'; . . \u2022\u25a0   \" y\n^Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any roader, Names ot persons\n\u25a0Iking .questions will not be published,.\nThin ll no chargf *\u00abr this service.\nQuoitloni WILL NOT BB ANIWI. IP\n\u25a0V MAIL except where thin ll obvious\nMotility for prlvaoy.\nWorried, Silmo-r-Heferring to your question\npn whir* to tend sample of mixed dairy\nfood, we have been advised to give you\nthi following iddress:\nDUtriot Supervisor, Plant Products Division, 3100 Main Strut, Vancouver, B, C,\nMM. Q. I, S., Deer Park\u2014Whera should a\nper.on born In England apply for birth\ncirtlflcatel-\nSomorsi. House, Strand, London, W.C.2,\nEngland, Enclose order for five shillings, obtainable at any post office, '' .'..'\u2022,;\n1. 8\u201e N\u00abw Dinver-pif\u00bbil\u00ab'?'jrtyimi representation of each political Party In Ottawa\n.  ind Provincial Legislature, Victoria.\n. Ottawa! Liberal, 185; Progressive Conservative, \u00ab{| C.C.F, 13! Social Credit, 10;\nIndependent, 4; Independent Liberal, 4; vacancies, 1, Total-JM, Viotorin,'8. C: We have\nno figure! available since tho Coalition wil\ndissolved, but prior to dissolution figures\nwere: Coalition,' 37; C.C.F., 7; Labor, 1; Independent, 2; vacant, 1. Total\u201448. .\nAnxious,  Nelson\u2014Where   should  my  lister\nwrit! to obtain copy of her birth certificate? She wai born.in Minniiotl. '\nWrite to Department of Vital Statistics,\nCapitol, Lansing, Minn.\nCurious. Salmo\u2014Is a 1051 Canadian five-cent\npiece valued by coin collectors? I miy\nhava been lubjicted to faulty Information,\nbut I've bain told this coin it worth $80.\nSo fir ii we know, the 1991 nickel is worth\nonly face value. Wi shall mike further in-\nguirlei.\nAtomic Surname\nThe first \"atomic lurname\"\u2014\"Mr. Meson\"\n\u2014has been chosen by a naturalized British\nsubject\u2014an electronics technician who thought\nhe would take a mme \"in keepinr with the\natomic age\". Meson is one of the constituents\nof cosmic rays and is believed to be the force\n-that holdi the atomic nucleus together^-Bran-\ndon Daily Sun.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelion Dally News, March 11,1042\nDonald Brown, popular young baritone of\nNelson, will assist Frank Hosek, the gifted\nyoung violinist from Bellevue, Alta., at re-\ncltals in Trail and Rossland. Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson will act as accompanist.\nMrs. J. Q. Pearson and daughter-Judith,\n820 Mill Street, hive left for Calgary, where\nthey will spend, _i few weeks at tha horhe of\nMn. Pearson's mother.   \"'\u2022'.\n.28 YEARS AOO\nFrom The Nelson Dally Newi, Miroh 11,1027\nFrank Phillips, formerly of Nelson, who\nhas had charge of the Selkirk Gold Mining\nCompany properties at Rice Lake, Man., for\nthi past four years, arrived in Nelson Wednesday.\nWomen's suffrage fared badly in the Quebec Legislative Assembly today, a Bill tb give\nwomen a vote in Provincial elections being\ndefeated on second reading 41 to 13.\nMr. ind Mrs. 3. W. Holmes, Vernon Street,\nreturned to Nelson from spending two months\nWintering in Vlctorli.\nCO YEARS AGO\nFrom Thl Nelson Dally Miner, Mirch 11,1902\nAt the meeting of the City Council it was\ndecided, on the recommendation of the 'superintendent of the Electric Light Department, that i pole line should be extended\nalong Victoria- Street to Cedar Street, at a\ncoat of $100.\nThe Nelson Gun Club held its first regular shoot on Sunday morning, The Patenaude\nHandicap Cup was won by James Wallace, who\ndeserves.much' credit, as this was the first\ntime h.B had shot over the traps.\nYour Horoscope\nVou are advised not tp depend upon others to help you, but to work out your own\nproblemi. A fiir manure of success md hip-\npiness ii then foretold. Modente success md\npopularity ihould attend the child born' on\nthil date.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nVOU SHOULD* SEEM THE\nUTILE KEO-HBADBD Mr_S.\/oy\nI HAP-WdrVflM Irt THS &%\nJODtT TW. MINlUTES AtSO _\nAIAKE A PATE WITH HB. FOR\nIvHEM I GET OUT-THEN THERE\nWAS THE DETTTUW-I EXPECTS?\nA BIS ,H4T n.ME-'.N COMES THIS\nKNO C_3UT~__T _S.IT_._ I TELL\nVOU AKXJT THE NI6MT UURSE-\n_~^.\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nToday's Bible thought\nThere is biiftty in holiness, in\nright thoughts, in s good life. Evil\nliving and*thinking destroy beauty\nof life arid of features.\n\u2022From the daughter of Zlon ill her\neiiuty li depirtid.\u2014Lam. 1:4.\ndtutl disL\nm^\u00a3__\\Mr\nI didn't expect much. You\nalways know a man Is lazy or\ntoo dumb to make a Uvln' when\nyou hear a wife tellln' how good\nhe is.\nAstronomical studies indicate that\nsome parts of the planet Mars are\ncovered by lichens or mosses,\nGov't. Loan Up to 90% . . .\nLimited-Dividend Company\nPlan Solves Housing Needs\n, Under Sep .ion 0 of the Nations! Housing Aot, the Federal\nGovernment sg.ncy in, the housing field, Central Mortgage\nsnd Housing Corp. can make a Joan to a Umlted-dlvidend\nhousing company to assist in the construction of low-rental\nhousing, or to convert existing buildings into a low-rental\nhousing project, \u2022   ' \\\nThis la a plan that may be of particular interest tp Nelson\nftp It tackles ill housing short' ~~ ~    \"\t\nage problems.\nCompanies oro \"called \"limited-\ndividend\" because the dividends on\nthe projects they build in limited\ntq f|vt ptt cent of their Investment.\nIn in effort to encourage thiao'companies, the National Housing Aot\nof fen loans upi-tajM per cent of the\nlending vilui pf approved projects,\na low Interest rate of _>-_ per cent\nand in amortl.*.ion period pt up\nt_ _Q yetu'R,\nMERIUM INCOME ASSISTANCE\n; The medium-income group Is being helped by the'llmlted-dividend\nsection of the NBA, in OskvllJe,\nOnt,, the story of low-rental housing is being unfolded. There\u2014near\nthe   Queen  Bllisabeth   Highways\nKent Garden Homes Md*, erected 80\nhouses  for  the  medium  Incpme\ngroup In 1848. They obtMned a loan\nfrom Central Mortgage and Housing\nCorporation of .2.9Q. which they\nwill repay over a period pf 30yegrs,\nThl  homes' they  constructed\nwin of two typii\u201410 two-bid*\nreim bungilewi which rent it\n\u00bb4! i monthi ind 10 thni'bid-\nteam itorjl-and-a-half houiei\nwhleh rent it $181 month. Thi ao\nhoutei aro of frame construction,\nwith hot*nlr heating, located on\nlot. 86 f(, x lig ft \/\nIn thi early part of list yeir, tin\n|lmited>d(vl4end compgny wai ii),\nyancid i further lam to construct\n10 morse houses In thli project, five\nof  the  houses in three-bedroom\nstory-ind-i-hilf houses to nnt it\nm a menthi five ir\u00ab three-bid-\nrocm hunsiiowi which will rent it\nM7 i menth. Kent Garden Homm\nlimited obtilned an additional loin\nof $64,125\u2014making a total loan of\n$191,026. '\nThe story of limited-dividend\ncompanies is just beginning, in\nSudbury, Ont., Alexandria Park\nHomes Co. are building 50 one-and-\na-half story houses with four bedrooms which will, rent for \u00bb5J a\nmonth. In Hamilton, Grisenthwaite\nHentii Homes Md, received a loan\nof $3Bi,aoo with 140-year imortlw-\nt|on period .and are in the process Pf\nconstructing 42 single dwelling units'\nand row housing consisting of ei(_t\nIndian Prince Takes\nWives ro Conference\nNSW DELHI, March 10 (API-\nThe- Nizam of Hyderabad wiU bring\n13 of his 70-woman harem in thru\nSlanes to New Delhi Wednesday for\nIs first visit outside hit state In\n17 yurs. *;.\nThe 65-yeir'old prince was fur.\n1 .ui whin \u2022 serin of mishaps, Including getting hll face splni-bed\nduring a rowboat trip li; Madras\nharbor, marred hll last royal Journey ln 1035. He vowed never to take\na jrlp outside thi lt|t| again.   \u25a0'\nBut h\u00ab his relented tq attend 4\nnational ^inference cf provincial\ngovernors and regal heads of states\nunits. Rents will run from Ki for\nthe raw units to $80 far the single\nunits,       .\u25a0 . ,\nThe plan hai bain ui\u00abd with sue-\necu in Yarmouth, Th'i siction of\nthe National Housing Act brcuiht\nImproved housing condition's,\n)t_e pahtn thire farmed * limit,\ned-dlvidend company, Yarmouth\nHousing Wmlted, with his brothers\ntaking pn the non-paying pasta of\nvice-president and iccretary-tren-\nurer. Working is hli own cantrictor\nand with looji labor and supplies',\nha erected six apartments in 1D40\nwith a loan of $8),opo and a so.year\namorlljatlan period, The buildings\nprovided a total of 24 new housing\nUnits.\nYarmouth did not atop with the\nsuccessful completion of the first\nsix buildings, In 1850 a further loan\nof 1110,000 constructed eight mare\nbuildings providing 38 unltd,\nSrinigar, the capital of the st\u00bbte\nof Kashmir, has been cilled \"The\nVinice-of the East,\" ?,-;\nAccuses Russ of\nHolding Pogroms\nMONTOBAI,, Mireh 10 (CP)-A\nUnited States labor leader said Sunday the Soviet government Is \"en-\nglffed In a wholesale program of\nJaws in ill countries under Communist dictatorship.\"\nPenjamm. TlbachlMlty of New\nYork, national director of the Jewish Labor Committee, spoke at \u2022\nmemorial meeting sponsored by the\ntrade unions in tribute to Henryk\n. rilch and Victor Alter, Jewish labor leaden in Poland, murdered ip\nthe Soviet Union 10 years ago,\nMr. TabachiniKy told the gathering \"an organized pogrom is now on\nIn the goviot Union md in all tho\ncountries behind the Iron Curtain.\n\"Thli campaign ot terror Is not\nonly aimed at Jews but against all\nfreedon. loving people who want ta\nthink for themselves, act far them'\nselves md hi fr\u00ab.\"   :.\nSKRaSK,Narviy IC?) *A\u00bb\u00abw\ninstrument being msnufsfctured hen\nIrdesigned ta prevent human errors\nIn engine rooms of ships, The devjci\nsets off a warning Ml a tha engineer make* a mistake in executing\nan order from the bridge:\nARTHRITIC PAIN\nJon't suffer night and day-*r_m\nwarisoma ,\u00bboh*\u00bbi-p\u00bb sharp, st.\nfew*'\nmpdetahring|ons*_cl-ft>rr-l|of_i8_\nfro_iwthrit1oorrteiitH9tlopi_n,    fm\n[% TIMPHTflN'! T-H^'s\n \"It Pays To.Buy Quality\"\nO.ur Stoeki ot Present' ot\nChildren's\nShoes\nAre Complete\n\u25a0 From Babies to Missei\nIncluding\nHURLBUT, PIED PIPER\nAND WOLCOTT\nAll Widths\nR. ANDREW\n\u25a0& CO.\nLEADERS IN F OOTFASHION\nEstablished 1002\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\nBuy, Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nTOWLER\nfuel A Tnnsfir\nPhone MS Nelion. B.C\nNelson Social    ' '\n\u25a0   \u2022\u25a0 (:    .    ;. \u00bb .HON! 144\nVisitors from as far East as Manitoba are in the sodal\nspotlight these days.\nJh(0&i'44\nMEM\nNUHSES IN TRAINING . .Miss\nJean Smith and Miss Brenda Oauer\nof Winnipeg. are visiting Miss\n.Smith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G.\nSmith, Granite Road, Both are In\ntraining at' Winnipeg General Hos-\n'pital school of nursing,'\n.     ; . .   . \".\n.. OF LETHBRI6GE ,'. . Mr. and\nMrs. Andrew Locatelli left ftfr\ntheir home Monday after spending\na few days with their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and. Mra. Carl\nLocatelli, 1128 McQuame Avenue.\n* ,* *-\n, IN'THE DISTRICT . . . J. C.\nHembllng of Penticton. field supervisor for the.Canadian National Institute for the Blind, is spending a\nfew days in the Nelson .district\n\u2022 \u2666\u25a0 \u2022\n'PROM WINNIPEG ... Mrs. W.\nEby of Winnipeg, who has recently\nbeen visiting her daughters in Seattle and Vancouver, has come on tq\nNelson to visit her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H..W. Eby,\n806. Vernon Street.\n.   .   * \u25a0 *\nBACK AGAIN . . . Mrs. A. Ling,\n712 _: Josephine Street, has returned after\" visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. Leschuit-\nta of Trail and her son and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs.  William\n- -  ' I\nBuy* yoit\/L\nFORT GARRY\nCOFFEE\nal ih Bay*\nYellow Label.... Ib. 95c\nRed Label.... Ib. $1.01\nfttitot a lag Ctomptuj.\nINCORPORATtO SNO MAY    tBTO\nLing of Rossland.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. 'J. Owen' Will of\nNelson wish to announce'the engagement of their eldest daughter\nVirginia Janet, to Robort Bennett\nMacKay,' youngest son df Mr, md\nMn. L. J. MacKay of Chapman\nCamp, B. C, the piarrlagc to tike\nPlace April 11.\nFirst British W. I.\nFounded in Wales\nThe Women's Institute movement\nin British Columbia had been six\nyears old when lt was first, introduced In Great Britain. .,\n,Tw<j years prior to its establish\nment there In 1915, Mrs. Alfred\nWatt, secretary of -, the advisory\nboard in B.C. returned to England\nwith her two young sons, following\nthe death ot her. husband. '\n, When the First World War! broke\nout, she saw what \u00bba Women's Institute network would mean to\nEngland. With the help of Mrs.\nDrage-of'Wales, Ladyi Aberdeen\nind others she Interested the government, ind wrote to' B.C. for information. Aa a result, the first\nWomen's Institute, ih Britain,\nfounded on the Island of Anglesey, Wales, was modelled directly\nafter the set-up in British Columbia.     . .\nThe movement spread rapidly\nand the immediate project was to\nIncrease food supplies for\" war-\nravaged England. The result was\nsin increase of between 35'and 80\nper cent of requirements.\nMrs.' W.att was honored by the\nKing for her work, and the Instit-\n! utes became a vital part of the life\nof-the country.\nOne of the most Important Institutes formed by Mrs.. Witt was\n; that of    Sandringham,   pt which\nj Queen Mary was-the first president.\nj Because they hid come frbm Canada, they were called  \"Canada's\nGift to the Motherland.\"\n|   They now number more thin 6000\ni branches, and have become a pow-\ni erful organization,  represented  in\neyery country.   Annual   meetings\nare held ln Albert Hall In London.\nA monthly   publication,   \"Home\nand Country\" gives news off ill\nInstitutes.\nFGC7-5J\nBOY IT... YOU'll BE DELIGHTED\n.New Denver Group\nAsked for Woollens\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-A request\ntrom Kootenay Presbyterial for a\ndonation of woollens for a B. C.\nIndian mission was received by Turner Memorial United Church Women's Association at its March meeting at the home of Mrs. W. A. Kennedy. Mrs. James Eorsythe will handle this.  ;       .\nMrs, L. R. Campbell was appointed as choir member on the church\nboard. Members learned that tire\ninsurance oh the church and manse\nhas been raised. The sum of $5 was\nvoted to a bursary fund. An interesting letter was read, from Miss\nJ. C Gillespy of Japan, missionary\nwho left New Denver 2V_ years ago\nand was a membft- of the W. A.\nMn. Campbell ahd Mrs. Kennedy\nwere named to the new sick visiting committee, and. Mrs. W. G.\nThring and Mrs. H. R. Tibbitt, to the\nchurch cleaning committee.\nFruitvale C.W.L\nNames Tea Conveners\nFRUITVALE, B. C\u2014Committees\nfor their St. Patrick tea were appointed by members of the Catholic Women's League meeting at\nthe home of Mrs. A. Quattrln.\nMrs. Dona t Morissette and Mrs.\nE. Cristofanetti will convene a sewing table, and Mrs. A. Cleiry and\nMra. Frank Kaluiik, a bike table.\nMrs. J. Campeau and Mrs. Henry\nCyr will handle kitchen arrangements and Mrs. H. Watson and Mrs.\nH. Godin, tea table arrangements.\n' Mrs. Cristofanetti gave another\ntalk on present day education.\n0JICM,   Trip,   (0WL\nVnwium, THcurfin.\n9097 n-_\nJUST TWO PARTS!\nLook! Two main pattern parts!\"Ho\nshoulder-seam! No side-skirt seimsl\nYou could easily lew this dress in\none day\u2014It's easy as pie! A smart\nind simple Summer charmer, with\ncool neckline\u2014a wide V. Nice for\nstripes, print, or 'interesting textured fabric!\nPattern 9097: Missel' sizes 15, 14,\n16, 18il 20. Size 16 takes Wt yards\n35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern fives\nperfect fit Compute, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nThli eisy-to-use pittern gives perfect fit, Complete Illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) tor this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER     :,\nSend your- order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of the Nelson Dally\nNews, Patternt Dep^, Nelson, B. C.\nFor Beating Dry Skin\nBy JOAN BENNETT\n' I am not a.skin specialist. Any advice I offer is to women\nwith normal complexions \t\nIMPORTED from Italy, this swagger 'type pouch is\nmade of genuine calfskin with double handles and tucked\ncorded treatment on the frarrte. The bag is luxuriously\nlined in leather and has gold-plated accents and an inside\nzipper. Being both supple and practical it makes a good\ntravelling companion as well as a nice coat and suit complement. \u201e '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. '<   '\nKimberley Auxiliary\nSponsors Spring Tea\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - Daffodils\nand gay St Patrick's serviettes\nwere decorations at a Spring tea\nheld here by Ladies' Auxiliary to\nKimberley aerie of the .Fraternal\nOr-fer Of Eagles.   ..-\/-:\u25a0\u25a0\nPourers were Mrs. Woloschuk,\nMrs. M. Sheills, Mrs. Murphy, Mrs.\nJ. Siega, and Mrs.' Leo Nimslck, and\nMrs, G. Wanuk, Mrs. R. Eclceston,\nMrs. Danen, Mrs. J. Thompson, Mrs.\nG. Nord and Mrs. Missal served.\nKitchen arrangement; were , in\ncharge of Mrs. A. Ingebrlgtson, sr.,\nassisted by Mrs, Bush, Mrs. M.\nWhite, Mrs. E. Brown and Mrs. E.\nDraper. Mrs. O. Steinwandt, Mrs.\nElliott, Mrs. E. Cotnoir, Mrs. B.\nEvans and Mrs. Hooper were at1 a\nbike stable. ,\nTbiodlsicAagL\n\u00a3cutAtz (fJhsskh,\nTransfer Deigns\nin 3 colors\n'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n\"TOO DISCREET\"\nTORONTO, March 6 (CP) -\nRobert King, a hair stylist from\nNew York, thinks there are \"too\nmany faint hearts\" in the hair-\ndressing business.\n\"On the whole, hairdressers\nlack imagination and courage to\ntell their customers the truth\nabout their appearance,\" he said\nin an interview.\nOn the subject of poodle cuts\n\u2014a style in whleh the hair is\nchopped to about two inches and\n, curled softly all over the head-\nhe said that the teen-agers now\ngoing in for the craze should\nleave it to their grandmothers.\nPoodle cuts are most becoming\non white-haired and grey- ,\n, haired women.\nThe poodle-cut style takes too\nmuch work to keep in shape to\nlast long, he says. The hair must\nbe trimmed every two weeks\nand a permanent must be given\nevery two months.\nThe-poodle-cut craze won't\nlast beyond the Summer, Mr.\nKing predicted. \"Hair Is going\nto be longer and more casual In\nthe Autumn. The formal poodle\n\u25a0cuts wil! go.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iii.\nShe Ends 31 Years as\nDeportation Officer\nMONTREAL \u00ab_?> - Thirtyrone\nyears of service as a deportation officer have ended for Mrs. Eva Chevrier of Montreal. She recently retired from the Federal Department\nof Immigration.\nAs deportation officer she escorted women deportees to ships which\nwould take them back to their homp\n.land. Usually she had to bring them\nfrom far-flung parts of Canada.\nMany of her charges were criminals or mental cases and while they\nwere her responsibility she had to\nbe with them constantly.\nIn some cases she wai required to\nescort the deportee all ihe way\nhome. On one occasion she accompanied a deranged woman from Sudbury, Ont, to her home in Georgetown; British Guiani.\nWillow Point P.-T.A.\nEnvisioned by Speaker\nWILLOW POINT, B.C. - Members of Willow\/Point Women's Institute md parents took advantage\nof the school's \"open house\" ln connection with Education Week to\nsee pupils at work with their teachers, Floyd Searle, principal, ind\nMrs. H. MacLean.\nMra. J. J. Carney, president of\nNelson Parent-Teacher Asioelatlon,\nwas guest speaker. She iald the\nhoped a P.-T__. would be formed at\nWillow Point.\nWil. memben lerved tea.\nNELSPN DAILY-NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 19S2 - 5\nIf you have \u2022\npeciflc skin\ntrouble \u2014 persistent acne or\nany one of the\nmultitude of\nreal diseases of\nthe skin \u2014 you\nshould go to a\nspecialist, gat an\nindividual diagnosis and treatment for your\ntrouble on your\nkind of skin.\nThis may sound\nlike very obvious advice, but\nthere a re too\nmany women who try Aunt Jane'i\nointment, or Mary'i \"It's limply\nwonderful\" cream for ikin condl.\ntlom that need ind can be quickly\ncleared up by sound medical attention. I am talking to the healthy\nrun-of-the-mill women \u2014 which Includes most of us.\nThere are thr;ee types of normal\nskin\u2014dry, oily, and a combination\nof the two (with patches of each).\nIf you can't tell which type you\nhave, you can go by the law of averages. Four-fifths bf us have a\ntendency to dry skin after we are\n24 or 25. Steam heat and .careless\nexposure to wind and sun dry us\nout. A dry skin needs care, since It\n\"grows\" wrinkles easier, Is more\nsensitive and can become old-looking sooner than an oily one.\nTHE PROCEDURE\nHere is a quick routine for your\ndry-skin complexion. Remember,\nthis is conservation, not adornment\nAnd it's a before-breakfast and be-\nfore-bed procedure,\n1. Apply cleansing cream 'gently.\nWhether you do it with the up-and-\nout stroke is not as Important as\nthat you do it gently.\nfrom hairline an_ from ear to ear.\nJust leave it on for a minute or so\nthere, or you'll do more harm than\ngood.\nS. Now soak.a.cotton pad In cold\nwater, squeeze dry,.and soak again\nwith astringent. Pat lightly all over\nthe face. Dry\u2014and your, faoe is\nclean. If you've been really \"feel-\nthy\" do your creaming twice.\nOPINIONS VARY\nThere's as much disagreement\non the value of soap and water as\non how to make coffee, I've. seen\nwomen with beautiful complexions\nwho vow they owe it all to never\nusing soap and water. I've seen\nwomen with beautiful, complexions\nwho vow they owe it all to frequent\nuse of soap and water. I'm not violently pro or con, but I use a bland\nsoap on my face every day. If my\nface feels a little dried or taut from\nthe soap, I go over it lightly with\ncream,\n\u2022 If your skin is oily, your routine\nis almost the same. Your face merely needs, a lighter, .thinner cleasing\ncream. Choose a liquefying cream,\nand use astringent oftener. I don't,\nthink there's any possible argument\nagainst soap for oily skin unless it'a\na special condition being treated by\na doctor. The beBt results I've seen\nin counteracting that too-ehlny look\n(I really mean-greasy) have been\nachieved by the twlce-a-day use of\na soft face brush.and soap.\nY.W.C.A. President\nMuch-Travelled Girl \\\nMONTREAL (CP) - Lllace Reid\nBarnes is not .at all awed by her\ntitle of world president of the Young\nWomen's'Christian Associations, and\nshe seems to thrive on the work\nwhich keeps her away seven months\na year from her home at Lake Forest, 111. -   !\nMiss Barnes' has Just completed\nthe first year of her four-year term\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\nFreeman Furniture Co.\n'The House of Furniture. Values\"\nPHONE 116 - NELSON    .\nNewlyweds Honored '\nAt Fruitvale Party\nFRUITVALE,  BjC. - A recep- 9\ntion for Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dun-,\nlop who were married In Spokane,\nwas held at the home of the bride's:\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Boehmer. -:\nReceiving the guests with- the\ncouple, were their mothers who\nwore black dresses with corsage,\nThe bride chose a green suit and a\nred rose corsage.\nAfter a supper, served from \u25a0 \u25a0\ntable centred with a three-tiered\nwedding cake, a dance wai held,\n\".H*x\nWHITE\nWltm LAMP\n2 Don't stem annlvlni th. _.\u00bb\u00ab.__ a\u00bb world head of the Y.W.C.A. which\ntnm^______\\ ajspg M^m^m^mm\nthe'base of the throat and the face ____7i_\\\",\"__, !&\u00a3__$_*\u25a0\nfrom hairline \u00bbnA _____ ._,._. ...   inowdlng CWni. Her position in\nGET A CARTON TODAY\nvolves wide'trivelllng since the\n_ _ -      ;    \u25a0      ---'\u25a0- \u2014 wives w-ae .iravewng since ine\n8, Leave the cream on while you purpose of the world Y.W.CA. is to\nbrush your.teeth or your hair\u2014but study conditions ind problemi in\nilipf   ]__>_>.,_.   I,   ...   ...   . _.. --.    ..-__.. '  __     ...    .'. -   -.. . .       .\nvarious countries and to organize\n... ...... ,., v\u00ab _w_ . uuuulc or ao. various countries ana io organize\n4. Now wipe off the .grease and international training conferences'\ngrime with  a soft tissue. Gently, for Y leaders.\nNelson *nd District Distributer*\nWood Vollaneo\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n693 Baker tt\nPhoml-M\nTRAN8FER  DESIGNS\nIN 8 COLORS\nThirty-two rose motifs! Excellent\nvalue' These true-to-life colors-\ntea-rose and soft green are lovely to\ndecorate bed-linens, curtains, tow-\nell, tablecloths, blouses, iprons.\nWashable tool Transfer the' motifs\nin Just a few seconds\u2014no embroidery! Three-color designs \u2014 Pattern\n609 has 32 motifs, eight each of four\ndifferent motifs 1x2 _. to 3ttx8H\nihches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to the Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dipt, Nelion,\nK C, Print pliinly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nSuch a colorful roundup of handiwork ideas! Send twenty-five cents,\nnow for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalogue. Choose your patterns from our gaily Illustrated toys:\ndolls, household, and personal accessories. A pattern for a handbag is\nprinted Tight in the book. <\nTasty Bran Muffins\n3 kinds from 1 easy recipe\n_ Ibip. ahorl.nlng\nVt nip tugar er.\ngold., lywp\nI'M\nI .up Kollogg's\nAll-Bran\nYt tap mat\nI cup .[_!-\nflew\nVA lip. beklng\n_sw_ar\nHl.oipoonioll\nBland well shortening, sugar; add ess,\nbeat well. Stir In _______), milt;\n\u2022oak until most moisture il taken up.\nSift floor with baking powder, salt:\nadd to first mixture, stir only until\noombined. Fill greased muffin vans\nH full. Bake in*preheated _>od. _ot\noven (400F .) 80 min. Yield: 9 medium\nor 12 small muffins.\nSpicy 6rea Muffins i Mix 1 top. butter,\nH oup sugar, 1 tap. cinnamon.\nSprinkle over unbaked muffin batter.\nHoney-Nul Muffins i Put 1 tap. honey,\nchopped nutmeata. in each greased\nmuffin cup; add batter.\n\/  Fn will-ill iii-lnllf\nIII-blllui Mil III\n\u2022llli V, u, til*Iin\nMil.\nPrices like these prove\nyou can save at SAFEWAY\nCMlblwlUst__r,ilnM\u00bbiwrflH_i|M_i_l_\u00ab\u00abi\u00abi___i\n_ri\u00ab1fea_F\u00bb&iMt_i\u00ab__l.|n\u00abogU-\n\"w4_\u00abb__-H-_r___iai_|o_\u00abef_\u00ab|_MSH<_l__ec_i_MI\n2 for 49c\n\u2014-32c\n,lJ_iTb|_lp._d-lh.prt\u00bblll_l6Mt_.-i__Jwl_i__4_j<,\u00bb__)\nw4_iM_-it-_r___iai_|o_\u00abef_\u00ab_teiHi>taisc_i_M\ntoo mm v. Poll jo___ ____! oo \"queU-* \u2022_\u2022\u00bb _____ _0 \u00abdc_ -\nMl ih Mm yea will t_\u00bb ua gal mm Pt pm amay at mm\nit Grapefruit Sections Si's*.\n\u25a0^t Grapefruit Juice.-Sr=S?*r__\n* ORANGE JUICE S._t_ 2for65c\nir- GOLDEN CORN \u00bb_________ 18c\ni FANCY PEAS _rg*______   2 for 39c\n* WEINERS & BEANS te.._ 29c\n* FRESH BREAD .BWKB_i__ 2 for 25c\n* CANTERBURY TEA K\u00a3z;__ 91c\n\u2022\u00a3 Orange Marmalade tfr\u00ab_l__ 67c\n* GRAHAM WAFERS SS__>__28c\n* FRESH EGGSS^.1^      doz, 49c\n* AIRWAY COFFEE \u00abtS 94c\n\u25a0JasaL fijioduuciL\n\u2022 Sunkist ORANGES\n\u2022 CRISP CELERY _s\n\u2022 NEW CABBAGE\nExtra     ,\nSweet V Juicy\nSolid,\nGreen Heodi\n2 Ibs. 29c\n_ Ib. 15c\n- lb.10c\n^juLWrnifdmiL TJfaoU,\n* ROUND STEAK \u00ab\n* BLADE POT ROAST\n* COTTAGE ROLL\n__!__\nBrand.\nHalf or\nWhole ..\nlb. 98c\nlb. 79c\nlb. 69c\nPrieei Effective. Match 11th and 12th\nSAFEWAY\n ;.j8.r- NELSOH. DAILY NEWS, T UES0 AY, MAKHM\/. 93*.\nThe More People, More Prosperous\nCanada (an Become, Boards told\n' CRESTON, B.C. \u2014 A parallel be\ntween the rapid .developments of\nCanada and the United States was\ndrawn here tonight by L. Markham,\nmanager of the Chamber of Com.\npierce at Spokane, in addressing the\n81st annual banquet of.the Associated Boards of Eastern B.C.\nIt was a situation that demanded\nVie utmost co-operation between the\ntwo nations, Mr. Markham said. As\nth'e U.S. population swelled, its commerce grew stronger. Similarly the\nmore people Canada had the more\nprosperous it would become. United\nStates growth economically and\ntourist wise would mean much to\nCanada and tbe situation applied in\nfeverse \u2014 \"going along'hand in\n.hind.\",'.   *\u25a0'\"'\u25a0\n-i -Mr. Markham's speech was heard\nfey 100 delegates and guests ln the\nCanadian Legion hall. He was substituting for R. T. Rose, executive\nlecretary of Vancouver Board of\n\u25a0 Trade whb had been unable to fly\nhere as planned.\nREGIONAL\n.DEVELOPMENT ROLE\nJ The field of Regional development\nImposed a great' porblem in planning\nwhich only the boards could do.\n,;_.. He gave as ah example the coming\nif* Celgar's pulp and paper project\n.to the district ' .-'\n.\u00bb-, The district's great industries were\ntoasted in a series of brief addresses\nby the various delegates.\n- K.N. Stewart of Fernie, noting\n--.that the wealth of the province\nrested   primarily  on  Its  people,\npointed to the great Increase In\n\u2022; population \u2014 42 per cent In 10\n'\"Z'yeaf*.     \u25a0 v\n- .   In assuring hit listeners that It\nwas the people who would build\n* up the province, he urged that\n\u25a0  \"due heed\" be given to the establishing  of secondary  Industries.\nThe time was drawing near when\n\u25a0' they would be essential \u2014.\"think\nof the men and the youth coming\nbehind-.us,\"*   '.*.\nJ. W. Loader of Trail In respond*\nWing warned that in order* to get\nanything worth while it was also\nnecessary to give something. In his\nBine years In this province he felt\nits best attraction was the way lt\nibid Itself by giving \"the best climate in Canada, secenlc beauty be-\nATTRACTIVE\nINDIVIDUAL\nBEAN POTS\nt-li\nSend S labels from any of Helm\nBeam and 10 cents to cover\nhandling cost for each bean pot.\nH. J. Helm Company, of Canada\nltd.,Dept. S.P., Leamington, Ont. .\nybnd compare, companionship of\nfriendly people, the opportunity to\nbe useful to others.\"\nF. C. Ingram, Marysville, In\ntoasting mining, told of the groat\ndevelopments taking place In thl\nKimberley area where the future\nappeared to be 100 years ahead\nrather than the \"usual 40 years\nproposition' 'associated with mining. ; - ',;\": '.. V \"\u25a0\nDr. G. ft. Callback, Salmo urged\ndevelopment of secondary Industries. It was depressing to see\nnatural resources being shipped to\nforeign countries and then shipped\nback to Canada in finished form.\nToast to lumbering was given by\nGuy Constable, toastmaster of Cres-\nton, and in responding, Ci A. Anderson, Castlegar, presented the record\nfigures of the. past year enjoyed by\nthis industry. It was difficult for\nCastlegar people to fully grasp the\nsignificance of the coming of the\nCelgar pulp, and paper operations!\nits multi-million dollar expenditure\nwas beyond the grasp of the average\nman.' '-,''\n\/.EVOLUTION\nFrank Putnam, a former minister\nof agriculture and a farmer of the\nCreston district, toasted agriculture\nas the primary industry of any\ncountry. It had gone through a revolution \u2014 a few years ago 70 per ceht\nof the workers were engaged in\nfarming, today only 20 per cent \u2014\nin the mechanization of industry.\nThe fact that nature still called into\nthe field when planting time arrived\nin Spring,' was'saving the world today.   '\nDr. D. A, Perley, Grand Forks, described it as the \"basic industry of\nall' with the future of the Boundary\ncity and Creston-lying in producing\nof the essentials and necesitlei of\nlife.        :.:.;..\nR. Stephen of Kimberley toasted\n\"Transportation\" in houmorous style,\nthat had his listeners in stitches\nand Frank Coates.of Rossland followed suit, although seriously re\nminding tbe audience that transportation was the Ilfeblood of the-community. In every item given thought\nby the delegates in the business per'\niod, transportation had a function.\nIt meant progress to the province.\nV. L. McNaughton, Cranbrook,\nsaw   tourism   fast   becoming   a\nmajor Industry  and  In   his  response, H. D. Harrison' of Nelson\nreported that 178,000 tourists had\nvisited the Kootenay. Boundary In\n1981  as compared to  165,000 In\n1050. They had spent $9,000,000,\nabout $50 pier person. He stressed\nthe need to extend to these visitors\ncourtesy, servlco and good accommodation.\nThe Press wai toasted by Dr. C.\nH. Wright of Trill,- retiring president of the Association and response\ngiven by H. K. Legg, * publisher of\nthe Creston HeyieW and A. W.\nGibbon, Nelson Ttiaii? .frews Editor.\nHosts and ladies were toasted by\nByron Shrader of Spokane and G.\nC. Alger, Creston Board ot Trade\nPresident\nMrs. Shrader and Mrs. Markham\nwere present at the meeting.\nUnpleasant \"Surprise\nFpr Hungry Man\nTOKYO. March 10 (AP) - The\nshabbily-dressed old Japanese looked hungrily at the Tokyo restaurant window. ','-\u25a0\nHe picked up i brick from the\nsnowy sidewall and shattered the\nglass. He grabbed a dish of nishi^\nrice balls and sliced raw fish-und\ntook to hla heels.\nSeconds before police caught htm\nhe popped a rice ball Into his mouth\nand swallowed It.\nIt was made of wax.\nThe old man groaned and let police lead him to jail\u2014and some real\nfoodA\n',' , j ' ,\nCanadian Fliers\nOn British IV\nLONDON, Mirch 10 (CP) -Can-\nada'i\" No. 410 Cougar Squadron was\nOn view tonight to Britain's television audience, estimated at up to\n3,000,000 persons.\n. A sound film, taken at the R.C.A.F. base in North Luffenham, Rutland, showed action shots of F-86\nSabre Jets and the Canadians who\nfly them. _ *\nOne of the highlights wai a demonstration of close formation flying\nled by Sqdn. Ldr. Larry Hall of\nMontreal, officer commanding the\nCougars, A BBC cameraman, Flying\nalongside in an RAF Meteor Jet;\ntook shots which seemed to bring\nthe screaming jets right inside British homes. *\nOther Canadian pilots ln the flight\nwere FOS Lei Kerr of Three Riv-\n,ers, Que., Doit Morrison of Nordegg,\nAlta. Art Rayner of Medicine Hat,\nAlta., Frank Silvester of Toronto,\nand Bob Gibson of Guelph, Ont\n1850:\n= 1952\nptedtkaL BsuauiiL and, a, %_o\n-\u25a0_\u00bb \u25a0\u2014 mtaaawatammmmtn mt.  ***> \u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014M\u2014I\u2014w\nSitxndohtL o\u00a7, piano \u00a3xre(t<mri.i\n\u2014 \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0IIII-WI   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0III 111.1.\u2014   It.l \u2014IW\u2014     I- I! \u25a0\u25a0\u2014IMS-       mm   M\nHEINTZMAN\nRapjd Action - Pure Balanced tone\n\"Special Agraffe Bridge\n\u25a0i   Resonating Bass Bridge\nAIIExclusively Heintzman'-\nA WIDE RANGE OF NEW AND DELIGHTFUL\n'    CASE DESIGNS\n; .Trade In YoUr Old Cumberfeme Piano Now\nFOR CATALOGUE AND PRIC_!_I_T    .'\n'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'..\u25a0   WRITE OR CALL AT     '.'\n& Go.\nCalgary\nAlberta\nor\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nN.Jion,J\u00ab,C.\n===THE NAME IS YOUR eUA^NT|i _s_=\n3 Canadians fo\nMcCormlck Staff\nOTTAWA, March 10 (CP) - Hie\nNavy said today Canada has named\nthree veterans of North Atlantic\nwarfare to. the staff of Admiral\nLynde D, McCormlck, the new supreme Allied commander in the Atlantic, f\nAdmiral McCormlck,' due here\nnext week on a tour of Atlantic pact\ncapitals makes his headquarters at\nNorfolk, Va.\nThe three men are Capt Desmond\nW. -Hers, DSC, of Halifax, Cmdr. F.\nW. T. Lucas of Toronto, and Cmdr.\nJohn C. O'Brien of Montreal.\nCapt Piers won the DSC in 1943\nduring a two-year hitch' as commanding officer of the Destroyer\nRestigouche. He has been attending\nthe national defence college in\nKingston.\nCmdr. Lucas, a communications\nexpert, ended the war as commander of the frigate Kokanee.\nCmdr. O'Brien commanded the\ndestroyer Crescent for two years after the war.\nMeal Dearer for\nCoast Housewives\nVANCOUVER, March 10 (CP) \u2014'\nRetail meat shops here today are\npaying s!x cents a pound more for\nbeef than they did last Monday.\nPackers reported they have run\nput of the stocks of Alberta beef\nand now are selling beef bought at\nBritish Columbia cattle auctions\nlast week.\nThe packers also said they have\njust about reached the end of their\nstocks and have little hope of replenishing them, unless the provincial-federal embargoes on outside\nmeats are lifted.\nRetailers are paying 63 cents a\npound for beef carcasses and Vancouver housewives can expect to\npay between 85 and 95 cents a pound\nfor top grade roasts of beef.\nA report from Edmonton today\nsaid somr meat retailers have reported a drop Of 10 to 12 cents, a\npound on the price of steaks and a\ndecrease of eight cents for roasts:\nOne packer laid off 40 men here\nSaturday and others forecast layoffs\ntoday or tomorrow. .Somp packers\nhave put workers on vacation ih\nthe hopes they will not have to go\nthrough periods of no work and\nempty pay envelopes.\nThere was no sign from Victoria\ntoday that the B. C. embargo on\nprairie meat would be lifted.\nBuyers say .they think they have\nnearly cleaned up tb,e available supply of marketable cattle in the interior and will noiiy\" have to .Wait\nfor stockyard animals to be \"finished\" on dry feed lots before they are\nHt to kilL \" '\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press,\nLivingston, Ala. \u2014 Dr. Werrett\nWallace Charters, 77, Baptist official, author ana retired educationist v v \u25a0 \u25a0\nOmaha, Neb.\u2014Dr. C. C,Cr iss, 72-\ninsurance executive.\n| Toronto\u2014Henry .lit Wodson. 77.\nr ewipaper map for more than 30\nyears and noted for his news .coverage in rhyme.'\nNew. Glasgow, N.S. \u2014 James A.\nCunningham, '68, 'Vice-President\nand Managing Director bt the Victoria Coal Company.\nLos Angeles\u2014Dr. Leonard Walker, 71, symphony conductor.   .\nVictoria, B.C-Col. Ross Napier.\n74, last surviving member of the\nlate Gen. Sir Arthur Curie's or Ig-\ninal'itaff.  .   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\"\nToronto\u2014Maj. John O. Inwood.\n67, founder of Canadian air mail\nservice from Montreal to Ottawa.\nVahcouver-J. P. D. (Phil) Malkin, 74, wai time munitions director\nand later director of War Assets\nCorporation.\ni _  \u25a0'\"\n- tn the official order ot precedence\nin Canada, the Prime Minister ranks\nsecond, directly behin dlbe Governor-General.\nCandidates for Nobel Peace,Prize\nTHE NOBEL, INSTITUTE In Oslo, Norway, has announced the\n27 candidates for the .1952 peace prize. The U.8. nominees are: Prank\nBuchman, a leader In the Moral Rearmament movement; Giuseppe\nA. Boroeie,.Italian-born Chicago university professor; James T. Shot-\nJAMES'T. 8H0TWELL\nwell, Canadian historian now living In New York; and Clarence\nStrelt, a leader In the united world movement\u2014Central Press Canadian photos.\nNews of the Day\nRATES; 30o line, 40e lino black face type; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines; 10% discount for prompt payment\nMAC'8 COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\nBingo Tomorrow Night\nCathedral Hall.\n, L.A.TO B. OF.R.T.\nGen. meeting tonight 7:30 p.m.\nsharp. Followed by bake sale and\ntea: Open to. the public 8 p.m. Can.\nLegion Front Hall.' Eyerybody welcome. : -i\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONV'8 SHOE REPAIR8.\nClear Sheet Plastic, Ik\" Lucite,\n36\"x48\" sheets, or cut sizes at\nT. H. WATERS A CO, LTD,\nHave  you   investigated   Floater\nPolicy Insurance? See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY.   .\nAlways fresh films of any size at\nVALENTINE'S. And don't forget\nexpert developing service, too.\nATTENTION LADIES . '\u00bb\nSpring cleaning is just around the\ncorner. Brighten up your home with\nbrighter floors. For your floor landing and finishing, call Johnny Ari-\nchuk at phone no. 401-Y5. Free\nestimates. '\nWe have Phantom hose in the\nNewest Spring Shades.\nADRIAN MILLINERY.\n! FLO-ON\nRubberset Nylon Brushes\/\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\nNELSON LITTLE THEATRE\nMEETING\nTonight at 8 p.m., St\/Paul's Church\nbasement Mr. H. S. Hum, Executive Secretary of the B.C. tyami\nAssociation, will address the meeting on the \"Death of a.. Salesman\",\nThe public cordially invited to attend. Refreshments served.\nLA. TO CANADIAN LEGION\nGeneral meeting Wednesday, 8 p.m.\nImportant\nOrders   taken   now   for   Easter*\ncandy. See our specials today.\nGRAY'S.\nHOSPITAL .MEMBERSHIP DRIVE\nThe Interest af the public generally Is solicited. Help our hospital\nby purchasing a membership ticket\nfor $2. .0 and show an Interest .In\nthis Important local Institution' by\nattending the Annual Melting.\nVenetian Blinds ln plastic.\nPastel colors.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCall us for your Spring painting\nand paperhanging. G. Sutherland,\nphone 816-R3.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix It\nthrow it away Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nClean your- rugs with Lamorene.\nRemoves grease, lipstick, tar, gum,\nfood stains, etc. A tested product.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nA window full of bargains. \u2014\nSkirts, $1.98; shorts, .49; baby vests,\n.49, and many more articles.\nTOT-N-TEEN 8HOP.\n, A new shipment of chrome tables\nand chairs. Our stock is full. Any\ncolor you. want in your kitchen, we\nhave it Mc & Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nThe Best in Seeds and Bulbs for\nyour garden at\nCOVENTRY8' FLOWER 8H0P\nPHONE 962\nWATCH REPAIRS\nFor reliable repairs at moderate\nprices try COLLINSON.. JEWEL:\nLERY STORE, 561 Baker Street\nATTENTION\nChild   Health   Centre  and  Pre-\nSchool   Immunization   Clinic,  Me*\nmortal Hall today,' 2 to 4 p.m.    \u2022\nOne only\u2014Craftmaster table saw\nleft. Tilting table, complete with extensions, metre gauge, etc. 10% discount to clear. - HIPPERSON'S.\nSpring will soort* be here. Spruce\nup the pooch. Dog combs, brushes,\nrubber bones, harness, collars and\nleashes, at.WADES'. -'\n- Clean yottr rugs with Lamorene,\nthe wortder rug cleaner. Easier, taster: for less money. Buy Lamorene\nhow at.HIPPERSON'S.\nNew hats arriving daily. _\u2014.Hats\npriced from $2.95 to $8.95.  ,',\nADRIAN MILLINERY.\nJust Received\u2014A large assortment\nhat trimmings of beautiful flowers,\nADRIAN MILLINERY.\nKOOTENAY LAKE GENERAL\nH08PITAL 80CIETY\nNOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING\nAnnual General Meeting of the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nSociety will be held at the City\nHall.on Tuesday, March 18,1952, at\n8 p.m. All members of the Socjqty\nare requested to attend.\nL. CRUICKSHANK,\n.-. *   ,.-  Secretary,\n. CARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank doctors, nurses\nand staff bf Kootenay- Lake Gen'\neral Hospital for their kind attention to our daughter in her recent\nillness.\nMr. and Mrs. Duncan McDonald,\nYmir, B.C.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to extend our heartfelt\nthanks io all who showed so' much\nkindness and sympathy to Len during his long illness\/and for the\nmany beautiful flowers received at\nthe Trail-Tadanac Hospital and our\nhomes,\nHelen, Peter and the\nDavis family.\npne-Time Prospector Draws Maps\nFor Young Engineers lo Study\nCompany Plans\nTo Continue\nHome-Building\nCASTLEGAR, B. G-Thl Col-\numbia Builders Ltd. (G. W. Relkoff ahd W.'G. Hoodlcoff), which\nhas two homes near* completion, '\nplans to build more to help meet\nCastlegar's housing needs. i.\nThe two houses near completion,\non Fourth Street are 28 by 31 feet '\none-storey buildings with dry fin-\nish Inside and Cedar siding, and of\nup-to date design. \u25a0 \"\u25a0'.. ,\nThey consist of a full: basement\ntwo'bedrooms, a living room, kit; .\nchen nd bathroom.\":.'\u25a0';-. \u25a0\u25a0-'\nThe Columbia Builders ilartetf\nwork on the-houses in tbe Fall, and\nwork has advanced during tha Witt:\nter months so that the firm expecti\nto have'them completed in April ,\n\"We plan to build more in the\nmonths to come,\" Mr. Relkoff said\nMonday,- \u25a0 ..\u25a0-\u25a0..'v   . .'\u2022'.\nU.S.M__Ma..all.\nKIRKLAND _AKE. Oiit (CP)-\nWhat happens to old prospectors\nwhen the packsack becomes too\nheavy.and the old legs won't perform? ' ;      .\nOne of the oldest of them, .Walter\nLoudon, at 82, is making a modest\nliving in this Northern Ontario city\nmaking maps of mining claims. It's\na job he should know more than a\nlittle bit.about.'-:*\nA resident of. this section for 58\nyears, Mr. Loudon has watched the\ncountry change' from a _ eat unknown wilderness to a lively mining\nand lumbering area. He helped sur-\nvery, the Canadian. Pacific and- the\nAlgoma Central Railways. He surveyed it ill, but never struck It\nrich.,'--   ,       .  \"-.,\nToday, when a prospector needs\na map to close a deal.be comes to\nWalter. Large muting companies\nalso humber among his clients and\ntourists' like to take home some as\nsouvenirs of the section;\nWhen asked whether or not Kirkland Lake may become a ghost area,\nWalter replies the idea is \"crazy.\"\nHe says the \"more they scratch here,\nthe mora they find. Some claims\nneed only a few^ore feet dug and\nthey'll be 'other Lakeshores.\"\nBorn in England, Mr. Loudon\ncame to Canada with his parents\nwhen he was seven months old. He\nlived and grew up ln East Toronto,\ngoing to. school there. During his\nteens he prospected along Lake Superior and after the Algoma -Steel\nCorporation was formed, went to\nWork prospecting tor them.\n\"I was the man Who put the first\nsurvey figure on the rock bf the\nMisslssagi Canyon,\" he says..\nFor three and a half yeari, up to\n1919, he worked tor the Ontario Department of Mines; ai a surveyor.\nThat's where he, learned how' to\ndraw maps. He still has stacks of the\noriginal ones.    :;:\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0    \u2022,-' ',.\nHe settled in Kirkland Lake in\n1920. He dubbed the place \"the hub\nof the North\". It is the supply centre for both the Ontario and Quebec\nmining districts. v\nShow Understanding of Blind by\nTreating Them as Normal Friends\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Canada'! ie\u00bb-\nenth annual White Cane Week, let\naside Ih tribute to th. more than\n18,000 blind Canadians, will be held\nFeb. 10-18.    ,  :\nRehabilitation of the; blind is the\ntheme of the observance this year,\nsponsored by tbe .Canadian Nation,\nal Institute for the Blind ond the\nCanadian Council of the Blind.'\n\"lit these days when Canadians\nare'thinking more and more, about\nthe rehabilitation of handicapped\ncitizens, it is fitting that they should\ngive one week .to consideration bf\nthe problems of those handicapped\nby the loss of physical vision,\" say.\nMrs. Sadie 'Bending, President Of\nthe Council.\n\"Rehabilitation may Involve the\nmaking ot a l_v_ig,_but in its deepest sense it involves the making, or\nremaking, of a. life.and a soul so\nthat after the detour Involved, the\nindividual travels on to victorious\nliving.\"\nA C.N.I.B. release says that while\nfinancial support-is important re-\n' \u25a0    WHIST DRIVE\n! Blessed Sacrament Hall, Fairview,\ntonight, 8 p nv Admission 35 cents;\nRefreshments.\nGay potted tulips, daffs, narcissi;\netc., for hospitalized friends and\nshut-ins. Drop in or phone 910.\n.     MAC'S FLOWER,SHOP.\nNext Civic ^heatrei : v     .\nBoys' all-wool pullover sweaters.\nAssorted colors, sizes .4 to 8; ideal\nfor.: in-between season weather. \u2014\n81.89 each. \u2014 , :\nTHE  CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nRE8ERVE MARCH 26TH FOR\nGYRO  FASHION  SHOW,\n\u2022:. TEA  ^ND  BAKE  8ALE.\nCIVIC CENTRE AT 3 P.M., 8 P.M.\ny   'Admission nd \u25a0'.\nMONTH END SALE\n10-pce. Bedroom Suite\u2014matching\nbutt   walnut\u2014$199.50.  Reg.  $249.50.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.. _.   '\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.       PHONE 1560\nRescue Helicopter\nLands oii Sioux\nESQUIMAU, B. C. March 11\n(CP) \u2014 HMCS Sioux is probably\nthe only destroyer in history ever\nto provide.a landing space for a\nhelicopter at sea.\nThe story of how she did It came\nto light as Sioux pulled ln here Saturday from her latest .Korean, patrol. Her crew told how her after-\ndeck was cleared and strengthened\noff the Korean coast Feb. 8, tp I-\nlow the landing of a helicopter bearing an emergency case.,\nNaval officials believe lt Is the\nfirst time an aircraft ever landed\naboard a destroyer.      i\nEMERGENCY CALL\nThe Sioux was carrying out anti-\ninvasion patrols among the islands\noft the West coast of Korea when\nshe received a message reporting\nan emergency appendix case on one\nof the. islands. But due to ice conditions, no boat could be sent ashore\nso a U. S. army hell? .pter was sent\nin to pick up the unidentified patient : ; ''\u25a0      ..-.'. '' '\/\u25a0\nA small helicopter made two landings first'to test the deck. Then\nthe larger' helicopter bear^ig the\npatient gingerly but safely touched\ndown after a practice run.\nThe patient Was found to require\nan operation and Sioux set course\nfor.a British cruiser equipped with\nan operating room. The patient was\ntransferred to'the cruiser without a\nhitch. '   - ::  '..-.\nGREAT NEWS TOE\nMOTHERS\nHen it a stand new cough\nsyrup made _p-cUu> for\nKIDDIES COUGHS AND\nCOLDS. If Ultra M <__.*\nthey fllk for morel Flnt\ndoee b_n_i fait, lafo relief.\nJACK and JILL li made hy\n_\u00a3?Si,. f\" \">\u25a0*\u00ab\u00ab \"I BucHey-a\nllft-M _\" tthtan and li aijood for\ntheir coughi and eolda aa Buckley*!\n-Urtura b tat your am- Prloa III..\nSee Reconciliation\nBetween Aly, Rita\nBOMBAY, India, March 10 (AP)\n\u2014 Circles closely associated* with\nPrince Aly Khan, visiting here, report that a reconciliation is possible between the prince and his\nestranged wife, actress Rita Hay-\nworth. ..'    ,   ' '\nGOLD 8MUGGLER8 CAUGHT\nGENEVA, March 10 (Reuters)-\nFour smugglers who brought gold\ninto Switzerland in the shape of\nstatuettes and ashtrays have been\narrested. The gold believed worth\nmore than $2,250,000 was. obtained\nin Africa, South America and other\ncountries It was moulded into the\nstatuettes in Paris and flown here,\nthen melted down and smuggled\nInto Italy for sale on the black\nmarket\nCASTLE-JAR, B. C-The Cutlet\ngar Bridge Committee hopes to ob- *\ntain a speaker or speakers from the\nNorthport or Colville Chaipberi of\nCommerce to address its big publle\nmeeting here Friday night. ....\n. Many other i interesting matter!\nconnected* with the campaign for a\nbridge to replace the preserit'fe_7\nacross the Columbia River here are *\nscheduled to cbnie before 'the meeting, which will be i(tended, by representatives .of every organization\nIn the district   .    . ,    .\nTheJBrldge Copunittee wai eirtib- :\nllshed recently under the sponsor!-\nship of the. C_tleg_t .Chimbir of\nCommerce .and has th. backing of\na host of local organizations. '   .\nIte efforts are. being devoted at\npresent to bombarding Victoriaiwlth\nletters requesting a!bridge.'.(each\norganization sends its letter in turh),\nand to publicity to impress upon\nthe public the.value of the Committee's work and the need for a bridge.\nGlnnySlmms\nCompares Blue Bonnet\n\u2014 Sings Its Praises!\nhabituation means much more to\nthe blind person.\nAny act which will include a\nsightless friend in. home and social\nactivities is considered an importr\nant contribution.\nOn the preventive side, Miss k. I.\nThomas of the C.N.I.B. says White\nCane Week, with Its emphasis on\nthe sightless, is a good time to\nthink about the sigBted.\"\nCarelessness with playthings often\nil,responsible for the loss of sight\nin* childhood, says Miss Thomas.\nPreventable industrial accidents ite\nanother cause of (jllndness. ';   ._\u25a0..'\nW. L. Cummings, chairman of\npublicity for C.N.I.B., lays however\nmost blind persons lose their sight\nwhen they enter their 60s, and for\nthese, re-adjustment, is difficult..\n\"The blind are anxious to lead\nnormal lives and enjoy mingling\nwith the sighted wherever possible,\"\nhe says. \"If you have, a blind friend!\ninvite him to a party. Offer him a\ndrive the next timeryou are motoring through the country. Go with\nhim to church or the theatre, and\nabove all, rememj_f\u00a3r your blind\nfriend is a normal person who cannot see.\" J.'\n*;\nGive your meala a mow ndtel Talc*\nthis Up from Gihny Simma. Com>\npare Blob Bonnet Margarine irith\narm spread at amy price. like .the\ncelebrated songstress, you'll love thi\nmorning-fresh sunny-sweet flat\nthis   fine^quality   all  vegetable  mar.\nfarine. You'll Appreoiate Bit*\nOnnet's nutrition. And you'll welcome\nits real economy. So buy Blub Bonnbu\nand get. \"all 3\" \u2014 Flavor! Nutrition!\nEconom-e-el Use it in cooking, on\nvegetables, as a delicious spread.\nBlob'Bonnet Margarine is sold ih two\ntypes \u2014 regular economy package with\ncolor wafer, and also in the fomoui\nYellow Quik bag for fast, easy color.\n\u25a0Mt:\nHelp The mM Red Cross\nftmk'm mm\nTEA\nFast Frequent Service\n\u2014 5 hrs. 50 mini.\n\u2014 10 hrs. 10 mini.\n\u2014 12 hrs. 25 mini.\n\u2014 12 hrs. TO mi-is,\n\u2014 13 hrs. SO mini\nConnection! te the Morltlmeo\nFly the family for half fart.\nInquire about T.C.A.'j\nfamily faro plan.\nSee your Travel Agent or TCA Office.\n656 Howe Street (Opp. Georflla Hotel)\nPhOne TA 1211   <\nTRANS-CANADA\nINIIINATIONat      \u2022     tfUNS.AtlANIIC\ni IIAFUCONIININTAI  .\n7^\nwat\n Long-Term Planning Ahead\nOf Castlegar Commissioners\nNICK',OGLOW\nA. T. HORSWILL\nRJtt|bir> Store\nTo Be Extended\nCASTLEGAR, B. C\u2014To meet the\nI demands of increased business, Mr.\nlaud Mri. Fred Stetoniuk plan to ex-\nItend Rigby's, coffee: counter and\n[novelty shop premises.\nI Work will start in a few days on\nIthe extension,' which will be aa large\nlas the- novelty chop, space, and. will\n[be uE.d'for both novelty business\nlind coffee counter space. The ex*\n\u25a0tension will be made at the rear of\nItho building, and will be of cfuc*\n\u25a0coed frame construction.\nI The itore te also Castlegar depot\nIlbr Western Greyhound Lines, and\n\u25a0Kit room accommodation will be\n[Installed; in the basement at the\nI some time.\nI Mr. and Mrs. Stetoniuk purchased\nI the business; a year ago in January\n|frOm Kenneth Rigby.\n\"Lately, we-have been extremely\nI erowded,\" the owners explain. \"Bus-\nliness this Winter has been as great\ni normal Summer business.\"\nLAW FIRM OPENS\n|lN CASTLEGAR\nVCASTLEOAR, B. C. - John A.\nLliacDonald, son of Donald MacDonald, Q.C., Trail lawyer, will'start\na liiw practice' here.\n: Mr. MacDonald, recently called to\nthe Bar,' received bis schooling. ln\n1fea.ri._l weht on to1 University of\nBr C. He graduated with a Bachelor,\nof Arte degree In 1048 and received\nhis law degree in 1951.. He has been\nactive in labor circles. -\n>He Is the'third In hli family to\ntake Up law. An older brother Is ln\npartnership with his father.\nStreief, Sidewalk,\nWaterworks Jobs\nSlatted for 1952\n\/CASTLEGAR., Bi'isffe.tt\nthere ever was a board of commissioners with a busy time\ndhead of, it, .it's the -Village\nof Castl-gar's five -member\nboard. .   .\nContinuation otlts street Improvements and sidewalk program, and\nwaterworks extension, are the principal projects which will be carried\nout this yeir., - .   '   -\nBut nlannlng for the future will\noccupy the commissioners and their\nchairman, Nick Oglow, for the most\npart.   ' ,        i\n. There are such things, as a water\nsupply, town planning, lire hall and\nmunicipal office accommodation and\nother programs which ;\u25a0 nnist be\nlooked to in view pf thei -lobulation\nInflux-which is.anticipated 8,8 a re.\nsuit df \u25a0Cergar.'Dsvelopm'e'ht. Company's . projected ^fe'OO-.OOOv.'foVest\nindustry for Castlegar. and the Arrow'Lakes.',?' -'   '\u2022'; '-\"'''*\nThe, affiliate of.the Celanese Corporation of-America )ias. informed\nthe commission-that the village's\nwater supply; which' comes'by pump\nfrom the Columbia River, will be\npolluted by its operations.. .'.'>'.'\nAs a result, a preliminary survey\ni| being made in preparation _Or a\nlong-term water \/project-\nTOWN PLANNING .''\nA new town planning commission\nhas been appointed by. the village\ncommission to map out the village,\nand in this matter, as in the. water\nsiipply situation, there are many\nwrinkles to be Ironed but '\n. However, since five years ago-.the\nvillage .has been collecting data,\nwhich will be studied and revised\nin readiness for .the arrival -of J. H.\nDOughty-Davies of Victoria, director of the regional planning division of the B. C. Department of\nMunicipal Affairs:\nIn the meantime, applications\n' for permits for businesses wishing to start In what are now residential 'areas are being deferred.\nBoth the  commission  chairman\nand A. T.. .Horswill, Village Clerk,\nagree  that  the  village. needs to\ndouble its  present  fire  hall  and\nmunicipal' office accommodation,\nNEED-DANCE HALL\nCastlegar Is also ln need of*-n\ncommunity recreational centre, or,\ntor the time being, a hall suitable\nfor dances,\nTwin Riven Hall li too small for\ndances. Board of Trustees of Castlegar School'District will allow organizations to use the Stanley Humphries Junior-Senior High School\nfor practically any function except,\npublic dances. \u25a0..'\u25a0. v.,\ni Tdenpi Cftfonatio-i Hall, acquired\nby the village in IBM and operated\nby its parks board, but this is badly\nin need of repairs. The Castlegar\nKiwanis Club wants to obtain management of the hall and to rehabilitate it ,',\", .-'\nThe Village Is also,owner of new\nrecreation  ground*;  Deed  for a\nblock East of the bridge on Main\n. Street has been turned over to\nthe village In perpetuity for recreational purposes, .\nPresentation of the deed was made\nrecently at a concert\/sponsored by\nthe Castlegar and District Projects\nSociety. The site _*gs bought by\nthe Society from a _5oukhobor organization. .John Makaroff turned\nthe deed over to G. H. Wanless.\nPresident of the Society, who in\nturn presented it to Mr. Oglow.\nOther problems _Jace the commission, such as the need' for\u2022 a\nbridge to replace the present Columbia River ferry, antiquated by\nthe speed of modern .transportation.\nA bridge, the majority of Castlegar\nresidents' feel, Only Would tit the\nneeds of their growing up-and-coming community. ,-> -\nHEALTHY FINANCIAL\n8TATU8\nThe village is ln better financial\nposition than many of its neighbor\nvillages, 'having an $18,000 surplus\nCelgar Office\nBeseigedby\njob-ffunfers\n, CASTLEGAR, B.C. -. Celgar Development Company has, set up temporary offices in Castlegar \u2014 but\nnot for interviewing prospective\nemployees.\nR. H. Leech, who came to Castlegar from New Brunswick when the\noffices opened above the post office\ntwo weeks ago, has been harassed\nby people seeking Jobs ever since\nhe moved in.\n\"W. are not hiring tor the present,\" he explains. Mall applications,\nhowever,-may be addressed to the\noffice,, and wUl be kept ori file for\nconsideration if and when: Celgar's\napplication for a forest management\nlicence Is granted. '-'\n\"'The*company is ^marking time,\"\nhe-pointed out-until the,day when it\ncan,go ahead with its plans for a\ngiant forest industry for the are*\nMeanwhile, Mr.' Leech is a one-\nman department in an office which\nhas been established on a temporary\nbasis as a local contact between th .\ncompany, and business connections\nin the district-\nCASTLEGAR, B. C-B. C. Forest\nService's new, Castlegar ranger dis-\ntrict\/headquarters will be completed\nthis year, with construction of an\noffice building painting jobs,\" ..\nThe Service hopes to start.soon\non the office accommodation and\nwill have it finished: late this Summer.. '.'.'..'_\nThli Winter the Service completed work on warehouse to house\nfire-fighting equipment and a garage built of frame construction with\ndrop siding on.the Southern trans-\nprovincial highway South of Castlegar. A temporary office nearby will\nbe used when tbe new office is\nbuilt as a staff house.\nThe land on which the new buildings are situated was a portion of a\nblopk owned by.' the Castlegar\nSchool District and unsuitable for\nschool purposes owing to its proximity to the highway.\nDecision to move tho headquarters from Rossland to Castlegar was\nmade in. favor of a more central location.\nAn area of 1500 square miles taking in Rossland, Trail'and the Columbia Valley past Deer Park ii\npetyedZ ,\":'..\" Z.':   ;\u25a0_\u25a0-'\u25a0'.-  '.'\u2022\nThe headquarter! aro staffed by a\nranger, and two assistant rangers. A\nforester may.be posted there If'del-\ngar Development Company's plans\ngo ahead. '\" ,' \"\nfrom' last year to. work on. But Its\nprojects are sizeable.,\nThe commission has signed a contract for a new fire truck with a\n500-Imperial-gallon pumper, and expects delivery in four months\/But\nas the volunteer department has\nroom for only Its present truck In\nthe fire hall, accommodation is being sought.\npast year's commission built 14,-\n000 feet of new streets and gravelled\n18,000. feet. This year's commission\nhopes to extend paving to Cooperative Transportation Society's premises, and will prepare ground for\ncontinuing cement sidewalks as far\nas the No. 1 Elementary School.\nFifth Avenue will be prepared-and\nallowed to settle preparatory to\nblacktopping next year.\nThe commission haa \/also placed\nan order for 2500 feet of, pipe for a\n$10,000 water works extension plan,\nand a medhanical digger Is being\nbought tor attaching to the present\nmachine. - \u25a0   '       '\nThe commission meets twice\nmonthly in addition to holding special taieetings.\n\u25a0i* , -\nIN TH? MIDST of West Kootenay activity since\nearly days, yet.principally a residential town, Castlegar\nhas beep promised a major industry'of its own and the\nrole of a leader in'district progress. Site* for Celgar Development Company's, plants a short distance-from West\nRobson is shown here, along wife boundaries of the '466-\nacre Village qf Castlegar .and-the larger Village of Kinnaird, with a mile of unorganized, territory in between.\nDotted line' points to what public, works officials have\n' described as the logical place1 for a bridge\u2014below the\npresent ferry .crossing and in the \"same general area as\nthe railroadibridge. .\u25a0... -.\nThe CastlegarrArrow Lakes area in which the pulp\nand. paper industry will be chiefly locate_tVi_ served by,\nwaterways, railway;'highways and air,.-transport. The:\nSoutheast triangle of land between-the kootenay^Co.tim-!\nbia.Rivers is location of the s West Ko^t'ehayvpWipSry\nairport, operateel jointly ;\\>y the\" three', communities 'of\nCastlegar, 'Kinnaird aricfc Nelson.;^^Highw?ys|:jl\u00a7rgeljr'par-\nallfel rail lines,! Hydro-electric development'is, he?yy..\".' ''\nActual site of 'the proposed pulp and .paper.'pl_ints, is\na promontory about three railesWest'of-Castlegar, known i\nhistorically as Wesley. Ninety-five'Miss to;the'North, at\nthe 'head of the Arrow Lakes is Nakusp, whicj^'wiji hecojiie'\ncentre of logging operation's for, the new ;__dustyy..\ni~ :  \u2014Daily iffeWiS'di'awing.\nFor, New Firm\nBrothers\nTo Erect |\nBuilding   I\nCASTLEGAR, BiC; - Th*'\nbasement is already being diif\nfor a business block whicfi\nNick and William Oglow Ar*\nbuilding on the Southern\nTransprovtacial Hlghw_f\nSouth of here. ,   -\nThe brother! will opcrito a builf.\nIng supply business in the one.\nstorey, 25 by 60 foot building, u)|\nhove plans for additions later.\nThe building will go, up next t*\nCastlegar Dry. Cleahers, which (j i\nowned and operated by Nick Oglow..'\nWith expansion for which Castlegar Is destined, tho brothers fe\u00abl\nbuilding supplies will be much.in\ndemand. {They, expec. their- building\nwill, be completed in two or threi\nmonths,   .'.-;\u2022\u2022..' *.\u25a0'\u2022;\u2022'.    :\u25a0'.-'\u25a0*:_.  \"\/.\" :\nAT NEW SUB-OFFICE\nCASTLEGAR, B. C\u2014More thai. 500 motor vehicle\nlicences\/amounting to approximately $15,000, have been\nissued at the new Motor Vehicle Branch sub^office here\nsince the beginning of February.\nTheplates are'issued-from the village office here.\nBefore the sub-office was established, vehicle owners\nin this area were required to go to either Trail'or Nelson to\nobtain their licences.        \u2022 ,; '.:   '\" : '\n' The Castlegar sub-office\" was set up at about the same\ntime as Saltao's a couple of months ago.      .\"\nSites Arertt packing\nansions\nCASTLEGAR; B. C-\u2014Although it is faced with an increase in its school population, Castlegar School District No,\n9 is in a ftiirly good position\nas far as land is concerned.\nFar-sightedness on - the part of\nthe present board and, previous\nschool boards has built up the school\ndistrict's land.        .-.'   - . \u25a0\n\"We have plenty of room for exl-\npension throughout the district\" according to Charles King, secretary\nof the board of trustees.\n\u2022 The school district owns sight\nacres of practically level land on\nwhich stands the new, highly-mod-\nern Stanley Humphries Junior-\nSenior High School, and three and a\nhall acres nearby on which the\nnewly-built three-room. CasUegar\nelementary school No. 2 is situated,\nand three acres where the Castlegar\nNo. 1 elementary school stands.\nIn addition, there is land ln the\ndistrict such as at Robson, at Blue'\nberry, and land suitable for a small\nelementary school at Kinnaird..\nTho Stanley Humphries school\nIs now attended by 360 students,\nand could handle another 90 with*\nout feeling too much of a pinch.\nThe No. 2 elementary school will\nlend Itself to expansion. It has services for lour rooms, ahd any number of extra units could be added.\nIn the event of an Immediate Influx, the school board could put\nthe abandoned Raspberry, school into u.e for accommodation of 120\npupils as an elementary addition.\nThe Raspbery school is a four-room\nbrick school house on the Southern\nTrans-Provincial Highway East of\nCasUegar.    .\nThe board has bids on a 55-pas-\nsenger bus which will brings its\ncomplement of school buses to four.\nA total of 750- students are transported daily.\nLoading Ramp Built\nCASTLEGA&, B-C. \u2014 Canadian\nPacific Railway Company has just\ncompleted the construction of a loading ramp here.\nThe Company decided to build the\nramp after receiving numerous requests from organizations and individuals for its'installation. Previously! certain pieces of heavy machinery could not be unloaded here.\nTHE BRQAD-VALLEY; where the Kootenay River\n(left) ahd: the Columbia.River (foreground) meet, is ideal\nfor expansion. Southeast of Castlegar is'the Castlegar.air-\n.pqrti: much-improved under the ownership and admin-\n.^Stion^(SfyNel_on, Castlegar and Kinnaird, and only\nWest Kootenay. point of call on Canadian Pacific Airlines''\n..f....\n\"Southern route. A ,$65,000,000 integrated forest industry\nwould benefit' not Only Castlegar, Kinnaird and Robsqn,:\nbut also farming communities along the lOOrmile Arrow\nLakes such as Edgewood, Renata, Deer Park and settlements farther North which are in a rich, Scenic bijt alriiost\n\"f6rgdjt__i\" country. Nakusp's position as a logging centre\nis also expectedto be enhanced.\u2014J. G. Craft'photos.     \"\nCastlegar Marks Time\nUntil Celgar Arrives y|\nCASTLEGAR,:B.C.-The people,of;C9_tlegar_.and,Its\nsister communities, Kinnaird and Robson, are .watching and\nwaiting these days..       'Zii.- \u25a0'\u25a0:'\".   '-' 'ZZ-   '<;'?'\u00a3,. _\u25a0?.\/]\nThey are marking time untU'the,cWa\"iih-gd*S'upfoii'\n\"The Castlegar Story.\" ~ Z^^\u00b1___~__^^.\nLong before Celgar Development\nCompany', announced that It' \u201ehad\nplans for a multi-million dollar fot-\nest Industry centred on the Castlegar area, the people had- known of\nit Surveyors and preliminary field\nmen; \"ho matter how unobtrusively\nthey work, have a way of leaving a\nscent\nSo, Celgar's January announcement came as an anti-climax, and\nwhile no one doubts the company!!\nintentions, they.>are waiting..u\u201et(l\nthe gigantic pulp and'* newsprint\nmills become facts. .    > .,;   j\nThis period while Celgar's application fore forest management licence for 3,000,000 acres' goes\nthrough government 'charinels, '-is\ncreating what one resident has described as a \"state of confusion.\"'\nBUMOR8 FLYING. ' \"    \\.\u25a0\u25a0.\nRumors, of what such-and-such\na company plans to bring'to Castlegar and of big housing deals,'are\nrampant \"You hear so many rumors you get so that you don't listen\nto .any of them,\", in the opinion of\nseveral Castlegar people,\nare, \u2022'holdlM,tight.;:,0.:\u00ablie'they\nare, asking,as much ,as 10,000''tig\nb'uiljli^., litei; :_h,.,.th_ '*dojVfl-towii\nareafor land which would normally\nfetch $ioqo_-.;':.:.::,,_: iZwtff.*\nCertain circles are frowning op\n. the speculation- .They, claim ttisjt\nproperty, _.wneri ih the. buslnesa\nsection by holding out lor '_ah-\ntastic\". prices,. aM.ip.s!nj^_illd|j}g\n,: Onto\\outskir ta oi the' village....\n. Few property changes are'.taking\nplace,.and-alfhough' village'Ollices\ngel. daily requests lor information\nfropi local residents and;'outsiders.\nwishing to start businesses; tnd practices,the majority, are-waiting until\nCelgar's,forest management licence\ni| granted. -Also, it's not \/quite 'this\nseason fdr buildihg. .;,  .   i.'\\.   .\nSome, however,-'bound to get ln\non the ground floor, Ire going, ahead\nwith building and-extension plans.'\n\u25a0iJWithin a- few d.iy_i'at least two\nannouncements - Pts. expected, concerning business .ventures. ,-,\nCastlegar villagers agree on one\npoint, that It would be nice to look\nin on the Castlegar: district eight\nChamberPressing\nFor Improvemenls\n'CASTLEGAR, B.C. \u2014 Castlegif\nowes:M* Of 'lte.,bir)gh.:::huitl5'\nbustle appearance to Its active, irai.\nprovement-conscious .Chamber oi\nCommerce. Z\\.Z''i,Z:.. '\u2022'\u25a0?.'.\nI-ii Chamber, along. with*, othur\norganisations,, agitated for' serv\u00ab|#\nWhich' are nqw taken for graqte*\n1n;the villlgii'i -progrera. Arid itj\nkeeping at it ' >\u25a0\u25a0\nEstablishment of n ,'liquor; itore\nfor Castlegar; li- being > pressed, ter.\nThrough a network-of subTCommit.\ntees; rad and bridge improvement*\nare being, sought including'repair,\nto the Robspn;:rqad,, wig-wag's, fo\u00bb\nrail and road crossinjsiln tho Kinnaird, and Blueberry'flreek\"atean,\npatching up of the GenellO; bliiffji\nsection of Uw highway South en_\nsetting-up of, a historic-scenic look. -\noutlprBrillliBtpoint:1- -.it'.' .\/\n> - Establishment of, a,- sub-depot of\ntha - Provincial public 'works do-\npartment- at Castlegar ,is, anotheif\naim, Truckp, serving :tho; area; come\nfrom Rossland and spend too -mucji\ntime, travelling to and from CaStla.\ngar Jobs, 'e9pecially.;wc^k.'-ri- ^i\u00bb\nSyriijga.Creek road,' the'Chambei;\nclaims. . . .-,,, j\n,,<The Castlegar Bridge Committed\nrecently received: word j from: __.au -\nE. T. Kenney that the .demand jlw\nestablishment .of the sub-depot' \"it\nconsidered Justifiable, will'- be :.'\u00abe_\ncepted;'.,\u201e..,._.\u25a0'*..\u2022:   '-.'- .   ;,\nProperty owners lor fniles around years hence\u2014now.\nNewOplQiptelrM\n\"CASTLEGAR, B.C \u2014\":k lieW'iop.\ntpmotry practico will open\"hero\nwithin i lew'diyi.'-' \u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0 -.-.-\"..'*\n- Kenriath 'Mftrfow.ot Nelson will\nbe associated withtenry;._4-__u_ii.\u00bb\n61' Trail in the business, one of\nseveral,professional practises-which\nare slated fo^ Castlegar. ; v > \u2022\n. Bbrn in Trail,_^_'Mprrpw''.te'the\nson-of Mrs. Margaret 'Morrow -ot\nNelson. Ho. received his'educatloa\nIn Nelsoq, and wai graduated froitt\nNelson High School, in IMS. After\nattending the University of B.C: for\na year, Mf. Morrow went to Brilver-\nslty bf Toronto and in* 1951 was ono\nof three Western Canada ittidehti\nawarded medals,' ton studies, at ita\nCollege,of Optometry. He his recently been practising at Vancouver.\nDrug Store, Offices, Maybe Bank\nLewis Building To Be %t^de<i\nCASTLEGAR, B.C. \u2014 As soon as\nthe weather permits,, E. A. Lewis\nplans to extend his neat, frame-\nstucco building on Castlegar's main\nstreet.   \u25a0\u25a0 ,\nThe builijing will continue to\nhouse his Castlegar Barber Shop,\nand in addition will accommodate\na new drug store'to be operated\nby R., E. Goulet and possibly a\nbranch of the Batik of Nova Scotia.\nThere will ba seven more ollices\nupstairs. ',',.\nMr. Lewis intends to extend hli\nbuilding, which is 22by 82 leet to\nSO leet square. The new portion will\nbe either ol reinlorced concrete or\ncinder block. T-!'; -      ,,\nThe Variety Store, next'to the\nbarber shop in the same building is\nmoving out to make way tor the\ndrug store. The _lank olNpva Scotia\nhas ah option on the extension. ('\u25a0\n. Mr. Lewis hope! to have the ea.\ntension completed by mid-Juno. ,\nA resident ol Castlegar lor nearly\n10 years, Mr. Lewis has build hlo\nbusiness \"from ground up.\" Ho\nstarted his barber chop oni;part.\ntime basis, workipg lor- thi,: Consolidated Mining and Smelting Com.\npany in Trail when he wasn't in tho,\nshop, and has worked up to a'two.\nchair barber business.   -.    ,i .\nVILLAGE OF CASTLEGAR, with its pride, the.Stan-\n,ley Humphries Junior-Senior High School in the centre,\nis shown in this panoramic picture. The Columbia River\nand the rock bluff, familiar landmark at Robson, are in\nthe background. The community's growth began when it\norganized its own water company in 1937 and followed\nWith a cooperative transportation society. The population\ngrew.from 400 in.'1938 to 1000 in 1947 and n.arly 2000 today.. A population of 11,000 has been predicted with Celgar Development Company's projected forest industry.\n\u25a0 -*,\"\n 8-iHllsbN DAILY NEWS,TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1952\n. \u2022..> JOHN .RICHARD B\/kYL.SS* right hu i police escort now iftir\n\u2022 ohne unique In U.8. crime history. The police story Is thlt Biylisi\nIs believed to bi the man who robbed a bank In Hollywood, Cat, of\n119,600, some of It In bllli specially (narked by the bank to be given\nto holdup men. He took \u25a0 cab to an airport but In the cab loft a card\non which his name vvas printed, Pollci found that ho had entered his\nown name on the passenger lists, radioed to the plans pilot i fjunman\nwas aboard, then arrested Baylesi as ho stepped off the plane In New\nYork. The accused li a former resident ef Alcatrai prisons-Central\npre,, Cinfdlan.,\nTwo Fined for\nYukon, Still Hear! ol Base-Mela I\nMining, Nearly Doubles Population\n\u2022'.OTTAWA (CT>\u2014The Yukon, itra-\n. tegicilly important and on its way\n- back to a.new mining heyday,' is\nCanada's fastest-growing area and\nIt's got figures to prove It -\nOn a percentage basis, the Yukon\nfir outstripped any other, area of\nCanada ln the growth of ite population between 1041 and 1051, an 85.10\nper cent hoist to 9.080 from 4914.'\n: In sheer' numbers that boost was\npuny compared with, say,. Ontario's\njump of more than 800,000 in the\ncorresponding period but the fact\n\u2022till stands: the Yukon nearly\ndoubled Its population ln the' last\ndecode.\n'.Why the jump in thli land of legends about a gold rush that made\nthe Yukon's 1901 population 27,0i)0\nand then collapsed? ;-.'-\nOfficials cite a numb ei* of reasons,\n: life Alaska Highway has' gone\nthrough In the last decade,' putting\nthe Yukon on \u25a0 direct road link between Edmonton and Alaska. In the\nlast couple of years another important gravel road has- been built\nNorthwaM , from Whitehbrs* Into\nthi booming mining district' of\nMayo, i distance, of 250 miles.\nMILITARY BASK\nWhitehorse-has become an important military base in Joint Ca;\nnadian-American plans to, defend\n\u2022 .the North. The air force has a base\nthere. It is the heart of the army's\nengineering system for mainten-\nance of the Alaska Highway.   ,\nTha air base wis developed dur.\ning the war os part of the staging\nroute for taking planes to Russia.\nNow It is a key base in plans to fight\noff. any planes that might come from\nRussia. ,' .\n. Whitohorse's population his\nboomed from 754 in 1941 to 2600,\nDawson has dropped from 1000 to\n7731       '.\u25a0';,\nBut aside from the military, tbe\nkey to the Yukon's growth' ii mining. In 1946,' for instance, the total\nvalue of minerals produced in the\nYukon was $1,700,000 nearly all from\ngold on the Klondike.\nIn 1950 it was $8,000,000, with gold\nat'$3,500,000, silver at $2,500,000 and\nlead at $1,000,00. Officials here think\nthe total may hit $12,00,000 for 1951\nand keep on going. The heart of\nthis boom is the' base-metal mining\narea around Mayo, between White'\nhorse and Dawsonl\nRussian Award to.\nProlific Mothers\n. LONDON, March 10 (Reuters) \u2014\nThe \"Order of Mother's Glory, First-\nClass\" was awarded Saturday \u2014\nInternational women's day \u2014 to 3288\nwomen ln Communist Bulgaria lor\nhaving eight' or more \/children,\nPrague radio announced last night\nSORE THROAT?\nDon't suffer\nfrom common\nlore throat, when\nyou can do something about it Rub\nin soothing Minard'i\nLiniment \u2014 get   a\n,    supply,  today I.     Get\nquick relief\u2014today I\nWARDS\n- .klNO'O.-rAIN\".\nLINIMENT\nTo Juveniles\n-five person!, one \u25a0 Juvenile, appeared In Nelion courts Monday,\non charge! of violating the liquor\nact Two ottier charges arose' from\nIncldehts involving Juveniles.\nPeter Kurqzak, 38, Hemac miner,\nwil fined $300 ahd costs when he\npleaded guilty to * charge of supplying liquor to a 17-year-old girl.\nThi case was heard before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans\nin Provincial Court\nA second man, Alyre Rioux of\nNelson, wu arrested in a Nelsori\nhotel room Saturday night and\ncharged with supplying liquor to, a\nJuvenile. He pleaded guilty before\nMagistrate William Brown and was\nflnedWOO. .'\nMike Gretchin and Pete Makonln\nof Nelson were fined $1) each when\nthey pleided guilty to charges of\nconsuming liquor ln i public place.\nThe pair wai arrested Sunday\nmorning oh Vernon Street\nTor entering a beer pirlor without lawful excuse', a Nelson juvenile\nwas fined $18 In juvenile court\n.Juvenile   Court  Judge  William\nBrown heard the case.\nPress Hostile to\nSevan's Rebels\nBY ALAN HARVEY\n' J.ONDON, Mirch 10 (CP) -*~ A\nsidelight -on the. Left-wing: revolt\nagainst Britain's rearmament program, led by Aneurln Bevan, is\nthat virtually the entire British\npress is.hostile to the rebels,\nFor more than a year since the\nfirst rumblings of dissent were\nheard the weight of editorial opinion has been solidly against the\nBevan. group, whose main claim .is\nthat the arms bill ia too big,\nIn recent weeki as the'rearmament Issue came increasingly to\nthe fore, the Manchester Guardian\nand The Times warned leaders.of\nthe Labor Party opposition against\nthe dangers of bowing to the Bevan\ngrpup \u2014 as it has often been expressed, \"of allowing th. tail fa-\nwag the dog.\"\nDevelopments thli week may\nshow whether the Labor split is\nprominent of whether a compromise\ncan be arranged. Meanwhile the\nWeekly Observer said Sunday In\na comment that crystalizei the an-\nti-Bevan.case:\n\"Any individual who woiild'stake\nhli life on a wager that there will\nbe no war In, say the next five\nyears, would clearly be a reckless\nfool, Mr. Bevan asks Britain as a\nnation to act like such an\nindividual.\"\nIndian Runner Still\nActive at H.B. Post\nWINNIPEG, March IO (CP) \u2014 A\n04-yelrrpld ntfn, .Joe Keeper, died\nIn I Winnipeg Nursing home yesterday.  . '\u2022 -,\ni Last night', the Canadian Press\nerroneously identified him as Joe\nKeeper, the Cree Indian who rep.\nresented Canada in track events at\nthe 1912 Olympic games.     ,\nKeeper, one of Canada's greatest\nfive-mile runners, would be about\nAn officii] of the Hudson's Bay\nCompany, for whom Keeper hat\nworked for the last U yean at Norway- House, today said the speedy\nIndian still was it the poit oh the\nNorth end of Lake Winnipeg.\nQUAKE RECORDED AT N.Y.\nN_!W YORK, March IO (AP)-The\nColumbia Univerilty seismograph\nrecorded'an earthquake at 12:16.50\np.m. (EST) Sunday at a point estimated to be -300 miles Northwest.\nSeismologists said it wai \"in after\nshock of moderate intensity of tbe\nJapanese, quake of last week,\" ,\nTha university seismograph recorded a second earth shock at\n3:08.12 p.m. (EST). Termed* moderate in intensity, It wai estimated\nat a point 3000 miles from New\nYork, -probably in-the direction of\nAlaska.\" ,   .\nThis estimate would place the\ncentre Of the tremor- In the vicinity\nof Dawson, in the Yukon Territory\nnear the Alaska border.\nFavored in B. C.\nVANCOUVER, March 10 (CP) -\nOntario's system Of liquor sales by\nthe glass is favored for B. C. by the\nprovincial region-of the Canadian\nRestaurant Association.\n' A letter sent to all 'members of\nthe provincial legislature by the\nAssociation's B. C. regional coordinator, A. C. W. Gartehore, contains:\nA suggested wording for the forth\ncoming plebiscite on changes ih\nprovincial liquor regulations.'\nA-description of the six types of\nestablishments that should receive\nlicences in the event of the plebiscite being successful. A copy of the\nOntario Liquor Act     .\nThe restaurant men's suggested\nplebiscite question reads: \"Do you\nfavOr, on the basis of local Option,\nthe sale of-liquor by the glaal, with,\nmeals, ln hotels, restaurants And in\nother eating, establishments.\nMaximum, amount that may be\ndeposited In any one year ln Canada\npost office savings bank ii $1500.\nAND HER SIX ENVELOPES\nNancy no longer uses this old-fashioned lystem. In fact . .\".\nuowadiyi her husband calls her a financial whi*. Tfiat\"i because\n\u2022he followed the advice of friends by opening\ni Current Account at ,The Commerce. To-day\nNancy writes cheques, and keeps trick\nof every penny paid  out from  the\nstatement given  to her  by the\nBank each month. She started\nher banking pff on the right foot \u25a0\ntoo, by reading, \"It's Simple When\nYoh Know How\". It's the handy\npurse size booklet giving helpful\ntip! on day to day banking, and\nprepared esped-lly for women\nby The Commerce.\nIHRNmnSim\nA WOMAN AW Hi* UWifta\n*S\u00ab\u00ab5fi\u00abW>'iA\nAsk' fer your copy of your local branch, or wifto\nto,Frances Terry\/ Head Office, Ihe Collodion Bank\nof Commerce, Toronto.*    v'\u2022\u2022-.-...\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nFishing Shoreworkers\nTo Begin Negotiations\nVANCOUVER, March 10 (CP) -\nNegotiations will begin Thursday\nfor a one-third boost in pay for\n5000 B.C.' fishing Industry . shore-\nworkers.. \u2022',\nWage talks will be carried on between the United. Fishermen and\nAllied Workers Union (TX.C.) and\nthe Fisheries Association' of B.C.\nThe workers are seeking a 331\/3\nper cent wage hike on ratei thit\nrun from 98 cents an hour for cannery women to $1.58 an hour for\nmachine operators.\nWage clauses expire April 15.   .\nMAN,\" SUBJECT\nOF LESSON-SERMON\nIn all Churches of Christ Scientist the subject of.the Lesson-Sermon Sunday wai \"Man.\" The selecj\ntions read Included \"clarification of\nthe fact that ihe identity of- each\nindividual is distinct'spiritual, and\nis maintained eternally by God,\nSpirit, of whom mantis thr image\nand likeness,\"\nThe Golden .Text was:-\"O matt\ngreatly beloved, fear not: peace be\nunto thee, be strong, yea-be strong.\"\nDaniel'10:19\nThe Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"But unto every one of us is given\ngrace according to the measure of\nthe gift of Christ. And he gave some,\napostles; and some, prophets; and\nsome, evangelists; and some, pastors\nand teachers.\"\nEpheslans 4:7, 11 -\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Scinece textbook, \"Science'\nand Helath With Key to fbe. Scriptures\" by _tfary Baker Eddy,-was\nthe following: \"Man's Individuality\nis not material; This Science of being obtains not alone hereafter in\nwhat men-call Paradise, but.here\nand now; It Is the great fact of being\nfor time and eternity.\"\nFamous as an exporter of tea and\njute, India also produces i Urge\nquantity of tobacco. .\n. MEETING In the new U.N. building's confer*\nence rooms In New York, tho U.N. Assembly found\nthit,nothing new had been added to the debate. In\nthe first meeting, a Russian move to oust Nationalist China from' the debate wu defeated^-Central\nPrist Canadian. , ,-\u25a0\nMEMBERS of tha directing staff of \"Grand\n81am\" pose with U.S. Admiral Robert Carney,\ndirector of the four-nation nivil manoeuvres tinder\nway In the Western Mediterranean, aboard his flag,\nship, the: US8 Adirondack. From left are Capt\nRoyal Navy; Admiral Carney; Capt Louis Mornu,\nFrench Navy, and Cipt Nicola MUnl, Italian Navy.\nThe manoeuvres are believed to be the biggest In\npeacetime history,\u2014Central pr_\u201e Canadian.\nUphill Backs Sweeps, $10 Car Plafes;\nWants Area Transferred (o Cranbrook\n(Speolal to the Dally News)\nVICTORIA,. B.C. \u2014 British Columbia fishermen, In Victoria; to\nforce their demands for inclusion\nunder the Workmen's Compensa\ntion Act received the support in\nthe legislature Monday of Thomas\nUphill, the province's only Labor\nmember.\n\"The fishermen ate entitled to\nthe same consideration as any other\nindustry,\" declared Uphil. \"Great\nBritain does it why can't we?\"'.\nThe public galleries were full of\nfishermen.\nUphill urged Attorney-General\nGordon Plistriet *\u2022> allow sweep*\nstakes and raffles in B.C.' for com.\nmunity and charitable purposes. lie\nsuggested a system whereby the\npolice would Issue permits to or*\ngahiza tions wanting to stage sweep\nstakes,\n\u2022 \"The Attorney-General only has\nto go to Ottawa and 'ask tor it and\nhe knows It,\". said Uphill. \"They\nwouldn't turn him down \u2014 especial'\nly on the eve'of an*eleet___.\"\nThe,Labor member endorsed the\nautomobile groups' plea for a re\nduetlon In oar licence! from $25 to\n$10. ,.\"...:.   ;\/ ;.;\u25a0\u2022\u25a0    -   .\n\"Molt of the motorists use their\ncars to mike a living,\" said Uphill\nOn workmen'! compensation, he\nsaid:\n\"I hava been requested by the\nInternational Union of Mine, Mill\nand Smelter .Workers to t-.ke up a\nmatter In the report of the Chief\nJustice on Workmen's Compensation! dealing with the uncomplicated proviso in silicosis. This amendment is requested by the union and\nBritain's Famous Home Guard Gels\nReady To Meef Modern A-Warfare\nBy EDWIN 8. JOHNSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) - A modern,\nstreamlined version of Britain's famous Home Guard which stood as\na bulwark, against the, threat of invasion In' the Second World War,\nwill soon h\u00ab0n..the march again.\nAuthority to remuster the force was\ngranted last December by ah act\nof Parliament     v [\nThe initial call has already gone\nbut tb prospective volunteers, but\nfor the time being candidates are\nrequired to register cly pending\nfinal agreement on the conditions\nof service; Actuil enrolment ii not\nexpected to start until April ahd\ntraining a month or two later.\nOfficials, in charge of recruiting\nare aiming at an operational target\nof 900,000 men, about half the number mustered In the last war. The\nnew army, however, will have a distinct advantage over the 1939-45 edition which began basic training\nwith pikes, staves and broomsticks.\nModern weapons and equipment\nwill be available immediately to\nmembera Of the revived force after\nenrolment and courses of specialized instruction will be given, in*\neluding, the scientific aspects Of\natomic warfare.   <\u25a0       ,\nAny man between the ages of 18\nand 65 may apply for service, but\nregistration.-will not involve any\nobligation on the Individual to enrol nor commit the army to accept\nhim, Men. subject to service with\nthe reserve forces will be accepted\nonly if they are nor marked down\nfor a full-time Job with the services\nin event of war.\nEngagement on enrolment will be\nfor two years but may bo terminated at any time by giving one\nmonth's notice. Training, to be confined td evenings and weekends,\nwill be on the basis of no pay but\nconsideration is being given to pay-\n...I\nment of'nominal out-of-pocket expenses.\nNo Home Guardsman will be required to serye in any overseas\ntheatre of operations and volunteers\nwill be assigned to units, as near\nas possible to their homes or places\nof employment   '.  -.\"\"\nlt is agreed to by the Mining As-\n\u2022sedation In a letter which was read\ninto the record by Senator Farrls.\nIn fact, no one disagree! with this\nproposed amendment.\n\"There are at the present, time\nabout seven people in the province\nwho, thorugh no fault of their 'own\nhave been statute barred by tbe\npresent section. I believe our friend\nMr, G. Pearson, when he.was minister of Labor, as well as other promt\nhent past ministers, have agreed\nthat this provision works an undue\nhardship.' I wbUld like to draw to\nthe attention of the government the\nfact that there is no. disagreement\nwith respect to'thls amendment and\nit should be included in those to be\nenacted at this session.\" - . % t i\nSOUTHERN R.UTE\nUphill hoped the Minister of Pub*\nlie Works would do all possible to\nimprove the Southern Trans-Provincial highway, the Creston to Salmo cut-off, and the Cascade, bottle\nn.eck, and ln the Fernie district the\nroad from Fernie to Elco should be\ncompleted.\n\"Regarding tha situation of the\nupper portion of the Fernie die*\ntrlct, I was hoping that the* territory North from Bull River could\nbe placed in the Cranbrook riding.\nThe present sot;up Is' very un\nsatisfactory, as the work on the\nroads In thli territory li being\nperformed by the Public Works\nDepartment In Cranbrook, which\nI will hay to admit Is more economical. But Inasmuch as It Is In\nthe Fernie riding politically, If the\nread work - Is to br done by-the\nCraAbrook' Public Works Department. I feel* this territory should\nbe put Into the Cranbrook riding.\nThese roads have been neglected\nfor yean, and no one ean deny\nthat they are not getting fair\ntreatment In line with other parts\nof the province.\nmore Machinery\n\"The roads in the Southern' part\nof Fernie district do not get the\nattention that they-should. 'In my\nopinion there should tie additional\nmachinery in order to cope with the\nremoval of snow, as there is a great\ndeal of inconvenience caused by the\ndelay in snow-plowing, etc., after a\nsnow-storm,\" said Uphill. \u25a0 >,\nSays Higher Fares\nMean Fewer Riders\nVICTORIA, B. C, March 10 (CP)\n\u2014A six per cent drop in the num\nber.of but riders In Victoria li ex*\npected by the B. C. Electric, if\ngranted a requested ?0 per cent\nboost ln transit fares.\nThis anticipated decline was.\nlearned by the public utilities commission at the opening of public\nhearing into the B. C. E. application\nfor Increased fares here today. ,'.\n\"That is based bn a formula tested both ln Canadian and U. S. cities\nthat for every 10 per cent increase\nin fares there will be a three per\ncent decline in number.of riders,\"\nsaid Dr_H. L. Purdy, director ot\nresearch and administration for the\ncompany.     .-'..;;\u25a0'\u2022 \u25a0- .*!.'      '\u00a3:'. ,\nA handful of representatives from\nvarious organization; and the public as Well as representatives tor\nVictoria and the surrounding municipalities attended, this mornnlg's\nsession. Percy George, P.u.C. chair.\nman,presided.^   ''..._\u2022'\"\u25a0\nQueen Remodels\nPalace Rooms\nLONDON! March 10 (CP) \u2014Nine\nrooms in Buckingham Palace ere\nbeing repaired and painted under\nthe dire-tio|t of the Queen.\nThe decoration is being done in\npreparation, for the Queen and her\nfamily to iiBve from their preseht\nhome, Clarence House, Court circles\nsay they dojn^know when the move\nwill be ma\u00abie>.\nThe-throne - room, where the\nQueen, wilir.ceive visiting royalty,\nand the green drawing room, one\nof tho most\" ornate in the ancient\n-room ___a'ce, are being,done\nover in,tu_j;.shades ot ivory.\nPlumbers, ire installing steam\nheating in both rooms, since the war\ncentral heating has been slowly,\nreaching into one room after\nanother pf the rambling old palace,\nbut most are still pretty much as\nVictoria left them.\nKing William IV once termed\nBuckingham Palace \"the coldest\npalace in Europe\" and palace flunkeys ruefully dub themselves \"Royal\nIce Cubes.\" ...\nSeven rooms on the second floor\nare being , re-decorated in pastel\nshades, \u2022\u2022 \u25a0'.;:\u25a0 V\nCastlegar Fair\nSet for\nI\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., - A meetir,\nof. the Fall Fair Committee -at'tt\nhome of M. J. Webster elected\noffice E. Rourke_*' secretary;\nWebster, Chairman; Mrs. E,- A, M\nDonald, treasurer. Mrs. I. RUcy, u\nMrs. McDonald were authorized\nsign cheques,\nIt was decided that the Fall Ft\nwould be held in Castlegar on Fi\nday and Saturday, Sept 5 and ft\nwas also decided to hold a harv\u00ab\nqueen contest thli yeir with sev\ngirli to ba selected from tht hll\nschool. The girls must be 15 yeiri\nolder. A baby show will ba held wi\na doctor, not chosen yet to act\",\njudge.'\nThe committee will aik for he\nfrom the Legion at the next regul\nmeeting in regards to soliciting f\nadvertisements for ihe Fall Fa\nbooklet. _.:_.;:.?\nBUI Ried wai elected to take ov\nthe entertainment concession! n\nMrs. R, Rourke wa! elected as pre\nreporter for'thi committee.\nIndian Guide's\nWords Launched\nFather-Son Moye\nFRUITVALE, .B.C. \u2014 Ernie Vys{\nJunior High School student\ndeclared, \"eating champion\"\npolishing off four bowls, of _\nstew and four pieces of pie at\nA.O.T.S. Club's annual father\nion banquet.\nGuest speaker,.' William Nayl*.\nVM.CJl. supervisor it Trill, ipok\non   father 'and   ion   movenien)\nthroughout Canada and tha Unite.\nStates. Outlining how then movJ\nments were first started, he ti\nof a Y.M.CA. official on a hunt!.\ntrip ln Canada some thirty'yea\nago.  This  man,  while  convinli.\nwith hli guide, eventuilly bega\nspeaking of children, Ufa problenj\nthey created and the training the\nrequired.\nThe guide stated that it wu 1\nduty of every good Indian'\"to pe,\nonally supervise his soni educatio\nHe' deplored, .the fact that ma\nwhite.fltheri relegate this imp\nant duty to other... I.\nThe Y.M.CA. official was\nInarmed with the Indlin's ward\nthat he brought him back to til\nelty and encouraged him to rl\nlate hli theories of child rearlrr\nto assembled groups- of fitherl\nsons and others who won Intel\n\u25a0   ested,   -.-'\u25a0' ' y\nFrom these rousing speechei _.\norganization grew whose aims, wel\nto foster closer'partnership betwea\nfathers and sons by means of sporl\nand repreitianal aeti. itietr.The onl\nstipulation regarding attendant\nwas that father and son were honl\nbpund to\" attend the1 regular \"\n.vow\", together.\nThe plan has grown, immea.,\nably strengthening the bond of i\nfection between father and son, 1\nNaylor said.\nIn a game of \"dog and the boni\nafter the meeting,1 the sons prova\nthemselves the champions. '\nBX. MAN TO C.P.R. \u2022\nENGINEERING POST\nVANCOUVER,1 B.C. - J. D.\nderson of Mdntreal and formerly, J\nVancouver, has been named specll\nengineer of maintenance of way ff\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway'! fl\ncific and Pralrier regions. He wf\nhave headquarters at Winnipeg.\nMr. Anderson, a native of Prim]\nRupert, started with the railway i\n1945 as transitman at Penttoftm. '\nmoved to Vancouver in 1948 as a|\nsisfant engineer and remained\nthat position for three-years befoil\ngoing  to Montreal,  He holds\" hi\nbachelor's degree In civil englnei\ning from the University* of Brltisl\nColumbia and;his master's degreT\nfrom the University of WashingtoiJ\nLONDON, March 10 (CP) \u2014 Son\nNorth Atlantic- Treaty countrij\nwill restrict the movements of :\nvlet.diplomats,.probably beglnnitf\ntomorrow, under a plan designed I\nretaliate against similar restrictlorl\nin effect in Communist countries\/\nTHE WORLDS Fl N EST TOBACCOS\n (hound, lh.\nERIC  BISHOP   ..-    -\nI TRAIL. B.C.-The sad part about composing thlB column twice\nweekly is that it has to be sent to Art Gibbon and Co. in the News\neditorial office early in the evening. Hence, a guy misses commenting\non something which happened the previous night. For Instance, this was\nwrit by hand prior to last night's Nelson-Trail taffy-pull in the Silver\nCity and so many of our comments may look foolish at the moment.\nBUT THIS'SCRIBE still calls Trail and Nanaimo to meet in the\n.Jritlah Columbia final and battle for the right to meet either the Edmoh-\nIton Pats or.the Melville Millionaires, a couple of clubs which open a\n\u25a0best-of-seven inter-proylnclal series in the Saskatchewan- city this\nTevening. \u2022  . -\n* * * :...'': ::\":.: ' \u25a0.:...:..*..\nTHE TRAIL OVER NELSON prediction is based on the assumption\nhat the Smokies will play hockey and forget killer-like intentions. By\nhli time Gerry Thomson and Co. should realize, like the Kimberley\nDynamiters discovered too late, that the Leafs can't be roughed and\npumped Into submission. Eddie Wares' scrappy gang will only be beaten\npy: skating power and smart play. ,\n\u25a0;,. Oh paper the Trail team is stacked with \"smart\" performers. But\nhese gents are hampered by their own rough tactics. In fact, one or\nwo of the Smokie smart boys don't get much free time- when their'\nnates are In the sin bin as the skaters and backcheckers.at Thomson's\nUsposal have to work overtime.\n\".'*'*'* '.\nEddie Shamlock _ Nanaimo team has a few experienced, heady\npuck manipulators who will lead the Clippers by Kelowna-.hustlers.\nThe likes of Jack Kirk, Hermle Gruhn, and above all, Don Culley\nand Anoy Defelice, rev up In the playoff going, What many fans forgot\nwhen they called Kelowna over Nanaimo on, performances In the\n' Kootenay was that Shamlock. crew was only 10 strong on their Jaunt\nthrough our country and among the missing were sparks like Culley\nand Defelice. I \u25a0\n\u25a0* *,-'*,.*\nBut getting back to the.Kootenay final . \",\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'. Got a kick out of\nNelson's ex-mayor last Saturday when he slipped up behind me\u2014after\nthe 9-3 pasting the Leafs,handed the Smokies-rand smugly said: \"I\nthought you said Nelson didn't have a club without Harms.' Dear old\nNorman Stlbbs is right in a way. I suggested the Leafs would be Harmless without Johnny, but their spirit and scrap have overcome all injuries.\nIn fact such injury setbacks possibly have been, responsible for the\nLeafs' determination and drive. Still, Norman, Mr. Wares and Co. would\nJust love to have Harms around. \u25a0'\u25a0'-,\n,(\"\u25a0 SEEMS I GET the needle from everywhere these days. Have received nothing but wires and letters from Kelowna about Phil Herge-\nsheimer's amazing Packers. You see, I quoted the Packers at 50-1 for\nwinning the Allan Cup, At the time no. one said anything but now\neveryone-wants to bet,me or baste me. I have a memorandum that,\nreads: \"Send funeral cards and wreaths when the Packers bow to\nNanaimo\". And so help me I will,   _.\nSpeaking of funerals, they tell me that the blinds are still down\nin Kamloops in not so fond memory of the Elks. And I'm told that the\nPaul Thompson club really blew up in the final - against Kelowna and\nIthe likes of Bathgate and Cloveehok, smart players, tried to bump the\npackers Into oblivion, which they couldn't and didn't do.\nI_.'   -. Hone the Same thing doesn't happen hereabouts\/ ^^_^\nTRAIL IN FRONT WITH 9-1 WIN\nDouble Triumph\nIt. raised Knees for\nICajnadien Rookie\nMONTREAL, March 10 (CP) \u2014\nI Dickie Moore, Canadiens' fast-\nskating rookie, is in hospital undergoing treatment for badly-bruised\n'mees, it .was announced tonight,\ni He will be out of action for\nThursday night's game with Tor .J\njhto Maple-Leafs here and piay also\nMiss the weekend games with Boson Bruins.\nNetwork to Close\nCLEVELAND, March 10 (AP) -\nContinental .Press Service said today it will shut down its national\nrace news wire network after Wednesday's report.\n\"Conditions affecting racing publications throughout the country\"\nare forcing continental out of business, the service admitted.\nThe 'once-highly lucrative race\nnews wire has taken three stiff\npunches within the last year.\n.This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government?of British Columbia,\n^TIAST- the new\n\\w*m\nwm\nTO    KEEP    TOBACCO\nWiest Sinks Four as Smokies\nWithin Game of Series Win\nBy Staff Writer   \"';..\n:-, JRAIL, B.C.\u2014Turnabout was fair play here Monday\nnight 5s Trail Stpoke Eaters had everything\\ their bWfl way\nto romp to an easy .9-1 victory over Nelsoh Maple Leafs and\ntake a one_game lead in their best-oMive Kootenay Allah\nCup final. , .*\nThe win not oily avenged a 9-3 defeat at. the hands\nof the Leafs Saturday but boosted the Smokies to within one\ngame of a seri.s: triumph. They won the first game 4-3 and\nnow have a chance to end it Wednesday night in Nelson.\nFifth game, if necessary, will be played in'Trail Thursday,\nBob Wiest was the big gun in the'\npotent Trail attack, tallying four\ntimes and setting up two more.\nJohnny Rypien was light behind\nwith one goal and-four assists. Mike\nShabaga. Bobby Kromm, Terry Cav-~\nanagh and Bill Ramsden netted the\nothers. '\nBill Haldane averted a whitewash by scoring out of a wild\nscramble In thi aecond period.\nJust as they could do nothing\nwrong Saturday, the Leafs could\ndo nothing right Monday night,\nfalling behind 2-0 after 20 minutes, and falling apart In the second frame as Trail pounded In\nfive more to take a 7-1 lead and\ncoast In with two more tn the final\nperiod,,,. '      ,\nThe Smokies, on the other hand,\nwere a much sharper team than the\none that played in Nelson Saturday\nand except for some solid netmindlng by Rodzlnyak would have settled the Issue in the opening period.\nKROMM A STALWART\nIn addition to great games by\nWiest and Rypien, Smokies also got\na fine defensive effort by Bobby\nKromm who killed many a Leaf\nthrust with his dogged checking.\nJohnny Sofiak also played  a\nstarring role for the'Smokies and\nearned a shutout on the night's\nplay after  robbing  Glen  8mlth\ntwice on the only two clean-out\n\u2022coring chances of the night Trail\noutshot Nelaon 23-16.\nMike Shabaga got the neatest goal\nof the night when he drew out\nRodzinyak on a breakaway. Late in\nthe second, he got a picture goal\nwhen he skated through the entire\nNelson club only to have lt called\nback on Ramsden's offside.\nCoach Eddie Wares saw considerable action despite a groin injury,\nbut Mickey Maglio, nursing a broken wrist, was not used although in\nthe lineup. Genry Thomson removed\nthe injured Don Crough from his\nlineup, inserting Kenny Cook up\nfront end moving Gord Sinclair\nback.to the blue line.,   ,\nAnother sellout crowd of 8800\nwas on hand to see the home team\ncome through with the crucial victory.\nLineups: - \u25a0 '.- ' i\nNelson \u2014 Goal, Rodzinyak! defence, Wares, Severyn, Barefoot,\nPasqualotto, Gare; forwards, R.\nKoehle, P. Koehle, Smith, Appleton,\nHaldane, McClenaghan, Dobni and\nMaglio.\nTrail\u2014Goal, Sofiak; defence, Kotanen, Fischer, Hamilton, Sinclair;\nforwards; Turik, Rypien. Kromm,\nShabaga, Ramsden, Cook, Wiest,\nStanton, Cavanagh,\nReferees \u2014 Stewart and Swaine,\nKamloops, .\n8UMMARY:\nFIR8T PERIOD\n1. Trail, Cavanagh (Rypien) 16:01;\n2. Trail, Ramsden, (Shabaga, Wiest)\n19:05.\nPenalties \u2014 Fischer, Smith.\nSECOND  PERIOD  .\n3. Trail, Shabaga (Kromm, Rami-\nden) 1:61; 4. Trail, Wiest (Fischer,\nRypien) 3:41; 5. Trail, Wiest (Cavanagh) 7:46; 6. Nelson, Haldane (R.\nKoehle) 9:18; 7. ..rail, Kromm (Sinclair, Hamilton) 16:09; 8. Trail,\nWiest (Rypien) 17:30.\nPenalties \u2014.Barefoot, Turik. -\nTHIRD PERIOD\n9. Trail, Wiest (Rypien) 4:52; 10.\nTrail, Rypien (Wiest) 19:32.\nPenalties \u2014 \u2022 Barefoot, Rypien,\nKotanen.\nTop Shuttlers Practise\nFor Championships\nWINNIPEG, March 10 (CP)-Top shuttle stars fro*:\nacross the Dominion areata Winnipeg tonight; practicing for\nthe 1952' Canadian badminton championship matches which\nOpen Wednesday.\nAt least 10 former champions will compete, in the four-\nday competitions. \u2014\u2014    \u2014~\nCASTLEGAR, B.C. \u2014 There was\nJoy in the \u2022Stanley Humphries High\nSchool when the Castlegar boys* and\ngirls, who had not won a game\nthis season, came tip with two fine\nperformances to win over the St\nJoseph's Academy of Nelson. The\ngrils took'their .game bjr a 24-16\nscore and the boys won by a slim\n26-22 margin. ;.:..  .\nThe girls got away to a fast start\nend by half ti_ie>held a 20-6 margin,\nbut Nelson,, lei by little Helen\nBond With 10 points, fought back\ngamely in the second half to. out-\nscore Castlegar 10-4, but it was not\nenough and time ran out. D. Muirhead and S. Taylor led the Castlegar\ngirls with eight points each.\nThis game was marred by an accident, to Nora Henke of Castlegar\nwhen she was hit on the nose in\nthe first minutes of play. It was\nbelieved at this time that her nose\nwas broken.\n- The boys game was close all the\nway With the score 15-15 at half\ntime. With the Score 22-22 with a\nminute to play, L. Goetllng and J.\nNixon broke away for two baskets\nto win for the locals. J. Nixon\npicked up sevent points with L,\nGoetling and R. Martini each col\nlecting six. For Nelson it was B.\nPhillips and'B. Goddris with seven\npoints. G. Tralnor picked up six\nmarkers.\nA crowd of 200 students were on\nhand to cheer the locals to| victory.\nMohawk Defenceman\nSlashed by Youth\nPROVIDENCE, R.I.,-March 10\n(AP) \u2014 Ken Barlow, 22, of Bulyea,\nSask., defenceman with Cincinnati\nMohawks of the American Hockey\nLeague, was slashed on the. face\nSaturday night by a youth who attacked him With a can opener.\nIn cojirt today, police said iBarlow\nwas slashed when he refused to\nparticipate In a street brawl.\nHeading the list is Vancouver's\nCaryl Thompson, defending men's,\nsingles champion. > The 27-year-old\nCoast star also is co-holder of the\nmixed doubles' crown with Mrs.\nJean Bardsley, also of Vancouver.\nToronto will, have four champions\nor former winners in the various\nevents. Topping, the entry is the\nveteran Dick Birch, who has won\nmore Canadian' titles than any\nother player participating in the\ntournament He has won the singles\nchampionship three times, ~the\nmen's doubles once and the mixed\ndoubles seven times.\nGrant Henry of Toronto was co-\nwinner of men's doubles honors ln\n1950; Edith' Marshall shared the\nWomen's Roubles triumph in 1948;\nand Barbara Ince was in on the\nmixed doubles championship combination.   '.\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0' \u25a0 >\nOther Vancouver players back\nfor a chance at titles are Clare Lovett, 1947 and 1948 women's singles\nchampion and 1947 and 1949\ndoubles; and Lois Reid, women's\nsingles champion in 1950. .\nTrail Wins Over\nNelson Curlers\nNelson Curling Club members\nmade their annual trip to Trail\nSunday to take on the Trail club,\nand came home with only one win.\nTrail curlers held the edge over\nthe Nelsonites in five out of the\nsix games played: M. B. Ryalls\nbrought home the only local win. ,\nNelson rinks were M. B. Ryalls,\nH. H. Hinnett, B. B. Stallwood,'C.\nArcuri and J. H. Long; Richard Palmer, L. Chase, R. Chandler and W.\nA. Triggs; McCleary,.G. M. Parrish,\nWaltjen and R. L. Bruce.\nTrail rinks were A. B. Ross, D.\nBentley, J. D. Hartley and A. Crich-\nton; H. Jordan, R. J. McKinnon, G.\nService and T. Knight; R. DoekeriJI,\nR. McGerrigle, D. Somerville and\nS. Smillie.\nA chicken and spaghetti feed followed \"the games.\nTrail will visit Nelson Sunday for\na return game.\nPACKERS PASTE\nCUPPERS M\nKelowna Leads\nSemi-Final Series\n. KELOWNA, B.C., March 10 (CP)\n\u2014Kelowna Packers advanced to\nwithin a game of making the British\nColumbia Senior Hockey,'. Final\nwhen they handed Nanaimo Clip.\np'ers a demoralizing 7-1 setback to*\nnight i>. ';''..iii\nPackers now lead their best-of*\nfive semi-final series 2-1.\nThe Okanagan.League champions\nare favored to wrap up the series\nwhen the fourth 'game'comes' off\nWednesday night in' .Vernon.    ,\nClippers, on the brink of elimina*\ntion, will have-to win then to stay\nin, the running and force a fifth\nand deciding game back here Thursday night. . .'.'.\nSUMMARY:\nFIRST PERIOD\n1. Kelowna, Middleton (Robert\nson) 13:25.\nPenalties \u2014 Brown, Carr, Kaiser,\nHanson, Durban.\nSECOND PERIOD\n2. Kelowna, Penner 2:55; 3. Kelow\nna, Hergesheimer (Durban) 5:21.\nPenalties y. Shamlock, Landmark,\nPennell, McMeekin, Penner.\nTHIRD PERIOD\n4. Kelowna, Robertson (Middle-\nton) 4:05; 5. Nanaimo, Defelice (Fen-\nn .11) 8:26; 6. Kelowna, Hergeshelmer.\n(Daski, Kuly) 11:18; 7. Kelowna,\nMiddleton (Robertson), 13:03; 8. Kelowna, Middleton (Hergeshelmer)\n17:05.\nPenalties \u2014 Penner, Carlson,\nMiddleton, Kaiser, Carr, Kirk.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, \/_ARCH 11,198^ *r \u2666\nThe Toronto Maple Leafi have decisively proved to Montreal\nCanadiens that the latter have no monop&ly on youth. Matching the\nHabs rookie, for rookie, the Leafs whipped their second place rival!\n6-2, In a recant contest at Toronto. Toronto's Sid Smith and Tod\nSloan plced their teammates with two goals apiece, while Erie\nNeiterenko and Earl Balfour, up from Marlboro Juniors on trial, gave'\ntheir all. This pair, along with Jim Morrison, Hugh Bolton and George\nArmstrong rounded out a rookie quintet that outshone tha five famous Montreal youngsters. Even so both Canadiens' goals were notched\nby rookies, Geoffrion and Gamble.\u2014Central Press Canadian. \u2022'\nHockey Scores\nP.C.H.L.     .\nNew Westminster 5, Calgary 7\nW.C.J.H.L.\nLethbridge 1, Edmonton 10 (ten)\n8.J.H.L.\nFlin Flon 4, Saskatoon 2\nMANITOBA JUNIOR FINAL\nWinnipeg 6, Brandon 1\n(Winnipeg leads the best-of-seven\nseries 2-0) \u2022'\u25a0,.\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0\nMARITIME MAJOR\nHalifax 4, Charlottetown 8\nGlace Bay 0, Sydney 6        ,\nMARITIME SENIOR FINAL8\nSt. Francis Xavier 0, New Glasgow 5   ,,\n(First game pf best-of-five series)\nEA8TERN CANADA JUNIOR\n. Pembroke 4, Smiths Falls 3\n(Pembroke leads best-of-seven\nfinal series 3.1).\nFX\u00a3SH_\n_w\/Z N0TE i\nJr i|F THIS NEW J\nr -\n\\W_Wg_Wm\n_m&MM\nr\"\"\u2122^\"\"\"     -  - - -' .          Thii lid has a special, _B\u00a7\n\\     resilient sealing device around its Inside     ASm\n\\          rim. This \"Seal-Tile\" lid keeps the    A\nI     tobacco fresh, by forming ap          ^mp'\nI  airtight seal which retains natural-^^^\n\\     moisture and flavour.     ^___mr   -   \u25a0\n$|||g||$\u00a7t\nogdenss\nLONG WAY TO GO YET\nCHICAGO, March 10. (AP)-Jaok\nBurke, the hotshot of golf's Winter\ncircuit with four successive tournament victories, still has a long way\nto go to break Byron Nelson's professional Golfers' Association record of 11 straight wins seven years\nago.\nBritish Hockey\nTrainer to Australia\nFELPHAM, Sussex,' England,\nMarch 10 (CP) \u2014 George Bourher,\ntrainer of the British hockey team\nwhich defeated Canada in the 1936\nOlympic Games, has emigrated to\nAustralia. .\nAmong the mementoes that\nBourner took with him to Australia\nare a maple leaf badge, obtained\nwhen he trained Winnipeg Monarchs on a visit to Britain in the\n1930s, and a gold medal won by\nStreatham, British champions in\n1934-35.\nRacing Attendance,\nBetting Increases\nNEW YORK, March 10 (AP)*V-\nThoroughbred racing officials, noting the record-breaking attendance\nand\" betting at several Winter tracks\ngave credit today to the U.S. crackdown on bookmakers and increased\npublic confidence in the sport\nIf the termendous upswing continues at the Summer tracks, 1952\nmay be the biggest ever for the\nbusiness, now. conducted in 24 states..\nIt could surpass the all-time record\nyear of 1946 when $1,830,287,455 Was\nshoved through the .mutual windows.\nCuba's Chess Leaders\nLose to U. S., France\nHAVANA; March 10 (AP)\u2014 The\nFrench champion Nicolas Rossolimo\ndefeated Cuba's Francisco Plana; in\n38 moves, while Samuel Reshevsky\nof the United States was beating\nCuba's Rogello Ortega in 39.\nRossolimo and Reshevsky were\ntied for leadership of the international Chess Masters' Tournament\nafter the 13th round. Each has 10\npoints.\nEric Ellskases and Miguel Najdortj\nArgentians, and I. A. Horowitz of\nthe U. S. were in a three-way tie\nfor second place at nine points each.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nOVER 250 EXPECTED\nFOR GOLDEN GLOVES BOUT\nMONTREAL, March 10 (CP)-\nMore than 250 entries are expected for the Golden Gloves Boxing\ntournament, officials said today.\nEliminations will start here March\n19, with the semi-finals for April J\n21-22 and the finals April 25.\nSTOCKHOLM, March 10 (AP)\n\u2014The United States Olympic\nhockey team tonight defeated\nSweden 6-6 before \u25a0 crowd of\n10,000.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Associated Presa\nWashington (Q) 4, Detroit (A) I.\nCincinnati (N) 10, Philadelphia\n(N) 4. .'.;': i    .\nBoston (A) 4, New York (A) 7.\nNew York (N) 15, Chicago (N) 3.\n.Boston \"B\" (N) 4\u201e Philadelphia\n(A) 10. '\u25a0\"\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0_ ';\nNew York (N) .0, Cleveland (A)\n4.\nSt,Louis (N) 8,Boston (N) 5.\nPittsburgh (N) vs Hollywood\n(PCH) postponed, rain.\nSeattle (A) vs Los Angeles (PCI.)\ncancelled, ra__\nSTORAGE\ncosts so little\nis so easy to serve\nWHY TAKE A CHANCE _\nYour most precious effects are\nperfectly safe in our hands. Take\nadvantage' of our clean, dry,\nspacious warehouse where you\nrtfay store your belongings for as\nlong as you wish.\nPHONE 1106 TODAY\nARROW Van & Storage Ltd\n212 STANLEY ST., NELSON\nFORMER HOCKEY PRO DIES\nPITTSBURGH, March 10 (AP)-\nHoward Mackie, 38, former National Hockey League player, died of a\nheart attadk at his home here Sunday. Mackie was a right winger for\nPittsburgh Hornets of the American\nHockey League during toe 1946-47-\n48 seasons.\nJoins Broadcasting\nDALLAS, Texas, March 10 (AP)\n\u2014Charles A. Comiskey II, former\nvice-president of Chicago White Sox\njoined the Liberty Broadcasting system here today as vice president in\ncharge of sports coverage.\nw_w*\nFINE\nBEST CIGARETTE TOBACCO Xi>l t.\nJOCKEY SUSPENDED     '\nLOS ANGELES, March 10 (AP)\u2014\nThe Santa Anita stewards were upheld by the California Horse Racing\nBoard today in the recommendation\nof a 30-day suspension'for Jockey\nJackie Westrope.\nOLDTIMER MAKES COMEBACK\nMoe Roberts, who used to star as\ngoaltender for the Cleveland Barons\nof the American Hockey League, returned to action in tha Chicago\nBlack Hawk cage on November 25\nagainst Oetroit. Roberts, assistant\ntrainer and spar: netminder of the\nHawks had to replace Harry Lumley\nwho was injured, for the third\nperiod of the contest, and despite\nHis 46 years, was unscbred upon and\nhad nine saves.\n\"Boomer\" Rodrinya|c\nNelson Mapli Leafi\nWEDNESDAY\nATTENTION?\nSeason and Contract Ticket Holders must pick up their tickets\nby 5:00 p.m. Today.\nTICKETS NOT PICKED. UP WILL BE PUT ON SALE TONIGHT 7:00 P.M.\n'     FOR SEASON AND CONTRACT TICKET HOLDERS ONLY\nTICKETS ON SALE Kootenay Stationers TODAY 11 ;0<r A.M. to 5:00 P.M.\n- Johnny Sofiak\nTrail Smoke Eaters'\nRESERVE SEAT SALE;\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\n \u25a0'\"\n_______!__.   -\nlOTk^^^ra\nH\nE\nIM\nR\nY\n1\ns\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\n~N\nT\nL-ll'\/''\nIWO MILES FARTHER, HIS 0ONKEY\n(SETS STUBBORN, WANT5 TO TURN NOSH\nBUT THAT WArfA NICE\nEASV J08 X SAVE VOUt\n--NOTMNa TO DO BUT\nMA__ LIGHT\nrWASfMVINS\n-10_-__>_8-\nMONB'THAN\nSOU MAK-\nTHAtlS TOIB-\nJlgas-BUTI\nCOULDN'T\nstondcrivim3\nn all that,\ntraffic-it\nwas too news*\nwi-4_j__a-\nAT MI88I88IPPI STATION, near Plrth,\nthe home of Gorold Gemmlll became a pyra far\nhimself and  hli daughter, Deborah, three, Mn,\nGemmlll managed to Jump from a window With\nrmnvi\u25a0, live, in ntr \u00ab\"\"__, BUI mr, uwii\nto rsioh thi front, door, was overloml.\nPress Canadian.\n\u25a0 Central\nMANY WITNB88E8 In UJ.\na n il, \u2022 subversive Investigation!\nhave named Simon Gerson, above,\nai en. of thi tap Oommunlst\nparty members In the U.8. Here,\nGorson arrives at court In New\nYork on charges of conspiring to\noverthrow by force the government of thl Ul, Fifteen othirl\nhave been . Indicted with him.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nWALLACE HERON.Jhimesford, Ont,, saw the lilt of hll hird\nof 45 prln cattle shot on Government order whan a disease was dlag-\n-_.*___l   \u2014 t-.., \u2014 , \u2014 \u2014 1 \u2014 1-    \u2014\u2014   \u2014\u20141 \u2014 ,\u2014   Ul.   ...tl.   _._._.__,   *_>_.   ........I..\nnosed as trypanoaemlasli. Hen he and hll wife read thl quarantine\nnotice applied by the Government which forbids him to move iny\nother livestock or his equipment off thi firm. Hi bought the oittli\nfrom! Alberta last November. The disease, though not as easily trans-\nmltted as the - hoof-and-mouth scourge, Is contagious.\u2014Central Prln\nCanadian, \u25a0\". --. -\u25a0\u25a0\nACTRE88 SUZANNE CLOUTIER returned to Ottawa without\nthe benefit of a eltliem' welcoming committee usually accorded home\ntalent that made Its mark abroad. She starred In films In France and\nItaly, and Is stopping In Ottawa en route to Hollywood, Whore iho ll\nalready slated for i future role.\u2014Central Presi Canadian.  \u25a0\nA WELCOME HOME to Puddles Is given by Ivan Pinny of Lake,\nview, Ont,, after on 86-mllo Journey thit teak the cat nine months,\nPuddles wis given to \u2022 Kltohimr family but stayed with thom only\none day. He set put for LikivliW ind arrived with paws swollen ind\npainful but fat and happy,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nROBERT MORTON returned to Montreal from Winnipeg, whir*\nhi wu working, to find his home burned, ind hli father, mother,\nwife md two children dead In \u2022 fire, With him li hli daughter,\nliebil, only survivor of thi flri,\u2014Ointril Prin Cinidlin.     *\nDAILY CROSSWORD'\nACROSS      8,Vlperi 26. Color,\nI. Weary by . 10. Chair M fabric\nrepetition     11. A metal ring 38. Sifting\n5. A weight     16. Monotary utinslTl\n(Anglo-Ind.)    unit (Latvla)8I. River (Bag,)\n8, Manacles     18, Not taut      3*. Marshy\n.11. Is concerned Iff. Covers with      meadowi\n12. Not true\n18. Dower\n.14.Iniect\n19. Entire\namount\nlard\n20.__rlpo'\n21. Openings\n(anat)\n22, Cain\n17. Large worm 24. Girl's\n18. Booth 'nlcknomo\n20. Deep dish     25. Old measure\nof length\nSB. Pill to hit\n30. Oriental\n\u201e\u25a0 nurse\nJT.Covirwtth\nasphalt\n89. Mast\n<0, Units of\nelectrical\nicsistanoi\nfc-il_U\nUfjli\nnnnia\n1 II.V..I1\ni.r.nno\nrai mn.\nnnuirji 11\n1   .' ill. IU\ni ii-ii-i i ii\njn    ilea\ni.iiiiii::\n1 lUlilllll\nnn in\nsap.\nHIHMriUI\n1   Clllll..\nnn    k'jiiu i.'ii.u'-\nIWIIIi,'\nII11 IMIII.l\nH-l-ll *\u25a0\nriunm\ni:i_..tii-i\n:,-.\"l.l--J\nIJHk.\n1 l.-k'-J        j\nT>iU._ij>-Anwar\n41. Foundation\n49. A Jewel\n45. Sheltered\nli.l   '\u2022\n23. Plagued\n27. Melodies\n29. Sincerely\n30. Rank and sour\n32. Take out\n(print)\n33. Ship bottom!\nSB.Chlrt    .'\n88. Letter of thi\n* alphabet\n39. Weep\n42. Semblinci\n44. Crock litter\n46. Keeps\n47. Lines of\nJunction\n48. Noah's eldest son\n49. Scottish.\nGaelic\nDOWN\n- 1, A blow(slang)\n2. Verbal\n3, .poly\n4. Half ems\n8. Tribute\n\u00ab. Voided\nescutcheon\n7. Wreathe!\n>-   (Hawaii)\nDAILY OBYPTOQUOTB-^Here's how to work lit -.,\nAXYDLBAAXB\n\\. UL 0 N fl r B L L 0 W\n\u2022 One letter almply atanda for another. In thli example A U lind\nfor the three L'e, X for thl two 0* eto. 'Single litteri, apoi-\ntrophiei. the length and-formation of. thi word! an all htoti.\nEach day thi code letter* are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nIZOFHTJ    WKBBVIHL,    HSO    XOZKRUi\nHSTH    XTR9    HSOO      .TXKVL    KT W 0.\nESOP    UKVFA \u2014HOrPUfcKP.\nYeateidayV Cryptoquotey POWER, _____  A DESOLATINO\nPESTILENCE,   POLLUTES   WHATBTO   IT  TOUCHE?\u2014\n>\u2022  SHELLEY. . . \u25a0'\u25a0 ''\u25a0''-'\nDistflbuiod W Ku. -\"inns IroJlaU ,\n--   ' '.   I* \"    -\u2022   \u25a0\nON THE AIR\nCKfcN PROGRAMS .\n7(00\u2014Nlwl,,,,\nTiOJ\u2014Top \u00ab\u25a0 thl Mornlrg\n7:S0-Niwij-, \u25a0\u2022\u25a0'.      \u2022\n7:30\u2014Top of tho MorUng\n7:60\u2014Olani 'Teyi Program\n8:00-Newi.y      \"\n8:1_\u2014Sports Newi\n8:15-Breakfaat Club\n8:45\u2014Towtyjp Serenade\n8:55\u2014Meal of thl Day\n8:00\u2014Western Ttmii\n8:30\u2014Morning Concirt\n10:00\u2014Morning Dlvotionl\n10:15\u2014Riders of the Purple Saga\n10:30\u2014Kenny Baker\n10:48\u2014Oueatln' With KisUn\nil:00-Nawi\n11:05\u2014Dorothy Douglas\n11:10\u2014for You Madame\nIl:30-Aunt Mary\nll:45-Forbidden Diary\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:18-Nawi\n12:38\u2014Sporti Niwi\n12:30\u2014farm Broadcast\n12;55\u2014Musioal Interlude\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:45\u2014School for Consumers\n1:88\u2014Women'! Compty\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Giant Toyi Program\n1840 ON 1MB DIAL .\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nTUESDAY, MARCH 11,1 Ml\n2.:4IK-Easy Listening\n2:80\u2014Western Broundup\n3:00-Sacred Heart\n3:15-Paoliio Newi\n8!3o\u2014Party Lin*\n3:4\u00bb-Novel Tim*.\n4:00-Sunshlne Society\n4:80\u2014Cook ot the Seven Sm\n4:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\n4:35\u2014Report From Parliament I\n8:00\u2014Tony thi Troubadour\n8___~John Fiihe   .\n8:20\u2014Glint Toj\u00bb Program:.;'\u25a0'\u25a0\nMO\u2014Sporti Niwi\n8:85\u2014Supermm\n8:8(WNiwi\n6:00\u2014Drama of Medicine   .\nSilB^-Rid Croii\n8:30\u2014Cavilcide of Melody\n7:00-Newi\n7:15\u2014Niwi Roundup    -     ,\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014Nation'! Business\n8:15\u2014Commodores\n8:30-Jazz With Jim\n9:00-Chilcotln Traill\n8:80\u2014Family Theatre\n-0:00-Niwi: ;'*'-.\n10:18\u2014Tram-Atlantic Traveller\n10:80\u2014Nocturne1\nlllOO-Newa Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nVV_Dlsl\u00a3SDAY,'^ARCH 12,1952\n8:00\u2014New!\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:1-\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC Niws Commentary\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert >\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\nIl:l5-A Man and Hla Muiie\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One        '\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:45-Talk   .    -..-'.\nl:56^Woman'i .Compty\n2:00\u2014B.C School Broadcast\n2:30r-TBA\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n8180\u2014Solo Guilt\n3:45-N6vel Time\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shield! Sings\n4:15\u2014Plmo Popi   \"?.-<\"\u2022;\n4:30-Mig_ie Muggins   .-.*.,'\n4:45\u2014Something ln Harmony\n4:85-Niwi\n6100-Riwhidi\n5:20\u2014International Commentarj I\n5:30-HaVa You Heard!\n8:45\u2014Question Box\n6:00\u2014Neighborly Newi\nails-Intro to Wed. Night\n8:30\u2014Christianity in an Age of i\nScience\n7:\u00bb-Newa  : .    \u25a0 \u2022\n7:15\u2014CBC Niwi Roundup\n7..0-Becital\n'8:00-Strlng Orchestra\n8:30\u2014Baahmatchkln\nlOiOO\u2014Niwi' .   \u2022\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014Showplici   > -\n11:00-U N Todiy\n11:15\u2014Metropolitan Auditions of t\nAir\n11:45\u2014Night Cap\nll:57-Nows\n7\n -\nAMlMlllltMiim\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Adi_3 p.nu\nBIRTHS\n. BAREFOOT\u2014To   Mr.   and   Mrs.\n. George Barefoot, 814 Silica Street,\n1   at Kootenay Lake Genera] Hospital,\n-March 4, a daughter,\nVOYKIN\u2014To Mr; and Mra. Will-\nlam Voykin of Glade, - at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, March 4, a\ndaughter.     _. | '\n'.LADE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Paul\nLade of Kinnaird, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, March 4, a daughter. ' \u25a0 _\nLAWRENCE^-To Mr. and Mrs.\nVernon Lawrence, 1324 Cedar\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, March 5,, a son,\n\u25a0', LAROCOUFr-To..Mr. and Mrs.\nLaRocque, 310 Carbonate Street,,at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nMarph 3, a son. '.,':\u25a0\nTOMLIN\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nTomlin, Crescent Valley, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, March\n8, a son.: .\u25a0\nPhone 144\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nDepartment of Public Work!\n'     'Cranbrook plktrict\nLOAD AND SPEED\n.   RESTRICTIONS\nThe undersigned, being a person\nauthorized by the Minister of Public Works ln writing to exercise the\npowers vested in the said Minister\nunder Part II of the \"Highway Act,\"\nahd being of the opinion that cer-\ntian highways ip the Cranbrook\nelectoral district are liable* to damage through extraordinary traffic\nhereby makes the following regulation pursuant to Section 35 of the\n\"Hlghwiy Act,\",\nThe following load prid speed regulations are. now imposed* on  all\nF-TZEN\u2014To Mr. and'Mrs. Ludy I highways and roads in the Cran-\nFltaen, 323 Hendryx Street, at Koot- brook electoral district effective at\nvAUtOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES\nAkaltcho\n1.00\nAmal Larder ..!,:,_,.... '\"\"\"\"\u25a0'     '.,\nSTILL A FEW\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nenay Lake General Hospital, -March\n8, a daughter.\nWILSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wilson of South Slocan, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital,'March\n*, a son.\nRICHARDS-To Mr. and Mrs. A.\nRichards of Castlegar, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, March, a. .a\ndaughter..\n' WALSH-To Mr. and Mr* Wllf-i\nlam Walsh of Ymir,..at Kootenay\nLake. General Hospital, March 7, a\n\u25a0 ion.. \u25a0\n' MARKIN-To Mr. and Mrs. Will-\nlam Markln of Crescent Valley, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nMarch.4, a son.\u25a0;.\"'--,.\n\u2022HELP WANTED\n..ANTED - BY ONE OF NEL*\nson's leading business firms, s\ncompetent girl for general office\nwork. Shorthand- and typing essential. Excellent working condition! and good remuneration.\nHospital and medical plan. Minimum starting salary $125.00, more\n' depending'upon experience. .Box\n8682 Daily Newi.\nffAWl^MrjStECKiRS. 'HAVE\nroom for a few good prospectors,\n'Yellowknife area. $300 per month\nplus board and expenses, plus fib-\neral participation. Do not apply\nunless you can cut toe mustard.\n-W. S. Hamilton, 425 Baker St.,\nPhone 1279. ;;.'\u25a0\nNEED SOMEONE ' WITH' EQUIP-\nment to contract log 2,000,000 ft.\non Slocan Lake. Cat. essential.-Or\nwill pay relit for use of equipment\n. en. percentage basis. Box 18610,\n. pally Newi,\t\n'UMBRBR'AND ONE COOK FOR\na.m, on the morning of Thursday.\nMarch 13th, 1052, an'd will remain\nin effect until further notice.\nNo person shall operate any\nvehicle having, a maximum gross\nweight or axle loading in excess bf\n75% of that allowed by thp regulations made pursuant,to Section 36\nqf the \"Highway Act\" R.S.B.C. 1948.\nThe speed limit of vehicles with\npneumatic tires is restricted as\nfollows:\nPassenger automobiles: thirty (30)\nmiles per hour.\nTrucks   and   buses:   twenty-five\n(25) milea'per hour.' '.-,\u2022- .\nVehicles with solid tires ire prohibited,;\nDated  at  Cranbrook,  B.C.,\n10th day of March, 1952.\nJ. A. Dennison,\nDiatricfr. Engineer.\nthis\n$1785-;\n,...,.'...,.\nTHE BEST;\nUSED CAftS\n^951 Austlp Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan      r\n1950 Chevrolet Coach   *\n1950 G.M.C. Pickup:''.'-'\n1949 Ford Coach\n1949 Austin Sedan  .\n194$.CMC. Pickup\n1947 Chevrolet Pickup':\n1948 Mercury Pickup   .\n1947 Ford Fordor\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n.,     SPECIAL\n1935 International\n\"Panel \u2014$75\nfive or ilx months season, Rossland-Trail Golf Club. Do own.\n: buying, cater for. banquets, dinner! and' abort orders. 'Live in.\nSecretary, 8 Forrest -Stive, Traii,\n.B.C.   ' ,      \u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0.,\nSEED A CAT WITH BULLD02a_R\ntot logging operation.*. Will pay\nrent by the hour or by the 1000\nF.B.M. Guarantee 40 hour week.\n' Summer operation. Box 8542 Dally\nNewa.   '.'\".\"        ,    ' '.. \u25a0\nWAW___) r- COOK FOR MOD.ERN\nmining camp in Slocan area of\n' British Columbia, feeding approximately sixty men. Apply\nBox 8543 Daily News. ,'\n' WANTED-YOUNG LADY ABOUT\n25 years of age for cashier at\nArmson's. No experience neces\n\u2022ir..-.-'.\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH GIVE RESULTS.\" Fdr over 30 year! Western Canada Poultrymeo have\nsuccessfully ' raised \"The Chicks\nWhich Give Results.\" This year\nthe following breeds ire avail,\nable:. White Leghorns, New\nHampshires, Barred Plymouth\nRocks, Rhode Island Reds, Light\nSussex. Black. Australorps, Rook-\nHamp Cross, Leg-Hamp Cross.\nAustra-White Cross, R.I., Red-\nLeghorn Cross. Order early, price\nlist\" and further particulars'upon\nrequest. Order now. and Remember \"It's Results That Count.\"\nRump & Sen'dall Ltd., Box._',\nLangley Prairie and,Vernon; B.C.\n:JKi^ti-Qual.Uy Chicks.\nR.O.P. Sired Leghorn! and New\nHampshires. Also Canadian Ap-\n-. proved Leghorn- Hampshire\nCrosses. 27 years' experience\nwith chicks and poultry. Send\nfor our catalogue and particulars. Apply our agent Nelson\nFarmers Supply Ltd., Nelson,\nor write direct to New Siberia\nFarms, N. Balakshln, R.R. 2, .\nChilliwack, BC.\n1941 Forgo Pickup\n'1940 Ford Sedan   ..'...'-\n1940 Ford \u25a0'\u2022Station. Wagon\n1939 Ford Sedon i\n1,938 W.llys Coupe\n1937 Chrysler Sedan\n1936 Cheyrblef- Sedan\n1*35 Ford Sedan '\n1934 Plymouth '\n1933 VVhlte Ponel\n1933 Model B Coupe\n1932 Model A\nTERMS AND  TRADES\nEMPIRE-\n803 BAKER ST. \u2014 NELSON, B.C.\nAustin Sales and Service\nete\n\" tAMP\nEquipitoeet\nFor Miners\nor Loggers\nCamp Cots\nMqttresses\nBlankets\nCotton Sheets\nFlannel Sheets\nPillow Cases\nPillows\n\u2022 Tents, all sizes\n\u2022 Tarpaulins\nWe carry a complete stock\nand   your   v order   will\nreceive our immediate\n(\u25a0attention\n,',       PHONE 18'\nNelson-Machinely\nCompany, Ltd!\n214 Hall St.       Nelson, B. C.\nAmerican y It, ..\nAhacon    ,    ,,\nAhglo Huronian\nAnkeno ' ...\u201e.\u201e.\nArjoh      , \u201e,\u201e_.\nArmistice ;\t\nAtlas. YK ...._..\u201e\nAumaque .,..\u201e_...\nBagamac .,.\u201e..__\nBase Metali I...\nBevcourt _,;._\nBobjo      .     .;\u201e\nBoymar Gold ...\nBralorne     \t\nBreWliiRL.....\nBroulan\t\nBuffadlion   .\t\nBuffalo Ank ......\nBuff Can     \t\nCalliman   '-.'   ...\nCampbell' R L\nCentremaque  ...\nChesterviUe ......\nCochenour   ...,...,\nCons M le S\t\nConwest.     \t\nCrestaurum  .......\nCroinor     ,\t\nDelnite    . :,.._.\u201e.,.\nDetta R L, ...........\nDiscovery . .....\nDome       ....,\nDoriajda -.\u201e\n......\n.59\n. 8,35\n. 2.00\n. .42\n: .12\n. .10\n.      .17\n\u2022 .20 Vi\n.    MS\n.'\u2022I'. .52\n.\"'      .87\n.      .19\n\u2022    .13\n6.30\n.17'\n1.43\n.12\n1.20\n23\n.28 V,\n8.00\n,18\n,36\n1,52'\n88:00\n_,70\n,14\n.34 V,\n1.24\n.16\n\u2022 .33\n19.25\n.44\n. Duvay _\nEast Amphl   \t\nEast Sullivan .....\n. Ider Gold   ......\nElona\nEstella    I\nEureka ......\nFilconbridge ......\nFrobisher   i \u25a0\u201e.,..\nGiant Yei\nGillies Lake :;.\nGod's Lake\t\nOoidale\nGold. Eagle.\nGolden Manltou\nHalcrow  . .......:....'..\nHallnor     ..............\nHardrock .,..Z.._.\nHarricana' __.\nHasaga  .   \t\nHeva\nHollingcr'    ;a.\nHomer YK  ,'.\nHudson Bay ...\u201e_,...,\n.      .12\n93\n8.30\n,83 .\nXI\n1.90\n145\n13.U0\n478\n11.25\n' ,13\n.40\n.16H\nJ2\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1952 '**. II\n.int\n8.00 \u25a0\n.13\n.U.\nMACHINERY\n\"MILLS\" IGE CREAM MACHIliE,\n\"Savage\" ice cream cabinet, \"Alaskan\" oil. range, 2 oven; 8 plate\nglass mirrors, set of chrome\nbooths, 4- tables, 3 double and 2\nsingle Heats, 2 sets chrome tables\nand chairs. Berkel' meat sllcer,\nhand* power; McKasky cash register, 4 clothes trees, .cutlery,\nglasses, dishes, etc. Compressor\ndoor for walk-In frig. Apply\nBox 88. CasUegar. B.C.\n.Ft.\nRAMP -\nBODY AND FENDER WORKS\nDealers For\n.     BRADEN ond TULSA\nTRUCK WINCHES    -\nfor every opplicatijbn\n3 to 50 Tons Capacity\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nPhone 193 \u2014 556 Josephine St.\nNelson, B.C.\nHIGH BQY FRIG., NfW\nToledo s .ales, small adding machine, new shelving and counters,\nfluorescent lights,- ice cream frig.,\na very nice practice piano,-completely overhauled. All remaining\nstock at wholesale price. Apply\nRosemont  Grocery,, 409   Wasson\nStreet, Nelson; .B.C;  .-\t\nBBX^nffnai.   T,ri..ni_(.TTV_|Granyllle Island: Vancouver 1, B.C.\nwashing machine, J mos.\nFpB SALE-DISMANTLED SAW-\n- mill plant. We are dismantling a\nsawmill' breakdown   plant   it\n' Ocean Falls  Majority of, equipment is for dlaposal including log\nhaul chain and drive, log loading\nequipment   10-foot   Clark   band\nmill, jump saw. 60\" Sumner edger\ni with synchronous drive, trimmers.\n' etc. All or part for sale For additional details Write or wire Mr\nA* R    Dyrsmid,'P.O    Box   879.\nVancouver, B.C.  -\nFOR SALE. - SMALL PORTABLE\nmill- and pqwer plant. Will take\nrough lumber in payment Must\nhave some lumber or cash down.\nAlso, small planer tor sale cheap.\nApply Creston Builders Supply,\nCres__vB.C.\n\"NATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\n- LIMITED\nDISTRIBlftGRS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND'\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited.\nInspiration\nInt Nickel\t\nJollet Que .,..\t\nKayrand   : i..\nKejore    \u201e.\u201e..,\nKehvlllis    \t\nKerr Addison\nKirk-Hudson   Bay\nKirkland Lake\nKirk Townsite .......\nLabrador        Z...Z.\nLakeshore\t\nLake Dufault\t\nLake Wasa   \t\nLamaque   \t\nLeitch  J\nLolivlcourt \t\nLynx  \u201e,...\t\nMacDonald    _,....\nMacassa \u00bb__\u00bb_\nMacLeod Cock ...;...\nMadsen B L ....-.\u201e\u201e\u201e\nMagnet\nMalartlc G'F .\t\nMarcus G \u201e_\u201e..\nMclntyre      \t\nMining. Corp .....v\t\nMoneta  ...,, _'.\t\nNegus  i   ..   ......_\u201e.,.\nNew Calumet'  ,_..\nNew Goldvue  ,\u201e_\nNew Lui_d    \u201e\nNlpisslng  \u201e\u2122_.j__,\nNoranda   -..!.._.__i.\nNorth Inca ....\u201e .\nO'Brien ...: _...\u201e.\u201e\nO'Leary  _-_.\u201e\u201e.\nOrlac \u25a0........ ,\u201e_.,\nOslsko  _\u201e\nPamour  , *, ^\t\nPaymaster \u201e\u201e.\nPickle Crow\t\nPowell Rouyn ....,\nPreston E D \t\nQuebec Lab ,_\u201e\nQuebec Man .... _..\nQueenston  \t\nQuemont \t\nSan Antonio\nMarket Trends\nNEW VORK, March 10 <AP) -\nRailroads gave ground amidst a gen'\noral easing of prices.\nCanadian Issues were mostly lower. Mclntyre increased -Hi, and\nDome Mines gained li. Distillers\nSeagrams fell %, both International\nNickel and Hiram Walker slipped\nVt, and Canadian Pacific dropped Vs.\nTORONTOy (CP)-\u2014-. Industrial!\nand base metals drifted moderately\nlower toward the close but golds\n.29 V. I and western oils made little head\n.12   .way., -      ,\nTrading opened briskly, tapered\noff until mid-session then picked up\nagain. - Industrial 'dealings were\nmainly in leading, issues but a scattered list of golds, oils and metals\nattracted speculative Interest.\nMONTREAL - (CP) - Price!-\nturned mixed near the close'after1\na slightly higher forenoon trend.\nSteadily weakened support pulled\nthe  list  back from  morning  advances. Changes were mainly fractional, With only the odd issue\ning in a wider range.\nJOHN H. >. TURNER, O.P.E.\nformer superintendent of thl,\nBatik of Montreal's, forelon dl-\npartment who hi! been plveh\nchirga ef the bank's Western division, following hli appointment\nai an assistant general minigir.\nHe will supervise the operation!\nof all branches In B. C, thl Yukon and the Prairie Provlncoa.\n| H\u00bb succeeds Ernest E. Rutherford, |\n|- who li retiring on pension at the\nind of .April after a career With\nthe Bank of Montrnl ef 40 yeara.\nMr. Tumor's sucoeiior Is Edward\n_   __.\u2014-\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Australia's\ndecision to cut Imports added to a\npre-budget: gloom and' share prices\ndrooped. Falls up to two shillings\nwere registered. s\nSmall   sales   gave'  dullness   to\nBritish ' Government   lonlg-dated, _   .-^\u25a0\u25a0z:r_T_,''ar*Vl!ll\\\nmainiy steaay. .,...,.\u201e    .>,, ,nt ,up,P|ntel,d,l,t 8f ^t fr,,^,,\ndepartment since 1948.\nsquare tubs included. Will 'accept'\n_!_n_.,y_.pa_meDts'  S^0-' Phone\n269-Y1. Mr. Wagner.\nR.O.P. SIRED-ORDER YOUR RE-\nquirements now from one of the\nmost popular breeds: S.C  White\n: Leghorns, New Hampshires,\nRhode Island. Reds. Now available\nat the Triangle Chick Hatchery,\nphone 3201. Armstrong. B.C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFAMILY MAN DESIRES WORK,\ngeneral labor; also experienced in\nbuilding and repairs. Hourly or\ncontract basis. Phone -1159-L.\nW___W= tlG\u00abT D-_TIE_ F'6R\nmornings, mending, Ironing, sew-\nIng, etc, Rm. 26, Annable Bk\u201e City.\nIF YOU INTEND BUYING BABY\nchicks or pullets this year, write\nfor catalogue of breeds and prices\nto APPLEBY POULTRY FARM,\nMISSION CITY. B.C.\nTWO COWS FOR SALE-1 MILK-;\ning, 1 due to'freshen. Apply Tom\nOgloff. Glade, BC,  '\nFOR SALE - 2 CORNER LOTS*\nApply 1910 kootenay Street ,\nPERSONAL\n,  BUSINESS OPrORTUNITIES\n#OR SALE -r IN PENTICTON,\nB.C., 11 room rooming house,\nnicely furnished, over $200 per\nmonth revenue. Owner leaving\n'town. For particulars write:\nHouseholder, 501 Winnipeg St.\nPenticton, B.C.\nCAFE TO RENT - NEWLY DEC-\norated* and furnished with horseshoe counter and padded booths\nln good mining town with large\npayroll for particulars apply to\nAlexandra Hotel, Natal, B.C.\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN*\nsurance Co., D L Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE CP.R\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates $150 to $2.00 single, $2_)0 to\n$300 doubles   Vancouver   B   C\nMbox. iailg Urns\nClassified Advertising. Ratal:\nlie per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive   Insertions.\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive inser- *\ntions.  '.-. '   .   ,..'.   \u2022\n$1.56 line per month (26 consjc-\nutlve Insertions).  Box numbers  lie .extra.  Covers any\nnumber ot insertions,\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL) 'NOTICES,\n' TENDERS, J!tc,\u201420c per line,\nfirst Insertion.  16c per. line\neach subsequent insertion.\n-    ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription' Rates:\n(Net Mora Than Listed Hire)\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance        .30\nBy carrier, per year      15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne tp\u00b0_t_   .....__;  $ 1.25\nThree monthii 3.75,\nSix month!   .\u201e\u25a0\u25a0_.,..., -    7.50\nOne year  Li-:il ....    15.00\nMall In Canada,' outside Nelson:\nOne month     i..ii, :_.Z   1.00\nThree months '..llfc_.,\u201e\u201e.,    2.75\nSix months   ....._______.    5.50\nOne year v ........ -,   10.00\nWhen extra postage Is required,\nabove rates'plus postage.\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately Daily News Printing\nDept, Nelson   British Columbia.\nADULTS I PERSONAL RUBBER\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment $1-\nbill. Tested, guaranteed, tine\nquality Mailed In plain, sealed\npackage. Including free Birth\nControl Booklet and , bargain\ncatalogue, of Marriage ; Hygiene\nSupplies. Western . Distributor!.\nBn\u00bbl02..-PN, Vancouver\nFOIt:SALE\nDomaged 1947 Ford,\nPickup   , I  \u25a0 '\nSerial No. 2124-47H3033, License   .\nNo. C25-425. 'Inspect at Nelson\nTransfer Garage, Nelson.  ,\nDamaged 1949 G.M.C.\nPitkup. _    '\u25a0\nSerial No. 9931402244, License\nNo. C26-623. Inspect at Oswald\nMotors, Castlegar.\nDamaged 1939 ford Sedan\n-Serial No. 016442, License No.\n70-574. Inspect at Oswald Mo't-\n'Ori, Castlegar.   \"\".\"\u25a0\u25a0'.\u00bb\nDamaged 1941 Plymouth.\nSedan       \"\u25a0..-,.\nSerial No. 9618191, License No.\n164-944. Inspect it Motor Inn:\nGarage, Triil.\nBids for salvage on above vehicle! to be made* in writing to\nBOURQUE &MCGARY,-\nInsuranco'Adjusters\nBOX .3 NELSON, B.C.\nSEE,ART PETERSEN, CRESTON,\nfor your dressed pork. Also wean-\ner pigs. First pigs ready about\nApril 1st Phone 35-X, or write\nBox 144. Creston,-B.C.. \t\nCO. FEE TABLES END TABLES,\nchests, desks, dressers, vanities.\nbeds, our specialty Made by Amoroso and: Fazio Woodworking, 518\nSixth Street. Phone' I282-L. v\nCOMPLETE BEE HIVES AND\nequipment, one 14 in. gang, plow,\n2 lets, shears, log sleigh, for sale\nor exchange for chickens or bull\ncalf' D J. Mclhries, Willow Point,\nSherritt. Gordon\t\nSigma .       .....\t\nSilvermlller ... -\u201e\nSiscoe ..     .._\u201e\nSladon Mai ;';;\u201e,\nSteep Rock ..\u201e,' ,_\nSurf Inlet \t\nSylvanlte   \t\nJeck Hughes  ..\u2022...,_.,\nThompion-Lund __\u2014;\nTOmbill __.\nTorbrit ;'\u25a0..';\u25a0';;;\nTram Cont Rei\t\nUnion Mining ',\t\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Cmada .._.\u201e._.\nWaits Amulet\t\nOIL_\nAnglo Can\t\nAP Con   ...\nCal & Ed  .....I. \u201e\n\"Nu:Lite'T Stainless Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer a apecial trade-in allowance\non .your old cook ware. Box\nNelson, B.C\nTRUCK, TRACTOR AND LOAD-\ning winches available from stock\nLeRoi 105 Compressor for rent\nBayes Equipment Co. Cranbrook.\n\u25a0icy \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0._.\u25a0 '_'\u2022'-\u2022\u25a0\" .\nFOR    IMMEDIATE   SALE - t)i,^_ \u00ab .\nCaterpillar tractor and bulldozer, Calmont\nBox 144, Trail, or phone Weill at | Central Leduo :.\n\"\"\"'\"'\"'\" Dalhousle    .\t\nDavies. Pet*\u2014\nDecalta ...\u201e__.\nDel Rio\t\nEastcrest \t\nFederated Pet* .\nHighwood\t\nHome\t\nImperial Oil.!...\nInter Pete \t\nKroy\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, March 10 ICP) -]\nTrade was strong and aetiv* on light\nreceipts on thl Calgary livestock\nmarket today.\nNo bulls were available ln the 180\ncattle and calves on offer.\nGood light butcher steeri and\nheiferi were fully steady. Heavy\nbutcher steers were selling $1 or\nmore below comparable light\nweights. Cowl were steady to strong\nthe odd, choice, half ery kind bringing up to $2, ,:\nGood' to choice fed calves were\nin keen demand. Veal calves were\nfully steady. i\nHogs closed steady last week at\n$23.78. Sowt were unsold, No sheep\nmarket was established.     :'\u25a0 \u25a0 . -.\nGood to choice butcher, steers\n25.50 to 26.75, common to mediurh\n21.00 to C5.00. Good to near-choice\nbutcher heifers 24.50 to 25.75, common to medium 20.00 to' 24.00*. Good\nto choice fed clival 800-800 pounds\n27,00 to 28.80, common to medium\n25.00 to 26.00. Good eowi 18.00 to\n19.00, common to medium 16,00 to\n17.50, canners and cutters 10.00 to,\n14.50. --'\u25a0'--\u2022\nChinese Forces\nUse Russ Arms\n'..     By ROBERT IUNSON\nTOKYO, March 10 (AP) \u2014 He* :\nneutral is Russia ln the Korean wart\nA hitherto-secret report in Qea.\nMatthew B, Rldgway'i heidquirteri\n-jaerti: . \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0-' .. m\n\"Th* main source of mpply fo*\npreient Chinese Communist forcM\n. . . ln Koera ... . ii from Soviet-\nfurnished material.\"\nAlthough the United Nation!'\ncommand never his announced the\ncapture of a Russian soldier, practically all equipment in use by the\nNorth Korean Army, and the Chi-,\nnese Communist force! Ji Ruwlan-\nmide.\nSo too, li the iwlft lit lntercep-\ntor plane, the MIG-I5, which patroli\nNorthwest Korea from Manchuria*\nbases.\n14.50. Good to cohlcaVeaiye^vrt,,*'_\u00ab ''**'_'_ \u00b0^ \u00bb\u00bb**\u2022* I\n31.00 to 88.00, common to medium *\u201e ***_*,&'. _**i<tl!atUn today I\n.Waneta.\nPROPERTY,. HOUSES; _ ARMS'!\nETC., FOR SALE\nFOR 8AU! - '100-ACRE. FARM\nwith Vt mil_ lake frontage; 40\nacres, cleared, 3 acres fruit and\nwalnut orchard. 7-rm. house with\nbasement, outbuildings, electricity\navailable, Irrigation flume under\nconstruction. $7500. David. Orcutt\nFauquier, B.C.\n25.00 to 30.00.\nVancouverSfocki\nMINE*\nBeaver Lodge \u2022. _____L\u00bb_\nBralorne  -   ~\"~\nCariboo Gold\t\nGolconda .........._____ 1\nGiant Mascot\nCOAL AND WOOD HANGE, $35;\n' _  incubators, 140 eggs size, $15.00\neach;'  cream*   separator,   $15.00.\nHudson, Balfour.\nCRESS\nWART\n, -             KEMbVER -\n.\"eiraREss\"\"* *om fn**\nWE _TILL HAVE PORK-68 LBS.\nto a side, It 39 cents. H. H. Relmar,\nSlocan City, BC.\nFOR SALE'\u2014 FULLY MODERN\nhome in Nelson., 4 rooms - and\nPembroke bath, large cabinet\nkitchen, inlaid linoleum, full\nbasement washing facilities. New\nfurnace, wired fpr range, electric\nwater' heater. On two lota, fruit\ntrees. Bus stop at door. Write to\nMm. J..-S. Lawrence, Fruitvale,\nB.C.\nMacDougal Segur\nHighland Bell ._._.\nKootenay Bell* __.\nPend Oreille __\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Border....._\nQuatalno'i...,:\t\nReeves MicDonald\n|Sheep Creek\t\nSherritt Gprdon \t\nSilver Ridge .......;\t\nSilver Standard \u2122\nVananda \"J\nVan Roi'\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\nH\u00abW   1852   BEL'l'dNB   HEARING\naid;  fully  guaranteed.\nPhone 508-R-S.\nCheap.\nBUSINESS AND   .\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AVERS AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W WIDDOWSON & CO AS-\nsavers 304 Josephine St., Nelson\nHI S ELMES ROSSLAND BC,\nAssayer. Chemist Mine Rep.\nSACRIFICE SALE-1949 PONTIAC\nDeluxe 4-door sedan with heater,\ndefrosters. Excellent condition\nand clean throughout Ctll 1116-R.\n1. or SAL_i-'5i HIlLMAN MtNJt\nA-1 shape, $1700. Apply Willow\nPoint Store, R.R. 1, Nelion, B.C.\n2 ROOM HOtWl! t_tAHUa.\"F?__'\nsale. Apply p. 3. Mclnnes, Willow\nPoint\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE FOR\nsale. Phone 087-X-2 or call at\n705 Silica St.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SP1-\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n935 E Cordova St.. Vancouver, j\nFOR SAWS-GURNEY 4-BURNER\nelectric rang*. PhOhe 434-L1.\nW* _____ - fetMH ELIfcCTRiC\n. .waahlng. machine. Phone 771-X.\nFOR SALE-HEINTZMAN PIANO.\nPhone 883-L.\n'MI-_6Mtc tttAmd AibS.'-\nWHte PO   Box 39   Nelson. B.C\nfutLV M_6Eltl_  fldm  i_\nstoreys with 28 lots (about 1.75\nacres).. Pear and, cherry trees.\nLarge living room and fireplace.\nSacrifice $3500' cash or1 $4000 on\nterms. W. F. Tyers, Kaslo, B.C.\n_______________________________\nFOR SALE OR TRADE-160-ACRE\nUmber land at Fauquier, B.C. Will\nconsider trade for small house in\nNelson. .Apply E. Kendrick, 924\n' Latimer Street Nelson, B.C. -'\u25a0'\nfor sale IN cAS-LBdAB - 4-\nroom modern house. Full cement\nbailment Apply J..C McLuckle,\nCastlegar, %\nBAM BbGGV TOft SALJS -i\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER  AND AUTO\nWrecking Phone Rossland, 171,\nENGINEER, AND 8URVI-VOR8\nR  W   HAGGE.N   Land Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nBOYDC AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, \u25a0 bras!, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading- Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Me-\n' tola Ltd. 250 Prior St.. Vancou-\nver, BC. Phone Pacific 8357,.\nWAN-tED-CEDAR POLES FROM\n20' to 90'. inclusive, cedar posts\nsplit and round, unpeeled Larch\npoles. Albert Malda, Caacade, B.C.\nWANTI!!D-i-C_.DAR P6l__S, POSTS\nWould also take Cottonwood logs\nor other species. S. P. Pond, Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 369-R2.\n$10.\n'RENTALS\nIN8URANCE AND REAL E8TATE\n(HCMARDY AGtoClES  LTD.  II.\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-.\nContact H. Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop,  acetylene  and\nelectric Welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 503 324.Vernon St\nSHIP U6j.(.UR--RAP\"-____Aia\nor iron Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St, Vancouver. B C\nC__ia_ P6_j_5, ALL <_!___>__\nand lengths Larch poles Glacier\nLumber Co,, Box 480, Nelson. BC.\nSHIP   YOUR   HIDES   TO.\nMorgan  Nelson. B.C\nWANTED TO RENT-^ OR 5 RM.\nhouse on North Shore by B.C.\nTelephone employee. Furnished, or\notherwise. Phone 858. \u25a0\nGENTLEMAN REQUIRES HOUSE-\n.keeping room or small suite. Re-.\nliable and permanent Phone 710-R\nafter 3 p.m.\nFOR    RENT - LIGHT    HOUSE-\nkeeping   room   for   gentleman.\nPhone 517-Y.\nTT.\nROOM AND BOARD\ni-ftbbii _OWAG_ >6B mm\n\u25a0 by month. Phone 46 or 743-B-2.\nmnil \u25a0\u25a0, w ii ,   -    _____\nLOST AND FOUND\n17 MltE_ FR6M r_!LS6N, S6UTH\nihor^\u2014S-bedroom house with\nacreage; $6000. Easy terms. Box\n8184, Daily News.\nComfortable home, 2 bed-\nrooms, kitchen, living room, bathroom, furnace, garage. Ph. 124-R,\nwAimiiv. yo _ _t 6_t vm soaia\nhouse for cash. Phone 279-X.\nFOR SALE: -'-,tiPtlltt.ii- ftbftM\nottage.on 2M, lots. 'Phone 1223-Y,\nHOUSE\n161-X-3.\nSpring\nEye*Openers\n1941 Plymouth\n'     . Sedan\nIn beautiful shape.\n1940 Plymouth\n:     Sedan\nRadio, heater, A-1.\n'1950 Plymouth\nSedan\nRidlo, air condiUOnlnf.\n1946 Ghev. Sedan    \u25a0\nOooo^ahape.\nWestern Exploration ___\u201e\nWestern Uranium  .\nWestern Minei....'\t\nOIL8\nAnaconda  \t\nAnglo Canadian T\nHome   :\u25a0 >;,-f,\nMercuiy _. __.\nOkalta Com ...\u00bb .:  '\nVanalta ,. ;\t\nVulcan   .        ; , \"\"\nINDUSTRIALS^\nAlberta Dist\nAlberta Dist V.T.'\"_...ZZ1I    __\nInter Brew ...........'....., ...\"    i_\n.    1.15\n.    6.25\n.    1.35\n.      .25\n.      .98\n.82\n.      .78\n8.00\n.2.20\n.32\nMl\n8.80\n1.70\n4.60\n.32\n2.50\n.19\n.60\n1.30.\n8.90\n.49\n.20\nS.1B\n16.00\n.31\n4.00\n.69\n1.00\n2.80\n2.55\nFOR   SALE. -,- t____\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\nSPECIAL\n1950 PREFECT SEDAN\nNO TRADES^\n$395\n1947 MERCURY SEDAN\n$1125\nLOST - ONE   GREEN   SLIDING\ndoor from * Nelson Rowing Club;\nShould be around the waterfront.\nReward. Call 1302 or 207-X.    -\nLOST - LADIES' WRISTWATCH,\nbetween Queen's and Star Cafe,\n\u25a0Saturday. Reward. Phone 484-L1.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 2 MENlCURKY TERRIER, 10 MOS, OLD.,\nApply Mrs, Nahornoff, Castlegar. I    for sale. Phone 401rR3. Inoculated ,\nGET A\n\"\u00bb\u00bbte$1,O\u00ab0iTOg_.,Afl^\n1947 Forgo\n3\/.-,l Ton\n1947 Ford Pickup\n1948 Mercury\n\"W Ton\n1946 Ford 3-Ton\nSU.TE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Bake. St'\nMid Cont \u201e._.\u201e\nOkalta   ..' __\u201e   ;\t\nPacific Pete -._..\u201e;\u25a0. ~\nRoyalite   :... i.*\u201e _.._Z\nRoxana _.._, ,.;\nTower Pete  ;\nUnited Oils    .....;.\u201e..\u201e_      ;\nINDUSTRIALS \"\"\"\"\nAbltibi* __ji___:\t\nAlgoma Steel .........m,ZiZZ.\nAluminum  .:,..i.....\t\nArgui  , ;........ j,\t\nAUas St      ,....\u201e!_  ,_\nBell Telephone  -*\u2014.\u201e'\nB C Power A  .._\t\nBrowp Co. .! ; ._\nBruck Silk A  ;.\nBuilding Products \u201e\nBurL SteeL ..'__.,_ _,\nCut. Cement    ;... ^__'\nCan. Paokera'.A _.\u201e\u201e\nCan Canhen .  LZi__\u201e\nCan Car 8c Fdy  .'. .\nCan Car & Fdy A'....\u201e__\n|Can, Oil ....  \u201e\u201e\nCan. Celanese  .-\t\nCan Marconi \u201e. \u2022_\nCan Pacific Rly ....\t\nCons. Paper  ........ __,.\t\nDist Seagram ..\u201e\u2022., .*_\nDom Bridge  \u201e_.____.\nDom Foundrlj! \t\nDom Steel & Coil B .\u201e .\nDoni Tar & Chemical \u201e\nGatineau       -.  \u25a0 . .. .__ -\nGatindau 8% pfd ....' __,\nGreat Lakes pfd ' \t\nH. R MacMUlan A _____\nH.R. MacMillanB .__\t\nImparial Oil  \t\ntap. Tobacof ._*._\u201e____\nI\u00abt Matal ...,....\u201euJ\t\nInt Nickel\t\ntot; Pete\n_    _,   _\u2122_\u00bb.  today i\nmade available tha report, contain- I\ning a lilt ot captured guni.   -\nCommunist itaff officer! drafting\ntruce-supervision terms nominated\nRussia as a neutral observer.\n\"With the exception of a small\namount of Japanese material left\nover from tha Japanese occupation\nof Korea and Manchuria and mater,\nlal captured from UN... force! in\nKorea, tha North Korean Army hai\nbeep entirely equipped and ar re-\nequipped with Soviet material,\" the\nreport iald.\nBuses Crash on\nOregon Highway\nEUGENE, Ore., Maroh 18 CAP) ,_\u25a0_\u25a0_\nNineteen persons were Injured to.\ndiy. when two continental trallwiy*\nbuses crashed head-on it tbe Wil*\nliamette Park overpass on Highwajr\n09, four miles south of hen.\nA southbound bus itruck a ion- \u25a0\ncrete abutment on the overpass ap- |\nproach and swerved into ui* path\nof the northbound hue.\nThree ambulance! brought Mm _\u2022\ninjured to hospitals here. None ruf*.\nfered critical injuries,\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPBG, March 10 CO,  \u2014 \u2022\nWinnipeg grain cash price!:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 91.\nBarley,. NO. 1 feed, 1.29*.\nEDMONTON, March, 10 (CP) \u2014 ,\nThe Farmers' Union of Alberta today asked the Federal Govern-\nmpnt to place floor prices of $28.50\na hundredweight on top steers add\n$25 on'fat lambs, basis Edmonton\nand Calgary. A uniform floor price\non hogs also was requested.'\nLet our Clients tell yon\nwhatBeorgeSJ\" \"\nWrifV eee \u25a0\nGeorge S.AW Company\n\"Biuvnt*** &n}{_u_iai|\nWaiurn Plviilen\nSaa Frmdm _, C\u00abH.\nIilabllih.l Hll\nLiura Secord ...\t\nLOblaw A    :_......_\nMassey Hairli \t\nM It O Paper  \t\nMcColl Frontenae\nNat. Steel Car ..:\u201e..\nPage Hershey  _\nPowell River  \/\nPower Corp  _.\nShawlnlgan   _..\u201e._\nSimpsons A   ...\t\nANNUAL REPORT\nAik your Invoilmonl Dealer\n(or His Annual Report\nand proipectu. of\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nltd.\n 12\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1952\ncan suffer from the season's crop of\n;   coughs, colds and hoarseness\nFor Quick and Safe Relief Use ,\n.':!y:'':;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0 Nyal     . V y\nBaby Cough Syrup\nIt Is also helpful In cases of whooping cough and.\nI        difficult breathing when due to colds.\n' 35c per Bottle\nDRUG STORE\nCourt Martial Sentences\nSgm. MacDonald to Death\nSEOUL, March 10 (CP) - A\ncourt martial today sentenced S_m.\nRobert Burns MacDonald, 21, oi New\nWatertord, N.S., to death-for the\nmurder ot Pte. Harold Carien Harrison, 31, of TrUro, N.S,\nTha tribunal found that MacDonald shot.bii comrade tb death Jan.\n28 with a .45-cali.re automatic during a quarrel In a house at Tokchon,\n20 miles North of Seoul, Korea.\n' 'The court, In a report to Canadian\nArmy authorities in Ottawa, recommended clemency,\nMacDonald la a member of the\nRoyal Canadian Horse, Artillery.\nHarrison, a member of the Canadian\n25th Brigade headquarters, died in\nhospital Feb! 23.\n* MacDonald told the court martial\nho Went to the Korean bouse ln\nsearch of companionship after a\nday of drinking. He said he met\nHarrison for the first time there.\nNO RECOLLECTION\nMacDonald said he recalled talking to Harrison about aome chocolate- bars and a \/blanket which had\nbeen stolen from his Jeep, but 'said\nhe had no recollection ot firing a\nshot.\nDuring the trial two British soldiers, Gunneri J. Savage and\nCharles Parks of the Royal Artil-\n: lery, testified they were ln the\n\u25a0 Korean house when MacDonald\ncame in, waving a .45 calibre automatic.\n\"Nobody moves or I shoot,\" they\nboth quoted him as saying.\nThey laid Hirrison entered from\n,another room complaining: \"What's\nall the noise about? I want to sleep.\"\nHarrison turned to MacDonald and\nsaid: \"Put that gun away. You ain't\ngoing to shoot anybody.\"\nThe soldiers testified words were\n' \u2022 xchanged  between the two  and\nthen.a gun \"popped.\"\nMacDonald then told them to wrap\nHarrison in blanket!, and put him\nin MacDonald'! Jeep. They aald MacDonald then asked for directions to\nthe nearest medical officer or hospital end left with Harrison ln the\njeep.\nFisheries Council\nTo Meef in April\nVANCOUVER, March'. 10 .CP)-\nCanade'a controversial fish treaty\nwith Japan is one of'the major topics tor discussion at the three-day\nseventh ihnlial convention of, the\n__sh_ri_ Coi.t.611 of Canada which\nopeni hire April 28..\nIn nttondanee at the convention\nwill be -Utitahdlng'_ovetntoent and\n.___ne_i authorities fron. Canada\nan<r thi United States and-thli.li\ntha first time the council%ill have\nheld lis convention outside of Ottawa.      .. \u25a0\"-.', ;\u25a0: y.z  .\"'\u25a0' \u25a0 \"\u25a0'\nAmong other topic* to be discussed by the council are development and conservation of Canadian\nfisheries; scientific development! ln\nmanagement; processing and marketing and the world market situation.   *.   '.,\nExpected to attend are Hon. R.' W.\nMayhew, Minister of 'Fisheries;\nStewart Bates, deputy minister;\nRoyal Toner, president of ,the' U.\u00a7.\nNational Fisheries Institute, New\nYork, and Charles Jackson; Wash-\nIngton, D.C., general manager of the\ninstitute.\nPHONE \"144   FOR   CLA88IFIED\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\n\u25a0 _    -'-.\"'     .' '    \u25a0 . _       ' \u25a0 '\u00bb\u25a0';\u25a0\u25a0' '    \u25a0     . \u25a0'\"\"'\u25a0     ''*'. \u25a0     \"' ,-  \u25a0   ' V \u25a0 '    '\u25a0\u25a0'\nUpSp Jfdanded by F-M Outbreaks\nlift Canadicky Mexican Districts\nWASHINGTON, March 10 (API\u2014\nThe United States $19,000,000,000\nlivestock industry itands in greater danger from toe world's worst\nanimal malady\u2014foot-and-mouth disease \u2014 thm at any time ilnce\n'1014. A recent outbreak of the disease in Canada pas virtually made\nthe U. S. an Island Jn a world dotted with areas of Infection. The\nMexican and tl, S. governments are\nengaged in a Joint* effort to eradicate the disease In Mexico\", where\nIt bobbed. UP hi 1047.. .\nThe disease is raging ln Europe,\nmany sections of Asia and In Venezuela and Columbia in South America.  .'     ,.      ., \u2022'.'_ ', . .-'\nAgriculture department officials\nsay it will be a minor, miracle if\nthe U. 6. escapesan outbreak this\nyear. They say there haa been ample opportunity for the virus to be\nbrought Into the U, S. from the af-.\nfected areas.   . .. \/    ...\nThe'U. S. has had nine outbreaks\nof the disease, the last being in 1929.\nThe most serious was ln 1914, when\nthe disease spread to 22 states,\n.., The disease is Caused by a virus\nof which there now are six distinct\ntypes. The foot-and-mouth disease\nspreads rapidly. The disease, takes\nits name from visible symptoms \u2014-\nblisters appear on the tongue and\nabout the mouth, on the skin above\nthe hoof-line, on the skin between,\nthe toes, on teat! and udders, and\non the snouts Of swine.\nMEXICAN CAMPAIGN\nIn, most European countries\/the\ndisease has gained such a.foothold\nthat lt has probably become a permanent infection -.'.';\nRealizing that as long as the disease existed in.Mexico American\nherds were menaced, the U. S. gov*\nernment has been cooperating with\nthe Mexica'n g6vernment in an effort to stamp out ah outbreak that\nfirst occurred In. 1947. The ,U. S.\nhas spent $122,000,060 of Its own\nfunds on this campaign.\n* No case of the disease has appeared in Mexico since last August.\nConcern over the possibility of an\noutbreak in the U. S. has been deep*\nened by the fact that the first occur-\nrence of the disease in Canada was\nearly last December. It was not fin\nally diagnosed as foot-and-mouth\ndisease until late in February.\nIn the meantime, there has been\nmuch movement of livestock from\nthe affected area in Canada to tbe\nUnited States. The time of the great\ndanger will be In the Spring, after\nthe ground thaws\nExpect Floodless\nYear for Rivers\n; VANCOUVER; .Mar* ip (CP)--A\nfloodless year for British Columbia's main riven, waa vaguely indicated today by the monthly report of the water resources division\nSnowfalls In most of the river\ndrainage basins were below normal during February and, In the\nEast Kootenays \"considerably, below normal,\" the service reported.\nAt the same time river runoffs\nvaried from 4-5 of normal to 4-5\nabove normal..\nOfficials of the federal board said,\nhowever. It was \"too early in tbe\nyear\" for a reliable estimate of\nflood potentials. Cold weather and\nheavy snowfalls in March and early\nApril could reverse the situation In\nmountain ranges feeding the Fraser,\nSkeena and Columbia Rivers.\nDollar-Sterling Convertibility\nUrgent Need for NATO Partners\nMONTREAL,,March 10 (CP) \u2014Imposed last year. But trade be-\nTrado Minister Howe said today\nthat dollars and sterling must be\nimade convertible if North Atlantic\ncountries are to become trading\npartners as well as military nsso-\n,. cities.\n. He said he made that remark\n\"merely to Indicate what the essential . objective should be\u2014\"but not\nWltlMiny intention of putting pressure on our friends in Britain and\niii; -Western Europe who confront\ngrave issues at the present moment.\" .\n- Canada, he added in a speech before the Montreal Canadian Club,\nis in- \"deep sympathy\" with Brit-\nIto'l economic plight. The encouraging thing was, that the sterling\narea j-ecognized that it can regain\n; economic stability only by attempt-\n- Ing to live within its means. \"\n\/There would have to be further\n. cuts made in Britain's imports as\nthe drives towards the goal of convertibility of sterling and dollar!,'\nbut these should not greatly affect\nCanada's exports to the United\nKingdom, Mr. Howe said.\nIn a speech that ranged over the\ndark and bright sides of Canada's\ntrade, Mr. Howe noted that difficulties being encountered in Britain\nare being encountered in other\ncountries, too.\n\"France has recently Imposed new\nimport controls. Even Belgium has\nbeen led to a policy of import restrictions on dollar goods, to our\ngreat regret.\"\nCLOSER TO 8TATE8 '\nThe most important thing about\nthe sterling area crisis, he said, is\nnot its Immediate effect on Canada's\ntrade, but whether the crisis can\nbe surmounted.\nWhile Canada was experiencing\nsome difficulty In sterling area markets, she was moving closer In trade\nWith the United States. Commercial\ntiea between the two countries were\n\"very close\" and \"highly dependent\non the goodwill\" existing between\nthem.\nThat waa why Canada was \"perturbed\" by the U.S. Import controls\non dairy products and fata and oils\ntween the countries had grown so\nlarge that it could not be \"seriously\nimpeded\" by \"hasty action on either\nside.\"\nNevertheless, Canada took the po\nsition that the import control! in\nthe U.S. \"are not only unjustifiable,\nbutcontrary to the principles and\nagreements on which trade has been\nbuilt up between our two. countries.\" '   ';\nONE OF VICTIMS of gunmen, Sergt.of Dfets. Edmund Tong, Is\nfighting for his life In Toronto hospital. In a Montreal hospital, his\nalleged shooter, Steve Suchan, Is.undre police guard. Here, Det-\n8ergt Rennie Thlrlot, of Montreal force, places manacles on 8U-\nChan's feet to make sure escape will be Impossible. Suchan, \"who\nwas shot three times by police, Is expected, to recover. He was carrying three guns when police caught him.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nrecent one,\nBoyd, now dubbed Canada's No. 1\nbank robber, was caught, with another man shortly after a North-End\nbank robbery last Oct 10 in which\n$12,800 was taken.\nHe was arrested In his own panel\ntruck. In it, police-found a complete\nmakeup kit. Police, said Boyd disguised himself with makeup, smear;\ned lipstick on his eyelids, bloated\nhis cheeks with cotton\nMakeufp Artist Believed Leader\nOf Toronto Area Bank Robberies\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Last Nov. 4, a was' the \"bralna\" behind the most\nquiet, family man slipped over the\nwall at Toronto's Don Jail and disappeared.       '       ' '    ' ' \u2022' \u2022\nHe was Edwin Alonzo Boyd, 37, of\nnearby Pickering. Neighbors said\nhis hobby was landscape gardening.\nPolice said his business was robbing\nbanks.\nWhen he fled the Don Jail\u2014along\nwith two other men\u2014he was awaiting trial on at least six bank-robbery charges. -\nSixteen days after Boyd's escape,\nthree men robbed a West-end bank\nof $4100. ' i ';,'      '\nSince then there have been four\nother bank robberies in the Greater\nToronto area,\nFeb. 22 three men captured employees of a suburban bank as they\narrived for work, tied them up In\nthe basement and coolly looted the\nvault of $50,000. . (\u25a0        \u2022-.'\u2022.\nA similar method was used Jan.\n3 when, two men stole a sum estimated at between $40,000 and $50,000\nfrom another suburban bank.\nIn between, on Jan. 25, three men\ndropped in on an East-End bank\nand Withdrew $15,000 without making a withdrawal slip;\n1951 HOLD-UP8   '-'\".'\u25a0'\nIn the last 14 months bandits have\ntaken\" Toronto area banks for\n$106,546. Eight robberies occurred tn\nthe Greater Toronoto ares ln 1951.\nEyewitnesses have used terms.\nvarying from, \"false-faced\" to \"monkey-sized\" to descriBe the bandits\nwho have operated \"with football-\nteam precision\", and In \"a gentlel.\nmanly manner.\"\nPolice blame at least Ijalf of the\nrobberies on Boyd, And a' veteran\nToronto police officer, Inspector\nJames Warren, Is certain that Boyd\nU.S. Vels Invited\nTo Inspect Herds\nMONTREAL, March 10 (CP) \u2022\nTrade Minister Howe expressed\nconfidence today that-the United\nStates will lift its embargo on Canadian livestock and meals as\nquickly as It can. '\u25a0\"'     *\n\"The Canadian government fully\nunderstands the reasons for this\nembargo which waa mandatory under United State. law,\" Mr. Howe\nsaid in a brief reference, to the\ncontrols In a speech before the\nMontreal Canadian Club.\n\"As a matter of fact, os soon as\nwe suspected that there might be\nfoot-and-mouth disease in thli\ncountry\u2014even before ther. wa\u00bb definite proof \u2014 we invited the U.S.\ngovernment to send In veterinarian!\nto observe and to advise.  -  '\u2022\n\"Not for many, many decades\nhave we had a case of this dreaded\nanimal disease in Canada, and we\nwere most anxious not only to stamp\nlt out immediately, but to satisfy\nour American friends that.we were\ndoing everything possible to stamp\nit out.\" . .,\nBusiness Spbtiight.. .,*\nRumors Fly About\nCredit Purchases\nThe decline in HVlhg costs during\nJanuary gives rise to the possibility\nthat the federal government may\nsoon Consider further easing of its\nconsumer credit restrictions. ._.':\n\u2022'. Qut Just how won, or what pat-..\ntern the reductions miy follow, are\nstill matter! for conjecture. The government hai given no clues what its\nnext step will be.\nHowever, Finance Minister Abbott\ndropped a hint of the government's\ngeneral policy, when he announced\nreduction, last January, extending\nthe time-to-pay on installment buying to. 18 months from 12.\nFrom time to time, he. said, the\ngovernment would consider further\ncuts in , the restrictions, depending\non how the country fared in its\nfight against Inflation.''\nGovernment economist! believe,\nprlcei may strengthen toward the\nend of 1952 as defence purchases ln\nCanada and the United States move\ntowards a'_Unc.'\\ \u2022\n..- But for the tnoment, the Inflationary gallop which almost doubled\nprices-from their 1939. standing appears to have been slowed if not\narrested.,*'.- \u2022-..-.''\u201e'..., :\":, \u25a0'\u25a0>,\nIt appears likely that If the federal\ngovernment' Is to m_ke any realistic\nmove for further reductions, it may\nwell bo in the field of down payments which In Canada Seem tough-\ner than' hi' the -U.S. add U,K.\nLooking successful Is ont of\n-the secrets of being successful.\n, Fortune smiles most readily\n,' i> \\    V     , '\non the man who knows his worth,\nand looks the part.\nDbn'tvtake chances, with your appearance.\nGit your clothes measure of\nEMORY'S IM);\nThe Man's Store\nw\nSoulhAfrican Divorce laws Prove\nEasier for Applicants Than Reno's\nJOHANNESBURG _CP) \u2014Divorce proceedingi may be started\nin South Africa even faster1 than in\nReno, Nevada, where there'! a ilx\nweek! residence qualification.\nOne Johannesburg lawyer, explained \"a man need be only two\ndays ln any city In South Africa,\nand, providing he intends to make\nhi! domicile permanent,,ha can immediately begin divorce proceeding!.\"  .\nHe estimated that the shortest\ntime for obtaining a dlvorco decree\nis less.than two months after, the\nfirst stepping ifyto _ lawyer's office,\nand the, costs run as low as \u00a335.\nSuch speedy divorces' are possible\nOnly in uncontested actions, but\nmore than 99 _\u00bbr\\cent Of divorces\nin South Africa are unopposed. Th.\nlawyer agreed there is often collusion. Collusion, however, is Hlffl-\ncult to prove. The most common\nground for divorce here is desertion,\nand the desertion heed \u2022not be longer than one day for proceedings, to\nbe instituted.\nOPEN TO ARGUMENT.\nWhether an easy divorce Is I good\nthing is a matter tor argument, this\nexpert pointed' out. His personal\nopinion was that if two persons\ncahnot gat along together it is bet:\nter .hot io fbrce them to remain\nmarried.\nWhere a women sues tor divorce\nhere, there is no provision for all'\nmoiiy hut it inay.be Introduced by\nlegislation how being considered In\nparliament. Introduction bf alimony\nwould probably tend to increase the\ndivorce rate since many dissatisfied\nwomen now are probably shunning\ndivorce because of the need for financial security,\nFormer Alia. Farmer Finds Job\nEDMOfOTON _\u00abjP) - Day; after\nday, regardless, of weather, 35-\nyear-old Dan Blake goes for a 15-\nmile walk It's all ln the day's work\nfor the former farmer, now a pipeline walker tor'an loll company.\nMr, Blake considers hla job the\nbest ho ever had, even though he\nmust trudge through heat and cold,\nsnow, rain or mu'd. He performs an\nimportant task for the oil company\nin the Leduc and Redwater sectors\nof the Edmonton oil fields.    '\nHis. Job Is to patrol the gathering\ntl\nrr\nMOSCOW, March 10* (AP)-The\nMoscow Press today hailed the new\nRussian budget today as the \"bud\nget of peace\" and contrasted It with\nthe \"war budgets of Britain and th.\nUnited States.\"\nThe budge.t, biggest in the Soviet\nUnion's history, was approved Saturday by the Supreme Soviet (Parliament). The legislators made almost ho change in the appropriation\nlineup. Submitted by Finance Min\nister Arsehy G. Zverev.\nTotal expenditures of 477,000,000,.\n000 rublea-'about $119,500,000,000 at\nthe official rate\u2014are planned. Of\nthis almost 114,000,000,000 rubles is\nearmarked for the armed forces, the\nlargest peace-time --Soviet defence\nbudget tnhistory. '\u25a0:..\u25a0\u25a0'.\n.ATOM IQNO.R-P .\u2022\u25a0;\u2022'\nAil papers devoted many columns\nto discussions of the budget Much\nattention .Was paid to the statement\nof Chairman Korniyet? of th. Lower House'*, Budget Committee that\nthe proposed expenditures\" testify\nto a peaceful policy.\"    -- -,-\n(State Department sources said\nthat atoinlc development and exi\npension of war porduction facilities\nare not itemized under military\nheadings in the Soviet budget, but\nare hidden under peaceful (industrial and scientific enterprise.\n(There is no market to determine\nthe real value of.the ruble Interna-\n.tonally;) '\u25a0'\"\nWHEN TWO JET8 In a four-plane formation collided I'll \"mid-air\nNorth of Aurora, Ont., recently, tha pilots of both aircraft were killed,\nThey were attached to the R.C.A.F. of To.onto Squadron. Both civil\nians, they .were on training exercises when their aircraft collided.\nOne pilot was Identified as F.O. R. Yeatei, \u00bbof Toronto. Name of the\nlecond pilot wai withheld. Wreckage .of one Jet Is seen- above.\n\u2014Central Presi Canadian.\nlints that tako the oil frbm the\nwells to the refinery. He inspects\nthe ground over the line for leak!\nand checks the pump houses arid\nvalves en route. .--\nBlake, whose home Is near Ellor-\nslie,. Alta., wears a warm' parka,\nbeaded mitts and felt boots to combat Winter cold, .and claims he is\naa warm as if he wore in his own\nhome.       , *'.-\u25a0       \u00bb   '\n\"I've never got fold,\" Mr. Blake\nsaid. \"I dress warij) and I enjoy\nthe work. I like tq be out in the\nopen and bn my own. It's a little\nlonesome, but I'm ijscd to being on\nmy own as I've lived'on a faim\nmost of my life. Tbto Job gives1 you\nan appetite and keeps you healthy.\"\nROVING HELPER '\u2022\ni Blake has been pipeline walking\nfor about a year and a half. He\nwears snowshoes wjien the snow\nis deep and says thsjt once a trail\nis made he could to. t as well be\nwalking on a city-||dewalk.    .\nHe haa -discoveroc) several leaks'\nin the line since he started working\nfor the oil company. One of these\noccurred at night and 900 barrels\nof oil spilled on tho ground before\nthe leak was found- He said most\nof the leaks he has found have been\nsmall ones. ''..'.\nFtEl\/ftY'S J^wrmqey\nPreic.lp.ioni\n'Accurately .\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk. *\nPHONEM\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME;\n\"Distinctive Funeral Servfca\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n815 Kootenay St       Phone 381\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRlSt'..\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arte Building   -.\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nc^SJEH\/.\n?0 YFARS FXCERIENCI\nNEISON   DC\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMR.tv\nChartered Accountant*\n- Auditor! \u2022\nS7_ Biker St Phom 8S\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Wird 8t Phono 83\nWIGINTON\nMOTOR5 LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR ClOTME', LINE\nOUR TEIH'HONE I INE\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker St.\nHave the Job Dane Right\nVICGRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nPlows Rescue P.E.I.\nFishing Villagers\n, NORTH RUSTiCO, P.E.I., March\n10 <CP>\u2014Winter's vveek-long siege\nof this fishing village ended Sunday\nwhen two plows pushed through\nthe last of 18-fbbt drifts.\nThe plows battled for two days\nthrough drifts left.by one of the\nworst storms hi 40 years\n\u2022 At one time villagers were down\ntoithe last case of canned milk. Fuel\nwaa low and residents divided the\nschool's coal, 200 pounds to each\nhousehold. - !\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n.     at'the;' 7.\" '\n\u2022 Nelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 146\nTry Our\nRoyal Pot\/\nPastry Flour ,\nPor Better Baking result!\nPHONE 23$\nELLISON MILLING &\nELEVATOR COMPANY LTD.\nWe Now Hove ,\nFluradene\nTOOTH PASTE\nWith Chlorophyll _\nStop Bad Breath and have\nWhiter Teeth;     ...\n69c tube y..:'.!\nOn'Sale ot Your Rexail Store\nCity Drug\n\u25a0 COMPANY\n. Nelson's Modern Pharmacy,\n\u25a0 Phone 34 Day - 807-R Nlaht\nBOX 460       '\nBIRTHDAY FOR MOLOTOV\nMOSCQW,' March 10 (AP)-Dep^\nutyPrlme Minister V. M. MpUrtov\ncelebrated his 62nd birthday today\nNothing todiy Indicated that hi?'\npost had changed from that of 1948.\nwhen the Soviet press referred to\nbim; as \"the closest assistant of Stalin.\"    ,\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING\nCHEATING\nCOMPANY LTD.\nA Complete Plumbing\nand Heating Service   .\u2022   -\n351 Baker St.\nPhone 666\nNelson, B.C.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1952_03_11","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0426434","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1952-03-11 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1952-03-11 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\/1.0426434"}