{"@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":"2023-02-22","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1953-01-24","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427925\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2022mm\nanadas Budget\nSurplus Dwindl\nAbbott Expects Canada's Finances '    ,\nTo Come Out \"J\u00abst About Eviw\" ^ f * f\nOTTAWA (CP). \u2014 Finance Islihister\"Abbott Friday\nannounced a budget surplus of $264il00lrj00:|or;;theLfirstn-he\nmonths of th-current fiscal year; '   .        ',\nThe-surplus was less than half that for the corresponding period of the previous year, a likely ini-i-ation that\nthe over-all surplus for this! current year will be slashed\nsharply from the $250,000,000 for 19.1-52,.and Abbott expects.\nCanada's financial picture will finish \"just about even-this\nyear,\" ..,'.--\u2022 . y[ -y ; \u25a0 \u25a0'\"\u25a0\u25a0 -y\nFor the year ending next March 31, Mr. Abbott fore-|\ncast in last year's budget speech a surplus, of only. $9,000,000.\nFriday's figures in a monthly report from-the finance department  cover  the  nine\ncover\n'inonths up to Dec. 31\nThey are expected to be. the' last\nthat will be made public by the\nI minister before he brings down his\n11053-54 budget in. March. Customarily, the position In the last few\nmonths before the budget is kept\nsecret, . ...\u25a0:V*S,\nWith the budget now under preparation, there have been unofficial forecasts that Mr. Abbott -prill\nuse his good financial position to\nI make some tax reductions.\nThe surplus to the end of December was down by 1367,300,000\nfrom th. $631,400,000 in the first\nthree quarters of the previous fiscal year. A December deficit of\n$27,800,000, compared with a surplus   of  $74,900,000  in  December,\n195V cut deeply into Mr. Abbott's\ncash. \u2022 \u25a0 ... ' \/ .\n\u25a0 Fpr the.first' nine months, '..e*\nvenues amounted, to' $3,0.5,300,000,\nabout ,72 per cent of' the total\n$4,003,111,000. forecast by the minister for the'.' year.. They were\n$281,000,000 more than the intake\nfor . the same months a year\nearlier..; ''.'.\u2022      -'   '   \\\nSpending in the same . period\nadded up to $2,821,200,000, or about\n66 per cent, of the \u201e $4,270,000,000\npredicted by Mr. Abbott fbr the full\nyear. For the first nine months of\nthe previous year, $2,172,800,000 had\nbeen 6pent\"\u2014 about 58 per cent of\nthe year's total.\nDefence spending in the first\nthree quarters came to $1,223,300,-\n000, more than 50 per cent up from\nthe $812,500,000. of the correspond\nins months in 1951.    -   Y       \" ,\nPROVtt4ClAlll\nLIBRARY\nR$\nWEATHER FORECAST\n* Kootenay:. Occasional,light rain,\nor snow. A little milder. Light\nwinds. Low and high at Cranbrook,\nCrescent Valley and Revelstoke 30\nand 38. Sunday outlook cloudy and\nmildV\nVoltSt\nCriminal Code Gets\nAttention of House\nOTTAWA.(CP) \u2014The Commons\nbegan consideration of a big slate\nof government legislation Friday\nstarting with the massive revision\not  Canada's  Criminal  Code  and\n. other acts respecting the law of\nthe lend.\nBesides the bulky Criminal Code\nrevision \u2014 first major overhaul\nsince 189. \u2014 Justice Minister Gar-\nson introduced other hills from his\n'department   ' '\nOne would make the crown liable\nI for actions against civil servants in\n> certain cases and for payment ot\nsalvage claims against government\nshipping.\nThe minister said the Criminal\nCode   revision,   conducted   by\nroyal commission, does' not change\n1 *fhe- principle of -the law.'ibu. ._\u00a3tai<\ninates inconsistencies and'simplifies the statute.       -\nOne proposed change would\nmake the treasonable act of pass-\ning information to a foreign state\npunishable by death or life im-\nj prisonment. This had been changed\nby a Senate committee which studied the bill. The committee had\namended the bill to make the maid.\nmum penalty for treason 14 years.\nMr. Garson said this proposed\nchange was something the Commons would want to consider later.\nE. D. pulton', OpC^-Kamloops), a\nlawyer, referred to the appearance\not Tim Buck, Labor-Progressive\nleader, before the- Senate committee. He said the Communist leader\nhad \"muddied the waters\" and he\nrejected Mr. Buck's \"hypocritical\nutterances.\"\nMr. Buck and other Communist\nrepresentatives had appealed to\nthe Senate committee to erase ex-\ntension.of the law on treason\u2014for\nsupplying information to a foreign\nstate that would jeopardize the\nsafety and interests of Canada.\nMr. Fulton was critical of some\nparte of the Criminal Code amendments, particularly enlarging the\npowers   of   magistrates   to   hear\n. cases. He described this as a\nwhittling down of the right of trial\nby jury.\nBut generally he cortsidered pie\nrevision good and joined Mr. Gar-\nson in a tribute to the commission\nand others concerned with the\nmassive work.\nBC. TO HAVE\nEIGHT JUDGES -\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2022:- The Commons,\nin an unusual burst of speed, passed a bill Thursday night to provide for payment of an additional\njudge on the British Columbia Su*\npreme Court\u2014increasing the panel\nto eigtyt from seven judges. \u25a0 .\nIt .was the first measure passed\nby-the Commons thus session. It\nnow goes to the Senate for approval. -' ,\nWithin a few minutes, members\napproved the resolution proceeding\nthe legislation. .Then it accepted\nthe bill itself x and quickly put it\nthrough the first, second and third\nreading, routine that .usually takes\nseveral days;' ,,\".-'.\nFast action was requested by Justice Minister Garson who obtained\nunanimous consent to put the bill\nthrough all stages at once.\nHe said the B. C. Supreme Court\nwas. under terrific pressure at work,\naggravated recently by the illness\not the chief justice, - \"\n1 NELSON; Bi C, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 24, 1953\n^a.:Vr*B;^',,ffM-\"i'i'i\u25a0>-.-.\u25a0 ;i\u25a0,.;\u00ab;\u25a0\u25a0> i;\u00bb.-ri.\u25a0\u25a0'.-*\u2022\u00ab'.\u25a0\/-*\u2022\u25a0-\u2014\u25a0 \u25a0.\u2014.-\u25a0\u2014'.   . \u2014;\u2014\u2014- \u25a0\u2014\u25a0 <~~i\u2014*\u2014*\nNo. 223\nVI S U A L I ZI N C -FUTURE\/CITY \u2014 Vene.uelan6ffl.l-Is took 4ver modelot one of\ncountry's latest projects, University City in Caracas, already 80 percent built. In foreground Is\nUniversity City Hospital and other buildings, including stadia, are part of campus.       *\"\"\nBABY'SBIRTH NOT\nTO BE BROADCAST\nOTTAWA (CP) - CPC plans to\nbroadcast nationally the birth of\na child have been cancelled Revenue Minister McCann informed\nDonald Fleming (PC \u2014 Toronto\nEglinton) Friday.\nHe said the Women's. College\nHospital in Toronto originally approved the idea and then changed\nits mind, leading to the cancellation. It was to be a reb-oadcast of\na program \"A New Life Begins\"\nbroadcastion station CJBC, Toronto,\nNov. 30 in collaboration with the\nhospital.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Police\nFriday ordered a Vancouver taxi\nfirm to halt a lucky-number game\non charges that it was a lottery.\nOfficials of-Yellow, Star and\nChecker taxi company, t owned by\nits 108 drivers, said it 'vould tight\nthe ban.\nPolice allege the raffle \u2014 which\nhas prizes of furniture and other\ngoods \u2014 violates the criminal code\nprovisions agains'. 'games of chance\ninvolving tickets' nd prizes.\niiiiiinisi      .,:,.. ..iini.i   milium\nBeer Served\n:      On Wheels   ;.:\nCHILLIWACK, B. C. (CP)-! |\nTwo waiters, whizzed across the\ntile floor of a Chilliwack beer   -\nparlor on roller.-skates-Thurs-'-\nday night to serve th__r\u00bbust-\nomers.\nThe -. waiters;- Tony Britten\nand Jack Coiford, said they\nwere , i protesting > the recent\ngovernment order that drinkers\nbe served only one glass of beer\nat a time.       \u25a0' a ','..\n\"It cuts out serving time by\ntwo-thirds,\" said Colford,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTAXI DRIVERS ASK\nCHANGE IN LAWS\nVICTORIA (CP) - Taxi firms\nin Victoria may seek permission\nfrom the provincial government\" allowing them to make deliveries of\nliquor'and beer to private homes.\nAt present,- the B.C. Liquor Act\nexpressly ^\"tfde%L_h*AJajto\u00bb.i-ra\n>ner-__\"uw#d\"\"% tensj>-rt'\"BejUor.'\nThey are allowed, however, to pur-\nchase any other kind of article\nfrom a retail outlet and deliver it,\ncharging the regular taxi fare for\nthe trip.\n\u25a0J. W. Dobbie, Black and White\ntext co-owner, said Friday representatives of several cab companies\nhere had met to discuss the matter.\n'We feel that we should be allowed to make such deliveries.\nNow that the liquor'store is open\nto 11 p.m.,\" Dobbie said.\nOUT FOR A TURN ON\u00bbTHE ICE-Three\nDutch maidens from the fishing village of Volendam are dressed\nia their quaint traditional hooded costumes as they go skating\ntogether on a-frozen lake ta the vicinity of their village.\nRabies Outbreak\nWorries Albertans\nBy LORNE BRUCE\nCanadian Press 8taff, Writer\nEDMONTON (CP) -f The first\nsuspected case ot rabies South of\nEdmonton\u2014involving a dog in the\nMinburn area\u2014was discharged Fri\nday as an Alberta health officer\nreported \"quite a bit of agitation\"\namong humans as a result ot the\nsouthward spread of the disease.\nDr. Norman Baster, the province's\ndirector of 'communicable diseases,\nsaid his office has received- many\ntelephone calls from resident-\nseeking advice. \u25a0 A list of precautionary measures was issued which\nDr. Baster said, should eliminate\nthe possibility of any human cases.\nDr. Baster said rabies is severe\nin man, but also;rare. It can be\ncontracted by all warm-blooded\nanimals, being transmitted by the\nsaliva. The danger to a man lies in\nbeing bitten by a rabid animal.\nKon-Tiki Scientists\nMove to Floriana\nQUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (Reuters)\n\u2014'Sior Heyerdahl's expedition, to\nfind out what the earliest Americans were like have left San Cristobal, in the Galapagos to join the\nhandful of inhabitants on the Pacific Island of Floriana, known here\nas a second Garden of Eden. The\nNorwegian anthropologist of Kon-\nTiki fame hopes to'.find there further evidence to support his theory\nthat the Polynesian Islands in the\nPacific were populated by emigrants from the Americas.\n\" \"\u2022IIMIMMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nWanted\u2014Boy With\nReal Nice Shiner.\nPnTSFIELD, MBBS. (AF)-\nArtist Norman Rockwell was in\ntown Friday looking for a boy\nwith a black eye.\nHe , inserted an advertisement in the Berkshire Eagle\nasking for a boy or girl \"with a\nblack eye fresh enough for a\ngood coloring.\" He searched\nvainly in\/the district without\nfinding any 'shiner fresh,\nenough to use for a magazine\ncover painting. But\"I hope we\nare not going to start a bruising epidemic by appealing for\nhelp,\" Rockwell said.\nThen four fresh black eyes\nand pine, ot varying shades\nshowed up. One-was a \"beauty\"\nthat the mother of the owner\nsaid was fresh from a tall.\niiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiliillllllllllllllllllll\nBy Mine, Mill for U.\nVANCOUVER (CP)'-Construe\ntion of a second smelter in British Columbia will be sought \"by the\nB. C. district of International Union of Mine,. Mill and Smelter\nWorkers (Ind.)\nThe union will send a. delegation\nto Victoria to seek a hew, smelter\neither by 'government subsidy or\nby private individuals.    \"*.-'.\n, At the annual convention here\ndelegates said mines, were being\nforced to shut down because there\nwas only one smelter outlet fbr\nore In B. C, Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Co., at Trail.\n- The delegates adopted a reiol-\n-1 utlon urging a shorter work week\n-. Which would spread jobs among\nmora' miners. The union claimed\nthat mora than 1200 workers ire\n'\u25a0idle. \u25a0 \u25a0 ;,**;\u2022; \u25a0 . ,..'..'\u25a0 '.-.:; ;\n* It was also decided to ask the\nB. C. government to eliminate sections of pjjj Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration act which\ngives the Labor Relations Board\npower, to. decide the jurisdiction of\nunions.    ' \".'\"\u25a0- .' \u25a0 I -.    .\nBook Distributors\nObserve Decency\nLaws in Alberta.\n'.' -fDMONTON (CP)Yr- Distributor.\n6f.b9ak8.sM,,r(_jga?ines..ha;^e-.-been-\n\"petty cooperative'' . wjtn Alfie*-\nta's. law .-liforcjement agencies;' on;\nHandling complaints about obscene\nor imiaoral literature, H.' J. Wilson\ndeputy^ attorney-general, .said- Friday.\nMr. Wilson said a satisfactory\nsolution usually is found whenever\nthe law communicates a complaint\nto a.distributor.\nHe commented on Justice Minister Garsdn's- statement in Ottawa\nthat present;laws covering obscene\nliterature were \"quite enforceable\"\nand the responsibility of provincial\nand local enforcement authorities.\nCoast City Buys\n$250 Drunkometer\nVANCOUVER (CP) r- Vancouver's Junior Chamber of Commerce\nhas purchased a $230 drunkometer\nand will present it to the Vancouver police commission for use on\ndrunken drivers. George Ros9,\nchairman \"of the chamber's traffic\nsafety committee, said he has been\nassured the commission will use it:\n8TRIKE CONTINUES '\nNEW YORK (CP) --The New\nYork bus strike, now in.its 23rd\nday, will \"continue\", a union leader\nFriday told 5000 striking drivers.\nThere is \"no basis\"'for settling the\nstrike \"at this time,\" said,Matthew\nGuinan, president ot the Transport\nWorkers Union (CIO) local 100.\nLawyers for, the union and the\neight'private bus firms had been\nreported near agreement on an arbitration formula in the wage-hour\ndispute,        _   '\nRailways, B of RI\n*\u25a0 MC-m_i__8-_**tCS?)*^'_;riliwaya-'\nand the'Brotherhood of-Railway\nTrainmen v4U hie'et again Monday,\none week ahead of a strike deadline, in an effort to settle a wage\ndispute;. '\u25a0'.\"\"'';       .  \u25a0_\nThe railw-ys proposed the, meet-'\ning In a Joint telegram Friday to\nA.1 J. Kelly, BRT i vice-president.\nMr. Kelly - said \"we wlli respect\ntheir notice,\" but expressed concern at. \"06 hours': additional delay-\nfrom the,time the telegram was.\nreceived.\"..\nThe railways' telegram was sent\nby N. R. Crump, vice-president ot\nthe CPR, and S. F. Dingle, vice-\npresident of the CNR.\nIt expressed unwillingness \u2022 \"to\nconclude that the position is as\n' hopeless as the meeting Thursday\nwith our negotiating' committees indicated and that a complete discontinuance of railway service in\nCanada is inevitable.\nSchool Children\nTo See .Coronation -\nLONDON; (Reuters)' \u2014 One of\nevery 10 cliildren in London will\nbe sitting in special bleachers sipping free lemonade next June .2\nwhen the Queen rides past in the\ncoach of state to be crowned in\nWestminster Abbey.\nAn announcement Friday said\n30,000 school children\u2014an increase\nbf 50 per cent over previous plans\n\u25a0will be' given seats for the pageant, ' -  N-\nThe lucky youngsters will be\nchosen iii classroom lotteries, with\nthe winner-' names being picked\nout of a hat.\nShocking Conditions Described in\nReport on Coquillam Boys' School\n, VANCOUVER :(CP)-'Conditions1\nat .the Boys' Industrial School in\nPort Coquitlam were described Friday. as,\"shoclflpg and' deplorable\"\nin a report'made public by a special committee of the Community\nChest andiGouncil. ,';\ni The report,.'sent to .Health' Min-.\nister Eric Martin, called for imme-.\ndiate construction of a new boys',\nschool, and It said:    .'\".'\u25a0'\n\"It should be kept in mind that\nthe ultimate\/ end' of the detention\nof juveniles is reclamation arid rehabilitation.\"-.:       '..',,\u25a0 . ,    '\nOVERCROWDING MENACE-.=\nThe committee found overcrowding at BISCO;. lock of facilities for\nvocational training and- recreation;\nfire hazards; possibility of easy escape; no opportunity of segregation\nof more serious, offenders, and supervisory problems.\nTbe .committee praised the work\not the present staff.\n\"Despite great difficulties the staff\nhas : made' remarkable achieve-\nments,\" said the, report,\nMaximum . accommodation: at\nBISCO is for 70, but at times the\nschdol'population ranges from 84\nto. 129:\nESCAPE RATE HIGH    ..'\nThe reftort said that continual\novercrowding demoralizes the te-\nmotes and makes adequate supervision' impossible. \"One- of the\nmost obvious, results is (that the\nescape rate goes up during the peak\nperiods of- population\" .,\nThe Committee found that a minimum of'30 boys sleep in the junior\ndormitory which is of shiplap con-\nstrjictibn. ., Y\n,' 'In 'the event > of a , serious., tire\nthe loss' of lite'would be great,\"\nsaid the.report. Yf\nThe report also said that many\nof the inmates, who come from ail\noyer^B; C. ,and:the'.Yukon, are hardened delinquents' who; require\nspecial supervision which is unavailable. ('',.\"'\nADVI8-.S RURAL SITE\nIn recommending early .construction of a new school, the- report\nsaid that a rural site Is preferable\nand-should be removed from the\n\"tempo of urban- life;\"\n. The, 28-member committee was\nset up after reports that, start on\na new- BISCO.; at Wellington on\nVancouver . Island would ' be delayed.. .... . .   .'      i'-' >\u25a0'.'...\nMembers of the committee .included doctors, lawyers, social\nworkers, clergymen-and police official..   :  .\nHensler Charged With\nLone Survivor\n!i HOPE,' B.-<t, '(CP) - Matt Offer,\nlone survivor of a car crash in\nwhich five men died Friday, told\nof. his escape from the waters of.\nLake of the Woods.\nThe car plunged from the Trans-\nCanada highway when Offer, the\ndriver,- swerved to avoid a big\nrock,'.;': ,;..;.\u25a0-.,\n\"The car seemed to float for a\nsecond) eh the. water 'and then It\nstarted slowly, \"settling, sort of like\na leal falling,\"- he said.\n\"I don't remember anybody say:\ning anything, I just remember the :\nsound of the air going put and the\nwater comlhg, in.\"\nOffer got the car door unlatched,\nbut he couldn't push it open against\nthe pressure of the water,      -\n\"I turned sort of on my back\nand-kicked twice with both feet.\nThe door came open enough for me\nto get out\"  -,-\u25a0. '\u2022;\u25a0\u2022'\u2022.\nHe grabbed one of the men as\nhe went out, possibly Mass Muk-\naida,'a Japanese  carpenter from\nHope, but lost his hold.      .       -.\n1\n%'\nServes 5 People\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A \"nightcap\" liquor store opened'its doors\nhere \"\"\"hljrsday ni^it, but apparently fev persons were carrying\na 'de-uerate thirst ;>,\nFor the first time in more than\na decade a citizen was able to buy\na bottle\" after supper without edging up to a bootlegger. But clerks\nreported tljey were never rushed:\nand a survey shortly before closing:\ntime showed only five customers\non the premises. ' \"\"\u25a0'-,_.-, kL %\ni-~ Klfce.downtowir-iSt-rejWj-l^rmajn^\n\u00abpen:-rl wek -dayV until 41 ptav\nbut aU others in the city continue\nto\\close at t p._a. One Victoria\nstore will also stey open until an\nhour before midnight...\nThe government introduced the\n\"nightcap\" stores oh recommendation of a liquor inquiry commission\nwhich recently investigated \"British\nColumbia drinking habits.,    \u25a0 ' \u2022 -\nGamma Globulin\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014Arrangements\nhave been completed for. a test in\nCanada of gamma Globulin, a Substance being experimented with in\nthe United States as a protection\nagainst paralytic poliomyelitis, the\nhealth department announced Friday. '!:...'\u25a0 \u2022\nThe health department said preliminary reports of studies in the\nU. S. are \"encouraging,\" and that\nin limited experiments the occurrence of paralysis among those who\nsuffered from polio was less than\nin- those who received gamma glo-\n.bulin than in .those who' did not\nFinal evaluation ot the usefulness of the product however,-will\nrequire  further  clinical  observation and study.\nPINT FOR 0O8E\nGamma globulin is obtained from\nhuman blood plasma, with a pint\nof blood required to provide*\nsingle dose of Gamma globulin. The\namount available this year wiH be\nSmall. -      .   .-.'\nLIBERAL RUMORS\nSURPRISE SLOAN\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Chief Justice Gordon Sloan said Friday speculation that he may be asked to lead'\nthe Liberal'party in B. O. was completely \u2022 without his knowledge.  -\nHe issued a brief statement saying a report published Thursday\ntelling of development of a movement to draft him for Liberal leadership had caused' him some distress in hls.positlon.on the bench.\n\"If I should ever seek political\npreferment which is far from my\ndesire and intention, \u25a0 I, shall consider .it my first duty to resign from\ntiie bench. 1\nSince my appointment to the bench\nI have, ol course, completely disassociated myself from politics;\"\nMacKenzie Regrets\nCurrie Criticism\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Dr. .Norman MacKenzie, president of the\nUniversity of British Columbia, said\ntoday that criticism of the army\narising trom the Currie report may\ndestroy the public's confidence in\nthe armed forces.\nAddressing the annual convention of the Dairy Farmers of Canada, DT. MacKenzie divorced him-\n-self from politics before he said\nthat waste and inefficiency were\ngenerally associated with war.\n\"I am far more concerned lest our\nconcentration on these abuses and\nour criticism ot the armed forces\nmay destroy our confidence in\nthem and to such an extent that we,\nas a people, refuse to- provide the\nmoney or manpower tp maint-in\nthem.\" .   ,' \u25a0 '\u25a0: \u25a0\nBuilding Trades\nFind ICA Act\nIneffective\n' VICTORIA (CP) \u2014Exemption\nof building trades unions from\nthe Industrial Conciliation and\nArbitration Act was requested\nFriday by the Trade Union Con-.\ngreis of B.C. (TLC) In a brief\n1 presented to the cabinet,\nSecretary R. K. Gervln told the\ncabinet the trade union movement\nadmits provisions of the act assist\nIn facilitating negotiations with\n- most unions, but the building\ntrade unions have found the time-\nconsuming procedure of negotiation, conciliation and arbitration\nworks to their disadvantage.\n\"It   preventsY effective   action\nwhen required,\" the brief said.\nThe brief asked that the ICA act\nbe   made   voluntary   for  these\nunions unless any-particular group\nwants other arrangements.\n-\u25a0'\u25a0* '\nPrinting Shop Employee Charged\nWith Giving Advance Copy of Currie\nReport to CCF Out on $500 Bail\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014!-\u00abter.ck Hensler, wanted on a\ncharge oI.the_t of an adyance'copyjtrf the-controversial Gurrie\nreport, gave himself up' late Friday to Quebec provincial\npolice. ,'   '   . \"\u25a0 : \\ .;'V \u25a0     '.'.. .      \u2022 Y-\n\u2022 \u25a0 The small, 36-year-old printing shop employee walked\ninto provincial police headquarters with his counsel, Alexandre. Chevalier, QC, 't; .'. ';y v '\n.'   Hensler was placed'under'Sacre-t and appeared- irmne-\n. diately. before Judge- Rene\nThebergo.\nThe Judge fixed bail at $500 but\nthe. question of preliminary hearing\nwas set aside for decision Monday.\nBecause It was too late for baa\narrangements to be made immediately, Hensler remained ln pojice\ncu-todf\/. '.    \u25a0  .\nHis lawyer said he will be freed'\ntoday' when ball formalities are\ncompleted. ..\nHen-tor's surrender came a few\nhours after Hilaire Beauregard,\ndeputy-director of the provincial\nforce, said police had been unable\nto locate the printer- In places\nwhere he was;known. \" \u25a0;:.\n; The printing shop employee-was\nat; work in the Notre Dame street\nplant of .National Lithographing\nand Printing Inc., during the parliamentary fuss over the fact: an\nadvance eopy of the Currie report\nfound its way into the hands of\nM. J. Coldwell, CCF pirty leader.\nJack Rudner, lawyer for the company which printed 106 copies of\nthe Currio report, said Hensler did\nnot appear for work Thursday.\nBefore Judge Theberge, Mr.\nChevalier made a formal application for a preliminry hearta!\nwhich opens the door tor a fury\ntrial tet Ke -Sent\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\n- Mr. Chevalier said he made this\napplication although a $20 value\non.the-.Gurrie.report advance\ncopy \"would normally mean the case .\nwould be disposed of by a judge\nalone..'V     . r.'; y\n'Judge Theberge reserved a deel-\nsion on the application until Monday. \u25a0    \u25a0   \u25a0       \u25a0    '!\u25a0\u25a0'. \u25a0\u25a0< '-'\u25a0'\nThe theft accusation.against Hensler was laid on a complaint lodged by Clarence LeLievre, representing, the accounting firm of\nMcDonald,v Currie' and Company.\nGeorge S. Currie, Yvho'wrote the\nreport on administration of anhy\nworks'services, tea partner In the\nfirm.- - ,'\nDfejNtjSTSWARN\nCABINET\nIVKSCORIA' \u00ab!?} -The GoBege\n\u25a0^\u25a0\u00a9i^-eurge-n. nfRCwarned,\nthe cabinet of tW'.danlg-rt JSMi-\nlowing dental technicians to make\ndentures dtrectiy for the public.\nThe Dental- Technicians j Society\nwUi seek' this Tight- in \u00ab'.-prlvate\nbill to be'introduced to the legl_-\nlature.  \u25a0 \u25a0;..      . .-'. Y ' \u2022\"\n'A spokesman'Said some technicians practising illegally In B.C.\nencourage people to believe they\nhave 'degrees and that,, because\nthey do;only one thing,.they are in\ntact specialists.        ..-.-\nHe said thois \"constitutes-a serious menace to the health -of the\npeople.\"\n\"The-real intent and-purpose of\nthis section of the proposed dental\ntechnicians' act is to permit unqualified persons to practise dentistry,\" he said.\n\u25a0.   \u25a0\nAdvance News for-.\nProspective Parents \/:\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Prospective\nparents; may soon know months in\nadvance whether it will be a boy,\nor-argirl.\nA Toronto, biological laboratory\nis working to perfect a salivary\ntest on expectant mothers which\nthey hope will determine with -5r\npercent accuracy toe sex of Unborn\nchildren.-   ', - '\nThe tort, taken in the sixth month\nof pregnancy, determines toe \"\"v\nby the presence or absence of certain male and female hormones.\nIt was discovered by two American scientists and a recent article\nin the official magazine of the Ame-\nricai Association for the Advance,\nment of Science said preliminary\nresearch had been accurate in 98\nper cent of the cases where boys\nwere prejdicted and 95 per cent\nwhen girls were forecast\nBus Driver Saves 19\nFrom Electrocution\nST.'LOUIS: (AP)\u2014A bus driver's\nquick' thinking may have saved his\n29 passengers from electrocution\nFriday when a HOOO-volt- electric\ncable broke and tell across toe\nvehicle.\"  '\nWilliam -dndhorst said, \"we were\nblinded by blue sparks shooting\naround us. and I, looked out and\nsaw whet 'had happened. I yelled\nto them all to stay inside or they'd\nbe electrocuted.\"\n\" Then' Lindhorst slammed the\ndoors and drove oft.\nA Union Electric Co. spokesman\nsaid' the Vehicle's rubber tires\nserved as insulation,, but. if anyone\nhad stepped'dOTWito the wet pavement he might have grounded the\nentire bus and the passengers.\nOlivier Narrator\nFor Coronation\nLONDON (Heuters) \u2014 Sir Laurence. Olivier will be the narrator\nfor-toe only technicolor movie of\nthe Coronation, it was announced\nThursday. The full length feature\npicture, \"A, Queen* Is Crowned,\"\nwill be produced by the J. Arthur\nBank organization and released in\nBritain June 8, six days after toe\ncoronation. Copies will be flown\nto many, parte of toe world. ; .\nGIFTS FOR TH? PONTIFF \u2014\nPope.Plus XII smiles at two doves\n.perched on a finger of each hand\nduring an audience at Vatican\nCity. The birds were presented\nto him by children end members\nof the Third Order of St Francis.'\nAnd in This Corner \u2666 . .\n\u2022i DETROIT (AP)\u2014Mrs. Carolina Nemlth obtained a divorce Thursday from her husband charging that he hadn't spoken to her In the\nlast'three years. Mrs. Nemlth said her husband, Louis, occasionally\nwrote her a note during the three-year silence period. ,\n. PHILADELPHIA (AP)\u2014Arthur Klein, who runs a towel supply\nservice, was well and truly shaken when he walked into his office\nThursday-and saw a man snoring on the floor, a screwdriver in ope,\nlimp hand and three hinges from toe safe beside hiroi Once awake,\nthe intruder tbld police his name is Philip Burke, that he had broken\nin through a basement window, and that anyone would get tired .\ntoying to craok a safe with only a screwdriver. ,\n<-\u25a0\u00a5\nmMtmmm\u2014\u2014\u2014mm\n mm^mmmmmmmmm\n**********\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0-.-     \u25a0\nmmmmmm^m\nWwr*\nwwwpss\n\u2022 m\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24. 1953\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Shews ot 2:00 \u2022 7:00 -' 9:00\ny\\\nDebbie REYNOLDS\nfefl\nLate News\nCartoon'\n^\/^r\nSTARTS MONDAY\nNelsonr Cra\nDiffer in CafegorieSr\nCompilation of staffs employed by nine similar British Columbia\nhospitals shows a wide difference, in number of staff employed by.\nCranbrook and Nelson hospitals which provide for 95 end 8- beds,\nrespectively. '\n. Kootenay Lake General Hospital here has a total staff ef 94, 29\nof whom are nurses sand 15 administration workers. St. Eugene Hos-'\npital at Cranbrook has 79 workers, 20 of whom are nurses and five\noffice workers.\nj     Trail-Tadanac Hospital alone among the nine has two dieticians.\nKelson has four technicians, Trail four and Cranbrook one. Nelson\nhas 15 orderlies and maids, Cranbrook 18, Trail 22. The hospital here\ncounts 30 as \"other workers;\" this would include laundry help, seamstresses and maintenance staff. Trail has'44 and Cranbrook; 35.   >\n.Kootenay Lake General Hospital's office staff is largest of the\nthree and second among the nine hospitals, exceeded only by the 18\nof North Vancouver Hospital. Nelson has two persons in executive\nadministrative capacity, Trail 'three and Cranbrook .one. Nelson has\n13 others on its business administration staff, Trail eight and Cranbrook four....... \/        :  ...\n\u25a0 -.  Following is.a tabulation.of staffs ln hospitals ln nine British\nColumbia centres:       .     .    s i.'.\nadmin. orderlies,\nex.   cleric tech. nurses diet maids other   sum   beds\nIT. Vancouver 1\nDuncan\nNanaimo ...\nKelowna....\nVernon _\nNelson \t\nPentlcton .\nTrail \t\nCranbrook\n17\n7\n8\n10\n5\n13\n\u00ab\n8\n4\n10\n48\n81\n38\n38\n37\n29\n36\n48\n27\n21\n11\n16\n22\n15\n19\n22\n18\n37\n30\n43\n34\n38\n30\n19.\n44\n85\n144\n93\n106\n103\n108\n94\n84\n129\n79\n106\n119\n109\n111\n134\n99\n80\n106\n95\nSlocan Teachers, Trustees Wage\nArguments Presented Arbllralors\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nValentines\n,-  -Y-,^,%',...'--     y\nFor thost Mel ear*:to\nsend tho best . . .   Y\",\nvVo'aro distributor, for\nCOUTTS VALENTINE    .\n;,Y\";\"-;:CARDS '';..;.'.'.'.\/\n:art shoppers\n-X'.(-i-!--TINO CAHD-'i'-','\nFOR \"EVERY OCCASION\nOUR PRICES\nBE BEATEN\n-\u25a0\u25a0v\" try: us |fi\nBRAND NEW\n\u2022 Closo compact ond j\nstandard design, toilets.\n\u2022 Bathtubs\n\u2022 Cast- iron and  china\n.   hand basins.\n\u2022 Sinks, double and\ntingle compartment,\ncast iron or steel, with\nor wit hout drain-\nboards, acid resistant\nporcelain.\n\u2022 Swing taps\n\u2022 MEW and USED\n\u2022 Iron Pipe and Fittings\n\u2022 Soil Pips and Fittings\n\u2022 Used Fixtures\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\n|902 Front St.     Phone 1511\nTrail Curling\nResults of play ln the Trail Curling Club's second round Rotation\nPresident. vs Vice-Presidents play\n.^.VB-p&'-V'i-v''-. Ortner \u00bb.   ','\nRYD,\" Pbrry 1, E. O. Player;..\n.*\"\u00a5\".' E. Vance 10, S. Matovlch 8.\nV. _. Ferguson 7, A. Forrest 8.\n\\V. Forrest 5, O. Service 9.\nL. Fdrtln 7, W. Slddall 10;   ' '\n0. GUP 10, \"8| Gray;ll.' >\nS. Smillie 11, A. SnowbaU 10.\nW. A. Forrestl., WVGregory 3.\nJ. H. Hargrave 7, F. Strachan 1.\nR. Stuart 9, D. Sutherland 4.'    '\nJ. D. Hartley 4, R, McGhie 10.\nDraws for Monday are:. .\n6:30 p.m.\u2014A. Burwaeh vs W. Mil-\nburn, A; Dafoe vs R. -lose, E. Perkins vs F. Plester, J, Robinson vs W.\nRae, R. Balnbrldge vs T. Cummings,\nA. MacKinnon-vs W. Robertson., :\n8:30 p.m.\u2014P. Mclntyre vs N. Bent*\nley, T. Rice vs A. Beckett, D. Min-\nto vs G. Mitchell, H. Currie vs J.\nAtweli, A! Benedet vs. J. Montpelller, G. Morrison ,vs R. Dunlop.\nArbitration Board hearing bf the\nwages. dlsputo ' between teachers\nand Board of School Trustee* for\nDistrict No. 8, began Friday at\nNelson Court House, It continues\ntoday.\nSitting on the Arbitration Board\nare Judge Eric P. Dawson, choir-\nman, William Ramsay, School\nBoard representative, rnd V. L.\nDryer, of Vancouver, teachers' representative. ....'' -.'\u25a0'\nDuring morning session Friday a*\nthe court house Stanley Evans pre.\nsen ted a brief asking for hlghet\nwages for the teachers. In the\nafternoon the school \/ward's brief\nwas presented ..by Leo Gansner ol\nNelson. ,--.-        !'.';        v   \u25a0\nToday rebuttals will be rtede by\nboth parties. '\u25a0\".\nRequest by the Slocan School Dis\ntrict teachers is based on a comparison with 1952 salaries throughout\nB.C., Stanley Evans of Vancouver,\nteachers'  representative;' told the\narbitration board. The wage scale\ncompered unfavorably with most\nB.C. schools; he said. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0        '\" y -\nTwenty-seven B.C. districts pay\nmore\/than the Slocan $2150-for beginning   elementary   teachers,   64\npay-higher -than the Slocan 93500\nmsKlniuih for elehientaryiteaOhers,\n27 pay more' than Slocan'S$2700 for\nsecondary heglnnlng teachers, and\n40 pay niore than the district's $4500\nmaximum for secondary; teachers.\nThe district too, with the presence of Doukhobor communities, is\nless-attractive to teachers and maximum- salaries equivalent to average\nsalaries df other professions should\nbe paid, Mr. Evans told'the Board.\nWhen     prospective    teachers\nlearn of the armed guards still\nstationed it district schools, they\nfeel the existing situation Is one\nIn which they do net wish to\nplace themselves; \"\u201e\u25a0\n.-   The Arbitration  Board, In ea-\ntabllthlno  salaries for teachers,\n' should be aware of the general\ni rolliotancei of teachers to go Into\nthe district because of their presence, Mr. pvani thought.   \u2022-.\n'With   the   present  shortage   ot\nteachers; drop ,oi\u00bbt of about 700 a.\nyear and the anticipated increase\n(grades 1 to 8 were \"estimated to\nincrease by 155,000 pupils fdr 1952-\n52) approximately 1100 more teSch-\ners will be needed, he explained.\nThe shortage will be most acute ln\nthe Slocan District because of-the\nteachers' reluctance to work near\nthe Doukhobor. communities.   .\nMr, Evans referred to the Consultative'Commlt--e on Doukhobor\nProblem's report which recommended a special course ot study\nfor Doukhobor pupils and special\nThe Weather\nWMiSOll\t\nSt John's\t\nNorth Bay..........\nWinnipeg ....\u2014,_\nSaskatoon ....\nMedicine Hat.....\nCalgary.........\t\nKamloops ..-\u201e__.._.\n\"Pentlcton ___.\nVancouver \t\nVictoria..?.\t\nKlmberJey\t\nCrescent Valley\nKaslo :\t\nPrince Rupert ....\nGrand Forks ._\n37\n25\n31\n28\n28\n38\n32\n38\n38\n47\n50\n33\n34\n35\n37\n.52\n1.04\n.10\nteachers capable of carrying out\nsuch a course end meeting, the demands ot th\u00ab community Itself.\nTo attract teachers Of suoh'a cal.\nibre higher wages are n-cessSry, he\nsaid. \u2022' -'-\u2022:-- -\n525,000 INCREASE      \/'\/V\nSecretary \u2022 treasurer of ' SlocSn\nSchOol- District No. 8, Paul S.\nBerber as a witness gave evidence\nthat wage scales demanded by the\nteachers would mean an annual\npayroll Inorease- of $25,000. '\nPresent (\"jistrlct payroiltisrUI.\"'i-\nteachers. employed, was $107,00.\nplus increases granted last September for additional years of expert-\nenoe....,  - ,' \"' .-'.   '\u25a0,-'.\nSince 1046 average salaries' have\nincreased from $1339 to $3144, ,138.8\nper cent, Leo Gansner, who^repre-\nsented -the board, explained jn i\nbrief   presented;* the   arbitration\nboard,   .;.. Y.'. -.'.'..;\u25a0*\u00bb: ?.\u2022**\u2022; -\n*XCE\u00ab0kc6*t RI8IY\nSince June, 1951 salaries have increased' approximately 15 per cent\nwhile the _os.t ot living index has\nincreased only IA per .'dent Mr.\nGansner pointed out;   A \u25a0'\"'-\"'\nMr. 'Gansner''-'also argued the\nteacher's position was more parallel\nto that of .civil servant, than of\nmembership. In a profession and\nthey worked .under particularly\nfavourable conditions..   .,\nMr. Gansner also pointed out\nthat demends fOr salary increases\ncame at a time when many, district\nmines have . closed.. Increases\nshouldn't be granted, he maintained, .unless.it could be shown sal\narjes-were below; the lewd of .others\nin the community performing Similar duties- or having similar responsibilities. '_'   \u25a0''.\". \u25a0'\nIt had been argued that* because\nthe area was known as a Doukhobor area teachers outside the district niight.be reluctant, to teach\nthere, and hence salaries should be\nraised, Recommendations made by\nthe Consultative Cc'rimlttee or'\nDoukhobors that the teacher's sal\nary should be supplemented; were\nquoted; Gansner replied that he felt\nthe report dealt with the Sons ot\nFreedom not attending school and\nhence the Doukhobors should be\nho problem. Children' ot -Orthodox\nDoukhobors attend school, are well\nbehaved and present no problem,\nhe said.\nReferring to the question of\nshortage of. teachers, he, said the\nboard'had no difficulty in finding\nteachers and as \"far as we're concerned there is no shortage,\" For\nthe 84 classrooms in tlie district\nthere were 34 techers, he said.\nWith Standi;\nand Bdsoiii\nResults of play in tho Nelson\nCurling Club's UDL S-otl^nSl 'play\nFriday were: '\u25a0'.\u2022'.\nV Chile \u00bb, MOrrls 8. \u25a0\" \u25a0\n*Ry>M-,.fa\u00bbr\\4.   .'\u201e--','-*i   ,\nRamsbottom 10, Gt-enwood 7. .\nToter 7, Chase 6V       \" \u2022\". \u25a0\nS\u00abml-flhals-M. B. Ryajls 8, E.\nRambottbm 8, R. Carmichael 0,\nTbltrii.       :\\   '\u25a0\"-' \u25a0 ' . ';-'.-'\nFinal draw\u2014R.' Carmichael vs M.\nB. Ryalls.        \u2022\"\u2022!\"\u2022'   \u2022\nResults of Sharp Cup curling lasl\nweek In the Nelson Ladles' Curling\nCJubwa.-: '\u2022-      :  \u00bb . -\".i- 'V\nMrs. J. DeGlrolamo defeat-d Mrs.\nT, A, Wallace, Mrs. M. L. Craig beet\nMrs.'A,-J. Hesse, Mrs. W. T. Hlpperson won from Mrs. J. C. MUir, Hesse\nbest Mrs. E. N.,Mannings, DeGlro\nlame won from Mannings, Craig\nWon over Wallace, Hlpperson beat\nMannings, and Hesse beat; Muir.\n\u25a0\u2022* Draws for ri\u00bbxt weelp are:.. ' -...\nMonday\u2014Mrs. Craig va Mrs. Muir,\nMrs,' Wallace vS Mrs. Mannings,\narid Mrs. Hlpperson va Mrs. DeGlrolamo.   .  .    '\u25a0\u25a0 \" \\   ::-       .  '\"- ] '\n1 !_VesJI-y^M--'.5.WAlla6<~'ys: Mrs.\nMuir and Mrs. Hlpperson vs MrS,\nHesse, \u25a0\"-'. \u25a0- ': tf\\- :'-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 \" \u2022'\u2022;  sr>\nDemand for Hos Here\nt-Tuim^        Jaycees Shown\n1\n1926\u2014aT^ljrsi^ons-.    '\u00bb,     i*\n\u25a0 \\ ' ziTt-tkyt' \u2022\u2022>: '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0;'\ni\"\u2022 liBl--lM'--\u00bbp*\u00abt^M_i; >r   '-. .  );\u25a0\u25a0:.-:\u25a0\n^-,'\u2022'-.''\u2022 \u25a0,-r.-564,3M-.y\u00ab    ',y ;\u25a0\u25a0''':\u25a0'*\u2022'\u2022:,\u25a0;..''-\n; 871 <phy_lotheraby treatments\n*.'\u25a0;\u2022   'This comparison illustrated to Nelson Junior Chamber\nof Commerce Iriday tilttht the growth in demand on Koo-\nItenay Lake General hospital services. It was given by]\nitjGeorge Turner,^chairman o_|\".''V\",\"''!1\"\"\"\"^.\"    -71   ^\u2014]\nIo\nFor Convention\n.29    38    .58\nJilted Youth\nShoots Self\n'WASHINGTON (AP) - A 15-\nyear-old high school student totally shot himself Thursday after being Jilted by his 13-year-old girl\nfriend.' Michael Adkin's girl\nfriend had come to his home and\ntold Mm all was off between th'em.\nHis sister-found him dying a short\ntime-later; -\n11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111\nWeleomo\nCanodii\nans\nHOTELl\nRooms With  Beth t3.0O-tS.5O.\nWithout'   Bath   $2.00-$2.50.\nSpokano W. 213 Riverside\niIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiin\n111111\nNOTICE\nDog Licences\nOwners of dogs over four months of age in tha\nCity of Nelson, take note that licences must'\nbe purchased by\nJANUARY 31\nLicences may be purchased at the City Hall\nBy Order '.\u25a0\u25a0'., y .,-\nR. HARSHAW\nCHIEF OF POLICE,   CITY OF NELSON\nFansSeeFine\nDown Stars; In\nA small, enthusiastic crowd left\nthe Civic Centre Friday night thoroughly convinced\"' thst: j they . had\nseen one of the finest exhibitions ot\nbasketball here ln & long time.'The\nMagrath Rockets defeated the Nel-\nson-Trail-Castlegar All-Stars 80-85.\n' As the game opened lt looked\nfor a time like a walk-away for\nthe'Rockets. They started that fast.\nThe. Rockets showed some remarkable .shooting and checking all\nthrough the first half and when (tie\nwhistle went they held a 33-9 mar-\n$%'        -       '. .'\u25a0'.'      ,'-.  ;\nthe All-Stars through the first\nhalt missed shots that ordinarily\nwould drop through nervousness\nand the constant -cheeking ot the\nRockets and- their long passing upset the All-Stars no end..\nThe Stars finally came into their\nown in the second halt and at times\nshowed much more speed than\nthe Rockets. Their passing plays\nstarted to click and ;the. shots that\nwere'earlier rolling around the\nrim to fall out, started to drop\nthrough.\nFor the Rockets Gene Bice was\nthe .big gun garnering 14 points\nwhile teammat* \"Larry 'West pick:\ned up 13 markers. The All-Stars\nwere, led by.Held Hickeh with 16\nige Show, Alberians\njoints followed by Rennie Mitchell\nwith 15 and Don MacKinnon with\nThese . same \u25a0: two clubs. will\nmeet' again this afternoon and\nevening In Castlegar and If they\nput up the same kind of an exhibition as they did last night the\nbasketball fans will be given\n- real treat\nLineups:\nMagrath Rockets\u2014Wes Rice 8,\nAl West 8, Ty Alston 4, Blain Sa\nbey 10, Larry West 13, Gene:Rice\n14, Don Johnson 7, Eldon Colman\n10, Jim Matkln 7.\nAll-Stars \u2014 Eric Granstrom 4,\nReid Hlcken 16, Jim Merkley 8, Ddh\nMacKinnon 11, Rennie Mitchell 15,\nMacAuley, Keh Fcatherston, Gene\nNutter 5, Jim Corbett, Sam Marie-\nco 4, De_ Cory 4. .- \\\n\u25a0In the lid litter the Nelson Sen*\nt'or men downed the Notre Dame\nPups 38-15.       '.-,..'-\nThe Seniors from the start put on\nthe power add by, half time had a\ncomfortable 23-5 edge. The less experienced Pups put up a game fight\nbut were no.match fOr the Seniors\nwho were led by Dave Butterfield\nwith hia_20-point effort. I. Cornek\nand Bud Goddetis led the Pups\nwith five points each.\nAn eight-man committee to name\n71 delegates to the Nelson-Creston\nLiberal Association annual meeting\nhere Wednesday was appointed by\ninterim chairman Stanley Morris at\nthe annual meeting of the Nelson\nLiberal. Association.   .' , ,'. ;\u25a0\nThe committee will also name 25\ndelegates to attend the West Kootenay Liberal nominating convention at Castlegar February 21. .\n\"Thij meeting which named Fraser\nTees president also named Rt. Hon.\nLouis St. Laurent, Canada's prime\nminister, as'' honorary president;\nSnd Hon, James Sinclair as -honorary Vice-president.\nA resolutions committee was appointed to forward resolutions to\nthe forthcoming Nelson-Creston and\nKootenay West meetings.\n1 .Harry D.-Harrison addressed the\ngfoup briefly, outlining a recent\nvisit by the federal Minister of Fisheries, Ron. James Sinclair. He also\nHave a resume of what likely will\ntranspire at the annual meeting of\nIhe federal group. -,.\nHONOR FOR UB.C '\"\nPROFESSOR\n.. -Dr.-'G. J.' Spencer, professor of\nzoology at the University of British\nColumbia, has been appointed a\nFello\"v of the EntpriiolottlcaljSociety\nof America, an horior that has been\ngiven few Canadians,'\u25a0'%,      , \u25a0-\nDr. Spencer has been a, member\nOf the UBC department of zoology\nsince 1924 and has an international\nSeputation for his research work in\niie field of insect pests.       \",,..\nthe' bpard of directors.\n\",_*.'same building, ;**' same\nheating facilities, the samo-wiring\nwero providing these Services In\nthe single month, Mr. Tulfner told\nthe dinner meeting, attended by.\nJaycee members and their wives.\nDISTRICT \"SUPPORT NEEDED\nThe. meeting was also addressed\nby Mayor Joseph Kary, who stressed the need,of a hospital district,\n\"Service is good in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital,\" Mr.-Turn-\ner said,' \"considering the facilities\nwe hove to work with.- .\" '.'.('\n' VThe building Isold, it's not fireproof and it's not muted to the facilities and .equipment needed by\ndoctors and nurses.  .\nWe need a new hospital. It is\nnot efficient to try and operate in\nthat: building.\"\nA new boiler room was needed.\n'Undersized\" boilers were providing neither sufficient heaft nor sufficient steam, for proper sterilization. Much ol the fuel \"goes up the\nchimney\" through the use of jacket heaters for hot water.    -'\nThe elevator was obsolete and\nin a poor location; the dumbwaiter\nwas outmoded and \"often\" out of\nworking .order; the 'kitchen was\n\"inadequate and not laid out for\nefficient working.\" '.\n\"Even lt-tnie hospital was enlarged, both to the .East and the\nback of the building, It would be\nmakeshift\", Mr. Turner ssld.\nDemands of X-ray and sterilization equipment'had taxed the wiring to four times its c-paeity,-Rewiring would cost, $35,000.\nTenders for re-wlrlng had been\ncalled), Mr. Turner said, and the;\nexecutive committee had power to\nact if any'were received. Under\nB. C. Hospital Insurance, one-third\nwould be paid by the Government-\nNew hospitals, he pointed out,\nwere built \"entirely different to\nthis one. They are carefully designed, \"having in mind the needs of\ndoctors, and nurses ln the care of\npatients. Largest modern wards\ncontained only four'beds.\".'\nHe urged the building of a regional hospital, which could give\nservices that small hospitals could\nnot, and ot the formation of a voluntary district \"to spread the cost\namong those that use it.\"'\n60 P.O. DI8TRICT PATIENTS\nThe Government) had proposed\nformation of compulsory hospital\ndistricts similar to school districts,\nMr. Turner 'replied when' asked\nwhy hospitals were not Included\nin.civic administration, as schools'\nwere;\n\"Ho-pltels ere like schoolSi-non-\nprofit \u25a0 making, and municipalities\nnave shied away trom connection\nLwith them. Sixty per cent, of pa*\ntlorrts are from outside the City.\"\nPossibility of having a religious\norganization, such as Catholic nursing groups or the Salvation Army,\nrun, the hospital was mentioned,\nand Mr. Turner said this bad, been\nInvestigated. \"It does not mean\nlower operating costs.\"* \u2022    .\nHe   complimented ' the   Junior\nChamber on the appointment of a\ncommittee thpt toured the hospital.\n\"You saw things that were good,\nand you saw: things that you didn't\napprove: ot. The building itself Is\nin particularly bad condition.\"\nA   lot of progress  Had been\nmade toward Investigating  possibility of a hospital district, Mayor Kary said. Tha Mayor, who Is\na member of the committee that\ntested the possibilities of organizing the district, gave a history\nof the work that had been done.\n, \"Only  last  week a  delegation\nfrom Salmo said It saw the need\n.  of better servlees, and offered Its\ncooperation.\"'\nThe group was stilt trying to\nget a professional organizer, he\n' said,\n, \"Give us a hospital and we'll give\nyou a.site,\" Mr. Turner said when\nasked if the directors had a- location in mind. Accessibility and\nWater supplies were the msln fsc-\ntors in a, site decision.\nA district Junior Chamber of\nCommerce meeting will be .held in\nTrail Feb. 26, it was announced\nduring . a brief business session,\nWhich decided to make the Ladles'\nNight .held Friday, an annual event.\n\u2022 First plans were laid for a March\nvisit By Roger Flumerfelt of Cal*\ngary, president of the Canadian\nJunior Chamber 'of Commerce.\nNamesake's Conduct |\nEmbarrasses\nArmand Arcand, Royal Hotel, Is\nnot the man of the same name Involved in a court case earlier this\nweek and sentenced for theft of a\nwomen's coat.\nMr. Arcand advised the Dally\nNews Friday of confusion created\nby a story concerning his namesake I\nwho ts now serving a three-month-J\nterm ln the provincial jail, .\nlake Level Rises\n: '': '.\u2022\u25a0   '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0   ,'V\n-. Kootenay Lake water level hss\nrisen a. quarter- of an inch' since\nThursday and . water storage for\npower production has been increased to 2230.aore feet\nWater storage in acre feet, a year\nago, 851,700; week' ago, 592,720;\nThursday, 698,470, and Friday, 6O0,-\n650. - .\"'\u25a0     ;\nSince .Friday,, Jan. 6, Kootenay\nLake has risen 6% inches and water\nstorage hSs increased 63,600 acre\nfeet';        , ',\u2022 ...:, \u25a0; '.\"'\",'\nHO^klY'SfilG?\n''\u25a0' By\"Thi Canadian Press   Y\n' \\      .' ..G.'A.Pt\nHowe, Detfolt :   \u00bb\u25a0-\u25a0\u00bb_ 5\u00ab\nHergesheimer, N. Y.......   21   25. 48\nLindsay,1 Detroit    IB   24  43\nRichard,'Montreal -.    17   25.- 42\nRonty, New'YOrk    16   24. 39\nPrystal; Detroit:   12 23 33\nKennedy, TOronto      13   18   31\nEXCEEDS SPEED LIMIT\nCAfc-LIEGAI. \u2014 Frank Stencer,\n43, of Castlegar; was fined $15 ln\nCaBtlegar court Thursday afternoon\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate W.\nH. Taylor On a charge of exceeding\nthe speed limit through the village\not Kinnaird. The Offence occurred\nabOut 3:45 a.m. Jan.' 21..\nCheck Them Fast for 35c\nMinisters Take\nQver New Positions\nTORONTO, (CP) - Two' newly-\nappointed officers of the .United\nChurch of Canada were, Inducted\ninto their offices Thursday by Rev;\nA. A. Scott, moderator.\nRev. Peter Gordon White assumed\neditorship of Sunday school publications succeeding Dr. George\nLittle who haS become director of\nthe Observer Every Family 'plan.\nRev. T. E, F. Honey**' former missionary in Chins, to6k over'as associate secretary of the, board ot\noverseas mlsslOfta.' Y . \u2022\u25a0\u25a0'-\u25a0'\u2022\u2022\nVoters Who Foil to\nVote Token Off Lilt\n' VICTORIA (CP)-t-A .halite In\nthe. provincial Elections- Act to\nstreamline the ' procedure for\n, cleaning . out deadwood In. the\n.voters' list was made recently by\na cabinet order.'\nVoters who fall to exorcise their\nfranchise and who fa'l to respond\nta notices sept out by the government Will be considered to have\nleft their electoral districts and\ntheir names will be knocked off\ntht district vo.t.rs' list\nThe act formerly provided for\nthe names of voters who had left\nthalr ridings to be removed frOm\nthe lists, but gave officials no\nway of dStermlnlog whether the\nvoters actually had moved away.\nThe new order provides that\nthe return of an undelivered notice from the eleotoral officer will\nbe sijfflcl.nt oroof. >\nCANADIAN DOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK (CP)-The Csnadlan\ndollar: was 8\/32 cent lower at a\npremium of 3 per cent, In terms\nof II. S. funds today. Found, sterling wss up 1\/10 Cent at $3.81**.     1\nA GLEAM RACES FOR\n$50,000 STAKE\nARCADIA, Calif.' (AP) - A, 12-\nhorse Held headed by Calumet's\nA Gleam.races today tor the biggest pot'of gold Santa Anita has\nOffered to date this season\u2014$50,000.\nA Gleam, carrying a bulky top\nweight of 130 pounds including\njockey Eddie Arcaro, could prove\nthe betting choice although she has\nnot shown the dash and tire of last\nyear when she Copped five stakes\nat Hollywood Park. -       -        -\nA Gleam and Spanish Cream, the\nfive-year-old. mare who. beat the\nCalumet miss on opening day In a\nspring event, appear the class of the\nfield. - Y , ' .-;   Y     '\nHewitt Says (KEY\nUsing His\nSporiscast\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 jSportcaster\nFoster Hewitt charged today that\nradio station CKBY of Toronto is\nincorporating in- its broadcasts material taken.from his play-by-play\nreport of National-Hockey League\ngames oyer his own Toronto sta-\ntion.\"\n. He made the charge before the\nCBC board of governors, at a meeting called tp consider proposed\nchanges In regulations and is prepared to defend his position ln\ncourt   .,\n-Clarence Campbell, president of\nthe NHL, asked the hoard to ban\nthe broadcast of reconstructed\nshorts events,     \u25a0;,: \u2022   .'\u2022',.-\nMr. Hewitt, operator of station\nQKFH in Toronto, said that last\nyear he obtained from the NHL and\nrhik owners the exclusive right to\nbroadcast the away games of the\nToronto Maple Leafs direct from the\nrlnfcs'de, Y\"\n$\nBy The Ais-clated Press\nVAlNCOU\"v\"ER-*Ja.kl- Blair, 132,\nHollywood, outpointed Bobby\nWoods, 130, Eureka, Calif., 10.\nNEW YORK - JpOy Klein, 148%,\nNew York, stopped Frankle Belan\nger, 1614s, Quebec,...\nAUGUSTA, Mer-Jackle Jamieson, 141, Portland, Me., knocked\nout Babe MacCarron, 142, Bangor,\nMe. 10.\nFALL RIVER, Mass.\u2014Mario Moreno, 150, New York, outpointed\nPete Adams, 150, Newark, N. J., 10\nTerse Comment. . .\nTOKYO (AP) - Pelplng radio\n.. tonlort oarrled this Communist\noommont on President Elienhow-\ner's Inaugural address:\n\"Nftiseetlng hypocrisy,* \u2022]   -\nTrail Kid Teams\nFrom Playdowns\nTRAIL \u2014 Nelson's kid hockey\nrepresentatives, took a pair of\nshellackings In Trail Friday night,\nand were boosted out of contention\nfor district honors.\nTrail's bantams administered an\n11-0 lacing while the Silver City\nmidgets whitewashed the visitors\n8-1. They.will go on to face Ross-\nland for West Kootenay titles.\nEddie Cristofol' was high, man\nfor, the bantam winners sinking\ntour counters and assisting on two\nothers. Singletons were scored by\nRon Dolsen, Don MacDougal, Don\nLaurlente, Gordon Bell, Richie Truant, Mervln Aiken and \"Bill Galla-\nmore. -.\"'\nThe Trallites took off 4-0 In the\nfirst stanza, and stepped that out\nby four more,goals in the second:\nOnly two penalties of the match-\nwent to Trail.' Y\nTrail Midget attack was led by\nMervin Cronle who scored a pair.\nFollowing him up were Ron Soko-\nlik, Bob Tanner, Gordon Stellge.\nJerry Fabro, John Sobeirllak, and\nLarry McLaren.'\nNelson was saved from a. shutout\nby B, Stefanluk who scored the\nopening goal of the contest.\nCHECK\n. Then \"for Your Needs\ni Vi\"  ond 3\/16\"  plot*,\nvery good condition.\nStiai 4'x8' and 4'xlO*,\nalso smaller sixes.\n\u2022 1\/6and 1\/4 H.P. Electric motors.\n\u2022 Used coble.\n\u2022 Used Air Hose.\n0 Split pulleys and belting.\n\u2022 New and used Pipe and\nFittings, Tubing.\n\u2022 300-Amp. Hobart\nElectric Welder.\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\n902 Front St.    Phone 1511\nMcGregor Gives First\nBeating to Segura\nEVANSTON, 111. (AP) - Australia's Ken McGregor beat Pancho Segura Friday night for the\nfirst' time in the 13 matches their\nnational professional tennis tour,\n4-6, 8'3, 6-4.\nHEAR.\nEorl Worren's\n\"Homemaker's\nHarmony\"\n11:15 \u201411:45\nMONDAY to FRIDAY\nKbH\nAPPOINTED DIRECTOR\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Dr. J. Rin*\nton Mcintosh has been appointed\ndirector of the University of British Columbia's School t Education\nit was announced Friday. He succeeds the late Dr. 1,-oxwe'l A.\nCameron. .',,   ' .   ,\nDr. Mcintosh is a director of the\nUBC Summer session ahd has been\na member of the School'of Education since 1948.\ni A Treat\nPor Vou end Your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\nInerease Your\nFor more fun in\nPhotography . . .\nDevelop and Print\nYour Own Snapshots\nCOMPLETE KODAK\nDeveloping and Printing Kits\n$6.40 \u2014 $11.25 \u2014 $18.15\nAnsco Home Developing Outfit\n$10.95\nW* havft 0 C6fri|Jlete stock' of such iterrts as:\nTrays, Thermorti.ters, Paper, Developers,\n' ..'  \u25a0 Ferifltype Tins, Developing Tanks, etc.\nRAMSAY'S\n497 Baker St* Phona 106\nCAMERAS - FILMS - OREEflt.6 CARDS\n*\n By\nm\n^\n'\u25a0?{;'    '\u25a0' \u2022\nrmm*>sm*\nPlastic   ;\nOvershoes\nExtremely tough and\ndurable.    .\nExtremely light.\nWomen's\nRed or clear _\nChildren's\nRed or .clear _\n$<V98\n\u00bb278\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n533 Baker 8t\nPhone 895\nP. DEATHS\nI By The Canadian Press\ni   Montreal \u2014 Dr.   Alvah   Hovey\nGordon; *n, one ot the founders\nand a charter member of the Royal\nCollege of Physicians ot Canada.\nHalifax \u2014 E. J. Cragg, manager-\ncommissioner of the Nova Scotia\npower commission and a former\nHalifax mayor.\nLos Angeles \u2014 Mary Mannerlng\nWadsworth, 76, star of the London\nand New York stage 50 years ago.\nNE\\5r WESTMINSTER, B. C. \u2014\nOscar Swanson, 63, .well-known\nroyal city sportsman.\nJ. DEAN KIMBERLEY PRESIDENT . . .     ;\nGun Club To Ask for Elk Season\nPolice Contract\nKIMBEatLEY\u2014J. Simons, administrator of the McDougall Hospital,\nthis week addressed the City Council asking a grant from the 1853\ncouncil toward the cost ot the proposed hospital survey. The matter\nwas left over for further discussion.\n. Failure of some residents to clean\ntheir sidewalks of j snow will! be\ndealt-with by the ijollce. ,\nSeasonal increase in power consumption has forced \"the transfer\nof some ateas in the North end of\nthe city to the Cominco powerhouse. '\nKimberley will delay signing the\n1953 police contract until the results\nof Association of Kootenay Municipalities investigation of increased\ncosts is known.\nA revision of the dog bylaw Is\nplanned to increase licences from\n$2 to $5 for males and from $5 to\n$10 for females.\nThe Kimberley health unit confirmation bylaw was approved,\nnaming Dr. Watts as medical health\nofficer and Messrs Armstrong and\nGolebrook as sanitary inspectors for\nthe city.   Y - I, -\nNOTICE\nOur Taxi Stand\nNext to Gelinas\nIs Now Open for\n24 HOUR\nTAXI SERVICE\nPHONE 1700\nCITY TAXI SERVICE\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Seventy-five\nmember, of the Kimberley -Rod\nand Gun Club attended the,annual\nmeeting here, to re-elect J. Dean\nand- J. Mascho as president and\nvice-president respectively.\nOther officers elected were: secretary-treasurer, S. Muraro and\nexecutive, T. McVlcar, JrHandley,\nJ. Davis, V; Dick, and D. Lang, all\nSir two-year terms. F. Bates C.\narossino, B. Hart and, R.-, Armstrong have still one year to serve.\nSpeaking bristly were Game Department Inspector C; F.'KearnS\nand FlShlng Supervisor C. H. Robinson, both of Nelson; J. Bailey\nand R. Farquharson, Cranbrook\ngame wardens; J. McKill, Invor.\nmere game warden, and Leo Nim-\nsick;, MLA for:Cranbrook-Kimber-\nley. Also present were E. Johnson\nand E. T. Cooper, president and\nsecretary ot the.Cranbrook club.\nRecommendations approv.d to be\nbrought up at the\" annual East Kootenay -one meeting were; \u25a0\n1. Examinations for all those taking out firearms licences in care\nand use of firearms, care of game\ntaken, behavior in the woods, ga^me\nlaws, and other hunting require,\nments.\n2. Opening of the Cranbrook area\nfor hunting elk, and at least part\nopening for moose. This area' has\nhitherto been closed.\n3. Season and bag limits to re.\nmain the .same as last year.\n4. Migratory bird season and bag\nsame'as last year.\n5. Upland bird season to be trom\nOct. 1 to 30 and blue grouse season\nfrom Sept. 15 to Oct. 15..\nA banquet and films completed\nthe meeting.\nHalifax Court\nAcquits Soldier\nHALIFAX (CP)\u2014A Nova Scotia\nSupreme Court jury Wednesday\nacquitted Cpl. Gerald Higgins,\ncharged with theft of $-00 worth\nof army boots and clothing.\nHiggins denied he was implicated\nto thefts from the. large ordnance\ndepot here. Army officers said earlier that there was a $1500 inventory\nshortage at the end ot 1951.\nTeletype Goes\nIn al Trail\nTelegraph Office\nTRAIL \u2014 The old familiar clacking of the morse key' has been replaced\" in the Trail office of the\nCanadian Pacific Telegraphs by\ntlie chatter' of 'the teletype, most\n\"modern of all wire communication\ndevices. Y '\u25a0 .        ';', \u25a0\u201e . ,\nThe changeover trom morse key\nto teletype came Thursday morning\nas one niore step in the gradual\nmodernization ot CPT offices across\nCanada. In this province Vancouver\nwas the first office to become\n\"printerized.\" Victoria followed and\nthen came Chilliwack, Nelson, New\nWestminster, Pentlcton and, now\nTrail.1\nInstallation of the teletype means\nmore than that the office has shiny,\nefficient new equipment. It means\nthat the wires will be sent off at\ntwice the speed of the old, 35\nwords per minute morse key and\nthat, one operator will be able to\ndo the jobs of two more easily and\njust as quickly.\nThe teletype equipment Will also\nallow the operator to stock up a\nsurplus of messages to be sent automatically whenever 'a channel is\nclear..Under the Old 'System, the\noperator had to wait jnd send the\nwire- himself. A device which records messages almost like a tape\nrecorder and then transmits them\non another device, allows this new\nadvantage. -\n- The equipment was installed by\nJames Watsoh of Nelson, Canadian\nPacific teletype maintenance man.\nWhen the Trail CPT office opened for business 20 years ago, its\nagent was also 'operator and\nmessenger. Now the office has an\nagent, W. G. (Gib) Kennedy, three\noperators, S. M. Whittacker, W.\nWright and H. W. Worsnop,. two\nclerks and four messengers.\nThe morse key, although still\nused extensively in some offices,\nwill have its only chance for re\"\nCdmlnco Raring as\nWater portage Basest\nTRAEi\u2014ednsolidated. Mining &\u2022Smelting Company\nannounced at noon Friday that the abnormally mild weather\nhas improved the water situation to the point where it is.\npossible to increase the power load. As a result, the oxide\nplant will be. started up and over 100 men will be re-employed\nduring tire next few days. Cominco officials, stated that the\nwater situation is still quite,critical and much will depend\non the weather during the next two months.\n^*mmw\u00ae:\nm\nKimberley Athletic Group\nNames 1953 Executive\nKIMBERLEY-Wllliam Campbell\nwas reelected president \"ot the Kimberley Amateur Athletic Association at the annual meeting of the\ngroup.\n3. Lucas was named vice-president,\" R. J. Barrett, secretary, and\nE. Pederson, treasurer. B. E. Hurdle\nwas named honorary president: and\nJ. R. Giegerlch, H. R. Banks ahd\nH. E. Andrews, honorary vice-presidents.\nElected to - the executive were\n(for two years): H. Patterson, P.\nGallpen, Miss Irene Port, H. Lind-\nqulst and E. Semehzie;. (one year\nterm): D. Harrison and J. Byram.\nThe KAAA IS an agent of the Kimberley and 'District Community\nChest .   .\nSOLDIER HAS\nCOSTLY nil*\nCRANBROOK\u2014ROhe-t M. Kon-\ndra, member of the Canadian Army\nstationed at Calgary, ran into costly\ntrouble on a trip through here in a\nborrowed car. He\"*-had a head-on\ncollision with another vehicle on\nthe Wycliffe Hill with $400 damage\nto the car he was driving.\nIn district court before Magistrate Richard Shiell he pleaded\nguilty to failure.to yield one half\nthe highway- to oncoming traffic\nand was fined $10 and costs. -He\nalso pleaded guilty to driving without a driver's licence and was fined\nan additional $25 and costs.\nvival at the Trail CPT in-the case of\na breakdown of the teletype equipment .     \u201e\u25a0 i.   r'...'\"- .- -. .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24,1953 \u2014 1\nGOLDEN MAN\nDIES IN\nLOGGING MISHAP\nGOLDEN \u2014 Funeral services for\nCharles Edlund, killed when.pinned under a load of logs, were held\nfrom the United Church here. He\nwas 51..\nHe Was born to Sweden and aa a\nyoung man settled in-this district\nengaging in logging work for ten\nyears until 1932 when he bought a\nfarm at Blueberry hear here. He\nhad operated'it ever since, working\nat logging'during the Winter.\nHauling logs off his property, he\ntailed to return home to tile even,\ning'and his Wife and son found\nhim dead beneath an overturned\nload of logs.\nSurvivors; are his wife at home,\ntwo daughters and two sons, and\nhis mother in Sweden. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'\nWILLIAM CAMPBELL\n. . .. beginning, teconjl-year, as\npresident of the klmberley.Amateur Athletic Association.\nPERTH, Australia (Reuters) \u2014\nThe Monte Bello. Islands \u2022 where\nBritain exploded her. first atomic\nbomb last. Oct 3 are still radio,\nactive, Capt i Bryce Morris,. naval\nofficer to'charge, Western Australia\nsaid Thursday. '\nII Patterson\nNamed Acting\nMayor of Kaslo\nKASLO\u2014Alderman Ralph Patterson was elected- acting mayor of\nKaslo to serve during any absence\nof Mayor R. E. Green at a meeting'\nof' city council Monday.\nMeredith! Bruce, Baldwin and\nKitto were appointed auditors for\nthe city in 1953 and Dr. A. M. Bar-\nrera was appointed medical health\nofficer. W. J. Hendren was also\nnamed local assistant to the fire\nmarshall. .\nA building permit, allowing Imperial Oil Company, to erect oil\ntanks apd other equipment on CPR\nreserve, was approved by council.\nThe entire council will sit for\nthe court of revision on assessments\nit was decided during the meeting.\n- Other business Included a report\nfrom a volunteer fire brigade.\nDecember,    accounts,    totalling\n$3811.63  were, approved for\nment.    ,   ..'\u25a0-,,\nNew Water\nLine for\nMarys-wile\nMARYSVTLLE\u2014The old .wood-\nen pipeline which supplies Marys-\nvllle with water is nearing its last\ndays.. \u25a0 i\nIn the village's 1953 budget the\nmajor expenditure listed ia. replacement of the wooden pipeline with\na new metal one.        ' ,'   >' \u25a0\nAt a commission meeting here it\nwas also decided, to order a pressure reducing valve tor the connection to the Consolidated Mining, and\nSmelting Company water line..\nM- Tenenbe was appointed auditor for the year during tb- Commission meeting. ' \u2022'\nNOT SO FREE\nKANSAS, CITY (AP)-Although\nhe isn't under the watchful eye's\nof the secret service any more,\nHarry Truman walked about in\ndowntown Kansas City Thursday\nflanked by two First World War\nveterans as bodyguards. At the\nformer president's home in -Independence, the city police department will have men assigned on\nan around-the-clock basis.\nG. H.JONQ\n140 YEARS' EXEPERI-\nENCE IN CANADA\nI Chinese Herb Remedies\nFor All Ailments\nCorner 6th Ave. ond 1st 8t 1-\nCalgary      .\u25a0\u25a0'*\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\nJANUARY 31st\nHELD HIGH\nas the Kootenay's \"Favorite Edition\"\nHighlighted by Hundreds of\nPICTURES STORIES, ARTICLES\nOF THE KQOTfcNAY-BOUNDARY\nThe \"Mail-Away\" Edition that everyone will\nWant to send to their Relatives or Friends\nORDER EARLY from your Agent, Carrier or\nDirect from the Circulation Department.'\nPLUS 3% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nter Wrapping and Mailii\nAnywhere in Canada, Great Britain or U.S.A.\n .;\u25a0'\u2022'\u25a0\"'!: '<\"'\u25a0\u25a0\"\"\":'\u25a0\u25a0' '\u25a0'-.' ' *' \" '*' \u25a0'   \"*   '     \u2022--'.'\u25a0 -   -.'-.-\u2022 '\"I\/O\/?   '\n.4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24, 1953\nFinancing Hardest Here...\ns;\nSwedish Record Better\nCanada is lagging far behind other similar countries in its efforts\nto lick the houFing shortage\u2014even tiny Sweden has a better record.\nThis unpalatable fact emerges from a scientific study in Maclean's\nMagazine of the home-construction records since 1040 of Canada, the\nUnited States, Great Britain, Australia and Sweden,   Y\nSidney Margolius, well-known social.economist, chose these five\n. countries because they are basically similar, and because the housing\nprnblern.at-war's end was acute in all of them, ..'.'\u2022 \u00bb<\n- Perhaps the most significant statistic is that covering new homes\nbuilt to keep pace with expanding population, and it ts here that\nCanada makes its poorest showing. Britain, for instance, has built\n807 homes per 1000 of population growth while Canada has-built only\n2B2. Canada has not even kept up with the new families sprouted since\nthe war, much less begun to catch up on J|ie wartime deficit Or take\ncare of immigrants'needs.     >.. . ..'\u25a0\nThe greatest obstacle to home building,in Canada, the writer\nfound,'is the difficulty of obtaining ^ low-interest mortgages\u2014rather\nthan shortages of materials or I labor, as generally supposed. It is\nharder to finance a home in-Canada today than in any of the other\ncountries mentioned. It's harder to find a lender, you can't borrow as\nmuch, and you. must pay more interest - -\nMargolius points out that in the U.S. even a non-veteran can buy\na ten-thousand-dollar house with a down payment of $1200 to $1500,\npaying off the balance at around four and a half per cent interest.\nAlso a U.S. citizen is excused from federal income tax on that part\nof his income'which he pays for mortgage interest and real-estate\ntaxes. In the middle of its rearmament boom, the U.S., with 11 times\nCanada's.population, is building 18 times more homes. .\n(powers Careful When\nWatering Mouse Plants\n, The successful grower of house plants knows just how\nmuch water each plant needs, and\/may not give any two\nplante the'same amount. She probably checks them once or.\ntwice a day and waters just\nthose that will get, too dry before watering time of the following day, \"'-? .\u2022-.-.*\nIf the soil looks moist and feels\nmoist the -plant pnfbably will'go\nanother - day if it was' soaked\nthoroughly the previous time, Vdu\nwill\" soon t-W-iwhich need water\neach day, which can go for two\nPlanning to move? Call m .\nfirst Our modern vans and\n\u2022killed' movers assure a 8AFB\nmove wherever you go. We\nare agents tor North Ameri-\nean Via Lines, America's\nleading loaf distance mo-taj \u25a0\norganiiatl-a. It eosts no more\nto eajoy this finer serrleel\nWest\nGo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C\nPhono 33\ndays and which need water only\nonce a week. Some soils will hold\nmore moisture than others.\nGlazed containers hold moisture\nmuch longer than ordinary clay\npots. The amount ot moisture in\nthe air also affects the speed at\nwhich plants' dry out.\" Location of\n'plants in the house also determines\nto a great extent how often they\nmust be watered.\nPLACING IS IMPORTANT\nPots placed over radiators, hot'\nair register or near other heating\nelements also naturally dry out\nfaster than those placed in cooler\nprts of the. house. Also plants in a\nSouth window dry out more rapidly\nthan those that are in the indirect\nlight or exposed'to less sunlight\nIn the extremes of a Southern exposure pots may dry out a: much\nin an hour or so of bright sunlight\nas they would all during cloudy\nweather.\nTaking all of these conditions\ninto consideration you can' see how\nfutile it would be to give a definite\ntimetable for-watering house plants\nwithout making some reservations.\nEach individual's\" watering problem remains very much the same\nfrom day to day except f oi- seasonal\nvariations and routine schedule\nsimplifies the procedure add prevents unintentional neglect\nGrouping plants that have slml\nlar water requirements also auto,\nmatically groups most House plan's\nas to light requirements. The ones\ndoing best in subdued light usually\nrequire a constant supply of moisture at t orehost\nture at the roots and in the air,\nwhile most of those that thrive in\ndirect sunlight can stand some\ndrought and,neglect\nLiving Area Made\nBright by Color\nA large living-dining room that\nIs rectangular in shape is distinguished by a modern and dramatic\nuse, of color. The two end walls\nare painted in celandine green.\nThrough the archway in one of\nthese walls, eh area is visible which\nis 'painted chartreuse. Fine-panelled\nside walls have a smooth natural\nfinish, while the window frames in\nthese walls are enamelled in the\nsofe gray-green, The ceiling is\nwhite and much of the furniture is\ncoated to match. On the floor,\nwhich blends with the pine-panelled iwalls are gray-green rugs. Upholstery'is a grayed cerise, which\nis not unlike a clover pink.\nGouchman, Fowler\n\\ & Collinson\nS Agencies Ltd* v\nALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE\nREAL ESTATE\nP.O. Box 400 Phone 2921\nCastlegar, B. C.\nINSURANCE  MANAGER\nR   A   C-uchmnn\nREAL E8TATE\nW   Collinson\nCASTLEGAR BUILDING\nSUPPLY STORE\nGENERAL BUILDING CONTRACTOR\ny NOW IN STOCK\nComplete\nBathroom Sets\nIn white. Come and see it today.\n$165 Plus $4.95 Tax\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.\nBox 292\nPhone 2161\nFIYE^ROOM RANCH HGME\n_____\n\"\u25a0_!_\u25a0*\nThis attractive,' modern \"Ranchy\"\nhome is out of the ordinary because, it emphasizes charming individuality. -Yet it is designed on\nsimple and practical lines with\n'. well placed rooms of ample size.\nFeatured are'the.large comfortable\nporch and the convenient attached\ngarage. Outside walls are ot concrete blocks.\nThese plans are published for the Interest and Information value\nonly. The Dally News cannot supply detailed blueprint, or specifications. These contemplating building homes should consult a local\narchitect designer or builder. \u2022 ,.'\nB.C. Interested in Britain's\nLumbermen in British Columbia\nand the bankers who back many ot\ntheir operations, are watching with\ninterest a conflict which is going on\nwithin the ranks of government of;\nficials in the United Kingdom.\nSo said ,K. A. Gardner, Vancouver banker, when he addressed the,\nlogging and sawmill executives\ngathered at the Tenth Annual Convention of the Truck' Loggers Association in Vancouver.\nManager of the main branch of\nthe Canadian Bank'of Commerce\nin Vancouver, Mr. Gardner told\ndelegates that the.conflict was.between the British Treasury, which\nwas attempting to restrict imports\nto conserve the U. K. dollar resources, and the ministry ot housing,\nWhich was seeking to increase imports of timber in order to expand.\nBritain's housing program, for 1953.\nThe treasury, he added, might attempt, to further its aims by releasing part of the nation's stockpile\nof timber.\nB.C. INTERESTED\n\"The result of this conflict will\nbe of considerable interest to us\nhere ln British Columbia,\" Mr.\nGardner remarked. Y\nAlso of great Interest to British\nColumbians, said Mr. Gardner,- was'\nthe recent conference of prime ministers in London, for although the\nworld demand for timber ahd other\nforest products had been greater\nduring the past few years than at\nany other time in history, Canada,\nas an exporting nation,'was vitally concerned with the fiscal and\nmonetary policies of its own gov\nernment and of the governments.\nof countries which were importing\nits products.\nPRODUCTION  DOWN .\nMr Gardner anticipated that official figures for lumber production\nin 1952 would show a drop from\nthose of the previous year, with the\nfigures for exports to the United\nKingdom and. the  United  States\nshowing the most noticeable decline\nbut thought that 1953 would see improvement .     \u2022'\u25a0'-.   ..---V\nStronger competition from the\nBaltics,  Russia  end  the   United\nStates could be  looked for, he\n\u25a0aid, but It was expected  that\nthere would be a high level of\nresidential   construction   In   the\nUnited States and that general\nactivity in the Canadian domestic\nconstruction    field    would    be\ngreater ,\n\"From a brief Ipok at some of\nthe salient features in our economy\nthere would appear to be no doubt\nthat Canada-Is entering 1953 on a\nvery high level of production and\nprosperity, although I think that\nin keeping .with the United States\nand certain other countries, we must\nconsider that the present prosperous\nperiod is selective in its boom aspects, in the same manner as we\npreviously (around the middle of\n1991)  experienced a 'selective' recession.\"\nAlthough the facts seemed to\npoint to a fairly rosy piptureior the\nearly part of the year, the speaker-\nwarned that there had been-a marked decline 'in wholesale prices in\nCanada and that this had been\none Pt the earliest signs of a future\nslowing up of business in previous\nbusiness cycles.\nHe also commented that consumer\ncredit buying, which Was a very\nsubstantial factor in the high volume of retail sales was a feature\nwhich would have decidedly unsatisfactory results if not kept under proper control.\nIN STOCK\nFOR  BATHROOM\nOR KITCHEN\nBARCLAY PRIM TILE\nIn pastel colors. Sheets !4\"x4'x8'\n4\" squares.\nALSO.\nCONGO WALL       .\n64\" width. Cut tp length.\nALL TYIP-JS\" OF\n.' CHROME,MOLDINGS\nNelson\nWoodworking\n273(jpaker St\nCompany\nPhone 1150\nGlass curtain, are back again. Some are short, some long,\nsome are ultra-sheer, some a heavy, texture, some are tiebacks,\nsomq twb-deoker Dutch style, and Others excitingly full and\nstraight, but whatever the va<\"\nrietyiin style, th.y are good-\nlooking.\n- It Is good to see the glass or sheer\nctirtaln. baclj again. It was definite*\nly passe' fqr several,\"years because\nfull-length pattorned draperies be-\ncamo. the rago. Many - homernokers. tains should be of such a length\nwere most reluctant to give up. the\nglass curtain because they do 'add\na delicious grace, softness and feminine touch to any room, '\nWIDE VARIETY     i \"''*\u25a0'\nThere is a wide variety in textures, colors and weights in the\nnew glass curtains, 'the most popular at the moment has a' heavy\nboucle yarn In a loose weave with\neither a silver or gold thread running through at intervals. These\nare rich ahd luxurious looking\nhanging absolutely straight from a\ntrack which allows them to be\nsnugly .closed at night or opened to\nthesunshine and your-favo.ite view\nduring the day.\nPerhaps the most exciting nows,\nwhen it comes to the question of\nhanging these new glass curtains,\nis the double-decker effect. Whether the fabric is sheer or coarse, a\nplain or dotted weave, they may\nbe placed on two rods in a double\neffect. The top rod or track may,\nbe plaeed-at the top of the .wnt-\ndowj. in'. the' usual position or -at\nCelling height. The1 second rod, or\ntrack slrould be'placed'half or part\nway. down' the window* The cur-.\nthat the top set will- slightly Overlap the bottom, set.      -YY\nLIGHT. CONTROL  \"'\u25a0,..'\nWith this arrangement of two.sets\nof curtains, you cap control the light\nin the room while obscuring en unsightly view. The top set may be\nopen and the bottom closed to let\nin the sun while preventing passers-\nby from peeking in. Or, if you wish\nto enjoy, a pastoral view which\nflows by your window, as well as\ncut out the harsh sun, then the bottom set may be left open and the\ntop closed.\nXie-back curtains and criss-cross\ncurtains are being widely used not\nonly in bedrooms but In living and\ndining rooms. Marquisettes, very\nsheer ln colored nylon and orlon,\nare Soft and pretty in any room,\nand may be placed on a track so\nas to be easily opened.during the\nday and closed at night. ' '.'\"\nTAKE CARE IF\nYOURWATER\nPIPES FREEZE\n- The,weather, is .mild\u2014and it appears as though Spring is just\naround the corner. But there is still\ntime for old .man Winter to step\ninto our midst and with no protective snow covering the ground, a\nlot of frozen pipe trouble could be\nin store.\nDon't assume that frozen pipes\nwill thaw unaided as the weather\ngets Warmer. When pipes freeze,\nthaw them yourself or call a plumber at once. The damage caused by\nfrozen pipes which .burst is likely\nto exceed the' cost of' having them\nthawed, . '.    .'\nDon't try to *haw frozen water\npipes with an open flame. Th.ere\nis danger of starting a fire and also\ndanger, of generating sufficient\nsteam in a closed pipe to cause it\nto bulfst. The only safe way to thaw\nfrozen pipes Is with hot water or\nelectric heat. Always start operations at the faucet end of the pipe.\nRags wrapped around the frozen\nsection hold the water heat as water\nis poured on. .\u201e-,..---,,-' ,->;\u25a0;\nDon't use lye, potash or drain\nsolvents to' thaw out. frozen'waste\npipes. You risk seridus injury to\nyourself or to workmen who may\ntty to undo the damSge yon have\ndone.\nDon't pour boiling water into\nfrozen toilet bowls. A sudden and\nextreme change in temperature is\nvery likely to crack the bowl.\nRUSTIC SET-TING\nFOR ANY PLANT., >\nAn attractive rustic v flower pot\ncan be made at practically no expense from a large tirt fruit juice\ncan and the limb v of a birch tree-\nSaw It into pieces, as long as' your\ntin can. Split each piece. (This can\nbe, done by hand if you clanlp it\ninto a vice first.) Cover the \"outside\nof the tin can\" completely with these\nStrips, arranged vertically one right\nnext to the- other and no space\nbetween. Attach each strip with a\nscrew, top and bottom,, which will\npierce the tin easily and can be\nheld with a nut. Color the screw\ngrey with touch up paint and they\nwill be practically invisible.\nA set of such pots make r rustic\nsetting for any kind of plant end\nthe birch logs themselves require\nno finish.\nHow to Sandpaper\nNext time you have tq sand-paper\nan irregular shape or surface, dampen the back of the paper lightly,\nwith a wet sponge.\nThis will make' the stiff paper\nsufficiently pliable so lt can be\nmade to come In,complete contact\nwith the area to be sanded. Otherwise the sanding job will be uneven\nand unsatisfactory and the paper,\nwill crack , and wear out in a\nshort time. Caution: Use only sufficient water on the back of the\npaper to make it pliable.\nIf you get it 'too wet, the glued\nsurface of the paper will become\nsticky and gummy. \u2022\nPRINCE GEORGE TO\nBUILD NEW JAIL\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) \u2014 Lew\nKing, Social Credit member'of the\nlegislature for Fort George, said\nhe will recommend construction of\na new 100-prispner jail here.\n. Mr. King was shown a room 20\nfeet by 3 feet Which the warden\nsaid sometimes houses as many as 40\nprisoners. The jail is.in the. base;\nment of the provincial government\nbuilding, here.     .   \u25a0      \"...\nThe warden said more than .$20',.\n000 was spent last year,to fly the\nprisoners to Oakalla prison. Some\nprisoners were flOwn south under\nescort to serve sentences of only 20\ndays because there .was no accommodation, he.said. Y\nLEEDS, Eng. (Reuters) \u2014 Gordon\nWoterworth, a druggist who died\nlast November, didn t want his two\nchildren to fall prey to fortune-hunters when ; they came into\" their\n\u00a312,600 Inheritance. In his will,\npublished Friday he arranged for\nthe money to be held for them until\nthey reach \"an age of common\nsense\"\u201450 years. The son and the\ndaughter are 28 end 20.\nPut Initials on\nHousehold Articles,\nYou can .decorate many small\nhouseholji articles, such'' a- transparent \"ilass ash trays, cigarette\nboxes, bookends and the like with\nyour initials by following this\ntechnique. First; draw' the, letters\ncarefully oh graph paper. Trace\nthem on to white surgical adhesive\ntape. Now cut each letter out carefully, using the corner of a sharp\nrazor blade. Be careful to .spoil\nneither the letter nor the tape sur,\nrounding it, since both can be used.\nFirst, try, arranging the. letters\nharmoniously on the object. Sfnooth\nthem down carefully. Now pour a\nlittle nutomobile_touch-up paint in\na fiat saucer and dip a discarded\ntoothbrush into the. color*.' Hold a\nsquare of discarded window screen-,\nlng over the work to be-painted,\nand rut- this moistened toothbrush\nover this. Don't rehiove \"the adhesive until the paint Is, quite dry.\nThe result will by. en attractive\nspattered finish all over'! the'area,\nleaving your unspattered Initials\nstanding out plainly.   ,    .  ,  --\nOn other objects, try working adversely!. Spatter paint on the\ninitials only, leaving the' rest of\nthe surface i   a single, color.' :\nNEW DECQRATIVE TABLES\nTable manufacturers, who began\noffering French Provincial cocktail,\nlamp and end tables, as well as\ncommodes, at the last market, have\nnow extended their offerings of\npieces in this period; For the first\ntime, many are going back to producing the tea tables, poudre\n(powder) tables, curio cabinets and\nother auxiliary pieces.that originally were integral parts of a French\nProvincial line.,   .   . \u25a0'\"\u25a0:'...\nFrom. Salad Bowl    .\nTo Sewing Kit. y.\nA novelty sewing kit. can be\nmade in short order from a wooden\nsalad bowl if you drill small holes\nall around it, near\/ Its rim, 'and\ninsert short pieces of round pencil\ninto them,- Glue these self-made\ndowels into position, and,., slip\nspools of thread over'them. Glue a\npincushion in the centre of the\nbowl. The kit will also hold articles\nof clothing, etc., if you measure all\naround the edge of the bowl, and\ncut a piece of fabric this length.\nTack it into position, and finish off\nthe top with a drawstring closing.\nThe material should be at least 12\ninches wide. To hold scissors, tape\nmeasure, needle threader, etc., sew\npockets on the Inside of the fabric\nfdr the purpose. The bag will open\nout flat if.the-drawstrings are long\nenough and if the bag. is slit vertically on opposite sides. Close these\nsilts with zippers, When they are\nopened, the contents will be revealed automaticallyr\nInside Chimney\nSaves on Fuel\nF'gures oh how much of the heat\ngenerated In a furnace goes up the\nchimney show that for one pound\nof coal with a heating value of\n10,000 British thermal units, about\n5900 B.T.U. or 50 per cent of the\nheat in the coal, is used in heating\nthe house:\nA British Thermal Unit is the\namount of heat required to raise\nthe temperature of one pound of\nwater one degree Fahrenheit.\nWhen , the chimney is ,inside,\nabout 9 per cent of the heat in the\nfuel, which 'passes through the\nchimney walls, is-recovered from\nthe ehtrnney..     > V! \"'.-\nThis ultra-modern .styled F-M Furnace Is\ndesigned to give, the hichest heating -g\nefficiency, lt offers more than just ordi-   1\nnary automatic heat... it also conditions\nthe air, giving the advantages of moist .\noutdoor sir. The F-M Furnace is finished '\ninattractive green And- designed as a\ncompact unit that uses only a small floor\narea. It is available in 5 sizes. Let us give\nyou the complete story of the' F-M Oil .\n-ir\u00abd warm Air Furnace? \u2022     *.;'J\nBENNETTS LTD.\n324 Vernon St.\nPhone 593\nUnited Trucking & Storage Ltd.\nSTANLEY ST., NELSON, B. C.\nDAILY . FREIGHT  SERVICE  TO\nFROITVAI.E     SAI.MO\nNELSON \u2022 CASTLEGAR -  TRAa \u25a0  ROSSLAND\nWs\nHow Ta Buy a Housed\nWithout After Regrets\n_ \u00bb.-\u25a0 \u2022 .                                  v  \u25a0         '\u25a0'-     v \u25a0\nE\u00bb_y-p\u00bbyrrient mortgages have brought home ownership\nwithin the rfeach of many, t>ut buying a house is still the most\nimportant financial deal of,a lifetime.'\n.   Somebuyers are; .areful about all the legal details of the-,\npurchase. Many other?, unaware of the pitfalls and charmed\nby the dream house they are, acquiring, sign papers they\nshouldn't sign, fail to cjieck * ~\t\nimportant essentials in advance, and live to regret it'all7\nlater..... \"-.!],;;'y ' (.\u25a0.-'..'\nThe Important rules in buying a,\nhouse,' a - Reader's Digest' article'\nempnasUes, are!\n1. 0e. ah experleticed real estate\nlawyer beforS you look .at property)\n2. Don't-sign anything until your\nlawyer approves;\n3. Don't let the agent hurry you.\nA  common  mistake  of house\nbuyers Is to sign an \"offer'', usually\nto buy at a price under the quoted\none. By doing so you may actually\ncontract to buy the, house, in which\nevent you find you have signed\naway all your bargaining power\nand can withdraw only lt the seller\ncannot produce a clear title, A\nlawyer, consulted in advance,\nwould have saved you such embarrassment.    .' -..\nBe sura of your boundaries. That\ngroup   of   fruit   trees   you   think\nyou're buying may turn out to be*.\niong\"fo the man next door. . ',,\nCHECK SOUNDARY\nKnow your zoning laws. Don't\ndiscover too late that you can't\nbuild a garage because zoning\nregulations forbid it so close to the\nproperty Jine. .   -',-\nDon't assume that you are buying\nthe screens, sto^m windows, a ton\not coal tn the cellar or even the\nkitchen stove, along with the house.\nMake sure. Otherwise, you may\nfind that such property moves out\nwith the previous owner,\n8eta date for taking possession\n\u2022o that the sailer cannot refuse to\nmove out until he finds another\nplace to live.\nWhen    buying   a   two-famliy\nhouse, don't count on the tenant's\nrent   until   you   check   on   how\nmuch of It has been paid In advance to the current owner.\nIf there's a chance that termites\nare in your prospective house, get a\nwarranty that'there are none. With\nthis, as with everything else, be\nSure your, prbfectlon is in writing.\nVerbal agreements are meaningless\nin court   \u2022    , \u2022 ;\nCONSULT tAJVYER . :,f\nA good lawyer will look after\nsuch details. Many buyers who\nonly hire a lawyer to close the deal\ncould save .much \u25a0 expense and\ntrouble, for. an extra $25 or so fee,\nby getting legal advice before the'\npurchase. And never let the\nbroker's or owner's lawyer liandle\nyour side of the transaction. '\nCertainly the vast majority of\nreal estate agents are honest. But.\nfor your own protection rem-mber,,\nhowever, that the agent -eprcsenis\nthe seller, not the buyer, and is.inV\nbUslnes   to   make   a   quick   sale,\ncollect his commission and move |\non., '-.'-\u25a0'\nCHECK ELECTRIC\nSYSffeM; AVOID\nFIRE THREAT\nThere was an octopus in many\nhomes during the recent festive\nseason \u2014 an electrical octopus,\nknown to be just as deadly in its\nway as the ocean variety,.\n\"Octopus-outlet\" is tho 'name\ngiven by electricians to the -multipurpose plug whereby a number ot\nelectrical cords may be connected\nat one outlet. In addition, electricity\nis thus carried further by extension\ncords \u2014 for example, one cord to\nsupply light to the Christmas tree,\none to the window wreaths\/one to\neach floor lamp, to the radio and\nany of these may be disconnected\nto make way for the vacuum cleaner. Small wonder if, at the height\nOf partying sudden darkness resulted from a blowing fuse, or perhaps the wires in the electrical\ncircuit were overtaxed to the point\nwhere a short circuit could mean\na real threat of fire. Such disaster\nlurks in any home at any time of\nyear when the octopus outlet is\nused.\nCome Easter and Spring, the\nhome maker's thoughts are turned\nto cleaning, decorating and possibly\nremodelling. With weeks still ahead,\nfor planning, why not'give some\nattention to your electrical wiring\nto'forestall the dangers' of that .\noctopus outlet Advice about Installing sufficient wiring to bring\nadequate supplies of electricity to\nconveniently 'placed outlets to meet\nthe needs of modern living is offered, without cost, by the, local\nutility and electric services In most\ncommunities. Such advice may also\nbe obtained from- the,ielectricoL^\ncontractor who did the electrical\nwiring when the house was built\n& Building Supply Ltd.\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.\n\u2022\u2022jV Building Supplies\n,0 .Plumbing'<\n* Heating and Electrical\n\"don't talk to mo about morjoy\nSettle all your bills now on\nthe HIAGARA 10AH plan\nHow much do you need? $100! $5001 $10001\nMore? Figure it up-r-heti come to Niagara\nFinance and. quickly arrange for a friendly\nloan.**\n**Life Insurance, at-no extra cost to you\u00bb on\nloans to $1000, protects your family.\nYou actually pay less for many Friendly loans.\nJUST A FEW OF MANY PLANS\nAmount\nMonthly\nPayment\nNo. of\nPym'H.\nAmount\nRoe'd.\n-von.Doll-r\nPayments\n$950\nMI.10.'\n34\n$1196,30\n-    $60.00\n600\n4Mb\n'it;\n...418.27\n38.00\n-30\n33.10\ni* -\n.64.30\n23.00\n_-0\nMJ\"I,\n* \u25a0\n123MonCholcMforYou\nFINANCC COMI'ANf LID.\nUllliPWl ^uuioun if inosnua uctnuu umunii ut\nSUITE 1 560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 16SO\n.-\u2022\u2022<\u25a0\u2022.\n___\n__\n l^s\n\"It Pays to Btiy \u25a0 Quality\"\nWomen's Campus\nAll Rubber\nSnow Boots\nBy Goodrich\nThermo. Pile Lined\nWhite or Brown\nRegular $10.45.\nSPECIAL $8.9}\n\u2022Lies 4 to.\u00bb.\nFL ANDREW\n& GO.\nLEADERS  IN FOOTFASHION\n'        Established 1002\nLister Notes\nLxaTER \u2014 Bruce Ross of the\nRCAF has left for St. Huberts, Que.\nMr. arid Mrs. R. Bentley of; Calgary were the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. D. J. McKee.\nMr. and Mrs. George Fleck and\ndaughter were Lister visitors.\nFrank Fenrick, J. KTannabetter,\nA. Mar-he and Miss H. Sommer-\nfield were winners' st military\nwhist sponsored by the Deer Lodge\ndub.\nSocial\nsonoocia\n60 i^tenci Joint IhstaHatiott\nPrairie cities as far East as Ontario beckon Nelson\npeople on business and holiday visits.\nThe Ladies'\nWHIST DRIVE\nAuxiliary to .the Fraternal Order of\nEagles held a whist drive Thursday\nnight. First prize winners were Mrs,\nLindsay and Miss G, Adcpck and\nsecond prizes Went, to Iii Collette\nand Mrs, S. J. Newell.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022-\n' EDMONTON VISITOR . . . Mrs.\nJack Peterson of Edmonton is visiting her brother-in-law and sister,\nMT. and Mrs. Rueben Buerge, Vernon Street, and also her brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr.' end Mrs. L.\nSanft, Granite Road.\n*\u2022\u25a0'*\u2022-\nHOSPITALIZED ... Mrs. E. Tenant is a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.   . ,\nBUSINESS TRIP... T. A, Temple\nleft Wednesday night on a business\ntrip to Calgary and Edmonton,\n\u00ab   \u2022  *\nTO CALGARY... Fred W. Hlnitt\nis in Calgary on a business trip:\n\u2022 \u2022 . \u2022\nONTARIO VISIT . . . Mrs. M.\nBrackett has' left by train to Join\nher husband, Marshall Brackett, in\nPlctou, Ont.\n\u2022 \u2022 ' \u2022\nSLOCAN VISITORS ... Mrs. J.\nBoisverf, Mrs. William Jensen, Miss\n\u00bbt JattiV Imtri. fflfarrf!\nSilica and Stanley Streets\nMinister: Rev. G. W. Payne, S.T.M\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, BA. A.T.CM.\nSUNDAY, Jan, 25th:.\nSunday School as usual\n11:00 ajn.\u2014Morning Worship\nSubJect-THE RECOVERY OF DISCIPLINE\"\n2:00 pjn.\u2014Harrop\n3:00 p.r_.\u2014Procter\n7:80 p.m.\u2014Evening Vespers\nSub.eet-*A DANGEROUS PENTEC08T'\n8:45 p.m.\u2014Fellowship at Manse .\nMondey, 8:00 pjn.\u2014Excelsior Club meets at the home oi\nMrs. H. McCandllsh, 214 Victoria St\nFEB. 3RD\u2014Annual Congregational Meeting\n0mion {fotmtmtt\nBaker and Hendryx Streets\nMinister: Rev. David A. Butterfield, B.A.\nSUNDAY: 10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:80 pjn.\u2014Evening Worship\nMonday, Wednesday and Friday\nCOTTAGE PRAYER MEETINGS - 7:80 P.M.\nirfttttg tart QHyurdj\nJosephine and Silica Streete\nMINISTER: REV. ALLAN DIXON. B.A., B.D. .\nOrganist and Musio Director: Mrs. C W. Tyler\n9:45. a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.^\"A MAN'S A MAN, FOR A' THAT\".\n.- ,   \u25a0 \u25a0   (Broadcast over CKLN) - -\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"18 YOUR RELIGION BA8E0 ON FEAR?\"\n(Fourth In Series on \"Fear\")\n#t. #an1m\u00abr a f-rii-QIatlit-bral .\n(ANGLICAN)\nDean Thomas L. Leadbeater, D.D.' \u25a0\nCONVERSION OF SJ. PAUL\n' 8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion (AYPA Breakfast after Service)\n11:00 ajn.\u2014Family Service\nSermon-\"8T. PAUL NOT R.B.\"\n12:00 noon\u2014Holy Baptism\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Willow Point\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nFilm In Hall After Service\u2014\"OTHER SHEEP I  HAVE\"\nNotice: Annual. Meeting Thursday, January 29th,\nmbitterUin GHjurrij ht (Eatt-tk\nFIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nKootenay and Victoria Streets\nMinister: Rev. L. S. van Mossel, BA.\nOrganist: Mrs. W. A. Manson 1\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.-THE   STEWARDSHIP   OF   OUR   CHILDREN\n7:30 p.m'.\u2014Evening Worship\nFRIDAY, Jan. 80th:\nPotluck Supper and Annual Meeting. AU members and adherents are expected to attend. Supper begins at 8:30 p.m.    .\nEVERYBODY WELCOME \u2022   \"\n5?\nfirst -Baptist\nrrijt\nCottonwood and Fourth\nREV. THEO. T. GIBSON. B.A.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Siuiday School. .\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nThe Pastor. \u25a0  v -\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nMr. B, Clerkson.\nTuesday, 7:00\u2014Explorers. CGIT.\nSaturday,\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Mission Bapd.\nHelen Bailey, Fred Storgard and\nMrs. T. W. Cooper were Nelson visitors. Fridsy. Mrs, R. G.' Warner\nstopped in Nelson en route to Kinnaird where she will visit her sons\nand daughters-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nFremont Warner and Mr. and Mrs.\nHarvard Warner.\n\u25a0\u2022 - *  \u2022 .\nSPOKANE VISITOR . . . Sam\nBrown is visiting his former home\nhere from Spokane.   -\n\u2022ftttitrrif nf\n(Anglican)\n*-   '  FAIRVIEW\nCANON;W. J. SILVERWOOD\nA.K.A. B.Ss.. Vicar   \"\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday  School\n; ' Bible Class\n-Holy Communion\n-Evening Prayers\n11:00 a.m.-\n7:30 p.m.-\n2nd Address: The Coronation\nService and Ritual\n3:30 pjn.\u2014South Slocan >\nCoronation Styles\nOn View Monday\nBy MURIEL NARRAWAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) - A breathless\nhush envelopes London's \u2022 couture\nworld \u2014 the \"Big Eleven\" are in\nsemi-seclusion prior to bringing out\ntheir Coronation collections.\nThe great occasion starts Jan. 26,\nwhen Britain's 11 leading fashion\nhouses.\u2014 local equivalent of 'the\nhaute couhfre of Paris\u2014open their\ncrowded salons to show what they\nhave to offer'In Coronation-year\ndesigns.\nSo far, isolated references to the\ncoming collections forecast exciting\nthings to come. Take Norman Hart-\nnell, the Queen's-designer. Amid\nshimmering silks, satins and Jewel-\nstarred brocades his Spring collection will introduce such glowing\nneutral shades as one named \"por:\nridge.\"\n8UBTLE TONE\nThis sounds a bit unromantic, but\nexperts say the subtle tone mid-\nway between stone and beige indeed suggests the honey-colored\nfavorite cereal of Scotland.\nHartnell predicts it will be worn\nas a contrast to vivid Coronation\ncolors such as deep royal blues,\nvivid Coronation reds and purples\nranging from the softest violet to\nthe hard tone of velvet, fur-trimmed robes.\nEvery shade of brown, from deep\nburnt sugar to the warm cream\nof puffed candy, will give flattering\nemphasis to such shades as an elus.\nive sea green. Hartnell's preference\nfor these colors may be derived\nfrom the Queen's choice of browns\nand greens- for the royal tour of\nCanada.\nThat tour, in fact, may be an\nimportant fashion pointer. The\nKing's death last February, following so closely after his daughter's\nCanadian visit, means that the'\nclothes she wore in Canada are\namopg the best indications of possible royal preference in Coronation fashions.\nAFTER DOLLARS\nThis year, Britain's foremost designers are making even greater\nbids tor dollar sales. Those who\nhave not already visited the United\nStates will make flying visits before\nCoronation.\nIn February Hartnell is going to\nNew York on a trade trip. Earlier\nthis year, Mrs. Creed, wife of designer Charles Creed, was complimented on her \"English elegance\"\nduring a visit to the United States.\nAmerican women admired her\n\"unique tailored evening ensembles.\"\nDesigns by Peter Russell and John\nCavanagh will be noticed when\nLady Makins, wife ot the new British ambassador to Washington, attends the many social functions that\nare part of her office. A smart\ndinner dress by Russell is a, sheath\nof amethyst Nottingham lace,with\nfantail skirt, low neck, long sleeves\nand pink rose trimming.\nDresses by Cavanagh Include\npink satin ball gown embroidered\nin gold, silver and.pearl star-fish\ndesign. \"\u25a0\u2022'.-\u2022\u2022\n' Digby Morton returned from an\n8000-mile tour of the United States\nwith news tKat\"'American women\nare especially interested in lightweight woollens. :..\u25a0-':\nHardy Amies, designer \"of many\noutfits worn *by. the Queen in Canada, needs little introduction these\ndays. The glorious white and silver\ncrinoline gown worn by Jane Mc-\\\nNeill at.her Jan. 10 wedding'to the\nEarl of Dalkeith  was made by\nAmies.\nOver 80 Odd Fellows, Rebekahs\nand friends gathered for joint installation ceremonies for officers of\nKootenay Lodge No. 18 and Queen\nCity Rebekah Lodge No.' 16 Tuesday evetiing.\nGrand Marshals, Past.Grand\nMaster. David Proudfoot and Past\nDistrict President Mrs.' Annie\nPeters with 'District Deputy .\"resident A. S. Read and District' Deputy President Mrs. Sadie McClelland, installed the new officers.\nThey Were assisted by Odd Fellows,\nGrand Warden A. G. Lane, Grand\nTreasurer N. C. Stibbs,- Grand\nSecretary W. Jeffs and jSrand\nChaplain T. Bambrick and .Sisters\nGrand Warden Mrs. Ruth Proud,\nfoot, Grand Secretary Mrs, A.\nDraper, Grand Treasurer A, Nichols, Grand Inside Guardian Mrs.\nTlllie Ozelle, Grand Outside Guardian Mrs. Lucille Bambrick and\nGrand Chaplain Mrs. Emma Woods.\nOfficers installed in- Kootenay\nLodge Were Frank Llppih'gwell,\nJunior past noble grand; J. McClelland, noble grand; L. Hall, vice\ngrand; A, O- Allen, recording secretary; W. A. TTiggs, treasurer; David\nProudf oot, conductor;. Ivan > Lewis,\nwarden; D. Scott, chaplain; J.\nMcAvin, inside guardian,' D. Paul,\noutside guardian; W. Fisher, right\nsupport ot the noble grand; -Alex\nTullock, left support o\u00a3 the rioble\ngrand; W. CoUett,. right support ot\nthe vice grind; H,- Harrison, left\nsupport of the 'vice grand; G.\nStrong, right scene supporter; Robert Hong, left scene' supporter.\nOfficers installed for Queen City\nLodge were: Mrs. Elizabeth Sinclair, junior past noble grand; Mrs.\nAnne Read, noble grand; Mrs.\nDorothy Immings,.vice grariS; Miss\nBeryle Andrews, recording secretary; Mrs. Elsie Bereau, financial\nsecretary; Mrs. Rhoda Lewis, treasurer; Mrs. Christina Hong, con.\nductor; Mrs. Muriel' Boas, warden;\nMrs. Margaret Clements, organist;\nMrs. Kitty Woods, inside guardian;\nMrs. Emma Tickner, outside guard-\nOur Father's\nBusiness\nian; Mrs. Leatha, Bealby, right\nsupport of the noble grand; Mrs.\nSadie McClelland; left .support of\nthe noble grand; Mrs, Gertrude\nWhitehead, right support .of the vice\ngrand; Mrs. Florence.Andrews, left\nsupport of the vice grand; Mrs.\nTillie Ozelle, color bearer.\nInstallations wore  followed  by\nrefreshments and a social hour.\nify, ctauha, WhssJsA.\nMrs. Rutherford\nRed Cross Leader\nFIELD \u2014 Mrs, M, 3. Rutherford\nhas been named president for 1053\not the' Field Branch of' the Canadian Red Cross.\nMrs. C. W. Siyear was named\nvice-president, Mrs, John Mather\nsecretary-treasurer, Mrs. R. J. McKinnon : work' convener Mrs. McKinnon; was named Field delegate\nto the provincial council meeting\nin Vancouver February 24, and\nMrs. J. Tocher alternative.\nIn addition to. sponsoring the, annual Spring drive for funds in the\nGolden area) the branch has a highly active ladles\" group; which has\nmet regularly - during the year to\nsew and knit in the YMCA ladies'\nlounge.   .   '\nand\n\u25a0BrtljL-l Sabi-roarl*\nIn Affiliation\nPentecostal Assemblies of Canada\n708 Baker Street\nREV. L M. PRESLEY. Pastor\nSUNDAY: . . '\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Devotional\nService\n4:00-4:15\"p.m\u2014Bethel Fireside\nHour    \u2022  .\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Meeting\nTUESDAY: .'._' .    ,\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer and Bible\nStudy\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Younf Peoples\nEVERYONE CORD-ALL\"?   .\nINV-'rI!~\">\n3Firat flMiiirrff of\nC&ifrtet \u00a7ffcnttet\n. Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, In Boston, Mass,\n.  Sunday School - 9:45 ajn.\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00 ajn.\nSUBJECT -      .\n\"TRUTH\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8:00 p.m,.     . ,\n, Reading Room, 209 Baker St,\nOpen Dally From 3 to 5 p.m.\n,   All Cordially Welcome\nThis is a machine age . -. . and\nmachines are rn.de to relieve us of\ndoing hard things. The family car\nmakes for parties, outings, visits,\nshopping trips as well as for business. . It makes movement swift,\ncomfortable and enjoyable. Printing presses relieve us ot writing\nalmost entirely. Large tractors give\none map the working capacity of\ntwelve not so equipped.\nA civilization built upon;, the\nmachine age is usually prosperous.\nThe people are usually well-fed;\nwell-dressed, well-housed end. comfortable. Too comfortable in some\nrespects it would seem. For with\nthe coming ot the machine often\ncomer the love of ease. In the field\nof; amusements ... the movie-\ntheatre has become the symbol of\nthe average man's greatest source\not entertainment. Why? Is it not\nbecause it requires so little effort?\nAll he has to do is to pay the price\nof admission ... sit brfck in a comfortable chair, relax < and enjoy\nwhat has been produced in Hollywood or on the stages of Europe,\nIn education we.seek the easy\nway. The main'object Is lb amass\nknowledge. The facts are . con*,\ndensed and presented.in is simple\na form as possible. The student has\nnot\" learned to think for himself. It\nis a comfortable way to wisdom,\nOr consider our reverence for\nmoney. Money buys machines and\nmachines make life easier. It is\nassumed .that everyone wants\nmoney... ; .labourer . . 'Machinist . . . teacher . . ,'clerk... minister. Only the eccentric would\npossibly choose a position for\nreasons other than financial benefit \u25a0:\u2022\nEven the way of salvation must\nbe made simple . . . easy . ... and\nvery obvious. There must be no\ndemands made . . . no attempt to\nspeak of sacrifice. God must be\npictured as an all-loving, gentle\nand complacent sort of fellow that\nsmiles knowingly at our Sins and\nwelcomes- us home at the end of\n-life's; little day saying ... \"Well\ndone old. chap ... you were not\nsuch a bad sort after all . . .\"\nThus religion becomes, in our\nmachine age, a matter of easy going relationship with the Divine ..\na j matter largely of remote control'.'. . the'sending of wife to\nchurch or one step further removed\nby sending only the children'and\nexposing them to the frantic attempts of Sunday' School teachers\nta' cover the world of religious\ntruths in a few moments, on Sunday morning. ,\nThe words of Amos seem to; have\nbeen spoken just for this hour .. .\n\"Woe to them that are at ease in\nZion, and trust in the mountain of\nSamaria.\"   ' \u2022'\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022  \u2022\nIt need not be pointed out that\nlife is not easy. It never has been\nand it Is not today. God-is shaking\nus; out of our comfortable seats in\nZion; He is disturbing not only\nnations, but many individuals in\nthis community.\nThere is a call for something\nmore basic titan economic security .'. .easy living ... comfortable\nhomes and a simple formula tor\nsalvation, as one person expressed\nIt:\n\"I am glad I found God, even if\nit had to come to me the herd way\nof suffering.\" Easy living satisfies\nonly the selfish part of our personalities . and leaves \u00ab hunger at\nthe deeper level of genuine living.\nAs the churches in Nelson* prepare\nfor the forthcoming Mission there\nmust be much. heart-searching on\nthe real meaning of lift and our\nresponsibility to a just righteous\nand loving God who'will not leave\nus long at ease in Zion.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWEALTHY ENGLISH\nPEER TO MARRY\n\"' LONDON (Reuters) -Lord\nCowdTay, 42, one of the wealth- \"\nlest men in Britain, today announced   his   engagement   to\nElizabeth'Jackson, ,25, who was\nsocial secretary here to Mrs.\nLewis Douglas, wife of the former United States ambassador.\nCowdray obtained a divorce\ntrom his first wife. Lady Anne\nBridgeman, two years ago.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSouth Slocan\nMr. and1 Mrs. Douglas James have\nmoved from Nelson to. take up residence here.\nMr. and. Mrs. Walter. Davis, of\nToronto, -who have been visiting\nMr.. Davis' brother-in-law and .sis*\nter, Mr. and Mrs: J. D. Yeatman,\nleft Saturday for Toronto via Vancouver and the southern States.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24,19S3 \u2014 S\nSlocan City\nSLOCAN CITY \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nEdward Clongh, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nFASCINATING TO D,0   ..\nYour two favorite kinds of needlework \u2014 embroidery and, crochet!\nCombine them to make this graceful decoration for sheets, pillowcases, towels or scarfs. -'\u25a0...'.',\n'Variety for llnOnsl. Pattern 505:\ntransfer of a 9x20; two *7xl6-inch\nmotifs; crochet directions.\n' Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS' In\ncoins (stamps cannot be. accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews; iNeedlecraft Dept, Nelson.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyodr NAME and ADDRESS;\nExciting value! Ten, yes ten popular, new- designs to crochet sew,\nembroider, knit\u2014printed in the new\n1953 Laura Wheeler Needle-raft\nBook. Plus many more patterns to\nsend for\u2014ideas for gifts,' bazaar\nmoney-makers, fashions! Send 25\ncents for your copy!        ;\n(HURCHHAS\nBUSYYEAR\nWILLOW .POINT\u2014St. Andrew's\nby-the-Lake (Anglican Church) has\nincreased its membership and attendance , over the- past year\u2014Very\nRev. T. -.Leadbeater told membrs\nWdnsday. \u2022\nDean .Leadbeater outlined the\nwork- and progress ot the church\nduring 1952 at the annual vestry\nmeeting, telling members there was\nalso. Increased financial support\nover the year.\nChurch Improvements which Included, renewing the celling of the\nchurch, were'carried out over the\npast 12 months and enlargement of\ntile church hall is anticipated, Dean\nLeadbeater told; members.\nThe Women's Association reported a successful year which included\norganizing a. new branch, the Evening Women's Auxiliary.\nSunday school attendance doubled oyer the year and now totals\n80, the report showed*.\nThe young peoples group is organizing and undertaking church\nresponsibilities- such as cleaning\nahd making fires.\nFlans, for.a.North Shore visiting\ncampaign to stimulate church, support and membership, were made at\nthe meeting.'.\",'.\nNew officers for the coming year\nwere elected during the meeting.\nThey were' H. Hankin, parson's\nwarden; T' G.- Ludgate, people's\nwarden,, ahd secretary-treasurer; B,\nTownshend, F.H.W. Chanter,. H.\nDenny, Mrs. D. Phllpet and two Women's auxiliary members, committee. H. Hankin was appointed lay\ndelegate to the synod with T. G.\nLudgate, substitute.\nON OUR BUDGET PUN\n10% DOWN,\nBalance 18 Months\nWiii at Whist, Bridge I\nKASLO \u2014 Axel Augustine end';\nMrs, W. Langtands were high-,\nscorers in telephone whist and\nbridge sponsored by the Parent-\nTeacher Association here. TTiere'\nwere 38 tables in play. Whist consolation prize went to Ralph Pat\",\nterson and bridge consolation to\nMrs. H. R. Abey. Proceeds, amounting to $70 will go towards the\nscholarship fund,\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Rotter ot\nSalmo were visitors at Kaslo tor';\na few days.\nMrs. A. Furlak had as guests over\nthe weekend, her son-in-law and I\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. Johnson\nof Zincton.\nE. Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hicks\nand Mr. ant\" Mrs. Wilbur Hicks left\nFriday tor Spokane where they\nwill spend the weekend.\nNe<u)s of the Pay\nRATES: SOo line,-40o line black faco type; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum.two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nLabrador puppies, $25 each. For\ndetails, phone 482-L-2. '\nRotary Luncheon Monday, Jan. 28,\n12:15 p.m., Hume Hotel.\nHats Drastically'Reduced to Clear\nADRIAN  MILLINERY\nLaquita's Hairdresslng Salon .\n1117 Front Street \u2014 Phone 1236\nLUMBER\n: Standard grades and sizes. Cedar\nand spruce panelling, sheeting,\nboards and siding, Timber and dimensions. Kootenay Forest Products, Retail Department FhOhe 1200.\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\nHot Peanuts- and.Hot Buttered\nPopcorn anytime at WAIT'S.\nGYPTEX TEXTURE PAINT\n6 colors \u2014 10 lb. pkg. $1.90.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nSaturday Spec! a 1\u2014Deliciously\nfresh bulk assorted chocolates, $1.00\na pound. GRAY'S, 534 Josephine. St\nFLOWERS' FOR EVERY\nOCCASION.\nGRIZZELLE'S FLORISTS\u2014PH.\n187\nLadles' and girls' dresses. Special\nclearance prices at\n.    THE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant fix ft,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done end -fully guaranteed, at\nreasonable .prices. '\nRESERVE MAY 8 FOR CHURCH\nOF REDEEMER SERVICE CLUB\nSPRING TEA- AND BAZAAR.\nParty Dance, Woodlands Hall\nBalfour, Sat, Jan. 24th. Price: 50c.\nPrizes, refreshments, Balfour Social\nCredit Group.\nAnnual Clan' McLeary\n'  Burns'-Night Supper .\nLimited number ot tickets-available at Butterfield's Jewellery, 481\nBaker St, or ask- Clansmen. Price:\n$2.50 per ticket.\nGOA\nL\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel e\\ Transfer .\nNelson, B.C.\nFor Examiners\nLONDON (CP) - Britain's royal\nSchools of Music announced Friday\n\"with regret\"' that their annual\npractice of sending examiners to\nCanada will end this summer.\nScholarships enabling gifted Canadian musicians to study in Britain, valued at more than $4000 a\nyear,' also will be awarded for the\nlast time in 1953.\nIn announcing the decision, the\nschools.paid an oblique compliment\nto Canada's, growing musical maturity. Secretary L. H. Macklln said\nthat the development of Canadian\nnational institutions in music has\nmade the British services less imperative. .\nSince 1897, professors from the\nroyal academies and colleges have\nvisited Canada annually to conduct\npractical examinations in musle.\nThe cost of the tours has increased,\nond recently the associated board 9!\nthe royal schools has had to beer\nan annual deficit at $5000.\nVAN PLEfiT RETIRES\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.\nArmy announced Friday that Gen.\nJames Van' Sleet, 8th Army commander in Korea, will be retired\nMarch.91.- He.will be succeeded\nby tt-Gen. Maxwell Taylor.\n...delectabUfooito \u2022\nmatch the lovely setting\nwhen you \"Dine in the\nSky\" at Sylvia. CUmto\nevergreen Stanley Park.\nBaby sitting serviet'^\n---W8-* parking\nfor your ear.\nSensible rates.\nMilliard C. lyi\u00bb\nManaging Director.\n: Maybe you cant afford a vacuum\ncleaner but a Bissell sweeper will\nfit into most anyone's budget. The\nBissell Vanity Sweeper with the\nBisco-matic brush action' will make\nyour carpet look like hew. .'\"\nHIPPERSONS.\nMEDICINE-CABINETS\nMetal; medicine   cabinets   with\ngleaming plate-glass mirrors  and\nsparkling crystal, glass shelves. Four\ndifferent styles to choose from at\nT. H. WATER8 A CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St. \u2014 Nelson\n\u2022A-5-Star Specie.\u20145-Piece Bleached Walnut Bedroom \"Suite\u2014Large\nthree-wing mirror, wardrobe type\ntedar-llned chiffonier,, dust-proof.\u2014\nRegular price $449. Slightly marked\nIn shipping. Special price\u2014$329.\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 1660\nxvZllSSS\nS&tm\nP.F. DIGESTIVE\n(MM\nThis -Eghdy sweet meal   '\nbiscuit is 10 -sri-fying at   -\nserve with a ptny snick\nSo fining to setae -rid.\nbevetages which men\nptefitf.\nPP.      ;\"-\nENOUSH QOiMffT\n;\nPEEK FREAN'S\nSpecial\u2014Dotted Marquisette Curtains, 37x81, in rose, yellow and\ngreen. \u2014 $2.95.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nYour stainless steel copper-clad\npots and pans cleaned in a jiffy with\n\"Samae\" Miracle Cleaner. For brass,\nbronze and chrome also. \"\nHIFPERSON'S..\n: PROSPECTING CLASSES\nRegister at the Chamber of Mines,\n302 Baker.St. First .class Jan. _7th,\n1953,' at 7:30 p.m, in the' Junior\nHigh SchooL Fee: $2: ,\n; CLEARANCE\n9-WEEK-OLD BUDGIES, ALL\nBRANDED BIRDS,      Y\nSPECIAL PJ1ICE - $6,95.\nCOVENTRY8\" FLOWER 8HOP\n498 BAKER ST.\nDONT $\nwhat's good for a\nASKFQft\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nA SINGLE SIP TELLS WHY\nCUNARD LINE\nWinter Saill.os tt EUROPE\nNow In offotf-spoM Thrm.$eason rates on all sailings to Britain and turope.\nwllh arrival at a convenient Sngllsh, Fronth or Irish port.\nWAY   RATES\nONE\nFirst Class from $192\nTO   BRITISH   PORTS\nTourist Class as low as $140\nl*m*\nNEW YORK\nHALIFAX\nVESSEL\nTO\nJan, 23\n_. ..\n' QUEEN MARY\nCherbourg & Southampton\nJan. 23\nJan. 25\nSAMARIA\nCobh 8. Liverpool\nFeb. 6\nMEDIA    j;\nLiverpool\nFeb. 6\nS&fTHIA\nHavre & Southampton\nFeb. 7\n1   QUEEN MARY'\nCherbourg & Southampton\nFeb. 13\n-;   Feb. 15\nFRANCONIA\nCobh & Liverpool\nFeb. 19\nQUEEN ELIZABETH\nCherbourg 8. Southampton          ,\nFeb. 20\ni         *-\nPARTHIA\nLiverpool\nFeb. 25.\n__..\n.   QUEEN MARY\nCherbourg & Southampton\nFeb. 27\nMar. 1\nASCANIA     ...\n'   Cobh, Havre & Soulhampto\n\u00bb.\nCORONATION.   A chance of a lifetime...\nwilness (he spfendour of Iho Coronation procession ..;\n-\nmate yoor sailing plans NOW.\nConsult your local Agonl-No ono can servo you better.\nCUNARD SIlAm-SHIP COMPANY UNITED\nReefer Building, Montreal 25, Quebec\njjjjjjjjMJI\nV\n \u2014- ~-\n**\u00bb**fmr^wtm***\n#&'\n$>tjtt\nEstablished April 22. 1003\nBtlttsh Columbia's\nMost interesting Newspaper\nI published every morning except Sunday by tbe\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY   LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson. British Columbia.\nAuthorised aa Second Class Mill,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF 189 CANADIAN PRESS AND\n\/THI AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nSaturday, January 24, 1953\nChanges in Way'\nOf Life Revealed\nIn Nlew Index\nHow much Canadians have changed\ntheir ways in the recent past is revealed in detail by the new. consumer\nprice index, subject of the Bank of\nMontreal's latest Business Review. Departing from its usiial analysis of the\n' Canadian economic scene, the bank report is devoted to an explanation-of\nhow the index was \"devised and what\nit does. It emphasizes the importance\nof the Index as a \"trigger figure\" which\naffects Incomes and costs all over Canada, but states reassuringly that \"lt\nappears to be about the' most painstaking and comprehensive indicator\nthat could be devised.\"\nThe bank comments that the cost\nci living Index has been among the\nmost frequent topics of conversation\ntn recant years. Nor Is this interest\ncasual, since a sample of collective\nbargaining agreements signed in the\nfirst eight months showed that some-\n' thing like 40 per'cent of union workers\nwet* protected by \"escalator\" clauses\nwhich made mandatory a change in\nwages with each specified change in\ntha index. Moreover, many employers\n\u2022ra greatly influenced by the move-\n: plant of the index, in considering general revisions of pay rates, Despite the\nfamfliatfty and importance of the cost\nof Bring index, it was among the \"least\nunderstood and most misunderstood\"\nt)f the figures produced by the Do-\nminion Bureau of Statistics, the bank\nmaintains. The appearance in the last\nfour months of the new consumer price\nindex has provoked added interest, and\ntha discontinuance of the old index in\nthe near future is necessitating the renegotiation of many labor contracts..\nAs its new name implies, the index\n.'b intended to reflect \"only the influ-\n: ence of price changes upon the cost of\n* the typical purchases of a representa-\n: tlve cross-section of Cana&ian consum-\n. tn,\"' the review states. During four\n. yean of preparatory work in the \"most\nthorough-going\" revision of an index\nof Canadian retail prices ever undertaken, the Bureau consulted business,\nunion, welfare and consumer groups,\nI and made a detailed study of the year-\nVound  purchases  of 3600  Canadian\n; households. Next, a \"target 'group\" of\n1317 families was selected, ranging in\nsiire from two adults to two adults with\n. four children, with annual incomes\n'. tanging from.$1650 to $4050 in the year\nanded August, 1948, and- living in 27\nCanadian cities of over 30,000 population. The detailed expenditures over a\nyear of this \"target group\" were then\nanalyzed to  determine what items\n. should be included in the new index.\nWhile most of the commodities and\n- aervices bought in 1948 were found to\nba tha same as in 1938, the previous\nBttrvey year, over 30 items included in\n. the old cost of living index had receded\nj to negligible importance  and were\ndropped, while nearly 100 new items\nwere added.\n\"These deletions and additions, pro-\ntrlda... an interesting commentary on\n' th\u00a3 cbailgei that have taken .place in\nthe Canadian way of life in the short\nspace of a decade;\" the bank states.\n\"The modern family eats proportionately more pork and less beef, and more\nfresh fruits, vegetables and fruit juices\nthan ten years eafller.\" Nylons have\nreplaced rayon or woollen stockings,\nand pyjamas hava supplanted the cotton nightgown, And, ii the home, fuel\noil has gone a long way toward replacing coal and coke for heating.-The costs\nof soft drinks, beer, liquor, and of home\nownership, as distinct from renting,\nhave been included for the first time.\nAfter examining the enormous task\nof keeping the new index up to date,\nthe \"weighting\" of different purchases,\nand the reasons for the choice of 1949\na$ the new base year, the Bank of\nMontreal review concludes by emphasizing the importance of \"bearing in\nmind what it is and what it is riot.\" It\nis not intended to apply to farm households, for which a separate index is\ncompiled, n6r to single persons, or families larger than six, nor to families in -\nthe very low or very high income\nbrackets. But lt does apply, and apparently with a high degree of validity,\n\"to the average sized, city-dwelling\nfamily of moderate means to which so\nmany Canadians belong...\"\n? Questions?\nBetty's Weekly Letter to:\nDear Jane:\n\\ ' Isn't it the truth that our faults and shortcomings often show up so much more plainly\nthan our virtues?\nTake dusting, for Instance. You can have\nthe house spie and span, you can go over\nevery single Inch of it\u2014but one\u2014and that\none inch you miss will show tip like a red\nflag just at the wrong time.\nAnd that cobweb hanging from the celling! How lt got there Just as the doorbell was\nringing will always be a mystery, but there\n' lt hangs for all to see.\nOr this matter of bridling the tongue. We\nknow what is said of \"the man who bridleth\nnot his tongue.\" We may keep ours well,\nbridled for ever so long, but once ln a while\n' the birdie slips, and those are the times that\nare hard to forget.\nMaybe this is the resson I felt such a satisfaction from an editorial ln one of Canada's\nleading magazines entitled \"A Fond Farewell\nto Harry S. Trumon.\" It has no doubt always\nbeen easy tor people to se\u00bb Mr. Truman's\nfaults and to overlook his virtue;. It seemed\nto me a timely and kindly gesture on the part\nof this magazine to remember some of the\ngood things he did; to remember that for\nseven years Mr. Truman was faced with one\nterrible decision after another. As they say, lt\nseems only fair that if he is to be blamed for\ntbe things that went wrong he should get\nsome credit for the things that went right\ni This is a very significant, week in the\nhistory of the world, when Mr. Truman steps\nout of the White House and Mr. Eisenhower\nsteps in. It is always a source of wonder and\nthankfulness to me that men ot honor and\nintegrity are willing to tackle these political\njobs. We may heartily disagree with many of\ntheir policies, we may think they are making\ntragic mistakes, but I think most of us feel\nthey are sincere In what they do\u2014that they\nare men of honor and integrity.\nIn general conversation It does seem, Jane,\n'flat there Is a tendency to class all politicians\nas crooks, to be suspicious of anyone in public\noffice, to have no constructive suggestions, but\nto confine'our thinking to \"Why did they do\nthis7\" or \"Why didn't they do thatf when it\nIs too late.\nWhen one tries to balance a job that will\nbring more criticism than praise, more responsibility than reward, more worry than\nrest, against a chance tp own a little potato\npatch and do as one pleases, It is a wonder to\nme the potato patch is not chosen more often.\nAs I said before, it makes me thankful that\ny we have men and women who are willing to\naccept these responsible positions. And if we\nare going to attract to public office those with\nintegrity, it may be our job to keep alert, to\nkeep our thinking up to date, to make it\npossible for them to know what we are thinking. We, too, believe in government of the\npeople, for the people, by the people.\nOr, as the Irishman said, \"Maybe our job\nIs as big in a small way as theirs is small ln a\nbig way.\"\nBETTY BLYTHE.\nOpen to any roader. Names ot persons\nasking questions will nit be published.\nThere Is no: charge\u25a0'; ttr this Servleo.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE Ari8W.REO\nBV MAIL except where there Is Obvltus\nnecessity for privacy. v\nV. M., Cranbrook\u2014Where in Canada can we\npurchase uniform!, or have them made,\nfor girls' bands?\nThe custom nt most schools and institutions seems to be to purchase the material\nfrom Ope of the stores and have the uniforms\nm*d* by a local tailor according to choice.\nMrs. J. J., Cranbrook\u2014Is there a way to ro-\n...  move wallpaper from wallboard?\nOwing to the fact that wallboard is apt to\nbe somewhat soft, this is a difficult job, but\nwe have been told that straight wallpaper\nremover should be effective. ,\nNelsonite\u2014Where can one have \u2022 dressmaker\nform made lq Nelson?;.\nApparently no one makes these In town.\nThe Singer Sewing Machine,Company, Van-\n, eouver, will make one tor you to your own\nmeasurements. '\n3. D\u201e Kaslo\u2014Is old oil stock of.Beacon Oils,\nLtd., sold In 1014, of any value?.\nBeacon Oils lost Its charter, and the stock\nIs of no value today.\nE. V. b\u201e Slocan City\u2014I've got fed up reading\nwell-known Digests, mostly about super-\npeople. Are there any mostly about ordinary people? ' -.   >\n.'\u25a0   English Digest seems to be what you\nwant. There Is also Canadian Sports Digest\nand Magazine Digest, both published in Canada. .\nA Reader, Kelson\u2014Please print addresses of\ncorrespondence schools  where one  can\nlearn professional bookkeeping.\nHigh School Correspondence Instruction,\nDept. of Education, Weller Building, Victoria,\nB. C; Calgary Institute of Technology, Calgary, Alta.; ShaW-Sprott Commercial College,\nVancouver.\nMrs. N. B., Castlegar\u2014Will you please publish\nagain the address of place ln Nelson that\nbuys used clothing?\nWe cennot recall any business or person\nbuying clothing in Nelson. Gifts of wearable\nclothing are much appreciated by the Public\nHealth Nurses, Hall Street; the Salvation\nArmy; and by\" leaders of the other church\nln Nelson, who also do an Immense amount bf\nwork among the under-privileged.\nLetter to tH& Editor . , .\nLetters may ba published over t nom de plume. _ut the actual name\nof the writer must be given to the Editor es evidence of good faith.\nAnonymous letters go ft the waste paper basket '        .\nRobert Burns\nWhat's Kndvyh\nAbout Scotland?\nTo the Editor!  .\nSir\u2014The English children know\nlittle about Canada, the Canadian\nchildren know little about England,\nbut what do these Canadian Scots\nknow; about ScoUand? I often wonder, espeolaily around -turns'\" night.\nSo here IS a questionnaire: <\nWhere Is Sootitad? i\nSouth of the Arctic Circle, North\not England, over, the Sea from\nSky.'\nWhat\" IS the capital of Scotland?\nEdlnbra, Auld Reekie, Glanca.\n\" The people ln Scotland are called\nScots, Scoteh, Seotlanders?\nScotland's greatest poet was called Rob Roy, Meg Morrllees, ROb\nMcGregor?\nWithout asking the Daily News,\nwhat night's Burns' nilht?\nWhich Burns is It that has a\nnight Pat Robert or Harry?\nBurns' poetry Is noted.for its\nhigh moral purpose, ornate diction,\nlove of life?      \u2022       \\\nThe language spoken In Scotland\nis Scottische. Gaelic, Doric?\nTha \"twa talks\" are English and\nGaelic, English and braid Scots,\nEnglish and Laland Scots?\nWhat is meant by \"great pudding;\nof the chieftain clan?\nThe head ot the Clan Mac'Eral,\nGeorge III, Burns? \u25a0\n- A haggis IS a very Old woman,\na drink brewed from heather' tn''\nhoney, a Greek'name for* cold\npease p-rrlpte? \"\nTh* plural of haggisMs haggeS,\nhaggisses, haggli?\nQuote any other line of Bums'\npoetry thgt you' know except \"\u00ab\nman's a man tor.a' that,\" (You\ncan't? I'm not surprised. The only\nScot I know who quoted poetry\nquoted Locksley Hall.)     ,\nYou may perhaps have heard of\nthe Cottar's Saturday Night. Is this\nany relation to the Toronto Saturday Night?\nWhat is a Cottar?\nA split pin, a .man who makes\ncots, one who sleeps in' cots?\nNam* one Scottish historical\ncharacter who had an Inferiority\ncomplex. (For that matter, name\nany Scot who at any time ever\nhad an inferiority complex.)  ' -\nWhich Is correct? '.,   \u2022\nThe etpne of Scons, the stane of\nScane, the soone of stone?\n'  Translate Into English:\nMony a nlckle meh's a nuckle.\nWhich of the following Is used\ntor stirring parrltch:\nA elaymore, a skesn dhu, a sporran? ' . .\n\"SASSENACH\"\nI Nelson, B.C.\nTU Take Porridge\"\nRock Salt Mining\nSalt mining Is one of the oldest of human\nIndustries, for men and animals have a natural\nneed tor this substance. Indeed, it is one ot\n\\the oldest Industries right here in Windsor.\nThe process used has been that of Obtaining\nthe brine, but the new industry in -Ojibway\n- will be a rock salt mine.       \u25a0\nSalt also formed one of the oldest types\nof trade. Some of the caravan routes of the\ndesert were formed by salt traders! One of the\noldest roads' in Italy, the Via Salaria, was\noriginally.a trail over which salt pans were\n> carried from One part ot the,country to the\nother, as its name suggested. And, of course,\nsalt taxes are one of the oldest forms ot taxes.\nIn Biblical days there were.salt mines.\nSlaves were used to work them. Barabbas, the\nconvict released by Pilate when Jesus was\ncrucified, spent many later years in the Bait\n' mines, by legend, at any rate.\nSome humans still go without salt, as ln\nCentral Africa. This is said to be one reason\nfor eating meat raw, or roasted; to keep its\nsslty flavor which would be lost in boiling.\nSome of the oldest towns were built\naround the salt Industry, as Northwich, in\nCheshire, England (which, by the way, is lo*\ncated on an old Roman road). But the substance which gave Northwich its reason for\nbeing also brought about its decline. Many of\nthe houses have sunk tb fantastic angles bet-\ncause of subsidences resulting from the pump*\n\u25a0   ing Of brine. Northwich how is practically a\nghost town.\nProbably In the Ojibway development care\nwill be taken not to have houses built over\nthe Immediate area where the salt Is being\nmined.\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\nR. J. DEACHMAN\nBruce Hutchison gives us a.story\nin which Jie lauds the habit of\ndrinking plain common coffee \u2014\ncoffee well made of course! Every\nmorning It seems, somewhere between 10 a.m. and 11 a.m., tbe men\nin the offices and , factories of\nAmerica drift out to the cOffee\nshops. There I with the solace of\ncoffee the men gather new strength\nto Improve tho whole industrial\nfabric of the nation. Coffee, so our\nfriend proclaims, is the cement\nwhich holds society together.\nYet, strange to say, the nations\nwhich drink the least coffee are\nthose with the greatest stability\nof character. Where do we go in\nsearch Ot national stability. Is it\nin the countries of South America\nor is it to Arabia which has a\nbrand of coffee so good that no\nmeal is necessary after it. Could\nit be in countries like Canada\nwhere we are moderate in Our\ndrinking habits or 1b it in Scotland\nwhere thrift makes the cups small\nand the custom is to limit drinks\nto two, \"You buy one for me, I'll\nbuy one for you.\"\nTHE 80.0TS AT HOME\nWhere will you. find a nation\nmore thrifty than the SJcots in\neverything they do? They talk\nabout their work \u2014 they criticize\nthe government and the labor lead\ners but do they need to swallow\nso much coffee while they are\ndoing it.\nThe Scots are a clannish folk,\nthey rarely make a display of their\nvirtues, When this drinking habit\nshows signs of costing them too\nmuch they issue an order to Increase the size of the glasses and\nuse the same amount if spirit. It\ngives the appearance of generosity\nbut is less costly.\nSome years ago I was in Glasgow.\nI wanted to* go down to Kilmarnock that day but there was only\none. train in the afternoon and it\ndidn't stop 'there. The porter at\nhat hotel was Scotch as heather,\nIf one put on a Scottish accent it\nmade a marked difference In the\n \u2014< \u2014r-r .'.'\u25a0  '. .-\u2014\nWhere on Earth\ndid BULL SMITH   -\nget his nickname\"?\nky TED ATW0QD\ntemperature. Now my mother eame\nfrom a spot called Som in Ayrshire so I spoke in my broadest\naccent, learned Bt my \"mither's\nknee. The atmosphere changed at\nonce: \"I'll arrange for that train\nto stop at Kilmarnock and let you\noff. Lord, \u2022 laddie with an accent\nlike that I could stop any train\nin Scotland.\" Even \"Bruce\" must\nadmit the best. of coffee would\nnot stop a train. I spent the next\nday in Kilmarnock. It was there,\nIf I mistake not that the psalms\nwere translated into \"Erald\nScotch.\" Here is the Twenty-Third\nPsalm as a native ot Ayrshire reads\nlt:\n\"The Lord's ma herd\nAt every turn\nHe gl'es me a' I need\nHe leads me doon beside the\nburn\nAnd through tha grassy meed.\nAnd whiles when I\nHa'e lost my track\nAnd some wrani* turnln'\u00abtake\nHis tender mercy brings me\nback\nE'en for his ain name sake.\nGoodness I trow shall follow\nme\nAnd mercy leave me never\nTill I wi' theee a- dweller be\nForever and forever.    \u25a0 Amen.\"\nYour Horoscope\nDo not take misfortunes too serioUBly, but\nuse them to avoid future mistakes. Your fortunes should revive rapidly. Born today, a\nchild is likely to be exceptionally fortunate.\nFOR SUNDAY, Jan. 25\u2014A busy, happy\nyear appears to lie ahead. Today's child may\nbe one of fortune's favorites.\nIt's Been Said\nNothing can bring you peace but yourself.\u2014Ralph Waldo Emerson.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n^ms^mmm^mmsms\nnWfc HER UP-THE OROrVLS\nBEGftJ\natiaBFigg.\nNejCT \"TOU5 eo in nice ajd QUET\u00ab\"\nDOMT TRy TO REASON-SUE\n\u25a0 -I wontt BLfy\" rr-.\n\u25a0\u25a0::;\":\" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0: \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0--^ft'tfflffiivflYi\nToday's BibleThbught\nSome of us like to go Into a particular room to pray. An altar may\nbe in a closet. Some have a special\nfeeling of nearness ln snch places.\nMany, find their altar ln churches.\nWe must each erect his own altar.\nAni*Noah bullded an altar unto\nthe Lord.\u2014Gen. 8:20.\nI do not believe that the particular flavor ot something . we\ndrink cuts deeper our channels of\nthought or makes us think more\nclearly. Coffee is an effervescent\nstmiulant. What is the peculiar\nvirtue in-that drink? There is a\npiquant flavor which passes In a\nfew moments. Who has ever thought\not measuring its food value? If\nyou would add to your strength\nturn to the great national food ot\nScotland\u2014porridge. I have no fear\nfor the future of the human race\nif we continue to use coffee as a\nmild exhilarant .while our basic\nstrength arises from the abundant\nuse of oatmeal. It should be recognized as the basic food of all the\nnations. Scotland has never been\nthe seat of great national wealth,\nthe climate is far from pleasant the\nsoil is often poor, yet from that\nBern land and rigorous clime has\nsprung the grandest race of men\nthe world has ever known. Give\nporridge not coffee the credit for\nthis magnificent achievement Who\ncan guess what Scotland might\nhave been if it had been deprived\nof its great national food. The\nScots know its value, it's written\nin their record of achievements.\nBy ROBERT MAIN\n. Scotland's great poet the lad that\nwas born in Kyle, was truly national tor practically all his works\nWere about tha land he loved and\nher people. Yet althought he was\ntruly national no one ever achieved\nsuch universal tame' end Scclalm\nas did Robert Burns and at this\ntime all Over Hi* world millions of\nhis fallow countrymen ere doing\nhonor to the Immortal Bard.\nOther po*U had written many\npoems before Burns but lt was\nBurns who put passion and fire into\npoetry and th^t passion and tire\ncame clear and clean from his native soil and not from a cultivated\ngarden.\nHis love of nature in all its phases\nIs clearly demonstrated ln many of\nhis poems, ths hills and dales, th*\nheather, the broom, the whins, and\nbramble and all the wild life that\nlived therein. Being a poor man\nhimself, a great many of his poems\nwere about his own class, their toll,\ntheir amusements and everything\nconnected with their, lives. He\npreached a crusade against the injustices of the rich, but advised his\npeople not to .envy them but to\nlive their own lives and be happy.\nThe philosophy of Burns is summed\nup in those lines;      -\n\"The rank Is but the guinea stamp\nA man's a man for a' that.\"\nBurns was a man of many, moods,\nSometimes grave and sometimes\ngay. He knew his fallings and didn't\ndeceive himself and was sincere\nabout them. It may sound paradoxical, but his failings enhanced-\nhis gifts. His fluctuating moods\nwere a nursery (or his Inspirations\nand his wooing of the muse which\nwas one of his greatest charms. He\nwas always striving between passionjand virtue. If he had not had\nthose woods much \"of his best works\nwould never have been written.\nBesides being a great poet Burns\nwas alio a great artist and although\nas, far as we know he never put\nbrush to canvas many of his works\ndenict scenes Scottish life.\nTake for instance \"The Cotter's\nSaturday Night\". Here we see the\nCotter after a week's work putting\naway his tools and entering his\ncottage, probably a thatched one\nand being greeted by his guld wife\nand taking the youngest bsirn on\nhis knee while his wife finished\nIroning his shirt for Sunday and\nprepared supper. The rest of the\nfamily began to gather in the\nkitchen. When they are all settled\nat the table a knock comes to the\ndoor and Jennie, the eldest girl with\nblushing cheeks and. sparkling eyes,\nadmits a lad from a neighboring\nfarm. After his'welcome the Cotter\nsays grace and this is followed by\na clatter ot spoons. The meal over\nthey, all gather round the ingle\nnook and play games. Just before\nbedtime the cotter opens the family\nBible and reads a chapter. This is\nfollowed by singing some of the old\nfamiliar hymns. Now it is bedtime\nand Jennie sees her lad to\" the door.\nHAPPIEST WITH PLOW\nBurns was happiest when Jie was\nbehind the plough with all nature\naround him. Ploughing one \u25a0 day\nhe disturbed a field mouse which\ngreatly upset him and he consequently wrote the \"Ode to a Mouse.\"\nODE TO A MOUSE\nYou  sleekit,   timorous,   frightened\nbeastie.\nOh, what a panic's in your hreastle,\nBut now you needna be sae hasty,\nwl bickring brattle,\nI wid be laith to rin and chase thee,\nwi murd'ring pattle\nAnd so on\u2014\nCbwL fat\nAmy never starts at the'begin-\nnln' She tells the exoltln' part to\nget everybody to listen and then\nstarts Over and gives all the tiresome details.\nFEW resident- of Smlthtown. L. ly\nrcolizo the colorful history ot the man\nfor whom their tows was named. Nor,\nprobably, have many of them hurd\nhow ths sen-square-mlls area\nths north side of Long Island earns to\nbe christened -Smlthtown.\" ..\nSack In d\u00bb mid-nth century,\nBlohard Smith, ma of the .early settlers, aroused :ho curiosity of nelgh-\noors and Indians when he began raia-\nng oattle. Gradually, as his hen)\n-traw, Smith became eager to add more\nand to his farm. The .surrounding\narea was owned by Indians ana none\nof them cared to sell their precious\nacreage. One profit-minded chief,\nhowever, hod a plan.\nIf smith could rids ono -f Us bulls\n\"from sun to sun,\" ha could keep as\n-Such land aa he could'cover In this\nseemingly Impossible trip) The Indian\nand Smith laughed at the bargain, but\nthat night Smith grew more and more\nserious-a* he thought It over. Duf lng\ntha following weeks he trained one ot\nhis bulls and,accustomed the animal\n_> a rider. Then ho called in his In-\nUan friend. Tho bargain, the redskin agreed, was stUl on.\nCalmly, Smith mounted the doolie\nbun. Off they sped, tha Indian In\nJiost pursuit. Then, tha hugs beast\nand his rider wore lost from sight.\nThe Indian, puzzled, called on his\nfriends to help him, Smith, meanwhile, woo speeding along, pausing at\nintervals to rest hlmsolf and tho bull\nBy sundown be had covered ten\nsquare miles\u2014and won his tltlo to ths\ntract. Whit did ths natives call him\nattar *h\u00bbVt Tou guessed lt-rSuii\nSmlthi\nCopjrUhl, IIS J. Ill- tart -MM ttUaa* US\nTHANKS!  Helen J.iwle.ikl,  Ucuit\nvoile-, Ni* Yolk.   -,;\/\nSeaS la vwr licit lo \"Whirs On Sorth,\ncore ol Mill newipopir.\nRenew Campaign\nAgainst Rising\nTraffic Mishaps\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A renewed\ncampaign against the rising toil of\ntraffic mishaps was announced\nThursday by Attorney-General\nRobert Bonner.       *\nHe announced the formation of a\nfederation of traffic safety councils under\" government sponsorship\nbut operated by the B.C. Automobile Association.\nThe new organisation's objec\ntives will be:\n1. To Integrate the efforts ot\nexisting traffic safety councils in\ncommunities throughout B.C.\n2. To encourage formation ot additional traffic safety councils.\n3. To achieve uniformity In traffic safety work in the province.\nMr. Bonner's announcement followed a recent meeting with Harry\nDuker, - B.C.A.A. president, and\nFrank Bird, secretory-manager.\nThe government will work with\nthe federation by giving technical\nassistance.\nmouse, but he compared his aimless\nlite with that ot the little mouse\nand the result was in favor of ths\nmouse who had an aim ln life which\nhe had never attained.\nOn another day his plough uprooted a daisy ahd his Ode to.a\nDaisy   followed\nThou modest crimson tipped flower,\nYou met me ln an evil 'our,\nAnd noo I've cast you ln tha stoor,\nYOur 'slender stem,\nTo spare thee noo is past my poor\nYou bonnle gem.\nAnd so On\u2014\nOne   evening  while' wandering\nalong  a   woodland  path   he  was .\nstartled by a wounded hare making\nfor the wood. This, put Burns In.\nsuch a rage that he burst out with:\nTO  A  WOUNDED   HARE\n\"Inhuman   man,   curse    on   your\nbarbarous art . : ,\nAnd  blasted  be your  murderous\naiming eye.\nMey never pity soothe thee with\na sigh,\nNor ever pleasure, glad thy cruel\nheart\"\nAnd so on\u2014\nThose illustrations give us a good\nidea of the nature and character ot\nthe Scots' great poet.\nRECOGNITION COMES\nBriefly I will recall the time\nwhen he was so disappointed because his poems were not appre*\nelated. He determined to leave the\ncouuntry and managed to dispose\nof some of his poems for 1120. He\nwaa waiting for a ship to take him\nto a foreign land when he received\na message from Dr. Blacklock to go\nto Edinburgh as his poems wer*\nbeing much admired and. appreciated by the nobility. He received '\n\u00a3500 for his second edition and\nstayed a few days with the idle\nrich, but he was not in his element\nand returned home.\nThe money he received was\nmostly spent In paying his father's\ndebts and. buying a small farm\nfor  himself.\nBeing a great poet Burns loved\neverything that eame within his\n\u2022cope. He mingled men, women,\nsoourlng   mountains   and   glens,\nwoods and burnt, the flowers of\nthe field and all the wild life of\nthe countryside. All these he has\n. demonstrated In hit work In alluring and  passionate  language,\nHe waa a past matter In giving\nhit poems a lilt and a special lilt\nwhen a lady was the subject\nHe was a true son of the muses\nand in his brilliant though short\ncareer he poured forth song after\nsong ln emotional tenderness that\nmade him immortal.\nIt was a glorious humanity and he\nwas its Inspired mouthpiece.\nLike most of us, Burns hsd his\njoys and sorrows, but his great gifts\ncompensate for any shortcomings\nhe may have had.\nI feel sure that all Scots wish to\nthink of him as a happy man and\na man they are proud to call a\nbrother Scot. As he was happiest\nwhen behind the plough let us picture him at this task.\nWhen he comes to the end of the\nfurrow he sits on.the handle of the\nplough with all nature bursting\nwith bud and bloom while he listens\nto the melody of that songster of the\nfky, the lark, and watches the\ncrow, and peewees as they follow\nhim. There we will leave him,\nLittle did he dream of the great\nand lasting impression he was to\nmake upon . Scotland and her\npeople, an impression that will\nnever die and has insured him of\nNot only did he write about the his   title   \"The   Immortal   Bard\",\nOne al a Time Order Keeps Beer\nParlor Waiters on Steady Run\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014The usual\ncomment on the report of British\nColumbia's, liquor Inquiry commission has been that its recommendations would change drniklng habits\nin the province.\nDrinking habits are already\nchanging, far sooner than the commissioners might have guessed.\nThe report, while proposing a\ncomplete overhaul of B. C.'s liquor\ndistribution system, noted that as\nmany as five glasses of beer were\nbeing served to one person at one\ntime In some hotel beer parlors.\n\"This is sheer debauchery,\" the\nreport said,\nGENERAL PRACTICE     .\nIt has been general practice in\nB. C. for years to serve at least two\nglasses to a customer, at a time. Attorney-General Robert Bonner dug\ninto the statutes and found that the\nlaw says only one glass of beer at\na time.\nThe order went out to all beer\nparlors in the province: \"One beer\nat a time.\"\nPatrons are finding that .when\nbeer parlors are crowded the perspiring waiters can't keep up with\nthe \"one-more\" orders.\nA cartoon In the Vancouver Sun\nlength of a tavern, bearing one\nbeer aloft, as customers signal\nvainly. A sign on th<( wall says:\n\"Please do not ask for more while\nyour glass is damp,\" and one patron is saying: \"Talk about licensing more breweries in B. C. . . .\nAt this rate we won't even keep\none brewery busy.\"\nThe result Is that most drinkers\nnow are ordering one bottled beer\nat a, time. They get nearly two\nglasses from one bottle. In other\nwcrds, they can buy a 12-ounca\nbottle of beer but they can't buy\ntwo six-ounce glasses ot draught\nat one time.   :\nWaiters say they are working s\nlot .harder but selling less beer.\nThey are sending a delegation to'\nVictoria to protest the new order to\nthe government.\nNew gimmicks are already in use.\nSome persons able to get hold of an\nempty glass keep it on the table\nwhile holding their full or partly-\nfull glass under the table. The waiter Is thus constantly bringing a new\nbeer for the empty glass.\nAs the new order came in only\nthis week,.it is too early to judge\nwhether it will cut down drunken-\nshows a harried waiter racing the ness.\nB.C. Health Dept.\nAlerted to'Flu\nVICTORIA (CP) -r The provln*\nda] health department has alerted\nlocal health agencies throughout\nBritish Columbia to be on tho look*\nout for any abnormal Increases In\nInfluenza cases.    '     -\nA health department official said\nall health services have been notified to watch the situation closely.\n\"We are prepared in B. C,\" he\ndeclared. \"To date, we haven't recorded any unusual number of 'flu\ncases\u2014Just the normal-seasonal\nnumber.\"\nDonald McDonald's Missing Peg\nLeg Held Money Meant for Mother\nSYDNEY, Australia. (Reuters) -\nWanted: Donald McDonald's wooden leg. i .\nThe 58-year-old seaman, who died\nhere recently, may have used it as\na portable ban. for storing his\ncash, say his relatives in Scotland.\nThey think he diei well-heeled.\nSo, at their request, authorities\nexhumed McDOnald's\/body Frldsy,\nonly to find he had been burled\nwithout his artificial leg.\nA mortuary attendant.who .prepared the body for burial, said he\nknew Donald had a peg leg when\nhe died, but he couldn't remember\nWhat happened to it\nTo complicate matters further.\nMcDonald's landlady said he owned\ntwo wooden legs at the time of.his\ndeath.\nThe landlady, Mary Qulnn, said\nshe found one of the legs ln McDonald's home after the funeral\nand sent it to the Salvation Army.\nSorters at the army depot don't\nrecall .getting It\nMiss Qulnn said McDonald had\ntold her he still had   \u00a31800 left\nfrom damages he received in 1941.\nwhen he lost his leg in a trolleyv\naccld-mt .There is no trace of It\nHe Is Believed to have willed his\npossessions to his 84-year-old\nmother ln Scotland. But the will is\nmissing, too.\nApproximately 80 per cent of the\nBritish r-gular army is now serving overseas.\n \u25a0pilLUPl^Ji;,!.    I.   . ... !   .!.!\u25a0\n\u00a30\nQjwwmL thfi\nKOOTENAY * $pD\/dL\nBy JACK. KAVANAGH]\nKIMBERLEY\u2014JKimberley High School's curling team,;\nunder the guidance of Principal Doug Young, are at Vernon\nparticipating in the B.C. high school curling playdowns.\nNorman CaukiU's rink won -the right to represent the Kimberley school by eliminating four other rinks in a close race.\nOn the, Caukill t_|m are Dave Harrison, *-Mrd; Gerry .Ink-\n- ster, second, . and Ronnie'\nNeeve, lead.\nf The boys-have been playing to-\n' gether .as a unit, in the Kimberley\n-senior -lull league and have made\nl   fine   account   of   .themselves.\nGeorge  Noble's  rink   represented\nKimberley last year and the year\n.h-fore that young Eric Bisgrove's\nteam won the B.C. title and fln-\nirhed   second 'in   the   Dominion\n. finals. The 'spiel opened in Vernon\non Friday and tbe Dominion finals\nwill be held in Saskatoon the latter\npart, of February.\n.  \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nHigh school curling has gone\nover big in Kimberley this year\nwith 14 mixed team.. forming an\nactive league. The Kimberley Curling Club lets kfds have use of the\ni\u00bb on Wednesday afternoons- and\nSaturday mornings free, and to top\nthings off, they provide three\ncoaches, Don Morrison, Chris .Nesbltt and Ab Alley. The Selkirk\nBonsplel, scheduled to get underlay In Cranbrook on January 21,\nHas been postponed until January\n18, due to the lack of ice ln our\npeighbor city. ' .,   \u25a0,\nCranbrook is. certainly in need of\n\/artificial Ice for a'number of their\n\/intermediate hockey games In^the\nABCJ hate been cancelled when\ntheir arena was turned into a\nswimming pool.\nVernon will also play host to\nthe B.C. open 'spiel starting on\nFeb. 0. Kimberley will have good\nrepresentation at the 'spiel with\nEric Bisgrove's rink heading the\npack.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nKlmberley Rod and Gun Club\nheld Its annual meeting last Sunday afternoon and elected their\nofficers to guide them for the coming term. Jack Dean was reelected\npresident, with Syl Mararo replacing Jack Wardrope as secretary-\ntreasurer. Joe Mescho was named\nvice-president The club ' had a\nmembership of 211 last semester and\nhopes to expand to 250 members\n. this year.\n\u2022   \u00ab  '\u2022 .'\nthings are pretty quiet .in .the\nDynamiter camp at present, especially after they took two drubbings\nin the West Kootenay last weekend. \"Smiler\" Brown has his headaches with a number of his players\non the injured list\nKenny Simpson will likely be\nlost to the Dynamiters, for the\nremainder of the season. He tore\na ligament In hli knee and Is\nsporting a east and will for some\n. time to coma. Ray McNiven picked up a double eharlle-horse at\nGENERAL\nSKATING\n10:05 to 12 Noon\nthe Trail game.lest Friday and\nwas a doubtful.,starter against\nNelson here Friday. Claude Bell\nIs playing with a taped-up hip and\nBobby \u2022erimled has played the\nlast three weeks with his wrist\nIn a cast\nKlmberley Intermediates gained\nsole \"possession of first place in the\nAlberta-HC. League by trouncing\nCreston-18-5 and Fernie'8-2 last\nweek. Andy Port paces the team\nin the goal column with 19 to his\ncredit\n* * \u2022   \u2022*\nHere and There:\nDoc Livingstone, Dynamiters'\nlanky centremen, is golf pro at the\nKimberley club during the off\nseason. Dave Maslsch, the kid who\nkayoed Jack Butula two weeks\nago, will take In the Golden Gloves\ntournament staged In Vancouver\nnext month. He will fight as a\nlight middleweight\nButula will defend his crown in\nthe welterweight classic . . . Klmberley old-timers ' will challenge\nthe winner of the Nelson-Trail\nseries on a two-game total-goal\naffair. Tick Seattle, a Kimberley\nlad, scored over 100 points ln the\nhottest hockey league last year.\nHe's with Dunfermline Vikings and\nwas second, in the league scoring\nrace this season, until an Injury\nsidelined him for three weeks ,\nSpring hit its peak last Sunday\nwith oyer 200 using the ski hill.\nThe North Star ski lodge will cost\napproximately $15,000 when completed.\nThe dream ot most of the ski\nmembers is to replace their 1200\nfoot rope, tow with a modern chair\nlift\nI (.\u00ab.\u00bb\u25a0 \u00bb\nWalter Gelling, coach of the Kimberley Elks baseball team, is going\nto call a .meeting soon and line up\nthe program for the coming Summer.\nKlmberley has one of the most\nunique baseball, diamonds this side\nof Vancouver. The new park is\nlocated right in the heart ol the\ndry alongside the ice arena. The\nentire outfield was put to grass last\nSummer and the Elks used the\ndiamond at Lindsay Park.\nHockey players who can.be seen\nwearing the Elks uniforms in the\nSummer months are Red Mellor,\nClaude Bell, Buzz Mellor, Red\nSutherland, Red Mathews and Dave\nMcLay.\nlost\nMH.L LEADERS\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanding\u2014Detroit  won  20,\n11, tied 12\u201452 points.\nPoints\u2014Howe, Detroit\u201454.\nGoals\u2014Howe, Detroit\u201430.\nAssists \u2014 Hergesheimer, New\nYork; Richard, Montreal-^.\nShutouts\u2014McNeil,   Montreal\u20147.\nPenalties\u2014Lindsay, Detroit \u2014 84\nminutes.\nWINS TITLE\nMEl-EtoURNE (Reuters) \u2014Frank\nJohnson of Manchester, England,\ntonight won the British Empire\nlightweight boxing title by beating Frankie Flanrtery, Australian\nchampion, on a technical knockout\nin the 10th round.\n*   SUNDAY\n3 to S p.m.\nBring Mom and Dad and\nGRANPFA, TOO\nTONITE\n8 p*m\u00ab\nDynamiters Lace Leafs 7-3\nDALE ANDERSON\nNelson Maple Leafs\nTRAIL SMOKE EATERS\nvs.\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\nTickets on Sole Saturday\nKootenay Stationers \u2014 10 to 5,\nCivic Centre, Saturday, 7 p.m.\nFREE PARKING\nON BALL GROUNDS\nOut-of-Town Ticket Orders\u2014Phone 362\nSlay-al-Home\nyJplelfor\nTrail Women\nResults of play In the Trail Ladle-\nCurling Club during the past week\nwere: '       ,<\u25a0'    ';,  . ,-   -.  . -\u25a0\nBean feed competition: \u2022\nPresidents vs vice-presidents:\nPollock 8, Klngwell 4,       \u25a0>\nPotter 7, LangUl 8,;     -\nMurphy 7, Milburn 7,\nJones 4, Pattullo 10,\nLyon 10, Mondor 8,       \u25a0 ...\nBuckna >5, Milburn 10, r\nAlcock 8, Graham 4.\nLauenep competition:\nAlcock 7, Graham 6, '\nJoneS 7, Klngwell 8,\nLangill 10, Lyon 3,   .\nMilburn 3, Mondor 10.\nDraws follow:\nMonday, Lauener competition:\nMurphy vs Pattullo, Pollock vs\nPotter, Buckna vs Alcock, King-\nwell vs Langill.'    .     ,   \u25a0\u25a0\nTuesday\u2014Lyon vs Milburn, M0n-\nwell\nOn Thursday and Friday of next\nweek a stay-at-home 'spiel will be\nheld by the members of the club\nPattullo vs Pollock, Alcock vs King-\ndor vs Murphy! Graham vs Jones,\nwho are not attending the Kootenay ,Ladles Curling Association\nBonsplel being, held in Nelson on\nThursday, Friday and Saturday.\nCreston Bolsters\nDykes Against\nJaycee Horde\nWhen the Creston hockey team\ntakes on the Nelson Jaycees of the\nCommercial League In Creator, this\nweekend they will be pitted against\nthe toughest band of veterans they\nhave ever encountered. You have\nthe word of the Jaycees' head man\nfoT that.\nThe Jaycees' forwardg definitely\nlive up to their names as high\nscorers, for if they don't get the\npuck in the opponents' net they\nmake up for it by pushing it past\ntoelr own star goalie, \"Turk',' Jor-\ngenson. Their defence is a little\none-sided, but that is due -to \"Detour\" Morgan waving the onrush-\nlng forwards to the other side of\nthe rink were \"Wick\" Wicken and\n\"Rollobor Gorsllne take care of\nthem. Their first line is very strong\nas \"Boom Boom\" Black and \"Teeter\"\nOlson see'to it that \"Rap-'em-In\"\nJamieson gets, that disc, and he is\nalways good for a couple of trips\na game. The second line of \"San\nPan\" Boates, \"Rudolph\" Peloso, and\n\"Sax\" Mclvor are a great checking\ntrio, In fact they're so good at it\nthat they have the job of checking\nall baggage while on a trip. The\nthird and last .line of \"Fireball\"\nNedelec, \"Rickef ' Brown, and\n\"Sausage\" Gay, are well known\naround their home league as the\nwizards of the blades. They can\nskate faster away from the referee\nthan any other player in the league.\nWith such a tough aggregation\nmaking the trip, Coach \"Black Jack\"\nMqLoughlin has decided to take the\ntrainer, \"Bunny\" LeMolgne, along.\nHe is the only man on the squad\ncapable of keeping the boys in top\nshape. .   ,\nKIMBERLEY - Klmberley Dy-\nnamiters'qut loose with a four-goal\nscoring outburst Friday night to\ntrim Nelson Maple, Loaf. 7-3 before a large crowd.\nThe WIHL game Was . evenly\nfought until the lasf period when\nDynamiters threw defensive hockey In the ashcon to send five man\nganging attacks up the ice to make\nthings hot for'Rodzinyak.\nBoth coaches had to shuffle their\nlines around with Herb Lovett and\nlied Koehle missing from the, Nelson lineup and Dynamiters playing\nwithout   Ray   McNiven;'   Bobby\nSchmied apd Ken Simpson, all out\nwith Irijur'ies. y '-'   ..'^':\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   Ernie  Ruml  suffered  a  nasty\n.   cut below the right eye 'late In\nthe final period and was removSd\nto , the' hospital   by   ambulance:\nThe eye was not-Injured, but the\nNelson  rookie  will   be  missing\nfrcm the Leaf lineup, for some\n.time. --'.'. '\nNelson served \"eight of the 14\ncalled penalties. '\nJones and Kavanagh both scored\ndoubles for the home crew.\nBill Jones scored the only goal\nof the initial period on a slap shot\nfrom the bluellne. Then he sent\nKimberley two up at the 17:18 mark\nof the second period on en identical\nshot\ni Haldane took advantage of a\npenalty to Doc LivlngBtoneT. and\nmade no mistake in rapping in a\nclose shOt from Mctay's doorstep,\nThirty seconds later Jerry Barre\nscored a picture goal with Claude\nBell engineering! the play, Nell\nMcClenaghan picked an opening\nminute later to close the gap to\n3-2 arid close the second period\nscoring, ,\nBuck Kavanagh slammed In two\ngoals .within the seven minutes of\nthe opening \u00abof the third canto to\npractically sew up tho contest\nJohnson and Barre added insurance markers with Fritz-; Koehle\nclosing the' soorlng.book with only'\na second remaining.\nLineups:\nKlmberley \u2014 Goal, McLay;'' defence, Johnson! Banting, Tatchell;\nJones; forwards, B.. Mellor, Hockley,\"- Kavanaghr Larter,( Barre, Bell,\nLivingstone, ,R. Mellor, Yost., ..\n.'Nelson \u2014 'Goal, Rod-lnyak-; defence, Pasquallotto, Malacko, Gll-\nhoolv, Gore; forwards, Hyssop, Haldane; Lowe, F. Ktpehje\/. Smith,\nHaley, McClenaghan; Ruml, Anderson.   Y'    '\u25a0\" .       ;'   .   .  '.\n8UMMARY   \"\nFirst' period -r- 1. Kimberley,\nJones (Hockley, B. Mellor) 10:05. *\nPenalties \u2014 Lowe, .Tatchell, Yost\nBell; Pasquallotto, Anderson (2\nminutes, plus 10 minute misconduct).\nSecond period \u2014 1. Kimberley,\nJones (Livingstone) 7:18; 3. Nelson,\nHaldane (Pasquallotto, Hyssop)\n18:13; 4. Kimberley, Barre (Bell,\nLarter) 16:30; 5. Nelson, McClenaghan (Gare, F. Koehle) 18:50.\nPenalties \u2014 Anderson (2), R.\nMellor (2), Livingstone, Malacko.\nThird - period \u2014 6. Kimberley,\nKavanagh- (Johnson; Hockley) 2:38;\n7. Klmberley, Kavanagh (Tatchell,\nHockley) 7:00; 8. Kimberley, Johnson (Bell, Barre) 8:18; 8, Kimberley,\nBarre (Bell, Tatchell)- 18:08;'-.'IO.\nNelson, F. Koehle (Gilhooly) 10:59.\nPenalties\u2014Gare (2). ,\nSydney SwinglerOul in Front in\nSkating Championship Events\nBy JIM   PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON  (CP) \u2014 Sydney\nCarole 8wlngler of the Calgary\nClencce Club was announced as\nunofficial leader In women's novice  compulsory  school   figures\nand Larry. Rost of the Ice Club\nof   Greater Winnipeg  took  the\nled In men's novice school figures.\nSkaters from across the West cut\nsome fancy figures in four events\nln the opening of the two-day Western Canada figure skating championships Friday but no champion-\nSix Trail Rinks\nFor'Spiel Here\nTRAIL\u2014Six Trail rinks have entered the annual'Kootenay Ladies'\nBonsplel which opens in Nelson\nThursday. January 28., .-,..-\nIncluded in this year's entries is\nthe Graham foursome, winner of\nthe Nelson Cup ln Creston last year,\nand Mrs. Ink's quartet, secondary\nevent winner last year, Seven rink-\nattended last year's bonsplel with\nfive copping prizes., Mrs. Pattullo\nwas runnerup in the Nelson Cup\ncompetition while the Jones rink\ntook. second place honors in the\nRossiand Cup event The 1852 consolation finalist, Mrs. Minto, will\nnot enter the 'spiel this year..\nTrail rinks planning tb enter this\nyear's bonsplel are: Mrs. Graham,\nMrs. Jones, Mrs. Milburn, Mrs.\nMurphy, Mrs. Pattullo.and Mrs. Ink.\nships were decided.\nMiss Swingler topped a field of 15\nln the women's novice event. Officials did not give any indication\nof the margin she held over club-\nmate Sheila Middleton, who was\nfollowed by Blaine Dawson, Vancouver Skating Club, and Gall Leonard and Sharon Adams, both of the\nGlencoe Club in that order.\nMiss Swingler, a former Nelsonite\nattended the Mary Rose Thacker\nslimmer skating school held in Nelson and was one of the school's star\nperformers.;'\nnight that \"Lippy\" Lrpssok would\n. . take the place ol \"San Fan\" Boates,\nFlash\u2014It was announced late last who is unable to make the trip.\nKing, Queen to Be Crowned at 2-Day\nKimberley North Star Ice Carnival\nKIMBERLEY\u2014One of the highlights of the Kimberley North Star\nFigure Skating Club's 3rd annual\nice carnival will be the crowning\nof both a king and a queen.\nAlready interest is running high\nin the race to see who the mon-\narchs of the two-day event will be,\nThe contest is being sponsored by\nthree women's- organizations in\nKimberley, The Ladies of the Eagles\nhave as their candidates Lawrence\nLowes and Gladys \"Evans, while\nMamie Roth and Gilbert Kirk are\nthe candidates for the Ladies of the\nMoose. The third group, the Ladies\nof the' Royal Purple, have as their\ncandidates Marcia Bates and Douglas Johnson.\nThe king and queen will he\ncrowned during- tha carnival February 13 and 14.\nASK FOR Scotland's Favourite Son...\nWALKER\nBORN  1820\u2014\nSTILl GOINO STRONG\nFINE OLD SCOTCH WHISKY\nDistilled,\nBlended and\nBottled in\nScotland\nContents 26J*\u00a3 oa.    \u2022 ,   vi\nJohn Walker & Sons Ltd, scotch Whisky distiuers, Kilmarnock. Scotland\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\n, Control Board or by the Government, of British Columbia.\nNo Hedge-Hopping\nAllowed for Pro\nFootball Players\nPHILADELPII-A (CP) - No\nlonger will pro football players of\nthe National Football League be\nable to Jump to a Canadian team,\nbten Jump.back ln to the U. S.\nloop. '\u2022',.'' \u25a0   '\"\u25a0' '\n' Clubi. owners amended the NFL\nconstitution Friday' to 'rule that\nhereafter a player who reports ahd\nplays In .Canada first must be\ncleared' 61 contract-jumping at a\nhearing before being permitted to\nreturn. Then he must sign ahd\nreport to his V. S. club before the\nfirst game of the season in order\nto be eligible to play that season\nlnthe.NFL.\n' This would rule out such switches as that made by George Batter-\nman in 1051 when he played a lull\nseason for, Montreal, then; after the\nlast game.there, returned to finish\nthe U. S, season with New York\nYankees;\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24,1958 \u2014 7\nLandy Draws Lane One;\nHopes for Weather Break\nPERTH, Australia (AP) -Young\nJohn Landy drew the No. 1 lane\nfor today's heralded try at the four-\nminute mile but he wes concerned\nabout another needed break \u2014 the\nweather. \u25a0'.-.. a '\u25a0 i\n\"The only .thing that can affect\nmy performance now is the weather,\" said the 22-year-old student\nwho last month ran the third fastest mile in history.' \"Every degree\nthat the temperature rises over 90'\ndegrees will pull me back just a\nlittle bit extra.\"' \u25a0\u2022-.-\nThe temperature reached' more\nthan 80 degrees Friday but cooler\nweather was forecast for today.\nLandy, timed in 4:02.1 Dec. IS at\nMelbourne and who later ran a\n4:023 mile in miserable condltlons,i|\nCLUB CHAMPS TO EMERGE FROM\nSUNDAY BADMINTON PUY HERE\nSunday afternoon will be a big\nday for the members of the Nelson Badminton Club. Finals are to\nbe played for the club championship and there is expected to be\nsome fine badminton dished up.\nIt is the feeling of many that anything can happen for last Sunday\nwhen the' tournament got under\nway two of the biggest upsets seen\nin Nelson for some seasons were\nregistered. Eddie Hearn, who has\nheld the -championship for seven\nyears, went down to defeat before\nthe smashing drives ot Stan Donaldson, and Jimmy Ball took the\nmeasure of Murray Crelghton.\nThe tournament also has another\ninteresting feature. Al Wilson advanced into the finals In the men's\nsingles B-Fllght while his son Marvin will be in the finals along with\nPeter Godfrey in the men's doubles.\nMr. Wilson also has two daughters\nplaying in the senior club and from\nreports he Can hold his own against\nany of them.\nFollowing are the finals to be\nplayed Sunday afternoon:\n\"A\" FLIGHT\nMen's singles\u2014Stan Donaldson ts\nJim BalL\nLadies' singles \u2014 Dolly Fife vs\nDorothy Thompson.\nMen's doubles\u2014Murray Crelghton\nand Eddie Hearn Vs Peter Godfrey\nand Marvin Wilson.\nLadles' doubles \u2014 Helen Wilson\nand Pat Warren vs Kay Thompson\nand Dolly Fife. '\nMixed doubles\u2014Stan Donaldson\nand Kay Thompson ys Eddie Hearn\nand Mary Hearn.\n\"\"B\" FLIGHT\nMen's singles \u2014 Norman Hughes\nvs Al Wilson.   Y   ,\nLadles' singles\u2014Alice Ronmark\nvs ^Toan Mawer.\nMen's. doubles \u2014 Jack Richards\nand Geof. Meneice vs Norm Hughes\nand Laurie Lefeaux. '  . .\nLadies' doubles\u2014Joan Mawer and\nSally Butling vs Alice Ronmark\nand Ann Bennett\nMINOR HOCKEY\nSCHEDULE\nMinor hockey leagues schedule;\nMonday, 8:00-6:00\u2014Midget Vies vs\nPats.\nWednesday, 3:00-4:00 \u2014 Maple\nBuds.\nFriday, 5:00-8:00\u2014Bantam Reps vs\nMidget Reps.'\nSaturday,-' 12:30-1:80 \u2014 Bantam\nPool; 1:30-2:30\u2014Bantam Bisons vs\nRockets; 2:30-3:30\u2014Bantam Bisons\nvs Rangers; 3:30-4:30\u2014Midget Cuba\nvs Vies; 4:30-5:30\u2014Open hockey.\nwill shoot for a world record and\nthe legendary four-minute clocking in the Australian track and\nfield championships.\nHe must moko four circuits of\nthe Leedervllle oval grass track.\nAlthough he has been accustomed\nto running on a combination dirt\ntrack, he is pleased with the condition .of.the turf surface.' . .,':\nThe present mile record is 4:01.4\nset by Sweden's Gundar Haegg ln\n1945. Arne Anderson, also of Sweden, had a 4:01.0 clocking ln 1044,\nLandy drew the No, 1 lane In the\nrace In which he will.face eight\nother contestants. The chief opposition is expected to come from .Jim\nBailey, a New South Wales speedster who won the event last year\ntp 4:16.       .      ,   .\nWind could be a big factor ln the\nrecord - attempt A good breeze\nblows in from oft tbe ocean and\nthe finishing run will be made Into\nthe-prevailing wind.'\nFour official stop watches, checked and rechecked, will clock the\nAustralian comet There will be\nhundreds of unofficial elockers\namong the thousands of spectators\nexpected for the big event,\nLandy was quietly resigned before tha race about the prospects\not a record, \"Anything .1 can do\nabout my performance has been\ndone in the pastf-few. weeks,\" ht\nsaid, - \u25a0'.,'.- >'\u25a0'    .\/\nPhone 7\nTot    ' -\n7 TAXI\n3 Comfortable\nRadio-Equipped Cab* -\nAt Your Service\nANYWHERE \u2014 ANYTIME\n1 TAW\nLOCATED IN THE\nBUS DEPOT\nGREATEST PERFORMANCE\nIN THE lOWPRICE FIELD\n120 Hp. \u00bbrury\" V-8-\nmost powerful engine in the\nlow pri-e field\u2014in Custom-\nline and Crestline model-.\n110 Hp. V-8 b Mainline.\nBuilt for Meteor by the\nworld's largest manufacturers of V-8'i. Choice\nof Mere-O-Matic Drive;\nTouch-O-Matie Overdrive\n-(boAoptta-la-e-tracc-t)\nor Standard Tr-nsmhrirm.\nMILES AHEAD VALUE WITH THE\nGREAT NEW \"WONDER RIDE\"\nYes! Canada is \"scW on the new \"M Meteor!\nAnd m wonder! Meteor for'53 offers the greatest\nvalue in the low price field I It's the ityie-ieader.-i\ndeck on tho outside .. .spacious on the task-*!\nIfs the performanee-kader, tool Meteor offers V-8\nperformance desired by more ond more CanadSans\n\u2014plus a grest new \"Wood-r^H-d.\" to provide n\nthrilling new _xperie_wtoflo_tingco__fort. Meteor\noffers exclusive features\u2014more of everything .si\nmost for yo\u00bbl Try a \"Wonder Ride\" in Ac new\n\"S3 Meteor before yon make your decision about\nBnyneweari\nB\u00a3 MllBt AFT\u00a3AO\/a\nTRY   THE \"WONDilt \u25a0'tt:t1PE..V':;:B.EFO-RE   YOU   DEtipEl\n701 Baker St.\nPhone *7\u00ab and 579\nFOR   THE    BEST   BUY   IN   A   USED    CAR... SEE   YOUR    METEOR    DEALER\n ^PPPPPT^1\nIHBiKrW^\niway\/ ^^w\u2022^\u2022^\u25a0fW^\u25a0^\u00bb^^^^^JMW,^!.'|.^^M\u25a0-yl\nJ\u00a9\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24, 1953\n\"1 PERSON-TO-PERSON WANT ADS\n\\    FOR QUICK RESULTS \/\n____\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nPOWERS\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Manning Powers of Lister, at the Creston \"Valley Hospital, Jan. 20, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nFemale Help Wanted\nOFFICE CLERK\n)   TYPIST\nSome Previous Experience\nPreferred\nGood salary and permanent position for qualifying applicant\nAPPLY\nBOX 6992, DAILY NEWS\nCANADIAN LEGION, BJ..S.L,\nBranch 87, Kimberley, B.C., requires canteen manager. Must be\nconversant with draft beer and\nmixed drinks. State salary expected. Address all correspondence to Secretary, Box 100, Kimberley, B.C. Y       ,\nSMART FEMALE CLERK WANT-\ned lor grocery store; experience\nnot necessary but preferred. Must\nbe honest. Apply Box 6848 Daily\nNews.    _________\nWANTED\u2014MIDDLE-AGED W01--\nan to care for year-old while\nmother' works. Steady eraploy-\nment. Box 9144, Dally News.\nWAITRESS WANTED \u2014 APPLY\nBowladrome.\nAGENTS WANTED\nSELLING GO.ODWEAR, ALL\nwool' Made-to-Measure clothes is\nan easy way to earn big pay each\nweek. Our new Spring line is a\ncomplete clothing store. Everything sold on a money back guar-\n' antee, with a unique selling plan,\nWe teach you how to succeed.\nHighest commissions and liberal\nFREE offer. Better write at once.\nGOODWEAR CLOTHES, Dept\n201, P.O. Box 215, Montreal,.P.O..\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nBetween:\nFrederick Morgan King\n.   ' Plaintiff,\nAnd:\n. Lester Alfred Prosser\nDefendant.\nTAKE NOTICE that anyone\nclaiming to have. any right, title\nor interest in or to, or any mortgage, charge or encumbrance\nagainst Lota 5, 15 and 16, in Block\n334,\" District Lot 528, Group 1, New\nWestminster District, according to\na' registered map or plan deposited\nin the Land Registry Office in the\nCity of Vancouver and numbered\n590 or any part thereof or to or\nto any Certificate of Title covering\nthe said property or any part thereof is hereby required to, not later\nthan the 4th day ot May, 1953, enter\nan appearance to this action to the\niRegistry of the Supreme Court of\nBritish Columbia, at the Court\nHouse, Vancouver,- and- with such\nappearance tile ai statement setting\nout such claimant's full name and\nstreet address and the grounds on\nwhich the claim is based and full\nparticulars ot such claim; otherwise\nany such claim will be deemed tq\nbe forever barred and ah order\nwill be made vesting the said property in the above-named Plaintiff\nfree and clear of any claims of\nanyone whomsoever and directing\nthe Issuance to the said Plaintiff\not a Certificate of Indefeasible Title\nto tiie said property.\nJanuary 6, 1953.\nW. B. Farris,\nChief Justice ot Supreme\nCourt ot British Columbia.\nDISTRIBUTOR WANTED \u2014 WE\nare pioneers in foliage feeding\nand have, been mfging for years\nGuaranteed Analysis Nitrogen\n\u202223%, Phosphoric Acid 21<*, Potash\n\u202217%, plus other elements. We are\nlooking for a distributor who will\ndo a job, one who is established.\nWe will furnish further information along wlto literature on request. Apply Box v8478. Daily\nNews. \u25a0 *:'':\u25a0*   ;\nRAWLEIGH PRODUCTS\nA highly respected line of Everyday Necessities. A few choice\nRural localities and large city\ndistricts available now. Write\nRawleigh's Dept A1531, Winri-\npeg, Man. \u2022\nBE A GO-GEfl'l-K \u2014 J!)6U-i-~-\nyour income-7-ell cosmetics, tonics, liniments, cough and cold\nremedies, domestic products, full\nor part time. Dealers wanted to\nyour surroundings. FAMILEX,\nDept 3,1600 Delorimier, Montreal.\nPETER IWANEK AND\nANNIE IWANLK\nFREIGHT TIME SCHEDULE NO. 1\nFor\nFREIGHT SERVICE\n\u2022   Between\nPROCTER - SUNSHINE BAY\nHARROP - CRESCENT BAY\nNELSON\nRead Down Read Up\nDaily Ex. Sta_- Daily Ex. Sun.\nA.M.\n7:30\n8:00\nPJVt.\nAr 4:00\n3:30\n3i00\n0 Lv. Procter\n2 Sunshine Bay\n8:30    5 Harrop\n9:00   18 Crescent Bay\n9:15   16 Willow Point\n9:45   20 Ar. Nelson Lv 1:45\nThe application is subjeot to toe\nconsent of toe Public Utilities Commission and that any objection may\nbe tiled with toe Superintendent\nof Motor Carrier* PtibUe Utilities\nCommission, Vancouver, B.C:\n, To business men ot Nelson, Trail\nand District:\nPlease do sot -How any credit\naccounts in my name to anyone\nwithout my personal sanction.\nSigned: W. E. Wyles,\n2250 Falls St.,\n\" \u25a0'  Nelson, B.C.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\n\"PUPPIES FOR SALE\u2014HUNTING\ncross. Phone 773-R-4.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n43. Unite, as*      8.Va_ttraot\ntwo pieces (SB. Eur.)\nofmetol        ft Describe,\n\u2666J. Rowing: as a word\nimplements 11. Relieved\nDOWN 13. Like a cake\n1. Owner ot\na vineyard\n(Bib.)-\n2. Tankei .\ncarrying\nOfl     \u2022\n3. Undivided\n4. Northeast\n(abbr.)\n5. Listen!\n6. To face east\nT. Precious\njewel\n15.' Afrikaans\n18. Of strong\nfeeling\n20. Lubricate\n24. Perched\n28. Portion\n26. A pile\n27. Headrest\n28. Kind of poem\n29. Streams\nof water\ntp. Put forth,\nMeffort\nUULJU\na_ii=i!_\nHSK-E\nJ-1Q-J\nHBQaa\nlamac\naa hhe\nHUB\n\u00ab\"_-*!'-   s\naraaar.\n\"HDD     li\n\"-[.\nHi__lllla\na,-_--j_j\nt3*__\nHtiE\n'JH-iafclt:\ni-iaaa\nHaa    a\n__*   BH\nlaauaa\n3a_.ni\".\nn..\"_l_\n\".Haa\nHHSH\n\"iSQ-J\nIMKH\n_SME.\nVMttrd-y'i Aaiwa\n83. A high  .\ntemper*\nature\nSS.Recollectloft'\n39. Anger\n40. Exclamation\n42. Cobalt (_ym,|\n\u25a0     ACROSS\n1, Midday\n5. Swine\n{.American\nauthor\n}0, Rugged\nmountain\ncrest\n12. Competent\n13. Simferopol\nisits\ncapital\n14. Spawn\noffish -\n15! Seize\nK.Postscrip*\n(abbr.)\n17, Trace\n19. The bull*\n(Inch (Enj.)\n21. Exclamation\n22. Sprint\nmonth,\n23. Bound\n34.Coin \u2022' *\n(Pen\"*\n25. Chum\n86. Petty\nquarrel\n28. Consume\n29. Music note\nsi. Monkey\nSj.Toput\nat the\nbeginnlM\n84. Mulberry\n35. Leave out\n37. Evening\n(poet,)\n58. An ln<\nflrmaryeohi\nnected with\na hospital\n40. Affirm\n4t Mohammedan bible\n\u00ab. Flintlike\nWck'\nDAfltf mOTOQUO\u00bbI_~He-<A how to work Hit\nAXI-DLBAAXR\n\".LONGFELLOW\nOhe letter simply stands for another. In this exempts A te useS\n(or the three L'e, X for the two O's, etc. tingle Utters, apos\u00bb\ntrophies, the length end formation of tha words M* all hint*\nEs-h day ilw code letters ere different. i\nAtyptef^tjuMtat\n\u00bb   XBNNXK   WX\u00bbW\u00bbK   ti   im H.\u00ab\n\u2022KRDVMNMC. r* XBVMN RKO XBSN.\nBKO OXXRWOCM RKO ORBX~v*l*t\u00abrft\nm\nT*\nr\n*\n^A\nT\nr\n\\\nV\ni\n9\n'^\niff\nH\nw\n&\n%\nI-\nir;\ni\n\\i\n1\n16\nw\n>u\nI\nA\ni-\n_i\n%\n__\n1\n_!\n1\n%\n\u00bb;\nl\n2?\n^\/A\n%\n-\u2666'\nn\n%\nii\na\u00bb\nSO\nfr\n%\nJit\nw\nCj\n3\u00bb\n36\n\u25a0\ni\n*i\nw\n-\ni\n40\nw\n\u2022\nt\n4X\n'4\n4V\"\n%\n44\n\\\nYWterdey'l\nWOW\nKAROY\nitoquotet WSBNSB COMBS SOLAGE? NOT\n- ,T K DOWC.  Sfet&RMa\n*%wmm w tern 9mms snmm\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nAVAILABLE FOR HIRE\nONE-YARD CRAWLER\nFRONT END LOADER\nExcavating and Loading\nby Contract Or Hour.;,\nPhone 1030 or 1457rb, N.lson\nHigh Efficiency.      '\nINSULATION\nExpertly installed.\nEasy terms. Guaranteed results.\nPhone 1683 for estimates.\nEXCAVATING, ALSO PLUG AND\nfeather work by hand in cellars.\nPhone 96-L-2. '\nACCOUNTANT CAN HANDLE A\nfew private accounts. C. A. Mel-\nchers, Hume Hotel.\nELDERLY LADY WILL CARE FOR\nchildren any hour of day or eve\nning. Phone^-009-L.\nFOR YOUR PRUNING NEEDS \u2014\nPhone 1151-L.\nPERSONAL\nMADDENING ITCH BANISHED IN\na few minutes. Athlete's Foot\nRingworm, and other skin irritations are quickly relieved with\nEllk's Eczema Ointment No. 5!\nItching stops soon after applica.\ntion, redness and burniing Sub.\nsides, skto heals rapidly. $1.50,\n$2.50.\nGet it from your druggist or trom\n\"Elik's Medicine Co,\" Dept NN,\nSaskatoon, Sask.\nQUIT j CIGARETTES EASILV AS\nthousands of others have; done.\nUse Tobacco Eliminator, a seven-\nday scientific treatment that\nquickly eliminates oil1 craving for\ntobacco'. For free booklet write\nC. W- King Pharmacal Ltd, Box\n673, London, Ont\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nP.O. BOX 388, NELSON, B.C.\nWAWANE-A MUTUAL -'IKE 1N-\nsurahce Co, D. L. Kerr, Agent\nfi,ME_t IfttWlllL, OPPbSll'l- CM.\nDepot Clean rooms and reasonable rates, Vancouver, B.C\nRENTALS\nWANtED TO RENT rr FOUR OR\nfive room house by Kootenay\nValley milk man, wlto one baby.\nFairview route, Phone 743-L-3.\nWANTEp TO RENT \u2014 FAMILY,\nhome On permanent basis, by\ntelephone employee; considerate\ntenants. Phone 1714-L.-\nWANB-D 'IMMEDIATELY -r-_\"UR-\nnished housekeeping room, close,\nto, by business woman. Phone\n439-Y after 6:00 p\".m.\nWANTED BY FEB. IST.t-SMABL |\nturn. apt. by young, quiet couple.\nNo   children.   Apply   Box   9110,\nNelson Daily News.'\nFOR RENT - HOUSEK-__3?Ef3\nrooms with general heat Phone\nNorth Shore Motel,' 387-1-4.  1\nHEATED BEDROOM \u2014 GENT\nman preferred. Phone 803-X I\ntec 5.   . ,   .;..\u25a0'\nROOM VACANT FOR YOUNG\nbusiness man. 501 Cedar Street\nPhone 1392-X.\nOFFICE SPACE FOR RENT'\nApply Room 206 Johnson Bloc)\nPhone 1867.      '    \u2022'i\nWANTED BX _'EB. 15'M-\nor four-room apt-Heat and turn-\n\u2022Ished. Bbx 7863, baily Newa.     ' \\\nFOR RENT \u2014 LOWER HALF OF \\\nhouse, Apply 52 Ymir Road.    \u25a0\nBUSINESS AND>\u2022 \"\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES ,\nE W   WIDDOWSON & CO, AS*\naayers. 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nB.  S.   ELMES.   ROSSIAND,  B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Rep.\nBULLDOZING; TRUCK HAULING\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAILING,\nsand and gravel. Day, hour or\ncontract H. Harrop, Phone 117,\nENGINEER8 AND 8URVEV0R8\nBbVt) (..AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer,\nMACHINI8T8\nBENNETTS j__5_-_Ep\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and,\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593. 324 Vernon Street\n-     ON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... ibw onthe mai.\n(Padtle Standard Time)\nSATURDAY,\n7:05-Bre-kfa~t with Boats\n7:15\u2014Sports Page.\n'7:20\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n.7:30-News '\n7:35\u2014Breakfast With Boat!\n8:00\u2014News       ,-\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores *\n8:30\u2014Second Cup of Coffee\n8:55\u2014Sports Corner .\n9:00\u2014Western Roundup\n9115\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club i\"\n9:45\u2014Saddle Serenade\n10:00\u2014Children's Theatre\n-0:30\u2014Notice. Board\n10:45\u2014News     \u00bb\n10:55\u2014Weather\nJANUARY 24, 1953    ;\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:30\u2014Musical Reveries.       . ,.\n3:00\u2014News \"' :\n3:10\u2014Old. Country Sports\n3:80\u2014Dixie' and Ja_is\n4:00\u2014Joun Fisher\n4:15\u2014Sports College\n4:30\u2014Western Trails;\n4:45\u2014Paclfia New*.   Y - \"\u25a0:\u25a0-'\u2022'.\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament 1\n5:00\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014N.H.L. Hockey'\n8:00\u2014Saturday Special-\n8:30\u2014WIHL Hockey\n10:00\u2014News   .   .', \u25a0'.\".\n10:15\u2014Saturday Special\n10:45\u2014Sports Roundup\n11:00\u2014Around toe Town\nSUNDAY\/JANUARY 25, 1951\n9:00\u2014British News\n'9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C Gardener\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014Way of the Spirit .\n11:00\u2014Trinity Church>   ,\n12:00\u2014Symphony Orch.\n1:80\u2014Critically Speaking\n-2:00\u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarns\n2:30\u2014Three Men in a Boat\n3:00\u2014News      _Y\n3:05\u2014Ask toe Weather Man\n3:12\u2014Weather\n3:15\u2014U. N, on Record\n3:30\u2014Musicale\n4:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n4:15\u2014Here's Health\n4:30\u2014Chamber Musie '\n5:00\u2014Hour ot St Francis\n5:15\u2014Longtaes Musicale\n5:30\u2014Guy Lombardo\n6:00\u2014Stale 58\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Salvation Army\n8:00\u2014Comedy Time\n9:00\u2014Organ Reveries\n9:30\u2014Mystery Program\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00-\"NEWS\" Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS*\n830\u2014Sunday Morning Recital\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9;15\u2014Mainly About Books\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C Gardner\nlOilS^-Just Mary\n10:30-Way ot the Spirit\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n11:30\u2014Religious Period     .\n12:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n20. \u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarn's\n2:30\u2014Jake and The Kid\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Asi: the Weatherman\n3:12\u2014Weather Forecast\n8:15\u2014U. N. on the Record\n.    (Pacific Standard Time)\nSUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1953\n8:30\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n4:30\u2014Chamber Musie\n5:00\u2014Sunday Chorale\n5:80\u2014Little Symphonies\n'6:00-T_|tage 58\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n8.00\u2014Comedy Time\n9:00\u2014de Rimahoczy Quartet\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hour\n10:00-News\n10:15\u2014Talk\nm:30-Recital\n11:00\u2014Collectors Items\n11:57\u2014News\n12:00\u2014News\nMONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1953\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Miisical Minutes       V\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotions\n. 7:55\u2014March Past '.\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Harmony House\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:-5-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase \/\n12:30\u2014B.C.   Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to,One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Easy Listening\n3:00-rBrave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Musical Program\n3:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n4:15\u2014Road Show\n4:30\u2014The Valley of Seven Sisteri\n4:45\u2014News\n4:55-Spotlight\n5:00\u2014Rawhide\n5:30\u2014London Studio Concert\n6:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte\n8:00\u2014Fireside Singers\n8:18\u2014Symphony -Orch.\n9:00\u2014Farm Forum\n9:30-Here's Juliette\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:80\u2014The Chase\n__H\n ^mww^m\n\u25a0^^f^SPgiSP\nPERSONTO'PFRSON WANT AGS\nFOR QUICK RFSULFS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Clgssltled Adi\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALI\nFOR\n-\"QUICK\n; :    SALE\nat sacrifice price\n$9500\n\"MUST BE CASH\nKNOWN.ASTHE\nPASSMORE STQRE\nand\nSERVICE STATION\nBuildings, stock, fixtures,'\n-i    gas pumps, all goes.\n5-room house, store adjoined.\nService station 24|x36'.\nGarage 18'x24f, woodshed,\netc. .\nWater piped In.\nNew modern school, 100 yds-.\nBuildings Alone Worth More.\nReason for Sale: Illness.\nPLEASE PHONE BETWEEN\n8 A.M. TILL 6 P.M.\nOR COME AND SEE\nHO LETTEBS ANSWERED\nmm fnrrrr i\u2014r -\u25a0* - ----- ---\u2022***\u2022*\nMACHIN-RY\nKOHLER\nELECTRIC\nFOR SALE\nNEW BUNGALOW\n% Bedrooms. Shower Bath.\nSome Terms.\n$7650\nComfortable home on two centrally located lots. While this\nis an older type home it has a\ngood stone and cement foundation, cement floor in basement,\nfurnace, There la revenue trom\n\u2022 housekeeping suite ot $30.00\nand three bedrooms upstairs\nfrom which good revenue could\nbe obtained, as this residence\nis so well located for all schools.\n: Deal requires about $2600 down\nand balance at S40.00 a month\nand_ .interest, \u00bb%. \u2022 $6500\nFull price ...-. *u?*.r\n1 BEDROOM HOUSE   -\nOn One-Half Acre on Highway.\nSix-Mile, North Shore.\n$4850 ,\nSMALL STORE AND\nLIVING QUARTERS\n1 Mile South of Nelson.\n$3900\nAnd Stock.\nWa have Two Good Listings for\noccupancy in the Spring. Good\nlocations and substantia-nomas.\nTRIPLEX\nExcellent Property.\n$14,000\n1 BEDROOM HOUSE\nUnfinished, In Fairview.\nBeautiful Ideation.    '\n$4500\n\/GOOD BUILDING SITE\n(0x120. Fairview, Sixth Street.\n$1050\nTerms as low as\" $400 down.\nC.WeAppleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nEstablished 40 Years\n382 BAKER ST. - PHONE 289\nBox 28 Nelson. B.C,\n*,,,fy*\nMAKE\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES\nLTD.\nOur Insurance\nAgent\nPhone 135    554 Ward St.\n'-\/        M. B. Ryalfs, Mjr.\nMODERN\nBUNGALOW\nCentrally located on Wi lots.\nPqrt basement, furr-o.ee.\nCASH $5500\nP. E.-Poulin\nPhone 70\nP.O. Box 130\n(Continued in Next Column)\nSOLE SUPPLY\nfor\nFarms, Cabins, Sawmills,\n.      Mines, Logging and\nConstruction Camps\n. PORTABLE UNITS\nfor\nCarpenters,  Meechanics,\nMovie Projectors, Fire\nTrucks, Contractors    ,\nEMERGENCY STAND BY\nwhen central station fail*\nautomatically cut in\nHospitals, Radio Stations, \u2022\nPublic Buildings, etc.\nSizes range from 350 Watt\nto 15 KW. Let us make'a\nrecommendation and\nestimate\nNo obligation\nTRACTOR\n& Equipment Co. Ltd;\nPhone 930   ,        Box T19\nNELSON, B.C.\nRamp Body and\nFender Works\nDEALERS TOR\nBRADEN and TULSA\nTRUCK WINCHES\nFOR EVERY APPLICATION\nI to SO Tons Capacity\nNelson, B.C.,.\nPhone 165 -? 556 Josephine St\nPRICES ON APPLlCAtiON\nNATIONAL MAG-ONERS CO.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AMD -\nCONTftACrORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1, BO.\n2 PORTABLE SAWMILLS, 1 EDG-\ner, 1 GMC Diesel power unit, rebuilt, 2 planers, 1 cat, 100 h.p.;\n1 55 h.p. with belt pulley drives.\nBayet Equipment Company,\nCranbrook, phone 80.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIfl\nye\u00abr from, the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm. Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks, New Hsmpshires and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request.\n300 NEW HAMPSHIffc PULLET\nchicks available arid ready tor\nshipment January 26th at $36.0.\nper 100. Appleby Poultry Farm,\nMlsslonj.B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\n2 GIRLS DESIRE ROOM AND\nboard. Aj>fuy Box 8460, ..Dally\nNews.\nWILL 6AR-! FOR CHILD OF\nschool age in my home. Ph. 302-X.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE OR RENT. EIGHT\n_i>il_s West of Nelson on highway:\n20 acres; two-room dwelling; excellent location tor roadside business. Rent $20.00 month. Phone\n2847 or write A A. L.mbert Kin*\nnaird. B.C.\ntbk 'SAt-f-i-ftOb-. HOtjSk 4\nbedrooms, 1 combination kitchen\nand l-vihg room; lights and water.\n'Completely finished. $2000.00, dr\nreasonable offer. iW miles from\nSalmo on airport road. Apply or\nWrite Don Bracken, Salmo.\n\u2022r-SStofcrWAL i-OtfS tOl. SALE\nIn Salmo, all high, dry and level.\nClose to store and school. Cash\nor terms. Clew titles issued Immediately. R. H. Street, Salmo,\nB.C.\nfo^AT_f=SSu^rSN~SS_5_I\nlot, excellent location, close to\nBiker St. Needs time alterations.\nFull price $4500, with down pay*\nment of $-500 Phone 206-L-3.\nWANTED-HOUSE WITH ACR_\"-\nage to be purchased under VLA.\nPhOne 401-X-2, or apply to Box\n-J13, Daily News,\nFOR sAL-5 - iO-ACR*. .\"ARM #J\nVallican. Good buildings, good\nirrlgotibn. Apply Box 8464, Daily\nNews,\nFOR SALE OR RENT-4-ROOMED\nhouse on main road at Kinnaird.\nApply BOX 0120, Dally News.\n'W-.UU ii ii i u hi in i'i    i im m. . i  'I'n\nAUTOMptlVl\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nn*m*\u00bba*at*\u00bb**ma#**.\nEN ROUTE:\nNew ;;\nCarload\nOrder Now\nfor Jan. 28\nDelivery\nIMMEDIATE   DELIVERY\n. 'on  '\nNew Consul, Sedan '\n'    THE FINEST    ...\nUsed Cars\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Studebaker Starlight\nCoupe'\n1952 Prefect Sedan\n1951 Prefect Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan-\n1951 Austin.Sedan\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n1949. Ford Coach\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1949 Meteor Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1948 Pontiac Sedan\n1947 Monarch Sedan'\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1946 Ford Sedan ';-.\n1940 Dodge Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan        y .\nUSED CAR      ;\nCLEARANCE\n1938 Chrysler Sedan, $200\n.1938 Ford Coach, $100\n'1936 Ford Pickup, $250\n.1934 Plymouth Sedan, $1Q0\n1933 Buick Sedan, $75 ';\nUSED TRUCK\nBARGAJN-v\n1952 Thames PicHup  ;\n1950 Fargol-fon, \\* '. .,\n1949 Thames Pane!\n1949 Stgdebokei'.PI-kyp\n1947 Ford Pickup\n1946 Ford Pickup p\nel Biierge\n.'Motors-'\nVernon St.' Phone 74\n.'.    Nelson   .\nFORD - MONARCH\nSALES AND SERVICE\nClearance\nGood Units      \"\nBargain Prices\n1950 Hillman Sedan\n1941 Buick Sedan\n1937 Dodge Sedan\n1934 Chevrolet 2-Door '\nTRUCKS    .'\u25a0\nI        j\n1951 Studebaker V4-.T6n\n1950 Studebaker V_*Ton\n1941 Chievrolet %-Tan\n'    SPECIAL\nLast of 1952 Stock\n1 STUDEBAKER CHAMPI6N\n'2-DOOR SEDAN   ' i\nComplete with'accessories\nBEFOP\nSERVICE\nUMITgD    :V;>\n213 Baker St.    Phbhe 1234\nNelson, B. C.\nss\n\\*o*m^****m*0*\u00bb*\u00bb*mtm\nWILLYS JEEP, COMPLETB WKtB\nhydraulic hoist, 12\" plows, coll\n.spring cultivator. P.T.O. and governor; all in first class condition.\nPrice; $1509.00 Terms. H. D. Bar-\ngery, Nakusp, B.C.\n.    AUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nv (Continued)\nNew 1953\nSomersets\noh hand,for\nIMMEDIATE\nDELIVERY\nChoice of Three Colors:\nBlack, Seal Grey, Beige\n1953 Austin CJountryman.\n195& Austin Panel\n195,3 Austin Light Delivery\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Meteor Fordor\n1951 Plymouth Sedan\n1951 Ford Tudor.\n1949 Chrysler Windsor\n1949 Ford Fordor\n1948 Oldsmobile Hydra-\nmo. ic\n1947 Frazer Sedan\n1947 DeSoto Sedan    x\n1-946 Ford.Fordor\n1942 Chevrolet Couoe,,.\n1940 Studebaker Coupe ,-.\n1939 Poritldp i Sedan\n1938 Oldsmobile .Sedan\nSPECIAL\n1947 Willys Station Wagon\n.Y-:'-:v $775-     'U   '.'\n1952 Austin Somerset.\n1951 Austin Devwi   Y-Y\n1950j Auistin Deybn      '\n1949 Austin Devon'\n195Q Morris Oxford\n1949 Hillman Minx\n1950 Morris Minor\n1951 Austin Panel      <\n1-950;Austin Panel    \u2022\n1951. Austin Countrymen v\n1949 Dodge 3\/i-Ton\n1946 Mercury 3-Tbn     .:\nHoist and Box\n1939 Ford Sedan Delivery\nCASH FOR t-ATE MODEL\n'\u2022;''-'\":y CARS'   iif ';'\u25a0\u25a0:,\nTERMS ancf TRADES\nMOTORS\n803 Baker St.    Phone 1135\nV   NIliON.B C.\nSCOTT'S Tire Shop\nNEW LOCATION\n509 Lake St,    Phone 1122\nVtil \"tan-tog;-* -te-X. ending .\n'\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\">< TraoUoni-int\nNew and Used Tires     -\nTRACTORS ON RUBBER 5- MAS-\nsey Harris 575; John Deere 625;\nJohn Deere 605; Allis Chalmers,\n725. MarkoH's Store. Slocan Park\n*AMT-3----iA'i___Ri bOx Io 52\napproximately 4 ft. by 6 ft. Phone\n73-R, Kaslo.\n-.AVE VOU*' __A<_Ht-N4 'ta\nGOOD REPAIR FOR SPRING\nComplete overhauls, accessories, ate.\nAll work guaranteed.\n\"The Shop ot Friendly Sfcrvlee''\nKOOTENAY MOTOBCYCL*\"\nSALES AND SERVICE\nBox 850 \u2014 Phone 8601 \u2014 Castlegar\negai\nm\n... fall 'Ok 6WAJM- 7rmCft\n$t. Paul hoist with dump box, 5-\nyard. Value. 4 good grade 8..5X-.\ntire*. -W; O. Btnnett, Grand fas*\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MASKST PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron, Steel, brass, copper,\nlead,'etc Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd, 350 Prior St., Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Peclilo 6357:\n-HiP t)5 V6im\"6CR^P ttef-X\nor Iron. Any quantity Top price\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n016 Powell St, Vancouver,' B.C.\nenSKS fisas - 'all epsp\nand   lengths.   Kootenay   Forest\nProducts Ltd,\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR.SALE - SMALL GROCERY\nstore in good corner-location In\nTrail, B.C, App. turnover, $GO.Q00>\nper year. Living quarters concct-\ned with store; Including three\nbedrooms. Box 8735, Dally News.\n30^\nLake Ontario borders 'the United\nStates tor an- airline distance of\n148 miles.\n-j\u2014\u2014'\n(Continued In ttttt Column)     Buy. Belli Trade the Classified Way\nMR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nm \u2022** \u2022\u00bb'*m*0'a**i*^**t>*tr\nAVAILABLE FOR \\\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n(mm\ny-S$1EI_\nLOCKfiRS\n12x18x72 In triple, double\nor single banks.' Heavy 18-\ngaugo, steel construction.\nShelf Inside with rod and 2\nhooks below. Door fully reinforced, Electric-welded\nJoints throughput.. Doors\nvented top and bottom,\nflat key lock with two. keys.\n3-inch legs. Also multiple\nbox lockers ^and wardrobe\nlockers.   ,   )   '\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nSelkirks\nEquipment .\nani^j Supply Co., Ltd.\nPhone 1690 P.O.Box 81 .\n'  ,     8.0 VERNON ST.     .\nMort Browne, Manager\n\u2022 Singer Sewing\"\nMdchirit?Co.\nElectric Portables for rent\/\n$2 per week, $6 pet morith\nDelivered and picked up\nEsfimafes given free on repairs\nNew machines from $9550 iip\nPHONE 41\nHudson Bey _-\u2014-\nInspiration .:..\u2014\u2014\nInt; Nickel ..._.-..\n\u2022Kenville *..\u2014,\nJterr Addison ........\n'Kirs-Hudson Bay\nLabrador .-\t\nLake Dufault\t\nLakeshore ..,-.-;._-.\nLeltch\nTREES,  SHRUBS AND  PLANTS\not all kinds are featured in our\nfree descriptive price list. Write\nfor your copy today, SARDIS\nNURSERIES, R.R. 3, Sardis, B.C.\ndU$-\"\u00bb-' siiilE,  CbAt Ailb\nijro6d cook-atove, douW- bed,\nchest of drawers, coffee table, end\ntable, telephone table, All prac-\ntically new, Phone 79-R, Kaslo.\nI?0R \".AtE-S'-OVT. _lb-TtM|,\ndisplay' tables, nail counters, safe,\nelectric ceiling fixtures, small\nhardware stock. McT---s Hdwe\nRblalend, Phone 109,\nuiiits, itornv sash made to order.\n\u25a0718 -Victoria Street,\nO. GOfcOFF tUMi'\nPhone 970-L.\nSflOc\nPIPE, t- FITTINGS- -* -.--l-U-S ->\n-.Sp-del low. prices. Actlvei-^rad-\n;lng Co., 935 K Cordova St, Vancouver.\ngp TO m B-S^OtWf OH \"A-X'\n.  cabinet orders received' during\nJanuary. Phone 128--L. Amoroso\nWoodworking, 518 6th igtj Nelsen.\n_' toi^'6f\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0Mkil Mr-t_-*.,Jl6T\nbaled; one Massey Har.lt and Ope'\nDomo separator. Apply. 115 Chatham Street.\nFOR SALE-THREfc-PIECE (-HES-\ntorfleld suite, good condition. \u2014\nPhoiie 813-R-l,\nFUEL SawduSt, Dtnf, mm*}\ned carload lots, Wynndel Box and\nLumber.Col Ltd,\n\u2022>ipfc;MH&bS-X^'ptt)Hfirrffi\nfixtures Columbia Trading Co.,\n902 Front Str-et Phone 1511.\nNEW'-BADIO-PHONO CqMBINA*\nttbh. Highest offer. App^ No. \"\nGrapdvlew Cabins, Nel-Dn.'\n_ii(-RdM tCWmm Afflg;-*\nWrite P.0 Box 89. Nelson., B.C\nB'oR.'.aAiB H W\u00abC \u25a0 -'iB-ffl-\ncqat, size 34,(25. Phone 1746-L.\ntilths corn' sAt*v*-i^*#6R t)va&\nrelief, Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nUSED \u25a0S__fes^R-'_---D FOB\"SSEI\n\u2014Phone 684-L. i   .\nClaislflod Advertlslno Rates: \/\n15c per lint- first insortlon and\nnon-consecutive Insertions\nlie lino por cbnsecutlve lnser-\nfort after first Insertion' j\\:\n48c line tor 6 consecutive lnser*\ntlOlU     \u25a0.''\u25a0\u25a0\u2022':\u25a0' '\u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0'(','\u25a0'.'\n$1.58 line for month (26 conse-,\ncutlve insertions). Box. hum- j\nbars lie extra. Covers eny\nnumber of insertions.   \u2022\"'-', .'\u25a0 .\nPUfiLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES..\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,:\nfirst insertion. l\u00abc per line!\n\u2022\u25a0   each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   I_?SS:\n10% FOR PROMPT PA-XmNT\n.      Subscription Retei;\n\u2022(Net Mete-Then Listed Hare)\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance       JO\nBy canter, per year ...... $15.60\nUnited Stttes, United Kingdom:\nOne. month    $ 1.25.\n\"\"\"hree months , '    3.75\nSix months .,..:..,.-...      7.50\nOne ye\u00abr \u2022 ,,.:..,\"\".   15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOn\u00bb taenth _._       1.00\nThree months ..._-      2.76\nSis months ....\u201e._._...-     5.50\nOnevye$r   5^6.00\nWhi-ro extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus potUjge.\nNEWSPAPERS SUSPENDED\nCAIRO (AP)\u2014The Egyptian government suspended two more newspapers, Al Manora and Al Wat-\nanlah', Thursday. The government\nannouncement gave no reason for\nthe action.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)  *\nMINES\nAoadla Uranium '-. ..:..__.\nAkollcho ...._.__\nAm-1 Lordcr    \u25a0,..-.\u25a0__\nAmcricon Y, K.  ..i',...\t\nAnglo Huronlan .........\nArjon..........\u201e_'v;',., ,,r\nArmistice :\u201e ,;,.,....',Y;,--.:\nAumnqu-   --.,.,.,.-.,,,.,..\nAunor ;.,,...-.,_-:-..\u2014\nBagarnnc .; '.:.-j,.,.... .\nB'rtwatof-'l.-^-,,, ;,, v,\nBase Met*]*. \u00a3,\u2014._\nBevcourt-'' \"'.':.. ;.. .'..:..\nBidgobd Klifk.\t\nBohjo   ..-'.'i\u2014'ii,'   ...\nBoymar Gold -.\u2014\u2014,\ntralorne   ...,-...\u2014~\u2014\nBr wis R. L. \u25a0;, i    ,     ,\nBre-lan   .:..\u25a0......\u201e;,;,.,,..\u25a0.,\nQUttadlseq   ;jJ....'..,.\u25a0||.-\nbuffalo Ank. :.............\nByffi Can. (....-.-\u2022--.,\u2014\nCalliman  ..-..v-^-.\u2014.\nCampbell R. L. .,.,-.\u2014.\nCariboo flold .\u201e\t\nCastle Treth. ...,.._\u2014\nCentral Patricia -__.,-\nCentral Pore,  '...^-\u2014\nCentremaque   ,*,.,\u201e.\u201e \u201e\u25a0\nChestervllle ..\u201e._.,-__--.\nChimo O. .....,..-.,\u2014.\nCoehenour- u,...:....\u201e..._.i\nCortlaurum ..\"& ... \u25a0-.-\nCons Mining & Smelt.\nConwest    .:.,.\t\nDelnlte \u2014\u2014\nDett* R. t- * ~-U,\nDomo \u2122_-___.\u2122--\nDonalda . ::..._.__.-\nDuvdy ;....~\u00bb--_~\nEast Malartlc -_\u201e\u2014..\nElder Gold ....;\u201e.,,\t\nF\"teUa  ' .....-\u2014\t\nEast Amphl :....\u00bb\u2014.....\n-\"alconbrldge- ....;,.\u25a0\u25a0-..-...\nFrobishe.,  ...__^_-_-\nGlant VeL ... :\u201e...\u201e.---_-\nGolden Manitou ._.-\u2014.\nHallnor\t\nHardrock _\u201e_.u__--_.\nHolllnger\nMacDonald ...-*\u2014-~*\u2014jji\u2014\nMacassa. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 :..-,.--_-\u2014--\u2014\nMacLeod Cock -.\u201e\u2122.-.-_\u2014\nMadien R. I* \u25a0 -\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nJV-alartlc G. F.- ,\u201e__ .-\nMining Corp. \u2122-..._.\u2014\u2014\nJ!ew Calumet -..\u201e.,,.... ,Y,.,\nStrand*  ......~t.~~\u2014.-\nNorme'tsls' -,... V...-. \u25a0\nNorth.; Cab...\u2014TV,,;Y  -r:J\nCBrlen  ..\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0. -.'\u00bb. r, ;i-~.\nOgamn i~ \u2014r~\u2014*~\nOsisko. si.--^_i --\u2014\nPamOur ,...,.. -\u2014-\n-Paymaster .'.',.\u201e.\u25a0\u25a0\u2014:\u2014\u2014\nPickle (.row \u2014*_\u2022__-_-\nPioneer\nPlacer Devel\t\nPreston E. D. --_.\nQuebec Lab ...\u2014\u2022'-\n(Jueenston ..-i~\u2014\nQuemont,,...,..._\u2014\nHoche LYL. \u2014,\u2014\nS_n'vA*tottlo\".-.\t\nShawkey ...;\u201e.......\u2014\nSh-rrltt Gordon .-\nSilvetmUWr .;.',,....-\nSllanco  .',..._.._.\nSlsco'e\nStaddcona \u2014\n-Itarratt Olsen;_.\nSteep Rock    ,_.\nSudbury Cont :_\n\u25a0Sylvanlte ...........\nT_c|t JHU-hss. \u25a0 \u2022,'\nThorhpson-Lund!\n'T'tfrblll  ,\t\nTorbrlt\nTpwagahiae' ,.\u2022\u2022\nTrans Cont Res\nUnion Mining\t\nUnitisd   '.eno ... \u2014\nUpper- Canada -'\u2022\u2014\u2014-\u2014\nVentures -., ........__\u2014\nViolarnae j .i,.'.,.\u2014-.--\u2014.\nWaite AWulet \u2014.__-\u2014\noits\nAnglo Can.  ...\u00ab-__-.\nA P Consolidated ...\nB. A. OU-'..:.;.'.*.'. ,,,..-,.'....;.-.\nCalgary. *Bnd Edmonton .\nCalmont\nCentral. Ledue \u00bb_i..,.,.-.\nChemical Research ...\nCommonwealth Pet*\nDftlhousle \u2014\nDecalta    :\u25a0\u2022,,..'.. :..\nCentral Explorers \u2014\nDel Rio ,...\u201e........'.-._-..\nEaStcrest, _.._-\nFederated Peto ,_._-._\nHighwoOd \u2014,\u2014\nHome ~\u2122_-.\nImperial OB ... ,\nInter Pete  ~\nKroy ...-...-._\nMacDougal Segur \u2014\nMid Cont. ._-\nNat. Pete  ..\u201e\t\nNew Pacalta \u2014 \u2014\nNordon   .:....,;,','.'. \u25a0\nOkalta  ..:.:...:.._._\t\nPeeifl- Pete\t\nR,oyallte \u2022;.:.\u201e\u201e -,; ,,..\nRoxana .......;,.,.___\u2014\nTower Pete .\u201e,'__\u2014\nUnited Oils  i. .\nINDUSTRIALS\nAMtlbl -..-,-?.-...'_-\nAlgoma Steel ...\nAluminum  ...:......\n31\n\u25a0 w\n13.25\n'\u2022'\u25a0 M\n.ioy\u00ab\n4*\n2.70\n'   33\n1.44\n(3\u00bb\n.01\n'\u25a0\u00bb\n.41VI\n.IB\n4.70\n.11\n3.S0\nY.l-\n.56\n.--\u25a0-\nit\n0.05\n1.95\n2.75\nl.U\n32\n.13\n-H\u00bb\n1.58\n1.4S\n41\n8100\n4.80\"\nimi\n.16-'\n20.16\n.oa*.\n.47\n2.55\n.60\n.78\n.11\n. 21.65\n7.08\n10.65\n3.30\n4.78\n.15*.\n15.35\n85.75\n.48\n44.50\n.07%\n10.50\n-1.33\n10.50\n1.18-\n8.00\n1.08,\n. 1.08\n'2.59\n1.60\n. 1.73\n14.68\n1.02\n78.00\n4.00.\n1,00\n1,03\nMl\n.69\n1.03\n.84\n1.40\n1.97\n44.00\n1.65\n.18^4\n.42\n21.00\n.14%\n2.20\n,11\n8.60\n.   1:09\n,\u25a0\u00bb\nJ5S\n,40\ni29\n8.76\n.17*4\n1.35\n2.0?.\n.18\n.24:\n1.60\n.12\n.47\n.   .19\n0.25\n1.57\n28.25\n12.00\n8.28\n3S\n20.25\n13.75\n. 2.05\n3:80\n1.27\n.   4.50-\n.     .23\n.84\n5.70\n3.30\n.10\u00ab\n6.80\n.25\n11.65\n34.23\n25.38\n1.87\n3VA\n.34\n2.87\n-MM\n| .11\n\"2.98\n11.65\n. 15.25\n:3m\n.42\n1.38\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. M, 1953 \u2014 *\nArgus,         .-.'._... !___\nAtlas St, ...__^ .\nBathurst Power .........____\nBcattic Bros.     Y.,..,,.\nBell Telephone ,..,..-,.g\nBrazilian  .:.\">':    .,}.-,'\t\nB.C. Electric pfd .-,,.\t\nB.C. Eelectric ._,' ,,,:,'\t\nB.C. J'orest      \u201e     , ,\nB.C, Packers A ....___..\nB.C. Pa-kers B ._\t\nB.C.'PoWer A \u2022 : \u2014..\nB.C. Power B ..;.....__\t\nBuilding Products .__-_\n-htrl. Steel  ...\u201e.__-__,\nBums B'. \t\nCan. Cement  :__-_\nCan. Malting  \u201e_____.\nCan. Packers A ...       . ,\nCan. Packers B '-...\u25a0\u25a0 .\nCanadian Brewr -les _\u2014_\nCanadian Canners    ~_\nCanadian Car & Fdy A _\nCan. Oil ..'. ~_\nConndion Celanese , -....\".\nCanadian Dredge    \u201e._\nCanadian Pqclflc Rly\t\nCockshutt        ;, .\u201e;...\nCons. Mining & Smelting .\nlust, Seagram. ...........\nDom. Foundries  \u201e\t\nDom, Magnesium' ...'.\u2014_\nDon, Steel & Coal B\t\nPom. Stores ......v...: \t\nDom. Ter & Chemical \u2014\nbom. Textiles .'...... '~*.\nEddy.Paper ... ...___^_\nFamous Players ...._,\u2014u.\nFenny Farmer ___\nFleet Air' ...\u201e~\u2014-_\nFprd A  --..__-_J_\t\nGatineail  *. -.\u2014\u2014\nGreat-Lakes ....-- \u25a0.,'...\u201e,\nGypsum Lime .. \u2014~\nImS-riel Oil  . .-I\".:\",,;,,,\nImp'. 'Tobacco ________\nint Nickel ...\t\nInt Pete. '. _.\nKelvlhator _-_\nLoblew A\t\nLoblaw B _ !\t\nMassey Harris  \u201e:.\nM6ht Loco  ^___\nMoore Corp. .'\u201e:._....\".\u201ei\u201e._\u201e.\nMcColl FrOntenac _uj\t\nNat, Steel Car ...J-\t\nPage I Hershey ......._.. _\nPowell, River . ,__-__\nRuss'v Industries ,..:.,.,.r.......\nSimpsons A ..... :\u2014__\nSouthern ...l .,.;\t\nSteel of Canada .';,\u2022,'.',;\u25a0-',>,\u201e-\u25a0',\nSteel, of Can. pfd _______\nStandard Paving .:____\nUnion Gas of Cen ....\t\nUnited Steel ,...,...,\u2014-~-\nWeston <3_orge ___\nWinnipeg Electric com .....\n23V.\n' 44V4\nm\n88\nU\n' im\n'^8%\n14K\n814\nm\n7%\n3\u00ab\n-OK\n80 '\n81%\n83\n33%\n.29%\n18%\n32%\n17%\n13%\n45\n80%\naivi\n15%\n32\n26\n'   14%\n13\n15%\n.14%\n40\n10%\n22%\n18%\n-21%\n128\n63%\n22\n17\n35\n'   \u00ab\u00ab%\n* *%\n44%\n-   26%\n15%\n87%\n89%\n10%\n.16%\nY25%\ni 86%\n*S7-:i.\n. 68%\n.' SS-\n' 23%\n88%\n21\n88%\n. 82%\n18%\n27\n12%\n27\n48%\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS\ninvito you to see these\noutstonding buyt.'\nCOME IN TODAY    \u2022\n1952 Plymouth\nSedan\nMileage:' 10,000. Color: Black.\nAir'Conditioner. A-l Shape.\n1949 Plyniouth\nSedan \u2022>'\nCompletely Overhauled- Coloh\n-Slue'.'Sun Visor, Air Conditioner.\n1946 Chevrolet\nSedan\n$975\nColor: Dark Blue. Heater.\nSPECIAL;\n1938 Ford Sedon, >133\n1938 Dodge \u2022Sedan, $T29\n1939 Plymouthv\ny Sedan' ','-.\nColor: IJlue. Good Shape.\n1952 Austin Sedon\n,  Ope Owner. 16,000 Miles;\n1950 Fargo Light\n- Delivery\nOne Owner. Color: Red.\n1952 Fargo Express\n\u2022 Low Mileage. Color:'Grey.\n1951 Forgo 3-Ton\nDump Body.Special Price.'\n1951 Austin\nCountryman\nMileage: 7000. A-l Shape.\n1939 Plymouth Sedan\nS349\n1936 Plymouth Sedan\nLicenced and Running Order\n\u00bb99\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\nAs Is Basis\n$129\n1936 forgo Plekup\nNew Faint\n$195\nNIAGARA\n|\\l\\ll|  MNAN   I  .:.,'-.  h  UO\n8UITE1\nPhone 1650      560 fiaker St.\n***mms*emm*1>>t**mm^>*\u00bbeimsm'\nPEEBLES\n. MOTORS\n- CHRYSLER* PLYMOil 1 *\u2022\n,FARC.OvJ.^u,^TlP,ts\nNelson\nMachinery!\nColumn\n\u2022 '\u2022'\nThe New\nPACIFIC   SLUSHMASTER\nSCRAPERS\nIn a.Wlde Range of Models From\n.400 to 2100 lbs. to Suit the '\nPower ot your Hoist- Y v\n... .r\nPACIFIC\nJAW\nCRUSHER\n:.tor.'.\/\"> '\n* Mine*    -\n\u2022 Rock PlonH       ,i\n\u2022 Quarries\n\u2022 Cement Plant*\n: \u2022 Construction Project!  >\n.   oryi   \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0'<'\/.\nALL TYPES OP\nINDUSTRIAL CRUSHING\n7;,;\u2022,:*:'\u25a0'; 5|\nNew in Stock\u2014The\n\"ROUND THE CORNER\"\n, \u25a0 SHEAVtSLOCK\n* \u2022av\u00absTlm'e: \\, v-.Y.\n* BaVes Manpower1; '-\n* Very Qulokly Paya for Itself\n'\u25a0\"'-y'-\u25a0;*\u2022;'.*..-. ^i\nFOR THI FINEST IN\nQUICK   OPENING\nSHEAVE BLOCKS\n. 1:..     ;: BUY   ' y v -\nPacific\n* SIMPLE\n\u2022 RUGGED\n\u2022 DURABLE\n' featurinjC\n* Qulok, Opening\n* Wide Threat\nIt Manganeie Steel Sheave for\n. Qiwater Strength and wear.\nit Heavy Duty Antl-Frlctlon :\nRoller Bearings ;-;\n'\";\u25a0. v.-\u2022\u25a0:.\u25a0;\u2022.', -:-'\"y,\nWe Are the Stocking,\nDealer For the Kootenayt\n\/.,; \u25a0 .'vFor.,:,':\nBritish Blue Strand\nWir. Ropes\n\u25a0\u2022.-\u25a0\u2022\/'\u2022.'\nTHE MODERN\nFIREPROOF\nWALLppARD\nSmooth, Invisible Jointi. ,\n.    Hard and Durable.'\n4 ft. wide and in length*\nof 4 to 9 feet.\nSPECIFY   STONEBORD\nON YOUR NEXT\nBUIL^NG JOB\nV \u25a0\u2022,,#\u2022,:.;''\nTHE NATIONAL\nSa\u00a3e-Line\nWIRE ROPE CLAMP\ntar  .;\n\u2022 SAFETY\n'-'\u2022 SECURITY\n\u2022 SIMPLICITY\nBe Sure to Buy\nSAFE-LINE\n);] + 4-   V\nCALL or PHONE\n18\n-\u25a0^\u00bbs\u00bbii-*\u00ab \u2022***\u2022\u2022**\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If ifs machinery you need, .\n,   consult us.\"\n214 Hall St.    Nelson, B.C.\n *m^-m.mm^m^mmm\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 24, 1953\n,\nan\ni\nINTRODUCING\n\u2022A now size of\nNOXZEMA\n3-WAYSHAVE\nThis size will sell at 40c per |or, but we have .\ninstructions to soil our first shipment at\nlit   .\nThe 3-Way Shave:\"\n1. Under lather. . . Medicated bate\n2. Brushless shave. . .Lather hot needed\n3. After shavo . . . Cooling and Soothing\nSPECIAL \u2014 NEW SIZE\n25c\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD,\nCar Plunges Off Hope-Princeton\nHighway; Five Men Drown in lake\nVITAL PRICES\n'. YORK (CP) - Spot prices:\nMd, ft Y. .14..   .\n, East St.. Louis .12%.\nWinnipeg Grain\nv.^lnifsi-Piso-'iePi \u2014 w-__-peg\ngrain ee-J-prices:\nOats: No. 1 teed, 78%.\ngBarieyi Mb.lteed,. 1.17*.\n#EAD THI CLASSIFIED DAILY\nI THOMPSON\ni      fUNfRAL HOME\n- \"Dlst-nctdve Funeral Sendee\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n. WS Kootenay St       Phone Ml,\ni        .      asss\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nY Auditors\n\u201e m Baker St Phono 2\u00bb\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n\u00a3hone 327\n676 Baker St\nJ. A. C LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING ,\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone. 141\n4  For a Better Flavor and\nTastier Home-Made Bread Try\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nfell directions on every package.\nTake a Package Home Today or\n..   I Phone 238\nI      ELLISON MILLING   .\n.'-,   4 ELEVATOR CO, LTD.\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nAccurately\n.   . Compounded i\nY   Prescriptions\nSt      -     Phone 235\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices).\nMINW\nBeaver Lodge  . _.\nBralorne .....\u201e...._-.\u201e._._\nCahusa ,. I \u25a0\u201e\nCariboo Gold.\t\nEsteUa; ...\u201e.\u201e\u201e-____\u2122.\nGolconda.\nGrandview        .\nGiant Mascot .\t\nHighland Bell ..... _\nKootenay Belle ..__-,\nPac Eastern. Go' \\ .\t\nPioneer Sold ........\t\nPremier Border. ___.\nQuatsino , .......\t\nSheep Creek _.___\t\nUtica  .....I _.\nVananda...  -',,',,;,\nWellington .........\u201e\u201e.._.\nWestern Uranium'..\t\nYale    ....\u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e..\u201e___.\nOIL8      -\nAnaconda i \t\nAnglo Canadian \u201e\t\nA P Consolidated\t\nCalmont _l\t\nCommonwealth\t\nHome _\u201e.\u201e___.\nMercury --,,, \u25a0,,\nNational Pete ,\u201e\u25a0\u201e\u201e'.'\u25a0\t\nOkalta Com .\t\nPacilic Pete _.\t\nRoyalite   .....\nVanalta   \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates  ..\nInt Brew B -...\n1.42\n4.80\n. .05H\n1.80\n\u25a0'. -77\n.20\n\u25a0'-\u00bb'\n.58\n.45\n.08\n.12\n.1.95\n,   -14\nY5S.\n1.00 ;\n.01%\n.02%\n-,,02\n4.15\n4-Y\n\u25a0 si--\n8.10\n.36\n2.10\n4.80\n11.50\n255'\n2.90\n11.00\n15.25\n\u2022SO\n20.50\n4.05\nHave the Job Done' Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHOPE. B. C. (CP) - Five Hope\ncarpenters , were drowned and a\nOxth escaped Friday when a car\nwerved to avoid a rock on the\ntrans-Canada highway' near here.\nwent out ot control and plunged\nInto 50 feet ot water in Lake ot the\nWoods,     r \u00bb\u2022'\u2022\u25a0;\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0'\/\",'.    \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0   i',\nThe victims were: Mathlos Sven*\nrod, Mass Mukaido, Zion Edward'\nSeward, Minto George Currie and\nJohn Fraser MacPhotl. AU were\nmarried.\nMatthew Offer, the driver, escaped and swam to shore.\nRCMP .said the car apparently\nswerved off the road while trying to\navoid ; a rock which had tumbled\nonto .the highway. Mukaida got\nclear of the wreck but went under\nwhile trying to swim ashore.\nThe bodies were recovered later.\nRCMP said the driver, Matthew Of-:\nter of Hope, managed to pull himself free from the car and swim\nashore. He grabbed one companion\nbut lost his grip In the icy waters.\n. Witnesses said Mukaida also got\nclear of the wreck and swam a\nshort distance before going under\/\nArtificial respiration failed to revive him, All passengers in the car\nwere en rout* .to their'Jobs at the\nPacific ftickOl\" Mines, fte lake-is\ntwo miles northeast- of here.'\nRCMP said-the e'er apparently\nstruck a rock which had tumbled\nonto the hlghwey from. \u00ab bluff\nabove. The highway Is 25 feet above\nthe lake at the point where the accident occurred.\"   Y\nHeadlights were still shining under the water as wreckers reached\nthe-scene end started salvage attempts. A light rain was falling at\nthe t|me. :.-.,-\nRADIATORS\n-.'\u2022\u25a0   CLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT ST. PHONE 63\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\n...PONTIAC \u2014 BUICK    .\nQ.M.C. TRUCK8\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\ni'j\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0PBBBB\nOur Places of Business\nWill Be Closed\nFrom 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.\nToday\nOut of Respect to the Memory\nof the Late       .,' ;  .'\nRoy Sharp . .   \u201e\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCompany Limited\nProtect Yourself\nFrom Colds Now ~\nBe Sure to Hove a Bottle of FLEURY'S\nBRONCHIAL\nin the home\n65c per 8-oz. bottle\nA reliable remedy for Coughs and Colds\nand affords prompt relief.\nPHARMACY\n503 Baker St.\nPhone 25\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014.Prices tip.\nped e little-lower. .\n. Canadian issues were mixed. Canadian Pacific and Dome Mines\nwere ahead %, International Nickel\ndropped tt,. and Distillers Seagram\nwas unchanged.-\n'TORONTO. (CP) \u2014 Prices im\nproved slightly toward the. close,\nbut industrials weakened. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 : \u25a0\n'Papers-continued weak in tho ih\ndustri'ols list but constructions ahd\nutilities were firm.,Most changes\nwere small.\nHigher-priced base metals weak\n'ened but most others gained. Chi-\nbougamau Exploration, United\nKeno, -United Asbestos, Steep Rock\nand 'Estella made good gains.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Steady to\nmixed' prices prevailed. Trading\nwas moderate. .\nUnchanged issues tare outnumbered ' gains or losses. Canadian\nCottons dropped a point to 45% fpr\nthe only large movement\nLONDON.. (Reuters) \u2014 Dome-tic\nIssues continued in favor. Prices\nimproved or were.-maintained hut\njust before the close a little surface dullness was.' apparent.\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\nMontreal Curb to\nChange Name\nMONTREAL (CP) - fhe.\u00bb\u00abA-4\nof. management - of the Montreal\ncurb market has announced a pro.\nposal to change the name of the\nmarket to Canadian stock exchange.\nThe proposal will be brought be\nfore a special meeting Feb'. 2 of\ncurb members. The Montreal curb\nmarket, which now has 540 listings,\nwas. founded in 1926 to provide\ntrading faculties for securities not\nlisted on the Montreal stock exchange. v\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Tjie cattie\nmarket at the Calgary, .stockyards\nshowed a strong undertone with\n482 cattle and calves on-offer. Butcher steers of brandable quality\nwere SO cents to $1 higher under\ngovernment support^ prioes.-There\nwas a fair demand for- cows at\nsteady prices. \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0-\u25a0\nHogs were down 25 cents a hundredweight Thursday at 22.25; sow's\nup 25 cents at 12.25; good lambs 23,.\ngood ewes 8-9. ;   .\nGood to choice butcher steers\n20.50-22; common to medium 15-\n20. Good to choice butcher heifers\n19-20.50; common to medium' 14-\n18.50. Good cows 12-13.50; common,\nto medium 10-11.75; canners and\ncutters 7-10. Good bulls. 13-14;, common to medium 11-12.50,. Good,\nstocker and feeder steers 17-19;\ncommon to medium 15-16.50. Good\nto choice veal calves 23-25; common\nto medium 18-22.50. '.\".'\"\u2022'*\nBond Prices   .\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Trading on\nMontreal bonds was quiet and\n\"firm. High'grade and provincial\nissues were firm. On the corporate\nside, Canadian Breweries common\nand Atlas Steel convertibles were\nIn demand with prices generally\nunchanged. '\u25a0\u25a0:\nProtestant Bishop\nAgainst Campaign\nBERLIN (AP) \u2014 Bishop Ott.\nDibelius, head of the Protestant\nChurch for all Germany, has refused to support a Berlin campaign\nagainst agencies, assailed by the\nCommunists as \"spy and,,terror\ngroups.\" The East Christian Democratic party had asked Dibelius to\njoin in the attack on the American\nradio station BIAS and anti-Communist underground groups.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nWinnipeg Electric  Co.  common\n60 cents Feb. 23 record Jan. 23.   ,\n-'-    T i     \u25a0\nRadios\nand\nCommercial\nRefrigeration\nSe\u00ab \/ice Shop\nNelson, B. G.\nCanadian Seeds\nHelpU.K.fo\nPlant Reserve\nVANCOUTOR (CP) - Britain is\nbuilding up a sound reserve of\nstanding timber from seeds imported from the Fac-tic coast, Dr. John\nWalton ot Glasgow reported here\nSaturday.,.\nDr. Walton said the British forestry commission is building up\na reserve by planting the-seed of\nDouglas fir, Sitka spruce and lodge-\npole pine. The first\" seeds were\nplanted, In 1922.\nThe doctor, who is Regius professor of botany at the University of\nGlasgow, is one of Britain's nine\nforestry commis-ioners,-'\nMay Alter Cases\nOTTAWA \u2022<<->.\u00bb) \u2014 A:'bb-merang\nemerged in the Commons debate\nThursday im, the Currie< report \u2022**\nagainst Progressive Conservative..\n. Col. David Croil (L\u2014Toronto\nSpadina) quoted one Progressive\nConservative member after another\nas opposing the government's proposal to send the-report on.toe\narmy works services to the C$fn*\nmons defence expenditures committee. Col. Croil is :.expected tb head\nthe-committee.\n\"fte quoted them as* .iylng this\n\"doesn't make sense.\"\nLAST YEAR'8 MOTION     . \\%\nThen he proceeded to quote t\nmotion made in the same committee last year in which Lt.*CoL -firui-\n<Ia_ Harkness (PCJ-Calgjary East)\nmoved that as soon as the Currie\nreport was available, it and its\nauthor, George S. Currie, should be\ncalled before the committee.\nWhile. Liberal members -oared\nWith; glee, Col. Croil 'recalled that\nall Progressive Conservative m_m-\nbers oi the \"cp-triidtteeYsupported\nthe motion. \/-'\u25a0--\nCol...Harknew grinned but didnt\nreply. ...     . ..\" :.:-'\u25a0 '\u25a0' .wi\n\"Tobacco Road\"\nOff Booksfalls\nVANCOUVias- (CP) \u2014 Dlstrlbu-'\ntors of a pocket edition of \"Tobacco\nRoad\" said-Friday'they have taken\nthe Erskine Caldwell novel off the\nbookstands on the advice ot elty\nprosecutor Gordon Scott   \t\nThe distributors said they were\nremoving)the edition from the\nstands \"to avoid possible prosecu-\ntion.\"; \u25a0:.,:\"\u25a0\nThe prosecutor said he has a\nnon-binding censorship arrangement between himself end two distributing firms in the city.\n'\u2022 \"Tobacco Road\" .was one of quite\na number of publications that we\nhave suggested be taken off the\nstands,\" he salt\". '\nDEADLY VIRUS\nSNUFFS OUT BABES\nTACOMA, Wash. (APi\u2014Another\ninfant died in Tacoma Thursday,\napparently victim of a .deadly virus\nthat Is threatening. to reach epidemic propprtlbns here.\n. It was the sixth death, all occurring in children under six months\nof age, in the Tacoma area within\nthe last n>onth. \/ '     \u25a0 . .\"\u25a0\nHi.' Frank James, coroner, said\n\u2022\"\"he' was .almost: pbslUve'\" ; th^t\nDavid Lef-ver was tHe victim- of\nthe same deadly combination of\nvirus pneumonia with a superimposed pneumonococclc pneumonia\nthat has claimed five other infants.\n. \"The illness is very similar to\nthe influenza epidemic during the\nFirst World War,\" Dr. James said.\nChildren under one year are particularly susceptible- because, ithey\nhaven't worked up any immunity,\nhe said, adding      .-'...      i\n\"In none of the cases has the\nchild been ill longer than two days\nbefore the death.\"     -   ' i \u25a0     . Y\nIs\nOur Business\"\nComplete supplies for Leather-\ncraft, Dresden- Painting, Petit-\nPoint, Copper Tooling, Oil Paint;\nng and many other ornfts.\nLakeside Hobby\ny \u25a0\u25a0 'Ce'nlTe''''\/\"''\"'\nCeitlegar.\" B.ti.\u25a0'.-- Phone 3381\nRelief Act Fund\nTo Pay B. C. Debts\nVICTORIA (pP)-The greet depression Is officially over,- the pro-\nvinciol cabinet decreed recently.\nThe government, going through\nfinancial records recently, found\n$200,002.50 in a. special fund, part\nof unemployment relief acts passed\nin the 'SOs.-\nThe money has been transferred\nto the consolidated sinking-fund and\nwill; be used to help pay the province's outstanding debts as the;\nconie due.   .\nSold a cabinet statement: \"The\npurpose' for which these monies\nwere borrowed no longer exists.\"\nU. K. Off iclals\nDeny \"Monty\"\nAnd Pope Rumor.\nLONDON. (AP) - Foreign office\nand> church officials Friday denied\nreports . published in Rome that\nField Marshal Viscount Montgomery is negotiating a pact between\nthe Church of England and the Vatican:\nA Foreign Office spokesman said\n\"we certainly do not know a thing\nabout it.\" A Church, of -England\nspokesman said,\"it does not even\nbegin to make sense.\"   -- >\nThe report, published in Rome's\nMomento Sera, said Montgomery\n\"reportedly has the official capacity of a secret extraordinary ambassador from the government bf\nLondon to the-Holy See!\"\nOTTAWA (CP)'\u2014The Canadian\nAssociation of Broadcasters, taking\nissue with radio regulations in. general, Friday urged the CBC to drop\nplans to compel' radio stations to\ndevote a percentage of their weekly\nbroadcast time' to Canadian programs.\nThe .association--its membership\nincludesmost,6f-the 139 non-gov-\nernment-owned radio stations\u2014said\nt^er.e h'es'been no public (demand\ntor a.CBC proposal that radio stations, use from 30 to 48 per cent\nof their tin^ for live or .recorded\nCanadian programs.\n\"Th. :t\u00ab5t- bf Whether, material\nshould be,used'br hot should be\nmerit and htit hitionality,\" said' the\nAssociation. \"This proposed control\nreeks with the narrow and bigoted\nnationalism'most of lis thought was\ndead and buried in the 20th century.\"'. \u25a0' -'\u25a0'' ;'\nViews of the association' were\noutlined In ! a 25,000-w6r4 brief\nsubmitted- at a public meeting, of\nthe .nine*inember CBC B^ard of\ngovernors. The meeting was colled\nto hear representations on a series\nof new regulations prOpo^d !by\nthe CBC, controlling body for\nradio.-  .    ',' .'\u2022. ' ,'Y.\nBASIS FOR .DI8CU88|pN\nThe regulations were- issued by\nthe CBC Oct 0 as a basis for discussion. The CBC board will decide\nwhether they should go ihtS effect\nafter it-has considered representation, of lntere-fe^ .parties,, H\nTlie CAB brief was presented by\nT. 3. Allird, '\"general managef1 of\nthe; Association. At the outset the\nbrief sa)d radio is a foraf of pub*\nllshlng \u2022 and should be subject to\nthe same laws as other publications.\nBroadcasting should.not be singled\nout for \"specific discretionary controls.\" ,~\nThe'brief contained these points:\nThe CBC should allow nqn-gov-\nernment-owned.-station- to operate\nthflr own networks. The CBC's ban\non political broadcasts fhould be\neased tb permit int-rviews, qnes-\ntion-and-answer programs, qdlz\nshoiys arid' similar program devices\ntb stimulate- interest in politics.- i\nA ban on advertising the sale\nSI stocks' and  bonds  should  be\nft-di -M \u2022.-'\u2666\" '\u25a0'.,'\u25a0 .:-.-.' -.    ,'-:  \", ; -\nCanadian churches should be included among organizations entitled\nto. use the radio to appeal for\nffinds.' '\u25a0\u25a0'< '\u25a0-     \u25a0 i-.       fJi--^   \u2022\u25a0\nProprietors pf radio stations\nshould be allowed to judge for\nthemselves whether a program\nconcerning.public health arid.dealing wlth-such matters as birth conr\ntrol, venereal disease and other\nsubjects is fit for broadcast\nMuch of thebrief \"dealt with the\nnew regulation giving the CBC\npower to regulate, the Canadian\ncontent\" of programs.    \u25a0        \t\nMORE CANADIAN TALENT\nThe regulation is In line, with a\nreebmmendationj of Hie. Massey\nCommission on arts,, letters and\nscience; The Commission 'recommended the CBC investigate \"way's\nof | ensuring that the broadcasters\nemploy more Canadian talent\nAn' appendix to the,CAB' brief\noutlined steps-taken by' iriany non-\ngovernmenl-stations to develop Canadian talent-. Seme of the' work\nincluded financial assistance to\nmusic and dramatic societies.\nChemical Fumes Seep Through Fog;\nAirports Demand Fido's Services\n\u25a0}.-'. By COLIN FROST\n. LONfiON (AP)-\u00bbonnally eesy-\ngqlng London is finally getting\nreally ril-'d up about one- of Its\n.Ibng-time Winter complaints\u2014the\ncity's famous pea-soup fogs.\nDuring the last three months,\nfour big smog' blankets, have led,\nto an estimated 600.\" depths and\nseriously crippled 'communications\nin the world's biggest capital.\nDuring one week. In December,\n\u25a0when the worst fog*1n recent memory, muffled the city, the death rate\njumped by 2000 persons\u2014more than\ndoubling the normal figure for the\nperiod.\nGRAVE8T URGENCY\nMost of the deaths have been\nattributed to bronchitis, pneumonia\n>and heart ailments touched off by\nthe fog. The government says it is\nprobing the fatalities, with \"the\ngravest urgency.\" \u25a0'\nThe fog costs big money, too.\nOn each of 18 dark days thus far\nthis Winter, the blg.\u00bb international\nairlines using. London's two main\nalrprots lost an estimated \u00a360,000\nthrough delays and diversions.\nThe squeeze on the airlines is\nso bad that they are pressing the\ngovernment which runs the airports, to bring back1 the wartime\nfog disposal' system known as\n\"Fldo.\".\nUnder the . system,  gasoline or\ndiesel oil Is set afire in blazing\nrows   alongside \u25a0 airnort  runways.\nThe heat shifts the fog.\nEXPENSIVE  BUT GOOD\n\"Fido\" is expensive, but airline\nofficials say its cost is small ln\ncomparison to their losses. \/\nPeter*'Masefleld,-boss of the nationalized British\/ European Airways  Corporation,   said:   \"A  fog\ncoals us \u00a320,000 a day. We are all\nln favor of Fldo.\" \u2022\nThe National Smoke Abatement\nSociety, a voluntary organization\nsupported by hundreds of municipalities, has called for a full-scale\ninvestigation of the togs.\nThe society has been studying\nreports of a U.S. government investigation into the 1848 smog disaster at Donore, Pa. \\\nThe'deadly smoke and fog that\ncost 19 lives in the Pennsylvania\ncity was laden with add fumes\nfrom industrial plants in the area.\nSimilar chemical .ontomination\nalso has characterized the London\nfogs. -\nThe famous diarist Samuel Pepys\nwas complaining about- London's\npea soupers back in the 17th century. King George II said at that\ntime that somebody should do\nsomething about them. Nobody has\n\u2014ryet\nRELIEF FROM\nCOLD MISERY\nHISTA-REX\n$1.00\n20 Capsules\nSold Only at\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34. Day - S07-R Night\nBOX46<r\nNo More\nIroning . . .\nB.V.D. Nylon\nTricot\nShirts\nYES! THAT'S'RIGHT!\nNO MORE IRONJNG!\nJust swish gently in\nsuds and lukewarm\nwater. . . rinse thoroughly and hang it on\na hanger. It will dry\nsmooth, crisp, and\nwrinkle-free in o short\nwhilewlthout ironing.\nIn blue, tdn, grey\nand -white.\nEmory's\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nThe United States bas a total bt\n10,796 theatres with seating capacity of 12,384,150 persons.\nChurchill Turns\n,NEW YORK (AP) :- Winston\nChurchill bundled together his papers, his paints, and his family today .and boarded the liner Queen\nM-ty for England after a West Indies vacation. \u25a0   .*\"\u25a0 .'    '\nThe prime minister, looking 'fit\nand rested, told newspaper men on\nthe gangway of the big liner:\n; ''We had a very good Journey and\npassed a pleasant fortnight in the\nsunshine \u2014 a little rest, a little\nchange.\"\nThen, smiling impishly, Churchill\nadded:     : . .\n', \"\"Hiftrik you. very much for. al-\nlowing me to inform you of these'\nimportant facts.\"\nAccompanied by Mrs. Churchill,\ntheir daughter, Mrs. Christopher\nSoames, and son-in-law.. Captain\nSpames, the prime minister landed\nat Idlewild airport about an hour\nedrlier.i-.-  \u25a0-.. ado,       '\u2022' ,',  \u201e\nWORKERS CHEER,\nIRISH BOO\nBier workers cheered him as he\ndrove up to the. dock. But. 11 pick*\nets of an organization called the\nIrish American Minute Men\u2014that\nadvocates \"Ireland for. the Irish.\"\n\u2014leered him. \u25a0\u25a0':,;  .\/\nDuring his two weeks' vacation\nin Jamaica, Churchill all but finished, three paintings\u2014two landscapes and one seascape.\nOn- his; way to the West Indie,\nhe conferred here with. President\nEisenhower before the election and\nalso visited President Truman in\nWashington.\nI\nTOKYO (Reuters)\u2014Japan's first\npost-war ' armored. corps paraded\npublicly for the first time Thursday when crews marked the end\nof their basic training. The 20 U.S.-\nbuilt light tanks which make up\nthe force will be posted to Hokkaido, japan's Northernmost island.\n\u25a0'\u25a0      ' Y .ii _-. -.- \u25a0 \u25a0 |\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n'\"'atthe', \u25a0;\"\u25a0\"\u2022\"\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street\/        Phono 14\u00ab\nYmir\nIVERY\nSaturday\nNight\nMICKEY MeEWEN\nAND HIS\n. \"MELODY MAKERS\"\n\u25a0\"..-'. -\u25a0\"\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022. '-.'*\u25a0\n*  Cdrne and Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir.\n,   .     ADMISSION 76c\nOANCiNG9Tbt\nThe room that must be above reproach .\nof gleaming beauty and sturdy\nconstruction add a touch of refinement to the home; ,;-;.\nSmart new ttyles ore now available - ;.'.'',\u25a0\nat a very moderate cost.\nCall, phone or write u\u00ab for an estimate.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& Seating cq. LtD-\n' \u2022-\u25a0:'\u25a0 ,.!.-:.--.;- >'T..\u00ab.,.EMSONrMlihi_(|er'' V-\u00ab!-''\"-;,'\"'\n351 BAKER ST. ; PHONE 666\n^^ATtswmm**^^\nWE HAVE\nFOR YOU\nAt Our Three Baker Street Locations\n2q\u00ab--2l2 \u2014 28r\nONE ONLY-      :-;'\u2022..'\/,;  ''    ;~': ^-C.'Vk    .'\n1951 Mords Minor :\nDELUXE COACH\u2014Lovely seafoam green; locks and runlike new. Heaterk defroster, low.mileage. Priced to elear.\n' ONE7dN_,Y -  .   Y- '. \u25a0      '. Y \u25a0'   . ''.'    f\n1949 Meteor Deluxe Coach\nHeater and Defrosters, Seat Covers, Winterized.\nLooks and runs like new.\nONE ONLY ' ' , _. '\/,';'-\n1948 Monarch Deluxe Sedan\nNew motor, good rubber; heater, defroster,, aeat covers.\n5 All Winterised, with knobble*.\nPONE.ONLY - <\n1947 Dodge Deluxe Sedan\nHeater, new paint, good rubber,:winterized.\nONE ONLY'  Y: ' '   ' '\n1946 Chevrolet Coach\nHeater, Defrosters, Seat Covers, Winterized, flood Rubber.\none only'       \u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: -  ]'\u25a0' \u25a0 -... \u25a0\n1940 Olds. Deluxe Coupe\nB pasienger. Hydramatle drive, new paint, good rubber.\n,   .  Priced to elear. .       ;'.\u00bb t\nONE ONLY\n1938 Ford Deluxe Sedan\nHeater, radio, new motor; 1500 miles; 2 knobby spares, all\n.-\u2022\u25a0,- good rubber. Good dependable transportation. Priced right.\nSEE THE NEW\nPontiac for'53\nNOW 6N OripLAY\nTRUCK BARGAINS\nONE ONLY\n1951 GM.C. Lt. Delivery\n- Commercial  red. Low mileage. A-1  shape. Heater and\ndefrosters. - \u25a0\n^NE'ONLYV\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery\nLike new. Priced to clear.\nONE ONLY\n1941 Fargo Light Delivery\nHeater, antl-freeze, good tires, all winterized. Ready to go\n.'.', to .work. .   ' A.,\n1936 Ford tight Delivery\nWinterized, good rubber. Ready to go.\nEach and Every Cor Winterized\n10 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM\nCASH \u2014 TERMS \u2014 TRADES\nSEE THE NEW\nG.M.C. LIGHT DELIVERY\nFOR 1953\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nCome and Do Business With Us on Baker St.\nPHONES 121 - 122\nLimited\nBAKER ST.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_01_24","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427925","@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":"1953-01-24 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-01-24 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\/1.0427925"}