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Milder.. Winds    %.\nsoutherly '20. low ond high at Cranbrook, Crescent Valley 32 and 45. fi\nNo. 268   .\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBudget Highlights\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Highlights of the budget presented\nin the British Columbia legislature today by Premier and\nfinance Minister Benriett:   *\nm \u25a0     Two per cent increase in the three per cent sales taTx\nto replace hospital insurance premiums.\n* *      *.\nReduction of the amusement tax from 17% to 15 per\ncent'\n* *      *\nExemptions on children's clothing and boots from the\nales tax.\n* \u00ab      *\nReduction of car registration fees from $10 to $1.\n';.;. * ,      *        * ,,v   '\n\u00a7      Thirty-million dollar borrowing provisions for the\nPGE.\n* \u00bb      *\nAnticipated surplus for the fiscal year ending March\n81, ,1955, $5,854,097.\n';\u25a0'' .'\".r.'.'.r'''-   .'\u25a0-'   \u25a0 *\u25a0     . * \u00bb\n.Anticipated income for the fiscal year ending March\n91, 1955, $193,898,969.\n\u00bb     .*      *\nAnticipated expenditures for the year ending March\n31, 1955, $204,309,347.\n* *      *\n.Estimated income for the fiscal year ending this March\n81, $168,814,808.\ntr * *\nEstimated revenue surplus for the fiscal year ending\nMarch 31, $3,748,163. '.     .\nA total of $45,374,000 expected from the Donfinion-\nprovjncial taxation agreement, an increase of $1,858,000 over\nthis year.\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII\nFish Catch Down\n(h Values\nOTTAWA (CP) - Despite * 107-\nper-cent increase in quantity, value\nof fish landings in Canada in January declined 3.8 per cent compared with the same month In' 1053.\nFishermen caught 91,712,000\np;ound*,lpi'th* ^rto ..#,844,-000* In\nJanuary,  the bureau' oil statistics\nreported today, During the tame\nmonth in 1858 they landed 44,252,-\n000 pounds valued at $2,839,000,\nTha Atlantic coast catch\u201431,257,-\n000 pounds worth $1,735,000\u2014 was\n16 per cent smaller and worth 29\nper cent lets than in January, 1953.\niOaish. 3Lwoh.\nKootenay Lake water level \u2014\nSaturday, 2.8S and Monday 2.30 feet\n\u2022trove zero.\nTHEATRE STRIKE\nCALLED OFF\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A scheduled strike involving 23 Famous\nPlayers Theatre* in B.C. was called\noff Monday, shortly before members ol the Motion Picture Projectionists Union were due to strike\nIri .^^nnfJunctng-. -th* r tiattlffiiahi,\nunion representative George Thrift\nsaid details o the agreement could\nnot ba disclosed imrhedaitely, Tha\nmeeting began one hour before the\nscheduled strike deadline.\nPM VISITS'23TH\nBRIGADE IN KOREA f\nIN KOREA (CP) \u2014 Prime Minister St. Laurent travelled by Jeep\nthrough dusty hills, visiting men\nof the 25th Canadian Brigade in\ntheir anchor position along the\nKorean cease-fire line Monday.\nDrop in Liquor\nProf its Expected\nVICTORIA- (CP) \u2014British Co\nlumbians appear to have lost their\ntaste for liquor bought in government liquor.stores. \/\u25a0\u25a0.\nThe budget read' In the legislature by Premier Bennett today said\nthe government expects a decrease\nin liquor profits for the' coming\nfiscal year of $1,000,000. \"This is\ndue to a large increase in beer consumption as against a substantial\nreduction ln hard liquor sales\"\nThere is no given reason for the\nchange. It is reported that Quebec\nnoticed a similar change two years\nago.\n10 Killed for\nCandler Murder\nNAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters)\u2014Ten\nMau Mali terrorists paid with their\nlives Monday for murdering British\ndistrict officer John H, Candler In\nthe Fort Hall native reserve last\nFriday.\nThe 10 Africans were among at\nleast 40 killed in running battle\nwith security forces In the Thlka,\nKiambu and Kijabe areas north of\nNairobi;   ,\nCandler, JS, waa killed shortly\nafter conferring with high British\nofficers on .the 16-month' campaign\nagainst the\/terrorists. His murder\nset off a mammoth weekend-hunt\ntor the slayers. The 10 killed Won-\nday were Identified at membersnof\nthe gang which ambushed Candler.\nOfficial casualty figures Issued\ntonight shpwed 85 terrorists killed\nand 53 captured last weak. Security\nforces lost one white soldier and\nnine African home guard fighters.\nCanadian Cod For\nKorean Relief\nOTTAWA   #fe** The  federal\ngovernment is \/contributing an.^d-\n'**'tViV'W00,,-tonii^ Owidlai'cod\nr. -l...,:nntVL U:*u.m ?INT.t^iiS..\nV\u00bbWff*PW0,W^te'th\u00bbvUN emergency relief prbgrim in Korea.;' *\nIt li the second Canadian, contribution of codfish to the program\nfor relief of Korean civilians. Last\nfall, .'Canada- shipped 1000 tont\nvalued at 1800,000. \u00bb\nBRITISH WOMEN SEEK\nEQUALPAY\n. LOINDON (Reutera) -? Women\u2014\nwith the light of battle in their\neyes and money on their minds-\ndescend on Parliament today to,\ndemand aqua! pay fbr doing the\nsame job as men.\nSAYS NEWSPRINT\nMUST BE FREED\n.LONDON (CP) -'Th*.chairman\nof The Financial Times, Lord\nBracken, said Monday in hla column ln the daily newspaper that\naction must be taken before April 1\nif enough Canadian newaprlnt is to\nbe obtained to de-ration the commodity in Britain next year.   A\nIn a critical article, the former\nBrendan Bracken, once Conservative member of Parliament land\nwartime Information minister, says\nIt is \"monstrous\" that newsprint\nshould still be controlled nine years\nafter the end ot the Second World\nWar.\nAssociated Boards Name H.R. Banks;\nAir Cleared\" on Cutoff,\nCRANBROOK\u2014A widely known Kimberley engineer\nlg the new president of the Associated Boards ol Trade and\nChambers of Commerce-of Southeastern British Columbia.\nH. R, Banks, for 21 years Cominco's superintendent\nof the Sullivan Concentrator at Chapman Camp, and now\nconsulting engineer, ore concentration, was elected at the\nassociation's 53rd annual meeting here Monday.\nThe 60 delegates from 15 Koptenay-Boundary centres\nalso put through six of a dozen resolutions to be considered\ndealing with highway and lake ferry problems, opening of\nnew highway routes and British Columbia's new bridge\ncommission.\nElected first vice-president was\nW. T. Waldie of Castlegar, and Fred\nC. Ingram of Chapman Camp is\nsecond vice-president\nKaslo Board of -Trade taw two\nfi ita resolutions passed and a third\ndefeated.\nOne seeking survey of the Bal-\n&ur-Kaslo section of the highway\n*rfto a view to ita standardization\nwas approved. It pointed out that\nthere have been few improvements\non the section in late Jeara while\nthe highways to the north and south\nhave been or are being standard-\nsled. \/\nSecond to be approved and receiving party support from Windermere delegates asked survey of\ntjjja proposed Jumbo Pass route this\nyear. The route would provide access to ready markets for produce,\ntrom the Lardeau valley and Kootenay, the resolution said: It would\nutilize hundreds of miles of already\nconstructed roads and shorten\ntraVel of east-west traffic from Revelstoke to Calgary.\nMore   beauty   could    not   be\nfound anywhere, J, A. Cochran of\nKaslo said. There were fallt a\nperson could walk under without\ngetting wet, and 'there were 200\ntquare   miles   of   glacier.   Flrtt\ngrain wat threshed In th* Lardeau valley thit year.\nDefeated Kaslo resolution called\nlor consideration of a new route\nfor Kootenay Lake ferry Anscomb\ntrom near Riondel to a site ln Woodbury Bay on the west side of the\nlake, with Improvement ot roads\nto these points, and investigation of\nmeans of cutting present loading\nind unloading times of the ferry.\nThe proposed new landing* would\ncut the round trip from two and a\nhalf hours to one hour.\nTrail delegates tald thty would\nha forced to buck movei for extended ferry service and bettor\nroads In the area If it meant that\nthe proposed Creston-Salmo cutoff was not going to receive\npriority,\nHarry D. Harrison of Nelson\nexplained that contract wat al-1\nready let for the auxiliary ferry\nbut this was only to take care\nof overloads until the cutoff could\nbe put through. \"The cutoff must\ncome, trafflo would force It, but\nwe must have something to carry\nthat trafflo today,\n\"The cutoff would take some\ntime to complete but people were\nalwayt* going to, have to be carried across the lake,\"\nTrailite* tald Mr. Harrison's explanation had cleared the air,\nTrail's resolution calling for completion of surveys to determine a\nfeasible economic route between\nCascade and the Columbia River\nand building of a road on the new\nroute, completion of a survey this\nyear of the Salmo-Creston cutoff\nse that early, decision' could be\nmade on constructing * highway to\nprovide a shortcut for fast commercial traffic and further relief\nto f\u00abrry bottleneck, and provision, of\nprogress reports on all surveys made\nto date between Cascade and Creston trom the public works minister,\npassed unanimously.\nReconstitute of the, B. C.\nbridge commission to Include\nthote with necessary professional\n\u2022' background to guarantee that\ncommission recommendations, to\nthe government be of tha highest\nprofessional calibre, was asked Ih\nA. C. BENNETT\n. his first buciget\nCanada Safeguards\nJapan's Markets\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Acting Prime\nMinister Howe taid Monday ateps\nhave been token to safeguard Canada's position in' th<J Japanese\nmarket for the next two year*; \",\nMr. Hpwe aaid the government\nhns no information on a reported\nJapan-United State* agreement\nunder which the.U.S. would^glve\nJapan surplus wheat and barley..\nSold To Ethiopia\n. OTTAWA (CP\") \u2014 Fourteen See-\nond World War firefly alrclreW\nhave been told to '.Ethiopia <w\n1100,000, the defence department\ngaid Monday.\nThe anti-submarine fireflies were\nreplaced in the Canadian Navy by\nAvengers, which are toon to be\nreplaced In turn by ' SOT Oram-\nmans.\nFarouk's Coin Sale\nReaches High Total\nCAIRO (Reuters) \u2014 The' sale of\nex-king Farouk's valuable collection of 290,000 coins here haa yielded $616,000 \u2014 described by auctioneer Peter Wilson a* \"the highest\ntotal of a single talc ot coins held\nduring the present century.The collection was particularl ystrong in\nUnited States and French coins.\nNIXON TO ANSWER\nADLAI STEVENSON\nWASHINGTON',(AP) - The Republican party passed over Senator\nJoseph McCarthy Monday and gave\nvice-prdsldent Richard Nixon the\nJob of answering Adlai Stevenson's\nblast thit. the party is \"half McCarthy arid hall Eisenhower.\"\n i 1\t\nBUTTER STOCKPILE\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014-The government\nlikely will enter .the new butter\nproduction year next. May with the\nbiggest-unsold butter stockpile ln\nprice-support history.\nTo Replace HIS Premiums\nREVISION\nSERVICE\nBritish Columbia's hospital Insurance service, a thorn In the\naide of government* tlnce It flrtt\ncame Into being In January, 1949,\nwill  be reviled, with  premiums\nbeing substituted by an Increase\nIn the sales tax..\nPremier   and   Finance   Minister\nBennett announced in his budget in\nthe legislature today the premiums\nwill be substituted with a two-percent increase in the three-per-cent\nsocial services sales tax.\nThe.change is the government's\nsolution to rising hospital costs and\nsaves British Columbians from a\ndrastic increase ln premiums or\ngovernment subsidy.\nThe -tax will bring the government an estimated $23,420,000. Thi*\nwill meet costs that have jumped\nfrom an estimated $23,770,000 tor\nthe fiscal year ending March 31,\n1953, to $28,700,000 estimated for\nthe coming year.\nThe revenue from tha tax will\n(till hava ta ba supplemented by\n$8,376,000 from revenue sources.\nMora than $6,000,000 of that will\ncome- from   tha   government's\nthara of the remaining three par\ncent of tha talet tax. Ope per\ncent goet to B.C. municipalities,\nAt present a married person pays\na premium ot $39 and' a single person $27. The premiums in the year\nnow ending amounted to only $15,-\n000,000. The government subsidized\nthe scheme to the tuno ot $4,033,428.\nThe ohange will save $1,000,000\nIn administration costs.\nThe' Jervir* now is faced with\nreturning upward* of $5,000,000 in\npremiums paid in advance for covr\nerage from January to Julie,\nPremier Bennett said the new sys\nfe^''$\u00b0fr.&rt-efther ?wm**' ojj\n.Businesses  would'-. gst . the j increased tax': badp: In the.form, of\ndepreciation  allowances\u2022\u2022 on , their\nincome, tax-'\n.',r-'Amarried pensioner.now.paying\n$39 a year'in' premium*, would pay\n\"at most',' $$'.60 annually by the\ntax increase. An old-age pensioner\nwould have his taxation increased\nto, approximately $4.27' trom $2.58.\nA wage .*8rher-with * family of\nlour- earning $260 monthly would\npay $2,$5r a month under thi f(ye\nperrcent tax or $1.18 more a.month,\n,but.would,save $3.07 by non-payment of premiums, '\"\n\u2022  The premier aaid the combined\naffect of. more bed accommodation\nrequired to maet. the needs of an\nIncreasing population,' higher wages\nand shorter hours of work for hospital staffs, the increasing average\npatient stay in hospitals, mora and\nbetter  services,  costlier  facilities,\nequipment and drugs \"Is reflected\nby expenditures unbelievable a lew\nyears ago.\" The costs have increased\ntrom an average of $18,200,000 for\nthe three yeara ended March 31,1952\ntb $23,770,000 estimated for the coming year.   ......\n\"Experience hasr taught us that,\nunless a province-wide coverage\nfor all bur people is established,\nhospitals will continue to Incur ever-Increasing operating deficits.\nThe present plan is replete with\ncontradictions, Itf Is neither a wel-\ntare nor an insurance plan. It cannot be made a composite of the two\nwithout creating distortions and inequalities, or without requiring exorbitant administration costs.\"\niiiniiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBennett Sends Hart\nB.C.'s Well Wishes\nVICTORIA\u2014Premier Bennett\ntent thli message  Monday to\nformer premier John Haft In ^\nhospital:\n\"tn presenting the budget today, I am especially thinking of\nthe great service you rendered\nthit province, not only at prime\nminister, but as minister of\nfinance wherein you. presented\n20 budgets In the legislature of\nBrltsh Columbia.\n\"Tha government and all\npeople of British Columbia are\ngreatly Indebted to you ahd\npray.for your quick recovery\nto normal health.\".-\".\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPrepare Slips For\n7000-TonRail-Car\nFerry at Coast\nNANAIMO \u2014 Last reminder of\nthis island city's historic importance as; a great coal-producing\ncentre is disappearing with the\nrapid demolition of the port'* unused coal-handling facilities, Tha\nCanadian' Pacific Railway is razing\nunwanted structures in the waterfront area, and ls preparing rail\nyard accommodation in anticipation\nof new terry slips to be constructed\nhere and at Vancouver.\nA total of three million dollars\nhas been appropriated by the-Cana-\ndian Pacific to provide Vancouver\nIsland and Mainland docking facilities top; its,; t\u00bbw,s 7OO0rton rail-cay\nAlta. School, Hospital\nTaxes May Be Cancelled\nH.R'.'BrANp\nanother succetsful Trail''motion,\nThose   choten   should   be   from\ncivil life outside the government\nto ensure continuity of the commission, It tald. At originally appointed, the commission consisted\nof three cabinet ministers,\nThe boards in a Nakusp-sponsof-\ned  resolution   will   also   ask  the\npublic works department to improve\nNo. 6 highway from Slocan Junction\nto Monashee Pass and to blacktop\nthis season, portion*, of the road\nnow ready tor blacktopping.\nDelegate*- were entertained in\nthe Cranbrook armory at a reception staged by tha lumbering industry, and later at a banquet, at\nMount Baker, High\u201eSchool, put on\nby the Canadian. Daughters.\n> r Howard-TV Mitchell, president\nand publisher of . Mitchell Press,\nVancouver, in a forceful address at\nthe banquet, graphically pictured\nBritish Columbia's art in 'today's\ncompetitive world and gave an\noptimistic forecast of her future. A\nfuller report of his speech will: be\ncarried in Wednesday's paper.\nEDMONTON (CP)-rThe dazzling\npossibility of a cash share tor\nAlbertanB in their province's rich\noil and. natural gas resources\nemerged today from a $205,000,000\nbudget placed before the Legislature by Premier Manning.\nIn a 1954-55 budget that featured\nIncreased pensions for the aged and\nthe blind and higher indemnities\nlor provincial lawmakers, he also\nraised the possibility ol eliminating\nall municipal, school and hospital\ntaxes.\nBringing down hit tenth budget,\nMr. Manning estimated the province's 1954-55 expenditures at $156,-\n$49,712, an increase, of. $18,091,582\noyer the current year, and revenues\ndt $157,315,465, an Increase of\n$18,947,05, That left an estimated\nsurplus of $885,753. '\u2022  '\nBoosting his total estimated expenditure*; to\" $204,949,721, he also\nbudgeted for, statutory -provisions\nfor loaning purposes ot $48,000,000.\nThis covers aid to provincial'municipalities.    -<te-- . \u25a0 ii'*\"-\nHe announced the province will\nIncrease by $5 monthly, to $15 its\nsupplementary payments to recipients of old-age security pensions, old-age assistance arid blind\nallowances. The ceiling on their\nallowable annual income -will. be\nincreaead <py. $80.\nFor members of the assembly, he\nannounce^ an increase of - $600 in\ntheir session indemnity, raising it\nto $3800. Tha total will include\n$2400 of Indemnity and $1200 of\nexpenses.\nThen, ln a gesture that recalled\nthe late Premier William Aber-\nhart's promise of a $25-a-month\nSocial Credit dividend for Albert-\nans, Mr. Manning took his peek\ninto the future:\nIt is well w(thin the realm of\npossibility in the foreseeable future\nrevenue from further oil and gas\ndevelopment will be . . . sufficient\nto eliminate' all present municipal,\nschool and hospital taxes with a\nbalance ot approximately $30,000,000\navailable for debt retirement or\nsuch other purposes as may be considered in the. public Interest.\"\n,. This would enhencethe hbility ot\nratepayers'to meet the costs of local\ngovernment and . \"recognize each\ncitizen's -personal stake, in the\nnatural resources of the. province\n\u25a0nd his right to an equitable share\nin the benefits accruing from their\norderly development\" '      ., \u25a0 \u25a0\nMr. Manning reported the provincial treasury has received $271,-\n955,853 as' a direct, result ol oil and\ngat development since the rich\nLeduc field was discovered in 1947.\nFor the present year,oil revenue\nwould exceed $90,000,000, brie ahd\none-halt times' the- total ot all\nmunicipal, school and hospital taxes\npaid during 1053,\n$5 Bonus for Pensioners\nVICTORIA (CP) - Ari increase, in the sales tax to five per cent tp,\nreplace premiums in British Columbia's hospital insurance scheme\nwas announced today by Premier Bennett;    ?\nIn his budget address to the legislature, Premier Bennett, also finance minister in the government, said the in*-;\ncrease from three to five per cent M'the sales, or social\"\nservices tax, will give the government ah anticipated $23,\u00ab\n420,000 fof the year ending March 31, 1955.\n..'' .i^jfflie\/fex, expected to be effective -from April 1, wil}\nbe the highest in Canada with\/ the exception of some cities:\nin .Quebec where the municipal and provincial, taxes com-\nbinec|amount to five per cent,\nmrtJon .trt\nSltffficrtaey Schttana; *hd wl)fch ia\n\u00abxpeeto9! rta enttr Nanalmo-Van\ncower *ervice \u00bboiM time next\nyeti^;.--..\u25a0;\u25a0 .-.'\u25a0'..!aft-i .->(,\n.'t-\u2014f-<\u2014.'4., \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nEx-Premior'tWift\nAmassesWealth\n; CAIRO <Apy \u2014 A military court\nordered seizure ol the wedth of\nMrs. Zeinab el Wakil, wife ol tor.\nmer premier. Mustapha Nahas. She\nis said to \"have amassed nearly $3,-\n000,800 in graft during her husband's\ntwo tends. The three man military\ncourt said Mri. el Wakil \u2014 known\nby her maiden name according to\nMoslem custom \u2014 would not be sent\nto prison because of ill health.\nFour Die In Aussie\nWar Exercises\nS^DNEy, Australia (AP)\nHeavy seas swamped a convoy ot\namphibious Australian Army vehicles during- a pre-dawn exercise\nMonday. Four soldiers were drowned and tour others are miasing. The\naccident'occurred off Port Stephens\non Australia's southeast coast 90\nmiles north of Sydney.\nFRENCH tlQHT?N\nUP ON DEFENCES\nHANOI, Indo-China (AP) -The\nFrench tightened their defences\nMonday trom Hanoi to the key\nsupply port of Haiphong. Tha entire area was alert aa rumors\nspread that the Red-led Vietminh\nwere getting ready for a big push\nto catch the eye ot the big powers\nbefore they meet in Geneva.\nHOUSING LEGISLATION\nGOES TO SENATE\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The governments new housing legislation has\npassed the Commons. It now goes\nto toe Senate for study.\nDOLLAR LOWER\nNEW YORK (CP) - Cuu^dian\ndollar was 3-32 of a cent lower at\na premium of 3 13-32 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds today. Pound\nsterling unchanged at $2.81 7-18.\nMONTREAL (CP) Jt VS. dollar\ntoday closed at a discount of 3 9-32\nper cent in terms of ' Canadian\nfunds, up 3-32. The pound sterling\nwas $2.72tt, up Vs.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiini\nStill, He Posed ...\n\u25a0VICTORIA.. (CP) - Sir Edmund Hillary,' conqueror of\nMount Everest, is an obliging\n:   chap.\nOn his arrlval'here Sunday,\nthe   tall  New1 Zeolander  was\nasked by a photographer to pose\nwith  a  banana,  his  favorite\nfruit.    ,     '   '.--,   ' \/,.'\u2022 v\n\"All right,\" said Sir Edmund,\ni \"but it seems damn silly to me.\"\nHe has.told how he was sustained on his climb of the\nhighest peak ih the world by\nbeer, bananas and mint cake*.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\n' :,   \u25a0 -', , \u25a0    1  \"\nThe premier also announced the\ngovernment proposes:       ' v-, - .\nA flat $5 increase in the province's\ncost-of-living bonus to old-age and\nblind pensioners and recipients ol\nsocial assistance and mother's allowances.\nExemptions trom fhe sales tax of\nchildren's clothing and shoes.\nReduction ol the 17H per cent\namutement tax to 15 per cent\nReduction from $10 to $1 of automobile registration fees.\nTo aeek approval ol granting borrowing power* et $30,000,000 to the\ngovernment-owned' Pacific Great\nEastern Railway.\nAbolition of the 10 par cent tax\non liquor by the glass approved at\nthe last session of the legislature,\nThe premier, who tald toe,government does not expect undue\nchanges In the province's economy\nin the 1054-55 fiscal year, budgeted\nfor a sizeable surplus of $5,854,007.\nThe estimated revenue far the\nyear was $193,989,969. To this wat\nadded a surplus fund anticipated at\n$16,284,476 which included an anticipated surplus for the fiscal year\nending this March 31 ol $2,748,163,\nExpenditure* for the 1954-55.Ha-\ncal year were estimated at $204,3pB,-\n:$**,'&'>\u25a0\"\u25a0'        *    -      '     -\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\nIt, was estimated tha province's\nrevenue fbr the fiscal year ending\ntola. March would be $169,362,769.\nThe expenditures for the period\nwere authorized at $178,364,806, but\nthia would be rediiced-by \"savinga\"\n\u2014non-expenditure* of full appropriations, etc. \u2014 :.of $11,750,000 to\n$166,814,606.\nDEBT REDUCED\nThe premier said the net debt of\nthe province haa been reduced by\n$36,177,861 to $154,913,978 In the\nsame period. The per capital reduction of the net debt was $38.\nThe sinking fund had increased\nby $1,533,872 by Dec. 31, 1993.\nThe province expected to receive\n$45,374,000 under the dominion-provincial taxation agreement, an increase of' $1,858,000 over'the fiscal\nyear now ending. Under the agree\nment the province now rents Its income tax and succession duties field\nto the dominion government lor\ngranta based on gross national product and population.        -\nB.C.  also   expects  $1,100,000  \u2014\n$300,000 more than las^year \u2014 from\none-half \"the federal Income tax pn\npower distribution corporations.\n$5 MILLJON REFUND.,.'.\nThe government will have to refund more than $5,000,000 aa a portion ot hospital insurance premiums\npaid in advance. The premier estimated 'the service would cost $32,-\n865,000 in the next year against an\nestimated $28,618,428 this year. The\ngovernment would have to subsidize the scheme with another $8,-\n375,000. >\nBesides boosts In federal grants\nahd the increased sales tax, the\ngovernment expected increased revenues Ol $2,000,000 from the 10-\nper-cent tax on logging profits approved at toe last session ol the\nlegislature, $1,000,000 from the gasoline tax, and $1,300,000 more trom\ntimber tales.\nLoss of revenue included $1,000,-\n000 ln liquor sales, $335,000 in the\nreduction, bl toe amusement tax,\n$800,000 ih the exemption ot children'! clothing from the sales tax,\n$563,000 Ik the reduction of registration fees, and $1,500,000 in th'e loss\nof the 10-per-cent liquor tax.\n- The increased cost-of-living bonus\nwill cost the government an estimated $2,900,000 annually. At present the bonu* to old-age and blind\npensioner* ia-a flat $10. Old-age as-\nalstance cases receive up to $10,\nsocial assistance and mothers pensions run from.$42 Ior a single p'er-\nton to. $122 a month. .-\nTax Agreement\nThe British Columbia government\nnays it is not getting an \"equitable\"\nreturn trom toe federal government\nfor what toe aenior government\ntakes out.\nPremier and Finance Minister\nBennett said the province expects\nto earn a total ot $45,374,000 under\ntoe' dominion-provincial taxation\nagreement ln the fiscal year ending March 31, 1055\u2014an increase of\n$1,858,000 Over the year ending.\nIt also expected $1,000,000 .from\none-half of the.federal Income tax\non power distribution corporations\n\u2014an increase of, $300,000,:\nBut toe premier said it it esti\nmated the federal government\nmakes collections in direct and indirect taxes, non-tax revenues and\nspecial receipts and .credita that\ntotal $474,700,000.        . ;'^;    ,   ;i\nI ' In direct taxation alone, including personal Income tax, nonresidents tax, corporation-Indonia\ntax, succession duties and Income\ntax on undistributed prof Ita, the\nfederal government gathered\n$259,700,000.\nPremier Bennett, lormer Finance\nMinister Einar Gunderson tnd Attorney-General Robert Bonner,\nwent to Ottawa Dec. 14 with a brief\non federal-provincial joint Investment of highways, railway* and\nforest protection in B. C.\n\"The development ol the province's resources is manifestly of\nmajor importance to the economy\nof the nation,\" the Premier laid.\n\"No other economic, area in Can-\nada hat, such a variety, as well aa\nsuch potentials in undeveloped natural resources.\" 4:,\nIt was the hop* of the govern-,\nment to enter into a. partnership\nwith the federal government to\n\"settle and develop B. C. rapidly.\"\nIK, partnership would \"provid*'\ngnomic ttoaflta^WtMnadian*.''\nPGE Extension\nThe legislature will be asked to\napprove borrowing power ol $30,-\n000,000 Ior toe government-owned\nPacific Great Eastern Railway.\nPremier Bennett gave no detail*\no! how the money will, be spent in\nhi* budget address in the legislature today. * .'\"''    ,\nThe northern extension is estimated to cost some $50,000,000 and\nthe southern end $10,000,000. The\ngovernment is also replacing steel\nOn the railway. -       r\nThe legislation- tubmitted will\nhave dual powers\u2014toe minister of\nfinance, as agent tor the railway,\nmay sell bbnds, fully guaranteed\nby the province; or toe province\nitself may issue and tell bonds and\nmake advances to the railway.      '   -\nConstruction\nThe defeat of British Columbia's\nfirst Social Credit government last\nSpring in effect caused certain delays in construction projects planned by toe government.\nPremier and Finance Minister\nBennett said in his budget speech\ntoday, \"because ol restrictions imposed by toe\/provision ot an interim supply for only , the . first six\nmonths ol the liscal year,\" the program contemplated with respect to\ncapital works payable, out bf Income pay-as-you-go was seriously\nretarded.\" v\nWhen toe government was defeated, jn toe spring toe legislature\ngave it enough money\u2014$90,000,000\n\u2014to last till September when whatever government was elected\nwould have to call another sitting\nof toe legislature.\nThe premier tald a net capital\nexpendlturea  program  estimated\nto cott $31,384,760 had been pro'-\nvlded for.\n\"Much of the proposed work had\nto be deferred because of the restriction automatically Imposed on\nnormal contractual procedure by\nan interim supply bill that provided\nbut a fraction of the amount that\notherwise would have been spent\nduring the summer and early autumn.\"\nExpenditures\nNine services virtually made up\na $7,995,705 anticipated increase h\\\nappropriations \/outside hospital insurance by the British Columbia\ngovernment tor the liscal year ending March 31,1955.\nThe  budget  said not  counting.\nhospital insurance, $142,083,763 will\nbe appropriated tor toe, year against\na total of $138,892,218 this year \u2014\n;an increase of 5,9 per cent.  ,    ' -s j\nThe increases are made up chiefly by: RCMP-policing $195,724 Irti\ncrease; provincial jails'$449,554; educational grants and teacher super*\nannuations $2,980,000;.University of\nBritish Columbia $200,000; social assistance and mothers' allowance*\n$885,000; old-age security and coat\not living to the-old-aged $2,179,000;\nmental health services $361,163;\nmaintenance of roads and bridges\n$459,956; grants to sUndry homes\nand charitable organizations $284;-\n'\u25a0''\u2022\" ' ' '        '   ' ' '        '       iL     - '   '  '\u25a0\u25a0 ^-\u25a0'\u25a0-''^\nL.\n\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0'-       \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 -;-\n w\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1954\nTONGHT- WEDNESDAY \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-8:25\nIl wonderful stars lived blusbln&y ever niter!\nf^&\"i\\ ^ m^m aim^m, m HIHE\njUHLYl HDIBQE-OIYID WAtlE- EV\u00a3 ABDFJ\nP\u00abHIOOM-EIIE\u00ab\u00abEI\n\u00abirZI eAYNOMOUIS eUNEnR\nZUZSA\n\"HELLGATE\"\nAmerica's Devil's\nIsland\nMUSICUND\nTHEATRE\nKASLO, B.C.\n8H0WING  TONIGHT\nand WEDNESDAY\nOne Show 7:30 p.m.\nDouble Feature:\n\"FORT, VENGEANCE\"\nStarring James Craig\n^SAFARI DRUMS\"\nJbhhny Sheffield \u25a0\nFINED FOR SUPPLYING\nLIQUOR TO INTERDICT\nOlas Sarll of Nelson pleaded\nguilty In City.Police .Court Saturday to giving,liquor to an interdicted persOft. Sentenced to a tin*\not $300 or three months in jail, he\nchose toe jail term.\nThe offenca occurred early Saturday morning.'i\"-; .\",'\u25a0\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nMON.\nMAR.\nCatiiing\nMatinee 4:00 p.m.\nKiddles 60c-Adults $1\nNight, 8:00 p.m.\nKiddles 500- Adults $1\nReierved $1.60\nADVANCE TICKETS AT\nCIVIC CENTRE\n15\nEducation Week\nMarked af Trail\nSchool\nTRAIL \u2014 With the auditorium\npacked to standing room parent! enjoyed an entertainment ol singing,\npantomlne and thrilling tumbling\nact marking, the opening ol education week at the Laura J. Morrish\nElementary School In East Trail.\nChairman' ol the Trail and District\nTeacher* Association Sid Potter addressed to* parent* stressing the\nimportance ot teacher and parent\nworking as a team with toe student\nas a middle person. Teachers and\nparent*.should get together in Jhis\npartnership. How well lt functions\ndetermines the amount ot education the child Will get.\nSumming up what teacher and\nparent'can expect-Mr. Potter said\nthat a parent can be expected to\ntake an interest in the school at a\nunit as well as in a child as an individual. Respect lor the school and\nthe teacher must be expected from\nthe child by toe parent. Too often\ntoe teacher has to waste valuable\ntime enforcing dicipline which\nshould be administered by the\nparent. Suggestions and constructive criticism regarding schools and\nOperation should come from the\nparent On the other tide, parent\ncould expect toe teacher to keep up\nprofessionally keep up to date\nthrough extra study, have a\nthorough knowledge ot subjects\ntaught and go beyond this to widen\nhi* background and enrich his\nteaching. Tbe teacher must maintain a good classroom, set an example on conduct towards the community and his fellow men and\nshow a love ot learning. ,\n\"At the same time,\" concluded\nthe speaker, \"the teacher can be\nexpected to be human.\"\nFollowing the terving ot refreshment! parents were Welcomed into\ntoe various classrooms by the\nteachers to review toe work Of the\nyoungsters.\nCLINTON\nPOWER\nChair Saws\n20\" Blade \u2014 $289\n26\" Blade \u2014 $299\nSpear & Jackson\nor Simondt\nCIRCULAR\nSAWS\nSAW TEETH\nand\nSAW SHANKS\n\u2022     #\nCALL er PHONE\n18 DAYS\nPhont 792-Y Evenings\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd,\n1   \"H If* Machinery You Need.\nConsult lit First\"\n214 Hall St.   .Nelson, B, C.\nPool Hall Robbed,\nWindows, Parking\nMeter Broken Here\nA theft, broken windows' and a\ndamaged parking meter are all being attributed to the same individuals by city police here.\nThe offences which occurred on\nMarch 6 began when five billiard\nballs were stolen from a local pool\nhall. Later in the evening two\nwindows were broken on the\nJosephine Street side ot the Wood\nVallance Hardware Company. The\nwindows were broken by billiard\nhalls, two being found inside toe\nstore. A parking meter in front of\nthe Nelson Pharmacy was broken\noff of its stand and was thrown\nthrough the window ol the Jose\nphine Street drug store.\nTwo or three young men were\nseen running down the alley\nnearby. The police have a description of the suspects and names ol\nthose who were playing at the pool\ntable from which the balls were\nstolen. No charges have been laid.\n120 at Meeting,... \\\nCitizens Seek\nBoard Ban of\nKASLO \u25a0*\u25a0 A committee ol citizens, will attempt to arrange a\nmeeting with Kaslo Victorian Hospital Society Board ol Directors to\nseek clarification of a situation here\nin which the board 1* said to have\nrefused permission for a Kaslo doctor to practice in the hospital.\nThe committee wat appointed\nMonday night by a meeting of 120\ncitizens at which a 'dearth of information about hospital affairs\nhere seemed the feature.\nThe woman doctor, wife of a retired doctor of dentistry, last year,\nwas involved in a somewhat similar\nsituation, eventually resolved when\nan outside mediator was called in.\nDr. Irwin was described by one ol\nthe principals ln arranging Monday's public meetings as \"a good\ndoctor who has served the community lor live years.\" She is on\nthe medical stalf ol another district\nhospital.     \u00bb\nResident at Mirror Lake, three\nand hall miles Irom this city, Dr.\nIrwin with a. second doctor serves\nthe large area including the Lardeau Valley, North to Whitewater\nand downlake to Riondel. The doctor came to Kaslo Irom Moose Jaw.\nThe meeting revealed that every\nattempt to obtain an explanation\n\u2022from a tight-mouthed hospital\nboard had so far failed. The directors claimed that under Section\n5-B of Hospital Act regulations\nthey were not required to give reasons for refusal to permit a doctor\nto practice in the hospital.\nPetitions to the board on last\nyear's situation, it was recalled\nwere Ignored.\nSociety members, lt was said, had\ntailed in attempt! to attend Board\nmeetings to hear discussion on questions presented.\nMEETING   DELAYED\nOne board member. Rev. T. T.\nBalmer, re-elected last year, resigned last month. A second Mrs.\nNita Hunter, R.N., who became\nmatron last Fall, has never been\nreplaced as a director. .    .\nThis year's hospital society an-\nFacts bit\"\nKaslo Doctor\nnual meeting, scheduled constitutionally tor the latt Thursday In\nFebruary, bat not been held. It\nwat postponed to March 25.\nA similar postponement occurred\nin 1093. At the 1953 meeting one\ndirector was re-elected and three\nnew members took office. The board\ncomprises four elective members,\nCharles Lind, chairman; G. M,\nArmstrong, John Walker and Norman Miller; and three appointed\nmembers, Aid. Gordon Bowker,\ncity council representative, Claude\nMcDonald, provincial government\nrepresentative, and Mrs. Guy Browell, hospital auxiliary representative.\nMembers are elected to one or\ntwo year terms according to the\nplurality of their vote at annual\nmeetings. Four vacancies will oc-\ncur thit year.\nCitizens' committee appointed to\nmeet the board to teek a report for\na future public meeting comprises\nRoy Green, former mayors Fred Ay-\ndon, Ernest Augustine, Mrs. Jack\nTurner and Howard Perkins.\nNOTICES POSTED\nBoard members, lt wat reported,\nhad posted notices about the city\nthat the Monday meeting wat not\nunder the auspices ot toe board.\nPublic notice ot toe meeting had\nclearly stated the meeting was called by a group of citizens interested\nln \"a return to a stable and equitable settlement... of the. question\nof hospital and medical situation ln\nKaslo and District.\" ,\nMembership in toe hospital to.\nciety, usually about the 40-member\nmark, during latt year's controvert*\nand recruiting effort waa Increased\nto 240. Membership it on payment\nof,a $1 fee.\nThe Monday meeting was told\nthat society members \"simply are\nnot in possession of the facts.\" (The\npurpose was not to take tides in\nan issue, if one existed, but merely\nto obtain an objective assessment\nof the facts.\nNeither director or Dr. Irwin attended the meeting.\nUnion Unjust\nDismissal Charges\nBefore Board\nTRAIL, B.C. (CP)-One Arbitra-\ntibn board has already opened\nsittings in Trail, and a second\nboard wlU go Into action ln nearby\nSalmo later this week, both hearing\nunion charges of unjust dismissal\nol union members.\nIn Trail, a board ol arbitration\nheaded by U M. MeBride ol Nelson opened hearings Monday into\na charge by the Trail and District\nCivic Workers Union that union\npresident M. J- Scanlon had been\n\"unjustly\" dismissed, because 01\nhis union work.\nDonald MacDonald ol Trail Is\nsitting on the board as union representative, while Harold Clegg ls\ntoe city nominee.\nIn Salmo, local WI ot the independent Union ol Mine. Mill\nand Smelter Workers Is protesting\nthe dismissal of its president, J.\nMoffat by the Canadian Exploration Mines Co.\nMr. Moffat has been an employee\nof Canadian Exploration for 25\nyears, and the union charges his\ndismissal is a violation of seniority\nand other points in its agreement\nwith the company.\nBoard hearings are to open in\nSalmo Thursday but as yet, the\nmembers of the board have not\nbeen announced.\n'.. NEW WAREHOUSE and carpenter shop on Nelson\nwaterfront replaces ruins of building destroyed by fire\nin December 1952. It was constructed at a cost of about\n$3000 by Laurence Simpson, well known Nelson district\ncontractor. Smaller buildings at right are temporary.;\nsheds on skids, put up to house stock after the fire! The!1\nnew building is 60 by 60 feet and is of concrete\u2014Daily\nNews photo. i .,..-,.S\nLIGHT CRUISERS\nCanada's two cruisers, the Ontario\nand Quebec, eacH carry nine six-\nInch guns plus amaller armament.\nEducation Is Your Business\nA. L. CARTIER\nThere is grave danger that \"what\nis the business of everyone may\nbecome the Tjusiness of no one\" or\nat least of too few. As a matter of\nfact, since* the advent of state-financed, and hence of universal\nschooling, there has been a tendency to equate education with\nschooling. The .result li that the\nschool has had to assume responsibilities that belong to other educative agencies. This not only overburdens the school and diminishes\nits efficiency but causes a shirking\nof responsibility upon the part of\nother educative agencies.\nTeachers are very much aware of\nthis problem, and in order to call\nattention to it, they have set aside\n\"Education Week\" with the slogan\n\u2014\"Education Is Everybody's Business.\"\nHere in Nelson.this problem will\nreceive special consideration in a\npanel discussion between representatives of the various agencies in\neducation.\nEducation could be, defined as\n\"the generation of an adult human\nbeing.\" Most other animals are\ncomparatively mature at birth: but\nto generate a man or woman takes\n\u2022about two decades. Not only must\nthe child grow up physically but\nhe must acquire the arts of communication, obtain an intelligent\ngrasp of the civilization in whieh\nREAL HELP FOR\nYour Itching Piles\nOR NO COST\nII Hem-Roid. u Internal pile treatment,\noee not quickly ease the itching soreness\nsnd burning pain et root tiles\u2014it costs\nott nothing.\nGet \u00ab package of Hem-Roid tt sny drug\ntore snd me ss*directed. Von will be\nleaned at bow quickly your pile trouble Is\nrelieved. Only $1.59 (or tbe big 60 tablet\nusing Hem.Roid 2 or 3 dare, as a teat, ask\npackage, tl you are not 100% pleased aftei\nfor your money back. Refund ajrreemen'\nby all drug  stores.\nhe lives, acquire toe physical and\nmental skilla necessary to play his\nproper part In society and acquire\nthe moral self-mastery which ls\nnecessary in order to use his know-\nledge and skills for truly human\nand even divine ends.\nTREMENDOUS TASK\nThis is a tremendous task \u2014 far\ntoo complex for any one agency.\nSuppose for example that the home\nwere to fall in its job of teaching\nthe child to speak his mother\ntongue or to neglect the development of moral virtue. Would not\nthe school be unable to perform\nIts task? Or again suppose the community provided an environment\nsuch as to entice youth Into moral\naberrations. How could the home\nchurch and school accomplish their\nrespective tasks? And suppose the\nschool were to set itself up as official interpreter of the meaning\nof human life and of the ends which\nmen should pursue. Should these\nbe at variance with the church then\nhow could the church ln one hour\na week counteract 25 hours a Week\nof such poisonous propaganda\u2014even\namong such children as would continue to go to church?\nALL   EDUCATORS\nWhil* education is' defined as\nthe generation of an adult, the\nmeans taken is chiefly to provide\na suitable environment in which\nour children may grow up. JVe are\nall a part of the child's environment whether we like lt or not and\nwe ar* all therefore educators. But\ninsofar\" as we are teachers, church,\nmen, parents or . scout-leaders we\nare educators by profession. And\nnone of us can do the whole Job)\nalone. Therefore we must recognize\nthe proper function of each principal agency In education and lend\nit toe support it needs and deserves.\n. Education is your business!'Education^ Week Is a time to take stock\nof your business in order to see\nhow you are doing.\nDevelopment\nOpportunity Best\nIn High School\nBy ROSEMARIE STURGEON\nST, JOSEPH'S SCHOOL\nFrom the day a child entera ichool\nhis character and personality are\nshaping towards maturity. But it\nla especially when he enters high\nschool that there opens before him\nwider opportunities for developing\nthe many facets of his personality-\nsocial, religious, physical, Volitional,\nIntellectual, aesthetical, He assumes\ngreater responsibility for his actions; he lt meeting more people\nIn a greater variety of classes; he\nls enjoying the freedom of choosing\ntome of htq own courses.\nHe shares in planning activities\nthrough the student's council and\nassembly. He discovers that his\nsuccess in high school depends\nlargely on him. This wider freedom and personal responsibility otters a challenge to his growing\nabilities. The way he reacts to this\nchallenge will have a great deal to\ndo with toe enthusiasm with which\nhe accomplishes his dally tasks. In\norder to have a favorable attitude\ntowards his work, it ls necessary\nthat he see the goal for which ha is\nstriving\u2014the goal of a balanced\nChristian personality.\nThe special aids which help him\nattain his goal are the natural helps\n\u2014the courses that he takes in\nschool. The way in which he studies\nthem will make a big difference in\nhis life. Religion classes help him\nto become better acquainted with\nGod and His plan for his life. English classes help him to appreciate\nothers through the type of books\nhe reads and will enable him to\nthink and write ln a clear Interest\ning way. History classes help him\nto realize how others thought and\nlived. Science classes open to him\nthe marvels ot his environment.\nMathematics train! his mind to\nthink ln an orderly manner, and\nlanguage classes introduce him to\nthe cultures of other people.\nBy using well so many opportun\nities, he will become a well balanced person capable of contributing\nhis share to the welfare of his\nfamily and community, and he will\nfind happiness in the career of his\nchoice.\nJUVENILE FINED FOR\nIMPAIRED DRIVING\nA juyenile appeartd in juvenile\ncourt here Monday and was fined\n$25 on each of two charges to\nwhich he pleaded guilty. He was\ncharged with' driving a motor\nvehicle while his ability was Jm-\npaired by alcohol and also for driv<\ning without a driver's licence. Th*\noffences occurred on Fall Street on\nSunday afternoon. In City Police\nCourt on Saturday, A. Logan of\nNelson pleaded guilty to a speed-\ning charge and wat fined $29. The\noffence occurred on Nelson Avenue\nFebruary 21.\nThe Weather\nNelton    83\nCalgary  19\n\u25a0Edtoonton   31\nKimberley  25\nCrescent Valjey  31\nKaslo  32\nGrand Forks ,  29\nKamloops ,- ,  27\nPentlcton ,.....'. '  84\nVancouver' - :  38\nVictoria -  88\nWhltehorse  :  21\nLos Angeles   52\nSpokane '  35\nChicago       26\n41\n.27\n48\n\u2014\n46\n\u2014\n40\n.01\n36\n.27\n26\n.36\n39\n.24\n41\n.04\n44\n.01\n44\n.57\n43\n.18\n35\n\u2014\n69\n\u2014\n45\n.20\n42\n\u2014\naay every time parents buy children's clothes and boots and don't\nhave to pay a sales tax\u2014well, Mr.\nSpeaker, that's a Social Credit dividend, too.\nCCF-ere and Liberal! listened attentively aa the premier apdke.\nThey took many notes, so they may\nknow what they're talking ' abou,t\nwhen they speak ln the budget debate.\nOpposition leader Arnold Webster followed the budget trom a\nspecial copy sent him by courtesy\nof the premier.\nTottay Mr. Webster will tell the\nHouse what toe CCF thinks ot toe\nfirst Bennett budget\nHon. Wesley Black, provincial\nsecretary and Nelson-CreBton member ln the Legislative Assembly,\nduring hit turn on the floor tald\nhe wasn't going to make what ha\ncalled a garbled mess. In that polite\nway he intimated that's what ha\nthinks most ot the Oppositionists\nhave made. However, he couldn't\nresist the temptation to stir Up tha\nopposition, though, being tired, they\ndidn't stir any too well.   .\nThe opposition, tald Mr. Black,\ntries 'to divide 8C-ers 'and so conquer them. Well, they cant do it,\nsaid Mr. Black; lt there's one side\nof the House indivisible and unconquerable it't the SC tide. Mr.\nBlack aaid he doesn't care if the\nopposition calls tots government a\nsecond-look government. Perhaps lt\nis, and perhaps it's a new look government, but one thing sure\u2014it'*\nthe peoples' government,\nMr- Black was mystified by the\nLiberals. He said he can't figure\nout whether they're really inter-\neated in the affairs of, B.C.\u2014or more\ninterested in federal politics. The\nLiberals made a few desultory, remarks in reply, but shrugged their\nshoulders \u2014 as much as to lay \u2014\nwhat'a the use?\n. By JAMES K. NESBITT\nVICTORIA-^-It was fascinating in the legislature Monday to watch\u00bbthis remarkable man, W. A. C. Bennett, stand\nin his place and utter the historic words: \"Mr. Speaker\u2014I\nbeg to move that \"you do now leave the chair that supply\nbtf granted\"toHer Majesty.\" That meant the annual budget\nwas abojit to be presented.\nThere he stood, the premier and the minister of\nfinance, though truth to tell, of course, he'd much rather\nhave been sitting listening to his hand-picked minister of\n. finance, Einar Gunderson, delivering the budget. However,\nthe voters of Victoria decreed\notherwise,\nAs premier and minister of finance, Mr. Bennett has toe reins of\ngovernment firmly in his hands.\nSocial Crediters wore white hyacinth and green fern in their buttonholes \u2014 the white and green of\nSocial Credit Proudly they wore\ntheir colors.\n' Just before he wept Into the\nhaute Mr. Bennett tent a letter\nto  former  premier  \u2014  finance\nminister  John   Hart,   III   In   St.\nJoseph* hoapltali \"I arri especially\nthinking of tha great tervlce you\n(tendered thli province, not only\nas prima minister, but In your\ncapacity at.the minister of finance\nwherein you pretented 20 budgets.\n.Jhe  government and  all  the\npeople of Brltiih Columbia ara\ngreatly Indebted to you and wa\njSray.for-your qulok recovery to\nnormal health,\"\nThis wu a very nice gesture,\nthough there were political cynics\ntheut who recalled that Mr. Hart,\naa premier and minister ot finance,\nrefused to have anything to do with\na sales tax; and yet now, Mr. Bennett's government is increasing it to\nfive per cent -i though to good\npurpose, lor lt may \"work out vary\nwell in the interests ot adequate\nhospitalization for all British Columbians. Certainly, It's a bold\nmove. The opposition will scream\nabout lt\u2014but after all, the sales tax\nIa called a tax for social tecurity\u2014\nand what'a hospitalization if it isn't\nsocial tecurity?\nBOLD PROJECTS- ECONOMY\nMr. Bennett, naturally enough,\nwas very proud of his budget. Every\nminister of finance is. You could\nsense his pride as he read from his\nprepared text: \"The estimatea -\nreflect the expanding public service needs ot a fast increasing pop.\nulatlon; bold and objective projects\nleading towards toe rapid development of our vast natural resources;\nand yet \u2014 through it all the greatest possible measure of economy\ncompatible with efficiency in administration.\"\nAa wa looked down on Mr. Ben-\nnet as he rolled off the figures,\nIt was almost unbelievable that\nhe hat already had tuoh a spectacular political, career \u2014 One of\nthe molt spectacular In the political history of tha province; elected a Conservative, 1941; forced\nInto coalition; re-elected at coalitionist, 19451 triad for Conservative leadership, beaten by Herbert\nAnsoonib, 1946; resigned B.C. teat\n1948, to run at Conservative In\nYale federal by-election, beaten\nby CCF Owen Jones; reelected to\nB.C,   leyltlatore   at   coalitionist,\n1949; triad again for Coniervatlve leadership, beaten by Herbert\nAmeomb, 1949| brake with coalition, 1951; became Social Credit\npremier,   1952;   re-eleoted   with\n80Clal Credit majority, 1953,\nMr. Bennett's political enemies\nlike to say ha doesn't know his\nmind, what r with all the jumping\naround, but no one cari deny he got\nto\" to* vary top in a quite breathtaking fashion.\nNO THEORIES\nThere were no Social Credit financial theories in the first Bennett\nbudget not that anyone could see\nat first glance, anyway; perhaps\nthere are some wel1 bidden. The\nopposition will tearch for them, but\nitt not likely they'll find any. Its\na quite orthodox budget \u2014 quite as\northodox as John Hart or Herbert\nAnscomb would have presented.\nGUNDERSON THERE\nSocial Crediters, though, will insist there are plenty of Social Credit\ndividends in the Bennett budget,\nprepared by Mr. GUhdereon, who\nwgs in th* Houie Monday, complete\nwith white *fld green buttonhole,\nto prove he's still a.,,good Social\nCreditor, aven If the'Vdters did kick\nhim out. '\"\u2022\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0        \u2022 *\nMrt. Anani, developing Into an\nastute politician, hat started the\nfashion of finding Soelal Credit\ndividends.   She   astounded   the\nHouta. th* other day when ahe\n\u25a0aid that the Liberal government\nIn Ottawa had ttolari front 80 th*\nIdea  of family allowances,  So,\nMr. Speaker, tald , Mrt, Artem,\nwhat ara family allewanoat but *\nSoolal Credit dlvldertd,_dligulied\nby Liberal wrapping flaperl\nSo it i* SC-ers who are doubtless\n?:oing to say the extra $8 a month\nor pensioners,\"though,iRwon't be\npaid in Social Credit money, is\nreally a SC bonus; they may even\n$2500 Fire Sends\nWoman to\nFire early Monday morning caused. $2500 damage anpj\nsent one woman to hospital suffering shock.\nFiremen fought the blaze, which started in a chimney*\nfor' two hours. Residents of the building, owned by Steviij\nVingo, were Mr. and Mrs. Pinie Laurino, 307 Observatorjf\nStreet.\nJ. McKenzle Talks\nTo Gyro Members\n\"Education is everybody'* bus-\ninett md responsibility,\" J. J. McKenzie, ichool inspector, told Gyro\nmember* at the Hume Silver Room\nMonday night. \"One week of every\nyear it let aside for education but\nthe 52 weeks of toe year thould all\nbe education weeks,\" he tald.\nHe went on to say the education\nwat not in terms of \"tchooling.\"\nSchooling it a formal part of education but mott of It taket place\noutside the four walls of the school,\nin the home, church, radio, press,\nmovies and other community activities.\nThe major part is played by the\nschool. Tha chief job Ot tha school\nit to teach the child to read and\nwrite. The ichool thould be prepared to do Its retponilbilltle* but\nnot alone.\nThe public tchool il a subject of\ncriticism; it has always been open\nto criticism and will always have,\nto stay open. The public school is\nan institution, but not a perfeot one.\nIt does the best lt can for th* needs\nof the children.\n\"Some of the problems facing us\ntoday are that during the next 10\nyears, 100,000 children will be coming into B.C;' schools,\" he said.\nAbout-400 more teachers per year\nwill ,bo required along with 400\nmore classrooms per yeir.\nMora teachers will b* required\nin September, 1954, than wire required. In September, 1953\/ Many\nteachers from other provinces hava\ncome to British Columbia to teach\nbecause we have- \"batter achoolt,\nhigher wages, and better working\ncohditiOniiF hd 'said. ..-,:     .\"   \"'  I\nMr. McKenzle said that \"every\nman's child has the right to go to\nsecondary tchool!\" The (chool is\ntrying to serve- th* Individual.\nJoseph Kosiek of\nFernie Diet Here\nJoseph Koslek of Fernie died at\nMount St Francis Monday at the\nage of 74. Remains are being forwarded to Fernie where furieral\nservices and interment will take\nplace. < - \u2022 ;\nIce Fantasy\nTo Be Staged in\nNelson Monday\nOn* of Canada's top ice shows\nwill be ln Nelion Monday whan\nBoy' Lisogar of Edmonton bring!\nhis Canadian Ice Fantasy of 1954 to\nthe Civic Arena' for an afternoon\nand evening appearance.\nThis show has come a long way\nsince it first started three years\nago when it wa* on a much\nsmaller scale.\nOriginally started with a troupe\nof 18 the show now has 42 persons\nincluding 86 skaters with Kris\nPeebles and Yvonne Broderi as\nstar performers.\n, Miss Peebles, \u00ab television starlet\nfrom the Weit Coatt hat w\u00abn\nInternational acclaim at Amarlca's\nforamott rhythm skater while Mill\nBroders has been acclaimed one of\nthe world'! greatest skating personalities.\nThe shew features eight big production numbers topped off by th*\ndelightful fairy tale of \"Ooldllockl\nMd the Three Bears\" tor children\nof all aget.\nIn addition to toil the show.hai t\nItpcial comedy team from Spokane\nthat hai rocked the house with\nlaughter wherever they have appeared. ,\n$2000 Collected\nSo Far in\nRed Cross Drive\nMrs. L. G. Catley, Red Crott campaign chairman, reported Monday\nevening that $2000 have been collected to date in the month-long\ndrive for fund now \"in progress.\nThis represents only the residential canvass conducted by Nelson\nwomen on the, tint day of tha campaign. Some collections have not\nas yet been handed in to tha campaign depot. Only one contribution\nhas been received so far from tha\nvarious tervlce clubs, that being a\n$25 donation from the Lions Club.\nMrs. Catley stated that those In\ncharge of the campaign wer* \"very\npleased\" with the showing to date.\nTh* business area of the city is how\nbeing canvassed by various business\nmen. This year's quota tor tbe city\nof Nelson It $7500. \u2022\nFire broke out at 1:25 a.m. and)\nboth a pumper truck and ladder\ntruck were employed before ii\ncould be extinguished. Damage to\nthe building wat estimated at $1500\nand to contents $1000.\nMrs. Laurino was taken to Kootenay Lake General Hospital suffering shock. Her condition Monday night wai \"improved.\"\nLas. Riles Held\nFor W. Spooner\nFuneral lervice! for William\nSpooner of Willow Point were held\nMonday afternoon at St Andrew'*\nby the Lake Anglican Church. Vtrj.\nRev. T. L. Leadbeater, D.D., officiated and Interment waa in to*\nKnights of Pythias in Ntlton Memorial P*rk.\nTwo hymns sung war* 'Ten Tout-\nand Time Ten Thousand\" and\n\"Peace Perfect Peace.\"\nPallbearers were Charles M.\nBeltner, John Swanson, Fred Dea-\nkin, H. E. Dyer, Alex Balfour,\nThomas Aulty, members of the\nNelson and Trail Lodges Knights\nof Pythias. ,fl\nL\nFormer Moderator\nRev. Endicott Dies\nTORONTO (CP) - Very Rev.\nJames Endicott, 88, second moderator of the United Church of Canada, died Monday night.\nBorn in England, he cam* to\nCanada at 17. ' He served as\nMethodist missionary in West\nChina from 1893 to 1910. H* served\nlater as Methodist field secretary\ntor foreign missions and as gen\neral secretary. After church union\nin 1925, he wat secretary of the\nUnited Church board of foreign\nmissions from 1925 until his retire-\nment in 1936.\nHe was appointed United Church\nmoderator in 1926 and served for\ntwo years.\nHe wat the father of Cr. James\nEndicott, United Church minister\nwho associated himself with Com\nmunlst-tupported movements after\nthe Second World War.\nANCIENT RELIGION\nOna of toe world's great religion!,\nHinduism, ls professed by mora\nthan 800,000,000 persons.\nPhona 889\nTOWLER\nFuel A Trantfar\nNelton, B.O,\nHere's new beauty . . . i\nefficiency . . . new features\neverything you could desire for\nwork-easy cleaning! Save time,\ni*v* effort . . . clean the Hoover\nway. A free demomtration in our\n\u2022tort \u2014 or your home \u2014 will\neonvlncel\nBlr%kF'twill Klnl'\nModel 4.1C\nSee it now...at\nHUDSON BAY\n.  COMPANY        l\nPhone 1155\nWALLVPRANK*    '\nRepresentative\n\u25a0safe\nCAR WASH\nSaturday, March 13th\nHelp tha NOTRE DAME PUPS In Thfcir Drive For Fundi\nFor Theli1 Trip to C*lg*r\u00bby ;      $ -.,-.,\nPhono 12 Anytime Before 9 P.M. For Appointment.\nWe Will Pick Up Vour Car or Drive In Yourself\n, Location: Car Lot Behind Canadian Legion\n      . '  ' mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\n mmmmmmmm^'\n&?t\n^Styles\n\u25a0'. ' AreH&e!\nBEAUTIFUL NEW\n- CONNIE SHOES v:s\nDesigned by the. leading stylists\nof America especially for you.\nEXCLU8IVE AT   .' :fF\nmn SHOE\nCENTRE\n653 Baker 8t. Phone 896\nIrvWindermere...\nScouts Name\nGroup Committee\nKINNAIRD \u2014 Fathers of the\nScouts and Cubs in Kinnaird elected their group committee for 1954,\nfollowing a father and son banquet.\nThe new committee is headed by\nA.- Gray, with J. Cushner as secretary-treasurer.\n| Other members elected were A.\nLambert, S. Gallo, G. Wisted, S. C.\nMulrhead, F. G. Warner and C. A.\nStevenson.\nThis grpup will be responsible\nfor the administration of the\nScouts and Cubs; arranging transportation for out-of-town Scout\nfunctions; planning camps; securing\nleaders when needed; and arranging for the annual father and son\nbanquet.\nP-TA Discusses\nChildren's Needs\n..'NEW DENVER\u2014A_ meeting of\nNew Denver-Sllverton Parent-Teacher Association was held in Lucerne High School when members\nparents and friends heard Miss Cam-\nmaert speak on child training.\nMiss Cammaert of Trail is toe\nConsultant Public Health nurse for\nKootenay District. She took part in\nthe panel discussion on the question\n\"Are we meeting our children half\nI Next meeting will be held March\n25 when a debate on the topic \"cor-\npbral punishment should be abolished in our schools.\"\nFruitvale Group\nArranges Mortgage\nFRUITVALE\u2014A meeting of the\nFruitvale Memorial Hall Committee\nwas held in the fire hall when favorable consideration was given to\na proposal to grant a mortgage of\n$10,000 if necessary. The committee\nwould prefer to grant a mortgage\n'of $15,000 as this would enable them\n.to Install a heating unit as well as\nithe necessary, lighting and plumb-\nling and new floor, which the lesser\namount would not cover.\nEfforts are to be made to have\nthe hall ready for the May 24 sports\ndance.\nOutdoorsman's Camp Dream Will\n\"'\u25a0\u25a0' * '2-t*; '      -.-,  \u25a0 -\u25a0\"    .\"-- . \u25a0  -       ' ' '     -     .. '      \u25a0 y'<   *'     '',.',\u25a0-     '. '\u2022'    \",'.''\u2022       - \" .\"\u25a0\nBring Happiness to Youths\nP-TA* TO HEAR\nSCHOOL INSPECTOR\nBURTON\u2014A meeting of Burton\nrPTA was held in Burton School\ny\/hetx an Invitation was received\ntrom the Central PTA to attend a\nmeeting at East Arrow Park on\nMarch 11 when Dr. Smith, inspector\n\u00a9t schools,,wijl.be.guest speaker..\nA masquerade ball has been arranged Ior March 2? and another in\ntoe series of whist drives will be\nheld March >\u00ab. y>:\n\"i Attendance prizetyent to Division\nOS  f,..'.:..f \u00ab\u25a0 m\nINVERMERE \u2014A twenty-year\nambition will come true thi* turn-1\nmer when Edward J. (Ted) Zin-\nkan opens Rocky Mountain Boyt\nCamp on Lake Windermere,\nFrom the daya when\u00abpo attended 8ummer camps In Eaitern\nCanada, Ted hat wanted, to have\na camp for boyt which would\nInclude the best features of each\ncamp he attended, x\nBorn and brought up in the East,\nTed is a well-known Canadian\nskier, golfer, archer and canbist.\nBefore the Second World War he\nwas a member of the Canadian ski\nteam which competed in the world\nchampionships in Poland. The team\nalso skied competitively in Austria,\nSwitzerland and France.\nTed did a great deal of paddling\nin Eastern Canada and in September, 1953, Frank Reinarz, a geologist, and he, in separate canoes,\npaddled down the KOotenay River\nfrom the Banff-Windermere highway in Kootenay. National Park to\nCanal Flat, a two-day, seventy-mile\ntrip with 71 per cent fast water.\nAfter five years' war service as\nan officer in the Canadian Army,\nTed Zinkan took his discharge ln\nVancouver and decided after one\ntrip that the Windermere Valley\nwas part of his dream come true.\nHere he bought the old Adami home\noverlooking Lake Windermere and\nwith it as the nucleus built up\nRocky Mountain Lodge, a summer\nresort which he haa operated for\neight years.\nNow the rest of his dream Is coming true, for above the lake on a\nlovely sunny site at an altitude of\n2700 feet, Ted has built Rocky\nMountain Boys' Camp.\nThe camp, situated on this mountain lake between the Rockies and\nthe Selkirks, will afford the best\npossible swimming facilities. The\nwater is warm because of hot-\nsprings in the lake. There are floats\nand docks, canoes and rowboats,\nthe latter for the junior boys. From\nthe docks the campers who have\npassed their required swimming\nand boating tests will start off on\novernight canoe trips.\nThere will be riding with many\ninteresting and exciting pack trips\ninto the mountains where the boys\nwill learn the art of camping out.\nArchery instruction, which trains\nthe eye and helps the posture, will\nalso play an important part of camp\nlife. There will be target and roving\nshoots, the latter to train the boys\nin later life to hunt with bows and\narrows.\nCraftsmanship* too, will be stressed and the boys will learn, the art\nof working with modern tools,\nbuilding .boats and other useful and\ninteresting projects. They will find\nout how to make bows and their\nown arrows right down to painting\nthem with their own identifying\nmark.\nMuch planning has gone into construction of the camp. The main\nbuilding, which overlooks the lake,\nis spacious and airy and here the\nboys will have their meals and in\nthe evenings gather for games.\nThe cabins accommodate six boys\neach and each cabin will be named\nfor one of the big game animals\nwhich abound In the valley. The\nboys in each cabin will be known\nas that group, Elk, Moose, Sheep.\nDeer, and so forth, and antlers or\nhorns over the door will signify\nthe names of cabins.\nNEAR H08PITAL\nAlthough completely removed\nfrom the hustle of city life, the\ncamp is only four miles from the\nBruce Memorial Hospital at -Invermere where there are excellent\nmedical facilities.\nLeeds county in eastern Ontario\nWas first settled in 1764 by United\nEmpire Loyalists.\nPROUD OF ITS AGE\nDE LUXE WHISKY\nIN SMART DECANTER\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\n'or  by   the   Government   of  British\nColumbia.\nFERNIE-Ed Howai'd,\nchairman pf the Fernie Kinsmen Polio Fund drive, has\nannounced that $1720 has been\nraised in Fernie district. The\nmothers' house to house one-\nhour blitz drive netted $1022,\nwhile donations of $697 were\nobtained by means of canvass\nof business and other sources,\nThe   amount   collected   this\nyear is about $450 more than\ncollected in last year's polio\nfund drive.\nFunds have been forwarded\nto the B.C-' Polio Fund headquarters at Vancouver. Most\nof the money is used for medical treatment, travelling expenses and rehabilitation of\npolio patients and the balance\nfor polio research work.\nDistrict Woman Again\nHeads Mining Group\nCrawford. Bay\nWorking for\nFallFair\nBOSWELL\u2014Enthusiastic support\nwas given a card party and dance\nlh toe Memorial Hall here.sponsored by Mrs. J. Karpowich to raise\nfunds for the Crawford Bay and\nDistrict Fall Fair. Many visitors\nwere present from Riondel, Kootenay Bay, Crawford Bay, Gray\nCreek, Sanca, and Wynndel.\nEleven tables of progressive whist\ntook up the early part of the evening and dancing followed. Special\nprizes were given for a competition.\nWinners at cards were Mrs .Len\nWilson, women's first; Len Wilson,\nmen's first; consolation Mrs. George\nHill and Mr. H. Bell. A rose satin\ncushion was won by Mrs. P. Saxby-\nHawkins, angel food cake went to\nBeatrice Hellman and a large piggie\nbank to Mrs. K. Wallace.\nSupper was served by hostess\nMrs. J. Karpowich assisted by Mrs.\nC. Shaub and Mrs. R.. Shell ahd\nothers. Miss Audrey Kocher was at\nthe pianb and Ken Wallace acted aa\nmaster of ceremonies.\nNet proceeds amounted to nearly\n$40. Mr. R. Graham Brown, secretary, gave out copies of the new\nFall Fair prize list-\nMrs. Viola MacMillan, well-\nknown In district mining circles\nand once a New Denver resident,\nwas re-elected president of the\nProspectors and Developeri Association for the 10th successive\nyear Monday.\nMn. MacMillan It the namesake\nof Viola Mac Mines at Sandon\nand started prospecting about 24\nyean ago with her huiband,\nGeorge A, MacMillan.\nCyril T. Young wai elected,\nvice-president and Fred Jpwtey\nsecretary. All live In Toronto,\nOther memben of the executive\nInclude;\nGunnar Berg, Edmonton; K.\nSherman Oliver, Uranium City,\nSask., and Toronto; and Peter\nStewart, Winnipeg.\nSaved by Police\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Police report a 16-year-old girl has been\ntaken to juvenile home here after\nbeing prevented from jumping from\nGranville bridge.\nThe girl wouldn't give any explanation for the jump attempt except that she had \"nothing else to\ndo.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1954 \u2014 3\nGrand Forks Plans Library Display\nGRAND FORKS - Grand Forki\nPublic Library which had a fledgling ttart in 1947, is experiencing\nan encouraging growth.\nEspecially have the Juveniles\nbenefitted from it \u2014 membership ln\nthis category is expanding, circulation of books rlslruj, and regarded\nas most important of all, the level\not reading.\nBoard members and the newly\norganized membership committee\nare now conducting a drive to acquire a greater number of adult\nmembers. Although the adult membership has not increased much\nover the years, circulation of books\nhas, showing that those who belong\nhave furthered their reading habits.\n' Another project the library is undertaking is' a display of books\nwhich they are putting up March 10,\nVisitor's Day at the-schools, as part\nof Education Week. The display is\nprimarily to acquaint parents with\nthe types of books available at toe\nlocal library. Alan C. Clapp has\nbeen re-elected chairman of the\nLibrary Board each term since taking office in May, 1941\nMRS.  G.   A.   MacMILLAN\n70 See Badges Awarded at Wynndel\nAnnual Father and Son Banquet\nM. OVERENNAY\nDIES AT 56\nTRAIL \u2014 Russia-born Mike\nOverennay, who has lived 58 years\nin Canada \u2014 36 in Brilliant \u2014 died\nat his home Sunday afternoon. Mr.\nOverennay was.65.\nHe is survived by his wife Lucy,\none son Edward and two daughters\nMrs. Alex Osachoff and Mrs. George\nMarkin. s\nFuneral service will be held on\nWednesday with burial at Brilliant\ncemetery.\nOldest fat-stock-show in the world\n\u2014the annual Smithfield show in\nEngland\u2014goes back to 1799.\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND WALL\nALL NEWLY DECORATED\nAn ideal family hotel right down town,\ni Reasonable rates.\nUNDER  NEW  MANAGEMENT\nWYNNDEL \u2014 A Boy Scouts\nfather and son banquet was held\nin the Memorial Hall with about 70\nScouts, Cubs, father and guests sitting down to a banquet prepared by\nthe mothers.\nRev. A. O. McNeill of Creston\nasked the blessing. The Scouts and\nCubs repeated their pledges\" and the\nflag was unfurled by Scouts. A.\nFletcher and W- Mather. Toasts to\nthe fathers was given by Scout B.\nMerriam, to the late Baden Powell\nby Scout R. Evans and to the Queen\nby Cub D. Taylor.\nG. Lowery, president of the local\ngroup committee, welcomed the\nScouts, Cubs, fathers and guests and\nintroduced guest speakers H. Dodds\nchairman of the executive of Creston who outlined functions of Boy\nScout executive from provincial\ndown to the local group. W. F.\nBrownlee, treasurer of the executive who reported on financing of\nthe Scouts, and A. W. Burch, group\ncontactor who spoke on the structure of Boy Scout organizations and\nthe need for a \"Rover\" group to\ntake care of the boys too old for\nScouts.\nJ. J. Firth welcomed the group\nfrom the recreation society who\nsponsor toe Scouts and Cubs. Mrs.\nJ. J. Thompson spoke for toe\nmothers.\nScout leader F. Merriam outlined\nthe Scouts program and Adrian\nAndestad, cub master, outlined Cub\nwork.\nA sort program was .held and a\nrelay race for sons and fathers was\nenjoyed.\nSecond olats Scout badges were\nawarded to Scouts W. Fletcher\nand R. Evant and Ron Rolston\ntook the Scout oath, making the\nScout roll 21 and Cubi 10, A wire\nwas read from W. McFarland now\nof Victoria, late Scout muter,\ncongratulating the troop on continued success and special mention to Frank Redshaw who goei\nto Victoria to receive the Medal\nof Merit from the Lieutenant-\nGovernor.\nLutherans Show\nGood Balance\/\nMore Members\nLISTER \u2014 Reports read at Bethi\nlehem Lutheran annual congregational meeting showed that during\n1953 seven members were received\nInto the congregation with another\nfamily Joining at the meeting. After\nall bills were paid there was a\nfavorable balance of funds.\nArthur Sommerfeld and Bertold\nSommerfeld were re-elected to the\nChurch Council. Other members are\nEdward Siebert, Herman Sommerfeld and Erich Sommerfeld. Plans\nare being made to re-paint the\nchurch this Summer.\nThe Women's Auxiliary contri'\nbuted toward helping the congregation. This organization also grew\nduring the year with addition of\nthree members.\nOn the executive are president,\nMrs. H. Knoll; vice-president, Mrs.\nM. Rother; secretary, Mrs. Art Som-\nirlerfeld and treasurer, Mrs. E.\nSiebert\nPlans are being studied for procuring a bell for the belfry.\nLAYOFF OF UNION\nHEAD PROTESTED\nTRAIL \u2014 Arbitration proceedings\ninstituted against the city of Trail\nby Trail and district civic workers\nunion were heard at city hall\nMonday.\nThe c&se arose as a result of the\nlayoff of Union President M. J.\nScanlan, who gave evidence.\nThe union stated Mr. Scanlan was\nlaid off shortly after the union had\nfiled a pay rate grievance on his\nbehalf Dec. 10.\nThe union alleges this constitutes\na violation of the collective agreement between the city and the\nunion which affirms that the city\ncannot take action against an employee because of his union\nactivities.\nChairman of the board is L. M.\nMeBride. City is represented by H,\nH. Clegg and D. M. MacDonald acts\nfor the.union. Also present at toe\nhearing is City Engineer J. D. Reid.\nThe case was postponed from last\nWednesday because of Illness of the\nchairman.\nMARK BADEN POWELL\nBIRTHDAY WITH SALE >\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 In keeping*with\nthe celebration of toe anniversary\nof the birthday ot Lord Baden Powell, founder of the Scout movement,\nEdgewood Cub pack held a successful sale ln Canadian Legion hall.\nBooks, magazines and odds and\nends collected by the Cubs were\nsold. There was also a home baking\nstall. After the sale the Cubs gave a\ndemonstration of their activities\nand played games. Cub Master M.\nChiles outlined the work and\nachievements of the boys. Cubs Ron\nBateman, Lome Haggart and Herman Hug were presented their first\nstars.\nLome Haggart gave a reading\non the life of Lord Baden Powell.\nW. D. Haggart, chairman of the\ngroup committee spoke on the work\ncarried out by'the committee. Representatives named were W. D. Haggart, chairman, Mrs. I. Farrer, Secretary-treasurer and Miss R. Kirk-\nman, R. E. Bateman and D. Williams executive.\nMrs. H. Coates won the candy\ncontest.\nNo Subsidy for Arrow hakes Boat\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The government\nhas decided against a $60,000 subsidy to keep a steamship service in\noperation on the Arrow Lakes, in\nsoutheast British Columbia.\nTransport Minister Chevrier said\nin the Commons Monday that a\nsubsidy would be the only means\nto avert a shutdown of the service\nApril 24 planned by the Canadian\nPacific Railway.\nThe cabinet considered a subsidy\nsome time ago and decided against\nit.\nMr. Chevrier was replying to H.\nW. Herridge (CCF\u2014Kootenay West)\nwho asked if the government could\nfind means of\" maintaining the service until other. transportation\nmeans are available.\nMr. Herrldge said later, outside\nthe House, that 3000 persons In\nthe Arrow Lakes valley depend\non the CPR's flat-bottomed stern-\nwheeler, the Minto, which hat\nbeen serving the lakei for 65\nyears.\nThe 830-ton Minto, one of the\nfew stern-wheelers left in Canada,\nmakes the 120-mile trip from Arrowhead, at the north end of Upper\nArrow   Lake,   to   Robson,   at   the\nCanada's Mildest. Best-Tasting Cigarette\nsouth end of Lower Arrow Lake,\nin two days.\nRailway lines touch the lakes at\nthree points, Mr. Herridge said.\nBut there are no roads linking the\nfarms ahd lumber camps along the\nshores of the lakes and the Minto\nwas their only commercial link with\nthe outside.'\nMr. Herridge, whose farm is served by the Minto, said the boat stops\nwherever a signal fire Is lighted.\nW\/fimmm\\mm^Lm%\u00a3\u2014\nServices For Trail\nTot To Be Held Today\nTRAIL \u2014 Funeral services for\nLyle George Reimann, 20-month-old\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Reimann, 1350 Gardener Avenue will\nbe held Tuesday from the Peace\nLutheran Church. Rev. William\nFrick will officiate.\nHe is survived by his parents, one\nbrother, Leonard, and grandparents,\nMr. and Mrs. Geoajge Newby of\nCreston.\nInterment will be in Mountain\nView Cemetery.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nALAN C. CLAPP\n\u2014Don'* photo.\nPost Office\nBusiness Up\nTotal business transactions at the\nNelson Post Office during the\nFebruary were $190,576 or $18,889\nmore tha nthe $171,687 transacted\nin this month of 1953.\nPostage sales were less than a\nyear ago, sales last month being\n$7934 compared to postage sales of\n$8901 in February, 1953. Money orders issued last month were valued\n$3429 as against $3941 for the same\nmonths last year. Money orders\npaid totalled $4772 compared to\n$4267 paid a year ago. Other revenue totalled $454 against $552 in\nFebruary last year.\nWool has been Australia's moBt\nImportant export from the early\ndays of settlement.\nS. QUARIN RETIRES\n\u2022 NATAL \u2014 One of the latest old-!\ntimers in Natal-Michel district td\ngo on miners' pension is Sylvlo.\nQuarln of Natal. He retired after\nworking 44 years in the mines,\nmostly employed at Michel Colliery. He started work in toe mine!\nin 1910.\nVANCOUVER   B.C,\nint 3 roof-fha-fs -fireproof r;\nJohns-Manville\nROOF SHINCLES\nfltf E BOOKLET - fee your copy ef foil-\ncolor brochure write Canadian Mute*\nMaitvllle D.pl. N-48, If* lay St.,\nToronto, or tee yew nearest J\u00abM dealer.\nSEE    YOUR    NEAREST    J\nR. H. MAC CO.\nNelson, B.C. 12A K.W.C. Block Phone 1568\nK.W. DIXON CO.\n701 FRONT STREET\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1704\nL-fclU.   This Sale Only! SAVE $50\nCOLDSPOT\nSPACEMASTER\nREFRIGERATOR\n\u2022 Featuring\nFully Automatic\nThermo Defrost\nWas $424.95\n$374.95\nNOW\nONLY\nFully Automatic Thermo-Defrost does\nthe entire Job of defrosting. No buttons to puth ... no clocks to watch\n... no pani to empty. Therm-Defrost\ndoes all the work automatically.\n9.4 cu. ft Big full-width freezer hOldt\n40 Ibs. of frozen foods . , . Roomy\nporcelain-enameled vegetable erliper\n. . . full width Handl-BIn for frulti,\nvegetables. Butter-ready with temperature control keeps butter th*\nway you want It, 4 shelves In doer\ngive bonui storage space. Glide-out\nServl-Tray . . . Bacon-Cheete container .. ..Egg Basket Complete with\nwide-mouth Juice bottle, removable\nplastic dishes to itor* leftovers.\nOnly $10 down\nSAVE $50 Full Family-Size COLDSPOT\nGiant Across-the-Top Freezer\n11,9 cu. ft See what you get In thla big Coldspot: SO Ib. freezer\n. . . full-width Handl-BIn holds over '\/2 bushel of fruits, vegetables. Slide out Chiller Tray prevldei extra cold storage for\n.meats, beverages. Adjustable ahelvet, 4 ahelvet In door, eeler\ntone Interior.\nWa* $354.95\n$304-95\n110 DOWN DELIVERS\nWe Service\nWhat We Sell\n556 Baker St.    Phone 1490\nSatisfaction or Money Refunded\nI    ;'*\n\\      I\n\u25a0     -    -\n.   .\u2022\"        ..       ..-'.\n:   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0''\"\u25a0:\"    \"   '\u25a0'\"-\n: ' ' ' \u25a0'\u25a0''\u2022'\u25a0\t\nemW&&\\. \u25a0 \u25a0\nkuxtwSllim S\n' \t\n -\n11'\nSetoiillehed April ag. 190g\nBiiliih Qoltimlsltts\nMeal fiitereafintj Newspaper\nllehed every morning exeept Sunday h,v tht\n~ PUBUSHINQ eOMMN? kWW\nPu\n.ME\nsee\nNEtVB\nIsh Goliimbia\nfJlasj Mull, \"\nttawo,    '\nBaker Street.\nHthflrlBid sg'-Bi\nout Office Bes\nI. .   >. 1.U.LI. \u25a0\u25a0!' l\",l'l .  - -\nTuesday, March 8, 1681\nixegssive Taxing\nHarms TourlstTrade\nIf we ever hope te build up end\n'm intBln eur teu?.\u00a7Vtred,e It wtU pay.\nus* te heed the eampleinti of these\nwho have already visited us, One et\ntha tnejer treublea atenji from the\ngreed of governments in this country\nto-jeak the'motorist, Almost a third\nef'every dollar we \u25a0pay In eenneetlen\nwith a meter ear is tax. Every time he\nbuys a .gallon ef gasoline or a tire er\na Replacement part in this eeuntry the\nvisiting Amerlean \"gets a sheek,\n:;Taka the ease er tires, Ira G,\nNdedles, president el the \u00a7. T. Seed-\nrich Co,, had seme interesting comment\non this in a rfeent speeeh, \"Canadian\nmanufaetu'rer8?rhe pointed out, \"are'\nbeing unjustly eritlelsed for the wide\npriee variance between identical Canadian, ahd' -United States . manufae\u00ab\ntureM;'* he>\"|\u00ab!lt\u00bbtbd: aut, \"are being\nlinjustly cjrjtici?e4 for the wide priee-\nvarianee between identical Canadian\nand United States manufactured goods.\nThe fault rests with the Federal Gov-\n.ernmentV W\/\u00ab g\u00abl\u00aba and 18% excise\ntaxes, and the unrealistic practice of\napplying these taxes at the.manufacturing .level, .rather than the retail\nlevel,\" Mr. Needles cited examples of\ntire prices in both countries' \"A 800-16\n4-ply tap quality tire sells in Canada\naround $28,80 including tgx, while in\nthe \u25a0'United States the same tire is\nadvertised at $20,60,, or 22,3% lower.\nHowevar, if' the',sales and excise taxes\ntotalling 25% of the net selling price\nand the tax effect of the retail markup\nwerarenved, the Canadian tire would\nsell for '$2? as compared to the U.S.\nprice cf MtftV] ,     \/      '\nBETTERS TO\nTHEEJ3ITOR\ntetters I* thi N'tir on any toplo Of\n.Itnuint Interest in welcome It-they are\nbrief, naaurata and fp'fi No lettep will k*\nInserted In wht[ti tr.to nart, exeent over\nthe signature end gddjett aMhe writs\/,\nUnsolicited eorrsspondence cannot lit '\u25a0*.\n. Photo Stirs Memories\nfa the Sditeri   '\n8!r=\u00a5our picture to Msrch. I Issue of\nnushmnbile between Kingston ana wall island\nmade toe kind ef lonesome,\n; I Uvea in Gape Vincent, n, y\u201e across from\nKingston, tn 1001, The N,Y,q, Railway Game\nlate Capo Vineent and tho passengers, lor\nBanada use to take a side wheeler ferry .from\nGape Vineent te Kingston in th* summer\ntime, hut 'in the winter time it wen a. elesed\nsleigh and horses, hut in to* spring time it\nwas en open flat bettors heat 'with runner*,\n\u2022nd sloping end's, on account of felts.at water,\nthen iee. It was pretty hard on the passengers\nheeause when they were, on ice they had to\nget out and help push, end then when wo came\nto water they .had to Jump in and push or row,\nA let nf them get suite wet, Bat moving fast\nenough] they-wsuld Weak through rotten ice.\n\u25a0 Welt Island is In It. kawrenee River between Kingston and fjape Vincent, The mod'\nern contrivance would have been welcomed\nIn those days,\n8, A, PHftUPg.\n.   Operator, 6PB, Procter, 8. c.\nTap tha\" Resources\nA C:minio'n Government genuinely\ncon\" .^d about problems of social security world' not nsed to be spurred\nby Opposition members Into-formulating a development program whieh\nwould include the construction of national highways. Mr. John Diefenbaker b:s3d his arguments for a \"roads\nto!re?oi'.rceg. policy\" upon the.need for\noHr.-i:,-\" presently inaccessible mineral\nar'ks in the north for exploitation The\nneed is v\/idsr than that,\n. ?If~-ienc.I development in commercial 2nd induEtrial activity has pro-\ncefec'ed \u00a30. rapidly that Provincial Governments today aro straining their revenue resources to keep up with essential highway construction in the settled\naabas cf the Dominion- They pioneered\nthfe extension of road services into the\noEer mining areas, By that and other\nrrfeans. they contributed to the eco-\nrtlrnic strength which now- supports a\n$S billion Dominion budget. There is\nrrfcre social security to be gained by\ntils Dominion now taking over the construction of\" all roads of primarily na-\ntiinal importance than by distributing\nci ih bonuses which contribute nothing\nthe creation of new sources of em-\nWant to R^&d a\nGood Novel? Try\nThe Dictionary\nBy W.\u00ab. e,\nIf you don't believe the English language\ndictippary is i novel, Just read it to find out-\nEach current edition add* to It novel words,\nespecially recent issues whieh have either re-i\nluctantiy'or,eagerly Ineluded many novel\nwords ror expressions Invented hy the general\npublic, or rather words Invented by tame individuals, to be adopted by his community end\nto spread aroundvuntii in common use:\nJ'Jfove!'' means aomsthing new, a word,\nidea, or incident, or discovery o| public Interest, ate- The new dictionaries are bulging\nwith \"novels\". Our language grew? dally mora\n^versatile? Perhaps that If the word, tor these\nwho like variety\u2014or It could he \"confusing\" to\nanyone learning the language as an adult, So\nthought the Frenchman, who with his hooks\nAnd an English friend who volunteered to\nhelp, was fairly eager to learn to speak and\nread fngiish until he came to the many meanings of the word \"go\", Helpfully, his English\nfriend defined the meaning of this smail*word\n\u2014as a verb, an adjective, a noun, etc. He mentioned just a few, sueh a'i,\/G-lt, vamoose, skedaddle, ebtgusdue'ate, proceed, advance, bike,\nscat, hit the high' apsis, make truck's, make\nyourself scarce\"\u2014ail denoting tho action of\n\"go\". He told the poor fellow of the expressions, \"He has lots of go\"; \"on the go\"; \"He's\na goner\"; \"He will get lt\"; \"The get of that\nstallion\"; \"How's the going?\"; \"Ha't a gone\ngooie\";\"He and she are going together\". At r\nthe story goat, the young Frenchman with hir\ncompanion were on board ship hound tor Caned*\u2014th* Frenchmen threw his English language book in the ocean and decided to settle\nin Quebec,\nOnce upon a time a bright lad invented\nthe word \"go\", For a long time It wat the\nsimple I go, you go, go you, go io, go up, go\ndown, etc, Now look in the dictionary and tee\nwhat wo've done, and we're probably go-lng\nto make a lot more novel word* ef many\nsyllables, to use where, long ago, * slmplo expressive grunt conveyed the message Just *s\nclearly,\nHowever, today's teacher's and pupils\nwould not enre to go b*ck to that.\nNor would the cditon, Today's dictionary\nls Interesting, novel,\n(Contributed)\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to my reader. Names \u2022' noraqn*\nasking'questions will net tat puniliM-\nTht'*   It  n\u00bb  th*r|t  top thli  leM'e*. \u2022-\n0u*stieni witorWHT r\u00bb: wwim* r\nBY, MAlt- ewept where then H obvious\nnecessity fef-pflVMji.   \u2022\nB. ft, Wynndel\u2014Dom noiton, havo any hoard-\nIng-aut kennels Where an* eeitW |*ave a\ndeg while on holiday*\n.  Set ln toueh with Br-J,tf, Campy; Bfl, 1,\nNolson, phone 7TMM, and Clerihew Kennels,\nEighth Street, Nelson, phone !M0,\n5 immigrant, TrniHEan you ton us when\nPrseee Independenee Say is observed In\nCanada, M at all?\nfhe BtaeW National Holiday (Independence Pay. 1821) is marked on all Canadian\ncalendars tor March Sgth, It Is not observed\nas a general holiday hut gcrpps the Pomlnlen\nQreek eemmuplties held suitahle ceremonies,\nj, 8, v. w., Kimberiey-Ceneernlng nucstion\nen literature dealing with details el stals-\ntog ef the Tltanlei II yeu will send us\nyeupfleme BPd ppstei address we will put\njrgu jn touch with anqther reader who\n- ha; very kindly offered a lend a memorial'\ncopy ei a gritiih magastoe in whieh there\nare ell particulars,\nTeacher, Pernie-;i am considering taking a\ntr|p to Holland this year and would Uke\nte  get pU  the information  possible op.\ntravel in that country, steamer pamphlets\nare not suite enough, where could i write\ntor fuller information?\nI Hogenkamp, Netherlands National\nTourist @fflee, ill iherbreoke Crescent, Pointe\nClaire, p,\u00a7,\nH, C, T\u201e Haney, 8-C^=AerBBs the toee of a\n'\u25a0'*   grandfather clock 1 purchased roopptiy\napnear the flgures B to OB'\/i- Please ten,\nme their meariipg'\nThese Indicate the phases of toe moon=\nmo when the moon is turned away, to 19H\nto the last nuuter,\nLooking Backward\n1OVBAROA09   \u2022\nFrom the Nelson Daily News. March I, IM*\nA farmer well known Kootenay resident,\nCol, R. 8. Westhury, onee ef Crawford Bay,\nhas written an Interesting account of his war\nexperiences in a letter to A, W. tymbery of\nSray   Creek,   mentlpnlpg   several   Kootenay\nfolks,' ',.'.,\n' At. the Rotary meitjng it was announced\nRotary curlers' winnings would he donated to\nthe Crippled Children's Fund- ,\nSeveral, skating stors from Calgary, InV\neluding twq Canadian Silver medalists, will\nfeature In the Rotary Club lee Carnival, at\nthe Clyic Centre op Monday,\na veahi'aqo\nFrom the Nelson Bally News, March 9, 192J\nMr. and Mrs, James Woodall, Silica Street,\nhave as thejjr hquse guest Miss Martha Webb\nof Calgary, former resident of Nelson.\n,: .Kaslo board of trade is backing the efforts\n; of'the Nei\u00abon..board of trade to secure early\ncompletion of the provincial hlghwiy fey way\nof the east side of Kootensy Lake.\nB0 YBARB AOQ\nPrem the Nelson Dally Newt, March 9, 19M\nCharlet r, McHardy has been gaaet'-sd a\nnotary public and a F, Pownaii of Fort Steele\nhis been appointed justice of tha peace,\nThe steamer Kailo's new hour tor departure tor the north each day places tho mall\ntervlce for Lardeau, Poplar and Trout Lake In\na bad plight. Tha Kailo leaves at S o'clock and\nttopi. at Kislo, where the Kokanee, by a bad\nconnection, picks up the mail from the prevl.\nout day, making the mall service very much\ndelayed.\nIt's Been Said.\nLet thy c\u00abrri\u00abgt be frlmdly, but not foolishly free; tn unwary opennit* cauSeth contempt, but t llttlo rciervedneii, retpect; *nd\nhindtoma courteiy, klndrtei*.\u2014Thomll Fuller.\nYour Horoscope\nA bright outlook should be yours, Coin is\nlikely in various wayt. Look for on independent character though with a gentle dltpotltion\nin the child born today,  .\nNothing it denied to well-direettd libor,\nend nothing it ever to be attained without it.\n\u2014Sir Jothu* RCynoldt.\nSet Their Own Pace1\n(Woodttoek Itntlnel-Rtvltw)\nIn the imall town life it radically differ,\nent. People have not so many mechanical\namuiementt, They muit turn to thot* around\nthwn to rottto their Interest, Th* pace It not\nso twift. The-inhabitant! do not com* and go\nwith the dime rapidity.\nHouse* Become lniep\u00abrably Identified with\nfimllies, the generatlonl of which have lived\nin them. Without good neighbors who become\nin time almost memban Of one's larger family,\nOxlttence would teem btrren indeed. Joys and\ntorrows are shared by the many rather than\nby the few, and become correspondingly magnified or mlnlmlied. There Is no such thing as\nloneliness.\nToday's Bible Thought\nIn the beginning God created\u2014\nGen. 1:1.,\nPractically all Intelligent men believe that. But somo Imagine that\nthe Infinite loit lntarett. thortly\nafter itartlpg the \"amailng tym-\nphonythat hat carried'on for infinite aget.\nWe believe neither lh Spontoneout\ngeneration nor perpetual motion.\nGod still guide* hii universe.\nGunL <HpJ\nAmy is a meek little thing, who\ncouldn't be bossy, but no wife is too\nmeek to nudge her husband when\nhe does the wrong thing in public.\nmHsawiNej \u00bbrmif'V mrejtff) \u25a0 '\u00bb.r.iu,' inks'\"une\n,     A tHkmOQK HOUM66 ITORY\nThe Naval Treaty\nBy \u00bbH ABTHUS CONAN POYLE\n(Published by arrangement with\ntpe estate of Sir Arthur (Japan\nBoyle., Weris rights reserved, \u00abe\nipstration'i eapyplghted, ''1iW>l\u00bb\nKing Fqaturas 3y|idlooto, Inc.)   r\n' eaftPTiRTwe <eor>ttRue4>\n\"Havf yau Ipr-mad any (hapt*\nabout how that bell rang \".vC f\n\"Weu> t rsvinf psrrfpns thaWt belts\nme, jt was a opoj hanf'to gl*e the\nalarmUKe that,\"\/       :.  :.'\u25a0'\n\"\u00a5e\u00a7, it was a queer thing to do,\nMany thanks to you for what you\nhavs-'told *e- If J pan put the man\ninto your hands yeu shall hear Irom\nme, Geme along, Watson,\"    t\n\"Where gra we going new?\" I\nspited as we left the office.\n\u25a0 \"To Interview tod Holdhurst,\nthe future premier of England.\"\nWe were fortunate in findipg that\nbis lordship wss itm In his eham=\nhers in gowning it'eet gqd, en\nHolmes sending |p his cord, we\nwere instantly shown up- The\nStatesman rraj\u00a7[yed US with that qla>\nfashioned ceurtgpy for which he jg\nremarkable apd seated us on the\ntwo   luxuriant  lounges  on  either\nside of the fireplace, Standing on\nthe rug betwen us, with his slight,\ntall figure, his sharp features,\nthoughtful face, and curling hair\nprematurely tinged with gray, he\nseemed is represent that not too\ncommon type, a nobleman who is In\ntruth noble,\n''Tour name Is very familiar te me\nMr, Holmes,\" said hc-smiling, \"And\nof course I cannot pretend te be\nigriorant ef the object el your visit,\nThere has only been one occurrence\nto these offlees whieh eould call\ntor your attention, In whose Inters\nest are you acting, may I ash?\"\nflIn that ef Mr, Perey Phelps,\"\nanswered iherloelt,\n\"Ah, my unfortunate nephew!\nYou ean understand that our hln>\nship makes it the more impassible\nfor me to screen him In any way, It\nthreatens his career,\"\n\"But if the document Is found?\"\n\"Ah, that, of course, would he different!\"\n\"I have one or twe questions, Was\nit In this room that.you gave your\ninstructions as te the eopylng of the\ndocument?\"\n\"Jt was,\"\n\"Then yeu could hardly hsve been\nqverheard-\n\"It is aut of the question.\"\n\"Did you ever mention to any-\nojne that it'Was yeur \"intention to\ngive anyone tho treaty te be copied?\" . i\n\"Never.\"\n\"Well, then with the thief's Bres-\nqnce here was purely accidental. He\nsaw his chfcnce and ne took lt\"    .\nThe stateman smiled. \"You take\nma out of my province there,\" said\nhe.\nHolmes considered for a moment.\n\"There is another very important\npoint which I wish to discuss with\nyou,\" said he, \"You feared, as I understand, that very grave results'\nmight follow from the details el this\ntreaty becoming known,\"\nA shadow passed ever toe expres-\nlive face of toe stateman, \"Very\ngrave,, indeed.\"\n\"And hftve they occurred?\"\n\"Not yet,\"\n\"If the treaty had reached, let us\nspy, the French or Russian Foreign\nOffice, you would expect te hear of\nIt?\"\n\"I should,\" said Lord Holdhurst\nwith a wry face,'\n\"Since nearly ten weeks have\nelapsed, and nothing has been\nheard, It is not unfair to suppose\nthat tor some reason the treaty has\nnot reached them,\"\nLord Holdhurst shrugged his\nshoulders,\n\"We can hardly suppose, Mr.\nHolmes, that the thief took the\ntreaty in order to frame It and\nhang it up.\"\n\"Perhaps he is waiting for a better\nprice,\"\n\"If he waits a little longer he will\nget no price at all, The treaty will\noease to be secret ln a few months\"\n''That is most Important,\" said\nHolmes. \"Of course, It is a possible\nsupposition that the thief has had a\nsudden illness\u2014\"\n\"An attack of brain fever, for ex.\nample?\" asked the stateman, flashing a glance at him.\n\"I did not say to,\" laid Holme*\n\"And now, Lord Holdhurst, wa have\nalready taken up too much of. your\nValuable time, and \u201ew0 shall wish\nyou good-day.\"\n\"Every success to your lnvettlg*-\ntion, be the criminal who it may,\"\nanswered tha nobleman as he bowed\nus out at the door.\n\"He't a fine fellow,\" obterved\nHolmet ai we cam* out Into Whitehall, \"but ha hat a struggle to keep\nup his position, Ha Is far from rich.\nYou noticed, of courte, that his boots\nhad been reioled. Now, Watson, I\nwon't detain yqu from your legitimate work any longer. I shall do\nnothing toore today unless I have\nan answer to my cab advertisement.\nBut I should be extremely obliged\nto you If you Would come down\nwith me to Woking tomorrow by\nthe tame train which wa took yesterday.\"\nI met him next morning and we\ntravelled to Woking together. He\nhad had no answer to hit advertisement, tnd no trash light had been\nthrown updn the case. He had, when\nhe se willed it, the utter immobility\nof * red Indian, and I could not\ngather from hi* appearance whether\nhe was satisfied or not with the\nprogress of the case. His conversation, I remembef, wm'about the\nBartillori tyltem of.measurements,\nand expressed his enthusiastic admiration of the French savant,\n,We found oui- client with his devoted nurse, but looking, considerably batter than before. He rose\nfrom the sofa and greeted us without difficulty when we entered-\n\"Any news?\" he asked eagerly.\n\"My report, os I expected, is a\nnegative one,\" said Holmes. \"I have\nseen Forbes, alto your Uncle, and-1\nhave let one or two trains of inquiry upon foot which may lead to\nsomething.\" -\n\"You have not lost heart,\u00bbtoen?\"\n\"By no.means.\"\n'.'6od Wess you lor,saying tbatl\"\ncried Mi?s. Harrison; \u2022,    ..,.,   .\n\"Now we have.more Vtell:jrou\nthan you have for us,\" said Phelps,\nreseating himself upon the couch.\n\"We had an toJvenfuTa during the\nnight,, end one. which might have\nproved *o ba g serious ene? His en-\nprcsslon grew 'Very grave -\u00bb\u00bb he\nspoke. \"Bo you know,\" said he. \"that\nI begin to believe that I am the un<\nconscious centre pf some monstrous\nconspiracy? . \u25a0    \t\n\"'An!\" murmured Holmes, \"Pray\nlet me hear about it.\"\n\"\u00a5eu must knpw thst last night\nwas the very first one that I hive\nslept without a nurse to the room,\nI had a night-light burning. About\ntwo to toe morning i had sunk tote\nb light sleep when I was suddenly\naroused by a slight noise. It was\nlike the soundjvhieh a mouse makes\nwhen it is gnawing a plank, and S\nlay listening to If le* seme time\nunder the impression that it must\ncome from that cause. Then it grew\nlouder, and suddenly there came\nfrom the window % sharp metallic\nsnick, I sat up to amasament, There\ncould be no doubt what the squnds\nwere pow, The first had been caused by someone forcing an instrument through the slit oetweep the\nsashes, and the second by the catch\nbeing pressed back,\n\"There was g pause of some minutes, as if the person WCre waiting\nto sec whether the noise had awakened me- Then I heard a gentle\ncreaking as the window was neing\nstowly opened, I soijld stand it po\nlonger, so i sprang cut of bed end\nflung open the shutters- A' man was\ncrouching at the window, I could\nsee little of him, for he was gone\nljke a flash- He was wrapped in\nsome sort af cloak which eame\nacrpss the lower part of his face.\nOne thing only I 'am su'e of, apd\nthat is that he had seme weapon (n\nhis hand, it looked to me like a\nknife. I distinctly saw its gleam as\nhe turned te run.\"\n\"This is most interesting,\" \u00a38ld\nHolmes. \"Pray what did yeu do\nthen?\"\n\"I should have followed him\nthrough the window if I had been\nstronger, As it was, I rang the bell\nto rouse the house. Jt took me some\nlittle time, for toe bell rings to the\nkitchen\" and the servants all sleep\nupstairs, I shouted, however, and\nthat brought Joseph down, and he\nroused the ethers. They found\nmarks pp the bed outside the window, but the weather has been so\ndry lately that it was heeeteSs to\nfollow the trail across the grass.\nThere's a place, however, on the\nwooden fence which skirts the road\nwhich shows signB, they toll fne, as\nif .someone had got over and, had\nsnapped the top rail in doing so.\nI have said nothing to the local\npolice yet; I had best have your\nopinion first,\" \u25a0-.\n(Hoime\u00ab deals out e Week eye at\nthe cost of some eut knuckles, the\nthief is exposed and the theft fully\nexplained in tomorrow's climactic\nconcluding chanter of \"The Naval\nTreaty,\" exclusively in The Pally\nNews),\nIndustrialist\nSupports Benton\nSTAMFORD, Conn, (AF) - A\nprominent industrialist said Saturday he believes that former Senator\nWilliam Benton (Dem.-Conn.) said\nabout Senator Joseph McCarthy\n(Rcp.-Wis.l, and ls willing to say\nio on the wltnesi stand,\nMcCarthy withdrew a M,000,000\nlibel suit against Benton, He explained that his lawyers had told\nhim be could not prove damages\nbecause they could pot 'ind anyone who believed the Benton statements that McCarthy was guilty of\nperjury,- fraud ind calculated de-\ncelt on the American people,\nSaturday, Walter H. Wheeler, Jr.,\npresident of the Pitney-Bowes, Inc.,\n\u25a0nd former president of the New\nEngland Council, a private development organization, made public this\ntelegram he sent McCarthy:\nGLAD TO TE9TII\u00bbY\n\"The New York Times this morning reports you as stating you are\nwithdrawing your $2,000,060 libel\nsuit against ex-senator Benton because your lawyers had been unable\nto find anywhere in the United\nStatet anyone who would testify\nthat he believed anything Mr. Ban-\nton had said. ,\n\"Your Ijwyers could not have\nlooked very hard. I would be glad\nto testify for you that I ba|Teve\nwhat' Senator Benton hat said about\nyou, and I am ture there are many\nmillion* of others in this country\nwho would, be happy to do likewise.\"\nCharge Bus Driver\nWith Manslaughter\nTOHONTO (CP)\u2014A Toronto bus\ndriver was' charged with manslaughter Saturday after an alleged\naltercation between the' driver and\none of Hit passengerl who died later\nIn hospital from 0 fractured skull,\naearabrtl hemorrhage and biWa\ninjuries,\nLome F. Perry, 45, the driver, was\narretted following the death Friday\nof Harold L. 9*llar, S3, president of\na Small aerial photo company,\nPolice said they knew nothing of\nany altercation end thought at first\nSeller had died of a seizure. Later,\nthey received a phona call from 0\nperson who, they laid,' claimed he\nhad witnessed the altercation, 1\nPerry Was remanded and bail wat\nfixed tt $5000.\nToronto Transport Commission\noff totals said Perry was ejecting Sel-\nlar from the bus when the latter fell\nand struck his head on the roadway,\nThey said they were told the man\nwas \"drunk.\" .   *\nCLASSIFIED  ABB GET   RESULTS\nPHONE' 144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n. The inhauit fan inaae.pf %\u2022 apartment may be no nentheusa\ndtye JtMiJMt heuilng tenditkni he Int what thi* *?e nAyaihlnj.\nfen. 0.(3.. this papa pigeon ~hli ahestlnflifed te the lurrtlnjjjiIm\nft *he approved manner et the preud, father = mm wall pleased\ntna\u00bb hi can keep his nre|Bny mm. He teek ever while manto. wmA\naut shapplug fop foad,\u20146;nt\u00bbal pre*l CenitoliPi\nJebb Declares UN\nSaved Asians\nNfiW YORK (AP)Hilr Oladwyn\nJebb sailed tor home Friday with a\nfarewell message that the United\nNations saved Asia from eommun*\nIsm, Sir Siadwyn, retiring as Belt*\nish permanent representative to the\nPN said \"If it had pot been for\n(he UN, working under'American\nleadership, eemmunism might have\ntriumphed to Asia, whieh 't hasn't\nyet.\"\t\nDrug Bills High\nFor Canadians\nSABNIA, 8nt- (iSPl-eanediens\nspend almost as much en drugs te\ncure their Ills as they pay to hespU\ntala and dentists, And .about one-\nguarfer qf the average family's\nhealth budget gees to buy protection\nunder publlo and private medical\nand hospital care plans.\nHealth Minister Martin said Sat'\nurday those figures are some ef preliminary findings of a eountry-w'de\neiekenss survey made In 1981, Results of the survey ere still being\nanalysed, '  ..\nCanada's total health bill in 1851\nwas- $675,000,000, arid only one in\nfive Canadians went through the\nyear without an illness, Mr, Martin\nsaid In a speech prepared for de*\nlivery at the opening of a new addition to the Sarnia General Hospital,\nM1ALTHV MQrLB\nDepslte the statlstcls, he said, Canadians are. among., .the worjd'.f\nhealthiest people. Cahada's general\ndeath rate has oeep cut hy a third\nto 80 years, putting her fourth\namong the eountries of the world,\nwhlto her death rate among older\nnersons is lowest of any of thelesd;\nIng countries-\nMighty Hawsers\nRaise Liner\nLIVERPOOL, England (Heuteril\n\u2014 Sixteen concrete-embedded\nwinches with huge Steel hawiers\nSaturday heaved the fire-wrecked\nliner Empres of Canada from her\nside to an almost upright angle of\n10 degrees.\nThe big lift, climax to 13 months\nof intensive preparation!, wat completed in 86 minute!, The liner's flat\nbottom now is settled comfortably\nIn the mud. Only pumping optra-\ntiont, which will latt between tlx\nand eight weekt, remain,\nBIOOB8T UNOJHTAKINO\nThe 20.000-ton Canadian .Pacific\nliner was gutted by fire at dock\nhere en the night of Jan. 24-ZB, 1083.\nTotal cost of salvaging the hulk\nwill be more than $840,000. It will\nbring about $112,000 as scrap. The\nfinancial lots of itt railing will be\nborne by the local docks and harbor\nboard which must accept the responsibility for removing all wrecks.\nMore than 200 men took part in\nthe salvage operation, one of the\nbiggest ever undertaken In Britain.\nSalvage experts from tha United\nStates were among those looking on\n\"Tighlen Bells\"\nSays Nehru\nNEW DELHI (AP)-Prime Min-\nliter Nehru told India's business\nleaders Saturday his government\nIntends to raise \"enormous funds\"\nwithin the country \"so we will not\nneed to go about on crutches sup\nplied by others.\"\nThe annual session of the Indian\nFederation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry listened in silence as Nehru asked all Indians to\n\"tighten your belts\" in tha face\nof United States military aid to\nPakistan. In an addressl widely interpreted at paving the way to possible termination of United States\neconomic aid, Nehru declared: \"Thit\ngeneration of ourt In India li condemned to hard labor,\"\n\"It li true that t weak person\nneeds help from others,\" he said.\n\"We thill continue our policy of\nfriendly co-operation with all coun-\ntrlet thit accept ft, We to the government of India do not think in\nterms of lloJatlon. But it is becoming increasingly clear to the new\natmosphere that real progress for\nus will dapend on the progress we\nmake ourselves.\"\nCBC Plans TV for\nSchool Classes\nBy HARRY FCeiH\nTeRQNTe (eP)=fJhtidren in f>\nnadian schools are going to discover\nthere's more to television than eow>\nhoys and comics.\nEducatienal telecasts are getting\npnder way this month., aJtei'.lBnj.r\nstudy and planning by toe 68b M\neo-operatiph with <te|e_h,\u00a7rs' ojgan>\ntaUons. \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0,.,\nTelevision presentations of tala\nnature at first will be ran after\nschool, hours, tying in iwth fhe regular seheoi radio broadcasts mm\nat many schools during the day, But\nnext November regular television\nschool hours, part ef the ordinary\nclassroom routine where teachers\nare equipped' and ready to watch\ntelevision- ',.- .     \"   ,\";f\n\"*' Ai!i*uiBii.'j3il;mujWntlaa)\nPaper Gloomy on\nRevival Results\n- LONDON (Beuters)-The Church';\npf England Newspaper suggests that\nthe revivalist message of American evangelist Billy Graham is ont\n\"the British public has heard, tried,\nfound wanting and turned away\nfrom.\"\n\"It may, et course, happen thit although the dynamic of revivalism\nhas run down once, .end more than:.,\nonce, its impact may come freshly\nupon a generation that hss 'grown\nup In different 'circumstances,\" thr\nchurch journal added,:\nNO AUTHORITY!\nBut, It asked, what use ii tt to.\nsay \"The Bible says,this or that\":\nwhen the Bible has- rro authority? .\u00bb\nGraham ls holding t three-month i\ncrusade in icndOrti.'' -\u2022''-\u2022\u2022 I\nThe paper continued* '\u2022'      \u25a0' <m\n\"When we constantly hetr-b*v\nwailed toe abstnet of a sense of tin\namong our people, of what use ear*\nIt be to appeal te a consciousness ot\nguilt..,. .   , ..-\u2022;\u25a0\n\"Can a movement.really succeed\nthat carefully evades ell tog ethical\nproblems of toe day just. because\nthey are controversial and' awkward? , \u2022 , If approach along those\nlines is impossible;'surely whtlhelfli\nIs a new and easily.' intelligible presentation of toe:.Xa*lsSian. understanding of the universe in which\nw* live?\"\nCOLD WATERS\nThe Arctic ocean covers about 5,-\n900,000 square miles, nearly half\nof It covered by icefields.\nRed Threat In\nBrit. Honduras\nLONDON (AD'-^Th* government\nha* boon liked urgently to investigate 1 possible Communist threat\nto British Honduras in Central\nAmerica, authoritative tourcei dli-\nclosod Monday.\nThey confirmed * raport published In Lord Beaverbrook'i .pro-empire Dally Express that Governor\nPatrick Muir Renlson seeks Immediate appointment of a royal com-\nmission to uncover any link between the colony's leading party!\nand Communists ln neighboring\nGuatemala.\nBritish. Honduras is due to elect!\na new legislative assembly April!\n23 under the terms ot a constitution]\npublished last Saturday.\nA government statement on thai\nsituation ln the colony is expected\nto be made next Wednesday in thea\nHouse of Commons. The colonial!\noffice -laid nothing official could baj\nsaid until then. But responsible in-l\ntorments confirmed the report r\/1\nthe situation By The Express.\nLiquor Act Saves\nMan From Jail\nPENTICTON, B. C. (CPJ-A legl\nlest reiident convicted twice of aell-J\ning liquor, wat lived from a jallf\nterm by the repeal of the old B,r\nliquor act.\nG. W. Sutherland, brought lntfj\ncourt in 1 wheel-chair wai given 1\nsuspended sentence and orders\nto post $400 bond,\nEvidence wat that Sutherland\nsold to two persons who went til\nhis home, Hit wife warkit, to tupl\nport their five imeir children,     1\nHe bad a previous conviction ol\nselling liquor, but under the old tell\nMagistrate 0;- A, McLelland talil\nthat repeal of the act, ln ef feci\n\"gave this man a now lease on life:]\nIf the previous conviction ha|\nbeen noted, it would have meant*'\nmandatory jail term.\n-\nr\n1\n It. Pays, To 0uy Quality\"\nMEN'S\nLOAFERS\n\"icbijUAKr'\nGenuine band sewn Slbago Mocs..\nDeep burgundy or black. Polish\nleathers, leather soles. .\nWidth* B'tnd 0.\nBites 6|\/j to 11.\n$12.50\nR* ANDREW\n&C0.\nLEADERS IN POOTFASHION\n. Established 1902\nCircle Bridge Club\nEntertained\n|! FSUnVALE --Mr*.'F. 1C Pelt-\ntsche entertained* members of the\nCircle Bridge. Club at her home.\nThere were two tables In ploy, Mrs.\nHarry Matsen and Mrs. Alfred Dll-\nUng were the two top scorers.\ntdJiMA. IHfL LOiik\nWfaian. TfletAiin.\nSIZES\nt9l15       UV&-24H\n1    f half-sizer\nI Crisp scalloped collar \u2014 slimming\nprinces* lines \u2014 \u00abtep-in olosing.\nThli work-playhouse dress combines both charm and comfort. It's simple to tew too. Proportioned to fit\ntnd flatter the short, fuller figure-\nno alteration problem*. Choose a\ngay cotton!\nPattern 9115: Half size* 14%. 16%,\n16%; 20%, .22%, 24%. Size 16% takes\n4%.yards 35-inch fabric\nlil* easy-to-use pattern gives per:\nfeet fit. Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step,\nI Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35e)\nIn coins'\u25a0 (stamps oannot -be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\n[Send your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, Care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B. C.\nMakes $Q6d Gai^erLter\nCALOABY (CP) - Ever feelllke\nheckling your husband on the way\nhe does toote repair Jobs? . & ii'.\nA group of Calgary women are\ntaking a night course to woodworking^ which will put them In a\nposition to heckle with authority.\nAt the Institute of ^Technology of\nArt, the women are learning to turn\nout tables, lamps, bookshelves, and\nother household furniture,' It ia -a\n72-hour course with \u2022 classes of two\nhours, each, held twice weekly.',\nWhy do women take such a\ncourse? \u2022\"\u25a0 '   .\u25a0       '\u2022.\"\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\n. \"I'm taking tbe course for toe\nfun of it| and because I think it's\na good idea to be able to use hand\ntools properly, and know something\nabout machine tools,\" says t doctor'* wife.\nADDED ABILITY\n\"I think moat of the women In\nthe' class are taking lt so they can\neither heckle their husbands into\ndoing things the right way, or fairing that, so they can do toe jobs\nthemselves,'' this woman added.\nAnother \"student\" explained: \"I\nhave bought an unfinished house\nto Victoria and I want to finish as\nmuch as possible of it as I can myself, particularly th* Interior. I\nwant to change it around a lot so it\nwill fit better into its setting.\n\"One of my women frlendB built\nher house herself, so I guess lt one\ncan do it, another can, I just wish I\nhad started the course a long time\nago.\"\nA sister and brother team, Dor\nothy and'Raymond Blust, have tak;\nen up woodworking as a hobby.\n\"We both want to make furnlture-\nfor the house,\" said Dorothy. * am\nworking on a set of floor lamps and\nmy brother has a cedar chest and\nan end table on the go. -We are\nhaving a lot of fun out of it too.\"\nLIKES TO HELP\nMr*. J., M. Browning said:\n\"My husband wanted to taker the\ncourse and I joined so I could work\nat the same thtaga he does. We tre\nfinishing some rooms ln the base-'\nment and he wanted to learn the\nproper method.\n\"We're both enjoying lt and my\nhusband is making a'magazine\nrack while I work on a sewing box\ncomplete with partitions, so I have\nto use-some of the machine tools.\n\"I'm not too keen about machine\ntools\u2014some are a bit tcarey. I would\nrather work with appliances. I\nwant to make some things tor toe\nchildren, toys like doll houses and\ncradle*, and I guess that, will keep\nme busy for a long time.\" \u2022      ,\nThe students select' their own\nprojects with guidance and draw up\ntheir own plans.\n\"But I like to ace them undertake\nprojects within their scope,\" tald\ninstructor George Miles.\n\"The women try very hard and\ngenerally show good progress. They\nare not too fussy about working\nwith specialized equipment since\nmost of them haven't, or may never\nhave, such equipment to use at\nhome.\" '-.'\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nLove Problems\nLove Affair No Solution\nFor Wife With Conscience\nBy JANE ATKINSON\nA young woman of 24, married\nseven yeara and mother of a small\nchild, tells me that hers was ai \"marry in. haste, repent of leisure\" marriage; that she never loved her husband from the beginning, and now\nla tempted to have an affair with\nsomeone she thinks she really does\nlove.\nDuring the first four years of her\nmarriage, she explains, her lack of\nfeeling for her husband was aggravated by his mistreatment of her.\nBut adds, \"now, however, he has\nchanged, and although he is kind,\nconsiderate and good to me, I still\ncannot love Aim.\"\n' In an effort to divert herself from\nher problem, she took a job and\nthere met the young man, four years\nolder than herself, who has thrown\nher life into chaos.\n\"I know ifs not Infatuation,\" the\nwrites. \"I truly tove him. I cant\neat, and I cant sleep. All I do is\njust live for toe time I see him\nevery day. He tells me he loves me\ntoo, but.I just dont think he does.\n\"He has asked me to nave an affair with him. saying that since we\nlove each other and I am married,\nthat la the least happiness we can\nhay* together. Up to now, I have\nrefused him, much as I want to do\nas he says, because I know it is\nwrong, and I cannot get myself to\nbe unfaithful to my husband for he\nis good to me. But the last time I\nrefused, he told me that if I waa not\nwilling to do as he suggests the\nbest thing would be for us not to\nsee each other any more.\"\n\"Could he love me and say that,\ndelicious dessert..\nfrozen strawberries\nPHONE 1175\n.\nTht nationally known process for the finest\nin dry cleaning that money can buy.\nYour clothes art not harmed In any way.\nThey come out sparkling new. You thould be\nuting thit tervlce.\nALWAYS \u2014 ALL-WAYS\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nAMD CLEANERS\nPHONE 1175\n182 BAKER ST.\nMiss Atkinson? That. Is what-tortures me. I know now that if I do\nnot have an affair with him,.I will\nnever see him again and I just.can't\nface,the future without him, for I\nwould miss him more than I could\nbear. On the other hand, if-1 do\nyield to him, I know my conscience\nwould never let me rest. I just\ndon't know which way to turn: I\neven quit my job but that didnt\nhelp. It only made it worse, for I\nmissed him so.\"\n\"I must make my decision now,\nfor the hext time I see him, he\nwants my answer. Please help me\nmake the right decision. What shall\nI do?\"\nCould anything possibly be more\nobvious than that thla young woman already ls quite aware what\nthe right decision would be? Could\nany decision which would result to\nbeing tortured by conscience forever after possibly be the right one?\nCould it be a right decision for\nher to doublecross herself by being\nunfaithful when she quite evidently\ndoesn't want to be? What is there\nfor me to tell her that ahe does not\nalready know? And all tola over a\nman she feels doesn't even love her!\nWhat I think tola young wife is\nreally pleading for in her letter is\nhelp in finding the strength and\ncourage to make that right decision.\nAnd I can assure her that the only\nway to find it is by determined and\nunswerving effort ot the will, to fix\nher attention on the welfare ot her\nchild and her husband, instead of on\nherself.\nIf she continues to focus it on herself, she Is lost. But oiit ot her sincere wish to be a woman ot integrity, rather than one of self-indulgence at the expense of others,\nwill come that atrength and courage she so sorely needs.\nI would like to have a letter from\nthis young woman giving ma her\nname and address so that I ean\nwrite to her and otter some further\nsuggestions. I realize that at toe\nmoment she sees nothing ahead of\nher but black despair and'bleak\nendurance. But I am sure tola picture can be changed. Will she make\nit possible for me to tell her how\nin a personal letter?\nBlllliill\nMI88 JO ANN HOPWOOD*\n.FIr*t-Vle*iPret|dent -\nFLORENCE JEFFREYS\nSecond Vlce-Preildtnt\n. Active to .the work, of Nelson's newest women's\norganization .are Miss Jo Ann Hopwood and Miss\nFlorence Jeffreys,;.officers, of the Junior Auxiliary tp\nKootenay take General Hospital. The young women's\n, group aids the present- hospital\/and- is working to build\na j fund for furnishings for the proposed new district\nhospital. \u2014Vogue photos.\n0\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type ratet on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt paymtnt'\n-L-\nLA.TO B. OF R.T.\nMonthly -.. meeting tonight, 8\np.m.\n1354 SOLUNAR TABLES, 75c at\n' JACK BOYCE'S\nThis month only: 20% discount on\nBridal Veils. ADRIAN Millinery.\nL.O.B.A. Bake Sale at Mc St Mc\nStore,. March 13th;\nBest materials only used- on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nFOE EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone-B: J. Kelly,' 378-R-3.\nYOUR MIMEOGRAPH 8ERVICE\nSt. Patrick's Day Cards and a\nbig display of Easter Cards.\nKOOTENAY  8TATIONERS\nWe have no elephants but lots of\nTrunks,   both   Steamer   and   Box\nTRUNKS at WADE'8\nTuberous Begonias, Gloxinia and\nAmaryllis Bulbs now in\nCOVENTRY'8 FLOWER 8HOP\nEnquire about our summer tire\nretreading now;\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\nThe Way to Her Heart\u2014Diamonds.\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\n'    611 BAKER ST.\nSimonii Polish for Autos, Floors.\nLiquid or paste. Priced from 88c.\nWOOD  VALLANCE  HARDWARE\nPlastic Bridge Table Covert\nGreen or wine \u2014 $2.25\nSTERLING  HOME  FURNISHERS\nYOUR   NEW   FULLER   BRU8H\nrepresentative is Don E.. Sergent,\n206 .Morgan St., Phone 1335.\nThe honorary president .for the\nmonth of March is Mr. Ken Brown,\n212 Union Street J ,. .   .\nPythian Sisters ,Tea and Bake\nSale has been changed from April\n3rd to April 10th. Door Prize.\nIf, BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow it away. Prompt watch work,\nguaranteed, at reasonable prices.\nSanforized Denims, plain shades\nand multlstrlpe. 36\", 95c.\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nMotors, Radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh Pressure Jenny Service.\nSHORTY'S. Repair Shop, 714 Baker\nPleated neckerchiefs with perfume bottle attached. Lovely for\nthe teen ager.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP\nVffobisL $OAAifL...\nBing's Plan For the Future Hint\nPossible Retirement From Films .\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)-For many\nmonths, friends have been saying\nthat Btog Crosby plans to ease Into\nretirement. Today he gives some\nsupport to those statements.\n\"I have about five or six 'more\npictures to make for Paramount,\"\nhe says, adding with a laugh, \"that'\nshould be about enough for me.\"\nYou can't always determine a\ntrend by a Crosby remark. He\ntosses 'em off with toe greatest\nof ease and declines to be pinned\ndown on anything. But he left no\ndoubt that he favors a slackening\nof pace.\n\"I've always said that my favorite\nkind of picture would be one that\nopened with a shot of me sitting\nto a rocking chair on a front porch.\nThe rest of hte picture would be\nwhat I saw.\"\nHit current film Is his biggest\ndramatic challenge to date, but he\nsaid it ia also one of his easiest\nchores. He is acting to the film\nversion ot the Clifford Odets play,\n\"The Country Girl.\" The part la\nthat of a faded, alcoholic stage star\nwho has a last chance to regain\ntheatrical fame.\nALWAYS TALKED ABOUT\nGrace Kelly plays his suffering\nwife, and William Holden is the\nstage director who tries to mold\nhim back into shape.\n\"'<\u25a0>.-        ,  NOTlC*    >  .:'\u2022-.-\u2022'\u25a0<,\nWhist drive .In aid of Handicapped\nChildren's    Fund    scheduled   for\nMarch. 19 at Canadian Legionxnow\npostponed to March 26.\nru.uu\nSports College approves,'discriminating tastes approve, ORANGE\nCRUSH. \".' :\nCOLUMBIA BOTTLING WORKS\n. 'Tne'ANNUAL MEETING of Nel-\nson Savings Credit Union will be\nheld to Legion Hall, Thurs., M*rch\n18 at 6 pjn.     .\u2022 ,\n\u25a0C.I.L. Plastic Wood-r-Handles like\nputty; hardens Into wood.\u2014Tin 60c.\nLarge tube 35c.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nATTENTION\nChild  Health  Centre' and  Pre.-\nSchOol  Immunization  Clinic,  Memorial Hall today, 2 to 4 p.m.\nWanted\u2014Cotton Rags, must be\nclean and;of good tlze. No wool\naccepted. Will Pay 12e per lb. Nelion Dally Newe.,\nStart the Spring with a pair of\nDAYTON HAND WORK SHOES\ntor men at WADE'S SHOE A\nLEATHER GOOD8.      \u25a0\nANNUAL MEETING\nKOOTENAY LAKE GENERAL\nH08PITAL 80CIETY, MARCH 16.\nCATHEDRAL HALL, 8 P.M.\nYour dealer for Mary Maxim\nWool, Northern Style Sweaters.\nComplete stock ot wool, patterns,\nneedles, zippers.\nEBERLE'S JUNIOR SHOP\nSalmo Elementary School to have\nopen house on Thurs., afternoon,\nMarch 11. The new school will be\nopen for inspection by the public\non that date.\nEverything for your electrical\njob: \u25a0 Wire, Loomex, outlet boxes,\nsingle and ,. double receptacles,\nswitches, sockets, etc. Also extension cords, iron plugs, etc.\n\u25a0      \u2022      HIPPERSON'S\nThe BEST in Chocolate Candy-\nCream Centre, Nuts, Nougats, Liquid Centres, Cherries. Your special\nfavourite\u2014made as only we know'\nhow, \u2014 GRAYS. 534 Josephine St.\nPhone 134*\n8CRATCH PADS - AN EVERY\nDAY NEED FOR BUSINESS ANO\nPROFESSIONAL' MEN. GOOD\nCLEAN STOCK! 40e PER LB. -\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, PRINT\nING  DEPT.,, PHONE 144.\n*\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\niSfelsoii\nSocial\nPHONE 144\n\" FRQM SPOKANE ','.. Mil*\nAnnie Brown of Spokane is. spending a. week with her grandmother,\nMrs. W. Brown, Third Street.:' -,\n.''::-: '-'m ' fl'* f '\u25a0''.-..\nCALGARY VISITORS. ... Mr.\nand Mrs. George T. Valentine ot\nCalgary were visitor* in> Nelson-at\nthe.weekehd and left Monday for\nVancouver.   \u00bb-\n\u25a0 \/\"   \u2022'. \u2022  * '\nATTENDS FUNERAL . . . R. D.\nWilks of Edmonton is here to attend the funeral of his mother, Mrs.\nJ. Wilks. .\u25a0'\u2022:' r \u25a0 \" '\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\n\"',- ,\\,..\u2022'.-\u2022  * \u25a0i \u25a0\u25a0>\nFRQM .SPOKANE =. .Mr, and\nMrs. Sam Brown of Spokane were\nin Nelson\"' visiting - Mr. - Brown's\ntoother, Mrs. W. Brown, Third\nStreet and also Mrs. Brown's father,\nE. Calbick.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\"'\u2022  \u2022  . ..\u25a0\u25a0-.\nVISITS' SISTER1... Mr.s.'w,\nSaliken of Erickson is visiting her\nsister, Mrs. N. Jmaeff, Kootenay\nStreet,\n'  ,   '-*.'\u2022\u25a0,'\u2022\"\u2022, -\" \u25a0-.'\nIN .HOSPITAL . .... Mri.. ,S. N.\nFawcett, Fourth Street, is a patient\nIn Kootenay Lake General-Hospital,\n&&y:\nFor Greenwood\nGREENWOOD.\u2014. Greenwood\nWomen's Institute meeting in.the\nschool with President Mrs. Norman\nMacNab in.the chair, laid plans for\nthe 1954 district rally.    . .    V.   ,.\nIt was decided to send a donation of $5to the-w I Fund for sewing machines tor India.\nA card party. is ' planned for\nMarch. ......\nThe Institute have'ralao joined the\nFilm Council of Grand Forks,and\ncan obtain films to be shown at\ntheir meetings. This time, the members enjoyed one on \"Four New\nApple Dishes\" and another entitled\n\"Shop Talk.\" ''\nOn.May 18, Greenwood Women's\nInstitute will be hostess for the\ndistrict rally. All other Institutes,\ntrom Carmi, Main River, Rock\nCreek, Grand Forks, will be extended an invitation to attend, and\nit is expected that members of the\nprovincial board will be here. All\narrangements will.be completed at\nthe April meeting.      \u2666 ,j\nThe United Nations flag, kit arrived and' toe necessary work to\nassemble this will be the work project of .the-W I. i,\nAll committee reports were given, and it .was. noted, that flowers\nhad been sent to those who had\nbeen ill.\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostess Mrs. F. Belli\nNELSON DALY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1954 \u2014 3\n$50 TRADE-IN\nOn Your Old 2 or 3 Piece\nCHESTERFIELD or\nLOUNGE SUITE\n\"r \u25a0\u25a0: . .' ,'. \"\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 .'\u25a0''.< \" >:\u25a0;   '\u25a0;\u00ab*,>' \u25a0\u2022''\u2022\u2022 \u2022\u25a0:\u2022    '\u00bb .\n\u25a0   (Regtrdleit of Age or Condition) >\nWhen You Purchase a New Suite at\nMrs. E. Kirkham\nInstalled Head\nMrs. E. Kirkham was installed\nas president.of the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Fraternal Order of\nEagles replacing Mrs. B. Kidwell\nwho' has left the. city1.\nMrs. Ruth Proudfoot and Mrs.\nSarah Mannings were presented\nwith past, president jewels, Mrs.\nRuth Proudfoot and : Mrs, F. W.\nCartwrlght were appointed delegates for the provincial convention\nto take place to Nelson June 18 and\n18.,' .'..'.  .\nEntertains\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 The dining room\nof the Edgewood Hotel was the\nscene of the annual husbands banquet when the members of the\nWomen's Institute were hostesses.\nCovers were set for 44.. Grace was\nsung by the gathering followed by a\nturkey supper. Place cards were to\nthe form of.miniature flower pots\nwith flowers which added color to\nthe tables.\nFollowing supper a hilarious hour\nwas spent in games. G. Miller\nshowed films of the local coronation , day parade and also local\nscenery. On behalf of the husbands,\nJ. B. McLeod expressed the-thanks\nof -the guests of honor. President\nHrs. Shields replied for the women;\nLegion ladies\nNew Deliver\nNEW DENVER'\u2014 Miss Barbara\nand Mis; Norma Thomllnson were\nNelson visitors.\nMiss Doreen Parent ot the Public\nWorks Office was a visitor in\nNakusp, guest of her parents, 'Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Parent Jr.\nMrs. J. Pederson of Nelson is the\nguest of. her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A, R. Gorman and\ntwo sons.   .\nMr. and. Mrs. H. B. Yonge ot\nZincton were New Denver visitors.\n' Mr. and Mrs, Norman F, Brookes\nleft for a month's holiday with\nrelatives and friends.\nWilliam E. Rowe haa returned to\nNew, Denver after spending the\nwinter in Vancouver and Nelson\nand haa started work on his Dude\nRanch,\nMr. and Mrs. Harry L. Taylor and\ntwo daughters Jacqueline and Joanne were guests of Mrs, Taylor's\nbrother, Mr. and Mrs. H. Anderson\nahd family at Glenbank.\nMrs. William - Clever and Roy\nHayashl were in charge of the\nSlocan Lake Hardware, to the\nabsence of Mr. and Mrs. N. D.\nBrookes.',\/ .\nMrs. R. E. Crellin has been visiting, to Trail with her brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh\nMacLeod and in Nelson with her\nuncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs,\nGeorge ' Tattrie, returned to her\nhome accompanied by her husband\nand two children, .Bobble and Gail\nwho were guests at the home. of\nMr. and Mrs. George Tattrie in\nNelson.\nMr. end Mrs. Charlie Parker,\nMrs. Andy Anderson and Douglas\nK Godfred were Nakusp visitors.\nThey were accompanied on their\nreturn by. Mr. Roy Aalten of\nNakusp.\nMiss Naomi Pone, matron of the\nSlocan Community Hospital was a\nNelson visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Okamatsu left\nfor a three months holiday to\nKamamoto Ken Japan to visit par-\nehts and relatives. .They sailed by\nthe \"Hikawa Marie.\" Mrs. Amy\nMori is replacing Mrs. Okamatsu\nas cook in the Slocan Community\nHospital. .       , -   ..\u25a0,...'\nGive yourself a treat on ironing\nday with an Arvin all metal ironing board, with perforated top. Adjustable for height, built to last,\ntwo models $11.60 and $15.40.\nHIPPERSON'S\n\"They have to do most ot the\nwork,\" Bing said. \"I'm the' one\nthey're always talking about.\"\nI found Blng more relaxed and\nhappy than I have ever\" seen him.\nHe sat on a stool and chatted volubly. I asked him if there were\nany pictures he would like to do.\n'\u25a0Not right now,\" he replied.\n'Three years ago, I wanted the\nstudio to get 'Guys and Dolls' for\nme and Bob Hope. Paramount owned part of it, but sold out for\n$85,000. Now I read the asking price\nis up to (750,000! Sam Goldwyp\nbought it for a million. I wish we\ncould have done it here.\n'ROAD'-FILM QUESTIONABLE\n\"I don't know if Hope and I will\ndo a 'Road to the MOon.' We should\nhave' done it a couple of yeara ago.\nSince then Abbott and Costello have\ndone a space picture, ahd Martin\nand Lewi* will probably get to the\nact, too. Who knows?   Y.\n\"I've always wanted to do a -picture with Judy Garland-We've done\n* lot' ot radio programs and army\nshows together, and, I think she's\ntoe greatest female talent to town.\nAs a matter of fact, I think she's\nthe greatest talent, male or female.\"\n- Btog will' hit the half-century\nmark May 2: Part of his slowdown\nmay be due to his physical shape.\nHe admits he has a kidney condition, but he haa no plans Tor an\noperation^as has been rumored.\nWINNERS OP NOTRE DAME\nMARDI GRA8 RAFPLE '<\n1 First-prize, Miss Linda Johnson,\nc\/o 804 Stanley Street. Second\nprize, Mrs. 6. Philifent, c\/o Frank\nand Stan's. Third prize, Mr. Don\nAppleton, c\/o Kokanee Lodge.\nJust .arrived. New. Trunks, $24.95\nand up. Also 3 used rangettes, and\n5 used washing machines.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE  EXCHANGE\n413 Hall Street.\nCARD OF .THANKS\nI would like to thank the nurses\nand staff and also speqial thanks\nto Dr. Shaw during toy stay to the\nhospital. Also to the friends who\nsent me flowers and cards.\nMRS. DAVE RICHARDSON\n.FUNERAL  NOTICE\nLEAHY \u2014 Requiem Matt for toe\nlate Joseph William Leahy of Salmo\nwill be.'sung from the Cathedral of\nMary Immaculate' Wednesday at 9\na.m. Rev. Father F. Monaghan will\nofficiate with interment in the\nCatholic section of Nelson Memorial\nPark. Rosary will be recited.at the\nThompson Funeral Home at 7:30\np.m. Tuesday evening.\nOCEAN ROUTE '\nThe first steamship service across\nthe Atlantic started from Liverpool,\nEngland, in 1840. '  V- '-:\nNAKUSP \u2014 The regular meeting\nof the Women's r Auxiliary to the\nCanadian Legion was in the Lower\nClub Rooms with a potluck aupper.\nWith a large number of members\npresent many old time members\ndame out tor the occasion and were\nwelcomed back by the active members. The nicely arranged tables\nwere well laden and were centered\nwith a large bowl of Calla lilies,\nthe work of Mrs. L. Davies.\nA date was set for another whist\nand bridge night..\nA donation was made to the local\nLibrary Board. Plans were formulated for the Easter. Mpriday dance.\nProceeds of dance Will be used to\nassist needy veterans arid families.\n$80 REALIZED AT \u25a0-?*\nRUMMAGE SALE\nEighty dollars, which will go to-  .\nwards toe building of a cottage, for ''::\nSummer camping, waa realized at!\ntoe Salvation Army Home League..\nrummage sale. !'. i ..\u2022?1'\nThe sale was In the- YoungUr\nPeople's Hall\/in the Salvation Army, ..\nCitadel Saturday. .    \u25a0 , v\u00ab * ,\nIn charge were Mrs. J. Hood Sr.f.r\nMrs. J. Hood Jr., Mrs. T. Garnet,\nMrs. J. Martin, Mrs. E. Oulton, -Mrs.\nT. Tennant and Mrs. H. Thornhill)'\/\nwas cashier., '...  . .'\nw mmtmmni*^^* tf'HI***' b-1     -\nbtf, dtauM. lOks&kfi,\nJIFFY CROCHET    -   \" ,'-,\nNeed a new spring or -summer\nbag? Crochet it yourself I Two smart'1\"\nstyles to this pattern\u2014both are easy\nto make ol straw or cotton yarn.\n.Match your spring or summer'1\nbags to your favorite dresses. PaU ;\ntern 545; easy, crochet directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted! -\nfor this pattern to Nelson Dally\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson,\nB.. C. Print plainly PATTERN t-\nNUMBER, and SIZE; your NAME\nar-d ADDRESS.\nSEND NOW for our new  1954.:'\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog\n\u2014the1 best ever! 79 embroidery, cro-  .\nchat,   color-transfer,   dressmaking.-;\npatterns to send for\u2014plus 4 com,- ,\nplete patterns printed in-the bookl\nIdeas for gifts, bazaar sellers, fashions. Send 25c. ,..,\n$5 Donated To\nB.C. Polio Fund  '\nGREENWOOD \u2014 The Ladies Aid\nof the Greenwood United Church\nhad their regular meeting in- the\nKindergarten room ot the Church,\nwith an excellent attendance. Mrs.\nE. Hendry, president, was to the\nchair. '     . ,v'  .\nThe devotional .period opened\nwith the Lord's Prayer, followed\nby toe \"Mary Stewart Collect,\" arid\nthe singing ot a hymn. Mra. C.\nFloyd read the Scripture, and Mrs.\nJ. Puddy the commentary.\nThe President extended a welcome to Mrs. A. Boroduia, as a new\nmember. ,-\u25a0'-,.-\"> \u2022\u2022\nIt was also decided to holds bake\nsale in order to raise funds.,\nA donation of $5 was also sent to\nthe B.C. Polio Fund in Vancouver.\nBd&weli Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Stan\nJeffries of Nelson, are guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Macgregor, '.\nMrs. Eric Bainbridge is a patient\nin the Creston Valley Hospital.\n\\    '\u25a0;':; \u25a0-\u2022'\" '\u25a0%>'\u25a0\nBENDIX\nDOES EVERYTHING BUT IRON YOUR CLOTHES\nBanithei Wothdoy Drudgery ... Autemutieally\nWith a Single Setting of the Dioltt\nLets you live like the lady you are . . . Now you\ncan be the lady of the house 7 days a week . . .\neach week in the year for years and years to come.\nSelecting a BENDIX DUOMATIC for your home   .\n\"is the smartest choice you'could make, simply\nbecause) nowhere |n the whole wide world is there\no single laundry'appliance which can so com- .\nplejely transform workdays into holidays foryou.\n' Settht   -,..,'\nWORLD'S' ONLY COMBINATION WASHER-DRYER\n. \"v\" r\" : ON pISPLAiT Nt>W AT\nMcKay & Strelton ltd\nYOUR- HOME PLANNING CENTER\n532 BAKERST.        NELSON, B.C.        PHONE 1555\nii\n__^ _^_ -'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n\u25a0  \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\n \u00ab \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1934\nil!\nn\" Turns OufTo Be\nbit foi\nByB0BTH0MA3\nHOLLYWOpD {AP)-The \"Bgyp-\ntlan\" may rank as Hollywood'*\nheadache picture of the y*ar. It has\nbeen Just as much trouble, casting\nthe propi al It ha* the leading man,\n- Marlon Brando left for New York\nas filming waa about to atart. Twentieth CenturyVFox'chalgad breach\nof contract and: sued hint for $2,000,-\n000. Brando's doctor, however, said\nhe was ill. , : .'\" \u25a0\nI Now, it turnVout that,\"The Egyptian\" la one of the toughest pictures\nln years from the scenic standpoint,\ntoo, .... .\" ,\n\"We had to -start from scratch,\"\nsaid Walter Scott, head of the studio prop department \"No studio hai\never made a big picture about indent Egypt until now. We were\nable to borrow a few items from\nMGM, which has been making 'Valley of the Kings'. But most ot it we\nhad to create from scratch.\n\"We have made J00O different\nItems for the picture. Now the\nother* want to borrow our. things.\nWe've already had four men from\nCecil B. DeMllle over here to see\nwhat they can use to 'The 10 Commandments.'\"\nMASTERS OF MAKEUP\nThose   ancient   Egyptians   were\n-f\nmatteri of makeup, Scott explained.\nHe demonstrated a- replica of* o\nQueen's makeup box that would\nmake Max Factor green* with envy.\n. Research for \"The Egyptian\" has\nuncovered some odd'facta about the\n1300 B. C. -era, including:\nEgyptian men were baby kitten,\nAffection was shown in early\ntimet by placing the nose* ln close\nproximity and sniffing. Later the\nkiss replaced this nasal nonsense.'\nEgyptians' quaffed beer made of\nbarley. Since they didn't have hopt,\nthey uied the lupin, skirret herb\nand an Asyrlan root tor flavor.\n8HEATH GOWN POPULAR\nToday's sheath gown was popular\nthen, but with a difference. With the\nEgyptian women, it hung trom below the bosom te the anklet.\nBoth texel shaved their heads for\nreason* ot religion, hygiene and\njust plain heat.\nThe women also outlined toe\nveins of their chests in blue, reddened their lips, tinged their cheeks\nwith red and white and applied\norange henna to the tips of their\nfingers.\nDancers were extremely graceful\nand often appeared naked. Which\nshows you how accuracy must often\nba sacrificed ln films.\nWhereon turlk\nWa* A 'Cockroach Parah\/zw'T\nIHTCTlTfHH\nLOW) before tb* fmrt etoetrio light\ndispelled the dark of night, Thomas A. Ed won had already tojutred a\nmodicum ot fame rtor a very different kind of Invention. Tb* SMrne\nwaa ta Beaten, when Edison wat\nworking ai a young telegraph operator toe w<xrtera union.\nThe offices wer* on a\nfloor which had recently been inhabited by a restaurant. nuwjh\nthe eating establishment had (at-\npatttd. tt loft behind a teeming\nlegacy ot hundred* of oookroaohea.\nThey bred and flourished ta ency\nplatter crook and floor-board ortr-\nloa. At too tint whlH at a boned\njloneb. .er. even' a snack, they\nimarohed forth on the douM*.\nTha perstatent erunchlng ot thoir\neoMottr* Jaw* wm so exasperating\ntha* Edtaon decided to eliminate\nthem. Ba fastened two stripe of\ntinfoatotlitwall. Then he watted\nowr to tho telegraph wires, hooked\nop ona of too atrip* to, tb* pattern\npel* or th* battery and tb* other\nto tb* neaattn polo. Th* jon compute, bo caned hla associate* -to'\nStarr Urn* a oodtroaoh omnbtd\ntb* watt, be atmultanaously bumped\ntaeo both strips of tinfoil, with\na nap, oraokla and a flash, tn*\nmsar\/tsggail Tiottm TenJshod Into\nnoaitag. So attaettn waa th* ta-\nveotton tfl tt wa* written Into a\nj hatt-ootann story by the olty paper.\nr But Edtsonl smmissui framed at\nrtaah publtorty and ordered tho\nr young man to giro op bit extcrml-\nTat as wa know, tbJt early cUa-\nootngemtnt did not blight th*\nlnTcntort career. For his mibst-\nqnent world-wldo reputation de-\nponds not at an on tho fact that ba\nodd* rmrented \u00bb most Ingenious\n\"coofcroMb paralyala.\"\nrUTiHU, .mi, ST. T. Beta* nana Sm\nTHAMMi Franeb W. Fear, Ansa-\ntow*. Po,\n\u00bba*dh|*\u00bb tails ta *****.Oat*!*,*\nPure Wafer for\nPrince Albert\nPRINCE ALBERT (CP) - Civic\nauthorities report they have been\nnotified by tha Alberta health department that alternate diversion of\nplant, which previously had gone\nwastes from an Edmonton chemical\nInto th* North Saskatchewan river,\nwas completed.\nIn the communication,' Dr. A.\nSomerville, Alberta's deputy health\nminister, aid he could not say\nwhether current pollution of the\nriver would be ended before the\nspring ice breakup.\nDr. Somervllle said that since toe\nOrder was issued the chemical plant,\nwhich remains unidentified, had\nSteadily diverted it* waste'lines.\nThe Alberta official said lt will\ntake a maximum of three weeks\nbefore effects of the diversion are\nnoticed here.\nRegina Girl To\nAppearWilh\nMason, JI raff ord\nLONDON <CP>-Fr*nce* Hyl*nd\nof Regina ha* been signed to ap-.\npear opposite James Mason to toe\nStratford, Ont, Shakespearian festival this summer, lt wss learned\nMonday.\nAn official of H. M. Tennent,\ntheatre management company for\nwhich Miss Hyland works, said\nproducer Tyrone Guthrie \"returned\nto the attack\" after seeing the 29-\nyear-old blonde Canadian girl at\nEdinburgh ln Christopher Fry'* new\nplay, \"The Dark Is'Light Enough.\"\n. \"He was enchanted,\" said the\nTennent spokesman. He had sought\nMiss Hyland earlier but she had\nbeen given a part in the play,\nwhose cast Includes Dame Edith\nEvans. The play now is on tour\nand la due to reach London's West\nEnd ln April.\nMiss Hyland will play Isabella\nln \"Measure For Measure\" at\nStratford. v\nMin Hyland wai not available\nfor comment.\n. She came to London to study at\nthe Royal Academy of Dramatic\nArt four year* ago. This will be\nher first trip home since coming to\nBritain.    \\\nRussia Plays Up\nMcCarthy Issue\nLONDON (R*uters) \u2014 Moscow\nradio said Monday that Senator\nMcCarthy is acting ln the United\nStates with the full backing of \"toe\nRepublican party and of its leader,\nPresident Eisenhower.\"\nThe party consider* the Wisconsin Republican senator its \"most\nprecious capital,\" commentator Valentin Zorln' said. It waa tha second\ntime within two weeks'Russia has\npltyed up the McCarthy issue.\nThe Republican leaders, Jorln\nsaid, have \"decided to move Senator\nMcCarthy to toe political foreground, hoping that his propaganda campaign will divert the\nattention of American workers from\npressing problems.\"\nMeanwhile, newspapers in Western  Europe   continue   to   express\nalarm about the McCarthy Issue.\nREPUBLICANS RESPONSIBLE\nIn West Germany, the Frankfurt\nAllgemelne today sa,id' the Re\npublican party Itself was responsible for McCarthy'* sudden rise to\npower, and predicted that it will\nlose millions' of independent votes\nin the fall elections.\nIn Paria the Conservative newspaper, Le Figaro, noted the Wisconsin investigator's \"unpleasant\"\ntactics.\nBut, it said, Frenchmen who Insist that MeCarthyism makes the\nU.S. too same as Russia should\nremember that such \"fine intellectual comparisons\" are possible ln\nParis \"only because Paris is on this\nside of the armed frontier.\"\nDEATHS\nBy the Canadian Prest\nRome \u2014 Mtssino Cardinal Mas-\ntini, 70, one of the 19 cardinals of\nthe Roman curia, the central government of the Catholic Church.\nSullivan, Ind. \u2014 Will Hays, 74,\nlawyer, politician and for 24 years\n\"czar\" ot the movies as head of the\np-peMent of the Motion Picture Pro-\n\u25a0 - \"-d Plttrlbutora of America.\n. r irSs-nas \u2014 Fred R, Da-\n>\u25a0 '.   \u25a0 V t   Indies   newspaper\n, ! vi> .1.1 ek'est son of Senator\nW. iiupert Davies of Kingston, Ont,\nBournemouth, England \u2014.'Lord\nLyle, 71, head of the mammoth Bri-\ntis sugar refining conceal of Lyle\nand Tate.\nHammonton, NJ. \u2014 Wllljam J.\nSmith, 88, reputed to be the oldest\nbank president In the United States,\nMontreal \u2014 Jacob Isaac Segal, 52,\npoet-and essayist, accepted, as the\ndean ot Jewish writers in Canada,\nDonate $100,000\nCancer Research\nMONTREAL (CP) '\u2014 Dr. Jean\nBouchard, president of the National\nCancer Institute of Canada, announced Monday it has received a\ndonation of $100,000 from the Canadian tobacco industry for support of\nreasearch into problems related to\nlung cancer.\nThe board of directors will administer the fund, and the announcement said any grants made\nfrom lt will come under the same\nregulations as any other grants-in-\naid of research awarded by the Institute.\nAt the same time Dr. Bouchard\nannounced that the board has re-\ncentlyvmade grarits totalling $436,-\n000 for cancer research work this\nyear ln laboratories across Canada.\nSome 60 cai\\cer research projects\nwill be supported at a cost of $395,-\n000 and research fellowships totalling $41,500 have been granted to\n13 scientists who are devoting all\ntheir time' to cancer research.\nBuy,'Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nA,\n% Just look at the line-up\nVWte really excited about the low [triced we have for you1 this week.\nYou'll be too, when yon see tbe store Mofii\u00bbney\u00abvingvaIoe8.I^w\nprices on Fresh Produce! Low prices on Meats! Low prices on Canned\nFoods! Low prices all over tbe store! You'll think each section of the\nOl, k OiL ^on ^^^i^oaiaoevary other in offering you savings. Mce those\n\/111   10   1*5 til     Bowbelpw. Check them. Then loiiny over and-aave, 8AVRSAVE!\nPrices Effective\nOld South Frozen\nORANGE JUICE\n6 os. ean\n2 for29 Ofor83\n(Com of 48 com $6.49)    ,\nCREAM CORN\nDowkltt. Golden.\nIdeal for\ncorn fritters.\n15 oz can \t\nGREEN BEANS\nDowklit Cut.\nAn economical\ndinner vegetable.\n15 oz. cart _._..\t\nCAKE MIXES\nRobin Hood, White and Chocoltte\nbanded togethor with 15e egg coupon.\n15 oz. package\nBoth for _, v\u2014\nBfifiC    Breakfast Gem.\nW\"    In csrtons. Less 15c dozen. .\n49*\n58*\nTOMATOES\nVanity Fair\nor Okanagan.\nChoice quality.\n28 oz. can ...\t\nMARGARINE\nRote Brand. A top\nquality product at an\nexceptionally low price.\n16 oz. package ._\t\nInstant Coffee\n:.. Edwards' \"Special Offer\"\n25o off the regular retail price.\n6 oz. jar\nLess 25c.\n1.93\nCohoo Salmon 9      49$\nMoonlight, Fancy. 1% ot. tin *\u25a0 for ~ r ~\nTuna flakes 32$\nCloverleaf, Fancy, Light, t oilcan .. \u25a0**!\nSalad Dressing 4Q$\nMiracle Whip. 18 ox. Jar ~f~\nSweet Mixed Plcklei 42$\nOld Towne. 24 oz. Jar \" &\nSpredeasy Cheese\nBurns'. 2 lb. pkt,\t\nKraft Dinner J       TCtJ\n\"Hi oz. pkt \u201e  *\u25a0 for m-JT\nWhite Beam\nSmall. 32 oz. pkg. \t\nPearl Rice-\nMonarch. 2 lb. pkt  \t\nStrawberries\nFraser Vale. Frozen. 15 oz. pkt.\nIce Cream\nParty Pride. Pints\nChsdt JheAtL fivsJufday. OoIusll.\nChoice Peaehet i\nHalves o'Gold. 15 oz. can\t\nPineapple  .\n'Lalanl, Fancy, Sliced. 20 oz. can\nApple Juice\nSun-Rype Slue Label. 48 oz. can\nOrange Juice\nFull 0' Gold. 48 oz. can \u2022-\u25a0\nPineapple Juice\nLibby's Hawaiian. 48 oz. can .\t\nGrapefruit Juice.\nTownhouse Natural. 48 oz. can\ntor 95*\n34*\n35*\n38$\n\"\"\"\"31$:\n32$\nCut Green Beans\nBrlafgate Fancy. 15 oz. can\t\nDiced Beets \u00a3\nTaste Tells, Choice. 15 oz. can. V\nWhole Kernel Com .\nCountry HOnie, Fancy V.P. 14 oz. can\nfancy Peat a\nSugar Belle. Sieve 5.15.0>. can  ~\nBoneless Chicken\nBoulter's. 8- pz,; Jar ,., .;...\t\nJellied Chicken\nFarmerette. 7 oz. Can .\n19$\ntor 73$\n1$*\nfor 59$\n85*\njmm\nPork and Beam   \u25a0\nTaste Tells. 15 oz. can ....'\t\nSpaghetti\nLibby's Cooked. T.S, 15 oz. can*\nMixed Cheete\nBerkshire Cheddar. Lb\t\nShortening\nSwift's Jewel. 18 oz. ctn \t\nPancake flour\nAunt Jemima, 3% lb. bag\t\nTomato Catsup .\nTaste Tells. 13 oz. bottle ;\t\ntor 69$,\nto. 37$\n49*\n25*\n53*\n2$*\nNob Hill Coffee\nA Rloh Blend of Choicest\nCentral and South American Coffees.\n2 lb.\nbag\n$n.3i\nEdwards Coffee\nNo Finer Coffee Paoked ... j\nAlwayt Fresh, Alwayi Pennies Lest.\nDrip or Regular grind\n16 oz. can \u2014\njj Grapefruit \u00ab wwt*  2^27$\nNewtown Apples,^. 2 lb,25$\nBananas S. 2ib,45$\nBrussel Sprouts [TrteA        - j|f\nField Tomatoei SK j 25*\nCriip Celery &1^d. *!*... 15$\nBroccoli %*iN: WgJi .23$\n\"Q\"\u00b0\u2122e' .Gems. No. 2.100 lb.sk. \u00ab|>Z.!>!>\nl& Afl essfiss m       mm mm\ni*9\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantitlet\nCANADA SAfEWAY LfMLI-fjD\n...        ..        V. .:,,\u25a0,;.\u25a0;\/\u2022,,\u25a0..,,,\u25a0\u25a0\/... .:,...     r-'.r.r.r\n-\n\/..\n;\n StJllpll      Qf'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH % \\\\Vem- j\nINDIACELEBRATE S_W IT H- L J G H f S \u2014 Illuminated Union Secretariat building In New Delhi Is mirrored L,\nnearby pool during observance ot Republic Day. It was ont et many structures to the Indian capital lighted for the occasion]*\nNATURE PROVIDES A PLAYTHING-\nFour-yoar-old Janioe Golden clutches a six-and-a-half foot icicle\nI as she studs ln the snow near her homo In Coffeyvllle, Bis.\nWarn        \/    \u2022 '   '\nSPOTS BEFORE THE EYtS-l<N*twte. before\nrushing to an optlelan tor what yon tee tre polka dot stockings,\npart ot designer Jacques Ftth't summer styles taown to Paris. \\\nCOUPLE  Of   RINCERS-Two  Kmnaon  women,\nsupplementing their native garb with large, note-rings, attract\nattention at a folk-dance festival ln New Delhi, India.\naccompanied by violinist Gabriel Peyre, stag Into Victor recorder Enrico Caruso used 50 yeara wo.\nto memorial ceremony at New lork't Carnegie Hall. At right ls George B. Marek. Victor official.\nMUSIC WINNER-\nMarlne Lt. Col. Carl W. Hoff-\nnum holds hla composition,\n\"Esprit de'Corps March,\" winner of $1,000 in ASCAP'S\narmed forces competition.\nHERE'S LOOKING AT-YOU-joyee Van Dnlrt\ntights down barrel of mld-elghteenth century flintlock blunderbuss at Michigan Gun Collectors Association show to Detroit.'!\nfLUSHED PROM D E P T H S.-A \"frogman\" holds\ntwo ancient Greek Jars in a Paris store. He helped te recover\n.them from a ship wrecked to the Mediterranean to 200 B. C.\nCLUTCH INC TOP\n\u2014New Paris spring hat Is a\nflower-pattern with beads and!\npearls and five, tendril-like\ntrips over forehead. Handbag\nIt ot matching material.\nCAFETERIAS  ON  WH EELS \u2014 Drlver-cashlers check In at main kitchen ot\nDouglas Aircraft's El Segunde, Cal. plant after serving meals to workers from their food trains.\nIN NEW ROLE \u2014 Former heavyweight boxing champion Jersey Joe Walcott talks with o youth to Camden, tt. J\u201e\nafter starting as special aide to combat juvenile delinquency.\nCOOD  STAR T\u2014Tlconderoga, White Heather and Caribbee, left to right, get away to 125-\nmile Great Isaao ocean race at Fort Lauderdale, Fl*. Caribbee, owned by Carleton Mitchell, won.\nli\nN I C E HA N DPU L\u2014 M>\u00bb. Margaret Clark displays a\n55-pound Brazilian aquamarine valued at $2,500,000 now resting\nto a New Xork vault pending decision to an ownership dispute\nSQUARE-SHAPED   PLANE \u2014 William Horton sits In cockpit of Ms experimental\nplant at Santa Ana, Cal, after it made second lest flight. Wing Up* fold back Into fuselage.\n-^\u2014^^\nmmm\nm*m.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0   .   -\u25a0;.\u25a0.\u25a0:\u25a0.\n' \u2014'-'-   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u2022-\u25a0-\u25a0\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0-   -,r.'-:'..v-:r, ,.,,.,\n I \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1954\nw\nfi itjxi\ny;4i\u00ab'4w,nmmiimmiii#\n|,r-   -r\n\".    i\nPr ' >\"!'\"\n;\u25a0}'\u25a0\nfr   \u2022\n-r.-.-r\nl--y\nYou Can Count on the Nelson Fans\nTo Back You Right Through the Series\nThis Page Is Made Possible by the Following Sports-Minded Nelson Firms\n1179 Boker St.\nR. ANDREWS, CO.\nPhone 533\n\u25a0\u25a0M\nis&\nm '\nIr\nARMSON'S CAFE\n, Baktr $t.\nPhone 391\nBENNETTS LTD.\nMACHINE SHOP\nVernon St.\nPhone 593\nBRADLEY'S MEAT MARKET\n,iI16 Baker St.\nli\nPhone 831\nH. BUTTERFIELD\nJEWELLER\n431 Baker St.\nPhone 333\nR.C. CATION\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR\n536 Stanley St. Phone 389\nCITY AUTO SERVICE\nGranite Rd. Phone 447\n520 Vernon St.\nPhone 1752\nCOLUMBIA BOTTLING WORKS\n609 Ward St.\nPhone 412\nI CONNORS DIAMOND DRILLING\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n518 front St. Phone 1578\n543 Baker St.\nPhone 1614\nK.W.\n701 front St.\nPhone 1704\nEMORY'S LTD.\n571 Baker St.\nPhone 31\nw\"=\" <0N FARMERS' SUPPIY tTD.\n524 Railway St.\nPhone 174\nGODFREYSm\n378 Baker St. Phone 270\n534 Josephine St.\nPhone 1347\nFURS\n580 Baker St.\nPhone 272\nJ.T.M0WATT\n536 Ward St.\nPhone 200\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0-,\u25a0 \u25a0 ,-.':iV.\n mmmms\n\u2022^%O*K#i\u00a30u' JCraQU iimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiHiiMiiiiiiiifiHi|iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiH\nKooi enay h $mt\nMil iliiiiiiilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUHlUIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIlI\nBy LEN WALKER if'\nCAHA Oets Storm\nOf Criticism\nWith the eempletion of the Dominion High SeheoJ\nand Dominion' championship bonspiels,-the eyes of. curlers\nWill turn to Edmonton Maroh 15 wheh the women's western\neuriina playoffs wiU be staged. : :     .x\nWeat Kootenay torts; will be interested in this event\naa the LU Lyon rink from Trail .will represent B,C,\nThis rink, \u2022cgmprised; gf Wl\\Ly6n, Mb j Eileen MsCen-\nnel, third; Isabel Morris,, second, and May Johnston, .lead,\npiled up a remarkable regard'in winning the ie, title, lh\nVancouver reeentty.\nWhile at tho const they captured\n11 garnet ai\\d dropped two;, 'In taking the crown and the Petal! ^roptty\nthey won six straight games- ^\\py\neame oIobo to marking It a double\nvictory when they swept to the\nfinal in the seooindary event, eqly\nte lose to a Nanaimo rink whe captured the Collinson Trophy donated\nhy the late Ernie Collinson el Nel\nten,\nJn winning tha p.C. erown eact\naur-lPP received a $39 gltt cortlli-\ntgte from the dopatere ei the primary eampetitlon. Along with this\nWlU gq an- exnonsonpoid trip to Ed-\nmontgn next weekend where they\nwlU attend, g banquet en the igth\nsns then titer a church parade ei\nall ouriers the day after will twins\n,4nto the championship play,\nMuch credit should sq to this\nTraU rink- They ployed top notch\nflumes throughout-\n19 IN06P HUM\nIn the West Roptenay playoff held\nIn Nelson the Lyon rink found the\nreed rough as May Craig's rlnfc pi\nNelson forced, them to go 13 ends\nbefore Ly'en eame out the winner.\nAfter getting te the coast and' In\nH,Si play they had the last season's\nohamnianship rink from Kimberley shipped by Leu Maartman' to\neentenn with- Thla they successfully\ndid and new with the time near at\nhand when they will vie fer the\nWestern championship we, along\nvwlth an curling fena throughput this\narea, wilh them the best\nPred lotion Corner:\nWith the WIHL playeff positions\nfinally decided, we think, tht question of who will meet who ill th*\nfinal will only bt determined, after\ntho semi-finals art completed-\nHow's that for going otft on t limb?\nHowever, I nave token as my\nchoice Nelson and Spokane, Spokane to take Kimberley in five\ngames and Nelson to boat Trail in\nthree-\nOld Timers Dlotl\nIt might interest tin* oldtlmers\ntnd ospeolally Walter Walt that\nyoung Batch Paige ohamplons the\nfollowing six way* te stay young:\n1, Avoid fried mtttt whieh angry\nup the blood; 2, It your stomach\ndisputes you, lie down end pacify\nIt with cool thoughts; 3, Keep tha\njuice* flowing by jangling around\ngently as you move; 4, Qo lightly\nOh the vices such at carrying on\nIn society. The social ramble ain't\nrestful: 6, Avoid running it ill\ntimes; 6, Don't look back! Somebody might be gaining on you.\nFor the Yeung fry'\nDad in telling the yeuniiteri ef\nhii early hookey eeretr often tills\nhew he used to tie magazines on his\nthins for guards.\nTht Maple Buds of Nelion go one\nbetter, To prove they started .before\ndad they say \"we uit digest books\nfor shin guards.\" They fit too,\nKid Matthews\nRated Favorite\nSPOKANE, Wash. (AP) \u2014 Harry\n(Kid) Matthews of Seattle is rated\na solid favorite to put awsly Murray Burnett in their 10-round\nheavyweight match here Tuesday\nnight.\nJOHN\nNIAGARA\nTalks abouti\nBills marked\n\"PLEASE\nMost people havo had a bill\nsometime, bearing the words.\n\"Please remit by iiturn mall\".\nAnd many of ut have not\nalways   been  able  to  nod\nfiaymeot by return mail, A\nsrge unplanned bill, or \u2022 lot\nof little ones, can'often cause\nthis to happen. Moir pcoplo\ndon't retlii* thit ill they\nneed to clear away their\ndebts is time; yes, time to\nspread the payments into\nfuture pay envelopes. A friendly loan gets you a lump turn\nof money, with which to pty\nyour bills. You thon btve\ntime to repay, with payment* ,\nyou can handle mora easily.\nIt's * simple way to set back\non your teat, friendly lout\nup to $1300 from Niagara\nare life-Insured at no extra\ncost to you. Besides, on mtny\nfriendly loons, tht ruti are\nlower. If you need money why\ndon't you give yourself tlmo\nto pty by arranglog a Niagara\nloan. We'll be glad to in you\n... so just drop ln.\nBI   I AC ARA\n560 Baker Street\nPhone 1638\n_ By Tht Canadian Press\nThe much-mellgntd Canadian\nAmateur Hookey Association Man-\nday night invited critical tjantdlen\nsport? writers and others to \"some\nup with some concrete suggestions\"\nabout choosing tht country's ren*\nresontatlvo In future world hookey\nohamplenshipi- It warned \"H isn't\nthe. almplo problem it appears to\nbe.\"\nSmarting under t countrywide\nbarrage ei eritleim sn e roiuit ei\nCanada's M lea*, to Russia In the\ntournament at  Stoekhfllmi  PAHA\nsootetary-manager (Jeorge Budley\not Midland, Ont-, presented th*\nCAHA's case In ftjtatenyent to Tht\nCanadian P\u00bben.\nIn efeet, he said, it was \"impossible'1 to send a team of highei\nranking than the aenlor 9 Toronto\nBlast York lyndhursts that howea\nto tht Russian* tn what hai been\ndescribed as a \"black eye\" ta Canada, * ''catastrophe,'' \"a national\ncalamity\" and \"a resounding alas\nla Canada's faot,\".\n, Th* Issue will be threshed out at\nthe CAHA annual meeting in Vancouver May 10, hut snorts writers.\nformer professional players, coaches and just about anybody wh* ever\nhad anything to ie with heokey,\nBounded on the CAHA, Non*\nblamed, the Toronto team fer the\nlost and Many felt that the CAHA\nehote \"t hpy te do * P>*\u00bb'\u00bb Job.\"\nMany charged the OAhA with\n\"stupidity.\" \"bungling,\" \"blunder-*\nIng\" tnd \"short-sightedness.'1 Seme\nsuggested that Canada should pan\nup the championship! U the CAHA\ncan't choose a stronger team than\na senior B outfit tnd others called\nfer t \"ntw deal,\" In the CAHA.\nleafs Oiler To\nTour Russia\nTORONTO (CP)-Toronto Mtple\nIiotft of the. National Hookey\nLeague have'' offered to make a\ntour ef Russia, managing director\nConn Smythe tald Monday ln a\ntelephone interview from Florida,\nwhere ha ls on holidays.\nSmythe told the Toronto Telegram that th* only condition is\nsuit able compensation which\nwould include travelling expenses\nand a small remuneration for the\nplayert,\"\nH* would \"very much like to\nho Canada regain her lost prestige\nIn world hockey,\" said Smythe who\nadded that he would personally accompany the team whieh could\nloava right after the NHL playoffs.\nA committee ef Toronto citizens\nha* started raising funds for the\ntrip which would include a brief\ntour of other European countries.\nToronto* Mayor Allan Lamport\nsaid he personally would put $5000\nin tha kitty to send the Leafs to\nRussia.\nNATIVE PROTECTORATE\nThe Swaziland prottctorate north\nof the Union of South Africa has\nan area of 6705 squirt miles,\n\u25a0   See Ut For Your\nSUMMER\nRETREADS\nNOW!\n(Fair Allewanci en Your\nOld Tlroi)\nSuperior Motors\nDodge \u2022 DeSoto Dealer   ,\nOpp. Post Offlct), Virnon St.\nMike Shabaga Quits Smoke Eaters;\nLeafs at Full Strength Tonight\n\"Wn'il MrUinly be flying tonight,\", wtirt tie Wertli ot\nCoach Willie Schmidt in telling how his;: -testa,;Would stack\nup against the'Smoke Eaters in the iirs't'gah^eof-the WIHI^\nsemifinal played*,.' ;f  \u2022 ' : \\';'    '\ni Sflhmidt ititW:;'aU playeri were in readiness tor the\nserie\u00bb which istrtt'r,e'\u00abi.out.qf-five a.ffeji'. 'fif\n\u25a0\u25a0 On the,, pwitjf pido at the ledger;; fye, Smeke Eaters\nand ekmeh Mee Yeung are having their.troubles asi starry\nMike Shabaga announeed. he had quit.tha oWo, JJe had\nrefused ta makethe trip te Kimberley fer their final league\nfixture- x . ;'\u25a0 -. .\nBhabaga, in making hip abrupt; deelslon, said the\nheokey olub has made ne meve ta secure \"permanent empleyi\nment fer hiriur '\u2022       ...     \u2014-\u2014-=- i~_l.\nShabaga, former employee ef O\nmtnep, was laid off in*pecemeer\nand since then haa been unable t\u00b0\nsecure employment, He Hid *hat\nwhen he came to Trail three years\nago to play hookey ho wat premiiert\na ion with a future.\nWith this decision of Phabaga's\nCoach Young it left with \u00bberlMltd\nclub te, moot Leafi although It hu\nbeen reported thot Borgia Sinclair.\nBobby Kromm *ud tea eorrado\nwould be back ln the lineup,\nYoung hat also brought up\nfrom tht Intermediate nub ta |t\ntltng with Gordie Robertson ind\nJohn Mantlet who wera brought\n.  up earlier. It It nlap iKIttteS that\nrnnk Turlk will bt In uniform,\ncontrary to tho belief of many\nfans that Njls\u00b0n would see another\ngoalie ln the nets come playoff time,\nCoach Schmidt haa named Eric\nPaterson te till in between the pises\ntonight- -   -\nrei> defence line duty tht Lea's\nWill have the choice of Lloyd Ailsby, Buck Jones, Sod McCarthy. Ernie Gare, Bruno Pasqualatto and\n-Schmidt himself, .\nMaking up the front strings will\nbe Jimmy Um, B\"1 Haldane, L*e\nHyssop, Bed Koehle, Fritt Koehle,\nDen Appleton, Marty Burton, Mickey Maglio, Marlowe MaePonaid\nand. Hers lovett.\nFarewell Parly\nFor Canadians\nSTOCKHOLM .(Reuters) - Ihe\nToronto Bait York hookey team,\nwhich placed .second to Russia in\nthe world lot hockey ehamoion-\nthip* hare, attended t farewell\nparty In itt honor at the Canadian\nlegation Monday night,   .\nThe team will travel to flunds-\nvail, North Sweden, today for tn\nexhibition game against a locaj\nteam Wedneiday, The Canadians\nwill return to Stockholm tnd leave\nfor Pari* by. air later tht name flavin Ptrli they will play two gomes\ntgainit th* Swedish Djurgaarden\ntetm, the present champion of\nSweden.\nW. B. (Baldy) George, president\nOf the Canadian Amateur Hoekey\nAssociation, left Stockholm by air\nMondty,\nSOVIET TEAM\nGIVEN BONUS\nSTOCKHOLM (Heuters)-Members of the Soviet team which defeated Canada Sunday to win the\nworld ie* hoekey championship, received a state bonus of 5000 rubles\n($1280) ttcb, the Swedish evening\npaper Aftonblldtt reported Monday,\nTht piper Hid it had received\nthis Information from \"one ot the\nSoviet team's meit skillful players.\"\nAllle Slated\nFor Bull Pen\nBICYCLES\nTRICYCLES\nPart* \u2014 Repair*\nAecettoriet\nEDEY'S\n737 Baker St. Phena 1049\nST, PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -\nAlii* Reynolds, New York Yankees'\ntop salaried pitcher at about 842,000,\nprobably will be strictly a bullpen\nartist this soason.\nIt all depend! on a couple of big\nifs.\"\n1. If youngiten like Bob Wietler,\nSteve Kraly tnd Wally Burnette\nmade the grade.\n2. If Allle'i tore back doesn't act\nup.\nTha 36-year-old right-hander is\ntaking it easy in spring practice,,\nslowly working himself Into condition. He wont start bearing down\nfor a long time. Thar* was a long\nperiod when Reynolds wasn't lure\nhe ever would pitch again.\n\"The pain was terrific lata in the\nseason,\" ha laid. \"Every tire* I\npitched I'd get those muscle spasmi\nin the Bmall of my back. It all\nstarted when I wrenched my back\nin a but accident in Philadelphia.\"\nWilliams May B\u00ab\nBack Earlier\nBOSTON (AP)-InJured Ted Wil.\nHams may return to baseball sooner\nthan expected.\nSurgeons will open the Boston\nRed Sox slugger's left'shoulder today md wire together hii broken\ncollarbone.\nThe doctors estimate hit return\nto playing status \"in the vicinity of\neight week*-\"      ',.'\u25a0' i\nBE PREPARED . , . For tha SPRING WINDS\nJACKETS\nWind and Rain Resistant\n$1\/V9B\nAll new shades and styles.\nPriced From  j\t\nHughes-Stuart Men's Wear\n459 WARP ST.\nPHONE 425\nTRAIL \u2014 A smouldering dispute\nbetween yeteran oentremen jflike\nShabaga and tha Trail Smoke\nEaters hockey club- broke Into\nflames Monday m 3habaga refused\nto play. . ,.and waa auttn\\eticaHy\nsuspended,\n'. Shabaga hat refused to nlay any\nfurther Wen torn International\nHockey Leigue game* with the\nSmoke Eaters until he is assured\nof a job for the summer mehthi,\nActually, the dispute brake aut\nover the weekend as Shabaga re?\nfused te make the trip te Kunber-\nley ior Traii't Baturdey night garni\nWith the Dynamiters. t\\e dlff not\nmake the trip, then handed the\nclub his ultimatum again Monday,\nshabaga'i move cemei at Trail-\nalready crippled with six injuries^\nprepared to open iti WlHk semifinal aeries against Nelson Maple\nUafs, In Nelson Tuesday night,\nShabaga also leaves the team\npew, and || suspended from play*\ning any furtira\u00bb hockey until his\ncase is reviewed by the Canadian\nAmateur Hookey Association.\nA scarcity of Jobs has bothered\nthe Trail olub all season, following\nlayoff! at the Consolidated Mining\nSmoke Eaters are still unemployed,\nand Smelting Company. Several\nand team officials say the job situation la just as bad new as it was\nearlier In the season.\nT. McGovern Rink\nWins Kafs Section\nMrs. T, McGavern's rink won the\nKats section In tbe Nelson Ladles'\nCurling Club Kits tnd Kittens competition Mondty with t 10-f victory over Mn, T. A, Wallace,\nMn, B, Hille ctpturod 115-0 win\nover Mri, Phil Xuntt In tht Kittens\nsection but play In thli division ls\n\u2022till to bt completed.    \u2022\nTuesday will tie several other\nrlnki vieing for honors in the new\npoint! compttition, Those ntmtd\nfor this event so far trt Mrs, M.\nDaOlroltmo, Mri. S. N, Mannings,\nMn, B, Oray, ,Mn. O. Mclntyre,\nMri, R. H, Buih, Mrs. A. Barrett,\nMrs, R, Chandler tnd Mrs. 0. Open-\nthaw.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIII\nHas Flaggin Spirits?\nVANCOUVER (CP) - General manager Blair Clerk ot tha\nBritish Empire Garnet may be\nexcused If he has flagging spirits.\nHe has the worry, ajnong\nothers, of finding hundreds of\nflagt for the games here July\n30-Aug,'7. .\nAnd he has to be sure that he\nhas the right flag for each of\nthe 24 countries at the right\nplace at the right time, Flags of\nall competing countries just fly\nit the stadium and at the athletes' quarters at Empire Village. Then each country will\ncarry a flag In the opening ceremonial parade. And tht flags\nof each competing country must\nalso fly at each of the cycling,\nwrestling, fencing, boxing,\nbowling and rowing sites.\nThin three flags for each\ncompeting country must be on\nhand for raising ln can the\ncountry wins all three places ln\niny event.\nThat's net all.\nSix countries\u2014Bermuda, Brltiih Guiana, Gold Coatt, Kenye,\nMalaya and Trinidad\u2014haven't\nyet confirmed the flag they'll\nfly or submitted a design.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii\n'P(8rS|Mk\u00abW\nOfficials Handle\nDan '.Kurdydyk of j rWlnhlpeo\nwill act-t\u00bb referee In ohlef for\nth* first two oaraot of the semi-\nf|n\u00abi pi*yaff* between the Smokies and the l-eaft, Dr. Joe Vlngo\nVloe-prisldent of the Western International Hockey League said\nlate Monday night.\nWorking tht flrtt game with\nKurdydyk will be Bt\u00bb Maker ef\nSpokine  while  in tht second\nSame tt be played in Trail Thurs\nay John UrstKl of Iptktnt win\ntfil*lat|,\nNamei tf tht reftrttt for the\nPiye\u00bb, Dynamit\" ttrlM whith\ngets under Wty In Klmberlty *\u00bb\u2022\nnight wtrt not known rt.prat*\ntime,    ' '.,,,''\u25a0,  . -\n h. .   ', . 1. '\nBroncs Cain Final\nWith 2-1 Victory\nThe eeilar-dwelling fironoi, who\nwere given little or no chance ef\nemerging as the eity bantam\nchamps, turprlstd .everyone when\nthey edged past the Quakers to ad.\nvanee. tethejflpals,\nAfter playing twd tie games, they\ncam* through with a \u00bb\u25a0! victory\nSaturday to send them Into the final\nagainst the Roohetl for the title,\nIjittle   Kenny  Moffatt  was  the\nhere when he goprad. both Broncs'\ntallies in a.game that was fast,\nclean and Backed with action. Tht\nonly thing lacking in the entire\ngame was the attendance of spectators.\nAfter playing a close-checking\ngame In,the first frame, bethtetmt\nopened up in the, second. At the\nthree-mlnuto mark ot tha middle\nsession, Paterson sent the Quakers\nInto the lead, Moffatt tied up the\ngamo at the 10-mlnute mirk, scoring after taking t pass from Bob\nHarrison,\nFifem then until the end tht\nBroncs refused to be beaten at they.\neuthuttltd the Quakers. Moffatt\ntcored tht Winner at the slx-minuto\nmark In tht third and, although\nthe Quakers fought hard until tht\nend, they oould not break through\nthe Broncs' strong define!,\nHand fernie 5-1\nhockey setback\nNATAL - Pitying it th* Nttal\narena before t fair crowd, the\nMlchtl-Nattl High School won Its\nsecond gamo of the season as they\nhanded tht Fernie High School a\n5-1 tttbiek In tn exciting hockey\ngame.\nMichel-Natal took t commanding\nthroo-goal load In tht first period,\nsplit two goals in tht ttoond period\nto lead 4-1, and then notched the\nonly goal ef tht third period, to\nwin handily by t 8-1 icore. Onoe\nagain the work ot J. Galla In tht\nMlchil-Nlttl goal proved to be tht\nbig stumbling block for tbe Fernie\nteam. They wer* only able to icore\na single marker, that eomlng early\nin the second period by H. Uphill,\non an assist by Marasco. Ronnie\nMatt led the winners with two goals\nwhile Turlik, Cousens and Reno\nFabbro icored tingle goals. To date\ntha Michel-Natal High School, operating in the- East Kootenay High\nSchool Letgut has played eight\ngamei, winning two and losing six,\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian Prest\nG A Ptl\nHowt, Detroit  28 43 71\nRichard, Montreal .r.... 39 20 61\nLindsay, Detroit  23 32 D9\nKelly, Detroit  13 33 48\nGeoffrion, Montreal .... '2B 22 47\nOlmstead, Montreal .... 14 33 47\nRonty, New York   13 33 46\nReibel, Detroit  10 31 46\nNHL STATISTICS\nBy The Canadian Preu\nStanding: Detroit, won 33, lost 16,\ntied 13\u2014points, 83.\nPoint*: How*, Detroit. 71.\nGoals: Richard, Montreal, 35.\nAssists; Howe, Detroit, 43.\nShutout*: Sawchuk, Detroit, tnd\nLumley, Toronto, 12.\nPenalties: Richard, Montreal, 113\nminutes.\nRedmen Boxla Club\n1954 Wars\nROSSLAND \u2014 lioailtnd Redmen\nlacrosse club held their annual\nmeeting Sunday evening in the\narena and Frank Grubisic was\nelected president succeeding 1053\npresident Ernie Carkner. Cleve\nCowland was elected vice-president\nwhile Tullio Lenarduzzi was appointed secretary-treasurer. Others\nelected to the executive were Tommy Davli, Max Tyrk ind Cliff\nBarry.-\nA report was given on the financial standing of tbe club and\ndiscussion took place concerning\nplans for .1854 Including.the possibility of. forming a West Kootenay\nlacrosse league. < \u2022\nNelson Maple Leaf* were not definite as to their plant for league\nplay aqd lt, is not known whether\ntha Nelion club will enter the\nleague thi* season. In  tha  event\nNelson does not enter en alternative would ba Rossland and Trail\nparticipation in the Okanagan lacrosse league which now comprise9\nVernon, Kamloops, Salmon Arm\nand Kelowna.\nThe lighting system in tht arena\nwat alto criticised by the Redman\nclub and members of the executive\nwere asked to contact the Rossland\nCivic Activities Association on.tbe\npossibility ot Improving the lighting.\nThe meeting adjourned with a\ndiacustion on referees. It waa noted\nthit the West Kootenay league executive meeting will be held ln\nthe near future, pending nominations to the executive by the three\nmember clubs. The schedule for the\nleague will be drawn up at this\nmeeting.\nNtLSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH % 1954 \u25a0\nFeatured with Canadian lee TsntSsy is lovely Hiss Kris Peebles, acclaimed as\nAtnerlea'g forsroggt rhythm gtater.     .\nWillie Schmidt Only Maple Leal\nChosen for First All Star Team\nTBAHV-rrr-Twp M^ttr-old rookies\ntnd two pitying coaches htvt been\nnamed to berth* in the JOS.W\nWestern international Hockey\nLeague's all-star tetm In votes oast\nby sportawrltin and iBortsoasttrt\nih-tho four league cities, i\nRookie not minder Seath Martin\net Trail tnd Let Llllay ot Kimber>\nley wort named te the tetm along\nwith playing coaches Met Young\nof Trill tnd'Willit Schmidt of Nel.\nton.\nMartin edged out veteran Gerry\nFodey 'ot Spokane to claim tht\nleagues goal-tenders berth while\nLilley picked ujrtlve-'out tfra pdsi'\nBible eight votes to nail down the\nright wing berth.\nYoung who was named to the\nteam's lift wing position wat almost\nin unanimous choice along with\nBully Sullivan of Kimberley,\nBoth earned six votes while\nSchmidt wat named by five selectors to work along with Sullivan on\nthe mythical .squad.\nVeteran oentreman Red Tilson of\nSpokane wis the top choice for\npivot man on the tqutd Claiming\ntour votes over runntr-up Buzz\nMellor of Kimberley with two and\non* each te Lee Hyssop tnd Mikt\nShabaga ot Trail,\nThere wis no contest In tho cholco\nof a cotch tor tha flrtt tttm. Norm\nLarson of Kimberley was an unanimous choice over Mot Young who\nwas the choice of five aelectora as\ntn* coach of the second team.\nOnly two candidates were seriously considered by the voters for the\nrookie award wen by Les Lilley of\nKimberley, Wiley with ai* vote*,\nWis tht cold over Seath Martin of\nTrtil,      ~r;\"\"\nTwo members ot last year's all'\niter tttm, Ralph Luke tnd Bill Hildas* were dropped to the alternate\nsquad this year. Luko picked up\nfive votes to make the second squad\nalong with Trail'* Gordie Sinclair,\nChoice of netminder for the second\nttam went to Gerry Fodey while\nHaldane earned th* left wing berth\nalong with Red Koehle who wai t\nstrong contender in the race tor tha\nsecond team. Mike Shabaga was ie-\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Preu\nNEW BRUNSWICK 8ENI0R\nSaint John 2, Fredericton 1\nBest-of-nino finals tltd 2-1.\nNOVA 800TIA SENIOR\nStelluton 7, Windsor 1\nStallirton leads best-of-tevin tin-\nill 3-1.\nONTARIO SENIOR A\nOwen Sound-3, Chatham 8\nOwen Sound loads btst-of-stven\nleml-flnal 3-1^\nNORTHERN ONT, SENIOR A\nNorth Bay 4, Sudbury 3\nONTARIO JUNIOR A      \u00bb*,    ,\"    \"\nTor. St. Michael's 1, Kitchener 8\nTHUNDER BAY SENIOR\nPt, Arthur Bear Catt 5, Ft, Fran-\neat 8\nFort Francei  wlm  bett-ef-tlve\n\u2022aml-flnali 8-2,      ,\nWESTERN JUNIOR\nMedicine Hat 0, Regina 6\nRegina wins best-of-seven semifinal 4-2.\nSASKATCHEWAN SENIOR ,\nMelville 1, Yorkton 5\nBest-of-seven semi-finals tied 3-3,\nMANITOBA SENIOR\nWpg.   Maroons   4,   Portage   lt\nPrairie Memorials 2\nMaroons win best-of-ieven final\n4-0.\nMANITOBA INTERMEDIATE\nSelkirk 2, Dauphin 10\nDauphin wins best-of-three semifinal series 2-0,\nOKANAQAN SENIOR\nKamloops 3, Kelowna 4  (overtime)\nKelowna leadi bost-of-flve semifinal 1-0,\n\u25a0 i\u2014: !    \u25a0\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT8\nlooted to centre th* ttoond team\never Leo Hyssop ef Nelson who also\nwon a berth on tht tll-tttr team list\nyear.\nAlthough no reauest w*t made for\nthe league's most.valuable player,\nMoo' Young, in his second year as\nl left winger tnd slaying coach of\nTrill wen tht vote of six selectors.\nTht turns aro is follows:\nAU'Sttrt - Seath- Martin, Trail,\ngoal! S, Sullivan, Kimberley, Willie\nSchmidt, Nelaon, defence:. Jt. Tilson,\nSpokane, central Let Lilley, Kimberley, right wlngi Moo Young,\nTrail, left wing; Norm Larson, Kimberley, coach,\n.Alternates \u2014 Gerry Fodey, Spokane, goal; Ralph Luke, Spokane,\nGordle Sinclair, Trail, defence:\nMike Shabaga, Trtil, centre; Red\nKoehle, Nelson, right wing; Bill\nHaldane, Nelson, left wing; Moe\nYoung, Trail, coach.\nRookie* \u2014 Les LiUey, Kimberley;\nrunner-up Seath Martin, Trail.\nWith Siane\nand Besom\nNelaon Curling Club's Jeffs competition draw for Thursday:\n7 o.m\u2014Bi Ctrmlehttl vi W. Burdenle, N. fl. Jennejohn vs E. Ramt-\nbettom, P, Carmiehttl vs Z. Mason,\nW, M, Young ,vt H. Bush, M. 1,\nSyall* vt w. tozer. >   '\"\nAS i>,nv\u2014D. MeakJnt vs D. Per.\ntonus, A. B, Gllker vt R, Palmer,\nW, Oold vt R. S, Wallace, W. Duck.\nworth vs A. Farenholtz, ->\u25a0G- Petrie*! vt J, Teague.\nJtetults of play Monday ,ln th*\nJeffs competition wtrt:      \u00bb\nW, Cold 7, T. s. Jtmton \u00ab;\nN, It. Jennejohn 4, R. M. Chandler 8;    -  -      '\n\" E. C. Hunt 7, A. Farenholtz 8;\nL. G. Peerless 0, G. Moir 6;\nJ. Campbell 12, L. J. Maurer 11;\nD, Cathcart 1, J. Teague 0;\nM, B. Ryalli 10, J. 0. McMurchy 8;\nH, A, Greenwood 0, I* McEech-\ntrn 1;\nJ. Milnt 7, J. Leeming 8..\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nBSetBOBBBBBBBBaf\nNo Skating\nToday\n\u00bb.\u00ab\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nNELSON\ni\nMARCH 26-27\nCIVIC CENTRE - Nelson\nEntriei to bt mad* not later than\n..   March 24th, 1 p.m., to J. H. Long,\n512 Hcndryx St., Ntlton, B.C., or Phone 78\n'\u25a0   ,-- \u2022\u2022'\u25a0 \u25a0'    :\n\u2014\n\u25a0H\n\t\ntfftfptmt-^\nM\nfotofc-   - \u25a0     \" '**fa\u00ab\n m\nPhone 144\nDeadline lor Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nTRAINING,FOR   .\nACCOUNTANT\nCLERKS\nThe Canadian Army hat many\nopenings.for young men at Accountant \u2022 Clerka. The Army will\ntrain you in bookkeeping, accounting, costing. You \"will learn\ntyping. You will learn to keep\nrecords and ledgers for supplies.\nYou will be trained to maintain\nstocktaking records and assist in\nstocktaking procedures.\nThere are also \"openings in the\nArmy for men to train as:\nElectricians\nRadio Station Operators\nTelecommunication\nMechanics\nSurveyors\nDoctor's and Dentist's\nAssistants\nTech)nicqJ, Assistants\nAn Army career offer* good\npay, pensions, excellent conditions of service, variety of work,\ntravel, medical and dental care,\n30 days holiday.        '<   ,\nTo be eligible for this trades\ntraining, you must have Grade 10\neducation or equivalent, be 17 to\n40 years of age, and physically fit.\nFor full information write or\nvisit the Army Recruiting Station\nnearest your home.\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot,\n4201 West 3rd Avenue,\nVancouver, B.C.\nTelephone CHerry 2111\n.............j...........\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRENTALS\nSIX ROOM HOUSE WITH THREE\nbedrooms, wired for range. Close\nln, oh Victoria St. Newly decorated. For' responsible parties\nonly. Leave phone numBer at\n1327-R between 8 and 8 p.m.\nWANTED TO RENT: 2 OJR 8 BED-\nroom house by reliable couple,\nOccupancy immediate or ln near\nfuture. Phone P. S. Cook, Hume\nHotel.      ,   \u2022\nLOVELY LARGE ROOM GENTLE\nmen  sharing.  Six  blocks  from\ncity  centre,  on  bus  line.  Very\n. reasonable. Available March 15.\nBox 440, Daily News.\nFOR RENT: SMALL FURNISHED\nhouse for 5 or 8 months, from\nmiddle of April. Apply Box 320,\nNelson Dally News.\nWANTED TO RENT WITH- OP\ntion to buy ln year's time, small\nfarm, close in. Box 238, Dally\nNews.\nUNFURNISHED COMFORTABLE\ncentrally located apartment. Ideal\nfor business couple or 2 working\ngirls': Phone 1542.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM, MOD-\nern' kitchen with fridge. Also\nsleeping rooms. By day, week, or\nmonth. 171 Baker St.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDOMESTIC ELECTRIC REFRIG-\nerator, $95; Drop Leaf Table, new\nbut marked,; $15; Remington\nTypewriter, rebuilt, $78; 14-ijt.\nPressure Cooker, like new, $10.05;\nNew Chrome Table, top chipped,\n$34.05; Portable Radio,-$20. A few\nused doors and windows. J. P.\nMorgan Store, 801 Baker St, Ph.\n47.    \u25a0 \t\n1\u201418-CU. FT. DEEP FREEZE,\nused 4 months. Take over payment. No down payment. 1 pair\n. girl's white figure skates, size 7,\nnever worn. 1 set low heat stainless steel, used very little. Box\n237 Daily News.\nHOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS:\nChrome set, cafe sink, canopy,\ndishes, garden tools, lawn mower,\netc. Apply 210 _Vernbn St.\nFOR SALE: 16-FOOT ROW-BOAT\nmounted oh 2-wheel rubber-tired\ntrailer. Can.be seen at 705 Robson\nSt.     .\nFOR SALE - NEW VON SCHRED-\ner rug deterger. Suitable for\nhotels or business. Box 308, Nelson\nDally News.\nNEW. FOUR ROOM HOUSE, NEAR\nschools, stores and highway. Reasonable rent. Paul.Markoff, Slocan\nPark.\nONE LARGE FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Also one large sleeping\nroom, 140 Baker St. or Ph. 401-L.\nMAN AND WISE DESIRE WORK\nin small camp as cook and truck\ndriver. Apply Box 428, Nelson\nDaily News,\nWANTED\u2014PLACE TO CUT CE-\ndar posts on shares. Apply Box\n428, Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED \u2014 JOB BABY-SITTING,\navailable every evening, phone\n213-R after 4 o'clock if possible.\nAGENTS WANTED\nTEXTILE SALESMAN FOR BRIT-\nish Columbia wanted by a well\nestablished wholesale House.' Extensive Line, Cottons, Rayons and\nNovelty Fabrics. Must have connections with Departmental, Chain\nand Retail stores. Our staff ls advised of this ad. Write Box 208,\nDally News. ,\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nTENDERS WILL BE ACCEPTED\nat the Secretary-Treasurer's office\nup to 5 p.m. on March 8th, 1854,\nfor the clearing, grading, levelling\nand burning of stumps and brush\non the grounds of the Salmo Elementary \u00abnd Salmo Junior-Senior\nHigh Schools. Particulars of the\ngrades and levels can be obtained\nfrom the Maintenance Supervisor\n813 Ward Street\nG. S. Livingstone\n\u2022    Secretary-Treasurer\nSchool District No. 7\n812 Ward St., Nelson\nFOR RENT \u2014 SELF-CONTAINED\nApt Heated. Close ln. Box 425,\nDaily News.\nF6R RENT: 1 FURNISHED LIGHT\nhousekeeping room, and 2-room\nfurnished suite. Ph. 878-Y;\nSINGLE ANP DOUBLE ROOMS\nfor rent. Central heat; electric\nstoves. N. Shore MoteL Ph. 1884.\nPARTLY PURNISHED 2-ROOM\nsuite. Apply 723 Silica St., Suite 2.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, CALL AT\n023 Vernon St\nFOR RENT\u2014TWQ-ROOM FURN-\nished suite. Phone 359-R.\t\nFOR RENT\u2014WARM HOUSEKEEP-\nIng room. Phone 405-L.\nFOR RENT- \u2014 2-ROOM HOUSE\nNorth Shore. Phone 1885-R-l.     \u2022\nONE ROOM SUITE FULLY FUR-\nnlshed for two. 171 Baker St.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT; GENTLE-\nman preferred. 410 Victoria St.\nHousekeeping  room  for\nrent, Phone 1564-X.\nFOR RENT: UNFURNISHED 2-\nroom suite, 711 Carbonate Street.\n3 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT-M.\nPopoff, Fruitvale, B.C. ''\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE \u2014 18 FOOT 2 SEATER\nrunabout boat. Oak ribs. Needs\npainting. $80,00. Can be seen at\n822 Fourth Street. Phone 821-X,\nWANTED\u201414- OR 16-FOOT ROW-\nboat with small outboard motor.\nApply Box 412 Dally News, or\nPhone 632-L-2 after 5.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDOWN\n1. Feeling\n2. Biblical\nname\nS. Settle\nanugly\n4. Roman\npound\n5. One who\nprovides a\nnew Inner\nsurface\n8. Epoch   .\n7. U.S. river\n8. Furnish\nwithe,\nmonetary\nfund\n8. Selenium\n(sym;)\nlO.Willowa\n13. Lamprey\n17. Unit of\nweight\n10. Exlat\n21. Most\ndelicate\n25. Timber\ntreea\n(Phil.)\n27. An\nIndian\nstate\n28. Printing\nerror\n30. Divests of\nthe rose\n32. Golf\nmound\n14. Bone\n(anot.)\n35. Deadly\n37. Bitter\nvetch\nliUCTLrr,    ilUMId\nggmaa nanrciEi\nanuin laeiaJGitiB\nm     HB0IISI BE\nawmnnararaaiar-i\nr-Trjmuypi   Haa\nUlilM  HUB\nnasi HBHaiaH\namutar=iarai=iHra@\nan HI33H ran\nraawauia amiim\nntiEiaa hcidiiiih\nVeiteriloy's Answer\n42. Luzon\nnative\n44. The\nwallaba\n(Braz.)\n45. Masurium\n(sym.)\n48. Cesium\n(sym.)\nACROSS\n1. Before\n4. Rugged\nmountain\ncrests\n10. Prophetic\nsign\n11. Calm\n12. Drench\n14. Disembark\n15. Neuter\npronoun\n16. Genitive.\nform et\nCetua\n18. Head\n(slang)\n20. An image   .\n22. Female\nsheep.\n23. Soft, flex.\nIbleleather\nof sheepskin\n24. Seines\n26. Nick\n28. Part of\na step\n81. Tidy\n33. Roman\nemperor\n84. Often\n(poet.)\n16. Seeding\ndevices\n88. Ceblne\nmonkey   .\n88. Queen of\nheaven (Gr.\nrelig.)\n40. Like\n41. Gang:\n43. Kind\nof rock\n45. Varnish\ningredient\n47. Musical\ncomposition\n48. Places ot'\nworship\n49. Man's\nnickname\nDAILY CEYPTOQUOIE-Here's how to work It:\nAXTDLBAAXK\nrs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In thi* example A Is Died\nfbr the three L'a, X for tht two Q'a, etc. Single letters, epos-\ntrophies,,the length and formation of the word* tr* an hlnto.\nEach day the code letters ere different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nI    ELSOFLAIS    ITS'O    I    AIS\u2014FLIDO.\nBICD    8WO    1> MVAAUS    AIS-DRIB.\nYesterday* Cryptoquotet WE SAID ON THAT FIRST BAT,\nWE SAID AND SWORE THAT SELF SHOULD BE NO\nMORB-SHANKS.:\u25a0\u00bb '-:\u2022 ~ .\n4#t\" -\nFOR SALE - 12 FT TRAILER,\ncash, terms or trade. V M. Hoskins,' R.R.  1, Nelson.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trading Co., 035 E. Cordova Street\nVancouver,\nFOR SALE: CONNOR WASHING\nmachine; .kitchen chrome set,\ngrey; radio. Phone 681-R.\nFOR SALE: \"UNIVEX\" MOVIE\ncamera and projector. All ln good\nworking order, $20. Ph. 1327-R.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHE CHICKS WHICH GIVE RE-\nsults\" For 1054, raise chicks from\none of the oldest established\nhatcheries and poultry raisers, in.\nB.C! Since 1820 Western Canada\npoultrymen have been raiting\ntheir famous chicks. The following breeds, and cross breeds art\navailable.' and suited to every\nneed: S.C' White Leghorns, New\nHampshires, Barred Rocks, White\nRocks, Light Sussex, Rhode Island Reds. Black Australorps.\nAlso, Leghorn-Hampshire Cross,\nAustra-Whites, Rock-Hampshire\nCross and Hampshire-Rock Croat.\nBroad Breasted Turkey Poults.'\nOrder early ahd remember \"It's\nResults That Count\". Particular*\nand prices sent immediately upon\nrequest RUMP AND SENDALL\nLIMITED, Box N, Langley\nPrairie, B.C., or Vernon, B.C.\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS-R.6.P.\nbred Leghorns, ajso R.O.P. sired\ngrades of Leghorns,- New Hampshires, Leghorn-Hampshire Croat.\nBuy our chicks and follow our\ndirections how to raise them and\nkeep them for complete success.\n29 years' experience \u2022 with chicka\nand poultry. Apply our agent,\nNelson   Farmers'   Feed. Supply,\n.Nelson, or write direct to New\nSiberia   Farms,    N.   Balakshln, I\nR.R. 3, ChUliwack, B.C..'i        I\nWHITE ENAMEL BEATTY ELEC\ntrie washer. Call at 614 Fourth\nSt.\nFOR SALE: ELECTRIC STOVE\nv\/ith garbage burner. First class\ncondition. Phone 407-R.\nONE GAINADAY-GLAD IRON,\nvery good condition. Mrs. J. E.\nParker. South Sldcan, B.C.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS -\n-Write P.O.: Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nTOR SALE-1050 AUSTIN STA-\ntion Wagon* motor reconditioned.\n, Lots of power\u2014easy on gas. Cheap\nfor quick sale. Phone 48-R.\n1950 %-TON CHEV. TRUCK. SA6,\nrlfice. Owner left for Vancouver.\nPriced at $975: J. Abrdslmo, Tag-\nhum, B.C.\nFOR SALE: 1840 METEOR \"DBS-\nluxe Sedan in good condition.\nGood rubber, radio, spot light, sun\nvisor, indicator lights^ Phone\n58-Y, Kaslo. -**>\nHARLEY DAVIDSOfo MOTORS\ncycle for sale or trade. Good condition. Apply M.Piquard, Box 43,\nKinnaird. ':\u25a0'\u25a0\nR3R\nSALE:. 1951 CHEVr SEDAN\nDel'y Reasonable -terms Phone\n1304-L after 5.\nFOR SALE: ONE 6-tON COLUM\nbla Trailer almost new. 8.25 X 20\ntires. Price $1000.\nIsm   Austin   sedan,   good\nshape. On terms. Box 23 Salmo,\nB.C, .\nBOY'S   BICYCLE    FOR . SALE\nNewly reconditioned. Ph. 1253-L.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS-\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. We have'\notfer 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly condltiored Breeders on\nour own farm. Our baby chick*\nare produced only from our own'\nstock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks,   New- Hampshires  and.\nCrosses. Catalogue on request\nIF INTERESTED IN BAB?\nChicks send for our free 1854 Illustrated catalogue. The Appleby\nPoultry Breeding Farm, Mission\nCity. B  C.\nFOR SALE: BROWN AND WHTT8 .\nsaddle horse and a black saddle\nhorse. Well trained. $50 each. Apply 214 Innes St. Phone 1738-11.\nriturtKI Y, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC FOR SALE\nFARM - COMPRISING 14 ACRES,,\nland, 5 room modern house, surrounded by spacious lawns and\nfruit trees, also 20' x 80' chicken\nhouse, 20' x 40' work shop, will:\nsell all or half of above land.\nPrice reasonable. Apply J. Raine,\nRobson. Phone 3704.\nFOR SALE.- BEAUTTEUL NEW,..\n3 bedroom house, fully. modern,\n6\" x 18' picture window otfer*\nlooking lake. 14 lots, fruit, trees.\nImmediate possession. Sacrificial\nprice $7500. Mrs. R. J. Roberge,\nKaslo,.B.C. -    ..,-.-. -\/, -vtr;    j\nFOR SALE ORv TrADIS; HALS'\nsection close to\" Cranbrook^ Lot\n. 8395, north of feWhrX'jTAnder-i\nson,-10180-107 -St, Edraontoh,-Alberta. ;-:-.'. -?    - \u2022\u00ab\nFOR SALE: 10 ACRES, TRACTOR\nand all equipment, or tractor and\nequipment separate. Apply P.O.\nBox 254, Nel;on.\nFOR SALE: I 4-ROdM, PULL?\nmodern house, good garden and\nfruiti trees. Price ?I6fl0. C Joha't\nson, Box 17, SUyerton, B.C.,\n%\nT\u2014\nr-\n3\n^<\nr-\nr-rr-\n7\ns\ne\nIO\n|\nli\nIS\nt\/<\n14\n%\nti\nF\/\/\n16\n>7\nt\nIs\n\\%\nio\nai\n\u00a7\nJI\naS\n^1'\n4*'\nik\n^A\nV^\njir\nw\n%\nie\nIt\n30\n%\nl\n*\n32\n^(\n35\n\u25a0\n54*\nir\n%\nib\n37\n30\ni\n%\n39\n'^\n40\n'^\n41\n4Z\n^A\n43*\n44\nit\n4k\nf^\n47\nta\nVA\n49\n1\nON THE AIR-\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n.7:05\u2014Bob's Inn\n\u2022 7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Bob's Inn\n8:00\u2014News'\n\": 10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Across Canada\n0:00\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n10:00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Music\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Here's Health\n11:00\u2014Gabriel Heater\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nH:45^-Consumer's Corner\n12:00\u2014Noon Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55-Chat With the Listener\n1:00\u2014Range Roundup\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Falrview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Afternoon Visit\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n(Pacifio Standard Tim*\nTUESDAY, MARCM 9, 1954\n8:45\u2014Afternoon Varietlei\n4:00\u2014Pacific News   ,\n4:15\u2014Barney Potts Show\n4;30\u2014Alice in Orchestral!*\n4:45\u2014Sleepytlme Story Teller\n5:00\u2014Education Week :\n5:15\u2014Int Commentary\n5:20\u2014Report From Parliament HIB\n5:25\u2014Road arid Weather Report\n6:30\u2014Supper Club\n5:45\u2014Sports  News\n5:50\u2014News -'.\n6:00\u2014Tell Me Doctor .\n6:15\u2014Highways of Melody\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Music Hall\n8:00\u2014Nation's Buainest'\n8:15\u2014Coke Time\n8:30\u201420 Questions\n9:00\u2014Mr. Show Buslnes*\n9:30\u2014Vancouver Theatr*\n10:00^-News\n10:15\u2014Turning the Fable*\n10:30r-Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Devotions \\\n11:00\u2014Around the Towa\n12:00\u2014NEWS Night C\u00bbp\nCBC PROGRAMS\n\u2022Pacific Standard Tim*\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 10,. 1954\n7-00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast.\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:80\u2014NOws\n7:35\u2014M'isical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Mor,ur,\u00bb Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014Newa\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n8:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n015\u2014Aunt Lucy\n8:80\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15 -The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kate Altker\n11:15-Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30~A Man and His Music\n12:15~CBC Newi\n12:25\u2014Showcase- .\n12:30\u2014Farm  Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Fi\u00abe to Oh* . '\n1:00\u2014Af te noon Concert\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinae\n815\u2014Brav* Voyage .\n3 30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C Rour.dup\n4:15\u2014Other Voices, Other Placet!^\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road .    y.\n4:45\u2014Benny the Bashful Boxcar\n5:00\u2014Music Shop\n5:15\u2014International Commentary\n5:20\u2014Newa\n5:30\u2014Rawhide Sji:.^\n5:55\u2014Have You Heard\n6:00\u2014Neighbourly.:N*\u00ab*-v,v.;\n6:15\u2014Stara from Paris    ;'\n6:45\u2014Intro,  to   Wednesday\n\/rOO\u2014New*\n7:15\u2014Newa, Roundup\u00a3\u00a3=-.\n7:30\u2014An Appreciation, erf Wuge:\nO'NeW-r-r,-^.-;-\nlOiOO-rNeW*        ,       .,'\n10:15-7RecItal\n10:30\u2014Sounds of Asia,\"\nXlmmmstm&th\nm^^H'^WMWimV^S^Mii^^^^^\n 673\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONI 144 ' ^'\nDeadline for Classified Ads \u2014 S p.m.\nMACHINERY\n'   Quality Equfpment\nfrom-.a\n, ..Reliable Dealer\nYOU GET THE BEST IN USED\nEQUIPMENT FROM YOUR\n\"CATERPILLAR\"\n.     .       DEALER\n\"Cat\" D2, 5U series, hyd. \u00bbngle-\ndozer, - Hyster winch, guards.\nOperated only 1925 hours. 60-day\nwarranty, Cranbrook. ftfiOKf)\nFT1608. .'.  -PO^OU\n\"Cat\" D4, 7J series, LaPlante\nChoate Trailbullder 'dozer, Hyster\n\u25a0winch. Major repairs completed.\n80-day warranty, %JO<!ft\nVernon. FT1813 .\u00bb\u00ab\u00a7 A\u00abW\n'Int. TD-8, Smith 'dozer, Carco\nwinch. Very good condition.\nReady to go. As is, Ccenn\nNelaon, FT1259 \u00abP\u00ab\u00abJUV\nInt.   TD-14,   1947   model,   with\n\u201e   Hoover  hyd.   overhead   loader,\n|- model F Carco winch, extra bulldozer blade. As is,\nVancouver. ET1413.\nrteaP'No. 11 rhotor grader, tan-\ndam drive, cab, lights, scarifier,\ngood mechanical condition. As\nis, Vancouver.\nJT1388.  \t\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD   AND   ROOM   FOR\ngentlemen sharing. Nice location.\nThree houses from\nAvailable March 15.\nDally Newt.\nbut   Itop.\nBOX   441,\n$6300\n$6250\nFINNING TRACTOR\ntt EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\nPhone 930 \u2014 Nelton\nPhone 61 \u2014 Cranbrook\n\u00bb*i\u00bbi\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb\nRamp Body and\n-   Fender Works\nNelton. B.C\nJobbers for\nSPJCER\nNeedle Bearing, Power\n\u25a0   Takeoffs and Universal\nJoints\n858 Josephine St     ^Phono 195\nfARMALL CUB HYDRAULIC -\nexcellent condition, light*, starter,\nbulldozer blade, plow mower.\nParticulars, apply Box 316, Kim-\nberley. \t\nFOR RENT - SHOVELS. BACK-\nhoes, dragline, log loader bulldozers, compressors, etc Bayes\nEquipt Co., Cranbrook, phone 80\nWINCHES: FOR RUBBER TIRE\ntractors, eat*, trucks, etc, Biyei\nEquipt. Co.. Cranbrook. phone 80.\nNdumt Saily Netbs\nClassified AdveHltinp' Raton\nISc per line first insertion and\nnon-conseoutlve insertions\nlie tine per consecutive User\ntion after lint insertion.\n48c line for 6 oonsecutlv* Inter-\nIons\n8166 line tor month (28 consecutive Insertions!   Box numbers 11* extra  Covert any\nnumber ot insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS it*. - 20c pe> line\nfirst Insertion   16c  pet   Un*\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE   rtATES   LESS\n10% COR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Ratet:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week.\nln advance 38\nBy carrier, pel year 81660\nUnited State*. United Kingdom\nOn* month    8 1.25\nThree months ......       8.78\nSix months            7.80\nOn* year .16.00\nMali in Canada, outside Nelton\nOne month . 8 1,00\nThree months   .._       2 75\nSix Montht      ,5.80\nOne rear 10 00\nWhere extra pottage 't requ'red,\nibovt ratal el us postage.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\n'   Tht, Dally'-Ntw*, dot* not hold Itttlf responsible In the event\nof ari error In the following llttt,\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nSPECIAL TODAY ONLY\n1980 MODEL A FORD SEDAN\nMotor Completely Overhauled.\nIt runt like a Model A.\n1840 PLYMOUTH 7-PASS. SEDAN\nMechanically and Body Fair.\nPriced to Sell.\npaitntYe).\nGod's Lak* -\t\nOoldcreat\t\nGolden Manitou ...\nHallnor \t\nHasaga -\t\nHollinger \t\nHomer Y K\t\nHudton Bay\t\nInspiration  -.\nInt Nickel\t\nJoliet Que\t\nKerr Addison\t\nKirk-Hudson Bay.\nKirkland take\t\nLabrador \t\nLake D'ufault\t\nLake Wasa .\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\n*QP! MARKET PRICEB PAID TOR\n\u25a0crap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\t\n'WANTED \u25a0\u2014 CATERPILLAR D2\ntractor equipped with bulldozer\nand agricultural- loader. Please\nstate condition, price and terms to\nBox 53 Nelson News.\nWANTED: SQUARE ST-ERN,\nround bottom row boat ln good\ncondition. E. Carlson, Johnson's\nLanding,\t\nWANTED-ABOUT 1000 STAND-\ning Cedar or will contract making\n'tnd skidding poles. Box 554, Castlegar. , \u2022\n'WANTED: A USED GAS RANGE.\nPhone 357-R. -\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co D. L. Kerr. Agent\nWanted: good home for an\nInvalid lady. Apply Box 818, Nel-\nson Daily News.   ,\n| ALMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and reasonable rates  Vancouver. B.C\nll.tTOME NURSING CARE FOR BID-\nerly gentleman, to share rooms\nwith non-smoking gentleman.\nTelevision and other conveniences. For full particulars write\nBox 276, Creston. B. C.\t\n| TOBACCO ELIMINATOR\u2014A SCI-\nentlfic guaranteed remedy for\ncigarette addiction. Quick-Sure-\nPermattent. For free booklet write\nC. King Pharmacal Corp. Ltd.,\nSox 303, Walkerville, Ont.\nINSTRUCTION\n| LEARN   TO   WELD  AND\njourneyman   and   command\nA\ntop\npay. Night classes. Welding and\nConstruction School, 148 E. First\nAve., Vancouver. B. C Phone\nFAIrmont 2101.\nBUSINESS AND\n[PROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n|t   W   VVIDDOWSON   & CO.,  AS\nlayers  301 Josephine St.   Nelson\n\u00ab\nS    ELMES.   ROSSLAND   BC\nAssayer Chemist, Mint Rtp\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEVOR8\nboyd c AffMflK,\"M.ti,i:e. \"\nIB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.. Nelson   Phone 1888.\nPfc COATIS, 8TB\"'fJO tm\nBaker   St.   Ntlton,   Phont   HIS\nB C  Lands Surveyor\nIS. V   SHAYLtB.  PO   BOX  Ml\nKimberley, Phont 64\nB.C  Land Surveyor. Engineer,\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop    Acetyleno   and\n'electric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593, 324  Vernon St.\nCLOTHIERS\nIgeorge ELSEY,\n\u25a0a\nRlSPftfiSENTA-\ntlve for Park Fletcher Made-to-\nMeasurc Suits, Pants, .Topcoats,\nOvercoats, Slacks, etc. Write box\n12   Nelson News.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Prices werrl\nlower today with trading comparatively light- -\nLower Canadian stocks included\nCanadian Pacific and International\nNickel, each down, and Hiram\nWalker off. Dome Mines gained,\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 MO.st group*\nwere higher ln light trading toward\nthe close of session.\nPapert, utilities and foodi lad tha\nIndustrials' strong element but liquors, steels and textiles dipped,\n\"Base metal seniors were. slightly\nstronger but juniors and Manitow-\n-wadge tret Issues were, down,\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices leaned forward in moderate trading.\nSenior metals, miscellaneous Industrial!, papers, senior oils and\nbanks were higher. Utilities,' beverages and carriers were mixed.\nLONDON (Reuters)'- After \u2022\nquiet opening, firm conditions developed in most sections.\n. Industrials were firmer ln spots\nunder tha stimulus Of selective buying. Stores and textiles were prominent\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - Cattl* and\ncalves 673, mostly good 'butcher\ncattle. Good to choice butcher\nsteers about steady; plain kinds\nslow and lower In spots; cowl and\ngood, light stocker and teider steers.]\nsteady; bulls steady to Strong; Vtll\ncalves scarce and fully steady.\nGood, to near choice butchtr\nsteers 16.50-17.60, common to Medium 12-16.25; good to choice\nbutcher heifers 16-18, Common to\nmedium 10-14.75; good cows 10.50-\n11.50, common to medium 8.50-10;\ncannert and cutters 5-8; good bull*\n12-13, common to medium 8.\"\n11.50; good stocker and feeder\nsteers 14-14.50, common to medium\n10-13.75; good to choice Veal calves\n22-25, common to medium 12-21.\nGrade A hogs closed last week\n25 cents lower at 34. Sows were 25\ncents higher at 21.50-21.75 ltVe-\nweight.\nGood lambs 18.50.\nTORONTO STOCKS ;\n(Clotlng Prloet)\nMINJ8        \"r.\u25a0'-.\u25a0 .\nAktltcho f.f   .86\nAmtHctin V K .\/\u2022',. ,.\u2014...     4BH\nAnglo Hurtnt*w,,4.^\u201eM.,.^. 13.00\nArt*. ...-. .- ^.-..\u201e\u2122..,,\u201e.' . ,40'\nArmittict ,...;...-...........~.J~..    .17\nAtlti YK \u201e....;;      .12\nAumaqiit u..\".,.,.,...\u2122..-    .lift\nAunor .-. ;..-.:...\u201e  2.05.\nBarymln ,.., j,.\u2122.. MC)\nB*vcourt ,...'.  .81\nBobjo \u201e:.  .80\nB-oymtr Oold 17ft\nBralorne    3.60\nBroulin  _ \u201e....,.\u201e.,   J.88\nBuffalo Ahk \u2122.\u201e.i.\u00ab.;...\u201e'\u201e .70\nBuff Can .,  .80\nCalilfan 16\nCampbell R L ,. \u201e'... 7.80\nCan Mai.. '. \u201e\u201e\u201e.;.... .48\nCheitervlll*  ,30ty\nChimo G   1.38\nCochenour  .71.\nCom M 4s S  -82.88'\nConwett \u201e   3.60\nCons Discovery -   . 1.05\nCroinor   .24\nDelnite  ... 1.18\nDettt R L  \u201e. .18 -\nDome ..:  :  18,00\nDonalda  .56\nDuvay  -...- .18\nEast Malartic .*   1.42\nEast Sullivan  8.85\nEastern M*taU \u2014 .61ft\nElder Gold _.,.... .64\nEstella'   .17\nEiirtka  .78\nFalconWldg* ...... .... 14.75\nFrobisher  4.70\n:Copkshutt  .,....\u2022..\u201e.:\u201e.....,..\nCMli'8 :.;,i\t\nSons. Peper \n1st Seagram :...;..:\u201e..\nDom Foundries .'. ;,.:,\nDom 8t*e| tt cot! B\nDom Stores   .        '   .\nDom Tar tt Chemical...\nDom Textllei. .,.,..,,..?\u201e;\u201e\nMdy.PlBlr     ,;,.\u201e.....\nF*mou\u00bb Players,\t\nFinny Firmer \u2014...,\nFleet Air ..................\nFord A \u2022'\t\nGatineau\t\nGatineau 6% pfd .\n22ft\n44 tt\n28\n14Vt\n0%\n20\n8\n7\n29\n82 V\u00ab\n91\n186\n86U\nlift\n107\nGoodyear   ...' \u201e  116\nGreat Lake?\nGreat Lakes Pfd.\nImperial Oil \t\nimp. Tobacco .....\nInfNlokel\t\nInt Pete\t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B\n22ft\n, 81\n83\n9ft\n36%\n21 Vt\n40%\n45\nMaple Leaf Milling     7%\nMassey Harris\nMeColl Frontenac\nMont Loco\t\nMoor* Corp J.\t\nPage Herhey \t\nPowell River\t\nPowtr Corp\nRuts Industries\t\nShawlnigan.  ....\nSimpsons A  .\nSOutham   ,    80\nMs\n2SV,\n16V.\n25ft\n73ft\n28\n36ft\n19ft\n39ft\n15\n8.25\n.78\n.    .18\n1.38\n8.00\n.18ft\n13.80\n.19ft\n40.00\n2.35\n85.76\n.43\n17.25\n.75\n.41,\n8.28\n.65\n.21\nLamaque      8.75\nLeitch\nLexindin ' \u00ab...\nLittle Long Lac....\nLouvieourt\t\nMacassa \t\nMacDonald \t\nMacLeod Cock ....\nMadsen R L \t\nMalartic G F ....\nMclntyre Poro .....\nMcWattar* \t\nMonet*\t\nKew Alger ....-\t\nNe wBtdlamaquo\nNew Calumet\t\nNew Goldvut...;....,\nNew. Relet*.\t\nNew Lund\nNew Larder U\t\nNew Mylamaque \t\nNipisslng     1.43\nNoranda    63.00\n.65\n.14\n.76\n.14\n1.65\n.68\n1.45\n1.65\n1.35\n88,80\n.17ft\n.11\n.10\n.57\n.57\n.16\n.17\n.19\n1.07\n19\nNormetali\nOgama \t\nOlltko  \t\nPamour \t\nPaymaster\t\nPickle Crop ..\nPlacer Devel..\nPreston E, D.\nQuebec Lab ..\nQuebec Man..\n2.41\n.16\n.48\n.65\n.39\n1.03\n24.00\n2.86\n.12'\nQueentton '      .27\nQuemont ...........\u201e.\u00ab\u2122.\u201e    14.35\nRtdiore  .-.        .55ft\nRoche Lt, 15\nSan Antonio     1.70\nSherritt Gordon      3-90\nSilvermiller       1.06\nSilanco 1 u.        .14\nSltcoe      .40\nStarratt Olsen 16\nSteep Reck     7.30\nSudbury Cont .\nSurt Inlet \t\nSylvahlte\t\nTeck Hughes\nTomblll\t\nTOrbrlt\nAttempt fo Put\nLife Info Cricket\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The leisurely\ngame of cricket tends to bt too\nslow for even the English.\nIn an effort to rid tht game of\nstonewall tactics, alow scoring tnd\nfloppy fielding, a group 6f cricket\nlovers plans to present star players with trophies and monetary\nprizes this season. . ...,'..\nTacit approval has been given by\nthe Marylebone Cricket Club, tht\n\"government\" of the gamer's.. Aifd\nMMC secretary, says the ruling\nbody does not recognize prizes for\ncricket\u2014a true blue sport, exempt\ntrom entertainment tax \\ despite\nnumbers of professionals. '   '\nBut personally, I Imagine that\nanything which will infuse lite into the game at the present time\nmust ba a good' thing,\" says Aird.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n.18ft\n.17%\n1.10\n8.25\n,    .41\n1.80\n.88\n6.78\n1.80\n16.88\n1.70   '\n9.50\n...     8.15\n.30\n11.28\n10.80\n.10 .\n6.00\n2.H\nCentral Explorer*     8.05\nTrent Cont Ret\t\nUnited Ken*    \u2014\nUpper Ctritda \u2014\nVentures\t\nVlMamte \t\nWalte Amulet \u201e\t\nOILS\nAnglo Can    \t\nA P Consolidttod \t\nB A on   \t\nCalgary and'Edmonton .\nCalmont\t\nCdn Atlantic\t\nCentral Leduc .\nSteel of Canada\nStandard Paving ...\nTaylor Pearson ...\nUnion Gas of Can .\nUnited Corp B \t\nUnited Fuel A\t\nUnited Steel \t\nWeston George .\t\nWinnipeg Gat\t\n29ft\n25ft\n8\n38\n13*4\n58ft\n12%\n87\n8ft\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prlcet)\nMINES'\"\nBeaver Lodge       J5\n~   '   3.50\n  .03\n  .76\n: 15\n  .35\n    ) .35\n  8.80\n...... 1.85\n  M\n  .15\nReeves MacDonald  1.33\nBralorne\nCanute\t\nCariboo Gold ......\nEstella   \t\nGiant Mascot .....\nHighland Bell ....\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Border\nQuatsino\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSilver Ridge    \t\nSilver Standard ...\u00bb\t\nVananda \t\nVan Roi\t\nWestern Tungsten\t\nYale\t\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian\t\nA P Consolidated ........\nCalgary It Edmonton .\nCanadian Anaconda ...\nDalhousie\t\nHeine  \t\nMercury .: ....\nNational Pete\t\nOkalta Com .\nPacific Pete .\n.45\n3.90\n.08\n.61 ,\n.01\n.04\n.36\n.21\n5.20\n.30\n10.25\n.14ft\n.16\n9.30\n' .11 '\n1.58\n1.75\n8.80\nRoyalite     12.00\nVanalta    16\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates     25.50\nChemical Research\n1.90\nCommonwealth Pete    4.10\nDalhousie\nDecalta\t\nDel Rio \t\nFederated pete\nHtghwood Sr. ..\nHome'    '\t\nImperial'Oil\t\nKroy\nMacDougal Segur Ex .\nMid Cont\t\nNat Pete\t\nOkalta       i ;.\t\nPacific Pete .w......\t\nRoyalite  ...ft;\t\nRoxana .'.,',( ,-....!.........\nUnited. Oils s\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbi  \u00abj.\nAlgOme StteJ\t\nAtlas St _:\nBill Telephone .............\nBrazilian\t\nB.C .Electric 41\t\nB.C. Electric 4fts\t\nB.C. Fofttt'. '\u201e'.-....\u201e._\nB.C. PacTttft \u00bb' \u2014.\nBrown Co. :.w..\nBrack Silk A\t\nBrack Silk B \u201e..*.....\nBuilding Product*\t\nBurl Steel \t\nCan.' Cement  \t\nCan Malting     ...\u201e*.\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\nCan Packers S\t\nCan Brewitri*ic....',\u201e....\u00ab\nCan Canners \t\nCan Car & Fdy \t\nCan Celanese .,.:.,,\nCan Oil\nCna Pacific Rly \t\n6.18\n,71\n1.81\n4.18\n.16\n8.70\n33.00\n1.66\n.14\n.46\n1.55\n1.76\n8,00\n12.00\n.14\n1.09\n.. 19ft\n.. 44ft\n.- 14ft\n.. 41ft\n- 7ft\n.. 81ft\n- 87\n- 6ft\n.. 9%\n..    11\n. 11\n.. 450\n.. 87ft\n.. 20ft\n.. 90\n.. \u00ab7ft\n.. 39\n.. '88%\n.. 28\n.. 18ft\n,.'\u2022   88ft\n.. 16ft\n. 22<)>\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results of\nSaturday's Rugby League games ln\nthe United Kingdom:\nRUGBY LEAGUE CUP\nSecond Round\nHalifax 24, Keighley 5\nHuddersfleld 12, St Helens 5\nHull 5, Workington T 5\nHunslet 10, Whitehaven 2\nLeeds 12, Leigh 3\nOldham 4, Warrington 7\"\nWigan 15, Bradford N 10\nYork 11, Doncaster 2\nLEAGUE GAMES\nLiverpool C 10, Saltord 0\nWakefield T 26, Dewsbury 11\nWidrtes 13, Hull K R 6\nFriendly Match\nSwlnton 8, Rochdale H 10\nResults of Saturday's Rugby Union galries in the .United Kingdom:\nINTER-SERVICES TOURNEY\nRoyal Navy 8, Army 6\nCLUB MATCHES\nLdn Scottish 29, Richmond 3\nLdn Welsh 5, Guys Hosp 8\nMet Police 17, St. Thomas's 11   '\n0 M Taylors 9, London Hosp 6\nSt Bartholomews ft 6, Stroud 9\nSt. Marys H 0, Ldn Irish 8\nSaracens 3, bid Blues 6\nAldefshot S 3, London U 6\nBarnstaple 5, Torquay A 0\nBath 16, Bristol 6\nBedford 9, RAF 8\nBirkenhead P. 6, Wasps 8\nBridgend 6, Maesteg 3\nNewtoh A 0, Bridgewatef 6\nCambridge U 5, Rosslyn P 5\nCheltenham 11, Alleynians 0\nCross Keys 9, Weston SMS\nEbb Vale 8, Pontypool 3\nExeter 3, Plymouth A3\nGloucester 15, Llanelly 18 ,\nManchester, 12,.Notts 5\nMoseley 17, Headlngley 13\nNeath 13, Aberavon 3\nNewbfldge 16, Abercarn 8\nNewport 3, Cardiff 3\n>  Northampton 11, Blackhead 0\nPontypridd 8, AbertlUery 3\nRedruth 15, Devonport S3.\nSwansea 11, Penarth 8 -\nTaunton 11, Glamorgan W 8\nWaterloo 8, Coventry 8\nEdinburgh U 8, Edinburgh All\nGlasgow HSFP 6, Glasgow1 A 6\nWattbhiMis 8, Royal HSFP 0     \u201e\nLeicester 12, Harlequins 3\nyi&mStftmUmjLmmm    ,,       \u201e- r. -n \u25a0 , .\nDividends\nBy The Canadian Press\nInternational   Milling   Co.,   $1.\nApril 15, record March 31.   .\nSteel Cor Of Canada Ltd., it cents\nMay 1, rtcord April 7.\n. Canadian Bank of Commerce, 30\ncents. May 1, record March 31.\nCanadian Westlnghbuse Co. Ltd.\n80 cents, April 1, rtcord March 15\nWlwnineo Grain\nWINNIPEG (CP)   -   Winnipeg\nsraJnrfitH prtciei:';  \u25a0'\nOattMfd. 1 feed, 69%.\nParley\u2014No. 1 feed, 88.\n1$ Golden Boy\nVANCOTJVSR'tCP' -* BUI Ston*\nof VtnCouVtr wti.nemed Vehcou-\nvcr's Golden Boy fighter Saturday\nnight In tht annual Golden Glove*\ntourntmeh't'\u25a0'\u2022-.   :%-.\u2022        .'  '\nTht Stylish boxer, who won the\n166-pound   event   by   outpointing\nWalter   Kupchok   of   Vancouver,\nalto was# named the mott scientific\nboxer in the tournament. that at-.\ntraded more thin 100 entries.      '\nMaurice Lemay of Kimberley,\nonly turvlvlng Kootenay boxer on\nthe final nlght't card, lost by a\nflrat round technical knockout to\nJim Walter*, Vancouver, In the\n132-pound olatt eeml-flnnl. Walters, who went on to win the\nolatt, wat named runner-up for\nthe Golden Bey award,\nLother . Lebewtkl of Prlnee\nGeorge wat voted the bait out-of-\ntown boxer.\nCOLEMAN BEATS\nRANGERS 7-5\nFERNIE, B.C. \u2014 Coleman Grands\ndefeated Fernie Ranger* 7-8 in\nFernie Saturday night The fixture,\na rescheduled postponed game, waa\nthe final game ot the Alberta-\nBritish Columbia Intermediate Hockey Lea'sue schedule.       >\nM(ke Hudz led the Coleman club\nwith four goal*, George Jenkins\ngot.two and Andrew Slska one.\nWilfred Ashmore got three goals\nfor Fernie with singles going to Joe\nBoshio and Bill Mllburn. \";.[..\nTet Kryczka, Coleman centre',\nwas the -best -man on tha ice, leading the' Coleman attack, back\nfcheckihjf' consistently and constantly; breaking up Fernie attacks.\nGeorge Jenkins ot Coleman and\nMike Slovene ot Fernie kept the\ngame well ia hand, issuing six\npenalties to Coleman and one to\nFernie.\nBy Ztui Breaki\nRecord To Win\n\u25a0-.' By.iOl MYERS\nARCADIA, Calif. (AP) - By\nZeus, t tour-year-old colt stunned\ntht more distinguished performers\nin an International lineup Saturday\nwith t record-breaking triumph ln\ntht 1118,200 San Juan Caplstrnno\nHtndlctp.: .,   '\n< By Zeus, ownod by movie actress Jane Greer and given t wonderful ride by -Jockey Xty York,\nfinished the lft-mlle journey over\nSanta Anita Park'i new grass count\n4ft length! In front ot bit running\nmate, Rejected, from King Ranch,\nThe Dormar Stable'! Lucrative was\nthird.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, TUBPAY, MARCH % 1M4 >-11\nAustralian Wins\n$9667 for 50 cents\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) - An\nAustralian daily double record of\n\u00a34316 (89867) for five shillings (56\ncents) was paid out Saturday tt\nWorwlek farm race track near Sydney. . \u2022  \u25a0\nA man named James Darby held\nthe only ticket on the double which\nconsisted of Flnlsteere at 28 to 1\nand African Queen at 100 to 1.\nPrevious Australian .double record was \u00a33120 for tlve shillings\npaid at Randwlck, Sydney, Oct 13,\n1851.\nMotor Fatalifies\nSOUTHERN DOMINION\nThe two main islands of Nejv Zealand have a combined area of 102,-\n000 square miles.\nOTTAWA (CP) -.Motor vehicle\naccidents in Canada claimed 414\nUvea in the second quarter of last\nyear compared with 376 in a similar period of 1882, the bui-eau of\nstatistics reported Monday. Fatalities lh the first^ quarter totalled 805.\n\"'The number injured rose to 11,-\n287. from 8729 in the first quarter\nand 10,350 in the.second quarter of\n1952. Accidents totalled 31,387 compared With 33,324 ln the first quarter\nand18,806 In the .second quarter a\nyear earlier.\nTRAIL-TADANAC HOSPITAL SOCIETY\nSALE OF LANDS, BUILDINGS\nand CERTAIN FIXTURES\nSEALED TENDERS marked \"TENDER FOR XRAIL-TADANAC\nHOSPITAL,\" are Invited and will be received by the underalgned\nto 12:00 Noon on the 4th day of May A.D. 1954, for the purchase\n^ the lands and premises comprising Trail-Tadanac Hospital,\nTall, 8. C, and certain fixtures,\"\nThe property comprises 2 buildings,,No. 1 building of 77 rooms\nand No. 2 building ot 53 roorrts. They ..are of brick and concrete\nconstruction and may be sold separately if expedient. \u2022'\nFull particulars Including plans, showing available fixtures, terms\narid probable date of delivery, will be supplied upon request accompanied by certified cheque for $25.00, and such deposit will be\nreturned to any unsuccessful bidder upon return of plans, etc., ln\nIgood\" condition. >\u25a0;: ,_\nTha highest or any tender hot necessarily accepted.\nDATED at TRAIL, B. C, thit 2nd day of March,'1954.\nSecretary, Trail-Tadanac Hospital Society.\nMP Complains of\n\"Smelly Bacon\"\nTORONTO (CF)*-A member of\nfhe Ontario legislature saya Canadian bacon \"smells to high heaven.\"\nHarold \u2022 Fishleigh, Progressive\nConservative member for Toronto-\nWoodbine, told the legislature thit\nCanadian! . soon will: lie eating\ntheir breakfast egga without bacon\nunless , meat packers Improve) - Its\nquality. ',.'...    j..\n\"Canadian bacon tastes awful,\" he\naaid. \"The only good bacon I have\nhad recently wu imported from\nDenmark.\"\nHe spoke during tht . throne\nspeech debate.\nOrders Purge in\nDagestan Republic   \u2022.'\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The long arm of\nthe Kremlin purgors Saturday\nreached out to the Dagestan autonomous republic, t rugged\"area on\nthe Caspian sea. The Dagestan radio said one Guseinov had been\nousted 1* finance minister and replaced by Aniar Blgelovlch Slgelov.\nNo reason waa given for the\nbhtngt.'\"' - \u25a0'\u2022' \u2022*-\u25a0' ,\nDagestan hu tn estimated population of about 900,000. Four-flfthi of\nthe country li covered by loaccei-\nBible mountains. Mott of tht people\nare Moslems.\nU.K. Sugajr Magnate\nDies, Aged 71  '   \/ \u2022*\nBOURNEMOUTH, England (AP)\n\u2014Lord Lyle, BriUsh sugar magnRte,\ndlrt'locltjr St the ego of 71.TTJTT ;\nHe WS6 stricken with pneumonia'',\nwhtlb crossing the Atlantic on-the\nway to the Bahamas in January,\nspent a week in a Now York hospital Instead, and'then tolled back\nhotU. . ' v '\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0 ' -'..   '{ .   \"'\n'. As president of Tate and Lyle,\ninter reflnere, Lord Lyle was a\nchampion of fre'e enterprise and\nspent \u00a318,000 in 1030-81 on a successful campaign against tbe Labor\ngovernment's proposals to nationalise the tugar Industry.        ,\nHis son, Charles John Leonard, ln-\nh\u00abflttth*tlttt^.-|.'   -,\nMau Maurs Carry\nOutThreal     |\nNAIROBI, -Xmn    OUutetWr-  .m\nJohn H. C\u00abndler; BHtl*h ilurtfleWfc-   -1\nfleer tinder  'sentence 'of  death\"\nfrom Mau Mau terrorist*, was ambushed end killed. .>'\u25a0'\"\nAn official announcement Saturday Mid Candler, veteran of the 16-\nmonth campaign tgalnit tha Mau\nMau, ordered hi* four tribal police- <\nmen to leave him ta ht lay dying. , m\nThey refused, fighting back untU     ]\nanother burst of fire from th* hld-\nden terrorists flngily klRed Wm.   ,\nWANTED\n*>\nJOURNEYMAN MACHINISTS for Ci.M.~* \u00ab. Co'.,:Klmberley.> \u25a0\nApplicants must be under 40 year* of age and physically -\nfit 40-48 hour week.-'01.88 pet hour\/Must be ante to do' !\nheavy plant repair and machine thop work.'.  ' , y i\nApply to:        '* .v;      ,   , .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;^f'k ... f\nPersonnel Division,            ,:-.\u2022\u25a0''.', -\nThe C. M. 4 9. Co. of Canada Ltd\u201e >\nKimberley, I.e. .,.\"\nWanted\nfor Kootenay District\nYoung Man With Late Modal Car.V\nSand Applicationi to\nBox 214 Nelton Daily Newt.\nV;\nMAIL\n-Renting\nYour Classified Wanted on Ttfis Handy\nORDER FORM\ni'           \u25a0 't  \" \u2022 jrniiiiri'i.-'i- ' ii                                      '               .      '{    ' in \"i' n\n   :    '\"\"\"    i .''   \"\u25a0'   ' \"'''\"' ' .\nmm I       .iii iii.. _nBSMBH\u00aba\u00bb\u00ab\n. i ii li ll -\u25a0 ,   I       I      IIM\u00ab\u2014 MM_IM\u00bb\n'          ii i  ,     \u2022  i r' i   in. w^^\u2014\u2014            n i iwewwii\u2014 ..^mmmmmmmm,mmmm\n   in i .ii   '    I                    ^*mmmm*mmimm.\n                           li                 \u25a0      i   .                   nwiim      \u25a0 ll                                 i     1.1           l        ,\nI\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LIN!\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINI\nr\nm  Put one word in each space\n(Each group of numbers or letters count os one word.) ,\n\u2022\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words\n(Box 00 Nelson Newi) .: (,      :i.y\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\n6 TIMES\na\nu\nLINK\nYOUR NAME\n3 TIMES\nill\nLBS\n2.22\n2.59\n2.06\n\u202206\n1.44\n1.92\n2.40\n2.88\n3.38\n3.84\n\u2022 Minimum charge n two llriet\n\u2022 Add lie for BOx Number \u25a0'\u2022       \">;^\u00bbt;\"'\n'   \u2022'>\"\u25a0'\u25a0-..\u2022.\u25a0\"....\u25a0   '   \u25a0% i -,-'\u25a0 T:;'v^Ti\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above ratet if payment it\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the lew six time rate\nV\n3\nADDRESS\nNo. ot Doyt Ad Is To'Run.\nPaytttent Inclosed _,\nBIH Me ...'     \"  -\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nolson Daily News Classified Ad\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B.C.\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0-'\"'\u2022     \u25a0 -'  \u2014 I i\t\n\"  '- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0   \u2022\u25a0\u25a0::-\n w\nTJ\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1954\ni.'uJt,'   t \u25a0     ' i \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014 \u2014.- .M   '   .j     ,    .,\u2014 \u2014\nWJf ' '\"-\u25a0 '\u25a0'. -i-M0^'^ England\";1 ';-\nIf *0y Expert Workmen\n|.;;0.f Good Old-Fashioned Heavy Rubber\nf ^rifj Fxilly-GuOranteed.\nHot Water\n\"\"iii   ' \"' j       '..\u2022' .frffi\" '-\u25a0\"'.'; \u2022 L.f,\"\"'       :.f,, '       \",\";'\"'.\nBottles\nSoqtePools Combine\n%|is l^o\niBy SHERWOOD DIQKERMAN\nTLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The fixture\nof Britain's biggest betting industry,' the soccer pools combine, Monday was tied up in a tangle ot conflicting results on pollsters' form\ninlets. -     '\nPools promoters, whose prowess\nIri figuring soccer odds earns them\nah estimated \u00a380,000,000 annually,\nclaim the betting public has voted\n10. to 1 against a' proposed law requiring the pools to publish their\nfinancial accounts.\nBut a public opinion poll found\ntwp out of three bettors were in\nftxpr ,of the bill\u2014and statisticians\nhinted that this time the respected\npools had rigged their figures.\nIhe pools, a central feature of\nBritish life, each week take the\nbets of some 17,000,000 Britons who\ncross their fingers' that this time.\nthey've picked a perfect combination of winning soccer teams.\nBIG PAYOFFS\n^The payoffs, varying with the\nodds on a bewildering variety of\ncontests, can run as high as 1,800,-\n000 to 1 \u2014 for picking eight tie\ngames without a mistake. Not many\nbettors cash' in on this long thot,\nhowever.\nLast year a parliamentary bill\nwas introduced to find out what\nhappens to the money of those who\ntried and failed. '\u2022\u25a0';\n\"I'm   not   concerned   with   the\nrights and wrongs ot betting\" explained the sponsor, Labor member Frederick W.Mulley. He said\nthe bill's provision for published\nbreakdowns of bets taken, winnings\npaid i out and profits retained by\nthe pool operators would give bettors a chance to choose between\nthe countless firms and countless\ntypes of contest absorbing their\nstakes.\nThe. pool jsromoters started \u2022 to\nfight the bill in earnest after, it,got\ntentative approval In the House of\nCommons last month. Attached to\nthe millions of betting forms which\nthey pall out to contestants each\nweek they send blank ballots for a\nbettors' vote on the bill, and Outlined the reason! they oppose lt.\nSEE POOLS ABOLISHED   -\nAmong other things, they warned\nthat the cost of the weekly accounting would cut winnings and\nclaimed the bill was merely a first\nmove to regulate and then abolish\nthe pools.\nTheir requests, published Sunday,\nshowed more than 6,000,000 against\nthe bill, 870,000 for it and almost\n1,500,000 blank ballots.\nThe poll results, announced at the\nsame time, gave 66 per cent for the\nbill, 22 per cent against it and 12\nper cent undecided.\nStatisticians for the poll said the-\n\"propaganda\" sent with the promoters' ballots disqualified their\nresults. :\nRoyal Tour Cancellation\nRumors Sweep Australia\nSYDNEY, Australia (AP)\u2014 Rumors that the royal, visit to Western\nAustralia might, be cancelled Increased Monday \"following reports\nof 22 new cases 61 poliomyelitis In\nPerth during _ the last three days.\n; In a letter 'published in the newspaper West Australian, a doctor\nSays: \"It is up to us, the people, to\nauggest the cancellation of the royal\ntour. .   ;,;.:',\n' \"Although a .sacrifice, it would\nsafeguard, a well-being of our\nJtoyal Family and of our fellow be-\nfings.\"\n\u2022 Changes in the program for the\n(Western Australian part of the tour\n-by the Queen and the Duke of\n(Edinburgh have already been announced. These are designed to.lessen the risk of Infection, particularly among children.\ni   But no official move has \"been\nEade . suggesting   that   the   tour\night be cancelled.'\nQUEEN'S HEALTH GOOD\nI  But the Queen herself, with half,\nper tour completed, is in \"splendid\n\u2022^THOMPSON\n1,     FUNERAL HOME\n&Dlatln\u00bbUv* Funeral Service\"\ngg   AMBULANCE SERVICE\n50.15 Kootenay St       Phone 341\n*F\n^CAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\ni & CO.\n< Chartered Accountants\nAuditors\n8 Baktr. St Phona 838\nJJ a. jt. Laughton\nOPTOMETRIST\n>'.   '     VISUAL TRAINING\n-ft      MediCal Art* Building\nSuite 206 Phono 141\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\n,. EXPERTLY RECOVERED\n!'\u25a0\u2022\u2022 it th*\nNelson Upholstery\nSOt Hall Street - Phona 148\n.-'.- iMake Your Own  Home-Maee\nBread, With ELLISON'S\n% U-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFall Instruction* on Every Package\n-i    '   PHbtt* 238 or Call \u2022    >\n:\u2022;     ELLISON MILLING\nhealth and spirits,\" Eric Harrison,\nAustralian minister ih charge' of the\ntour, said Monday. It proved, he\nsaid, that fears in Britain ahd Australia that the royal program has\nteen too heavy are groundless.\nThe Queen and the Duke of\nEdinburgh \"are happy - and thoroughly enjoying the change of\nscene as they move from state to\nstate,\" he said.\nTO SCREEN SERVANTS ,\nA Perth report today'said the\npublic health 'department will\nclosely screen people handling food\nfor the royal table. Those coming\nin close contact with the royal\ncouple will also be screened.\nOfficial sources said the royal\nhandshake may also be banned in\nwestern Australia.   I    \u2022, '\nThe royal couple returned to\nMelbourne Monday from O'Shan-\nnassy chalet near Warburton. in\nthe mountains 60 miles from here,\nafter a restful weekend.\nQr aw ford Bay, Crpmhrook Lead\nWe Kootenay Junior Badminton\nCrawford Bay and. Cranbrook\nahuttlera ruled the rbott ln the\nfourth annual West Kootenay Junior Badminton Tournament held in\nCastlegar over the weekend, Both\nclubs walked pff with six championships, each while Nelson took two\nand Kinnaird oner\nAll told, 108 entrants competed\nin the three-day event which saw\nnine Kootenay centres represented.\nD. Fraser of Crawford Bay stole\nmuch of the .limelight from the\nother youngsters as he was In on\nno lest than three titles. In winning\nthe singles crown for his age group\nFraser swept all before him in 10\ngames. He lost but. one and that\nby a 18-12 count to 3. Mansfield of\nCranbrook ln the, third round ot\nplay.\nIn the doubles event for the 14\nyear aga group he, teamed up with\nG. Walker to play one of the most\nthrilling finishes seen in a long,\ntime.\n15-1, 15-2; N, Hughes, Nelson, beat\nB, Creighton, Kinnaird, 18-11, 17-16;\nK. Wagner, Trail, won from fe\nVance,-Crawford Bay, by'default!\nA. Sandberg, Nelson, beat N-New-,\nlove, \u2022 Kinnaird, 18-10, \"18-1.2; 'O.\nWalmsley, Cranbrook, beat. C.\nBonde, Trail, WS, 18-2. -,.-..,  , \u25a0\u25a0,.\u25a0)\nSecond Round\u2014Morgan beat\nWilson,. 16-13, 15-12; Nutter beat\nMeBride 1848, 16-10, 15-lf; Hughes\nbeat Wagner 18-17, 16-18; Walmsley\nbeat Sandberg 16-8, 1B-8, ,.'.\u201e\u25a0., ':\nSemi-finals\u2014Morgan beat Nutter\n15-13,- 16-2; Hughes beat Walmsley\n18-13, Will, '.\nFinal \u2014 Hughes   beat   Morgan\nISA 15-10.\nBOYS' DOUBLES UNDER 14\nFirst Round.\u2014 C. Vennberg and\nW. Epp, Cranbrook, beat R. Smith\nand B. Taylor, Kinnaird, lS-8,.18-8;\nK Mulrhead and R. Mitchell, Kinnaird, beat E. Vennberg and B.\nMansfield,. Cranbrook, 15-11, 18-17.\nSecond Round\u2014C> Vennberg; and\nEpp beat B. Gladwin and P. Danielson, Crawford Bay 16-4, 18-8; J.\nPinckney and B. Fenner, Kinnaird,\nIn meeting C. Vennberg1 and W.\nEpp of Cranbrook In the final they\nl08t the first game 16-17, but came \u201e ,\nback to take the second garpe M.\\tetJ.T^tMB.Dagtx,\u00bbnd\nand then edge out a one-point 17-18 nalrd. 15-8, 8-15, 15-7 D. Fraser and\n\u25a0 No. 8 \u2014 Trall-Salmo, bare, frott\nheaving.\nHaft Highway: Open, fair, sanding, carry chains.\nNo. 97 Okanagan Highway: Ross-\n'land-Paterson, compact snow upper\nlevels, bare lower levels.\nCreston-Porthlll: Slushy, slippery,\nsanding.\nNo. 8 Nelway-Vernon: Open. Nel-\nway-Nelson-South Slocan, bare,\nfrost heaving. South Slocan-Slocan\nCity-Nakusp-Needles, fair to good,\nrough sections, bare sections, lower\nlevels, 6 Inches new snow higher\nlevels.' Needles-Monashee-V e r n o n\nfair to good, 6 Inches new snow\nhigher levels..\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Qol-\nden: Blasting operations to take\nplace at Moyie Tuesday, March 9th,\n12 to 1 p.m. Maybe delays of two or\nthree hours.\nBanff-Windermere: Mostly bare,\ngood.\nNelson-Kaslo:    Fair.    Kaslo-New\nDenver: Good, new snow, narrow.\nKaslo-Lardeau:  Closed at Schroe-\nder Creek due to blasting.\nWASHINGTON\nSnoqualmic Pass: Snowing, slush\non road from two miles west of\nSummit to two milet East, one inch\nnew snow for total of IM Inches in\nski area. Temperature\nSteven* Pass: Snowing, slush and\nice on road from six miles east of\nSummit to five miles west, six\nInches new snow for total of 160\ninches in ski area. Temperature\nand then edge out a one-point 1\nvictory in the final\nIn his final event of the tourney\nFraser teamed up with A. Gladwin,\nalso Of Crawford Bay, to capture\nthe mixed double event with a\nclean cut victory over Y, Mitchell\nand R. Mitchell of Kinnaird.\nGladwin also picked up another\ntrophy when she teamed up with\nM. Linn to take the girls doubles\nunder 14. Another Crawford Bay\nlass M. Pratte took the title iri the\nsingles for 16 year olds when she\nbeat M. Iwanik of Procter 11-8 and\n11-2.\nPratte with L. Nyberg as her\npartner captured the girls doubles\nbut only after a tough three-game\naeries with M. Salter.and.M. Wet-\nmore of Tadanac.\nTO CRANBROOK\nW. Morgan .paced Cranbrook\nwhen he captured the under-18\nsingle class with a 15-6, 15-12 victory over another Cranbrook lad\nJ. Corrigan in the final.\nEntered  In the Under-W Class\nMorgan startled the.experts when\nhe advanced to tha finals only to\nba defeated by Nelson's Norman\nHughet.by 15-5 and 15-10 toorei,\nBoth Morgan and Corrigan teamed up to win the under-18 doubles\nevent, while Norman Hughes and\nDon Nutter captured the under-18\nevent to give Nelsott their second\ntourney win.\nCorrigan with E. Chlopan of\nCranbrook as his partner took the\nunder-18 mixed event with M. Salter and H. Hargrave of Tadanac giving them stiff competition.\nM. Levlrs of Cranbrook haft to\nfight it out with fellow townsman\nE. Chlopan before being declared\nthe titlist for the under-18 event\nfor the girls.\nBoth teamed up to capture the\ndoubles event as they beat E. Tern-\npleton and L. Bridges also of Cranbrook. Levlrs also gained a crown\nIn the mixed doubles as she and G.\nWalmsley downed Norman Hughes\nand Dolly Fife of Nelson in the\nfinals.\nRE8ULT8\nThe results of games played In\neach event are as follows:\nBOYS SINQLE8 UNDER 16:\nFirst round\u2014E. Thompson, Nelson beat- W. Epp, Cranbrook 15-12,\n15-12; C. Sookachoff, Kinnaird beat\nR. Garner, Proctor, 17-16, 3-15, 15-\n10; W. Eldrldge, Kinnaird beat L.\nDonelly, Trail 18-14, 15-8; D. Drew,\nNelson beat A. Evans, Kinnaird 15-\n7, 15-4.\nSecond round\u2014J- Corrigan, Cran\nbrook beat K. Leitner, Castlegar\n15-5, 15-1; D. Denrie, Procter, beat\nH. Plotnikoff, Castlegar 15-9, 15-8;\nR. Rhodes, Trail beat L. Geronazzo',\nKinnaird 15-7,15-6;. Sookachoff beat\nThompson 15-0, 15-9; Drew beat\nEldrldge 15-12, 15-4.\nB. Stefoniuk, Castlegar beat S.\nPoster, Crawford Bay 15-3, 9-15, 15-\n2; W. Morgan, Cranbrook beat P.\nHoloboff, Castlegar ,15-6, 15-3; H.\nHargrave. Tadanac beat P. Sookachoff, Kinnaird, 15-3,15-5.\nThird round\u2014Corrigan beat Renzle 12-15,15-1,15-3; Sookachoff beat\nRhodes 15-8, 15-3; Drew beat Stefoniuk 15-6,. 18:15; Morgan beat' Hargrave 15-7, 15-13.\nSemi-finals\u2014Corrigan beat Sookachoff 16-10, 15-4; Morgan beat\nDrew 15-4, 15-4.\nFinal\u2014Morgan beat Corrigah 15-6,\n1M2.\nBOYS SINGLES UNDER 14:\n- First round\u2014G. Walker, Crawford\nBay be&t L. Grummett, Castlegar\n15-12, 15-2; D. Fraser, Crawford\nBay beat E. Vennberg, Cranbrook\n15'0, 15-11; L. Fife, Nelson beat R\nSmith, Kinnaird 15-8, 16-17, 15-10;\nB. Lee, Tadanac beat J. Fenner,\nKinnaird 15-5, 15-12; B. Taylor,\nKinnaird beat R. McLeod, Rossland\n18-13, 15-12; W. Epp, Cranbrook\nbeat D. Davies, Kinnaird 15-1, 15-6;\nR. Mitchell, Kinnaird beat B. Gladwin, Crawford Bay .15-8, 15-11.\nSecond round\u2014K. Mulrhead, Kinnaird beat E. Inkster, Rossland 15-5,\n16-0; C. Vennberg, Cranbrook beat\nB. Fenner, Kinnaird 15-5, 15-3; B.,\nMansfield, Cranbrook beat Walker\n15-9, 15-8; Fraser beat Fife 15-6,\n15-9; Lee beat Taylor 11-15, 18-14,\n15-8; Mitchell beat Epp 15-9, 11-15,\n15-10; M. LeRoy,' Castlegar, beat\nJohn Pinckney, Kinnaird, 15-2,15-9;\nP. Danielson, Crawford Bay beat\nM. Smith, Kinnaird 45-2, 17-16.\nThird round\u2014Vennberg beat\nMulrhead 15-6, 15-11; Fraser- beat\nMansfield 12-15, 15-5, 16-4; Mitchell\nbeat Lee 15-10, 15-9; LeRoy beat\nDanielson 15-2, 15-5.\nSemi-finals\u2014Fraser beat Vennberg 15-11, 15-11; Mitchell beat LeRoy 2-15, 15-2, 15-4.\nFinal\u2014Fraser beat Mitchell 15-1,\n18-12.\nBOYS' 8INQLE8 UNDER 18\n' Flrat Round \u2014 M. Wilson, Nelson,\nbeat Ralph Englund, Castlegar, 15-\n6, 15-3; W. Morgan, Cranbrook, beat\nF. Horcoff, Castlegar, 15-3, 15-6; M.\nMeBride, Trail, beat B. Kanlgan,\nCastlegar, 15-0,15-4; D. Nutter, Nelson, beat B. Brandson, Kinnaird,\nG. Walker, Crawford Bay, beat M\nLeRoy and L. Grummett, Castlegar,\n15-5, 15-6; Mulrhead and Mitchell\nMat W. Gray and M. Smith, Kinnaird, 15-4, 15-3.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Vennberg and Epp\nbeat Pinckney and Fenner 15-1, 15-\n1; FraSbr and \u25a0 Walker beat Mulrhead and Mitchell 8-15, 15-12, 15-9.\nFinal \u2014 Fraser and Walker beat\nVennberg. and Epp 16-17,. 18-9,\n17-18. '\nBOYS' DOUBLES UNDER 16  .\nFlrBt Round \u2014 H. Hargrave, Tadanac and R. Rhodes, Trail, beat K.\nLeitner and P. Sookachoff, Kinnaird, 16-12, 17-15; C. Sookachoff\nand A. Evans, Kinnaird, beat D.\nDrew and E. Thompson, Nelson,\n8-15, 15-7, 15-5.\n\"Second Round \u2014 S. Foster and\nD. Frater, Crawford Bay, beat P.\nHoloboff and G. Hyson, Castlegar,\n15-9, 15-7; R. Garner and D, Renzle,\nProcter, beat Hargrave and Rhodes\n15-4, 15-10; Sookachoff and Evans\nbeat W. Eldridge and L. Geronazzo,\nKinnaird,.15-7, 7-15, 15-12; W. Morgan and J. Corrigan, Cranbrook,\nbeat H. Plotnikoff and B. Stefoniuk,\nCastlegar, 15-3, 15-5.  ;,\nSemi-finals \u2014 Garner and Renzie\nbeat Foster and Fraser 15-10, 15-12;\nMorgan and Corrigan beat Sookachoff and Evans 15-2, 15-1.\nFinal \u2014 Morgan . and Corrigan\nbeat Garner and Renzle 15-2, 15-11.\nBOYS' DOUBLES UNDER 18\nFirst RoUnd \u2014 NrHughes and D.\nNutter, Nelson, 'beat A. Kanlgan\nand R. Englund. Castlegar, 15-3, 15-\nll.i \u2022'.'\"'\u2022'\nSecond Round \u2014 G. Walmsley\nand W. Morgan. Cranbrook, beat H.\nPlotnikoff and B. Stefoniuk, Castlegar, 15-2, 15-1; Hughes and Nutter\nbeat G. Sookachoff and B. Creighton\nKinnaird, 15-7, 15-2; F. Horcoff Ind\nR. Englund, Castlegar, beat B.\nBrandson. and N. Newlove, Kinnaird, 10-15, 15-8, 15-9; A. Sandberg\nand M. Wilson, Nelson, beat K.\nWagner and M. MeBride, Trail,\n15-2, 15-11.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Hughes and Nutter\nbeat Walmsley and Morgan 10-15,\n15-9; 15-12; Sandberg and Wilson\nbeat Horcoff and Englund 15-4,\n18-15. \"     -   .\nFinal \u2014 Hughes and Nutter beat\nSandberg and Wilson, 15-2,  16-18,\n15-11.\nGIRLS' 8INGLE8 UNDER 14\nFirst Round \u2014 F. Pierpoint, Kinnaird, won from B. Salter, Tadanac;\nby default; M. Linn, Crawford Bay.\nbeat M. Coon, Rossland, U-8, 11-4;\nY. Mitchell, Kinnaird, beat V. Kinakin, Castlegar, 11-1, 11-5; A. Gladwin .Crawford Bay beat D. E. Haley,\nRossland, 11-7,, 9-11, 11-8.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Pierpoint beat Linn\n11-5, 11-1; Mitchell beat Gladwin\n11-9, 11-3. '\nFinals \u2014 Mitchell beat Pierpoint\nli-s,: u-5.\nGIRLS' SINGLES UNDER 16\nFirst Round \u2014 M. Wetmore, Tadanac, beat-E. Chlopan, Cranbrook\n7-11, 11-7, 12-11; M. Creighton, Kinnaird, beat D. Walker, Crawforr'\nBay 8-11, 12-10, 11-7; R. Crawford.\nNelson, beat L, Haley, Rossland,\n11-8, 11-3.\nSecond Round \u2014 M. Pratte, Crawford Bay, beat C. Mucha, Procter.\n11-1, 11-4; Wetmore beat Creightc-\n11-8,'11-6; M. Iwanik, Procter, bea\nCrawford 11-0, 11-0; L.- Nyberg\/\nCrawford Bay beat B.. Jeffs, Nelson,\n11-0, 11-3.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Pratte beat Wetmore 11-4, 12-9; Iwanik beat Nyberg 11-7, 4-11, 11-4.\nFihal \u2014 Pratte beat Iwanik U-8,\n11-2.\nGIRLS' 8INGLE8 UNDER 18\nFirst Round \u2014 E. Paterson, Tadanac, beat J. Mawer, Nelson, 11-4.\n11-0; D. Fife, Nelson, beat L\nBridges, Cranbrook, 11-2, 10-12, 11-\n7; D. Mulrhead, Kinnaird, beat A.\nRonmark, Nelson, 11-3, 11-1; M\u00ab\nChlopen,. Cranbrook, beat B. Tilston, Nelson, 11-7, 11-7; M. Levirr?..\nCranbrook, beat S. Butting, Nelson.\n11-5, 41-7; H. Young, Nelson, bea'..\nK. Heilly, Crawford Bay by default:\nS. Shorthouse, Nelson, beat A.\nMstheson, Nelson, 11-2, 11-4.\nSecond Round \u2014 D. Fife won\nfrom E. Paterson by default; Chlo-\nban beat Mulrhead 8-1U U-5. 12-10;\nLevlrs beat Young 11-2,11-8; Short-\nhouse beat E. Templeton, Crah-r\nbrook, 11-2, 11-2\nSemi-finals \u2014 Chlopan beat Fife\n8-11, 11-5, 12-10; Levirs beat Short-\nhouse 11-2, 11-2.\nFinal \u2014 Levirs beat Chlopan 12-0.\nii-7. 'V-     . \u25a0. i\nOIRL8 DOUBLES UNDER 14:\nSemi-finals \u2014 A. Gladwin and M.\nLinn, Crawford Bay, beat V. Kinakin and O. Plotnikoff, Castlegar,\n15-6, 15-8; F. Pierpoint and Y. Mitchell, Kinnaird beat D. F. Haley and\nM. Coon, Rossland 15-1,. 15-10,. %\nFinal\u2014GladWin and Linn beat\nPierpoint and Mitchell 15-5, 1548,\n15-11.\nGIRLS DOUBLES UNDER 161\nFirst round \u2014 M. Salter and M.\nWetmpre, Tadanac, beat D. Walker\nand, A. Gladwin, Crawford- Bay,\n15-1, 18-6; A. LeRoy and.O. Sam-\nsonott, Castlegar, beat R. Crawford\nand B. Armson, Nelson, 15-14, 15-9;\nV Pratte arid L. Nyberg, Crawford\nBay beat M. Iwanik and C. Mucha,\nProctor, 15-9,15-0; J. Bergen and M.\nCreighton, Kinnaird, beat L. Haley\nand D   F  Haley;. Rossland,  15-8,\niimi. \"    \u25a0;\u25a0 . v\u25a0-\u25a0 ..fi-sy\n. Semi-finals \u2014 Salter iand, Wetmore beat LeRoy and Samsonoff,\n18-10, 18-0; Pratte *nd Nyberg. beat?\nBergen arid Creighton 15-8, 15-2<\nFinal \u2014.Pratte and Nyberg beat\nSalter and Wetmore 13-15, 15-6,\n18-18. \" ,'\u25a0 \u2022 .'*.-'.  ;.\"\nGIRL8 D0UBLE8 UNDER IBs.\nFlrat round\u2014 S. Butling and J.\nMawer, Nelson, beat C. Ogden and\nM. Iwanik, Procter, 1840, 10-15,\n15-7; Hi Young and A. Matheson,\nNelson, beat.E. Roberton and O.\nSamsonoff, Castlegar, 16-3, 15-7.\nSecond round \u2014 A. Ronmark4 and\np, Fife, Nelson, beat Butting and\nMawer, 15-8, 18-7; M. Chlopan and\nM. Levirs; Cranbrook, won from K,\nRellly end L. Nyberg, Crawford Bay\nby default E. Paterson, Trail and\nDonna Mulrhead, Kinnaird, beat S,\nShorthouse and B. Tilston, Nelson,\n15-7, 15-7; E. Templeton and L.\nBridges, Cranbrook, beat Young\nand Matheson, 18-10, 15-5.\nSemi finals \u2014 Chlopan and Levlrs\nbeat Ronmark aind Fife 15-10,14-17,\n15-4; Templeton and-Bridges beat\nPaterson and Mulrhead 15-7, 6-15,\n15-11.   ,.       .'\u00ab\nFinal \u2014 Chlopan and Levlrs beat\nTempleton and Bridges 15-8, 12-15,\n15-8.' \u25a0\nMIXED DOUBLES UNDER 14:\nFirst round \u2014 D. Fraser end A.\nGladwin, Crawford Bay, beat F,\nPierpoint and K- Mulrhead, Kinnaird, 15-7, 15-8; B. Gladwin and\nM. Linn, Crawford Bay, beat M.\nLeRoy and V. Kinakin, Castlegar,\n18-13, 15-8; L. Grummett and O.\nPlotnikoff, Castlegar won trom\nB. Lea and B. Salter, Tadanac,\nby default; Y. Mitchell and R. Mitchell, Kinnaird, beat D. F. Haley\nand R. McLeod, Rossland, 15-8,\n11-15, 15-3. .\nSemi-final* \u2014 Fraser and- Gladwin beat Gladwin - and Linn 15-6,\n15-4; Mitchell and Mitchell beat\nGrummett and Plotnikoff 15-5,\n15-10.\nFinal \u2014 Fraser and Gladwin beat\nMitchell and Mitchell 15-9, 15-10,\nMIXED DOUBLES UNDER 16:\nFirst round \u2014 B. Armson and D.\nDrew, Nelson, beat P. Holoboff and\nO. Samsonoff, Castlegar, 12-15, 15-7,\n13-10; A. Evans and J. Bergen, Kinnaird, beat M. Pratte, Crawford Bay\nahd H, Plotnltoff, Castlegar 9-15,\n18-2,16-6; R. Garner and M. Iwanik\nProcter, beat A. LeRoy ahd B.\nStefionuk, Castlegar 15-8, 15-0.\nSecond round \u2014 M. Salter and H.\nHargrave, Tadanac, beat D. Walker\nand S. Foster, Crawford Bay, 15-3,\n15-2; Armson and Drew'beat Evans\nand Bergen, 15-8, 15-0; Garner and\nIwanik beat R. Crawford and E.\nThompson, Nelson, 18-5, 15-3; J.\nCorrigan   and* E. \"Chlopan,  Cran-\nUi. Signs Pad\nWilli Japanese\nTOKYO (AP) - Japan and the\nUnited States Monday signed a mutual defence pact to give the Japanese both guns arid grain ani has-.\nten the day when U.S. soldiers can\nWithdraw tram the Island empire.\n' The mutual, defence . assistance\nagreement, actually a series'-'of\nagreements, will pour $100,000,000 of\nU.S. eld into Japan's economy In\nthe next .three; months, arid-probably much more in the long run.\n' 'U.S. ambassador John Allison said\nthe.agreemeht \"takes. us;'phe step\nnearer the time when-'the United\nStates cap withdraw ita forces from\nJapan.\". \u00bb\nThe .agreement .will increase\nJapan's 'defence: force from 120,000\nto 160,000 rieh. The U.S. will supply\nships and planes.\nThe U.S. also will start the movement of - 600,000 tons' Of surplus\nwheat and 100,000 tons of barley to\nJapan, Japan will sell the grain domestically and in turn use the\nmoney'for guns and munitions.\nThe agreement was hammered\nOut in,eight.months of negotiation\nwhich .at time* brought the Liberal\ngovernment of Prime Minister Shi-\ngeru Yoshida under, intense oppo-\n'iltloli crtticUm. .,\". <   ' \u2022\nbrook beatR. Rhodes and M. Wetmore, Trail .18-15, 4847,\nSeml-finalj.-r- Salter and Hargrave beat Drew and Armsori. 15-8,\n15-6; Corrigan and Chlopan beat\nGarner and.Iwanlk 0.-15; 18-17,4744.\nFinal \u2014 Corrigan and Cliropan\nbeat Salter and Hargrave'15-7, 5-15,\n15-10.   .\nMIXED DOUBLES UNDER 18:\nFirst .round \u2014 B. Creighton and\nD. Mulrhead, Kinnaird, beat C. Og\nden' and D. Renzie, Procter, 15-6,\n15-8; G. Walmsley and M. Levlrs,\nCranbrook beat A: Ronmark and A.\nSandberg, Nelson, 15-6, 15-2; K\nWagner and E. Paterson, Trail, beat\nK Rellly, Crawford Bay and B.\nBrandson, Kinnaird 15-5, 15-3; H.\nYoung and D.,Nutter, Nelson, beat\nR. Englund and E. Templeton, 15-5,\n15-8; M. Wilson and B. Tilston, Ne)i\nson beat F. Horcoff, Castlegar and\nM. Chlopan, Cranbrook, 15-10, 15-9;\nN. Hughes and D. Fife, Nelson, beat\nRoy Englund and E. Roberton,\nCastlegar 15-2, 15-1. M. MeBride,\nTrail and M. Pfatte, Crawford Bay\nbeat B. Kanlgan and O. Samsonoff,\nCastlegar, 15-2, 114,\nSecqnd round \u2014 Walsmley and\nLevirs beat Creighton and Mulr,\nhead, 15-1, 15-4; Nutter and Young\nbeat Wagner and Paterson 7-15,15-9,\n15-10; Hughes and Fife beat Wilson\nand Tilston 15-7, 15-8; MeBride and\nPratte beat J. Llghtle and K. Grunerud, Castlegar, 15-2, 15-3.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Walmsley and te-\nvirs beat Nutter and Young 15-6,\n15-5; Hughes and Fife beat MeBride\nand Pratte 15-5, 15-10.\nFinal \u2014 Walmsley and Lavirs\nbeat Hughes and Fife 12-15, 15-13,\n^y-a >  - , , l^.\nUMi^BaUery\n| fNews. -\nThe weekly training parade of\nthe Ulth: HAA Bty. RCA will be\nheld in Nelson Armories on Tuesday, March 9, 1954 and administrative end maintenance on Friday,\nFeb: 42, 1954 at 2000 hrs under\ncommand of \u25a0 Capt. H. T. Gumbert.\nPart 1 Orders published by Capt\nH.. T. Gumbert Commanding Officer, Ulth HAA Bty. RCA CA (RF):\nDuties\u2014Orderly Officer, March 9\n1954, Lieut. iE W. M, DreW, Order-\nly Sergeant, March 9, 1054, A\/Sgt.\nE, J. Heroiix,  \u25a0\nPafades-Fall in,< 1835 hrs.\nBattery parade 2000 hrs,, Training parade 2005 hrs,\nTraining\u2014GMT as per syllabus.\nKnUte Anderson, former member\nof the lllth HAA Bty (RF), re-\npnlisted in the local Battery last\nweek. Knute, during' the war a\nmember of the RCN, now resides\nat 409 Silica St\nS\/Sgt, G. E. Trainor left the city\nyesterday for his weekly visits to\nthe Cadet Corps in the East Kootenays.\nThe Cadet Corps of tha Nelson\nJunior High School carried out\ntheir recreational training at the\nbowling alleys on Saturday morning.\nA successful recreational shooting'.program was conducted under\nthe supervision of Major S. Linton\nat the Nelson Armories, some 12\nmembers of the lllth HAA Bty,\nparticipated.\nSgt. R. Totten of the RFSS .Section: of the RCEME will be in Nelson today and Wednesday in connection With his military duties and\nonr completion leavea for Vernon,\nB..C.\nVATICAN CITY (AP). \u2014 Pope\nPius' slow but steady recovery from\na dangerous gastric ailment.waa reported continuing today.\nThe soucres said the 78-year-old\nPontiff is able to retain an increasing amount of solid food.\nHe has been confined to hit quarters for six.week*, most of the time\nin bed.' \u25a0'  .\nLOOK\nft Your\n\u25a0\u25a0cjfy.\nOTHER PEOPLE DO!\njj-.|-;V-.-,'r_-  I-   ' \\-    '   .'   f,*! '-.'\u25a0 I\nYet, everyone noticet the\nhat you wear. If you need\nti mw ent, drop ih and\n(\u25a0\u2022 our now spring 'topi.'\nIf youri just noedt \u2022\nbrush and a little iteam\nwe'll do that too \u2014 FREE.\nEmory's Ltd.\n\"THE MAN'S STOB*\"   .\nPHONE 31\nHISTORIC UNIVERSITY; rf\nLaval University at Quebec was\nfounded by royal charter ln 1852,\nfrom a seminary established in 1663.\n<.   \"*\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART 1\nBeauty Solon\nPhone 887\n876 B*ker Strert\n:\n5\nIGINT0H\nMOTORS LTfti\n'    PONTIAO - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCK*\nBody and Paint Work * Specialty\nHove tho Job Dons Right\nVIC GftAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER.\n-,J   PHONE 815\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n818 FRONT ST. PHONE 83\nm\nHALF-PRICE\nSALE!\nWoodbury\nSHAMPOO\nLarge 81,80 Sin For Only\nLimited 8upply\nSo Get Your* Early\nk        Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\nPhone'34\nBox 460\nm\nALL BUSINESS IS LOCAL\n\u25a0'.'..'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 ',    $.y ; >.'\nDon't go \"buuln' around\" looking forbargaini! Shop in _\nyour own community \u2014 whore you'll find every type of\nmerchandise \u2014 every modern- service \u2014: you could\n\u25a0 possibly want. And you'll appreciate the near-to-home\nconvenience, the extra shopping timo'that's yours, when\nyour business is local! Shop at home, and save!    - ,\nSHOP   WITH   YOUR   PROGRESSIVE   MERCHANTS\nWHO ADVERTISE REGULARLY IN YOUR\n\u00bb:rf\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n,\u201e..,^^,^.M\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1954_03_09","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427943","@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":"1954-03-09 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1954-03-09 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\/1.0427943"}