{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-03-02","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1953-12-01","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427978\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" B.C. Backs Alberta\n. :;:;.    ; '.- \"\".' .' \u25a0 *   .V-   '      ,_\u25a0 \u25a0_ .',;: y \".'\u25a0'-' ' fl \u2022\nFreight Rate.Plan\n'''\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 -'.'\u25a0*.-,    ':'-  ,'   \\' .\/\u25a0>;\u25a0-,'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0      ' v *    \u25a0   '\u25a0' -  \"     ,    -\nNew Rate Scale Compromise Between\nFour Other Plans Now Before Board\nOTTAWA; (CP)-Alberta is drafting a new plan of\nequalized freight; rates to be placed before-the board of\n> transport comihi-sioners, the province informed the board\nMonday.\nAnnouncement of the new rate scale, which would\n, be the fifth to be placed before the board in its long inquiry\nleading to country-wide equalization of rates, met with\n,a varied reception from spokesmen for other areas and interests.\nBritish Columbia announced support. Manitoba indicated a turn-down. Saskatchewan, Quebec and the Atlantic\n:provinces were non-committal, and so were .the railways.\n'Ontario was not represented at the hearing.       %\nMr. Justice J. D. Kearney, chief commissioner, said\nit would get full consideration along with four other plans\nalready before the board; including one drafted tentatively\nby the board itself to go into ~~\neffect Jan. 1, 1955.\nI A'berta counsel J. J, Frawley,\n.announcing his province's proposal,\nsaid it will be a compromise between the various rate schemes\nhow before the board. He gave no\n. details, though.\n' Tolls affected by the Alberta and\nother plaps are the \"class\"\u2014ceiling\n\u2014rates which carry about one-fifth\ndf the railways' $l,000,000,000-a-year\nfreight business. The board, ordered\nby Parliament in 1931 to equalize\nrates as between different regions,\nIs dealing first with these because\na large proportion of the rate structure hinges oj_ them.\n.Monday's Alberta announcement\nwas dropped, in surprise fashion,\nInto a Waring that had been expected to open the final phase of\n1'O.ng equalization sessions that\nstarted early this year. Indications\nwere that the Alberta move would\nresult (n a further adjournment to\nsome, time In-January for study of\nthe western province's plan.\nMr. Frawley said he might bring\nIn the skeleton of his new scale this\nweek, but it would have to be ex\nplained later by an expert\u2014Prof.\nErnest Williams of Columbia University, New York.\nAnnouncing British Columbia\nsupport of the Alberta Plan, counsel C, W. Brazier said it would not\naffect B.C. one way or another but\na compromise would gain greatest\napproval across Canada.\nFAVORS BOARD SCALE\nManitoba counsel C. D, Shepard\nsaid his province favors the scale\ndrafted by the board in December,\n1952, as far as rates within the West\nand within the East are concerned.\nHowever, it wanted the existing\nsystem preserved on rates between\nthe two territories.\nThe.board proposed to wipe out\na so-called \"triangle\" bounded by\nMontreal, Windsor and Sault Ste.\nMarie, Ont., within which all rates\nto and from western points are the\nsame, for similar goods.\nMr. .Shepard described the Alberta plan as an arithmetical average between the board's scale, one\nproposed by the Canadian Pacific\nRailway.and two alternatives, from\nthe Canadian National Railways.\nSocreds Claim Gunderson\nDefeated Through Collusion\n\u25a0VANCOUVER (CP)-British Columbia Social Credit League directors have asked Premier Bennett to retain the services of Finance Minister Einar Gunderson, defeated in the Nov. 24 by-election in\nVictoria.  .   .\n'. .Text of a resolution passed Saturday, by. the board, of directors was\ndisclosed .Monday..Vlt read: \"The\nboard'of directors, of the B.C. Social\nCredit League . unanimously \u25a0 and\n- strongly urge the premier to do all\nin his power to retain the valued\nservices of Mr. Einar Gunderson,\nwho is recognized by the people in\nall. walks ot life in British Columbians one of the mo;t outstanding\nfinancial experts this province has.\never had.\"\nThe resolution claimed Mr. Gunderson was defeated through \"collusion \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 between the political\nmachi. es ot the Liberals and CCF.\"\nThe directors said the CCF vote\nin the June 12 election totalled 4923\nvotes in Victoria,,while.in the November 24 by-election the CCF received only 2495 votes.\n\"The loss of nearly 2000 votes by\nthe CCF In the by-election, which\nobviously went to the Liberal candidate, shows conclusively this collusion existed.\"\nMr. Gunderson said he had no\ncomment to make on the proposal\nthat he remain in office.\n-Regarding the collusion charge.\nt^e njihlstff .Saldi; :.:\n\"I think the polls show collusion.\nThe rumor in political circles is, of\ncourse, that CCF leaders told their\nfollowers to vote Liberal.\"\nChurchill To Foot\nBermuda Bill\nBy 8TANLEY JOHNSON\nTUCKER'S TOWN, Bermuda\n(AP) \u2014 President Elsenhower and\nPremier Laniel will live in luxury\nat Bermuda's swank Mid-Ocean\nClub during the Big Three conference, and Prime Minister Churchill\n. Will pick up the cheque.\n' Foreign office sources declined\nto speculate Monday how much it\nwill cost Britain to house, feed,\nand entertain its distinguished foreign guests and their staffs during\ntheir stay. But travel people and\nhotel men estimated the total will\nbe at least \u00a380,000.\nKootenay Lake water level\u2014Saturday 7.15 feet above zero and Monday 7.05.\nwwpntnnKuwamtnimm\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nShe Asked Him,\nHe Showed Her\n\u2022London \u2022 .w_#_\u00bbli-^_d_n\nRoy, 42, said to have Britain's\n.-biggest- hand!.ebar..-,mo\u00abstaohe(.',\nd\u00ab_|hte_.thillldha, of teiavlsliti\n\"\u25a0' vifc w* Sunday nlg.it by -giving.:\nan unscripted kiss to attractive -\nCanadian moyie actress Barbara\nKelly in a quiz type program.\n\u25a0 Roy was appearing In a regular feature called \"what's my\nline\" In which a team oi television personalities try to guess\nthe .occupation of guests by\nmeans of \"yes\" and \"no\" answers.\nMiSs Kelly, after staring at\nRoy's 16%-lnch moustache asked him: \"How do you kiss your\nwife?\"\nRoy looked at Miss Kelly for a\nmoment, walked quickly across   ,\nthe. stage and demonstrated.\nRoy's wife who was watching'\nin Glasgow said: \"Was mj> fade\nred.\"\nMiss Kelly's husband, radio\nand television comedian; Bernard Braden said: \"I am going\nto look for a bearded'lady.\"\nBoth are natives of \/Vancouver.\nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n . 1 m. \u25a0\nVol. 52\n?%\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSocialism as '\"\u2022' m\nHeSfeesIt\nOTTAWA (CP)-Irvin.Studer..-.\n(L-Swlft CurrentTMaple Creek)\ngave the Commons Monday his\n' recipe on how to become a socialist. ,-';. ',\n\"All that needs to happen to\nmq is that I have a crop failure,\nthen the cattle should get foot-\nand-mouth disease, the hogs get\nhog cholera, tha chlckenlr get\n. coccidioslsi then lov$ iljea. out\nthe window and the wife leaves\nhome..\n\"After everything Is gone I\nsay; 'Eloys, I have had It. Hooray, I am a socialist and willing to share, everything I.have\nnot got with those of you who\nhave everything'.\"   \u2022    . \" V    .,.,\n\u25a0\u25a0\" 'ii'1''iiiiiilii'''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n^ftodenJls Burn\nMcC6ri|i|iifigf\nVANCOI^-#Je*l-CoV Robert\nMcCormick,.- ptiM^er 'yi the Chicago 'Tribune, ufel_tifirhed:Vi\u201e effigy\nat the University ' of British' Columbia Sunday night. .-.'\nThe effigy\"Vas,a.hollow straw\ndummy, flllecl1. With , old Chicago\nTribune newspapers\nMore than 300' students of both\nsexes turn'ed Up in a\\ car parade,\nhoisted the mannequin aloft on a\ncrude gallows, soaked it in gasoline and lighted |t.' '-\nThe burning was in protest against\na recent Tribune editorial attacking\nLester Pearson, Canada's external\naffairs minister. Students stood in\nIhe rain while the dijmmy. burned\nchanting: \"Don't molest our Lester.\"\nNo police were present.\nPrior to the burning, the effigy\nwas awarded a replica of the \"Order of Lenin\" medal.\nSENT TELEGRAM\nThe. students-also, sent Col. McCormick a -360-word telegram, collect, In which' they declared:\n\"It ls regrettable that the effigy\nwas of a prominent citizen of a\nfriendly nation. ... It must be remembered that this incident Is not\nto be taken as opposition tp the\nUnited States, but rather to a faction which is believed by Canadians to be violating human, rights\nand liberties. The action, is. not of\na left-wing group, but ah'iridica-\ntion of Canadian public opinion ..\"\nThe telegram;^charged.Cpl.. $_\u2022\nCormlck- witiff i'diWlag- a. \u2022 -wibga\nbetween the Western Allies.\" . t:\nwp^T-piRSUNjSOf. \\,Vt:\nri-Presldent- Norman .A. lit Mac-\nZenzle of UBC declined comment,\nsaying:,    '-'' :\"\u2022<    ....\n\"Comment at a time like this\nonly adds, to the excitement and\nendangers our freedom and the relationship batween our. two- countries.\".-   \u2022 . Is. .,-'.   \u25a0 .,-\u25a0'   .   '   ,\nIvan Feltham, student, council\npresident, commented: \"That wasn't\na bad idea; Too j bad they, didn't\nhave ths''real thing.\"\nLANIEL CALLS\nCABINET SESSION\n\/- PARIS (Reuters) \u2014.French Premier\" Joseph Laniel Monday night\ncalled his cabinet into a special\nsession after the Vietminh Communists in Indo-China confirmed\nthat they had made a truce bid:\nover the heads of the Viet Nam\ngovernment.\nBut the government said it had\nno reason to officially consider the\nbid, made by Vietminh President\nHo Chl-Minh and published Sunday\nin a copyrighted article by the\nSwedish newspapef Expressen of\nStockholm. \u25a0       .   \u25a0\"\nCANADA-TUESDAY MORNING. DEC. 1, 1953\nNo. 186\nBEFORE: LEAVING Bermuda for Jamaica on the second leg of\nher tour ofthe British Commonwealth, Queen Elizabeth; flanked by\nSly Alexander Hood, at right, governor of beautiful Island, and\nher husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, Is shown addressing Bermuda's colonial parliament at Hamilton; the Oldest self-governing,\nlegislative body in the Commonwealth,.with the exception of the\nmother parliament In London. The first reigning monarch to visit\ntha colony since It was established In 1609, Queen Elizabeth said\nshe was happy \"to find serine and vigorous a growth.\"'\n\u2022-Central Press Canadian,\nU.S. To Adopt Tough\nFarmers Seek\nDamages From\nVETERAN MOVIE ACTRESS Irene DUhne, right, looks admiringly at her daughter,-Mary Frances Griffin, While.helping: the\nattractive 18-year-old adjust her gloves before making her debut\nat the annual Gotham Debutante Ball In New York City.: The affair\nbenefits the New York Foundling Hospital. Miss Dunne, In private\nlife, Is tho wife of Dr. Francis D. Griffin of Los Angeles.-\ns_AI\u00bb-\nWlrephoto.\nNAKUSP\u2014.Whatshan power plant; operated by B.C.\nPower Commission, is expected to have one unit back in\noperation Friday. - :..;,V.,'v'-.-   ''.:'\u25a0\nThe $7 million plant was knatked -out by mud slides\nthe middle of August.\nThe 500 foot lower tunnel which\nhas been under' repair, was completed Tuesday, in order to effect\nrepairs to the tunnel holes were\ndrilled in the sides, and roof and,\nwhere solid rock was not encountered, cement and water were\nforced into the cavities ..found behind the cement, wall. It was previously' thought that underground\nseepage behind the cement and\nsteel lining had been responsible\ntot., -ormationr'of these' ipvittes and\nthe subsequent3jUnm|M'.'tim\n\u25a0plant, .- \u25a0\/.'\"- \u25a0:\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 y..-^iTwK~-Z-i<~?\na Pres'surb of W__era In the fennel,\nestimated at 300 pounds per square\ninch, necessitated placing a solid\ngrout coat around the. tunnel having no give, or empty pockets. In\nsome of these underground cavities\nas much as 240 bags of cement\nwere forced into fill the holes.\n\u2022 Effectiveness of this type of\nrepair can only be established by\ntime. Difficulty was encountered\nduring the early construction of\nthe tunnel but it was thought:\ninstallation of steel linings would:\novercome the fault in the ground\nfound at that time. \u2022\u25a0\u2022\nNo repairs were felt necessary\nin the Upper tunnel. ...\nEQUIPMENT RECOVERED\nThe mud and rock slide, which\nforced, the Commission to move\nabout'-380,000 cubic yards of rubble,\nalso burled two trucks, one shovel\nand bulldozer. These have been\nrecovered with the exception of one\ntruck, which was of little value.\nAbout 120,000'rcubic yards of the\nrubble lips been moved to date.\nWork will continue all Winter to\nmove the balance of the rubble\nand on reconstruction of the power\nhouse and switch yard. Cement\npouring Is under way, beginning\nthe reconstruction of the power\nplant.,'It is hoped to have the\nbuilding re-built by Christmas,\nThis building has steel girders\ncovered .with cement slabs for\nrafters.\nA temporary shelter was early\nconstructed to protect- tbe one undamaged : u nit the Commission\nhopes to put Into production this\nweek. -Ine) second unit was badly\ndamaged and. parts have been sent\nEast. for .repairs.. ,\nThe switch yard ts yet to be rebuilt and will be located above the\nplant on.'a change of site.\nWomen Convicted\nOf Robbing Man    .\nVANCOUVER <CP.\u2014Two young\nmothers. have been, remanded to\nFriday for sentence after being convicted Monday of strong-arming a\nman out of $400 after having lured\nhim Into a fortune-telling establishment.\nRemanded by Magistrate Gordon\nScott Were Margaret and Fay Dem-\nitro, aged 20 and 24, whom police\nsaid have a total of 11 children between them.\nWebiter Raps Milk\nBoard Quota Orders\nVANCOUVER (CP)-CCF Leader\nArnold Webster said Monday that\nthe new milk board quota orders\nwhich' go into-effect on B.C. farms\nnext spring \"makes a mockery of\nSocial Credit is so fond of ad J\nvocating. He ssid. the quotas would\ngive little chance to newcomers or\nfor increases in existing dairy\nherds.\nEDMONTON iCPi - Twelve\nsearch planes- returned to their\nbase here Monday night and again\nreported no success in the hunt for\na single-engine Cessna 180 which\ndisappeared lh northwestern Alberta eight daya pravioUsly with\nthree men aboard. '\nft.-\nG.R. Naden, Dies\nVICTORIA, (CP)-George H. Na-\ndeni 88; pioneer British Columbian,\nformer memberV of the legislature\nand'deputy minister, died here\nMonday.. ,\"\u25a0 ,, \u25a0  ' .  , .-.\nAi#siaent'ptB,c; i.ince tb?-IBM's,\nl(g , had %at\u00abhe^ the }j?rovlnce\ndevelop to'wliif a is 'today?\"-'.\"\" .\nI He was''_dm lh England and before coding to B.C. was a bush\npioneer In Ontario. He settled in\nthe Kootenoy's in the 1890's and\nworked at mining: and lumbering\nIn theiNelson district.\nAround 1894 he started a business\nin v the, thriving community of\n.Rossland: and .later moved, to the\nthen: new. smelter town of Trail.\nLater he became mayor and then\nmember of the legislature for\nGreenwood. V v\nMr. Naden was prominent in the\nextension of the Grand Trunk\nPacific Railway to Prince Rupert.\nHe moved to Victoria in 1918 and\nwas appointed deputy minister of\nlands. '...,.'\nFuneral services will be held\nThursday.\nHe is survived by a son, Dr.\nJohn H. Naden of Vancouver; a\ndaughter, Mrs. Reg Gardoo of\nVictoria and six grandchildren.\n. .BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP.-\nThe International Joint Commission was told Monday that a two-\nfoot rise In the level of Kootenay\n\"Lake in Canada caused JOl.OGO damage to farmers,in the United States\nand the town of Bonners Ferry!\nE, L. Palmer, representing the\nKootenay Valley Reclamation Association. asked that the ^est Kootenay Power and Light Co. and the\nConsolidated Mining Co. be required\nto pay.\nThe two Canadian firms have\npaid $12,668 to the 35 farmers, the\nsix reclamation districts and the\ntown for the damages. Palmer said\n$79,295 is still due to pay ell the\ndamages.      V\nThe Canadian firms said they\ndon't think the damage amounted\nto any more than they have already\npaid. \"\nThe International Joint Commission, which handles water matters\ninvolving the U.S. and Canada, gave\nthe Canadians permission to raise\nthe lake level In 1848 for water\nstorage and power additions. The\ndamage claims were filed in 1950,\nThe farmers contend the two-foot\nIncrease .damaged wheat and oats\non this side of the border. Bonners\nFerry claims its sewerage system\nwas damaged.\nThe decision will be announced\nlater,     i.   \u25a0   .\n10-Year-Old Held\nIn Tot's Death\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A 10-year-\nold girl is being held in Juvenile\nDetention Home today in connection with .the death Thursday of\nthree-year-old Anne Mawdsley.\nAnne was found dead in a water-\nfilled ditch near her home and\nphysicians said that she had been\nbeaten about the head before she\ndrowned.\nExamination of the body showed\nthree severe injuries to the' child's\nhead; There also was a bruise on\nher right .leg.\n- Police inferred that charges could\n'be laid against the girl believed\nresponsible-for the child's death.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Mme. Ther-\nese Casgrain of Montreal Sunday\nwas- -re-elected Quebec provincial\nleader of the CCF party.\n5 . By.aOMEfl JONE8\nABOARD THE'^POTHIC (Reuters) \u2014 Queen Elizabeth and the\nDuke of Edinburgh travelled west\nfrom Panama 0ity Monday on the\nstart of a 6000-mile voyage to the\nSouth Pacific'\nFor 17 days,' the Queen and nuke\nwill have a chance to rest from the\ncrammed schedule they filled since\nflying from!Lbndon to Bermuda a\nweek ago. Next port of call on the\nglobal royal tour is the Fiji Islands.\nAlready,! the Fijlans are beginning to assemble at Suva, their\ncapital, from the 322 scattered Islands in preparation for a royal\nwelcome Dec- 17. Representative\nchiefs will board the Gothic for\nwelcoming speeches.\nHowe Sees Stiffer\nCompetition\nIn Business\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Trade Minister\nHowe Monday forecast stiffer competition for Canadian business during 1954 but \"as for the general\nlevel, of economic activity I predict\nthe pessimists are going to be wrong\nagain.\"\nNEWSMEN NAME OFFICERS\nVANCOUVER (CPJ-Stan Sutherland, news editor of the Vancouver Province. Friday was.re-elected\n.resident of the Newsmen's Club of\nB.C. at the annual meeting here.\nElected vice-presidents were Bill\nFletcher, business editor of the\nVancouver Sun and Bill Herbert, of\nthe Canadian Broadcasting Corpor\natlon.\nFrank OT.ell was re-elected sec?\nretary and Ted Fairfax was named\ntreasurer.\nCommons Rings With\nCheers for Churchill\nLONDON   (CP) \u2014 Sir' Winston lee paldtrlbute to the prime mln-\nChurchlll turned .79 Monday but\nfor Britain's durable \"Grand Old,\nMan\" it was mostly just another\nworking day.. .   , .\nDeclining to take a holiday, the\nprime, minister summoned his cabinet to. discuss the coming Bermuda\nconference and Russia's offer to\nattend Big- Four talks, was acclaimed by a cheering. House of\nCommons, had dinner, with his family, attended' a midnight champagne and rum cake reception for\n100 guests and then went back to\nwork.   .\nThe big moment ot tbe day came\nin Parliament when Churchill\nslipped Into his seat. A roar rose\nfrom his Conservative followers\nand was taken up by Labor and\nLiberal MPs. The cheering spread\nto the public.galleries, where such\ndemonstrations are strictly forbidden, and ushers had to subdue the\nacclaim.\nVISIBLY MOVED\nLabor party leader Clement Att-\nister and then Emrys Hughes, i\nleft-wing Labor member who normally defies every move of the\nConservative government, rose.\n\"Would I be in order to wish enemy\nNo. 1 many happy returns of the\nday?\" he asked amid laughter.\nChurchill bowed solemnly in acknowledgment. He was visibly\nmoved by the demonstration.\nMonday night Churchill gathered\nwith members of his family.\nA 50-pound \"Nobel Prize\" birthday cake with a 16-Inch candle on\ntop was brought In. The cake,\nwhich caterer Christopher Floris\nspent a year designing, is In the\nform of a circular bookshelf displaying candy models of the 35\nbooks which won, Churchill the\nNobel Prise for literature earlier\nthis year.\nAt the bottom of the candle was\na small chocolate model ot Rufus,\nChurchill's poodle, barking at a\nblack oat atop the-candle.\nthere was no basic change In Russian policy outlined in tha Soviet\nnote, which repeated attacks on a\nlimited rearmament of Germany\nthrough the proposed European Defence Community, and on American bases in Europe and insisted\nthat Red China be accepted as a\npartner in reducing world tension..\nIn Berlin, British and French\ndiplomats said that all signs\npointed to such a four-power can-\nfetence in West Berlin late in January.. These informants agreed that\nthe final decision is likely to coma\nout of the Bermuda talks opening\nFriday. .\nDulles Would Reduce War Risk, Slow\nDown Armament Race at Big Four Meet\nBy JOHN A. SCAbl     '*'.'\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014State Secretary Dulles hinted:\nstrongly Monday the United States will'accept Russia's bid.\nfor an early meeting of the Big Four foreign nptaisterg'in'\nBerlin.    ' '%   .   ;\/ ' ,_\u25a0..\"       -,; ',\n\"We approach a possible meeting with the representatives or the Soviet Union,\" he told a congressional com-,\nmittee. f\nDulles spoke, about the same time that Foreign Secretary Eden was telling the British House of Commons he\nhas \"every reason to believe\" the United States shares his\nhope an early conference can be arranged.\nDulles' comments came as he wound up testimony\nbefore a special congressional committee investigating'\nRussia's seizure of the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania, aid\nEstonia.\nHe gave advance notice that the\nUnited States will adopt a tough\nattitude In dealing with Russia's\nForeign Minister Molotov in the\nevent a satisfactory basis for a\nconference can be found.-\n\"I can assure you,\" Dulles said,\nthat we welcome opportunities to\nsettle specific disputes between us;\nto end the race in armament, particularly atomle armament, and to\nreduce the risk of war.\n\"But let me also assure you ot\nthis; \"Wa do not look upon the\nconference table as a place-where\nwe surrender, our principles, but\nrather- as a place for making our\nprinciples prevail.\"\nHis broad hint that the,. United\nStates might agree to Russia's invitation contrasted rather sharply\nwith official state department comment on Moscow's bid last Friday.\nAt that time, the department labelled Russia's note, \"disappointing\"\nand said' It represented a Soviet\nmove to block French approval of\ntha proposed unified European\naw.,        \".,_\u201e\"..'\t\nDulles has discussed the' Soviet\ndffer Vwlth' President Eisenhower\nsince then; \"': -j ;   ; \"\u2022\n. Despite' the State -department's\ntS-lly- raeisptlon' of 'Ruisii's 'proposal,' American diplomats acknowledged there appeared to be ho\nalternative but -to meet with the\nRussians, provided some assurances\ncould be obtained that the Russians\nwould not turn the conference Into\na propaganda forum for attacking\nthe West\n\" By EDWIN 8HANKE\nLONDON (Al>) \u2014 Foreign Secretary Eden told the House of Commons Monday Britain ahd the\nUnited States both now hope to\nmeet Russia soon to discuss Germany and Austria. '.\n. Eden said the latest Russian note\naccepting a conference meant the\nSoviet government was ready to\nmeet Britain, France and the\nUnited States \"without conditions.\"\n\"It is the hope of Her Majesty's\ngovernment that it will how be\npossible to arrange a meeting of\nthe four foreign ministers at an\nearly date.\"   .\nHerbert -Morrison, deputy Labor\nparty leader, asked whether Eden\nhad seen press reports \"attributed\ntb secretary, of state John Foster\nDulles\" which gave a \"contrary\nimpression.\"\nEGPECTS U.S, SUPPORT\n'i have naturally had communications from the United States,\"\nEden replied, \"and I have- every\nreason to believe that the answer\n1 have just given will be endorsed\nby the United States government.\"\nBritain officially welcomed the\nRussian note on Friday, but a U.S.\nstate department spokesman characterized the substance of the note\nas \"disappointing.\"\n- The British foreign office noted\n.  By ARCtt MACKENZIE-    '\nCanadian Press Staff Writer -.\nLONI}ON;,\u201e(CW-A' 66-year.old\nEnglishman wM$_a\u00a3jnev.\u00ab llv^d:.\nin Scotland calmly asserts that\nScots cannot understand many of\nthe' words, of Robbie Burns, \"al-\nti>qwjtethpy;wui:nOt, admit It,'1 aifd\"\ntells flow, he's. translating soma\npoems of the bard into the Queen's\nEnglish:\nHis. translation, to be published\nin January, makes short work' of\nsuch 'Burns phraseology 'as \"pin-\natoup,\" \"Palpch, .tripe or thairm,\"\nand \"bousing, at the happie.\"\n. The translator is William' Kean\nSeymour! who plans to braVe. the\npossible wrath of Lohdon Scots Jan,\n25 when he attends the Burns Night\ndinner at the Caledonian Club.\n\"I will gladly recite some of my\nBums translations' there if they\nask me to,\" he said hopefully Monday.'\nSeymour; one-time London bank\nmanager, has depended on the die.\ntionaries 61 the Lowland Scots dialect for his translations.\nIn \"Tam O'Shanter,\" the lines\n\"while: we sit bousing at the nap-\npie an' gettin' fu' and unco happy\",\ncomes out as \"hile we sit drinking\npot on pot. with -tippy pleasure in\nour lot.\" The phrase \"painch, tripe\nor thairm,\" in Burns' ode \"To- a\nHaggis,\" is changed to \"paunch,\ntripe dr gut.\" -   -\nON TO START\nEXPLANATIONS\nBy WILLIAM   BARNARD\nPANMUNJOM (AP)\u2014The United\nNations command said today it\nwants to start explanations Wednesday to 328 South Korean prisoners of war listed by the Reds\nas refusing repatriation.\nThe Allies did not immediately\nask. for 'the start of explanations to\nthe 22 Americans and one Briton\nheld in the same camp by neutral\nIndian Guards.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nMEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)\u2014Thirteen-year-old Walton Llpsey, Jr.,\nand his father flushed a covey of quail while hunting. Walton cut\nloose with his doable-barrelled shotgun and dropped a bird. \"Before I could shoot again,\" he said, \"another quail flew right Into\nthe gun barrel. It killed him. Must have broken his heck.\"\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014A racoon cost a 22-year-old Victoria hunter a\ncomfortable night's sleep at home.\nNorman Healey went hunting in the woods about 10 miles from\nhere Sunday. When he didn't turn up at dusk a companion reported\nhim missing to police.\nA small search party m .t him eoming out e^rlv todav. He said\nhe had sighted a racoon at dusk and went after it. When it got dark\nhe decided to stay in the woods overnight rather than risk injury\nmoving around in the darkness.\nHe didn't get the racoon.\nDRUMHELLER, Alta. (CP)\u2014No one Is perfect\u2014not even a cham-\nRlon dog, Take tha case of \"Tippy of Dick\" a black Labrador who\nas won more retriever honors than he can shake his tall at\nAlthough top dog In the hunting field, he's low man with a\nporcupine. For Tippy of Dick, owned by Frank Halaz of this district,\nhas met a porcupine three times In the last three weeks and been\ndeclared loser eaoh time.\nIn the last enoounter he picked up 300 quills, Add these to hundreds of others that a veterinarian has yanked from the dog's nose\nand forepart, and there ,1s justification for his owner's remark:\n\"Ha Just seems to go wacky each time he sees a porcupine.\"\nSHREWSBURY, Eng. (Reuters) \u2014 Shropshire police turned to\npoetry this week in an effort to arouse farmers against poultry\nthieves.'\nPosters distributed through the county Sunday warned that thefts\nare on the Increase, and followed up with this rhyme:\n\"Christmas is coming, the geese are getting fat.\n. \"Don't you think the wide boys (sharp operators) are well aware\nof that?\n\"In Liverpool and Manchester, Birmingham and Crew,\n'They'll find a ready market for your cock-a-doodle-doo.\"\nPU8AN, Korea (AP)\u2014U.S, soldiers who watched one-sixth of\nthla Jammed port city burn this weekend perked up somewhat today\n\u2014they found out the fire missed the flnanoa building.\nToday's pay day.\n____.\n\u2014\n \u2014. :\u2014\nv\/\nm\nUMffiti\n3 mm NCLSOr. DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OK, 1,1951\n\"in<ihi mam\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00 - 9:00\nFiS__V._. I..!!!, \/.\"\"omo\nSTARTS WEDNESDAY AT 2:00 P.M.\nA bmmi anlik-\nall others.. who\ninspired dread in\nibn hearts qf spmq-\nbut who endeared\nUrntell fcw\u00bbe\u00bb to\nboyi -.\nlfafr$l*&ff*yW*J0\u00bb\/f\nMatinee: Adults 50e, Students 50c, Children Z$e.\nEvenlngsi Adults 75c, Students S0e, Children 25a\n1 \u25a0.. mm i ui\" m\n$1700011\nEight New Businesses;\nDiesel Shops Open;\nSchool Contract Is Let\nNoted Violinist\nTo Appear Here\nBeaQna' SOitttndrvltlo, 8 loading\nCanadian contort violinist, will be\npresented thia evening by tha Nelson Musical festival Association.\nShe will be accompanied by Por-\nothy \u00a7wetham, accompanist and\npiano sololit.\nCanadian-born Miss Sommtrvlllt\nIs a native .ot Oublph, Ontario,\nwhera sht eommonetd her musleil\nstudies tt tht ago of five. Sht has\natudled with such outstanding artists tt Parlew, .Miiha .off tnd\nWiumiky.\nThe attractive artist hat appeared\nwith tht Baltimore Symphony orchestra and as a featured sololit\nwith tha Toronto Symphony orchestra.\nShe Haa toured New York State\nand the Southern Statei as well ai\nher native Conada, where she is\nwall known for her many raeltals\non the CBC network!. '\nProceeds will go to the Association's grand piano fund.\nH PBSTIVAL8\nTha Nelion Music Festival Association has as Ita objective tha promotion and arrangement of competitive music festivals and the encouragement of other eetlvitlai\nwhich develop musical ability end\nthe appreolttlop of good musie and\nthe allied arte.\nTwenty muiic festivals have been\n?ut on with tht cooperation bt\nrail ilnce the Association was\nfounded in 1BJ0. Approximately\n1900 contestants each year receive\nvaluable e. perlenea and advice\nfrom top.rate adjudicator!. \u2022\nNetablt among presentitions\nmadt by the Nelion Association\nhave been recitals by Don Brown,\nBarbara Hem-ling, and Francis\nJames. Three visits by American\nhigh school bands and orchestras\nwere arranged and the National\nBallet Guild ol Canada was pre-\nwnted lait November,\nThe National Ballet Company\nhai been contracted to perform in\nNelson again in IBM.\nFIRE DESTROYS\nWINLAW HOME\nWJNOAW\u2014Fin deitreytd the\nhomt of a Doukhobor family htre\nover the weekend.\nCause oi thi blue was believed\nby RCMP to be - an -overheated\nitove.\ntilth Battery\nNews\nWeekly trtlnini paridt of the\nlllth HAA Battery. wIU bt held in\nthe Nelson Armories Dec. 1 -at 1M5\nhrs- under tbt commend of Capt-\nH, T, Oumbert\nPirt I orden, published by Capt\nH. T.. Gumbert, commanding officer:\nDuties\u2014Orderly officer, Dee, J,\nLieut, r. W, M, Drtw; next for\nduty, Dee. I, Lieut- C, W, Beasley,\nOrderly sergeant,.Dec, 1, Bdr, E. J.\nHerouxt nnt for duty, Dee. 8, Bdr.\nBteveni.\nParadti\u2014Bitttry paradt IBM hn.,\nInspection 2000 hrs., training 2008\nhrs.\nDrew-BolI-cill order, Training\nti per syllabus.\nOFFICERS CONFERENCE\n(J-Sgt. O. E. Tralnbf left yeitef.\nday to attend the training parade\nof the Rossland. High School Cadet Corps and today he will be at\nthe Trail Armorial ta mbervise the\ntraining ef the Trail Cadet Carpi.\nCorpi jl affiliated with the lOBth\nHAA Battery, BCA IM..\nM,-Col. J. Cwtei, -commanding\nofficer et the 34th HAA Rent., RCA\nCRT), Trill, B.C., leeompanied by\nMiior T. H. Fell, gnd.ln-command\nof the regiment, left fer Vancouver\n\u2022Maintaining her position ti t\ncentro ef tomme>e\u00ab In the Koott.\nntyii the City of Nelson moved\nforward   with   ever    Increasing\nstrides during tht yttr' ending\nDec 1.\nIn those At months, applications\nfor building pprmlts totalled $ 4Z8,-\n282 while the portion ef tht Canadian Pacific Railway budget for\nthe yetr allotted to impr\u00abvi facilities and tht ntw diesel I hop\nwas $006,000 ti the 1053. portion\nof a $1,700,000 project ,.. \\' ...\nMoro thtn SO cWr.er.itl firms\nmade application . fer building\npermits ef, $808 er mere, Eight\nnew builneini opened while other! moyed to.largir. ntw looatlom\ntr did txtenilvt ronovation tnd,\naddition work te tha existing\npremises. I '        '     -    -\nNet Included lit building por-\nmit flgucoi li thi tentrtet'for the\naddition to the Nelion Junior\nHigh Sohool, The eontraot, worth\n270,096, was awarded to Bennett\nand White Construction Oompapy\nIn November,   Netlea hai bttn\ngiven that some work, at Itait ll\nplanned for December,\nPermit! in the last two weeki of\nNovember increased permit flgurti\nfor authorised building by $4320,\nincluding a $1000 itrueture by Kootenay Valley Co-op tf homt dairy\ntruoki,   .\nTht Union Sewing Maohino Company, optrtting In the Chamber of\nMines Building, Baker Street, tnd\nTht Party Shop, Stanley Street,\nwhich deali In imported foods, made\ntheir oebut In November, thtleteit\nadditions to ntw enterprises here.\nIt ihould bf noted that In tht\nvnt majority of cases, the figures\nquoted on tht building permit applications ara vistly below the actual outlay Involved.\n\u2022Cost ef decorating, store fixtures,\nplumbing, heating, wiring, and labor\nput forth by the proprietor are Just\nt few of the items not included In\nthe initial figure. Main value of the\npermit applications are to call attention of the assessor to the new\nconstruction-or alteration! and to\nensure that the plani art not contrary to the by-law.\nThroe spanking new businesses\nwere opened on permit Application!\nthat totalled juit ever. flMO, l figure that would not begin to stoek\nthe show cases.\nThe grand total of development\nIn Ntlson ihir part year win not\nbe  template  until  flouroi are\navailable for the trie outside the\nelty limits, Housing md business\nactivity in greater Nolson hai alio\ncontinued with unabttid vigor,\nIn Nilson itieU three new tptrt-\nmint  houses  with  an  estimated\nworth ot 850,800 tre under conttruetlon tnd 10 new homei htvt grown\nunder (hi htmmir tnd law, Eleven\nadditional reiidentitl  unlti  hive\nbeen provided by convenlon  of\nbuilding! into duple .el or apartments.\nOf the money expended by the\nCPR, 84M.0O0 wai ipent on foundations, electric wiring, sewerast.\nsome fill malarial, and heating facilities within the new building. A\n$200,000 heating plant housing three\nsteam boilers will be completed this\nyear and the remaining IUm went\nto tools, equipment, extension of\nthe yard, trackage, outside faell-\nitlei, ft|el \u00bbtorege,iervlee platform,\nand sand and water lupply..\nStop'     vl;\nfame almost completed work on\ntwo shops, one of which will houie\nhia buber shop, tnd tbt-other a\ncafe, A full eiee basement with modern plumbing.flxtuvei and in upstairs office space round out tht\nlob,,,\nTht Selkirk Equipment Oomptny\nput * quomtt style 'building ovtr\na concrete foundation on Luke\nstreet, tnd now htvt i unique,\nroomy warehouse In whleh to itort\ntheir mine, mill, logging tnd garden\nequljp-itnt,\nWork hai been progressing ateid-\nily nil year l_ tht modernliatlon\nof thi Kootenty Steam Laundry\nand Cleaning pltnt, Whtt wti onet\nrtthtr run-down building hit\nbeen replteed by t white stucco\ncement blook, a model of efficiency\nand production, bowtlng equipment\nthat li second to none.\nRamsey's Camera Store replaced\na shoe shop in tht 490 block at\nBaker Strut In mother major\nmovt. Tht woll-llt store hill t\nshow window thit displays a constant parade of binoculars, cameras and photo finishing accessories.\nHOTEL MODERNIZATIONS\nAlthough the permit! were taken\nbut lait year, the Hume and Quetn'l j\nHotel both undertook txtemiva tl-\nteratlons to  their premises  with ]\nthe majority of the , work; being ;\ndone this year.\nThe Hood Baking Company retell\nstore, which wm moved from itt\nlocation of 11 years to make way\nfor tho Hudson's Ray addition, reopened it! doors in modern, renovated premises in place of the Club\nCafe,\nThe Taylor's Drygaodi itora also\njoined the Hood Baking Company\nIn tbe 600 block of Baker Street.\nWork of converting the Club Cafe\nbuilding to the new, airy promises\nwas carried -out jn May.\nSherwin Williams opened in\nultra-modern paint tnd wallpaper\nstore on Baker Street on what was\nformerly the ii te of Van dt K amp's\nBakery, The storo, which will alio\nservo dealers In other Kootenay\ncentrei not served directly by t\nSherwin Williams store, is the molt\nmodern ot tht comptny's ehiin,\nFrank Beresford and Stan Payne\ntook over the ChtrleiWorrii premises whop. Mr. Morris retired, tnd\nopened another completely renovated building deiling in boyt', infants' and students' clothing ai will\n\u25a0i man'a work and dress clothes.\n\u25a0 A men's waar storo wai opened\nby D'Arcy Hushes and Harold Stuart In premlios formerly oooupiod\nby the Cabinet qigir Store op\nWard Street. A full line ef men's\nclothes and a tie and sock bar were\nfeatured in the early May opening.\nMuch pf the' work wai done' by\nthe two men themselves, assisted\nin the technicalities of the conttruetlon by a contractor,\nDoherty'i itort, opposite the\nGreyhound depot, was also opened\nwithin the lnst year, The store deals\nin novelties, tricks and jokes, tobaccos, papers and magazines, and\ncostume jewelry, and wis open for\nbusiness In December.\nIn another major Biker Street\nimprovement, the J. P. Morgan\nstore, now owned by Sari M. Cutler, and dealing In new and used\nfurniture and second-hand goods,\nhas a new full cement basement, a\nrenovated main floor, an imide\nbasement stain, md a modern show\nwmMw\nArchitect*' conception of \u00ab\u00abw Nolgon Junior High School addition Is given in drawing.\nGo-Ahead Given Junior High Addition\nMAJOR PROJECTS\nHeading tht list Of mercantile do- window front, The second floor is\n.lopmenW in Nelson was the \u00bb100, to ttiemi of. mprovementend\nvelopment!\t\n000 addition to the Hudson's Bay\nCompany. Work on the program\nittrted eirly in Mey \u00bbnd was completed in-ihelatter .part j>t October.\nKenyon ind Co. were the contract-\nnew lighting his been installed\nthroughout.\nSTORE-WIDE MODERNIZATION\n. Tha Hipperson Hardware  store\njoined the Marshall-Wells Assecia\nFew Meals Hissed\nBut No Hunger\nStrike Al Denver\nNEW   DENVER.   B.C.   (CP) -\nraUart officers hero today denied\nreport that 48 Doukhobor children held ai welftrt wards tre\non a hunger itrlke.\nThe claim was made by Freedomite spokesmen John Perepelkin during tn interview in Victoria-\n\"A faint-hearted attempt at a\nhunger itrlke wai made 10 days\nago by seme of the older children,\nlaid a spokesman. \"A few pasted\nup a few meals but the Idea soon\nfizzled out.\"\nHe alio' refuted . Perepelkin's\nclaim thet there had been One case\nof smellpox at New Denver. He\nsaid the hospital wai under quarantine recently when eight children\nhed chicken pox,\nThe official said the number of\nFreedomite children at New Denver has now dropped to J5. The\ngroup bias taken in provincial welfare care Sept. 9 after parents\nwere arrested in an RCMP raid,\nMr. Perepelkin wss in Victoria\nen route,to Vancouver after consultations with remaining loot\nmemberi at Hllllers netr Albernl-\nHt itld ht wis going ta the\nmainland to teek the assistance of\nintermediaries In pressing thi gov,\nernment to relent tht Remaining\nohlldren at New Denver into the\ncustody of relatives it Krestova,\n'Very few of them are of ichool\ntie,\" Mr, Perepelkin Itld- \"Molt\ntrt tlther under or over ichool\ntgt. We ire partleultrly concerned\nthat the eldest boyi and. girls\nihould not remain in idleness,\" .\non Thursdiy te attend the annual v\u201e..   ___._..\nreserve force commanding officer! craased servlea In other Una*. A\nconference and will rtturn to Trail j permanent canopy, the full length\ntoday. j 0i  the  building,  and  a  iprlnkler\nRecrulti ire still needed in the | system wuh 400 Individual iprlnk-\nors for the 80 by 110 foot two itorey < tion of independently owned iteres\nextension.-       - - -early in May and marked the oo-\nThe Bay did away with their iro-j eisien with a complete faqe-lifting,\neery  department  In favor  of  in- and interior decoration.\nThe Weather\nNELSON   37 43\nKimberley     20 41\nCreicent Velley 33 41\nKaslo   39 -40\nlllth HAA Battery. Tor further\ninformslion inquire at the Nelson\nArmories from osoo hri, to 1700 hrs.\ndaily or on Tueiday, Thursday and\nFriday eveningi from IDB0 hrs until\n8100 hn-\nWeekly Publisher\nCharged With Libel\nSALMO,   B.C. \u2014 A   charge   of\ndefamatory  libel  hn  been  laid\nagainst Trail publisher Jeff Wood-\nhams, editor ind publisher of tbe\n,.. (r\nNOWl\nW\u00ab Hove Them!\nUjllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJ.\nS ARROW 5\nI   100% Nylon Tricot    I\nI SHIRTS  I\n!illlil|ll|)ll|lllllllllll|llllllllllllllli7\n\u2022 Brilliant'White'\n\u2022 No Ironing\n\u2022 Coq), Comfortable\n\u2022 Easy To Waih\nRegular or Short Point Collar\nEach $12.95\nGODFREYS'\n.21\n.01\n.26\n18 kootenty r.ree\"Presi,  1  weekly\nnewspaper publlihed tt Trill.\nMr, Woodhams, former eastern\nCanada and west coast newspaper\nman appeared in magistrates court\nhere Monday and was released on\nJiooo hail, The ease ha; been reminded for eight days,\nThe libel charge his been entered\nby the liw firm ef Cimeren and\nMeagher in Triil, Both Mr. Cameron ind J- P. Meagher ire pressing the charge ai Individuals.\nThe charge ic result of \u2022 front\npage editorial printed in . last\nThursday's edition of the Kootenay\nFree Press, referring to tht recent\nInquest at Trail Into the death of\nMri. Alfred Turner of Beaver Falls.\nTbe firm of Cameron tnd Meagher\nattended the inquest on behalf of\nWilliam Butorac of Ttosiland, alleged by police to be the driver\nof the auto which killed the Beaver\nPalli woman,\n.Phone \u2014 270\nBOX\nThe cornerstone of the Cologne,\ncathedral was laid In 1848, and the\nstructure was completed in\n!ers were a feature, pf.the conitruc.-\ntlon.\nAnother major development in\ntown was the conversion of the\nused car lot at the corner of Vernon\nand Josephine Into a spacious- garage and lervlce station operated by\nMel Buerge- The smooth black asphalt covering the \"front yard\" of\nthe premises and the accessibility\napproached from either side and\nare set far back from the street\nmakes the builnesi one of tht moit\nup-to-date in the Kootenays-\nTht tver Increasing freight tnd\nexpress handling by trucking firms\noperating out of Nelson to district\npolnti brought Aout the development of The Truck Terminui on\nFront Street, Thi Terminus provides a convenient central office\nfor the truck lines which iirva all\npoints ef the compass from Nelion.\nL, F, Gilbert of Ladybird racing\nEvery fixture In the building was\nreplaced and tha whole store 'was\nbrightened with a new lighting and\ndecorative scheme. A ladles' rest\nroom was provided for the convenience of shopperp.\nThe big change, however, was in\nthe arrangement of stock. Everything . was departmentalized for\nshopping convenience and a larger\n\u2022took wai put on display,\nThe retire. Bikery in Falrvltw\nalso had a grand opening in May\nwith a new plant opened for'public\nof the fuel pumps, which miy be jnsp .otlon- New equipment includ\ned a rotary mixer, a eaka and\nsweet bread mixer, a wrapping\nmachine for finished products, a\nslicing machine, end a weighing\nand euttlng machine.\nA modern molding machine, the\nfirst in the Interior, eliminated the\nhandling ef loaves.\nA recent Improvement to the\nBeaeon Motors sales and lervlce\ngarage saw new plite glass win-\ndews installed around tht show\nroom ind 1 newly stuccoed outside-\nThi promises were generally pol-\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND WALL\nALL NEWLY DECORATED\nAn ideal family hotol right down town.\nReasonable rates.\nUNDER  NEW  MANAGEMENT\nOUJ Dynamite Pound\nHear Slocan Tracks\nDynamite wu found near the\nCPR trucks tbout a quarter of 1\nmile from Slocan City by children\nSunday*\nItCMP at. Nelson described the\ndynamite ai old and felt It had no\nconnection with recent bombings\nby fanatical. Sons ef Freedom. The\ndynamite was manufactured in\n1930. It was found lying alongside\ntbt track. j\nTRAFFIC FINE IS $35\nWilliam Khadikan was fined 135\nIn City Cot-t Monday rajornlng\nwhen he pleaded guilty to driving\n48 mph en Nelson Avenut Sunday\nnight\niihed and \"imtrtened up\" In keeping with alterations mint list year.\nThe Wood \u2022 Vallanee Hardware\nlowered the celling in their retail\nstore tnd repainted the interior in\naddition to the installation of bank\ntype fluoreicent lighting, A cement\nfloor was built in the basement.\nA new firm took over the Jewelry\nbusiness of'R. H. Sutherland after\nhit death In October.\n500 Hear Trail\nHigh's Concert\nTRAIL \u2014The second annuel\nconcert of the J. Lloyd Crowe High\nSchool wat held Monday evening\nin the auditorium of the Trail\nJunior .High School under the\ndirection of K. It. Potter, music\nteacher and bandmaster,\nThe opining 'ielection! were\ngiven by the Grade 10 mixed and\ngirls' choir. The list selection.\n\"June,\" by Tschaikowiky, formed\nt beautiful choral framework\naround a plane solo played by\nPatricia Badgley.\nAi tht curtain came down director Potter stood his ground. He hid\nanother treat for the 900 peeple attending and with a smllq geld, \"Last\ntime thty.Wed to push me off before I wsi ready to go, This time J\ntm determined to stay, and he announced tht unscheduled selection\nof the .ohemian Christmas carol,\n\"Sing Songs of Joy,\"\nA choir from grades 11 and !_\ngave, selections and thii was followed hy tht ichool choir,\nFollowing a short Intermission\nseveral selections wert givtn by\nthe school orchestra.\nFollowing leveni number* by\nIht ichool hand tht choir tnd bind\nJoined together in t finale. The audi-\nenet tnttred in singing, \"Jem Joy,\nof Man'! Desiring,\" by Bteh tnd\n\"A Mighty Fortress Ii Our Opd\"\nby Martin Luther,\nA feature of the evening wts t\ndisplay put on hy eight mtjorettei\nwho marched down the aisle to the\nrousing march \"Semper Fidells\"\nplayed by Oil bind.\nConstant applause marked the\nconcert ti t definite tueeess.\nMUST II WARM\nCorel reefi trt confined to waters\nthtt do not got eolder thin ibout\nM degrees tt any time of the year.\nAuthorization to proceed wlth\nconstruction of the Ntlson Junior\nHigh School addition has bten\ngivefi by tht Ptptrtment ef Education.\nContractors, Bennett end White\nConitruetlen Company, said ovtr\nthe weekend that the work would\nstart within two weeks. Crews were\nto be brought to. Nelson from the\nnew hoipltal nearlng completion In\nCreston. Sharp, Thompson, Berwick\nand Pratt, Vancouvor, are architects. \t\nThe contract,- let by Nelson DIs-\ntrlet No; T School Board, Is- for\n$a7B,000, about $14,000 less than the\nloweit b'd; rteeWed lw* Spring.\nTha hoard sit the* Umt turned dpwn\nthe bid!.\nBesides the addition, the contract\ncall! for considerable renovation of\ntha present building.\nCrimped' home economics and\nwoodworking roomi will be converted into shower and. dressing\nroomi and lunehroomi. Fully modern boyi' shop facilities will ba accommodated in the iddltlon, There\nwill be metal and woodworking\nshopa and drafting room, \u25a0 forge,\nfinishing room and storage space.\nTht girls' home eoonomles department will have model kitchens\nfor cooking classes and complete\nsewing facilities, including fitting\nroomi with mlrrori, and 10 on,\nNew classrooms and the home\neconomics   ropms   and   workshops\nwill be fully air conditioned.\nWaihroom in the old building\nwill be completely renovated and\nmodernised and it girls' ihower\nroom will bi incorporated in full\ngymnasium facilities. The girli*\n,,vm instructress will have an of-\nfloe.\nThe old metal working room it\nthe South end of the school il to b_\nrenovated and will include boys.,:\nshower and dressing room, whllt\ntht home ecoporplw room end ithn\nwoodworking shop win become\nboys' and girls' lunchrooms with\nseating capacity of about 100 in\neach room.\n- One classroom In the old wing Is\nto be converted into en administration suite, and this will permit removal of temporary partitions end\nreiteration of classrooms to full capacity.\nIn the new section there will bl\na band room, girls' and boys' lavatories, and two fireproof stairways,\none adjacent to tha old wing.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nCAPITOL THEATRE\nBill\nP.M.\nTONIGHT\npoors open at rao P.M.\nI1I8.\nP.M.\nBAUNA\nSOMERVlLU\nGifted Conceit Violinist\nDbROTHY SWITHAM\nAccompanist ond Piano Sololit  .\nSponsored byi Btytl .Oeniervttory''?if:Mlii|Oi: ter.iptt;\nAthpieii; Nelson Musical Festival Association\n'   \\H TH| INTBHMT OF OOOD MUSIO\nAdults $1.00 Students 35c\n\u2022\nPACK CARBIUILV\n\u2022\nADDRESS CORRECTLY\n\u2022\nSHIP BY IX.WSS\nro powre wi\nNOT IATER THAN\nNiwftundlond,   ,   ,   ,   ,   \u2022\n1   .\nDecember '_\nMorlllmt Provlmoi    ,   .   ,   .\n.   ,\nBtnmktr 10\nOntario and Quebes  ...   1\n\u2022   \u2022\nDecember M\nManitoba\t\n1   i\nRecimbor 14.\n\u2022aiko-thewan and Albert a   ,   ,\n.   1\nDeftmbor 14\nIrlllih Columbia   ...   .   .\n.   1\nDtwhi-tr IS\" 5\nPACIFIC\nP     NATIONAL\ni-xfj-lcM    $m&   i'xT\nWatch For the\nChristmas Shopping\nIn Your\nDAILY NIWS\nenThurtday\nVALUES GALORE\nFROM\nYOUR NELSON MERCHANTS\nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\n\t\n-.--..    V\n 8\u00a7\u00a7f\nThe Shoe For Men\nSmart, Distinctive\nYet Reasonable\n$|f\\.9S      $1\u2014 .95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n653  Baker St.\nPhone 896\nSalmo PTA Holds\nTalk On Curriculum ._\nSALMO \u2014 The Salmo Junior-\nSenior High School Parent-Teacher\nAssociation at its November meeting held an Interesting panel discussion on curriculum changes' in\nth ' past 30 years.\nThree teachers took part. A buzz\naession followed with members taking an active interest.\nIt was decided to present each\npast-president with a pin, also to\nextend an invitation to the school\nstudents council to send a representative to PTA meetings. ,\nPRIZED POSSESSION\nDE LUXE WHISKY\nIN SMART DECANTER\nThia'advertisement' is not published'or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor  by  the  Government  of  British\nColumbia. .\nYOUR\nTRANSMISSION\nRequirements\nSUPPLIED FROM STOCK\nSewall Stock Sprocket!.\nAtlas Roller Chain\nQ. D. Heavy Duty Sheaves\nMaurey F.H.P. V Sheaves \u2022\n.    Steel Split Pulleys\nShaft Collars\nBearings\nBelting\nBelt Lacing\n\u2022   \u2022\nPHONE 18\nPhone 792-Y Evenings\nFilm on Historic Stei^vReeler S.S. Minto l\u00a5ill\nGiWy Afro# Lakes to United States anH Britain\nFILM TO BE\nSHOWN IN'54\n!The Arrow Lakes is in for\nsome round-the-world publicity'when a film picturing the\nS.S. Minto, one of the last\nsternwheelers, is' rfeleased by\nNational Film Board.\nThe romantic steamer, which plies\n130-miles of Scenic inland lake, was\nfilmed last Summer by a Film Board\nphotographer who spent three days\non the pioneer steimOr.\nStops on her unique journey and\npicturesque local scenes didn't miss\nthe eye of tiie photographer and\nthe film turned out \"very well,\" according to fl. W. Herridge, MP for\nkootenay West, who for the past\nnumber of years has been working\nto haye historic district steamers\nand their routes recorded.\nMr. HerVidge explained the film\nwas complete and anticipated its\nrelease in late Spring or early Summer.' ,\nIt will appear on the Eye Witness\nseries shown in theatres and will be\nseen in United States and Great\nBritain as well as Canada.\nSUMMER SUBJECT  '\nReason for delay in showing the\npictures is because it is a Summer\nsubject. Film board too has items\nscheduled for release up to January. \u25a0\nMr. Herridge was supported in\nseeking the filming by district Women's Institutes and other organizations which adopted resolutions\nurging the board to film the old\nstern wheelers.\nOnly district rivals of the Minto\nare the SS Moyie which piles Kootenay Lake from Nelson to the Lardeau carrying mail and freight and\nthe SS Rosebery\u2014a screw driven\ncraft\u2014which carries CPR trains and\nexpress on Slocan Lake. The rivers\nof the far North still boast one or\ntwo sternwheelers.\nCompany Ltd.\n\"tf R_rMabhln<ry You Need,\n\"      \" .Us First\"\nConsult\n214 Hall St.\nNelson, B.C.\nCranbrook Names\nRural Trustees\nCRANBROOK - Newly elected\nrural trustee on Cranbrook District\nSchool Board is Per Williams of\nYahk.\nRural school district meetings\nhave been completed with Fred\nWilliams named representative from\nMoyie. Other rural trustees are\nBen Nlven from Fort Steele, William Lye from Wycliffe, Tom Muir\nfrom Wardner, Mrs. George Creel-\nman from Mayook, B. D. Grauer\nfrom Bull River and Mr. Williams\nfrom Yahk, and the meeting of rural\nrepresentative chose Mr. Williams\ntrustee. Second rural trustee with\na year more to serve Is Mrs. Creel-\nman.\nArthur Draper has been named to\ncontinue' as extra-municipal trustee.\nCity trustee terms expiring in December are those of Chairman Murray MacFarlane nad Dr. J. M. Mug-\nan. They have until Dec. 3 to tile\ntheir nominating papers for re-election.\nCANADA'S WIDTH\nApproximate distance from St.\nJohn's, Nfld., to Prince Rupert, B.C.,\nis 4543 miles.\nDecorate For the\nHoliday\nSeason\nS.S, MINTO, at the age, of 60,'still plies the Arrow vLakes against the background of modern carsj trains and airplanes, token of a lost era when the Kootenays\nwere growing up. A National' Film Boa_.d picture will catch the quaint old steamer\nagainst its natural background and record its activities for history.\nCranbrook Ratepayers Will Have\nFirst Vote in Three Years Dec 10\nCRANBROOK\u2014For the first time\nin three years Cranbrook ratepayers will vote on Dec. 10, civic election day.\nSubject of the ballot will be a\nproposed extension of city limits to\ncover an additional 140 acres in the\nsouthwest environ of the city with\na 60 per cent majority required.\nProposed addition would add an\nassessed $24,000 in land and $133,000\nin improvements to the city rolls,\nwith ap estimated city tax return\nunder present mill rates of about\n$6100 annually.\nIf ratepayers endorse the extension they will be faced with a further bylaw, sewer, streets and street\nlighting to the built-up section of\nthe annexed 28 blocks.\nTerms of Mayor R. E. Sang, and\nAldermen Goerge Haddad. J. M.\nFalkins and W. A. Burton expire\nin December and all four are seeking re-election. So far there have\nbeen no rumors of opposition. Al\ndermen whose terms continue'for\nanother year are Sam McLeary, A.\nJ. Balment and A. E. Jones.'\nOnly controversial issue of serious proportions of the past year\nwas the artificial ice bylaw which\npassed narrowly on a second vote\nafter ita defeat in 1052. Strong op\nposition by a Ratepayers Protective\nAssociation prior to the vote appears to have subsided. Otherwise\ncity affairs seem to have met with\ngeneral approval.\nMunicipal-, school trustees whose\nterms expire are district board\nchairman Murray MacFarlane and\nDr. J. M. Mugan who have not publicly declared their intentions of\nseeking re-election.\nExtra-municipal trustee Arthur\nDraper has been re-elected to another two-year term. As a resident\nof the area the city proposes to lh'\nelude in its new city limits, his eligibility  as  extra-municipal trustee\nSlocan Buys Truck,\nForms Fire Department\ncould be cancelled by .ratepayer approval of the limits extension.\n. A peak number of 1282 voters are\neligible for ballot in the election.\nGETS NEW\nLEASEONUFE\nNAKUSP-The CPR steamer S.S. Minto,which plies the\n13,0 miles of waterway on the\nArrow Lakes will leave district residents without service for about two months\nwhen she goes into dry dock\nthis Summer.\nIt is a government regulation the\npaddlewheeler be overhauled once\nevery four year?.\nThe last overhaul was given the\nsteamer four years ago in April,\nbut this was a little too early in the\nyear as the level of the lake must\nraise high enough to float the boat\nonto the ways at the shipyard. It is\nexpected it will be May or even\nJune before the work ls undertaken\nthis year.\nAs there is no substitute boat on\nthe waterway, residents of the district will ol without service for\nabout two months, as they were\nfour years ago.\nThe only surviving steamer giving service of its kind in the Pacific\nNorthwest, the famed steamer offers residents of the province and\ntourists the chance to ride its spa.\ncious deck's,1 sleep snugly in its\nclean, white cabins and eat the\nwholesome meals served in its spacious dining room, with the cleanest of linens and best of silver\nThere is probably no steamer that\nhas lasted the life of this 60-year-\nold craft. The SS Moyie on Koote-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, DEC. 1,1953 \u2014 3\nInvermere To Elect Three\nChurch Opens\nDecember 13\nGRAND FORK8 \u2014 Opening of\nSt. John's United Churoh It\nplanned for member 13 when\n\u2022peolal opening services will be\nheld. Dedication of the church\nwill be In the Spring when the\nPresbytery meeting Is held hera,\nFINED FOR DRIVING\nOVERLOADED TRUCK\nLionel Charles Steinton was fined\n$20 and costs in provincial court\nhere Monday for driving .an overloaded truck on the highway. He\nwas charged Saturday and pleaded\nguilty before Stipendiary Magistrate\nWilliam Evans.\nnay Lake ls devoted chiefly to barge\nand freight service.\nDOOMED\nLike its predecessors on the inland\nlakes though, its life is near an end.\nIt is losing money for the railway\ncompany. A year or two ago, it\nlooked like Its life was to be cut\nshort, but residents of the district\npetitioned the government and railway company to keep it going and\nso lt continues. To Isolated communities of the district, to logging\ncamps and others, it is a great\nblessing. It is the fastest and most\neconomical route from the North\nInto the district\nTalk of repairs this coming Sum.\nmer indicates that the \"little old\nheart-Warmer, SS Mlnto\" will receive another lease pa life, at least\nfor four years.\nPainting\nPaper Hanging\nDAVID NYSTROM\nPhone 792-X\nSLOCAN CITY \u2014 Slocan City\nCouncil has purchased a truck to\nbe converted to a fire truck, organized a volunteer fire department and named E. W. Hicks fire\nchief.\nAs soon as weather permits a fire\nhall will be built in the central part\nof town to house the truck and\nequipment. Council plans to use\nthe building as a machine-Shop as\nwell.\nThe three-quarter ton truck will\nbe equipped with sirens, ladders,\nextinguishers and other Equipment.\nFire hall will be 20 by 30 feet.\nFiremen will be volunteers,\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nfOA\nL\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Tranafar\nNelson, B.O.\nOrit Of IkePww^\nGillette Gffia-\nQlft Pack Of\n50 Gillette BLUE BLADES\nIn Dispensers\n\u2022 Holiday pack of 5 dispensers-each holding 10 Gillette Blue Blades. A gift he'll use\nand appreciate for months to coma.\nGillette\nShaving\nKit\n\u2022 Here's a remembrance that costa\nlittle, but makes a\nbig impression. Kit contains a Gillette Tech\nRazor, 15 Gillette Blue Blades and a tube of\nGillette Shaving Cream. \u00abV\nGillette\nmm\nGift Set\n\u2022 Colorful Christmas package contains a Gillette Rocket one-piece Razor ia\nStyrene travel case with 10 Gillette Blue\nBlades in dispenser, a tube of Gillette Shaving Cream plus an extra 10-blade dispenser.\nGift\nCarton\nOf 100 Gillette\nBLUE BLADES In Dispensers\n\u2022 Imagine how pleased a man would be to\nhave a year's supply and more of blades.\nAttractive gift carton holds five 20- fEflft\nblade dispensers-100 blades in all.   wuu\nSEEKING RE-ELECTION for\nthe third time Is Mayor R. E.\nSang of Cranbrook,\nFOR SALE AT\nCRAWFORD BAY\n3 REGISTERED AYRSHIRE COWS,\n1ST Calf. Each\t\n2 GRADE AYRSHIRE COWS.\nEach\t\nSEVERAL COWS.\nUp from \t\nSEVERAL HEIFERS.\nUp from \t\n2\u20146 MONTH OLD HEIFERS.\nEach\t\nH. HARROP\nPhone 1278 or 482-H Nelson\n$175\n$150\n$100\n-$55\n-$50\nINVERMERE\u2014Only'one community In the Windermere district will participate In the municipal elections December 10.\nVillage of InvermerO has three\nretiring commissioners, Dr, F. E.\nCoy, N. T. Bavin and William\nWeir. Commissioners W. R. Lake\nand Harry Bartle hava another\nterm to serve,\nUnorganized -village of Athalmer Is forming a water Improvement district so that street lights\nmay ba installed. Athalmer ratepayers will elect officers at a\nmeeting Dec. 2.\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nA\n. Canadian Whisky\ndistinguished for its\nsmooth\nlight taste\nEXPORT\nCANADIAN WHISKY\nLu4.,ml*.rUAmtt\\\nEXPORT\ntm .mush coiiium. oismunv co,tio\nThis advertisement\nh ret published or displayed by\nthe liquor Control Board or by Hie\nGovernment of British Columbia.\nSlocan Teachers\nTo Try Out\nProblem Shop\nSLOCAN CITY\u2014Slocan Valley\nTeachers' Association will gather\nat'Solcan City December 4 to hold\na workshop, the first of its kind to\nbe held in this district.\nThe workshop is a method of\nproblem solving that is comparatively new in the various local\nteachers' associations. They are becoming recognized as an important\nfeature of teachers' professional activities.\nIn a work-hop, teachers of a local\nassociation gather around the round\ntable in an effort to solve the many\nproblems of education in the world\ntoday.\nThe workshop idea Is growing\nbecause of its emphasis on work.\nUsually it Is a period of intensive j\nstudy of a specific problem and out)\nof the study a plan or program is\nworked out toward the solution of\nthe problem. I\nThe Slocan. Teachers' Workshop\nwill be used to initiate their program of study and activities for the\nremainder of the school year. Topics\nfor discussion will be classroom and\ncurriculum problems, the teaching\nprofession, and public relations. J.\nJ. McKeniie, inspector for the Slocan District, will take part in the\nworkshop.\nServices Held\nFor Mrs. G. Keys\nNAKUSP \u2014 Funeral services for\nMrs. Jane Ella McCoy Keys, wife\nof the late George H. Keys, was\nheld in Nakusp Robertson MeiA-\norial Church with Rev. D. R. Stone\nofficiating.\nMrs. Keys was 79 years. She died\nat her home here November 25.\nHymns sung were \"Blessed Be\nthe Tia That Binds'.' and \"Nearer\nMy God To Thee.\"\nService at graveside was conducted by members of the Eastern\nStar.\nPallbearers were Vic Smith,\nHarty Maxwell, Don Smith, Dr. F.\nB. Maxfield, Paul Henke and Joe\nCrowell.\nNAKUSP HUNTERS HAVE\nLUCK IN EAST KOOTENAY\nNAKUSP\u2014A party of Nakusp\nmen on a hunting trip to Canal\nFlats bagged three deer, and spotted\na herd of 42 elk.\nThe party consisted of Ken and\nWayne Highland, Peter and Neil\nHurry and Ralph McPhee. Wayne\nHighland, one of the two youths in\nthe party, shot his first deer.\ning--\nMAO.\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\ni i i     i\ni i      \"\u25a0\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD UNI\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINI\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\n\u2022 \" Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nLINES\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\nYOUR NAME\nADDRESS\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\n3 TIMES 6 TIMES\n.74\nt.ll\n1.48\n1.88\n2.22\n2.88\n2.96\n.98\n1.44\n1.82\n2.40\n2.88\n3.38\n3.84\n\u2022 Minimum charge it two lines\n\u2022 Add lie fer Bex Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% frem above rates if payment it\nencloted\n\u2022 Take advantage ef the low six time rate\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run .\nPayment Enclosed \t\nBill Me  1_\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B. C.\n \u2022.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-^-.\n jaatwjMietafiatW\nm^s^swii1^\nmmmm\nCstaPtlahed April 2H, 1UU2\nBrltls-h Columbia'!\nMoel Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sunday by tha\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n30t Baker Streot,   Ntlion,  British Columbia.\nAuthorized ia Second Clm Mnll, '\nPost Office Dopartmont, Ottawa,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTuesday, December 1, 1959\nCompetition at Polls\nA Healthy Sign,\nAssures the Best\nCompetition for present incumbents in public offices, who have offered for new terms in the civic elections of December 10, does not necessarily mean dissatisfaction with present administrations. Rather it would\nbe a sign of good civic health, an indication that others are interested in\ncity and district affairs, are willing to\nshoulder some of the load of public\nduties and to contribute their energies\nand ideas. Further, it would mean -that\nthe electorate would have a choice, a\nchance to choose from among the best\navailable those who will administer\ntheir affairs\u2014a valuable factor in the\nmaintenance of the democratic principles.\nNelson's present city council has\nbeen reasonably progressive, it has\nbrought up to date a number of needed\nprojects and has given attention to the\ndevelopment of a progressive policy of\nmaintenance and new undertakings.\nThe members can justifiably ask\nanother term to finish out their plans.\nBut they will get their best endorsement at the polls.\nAcclamation is not always, as it is\nsometimes taken, a rubber stamp of\napproval. More often it is merely the\nsign of lack of Interest by those capable\nof doing a job. Citizens who are aware\nof worthy men and women should consider it as much a duty to forward\ntheir nominations and bring their talents to public attention as the nominees should consider lt a duty to offer.\nThe polls are the crucible In which\npublic men and women of merit are\ntempered for their Job. A rejection\nonce only fits them better for a second\ntry. And in assuring competition for\npublic office citizens are assuring a\ncontinuing supply of talent.\nCity council seats, of course, are not\nthe only offices available. Police commission and school district board of\ntrustees also have vacancies. The\nschool program currently under way\nafter the electorate's endorsement envisions the spending of $3,000,000 in\npublic funds, surely a project of size\nto stir the interest of men and women\nof high ability. Police commission duty\npresents problems to challenge any\nready mind, and should be considered\none step in training for further civic\nOffice.\nPresent office holders, It is a certain tyT are not, the only ones interested\nIn public matters.. Those who are\nelected after contest have the satisfaction of public endorsement, of knowing they are considered the best among\nthose interested.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetteri to tha editor on any topic of\ngenuine Intereit are welcome It thoy ara\nbrief, accurate and fair. Hi letter will be\nIniarted In whole, or In part, axeapt over\ntha ilgnature and addren of the writer,\nUnidllolted oerreipindanee cannot be returned.\n. '\nSuggests Cartel Fines\nGo To Provide Promised\nAid For Burned-Out Vets\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014It Is with mounting indignation that\nI read io often of the plena of burnt out vet.\nerani, to icy nothing of the need! of old age\npensioners throughout tne province, Time\nand time again I come across veteran! asking\nfor assistance; time and time again.pleas ara\nmade through Canadian Legion branches to\nsecure \"justice\" for these veterans.\nThose men were assured, ai I wai ai-\nsured, ai a World War veteran! (tha same\nthing wai promised in World War II), that\nthese brave and well deserving men would be\nfighting to secure freedom from fear, want,\npoverty and Insecurity, and so on, at nauseum.\nIn the meantime the government of this country con spend millions on defence\u2014no doubt\nmore defence agalnat fear, poverty, freedom\nand want.\nMember! of Parliament hope for a iub-\nstantial Increase in salaries. Combines and\nprice fixing agencies can fleece the publlo\nwith the sky the limit. Call the roll: Rubber\ncombines, metal, bread, optical, watches, sugar, nitrogen, steel, aluminum, electric lights,\nchemical!. I have a record of them all in \"Case\nStudies in International Business Diplomacy'*\n(572 pages) And the fipes, Mr. Editor? Peanuts, and more peanuts, as against the outrageous profits that are made and the \"hoggish\"\nprices that are charged the public. Mr. Diefenbaker, MP, suggests that much stiffer penalties should be Inflicted on these combines.\nThere are those who suggest that the\nburnt out veterans fought and died to keep\nthese cartels and price fixing combine \"empires\" Intact. Mr. Alfred Krupp gets his \"empire\" back. Japan is made to re-arm against\nits will, although the \"Allies\" made her sign\na treaty that she would never resort to war\nagain. Germany is made to re-arm. Marshall\naid is poured into countries around the world\n\u2014all this, Mr. Editor, running into billions\nof dollars\u2014to fight Communism, to preserve\nour free way of living.\nIs it really impossible that out of all this\navailable money for armaments and defence\nto say that some of lt cannot be spared for\nIncreasing veterans and old age pensions\u2014\nfor cancer and polio research\u2014for mental\nhealth institutions? (By the way, the Provincial Mental Hospital, which I have visited\noften, needs some kind of hostel where rela-,\ntives can stay when visiting patients. The\nnearest hotel ls Port Coquitlam.)\nWhat li amiss with taking the fines imposed 6n price fixing combines and cartels\nand putting them into pension funds and\nother agencies which desperately need help?\nThese fines, I imagine, go back into government coffers. If so, then I would luggest that\nour MPs, Legion agencies, service clubs\u2014yes,\nand tha Church\u2014get busy and attend to this\nmost urgent problem.\nWe are told that poverty, fear, sullenness\nand discontent constitute the seeds of Communism. All right, we need to get busy and\nstop these seeds from sprouting, by seeing to\nit that the glibly-made promises of Wars I\nand II are fulfilled\u2014the sooner the better.\nI write as one who at the tender age of 18\nJoined -with the Royal Engineers to make a\n\"brave new world\",\n(REV.) CANON W. J. SILVERWOOD.\nNelson, B. C,\nYour Horoscope\nIf you ara careful in business matters and\navoid erratic changes your next year will\nahow some success. Originality, cleverness\nand musical and artistic ability are foreseen\nfor the child born under these auspices.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen te any reader. Nimei ot persons\nelklng questions will net be publlihed,\nThere li no Merge fer thli itrvlot,\nQutltloM WILL NOT II ANSWERED\nBY MAIL oxoopt where there li obvious\nnecessity for prlvaey.\nE. B. S., Creston\u2014Pleaie print recipe for mixture to make blackboards for children,\nAnd li lt true that starch rots materials\nltke curtain! or drosses that are itored\naway for winter?\nTo make blackboard!: Paint board with\nordinary black paint iueh as will dry with a\nglow then apply a coat of black paint mixed\nwith turpentine instead of oil, which will dry\na let black, Regarding second question, we\nhave never heard of storch being harmful to\nany fabric, but it li customary to itore summer drosses and curtains unitarched and un-\nlroned, possibly because they will have to be\ndona over again when they are taken out.\nReader, Grand Forks\u2014J have' heard that in\n' China the Chinese brew tea by a different method from what we use over here.\nIf ao, what ls the difference?\nWe understand that In China tea is never\nmade in a teapot, but each cup is brewed\nseparately. The cup Itself Is different\u2014a small\nbowl covered with strainer and Hd. A tiny\nbundle of long tea leaves is placed in the\nitralner and boiling water is poured over\nthem. This first Infusion ls invariably thrown\naway as unfit to drink. The\" procedure has\nmade the leaves swell, and when next boiling\nwater is poured on it filters through slowly\nand is allowed to steep for a few moments.\nWhen the strainer ls removed the golden\nliquid in the bowl is fit lor drinking without\nmilk. We have been told this Is as different\nfrom Occidental tea as champagne Is from\nginger pop.\nStudent, Trail\u2014Was very Interested in a recent article by Ruth Walsh, who says that\nthe origin ot the Kootenay Indians is unknown. I seem to remember hearing they\ncame from the East. Is there any truth in\nthat?\nThe Kootenay Indians\u2014like the Stonles\nat Morley, Alta.\u2014are a branch of the Sioux\nor Dakota peoples, and came to the mountains from the prairies through the pass that\nis now known at' the Crow's Nest. (The\nStonies travelled a little further north and\nentered the Rockies by the pass in these days\nused by tha CPR main line. The Kootenays\u2014\nor Kootenaia, as the old explorers spelled lt-\ncame on a hunting trip and were followed\nand trapped by the mighty Blackfeet. There\nare records ot a terrific battle between the\nKootenais and the Blackfeet\u2014both in those\ndays powerful warriors\u2014in which the Kootenais were driven further back Into the mountains, where they eventually settled In the\nvalley now known-as the Columbia, and went\neven further south.,The late Sir-Sam Steele,\none df the first members of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police (hero of the famous victory over, irate Wild Horse Creek placer miners whom he held at bay on the Port Steele\nbridge), had a great admiratien for the Kootenays. In his biography Sir Sam often referred\nto their courage, Integrity and magnificent\nphysique.\nSeattle Visitor\nPoints To Ferry\nUsers' Bad Habit\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Recently I have had the pleasure of\nvisiting this fine country, and hope you will\n' draw to the public's notice one very bad\nhabit they have acqulr.ed through negligence\nof people in authority on the North Shore\nferry. (I had to cross every day.) The bad\nhabit mentioned is leaving car engines on\nwhilst crossing by that ancient manner; the\ntrip is bad enough without having to suffer\nsome thoughtless person's exhaust. Otherwise\neverything was grand. Please publish this and\ndo a great favor to us allergic people.\nA. MONGER.\nSeattle, Wash.\nGems of Thought\nFAMILY\nA happy family Is but an earlier heaven.\n\u2014Bowring.\n* *      * \u201e\nHappy are the families where the government of parents ls the reign of affection, and\nobedience of the children!the submission of\nlove.\u2014Bacon.\n* *      *\nThe ties of family and of country were\nnever intended to circumscribe the soul.\n\u2014Channing.\n* \u00bb      *\n-The offspring of heavenly-minded parents\ninherit more Intellect,'better Manced.minds,\nand.sounder constitutions.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* \u00bb      *\nIf God has taught us all truth in teaching\nus to love, then He has given us an interpretation of our whoje duty to our households.\n\u2014Henry Ward' Beecher.\n* \u2666      *\nA house without a roof would scarcely\nbe a more different home than a family unsheltered by God's friendship, and the sense\nof being always rested in His providential\ncare and guidance.\u2014Horace Bushnell.\nOnly what we have wrought into our\ncharacters during life can we take away with\nua.\u2014Frederick Baron von Humboldt.\n[ Theyll Do It Every Time\n\u2014       By Jimmy Hatlo\nTruly a kaswion f_J,te-\u00ab dapper\nmc<-owasl~wpecgabi-e wardrobe-\nMAM -ABOLir-TOWM -\nToday's Bible Thought\nIsrael learned social justice the\nhard way.\nIt shall be ... as with the servant, so with his master.\u2014Is. 24:42.\n\u25a0 t\n(hunt 2(bL\nLetters to\nThe Editor\nLetters to the editor on any\ntopic of genuine Intereit ara\nweloomt' If thiy ire brief,\nteeurata and fair, Ne letter will \u2022\n\u2022 be Inserted In whole, or Iti part,\nexoept ever-the ilgnoturo and\naddress of tho writer. Unsolicited correspondence cannot be\nreturmd.\nOrthodox Member\nThinks Use of\nNames Misleading\nTo the Editor;\n\u25a0Sir\u2014In a recent Issue of your\ncaper, dated Nov. IT, on. page four,\nLetters to the Editor column,'wai\nprinted a letter under the signature of Mary Berlkoff, from Wynndel, B. C.\nIn thia letter she Insinuates and\ngives the impression of being representative of the Union of. the\nSpiritual Communities of Christ,\nknown as the Orthodox Doukhobors, with a membership of 5000.\nThis false impression ot her being\nrepresentative of the above named\norganization is very likely to mislead others, as it evidently has misled you, Into believing it to be true.\n(Mr. Legebokoff Is In error. Mrs.\nBerlkoff used the, term \"Spiritual\nCommunity of Christ\", a form used\nfor years now by the Sons of Freedom, not the \"Union of Spiritual\nCommunities of Christ\", Identifying\nthe Orthodox Doukhobors. \u2014 Editor.)\nI would like to state, being myself a member of the Union of the\nSpiritual Communities of Christ,\nthat the above named Mary Berl\u00ab\nkoff'ls not a member of our organization, and the organization never\ngave her any power of representation, but has absolutely no connection with her or whatever group\nshe represents.\nWhile upholding the right of everyone to freedom of speech, I\nwould like fo point out that they\nare using your paper to mislead the\npublic with the above mentioned\naim.\nHer letter, which was addressed\nto the Reformed Doukhobors. another group of the same so-called\nSons of Freedom sect, brought an\nanswer from the above mentioned\nReformed Doukhobors, which was\nprinted In your paper dated Nov.\n21, in the Letters to the Editor column, under the signature of six\nmembers of their committee, and In\nwhich, answering Mary Berlkoff,\nthey address the Union of the Spiritual Communities of Christ, again\ngiving the false Impression that our\norganization has anything to do\nwith any of those fanatical Sons of\nFreedom groups. (In this letter the\ncommltete members addressed both\norRanlza tions\u2014Editor.)\nThe Doukhobor problem ls serious enough not to be clouded with\nmisleading, statements and false\nrepresentation of Irresponsible persons, and in this respect the press\nshould avoid being used to misinform the public.\n-PETER P. LEGEBOKOFF.\nBox 440,\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nSees Danger For\nGouzenko\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014There is no .reason whatever\nwhy any person should Interview\nMr. Gouzenko face to face. No ol)e\nshould be permitted to attempt it,\nespecially a person or persons from\nthe United States of America. To\ndo so would be certain death for\nMr. Gouzenko.\nEx-Communists have told their\ntales of Communism in the public\npress. Admirals, generals, scientists,\ncivilian politicians have published\nor broadcast their adventures pf\nderring do. Among them all, not\none individual has mentioned what\nment on between the years of 1936\nand 1039. During these years, the\ngovernments of Canada, the United\nStates of America. England, France\nand Russia tried in vain to turn\nCatholic Spain into a Communist\ncountry. Today the United States\nof America has begged General\nFranco for air bases that these villainous scoundrels may mage battle\nagainst their bosom friend, Russia.\nShould any one among these \"investigation\" committees catch sigh\nof Mr. Gouzenko, that would be his\ncertain death.\nFor no one knows who in the\nAmerican state department is a\nCommunist or a jackass. Either one\nor both would be the death of Mr.\nGouzenko.\nM. J. O'LEARY.\nFruitvale, B. C.\nI don't blame spoiled husbands\nor wives or youngens. I'd\"be ornery\nmyself if everybody waited on me\nond let me boss everything.\nNATIVE GOD\nOgun, the god of Iron, is a powerful influence in the lives of Yoruba\nnatives.in Nigeria.\n$3 Million Plan\nShould Inspire\nTrustee Contest\n. . _. B. Pearce\nSo the Aotion Committee' has\ndecided that the present council ls\nao good, that lt does not Intend to\nrun candidate! thli year. That ls as\nwell; for now via can go back to\nchoosing our own candidates in a\nmore democratic way. How successful, that may be depends upon\nthe amount of intereit olttzens have\nin civic government. A candidate\ndoes not, aa a rule, \"offer\" himself\nfor office, but ls persuaded by his\nfriends to seek election. It is therefore Important that If a citizen feels\nthat one. ot his friends or acquaintances would be of value on\nthe city council he ihould periuade\nhtm to run, should nominate him,\nand find a aeconder for that nomination. Most probably your candidate will be diffident about the\nmatter; but persuade him to stand.\nThere is never- much attention\npaid to school board elections, and\nyet this year the budget was for\n$612,733.70, and there ls $3,000,000\nto be spent on new school buildings. That is no small amount of\nmoney. One would imagine that\nthere would be enough concern\nthat it were spent wisely to cause\na contest for trusteeship.\nPOLICY-MAKERS\nSchool boards are policy-making\nbodies. Their executive officers are\nthe secretary-treasurer, the maintenance engineer and the school principals. These are the experts who\ncarry\" Out the boards' policy aimed\nat making education In the school\ndistrict as efficient as possible. The\nInspector is the Department's reo-\nreseritative, and acts as the boards'\ntechnical adviser. He attends all\nmeetings, and gives advice when\nneeded.\nLike the council, the school board\ndivides into committees which deal\nwith certain branches of the work,\nSome of these are the Finance\nCommittee, Management Committee. Property Committee, and the\nHealth Committee. These deal with\nmatters within their scope and report to the board.\nSPENDING CHECK\nGenerally spesklng, the board\nmeets twice each month. At each\nmeeting trustees are each given a\ncopy of the minutes of the last\nmeeting and the monthly report of\nreceipts and disbursements. Two\ncopies of this report are also sent\nto the finance branch of the EdUi\ncation Department,, which keeps a\nclose check on all expenditures.\nThe form Itself is,\u00bb model of lucidity. It Is dlvldetT into separate\naccounts, such as, Administration,\nInstruction. Repairs and Maintenance and Conveyance of Pupils\nAccount, each of which ls further\nsubdivided. If also shows the state\nof the.bank account. From all of\nthis it ls possible to see the financial state of the board at any moment.\nVisitors and delegations with requests are usually heard, early in\nthe evening. Their requests, which\nmay be such things as a change in\nbus schedule or the use of a schoolroom, are always given careful consideration.\nReports from committees take up\na fair amount of time. In one meeting the Property Committee reported on a change in the plans for\nan additicg. to the Hume School\nand electrical power to the Salmo\nHigh School. This latter Involves\nan explanation of the difference\nbetween single and three phase motors, which1 was most interesting.\nPrincipals attend the meetings to\nkeep the; board advised of matters\nconcerning their schools, while the\nmaintenance engineer ls present to\nanswer for'his department.\nTrustees are unpaid, and receive no remuneration for their\nservices. Their only reward li\nthe quiet satisfaction of carrying\nout their Important duties to the\nbest of their ability.\nIsraeli-Arab Fiareup\nMarks FAO Confab\nROME (Reuters) \u2014 Israeli-Arab\nfriction flared In the UN Food and\nAgricultural Organization's (ID-notion conference here Saturday.\nThe brief clash occurred when the\nconference examined a recommendation for regional representation of\nmember countries on the FAO Council.\nThe Israeli delegate objected to\nthe Inclusion of his country in the\nEuropean region of FAO. He said\nIsrael should be Included In the near\neast region. Israeli's agricultural\nproblems were common to those ill\nother mid-eastern nations, he stated.\nSyrian and Iraqi delegatel im\"\nmediately accused Israel of trying\nto inject politics into the technical\nworks of FAO. They said Israel hai\nnothing In common with its Arab\nneighbors\u2014even agricultural problems\u2014and thus cannot co-operate\nwith them in the Implementation\nof FAO's objectives.\nThe Cuban .delegate halted the\nsquabble by calling for an end of\nthe debate on this subject.\nIsrael and the Arab nations have\nbeen technically at war since It-\nrael became an Independent state\nin 1946.\nDespite Higher Imports, Canada\nHolds Her Own As Trading Power\nOTTAWA (CP)' - Canada itlll\nranked as the world's third largest\ntrading power in the first halt of\n1993, but the \"most striking feature\"\nwas the rapid growth In volume\nof imports, the bureau of statistics\nhas announced.\nReviewing the first six monthi\nof foreign trade, the bureau observed that even though Import\nprices had dropped, the value and\nvolume of Imports established a\npost-war high,\nImports rose to $2,210,600,000 from\n$1,990,300,000 last year, while exports\ndropped to $2,019,700,000 from the\n1962 peak of $2,121,700,000. The exports decline was attributed mainly\nto falling prices.\n\"SIZEABLE\" BALANCE\nThe bureau noted that the shift\nIn emphasis on lmporti  rosulted\nin a \"sizeable\" Import balance of\n$197,000,000 to tho first six monthi;\ncompared to an export balance of\n$171,000,000 last year. The Import,\nbalance waa offset In. Canada's in-\nternatlonal accounts \"by a substantial net inflow of capital.\"\n\"Canada's terms ot trade were\n\u25a0lightly better In the first halt of\n1993 than'a year earlier, although\nthey deteriorated a little during the\nhalf-year. The change, from an export balance in 1952 to an import V\nbalance in 1953 was not due to\nprice movements but to contrasting\nmovements In export and import'\nvolume.\"\nThe figures ahowad that Canada\nstill ranked ai the' world's third\nlargest trading power, with the U.S.\nfirst and Britain second. France\nwas fourth and West Germany fifth.\nyour\nmoneyl\nLemon Hart it no ordinary ruml\nItt distinctive flavor and bouquet ere\nthe result of Its being matured under\nbond In those great Port of London\nunderground vaults, which for centuries have been Ihe cradle ot fine\nwines and spirits. Lemon Hart Is\nrecognized at the finest of. Britain's\nImported rums . . . blended with\ntraditional skill from Domorara Rum.\nEnjoy It todayl\nBRITAIN'S  FINEST IMPORTED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor'\nControl Boord or by the Government of British Columbia. ';\u2022':\u2022\n\u2022 The IWA strike in the Interior lumber industry is now a fight for the right to organize\nand bargain collectively.'\n\u2022 The employers' intend to break the strike by\nthe use of strike-breakers, and throw the IWA\nstrikers on the bread line.\nTHE FACTS AREj\u2014\n1 For two years, Conciliation Boards have recommended better contract terms as necessary and possible. These have been rejected\nby the employers.\nO   The employers threatened lock-outs to force i\nthe lumber workers to accept the,195I; coa-v,\ntract terms, with a base rate $1.52 a day less\nthan is paid at the coast. ..\";:'':.'\".\nO    The employers have refused to mediate the,\n-   strike issues, hoping to starve the strikers <\ninto surrender. ,\n2W t&e StrtiAeM\n\u2022 The IWA can and will finance its picket lines\nfor another six montha, if necessary.'\n\u2022 The entire trade union movement in Canada\nis behind the strike. Get in step.\nVmt ic & Scot\nO Workers are warned against accepting employment offers as strike-breakers.\n\u2022 Strike-breakers will be named throughout the\nunions in the Canadian West as \"scabs\".\n\u2022 A victory for the IWA strikers is a victory\nfor all the Interior workers.\nSCABS KEEP AWAY\nIWA Strike Committee\n41 Klesswoy, Vancouver. >.C\nListen To\nI.W.A. STRIKE NEWS\nCKLN - Friday, Dec. 4 - 6:30 p.m.\n________\nvj..    ..\u25a0:\u25a0.   \u25a0\u25a0  ... -    V       . ...'\n____.\n_\t\n Wl^\n\"It Pays To Buy Quality\"\nyar^.lfaw&tb <\u00abv    '\n(SCOJT-M-HAtl )\nTOPS IN QUALITY\nTOPS IN COMFORT\nWith\nAIRFILM SHOES\nFor Men\nCompletely pneumatic from heel\nto toe. Black, brown calf bal-\nmoral oxfords.\n$18.95\nSizes 6 to 11\nC and E Widths\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nNelson Social-\n,'     '',.'.'-   ..       ..'        '-..       ,  PHONE 144\n' A Nelson girl, whose wedding takes place Friday,\nwas guest of honor at a miscellaneous shower at the home\nof Mrs. H. C. Armstrong, Chatham Street.\nHONORED . . . Friday evening\nMrs. H. C. Armstrong and Mrs.\nF. Carter were co-hostesses at the\nhome of Mrs. Armstrong on Cha.\ntham Street, at a miscellaneous\nshower honoring Miss Dolly Jerome whose marriage to.Jack Mor-\n\u2022ris takes place on Friday. Little\nArdell Carter, niece of the honoree,\npresented the gifts In a decorated\ndoll buggy. Games and contests\nwere enjoyed. Ardell Carter and\nFrances Monaghan assisted the hostesses in serving lunch.\nTO SPOKANE . . . Mrs. Alex\nCarrie, Silica Street, left recently\nfor Spokane to spend several\nmonths with her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Yorke.\n.   \u2022   .\nHOME FOR WEEKEND ... Joe\nSturgeon and Ray Poulln have returned to Gonzaga University after\nCJvdiSbiiuiL Jwdct\nBy MARGARET CARR\nLike Christmas shopping, fruit cake baking should be\nJone early. Not only is the busy holiday rush avoided, but\nfruit cakes improve on storage for several weeks, depending\nin the type of take.\nDark or light, fruit cakes add holiday glamor that is\ninmistakeable.\nRiOh.and fruity, the cake's flavor\nI unequalled for holiday dessert,\nir a refreshments to serve callers\nvho come to see the tree. Because\nruit cakes are made so far ahead,\nhey are a boon to busy hostesses.\nIPith all the' many preparations\nhat must be made for Christmas\ntinner, dessert is assured and ready\n-Jen fruit cakes and puddings have\nleen made.\nIf your family does not care\nbr certain candied fruits in a par-\nicular recipe, others may be sub-\ntltuted, Not that today's recipe\nOr fruit cake contains no baking\nlowder\u2014we feel that the addition\nif such to the recipe has a tendency\np dry out the cake. In order to\nurther ensure moisture in the cake\nloney has been added.\nEfficient homemakers take fruit\nsake baking in their stride. Their\nlecret ls to cut up the fruit and\ntuts, and line the pans for baking\nme day and then put the cake\nogether and bake it the following\nlay.\nAs soon as fruit cakes are baked\nremove them from their pans to a\nrack but do not remove the pan-\nlining papers. After the cakes cool,\nwrap them tightly either in waxed\npaper or aluminum foil and store\nin an air-tight container in a cool\nplace.\nAdding the final decorations to a\nfruit cake should be done after\nthe cake has been properly ageo..\nYou can give it a beautiful glaze\nby brushing its surface with hot\ncorn syrup which has been brought\nto a full boil. Before the glaze\nhardens, add your decorations' of\ntoasted almonds, walnut halves and\nglazed fruit\nDARK CHRI8TMA8 CAKE\nTwo pounds seeded raisins, IV,\npounds currants, Vi pound candled\npineapple (chopped), Vs pound candied cherries (halved), Vi pound\norange peel (chopped), Vi pound\ncitron peel (chopped), Vi pound\nlemon peel (chopped)', 1 pound\nblanched almonds (split in half)\nH4 cups butter, lVs cups sugar, 6\neggs, Vt cup honey, 2 tablespoons\nmolasses, 3 cups pastry flour, Vs\nteaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon grated nutmeg, Vs teaspoon almond flavoring,\n% teaspoon vanilla flavoring.\nPrepare fruit and dredge with\nsome of the flour in the recipe.\nCream buttir and sugar very well\ntogether. Now add one egg at a\ntime, beating it in well, continuing\nuntil all eggs are added. Sift remaining flour, salt and nutmeg and\nadd with the fruifc.riuts apd flavoring. Combine well. Tun. into a\ngreased and paper-lined tin, using\neither one large 9x0-Inch pan and\nthe small 5x5-lnch pan, or two medium 7x7 and one small 5x5. Bake\nin slow oven (275 degrees F.) from\n2Vt to 3y\u00bb hours, according to size.\nFill the pans two-thirds full.\nDo not allow the oven to become\ntoo hot, and if the cake is browning\ntoo much, lay a heavy piece of paper\nover the top.\nspending the weekend at their\nhomes in Nelson.\n.   .   .\nFROM SPOKANE ... Sid Joss of\nOsoyoos, a student at Gonzaga University, was a weekend visitor, to\nNelson.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nTO ROSSLAND ... Miss Frances\nAllen, 824 Baker Street, spent the\nweekend In Rossland with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. R. P. Allen.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nHOSPITALIZED . . . Tom Spencer, student at Notre Dame College,\nis a patient in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\n.   .   .\nSPOKANE VISITORS ... Mr.\nand Mrs. Elson Smith and daughter Cathie of Spokane were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. J.\nSmiley, North Shore.\n\u2666 *   \u00ab\nCOAST HOLIDAY . . . E. J. Le-\nveque, Victoria Street, left Saturday for a two-week holiday at\nthe Coast.\nTrue Frlenda Stand by\nYou, Pythians Told\nFRUITVALE\u2014Miss Mary Hutch-\nenson of Trail, District Deputy\nGrand Chief, B.C. Pythian Sisters,\npaid an official visit to Rosevale\nTemple No. 38. Twenty- two other\n-Trail memblrs attended with her.\nDuring the meeting Mrs. D. Ashworth was Initiated into the order\nand made welcomed by members.\nThe degree staff exemplified the\ndegrees.\nThe members' Christmas party\nwas set for December 23.\nMiss Hutchenson spoke briefly,\ngiving some of the attributes which\nhave made Pythian Sisters great.\n\"True friends,\" she said, \"are those\nwho laugh with you, who cry with\nyou and help you in time of need.\nRespect is what we owe; love is\nwhat we give.\"\nAfter the meeting a delicious cold\nplate supper was served by members of Rosevale Temple. Mrs. W.\nPowne was winner of the booster\nprize.\nARE YOU UNHAPPY WITH YOUR PRESENT DAY\nDRY CLEANER?\nThen Try\nWe Guarantee\nA Pleasant\nSurprise!\nThis sptclal service requires a\nvery high standard of cleaning\nand Kootenay Laundry and\nCleaners now have the staff\nand equipment to do the Job\nwith efficiency and accuracy.\nYou too will enjoy the \"3 S\"\nslogan.\nSatisfactory Sanltone Service\nTRY SANITONE 8ERVICE\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nAND CLEANERS\nPHONE 1175 182 BAKER ST.\nFormer Red Cross\nWorker Dies\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Word has been\nreceived here of the death Sunday\nin Oyster Bay, N.Y., of Mrs. Brian\nMeredith, former Canadian Red\nCross worker in \u2022 Britain.\nHer husband, formerly of Ottawa,\nis at present attached to the secretariat of the United Nations in New\nYork.\nMrs. Meredith was born In Edmonton in 1013, the daughter of tbe\nlate Percy Nowell Johnson, one.\ntime surveyor-general of Alberta.\nHer mother now lives in Victoria.\nMARRIED TO JOURNALI8T\nMrs. Meredith's schooling, begun\nin Canada, was completed at Britain's Reading University. Later she\nlectured at the University of\nAlberta.\nReturning again to Britain, she\nwas married in 1938. Her husband\nwas a London journalist at the\ntime. At the outbreak of the Second\nWorld War, she served as executive\nassistant to the late Hon. R. B.\nBennett, former prime minister of\nCanada in organizing the Canadian\"\nRed Cross in England.\nSurvivors besides her husband\nand mother include her twin children, Mark and Ann and a brother,\nFranklin Johnson, of Brantford,\nOnt.\nShown here with three daughters on the occasion of their golden wedding\nanniversary are Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Proudfoot, 806 Observatory Street. From left to\nright are Mrs. Proudfoot, Mrs. R. K. (Edi th) Smith of Calgary, Mrs. T. A. (Genevieve) Clarke of Vancouver, Carol of Nelson, and Mr. Proudfoot. Three sons, Dave,\nJames and Bob were also present. At th e left is the wedding cake and a portion of\nthe mass of flowers sent to the couple.\u2014Daily News phdto.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULTS\n0JUL&A, lifL With\nVnoJiiatL Wwditt\n*    WA1S1\n9178   24'-30-\nWEEK'S 8EWING  BUY\nSlim as a PIN\u2014this ib the skirt\nof the season! Such novel pocket\neffect, side pleats\u2014you can make\nit in a host of fabrics for casual\nand dressup!' For example, wool\n(ONE YARD 54-lnch is all you\nneed.) Velveteen, winter cotton, or\nfaille\u2014all are versatile, smart!\nPattern 0178: Misses' Waist Sizes\n24, 25, 26, 28, 30 inches. All given\nsizes: one yard 54-lnch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN care of Nelson Daily!\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B.C.   I\nNeyv Denver\nNEW DENVER\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nErnest DeRosa and daughter, Mary,\nhave returned from Spokane, where\nthey visited friends.\nMrs. Con Stewart has' returned\nfrom White Rock, B:C, to spend\nthe winter with her son and daug-\nter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Stewart and family and Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Stewart and family. She was\nmet at Nelson by her granddaughter, Mlsa Ivey Stewart.\nAndrew Schnaebele was a visitor\nto the .Windermere Mines.\nMrs. Mary Stephenson of Troy,\nIdaho, spent a few days with her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. James For-\nsythe, and brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Quintin A. Forsythe\nand family.\nMrs. C. W. Nelson has returned\nfrom Edmonton, Alta., where she\nvisited her son and daughter-in-law\nMr. and Mrs. G. Ronald Nelson.\nGrand Forks\nGRAND FORKS\u2014Miss Eva Ronald, RN, arrived home Monday\nfrom Ketchikan, Alaska, where she\nhas been on the hospital staff. Miss\nRonald visited relatives in Oliver.\nHer wedding to Merrlyn Keith .Gar-\nton Dec. 5 will be the first service\nto be held in the new St John's\nUnited Church in Grand Forks.\nQueen Wears Gift\nJewelery on Tour\nLegion LA Hat Visit\nFrdm Provincial Command\nFRUITVAIJ-r-Mrs. F. ;Midd.\u00abton\u00bb\nthird vice-president of Provincial\nCommand Ladies Auxiliary, *as\nspecial guest at a meeting of Fruitvale Ladies Auxiliary of Leglqp\nBranch 106. Meeting was held m\nthe Canadian Legion Hall with 20\nmembers present. President Mrs.\nG. Stoutenbufg was in the chair\nand introduced the guest.\nA social hour followed the business period, with Mrs. G. MacKenzle, Mrs. C, Rogers,. Mrs. J.\nDavis and Mrs. A. Endersby serving refreshments. Mrs. Angus Wil-\nmot was winner of the Booster\nPrize.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The Queen\nhas carefully chosen the jewellery\nshe is wearing on her six-month\nCommonwealth tour to show her\nsubjects some of the magnificent\ngifts sent to her from abroad.\nThe National Jewellers Association explains it is the first time\nsuch a unique collection of priceless gems has travelled such a\ndistance. The Queen and the Duke\nof Edinburgh started their 50,000-\nmlle tour of 14 Commonwealth\ncountries November 26.\nSpecial security precautions have\nbeen taken to safeguard the gems.\nAmong the famous pieces the\nQueen will wear is the flame lily\nbrooch given to her by the children\nof Southern Rhodesia fpr her 21st\nbirthday.\nAnother ls the floral brooch made\nup from the rare pink diamond\npresented to her as a wedding gift\nby the Montreal - born diamond\nmine owner, Dr. John T. Williamson of Tanganyika.\nOne of the most breathtaking\nitems in the collection is a diamond\nand pearl studded diadem of Russian origin which was made for\nQueen Alexandra, wife of King Edward VII.\nThe association said that at the\nQueen's express wish no new pieces\nof jewellery were -specially made\nfor the tour. But some famous\ngems which belonged to the late\nQueen Mary were altered to fit\nher grand-daughter.\nDenver Lad\nGiven Farewell\nNEW DENVER\u2014A farewell party\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nT. Butler honored John Boudier\nwho, with his parents will take up\nresidence at Powell River. Miss\nSharon Butler and Miss Ellen Berg-\ngeren were hostesses.\nThe evening was spent In playing\ngames and contests.\nConcentration Camp Helps\nWoman Barber's Career\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Four years ago,\nwhen. Mrs. Altde Vainu answered\nan advertisement for a barber,\neveryone thought lt was a mistake\n\u2014 everyone, that is, but Mrs. Vainu.\nShe got the job and today owns\nher own three-chair tonsorial salon.\nAn Estonian, Mrs. Vainu arrived\nhere from Europe five years ago\nunable to speak English. But she\nhad completed a three-year course\nin a barbering school at Tallin,\nEstonia, and gained a good deal of\nhair-cutting experience during four\nyears in a German concentration\ncamp.\nSo, after serving one year as a\ndomestic as required by her immigration contract, she answered\nJoseph Girard's ad for a barber in\nJune, 1040.\n\"You must be looking for a job\nin the beauty salon at the back,\"\nJoe tbld her, but Mrs. Vainu explained in halting English that she\nwas an ordinary man's barber and\nsimply wanted to cut hair. She\nwas hired. i\nNow she has two assistants\u2014men\n\u2014 working for her and she oan\ncarry on a line of barbershop patter with the best of them. But, and\nthis may be her secret formula for\nsuccess, she only uses her gift of\ngab when the customer starts a\nconversation: btherwise, just the\ndrone of clippers, the gentle snipping of scissors \u2014 and silence.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nNatal Notes\nNATAL\u2014Mr. and'Mrs. C. Johnson, accompanied by Mr., and Mrs.\nJ. Percello of Spokane, were Natal-\nMichel visitors. The Johnsons visited Mr. and Mrs. M. Anselmo at\nNatal, while Mr. and Mrs. Percello,\nwho left Michel only recently to\ntake up residence in Spokane, were\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nGregory of Michel.\nMiss Mary Voltner of Edmonton,\nAlta., is spending an extended visit\nwith relatives in Natal.\nMiss Wilma Taylor, accompanied\nby Dick Taylor of Michel were\nvisitors to Lethbridge, Alta. While\nthere they visited Miss Mary English of Michel, who is at present in\ntraining for a nurse at Gait Hospital.\nMiss Joanne Jenkinson has returned to Michel until January\nwheft she will leave for Victoria to\nenter nurses' training school at St,\nJoseph's Hospital. Miss Jenkinson\nhas been employed at the post office in Castlegar.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Dootson of\nMichel were visitors to Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. V. Voltner, accompanied by Miss Mary Voltner and\nMr. and Mrs.- Stanley Zemanek of\nViking, Alta., were the guests ot\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Yarolim \u2022 ta\nNatal.\nGus Bouten and daughter Grade\nof Spokane were Natal visitors at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. M Galla.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Butte and fam-\nily have returned to their home\n.at Kamano after spending a short\ntime with relatives at Michel.\nMrs. Aileen Murphy, accompanied\nby daughters Frances and Margaret\nRose, along with son Terry Edward,\nreturned to their home in Edmonton, Alta., after spending a few\ndays at Natal. Mrs. Murphy ls the\nmother of Sister Stephen Maris of\nthe Sisters of the Atonement at\nNatal.\nMrs. W. Chalmers ls in Vancouver\nwhere she will undergo an operation at Vancouver General Hospital.\ntable. Were $205. Birthday Sale\n4 only, 2-pe. Lounge Suitei in wine and green velours.\n_'107.77\nOutstanding buy. Were $147.50.\nBirthday Sale\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nalways insist on...\n.foremost in frozen foods\nRECORDS\n- SPECIAL XMAS LIST!-\n.    MOODS IN MUSIC\nMusie Fer Dining\nMusie For Relaxation\nMusie For Reading\nTHE MELOCHRINO STRINGS\n'     DINNER MUSIC\nSigmund Romberg and Hi* Orchestra\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nYOUR HOME PLANNING CENTRE     .\n532 Baker Nelaon, B.C. Phone 1555\n12 only, Day-Nito Lounges in a variety of   %\u00a31 H\ncovers, grey, wine, green, ete. Were $9-4.50.  D\/sl \/\n2 only, Floating Rockers. Real comfort. Wine and green\nvelours. Real bargains. Were $109. $11 11\nBirthday Sale :    I I el I\n1 only, Famous Tynan Hostess Rockers.\nReal eomfort in top friezes. Were $42.95.\n1 only, Nylon Covered 2-pc. Chesterfield $\nSuite in lovely gold shade. Was $319.50.\n'34.77\nOCCASIONAL FURNITURE\n6 only. Walnut and Blonde End qnd Cocktail   $Q H\nTables in modern design to $12.50.     O* I I\n1 enly. Walnut Student's Desk. So very\nhandy for many uses. Was $28.95.\t\n\u202221.77\n1 only, Reeord Cabinet, Walnut, with ample $|J A  H\nspace for records, albums. Was $47.50. 3^\u00bb I I\n1 enly. Revolving Drum Table In beautiful   $3 \/j H\nwalnut. A lovely accessory. Was $49.    3 s\u00ab \/ \/\n1 only. Bookcase In walnut, would make a $ A A  H\nlovely gift. Was $62.50. ____ T\"T. \/ \/\n2 only, Leather Top Cocktail Tables by       $1Q 11\nDeilcraft. Real quality. Were $49.50 Jmaf a I I\n1 enly. Walnut Desk in the graceful style %A A  H\nto complement any room. Was $59.50.      sfT\"\u2022 I I\n2 only, Cocktail Tables, removable glass     $J A   H\ntop tray. Were $42.50    PT \/ I\n4 only. Cedar Chests, new arrivals, oak and $CQj H\nwalnut. Example: was $69.50.    aftrel I\n1 enly, Comer What-Not, lovely solid\nwalnut. Was $36.50. Birthday Sale\t\n4 enly, Tri-Lights.\nWere $22.95. Birthday Sale\t\n1 enly, exquisitely different 36\" Circular\nPlate Glass Mirror. Was $37.50\t\n'27.77\n19.77\n'31.77\n'24.77\n'66.77\n'59.77\n1 only. Sliding Glass,Door Bookcase $i\u00a3A 11\nby Deilcraft. Was $83.50. Birthday Sale _   OTr\u2022 I I\n1 only, Plate Glass Mirror, 30\"x20\". $||  H\nWas $13.95. Birthday Sale ._...       11 \u2022 I I\n2 only. Cocktail Tables, 1 walnut,\n1 mahogany. Were $29.50. Birthday Sale\n1 only, Combination Desk and Commode,\nlimed oak. Was $79.50. Birthday Sale\t\n1 only, Plate Glass Mirror, 36\"x48\".\nWas $76.00. Birthday Sale \t\nBEDROOM FURNITURE\n1 only, 3-pc. Suite, same as above but in $^ A1 H\ndelightful limed oak. Was $329. tLTt I al I\n3 only, Chiffoniers in open stock grouping.\nAlmone Mahogany. Were $53.50.\t\n14 enly, Vanities from same group at\nabove. Almone. Were $87.50. _L\t\n8 only, Commodes for each side of your\nbed as above. Were $34.\t\n'37.77\n'64.77\n\u202224.77\n\u202227.77\n3 only, Extraordinary Bedroom Suites by Pepplers $| *\\ C\nare on sale. You Can Save .         l_b?\n7 only. Open  Stock  Limed  Oak  Pieces  by  Restmore.\nExample: Bookcase, headboard, bed. $ij A  H\nWas $78.50. Birthday Sale .._.   OT\". I I\n9 only Beds in all sizes to complete your\nopen stock pieces. Were $38.50.\t\nDINING ROOM AND DINETTE\n1 only, Smart Modern 5-pc. Chrome Set in $T\/1  H\nyellow starburst pattern. Was $102.30. .._    I T\u2022 \/ \/\n1 only. Combination China Cabinet or large $ A A  H\ndouble door book case, walnut. Was $62.50.     II \u2022 I I\n1 enly. Small China Cabinet, lovely sandalwood finish,\nsliding gloss doors. Was $69.95. *CT 11\nBirthday Sale J I al I\n3 only, S-pe. Chrome Suites in popular pearl $T\/1 H\narborite. Red, grey, blue. Were $107.30, _    I T\"\u00bb # I\n1 enly, Wrought Iron and Formica Top Table, Buffet and\n '297.77\n6 chairs. Was $365.\nBirthday Sale\nSEE THE MANY OTHER VALUES OFFERED\nEVERY ITEM REDUCED\n-.\u2014\u25a0_- ; : :    -'-...\n \u2022~r-t-^esiipm^a'MmmfWV'. \u00bb'H\"\n\u00ab'\u2014 NH.50N DAH.Y NKW$, TUBPAY, PIC1,1953\nI11., >..i\",.ii'\nif*\nDepose King pf Bugamda...\nBritish Proclaim State\nOf Emergency in Uganda\nKAMPALA, Uganda (Reuteri)\nBritish colonial authorities Monday deposed tho native king at\nBuganda, a central Uganda province where violence is threatening\nover Independence demands.\nAt the same time, British authorities proclaimed a state of emergency In the province. Tho deposed\nking (Kabaka), Mutesa II, immediately left by air for. London to\nplead hia cause there-\nSir Andrew Cohen, governor of\nUganda, said the step had been\ntaken because the Kebaka had\natated he was determined to oppose\ntht deciiloiu tnd policy of the pro-\ntectorata government,.breaking tha\nagreement of )SM by which Bu-\ngandt li governed.\nPUBUI9 REFUSAL\n\"Ht Ktbaka hM thbwt dearly\nthat he. li not prepared to cooperate loyally with Her Majesty's\ngovernment on matters of major\nImportance,\" th; goveroor'i itete.'\nment said.\n\"He hai stated hit Intention publicly of refusing to' accept the protectorate government's - decision!\nafter being clearly warned. The\ngovernment has therefore no alternative but to withdraw recognition.\"\nthe disputed decision related to\nthe recent demands for self-govern-\nmeht bt Bugando, This would\nmean cutting tha central province\noff from the rest oi Uganda involving radical amendment of the\n1800 agreement\nActors' Church\nTo Be Demolished\nLONDON (CP) *. The ehurch\nwhich naa been the worshipping\nplace of the West End theatre world\nfor almost 100 years Is preparing\nfor Ita last curtain.\nOfficials bave decided that St.\nPeter'i, \"the acton' church\" in\nWindmill street near Piccadilly Circus, must finally be sold and torn\ndown. They made the same decision 29 years ago but a barrage of\nprotests and petitions saved the\nold building.\nSt. Peter's is probably Britain's\nonly church with a professional actor as vicar. Rev. Clarence May, 65,\nwho took over the parish 25 years\nago, hold! a card with Equity, th<\ntheatre tradt union, and has appeared in many stage productions.\nTOO MANY CHURCHES\nArchdeacon M. M. Hodglns, secretary of the Bishop of London'!\nchurch reorganltatlon, committee,\nsaid in an interview (hat the church,\nbuilt In 1861, will probably be clos.\ned early in the new year.\n\"There are more than half a dor-\nen churches in the immediate area,\"\nhe explained, \"more than are needed, and we peed more churches in\nth* luburbi.\"\nIt is estimeted that the building\nand property will be sold fOr ibout\n$420,000. .   .\nUnlawful Practise\nBrings $50 Fine\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u25a0*- Stanley S.\nBlank was fined $50 in police court\nhere for unlawfully practlilng medicine.\nBlank was charged under the\nMedical Act with \"examining or\nadvising\" a patient and applying\ntreatment.\nTbe charge was laid by the Col.\nlege of Physicians and Surgeons af.\nter a young woman reported a series'of testa she said Blank had giv.\nen her.\nstrained by neighbors ai the l>o,dy of her two\nyear-old   son,  Qary,  '\nAngeles   ambulance\nli  carried\nattendants.\naway by  Los\nHe   had   been\nplaying near the curb and fell Into the gutter\nJuit befort a salvage truok, right, pulled up, He\nwai crushed.\u2014AP Wlrephoto,)\nVANCOUVER MAY\nBALANCE BUDGET\n.VANCOUVER <CP) - Canada'!\nthird largest city, which, began'\"WU\nwith a red-Ink ih_owlng, will p rob.\nably comt closo to balancing the\nbn .get   ,\nActing^mtyor J. W. Cornett laid\n\"we expect the city to finish up the\nyear on the right aide of the ledger,\"\nHe said'increase! in revenue over\nestimated budget income accounted\nfor $300,000 to the good and laving\nof n half-year's Intereit on bonds\nIssued In the Fall instead of Spring,\nput the Olty another $200,000 ahead.\nAnother saving\u2014$100,000 \u2014is expected to come from an economy\ndrive throughout civic departments\nand would bring total saving to\n$600,000.\nRCAF Approves\nDismissal of\nAirwoman Burton\nMan and Man Hake Daring Trip ii\nOpen Boat lo Rescue losl Friends\nTWIN REMOVED\nFROM BABE'S BODY\nHERBPQPtD, Eng- (AP)-rThe parents of three-year-old Howard\nDavies disclosed thlt ha gave\n\"birth\" to hlii own twin at the\naga of ceven weeks.\nSoon after Howird wai born In\n1950 hii mother, Margaret, noticed\nhis stomach wai distended.\n\"He was elways crying for more\nfood and I had to give him twice\nli much ai normal,\" ihe told a\nreporter.\nAn X-ray revealed a human embryo In a cavity on the right tide\not the bilby's abdomen. It wis removed by surgery. Howard made\na complete recovery but kept a\nseven-inch scar.\nA doctor who took part in the\noperation laid the baby within the\nbaby was a malformed boy.\n\"Little ls known' of thli kind of\nphenomenon,\" he said, \"but It is\nthought to have been an 'included\ntwin'.\"\nThis means that Howard was Intended to be one of twins, but\nsomething went wrong during prenatal development.\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (Reuters)\u2014\nSixty British troops of the Roya)\nWelsh Fusiliers, advance party of\n240 assigned to guard duties at the\n\"Big Three\" conference, left here\nSunday for Bermuda.\nCanada's Biggest\nShipment to\nFlood Sufferers\nTORONTO (OP)\u2014The largeit Individual shipment of relief supplies\nfor Dutch floor victims, $412,870\nworth of firm equipment, today\nleft the port of Toronto for Rotter,\ndam, Charles LaFerle, honorary\nsecretary of the Canadian National\nEuropean Floor Relief fund, presented the shipment to The Netherlands ambassador, A. H. J. Eovink.\nIt consisted of 280 tractors, 10 combine!, 10 tandem disc harrows and\n97 cases of wrenches for farm areas\nInundated, b'y last February's flood.\nPoisoning Follows\nArmy Breakfast\nFT. DIX, N.J. (AP)\u2014The U.S.\nArmy said almost 100 men got food\npoisoning after eating'breakfast in\na Ft. Dlx mess hall Monday. Public\nInformation officer Capt. Harry\nLalpham said 62 of the men were\ndetained in the post hospital for\ntreatment. He said an investigation\nwai started Immediately. Lalpham\nsaid the men reported lick this\nmorning a few hours after eating a\nbreakfast of ham and eggs.\n\u2022 e\nK!\nA GIFT\nSUGGESTION!\nSend a\nGIFT SUBSCRIPTION to the    .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nThat Says \"Merry Christmas\" Again and Again\nir A Subscription to the Nelson Daily News Will Give That Relative or Friend Hours\nof Enjoyment Throughout the Year.\nir An Attractive Card Will Be Sent With the First l$sue To Announce Your GIFT\nSUBSCRIPTION.\n1 Month, $1.00 - 3 Months, $375 - 6 Months, $5.50 - 1 Year $10.00\nBy Mail Outside Nelson\nHIS CMEST FULL OF MEDALS, his eyei glancing over the\ndescending spectacles, British\nPrima Minister Winston Churchill made a memorable ploture\nai he waited for a second course\ntt the Lord Meyor'i traditional\ndinner In London's Guildhall. He\nappeared in excellent health.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nFor Nail or\nService\nPHONE 144\nCIRCULATION DEPARTMENT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nKilled When\nThrown From Truck\nONTARIO, Ore. CAP) \u2014 Dicky\nLynn Black, 22 months, wai killed\nFriday night when thrown from a\ntruck driven by her father, Bay\nBlack, as it went over a bank near\nhere.\nHer lister, Helen Beatrice, 5,\nburned on the arms by gasoline,\nwei reported In fair condition in\nhospital. The parents and two other\nchildren were treated for minor\ninjuries and released,\nPolice said tha truck ilid down\na 30-foOt bank on a country road\nweit of here.\nTrinchinopoly in India Is noted\n(Or manufacture of jewelry, cutlery\nand cigars.\nOTTAWA (AP)-RCAF head-\nquarten announced Monday they\nhad approved the dismissal for\n\"unsatisfactory conduct\" of Airwoman Margaret Isobel Burton, who\nwas arrested in Victoria a week\nago seven months after ihe dis.\nappeared from her Aylmer, Ont.,\nbarracks.\nAn air force spokesman said\nauthority hai heen given to Wing\nCmdr, D. C. S. Macdonald, commanding the RCAF station at Sea\nIsland, to discharge the 20-year-\nold airwoman,\nUP TO WING  COMMANDER ,\nWing Cmdr Macdonald lajd Saturday Airwoman Burton had been\nsummarily tried and found guilty\nof being absent without leave., She\nwai fined $40 and confined to'bar-\nrocks for 21 days,\ni Ilia RCAF headquarters spokesman said it wai up to Wing cmdr.\nMacdonald to let the dite for dismissal.\nAirwoman Burton aald after hlr\narrest that ihe had been \"ill over\nthe continent\" jlnce her disappearance last. April 19.\nCanada Faces\nTough Competition\nIn Tourist Market\n\u2122 OTTAWA (CP)\u2014Tourist promo,\nten in Canada meet horo next\nweek to come to grips with the\nproblem of Increasing tourist competition from other countries.\nThe meeting Nov. 30 to Dec. 2\nwill be the eighth annual federal\nprovincial tourist conference.\nUp to Oct. 31 this year, 2,329,934\ntourists came to Canada, an all-\ntime high. The figure for all of\n1952 was 2,278,105.\n. Canada's share of the American\ntourist dollar Is decreasing. Last\nyear, Canada took in 33 per cent\nof all U.S, tourlit money spent\noutside .the U. S. compared to 45\noer cent in 1949. .At the same time,\nMexico's share of tho U.S. tourist\ndollar rose from 19 to 22 per cent.\nCanadian travel official! alio retort Increasing competition from\nFlorida, California and South America.\nA record total of 2,915,707 persons\nvisited Canada's national park! and\nhistoric sites between April 1 - and\nOct. 31 this yiar, an 18 per cent\nincrease over the same period list\nyear. Banff was the favorite park,\nHalifax Citadel the favorite his;\ntorlc site.\nVANCOUVER (CP.-A man and\nwoman who rowed a smell boat\nthrough pitch blackness and pour,\ning rain In the north arm ot the\nFraser at 3 a.m, Monday found a\nboat with nine of their friend!\naboard stranded but safe.\nMiss Rae McCuaig and Earl Miller\nmade tho daring trip from Celtic\ndockyard a. the foot of Iona Island\nwhen the 31-foot Spud I wu overdue, .'\u2022\u2022'.-\u2022\n\"We thought wt might find them\ntt ji cottage whioh Spud's owner,\nGordon Cobb, hfls on tht Island,\"\n\u2022tld Miller.\n\"It was a tough trip, though. We\nended up walking aerosi a lot boom\nIn the dark, towing our rowboat behind ul.\"\nLOOKED IN BV BOOM\nThty found tht Spud, due back\nby nightfall-Sunday, had been locked lh on the beach when a tug\nparked a log-boom Juit offshore.\nPolice bad begun to hunt for the\nboat and iti passengers by the time\nit was free of the boom and able to\nget back to the wharf.\nAboard were: owner Cobb^city\nfireman Andrew Brand,, and his\nsons Ross, 12, and Greg, 6; Norman\nJ. Prouse and his son Danny, aged\n2: Oeorge McKenclek Shirley Cobb\ntpd Leroy MacDonald.\nMr. Cobb said: \"We Just went tot\na pleasure run down, to the island;\nWhen it was time to come home we\nfound we were boomed-in. 3\n\"We made a few tries to gat .out,\nhad to settle for the night in our\ncottage.\"\nHISTORIC EVENT\nTht first wireless signal across\nthe Atlantic wai picked up by Maf\u00ab\ntonl at St. John's, Nfld., in 1901,\n\/ ______    * wwra choici w\n\" -*f-3!____     WIMWOINUP AMD.\nH\u00ab_____l       tVU.1 IWVICID\nAMITMINW ANO\nHOIll IOOMI AT ,\nMOD-RATE BATH\nUANCOUVER   B.C.\nTlilt idvednemcnt It net'Published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard bt ov the Government el Britlih Columbia\nthere is a Mcculloch\nSAW FOR YgUfi NEED..\nHere, in the 1953 McCulloch Models, S3,47 and 4-S0,\nis a complete line of one-man Power Saws, designate increase production and reduce labour in all\nwoodcutting activities. Eaoh model is the result of\nin-thMteld research together with the most advanced\nchain saw engineering arid manufacturing facilities\nIn the world. Choose the McCulloch model for\nyour need*.\nMODEL 33\n201b.\nThis is the world's lightest power\nchain saw. Rugged and powerful,\nthe Model 33 cuts through trees 18\ninches in diameter in less\nthan one minute. Available |\nwith 12\" or \"16\" blade.\nr.O.B. ifaiphnr\n\u25a0m\nMODEL 47\nA chain saw of extra-production performance--yet sold at a surprisingly\nlow priee. Weighs only 30 pounds,\nand incorporates the heavy-duty\nfeatures that make it stand up under\nthe toughest work. Six\nmodels available--14\" to\n36\" blade and 15\" bow saw.\nS.b.B. VsttSmm\nm\\\nMODEL 4-10\nThe fastest cutting one man chain\nsaw ever developed. Light weight,\nwith maximOm power delivered\nto the chain makes the 4-30 a\nreal production tool in timber\nup to 5 feet. Six models ,,Ajtik\navailable-14\" to 36\"$QCQ\nblade and 15\" bow saw.   V WW\nt rJO.B. Vanffonw\nGtt o imonstration pt any pj the 1,00 McCulloch Dealers in Cttoda br contact        f\/wn'i a McCtiHeih into \/or entry\n! purpose. Please send for full information\nLEMERY  DISTRIBUTORS  ITD. '\"-* ^-^-~\u2122\nI and ths name of nearest dealer.\nExclusive Canadian Agents\nName...\n220W.l_.tAve.,      10555 J16th St.   938 Portage Ave.   861LandsdowneSt.,      6251stAve.,      I Address..\nVancouver 10, B.C.   Bdni6nton, Alta.  Winnipeg. Man.   Peterborough, OAt. Quebec City, Que.   j\nNELSON SALES <Sc SERVICE LTD.\n745. Baker Street\nNELSON, B.C.\nPhone 977\n\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0 .'\u2022\u25a0     i -\u25a0\u25a0'\n _, ,\u2014\n1 \u25a0\u2022'  '\"- ''V^JlP^*)\n, .\u2014\nNIUON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, DEC. 1,1953 - T\nPrices Effective\nDECEMBER 1st to 5th\n^ttS^iMP-.:___'\nAwf** \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0> . 'V'-1 Hftta^^&l\nChristmas Gift Certificates\nA worthwhile Chrlitmoi gift. . . Enquire\nabout Safeway Christmae Turkey Certificate! at your neighborhood Safeway . . .\nCertificate! are available in $5.00 and\n$10.00 denomination! and may be applied\non a Turkey or any other merchandise in\nthe itore . . . Certificates are now on sale\nin all Safeway Stores in British Columbia.\nCanned. VsqslabkL\nGolden Corn r^\u00ab\u2122,6f0r 95*\nFancy Peas ir.rneoa,6for 1,05\nCut Green Beans Jg** 6tor 1.10\nCannuL $iucba*\nTomato Juice STST\"'\".*'.. 3 5*\nOrange Juice g*w'\u00a3 Fu,cy:  41 *\nPineapple Juice \u00a3&#?*\u00a3\u25a0 35*\nfialdnq, Ml\nGlace Cherries 8s^pH'di\nCut Mixed Peel K!apn\u201e;,!\n49*\nFruit Cake Mix ZTT.\nAlmonds ?M _\u201e..\u201e..\n29*\n33*\n36*\n35*\n(Plc\/tfu. and. OtivM,\nSweet Mixid Pickles 2fMTSTe! 42*\nSweet Gherkins f^iu 48*\nStuffed Olives ,\"\u25a0\u00a3 %?'\u2014\nCandy* and* WtrtL\nCreams and Jellies K\nWillard's Chocolates %%\u00a3% 89*\nLicorice Allsorts ^fpV,39*\nCanned SpupA, faadu 0innsM\nMushroom Soup \u00bb?.\u00bb;       18*\nKraft Dinner m 0? pkt    2 tor 25*\nTomato Soup \u00ab_T    6**75*\nWIJArpi'fanoi.lt'A -\nFresh l9m%fot.'Z^\u2014..c^.. 55*\nMargarine fe^TI 3 tor $1.00\nMincemeat 5fS  44*\nCranberry Sauce 81S. eS^ _ 27*\nShortening W\u00a3 _.... 24*\nFRESH COFFEEn\nIf you'ro tntmertd of mellow eeffet\nflavor, select Airway ... If you're devoted te flavor that match!! aroma,\ntako Nob HIH.\nAIRWAY\nA mild blend of high grown BratWan\nooffooa oxoluilvely .. .\n16 oz.   gg#   3 lb. $'\npkg. _\nbag\n'2.84\nNOB HILL\nFor then who prefer i ahtrp, freih,\nvleoroue full-llavored coffee ,\n16 oz.    QOe    2 1b.\npkg. _ JrQ      bog\nUMNESE iAANDMUN\ne\u00aby *\u2022 ?\u2022\u2022''\n^Bundle' ^3,Jj\n0t 2 boxei\n6RAPEFWS\nFlorida White.\nIndian RWer.\niliinned.\n2 ibs.27c\n2V lAexiwn Oianqes\nRed-rip*-       . \u00a3|      If \u00ab\u00ab\u2022*\"\u25a0\u25a0  ~-       '.      Fancy,\nfield Tomatoes \u00bb**\u00a3; 3V Mcintosh APP\u00ab5*-\nROUNDJTEAK\nChuck Roast SR\u00a3,:\u00b0,U9Lb\nCottage Rolls MPS Whole\nOr Rooit Beef.\n\u00a3\u2022\u2022\" \u00abnd tender.\nRod or Blue Brand.\nSjl Jfea'Shoulder Roast K 29*\nlasting Chicken\nBrussel Sprouts ^\n1  , Crisp, 9\u00ab*n sta,kV\nCelery ^\nZ^y^ MSheulfoRoasts39> gjjgSg?^\n25*\nBlade Rib RoastXr-Ji49*\nWe Reierve the Right To Limit Quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\nf\u2014'\n M-VWP\nmmmmmmmm\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, DEC. 1,1953\nBermudans Rage Over\nAlleged Color Bar\n\u25a0 HAMILTON (AP) \u2022*\u25a0 Bermuda's\nbiggest public upheaval of the century raged Monday over alleged\nslights to the colored population\nduring the visit of the Queen last\nweek,\nDEVOTION TO QUEEN\nThe royal tour, Intended to Improve Commonwealth relations, instead brought to the surface long-\nburled resentments, although the\nQueen herself was the subject of\nthe highest praise and devotion on\nall sides.\nFocal point ot the dispute ls that\nho representative' of the Island's\n64,000 colored people\u2014two-thirds\nof the population\u2014was invited to\nthe dinnet in Elizabeth's honor\nTuesday night\nQUESTIONS  IN  HOUSE\nQuestions have been asked in the\nisland's parliament. Hamilton newspapers are filled with the pros and\ncons of the question. E. T. Richards, MP, told the House of Assembly: \"It is the biggest slip ever\nmade in this century in this country.\"\nA government supporter, J. E.\nPearson, replied that if there had\nbeen a colored person of enough\nprominence, he would have been\ninvited. There .were colored people\nin attendance at the earlier garden\nparty, where 800 of the island's\nelite assembled.\nThe Bermuda Recorder's weekend edition said in a front page\neditorial that the arrangements for\nthe Queen's visit had turned it\ninto \"an ogre of racial discrimination such as no person could contemplate without a feeling of revulsion.\"\nBlackmore Brands\nMcCarthy \"Man of\nGreat Sincerity\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014John Blackmore\n(SC, Lethbridge) Monday completed\nla the Commons what he $ald was\na defence ot Senator Joseph McCarthy.\nHe was replying to an attack\nmade by David Croll (\u25a0!_, Toronto\nSpadina) last week against \"Mc-\nCarthyism\" and \"McCarthyltes.\"\nMr. Blackmore was still speaking\nat the 10 p.m. adjournment Friday\nnight and completed his speech\nMonday.\nMr. Blackmore said Senator McCarthy is a \"dynamic personality,\"\na man of \"great courage and sincerity\" with a great \"intellectual\ncapacity\" and \"understanding of\nworld affairs.\"\nBecause of McCarthy's work,\nCommunist sympathizers were\n\"gnashing their teeth\" and \"screaming.\"\nGREAT POET\nGeoffrey Chaucer, who died In\n1400, was the first man to assume\nthe title of poet laureate of England.\nIsland Hunter\nBags Cougar\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Death\nstared out at Arthur Zieroth Saturday from the burning eyes of an\nenraged cougar, and the 24-year-old\nVancouver man knew he had to\nshoot fast.\nIn a mater of seconds, Zieroth\npumped three shots at the big cat\nand when it was over the cougar\nlay dead only five feet from him.\nZieroth was hunting near Campbell River when his fear-filled en*-\ncounter unfolded. He was standing\nover the carcass of a dead doe shot\nby someone else when he first saw\nthe cougar.\nTRAILED IN GULLY\nThe cat disappeared and Zieroth\ntrailed it. He was walking down\ninto a gully when his attention was\ndrawn by the squawking of some\nblack birds. When he looked up,\nsaw the cougar coming over the\nrise 20 feet away.\nZieroth decided the cougar waa\ntoo close tb wait for the animal's\nnext move, \"so I pumped a shell into\nmy rifle and got him in the shoulder.\"\n\"He kept coming and I fired\nagain, but I missed pretty badly\nI pumped the lever on my 30-30\nrifle again and this time hit him\nsquare in the middle. He fell five\nfeet in front of me.\n\"I stood there shivering when it\nwas over,\" said Zieroth who has\nbeen big-game hunting only three\nseasons.\nBut the fear he experienced was\nworth $40. He will Treceive a $20\ngovernment bounty and a Chinese\npaid him an equal amount for the\nmeat\nGOLD FROM RUSSIA\nARRIVES LONDON\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Nearly \u00a31,-\n000,000 worth of Russian gold arrived at London airport from\nPrague today, and was rushed off\nunder heavy police guard to a secret destination in London.\nThe gold \u2014 three tons of Ingots\nstamped with the hammer and\nsickle hallmark \u2014 was the final\nconsignment of \u00a35,500,000 worth of\nSoviet gold flown into London by\nthree specially-chartered Royal\nDutch Airlines planes. The first\ntwo plane loads arrived Sunday.\nEarlier this month London bullion\ndealers reported Russia was secretly selling gold in western Europe\nin an apparent move to buy scarce\nsterling to finance the Soviet\nUnion's imports of butter, vfool and\nother goods from Commonwealth\ncountKes.   ,\nPHONE  144  FOR   CLASSIFIED\nOF SURPLUS INVENTORY\nBy Lethbridge Woodworking Co. Ltd.\nSale in the Warehouse\nRear of 1233 - 3rd Ave. A. South\nLethbridge\nTERMS:   CASH AUCTION   1:00   P.M.\nThursday, Dec. 3rd.\nMACHINERY, ETC.\n1\u2014D-6 Caterpillar, 9U4617, with Hydraulic Bulldozer, In very\ngood shape.\n1\u2014Caterpillar 35    1\u2014Allls Chalmers Power Unit (Used 30 hrs,)\n1\u2014G.M.C. \"99\" 4-Cyllnder Diesel Power Unit\n1\u2014D-6 Hyster Logging Winch.    .\n1\u20143[\/2 to 5 h.p. I.H.C. Stationary Engine.\n1\u2014Complete Mill with Little Giant Husk, Standard Iron Works\nCarriage and 48 feet of track. Pillar  Block  Bearings.\n1\u2014Complete Little Giant Mill with a 56 ft. track, Pillar Block\nBearings.\n1\u2014Power Bucker with Winch, 5 ft cutting bar, 150 ft, of 94-Inch\nCable, 15 h.p. Wakasha Motor.\n1\u2014Cordwood Saw Mandrel with 30-Inch blade.\nChoker Cables and Hooks.\nOther Mill Parts too numerous to mention\u2014Pulley 8haftt, etc.\n1\u201440-Inch 8 gauge Inserted Tooth  Mill Saw Blade.\n3\u201452-Inch 8 gauge Inserted Tooth Mill Saw Blades.\n1\u2014Nlcholla Bros. 3 Saw Edger, complete with table.\n1\u2014Roller Table Cut-Off Saw.\n1\u2014Standard Iron Works 2-Saw Trim.\n1\u2014Monarch Water Pump and Gas Engine.\n1\u20142-Wheel Rubber Tire Trailer, 600x16 Tires, and Box,\n1\u2014Beet Trailer 1\u2014150-lb. Anvil 1\u2014Forge.\n1_4-wheel Massey-Harrls Trailer     1\u201410-ln. 35-ft. Endless Belt\n4\u20145 ft 6 inch Cro.j Cut Saws 2\u20145-ft. Cross Cut Saws\ni 3\u20144 ft 6 in. Cross Cut Saws 1\u20145 ft Cross Cut Saw\nRESTAURANT EQUIPMENT\n1\u2014Right Hand  Drain Board Sink.\n1\u2014Double Oven Restaurant Coal Range\u2014Double Fire Box.\n1\u2014Single Oven Restaurant Coal Range.\n3\u2014Cupboards, one with sink, pastry and baking.\n1\u2014Meat Grinder      1\u2014Meat Cleaver      4\u2014Enamel Meat Trays\n2\u201424-Inch Meat Saws\n9 Dozen\u2014Restaurant Ware Saucers\n7 Dozen\u201410-inch Restaurant Ware Dinner Plates\n5 Dozen\u2014Restaurant Ware Cups 2 Dozen\u2014Cereal Bowls\n5\u2014 Enamel Canners 1\u2014Coca-Cola Cooler\nTea and Coffee Pots    \u2014     Knives, Forks and Spoons, etc., etc.\nOther Equipment Too Numerous to Mention,\nMISCELLANEOUS\n5000 Feet\u2014Rough Lumber 4\u2014100-ft Lengths of Fire Hose\n2\u2014Lengths of Lawn Hose 175-ft\u20141-lnch Pressure Hose\n1\u2014Gas Pump 1\u2014Blacksmith's Vice\nApproximately 150 feet of Conduit\nFlexible Conduit and Electric Boxes\n% Ken New Mine Track 8plkes\nQuantity of Single Steel Conveyor Rollers\n3 Warehouse Carts Grease Guns\nCAMP EQUIPMENT\n55\u2014Single Parkhlll Cots 65\u2014Singlo Parkhlll Mattresses\n65\u2014Pillows '215 Woollen Blankets\n\u202216\u2014Skullguard Proteetlva Hats 2 Pairs\u2014Now Gum Boots\nS\u2014Quebec Coal Heaters 8\u2014Wajax Hand Fire Pump Units\n3\u2014Scoop Shovels 11\u2014Single Bit Axe Handles\n7\u2014Double Bit Axes 4\u2014Grub Hoes , 8\u2014Canthooki\n5\u2014Coleman Gas Lanterns\nKEN HURLBURT, Auctioneer\nLethbridge, Alberta, Licence No. 274\nJ, J. Marshall\nClerk.\nWEATHER NO OBSTACLE, AS 8ALE WILL  BE HELD\nINDOORS\nIndia Cool Bui\nPolite fo Nixon\nNEW' DELHI (AP)-Vlce-P--sl.\ndent Richard Nixon of the United\nStates arrived In New Delhi Monday for Informal talks with Prime\nMinister Nehru. Questioners In\nParliament tried In .vain to pin\ndown Nehru on whether he would\ntake, up with Nixon the. hot Issue\nof possible American military aid\nto Pakistan.    \u2022\nThe official attitude of the Indian government toward Nixon appeared to be cool but correct. Cabinet ministers made no secret of\ntheir lack ot enthusiasm for the\nvisit trom the globe-girdling vice-\npresident India's.press mirrored\nthe ministers' attitude.\nPAKISTAN  ISSUE\nNixon, his wife and their party\ncame by plane from Bangalore in\nsouthern India. Nixon's arrival in\nMadras Sunday was the first prominence given him by Indian news;\npapers on his tour.\nMuch of the Indian attitude toward Nixon ls due to recent talk\not possible U.S. military assistance\nto India's rival neighbor, Pakistan.\nThough both American and Pakistani officials have denied such an\naid-f or-bases pact la under consideration, Indian officials probably will\nquestion Nixon closely about the\nreports..\nGREAT THINKER\nHerbert Spencer, the English\nphilosopher who died in 1903, was\nin turn an engineer, inventor and\njournalist.\nWith mouth wide open, a milk wagon horse\nappears to tie laughing at a snowbound auto In\nHazelton, Pa., as the state's worst snow storm in\ntyeara  snarled   traffic  and   made  transportation\neven by horse drawn carriages difficult Snow\nup to 12 inches was dumped on the Keystone\nstate.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nNUTFIELD, Eng. (Reuters) \u2014\nMrs. Daisy Morris, 61, was in her\nbackyard Monday when a sirtgle-\nenglned monoplane somersaulted\nover the fence and knocked her\ndown. She escaped with a cut leg.\nTwo men In the plape were killed.\nShow Shocks Co-Eds\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Twenty Japanese\ncollege girls found the facts of Tokyo night life just a little too bare\nSunday. A> publicity-minded burlesque theatre manager invited the\n20 coeds to  be his guest.  Kyodo\nnews servlcfe reported that the college girls were \"shocked . . .\"\" embarrassed ... red with confus-\nsion . . . and none was brave\nenough to sit it out to the end.\"\nBuy, Sell, Trade the-Classified Way\nGouzenko Withdraws\nFrom U,S* Spy Hunt\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Telegram\npublished Monday a copyrighted\nstatement in which Igor Gouzenko,\nthe former Russian code clerk\nwhose disclosures sparked the 1946\nCanadian spy trials, says he has\ndecided not to be interviewed by\nthe spy-hunting internal security\nsub-committee' of the United States\nSenate.\nTwo requests from the sub-committee to interviSW Gouzenko were\nforwarded recently to Ottawa\nthrough the U.S. state department.\nLast Wednesday, the House of Commons In Ottawa was. told that such\na meeting would be permitted, with\nsome restrictions, by the Canadian\ngovernment\nQUOTES  PEAR80N\nGouzenko's statement Monday\nsaid:\n\"I have read the statement of\nHon. Lester B. Pearson (minister of\nexternal affairs) in Parliament regarding a proposed Interview with\nUnited States officials. I noted the\nwords, _t is his (Gouzenko's) responsibility to determine the effect of any such discussions on the\npreservation of his new Identity\nand consequently on his safety'.\"\nGouzenko now is a Canadian citizen, living in an Ontario village\nunder an assumed name and with\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police\nprotection.\nCHOOSES SAFETY\n\"It is clear therefore that the\nmatter of the interview is now up\nto me and the choice before me\nis either the conversation with U.S.\nofficials or the safety of my family\nand' myself.\n\"I choose safety, not because to\ndo otherwise would be foolish coup\nage; in some cases, such as tha\ndefence of one's honor, even foolish\ncourage Is excusable; but because\nI consider the safety of my family\nis not just a personal matter. Canadian and U.S. security is also\nInvolved.\"\nGouzenko said In his statement\nthat he has no  new information\non any spy ring; that the major\npart of his suggestion to U.S. representatives would have been this;\nThere are many others In thi\nSoviet '_py  networks, especially\nIn Canada and the United States;\nwho could be encouraged to do\nas ha did If their, fear oould be '\nremoved, 'These people should\nba assured by tha weitern da-.\nmooraclei of protection and security,  citizenship,  lifelong  protection,  material' security,   help\nIn finding suitable work and I\ndocument   acknowledging   their\nservices   to   the .democracy   to\nwhose protection they fled.\nLandlocked'Swiss\nOrder Large Fleet\nBERN, Switzerland (Reuters)\u2014\nNeutral, landlocked Switzerland\nhas blueprinted a 36-ship national\nmerchant fleet to assure her overseas supply lines if there ia a third\nworld war, it was announced thla\nweek-end.\nYou'll enjoy new worlds of\ndwmmde\nCHRYSLER NEW YORKER -DELUXE\nwith brilliant i^*^^\n.. _ effortless _>^^^^^^^!^ >^^^!>^^ >^^ ^^^fe^ ^^^^r\nProudly you'll drive\u2014and well you may! For here is beauty ... magnificent performance ... and the\nworld's most advanced power features-\u00ab-perfected,by the car that pioneered theml\nOnly Chrysler brings you this great new combination, today: The FkePower V-8 hemispherical\ncombustion chamber engine\u2014delivering 235 horsepower with ease on standard gasoline .. . New\nPowerFlite,' Chrysler Engineering's newest and finest no-shift, no-clutch driving ... Full-Time '\nPower Steering,* which does four-fifths of the steering work all the, time\u2014with greater control and\nsafety, effortless parking and steering . .. Power Brakes, thst give quicker, smoother, safer stops\nwith less than half the usual pedal pressure... and an improved suspension, engineered for the softest\nand most luxurious of rides.\nIrt 1954, more than ever before, you'll have cause\nfor pride when your friends pause to remark . ..\n\"I SEE YOU DRIVE A CHRYSLER!\"\n\u2022Power Steering is optional at extra cost on all models. firePower and Power\nBrakes are standard on all V-8 models. PowerFlite is standard on all models.\nSEE THEM AT YOUR CHRYSIER-PIYMOUTH-FARGO DEALER'S\nManufactured In Canada by Chryilcr Corporation of Canada, limited\n^^^^^^^^\n\t\n (hoJUtuL ihsi\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii.\nBy LEN WALKER\nJust what the game in Kimberley\nbetween the Dynamiters and the\nNelson Maple Leafs was really like\nI can't say not having been a witness, but if the radio broadcast was\nany indication the game must have\nbeen similar to that played by Spokane there a short time ago.\nThe one variation, according to\nthe broadcaster, was the switch\nfrom hockey to boxing staged by\nSully Sullivan and George Barefoot\nSteve Cameron had difficulty In\nchoosing the three stars of the game.\nMy notion was that Sullivan, Barefoot and the RCMP officer, the announcer talked so much about, were\nundoubtedly candidates.\nShortly after the Dynamiters had\ntajcen the lead for good, the announcer noted he was not too Impressed with the,officiating. Same\nold woe.\nSeveral times we heard the an\nnouncer say so and so had the puck\nbut when ready to pasi found no\nbody there. Could lt be the other\nplayers were under.the impression\nthey weren't going anywhere anyway?\nIn the second frame with Pas-\nqalatto and Larson sitting out\nroughing penalties, it was said the\nteams were playing four men aside.\nIf the other two players went out\nto order a cup of coffee I'm only\nsorry I wasn't with them.\nThe number of penalties handed\nout interested me. While I was\nin Kimberley, it was pointed out\nthat the mining city was one place\nwhere the home team regularly\nwere handed more sin-bin sltouts\nthan other teams. For this game\nLeafs beat them in that department, seven to their five.\nIn the commentary after the\ngame, Steve Cameron reported\nGeorge (Express) Barefoot had the\nbetter of Sullivan, and yet when\nthe tussle was going on who emerged\nfrom the pile up first? You guessed\nIt, Sullivan.\nWas pleased to hear Steve stated\nNelson would still end up-on top of\nJaycee Pucksters\nTake Transfer\nThe Jaycees battled Nelson\nTransfer Sunday to a 7-3 victory\nin the fifth game of the Commercial Hockey League.\nGordie Olson and Roy Peloso\nicored two goals apiece for the\nJaycees and the others were scored\nby Erwin Black. BUI McKlvor\nand George Nedlec. Assists were\n- from Erwin Black, Jack Morgan,\nGeorge Nedlec, Bill McKlvor, Roy\nPeloso, Bob Pickering and Gordon\nPickering.\niThe Transfer's marksmen were\nRich Wassick, John Cone and Ken\nWhite. Assists were from John\nCone, Angelo Vulcano.\nThe four penalties distributed by\nreferees Ron Nash and Chester\nChristlanson went to Mike Apoiti-\nlik, Bob Pickering, Ron Gorsline\nand Gordie Olson.\nFor Guaranteed\nMarfak  Lubrication\nPHONE 75\nMechanical Reptlra by\nFactory Trained Mechanic!\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nOpp. Post Office on Vernon.\nBudget Plan Available on All\nLOCKS REPAIRED\nEDEY'S\nLOCK AND CYCLE SHOP\n737 Baker St Phone 1049\nthe heap before the end ot the season. Which reminds me, I will most\ncertainly take Jack Kavanagh up\nbn his baby carriage trip down\nBaker Street should Nelson be\nahead of the Dynamiters by noon\nChristmas Day. Please don't blow\nthat cigar smoke in my face while\nI'm doing the pushing Jack.\nMajor Leagues\nAdd To Ranks\nATLANTA, Oa. (AP)\u2014The major\nleagues dipped into the minor\nleague talent pool for 13 players\nat an Investment of $132,500 Monday in the annual sale that opens\nwinter baseball meetings.\nBaltimore Orioles, heirs to St.\nLouis Browns' No. 1 pick, took\nsecond baseman Vinlclo Garcia, a\n.305 hitter at Shreveport In the\nTexal League. They also took 30-\nyear-old outfielder Chuck Dlerlng,\nformer Giant and Cardinal, from\nSan Francisco.\n'Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago White\nSox and Baltimore each drafted\ntwo men and Philadelphia Athletics\none for a total of nine by American\nLeague clubs. The National League\npicked only four, one each by Pittsburgh, Chicago, Cincinnati and St.\nLouis. Seven clubs passed when\ntheir names were called, including\nthe world-champion New York\nYankees and pennant-winning\nBrooklyn Dodgers.\nFive pitchers, five inflelders and\nthree outfielders were selected, two\nmore than the 1952 draft ot 11\nplayers for $120,000.\nBranch Rickey Jr. of Pittsburgh\npicked a bright young New York\nYankee prospect in outfielder Gerald Lynch from Kansas City. Lftmch\nled the Piedmont League In hitting with a .333 mark at Norfolk\nlast season and had 21 home runs.\nV'.. ,' 'V. .y V.:.' ' <:\u25a0   ,..,;\u25a0:  .. , .;        .'\u25a0'\nNHL Leaders\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanding: Detroit, won. 13, lost 4,\ntied 5 \u2014 31 points.\nPoints'. Howe, Detroit, 29.\nGoals: Richard and Geoffrlon,\nMontreal, Howe, Detroit, 10.\nAssists: Howe and Lindsay, Detroit, 19.\nShutouts: McNeil, Montreal, Sawchuk, Detroit, 4.\nPenalties: Gadsby and Mortson,\nChicago, 44 minutes.\nRANGERS'    HERGESHEIMER   shoots   what\nlooks like a lure goal past Goalie Harry Lumley, '\nbut the puck detoured past the goalpost during\nrecent NHL contest, won by Leafs, 1-0. On other\nshots   Lumley oame   up  with  some  uniatlonal\nlavei to earn his second shutout of the . _n\nthe hard way. Leaf forward Jim Morrison broke\nup the scoreless, hard-fought contest with less\nthan five minutei remaining,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nCONCERN ING GREY CUP...\nAll Agree It Was\nOne of the Qreatest\nBy The  Canadian  Press\nThe sports writers were virtually\nunanimous Monday on their Grey\nCup post-mortems: Saturday's East-\nWest football final was one of the\ngreatest in the history of the an.\nnual classic.\nThey picked the champion Ham.\nilton Tiger-Cats the better team\nand Indian Jack Jacobs, Winnipeg\nBlue Bombers' quarterback, as the\nbest player.\nJack (Winnipeg Tribune) Mathe.\nson: \". . . One point the Bombers\ndidn't bring up after the game was\nthe weak defensive play on their\nown line in that first quarter. The\nbest line in the West was a poor\nsecond on the field, and Tiger-Cat\nchargers were picking up a lot of\nyardage. The promised explosion\nwhich was to occur when Huffman\nand Mazza came to grips was nothing but a mild tremor ...\"\n\"SUPERB ENDING\"\nIvan (Hamilton Spectator) Miller\ndescribed Bombers last-minute attempt to tie up the game as a \"superb ending to a battle between\nteams 'that fought with different\nweapons, perhaps, but which fought\nthe good fight, going all out every\nInch of the way . . . There were\nmany striking features . . . One\nthat Impresses us most Is that Hamilton coach Carl Voyles proved\nhimself right on so many counts.\"\nElmer (Montreal Herald) Ferguson though the Bombers, defeated\n12-6, \"wasted valuable seconds in\nlong huddles when they seemed to\nbe debating tactics among themselves , . . Briefly we think.that\nffijfeB of- the fSttr \"taettrtt* ferns\neould have beaten the Bombers,\ngame and tenacious as they were\n' Milt (Toronto Star) Dunnell de\nscribed Jacobs' 28 completed passes\nas \"a terrific afternoon's work, one\nthat will be remembered long after\nthe Indian is gone from football.\"\nBob (Winnipeg Free Press) Molr:\n\"Looking at it from a western angle,\nWinnipeg had enough chances to\nwin. They didn't capitalize. It wasn't\nbecause they didn't have the guns,\nHamilton guns were of a slightly\nbetter calibre, and blew larger holes\nin the attack ...\"\nCAT8 MORE VER8ATILE\nDick (Montreal' Gazette) Carroll\nsaid 'the Tiger-Cats won because\n\"they were Just a little more versatile than the Blue Bombers, espe\ndaily on attack. Tom Casey is a\nspeedball, but Jacobs didn't make\nenough use of him.\"\nTed (Toronto Telegram) Reeve\nsaid one thing was lacking \"and\nthat was good kicking. The reason\nfor that was fairly obvious; Jacobs\nhad so much to do and Merle Hapes\nhad his line-smashing chores so lt\nwas a wonder to us that they got\nthe ball away at all.\"\nJim (Toronto Globe and Mail)\nVlpond said Voyles \"accomplished\nthe coach's dream of a lifetime\nwhen h'e brought his team to peak\nefficiency at the right time. That's\nan achievement all the more amazing when it is recalled that he wa-s\nbeset with tremendous grid difficulties at the 'outset.\"\nTommy (Ottawa Citizen) Shields:\n\"In future years when footballers\n\u00abet around to talking about Grey\nCup games, they probably will refer\nto (the' 1953 ftn'al __HM_ outstanding\nCanadian final in gridiron history.\nPersonally, this one was the best of\nthem all that lt has been our good\nfortune to- see.\"\nGrey (up Came \"Real Thriller\"\nOpinion Of U.S. Sports Writer\nJOHNNY PAOLONE\n. . , ex-Medlclne Hat Junior who\ncan more than hold his own In\nsenior company with Trail Smoke\nEaters, although he Is small for\na defenceman.\nFAMILY CONTEST\nESPECIALLY FOR\nKIDDIES!\nFor everyone who buys a gift for Dad, brother, uncle,\nor Grandpa at Hughes-Stuart a free ticket for a chance\non the\n$60.00 Electric Train\n(NOW  IN OUR WINDOW)\nCONTEST DRAW\nDEC. 24 AT 4 P.M.\nHughes-Stuart Mens Wear\n459 WARD ST.\nPHONE 425\nNEW YORK (CP)-The Grey\nCup football final in Toronto Saturday between Hamilton Tiger-Cats\nand Winnipeg Blue Bombers was\ndescribed for American readers as\n\"a.combination of.the Army-Navy\nand Rose Bowl games, with a touch\nof the world series and the Kentucky Derby thrown in.\" .\nHugh Fullerton Jr., Associated\nPress sports writer, watched Hamilton Tiger-Cats beat Winnipeg Blue\nBombers 12-6 and described the\ngame as a \"real thriller.\"\nFullerton noted that spectators\ncame from many parts of Canada\nfor the annual football classic and\nthat some paid as much, as $75 for\na pair of tickets.       .    ,\n\"Thiy whooped It lip in real coir\nlegiate style, tore down the goalposts at the finish and didn't seem\nto care that most of the star players were Canadians only by adoption ...\n\"The rules are somewhat different from U.S. pro and college football and the field is considerably\nbigger but the way the teams played\ntoday, the difference is hardly noticeable.\"\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWestern League\nEdmonton 4,, Victoria.6..\nSaskatchewan Senior   .\nYorkton 3, Moose Jaw 7.\nShaughnessy\nNamed To Executive\nATLANTA, Ga. (AP) \u2014 Frank\nShaughnessy, president of the International League, Monday was\nelected to the executive committee\nof the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues minors,\nrepresenting the triple A and double A leagues.\nShaughnessy will take office at\nthe close of the current convention.\nOther members of the committee\nare Tommy Richardson, president\nof the Eastern League, representing\nclass A leagues, and Herman White,\npresident of the Northern League,\nrepresenting classes B, C and D.\nTwo Fans Die\nWatching Cup Play\nHAMILTON (CP)\u2014Two Hamilton fqotball . fans died Saturday\nwhile viewing the Grey Cup game\nover television.\nFrank Glenn, 64, collapsed from\nthe excitement while watching play\nin the home of friends.\nHarold Dingman, In his early 60s,\nsuffered a heart attack while watching the game at his home.\nHELPS  FLOWERS?\nMIDDLETON, England (CP) \u2014\nSmog, mixture of smoke and fog,\npleased one group here. The chrysanthemum society of this Lancashire town claimed the sulphur-\nladen atmosphere showed blooms\nat their best by preventing plant\nrust.\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian Press\nG A Pt\nHowe, Detroit     10 19 29\nLindsay, Detroit      7 19 26;\nGeoffrlon, Montreal ....   10 11 21\nReibel, Detroit      7 14 21\nKelly, Detroit     9 10 19\nSandford, Boston      4 15 19\nSloan, Toronto     4 14 18\nPearson Kickoff\nNot So Spectacular\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The official\nkickoff by External Affairs Minister Pearson at Saturday's Grey\nCup game In Toronto brought a\ndaugh Monday In the Commons,\nMils Grey Cup, Joanne Baird of\nRegina, held the ball and Pear-\nion's kick dribbled about six\nyards.\nJ. M. Macdonell (PC, Toronto\nGreenwood), raising the question\nas a point of privilege, asked:\n\"Did he have his eye on the ball\nor on Mlsi Saskatchewan?\"\nSpeaker Rene 'Beaudoln remarked It was not a question of\nprivilege.   Pearson did not reply,\nU.S. OLYMPIC\nHEAD RETIRES\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Avery\nBrundage retired Monday as president of the U.S. Olympic Association, after serving 25 years in the\npost. Kenneth L. (Tug) Wilson, commissioner of college football's Big\nTen Conference, was elected to succeed him. \u2022\nBrundage told a press conference\nhe was giving up the American post\nto devote, his full energies to the\nInternational Olympic Association.\nBrundage was elected president of\nthe international group last year\nond will serve in that capacity until\n1960.\nBrundnage; 66, said also he withdrew from the U.S. association to\nforestall any possible charge of bias\nin holding the two Jobs at the same\ntifne.\nWilson, who formerly held the\npost of vice-president in the U.S.\nassociation, was elected unanimously. Asa Bushnell of New York was\nre-elected secretary.\nDouglas F. Roby of Detroit, who\nretired Sunday as president of the\nU.S. Amateur Athletic Union, was\nchosen vice-president and R. Max\nRitter of Philadelphia was named\ntreasurer.\nThe election took place at the\nquadrennial meeting of the U.S.\nOlympic Association, during which\ncommittees were selected to handle\nthe individual sports events at both\nthe 1956 Olympics and the 1955 Pan\nAmerican Games.\nLeagues Discuss\nInterlock Schedule\nATLANTA, Ga. (AP) \u2014 The American Association Monday discussed\na proposal for an Interlocking\nschedule with the International\nLeague but took no action due to\nthe uncertain condition of the International League makeup.\nIt has been pfoposed that each\nclub take one swing around the\neight cities of the other double A\nleague. A league spokesman said,\nhowever, lt probably would be impractical if Havana should be granted membership In the International.\nUnder the proposed Interlocking\nschedule, each American Association team would'make one swing\naround the International League.\nEach International club would\nmake a similar trip. All games\nwould count In the league standings.\n 1 \u2014\nMay Seek New\nTalent in East\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014Kenny MacKenzle, co-owner of\nNew Westminster Royals in the\nWestern Hockey League, may go\neast in search of new talent.'\n.He said Monday he will decide\nafter the' Royals meet the league-\nleading Vancouver Canucks here\nWednesday night. The Royals .beat\nEdmonton Flyers 4-1 Saturday and\nMacKenzle said:\n\"If we go as gqod against Canucks, maybe It wont be necessary\nto get any replacements.\"\nMacKenzle may seek a possible\nhookup with Toronto Maple Leafs.\nThe Royals are the only team in\nminor professional hockey without\na working agreement with a National Hockey League club.\nWHL STANDINGS\nBy The Canadian Press\nW L T   F    A Pt\nVancouver   16   4 5   75   54 37\nCalgary- .....16   8 1110   65 33\nWestminster     11 11 4   78   89 26\nSeattle     9 14 4   79   89 22\nVictoria     8 11 5   66- 71 21\nSaskatoon     9 11 3   58   66 21\nEdmonton    6 16 4   67 109 16\nSENIOR HOCKEY\nWEDNESDAY\nCIVIC ARENA   8:00 p.m.\nSPOKANE FLYERS\nVS\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\nTickets on Sale\nToday - 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nCivic Centre Office\nOUT OF TOWN ORDERS PHONE 118 er 362\nMarty Marlon To\n(oach Willie Sox\nATLANTA, Ga. (AP)-taarty Marlon, who managed tha lost-place\nSt, Louis Browni in 195S, has been\nsigned as coach of Chicago White\nSox, it was announced Monday\nnight.\nMarlon.'who had piloted St. Louis\nCardinals to a third-place finish\nIn 1951 before Joining the Browns\nas a player-coach the following sea\nson, was dropped by Baltimore Ori\noles after they inherited the Browns\nlast, month, although his three-year\ncontract had another year to go.\nRoger Cramer,' who coached the\nWhite Sox last season, was dropped\nto make room for Marion. Cramer\nhad been offered another Job in the\norganization but has not yet made\nhis decision.\nIN GATOR BOWL PLAY\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -\nAuburn and Texas Tech were selected Monday to play in the Gator\nBowl football game here New Year's\nDay.\nThe Texans had a 10-1 record this\nyear and won the Border Conference title.\nAuburn, surprise team of the\nSoutheastern Conference, finished\nthe season in a tie for third place\nwith Mississippi State.\nFootball Scores\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nEast\nArmy 20, Navy 7.\nBoston College 6, Holy Cross 0.\nBoston U 41, William and Mary 14.\nVlllanova 20, Gordham 13.\nSouth\nDuke 35, North Carolina 20.\nGeorgia Tech 28, Georgia 12.\nTennessee 33, Vanderbllt 6.\nFlorida S 23, N Carolina S 13.\nMississippi 7, Mississippi S 7.\nAlabama  10, Auburn 7.\nMiami 14, Florida 10.\nLouisiana S 32, Tulane 13.\nSouthwest\nTexas Christian 13, S Methodist 0.\nOklahoma 42, Oklahoma A M 7.\nRice 41, Baylor 19.\nTexas Tech 46, Hardin Slmmin 12.\nFar Weit\nColorado 13, Calorado A M 7.\nNotre Dame 48, South Calif. 14.\nSEIXAS KNEE\nIMPROVING\nMELBOURNE (AP)\u2014Vic Selxas\nof Philadelphia is out of the Victorian tennis tournament but he\nplayed nine hard sets Monday and\nthen walked off the courts with a\nstrong step.\nThat is an encouraging item for\nthe United States Davis Cup team\nplaying its final turneup tournament before the interzone and challenge round matches.\nSeixas, holder of the Wimbledon\ncrown and one of the two players\non whom the U.S. is banking for\nthe return of the Davis Cup, bowed\nin a second-round match to Australia's George Worthington 6-3,\n6-0, 4-6, 6-8, 6-1. Then he teamed\nwith Tony Trabert of Cincinnati\nto defeat Worthington and Don\nCandy in doubles 6-4, 6-4, 4-6, 9-7.\nSeixas' knee was not fit But he\nis convinced the knee will be 100\nper cent okay with a little rest\nand warm weather.\nMcCuilough\nJoins Canucks\nVAMCOUVER (CP)\u2014Chuck McCuilough, high-scoring centre ice\nman, Joined Vancouver Canucks of\nthe Western Hockey League Monday.'\nMcCuilough, who refused to Join\nEdmonton Flyers In a deal for\nJim Uniac, was purchased from\nSaskatoon Quakers by Canuck's\nowner Coley Hall.\nHe will replade Gordte Kerr,\nthe Canuek veteran, who will be\nout of play for six weeks, the\nresult of a torn cartilage in his\nright knee.\nKenny MacKenzle, co-owner of\nNew Westminster Royals, is reported seeking Murray Parker, a\nSaskatoon  defenceman.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, DEC. 1,1953 \u2014 Sill\nSilent Game Bothered\nTouring N. York Giants\n\\\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nRolls Boll With\nHis Nose 4 Blocks\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014Blue\nBomber football fan H. W. Hall\npaid off a Grey Cup bet Monday\u2014 with \"his nose.\nLoser when Bombers went\ndown 12-6 before Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Hall rolled a football .\nwith his nose four blocks along\nthe sidewalk of Portage Ave-\n'nue.\nDressed in a buffalo coat and\nred wig, Hall used a small mobile frame to steady himself\nover the ball as he crawled\nalong followed by a big crowd\nof Joshing shoppers.\n\"Bombers will road In '54,\"\nsaid a sign on the mobile\nframe.\nIIII..II...IIIII-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nSoccer\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 British soccer\nstandings: Top five teams\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nW T L Pt\nW. Bromwlch   15 2 8 32\nWolverhampton   18 5 2 31\nHuddersfleld. T  12 3 5 27\nBurnley  ,  12 0 8 24\nBolton W  8 7 4 23\nDivision II\nLeicester C  ..... 10 7 3 27\nEverton   10 7 8 27\nDoncaster R ;.....  12 2 6 26\nBirmingham     9 6 5 24\nNottingham F   10 4 6 24\nDivision III Southern\nIpBwich T   14 6 1 34\nSouthampton  IS 2 \u00ab 28\nBrighton   12 4 4 28\nReading   12 4 5 28\nNorwich C    10 3 6 25\nDlvlilon III Northern\nPort Vale   16 4-1 36\nBradford   10 7 8 27\nGatehead     10 7 4 27\nScunthorpe V   10 6 4 26\nBarnsley   9 7 4 25\nSCOTTI8H LEAQUE\nDivision A\nQueen of S   9 1 3 19\nHearts    7 2 4 16\nDundee      6 4 3 16\nCeltic    \u00ab 3 8 15\nSt. Mirren  6 2 4 14\nDlvlilon B\nMotherwell    _..,. 10 0 3 20\nDunfermline A  7 3 1 17\nMorton    \u201e   7 2 4 16\nAlbion R  7 2 4 16\nBy OAYLB TALBOT ':Ub\nNEW YORK (AP) - The thing \u25a0\nwhich Impressed the New Yorke\nGiants most about Japanese base- '\nball was tha Impassive silence of\nthe vast crowds whclh turned out\nto witness their recent 14-game ex-';:\nhitlon tour. -1'}\nHorace Stoneham, the olub presi\"\ndent,   says   it   had   him   slightly\/,\nrattled until he got to the bottom'6\nof this strange characteristic of the\nJapanese fan. i-n\n\"I asked them about it and they1\"\ntold me,\" Stone said. \"It.seems they''\ndon't do any yelling unless their'\"\nteam ls ahead or at least tied. Up'T\nto that time our boys had been go-<..\nlng ahead right at the start, they\nexplained, so there was no chance,.\nto yell., Later on we found theyV.'\ncould make aa much noise as aity-V.\nbody \u2014 maybe more. They're really '\nnuts about tho game.\nHow else does the Japanese'\nbrand of ball differ? Well, Stone.!\"\nham recalled, the insolvent allnger\nalways went over to the bullpen .\nand tossed a few pitches before?\"'\ncontinuing to the showers; Thli\"'\nreally had the Giants winging.        '\n\"There was an answer to that\none,   too,\"   Stoneham   laid.   \"The'\npitcher ls only showing hii fans\"\nthat his arm isnt hurt and that he'll!\"\nbo ready to go again when they\nneed him.\" <.\nCOULD CATCH ON *>\u00bb\nSomeone   commented   that   our'-\npitchers had better hop* a few of\ntha tougher big league manager! *\ndo not hear of tha quaint custom.?-\nIt could give them Ideas, ,\u2022 \u2022\u25a0>.\n\"The main  thing -you. discover\nIn a hurry about tha Japanese ia\nthat  they  won't   stand  for .any,.}\nclowning,\"   Stoneham   continued.\n\"They're dead  aerloua about; th*.\ngame and they want you to plajr*.,\nlt that way. They'd rather gtt beat'\n19-0 and know we're giving.them\nour best than 2-0 if they think we're ,\neasing up.\" .'.'     .p':\nStoneham and hla manager,, Leo j\nDurocher, liked what they saw bf.^\nfour Japanese players \u2014 tyrea'\npltcheri and an lnflelder \u2014 and in,-,,,\ntend to try them out in their farmj.\nsystem next season. As a group;\ntha Giants say, Japanese pitchers .\nare for soma reason far ahead ot,.\nthe country's batters. , '\nTINY TOTS\n, 2:30-4:00 p.m.\nCHILDREN SKATINO\n4:05-3:45 p.m.\npf For easy\n\u25a0Pointer\nstarting\n'give me Chevron\nBan-Ice every time\nEven lo Hie eoldert weather, .\nfail systems ara kept' fete of lea with Chawon\nBin-Ice. Simply add It to fuel trnki In MM\nquantity shew* by chart.\nSee year Standard at B.C Ajurt today tor M\nparticulars.\nSTANDARD OIL COMPANY\nOF BRITISH COLUMBIA LIMITED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia. \"\n.. \u25a0   .-  . ...;.:\n_________________________________\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\n:\"    \u2022   \u25a0'\"   -\u25a0^\"-' \u25a0\u25a0\"     \u25a0    :\u2022\u25a0<\u25a0>\"\u25a0\u25a0     \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 .-   \u25a0.'. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022^Mfc>\n_________\n J^mmmmmmmmmmmmi\nL\nV\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\n*T\nA\nG\n_E\nN\n,T-\nB\nU\nZ.\ns\nA\nW\nY\n,E\nR\n1       _\nII\n\u25a0U\/Ul\n1\ntl'1\nJ_\n^\n\/\u00bb'W\u00ab\/HI)fW-.*UWU*,\u00ab|  \\i.tMt>WWABO*bAULMKJItMIT*\ncuf\/iA\/ _n Relieve. TUAr r au     mtiawc ucdc _.\/___..-___ a,*,\u201e?&- __<\u2022_\u25a0__ _.>__.___\u2022__\/_\/_\u2022\nmKB,Hfiie,ivtiiiemm(ssm*Mi!Mw&ir-\nst\/tar. Biioas HA&&V&M coooakpoai\n~ '    ~xccwe\/tens,:. '     '\nEvei^\/i>AYrl''s\nA HAT OR\nDRESS OR\n\u25a0 SOMETHING.'\nt\/-  *-\nuil:U _ _.\u2014 .. _..b..     . '-\nWhile a heavy-duty\nuirecker tussles with\nthehijaefctruete-\n\/ SPEED IK.....HEE-S D0--...P--FECT APPROACH\u2014 .\nANOTHER UNIQUE IAMD1NS, MR.\nSAWYER. BUT- JUST ATRIFIE (XD-\nFASHIONED. WEIA-POUR MODERN\nTRICYII'-EAR PIANES ON AU\nTHREEVWEELSt-NOTON TWO\nWHEEL. AHP THE TJUl PIPE.\n10 \u2014' NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, DEC. 1,1953\n%M\n.-:^y^iyi.my^y, j ^ .\nPERSON JO-PERSON WANT ADS\nFOR QUICK RESULTS f\n..:*\nPhone 144\nDondlino lor Claajilied Adi\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nPETERSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. G.\nL. Peterson, Riondel, B.C., at kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nov.\n27, a daughter,     .\nHELP WANTED\napplications Ark -Nvrncfl\nfor the position of Administrator\nof Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nelson. B.C. Must have outstanding executive ability, knowledge of hospital management and\nability to formulate public relations policy. Apply Box 7330,\nDally News, stating age, qualifications and salary. Applications\nmust be In Uie hands of the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nBoard not later thon 15th of\nDec, 1053.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWANTED \u2014 ONE MATRON AND\ntwo general duty nurses. Please\ngive age and experience in first\nletter. Apply Secretary of Victorian Hospital, Kaslo, B.C,\nTHREE WAlTHEStiES. \u2014 APPLY\nArmson'a Coffee Shop.\nAGENTS WANTED\nGOOD DISTRICT OPEN TO SELL\nRawlelgh products. Real opportunity. Write Rawleigb's, L1535,\nWinnipeg, Man.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED\u2014POSITION AS RECEP-\ntionist, clerking .typist, or'general office work. Box 7320, Daily\nNews.\nALL TYPES CARPE-TriCR WORK\ndone. Finishing and cabinets a\nspecialty. Phone 1140-Y evenings.\nNflaott M; NetttB\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 8 consecutive inser-\nions.\n$1.56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers He extra. Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)  NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc \u2014 20c per line,\nfirst Insertion. 16c per Una\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT. ,\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not Mora Than Listed Hera)\nBy carrier, per week.\nIn advance .. ..        3D\nBy carrier, per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month       $ 1.25\nThree montha .-    . 3.75\nSix montha       7.50\nOne year      15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month     ...._    $ 1.00 '\nThree montha -      2.75\nSix Montha       5.50\nOne year ,...'     10.00\nWhere extra postage la required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\n(Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER\nOF BEER LICENCE\nNOTICE IS HEREBY given that\non the 4th of December, 1053, the\nundersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto transfer of Beer Licence No.\n10048, issued in respect of premises\nbeing-part of a building known as\nthe Savoy Hotel, situate at 108\nBaker Street, Nelson, British Co-\nlumbie, upon the lands described\nas Lots 13 and 14, Block 01, Official\nPlan, Nelson City, in the Nelson\nLand Registry District, in the Province of British Columbia, from THe\nYorkshire & Canadian Trust Ltd.\naa executor of the estate of Glenroy\nGray Huxtable, deceased, to the\nMonte Bello Hotel Limited, the\nTransferee.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 4th day of November,\nAD. 1053.\nMonte Bello Hotel Limited,\nApplicant and Transferee.\n3-ROOM SUITE WITH BATH, ON\nground floor. Kitchen range included. Close in.-$35.00 per month.\nRobertson, Hilliard, Cat.ell Realty Co.\nCORPORATION OF    .\nTHE VILLAGE OF SALMO, B.C.\nNOMINATIONS AND ELECTION\nOF COMMISSIONERS\nNominations for two Commissioners (2 year term) will be.\ntaken at the Village Hall, Salmo,\nB.C., on Tuesday, December 3rd,\n1053 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon.\nElection (if any) will be held\nat the Village Hall on Thursday,\nDecember -10th 1853. Polling Hours\n8 a.m. to 7 p.m.\nHENRY JOHN,\n Clerk of the Village.\nPERSONAL\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-\nWrite PO Box 38. Nelaon. B.C\nv. ateAM-A BOTCH- Mb iff\nsurance Co., D. L, Ken, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE CJPJt.\nDepot Clean rooms and raaaon-\nable ratea. Vancouver, B.C\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAS8AYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n\u00a3 W. Wi\u00bbb6WS6_t S cb\u201e AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nff~g mm, BC-sT-ora; m.\nAssayor, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. B. MATES. SHE NO. 8, 3\u00bb\nBaker St.,  Nelson, Phona 1118.\nB.C. Lands Surveyor.\nS. V. SHAYLER, P.O. BOX &2,\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB.C. Land Surveyor, Engineer.\nStWt AWLBflK.!-- e61__ ST.\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED-\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 583, 324 Vernon St.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n2. Recover\nstrength .\nS. Troubled\n4. An overwhelming\nquantity,\naa faces\nt. Brag\n0. Bones\n(Anat)\n7. Man's\nnickname\n(poss.)\n(.Without\ntpea\n11. Little child\n12. Driving\nice pellets\n13. Relieves\n18. Haze\n18. Simian\nSO. Perch\nSL Cheat\n22. Turned\naalde\nsuddenly\n$3. Muser\n24. Pole\n25. Kettle\n27. Period\noftime    _ *\n29.0bnox-     \"esleiday'a Aaswef\nlouo plants     3*. Petty\n_Ht_   HHHH  UK\n'lay aaRi eibb.\ni_.___.__.   UH-J-.H-:\nHEHEia\nacasatan e\/bhb\nH!.M    l-ll_l    _1M!_\n... ,\u201ejh aiasBE\n________   .'iBIdfc!\n80. Overhead\n31. Shed, a*\nblood\nS3. God of\npleasure\n(Egypt.\nRellg.)\nquarrel\n85. Jewish\nmonth\n37. Observe\n38. Linen\nvestment\n(Eccl.)\n%\n2\nsr\ny,.\nft\n7\/.\n1\n1\n2\nI\n1\n1\nI\n1\nrr\n%\nACROSS\n1. Malayan\ndagger\n(var.)\n6. Water craft\n9. Robust\n10. Capital\n(Nor.)\n11. Capital\n(Fla.)\n14. Lubricates\n15. Man's name\n16. Music note\n17. Attempt\n18. Suitable\n19. Roman\nmoney\n10. Coin\n(Peru)\ntl. Projecting\nend of a\nchurch\nS3. Small\nbranch\nSS. Smooth\nwith an iron\n-fl.Cry.as\nan owl\n87. Long-heired\nwild ox\n(Tibet)\n18. India\n(poet.)\n29. Skin tumor\n30. Warp-yam\n-S.Man's\nnickname\n14. Large body\nof salt\nwater\n15. Dexterous\nK. Reckless\ncriminals\n39. Peruse\n40. Wash\n41. Places\n42. Raised\nDOWN\nLA seat\nDAILY CRYFrOQUOTB-Here's bow to work Itt\nAXYDLBAAXB\nbLONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L'e.x fer tha two O's, ete. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the 'words are all hints\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nJNZDOPYFZA'Y B OTH1D OBQD,\n\u2022Ray   ITSD    HDJZOPP-EDORIZSND.\nYesterday's Ciyptoquote-FOR NOT ON DOWNY PLUMES,\nNOR UNDER SHADE OF CANOPY REPOSING, FAME IS\nBUb<t>u_. hu ttum felon* amUaUa\n1\n1\nm\nRENTALS\n2 CLEAN, WARM HOUSEKEEP-\ning rooms, to'quiet working or\nbusiness woman. Available Dec.\n1st. 824 Silica St. Phone mornings, 335-X.\nFOR RENT - BUILDING SUIT-\nable for storage or. workshop.\nApproximately 600 sq. ft. Lights,\nwater and can be heated. Lane\nentrance. Phone 203.\nFOR RENT\u2014STORE OR OFFICE\nspace. Approximately 1200 sq. ft.\nHeated building; good location.\nPhone 527 days..or 703-R eves.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2 APARTMENTS, 1\nwith private bath, 1 with semi-\nprivate bath. Furnished, steam\nheated. Phone 197-X. Also 2\nsingles. Strathcona Hotel.\nFOR RENT\u20142-ROOM SUITE AND\nbath, furnished, heated, - with\nelectric stove. Apply 711 Victoria\nStreet.\nMODERN 3-ROOM COTTAGE -\nPartly furnished, on North Shore,\n3 min. from ferry. Apply Con\nCummins; phone 1623-L-2.\nLAKESIDE BUNGALOW CABINS.\nOne or two rooms with' double\nbeds. Cook and heat by' propane\ngas. \u2014 Phone 864.\nFOR RENT\u2014LOG CABIN; ALSO\n4-room apartment. No children.\nApply Miss M. Wyman, Ymir.\nTWO HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS-\nSingle men. Phone 1564-X, 810\nVictoria Street.\nBEDROOM - FOR RENT \u2014 BUSI-\nness man preferred. Apply 410\nVictoria Street.\nFOR RENT\u20142-ROOM SEMI-FUR-\nnished apartment. Kitchen privileges. 813.Stanley Street.\nFOUR ROOM APT. FOR RENT \u2014\n915 Observatory St. Apply downstairs.\n3-ROOM APARTMENT WITH\nbath. Adults only. 904 Edgewood\nAvenue.\nLARGE FURNISHED HOUSE-\nkeeping room for 1 or 2, sharing.\nAllen Hotel, 171 Baker St\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS FOR\nrent. General heat. Electric stoves\nNorth Shore Motel, Phone 1684.\nPERMANENT RESIDENT WANTS\nto rent family home. Ph. 1750-L.\nUNFURNISHED   SELF-CONTAIN-\ned suite for rent Phone I778-L.\nCOSY BEDROOM FOR TWO. -\n214 Victoria Street\nTHREE-BEDROOM    HOUSE    ON\nGranite Road. Phone 360-R-2.\nWARM BEDROOM FOR RENT \u2014\nClose in. Phone 653-R.\t\nWARM BEDROOM FOR RENT\nPhone 396-Y after 12 noon.\n2-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT \u2014 814\nVictoria Street.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nTALKING BUDGIE BIRD WITH\ncage and gadgets. $18.00. Phone\n1617-L.\nSPRINGER PUPS FOR CHRIST-\nmas. Deposit will hold. Terms.\nApply Box 8230, Daily News.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nQueen's Bay\nLodge     \/\nOwing to illness, the owner of\nthis fine Summer Resort has '\nauthorized us to sell this splendid property. 14.7 acres with\n660 feet water frontage. Main\nbuilding has owner's suite of.\nfive rooms, bathroom; with 9lx>\nfurnished guest rooms. Electricity, pressure water and\nsteam heat. Store, coffee shop\nand gas pumps. Also three furnished cottages. fig\nFULL PRICE ONLY\n$25,000\nTERMS\nOr  Substantial Reduction for\nAll Cash. \u2014 Exclusive.\nMcHARDY\nAgencies Limited\nPhone 135 - Eves., 620-Y\n,\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nOffers in writing will be received\nby the undersigned up to 4:00 p.m.\nWednesday, the 2nd December,\n1053, for the following described\nproperty: ,. .\n\"Parcel No. 3 (D,D. 76273-1) *of\nLot 8370, Kootenay District.\"\nThis property is near Taghuht\nand includes a small cabin.\nTerms of sale\u2014Cash.\nThe  highest  or  any  offer  not\nnecessarily accepted.\nThomas G. C. Fox,\nCourthouse, Nelson, B.C., ''\u25a0\nAdministrator ot the Estate of\nAlexander S. McLennan,, Deceased.\nFOR SALE-MODERN, NEWLY-\ndecorated 2-bedroom house. Situated on 2 lots. Automatic oil\nheat, wired for electric range.\nRevenue from self-contained\nbasement suite would meet half\nof monthly payments. Full price:\n$6800.00. $2500.00 wiH handle. \u2014\nPhone 1333-X\nFOR SALE \"\u2014 NEW 3-BEDROOJ_\nhouse. Good location. Cash or\nterms arranged. Box 7822, Da%\nNews.\nFOR SALE \u2014NELSON'S FINES'-'\n'  3-bedroom bungalow. 3 years old. I\nPrice reduced- for quick salt. \u2014\nApply 1501 Kootenay Street.,,\nFOR SALE \u2014 MODERN 3-BBD-\nroom house close to school, good\nlocation, in Creston. Write Box\n906, Creston, B.C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - RONSON LIGHTER. tt\u00bb.\nscriptlon Phil Edwards on on*\nside, and initials A.P.E. on other\nside.. Sentimental value. Reward.\nPhone 957-R.\nLOST, ON NORTH SHORE - i\nkeys in black change purse. Find- \u25a0\ner please  return te Box  7574,\nDaily News.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... \"\u00abo on the im*.\n(Pacific Standard Time\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1953\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:15\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sports Corner\n9:00\u2014Earl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Riders of the Purple Sage\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Visit\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Invitation To the Waltz\n11:00\u2014Morning Musical\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00\u2014Noon Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Chatting With the Listeners\n1:00\u2014Man In tbe Kitchen\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Fairview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varletiea\n4:15\u2014Barney Potts Show\n4:.30\u2014The Oriole's Nest .    .\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime Story TeHer\n5:00\u2014Report From Parliament H*\n5:05\u2014Pacific News\n5:15\u2014Int. Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the News\n5:25\u2014Spotlight On a Star\n5:45\u2014Sports  News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00-Tell Me Doctor\n6:15-Here's Health\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melodr\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-Music Hall\n8:00\u2014None But the Brave\n8:15-Talk\n9:00\u2014Mr. Showbusiness\n9:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014African\" Adventure\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time\nWEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1953\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40-iMoni_n> Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News \u2022\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfait Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News   _ommentary\n9 15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning! Visit\n10:15-rThe Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\nll:00-Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and Mis Music\n12:15-CBC News\n1__:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30   I'arm   Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afte noon  Concert\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3 15\u2014Bravo Voyage\n8-30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:15-Other Voices, Other Places\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Music Picture Lady\n\u20225:00\u2014Lyrical Lady\n2:15\u2014International Commnetary\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Rawhide\n5:55\u2014Have You Heard\n6.00\u2014Neighbourly News\n6:15\u2014Melodic Strings\n8:45\u2014Intro,  to  Wednesday Nigh'\nf:00\u2014News\nf:15\u2014I-'ows  Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Pier-Head  Yarns\n9:30\u2014Whisky Johnny\n1000\u2014News\n10:15\u2014My First Novel\n10:30\u2014Music of Schumann\n .\n,   : '  \u25a0    -   .'-; ',\u25a0\u2022'     :'-.-\u2022    \u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0\n spp^ypppp\n3cD.\nPHONE 144\nDoadllne tot Claiilfiid Adi\u20145 p,m,\nFOR 1ALI MIICILUNIOUS\nI\n'EAUDRS IN ALL TYPES Of\nused equipment, mill, mini and\nlogging lupplleii now and used\nwir* rope, pipe , ind (Ittlngsi\nchain, steel plate and shapes \u2014\nAtlas Iron dl Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior 8t\u201e Vancouver, 8,0 Phone\nPaaifie eaBT.\t\nTOR SALE \u2014 ONE ONLfn.'\nBeaver table saw, plus motor,\nPerfect condition. -Value $170.00)\n1 I will Mil far-I1M.00, y.l-1 160.\nW.  -OFFER   YOU  THE   FINEST\nselection of musioal instrutninti\n- in Canada. Melody Musie, PQ,\nDrawer- 180. Nelson.\nfsoxtWffi-iiFBsrwooa,\nlfl-ln, \u00ab60Qi 11 .lii, $17,00. Write\nV. J. Kosiancic, Crescent Valley,\nor \u2022 phone Kosianeje.     \t\nI  tciT<JH\u00abN SINK PJPK, Hi ANO\n)   Vi,  electric  radio,  new  ohromi\nkitchen   set. -Phone  396-Y  after\n12 noon.\nSpeolal low prices  Aetlve Trad\ning Co.. 985 E Cordova St. Van\ncouver\nfcRESS    WART    REMOVER-\nLeaves no scars.    Your druggist\nsells CRESS.\nyflnrcMHam-Ag1 ewwBgifB\ndoilles,    tablecloths    and    bed-\nspreads, phone 1818-L,\t\nFULL   PANEL   DOUBLE'   BED,\n complete; Winnipeg eouch, play\npent Baboo Tcnda, Phont <69-L,\n|08\"\"\u201eAEE- BIO\" TORCH OIL\n.  stove. Phone IH-L-2.\nFOR\" SALE - WALNUT BUFFET.\ny\u00bbPhBne019;R-after 8:30 p;m.\nB\u00abWA\u00a5 BmBttlCA-tSTd 710,\n\"not .gated, jss.oo. Phone 1882-Y\n1  \u2014Apply Box 7848. Dally News.\nI H.P. ELECTRIC MOTOR: TOR\n.-\u25a0sale,-Phone-1368.L-2,\nCOLEMAN OH. BtATiiH AND\ndraft booster, \u2014 Phoni \u00bbja-X,\n|5}_ SALE^FAmBANXS-MORIE\noir heater, M.Wyman, Ymir, BC.\nAUTOMOTIVl\nMOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES\n..FOR SALE\n;.' Surplus LflBBina Equipment\nTWO 5-6 TON loaGINO TRUCKS\nFour-wheel drive, highway licenced\u2014 Complete . with   water   tanks,\nstake bunks, air-brakes, with log-\nn trailers to match,\nNE TON PICKUP TRUCK\nFour-Wheel Drive\nONE TON WILLYS JEEP\nFour-Wheel Drive\nTWO CAMP TENDER' TUC5S\nTat Further Particulars. Apply\n:,..\u00abir.:Fojt..Offl_eBQvl71, \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n\u25a0ST -'      North Vancouver   '\n- ,    Phone North 196\n.-ATTENTION\n^TRUCKERS\nA 1943 White Logger\n.... . and Trailer'\n\u2022 Damaged by Fire \u2014 Located at\nSINNERUD TRUCK & TRACTOR\nNelson, B.C.\nOpen for Salvage Bids\n-f-,        jfnhifi(t Bid to\n\u2022'\u2014Indusiwal -Acceptance\nCorporation\n560 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n-.\u00bb_-i-,_\u00ab\u00ab mm^mimm '.' m* . - mm*-m+.\nSACRIFICJNO,'48 STUDEBAKER\nChampion    .-door    sedan    with\noverdrive, heater tnd radio; 35.-\n(00 mileage, fiaoo or best offer.\nPhone 209.\t\nFOR SALE\u2014 I8-TtfUICK CUSTOM\nSedan. Only i months eld. Driven\nonly 5000 miles, Full prlcp: J30O0,\nTerms! and can bi financed, \u2014\nPhone 1661.\n.FflrsUUMW CHEV, COACH,\ntorpedo -node), Heater and radio,\n$1275.00. Can be. seen at ISO Vic.\ntoria Strilt     . \t\nFOR SA-.JM950 DODOE PANEL,\nGood price, Apply Frank Kavic,\nRobson, B,<3-\nMACHINERY\nRAMP\nBody and Fend.' Works\n\u2022Plstributori Ton\nPhil Wood hydraulic hoists md\nbodies (or truck or trailer I\ntypos, 90 mod-is t. te 40 tons\ncapacity Pumps power take-\noffs, universal*  etc\nPhono IM      MB Jospphlno St\nNelson. B.C.\nNATIONAL MACHINBRV CO\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTOR!)  fOR:  WINING\nSAWMJU- LOOomO AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries invited\nGrrwllf lulend  Vanenuvei 1  BC\nBUSINSSS OPPORTUNITIBJ\nUIVISTOCK. MULTRY AND\nPAOM iUffllH, ITC.\nBUY VOUR 9ABY CHICKS THIS\nfair from the Appleby Poultry\narm, Mission City. 0,0 Wr have\nover 7000 oKtromolv healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own form Our btby chlck.\nari produced only Iram our own\n.tooll In White LeghOrm, White\nnoons, Now  Hampihlrei md\nCrosses Catalogue on rpnuosl\nFOR   &ALJMI   MONTHS \"\"OLD\nbull. Apply F. Seprlkan; Blewett,\n'\u25a0_ --__^!5..y^llh|J!!1.\nESwHTTSffiJcS TJT53wn . -\nThi Diamond electric portable\nsewing machine, with rivirse\nstitch, round bobbin; only 583,50.\nUnion Siwing Machine Co. -\nrhpni_l.au, 308 Baker Street,\nWANTID   MISC-UANiOUS\nWANTED- CLEAN <5 OW \u00a7_.\nrggs. 12c Ib Must be 19 inahes\nsquare or more. Daily News\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n*mr*-e*mw*r+*'*\nTODAY'S SPECIAL\n1953 Chrysler\nWindsor Sedan\nOnly 9800 Miles. New Car Guarantee. Beautiful Two-Tone. \u2014\nShowroom Fresh. Torque Drive.\n$600 SAVING\nPEEBLES\n^MOTORS  1\n.FAR^OvWfo\/-TIR.E. \/\/\/\nTLu. fOVO \"Moii. 'h 1 ^\n\"tt1ll_lllltt_..l..*l_|\niitiitim<i\u00ab<\u00bbi\u00abi\nIHt.llllltllMIIKnil.llt\n43 -\nJ3\u00bb\nU,I8\n...,uv\n,u\n1.10 :\n1,88\n,11.\n4,18\n,n\n^RON*^ STOCKS\n. !  (Closing frlees)\n,MlN_8-r^V\n'Acadia Uranium\nAmerican IT K .\nAnglo Buronlan\nAfmtitlM ,v,. *\"\nAurtw^ud \u25a0\u00ab\"\u25a0\nAunor , .\u201e'\u201e.,,\nBarvmln ;,\u201e\u201e,\u201e\nBan Mitali ,\u201e\nBeiietirn -,-\u201e,\nBeviourt \t\nBobio, \u201e;.\u201e;.\u201e\nBoyhtir' Oold\nBralorne\nBroulan\nBuff c\u00bbn\nCallffan\t\nCampbell B h \u201e\u201e\nCan Mai\nCentf al Poro \u201e ,, \u201e\u201e\nChestervllle  ,\u201e \u201e\u201e\nChime O \u201e\t\nCons.M ba ;,_\t\nCohwoit ,\t\nCons Plsoevery\nCrolnor '\u201e:\t\nDelta'n _.\u201e.,\u201e.,\u201e\nDome \u201e\nDonald* \u201e \u201e.\nDuvay '.,\u201e\nEaBt Malartie ..\nEast Sulllvm \u2022\u2022\nEast Metai\u00ab \t\n__tella\nFaloonbrldie '.,\nFroblshir . .\u201e<...\nGiant Yel\ni.t1|ll1t||iirt|l<\"<mt\n\u2022y.itit.H.Htt1n1.1n.11...\n'ttfii-iiniitnnltt,t'.tittit\n: wiT ,\"\"\n(mti'ittiitim\ns\n1,18,\n1,10'\n,11\n,10\n7,00\n,11\n.11-.\n,11\n'1,11\n14,80\n1,10\n1,01\n-I\n,17\n14,71\n,11\n,17\n-.88\n3,88\n1.21\n.23\n18.78\n4,70\n1,40\nGod;s L\u00bbka .:...^y^.^y.   \"M *|\nGoldorest\nGolden Manltou\nHarrloani .,\u201e \u201es.\nHollinger \u201e\t\nHomer Y K  :.,:....-\t\nInspiration   ,\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e \u201e\nInt Nickel -    37.85\n.1014\n180\n,1014\n,,21\n11.78\n.95\n1.90-\nffOMPlete'sawmSl ANiToUT.\nfit for sale, with timber and mora\navailable, including one D8 cat,\nwith winch and cable blade. One\nS4600 unit and sawmill, \u25a0 two\niiipir-twln J.E.L. phaln iawi,\nOood tie contract to go with salt,\nCm be financed, Dissolving part-\n. .-oe'rahip, Write Morgan & Thomai,\nAthalmer, B.C., or phone 6-F.\nPOPUUR 'HiROOM M6WHM\nhotel, plus two a-room suites,\nsample rm. and cafe service, well\nSituated In progressive Interior\n\" city, and showing excellent re.\nturn on Investment. For this and\nother attractive business opportunities, write Box 7596, Daily\nNews.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Trading continued its rally with rising prices\nfound in all sections of the list,\nMclntyre led Canadian stocks on\nthe upside. It was followed by\nDistillers Seagram and International\nNickel.\nTORONTO (CPl\u2014Frioe groups\nwere  mostly  higher In  moderate\ntrading toward.the- elose,\n- Western- oil?--wrttmwd- to lead,\nfollowed hy. ban metals and in.\nduitrlals.' Ooldi had a nominal\nloss. Uraniumi were a little higher,\nMONTREAL (CP)-Prlces continued their forward trend during\nquiet trading,\nMiscellaneous Induitriali, papers,\nbeverages, senior metals, steel and\nbanks wan highir while utilities,\nsenior oils and carriers were mixed,\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Stock mar<\nkets wen vory quiet with interest\nmainly confined to selected issues,\nGovernment geguri.es win unchanged while there -were lew\nchanges among industrials,\nOils attracted a few buyers and\nslipping Issues wore  firmer,\nVancouver Stock.\n(Oleilni Prices!\nMINI!\nBoaver Lodga M\nBralorne .          3,00\nCanuaa 04\nearlboo Gold 01\nEstella  II ty\nGiant Mascot        .45\nHighland Bell 35\nKenvjlla .,.,.,       .05\nPac Eastern Gold U\nPioneer Gold      1.40\nPremier Border ,\u201e      ,05y\u00bb\nQuatsino    .  , ,.      ,19\nReeves Mae   ,      1,47\nSheep Creek  50\nSherritt Gordon' ,    4,50\nSilver Standard ,     .'0\nUtlca 01\nVan Rol  m\nWestern Tungsten '0\nYele ,... S\u00ab\nOILS\nAnglo Can       <B6\nA P Cons iW.\nCal Si Ed \u25a0    11-00\nCalmont  ,     1.09\nCan Anaconda  -.,      .14\nDalhousie  18\nHome        7,00\nMercury  H\nNational Pate      1,82\nOkalta Com    1,80\nPac Pete ,   ' 8-78\nRoyalite  , ,    12-78\nVanalta 19\nVulcan , V-     -30\nINPUST.IA-8\nCapital Estates   25.85\nInt Brew B    ,      4.80\nJol!ot Que\nKerr Addison.    ,\u201e\nKlrk-Hudson.Biy ,\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLabrador .    -.,:\u201e\u201e\u201e\nLake Dufault,.,\t\nLakeshore- .\u201e\nLeitch        .\t\nLineman (new!\t\nMacasss    \t\nMaoDonald  .,\nMacLeod Cock ,\nMadsen R.fc\t\nMslartlo 0 F\t\nMclntyre Fore \t\nMeXmili n L\t\nMoneta v\nNew Alger ,\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Goldvue ,..\nNew Kelpre   \t\nNew Larder U \t\nNaw Mylamaque\nNlpisslng\t\nNoranda\t\nNormetals ,\u201e. ,\u201e\nNorth Inca ...........\nOgama\t\nOsjsko\t\nPaymaster   \u201e...\u201e\nPlokli Crop, .,,\t\nPlacer pavelop ,\u201e.\nPreston JS P . .1\t\nQuebeo Lab . \t\nQuebec Man \t\nQueenston ,,.,_\t\nQuemont \u201e-, \u201e\t\nColearv Livestock\ncalgary (\u00ab\u25a0) - Cattle ind\neelves 1614 with e liberal run off\ntrucks expected. Cattle market\nslow; good to near ohoiee butehers\nand heifers fully 80 cents lower,\nwith fair to medium kinds down\nabout IL Last week's total sales of\n8401 cattle and calves Was a rec,\nor'd.   .\nGood te neir choice butcher\nsteers 80 cents lower, at 17 to 19,\ncommon to medium 10 to 16,50; good\nbutcher heifers 18 to 18, eammoit\nto medium 10 to 14,75; ggod cows\n8,80 to 8 95, common to medium\n7.25 to 8.25; canners and cutter 5\nto 7; good bulls 9 to 9.50, common\nto medium 7.80 to 8,78; good stocker\nand (coder steers 15 to 10, common\nto medium 10 to 14.78.\nGrade A hogs closed last week\nat 99. Sows 18.95 to 16.50 liveweight,\n21.IQ to 21.40 dressed.\nGood lambs 19 to 19.75.\na**\"\n_>ehe 1.1 .-;. ..\u201e','\u201e;\u201e\u201e;\nSlan Antonio ,\u201e'  '.,;\u201e\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilver-illler \t\nSHaneo ., ,.-..,\nSlscoe \t\nSteep Rock ,\t\nSudbury Cent ..,,..\u201e,\u201e...\nSurf Inlet  :,\t\nSylvmlte ,v,\t\nfeck flugh'as    \u201e,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\nThompson-Lund .,.\u201e\u201e\u201e\nTomblll \".... i\t\nTorbrlt .-..,.' .\u201e\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Canadi \t\nViolamao       \t\nWaite Amulet \t\nOIL*\nAnglo Can    ,.\t\nB A Oil   ,.,-\u201e\t\nCal & Ed  , ,\nCalmont  .-.., .-.\t\nCdn Atlaoile .....\nCentral Ledue \u201e\t\nCentral Explorers \t\nChemical Research\t\nDal Rio        :.-._\nFederated Pete ',\t\nHome,,       ,\u201e;\u201e\u00bb,\t\nImperial Oil      17-50\n,11\n11.00\nm\n\u25a0sm\n1,00\n,\u00abs\n1,10\n,88\n.11\n1,41\n.80\nMO\n1.78\n1.88 -\n84,00\n.38\n\u2014At'\n.nv,\n.42\n'   .19\n.11\n' 1.21\"\n\u25a0S1V4\n1.44\n62.75\n2.80\n-  ,18\n.1.'.\n,40\n,\u00bb\n1,01\n17,18\n1,50\n.11\n.70\n.18\n18,00\n-,.8t\n,10\n1.80\n4,88\n,78\n,1714\n.80\n8,80\n,194)\n,18\n1,11\nMSI\n,    .18\n,98\n1,11\n0,90\n1.03\n1,97\n9.75\n5.00\n\u25a020,35\nll.M\n1.1*\n1,15\n1.05\n4,18\n1.70.\n'.1.48\n3,911\n.1.03\nRuss Gold Shipments Discourage\nMany Canadian Exporting Firms\nW HAROLD  MORRISON\nOanedlan .nil Itaff-Wrlttr\nWell-qualified Canadian experts\nfeerit would take more thin all\nthe gold In Russia to crack the\nofficial market for the yellaw metal.\nBut Irioreased shipment! elUva-\nMin fold, particularly Into European centres, have aroused owloiHy\nIn Ottawa end other world capitals-\nReports are that heavier supplies\nfrom Soviet vaults, combined with\nDulles Welcomes\nTalks wllh Russ\nPac Pete .\n9.15.\nRoyalite\" Z........ .-..   12.50-\nRoxana\nUnited Otis \t\nINDUSTRIAL!\nAbltlbl .\nAlgoma Steel ...\nAluminum\nAtlas Sf\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian \t\nB C Kleo 4s \t\nB C Elec 4lis.\n,1514\nII\nm\n17\n48V4\n1214\n*n\n\"4\n79\n91V4\nb c roreVt\"  ..;....:......;.'.    SHJ\nB C Power A\nBurrard A      .....\nCan Cement\nCan Packevi 8\t\nCan Steamships \u201e\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nCan Briwerles\t\nCan Canners\nCan Car b Fdy ,\u201e\nCan Car * Fdy A\nCan Celanese\t\nCan Oil     \u201e. -.-.\t\nCan Pac Rly .,..,\t\nDlst Seagram \t\nDom Foundries.\nII\n7V4\n,1\n79\n20'.\n29\nnv,\n22V4\n12M\u00bb\n22'^\n28H\nm\nDom Stee!|& Coal \u00bb \u2014    Htt\nDom Tar Ss Chem\nDem Textiles\nDom Magnesium\t\nFamous Players \t\nFcrd.A ... \t\nGitineeu\nGsttniiu 5% pld -\u201e\nGoodyga; pfd    \t\nGreat tikes\t\nGypsum Lime -\t\nImpi'til Oil \u201e\t\nImperial Tobacco ...\nInt Nickel\nLake of Woodi\t\nLoblaw A\t\nUblaw B ,. \u25a0\".,\u201e-\nMaple Uaf' Milling\nMassey'Harris. :\"\nMcColl Frontenoc .,\nMoore Corp\nNat Steel Car \u201e\t\nPowell River. ,\u201e,,\nPoNver Corp    \t\nRuss industries \u201e\t\nshawl nlgan     \u201e\nSouthpm\t\nSteel.-of Canada -\u201e-,.\nStandard Paving \u201e\u201e\nUnion Gas of Can \u201e\nUgited Steel\n7^4\n12>^\nJ0\u00bb,',\n8214\n20%\n101\n48\n19H\n34\n27^4\n10(4\n35%\n\u00bb\\4\n41\n7J4\nISH\n18\n87^\n14%\nsm\n1744\n10H\nWAIHINOTO-* (APl-Statt fee\n!!_?. *_ i?\"1\"1 \u00ab,M *WW *e\nUnited States weuld \"weleomi ep-\npertunitlii to settle apeeltlo disputes\" with Russia, but tha conference table should not he considered \"11 I nlaee where we surrender eu* principles.\"\nTestifying hetere \u2022 special House\nof Reprasentetlves committee in-\nyestigatlng the leisure by Russia\nof Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia,\nDulles referred lndlraetly ta a\nSoviet bid tor 1 Big Pour foreign\nministers conference in Berlin.\nTO-ENB A-RA\u00ab!I\n\"W* approach a possible meeting with tha representatives of the\nSoviet Union,\" he said, \"I ean assure you that we welcome opportunities to settle ipeelfle disputes\nbetween use) te end the race in\narmament, particularly atomic armament, and to reduce the risks of\nwar,\n\"But. let me also assure you of\nthis,\" hi iddid, \"Wi de not look\nen thi conference table is a place\nwhira we surrender eur principles,\nbut rather as 1 place lor miking\nour principles prevail,\"\n      <\nSoys Two-Way Gas\ntradt Would Help\nBuild Up Markets\nTORONTO, <ePV\"-r John iR,\nWhite, president el Imperial Oil,\nUd-,, 'aid Monday thet two-way\nInternettonel trade in natural gas\nwill help build markets and keep a\npipa line full.\n- In an address delivered to the\nCatadian Club he gave this is one\nof thrie principles which he felt\nessential to a - saUafaptory - solution\nof the problem of marketing Ca\nnadian western gas,   -\nThe other principles were:\n\"Urge volume Is essential to\nmoving gas long distances it low\neo|tj md markets should be hunt\nup In advance if 1 largo-volume\npipe line Is te-be launched effective,\nly,\"\nHe said neither he nor Imperial\nare backing, financially or other,\nwise, any specific plpi lint proposal,\nNSW PROPOSAL\nAfter outlining \u2022 proposal fer an\nill-Canadian pipe line supplying\nonly Canadian points, md with ne\nadditional natural gas allowed inte\nthe eastern area frem Canadian\nsources, Mr, White said a new pro.\nSesil \"hu found fiver .with \u2022 num<\nor ,o< economists.\"\nThis weuld involve a 18-lneh in.\nstead of 1 30-lnoh pipe, It would\nrun frem Alberta through Regina,\nWinnipeg and northern Ontario to\nNorth Biy, when it would divide,\nsending branches to Montreal vii\nOttawa-and to Niagara Falls via\nToronto,\n\"A spur line would run -torn Win.\nnlpeg- to the Minneapolis area, Thi|\nUna, and that to Nlargara falls,\nweuld permit the export ot gn, on\n\u2022r. 'intirruptihle' basis, to the Unit,\ned states, Import of gas from the\nUnited States would take place un.\ntil the pipe line was eempleted.\"\nPRICE COMPARISON .\nEstimated eest of this prelect\nwould bl 1388,000,000 cgmpared\nwith -1300,000,000 for the no-export\nline, and many people might find\nit hard te understand why an industry can he \"gleemy\" about the\n16wer-cost line and \"happy\" about\nthe .other.\n('The answer Is b?sed en1 the eeo.\nnomic philoitphy involved. The\neastern market for gas ls at present\na potential one, The demand is\nthere, But how miny hemis have\nthl facilities te use itt\n\"The later md larger proposal\ntakes thl view that the temporary\nuse ofu.g. gi's, by attracting new\ncust.mors end developing the mir-\nkit, win further the development\net 1 Canadian pipe Una.\n\"A line to an established matket\nwould surely be easier t9 finance\nthan if It led to a piece where a\nmarket was expected to appear, but\nmight not materiallM for a year or\ntwo after completion,\n\"The 36-lnch.llne \u2014 with extensions \u2014 promises to handle about\ntwice as much gas is the 30-inch\nline. It could do tha job at a lower\ncost, assuring bitter prices fer both\nconsumer and produeer.\"\nU.S. Business Man\nKidnapped, Manila\nMANIU .AP><-Th\u00bb defence de.\npertinent disclosed Mondiy in American saw mill maniier wis kidnapped by Communist Huk nurlllM\nNov, 17 ind wu being held fer a\\l'\n000 ransom. The manager was Idon-\ntt. id il Jamas FMter, The BS,\nembassy ii'd it hid not been informed ef the incident,  -\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNI- HXi   (CP)' - Winnipig\ngrain cash prices:\nOats-No. 1 feed, 6814,\nBirley-No, 1 feed, 0OV4,\nother economic developments 'have\nresulted In ia sharp prioo drop in\nthe lh'_\u00bbUed ftee and Wick merl\nkef-overseas, v.\nPrices m these markets, which\ngater mostly tq private hoarders,\nran as high as 160 an ounce lit post.\nwm years, Recently prices drewtrt\nte about a fraction oi a dollar higher than the official price of S?a an\n.ounce (U.S, funds).\nThis decline has discouraged Canadian exporters. The federal government allows exports of debased\nnon-monetary gold inte free markets, hut mines involved are ineligible ter subsidies,\nRBTURN POR SUSSIDIfS\nMost mines whloh gave up the\nsubsidies ter the high-priced free\nmarkets now hive returned to their\nformer status,\nCanadian experts say these tic\ntors ire Involved in the sharp price\ndrepi\n1, Saslng ot international tensions-\nBorne hoarders are attracted te geld.\nwhen they fear the destruetlen of\nnational currencies .through wer,\n8, Fewer buyers, Chine waavence\na hla Week market for geld. Apparently the Had regime is cracking\ndown on .hoarders,   '\n1, Increased world supplies, Including that trom Russia,\nThe movement of RUMlgn gold\nInto western . urepe coincides with\nRussia's reported new policy ofV concentrating on heavier production\nanoT Imports ot consumer goods.\nThough the.exact extent of the\nSoviet geld stockpile h unknown\nIt his been reported repeatedly in\ntho Western wov)d as possibly\namong the world's largest,\nShe may be using the gold to buy\ncurrencies of other eountrlei In\norder, to import more consumer\ngoods, Or- she may be using the\ngold as a tool te depress the west\nem economy as part ef baste Communist policy to overthrow capital\nism,\nQualified Canadian experts ire\nlneline,d te the former view.\n\"It weuld tike more than ill the\ngold in Russia to break the basic\nprieC \u25a0\u25a0 Iff 'win- slid.' \"\"\nShow Declines\noS_TAW_f (CP)\u2014The number of\nAmerican; visitors and returning\nCanadians:' entering Canada from\nthe United States by rail, bus,, beat\nand plana Ih the tlrst three-quarters of this year declined 9.5 per\noent to 2,909,718 from the corresponding' period last year,' the bu\nreau of statistics reported Monday.\nArrivals of U.S. visitors in the\nJanuary-September period dropped\n3 per oent to 1,180,871, while the\ntotal'for returning Canadians was\nalso down.\n8AH8 -   .   ..     ...\n6en\u00abral Meters division In Pan-\nIda li.i-.is S. walkir of Kit oh-\nemr, new ti make his Hied-\nquarters In Qshnwa, Thi niw\ndivision will sell, distribute and\nservice passenger coaches af QM\nminufaelure.\n  ion Dividends\n  IM41         By Thi Canadian Prm\n  ail.     British   Columbia   Slectrie  Co,\n,.,\u201e\u201e\u201e. 88    m\u201e 4 per oent pfd. Hi 4% per cent\n  1244 pfd. 11.18, Jan. 2, record Dec. .15; 5\nWe.ton George   3314 per cent nfd. 88 cents, Jan. 2 record\nWinnipeg Gas   81., Dec. 16.\nStrike Affects\nN.Y.Dai-e.\nNEW YORK (A1.-A union\nmembership meeting was called fer\nMonday in the photo engravers'\nstrike which has closed-down six\nmajor New Yojrk City newspapers,\nand - a union spokesman said none\nof the three struck afternoon papers\ncould be published,\nThe Herald Tribune, tho only\nprincipal newspaper not affected\nby the strike,, published a streamlined eight-page edition with a\npress run estimated at 2,500,OM\nstepped up from about 300,000,\nThe Monday meming editions of\nthe Times, Daily News and Daily\nMirror did not appear. The struck\nafternoon papers are the Warld-\nWegram and The Sun, Journal-\nAmerican and Post.\nTelevision and radio stations in-.\ncreased the length and frequency\nof their news broadcasts,\nHerald Tribune engraving is done\nby an outside commercial firm,\nand the newspaper is not involved\nin tha dispute between the publishers ana Local I of the AJT.\nInternational Photo Engravers\nUnion,\nThe six newspapers were forced\nto elose, down because members\nof other unions, including mechanical and other' eraft, and editorial\nand business department workers,\nhave respected the photo engravers'\npicket lines.\nThe photq engravers, who struck\nearly Saturday In a dispute over\ntheir demands for a wage Increase\nand other' benefits, make metal\nplates for the reproduction of pictures and Illustrations on newsprint.\nThe combined circulation of the\nstrike-bound newspapers is more\nthan 5,000,000. The strike of 400\nphoto engravers idled about M.OOO\nnewsnaper employees.\nMiLSON PAILY NEWS, TUI8DAY, Die. 1,1953 \u2014 11\nMoscow's Leading Hotel Provides\nGuests With All Home Comforts\n'       |y  BILL  B088 y\n,   Canadian Presi Iteff Writer .-'\nMOSCOW (CP)\u2014Georgl Malenkov, the Soviet prima minister, may\nhe my erpupd-the-corner neighbor.\nMy ropm is in the Metropole\nHotel, by the Kremlin whose brooding red-brick walls dominate the\nheart of Moscow. But no ona seems\nto know whether Malenkov, like\nhis predeeesjor Stallp, llyes in the\nKremlin of has an apartment elsewhere in the city . \u2022\nThe Metropole ls on one side of\nSvorlov square, Moscow's' theatre\ndistrlot. The square's main building is the 180-year-old Grand Opera\nHouse, known to Russians as the\nBalghol theatre and national home\npf opera and ballet.\nOther buildings facing the square\nare the Uttle theatre, the Children's\ntheatre and Kagenevleh underground station. Just eft it ire the\npalace of the trade unions, a gambling easlno in the old days where\nearlier this year Stalin's body lay\nin state, md thi building ot the\nSoviet ministries,\nThe Metropole should hive 1 cosmopolitan flavor, m guests ire\nof ill oelers and represent most of\ntho \"political groupings In the world,\nTRANSIENT FOREIGNERS\nIt is one of thl three hotels\nwhich the state uses tor transient\nforeigners and I tew foreign residents. The others ara the modern\nHotel Moscow, ahd the National\nHotel where bentn lived briefly\nbefore moving Into the Kremlin.\nThe Metropole's only claim to\nfame apparently ii that Moo.tse\nTung, president of Red China, once\nentertained Stalin there. It is stuffy\nand drab, like a large-steed \"family\nhotel\" in London's Kensington district and no more exciting,\nA sitting room 20 feet by 15, the\ncelling 10 feet high, with a small\nalcove for sleeping costs 48 rubles\na .day (\u00bb!!,\u00bb at the official exchange rate), There li 1 large\ncarpet in the centre of the Inlaid\nhardwood floor, In one corner,\nmy room has a large desk with a\ngreen baile top under heavy plate\nglass, enormous marble book ends,\nfour inkstands and a desk limp.\nThe telephone dials into the Moscow system without going through\na hotel exchange. There is ho\nspecial charge for calls which are\npart of the room rate,\nIn another corner ire i-glided\nmahogany sofa wide enough for\nfive, two arm chairs end five\nstraight-backed chairs to tpatch, all\nupholstered In green damask and\narranged around two earpet-covared\noccasional tables.\nBy the curtained alcove ts a\nmahogany wardrobe with bullt.ln\ndrawers. Inside there ll a marble-\ntopped night table, a low easy\nchair and straight-backed ehalr.\nThe bed Is German style with mattress on the bottom, feather tick\non top.\nTha bathroom is att Die alcove,\n8 his a bath'and shower, wash '\nbasin and toilet.   '\nThe room I* hegted by radiators\nbelow four big windows. There are\nno pictures.\nAt the head of Uie stairs, on\neach floor, a woman flopr manager\nefts behind a huge deek and under\na portrait o< stalln,. She watches\nover the comings and going of her\nguests, takes their messages and\nkeeps their keys,\nPopip service operates from 8:?o\np,m. until 10:30 p.m. and a ca.e\ndownstairs is open from 0 a.01,\nuntil midnight. A restaurant is\nopen until 8 a.m, It has a rock\ngarden and fountain ot spurting\nouplds,   and   an   orohostra - whipn\nplays modern Russian music, plus\nsome pre-revolutionary offerings ot\nthe \"Merry Widow\" type,\nOffered Money If\nHe Didn't Go Home\nLONDON (Reuters) - Budapest\nradio said Saturday night a star\nHungarian soccer player rejected an\noffer ef gioo.ooo te desert his team\nand remain In London last week.\nThe nioybr was identified is\nJossef Roislk, whs scored the fifth\ngoal In Hungary's S-S' drubbing of\nan All-England team hare on Wednesday, \u25a0-..'\u25a0\u2022-\"\nThe broadeait paid 1 stranger approached Rozsilt and offered him\nthe money If he \"refused to return\nhome.\" The player replied that he\nwas quite happy In Hungary, the\nbroadcast added.\nSTILL 8BBK PLANE\nUDMONTON ICP> \u2014 The week-\nlong search for a missing light air-\nglene continued Without letup\nunday although the survival o,f\nits threo occupants is doubted.\nRCAf and civilian ||roraft bWe\nlogged 776 flying houri searching\nfor the single-engine Cessna 110\nwhleh vanished during a Ji5-miie.\nflight frem Granda Prairie to Edmonton lost Sunday night.\t\nIATBT RSPORT\nAsk year Invoilmsm Dsalii\n(or Hie lotsit Rapart\n\u2022nd Proipeclua al\nCAIVIH BUILOCK\n\"Then A^erfise in the ClUssified\nNo Other Medium Gets Better Results\nThan the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPhone 144\n- \u25a0    \u25a0 '     1\t\n____________\n'\n'\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0..; \u25a0 vv:,.-.::.\n ^ppppp^ppppp\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, DEC. 1,1953\nWHO DO YOU KNOW\nTHAT DOESN'T WRITE LETTERS.\nLETTERS FROM MOTHER\non beautifully finished\nDeckletone paper. Up from\t\nLETTERS FROM DAD\non Esquire\npaper ,*  ...\nLETTERS FROM DAUGHTER\non HUmmell notes', scented\nLotus paper or Symphony note. Up from .\nLETTERS FROM SON\non Vellum\nnote paper. Up from   \t\nand LETTERS FROM BAGNALL with the Sheriffs seal\nof approval on Mann's Drug Store letterheads.\n95*\n60*\n90*\n\u25a0!%mM m^Sk JE^I Me%\nDRUGS LTD.\nHan Who Talked With Stalin and\nMolotov Goes lo Bermuda Heeling\nBy DON DALLAS\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A pocket-\nsizcd diplomat who has talked to\nStalin twice and to Molotov more\nthan a dozen times will be a key\nfigure in the British delegation to\ntha. Bermuda  talks  this week.\nUrbane Sir Frank Kenyon Rob-\narts (height five-feet-four, weight\nground 130 pounds) is accompanying Sir Winston Churchill as leading\nforeign office _xpert on Germany.\nHe also has more experience of\n'direct negotiations with the Kremlin leaders than almost any other\nBritish diplomat. ,\nRoberts has helped to draft several recent British notes to Russia and may be called on to do\nao again in Bermuda,\nHUMAN DYNAMO\nRoberts, 46, has been called a\n\"human dynamo\" because of his\nability, to work up to 20 hours a\nday. Aa minister in Moscow from\n1945 to 1947, he rarely went to bed\nbefore 3 a.m. and was up again-\nsoon after 7 a.m.\nHe speaks German and French\nfluently and Russian reasonably\nwell.\nRoberts came to prominence in\nthe summer of. 1948 when he represented Britain in the western\nnegotiations with Stalin and Molotov aimed at ending the Soviet\nblockade of Berlin.\nSECRETARY TO BEVIN\nWhen Roberts left Moscow as\nminister In the summer of 1947, he\nbecame principal private secretary\nto the late Ernest Bevin, foreign\nsecretary in the last Labor government.\nBevin sent Roberts back to Moscow the following summer to argue\nthe western case on Berlin with\nthe men of the Kremlin. Roberts\nhad temporary ambassadorial rank\nin the absence at that time of the\nBritish ambassador to Moscow, Sir\nMaurice  Peterson.\nIn 1949 he was appointed deputy\nhigh commissioner in India, retain;\ning this post until his appointment\nin 1951 as assistant undersecretery\nat the foreign office, In charge\nof German affairs.\nCreston Man's CM^Ctim DeliiM^;\n0\/ Indian Art; Sun Ritwal Hoted Ce^ito^\nReports of M.S.\nFainting Pupils\nGLACE BAY, N.S. (CP) - The\nMiners' Assistance^ Committee here\nis Investigating reports that several children of unemployed coal\nmi .ers have fainted in school because of lack of nourishment.\nChairman Malcolm O'Handley\ntold members of the committee:\n\"It's a matter, of bread and butter,\nand clothing, too.\" He said many\ncases \"of dire need\" have been reported.\nAbout 1200 men were thrown out\nof work in June when the big No.\n1-B pit here closed for mechanization. Since then the return to work\nhas been gradual.\nThe assistance committee was\nestablished to assist these families.\nMr. O'Handley said District 26,\nUnited Mine Workers (CCL), and\nother labor groups are doing their\nshare in contributions but other\nhelp is necessary.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type fates on\nrequest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment\nAll hats greatly reduced at\nADRIAN  MILLINERY.\nP.T.A. Community Carol Singing.\nCivic Theatre, Sun., Dec. 13, 9 p.m.\nDesire   transportation   to   South\nSlocan 5 p.m. each night. Ph. 102.\nYou are eure to nlease him with\n;\u00bb gift from Jack Boyce.\nBaby dresses in nrlon, rob!a and\nnylon. \u2014 TOT-N-TEEN  SHOP.\nj. General meeting nf Local 1003.\n_BEW, Thursday. 7:30 n.m.. Hume\nHotel! Executive meeting 7:00 p.m.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix It\nthrow it away Prompt watch work,\nguaranteed, at reasonable prices.\n, Regular general meeting Nelson\n:U\"ion Thnrsdav evenin. next, at\n'8 sharp. Nomination of officers.\n!We doctor shoes, heel them, attend\n\"their _v\u00bblnff e\u00abH \u00ab,u-,e th.fr soles.\nTONY'8 REPAIR 8H0P.\nTrnrlm vniir olH  tlm* nf\n8UPERIOR   MOTOR8\nTire Department\nEvervthinc In ski wax, dubbin,\nbase lacoimr. pki harness, sole protectors.   SV   nr.loa.   ..*,\nHTPPl-RSON'S.\nFor pure sweet-tooth mn .ic\u2014take\nhome a box of our delirious fresh\ncandies todav. \u2014 GRAY'R. 534 Josephine 8treet Phone 1347.\nBovs' gift sox. \u2014 Better mialitv\nworsted wool mlxti\"*e. Sizes 7 to\n0*4; assortpd stvl. s. Clearance rtrice\n59c pr. EBERLE'S JUNIOR 8HOP.\n'   Flowers wired overseas make a\nwonderful Christmas gift. See us\nnow.\ni C0VENTRY8'   FLOWER   SHOP,\nWATERPROOF   your   raincoats.\nwork clothes, snow suits. Jacket.,\njhow.r curtains, head scarves.\nEMPIRE   DRY   CLEANERS.\nSheffield Tile Cement \u2014 45c.\nBURN8  LUMBER  CO,\nWillow Point W.A. Tea and Sale,\nChurch Room, Dec. 2nd, 2:30 p.m.\nCome and bring your friendi.fo\nSt. John's Lutheran. Ladies' Aid\nbazarr and tea Sat., Dec. 5th. at\n3:00 p.m. Corner Stanley and Silica\nStreets.\nSkis and ski equipment, maple\nand hickey skis for sale. Everything in harness and ski waxes.\nBamboo or all metal telescoping ski\npoles. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nSpecials \u2014 4 Used . Chests of\nDrawers; 2 Used Cribs: 1 Used\nHigh Chair; 5 Used Oil Heaters.\nAntique furniture repairs and\nFrench polishing.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 Hall Street.    '\nUsed Furniture\u20141 85.000 B.T.T1\noil heater. $79.50; 1 30-000 B.T.U.\noil heater. $59.00; 1 8-Diece wai.\nD.R. suite! oblong ext. table. $119.50;\n1 coal heater. $27.50; 1 dresser, chiff.\nand bed. SB9.50: 1 chrome kitchen\ntable. $34.50; 4 chrome kitch. chairs,\n$20.00; 1 oil ran te. $129.50: 1 studio\nloimee. $49.50: 2 nHd chairs. .\".no.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nI wish to convey mv deeopst ao-\nDreclatlon and gratitude to all my\nfriends who gave their time and\nefforts towards the success of the\nwedding last Sunday. A soecial\nthank you is extended to Mr. and\nMrs, D. Mclvor, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nLyon, Mrs. Earle Cutler, Mrs. L.\nCote. Mrs. J. W. Graham. Mrs. J.\nD. Yeatman and Mrs. K.. Loewen;\nMisses Shelagh and JoAnn Hop-\nwood. Anne Davis, Nancy Bod-\nnaruk; Messrs. Bill and Scott Mclvor and Keith Loewen.\nMrs. H. Loewen.\nStrings of Christmas Tree Lights,\npriced from $2.65 to $6.00. Check\nYour Renulrements Now.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCARLSON\u2014Funeral services for\nthe late Charles John Carlson will\nbe held from Thompson Funeral\nHome Wednesday at 2 p.m. Rev.\nDavid A. Butterfield will officiate\nand interment will be In Nelson\nMemorial Park.\n-   By RUTH WALSH\nDid you know that right now,you couid be sitting\non property not your own? That your business might not\nreally be, on YOUR land, and that the livestock on your\nfarm is actually not gracing on YOUR pasture . . . but on\nthe property of .the Kootenay and British Columbia Indian?\nThere is no Indian treaty in British Columbia and\nIndians in this wealthy province do not receive treaty\nmoney. As a matter of fact, an Indian delegation once .told\na premier of British Columbia that the Parliament Buildings at Victoria are built on Indian property and that the\nprovince is \"trespassing.\"  \u2022\nLike the white population, Indians stage elections among their\nbands, conducted in a similar manner. According to the Indian Act,\nthe council \"shall consist of one\nchief, and one councillor fbr every\n100 members of the band, but the\nnumber of .councillors shall not be\nless than two nor more than 12\nand no band shall have more than\none chief.\" The chief can be elected\ntwo ways \u2014 by a majority of votes\nof the electors, or by a majority\nof votes of the elected councillor;.\nCouncillors are elected by a majority of electors' votes. A reserve\ncan be divided, into'as many as six\nelectoral districts, and any elector\nwho resides In that area may be\nnominated to run for councillor and\nthe nomination must, as In any election, be moved and seconded. Nomination meetings are held and under\nthe supervision of electoral officers,\nthe whole operation generally runs\nsmoothly. Provision is also made\nIn the act for election appeals.\nVoters must be 21' years of age and\nqualified residents of the reserves\non which they propose to vote.\nMAKE  BYLAWS\nThe council of the band may\nmake bylaws, not Inconsistent with\nthe Indian Act or with any regula.\ntion made by Governor in Council\nor Minister. Here are some of the\nmatters of a reserve which the\ncouncil can help to Improve\nhealth of residents on the reserve,\nregulation of traffic, observance of\nlaw- and order, construction and\nmaintenance of water courses,\nroads, bridges, ditches, protection\nagainst trespass, regulation of bee-\nkeeping and poultry raising, weed\ncontrol, control and prohibition of\npublic games and many other\nthings.\nAny property owned by Indians\nIs exempt from taxation. General\nprovincial laws are applicable to\nIndians and property on a reserve\nIs not subject to alienation. The\nIndian Act also provides that certain property on a reserve may\nnot be acquired without the written consent of the Minister. These\nproperties   Include   Indian   grave\nhouses,  a  carved   grave   pole,  a\ntotem pole, a carved house post\nor a rock embellished with paint\nHowever, thlt does not apply to\ngoods manufactured for sale by\nthe Indians.\nThe Indian Act consists of 125\nsections and numerous sub-sections\ncovering all possible dos and don'ts\nconnected with Indians. The present\nact j was proclaimed September 4,\n1951 under the Statutes of Canada.\nRELICS COLLECTED\nIn a fashionable home near\ndown-town Creston, one can* venture back to the turn of the century\nand hear many Interesting tales of\nIndian days. The home is that of\nFloyd Rodgers, popular Creston\nrancher, theatre owner-and friend\nof the Indian. The Walls of his basement study In his home are covered\nwith relics of bygone days. Floyd,\na shy, friendly man who is always\nready with a jest and a laugh, came\nto the district in 1907. His father\nwas in the lumber business in that\nvicinity and Floyd joined him for\na time. His favorite pasttime is\nranching and he can talk cattle and\npasture for hours on end. The Indians in the Creston area have\nknown Floyd for years. \"A lot of\npeople fail to realize,\" Floyd..said,\n\"that the Indian is Just a human\nbeing ... if they like you,\" he\nlaughed, \"they'll do anything for\nyou.\" Floyd goes out of his way to\nhelp the Indians. At Creston's Fall\nFair, Floyd acted as mediator be.\ntween the Fair committee and the\nIndians who were to stage dances.\nFloyd agrees with many other business men as far as discrimination\nis concerned, \"if there Is any dis-\ncrimination, it is their own fault,\"\nhe said. \"Most of the. Indians will\nwork when they have to. but not\nfor long. He first worked with Indians in early 1900 when \"the In\ndians were the only ones in the dis\ntrlct who had any horses.\" He became friendly with them through\nhis dealings and has been their\nfriend ever since.\nHe has Interesting stories to tell\nof the many relict which don the\nwall of hit itudy. He hat In hit\npossession a saddle once the prop\nerty of Chief Running Water or\n\"Tameo\" and alto one belonging\nto hit wife. One of the prettiest\nItems  In  hit collection  It a  papoose   board,   Delicate   beading,\nskillfully   embroidered   In   gaily\ncolorful design! deck the outside\nof the \"cradle.\" The baby It tied\nto the board with leather thongs\nand a light skin protects It from\nwind and rain. He Is the proud\nposse.sor   of   a   scalping    knife\n\"which hat been used.\" The knife\nwat the property of \"Alexander\"\nand  originally  wat  crudely fa\nshloned to a bone handle. The\nknife It theathad In a beautifully\nbeaded cate.\nFamed for their rituals to the\nSun, the  Kootenay   Indians  designed  a  special   drum  for the\nceremony\u2014the Sun Dance Drum,\nOne of the originals,  hangs on\nFloyd's study wall. It It covered\nwith   rawhide' over  wood, and\nglvat forth.a deafening thud when\nttrubk  with tha  wooden  drum\nsticks. One pf tha wlerdest looking Items In Floyd'a collection It\na   medicine   man's, wand.   The\n\u2022trange looking stick Is colorfully\nReady for festivities is\nthis grandfather of the Indian reserve. His brightly\ncolored vest, and feather\nbedecked headdress are all\nmade by hand. Skilled Kootenay Indians make some\nof the finest saleable goods\nthroughout Canada. The regalia is worn only for ceremonial purposes and other\ncelebrations.\nEneas Jimmy, above, was\nborn in 1876, a Kootenay\nIndian of the Columbia\nLake Band living on the\nColumbia Lake Reserve\nnear Windermere. This\nman is known to oldtime\nwhite inhabitants of the\nWindermere as \"Teneese\nJim\" or \"Little Jim.\"\ndecked with beading and topped\nwith feathers and shiny buffalo\nhorns. All  types of stone ham\nmert and powder horns are alto\npart of hit collection. Gambling\nwat alto well-known among In\ndlant and when they gambled\nwith \"bones\" they meant \"bones.\nMade from oow horns, these dice\nare used In much the same way\nat dice of today,\nFloyd donned a ten-gallon hat,\nand accompanied by his huge Alsatian \"body-guard\" Whose bark  is\nworse than his bite,' drove with me\nto the reserve on the1 Creston flats.\nThere he pointed out thousands of\nacres of beautiful farm land-worth\nover'a million dollars.-The reserve\nis about three miles south of Creston. It is situated on the border of\nthe flat lands and one comes upon\nit suddenly around the bend of the\nroad. A poor road leading into it\nwas muddy and full of pot holes\nafter.!the rain spell earlier in the\nweek. We drove to the yard of Louis\nErnest's   home.   Children   peeked\nshyly from behind drawn curtains.\n\"Hi Louis,\" Floyd shouted at the\nsub-chief. While I loaded a film Into\nthe camera,. Floyd brought Louis\nover to the car. The chief, wearing a\nbroad smile warmily shook hands\nwith me. all the while keeping his\neyes on the camera. \"May I take a\npicture of you and your family?\" I\nasked. His grin broadened and he\ndashed into his new home, brought-\nout his wife and daughter Christine\nfor the photo. Pointing to a nearby\nchurch, he told of how he holds\nservices when no priest is at hand.\nHe is proud bf his new home and\nlives in comfort, with his family.\nSub-chief Louis Ernest of the Lower Kootenay\nIndian band, and Floyd Rodger, friend of the Indian for .\nmany years, discuss a \"gate\" problem. Floyd, a rancher\n\"from the'heart out,\" leases land from the Indians on\nthe Creston flats. He was a fprmer member of the North\nWest Mounted Police and came to Creston in 1907 He\nhas been a guide, a logger, a businessman, but all through\nhis life in the Creston area, he has worked for the welfare of the Indians, They come to him with many relics,\nand from them he has started a museum. He often acts\nas mediator between the white man and Indian.\n\u2022 A PERFECT REPLICA OF CANOES USED BY\nTHEIR FOREFATHERS is pictured here at the St.\nMary's Indian reserve in Cranbrook:. Indians even today,\nuse the canoes for fishing and duck hunting. Today's\ncanoes (there are many in the Creston area), are covered\nwith canvas stripping, but the ancient one's cover consisted of rawhide. The shell, however, is id-htic.il 'to\n\u2022those of hundreds of years ago, ,AS,U,\n: A GENUINE-TOMAHAWK, A QUIVER OF\nARROWS AND a sun dance'druip are some of the relics\nFloyd Rodgers has 'collected during his 50 yesrs in Cres-\ntpn. To the right is a saddle ownedlby.Mri. Tameo, wife\nof the famous Indian CHi'ef Riiniiing Water Of'thi^Lower\nKootenay Indians. The saddle is constructed of wood and\ncarved with rawhide. At the front is a saddle horn' and\n\"hook\" on which could be hung apapddse board or\nquiver of arrows. Shown here also is an In__a_. muzzle\nloader discovered on the Creston reserve..Silently, by\none of the Indians. ... .J,.\nAcquit Captain on\nMurder Charge\nNAIROBI, Kenya <Reuters). \u2014 A\nBritish Army captain Friday was\nacquitted on a murder charge accusing him of machine-gunning two\ninnocent Africans while on a patrol\nagainst the anti-white Mau Mau\nterrorists.\nCapt. Gerald Selby Lewis Griffiths, 43, was cleared by a court\nmartial which took 78 minutes to\nreach a verdict.\nHe was accused of killing two na.\ntive forestry workers at a Kenya\ndroablock last June 11 after his\ntroops stopped them on an antl-\nMau Mau patrol. '\nGriffiths testified that he suspected the pair were Mail Mau\n\"members and that he shot them\nwhen they tried to escape into the\nJungle. The prosecution alleged he\ndeliebrately shot them In tha back.\nas\nGothic Sails\nBy GOMER JONES\nPANAMA ! CITY (Reuters) -\nUnited States Air Force planes\nMonday escorted the liner Gothic)\ncarrying Queen Elizabeth and the\nDuke of Edinburgh, as it sailed\nfrom here out Into the Pacific to\nbegin a 6000-mile, 17-day cruise to\nthe Fiji islands\u2014next port of call\non the royal  tour.\nThere was no official send-off\nbecause Jhe Queen was still in bed\nwhen the liner sailed at 7 a.m.\nlocal time. She and the duke retired late after attending a state\nbanquet. '\nRetired Coast\nPolice Chief Dies\nVANCOUVER (CP). - George\nHood, 76, retired Vancouver-police\nsuperintendent who was the hero\not a running gun battle with two\nbandits in 1913, died here Saturday.\nHe was awarded a service medal\nfor meritorious di^ty following the\narrest of John Metellio and Dom-\ninic Kohpll, who were charged with\nhighway robbery and shooting with\nintent to kill.\n. A bullet nicked Mr. Hood in the\near' as the battle raged on the Cam'\nbie street flats in what is now'down-\ntown' Vancouver.      '-'.   -\nHe joined the city police depart\nment.in 1906 and retired in 1932\nas traffic department superintendent. '   -'\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Truck\ndriver Frederick Faithful learned\nhe had picked on the wrong customer to do out of a load of coal.\nHe was sentenced to nine months\nin jail for absconding with five\ntons dispatched to Scotland Yard.\nI\nYouth Groups\nFurther Wans\nFor Campaign\n'...'.-\u2022. H..-:'-'\nThe \"Put Chrlsti.BaOk^rito'Christi\nmas\" campaign took on added lm-;\npetus Sunday afternoon when about\n29 persons gathered In the basement ot St Paul's 'Church' to further organization plans. Represented\nwere Young Peoples , Association\nfrom the Anglican, United, Mission\nCovenant, Full Gospel, and Catholic\nChurches. \" V \u25a0'.     ...\n\"Numerous projects which vwlll\nhave to be undertaken in connection with the campaign were assigned to individual church groups.\nIt was understood these groups\nwould be responsible for the project, but would enlist the co-operation and suggestions of aU to\nachieve the desired result.\nThe groups emphasize thay are\nnot trying to stop buying of\nChristmas present! since the ex-.\nchanging of. gift \"Is a Christian\nconcept\". |\nThey ara, however, trying to get\npeople to remember \"that Christ-1\nmas Is Christ's birthday\" and!\nthat the commercial aspect of\nChristmas should not overshadow\nthjs spiritual aspect, |\nIn their drive for funds, those\npresent voted to start things off by,\nasking their own youth organizations for small donations. |\nNewspaper and radio coverage\nwas felt to be ot utmost importance\nin communicating the message and\na committee was designated to\ntake charge of this task. It was reported that several merchants were\nIn favor of Nativity scenes in their\ndisplay windows and it ls also\nplanned to build a large crib where\nit may be viewed downtown.\nPlans are under way to have\ncarollers taken around town by\ntruck singing their Christmas message. Those churches sponsoring religious programs on the radio will\nbe asked to devote their time to the\n\"Christmas Is Christ's' Birthday\"\ntheme.\nSeveral thousand leaflets explaining the meaning of the theme\n\"Christmas is Christ's Birthday\"\nwill be printed.\nSport Shirts\nAre Sure\nTo Please Him\nPlain light or dark\nshades, plaids, checks\nand neat figures make up\nour selection for Christmas giving.\n$4.95 to $12.95\nEmory's\n\u2022 Limited\n\"The   Man's   8tore\"\nFemale Poukhobors-\nNerve-Wrecking\nProblem\nSays Warden\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Eleven per cent\nof Canada's prison population of\nabout 5100 were under 21 years of\nage, says the annual report of the\nCanadian penitentiaries commission.\nThe report, tabled In Parliament,\nsays S64 youths were in prison. This\ncompared with 485 amopg a prison population of 4687 In the year\nended March 31, 1953.\nMaj.-Gen. R. D. Gibson, penitentiaries commissioner, says in the report that ,(t is a' matter of grave\nconcern that judges and magistrates\nsend youngsters to prison instead of\ndealing with them some other way.\n' \"While the proportion of penitentiary recidivists (repeaters) admitted during the yast year has remained stationary, the. increase in\nover-all population has been mainly\ndue to the larger number of youthful offenders committed tp penitentiaries.\"   '\nReferring to operations at Kingston, Ont., penitentiary, warden\nR. M. Allan said female Doukhobor\nprisoners were a \"difficult and\nnerve-wracking problem,\" >\n\"The confinement and supervision pf .female Doukhobor inmates\nincreased the responsibilities and\ndifficulties of our staff and there\nwasa distinct feeling of relief when\nthe remainder of this group was discharged during the latter part of\nMarch.\"\nGod's Dominion\nOver Evif Stressed\nMan's God-given dominion  oiet'Si\nevil of every sort was emphasized!'\nat Christmas Science services Sunday. -   '      \u25a0 1\n\"Ancient and M6_em Necromancy, alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounced\" was the subject\nof the lesson-sermon. The Bible\nreading contained this passage front\nEphesians:\n\"Finally, my brtthren, be strong.\nin the Lord, and in the power of\nHis might. Wherefore take unto\nyou the whole armour of God, that\nye may be able to withstand- in tha\nevil day,' and having done all, to\nstand\" (6: 10, 13). .-\nThe following passage was read\nfrom \"Science and Health with Key,\nto the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker\nEddy:\n\"There Is no power apart from'\nGod. Omnipotence has all-power,\nand to acknowledge'any other pbw\u00bb\ner is to dishonor God.\"\nDENTAL CAUTION ' \\\nDental caries is due to action of\nbacteria.forming particles of food\nlodged In the teeth.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical  Arts  Building\nPHONE 25     '\nAccurately\nCompounded,        ;-\nPrescrlptlona        |\n503 Baker St '\nPhone 25\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service'.\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n519 Kootenay St        Phone Ml\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\n, Phona 327\n\"*   '        678 Baker 8treet\nSemcemert|5_i0P\nFor Christmas\nIn Japan\nOWAWA (CP) \u2014 There'll be an\noriental flavor in many a Canadian home this Christmas.\nArmy headquarters said-that tons\nof gifts already have been mailed\nby Canadian troops in Korea. Although the big rush is over, the\narmy said big and small packages\nare still pouring in. During the last\ntwo months, representatives of\nevery unit in Korea have been\nshopping in Japan on behalf of\ntheir comrades. Their selected\ngifts were sent to Korea where\nunit members could make their\nown final choices.\nCommits Suicide Iri\nElectric ChejifW; v\nLAON, France (API\u2014Electrician\nJean Fauvert committed\" 'suicide\nin a home-made electric chair.\nPollc'e said- the 27-year-old father\nof five children, carefully built the\nchair in the basement. It had sheet\nmetal bracelets and a helmet-like\nheadpiece: The switch was placed\nso he could reach it while the\nbracelets'were on the wrjats.\nPolice said Fauyart wai. facing\na charge of passing, worthless\ncheques.\nSHORNE, England (Rfotersl-A\n41-year-old twitch .diggetf killed at\nwork near Here\/ la' ttell&wl to be\nthe first fatal victim of. an airplane's\nsupersonic bang. . \u2022*'   '\nJohn O'Sulllvan was deep in a\nroadside' drainage trench when two\nsharp explosions sounded, The sides\nof tha trench collapsed and he was\niburied alive. It took rescue workers five hours to recover his body,'\nPolice reported later that the explosions' oame ..from a jet aircraft\nhurtling through the sound barrier\nover the nearby Thames estuary.\nU.S. Cuts Down\nCivil Service\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Another\n26,600 civilian workers were dropped from the federal payroll during October, the U.S. Civil Service\nCommission reported Monday. It\nsaid this brings the net cutback\nsince January to about 176,600, leaving a total of 2,372,100 federal employees.\nBig B.C. Turkey\nBusiness Expected\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014B. C. turkey breeders are looking\nforward to a $1,000,000 market this\nChristmas, partly due to a decline\nin the Alberta crop.\n\"The Albertn crop is down by at\nleast 25 per cent this year and they\nwill not have too many birds for\nexport,\" Association president Jack\nWood said.\nMore than \" 185,000 fresh-killed\nB.C. birds hav* been fattened for\nthe holiday season, and are expected to bring top prices. \u2022\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nfl.M.C: TRUCKS     i\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\n\"''\u25a0''.' \u25a0 '    '      \u2022'   \u25a0 \u25a0   \u2022    \u25a0\u25a0\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shot)\n818 FRONT St.       ;  PHONE 83\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n8. CO.    .\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phona 235\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRA.NINO\nMedical Arts Building    .\nSuite 206 ^Phona 141\nHave the iob Dane Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER   \u2022\nPHONE 815\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat tha\nNelson Upholstery\n(09 Hall Street Phone HS\nMake Your Own Home-Made Bread\n,   With  ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on Every Package\nPhone 238 or Call\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nFOR CHRISTMAS\nPAGE & SHAW\nCHOCOLATES\n1 lb. box -.:\u25a0-'...!;..\u201e:......!..!. $2.00\n2 Ib. box ,..,'.  $2.80\n\\\u00ab lb.' box .'.  $3.28\n8 lb.\u00abbox  :.. $6.96\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY  \u25a0'    .\n'Nelson'^ Modern   Pharmacy\"\nPHONE 34\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_12_01","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427978","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1953-12-01 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-12-01 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\/1.0427978"}