{"@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":"2023-03-28","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1956-02-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429049\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":"  T*\u2014\nB.C. Post Office\nRobber Si\nCaught in East\nPolice Recover $25,000 Believed To\nBe Part of $44,000 Taken Year Ago\n~^ \u2014\n' *&. -v. V>. NELSON B.C., CANADA-MONDAY MOl\n'^<ol\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy, Intermittent light snow overnight. Remaining mild. Light winds. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook and Cescent\nvalley 15 and 25. . v\nNELSON B.C., CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARYS, 1956 '     Not mm Than \u00abc o\u00abny. 100 \"Saturday No. 242\nTORONTO (CP) - One of Canada's most wanted men \u2014 John\nKeith Macdonald \u2014 was arrested\nSaturday night near the tiny Ontario farming community of Horn\nlng's Mills, 65 miles northwest of\nhere.\nWanted for questioning in connection with the $44,000 post office\nrobbery at Britannia Beach, B.C.,\non Dec. 17, 1954, the 54-year-old\nsuspect has been sought intensively by the RCMP.\nWhen arrested he was \u25a0 living\nunder the name John L. Larson on\na farm 25, miles north of the town\nof Orangeville. RCMP officers\nmaking the arrest recovered more\nthan $25,000 believed part of the\nloot.\nHELD IN TORONTO\nRCMP Supt. R. F. Karrow said\nSunday Macdonald is being held\nin a Toronto police station while\nplans are completed for his return\nto British Columbia for trial.\nMacdonald, calling himself John\nCleland Wallace Black, worked as\nassistant postmaster in the community 30 miles north of Van-J\ncouver from 1951. ( !\nPolice said that aftar the rob-1\nbery he walked 18 mllei through j\ndeep snow over a seldom-used\nwatershed road. Tha money,'\n\u2022hipped from Vancouver for the\npre-Chrlstma* pay roll of a\nmining company In the town,\nwas being held overnight in the\npost office.\nWhen he left Britannia Beach,\nMacdonald left behind a wife\nand a tlx-month-old ion.\nBefore living thera, he had\nbeen an Insurance salesman jn\nMontreal.\nand clean out his driveway with\nmy small'tractor.\" .\n\"We used to ask ourselves what\nhe was doing here. He didn't say\nmuch about his background and\nwe never saw him do any work at\nthe farm or in town.\"\nThe neighbor said MacDonald\nhad redecorated and expanded the\nlittle bungalow and fixed it up inside.\nLast August MacDonald told\nneighbors he was getting married\nto a girl named Rene Martin who\nlived near Stayner. He was away\nfor two weeks and returned with\na 28-year-old woman whom he'\nintroduced as his wife.\n\"He certainly didn't live particularly well,\" his neighbor said.\nEden Prepares\nHouse Speech\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister\nEden, relaxing after a strenuous\nweek in Washington, worked\nquietly Friday on the speech he\nwill make to Canada's Parliament\ntoday.\nOfficials at Government House,\nresidence of Governor-General\nVincent Massey where Sir Anthony is a guest, said he kept to\nhis room most of the day.\nThe visiting leader decided to\nrest instead of going to church\nservices and also dropped plans'\nto have a quiet luncheon with the\n' mily of Lionel Massey, secretary1\nMore than 300 persons live in and son of the governor-general.\nHorning's Mills but few had any\nidea of the history of the man who\nlived in the little bungalow on the\nhighway 10 miles north of the\ntown.\nPolice in the town said he was\nrarely  seen   by   townpeople   and\nteemed \"to keep himself to himself.\"\nMYSTERY MAN\nA neighbor said in an interview\nthat Macdonald had bought n two-\nroomed cottage .'and 10'^jpwwto\nland about a year ago.\n\"He didn't do any farm work at\nalt and had no machinery,\" the\nneighbor said. \"I often used to go\nLt.-\u00a3o!. Slack\nKilled in Mishap\nSEOUL (AP) \u2014 Lt.-Col. William\nSlack, 46, senior Canadian officer\nin Korea, was killed early Saturday morning when his jeep overturned north of Seoul.\nCol. Slack, officer commanding\nthe 3rd Canadian Field Ambulance\nCor^srwrt^eturriing'W his 'headquarters near the front lines from\na reception here in honor of Theodore Newton, Canadian minister to\nJapan and Korea.\nOlympics; Co|3s Hockey Title\nAustria Second; Skier Lucille\nWheeler Canada's Bright Spot\nHERE IS A STRIKING VIEW of the ski\njump at Cortina, Italy, with'a Finnish contestant\nsoaring, seemingly, among the clouds that overhang the mountains. In the background Is the\nvillage of Zuel \u2014 a sleepy little place until the\nOlympic games brought 1,110 representatives of\n32 countries to its doors.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nWilliston to Speak at\nSchool Opening in March\nThe new Nelson high school\nwhich took two years to build\nand longer to plan, will bt of-\nSoviet Industry To\nBe Decentralized\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 The Soviet | system in   previously   under-de-\npress has just announced new\nplans.for a vast development of\nindustry in the strategically less\nvulnerable east Siberian and cen-\ntra*l Asian regions of the U.S.S.R.\nThe plans are\" similar to those\nwhich built up huge, industrial\ncomplexes in the Urals before,\nduring and immediately after the\nSecond World War. That program\nwas credited by many with a great\nrole in Soviet resistance to the\nNazi invasion.\nLeading Soviet authorities say\nthe development of Kazakhstan\nand the Irkutsk region of Siberia\nwest of Lake Baikal have been\ngiven priority. Deposits of iron,\ncoal and other raw materials are\nreported to have been explored in\nboth regions recently. *\nThe exploitation of this new\nwealth, along with development\nof associated industries, would\ngive the Soviet Union what would\namount to a whole new industrial\nveloped regions. ,\nBIG INVESTMENT\nWriting in Izvestia, D. Kunayev,\nchairman of the Kazakh council\npf ministers, said more money\nwould be invested in that Soviet\nrepublic in the next five years\nthan in the 38 years since the Russian revolution. The program, he\nsaid, would include factories for\nproduction of trucks, tractors, die-\nNolle! Overrides\nOpposition\nPARIS (Reutrs)\u2014France's new j\nSocialist premier Guy Mollet said\nSaturday night that he will go\nahead with his decision to install\nLiberal^ 5oldi\u20acfv- .statesman Gen,\nGeorges Catroux as resident minister in Algeria dispite opposition\nfrom French settler groups in the\nrestive North African territory.\n, Mollet, speaking in a radio and\ntelevision broadcast from his home\nconstituency at Arras, said: \"The\ngovernment's will \u2014 its essential\ntask \u2014is to stop blood flowing in\nAlgeria, the blood of Europeans as\nwety as that of Moslems.\"\nThe French settlers already have\nsaid that they will stage demonstrations against the 79-year-old\nCatroux when he arrives in Algeria next Friday. The settlers accuse Mollet of usurping the powers j\nof the National Assembly by creating the new resident minister post\nfor Catroux.\nMollet said he will fly to Algiers\ntoday to study the situation.\nALGIERS, Algeria (Reuters) \u2014\nFour French foreign legion b'attal-\n. ions and  2,000  extra riot police\n^-^T^IITA\"11!!^ \u2122!lfi;imoved into^ A1*iers Sunday Bi*ht\nlurgical equipment, which never\nhave been manufactured in that\nregion.\nV. Krotov, economic chief of the\neast Siberian branch of the Acad\nemy of Science, wrote that the\nSoviet Union's biggest aluminum\nplant would be established in Ir-\nkitsk, using power from the\nworld's two biggest hydro-electric\nstations, the Bratsk and the Kras\nnoyarsk stations, scheduled to\nhave an output of 3,200,000 kilo\nwatts each.\nas added security for today's air-\nrival of French Premier Guy M.e-1-\n! let. '-:\u25a0!'.'\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 -:\u25a0\nMollet is- making a-dramatic per\":\nsonal bid to prevent \"another Indochina war\" in Algeria.\nJIA THAMOE, Italian TV Blnger, is shown In Milan with\nher near-Blind husband. Lulgi Rlnaldo, 48, to whom she plans to\npive one of her eyes. Tb-.y qo t-> Japan, where a surgeon will\ntransplant a cornea from one of her eyes to his,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian Photos.\n\"Show-of Force\"\nMay Solve Middle\nEast Problem\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Britain\nand the United States are considering making a show of force\nin the eastern Mediterranean to\ndissuade Israeli and Arab states\nfrom going to war.\nPrime Minister Eden and Pres-1\nident Eisenhower are reported to\nhave agreed at their conferences\nhere last week that they simply\ncan not tolerate an outbreak of\nwar in the Middle East. They are\nsaid to have decided to prevent or\nsuppress any such hostilities.\nThe U.S. 6th fleet, built around\ntwo carriers and including cruisers,, destroyers and ' submarines,\nmay be put on manoeuvre in the\narea as part of the \"show of force'*\nplan under study.\nficlal.y opened March 10,.If\nplans laid Saturday materialize.\nIt will be a day when the\nspirit of pride in accomplishment wilt be mingled with remembrance for the man who as,\na high school principal In Nelson gained eminence among\nB.C. educators'\u2014 the late Leslie\nV. Rogers for whom the school\nis named.\nIri a proposed public program\nlasting an hour and a half, the\nprincipal G. H. Lee will receive\nthe, keys to the school, twosCab-\ninejt^ininljrters Will s^eak hnd a\nsimple ceremony of dedication\nwill take place.\nRetails of the program were\nworked out at a meeting in the\nschool board office Saturday\nmorning and will be presented to\nschool board tonight for approval.\nThe actual move from the old\nto the new building will take\nplace March 2, so that by the\nopening day students and tench-\nore will have become accustomed to their modern and commodious work place.\nAppropriately, the opening will\ncome at the end of Education\nWeek. The public's attendance at\nthe ceremony will take the place\nof the customary \"visitor's day.\"\nProgram arrangements are in\nthe hands1 of Miss Eileen Cross,\nwho had extensive experience in\nschool opening formalities in her\nformer position with the B.C. department of education.\n. Municipal and government dignitaries together with men and\nwomen who have played important roles in the school's constructor will have places of honor on\nthe stage of the vast auditorum.\nAfter words of welcome, the\nschool board members will be introduced, and one of them will\nspeak for the group. Representatives of the% contractor and the architects will take part in the turning over of the key.\nInspector N, A. Allen will introduce Mr. Lee who will speak in\ntribute to his former principal L.\nV. Rogers.\nThe  principal  speaker,'. Hon.\nR. G. Williston, minister of ed\nucntlon, will  be Introduced  by\nHon. W. 0. Black, Nelson-Cres-|\nton MLA and provincial secretary. '\nDedication will be performed\nby a cleric chosen by the Nelson\nMinisterial  Association.'\nThe school'choir which has been\nlong practicing for the opening.\nwill sing \"Bless This House\" and\n\"The  New   Jerusalem\",  arid   the\nband will also play.\nThe senior, girls   will   conduct\nthe .jnityjfe ^oughib^rchopl. fy\ntakes'about an hour to- fiiliy.in\nspect the   .completely   up-to-date\nand spacious building.\nRCMP PROPOSES\nCO-OP PLAN TO\nMUNICIPALITIES\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The RCMP\nHas proposed to municipalities of\n5,000 to 25.000 population an al\ntentative,, co-operative method of\ncsrying out-police duties.\nThe RCMP said it has proposed\nto such municipalities that if they\nwish they could form their own\npolice force to carry out routine\ntraffic, patrols and other duties\narfd the RCMP would handle only\ncrime investigation,\nThe federal force now handles\nall police work in various munici-\npalities under contract.\nAn RCMP spokesman said the\noffer was made to help municipal\nities meet forthcoming increased\ncosts of police work' where it is\nprovided by the RCMP and to\nhelp meet a manpower shortage in\nthe federal force.\nB.C.\nTRUCK HITS POWER\nPOLE, 3 INJURED'\nNEW WESTMINSTER,\n(CP) \u2014 Three persons Were injured and electric power for several\nblocks was cut \"off when, a load\ned truck struck a power pole at\nSapperton early Saturday.\nJim Freelander, driver, was reported in good condition in Royal\nColumbian hospital , with facial\nlacerations and neck injuries.\nBLIZZARD\nLETS UP\nlro'Die in Texas,\nNew; Mexico in\n5-Day Storm\n\" AMARILLO, Tex. (AP)\u2014A five-\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCORTINA d'AMPEZZO, Italy (CP) \u2014 The Olympic\nflame was extinguished Sunday night,  ending the  1956\nwinter Games, 11 days of glory and disappointment for the\nathletes of 32 nation's.\nFor Canada there was more disappointment than- glory. For Russia it was just the opposite. Making its first appearance in the\nwinter Olympics, the Soviet Union finished on top in the unoffi-\n. .  ,..,     .,    ,,\u00a3.-, ,       .  i cial team standing and dethroned\nday blizzard which dumped upto'>,      . ,    , ,    .. _, .    .\n-J I Canada's defending hockey cham-\ntwo feet of snow on parched farmlands of Texas and eastern New\nMexico., suffering from* a prolonged' drought, let up Sunday.\nOnly light snow was falling in the\nplohs.\nFor the second time iri  seven\nOlympics, Canadians failed to win\na gold medal although they had\nbeen favored in the pairs figure\narea, where 16 deaths werYattri-! skatinS-  The  sPMd. skaters  P\"\nformed   well,   beating   Canadian\nI records for all distances, but fin-\ni ished well down the list in  the\nt four events.\n| FAR IN LEAD\n| \u25a0 The one bright spot from the\nbuted to the worst 'storm   in   50\nyears.      \" \u2022 '\nDrifts ranged as hijgh as 15 feet.\nTransportation and communications   were   disrupted   and   even\ncity streets were blocked in such, -,       ,.        .     .    . ;\nj,     \u2022 .., .       -,,     Canadian standpoint was the per-\nTexas  communities   as   Amanllol , *  . \u25a0     T     \u2022,.   \u25a0\u25a0\u201e.,     .\nand Plainview.\nformance of skier Lucille Wheeler,\nI 21, of  St.  Jovie,  Que.,  the first\nA   cross   -   country   bus   was| Canadian ever to finish in the top\n\\aA ir* ,..\u00ab.=**\u2014 TW-.- ....\u2666 ^x j^, an oiympjc gicj event.\nAtter completion of Sunday's\nstranded in western Texas with 16\npassengers for 21 hours before\nthey were rescued. All were in\ngood condition. Two were small\nchildren. The passengers said they\nsaw several hundred cars stalled\nin snowdrifts.\nTh'e bus driver. John Herron,\nhad fought 12 miles through drifts\nknee to waist deep to send a rescue party to the scene, near the\nTexas-New Mexico border town of\nGlenrio, N, M.\nSnowblind, frostbitten and\nnearly hysterical, he fell within\n100 yards .of the town but. had\nstrength enough to whistle\u2014and\nhis whistle was heard.\n\u2022 '.    t \u25a0 'O ; !\u2014r\"\t\nEnglish Garden.\nBy RONALD BATCHELOR\nJOS, Nigeria (Reuters) \u2014 The\nQueen and the Duke oi Edinburgh\nspent a quiet Sunday in a simple\nEnglish cottage on a mountainside.\nThe royal couple shook, off the\ndignitaries who accompanied them\nort the first week of their Nigerian\ntour. They were almost alone in\nthe two-bedroom cottage here and\nspent most of the day reading, listening to the radio, or walking\", in\na garden full of English flowers.\nAfter breakfast, the monarch\nand her husband worshipped in the\nChurch of St. Pirans, a tiny build- ]\ning of fried mud bricks with a|\ncorrugated iron roof.\nThe church, built 31-years ago\nby Europeans. working in nearby\ntin mines, is dedicated to the saint\nwho took Christianity to Cornwall.\nSt. Pirans also had a practical\nside\u2014he taught the Cornish tin\nminers a new method of smelting.\nAfter the service, the Queen .and\nthe duke returned to their cottage,\nwhich lies 4000 feet above sea\nlevel.\n. One Nigerian newspaper man,\nwho confessed he has bitterly resented British colonial rule, said\nSunday: \"For perhaps the first\ntime since Europeans came to Ni-\ngeria. 100 years ago, we are now\nfeeling we are truly equal and that\nthe British realize that.\n' \"We have seen our Queen as\nwell as yours, and she has made\nus feel we are all one.\"\nski jumping \u2014 the 24th and last\nevent of the   Games \u2014. Russia\nwas far in the unofficial team\nlead with 121 points. Austria, led\nby toni Sailer, triple ski  winner and Individual atar   of   the\nGames, was second with 78'\/2.\nFinland -was third with 66. Sweden fourth  with  62,  Switzerland\nfifth with 55V,. the United States\nsixth with 54'^ arid Norway seventh with 47.\nCanada, with five points earrfed\nin skiing; four in hockey and sev.\nen in figure skating, finished in\n10th position with 16 points. Canada had also placed 10th in 1932\nwith 19.  ,     i. ;-r->-  '  :   ,\nCANADA'S .THJ,8I^HIGHEaT-.)\nTt| poittf\/total.tfflif year was the\nthird highest in seven winter Olympics held to date. In 1948 the\nCanadian team \"won 24% points,\ngained nine in 193*6, 47 iri 1932 at\nLake Placid, N.Y., 13 in 1928 and\n11 in 1924.\nThe points are reckoned on the\nbasis of 10 for first and 5-4-3-2-:\nfor the next five places in each\nI of the Olympic competitions.\nHowever, they are unofficial since\nthe Olympics recognizes only individual accomplishments. .\nIn Sunday's ski jumping, Finland ended Norway's domination\nby placing 1-2, the first time a\nNorwegian had failed to win the\nevent. Antti Hyvarinen was first\nwith leaps of 81 and 84 metres\n(265V4 and 275^4 feet) for 227\npoints and Aulis Kallakorpi was\nsecond with 83.5 and 80.5 metres\n(274 and 264 feet) for 225 points.\nEARNS   FIVE   POINTS\nJacques Charland. the Canadian\nchampion from Trois Rivieres,\nQue., put together leaps of 76 and\n73 metres 249 and 239% feet) for\n188.028 points and finished 27th in\nthe field of 51.\nThe best Russia could do in this\nevent was 16th.\nThe Russians came away from\ntheir first Olympics with record-\nbreaking  victories  In three  of\nthe  four  Speed-Skating  everlta,\nthe hockey title and two crosscountry akl-raclng gold medals,\nThey were.not entered In either\nthe figure skating or bob sledding and had only a fair showing In the downhill ski compe-\ntlon.\n'  Among the Canadian performances,   Miss   Wheeler  finished   a\ngood third in the women's downhill and sixth in the gant slalom,\nearning'five of Canada's 16 points.\nAnother five points were added\nby Toronto's Norris Bowden  and\nFrances Dafoe,   world   champion\npairs figure skaters, who   placed\nsecond to an Austrian couple   in\nthe  Olympic  competition.\nThe Canadian hockey team,\nKitchener - Waterloo Dutchmen,\nfinished third behind Russia and\nthe U.S. after losirig 2-0 to'the\nSoviet team Saturday. It added\nfour points to the team total.\nThe other two Canadian points\nwere in figure skating. Carole\nJane Pachl, 17-year-old Canadian\nchampion from Montreal, was\nsixth in the women's singles and\nBarbara Wagner, 16, and Bob Paul,\n17. of Toronto were sixth in the\npairs.\nGUARD RAIL SAVES\nl\\CAR FROM DROP *\nNANIAMO, B. C. (CP) \u2014 Two\nmen were saved from a plunge\ninto the Naniamo river Friday\nnight when a guard rail halted\ntheir skidding automobile overhanging a 35-foot drop.\nNick Krulko of Farmer's Landing, driver of the car, and Zona\nJohn Percy of Vancouver were\ntaken to hospital here.\nWant Cattle\nRustlers Punished\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP)-Stiffer\npenalties for cattle rustling have\nbeen recommended by the southern Okanagan section of the\nBritish Columbia Injterior Fish,\nGame and Forest Protective Association.\nThe meeting discussed the case\nof two Trail men, sentenced to\ntwo years for cattle rustling,\nwhose sentences were cut by the\nappeal court to nine months. The\noffence occurred in the Osoyoos-\nKeremeos area.\nRUSS JIBES RANKLE....\nBritain May Cancel Qoodivill\nTour oj Bulganin, Krushchev\nBy JAMES F. KINO\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Russian at'\ntacks on British cqlonial policies\nare giving Britain second thoughts\nabout her invitation to Soviet'\nPremier Bulganin and Communist\nparty chief Khrushchev to .visit\nLondon in April.\nA government source said that\nunless Moscow's propaganda campaign is toned down the Soviet\nvisit, heralded as a \"goodwill\ntour,\" might be cancelled.\nBritish feelings also have been\nbruised by Bulganin's by-passing\nof Prime Minister Eden in his recent- Correspondence with President Eisenhower.\nThe Soviet needling continue*.\nThe latest effort is by Soviet historian Hya Galkin, in an English-\nI\nlanguage talk over Moscow radio.\nHe had this to say:\n\"No one exported the idea of\nrevolution or freedom and independence to North America. It\nwas Thomas Jefferson, and not\nany' Communist.\n\"I think present-day Americans,\nthe descendants of Jefferson and\nWashington, will understand the\ndesire of the Asian and African\npeoples, to have their '76 too.\"\nEnglishmen joke about the\nshrinking empire but they resent\nSoviet charges that they are an\noppressive people.\nEven those who take the empire\nlightly have been stirred the last\n\u25a0week by pictures of African tribal\nchiefs in Nigeria paying homage\nand pledging loyalty to the Queen\non liar royal tow.\nRuss Protests\nBalloon Fleets.\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014Russia has protested to the United States charging American military organizations have sent fleets of balloons\nequipped for automatic aerial\nphotography over Soviet territory.\nThe Soviet news agency Tass\nSunday night published the text of\na note it said was handed U. S.\nAmbassador Charles E. Bohldn\nSaturday demanding an end to this\npractice.\nThe note said the balloons were\nreleased by \"American military\norganizations on the territory of\nWait Germany.\"\n1 aj\nThaw Comes lo Europe After\nSix-Day Cold Snuffs 147 Lives\nLONDON   (AP)\nThe great another   to   the    weather   were\nthaw set in Sunday over much of\nshivering Europe but the tail end\nof the continent's worst cold wave\nbrought continuing hardship to\nmillions of families.'\nThe known death toll climbed to\n147 on the sixth day of the now\nsubsiding Siberian blasts which\ncaused millions of dollars in damage across Europa, even down to\nthe sunny Mediterranean.\nThe freeze persisted in France\nand .Italy. Moscow, reported subzero temperatures and primary\nschool children there were warned\nto stay home.\nIn thawing Britain the loud noise\nwas the drip, drip, drip of water\nseeping from burst frozen pipes\nInto thousands of homes. Onlyt,the\nplumbers seemed tb be benefiting\nfrom temperature readings which\nsoared into the upper 40s during\nthe day.\nDeaths attributed in one way or\ncounted as follows: France 42,\nBritain 36, Italy 20, Denmark 11,\nGermany 10, Turkey 10, Austria\n5, 'Holland 4, Switzerland 4, Yugoslavia 2, Spain 2 and Belgium 1.\nTemperatures in north Germany\nwere rising but still around freezing point. In the south, it was\nsnowing. Scores of families at\nVilshofen in Bavaria remained\nhomeless after an ice jam on the\nDanube caused an overflow that\ninundated 250 homes.\nIn Sweden, Stockholm enjoyed a\nbrief look at bright sun shortly\nafternoon. Snow continued to fall\non the northern half of the country\nand the temperature dropped to 10\nbelow,\nIn Greece, blizzards foiled attempts by army planes to drop\nfood supplies to snowbound villages in the northeast.\nlllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllfltllflllllllllllMlltllllflfllfllllllllll\nSchweik Takes Blame\nBy TOM REEDY\nPRAGUE (AP)\u2014Whenever something goes wrong in Communist Czechoslovakia they blame it oh Schweik.\nIf a government program falls short, if the laundry doesnt    ,\nshow, if a pipe leaks, it's \"schweikism.\"\nAuthor Jaroslav Hasek created \"the good soldier Schweik\" in\nthe time of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Schweik never seemed to do things right and yet he got out of trouble with amazing\nease.\n-^lany a Czech today is still a Schweik. It is characteristic for\nhim to appear unable to grasp a problem or to carry it out. Ha\nwho resists the government resorts to \"schweikism\" and there's\nno law that says vou can't be stupid. The safest way is to fall\nback on this often laughed-at national trait and that is what\nmany do. \u2022\nThe Communists recognize that Schweik is not the sort of\nfellow who takes to the barricades, whips out a club and fights\nto the death. But he-is a man who is pretty hard to push around\nand is easier led than booted from the rear.\nThus the regime has found it necessary to make many concessions to individual liberty.\n\u25a0     The best selling book in Prague is \"Citizen Brych.\" It has the\nblessing of the government.\niiiiiiuiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii\n \t\n\u2014- ;\t\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1956\nHeld Over \u2014\nDon't Miss the Chance of Seeing the Finest Comedy\nto Play This Theatre in Years.\nist ALL HERE! That famous\nit Isl    funny feud between the\nCaptain and the crew-\nthat frantic shore leave-,\nthose lonesome nurses\n-all the lusty, gusty,\n\"must see\"greatness of\n,,#\/ \"Mister\n^Roberts\nSTARRING\nHENRY     \u201e JAMES\nW WIXIAM        JACK\nPOttLEMMi\nCinemascope \u2022WabnerColob\n\u00bbu,.\u201ed.. WARNER BROS\nShows at 7:00-9:12\nTHESE TWO Notre Dame College students are competing\nfor the honor of Mardi Gras Queen, winner to reign over Mardi\n1 Gras celebrations on Friday. Marie De Pfyffer, right, of Kelowna, attended Kelowna High School winning numerous trophies for skiing and swimming and the best girl athlete award,\nbefore coming to Notre Dame where she Is active In College or-\nganlzatlons. Audrey Kocker, left, came to Notre Dame from\nGray Creek. She came to B.C; a few years ago from Calgary, and\nhas studied music, dancing and elocution.\nHighland Bell Wins\nMine Safety Plaque\n.||IIi!?ll'llilllllllMII!l!llIllllllilllllllll\nMusicland\nTheatre\nKASLO, B.C.\nShows at 8:00 p.m.\nShowing\nMonday,  Tuesday, Wednesday\n\"REMAINS\nTO BE SEEN\"\n,    June Allyson, Van Johnson\nIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nFruitvale Meeting\nPostponed\nFRUITVALE\u2014 Annual meeting\not the Fruitvale Recreation and\n\u2022~^*\/6iee*'Bo6jie\u00ab5\u00bb.Kttf been resChadS\n\\ uled for February IT at the Mem-\n| orlal Hall. Lack of sufficient at-\n' tendance forced postponement of\n' the meeting Friday night.\nMrs. John Reid\nDies Here at U\nMrs. Annie E. Reid, a resident\nof Nelson since 1924, died in the\nMount St. Francis Infirmary Saturday after a long illness. She was,\n74.\nShe was born and educated in\nBlackville, New Brunswick and\ncame to- Cranbrook in 1910 after\na brief residence in Massachusetts.\nIn 1911 she married John Reid\nthen a provincial government road\nforeman,in the East Kootenays.\nAfter the death of her husband\nin 1924, she moved to Nelson.\nMrs. Reid, is survived by one\nson, Johfl \\Reid, of Mlssii^f'tity;\none daughter, Miss Mary Reid of\nNelson; one sister, Mrs. Lylan\nWroten of Dayton, Ohio; one brother, Lynas O'Grady of Houston.\nTexas; and five grandchildren.\nf More Than 1000 Cars of Lumber\n! Shipped in 195S by Nelson Company\nShipments of finished kiln-dried\nlumber by Kootenay Forest Products of Nelson rose to 34,500,000\nfeet board measure, sales volume\ntotalling over 1000 cars, in 1955.\nPayroll total also rose last year,\nreaching $1,250,000, which went\nto 200 men at the Nelson plant and'\ntha woods crew. Payroll for contractors, in addition, was $40,000\nin the Nelson area, $75,000 in the\nFOR YOUR\nBABY'S COMFORT\nWe -Oarry Complete  Lines of\nit Infant Dietary Supplements\nic Talc, Creams, Powder\ntV Nursing  Bottles, etc.\n* Gifts and Cards.\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your. Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.     Phone 1203\nNelson\nKaslo-Lardeatf area, and $100,000\nin the Creston area.\nExpenditures on maintenance\nsupplies and equipment reached\n$425,000.\nThe company operates three\ntugs on Kootenay Lake, towing\n30,000,000 fbm of logs annually. It\nspecializes in kiln dried finished\nlumber with high grade common\nand \"select run to panelling. Eighty\nfive per cent of shipments are to\nthe United States'.\nBoard of directors are J. 'L.\nHickey, president; E. L. Vance\nvice-president and sales manager;\nL. Lefeaux, secretary and office\nmanager, W. J. Shukin, treasurer\nand general manager; W. M. Leu-\nthold, chairman,of the board; J.\nH. Leuthold and R. V. Stuart,\ndirectors.\n(Editor's note: This report was\naccidentally omitted from the\nPictorial-Industrial Edition Saturday).\nHighland Bell, a small scale\nsilver mine near Beaverdell, was\nawarded the West Kootenay\nsafety plaque In Nelson Satur^\nday.\nThe1 presentation was made\nby H.\u00abC. Hughes, chief Inspector\nof mines in B.C., at the annual\nJoint banquet of the West Kootenay Mine Safety Association\nand the Nelson branch-of the\nCanadian Institute ol Mines and\nMetallurgy.\nA record turnout of 110 'mining men attended the banquet,\nrepresenting mining Interests\nfrom Princeton to the East\nKootenays.\nAfter commending the men and\nofficials of the Highland Bell for\ntheir low accident record In 1955.\nMr. Hughes described the .recent\nincrease in the developmnt of\nNorthern B.C.'s rich mining potential. '\nHe reported that the monopoly\nof the world asbestos market held\nby Quebec would soon be challenged by B.C.\nA road being built from the\nCassiar district to Stewart on the\nPacific coast has limited Cassiar\nasbestos developmept to high\ngrade ore which is .transported\nvia the Alaska Highway.\nTwo officials of the Bluebell\nMine were elected officers of\nthe West Kootenay Mine 8atety\nAssociation In order to enable\nstaging of the annual mine fes\ncue and first aid competition\nat Ktondel In June. OfTicers\nelected were D. Campbell, pres\nCivic Theatre Lease\nTopic of Meet Tonight\nNelson'! only continually-,\noperated  movie  house  will  be\n\u25a0   the focal point of attention of a\n\/special meeting of City Council |\n* tonight. !\nCivic Theatre Ltd.'s lease, first\nsigned In 1936 and extended under agreement dated February 18,\n1948, terminates at the end of\nthis year. The company as early\nas June of last year submitted\nIts proposals for renewal, and\nthese will be discussed by company representatives, City Council and Civic Centre Commission\ntonight\nNo decUlon Is expected to be\nreached for some time.\nUnder the extension of nearly\n10 years ago, the company agreed\nto pay a yearly rental of $5700.\npayable in monthly installments\nof $475. ' ,  \u2022\nThe offer presented in . June,\n1955, to lease for another 10 years\n(from January 1, 1957 and ending\nDecember 31, 1966). calls for payment during the first five years\nof a yearly' rentaj of $6200, payable\nIdent and J. Donald .secretary-1 jn monthly installments of $516,\ntreasurer: and during the second five years,\n5 Accidents at\nTrail Saturday\nTRAIL \u2014 A hit and run car\ncollision here Sunday came on tt*e\nheels of four minor traffic accidents which occurred , with\nclock \u00ab\u2022 like regularity Saturday\nnight.\nFrank Thiel of Trail told RCMP\nofficers that he had pulled up at\na stop sign on Farwell Street and\nwas struck from behind by an unidentified motorist who ducked\nup a back alley nearby. Damage\nTaylor-Burson coal mine located near Princeton was runnerup\nin the safety competition open\nto mines employing less than 100\nmen. Western Exploration mine\nnear New Denver received honor-\nabl mention.\nHighland , Bell, employer of\nabout 50 miners, won the plaque\nwith a record of threte accidents\ninvolving payment of workmen's\ncompensation to injured workers.\nViolamac held the plaque fbr the\nlast three years after winning it\nfrom H.B. mine in 1951.\nSees Confidence\nIn While Cane\n\"Until I used myv own White\nCane for the first time. I doubted\nthis year's theme for White Cane\nWeek, The White Cane Creates\nConfidence,\" declared E. L. Ross,\nNational White Cane Week Chairman of the Canadian Council of\nthe Blind, and The Canadian National Institute - for the Blind.\n\"People were so gracious,\" Mr\nRoss, said. Strangers came to my\naid at once, and in a pleasant,\nfriendly manner dissolved my\ndoubts with courtesy and assist-\n-ance.\"\n'Taking place from February 5\nto 11, 1956, co-sponsored for the\n11th' consecutive year by, C.C.B\nand C.N.I.B., the Week will present the achievements of the sightless in a Canada-wide education\nprogram. .    \u25a0 \u25a0\nThe Institute for the Blind- in\nNelson is one of the beneficiaries\nof the Community Chest. W. H.\nCrossley is acting chairman,!). H\nMollison, former chairman, having moved to Victoria.\n\"While the offer of a guiding\nhand along, the street gives confidence    to    the    sightless,    the\nto Thiel's car is estimated at $500. j achievements of the blind create\nconfidence in the sighted,\" Mr.\nRoss observed. He spoke of the\nnumerous blind men and woWn\nwho manage C.N.I,B. stands and\ncanteens in post office, hospital,\noffice building and factory.\n\"With  over-the  counter  ser\nAt 6:15 p.m. Saturday W. J. Tur-\nnan escaped without injury when\nhis car spun out of control and\nplunged over a retaining wall\nnear the Annable Tunnel.\nAt 9:15 p.m., a car driven along\nColumbia Avenue by Robert Hay-\nter of Vancouver struck a pillar [ vic\u00ab- and a cheerful smile, they de-\nnear the Gyro Park entrance, re-1 vel\u00b0P confidence in their sighted\nsuiting in $75 damage to Hayter'sj customers.\" he pointed out, \"while\ncar. ; blind workers on   the   assembly\nlines of Canada's industries create\nconfidence by carrying their share\nof the day-to-day job. The blind\nwho serve the public in occupations such as piano tuning and re\nnairing have an additional opportunity to* develop the confidence\nof their clients.\"\nMr. Ross explained that confidence in the sightless grows not\nonly through contact with the\nsighted in the canteen and industrial  placements of C.N.I.B.. but\nLess than an hour later, damage\ntotalling $60 resulted from a colli-\nson on Columbia Street between\nvehicles driven by Elton W. Master\nof Rossland and Sherwood C. Le-\nfond of Trail. A third vehicle,\ndriver unidentified, was also involved in the collison.\nA third accident on Columbia\nStreet occurred at 10:45 p.m. causing $225 damage to cars driven by\nPatrick R. Ritter of Rossland'and\nTerance R. Halliwell of Trail.\na yearly rental of $6700 payable\nmonthly at $558.33.,\nBesides the increased rental, the\ncompany offer contains the following special provisions: j\n1.' That the lessee, tbe Civic\nTheatre, shall be responsible for,\ndecoration as necessary through-1\nout the entire interior of the pre-!\nmises. \u25a0 i\n2. That the lessors shall not be\nresponsible for the maintenance\nor operation of \"the ventilating\nplant iri the premises which shall\nbe maintened and operated by the\nlessee.\n3. That the lessee shall not be'\nrequired to make the theatre\navailable for the use of the lessors for more than four days In\nany one calendar month or on\nmore than one Saturday In*any\none calendar month, or on any\npublic holidays either provincial\nor federal, or at any time for\nthe showing cf any motion pictures.\nThe first two offers in these\nprovisions would mean acceptance by the company of a greater\nshare in upkeep of the municipal-\nowned Civic Theatre,\nUnder the terms of the original\nagreement made, shortly after the\nCivic Centre was built, responsibility for decoration of the interior\nwas divided between the company\nand the lessor.\nThe acceptance of maintenance\nof the ventilation plant by the\ncompany would be a complete reversal of the present arrangement.\nThe lessor is responsible now.\nFEWER DAYS\nThe third provision would mean\na reduction in the availability of\nthe theatre for public shows of a\nnature other than movies. Under\nthe original agreement the company was obliged to make the\ntheatre available for the^ use of\nthe lessors for. no more than six\ndays in a calendar month, instead\nof the four as stated in the new\nproposal,-\nOne of the major aspects of\nthe present situation is that the\ncity Is not under the same obllg\natlon to continue leasing to the\ncompany   as   It  was   when   the\nmatter came up for reconsldera\ntion nearly 10 years ago.\nAt that time, contingent on the\nterms of the original contract dated\nNovember 27, 1936, the city had to\nrent to Civic Theatre Ltd. or use\nthe theatre for purpose other than\nthe showing of movies.. It had not\nthe option of leasing to another\ncompany, which it will have when\nthe present extension pf the lease\nexpires at the end of this year.\nThe lessor is the City of-Nelson\nand the Board of Nelson Civic\nCentre Commissioners.\nNew wage contracts with the\nCity employees are also to be discussed by council tonight.\n5-Cenl Raise for\nTrail Employees\nTRAIL (CP) - A five cent\nacross the board wage increase\nand an equivalent increase to employees on salary has been awarded Trail City employees.\nThe board of works and union\nnegotiating committees announced the terms of the 1956 agreement\nin a joint statement Saturday.\nCost of the wage increases is\nestimated at $8,500 or slightly\nmore than a mill.\nFringe benefits include sick on\nthe basis of one-half a day's pay\nwith one day a month to a maximum of 20 days accumulated\nleave.\n$   $   $   $   $$$'$'$\u2022$$\"$$$   $   $   $   $\nYOUR DRY CLEANING\nDOLLAR\nGOES FARTHER AT\nJONELLA CLEANERS\nSpecial Prices for a. Limited Time Only.\n\u2022. \u2022 see your plumber!\n...PH-4\nPublished to encourage modern living with modern\nplumbing and heating equipment.\nThe Cenedien Institute of Plumbing and Heating\nLadlea'.and Gents' Overcoats, up from $1.25\nWhite, Pastel and Fur Trim Slightly Higher\nLadles  and Gent's Suits\nLadies' and Gents' Suit Coata or Sports Coats\nPants and  Slacks\t\nSklrta   (Pleating   extra)     \t\nLadles' Dresses, up from\t\n8port  8hlrU  .'.\t\n$1.25\n.65\n.60\n.50\n$1.25\n.50\n.    10% Off the Above Prices\nfor Cash and Carry\nJONELLA CLEANERS\nPhone 1042 for Free Pickup and Delivery\nOr Use Nelson's Only Drive-In Service at\n517 Victoria Street \u2014 Just Behind Safeway.\nthrough the recreation program of\n_C.C.B. A volunteer organization,\n\"made up of sightless members, the\nC.C.B. links almost 60 clubs of the\nblind from St. John's to Victoria,\nwho conduct a year round recre^\nation program. Bowling, a variety\nof card games and dancing, are only a few of the winter features.\n\"All these activities create confidence in the White Cane carrier.\" Mr. Ross said, \"and in each\nevent, the helpful understanding\nand consideration of our sighted\nfriends is most appreciated. Because of this understanding, blind\nCanadians are now accepted as\nI useful citizens. The message of the\nWhite Cane is known everywhere.\nIt means trie blind may step forward with security even In a\nstrange city, because the White\nCane Creates Confidence.\"\nNOT THE LEAST part of Arctic training la that of the Royal\nCanadian Army Medical Corps. The medics must evacuate and\ntreat casualtlea under aevere weather oonditlohs. Here, near Fort\nChurchill, patient Cnl- Fred Crulkshank of Barrie, Ont., geta i\ntransfusion from Pte. Bob Mack, Nelson, B.C. and Pte. Bill Lee-\naon, all of the 1st Airborne Medical Platoon.\n\u2014Canadian Army Photo.\nIce on Lake Brings\nOut Sunday Skaters\nA resolution fully endorsing,\nthe proposal that-a''silver dollar\nbe ' minted com mem mora ting\nB. C.'s centenary in 1958, was\npassed Friday ar a special meet\ning of the Chamber of Mines of\nEastern British Columbia's executive board.\nThis province, by far the lead\ning silver producing province in\nCanada, would benefit from mint'\ning of such a specially designed\nsilver dollar, the executive felt, j\n\"It would use a lot of silver\nwhich would be taken off the\nmarket, as it is logical to assume\nthat the coins would ultimately\nfall into the hands of souvenir\ncollectors throughout the world.\"\nThe suggestion has been endorsed by the B. C. Centennial\nCommittee and supported by Hon.\nR. E. Sommers, minister of mines,\nand Hon. R. G. Williston, minister\nof education.\nIn 1934 the Chamber of Mines\npressed for the Royal Canadian\nMint striking silver dollars for\nuse in Canada, realising that such\na step would use up a lot of silver and so help production during that period. The federal authorities acquiesced, and the silver\ndollars were struck.\nIt was a great day for skating\nSunday. Bright sunshine and a\nsmooth sheet of Ice along the\nshoreline of the lake saw Mom,\nDad and the kids taking ful lad-\nvantage of a glorious Winter day.\nToddlers not yet fitted to the\nblades were being pulled around\non sleighs.\nThere was plenty of room for\ncrack-the-whip, forbidden in the\nrink for lack of space, and laughing shrieking youngsters were\ntaking full advantage of the wide\nopen spaces.\nThere were skaters in the bay\nat Lakeside Park and all the way\nup to Walton's boathouses, and it\nwas reported that in every bay up\nlo nine-mile the ice had been\ncleared and little groups of skaters in bright winter garb made\nthe most of Dame Nature's bounty.\nBy the park someone had built\na small fire where cold fingers\ncould be warmed and a few\nthou ghtful folk had brought\nthermoses and a snack for between times,\nIn among the trees at the Park\nchildren flashed on a sheet of ice\nlaid down by obliging Nelson firemen, and many a hockey game\nwas going on in sunlit patche;\namid encircling trees.\nFor those less inclined to su,ch\nstrenuous exercise a walk along\nthe North Shore highway in the\nsun was sufficient.\nStill  Offering\nMILL SHUTDOWN\nAVERTEDBY\nWARM WEATHER\n. . A shutdown of tha Kootenay\nForest Products' sawmill In\nFairview, owing to a freezup of\nthe plant's log supply floating\nIn the West Arm of Kootenay\nLake, wis averted by the weekend, warm spell,\nE. L. Vance, vice-president of\nthe. company, said -Sunday that\nthe sawmill had been threatened by a shutdown last week\nafter the prolonged cold snap\nhad Jammed the log booms Into\na frozen mass,\nYoung Skater\nBreaks Leg\nIt seemed like just another\nskating spill when eight-ye*ar-old\nCarol Ann Gordon took a tumble\nSunday afternoon while skating\nwith her older sister, Pat, on the\nedge of the West Arm near Lakeside Park.\nBut Carol is in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital today suffering\nfrom a broken leg. Her condition\nis reported to be satisfactory.\nCarol's father, J. A. Gordon of\n238 High Street, related that Robert Sibit, 19, came to Carol's rescue and attempted to carry her\nhome, a distance of nine blocks\nfrom the park.\nMr, Sibit trudged for three\nblocks up Nelson Avenue before\nbeing relieved by Walter Wait,\nwho volunteered to take Carol\nhome in his car.\nThe full extent of the youngster's injury was not realized until,\nshe arrived home.\nExtra Pants\nFREE\nWith\nCambridge\nClothes\nKind of dragging this\ndeal out a bit this year,\nbut we still think it is\none of the best offers of\nthe year.\nSPRING SAMPLES\nIn TWO WEEKS.\nGodfreys'\nPHONE W%*]0-**\\ BOX\nk. AAA. A. A. A. A.\nHEAT\nTWILIGHT CLUB\nHONORS WORKfRS\nA surprise party honoring Mrs\nC. L. Rushby on her birthday was\ngiven by members of the Twiligh'\nclub at the home of Mrs. Bourget\nin the Annable Block Friday af-\nternoon.\nA pair of brass plaques, as a\ntoken of appreciation for her\nwork in the club, presented on behalf of the 30 members and friends\npresent. Serving tea were Mr..\nBourget, Mrs.., Eberle and Mrs.\nLindsay. Mrs. Margaret Street wa>\nalso presented with a pair of brass\nplaques for her assistance in the\nclub.\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDRUMHCILIR Dt\u00a3P SEAM\n*9      **9      **w     *w     9     **9      **9      *r     **r      9      *P      9      *9      **9      **V     **9      *9     w\nFor Sale\nBY OWNER\nBUILDING\nSUPPLY BUSINESS\nIN NELSON\nHandling the Best Known\nNames in Building Materials\n1955 Gross Salco $100,000. Could\nbo doubled with additional\nworking capital and (took.\nWould consider selling stock\nand fixtures separately. Lease\non premises can be arranged.\nFor complete  Information,\nwrite\nBox 3026\nNelson Daily NeVts\nThe Weather\nNELSON                  21 37\nCalgary          ...     22 35\nCrescent Valley    18 35\nKamloops     21 35\nPenticton  23 34\nVancouver  35 42\nVictoria   __      36 43   .01\nPrince Rupert .;  37 42   .60\nWhitehorse     ....'.  4 19    \u2014\nSan Francisco '...  44 55 \"'\u25a0*-(\nSpokane   .       16 28   .22\nCoal\nTOWLER\nFUEL ond TRANSFER\nPhone 889\nFRIENDLY\nAMILY\nI NANCE\nPersonal loans\nFor Bills, Fuel,  Repairs, Cora,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Lfd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arts Bldg.\nPHONE  1786\nTrans Canada Creditloans.protected\nat no extra cost by life-insurance,\nsolve budget problems for thousands\nof Canadian families\u2014without endangering family security. Solve\nyour money problems. Get a life-\ninsured loan, on your own credit.\nCall us today.\nUICK GASH LOANS\nTHE All-CANADIAN tjk LOAN  COMPANY\nwmmmmw\n525 VERNON ST. ,\nTEL.-1690\n Likely To Cost $135,000 ...\nBids to Be Called for\nCranbrook SchootWing\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Tenders for\nthe seven-room two-storey adi-\ntlon to Mount Baker Junior-Senior\nHigh School at an estimated cost\nof $135,000 will be called this\nweek, the Department of Education has notified the Cranbrook\nDistrict School Board.\nThe project was heavily endorsed by ratepayers of the city and\nschool district more than a, year\nago but delays were occasioned\nby changes In plans.   Architect's\nMichel Mines\nWorking Steady\nMICHEL \u2014 The Michel Mines,\nsince the first of the year, have\nb\"en working steady time. Last\npay day the miners received their\nfirst full pay of 10 shifts since the\nstart of the new year.\nA second full pay was in the\nmaking but due to a fatal accident at the by-product plant, the\nmines were idle on the) day of\nthe funeral. This coming pay, the\nminers will receive a nine shift\npay.\nIn the meantime, coal production at the Michel and Elk River\nCollieries of the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal Co., Ltd., during the month\nof December, 1955, showed a drop\nof 11.018 tons, as compared to December of t]je preceding year.\nMichel Colliery, the big East Kootenay producer, led the production figures with 62,954 tons as\ncompared to 69,510 tons mined in\nDecember of 1954. Elk River Colliery produced the remainder. 23,-j\n656 tons, as compared to 28,118'\ntons in December. 1954.\nTotal coal production for December, 1955, was 86,610 tons as\ncompared to 97,628 tons in December of the preceding year. Michel Colliery showed a drop of\n1 6556 tons and Elk River Colliery\n, with 4462 tons.\nCoke production at Michel also\nshowed a decrease from that of\nDecember, 1954. Total coke pro-\n. duced in December, 1955, amounted to 13,957 tons, a drop of 2449\ntons from the same month of the\npreceding year when 16,406 tons\nwere produced. Breakdown of the\nfigures show that the by-product\nplant produced 12,699 tons as\n' compared to 14,918 tons in December, 1954, a drop of 2219 tons\nwhile B. P. Breeze produce\namounted to 1258 tons as to 1488\nj in December, 1954, a decrease of\nt\\ 230 tons.\ndrawings, and specifications for\nthe addition are all complete and\nonce the contract ls let an imme\ndiate start will be made as soon\nas weathar permits with the ob\njective of having the classroom\nspace ready for occupation in Sep\ntember; Since last September\nshift system for some junior high\nschool divisions has been in ef-,\nfeet\nTALKS CONTINUE\nTea cher-contract negotiations\nbetween committees of the Cran\nbrook Teachers Association and\nthe School Board are continuing,\nand the board committee has made\nIts final offer for consideration by\nthe Association membership. February 14 is deadline for settlement\nor application for conciliation\nand emerging terms following\nsettlementNwill be retroactive to\nJanuary 1 when the renewal was\ndue.\nBoard chairman Murray Mac\nFarlane has announced board\nstanding comiriittee personnel for\n1956. With chairmah named first\nthey are: building, Mr. MacFar-\nlane C. E. MacKinnon and Per\nWilliams; finance, E. W. Hawkes.\nMrs. George Creelman; teachers'\nR. S. Inglis and Mr. Hawkes; insurance, Mr. Inglis and Mr. MacKinnon; athletics, Mr. MacKinnon\nand Mrs. Creelman; supplies Mr\nMacFarlane and Mr. Inglis; rural\nschpdls, Mr. Williams and Mrs.\nCreelman; transportation, Arthur\nDraper and Mr. MacKinnon\ngrounds, Mr. Draper and Mrs. Williams; personnel) Mr. Hawkes and\nMr. Inglis; and public health rep\nresentative, Mr. MacKinnon.\nKINGS HANDED\n8TH DEFEAT\nNATAL \u2014 In a Alberta-British\nColumbia Hockey League game at\nNatal Arena, the Cranbrook Selkirks, consolidated their hold on\nsecond place in the league, out-\nscored the Natal-Michel Coal Kings\n3-1 in the final period to skate off\nwith a 9-6 win.\nBoth teams battled on even terms\nduring the first two periods as the\nteams were tied 3-3 end of the\nfirst while Cranbrook held a one\ngoal 6-5 lead end of the second. In\nthe third period the Coal Kings\nfailed to keep up the fast pace as\nthey went down to their eighth\ndefeat of the season. Leading the\nscoring parade for the visitors were\nLudlow, F. Anderson and Tylio\nFabbro with two goals each while\n12c WORTH\nof\nFresh\nSHUR-GAIN\nChick\nStarter\nThat's all that'i needed to last a\" chick a month and a halt.\nINSIST ON SHUR-GAIN\nAlways Fresh \u2014 Always Available at\nNelson Farmers Supply Ltd.\n524 RAILWAY 8T.\nPHONE 174\n\u25ba\nNfAQA\n*4\nThousands of Canadians have borrowed ot Niagara\nFinance offices from coast to coast\u2014and a loan of\nup to $1500 or more may bo youn quickly and\nprivately. There are loan plans to meet almost every\nbudget requirement and loans to $1500 are life-\ninsured at no extra cost to you. Rates on many\nNiagara loans are lower, too.\nPayments can be fitted to individual pay periods\nand on loans above $500 you can have up to\n24 months to repay. Come in and see us anytime.\n\"Here art Just a hw of our many loan plans\"\nYOU\nGET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n12\n15\n20\n24\n(400\n750\n172.60'\n1250\n$ 37.1]\n70.35\n116.45\n$31.13\n57.15\n93.55\n$45.15\n74.30\n$3I.\u00bb3\n45.00'\n63.60\n' *Ont> ol our many \u00bbvtn-doilar payment plant\nRTOC^MMIII\t\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nlllllll   V^^J BRANCHES rsOM COAST.TO-COAST\n560 Baker Street\nPhone 1636\nCalgary Roused\nBy Orders lo\nDutch Musician\nCALGARY (CP) - Henry, Pluk-\nker, Dutch musician who is con*\nductor of the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra, and his wife\nhave been ordered by the federal\nimmigration department to leave\nCanada, Immigration inspector.;J.\nD. Mcllhargey said Friday night.\n\"Mr. and Mrs. Plukker have\nbeen unable to meet our requirements,\" Mr. Mcllhargey said.\n\"They will be allowed to remain\nonly until the current series of\nphilharmonic concerts has been\ncompleted.\"\nMr. Mcllhargey said the order\nhas been given to both the Calgary Philharmonic board and to\nMr. Plukker. The conductor said\nearlier he had not yet received\nany notice, but he was applying\nEor extension to his visa, which is\ndue to expire Feb. 29,\nCONCERTED   EFFORTS\nMeanwhile, a concerted effort\nwas beguh here to get the immigration department to reconsider j\nthe decision; i\nA telegram was'sent to Douglas}\nHarkness, Progressive Conserva-1\nlive MP for Calgary North, in an\neffort to get quick action and\nclarification. Mr. Harkness now is\nin Ottawa.\nT. W. G, Thomson, president of\nthe Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra, said \"the news of tbe\ndefinite refusal for permanent\nlanding for Henry Plukker came\nas a surprise.\"\n\"Inasmuch as he has been allowed to remain in the country for\nnearly a year, I presumed that' it\nwas a matter of lengthy routine\nand that it would eventually be\ngranted. I do,not know why it\nhas been refused and neither did\nMr. Plukker When I talked to\nhim.\"\nMr. Thomson said Mr. Plukker\n\"is a musician of outstanding\nability and has*accomplished a\ngreat deal in the short time he\nhas been there. If he is denied\npermanent landing, it will be a\nsevere loss to the symphony music\nin Calgary.\"\nILLUMINATED address was\npresented at Kaslo recently to\nRonald Hewat, above, for having\nbeen a vicar's warrjen for 50\nyears, 33 of them at St. Mark's\nAnglican Church there. Born in\n1869 In England, he came to Canada In 1888, going to Golden in\n1890 where he became well acquainted with Captain Armstrong. In later years he joined\nthe B.C. government, serving as\ngovernment sub agent at .Wilmer\nn 1914-15, government agent at\nFernie and in 1920 at Kaslo,\nwhere he retired In 1938. He is\na Mason of long standing.\nEmerald Aiders\nled Officers\nNelligan,   Pearson  and   Johansen\nadded single encounters.\nJlmmey McVeigh of the Coal\nKings scored the only hat trick of\nthe game as he blinked the red\nlight on three ocassions, Serafini,\nBailey and Stuart McFarlane scored the other Coal Kings goals.\nF. A. Bergstrom, 70,\nDies at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014Taken suddenly ill at the downtown rooming\nhouse where he was staying, Frans\nAlbert Bergstrom died there\nThursday night at the age of 70\nyears.\nHe was born at Longasala, Sweden, and came to Canada and this\ndistrict 42 years ago. He was employed at a number of district\nlogging operations, mostly in the\ncapacity of blacksmith, and had\nworked until recently for Knights'\nLumber Company in the Crow's\nNest Pass until coming here a few\nweeks ago for treatment. One son,\nSwan, survives him in Asterlund,\nJamtland, Sweden.\nHER FAVORITE\nLONDON (CP) - In a newspaper ballot to name the best\nLondon show of 1955 the first vote\nwas cast by a visitor from Toronto,\nGloria Baker, 55 Highland Avenue.\nShe picked the West End musical,\n\"The Boy Friend.\"\nEMERALD MINE\u2014The Canex\nCentre of the St. John Ambulance\nAssociation at its annual meeting\nin the Emerald Community Hall\nelected these officers: G. A. Gor\ndon, chairman; J. D. Little, vice-\nchairman and A. W. Baker, secre\ntary-treasurer, all re-elected and\nMrs. E. Kipp, RN, Mrs. C. Prior.\nDr. G. F. Dltchburn, R. Cheno-\nweth and W. N. Seminoff will\nserve on the management committee for the centre.\nMr. Gordon In a summing up\nof the Centre's activities during\n1955, pointed out that since the\nestablishment of a local St. John\nAmbulance Centre in January,\n1955, 67 adults and seven juniors have received St. John Ambulance Association awards.\nThe Spring and Fall First Aid\nclasses were conducted by Dr.\nG. F. Dltchburn, H. W. Aitchison,\ndepartment of mines first aid instructor and A. W. Baker, safety\nsupervisor for Canadian Exploration Ltd.\nClasses In first aid instruction\nwill again commence during the\nlatter part of March, 1956.\n\u2014 \u2014\nSuccessful Year Ntfled by Kaslo\nUnited Church al Annual Meeting\n ^^\nW5\nKASLO \u2014 Reports Indicating a\nsuccessful year were given at the\nannual meeting here of St. Andrew's United Church.\nThe annual meeting In the\nchurch heard reports of the Session, Board of Trustees, Board of\nStewards, Women's Association,\nService Clu.b, Choir, Sunday\nSchool, Canadian Girls in Training and Cradle Roll.\nAll-vaccounts showed a healthy\ncredit balance, and in addition the\nsum of $325 had been cdntributed\nto the missionary and maintenance\nfund, $100 to Union College and\n$12 to the Christian education\nfund, and there was a balance of\n$235 n the building'fund.\nIt was reported that >' on the\nKaslo charge four members had\nbeen received on profession of\nfaith and one by certificate.\nREPAIRS STARTED\nThe Board of Trustees reported\nthat a program of repairs to the\nchurch building had been started\nconsisting of completion of cement\nfoundations\" to be followed by a\nnew ceiling and other structural\nrepairs.        '.\nThe following officers were\nelected for the year: to the Board\nof stewards, A. L. Macphee, C.\nR. Fahrnl, C. Carlton, J. C.\nClarke, G. H. Baker, P. H.\nBoyalr, C. Lind and Mrs. John\n8trachan and Mrt. J. H. Hunter;\nto the Board of Trustees, J. Pat-\ntenon, A. L. Macphee, C. R.\nFahrnl, C. A. Carlton, and J. C.\nClarke.\nThe meeting  was preceded by\na pot-luck supper In the Churoh\nHall served by the Women's Association, Service Club and CGIT.\nThere were 82 In attendance.\nAfter supper there was,a short\nprogram with a Sing-Song in\nwhich all took part, Rev. Dr. H. K.\nJohnston welcomed Rev. and Mrs.\nF. T. Balmer, and Rev. and Mrs. P.\nMcNutt. Both guests In reply extended greetings to the congregation.    .\nThe meeting was held on Burns\nNight, also the birthday of Mrs. A,\nL. Macphee, the Ladies of the congregation honored Mrs. Macphee\nwho has been organist'for 35 years\nby presenting her with a birthday\ncake, and everyone joined in singing \"Happy Birthday!\" Mr. Macphee responded on behalf of Mrs\nMacphee, and in turn called for\na very hearty vote of thanks for\nthe Women's Organizations, thanking them for the supper, and for\ntheir work for the Congregation\nin 1955.\n17 in Castiegar\nFirst Aid Class\nRita Dances With\nPrince Aly Khan\n\u2022 PARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Rita Hay-\nworth has had a short reunion\nwith her former husband, Prince\nAly Khan, In the Alpine skiing re-\nsort^)f Megeve, the evening newspaper France-Soir reports. Aly\nKhan arrived at Megeve last week\nand dined with Rita. They' danced\ncheek to cheek to South American\njnusic into the early hours.\nHonor Voroshilov\nMOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet\ngovernment has named Marshal\nKlementi Voroshilov, chairman of\nthe Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (parliament), a hero of the\nSoviet Union. The honor came to\nVoroshilov on his 75th birthday.\nHe was hailed for his \"outstanding\ncontributions in defence of the Soviet state.\"\n(oho Salmon\nArrive Lale\nNANAIMO. B.C. (CP).\u2014 A $3,-\n000,000 sea mystery is baffling\nscientists and fishermen studying\nthe return of Coho salmon to\nVancouver Island waters.\nFor the first time in history, the\nCoho run failed to hit B.C.\nwaters last fall.\nAnd now stream fishermen on\nboth east and west coast of the\nisland report \"badly beaten\" Coho\nare arriving in island waters four\nmonths late.\nStream fishermen report the\ngaunt, spongy Coho are .responding to their homing instinct with\nthe same fervor displayed by normal spawning runs.\nDespite their weariness, the\nCoho are heading for the upper\nreaches of the streams and there\nlies the danger.\nRecurrent frosts have lowered\nstreams and more freezing temperatures may destroy the spawn\nin the exposed gravel beds.\nThe answer to the puzzle may\nbe worth' $3,000,000 \u2014 the approximate value of the Coho in the\nB.C. salmon fishing picture.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED QAILY\nCASTLEGAR\u2014Senior first aid\nclasses, sponsored by St. John's\nAmbulance Association, commenced Friday night, with*a two\nhour period being devoted to an\nintroductory lecture by instructor K. Rigby, and a practical\ndemonstration in applying of bandages given by Instructor F. Richardson.\nThe classes are being held in\nthe Twin Rivers Elementary\nSchool in Castiegar, and the\ncourse will run eight weeks, after which examinations will be\ngiven.\nSecretary R. Rivers reported\nenrolment at the first session was\n17, ranging from beginners to\nthose working for advanced\nawards.\nClasses will be under the direction of four qualified instructors, C. H. King, J. Dalziel, F. Richardson and K. Rigby, and will\nbe held each Friday.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1956 \u2014 3\nFire Brigade\nDiscusses Siren;\nElects Officers\nKASLO \u2014 Mrst regular meeting\nof the Kaslo Volunteer Fire Brigade for 1956 was held in the City\nHall, conducted by Fire Chief W.\nHepdren.\nAccounts in connection with the\ndance  amounting  to  $98.54   was\nreceived and passed for payment.\nThose who contributed music   a\nfor  the  dance  should  receive a\ntoken payment as appreciation for\ntheir service, it was decided. It\nwas decided to post a list of the\nmembers in the telephone office.\nAfter some discussion on the\neffectiveness of the siren, It was\ndecided to Investigate the possibility   of  getting  an   oscllatlng\nattachment which would break\nthe alarm   Into a series of fluctuating densities.   -\nA fund to be available, .to recompense members for damage to\nclothing suffered while attending\nfires, was set up In the amount of\n$25. This fund is to be drawn from\nthe regular fireman's fund, Chief\nHendren   informed    the   meeting\nthat the members are now covered\nby compensation for injuries suffered while answering alarms.\nChief Hendren noted that the\nstand pipes in the Allen addition\nwere often hidden in snow and\nthat it would hinder the brigade\nIn their efforts to render mutual\naid if this condition were not corrected.\nThe secretary was instructed to\nacknowledge the city's letter ol\nappreciation received from the\n1955 council, and to forward a note\nof thanks to the Women of the\nLegion Auxiliary for their help in\nthe task of providing refreshments\nfor the dance.\nOfficers elected were: Chief William Hendren, first deputy D. Ley-\nden, second deputy J. Morris,\nthird deputy M. McLanders. hose\nand ladder captain R. E. Green,\ndrivers of equioment D. Leyden,\nJ. Morris, M. McLanders and G. H.\nBaker.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIll;lll't'l!l>li|||||||\nFRUITVALE BOY\nHOOKS 3-POUND\nRECORD TROUT\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Winter\nwheater and youth don't seem\nto be drawbacks to catching\n.record size fish.\nGary Wade, 10-year-old son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Len Wade,\nrealized the dream of all anglers who have cast lines Into\nBeaver Creek here when he\ncaught a three-pound, 11-ounce\nKamloops trout recently.\nAccording to old-timers it is\nthe largest fish ever caught at\nBeaver Creek. He hooked it\nbetween the Legion Hall and\nthe highway bridge over\nBeaver Creek.\nIIIIIIIMIIIIII'.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nNoled Tenor fo\nSing in Trail\nTRAIL \u2014 The annual concert of\nthe Women's Musical Club will\nfeature the \"Hungarian-born tenor\nLeslie Chabay here Thursday\nnight.\nTrained in Europe, he went to\nthe United States in 1947 and sang\nwith the Metropolitan until 1951\nwhen he was injured in an auto\nmobile accident. He is now artist\nin residence at Washington Uni\nversity in St. Louis and also at\nthe Summer Festival at Aspen.\nColorado.\nHis program will include operatic arias from \"Don Giovanni\" and\n\"The Barber of Seville.\" The\nHeder will be all Brahrris. and he\nwill also sing Hungarian folk songs\narranged by Bela Bartok. \u00bb\nHe was highly recommended to\nthe Women's Musical Club by the\nartist management, who sent to\nTrail previously'Robert McFerrirl\nand David Bar-Illan, who were\noutstanding successes on the concert stage. The latter is returning\nthis season in the Celebrity Con\ncert Series.\nThe Club is hoping^for a sell-out\naudience for the program, and is\nespecially inviting Nelson, Castiegar and other district music\nlovers to attend,\nKIMBERLEY MAN IS PRESIDENT OF\nSENIOR CITIZENS' REGIONAL GROUP\nbe considered at the next Council\nmeeting, preparatory to forward\ning to the dominion and provincial\ngovernments.\nCRANBROOK \u2014 E. T. Dawson\nof Kimberley has been elected\nBritish Columbia Senior Citizens'\nAssociation East Kootenay Regional Council president at the district meeting here' of representatives of Senior Citizens' Associations of the area.\nMrs. Anne Weston of Canal Flat\nwas elected vice-president, and\ndirectors are Clifford Hudson,\nCharles LaFleur and Harry Hern\nof Cranbrook, Mrs. E. Andrews\nand Mrs. H, Lindenberger of Canal\nFlat, and P. J. McKim of Kimberley. Mrs. Charles LaFleur of Cfan-\nbrook was named secretary.\nResolutions concerning senior\ncitizens through the province will\nNatal First Aid\nClasses Start\nNATAL \u2014 Sponsored by the\nNatal Centre of the St. John Ambulance Association, classes on\nFirst Aid, postponed for one week,\ncommenced at the Michel Community Hall Sunday. The course will\nconsist of six classes, or.e neld each\nSunday afternoon.\nDENTAL DECAY TOPS\nALL DISEASES\n\u2022\nTWO CANADIANS serving with the International Commission In Cambodia, Indo-Chlna, stroll through the market In\nPhnom Penh, Cambodia's capital city. They are, left, Cpl. A. P,\nHencher, Halifax, and Cpl, R. G. Bradburn, Oxford House, Man.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nFor Service\nCall . . .\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B; C. Phone 666\nA Complete  Plumbing and  Heating  Service\n\"Doctor, my five-year-old,\nJoan, asked me the other day\n- wjhy children must have .fillings in their teeth when dogs\nand cats don't need them. The\nmore, I've thought of that question, the more puzzled I am. It's\na pretty black picture for us\nhumans, isn't it? When are you\ndentists going to have the\nanswer?\"\nIt is a black picture, when\noccurrence of dental decay still\ntops that of all other diseases-\ncancer, arthritis, heart disease\nand even the common cold.\nBut, unlike those other diseases, tooth decay, by application of present knowledge, can\nbe almost completely wiped\nout.\nBasically, the answer to\nJoan's problem lies in the education of our people in the\nprinciples of Dental Health.\nThe 'Division of Preventive\nDentistry of our B.C. Department of Health and Welfare is\nwell aware of the appalling\ncondition of the teeth of our\nchildren. With the co-operation\nof the B.C. Dental Association,\na far-seeing program has been\nset in motion, attacking the\nproblem at its source. But the\nDivision can only operate\nwhere school boards and other\nlocal authorities approve of\nand desire its services.\nWidespread educational programs are presented through\nschools, adult groups, radio and\neven TV, Government Health\nUnits, public nurses and other\nhealth officials assist in spreading the information. But pro-\nguess depends upon co-operation of the people, and so progress is very slow.\n\"Doctor,\" continued Joan's\nmother, \"everyone surely must\nknow that fluoridation of the\nwater supply will cut decay by\ntwo-thirds. Then what's holding it up? Wouldn't it be worth\nwhile, or could it be dangerous\nas some people say?\"\n\"You parents of children like\nJoan must answer that question to your own satisfaction,\"\nreplied her- dentist. \"When\nJoan is ill, your Doctor may\nprescribe drugs that, giveh in\nthe wrong amount, would kill\ninstantly. Vet you trust your\nphysician. For his surest and\nlatest information on drugs and\ntreatments, your physician\nlooks to the great universities\nand research centres. All of\nthose great organizations, together with the Canadian and\nAmerican Medical and Dental\nAssociations, are working constantly to safeguard your\nhealth. . Now, after years of\ncareful study, and observation\nof carefully controlled experi-'\nments, they have pronounced\nfluoridation a safe, and effective means of reducing tooth\ndecay. Who else remains to\nspeak? Who has greater qualifications? ShaHwe accept their\nassurances or shall we listen to\nthe shrill, uninformed voices\nthat always shout death and\ndisaster in the face of any great\nand 'proven health program.\"\nYes, progress in Dental\nHealth will come according to\nthe will of the people. Proven,\neffective means of control of\ndental disease are freely to be\nhad. The needful information\nis available through your dentist, his B.C. Dental Association, or the Division of Preventive Dentistry of our Provincial Government,\nr\"\" Will the coming generation\nof \"Joans\" suffer as we did, or\nwill an enlightened people\ncome to their aid?\nThis Is one of a series of articles written for and presented by\nThe British Columbia Dental Association\nA Warning\nabout Foreign\nAttachments\nto Telephones\nTelephone subscribers are reminded that\nthe use of telephone attachments unauthorized by the Telephone Company is contrary\nto regulations governing telephone service.\nThis is pointed out because from, time to\ntime certain devices of this kind appear on\nthe market and are offered for sale or for\nrent to telephone users.\nThe' regulation applying to \"non-approved\ndevices\" follows:\nThe subscribers shoW nof use or permit fo be\nused any electrical or mechanical apparatus\nor device in connection with fhe equipment or facilities furnished by fhe Company without fhe written consent ot fhe\nCompany, or permit the attachment of\nadvertising devices thereto. If any\n, apparatus or devices ot any (find other\nthan'those furnished or approved by fhe\nCompany are attached fo or connected\nwith any part of fhe Company'i property,\nIhe Company may remove such apparatus\nor devices or ferminafe Ihe service.\nThis regulation is, of course, in the interests\nof good telephone service and, therefore,\nfor the protection of telephone subscribers\ngenerally. Some attachments to telephones\ncan impair service. And interference with\nservice on one telephone does not stop with\nthat instrument. Others are bound to be\naffected.\nThat's why telephone regulations prohibit\ntelephone attachments without the written\nconsent of the Telephone Company.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE  COMPANY\nalJMB\n\u25a0Jl\n f!\u00abPfS^i!!P\u00bbt\u00ab1^ '\t\nvxiaem\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\n5M00tt lailg News       'Questions?\nEstablished April 22   1IW2\nInferior  British Columbia's Largest  DaiJy  Nawspdpei\nPublished ever\/ morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized 05 Second Class Mall. Post Utflce Department Ottawa\nMEMBER   O*    THIS   CAWAOIAN   PRESS'AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   Or   CIRCULATIONS\nMonday, February 6, 1956\nJamming Athens Broadcasts Not ihe Remedy\nThe British Government, it is announced, is thinking of jamming the\nAthens broadcasts' which are inciting\nthe Cypriots to violence. Friends of\nBritain will hope that this expedient\nis not adopted. It would infringe\nfreedom of speech, it would presumably break, an international agreement about use of wave-lengths and\nit would confess a British failure to\ncope with a diplomatic problem and\na police problem, points out the Toronto Globe and Mail.\nThe process of jamming, perhaps\nunfamiliar to most North Americans,\nis well known to Europeans whose\nmemories go back to the war period.\nIf any country wishes to prevent its\nnationals from listening to radio\ntalks from another country, it has only to produce a loud and continuous\nblare on the wave-length on which\nthe talks are heard. This completely\neffective way of blotting out a hostile\nvoice was used many times by the\nNazis in 1939-45. It was never used\nin Britain in that period or at any\nother time. The British public was\nalways free to hear Hitler, Lord Haw\nHaw or any other enemy spokesman.\nThe Athens broadcasts, by all accounts, are disgraceful. Perhaps no\none has heard them in this country;\nbut observers on the scene say that\nthe Greek commentators have openly\nand wantonly advised Cypriot rebels\nto kill. Several of the murders of recent weeks are attributed directly to\nthe emotional excitement produced\nby the talks from  Athens,  once re\nnowned as the mother-city of philosophical thought. If ever there was a\ncase for jamming, it may be argued,\nthis is it.\nEven so, London would surely be\nill-advised to try this desperate remedy. There are two sides to the question. First of all, there is the business\nof keeping order in Cyprus itself. The\nevidence is all to the effect that the\nmajority of Cypriots are content, preferring the sterling bloc to drachma\nisolation and preferring British to\nGreek protection against the Turks,\nwhose claims in Cyprus have been\nvociferously stated. The Cypriot terrorists are a minority and it should\nnot be beyond the powe; of an adequate British force to subdue them\nand lock them up.\nThe other side of the question is\ndiplomatic. Greece is a member of\nthe North Atlantic alliance, much indebted to both Britain and the United States for both economic aid and\nthe military support which has kept\nGreece on the right side of the Iron\nCurtain. There must be some way in\nwhich the NATO Powers could discipline a member or at any rate call\nupon a member to refrain from unfriendly acts against an ally.\nBefore Britain tries radio jamming, which would definitely be a\nfall from the state of grace which she\nenjoys as a champion of free expression, sterner police work in Cyprus\nand stronger diplomatic pressure on\nGreece ought to be tried.\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\ntetters to the Editor on any topic of genuine interest ape welcome If they ire\nbrief, accurate ind fair. No letter will be inserted In whole or In part, except over the\ntlgnature   and   address  of   the   writ-r     Unsolicited   correspondence  cannot   ba   returned\n\"False Psychiatry\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Mr. Strawn. in his letter of last\nThursday, has placed his finger on one of\nthe-weak spots of this generation. Many of\nus do not practise what we preach, and I\ndoubt if we ever did, even in the moral\nrectitude of the Victorian era.\nConsidering the large increase in our\npopulation, has the percentage of juvenile\ndelinquency really increased, or is it just\nreceiving more publicity? The churches do\ntheir best, as do the schools, but their scope\nla limited. In extreme cases, our magistrates\n\u2022 use discrimination.\nWe understand that some of the detention homes have not been all that they\nshould be. Surely it is up to us all to see\nthat sufficient pressure is used to have this\n*ut right.\nThe responsibility of detecting and correcting incipient delinquency lies wholly on\nthe parents. Judging by results, most parents\npractise a moderate discipline, with the old-\nfashioned woodshed treatment when re-\nquired, but a false psychiatry is all too prevalent, holding that children must not be\nfrustrated, and the result is very evident.\nThe modern pocket books, so plentifully displayed in stores, must take their\nphare of the blame. I do not mean the crime\ncomics, but there is a preponderance of\ncrime stories, most of them by no means as\nwholesome as Sherlock Holmes, and the fiction is well spiced with questionable episodes to stimulate sales. Virtue triumphs in\nthe end, but I doubt if the moral receives as\nmuch attention as the episodes.\nOther than the public libraries, this is\nthe kind of literature most readily available\nToo' Prevalent\"\nto our adolescents. I feel that Mr. Strawn has\ntaken tun gloomy a view of the situation; he\nsees \"as through a glass darkly\".\nThere never was a time in Canada*?\nhistdry when the prospects for youth were\nbetter than now. Education is open to all,\nand a youth with ambition and ability can\ngo as high as he or she desires. Th\u00ab demand\nfor young people with education and willingness to accept responsibility far exceeds\nthe supply.\nContrary to Mr. Strawn's assertion, we\ndo not \"push our young men into uniform\".\nIt. is true that they are taught to kill.\nIf it were not for the youth of the past two\ngenerations, who volunteered to be trained\nto kill and be killed, to live and die in\ntrench mud, and to endure the horrors and\nmisery of two wars, Mr. Strawn and I would\nnot now be able to vent our opinions with\nimmunity in the Daily News. We might be\nserving in a Nazi labor camp, or worse, and\nI feel that we owe these men, both living\nand d-ad. a deep debt of gratitude for their\nsacrifices, and that not only on Remembrance Day.\nGEORGE \"PORTEOUS.\nPress Comment\nFiretending is a fine art, and not al) men\nmaster it. It calls for the virtues ui a philosopher who realizes the frailties of man but\nwho also appreciates his virtues. He who\ndelights in tending fire knows that the glow\non the hearth also fosters a glow in the\nheart.\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nANSWERS\nOptn to any roeder. Namti ef per-\naona aiking queitloni will not tie pub-\nlimed. There Ii no oxarge for tnii service. Queitloni WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY MAIL except where there\nle obvloui necessity far privacy,\nG. G. E., Salmo \u2014 I would like to know if\nthere i\u00bb a speigel dealer in the district?\nCan other readers help, please?\nE. V. D., Slocan City \u2014 Does painting a\nheater with aluminum cut the heat\noutput? .\nThe general opinion is that it would not\ndo so but if it did the amount would be\nnegligeable.\nM. C, Itlondel \u2014 Could you give me an\naddress where I could write with the\nidea in mind of buying a purebred German police pup?\nContact Mrs. J. J. Carney, R.H. 1, Nelson, and Clerihew Kennels, Nelson.\nE. P.C., Marysville  \u2014 Could you please\ngive jne  address of the  manager for\nAvon products and salesmenship?\nWrite to Mrs. M. J. Caisley. Manager.\nAvon   Products   of   Canada.   Ltd.,   504-119\nWest Pender. Vancouver, B.C.\n.Student.   Kimberley  \u2014   I   would   like   an\naddress to write to for information on\ntha Mexican customs officer?\nWrite to F. H. Ajuria. 163 West Hastings\nStreet, Vancouver, B.C.\nStubborn, Nelson. \u2014 We read recently that\nthe Nelson River is the longest river\nflowing into Hudson's Bay. We question this? Can you tell us if it is\ncorrect?\nYes.  the  Kelson  Hiver.  1600 miles in\nlength,   is  the  longest  river   flowing  into\nHudson Bay.\nGet His Attention\nA trade: sold a mule to a farmer. \"This\nis a fine animal,\" said the dealer. \"He will\nwork good if you treat him gentle.\"\nIn a few days the farmer went back to\nthe mule barn. \"You lied to me,\" he told the\ndealer. \"I warmed the oats for that mule. I\nmassaged him with a curry-comb. I bedded\nhim down at night. Yet he won't do a lick of\nwork.\"\n\"Let me go out and have a look at him.\"\nsaid the dealer.\nThey went to the farm. The mule was\nstanding there, hitched to a plow. He would\nnot budge. The dealer picked up a two-by-\nfour and broke it over the animal's head.\n\"Now try him.\" said the dealer. The\nfarmer said, 'Giddap.\" The mule leaned to\nthe collar and moved off.\n\"I don't understand it,\" said the farmer.\n\"I thought you said you had to treat him\ngentle.\"\n\"You do,\" said the dealer. \"But you have\nto get his attention first.\"\u2014Atlanta Constitution.\nButter to Germany\nThere will no doubt be criticism of the\nsale of butter to Iron Curtain countries at\nless than support price and at a loss to Ca.-\nnadian taxpayers.\nApproximately 8.000,000 pounds of Canadian butter is on the way to Europe, and\na large part of it may be taken by East\nGermany.\nSo far as the dairy industry is concerned\nthere will be,widespread satisfaction that\nthe overhanging surplus is reduced by this\namount, and the transaction will bolster a\nfresh hope that still more butter may find\noutlets overseas.\nMoreover, it should be understood that\nthe support price and the retail price of\nbutter in Canada are above the world price,\nand must be, in order that our great dainy\nindustry may survive in our present buoyant\neconomy. The loss sustained through the\nsale of surplus in selected markets Is a small\nprice to pay for stability and the sustained\nbuying power of Canadian agriculture.\nHappenings\nin the House\nBy HON. W. D, BLACK\nOn Tuesday aftenoon the two\nweek-long debate on the speech\nfrom the Throne came to a close\nwith a unimous vote by all par\nties endorsing the Government's\nprogram as outlined in the Throne\nSpeech delivered by' Hla Honor\nthe Lieutenant-Governor.'\nOn Wednesday, speaking before\nan expectant House with the galleries packed, Premier W.A.C.\nBennett, minister of finance,\nbrought down a.record budget of\n3258,427,024 compared to last year\n$212,089,341. The budget outlined\nthe Government's plans for expend).* res which will benefit\nevery corner of the province and\nevery citizen, young and old.\nOf paramount interest to thou\nsands of Kootenay residents is the\n$5 per month Increase in Ihe bonus paid by the province to those\nold age pensioners qualifying for\nsuch a., bonus. Pensions for the\nblind are also increased by $5.\nwhile allowances to social assistance and mothers' allowance recipients will be, increased by $5\nper month to heads of families\nand $2 to each of their dependents.\nProvincial government grants\nto local government will be\nsubstantially Increased and Nel-\n, 3on, Creston and Salmo stand\nto gain considerably. Nelson\nwill receive an extra $16,816\nper year, .Creston $3252 and Salmo $1214.\nThe province's net debt was decreased by $13,432,000 during 1955,\nmaking a total reduction of $65,-\n154,000 since February 15, 1952.\nThe government ended the fiscal\nyear with a revenue surplus of\n$15,550,000.\nThe southern end ,of the Pacific Great Eastern into Vancouver\nwill be completed by June of this\nyear, well within the estimated\ncost of $10,500,000.\nBRIDGE READY 1957\nThe first bridge to be built under Toll Highways and Bridges\nAuthority, the Agassiz Rosedale\nBridge, costing approximately $4,-\n000,000 will come into' operation\ntoward the end of 1956. The Nelson bridge is anticipated to come\ninto operation during the middle\nof 1957, and Is estimated to cost\n$4,000,000. Contracts for this\nbridge, amounting to $3,397,513,\nhave been let and other materials\nand work are expected to cost\n$602,500.\nA bill increasing the borrowing\npower of the B. C. Power Commission will be introduced to allow for an expansion in their program of rural electrification\nThe Amusement Tax will be re\nduced by one-third and proceeds\nfrom this tax are to be devoted\nexclusively to the construction\ncosts of new hospital throughout\nthe Province.. In future the Act\ncovering this tax will be known\nas the \"Hospital Construction Aid\nAct.\"\nThe Government has Increased\nits estimates by $1,716,000 to increase Civil Service salaries. There\nwill not be a flat across-fhe-board\nincrease but rather an increase nn\nan individual job basis, relating\nto prevailing rates paid by other\nemployers.\nOf particular interest to all hospitals in the Kootenays and everywhere in the Province is the Government's decision to Increase its\ngrants toward to cost of hospital\noperation. An additional $1,552,710\nis provided in the estimates to allow some increase in hospital\nbudget requirements.\nEvery resident of the Kootenays, and especially residents of\nthe isla&n-Creston area, will be\naffected by the tremendous In\ncrease In the Government's expenditure for road building. Tor\nmajor hlghwaya, secondary\nroadi, foreat development roads\nand mining roads the Government la planning a record pro\ngrom costing $68,228,000, an In\ncrease of $37,480,320 over last\nyear,\nSizeable appropriations for the\nconstruction of the road over the\nCascades, the Creston-Salmo Highway, the completion of,the Nelson-\nNelway road and the rebuilding\nof many important secondary roads\nsuch as the road up the Slocan\nValley will be highlighted. In addition $1,427,605 more than last\nyear has been set aside for maintenance work on existing roa'ds\nthroughout the Province. This will\nallow the Highways Department\nto straighten out-curves, re-pave\nor improve the many secondary\nroads in the Nelson-Creston area\nthat have been a source of irritation to residents for many years,\nOf real interest to every farmer\nand orchardist in the Kootenays\nis the increase in the Agriculture\nDepartment's budget by 45 per\ncent. It is hoped that this will\nbring about a real increase in the\nservices provided for this essential part of our Provincial economy.\nProperty owners will be glad\nto know that amendments to the\n\"Assessment    Equalization    Act\"\nCAPABLE OF LIFTING 90 torn In one scoop Is thii giant\npower shovel, world's largest mobile land maohlne. It Ii ihown\nhere as it began lumbering from Cadiz, Ohio, where It waa assembled, to a coal company mine not far away. Its height Is that\nof a 16-storey building. Two passenger cars, shown easily parked\nIn the gigantic dipper, give an Indication of Its size.\n\u2014Central Preis Canadian.\nThreaten Navigation\nTOKYO (AP) \u2014 United States\nNavy officials Saturday said numerous Russian-made mines have\nbeen floated deliberately into the\nJapan sea, menacing navigation\nin violation of the Geneva convention. A spokesman said 142 mines\nhave been recovered on Japanese\nbeaches or waters since 1952.\nwill be introduced, to clarify the\nassessment andV taxation for school\npurposes of tenants' fixtures in\nlandlord premises.\nMine owners and operators will\nbenefit from sales tax abatements\nof one-half for machinery or taxable property used specifically for\nmining exploratory work.\nThese major changes in the\nProvincial Government program\nfor the next fiscal year reflect the\nGovernment's view that British\nColumbia is entering upon the\ngreatest development boom in its\nhistory. It is my intention to see\nthat the development in the Kootenays is kept in step with every\nother part of the Province.\nWhen further ' details of the\nbudget of particular Interest to\nthe Nelson - Creston area are\nbrought out in the House I shall\nendeavour, through the medium\nof this column, to keep you informed.\nOver $12 Million\nTo Tree Fruits\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 More than\n$12,000,000 has been advanced to\nshippers on the 1936, crop, B.C.\nTree Fruits announced Saturday.\nUp to late December, $9,204,-\n315.52 had been paid out. Since\nthat time, peach pools have been\nclosed resulting in a further payment of $577,923.64. Total payments to shippers for peaches\namount to $1,404,487.94.\nAdditional advances have also\nbeen made on d'anjou pears totalling $45,500 and on apples in the\namount of $2,200,000. Of the $12,-\n000,000 advanced on the total crop,\napproximately $7,000,000 was on\napples.\nThese payments are the amounts\npaid packinghouses from which all\npacking charges are to be deducted in arriving at the net grower\nreturn.\nBackache\nfar quick comforting help tor Backache,\nRhoumatte Palnn, Getting Up Nlghtj, strong\nBloadT artae. Irritating passagea, Leg Palo*.\nmd low of energy due to JtUdn*T mm\nBladder troubles, try CYSTBX. Quick,\n i-i- \u20144.1.\u2022>..*\u25a0\u00ab ... \u2122\u201e\u201e\u201en fcaufe, Don I\nutaaaer trouuiuu, **j v *. a i. *_\u2022*-_*!**\ncomplete satisfaction or money back. D\n\u25a0after another day without \u2022\u2022king 1\n.fcuggUt lor CTBITUL\nWatch Your Language\nDIAMETER - (dy-AM-e-ter) - noun:\nthe length of a straight line through the\nc-ite- of an object; thickness. Origin: Old\nFreeh\u2014Diametre. from Latin from Greek- \u25a0\nDiamelros, from Dia plus metron, measure.\nIt's Been Said\nIt is far more important to me to preserve an unblemished, conse'ence than to\ncompass any object howevei  great.\n\u2014William Henry Channing.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nTHE B4RBER ALWAYS RE\/MOVES\nTHE RtfTIENttfe BIFOC4LS BEFORE\nTHE T0NS0RI4L OPERATION--\nToday's Bible\nThought\nBehold how good and how\npleasant It Ii for brethren to dwell\ntogether in unity,  Psalm  133:1.\nSometimes a small inheritance\ndivides families. \" But if each\nthinks of others as well as of him\nself the problem is solved.\nOiwl dist\nFew men are so good by day\nthat there is no night work for\ntheir conscience to do.\nIf You Want It;...\nYou Get It Easily With a WANT AD!\nWhat Do You Want? ...A Want-Ad Will Get It for You.'\nFIND BUY HIRE\nSELL\nRENT\nTRADE\nPhone 1844 \u2014Classified Department\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n_^__________\n XIqS\nm\\ Pastry\nDelicious for\nSpecial Baking\nBy MARGARET CARR\nHere we bring you directions\nfor making puff pastry, patty cases and NTapoleons. As we have\npointed out before, the method ts\nlengthy, but when foHowed carefully, is not nearly so difficult and\ncomplicated as it would appear on\nfirst reading over the recipe.\nPUFF PASTRY\n4    cups pastry flour\n1    teaspoon salt\n1    pound unsalted butter\nIce water\nMix and sift the flour and salt.\nCut of 1\/3 of the butter and cut\nit Into the flour. Add water carefully, to make a stiff dough. Turn\ndough on to a lightly floured\nboard and knead very lightly for\none minute. Chill for 5 minutes.\nMeanwhile divide the remaining butter into four equal parts\nand pat each into a thin sheet,\nPlace these on wax paper and\nplace in refrigerator to chill thoroughly. Now roll dough to Vi inch\nthickness, keeping it rectangular\nin shape. Place one sheet of the\nbutter in the centre and fold over\nlike a pocket book. Roll out again\nto Vi inch thickness and fold over\nwithout butter. Next time roll out\nand fold over adding butter as in\nthe first rolling. Continue thus until all butter is used and then fold\na couple of extra times. Wrap in\nwax paper and leave to chill for\n24 hours In a refrigerator.\nIf tha paste sticks to the board\nduring the series of rollings,\nscrape the board clean and dust\nlightly again with flour. Use only\nenough flour to keep the paste\nfrom sticking. Roll with a light\neven stroke, In only one direction\n\u2014not back and forth. The number\nof layers of butter and paste are\nwhat make it flaky. It is the air incorporated into the paste that\nmakes it puff and become light.\nThe    above    recipe will make\nabout 12 large patty cases or 20\nsmall cases.\nPATTY CASES\nRoll out puff paste to Vi Inch\nthickness, using a 2V\\ inch cutter,\nFtamp out twice as many pieces as\nyou wish cases. Using a cutter\nabout \\V% inches In'diameter, cut\nthe centres from half of the circles. Place these on top of the\nwhole rounds, wetting them\naround the edge so they will stick\ntogether. Arrange on ungreased\nbaking sheet. Place in hot oven\n(450 deg. F.) for 10 minutes or un-\n' til they puff. Reduep hea&.to 350\ndeg. F. for about 20 minutes or until very lightly browned.\nThese may be made up ahead\nand reheated for use when desired\nto restore the crispness.\nNAPOLEONS\nRoll puff pastry to Vi inch\nthickness, cut into two large oblongs closely matched in size.\nBake on an ungreased baking\nsheet at 450 deg. F. for 10 minutes. Reduce to 350 deg. F. until\ncooked. Cool and spread the slice\nwith cooled thick cream custard\nfilling. Place on top layer and\nsprinkle with icing sugar. Use a\n.very sharp knife to cut Into\nservings.\nAFTER SPENDING a honeymoon In California, Sydney\nBrass and his bride, the former Marlene Tipper, are making their\nhome at Yahk. The brlde'ia the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Tipper of KIngsgate. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs, W. Brass\nof Portage la Prairie, Man. Priscilla Atwood, bridesmaid, and\nCarl Nelson, best man, were both from Yahk.\n\u2014H. M, Buckna photo.\nThird Marriage\nGoes On The Rocks\nSANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)-\nJudy Garland's third marriage has\ngone awry.\nThe singer-actress has filed suit\nfor divorce from actor's agent Sid\nLuft. They were wed June 8, 1952,\nShe charged cruelty, asked the\ncourt to make an equitable division of community property and\nrequested custody of the two children, Lorma, 3, and Joseph, 10\nmonths old.\nMiss Garland formerly was married to musician David Rose and\nfilm director Vincente Minnelli.\nShe and Minnelli had one child,\nLiza.\nThe Doctor\nVnwdcut TTlwdiiL\nFAVORITE  NIP\nLUTON, England'(CP) \u2014 Mrs\nMabel Williams of this Bedfordshire town attributes her 100 years\nto \"whisky in tea, and clgarets.\n[ Make Your Own  j\nValentines\nE it Styrofoam  Ribbons\nt ic Gold and Silver Doilies  a\nI ic Hearts and Flowers\nI ic Assorted Valentines\nHOBBY SHOP\nPhone 224\n^******'*A*.\u00bbmmmm\\mmm\\l\nBASIC BEAUTY\nFashion basis for a smart cep\"-\narates wardrobe! The beautiful\nflare skirt that teams so well with\nall your blouses, sweaters, glamorous evening tops. This new style\nLs as easy to sew as it is flattering\nto wear! Perfect for bengaline,\nsoft woolens, velveteen-\nPattern 9128: Misses' Waist sizes\n24, 25, 86, 28, 30, 3^ inches. Size\n28 takes 2% yards 39-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect *fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted), for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St., W.,\nToronto, Ont.\nNew Basements\nAre Hazardous\nBy Herman N. Bundesen\nWith the installation of more\nand more electrical equipment\nand appliances in the basement\nof the average home, the chances\nof accidents there are Increasing.\nNot only might the equipment itself present certain hazards, but\nthe fact that you use the basement\nmore often also creates new problems.\nBasement stairs can be very\ndangerous, especially if the light\nis dim. A couple of precautions are\nin order.\nPaint the bottom step or the\nconcrete floor at the base of the\nstairway a shiny-white. This will\nprevent you from thinking the\nlast step is floor level. And when\nyou paint tbe stairs themselves,\nmix some sand in with the paint.\nThis will form a gritty surface\nand help prevent slipping.\nSHOCK HAZARDS\nAll power tools and appliances\nshould be grounded to avoid\nshock hazards. With certain tools,\nthis sometimes is a difficult procedure. But as far as the family\nwashing machine is concerned,\nit's an easy process.\nSimplyiconnect the fflame of trie\nwasher to a water pipe with\nwire. You can use a battery clamp\nto attach the wire to the washing\nmachine. With such an arrange-*\nment, any break in the insulation\nwill blow a fuse and not send the\nelectricity coursing through your\nbody.\nA floor board alongside the\nwasher might be a good idea. It\nwill keep you off the wet floor\nwhile laundering.\nFor dad's workshop, background\ncolors of soft gray, green, blue and\nblue-greeri are easy on the eyes.\nThey also reflect light well with\nout being too bright.\nBare light fixtures might cause\nglare and temporary blindness, so\nit is better to have an effective\nshading device. You can highlight\n(he cutting adges of gray machinery with a bright orange paint.\nWhenever possible, ground all\nmachinery.\nEXTENSION CORDS\nDo not hang extension cords\nover nails or other sharp edges or\npermit them to become kinked.\nProtect the cords from oil or hot\nsurfaces.\nDripping pipes may make the\nfloor slippery. Eliminate condensation by covering cold water\npipes with felt or any insulating\nmaterial,\nAs for the furnace, paint any\nlow hanging ducts a bright color.\nAnd remember, the trick in banking a coal fire for the night is to\nleave some red coals exposed to\nignite the gases, Open the flue\ndamper slightly, -too, to prevent\nqas accumulation,\nGET THEIR   MAN\nNOTTINGHAM, England fCP)\u2014\n\"Training some girls to be policewomen is a waste of time,\" says\nPolice Surgeon Dr. K. S. MacDonald. \"They hook a handsome copper and leave for some sort of\nslavery.\"\nPHONE   1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nRl^ Stanley Street\nPASTOR:   D.   WINE\nSpecial   Services   With\nEvangelist and  Mrs.\nH.  Creighton  of  Penticton\nMessage of  Deliverance\nTuesday.   Feb.   7   Through\nSunday, Feb. 12, Except\nSaturday, Services at 7:30 p.m.\n' EVERYBODY  WELCOME\nSunday School Weekly\nat 10 a.m.\nMorning Worship Weekly\nat 11 a.m.\nParis Papers\nComment Coolly\nOn Dior F Line\nBy NADEANE WALKER\nPARIS (AP)-Dior'i new line\u2014\nthis time the \"F\"\u2014is again the\nbiggest news of the Paris spring\nfashion showings which wound up\nFriday. But one Irate Paris fashion editor blasted him for \"dehumanizing\" woman.\nTha fact that imall waistlines\nare general this year Is the best\nnews, fashlonwlse, that women\nhave   had  for  several   seasons.\nWith few exceptions, the unbelted bag has disappeared.\nWhile Dior puts belts right un-\ndwer the bust, in an infanta or Em-\nress  Josephine  style,  even   here\nthe   natural    waistline    emerges.\nLanvln also goes In  for the  le-\nvated infanta waist, but mostly for\nformal wear. Several other houses\ntended toward high-waisted effect.\nOBSCURE\nWhile Dior's previous \"H\"  and\n\"A\" lines were easy to see in the\nsiihouette, the new \"F\". is rather\nobscure. It must be explained that\nIt is the longhand or written \"F\"\nthat Dior has in mind, arid that lt\napplies only to the side view.\nParis   papers   have   remained\nrather   unexclted   about   Dior's\nlatest line. Moat of them ran a\nstraightforward   description,\nwithout comment on  criticism,\non a back page. But at least one\nlong   suffering   fashion   editor\nwas stirred to an attack on the\nstyle dictator.\nAfter remarking that \"High\nfashion is one thing, and Christian\nDior quite another,\" the writer\ncriticized Dior for breaking all the\nrules and \"betraying without cease\nthe natural needs of the body by\nchanging continuously the form.\"\n\"It is with difficulty,\" she remarks bitingly, \"that anyone could\nimagine a child behind the skirts\nof a Dior-dressed woman!\"\nGenevive Fath apparently\npleased her opening-day audience\nagain with a curvey, natural silhouette. A small waist nipped in\nbetween well-round bust and hips\ncreates a modern hourglass figure,\nwhich she calls the \"chalice line.\"\nPatau's collections have also\nbeen praised by the fashion press\nas better than usual this year.\nGeneral consensus Is that Dior,\nwhile still \"the best,\" does not outshine the competition as over-\npoweringly as usual.\nAustria Dissolves\nWTU In Vienna.\nVIENNA (AP) \u2014 The Austrian\ngovernment announced Saturday\nthat it has ordered dissolved the\nCommunist-controlled World,Ted,\neration of Trade Unions which\nhas its headquarters in Vienna.\nNotice of this decree of the Austrian ministry of Interior was 1e-\nlivered to Louis Saillant, French\nCommunist who is secretary-general of the WFTU and who maintains offices here.\nNELSON IS WHERE Mr. and Mrs. John Louis K.itelnlkoff\nwho were married at the home of the groom's parents at Blewett,\nare residing. The bride Is the second, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nVernon ^Richard O'Neil of Sirdar. Rev. G. W. Payne of Nelson officiated at the wedding ceremony,\u2014Renwlck photo,\nHigh. Handsome Waistlines Top\nParis Spring Fashions Openings\nBy NADEANE WALKER\nPARIS (AP) - Waistlines made\nheadlines In Paris spring fashion\nopenings last week. They're high\nand handsome.\nNothing really revolutionary\nenough to wipe out entire wardrobes has come out of the current\nstyle season. Dior's \"F\" or \"arrow\" silhouette was top-attention\ngetter, but this has become a habit\nwith Dior.\nGodd news for the ladles was\nthe  reappearance of the fitted,\nsmall waist, which has too often\nbeen  swaddled  loosely  of  late,\nThe new 1956 fashions are more\nflattering than they have  been\nfor several seaspns.\nOff-white emerged as \"the color\"\nfor spring, with popular support\nfor the coral, pink and red range,\nwatery  and  intense  blues,  navy,\nand green, with multicolor flower\nprints on white. SmoouT woolens\nalmost crowded out tweeds, and\nchiffon-type gauzy materials were\nleaders for late day and formal\nwear.\nCOMBING JACKETS\nPin and chalk stripes, small pastel checks and polka dots were all\nvery a la mode. So were pleats,\nbuttons and a new short loose\njacket something like a bolero and\ncalled a \"canezou\" or \"caraco.\"\nThese are the obsolete French\nwords for the combing jacket\ngrandma used to wear while she\npinned up her hair.\nHemlines held the status quo a\ndecent few inches below the knee\nand necklines, while generous in\ncertain cases, were nothing to\nknock your eye out. \u00bb\nJackets  got shorter   (some are\nPATTERN A7 57\nc?4- LJtaicu \\_ytiauidl    1\nPROMINENT DESIGNER\nEnjoy the newst ot the new: the \"coordinated look\" you'll see\nstarred m spring fashion shows of important new Prominent Designer clothes. Here, Grabois gives you a slim sheath of a dress\nand a short jacket just touching the waistline. Notice the tab\nacross the square neck of the dress which ,is so adroitly (and\neasily) slips through jacket. Moreover, this is an outfit you can\nmake in almost any material. The Original is in a printed silk\nwith a navy wool jacket; but think of it also in linen, shantung,\nor a lovely new cotton. It's surprisingly simple to sew, and wonderfully but wonderfully enjoyable to wear \u2014 here, there, from\nJanuary to past June! Pattern A757 is available in Misses' Sizes\n10, 12, 14. 1G and 18'. Size 18 dress requires 3 yards 39-inch fabric;\njacket requires 1% yards 54-inch fabric. Send.FIFTY CENTS (in\ncoins) plus three cents tax for Pattern A757 to N.D.N. Prominent\nDesigner Pattern Department, 60 Front St. W., Toronto, Ont,\nPlease print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE,\nSTYLE NUMBER and SIZE.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. MONDAY, FEB. 6,1956 \u2014 S\njust waist-length) and flat panels\nfluttered from many models. The\ncone-shaped    flaring   skirt   was\nhighly popular, but not to the exclusion  of  the sheath.  Big  bells\nblossomed out for cocktails, dinner\nand  dancing.  Embroideries,   were\nlargely   of   multicolored   delicate\npastel flowers on white grounds.\nSeveral    designers    played\naround with the Empire or Infanta   waistline,  pushed   up   to\njust under the bust, Dior did It\nwith a belt or horizontal  pleat\nwell above a small natural waist.\nLanvln curves the waistline up\nIn front and puts a bow trailing\ndraperies'under one side of the\nbreast. Dresses gave the waistline a  lifted  effect by curving\nbelts down behind and putting\ndetail Just under the bust.\nGriffe went in for harem hemlines,    gathered   in   like    baggy\nTurkish   trousers,    and    Maggy\nRouff, practically alone of all the\ndesigners, put in a few shapeless\nsheaths, a reminder of the 1920s.\nPatou, opening the season, correctly forecast what was to follow\nwith his normal silhouette, and a\nline that was curvy, near and discreet.. Hard   on  his heels,  Heim\nshowed   more   small   waistlines,\nsome, times with flat panels falling\n[\"from just below the bust in front\nor shoulderblades behind.\nBalmain's collection, another In\nthe series he aptly calls \"Pretty\nLady.\" were as wearable and as\nunsensational as usual. The cowl\nneckline, puffed out just in front,\nwas .his new obsession. Like a\ngreat many others, he liked wide\ncorselet belts of draped or pleated\nfabric to underline the high bust\nand emphasize a small, natural\nwaist.\nDior's \"F\" profile was a bit\nhard to follow, but the \"arrow\"\ndescribed it better, with slanting\nwidth in the cut of the sleeves and\nbust. His dressy dresses were so\nfull they looked like animated\nclouds.\nCloche hats comlng'down to the\neyebrows and Queen Mary toques\nheaped with flowers went with all\nthe new clothes.\n\"Tattooing\" (an\nHelp Remove\nBirthmarks\nBy DR. HERMAN N. BUNDESEN\nWhile many persons regret having been tattooed, doctors sometimes recommend the procedure,\nOf course, their recommendations\nare for tattooing of a different\nsort.\nAlthough it's a long and painful\nprocess, it sometimes is' used to\ncover bad birthmarks. Generally\nIt is done at intervals of two to\nthree weeks for a period of several months.\nThe lesion is tattooed with skin-\ncolored pigment. One drawback\nto such a procedure is that this\ntattooed area will remain white\nwhen the rest of the skin is\ntanned during the summer.\nUse of this me'thod usually Is\nconfined to the nevus flammeus,\nor port wine mark, This is a flat\nlesion of varying sizes and shades\nof red. It is most likely to appear\non the face, neck or chest as a\ndeep stain.\nIt is a very common sort of\nmark found on about one-third of\nour babies at birth. It's usually\nlocalized at the nape of the neck\nand frequently disappears with\nout any treatment.\nEFFECTIVE TREATMENT\nAnother way of geinng rid or\nsuch a mark is by use of thorium\nX.\nThe thorium solution, which\nproduces good results in some instances, is painted on the area\nevery two weeks for six to eight\nmonths. It may blister, but it is\nnot likely there will be any permanent scarring.\nBTRAWBERRY   MARK\nThe common strawberry mark\ngenerally will vanish^ by itself\nwithin a few years. Refrigeration\nwith solid carbon, dioxide may\neliminate the mark, but it sometimes results in scarring. However, there are various injections\nwhich help to clear up the disfigurement.\nIn most cases something can be\ndone. So, if you have a birthmark\ndo not let it worry you. Your doctor probably can be of great help.\nFEBRUARY\nSALE\nSPECIAL\nRollaway\n..... \u20ac**\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0',...\nAnd Spring  Filled Mattresi\n32.30\nFruitvale Group\nPlans Teas\nFRUITVALE - Plans for the\nAOTS father and son supper and\nfor a Valentine tea on February\n18 were made by members of\nCircle 2 of the St. Paul's WA\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. F. M.\nPeitzsche.\nMembers then worked on articles for a talent tea on March 24.\nSeveral methods of raising talent\n^money were also discussed.\nEmerald Mine\nEMERALD MINE - A farewell\ntea was held at the home of Mrs.\nH. Stear.e, for Mrs. H. Maxwell,\nwho is leaving to make her home\nat (Blind River, Ont. A matching\ntrain case and wardrobe were\npresented on behalf of her friends\nby Mrs. C. Perry. Mrs. J. Gordon\nand Mrs. R. Maxwell presided at\nthe tea table. Co-hostesses were\nMrs. R. McLeod, Mrs. R. Stevens,\nMrs. C. Perry, and Mrs. E.\nWigglesworth.\nA farewell party was held at\nthe community hall, by the teenagers, for Miss Lorraine Maxwell,\nwho will be leaving soon. Jean\nMacDonald presented a gift, on\nbehalf of the group, and dancing\nand refreshments followed.\nladysmith Woman\nIs Centenarian\nLADYSMITH (CP)\u2014Mrs. William Ambrose Cooil of Ladysmith\ncelebrated her 100th birthday\nThursday and was presented with\na pbtted plant by Mayor Leonard\nRyan. Mrs. Cooil, without the aidj\nof glasses, re'ad a letter of congratulations from residents of Lady-\nsmith and city council.\nMr. and Mrs, Cooil, who both\nhail from the Isje of Man, were\nmarried in Glasgow and came to\nVictoria first moving to Ladysmith\nin 1909. Mrs. Cooil still does her\nown housework although her husband, an avid gardener, helps in\nthe kitchen. She received congratulations from the Native Daughter's\nPLEASANT WAIT\nBRIGHTON, England (CP) -\nWomen shoppers waiting for the\ndoors to open at a store's special\nwinter sale were served tea and\ntoast by the management.\nlodge., and St. John's Anglican\nchurch guild. During the Second\nWorld War she was treasurer of\nthe Ladysmith Red Cross branch.\nINDESTRUCTIBLE\nIRON WRINGEf.\nClub To Hear Talk\nOn Rheumatic Fever\nFRUITVALE - The Friendly\nClub decided to cancel its cext\nmeeting to enable members to\nhear a talk on rheumatic fever\nbeing given In the Junior High\nschool. Next meeting will be on\nFebruary 16,\nMembers at their meeting at\nthe home of Mrs. Len Wade sewed\nand   stitched   fancywork.\nSKIN ITCH\nTo quickly clear your skin of embarrassing, external blemishes, Eczema,\nRash, Pimples, Itching, Cracking, Feeling\nBkln or Foot Itch get new scientific, antiseptic, healing, germ killing NIXODERM\nfrom druggist today. Use NIXODERM\ntonight, for a clearer, softer, smoother\nskin tomorrow. Satisfaction or money\nback trial offer. Don't Buffer from a bad\n\u2022kin any longer. Got NIXODERM today.\nSold Exclusively in Nelson by\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n\"Nelson's Oldest Appliance Firm\"\n532 BAKER ST.      NELSON, B.C.      PHONE 1355\nDisinferts as if iAam^ndCweetml\ncottons!\nRemoves Stubborn Stains'\nMakes porcelain glow.\ndiope^\nKills germs! Deodorizes!\n\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1956\nWashington U. Wins\nCollegiate Ski Meet\nBy tJAVlO OANCIA\nCanadian Pi-mi Staff Writer\n' BANFF, Alta. (CP) \u2014 The University ol Washington for the second consecutive year has won top\nhonors in the international collegiate ski meet The team topped\nall three events-giant slalom,\ncross country and downhill.\nJack Haase of Walla Walla,\nWash., a University of Washington\nskier, won the three-way combined title with a score of 282.3\npoints out of a possible 300.\nThe University of Alberta team\ncoached by former Olympic skier\nGordon Morrison of Banff placed\nsecond, Its highest placing in the\n10-year history of the meet. The\nEdmonton squad had(a combined\nstanding of 278.2 points. The University of British Columbia was\nthird  with 268.5 points.\nIn the downhill event Sunday\nthe Seattle squad scored 98.7\npoints, followed closely by Wenatehee Valley College with .97.0.\nMontana State College was third\n'with 93.5, followed by the Uni-\nBE\nCLEARLY\nINFORMED\nCKLN\nTonight\n10:15 p.m.\nThe Honourable\nRay Williston\nMinister of Education\nWill Report to You\non   the   Present\nSession    of   the\nBritish Columbia\nLegislature, Also\nReport from the\nDepartment of\nEducation\n\u2022\nSocial Credit\nKeeps YOU Informed\nBritish Columbia\nSocial Credit League\nvehsity of Alberta with 93.2 and\nUBC with 91.9.\nWINS  DOWNHILL\nWalt Taulbee sizzled down the\nfast Mount Norguay slope in 1:14.2\nto take top spot in the downhill.\nHe was followed by Morrison with\na time of 1:18. Don St. Lewis of\nSeattle, a Wenatehee entry, was\nthird in 1:18.2 and Dave Steves of\nBozeman, a Montana State College entrant, followed with. 1:18.6.\nDave Sturgess of Vancouver,\nwith the UBC team, was with fifth\n1:19 and Haase was sixth with\n1:19.4.\nIn the combined team standings\nMontana State College came\nfourth with 267.9 points, followed\nby Wenatchee.Valley College with\n259.2.\nStevens, a Montana State College student, came in second in\nthe three-way combinede standings with 274.2 points. Sturgess\nwas third with 268.9. Oyateln\nBoreng and Phil Rognlien, both of\nKalispell, Mont., and both registered at Montana State, came\nfourth and fifth and had 265.1 and\n248.6 points respectively. Harvey\nAbell of UBC was sixth with 233.4\nCRASH INTO TREES\nThe meet was marred by accidents which put two of the top\nskiers out of the competition.\nDoug Nicholson of Seattle, a Wenatehee entry, piled into a tree\nduring a practice run Friday and\nsuffered a fractured pelvis. Ralph\nFederspiel of Seattle, a Washington entry fractured his leg Saturday when he crashed into a tree\non the fast and treacherous North\nAmerican run on Mount Norquay.\nFederspiel had come second in the\ngiant Slalom event.\nTheberge, Bobrov\nTop Goal-Getters\nCORTINA d'AMPEZZO, Italy\n(CP)\u2014Canadian left winger Jerry\nTheberge and Russian centre Vse-\nvolod Bobrov shared the goal-\nscoring leadership with nine\napiece at the end of the Olympic\nhockey   tournament.\nThe 25-year-old bricklayer from\nSt. Hyacinthe, Que., and Russia's\n33-year-old captain both were\nblanked as the Soviet Jeam won\nthe title by defeating Kitchener-\nWaterloo Dutchmen 2-0 in the\ntournament's final game Saturday\nnight.\nRussia's Alexei Guryshev was\none goal behind the leaders while\ntwo Dutchmen, captain Jack McKenzie and Jim Logan, finished\nin a three-way tie for fourth place\nwith Johnny Mayasich of the\nUnited States.\nTHE LEADERS':\nTheberge. Canada     9\nBobrov, Russia         9\nBuryshev, Russia     8\nLogan. Canada     7\nMcKenzie,  Canada   \"...   7\nMayasich. U.S    7\nScholes, Canada         5\nShuvalov,  Russia      5\nChristian.  U.S.          5\nCleary. U.S.      5\nOlson.  U.S.      5\nNavrat,  Czechoslovakia        5\nClaim Russian Tour\nWould Pack Arenas\nWINNIPEG   (CP)\nMaurice     \"In recent weeks the Canadian\nSmith, sports editor of the Free\nPress, says the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association should\nbring the Russian Olympic hockey\nteam to Canada for a national tour\nas a revenue-making venture.\nIn  his  column,   Smith   writes:\nSHOWING THEIR SKILL In a workout at Madison Square\nGarden are four member! of the Swias men'a Olympic gymnaatlc\nteam. They opened their first coast-to-coast tour of America with\na performance In New York recently. Left to right are: Joseph\nKnecht, Eduard Thoml, Oswald Buhler and Jack Gunthard,\ncaptain of the team and winner of the horizontal bar gold medal\nIn the  1952 Olympic Games.\u2014Central  Presa  Canadian.\nCANADA AT\nTHE OLYMPICS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSaturday\nItockey: Russia defeated Canada\n2-0.\nSunday\nSpecial ski jumping: Jacques\nCharland, Trois Rivieres, Que.,\nplaced 27,\nWATER reveals\nwhisky's\ntrue flavour\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results of\nSaturday's United Kingdom soccer\ngames:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nArsenal 3, Sunderland 1\nBirmingham C 4, Charlton A 0\nBlackpool 0, Manchester C 1\nBofton W vs Aston V postponed\nChelsea 2, Wolverhampton W 3\nEverton 0, Portsmouth 2\nHuddersfield T 1, Cardiff C 2\nManchester U 2, Burnley 0\nNewcastle U 1, Tottenham H 2\nSheffield U 3, Preston N E 1\nW Bromwich 3, Luton T 1\nDivision II\nBlackburn R 2, Bristol R 0\nBristol City 2, Barnsley 0\nHull C vs Doncaster R postponed\nLeicester C 5, Plymouth A 1\nLincoln C vs Stoke City postponed\nMiddlesbrough 1. Liverpool 2\nNottingham F 0, Sheffield W 1\nPort Vale 2, Fulham 1\nRotherham U vs Leeds U postponed\nSwansea T 5, Notts C 1\nWest Ham U vs Bury postponed\nDivision III, Southern\nBrentford 2, Exeter C 0\nCoventry C vs Southend U postponed\nGillingham     vs    Bournemouth\npostponed\nIpswich T 2. Aidershot 1\nMillwall   vs   Norwich   C   postponed\nNewport C vs Swindon T postponed\nReading vs Colchester U postponed'\nShrewsbury   T   vs   Crystal   P\npostponed\nSouthampton 1. Brighton 2\nTorquay U 2, Queen's PRO\nWalsall vs Northampton T postponed\nWatford 0. Leyton 0 4\n-.COTTISH   FA  CUP\nrifth  Round\nAirdrieonians 7, Hamilton A 1\nAyr U 5, Berwick R 2\nBrechin C 1. Arbroath 1\nClyde vs^ Dunfermline A postponed \u2022\nDundee U 2, Dundee 2\nEast Fife vs Stenhousemuir\npostponed\nFalkirk 0. Kilmarnock 3\nHearts 3. Forfar A 0\nHirbernian vs Raith R postponed\nMorton 0. Celtic 2\nMotherwell vs Queen's P postponed\nPartick T 2. Alloa A 0\nQueen of S 3. Cowdenbeath 1\nRangers 2. Aberdeen 1\nSt. Mirren 6, Third Lanark 0\nStirling A 2. St. Johnstone 1\nDivision III, Northern\nBradford 3. Gateshead 1\nSoccer Standings\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Soccer standings:  (top five teams)\nPut Seagram'i \"83\" to the water\neat- Water, plain or sparkling, reveals a\nwhisky's true, natural flavour\nand bouquet.\nSeagrams \"83\"\n0*y Seagrams**\/^ Sure\nTh|j advertisement Is not published or displayed by\ni liquor Control Board or by the Govommanl of British Columbia.\nENGLISH   LEAGUE\nDivision 1\nW\nT\nL\nPt\nManchester U   .\n16\n6\n7\n38\nBlackpool\n14\n6\n8\n34\nWest Bromwich\n14\n4\n11\n32\nWolverhampton\n13\n5\n10\n31\nBurnley   \t\n12\n7\n9\n31\nPortsmouth   \t\n13\n5\n10\n31\nDivision 'II\nSheffield  W \t\n12\n11\n6\n35\nBristol City \t\n15-\n9\n5\n34\nSwansea Town \u2014\n15\n4\n9\n34\nLiverpool    \t\n13\n6\n8\n32\nBristol R   \t\n14\n4\n10\n32\nLeeds United   \t\n14\n4\n9\n32\nPort Vale\t\n11\n10\n7\n32\nDivision III, Southern\nIpswich   Town   ...\n18\n8\n4\n44\nLeyton Orient \t\n17\n7\n4\n41\nBrighton    \t\n18\n5\n7\n41\nTorquay U     \t\n15\n8\n8\n38\nCoventry City \t\n16\n4\n10\n36\nNorwich City\n14\n8\n7\n36\nDivision III, North\nern\nAccrington S  .  .\n18\n5\n6\n41\nSouthport\n17\n5\n7\n39\nHartlepools U   ....\n18\n3\n10\n39\nGrimsbv Town ....\n17\n4\n8\n38\nDerby County'\t\n16\n6\n7\n38\nEscapee Dodges\nLondon Police\nBy EDDY GILMORE\nWalker Retires\nAs Point Leader\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) \u2014 Doak\nWalker, who recently announced\nhis retirement from professional\nI football, won the National Football League scoring championship\nlast season for the second time in\nhis career.\nOfficial league statistics show\nthat Walker, of Detroit Lions,\nscored 96 points, seven touchdowns, 27 conversions and 9 field\ngoals. Vic Janowicz of Washington Redskins was second with 88\npoints. Janowicz scored seven\ntouchdowns, booted 28 conversions\nand connected with 6 field  goals,\nGeorge Blanda of Chicago Bears\nfinished third with 82 points on\ntwo touchdowns, 37 conversions\nand 11 field goals.\nFlyers Trounce Leafs\nBefore Capacity Crowd\n.Olympic Standing\nCORTINA d'AMPEZZO, Italy\n(CP) \u2014 Final unofficial standing\nby countries based on a 10-5-4-3\nAmateur Hockey Association has\nfrankly admitted that it is not the\nwealthy organization it once was.\nWith interest in junior and senior hockey at a low ebb all across\nCanada, it would seem the Allen\nand Memorial Cup playdowns are\nnot going to draw well this\nseason which means the CAHA\nwon't pick up much revenue in\n1958. ....\n\"Why not bring the Russian\nOlympic team to Canada for a national tour? Considering the outstanding success of the Soviets in\nthe last two world championships\nand this year's Olympics, we think\nthey'd pack every hockey arena in\nCanada.\"\nStrikes n Spares\nPlaudits for topping the 700\nmark went to five bowlers in Mixed Commercial League play last\nweek. Doug Hall's 794 and Dot\nWaterer's 738 copped the men's\nand women's high three game aggregate honors. Others scoring\nover 700 were Chuck Symmonds,\n737, Bruce Malcolm, 721, and Tom\nMaglio, 709. The Hume Hotel\nquintet made a clean sweep of\nteam honors with scores of 1324\nand 3441.\nHere are the results of competition in other bowling leagues:\nJunior Womenn' Laegue \u2014 high\nsingle, Mary Gordon, 319; high\nBillie Moore, 645; high\nSPOKANE, Wash. (CP) \u2014 A\ncapacity crowd of 5,700 watched\nSpokane Flyers hold their three-\npoint lead In the Western International Hockey League Saturday\nnight with a 6-2 victory over the\nthird-place Nelson Maple Leafs.\nGrabbing a two-goal lead In the\nopener, Flyers were never in danger as they outscored the visitors, 2-1, in the second and third\nperiods.\nIt was tlie   eighth   consecutive\nLONDON (AP)-Alfred George! 2-1 traditional point score for the Jfam ns'ngle a\"d *\u00ab*reSate. Head\nHinds has eluded police for morel first six finishers in each of the\nthan a month in a grim disappear- 24   events   in   the   1956   winter\ning act staged in'the foggy back-; Olympics completed:\nalleys of the vast city.   '\nSince he climbed over a wall of\nNottingham jail and fled through\nSherwood Forest, Hinds has done a\ndozen things that could ,have led\npolice to his hideaway.\nBut hundreds of detectives and\nuniformed bobbies apparently\nhaven't come close to bringng him\nin.\nHinds was serving a 12-year sentence for stealing \u00a340,000 worth of\nmoney and jewels. Since he escaped, he has:\nWritten three letters to London\nnewspapers and apparently posted\nthem hrfflSelf.\nTelephoned his wife to tell her\nhow much he loves and misses her.\nDiscussed his case by letter with\nhis lawyer and member of Parliament\nMAILS TOY8\nJust before Christmas he went\nout and bought toys for his two\nchildren and mailed them from a\ncrowded post office.\n\"To my big boy, Peter,\" said a\nChristmas card. \"Love from\nDaddy.\"\n\"All my love, darling,\" said his\ngreeting to his wife, \"hoping that\nthis is our last Christmas apart.\nYour Alf.\"\nAll of Hinds' letters and packages have borne the postmark\n\"Lqndon SWI,\" a thickly populated\nsection abounding in mews, alleys,\nlanes and byways as well as big\nopen streets, stately mansions and|\nVictorian houses.\nThe postmarks show the hour\naround 6:30 p.m., when London's\nstreets are often shrouded in fog\nand mist.\nHinds was convicted in 1953 in\nwhat Lord Chief Justice Goddard\ndescribed as \"one of the most serious robberies in London in a long\ntime.\"\nHe has offered to surrender if a\nnew trial is granted him.\n- His wife, Lila, stared at an un-\nsent   Christmas   card   on   her\nmantlepiece and said:\n\"I bought a card for Alfred but\nI don't know where to send it.\"\nRussia      121\nAustria  .. \\,._  78Vfe\nFinland    _...  66\nSweden   .   _  62\nSwitzerland    _... 55*_\nUnited States   MVt\nNorway w  47\nItaly     .... . -..._  3m\nGermany     24\nCanada    _... 16\nFrance    \t\nThe Netherlands .\nPoland  \t\nJapan   .\nCzechoslovakia ...\n| Britain  \t\n] Hungary\t\nI Spain   \t\n10\n7\n6\n5\n5\n4\n4\n3\nSelkirks Triumph\nIn A-B-C Fixfures\nwin for netminder John Sofiali\nsince joining the Flyers in Decern'\nber and the veteran . netmindei\nweathered a gash in the head lati\nin the third period for his victory\nSofiak went off for stitches but returned to finish.\nVeteran.Carl Cirullo scored twi\ngoals for the winners while Douj\nToole, Frank Kubasekv GaVrj\nStarr and Art Jones added on*\neach. Jones' tally was his 35th ol\nthe season.\nWendy Keller and Don Apple,\nton replied for Nelson.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1. Spokane, Jor -i\n(Pasqualotto, Roszini) 3:19; 2. Spokane, Toole (Cirullo, Starr) 17:40.\nPenalties:    Luke    11:50, Kellel\nCRANBROOK    \u2014    Cranbrook | 18:54.\nSelkirks beat   Michel-Natal   Coal I    Second period: 3. Spokane. Ku.\nKings here Saturday evening 14-5,! basek  (Nadeau, Miller)    :36;    1\nin an Alberta-British Columbia In-j Nelson, Appleton (Maglio, Parker) *\ntermediate Hockey League game] 7:31; 5. Spokane, Cirullo  (Kubs\nto stay close behind league leading! sek, Miller) 9:48.\nKimberley Legionaires as the 16 j    PenaIties; p. Koehle 8:52\ngame schedule for the six particl-  Gregor 15'57\npating teams goes into the home I    rr..  .        '\nstretch.  Selkirks now have nine!, Th'rd Pe\"\u00b0<i: 6. Spokane, Cirul-\nlo (Pasrjualotto, Rozzini) 13:49; 7.\nSpokane, Starr (Hodges) 17:18; A\nNelson. Keller (Hyssop, F, Koehle)\n19:10.\nMc-\nPenalties: McGregor 6:27, Mag.\nlio 11:19, McGregor 12:50, R,\nKoehle (misconduct) 12:50.\nPins, 985 and 2588.\nVariety Club \u2014 high single and\naggregate, Gwen Greer, 349 and\n714; high team single and aggregate, Busy Bees, 938 and 2368.\nSenior Women's League \u2014 high\nsingle, Fern Porteous, 335; high\naggregate, Dot Waterer, 662; high\nteam single, Peeks, 1029; high\nteam aggregate, Lunns, 2871;\nHigh School League \u2014 high\nsingle and aggregate, Frank Anderson, 227 and 591; high team\nsingle, Gutter Guys, 653; high team\naggregate, Lucky Strikes, 1797;\nMen's Commercial League \u2014\nhigh single and aggregate, Chuck\nSymmonds, 302 and 726; high team\nsingle, Larry's Hilltoppers, 11Q5;\nhigh team aggregate, Mel Buerge's,\n3012.\nwins, a tie and two losses, with\none home and three road games\nto play by February 25.\nEarly first period Michel goals\nby Ernie Winstanley and J. Sera-\nfino gave the visitors a 2-1\nlead but by the end of the period\nSelkirks led 3-2. In the second Sel-1\nkirks scored four goals to Michel's i\nsingle by Armond Lalonde md DL., nl,'\nvisitors' final period tallies werel Rne\u00ab\"W\u00ab\"SSu1\nscored by Rod Joyce and Jim Mc-\nVey.\nSelkirks Fred Anderson and\nBrian Casey each had three goals\nwhile John Walmsley, Duncan\nMacDonald, Denis Nelligan and\nLaurie Ludlow each had a pair,\n! Arthritis -\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Only two\nRugby Union games were played\nSaturday.\nThe results:\nINTERNATIONAL MATCH\nWales 9. Scotland 3 (at Cardiff)\nCLUB MATCH\nCoventry 8, Combined South\nAfrican Universities 11\nAll   other  matches   were   can-\nVital Facts Explained\nFREE DESCRIPTIVE BOOK\nAs a public service to ail\nreaders of this paper, a new 44-\npage highly illustrated book on\nArthritis and Rheumatism will\nbe mailed ABSOLUTELY FREE\nto all who write for it\nThis FREE BOOK fully explains the causes, ill-effects and\ndanger in neglect of these painful and crippling conditions. It\nalso describes a successfully\nproven drugless method of\ntreatment which has been applied in many thousands of\ncases.\nThis book is yours WITHOUT\nCOST or obligation. It may be\nthe means of saving years of\nuntold misery. Don't delay. Send\nfor your FREE BOOK today.\nAddress The Ball Clinic, Dept\n5244, Excelsior Springs, Mo.\n\\i)ut heart singe...\n#f the i\/erg -fitst sight \/\nCarlisle U 0, Accrington S 4\nChester 1, Barrow 0\nChesterfield 2, Tranmere R 0\nCrewe Alex 1, Scunthorpe U 2\nDerby   C   vs   Oldham   A   postponed\nGrimsby T vs Darlington postponed\nHartlepools U 1, Bradford C 0\nMansfield T 8. Wrexham 1\nRochdale 1, Southport 3\nStockport C 3, Halifax T 1\nYork C 1, Workington 1\nIRISH CUP\nFirst Round\nArds 1, Glenavon 1\nBallymena U 0. Glentoran 4\nBangor 2. Crusaders 3\nChimney Corner 1, Linfield 7\nCliftonviHe 6, Carrick R 0\nColeraine 0, Distillery 3\nDerry City 0, Portadown 2\nDundela 1, Linfield Swifts 5\nMILLIONS KNOW THE\nCOUGH\nAND\nCOLO\nFIGHTING POWER OP\niMiai\nTHAT'I WHY IT IS CAN.\nADA'S FASTIST SELLING\nCOUGH, COLO, ASTHMA\nAND BRONCHITIS REMEDY.\nN-US\n'56 Plymouth Belvedere V-8 4-door sedan.\nNew Flight-styled '56   PLYMOUTH\n6'S AND V-8'S...UP TO 200 HORSEPOWER WITH POWER' PAK\nPut your flngor on a new kind of driving\nwith Plymouth push-button PowerFlite,\noptional on all models! Press your finger\non the button . . . step on the gas . . .\nand GO! This is safer driving, too!\nControl panel is placed to left of driver,\nout of passenger's reach.\nIt's so fresh and youthful and spirited in concept that you\nfeel good just looking at it!\nAnd this dramatic beauty springs into action at the turn of\na key, the touch of a button. For that's all you do to start\ndriving with '56 Plymouth's new push-button PowerFlite.\nThen nudge the accelerator, feel Plymouth power ZOOM\ninto action. New Hy-Fire V-8 has 200 h.p. with Power Pak.\nGreater torque gives livelier performance.\nThere's new peace of mind, too, in this great Plymouth.\nLifeGuard door latches, optional seat belts, Safe-Guard\nhydraulic brakes, constant-speed electric windshield wipers\nare just a few of the features that assure safer driving.\nFull-time power steering and power brakes are available\nto give instant, positive control.\nOnly Plymouth in the low-priced field brings you such V-8\npower, such fine-car luxury. Easy to buy, too! It's time to\nsee your dealer and drive one yourself.\nMANUFACTURED IN CANADA BY CHRYSLER CORPORATION OF CANADA, LIMITED\nWatch Climax\u2014Shower of Stars weekly on TV. Check your newspaper for date and tlmo.\nSee and drive the beautiful new Plymouth with the FORWARD LOOK ^> at your Chrysler-Plymoulh-Far\u00a3o dealer's now!\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\n135  Baker St.  \u2014  Phone  1090\n .,.;.','..'ii !7,iiir.ui..i : ; ; : '\n<W\\\nRuss Triumphs 2-0\nOver K-W Dutchies\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n-C I CORTINA d'AMPEZZO, Italy  (CP)\u2014 Russia ended Canada's eight-year reign as\nOlympic hockey champions Saturday night with a convincing 2-0 victory over Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen.\n, -\\ It was no fluke. The Russians, establishing themselves as a power in international\nhockey by capturing the Olympic, world and European titles, defeated the 1955 Allan\n,Cup champions \u2014 the best amateur team On->da could send to Cortina. And the losers\nplayed magnificent hockey. *  *  *\nAustria in the preliminary round\nBut it wasn't enough. Russia\n. having defeated Toronto East\nYork, a senior B. club, for the\nworld title in 1954 only to lose it\nto Penticton Vs last year, were the\nbetter team in the rubber match.\nGET THE BREAKS\nThe winners got their share of\nthe breaks.. Three shots banged\n. into the Russian goalposts and\nbounced away. Two others nicked\nthe outside edge of the pipes. But\ncoach Bobby Bauer of the Dutchmen and Canadian observers\nagreed after the game that the\nnew champions could give any\nCanadian club a battle.\nThe defeat, coupled with a 4-1\nupset at the hand of the United\n-States, dropped the Dutchmen to\nthird place in the Olympic standing with three victories against\ntwo defeats. The undefeated winners and the Americans, who lost\nonly to Russia, finished ahead of\nthe Canadians.\nIt was the first time in the history of the Olympic or world\nchampionships that a Canadian\nteam has finished lower than second or suffered more than one defeat. And it was Canada's first loss\nOt the Olympic hockey crown\nsince Port Arthur Bearcats were\nedged 2-1 by Britain in the 1936\nfinal.\nRUSSIANS IMPROVED\nThroughout the two-week tournament it was evident that the\ncalibre of Canada's opponents has\nimproved immeasurably during\nthe last few years, in which Canadian entries rolled over weak\nEuropean clubs by scores that usually reached into double figures.\nApart from  a  23-0 romp  over\nand a 10-0 decision over winless\nGermany in the final competition,\nthere were no Canadian runaways. Most of their other vjctory\nmargins were matched or topped\nby the Russians and Americans.\nThe Russians had profited from\nthe 5-0 chellacking they took from\nPenticton in last year's world\ntournament. Shy of body contact\nin the 1955 final, they traded\nbumps vigorously with the Dutchmen Saturday. And their pass-\npatterns, while stereotyped, functioned wel lenough to give them\ntheir margin.\nBEAUTIFUL OFFENCE\nBut their biggest improvement\nwas in defensive play. Although\nthe Canadians attacked almost\nconstantly, they were able to get\naway only 23 shots on goalkeeper\nNikolai Puchkov, who racked up\nhis second straight shutout and\nhis third of the final tournament.\nContent to limit their own attack to nine shots on Canadian\ngoalie Keith Woodall, the Russians played their positions beautifully.\nLed by 21-year-old defenceman\nNikolai Sologubov, tagged by\nCanadian experts as good enough\nto play on any National Hockey\nLeague club, they anticipated the\nI) u t c hmen's offensive moves,\nbreaking up their attacks before\nthey materialized.\nAnd when the losers got through\nto Puchwov, they found him un\nbeatable, just as he was in his 4-0\nshutout over the Americans the\nprevious night. Puchdov's record\nof five goals allowed in five final\nKimberley Rink Gains\nB.C. Women's Finals\nA Kimberley rink will represent the Kootenay at the British\nColumbia women's curling championship at Kelowna at the end\nof February.\nMrs. I. Hanson, skip, Mrs. L.\n' Lsith, Mrs. V. Alcock and Mrs.\nA. Calles of Kimberley swept a\nround-robin with five straight\nwins in Kootenay zone playoffs\nat Nelson curling rink Saturday\nand Sunday.\nRunners-up were Mrs. L. Lyons,\nMrs. I. McCannel, Mrs. I. Morris\nand Mrs, M. Johnston of Trail,\nwho lost one game. Other entries\nwere skipped by Mrs. M. DeGirolamo of Nelson, winner of the\nB. C. championship last winter,\nwho lost two games; Mrs. M. Ink\nof Trail and T. Jones and M.\nRichardson of Trail Business Girls\nClub.\nWinner at Kelowna goes to\nVlncouver for the Western Canada finals and the championship.\nThe series has so far been played\nonly in the West.\nCash for fuel, repairs\nand new-born heirs\/-\n^\ni \u2022\n\u2022*\u2022'\u2022\u2022>\n,\u2666:\u2022:\/\nHere'* the kind of event that always seems\nto take a little more money than you have\non hand .\u2022.. when borrowing seems both\na necessary and sensible solution. And that's\njust the time to take your problems\nto the leader in the consumer finance field,\nto ask the help of the best trained staff anywhere.\nThousands of men and women have found\nthat Household Finance can be relied on to give\nthem prompt money service. If you have\na steady income and can make regular monthly\npayments, no endorsers are needed.\nThere's a HFC ollico near you.\nWhy not p\/iono or drop In today I\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nR. M. trlghty. Manager\n608 Bailor Strsst, second floor, phone 1890\nNELSON, B.C\ngames waE the best of the tourna\nment.\nNEITHER CAPITALIZE\nLeft-winger Yuri Krylov shot\nthe Rusians into the lead at 6:20\nof the second period, driving home\na screened shot from 12 feet out.\nValentin Kuzin scored their second goal early in the third period,\ncutting in sharply to take a pass\nfrom Alexander Uvarov and beating Woodall with a 22-footer.\nThe Dutchmen started stepping\nInto the Russians from the siart.\nbut all it got them was penalties,\n\u2014seven to the winners' three. Although the Canadians were two\nmen short early in the opening\nperiod, neither side was able to\ncapitalize on a manpower advantage.\nAs the game progressed, the\nRusian penalty-killing becairre so\neffective that the Canadians managed only one weak shot on goal\nwhile defenceman Genrikh Sidor-\nenkov served a minor for tripping\nlate in the second period.\nNelson Kid Clubs\nSplit With Trail\nNelson Minor Hockey Association's kid hockey teams earned a\nsplit in a two-game exhibition\nseries with Trail League teams at\nthe Civic Arena Saturday afternoon.\nThe Trail Colombos from the\nBantam League won a well-deserved 5-1 victory over the Nelson Red\nWings in the opening game, while\nthe Trail KP's lost 8-2 to Nelspn's\nhustling midget Hornets.\nIn the bantam game Trail led\n1-0 at the clcwe of the first period,\nthen went ahead 3-0 in the sand'\nwhich session and added two more\nto Nelson's one in the final stanza\nThe game was highlighted by some\nfine goaltending of Nelson's Geor-\ngie Watson. The Trail scoring was\ndivided among Broom. Rishagen\nSchiavon, Hunter and Lake scor.\ning singletons. Letcher picked up\ntwo assists, Brown and Lake one\neach. McKinnon tallied Nelson's\ngoal on a two-way passing effort\nfrom McEachern and Rogers.\nAll three penalties went to Nelson. Dune Jamieson and Bill\nWicken were the referees.\nThe midget game was fast all the\nway with Nelson taking full advantage of the slower Trail defence, to score on several fast\nbreak-throughs. Trail's front line\nMilne, Casey a^nd Mailey was fast\nand only some exceptionally fine\nsaves by Nelson's Milt Jorgenson\nkept the Trail club from scoring\nmore than two goals. Nelson led\n2-1 in the first, 3-2 in the second\nand then broke way for five unanswered goals in the last frame,\ntwo .coming when Trail had a man\nadvantage.\nG. Milne scored for Trail i\nassisted in the first and Bill Casey\nscored from Mailey in the second.\nTom Hufty and Dale Skapple scored a hat trick each besides picking\nup an assist apiece to lead the\nNelson attack. Jerry Poulin and\nBill Lipsack notched the other\ngoals. Wilson picked up two assists and Dean Carmen and Hannon one each.\nEach team drew two penalties.\nErnie Gare and Bill Wicken were\nthe referees.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6,1956 \u2014 7\nCanadian Observers\nRate Sologubov Pro\nBy KEN  MEftiERAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCORTINA d'AMPEZZO, Italy (CP) \u2014Canadian   hockey   experts, who watched\nRussia's 2-0 victory over Canada's Kitcheaer-Waterloo Dutchmen in,the final game ol\nthe Olympic hockey tournament Saturday, agreed that at least two of the Russian players are of National Hockey ' *  *  * \u2022  *  \u2022\nScot Wins Title\nIn Bellas! Bout;\nIrish Mob Riots\nBELFAST (AP) - Fight fans\nrioted Saturday night after\nCharlie Hill, a determined Scot,\nwon the British featherweight\ntitle from Billy Kelly, an Irishman.\nAt the end of the close 15-rdUnd\nbout, referee Tom Little of London raised Hill's hand. A roar of\nprotest went up from the 15,000 at\nKing's Hall and the ring suddenly\nwas showered with bottles, chairs,\ntomatoes and old shoes.\nWhile men shouted \"we want\nKelly,\" women in the crowd\nscreamed and fainted. Police\ncharged the rioters with night\nsticks. A dozen fans were treated\nfor injuries but none was seriously\nhurt.\nPolice escorted the two fighters\nand the referee out of the arena.\nHill weighed 125%, Kelly 125V4.\nTwo Points Separate\nFourth, Sixth Teams\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS     I two minutes left to play but the\nThe battle for the final playoff Leafs  were  unable  to  penetrate\nspot   in   the   National    Hockey | the stout Chicago defence.\nLeague wa*rmed up during the\nweekend.\nChicago Black Hawks wrested\nfourth place in the standings from\nToronto Maple Leafs by defeating\nthe Leafs twice, 4-2 on Saturday\nnight and 3-2 Sunday night.\nBoston Bruins turned back Detroit Red Wings 3-1 Sunday night\nafter whipping New York Rangers 7-1 the previous night.\nThat  left  the  Hawks  with  42 j\nThe Bruins made it a perfect,\nfour-point weekend as they out-\nskated Detroit for their victory at\nBoston Garden. The reunited line\nof Don McKenney, Real Chevre-\niils and Leo Labine sparked Boston to the decision.\nMcKenney, Chevrefils and La-\nbine each scored a goal. The\nBruins now have won six and\ntied one of their last eight starts.\nMcKenney  put  the  Bruins  in\ners\n^League calibre,\nThe Canadians were unanimous\nin picking husky defenceman Ivan\nSologubov as the best NHL-type\nplayer on the Russian  team.\nSologubov, 21, a standout against\nthe Canadians, was appearing in\nhis second world tournament.\nOne club in the American Hockey League \u2014 just one step below the NHL \u2014 already has made\nan offer to a Russian player.\nManager Jim Hendy of Cleveland Barons said at Cleveland\nSunday he has cabled an offer of\na two-year contract at $10,000 a\nseason to goalie Nikolai Puchkov,\nwho led Olympic nefmi\u00bbders in\nthe final tournament by yielding\nonly five goals in as many games.\nEXCELLENT PROSPECTS\nHendy said he has telegraphed\nthe Central Registry of Organized\nHocHey at-Montreal to put Puchkov on Cleveland's negotiation\nlist.\nVeteran hockey broadcaster Foster Hewitt who aired the final\ngame as well as Russia's 4-0 victory over the U. S. called Sologubov \"the best two-way defence-\nman I have seen in a long time.\"\nCoach Bobby Bauer of the\nDutchmen, an NHL all-star with\nBoston Bruins, said Sologubov\nand  forwards  Yuri  Krylov  end\npoints, Toronto with 41 and Bos-i front in the first period by tipping\nton with 40.\nIn Sunday night's other game\nthe league-leading Montreal Canadiens battled New York Rangers\nto a 3-3 tie.\nThe   Canadiens   edged   Detroit\n2-1 Saturday night.\nFAST START\nThe Black Hawks opened the\nscoring at Chicago after only 30 j assisting,\nseconds of play when Glen Skov|\ntallied. Rookie defenceman Pierre\nPUote made it 2-1 for Chicago in\nthe middle stanza after Toronto's\nTod Sloan had evened the count I\nwith his 30th goal of the season.\nGus Mortson provided the clincher for Chicago In the final period before Gordie Hannigan counted for the Leafs to reduce the\nmargin.\nToronto coach King Clancy\npulled his goalie Gil Mayer with\nin a Fleming Mackell drive. Detroit's Normie Ullman squared the\ncount late in the period by batting\nhome a rebound.\nLabine combined with his two\nteammates to make it 2-1 in the\nsecond period and six minutes\nlater Chevrefils clinched matters\nwith both McKenney and Labine\nJamieson, Nichols\nVictorious Curlers\nListed .below are results of\nBusiness -Girl's, Curling Club\nmatches held at Nelson Curling\nClub Saturday morning:\nJamieson, 13, Brown 10; Nichols\n10, Sutcliffe 9.\nWIDE RANGE\nThe bobcat or bay lynx is found\nin open, rocky or bushy districts\nfrom Southern Canada clear to\nMexico.\nRally Fails...\nDynamiter Fuses\nCut bv Smokies\nTRAIL \u2014 Kimberley Dynamiters put on a belated third period\nrally which netted three goals iri\na WIHL game here Saturday night\nbut Trail Smoke Eaiers still came\nout winners 5-3, thanks to a 5-0\nmargin built lp In the first two\nperiods.\nThe injury-riddled Smokies\nopened up a 4-0 first period lead\nand added a singleton in the\nsecond while Dynamiters were\nheld scoreless mainly through the\nflawless work of Seth Martin in\nSmokies'  goal.\nDefenceman Yogi Kraiger, Don\nFletcher and Joe Conn accounted\nfor three Trail tallies and Morris\nSaplywy and Mike Shabaga got\nthe others.\nMartin got an assist on the first\ngoal of the game, firing a pass to\nKraiger who found Mike Shabaga\nin the clear at centre. Shabaga\nwent in alone and beat Earl Betker from eight feet out.\nPlaying    coach   Norm   Larson\npaced   Kimberley's   third   period\ndrive with two goals and an assist\non   Claudie  Bell's  marker.\nTWO PLAYERS RETURN\nSmoke Eaters were forced to\npress two players into action who\nhave been on the sidelines with\ninjuries. Don Fletcher and Gerry\nPenner both played strong games\nalthough still showing effects of\nlong layoffs.\nDefenceman Harry Smith suffered 'a broken leg in practice\nFriday night and this necessistat-\ned the moving of the two players\nback into action.\nAnother small gathering. \u2014 1499\n\u2014was on hand.\nSmokies wasted little time hitting the score sheet in the opening period strike twice within one\nminute and 25 seconds. Shabaga\ngot the opener on a breakaway\nat the 1:10 mark and Saplywy\nadded the next, potting Lenar-\ndon's rebound.\nKraiger drove in a screened Fhot\nfrom inside the blueline at 12:06\nand Fletcher made it 4-0 for the\nperiod at 16:35, outskating Larson\nand Knippleburg on a breakaway.\nPauls' Fernie Rink Wins\nEast Kootenay Bonspiel\nTrail was a man short at the time\nwith Conn sitting out a slashing\npenalty.\nConn counted the only marker\nof the second session driving a\nlong screen shot from the blueline\nthat bounced off defenceman Bill\nJones and past a startled Betker.\nSTART   COMEBACK\nDynamiters started their comeback drive in the -last period, taking an advantage of a tripping\npenalty to Bobby Kromm to spoil\nMartin's shutout hopes after one\nminute and 47 seconds of play.\nBell scored after Kenny McTeer\ndeflected Larson's screen shot\nfrom the blueline to him.\nDynamiters scored again\n12:55, taking advantage of some\nhaphazard checking by Smokie\nforwards. Larson did the damage,\nfiring a shot that rolled up Martin's arm and dropped over his\nshoulder.\nA last-ditch Kimberley drive in\nthe closing minutes paid off with\none tally, Larson beating Martin\ncleanly.\nLineups:\nTrail \u2014 goal, Martin; defence.\nConn, Fletcher, Kraiger; forwards,\nShabaga, Burikow, Lenardon,\nPenner. Turik, Demore, Kromm,\nSaplywy.\nKimberley \u2014 goal, Betker; defence, Jones, Craig, Andre, Lebioda; forwards, Hockley, Barre,\nMellor, Knippleburg, Bell, McNiven,   McTeer,   Larson.\nFirst period \u2014 1, Trail, Shabaga\n(Kraiger) 1:10; 2, Trail, Saplywy\n(Conn, Lenardon) 1:24; 3, Trail,\nKraiger (Burikow, Lenardon)\n5:56: 4, Trail, Fletcher (Demore)\n16:35.\nPenalty \u2014 Conn 16:42.\nSecond period \u2014 5, Till, Conn\n12:46.\nPenalties \u2014 Lenardon 9:30. Le-\nbioda 10:15, Conn 19:58.\nThird period \u2014 6, Kimnerley,\nLarson (McTeer, Mellor) 1:47; 7,\nKimberley, Larson (Knipleburg.\nMcNiven) 12:55; 8, Kimberley.\nBell  (Larson, McNiven)  19:14\nPenalties \u2014 Conn 2:13, Andre\n9:56j Kromm 13:06, Craig 14:50.\nFERNIE \u2014 Dick Pauls' Fernie\nrink won the fourth annual East\nKootenay Zone Legion bonspiel\nwhich wound up play here Sunday night. ,\nPauls took the No. 1 event, edging Joe Pietrosky of Invermere in\nthe final game. Phillip Sobin of\nGalloway was third and Andy\nWhite of Kimberley, fourth.\nMembers of Pauls' winning rink\nwere Irv Morgan, lead, Fred Sow-\nchuk second, and Bud Dickem,\nthird, and Pauls'  skip.\nThe No. 2 event went to Roy\nWebb of Cranbrook. O. M. Uri of\nCreston was second and Joe Sher-\nbo of Cranbrook, third and Ivan\nStaples of Creston, fourth.\nMembers of Webb's rink were\nArchie Kary, lead, Murray Wheat-\non, second, Dave Reekie, third,\nand Webb, skip.\nThe third event weni to Garnet\nBannatyne of Kimberley. who\ndowned Ken Stewart of Fernie\nin the final. Third went A. Cowan\nof Marysville and fourth to J\nRobertson of Kimberley. Banna-\ntyne's rink was composed of Eddy\nMcNicholas, lead; Jack Thompson, second; Elmer Gerringer,\nthird and  Bannatyne, skip.\nThe spiel was limited to 32\nLegion member rinks from Edge-\nwater, Invermere, Kimberley,\nMarysville, Cranbrook, Creston,\nGalloway. Elko and, Fernie. Play\nopened   Saturday   morning   and\ncontinued around the clock until\nthe finals were reached Sunday\nnight,\nAlexei   Guryshev   are   excellent\nprofessional prospects.\n\"Sologubov could star on any\nNHL team,\" Bauer said. \"And\nKrylov has one of the finest shots.\nI've ever seen. He gets it away\nhard and fast.\"\nGREAT  PLAYERS\nSports columnist Bob Hesketh\nof the Toronto Telegram agreed\non Sologubov and Krylov.\n\"They are great players.\" he\nsaid. \"So is left-winger Yuri Pant-\nyukhov. Like Krylov, he has a\ndeadly shot and is a fast skater.\"\nSports columnist Andy O'Brkn\nof the Montreal Star said that all\nthree are \"top-notchers\" and that\nSologubov \"could make any NHL\nteam.\"\nLen Taylor, sports editor of the\nKitcherner-Waterloo Record, said\nSologubov \"always managed to b\u00bb\nin the right place at tha right\ntime \u2014 a magnificent player.\"\nBauer called the Russians \"the\nbest team Kitchener-Waterloo\nDutchmen have ever played\nagainst'.'\nLeafs' Lee Hyssop\nLeading WIHL Scorer\nLee Hyssop retained his eight-\npoint Western International\nHockey League scoring margin\nover the weekend although Spokane Flyers tripped Nelson Maple\nLeafs, 6-2, in Spokane, Saturday\nnight\nLee earned an assist on Leafs'\nsecond goal, scored by Wendy\nKeller, just 50 seconds before the\nend of the rugged contest. The\nsmooth-striding centre was handicapped by the absence of linemate\nBud Andrews, who cut himself in\nTrail shortly before he was supposed to meet the club Saturday\nmorning for the trip to Spokane.\nRed Koehle,  normally a quiet\nindividual, earned a misconduct\npenalty in the third period when\nhe protested too violently against\nan official's decision.\nGeorge Cullen and Tommy Dunn\nwere both absent from Spokane\nSaturday night and the Nelson\nsquad were of the opinion, especially in the last period, that some\nof the substitute officials' decisions\nwere not justified.\nWestern \u201e International* Hockey\nLeague Standings\nW L T Gf Ga Pts.\nSpokane     25 18 0 217 191 50\nTrail        23 20 1 194 205 47\nNelson    20 21 2 179 205 42\nKimberley ...    16 24 2 201 207 34\nRevelstoke Skier\nJunior Champ\nREVELSTOKE, B.C. (CP) \u2014\nJohn Mclnnes of Revelstoke Sunday won the Oscar Lundell trophy\nfor the best jump in all classes\nat the B.C. junior ski championships here. Mclnnes scored 152.6\npoints. He also won the Ivind\nNelson trophy for best style.\nA special prize for D class embodying combined prowess was\nwon by Bill. McKenzie of Banff,\nAlta.,\nNolin Stringer of Revelstoke\nwon the Eagles Rose Bowl trophy\nfor the alpine and combined slalom and downhill. The Wakita\ncombined cross-country and\njumping trophy was won by Bud\nMcKenzie of Revelstoke.\nA light snowfall and temperature of 25 iegrees above zero\nmade for ideal conditions in the\nwestern foothills of the Rockies,\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nREAL   PRODIGY\nMozart, the great composer,\nstarted to gain a reputation both\nas performer and composer from\nthe age of six.\nTONI SAILER of Austria Is the centre of attraction as eager\nhands reach out to get his autograph .after he sailed to victory In\nthe giant slalom event of the winter Olympics at Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy. He won all three Alpine events, *\nADULTS\n8:15 P*m.\nComing Attractions\nMardi\nGras\nFRIDAY, FEB. 10th\nAdmission \u2014 7S\u00a3\nMl       TLa   CIahJakJ  Max  aai\/a\/I win\nJust keep RPM 10-30 Special Motor Oil in your car\nand light truck and you, too, can get up to this saving\nin gasoline. \"RPM 10-30 Special\" cuts down drag in\nyour engine in all kinds of weather so it doesn't have\nto work so hard, doesn't use extra gas.\nFor all cars, new and old... oil savings up to 33%\ncompared to light grades . . . quiets noisy, sticky hydraulic valves.. . easier starting... stepped-up power\n.. money-saving protection of engine parts .. meets\nall car manufacturers' recommendations . . \u2022 one oil\ncovers grades 10W, 20W, 30. Let us tell you more about\nhow RPM 10-30 Special Motor Oil will save you money.\nFor Information on any Standard Oil product. Mil\nBUD MAWER\n95 Government Rd. Telephone If S3\n-*-\nammmmm\n  ,\nI \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6,1956\nH\nfE\nN\nR\nW\ni\n_W_K     l^i\n\u2122_\\ \\\nKuf^lM\nZ$$m\nkl\nff_W_<*_4\nkj^-fi\n(bOO-HOCM)\n*ft\u00bb\n^^V\\VTJ\u00bbv\nf s\n\/\u00a3\u00a9\u00bb v \/ Mai   '\nMi\nA \u2022 ;\n^rWv^f^OA\"\n'fe\nv\u00ab-'TwZ3>Pl\nF-- GHOOT MB .'J^M^\nmmm sz^fogm\n^PjaWJi^\u2022^fofcm^^\/mimW'''*?:-: :V\\\n\/J:]3ttM_f__W{i*\u00a3dA\niOSSKrrvl\n1 sitofs ispy ^M\nBjpi\n1 \/  y   k\nSleek, Copper, Refining Oils,\nLead Canadian Market Upswing\nBy PATRICK FELL0W8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe stock market made headway in most divisions last week.\nIt was a slow upWard plod, but\nthe run was unbroken arid prices\ncame, out ahead in each session. On\nthe Toronto stock exchange, Industrials scored their best weekly\nadvance since early December.\nThe New York market's readiness to respond to bullish news\ngbt quick reaction from traders at\nToronto and Montreal. This applied, particularly to steels and\nrefining oils, which were leaders\nthroughout.\nSteels strength lay in continued\nhigh demand and record production, observers said. Two Canadian\nsteel companies, Stelco and Dominion Foundries, reported capacity\noperations and substantial orders\nahead in annual statements this\nweek. Stelco advanced $2.75 and\nDominion Foundries $1.50.\nExcellent earnings and expanding markets were given as reasons\nbehind the demand for oils.\nCOPPERS ACTIVE\nActivity In copper prospects was\nbehind big volumes trade on the\nToronto exchange.\nDuvan was the big trader, turning over 1,728,000 shares for a 47-\ncent jump to $1.35 as good ore\nshowings were reported from the\ncompany's northwest Quebec\nMclntyre which jumped $5.50 to\n$91.56.\nSelected uraniums were strong\nas talk was revived of a' possible\nchange in government purchasing\npolicy and extension of the 1962\nexpiration date on contracts.\nNothing emerged from a rumor\nthat an announcement from the\nUnited States Atomic Energy\nCommission would be made at a\nDenver mining conference. But a\nsizeable future market for uranium was indicated in a report\nordered by the U.S. Senate-House\nproperty.\nSenior   mines   won  only   scant\nattention with the exception of\ncommittee on atomic energy and\npresented to Congress.\"\nNesbitt Labine, active for several weeks, again led the higher\nuraniums, up 55 cents at $3.90.\nWeeks index gains at Toronto:\nIndustrials 4.39 to 438.60, golds\n1.17 to 87.59, base metals 1.92 to\n222.58 and western oils 2.19 to\n122.63.\nWeeks volume: 31,039,000 shares\nagainst 27,224,000 the previous\nweek.\nAt New York The Associated\nPress average of 60 stocks was up\n$4.40 at $177.60.\nWeek's index gains at Montreal:\nBanks .58 to 51.29, utilities unchanged at 134.10, industrials 2.80\nat 288.10, combined 1.90 at 236.\npapers 4.01 at 1355.35 and golds\n1.13 at 77.92.\nWeek's volume 322,960 Indus\ntrials and 5,596,564 mines against\nprevious week's 306,811 industrials\nand 5,891,529 mines.\nDemand Quiet\nFor Lead, Zinc\nNEW YORK CAP) \u2014 Prospects\nappear dim for any early relief\nfrom the tight copper supply pic\nture.\nDemand for lead and zinc last\nweek was quiet.\nMajor metals prices:\nLead\u201416 cents a pound, New\nYork; 15.80 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc\u201413.50 cents a pound. East\nSt. Louis; 14 cents, New York,\nSilver\u201490.25 cents an ounce\nNew York; 76.62 pence, London.\nGREAT UNIVERSITY\nThe University of London has\n28,000 students, including 1800\nfrom Commonwealth countries\noutside Britain. ,\nAuto Industry's Sagging Sales\nOutstanding I). S. Weakest Spot\nBy WALTER   BREEDE  Jr.\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The bluest\nof industry's blue chips came up\nwith a batch of 1955 earnings reports last week that left the record profits of earlier years in the\nmodel T category.\nTopping the list of reporting\nfirms was General Motors Corporation, the world's biggest automaker. First company in U.S. history to break through the billion-\ndollar profits barrier, GM reported\nearnings of $1,189,000,000 in 1955.\nAlso heard from were the\nworld's biggest oil company, the\nwi.ild's biggest steel firm and the\nworld's biggest copper producer.\nStandard Oil Co. (New Jersey),\nreporting the \"best year in -the\ncompany's history,\" estimated its\n;955 profits at $717,000,000, up 23\nper cent from the year before.\nRECORD PROFIT\nA 90 per cent hike was announced by United States Steel\nCorporation. With profits at a\nrecord $370,197,000, sales and shipments also set new highs. Ken-\nnecott Copper corporation boosted\nits net earnings 61 per cent, to a\nrecord $125,615,000.\nContributing further to the\nebullient tone of business this\nweek were stock splits and increased dividends. The stock market  snapped  out of its January\nBusiness Spotlight...\nB.C. Gas,\nExploration To\nCost $(0 Million\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Gas and\noil exploration in British Columbia, spurred by the prospects of a\ncompleted gas line from the Peace\nRiver area to the coast in two\nyears, Is expected to cost more\nthan $60,000,000 this year,\nPaced by Pacific Petroleums,\nLtd., with a 70-well program\nscheduled this year, other exploration companies are planning stepped-up activity in northern B.C.\nin varying degrees.\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner described the gas and oil\nfuture of northern B.C. with\nfervor.\n\"We have opportunities there,\"\nhe said, \"that equal those in\nTexas.\"\nIn  the  opinion of George Mc\nMahon, president of Pacific Petroleums and vice-president of\nWestcoast Transmission, builders\nof the BC. gas line, gas and oil\nwill one day make the province\ndebt-free.\nOnce natural gas starts flowing\nthrough the pipeline, the provincial government collects a 15-percent royalty as the gas comes out\non the ground. Further royalties\ncome from by-products.\nWhen oil is found in large\nquantities, the province may offer\n(or sale oil lands at public tender.\n\"It has been these crown reserve sales that have made Alberta\ndebt-free.\" said Mr. McMahon recently, talking to the board of\ntrade at Kamloops, B.C.\nLESS CASUALTIES\nLONDON (CP) - A group of\ngarbage collectors complained to\nmunicipal officials that they were\nrun down frequently by electrically-powered carts they use to\nmake their rounds. S nva 1 Ter\nwheels were fitted to the carts to\nmake them move more slowly.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2022By Frances Drake\ndoldrums with oil shares leading\nthe advance. Retail trade moved\nahead. Steel set new production\nrecords.\nOutstanding soft spot was the\nauto industry which announced\nnew cutbacks to bring production\nmore into line with sagging sales.\nFor the industry at large, it is\nestimated   that  some   28,000  auto\nworkers have 'been laid off since\nthe start of the year.\nOUTPUT DOWN\nJanuary output of cars and\ntrucks was eight per cent under\nDecember and down early seven\nper cent from January 1955. Bucking the trend was big General\nMotors which upped its output of\ncars and trucks by around two per\ncent. A drop in production of GM\ncars was more than offset by rising truck output.\nOutside of Detroit and other\nauto manufacturing centers, the\ncutbacks caused scarecely a ripple. The steel industry w^s\nswamped with orders from other\ncustomers, with capacity operations sighted for months to come.\nDepartment store sales across\nthe U.S. at latest count were a\nhefty eight per cent over the like\n1955 week, after loafing along at\nonly two or three per cent above\na year ago during most of January.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n00\u2014Sign On   \u25a0\n15\u2014Love of Life\n30\u2014Love Story\n00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n30\u2014House Party\n00\u2014Big Payoff\n30\u2014TBA\n45\u2014Bob Crosby\n00\u2014Brighter Bay\n15\u2014Secre Storm\n:30\u2014On Your Account\n00\u2014Variety Hour\n30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n45\u2014Guiding Light\n00\u2014Valient Lady\n15\u2014TBA\n30\u2014Gary Moore\n00\u2014What's Cooking\n30\u2014Strike It Rich\n:00\u2014Western Roundup\n00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Weather Vane\n:15\u2014Doug Edwards News\n:30\u2014Robin Hood\n:00\u2014Studio One\n:00\u2014Burns and Allen\n:30\u2014Talent Scouts\n\u25a000\u2014I Love Lucy\n:30\u2014December Bride\n:00\u2014Hollywood Preview\n:30\u2014Mr and Mrs Music\n:45-TBA\n:00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Flamingo Theatre\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n8:40\u2014Test Program\n8:45\u2014Color Test  Program -\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading\n9:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n10:00\u2014 Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014Ernie Kovak\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Now \u2014 The News\n1:10\u2014Weather Watcher\n1:15\u2014Mod. Romances\n1:30\u2014Queen For A Day\n2:00\u2014Women\n3:00\u2014Willy\n3:30-Trouble With Father\n4:00\u2014Mr. Engineer\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Pinkv Lee\n6:00\u2014Bis Game Hunt\n6:30\u2014Little Rascals\n8:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7-00\u2014l.iberace\n7:30\u2014 Tony Martin\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Ceasars Hour\n9 00\u2014Medic\n9:30\u2014Robert Montgomery\n10:30\u2014Water Front\n11:00\u2014Secret File U.S.A.\nKP.EM TV - Channel 2\n11:45\u2014Test Pattern\n12:00\u2014Afternoon Film Festival\n2:00\u2014Movietime on Two\n3:30\u2014The Ruggles\n4:00\u2014Story Land\n4:15\u2014John Daly\n4:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:53-Watch the Birdie\n5:00\u2014Mickev Mouse Club\n6:00\u2014Sky King\n6:30\u2014Autry-Rogers Western\n7:25\u2014 News\n7:30\u2014Town and Country Time\n8:00\u2014 Readers Digest\n8:30\u2014 Voice of Firestone\n9:00\u2014 Western Theatre\n10:00\u2014Curtain Call\n10:30\u2014News\n10:35\u2014Mystery Playhouse\n11:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n'Prnferam. suhleci to change by stations without notice i\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Tuesday, February 7, 1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Generous, stimulating planetary\naspects. A day for practical, truly\nartistic, confidential and laborious\nmatters. Earnest, honest effort\nwill pay.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\u2014\nAn excellent day ,for advancement. Matters of importance have\nexceptionally favorable influences.\nYou could also do well with a\nhobby, with usual or new duties.\nAvoid worry!\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nThere is much promise in this\nday's benefic aspects. Maintain a\nsteady pace where useful work is\nconcerned but don't overdo.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nThere's no need to wear yourself\nout but do make this a big day of\nachievement. There are many\nencouraging aspects for varied\ninterests \u2014 industry, banking,\nteaching, science, the arts, etc.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\u2014\nDon't dally with unessentials now\nDifficult tasks work with machinery, tools, mining among the\nmany activities favored. Also\nsponsored, are intellectual and\nartistic pursuits.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Your specific talen\nchildren's activities, art, writing,\npromoting, journalism, editing\nplays, music, etc. among the\nactivities especially honored now.\nYOUR day for progress.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Don't permit doult\nof accomplishment or fear of new\nand  difficult  tasks  to  keep  you\nIrom aiming high today. Much\ngood should reward smart, intelligent effort and management.\nKeep cheerful.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 An even disposition plus your innate capability\ncan bring real contentment as well\nas fresh gain. A responsive day for\nclever handling of situations.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Very auspicious\nrays promise that you will get\nahead in your work. You might\nwell try out new ideas you've had\non tap. Expand some.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 This day should\ngive you fresh incentive to get\nahead. You could advantageously\nimprove your position, output,\nwhatever your life's work and\ninterests. Have hope, faith.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius)\u2014You really should\nbe inspired by the encouraging\ninfluences all about you now.\nWhile sudden decisions and drastic\nchanges in plans are not advised,\ndo push ahead as planned.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Confidential matters,\nactivities , connected with water,,\nmanufacturing, selling beverages,\nchemicals, oils, all liquids and\ngeneral business interests among\nthe varied fields sponsored now.\nYOU BORN TODAY are usually\nquiet and reflective in disposition.\nYou are not always ambitious for\ngain, unless rightly aroused, then\ncan become a real fighter for\nattainment. 1956 promises ad- '\nvancement, if you persevere at\nyour occupation, study, and do\nnot waste time. Birthdate: Charles\nDickens, famous novelist; Millard\nFillmore, 13th U.S. president.\nKing Features.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Baseball\nclub\n4. Wine\nreceptacle\nT. Island off\nFlorida\n8. Herds of\nwhales\n10. Native ol\nUruguay\n12. Pin for meat\n13. Musical\nInstruments\n15. Fastener\n16. Pale\n17. Man's name\n18. Public\nnotice\n19. Owns\n20. Branch\n21. Shore recess\n22. Marshy\nmeadow\n23. Intoxicating liquor\n25. Word\nexpressing\nnegation\n26. Cent (abbr,)\n28. Breeze\n29. Cover\nof a pan\n30. A pronoun\n81. Dwarfs\n33. Look\naskance\n34. Urbanltes\n86. Eager (obs.\nform)\n87. Mlschlev-\n0U8 persons\n88. Man's\nnickname\n89. Remunerate\nDOWN\nI. Engraver's\ntool\n2. Touch end\nto end\n8. Children's\ngame\n4. Once\nmore\n6. Mexican\n.Indian\n6. Poisonous\nmushroom\n7. God of love\n9. Breaths\nnoisily\nIn sleep\n11. Java tree\n12. Mineral\nspring\n14. Man's\nnickname\n16. Manner\n19. Ugly\nold\nwoman\n20. Place\n21. Subdi.\nvision,\nof a\ncity\n22. Danish\nweight\n23. Choking\nbit\n24. Cleanse\nof soap\n25. Unless (L.)\n26. A game\nof skill\n27. High,\ncraggy hill\n29. Even\nUfjtsrj Huna\nrjuiHn nam\nBHGiaa nEiHEci\nHEffiBUE]   HMtjn\nHmrj am ana\nCHUU   SHBfclUU\nr.iaarjH\ntiaisaan Biauu\nHnri huu mou\nBBHH   DEDHGira\nhuhhh nauuiti\nUlSHH   HHKII3\nBS3CJU   nHHEI,\nYeaterdar's Anancr\nSO.Teary\n32. Spirit of\nevil and\nenemy of\nBuddha\n33. Capital\nof Peru\n35. A gratuity\n1\n%\n1\nr-\nJ\n1\nA\n5\ni\nfl\nt\n%\n7\n%\n&\n1\n%\nIO\n11\n_i\n12\n%\n,3\n14\nIS\"\n%\nKb\n^A\n'7\n18\n'^\n19\n%\n20\n^A\nV4\n21\n%\n22.\n%\nVA\n23\n24\n%\nis-\n'^\n26\n27\n26\n%\nz>)\nVA\n\u2022jo\n31\n3Z\nVA\n33\n%,\n34\n36-\n?^\nI\n3\u00bb\n%\n37\nW\n%\n%\n36\n%\nii\n\/\/\/\nZ-b\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m \u2014 Pnone 1300\nEvenlnga - Phone 1033 R\nDally Except Sundaya\nand  Holidays        i\nMc & Me\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work itl\nAX YDLBA AX R\nls LONGFELLOW\n. One letter simply stands for another. In this example A ls use!\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, apos>\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nIKDS LBVYOE NLF CKBJQ KC K\nIGMUJUVO SHE LOKINL- NBCCOE.l\nSaturday's Cryptoquote; THE GOOD ARE BETTER MADH1\nBY ILL, AS ODOURS CRUSHED ARE SWEETER STILL-\nROGERS.\nPlttrlbuted by King Features Symticnto\n W*-\"^\u2014\n\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0-. . \u25a0 \u25a0.\n. \t\nWi\nSMALL INVESTMENT -   LARGE  RETURNS\nThat's ihe W^nt Ad Story  -  PHONE   1844\nBIRTHS\nCLARKSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn A. Clarkson of New Denver,\nat the Slocan Community Hospital In New Denver, Feb. 1, a\nson.\nMIROS\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Ivan\n\u2022Miros of Castiegar, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Feb. 3, a\nson.\nJOHNSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nKenneth Johnson of Salmo, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nFeb. 3, a son.\nANDERSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nClarence Anderson of Salmo, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nFeb. 4, a son.\nIALLANARAO \u2014 To Mr. and\nMrs. Luigi Iallanarao, 1010 Gore\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Feb. 4, a daughter.\nGARE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Ernest\nGare, 424 Third Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Feb.\n4, a daughter.\nSMITH\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Eric\nSmith, RR1, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, twins, on Feb.\n5, a son and daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nNEEDED NOW, BY WELL -\nknown sales organization, 2 reliable men with cars. Earnings\n$90 a week or over to start.\nSales experience unnecessary\nFull training given. Apply Box\n5933, Daily New,s.\nHIGHWAY DRIVERS WANTED\nby leading trucking organization to operate diesel tandem\nunits, and be living in Nelson\nApply Box 1367. Daily News.\nWANTED - SALESMAN OR\nsaleswomen for fast moving articles. Phone 1367 or call at\n615 Victoria Street.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nTypist  required,  prefer-\nably with dictaphone experience, In local office of national\nfinancial institution. Shorthand,\nhelpful but not essential. This is\na permanent position. Excellent\nstaff benefits, good working\nconditions. Salary commensurate with experience and ability.\nPhone 1636 for appointment, or\nwrite Box 5930 Daily News.\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given you as bonus. Just show North American\nFashion Frocks to friends. No\ncanvassing, investment, experience necessary. North American\nFashion Frocks Ltd., 2163 Par-\nthenais St., Dept. U-3438.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED\u2014JOB ON ROADS, city\nworks and highway. Have 25\nyears experience and would\ntake the job of foreman or\nstrawboss. For information contact Mr. William Tymovich,\nBlueberry Creek, B. C.\nCARPENTER, ODD JOBS. REAS-\nonable rates. Phone 1282-L.\n7 YRS. EXPERIENCE IN PRUN-\ning and trimming. Ph. 1352-Y.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nTWO FERRANTI TRANSFOR-\nmers, 75 KVA 2300-460 volt, also\nmisc. small sawmill equipment\nincluding three saw edger, two\nblock carriage with husk friction and drive and loghaul'fric-\ntion with drum. Kootenay Forest Products, Box 450, Nelson\nPhone 1200.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain steel plate and ' shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St.. Vancouver. B.C Ph\nPAcific 6357\nFOR SALE\u201428-FT. FACTORY-\nbuilt house trailer. Must sell.\nCall weekends or after 5 on\nweek days behind Creston Hos-\npital. Harold Timchishen, Cres-\nton, B. C.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET\nsis. copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment Active Trading, 935 E\nCordova   Vancouver\nBOMBER HOISTS 1500 LBS CA-\npacity. $45, while they last Active Trading Co..' 935 E. Cordova\nVancouver    ,\nFIR AND LARCH CULL LUM\nber. good fire wood, limited supply 1 truck load equals 2 cords\nSpecial $15 delivered Ph  I702-R\n14 CORDS DRY TAMARAC\nfirewood $12 cord. S. M. Zmaeff,\n1308 Hendryx, Nelson, or phone\n958-L. '\nTELL HIM NOT X\nTO HANS UP, HI.    1\nI WANT TO TALK   \/\nWITH MARY LOUA\nV           tJfc,\n_^-*^t-y\\>\nyjusTA\nj   MINUTE,\n'tlm^>ri*!\/ L\\\n\/\\\u00a3Qfflf\\'l\/7*\\\nffffi.J\nWILL VOU ASK\nMARy-LOU TO\nA9K ED WHAT\nHE CALLED\nME FOR?\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nOFFERS plainly marked on the\nenvelope \"Offer for House No. \u2014\"\nwill be received by the undersigned up to 12 o'clock noon, 13th\nFebruary, 1956 for:\nHouse No. 6, being the dwelling situated on Lot 10, Blk. 46.\nNelson City, Plan 266 and known\nas 820 Nelson Avenue, Nelson\nB. C.\nHouse No. 7, being the dwelling\nsituated on Lots 4 & 5, Blk. 46.\nNelson City, Plan 266 and known\nas 808 Ne'son Avenue, Nelson,\nB. C.\nHouse No. 9. being the dwelling situated on Lots 6 & 7, Blk. 46,\nNelson City, Plan 266 and known\nas 812 Nelson Avenue, Nelson.\nB. C.\nHouse No. 10. being ihe dwelling situated on Lots 8 & 9. Blk. 46.\nNelson City, Plan 266 and known\nas 816 Nelson Avenue, Nelson.\nB. C.\nHouse No. 11, being the structure situated on Lots 1, S & 3, Blk\n46, Nelson City, Plan 266, and\nknown as 802 Nelson Avenue,\nNelson, B, C.\nThe dwellings may be inspected\nbetween the hours of 10 a.m. to\n4 p.m. on 6th, 7th & 8th February, 1956, respertively and further\ninformation is available from the\noffice of the Government Agent.\nCourt House, Nelson, B. C.\nThe structures are to be sold individually on an \"as is and where\nis\" basis and it is a condition of\nsain that each is to be removed\nfrom site within 14 days of notification of acceptance of a successful bid and a further condition\nthat any structures, or portions\nthereof, if remaining after the\nprescribed removal period shall\nbe forfeited and shall be demolished and removed by agents acting on behalf of the Crown.\nOffers should be accompanied\nby a certified cheque or money\norder, payable to the Minister of\nFinance, for 10 per cent of the\namount offered.\nThe   successful   offer   will   be\nsubject   to   Social   Services   Tax\nand the highest or any offer will\nnot necessarily be accepted.\nChairman,\nPurchasing   Commission,\nParliament   Buildings,\nVictoria. B. C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUCTION OF TIMBER SALE\nX67900\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction at 1:00 p.m. (local time) on Monday, February\n27, 1956, In the office of the Forest\nRanger, Kaslo, B. C, the Licence\nX67900, to cut 206,000 cubic feet of\nsawlogs and 64,000 lineal feet of\ncedar poles and piling, on an area\nsituated near Sawmill Bay, Kootenay District.\nTwo (2) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.       '\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the District Forester,\nNelson, B. C, or the Forest Ranger, Kaslo, B. C.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - IMMEDIATE Occupancy. Three-room suite in\nduplex, Fairview. $45 month\nPhone 269.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE AND DUP-\nlex across lake. For further details contact T. D. Rosling & Son\nLtd., 568 Ward St. Phone 717.\nFOR RENT\u2014MODERN 1 BED-\nroom suite. Basement, furnished\nand garage. Adults. Vacant Feb.\n15. Phone 612-X.\nFOR RENT\u2014BASEMENT STOR-\nage space, central location Baker St  Apply Box 8142. D  News\nFOR SALE - 28 FT. FACTORY\nbuilt house trailer. Must sell.\nCall weekends or after five\nweekdays behind hospital.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture 301 Baker St. Phone\n47 We buy used furniture\nELECTRIC STOVE, 2 CRIBS,\nlarge boys bicycle, excellent\ncash buy. Phone 1892-X.\nMCCLARY    WASHING    MACH-\nine, good condition. Ph. 44-X-l\nDOUBLE BED WITH COIL\nspring mattress. 1011 4th St.\nCCM BOYS' SKATES 13V4. Used\nonce. Phone 585-R-2.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS\nfrom the Appleby Poultry Farm\nMission City, p. c. AH. our\nbreeding stock is now respected\nas being tops in Canada. White\nLeghorn, White Rocks, New\nHampshires and Crosses. Send\nfor free literature. \u25a0\nFOR   SALE-FAT   BEEF   COW.\nH. Kabatoff, Slocan Park, B. C.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nROOMS. Fully turn. Day. week,\nmonthly rates. 171 Baker St.\nFOR RENT\u20142-BEDROOM DUP\nlex, wired for range. Phone\n1808-X-2.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM, PRIV\nate entrance. 75 High St., call\nat 71.\nFOR RENT -  2-ROOM  SUITE.\nheated. 917 Edgewood Ave.\nFOR   RENT\u20142-BEDROOM   APT\nwired for range. Phone 1828.\n6-ROOM HOUSE, VACANT FEB\n15. Phone 965-Y.\nDrop  In at\n.   Reuben.Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\nToday\nAnd Deal With Confidence\nWith the Largest\nAutomotive Dealer\nIn the Interior of B.C.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\n1956 Austin Sedans\n1956 Meteor Sedan\n1956 Dodge Sedan\n1955 Buick Hardtop\n.\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1954 Plymouth\n1953  Austin Sedan\n1953 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1953 Pontiae Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Coach '\n1952 Meteor Coach\n1952 Studebaker Sedan\n1951   Austin Sedan\n1951  Meteor Sedan\n1954 Austin Pickup\n1954 GMC Pickup\n1951   Austin Pickup\nTERMS  AND   TRADES\nMANY OTHERS\nTO CHOOSE FROM\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass, alu-\nminum; copper Used parts foi\ncars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking,' Box\n132. Granite Road. Nelsoa B.C.\nPHONE 189-R-4\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nind cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products   Box 450   Nelson\nWANTED TO BUY' - TIMBER\nand bush land tn vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News\nWE BUY SCRAP METAL PHONE\n882-Y . for honest deal Ware\nhouse  415^4   Latimer  St..   City\nt  Independent Trader\nWANTED\u2014ALUMINUM HOUSE\ntrailer, about 15 ft. Wrjte Box\n173, Rossland, B. C.\nWANTED:     BROWNIE  , DRESS\nsize 12 or'14. Phone 687-R.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\n\"ass a Vers\" a n'd mTne\nrepresentatives\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St. Nelson\nH. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND. B. C\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nFAIRVIEW - BEAUTIFUL MO-\ndern home, 3 bdrms., dining and\nliving room, fireplace, oil heat,\ndouble plumbing, large rec.\nroom fire place, 4 lots. $17,500.\neasy terms. Box 440 or Ph. 433.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST\u2014GOLD TUDOR WATCH\nwith expansion bracelet Uphill\ndistrict.  Phone 543-X. Reward\nLOST \u2014 DOWNTOWN, BLACK\nleather glove. Leave at Daily\nNews.\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nG. W. BAERG\nBritish Columbia  Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand B'bx,34, Fruitvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L. Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C.\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.     Nelson   Phone 1238\nS   V. SHAYLER  PC.  Box 252\nKimberley, Ludlow 2-2136.\nB.C.  Land Surveyor, Civil Engr.\n803 8AKER STREET\n,    PHONE   1135\nTRADE '52 CHRYSLER STA-\ntion Wagon for Cat. or dozer; or\ntrade '50 Ford %-ton pickup for\nwheel tractor. R. Fisher. Phone\nFOR SALE\u20141953 CHEV. $1450\n$425 down, or English car trade\n& $54 per month. Ph. 1891' days.\nBalfour 4-T.   -\nMACHINERY\nMORSE\nTRANSMISSION\nPRODUCTS\nMorse Silent Chain Drives\nMorse Roller Chain\nMorse Stock Sprockets\nMorse   Couplings\nMorse Drive Shafts\nMorse   Clutchei\nMorse High-Spoed HY-Vo\nChain    Drives\nSEE <JS  TODAY\nOn   Your\nCHAIN  DRIVE\nPROBLEMS\nWANTED - GENTLEMAN\nroomer. Phone 650-R.\nFOR  RENT-4-ROOM APT. PH.\n1245-L after 5.\n2 - ROOM SUITE, FURNISHED,\nheated. Adults. 823 Vernon St.\nFOR  RENT - 4-ROOM  SUITE.\n610 Front St.\nHEATED    FURNISHED    APT.\nAdults. 719 Stanley St.\nFOR RENT-FAMILY HOME AT\n910 Edgewood Ave. Phone 224.\nBuy.   Sell    Trade  With   Want Ads\nClassified Ada Get  Resulta\nLTD\n324 Vernon St      Nelson BC\nPHONE 593.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS   LIMITED\nMachine  Shop,   Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593     324 Vernon St.\nSun Reporter Wins\nKemsley Award\nTORONTO (CP) - Macdonald\n(Mac) Reynolds, 32-year-old re\nporter on the Vancouver Sun, is\nawarded the 10th Kemsley Schol\narship in Journalism. He will\nspend a year in Britain gaining\nexperience in the various offices\nof the Kemsley newspapers.\nMr. Reynolds was born at Port\nDover, Ont, He joined the Canadian Army in 1942 and was an\nartillery observer in Northwest\nEurope. Before the war he wrote\n'adio news for CBC and Press\n,iews in Toronto.\nSelection of Mr. Reynolds was\nmade by a committee of' newspaper men under the chairmanship of Frederick I. Ker, Canadian\nSection, Commonwealth Press\nUnion.\nHEALTH   HINT\nMedical experts advise persons\nover 40 \u2014._\u00a3specially if overweight \u2014 to have periodica] health\ncheckups.\nrifons I earn\nHow lo Cope\nWilh H Bombs\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Britain's civil\ndefence planners have brought up*\nto-date the official manual on the\ndangers of thermonuclear weapons\n\u2014and the picture they paint is\ngrim.\nThe new booklet, a drab, paperbacked publication now available\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1956 \u2014 9\nto the public, takes a 10-megaton\nhydrogen bomb as a \"convenient\nsize\" for'calculating effects of the\nheat, blast and radioactivity generated by the explosion.\nThis size, equivalent to 10,000,000\ntons of TNT, is 500 times as powerful as the first atomic bombs\ndropped 11 years ago on Japan.\nThe old manual was based on the\neffects of the first bombs. '\nNo reason is given for choosing\na 10-megaton bomb as the example.\nGet under covef, it tells Britons,\nand^stay there. Don't come out lor\nat least 36 hours.\nConverting the dry official\nword-ing of the manual ir^to\neveryday English, one WTiter says:\n\"Picture a snow storm, and the\nflakes, silently forming their carpet over the ground, trees ahd\nhouses alike, Now imagine that\nevery flake is a source of deadly\natomic rays that can enter your\nhouse and even your cellar Just\nas wireless waves do.\n\"This is the sort of thing that\nmost of us would face If hydrogen\nbombs were used against Britain.\"\nft    ^x*\nEXCLUSIVE photos from Antarotlc show\na downed Canadian' reconnaissance plane wfHch*\nhad to make a trash landing, at top, after buffeting by wind and snow.'Members of the plane's\ncrew, seen above resting on canvas, waited  18\nhours before being rescued by men seen In tha\nbackground. The plane was part of Admiral\nJ3yrdV current expedition to the South Pole In\nconnection with the International Geophysical\nyear.\u2014Central. Press Canadian. *\nTIMBER   CRUISER\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan  City, B   C.\nConfidential   Estimates.\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE BY OWNER\u2014BUILD-\ning supply business in Nelson\nhandling the best known names\nin building materials, 1955\nGross Sales $100,000. Could be\ndoubled with additional working capital and stock. Would\nconsider selling stock and fixtures separately. Lease'on premises can be arranged. For\ncomplete information write to\nBox 3026. Nelson Daily News.\nBOWLING ALLEY, BUILDING\nand all equipment. 4 yrs. old\nand in new condition. Now in\nmid-season. 76 teams in league\nFully equipped lunch counter\nGood terms to right party. For\nfull particulars apply to Box]\n688. Cranbrook, B. C.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox  368 or  Phone 366-R.\nTHE ALMER HOTEL OPP C.P.R !\nDepot Vancouver. \"B C 100%\nfire-proof. 24-hour elevator ser\nvice. Clean, quiet and comfort\nable. Reasonable rates, city\ncentre.\nNrlaon Satlu NrttiB\nClrculaiton Dept  Phone 1844.\nSubscription   Ratea\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday.\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .35\nBy Mall in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month.          $ 1.25\nThree  monthB        $ 3.50\nSix months      ._     $ 650\nOne year $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom\nor the United States\nOne month \u25a0 $ 1.75\nThree  months     $ 5.00\nSix  months , $ 9.50\nOne year         J18.00\nabove rates plus postage.\nWhere  extra   postage  is .requireo\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFOR SALE\u2014D6 CATERPILLAR\ntracW with dozer and winch\nready for logging. Serial 4R1223.\nMotor completely overhauled.\nPhone Nelson 247-X.\nGIBSON TRACTOR, TRAILER\nplow, harrow disc, good condition $350 Bill LaPlante. Gray\nCreek. B   C.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nFOR SALE\u2014YOUNG AIRDALE\nfemale. che?p Make'nice watch\ndog. Phone 1761-R-l.\nSelson\nConcrete Lt\n, $l3 50cu  yd.\nPHONt 87 I\nDelivered   in   Nelsnn\n'Do   It   the   Easy   Way\"\nSAVE   TIME   \u25a0   SAVE   MIIN\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nRenting\n\\our Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u2014 i i    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0nmMnaiiii-i\n\u2014 I\nI- '\u25a0\n\u2014 II  \u25a0 II I    \u2014\n\u2014- hi   \u25a0 innnam ' i in\u2014\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH UNI\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\nicuih 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.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\n\u2022 Minimum charge It two fines\n\u2022 Add lie for Box Number\no Deduct 10% from above rates rf payment h\nenclosed\n.... \u201e. \u2022  Take advantage of the low si* time rota\nIon Consecutive Insertions 201 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo ot Days Ad Is To Run ______\nYOU*   SAME  c ,.   \u2022\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 ,    5,11 Me -\nADDRESS i \u2014  Payment Enclosed  ____ ____\nLine\n1  Insftiftn       M.i\n\u00ab.  .20\n2 Consecutive  Insertions\n.38\n.48\n\u2666 CoMftcutivfi In'vt'nni      .......\n.SO\n26 'Consecutive Insertions\n1.82\n\u2022Nelson Daily News\nClassified.Advertising Department, Nelson. B.C.\n_____ _\u2014_iti_ai_-\u00ab-_l\n ; -7?-7\n ,_.\u2014_\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, FEB. 6,1956\nKILLERS of CHILDREN\nDiphtheria . . . mastoiditis . . . scarlet fever . . . pneumonia!\nThese were some of the big diseases\u2014the big killers of\nchildren\u2014a quarter-century ago. But today, we rarely hear\nof anyone dying'from one of these diseases. The explanation? These diseases have been conquered by new drugs\n\u2014drugs that were unknown 25 years ago\u2014tnit are now\nfound in every drug store.\nTODAY'S PRESCRIPTION\nIS THE BIGGEST BARGAIN IN HISTORY\nMann's Drug Store\nPhone 81 498 Baker St.\nMann's Clinic Pharmacy\nPhone 1505, 405 Hendryx St\nDespite Long Strike Oshawa Hot\nYet Regarded as Depressed Area\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nOSHAWA, Ont. (CP) \u2014 This is\nnot a boom area, but neither is it\na depressed area.\nThis view, expressed in about\nthose words by numerous business\nmen, seems a fair description of\nOshawa, where the huge plant of\nGeneral Motors of Canada has\nbeen shut down by a strike for\nmore than 4\\_ months.\nGeneral motors estimates that\nin the period Sept, 19 to Jan. 31\nwages to employees now on strike\nwould have been $13,290,228.\nChief off-setting item is an\nestimated $3,000,000 or more paid\nby United Automobile Workers to\nits members \u2014 mostly in vouchers\nfor food and other vital fteeds.\nIn view of the net loss, the city\nis somewhat of a miracle in the\nway it has stood up and it epitomizes much of the toughness of\nthe Canadian economy.\nEmployment \u2014 outside those on\nstrike \u2014 has held up well, but it\nis not the peak (and overtime)\nemployment which could have\nbeen expected this year. In general, people are well fed and do\nnot lack for necessities. Large\nnumbers, however, cannot meet\npayments on mortgages, time purchases and loans, and are piling\nup debt.\nMost vital direct bolsters in the\nsituation have been the union\nbenefits and the fact that creditors\nhave not pressed for payments.\nQshawa is not alone in feeling\nthe strike. In addition to the $13,-\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n'676 Baker St. Phone 235\n290,228 loss in wages there, General Motors estimates the following wage losses in its plants in\nother Ontario cities:\nSt. Catharines $6,175,989; Toronto area $1,711,200; Windsor $1,-\n505,200; London $848,000. Total\n$23,830,677. Wages lost per day in\nall ^plants, says General Motors,\ntotals $278,328 per day and $1,-\n361,640 per. week.\nFEELING OFF COLOR\nbecause of irregularity?\nCHEW\nFEEN-A-MINT\nA modern medicinal laxative in\nchewing form,\nFEEN-A-MINT JS\npleasant to chew and\ngentle in its action, gentle\nenough, for little children.\nFeen-a-mint is a safe, dependable\nand thorough laxative and has a\ndelicious candy-coating - refreshingly flavoured with mint. Why feel\noff-color in the mornings? Or sluggish, headachy and miserable anytime, because you need a laxative?\nGet feen-a-mint at your druggist\ntoday and feel fine again.\nFAMOUS CHEWING LAXATIVE   *  \u00ab\nSevere Frost\nGrips London\nLONDON (AP) -Biting Si\nberian blizzards kept Europe\nfreezing Saturday, and forecasters\nwarned that fresh blasts will keep\nthe Continent icebound for at least\nanother three or four days.\nMenacing ice floes were\nported building up in the North\nsea as the death toll over the\nfrozen Continent rose to 113\nfive days.\nSIX DIE ON SHIP\nIn Glasgow, ,six Lascar seamen\ndied from fumes as they huddled\nover a makeshift stove aboard\ntheir ship.'\nIn parts of London electricity\nwas cut off to conserve power\nGarbage has not been collected in\nfit- capital for 10 days because of\nicy streets.\nA helicopter flew a veterinarian\nto shoot 32 pigs starving to death\naboard an abandoned freighter off\nthe coast of the Danish island of\nZealand.\nOther aircraft were called in to\nferry food and fuel to isolated\nisles in the Scandinavian area.\nReports of a serious fuel shortage came from behind the Iron\nCurtain. Poland called for fuel-\nhaving measures and ordered\nbonuses to increase output from\n'he mines,\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED    and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front \"M. Phons 63\nJ. A. C. LAU'r-HTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMcdir.nl   Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono  327\n676 Baker Street\nLIKE YOUR\nPAINT TO\nLAST ?\nWHITE\ni*\nFOR  ALL INTERIOR   SURFACES 5968-3\nBurns Lumber Co.\nFIREMEN'S   JAMBOREE \u2014 Japanese firemen balance bamboo ladders tor colleagues' display of acrobatic skill\nduriiiB exhibition In Tokyo's Imperial Palace Plaza.'\n_\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type ratea on\nrequest   Minimum two llnea.   10% discount for prompt payment\nEagles meet tonight at B p.m.\nAVON   REPRESENTATIVE\nM. Russell\u2014Phone 411-H.\nRotary Luncheon Monday\n12:15 p.m. Hume Hotel.\nQuality  Footwear for  the  entire family at R. Andrew and Co\nDON   ELDER   STUDIO\n659 Baker St     -     Phone 1205\nMidwinter   Sale  Continues.\nEBERLE'S  JUNIOR   SHOP\nRoy Kline's electric organ and\norch. Playmor Saturday.\nSpring    Bouquets    or\nBulbs for the Shut-Ins.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP-\npotted\nPH. 910\nFIRE     PREVENTION\nLeslie's   Fire   Equipment\nSales & Service\u20141724 Falls Streel\nChimneys cleaned and topped\nFurnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned\nPounder's Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L.\nGuaranteed Radio and\nTelevision  Service.\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St.        Phone 1555\nCafe Curtains in Taffeta\nSailcloth, checks and designs $5.95\nand $5.50 at Sterling Home Furnishers.\nMake up your table for Hospital Auxiliary bridge and can-\nasia party at the Canadian Leg\nIon, Thursday, Feb. 16.\nSpecial bargain: 80 yds. 42\" Silk\nSuiting in greys and blues. Reg.\n$1.75 and 98c, \u2022   ,\nTAYLOR'S   DRY   GOODS\nGlass Tops for Furniture. Cut to\nany  shape.  Edges polished.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 HaU St.     Nelson\nB. C. GOVERNMENT\nEMPLOYEES    ASSOCIATION\n'     'ing Canadian Legion Tues-\nda;, Seb. 7 at 8 p.m. Followed by\nannual meeting of\nNELSON PTE CREDIT UNION\nToday's Special, new 5 piece\nChrome Suite, foam rubber seats,\nstainless steel trim. Reg. $99.50\nfor $79.50.\n\u25a0    WE  BUY AND SELL\nNEW   AND   USED   FURNITURE\nHOME  FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE  1560.\nTHE NELSON MUSIC FESTIVAL\ncommittee is pleased to announce\nthat the Syllabus for the 1956\nFestival will be released next\nweek. We regret the unavoidable\ndelay in issuing but this will be\noffset by the fact that all music\nwill be available C.O.D. at Ben\nSutherland's the day the Syllabus\nis released. \u2022\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nREID \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late Mrs. Annie Ethel Reid\nwill be held on Tuesday at 2 p.m.\nat the Thompson Funeral Home.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood will\nofficiate. ' Interment will take\nplace at Nelson. Memorial Park.\nNewspaper in\nFavor of Kiss\nBy BRUCE HENDERSON\nBUENOS AIRES (AP) \u2014Amid-\nTraffic Cop\nDefends'\nWomen Drivers\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Men\nmay snort about women's driving\nbut, says the head of the > police\ntraffic division here, they are the\n\u00abause of many women drivers'\nproblems.\nSgt. Wilfred Henrich advises\nwomen who went to learn to drive\nnot to. pick their husbands -for\nteachers. Too quick to criticize or\nlaugh, husbands shake their wives'\nconfidence, Sgt. Henrich said.\n.Husbands.don't let wives drive\noften enough. When learning, they\nshould be able to take the wheel\nfor drives on Sunday when there\nis little traffic.\n\"Too many women insist on\nwearing high heels,-\" Sgt. Henrich\nsaid. \"When they have to jam on\nthe brakes, the high heel prevents\nthe pedal from reaching the floor,\nALSO BLAMES UNDIES\nRestricting undergarments arei\nanother source of discomfort to a I\nwoman behind the wheel, he said.\nShe just can't turn around when\nbacking up.\n\"A . woman never turns and\nlooks out the window like a man\ndoes,\" he said. \"Instead she looks\nthrough the rear view mirror and\nshuttles back and forth like a\nfreight train.\"\nSgt. Henrich says men should\nnot give in to women drivers by\nallowing them the right-of-way\nwhen they aren't entitled to it.\nSome women think the courtesy'\nshown them at home or on the\nstreet should be given them on the\nroad, too. This may cause accidents\nwhich could have been prevented\nhad the men been more firm.\nDespite their disadvantages,\nhowever, women drivers have\ntheir good moments. In his experience Sgt. Henrich said, he had\nnever heard of a woman driver\ninvolved in a traffic fatality.\nN. Z. Fighting\nInflation\nBy J. C. GRAHAM\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nAUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) \u2014 After\na year of gradually increasing\ncredit squeeze, New Zealand is\nmaking noticeable progress in its\nfight against inflation.\nAn unbalanced position in the\neconomy has made itself felt in\ntwo main ways:\n\u25a0 Imports have greatly exceeded\nexports in value, thus running\ndown reserves of overseas funds\nBy the end of November last year\nthe overseas assets of the banking\nsystem had declined to \u00a366,000,000\ncompared with a peak of \u00a3140,-\n000,000 in 1954.\nInternally, boom conditions\ncreated a tendency to attempt too\nmuch too fast in development,\ncausing undue competition for\nfavorable labor and materials.\nThese tendencies created an inflationary situation which threat-\n600 YEARS OLD \u2014 A visitor to Frankfurt, Germany,\ncity library examines constitution of Holy Roman Empire proclaimed by Emperor Karl IV in Nuernberg, January 10, 1356,\nVflovisL ^ouifL...\nStar Learns More From One Flop\nIn Broadway Than Three Triumphs\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)  \u2014 You're,\nalways  reading about Broadway!\nhits. So what's It like to have a\nflop?\nCarol Channing now knows. She\nwas the toast of Broadway in two\nconsecutive hits, \"Lend an Ear\"\nand \"Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,\"\nthen toured triumphantly in\n\"Wonderful Town.\"\nBut a month ago she closed in\n\"The Vamp\" after a six-week run.\nAlthough she was lauded by the\ncritics, the musical was panned\nand ended up a $300,000 loss.\nBroadway's loss is Hollywood's\ngain, because \"she bounced here\nfor her first film role in RKO's\n\"The First Travelling Saleslady.\"\nNO FUN  LEFT\nThe big girl with the little vojee\nrelaxed in her dressing room and\ndiscussed the late \"Vamp.\"\n\"It was a rugged experience,\nespecially when you've always\nhad hits before,\" she observed;\n\"But I actually learned more from\none flop than I did from the hits.\n\"When we opened in Detroit, the\nshow didn't make much sense, but\nit had a lot of fun. By the time\nwe got to Washington, they had\nfixed up the plot, but all the fun\nhad gone out of the show\n\"I knew from the moment the\nON   VALENTINE'S   DAY\nMake Your Man Happy With\nF6RSYTH SHIRTS\nand\nVALENTINE TIES\nSay \"Happy Valentine's\nDay\" with the gift he\nwants ana needs . . .\nFORSYTH\nWHITE SHIRTS\n\u2022 COUNTRY CLUB\n\u2022 CLOVER CLUB\n\u2022 SOUDANA\n$4.95 to $8.95\nEmory's\nLimited\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nBOX 100 PHONE 31\ncurtain went up that the show was\na flop. You can feel it right away\nWhen I did 'Lend an Ear' and\n'Blondes,' the response was immediate. You can feel the warmth\nof the audience; they're on your\nside and you can do anything.\nFIRST IMPORTANT FILM\nMiss Channing, who is married\nto Alex Carson, a former player\nwith Ottawa Rough Riders of the\nBig Four football league, has\nbeen discussing another musical\nfor the spring of 1957. Meanwhile,\nshe might whip up a night club\nact and do more pictures, \"The\nFirst Travelling Saleslady\" is her\nfirst important film opportunity,\nbut it's not her first picture.\nShe dimly recalls another film\nin which she had one scene and\nher only line was \"I don't know.\"\nShe was asked the name of the\npicture.\n\"I don't know,\" she replied.\nCar Damages\nCambie Bridge\nSwing Span\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The swing\nspan on the Cambie bridge, which\ncrosses False creek in the industrial heart of the city, was jammed\nand, police said, the mechanism\nwrecked in an automobile accident\nat the weekend. \\'\nPolice said the smashup occurred when Robert E. Johnson.\n25-year-old longshoreman,, attempted to swerve into the outside lane of the four-la\u00abjie bridge\ncrossing.\nThey said he hit a girder which\ndamaged the mechanism of the\nbridge so that it cannot be opened.\nHe suffered a broken leg and\nundetermined head injuries. Hospital attendants described his condition' ag fair.\nPolice said the bridge may have\nto be closed to traffic until repair*\nare made.\ncouple  left a  movie, strolled to;\nward Plaza Lavalle and sat downj~^\"grt^*^^and: The gov\nbench. At about 11:50 p.m., I eminent   has   met   the   situation\nthey kissed. Suddenly, three plain-] largely by tightening credit,\nclothes policemen appeared from j RAISE  BANK BALANCES\nthe   shadows   and   arrested   the |    In\\ an  eftort to  prevent banks\nyoung lovers. They Were taken to\na nearby police station, kept four\nnight kiss on a park  bench  has! hours, questioned and fined.\nwarmed this Argentine capital into\na lively debate. Is kissing in public\nimmoral? That is the question that\nhad to come to a head sooner or\nlater.\nPolice have decreed a crack-}\ndown on \"cases of moral offences\nin plazas and public places.\" Cars;\nare rare in this country and summer nights find Buenos Aires:\nparks filled with couples.\nSuch courting has been more\nintense this year for some unknown reason, observers say.\nThere have been complaints about\nexcesses.\nThe decree did not state specifically what would be considered a\nmoral offence. There was speculation that a properly restrained\nhug or even a peck on the cheek\nwould not bring down :the wrath\nof the law.\nOn   a . recent   night   a   young\n\"In the matter of discrimination\non moral regulations, prudent\ncomprehension is necessary,\" the\nnewspaper La Epoca declared, \"in\norder not to fall into moral\nfanaticism or an excess of ridiculous intolerance.\n\"The kiss is not immoral, and\neven less is it a crime. In nations\nsuch as France, the United States,\nRussia, Great Britain, Germany,\netc., the kiss is the most natural\nthing in the world. Nobody in\nthose countries would think that\nkissing signifies an immoral act.\n\"We are too backward in this\nregard . . . because the kiss, proof\nof affection, love or friendship,\ncannot be considered an infraction\nfrom extending overdrafts to\nclients, the minimum balances\nwhich trading banks must mainT\ntain with the reserve bank have\nbeen raised five times since last\nJune. At that time, trading banks\nwere obliged to maintain deposits\nequal to 15 per cent of demand\nliabilities with the reserve bank.\nThe figure now has been raised to\nan all-time peak of '26 per cent.\nAt the same time the discount\nrate at which trading banks can\nborrow from the reserve bank has\nsuccessively been raised from four\nto seven' per cent. Trading banks\ncan charge their clients only from\nfour to five per cent on advances.\nThere have, however, been additional measures to restrain spending. Terms for the issue of building permits have been tightened\nrfPUbltem^\nso lives in an outmoded world . . .\"\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nhousing preference over\" most\ncommercial building. Instalment\nbuying terms have been made\nmore strict.\n602 BAKER ST.\nphone: i 130\n$iW   ?^mmWFllfl\nHUNDREDS OF ELK hobnob around lazily\nin one of their new feeding grounds at Oak\nCreek, near Yakima, Wash., where thay wera\nherded   by   halKopter.  Th*  Washington   state\nw; ilto:., \u25a0;:&':; *...;..v ^~$**. _...-$___*?*\ngame department feeds tha animals hay In tha\nprotected areas to keep them away from Yakima Valley orchards\u2014-and no hunting Is allowed.\n\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nBilly Graham Talks\nWith Pandit Nehru\nNEW DELHI (AP) \u2014 American\nevanegist Billy Graham met with\nPrime Minister Nehru today for a\n30-minute private chat.\nNeither reporters nor photographers were admitted to Nehru's\noffice, and spokesmen said they\ndid not know what the two discussed.\nGraham, who has been making\na tour of India, told a press conference his meeting with Nehru\nwould be \"strictly social.\" He\nadcled that he admired the Indian\nleader.\nLater the evangelist had lunch\nwith Rajkumari (princess) Amrit\nKaur, only Christian member of\nthe Indian cabinet.\nPHONE  1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto \u2014 Balmer Neilly, T3,\npresident of Mclntyre-Porcupine\nMines Ltd., Canada's second largest gold producer,\nToledo, Ohio \u2014 Oliver W. Randolph, 81, internationally-known\nauthority on grain driers.\nChicago \u2014 Dr. Malcolm T. Mac-\nEachern, 74, Canadian-born leader\nin the field of hospital administration and a pioneer of the accreditation system of improving hospital\nstandards.\nRegina \u2014 Oscar Jukes, 65, publisher of the Melville (Sask.) Advance, and active in weekly newspaper work for 50 years.\nBeilleville, Ont, \u2014 Stanley L,\nJoss, 63, president and general\nmanager of the Black Diamond\nCheese Co., Ltd.\nToronto \u2014 Robert Ross Bon-\ngard, 86, former senior partner of\nBongard and Company, stock\nbrokers.\nHave The Job Done Right\n\\\/IC GRAVE*\n\u2122        LIMITED        \u2022*\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHeavy Snow Falls\nOn Texas Panhandle\nPLAINVIEW, Tex. (AP) -\nSnowfalls ot as much as two leti\nparalyzed much oi the Texas pan.\nhandle and south plains Saturday.\nWhipped into drifts as deep as\nnine feet of stiff north winds, the\nsnow encased the cities of Plain-\nview, Hereford, Canyon, Airiarillo,\nBorger and many others.\nStores were closed and main\ndowntown streets blocked in most\nof those cities.\nClassified Ada Get Results\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bako Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt makes excellent\nhome made bread.\nELLISON MILLINC\n& ELEV. CO. LTD.\nPHONE 238\nFor  8lmple 80RE  THROATS\nREXOKETS\nAnaethetic, antibiotic throat\ntroches containing Benzocaine,\nhelps ease pain at once;- tyro-\nthricin, helps kill surface\ngerms; terpin hydrate, -helps\nrelieve coughing. _ |\" j*\nONLY    :.\u00a3,   Oj*\"\nCity Drug\nYOUR REXALL PHARMACY\nBox 460 Phone M\nTHE 21ST ANNUAL\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nSOLD OUT\nWe are sorry we will be unable to accept any more orders\nfor extra copies of the 1956 Pictorial Edition\n;#\n\u2022Nrlamt lath} Nrtiw\nCIRCULATION DEPT.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1956_02_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429049","@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":"1956-02-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1956-02-06 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\/1.0429049"}