{"@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":"2022-04-04","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1957-02-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430150\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Terrorists\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters)\u2014British officials have\narrested two Greek Cypriot priests as terrorists.\n, They said Tuesday night the two men, Charalam-\nbous Kyriakou and Gregoris Feorgiou, \"used their position and influence as Greek Orthodox priests-to recruit\nEOKA' members and administer the EOKA oath.\" EOKA\nis the Greek Cypriot terrorist organization seeking, union\nof this British colony with\nGreece.\nBoth men, the British said,\nlived inside the operation area of\nthe recent anti - terrorist sweep,\ncode-named .Black Mac-\nMeanwhile, a court Imposed the\ndeath sentence:for the first time\non a Turkish Cypriot; 16-year-old\nHussein Ahmet Kutchuk. Found\nwith a pistol in his possession,\nKutchuk was given the mandatory\nNo\nGardening-\nArchbishop\nBy  LARRY  STANWOOD\nCanadian' Press 'Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The seven-\nyear-old Sunday sport issue in\nVancouver has erupted into a controversy of conscience.,;\nTouched' off by a. Victoria\nJudge's call for a \"modification- of\nour Sunday laws,\" the\" religious\ndispute even includes such, activities as home gardening and. trimming the hedge on the Sabbath. -\nRoman Catholic Archbishop, W.\nM. Duke said Sunday he regards\nnot only sport but any kind of unnecessary \"serville work\" on Sunday as a mortal sin.\n\"All are obliged under pain of\nmortal sin first to give public worship to God; second, to abstain\nfrom serville work,\" he told his\ncongregation.\n\"Such tasks as mowing the\nlawn, trimming the hedge, painting the house, shingling the roof,\nharvesting, engaging in some do-\nit-yourself project, performing on\nSunday the work in which we are\ngainfully employed throughout\nthe rest of the week \u2014 are alj\nforbidden.\" '\nJHn protestant-.'-d-rgfc while,\ngeri_rall\u00a3 opposed' tp' bpte'SuiS-\ndayS,. are not supporting- Archbishop Duke^s stand -that mowing\nyour lawn on the Sabbath is sin.\nful.\nsentence  under- amended  emergency regulations.\nThe ju_ge told.Kutchuk he could\nappeal and had the chance of a\nreprieve from the governor, But\nhe. said ihe did not' believe Kut-\nchuk's story that he found the pistol-arid meant (o turn it in.\nARREST. 189\nAn official statement said. 189\nCypriot suspects were arrested\nduring a four-day security sweep\nin villages in the Troodos and\nPaphbs districts of west .Cyprus.\nThe statement said most of\nthose arrested Were \"village group\nleaders of EOKA members. -\nIn London.'the'judicial committee of. the privy Council refused\nto allow Nlcos Iacovou Tsardellis\nleave to appeal his death statence\nfor shooting a' British sergeant.\n\u2022 Ah. explosion, rdcked parts, of\nNicosia-Tuesday when an army demolition team. blew up a .terrorist .underground hoard of .dynamite,-.TNT, .and Aom_s.- :  .--\u25a0 ..>\nHopes for Early.\nStation\nCulture Program\nOTTAWA (CP)-\u2014Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent says- he. hopes: the\nlong-awaited Canada Council will\nbe at work promoting a $100,000,-\n000 aid-to-culture program before\nMarch 31..\nThe prime minister's statement\nmade Tuesday, is regarded as a\nfurther indication the government\ncontribution to the council will be\ntaken out of surplus revenues for\nthe current fiscal year. \\\nFinanpe Minister Harris budget-\nted for a surplus of some $113,000,-\n000 for the year ending March -81.\nHe may end up with a surplus of\nsome $300,000,000, even after'providing $100,000,000 for the council.\nExchange of\nJournalists \"....,\nPlanned\n. VICTORIA. (CP) '\u2014 A \u25a0 three-\nmonth exchange of Canadian and\nUnited States journalists will be\nmade this year under the auspices\nof the International-PTess Institute.' .      \u25a0    \"'   '     '\u2022:'.;;-.\"\nStuarte Keate, publisher of the\nVictoria Daily -Times and chair-\nman of the Canadian ;-National\nCommittee. of the IPI, said the\nexchange should- strengthen -the\nbond between English-speaking\ncountries.\nUnder the program, Mr. Keate\nsaid; the Canadian newspaperman\nwill work fpr two months.on the\nU.S. nevv.paj.er whi'cji his s\u00abut\na'staff. _rie_nb\u00abw to Cfsglidfc.JCM'\n;otb^mon\u20ac',^irbe;ipent\/travel-\nllng iri'the U.S.A; Me Siime-prO-\ngram is planned for the U.S. journalist' \u25a0vlsitiiig\"'the\\ newspaper in\nCanada'which has 'sent a. staff\nmember to the U.S,'\nThe men will not work as ordinary reporters, but will be sent\nout on special assignments, sit in\non the news desk-'and' editorial\nconferences.' ' '\n2.1'\n%WEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay Mostly \u201ecloudy. Scat,\nfered- snowflurries. in ;afternoon.\nLittle change Iri. .'j^'mperature.\nLight' winds. Low and high at\nCranbrook- zero and 15, Crescent;\nValley 5 arid 20.   \u2022      .\u2022\u25a0    \u25a0\nWEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,1957\nNot more Then do Dally, 10o Saturday   No. 241\niiiillllllllllilllllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllh.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBell Needed To Start Bus\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The big London bus rolled up to the curb\nTuesday, stopped and waited. Nobody,got off. Nobody got on.\nThe driver turned and eyed the conductor.\n\"Ring the bell,\" shouted ttje driver in-a burst of exasperation..\n\"It.ain't.a regular stop, mate,\" shrugged the conductor. \"I\ndidn't ring,for you to stop\u2014so I don't need to ring for youto go.\"\nThe driver insisted he had heard a signal to stop. The conductor folded his arms.\nThe rule book says the conductor is in charge. He rings the\n\u2022bell once to stop the bus, twice to get it going again.\nFor 13 minutes the 25 passengers fidgeted and grumbled.\nThen the conductor picked up his ticket machine and stalked\noff the bus. \u2022   '-,.'.\nThe passengers gave up and piled off the bus; The'driver\nwalked off in an equal huff.        \u2022    <\n, London Transport, which operates the city bus system, summoned both men.to the superintendent's office for an explanation and sent another driver to bring hdme.the bus.  . '..,.\n>   IIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIII\nArmy __Hsmaiitlirig\n2 Giiards Battalions\nBy,DAVEViyiclpiTOSH...\nOTTAWA'(CP) \u2014 The army is\nlosing no tirne iri, dlsrnantllng two\nof the 'four' battalions in the Regiment of'Canadian- Guards. The\njob,is. expected to-be completed\nbefore the end  of1 next  month.\nA 'headquarters -team, 'comprising mainly .personnel selectibn officers' left Tuesday for Carnp Val-\ncartier, Qiie.V horije of\" the Guards'\n3rd : Battalion. ^Att-thet team' is\nalready at CSmp Ipperwash, Ont.,\nthe'4th'Battalion's'station. '\n..' The'-process-of -'channelling the\n900 men of-the two battalions into\nother corps or- Ipfantry regiments\nthus'begins'jess than two, weeks\nafter 'Defence 'Minister. Campney's\narinburtce'merit that the number Of\nirtfantry.battal1-.n_4ri..Si..regular\narmy is being.reduced by two to\n,13.'.'for.the-preserit.\"\nDisbandmerif of the two guards\nbattalions.has two purposes.   ;'...\nOne .faces--\u25a0 the fact -that the\nGuards regimerif could not maintain- all --its' battalions - at \u25a0 full\nstrength., An infantry., battalion\ncorriprises-about'B50\u201e.men but th,\n3rd -and. 4th battalions together\nnumber only-900.-THe 1st and 2nd\nBattalions of ift'e' Guards; based\nBarbara Back\nOn TV Show\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Canada's Barbara Kelly is rejoining -Britain's\nbest-ljnown television panel show,\nWhat's My Line? The Vancouver\nactress has settled a dispute over\nfees and Will be back on the BBC\nprogram starting Feb. 17. Miss\nKelly was a member of the original panel. Salary differences,kept\nher but of the show for .the. last\nfew months. Her actor husband,\nBernard Braden, also of Vancouver, is to launch a series of informal television interviews with\ncelebrities shortly.'\nSoviet Cuffing\nDefence Costs\n. ByHAROi-D K.M1LKS  .\nMOSCOW (AP).-^Sbvlet government officials laid down the line\nTuesday, for-a cutin.-the rate .of\nRussia-'s.industrial growth and.a\nslight 'reduction, in direct defence\nexpenditures for .1957.\nEconomic .boss.M-khall G. Per.\n:vukhin .and Finance Minister Ar-\nseny G. Zverev outlined the plans\nat:the opening session df a semi-\n.'annual meeting of the Supreme\nSoviet, Russia's -parliament.\nZverev presented a 614,000,000,-\n000-ruble budget, biggest in Soviet\nhistory.. Direct defence expenditures .proposed this year are\ndown 1,000,000,000 rubles from the\nannounced outlay for 1958.\nZVerev said the defence cuts\n\"represent the Soviet Union's desire to reduce its armed forces.\"\nThe Russians value their rubles\nat 25. cents, but many Western\neconomic experts believe its actual buying power is more nearly\n10 cents.\nZverev said the government ex\npects to collect 614,800,000,000 rubles and- to spend'603;80oib00,000\nthis year.     .'\u25a0'..,\u2022\"-'\nat Camp Petawawa, Ont., are also\nbelow standard strength,     \"    -\nThe,other purpose is.to clew\nthe way' for formation of a'.ri-w\narihored regiment\u2014.the 8th Canadian Hussards\u2014as part of avast\nshakeup- .in' army organization,\ntactics - and- formations in light - of\nprobable atomic conditions on 'the\nbattlefield. - - - -    \u25a0-    >    \u25a0\nFormer Soviet\nNuclear Boss\nMystery Patient\n,'\u25a0 By The Associated Press\n, Private advices from Moscow\nTuesday established.that.Mos-\ncow's m y s t e ry patient, whose\nIdentity has been puzzling', the\nworld, is\" Vyachelav A. Malyshev\nformer bos.ss of the Soviet nuclear\nweapons-prograiri. \"\u2022'\u2022'.'..',    .\"\nThe 54-year-old - Malyshev, . an\nindustrial executive with high\nCommunist' party rank, has an\nailment which German specialist\nDr. Hans' Joachim Schulten describes : as a \"blood - disease n6f\nassociated with atomic readia-\ntion.\" Schulten; called to Mbscow\nto advise1 on Malyshev's treatirieht\nsays he is in critical condition.\n\u25a0 The Malyshev. illness became an\ninternational enigpa because the\nSoviet government did riot revei}\nthe patient's identity.      * ,;,.\nCUES TAKE\nIMIVES1\n60 Injured it*i ;\nBritish Islesjh\nHurricane Winds\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Hurricane force winds rising to 125\nrriiles an hour eased Tuesday\nnight after dealing death and destruction across the British Isles.\nUnofficial -'reports placed the\ndead at 17 \"with;at least 60 persons injured .'in. the (worst storm\nof- the winter. Dama-ge estimates\nwent .as high, as $3,000,000. Full\nforce of the 'storm .was te\\\\ in\ncoastal areas. \u2022\nAn air and sea search for the\n12-man crew aboard a 273-tpn\nScottish trawler was \"abandoned.\nThe trawler, the R6b6rt Limbrick\nwas brown onto the rocks near the\nIsle of: Mull off the Scottish .coast\nand sank,    ',\"-        \u25a0\"..-\u25a0'.-\n.Mountainous seas around. Britain's coast crippled- six. vessels.\nScores , of, others. sought shelter\nin ports and cOve.s. '.-;.: ;\n' A man and two youths \u2022 were\nmissing^, from a yacht ,. washed\nashore, op Britain's south \u2022 coast.'\n. In'Ireland, tWo m.en..were .killed\narid;:at least, 10,.injured by the\nwinds.- One man was drowntid\nafter-being blown from a ship's\ngangplank. - -\nIn Scotland 50 persons were injured in a. storm that .brought\ndown Wees, disrupted communications arid wrecked homes. The\nFrench coast was hard hit by the\nstorm, r \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0' - .. '\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022 : \u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0\ndUpee8nsC....      \u2022.\nGas Blast Levels\nFull Business Block\nBrief Warning Cuts Casualties;\nAt Least Two Killed, 40 \/n\/urecf\nRENO, Nev. (AP)\u2014Three explosions from a leaky\ngas line, followed by a four-hour fire, destroyed a business\nblock in Reno Tuesday, killing at least two persons'and\ninjuring about 40.\nTen business establishments were wiped out. Gas\nlines in the downtown'area'were shut off.   ,\n. Twelve square blocks, including the 13-storey Mapes\nHotel and tl\\e Masonic Temple, were evacuated for fear\nof \u25a0 further-explosions. \u25a0\n430,000 Pints in\nLast 10 Years\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014' British\nColumbians have donated 430,000\npints of blood worth more than\n$10,000,000 to the Red Cross blood\ntransfusion service-in the last'10\nyears.   - \u25a0\nThe blood has been administered to 214,000 persons since the\nfree transfusion service began\nFeb. 7, 1947, Red Cross- officials\nsaid today.\nThe blood was collected from\n750 clinics for Vancouver donors;\n2000 clinics held in cities and\nvillages from Vancouver Island\nto the Alberta border and 500 in\nbusiness firms. Another 30,000\npints came from the University of\nB, C.    \u2022\n\".' WASHINGTON (AP)\u2014President\nEisenhower Tuesday named Vice-\nPresident. Nixon as chief of a U.\u00a7.\ndelegation to atend March 3-10\nceremonies marking. Britain's\ngranting of independence to the\nGold Coast.\nThe body af. ens of four-erewmen of a\nDC7 passenger piano which collided with a jet\nfighter plane ever Van Nuyi, Calif, (above), Is\nremoved from the wreokage which fell on the\nplayground ef Pacolma Junior High School,\nSeven were killed, Including at least two school\nchildren I playing In tho yard. At least 78 wcro\nInjured. Ronnie Brann, 13, top right, and Bob\nZaflan, 12, below, rlght,,.wepe kijled in the:\nschoolyard_ where they, and dozens,.of-other.\nchildren were playing when the plane crashed\namong them.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.     .     \/        ,,.-' .'\nIraqi Prince\nAsks U.S. Arms\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Crown\nPrince' Amir Abdul Ilah of :lraq,\nPresident Eisenhower's second\nArab visitor\" within a week, conferred with him for 45 minutes\nTuesday and asked for more\narms\nThe President's other, Arab\nguest, King Saud of Sau4i Arabii,\nhjVd..'%,auiet' day. St Blair.. Houise,\nofficial gft-St; residence.'''\n\":'__bi_4 encl;-lah Are- expected to\n.get fogether today. Their meeting\ncould .haye. 'rriqre ' symbolic than\npractical value..\n' Both \"are members .Of the Arab\nLeague. Bpth ate rich in oil. Both\nare feeling pinched because the\nIsrael - jigjrpt'. fighting ,tost \u2022 fall\nhas serioijsly slowed the-flow of\ntheir, oil toVwestern markets. \u25a0\"\nBut they have'their difterehces.\nIraq is a' member;- of' the- U, S.r\nsupported Baghdad Pact,' whose\nother merribers are Britain, Pakistan, Iran and Turkey. Saudi Arabia opposes the. pact.\nHowever, Satid arid Ilah have\nfound themselves in agreement on\nEisenhower's program to'. curb\ncommunism in' the Middle East.\nThey'also agree each should get\nmote military and economic help\nfrom.the US. \u2022...\u2022\u2022 ' . \u2022 \u25a0  \u2022\nKilled-.were Mrs. John Dupratt,\nabout'SO, member of. a socially\nprominent Reno family who was\nwalkirig . along the street at the\nscene, arid Frank Sjiiha, a shipowner; \u201e;.-.--\nFire Chief Carl Evans said\nmore bodies might be found when\nit was possible to search the hot\nruins of the five destroyed buildings.-'These were - the' ilks Club,\nthe' adjoining Gray - Reid department-store, the Bankers Trust\nbuilding;, the \u25a0 Biltz building, and\nan unnamed office building.\nFire Chief Evans said It was impossible1 to' estimate property\ndamage. Unofficial estimates \u2022 ran\ninto the -millions. \u2022\t\nA brief warning apparently explained' .the \"relatively 'small casualty list. The blasts occurred at\n2:03 p.m.. MST,'. .\n.Ed Caffrey, -who had just left\nthe Elks.' Club,- said he and-..a\nfriend\" .were hurled against the\nwall. They ducked down an alley,\n\"arid, at that.moment the Elks\ndining room blew up.\"  '\u25a0'_\u25a0\nThe Elks Club and the three-\nstorey department store burst into\nflames. After four hours the Elks\nbuilding and the stores across the\nstreet lay in ruins. The department, store-still was burning.\nGA8 CUT OFF. ' :\u25a0>-.'..-'\n_...Tl.e-.^i\u00bbli\u00bb..g(_s valve, beneath\nthe Maples'Jlotei, was shut off.\nFrank Tracy,-.Slerr* Pacific\nP'e.ei'Company manager,- set\nMore Lose Licences\nVICTORIA CCP) \u2014 Suspensions\nof. drivers \u25a0 with bad- records \u2022 in\n1957 are double the number suspended in the same period last\nyear as-the motor vehicle branch\ncontinues, its -fight to- cut the\ndeath toll'on B.C. highways.\nGeorge Lindsay, superintendent\nof motor vehicles, said Tuesday\n172 motorists lost their licences in\nJanuary after a check of driving\nrecords.'. \u25a0-, ,;       ,  -\nIn January-a year ago 81. lost\ntheir licences.    ..,.-.\nConsciousness\nReturning After\n51 Days in Come\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A -13\nyear-old boy,.who has been in a\ncoma' at Vancouver General Hospital for 51 days, was heard to\nwhisper Tuesday and hospital\nauthorities said he may be awake\nning.\" '\"\"\u25a0'- \u25a0\u25a0----\nBruce Harrington of Souti\nWestminster, unconscious since a\ncar knocked hini from his bicycle\nDec. 16, whispered something\nwhich a nurse thinks was \"Bi.\"\nLater a supervisor saw the boy's\ntoes Wiggle,\n-Officials at the Health Centre\nfor children said Bruce is still\nupconscious by medical standards\nand is still being fed \"intravenously.\nHowever in recent days his\neyes have, been seen to move and\nhis head to turri slightly.\nIn another, room\" at the same\ncentre is Pat Kowalski, 15, who\nis in her fifth month of coma\nsince' she was hit by a car. She\nhas shown no sign of recovery.\nVIENNA  BARS ATHLETES\nVI-.N-.A (AP) \u2014 The Austrian\ngovernment Tuesday \"barred for\nan indefinite time the appearance\nof Hungarian artists and athletes\nin\/this\"'country to prevent incidents with refugees. The measure\nwill-affect-'a nuinber of soccer\ngames between Vienna and Budapest clubs,' and - possibly - the participation of .Hungary's skaters in\nthe-European-figure-skating- championships here'Feb. 14-16..  .-\nI_ll_l__.--__l__llllll.--.lllll._l----llllll.i\nBudgie Forgot\nPhone Number\n1VANCXDUVER (CP) - -oey\na budgerigar, had been trained ,\nto remember the phone number of bis master in: case1 he,\n\u25a0 become lost' '\u2022-\nHe' did get lost.' So\/did the\nphorienumber,       .\nJoey chattered out'Cherry\n317 iri the apartment of Mrs.\nDoreen\" Turner but: couldn't-:\nrecall- a fourth digit\nMrs. Turner got-Joey back-\nto its-owner by way of a classified advertisement in a newspaper and found out .be-number wis Cherry: 1317..\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllll\nParliament\nTuesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nPrime Minister St. Laurent said\nhe hopes the Canada Council will\nbe set up by March 31; he indicated succession, duty \"windfalls\"\nwill help finance it.\nRev. E. G. Hansell (SC-Mac-\nleod) challenged the prime minister-to call a plebiscite to decide\nwhether Canadians want a Canada Council.\nErhart Regies (CCF-Burnaby-\nCoquitlam) proposed that the government\", consider taking over\nTrans-Mountain Oil Pipe Line Co.\n. Lab.or Minister- Gregg announced an unemployment insur-\nance.plan for fishermen Will go into effect April 1 with benefit payments'Starting Jafl. 1.\n: The Sopial Credit party tried unsuccessfully to have the Commons\ngo into * special debate on expulsion of'Indians from Alberta's\nHobbema. reservation.\nHealth Minister Martin announced' Newfoundland has be\ncome the-fourth province to\naccept the federal hospital insurance plan proposals.\nSenator John T. Haig, opposition leader, opposed a $1,000,000\nCanadian government loan to the\nUN for clearing the Suez Canal as\nmoney \"down the drain.\"\nNEW yORK (CP)-The Canadian-dollar was 1-32 lower at\npremium of  _ 11-32 per cent\nterms-of U.S. funds. -Pound sterling'1-32 higher at $2.7931-32.\ncrews to testing for, low - lying\npockets of gas.\nLittle if any discomfort resulted\nfrom the gas shutdown in Reno's\nwintry weather. Most of the city\nis heated by oil:\nPolice blocked the. area. The 12-\nblock. roped-off section extended\nfrom,: Second Street-, to .Liberty\nStreet and from Centre Street to.\nChestnut Street, .   . ',\nVirginia Street, Reno's \"main\ndrag,\" parallels Sierra Street one\nblock from the disaster scene.:\nSgt. John R. Paget, of, the air\ndefence filter centre, said he\nheard the- first -explosion; and\nlokoed out the window just as the\nsecond blast went off.\nROOF SKYWARD |';V\n\"I saw a roof go skyward about\n100 \u2022 feet,\" Paget' said.- \"A. large\ncrowd was already formed.-People\nwere streaming from all- dirtc.\ntions.\", .  \u25a0   -,. '.-'j   \u25a0 ..-\nA department store employee,\nCharles Patterson, said, there was.\na forewarning.. \u2022'-.   -\n'We smelled gas. so I called the\nboss and he said we'd better clear\nthe building. He .ailed the Sierra,\nPacific Power Company.\n\"The crew came and told us:\n'Clear outl. We<, expect a blast!'\n'We ran out as fast as we could.\nThen it .blew up. Most\" ot- 4Se\npower company ere#'we^e' Si&o'iti\nthe injtired-''!.'.\"\nU.S. Fears No\nRuss Threat\nSays Dulles\n\u25a0\u25a0-      By JOHN 8CALI\nWASHINGTON- (AP) \u2014 State\nSecretary Dulles' says:the Eisenhower administration will never\nallow Russian threats to frighten\nit- from proceeding-with--toyipejl-\nicy it believes right in the Middle\nEast or elsewhere.\nDulles said Tuesday that. to\nabandon a policy because of fear\nof what Russia might do, would\nin effect permit the' Kremlin.\/\u00bb\ndictate American actions.\nThe United States had faced up\nto serious Russian - threats and\nforged ahead, eventually .forcing\nthe Soviets to reconcile themselves to the American action.\nDulles outlined'.', the 'jgbverai.\nment's attitute- at his first .press\nconference in seven .'weeks. He\nlaid. down the view in. answering\na,question as to whether the government would i!risk war\".;,_( nee.\nessary. to protect Israel's ind_.\npendence. :*:;, . _,     , , j\nDulles said he had good pounds\nfor hoping Israel would \u2022 comply\nwith the latest United Nations\nresolution demanding swi-t wlQi-\ndrawai of Israeli TforoM .. from,\nEgypt's OnU of Aqaba irea- as\nwell as the Gaza- Strip.   \u2022  .      :\nSALUTE TO QUEEN\nMONTREAL (CPy^j.:'tl:% gun'\nsalute in honor of the anniversary\nof the accession of Queen Elizabeth' II to the throne.'wfl'ble.fired -\nfrom htop Mount. Royal, at noon\nWednesday. A troop - ot' the, 87th\nfield-regiment' RC^i^tfitia under Lieut. K. Kaplan,\"will fire-&\u2022\nsalutelrom-fo'ur.guns;.; \u2022 '     - ' '\nTo typtiss Ccwada\ntONDON (CP) -The Daily\nMail says. Canada is-no place for\nsnobs;\u25a0 \"-Britons!.' planning \u25a0 a' 'new\nlife' in! Cenada have, unliipited\nchances of success; providhig they\nare. adaptable and willihg to work,\nsays the Mail's Washington'.correspondent, Don. Iddbh, .-writing\nfrom Ottawa. ' ' \u25a0 , v. '\u2022.\n. \"But the British who come here\n\u2014and there ; have been sOmer-\nriding a high horse and saying:\n'Really, at- home; we don't do\nthings Uke this at all'\"will fall off\nthe horse and brestk their leg\nand perhaps their-neck.\"   \u25a0\nWhat -vill the new Canadian\nfind? Says Iddbn-\n\"He can expect twice-the wages\nhe earns in Britain and half the\nincome tax. He will have to pay\na quarter of -his monthly earnings\nin rent, and houses are still hard\nto find.\nBIG MONEY     .   .\nCOMES FAST\n\"The cost of living is about 50\nper cent higher than in England\nand there is no welfare state on\nthe British model. But big money\ncan come fast here and social security legislation is being considered by Parliament\".'\nIddon, saying it was his 100th\nvisit to, Canada,- added!: ,^l,-Ov\u00bb\ntjie country., and H I.wpre jH.ti.-.\nstead of 44 I'd;settle here and try\nto. huy a newspaper\" \"instead .of -\nwording for one.\" > ', '.\". ' t\nTEN IN ONE- \u2022 -,;\/'; ;.': '\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022 i\n-\u25a0Idd\u00abi describes Canada as.\"ten\ncountries in one,\"\n\"It offers- as ra\\{eh Wa-ie-ty and-\na future-as'big as,'or bigger than,\ndoes theU. S.-Thi.s is a firs't-name,\neasy-going couritry with l}tt% class\ndistinction and no feudalism?' .\nThe repot ter - says Ti^ThaS interviewed hundreds of,Britons who\nhave started a new l_fe in' Canada, \"They are sold on ,'Canad*.\nOnly a: handful say, they don't like:\nthe country .dr the people. ^They\nare either the starched and stuffed, top the no-gbods' who tould\nnot    earn a Hying.anywhere.\"\nMeter Returns Up\nVICTORIA (CP)^-Income *om\nparking meters has multiplied almost eight, times since they were\n.first installed here nine years ago.\nMayor Percy Scurrah told the\nVictoria Kiwanis Club Tuesday.\nThe mayor said income from the\nmeters in-1-56 was $126,723, ebm.\npared with $17,439 in 1047.'   V\nAnd in This Comer...\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Mrs. Richard Calvert was afraid her tWdJyear.\nold son, Richard, might be Jealous of the family's new baby.\ni So, on the way home from the maternity hospital she bought\nRichard a picture book.. Richard took an Ins'taht liking to his new\nbaby brother, but the picture book was Just awful.\n\u201e__, WJ_,\"? '\u2022_. rest of the 'amlly gathered around the new arrival,\n\u2022 little Richard toddled off* found a box of matches and; set flrjs to\nthe picture book. Now mother and baby are back Ih hospital suffering from shock and the Calverts are looking for a new home.\nVANCOUVER (CP)-^Bu\u00abgiars scrambled through a rear window of a Kingsway.store overnight and scrambled 90 dozen, eggs.\n. The eggs were shattered against the walls of Gilby's Poultry.\nNothing was taken by the intruders. ., \t\nNANAIMO, B.C. (CP)\u2014An Anglican church dignitary foresees\nthe time when church service times will be changed to fit In with\ntelevision programs.\nVen. Archdeacon A. E. Hendy told the annual meeting of St.\nPaul's Church here Monday night television Is interfering with\nchurch attendance.\n. \"The time may come,\" he said, \"when we shall have to devise\nhours of service In which we shall not seem to be In competition\nwith these secular pleasures, , \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\n\"For the present we shall cohtlfiue our present arrangements,\nfor the church Is everlasting and modern Inventions pall and; fade\naway In comparison.\" \t\nDESCHEHES Que. (CP)\u2014The three dog catchers in this village across the Ottawa River from the capital resigried Mohdi'y\nnight when council members disagreed with the way they were\nhandling collection of dog licence fees.\nLater, after it was agreed they could sell tags to dog owners\ninste\u2014. w. ._.J._uig mum \u00bbo trie police chief..the^og catchers agreed\nto go back to work.\nMeanwhile, however, they had let all the dogs out of the village\npound. They planned to resume today their roundup of stray dogs\nbegun over, the weekend.\n'DERBY, England (Reutera)\u2014Two young Hungarian refugees\nhave applied to their legation In London \"to return to Hungary so\nthey can get married. A 17-year-old youth and his .5-year-old\nsweetheart arrived.near herein early December and were refused\npermission to marry because the girl Is too young. \"We would\nrather go back than have to wait,\" the boy said.\n I\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6, 1957\nv<^sM_!\nMl HIS,B*ND\n\"HIGH SOCIETY\"\nQ1 1   t   j   f .\"1    InVlSTAVlSION\n.1 I  i    (   E \"-J    mdCOLOR\n_!____-_\nTONIGHT, THO., SAT. Complete shows at 7:00, 9:10. Prices 83c, 60c, 25c\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nTonight and Thursday\n\"SUSAN SLEPT HERE\"\nTechnicolor\nDick Powell -Debbie Reynolds\nBuilding Permit\nTotal $5731\nIn January\nFive building perrnits were filed\nat' City Hall during January for\na low q_'$-7_l.\n' Largest permit for $3581, was tp\nenlarge ther Toiri-Boy Store at\n464 Ba^er'Street. The estate of\nE. F. Green, with G. H. Green,\nexecutor, applied for s permit\nto convert an apartment into two\nsmaller apartments at 856 Ward\nStreet for $1500.\nThe three remaining permits, involving alterations to existing residences or premises, were issued\nto Liberty Food Store, to enlarge\noffice space on the mezzanine;\nBoyd C. Affleck to put.glass in\nhis {rout porch at 218 Gore Street)\nqpfj to T. |. Shqrthouse to put in\n.Stajrwfry at 611 Font Street.\nPermits fdr jobs worth $15,700 '\nwpre filed. In p. comber last year\n\u25a0yhile peripiu? for \u2022.fnuaryf, 185$,\nwer\u00bb i_piu4e4 with ths permit.\nissj}e<J in February.\nYouth Found to Be\nJuvenile Delinquent\nA. J7-yea^4 yQut]i, was found\nte.be\"* juvenile delinquent Tuesday when he appeared before\nJuvenile -Court Judge William\nEvans charged in connection with\n. an indecent act offending a 17-\nyear-old girl last month on High\nStreet. The ease was adjourned a\nweek' ter'fufther investigation.\nPolice reported several complaints from teen-age girls concerning acts of youths.\nRelievo   tha   Syrriptgrn!.\npf ;iM flOFT.rr.pi. __\u00bb.(_\nOoryban  Capsules  $1.25\nPyr|t_f-| Cpmpoiim)  65o\nNe|son Pharmacy\n\u2022Your Fortresj of Health*\n\"488 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203      Nights: 894-L\nSkiing by Qaslight\nIn Style Tonight\nThere will be skiing by gaslight\ntonight at the Silver King ski hill.\nA story in Monday's paper said\nmany people had enjoyed night\nskiing when it was tried for the\nfirst time Saturday'night. Since\nthen Club officials have reported\nmany enquiries about the innovation, and arrangements have been\nmade to have gas lamps on the\nhill Wednesday night.\nOriginally the Club planned to\nMan's Body\nFound at Trail\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 The body of a\nmiddle-aged man was found on\nthe bank qf the Columbia River\nhere Tuesday afternoon.\nPolice are withholding identification pending the notification\nof next of kin.\nThe body was dscovered behind\nthe\/ glks Hall. Cause of 4eath is\nl^ndetenpined. Police are investigating and a post-mortem examination is being held.\n40 BIRTHS HURE\nDURING JANUARY\nFigures released on the mtmber\nqf births, deaths and marriages in\nNelson during January remain\nclose to pie number reported, for\nme last.mon_'o-^8_8.:'.',. ,'.\nThere were 40 birth* in January\nand 41 in December in the city,\n10 deaths in December and 12 in\nJanuary, eight Japuary marriages\nar(4 six December' marriages.\nTl}ere were four ojeattis in the district, but no births or marriages\nreported during January. A month\nago there were three deaths ai)4\none .marriage in the district.\nstart night skiing when the lift\nstarts, at which time a generator\nwill be used to illuminate the hill.\nNelson Woman's\nDaughter Dies\nMiss Myrtle .Jarfe McRae, 53,\ndaughter of Mrs. W. J. McRae of\nNelson, and sister of government\nagent K. D. McRae, died Friday\nin Vancouver. Funeral services\nwere held Tuesday.\nOther survivors are two sisters,\nMrs. George Beattie, Vancouver,\nand Mrs. Stuart Murdock in Alberta.\nCeylon Signs\nPcrct With\nPremier Chou\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) \u2014 The\npremiers of Communist China and\nCeylon Tuesday signed a pact of\n\"peaceful co-operation and resistance against aggression and expansion of the imperialist arid colonial forces.\"\nChinese Premier Chou En-lai\nand Ccylonese Prime Minister Solomon Bandaranaike toasted their\nagreement in orangeade in a ceremony ending Choii's.gbodwiU visit,\nto the British Commonwealth island. Alcoholic drinks are banned\nat state functions,in Ceylon.\nIn a companion statement the\ntwo premiers called for a second\nAsian-African conference and denounced any attempt to fill a\npower vacuum in the Middle East\nby substitution of one outside\npower for another.\nSt. Saviour's Rector Inducted\nIn Solemn Rites, Becomes Canon\nIn solemn ceremonies of the\nAnglican Church! Rt. Rev. P. R,\nBeattie, Bishop of Kootenay, Inducted Rev, { George Warren\nLang Into the Incumbency of the\nparish of St. Saviour. Pro-\nCathedral.\nThe  Bishop   also   announced\nthat he was making the rector\na Canon Ip the-Pro-Cathedral.\nPreceded by the united cnojrp\nof-St. Saviour's and:Chu-ch of the\nRedeemer, (he. clergy.of  West\nKootenay;   the   rector ' and   the\nBishop entered the '.church   in\nsilent procession, Rev. Canon W.\nJ. Silverwood, rural dean of West\nKootenay, started the. servjee by\nthe singing Of Evensong.     -\nVen. B. ,A. Besker. Archdeacon\nof Kootepay, read the first lessop\nfrom Tjtus 11, with the. assembled\ncongregations of St. Saviour's arjd\nChurch of the Rede,erper reading\nthe Magnificanfc (Luke 1) respon-\nsively. The service proceeded according to the order established\nfor Evening Prayer.\nThen began the service of institution and induction of the incumbent directed by the Bishop.\nHe was presented with a Bible and\nthe Book ol Common Prayer from\nthe Bishop who charged him \"to\nlead tne devotions of the people,\nadminister the Sacraments of\nChrist and exercise the discipline\nof Church.\"\nKEYS PRESENTED\nFollowing this charge he was\nthen inducted into, possession of\nthe churches of his parish. T. G.\nLudgate, people's warden, Willow\nBarn in Joffray...\nMissimary To Sail\nKetch Across Pacific\nA Kootenaian by birth, Rev. C.\nKetchum, will leave his mission\nfield in Okinawa shortly to sale\na 6P-foot auxiliary ketch 2000 miles\nacross the' Pacific to the Marshall\nIslands where he will turn her\nover to the missionaries for work\nURGENT MEETING\n^\u25a0W_\u00bb\"fl^\u2014_\u2014__-_-_\u2014\u2014\u2014_______\nNelson\nRetail Merchants Association\nTODAY, 1:30 p.m.\n.To Be Held\nCHAMBER OF COMMERCE ROOM\n:   -    DO-NOT MISS THIS MEETING\nNelson Retail Merchants Association\nPEtBLEi  I  PEEBLES\n____\nPhone 1090        Phone 1090\nWatch \u2022 for\nrise\nin\nin the South Sea Islands.\nWhen he returns to his base in\n_faha, he hopes his own new ship,\na clean, 40-foot motor sailer, now\nbuilding, will be ready for work\nin the ruggecj Ryukyo chain which\narcs down from Japan towards\nFormosa.\nHe left Cranberry lake, a residential suburb oi Powell River,\nthree years ago to take up his\nnew post on the four-square mission field in the Orient.\nThe motor ketch for the Marshall Islands will be chistened\nMorning Star VII and he will sail\neastward to Wake Island, then\nsouth to Jaluit in the Marshall\ngroup.\nBorn In Jaffray in 1022, Mr\nKetchum wertt to sea in the early\nyears of the war and witnessed\nthe heroic sacrifice of the \"armed\"\nmerchantman Jervis Bay as she\ndefended her convoy of 36 ships\nagainst the German pocket batte-\nShip Von Scheer.\nLater he signed aboard an old\nwindjammer, the Daylight, carrying a cargo of bombs, airplane\ngas and detonators, aroupd the\nHorn.\nIn 1952 he was ordained in the\nFoursquare churoh and set out\nfor the Marshall group to skipper\nthe Morning Star VI which was\nsubsequently )ost during a storm.\nG.F.Truei.\nOf Robson Dies\nA former Robson man, George\nFranklin Trueit, died Saturday in\nVancouver, where he had lived\nlatterly. Funeral was held Tues\nday.\nMr. Trueit was an qldtimer of\nRobson, having lived there'more\nthan 40 years.\nSurviving are two sons, George,\nNew York, and Charles, Vancouver, and two daughters, Mr?. N.\nLandis, Nelson, and Mrs. V. Dil-\nworth in California. .\nPost Office Business\nDecreases Slightly\nBusiness transacted at the Nel\nspp Post Office in January wa6\ndown slightly from DecetpberlS\ntotal business which Included the\nextra business associated with the\nChristmas rush.\nTotal business transacted a,t the\nEpst Office amounted to $233,887,\njust about $6000 less than the\n$239,619 reported in December.\nMoney orders issued were 321_,\ncompared to 3911 issued in'December, while money orders- paid- out\nin the ^rne period were 6326, up\nconsiderably from the 5718 paid\nout last month'. Additional revenqe\nlast month was $433 compared to\n$533 iri the last month of 1956.\nSocreds to Plan\nNominating Meeting\nThe executive of the Kootenay\nWest federal Social Credit Association will meet here Thursday\nnight t<5 make detailed arrangements for the nominating convention to be held in Trail.\nPresent will be Mrs. Van\nMaarion, of Nelson, president;\nWilliam Cassian of Trail,' first\nvice-president; Norman Brookes\nof K^'slo,' second vice-president;\nFloyd Searle, North Shore, third\nvice-president, and Ed. Huitema\nof Rossland, fourth vice-president.\nFined for Speeding\nSpeeding near Oliver on Jan.\nuary 24 cost S. Amoroso of Nelson\na $20 fine and costs Tuesday. He\npleaded guilty to the ?harge before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans in provincial court.\nMetals Prices\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y., .16.\nZinc, East St. Louis, MVt.\nSilver, N.y., 91%.\nDEATHS\nMexico 'City \u2014 Miguel COvar\nrubias, 53, one of Mexico's most\npopular and successful modern\nartists.\nThis Friday's Issue\nPecblw Motors a\n[HRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-FARGO _^TIRE5\nX?Urmi\\OQO^ <%&&_<--,B.C. ','\"\u25a0\nPhone 1090      . Phone 1090\nfEEBiitt i Peebles\nm\nm\nK0RPACK Cement Products\nCo. |_td.\nmo\nFERRAR0 BRQS.     ;\nSAND AND GRAVED \u25a0\n* CONCRETE &i,dCKS\n* CINDER BLOCKS\n* CHIMNEY BLOCKS\nSAND _- GRAVEL - CEMENT\n154 Wellington St.        Trail. B.C.        Phone 2105\nPoint, presented the key{ to the\nChurch' of' St*\" Andrew's-by-th'e-\nLake, and CM. Beltner, people's\nwarden, presented the keys to St.\nSavjour's.'      '   '\nThe Incumbent acknowledged\nthis by replying: \"I receive these\nkeys at your hands, as the pledge\nof your recognition of me as your\nappointed Minister.\" '     ' \"\nPprtipps oi the Scriptures were\nread admonishing the rector to\npreach and to, \"reverently order\nthe service of Cfod's house.\"\nThe letters and license of induction were read by the rural\ndean of West Kootenay.\nSumming up the work of a minister, the Bishop outlined his work\nas \"preaching tile sermon,\" \"reading the book of Common Prayer\"\nand. \"performing the Sacraments\nof the Church.\"\nBishop Beattie announced that\nhe was making Mr. Lang a canon,\nwith C. H. Hamilton reading the\nletters granting this digpity and\nauthority to the incumbent.\nBishop Beattie said he would\npreach his sermon around the rather unusual words in Matthew 10;\nVIII; \"Freely ye have received\nand freely ye h^ve given.\"\nAddressing the assembled congregation, he said the people all\nhad been inheritor? of \"unspeakable gifts in Jesus, bearer of God's\nlove.\". He said that it was very\nsurprising that from a small group\nof disciples \"going out into the\nworld to win it for Christ\" would\ncome our present church.\nHe commended the freely-given\nwork of past rectors and devoted\nlaymen although he was only going to mention Fred Irvine.\n\"We thank God for him and for\nall like hiri}.\"\nBishop Beattie charged St. Saviour's to be a \"live\" church. He\nadmitted a church could exist\nwithout being truly alive and\nserving Christ, but it was only a\n\"nice club\" if that was all it was\nin the community. .\nSpeaking a few words of comfort and instruction to Mr. Lang,\nthe Bishop reminded him of a part\nof the induction service where he\nwas pictured as a teacher, a leader\nin worship, a priest, representing\nChrist to the people and the people to Christ, He pointed out that\nhe was not required to be an\norganizer, a mixer, an organist,\nalthough it was agreeable when a\nminister was these things. He ask-\nec) the people not to adopt the\nattitude of \"let George do it,\" but\nto:. \"Support your rector, for the\nwork of any minister is emotionally very hard work.\"\nGREAT THINGS\n\"Great things had been done by\na life offered in service.\" Livingstone offered his life to the service\nRio Tinto Offers\nTo Buy Kern Oil\nLONDON (CP)-Rio Tinto Company Limited, the great British\nbase metal-uranium mining group,\nis preparing to move into the\nNorth American oil fields.\nGerald Coke, head of Rio Tinto,\nannounced Monday night his company has made, an offer to acquire the \u00a31,444,500 issued capital of Kern Oil, a British,company\nwith extensive holdings in Cali-\nfornia. The take-Over bideinvolves\nabout \u00a311,000,000.\nThe Weather\nSkie$ are generally cloudy\nthroughout B.C. this evening but\nwith breaks in the cloud cover in\nsome part; ot the southern interior\nand along the south coast. Light\nsnow persists in the Lower Fraser\nValley but otherwise little precipitation is reported. Temperatures\nremain below normal tut have\nmoderated somewhat in the interior.\n: A. yveak disturbance moving\nsouthward over B.C. at high levels\nwill bring snowflurries to the interior. Little precipitation is expected in coastal areas.\nNELSON     IT 24   \u2014\nSt. Johns       10   i9   .20\nHalifax    _      21   27   .07\nMontreal  \u201e....     13   27\nOttawa      5   29\nToronto   3   30\nNorth Bay _     4   26\nPort Arthur    -13   28\nKenora -       0   13   .08\nWinnipeg       1    6   .12\nBrandon    .15    3  .10\nThe Pas    -16    0\nJtegina     -1$    5   .02\nS^sk^toott       -14    3   .0?\nPrince Albert _  -16    S\nft. Sattleford _    T14    4\nSwift Current.  rio\u201e a .03\nJUediclne Hat .\u2014....    -3  1Q..I\nL\u00bb-H>ridge      .1   19  .06\nP*l#|ry \u201e\u201e._.._    ,9   }0   .01\nJSdmonton  \u2022-  ?12   .9   \u2014\nJCimberley -      1  19   \u2014\n{Camtoopj  ..     i  19   -\nfMtjcton,       19 26   -\nVictoria  n    33   35   .33\nVaAco.uver ...,.____...!  32  34\nf-lnca Rtipert.....\u2014    ?j  29\nfririca <5\u00abo\u00ab\u2022 ~\u2014  til'\"10\nWhiWWJM*      -7  21,41\nSe|ttl( \u201e\u201e.(,,.,,...,   ,37 .; 42   fil\nfW^ftitn -r\u2014    36   $5   t~\nJ,is A)ljti}|......!.     45  69   m\nSp-kane ;     si 33  .69\nChicago1:.!      ?i   M   -7\nNew York!      31' .38   i\nREV. CANON\nLANG\nof Christ in Africa, Louis Pasteur\noffered his life to science! And the\nmany persons who lay in unmarked graves gave proof that soldiers\nhad offered their lives in the cause\nof freedom. \"We have freedom\ntoday because people offered their\nlives.\"\nFollowing the solemn service of\nworship, the procession went\nslowly out of the church.\nRev. E. H. Patterson 0 fT.aU,\nas bishop's chaplain, hearing the\nbishop's crozier, preceded' the\nbishop as Canon Lang and the\nBishop quitted the church.\nAt,the reception in Memorial\nHall later, Bishop Beattie spoke\naffectionately of the rector and\nfamily with whom he was well acquainted. ,\nRev. J. N. Allan brought greetings on behalf of Nelson Ministerial Association. Mayor Joseph\nKary spoke briefly on behalf of\nthe City.\nLIONS GIFTS TO HOSPITAL ...\nBenefactors Told\nEquipment's Uses\nMembers of the Nelson Lions\nClub learned Tuesday about work\nperformed by equipment donated\nby the Club to the KOotenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nGuest speaker was A. K. McAdams of the Hospital Board, He\noutlined functions of a bladder\nirrigator, pump, and automatic\ntourniquet, valued at about $800,\nwhich the Lions donated to the\nHospital recently.\nThe club also donated two re-\nNELSON LIONS\nMEET NEW CLUB\nAT NORTHPORT\nMembers of Nelson Lions Club\nwere present at a meeting in\ntforthport, Wash., when a club\nwas organized in that city..\nKettle Falls Lions Club sponsored the new group, assisted in\nthe organizing by their president,\nW. Brauner and International representative Jack Cooper of Victoria.\nFrank Beresford, second vice-\npresident of the Nelson club gave\na resume of the activities of his\nclub, explaining its cleanup campaign, Little League baseball\nsponsorship and assistance to\ncrippled children. He told how his\nclub has had two years of 100 per\ncent attendance for every member.\nL. Gillis, secretary of the newly-\nformed Trail club gave an outline\nof the origin of his club.\nContinuing the theme, Fred\nHauck, past president of Kettle\nFalls Lidns pointed out that\nthrough the work of his club, the\ntown had developed a lighted\nathletic field.\nIn speaking for the Colville\nClub, president Floyd Cory toid\nthe gathering that among the outstanding activities of his organization was 4H representation and a\nfair.\nThe new club was offered support and visits from Colville, Trail\nand Nelson clubs.\nBURNIE GOES\nTO COAST TODAY\nA- R. Burnie. who has beep\nmanager of the Bank of Montreal\nbranch in Nelson, (eaves toda.y\nwith his wife and family for Vancouver, wtyer, he has been ap,\"\npoir|ted to manage one of the\nBank's branches. His successor\nhere is W. Forsythe.\nTabernacle\nReports Indicate\nYear of Progress\nReports given by various organizations of Bethel Tabernacle indicate 19S6 was a good year for\nthe church.\nRev. Reuben Swanson, who has\nbeen pastor for the last six months\naddressed a fair representation\nof members at the church's annual meeting Tuesday night, on\nthe year's progress.\nJack Bunt, secretary-treasurer\nof the church for a number of\nyears, declined to stand again,\nand James Hood was elected by\nacclamation. ' Former Sunday\nSchool superintendent Bert McGowan also declined. He will be\nreplaced by Mrs. Swanson, Sunday\nSchool superintendent at hf r husband's former church at Richmond, near Vancouver.\nHerbert Lancaster was appointed assistant superintendent, and\nsecretary-treasurer of the Sunday\nSchool will again be Gilbert An-\nonby.\nJ. L. Wood and <.\u2022 Stenberg\nwere elected to the church board\nFour men are on this board, and\ntwo are elected every year for\ntwo-year terms.\nTotal sum ccfllected from all\ndepartments last year was $8512.35,\nincluding $7000 from church gen*\neral offerings. Remainder came\nfrom the Sunday School, Christ's\nAmbassadors (young people), and\nWomen's Missionary Council. Missionary fund for foreign and tlome\nfields is now $1077.15.\nTabernacle report was given py\nMr. Bupt and Mr.'^nonby reaij\nthe Sijn4ay School report Report\nfor the Christ's Aj}ib?l553,dors wa?\ngiven by Mf Swanfon.\nMrs. Anopby said the Women's\nMissionary  Ccmpcil  had  done\ngreat deal of sewing, in qddUion\nto sending out literature and givr\ning clothing to needy workers.\nMr. Swanson estimated Church\nmembership h?S been increasing.\nChoruses and BibU reading\nwere also featured, along with\nvotes of thanks to officials.\nsuscitators to the Nelson Fire\nDepartment. These are used for\nemergency cases at the hospital\nMr. McAdams spoke of the need\nfor having clubs donate certain\ntypes of equipment. Members also\nsaw a pjcture of ope of the four-\nbed wards planned for the new\nHospital.\nOther gufsts at the meeting,\nheld in the Silver Room of the\nHume Hotel, were Henry Le:\nMoigne, W. Lorry apd J. Scrivener of Penticton, field commls.\nsioner for Boy Scouts.\nVice-president Frank Beresfqrd\ninducted three new members, D.\nMarshall, G. Craig and R. Richard-\nsori.\nE. M. Cutler, repoitod $620 profit\nfrom pions' light bulb sale last\nfall G. S. Guilivan was appointed\nchairman of the Spring cleapup\ncampaign.\nCustoms Revenue\nUp Over Dec\nCustoms receipts at Nelson Jn\nJanuary were above the receipts\nreported in December by aboul\n$1000.\nCustoms duties taken in totalled\n$32,699.54, up slightly from the\n$31,487.59 taken in December,\n1956, Jhis is down, however. I.OT\nJanuary receipts a year ago when\n$34,462-44 was taken in, but up\nconsiderably over the receipts\ntwo years ago January qf $?4,-\n269.80.\nSALMO YOUTH\nSENTENCED\nBlaine Eric Kraft, 20, of Salmo,\nwas sentenced to a period of nine\nmonths plus an indeterminate\nterm of up to nine months at\nthe Young Offenders' Unit in Burnaby for indecently assaulting a\n16-year-old Salmo girl August 5.\nSentence was given Tuesday by\nHis Ifonor Jud,ge E. p. paw.on\nin County Coin-t.\nCrown prosecutor was L. p.\nGansner, qpd M.\" E. Moran w?s\ndefencq  coqiisel.\nThe oftence took pla,ce in tl)e\nearly morning hours following a\ndance and house p^rty, or\\ a S)de\nroad of the Salmo-Nelway ftjgb,.\nwqy.\nAir Cadet League\nMeeting Feb. 13-14\nOTTAWA (CP) - The 16,th\nannual meeting of the Air Cadet\nLeague of Canada will bo held\nhere Feb. 13 and 14, league headquarters announced Tuesday,\nAbout 100 delegates will attend\nfrom ali provinces.\nCPR Appointments\nMONTREAL - D. B. Wallace,\nmanager department of public relations, Canadian Pacific Railway,\nannounced appointment of three\ndivision managers.\nH. T. Coleman is appointed division manager, press relations;\nW. T. McFarlane, division manager advertising, and E. W. Scrog-\ngie division manager display.\nHurt in Car-Train Crash,\nWoman Leaves Hospital\nA Nelson woman returned to\nher home Friday after a two-week\nstay in hospital, snd her mother\nwho has been looking after the\nhome, returned Sunday to Kimberley where her husband has entered hospital.\nMrs. 15. H. Wickens, 611 Hi)ll\nStreet, wa? taken to Kootenay\nLake General Hospital with a\nfractured neck suffered when a\ncar in which she was riding with\nher jjiijfeiS-l ^ y\u00b0 .ns son was\ninvolved in a collision with a\nGreat Northern train near Salmo\nearly January 16. Const. Wickens,\nwho is attached to the Nelson\nRCMP detail, was taken to\nShaughnessy Military Hospital\nwith a fractured kneecap.\nMr. Wickens is in a wheelchair\nafter an operation January 23.\nThe young son was not hurt and\nwas taken to Kimberley by Mrs.\nDonald Torgeson, the injured wo.\nman's sister. Her mothdr, Mrs. W.\nW. Duncan of Kimberley, was\ncalled home Sunday night as Mr.\nDuncan entered Kimberley bos.\npital.\nThe family was returning from\na hockey game in Rossland. when\nthe accident occurred\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT . \u201e \u201e\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDnUMHBLteR DEEP SEAM\nm\nOvershoes\nSnow Boots\n\u00bb\nGleated\nRubbers\nPullovers\nWe still have a\nPretty Fair Stock.\nGodfreys'\nPHONE WM70-\u00ab BOX\n*r~rir,.'>*\"!'\n&ai\nPlanning te move? Call us\nfirst Our modern vsns and\nskilled movers assure a SAFE\nmove wherever you go. We are\nagents for North American\nVan Lines, America's leading\nlong distance moving organization. It costs no more to\nenjoy this finer service.\nWest\ntransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE 33\nTowlcrFuel and Transfer\nPHONE 889\n Salmo Legion Building Opening\nCoincides With 10th Anniversary\nSALMO\u2014Friday was a big day\nfor Salmo branch of the Canadian\nLegion. Besides being the 10th\nanniversary it was also the official opening of the new building, as well as the branch's annual meeting.\nSpeakers included ' Cecil Pitt,\nfourth vice-president, provincial\ncommand and executive member\nof Nelson .branch; A. A. Lamb,\nzone commander, Castlegar; S. J.\nNewell, deputy zone commander\nand president of Nelson branch;\nS. Dawson, Nelson; and H. D,\nMcCutcheon, Fruitvale., Other\nguests were introduced from Nelson, Castlegar, Trail and Fruitvale.\nINSTALLATION\nJoint installation of Legion and\nAuxiliary officers was performed\nby Mr. Lamb. Legion officers are\nTri-Munlcipalifies Meeting\nSuggested on (reek Pollution\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 A meeting of\nTrail, Rossland and Warf ield municipal governments on the problem of Trail creek pollution has\nbeen suggested here.\nThe pollution arises from depos-\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nLISTER NABS\nBEAVER \"BOSS\"\nLISTER \u2014 Harry Yerbury\nis winning his battle with beavers which each year play\nhob with Lister's water supply system.\nMr. Yerbury has trapped\nfive of the beavers, the last<of\nwhich is believed to have been\nthe \"chief engineer\" of the\ncolony which has been divert-'\ning the water supply and vexing local housewives. '   .\n111111111111m1111111111111111111iii1_1111.il\niting of Rossland sewage, and War-\nfield and annable garbage into\nTrail creek, which is uncovered\nuntil it gets to the Trail city limits.\nFrom there it is taken by underground culvert to the Columbia\nRiver.\nAid. F. E. Devito, chairman of\ncouncil's health and relief committee has said it is quite possible that\nin another 10 years or so all sewage will have to be treated before\nbeing dumped into the Columbia.\nSewage and effluvium from Nelson, Castlegar, Robson, Kinnaird\nand Trail goes into the Columbia,\nwhich then carries it south into\nWashington state.\n\"Washington already has its\nsewage treated and will probably\ndemand soon that Canadian centres on the Columbia and its\nKootenay tributary do likewise,\"\nAid. Devito said.\nDuchess of Windsor   ,\nConfides on Lore\nDo you believe in love at\nfirst sight? Aro women\nmore romantic than men?\nCan a person love more\nthan once?\nThe Duchess of Windsor,\nwhose romance 'and marriage with Edward VII_\ncreated world- wide interest, gives {rank answers\nto Star Weekly reporter\nLester David..\n] Read this week's issue for\nMs exclusive interview:\n\"The Dnchess Talks of\nLove\".\nThe New STAR WEEKLY\nNarrows Bridge\nTo Be Toll Way\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Tolls will\nbe charged oh the new second\nnarrows bridge now under construction in Vancouver, highways\nminister P. A. Gaglardi said Tuesday.\nMr. Gaglardi said tolls would be\ncharged because Ottawa will not\npay mo\u00bbe than half the cost of\ntwo lanes for the six-lane span.\nOverall cost of the bridge will\nbe in the neighborhood of $16,-\n000,000.\nThe negotiations with Ottawa\nfor an increased subsidy on the\nbridge will continue, the minister\nsaid.\n\"I'll never stop my battle-with\nthe federal government,\" he said.\n\"Until they come through with a\nfair share, the bridge will have to\ncontinue as a toll structure,\"\nHe said that when Ottawa pays\nthe price, the tolls will be iifted.\nIt is believed B.C. wants the\nfederal body to pay 50 per cent of\nthe total .bridge cost.\nR. G. Stenson, president; H. Mang,\nvice-president; A. W. Hearn, treasurer; M. G. Bush, secretary; F. T.\nMiddleton, sergeant-at-arms; with\nexecutive members A. B, Lundeberg, J. R. Teague and fi. W.\nRoach. Mrs. Middleton will head\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary, with vice-\npresident Mrs. Stenson, secretary,\nMrs. C. Gradiri, treasurer Mrs.\nS. Haire, sergeant-at-arms , Mrs.\nA. Ldvestrom and executive members Mrs. L. Faurot, Mrs. C. W.\nHenry, Mrs. Roach,\nOpening ceremonies were fallowed by addresses commenting\non the hard work and active\nmembership; which produced the\nBranch's new home. - Mr. Pitt\nurged members not to lose sight\nof the? chief aims and objects of\nthe Canadian Legion, which are\nwelfare of veterans and dependents. .  . \u2022\n\"While members are building\nand acquiring material property,\nthey should not forget the Legion's ultimate goal, which is always the well-being of all veterans and dependents, particularly older veterans, to whom the\nLegion owes so much,\".he said.\nMr. Newell spoke, of need for\nmore  members,  since   about  70\nper cent of those aided do not\nbelong to the Canadian Legion.\nReports at the annual meeting\nspoke of a firm financial post\ntion, with   membership     going\nahead. Mr. Stenson told of many\nmonths of hard work by mem\nbers to finish their new build\nIng and extended heart-felt appreciation for support given him.\nA social time closed the evening, and guests shared a larje\ndecorated birthday cake with 10\ncandles. Those on hand from' Nelson included Mr. Pitt, Mr. Newell,\nC. O. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. N.\nA. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.\nBurns, Clarence House, F. Ozer-\noff and Mr. Dawson.\nEx-Nelson Man To Be\nSlocan Bank Manager\nNEW DENVER \u2014 The Barik Of\nMontreal has announced that,\nstarting Thursday, the newly renovated office at New Denver will\nmiC&MII EfMMH.  SEIir-ORAtf. SOAP BACK\ny\\m aim top\nSWING NMMEI\n-year\nEASY-CLEAN CONTOURS\nNO-TIP\nDRAIN BOARD\n(left or right)\nQUIET-SLIDE\nDRAWER\n(Nylon glides.\nEA8Y-V\nHANDLES'\nQUIET DOOR\n<H). ft. .TOW*   OATCWS\n3. ACE\n95 LOWEST PRICE EVER\nfor this all-steel deluxo-typo\n42\" CABINET SINK\nNever before did such an amazing low\nprico buy so much in modem convenience features . .. AND in sparkling\nbcaulyl   So start your dream kitchen\nnow... don't mix this terrific bargain.\n(MUTED TIME OHLY-tASY TERM81\nWE CANNOT REPLACE\nTHESE SINKS AT THIS PRICE\n52 GALLON\nAutomatic Water Heater\n3000 watt, 220 volt, 350 Ib.. *11A Crt\ntested tank. 1-yr. warranty. 1 only     I IT\u00bbPw\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\nDodds Heads\nSalmo Socreds\nSALMO \u2014 Slate of officers for\n1957 was chosen when the Salmo\nSocial Credit group held its January meeting at jhe home of Frank\nBurger.\nNew officers are James Dodds,\npresident; Ed. Avery, vice-president, and Ellis Roach, secretary-\ntreasurer.\nLocal League matters were up\nfor discussion, and a donation was\nmade to the constituency treasury\nfor elcetion expenses. A tape recording of Solon Low's speech on\nnational policy was played by Al\nCartier of Nelson.\nMrs. W. J. Van Maarion of Nelson, . constituency president, was\naslo in attendance.\nFormer Resident\nDies on Holiday\nTo East Kootenay\nCRANBROOK\u2014Taken ill while\nvisiting relatives in this district\nin January, Mrs. Frank Thompson\nof Edmonton died at St. Eugene\nHospital here Saturday. She was\na long-time former district rest-\ndent\nShe was born Winifred Mae\nBryant 57 years ago at Crowhurst,\nSussex, England. Jn 1912 her parents brought their family to Canada and Fernie where she grew\nup. After her marriage there to\nFrank Thompson she made her\nhome at Wardner for a considerable period, then they moved to\nFort William and later to Edmonton. She was with the office staff\nof a hardware firm there and was\nholidaying when taken ill.\nSurviving her are her husband\nat Edmonton, one son, Frank jr.\nof Long Beach, California, three\ndaughters, Mrs. Frank Wellander,\nWardner, Mrs. Ron Claydon, Port\nArthur and Mrs. Williams Parks,\nPrince Albert, and. six grandchildren. Her mother, Mrs. Winifred\nBryant, also survives her at Fernie, four brothers, Aubrey, Jack\nand Leslie Bryant at Fernie, William at Campbell River, and four\nsisters, Mrs. William Parsons,\nCranbrook, Mrs. Dorothy Payne,\nFernie and Mrs. Joe Lucas, Vancouver, and June Bryant, Fernie.\nRey. Ray Wollam will officiate\nat the funeral service at the\nUnited Church here today and\nburial will be in Westlawn Ceme.\ntery.\nStrawberry Plant)\nCertification\nPlan Drafted\n&6'\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nFort Worth, Tex. \u2014 Harry H,\nHalsell, 96, trail driver, Indian\nfighter and author.\nVancouver \u2014 Lady Heathcote,\nwife of Rt, Rev. Sir Francis\nHeathcote, retired bishop of New\nWestminster.\nToronto \u2014 Dr. George Pardon\nBryce, 74, for 40 years a United\nChurch missionary in India.\nVictoria \u2014 Robert C. Lett, 87,\nretired superintendent of the department of Natural Resources of\nthe Canadian National Railways\nand pioneer of the Grand Trunk\nPacific Railway.\nNew York \u2014 A. M. Henderson,\n57, chairman of the board of directors and the executive committee of the Campbell Chibougamau\nMines Limited of Montreal..\nKENNETH SMITH\noperate as a full-time branch under the management of T. Kenneth\nSmith, formerly of Nelson.\nFormerly a, sub-agency to the\nNelson branch of the Bank, the\noffice will be open Monday to\nFriday from 10 a.m. to noon, and\nfrom 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. In addition\ntb this, the branch will be open\nfrom 4:30 p.m. to .6 p.m. on Fridays.\nMr. Smith, the new manager,\nwas formerly accountant at the\nbank's Cloverdale branch. A native of Cullompton, Devon, England, he came to Canada at an\nearly age and lived in this district during, his youth when his\nfather served as a mine foreman.\nMr. Smith joined the Bank of\nMontreal at Nelson in 1933, and\nserved there until 1942 when he\ninterrupted his banking career tb\njoin the Canadian Army. After\nservice with the First Canadian\nArmored Brigade in Italy, Holland and Germany, he returned to\nthe Bank of Montreal and served\nat Rossland, Trail and Vancouver\nprior to his appointment as accountant at the Fourth Avenue\nand Alma Road branch, Vancouver, in 1952, He became accountant\nat Cloverdale in 1954.\nActive in community affairs, Mr.\nSmith served as treasurer of the\nCloverdale rodeo committee in\n1955 and,, at present, holds executive posts with the Surrey-Delta\nBoy Scout Association and the\nCloverdale Kinsmen Club.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\/WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6,1957\u20143\nChange of Ownership\nFor Grand Forks Firm\nCRESTON \u2014 A revised straw-\nbery plant certification .program\nfor B.C. based upon the production of virus-free plants has been\nannounced .by R. P. Murray,'provincial horticulturist at Victoria.\nOutlining of this work is the\nresult of close co-operation between the plant pathologists and\nentomologists, of the science service, the experimental farm service and B.C. department of agriculture.\nDr. R. E. Fitzpatrick and his\nstaff of plant pathologists have\nbeen successful in freeing some\nplants of the British Sovereign\nvariety from known viruses. They\nhave also undertaken the responsibility of maintaining a source of\nsuch*plants as may be required.\nSo far, the British Sovereign variety is the only one available under\nthis scheme but other proven varieties will be cleaned up and released in due course. .\nHorticulturists at the . Agassiz\nExperimental Farm have propagated a limited number of these\nvirus-free British Sovereigns.\nThey are prepared to propagate\na sufficient quantity each year,\nprobably in screen-houses, to supply commercial foundation stock\npropagators.\nThe administration of the regulations concerning the propagation\nof certified strawberry plants will\nbe the responsibility of the horticultural branch, B.C. department\nof agriculture.\nISOLATION\nIt is proposed to approve plant\npropagators who have complete\nisolation, either by means of\nscreen-houses or geographical isolation to propagate the foundation\nstock received from the experimental farm. A foundation stock\npropagator will supply commercial\nplant propagators who will, in\nturn, propagate the plants in-isolation and will sell to the fruit\ngrower as certified plants. It will\nbe necessary for the foundation\nstock propagator to obtain his\nplants annually from the experimental farm and the \u25a0' certified\nplant propagator must renew his\nsupply annually from the fourida-\ntion stock propagator.\nThe past system of inspection\nGRAND FORKS (CP) - The\nGrand Forks Sawmills Company\nLtd. has been sold to the Boundary\nSawmills Ltd. of Midway;'\nJohn   Coe,   president   of   the\nMore Vehicles on\nCastlegar Ferry\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Ai} increase in\nvehicular traffic over- the Cotum-\nbia River here on the Castlegar\nferry is reflected in department\nof highways figures for January.\nComparative figures for January of this year and January, 1956,\nfollow:\n1956     1957\nRound trips 3,778    20,460\nAutos (and drivers) 18,403   20,759\nPassengers\n(not drivers) 48,784   48,166\nTrucks (all types)     9,180   10,345\nTrailers and semis 20        64\nMotor buses 704       802\nMotorcycles\nLivestock 2\nwhich B.C. has used for several\nyears is to be retained until such\ntime as the new program is un\nder way. Plants passing inspection\nunder the old system are now to\nbe called \"crop approved\". Inspection and subsequent approval\nmay now be obtained for Northwest, Marshall and Siletz varieties\nas well as British Sovereign.\nPlanting stock of virus-free\nBritish Soyereigns are not expected to be available for grower use\nuntil Spring of 1959.\nGrand Forks firm, said he understood that Boundary Sawmills\nwill carry on at Grand Fdrks with\nvery little change.\nIn 1943 the Grand Forks mill\nwas purchased by four packing\nhouses \u2014 Penticton Co-operative,\nPyramid Co-operative, Narariiata\nCo-operative and Kaleden Co-operative. Its chief purpose was to\nsupply box material.\nPenticton Legion\nElects Officers\nPENTICTON (CP)\u2014George\nCarter was elected president of\nthe Penticton branch of the Canadian Legion here. First vice-presi-\u00bb\ndent is Jim Bolton, and second\nvice-president is Walter Penty.\nOther officers: Past president,\nRon Dean; executive, Ken Almond, Dick Knight, Dalton Deacon-, Roy Hotson, Jack Lambert, P.\nF. Eraut; society, A. D. C. Washington, J. B. Feeney, Graham Kin-\ncaide.\nUFE NOT\nWORTH LIVING?\nThen wake up the liver!\nYou know that sour, sunk, constipated feeling?\nIt may be caused by the liver. If your liver\ndoesn't pour out up to two pints of bile a day\nyour food may not digest properly, gas bloats\nap your stomach and you feel that life's just\nnot worth living. That's when the liver needs\nmild gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills. These\nfamous vegetable pills help stimulate the flow\nof liver bile. Soon your digestion starts function-\ning properly and you feel that happy days are\nhere again! Don't ever stay sunk. Always keep\nCar tor's .Little Liver Pills on hand.\nFor Service\nCall . ...        ,\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA Complete  Plumbing and Heating Service\nDISTRICT SAWLOG SCALE\nDECLINES IN JANUARY\nA considerable decrease in the sawlog scale in the Nelson\nforest district in January, compared with that of the same month\nlast- year, is shown in figures issued by the B.C. Forest Service.\nThe scale totalled 29,891,260 feet board measure as against\n49,593,913 f.b.m. in January, 1956, the major reductions being in fir\nand larch.\nSAWLOGS (f.b.m.) 1956\nFir    .,    12,771,589\nPhone 1511 Nelson, B. C.\n9Q2 Front St.\nCedar   ....'_ .'. _  1,812,322\nSpruce    ::  13,387,714 .\nLodgepole pine  1,319,695\nHemlock    ...A  3,711,264\nBalsam    797,382\nWhite pine _  2,198,681\nYellow pine  _ -. 544,248\nLarch \u201e. \u201e  13,044,725\nCottonwood    ^ _  6,293\nTotals .-   49,593,913\nMINOR PRODUCTS\nPoles and piles (lineal feet)  403,939\nMine timbers (lineal feet)  ; '.  31,052\nMine props (cords) .-. _ .'  1,540\nHewn ties   (pieces)  712\nFence posts (cords)   266\nCordwood (cords)             290\n1957\n7,259,771\n2,179,756\n10,196,217\n1,143,458\n1,255,267\n722,171\n925,381\n303,429\n5,905,816\n29,891,260\n423,829\n169,358\n169\n324\n91\nSTORAGE\nat\nTruck Terminus (Nelson) Ltd.\n:   .    if '\n\u2022 FIREPROOF\n\u2022 CLASSED FOR EASY REMOVAL\n\u2022 MODERATE RATES\n\u2022 NEW UP-TO-DATE BUILDING INSURES YOU AGAINST DAMAGE\nPHONE 77\nFor Arrangements        .\nfebru\nhomefurnishinqs\nCONTINUES WITH MORE VALUES\n2-pCe.      Specially Priced!\nModern Suites...\n$\n179\nIf you've been looking for a new living room suite then make this your choice.\nThe materials are durable and long-wearing. The styling is long . . . low . . .\nand lovely \u2014 with wide arms, thickly upholstered seats \u2014 and the new low legs.     Pay only $\u00ab Down,\nAs for colors, there's a rich silver grey,' a twinkle red, chartreuse green,  grey\nwith black accent and blue. \u2014 Practically speaking too, this chesterfield suite\nhas sturdy frame construction with reversible spring-filled cushion.\nBalance Monthly\nCotton Sheets for Every Bed in Your Home\nOnly 6\n99\npr.\n* Specially priced for our Home\nFurnishings Sale.\n* White or colored.   \u2022\n* Plain hems.\nSo practical \u2014 if white \u2014 so smart, so decorative, lovely pastel\nshades that complete your bedroom ensemble. Your choice of\nlong-lasting, double bed size,. 81\" x 100\" in white or pastel shades\nof yellow, pink, blue or green.\nImported Bed Throws       !ery,e?^l,0*S_\n\" . N*>vi>r mat  nillntos:.   fillprt\n6.33\nNeed an extra blanket? One with\nplenty of tuck-in? Beauty, warmth and\nwashabality is assured in these fine\nblankets,\" finished with acetate-binding. Double bed size\n72x90. Reg. 8.03. Each .\nWool Filled Comforters\nBeautiful, shimmering satin covered,\nfinely quilted, wool-filled comforters\nfor that extra warmth without weight.\nTwo tone pastel shades. Cut size 60\"\nby 72\". -Beg. 9.5U. \/  QQ\nEach    D.\u00bb\nNever mat pillov.s, filled with tery-\nlene, the wonder fibre that's so resilient, has quality cotton cover ahd\ncompletely washable. A   QQ\nReg. 6.95, each. Each   T.J'J'\nGoy Cotton Prints and\nBroadcloths\nShop now in this lovely assortment\nof new Spring patterns and gay pastel\nbroadcloth cottons for all your Spring\nsewing. Specially purchased for this\nFebruary Sale. 36\" wide.\nReg. .69 yd. Yd\t\n.44\nCopper Trim Stool\nTwo-step kitchen stool. Tubular\nframe with plastic floor protectors\n\u2014 lift-up upholstered 1 *} Q CJ\nseat. Each \\Jmt\\wJ\nChrome Chairs\nComfortable kitchen chrome chairs\nwith padded seat and back. Blue,\nwhite and pink. \"1 QC*\nEach     \/ >yj\n . IfeiM latlg !taa\n.     Established April --.  1-0- '.,\nInterior f-ritish Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning eiccept Sunday and statutory\nhdlidays    by    the,  NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY   ,\n% LIMITED,  2B6 Bakei Street, N-lson, British Columbia.   .\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Offico Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER  OP   THE -AUDI-   BUREAU  OF CIRCt-LATIONS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nWednesday, February 6,1957\nAn Important Right\nIn his dual capacity as Minister\nfor Immigration and Indian Affairs,\nMr. Pickersgill seems to be running\ninto a'good deal of criticism-from\nthe Opposition in the House of Commons.\nMr. Pickersgill is an outstanding\nexample of the bureaucratic type of\nmind. Everything, in hist opinion,\nmust be done according to the departmental rules. This, of. course,\n\" rules out :human sympathy in dealing with individuals, as the case of\nChristian Hanna shows.\n- To him the rules are as unalterable as the famous laws of the Medes\nand Persians, \"which changeth not\";\n\" though there is record that even they\nwere changed in favor of an alien.\nBut Mr. Pickersgill abides by the\nrules, 'and, what is worse,\" betrays no\nmore sympathy for a homeless and\nstateless person than he would for a\nstray dog.-.-'\"\nHe betrays as little - concern for  .\nthe plight of the 118 Indians who\nhave been threatened with expulsion\nfrom the Hobbema reserve in ;Al- *\nberta. '\n\u2022 These Indians are to be expelled\nbecause .-' their ancestors accepted\nscrip and gave up theif rights after ,\nthe Kiel, rebellion, or have white\nblood in their veins, or have in some\nway fallen foul of the rules of the\nIndian Department. The case is com\nplicated to the layman, but, fortunately, the Indians have friends in\nthe Bar Association of Alberta and\nothers who are pressing their case.\nThese Indians forwarded a petition to the Queen which by some\nmeans or other ended up in Mr.\nPickersgill's office. As a minister of\nthe Crown he should know that this\nis contrary to all- precedent. Following tradition and precedent, a petition should be forwarded to Her\nMajesty, who would then return it to\nthe Canadian government for their\nconsideration.\nIt is impossible to conclude for\nwhat purpose Mr. Pickersgill tobk\npossession of the petition, but there\nis little doubt that he lacked ordinary\ngood manners and respect for the\nCrown. It is the right of every citizen, white or colored, to lay a petition ,at' the foot of the throne.- It is\nespecially so in the case of Canadian\nIndians who have treaties entered\ninto with Canadian governments in\nthe past\/Nothing should stand ih the\nway of our honoring suqh treaties.\nThere \u25a0 is a steadily growing\nopinion that the time has come when\nour Indian brethren should receive\nmore sympathetic treatment from\nthe government. That they should\nhaye their rights preserved is important to all Canadians. '\n1 Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersons asking; questions will not bo ,\npublished. There is no charge for this\nservice. QUESTIONS .WILL .NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\n.  there Is obvious necessity for privacy\nL.,  Shoreacres\u2014I was born in Kamsack,\nSaskatchewan.  Could  you  please  tell\nme where tb write for a birth. certificate, and what information is needed?\nWrite to The Department of Vital Statistics, Regina, Saskatchewan. Give parents'\nname and date Of birth, The fee for research\nand copy of certificate would be $2.50.\nInterested, Nakusp-^To whom would you\naddress a letter regarding further Information regarding a certain course being\ntaught by a university?\nAddress your letter. to The Registrar,\nname-oi university, name of town and province.\nCurious, Kelowna\u2014Can a man be appointed\nto the Senate if he is not a Canadian?\nAnyone appointed to the Senate must\nbe a Canadian citizen or a British subject,\nmust own lands worth net $4000 above all\ndebts, mu\u00abt be resident in.the province for\nwhich appointed, or of the electoral division\nin the Province of Quebec.\nMother, Kinnaird\u2014What 'is the address of\nthe Montreal Protestant School Board?\nThe Protestant School Board of Greater\nMontreal, 3460 McTavish Street, Montreal,\nP. Q.\nTwo Million'Jobs\nThe measure of the Dominion government's concern for the bases of. Canadian\nprosperity will be found in the forthcoming\nbudget foi- 1958-57. If that budget does not\nlay the foundation for a largely expanded\nimmigration policy, coupled-with the. encouragement of more secondary industries,\nit again will be apparent that the administration is content to coast along on the basis\nof dealing only with economic superficialities.       ' ,...'.\nUp to this time, the cabinet has defended\n. its policy of permitting a disproportionate\nexport of raw materials. Between 1938 and\nthe end of 1956, Canada's export of mamir.\nfactures rose only 260 per cent, compared ,\nwith a total rise in exports of 411 per cent.\nIf exports as a whole are a. measure of Increased economic activity, the export' of\nmanufactures clearly indicates that gevernment policy is inimical to the grdwth of\nmanufacturing, and hence to the creation of\njobs which would support a sustained long-\nterm drive for new settlers from abroad.\nIt is estimated that Canadian export of\nraw materials has created two-million jobs\nin manufacturing plants abroad. That means\nthat we have been .exporting two million\njobs which Canadians, old or new, could\nnow be filling within our own borders. It\nmeans that, the Canadian eeonorhy is being\ndeprived 6f the product Of two million more\npeople-than are currently employed in factories; that the nation is losing the income\nof two million wage and salary earners,-\nthat capital formation by Canadians within\nour borders lacks the savings and investment of two million adult workers.\nIt means that tax revenues in the prov-\nIt's Been Said\nIn science, read, by preference, the newest works; in literature, the oldest. The classics are always modern.\u2014Edward Bulwer-\nLytton, English novelist and dramatist.\nIt's but little good you'll do watering\nlast year's crops.\u2014Marian . Evans Cross\n(George Eliot, English novelist).\ninces have been deficient to the extent that\ntwo million workers would be contributors\nto industrial expansion; and it means that\nthe workers now employed are being unduly taxed to sustain all the questionaBle\"'\nfeatures of contemporary fiscal and morie-'\ntary policies created in Ottawa.\nIn terms of a domestic consumers' market, it means more than all' the above considerations. If a normal proportion of those\ntwo-million jobholders we have not got\nwere married, our population today would\nbe somewhere between five million and\nperhaps eight million larger than Its present*\nlevel. Such an increase in population would\n. make our- national production and marketing problems simpler all along the line.\nInstead.of being too rapid, our current\nexpansion rate would In these circumstances\nbe subnormal. A 20-25 per cent increase in\npopulation \u2022 would add considerably more\n.than a.similar percentage to domestic capital and to the security behind credit accommodation employed for either capital or\nconsumer purposes. In a fundamental sense,\npopulation is the determining factor both in\nthe rate of. primary production and in the\ncreation of capital to facilitate it. It.is the\nbasis on which secondary industry proliferates in ratio ss raw materials are produced.\n\u2022 Population is the source of all government.\nrevenues, the essential backing of our currency and the ultimate source of economic\nstability.\nIt is sheer blindness to assume, then,\nthat our present lack of population in relation to the demand for our resources is not\nthe principal source of our dear-money policy, of our record-breaking unfavoable trade\ndeficit. The billion dollars we owe the United States on current trade account is a\nmeasure of what we are paying to support\ntwo million workers abroad engaged in\nthe manufacture of our natural resources. In\nsum, we have a high-cost ecbnbmy which\nnothing but a sharp rise in population can\nkeep solvent. That is the basic problem to\nbe faced in shaping the 1058-57 budget.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2022By FraMM Drake-\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nWelcome for Attlee\nAs a speech-maker Earl Attlee may not\nhave the competence to pack halls, but he\nstill is a far more distinguished visitor to\nCanada than some who have come in official capacities of late. A scheduled Toronto\naddress by Earl Attlee had to be called off\nbecause of meagre ticket sales, but the\nQueen City's Mayor Nathan Phillips rose\ngraciously, to the occasion with an official\ndonner for the former prime minister of\nGreat Britain.\nThis restored the perspective.\n. Earl .Attlee's Labor party is out of\npower, although with good prospects of\nreturning to it in the indefinite future; and\nhe has retired to the seclusion of the House\nof Lords. His relatively few years as prime\n. minister, however, were marked by real\naccomplishments, considering the economic\nand. other difficulties of the times.\n. It was the period for peaceful transition\nfrom colonial to independent status for India and other lands. No other government\ncould have done that better, than Earl\nAttlee's,\nIn world affairs it produced one of\nBritain's greatest foreign ministers In the\nlate Rt. Hon. Ernest Bevin. If it is accused\nof proceeding too far with its nationalization program, history still will record that'\nonly the steel industry has been denationalized by the Conservatives since they resumed power.\nEarl Attlee is not a discredited politician\n.or a statesman who failed, but a man of\nthe highest principles who found his way\nwith commendable wisdom and sureness In\nan exceptionally trying time. Mayor Phillips really acted for Canada in making\nEarl Attlee welcome.\u2014Windsor Star.\nNasser Makes a Friend\nNasser sank 21 ships in the Suez Canal;\nI wiBh to God it had been 121,\" said a Texas\noil man gleefully as he watched supplies\nof U.S. oil drop and prices rise recently.\nSo far as he Is concerned the longer the\ncanal is blocked and Europe starved for\noil, the better he will like it,\nThat sort of man would probably rub\nhis hands with satisfaction as fire wiped out\nhalf the town because this might make his\nown property more valuable. To him war\nor the threat of war is a fine thing for\nbusiness so long as only the other fellow-\ngets hurt.\nIt would probably be impossible to ram\nit into his thick skull, but it is a fact, nevertheless, that a substantial part of the boom\nin the United States and Canada last year\nwas directly due to new prosperity in Europe. It was the extra buying by Europe that\nput new life into international trade. So\nlong as the Suez and' the oil from beyond\nis blocked European prosperity and eventually our own too, 'is threatened. . . .\n\u2014Financial Post.\nWatch Your Language\nHIRC1NE (HUR-sin): Adjective\u2014goat'\nlike, especially IH smell; also, goatish. Origin: Latin\u2014Hircinus, from Hircus, he-goat.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT    '\nLet the words of my mouth and\nthe meditation of my heart be acceptable In thy sight, O Lord, my\nstrength and my redeemer,\u2014Ps.\n19:14.  , .\nWe can think of ho technique\nthat would improve on this formula. Many saints , have grown\nbeautiful In life by applying this\nprayer for perfection.\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Planetary influences suggest\nthoughtful caution in all under,\ntakings. There's no need to make\ncareless errors or expose person\nor property to needless risks.\nFamiliar matters, daily duties\nfavored. .\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Your Venus, th* Mo6n 4nd Suft\nstress patience, thoroughness and\nclose attention to all duties, details\n.and what may seem to be friend\nless corrections. But day. will\nyield to proper management,\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Oemlnin)\n\u2014Extremes and careless action\nshould be avoided on this not too\nauspicious day. However, periods\nlike this give one pause to check,\nImprove, take cognizance of needs,\nJUNE 22 to JULY _3 (Cancer)-\nIt will take Cancer's best behavior\nand general know-how tb cope\nwith possible irritations, restrictions now. Show family and business associates, fellow students\nyou can take things in stride,\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leb)-\nWhile you may1 not accomplish as\nmuch as you would like, nevertheless this IS a time to make\nimprovements), plan wisely for\nfuture action.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 This day's influences\ncould be a springboard to top\nresults If you are true to your\ninnately fine talents and tendencies. Take care of health and\ndon't worry.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to' OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 It is said that an\nounce of prevention is better than\na pound of cure. Take that ounce\nof prevention then; forethought,\nwise planning and no reckless\nextremes. Every day some good\ncan be accomplished.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 If you. take patient\ncare  of  the   \"little\"  things,  the\nW0l5(?Vih.$ AS     ':.\nBOSSO SNEAKS OFF\ndFTEI.AWr.lSPERED\nCONFERENCE WITH\nEFFICIENCY\" dOE'X'\nmore difficult 6rt6s cSn be hattdled\nmore easily, quicker. Day Is\n\"tricky* .but sbuhd management\nand a firm hand will bring about\ngbod results.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n2i (Sagittarius) \u2014 Some persons\nmay caiiie friction IF you don't\nstep In with your intelligent and\npleasant manner and put them bh\nthe right course.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 YOur Saturn is nt)t\nunfriendly but there are Other Influences that could 'bring setbacks. Don't YOU let them. Go\nabout duties and chores .with\nsensible calm. You'll win.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Everyday duties'\nand most familiar activities should\ngo. along smobthly, bring fair returns. But it will be wise for you\nto start as early as possible and\nmaintain a constructive pace.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Extra care is advised\nin activities. connected with the\nsea, handling liquids, chemicals,\netc., and in confidential matters.\nBe content with keeping up with\nday's needs; don't'overreach.\nYOU BORN TODAY have\nlikeable personality; as a rule are\nthoughtful, studious; highly in-\ntelligent and talented. You may\ngo in for reforms, research In\nscience, medicine or the more\nrecent departments of radio,\natomic energy, and allied fields.\nAvoid temptations to dawdle or\nwaste time and energy on unworthy associates, pastimes.\nAquarians sometimes fall prey to\nthose who flatter but .who are not\nsincere br helpful. Birthdate; Millard Fillmbre, 13th U.S. president;\nCharles Dickens, famed nbvellst.\nKing Features,\nLoss ol U.K. Customers Blame-\nOn Sea Rales by Lumber Magnate\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia has lost, temporarily at\nleast, bne of its best timber customers \u2014 th* United Kingdom -.\nsays lumber magnate H. R. Mac-\nMUlan.\n\"Nothing is permanent,\" he said\nGREAT CLIFF8\nTowering 2000 feet above the\nsea, the highest cliffs in the British Isles are at Achill Island in\nIreland's couhty Mayo.\nGales Sweep\nBritish Isles\nBy JOHN DUDMAN\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The worst\ngales of the winter, with gusts\nreaching 110 miles an hour, left\na trail of damage across Ireland,\nand . Sootland and the English\nChannel, killing at least two persons and injuring dO. Many were\nmissing.\nSix ships were crippled in\nmountainous seas along the British coasts and scores more raced\nfor shelter.      , ,.\nGales also swept the north and\nwest   coasts  of   France,   driving\nfishing vessels back to harbor.\nSEAMEN OVERBOARD\nThe liner Queen Elizabeth ar\nrived at Cherbourg this morning,\nreporting \"very heavy\" seas\nacross the Atlantic from New\nYork.\nIn the English Channel, the\n7050-ton Turkish merchant vessel\nC. Sadlkoglu drifted out of control to within a quarter mile of\nland before being taken in tow.\nTwo new liners were torn from\ntheir moorings in the River Clyde,\n-Scotland. The 10,000-ton Clan liner\n'Ayrshire was jammed against\na quay by the gales for hours.\nHIT8. TRAIN\nThe.other, the 9000-ton British\nliner .Masirah, was to have made\nher maiden voyage today.\nAt Dungannon in County Ty-\nrqne a tree fell on a train emerging from a tunnel, damaging two\ncoaches and the tender. No one\nwas injured.\nA four-enginer Viscount airliner\nwas driven off the Belfast airport\nrunaway onto the grass by an\n80-mlles-an-hour wind as it came\nin to land Monday night None of\nthe 44 passengers was hurt.\n6n returning from a four-week\nvisit to England and Europe, \"but\nthe-expectation is that high de*p\nsea freight rates will last two,\nthree, four or five years.\n\"And as long as they last, we\ncan't compete in the European\nmarket.\"\nMr. MacMlllan, board chairman\nof MacMillan and Bloedel Ltd.,\nsaid \"We're $10 to $15 a thousand\nboard feet away from being able\nto compete in the U.K. or Holland\ntoday.\"\nHe added that west coast pulp\nexports to Europe might also be\naffected by the freight dif-\nferential.\n\"Our products from this province will have to be sold elsewhere. There aren't any new\nmarkets. We're becoming more\nand more restricted to North\nAmerica,\"   -\nMr. MacMillan was asked about\nthe chances of trade with Communist China, which he has advocated,\n\"It's a future possibility that\ncan't be turned to accbunt now,\"\nhe replied.\nEven if the Chinese Communist,\nregime is given diplomatic recognition, Mr. MacMillan said, it may\nbe some time before it can us.\nforeign exchange reserves to buy\nB.C.'s' products.\nAnn Seeks $93,000\nSANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)\u2014\nActress Ann Sothern, star of the\ntelevision show Private Secretary,\ns'ays $93,000 is due her from the\nshow. Her court complaint Monday claimed profits from the show\nhave been improperly distributed.\nIMPRO\nALL MEALS!\nBut how can you tell whether\nbeing an old bachelor makes him\nqueer or being queer makes him\nan old bachelor.\n...at your\nfingertips\nSafety in the automobile is optional at no extra cost. No mechanical\nsafety device can replace the protection of careful driving.\nLast year, traffic accidents claimed the lives of more Canadians\nthan ever before. Someone was injured every 8 minutes. A car was\ndamaged every 48 seconds. Automobile insurance claims rose to more\nthan one hundred million dollars.\n\u2014 \u25a0    *- i\nOne result of this is higher automobile insurance rates \u2014 because\nwhat is paid out in claims must be brought in by premiums. But even more\nimportant is the fact that you hold .your life, and the lives of others, in\nyour hands when you get behind the wheel of a car.\nSafety pays.dividends... saves lives, helps to lower your insurance\ncosts. Be Careful. |',,\/.\nAM, CANADA\nINSURANCE\nFEDERATION\nALL CANADA INSURANCE FEDERATION\nen behalf ot mor!\u00bb imp 200 competing companies writing\nf      ;\"        -   ' Fire, Automobile ifnd Casualty Insurance,\n 3'6\nAbout the Town\n'By Alice Stevens\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nMrs. Paul Berekoff and Mrs, F;\nKienliolz were cohostesses Thursday evening at a bridal shower at\n\u2022the home of Mrs. \"Berekoff, 104\nWOMAN ENJOYS\nWORK AS GOV'T\nPHOTOGRAPHER\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Miss-Barbara\nDavies enjoys her work as a government photographer, arid she'll\ngo anywhere anytime the. call\ncomes.\nThe pert brunette,- a civil ser-\nvaht since 1951, for the last three\nyears has been assistant photographer in forestry.\n\"I generally sleep in a tent,\"\nshe said. \"Some of the young fellows like to sleep out in their\ni sleeping bags to show how tough\nthey are, I expect; but I like my\ntent.\"\nA tent is needed in northern\nBritish Columbia or the interior,\nfor protection against the elements in winter and for refuge\nfrom mosquitos and black flies in\n\u25a0   summer.     .\nMiss Davies is well trained in\nphotography. It had been her\nwork in Britain during the Second World War as a member of\n' the WAAF. For two and a half\nyears she taught young pilots air-\nlal camera work and how to make\na photographic run.   .\nShe is also an angler and a ski\nenthusiast. _--\u25a0\u2022\n9______\/i_i0_.\n\u00a3tf, eZauha. LVheelsA.\nDouglas Roa'd. Honored gueBt was\nMiss Pat Bird who is to be married this month. She was presented with an ornamented box of\nyellow: and blue containing many\ngifts of linen and cups and saucers. Seated in a chair decorated\nin similar colors, Miss Bird was\ngiven a corsage,- as were her mother' and future jnother-in-law.\nThe eighteen friends present en-\nJoyed an evening of bingo and\ngames.' .       .\n*   *   *'\nJohn \u25a0 Short, 709 Observatory\nStreet, has left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for his home.\n\u00bb   *   \u00bb\nJack' Morgan, Carbonate Street,\nis expected back today after attending an arena managers meeting in Vancouver. Mr. Morgan is\npresident of that association.\n*\u2022\u25a0*.'.\nAt a meeting of Lutheran Ladies\nAid held at the home o| Mrs. M.\nBrader, Selby Street, Mrs. R. Zu-\nbick was elected president and\nMrs.. L. Sept took the office of\nvice-president- New secretary is\nMrs. B. Lashmar and Mrs. J.\nLucas is treasurer.\nFASCINATING CROCHET\nA lovely combination of butterflies in filet oroohet sind pineapples, in this oval doily. Completely fascinating needlework!\nPattern 797: Crochet directions\nfor oval doily 27xip inches in ito.\n30 cotton. Smaller in No. 80 cot.\nton, larger in string.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern \u201eto Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 90 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt Print plainly PATT>ERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to\" you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\n<-\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft book for 1957! Dozens\nof other new designs to order. \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery,\nfor your copy of this book NOW-r-\niron-ons, novelties. Send 25 cents\nwith gift patterns printed in it!\nHml Wonder why\nDr. Chase's\nNERVEFOOD\nho.pa co many people say\nWhen yon feel\ntired, nervons,\nirritable\u2014 little\ntliingi. bother 70a\n\u2014worries pile up,\ntbat'B the time to\ntake   Dr. Chase's\nNerve Food.\nThe Vitamin  Bi  and  Blood\nBuilding Iron in Dr. Cb&Be _\nNerve Food work together, te\nhelp build npyomeener-lheahh\n\u2014help yon feel relaxed, at esse,\nable to forget you ever had\nnervous troubles.\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food helps\nyon have the sound steady\nnerves that eo with good health.\nHelps yon feci in love with life\n\u2014confident\u2014energetic\u2014ready\nto enjoy your family, your\nwork, your friends.\nThe sooner you start, the sooner\nyou may feel the benefits of this\nall-round tonic 89f_\u2014Economy\nsize $2.23 saves yon 44^.\nDr. CHASE'S\nNERVE F^OOD^\nTravelling Basket\nProject Adopted\n, A \"travelling basket\" plan tor\nraising money was endorsed at the\nFebruary meeting of the Good\nCompanions of St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church, held at the home\nof Mrs. Jack Wright Ctf-hostesses\nwere Mrs. H. \"W. Golberg, Mrs,\nLloyd Catley and Mrs. R. T. pick-\nson.\n\u25a0 'Under the scheme,-_ member\nwill bring a cake or some other\ncontribution for the basket to the\nmeeting, where tt will be bought,\nthe purchaser in turn taking the\nbasket to contribute an article\nfor the next meeting.\nAinsworth Notes\n\" AINSWORTH \u2014 Hans Hansen is\nhome after being ip Kootenay\nLake General Hospital in Nelson,\nwhile his broken arm -was placed\nin a oast. He Ijad a bad fall and\nbroke his right arm.\nA cribbage game of five tables\nwas held in the Ainsworth Community Hall with Mrs. E. Pickard\nand Mrs. H. B. Hansen in charge.\nWinners were: women's first, Mrs.\nA. B.-Hansen, consolation, Mrs. J.\nBurns; MeA's first, B. Jones; consolation went to C. Hartland.\nThe Highways\nNo. 8 \u2014 Grand Forks, Casaade \u2014\nfour to eigth inches new snow,\nplowing. Cascade,.Rossland \u2014- five\ninches new snow, plowing, carry\nchains, Rossland, Trail, Castlegar,\nNelson, Balfour, Kootenay Bay,\nCreston, Goatfell \u2014 two to five\ninches new snow, plowing and\nsanding. Goatfell, Cranbrook, Fernie, Crowsnest. \u2014 fair, icy conditions,, sanding.-\nNo. 3A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 five\ninches' new snow, plowing and\nsanding.\n.Rossland, Paterson \u2014 plowing\nand sanding. Creston, Porthill \u2014\nfive- inches new snow, plowing.\nNo. 6 \u2014 Nelway, Nelson, South\nSlocan \u2014 five inches new snow,\nplowing. South Slocan, Slocan\nCity, Nakusp, Needles \u2014 two to\nfive inches new snow, snowing,\nplowing, widening. Needles, Monashee, Vernon \u2014 plowing, carry\nchains.\nNo. 95 \u2014.Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 good winter condition\nwith some slippery sections, drifting conditions Windermere South.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 five inches new\nsnow, plowing. Kaslo, New Denver \u2014 plowing, Kaslo, 'Lardeau \u2014\nplowing. . Lardeau, Gerrard \u2014\nplowing Lardeau to Poplar, closed\nPoplar, to. Gerrard.\nRevelstoke distMct \u2014 ferry service has been resumed between\n'Arrowhead and Beaton.\nENGLISH GHOSTS\nGO MODERN\nWith its' ancient manors\nand foggy streets England\nhas always been a HAPPY\nHAUNTING ground for\ngh03t3.\nToday an R.A.F. Canteen\nstands on the site of a\nrained abbey; BBC studios\nhave replaced a haunted\nhouse; Scotland Yard\ntrains recruits in an ancient chateau\u2014BUT the\nghosts are still there I In\nfact one has even taken\nover a subway.\nRead \"Ghosts ,In Modern\nHaunts\" in this week's\nissue of the Star Weekly.\nThe Hem STAR WEEKLY\nBy TRACY ADRIAN \u2022,'\u2022\u2022'-\nTHOUGH THIS COSTUME looks exactly like the ever popular classic shirtwaist dress, It Is In reality separates consisting\nof a blouse and skirt. The twosome Is very attractive as pictured\nand both skirt and shirt can be mix matched to form wardrobe\nchanges. Made of cotton and a new rayon fibre, the fabric Is\nquite a bit like shantung with a silken look and feel and Is\norease resistant. Eye-catching fish lures In \"bright colors are\nprinted oh green, navy, gold or brown grounds.\nExplorer's Wife Says\nAntarctic \"Man's World\"\nBy FRANCES LEWINE\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 IDditih\nRonne, who has been there, says\nshe will be the first to admit that\nthe Antarctic \"is a man's world;\"\nShe and one other woman hold\nthe distinction of being the only\nmembers of their sex to set foot\non the southern continent.\n\"I wouldn't have missed it for.\na million dollars and I wouldn't\ngo back for two million,\" she said\nat her suburban home.\nMrs. Ronne, 37, accompanied\nher navy husband on a 1946-48 expedition as researcher and historian.\nBORED\n\"The most difficult part of Arc-\ntie exploration,\" Mrs. Ronne said;\n\"is being in isolation with the\nsame group over a long period of\ntime . . . even the way a man\nputs on his socks in the.morning\nbegins to irritate you>\nCapt. Finn Ronne, a 57-year.t.ld\nveteran explorer, now is scientific\ndirector of the Weddell sea station of the U. ,S. team exploring\nthe Antarctic.. ,\nMrs. Ronne said an Antarctic\nexplorer '*as to be very self-reliant\" when things get tough, especially during the 24-hour winter\nnights. He shouldn't be the type\nthat relies on other people, for entertainment and happiness..  ..'\nA go\u00bbd hobby is a fine idea, she\nadded, \"to keep strong mentally\nand, physically.\"\nRonne comes by , his exploring\nOxford Suspends\nReturned Student\nOXFORD, England (AP)\u2014Roger\nCooper, one of four young British\nstudents jailed for two weeks in\nHungary on spy charges, was suspended until March 16 by.Oxford\nUniversity Tuesday for failing to\npay enough attention to his\nstudies.\nCollege authorities said Cooper,\n22, spent too much time out of\nschool \"quite apart from his forced\ndetention in Hungary\".\nCooper, studying Arabic and\nPersian, and three other Oxford\nstudents were released by the\nHungarian government Saturday..\ninterests^ understandably. His father, Martin Richard Ronne, a\nNorwegieti, accompanied Roald\nAmundsen on the expedition that\ndiscovered the. South Pole.\nRortne was recalled to active\nduty in the navy for what is his\nfourth, trip to the Antarctic. As\nfor Mrs. Ronne, she said she had\nno qualms at all about sitting this\nexpedition out. .\nNELSON'DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6, 1957\u20145\nHungarian Refugee  Newlyweds\nThankful for Local Kindnesses\nThe blue eyes of Irene Garger\nwere glistening with tears as she\nwalked down the aisle of Cathedral of Mary Immaculate Sunday\nmorning to become the bride of\nBela Tanu. Hers were tears of\nhappiness. 'She could hardly believe her good fortune.\nBarely two months after her escape from Hungary with her 11\nance, she .was being married in-\na,free country and, with-all the\nsplendor of white gown, veil and\nflowers.\nAH this had been made possible\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 George W. Nelly\nhas been a patient in the Creston\nValley Hospital for a week, but\nhopes to return in a few days.,\nThe second of a series of crib-\n-bage parties was held at the home\nof Mr. and -Mrs. Davies, Destiny\nBay. Threfe tables played, and the\nhigh score went to Mrs. W. Tillot-\nson of Sanca, and consolation to\nMrs. Daviese. This was the South\nparty. The North end played at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman\nBainbridge. Four and a half tables\ntook part, and the high score w.nt\nto E. Whitney and consolation to\nEdwin Bainbridge. Lunch was\nserved at both homes before the\nguests returned home.\nLister Notes\nLISTER \u2014 Mr. ind Mrs. Kenneth Huscroft and son, Mrs. Leonard Huscroft and Mrs. Robert\nGraber were business visitors, to\nSpokane and.while there visited\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Edgar.\nMrs. Charles Huscroft has been\nvisiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr; and Mrs. Robert Harvey'\nat New Westminster.\nAfter visiting Mrs. Ethel Smith\nat Nakusp, Mrs. M. Lapointe of\nLister is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Carl\nLarsen at Cranbrook.\nMrs. C. Carleton and Mrs. H.\nDemchuk visited Mr. and Mrs.\nStanley Taylor at Nelson and Mr.\nand Mrs, Kenneth Demchuk at\nVancouver.\nNewts of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, We line' alack race type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two Una*. 10% discount for prompt payment\nBest materials'only used on your\nShoes at T0NV8 8H0E.REPAIRS\nBlNGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8 P.M.\nFLEURY'8  DRUG STORE\nOpen All Day Today\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopeh today, 2-4 p.m.    . \u25a0\nL.A. to F.O.E. Meet tonight 8\np.m. Officers 7:30.\nOIL  BURNER 8ERVICE PH, 385\n.   -.. All makes Service\nHOSPITAL AUXILLARY\nMeeting Friday 2:30\nHUME P.T.A. TEA\nWed. Feb. 13th., 2:30-4:30.\nCanvas and Wools for rug making\nHOBBY 8HOP \u2014 PHONE 1703\nPhone -63\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs\nFor your Valentine, send flowers.\n.Order early.\nMAC'S  FLOWER  8HOP\n. Satin Brocade for the bride-\nRich design, 45\" wide, yd. $2.25.\nTAYLOR'S   DRY  GOODS\n' Interior Wall Cleahers\n1    Phone 1883-L\n(Expert paint,,cleaning service)\nCongo floor covering, smart\npatterns, in 6'x 9'width\nSTERLING  HOME FURNISHERS\nLarge variety of ladies' house\nand afternoon dresses. ..\n,   EBERLES ON  BAKER  ST.\nATTENTION CANADIAN\nLEGION   MEMBERS\nGener4 Meeting, Thurs., Feb. 7,\n8 p.m.\" Films,, Refreshments.\nPlywoods of all kinds.'\nFull sheets or cut sizes.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156    101 Hall St.    Nelson\nValentines Day Special, Bone\nChina cups and saucers, only\n79 cents each.\nWOOD VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nPatients In Kootenay Lake General Hospital' can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department, Dally News.\nNew, unpainted Chests of Drawers\nfrom $16.50 up.\nwe-pay top prices for\n.,     Used furniture\nhome furniture\nexchange, ph, 1660\nSHAKESPEARE'S   OTHELLO\nBy Canadian Players of\nStratford.     *\nRotary-Sponsored March 25\nSAVE THAT DATE!\n1 Treadle Singer Sewing Machine\n$19.95\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE  AND ANTIQUES\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST. \u2014 PH..7   \u2022\nby the generosity of understanding citizens who had taken the\nyoung couple into their hearts,\nand into their homes.\nIrene's wedding gown of dainty\nnet and lace, loaned tojjer by Mrs.\nSteve Verseghy, was complete\nwith lace jacket and-trailing train.\nShe carried a charming bouquet\nof pink carnations, a gift from\na Nelson florist Her matron of\nhonor, Mrs. Verseghy, wore a lace\nand net' gown of turquoise, with\npink carnation corsage.\nj Through the kindness of a local photographer, they will have\nphotographs to remind them of\nthe wonderful day.\nThe grateful young couple,\nwhose close relatives are still in\nHungary, are still marvelling at\ntheir luck. In thanking Steve\nMaco, who has been a friend since\nthe arrival in Nelson of the two\nrefugees, Mr. Tanu said they\nwere \"one couple in a million\" to\nbe so fortunate. \u25a0_.\nMr. and Mrs. Maco held a small\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL \u2014 Dancing to the\nmusic of Bert Anderson, M. Hind-\nley and -Murray Fisher, a small\nbut enthusiastic crowd gathered\ntogether at the Wynndel Memorial\nhall to enjoy dancing Saturday.\nKenneth Packman of Cranbrook\nhas been visiting his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Packman.\nMilitary whist was the game for\nthe evening when a good crowd\nspent a sociable evening with\ntheir friends and neighbors at the\nWynndel Memorial Hall Friday.\nThe winning table was \"Sweden,\"\nand Mr. Margitan, R. Uri, Mr.\nLinden and C. Carlson were the\nwinners of prizes. The consolation\nwinners were Mr. and Mrs. Firth,\nMrs. Davidge and Mr. Lowden\nwho played at the- table called\n\"Monaco.\" A. Margitan won a\ncake donated by Mrs. C. Oglivie\nand decorated by Mrs. R. Ogilvie.\nConveners were Mr. and Mrs.\nArnie'Andestad, and Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Hindley, Mr. and Mrs. C. Ogilvie, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Ogilvie\nand Mrs. Esther Hagen. Proceeds\nare for. community work.\nreception for them at their home\non Stanley Street following the\nmarriage ceremony. !.>;\nA three tiered wedding cake\nhighlighted the table, while on\neither side glowed pink tapers in\ncandelholders tied with ribbons\nin the red, white and green of\ntheir native land, Hungarian music was played as the happy couple\nsat under a white wedding bell.\nWith a number of gifts received\nfrom well wishers, Mr. and Mrs,\nTanu have begun housekeeping\nin a modest suite it' Terrace\nApartments where the groom is\njanitor. \u25a0;;\u25a0\u25a0\n(Dmajl Mp. OJiik.\nTJtaAieuL TftwditL\nACTRESS ELIZABETH TAYLOR and pro-\nuper  Mike  Todd  are shown  during  wedding\nceremony conducted by Acapuloo Mayor Mario\nLopetequl. The wedding took place on Melchor\n.1W ..'\u25a0\"' \u2022\nPersuqula't swank home at Puerto Marques,\nMexico. A't left are Mr. and Mrs. Francis Taylor.\nIt was the third wedding for'each.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\ntt\u2014*\n\"GO EVERYWHERE\"\nSew a whole wardrobe of smart\ndresses from this pattern! Just\nvary the neckline. from novel\nscoop style to a collared version\n\u2014it's an ideal alUseason fashion.\nMake it casual or dressy according to fabric; its lovely lines' are\nboth versatile and flattering!\nPattern 9213: Misses' Sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42, 44, 46. Size 18\nrequires iVs yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis, easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit; Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart show you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRES8,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St, W.,\nToronto, Ont'\nFast, deep-down relief front\nArthritic ond\nRheumatic Pain\nwith skin-penetrating \"Deep Heat\"\nQuick 1 Massage New Mentholatum\nRub into the sore places and feel tin\nwarming comfort sink in I Tnose agonizing pains in hands, knee, hip, shoulder\nare soothed, eased, comforted. It's \u00ab\ngrand feeling 1 Get a tube of New\nMentholatum \"Deep Heat\" Rnb today,\nHew MENTHOLATUM \"Deep HeaT BUB\nHol Chocolate\nDelicious When\nSpecially Made\nBy ALICE DENHOFF\nHot chocolate, a favorite almost\nany time of day during the winter,\ncan be something special when a\ndash of Imagination is added.\nSure to please almost any pal.\nate is Mexican Hot Chocolate, as\ndelicious a concoction as one\ncould serve.\nFor five cups, melt two squares\nunsweetened chocolate in top of a\ndouble boiler over hot water.\nCombine' 2 tablespoons sugar, Vt\nteaspoon salt and 14 teaspoon\nground cinnamon, and add to\nmelted chocolate. Stir until blended. Mix in \u00a5_ cup boiling water.\nBring to, boiling point and boil\n1 minute or until smooth.\nScald 4 cups milk and add to\nthe chocolate mixture along with\n6 m&r-hmallows. Beat with rotary\nbeater until' marshmallows are\ndissolved. Cook over low heat,\nstirring constantly' to prevent a\nskin from forming on top.\nStir in 1.4 teaspoons pure Tan-\nilia extract.\nBRAZILIAN OVERTONE\nHot ohocolate with a'Brazilian\novertone means the addition of\ncoffee!\nMelt two squares unsweetened\nchocolate in a double boiler over\nhot water. Add Vt cup sugar and\nVt teaspoon salt, mixing thoroughly.\nStir in Vt oup hot coffeo snd\ncook Vt minute over low direst\nheat,\nI   Add Hi oup coffee and bring to\nboiling point.\nScald 11 oups top milk and add.\nHeat, stirring to prevent a shin\nfrom forming over the top.\nStir in 1% teaspoons pure\nvanilla extract. Serve ho,t. Makes\n_ oups. -\nIf desired, replace hot coffee\nwith 2 teaspoons instant coffee\ndissolved in 2 cups hot water.\nVIENNA 8TYLE\nServed Vienna style, hot ohocolate is rich and creamy.\nTo prepare - to 7 cups, melt 3\nsquares unsweetened chocolate in\ndouble boiler over' hot water. *\nAdd 1-3 cup sugar and Vt tea-\nspoon salt. Mix well.\nBlend in Vs cup hot water. Bring\nto boiling point and boil 1 minute.\nScald 5 cups light cream and\nadd. Heat over hot water or very\nlow heat, stirring constantly.\nAdd 2 teaspoons pure vanilla\nextract. Serve hot.\nFibre Glass\nLAMP\nSHADES\nTRI-UTE, TABLE, CLIP-ON\n3 Colon\nFREEMAN'S\nWould Prohibit\nAir Gun Sales\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The National\nCouncil of Women has urged\nPrima Minister St. Laurent and\ncabinet ministers to uponsor an\namendment to the Criminal Code\nto prohibit sale, manufacture or\nimport of air guns and air pistols.\nA six-member delegation, led by\nPresident Mrs. Rex Eaton of Dol-\nlarton, B.C., srient more than an\nhour Tuesday presenting 11 resolutions.\nThe delegation was '^ery pleased\" with its reception, Mrs. Eaton\nsaid. The resolution to ban the\nimport, sale or manufacture of air\nguns smd air pistols said they are\n\"dangerous weapons\" which yearly cause serious accidents, blind\nmany ohildren and \"serve no useful purpose whatsoever\nTOO REALISTIC\nThe resolution also urged that\n'toy guns be sold only if painted\nred, yellow or green. Those painted black or silver were too realistic. .\nMrs. H. H. Seen, Taneower,\nresolutions committee chairman,\nwas among tho delegate*. .\nMrs. Baton said a, _esoi-___n\nurging ihe National Film Board to\nproduce more classroom films on\nCanadian citizenship was well received. .\nOther resolutions repeated! the\ncouncil's request tot a revision\nof the Dominion Succession Duty\nAct to enable an adopted child to\nqualify as a legal heir ter all purposes, with his status the same as\nthat of the natural ohlld.\nAnother resolution said legislative bodies should make sure women are offered not only.' equal\npay ter equal work, but eqoal\nopportunity as well.\nFOOLED THEIVE\u00bb\nCOVENTRY, England \u00ab3P) \u2014\nBurglars broke into a wine shop\nhere and took 12 bottles with spirits labels. The bottles were dummies..\nCOOMIHC\nM\nLett His Head       \"!*_\nBecause He Forget Hli ^\/j\nBUCKLEY'S^ v.\nMIXTURE  $>\nTHE COUGH REMEDY that eheefes coughs at\nthe very first tip became Hi warming, sooth*\nIng Ingredients spread Instantly through\nthroat, chest and tubs*. W$ e\np\/ofo medication \u2014 stops\nli-lclo that makes you cough-\nin seconds. That's why Bueb y\n*y's Mixture has outsold oH ,\nothers for 30 years. I\t\nteg. Sln-SOo family Siio->85\u00ab\nnfiTi\n'   NOWt6&ie'&\nIncreased Banking Service\n>.\/ .\n... at our New Denver Office\nStarting tomorrow, the New Denver office\nof the Bank of Montreal will operate a\nfive-day service for the convenience of residents and businessmen of New Denver and\nthe surrounding district\nLocated in the same building it has occupied in the past, which has recently been\nremodelled and redecorated, the office will\nbe open Monday to Friday from 10 a.m. to\n12 noon, land from' 1 p.m. to 3 p.tn. For\nthose unable to do their banking during\nregular hours, a special service wili be available every' Friday evening from 4.30 to 6.\nThere are many ways you can make profit\nable use of-the B of M in your personal or\nbusiness banking. Here are some of them...\nfor saving money\u2014for borrowing money\u2014\nfor banking by. mail\u2014for sending money\naway\u2014for buying and selling stocks and\n..bonds.\n, Husbands, wives, sons and daughters ...\nall like dealing with the B of M. There's a\nB of M service to take care of your every\nbanking need.\nBank of Montreal\nNew Denver Branch: KENNETH SMITH, Manager\nWORKING  WITH   CANADIANS   IN  EVERY   WALK  OP  LIFE   SINCE   101?\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEPN.St.AY, FEB. 6,195T\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\u25a0\u2022. .1\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\n\u25a0i)||J w-ii-iitp^Tfw^rwy\nIII.   1-1   .11 I-1\nMen I This Is Your Chance to Save Many Dollars!\nMEN'S\nWEAR\nSTREET\nFLOOR\nSmall Charge\nfor 0ver.izo\n2-Piece\nSuit\nEXTRA PANTS 15.50\nMade-to-Measure Slacks 17.50\nPAY AS LOW AS $10 DOWN\nBalance on Low Monthly To. im.\n\u2022 100% Pyre Wool Yarn Dye Worsteds\n\u2022 100% Pure Wool Gabardines\n\u2022 100% Pun Wool Serges\n\u2022 100% Wool .Flannel Wonted\nAll New Patterns and\nShades for Spring\n-.\u25a0\"P^-PPPW fiJJL.IJM\nGUARANTEED DELIVERY IN TIME FOR\nEASTER AND SPRING WEARING .\nThis is really exciting news ... an opportunity to haVe .\nsuit tailored to your individual measurements, in th\nstyle and fabric of your choice. The selection of fabric\nis outstanding, consisting of fine imported and domestic\nwoollens. The maker is one of Canada's finest tailoring\n.houses. All this at the unbelieyqble low price of only\n49.50 for a 2-piece-suit Donf miss out on this opportunity to save on quality tailoring now at the Bay.\nSALE STARTS *\u00bb FEB. 7th\nand Ends on Saturday, Feb. 16th-Don't Miss It I\nMade-to-Mea$ure Suit Sale 4 9,5\u00b0\nYEAR-END CLEARANCE\nMUSKRATon.\nCENTRE BACK\nFUR\nCOATS\nPAY       t<% -\u00bb\nONLY    *27   DOWN\nBalance on Easy Monthly Payments\n* Save 30 dollars on regular $298\nMuskrat (Dyed) centre backlfur coats.\nit Free fur storage for the first year.\ntIt Free insurance while your coat is in storage.\nic Famous H.B.C. seal of quality guarantee.\nir Shades of Alaska Mink and Labrador Mink.\nit Sizes .'4 to 20.\nFull Sale Price $2 6 8\nAttention Non-Knitters\nSave Up to 20%\nNorthland\nSweaters\nNow you can enjoy the warmth and convenience of\nCanada's most popular sport? sweater, designed for\noutdoor living. Just choose your design from our fine\nselection of over 40 pattern designs, choose the colors\nfrrri a selection of 14 attractive colors, That's all you\nhove to buy, (plus zipper). Our knitters will knit and\nfinish the garment for you. Act now during this 3-day\nNON-KNITTER SPECIAL\nReg, Value $24 Men,S]. Um 38) 40i 42) 44         -\t\nReg. Value $21 Udl< teenrnm$<t iitis uill6i 18 , ,,\u201e , ,..,..,\u201e.,.....;.,.\nReg. Value $14 Childre?)>5| Bto ll0> \u201e , ; ., , \u201e.,.,.\nReg. Value $12 ^dies, sm 4| 6 _;; t _....\t\nFAY ONLY $5 DOWN \u2014 Balance in 3 months with na car rying cttarge.\n$19\n$17\n11.50\n9.50\n\u25a0 Ti_!|iinp\u00bb|iiin\u00bb\nSAVINGS IN WORK CLOTHES\nWork\n\u25a0w\u00bbwii\\ cfyey waoi rjb, reinforced\nCr._-l_-c with n^m ^ mA t09 for\n\u00ab-.Qv.l\\9  extra wear. Beg. ,79 value, , \u2022\n,WOrK Whipcord, leather trimmed\nD_._i_ pockets, Guaranteed wash-\nranTS able. Reg, 4,95 value, ........\ni\\Opei Kajiggfoo tan with snap\nftl\u00ab_m#_\u00bb\u00bb^stener, in atees S-M-L.\nWHOVeSReg. i,6B value, .,.,\t\nrlMnncI gmsFt cheek patterns \u2014\u25a0\n*U_i-tc washable, Sizes g and M\nimn8      only, reg, 2,49 value\t\n\/VQQI Liner mitts, in black and\n\\A \u25a0_____ white wool.! Regular 1,10\nTllT'tS \u2022 value, ....;........,....\n59\n3\"\n1\"\n1.89\n.89\nFOR ALL YOUR WORK CLOTHES SHOP THI JAY-\nMEN'S WEAR DEPT. ONI THE STREET FLOOR\nSavings in Nylons and Anklets\nReg. 1.35,,Seamfree Nylons\nPopular 400 needle seamless, full fashioned in QQ\nthe knit, first quality. Sizes-8Vjj to U  -~^\nFull Fashioned Nylons\n51 gauge, 15 denier hose in new Spring shades. Full fashioned and fi'ft qualtity. 5t ' $-9\nSi?es 8*4 ta 11. -, .;..,.. , \u00ab* P\"- ***<\nReg. .59, Triple Roll Cuff\nBobby socks in soft combed cotton reinforced heel and\ntoe with nylon, Snug fit euff. White only. JJ Q\nSi.es 8% to 11 .,\u201e\u201e  \u00bb3<\nReg. .49, .59, Ankle Socks\nAn assortment of all nylon or nylon and wool    tQ\nankle socks in Adult and kiddies' sizes,    * IW\n ~~^m\n-,-\n^-^\nm\nNEW PRESIDENT of tho British Columbia\nCurling Association, Jack McKay of Penticton,\nsecond from  left, Is congratulated by outgoing\npresident H. (Fritz) Farenholti of Nelson following election of officers at the BCCA annual\nmeeting held here prior to the B.C, Bonsplel,\nAt left Ib vice-president Dick Topping of Kamloops and Osoyoos, and between Mr. McKay\nand Mr, Farenholtz Is Arthur Gilker of Nelson,\nre-elected secretory-treasurer. ;\nS . \u2014Dally News pnoto.\n3-2 Win Puts Flyers\nBack in League Lead\nROSSLAND\u2014Spokane Flyers regained sole possession of the Western International Hockey League lead\nTuesday by defeating cellar-dwelling Rossland Warriors\n3-2 here.\nThe victory leaves Flyers one game ahead of second-\nplace Trail Smoke Eaters. Both clubs have four regular\ngames remaining, so Trail must win every game,, one of\nwhich is against Spokane in Trail, to tie Flyers for ihe\nleague lead by the end,of the season, provided that Flyers\nare not beaten by Rossland \u2014\"\nor Nelson,\nArt Jones, Rock Crawford, and\nFrank Kubasek scored Spdkane\nmarkers while Norm Lenardon\nfired home both Rossland markers.\nThe winning marker was notched by Crawford at 14:12 of the\nfinal frame, with an assist from\nlinemate Bu^dy Bodman. Bodman\nskated down the boards to the\nright of Rossland net, went deep\ninto Rossland territory, and flipped the puck to Crawford, in front\nof the goal. Crawford scored easily, allowing Zanier little time to\nmake a save.\nONLY 3 PENALTIES\nThe contest was the usual fast\ntype of game that these two clubs\nplay here. Only three penalties\nv\/ere handed out by referees Al\nToikko and Terry Cavanagh, two\ngoing to Flyers.\nAfter a scoreless first period,\nWarriors drew first blood early\nin the second frame as Lenardon\nThey're Coaching\nFun Outa Hockey\nRemember the fun you\nhad on the old mill pond\n\u2014everybody played where\nhe wanted, ai long as he\nwanted!\nToday the kids frequently\nhave to rise at 4 a.m. for\ntheir turn on the ice and\nthey're rigidly coached to\nplay-positions. They learn\nto get rid of the puck, not\nkeep it\nIn this week's issue of the\nStar Weekly Gordon\nCampbell, in his controversial article \"Give Hockey Back . to The Kids\"\nshows why the Russians\nean beat us at our own\nnational game. Buy your\ncopy of the Star Weekly\ntoday.\nThe rVew STAR WEEKLY\nscored his first goal. George Ferguson started the play, and\nknocked over Flyer goal-tender\nJohnnie SoJiak in attempting to\nscore. With Sofiak. sitting helplessly on the ice, Lenardon had no\ntrouble In getUng the pill into the\nmesh.\nSpokane retaliated .midway\nthrough the period, as Jones accepted a pass from Dave Gordichuk and flipped it over Zanier's\nleg to even the reading.\nOnly 12 seconds remained in the\nperiod when Lenardon scored his\nsecond marker. He caught the\npuck as the Spokane goal-keeper\nwas. trying desperately to reach it\non the' ice.\nMidway through the finale, Kubasek evened the score on what\nwas more or less a \"fluke\" goal!\nKubasek fired the puck at the\nWarrior goal, and it hit Zanier in\nthe shoulder and bounced over\nhim into the net,\nIt was less than three minutes\nlater that Crawford scored the\nwinning marker.\nLineups:\nSpokane \u2014 Goal: Sofiak; de\nfence: Lancien, Hodges, Lukt,\nPlante; forwards: Kubasek, Na\ndeau, Cirullo, Jones, Beattie, Gor\ndichuk, \u25a0 Zahara, Crawford\nRossland\u2014Goal: Zanier; defence\nFletcher, Ferguson, Lofvendahl;\nforwards: Lucchini, Lenardon, Turlk, Birukow, Hyssop, Andrews,\nChorney, Mclntyre\n- Summary:'\nFirst period\u2014No score\nPenalty\u2014Bodman  11:18.\nSecond peridd\u20141, Rossland, Lenardon (Ferguson) 2;28; 2, Spokane_\nJtfnes (Gordichuk) 17:30; 3, Ross.'\nland, Lenardon  (Lucchini). 19:26,\nPenalties: Hodges 4:30, Ferguson 15:48.\nThird period\u20144, Spokane, Kubasek (Nadeau) 11:51; 5, Spokane,\nCrawford (Bodman) 14:12.\nNo penalties. -    ,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6.1957\u20147\n4 Rinks in Eights of Both Top\nProvincial Bonspiel Competitions\nKimberley Men Qive\nStone Tough Battle\nfour rinks, who previously advanced to the eights\nin Primary 'A' Event of the B.C. Bonspiel) Tuesday advanced with four other rinks to the eights of the Primary\n'B' Event. . .   .\nThe four rinks who are in the quarter-finals of both\nthe Diamond Jubilee Evfent and CM & S Grand Challenge\nEvent are C. Larson of Chilliwack, Len Peerless of Nelson,\nArt Speers of Creston and Reg Stone of Trail.\nThe other 'four rinks who advanced in the Grand\nChallenge are H. E. Wheeler of Cranbrook, Dick Topping\nof Kamloops, R. Mathieson of Kimberley and Bill Croft\nof Summerland.\nFielder Leads\nScoring Race\nBy 19 Points\nSEATTLE (CP)\u2014Guyle Fielder\nof Seattle ran his margin to 19\npoints over Vancouver's Phil Maloney in the Western Hockey\nLeague scoring race last week.\nStatistics realeased Tuesday\nshow Fielder with 23 goals and 61\nassists for a total of 84 points.- His\n61 assists it tops in that department. . \u2022\nTHE TOP 10 8CORERS\nIn advancing Tuesday, Stone,\nseveral-time B.C. champion, had\na tough battle with Eric Bisgrove\nof Kimberley. The East Kootenay\nrink led 7-6 after eight ends, but\nStone counted four in the ninth\nto come away with a win.  .\nLen Peerless'. Nelson crew advanced by snapping a string of 27\nstraight wins that the Tony Folk\nrink of Duncan had piled in B.C.\n'spiel play and In action closer to\nhome. Score was 10-7. Art Ron-\nmark of Nelson gave the Croft\nrink a close run, the Summerland\nfoursome winning 10-9, and another close game saw Art Speers\na 9-8 winner over Dick Palmer of\nNelson.\nIn the 32nds of the Grand Challenge, the closest contest BUI\nCroft's 8-6 win over Milt Ryalls\nFielder, Seattle\n' 23\n61\n84\nMaloney, Vancouver\n28\n37\n65\nEx Dorohoy, Seattle\n20\n40\n60\nKinasewich, Seattle\n30\n29\n59\nFinney, Calgary\n30\n28\n58\nManson, Brandon\n22\n28\n50\nWylie, Vancouver\n14\n38\n50\nJohnson, Brandon\n14\n37\n51\nKilburn, Victoria\n24\n25\n49\nSenick, Seattle\n23\n26\n49\n3 More Injuries\nFor Maple Leafs\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014Toronto\nMaple Leafs, hounded by Injuries\nthroughout. most of the National\nHockey League season to date,\nadded three new names. to the\nmedical-treatment list Tuesday.\nCentre Rudy Migay, with a\nswollen ankle suffered Sunday,\nand defenceman Ron Stewart, suffering infection, are in hospital\nMigay is expected to play tonight\nagainst Montreal Canadiens. here,\nbut Stewart may miss the* game,\nteam officials said,'\nRight winger Tod Sloan, who returned last weekend after a shoulder dislocation kept him Idle for\na month, is bothered by the'same\nshoulder and Is to undergo\ncheckup.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nParis \u2014 Charles Huiftei,   160,\nFrance, stopped Pat McAteer, 157,\nBritain, 8 (European middleweight\nchampionship).\nManchester, Eng. \u2014 BOswell St.\nLouis, Trinidad, stopped ft\u00bby Corbett, irtgl-nd, 5 (Weights unavailable).\nPEEBIES  H  PEEBLES\nQ\nPhone 1090        Phone 1090\nWatch for\nOur Giant\nSurprise Advertisement\nin\nThis Friday's Issue\n_____\n_n\nPeebles motorsl,d\nC HR Y5 LER -P L_Y M D UTH \u2022 FARG D J^VTIRt 5\n\u20ac^oni 1090    <l>liJUf*-.B.C.  ;\nPhone 1090        PhOne 1090\nPEEBLES\nPEEBLES\nSign With Orioles\nBALTIMORE (AP) \u2014 Veteran\nright-handed pitchers Sandy Con-\nauegra and Erv Palica have signed\n1957 contracts, Baltimore Orioles\nannounced Tuesday.\nThe 36-year-old Consuegra had\na 1-1 record with Baltimore last\nSeptember after being acquired\nfrom Havana of the International\nLeague. The slender Cuban posted\na 16-3 record for Chicago White\nSox in 1954.\nPalica will be starting his third\nseason with the Orioles. He had a\n5-11 mark last season.\nFights\nNew York \u2014 Sugar Hart, 146..,\nPhiladelphia, stopped Barry Allison, 146%, Springfield, Mass., 7.\nMilwaukee \u2014 BOb Satterfleld,\n182.4, Chicago, outpointed Julio,\nMederos, 192, Cuba, 10.\nNHL NOT SENDING\nTEAMS TO EUROPE\nPALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)-Na-\nUonal Hockey League owners\nfuesday rejected a proposal to\nsend teams to Europe on an ex-\nhibtion tour at the .end of the\nseason.\nThe owner, at their annual\nmid - winter meeting, reported\nhockey is spreading in popularity.\n\"It's creeping into the middle\nstates,\" said Clarence Campbell\nof Montreal, NHL president.\nCampbell said only minor technical changes were made In some\nof the league's by-laws and that\nno important business came up.\n-______\u2014___\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014-_\u2014\u2014-_\u2014     _\nEngland Scores 382\nBut' Fails to Win\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\n(Reuters) \u2014 England's touring\nMarylebone Cricket Club team\nscored 382 runs Tuesday in a riot\nof point-scoring, but rain robbed\nthem of victory against the Transvaal side. .\n.- Rainy weather forced the game\nto be drawn when the English\nteam still had two wickets in hand\n\u2014despite the fact that its 594 first-\nInnings score was the highest any\nMCC side has ever made against\nthe province.  :'-.<\nTransvaal's first Innings score\nwas 232.\nBoth overnight MCC batsmen\nscored a century, Denis Compton\nscoring 131 in' 231 minutes, and\nDoug Insole 192 In 270 minutes.\nFrank Tyson had 55 not out when\nplay ended. Most successful of the\nTransvaal bowlers, Peter Heine,\nconceded 97 runs for his two wick-\nety   . \u25a0 \u2022.\".\nHockey Scores\n_,     08HL\n.Vernorf 4, Kamloops 6.\nKelowna 3, Penticton 1.'\nWHL\nVictoria 2, New Westminster 2.\n(Overtime).\nBrandOn 3, Calgary 1.\nVancouver 6, Edmonton 2.\nof Nelson, decided on the last\nrock. _\nPlay also commenced in the\nWood Vallance-sponsored Secondary. 'B' Event.-       '\nResults follow:\nGRAND CHALLENGE\nFirst Round\nR. J. Stephenson, Chilliwack, 10,\nJ. R. Bailey, Nelson, 0 (default);\nD. Porteous,, Nelson, 3, E. Bisgrove, Kimberley, 8;\nA. Waters, Nelson, 51 R. Stone,\nTrail, 10;\nV. Killeen, Nelson, 8, G. Beaudry, Rossland, 6;\nL. MacKenjie, Creston, 9, R.\nTopping, Kamloops, 13.\n9:45 a.m\u2014A. Reid, Nelson, 2, H.\nE. Wheeler, Cranbrook, 10;\nA. Stephenson, Nelson, 6, T.\nCoates,. Vancouver, 10;\nR. Mathieson, Kimberley, 8, K.\nL. Moysey, Victoria, 3;\nC. Larspn, Chilliwack, 12, E. C.\nHunt, Nelson, 6;\nR. Chandler, Nelson, 2, W. Karjala, Nanaimo, 10.\n12 noon--I_. J. Maurer, Nelson,\n.9, W. Carmichael, Prince George,\nS,  A.\nCampbell, Mull.\nRinks on Top\nQUEBEC (CP^-The fights for\none of the major trophies In the\n44th Quebec international bonspiel\nIs shaping up as a duel between\na powerful local rink and the\nCampbell brothers quartet from\nAvonlea, Sask.\nA. F. Muth'i Quebec Victoria\nrink recorded its third consecutive\nwin Tuesday, downing Jack Tol-\nten's Toronto team 8-3 in competition for the Chateau Trophy, Gar.\nnet Campbell's rink, also playing\nIn the Chateau competition, defeated R. Lahaie's Cap -de - la-\nMadeleine, Que., team 13-9 in a\nthird-round game.\nBoth clubs now enter the quarter-finals. According to the draw,\nthey will meet In the finals if they\nboth win the next two games.\nOFFICIAL OPENING of the B.C, Bonsplel took place here\nwhen Mayor Joseph Kary shed his overcoat, donned a wind-\nbreaker and heaved a rock down Ice No. 4 at Nelson Curling\nClub. B.C. Curling Association president H, (Fritz) Farenholtz\nheld the broom. In the background are two members of the\nKarjala rink of Nanaimo who curled on Ice No. 4 following the\nofficial openlng^Dally News photo,\nKimberley Rink\nLegion Winner\nCRANBRPOK-Klmberley Le-\ngion rink, skipped by branch president Al Hansen, won the annual\nEast Kootenay Legion Zone curling championship here Sunday\nand will represent tht zone at\nthe B.C. Legion bonsplel at Penticton. Other members of the rink\nwere Hugh Bates, B, G. Archibald\nand B. J. Brenton.\nIn the first round, a Cranbrook\nrink, skipped by Glen Cockwell,\nbeat the Invermere rink, skipped\nby Joe Fetroski, 10-9 in 11 ends,\nwhile Kimberley also had a narrow win over Creston, 8-7. Score\nin the final wan Kimberley 11,\nCranbrook 4.\nMembers of the Cranbrook rink\nwere L. G. Truscott, Elmer Con-\nroy and W. O. Atkinson.\nWomen's Zone Curling\nVictor Won All Games\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 The Kootenay\nzone women's curling championship was woA at the weekend by\nthe Mrs. A. F. Hansen rink of\nKimberley with seven wins and\nno losses, in the eight-team round-\nrobin event.\n. Runners-up were the -Mrs. A.\nLyon rink from Trail, with five\nwins two losses, Mrs. I. Grant,\nCranbrook, four wins three losses\nand Mrs. E. Blundell, Kimberley,\nfour wins, three losses.\nThe winners, Mrs. Hansen, skip,\nMrs. W. Leith, third, Mrs. S. Calles,\nsecond, Mrs. W. Al.O.k, lead, will\nenter the Eaton'*- - sponsored pro\nvinciil playdowns   at   Nanaimo\nFebruary 20 to 24 for the right to\nrepresent B.C. in the Western Ca.\nnada championship event at Sas\nkatoon March 11.\nMrs. C. H. Johnston of Trail,\nzone convener, waa In charge of\nthe event, with H. Bates, assisted\nby Mrs. R. Shaw, In charge pf\ndraws. The annual zone meeting\non Saturday elected the following\nofficers: president, Mrs. J. Iuk,\nTrail; vice - president, Mrs. I.\nGrant, Cranbrook; secretary, Mrs.\nF. M. Brennen,., Trail; treasurer,\nMrs. T. A. Wallace, Nelson; Mrs.\nC. H. Johnson is again zone convener. The 1957 playdowns are\nbeing held at Trail.\nN.  R.  Sardich,  Nelson\nSpeers, Creston, 19;\nR. Palmer, Nelson, 11, E. Doe-\nbell, Vancouver, 8;\nM. B. Ryalls, Nelson, 6, W. Croft,\nSummerland, 8;\n. A. B, Ronmark, Nelson, \"10, E.\nMacKinnon, Cranbrook, 6.\n2:15 p.m.\u2014E. Bisgrove, Kimberley, 9, R. J. Stephenson, Chilliwack, 5;\nR, Stone, Trail, 10, E. Jackson,\nPenticton, 6;\nL. G. Peerless, Nelson, 10,' D. A.\nMorrison, Kimberley, 7; *\nA. Folk, Duncan, 10, J. Harvey,\nNelson, 7,\nSecond Round (16s)\nH. E. Wheeler, Cranbrook, 11,\nT. Coates, Vancouver, 4.\n4:30 p.m\u2014V. Killeen, Nelson, 2,\nR. Topping, Kamloops, 15;\nW. Karjala, Nanaimo, 8, R. Mathieson, KimbSrley, 12;\nC. Larson, Chilliwack, 13, L, J.\nMaurer, Nelson, 5;\nW. Croft, Summerland, 10, A. B.\nRonmark, Nelson, 9;        v\nA. Speers, Creston, 9, R, Palmer,\nNelson, 8.\n6:45 p.m.\u2014E. Bisgrove, Kimberley, 7, R. Storte, Trail, 10;\nL. 6. Peerless, Nelson,  10, A.\nFolk, Duncan, 7,\nNELSON CURLING\nCLUB EVENT\nFirst Round\n11:45 p.m. Monday\u2014E. C. Hunt,\nNelson, 4, W. Croft, Summerland,\n10;\nR. Topping, Kamloops, 10, R. J.\nStephenson, Chllliwack, 4;\nE. MacKinnon, Cranbrook, 11,\nA. Ronmark, Nelson, 5;\nD. Porteous, Nelson, 5,-,W. Karjala, Nanaimo, 9;\nW. Carmichael, Prince George,\n8, V. Killeen, Nelson, 3.\nGROUP'B'SECONDARY EVENT\nFirst Round\nM. B. Ryalls, Nelson, 11, E. MacKinnon, Cranbrook, 8; <\nD. A. Morrison, Kimberley, 5,\nJ. Harvey, Nelson, 11;\nR. J. Stephenson, Chilliwack, 8,\nE. Jackson, Penticton, ,7.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014D. Fdrteoiis, Nelson,\n5, A. Waters; Nelson, 7;\nG. Beaudry, Rossland, 4, L. Mac-\nKenzie, Creston, 6;\nA. Reid, Nelson, 8, A. Stephenson, Nelson, 9;\nR. M. Chandler, Nelson, 11, K.\nL. Moysey, Victoria, 4;\nE. C. Hunt, Nelson, 9, W. Carmichael, Prince George, 10.\nBonspiel Sidelights...\nFirst two draws for the B. C.\nplaydowns were made up Tuesday\nafternoon with majority of the\nskips of the eight-zone champion's\npresent. . Playdowns will be a\ndouble knockout competition.\nFirst knockout: Thurs., 2:15 \u2014\nW, Carmichael, Prince George vs\nR. Stone, Trail;. R. Mathieson,\nKimberley vs C, Larson, Chllliwack; T. Folk, Duncan vs R. Topping, Kami-ops; T. Coates, Vancouver vs W. Croft, Summerland.\nSecond knockout:  Friday, 2:15\n\u25a0W. Carmichael vs A. Folk, R.\nMathieson vs T. Coates, R. Stone\nvs R. Topping, C. Larson vs W.\nCroft. '.        '   '\nScores of games aren't always\nindicative of the play. Close scores\nsometimes result from a three or\nfour count In the last end of a\nlost cause. On the other' hand,\ngames won by four or five points\nare often close battles till the last\nend. Take Jim Harvey's 10-7 loss\nto Tony- Folk of Duncan. But for\ntwo not-qulte-perfect shots, the\nscore might have been different.\nOne allowed Folk a five-count in\nthe sixth and the other prevented\nHarvey from taking two points\nat a key spot in the game. Down\n10-6 coming home, they played it\nout. \"Jim won't give up,\" one\nspectator said.\nWithdrawal of an out-of-town\nrink a few days before the spiel\nnecessitated making up another\nrink of local curlers. Jack Bailey\nis skipping this entry. So far their\nluck hasn't been too good, Tuesday morning they won a game but\nwere disqualified later for playing\nwith only three men.\nYou know how, official openings\naren't'as polished as ithey might\nbe. The president throws out the\nfirst baseball on two bounces, Or\n.the prime minister kicks a Grey\nCup football off the side of his\nfoot. But not so with the official\nopening of the 62nd annual B. C.\nspiel. Mayor Joe Kary threw two\nrocks, both dandles, the second\none ending up right in the house.\nDidn't notice if he hit the brooml\nLargest gallery of the spiel for\nfar was for the Stone-Bisgrove\ngame on Ice NO. 2 Tuesday night.\nIN TABLE TENNIO\nMONTREAL (CP)-Canada Trill\nbe entered for the first time in the\nworld table tennis championships\nat Stockholm March 7-15, the\nCanadian Table Tennis Association said.\nCaptain John J. Hunnlus, Paul\nBelanger and Jacques Poulin, all\nof Montreal, are scheduled to\ncompete in the 40-eountry meet.\nSimmons 'Hottest\nGoalie in League'\nBy RON ANDREWS.\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014When Boston\nBruins lost Terry Sawchuk, they\nfaced one of their darkest hours.\nBut Don Simmons, his replacement, has turned out to be the\nhottest goaltender In the National\nHockey League.\nSimmons had by far the best\nshowing last week in the efficiency ratings of NHL netmlnders.\nThe 25-year-old rookie stopped 73\nof 75 shots for a .973 \"fielding\naverage.\"\nThat raised his percentage for\nthe five games in which he has\nplayed for Bruins 42 points to\n.936. It's the best mark in the\nleague but Simmons doesn't qualify for top-billing since the other\ngoalkeepers have played most of\nthe season,\nSimmons was purchased from\nSpringfield Indians of the American Hockey League two 'weeks\nago, a week after Sawchuk announced his retirement. He recorded his first shutout last Thursday at Boston, a 2-0 decision over\nChicago Black Hawks.\nThe native of Port Colborne,\nOnt., turned in his best performance against the powerful Cana-\nRoskilde, capital of Denmark\nuntil 1443, has a oathedral dating\nfrom the 11th century.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All Types\nI Lake St Phone 890\nARROW BATTERIES\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Beard or by (he Government of British Columbia\nWho borrows from HFC ?\n#\nNearly three quarters of a million\nCanadian, like you borrowed from\nHFC last year. HFC ia Canada's\nlargest and.most roconunfinded\ncOnj.un.or finance company backed\nby 70 yean' experience in helping\nfamilies solve their money problems. So if you need lip to $1000,\nvisit HFC where you may always\nborrow with confidence.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nG. M. Chilton, Manogor\n608 Dakar Street, tecond doer, phone 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nKIMBERLEY DRANCII: 420 II. word SUM!, phonn LU 2-1121\ndlena at Montreal last Saturday.\nSimmono held the Habs to one\ngoal and turned aside 39 shots.\nMeanwhile, Glenn Hall of Detroit Bed Wings managed to hold\nthe one-point lead at the top of\nthe standings over Montreal's\nJacques Plante, who gave up first\nplace to Hall two weeks ago after\nholding that position for most of\nthe season.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nWALTZ\nNIGHT\nADULT\nSKATING\n8:00 -10:00 p.m,\nv Music by\nROY KLINE\nAt the Hammond Organ\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6,1957\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTho Dally News does not nold Itself responsible In tha event  \u25a0\nof an error In the: following lists. '\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\t\nAmal Larder __.'\nAnacon Lead   ............\nAnglo Rouen _\t\nAtlin Ruff\t\nAubelle _ \u201e..._. \u2122\nAumacho   ;...'.. ..\nAumaque _\nBarnat   \u201e\nBase Metals _\nBaska Uranium  _._,\nBibis 'Yukon  _..;..\nBoymar   \t\nBrilund _,\u201e.\u201e...\t\nBrunswick   ......\nBuff Can _...,\t\nBuff Red Lak _ :\t\nCampbell C .-.  \u201e\nCan Met\t\nCassiar\t\nCentral Patricia _.\t\nChimo  ..............\nChromium  :. .,\nCoin Lake .__.\nCons Denison _\t\nCons Discovery \t\nCons Halliwell\t\nCons Howe' _\nCons M & S,_\nCons Red Pop \t\nCons Sanorm\t\nCon Sub\t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man .......j.....\nD'Aragon\t\nDonalda   ..*.\t\nEast Amphl\t\nEast Malartic \t\nEast Sullivan .\t\nElder Gold \t\nFalconbridge   \t\nFaraday   \t\nFrobisher  ,\t\nGeco \t\nGeo Scientific Pros\nGiant Yel   __\t\nGlen Uranium \t\nGoldale\t\nGold Eagle  \u2022.\t\nGolden Manitou\t\nGrandines\t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerals   \t\nHasaga .._\t\nHeadway    .\u201e\t\nHollinger  ......\nHudson Bay :.....\nInspiration \t\nInt Nickel\t\nIron Bay ;\t\nJoliet Que \t\nJonsmlth   \t\nR. J Jowsey  \u201e.._.,\nKerr Addison  \t\nLabrador .\nLake Lingman \t\nLakeshore   \t\nLittle Long Lac ...\nLorado  \t\nLouvic't _\t\nMacassa ,...\nMadsen R L\t\nMalartic G F\t\nManeast\t\nMaritime Mining .\nMcLeod\t\nMilliken   \t\nMining Corp \t\nMogul i\t\nNew Alger _\nNew Delhi\t\nNew Fortune\t\nNew Highridge\t\nNew Jason\t\nNew Lund\t\nNipissing   \t\nNisto \u25a0\nNoranda New\t\nNorgold\t\nIJormetals  .'\t\nNorpax   _...\t\nNorth Can \t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska\t\nPickle Crow \t\n.14%\n.16\n1.53\n.50\n.72\n.11\n.30\n.17\n.33\n.09\n.00\n.    .50\n10.00\n.15\n.07\n10.50\n3.50\n7.80\n1.92\n.90\n2.85\n..12\n18.00\n3.05\n.95\n3.30\n4.80\n.18\n.11\n2.55\n.76\n.21\n.27\n.26\n.10\n1.25\n4.75\n.30\n37X10\n\u2022 1.70\n2.83\n15.25\n1.04\nA.10\n.54\n-.21\n.08\n1.39\n.21\n19.75\n.39\n.18\n.80\n24.75\n83.00\n.75\n99.62%\n3.00\n.49\n.16\n.86\n17.12%\n20.00\n.12\n4.50\n2.50\n1.25\n.16\n1.82\n1.78\n1.61\n.26\n1.60\n1.11\n2.58\n17.62%\n1.57\n.15\n.43\n.17\n.32\n.13\n.35\n2.65\n.12\n80.50\n.13\n5.40\n1.35\n1.50\n1.1X\n10.75\n1.28\nfU>e_.\nYour\nMouth\nSweetens\nYour Breath\nPlacer Develop    12.75\nPreston ED ...;\u25a0_..'.._.,     7.80\nQuebec Copper       .93\nQuebec Lab 19\nQuebec Lithium      8.75\nQuebec Metallurgical      2.15\nQuemont     16.25\nRadiore  _     1.10\nRainville  __._.\u201e__     1.00\nRayrock  ..+. ; _    1.48\nSan Antonio  60\nSherritt Gordon _     7.10\nSilver Miller  .-. 85\nStadacona  38\nSteep Rock \u201e.,...   18.87V.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nSlocan Van Roi.\nSullivan Cons ...\nSylvanite \u2022\u2022..,\t\nTeck Hughes\t\nTemagami\t\nThomp-Lund\t\nTombill\t\nUnited Keno ....\nUpper Canada\n.14\n3.65\n1.50\n1.75\n3.35\n1.00\n.25\n6.00\n 79\nVentures' :    37.25\nViolamac        1.70\nWaite Amulet _    12.12%\nWiltsey Goglin  12\nWright Hargreaves      1:39\nYa,Ie _      .33\nYellowknlfe Bear       1.50\nYukeno  __ : _ 07%\nOILS\n\"American Leduc 51 \u2022\nBanff Oils  _     2.50\nBailey Selburn     17.25\nBata Petroleum  11\nCal & Ed       26.00\nCan Admiral  50\nCdn Atlantic _     6.30\nCan Collieries  ' 6.75\nCan Devonian      6.85\nCan Decalta      1.00\nCentral Explorers     4.00\nCentral Leduc        7.25\nCon East Crest    \u2022  .45\nCons Peak 10\nDuvex       .24\nGreat Sweetgrass ,.    \u25a0 1.40\nHome A    11.87%\nKroy    89\nLiberal'Pete    ,      2.29\nLong Island Pete  19\nMarigold _...: .'. 29\nMidcon 76\nNat Pete .     3.60\nNew. Continental 60\nNew Gas Expl     1.70\nOkalta \u2014     2.70\nPac Pete     17.37%\nPetrol      1.07\nProv Gas   \u25a0  2.30\nRoyalite  :....   17.50 .\nSpooner        .23\nStanwell Oil  64\nTriad         8.20\nUnited Oils     2.23\nYank Canuck  12\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi    31%\nAlgoma Steel  _  113%\nAluminum   114%\nAtlas St  _    26%\nB A Oil i    46%\nBathurst Power    56%\nBeatty Bros   ._     6.\nBell Telephone  _    45%\nBrazilian        8%\nAlgom Uranium    20.00\nB C Elec 4%s _    92\nB C Forest     13\nB C Power A _ _   44\nBurns A     11%\nBurrard A  _._ \u201e    7.\nCan Breweries .'.    24%\nCan Canners     13%\nCan Ceianese    15\nCan Cement    28%\nCan Dredge _    18%\nCan Chem Co   \t\nCan Oil _.-.    !?%\nCan Pac Rly      __\nCan Packers A \t\nCan Packers B\t\nCockshutt _  \t\nCons Gas ; __.\nDist Seagram  \t\nDom. Foundries  _\t\nDom Magnesium \t\nDom. Steel Ord \t\nDom Stores \t\nDom. Tar & Chemical\t\nDom.' Textiles  _\nEddy Paper \t\nFanny Farmer\t\nFleet Air _\t\nFord A \t\nGatineau  _.\t\nGoodyear Pfd\n30%\n39\n36%\n7%\n30%\n30\n29%\n13%\n20%\n42\n12\n8%\n.   54%\n18\n.97\n103\nm\n_    _   47\nGypsum  Lime   -  24%\nHoward Smith    35%\nImperial  Oil  _ _ 54%\nImp. Tobacco  11%\nInt.   Pete \u201e  47%\nLaura Secord     18%\nLoblaw A  17\nLoblaw B   17\nMassey Harris   _      6%\nMcColl  Frontenae  62%\nMont.  Loco   _  15%\nMoore Corp  54\nNat. Steel Car    27%\n\u2022 TELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV \u2014 Channel 4\n):00 Good Morning\n):30 Search For Tomorrow *\n1:45 Guiding Light \u2022\n1:00 Valiant Lady\n):15 Love of Life\n1:30 As The World Turns \u2022\n1:00 Our Miss^ Brooks *\n1:30 Houseparty \u00bb\nJ:00 Big Payoff \u2022     ,\n!:30 Bob Crosby Show *\n1:00 Brighter Day .\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edge of Night \u2022\n!:00 Variety Time\n!: 15. What's Cookin'\n1:00 Garry Moore \u2022\n1:30 Godfrey Time *\n1:45 Variety Time\n1:00 Win a Dinner\n1:30 Strike It Rich \u2022\n5:00 Klixy the Klown\n3:00 Regional News and Weather\n1:15 Doug Edwards News *\ni:30 Giant Step \u2022\n.:00 20th Century Fox Hour *\n):00 Arthur Godfrey Time *\n):00 The Millionaire *\n):30 I've Got a Secret .\n1:00 Studio One\n1:00 The Movie Man\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n8:40 Test Pattern\n8:45 Color Test Pattern\n8:55 Bible Reading\n9:00 Tic Tac Dough \u2022\n9:30 It Could Be You \u2022\n10:00 Home \u2022\n10:35 Local News\n10:40 Home *\n11:00 Price Is Right \u2022\n11:30 Tenn. Ernie Ford *\n12:00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\n1:45 Modern Romances *\n2:00 It's a Great Life \u2022\n2:30 Truth or Consequences *\n3:00 \"Stranger on the Prowl\"\n4:30 Mr. Engineer and\nLittle Rascals\n5:45 Life With Elizabeth\n6:15 Molly\n6:45 Weatherwise\n. The Front Page (C.\n6:55 Newspaper of The Air (C)\n7:00 Claudetie Colbert\n7:30 Eddie Fisher.\n7:45 NBC News *\n8:00 Adventures of\nHiram Holiday *\n8:30 Father Knows Best *\n9:00 I Led Three Lives\n9:30 Highway Patrol\n10:00 This Is Your Life \u2022\n10:30 News Desk\n10:35 Edward G. Robinsqn\n11:05 Gangbusters\n\u25a0KREM TV - 'Channel 2\n11:45 Test Pattern\n12:00 Featurama\n4:30 Popeye\n4:50 Watch the<.Birdie\n5:00 Mickej Mouse Club\n6:00 Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00 Buffalo Bill! Jr.\n6:30 Newsroom    .\n6:40 Weather Sketch\n6:45 John Daly \u2022\n7:00 Wed. Night Fights \u2022\n7:50 Hank Weaver's Corner '\n8:00 Disneyland \u2022\n9:00 Headline\n9:30 Ozzle and Harriet \u00ab\n10:00 Ford Theatre \u2022\n10:30 \"Donovan's Brain\"\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\t\nBralorne     . ,\nCanusa'  \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nFarwest Turtgsten  _\nGiant Mascot _\u201e.\u201e......\nGranduc .._.\u201e\t\nGrandview \t\nHamil Sil   \t\nHighland Bell\t\nJackson Mines .. .,\t\nKootenay Base Metals ....\nNational Ex \t\nPend Oreille\t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Border ..... \t\nQua'tsino        \t\nSheep Creek    ;....'..\u201e\nSil back Premier\t\nSilver Ridge      ,\t\nSilver Standard  ..........\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor\t\nTrojan   . \t\nUnited Estella\t\nUtica  ..     \t\nWestern Exploration \t\nOILS\nAltex :_\nA P Consolidated \t\n.30\n3.85\n.09\n.45\n.16\n.18\n4.05\n> .13\n.03\n.86\n.11\n.02%\n\u202243- .\n2.88\n1.40   \u25a0\n.07%\n.58\n.95  ,\n.15  _\n.08\n.47\n.23\n.16\n.29\n.16\n.02%\n.45\n.40\nPage  Hershey  \t\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp.\t\nRuss\". Industries\t\nShawinigan     ,..\nSicks   Brew.   \t\nStandard Paving ......\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can ...\nWestern Grocers A\nWinnipeg Gas \t\n110\n41%\n58%\n12\n.   84%\n22%\n25%\n65\n65\n19%\n. 13%\nCharter  \t\nDel Rio  \t\nHome   .._...... _..\nNew Gas Ex __._\nPacific Pete ,..._\t\nOkalta Com ........ ._.,.\nPeace River Gas .._\u201e....._\u201e\u201e\nRoyalite _.._._.\nRoyal Can   _..._._..._\nSparmac   \u201e. _.\u201e..\u201e.._\nUnited\nVanalta .'.  J _._\u201e..\nVantor \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers _.\nAlberta Distillers Vt .\t\nB C Forests _...\nB C Power _\t\nB C Telephone \t\nCrown Zellar (Can) \t\nInland Nat Gas  \u201e.\u201e\nInland Nat Gas pfd _..\nLucky Lager        ......:\t\nMacM & Bloedel B _\t\nMid Western .__\nPowell River\t\nTrans Mtn ..._...,\nWestminster Paper\t\nWestern  Plywood   _\nUNLISTED\nAuwon    \t\nBluebird    \u201e\t\nMidwest Copper  _...\nWestern Mines\t\nWoodbury _\t\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal ....;.....\u201e\nCan. Bank of Com. \t\nImperial Bank of Canada\nRoyal Bank of Canada ..\nFUND8\nCan. Inv. Fund\t\nGrouped Income .._\t\nInvestors Mutual _\t\n2.83\n5.00\n11.25\n1.65\n17.00\n2.65\n9.50\n.17.25\n.07% \u2022\n.19\n2.20\n.32\n1.38\n1.55\n1.50\n12.75\n43.50\n45.00\n'   4.25\n7.50\n18.50\n4.00\n32.50\n3.10\n41.00\nUO.OO\n25.50\n14.75\n.11\n.01%\n.44\n.50\n.05\"\n53.50\n55.00\n55.00\n71.50\n9.70\n4.14\n10.93\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY <$, 1957\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014March of Truth\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Curling Results\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:50\u2014Rise 'n Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:-5\u2014Entertainment World\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\"\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014The Word of the Lord '\n11:00\u2014News    .\n11:05\u2014Story Parade\n11:15\u2014Women's World\n11:30\u2014Morning Melodies\n1.2:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:10\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30-iFarm Broadcast\n12:5,5\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:30\u2014Fiona Brown Show\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Legends of Pera\n5:00\u2014Musicale\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Closing Markets\n5:25\u2014Curling Results\n5:35-^Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Dinner Musie   .\n6:30\u2014Parliamentary Roundup\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Emerson Presents\n10:30\u2014Brier Curling\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC 8TANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1957\n00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast       , 12:55\u2014Five to One\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n:30\u2014News\n:3'5\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n;55\u2014Musical March Past\n.OO\u2014News and Weather\n:10\u2014Sports News\n:15\u2014Morning Muslo\n45\u2014Laura Limited\n:00\u2014News     .\n: 15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n:30\u2014Morning Concert\n00\u2014Morning Visit'\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n:45\u2014Old-New\nOOr-Radio Theatre\n:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:0O\u2014The Listening Glass\n:15\u2014News '\n:25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast .\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert .\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Musicale\n2:45\u2014Opening of B.C. Legislahirt\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014The JvIcLarnin Story\n4:45\u2014Roundabout\n5:00\u2014News'\n5:15\u2014By-Line   .\n5:20\u2014Sports\n5:30\u2014Jazz Workshop\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Designed for Yon\n7:00\u2014National Newa\n7:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n8:00\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n8:30\u2014Citizens Forum.  ..\n9:15\u2014Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Ask Teacher\n10:30\u2014Eventide\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Name a\ncandidate\n3. Foreboding\n4. Marry\n5. Slumber\nt. Bridge tare\n7. Heathen\nimage\n8. Revocation\n11. Light source\n13. Whirlpool\n15. Enemy\n17. Merriment\n20. Disease\nof sheer\n21. Swiss\nriver\n22. Capital\n(Hun-\ngary)\n24. Flap\n25. Division\nof\nhospital\n26. Puts\nforth\neffort\n27. Rude\nshelter\n28. Slip away,\nas time\n29. Snares\n31. Beaten\n________   IJI-__I_\nBHIS.HE!   __H[_H__\naeii-MH idMmuiE.\n[.(___    D-iHiausK\nan  HHHEIB\nsihw-I-I-ifj nan\nHL.-IHB   HHBE1B\nt-icira __ur-.ii_j__iii3\nl-'W-HEl  tin1\ntiHEiiaiuH    wm\nHlSHIll .   UDILIUE\namw.ui r_iC4ti!.(.\nisraau ciijbh\nYesterday's Answer\n34. Bucket\n39. Ireland\n36. Observed\n38. Wild sheep\n(Ind.)\n(Programs subject to change by'stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Winter\nweather\nreport\n8. Mix\n9. Dwelling\n10. Mineral\ndeposit\n11. Crippled\n12. Run away\nand marry\n14. Related\n13. Knocked\ndown\n16. Male adults\n17. A dandy\n18. Public\nnotice\n19. Capital\n(Czech.)\n21. Skillfully\n23. Metal can\n24. Greek letter\n25. Gardener's\nplague\n27. Make Arm '\n30. Hewing tool\n31. Young bear\n32. Malt\nbeverage\n33. Say again\n36. Petty\nquarrel\n37. A newer\n38. Percolates\n'39. Weary\n40. Imprisoned\nNazi\n41. Snow-\nvehicle\n40. Poker stake\nDOWN\n1. Millennial\nchurch\nmember\nDAILY CRVPTOQUOXE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is usee)\nfor the, three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, kpos*\ntrophes, the length and formation of. the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOUO     QKB     OVO,     HKKHS     QKB\nHKKHS,    S.TFR    QKB     STFR.    QKKH\nQKB    QKKH \u2014 OCKRVL.\nYesterday's Cryptequotet NOW THAT THE OLD LION ISj\nDEAD, EVERY ASS THINKS HE MAY KICK AT HIM \u2014'\nSAMUEL PARR. .\nDistributed by Kin. Features Syndicate\n%\ni\n2\n3\nV\n'ft\nj-\nb\n7\nT\n1\ni\n.\nI\n10\n%\nII\n\u2022\n^(\nli\n\\*\n,.\n%\nIS\nIt.\n%\n17\n^\n1\n\u00bb\n19\n70\n%\n21\nIX\n^\n%\n*.\n%\n24\ni\n%\n15\nib\nl\n27\n30\n-.\nST\n^<\n%\n31\n|\n31\n_T\n34\nis\n*\n3*>\nJ7\n38\n|\n59\n%\n40\ni\n'%\n_1\n%\nVi'\nf,\n 3i<.\nSMALL INVESTMENT   .\nThat*s the Want Ad Story\nRETURNS\nPHONE 1844\nbirthV\nTo IHr. and Mrs.\n\"tpo, at Kootenay\n:bsjital, Feb. 4th,\nAl^MMS\nOly Altpqas, Pgligo, 8_ JVPQtenay\nLake General Hosp\nHELP WANTPP\nThe Next 3 Years\nAnd Your Future\nAs a proud member of the Canadian' Army you can prepare yourself for a finer future. The Army\noffers ypu\n* Healthy outdoor life\n* Travel and adventure\n* Useful trades and skills\n* Opportunities to learn how to\nsupervise men\n* Good pay and opportunities for\npromotion\n* 30 days paid holidays\nAfter the first three years you\nmay return to civilian life better\nequipped for the future or better\nstill, make an \/Vrmy career 1. the\nservice of your country.\nTo be eligible you must be 17 to\n40 years qf age, an. able to meet\nArmy requirements.\nMail the coupon below, telephone\nor   visit   your   local   recruiting\nstation.\nArmy Recruiting Station,\nThe Armouries,\nNelson, B.C.\nWithout cost qr obligation, please\nsend me further details qn Career\nopportunities in the Army.\nName     \u2022 \u25a0\t\nAddress\t\nCity\/Town  t -\t\nProv ,\t\nTelephone ,\u201e..,..,..., \u201e \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.\t\nLEARN BLUEPRINT READING\nby home-study. Your ability, to\nread blueprints brings proir|p-\ntion to tetter paid jobs.' Diploma\n\u00bbw.-.-<..\"Free folder. Primary\nSchool of Drafting. Blueprint\nReading Dept. C3, Bq$ 123, Station Q. Toronto.\nDraftsmen are in &J|Sf\ndemand. Train by home study\nIn spare tinpe for these well-paid\njobs. Dipjoma av\u00bbrded. Free\nfolder. Prirjiary School of Drafting, Dept. G, Box 12J, Statiqn\n\"Q\", Toronto.\nCarriers foe nelson news\nwanted immediately for Mor7\nrlson and Summer Sub, Kipiber.\nley. Phone G. A. Bate, agent\nLudlow 2-B679.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. Just show North Arperi-\nean Fashiqp Frocks to friente.\n$To canvassing, investment or\nexperience necessary. North\nAmerican Fashion Frocks, Ltd.,\n3425 Industrial Blvdi, Dept. 3_-\n3438, Montreal, P.<?.\nSEE FOR YOURSELF\u2014WOMEN\n\u00a7re earning $2. or more an hour\nrepresenting Avon\u2014plus valuable prizes if you start pow.\nApply Bojf 10826, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED -. HOUSEKEEPER TO\ncare for 6-year-old boy, while\nmother wqrks. Phone 560-L, af.\nter 6 p.m. '\nWANTED WOMAN TO HELP\nwith housework, 4 hours per\nweek. Phone 625-R.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGENERAL MECHANIC, 49, MAR_\nried, would like work in the\nNelson area.   Major   overhaul,\n. motor tuneups,   welding,   own\ntools.   Available   immediately.\nVictor  G.   Stanley,   Gen.   Del.,\nRevelstoke, B.C.\nGIRL WILL BABY SIT, DAY OR\nnight. Fairview preferred. Phone\n1441-X.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSQN & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\n& S. ELMES, ROSSW.NR, B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLAND SURVEYOR\nBox fy Fruitvale, and\n373 Baker' St, Nelson, B.C.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson,   Phone 1238\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETS LIMITED\nMachine  Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593      324 Vernon St,\nJfoU-ott lathi NetttB\nCirculation Dept Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per week\nin advapce 35c\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson:\nOne' month    ...'. .'.     $ 1.25\nThree mopths     $ 8.50\nSix months      $ 6.50\nOne year        $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month      _....   $ 1.76\nThree months    $ 5.00\nSix months  ,.   $ 9.50\nOne year      $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor Delivery by carrier in Cranbrook phone Mrs. Wm. St-vely';\nIn Kimberley Mr. G. A. Bate;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spoone..\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St., Nelson, B.C.\nYoi)f  Friendly\nCHEVROLET, OLDSMOBILE,\nCADILLAC DEALER\nGuaranteed\nUsed Cars\n1957 Chevrolet Bel Air\n\u25a0 Sedan\n1957 Chevrolet Sedqn\nDelivery\n1957 Chevrolet Vz Ton\nPick Up\n1957 Chevrolet Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\n1956 Ford Fairlane\n1955 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1954 Ford Sunliner\nConvertible\n1954 Mercury Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1954 Buick Super   .\nHoliday Coupe\n1953 Chevrolet Coach\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1953 Mercury Sedan\n\"(Sew Motor\"\n195? Pontiac Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Coupe\n1952 Meteor Sedan\n1951 Ford Sedan\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1950'Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\nYour Choice of A-1\n' USED TRUCKS\n1956 Chevrolet Vz Ton\n1956 Ford Vz Ton\n1952 Ford Vz Ton\n1952 Studebaker  Vz Ton\n1951 Studebaker  Vz  Ton\n1951  G.M.C. Vz Ton\n1950 Chevrolet Vz Ton  '\n1950 Ford Vz Ton\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING\nService \u2014 Used parts, batteries,\ntires for 47-49-50-51 Austin,\nHillman, Prefect, Morris\" cars.\nPhone 136S-L-2, or write Box\n382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nWILL SELL OR TRADE \u2014 1954\nNash Metropolitan for a 2 or 3\nton farm truck, preferably long\nw.b., with or without hoist. Box\n5673, Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE - 1955 FORD fLAT-\nform truck, excellent condition.\nContact 525 Vernon St., or phone\n1690.\nFOR SALE-1955 BUICK SEDAN,\nlow milage, new condition. \u2014\nPhone 559-X-l, 6-7 p.m.      \" '\n1949 AUSTIN SEDAN - $250.00.\nGood buy. Phone 1304-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPACKAGE\nINSURANCE\nWe hove both Dwelling and\nMercantile Package Policies,\nInquire now and save up to\n, 20% on your insurance\npremium*.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\n201 HOUSTON STREET\n2-bedroom bungalow. Part\nbasement, central furnace,\nelectric hot water tank, 32 gal:\nlon,Groupdl00'x$5000\nMay be hapdled for $2Q00.\n408 HOUSTON STREET\n3-bedroom older house. Good\ngardei. and, lawn. Full basement, concrete; coal furnace.\nBath and one bedroom down-\nfe  $6000\nTerms: $1500 Down,\n$70 Per Month.\n. BEAUTIFUL\nFAMILY RESIDENCE ,\nGrounds landscape;}. View of\ncity and lake.' Gracious living\n: room with fireplace; cosy den,\nalso with fireplace; bathroom\napd 2 ^mple hedroorps down,\nstairs and large bedroom upstairs. \u2014 Full basement, oil\nfired, air heating. Garage.\n$16,500\nTerms may he arranged.\nFAIRVIEW\nComfortable cottage, all conveniences. Full basement. 2\nbedrooms, hot water heating.\nSmall garden and lawn. Ideal\nfor small family or retired\nF\u00b0X,ce  $7000\nList With' Us Today.\nWe Mqy Get You Cash.\nSPECIAL\nFEP. BARGAINS\nonly Spartan Combination\nRadio-Phonograph-TV\nPrevious owner kept it in\nperfect condition. \u2014 17 inch\nscreen. Guaranteed 3 months\nwarranty. Beautiful   \u00a7349\ncabinet ,. ^\nAlso': 1 orily Spartan TV 21\"\nConsole\n3 months $179\nwarranty  \"'\u25a0\u25a0'.\nqnd: 1 only Spartan TV 17\"\nc. w.\n&i CO. LTD.\nREAi  ESTATE  AND\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nPhone 269 Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - CHOICE BU1LD-\ning lots in Creston commercial\nzone. Frank Romajio, P.O. Box\n63, Creston, B.C.\t\n100-ACRE'FARM FOR SALE \u2014\npartially cleared, water, good\ntimber and small sawmill. Apply Box 5667, Nelson Daily News\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\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.\n350 FOLDING AUDITORIUM OR\ntheatre chairs. Wood construction. Plywood seats and backs.\nSingles, doubles, and triples.\nEach chair $2.95. Columbia Trading,. 902 Front St. Phone 1511.\nFOR SALE ONE YARD GRAVEL,\nBox and hoist A-1. shape, $500,00.\nAlso 1 logging.trailer, new rubber, $2000. ^Apply-Corner Service, Yahk, B.C.\n1 USED FRIGIDAIRE, 1 USED\nBeatty Vacuum, good working\ncondition. Phone 1726-R.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n, ' (Continued)\nROOM   AND   BOARD   FOR\nyoung gentleman. Phone 1179-X.\nConsole.\n3 months\nwarranty.\n$139\nMcLENNAN,\nMcFEELY\n& PRIOR LTD.\nPhone 1300'    476 Baker St.\n1 650-EGG INCUBATOR, ELEC<\ntrie, perfect condition. 1 F6 Vega\ntable model separator, good. J,\nHardwicke Poultry Farm, Fauquier, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 USED WESTING-\nhouse washing machine, good\ncondition, $50. Phone 1554-X.\nHEALTH FOOD-CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies St.\nRENTALS\n2 CLEAN, HOUSEKEEPING RMS\nin private home. Heat and hot\nwater. To suit quiet, respectable\nbusiness person. Phone 335-X.\nFOR RENT - NORTH SHORE -\n3-room cottage, winterized, 2Vs\nmiles east of Nelson Ferry. Ph.\n156, Nelson.\nTWO - ROOM FURNISHED\napartment, also 3-room semi\nfurnished apartment. Close in.\nReasonable. Phone 1718-R. .\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPINU\nroom furnished. Gas stove, frig.,\nautomatic heat Weekly or\nmonthly rates. 171 Baker.\n3 ROOM APTS, BLOCK FROM\nBaker, reasonable. Call 306 Victoria St. \t\nFURNISHED, HEATED HOUSE\nkeeping roorp, close in. Phone\n839-R.\n3 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE -\nheated, self contained, garage,\ncentral. Phone 653-R.\nFOR RENT \u2014 LARGE STORE,\nand basement on Baker St. All\nor half. Phone 1499-L evenings.\n4 ROOM HOUSE - FURNISHED,\nand basement, available Web. 9.\nPhone 1263-Y, 612 Innes St\nFOR RENT \u2014 HEATED LIGHT\nhousekeeping room. Ph. 405-L.\nAPARTMENT\n316.\nFOR   RENT\u2014PH\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE\u2014WILLOW\nPoint. Phone 782-X-l.\n4 ROOM SUITE FOR RENT. 608\nFront St. '\n2 ROOM  FURNISHED  APART\nment. Phone 890-Y.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nCASTLEGAR - * _ BEDROOM\nhouse, $35.00. Phone Nelson 296.\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.\nPhone 1571-X.\nROOM FOR PENT - 620 VIC\n.prig Street, phone 450-Y..\n2-RM. STE.,\n217-R.\nAND 4-RM STE. PH.\nROOM AND BOARD\nMACHINERY\n25 SAWS TO BE\nDRAWN FOR\nFEBRUARY 15th\nSign an Entry Blank before\nFebruary 10th at\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\n_CO. LTD.\n614 Railway St        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. \u00ab, 1957--9\nPERSONAL\nRoller Chain\nSprockets\nFlexible Couplings\n. Silent Chain\nMalleqble Chain\nPintle Chain\nMill Chain\nDetachable Chain\nLong Link Chain\nAll your Chain Problems\nSolved at\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS \u2014\nFridays. Box 493,! phone 366-R\nor 483-R.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St Phone 593\nNelson, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE \u2014 200 NEW HAMP-\nshjre Leghorn- hens, 2 yrs. old,\n$1.25 each.' 75 Plymouth Rock\nhens, 1 yr. old, $1.50 each. Average weight 4V. lbs. _>pply J. W.\nE, Alexander, Lardeau, B.C.\nCOW FOR \"SALE, FRESHENED\n4 days, 3rd calf. Apply Fred K.\nShukin, Slocan Park, B.C.\nFOR SALE - AYRSHIRE COW,\nfresh, third calf. E. H. Cosnett,\nSalmo.\nFOR SALE \u2014 5 CALVES, 2 WKS.\nold. Apply L. Kosma, Harrop.'\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED \u2014 1 NEW OR USED\nframe, with snow blade or fit\n1949 Ford tractor. Reply Box\n182, Castlegar, or phone Castlegar 7291.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\n. rags, without  buttons, 10c  lb.\ndelivered to. The Dally News.\nWANTED:\u2014MEN'S SKI BOOTS,\naround size 10, or ski outfit. Ph,\n1421-Y.\nOR   3   BEDROOM   HOUSE\nwanted. Phone 1331-L.\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-Stock market prices were slashed in the\nsharpest decline since last Oct. 1.\nPivotal issues wfte down from\none to four points.\nCanadian stocks on the downside included Aluminium Ltd.\ndown 2%, International Nickel off\n1%, and Mclntyre % lower,.  \u25a0\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket suffered its worst setback\nsince last November during mod.\nerate trading.\nThe industrial index dropped\nmore than iVt points and western\noils lost nearly four points on their\nindex. Base metals were off almost 3% index points while golds\nlost more than a point.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Decline of\na point and more were common\nas the Montreal and Canadian\nstock exchanges travelled lower\nthroughout moderately active in\ndustrial trading. Extreme losses\nran to 3 points.\nImperial dropped 1% to HVt in\nrefining, oils while.Trans Mountain\nat 122 was a two point loser in\npipe lines. Base metals were weak\nas Aluminium fell three points to\n114V. and International Nickel 2Vfc\nto -9V_. ,\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian P.ejs\nOffice Specialty Mfg. Co. Ltd.,\n20 cents April 1, record March 15.\nWeston, George, Ltd., class A\n7V4 cents, class B TVs cents, April\n1, record M. rch 10.   ,\nThe Premier Trust Company, $1\nApril 1, record- M^rch 15.\nCanada Safeway Ltd. 4.40 per\ncent pfd. $1.10, April 1, record\nMqrch 1.\nAunor Gold Mines Limited, four\ncents, March 1, record Feb.' 12.\nCanada Foundries and Forgings\nLimited, class A 37 V. cents, March\n15, record Feb.. 28.'\nInternational Nickel Company of\nCanada Limited, 65 cents U.S.\nMarch 20, iecord Feb. 18.\nNormetal Mining Corp., Ltd. 18\ncents, March 29, record March 1.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG (C_P.  - Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 88%.\nBarley, No. 1 fee.), jKty.   .\n-\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0HBf.'niFm1 H ...'_ i-__..._''  '-\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILV\nNew Postage\nStamps Ready\nBy March 7\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Four new postage stamps, illustrating the outdoor sports of skiing, swimming,\nfishing and hunting, are to be issued by the post office department March 7, it was announced.\nAll four are to be printed horizontally and in blocks of the four\ntogether so a person buying four\nfive-cent stamps will get each design represented in his purchase.\nThey are to be blue and plenty\nof white space in their makeup\nenables the simple, straightforward theme of each to stand forth\nclearly.\nOne shows a skier on a downhill slope, another a swimmer doing the crawl stroke, another two\nfishermen in a canoe and the\nfourth a hunter and his dog.\nThe department's instructions to\npostmasters say the stamps, to be\nknown as the Outdoor Recreation\nSeries, are to a short - term issue illustrating Canada's four ma-\njor outdoor recreational actvities.\n\"When original supplies ordered\nare exhausted,\" it says, \"no further supplies will be distributed.\"\nCalgary Livestocks\nCALGARY (CP)-.Bulk of light\nofferings good butcher steers and\nheifers; balance mostly cows.\nCattle market slow, Good and\nchoice light b .(tcher steers in limited demand, prices 25-5. lower.\nGood and. choice steers over 1100\npoi)nds selling mostly In 16-16.75\nbracket. Good and choice butcher\nheifers 50 or more lower, common\nand medium grades fully 50 lower.\nAll classes cows under pressure\nand lower in spots, Bulls about\nsteady.\nChoice steers 17-17,75, good 16-\n17, medium 13.50-15.50, common\n12-18. Choice heifers 18-15.80, good\n13-14.50, medium 11.50-12.50, common 10-11. Good cows 9-9.73, medium 8.28-8.75, common 7.20-8, canners and cutters 5.50-7. Good bulls\n10.50-11;S0, common to medium 8-\n10.\nLight receipts of stacker and\nfeeder steer? steady. Good feeder\nsteers 15.50 - 16.50. Good stock\nsteers 15-16.50; common to medium\n12-14.50, good stock steer calves\n15.50-17.\nVeal and butcherweight heifer\ncalves study. Good butcherweight\nheifer calves 16 . 17.50, good to\nchoiee veal 17-19, common to medium 12-15.50.\nFrankly!\nTHE USED CAR\nBUSINESS IS\n_     TOUGH\nThe BUYER is in the DRIVER'S seat ... To attract prospective dustomers to the excellent cars we must move, we\nare offering this genuine saving . . .\n(See Coupon Below)\nReal Estate and Insurance\n135 or Evenings 1065-X\n(Continued In Next Column)\nCREDIT COUPON\nWORTH $50 ON THE PURCHASE PRICE of any\ncar on our lot. No strings ... no gimmicks ... a\ngenuine effort to help ourselves by helping our\ncustomers. You can't lose a thing by investigating\nour. sincerity in this business offer.\nr\nLORNE CRAIG, Mgr. - Both Lots\nLeonard Hargreaves, Salesman\nBay Ave., Trqjl\nPhone 72\nOpposite Givi. TheQt.e\nNelson \u2014 Phone 1135\nSB\nHBBHBH-U\nSellin\nJour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u2014_-___-_-_\u2014      i     i __________________\n. _-__-_-_____--\u2014      i _______\u2014>\n1  ' \u25a0 I\u2014   ' -   \u25a0 !.-. \u25a0  \u25a0   I  .   -.1\nI I   '..' \u25a0 ' \"..-\u25a0\u25a0   I\n.     ' \u2014 .' '...'..   '.. \"     ...      II  .'.   .. \u25a0'\n1 \u25a0 . '',.'. \u25a0.'\"     ' ..I'\".'\n'        ______-__-___-\u2014 ________________________ I  is\nFIRST LINI\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH UNI\nHCHTH UNI\nt\nPut one word in each space.\n(fcach group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1 Insertion \u25a0\n2 Consecutivo  Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutivo Insertions .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n% .20\n.38\n.48\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two line*\n\u2022 Add lie for lox Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rotes if payment h.\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20* a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\n.\u25a0\"'.        ?\"\"'-.\"    -'  \"    ;- No ot Days Ad Is To Run ________\n' TOUR  *.AMI \u25a0\u2022  --_-- \u25a0     \u201ev it      \"\n\"\u25a0_\u25a0\u2022\u2022     \u2022\u2022, .; \u2022    \u2022      ._..,'.\" \" -\" : . -.BilL-Me __-__..;_- -_\u2014\n-PORKS.\/-    'J.,;^   ___,  Payment Enclosed, __________\nNelson Daily News\n(..tiwified Advertising Department,\nC.\nMt\\\ne3f_on,\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, KB. 6,1957\n\"OOOOOh, those aching muscles\"\nIs the Common Cry These: Days >\nBUT THERE IS NO NEED TO STAY THAT WAY\nInstead Use\n$1.49\n1\nA Modern Therapy For Treatment of\nMuscular Aches and. Pains.   ..-\nC-_~--*-\\\ni_J-t___tC~JW1\nMANN\nCouncil of Women Present Wide\nRange of Resolutions To P.M.\nCCC Offers Broad Plan\nFor Deferred Tax Cuts\nOTTA..A (CP) \u2014The Canadian\nChamber of'Commerce Tuesday\nasked the government to announce\nin the forthcoming budget a broad\nplan of deferred tax reductions\n\"appropriate to\" the developing\nsurplus,\"':\u2014;- 7\nThe chamber, executive coun-\n_U, in a brief .to the;ministers of\nfinance and national revenue, said\nit would appear-there is at least\nfrom $300,000,000 to $400,000,000 of\nannual .revenue that could be applied to-tax-puts.\n\u2022 The .brief added, however, that\n\"because, of the' inflationary; en-,\n-virohmeni\" the full application of\n\"sueh tix reductions should be deferred to a time when inflationary\npressures-have-abated and when\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n:;:\u25a0\u25a0.A.CO.    '' \u2022'\".\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\n.RE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\nSIS Front St. Phone 63\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll Beauty Culture\n'  and Cold Waves,\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nPhone 1922  Ste. 311\nftelen McCallum, Prop.\n: For All Your Baking Needs Try\n;-,:-. ELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\n} The flavor-ii right On Sale at\nI   ' Your Grocers, or Phone 238.\nELLISON MILLING\nf       & ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nsuch reductions would be useful\nand constructive from every point\nof view.\"\nIt was suggested that any such\nprogram of deferred deductions\nshould include these changes:\n1. Reductions in the lower and\nmiddle rates of tax on personal\nincome.\n2. Reductions '\u25a0 in the general\nrate of tax on corporate income\nand an increase in 'the present\n$20,000 limit, to which the lower\nrate on corporate income now applies.     '\n3.. Review of the special excise\ntax_ structure with a view to removing anomalies and limiting\nsuch taxatioii 6nly to commodities\nwhich are. regarded as appropriate for the special taxation oh a\npermanent basis.\nGeneral approval was given the\npresent tight money policy, but\nthe-council\"cautioned against \"over doing it,\" claiming the; policy of\nrestraint should be eased as inflationary pressures slacken.\nHOLD THE LINE\n- The, government was asked to\nplace \"more than ordinary ert-\nphasis\" on containing the present\nlevel of expenditure.\n\u2022 Apart from possible defence requirements,! the brief'; stated, the\nmost urgent demands' are to the\narea of municipal and provincial\nresponsibility. If possible the tax\ncollector.should make, some room\nfor \".unavoidable' increases in\nmunicipal' and 'provincial \u2022' taxation,\" otherwise.\"the over-all, tax\nload is more likely to increase\nthan decline.\nThe brief also reiterated a number, of recommendations, presented by letter last month to the\nfinance and revenue ministers, regarding the income tax, the excise' tax and the Dominion succession duty tax.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Resolutions\ndealing with subjects ranging\nfrom recommended changes In the\nsuccession duties act to prohibition of air-guns and air pistols,\nwere presented to Prime Minister\nSt, Laurent Tuesday by the National Council of Women;     ;\nMrs. Rex Eaton of Dollar ton,\nB.C., president of .the more than\n600,000-rhember council, led a six-\nmember delegation for the group's,\nannual meeting with the prime\nminister;1'\n.The resolutions, mainly formulated at the NCW annual meeting\nlast year, also called for revision\nof the Dominion Succession Duty\nAct to enable an adopted child to\nqualify as a legal heir for- all pur-\nRent-Raising Issue Puts British\nParliament in Tricky Position\nBy RANALD MacLURKIN\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The government is at war over house rents\nwith thousands' of the middle\nclass voters who helped to put it\ninto power.    .    .,.    V  .  >\nThe fierceness of the revolt,'\nover a new act which will allow\nmany landlords to raise rents, is\ndismaying some. Conservative\nmembers of Parliament. They\nfear it could -bring about defeat\nfor the government at the next\ngeneral election.\nRecently the House of Commons\nwas invaded by 100 angry middle-\nPrincess Grace\nReturns to\nPublic Life\nMONTE CARLO (AP) \u2014 Grace\nKelly Tuesday made her first official, appearance since the birth of\nher daughter, Princess Caroline.\nThe former Hollywood movie\nstar joined her husband, Prince\nRainier of Monaco, in receiving a\ndelegation of Dutch bakers in the\nMonacan palace's \"court of honor\".\nThe bakers brought the royal\ncouple a special raisin bread from\ntheir town of Uithuizen. .\nclass '.householders\u2014.representing\nmany others\u2014protesting - to their\nmembers' of Parliament,\nAgainst, this, the government is\nbeing, supported by property owners who ,say that they are being\ngiven- a fair deal. for the 'first\ntime in many years.\nThe new rent bill aims at giving landlords of.800,000 houses.and\napartments freedom to oust tenants and raise' rents as high, as\nthey wish.\nRents of most of the. 800,000\nproperties affected by the new bill\nhave .been \"frozen\" at pre-war\nlevels since the beginning of the\nwar.-' .,\nFAMILIES CRAMPED\n. An official argument is - that\ncreation of a \"free market\" in\nproperty letting will tend to:relax rather than aggravate the\nhousing shortage. Many people\nare living in apartments too big\nfor their needs while large families are cramped in one or two\nrooms. -.  , .\nThese arguments have failed to\nimpress thousands of\" persons\nalarmed by forecasts that many\nrents will be doubled and even\ntrebled.\nThe Opposition Labor party is\nchampioning them with a nationwide campaign against the act,\nwhich is being studied by the\nHouse of Commons.\nposes, with his status the same to\nall relatives of the adopting parents as that Of the natural child,\nThe resolution urged that in\nsuch cases the adopted child no\nlonger be assessed succession duties at the rates applicable to\nstrangers. '\"      ,   .\nOPPOSE AIR-GUNS\nDeclaring opposition to air-guns\nand air pistols as \"dangerous weapons\" which serve \"no useful\npurpose whatsoever,\" the council\nurged criminal code amendments\nto prohibit their import, manufacture or sale.\nA similar resolution' called for\na ban on toy guns, unless they are\npainted in bright colors, such.as\nred, green or yellow.\nToy guns painted black or silver\n\"resemble genuine weapons so\nclosely they appeal to the destructive instincts of children,\" it said.\nMembers of the delegation meeting Mr. St.-Laurent included Mrs.\nAlan Turner Bone, Montreal, immediate past president; Mrs. Mil-'\nton F: Gregg and Mrs. G. D. Fin-\nlayson, vice-president,,Mrs. F. R.\nDUminy, acting- honorary corresponding secretary, all of Ottawa,\nand- Mrs! H. H. Steen, Vancouver,\nresolutions committee. chairman.\nPlan Rocket\nLaunchers\nOn Formosa\nHONG KONG (Reuters) \u2014 The\nUnited States is planning to build\nrocket launchers on Formosa,\nusually well-informed American\nsources said here.\nThe sources said the launchers\nwill be operated by a special task\nforce of' the U.S. 13th' Air Force.\nThey sair} they will not be put\nunder Nationalist Chinese control.\nIn Taipei, Formosa, American\nana Chinese Nationalist military\nspokesmen would not comment.\nLife-Saving Award Goes\nTo B.C. Brownie, Age 9\n\\ TORONTO (CP) - The Girl\nGuides Association Tuesday announced the presentation of life-\nsaving awards to a brownie and\ntwo girl guides.\nRecipient of the silver cross was\nguide Susan Houghton, 12, of Bolton, Ont. Brownie Shawn Chapin,\n9, of Victoria, B.C.,'and guide\nSandra Ragg, 13, Montreal, were\nawarded the gilt cross.\nSusan' Boughton, in August,\n1955, jumped from a boat in Georgian Bay while fully clothed to\nsave her six-year-old brother from\ndrowning.\nBrownie Shawn Chapin, fishing orte afternoon last October at\nKinver Beach, B.C., noticed a cap\nfloating in the water and bubbles\nrising to the surface. She waded\ninto the water and saved a young\nboy from drowning.\nGuide Sandra Bragg saved her\nCanadian Trade\nCommissioner\nVisits Formosa\nTAIPEI, Formosa (AP)\u2014C. M.\nForsyth - Smith, Canadian trade\ncommissioner at Hong Kong, has\narrived here to survey the possibility of stimulating trade between\nCanada and Formosa.\nHe is spending eight days on\nthis island.\nCanada recognizes Nationalist\nChina, but does not maintain a\ndiplomatic or consular representative here.\nThe interests of Canadian nationals in Formosa, of whom there\nare\" about 200-r-mostly missionaries\n\u2014are looked after by the British\nconsulate. .\nThe visiting trade commissioner\nbegan his work here with calls on\nFinance Minister Hsu Po-yuan.-\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nbrother's life when the nine-year-\nold accidentally set fire to his\nclothing with a cigaret lighter.\nRoad Builders\nHad Busiest\nYear 1956-57\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 C. W, Gil\nChrist, managing director of the\nCanadian Good Roads Association,\nTuesday predicted annual Canadian spending on roads may reach\n$1,000,000,000 by 1960.\nHe told the Ontario Good Roads\nAssociation that road builders had\ntheir busiest year in history in\nthe 1956-57 fiscal year and indications are'that the coming year\nwill be even busier.\nAs the current year draws to a\nclose, he said, indications are that\nexpenditures by all governments\n\u2014provincial, municipal and federal\u2014will come close to the Canadian Good Roads Association estimate of $722,000,000, an increase\nof 13 per cent from 1955-56.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\n\u201e    PHONE 815\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Arts Building\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\nPhone 327\n578; Baker St.\nSHIRTS\nf or\nValentine's Day\nAlmost every man. needs\nanother white shirt and our\nForsyth Whites make the\nperfect gift for Valentine's\n(or any other time).\nOther gift items:\nTies, Pajamas, Shorts,\nHandkerchiefs, Cuff\nLinks, and Tie Clips.\nEMORY'S\nLTD.     U\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nHI8TORIC CITY\nPanama City, capital of the\nCentral American republic, was\nfounded in 1518.\nIF INTEGRITY B\nJCMtTSMAHSHIPSl\nGIRADIIIO-\/\n^\"\ni\nI\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\nValentine Day\nSuggestions\nALL GIFT-WRAPPED\nArden'i Memolre Chore\nPerfume on Heart\nCushlon    $4.00\nArden's Blue Grass Mist\nand Atomizer  3.60\nJune Geranium Mist\nand Atomizer  3.50\nMy Love Heart 8haped\nSoap  1.25\nBoxed Choeolates .... .45 to 8.50\nALSO\nVALENTINE CARD8\nVALENTINE BOOKS\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy   .\nCity Drug\nPhone 34\nBox 460\nDONT\nWAIT\nr\n\u25a0\ni\ni\ni\n\u25a0\ni\nAND BE DISAPPOINTED\nfcp Seagrams\nSeagram, Golden Gin\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTENDERS WANTED\nBids will be received up to 5 p.m.\nMonday, February 11th, 1957 for a\n1944 Maple Leaf Truck, formerly used\nas a line truck, as is and where is. May\nbe seen at the City Sub Station, 606\nVictoria St.\nThe highest or any bid not necessarily acepted.\nD. L URE,\nAetirig City Clerk.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order Extra Copies of\nJJriamt latUj JKVroa\n22ND ANNUAL\nPICTORIAL\nAND *\nINDUSTRIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER\nCARRIER OR TO THE DAILY NEWS\nCIRCULATION   DEPARTMENT.\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY  IN\nBLACK PENCIL\nMame _\n\\ddress\n\u2022ity \u2014\nlame _\nVddress\n\u2022ity   .....\n-lame _\n\\ddress\n\"ity\t\n.ame ._\nVddress\n:>ty\t\n-lame  _\n\\ddress\n:.ty_.\n^ame _\n\\ddress\n'our Own Name _\n'our Own Address.\nCopy 3QC anc' QC P\u00b0sta9e\nPlus 5% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 38^ per copy covers wrapping and mailing\nby us to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain\nor the United States.\nPHONE 1844\nKVtemt Bafig Jtaa\n!_\u25a0_\u00ab_-\u25a0\u25a0_   \u2014i -\u25a0  \u2014 \u25a0 \u2014i \u2014  m  __\u25a0_._\u25a0-_\u2022 J\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_02_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430150","@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":"1957-02-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-02-06 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\/1.0430150"}