{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0423940":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-01-31","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1951-02-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0423940\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Flu Counts Toll\nIn Eastern Canada\n92 Deaths This Year Attributed\nTo Influenza; Montreal Hardest Hit\nBy The Canadian Press\nOutbreaks of influenza appeared across Canada today.\nI In Montreal, the disease reached epidemic proportions with\n[92 deaths reported since Jan. 1.\nMontrealers were hard hit by the flu, apparently a milder\nI form than that prevalent in Britain. But Health Officer Dr.\nlAdelard    Groulx   said    the\n[spread of the disease now is\n[probably at its peak.\nSimultaneously an announcement\nSchools in Kentville, Windsor and\nGlace Bay, N.S., were closed at\nvarious times. A quarantine went in\nto effect at the huge naval training\ncame that since the turn of the year base at Cornwallis. near Digby, N.S.,\n82 persons have died in Montreal! peb. 2.\nIn the West a \"large number\"\nof Influenza cases were reported\naround North Battleford and\nPrince Albert In Northern Saskatchewan.\nBefore the outbreak passed Its\npeak, in North Battleford, about\n20 per cent of the population was\naffected. In Prince Albert, many\npupils were away from classes\nand business firms were .short-\nhanded.\nNEW YORK,  Feb  13   (AP)  \u2014\nBad colds and Isolated waves of\nInfluenza are harassing scattered\nparti'(of.\"the United States but\nhealth authorities do jiot consider\nthe'outbreaks alarming. \u25a0 \u2022 ' .\nJ M-any communities reported an\nupsurge of grippe, sore throats,\npneumonia and other respiratory\ndisease, but In most eases, officials\nsaid the increase was seasonally\nnormal..\nSome. areas,| however, were hit\nunusually hard by! the raid-Winter\nailments, fqrcin^ school's,\/to close\nand keeping workers: a^jay;-from\njobs.       Ij  j \u25a0        '    ),' If !, \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nIn Tallahassee, Fla.,, an \/epidemic\nof flu and colds cut .\/scihooU.attendance in -Leon County.. by&W per\ncent, causihgan indefinite pmimown\nof all white .scbilolfe. Many teJphW'\nalso were sickJ: !l ' I J '\/;''' - \u2022\nNorthern Nevf York W Mairfe\nwere also plagued ;by jkuch diseased;\nTwo infants died'ofJinMenjaMst.\nweek in Burham.'.iMe. \" I J mPS\nAt overseas airjSjW and-|m;'|the\nport of New Yorki\\jtJj3| hfeaith inspectors kept a close cljAoi' on i'rJ-\ncoming passengers to'guaitaj against\nimportation of influenza from Brit*\nish epidemic areas;     \/.!\",'\u25a0  !V:\nThe worst influenza -outbreall\nsince 1917 was reported at 6ran!ge,\nTexas, a community of 21,0d0.|; -Its\ntwo hospitals ?Were admitting oW\nthe most serlbus cases. No death|\nhave been .Reported. \",',\nIfrom causes \"more or less directly\n[attributed to influenza.\"\nA newspaper (The Herald) sur-\nIvey showed a 20-per-cerit absenteeism in Montreal business places\n\u25a0 because of flu.\nIMANY COLDS\nHealth   departments   in   Eastern\n\u25a0 Canada, where the Winter has been\n[comparatively \"open,\" said many\n|persons were suffering from colds.\nIn Granby, 50 miles Southeast of\n\u25a0Montreal, some 2000 of a population\nlof 25,000 were reported ill with the\n\u25a0disease and the high school closed\nlas a precautionary measure. The\niGranby Hospital, following the lead\nlof Montreal hospitals banned visi-\nItors In an effort to avoid spreading\nfflu.\nA  few  cases  were  reported   in\n\u25a0Quebec City. However, Dr. Berch-\nImans Paquet, City Health Director,\nsaid   the   \"situation   Is   absolutely\n\u2022normal.\" Two city hospitals \u2014 the\n\u25a0Veterans'   and   Jeffrey   Hale   \u2014\nClosed  their   doors   to   visitors   as\nprecautionary measures.\nA mild form of Influenza, combined In some places with measles,\nchicken pox and mumps, closed\nschools In several Martlme centre\n\u2022nd forced tight restrictions on\nhoslptal visits.\nChildren under IB were barred\nfrom rinks, theatres and other public places at Sydney, N.S., where all\nschools were closed after 1500 students and 24 teachers were reported\nsick.\nSchools at Liverpool, N.S., were\nordered closed until Thursday.\nMumps and measles were also reported In the town.\nReports reaching Grand Banks,\nNfld., said crew members of vessels\non the fishing banks also were being\nhit and that some ships are operating with only half crew. Numerous\neases of flu have been reported at\nGrand Falls and Botwood.\nHowever, officials at St. John's\nBald schools are not being closed-\nI\nmtanes\nGreet Student f|iflfs\nThe bands will play and the dignitaries'will gather when\nthe curlers come to town\u2014the kid curlers, thWr is, from all\nacross Canada.\nBig things are planned in keeping with the big affair\nthe Dominion Schools Curling Association, is, Tih.e,,curlirig is\nthe big part of it, of course, but the crack'[rlhkS Sferri-oacross\nthe country are going to have memories aplenty to carry\"hijrfe\nwith them after next week's \"'\nBonspiel.\nBoth Nelson and Trail communities have a part in the entertainment\nplans. Nelson ts host city, will pro-\nldd,e the lion's share, but a grand\n[inale Will be provided when the\n10 6tlident rinks go to Trail Thurs-\nlay ager \"the three days of sport\nire oyer*--'.\/\nThe \"curlers will arrive aboard the\nWestbound passenger Sunday morn-\nfig.! There a rousing welcome will\n?e accorded. Curling, community\norganizations and city representatives will form the reception group,\nand two bands will be on hand, the\nKootenay Kilties and the High\nSchool's Band, to parade the rinks\n:hrough the business section lo the\nflume Hotel.\nAssociation will hold its annual session Sunday night in the Civic\nCentre.\nSearchers Find\nLost Lumberman\n>f\nBLAIRMORE,iAlta,, Feb; 13 (CP)\n\u2014A foothills lumber 'n\\an who was\nlost almost two days In the woods\nafter a blizzard has been found\nby a search party and was brought\nto hospital here last night with both\nfe^t and one hand , frozen.\nHe is James Lewthwaite, 26, who\nFrom then on it will be a round i became separated from a party of\nVol. 49\nU\nIgferM\n\u2022ten\n11BRAHY;   1   '\nWm\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay \u2014 Clear, becoming\ncloudy Wednesday evening. Continuing cold. Winds light. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook zero and 30.\nCrescent Valley 5 and 35.\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 14, 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 249\n\"Roses Are Red, violets Are Blue\nV\nis that sornetbirig fok\"rrfe-\"you're hiding?-\"asks peti te'Maniyri Rothery of her'\nbrother Bobby as' he:cpyly'.riolds:back a big :Vcflentin'$'-.eard. Bobby and Marilyn, children'\nof Mr. ond Mrs. Jake ;Rpr:her'y, 806.'Third Street! ore.-:ho different than thousands of\nswains and sweethearts ,who,uWl 11 take up the hearts arid flowers theme todoy.\n'      '     '   i-   7 t',. ' '\u00bb\u25a0'; 7 '!'-^7' \u2014^'ice Stevehson photo.\n\\    'i    '\u2022 \"'    J  *' V' * ' \u25a0' \u25a0     ' 'f^'i' \u2022\nVandenberg Anp|yzes,P,ow\"er. .\",..'- :lff7 .\n% \u25a0\u25a0'\" \u25a0 '.Vv'     A,' \u25a0 f\n70 Out of 100 Russ Bormem\nCould Reach Targets in U. S*\nEmerald Tungsten Nine Near Salmo\nFo Be Reopened lor Production\n$flpg |^\u00abi\u00aba^x:\nMade|n ,\nClearing Slides    ;   '\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP), \u2014\nPublic Works crews, aided by'd^af\nweather, j made \"strong headway\"\ntodayt in, their fight to clears sllde-\nblbelied'highways in tKeytFraser\ngalley.\" -:''-A \u201e.;*,\u201e :;(1''s\n. Engineers said they hoped 'to reopen the Trans-Canada Highway\nnear Hope by Thursday.\nMeanwhile, rail service In British Columbia was getting back to\nnormal.\nwelcoming and entertainment\n!unctions and curling.\nOfficial registration of rinks at\nhe hotel will follow the parade. At\ni:45 p.m. a \"welcome-curlers\" ban-\njuet will be held, with the draw\nor the championship play follow-\nng. Then will come a parade to St.\n'aul's United Church for Sunday\nivening service.\nTHREE  DRAWS DAILY\nThree draws o \"curling will be\n)layed Monday, Tuesday and Wed-\nlesday. In the eventof a tie a fourth\niraw will be run off Wednesday\nvhen Canada's top student curling\nink will be known.\nNelson Teachers Association will\nsponsor a dance In the Civic\nCentre auditorium for curlers and\nstudents Monday evening. Wednesday night a civic banquet will\nbe tendered by the Mayor and\nCouncil, representing the City of\nNelson. Nelson Service clubs In\nthe Intervening,days will be hosts\nto,the,visitors at luncheons and;\ndlnnera,' ' \u25a0\u25a0!   '!\nIn fact there are' few Nelson\norganizations who will not have a\nhand one way or another In the\nwelcome for the young sportsmen.\nNelson student body from Its own\nfunds has provided $100 for crests\nto, be presented to each curler\nand official. The B.C. Curling As-\nsoclatloi) has provided $100 toward\nthe Dominion playdowns. -I\nThursday iTrail will take over.\nWith the curlers \\yill-,tome Ken\nfals'c-n, representing (tib Dominion\nurling Association, representatives\nf each\/f,(of ,the .senior associations\nf each province, curler-supporters\nf the student game,and newspaper-\nien. & '....-...\u2022.'\nThe Dominions,;, Schools  Curling\nx'x &y~ . \u25a0\neight fighting their way back to a\nlumber camp after their truck broke\ndown in the storm. Two other men\nwere reported missing last night but\nwere located unharmed.-\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) -\nUnion -and company officials met\nfor an hour today after transit\nworkers in British Columbia's\nthree major cities rejected a wage\noffer by the B. C. Electric Railway.\nDetails of the discussions were\nnot disclosed but both sides Indicated meetings would continue\n\"within   several   days.\"\nLow Asks Compulsory\nMilitary\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (AP)\nGen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, chief of\nthe Air Force, believes Russia\ncould push at least 70 out of 100\nbombers through to United States\ntargets in a determined attack,\nVandenberg said In a signed\narticle in the current issue of the\nPlans are well under way for the Saturday Evening Post that Russia\nreopening of the Emerald Tungsten I \"\"as- been working intensively, on\nmine near .Salmo, which has been | a heavy bomber to match the B\/-3(l'<\nclosed since 1943 after a drop in | Sunerfort and \"she unquestionably1\nheavy wartime demand for tung\nsten.\n,  A new mill, to be built at the\nmine for tungsten  output,  is also\nbeing planned for in the program,\nLead and zinc has been produced\nfrom the nearby Jersey deposit by\nthe Canadian Exploration Company\nwhich bought the property in 1946,\nPlans for resumption of. tungsten\noutput are reportedly at govern\nment request,\nTungsten is again in short sup\nply with prices climbing. Opening\nof the mine will in no way affect\nthe load-zinc production of Canadian Exploration.\nThe company reported a production of 5002 tons of concentrates\nfrom the Jersey lead-zinc deposit\nin the final quarter of 1950, with\nsmelter returns at more than\n$746,000.\nThe 36,143 tons of ore mined from\nIhe Jersey deposit averaged 2.39\nper cont lead and 7.02 per cent zinc.\nThaw Turns Kootenay Border Road Into Canal\nThe Creston to Potthill, Idaho, highway becdfne a stream bed wherj a thaw sent\n.wafer cascading f^nto theraad earlier this^eM1.1 A tcixi is pictured ploughing through\nthe hub-high stream.        ,-i , ' ' \" \u25a0''\n'.\u201e   , 'hii --\\'-! ''' -H. M. Buckna photo\n,*-\nREDS LAUNCH\nFURIOUS ATTACK\nWonju Hit Hard,\nAllied Troops\nReported Trapped\nBy ROBERT EUNSON\nTOKYO, Feb. 14 (Wednesday)\n(AP)\u2014An all-out Communist attack to drive back United Nations\nforces in rugged Central Korea\nbroke with great fury today on a\n20-mile front.\nFront-line dispatches said Wonju, key to all roads South, was\nhit hard shortly after 3 a.m. Allied units were In heavy action\nNorth and West of the town, reported AP correspondent John\nRandolph.\nAn even heavier Red assault\nstruck and surrounded Chlpyong\nWestern bastion of the central\nfront, Tuesday night. The Allied\nforce In the town still was under\nIntense enemy attack at 9 a.m.\nThe Allied units were trapped\n'In a pass near Chipyong, Randolph\nreported.\nThe 20-mlle front between Wonju and Chi-yong blazed with Allied and Red gunfire. Chipyong is\n35 miles East of Seoul and 20\nNorthwest of Wonju.\nStrong Chinese forces punched\nSouthward toward the main Won-\nju-Yoju road in an effort to crack\nthe U. N. line across Korea and cut\ncommunications lines. Yoju is 18\nmiles West of Wonju and 12 South\nof Chipyong.\nRECAPTURE   INCHON\nThis was the second phase of the\nbig Communist push to divide the\nU. S. Eighth Army and cut off the\n100,000-man Allied force in the\nWest.\nThese forces in the West carried\ntb.e.y. N. limited, offensive to- the\nHah River across\" from Seoul! They\nalso recaotured Seoul's port of In\nchon on the Yellow Sea and Klrnpo\nairfield. Korea's biggest, Northwest\nof Seoul\n.AP war correspondent Stan\nSwinton on the Western front re\nported the Communists early today\nsent 400 to 800 Infiltrators South\nof the Han River within rifle shot\nof a divisional command post.\nThe Reds were flushed out at\ndaylight and mopping up continued.\nAllied forces launch*!! .a, concentrated   attack.' itbttaWmilr\u2122\n-\u2022 ene)iiy-helifi ^rldgej South 'of the\n\u25a0 iMpr) and .'East of  Kumyangjang,\n'\u25a0'\/mofe Atiafi 25 miles Southeast of\nf fjeotil,;  AP   correspondent   Tom\n\u25a0Bradshaw Bald the Allied troops\n[advanced,\/ against   heavy   email\n[arrps nrul automatic weapons fire.\n,:. (The, t main j fighting,    however\",\nflared,, oil ,t'he '-Centrali front.\nRandolph, isajd-. fhe;,'Communist\nChinese and North Koreans jumped off at 10 p;m. Tuesday with sui-\nwill build it.\"\nAnalyzing   the   Soviet   striking\npower and United States'-Jal'r :de-\nfences,   Vandenberg   said ''Russia\n\"now has at least 450 planesi that\ncan  strike  our  major  ponulatloh'\nan dihdustrial centres from bases\nin  the U.S.S.R.\"   (A  reference  to\nRussian conies of the B-29).\nHe   expressed   belief   that   no\nconceivable    defence\u2014not    evenlcidal  charges  behind  the  roll   of\nsuch a preoostcrous device as a r drums and bugles and shepherds'\nfive-mile high steel fence around\nthe country backed by an\nbroken radar screen, a perfect\nwarnlni system and an umbrella\nof fighter planes\u2014could fully\nstoo a determined bombing attack.\n\"Should war come.\" Vandenberg\nsaid, \"we can he exnected to destroy no more than 30 per cent of\nthe planes making an attack In\nstrength on the United States before bombing missions are com-\nnleled. And our preparations to-\ndav are not beefed (built) up to\nachieve even that figure.\"\nThe U. S. must realize, the\nfour-star general said, that Russia might sacrifice bombers In\none-way atomic attacks on American industrial centres.\nVandenberg said a large-scale\nraid probably would Include\nonly a few planes carrying the\nA-bomb,\n\"Even If the enemv had 100 (atomic) bombs\u2014which she hasn't\nnow\u2014she could not afford to throw\nall into one raid.\" he said.\nAs for the. ability of the U. S. tp\nstrike the enemy. Vandenberg said\nthe \"B-36 has more speed, range,\narmament and carries a ' heavier\nbomb load than any big nlane In\noneratlon today, or any plane the\nMoscow rePime can get Into mass\nproduction In the next few years.\"\nU. S. SUPPORTED\nIN U. N. VOTE\nBy FRANCI8 W. CARFENTER\nLAKE SUCCESS, N Y., Feb. 13\n(AP)\u2014The United Nations Assembly gave the United States two big\nvotes of confidence today. It rejected, 48 to five. Soviet demands\nfor condemnation of the U. S. as\npn ageressor against Formosa. It\nrefused, 51 to five to slap the U. S.\nfor American bombings, of Chinese\nterritory along the North Ikorean\nborder. . '    \/' \/',' \/ \"\nNo one supported the Soviet\nI bloc In either vote.\nhorn calls.\nAt 4:15 am. Wednesday Chinese\nInfantrymen carrying torches,\ncharged aealnst the Allied defence\nline at Chlnyong after the heavy\nartillery and mortar barrage,\nAllied troops hurled back the\nfirst assault waves.\nThe first blow of the Chinese offensive was hurled Sunday night\nand Monday at Hoengsongbn i\nroad hub 10 miles North of Won\niu. The Reds drove the United\nNations troops back and captured\nthe town\nGen. MacArthur returned to his\nheadquarters in Tokyo Tuesday\nafter his 10th Inspection. of the\nKorean battlefront and dismissed\ntalk of crossing the 38tH parallel\nexcept by patrols at this time as\n\"purely   academic.\nSudbury's (rash\nDeaths Reach 9\nSUDBURY; Ont,-.Feb.' 13 '(CP)-\nThe death tpli in last' Friday's level-\ncrossing crash at nearby Coniston\nreached nine today with the death\nin hospital of Enoch (Ernie) Cooper\nof Sudbury.\nFrom the time of the crash, in\nwhich a C.P.R. train plowed into a\nbus loaded wtih workers going\nhome from the midnight shift at\nthe Coniston smelter W- the Inters\nnational Nickel. Company, Cooper\nbad been on the critically injured\nlist. He suffered multiple cuts,\nbruises, crushed pelvis, head injuries and acute shock.\nCHICAGO, Feb. 13 <A:P,)-Physl-\ncians -.today removed t,he bandages\noh the iharids;, of Mrs \"Dorothy Stevens, the \/(-ozeii wiinjian. They pronounced1 .trie hands ; in, \"excellent\ncondition\" with ho traoe of gan\ngrene.\n^\nToo Much \"Pussy-Footing\" From\nManpower Question Social Credit\nCharges; C.C.F. Motion Defeated\nOTTAWA, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014The Social Credit Party called\ntonight in the Commons for compulsory military training for\nhome defence.\nSolon Low, Social Credit Leader, Introduced in the\nThrone-Speech debate a motion of non-confidence in the Government which contained that proposal as. a foremost requirement in an over-all defence program.\nHe charged that there had been too much \"pussy-footing\" and \"shying away\" from the manpower question.\nHe also called upon the Government to launch an immediate  national   registration\nof Canadian manpower.\nMr. Low's motion specifically\naccused'the Government of \"failing\ntb Insure that a complete program\nof preparedness, Including compulsory training in the reserve\nforces for home defence, be executed with the greatest possible degree of equality of sacrifice and\nservice.\"\nThe Social Credit thrust came\nshortly after the Chamber voted\n150 to 54 against a C.C.F. non-\nconfidence motion calling for Immediate reimposition of price\ncontrols and the use of subsidies\nwhere necessary.\nBoth were Introduced as\namendments to a Progressive\nConservative motion\u2014still before\nthe Chamber\u2014criticizing the\nGovernment on other phases of\nits defence  program.\nAsserting that too many speakers\n.had \"shied away\" from the manpower question, Mr. Low said Canada could only fulfill International\nobligations if she made the best\npossible use of available manpower\nresources.\nHe agreed that this country, with\na small population, could make her\nbest effort as a supplier of arms\nfor North Atlantic and other partners on the Democratic front.\nBut she should have an immediate national registration and compulsory training in the. reserves\nfor home defence. '\nEvery community In the coun\ntry should have a well-trained\ngroup with sufficient equipment\n\"in case things do happen that\nmake It necessary. Mr. Low pre\nsumably had In mind air-raid de\nfence equipment.\nHe said he knew of Isolated\nplaces In Canada where It would\nbe the \"simplest .thing In the\nworld\" for. an, .enemy, country,\nsuch, as R^is's\/ jp\/lahdi\/^oops.\n.A^re'seVtei'force \/tnfet 'be.'builf'up\nthat' coul'cf cope' with sucif'a'iland-\nmM:\n-'He\" wondered whether the Govr)\nernment had any such program in\nmind and why It had not presented\nit to Parliament.\n\"I contend it is because they are\nafraid,\" he said,\nj Mr. Low said he agreed with the:\n.Government's plans to spend\nJdqo,W;W fpA,defence ^during the\nnext three yeaR .but- too rnuch em\nphasis had been placed on the\namount of money to be spent and\nnot enough on details.\nHe warned that if war came\nagain Canada should avo'd the mis\ntakes of the Second World War,\nwhen \"this country was bled almost dry of manpower.\"\nHe criticized Finance Minister\nAbbott for refusing to make fuller\nuse of subsidies to produce strategic materials in short supply and\nto use the Bank of Canada to regulate the supply of currency.\nF. D. Shaw, (SC\u2014Red Deer)\nwarned against the threat of Communists within Canada, as well as\noutside, should war, come, and said\nhis party was asking endorsation\nof the Canadian Legion program of\npreparedness calling for compulsory service.\nOpposition members again\n. pressed the Government to Institute controls as a weapon against\nInflation, despite Finance Minister Abbott's declaration of last\nnight that he does not think controls would be desirable or effective at this time.\nDefence and the  International\nsituation also were discussed  as\nback-benchers held tho floor.\nSpeakers Included A. J. Brooks\n(PC\u2014Royal),   J.   J.   Smith   (L\u2014\nMoose Mountain), John Decore (L\n\u2014Vegreville),  Hazen Argue   (CCF\n\u2014Wood Mountain) and G. F. Hig-\nglns (PC\u2014St. John's East).\nIn the opening stages, External\nAffairs Minister Pearson said any\ndecision to recross the Korean 38th\nparallel should be a collective decision taken by countries with\nforces In Korea under the United\nNations banner.     .\nDefence Minister Claxton reported that 85 reinforcements to\nfill the gaps battle may make In.\nthe ranks of Canada's Korean battalion, during its .first month>-of action are on the way to Korea. Tills\nwill be tha battalion's monthly\nquota.\nParliament\nAt a Qlan0;\nBy The Canadian Pr|s\u00bby T\/'X\n.The .Commons  voted'\/15'(f,to Jjsff\nagainst a   C.C.F.'  motto\/i' 6f  noli- L\ncoqfidence in the;7G<jvernment,\nVSMrin Low.iSocia) Predlt leader,\n'rooye'd a ^mo-tldji j calling for compulsory miljlary's,et:viee in reserve\nforces.    v - ,'i -'.   ;\u00bb..\u00ab;]\n' External Affairs; [Minister Pear-\nsonvKsaidl:-,,an'y\" deoisiqn1 to   cross\nKorea's' 38th\" parallel, Should -be a\n'{collective move. ;-     \\ V, \u201e' V*\n-' Renewed demands for pHce controls  were   made   by   Opposition\nmembers    during    the    Throne-\nSpeech debate.\nSenator Gordon Isnor (L\u2014Nova\nScotia) suggested decentralization\nof Canada's industry.\nWEDNESDAY\nThe Commons resume the\nThrone-Speech debate. The Senate\nwill sit.\nNelson, Tuesday\u20145.25.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nTORONTO, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014Detective Maurice Richardson pulled\na plug from a telephone-booth light socket\u2014and the lights went out\nin a nearby house.\nHarold Newmarsh testified today that when his electricity was\ncut off, because of an unpaid bill, he hooked up with the phone booth\nto run a pump. It worked so well that he extended it to.all his electrical\noutlefs.\nNewmarsh was fined $30\u2014for theft of electricity.\nTORONTO, Feb, 13 (CP)\u2014Peter Harkas clutched a photograph In\nhis hand to recognize the girl he'll marry among the 200 Immigrants\nwho arrived here today frpm Europe.\nHe got his first glimpse of his bride-to-be, Voula Karkabaee, In\nperson as she walked through Union Station carrying two bags and\nscanning faces for him,\n, \"You are Peter?\" asked Vo'ula, dropping, her bags. \"And you are-\nVoula,\" said the young man. \/ , ,',' rl(\nThey had -corresponded with each other after arrangements for\ntheir marriage were, made by mall by their parents.    ,\n. ' DETROIT,\/ Feb\/ 13 faVl~ValeWier4!&^\n' a day early this year. \" '! f\".'   \/\u25a0' \"l 'ff(. .\nI Landes was hailed into recorder's court for being \"paralyzed\ndrunk.\" Judge O. Z. Ide asked where he got the name Valentine.\n\"I was born on Valentine's Day,\" Landes replied. \"That's how I\ncome by the name. And Valentine's Day is tomorrow. That's how\nI come to get drunk.\"\n\"I have a Valentine for you,\" the judge sighed, then snapped:\n\"it's 30 days in the house of correction.\" ety>\n\u2014:  . r \u2022.\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Feb. 13  (AP)\u2014Police Inadvertently held up ,1 \u2022'\nfreight train when they raided a bookmaklng establishment Monday.\nLieut. Charles S. Schultz said that as he walked out after the\nrajd. a  man 'approached  him,  identified  himself as  a freight-train\nengineer and,asked:,-,\n', 'Will you get myflreman out of there? He stopped In to place a\nbet a'nd got stuck wher|, the place was raided. I can't move the train\nWithout him.\" i,\nThe fireman was released and the freight moved.\n.BRIGHTON, Sussex. England, Fob. 13  (CP)\u2014Customers at the\n- Sussex, Hotel don't mind so'much when it's closing time in the bar.\nInstead of the-traditional shout: \"Time Gentlemen, please\" the,y.-\nhear a recording of the proprietor's, voice. .. ..,\u201eu-- ;\\-\nWith 10 j minutes, to go, drinkers are warned: \"\n\"Closing j limb is drawing near^and ,when it comes there's'no\nmore beer.\" I, *. $ <\\ r,;\n.   When the fateful hour arrives, an insistent voice says:\n\"Closing time has now arrived\u2014so, please, your drinks pour\ndown inside.\"\n '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB, 14, 1951\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\u2014SHOWS AT 7.00 - 8.28\nDOROTHY   McGUIRE JEANNE  CRAIN\n'\u25a0' in -in\n\"Mother Didn't Tell Me\"     \"The Fan\"\nSTARTS THURSDAY FOR THREE DAYS\nCSWCi\nNews\nCartoon\nSport\nGrand Piano\nComing, Fund\nPlans Pushed\nExecutive of the Nelson Music\nFestival   Association   met   at   the\nJiome of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Lambert   Sunday   afternoon,   in   full\nstrength, to discuss ways and means\n-to complete their canvass for funds\nfor a new grand piano, which will\narrive in Nelson about Feb. 24.\n-.-  The   piano   committee   reported\nthat subscriptions were beginning\nto  come in rather well and that\n' they! Were ih. hopes of opening a\n' public subscription list ift the near\n..'fliture.''    \u25a0 | C- l i \u2022 .-, s.\n'':' Other matters discussed were the\n'holding of .two' de! three concerts of\nlocal and outside talent, to_-be pre-\n' sented' this 'Spring, or' during the\nj riexV three or four 'months: These\n'\u25a0 Concerts would' be Sin aid\"., of the\npiano fund .'exclusively-; ~ ,_.        ::\u201e_\nRepair British Ship\nfPlfipW fords'   -\n!;i   ;''iVJCfb'iRiA,':B.(|r\/,',;t,eb\".,..13 (CPi\u2014\n-   A'l-Mayirep'air-job.-aboard the Bri-\nI I. tlsK 'frdghter ffji'ngf Stephen   has\nBeen.. corppleted , by   workmen ,at\n,\";.: Yarrows. Ltd-- shipyard  here,  fhe\n'\u25a0' ' faotbrshipl  I suffered f considerable\ni | Stbrm damage duf'in^'-'lier voyage Jo\n\"X this icpaslj,' Several ^rloitom plates\nI'-:, Were \"replaced. 'The, ship wiiljeave\n|j | - Esgutrhalt 'drydOck f o|ayT\u00bb  '\n^\u25a0Sen^nt^d.^h^ -\n;  Assqult Charge '\n[V '.'\u2022 'y^CTfeBiA,.B.C, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014\nv A G.. Gordon! 40, from London, Ont.,\nWi' '   wps. sentenced to 30 days in jail by\n'-. Magistrate H. C. Hall in city court\ntoday on, a   charge   of  assaulting\nbus- driver John McConnell with a\nfull bottle of ketchup on the evening  of Feb.  2, \u25a0 when McConnell\nrefused to halt a non-stop bus to\nlet Gordon off.\nCROCUSES,\nMARBLES SURE\nSIGNS OF SPRING\nSpring signs are spreading in West\nKootenay.\nMonday, second successive\nSpring-like day, brought with it\nblooming crocuses and tulip shoots\none to one and a half inches high in\nsome gardens.\nSteve Maco reported that flowers\nwere blooming on his property at\n554 Stanley Street.\nNelson youngster-: have also\nbrought out their marbles, further\nevidence that Spring is not far off.\n.\u25a0Vf\n; ;'\nPRESCRIPTIONS\n....    - Hi\nNELSON PHARMACY t\n\"Your Fortress of Health\" R\n433  Josephine  Street,\"-  |'\nPHONE 1203 \u2014 RES. 394-L   |\nSons Resettlement\nProposals Told\nUJC Women Face Hangman\nMore Bravely Than Men\nGRAND FORKS, l^fiif Jl&r\nGrand Forks Board of Trajle has'd^f\ncided to invite the boukhobor'ton-\nsultative Committee ,'toi rri]eet.'in;\nGrand Forks in Aprils ;X^ .J 1 \"}\\ '\nD. C. Manly repo^ii on a'proposal for resettlement' df .the Sons\nof Fr;eedom group pjfeted by Boyd\nC. Affleck.\"of Nelson, and df inspection of localities for the possible re'-\nseltlpmept. ^Several spots in the\nProvince haja-Jjeen examined.\nL. t.\nWriter, Di\nLOS ANGELES, Feb*. ^3,,\\,(^PJVr'\nLloyd C. Douglas, writer. M maiiy\nbest-selling novels, died in- a hospital here tonight of a heart ailment. He was 73.\nMr. Douglas had been in 111\nhealth for a long time and was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital\nlast Sunday.\nHis daughter, Mrs. J. Weldon\nWilson, Las Vegas, Nev., with\nwhom he had been living, said Dr.\nDouglas had been suffering since\n1944 from arthritis. He became\ncritically ill five or six months\nago, she said, as a result of heart\ncomplications.\nSurvivors are Mrs. Wilson tfnd\nanother daughter, Mrs. Howard L.\nDawson, Montreal. His wife, Bessie\ndied in December, 1944.\nFuneral services will be held\nhere Friday.\n., His first book, \"The Magnificent\nObsession,\" was a tremendous seller. He fashioned it from one of his\njeligious  essays.\nBigger and better\u2014that's what the West Kootenay Exhibition in\nNelson Sept. 13. 14 and 15 will be if the new officers, headed by M. B.\nRyalls, have their way.\nMr. Ryalls was elected President at the Association annual meeting-Tuesday night, succeeding T. H. Waters. C. W. Ramsden is First\nVice-President, George Benwell, Second Vice-President and Finance\nChairman, and C. B. Mutchler, Secretary-Manager, and Treasurer.\nThe executive consists of H. A.\nAshton, industrial; D. H. T. Molll-\nson, publicity and advertising; A.\nB. Gilker, entertainment; Aid. Joseph Kary, midway and concessions;\nRobert Foxall, prize list; L. G.. Cat-\nley, gates and ticket sales; W. H.\nBurns, space and grounds; F. H. W.\nChanter, agriculture; Mrs. R. A.\nCuster, Women's Institute; Mrs. L.\nG. Catley, women's section; Mrs.\nR. H. Dill, historical display and\nG. L. Webb, arts and handicrafts.\nHonorary directors will be named\nby the executive, and chairmen of\ncommittees will appoint conveners\nof various sub-committees. A motion\nwas passed after approval of recommendations of the nominating\ncommittee of Mr. Ramsden, Mr.\nFoxall and Mr. Burns whereby tho\nwomen's section will be embraced\nby the title arts and handicrafts.\nHonorary presidents are H. W.\nHerridge, M.P. for Kootenay-West;\nWalter Hendricks, M.L.A. for Nelson-Creston; Mayor N. C. Stibbs and\nMr. Waters. The 1950 Exhibition justified the motto \"The Show Window\nof the Kootenay\", Mr. Waters said\nin his annual report\nHe praised the support of d|\u00ab.'\n,',. trict residents, citing Creston's\n\u2014 display of produce. fM   i\n;\u2022 \"From the results It wou-toYaij-\npear that we have established 'a\nmedium for'progress of the Kootenays In keeping with \u201eth,\u00abkobjects of such a orgarilzatlo'ti.''\n\"On a basis of results of ('the\n1950 Exhibition, It would, appear\nalso that some consideration will\nhave to be given toward \\rriere\n\"accommodation Jp. title1 -near fu-\ni |ure, as '\u25a0omeftctlopi' tyere over-\n\"j;cro)*.ded\/lh\u00bb;i9ob dlipla'ys,!' he said.\n!.\/A,,''h|al(ny gain\" in operations\nfti; JB50 compared with 1949 was noted in the secretary-treasurer's annual report. An earlier start waSj\npointed to as one of the reasons for\nthe increase.     - (;, \\\nThe executive was urged to Consider admissions, allocation of.prize\nmoney, adequate housing for.'poultry and pets and more storage space.\nSale of I membership,, tickets which\nwere tisable as WSny times as the\nholdel^'wished helped in sales, but\nthere\\',;jvas a certain amount of\nabuBjefby' the public which resulted\nin ^a material reduction of sales of\n'general admission tickets.\nJSlMO PROFIT\nThe Association had a net profit\nof $1600 fro mthe 1950 Exhibition,\naccording to the financial statement.\nNet receipts of $8300 included\n$3103 from general admissions, $1620\nfrom the sale of membership tickets\n$1506 from rental of industrial space\n$993 from the midway, $486 from\nthe queen contest, $408 from prize\nlist booklet and $100 in grants.\nPrincipal items in net expenditures of $6697 were $1798 for the\nfloor show, $1136 for new building:\nand tables, $908 for salaries and office equipment, $833 as exhibit expenses and $783 for prizes. ,-.\nTbe Association had a bank balance of $3821 at the beginning of\nthis year, compared with $2199 at\nthe end of 1949. It has assets of\n$1860, the biggest item being storage sheds valued at $8001\nTransit Workers\nReject Pay Boost\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 13 (CP)\n\u2014B.C. Electric transit workers\nhave rejected the company's wage\noffer of an 11-rent an hour wa'ge\nIncrease March 1 and 2<\/2 cents\nMarch 1, 1952, an officer of the\nVictoria local reported this afternoon.\n- \u00ab.* *'-'     '\u25a0\u25a0\nlORDjJAJVEBT\nCALVERT DISTILLERS IcAnadA) LIMITEb\n,,'.     AMHERSTBURG  >    ONTARIO\niThis advertisfernqnt is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board bit'by the Government of British Colujrnbla.\nIRWIN, TRAIL MEN\nTO ATTEND\nRED CROSS MEET\nFloyd L, Irwin recently appointed\nPresident of the Nelson Branch of\nthe Canadian Red, Cross, will be\nNelson's representative -of the B.C.\nDivision at Vancouver Feb. 22 and\n23.\nOver 100 delegates representing\nbranches in all parts of the province,\nwill attend the meeting which will\nbe opened by His Worship F. J.\nHume, Mayor of Vancouver on the\nmorning of Feb. 22.\nJames Bryden President of the\nTrail Branch and Provincial executive member representing the East\nand West Kootenay, and Leo Levey\nalso of Trail will represent the\nTrail branch.\nA representative from the Red\nCross National executive will be\nguest speaker at the opening day's\nsession while MaJ. Gen. C. R. Stein,\nProvincial Co-ordinator of , Civic\nDefence will address the convention\nthe second day.\nThe business agenda will include\nannual reports from the executive\nand the committee chairmen and\nelection of officers for the coming\nyear.\nPresentation of honorary memberships and badges of service will\nalso take place on the last day of\nthe convention.\nRailways Agree On\nCompensation Rates\nTrail Chamber\nOf Commerce\nName Committees\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 13\u2014The various\nTrail Chamber of,Commerce committees during the year have been\nannounced by President J. V. Rogers.\nThe committees and members, the\nfirst named being chairmen follow:\nFinance \u2014 Gordon C. Campbell,\nEd Benson, J. L. Crowe and P. L.\nBarron.\nAttendance and Catering\u2014Steve\nMatovich, Harry Rothery, P. F.\nArmstrong and C. C. Selby.\nColumbia River Basin \u2014 R. G. i resentativ'e agreed the scale should\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014\nOfficials of the Canadian Pacific and\nCanadian National Railways agreed\nbefore the workmen's compensation\nact inquiry Monday that maximum\ncompensation to injured workmen\nshould be \"moderately increased\"\nabove the present $2500 yearly rate.\nThe railroads were the first B.C.\nindustries to indicate they would\nnot oppose some increase in the\nrate. Other industries which have\npresented briefs have disapproved\nany such boost in compensation pay.\nNecessity for some slight increase\nin the scale, as demanded by labor,\nwas pointed out in the Canadian\nNational brief, provided costs to\nindustry were not allowed to rise\nto an unreasonable level.\nThe Canadian Pacific opposed any\nincrease in its brief, but under\ncross-examination the railway's rep\nVANCOUVER,, Fob. 13 (CP) \u2014\n,Trafissit''wptke;ri fa sjpa^couver, Vic-\nimla, and^ Neiy' Westminster \\have,\n.rejected a 13 &< cents an hour1 pay\nboost offered by the British Colurh-\nbia Electric Railway.\nUnion officials announced today\nthat the 3200 workers had voted to\nreject the offer in balloting yesterday in B.C.'s three major cities.\nThe union's Advisory Committee\nbad recommended acceptance. The\nmen ask a wage' increase of 25\ncents an hour.\nThe offer called for an Increase\nof 11 cents an hour March 1 and\n2% cents March 1, 1952.\nIt would have brought transit\noperators' rates to $1.37]\/i an hour\nthis year and advanced them to j\n$1.40 March 1, 1952.\nThe proposed boost would cost\nthe B.C.E. $1,600,000 during the next\ntwo years.\nThe men, members of the Street\nRailwaymen's Union (A.F.L.), also\nasked three weeks' paid vacation\nafter 10 years service and an increase of sick benefits from $20 to\n$30 a week. Under the present contract all workers get ,J\u00bbe, weeks\npaid vacation.      . ,'\u25a0\/;\u2022' 'If\/i;  '-'\n..-\u25a0\u25a0\/\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u2022\/\/\u25a0i,t', ,'\u2022:<!\u25a0\"   ' lh::\nU\nAnderson, O. H. Gill, F. W. Ban-\nton, .James Bryden and S. C. Montgomery.\nEducation \u2014 A. F. Snowball, R.\nE. Walton and Rev. J. Rogers.\nAirport and Air Transportation\n\u2014L. Williams, S. N. Mitchell, J.\nW. McKay, C. M. Spencer, T. J.\nTeahan and R. Tofan.\nBusiness Enterprise \u2014 W. Lauen-\nfft-Al Hall, A. Middleton, D. A.\n'Sinclair, H. Schnidrig and E. A. G.\nr Entertainment \u2014 John Loader,\n#16: Kennedy,, H. L. Morrell, J.\nD.I.Hartley and T. R. Stanley.\nj Community Improvement \u2014 R.\nBaihbridge; A. C. Jenkins, H. J.\nJacobs,' Rev: John Scott, G. W.\nTOson and J. R..Mills.\n, Befail and Wholesale \u2014 Don Sum-\nemna.-'j: L.. Balleny, G. E. Mason,\nH.\\A.-banning and G. A. V. Sand-\nercombe,   jLji, .    ' j\nMejjbersMp^jt\"H. Salter, M. * R.\nLandujctiiJLy^iTutt, Peter S. Ma-\nthew'sfc Arnold' Lauriente and, W.\nA. Fdrreptt'.' -J ; ...-' \" T\nRoads \u25a0 and- Bridges\u2014Ernie Mason, W^K'-Gwyer, F. A. Lee, R.\"K.\nCampbell; iO. H. Nelson and C- H.\nWright.'\\ U':, ~\nV Ag%i4l|)re and Forestry ^W..E,\nVap>ce),ila.rn.es-Afwe'll, D. B. Merry\nand <T -frf. -Douglas.\n. Legislatioh-^C, H. B. Frere, D.\nMcDonald, H. ,T. Ommanney and\nG. Huntley Gordon.\nTourist and Publicity\u2014J. ,C- VI-,\npond, B. C. D. Casey, Reg Stone,\nLeo Levey, C. A. W. Calder and\nC. E. Charlton. -, ' ,\nNational Affairs \u2014 J. H. Armstrong, W. G.'Small, Miller Mason,\nS. M. Rothman, Archdeacon F. H.\nGraham, J. T. Wilkinson, W. A.\nCurran and Parker Williams.\nPublic Health \u2014 J. B. Biker. L. A.\nRead and E. J. Provost.\nTransportation, Mail and Freight\n\u2014M. C. Monkhouse, Joseph Kline,\nN. E. Martin and H. L. Gane. '\nrise above $2500 a year.\nBoth  railroads  approved  of  the\nprinciple of a medical appeal board\nwhich labor want to review cases\nof injured workmen who might\nclaim unjust treatment\nOpposition to any increase in the\ndaily compensation rate of 66 2\/3\nof a worker's pay was voiced by\nboth railways.\n\"To- increase the scale to 75 per\ncent as proposed in many of the\nbriefs submitted to the commission\nwould virtually mean -that the income on an injured workman not\nemployed and in receipt of compensation would be substantially the\nsame as when working, and undoubtedly would encourage the\ntendency toward malingering,\" the\nC.P.R. brief read.\nBoth railroads opposed any increase, in pay to widows or orphans,\nrequested that the waiting period\nbe increased to 14 days (as opposed\nto six now) and asked that when\nclaims were re-opened any further\ncompensation be given at the rate\nprevailing at the time of the accident.\nWomen's\nSlater Brown Calf\nOXFORDS\nAAA-A-C \u2014 Sizes 5-11.\n$11.93\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone S95\n653 Baker St.\nMRS. SULLIVAN\nACQUITTED,,\nSpktlato'rs1' Appl;dud\nDedisiqn oh-Charge\nOf Manslaughter\nOTTAWA, ijFeb. 13.', (CP) \u2014 Mrs.\nMarion Sullivan tonight was acquitted on a charge of manslaughter\narising out of the death of her husband.    , -\nA'12-mah Jury found her Inno-\n-   cent after deliberating four.hourD.\nThe'48->year,<oitt Tor,o.nJo'!,vVoman\n.. -was oharjBdjfwItn *mih\u00bb[a\\ugbt<jr\nafter!.;.Old body'of :Fraiu!h> J.'8ui-\nllvaij, t'her, lawyer-husband,* was\ntoifrio Ijn a Chateau Laurlef \/r|otef\nIjedii'odni last Nov. 18.       i *'f*\u00a3\n(Solif.tirqom| spectators burst'|n|o\napplause}' -Mrs.  Sullivan  roselJaSd\nthanketi .flhief Justice J. C. McRtiqr.\nand, thejgury^ , \u25a0  ,;V\nTwd inert, (Ja'meron Lumsden and\nEmmett'iRooney, -were singled ,-out\nfrom the,crowd_6y the iChlef Ju's.-\ntice ahd held in' confe,ihpt -,Oj Court\nfor applauding. Ho\\^a1r^h'e',irriiips'-\ned no punishment'.^beoaite ityverfi\nwere others in the cfqwd Vhp 'applauded. '. ';,\u201e'..\nThe Chief Justice said the*'verdlc);\nbrought in was the only oneiwliich\ncould be considered on thfc Basis1\nof the evidence. ; X ^ '.'\nMrs. Sullivan said later in an,.in-\nterview: \"I feel very happy\".. \\\nSons' Antics Raise\nCouncil Complaint1\n' 'NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Feb.\n13 (CP)\u2014The fire last week in the\nDoukhobor compound at the Federal penitentiary had repercussions\ntoday in City Council chambers.\nCity fire trucks were called to\nhelp fight the $20,000 fire, which\nauthorities said was the work of\nSons of Freedom arsonists.\nAid. T. R. Radborne, Chairman\nof the Fire Committee, said: \"It\ndoes not seem right for us to risk\nour men and equipment in a place\nwe know nothing about.\n\"We do not know where any of\ntheir hydrants or equipment' are\nor what dangers and problems are\nin the institution.\"\nThe Fire Committee urged the\nFire Department be furnished\nwith i.;plan of,,the penitentiary's\nfire-fighting'facilities.\" i   ,t\\\nt-'    rr\u2014'\u25a0 \u25a0  t '*'Vj '   '\n'Some;,\/IIinau , metal  workers, are\njust as skilful with th'elf\/-jtoes ' Ss ' ^\nwith their fingers. \/ '*\nThe Weather\nRain is falling along'the Northern\ncoast and snow is slowly spreading\ninto the central interior as a weak\nPacific storm moves towards the\nB.C. coast. Rain from the storm will\nspread slowly Southward along the\ncoast and light snow is expected in\nthe Southern interior Wednesday\nevening as the storm moves across\nthe Southern sections of the province.\nPolar air which covers most of the\nprovince is retreating slowly Eastward and by Wednesday i evening\nis expected to have moved East\nof the coast mountains.\nNelson        9\nSt. Johns     31\nHalifax     35\nMontreal       23\nOttawa '.. :.,.',   12\nToronto  \u201e,17\nPort Arthur   -34\nKenora     -23\nWinnipeg   -34\nBrandon   -34\nThe Pas   -32\nRegina    -33\nSaskatoon     -31\nSwift Current  -13\nMedicine Hat     -6\nLethbridge       -4\nCalgary     -9\nEdmonton      15\nKamloops     -5\nPenticton     13\nVancouver     27\nVictoria    32\nKimberley     -7\nCrescent Valley     2\nKaslo      9\nPrince Rupert     27\nPrinqe George    -9\nGrand Forks \u201e....     6\nSeattle     30\nPortland     34\nSpokane     IR   37\nChicago    22. 27\nSan Francisco    41   65\nNew York    40   65.\nWhitehorse  ,1   21\nB. C. Legion Repeats\nDemand for Controls\n. VICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014\nThe B.C. Command of the Canadian\nLegion has reiterated its request\nthat the Provincial Government\ntake over control of rents.\nA delegation which met the cabinet today said \"increases in rents\n.\"will tragically affect the lives of\n(more than half the people* in the\nProvince.\nlS;Uch   increases,   in  conjunction\nin theftiost of living, will caVse a\ndanger'cftjSiljiwering in the .standard\nof living; for most of thf.'wcrking\npeople.\" - \"X-}.- i.   :\n32\n34\n41\n35\n31\n32\n8\n9\n-2\n-8\n7\n3\n11\n16\n28\n33\n38\n30\n18\n29\n41\n43\n21\n32\n27\n41\n24\n32\n49\n55\nYoung P-C Leader\nUndertakes\nUnity Campaign\n\u25a0 TRAIL, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014 F. H. fl.\nDewdney of Trail, newly^elected\nPresident of the B.C. Young Prq-.'\ngressive-Conservatlve . Association,\nis undertaking a campaign for more\nunity within the Progressiv-e-Coft-\nservatiye ranks in the Province : :.-\nMr..Dewdney gave \"his opening\ncampaign talk at' a \u2022dinner given;-in\nhis honor by the Trail' Yi.P.Ci'sl ai|d\nattended by senior ap.d junior mehri-\nbers of the .party.,' ,'      f V ;''';''' i1\nThe speaker declared there were\nno major differences between, the\nyoung, and senior'\/associations, and\nbelieved that the yoking party members could help to .put,-the senior\nassociation back on its feet. \u25a0,.\n..i'Tribute was :pal(d. to uVA. P. Cur-\n'tis, past president of tli,,e-West Kootenay Association, by ,Mrs. I. B.\nKenny, secretifiy--treasurer, and by\nMr. Dewdney^forlhis work in backing Mr. Dewdter's,; caU. for unity\nand' stressing I-the. need for better\nunderstanding.-within -the party in\nthe Rosslapd-Tr'ailr district. ,\nBritain Sends\nRubber fo China\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (Reuters) \u2014 A\ngovernment spokesman admitted in\nthe House of Commons last night\nthat two boatloads of rubber totalling 10,00-j tons are on their way\nto Communist China from tha\nBritish port of Singapore.\nThe statement was made by Colonial Undersecretary Thomas Cook,\nwho said it was assumed the rubber\nwas of a low quality.\nThe statement came in reply to\na question asked by a Conservative\nmember.\nCook added that \"there are no restrictions oh the export of rubber,\nbut a close watch is kept on. the\ncumulative totals of exports to individual countries.''.\n,,f \"Big-Ben,\" the, clock,'on the British Hbilse'of Parliament in Londor\n(was'-put'into operation ?in 18\nMIARD, HARVEY\nTO COAST MEET\nH. T. Miard, Public Works Divisional Eutjineer, and R. G. Harvey,\nDistrict Engineer, left for Victoria\nMonday to attend the convention of\nEngineers of the Public Works Department which opens there today.\nPublic Works officials from other\nKootenay centres will also attend\nthe session. i.\nGas Pipeline East\nGiven; Second Reading\nwith \/the rapid and continuous ri^  , 6TTAWA;^eb.'13 (CP)\u2014 A'bill\nir.   thoi'-,*no+   nf   Hihtut    will   -inflfea'a J (    \/.    ';.A,f \".'. .A.\"       -.1     ..\nto^incdrporlite<-a ne^y-pipeline company, to'pipe 'gisl -'from Alberta's\nprurMeJIer: fields to serve most\ncities as far- East as Montreal was\ngiven, second^ reading in the Senate\ntoday. ,i     ,\u25a0\"'\u25a0\n\\i Explaining the measure for in-\n''corporation* of the Trans-Canada\nPipe Lines, Company Limited, Senator Pat)! ;Bouffard (L\u2014Quebec)\nsaid the cbmpany plans a 2200-mile\npipeline Eastward to serve the main\ncities on the Canadian'Pacific and\nCanadian National, Railways lines.\nThese would include Toronto, Ottawa and Hull, as well as Montreal\nand the cost would be \"at least $250,\n000,000.\"\nAnswering a question by Senator\nW. Rupert Davies (L\u2014Ontario) if\npiping of the gas would lower gas\nprices in Ontario, Senator Bouffard\nsaid it was expected there would\nbe a price reduction, but it was\nThe onion is one of the oldest ] hard to say how much.\ncultivated    vegetables.    It    comes     The bill was sent to a committee\nfront Asia: I for further study,\nTwo joints of Vi%vV.,\nOTTAWA, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014 WiiliSm'\nCraig, 102, who attributed his longevity to no smoking, drinking or\npastry^' died yesterday, He was a\nlife-long resident of this district and\nsaw .'Ottawa grow from a small\nlumber town.\n' WESTFIELD, N.J., Feb. 13 (AP)\n\u2014Mrs. Katherine Greenslade Lyon\nwill be 104 today thanks, she said\nto good food, a little walking and\nwee nip of whisky each night before going to bed. The spry old lady\nsaid no special celebration was planned.  \u00bb\u00bb-->-\n.20\n.17\nwin your sleep**\nPAST\n3-WAY RELIEF!\nDon't toss and turn from night coughi\ndue to colds. Get Smith BrothersI\n1. Ease dry throat tickle\n2. Soothe your raw membrane! -\n3. Help loosen phlegm\nSMITH BROTHERS\ndrops] uy?\nBUCK!\nNEED ANY COAL Jgj;\nTREEPRllKjNG I\nDEMONSTRATiOH\nPLANNED TODAY    ,,\nA tree pruning demonstration for\nNorth Shore'growers is to be held HHI\nearly Wednesday afternoon.\nThe demonstration, to be held at'\nthe North ighore Poultry Farm, will\nbe in charge of J. E. Swales, District Horticulturist It will be .of\na practical nature, with advice on\ntheory of pruning and fruit bud formation.\nGrafting, budding, top-working of\ntrees and the preparation of grafting\nwaxes will be discussed as time and\nopportunity permits.\nWt\nALSO IN POUCHES\nAND\nHALF POUND HNS\nROLL ONE.-..LIGHT'ONE.;.ENJOY ONE\n:7*\nDeep Mined\n\u2022\nLow Ash\nContent\n\u2022\nFast Heat\n\u2022\nLump and Oil\nTreated\nStoker Size\nWEST TRANSFER\ni     COMPANY\n7tf BAKER STREET !\n'i-ftl. ''\nPHONE 33\n  '\":\\K Dea\\cra..lri\u00ab\nTpp Grade Coals for All Purposes Since 1899\nSWilliam C, Mffipliy, d;c!!|\njpi CHIROPRACTOR\nx \"..\n\"[} . ANNOUNCES THE OPENING\nf   . .OF A- DOWNTOWN OFFICE\nX !.'\nROOM 204, JOHNSTONE BLOCK y-'\nPhone 1466 576 Baker Sit.\nSOCRATES said\u2014\n\"No man goeth about a more Godly purpose\nthan he who is mindful of the right upbringing not\nonly of his own, but of other men's children.\"\nYou con help do this\u2014by contributing to the\nlocal Boy Scouts annual appeal for 'funds.\nScouting teaches boys' to'become good citizens, to be\nobedient) loyal and-self-reliant. Scouting develops boys\nphysically and morally.\nYOU\nare invited to help our boys by contributing as\ngenerously as possible to our current financial\ncampaign.\nPLEASE\nsend your donation to the Nelson branch of\nTrfE ROYAL BANK OJF CANADA\nor t6\nP. H. HOSKINS, Treasurer ' r\nat same address.\nDONATIONS ARE   DEDUCTIBLE  FROM   INCOME TAX\nAn official receipt will be Isued to you for this purpose.\nNELSON BOY SCOUTS\nASSOCIATION\n Cranbrook Gyro's Ice Carnival\nBig Hif Despite Two-Day Chinook\no\u00bb7\nCHANBEOOK, B.C., Feb. 13\u2014The\nartificial ice installations for which\nthe Gyro Club here is .working,\nwould have come in handy for its\nIce Frolic here Saturday. A two-\nday Chinook thoroughly sabotaged\nthe ice in the new Memorial Arena,\nbut the event was staged anyway\nbefore the biggest crowd ever to\nassemble, nearly 2000 people. The\nafternoon performance was cancelled to Save ice for the evening.\nMaxine Staples, candidate of the\nlumbermen committee of the club,\nwas ice queen, attended by Margaret Schvetz and Francine Barre,\ncandidates of the hotelmen and\nmerchants committees of the club.\nThe queen contest, in process\nthrough a vigorous campaign\nthroughout East Kootenay for the\npast six weeks, resulted in a record\nreturn, just short of $6000 net proceeds.\nJames Davidson was in charge of\nthe highly successful skating revue\nwhich occupied the evening. Taking part in the program were Spokane Silver Skates Club artists Bob\nClossin and Dale Plewman, comedy\nact, Marilyn Boothe, Timothy\nBrown, Roberta Irvine, Gail Jackson and Linda Barnard, and from\nGlencoe Figure Skating Club in\nCalgary, Wendy Egbert, Rosemary\nHall, Carol Irwin and Ellen\nSweeney.\nNorth Star Skating Club of Kimberley and Cranbrook Skating\nClub, who share Alta and Louise\nHarvey as professional instructors,\nprovided group numbers for the\nprogram, and individual numbers\nby Deanie Alward and Fat Brown\nof Cranbrook, and Marie Kershaw\nand Sarah Law of Kimberley.\nThe   Gyros   are   spearheading\ndrive to raise funds for installation\nof  an  artificial  ice  plant  in   the\narena at a cost of about $33,000.\nForks Legion\nNantes Officers\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., Feb. 13\nOfficers for 1951 elected by Grand\nForks Canadian Legion were: President, T. Wassholm; First Vice, H,\nRitchie; Second Vice, P. Reibin; Secretary-Treasurer, J. W. Crisp.\nEleceted to the executive at the\nfame meeting were E. G. Cooper, J.\nT. R. Lawrence, K. Murray and B.\n! Balabanov; V. McDonald was elected Sergeant-at-Arms. D. L. Greene\nis Chaplain and Comrade F.H. Rich-\n, mond Editor of the Lucifer.'; \u25a0>\n-MancigiSiPlrsajel^^f.t:\n' -GRAND FORKS^iC-.' MM ;13'\u2014\nvfyrF. 'Armstrong! for mJM#ei\u00bb\nmanager cat MtBii;X J3ee|'Ifarm\nIfchen it w\u00abrUnr^r.the;pwrier^bip Bf\nLp'rne Ciimpbelh Idjed fflivjifcfiuver\nFebruary. '2., .Funeral; s|eifvloes*'were\nJfflid at New|:'Welstrriinster ah'ctitnter-\n,;Bient was in fcaiite Cemetbryv .\ni'-'-Mr. Armstrong; wast,.in !Grand\nForks from 1909 fo 1927,1 when he re-\nI'tlred Wggggg 'Qrei \u00ab  ;  '\u2022  '\u25a0'\nXl\nPRO\nSLUGGISH?\nI \u00ab?* \"U^rJroW coni^jaHianillndi-\nI fecotion. Poaitlt-e reaulto from\n] FRUTT-A'TlTEiS pVen ,by ttna of\n\u00abhW^d...FRUltrAVTiVBS Contain\n1 dtti'abto of fi-ulto and lK-rbn'. i   'VC;\nLibrary Seeks\n$6820 for\n1951 Expenditure\nNelson Municipal Library expenditure estimate for 1951 of $6820\nwas presented to City Council Monday\" night, and was referred to the\nFinance Committee to be dealt with\nalong with City estimates.\nThe estimate was $500 more than\nthe original estimate submitted last\nyear and $1000 more than the final\nestimate after revision by the\nCouncil, it was pointed out. This\nwas largely made up by the hiring\nof a full-time assistant at $115 a\nmonth. If the library was operated\nunder the Public Library Commission, fully trained librarians would\nhave to. be employed at \"very\nmuch\" higher salaries.\nAn additional $250 was being\nasked for books. Amount allowed\nforjhis had been held at $1000 for\n1he\"past four years. This sum, however, bought fewer books each year\nbecause of increasing prices.\nSalaries wobld total $4010 for\nlibrarians, janitor and secretary;\nbooks $1250,- and various routine\nexpenditures, $1310, it was estimated. This would be reduced by\n$250 expected in revenue from subr\nscriptions and fines.\nADMINISTRATION\nLETTERS GRANTED\n. Letters of administration in the\nestate of Paul Bruin, who died September 1947, were granted to Claude\nMacdonald of Kaslo, in chambers\nMonday by .His Honor Judge Eric P.;\n\u25a0Dawson.    \u2022'-' .'    . ld-\\\nMr. Bruin died leaving an estate\"\nvalued at $1554 made up of propert\nty, bonds and shares. Blake Alto of\nNelson was solicitor.\nRemodelled Salvation Army Hall Officially Opened\nRossland Army Band\nConcert Features\nRededication\nCutting the ribbon to mark opening of the newly remodelled Salvation Army hall at Nelson Saturday\nnight was Aid. Joseph Kary, acting\non behalf of the City. In the picture\nfrom left to right, are F. R. Prit-\nchard, member of the Salvation\nArmy Advisory Board; Sgt.-Major\nS. B. Playdon, Alderman Kary, Rev.\nAllan Dixon, President of the Ministerial Association; Second-Lieutenant Austin Millar and Captain\nand Mrs. Arthur Touzzeau of Rossland, guest speakers at the official\nopening,\nMr. Dixon offered the dedicatory\nprayer, and Alderman Kary spoke\nfor Mayor N. C. Stibbs, who for\nmany years has been a member of\nAdvisory Board, expressing the\nCity's appreciation of the Army's\nwork.\nA large crowd heard a splendid\nmusical program presented by the\nRossland. Army Band. It included\ninstrumental groups and soloists.\nSunday the band held an open air\nservice at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital and it also played at Army\nservices. At a program in the afternoon, Aid. S. J. Newell, early-day\nArmy bandmaster, was Chairman.\nMr. Newell, who led Salvation\nArmy bands in Calgary and Vernon\nmany years ago, described the history of the Army's bands and its\nmusicians. Marches played by the\nArmy bands must include a hymn\ntune, he explained, thus the Army\ncomposers included hymn tunes in\ncomposing marches.'\nRibbon is cut by Aid. Joseph Kary to open remodelled Salvation Army Hall.\n  . \u2014Alice Stevenson photo.\nQreat British Dock Strike of 1949\nCalled by Request of Communists\n$@SOO'pn^I?\n\u00abPl#*W*r PRIZES\nIOO PRIZES IN THE POT\/\nm\nJgzm\nPOT OF ^Y\nGOLD    3 I\ncontest j\/ TWO GRAND PRIZES\n$1500 EACH\nSOLVE   THIS   SIMPLE   PROBLEM   NOW\nTO   ENTER   THE   CONTEST\nWHO MAY ENTER\u2014Contest is; open to onyone residing m\nCanada, excepting any person, or any member'of the family of such a\nperson, who hos won $300;00 or over in; any contest whatsoever. Also\nexcluded ore employees of The Canadian Hobby-Craft Magazine, or\nmembers of their fomilies.i-   -, ,f-,'\u25a0\u2022' .'-.-'    '   ;\n('\u00bb . THE PROBLEM\u2014l\u00abttW;Rui\u00a3le,!four creatures\/are going otter that\nPOT OF GOLD\u2014a hare\/'O\/TOrtbi'se, a bird and a Wstt;'They're going .to\nrun far.Jt, ,'tra'wl fbr.itvfly for it, and swim for it. What they don't know\nis that'rpfee'lbf trie \u2022paths'are blocked, and only one is clear.\nYour: jobj in po,l,vin^ 'the puzzle is to find out which path is open\nto the centre\"; You wilt sirppty have to trace it out for yourself and see.\nThen you'll know whic|r'creature can reach the gold.\nWHO VmL REACH THE POT OF GOLD\u2014Will It be the hare, the\nfish, the tor.toise of the bird?.; ,    .\nEach rWdture is.stotiiined ot one entrance to the ma2e. Every line\nin the sketih represents an insurmountable wall. One entrance, and one\nonly, tofts'to the centre. Which 'creature can reach the POT OF GOLD?\nA'.little'effort now eon win 'y<W 'one \u25a0' of those handsome CASH\n~  But you should ACT NOW. '\" ,\nmm.m.m.im~m'~~*mm Solution   Blank i\u2014^\u2014..^.^\u00bb\u25a0-\u00ab_Uiit\nI ehooee tha HARE \u25a1 FISH D\nTORTOISE D BIRD tl to reach\ntho POT OF GOLD. Without\nobligation, ploaso acnd ma complete detoila on how 1 may win\none of thoae 100 CASH PRIZES\naa my ahara of tha POT OF\nGOLD.\nMoil aolurton for\nContest Manager,\nHobby-Croft Magazine\n95A King St. Weat,\nToronto, Ontario.\nDcpt.l AG1\nIfVlHsi print \u2014 Do not wrlto)\n..Prey.\nExtra MONEY fQR. PROMPTNESS *\u00a3\u00ab+&-NOW\nSays Scouting\nCurbs Mischief\nRepresentatives of Nelson and\nDistrict Boy Scout Association\nsought the support of the Nelson\nGyro Glub in the coming financial\ndrive, at their meeting in the Silver Room of the Hume Monday\nevening.\nA.' fjL Coofce, Chairman of the\nBuilding Vfcqftimiftee of the Association,- .declared' that the Scout-,\nmoveitierijt, helped to curb juvenilfel\nfleliiftmlfflfe niSt only in Nelson,\nbut,' iri the -'whole of the Dominion.\nHedged the fiyros to support?'t.he\n'Ojgarii^tjoii'which did so much' for\nypiing people.- ( ,.\n1IL (KB tire,, District Scout Com-'\nmipsiorier)'gave a brief resume of\nactivities^'pf the local- Association.\nIn ttHe'\\NeIs'on  Association  was\n! 14-man executive responsible for\nnkedfjM the Scout Hall and Camp\nBvjsk artq for carrying out the policies of Scouting stated by the Do-\n(mi-Hion Council.\nIn\" the City there were five\ngroups of Cubs and Scouts, Mr. Ure\nexplained, each sponsored by five\nmen to each group. These groups\nsupervised the activities of their\nparticular group.\n\"There are 200 boys and they all\ngo to the Scout Hall, as well as\nBrownies and Guides, They are\nclamoring for more space,\" Mr. Ure\nsaid.\nHe explained that the financial\ndrive was to be used by the executive to remodel and extend the\nScout Hall and to condition Camp\nBusk for camping. Trips to the\nUnited States and camp-\norees throughout the district would\nalso be in the offing.\nKaslo lo\n\"Burn Bond\"\nKASLO, B. C, Feb. 13 \u2014 Kaslo\nwill mark the freedom of the city\nfrom debt with a \"burning the\nbond\" ceremony Wednesday night.\nCity Council members will participate in the ceremony at the Board\nof Trade flower show.\nReduce Mayor's\nw\nmm smith\nGXktft%CAKE\nF. H. Smifty electrician, donned\nan apron, rolled tip,,his,(Sleeves and\nshowed his fellow \"Gyros just how\nsimple it was to'bake, a cake at Nelson Club's supper meeting Monday.\nThe stunt wasBfl^encourage the\nmen to tackle', the job of baking\ncookies and i cakes' for sale at the\nmen's fashion- stjb-w next month. It\nis compulsory that the men do the\nbaking themselves.\nAlthough Mr. Smith's cake pyramided in the middle it tasted\ndelicious!\nFOREST RANGERS\nEXAMS PLANNED\nExaminations for the position of\nAssistant Forest Ranger will be held\nin Nelson, Grand Forks, Nakusp,\nCrapbrook. and Invermere, end of\nFebruary! beginning of March.\nThe examinations are being held\nto establish I eligible lists for 1951\nfire season employment. According\nto candidates! standings in the\nexaminations, appointments to positions now vacant will be made.\nExamination times are February\n26 at Grand Forks; February 28 at\nNelson; March 1 at Nakusp; March\n3. at Cranbrook; and March 5 at\nInvermere.\nGerry McManus, former Canadian\nSeamen's Union leader, today said\nCommunists organized the British\ndock strike in the Summer of 1949.\nIn an article published in the\nofficial journal of the Transport\nand General Workers' Union, Mc\nManus gave the details of the strike\norganization.\nMcManus was Secretary-Treasurer of the C.S:U. until he left the\nCanadian Communist party seven\nmonths ago. The 1949 British dock\nstrike followed a strike of C.S.U.\nmembers on Canadian ships which\narrived in British ports.\nSECRET REQUEST\nThis strike of the Canadian seamen, McManus wrote, was called\n\"at the secret request of the British Communist party to create an\nartificial strike issue for the dock\nVANCOUVER, Feb.  13   (CP)  \u2014 workers of London.\"\nCity,, Council   last   night  reduced     Early in 1949, Harry Davis, C.S.U.\nMayor Fred Hume's salary to $1 a President, visited Europe to get the\nyear\u2014at the Mayor's request. jnews of the Communist parties in\nThe change in salary necessitated other parts of the world, McManus\na by-law amenment which placed: said.\n$7499 of the $7500 salary into the j    The exeeutive of the union was\ncitys  general  revenue  fund.   The in session when Davis arrived back.\nmoney will be turned over to char-     \u201e\u201e    .   .     ,..\"..\n\"He had attended two major\nmeetings in Europe\u2014one a meeting\nof the executive members of the\nCommunist-controlled World, Federation of Trade Unions, the other\na special meeting of the dock\nworkers' faction of the British\nCommuinst party,\" McManus wrote,\nHe added;\n\" 'We can strike the world,' Davis\nsaid exultantly,\n\"Davis said he found in Britain\nnot merely support for a strike\nbut an urgent, ddrriahd for a strike\n. ; '.' a strike on the waterfronts of\nGreat Britain might arouse the\nwhole British Trade Union movement. Davis made it clear that the'\ncost to the Canadian seamen,' wsts.\nLONDON, Feb.  13  (Reuters) \u2014 irrelevant in the eyes of the British\nities.\nThree aldermen opposed the bylaw. They said it might embarrass\nfuture mayors.       \u25a0   \u2022'\nMr, Hume is co-owner of New\nWestminster Royals of the Pacific\nCoast Hockey League and , a\nwealthy contractor.\nCouncil also decided against ,a\nplebiscite this year on modified\nSunday sports.\nA plebiscite on a \"wide-open\"\nSunday\u2014with open theatres, taverns and race tracks as well as commercialized sport\u2014was defeated in\na December plebiscite.\nHalibut reaches commercial size\n;  five  years,  matures  at   12.  It\nweighs 150 to 200 pounds.\nSeagrawsw^Sure\n' Seagram's \"V.O.\"       Seagrattvs \"83\"\nr5cagram\"5 Crown Royal\n-Seagram's King's Plate     Seagrams Special Old\nBonspiel Delays\nSupreme Court\nEDMONTON, Feb. 13' (CP) \u2014 A\ncharge containing 10 counts of\nmanslaughter and two of criminal\nnegligence against W. J. Gray, utilities engineer, have been filed with\nthe clerk of the' court at Wetaski-\nwin, special crown counsel J. ,J.\nFrawley said today. \".'\nThe counts arose from an explosion and fire which destroyed the\nLeduc1 Hotel last Nov. 11 killing\n10 persons.\nOriginally, Gray was charged\nonly with criminal negligence and\ncommitted for trial on that charge.\nWhen Gray appeared in court at\nWetaskiwin yesterday for opening\nof the trial, crown counsel announced plans to proceed with the additional counts.\nAt the request of defence counsel,\nthe trial was adjourned one week\nbefore the charges were read to\nGray or any plea taken.\nWETASKIWIN, Alta., Feb. 13\n(CP)\u2014It isn't often that a Supreme\nCourt case has to take a back seat\nto a curling bonspiel but just that\nhas happened here.\nW. J. Gray, an engineer for the\nLeduc Utilities Company, was to\nhave appeared in court here next\nMqnday to face 10 charges of manslaughter and two of criminal negligence.\nHowever, .more than 40 witnesses\nand a jury panel of 45 today informed Chief Justice Howson that\nthey can not get accommodation\nin the city on that date.\nThe reason? That's right. Wetas-\nkiwin's three-day annual bonspiel\nis scheduled for then and all available accommodation has been booked up for several weeks.\nCommunist party.\n\"Davis had appointed his brother\nJack Pope (the family's real name\nis Popovich) a member of the British Communist party, as a walking\ndelegate for the Canadian Seamen's\nUnion in London. He wired Pope to\nreport the situation to the dock\nworkers,\n\"What happened from then on Is\na matter of public record. When\nthe ships Beaverbrae and Agra-\nmont arrived in London, Pope\ncalled the crews out.\" ;\nThe British Government, in a re--\nview of the 1949 dock strike, re-i\nported 400,000 working days were!\nlost in different ports around the\ncoast, and Britain's economic recovery program received a severe\nsetback.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1951\u20143\nSimpler Lives Hear Recifal by\nKey lo Happiness, Janie Stevenson\nGyros Told\nROBSON, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014 The\nRobson Amateur Dramatic Society\nenjoyed a real treat at a special\nmeeting Feb.. 5 when the speaker\nfor the occasion was -Miss Jane\nStevenson, L.R.A.M, L.G.S.M., A.L.\nA.M. (Honors, Acting), from Paisley, Scotland, spoke on dramatic\nproduction.\nMiss Stevenson gave a vivid description   of   the   work   from   the\nstandpoint   of  the   dramatist,   th\"\nproducer, stage manager, actors aiiii\naudience. After a satisfying di^e\nsion the program was rounded o\nby two recitations, one a scene fr-\nShakespeare's Henry VIII, and '\nother a poem by Robert Servics\nMiss Stevenson is a niece of Mr\nand Mrs. R. W. Chalmers, Robson\nHigh geared organization and fast\npace of life was mankind's biggest\nproblem, Rev. A. R. T. Dixon told\nthe Nelson Gyro Club Monday\nnight.\nMr. Dixon offered as a solution to\nman's problem that the first syllable\nof his boasted civilization be the basic attitude of men.\n\"The great people of the world\nhave been simple folk.\" Mr. Dixon\nsaid. He gave examples of great\nmen like Lincoln and Ghandi who\npossessed the secret of happy life.\n\"If people of democratic nations\nwould base their lives on the teachings of Jesus Christ, then we\nwouldn't be worrying about Korea\nand the situations of the world,\" Mr.\nDixon said.\nMr. Dixon said that even the\nchurches had fallen into the mistake\nof overorganization.\nSumming up, Mr. Dixon said that;\ninstead of matching the pace of the'\npresent world the happy solution\nwas to slow it. In this way man\ncould find time for thoughtfullness,\nkindness and considered action.\nE.   E. Hopwood   introduced the\nguest speaker and thanked him for! JJ^JJJSnT maintenance-free fencins, hedg.\nhis \"challenging remarks.\" ing, shelter rows, snow barriers, erosion control,\n :  game conservation, etc. Easily and quickly arown\nfrom seed. This remarkable new plant of many\n.\u201e . _TT ,..\u201e,   .     ..     . . , uses for garden, farm, ranch, summer properties,\nTHABU NCHU, South Africa \u2014  Khool \u00abnd industrial grounds is fully described\n(CP)\u2014Gardner G. van Tonder Cut   in our Bulletin \"Multiflora Rose\". .Send for\ndown a walnut tree in -his garden \\ ffi \u2122^,T\u00abTw - \u00bb^^(0^??\nin this Orange Free State town and; postpaid. Complete culture directions supplied.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 London Zoo\nwants to make sure Guy the Gorilla\ndoesn't catch the sniffles. A glass\nscreen has been placed around his\ncage to ward off germs from curious spectators.\nMULTIFLORA\nROSE\nTHE LIVING fENCE\npeach tree grew next to the |\nstump. Now he gets peaches with!\na complete walnut in the centre,\nInstead of the peach pips. I\nl1^\nviiMimmMBB.\u2122-.---   \t\nDOMINION   SEED   HOUSE\nC E 0 ft C E 1 0 WK . 0 K 1 .\nForestry Crew Leaves\nNakusp for Pingston\nNAKUSP, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014 The\nForestry Crew leaving Saturday for\nPingston via S.S. Minto were H.\nCouling, L. Larsen, Dave Crellin,\nW. Bishop, Ed Knight and L. Chase.\nThe men will cruise in this vicinity\nfor'Several days.\nA Treat\nFor You and Your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\n*S$ffl\u00a3Hi   ffiM\n\u00ab,io\u00bb- c^_\/,tta*vTcov\"-        ,-t\n***s!B'*s\nWin $2,000 just by naming this\ncake! It's delicious and so beautiful\u2014it's a 3-Iayer Qrange cake topped\nand filled with pale green frosting,\ndecorated with flowers of orange\nslices, and leaves of dark green cherry.\nThink of a suitable, original name\nfor it. Then read the easy contest rules\nand send in your first entry now. Enter\noften! There are over 100 cash prizes!\nlist PRIZE $2,000\n2nd prize $1,000.\nIrdprllt $0OO       3th priio SHO\n4thprlio $300       6th prlis $50\nPLUS IOO crlf p SIO bllli at Consolation Prl\u00bbil\nlo (tNametfieCakenConte5tRulei\nI \u2022 1. Print your name for this cake, your\n''\u2022 own name and address\u2014send with\n0 one panel (with \"net weight\" on it)\nfrom Jewel carton to: Swift's \"Name\n\u25a0 the Cake\" Contest, Dept d-4, P.O\n\u2022 Box 31, Terminal A, Toronto, Ont.\n\u2022 2. Contest is open to everyone in\n0 Canada, except employees of Swift\nCanadian Co. Limited, irs f.dvertising\nagencies andmembers of their families.\n\u2022 3. AH en tries, become the property of\n\u2022 Swift Canadian Co. Limited.  4. Mail\n0 all enttics before midnight of March\n-- 17, 1951. 5. Prizes awarded for suitability and originality. 6. No contestant\n\u2022 may win more than one prize. In case\n\u2022 of tie, prizes ate divided.  7. Judges'\n\u2022 decision is final.\n\u2022 Names of winners will be published in\nthis paper. Swift Canadian Co. Limited\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed bythe Liquor Control Boardor bythe Government of British Columbia\nRobson Enjoys U.B.C.\nFilnv \"On Sta^e\"\nROBSON, B. C, Feb. 13 -The\nFebruary meeting; .of' the Robson\nAmateur Dramatic Society was\nheld at the-R.C.M.C. Hall with 24\nmembers'present.\nIt was definitely decided that a\n3-acjf, comedy would be produced\nand1 presented in March.\nTile program' of the evening was\nthe showing of a film \"On Stage\"\nas received from the Visual Kdu-\niigtional - Department', v -of,-:, U.B.C.\nHostesses were Mrs. A, Martin,\nMrs. G. Magwood and Mrs. G.\nMillar. I\nSELL TgE CLASSIFIED WAY\nWhen there's a community effort on fbot, chances are you'll find the\nRoyal Bank Manager on the committee. He is often called on to act\nbecause Royal Bankers have earned a solid reputation as'public\nspirited citizens., And sp; it is right down the line, from the Manager\nto the youngest clerk. Royal Bankers are encouraged to pull their\nweight in all worthwhile endeavours, for the imprests of the bank and\nthe community are one.\nThis spirit is reflected in their service tosyou. When you have\nbanking business to do ... when you wish to discuss some financial\nmatter in confidence... see your Royal Bank first. The Manager\nand his staff are there to serve you in every way |hey can\u00bb\n\u2022 The Royal Bank in your community\ncan serve you in many ways. For instance, you may need a small loan to\npay medical bills, to consolidate debts,\nto improve pr extend your home. Personal loans i can be repaid by instalments. Endorsers are not necessarily\nrequired and interest rates are exceptionally low. Talk it over with your\nbank manager. He'll be glad to see you.\nTHE   ROYAL   BANK   OF   CANADA\nNelson Branch, P. H. HOSKINS, Manager\n 4 \u2014 Nelson daily news, Wednesday, feb. u, 1951\nJohn Derek Campaigns for\nFilm Stories of Young Love\nBy BOB TH0MA8\nHOLLYWOOD, Feb. 13 CAP) \u2014\nYoung love deserves a break on\nthe screen, says John Derek, the\nheartthrob of the milkshake set.\nThe actor complains that the\nover-age Romeds get smooching by\nthe bushel in movies, while the\nyoung actors get only a peok. Somewhat rashly, he hurled a challenge-\n\"Just let me make love to a girl\non the screen and I can make It\nlook better than any of the older\nactors. This isn't bragging; it's just\nthat young love is so much more\nexciting and real.\"\n(Djxal Vp. With.\nThe latter could be grounds for\na great debate but wo won't go\ninto it here. Let's get back to Der-\nfek's complaint. He remarked that\nhe has been unable to display his\nromantic abilities on the screen. In\nfour out of five pictures, he has\nbeen portrayed as a killer. (He's\nat It again in \"The Secret\"). In his\nother film he devoted his. time\nlargely to playing football..\nCURRENT TREND  -\nThis illustrates the current trend\nof Hollywood thought. The producers are inclined to present the\npioture of young people, devoting\nall their time either to strenuous\nsports or murder, mayhem and\nother forms of delinquency.\n\"They seem to have . forgotten\nthat young pcpolo make love, too,\"\nDerek said.\n\"In one. of my pictures, I was\nsupposed to play a young man. But\nwhen I read the dialogue, it was\nwritten for a man of about 35, It\nsounded silly for me. to be'.saying\nthose words and I know I Would be\nhit by the critics because of it.\n\"That made me realize that young\npeople are no longer represented\nin the making of pictures. The\nwriter, the producer and the director, all had forgotten how young\npeople talk and acted.\"   ' '\nThe older actors not only take\nthe stories away from the younger\nones, Derek said, but the actresses,\ntoo.       \u25a0' r   ;'-\n\"It's easier for a young girl to\ngot roles than for a boy,\" he said\n\"because the male role in a picture\nmore often requires the bigger\nname. The result is that younger\ngirls appear with older men and\nthen seem too.mature to play op\nposite someone young.\"\n., \u25a0 . ilSMALL ENSEMBLE,., ., ,,\n'\u25a0Ait fte prettiest little tglr,\\\\lnwJ\ntlieVlrcttie'Et-.^M^tS-.Shf^l'l'oyd tliei\n'scallops thattgoVrquria 3rtd round\ncollar 'suntop'\"and hem. It's a teally\ntruly grown-up ensemble!\n.Pattern'8446 comes in.sizes 2, 4,\n6\", S, 10. Size 6 sundress, jacket\", 1%\nyards 35-incth; 1 yard contrast.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern.- Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\n8TYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, core of Nelson Daily\nNews Pattern Dept., Nelson.\nHvae you seen . . , The new silhouette? The new Spring Suits:\nEnsembles? The new wrap-on? Order our new Marian Martin Pattern\nBook,, read ('all about,your beautiful\nSpring wardrobe.- Send iwcntfy-fiye\"\ncents for your copy today! A FREE\npattern of a new Spring hat\nprinted in book,\nVksdkaiaiL     ,\nbip cZcuUicl (jJhsurfsUi-\n... JIFFY THRIFT RUG\nFor  your  new  color  scheme,  a\nnew thrifty rug of cotton scraps.\nColor  sections   are  straight strips\nmade separately.\n* Slipper stitch single crochet done\n\u2022 in separate sections -\u2014 easy! Pattern\n546; directions, stitches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins, (stamps cannot be ac-*\ncepted) for this pattern to Nelson\nDaily News, Needlecraft Department, Nelson. Print plainly PAT-\nTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nSend Twenty-five cents more (in\ncoins) for Laura Wheeler's Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of patterns\nfor crochet, embroidery, knitting,\nhousehold accessories, dolls toys . . .\n,, many hobby and gift ideas. A free\npattern is printed in the book.\nHonored at\nNakusp Shower\n' NAJ4USP, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014 Host-\nesseS'honoring Miss Norma Funk .at\nLa. jiie\/'nuptial shower prior to her\nmarriage >\u25a0 to John Olson, Jr., were\njPfejf. Moseley and Mrs. H. Cann,\nat'the home.of the groom's parents,\nMrlia^d\/Mrs,' John Olson, Sr.\nI Arringfe thrbughou,t the rooms\nwere pink a,n'd white streamers and\nsilver yedjing bells, and daffodils\nin crystal Indlders. >\"\nThe fjgtaeit-of honor received the\ngifts in a-pink and white decorated\nbasktetwRMeh was carried in by the\ntwo.\/hrStesses.. ''\n,v m'.briad-elect thanked the ladies\nifor the shower of gifts.\n'.Games   and   contests   were   in\ncharge  of  Mrs.  Peter  Hurry,  Jr.\nMusic was also enjoyed.\nRefreshments were served when\nthe groom's-to-be mother, Mrs. Olson and Mrs. Hilder .(Wiles poured\nfrom a daintly arranged table.\nThe hostesses wee assisted by\nMiss Margaret Olson and Mrs. W.\nH. Davies,\nNew Denver L. A.\nCommittees Picked\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014\nCommittees for a Valentine dance\nwere appointed by Mrs, John Taylor\npresident of Slocan Community\nHospital Ladies' Aid at its meeting\nat the home of Mrs. T. W. Clarke.\nCommittee reports were given by\nMiss M. H. Butlin, Mrs. J. A. Greer,\nand Mrs. W. K. Staudinger. A new\nvisiting committee was named.\n--*rhe President welcomed Mrs.\nJames Draper as a guest,\nNew Denver C'W.L.\nPlans Whist, Dance\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014\nPlans for a St. Patrick's whist drive\nand dance were discussed by St.\nAnthony's Church Catholic Women's\nLeague at its meeting at the home\nof Mrs. E. DeRosa.\nNew Denver \u2666..\nNEW DENVER, B. C. \u2014 Master\nHerbert Boisvert of Slocan City is\na patient in the Slocan Community\nHospital.\nMiss Ella Pool, R.N., of Nelson,\non the staff of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, was guest for a\nfew days of Miss Eva Ekvall, R.N.,\nand Miss Peggie Dingle, R.N., at\nthe^'Slocan Community Hospital.\n\u2022 jfi&m'as Jjavis of Zincton is a\npatient'\" in, the Slocan Community\nHospitaj. j, i\nThose' making the trip by car to\nSlocan 'City on , Wednesday to attend the \\ Canadian Legion Auxiliary were Mrs. F. B. Tessman, Mrs.\nN. F. Brookes, Mrs. W. E. Rowe,\nMrs. A. I Schnaebele, Mrs. J, H.\nMcDonaugh, Mrs. H. T. Butler. '\nGeorge A. MacMillan of the Violamac Mines Sandon, left tot Toronto where, he will visit his wife\nand family. ,\nF. B. Tessman and J. A. Clarkson\nattended the District School Board\nmeeting in Slocan City.\nArthur Peaphey of Silverton is a\npatient in the Slocan Community\nHospital.\nMr. arid Mrs. Ernest Doney were\nweekend visitors in Nelson with\nfriends.\nM. C. K. Struve has left to\/.jjt-\ntend tho Public Works Engineers\nConvention In Victoria.\nJoseph Kancher of New Denver\nis a patient in the Slocan Community Hospital.\nFruitvale i..\nMr. and .Mrs. Homer - Godin entertained a number of tjielr friends\nand \u25a0neighbors at their home. Bingo\ncards and other games were played.\nA birthday tea was held in the\nFruitvale Hotel private dining-room\nih honor of Mrs.;E.'.Godln, the occasion being her{72nd birthday. The\ntea,table,was.centred 'with a birth-\nday'cake and the honbrecreceived\nI many lonely gifts. \"\u25a0..-.--,.\nBlindcraft\nTea,-Sale\nA Success\nIn observance of White Cane\nWeek across Canada, the Nelson\nbranch of the Canadian National\nInstitute for the Blind and Nelson\nWomen's Institute joined in sponsoring a sale of crafts made by the\nblind and nearly-blind - in British\nColumbia in the Hume Saturday.\nJ. C. Hembllng, district representative for the C.N.I.B., demonstrated\nthe use of various aids for the Bight-\nless, and E. Lindley, a local blind\ncraftsman, showed guests bow he\nmade his crafts,\nThe Silver Room was decorated\nwith daffodils. Pouring were past\nofficers of the W.I., Mrs. H. Mackenzie, Mrs. H. H. Pitts, Mrs. F. E,\nWheeler, Mrs. E. R. Clarke, Mrs,\nC. Shannon, Mrs B, Yeatman, Mrs.\nM. McGee and Mrs. J. W. Hearn.\nHandicrafts were sold by Mrs. H.\nE. Thain, Mrs, John Erb, Mrs. F. H.\nSmith and, Mrs. T. Dolphin. Mrs.\nErb and Mrs. H, A. Custer received\nthe guests and Mrs. J, McNabb was\ncashier.\nPRAYER DAY\nIS OBSERVED\nIN NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb.- 13 \u2014\nMrs.' K. Hansen, Mrs. James Draper\nand Mrs. M. C. T. Percivall were\nleaders of the World Day of Prayer\nservice in Knox Presbyterian\nChurch here.\nThe theme was \"Perfect Love\nCasteth Out Fear.\"' and churches\nparticipating were Knox Presbyterian, Turner Memorial United and\nSt. Stephen's Anglican.\n:, Appointed to take part in prayers\nwere Mrs. E. Harbin and Miss F.\nHamilton for the Anglican church;\nMrs. Mary Doyle and Mrs. J. A,\nGreer for the Presbyterian church,\nand Mrs, F, B. Tessman and Mrs.\nJohn Taylor for the United church,\nMrs. Hansen gave a brief address\nand the offering was taken by Miss\nDora Clever. \u2022  .     , ,\/.-,.\nNEW\/DtNVER     -\nmi mm '\nrt NEW? DENVER, B.C., Feb. 13 -'\nKnox Presbyterian Church Ladies'\nAid 4net' her; at the b'om'e.'of- Mrs.\nWi^iaihl Clever, .Th^'deVdtional\nperlodi i^aB led by' Mrs; K. Hansen\nandS reports, we're giyen,\nMrs. Hartley World\nDay of Mwi^if. \" \u25a0\nSpeaker qtfNakusp\nNAKUSP, B.C.,'Veb. 13 \u2014'\"The\nsun never sets on this .great work of\nthe churches. The .morning sun'.rises,\non Newfoundland, Bermuda and\nTrinidad, sweeps over Canada,\nshines on the workers in Japan, in\nKorea, in North and South China,\na little later on West China, a few\nhours later still on Central India,\nAfrica and the rounds then begins\nagain in Newfoundland. And so in\nall lands the prayers for peace during this 'World Day of Prayer which\ncovered the World Family ,of\nNations.' \" \u2022    , '   '   ,'.-\nMrs. B. S. S, Hartley -spoke thus\nin the Anglican Church to a large\ncongregation from the subject \"Perfect love Casteth Out Fear.\"\nMrs. S. Millward sang the solo, \"0\nLoving Father Hear My Prayer.\"\nOthers taking part were Mrs.\nRalph Islip, Mrs. F. Raymond, Mrs.\nE. Raymond, Mrs, E. Lodge, Mrs. B.\nMcRobert, Mrs. P. R, Henke, and\nMrs. E, C. Johnson, Mrs. T. Mitchell, was organist throughout the\nservice, which Mrs. R. Armstrong\nand' Mrs. E. J. Oxenham were\nleaders.\nN. Denver Council\nHolds Meeting\nNEW DENVER, B, C, Feb. IS \u2014\nBoard of Trade Council meeting\nwas held at the home of H. M.\nParker, Vice-President, Slocan\nCity, February 6th, with the President, J. L. Wilson of Silverton in\nthe chair.\nNorman F. Brookes of New Denver was re-appointed Secretary of\nthe Board for 1951. C. N. Uphill,\nNew Denver, was appointed to fill\nthe vacancy on Council.\nThe following were appointed:\nTransportation, (roads and bridges)\nindustries, J. S. Mcintosh, D. R,\nWilson; power, Thomas M. Leask,\nA. L. Harris; education, H,> M.-i\nParker and A. L.' Harris;' tourist\nand publicity, Js'Ai Roberts, C. N.\nUphill; community; affairs, H. Barry Robison, Qrientlri A. Forsythe;\nfishery, C. -W. (Jorby, R. G. Warmer.    , .   . x\nBoard members who are In default of current annual membership dues will be circularized. ,\nNew Denver T^\u00abH (\nTown Holds Social\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014'\nGames and dancing were on the\nagenda of New Denver Teen Town's\nsocial evening in K.P. Castle Hall\nhere. Entertainment was supervised\nby G. R. Nelson and Jim Tatoishi,\nTeen Town Mayor.\nASPIRIN\nRE LI MS PAIN AND\nMM'\n^\\fmBnm^Asr!\nSI. Lawrence Seaway Would Open\nUp Deposits of Labrador Iron Ore\nMONTREAL, Feb.. 13 (CP) -\nTransport Minister Chevrler today\nsaid joint development of power\nand: navigation on. the St. Lawrence River must be proceeded with\nImmediately by Canada and the\nUnited States in the Interests of\nnational, security and Canadian economy.    : '\u25a0'';\u25a0 ... ','..   .     :'X\nIn an address 'prepared for delivery to a joint meeting of the\nMontreal Board of Trade and Cham-,1\nbre de Commerce, Mr. Chevrler said\nthe Canadian Government Is hopeful that the U.S. Congress will implement the 1941 St. Lawrence Sea\nway Agreement at this session.\n\"Without construction of the seaway, the large deposits of high-\ngrade iron ore in Labrador cannot\nmove economically and expeditious-,\nly to the Great Lakes steel centres.\n\"Shipbuilding and ship repair'\ncould riot be Increased advantageously in the relatively well-protected' Great Lakes shipyards. And\nno relief could be afforded in times\nof emergency to land transportation between Montreal and the head\nof the lakes.\n\"It is equally important from the\neconomic angle. If you were to\ndraw a circle around the City of\nMontreal for a radius of 70 miles,\nyou would find within that area,\n6,000,000 horsepower cjf electrical\nenergy, most of which .\/has.never\nbeen touched, ond.lies there awaiting development' \u2022'    j   .    ,-A'\/\/',-'\u25a0'\n\"When this power; is frilly dev*L->\noped, I would venture' ttje of)in|oh-\nthot this will: be one ot the richest\nareas on the North American continent.\"\nCost of, completing the project\nwould be (204,000,000 for Canada\nand about (270,000,000 for the United States. Canada already has spent\nan additional-. $132,000,000 In completing the Welland ship canal and\nthe U.S., $42,000,000 for a new'-^ock\nat Sault Ste. Marie' .and dradglrig'\nthe St'. Clair River channels!' , ''\n1'' \u2014'' \u2022 t is,' i:-'< \u25a0\u25a0\nBoy Scduts to Fojrm\nGuard at Victoria\nVICTORIA, B.C.,;Feb. 13 '(CR)H\nFor the first time in their history,\nBritish Columbia Boy Scouts wilf\nform a guard of honor for the' Legislature opening here February 20.\nScouts will be represented from\nVictoria, Nanaimo, Duncan and the\nLower Mainland.\nAbout 60 members will assemble\nat district headquarters here to be\niriBpected by T. W. S. Parsons, Provincial Scout Commissioner.\nThe guard will line, the steps of\nthe legislative buildings and will\nbe under command of District Executive Commissioner Freeman\nKing.\nMONCTON, N.B.'(CE)\u2014Residents\nComplained that a magazine salesman here was claiming a connection;\nwith, the Moncton Flying. Club,', ex',\npiainipg that he iv\u00abs \"working; (Jis;\nway; \"thrtmgn\" flying scboo}.1' ;;The\ncljib\/^aid'it Hadtio hookup wijUiahy\nm|ggrje offer-lift! euoha pli|i\nOttawa Plans io\nEnd Wheat Pools\nOTTAWA,. Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014Government action to wind up wheat\npools at a certain date and pay the\nfarmers off at once was indicated\ntoday.\nTrade Minister Howe gave notice\nto the commons that he will Intro-\/\nduce this week a bill to, amend the\n.Wheat Board Act ' ,'\u25a0,.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;','\u2022\u2022>..\"',\n>;t pt tee. arjtiejpated'' a'mmjaniehts!''\nffie\/mb'st,-Important is ex^eotea 'to\nchange,the'system for payment' for\nwheat farmers turn over to'the\nGovernment Board for sale.\nThe new system would wind up\nthe annual pools\u2014 posslbily for bth-\neri grains too\u2014at the July 31 end\nOf the pooling period and pay the\nfarmers off regardless of whether,\nall, the vVheat ,is sold. . f fl\\ :!i;-,\n!'The import jvfluty be tfyatfafariers'\nwould ief,!ttieir\u2022 'irioricy-' promptly1-\nrather thai) waltink- llBMraB '-ca's&s\nfor months juntl? (the (Government\nhas soiaUhe'grairi'.' ;.'\u2022.;,\n,      ts and exam-\nfor:;-T:hb..year ended\nRecord Treatments\nBy Cancer Institute\nVANCOUVER, Feb, 13 (CP)\u2014B.\nC. Cancer Institute.'provided a record of 19;954j'\nination itdtaj u\u00bb-,iiu\u00abj.j\nJun'k'lDSO, 'was'30,771,L\n\/f.'frnese figures arc dramatic,\" said\n(Mr. Buckerfield. ''TJiey show an increase, over June, 1946JJ0J more than\n360 per cent. All doctors do. not\nsend their patients to tHe?-institute,\nbut I have no doubt omrSr'B.^r-treat-\nment centres woujd ,wow a similar\nupward trem\"\nshare with the poor. j,\nHowever, a battle! with his landed\ngeritry is the lesser of two evils for';\nthe Shah. Across his Nflrthfiin' bdr-,\nder the long arm of \u25a0 Russian*- Communism is reachlng'to wlin converts\namong the ,uridcJSprivlh;ge<U Pov*'\nerty ;and Vhunger'provjdeIthel' riibs't\nfertile soij .for';ttie -gi-o.wtfy of '.Corn-i\nmunlsm.. , .\". '\u25a0 I.1, '\u2022 - '' .' f - i':''!'.J\nThe dissftlutidn'of, fti_e-greaJiUrid-i]\ned estates'.of: EttrCpe, wltyi.a'Jesulfe'\ning benefit to the,'.'jatjifclj ijolk, Hai\nbeen moving apace 'in'..rebent ytafs.\nIran will be about the larest\/Eajst\nthat this'upheaval has 'reached? on\na big scale, barring the American, \\1\nimpelled reforms In Japan.\nSeveral International projects lot\nthe betterment of farming in thi\nFar East are getting under way\nMayhap the young Persian Shah'i\ngesture will speed the Eastward\nmovement of redistribution and improvement of the agricultural lands\nPERSIAN SHAH JOINS WORLD LEADERS\nIN CAMPAIGN TO COMBAT STARVATION\nBy DEWITT MacKENZIE\nAssociated Press Newt Analyst\nIt's a notable commentary on our\ntimes that Iran's serious'young Shah\nhas joined Asiatic leaders who at\nlong last recognise abject poverty\nas being the cause of most of the\nUnrest in- their part of the world.\nTwice   within   recent  days  the\n32-year-old Shah Mohammed Reza\nPahlevi has made striking moves to\nbetter conditions in his own country.- Thefirst was.his announcement\n,ttiKt\/he ,wUl\/seU his huge holdings\nto' the Jand*ht)ngry, .peasants. Yesterday (he I'oappea ih'ifc,; by\/dnjering\nthat the celebrations in' connctitipn\nwith-his marriage to the' Princess,\nSaraya Esfandiari should be strip-,\nped of the usual regal pomp and\nbe confined to one day as a measure of national economy.\n\\This;championship of the people;\nLisjrtjoj'd'jrhpve.oh the partjoC-ffifi'\n[.ruleiv ft'.requires no Imagination\n* ta\/realize' thai Ihei landed gentry' of I\nIran will -(igltJ to the; 1<W!dltc^\nagainst redistribution, [qpjwWIftK\nthat it is likely to qrag -.them along'\nwith it. They .aren't yet ^eady.'tb1,\ne';0;HpT?':f.7\nj Diisolve'2 or 3 tablupoOhfull\n^r if nnjjuird.in a little cplrl.\nwjrer Slid ^ppur'f^Into your\ni.hot bitH. Alter'tta'bjth ,,.\n!r \u00bb.bti*-rii6-i*va:i:.ltli'eh oil\nS to.|^l9r,a'|!orylti,li';-,i-:\nColmans\nMUSTARD\nIn ihe laundry when\nbaby's diapers are\nwashed, ttickel alley\nequipment eliminates\nrust and verdigris\nstains because it is\nrusl-proef and cam-\nsitm-raistant. It dees\nnet develop jagged\nedges, so prevents\ntearing of the wash.\nMuch ef the equipment\nused in the plants where\ncod liver oil, medicines\nand toiletries are processed, is made of Nickel\nalleys to maintain the\npurity of the product.\nTo commemorate the 200th\nanniversary of Cri>nstedt's\ndiscovery of Nickel in 1751,\nthe Royal. Canadian Mint has\nthis year issued i new five-cent\ncoin. This coin, like previous\n6ve-cent pieces, is made of\npure Nickel.\npincC-the discovery of Canada's Nickel deposits,\nhundreds 'of uses and vast markets have been\ndeveloped for Nickel through a planned program\nof research. So Nickel is now one of our most\nimportant exports to the United States and other\ncountries. As a result millions, of U.S. dollars come\nto Canada, which .the Nickel industry uses to pay\nwages, taxes, freight, and to purchase lumber,\n.machinery and supplies.\nCanadian Nickel\n\"Th nemance o\/AfcW\na 60'page book fully i7tW-\ntrated, will be sent fret em\nrequest to anyone interested.\nTHE    INTERNATIONAL\nN1CKE1. COMPANY    OF    CANAd'a,    LIMITED,    25    KING    ST.    WES.T,    TORONTol\n 23$\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nAndrew's Annual\nFebruary\nSALE\nGood assortment of\nPumps, Ties and Sandals.\nValues to $15.50\nSale Price $8.95\nValues to $12.95\n\u25a0 Sale Price $6.95\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nThrift Shop Feather in Cap\nFor Kokanee Chapter, IODE\nThe Thrift Shop again showed in 1950 that it is the most successful\nfund-raiser Kokanee Chapter, Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire, has.\nThis came out at the organization's' annual meeting in W.I. Room\nTuesday afternoon, at which Mrs. N. C. Stibbs was elected Regent,\nMrs. R. B. Brummitt, who has been acting regent, was chosen First\nVice-Regent, and Mrs. H. E.\nThain, Second Vice-Regent.\nRossland W.B.A.'\nHolds 'Phone Whist\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 13 - At\nthe monthly meeting of the Women's Benefit Association, Golden\nCity Club in the Anglican church\nroom arrangements were made for\na telephone whist to be held at once.\nResults will be in by next meeting,\nIt was decided to send a donation\nto the March.of Dimes campaign.\nHostessese were Mrs. Kenneth\nKlinzing and Mrs. W. M. Anderson,\nChurch Guild Meets\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C., Feb. 13-\nMonthly  meeting   of  the   Church\nGuild was held in the hall with\nMrs. W. S. MacPherson as hostess.\nVACUUM PACKING MEANS\nRICHER CAKES\nCross $50, Canadian National Institute for the Blind $25, Arthritis\nand Rheumatism Soclty $25, Mount\nSt. Francis furnishings $200, Girl\nGuides $10, and $33 for Christmas\ngifts for the aged and veterans in\nKootenay  Lake  General Hospital.\nTotal value of welfare work had\nbeen $362, Mrs. Roy Pollard -said,\nMilk had been given to needy families and gifts of clothing had been\nmade on her numerous calls.\nSixty-nine members were' receiving the I.O.D.E. magazine \"Echoes\",\nMrs. Mutchler told members,\n24 FOOD PARCELS\nTwenty-four  food   parcels  were\nThe chapter honored Its only\npast regents living in Nelson by\nnaming Mrs. Alex Leith, honorary\nregent, and Mrs. W. O. Rose,\nhonorary vice-regent.\nMrs. E. C. Wragge Is secretary,\nMrs. J. B. M. Barnum, treasurer;\nMrs. A, M. Noxon, corresponding\nsecretary; Mrs. C. B. Mutchler\n\"Echoes\" convener; Miss Margaret\nArthur, post war; Mrs, 8. Linton,\neducational; Mrs. C. H. Chatfleld,\nstandard bearer; and Mrs, F. D.\nCummins, child and welfare;\nCouncillors are Mrs, W. R. Smythe\nMrs. Kerby Grenfell, Mrs. W. A.\nGordon,   Mrs,  Harry  Burns and len\\\u2122  e'de\u2122y  pfople in  Britain\nMrs, W. W.  Ferguson.\n$800 TURNED OVER\nUnder the management of Mrs.\nH. B. Gore and Mrs. H. T. Miard,\nthe Thrift Shop turned in $800 during the year. This meant more to\nthe chapter than ever as its annual\ntag day was devoted to Manitoba\nFlood Relief. More than $1000 was\nraised for the flood victims, and\nconsequently there was less money\nfor other projects.\nThe- Thrift Shop had a balance\nof $191 in the bank at the end of\nthe year after donating the $800 to\nthe chapter.\nGOLDEN JUBILEE\nThe year also saw the chapter\ncelebrate the 50tfl anniversary of\nthe founding of the Order with i\nsuccessful tea at which many original members were guests.\nThe treasurer's report, given by\nMrs. Cummins, showed total, disbursements of $1218 and a bank\nbalance of $346, in addition to tag\nday proceeds. Mrs. Wragge, secretary, made special mention of the\nchapter's loss through Mrs. C. F.\nMcHardy, regent, moving to Victoria.\nDonations   were   made   to   Red'\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat tho\nButcherteria\nUse This Form\nTo Order Extra Copies o]\npictorial\nEDITION\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY-i IN <\nK BLACK PENCIL\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER\nOR TO THE DAILY NEWS CIRCULATION\nDEPARTMENT\nName _\nAddress\nCity  \t\nName _\nAddress\nCity  \t\nName _\nAddress\nCity  \t\nName _\nAddress\nCity ',_,\nName\nAddress\nCity  \t\nYour Own Name\nYour Own Address .\nii -.1 '.,,)\u2022'\nCopy |5C + 5C pwtage\nPlus 3% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 21e Per Copy Covers Wrapping and Moiling\nby Us to Anywhere in Canada, Great Britain or the\nUnited States.\ni )]'\n| PHONE 144\nby Miss Arthur at a cost of $167,\nIn addition, a shipment of articles\nvalued at $100 had been sent overseas.\nForty-one new citizens had been\npresented with cards, the report of\nMrs. R. E. Dill on immigration\nstated.\nMrs. Linton's report as educational secretary showed a total expenditure of $30. Two history prizes\nwere awarded senior and junior\nmatriculation students and a prize\nhad gone to, Riondel school for a\npatriotic essay competition. Lardeau\nand Riondel schools received donations of books, calendars and\nChristmas treats,\nMrs. Gordon reported that she and\nMrs. Brummitt had visited the home\nfor the aged and distributed Christmas gifts, while Mrs. Russell arranged with Kootenay Lake General\nHospital for gifts for veterans,\nMilk bottles deposited in various\nbusiness places had added $16 to the\nchapter's funds.\nDonations to I.O.D.E. funds and\nother non-local appeals had been\n$15 for furnishing a lounge in the\nnew women's residence at the\nUniversity of British Columbia,\nand $5 for an Indian student bursary, which, with other small donations, totalled $42. The total\nspent in aid of local projects was\n$804.\nMembers decided to hold meetings\non the third Tuesday in each month.\nDuring the monthly business\nmeeting, it was announced that $84\nhad been netted by a bridge and\ncanasta party in aid of the Queen\nMary carpet fund.\nThe Thrift Shop head was made\na permanent member of the executive, and members voted to take\nout membership in the Kootenay\nFavorite Classic\n\u2022\/\n,,.;;...r\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nThe fine classic does duty for\nmany seasons and always looks\nwell-bred. It Is an Investment well\nworth making, especially for the\nwoman who prefers a small, well-\nrounded wardrobe. Such an item\nIs this coat, designed by Davldow,\nwho does It In bright red chinchilla woolen. It has matching red\nbone buttons, and vertical stitching is smartly used to emphasize\nand exaggerate the size and Importance of the slit pockets.\nFruitvale C.W.L.\nPlans Tea, Sale\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014\nPlans for a St. Patrick's tea and\nbake sale were completed by the\nCatholic Women's League at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Henry Cyr.\nLake General Hospital auxiliary. A\ndelegate will be appointed by the\nnew regent.    \u25a0'\u2022  \u25a0\nMrs. C. G. Johnson ond Mrs. W.\nK. Gunn became new members.\nNews of the Day\nRATE3: Ue lino, 40c line black face type; larger typo rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nDon't wait until after the fire,\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nHot buttered popcorn at WAIT'S\nany hour of the day.\nELECTROLUX SALES \u2022 SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR HI\n, Bring that valuable timepiece tc\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nWANTED \u2014 CLEAN   COTTON\nRAGSU2C PER LB.\nI \\ NELSON DAILY NEWS\nH BUTTERFIELD eau't fix it,\nthrow it away. Prompt service em\nwatch work;, fully guaranteed.\nFOR YOUR VALENTINE \"FLOWERS OF SPRING\" \u2014 PHONE 187.\nGRIZZELLE'S, FLORISTS\nGUNS\nWe sell and repair them. Also sights\nSAM BROWN, Repairs, Nelson, B.C.\nCorsages,  orchids,   roses,   carnations, etc. Phone\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP \u2014 910\nLane Cedar Chests for your Valentine. \u2014 $54.50 up.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nOpen all day Wednesday. Order\nyour corsage early.-\u2014- .Phone 962,\nCOVENTRYS' FLOWER SHOP\nValentine Tea and Bake Sale Fri'\nday, Feb. ,16,,:First .'Presbyterian\nChurch, 3-5 p.m.. ' S , ,    -\nSEW-RITE TAILORS\nDressmaking \u2014 Alterations\nBelow Eaton's Phone 1526\nCorduroy overalls, sizes 2 to 10,\nassorted colors; $2.69 pair.\n\u25a0\u25a0':.' THE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nMILITARY BALL\nNelson Armouries TONIGHT\nDancing 9 to 2.        Dress Optional-\nLAUX SPAX\u2014For Spatching\n1 lb. pkg. 25c\nBURNS LUMBER.CO.\nWhy not give us a call to increase\nyour fire insurance protection today?\u2014C. W. APPLEYARD.\nFor stove and furnace work,\nphone Pounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 1541-L.\nCHIROPODIST\u2014FOOT SPECIAL.\n1ST, R. Bourchier, D.S.C., 1178 Bay\nAvenue, Trail. Phone Trail 1750.\nFor your Special Valentine send\nbouquet flowers complete with orchid; $3.50 and $4.00.\nMAC'8  FLOWER  8HOP\nMake her your Valentine with\nan exquisite Spring Bouquet or a\nbig box of the chocolates of her\nchoice! Shop at VALENTINE'S.\nWomen's Institute regular meeting Friday, 16th, 2:00 P.M.-*- j, A -.\nA general meeting' of- the rJEL-5-\nSON GARDEN'tLUB will be held\nFri., Feb. 16th', at 8 p.m. in the\nW.I. Rooms, Civic Centre.\nDON'T   FORGET   YOUR   VALr\nENTINE. SHE WILL  REMEMBER.\nGRIZZELLE'S,  FLORI8TS\nPHONE 187.\nAN OUTSTANDING BARGAIN\n2-pce. chesterfield suite in heavy\nlustre weave velour for only $159.50\nMc & Mo (NELSON) LTD.\n8PECIAL\nSingle  Vanda  orchid,  ready  to\nwear, 60c each.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nOne only \u2014 Used 8-piece walnut\ndining room suite. Special, $149.50.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPhone 1660 413 Hall St.\nFor the finest and sturdiest in\nelectric mixers, see the new West-\ninghouse food mixers. At $56.95 this\nis today's best value.\n.   HIPPERSON'S.\nPH.  1020-R  FOR   RESERVATIONS\nfor S1 z zling. Steak Supreme\nand melt-in-your-mouth Biscuits\nstraight from the oven!\nGERIGH'S LODGE. .\nPatient)* Jin; the; Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital pan have the Daily\n,News sent to them\/'every -hiorriJitg.'\nRhone 144, Circulation Dept, Daily\nNews,\nBuild your own freezer. It's easy\nand inexpensive. You build the box,\nwe supply and install the equipment. Complete equipment as low\nas $386. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nATTENTION\nAH Cubs, Scouts, Guides and\nBrownies are asked to wear their\nuniforms to school begining the 18th\nto 25th of Feb. which is Boy Scout,\nGirl Guide Week. \"\u2022 \u25a0\"',   c\nIN   MEMORIAM '*\nIn   memory  of  Ted,   who  was\nkilled in Italy Feb. 14, 1944.      I\nAlways in our thoughts, and sadly\nmissed by. Mom, Dad, Leslie, Olga,\nand Tommy Lund.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late\nFrederick Hindley will be held\nfrom St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral\nThursday at 2 p.m. The ,Very Rev.\nT. L. Leadbeater will officiate and\ninterment will be in Nelson Memorial Park.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late\nPeter Dempsey will be held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home Friday at 2 p.m. Rev. Canon W. J.\nSilverwood will officiate and interment wfll be in Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nGuide Association\nElects Mrs. Burton\nMrs. L. R. Burton has again been\nelected President of the local Association of Nelson District Girl\nGuides.\nAlso chosen at the organization's\nannual meeting in the Women's Institute room were Mrs. N. C. Stibbs,\nhonorary president; Mrs. Walter\nHendricks, honorary vice-president;\nMrs. G. V. Warren, secretary, and\nMrs. H. A. Custer, badge secretary.\nThe treasurer's office was left vacant\n\u2014: ^ -^-i\u2014:\u2014\nuntil the March meeting.\nAn active and successful year for\nGuiding in the dictrict was reflected\nin annual reports, and officers and\nmembers were thanked by Mrs.\nBurton for their cooperation.\nThe badge secretary said that-19\nbadges had been earned and presented during the year and first\naid classes arranged.\nTwo new members, Mrs. ,C. E.\nMason and.Mrs. J. A. Maber, were\nwelcomed into the organization.\nNelson\nSocial. . .\ns\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mrs. Alex Leith, who has\nspent several weeks in the Kootenay Lake General Hospital, returned yesterday to her apartment in\nthe Terrace.\n\u25a0 \u2022 Miss Mollie Irving, Carbonate\nStreet, has as guest this week her\nmother, Mrs. J. B. Irving of Thrums.\n\u2022 W..H. Foster, Victoria Street,\nis holidaying with a son in California.\no' Mrs. Paul Linco Willow Point,\nhas returned from two months spent\nin Spokane at the home of'her son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nFrancis McCathern also .visiting\nwhile away in Vancouver with two\nof her nieces.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith,\nCrescent Bay, visited friends in Nelson yesterday.    ;\nFRUITVALE W.I.\nTO BE GIVEN\nSERIES OF TALKS\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Feb. 14 \u2014 To\nmake meetings more instructive,\nmembers of Fruitvale Women's Institute, meeting at the home of Mrs.\nHomer Godin with Mrs. Henry Cyr\nco-hostess,  decided  to  hold\nseries of papers on special topics,\nThe series will start in March\nwith a paper on modern education\ngiven by Mrs. L. Peitzsche. In April\nMrs. Rozella Webster wi)l talk on\nhobbies and in May, Mrs. A. Webster will speak on good gardening,\nMrs. Charles Mawer was appointed official, delegate to the West\nKootenay district conference\nKinnaird in May.\nA discussion took place on the\nadvantages of special courses offered by the U.B.C. extension department, and members voted to\napply for advanced dressmaking,\nbeginner's tailoring and home rejuvenation ^courses.\nIt was decided to enter a thrift-\ncraft booth in the proposed Parent-\nTeacher Association hobby fair.\nHUMAN GUINEA\nPIGS TEST\nFOOD PRODUCE\nl (CAMBRIDGE,. England, Feb. 13\nuffflteMJ\u00bbSeven j children \u2014 sons\n\u25a0arid' daughters- bf-, (Cambridge, University ddentisis-i-iireiacting as hu-\nmaift giiipea pigs'' in; feeding tests\nlybfch y^ill determine.: wliefher' it's\n:safe,Jta;'e>ajc 'plants';treated with new\n'uisecticides.'' \u25a0\nThe youngsters eat strawberries,\nraspberries, spinach, lettuce, and\nother produce sprayed with insect-\nkilling chemicals.\nThese chemicals are absorbed by\nthe plants and kill plant lice which\nfeed on the sap.' -   .\nTo make sure the treated plants\nare safe for human consumption,\nthe scientists first feed, them to the\nrabbits. If the rabbits stay healthy,\nthe. scientists themselves try the\nplants. And finally, they feed them\nto their children.\n\"Feeding the plants to our children is the most satisfactory way\nof convincing farmers and gardeners the insecticides are safe,\" said\nDr. Walter Ripper, head of Cambridge's insecticide development\nteam.\nCrawford Bay W.I\n\" tonsors Carnival\nSp\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C., Feb. 13-\nCrawford Bay Women's Institute\nsponsOfed. ji successful 10-and-15-\ncent earn-ivaL in tha hall here?  \u25a0'\n\u2022 't-fi'i^yl \u2022\u25a0-.'\u2022     -\nBridge Club Meets\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Feb. W ''-,\nMrs. Mary Cherry and Mrs. Thomas\nAnderson were the winners when\nthe members of the Circle Bridge\nClub met at the home of Mrs. Walter Duncan for their weekly game.\nThere were two tables in play.\nH\u00b0 GOOD Q\nJUNIOR RED CROSS\nHOLDS GAY TEA\nAT ROSSLAND .\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 13\u2014McLean School Junior Red Cross entertained at its annual tea and sale,\nwith Miss Bernice Elliott as general\nconvener.\nThe guests were received by Mrs.\nHazel Davidson. This year the Valentine motif was effectively used\nto decorate the halls and stairways\nof the school and as centrepieces\non the small tea tables, while daffodils and hyacinths added a touch\nof Spring. Students in frilly Valentine aprons were serviteurs under\nthe direction of Miss Sylvia Roxby,\nand a busy group of boys served\nas dishwashers.\nThe prettily appointed tea table\nwas centred with a bowl of double\ndaffodils and blue and re'd hyacinths\nflanked by red candles in silver\nholders. Presiding at the tea urns\nwere Mrs. Ira Hendrickson, President of the Rossland Parent-Teacher Association, Mrs. Arthur Turner, wife of the senior Rossland representative on the School Board,\nMrs. Weldon of Trail whose husband is the newly-appointed chairman of the School Board, and Mrs.\nWilliam Lucas, wife of the district\nSchool Inspector.\nThe decorating committee, convened by Miss Wanda Berry, included Miss Margaret Kalhovd, Miss\nL. Pednault and R. Mundell. Serving on the tea,committee were Mrs.\nHazel Davidson, Mrs. L. Brewer,\nMiss Jean Hiltz, Miss Ruth Waldie,\nMrs. D. Archibald, Mrs.-W. Baldry\nand Miss Dorothy Brown.\nAdvertising and publicity were\nhandled by Principal E. E. Perkins\nand Jack Page, while Mr. Mundell\nacted as cashier.\nIn the lower hall a well-laden\nbake table was handled by Miss\nMary Militich and Miss Pauline\nGallo, and a candy stall was in\ncharge of Miss Grace Thatcher, Miss\nVivian Johnson and Mrs. McDon-\nell.. At the white elephant table\nMiss ' Helen Wagner was assisted\nby several girl students.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C\u2014 Mr.\nand Mrs, Jim Robinson, Danny and\nLinda visited Creston, Danny and\nLinda stayed to visit with Mrs.\nRobinson's aunt for awhile.\nSonny MacGregor and Herb\nDraper are now working at Riondel.\nMiss Marj Palmer, Fernie, is visiting her mother and sister here.\n\u2022 Fred Hedstrom spent a few days\nwith his brother Carl Hedstrom, at\nRiondel. ;,;\nMr. and Mrs. Mike Wasilinkoff\nand baby, J31ewett, visited friends\nhere.,      \u25a0\u25a0 > - *\nLoyd1 Johnson accompanied Mikje\nWasilinkoff to Vancouver to work\nin a logging camp there.\nBill Macpherson, Elmer and\nFred Hedstrom and Bob Rlelly.\nspent the weekend in Nelson.       ')\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, .951 \u2014 5\nFRUITVALE C.G.I.T.,\nTUXIS GROUPS\nENJOY BANQUET\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014\nRev. and Mrs. D. More. Miss Donna\nMore, Mrs. F. Peitzsche, Alex Graham and Calvin Morris were special\nguests at a banquet for Tuxis and\nC.G.I.T. groups and leaders in St.\nPaul's United Church hall here.\nBruce Dovey, leader of the Rangers, was master of ceremonies, and\nMrs. Fred Haines, leader of the\nPilgrim C.G.I.T, group was toast\nmistress. The toast to the King was\nproposed by Doug Burt, leader of\n'the Tyroe Boys; Miss Barbara Rothwell proposed the toast to all the\nC.G.I.T. members, Bruce Dovey proposed the toast to the Tuxis boys\nand Miss Doris Graves proposed the\ntoast to the leaders of the boys and\ngirls groups.\nLater a devotional and prayer service was conducted by Bruce Dovey.\nAssisting him in the service were\nMiss Doris Graves, Miss Jean DeBruyn, Harold Davis and Jimmy\nSims, with Mrs. Peitzsche at the\norgan. Rev. D. More gave a brief\ntalk in keeping with the C.G.LT.\nand Tuxis alms.\nA show was held in the church\nhall after the service under the\ndirection of Calvin Ferris.\nROSSLAND C.W.L.\nCIRCLES ACTIVE\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014 A\nnewly-formed group off the Catholic Women's League, St Joseph\nCircle, met here at the home of Mrs.\nE. Ruelle. Two guests were Mrs,\nAlex Gray and Mrs. A. Ruelle.\nA discussion period centred on\nits study book was held. Arrangements were made to hold the next\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. P.\nWagner.\nThree other Circles- of the Sacred\nHeart Church metrecently. A social\nevening was enjoyed by, members\nof St. Mary's group at the home of\nMrs. B. W. Lawrie. Mrs. Harold\nBailey will entertain the Circle\nnext.\nAlso of a social nature was the\ngathering of members of St Francis\nCircle at the home of Mrs. M. Dris-\ncoll. This group will convene next\nat the home of Mrs. C. Maletta.\nA question and answer period\nbased on the book \"O Really\" formed the study hour of S.t Anne's\nCircle when its members met at the\nhome .of Mrs. A. Drinnon, with a\nguest, Mrs. Archie McTeer, attending. Mrs. Harold Shannon invited\nthe group to meet next at her\nhome.\nSunshine Bay ...\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C.-Captain\nH. A. Pearson has returned from\nVancouver where he visited his\nsons William Pearson, and Jack\nPearson, and their families.\nClarence Sewell has returned\nfrom Nelson where he has been\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Albert\nFletcher.\nD. S. Taylor is a patient in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nFRUITVALE CLUB MEETS\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Feb. 13 \u2014\nSewing and knitting occupied members of the Friendly Club at their\nbusiness 'and 'social meeting at the\nhonie\" of Mrs. TFred Cole. Mrs.\n.Thomas Moon is the next hostess.\nCLASSIFIED ADS, GET RE8ULT8\nThe   English   channel   first  was\ncrossed by balloon in 1785.\nWatch for Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT  MARKET\u2014Phone 832\n20$\nO\nDown Payment\nPUTS ANY ARTICLE\nIN YOUR HOME\n\"The House of Furniture Values\"\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 116 - NELSON\nROBSON GROUP\nADDRESSED ON\nCOPPER TOOLING\nROBSON, B.C., Feb. 13 - A I\nby Mrs. E. Ostrom on copper too' \u25a0\nset off a competition among me   ,\nbers of the Evening Group meelm,\nat the home of Mrs. S. Grant\nEach member will turn out a\ncopper-tooled article in a small\ncompetition.\nIt was decided to hold a tea and\nbake sale March 31. Work is already '\nstarting for the annual bazaar in\nNovember. A portion of social meetings will be devoted to handicraft\nwork. '\nA new member was welcomed to\nthe organization..\nRobson W.A. Sends\nParcel Overseas\nROBSON, B.C., Feb. 13\u2014Members\nof Robson W.A. decided to send a\nparcel of used clothing overseas at\ntheir February meeting at the home\nof Mrs. W. Waldie.\nA bean supper was planned for\nMarch. The Scripture reading was\ngiven by Mrs. Sutherland and Mrs.\nW. L. Wright took over the program.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. O, Patenaude\nPHONE 293        NELSON, B.C.\nLOVELY HATS\nin\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmniiciiiiiiiiiMiiimiiii\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nCoffee Time\nFavorite\nPacific Milk gives coffee a\nrich creamy flavor that\nmakes every cup a treat.\nEconomical in all recipes.\nPacific is now Vitamin D\nincreased for extra nourishment. Never be witJiout\nthis all-purpose food.   ;\nPacific Milk\n\"Vacuum Packed and\nHomogenized\"\nillllllllllllllllllllllllUHllllnuiiDliiiiii\nSheTeds RI6H7V\nEnjoy a SPARKLING Good\n\"Keep-Fit\" Cereal!\n\u2022 Here's how you benefit when yOu eat Post's Bran Flakes\nregularly. You guard against \"irregularity\" often caused by\nlack of bulk foods in what you eat And, you wake up that\ntired morning appetite. The answer? Post's \u2014 the better Bran\n,,Flakes \u2014 are GOOD TO EAT.\nSupplies Bujk You Need\nin Your Diet  >\nPosf s Bran Flakes help\nprovide laxative action nature's way.\nSince this \"Keep-Fit\"\ncereal is made with other\nparts of wheat, you get\nwholesome wheat nourishment as well.       ,   ;\nTomorrow, begin the regular use of Post's\nBran Flakes. Nut-sweet\u2014deliciously different.\nServe for breakfast and in many other appetizing ways. You'll be delighted with this tested\nrecipe. Try it\nA Product of Ganarol Pooda\nBRAN\n1A  cup finely cut dried fi9\u00ab\nf   cup sifted flour\n3i\/2 teospoo\"' baking powder\nu  teaspoon salt\n'Posts mnmkEs\nWITH OTHER PARTS OF WHEAT\nMUFFINS You Ever Tasted!\n3    tablespoons sugar\ni     ana well beaten,\n3    XTpoonsmeltedbutter\nor bther shortening\n.Pour mhk over i-f-gj-ffiSffi\nAddVl cup finely cut dried Sg \u00ab^ ^\nSift flour once, \u00ab\"f\"S L^ Add egB and :\nsalt, and sugar, ond 8lf'a5,Twell. Add flout,\n\"butter to bran \u2122\u2122l\u00b0\u00a3\u2122*\u00b0\u00ab fl\u00b0ur' ^\nbeating only '\u2122tm\" n hToven (425\u00b0F.) for\nin greased muffin pens m,\n^rdreror*ratns may replace fig,\n Established April 22. 1802\nBritish Columbia's\nMost interesting Newspaper\nI Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n206 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost Office  Department,  Ottawa\nI MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nOur Good Deed Could ;\nBe to Help the Scouts\nCanadians, embarked on the great-\nIest preparedness program of their history, can perhaps this year appreciate\nmore than ever the importance of the\n| Scout motto \"be prepared\". It is the\nessence of our national effort.\nAt the same time we can appreciate\nthe difference between the Scout indention and that of ourselves forced\ninto a position of defence. The Scout\npreparedness is the preparedness for\nI friendly living, for, healthfully con-\n: tributing and growing toward a better\n'citizenship. And certainly :that is a\ngood thing. We could wish no better\nj for any growing boy.\n\u25a0\" The Scouting organization is peculiarly well equipped in method and\n|j experience for its role as adjunct to\nhome, church and school. Its methods\nare time-tested, its promise and law\nelevating and sound, and its purposes\ngreat. And its product is a better boy\nand eventually, consequently, a better\ncitizen. \\   .   '\nThis achievement cannot be obtained without cost. The conduct of the .\nScout movement in any community\ntakes \u25a0 a. tremendous amount of time\nand\/effort by its, leaders, it calls forf .\nt|jei\"prfj$sibn of equipment, halls and ,\ncarhps; We ,(!an't all contribute in the i\nway  the   Scoutmasters,  leaders  and\/?\nexecutiy.es 7'do,':.but we can, perhaps\",\n11 let 'our dollars db'our\/part for us.?Mi.\n\"\u25a0 * -\"-':  te'f \u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0 'MfU&M '-'       Mi '\u25a0\"'\nI''i Health{l^mrfnte--   ',, v*\n.,      It is: gene^'aW assurnedf|citifetors-are\n|ffi opposed i to Goyernmen| health insurance plans', tylany pfijtneftrIndeed are,\n,\u2022 but notiallloltliemrFijrijnstance, points\n, out TheWirid^pailVttar, Dr. W. H.\n. McMillan, iLibeM-; Member for Wel-\nland, in the. 'ifionSmons expressed the\nhope Cahada soon will have such a sys-\nE tem. He ' expressed, similar thoughts\nduring his byelection campaign.\nDr. E. A. McfSusker, M.P., Regina,\nhas become Parliamentary Assistant to\n.Health  and  Welfare  Minister  Paul\nI Martin, in the department which\nwould have control over health insurance. If Dr. McCusker were to retain\nthis position, in event of health insurance, he would have to support it.\nDr. McMillan says he often has seen\nlife savings of families eliminated by\na few weeks of unexpected illness.\nMost other physicians have had the\nsame experience, and probably have\nequal sympathies for the financial victims of such misfortunes. They only\ndiffer as to the method by which health\nservices can be provided for all without this occurring.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual name of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as\nevidence of good faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In the waste paper basket,\nGerman Botanist\nFirst Recorder\nOf Bluebell Find\nTo the Editor:\n\u2022Sir\u2014Your pictorial number of Jan. 27 is\nmost interesting, but am sure that some students of local history will take exception to\nthe statement concerning David Douglas, the\nbotanist, irt the Cominco story about the Blue\nBell Mine.\nDavid Douglas never saw Kootenay Lake,\nand the nearest he came to it was when he\ntravelled up the Columbia River with a Hud-'\nson's Bay brigade in the Spring of 1827. His\njournals, carefully written and containing detailed accounts of every day's happenings,\nmake no mention of any expedition to Kootenay Lake.;\nThis error has cropped up more than once\nand can, in all likelihood, be traced back to\nDr. G. M. Dawson's Geological Report of 1887.\nIn this he states with reference to the Blue\nBell, or the Big Ledge as it was then known,\nthat it \"was said to have been discovered by\nthe botanist Douglas in 1825\". Dr. Dawson\nwas evidently just passing this statement on\nfor what it was worth, and it was accepted\nas a positive fact t     f]      .\nDuring early fur trading days ,this ledge\nwas in all probability quite well known to'.\nIndians, trappers and, traders, but it was, npt\nuntil 1844 that its discovery was recorded KM\nKarl Andreas Geyer, a young German botanist'\nand explorer in the service of the Hudson's,.\nBay Company. Geyer obtained leave of ab^;.\nsence while employed at Fort Colville, and,\nlater,; while exploring the body of watepvjheri\nknowh as Flatbow Lake, discovered the' silver-\nlead'outcrop which was to be khojvft many\nyears later as the Blue Bell Mlriei^T'his was\nthe! first recorded mining'discovery a in the\nKootenays.    The  above   account: concerning\n'Geyer ,ha;s been unearthed by\u25a0GrsjeeJLee Nute,\nPftip.\/research associate Wi^i'Mff ^Minnesota\n.'HiMof'ieal Society, and-a-professor) at Hamline\nUniversity-- .; r:'    ;',    jif: \\ \u25a0 , j \u00ab  , ,\n) '\u25a0ijiMtor Edgar;.Dewdney thef-.great,. W&M\nrWjwfj we\/give-liferi his rise, biit'Tie W<*h.is*v\njteriilsifnply^buiit'a ^way through, iffil Kootenays rwjiece 'dthers had passed before: Let us\nnot^fpiiget'the. work accomplished by John\n.Sa^ll^.ert- and.Ossecjailyi*'John W. Sullivan,\n.Wbffl of the\";PallisCr Expedition, who in 1858-9\n.totaled nearly all of that section of the famous\n'-trail .within the boundaries of the Kootenays.\nCLARA GRAHAM.\nRoberts Creek, B. C.\nAnscomb Cigars Cost\nMore Than Pensioners\nBudget, Says Mother\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014So the Hon. Herbert Anscomb thinks\nthat social services in this Province have gone\ntoo far, does he?\nSome people have more nerve than they\nknow what to do with. Mr. Anscomb gets\n$10,000 a year as a Cabinet Minister. On top\n'of that he gets pdid handsomely as a director\nand shareholder of a brewery and as a shareholder and managing director of a wine company. So Mr. Anscomb gets at least three salaries at the same time,* one public, two private. '   ,\nThe wonder is that he does not feel that\n$10,000 a year is payment enough to spend all\nhis time doing the public's business, and the\ngreater wonder is that he now has the brass-\nbound nerve to tell retired civil servants, who\ndid spend all their time at the public's business, old age pensioners, mothers and widows,\netc., living on what he spends for cigars every\nmonth,, that they are getting too much in the\nway of social services.\nThe B. C. Tories might call another convention. They should be ashamed to have a\nman like that as their leader.\nMOTHER OF TWO.\nVancouver, B. C.\nNEWSPAPERS\nAccuracy, fairness and balance are qualities which responsible newspapers strive for\nin the presentation of news. They recognize it\nIs their duty to gather the facts and to present\nthem in such a way that their readers get as\nfull and true a picture of events as space limitations permit. Most newspapers take pride in\nfulfilling this responsibility to the public\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nYour Horoscope\nAn opportunity to fulfill a long-cherished\nwish may materialize, and your next year\nprove very satisfactory. Traits of industry and\nkindness should be, looked for in the child\nborn today.\n\u2022? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this servloe.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there ll obvious\nnecessity for privacy. ,_ ,\n' \"'~':M''';'!^7'77\nJ. G., Nelson\u2014What-Is the orlgln'-of*ttersur-f\nname Silver?,      :  .....   C\"i \"f '.'** X i'tj.'}\nSilver as a last name Is reduced frdtn, 'tne,*\noccupative \"sllverer\", and is a sign t)f, a a.olid\nEnglish background. :'r <     ,\u25a0\nEngaged, Kinnaird\u2014Who pays the wedding'\nexpenses, the bride or the groom?\nThe expenses in these days are usually\nshared. Formerly the bride's parents provided\nflowers for church and home decorations, the\ncarriages\u2014or cars\u2014to Jake bride, bridesmaids,\nspecial guests and family to church, \u00abnd they\nused to bear the whole cost of reception. The\nbridegroom provides his own conveyance to\nchurch, and in older days lt was in that conveyance he took his new wife away from the\nchurch, after the ceremony to the house of tho\nreception'. He bought the wedding ring and\nbouquets for bride and attendants, usually\ngiving each bridesmaid a souvenir of the occasion. From his pockets also came fees .for the\nclergyman and any \"tips\" connected with the\naffair. Nowadays the bride often pays for the\nreception and buffet-lunch, and even the bouquets. It is usually wiser to discuss these matters beforehand, as there is no hard and fast\nAide. \u2022    ;-'\n\"(interested, Nelson\u2014Where was the Hon. John\n'\u25a0';    Hirt born?\n; \u201e    County Leitrlm; Ireland.\ni Kl S.'fNelson'^-Is'i there any supersltionregard-\n\u25a0'4 j tngitljejpicRifVg pf cherry-blossoms?   ' \u25a0\nIn many pfirVot Great Britain it is considered unlucky to'gather cherry blossoms, but\npossibly the idea'was',invented, by a clever\nfruit-farmer who wantepVft preserve his crop.\nLoqki^' Backward v\n,v,(\\VAV,'ib YEARS AGO y\nv^Y#*lrV the Dally News of Feb. 14, 1941\n:,v Eleanor Simpson fought,her way to a\n11-4, 9-11, 11-8 victory over shuttler, Willa\nMcClement in the semi-finals of the Nelson\njunior badminton championships at the (Jivic\nCentre Thursday. Bill Burge and Walter\nNisbet will battle for the boys' -singles title\nSunday.\n25 YEARS AGO \u2022\nFrom The Dally News of Feb. 14, 1928\nThe carloads of cast-iron pipe from France\nfor the Five-Mile Creek pipeline arrived In\nNelson Tuesday, according to J. A. Ferguson,\nCity Engineer. He states that the City will be\nunable to lay the pipes until the-snow has\nmelted on the hills. Weight of the pipe was\nwell over 1,000,000 pounds.\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Feb. 14, 1911\nThe Synod of the Diocese of Kootenay\nwill meet in Revelstoke tomorrow and Thursday. Attending the session from Nelson will\nbe Rev. Rural Dean Stone, Fred Irvine, A. S.\nHorswill and W. A. Jewett. Other delegates\nwill be Rev. W- M. Walton of Fernie and Rev.\nB. Crowther of Michel.\nHail to thy returning festival, old Bishop\nValentine! Great is thy name in the rubric.\nLike unto thee, assuredly there is no other\nmitred father in the calendar.\u2014Charles Lamb.\nGems of Thought\n\\   l\" THE HOLY BIBLE\n'It is impossible to mentally or socially\nenslave a Bible-reading people. The principles\nof the Bible are the groundwork of human\nfreedom;,\n'\u25a0*..* * ,\nSearch the scriptures; for In them ye\nthink ye have eternal life; and they are they\nwhich testify of Me.\u2014St. John.\n* * * --\nThe Bible is the learned,man's masterpiece, the ignorant man's dictionary, the wise\nman's directory.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n'* *        '*\nWe might just as well try to take the brain\nout of men as to hope to eradicate the influence of the Bible from our business life.\n\u2014Roger Babson.\n* *      .   *\nThe man of one book is always formidable:\nbut when that book is the Bible, he is irresistible.\u2014Taylor.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nMjmm4 a. a. Mail earn\nIf you would be a popular guest, never\nleave the guest room neater than you find it.\nfrSiliii \u25a0],.... 7:u,'^'' in\nBv Timmv Hattol Toddy's Bible Thou9ht\n\u25a0\"\/  J\"1\"\"\/   \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0*<\"\u25a0\"\u25a0' The f|n,,,t th|no( win \u201ent ,nm\u201e ,\u201e\nThe finest things will not come to\nun unless we desire them and eagerly look for them. Unseen things\nare eternal.\u2014Be ye therefore sober\nand watch unto prayer.\u20141 Peter 4:7.\n(hint ML\nLir-r\u201e:.\n[coy. \\y\u00bb\nAmp before 'The\/1\nwere married me\ncouldn't see her.\nENOUGH-\nTHAHX TO MRS OH CW\/rWRS,\n_    Ze\/COUARD, BLD.t^\n;sj SAN FRMKISCo. CALIF-\n\" Sinners feel respectable till they\nget found out. We don't worry about\na hole in a stock'in' if it don't show.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Police got an\nemergency call from the landlord\nof a house'in South Tottenharn. A\n' patrol car raced to the scene. Said\ndie 'caller: \"The man .in the flat\nupstairs has left the bathtub dirty.\nLetters to\nThe Editor\nLetters to the Editor of suffi.\nclent Interest, but of too great\nlength for the usual letters column will, on occasion be reproduced in news columns. All let-,\nters to th? Editor must he.slgrted,',\nthough a nom-de-plume-mayVbe\nused for publication'.<-|;;  ;,\"\u25a0'\u25a0''?.\n^detfSHjWtlnt'rlrfji,,\npWlp$Mf);^Jlrl4\n\u25a0iytjy,,EflltarU \\: ''.VM'HV , \"\n. i', SI rtbifky 7,000,ftoq AbusbJf Vnjat\n\u2022geiC',*ltH Japan \"But demonstrates'\nSiK Wilfred' Laurfer'a vision when\nhe put Prince Rupert! on the map\/\nAlso Melvin Hay's idea when he\nput $3,000,000 into a ship-building\nplant to build his boats that were\nto ply the Pacific. But the Federal\nelection of 1911 threw Prince Rupert into the scrap heap where it\nremained until the'Pearl'Harbor\nepisode when the Americans took\npossession and expended some $16,-\n000,000 on rail and port fixtures.\nBut the $16,000,000 proved to be\ndead capital when the Americans^\nfolded their tents until the arrival\nof a U. S. company with the Columbia Cellulose plant which ' is\nabsorbing many millions of dollars,\nand is claimed to be the biggest\nthing of its kind on the Pacific\ncoast. And now the Aluminum\nCompany of Canada Is spending\n$500,000,000 on a plant that covers\nthe ground between a huge dam\npit the. Grand,;' Canyon on the Ne-\n.cpako Rlyer to 'a smelter at or near\n[Hartley Bay\/ on tidewater;\nWHY?\nHere the capital question mark\nappears on the horizon as to why\n\"when the American people have\nsuch' faith in Prince Rupert and\nits surroundings\" is it that our\npeople refuse to use their own railway .and port to ship the 7,000,000\nbushels of grain tp. Japan..\nNow,, h>t i,us: f,oi \u00bb minute, consider.1 \"as;;fe 'tj'pW'i'P^i.nce Rupert\nfits,in as an overseas,;port for our\ngreat cdf'ifldoif' across; ftie '\u25a0\u25a0 top of\nthe West1; V , B'T } )?\u25a0'-.:', -X  .\n\u2022'Dawsoil'' Crjee\u00abt, 'BjC\u201e;! M .. the\nWestern railhead \\ of our Northlaijd.\nIt is 84 '.miles (map measuremept)\nfrom Da*sbri Creek by way \u25a0\u25a0 Of,\nHudson Hope to Findlay Forks, it\nis 150 miles'from Findlay Forks to\nHazelton, whirls on the C.N.R.\n167 miles Northeast of Prince Rupert which should be 'our Notth-\nern port on the l?ac|fic. Prince Rupert has a grain elevator\\ that will\nload three or four boals.at'one, time.1\nShe has, a shipyard 'and drydiick\nthat would look after any. repair\nwork a boat may need. She also\nhas one of the three No. 1 harbors\nof the world. All of which Is within 400 miles of Dawson Creek, our\nrailhead of the Northwest.\nThus, if the necessary railway\nbetween Hazelton and our railhead\nwas a reality, which it should have\nbeen many years ago, as lt would\nhave opened up one of the richest\ncoal, waterpower and mineral fields\nin the world, every mile of the new\nline would be a revenue producer.\n400 MILES AGAIN8T 1300\nNow as we are shipping a consignment of wheat to Japan, and\nthe Peace River Country is making\ntheir consignment, thus a wheat\ntrain has left Dawson Creek for\nthat purpose, but when this train\nof, say 40 cars reaches Edmontgn,\nthe wheat has been hauled 505\nmiles, or around 100 miles farther\nthan if it had been shipped dlreot\nto Prince Rupert.\n,At Edmonton this train Is divided on a 50-50 basis between the\nC. P. and C. N. railways. The C.N.R.\nhauls their 20 cars 771 miles and\nthe C. P. hauls their 20 cars 835\nmiles and the wheat is landed in\nVancouver. But the wheat in the\nC.N.R. train has been hauled 1276\nmiles while the grain in the CP.\ntrain has travelled 1340 miles as\nagainst some 400 miles if the grain\nhad been shipped direct from Dawson Creek to Prince Rupert.\nThe Vancouver Sun has announced the arrival of a Japanese\nboat for the first cargo of this 7,-\n000,000 bushels of wheat we are\nshipping to Japan,' but the boat\nsailed 500 miles extra in order to\npass up Prince Rupert and arrive in\nVancouver, and when she arrives\nat her home port with her cargo\nshe will have sailed another 500\nextra miles. This will be repeated\nby each of the 20 boats that is supposed to make the round trip.\nNow let someone take a pencil\nand figure just how many miles of\nextra.- sailing' will have to be done\nto get the 7,000,000 bushels of grain\nover to Japan. Then, surely, this\nsmall sea of figures mingled with\ncommon sense and common reason\ntells us In no uncertain language\nthat tho 7,000,000 bushel shipment\nto Jopan should hav\\s been shipped I\nthrough Prince Rupert by all the\nlaws of God and man. What a boost\nthat shipment would have given\nPrince Rupert in developing hei\ninto a strong port on the Northern\nPacific which our country now\nneeds as we.observe the war clouds\nclimbing over the Northern horizon. '\nPAGE RIDEOUT\nNelson, B. C.\nThanks From MacArthur\nFrom an\nOldtimer's\nNotebook\nPlgtalled, 8-year-old Sandra Wise of Bloomlnrjton, Ind., sent\nGen. Douglas MacArthur a letter with a quarter taped on to \"help\nthe poor\" In Korea. Sandy holds the returned letter, and MacArthur's\nreply saying: \"Thanks, but I do not believe It necessary.\"\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nHas Something\nIn Common\nWilh President\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 13 (AP) -\nPresident Truman has written a\nletter to a judge here about a mutual concern\u2014an assassin's bullets.\n:\" The, president's note, released to-\n\u00abday,\/,was\" in- reply to a letter sent\n'h(m':by .Supefior Judge Frank G,\nS^aih sin''which... the judge com-\nmerftecj, OTfeJ . have something in\ncommon: bd.th)- have been selected\nas targets for .bullets.\nJudge Styata was one'of four LoS\nAngeles, jurisis recently \u2022 threatened\nwlth.\/d^ath^by a disgruntled San\nQliehthy prisoner who had applied\n'for parole.\nPresident Truman wrote:\n\"Dear Judge:\n\"I appreciated your note of Jan.\n26 very much.\n'T sincerely hope the San Quen-.\ntin gentleman has no better luck\nthan the two Puerto RIcans who\ntried to operate on me.\n\"I liked your rhyme.\n\"Sincerely yours,\n(Signed). \"Harry S. Truman.\"\nThe judge's poem:.\nThe Press says a con in San Quentin\nHas a yen to annihilate me.\nI don't know this man even slightly.\nWith his plan I cannot agree.\nI must think of my social position,\nWhich is one I view with pride,\nFor if I were killed by a stranger,\nI 'know I'd be mortified.\nBing Crosby\nUndergoes Operation\nSANTA MONICA, Calif., Feb, 13\n(AP) \u2014 Crooner i Bing Crosby underwent an operation for a kidney\nailment Monday.\nSt. John's Hospital reported'that\nthe 46-year-old singer came through\nthe surgery successfully and was\nresting comfortably. He entered the\nhospital yesterday.  \"   ;  \u2022  .-;     ,j\nCrosby's wife,- the. former,Dixie\nLee, and his mother,' Mrsj Harry\nLillis Crosby Sr., visited him earlier\nin the .day  . .,,;      \u2022.\u25a0\u25a0='' r    ' \u25a0 '\nThe \"Oi;(Gro.arlef's\" mml studio\nsaid the operation w,as\"pcz*fprmed by\nDr. F. C. S.chlumborgc\". It is expected Crasliy ilwrjuld be in hospital for\na'~week orulOidays.\nMiniature Sawmill\nShown Lumbermen\nMONTREAL;,,: Feby 13' (CP) \u2014\nBlue-suited jelegste* to, the three-\nday convention; of' .'the Canadian\nLumberman's Association surprised\nevery one byhplstlrig' a scale-model\nsawmill through the vJJ.hdow of a\ndowntown hotel ' '\nThe 16-foot-long sawmill was\nquickly put into operation. It ca,n\nedge, trim, gangsaw, and bandsaw\nwood.\nIts owner, Phil Quelch, a British\nColumbia engineer, spent 11 years\nand 10,000 hours to get it in production.\n\"I built it as a hobby in my basement and patterned it on the typical\nlumber mill on the West coast,\"\nthe 47-year-old engineer said.   .   ,\n\"An awful lot of It is built from\nodds and.ends,\" he added. \"I've got\na lady's glove, parts of a baby carriage, old sewing machine, washing\nmachine, cream separator, chandelier, piano and a gramaphone in\nthere.\n\"To get it in operation I made\nmore than 2000 cap screws, nuts and\nbolts. I made 31 feet of conveyor\nchain out of wire and I cut all the\nteeth of the various saws by hand.\nThe model as you see it .is .exactly\nthe same in operation as in a normal mill.\"\nDies in Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014\nTom Mclnnes, one of the last of a\nprominent group of writers who developed in young Canada, died in\na nursing home here Sunday. He\nwas 83.    .\nBorn  in  Dresden,  Ont.,  Oct.  20,\n1867,   he   was   christened   Thomas\nRobert Edward Mclnnes but signed\nhimself \"Tom Mclnnes\" in later life.\nBest known for his lusty, good-\nhumored,   often   sophisticated\nverse,  Mr.   Mclnnes  was  of the\nsame  generation  as  Sir  Charles\n'   G. D. Roberts, Bliss Carman, Duncan  Campbell  Scott and  Archibald  Lam'pman.\nHis books include \"A Romance\nof the LoSf,\" \u25a0 \"Lonesome Bar and\nOther Poems,\" \"In -Amber Lands,\"\n\"Klentenberg of the' Arctic\" ^ahd\n\"Chinook Stories.\" '  t   ' '.'\nTom Mclnnes, son of the late Hon.\nT. R. E. Mclnnes, lieutenant-governor of British Columbia in 1897,\nstarted his career as a lawyer. He:\nwas called to the B.C. bar ih, 1.893'.\nBut he soon branched out' and\nbecame prominent in several fields\nfor more than 50 years.\nHe published several articles and\nbooks on the Orient. He did not\nbegin to write poetry until he was\n40. He published several volumes.\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Feb. 13\n(CP)\u2014Ernest S. Dudoward, Chief\nof the Ea,?le Clan and Chief Councillor of nearby Port Simpson, died\nin' hopsital here. He was 71.\nHe had taken a leading part in\nPort Simpson Community affairs for\n40 years.\ntorlan   qf pf^i|M|Mi|fjt% ^Id-\ntimers' Association here (Contin-'\n'; ues a, second irist^llmentrfaf the\nI jWartin Fry' stbr.y,. Fry wari a pi-\n'.pneeri fur tradef,  guide', 'school\ni   tepcheriand prospector';;who catrie'\n:: to the Kootenay first In. 1876).\n- At Shoalwater Bay Martin went\ninto the oyster business during the\nSummer months, but again taught\nschool for the Winter.\nThe little family stopped two'\nyears at Shoalwater Bay and then\na letter arrived from Martin's\nbrother at Bonner's Ferry in 1878.\nHis brother, Richard A. Fry, had\nleased a store at Bonner's Ferry\nand wanted Martin to take charge\nfor him as he wanted to build on-\nother store just across the International Boundary line at Porthill.\nThere were no white people in that\ncountry, only Indians.\nMartin left his family at Bay\nCenter, where the school was, and\ntravelled on a small steam tug, the\nVeruna, to Astqria. There he took\na. large steamer and ran up the\nColumbia past Portland, \"Tliei Dalles\nto Wallalula, and there* .travelled\nthe narrow gauge railroad .(his first\nrailroad trip) to Walla Walla, a\ndistance of 29 miles.\nMartin found himself ' short of\nmoney. He had-'not understood how\nfar Kootenay was\" from Walla\nWalla. He lacked sufficient jto buy\nblankets. ' \u2022.     \u25a0    \u00bb    -\nAfter considering, hq determined to walk the rest of the way\nand only allow himself, dne'^moal;\na .day. He walked :fpr-,fpgr,day\u00bb.\non o,ne; mgali-a day X'iBO mile's^ i;o \u25a0\n'Seneac'ejuoteon,' (Indian' for Ear.\"\nrlng),'w|ber.e he met his brother's\n: ,p\"ack;'train'and walked the rest\n. of.th'e way, but got three meala\n' >a day.\n! Martin found himself among the\nIndians but could not understand\none word of their language. Ha\nunderstood Chinook, but these Indians did not. His brother had been\nwith the pack train when he fell\nin with it and they walked to Bonner's Ferry together. His brother\nhad Indians. tQjrun; the pack train.\nThe very, -next thoVnlng after.,ar- \\\nriving his brother hai' to: leavf' tc*..\nattend to his family (they were 'at'\nPorthill where his new store ,was\nbeing built).\nMartin was Up against it. Tha\nstore was built of huge logs with\na shake roof, and cedar punshion\nfloor\u2014one room for store, bedroom,\nkitchen, office, bathroom and sit.\nting room. (It was the only build-\ning on the river).\nHearing of a new white man at\nthe store lots of Indians were there\nbright and early, Martin had\nequipped himself with a pointer,\nHe would point to his various\ngoods, calico, shot powder, etc,,\nand make the Indians say their\nname for it. He would write down\nthe name very, carefully and! put'\nthe word on the article. In a day\nor two he had all the names for\nthe different goods and, was doing\na roaring trade. The Indians proved\nvery friendly.  -'     \u25a0    ''\n(To be 'continued)\nj s (Editor's Note: Historian Joy\n;, Has called attention to an error\nin date in his column of Feb. 12\nconcerning early-day hospitalization. The date mentioned should\nhave been 1894-95, he now finds, |\ninstead of 1896.)\nm\nWhy suffer from Nagging\nRHEUMATIC PAIN\nYou can get relief\nTormented by rheumatic pain? Stabbed, u\nwith a knife, by arthritic pain? Dull, wearisorat\naches in your back? Tempteton'i T-R-C's girt\nyou fast, comforting relief from all types of\nReplenish Kamloops\nBlood Bank\nVANCOUVER, Feb, 13 (CP)\u2014A,\nplane chartered by the' Red Cross\nmade a 250-mile flight to Kamloops\nto replenish thie exhausted blood\nbank at the interior city.\nThe plane carried 12 pints of\nblood and plasma and was piloted\nby .Art Livesy of Queen Charlotte\nAirlines. '   ![''\u25a0,\nA large quantity of blood and\nplasma was used during the weekend to treat a man seriously.burned I\nwhen he dozed in an armchair I\nwhile smoking. , S f- ,    '  'j\nThe man, Fred Schofleld, 73,' was\nreported in \"fair\" condition today. I\n 7\t\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTSI.\nComplete Goo<l\nOffices Committee\nBY FRANCIS W. CARPENTER\nLAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Feb. 13\n(AP) \u2014 The 38th parallel in Korea\nbecame politically hot again just\nas the U.N. finally completed\nthe good offices committee that will\ntry to stop the fighting.\nU.N. obserVers predicted the issue of crossing the parallel, the old\nborder between North and South\nKorea, would be the first major\nheadache of the committee. Communist China already has announced she would ignore the body.\nMexico's veteran U.N. envoy, Luis\nPadilla Nervo, took the third man's\nplace in the new three-man team.\nThe only rates increased were on\nbusiness cars. A lower accident ratio, due to the Public Safety ond\nResponsibility Law, was the reason.\nrheumaticpain. No matter how long you hart\nBiillprcd T-R-C'a will bring you comforting\nrelief. Why suffer needleaaly? Get_the: relief\nyou long for with Templelon's T-R-C'a. Get\nyour proper real Work in comfort again,.\nT-R-C'a are Canada's largest selling propria.\ntary medicine for rheumatic pain. 60c mid 51.25,\nREAD^lHE~CLASsiFiED   DAILY\nDON'T 1\nwhat's good for a.\nCOUGH?\n>     ASK FOR        BU.,\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nA SINGLE SIP TELLS WHY!\nSCHEDULE CHANGE\nEFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 15\nVANCOUVER\nPENTICTON .:\nPENTICTON -.\nCASTLEGAR ..\nCASTLEGAR ..\nCRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK\nCALGARY,  _\nFlight 4\n(Head ,DoWn) . ,\nLv.    8:15 a.m.\n9:30 a.m.\n9:45 a.m.\n10:35' a.m.\n10:50 a.m.\n12:35 p.m.\n12:30 p.m.\n2.'05^ p,m.\nAr.\nLv.\nAr.\nLv.\nAr.\nLv.\nAr.\nFlight 3\n(Read Up)\nAr. 7:05 p.m.\nLv. 5:40 p.m.\nAr. 5:20 p.m.\nLv. 4:30 p.m.\nA'. 4:15 p.m.\nLv. 4:20 p.m.\nAr. 4:05 p.mj\nLv. 2:35 p.m.\nGoMtJUm\n 111111\n<32<?\nSPORTS\n;\u25a0#       BY OLIVE FLEMING  laSf'    #\nNANAIMO, B.C.,. Feb. 13\u2014If the\n\"Sports Eye\" could have foreseen\nthe future, this writer would have\nstayed in Nanaimo to see the Broadway'Ghosts, a \"Negro hoop quintet,\nor the hotshot California Allstars in\naction in Vancouver. We sympathize\nwith those fans who paid to witness the Leaf-Monarch fracas.\nNelson was really off color on\nthe slow, heavy Kerrlsdale ice, but\nthe effects of a gruelling car trip\nto and from Spokane left telling\neffects on Scotty Milne's crew. As\none of the Coast papers termed it:\n\"It was not a case of the best team\nwinning and the worst team losing.\"\n.The less said about it the better,\nbut there were several relatives\nand former Nelsonites who saw only\nthe Monday night appearance of the\nLeafs in Kerrisdale.\nNEIL NIFTY\nHugged rightwinger Neil McClen-\nghan, a dangerous puckster around\nie net, almost got his hat trick. Aft'\n1,T he had fired his two goals, Goalie\nBob, Bartlett, who received a golf\nbag and a couple of clubs from the\nrisi.Saturday night, juggled one\nl\/Nail'i long shot drives, and drop-\n\u00abd It oh the goal line for Roy_ Al-\ni fo slap in. Neil deserved the hat\n(trick for-his battle.\n| Monarch's, Hon Montgomery re-\n\u00abSWd.,a.twisted shoulder when Er-\nnle.''Cjiare smashed him at mid-ice.\ni,The best checks of the night wore\nI dealt by Bud,Ritchie, who sent Hed\nKoehle and Johnny Harms reeling,\nwith hip checks.\nGeorge  Barefoot  did  not  play,\nI resting his stiff; leg, and Monarch's\nLou Holmes did not arrive for the\ngame, from Vernon.\nIjDenny Huddlestone, W.I.H.L. roo-\n3tle-6f-;the-year four seasons' ago\nwjieV^lth: Nelson, dropped into the\nLeafs! rooojl Monday night. Huddle-\nstone if| ji'ow' enjoying a good year\nwith New'Westminster Hoyals.\nFormer''tBp'notch Goalie Porky\nLevin who iknew ejc-pros Eddie\nWareB, Fredl'Herrjeri and Johnny\nHarms,' chatted with many of the\nLeafs, and recalled, the time that\nFred Herni\nord for rhtKAmerlcan Hockey\nLeague, ipo'itVng three goals and\nroi reci\nrgertseetjhe scoring rec\nthiW'Amerlcan\n\u2022 PS\u2122\n'four'ass\/llis,,\nI VJaeJt'O'Hara \u00b0f Nanaimo Clippers\n|had his hose broken in the first rug\ngod  encounter' between  the\nI clubs.\nNanaimo will\nof the 7-1 Nanaimo triumph over the\nElks a week ago. The protest was\nfiled because Clippers Busher Jackson and Crusher Conway had not\nbeen reinstated. M.O.A.H.L. prexy\nDr. Mel Butler upheld the protest\nand awarded the game to Kamloops.\nIt also put the Elks out front in\nfirst place.\nScotty Milne, pilot of the Kerrisdale Monarchs, tried to land former\nLeaf Bill Jenkins, who played defence with Regina and was released\nat the same time as Johnny Harms,\nbut Jenkins is down in New York\nplaying with Mickey Maglio and\nLee Hyssop with the Rovers. 5\ntwo players when they meet Kerrisdale next. Both defencemen Jack\nKirk and Joe Fennell drew two-\ngame suspensions, results of a mix-\nup with Referee Norm Prldham.\nNanaimo is somewhat hot under\nthe collar about Kamloops' protest\nFalkanger Soars To New Kimberley Jump Record\niPiiiBBii\nThorbjern \"Toby\" Falkanger, Norwegian\nnational jumping champion, paid a visit to Kimberley Feb. 4 to show the East Kootenay folks\nhow-It's done. Falkanger made jumps of 220, 224\nand 233 feet In an exhibition display, the last Jump\nunofficially  bettering- the former  hill  mark by\n11 feet.\nA crowd of 800 witnessed the exhibition by\nthe young champion who Is now an exchange\nstudent at Washington State College,\n\u2014Charles Wormington photo.\nClippers Blank Leaf,\nBlfjL JENKINS\nIt's almost (definite now that Penticton will t'rjl its utmost to have\na senior hockey (dub next season.\nB.C.A.H.A.. bdss). Gerry Thompson\nsaw the Leaf. sepifes^at the Coast. \u00bbt\\\nNelson mentor Eddie Wares\\'rind\ntwo - executives Frank Huffy* atid \u2022 Stan,\nI Smith looked up Club President N.\n\u2014 IC. Stibbs, who is in St. Vincent's\nbe short anbther I Hospital at Vancouver.\nI \"BOUCHER NIGHT\"\nAT MADISON\nGARDENS TONIGHT\nNEW YORK, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014\n\u25a0They're throwing a \"night\" for\n\u25a0Manager Frank Boucher of ihe\n\u25a0Rangers tomorrow at Madison\n\"Square Garden.\nThe fans will give him a new\ncar; the team a television set. Local\nhockey writers will chip in a typewriter. These are just a sprinkling\nDf the tokens of friendship planned\nto honor the 49-year-old Boucher\non his 25th season with the Ranger\norganization,\nTonight .\"I'll be there\" wires still\nwere' coming in from those .who\nknow and respect him in and out\nof hockey as well as from hisV' many\nfans.' Bill and Bun Cook, Boucher's\nllneshiates in the diys when he\nwas .one of the game's greatest\ncentres, .will be on hand. So will\nChing Johnson and Murray Murdoch. ,\"',':|!   '\u25a0     O''- i'   '\u25a0..\nLeafs Blast- Swiss\nChamps 11-3\nDAVOS, Switzerland, Feb. 13\n(CP)\u2014Lethbridge Maple Leafs today walloped Switzerland's best,\nthe champion Davos Ice Hockey\nClub, 11-3 before a crowd of 2000.\nThe Canadian contenders for\nworld hockey honors set and maintained a fast pace despite falling\nsnow which made the ice bad.\nCentre Bill Gibson led Leafs with\na brilliant four-goal performance.\nStan Obadiak and Jim Malaka got\na pair each, and Hec Negrello, Bert\nKnibbs and Don McLean got\nsingles.  '(.'..;,,'.,,  .\nBATES LOSES 10-1        U\nSTOCKHOLM, Feb. 13 (AP)''-tt\nThe Swedish national hockey team\ndefeated the Bates Manufacturing\nCo. club 10-1 here tonight. Jack\nPoirier scored the Americans' only,\ngpal in the third period.\nNANAIMO, B.C., Feb. 13 (CP)\n\u2014Clippers, beset by protest losses,\nInjuries and suspended players,\ntonight gained a measure of solace when they blanked Nelson\nMaple Leafs 3-0 In an Inter-\nleague hockey game,\nClippers,'going to \\vork in energetic fashion in the opening frame,\nrang the bell at the 13-mlnute mark\non a goal off the stick of Herbie\nLundmark on a relay through the\nmiddle   zone   from  Jack   O'Hara.\nO'Hara was playing with a broken\nnose  suffered in  the  team's  last\ngame here Saturday against Leafs.\nrtfFollqwing'  a   scoreless    middle\nperiijd and- with half the last period\ngonei'Arjdy' Clovechok batted in his\nown -fe'boundftto give Nanaimo the\nclincher. As added insurance Jack,\nKirkL blazed 6 long shot from just i\ninsidje the' Nelson blue to catch the !\ncpinerv --Goalie  Matwick  partially!,\nbjqeked the shot with his skate but]\nthe puck hopped over his foot'and-\ninto the net. '\u25a0 !\nNelson \u2014 Matwick; Steele, Mat-1\nhews; F. Koehle, R. Koehle, Haley.'\nSubs \u2014 Harms, Hergert, Haldane,\nWares, Gare, McClenaghan, and\nCrothers.\nNanaimo \u2014 McManus; Lundmark,\nKirk; O'Hara; Carr, Clovechok.\nSubs \u2014 Conway, Fennell, Jackson,\nCulley, Petrovich, Defelice, Warwick, Gourdeau,\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141. Nanaimo, Lundmark (O'Hara) 13:46.\nPenalties \u2014 Matthews, Conway,\nKtirk, Clovechok.\nSecond period\u2014No scoring.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20142. Nanaimo, Clovechok (Fennell) 11:15; 3. Nanaimo,\nKirk (Culley) 12:03.\nPenalty\u2014Hergert.\nAt   Kelowna   Spokane   Flyers\nousted the Packers 7-3 In a Western   Intcrnatlonal-M.O.A.H.L.   In-1\ntcr-leagup ' game.    High -scoring-\n.'*Lbrhe'Nadeau netted the-hat trick\ni\u00abt for'the victors.    , |\nSUMMARY i '\u25a0'.    I\nFirst,period\u20141. Kelowna, Anderson (Fritz-) 2:25; 2. Spokane, Nadeau\n(Macauley) 11:24; 3. Kelowna, Durban (Daski) 12:40; 4. Kelowna, Durban (Daski) 13:27; 5. Spokane, McNally (Macauley, Nadeau) 18:30.\n\u25a0 Penalties\u2014Luke.\nSecond period\u20148. Spokane, Cirullo (Horbe, Marchant) 7:30.\nPenalties\u2014Carrigan, Cirullo, Nadeau, Luke, Horbe, Anderson, Low,\nKusmack (2).\nThird period\u20147. Spokane, Scott\n\/Carrigan) 7:05; 8. Spokane, Wylie\n(Horbe) 10:38; 9. Spokane, Nadeau\n(Macauley) 14:13; 10. Spokane, Nadeau (McNally)  15:47.\nWhir's. Who\nIriMllML\nSMOKIES PLACE 6,\nLEAFS 5 ON\nALL-STAR TEAM\nSPOKANE, Wash,,'Feb. 13 (AP)\n(\u2014 Trail Smoke Eaters' of the. Western. International' jLeagfie''jockey\nteam placed six men on the ail-star\nthat will\"'meet Spokane Flyers in\na'game'here Feb. 20.   \u2022\n\"Five Nelson men were picked and\nfour; from1 Kimberley,\n- They were chosen by the Spokane\nSportswriters and Broadcasters Association sponsor of the annual\nall-star event.\nThose chosen were:\nCoach\u2014Bobby Kirk, Trail.\nGoalie\u2014John Sofiak, Trail.     '\nLeft Wlpgs\u2014Bob' Kromm,' Trail;\nBill Haldane and John Harms, Nelson.\nRight Wings\u2014Sam Calles and Bill,\nHryciuk, Kimberley; Red Koehle,\nNelson. .'','\u25a0\nCentres\u2014Dave Livingston and\nRay McNiven, Kimberley; John\nRypien, Trail.\nDefence\u2014Ernie Gare and George\nBarefoot, Nelson; Danny McDougald\nand Joe Palyga, Trail.\nJOHNNY RYPIEN\n. . . Trail's slim 24-year-old stick-\nhandling wizard is a little off his\nscoring pace of former years, but\nis still dangerous at all times, Went\nto the Pacific Coast League in 1945-\n46 after playing junior with Edmonton Canadians, seeing, action\nwith Tacoma Rockets, New Westminster Royals and Portland Eagles\nduring a three-year stay. Moved to\nSpokane Flyers for last .season before joining the Smokies this term.\nGolf, baseball and swimming occupy off-season time.\n\u2014W. Schultz photo.\nSugar Ray Solid\npMolla Tonight\nBy JACK HAND\n;.C.HICAGO, Feb. 13 (API-Sugar\nHay \"Robinson; world welter king,\nrules a solid favorite to strip Jake\nLa\" Motta of his middleweight\ncrown tomorrow night in the first\nphttle of two champions since the\ndays of Henry Armstrong.\nSimplifying the prevailing 3-4\nodds, Jake the Bull is a 3% to 1\nunderdog, in man-to-mon betting.\nIt may come down to 2% to 1 by\nringtime at 10:00 p.m.\nLa Motta, the cement-jawed\n\"Bull of the Bronx\" who never has\nbeen knocked off his feet in'95\nfights, is the mystery man. Nobody\nknows his exact weight. Nobody\ncan fathom his pre-fight strategy.\nThe weigh-in will be two hours\nbefore noon, giving La Motta extra\ntime to sweat off suet if needed.\nBut he amazed the experts by\nending his boxing last Friday, five\ndays before the fight, with the explanation that he already was fit.\nRobinson, expected to weigh 154,\nholds four victories over La Motta\nin their five-bout series. However,\nJake is the only man to whip him\nin 123 fights. That happened Feb. 5.\n1943, in their second meeting, a\nunanimous 10-round decision at Detroit. .\nConsolations,\nPreservations lo\nEnd Shuffle Play\nNelson's bird swatting _ experts\nwill be out on the floor again this\nweek, this time to finish off the\nconsolation event in the Nelson City\nBadminton Championships. First\ngames in the competition were played off last week.\n.Opening games will begin Thursday night while finals will be run\noff Sunday afternoon.\nEddie Hearn of Salmo and Mrs.\nBill Ramsay of Nelson took men's\nand women's singles in last week's\nchampionship games.\nPrizes will be presented to winners on Sunday afternoon at the\nCivic Centre by Mrs. Douglas Male,\nlongtime member of the shuttle\ngroup.\nFifteen prizes in all will go to\nthe winners, including five cups\nwhich were at stake in the five\nopen championship events. Individual cups, which may be retained\nwill also be presented.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl .Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n'.'.'\u25a0V'   It, fi\t\nDIMAGGIO NOT GOING TO\nREMARRY PORMEIUVIFE\nHOLLYWOOD, Feb. 13 (AP) \u2014\nBaseball star Joe DiMagglo scoffed\nat rumors today that he and his\ndivorced wife, the former Dorothy\nArnold, may re-marry.\n\"I ain't getting married again,\"\nsaid the New York Yankees' famed\nClipper, punctuating the answer\nwith a hearty laugh.\nDiMaggio is here to visit his\nyoung son, Joe, Jr.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nOn the\n10>Pin Alleys\nThe top notch bowlers of the J.H.\nAllen team and the J. MacMillan\ntrio walked off the Legion bowling\nalleys this week with a win apiece\nto their credit.\n\u25a0'The'.\"Allen keglers bowled over\nthe S. J. Newell squad with 1037\nagianst 872, while J. MacMillan\ntrounced G. Stro.ig ond his team\nby 673-651.\nAllen took both high single and\nhigh aggregate In Monday's night's\ngames,with 158 and 310, while M.\nDeferrb took both high Tuesday\nnight with 135 and 256.\nScores follow:\nNEWELL\u20140. Tedinck 183, J. Dee!\n186, Mrs. 6. Anderson 263, J. Brln-\nley 238, spot 12. Total 872.\nALLEN\u2014L. Cartwright 186, J.\nDrummond 258, R. Olsen 283, J.\nAllen 310. Total 1037.\nMACMILLAN\u2014P. Porteous 172,\nO. Anderspn 225,\/M. Deferro 256,\nTotal 653.,. ,'\u2022'-'\t\nSTRONO-Mrs.'O. Anderson 212,\nJ., Thomas^S, 'J.'Brinley 251. Total\n\u00abti: i'x '\u25a0 -,- :\nTrail Bowling\n- Ladles' Senior League:\nHigh single\u2014G. Grandbois,  270.\nHigh aggregate \u2014 G. Grandbois,\n730.\nHigh team single\u2014Demore's, 1182.\nHigh team aggregate\u2014Demore's,\n3195. '\nScores follow:\nROOKIES \u2014 M. Cronie 474, D.\nRawlinson 471, M. Wisheski 414, M.\nKarliner 474, A. Daniels 458. Spot\n66. Total 2291.\nDREADNOTS-J. Alton 524, B.\nCasey 466, M. Trlol 383, F. Elliott\n616,,T. Robertson 557. Total 2546.\nWONDERS\u2014G. Grandbois 730, P.\nWalton 580, L. McLaren 565, S.\nWhitehead 386, S. Basso 500. Total\n2761.\nDEMORE'S-H. Rothery 573, L.\nCasey 670, L. Buckna 510, O. Watson 772, M. Cronie 670. Total 3195.\nMONTANAS-J. Baldassi 590, H.\nZentner 443, G. Archibald 495, T.\nReuter 510, J. Buckna 666. Total\n2704.\nSHOE REPAIR-S. Maglianl 437,\nM. Ruckstuhl 362, E, Demore 275,\nS. McLaren 395, H. Miscisco 618.\nSpot 39. Total 2126.\nELLAYES \u2014 J. Letcher 573, P.\nReid 548, C. McDonald 456, M.\nFletcher 670, M. Barry 500. Spot\n306. Total 3113.\nHockey Standings\n'    NATIONAL   LEAGUE\nW L T F   A Pts.\nDetroit   33 11 10 181 114 76\nToronto   29 12 11 162 108 69\nBoston ..'.  17 23 13 130 148 47\nMontreal  ;.... 18 25 11 123 145 47\nNew York   14 20 17 114 144 45\nChicago   12 32 10 13B 189 34\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nWestern Division\nW L T F   A Pts.\nCleveland  36 15 5 218 165 77\nIndianapolis   .. 27 25 3 207 194 57\nPittsburgh     23 24 7 161 129 53\nCincinnati     23 23 7 161 160 53\nSt, Louis   24 27 3 170 186 Si\nEastern Division\nBuffalo   ..:  33 18 3 247 214 69\nHershey     26,22 4 176 174 56\nProvidence   .... 20 28 4 189 215 44\nSpringfield   .... 18 25 6 192 204 42\nx-New Haven    5 23 0   74 154 10\nx-Disbanded.\nBuy and  Sell the Classified Way'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1951 \u2014 7\nWings Well Ahead of National\nLeague Pack; Howe Tops Scorers\nMONTREAL, Feb. 13 (CP)-Four\nDetroit victories against two for\nToronto last week have put Hed\nWings well ahead of the pack again\nin the National Hockey League.\nWhen they started their four-\ngame series last week, Wings were\nonly three points up on Leafs. But\nToronto dropped one and won two\nfor 69 points compared to Wings' 76,\nDetroit's winning ways showed\nup in the individual scoring race,\ntoo. Their stars, Gordie Howe and\nSid Abel, are one, two in individual\nstandings.\nBoston's Jack Qellneau got the\nonly shutout during the week,\nhis fourth of the season, Detroit's\nTerry Sawchuk still Is tops In\nthat department with seven, followed by Canadiens' Gerry McNeil with six.\nToronto netminders Turk Broda\nand Al Rollins combined for the\nbest goal-tending average, 2.08\nagainst Sawchuk's 2.11.\nToronto and Boston's Bill Ezinicki shared the worst penalty record, Leafs with 649 minutes and\nWild Bill with 115 in the cooler.\nThe leaders: G A Pt. P\nHowe, Detroit   29 36 65 58\nAbel, Detroit  20 30 50 26\nRichard, Montreal   32 15 47 65\nLindsay, Detroit   20 27 47 97\nM. Bentley, Toronto .... 16 31.47 30\nSloan, Toronto   26 20 46 88\nKennedy, Toronto   12 32 44 15\nSchmidt, Boston   18 25 43 25\nR, Conacher, Chicago .. 23 18 41 16\nSmith, Toronto   23 17 40 25\nGardner, Toronto  18 22 40 24\nPrystai,  Detroit   20 16 36 23\nKelly, Detroit   12 24 36 16\nLach, Montreal   16 18 34 42\nLewicki, Toronto   16 17 33 24\nBabando, Chicago  15 17 32 28\nPeters, Detroit   13 19 32 12\nD. Bentley, Chicago ....   9 23 32 20\nWatson, Toronto  15 18 31 18\nMcFadden, Detroit   14 17 31   8\nJ. Conacher, Chicago ....   9 20 29 12\nGuidolin, Chicago   10 17 27 42\nThomson, Toronto     2 25 27 58\nStewart, Detroit   16 10 26 14\nKullman, New York .... 11 15 26 70\nThe first vaccination against\nsmallpox was made on May 14,\n1790.\nWith Stane\nAnd Besom\nResults of Tuesday night's games\nin the Nelson Curling Club's Round\nRobin Competition follow:\nW. A. Duckworth 0, L. J. Maurer\n1.\nJ. Morris 6, H. Peacock- 6.\nF. H. Smith 4, A. H. Whitehead i\nH. Riesterer 10, W. A. Triggs i \u25a0\nT. S. Jemson 8, A. J. Hamson t>\nH. A. D. Greenwood 14, F. L\nIrwin 11.\nJ: Harvey 10, C. L. Suitor 8.\nP. E. Poulin 6, W. Marr 19.\nJ. R. Bailey 7, R. Palmer 9.\nW. Forman 10, W. Will 3.\nCoast Soccer lo\nHave New Code\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014\nThe Pacific Coast Soccer League is\nconsidering a new player-transfer\nrule\u2014and one with teeth in it...\nThe \"bite\" is a proposed $200 fine\non any club which commits a\nbreach of the transfer rules.\nThe league executive last night\npresented delegates with a new Bet\nof transfer regulations for their\nconsideration.\nSKATING TODAY\nGeneral: 2:00-4:00 p.m.\nWEDNESDAY NITE\n. PROGRAMME SKATING\n8:15 to 10:15 P.M,\nAdults 35c\nGAME\n19\nHOCKEY\nNELSON\nGAME\n19\nvs\nKIMBERLEY\nFRIDAY 8:00 P.M.\nADVANCE SEAT SALE\nTHURSDAY and FRIDAY\n10 a.m. \u2014 6 p.m.\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nReserved $W$i 00   Adults RiiSn75V \"stiia^ri'tt\/SSe\"'\n- i>* ' ' \u2014\u2014 mlm\nHOCKEYSfcORES\nBy the Canadian. Preas\nTHUNDER BAY JUNIOR\nFort William  Canadiens 3,\nArthur Bruins 7.\nCAPE BRETON MAJOR\nGlace Bay 4, Sydney 4.\nDANNY MoDOUGALD\n. . . Learned his hockey at Maple\nCreek, Sask., and now in his second\nseason with Trail. Was with intercollegiate champion University of     \u201e\u201e\u201e,. \u201eaJ. ,,\nToronto Blues in 1947 and prior to'oHA JUNIOR A\nthat with 12th District Army team. I   Barrie 4 Guelph 5.\nA husky  6-foot 2-inch  200-pound   -\ndetenceman, Danny also enjoys\nbaseball, football, soccer, lacrosse,\nand swimming. .,\n\u2014W. Schultz photo.\nDenver Seniors\n'\"I\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb. 13\u2014\nDespite D. Hood's hat trick for ..Slocan City, New Denver seniors'de-\nfeated the visitors 8-5 in a well-\ndeserved win.\nJ. Heslip and Terakita were\nother Slocan scorers while I. Se-\ncura.'F. Russel, J. George and Crellin netted two apiece for New Denver .counters.\nMAIDSTONE, Kent, England\n(CP)\u2014The local Citizens' Advice\nBureau gets some strange requests\nat times but this one caps them\nall. Two visitors to Maidstone wanted witnesses for their wedding.\nGait 2, Toronto Marlboros 1.\nWindsor 3, St. Catharines 0.\ni   Oshawa 2, Toronto St. Michael's 4\nQUEBEC JUNIOR\nMontreal' Canadiens 2, Verdun 1\nEA3TERN CANADA\nCornwall 1, Ottawa R.C.A.F. 4,  '\nOttawa Army 8, Hull 2.\nQUEBEC JUNIOR\nQuebec 2, Montreal Nationales 4.\nP.C.H.L.\nVancouver 5, Tacoma 5\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nWithout Calomel-And You'll Jump Out el\nBed iri the Morning Ruin' to Go\nThe liver should pour out about 2 pint* of\nbile juice into your digestive tract evory tiny.\nlt this bilo is not flowing freely, your food may\nnot digest. It may just decay in tho digestive\ntract. Then gas bloats up your stomach. Yoa\n\u25a0At const inn tc<l. You fool sour, etiiil: ind tht\nworld looks punk.\nIt takes those mild, gentle C.-ulor'n little\nliver Pills to got these 2 pints of bile flow*\ning freely to make you feci \"up and up,\"\nGet a package today, EfTectivo in making\nbile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Littlo lire*\nKttk. KM \u00bbt toy drugstore, '\n\u25a0\n A\nB\nN\nE\nR\n\u00abi\nPHONE\n1032\nHOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\nSPECIAL CHENILLE BEDSPREADS   $10.95\nNELSON\nB. C.\n'Insurance for Peace\" Will Cost $5. Billion\nDefence Minister Claxton'\nhas presented to Parliament\nthe outline of a three-year\n$5,000,000,000 military program, which he termed \"increased premium to ensureu\npeace\", and which will include an air (division of\n40 regular and auxiliary\n' squadrons which will require 3000 additional aircraft; a 100-ship navy responsible for the protection\nof coastal sea lanes, and an\nairborne striking force, anti-aircraft artillery and other units for the defence of\nCanada against direct attack. The strength of all\nforces will be raised to a total of 115,000, or 148,000 if\ncivilian personnel is included. , Present strength, in-,\neluding civilians, is about\n90,000.\nDales Fixed for\nBig Four Meeting\nPARIS, Feb. 13 (AP)\u2014The Big\nFour Deputies will meet in Paris\nbetween March 10 and 15 to arrange\nfor a meeting of the Foreign Ministers of the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union,\na French Government official announced today. .\nThis source said the Deputies\nwould set the terms, a place, and\ndate for the meeting.\nSuch a meeting, would have as\nits main purpose the working out\nof an agenda for the Big Eour conference.\nThe Deputies, it was reported,\nwill be special representatives\nnamed for the occasion.\nRussia said the deputies in their\nParis meeting must be restricted to\nframing an agenda f6r the Big\nFour statesmen, with no prelimin-\npry talks on policy matters.\nAny Western attempt to add Far\nEastern questions to the agenda is\nexpected to produce a Russian\ncounter-demand that Communist\nChina be represented for such discussions.\nCoast Contract' for\nLarge Steel Barge\nVICTORIA, B. C, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014\nYarrows Ltd. has been awarded a\n$90,000 contract for building of\nlarge steel barge for the Vancouver\nTugboat Co., Ltd., of Vancouver.\nWork will begin immediately on\nthe new craft, according to an announcement by Shipyard President\nH. A. Wallace, and will be completed in about four months. The\nbarge will measure 150 by 42 feet.\nIts hull will be similar to one\ndelivered last month to the same\nfirm and, designed specially for\ncarrying paper from Ocean Falls to\nVancouver. The new scow, however, will not have any special\nhousing as did the paper carrier.\nMORE  PLANES WILL  BE  BUILT FOR THE\nBritain Resumes\nArgentina Talks\nBUENOS AIRES, Feb. 13 (AP)\u2014\nThe Foreign Ministry announced today Britain and Argentina will resume negotiations on the-purchase\nof Argentine meat. Seven months\nago Britain refused to pay higher\nprices asked by this country and\nstopped imports.\nIt is believed here that the Brit-\nish public, whose meat Nation recently was cut to an \"all-time low\nfor eight pence (nine cents) worth\nof fresh meat a week per person,\nwill force the Labor Government\nto accept Argentina's price demands.\nON THE AIR\nWEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1951\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DLAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7i05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of Morning\n\u20228:00\u2014News\n-8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madam\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n0:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Musicale\n9:58\u2014Train Time\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies Choice\n10:15\u2014Tom, Dick and Harry\n10:30\u2014Oliver's Choice\n10:45\u2014Robin Hood Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:00-^News\ni 12:0i\u2014Notice Board , .  (. ','\ni2:15^News    ' \u25a0.'\u25a0'.'\/<\n112:25\u2014Sports,News .\"' if.) ,'\n1\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Wednesday Serenade\n1:45\u2014Our Children\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Kootenay Concert\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Don Messer's Islanders\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News\n3:59\u2014News\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shields\n4:15\u2014Music by Goodman\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins        i\n4:45\u2014Something in Harmony\n4:55\u2014On the Air'\n5:00\u2014News'\n5:01\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman !\n5:30\u2014News   ' . \u201e-.\"\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Myrt and Marge\n6:00\u2014Teen Time\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale v'-'t'i:''.<\n1L00-U. N. Today      ''\n11:15\u2014Collector's Items\n11:55\u2014News Nite-cap.\n\u25a0   *\n1951\nAIR  FORCE\n\u2014Central Press Canadian photos.\n,-:'\u2022 X-X.XX\nfriday, feb. 16,\nckW\n1240 ON THE-DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014FOr You Madame \u25a0.\n8:55\u2014Meal of' the Day \\   -;\n9:00\u2014News   '\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\nO^S-'-Musicale\n9:58\u2014Train Time\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n10:15\u2014Tel Oliver Show\n11:00\u2014News ;..   \u00bb\"-\"\u201e-\"\n11:05\u2014Song Parade    '\u25a0\/.\n11:30\u2014Aunt tyJary.'-L , ,   ;,\n11:45\u2014Nbtice'Bbard\n12:00-4News\n.JSJiOl-^Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Thursday Serenade\n1:30\u2014Wife Saver\n1:45\u2014Deeds That Live\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Journey to Melody\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News     '      ,,-,',.\n3:59\u2014News,''   -'   \u25a0 \u25a0\",' \u25a0\n4:00f-The Sunshine Society\n4:30\u201420,000 Leagues Under the Sea!\n4:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n4:55\u2014On the Air\n5:00\u2014News, \u25a0        >','','..'\u25a0'.\n5:01\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News   .\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Myrt and Marge\n6:00\u2014Your Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Eventide\n8:00\u2014Citizens Forum\n8:45^-\"Logging With Bunyan\"\n.9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n-9:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n10:00\u2014News '\n10:lrr-Datelihe Edmonton\n10:30-CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014U. N. Today\n11:15\u2014Encore\nu:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\nMORE SOLDIERS WILL BE TRAINED IN THE ART OF DEFENCatl\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Stupors\nt 6. River (Fr.)\n11. Genus of\nherbs '     |\n12.Unltof ,.   |\n\u25a0w.''.electrical '\u25a0 '\u25a0\n'. y capacity\n13. East Indian,\npalm\n15. Stannum\n16. Malt.\nbeverage\n17. Beset\n20. French\narticle\n21. Norwegian\nwriter\n22. All correct\n(abbr.)\n23. Portion of\ngrain to be\nground\n24. Enemy\n25. Gloss\n27. Reduces in\nthickness\n2f>. Permit   {\n30. Girl's name\n'SS. Rough lava\n33. Variety of\nwillow\n34. Type   .\nmeasure\n36. A small f\nwindow\nover\na door\n48. Honey-\ngathering\ninsect\n39. Those In\nOffice\n40., Stairway,,\n' \"posts'1',''.-.'\n42. Come in\n44. Memoranda\n45. A marble,, <\n46. Weepy\nDOWN\n1. A shade\nof red\n2. Silk scarf.\n; fficci.)\n3. Officer of a\nmerchant\nvessel-.\n4. Perform \\\n5. Thread-\nbareness\n6. Whether\n7. A glossy\nsilk fabric\n8. American\nIndian\n9. Capital of\nBurma\n10. Man's\nnickname\n14. Headland\n18. A colonized\nregion\n19. Pieces out\n21. Anger\n23. Obtain\n24. Paddie-IIke\nprocess\n25. Flap, as\nsails\n26. A judicial ,\ntrial'\n28. Feminine\npronoun\n31. Tawny\nbeast (AfpJ\n33. Beginning\n34. Lamprey\nfisherman\n35. Untidy\n0HUH   GIWMM\nBinsHra: HiaipDH\nI3I1E  Hfcia   HHE!\nam HiBBsn dr\nH0IIHH   SiHIUHK\n00     an\nHEirania raGieing,\naa. Bisi-JHH hi?i\nnnia him iann=\nIMillaSi   niHHHfr-\nHnHHH mmnm\n\u25a0aanra -m\\ma\nYesterday's Atiswn\n37. A pilaster\n38. Greek letter;\n41. Sorrow\n42. Water god,\n(Baby!.)\n43. Music\n'note\n3    *\n32\n\u00ab\n23\n37\n45\n22\n3o\nm\n40\n43\n27\n<W\n85\n24\nJ8\n46\nK Q V N K*1\nJ V F G V G a\nJ V    S JF 3\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nRBMJ     TFR     JOR     QKGMV\nXIBVCMV,      SK      LFIV      SJ V\nLKGV    MKCMVG'CVX-   SJFC\nRYFIV \u2014XVC JFL.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote:   OUR COUNTRY'S WELFARE 13\nOUR FIRST CONCERN\u2014HAVARD.\nDAILY CBYPIOQUOTE-Here's how to ww* it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs L O N)0 F E L L O W\nOne letter simply stands'for another. In this example A Is used j\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.  Single letters, spoa-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.'j\nEach day the code letters are different,\n*\n 330\n\\PERS0W0'PERS0N WANT ADS\nV   FOR QU\/CK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED \u2014 AN INDUSTRIAL\nFirst-Aid attendant for a producing mine. Duties will include\nsome office work. Apply stating\nexperience and education to Box\n1 4323 Nelson Daily News.\u00bb\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nVANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED CAT\ni driver. Phone or write Western\n'Exploration Co., Silverton, B.C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nK-CIVTL SERVANT, AGE 60, RE-\nquires full or part-time employment. Well known in district. Experienced in various lines. Phone\n279-R, or.P.O: Box 254, Nelson.\nPOOK, EXPERIENCED IN HOTEL,\ncafe and camp cooking, wants\nwork. Phone 1038-L2 or write\n1130 Marianna Cres., Trail, B.C.\nPAMP COOK, HUSBAND HELP-\ner. Two small children. State\nwages. Box 4338 Daily News.\nSIRL DESIRES  WORK BY THE\nhour. Phone 1099-L.\nPERSONAL\nVAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\n. surance Co., D. L. Kerr, Agent.\nCRESS. BUNION SALVE \u2014 FOR\namazing relief\". \u2014 Your druggist\nsells CRESS.\nLMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R,\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles,  Vancouver,  B.  C.\nPERSONAL SUPPLIES (RUBBER\ngoods) mailed postpaid in plain\nsealed envelopes with price, list.\nSix samples 20c, 30 samples' $1.00.\nD. Ralph Mailing House, Box 120,\nAsbestos, P.Q.\nHEN! PERSONAL ' DRUG SUN-\ndries:  25 deluxe  samples,  $1.00.\n' Mailed in plain, sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed,\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDistributors, Box 1023N, Vancouver, B. C.\n..ADIES I DUPREE PILLS. IM-\nproved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 per\nbox. Western Distributors, Box\n1023 AN, Vancouver, B. C.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nIOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Me-\n, tals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch, .poles,, peeled\n; or unpeeled. Glacier Lumber Co.\nBox 450, -Nelson; B.C.\"\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n918 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C,\n.HIP   YOUR   HIDES   TO   J.   P.\nMorgan, Nelson, B. C.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nTOR SALE \u2014 1 STAR MARINE\nconversion, marine clutch,. water\npump, shaft and propellor. All\ngood running order. Apply Box\n4016 Daily News.\nINTERNATIONAL\nJOINT COMMISSION\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\nAPPLICATION OF THE\nGOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED\nSTATES RE LIBBY DAM\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat there has been transmitted to\nand filed with the International\nJoint Commission, on 15 January,\n1951, an Application by the Government of the United States, dated\n12 January 1951, requesting the\nCommission to give consideration\nto such effects as the construction\nand operation of a dam and reservoir, therein referred to as \"Libby\nDam\", on the Kootenay River near\nLibby, Montana, may have on the\nlevels or stages of the said Kootenay River at and above the international boundary between1 the\nUnited States and Canada, and the\nconsequences thereof, .and requesting the Commission to approve the\nconstruction and operation of this\ndam and reservoir under the provisions of Article IV of the Treaty\nof il January, 1909.\nFURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY\nGIVEN that the International Joint\nCommission will hold public hearings in the above matter at the\nfollowing times and places, each\nhearing to commence at 10:30\no'clock, A.M.:\nDavenport Hotel, Spokane, Washington, on 12 March, 1951;\nLegion Hall, Nelson, British Columbia, on 14 March, 1951;\nCity Council Chambers, Cranbrook, British Columbia, on- 16\nMarch, 1951;\nSenate Chamber' of the Capitol,\nHelena, Montana, on 19 March, 1951,\nAt these hearings, all interested\nparties will have an opportunity to\nbe heard.\nE. M. Sutherland,\nOttawa, Canada.\nJesse B. Ellis,\nWashington, D.C.\nSecretaries,\nInternational Joint Commission,\nSALE  OF~BUIL~DINGS\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the undersigned until 5 p.m. on\nMonday, February 26th, at the\noffice of the Secretary in Slocan\nCity for the purchase and removal\nof any or all of three temporary\nschool, buildings located on the\nschool grounds in New Denver and\ndescribed as follows:\n1\u2014Science Laboratory building\n14' by 28'.\n2\u2014Junior classrooms 14' by 58'.\nThese may be inspected at any\nUnie' other than school hours by\ncontacting the janitor or Mr. N.\nTattrie, ' local school trustee. A\ncheck for 10% of the amount of\neach bid must be included with\neach application. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all\napplications.\nDated at Slocan City, B.C., Feb-\n12, 1951.  -\nPaul A. Barber,\n_^____ Secretary-Treasurer.\nSCHOOL AND ^NSTRUtiTJON\nSELSON BUSINESS  COLLEGE-\nDay and Night Classes.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n| W. WIDDOWSON & i.CQ., AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine: St., Nelson!.\nH. S. ELMES.  ROSSLAND,  B.C.,\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY AGENCIES LTD.,  IN-\nsurance. Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALER8\niVE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK\u2014\nContact H. Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine  Shop,   acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nClassified  Advertising  Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive inser-\n, tions. :     *\n\u25a0 $1.56.line per month (26 consec-\n!     utlve insertion's),.! Box numbers  lie, extra. 'Coyers  any\nnumber of insertions.'  ''V,\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,-\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion. 16c per line\neach Subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy $   .05\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance  25\nBy carrier, per year  13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne nionth       1.00\nThree months     2.50\nSix months   4.50\nOne year      8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month      1.00\nThree  months       3.00\nSix months     6.00\nOne year     12.00\nWhere extra postrrje la required,\nabove rates pius postage.\nMACHINERY\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUHNSIPE CHICKS\u2014WHEN YOU\nwSnt.tnem.- Order early for 1951\ndelivery to .'ensure the desired\ndates. Write''ffjr.'jour free puoltry\nhandbook. It tellfc'-'about BURNSIDE CHICKS With; 37 years'\nbreeding behind thern: .\"Also gives\nsuggested methodi ififc'cermg 'or.\nyour poultry flock I R'.O.P.\" Sired\nS.C. White Leghorns; R.O.P. Sired\nNew Hampshires*;,. B.Q.PL'' Sired\nand Approyed'.iLSghorn and\n'\u2022 Hampshire! Crossbreeds.\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM,\nA. E. PO.*ELL. -HAMMOND, B.C.\nWANTED \u2014 HIGHEST PRICES\npaid for cattle of any kind or age\nby Dick Kleef. Phone, wire or\nwrite to Dick Kleef, R.R. 1, Net\nson. Phono, 404L-4.\nOrder your Baby .Chicks from the\nV    '    .ftPPLEBY\nPOULTRY BREEDING FARM,\nMISSION CITY, B. C.\nBreeders of Large Type White\nLeghorns,   White   Rocks,   New\nHampshires and Cross Breeds.\nThis farm is successfully operating on a completely non-forcing\nprogram.   Out-door environment\nWinter   and   Summer.     Hardy,\nvigorous, disease resistant stock.\nFOR SALE ABOUT 25 TONS\nsalted baled hay, mixture Red\ntop, wheat grass, Timothy and\nclover. Also 20-30 Rumley-Oil\nPull Tractor, on rubber, good\nworking order. Or will trade for\n2 or 3 ton truck. Prefer with van\nbox. I. A Williams, Kaslo. B.C.\nFINEST QUALITY R.O.P. - SIRED\nRhode Island Red and New Hampshire Chicks. Mixed sex $5 for $25,\n$10, for 50, $20 for 100, $95 for 500.\nPullets at 36c. Cockerels 10c. \u2014\nTRIANGLE HATCHERY, ARMSTRONG. B. C.\nFOR SALE\u2014COW, JUST FRESH-\nened. Apply W. W. Seminoff,\nBrilliant...B.C. . \u2022 .    \u2022   \u25a0    :'X:   '\nROOM AND BOARD\nCOMFORTABLE H O M Ef A N D\ncare for elderly person' or convalescent Apply Box 4012 Dally\nNews.\nBOARD AND ROOM VACANCY\nfor young business man. Phone\n1392-X.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nBILLIARD PARLOR FOR SALE,\nIn Trail. Owner leaving town. For\nparticulars write Box 4483 Dally\nNews.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SA~LE~\u2014~ THREE ROOM\nhouse on 75' x 100' lot in Montrose, B.C. $1800 cash. Apply C. T.\nMoen, Montrose, B.C.\nMINER\nNOW IS THE TIME\nTO PREPARE FOR\nYOUR 1951\nOPERATIONS\nwith'\nMADE IN CANADA\nioe\nEquipment\nCompressors, Slusher\nHoists: 1, 2 or 3-Drum,\nScrapers, Air Legs and Drill\nJibs, Stopers and Drifters,\nRock Drills, Mucking\nMachines, Diamond Drills\nand Blasthole Drills, Air\nTools, Slusher.Blocks, Hose\nCouplings, Plug Valves,\nWater Valves, Columns and\nParts, Joy Lite, Safety Electric Lighting and Power\nConnectors,\nand\nCATERPILLAR\nPOWER UNITS, ELECTRIC\nSETS, TRACTORS.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n1 LARGE DUO-THERM HEATER:\nI small Duo-Therm oil heater.\u2014\nNew, cheap for cash. Kitchen set,\nsingle mattress, hall tree, display\ntables, meat safe. Phone 77, 321\nBaker Street.\nNEW RED AND BLACK CHECK-\ned   mackinaw   jacket   for   sale.\nDouble sleeves and back. Size 42.\nPhone 952-X mornings.\nTHREE - PIECE    CHESTERFIELD\nsuite; excellent condition. Apply\n1501  Kootenay Street.\nFOR SALE\u20148 PCE. WALNUT\ndining room suite. Phone 954-L\nafter 6 p.m.\nFOR SALE DROP-LEAF KITCH-\nen table and 4 chair's, also kitchen\nChina cabinet. Phone 914-L.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E. Cordova St., Vancouver.\nTHE   MICRONIC   HEARING  AID\nSales - P.O Box 39 Service.\nFOR SALE\u2014G.E. WASHING MA-\nchine, as new. Ph. 314-Y after 5.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nTractor and\nEquipment Co.\n-     NELSON, B.C.\nBOX 119 PHONE 930.\nSee the New,\nSno*Blo\nSnow Plow\nI\u2014Easily Attached In Ten\n\"    Minutes. .\nO\u2014Powerful Blower Shoots\n*   Snow 20 to 50 Feet.\n, Q\u2014Attaches to Any Tractor\n\"\u00b0   With Power Take-Off.\n4\u2014Two Models Available Up\nto 8-Foot Cut.\ntX\u2014Special Rotating Discharge\n\"   Spout for Loading Trucks.\nTurns 180 degrees.\nC\u2014Loads Average Truck in\n\"   2 Minutes.\n7\u2014Priced from\n' $375 to $499\nFor complete information\nphone, write or wire or see\nit demonstrated at\nNelson\nEquipment Co.\nPhone  18- '   ', '\n214 Hall St. Nelson, B.C.\nCONTRACTORS \u2014'SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\n, \u25a0\u25a0 ,'\u25a0\/.-;   EQUIPMENT   '   '. ',,\u00bb.\nSEND  YOUR ENQUIRIES, TO\"\u2022'\nNATIONAL. MACHINERY    '\ncot; Ltd;\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver, B. C.\nFOR HIRE - NEW D-8 BULL-\ndozer for contracting work. Apply   to ! A,, iBedwell,   Ph.   80-R,\nKaslo.\nWINTER TRACKS FOR D6 AND\nRD7 cats in stock. Diesel power\nunits new and rebuilt. Bayes\nEquipment Co., Cranbrook. B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT\u2014D-4\ncot, equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc.C, Ross, phone\n588-R or 1376-L, Nelson.\nFEB. 15th\nYou can save this money.\nA small deposit on your\nAustin will guarantee, today's low price on delivery.\nNEW AUSTIN\nDEVON SEDAN\n$1680\nPlus 3% Tax\nUSED CAR\n1950 Ford Light Delivery\n1949 Austin Devon Sedan\n1949 Ford Panel\n1948 Chevrolet 5-\nPassehger\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Mercury Light\nDelivery\n1941  Dodge Light\nDelivery\n1940 Ford Light Delivery\n1940 Mercury Sedan\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan\n1.938 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 DeSoto Sedan\n1933 Model B. Coach\n1930 Oldsmobile $100\n1929 Model A.\nTERMS and TRADES\nSpot Cash for Late Model,\nUsed Cars\nEmpire Motors\n803 Baker St.       Ph. 1135\nNelson, B. C.\nWANTED TO BUY PANEL OR\nlight delivery. Late model.-No\ndealers. Cash deal. Write Box\n4059 Daily News.\n1947 7-PASSENGER, CUSTOM-\nbuilt Dodge. In very good condition. $1400.00. Call or write A. H.\nBudner, % Royal Hotel, Nelson.\nRENTALS\nWANTED \u2014 A ROOM FOR TWO\nbusiness men. Twin beds and 2\nmeals a day. R.C. preferred. Apply Box 4063 Daily News.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING SUITE\nfor rent. Business girl preferred.\nPhone 1418.\n2-ROOM UNFURNISHED SUITES.\nPhone 464-L2.\nFOR    RENT    FURNISHED   BED-\nroom! Phone 332-X.\nWARM, .BEDROOM   FOR   RENT.\nApply 210, Vernon SL\t\nHOUSE   FOR   RENT \u2014 PARTLY\n.'; furnished. Phone, \u201e291\u00bbR.\nFOR RENT \u2014 BEOROOM, CLOSE\nin. Use of hotplate. Ph.,' M-R:. ' X -,\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n>io $1,000\nare life Insured \u00ab\u00bb.\u00bb.,..\u00ab.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nAcadia Uranium ...., 41\nAkaitcho :...     1.30\nAmal Larder    . .21\nAnglo Huronian    13.00\nArjon\nAtlas Y K\t\nAumaque' \t\nAunor    \t\nBagamac  \t\nBarymin\t\nBase Metals \t\nBevcourt \t\nBobjo    \u201e..\nBonetal   \t\nBralorne\nBrewls R L\t\nBuffadison   \t\nBuffalo Ank     1.35\n.41\n.13\n' 28\n3.35\n.27\n.81\n.68\n.52\n.18%\n.48\n8.50\n.12\n.10\nBuff Can\nCalliman     \t\nCampbell R L\t\nCastle Treth   \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nCentral Pore \t\nCentremaque \t\nCheskirk    \t\nChestervllle  \t\nChlmo G   \u2122.\nCoast Copper\t\nCochenour  ...............\nCoin Lake\t\nConlaurum \t\nCons Beatty \t\nCons M & S\t\nConwest      -..\nCrestaurum   \t\nDetta R L .\n.35\n.25\n, 2.55\n.    2.50\n.59\n.      .21  '\n.      .18\n.11\n.-''    .60\n.32\n, 2.25\n,     1.75\n.15%\n.      .70\n.68\n154.00\n,    2.30\n.17\n.14\nDiscovery ..  37%\nDome       18.00\nDonalda \t\nEast Malartic .\nEast Sullivan .\nElder Gold \t\nEldona\t\nEureka \t\nFalconbridge .\nFrobisher\n.57\n1.40\n9.30\n.56%\n.25\n1.17\nJ1.75\n4.10\nGiant Yel \u2022     7.20\nGod's Lake  48\nGoldale -      .20\nGolden Manltou :.....'.     6.90\nHalcrow    16\nHardrock 30\nHarricana   15%\nHasaga       \u2014        .50\nHedley Mas  ._ 69 '\nHeva        .12\nHollinger       15.00\nHowey   .\u2014\n._   62.00\nInt Nickel  \t\n.... 42.00\nJellicoe       ...., _...._.\n 13%\nJoliet Quebec  .....J...\n....     .92\nKayrand \t\n...      .20\nKenville    \t\n...       .23%\nKirk-Hudson Bay \t\n 61\nKirkland Lake  \t\n 90\n....     8,70\n....     1.03\n....     5.80\nLeitch    \t\n....     1.05\n...      .30\nLittle Long Lac  .82\nLouvicourt   .28\nMacDonald  1.13\nMacassa      _ _ 2.05\nMacLeod Cock   3.50\nMadsen H L  .... 2.60\nB.C. Packers A   15%\nB.C. Packers B   14%\nB.C, Power A  ...\u201e.\u201e  , 32\nB.C. Power B ,'........_. '   6%\nBrown Co  13%\nBrown Co. pfd   147\nBruck Silk A     25\nBuilding Products  ..,  34%\nBurl. Steel  23\nBurns A  '45\nBurns B  33\nBurrard A _- 8%\n51%\n43%\n35%\n10\n20%\n27%\n17%\n18%\n22%\n49%\n16%\nS\nMagnet\nMalartic G T\".\nMarcus G .....\nMclntyre\n28\n2.53\n.10\n64.00\n19.75\n.39\n.11%\n1.02\nMining Corp -\t\nMoneta _..\nMylamaque\t\nNegus      \t\nNew Calumet   .    3.35\nNew Goldvue    29\nNew Lund  -.    2.15\nNicholson _ 22\nNoranda       83.00\nNormetals\nO'Brien\t\nOrenada   ..\nOsisko  \t\n5.80\n1.44\n.12%\n1.53\nPaymaster J. ,.  68\nPend Oreille \u201e  8.90\nPickle Crow  .  1.74\nPioneer -..._.,.   2.20\nPore Reef i  125\nPowell Rouyn  1.08\nPreston ED i-....'.  1.58\nQuebec Lab   .24\nQuebec Man ...   2.84\nQuemont ...:....!   28.85\n4.00\n2.75\n.22\n.22\n4.00\n6.85\n1.45\n.33\n.88\n.67\n.43\n.70\n9.50\nSylvanite        1.25\nTeck Hughes        2.25\nThompson-Lund  -      .10\nTombill  \u25a0    .30\nTorbrlt     2.05\nTrans Cont Res         .79\nUnited Keno  ,10.85\nReeves Mac\nSan Antonio \t\nSen Rouyn \t\nShawkey   :....\nSherritt Gordon ,\nSigma \t\nSilvermiller \t\nSilanco\t\nSiscoe\t\nSladon Mai\t\nStadacona   \t\nStarratt Olsen \t\nSteep Rock .\nUpper Canada .\nVentures\t\nViolamac     ,.\t\nWaite Amulet  \t\nOILS\nAnglo Can  ..\u201e.\u201e...\nB A Oil i\t\nCal Is Ed  ..\u201e.,...!*.\nCalmont i.\u2122-\nCentral Ledue\/... _.\nChemical Research ....\nCommonwealth Peta\nDalhdusle \t\nfigvlps'Pete\t\nDccalta   \u201e_...\nDel Rio i.\t\nEastcrest \t\nFederated Pete .._.-.\nHighwood    .......\nHome      \t\nImperial Oil     34.85\n2.00\n13.75\n.80\n13.25\n6.25\n33.50,\nl'tSS -\n1.10\n2.65\n1.00\n2.10\n.38\n.25\n.28\n1.25\n.14\n7.10\n.17%\n17.50\nV0U\nGET,\n-    MONTHLY PAYMENTS                       j\n?.-;<'\n11\n15\n\u00bb\n\u00bb\"i\nJIM\n200\n400\ntoo\n1000\n(IMS\nS3. M\n71.41\n106.SO\nITS.SO\n19.46\n11.91\n17 8?\n56.15\n91.50\n* 7.7*\n15.37\nSI. 13\n45.10\n74.13\nSSS.65-\n5B.Z5\n'Mm '\n4)U\nFOR PAYMENTS ON MANY OTHER AMOUNTS SEE\nInter Pete\nMid Cont \t\nNat Pete   \t\nNew Pacalta \t\nOkalta \t\nPacific Pete \t\nRoyalite   \t\nRoxana \t\nTower Pete _\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi .   ' .  ...;..\nAlgoma Steel v.i\nAluminum  Li\n\\rgus     \t\nAtlas St\n16.65\n.15y4\n2.15\n.12%\n2.90\n9.90\n14.50\n.30\n.39\n.70\n...   57%\n...   33%\n... 102\n12%\n15%\nI-TSIOIAflY  OF  INDUtTHIAL MCUTWCt\nCORPGRATtOH  in-\nSUITE 1\nPhone *1095     560 Baker St.\nlathurst Power    47%\nBeattie Bros       12\nI Bell Telephone   40%\nBrazilian   25%\nI B.C. Electric    85%\nB.C. Forest         8%\nCan Celanese\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Malting\t\nCan Packers A \t\nCan Packers B\t\nCan Bakeries\t\nCan Breweries\t\nCan Canners\t\nCan Car & Fdy \u201e\nCan Car & Fdy A\t\nCan Oil\t\nCan Dredge\t\nCan Ind Alcohol\t\nCan Steamship \t\nCan Marconi   435\nCan Pacific Rly   31%\nCan West Lmbr  8%\nCoast Copper ..\". _ 245\nC M & S   153%\nCons. Paper\t\nDist. Seagram  33%\nDom Bridge _ 63\nDom Foundries \u201e. 47%\nDom Steel & Coal B   34Vi\nDom Stores  14\nDom Tar & Chemical _. 86\nDom Textiles   16%\nEddy Paper  22%\nFamous Players  18\u00bbA\nFanny P'armer _  33\nFleet Air  \u201e 2.8O\nFord A   63%\nGatineau   _ 19\nGatineau 5% pfd \u201e  105\nGen Steel Wares  19%\nGoodyear  _  104\nGoodyear pfd _ 52^4\nGreat Lakes   37\nGreat Lake pfd .'\u201e 48\nGypsum Lime  _ 24%\nH. R. MacMillan A  ..... 20%\nH. R. MacMillan B   21\nImperial Oil  _ 3514\nImp. Tobacco  12%\nInt Metal  49%\nInt Nickel  42%\nInt. Pete   16%\nKelvinator  11%\nLake of Woods  36\nLoblaw A   33%\nLoblaw B  34\nMaple Leaf Milling  15\nMassey Harris  53:\nM & O Paper   32%\nMont. Loco   1914\nMoore Corp  28\nMcColl Frontenac   98\nMcColl Frontenac pfd  24%\nNational Steel Car  31\nOgilvie Flour  25\nPage Hershey  53\nPowell River _  72%\nPower Corp     27\nRuss Industries  23%\nShawinlgan   35\nShea Brew  ieyt\nSicks Brew  20%\nSimpsons A   40\nSimpsons pfd  101\nSoutham .......:..: J.:.\u201e. ...... '20%\nSteel of Can- \u201e  34\nSteel of Can pfd  34'\/8\nStandard Paving  14%\nTaylor Pearson   6%\nUnion Gas of Can  19%\nUnited, Corp B   42%\nUnited Fuel A  59%\nUnited Steel  _ \u201e 10%\nH. Walker ....;  60%\nWestern Grocers  _. 43\nWestern Grocers A  35 >\nWeston George  32%\nWinnipeg Electric com'  43%\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES (Closing Pr'-.ei)\nBralorne     6.80\nCanusa      .10\nCariboo Gold,^ :..\u00a3\u201e...     1.10 '\nGrandview :....\u201e      .40\nHedley Mascot :.....       .72\nHighland Bell      1.10\nKootenay Belle  '.....      .63\nPend Oreille    ,.._..    9.00\nPioneer Gold   ' 2.20\nPremier Border \u25a0        .12%\nQuatsino  , 19\nSheep Creek      1.70\nSilver Standard     2.85\nVanada _ 13\nVan Roi       .48%\nWestern Exploration 85\nWestern Uranium     1.82\n0IL8     '\nAnaconda 17%\nAnglo Can \u201e     6.25\nA P Consolid-ted  44%\nCalgary & Edmonton    12.00.\nCalmont :     J.15\nCommonwealth  :     2,30\nHome    17.75\nMercury  _      .16\nOkalta Com  _ :..._..    2.95\nPacific Pete  \u201e.    10,00\nRoyalite   .'.   14.75\nVanalta 28\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries     4.90\nCapital Estates  \u201e   23.75\nInter Brew   \u201e..      3.50\nAJberta Dist   '.'';,'3i2jd\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014 All\nclasses of replacement cattle were\nin keen demand by local and export\nbuyers on the Calgary livestock\nmarket today. There was also a\nstrong demand for all classes of\nbutcher cattle with a few more good\nquality kinds available. On Offer\nwere-368 cattle and calves, and a\nfair run off-truck was in sight.\nButcher steers and heifers were\nstrong to 25 cents higher, the odd-\nchoice steer bringing $33.10. Cows\nwere 50 to $1 higher to date this\nweek. ''MM\nMonday's sales were 261 cattle,\n45 calves, 118 hogs. ,     ,: ,\nHogs closed steady at $34.75 yesterday. Good lambs brought $34.25.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n31.00-32.75; common to medium\n27.00-30.50. Good to choice butcher\nheifers 29.75-31.50; common to\nmedium 26.50-29.50. Good cows\n25.00-26.00; common to medium\n22.50-24.50. Canners and cutters\n18.50-22.00. Good bulls 27.00-27.50;\ncommon to medium 24.00-28.50.\nGood stocker and feeder steers\n31.00-32.50; common to medium\n27.00-30.50. Good veal calve; 34.00-\n36.50; common to medium 28.00-33.p0.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1951 \u2014 \u00bb\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, \u00ab'eb. 13 (AP) \u2014\nA strong showing in the aircraft\ndivision put life into the market but\nprofit-taking cut gains back sharply\nall around.\nThe volume of trading expanded\nto an estimated 2,500,000 shares, bolstered by a fast first hour during\nwhich the quotations' tape fell briefly behind in reporting floor transactions. s     ,\nSteels, eppper mining and oils\nheld comfortable gains go\"ing to\naround a $1 a share. Utilities as a\ngroup traded at slightly higher\nprices. .\nCanadian issues gained with Canadian Pacific climbing %, Distillers\nSeagrams %, Hiram Walker >\/i and\nDome Mines %. International Nickel\nwas unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Industrials declined steadily.\nFollowing several sessions of advance, the group lost up to more\nthan a point, with papers leading.\nUtilities, steels, agricultures, constructions, foods, liquors, refining\noils and banks showed a majority of\nlosses.\nBase metals eased with a wide\nlist of moderate losses. Key issues\nlower included International Nickel,\nLabrador, Noranda, Sherritt Gor:\ndon and Waite Amulet.\nConsolidated Smelters, a feature\nyesterday, bucked the trend and\njumped about $3 to a new high.\nHudson Bay and Steep Rock were\nalso ahead.\nGolds dipped pennies quiet narrow dealings. ,\nMONTREAL, (CP) \u2014 Industrials'\neased over a wide front in moderately active trading.\nMost industrial groups participated in the trend and steels, papers\nconstructions and senior metals\nwere prominent losers. There were\nsome scattered j strong spots.        '\nConsolidated Smelters rose 1%\npoints to 154, but most of the senior\nmetals were down, paced by Noranda which fell 1% points, following Mojday'Sj 4%-point advance.\nA moderate list of utilities declined fractions, as did a small group\nof senior metals.\nMines moved slightly easier,\nwhile Western Oils were mixed.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Fresh institutional selling of British government bonds for reinvestment in\nsteel, shares ahead of nationalization\ndepressed Rrices in th,e gilt-edged\nsection.\nLosses of one-eighth to three-\neighths were widespread.\nThis decline checked active interest in other domestic issues while\nindustrials were also under the influence of the prospect of a rise\nin steel and electricity prices as a\nresult of the increased cost of coal.\n2728 Tons of Ore\nShipped to Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 13\u2014Ores and\nconcentrates received by the Consolidated-Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Limited, for the\nweek ending Jan. 20, totalled 2728\nwet tons, of which 053 wet tons\nwere for treatment in the lead\nsmelter and 1775 wet tons were for\ntreatment in the zinc plant.\nOres and concentrates for treatT\nment at the lead smelter were received from: Anacon, Garneau, Quebec; Buchans Mining Co., St. Johns,\nNewfoundland; Canadian 'Exploration, S.almo, B.C.; Dundee, Ymir,\nB.C.; Highland Mine, Ainsworth,\nB.C.; Lakeview, Sanca, B.C.; Mammoth, Silverton, B.C.; New Calumet,\nCampbell's Bay, Que.; Reeves MacDonald, Remac, B.C.; Sheep Creek\nZincton, Zincton, B.C.; Silver Standard, New Hazelton, B.C; Star Mine\nAinsworth, B.C.; Surprise, Lardeau!\nB.C.; Torbrit, Alice Arm, B.C.; United Keno Hill, Mayo, Y.T.; Vigilante\nAinsworth, B.C.; Violamac, Sandon,\nB.C.\nConcentrates for treatment at the\nzinc plant were received from:\nCanadian Exploration, Salmo, B C \u2022\nElkhorn, Retallack, B.C.; Goldfields'\nNorthport, Wash.; Rambler, Retallack, B.C.; Reeves MacDonald, Remac, B.C.; Sheep Creek Paradise,\nLake Windermere, B. C; Sheep\nCreek Zincton, Zincton, B.C.; Silver Standard, New Hazelton, B.C.I\nUnited Keno Hill, Mayo, Y.T.; Western Exploration, Silverton, B.C.\nAverage quotations for the week\nending January 20, 1951:\nSilver, N.Y. 90.16c per oz.\nLead, N.Y. 17.00c per lb.\nZinc, St. Louis 17.50c per lb.\nU.S. exchange premium, 5.1375 per\ncent.\nCopper Deposits\nTo Be Developed\nQUEBEC, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014Premiei\nDuplessis today announced that No.\nranda Mines Limited had approved\nexpenditure of $12,000,000 or $15,-\n000,000\" to start development of vast;\ncopper deposits in Gaspe Peninsula. '\nThe Premier made the announcement to a delegation representing\nthe Montreal and St. Johns, Que.\nregional councils of the Canadian\nCongress of Labor. .\nThe deposits located in the rugged\nGaspe interior, 65 miles West of the\ntown of Gaspe, will be reached by\na road to be built by the Quebec\nGovernment. \u2022\nThe Premier said there is enough\ncopper in the Peninsula for mining\noperations for 100 years.\nCopper ore deposits proved in the\narea so far are estimated at about\n50,000,000 tons.\nThe Premier's announcement was\"\nmade after the C.C.L. delegation\nasked that the Government favor\nthe establishment of a primary steel\nindustry in the Province.\nThe Premier said the Government\nfavored such establishment but the,\nfinancial interests who invested millions to develop iron ore deposits in\nUngava were entitled to recover\ntheir capital.\nA hydro-electric power development in the area will be one of the\npreliminary steps in getting the project started.\nCharleston Mine\nTo Reopen in May   .\nAfter Shutdown\nThe old Charleston Mine, In the\nNelson Mining District, which shipped its first ore,in 1894, will be';\nreopened for production in May,\nCharles Ling of Kaslo has reported. The mine is located two miles\nfrom the Retallack mill.\nMining operations were halted\nwhen the road became impassable\ndue to Winter weather; A block of,\nsome 20,000 tons of ore is Said.to\nbe ready for mining and there are 1\ntwo new leads in the mineralization\nto be followed.\nThe old property has been revived\nby increased metal prices and the\nprospect of a continued high demand. .'\"\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.\nQuarters for a crew of 12 and\nbin for 100 tons of ore were built\nduring 1950 and a compressor and\nair drills installed. .\nTrucks hauled 660 tons of ore to\nthe Kootenay Belle mill at Retallack. .       -'   t '\u2022 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nBase Raise on Cost\nOf Living Index\nVICTORIA, b!c, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014\nA monthly pay boost of one dollar\na point based on the increased cost-'\nof-living index, has been offered\nSaanich firemen by the Municipal\nCouncil.\nAt a meeting with the Council\nFiremen's representatives presented\ndemands which included a basic\nincrease of $12 a month for a man\nwith one year's service to $30\nmonthly for a captain..,-...\nSaanich Council, offered the: same\nwage 'increase' to the Municipal\nEmployees'\u2022Association. ,\nThe,'offers now are under, con-\nsjderation by both groups,     j  ;\nErtipire Press Union\nChanges Name\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (Reuters) \u2014\nThe .Empire Press Union today'\nchanged its name to Commonwealth\nPress Union and at the same time,\nadded \"defence of press freedom\" j\nto its official v'aims:,-1    ,   - X-,. f.\nThis was unanimously agreed to\nal an extraordinary general meeting at which the vice-chairman of\nthe union, Maj. Gen. Lord Burn-\nham, presided, supported by the\nfounder, Sir Harry Brittaln.\nThe meeting was attended by\nrepresentatives of member newspapers in Britain, the Dominions,\nIndia and the Colonies.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014 Win-\nn'peg grain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 1.00%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.52.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials- 255.71 up .91.\n20 rails'88.9J), tiff ,86.\n15 utilities. 42.75 up .18.\n65 stocky, 95.71 off .07.\ncycy\u00a3\/\/vi>\u00a3gse\nWe'll meet you\nmuch more\nthan halfway\nin giving\nyour car\nthe service\nit deserves.\nCome in\nand see \u2014\nyou'll agree.\nMANY VVIVeS ARE HAPPY\nTO MEET THEIR HUSBANDS\nHALFWAY. IN FACT,ON PAY\nDAYS THEY MEET \"EM\nRIGHT AT THE PAY WINDOW.'\ni\nyuem\nLTD.\nPHONE43  NELSON,B.C.\nFORD TRACTORS  DEARBORN IMPLEMENTS\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1951\n\"217\"\nTABLETS\ngive faster, surer, safer relief\nfrom pain because they contain\nacetophen Phenacetlne and caf-\nfeln.\n3  SIZES\n35c -75c -$1.50\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\n. Saccharin    Is   several    hundred\ntimes sweeter than common sugar.\nTO ASCERTAIN ASSETS\nOF ASHCROFT HOSPITAL\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) \u2014\nJudge Arthur McGeef was given a\ncourt order to ascertain assets\nat the Lady Minto Hospital at Ash-\ncroft, B.C.\nHe said he had not collected damages totalling $5319, awarded Dec. 15\nfor injuries suffered while a patient\nat the hospital. His leg was burned\nwhen a hot water bottle was placed\nin his bed..The hospital consented\nto the judgment.\nMr. Justice J. V. Clyne Issued\nthe court order. Officials said the\nhdspital may have to be sold' to'\npay the money.\nBuy  and  Sell  the  Classified  Way\nSeethe\nDOMINION\nSCHOOLS\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nCURLING PLAYOFFS\nat the\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE ARENA -.\nMon., Tues. and Wed. \u2014 Feb. 19 - 21\n3 DRAWS PER DAY\nMorning, Afterrioon and Evening\nBuy a Book of Tickets for $2.00 ,,\nfor admission to all games played\nSingle Game Admission 25c\nTickets may be purchased from:.      \\ - >--.\n7 TAXI STAND KELSON   PHARMACY\nGILKERS' LTD. CIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nDON'T MISS THIS EXCEPTIONAL\nSPORTS EVENT-?''\nWhy Pay More?\nUSED   CAR VALUES\nTO OUT OF TOWN CUSTOMERS\nwho purchase any of the used cars or trucks listed\nbelow. TWO DAY hotel accommodation will be\nSUPPLIED FREE\n1950 Pontiac Deluxe Sedan\nFour  door.  Two-tone   paint,  air  conditioner,^ J J E|j\nradio, seat covers. .:  tpAJmaJW\n1949 Pontiatfedan\nFour door. Air conditioner, \u00abun visor and     \\IX'J^\nback-up  light  <J\u00bb | \\fAmJI\n1949 Dodge Sedan     e\\jt:f\\\nFour door. Air conditioner, low mileage .\"....  $ig .JH\\*\n1949 Flying Standard    :eT_ft\nHe\u00aber.     $\/50\n1949 Meteor Custom Sedan\nAir conditioner. Low mileage\t\n1936 Chevrolet Sedan\n1937 Ford Coupe\nHeater\t\n1937 Studebaker \u201e\u00bb_\nHeater, Good condition        301 eJ\nHeater and defroster.' j il..\u201e.\n1947 Mercury V2-Ton\nHeater and defroster.\t\n1946 Maple Leaf 3-Ton\nTwo-Speed axle, Good rubber \t\n$1425\nNOW ON DISPLAY\n1951 Pontiacs - Vauxhalls\nand G.M.C. '\/2-Ton Pickups\nWIGINTON MOTORS Ltd.\nPhone 122\nNelson, B. C.\nIt's a Long Way Up\u2014and Down\nWarns Coast of\nScarlet Fever\nAnd'Flu Threat\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014Dr.\nStewart Murray, City Medical\nHealth Officer, warned. Vancouver\nsitizens. to take extra precautions\nagainst scarlet fever and a possible\noutbreak of influenza in the city.\nHe said the scarlet fever total, rising at the rate of four cases a day\nsince Jan. 1, reached 177 today and\nconstitutes a widespread menace.\nInfluenza has not yet hit Vancouver\nio any marked degree yet, but is\ncausing much absenteeism from\nwork in Eastern Canada and the\nPrairies and will probably spread\nhere.        ,\n\u25a0} \"GOING DOWN, GOING UP, GOING DOWN\":\nThis ski Jumping art is not as simple as an elevator\nride by any means; It's Just that the directions are\nthe same. You go down, then up, then down; of\ncourse, working In a lot of skill and daring at the\nsame time. This picture from the tower of Kimberley Ski Club's fine Jumping hill gives some Idea\nof the heights that faced the competitors In jumping events. One -Jumper is shown on his way tor\nward the lip of the Jump, while others In the right\nand left foreground await their turn. That crowd-\nsurrounded clearing is where the Jumpers end\ntheir landing run\u2014either there, or on their, necks.\nTorbjern (Toby) Falkanger, Norwegian national champion and member of Washington University ski team, set a new hill mirk on this Jump\nIn exhibition. His flight was 233 feet, 13 feet better\nthan Vancouverlte Tom Mobraaten's record of last\nyear.\u2014Charles Wormington photo,   '\u25a0  '   -\nQraharh Towers Foresees\nControls May Be Needed\nOTTAWA, Feh. 13  (CPJ^-Direct\ncontrols may be necessary in\/Can\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAQ\u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C;; TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nJ. A. G LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST     |\nVISUAL   TRAINING    i\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuit 206 Phone 141\nada to help fight inflation and rising\nliving costs resulting from increased defence activity, \u25a0\nThis is the highlight of the 1950\nreport of Graham F. Towers, Governor of the Bank of Canada. The\n7000-word report, made public today\nhas been sent to Finance Minister\nAbbott for tabling in the Commons.\nMr. Towers said that fiscal and\nmonetary measures may not be\nenough to provide stability In the\nCanadian economy. They may have\nto be backed up by controls.\nClri'i the Commons Monday night,\nMr. Abbott rejected requests of opposition parties for reimposition of\nprice controls at this time. Mr. Abbott said he does not believe a system of over-all price and wage controls would use controls to the extent needed when it felt they were\nnecessary).\nSome persons, Mr. Towers said,\nhave suggested that production\nshould \"be increased as a means\nto provide for defence without curtailment of civilian needs. Some\nhave pointed out the need for taxation which will keep the government on a pay-as-you-go basis, or\nperhaps in the early stages something wore than that, . ,\n\"If defence expenditure became\nso great that it was humanly impossible to finance it on a pay-as-\nyou-go basis, or if at an earlier\nstage financial measures designed\nto produce a fair allocation of the\nburden did not command public\nunderstanding and support, it might\nbecome necessary to make increas-\ningly-general^ise of direct controls\nin order to back up fiscal and monetary measures, despite the dangers\nto economic efficiency and personal freedom inherent In such controls.\"\nIn seeking a solution to the problem the goal should be to \"minimize\nany unfairness which might arise.\"\nA Must\n.JFo'\u00bbv\nTrouble Free\nDriving...\nV Wheels Switched\n\/Bearings  Packed\nV Car Lubricated\n' \/ Under-Chassis Checked\n\/ Cooling System Checked\n\/ Brakes Checked    I\nStudebaker\nSales and Service\nyV- '\u2022\u25a0, \u25a0      ,?.\n. r ;*:;'\nBILL\nDeFOE'S\nSUPER\nSERVICE\nPhon\u00ab12J4\nNELSON, B. C.\nTo Make British\nJet Engines for U. S.\nFLINT, Mich., Feb. 13 (AP) \u2014\nBruick Motors said today it has been\nawarded a contract to manufacture\nthe British J..G5 Sapphire Jet engines to be used in American fighter planes.\nThe size of the contract was not\ndisclosed but Ivan L. Wiles, Brulck\nGeneral Manager, said an initial\nexpenditure of $25,000,000 was authorized!\nWiles sold (he engine would be\nused in F-84 Thunderjets.\nHalibut Boat'',\nA Total Loss\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Feb. 13\n(CP)\u2014The 57-foot Prince Rupert\nhalibut boat Takla, which piled up\non nearby Lucy Island Wednesday\nduring a snow and windstorm, appears to be a total loss.\nSalvage vessels returned to Pd'frt\nafter having taken some of the gear\nfrom the shattered hulk which lies\non the exposed shore of the Island\nwhere she was driven by high winds\nand heavy seas.\nCONVICTED OF\nMANSLAUGHTER\nVANCOUfpi. Feb.' 13 (CP) -\nLloyd Holiand.'--jr!w a s convicted\non a charge ofltnafislaughter arising\nout of the death of ;a'passenger in\nhis car, Irene-Fergus,'\u25a0\u25a0';\u25a0\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nThe Moors brought the original\nviolin Into Spain from Morocco.\nHAVE YOUR  FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall St.\nPhone 146\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed,\nPH\nArts Bile.\nONE 25\nHaigh\nf ru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED  A   REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward SL Phone 63\nTHE WARDROBE\nART  TARLING,   Prop.\nLadles'  and  Cjents'  Tailors\nCleaning \u2014 Repairing.\nAlteratibns\n,: PHONE 1266\nP.O. BOX 36 \u2014 NELSON. B.C.\nFOR DEPENDABLE\nPAINTING AND\n*g     PAPfftHANGJNG\nMutflfV'S\nPhone 655 '\u25a0 745 Baker St.\nFalling Rocks Kill\nHedley Miner\nPENTICTON. B.C., Feb. 13 (CPfc\n\u2014 Clarence Olson, 22, of Oliyeh\nB.C., was killed when struck by\nfalling rocks at Hedley. B.C>: The\naccident occurred Monday, in the\nNickel Plate Mine.   ':\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n' & IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n560 Baker St.\nPhone 235\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302\" - 446 Ward St. i\nWe serve the West with\nEllison's Best Flour\nTry our All Purpose Brand\nELLISON MILLING AND\nELEVATOR- CO. LTD.\nmli m\nGIFTS\nfar the one you love ...\nPerfumes and Colognes by Len^heric^'lHSubig'a'riH\nCoty's,  Evening  in  Paris}.ietc:V'-'\nBath Salts, Toilet Sets, Fancy Soaps, etc.\nDeans, McNabs, Smiles and Chuckles Chocolates.\nWe Will Wrap Your VALENTINE PRESENT FREE\nFleury's Pharmacy\n\"EVERY INCH A DRUG STORE\"\nPhonev25 Nelson, B. C.\nTERMS \/ i>\n'\/    TRADES      }\n\/ M 1\na '\u25a0'\u25a0 *mw\nM \/.-...<     , ,'--'\nIV\nmmn\nCASH\n-BUY NOW-\nONE ONLY ,\/f\n1950) HILLMAN SEDAN\nLow   mileage.   Heater.   Tractionized.  Winterized.\nONE ONLY\n1950 VANGUARD SEDAN\n-  >'\u25a0  Low  mileage.  Heater.  Tractionized, Winterized.\nONE'ONLY\n1948 MONARCH COUPE\n5-Passenger. Low mileage. Radio, heater, spotlight, clock.\n.  Winterized. Tractionized,\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NELSON) LTD.\nHUDSON - HILLMAN - NASH\nSALES AND SERVICE\n\u00bbMlHK\nTIES\nEvery man can use, a tie,\nespecially    if    it   comes\nfrom his  favorite   store.\nSee our selection of\ncolors and materials.\nReasonably   priced  from\n$-[.00 up\nSOCKS\nComfortable, dressy\nsocks,     available     in\nvarious   patterns,   colors\nand plain shades.\nQuality wools,\ncottons and nylons..\nAn ideal Gift.\n$-^ -00 UP\nEMORY'S LTD.\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nA pool of more than a quarter\ntrillion dollars to pay for loss of\nlife from atomic bombings is being\ndiscussed by the Life Insurance Association of America.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE 8ERVICE\n515 Kootenay St -       Phone 361\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 \u2014 182 BAKER ST.\nDonald E. Hunter\nOPTOMETRIST\n431 Baker St.     Phone 333\nThe B ,C. Underwriters Associa]\ntion recently announced wide\nduclions in many types of car irj\nsurance. The reductions ranged\nhigh as $14 in some categories.\n''\u25a0:l7\\:'A Reaf>7< :\nValentine Gift\nRowntrees\nBlack Magic\n.   and\nDairy Chocolates\n,':',.,  -also [.\"x ..\nSmiles and Chuckles\n'   Heart-Shaped Boxes'\nof Chocolates\n$1.45 to $2.25\nAt Your  Rexall  8tore\nCity Drug Co.\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhones. ;Day,34, .Night 8Q7-R\nBOX \"\"\nCASH\nTERMS\nTRADES\nyl -i.J .ill,    ii  l ) W' i...Xh\nMl   ill --'itl ...'.j   M1\"\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_02_14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0423940","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}