{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0424071":{"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":"2023-01-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1948-11-30","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0424071\/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":" Canadian-Built\nTroopers Sabotaged\nReturning. Crewmen tell of\nImproperly-Secured Steering Gear,\nLifeboat on Vessels for China\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Hint of sabotage aboard.a Caha-\ndlan-bullt troopship en route to \u2022Chidng Kai-shek's forces in\nShanghai came Monday from 39 repatriated seamen who\narrived here during the weekend.     '\"','  )\u25a0\nThe men were the crews of the Kui Men. and the Chlng\nMen, 800-ton aluminum hull motor transports which they\ndelivered to the Ming Sung Industrial Corporation of Shanghai.\nThe boats were built in Mon-+    ,..,- \u2014 ,:   \u201e. \u2014'\n'treal. |nadian   seamen   being   flown   to\nA. crew spokesman\n1 PROVINCIAL\niH&e-\nWEATHER FORECAST\n' Kootenay: Snow. Wind Southerly\n15. High at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley 85..    .v\nseamen\nsaid during Eastern Canada from Shanghai af-\nthe 74-day trip it was. discovered ter delivery of the ships, whichare\nthe steering engine of-the Chlng to be used for troop carrying on the\nMen was not secured properly and Yangtze River.   _     .    '    ,\nthreatened to break loose. I, ...      \u2014\t\nOn another occasion the. welding'CHECKED BEFORE LEAVING\nconnection the keelgrab of a \"life-     OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Transport' Min-\nboat broke loose during a storm,    ister Chevrier said Monday night,\nCadt Alv Fu-an'd' of the Chlng He .was'\"astohlsh'ed'' to hesir of pbs-\nMenasaid:  ' - jsible'sabotage aboard a Canadian-\n\"The steering engine mishap was built troopship en route to Chinese\nvery serious. Several bolts had been Nationalist forces in Shanghai. '\nfastened by;only a few threads to!. Mr. Chevrler said he was certain\nthe foundation plane, with no nuts, the vessels'could not have been\nunder the foundation to secure it tampered with'at Canadian points\nproperly.  ,   .        ..'since .'all   sea-going'  craft . were\n\"When- the   lifeboat   welding thoroughly checked, by\n\u25a0.broke,\" he said, \"the crew had a before leaving port. ''\ndangerous time securing the boat,,, .The two \"vessels,  the Kui  Men\nagain as the ship was pitching ih and the Chihg Men, were believed\nheavy.seas\" ,   \u2022     ': Ito. have   been, constructed   under\nTbe men are the first of 120 Ca-1 private contract at Sorel, Que,\nSCENTaACO^Y\nNBLSON. BRITI-H COLUMBIA. CANAPA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, N6V. 50. -i\u00bb\u00bbHI\nNUMBER 18J\nSw^ther Believes\nCanuck Got Fortune\nMirror Scribe on Trail of Artist's\nGgche Theorizes That.Soldier    ..-\u25a0 \"i--'i\nA   ' Got There First; Empty Pox Found\nLONDON (CP>\u2014The,Dally Mirror Monday told a story about a\nCanadian soldier who might have unearthed a \u00a315,000 ($60,000)\ntreasure cached in Holland.\nThe Mirror, says, one ot its.reporters spent the last 10 days at Lareti,\nbetween'Amsterdam and Utrecht, digging In a garden and using as a\nguide a map marked by the' late artist, Hans van Meergeren, ln an\n Van Meegeren is tbe Netherlands painter who made fortunes by\n. producing canvases he claimed to be authentic works of Johannes\nVermeer. Experts of both Europe and America pronounced them\ngenuine. .        \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0',\u2022' ......   .\n.'\u25a0 The Netherlands Government spent large sums rebuying the bogus\npaintings .from museums and art galleries, arid tried, van. Meegeren\nfor forgery.' a i    \u25a0' - \u25a0\u25a0: \u25a0 - '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0* \u2014\u25a0 '\u25a0\u2014'\u2014'\nCCF. Wins Rossland-Trail;\nGovt Retains $. Okanagsn\nSUCHOW FORCE\nBALKING AT\nCAPITAL RESCUE\nOrders Days Old;\nRed Drive Turns\nTbwdrd'Nanking\nARMY IN TRAP    '\nNANKING (AP)\u2014The Chinese\nGovernment's Suchow garrison\nwaa under orders Monday night\nt6 move South to save Nanking\nand rescue an entire Army group\ntrapped by the rampaging Communists, but. gave no Indication\nof heeding the call.\n(See also story on Page 8.)\n.The'..'fate of. this frightened\ncapital tnay depend on the ability\n\u2014or wllllpgneea\u2014of the 250,000-\nIrian Suchow force to quit' Its'\nfortress 211 miles Northwest of\nNanking.\nLatest battlefront dispatches aald\nthe Government's 12th Army Group\n\u2014totalling .about 140,000 men\u2014was\nencircled by Communists, 67. miles\nSouth.- of' Suchow.. and 149 - miles\nNorthwest of Nanking.' Little de-\nNINE PREMIERS\nTO ATTEND\nHIGHWAY TAIKS\nOTTAWA (CP.) \u2014 All provincial\npremiers have accepted an invitation to attend a Dec. 14 conference\ncalled by the Federal 'Government!'\nto discuss the-construction of a\nTrans-Cariad? Highway, Resources'\nMinister MacKinnon announced on\nMonday. ' .     .- > '.< '-.\n'He said the Federal Government\nIS proceeding with plans for the\ndiscussions. ;\u2022'\u25a0:\"'.'\"'. :   >   ;*-'\"\nTo prove his responsibility for the\nfake Vermeers, van Meegeren painted in jail-what is reputed to be one\nof the finest \"Last Suppers'! ot all\ntlme-t-ln.authentic.:Venneer idiom.\nAt his trial he said one day his work\ninspectors would be rated as that.of a great\nmaster lh, bis own right\nREPRINT8 |N DEMAND \u2022 \u25a0 ,',''\n, He was sentenced to one year ln\njail but died after a mbhtb. Already\ncollections Of reprints of his paintings are being published.   .\nMrs. Inez Randall of London, van\nMeegeren's daughter, armed . the\nMirror Reporter'with a map. After\ndigging in the garden the reporter\nwas told that a former gardener\nonce discovered a bSz there. When\nlt was found, the gardener recalled,\nthe box was empty. A tube of lipstick arid a box of Canadian bullets\nwerebeside.it-\nThe reporter's theory: '' ' \u00bb\n\"A Canadian soldier, ordered to\nbury faulty ammunition, finds this\nbox and its.-\u00a315,000 contents.  .\n\"He pockets the money. The lipstick, brought from Canada for a\ngirl friend, drops from his pocket\nas he hastily reburles the box.\n\"Then be. buries the ammunition.\"\nAfter the German: surrender in\n1945, 1000 Canadian soldiers, were\nstationed at Laren, a small residential community,'while awaiting repatriation;'\nClaims Army\nFavors Northern\nHighway Route\n' SASKATOON-(CP).-A weekend\nmeeting of the Trans-Canada Highway Association plumping -for -a\nNorthern route was told the Yellow-\nhead, Pass Plan was favored by the\nArmy for strategic reasons.\nMayor Harry Ainley of Edmonton,\nAssociation President, said: defence\nauthorities would\"; welcome three\ncoast outlets but that, they favored\na Yollowhead Pass highway as the\nfence.remained  on the  route\n&_!*_#*\u2022:\u2022'\u2022''\u2014\"\"' \u2022 \u25a0'-!!::,\u25a0:\"\" .\nTRAPPED\u25a0: . - - ii:\nThis, group, Inferior, to the well-\nequipped '  Suchow   garrison, \u25a0 had\nmarched. from   Hankow   In   the\nSouthwest to help defend Suchow,\n' only, to fall into a Red net\nThe Only details given were that\nthe group, under Gen. Huang Wei,\nwas' South of the Kwei River, 12\nmiles SoUth of Communist-held\nSuhslen. Communist Gen. Liu Fo-\ncheng was the foe.\n'(The Communist radio confirmed\nIdentification of the trapped' group\n. and said it comprised 11 divisions\nwhich had already been partly\ndestroyed.)\nOfficial- Chinese  sources  con-\n'   firmed   that  the   Suchow   commander, Gen. Liu Tie, had been\ngiven   orders   to   move   South\nseveral -days ago.\nObservers said the Government\ncommanders evidently were reluctant to leave Suchow,  which  has\nt0 most strategic,,-..\u2014,-.,;-.:\n\u2022;Go'op\"era'tlori with the group pleasing for-a Southern route was urged\ninsofar as establishing the need of a\nTrans-Canada Highway Was, concerned.. . \u25a0\u25a0 . \u25a0'...' , ' ' .'\n-Mayor Ainley said his group\nwould be willing to allow a com-\nmission to decide which of the two\nroutes proposed was the. most feasible..\nThe Association In the Southern\nparts of the four Western province;,\nwants a. Trans-Canada -Highway\nbuilt through their territory.\nOil Discovery May \/\nBring Fortune to >'\u25a0??\u25a0\nHard-Luck Family.     .\nBINGHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) \u2014 A\nBinghumpton family of five Mon-\nNEW CHANCE FOR\nBOY IN \"COMIC\nBOOK\"MURDER\nAdmit Influenced  ,\nBy Diet of 30-50\nMagazines Weekly\nWELFARE WARDS\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014An 11-year-\nold boy, convicted of the \"comic\nbook\" murder of a 65-year-old Caw-\nSon Creek farmer, will get a chance\nfo live\/ a normal life, j\nChild Welfare officials here are\nplanning to place the boy ln, a\nfoster honu). He will be allowed to\nattend a public school.\nHis 13-year-old companion in the\ncrime has been, committed to a boys'\nindustrial'school. ' \u2022 ,\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0;\n: The boys admitted they dressed as\nbandits, stole a rifle and nmbiishod\na farmer..They-fired a shot at his\ncar WMchTeSuJted rnhls denth four\ndays later. - '\u25a0?'.'-\u2022*\n'Both boys' admitted being Influenced by \u2022 reading from SO to-Hi\ncomic books a-week.\nj They will, remain under control\nof the Welfare Department until 21\nyears of'age.' -'\u2022',\u25a0\nSlreel Car Fares\nTo Increase\nStreet car fares ln Nelson are going to be raised, In view of the $13,-\n000 deficit that is expected to be\nincurred i this year by the department\n.Application will be made \"to the\nPublic Utilities Commission to raise\nadult fares to  10  cents or three\nday hoped their hard times were, tickel( ,or 25 centSi childrens fare\n,.    \u2022 tW,;\u201e       tt -' _   .. to five cents and students rates to\nMrs.   William   Henry   Pratt,   37, six Uckets for 25 cents,\nstrong defences and ls well stocked,whose husband is unemployed, said  . single adult fare at present Is\nwith food and munitions stored up She \u2022 had been notified that an oil seven cents or four tickets for 25\nover many months. discovery in  West Frankfort IIL, cents.\nmight bring her an. income of Motion was made at Monday\nS700,000'a year. She\u2022 inherited titleinight's City- Council^meetIng,.by\nto the oil land from her grand- Aid. G. C Wallach, Chairman of the\nfather. [Transportation Committee.\nBerlin Reds Plan\nPower Grab\nBERLIN (AP)\u2014Russian-backed\nGerman Communists began massing their strength Monday night\nfor an apparent attempt to seize\npolitical control of all Berlin before the elections Sunday In the j|\ncity's Western sectors.\nThey announced a rally for\nTuesday In the Soviet sector to\n\"take decisive measures for the\nprotection of a united Berlin\" and\ncalled on all the city's eleoted\nbodies and party leaders to attend.\nAnti-Communist leaders\npromptly rejected the Invitation,\ndenouncing the meeting as .a\n\"scheme to establish a Red dictatorship.\"\n; Meanwhile, Col. Frank Howley,\nUnited-States commandant In Berlin, warned the Communists that\n\"there Is not going to be any violence or revolution.\" He conceded\nthere may be some minor trouble\nduring the voting Sunday.\nMarshal Vasslly Sokolovsky,\nSoviet military governor, accused\nthe Western Allies of allowing the\nelections In the Western sectors\nsolely for the purpose of \"split'\n, ting\" the city.\nQUASH DRUG CONVICTION\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Mike Rush-\nman Monday wOn his appeal against\na seven-year prison sentence.\nHis conviction on drug possession\nwas quashed by an Appeal Cpurt\n- .here.\n' Kushman was arrested by RCMP j\nofficers Oct. 5 after a nine-year-old\n; girl found a container filled - with\n:' drugs near a signpost\nPolice watched the spot f\u00b0r 23\nhours and arrested Kushman and\nIrving Hess when Hess picked up\nthe container.\n.     Hess did not appeal bis sentence\n- iit three years and $200 fine.\nWant Ad Wedding\n$25 MILLION TO\nMUNICIPALITIES\nDURING 1948\n$12,000;b00 for\nEducation'Alone\nSays MacDonald\nSEES SOLIDARITY\n. VANCOUVER, B.C. \u2014 Something\nlike $25,000,000: is being contributed\nto municipalities by direct and indirect grants and aids by the Provincial Government this year, Hon.\nR. C. MacDonald, Minister of Municipal Affairs; said In'a radio speech\nhere Monday.' night\nAnalyzing this, he said:   ,,\nIn 1042 the Provincial Government\ncontributed to the cost of education\nln this province $2,525,000.\nIn 1948 the provincial contribution\nof 50 per cent of the cost of new\nbuildings alone amounted to over\n$3,000,000. \u25a0    '  '-'\nActually, the province estimated\n\u2022 an outlay of nearly $12,000,000 In\ndirect education grants for this\nyear.'\nThe province granted to municipalities a greater share in motor\nvehicle licence revenues from a\nlimit of $570,000 a year to an' estimated $1,600,000 In 1948.\n-As another direct aid the Government: promised to municipalities a\nthird share of the net revenues from\nthe Social Security and Municipal\nAid Tax, estimated at $4,000,000. Already $2,000,000 of this sum Is in\nthe process' of distribution without\nany strings attached, and divided as\nequitably as possible on a bails of\ncensus, ration book and school population figures.1\n- Contributions to local road programs and Interest on municipal\npension plan loon- certificates bring\nJhe total of the Provincial Govern\nment's aid to nearly $18,000,000.\nRISING COSTS\nRising social service costs made\nthe - tax on retail sales necessary.\nThey jumped from $5,000,000 in 1939\nft) \u00bb2AC\u00ab#,0Q0 this year;-.:.--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n,. Dealing with the,Coalition Government,-ho said: >.-' \u25a0\u2022 -.-\"\u2022 \"\n\"fVUmnttithey: are ldtecestejl lit\nthe .work'and alms of tlie :G6vem-\nment or not there are still plenty of\npeople \/who \"like to speculate as to\nVie solidarity of the Liberal-Conservative Coalition in this province. No opportunity is lost to point\nWINSTON CHURCHILL\n74 today ... ,\n'\u25a0:\/< BY JAMES MeCOOK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Undaunted by\nage, Britain's wartime prime minister, Winston Churchill, celebrates\nhis :74th birthday today. ,::\n; The cherubic leader of the Opposition, who has livened Britain's public life for more than 50 years, still\ncatches at bis countrymen's imagination\u2014as he did'In the war. years\nwhen he rallied the people to battle.\nSometimes in Winter he wears a\nblack - overcoat In the House of\nCommons and stoops.as though feeling the weight of the years. But last\nSaturday he joined his hard-riding\nneighbors In\" a foxhunt He\" donned\njodhpurs and a light coat and vest\nclapped a stiff black hat on his head,\njammed a big. cigar in bis.mouth,\nborrowed a neighbor's horse and\ngalloped off to spend the day with\nthe Old Surrey and Burstow Hunt\nnear his home at ChartweU, Kent\nFriends said Churchill, a former\nmajor of the Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars, would not even be\nstiff after a day ln the saddle. As an\nactlve-servdce cavalry officer\nnow-forgotten wars, be became a\nskilled horseman and often ride's\nnear his country home.\nAs Opposition leader and chief\nof the political party that hopes to\nwin the next election, Churchill\nIs a man of Infinite activity In\nCommons. He Is a leader In the\nmovement for a uhlted Europe.\nThis year he became-a best-sell\nIng author with publication of his\nbook on the early stages of the war\n'and.the.years just before. Hispaint-\n: tags\u2014entered anonymously \u2014 have\nibeen-accepted by the Royal Acad-\n\u2022ajny.'   \u2022 '-\"\n' He lays bricks\u2014Cartwell buildings\nShow his skill\u2014chats with an immense \u2022variety of people who visit\nhim and whips oif biting or.'orol-\nlicking speeches at wiU.\nHis eyes flood with tears when\n'\u2022'\u25a0' he receives ovations \u2014 common\nenough at hla political rallies \u2014\nbut he barks and snarls In parliament when he assalli Labor policies and his rewards Is howls of\n.dissent and protest trom the Government benches.\nHis political colleagues say his\nthoughts now turri to the 1950 election. They think he will lead their\ncampaign with all his old fire and,\nIf elected, will willingly undertake\nthe task of again leading Britain.   |\nLuciic ucfalu became ' .\nof Victory Churoh In San Francisco (above).at a ceromony witnessed\nby more than 200 persons, nearly all of them total strangers. Twenty-\nyear-old Miss Cefalu of trans-bay Oakland put an nd In'n local\nnewspaper Inviting anyone to attend tho Saturday .ctjrtimony Because\nshe feared an .empty church as moat of her relatives, and friends\n' lived In the East The ad brought results.\u2014AP wlrephoto.\nJAMES QUINN, CCF.\n\"   Successful ...\nRUSSIA ACCEPTS\nFORMULA FOR\nBERLIN TALKS\nHope to Launch\nCurrency Mediation\nEffort Immediately\nOTHERS AGREE\nPARIS (AP)\u2014Russia Monday ac-1 by-elertlbns since 1945,\nQuinn Election Over Turnbull Is\nFirst By-Election Loss for Coalition\n, >T(VML, B.C. <CP)\u2014The C.C.F,. and the ilberal-Progre)$-\nsive Conservative Coalition.Parties registered split victories\nMonday in two. British Columbia by-elections.\n| The CiG.F. won- the Rossland-Trail ij.ding, a gain from\nihe) Coalition, and the Liberal-Progressive Conservative forces ;\nretained the South-Okanagan riding. '\n.. '\u2022\u2022? The loss at Rossland-Trail, where James Quinn, ;42-yeaf> \u25a0\nold shop steward,-d-feated Alexander Turnbull, a metpllurg*:\niital engineer, was the first by-election defeat of B.C.'s Coalf-;\nj|on G^ernment since being returned in the-1945 provincial ;\nelection.:.        . \u2022'..'.:\" -.,--;\n5      The'Sbuth Okanagan riding was retained for the Coalition\nBy Robert Browne-Clayton,.31 -year-old fruit rancher, He defeated Bruce Woodsworth,.34-year-old Winnlp'eg-bdm school -\nteacher, C.C.F.' candidate.\/    *\"\nWoodsworth Is the son of the late\nJ.- S, Woodsworth, founder of the\nC.C.F. I^rty.'\nBoth ridings,were. Jworway, con-\nWith only one poll, Pend d'Orellle.\nto be heard from of 28, Quinn, who\ncame here from Fleming, Sask., in\n1929, led Turnbull by 272 votea.\nHe bad 4743 votes to'4471 for the\nCoalition standard-bearer.\n' Trail City voters leaned heavily\ntowards Turnbull, vvhb reoe1v?d\n1095 votes there to 823 for Qulnn.\nIn West Trail,-however, 899 voted\nfor Qulnn to 617 for Turnbull.\nTadanac voted 220 to 89 for Turn-\nbull, but Rossland's total showed\n951 for Quinn to 718 for Turnbull.\nWith complete.,returns <rpm the\n48  polls;   Browne-ClaytOn   polled\nnearly  700 votes more than his\nCCF. opponent\nHis victory was the sixth for the\nCoalition of the seven provincial\ncepted a plan by Juan Bramuglla,\nPresident of the United Nations\nSecurity Council, to name a 'neutral'\ncommission of' currency experts ln\nthe Berlin.. dispute. The) United\nBritain and' France earlier\nhad approved the plan in principle.\nBramuglla said .Andrei Vishinsky,\nSoviet Deputy -Foreign-Ministers\nagreed to the plan at a meeting with,\nhim. It calls for tho naming of a\nneutral\" commission ot currency\nexperts. . \u25a0:'\u25a0-.,: ,;.: \u2022    i,.:',-\nBromugHa told a importer.he exr\npectspfe get format arop1aiSctT>'JrbT_\nthe three'\u2022Western powers Tuesday\naria that he hopes tfieneW mediation . effort \u00bbqan \u2022 get ' under ''way\nimmediately; ;\u2022..\nIf no bitch develops, Bramuglla\nwill have met his own Headline by\nassuring continuation of mediation\nUP differences of opinion and to'efforts before he Steps down\" as\nStir, up controversy. But the fact re- President ..of the Council at mid-\nmains that, this Coalition has functioned as smoothly as have other\nGovernments in B.C. and it has a\nrecord for. progressive legislation\nWhere the good' of the prbviijce and\nIts people ls concerned We -are not\ndivided in thought or deed,\".\nFog Cripples\nEurope Travel V\nLONDON (AP)\u2014A dense blanket\nof fog Monday crippled most ot\nWestern Europe's transportation for\nthe third consecutive day.\nBritish weather forecasters aald\nthere was \"no likelihood\" the murk\nwould clear in tbe, next 24 hours.\nShips were tied up and planes were\ngrounded from the Baltic to the\nAtlantic. Trains operated late, and\nIn England many were cancelled,\nThe Queen Elizabeth remained\nshrouded in heavy fog at Southampton, her departure for New York\ndelayed for the sixth time. Between\nfog and the now-settled dock strike\nin tbe United States she has been\nheld up since Nov, 17..\nThe Anglo-American air lift into\nBerlin halted Monday afternoon.\nAir-lift' officials said prospects of\nbringing planes, ln through the fog\nduring the night were poor.\nMost aircraft In Britain, Including\nR.A.F. planes, were fog-bound. One\nofficial described it as \"one of the\nworst: hold-up's in civil aviation\nhistory.\" \"   .-\nShipping at Hamburg, Bremer-\nhaven and most North Sea ports\ncontinued at a standstill. Skippers\nof fishing i vessels \u2022 coming - into\nLowestoft, Sufflpk,. from the N<!i;th\nSea said they: could not. recall a\nheavy fog which had lasted: as lopg.\nLevel 23 Charges    \u2022;\nOn Three Juveniles :\n, VANCOUVER-, (CP) \u2014 Alleged:\nmembers of a juvenile crime ring,\nthree boys, ranging in age from, 15\ntoj7 years, have been arrested.'-, - ,\nPolice'said Monday, they will fac?\n23 charges of burglary, involving\ntheft of more than $1700 in jewelry\nand other articles stolen from homes,\nstores and shops. The loot also, included $500 in cash. --      : .?'. \u25a0;<\u25a0\nTwo other juveniles, alleged members, of the gang, were arrested recently;' '    \u25a0-;,. . \"\u25a0;;\nnight Tuesday.\n, The Western powers withheld\nformal,acceptance until their home\ngovernments had seen the draft of\nthe-jlan.. \u2022      . -.   '   '\n' Details of the formula have not\nbeen disclosed.\nThe plan would recommend a\ncomplete and final -lifting of the\nBerlin blockade at the same time\nthe Soviet-zone mark Is Introduced\nIn Berlin as tbe sole currency.\n$6000 FOR REPAIRS TO\nSEAFORTH VILLAGE\nI 'VANCOPVER (CP) \u2014 The City\nCouncil will pay $6000 toward repairs and additional safety facilities\nat the Seaforth village here. ' t- .\n. Three of: the former army huts\nburned last, week and the fire' left\nSix families homeless. Since theh\nthe village has been the scene, of\nfour chimney fires, i  .\nIt is reported Central Mortgage\nand Housing Corporation will pay\nthe rest.\nCouncil action came as insurance\ncompanies cancelled or refused to\nrenew policies.of tenants ln the' village. \u2022\nHOUSE STANDING .\nAs a result of the voting the\npresent standing in the 48-member\nLegislature now.'Is:     \"'\nCoalition - 38; CCF. 11; Independent Liberal 1 and Labor 1.\nAbout 18,000. voters cast their\nballots .despite; overcast skies and a\nthreat bf snow.  - i;\nThe main Issues have been the\nCoalition Government's social service plans,: including aeompulsory\nhospital care Scherne, and- the\n,CCF.'svso^ah^tifii)PJOjn:a__,.Prem^\nier Byron Johnson, cfiargettfleotlon\nofvaC.CF.-hiember-would halt industrial-.expansion plarinea hy oilt\u00bb.\nside cip|t_U'     .-        \u25a0' i \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nThe elections, followed the death\nof:James,L..Webster,a>Liberal, In\nRossland-Trail, and the resignation\nof-.W;A.C Bennett, Progressive Conservative in South Okanagan.   ;\nThe CCF. held Rossland-Trail\nfollowing the 1941 .general election,\nand a Progressive Conservative\ncandidate   was   elected   In   South\nOkanagan. In the 194S general elec- I\ntlon the C.C.F. were defeated in\nboth constituencies.\nIn the 1948 election, Mr.. Webster\ndefeated1 R. W. Hagg'en, CCF., and\nWilliam Cunningham, People's\nCCF., -and. George Layton, Social\nCredit The vote-was: Webster 3171;\nHaggen, 933; Cunningham 2060;\nLayton ,261.      , V*\nIn a straight party battle in South\nOkanagan in the general election,\nMr. Bennett won with' a total o!\n3708 votes against 2062 for house-.;\nwife Gladys A. Webster.\n. The Liberals 'and Progressive\nConservatives formed the Coalition\nadministration following- tbe 1841\nelection. It was then headed by\nLiberal Premier John Hart, who retired last December. Mr. Johnson\nsucceeded him. ',\u00ab,\nThe Rossland-Trail vote: > '\n'\u2022 Quinn Turnbufl,\/\nAmiable    .... 176     '      fBfi\nBeaver Bend .....    88 123\nBeaver Falls ...   86 S6\nBlueberry^': ..........  20\nCasino  . \u2014 . 16\nCastlegar    288\nChina Creek ;..  .38\nColumbia Gardens .   18\nDeer Park    23\nEast Trail 782\nFruitvale  249\nKinnaird 128\nOasis .____   27\nPaterson _\u2014-   12\nPeind d'Orellle .-\nRenata . :,.. \u201e\niBobsori' asc^'^si.\nRowland ,.:..'._\nShaver's Bench...\nSheep Creek'\t\nSunningdale   \t\nSyringa Creek^\u2122.\nTadartac    ..._._.\nTrail \u2014\nWaneta  ..._.__~.\nWarfleld \t\nWest Trail .\u201e..;,_.\nAdvance poll    12\n\u00bb\n184\n11\n8\n22\n881\n261\n85\n20\n3\n\u2022 17\ni \"IB\n.m\n. 175-\n,  7\"\n. 0\n. 12\n1\n187\nTotals\n_.,4743\n'\u00bb\n88\nn-\nT18\n02\n1\n49\n7\n220\n1095\n\u2022\nMT\n817\n28\n4471\nNetv China\nPremier\nUnion Signing\nNext Week\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Signing el the\nterms under which Newfoundland\nwill join Canada as a 10th province\nlikely will take place some time\nnext weOfc\nRepresentatives of tho two countries   held   two   meetings   behind\nIn tho Prince George area, of-!closed doors Monday to continue\nf lclals say 76 percent of the saw-1 study of a draft ot the union terms.\nrnlllS have closed;down.hecause of jNOj announcement.was made.\nUNEMPLOYMENT IN\nB.C. LOGGING\nINCREASING\nVANCOUVER,* (CP)-Unemploy-\nmelit Iii the: logging Industry in\nBritish Columbia Is increasing.:\nApart from the 800 loggers Idle\non Vancouver i Island, it was reported Monday that 27 small sawmills have closed at Quesnel, In the\nNorthern section of the province;\nwithin the last 10 days.\nlack .of frost In the ground, making roads Impe-sahle; r :.\u2022\nCongratulates\nVldoiS\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Increased number of-voters In both Rossland-Trail\nand South Okanagan ridings was\nthe unknown factor in Monday's by-\nelections, Premier. Byron. Johnson\nsaid after returns were announced\ngiving the former seat to a C.C.F.\ncandidate and retaining -the latter\nfor the.Coalition Government.\nMr. Johnson's statement follows;\n\"I wish to take, thia opportunity\nof congratulating both victors In\nCURB FIRE AFTER BUST.\nSALISBURY, Conn. (AP)-T-Walt- PORTLAND (AP) -A waie'r;\ner Surdam had a wonderful op- front explosion rocked a wide area\nportunity to express a male opinion of the city Monday night but a fire\nof women-drivers Monday, but he that broke out In a municipal\ndidn't take advantage of'it, terminal building and among piled\nSurdam, i garage man, was called lumber was soon under control. , ;.-|\nto right an overturned car in which .-\u2022 One man was blown 200 feet Into\na-jWjhiaTn'was. tappe-, He'=*ia'de the Btreet from the Fortland Dock\nEliort work ot righting tho vehicle,Commission 0-fce.where the,blast\nand releasing\u2014|_s wife. |orlg_>at\u00bbd. ., \u2022.'\nJ the increased number of voters-and\nIhow they would ballot..: \u25a0 .:\nT   The handsome majority accorded\nRobert Browne-Clayton, Coalition\ncandidate in the South Okanagan\nriding, was most gratifying.\n\".'. : I would also like to take\nthis opportunity of paying.tribute, to\n\u25a0the untiring efforts of all those who\nwdrked so hard on behalf of the Coalition candidates ahd: to thank\nthem wholeheartedly for the part\nthey played ln the two campaigns.\n\"I regret very much that so capable a young man as Mr. Douglas\nTurnbull, Coalition candidate in\nRosaland-iTrall, was unable to be\nvlctdrious.bn his first try for public\noffice, for I found him to be a man\nof! exceptional executive qualities\nancl outstanding in his chosen profession.\" \"  '\"\njvr \u2022.'     'I, .\n8PORT8MAN DIES\nll.- Sun\" Fa \u25a0-\u25a0nl.i'atlvg Yuan\"7 KELOWNA, B.C (CP) f- Joe\n\u25a0pS^JZmSSS^Se Spurrier. 62 internationally known\nas. Premier by the Chlhesi: lawv \"Pgrtsman, dM here Monday. .\nmaking body. Sun, whoso father ^SP\"\"1\" ,did. ,mu.? J\u00b0 p, ci\u201e!\nwasHhe late dr. Sun;Yat-sen, was British ^Columbia 'fishing in the\nnominated, by President Chiang lUnlted States.\nKai-shek .to replace Wong Win: I In his youth he was a \u00abfell known\nhao. who reslaned.\u2014AP wlrephoto. lacrosse player. , .       -..,..\nthe two byelections.\"\nThe  fight's   were   clean   snd\nstrs^g&tfbrward and In: both 'ridingsi^   iv,    ui(,   \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e   VUJ.umuld\nPrime Minister St. Laurent told\nnewspaper men that \"we are studying the details pf the terms and it\nis quite lengthy.\"\nFrom other sources it was learned that the delegations are making\na thorough examination of a 17*\npage foolscap document which contains the detailed terms. The. document will form part of tbe bill to.\nbe submitted to Parliament for\napproval. <\nOriginally, It was expected that .'\nthe final terms would be signed\nDec. 2, but study of the draft has\ntaken longer than expected.\nSays B. C. Logging      \/\nIndustry Will Get\nThrough All Right\ni VANCOUVER   (CP)\u2014A  spokes-\/\nman : for   the ' British-   Columbia'\n\"will get through 1949 all right\"\ndespite a cut in export orders and\nfalling prices on lower grades of.\nlumber.       \u25a0'., - I\n\"There is still an over-all shortage of lumber In the world, and a\nway will be1 found to get the. needr\ned material 'to people who need\nshelter.\" he said.\nThe spokesman was replying to\nreports that the cut in sales to the\nUnited Kindom; will have grave ef-;\nfects ou the Industry.\nShoppings\nDAYS\n, W Christmas\nV^\t\n \u25a0ur\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30, 1949\nJmmL-\n9m*90\nWants Corner Lots\n! Application of HoraceVLaPolnte\nfor corner space at the. corner ot\nDelbruck and Ward-Streets was referred Monday night by Ne|son City\n.'Council, to the FlnShc'e Committee.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllll\nbecause meals can be so easy\nand such a pleasure with PURITY PRODUCTS. Our PURITY\nCOOK BOOK tells you Just\nHOW to create the most delicious dishes with PURITY.\nUSE PURITY when you want to\neook fETTER.\nPURITY\nBRACKMAN-KER\nMilling Co.\nNelson - Rossland\nllllllllllllllliilllillllllimilllillliiiliilii\nAction Coming oil\nTo View Street\nAction this Winter toward Improvement of View Street Is intended by the Provincial Public\nWorks Department, it was disclosed\nln a letter read Monday night at\nNelson City Council meeting.   .\n0. P. Roberts, District Engineer,\nstated that it was his Department's\nIntention this, Winter to survey-the\nstreet, part of which is outside City\nlimits. It will require.major grading\nto make it a two-way road and at\nthe same time provide access to lots\nin the vicinity, he pointed out   :\nOn completion of the survey, application would be made for funds\nto undertake the work when weather Is favorable.\nCity Counoll has been anxious to\nhave View Street improved because\nof wartime houses in the area.\nNlheflaResf\nServices were held at the Thompson, Funeral Home Monday morn-:\ning for the late Michael Roliek, a\nformer resident of-Nelson who died\nIn Vancouver Wednesday.\nMr. Rolick's four sons, Nlcbolus,\nPeter\/Alexander and George were\npallbearers, and Interment was in\nthe Nelson Memorial Park.\nlast Rites lor\nMany Nelsonltes gathered at the\nSathedral of Mary Immaculate on\nenday morning to pay last tribute\nto -Charles. Earl Vincent Madden,\nwho died here Thursday at the age\nOf 58. '\u25a0\"\u25a0        ','.'; ,     ,';\u25a0   ,.- -,   \u25a0\nRev, Father Anderson conducted\nthe Mess and interment was In the\nNelson Memorial Park.- ...-..'\nP.%E. Poulln, C, Massey, J..0,\nRiesterer, Ed' Daly,\u25a0; George La-\nPointe and James Mclvor were\npallbearersi\nMr. Madden was a member- ot a\npioneer Nelson family, and spent\nmost of his life here. '\nDerek Tye roieave al End of School\nTerm To Become Sea Cade! Officer\nDerek H. Tye, well known Nelson\nschool teacher, is leaving the city\nshortly for Vancouver to take on\nliaison work in the Sea Cadet; movement in this Province. His duties\ncommence in the new year.\nHe will become ab area officer\nbased on H.M.C.S. Discovery, and\nwill be back In this district in the\ncourse of hla visits to the various\nSea Cadet corps in British Columbia.\nHe will also be connected with\nSummer camps for the boys,\nMr. Tye came to Nelson, ln 1035,\nand-after ori* year on the Junior\nHigh School staff, joined the Nelson\nHigh School,, where he has been\nteaching ever since.\nNAVYVBTERAN\nDuring the Second World War,\nhe wss for two years on loan to\nthe Rpyal Navy, aervlng ln the At-\nlantic arid Mediterranean, more than\none and a half years ln the Indian\nOcean an* finally in the Pacific, In\nthe four-years beginning at the end\nof 1041 and ending ta 1848 that he\nserved ln the Royal Canadian and\nRoyal Navies, he rose to tha rank\nof Lieutenant .' _.      :>_,\nAft** release from the Navy, Ht.\nTye returned to the High School\nstaff at the beginning of 1846, replacing Miss M. Finoh.\n: Victorlo-bom and the third son\nof Thomas B. Tye of Victoria, he\nwas educated at University School\nln Victoria and later at University\nof British Columbia, from which\nhe was graduated in 1993. While at\nU.B.C. he won his \"Big Block\" for\nrugby, and was affiliated with\nAlpha Delta Phi fraternity. '\nMr. Tye has been active In a\nnumber of organisations In  hla\nyears In Nelson. His sports Intar.\nesta have  Included softball and\nDEREK H. TYE\nbadminton. He has also been en\nthe senior hockey executive one\n.year, and for the past two seasons\nhas been time-keeper far home\ngames.\n. A considerable amount of his\n\u2022pare time has been devoted to\nthe . Hampton . Gray, ..V.C. ..Sea\nCadet Corps, of which he has been\nCommanding Officer.\nHe. has also been a member of\nNelson Gyro Club and the Knights\nof Columbus.\nHis home ls at 814 Hendricks\nStreet     - . ,\nHis wife; the former Mlsa E. M,\nMangan to whom he was-married\nin 1937 ta Fernie, and young son\nMichael will join him at the Coast\nKing's General Health Improves\n\u25a0'.' LONDON (CP)-^Dbctors reported Monday there is Im-\nprovertient In the general .health pf the King.\nA week ago His Majesty cancelled all public engagements because of an arterial ailment affecting his legs*\nA bulletin issued by the five doctors attending the King\nsaid:. ' \u2022\u2022\u25a0 '    . iirny-;'    .. .       '-.., ;\n\"As a result: of relief fromwolkltjg, stqndlng, ond fatigue,\ni improvernent in the7 general heqlth of the' King Is apparent.\nNEW YORK (AP)-Buslness as a\nwhole ls still good despite signs of\nweakness ln several important directions, an Associated: Press survey\nof Strategic regions in the United\nStates showed Monday.\nAmerican business leaders studied\nanxiously such straws ta the econ\nomic wind as these:\n1. A decline in department store\nsales.\n3. Scattered shutdowns or lay-offs\nby small companies.\n3. Easing agricultural prices.\n4. Some business expansion plans\neither cancelled Or postponed\n5: An uneasy inertia in textiles\nand other soft goods.,\nThe question was: Are these real\ndanger signals this time? Or are\ntbey false alarms like the. one which\nearly ta 1947 and again at the beginning of this year caused recession worries?'  ...    \u2022\nA check of the business pulse ta\nsix regional areas of the United\nStates showed a mixed trend, Layoffs, for. example, were'becoming\nmore frequent iri New England and\nthe middle Atlantic states\u2014but employment was still swinging upward in the Southwest Prices were\neasing in the South, but still edging\nhigher In the Midwest\n\"This Is an Important factor to reestablishing, arterial circulation to\nthe feet, which ls a>o being encouraged by appropriate medicinal and\n{physical measures::\n\"In this -condition restoration of\ncirculation is a slow, process extending over a period of months.\n\"Some improvement has already\ntaken place and there is less cause\nfor immediate anxiety regarding the\nrlghtfoot\" :       -iy.   ,'-\u25a0'\nThe Weather\n, .SyriopsiS--The stVtm centrewhlch\n:has given Southeast gales over tho\n|3.C coast is moving rapidly East-\n, ward.'. CJloudy skies' with scattered\nshowers; and strjtog Westerly winds\naro expected- along the Coast; Tuesday, Snow is expscted to the Western, section ol the Interior and to\nIf You're TIRED\nIt's Dodd's You May Need!\nBECAUSE-Faully kidnoja lot exeats\nacida and poisonous mates stay In the\nsystem. Backaches, htadachta arid tint\n'feed-out\" feeling often-folk,-. Dodd'a\nKidney Pills help restore your kidneys to\nnormal action\u2014help you feel better, work\nbetter, play better. Bo auro you get tho\ngenuine Dodd's Kidney Pills, a Biwarit*\nremedy for mora than half a century. Ton\ncan depend on Dodd'al 1ST\nMcfeMieirPills\nfet more\n9\nWhat a thrill\nStrength and Energy!\nIf you are,-troubled by restless nights,\nirritability or; nervotiaiesa, try Milburn's\nHealth' and' 'Nerve PUIb, They contain\nonly the purest ingredients. For over 60\nyears they've been used by thousands as a\nionic for frayed nerves or a general rundown\ncondition.\nThey stimulate the nervous system, help-\nimprove the blood content, increase the\n\"\u2022appetite and thus promote sleep..\nMilburn's Health and Merv* Pills\ng^ \u00b0f   :''\nWinter\nTake a H1AVY Tall of Con '\nBe Prepared With CHAINS\nand PROPER SERVICING\n\u25a0 \u25a0'-.',\nAT \"AA.\nBill DeFoe s Super Service\n213 Baker St.       \u25a0\".'\" Phone 1234\nthe Eastern \u25a0 sectioi\ni. \" ; .>\nNelson\t\n..   71\n39\n...    27\n30\nToronto\t\n.    29\n34\nWinnipeg \t\n..   12:\n2b.\nRegina\t\nLethbridge ....\n..      9\n13\n*    14\n32\nCalgary  .'...'.\t\n-\u2022\"   12\n32\nEdmonton  \t\n5\n111\nPenticton ..,\u201e..>,..\u201e...\n.. \"27\n39\nVancouver .\t\n..   *S8\n46\nVictoria:.:.*\t\n.    38\n4b\nCranbrook \t\n\u2014-\n31\n...   20\n33\n_'  23\n40\n..    23\n37\nSpokane\t\n...    26\n40\nLos Angeles............\n..    45\n80\nWhitehorse\t\n...   -37\n-17\nWith Stone\nAnd Besom\nResults of Monday night's games\nto the Nelson Curling Club's Jeffs\nCup Competition follow:   - '-.   >\u25a0\nj; Teague 8, F. H. Smith 18.\nT. S. Jemson 8, H. D. Wallace T.\nA, Waters 8, F.-wing 10..\nM. B. Robichaud 8, J. H. Allen IS.\nT. Dolphin 8, A. B. Gilker 3,\nH. Farenholtz 10, A. H. Allan 8\/\nPresidents vs Vice-Presidents: <\nR. _,?IcBrIde 6, R. D. Wallace 11\nA. Waters 13, A. S. Maddocks 2.\nTr\nElectrical Head\nAttends Council\nA. C. Van Sacker, new City Electrical Engineer, sat in at City Council Monday night for the first time\nsince his arrival to Nelson, His duties hegin Tuesday.\nMay Get Retaining.\nWall in Spring\nRequest from Leonard Gustafson,\n55 Douglas Road, for a retaining\nwall to prevent loss of his property\nfronting on Douglas Road, may be\nmet to the Spring. ,\nCity Council was told Monday\nnight by Acting City Engineer R. D.\nHjckey that it would cost $712 to\nerect a rock wall; $565 for a concrete wall Concrete cribbing was\nsuggested by Aid. B. C. Affleck.\nMartin Petition\nLeft in Shreds\nV^COyVER (CP)-Coples of a\npetition signed by. TOO University ot\nBritish Columbia students, protesting- the exclusion of law student\nGordon Martin from the B.C. Bar,\nwere ripped to shreds by an unto'\nmpus Civil Llbertis\n., jetitiohS were found rip]\nto shreds when they were to have\nknown Intruder Monday.\nThe Campus Civil Liboi\nsaid the petitions were tound ripped\nbeen forwarded to Victoria.\nA new drive for signatures is\nplanned.\nResults of Monday night's games\nto the Trail Curling Club's'Crown\nPoint Competittoh, follow:\nS. G. Biagionl 6, A; B. Boss 7\nRi B; Hill !. J. Ji;Cameron ll'\nC. D. Stuart 7, G. Balfour 10\nM. MorrisOn 7, 3. Msrk 8\n' G, W. Weir 6, T, J. Teahan 4\nA. G. Cheyne 7, R, J. MacKinnon 5\nH. H. Miller 5, R. MeGhie 4\n'   C. Strachan 10, F. J; Gloysr 4\nT. Nixon 6, P. F. Mclntyre 9\nH. Beckett 11, T. H. Weldon 8\nR.. Sommerville   Jr.   8.   W.   G.\nCarrie 5   '\nW. P;   Robertson   7,   E.   Q,   N.\nPlayer; 6\nTuesday's draw!\"\t\n1:00*;A. Robb vs W. Meleary; L.\nAnother Triple for\nRouse; Whip Leafs 5-3\nSPOKANE, Wash. (AP) \u2014 Cy\nRouse, Spokang'i brilliant offensive star, scored three goals In\nthe second period Monday night\nto pace Flyers to a 8-3 Western\nInternational Hockey League victory over Nelson,\nIt was tht second \"hat trick\" In\ntwo nights fer Reuse against the\nMaple Leafs as the Flyert came\nfrom behind to post their 14th\nstraight vlotery of the aeasen at\nhome.     :        \\        . ' - \u25a0  - ,.\nScott and Thomas rapped In\nSpokane's other counters while\nNelson, goali came from the sticks\nof Fargher, Toschack and Tatcholl.\nLineups:\nSpokane\u2014Pie-ell; Blackett, Bentley; McBride; Snider, Rouse; Subs,\nPetrucci, Scott,. Nadeau, Barchyn,\nCurillo, Luke, Thomas, Rypien.\nNelson\u2014Seaby; Tatchell, Barefoot; Kllpatrick; Fargher,' Allen;\nSubs, Bicknell, Nelson, Heuston,\nI Hergert, Vickers, Winlaw, Toschack,\nLubeck,-Haldane, Koehle.\n8UMMARY\ni First period\u20141. Nelson,- Fargher\n(Kllpatrick) 1:57; 2. Spokane,,Scott\n(Thomas) 4:38; 3. Kelson, Toschack\n(Hergert, Haldane). 7:18   ., :    <\nPenalties\u2014Thomas, Rouse, Bentley.:'.       :. \"::::.;:\"\u25a0\"\u25a0!a   \u25a0\u201e\u25a0\u201e-?>\u2022\nSeoond. period\u20144. .Spokane, \"Rouse\n(McBride, Bentley) 0:52; 5. Spokane:\nRoute (Snider) 1:57; 8, Spokane,\nthomaa (Blackett,.Petrucci) 12:27;\n7. Spokane, House (McBride). 18:08,\nPenalties\u2014McBride,; Blackett.\nThird period\u20148. Nelson, Tatchell\n(Koehle, Barefoot) 15:00.\nPenalties\u2014Petrucci.\nDedication Dec. 5\nRedeemer Broadcasting Equipment\nHonors Memory of Austen Thompson\nInstallation of broadcasting equipment to memory of Austen Gilchrist\nThompson in the Church of the Redeemer in Fairview has been com-.\nDieted. It will be dedicated by Rev.\nw. J, Silverwood, the Vicar, at the\nregular Sunday evening service\nDec. 5.        ''::, : . -'\u25a0:  \u25a0'.\nBrought in from Vancouver, the\nequipment is capable of broadcast-\ntog chimes, English cathedral peals\nof bolls and other sacred'tousle over\na large radius in Faitview. The\nmusic is played on records and a\nloudspeaker carries .the amplified\nnotes {rom the Church steeple. Plans\nto purchase the equipment were\nmade over a year ago.\nAusten Thompson, ta whose mem\nory the system Is being Installed by\nhis family to England, was a devoted\nmember of the Churoh of the Redeemer, being Lay Reader, Vicar's\nWarden and Choir Master for many\nyears. The former owner of .the\nMcKim ranch,he (lied Feb. 1,1941.\n.\"- Miss Malyse Thompson, who lived\nin Nelson for a few years with her\nbrother, arrives thb week from\nEngland and wllll)* present at the\nservice of dedication. Miss Thompson was also a member of trie\nChurch; returning to England nine\nor 10 years ago.-Her parents, Rev.\nCanon and Mrs. Thompson, visited\nNelson during a tour across Canada\nsoma year; ago. Mr. Thompson's\nfather was a Canon of Rochester\nDiocese.    , ' .,-.'\u25a0 \"\u25a0\u25a0\nIsrael Seeks UJL Membership\n5y EDWARD CURTIS\nPARIS (AP)\u2014Israel formally applied Monday for rnerrfc\nbership lh the United Nations.\nBritain \"will In no circumstances make use of its privileged vote to bar the admission to the United Nations of any\nstate which secures an unqualified majority of seven votes\nin the Security Council,\" Sir Alexander Cadogan told tne No. 2\nPolitical Committee. Britain Is expected to abstain.    ,\u2022\nThe No. 1 Political Committee was\ndebating a Russian and Polish resolution calling tor withdrawal of all\nforeign troops from Palestine. Mah-\nmoud Bey Fawzi ot Egypt declared\ntroops of Arab countries in Palest\ntine \"are tbe least foreign of all.\" He\nsold the Russian delegation \"didn't\nssy a word about the hordes coming from Central Europe and more\nespecially Eaatern Europe.\"\nHockey Scores\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nMARITIME SENIOR\n. Halifax 8, Dartmouth 4\nSaint John 2, Moneton 3\nCAPS BRETON SENIOR\nSydney 3, North Sydney 1\nQUEBEC JUNIOR\nMontreal Natlonales 5, Montreal\nCanadlens 2 '\nO.H.A. JUNIOR\nGuelph a, Stratford 5\n\u25a0 ui   '\n' Toledo Mercury 1, Detroit Goodyear 8\nWindsor   Ryancretes   2,   Detroit\nAuto Club 3\nLAKEHEAD JUNIOR\nPort Arthur West Ends 8, Fort\nWilliam Rangers 3\n$1281 Needed to\nL. Fortln vs R. P. DockeriU; R. p>me(|v Drainaafi\nSomerville Sr. vs\"J. Leckle; w. fr Re^a7 >'n,_,\",9B\nRoss vs A. A. Slmonson.\n7:30\u2014V. E. Ferguson vs ._.\" L,\nJones; A. W. McDonald vs A. Balfour; C. Tyson vs A. E. Calvert; A.\nE. Allison va D, MacDonald.\n9:00^-L. F. Wendell va S. Gray;\nD. Forrest vs J. Wilkle; H. Currie vs\nR. C. McGerrlgle; A. Forrest vs R.\nStuart.    ' \u2022'-...:\u25a0'   \u25a0 \u25a0\nWALLACH TO ISSUE\nSTATEMENT ON\nTRANSPORTATION\nAid. G. C: Wallach,. Chairman of\nthe Transportation Committee, was\nempowered Monday night by City\nCouncil to publicize Its intentions\nfor the future ot transportation in\nNelson.    ...   '.       ,'\u25a0! \u25a0\nCitizens were contending that Inadequate publicity, had been given\nthe proposal to turn the transportation business oVer to private enterprise, Aid. B. C.' -Affleck' said to\nbringing up the matter.'.\nAid. Wallach said he had intended\nmeklng a statement to clarify the\nCity's position.\nNELSON COUPLE\nLOSE SON\nSix-year-old Edward Stewart Linville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard\nE. Linville, North. Shore, died here\nMonday evening,\nA younger sister also survives. Mr.\nand Mrs, .Robert. Jardine, Nelson,\nare grandparents.\nNo Parking\"\nSign for Legion\nCompliance with a request from\nNelson branch of the Canadian\nLegion for installation of a.\"no\nparking\" sign in front of its building on'Victoria Street, came from\nCity Council Monday night. The\nsign will be Installed on a trial basis\nfor six months.\n\"0Wat40,50,60r\n-Man, You're Cra:\nForfict your aa.1 Thoua.ads aw peppr.al 70.\n\u2022papillog-\" \" \t\nOn Beasley Street\nAn estimated $1281 will be needed\nto remedy drainage conditions ln\nthe wartime housing area on Beasley Street, City Council learned\nMonday night from R. D. Hickey,\nActing City Engineer. .\nThe matter was left to sbeyance\nuntil next year's Council is functioning\nRescue Fisherman\nWith Leg in Cast\n. CAMPBELL RIVER, a C, (CP)\nr-J. CUslie, a fisherman with his\nleg in a-cast, was rescued during a\nsevere storm that grounded his gll-\nnetter Aqua, near here during the\nweekend. His leg had'been Injured\nin a previous mishap.\nThe vessel waa grounded at the\nmouth of the Campbell River and\ntwo men waded out to bring the\nhandicapped fishermen tO shore.\nEfforts are being made to salvage\nthe boat\nThird Remand\nNANAIMO, B.C. (CP)-F0r the\nthird time the Crown Monday got\na remand in the preliminary hearing\nof evidence to a murder charge\nagainst Gordon Buck, 21. .\nThe Gabrlola Island resident ls\naccused of the shotgun slaying Nov.\n12 ot Irving Piper, 20-year-old farmer. ...\u25a0:\u25a0..;\nPiper was killed by a shotgun\nblast when he arrived at his home\nto hla par accompanied by hia sister,\nA men jumped from behind- a\nclump of bush and fired two blasts,\none of which struck Piper on the\nside of the head.\nThe hearing is set for next Friday.\nBylaw Given\nThree Readings\nBylaw 115, authorizing the taking\nout Of over $4000 frem the tax Mies\naccount for capital expenditure, was\ngiven three readings Monday night\nby Nelson City Council,\nThe Classified Columns Qlve Results\nBLACKHEADS\nJunior Music\nPupils in Recital\njunior pupils of members Of the\nRegistered Music Teachers'''Association were heard to a recital, up to\nthree performers at elementary\njchool age being .presented by each\nteacher..' y-O--!\n: The audience was composed'only\nol parents and friends of tho pupils\ntaking-part.        '   '.,'.- . , \"... -\nPurpose ot the group recitals was\nthreefold, Mrs. James Fraser told\nthe gathering. The . youthful performers were given a chance to hear\neach other and gain assurance in\nplaying or singing for an audienco,\nand teachers were able, to work together where there was no spirit of\ncompetition. \u25a0-'-' .\n\u2022 The Chairman urged the parent*\nto bear to mind the: age and physical\nand mental capabilities achieved by\nthe young-students, and to recognize\nthe need tor \"firm, kind guidance\"\nin leading-them on to music.\nPiano soloists were Diana Armstrong, Anne Godfrey, Joyco Bradshaw, Denlse Greenwood, Delphine\nPoulin, David Barrett, Barbara Joan\nMcFadden, Rochelle Crawford and\nGeorgette Major.     ,.,     ,     ;-\u2022\u25a0\",\nVocalnumbers were given by Ann\nFawcett, Carol Tickner, Charlie\nDunstall, < Shielab McPhail and\nMaUreen Johnston, and Dorothy\nFoster.    \u2022 .,     !.. :\nMarvin Founder and Betty Defoe were violin soloists.\nMrs. T. J. S. Ferguson and Mrs.\nAmelia Oliver were in charge of\narrangements.\nIn February Students of Junior\nHigh School age will be heard, and\nlater students of the Senior High.\nSeek Payment;\nFor Grading\nOf Civic Grounds\nRequest from;Civic Centre Commission for payment of $15 for grading of 'the Recreation Grounds for\nthe High School track meet, was\nreferred to the Board et Trustees\nof Nelson School District NO; 7,\nMonday night.,by City Council\nJap Hold-Outs Win\nReturn trB.C. =\nMOOSE JAW. Sask. .(CP)-HEvic-\ntlon of two, Japanese, from a pup\ntent finally closed the Japanese relocation camp here.\nActing on orders from Regina,\nR.C.M.P. persuaded 57-year-old Sue-\nklchi Miyagawa and Pomtjiro Naka,\n05, to leave the tent they had occupied beside the former : camp\nsince it was closed officially last\nAugust. They were plactd on. a\ntrain, for fyew Denver, B.C.\nAlthough Japanese.are prevented\nfront residing 10 Coastal areas as a\nresult Of,\" war-imposed '\u25a0 measures,\nsome have been permitted to live\nin Interior sections of the province.\nThe two were the last of the\nJapanese \u2014 evacuated from British\nColumbia as a potential security\nthreat during the war-^to leave the\ncamp. Others had been, evicted from\nthe camp after refusing to leave\nbut had taken, up work elsewhere\nIn Canada: or fa the city. The two\n0|d men bid held' out for a return\nto'BrlUsh Columbia; :'-    ''\u25a0' '\u25a0\u25a0\"-;\"\nChtjtfcllwn Ewt for 35c\nI SOLD EVERYWHERE\nBUCKLEY'S capsules\nCups and Saucers\n49c \u2014 60e \u2014 79e \u2014 $1.25\n8\" Dinner Plates\n- 32- AND 38-PIECE\nBreakfast Sets    ;\n$9.95 to $13.95\nPINO PRINT SHOP\n\"All Clear\" Call Sent Crowded Car\nInto Train's Palh, Court Is Told\n' \"We stepped a little way from\nthe railway, tho oar started again\n\u2022.. that'a all I remember.\"\nThese words Monday deicrlbed\na oar-locomotlvo acoldent that resulted In fly* dead and seven Injured, to tho Nelson Court of Assise,'In th* flrat day of a man-\nalauahter oase against Alex Sedar\nof Edmonton. Mrs. Rose Johnston,\nof Edmonton,, one of 12 being carried by tho ear, was on the witness stand. '\nSedar, driver ot the ear, has been\ncharged that Vneor Erickson on Oct\n17 he unlav\/fully did kill and slay\"\nMichael Nesplak of Canyon, Larry\nMorozoff of; Cresoent Valley, Peter\nWilliam Olynyk of Northville, Alta,\nand Nicholas Gorglchuk ot Erickson.\nSeven witnesses appeared for tbe\nCrown, the case being prosecuted\nby W. W. Ferguson, ond defended\nby C. H. Hamilton. Mr. Justice N.\nW. Whlttaker is presiding.\nThe party was returning from a\ndance, Mrs. Johnson testified, to. a\n1035 model coupe; Although six\nwere to the ear going to the dance,\n_, nude the return journey.\nThe 12 men and women rode to\ntha front and rumble seats, and on\nthe running boards, she said.\ni Mrs. Johnson could not recall\nwhether or not the car stopped at\nthe Erlckson crossing on the way\nto the dance, but testified it halted\nJust before the Intersection on tho\nway back, ,\n\"ALL CLEAR'1\n'Alex Sedar changed Into low\ngear after he stopped the car,\" she\naald. \"Then someone from the back\nyelled 'go ahead, It's all clear.' Sedar\nwent ahead, while I looked- from\nleft to right. I could see nothing\ncoming.\" ,:\u2022' '\u25a0.._'.V-, \u25a0\n.Mrs. Johnson was- seated-to the\nmiddle of the front seat. The vehlele\nhad. halted, she belloved, approximately 10 net from the crossing.\nScene of tho accident, about two\nmiles from Creston on the Erlckson-.\nCamp Lister highway, was described by the first witness, Constable\nR. E. Carlson of the Provincial Police at Creston.\nConstable Carlson told the Court\not arriving at the Erickson crossing\nit. approximately 1:50 a.m. Sunday,\nand finding a wrecked car, with\nthree dead and nine injured. Two\nothers died ln hospital.\n\"The car was described as a 1S3I\nmodel coupe, and to \"fair condition'\nafter the accident. The headlights,\nConstable Doree aald, were work-\ntog, and actual damage to the car\nwas not heavy.\nWarning of th* rail crossing is\nposted 300 feet before th* Canadian\nPacific Railway crossing, he testified.    .-\nAn 18 to 20 foot bank Is en the\nSouth.side of tbe rails, which round\na curve. \"An uphill grade levels\nslightly, but Is still fair,\" the Constable testified. '       .\nNine pictures taken later to the\nmorning were entered as exhibits.\nDr. Q. L. Smith ot. Creston, who\naided to giving hypodermic injections to the Injured ond performed\nthe autopsy, gave the court \"likely*\nreasons tor toe death ot the five\nmen. ,-.\u2022;\nHis testimony was;\nLarry Morozoff\u2014Injuries to the,\nbase of the brain, Internal haemorrhage and fractured ribs.\nMichael Neapiak\u2014Ruptured right\nkidney, fractured pelvis and bead\ninjuries,\nWilliam Olynyk\u2014Leg bones broken in several places; right arm broken, head injuries and severe loss ol\nblood. ~\nNicholas Gorgichuek \u2014 Ruptured\nleft kidney, and Internal haemorrhage.\nPeter Olynyk\u2014MUKl-skull fractures and injuries to the brain.\nTRAIN WHISTLED\nPusher engine that was to collision with the car signalled Its coming by whistle; a quarter-mile before the crossing, and by sounding\nof a bell, P. P. Corey, Cranbrook\ntrainman testified. Similar testimony was given by Engineer W. R.\nCop'o of Cranbrook and M. J. Cherbo;, engine, wiper of Sirdar, The\nthree made up the full engine crew.\n. They alsd stated that stopping distance was between 200 and 260 feet\n\u2014\"normal for that type engine.\"\n\"J Immediately applied, the automatic air brake In emergency when\nCherbo shouted to me,\" Mr. Cope\nsaid. '\u25a0 \u25a0'...''-\nCherbo had shouted on seeing\nthe car approach\u2014\"It appeared to\nreduce speed, I yelled when I saw\nIt was net stopping,\" he said.\nCorey alao testified that the oar\ndid not appear to bo stopping.\nA slight ground haze was the only\nmarr to visibility on the\/'ciear,\nmoonlight night,\" it was (aid,\nThe crew gat out of tho engine,\nwhich was on its last run of the\nday from Yahk to Sirdar; examined\nthe car and the locomotive and sent,\nfor tbe police.\nNicholas Shukin of Erickson testified he had Identified the body ot\nLarry Morozoff, who be, had employed at his fruit ranch.\nDuring the night sitting, when the\nprosecution completed its case, Mrs.\nOlga: Gorgichuek of Erlckson testified that she sat on Mrs. Olynyk's\nknees to the front seat She did not\nrecall details of the approach to the\nrailway crossing. She had a hazy\nrecollection of hearing the driver\nasking if everything was alright,\nbut could nOtsay just what the\nwords were. She thought a favorable reply had come from someone\nto the rumble seat. She \"saw nothing\" before the collision,\nOFFERED SECOND TRIP\nDuring cross-examination the told\nMr. Hamilton she recalled hearing\nSedar stating he would make two\ntrips, She did not hear- a train bell\nor whistle.\nJohn Morozoff of Crescent Valley\nsat in the rumble seat, he testified,\nwith five others. He also'said he\nsaw nothing on the approach to the\ncrossing, but thought ho he had\nheard a voice say, \"the road's dear,\ngo ahead, or something like that\"\nHe told Mr. Hamilton he had gone\nto the dance to a car driven by Bill\nSoprikin, along with four others.\nSaprlkto had left them at the dance,\nand they had been invited by Sedar\nto return with him, he said. .'\nFrank Putnam of Erlckson to his\ntestimony said he sat to the rumble\nseat with hla back to the driver. He\nhad paid little attention to other\nthan the conversation to the rumble\nseat as they neared the crossing,\nand hadn't heard anything beyond\nthe conversation.    '.\nIn cross-examination, ho also said -.\nhe went to the dance ta Saprikln's\ncar.-He hoard Sedar say he would\nmake two trips and at one stago\nJumped out of tho car. When ho\nleard someone say, '.'better all get\nin,\" he climbed baok in. Ho did not\nhear the train,' he said.\nNick Olynyk of Northville, AKa.,\nsaid he rode on the left-hand running board, holding to tho window\nsill. The car slowed down about 10\nor 12 feet from the crossing, be said-\nHe noticed the track was clear to\nhis left..Sedar put tho ear to low\ngear when \"pretty close\" to the\ntracksi He. did not hear anything\ncalled out\nAsked during cross-examination lf\nhe recalled testifying at the preliminary hearing tbat Sedar had called\nout and tbat someone had answered,\nhe said he could not recall saying\nthis, although be agreed that he\nmight have.\n^\nA Good Night's\nRfSf\nIs So Important\na. .' B\nDo you. sfrik peacefully on your\npillow and float away on cloud*\nof restful sleep?\nOr do you lie down with\nttaring eyes ... to have the\nworries of tho day come baok\nand taunt you? Many men and\nwomen whose nerves are frayed\nby amdety-br a run-down\ncondition\u2014find this to be truo.\nAnd that'a tho timo when Dr.\nChase s Nerve Food can do so\nmuoh to help you. Far this .\nreliable tonio contains Vitamin\nBi, iron and other needed\nminerals which help bu-d up\nyour vitality and tone up your\nwhole ' system\u2014ao you're in\nbetter condition to. get your :\nnormal needed rest.\nCanadians by the thousand*\nhave proved to over half a century of use, that you rest Utter,\neat better, feel better after taking\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food\/So\ndont let your nerves robyouof\nnroper rettl Get Dr. Chaae's\nNerve Food to the large \"economy size\". The name \"Dr.\nChaoo  is your assurance.      M\nADDITIONAL\nSleeping Gar Service\nEFFECTIVE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5\nStandard Sleeping Cor Will Operate\non Trains 11 and 12 Between\nNelson and Lethbridge\nQanadlwfL fiaafk, footway.\n_______\n-i .\nim*\n-'- <\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0: - ''\u2022'\u25a0 '\u2022\u25a0\u2022'\n ikil\nInspect Split Boat\nSEATTLE (AP)\u2014Engineers today\nare Inspecting the Army transport\nSt Charles E. Mower, which split\nopen while moored at Whlttier,\nAlaska.\nThe 385 persona aboard were reported safe, and ths transport Gen.\nLeRoy Eltinge is en route from Se-\nBy The Canadian Press ties point to the probability of a | will be $1.75. Canada and Australia. passengers.\nPresident Truman's promise of battle oyer prices. Since tbe pact .as exporters, also probably will aim     The'ship  broke  open  Saturday\n\u2022upport hat boosted hopes for rO-, was negotiated, hugO.wheat harvests as high as possible, , 'shortly after it finished a stormy\nvlval of the defunct International in exporting countries have created |    United Kingdom authorities stand trip   from   the   Aleutians.   It  was\nby the statement they made last Ju- bound for Seattle.\nly that they are prepare   to enter.   The Seattle port of embarkation\nNew Wheat Pitet Expected\nWheat Agreement y  \u25a0 .   'a \"buyer's market\" \"in-place of the\nMany Washington observers see former \"seller's market\"\n\u00ab possibility that the long-sought EXPECT AGREEMENT\npact Will go' Into operation next'.   The same day that President Tru-\nSprlng. But few predict smooth man gave his pledge,.* State Depart-\naalllng. I ment official announced an Amerl-\nIn London, Government sources cab proposal for a world wheat con-\nsaid British support is ih prospect ferenfce hOxt Jan.'&: Charles F. Wll-\ntdr Truman's efforts to: revive the sbn Of' Otfawa;-ohe of. the world's\nagreement top'wheat'experts; already is sound-\nCanadian Government authorities Ing out the'reaction-ito that sugges-\nexpressed keen interest in the re- tion, through the 11-country wheat\nnew discussions for on agreement said lt .had been told there was a\n\"lf a general desire is shown.\"'  ' ;   ! nine-foot crack up the starboard side\nThe United Kingdom withdrew\nfrom the agreement in July because\nof'American failure to -\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00bb. ~)r|.\ntain and 11 other countries, Including Canada, Australia, Eire. India\nand New Zealand did ratify it\n.United Kingdom sources said London   officials   felt   the   agreement\nand a five-toot slit acrbss the deck\nKIMBERLEY\nFILM COUNCIL\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u2014lri preparation for what it is hoped will, be a\nyear of increased community serv.\nCLAIMS LIBERALS,\nPCS ALLIED\nAGAINST CCF.\nSHEl.LMOTITH,   Man.    (CPV.\u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30,1948 \u2014 3\nIce, the Kimberley Film Council has Mrs. Earle Keating, C.C.F. candidate Progressive\nthere should be no Progressive Con- aiftklTDCAl   a~UCC\naervatlve 'candidate in the contest   *\u00bb\u00bbV1~I \u2022 KEMfc Wn_r\nShe said that while Mr. Garson CAIIMnCI Alkl\nand George  Drew,  leader  of the rwwr,,\/ *aV_\u00abwr'l\nConservative\nreorganized under direction of V.\nSagar, East Kootenay representative\nof the National Film Board. .'\u25a0\u25a0\nOfficers elected w.ere; President\nNelles Glover; 'Secretary, Mrs. B.\nLockhart; Treasurer, Sidney Smith,\nand, Publicity Officer, Les Rimes.\nports from  Washington  indicating Preparatory Council bfwhich he-isjcould not be worked without Unit-\nsteps may be taken to resume dls- Chairman.\ncussions for an agreement.   : \\ \"it the: 11 countries agree\u2014and It\nPresident Truman last Wednesday js considered a foregone conclusion\nsaid he will ask the United States that.they will\u2014the full-dress, 38-\nCongress to approve,an internation-' country conference probably can be\nal wheat pact if one can be negotiat-' convened by the target date, Washed, Addressing a meeting of the tngton observers say.\nUnited Nations Food and Agrlcul-1 Truman's statement reaffirmed\nture Organization, he expressed re- the stand he took-during the Pres-\ngret that the agreement drawn up identlal election campaign when he\nin. March was not ratified, by the promised mid-Western farmers he\nUnited States.. v, ' i would   back   a: five-year   support\nThe proposed five-year agree*'price.for:wheat on an International\nment lapsed when Congreaa failed scale. '\n' to- give.Its approval by July 1,        It was the  Republlcan-domln-\nthe deadline set. for ratification,     ated Congress of the United Statea\nIt called for the annual sale of\n800,000,000 bushels of wheat by\nthe three major exporting countries\u2014Canada, the United States\n: and Australia\u2014 to 33 Importing\ncountries, Including Britain. Canada's share, was 230,000,000 bush'\n.els.,.' -.'       \"':''  'ii'; i\nThe defunct pact called for a S2-a-\nbushel celling on Wheat sold within\nwhloh refused to ratify, last\nMarch's agreement and thus put\nan end to that pact Now, backed\nby a Democratic-controlled Congrats, Truman's wishes probably\nWill bear-fruit Several Congressional leaders, Including 8enator\nGeorge Aiken, Vermont Republican,'have pledged, to help get a\nnew agreement approved.\nWith . wheat   no \"\u2022 longer . scarce,\nits provisions for. a five-year period\nand a scale of floor prices,ranging some importing countries are re-\nfrom $1.50 for the present crop year ported seeking a $1.50.maximum In'\ndown to $1.10 in 1952-53. | any new agreement. Some dele\u00a3 tes\nAlthough' welcoming Trumafi'sto the F.A.O.meeting taWashlngY    ._\npledge to back any new agreement, toh.say the t'aaklrig price\" of the [have'a bearing-oh the price prdvi\n\u25a0   \"     -     \u25a0\u2022    '   \" \" ------'-    =--.nT\ned States co-operstion but they, re\ngretted the necessity ot withdrawing from an agreemen to stabilize\nprices for both producers and consumers.\nBritlih support for any new\nagreement It likely to be confined\nto a plan to operate In the crop\nyear 1949-50 and afterwards. Britons believe that any new pact\ncould not-come Into force before\nthe new crop year begins next\nAug. 1f\nThe maximum $2 price under the\ndefunct agreement was the.same as\ntheprlce paid by the United Kingdom for Canadian wheat in 1048-40\nunder the long-term contract between the two countries. Under\ntheir contract arrangements, Britain, and Canada. sOon must decide\nthe price payable for Canadian\nwheat in 1949-50. This is likely to\nbe discussed during a proposed visit by J., G. Gardiner, Canadian Agriculture Minister, to London to December,        iy, ..:..- ,\nLondon sources said that the price\nagreed between Canada and the United Kingdom\u2014the leading exporting and importing countries\u2014would\nUnited States, agricultural authori- < Unlted.States in any new agreement Isions of any new international-pact.\nChina Fight Shifts\nBy HAROLD K. MILKS tween here and Suchow. Earlier, re-\n'\u25a0' ..tAto-tm- -#\u2022_& ' -w- \u00bbrl\u00abr.\"=i Port\u00bb ^om *\u2022>* fron- indicated that\n^NAWKING (AP) - The critical the CommUnists have left secondary\nbattle, for. Central ^\u00b1^m^- troops to engage Nationalists wlth-\nMonday to be shifting1Tom Suchow- ln ^ Suchow perimeter. The main\nto the, approaches-of this Chinese- CoInm^nkt strength: nearly 500,000\nCapital. v .    troops was reported heading South\nIt waa learned reliably that the to     d ;pengpu 100 mUe^ Northwest\nestimated,25p,0W Nationalist Troops pf.H-ankingr     ...',- -.'\u25a0 \u2022:\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\"\"\nBy JOHN M; HIGHTOWER\nLITTLE SYMPATHY\nWASHINGTON^ (AP.) '\u25a0- Madame\nChiang, Kai-shek'a arrival here this\nweek is expected to touch off a\nfresh drive to get the United States\nSTORMS, FLOODS\nDISRUPTED\nUS. SERVICES\nSnow, Winds, Rains\nTake Toll Over\nCostly Weekend\n5 PERSONS DIE\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014The elements\nhit the United States In various\nforms during the weekend. Floods\nand.high winds struck the South.\nRain ond snow - plagued many\narea'a.:\nAt least five persons were killed\nat Suchow, defence bastlbn for Nan^\nking, have been ordered to withdraw Southward to engage; the\nmain Chinese Communist forces .\n. -The outcome 01 the entire .battle\nfor Nanking may depend on the\nability of the Suchow garrison:' to\nmake the. withdrawal. The Com- to underwrite China's war against'in automobile accidenta attributed\nmunists are concentrating in  the, llg communist 'foes. to the weather. Another was mia-\nare'aa of Suhslen and Pengpu, ralli   Authoritative    informants    Said sing. .'  ','..' ..'..-'.'.   .\ncities on Nanking's approachee.       that as.the Chinese president's wife!   Rato.awollen   riv\u201et   iBft'   \u00abi..r\nThere has>eep no Indication that sh6 ^j. be shown '-every courtesy,Hba_ta to ftree' Southern State?-\n&1__&l_Sl--o\u00ab__ if w,s\"^Ut ^t,madeclr Pr\u00aby;hey cSrll&\u00bb. bam\\q?n7Tfnne^e7\nlr*etting supplteW Planes, whicht^^a^^^J^',^^^^^^^^\nare taking out wounded. \u25a0\u25a0-.\u25a0\u25a0 ' - - aiOwta In the hands-off policy the ?! th*,.\u2122,* f\/Til'?. Bunared.il\nThe battle.for Suchow has raged Unlted.States State Department has,\u00b0Vn\u201erUB\u2122rdBSnr?' _&*,,,..*! m .\nthree weeks\/Its abandonment would tried to follow ai.far as possible inL^JK ^w^Mf \u00bb?5^n^.\n^as ^ita^Sl^S^%S^ *'* *\u00bb&&! *' announc-l\"\u00ab,& whh*.W. 83&-IS-*\ntog struggle _i\"*tl_^'^rij_llei'-i!fc\nWMMGVIiaXm*mf*aXVIX)a)*\u20acMt\nDID\nWtWS\u00bb\u00ab*\u00bbMi<nti\u00ab*BS\nYOU\nKNOW?\nthat your gift\nDollar goes\nFARTHER\nIn thoso delightful electrical\nappliances thai bring your\nChristmas Cheer for yean\nand years \u2014\ni- WHEN\n.   Y(OU     ''\nBUY .\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nFIECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 541\nSSSLri.* Tuskegee, Ala. A brief show-\nrain or slush and strong\nphasized. that it was made avalU|?Sf\u2122_i*Tw\nnhl\u00bb   \"at   ViAr   romio.*\"   T>,<!i-\u00bb   _*\u00ab cnangea SO\nable \"at' her request.\" There was\nno expression of welcome and no of-\nwinds diminishing.\nflclal word on.arrangements which!. *?\"\u00ab d'ed ln G\u201ef2rK'a \u00bb\"> Ala-\nmight be made to, expedite her mis-! bf.ma \"*\"\u00bb\u2022\u00bb \u00ab'?<i?nta'-5nd \"\"-\nsion   after  the   scheduled   arrival other person was missing. Two were\nWednesday.\n\u25a0 The fact is, Madame Chiang's trip\ndramatizes- a. dilemma to which\nState Secretary Marshall and President Truman presently find themselves in connection with the \u2022Chinese crisis. ,:.\nOn the ohe hand, responsible Informants lay, they wish to avoid\nany word or action which might\nembarrass the Chiang Government In . Its struggle with the\nCommunists. And they are hope-\nkilled on a slippery highway in Pen.\nnsylvania. .\nSouthern  floodwaters  originated\nln  Northern  sections   of  Georgia,\nAlabama and Tennessee.\nMany   roads   were   Inundated,\nnear Montgomery, Ala, 335 con-\n> vlcta were evacuated from a prison farm to the Kllby S'ate Prison\nwhen the Tallapoosa River rose.\nHemes were evacuated In scattered floods.\nUp to three Inches of snow fell in\nful aome way may be found by f? Sn^Mi W 1\u2122 Pe?nJ!,yvan,\nwhich the United States can'help & Snow fell on the outsets of\nto prevent a Communlat conquest Washington, D. C but,melted as it\n.of all China. :, .     I turned to rata.\nOn the otner-hand,, Truman ad-'ijAaCADE HIT\nmlnistKition leaders'appear.to have,   ofatti- 'hoi _. tk. r..\u00bb.s.\n%&\u00a3&\u00a3 soVtelia t toe Monday -Jto,\u2122 pUed\nCommunist tide and, eventually re|^l&f^$^ Baker,\nFeeling   thus,   they   apparently\nMount Rainier' and  Stevens  Pass\ncohslderit toip6sslble\"for \"tfa Unit- caught *\u00ab m \"^ \u00b0' tte wlnt\u00abr\ned States to  Underwrite taiiang'S|St0.r!n-,,     .-,       \u201e.\nwar with an.aU-out aid program1   At Mount Baker, 115 cars were\nwhich would Involve an estimated reported covered by anow, but vlr-\nexpenditure of several billions of?uaUy-aU were, reported to nave\ndollars during the next few years.\nNIAGARA FAPLS,\nRoses are  in   bloom\nOnt\nhere\n(CP)-\nat  the\nbeen dug out\nWind and raging electrical stirma\ncombined with snow to cut power,\nthe wind toppled trees across the\nwere stopped.at. several p,aCes as\nWilson  picked  some  Sunday  and\nmore are budding on the bushes.\nDon't Forget\nThe Kiwanis-Rod and Gun Club\nand Carnival\nCivic Centre Auditorium \u2014 7:00 P.M.\nFree Admission\nson and Rev. Guy B. ^\"Vltos^ita,, and block roads out of the\nhighway. ' ,' '' , '\nCoastal areas, meanwhile, braced\nfor new wind and rainstorms on the\nheels of an earlier weekend: gale\nwhich flaied the entire Washington\ncoaat with 50-60 mile winds, knock;\ntag out communications and blacking out several cities.\nThe weather bureau said fresh\nstorms carrying heavy rains and\nwinds of 40-45 miles an hour, were\n'.speeding South from the Gulf of\nAlaska.\n| Spokane reported gusts up to 58\nmiles an hour snapped power ijres\nand caused minor damage through-\nI out the c|ty.\nDisabled Vessel\nTowed to Shipyard\nSAN PEDRO, Calif.' (AP)-- The\ndisabled 5000-ton motorship, . Seaboard Star, put into a shipyard, here\nMonday after being towed 1500\nmile* by a sister ship\u2014-believed one\nof the longest such hauls to-modern\nsea hlstoty. ,    . i- >:'.:.\nThe Seaboard .Star, a Canadian,\nlost her prdpellor off the Gulf o!\nTahuantepec, Mexico, sonde.. 1500\nmile's South bf Los Angeles.Harbor.\nThe Seaboard Ranger, following behind, hauled her all the way to Los\nAngeles Harbor, arriving .'yesterday.\nSea-going tugs usua\"\nOn such lone tow lobs.\nplates near the break In the huU.\nThe St Mower is a C-2 type vessel, one of the smaller Army transports. It has a crew ot 129.\nparty,\nin the Fcderil byelectlon to.Mar- were, \"supposed to be enemies,\",\nquette constituency, has alleged that there was a \"strange alliance\" be-\na political \"deal\" was reached be- tween them,\ntween the Liberal and Progressive \"The twO parties have conipromiB-\nConservativo parties to Insure de- ed here and to a similar way ih On.\n(cat of the C.C.F. tario and I predict they will do the\nIn opening her campaign against same thing in Pariament They are\nJustice Minister Stuart parson, united fa one thing, and; that la the .\nLiberal candidate ta the Decr20 by- defeat of the C.CJ.'V I\nelection, Mrs. Keating told an aud- \u2014c ;  I\nience-here a compromise between    Chromium is a metal.harder than\nthe  two old parties had  decreed steel. I\nMONTREAL (OP) \u2014 Thomas\nKacvlnsky, chef at the Sun'ihjne\nCafe on 8t. Jamea Street West,,\nwas found slain Monday, hli body\n\u2022lumped over a small restaurant\ntable.\nKaovlnsky't head was battered.\nPolice began an Investigation to\ndetermine whether the man wai\nalso shot' Part of a. revolver handle was found near an apron on\nthe floor. Police said the apron\nwaa uted by the slayer Ih an attempt to wipe up blood.\nr^f^^'\"\nWROTE\n.tfDODS ION-DOLLAR STTOEtf\nAcross the.nation \u2014 in cities, towns and\nvillages \u2014 the B of M bis kept your money, and the money of\n1,700,000 other customers, hard at work in 1948...\nhelping Canadians in every walk of life to make a better\nfuture for themselves and for Canada.\nHere is the money \"that makes the wheels of commerce\nturn... that provides thousands of business\nenterprises \u2014 from the largest corporation\nto the smallest one-man show\u2014 with the\ncredit they need to carry on frpm day to day.\nTo citizens on salaries... tp farmers witlr seasonal\nIncomes... to merchants, manufacturers, business.-!\nmen in every worthwhile line of endeavour\n... to municipalities, school boards and \\^i\u00a7\u00a7\ngovernments.. \u2022., 'to churches,\nhospitals and all types of\npublic institutions... hundreds of millions of dollars are being\nloaned by B of M managers at more than 500 branches from\nthe Atlantic to the Pacific.\nThat's a glimpse of the 1948 worksheet for .your\nsavings...the sum of your contribution to Canada's\nprogress added to that of 1,700,000 other Canadians in\nthe B of M family.\nB of M depositors' savings\u2014your 1\nsavings;\u2014thus play a vital part in\nmaintaining pur high Canadian standard\nof living and in making Canada the third greatest\ntrading nation of the world.\nYes, by saving at the B of M today,\nyou are helping to build the greater\nCanada of tomorrow, while\nsecuring your'own future.\nf HI fActS\npfttiltl)\nJ^^^777WOT\nfor 1948\nWHAT THE B of M HAS TO MEET ITS OBLIGATIONS:\nCASH: Thc B of M has cash in its vaults and money r>\non deposit with the Bank of Canada amounting to *\"_B^H\nMONcT in the form of notes of, cheques on, and Vi\u00a3j\u00a7\u00a7?!..\ndepositswith other banks ..   ,    .    . \u25a0',    .    , ^9*,>*^\n\u25a0 INVESTMENTS: The BofM has over a billion dollars k\ninvested in high-grade government bonds and other j_i.\n\u25a0- public securities, which have a ready market Listed SMjij-\non the Bank's books at a^figure aot gruitr ibatt thi'tr \u25a0**'\ntnirkitvalve, they^^amountto-.'''..'-.;'...   .    .    .\nThe.BofM, has other bonds, debentures and\n. stocks, representing in large measure assistance tb\n.   industry for plant development in the post-war\n: period. These investments are carried at  .    ,    .\nCALL LOANS: The BofM has all loans which are\nfully protected by quickly saleable securities. These\nloans amount to .     .     .     .    .    .    ,    ,     ,\nS 211,721,990.06\n114,887,350.99\n1,003,513^)39.08\n129,037*998.89\n31,177,918.00\n$1,877,011,22\u00ab.8S\n4,2\u00ab,517.00\n27,185,\u00ab63.58\nQUICKLY AVAILABLB MIOURCES: The resources listed above,\nall of which can suickly be turned into cash, cover 78.09% of all >, '\"\nthat the Bank:o*es to the public These \"quick-assets'\" amount to   $1,490,339,197.02\nLOANS: During the year, many millions of dollars\nhave been lent to business and industrial enterprises\nfor production of .every kind.\u2014to farm\u00abs, fisher,\nmen, lumbermen and ranchers \u2014to citizens in all\nwalks of life, and to Provincial and Municipal\nGovernments and. School Districts. These loans now\namount to    .     .,  '.'    .     ...     .     , .'-:''.', .\nSANK BUILDINGS: In hamlets, villages,'towns and\nlarge cities from coast to coast the BofM serves\nits customers at more than 500 offices\/The value of \\\nthe buildings owned by the Bank,, together with\nfurniture and equipment, is shown on its books at\nOTHER ASSETS: These chiefly represent liabilities of\ncustomers for commitments -made by the Bank on\ntheir behalf, covering foreign and domestic trade\ntransactions \u25a0'-.    ......    .....    .\nTOTAL RESOURCES WHICH THE BofM HAS TO MEET\nITS OBLIGATIONS.    ...    .    '.    . \u2022 .    .\n456,266,24-1.22\n13,391,604,71\n29,383,602.12\nWHAT THE BofM OWES TO OTHERS:\nDEPOSITS: While many business firms, manufacturer1,\n. merchants, farmers and people in every type of business have large deposits with the BofM, the bulk\nof the'money on deposit with the Bank is the savings\nof well over a million private citizens. The total of\nall deposits is   .    ...    , ....    ,     ,   ...\nB_NK NOTES: BofM bills to circulation, which ore\npayable on presentation, amount to   .     ...\nOTHER LIABILITIES: Miscellaneous items, representing mainly commitments undertaken by the Bank\non behalf of customers in their foreign and domestic\ntrade transactions     ...     .     .    .'.' .     .\nTOTAL OF WHAT THE BofM OWES ITS DEPOSITORS\nAND\/OTHERS ,.    .   ..\"',.'  '.    ...    a    ..   11,908,441,407.43   v\nTO PAY Ali IT OWES, THE BofM HAS TOTAL OT-      '\nSOURCES,.AS SHOWN ON THE LEFT SIDE OF THIS\nSTATEMENT, AMOUNTING TO ...    .   Y   .    .    .    1J91,3M,\u00ab\u00bb,07\nwhich Means that the BofM has resources; \" W\\?A\\\nOVER AND ABOVE WHAT IT pWES.AMOUNTING TO   S   82^39^40.64  '\n. This fjg'ure of $82,939,240.64 is made up of money subscribed by the shareholders\nand, to some extent, of profits which have from time to time been ploughed back into tlie\nbusiness to broaden the Bank's services and to give added protection for the depositors. \"'\"\n\u25a0;r,':,.   .        ,       .\"   ,*,.    '*      * -   \u25a0-\u25a0        '\nEARNINGS \u2014 After paying all pvethead expenses, including staff\nsalaries, bonuses and contributions to the Pension Fund, an?after\nmaking provision foi contingencies, and for depreciation of Bank\npremises, furniture and equipment, the BofM reports earnings\nfor the twelve months ended October 30th, 1948, of  .    ,\nProvision for Dominion Income and Excess Profits Taxes and\nProvincial Taxes  ,     .     ,-'.',    '.     .     .     .     ....\nt    BAto,s\u00ae.M\n2,980,000.00\n*      5,459,f369.54\nLeaving Net Earnings of 1    .   '.\nThis amount was distributed as follows:\nDividends to Shareholders .-. . .\nBalance to Profit and Loss Account\nB; of M  EARNINGS  l^N  THE  SHAREHOLDERS'   INVESTMENT\nI .On each dollar of the shareholders' money Invested In the\n3,600,000.00\n1,859,669.54\n$1,991,380,648.07\n'\u25a0:..    I\nAND HOW\nTHEY WERE\nDIVIDED\nBank of Montreal, the Bank earned 10.17 cents in 1948\nJ To\nI To\nTAXES .    .    .\nSHAREHOLDERS\nSURPLUS    .    ,\n. 3.59 cents\n. 4.34 cents\n, 2.24 cents\n@CUUUM* ^(^'IBn^,.. WORKTnQ1 WITH   CANADIANS   IN   EVERY   WALK   OF   LIFE   SIN CE   I 8 I 7\ny taxe over\n-^      .-    .       .\n'\"A:A\"?\"?. '::\".'':i\n\u25a0   '   \u25a0    ' .     \u25a0   -V    '         '' '            ',,-                            .                                   ,'?-.'-\n.-   , hit'k\n...                   1                                                                   ,\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30, 1948\nhLove1 FroMenis\nBy JANJ5 ATKNSpN\nParents Threaten to Disown Daughter\nIf She Marries Man of Different Faith :\nWhen a girl's parent oppose her ithat   difficulties   and   differences\nchoice   of  a jhusband   so   bitterly melt away in some magic fashion,\n\"that they .threaten to close the door\n| of her home against her. if she per-\n.'slats .in marrying'him, should, she\nI follow her heart or be brow-beaten\n\u2022 Into yielding?   .        '\u25a0'\"'   \u25a0\u2022 < -r.\nI   That is the question a girl named\n.\"Becky\"  is  struggling  with.  She\ntells me' that she and a .certain\nyoung man, both ot. them being\n\u2022-twenty, five, have been going to-\n, gether for over a year,;\nj i \"When we were merely dating,\"\nI she writes, \"my parents had no\nobjections, but when we became\nserious and talked of being married, they objected strongly because\nof our different nationalities and\n*:falths. This young man's parents\n\u2022are foreign, but they treat me very\n!: nicely. He is willing to give up.hls\nreligion for me,.\n,    \"My parents Said that if I married him, they will dispwn me and\nI will not be permitted to come\ni'hbme, It is very hard for me to\nmake a decision as I have a very\n-good home,' but I feel that if I\n' leave this fellow who is very good\nto me, I will never.be happy with\nj another.    \"\u00bb ,\n' \"Should I give Up my family for\nhim or vice versa?\"\n1   Now to tell any girl 'definitely\nthat she should renounce her parents or, on the other hand, the\n1 man she loves, would be a respon-.\nibility no outsider should take on.\nThe   decision   as   to   which-  she.\n\u00abhould give up, if she must give\nup one oc the other, must in the\nlast analysis be the girl's own.    ,\nWi, All that any third person can do\nis to point out a few of the factors\n\u25a0 in the situation, and then let the\ngirl weigh them in her own mind\n.and decide which way the scale\n\u25a0 'tips. ';\"\nTo   begin   with,   has   \"Becky*;\ncarefully considered the difficulties\n''that inevitably lie in the path of\n'two people who marry under the\ncircumstances   she   describes\u2014that\nIs,  when  nationalities  and  faiths\nare at variance? To people in love,\nit all looks very simple. Because\n;they love each other, they assume\nThis, however, is rarely the case.\nInstead, the differences that can be\nso lightly disregarded in the early\ndays of the romance are aU too apt\nmerely to lie in wait for the unwary married couple and rise,up\nto plague them after the first happiness of marriage has worn oft\nThen,1 unless the two people have\nlooked ahead far enough to have\nfigured out ih.-advance .ways of reconciling their differences, the\nmarriage -is very likely to go on\nthe rocks, for beliefs, convictions\nand ways of life that are Implanted\nin a person's- early \u25a0 years are not\neasily, discarded as those in love\nare apt to think.\nFinally, if her marriage fails, the\ngirl may find herself alone, with\nno home of her own left and her\nparents' home still closed:to her\nbecause she flouted.their wishes;\nThat is the pessimistic l side of\nthe picture. The optimistic aide is\",\nthat I doubt very much If there are\nmany parents who would hold out\nindefinitely against their own flesh\nand blood purely because a marriage has been entered into in defiance of their wishes. Such parents\nmight hold on to their anger and\nbitterness for a period, but in most\ncases they finally come around and\ntacitly agree to forget the feud\neven though they still withhold,\ntheir wholehearted approval.\nWhat it all bolls down to Is\nthis: If a girl has taken fully info\naccount the handicap the must\novercome in a marriage which\ntries to bridge the gap between, two\npeople with basic differences in\nbelief, and has thus, so far as pes'\nBible, insured herself against unhappy surprises after marriage, it\nseems to me her marriage, even\nthough unblessed by her parents,\nhas a good chance of making her\nhappy. It seems to me also, that\nthe chances in most cases would be\nvery good for an eventual reconciliation with the parents.\nBut only the girl herself can de.\nelde whether those chances- are\nworth taking.\nThe doctor Ib not concerned over\nwhafhappens to be the fashionable\nfigure in any particular year, or\nthat. elegantly. slender waistlines\nare de rigueur this season. No, his\nonly purpose in having you take\noff excess weight and waistline W\nfor reasons bf health\u2014so if he puts\nyou on a diet, stay ion it. It will\nnot only mean a longer life, but a\nhealthier one.   .\nBy IffiRMAN N. BUNDESBN, M.D.\nFinds That Diagnosing Appendicitis\nIn-Older Folk a More Difficult Job\n; Since I was a medical student,\nand that was many years ago,,we\nhave gone a long way in the man-\n' agment of' acute appendicitis and\n| now,results are fairly satiBfactory,\nwith one exception. This exception\n' is thcfailure to recognize and treat\npromptly appendicitis in the older\n' group of patients, .particularly those\nover the age of 40.   \u2022 -.-'.,\nWe have found out that elderly\npersons with appendicitis develop\nthe condition slowly. Often the patient may not even look sick during an attack. However, the condi-\n- tion progresses rapidly and, by the\nfourth day of the disorder, the appendix may have broken open, discharging its contents into the cavity of the abdomen, resulting in\nperitonitis.\n8YMPT0M8 Not.TYPICAL\nThen, too, the: older patient with\nappendicitis often delays in seeking attention,- Unfortunately, the\nSymptoms are not typical, as they\nare in young persons, and a correct\ndiagnosis Is difficult; and, as I have\nmentioned, breaking of the appendix  develops very  early.\nProbably the most Important contributing factor to the bad outcome\nin these persons, is self-treatment\nm\nIkei\/TdllMe\nHear tho, aimplo ruloa of tha\nRobin Hood Flour Contest thnt\noffors $90,000.00 in caah prizoa-\n$1,750.00 ovory wook! Wlrinoro\n, announced ovory Monday.\nCKLN \u2014 10:45 am.\n(Trans-Canada Network)\nEvery Mon.-Wed.-Fit\nand the taking of laxitlves at home\nprior to entering the hospital. Not\nonly is the delay dangerous, hut\nthe use of the laxatives may make\nrupture ot the appendix more\nlikely. . ,\u2122 -',-'\nABDOMINAL PAIN\nThe usual symptoms of appendicitis consist of pain in the right\nlower part ot abdomen, together\nwith tenderness, on pressure on\nthis area, and some stiffness or\nrigidity of the muscles; The white\ncells in the blood area are, as a\nrule, Increased, and there may be\nfever. Sickness at the stomach and\nvomiting often but not always\noccur.\nIf there Is any suspicion of apt\npendie'Itls, and a definite diagnosis\nis n'St possible, an operatlon.should\nneverthless be carried out promptly, If the patient ahould have an\nattack of appendicitis and recovers\nfrom it without operation, the appendix rpay best be removed during the period when no symptoms\nare present ..\nThere are a number of conditions\nof the bowel which may contribute\nto the development of appedidtls,\nauch aa a blocking of the bowel,\ndue to narrowing of the passageway through -it, \u2022\nWEAK SP0T8 .\n- Elderly persons commonly have\nwhat is known - as sUvertlculae in\nthe, appendix. These are little out-\npouchlngs, similar in appearance to\nthose which occur in- the weak\nspots of a rubber tube. .   .\nIf the symptoms of appendicitis\noccur or, better yet, if any pain\ndevelops in the abdomen, there'\nshould be no delay In. having an\nimmediate examination made by\nthe doctor.' More importantr-self-\ntreatment should not be attempted.\nBecause hundreds of people have\nnot followed this advice, they have\nneedlessly sacrificed their lives.\nQUESTIONS AND  AN8WR8\nP. S.: What is spastic colitis?\nAnswer! Spastic colitis means -inflammation of the bowel In which\nthe muscle tissue of the bowel is In\nspasm, often associated with con-'\nstipation. Because the bowel ls Irritated, it is customary in auch\ncases to use soft diets, free from\nexcessive iiber.\nWheel Unknown\nIn America\nbefore Columbus\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Dr. M. W. Stirling of the Smithsonian Institution,\nWashington, D. C, said there wss\nno basis in the theory that the wheel\nwas unknown in America before the\narrival of Columbus. He told the\nRoyal Canadian Institute centuries-\nold children's toys, mounted on\nwheels, were foUnd on recent scientific expeditions to Tehuantepec,\nMexico.\ny^i^:.i^^t%::\nBy IDA JEAN KAEN\nDoctors P\/ove Excess V^eight a Burden,\nMenace to Your Chance of Healthy Life\nGREEKS UNABLE TO STOP\nGUERILLA FORCES\nATHENS (AP)- Lt-Gen. Jamea\nA. van Fleet ssys the Greek Army\nls unable at present to keep Communist Guerrilla forces from invading Greek soli. The head of the United States Military Mission here\ni said ln a broadcast that the rebels\nled by Markos Vaflades are maintaining strong forces in Greece despite heavy losses because they are\nbeing reinforced from across thd\nNorthern .borders,.\n\u2022' - - ' '    - \u2022-\n-The favorite ornament amohg\nRoman women was an early type\nof Safety oin.\nIt's not.because fat contributes\nto the middle spread, and clings' to\nthe backs of the Upper arms that it\nIs a health hazard. It's because ah\nexcessive amount of fat interferes\nwith normal . functioning of the\nbody. Insurance companies consider overweight a very serious\nliability. And folks with more than\na moderate amount ot excess fatty\ntissue;,' .are turned down fqr in-\nstance.'  \u25a0\nBesides being a menace to health,\nthe excess pounds are a burden to\nlug around. They contribute to fatigue, shortness of breath and foot\ndiscomfort.\nBut when you set out to reduce,\nbear, in mind that the purpose: is\nto improve your health. That cannot be done any lopsided diet Look\nat it this way...all excess pounds\nrepresent reserde calories.-.. calories that must be turned back into enegy if the weight Is to be removed. But since you mvyo no\neffective reserve of protein to repair muscle tissue, the daily Intake\nof protein must be just as high as\nif you were not trying to draw on\nreserve calories apd reduce.\nYou do have a reserve source of\nminerals\/ but don't draw^on it or\nteeth and bones will be the losers!\nMinerals are' needed dally to keep\nteeth, bones,' blood and- the vital\ntissues up to par, And since vitamins in the diet assist in the assimilation of minerals, they too must be\nincluded daily. ' They supply the\nmagic touch and provide the spark\nthat sets the engine running and\nkeeps It humming smoothly.   '\nAll this may-give,some inkling\nof what* can happen when you go\non a reducing diet that is hot\nscientifically planned. Which bring\nus to the proteclve foods again.\nI'll bet when you come to the protective part' of these dally morale\nbuilders, you skip'blithely over it.\nThat's all rights-provided you eat\nall the essentials! Why be on- a\nsecond-rate , diet?. A 1000 to '1200\ncalorie, scientifically planned diet\ncan provide a abundance of every\nnutrient except calories\u2014the calorie shortage Is made up from the\ncalories. ln the stored fat,' and\n'pounds are turned back Into energy. Fair enough?\nBritish Seek\nAviation Treaty\nWith Mexico\nMEXICO OITY (AP)-The British Government has asked Mexico\nto- discuss an aviation treaty, the\nDepartment bf Communications and\nPublic Works has said. A group of\nBritish' aviation experts is expected\nhere.about Dec 15. for prellminaiy\nI discussions.\nWinnipeg Student\nWins Rhodes\nScholarship,\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014Peyton Lyon\nof Winnipeg, fourth year Arts student at the. University of Manitoba,\nhas been awarded the 1048-49\nRhodes Scholarship for Manitoba,\nthe; Scholarship Committee < announced, over the weekend,\nA Past President, of the University of Manitoba Students' Union,\nhe served with the RCAJf. for five\nyears before coming to the University ln 1049.\nThe smallest antelope known la\nthe Royal antelope, which ia about,\nthe size of a rabbit when full\ngrown.\n'_a__:>qifc^\nBAKE NOW for the holidays ahead\nAll the makings lor holiday baking are\nready for you at SAFEWAY\nm-yW%\u00a3~^\\ Gain precious free time for last minute before Christmas must-do's by\n.',-*\u25a0\"> \u25a0\u25a0\"       -S taking now.. .ahead of the coming holidays. Sttfeway hasall the top\nquality baking makings you need tq prepare your own family-favorite\ncakes, cookies and puddings. So'buy and bake' now for big holiday.\nappetites. And remember... Safeway low priced help make your\n.Christmas dollar go further, '\u25a0\n\u25a0 Flour-\nlb. sack\nKitchehcraft^,iPurpose;\nKitchencraft 24\nMin Hood-,,PurpMe;\nlb. sack.\n-Purpose,\n7 lb. sack\nFive Ro_e$ 49 ib sack _\nAustralian Seedless;\nWoodland; 1 lb. pkt. _\n2 lbs. 33c\n\u2014 29c\nJELLO\nOR PUDDINGS\npkts.\n25*\nWoodland; ilk pkt\nCanned Foods\nPineapple Juiei,_?_?__i\n\u00bbKin28 oz., 2 tins\t\nGardenslde.\ncream style; 20 or), 2 tins ........\ngjj.ji Gardenslde,\n22*\n27*\n35*\nEveryday Values\n'lit \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0; Currants .a-wi-* !>.__\u2022\n* Shelled Pecans\ni\nPEANUT BUTTER\nBeyorly\n2f4o_-.olr.____ 57\nFresh ground;\nRolled-Oats RobtoHood; s ib. Pkt. ;'30*-\n$1.39\n17*\n65*\nAirway.Coffee ft*.\u00a3J\nPie Filler.'f^Tll _____   17*\nMarmalade $T&\u2122\u2122.\nPrices Effective\nNoy. 30th to Dec. 4th\nTender and juicy... guaranteed to please every time.\nStanding Rib Roast '*$$\u00bb w\u00abS \u2014lb- 55c\nKOUnCl    btCdK or Roast- Be8f\/ Blue Brand;  LB. 5\/C\nBlaCie   RlU   ROSSI  Beef, Blue Brandr LB. 45\"C\nSirloin Steak \u00b0r &$$% Bran* ___\u2014___b. 59c\nWo reserve tho right to limit quantities.\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n \"It Pays To Buy Quality\"\nGet In on These \u2014\nPre-Christmas\nValues\nFOR WOMEN\n.-'   Brown and Black Calf\nPumps. Regular $13.75 for\n*9\"*s\nBlack Suede Sandals\nRegular $12.50 for\nblack Suede Ankle Strap\nPumps. Regular $9.95 for\n$\"\u00bb.95   '\u25a0'\nFOR MEN\nBlack Balmoral .Oxfords.\nRegular $9.95 for\n$\"f .95\n- Tan Blueher Oxfords.\nRegular $8.95 for\n$\u00a3.95\nAnd a Wide Selection of\nRubber Footwear\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLeaders In Footfashion\nEstablished 1904\nKaslo Church Club\nHolds Bazaar\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014The Service Club\net St Andrew's United Church held\na successful tea and bake sale In\nthe United .Church Hall.\nCommittees in charge were:\nBake table\u2014Mra. R. D. Gardner,\nMrs. Richardson, Mrs. 3. R. Tinkess\nand Mrs, C, L EkdahJ.\nSewing table-^-Mrs, G. Waugh and\nMrs. C Lind, Jr.\nMiscellaneous table\u2014Mrs. A. Bay.\nJngton and Mrs. E. Aldous.\nRefreshments and tea tables\u2014Mrs.\nJ. Strachan Jr., Mrs. E. South, Mrs.\nB. Anderson, Mrs. W. Drayton, Mrs.\nWhltting and Mrs. Kamagija.\nFRINTON, Essex, Engalnd (CP)\u2014\n\u00bbfresh flowers on the waiting room\ntables ot Frlnton Railroad atatlon\nbrought a British Railway Executive commendation to the station-\nmaster on his \"artistic\" touch.\nlt'j\u00a3Fur.Coot Time\nSee Our\n\u25a0 Selection Of Fine Furs\n'i?'    For You\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nNelson Social\n\u2022 Mrs. Gordon Hallett, Medical\nArts Apartments, spent the week-1\nend at Robson, guest of Mr. andi\nMTs. Robert Waldie and Mrs. Leslie\nCraufurd.\n\u2022 Rev. Father Wilfrid and C. J.\nWalls of Trail v(slted the rectory of\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate\nlast week,\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Williams, 621 Second\nStreet, is a patient in the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital with an Injured arm.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs..Gordon Burns,\nLatimer Street, have returned from\nVancouver where Mr. Burns has\nbeen a patient in a Vancouver hospital for a few weeks.\n\u2022     By Mrs. KJ. Vi&neux\n\u2022 George W. Steele) Silica\nStreet, spent the .weekend at the\nhome of his son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr.; arid Mrs. Fred Steele, to\nvisit the former who Is a patient in\nthe Trail-Tadanac Hospital following an operation last week,\n\u2022 Rev. Father' Edward Doyle\nhas returned to Creston after attending the funeral of his mother\nin London, Ont.\n\u2022 Mrs. James Carey of Edmonton arrived Sunday to attend the funeral of her nephew, Charles Mad.\nden, which took place Monday\nmorning. .-'\u25a0\"'.\n\u2022 Miss Susan Tawse ls spending\na week in Vancouver.\nCivilization\nJust a Tooth\nAche to Eskimo\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Civilization\nmay be good for some people, but\nfor Canada's Eskimos it spells only\ntrouble\u2014dental variety.\nDr. R; J. Tickle,.Australian dentist who has spent his Summers\nsince 1940 travelling in the Canadian Arctic, says Eskimos are living\noh a restricted diet which plays hob\nwith their .teeth because many -of\nthe natural game animals are\nprotected.\n' Instead of fatty foods and meat,\nthey are eating more and more\nproteins and carbohydrates with a\nhigh : sugar content Such a diet\ncauses a \"complete breakdown'' of\nthe Eskimos' teeth In a very short\ntime.\nSince 1940,-Dr. T|ckle, a faculty\nmember, of the University of Toronto, has travelled from Aklavlk to\nHudson's Bay filling cavatieS and\ndoing extractions for the Eskimo\npopulation.\nThis Summer he spent at the\nAnglican mission in Aklavlk 'catching up with the year's decays.'\nThere is no resident dentist at the\nFar Northern town so he has his\nwork cut out for him to attend as\nmany of the nativea in the Mackenzie-Bay region as possible.\n\"Inherently the Eskimo have excellent teeth, not subject to decay.\nHowever, marked deterioration\nof their teeth ls now evident\"\nHe said the Dominion Government is becoming more health conscious abOift its wards, the Eskimos,\nand is considering adding dental\ncare to the large-scale medical\nservices.\nBut Dr. Tickle thinks this ls\nonly half the solution. A balanced\ndiet must go hand in hand with\nfrequent dental care for healthy\nteeth. '\n. li     sj .       \u25a0'\u25a0  i \u2014-\u25a0'   i'\"' \u25a0-\n. BIRMINGHAM, England (CP)-\nPublle clocks here, aip having the\npanels between 8 and 10 and 4 and\n6\u2014Britain's peak electricity consumption periods\u2014painted black to\nremind people w_n they must\nsave power. \"People glance . almost automatically rft clocks,\" said\na town council offlclaL _>\nW QUAKER OATS\nFOR HEALTH\nServe a \/\/ot Breakfast of\nQUAKER OATS EVERY DM1\nPre-Christmas\nFood Sale\nStarts To-day\nj       To Saturday This Week\nat the\nLIBERTY\nYOUR FLYER IS ON ITS WAY!\nWed at Kaslo,\nCouple Honeymoon\nIn United States\nKASLO, B.C. \u2014 A charming wedding' of wide interest was held in\nSt. Andrew's United Church at 4:30\np.m. on Nov. 25, when Elsa Mildred,\nyounger daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nAlex AugUstine of Kaslo was united\nin marriage to Robert A., youngest\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Lougheed of\nAinsworthi\nThi church was artistically dec.\norated With potted ferns and an\narched trellis of pink and white\nroses lighted with a background of\ntall white tapers before which the\nbridal party stood..\nGiven ln marriage by her father\nAxel Augustine, the bride was\nbeautiful in a white floor length\nmarquisette gown, fashioned with\ntight bodice, short sleeves and full\nskirt,, the waist length embroidered\nnet veil was held in place-with\na dainty ruffled halo, hand crochet elbow length mittens. A single\nstrand of pearls with pearl earrings\ncompleted her attire. The bride's\nflowers were a spray design of red\nroses with white satin bows.\nThe bridesmaid, Miss Beatrice\nFill was charming in a sky blue\nsheer gown with long sleeves, full\nskirt with ruffled hem line and\nmatching blue halo headdress, her\nflowers were pink carnations held\nWith pink tulle.\nThe groom was attended by his\nbrother Lome H. Lougheed.\nRev. C. O. Richmond officiated\nand Mrs. A. L. MacPhee presided at\nthe organ.\nDuring the signing of the register\nMrs. F. W. Webber rendered , \"I'll\nWalk With You.\"\nFrank Richardson of Castlegar\nushered the many friends of the\nyoung couple to their seats.\nA reception was held In the home\nof the bride's parents, The living\nrooms were decorated with pink\nand white streamers from which\nhung dainty wedding bells, lighted\nwith white tapers. The bride's table\nwas covered with a beautiful hand\ncrochet cloth, centred with a three-\ntier wedding cake embedded in\npink tulle, in which roses were\nfolded. Silver vases with pink and\nwhite carnations completed the\ndainty arrangement\nThe wedding cake Was cut by the\nbride and groom, the toast to the\nbride was proposed by Rev. C. O.\nRichmond and responded to by the\ngroom.\nThe bride's mother wore a pearl\ngrey costume with brown accessories and a corsage of deep pink carnations.' The, grooms mother ..wore\na,wine costume with hat,eh tone\nand a corsage of pink carnations.\nThe serviteurs were:.- Mrs. J.\nMoody, Mrs. M. Thomander and\nMiss Sonja Augustine.\nThe bride's gift to the groom was\na gold cigarette case, while the\ngroom presented his bride with a\ntravelling case. ,-.'-\u25a0\nOut of town guests were Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Lougheed, Westbrldge,\nB.C., Frank Richardson, Castlegar,\nDouglas Vandleburg, Fernie and Mr.\nand Mrs. Lougheed, Ainsworth.\nThe bride's attire for her wedding\ntrip was grey gabardine costume\nwith shorty coat black felt tarn\nwith black suede shoes and a corsage of red roses and carnations.\nThe happy couple left for a\nhoneymoon in Spokane and points\nSouth. On their return they will reside In Westbrldge, B.C.: ,\nMany Attend\nRed Man's Feats\nCHEROKEE, N,C. (AP) \u2014 Nearly\n80 lovers of Indian lore gathered at\nthe Cherokee Reservation Museum\nfor a Red Man's feast\nThe North Carolinians. and Ten-\nnesseeans attending had their\nchoice of 39 delicacies.\nThe menu included:\nDrinks\u2014sassarfas tea and hickory\nnut milk. Breads\u2014made from chestnuts, wild potatoes, hominy and\nbeans. The main course\u2014roast bear\nand barbecued rattlesnake.\nADpiTIONAL SPECIAL\nNot Advertised in the Flyer\nMaple leaf Flour\n7 Ib. bog with PRE. U. S. PILOT CAP,  .     JJQ*\nValue $-.50, for ___ \u2014-.\u2014 JX\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30, 1948 \u2014 S\nWomen Run\nSchool lo\ntrain Clowns\n\\\n'\u25a0\u2014 Paris showgirls act before television camera\nin London after, donning hastily-ordered brassieres. British decided \"semi-nudes\" were not for English\n. ,.,,'as       .eyes. Left to rights Ivano Grenuer, Maggie Clarion, Christian McCormick.        w \u25a0  \u2022\nArthur Gbdfrey Expected to Enjoy\nLasting Success Like Bing Crosby\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD^(AE)\u2014Radio star\nArthur Godfrey, here for a special\nair show, shook his famous red head\nat movie offers.\nThe salty personality of radio told\nme he. has received some' film nibbles, but figures the screen is not\nfor him\u2014yet. \"I'm not In; a position\nyet to get what I want,\" he said. I\nwant a producer to come to me and\nsay 'I've, heard you for quite a while\nand I know what kind of a. guy you\nare.'i I've i seen too many radio people-flop In pictures.\"\nGodfrey   has   the   same . easy\nwarmth of Bing Crosby, and It's my\nguess he'll some day enjoy .a similar success. In films.     .\nBRUSH   DEAL:-,'\n\"Fuller, Brush GlrL\" Thafs the Intriguing project planned by Producer-Director SS.'rSylvan Simon as a\nfollow-up to his Smashing. success\nwith' Red- Skelton. There'll be a\nsearch for 'the.: right \"girl\" for the\ntitle; role, :but' don't be' surprised lf\na famous redhead lands the part ,\n: Frank Buck Is off. to bring;.'em\nback alive again, after his stint in\n\"Africa Screams.\" He'll sail'up the\nNile to the Sudan and hopes. to\nbring back a coUple of white rhinos.\nHe' figures he can retail them for\n$12,000 apiece.\nDanny Kaye tells about being\nat the Paris Ballet recently and\nhearing a voice from the boxes\nshouting: ','Hey, you illly-looklng\ncreep', what are you doing here!\"\nDanny  gazed   upward   and   law\nRefuse Fir*\nInsurance to\nSeaforth Families\nVANCOUVER, B. C. , (CP)\"-Insurance: companies are cancelling\npolicies of tenants, at .the Seaforth\nVillage, veterans' \"housinjj project,\nbecause of the danger of fire, it was\nreported Monday.:      ,\nTen days ago fire destroyed three\nhuts, made SO families homeless, and\ncaused loss of > $18,000. j Since then\nthere have been several chimney\nfires. One was reported Sunday.\nTenants i report. they: have been\nrefused new policies, and in some\ncases old ones have been cancelled\nGuns to Salute\n_uernoaPe.elly'wh0\"vacatlon,nfl ,n King's .Accession\nCHICAGO (AP) - Laugh while\nyou learn.\nThat well could, be the slogan\nof Rosalie's School for Clowns.\nThe school is run by Mrs. Rose\nWegner, a plump woman who likes\ngood, clean fun, and her, daughter\nLenore, a -girl with big, dark eyes\nand a.blonde,head full of .gags.\n\u2022 They hold classes twice: a week\nin the basement; of their home. The\nstudents put on paint and costumes\nand really have a circus.\nOne. \u2022 lad .plays an accordion.\nAnother dances with a dummy. A\nlad in an old mammy getup takes a\nbow, A pal fitted with phony arms\neight feet long smacks him on the\nbustle with a rubber hand as big\nas a catcher's mitt-\nIt seems-: odd, in; the' midst of\nsuch goings-on, to hear Mrs. Wegner say: : t,. '\u25a0.'        ' '.'\n'-'Clowning Is serious business,\"\nShe casts a sober glance at a pupil\ngoing through n drill. He wails.\nTears squirt from his trick spectacles.\n\"It takes a lot of training,\" she\nsays. \"They can't, put oii a funny\nsuit and a hat with a duck on it\nand go out there and 'wait for\nfolks to laugh. They have to plan\nacts. They have to learn, pantomime\nThey have to have three months of\ncoaching before they make their\nfirst appearance.\"\nWHAT IT TAKE8\nShe spells out, her ideas oh what\nIt takes to be a buffoon.\nThey must be tall and agile. They\nshould have'talent and\" a sense of\nhumor. They can't be.shy. They\ncan't. be' too \u25a0\u25a0 bold.' She wants no\npart of coarse men- They don't go\nover with klds^-and kids rank first\nwith her.:\nThe Wegners-^the boys call both\nof them Rosalies-started the school\neight years ago. Rosalie, Sr., had\nbeen on the Stage. Rosalie,. Jr., got\nthe knack of makeup at the Chicago\nArt Institute. Each has a flair for\nmaking odd garments,\nH you walk In at the right time,\nyou can see a man-size chicken lay\nan egg.. Or a split personality made'\nup of what seems to be one man\nand one woman glued back to back.\nOr a firecracker as big as a bucket\nFreeman Furniture Co(\nThe Home of Furniture Values\nPHONE 115 \u2014 NELSON, B.C.\nCUSHIONS\nIn Blue, Gold. Rose\nGreen and Wine.\n$3.50 and up\nOPEN TlL 9 P.M; 8ATURDAY \"\na\nBing Crosby has given up trying\nto interest his sons in golf. \"I guess\nit's too slow a game for'theni,\" he\nlaments. \u2022\nTITLE CHANGES\nColumbia is undergoing a rash of\ntitle changes. \"Bonanza\" Is now\n\"Greed,\" because it was feared Easterners wouldn't know what a bonanza is, \"The Lovers\" is now \"Shock\nProof.\"\nTo Throne\nOTTAWA. (CP) \u2014Guns will roar\nin 11, Canadian cities Dec. 11 as a\nRoyal salute'to the 12th .anniversary\nof King George's accession to the\nthrone.     . '\u25a0: .\u2022\u2022>    '\nActive and reserve army artillery\nunits will fire 21-gun salutes at.noon\nin the.nme Provmclai capitals, Ottawa and Vancouver'\nTOMORROWS DINNER\nGrape-Fruit Juice   y\n\u25a0 Veal! Balls en Casserole\nBaked Potatoes   . Chopped Spinach\nVegetable Aspic Salad with\n- Mayonnaise   .\n' Lemon Coconut Cake\nbattte or. Tea    i   Milk (ChUdren)\nAll Measurements Are Level\nRecipes (Serve Four\nVEAL BALLS on CASSEROLE\nCombine 1 lb.- chopped raw veal\nwith 2 sliced onions, 6 sprigs parsley and 2 slices fat salt pork. Then\nput' through the food chopper. Add\n1 unbeaten egg, 1 tsp. salt, % tsp,\npepper and\" % tsp; thyme' or maj-\norani.-Mix thoroughly arid stir until \u2022 light and. smooth.' Shape into\nballs., Roll \u2022 in flour and brown in\nvegetable or meat fat. Transfer to a\ncasserole. To the drippings in the\nfrying pan add 1 c. soup stock, or\nuse 1 bouillon cube dissolved in 1\nwater. Cook and stir until\nsmooth. Pour' over the veal. balls.\nCover and bake 1 hr. in a moderate\noven,-350 F. Serve with potatoes\nbaked in the same oven. *\nVEGETABLE A8PIC SALAD\nCombine 1 tbsp. granulated gelatin and Vt c. cold water. Let stand\n5 min. Then add IVt c. boiling\nwater and stir until dissolved. Add\n3 tbsp. plain or herb-seasoned vinegar, 'A tsp. salt, Vs tsp. white pepper, 2 tbsp. sugar and 1 tbsp. lemon Juice. Chill until beginning to\nthicken. Then stir in % c. coarse-\ngrated raw. parrot _ c, diced celery or chopped cabbage, 1 c drain-\nBy IDA BAILEY  ALLEN\ned canned peas, and one-third c.\nsliced red 'radishes. Stir well.'\nTransfer to custard cups or, Individual ring molds, first rinsed with\ncold water. Chill until firm, about\n4 hrs..Serve on a bed of shredded\nlettuce. Garnish with parsley or\ncross. Pass mayonnaise or salad\ndressing.\nLEMON COCONUT CAKE\nMake or buy 1 thin plain cake,\nor use a sponge cake layer. If purchased, put it .into a pan In which\nItlits,, If fresfr baked, leave it in\nthe pan.\" Then make up 1, package\nlemon pie filling according to directions on the package, 'adding 'A\ntbso. butter. Taste, 'and If not:suf-.\nftctently sweet, add a little sugar.\nPour over the cake, and sprinkle\nthickly with shredded coconut.\nChill until the lemon topping is\nfirm. Then cut in squares or wedges and serve....\nTRICK OF THE CHEF\nAdd a few stoned red cherries to\nthe topping tor lemon coconut\ncake. Very de luxe.\nThe Bride: and^Grbbm\nWore Boots     v\nDENVER (AP) \u2014 Thebrldewore\nboots. So did the groom.\nThe cowboy boots helped, them\nthrough their-wedding ceremony. \u25a0\nWhen- MaryLou van Line married\nWilliam , E. Gallagher Sunday,\neverybody was - on horses. The\ncouple got the idea from the start of\ntheir romance two, years ago in a\nbridle path ln'Staten^Island^N.Y. .\nThe: ceremony was ' interrupted\nbriefly when- the bride's Palomino\nhorse and the groom's pinto pony\nstarted nipping eath other.\nThe horses made up for it-by sld.\nling together just as the ceremony\nended so the bride and groom could\nexchange the traditional kiss.\nTo Erect Bulletin\nBoard in Kaslo\nKASLO, B.' C.\u2014The Kaslo an<fn\nDistrict Women's Institute met In,\nthe home of Mrs. Templeton and de- ,\nelded to send Christmas cards to all\nshut-ins, and a parcel pt Christmas\ncheer also, to a shut-In.\nIt was decided to sponsor the,,,\nerection of a bulletin board in a\nprominent place in the city..\nThe annual meeting ot the Institute will be held Dec. 10. Mr. Stephenson was appointed auditor.\nA delicious tea was served by V\nPresident Mrs.. Stephenson and.\nMrs. McGregor as hostess. .'\u25a0\u2022;\nExtend Lectures\nVANCOUVER,   (CP)-rThs  Unl--',\nversity ot British Columbia Extension Department has invaded a new\ndomain.  -.-\u25a0..!\nThe Department will give lectures ln everything from modern\nmethods of lubrication to international affairs to prisoners at Oakalla Prison Farm this year.\nTen lectures will be given by V.\nB. C. professors and prisoners will-\nattend on a voluntary basis.\nthat sends up a heavy run-for-\nyour-life smoke signal and thea\ngoes off with a punny pip.\nAll of  which  may  show  whys\nthere is \u00ab0 hooky problem. '\nRosalie, Sr., says she now Is work- \u2022\ning with 30 young men. They work\nor go to college ... The school gets\nnight and weekend clown jobs.for'\nthem at carnivals, picnics,. dances,'\nparades and church and kid parties.\nA few of them want to be full\ntime clowns. Several\"grads'' have\ngone Into night clubs and the.\ntheatre,\nWomen are barred. Why? Rosalie,\nJr., comes up with a quick positive\nanswer:  \"I don't think  girls  are\n;' funny.\" ;i ;\u25a0\nSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER:\nBee Ritchie Pitted Prunes\nReady to use from the containers, as you would apples, dates\nor figs.No cooking required. Eat them instead of candy,\nSolve.your gift problems: We will ship'1% lbs. prepaid, via\nmall, any place, in Canada, leaflets and recipes enclosed in box,\nalso alcard with Sender's name.\nDon't delay \u2014 order now from!\nBee Ritchie,      '\n1123 Vancouver Street,\n*\u201e--.- :.\u25a0 \u25a0   f  -ii Victoria, B.C. >\"\u25a0 '':'\u25a0':-.',\n'Please be sure the name and address are plainly written.\nT H R U S H. \u2014 Doris   Day,\nradio alngcr. dons bathing suit to\ndemonstrate that her figure Is\n.  pleasing aa her voice.,   - -.\n Tf\nN^tottlatlii Otitis , ?Oupstions?\nEstablishe. April 2* 1902. ' '\"*    XH$\u00ab\u00a3 * S? f *f?   *\nEstablisheu April 22, 1002.\n\"\u2022British Columbia's\nMost-Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY,   LIMITED,\n266 Baker Sty Nelson, British Columbia.\n.     Authorized as .Second Class Mail,\nPost Office Department Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTTJESDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1948\nThe Smoke Problem\nThe smoke nuisance is becoming a No. 1\nproblem in major Canadian and United\nStates cities; but other, countries are also\nhaving their troubles.\nThe \u25a0National Smoke Abatement Society\nof Great Britain has issued a statement\nshowing that the damage done there by\nsmoke amounts to around $400,000,000 a\nyear.,    \u25a0\nSmoke has always been a nuisance in\nBritain, and as early as 1578\u2014long before\nthe advent of the era known as the Indus-\n, trial Revolution\u2014Queen Elizabeth complained of the smoke coming from breweries\nin the District of Westminster, Her Majesty\nsaying she.\"findeth herself greatly greved\nand, annoyed by the taste and smoke of the\ncoales.\" The result was that the brewers\nagreed to bum wood fuel.:\nWhen Britain became an Industrial country and factories were established all over,\nthe smoke' nuisance became terrific\u2014\u00abnd\n\u2022costly. Parliament passed various laws to\nlimit the nuisance,,but little effective result;\nwas seen until tne electric era carne. Smoke,\nis one of the main causes of the notorious\nLondon fogs, and the first noticeable improvement was, when the steam system operated by the London underground railways\nwas scrapped for electric haulage. The use\n. of electricity has done much good, but nevertheless London still \u25a0 has severe'; fogs, compared with which the recent spell of mists in\nOntario was trivial. In a London fog, to say\nthat \"yoU could hot see your hand before\nyour face\" is not a figure of speech but an\nactual fact, even at noon. \u25a0   :\nThe chief damage done by smoke is to\nbuildings, which corrode under accumulated:\nlayers of dirt. It is also a serious tax on the\ntime and energies, of housewives. The National Smoke Abatement Society estimates \u25a0\nthat a Manchester housewife, for example,\nspends one hour more a week at the wash-\ntub than the housewife ih Hayrowgate,.\nwhich is a \"clean\" towni Altogether, the So^\nciety says, the extra work caused in homes\nthrough smoke adds up to around 5,000,000\nwork hours per annum.\n;   Tito's Challenge\nSpeaking before the Academy Of Arts\narid .Sciences of .Slovenia at Ljubljana, Marshal Tito again took on the Cominform.\nHe challenged the theory that Soviet\nRussia has found the only formula for establishing a purely Socialistic State. He took\nissue with the idea, on which the Cominform obviously bases its. actions, that those\nwho profess devotion to Marx and Lenin\nbut who do not observe exactly the same\nritual of worship which the Soviet employs,.\nmust be treated with the special harshness\nwhich the faithful always reserve for apostates.\nThe verbal abuse, the economic harassment to which Yugoslavia is subjected, he\ncontended,^hurts the cause of Communism\nthroughout the world. He pictured oppressed people everywhere weighing, the\nmerits of State Socialism and deciding\nagainst it because the \"people's democracies\" could not get along with each other.\nThis probably is a bit far-fetched. If\nthere are some who will be disheartened\nover the fact that the Soviet satellites, who\nhave been ,so hard for the rest of the' world\nto get along with, cannot even get along\nwith each other, more will be mildly amused\nthat Tito, heretofore hardly an exponent of\nbrotherly love in international relations,\nurges it upon Russia and the other satellites.\nLooking, Backward\n25 YEAR8 AGO\nE From Tha Dally Newa of Nov, 30, 1923\nMany boys and their fathers attended the Father\n. and Son banquet held last night. The Trinity Brotherhood were their hosts. Rev. L. Hall of .Trail and\nMayor L. H. Choquette of Nelson gave speeches.\nAt the meeting of the Nelson Protective Associ-\nStion last night, J. W. Holmes, George Horstead, Rev.\nt. H. Wright, F. R. Jelfs, A. S. Horswill and R. J.\nSteel were named Board Directors.\nClarence White of Kaslo bagged a nice deer at\nWoodberry Creek Sunday. Three Rossland hunters,\nE. G. Atkinson, Eldred Jewell, and Ben Shaw, were\nBlso successful. They brought in five deer which\nthey shot near Westbrldge In the Kettle Valley area,\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Meagher have as their guest\n- Mrs. Angus Davies of Kamloops.\n40 YEAR8 AQO\nFrom The DaUy News of Nov, 30, 1908\nA large crowd attended the New England supper held at St. Paul's Church last evening. After the\ndelicious supper, Scotch stories and songs by Capt.\nRobertson were highly appreciated, as well as the\nOpen to any reader, Names af parsons aaKIno\nquestions will net he published, Thero la no\nsharps for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL sxeept when there la\nobvloua'necessity for orlvaoy,\nSubscriber, Trail\u2014Regarding your questions as to\n: where ybu may have dress shirts made to order,\na reader has kindly forwarded the following address:\"Messrs. Olbbsrds and Sons, Howe Street,\nVancouver, B. C.\"   ,     : '\u25a0; <    >\nMrs, A. W., Klmberley\u2014Could you please tell me If\n'..-:' there Is any way of re-doing dill pickles that\nare.too sslty?\nYou might try taking them out of present solution and re-doing them in brine which bas not got\nsny sslt added. ' i'';\nMrs. A. 0. M\u201e Chapman Camp-Please give me an\n.    address where I could get particulars tor taking\na correspondence courso In typing and book-\n..   keeping. -.-\nWrite to Miss A. B. Miller, Welter Building.\nVictoria, B, C. t\nR. B., Nelson\u2014Please give me the address of the\nWar Assets Corporation In Vancouver.\n1108 W. Georgia Street Vanacouver, B. C.\nX. V. Z., Ainsworth\u2014A reader has kindly forwarded\nthe following recipe for making fudge with\nflour:   .....\u25a0,-,'\nChocolate Fudge: Two cups of white sugar, one-\nhalf cup of milk, one-third cup of cocoa, one-halt cup\nof butter; boll this until it hardens when dropped In\ncold water and then add one cup of flour and pour\nin pan tq harden.\nLETTERS TO THE\nEDlTOi\nLetters may bo published over a nom de\nplume, but the actual name.of the wrlter'must\nhe given te the Editor aa evidence of good faith.\nAnonymous letters go In the waste paper basket\nProtests Council Action\non Nelson Playground\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Would you please find room for the following letter on behalf of the playground property now\nunder discussion. '\nStrangely enough, this matter touches several\nphases of our way of life, of which we boast so\nmuch. In the first place, we call ourselves Christians,\nyet it was Christ who took a little child on his knee\nand during His discourse, said: some very harsh\nthings about those who offended the likes of 'the\nlittle one He held to His breast\u2014and believe me,\nthe offence begins when we fall to give them decent\nplaces to play ln In their spare time.,\n- Second\u2014the Financial Post of a few weeks ago\nranked Nelson, B.C., on the New York .Stock Exchange very'high as a financial asset-The City is\nnot broke by any means and its credit is good, so\nwhy the sudden need to sell the children's playground? Third\u2014I suppose there is no doubt that\nlegally the City can sell this property it lt chooses,\nyet by this very fact, It could also decide against\nselling by -reason of Its being a playground. In fact\nIt could-and I say should, have used Its legal rights\nto see to It that this ground was made safe forever\nas a playground for the kids of this district -\nIt is one of our chief assets that the, citizens have\na right, a sacred right, to' voice their opinions and\n'be heard and that without the use of legs! talent\nbut the reality of this is fast dwindling to a mere\ndream. The Council replies \"that lt will amend the\nzoning bylaw, making the Fourways Park area a\nbusiness district.\" This act ls worse than stupid.\nBusiness district? Why there isn't, and isn't likely\nto be, anything resembling a business within blocks\naround the site. The nearest business is five blocks\naway, a small grocery store.\nIf the City Council of today can get by with\nthis deal what assurance have we that the Council\nof a future time will not, if the occasion arises, sell\nLakeside Park unless It is legaly secure.\nI hope the Council will realize they have made\na mistake ln the matter of the. playground and offset this mistake by giving it back to the kids. Aid\nSutherland, who pointedly refused to second the\nmotion to tbe amendment and strengthened his\nresolution by desiring his refusal to go on record,\nls to be thanked for his stand and I hope he will\nbe able to help see the matter settled the right\nway\u2014by giving the playground back to the kids.\nALEC GEO. MARSHALL, Nelson.\nEditorial on Tax\nRouses Trai I ite's Ire.\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Never in my life before has my ire been\naroused to such an extent that I found it necessary\nto use the safety valve provided by writing a \"Letter\nto the Edlor,\" but as I was eating my \"luxury meal\"\nTuesday I read your editorial. In It you stated that\nthe 3 per ceht tax applied only to luxuries and\nunesientials, lf my memory serves me correctly.\nObviously you are not one of those unfortunates who\nhas to live oh restaurant meals. I suppose that one\ncould survive on sandwiches snd coffee, but to say\nthat a meal over 51 cents was a luxury is going a\nbit too far. Why the' man who has not a home is\nthus penalized ls something that ls impossible for\nme St least to understand.\nConvention, and the snow capped hills around\nthese parts make it difficult to believe that clothing\nla anything but a necessity either.\nThrough a habit formed in my latter years I\nfind shaving to be almost a necessity, but perhaps\nI COULD overcome this. I have already given up\nthe luxury of tobacco ahd bottled beer\u2014even that\nbrewed ln Nelson.\nSPENDTHRIFT, Trail, B.C.\nmusical program by Miss Sturgeon, N. S. Kee, 0. C.\nWelker andRev. T. F. Ferguson.\nWilliam Orultehfleld and William .Wilde of Salmo are in town for a few days On a business trip.\nD. C, Coleman, retiring Superintendent of the\nC.P.R., was presented with a lovely cabinet of silver\nlast night by the local heads of the C.P.R. R. E.Lar-\nmour made the presentation speech.'During the day\nthe office staff presented Mrs. Coleman with several\npieces of chins and cut glass, '\nW, J. Brandrlth will speak on the subject of\nfruit culture at the Farmers' Institute meeting here\nWednesday. .\u00bb.-\nTltam^TnaAiin.\nEXACTING FIND\nYou look your best lh this! A\nshlrtfrock, very new-season with\nsmooth-hipped gored skirt, rounded\ncollar and yoke tabs. Pattern 9455\nis sure success to sewl .\nPattern 0455 comes In sizes 34,\nI, 40, 42,\u00b0 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 takes\niVt yards 35-inch.   ' \u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0    \u2022\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step,\nOUI\nNews of the Day\nRATE8; 22o lino, 27o llne black face type; larger typs rates on\nrequest Minimum twe lines, 10% tflacomit for prompt payment.\n\u25a0#TflIlll!(llll!|illBI\u00bbIIIII\u00bblI\nRedeemer Service Club Tea and\nBazaar, Parish Hall, Wed. Dee- 1st\nFollow  hockey  in the  Hockey\nNews on sale at WAIT'S,\nIf you want that wood sawn now,\nPhone 12B0-H. -\n,.i\u00b0-$-.A',,.^^^^\nIN ST. PAUL'S UNITED OHURCH, A N D    GENTS'   8KATE8    JUST\nARRIVED. ..\nGREENWQOP'8   '\nmm\nOld papers, ,15c; bundle, Lay Ip\nyour supply. new, ahd cheat. Old\nMan Winter Nelson Dally News.\n- Everything in snow shovels. Long\nand, D handled, wide galvanized\nscoops, Soo Line show and ice\nscrapers,. Ice picks: HIPPERSON'S.\nTrade your gun In eh anything in\n(he store. JACK BOYCE,\nMore.children;-rlde \"Junior\" .trl-\n.1\u00a3>1,,?r ?nd.?,WTmisi'-btli? *\"\u25a0\u25a0IS?'* eye'es than sny other kind. $12.50\nat Skllton's, 301 Baker, phone 81. \u25a0 \u201ea $14.50 af     '     \u2022..  \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\nBoard-companies pay your claims,;\npromptly. BLACKWOOD AGENCY.\n$14.S\nTHE CHIL,DREN'8 8HOP\nWill a be sway 3 months.  Place\norders immediately, before the end\nREIGN OF. DULLNESS ...\nCANADIANS NOT DULL, ONLY ACT\nTHAT WAY, DECLARES AUTHOR\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Canadians are 1 - those aspeots of their lives whloh\nnot really dull, they only feel they I   Americana deign to consider of\nhave to act that way, author Hugh I    Interest\nMacLennan told the Canadian Club,   This-has led to the \"propaganda\nMonday^ , .that depicts French-speaking Can-\nHe said Canada's whole inherited 2,da\u201e\" a, romantic backwater and\nhabit of mind must be radically,English-speaking   Canada   as   an\nchanged before she eould become a Arctic frontier..\ncoherent country,       , '^b'Imbli'c eye NU\n,\u201eT\u2122i0\u00bb^';hC\u201eTt^\u201enVrnmHrnmV\/' Canadians were hot really dull or\nPim-kfuan a^ou'-turn *\u2122\u00bb drama' stuffed shirts - the festivities that\ntizlng {hemselvea mainlv in terms i\nof the Northwest frontier.\nThe most Important step\nbe. \"in  realizing  that  at\nthere exists in Canada, a 1\ntechnique  for   making everything,g wWte. .^^ ,\u201e publio an\u201e, ^ ,\n^SSif\" *\u2122^X\"the\"b^\"Xy-\n\u2122.^\u00abnrLi? 1 \u00bb\u201e\u201e!,,'football.-final Saturday had shown.\nJ^Hnm\u00abLi,Z0r.w  ifPnr,\u00bbr,.itbat But, except for the tew times\n?w?L,f.e(.U\u00a3, kr.\u00bbl \u25a0 \u201eP\/Sr they were away from home, Cans-\ne\"   mota^\nduller'than it really is.\" He,added:|a \u2122J \u201e-,,'\nVFar too many of-us; especially    -h,s   B,\u00bb'   t   ,        t!        oW\n_*\u00a3\u25a0EL\u00ab8S\\?-J!_,t^i^'suleed oVin producing a second\".\n- ,   l-_7IT   >  i.  _r.i-- y orders immemateiy, oeiore tne end \u201e.m hmintMi hv the nniir.oman'i succ\u00abu \"\"v \"' juouuviua \u00ab \u25a0>\u00ab__--\ncolS^^\nat moderate prices, \u2122    \u25a0 \u25a0 '.. n=i =\u00bb\u00bbinin\u00ab v\u00bb, .n. m\u00bb\u00bb h\u00bb nmi *\n,_--._ -, \u201e , , \u201e     j BEATTY DELUXE IRONER AND\nSquare story-cake t ns in sets of BEATTY CLEANERS - IMM-DI-\nthree for your  Christmas cakes. 'ATE ne\\.\\very.\nLimited atook. HIPPERSON'S.    - n'c- \" '\u2022\nHand made gifts are \"always appreciated! THE CRAFT CENTRE,\n30? Baker St.:  .        , ,\"'    -\nGREENWOOD'8 HDWE.\nWhy not replace your old lamp\nshades with a new one from\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFlowers are the perfect gift for\nChristmas and .always welcome\nwhen they are from VALENTINE'S.\nSecond Nelson Scout and Cub\nMothers meet at Mrs. Wilks, 507\nCedar St. Wednesday, 8 p.m.\nNeed extra cash?. Bring in that\nold furniture, stove, piano, rug etc.,\nto the NELSON FURNITURE EXCHANGE, 520 Vernon St., Ph. 30L\nDon't overhaul your engine, install a factory guaranteed remanur\nfactured engine.\nCUTHBERT MOTOR8 LIMITED\nJUST RECEIVED A NEW SHIPMENT UNFINISHED CHESTS OF\nDRAWERS IN 3 8IZE8.\nAT GREENWOOD'8\nWhy not list your house with C.\n, M\u00bbISi\\P^*,,\u00abi? aT-idSS IW. Appleyard today. We can often\nto.'..!-??.*?**\" WM, At BURNS grrange a cash deal through  our\nmortgage facilities.\nLUMBER A COAL CO.\nSUTHERLAND'S\nFor Watch Repairs.\n401 Baker Street, NelsOn\n400-STAR. TAXI-400\nOffers   24 - hour   service.   Night\nstand at Queens Hotel Lobby.\nFrom this date, I will not be responsible tor any debt Incurred in\nmy name by, anyone other than\nmyself.   \u2022 y\n; JOE GOOTFREIND.\nThe regular meeting bf the Board\nof Trustees of the Slocan School\nNew shipment of children's ox- District No. 8 will be held Thurs-\nfords, boots, strap. Brown and black, day Dec. 2nd. 1948 at 7;3Q p.m. In\nTHE BOOTERY\nCanadian Legion general meeting\nThursday, December 2nd, 8 p.m.\nNomination of officers for 1049. All\nmembers please attend.\nDelicious home-made cakes ahd\npastries are yours for the asking at\nthe BOWLADROME COFFEE BAR.\nTRY OUR DO-NUT8.\nNew Denver, B.C.\nSee the new 1048 Model Royal\nPortable. Now In two brand new\nmodels. They sure are \"tops.\" D.\nW. McDerby, \"The Typewriter and\nAdding Machine Man,\" 536 Ward\nStreet, Nelson, B.C.\nRESERVE ARMY\n1.11. HAA Bty. RCA, will hold-a\nmuster parade at the Armouries on\nPay for your raffle tlcketi and Thursday 2 December at 1930 hours,\nmerchandise at Kinauction offloo In All rahks must attend this parade\nCapitol Theatre, Open today, 2 to in order to draw pay for the year\n5:30. Phone 60.\nJ. R. Watkins, quality products.\nCity dealer, Frank Reynolds, 713\nCarbonate St. District S. C. Colman, 203 Anderson St.'\n1848.\nOPEN COMPETITION\nAll entries for Canadian Legion\nBowling   ClUb   Knockout  Tournament must be'in by 7 p.m.'today.\n\u2014 :\u2014.   '   . 'Not limited to members. Good cash\nSee.our display.of novelty candles prizes.   Phone1  entries to   22S-L;\nand table .centres fbr Xmas.\nC0VENTRY8' FLOWER SHOP\nNelson.and Rossland .'\n1144-L;; 289-R-2. Watch - Wednesday\npaper for draws.\"\nthat anything you say may be used gtates\nas evidence against you.' [. Th<j'noveU|lt ia!d nl, natlve Nov,\n\" . . . Is It not a fact that If Scotia had suffered more than any\nCanada had produced a flamboy- other province from, emigration.\nant character like Winston Churchill, Ottawa would quickly have\nout him down to size and let him\nknow In no uncertain terms that j\nthere is no room In Canadian\npublic. life for anyone so un-,\nbalanced as to utter a principle [\nso clearly that anyone can understand |t?r\n\"Canadian Institutions are hot\npaying a fraction of what they\nwould pay. If they had the vision\nof a mole burrowing for grubs In\na garden,\" he aald. Average wage\nof Canadian,: teachers was less\nthan that paid dltoh-dlooers. \u25a0\n\"The reign of dullness can't, last\nforever. Canadians are too interest-\nMr. MacLennan said Canadians ing and the youth of Canada is be-\nsubconsciously tend to consider coming too impatient tor it to last\nthemselves   Interesting   only   In'much lOnger.\" \t\nCar Sales Drop\nOTTAWA (CPJ - Motor vehicle\nsales were about 10 per cent lower,\nIn the first 10 months of this year\nthan the corresponding period of\nlast year.\nSales totalled 174,314, compared\nWith 101,917 in the first 10 months\nof 1047. .\nIn another report, the Bureau of\nStatistics said the financing of\nmotor vehicle sales still Is rising.\nTrail Production\nFraser Blockade\nStalls Hundreds\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Hundreds\nof bus passengers and dozens of\nmotorists were marooned for more\nthan 24 hours during the weekend\non the Trans-Canada Highway, 125\nmiles East of here.\nThe roadway through the Fraser\nCanyon was blocked following a\nfreak snowstorm and a* rock slide.\nOne car was almost demolished In\nan avalanche of rock and snow- but\nno one was injured.\nTheatre Program\nTrail Little Theatre, will contribute to entertainment being staged\nDec. 8 in Capitol Theatre by Nelson\nLittle Theatre.\nMrs, Peter Mathisen, President of\nthe Trail amateur dramatics group,\nwill bring over as the curtain raiser, \"Catherine Parr and Henry\nvm.\" Roles will be taken by Mrs.\nF. C. Ransom and J. Huntley Gor-'\ndon. There-Is also a page,\nThe curtain raiser will usher ln.\ntwo one-act plays of Nelson Little\nTheatre, \"Heaven on Earth\" by\nPhilip Johnson and \"Family Album\"\nby Noel Coward Rehearsals are'\nprogressing well,'\nHOUSE ABANDONED\nTENANT ARGUMENT HOLDS\nGive your table the New Look,\nGenuine   California  Pottery.   New thanks\n... ,.       BRIDLINGTON, Yorkshire, Eng-:\nMany of-the motorists were big ]and, (AP)-A court'today upheld'\ngame   hunters   from   Washington, Richard Moore's claim that he isL'\nOregon and .California...  \u2022    y    ,   still the tensnt of s house he hasn't ~\nFour   hundred   bus-   passengers lived In since 1940.\nSavwSl^ilJa*!;!   The dwelling was badly damaged-\nnotL and auto camDrS lb\" Cferman bombs eight years ago\nh . . Jv I, 11S t i .-...hr.,,' a\"1* Moore moved but. It has since\n\u2666h?\u2122%h A. rSl. ff\u2122.!?\u2122l? I \"sen rebuilt-by the owners. Moore.\nLhff h\u201e thefl\u00a3Lle \u00b0  'SAirJS intended that he still has tenancy ,\nwhife   \u201e   fi\u201ent   nf   fr,,,*,.   inwed Hghts^nder the strict English'teht j\nlaws.\nwhile   a .fleet- of. -trucks-- towed\nstalled cars to Boston Bar,\nTraffic was resumed on the high\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe'wish to. express oar sincere!way,late Sunday with bus and car\nAssorted Colors.\u2014Open Stock,\nWOOD VALLANCE HDWE,\nan(l  .appreciation   to   bur. passengers moving on to Vancouver\n'X'ct\/vVbCt V V UnOCtK.\nJEWEL OF A RUGI\nMade of. diamonds! Crocheted of\n4 strands of string, or candlewlck,\nyou'll quickly have enough! Small\nsections, easy* tb handle.\nThree-color rug, so practical and\npretty in any room! Pattern 715 has\ncrochet directions.\nLaura Wheeler's Improved pattern\nmakes needlework so simple with\nits charts, photos and concise directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor each pattern to Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept, 266 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B. C. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nand ADDRESS.\nmany  friends . and '. neighbors  for j \u25a0 After the st6rm,: pilot J.im Chad\ntheir. kind words land acts of sym- j ney of Arllngtbh,; Wash,, - made a\npathy.extended to us In our.recent!forced landing in 18-Inches of snow\nGenuine Knowlton Fur Felt Hats sad bereavement In the loss of our on   the   Boston   Bar   airstrip.   He\nmake  extremely  smart gifts.  See loving husband, and father.\nalso our line of feather and velvet\ncocktail hats. ADRIAN MILLINERY\nChjuntdbL\nBy ROBERT Q.UIUEN\nI didn't try to pick my boys'\nwives; but I told 'em to try and get\nbetter women than their mother, so\nthey were ashamed to pick worse\nones.\nSAliyS.SAlLIES\n''Hurry, Harry! The breakfast is\nall hooked up.';   ,\nMrs'..M Roliek,and family)plane,\nlanded   without   damege   to\n\"It cannot be; Ssid ttytt MOore\nabandoned the house,\" \"said 'his\nlawyer, \"but rather that the house\nabandoned Moore.\"\nThe court ruled for Moore and\ngranted    him   40    shillings    ($8) -\nhis damages against the present tenant\nI for trespass. ,   >'    .\nMrs. Waif, Noted\nW.I. Figure, Dies\nMONTREAL (CP) - Mrs. Alfred\nWatt,, Honorary President of the\nAssociated Country Women of the!\nWorld and founder of the Women's\nInstitutes in the United Kingdom,'\ndied suddenly, here Monday.\nMrs. Watt, 80, retired last, year!\nfrom active work.. In 1947, she flew I\nto London to speak at the annual\nmeeting of Women's Institutes . at\nAlbert Hall. In July of that year,\nshe presided at thq international\nconference of the Associated Womeh of the World at The Hague.\nShe then returned' to Victoria, B.C.,\nwhere she ' had-ilved for several\nmonths each year.\nAt the time of her death she was\nstaying here with her son,, Sholto\nWatt. Her elder son, Robin Watt,\nM.C., had returned to Montreal a\nfew weeks previously ffom England.\nMrs. Watt was born ln CoUIng-\nwood, Ont., and was one of the first\nwomen to graduate from University\nof Toronto. After graduating, she\nentered newspaper. work . in New\nYork City. She married Dr. Alfred\nWatt and went to live in Victoria\nand at William Head, B.C., where\nher husband Was superintendent ot\nquarantines for British Columbia.\nShe was prominent in public life of\nBritish Columbia and was a-member of the Senate.of the provincial\nuniversity.\nShe and her sons left Canada for\nEngland in 1913 after the death of\nher husband, and during the First\nWorld War in the United Kingdom\nshe organized the Women's Institutes after the Canadian model.\nBetween the wars, Mrs. Watt organized the Associated Country Women of the World, an International\nalliance of Women's Institutes and\nkindred bodies in different countries, International conferences were\nheld in Vienna, Stockholm, Washington and London. Mrs. Watt travelled around the world ln 1036-37 in\nthe interests of this movement,\nAt the 'beginning of- the Second\nWorld War, Mrs, Watt was In North\nAmerica. She undertook many\nphases of war work, Including a\nregional conference ot the A.C.W.W.\nin Ottawa, and the organization ot\n\"American seeds for British soil\" in\nthe United States.-In this enterprise,-as In the Women's Institutes,\nshe received the support of Queen\nElizabeth and Queen Mary.\nHer last enterprise ln public service was to arrange, In Victoria, a\nrapid collection of clothing for relief ot flood victims in the Fraser\nValley.    .\nMrs. Watt about nine years ago\naddressed a special banquet meet'.\nin\u00bb nf the' Nelson Women's Institute.' I\nSTRINGS\nON YOUR FINGERS\nand . ..\nBELLS\nON YOUR TOES\nYou'll have a thousand little\njobs to remember right around\nChristmas time \u2014\nBut that is just the time when\nyou want to be free to enjoy\nall the pre-Christmas festivities,\nTHERE'S ONE THING YOU\nCAN GET OFF YOUR MIND\nRIGHT NOW\n. Select your.Christmas Cords from our high quality\nstock, told in two dozen lots only, no duplication, printed\nwith your name and address at na extra charge.\nFor Christmas Cards It's\nPRINTING DEPARTMENT\n [mj:\ndistrict airmen\nget distinguished\nFlying cross\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Amono 39\nRoyal Canadian Air Forse men\nInvested with the distinguished\nFlying Cross at oeremonlss were\nfour from'Tnall and one from\nCreston,\nThey were! FO. H.- D, Curtis,\nFO. J. J. MoGllllvrey, FO. T. C. K.\nWoolf and' FO. A. H. Hutchinson,\nall of Trail; and FO, V. I. Gorrill,\nCreston.\n-: WISBECH,: Cambridgeshire, Eng,\n\".(.CPlrWllbeoh Trades' Counoll has\nasked the Borough Council ''recognise those whose skill and craftsmanship have brought wealth and\nprosperity to tho town\" by appointing a trade j union representative a\nFreeman as-part of the borough's\n400th anniversary celebrations.\n[Montreal Has Snow\nCarry-Over\nFrom Last Winter\nMONTREAL (CP) - With ths\nnew season's snow yet to fall there\nls aresdy an abundance of the stuff\nin Montreal today\u2014several tons of\ntt.'    '..-'-'..'\nCity show-removal, men, busy\ntrying to Ret rid of it, are having\nonly a moderate degree of success.\nThe snow Is a carry over from last\nWinter, plied by snow removal men\nin a crevice of Martlneau quarry*\nwhich the city uses as a dump.\nThe Rest of Summer was not sufficient to melt all the snow ln the\n,   T ,      , , ,\u201e,._\nAccording, to Hindu legends,\nsugar cane was created when, a\nrajah, who wished to experience\nthe joys of heaven while still on\nearth, commanded his chief magi-\nclan to build an earthly paradise,\nH\n179-\n1948\npolicyholders' interests\nCome first\nrightly so. Policyholders ^\npay the premiums. Without\nthese premium payments , no\ninsurance company could exist.\nConsequently policyholders\naxe entitled to primary consideration in\nall matters affecting their interests.   -\nThey receive this primary consideration\nfrom \"North America\" Companies,\nwhose record for prompt and liberal\nsettlement of claims is common know.\n!\u00ab\u2022_\u00ab\u2022    ' \u25a0-\u25a0,\u201e'\nThere is no sounder Insurance protection  than  ths*  provided by  \"North\n\u2022   America\" Companies'Hre, Marine, and\nCasualty Insurance policies.\nBusiness accepted solely through\nAffntstt\u2022Broken.\nissntiira company of\nNorth America\nCOMPANIES\nCANADIAN HEAD OFFICE\u2014TORONTO\nFIRE \u2022 MARINE \u2022 CASUALTY\nService Offices throughout Canada\ninsurahc8 company op north aberica\nindemnity insurance company op north America\nthe auianct insurancs company op phlubbphia.\nwiadeiphia eire and marine insurance company\nC H I N A   P A S 5 AC E_ a Chinese sampan passes under the overhanging rear de'ok7oi' the\nU.S. aircraft carrier Princeton, part of Task' Force tt which Is visiting the U.S. naval base at Tslngtao.\nPad Submitted To Canada, U. $.\nLONDON (API\u2014A British Government source said Monday the\n| Western European Alliance has presented to the united States its draft\nof a proposed defence agreement\nj with the United States and Canada.\n1 Discussion of the terms is expected to begin ln Washington late this\nweek, the informant said. Diplomatic officials said the document, aa\nnow drafted, was a \"working paper\"\nsubject to revision ln Washington\nj talks.      ,-     ...      i.\".\nI   (Officials in Washington said the\n' Alliance's move came about a month\nbehind schedule and it is unlikely, a\ntreaty can be completed in time for\nformal submission to < the Senate\nin January).\nExact details of the document\nhave not been dlscloaed. Fbr the\nlaat month representatives of the\nWestern European Alliance coun-\nI   tries of Britain, France, Belgium,\n1    the .Netherlands and Luxembourg\nhave been working on a plan In\n'   seoret meetings here.\nInformants said the pact is cx-\n| pected to call for a pledge of mutual assistance without definite com-\n1 mittal to go to war In case of attack\non any member.\n, The Western European countries\nare expected to urge a 50-year alliance., with, the United States and\nCanada, This may meet some opposition from tbe United States which\nOnce You\nKnow How!\nMOVING\n\"Two or Three Ba&s\nof Personal Belonfeiii^s\nIs All We Need ~~-\nWEST\nTRANSFER\nDoes the Rest\nit\nNelson and District Agents for ALLIED VAN LINES\nJUST CALL 33\nFOR LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING\nBring YOUR Moving and Storage Problems to Us!\nFor Fast Efficient Service\nAnd Perfect Ease When Moving Day Is Here\nCALL\nWBT TRANSFER\nCompany\nNelson's Fuel Merchants Since 1899\nhas suggested in informal talks t\nperiod ot 10 to 15 years with a review later on the question of extension. \/\nOno of tho major problems likely to emerge in the Washington\ntalks ls the question of how far the\ndoor should be left ajar for admission of other nations.\nSome military officials have con'\ntended tbat Western defences cannot be secured without solid bases\nin Scandinavia and Southwestern\nEurope.\nIndian's Skill\nOf Tracking Finds\nAlberta Flier\nCOLD LAKE, Alta. (CP) - An\nIndian's uncanny skill in tracking\nand the stamina of a 20-man search\nparty was held responsible for the\nsaving bf George Rault, 37-year-old\nBonny ville pilot whose plane,\ncrashed last Tuesday 200 airmiles\nNorthwest ot Edmonton.\n' Rault, lost for five days in near\nzero weather' in u jungle ot muskeg\nand bush 50 miles Northwest of\nhere, Is safe in the Bonnyville Hospital, a town about 25 mlues Southwest of here. He was moved to Bonnyville from Cold Lake-Sunday, a\ntew hours after the search party\ncarried him in on a stretcher.\nReturn ot the search party ended\n36 hours ot tramping through dense\nwilderness where Rault and George\nOuimet, a passenger, crashed in si\nTiger Moth aircraft last Tuesday\nafternoon. First word of the crash\ncame Friday morning when Ouimet\nstaggered into this village settlement nearly exhausted.\nOuimet, himself injured, walked\nfor 38 hours before reaching Cold\nLake from the wreckage where he\nbad been forced to leave the Injured\npilot -    -\nIt there was an Individual hero in\nthe search party It was Pete Peche,\na 53-year-old Cold Lake Indian. It\nwas the outdoor craftsmanship ot\nPeche, whose keen eyes followed the\ntrail Ouimet left on his, walk out,\nthat led the search party to the\ncrashed aircraft.\nCpl. Tommy McNally of the Bonnyville R.C.M.P. detachment said\nthere was \"only one tense minute\nwhen we came upon the wreckage.\nWe shouted to Rault and then held\nopr breaths wondering if ho would\nanswer. For a Second tbe woods\nwere deathly silent and then we\nheard him shout back this answer.\nIn an Interview in hospital here\nRault smiled happily through blood-\nshot eyes. .<   \u201e   r\n\"I wasn't greatly worried about\ngetting out,\" he said. \"1 was confident that George would Qet out\nto civilization ond I knew that\nonce he had Issued an alarm my\nmany   friends   In   this   district\nwould organise a searoh.\"\nDuring those five days the only\nfood eaten by Rault were two Canada jays, birds about the size of a\nrobin which Ouimet shot before he\nleft thp Injured pilot.\nSee Break of Coast\nRainfall Record\nVANCOUVER, <CP)-A 12-year\nrecord^ fall of 12,38 inches of rain\nhas dampened Vancouver so far\nthis month.\nWith more rain predicted there la\na chance that the existing record\nof ' 15.86 Inches tha,t fell during\nNovember of. 1909 my be exceeded.\nThe downpour has caused flooding of basements ln many Olty and\nsuburban areas and is causing\nminor road washouts.\nPhone 144 for Classified Service\nResigns as Mayor1\nPOMEROY.. 0. <AP)r-Delmar\n(Kayo Kid Canaday threw In'the\ntowel today. Ho resigned as Mayor\nof Pomeroy, .\nThe former jrlze fighter\u2014charged with misconduct by four Pom**\nroy City Councllmen and suspended by Governor' Thomas J,\nHerbert\u2014mailed lus resignation to\nCouncil President Sidney Spencer,\n.\"I hereby tender, to the. Village\nCouncil my resignation as Mayor\nto become, effective immediately,\"\nCanaday \"wrote.'\"The inoreased demands of my private business make\nit imperative that I devote my full\ntime to it.\n'. \"My action is no submission to\nthe ridiculous charges which an Ill-\nadvised minority \u2022>\u2022-.# the. Village\nCouncil 'has tUeci against me.\n\"I am motivated soley by a desire to give again to my family and\nmy business the 1 attention which\nmy duties as Mayor have deprived\nthem of in the last months,\"\nCanaday fought 200 professional fights baok in the 1920s and\nlaid olalm to the welterweight\n\u2022 championship of West Virginia,\nHe   brought   the   same   punch\nto  politics.\nGovernor Herbert s uspended\nCanaday from office Nov. 22 for a\nperiod of 30 days on eight charges\nof misconduct. The charges had to\ndo with his handling of lines collected end with his try at buying\na I288 water cooler for the Pomeroy office of tha Stote Bureau\/of\nUnemployment Compensation.\n..'. The Mayor of Pomeroy, a village\nof 3500, draws a salary of $960 a\nyear Canaday grinned around the\nshaft of a ig blackr cigar.   -.:\n\"I get everything out ot this but\nmoney.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30,1941 \u2014 7\nReds Lose Votes\nHAMBURG, (AP)-Coramunlsts\nlost votes in Lower Saxony's communal elections, final' returnB\nshowed Monday.\nThe trend was the same as In\nthe other British-Zone States of\nNorth Rhinc-Westphalla and. Schleswig Holstein.\nThe Communists polled only\nthree per cent ot the votes in Lower Saxony compared to 5.1 per cent\nln 1040, The main political parties\nheld their relative positions.\nThe Social Democrats, who are\nleft of centre, gathered 3,071,082\nballots' or 39 per cent, to place\nfirst.    \u25a0\nThe Centre Christian Democrats\nhad 24 per cent and tne German\nPsrty, a far right group which exists only in Lower. Saxony, had 18\nper cent ... ;' * '  .-\nBEADING, England (CP)-Flrst\njrlale at a Reading -beekeeper's\nshow went to a Mr. Hives,\nSophoulis Sitting\nUp in Bed\nATHENS (AP) - Aged Premlei\nThemlstokles Sophoulis, given up\nby his doctors-as a hopeless case\ntwo days ago, aat up at the edge\nof bis bed Monday and. ate a hearty\nbreakfast      .\n'The morning bulletin issued by\nthe 88-year-old Greek stateman's\ndoctors said his \"general condition\nis very good.\"\nSophoulls suffered two severe\nheart attacks! last week and on Saturday doctors abandoned all hope\nfor him.and said he might not last\n24 hours.\nMARITZBURG, South Africa\n(CP)r-\"I wish your Lordships to\npsss sentence pf death on me,\"\nsaid a 70-year-old native charged\nwith murder. \"I do riot want to go\nto prison. I am waiting for death\"\nThe court convicted him of murder\nand sentenced him to MP years Imprisonment    \u25a0'.-'\u2022'..:'.\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR    ?'?    \" \\\nPhones:   Nelion 77; Roislond 171; Trail 1001\nConnections for;\nSALMO \u2014 KASLO \u2014 CRESTON \u2014 - NAKUSP\nB. C. Potato Growers\nTo Lose Business\nVANCOUVER, B. C. (CP)-Brlt-\nish Columbia potato growers will\nlose export business as a result of\nthe agreement announced during\nthe weekend, which will limit Canadian shipment to the U. S. after\nDec. 1.\nDuring September the Potato\nBoard bete shipped 1000 tons to the\nUnited States, and a few hundred\ntons during November.\nBoard officials don't know' how\nthe restrictions will affect exports\nto Alaska, Hawaii, Philippines and\nother U. . S. possessions. This trade\naverages about 3000 tons a year.\nCarol Sweetly\nCarol\nThe beautiful music of the Christmas Carols will soon be ringing out over the world. In order.that Nelson Dally News readers\n, may have the words to these Carols we have printed a limited\nnumber of Carol Sheets for distribution. These may be\nobtained free of charge by contacting the Promotion Department, Nelson Daily News.\nO Little Town of Bethlehem\nHark! The Herald Angels Sing\nWe Three Kings of Orient Are\nAway in a Manger\nThe First Noel\nSilent Night\nJoy to the World\n\u2022       O Come All Ye Faithful\nIt Game Upon the Midnight Clear\n\u25a0'.'\"'   '''\u25a0\u25a0>'\"\u2022\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0 \" \u25a0 ' \u25a0' \\    \u25a0\nGod Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen\nCAROL SHEETS\nfrom\nNtlsottla%^w0\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30, 1948\n36 Die in B.C.\nhr October\nCar Accidents\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Thirty-six people In British Columbia sdled as a\nresult ef automobile accidents in\nOctober this year\u2014mores than one a\nday\u2014G.H. Hood, Provincial Superintendent of Motor Vehicles, revealed Monday. .\n, .'The figure showed an Increase of\n50 per cent over traffic deaths for\nthe same month in 1047 when 24 persons were killed.. - .!\u25a0\nCumulative total of automobile\ndeaths for the first 10 months of\n1048 showed, however, a drop of\nI 4.S3 per cent below the comparable\nfigure In 1047. Up to Oct. 31 this\nyear, 144 people died on the roads\n, and highways Of the province.\nApart from deaths, the October\nreport indicates a favorable trend\nin driving. Although ther^ were\n24,600 more cars,on the roads of\nthe Province during; the first 10\nmonths of this year than in the same\nperiod iii 1047, there were only 134\nmore accidents ih the month,'and no\nincrease in the number of persons\nInjured.\nThe accident figures read 1343 in\nOctober, 1847, as against 1477 In the\nsame month this-year: Accident injuries remained at 475.\n0i| Continues\nTrading Feature\nVANCOUVER, B\/C.,(CP) V Oil\ncontinued to feature trading on the\nVancouver Stock Exchange Monday\nbut in the closing hour traders started to unload some of their holdings.\nThe average index, however,\nshowed oils had dropped only .25.\nProfit-taking had slowed but hot\nstopped the advance.\nShares traded during the morning\nsession totalled 474,000, almost exclusively In oil Stocks. .\nThe Yellow River of China, after\nbeing straightened out,, ls again\nflowing in its old course and emptying' Into the Gulf, of' Chihll.\nLast Rites for\nC.P.R. Auditor :A???v'\nOf Claims Today\nMONTREAL,'Que,\u2014Funeral services for Earl V. Neville, Auditor of\nClaims for. the Canadian Pacific\nRailway here Since 1848, who died\nsuddenly Saturday afternoon in his\n54th year, will be held Tuesday.\nArrive Home From\nFootball Maich\nCALOARY 4CI*>-The first contingent of Stampeders' .cowboy-\ngarbed boosters arrived back in the\ncity by air .Monday, weary from\nsleepless nights and voiceless from'\ncheering Calgary's first; Grey Cup\nvictory In history.\n\"It was a wonderful trip,\" said\nCarl Nickle, oneof the organizers\nOf the. aerial Stampeder special that\ncarried 21 Westerners to and-from\nthe game.\nMr., Nickle .also  disclosed  that\nthree women members of the party,\n\u2014Mrs. A.  G. Bailey,. Mrs.  C.  S.\nNickle and Mrs. Carl Nickle\u2014were\nallowed on the flpor of the Toronto\nStock Exchange ,last Friday during\ntrading sessions. It was' the first\ntime women had ever been allowed\nto do. so.      .'.-..'\u25a0.-.'\u25a0\u2022\u2022    .'\u25a0    '  '.<\u2022'\u25a0'\nMeanWhlle a special committee of\nfootball  fans and  clvlo. officials\n...- are Working out-plans foi1 * monster welcome-home celebration for\nthe new Domlnloh football cham\npjonsy\nThe special train carrying Stampeders and more than 300 Calgary\nfans is scheduled to arrive in Cal-\ncary Wedhesday.The players will\nbe paraded through city streets, with\nthe Grey Cup oh display on a special\nfloat at. the head of the parade. Following the parade, the team will be\ngiven an official civic welcome.\nA civic reception and banquet for\nthe* gridiron heroes will be 'held\nlater in. the week, probably Friday.\nMONCTON,' N. B. (CP)\u2014Air\ntravellers' are forgetful, -according\nto Trans-Canada Air Lines' Lost;\nand-found department here. Items\nleft behind on air trips include\nsUCh things as cameras, watches,\numbrellas, babies' Clothes, pens and\ncoats. '-\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\nBelieves Countries Must Know\nEach Other Better for One Worlfl\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe British Colonial .Office tells\nua that three per eent of Britons\nthink the United \"States still Is\none of the colonies.\n\"I never heard that one before,\nbut am not surprised. Having\nlived In England many years I en-\n\u2022y countered some extraordinary notions about my native land and\nIts people.\nFor one thing the average Briton\nhas no idea of the vast expanse of\nthe United States.\n\u2022 Many folk believe tbat savage Indians still rove the plains near Chicago. They also-think (perhaps due\nto American motion picture Westerns) that the \"Wild West\" Is full\nof two-gun men who shoot from the\nhip. Gangsterism is a predominant\nfeature of American life, they believe.,, l\nNA8AL TWANQ\nQuite apart from these strange\nbeliefs, Britons also find many oddities in American characteristics and\nhabits. They want to know, for example, why Americana talk through\ntheir noses quite overlooking the\nfact that the people in some parts\nof Britain also have a nasal twang.\nOur designation of a \"lift\" as an\n! \"elevator\" passeth understanding.-\nTHE OTHER WAY.TOOI\nOf course it is equally true that\nthe United States has sonie strange\nideas about Britain though my ob-\nIservatloh is; that Americans know\nimore about England than she does\ni about the United States. Apropos\n| of this, Lord Halifax made a neat\n|quip in a recent speech,before the\n\u25a0 English-speaking. union ih Britain.\nHe said \"the people in.the United\nStates are almost as pleased to see\nthat Princess Elizabeth has had a\nsoh as-we are,\" adding:\n\"That neW feeling-has come about\nbecause the American.nation has, in\nthe last few. years, come'-'to understand'that George the Third is really\ndead.\"'    >-..''   ' '-. ,\u25a0?'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nTalk about one worldl What hope,\nwhen'even two old Allies, like Britain and the United States don't\nknow each other!\nIt strikes this;1'column that it's\nabout time Americans -inaugurated\nsome more International educational\ncourses so that we can get, acquainted. Many of the misunderstandings\namong countries are. due to ignorance or to false ideas about the other\nfellow. -.;'     . .,,  ....\nJohn Bull, meet Uncle Sam.\nDO YOU  REMEMBER THIS TRIO?-Three\nof the famous keystone cops of early-day movie fame\u2014Snub\nPollard, Hank Mann and Chester'Conklin (left to right)\u2014are\nC together again at Hollywood, making a comic horse opera.\nEric Freeman\nNew Cranbrook\nKiwanis Head\nCRANBROOK, B. O.\u2014Approaching tbe end of its first year of existence here, the Kiwanis Club recently elected a new slate of officers to take over Jan. 1.\nEric Freeman was chosen President, Michael Green Vice-President,\nHarry Pakenham Secretary-Treasurer, With Executive members Past\nPresident W. J. ;Shorthouse, R0x\nColnier, Max Belkin, Guido Benedettl, Frank Bridges, Harry Voisey\nand J. S. Duhlop.\nSupport of the National Polio\nFund will continue to be its main\nservice project During its initial\nyear the Club sponsored three highly successful amateur nights, and\nwill continue this project in its. second year as a fund-raising measure.\nIn addition to this-project, the Club\nhas participated wholeheartedly in\ncommunity affairs.        .\nFour Killed in\nCocoa Plant Blast\nHULL, Yorkshire, England (CP)\n\u2014Four persons were killed and 22\ninjured Monday in three explosions\nwhich ripped the British Cocoa\nMills. Plant apart. Seven persons\nwere trapped in the building as it\nwent up In flames.\nPolice, firemen and other rescue\nworkers struggled to force their way\ninto the blazing building to reach\nthose trapped. Cries could be.heard\nfrom those still in the plant.\nT. F. Sloot, Technical Director of\nthe plant, explaining that gasoline,\nwas used in large quantities at the\nmills, said the first explosion was\ncaused by one of the'tanks bursting. \/-.',,'.' ,-J\nEscaping gasoline flooded - the\nplant, caught fire and other explosions followed, blowing out walls\nand shattering machinery.\nREGINA \u2022 (CP)\u2014Aerial photography was used to plot the course\nof a new power line between;Mel-\nville and Yorkton, the Saskatchewan resources department reported.\nEducation Plan\nFor Quebec\nBy, WILUAM STEWART\n. Canadian Press Staff Writer\nQUEBEC. (CP)-Educatlon is big\nnews in Quebec with campaigns for\nUliiversity expansion and \u25a0 teachers'\nactivities for higher -pay, on top of\na pronounced trend for.training that\nwill fit Quebecers for key positions\nin their rapidly-expanding province.\nIt adds up. to form pressure for\ngradual reform, not of the kind that\nblew Quebec's lid off about 76yeBrs\nago when a, stranger, moved in to.\nbusy himself with streamlining education. \u2022    y\nIn the middle of that controversy Waa Pierre Leroy, a young\nFrenchman: from  Nantes Whose\nradical   Ideas were  rejected  at\n, home \u2022 but found  some; support\n'\u2022.there,''\n- Leroy's ideas on education were\nfirst heard in 1873 when he wrote to\nthe French Minister of Education\nabout his, theory that It was the lot\nof an inspired few to change the\ncourse of thlngs; by . breaking\nthrough the fog of accepted error.\nLeroy's ideas got no response in\nFrance' but in the Spring of 1874\nhe landed in Quebec- to give the\nNew World their benefit\nA long letter to Quebec's Premier\nGedeon Ouimet brought a $1000\ngrant and. working quarters for Leroy. \u25a0'.'\u25a0'\u25a0'\nHis school of fast education opened September,' 1874, with 34 pupils\nwho were to take the usual classical course but complete it in the\nrecord time of four years.       -  .\nThe pupils working with manuals\nprepared by Leroy expected to complete all their studies at'the age ot\n15 and be ready for the world.\n\u2022: When educationists doubted that\nLeroy's pupils would, pop out of his\nclasses in short pants, with all the\nnecessary study behind them, Leroy's sky became a stormy black.\nThe ensuing fuss is described\nnow as a \"polemlque,\" a term used\nonly; for a first-class row.\nSupporters started to leave him\nfor good when he tried to sponsor a\npriest he admired aa first Bishop of\nChicoutimi. Another clergyman was\nappointed and Leroy got busy trying somehow to bring about the\nelection' of the embarrassed priest\nhe liked as pope. .\n!'\u25a0 Shocked QUebecers avoided Leroy\nand he walked the streets a penniless min.\".-  ,:    -\nHe returned to Nantes in 1886,\ndescribed by persons who knew him\nas a \"tragic figure,\" who had given\nan inherited fortune and bis health\nto his unsuccessful plans.\n''    ~    :    \u2014    ~.' i\nThe British Columbia Salmon\nFishing Industry stands first among\nthe fisheries of Canada in annual j\nmarket value.\n1.-.1 .'?      ^  ,.    .J*.- Thto vUI* In Florence, Italy, was the home of Myron Taylor, U.S.\npresidential envoy to the Holy See, before he gave It,to Pope Pins XH as music sohool for V.S.\nV \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022.  students. It will be known as the Pope Plus XII Musical Institute. ~\nRussia Agrees\nTo New Berlin\nParley Plans\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 Russia Monday\nnight accepted a new plan for mediation efforts. in the Berlin' dispute.\nForeign Minister Juan Bramuglia\nof Argentina'said Andrei Vishinsky,\nDeputy Foreign'Minister, agreed.to\nthe latest plan of the United Nations Security Council \"neutrals\" at\na night meeting with him.\nThe United States, Britain and\nFrance gave their approval earlier\nin principle to the plan. It calls for\nthe naming- of a \"neutral\" commission of currency experts which will\nat ln the Berlin dispute.    .\nWHEAT STOCKS HIGHER\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Stocks Of Canadian wheat ln store or in transit in\nNorth America Nov. 18 totalled 183,-\n009,000 bushels, the Bureau of Statistics reported. This was an increase of 33,136,000 bushels over\nthe corresponding period a year ago.\nCurling, supposedly of Dutch origin, was played as early as 1607\nIn Scotland    ,\nSATIN-SKINNED ANIMALS MOST\nCOLORFUL OF CHICAGO EXPOSITION\nBy GEORGE  KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer ,\nCHICAGO (CP) \u2014 Chicago's International Livestock Exposition is\nlike a monster, colorful multi-ring\ncircus, only better. It has silk and\nsables to lend a fashion-plate touch.\nThe week-long show, which draws\n500,000 persons from, the rich agricultural lands radiating Out from\nthis mid-West metropolis, takes\nplace in an oval-shaped, sawdust-\ncovered arena in a sprawling amphitheatre which covers 22 acres ln the\nChicago stockyards..\nThere, carefUlly-groomed horses\nand livestock, prance and. mince\nthrough twice-daily performances\nfor audiences which number.more\nthan 7000 to a sitting. The. arena itself gleams with bright chrome plating. '   \u25a0      \u25a0     ;   .\nBut the real show of color, the\none the public doesn't get.to see,\nla In the kitchen-clean livestock\n\u2022tails that snuggle up against one\naids   of   the   amphitheatre   and\nhouse millions-of dollars worth\nof prize-winning animals from 42\nstates and five  Canadian provinces. .,\nHere, shining satin-skinned > horses, large and small, stand'quietly\nunder tbe soothing brushes of their\ngrooms; fat, sleek cattle, their coats\nglistening with health and thrlfti-\nness, are bedded ln pens of golden ;\nstraw; snow-white sheep which look 1\nas though they were carved front\npure marble idle in their stalls.      1\nAbout them sWlrl a hurly-burly.,\ncircus atmosphere., Soft-spoken Ne-.\ngro. grooms argue' excitedly, about I\nthe meVits of their charges, drawling '\nTexans   and   Western   plainsmen,\ncomplete   With high-heeled   boots\nand 10-gallon sombreros, Idle stolidly about the stalls and.chattering\nboisterous farm youngsters, in town\nfor the big show, romp endlessly\nthrough the building.\nThe  fashion-plate  touch  comes\nfrom the expensive wrappings of\nthe wives of exhibitors who haye-.\nbrought scores of sleek, sensitive I\nshow horses, the aristocrats of any\nlivestock exposition, from Ontario's\nRoyal Winter- Fair ,dnd the New.\nYork Horse Show. Mink, sliver fox,\"\nmuskrat and sable coats blend Info'.'\nthe colorful background.\nThe hay andgralnshow,.'_eld In\nconjunction with the livestock exposition, is a sharp contrast. There,\nthe judges move softly through quiet, rooms,. studying and weighing\nfat, plump kernels of wheat and\nother grains to' the championship';\nsamplings. \u25a0.\nJj^S^m^W   'Ai\nsomjuturt?Mot^\nQive your ion a '\u00abe_d Start\", against\ntiettaewhenliehas'tOBtJiiteoutbri\nhia own. With a Crown\" Life's loiripo_cy ' ''\nyou can do thia easilyand at low cost1   '?-\nA $1,000.00 Crown Life S for t policy\nbought for your ton at any time frpm\nbirth to age IS, automatically becomca f\na $5,000.00 policy at aee 21, with\nno increase in premium. '.,'\ntOOK AT THESE FEATURES.\n1. No medical examination oh purchase\nor at age 21.\n12. Rapidly increasing cash value*\ncan provide an education fund,\nif desired.  '   \u2022\n3. Low annual premium. .\n\u25a0Get this protection for your son\nwhile he is still a child and earn\na lower premiumrate.\nCall a Crown Life representative\ntoday. He will be glad to\nexplain the plan in detail to you.- '\u25a0'\nCrown Life\nInsuhance Company\nE.tobllitud ,   Home Offl\u00bb\n1900\nCharles Parrlah, Nelson, Robert C. Hume, Revelstoke; General Agents.\n-J.J. Kenny, C.L.U., Provincial Superintendent\nProvincial Office: Rogers Building, Vancouver.    ,.-\nNamed Passenger\nAgent1 for C.P.R.\nPrairie'Region iis*\nVANCOUVER, B. C, -Arthur J.\nMahon, formerly Assistant General\nPassenger Agent here, for the C.ana- J,\ndlan' Pacific Railway, has been- .ap-'\npointed General Passenger Agent\nfor the Company's Prairie region,\nwith headquarters at Winnipeg. Mr.\nMahon replaces William Horder,\nwho will retire November 30, after\n48 years of .'service with the C.P.R.\nE. Officer, special \u25a0passenger, rep.-1\nrese'ntative.at Calgaryi Alta., since\n10(7, will' succeed Mr. Mahon as Assistant General Passenger Agent at\nVancouver.\nCanadian Wins\nShorthorn Award\n'CHICAGO (CP)\u2014A Canadian entry, > Scotsdale Bombardier, a 1450-\npound Shorthorn shown . by S. G.\nBennett of Georgetown, Ont., Monday.was named grand champion.of\nthe breed, at the International Livestock exhibition.\n.Sunset Bounce,'a Summer yearlings shown by Otis A.':. Carter and\nSohs,'Eldorado, Wi, wort, the reserve\naward.\nJ.'P. Wetstein of Joliet,.,Mont.,\nWas: acclaimed barley king as juds>\ning continued in the International\nHay and Grain Show held ih -, conjunction with, the Livestock Exposition.-    \":\"- -'\u25a0\u2022 ., i \u25a0\u25a0\nThe judges elected, his six-rowed\nGlacier Variety-as-the -finest of-the,\nshow- The -reserve championship\n\u2022went' to \u2022 L'. ';_,\"\u25a0 Peterson of Victor,\nMont-.f.who, showed the same type,.\n' ' The' Montana triumph deprived\nCanadian exhibitors'of a chance, of\nmaklrtga five-ply swee(p'Of the'most\ncoveted titles In International agriculture.\nHEADS EXHIBITORS        \u2022\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014W. \u2022 D. Jackson\nof London was elected President.of\nthe Canadian Association of Exhibitors at its annual meeting'here,\nOther executive members elected:\nElwood Hughes,, Toronto, Vice-\nPresident;, J. D. Clarke,, Ottawa,- Secretary; D. Z. B. Williams, Vancou-'\nver; and T. H. McLeod, Regina.\nELECTRIC\nRADIOS\n* \u2022     . -\nFirst for value\nIn every price class\nBe sure to visit your nearest General Electric\nRadio Dealer and see the exciting new G-E\nmodels that combine dependable performance,\nattractive design and the famous G-E value:\nRemember, there is a General Electric Radio\nto suit every taste and price.;; so make sure\nyou see the different G-E table models, radio\nphonographs, AM-FM sets and the portables .\nbefore you buy.  \u25a0 v      y\\''\n......\n,....\u2022*.*\u2022**************.\nModolC.17i Table radio\nand record player with G-E\nElectronic Reproducer. Six\ntubes. Sensitive Dynapower\nspeaker. Built-in Beam-a-\nScope antenna. Automatic\nVolume control, Bass compensation. New low price,\n$89.50.\nModel C376t With rich mahogany cabinet finish, this\nAM-FM console model gives you finer music\u2014I'M, standard\n: broadcast and records'; 9 tubes. 12' Dynapower speaker.\nG.E Electronic Reproducer. Storage (or 120 records. Also\navailable In walnut. Price, $395.\nModel C119: Table radio\nand automatic record player\nwith the exclusive G-E Electronic .Reproducer. AInico\n5 Dynapower speaker. Six\ntubes. Glorious natural color\ntone. Plays ten 12-inch\nrecords' or twelve 10-Inch\nrecords automatically.\nNew low price, $1-19-50.\nt................a,\n........\nCANADIAN\nGENERAL    E LE GTR\nLeader in Radio, Television and Electronics\nI C    CO    LTD\nGOV I R N O R-G. Menncn\nWilliams, Detroit Democrat, was\nnamed next governor of Mlchl-\n\u2022 gan -In the general election. *i\nSEE THE COMPLETE SELECTION OF GENERAL ELECTRIC RADIOS AT THE\nPHONE 260\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n\u2022 \u25a0 .i' \u25a0 y i\nAuthorized General Electric Dealers\n57 BAKER ST.\n i*3>\npjueL^ftmwiL\u2014\nBy CLIVE FLEMING\nSver since the Allan Cup Edmon-\ni. Flyers lost goalie AI Rolling to\ns Kansas City PlaMors, many net-\nnders have been approached with\nlers from: the. Flyer, bOsses.\nftori1 Pickell was given the oppor-\nilty to sign the Flyer contract,\nt apparently decided against it,\nother clubs were seeking him,\nlother team which was trying tor\n3 League-leading goalie in the\nirthern Division\" of the P.C.H.L.\nit Winter was the\/New Westmin-\nir -Royals. It even was splashed\nthe Vancouver Sun that Pickell\nt ink on the dotted'line,\n\"Ron.Pickell, who played .goal\nr Seattle Ironmen in the Coast\nickey League this year, has been\nmed by New Westminster Royals,\nmer Ken McKenzie announced to-\ny,\" qUoth Duke McLeod. He con-\nlued: \"McKenzie also disclosed the\nib had been after Mike Karakas,\n-Chicago goalie,; but abandoned\nta when Pickell signed.\" ' .' ;\nObviously there has been some\nIx-up, as Pickell is playing for\nlokane. Karakas, incidentally is\nrnlng out with Portland Eagles.\nIt was rumored several times that\n\u2022ank Currie made some bids to\nre Frank McCool out ot retlre-\nent. Since there wss a great\nlance of stomach ulcers recurring,\n* former Toronto Maple Leaf star\nJected the proposals.\nNow the Flyers haye Keith Wood-\n1 between the pipes, and the goal-\nleper is said to be doing a good\nb in taking over from Al Rollins.\n|_K JAKIE NA8H\nNow comes the report from Kim-\njrley Coach Ralph Redding, that\na Edmonton club is in contact\nith Jakie Nash, but whether he\noUld accept the offer is still un-\nloWni'Nash would probably be the\nbstltute goalie, that Is if he were\ntake the move.\nPICK-UPS . .'.When asked about\nS.1 departure of Buzz Mellor:and\nid Booth, Ralph Redding, Kimber-.\ni'.-'Coach, stated that after.recelv-\nt offers- from the Okanagan, they\nllldn't be persuaded to stay In the\nst Kootenay centre. Previously I\nid the pair went to Kelowna, but\nlt was Vernon Canadians . .. Spokane Flyers were rather rough on\nthe visiting Dynamiters -last trip\ndown, BUI Jones had 10 stitches on\nthe-back of his head, Jakie Nash\nhad to have five stitches to close a\ncut in the lip, Bill Tarnow was\nsporting a patch on. his forehead,\nand Gordie Wilson has 'a bad back\n. ..;- Wilson seems to be having a-\nbad time this year, first he had a\nsore ankle, then a broken rib _nd\nhow' this . . . Trail's star Frank\nTurik will only Watch hockey for\ntwo weeks due to a leg Injury , ..\nLui Corrado ls.nursing a sore wrist\ni.. Les Chrlstensen has recuperated\nfrom his painful ankle ... Louis\nSecco had a bad. knee, but played\nSaturday . ... By counting-up his\nsecond consecutive shutout Saturday night, Turk Broda ran his string\nof scoreless minutes of hockey to\n133 minutes, 45 seconds. Recently\nBill Durnan beared Flank Brimsek's\nrecord of 231 minutes, 4 seconds,\nwith a 204 minute 4-second scoreless\nfling .\". . In the'current exhibition\ntour of Senior B teams at the,\nCoast, Ron Maclntyre scored two\ngoals Snd got one assist, with another Nelsonlte, Mickey Maglio,\ngrabbing one marker, but the Lethbridge Native Sons lost 6-4 to the\nAll-Stars ... In the next game;\nwhen the Junior sextet worked to a\n5-5 tie with New'Westminster Cubs,\nAl- Sllverwood guarded the helftp\n. . .Former Leaf centre' Johnny\nHryciuk scored one goal for Vernon\nCanadians, in their 3-2 triumph over\nthe Kamloops Elks ...: Of the first\n34 games in the N.H.L., the. home\nteam won IB times. Six others ended ln deadlocks ,.. Montreal Canadiens were undefeated on home ice\nuntil Toronto Maple Leafs; defeated\nthem 2-0 ... Of the 29 games played in the W.I.H.L. up to and including November 20, the visitors only\nwon four games, and one was a\ndraw ... An average of 9.8 goals\nhas been scored each W.I.H.L. game\nthis season ... Fraternal franchise:\nColin KilbUrn was leading the Scorers in the W.CHX, playing for the\nEdmonton Flyers, while In the Junior loop in Edmonton, Doug Kilburn,\nCollin's brother, lead the scorers.'-.\u2022-\u2022.\nSHERBROOKE,-Que. (CP)-When\nHerbie Carnegie decided to. turn\ndown a professional offer with the\nNew York Rangers' hockey organization this Fall it. was the Jest\nthing that has happened to the Quebec Senior Hockey League in many\na season. \u2022\". - ... -\nCarnegie had-a chance to play\nwith New Haven Ramblers and\nlater move up to the parent Rangers\nin the-National League but he stuck\nwith.the local team and thus reunited after one season's separation\none of the biggest drawing cards in\nthe circuit\u2014the all-Negro Tine',   \u25a0'\nBack in 1942 Herhle\"and-his brother Ossie, Toronto boys, were play-\ntag for. Buffalo Ankerltes hi Northern Ontario. Someone passed the\nword along to another Negro hockey\nplayer, Manny- Msiclntyre of Fred-\nericton, who was playing for Truro,\nN.S, Bearcats.\nManny wrote Ossie-1 suggesting\nformation of an all-Negro line. The\nAnkerltes management Jumped like\na puck bouncing Off the backboards,\nsent Manny -a railway ticket and\nthus came into being the widely-\nknown, highly-rated- \"colored\" line.\nThis combination may be black\nbut the color of the coin it has\nbrought into the coffers of rinks\nthroughout Quebec and Ontario is\ngold, The fans pay to see them play\nand the Carnegies and Mclntyre, all\nof. professional; calibre, give them\ntheir, money's, worth. '.'. -\nSherbrooke has brought out the\ntop attendance for, the season in\nevery arena It-has played in so far\nthis year.   :     ,,:.\u00bb-\u2022..\nSince 1942 the line has played as\na unit for Quebec and Ontario\nteams with only two breaks. Mclntyre was In the army in 1943 Snd\nhe and Ossie played in Paris last\nseason.- ';'\n'We think we still have several\ngood years together ahead of us,\"\nHerbie said ta an Interview. \"We\nhavenlt hit our stride yet this year,\nbut when the going gets tough later\nin the season we nope to be click-\ntag.\" .. :,-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022',\nThese boys have no special system for their play which is one ol\nthe top goal-producers- lh amateur\nhockey.\nHockey Standings\nfast Indies Draws\nf irk Pakistari\ni Cricket Match\n-SHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) \u2014\n,e match between the West Indies\nurlng cricket team and a Pakistan\niven ended Monday In a draw.\n5\u00bb West Indies were 120 runs\njJU'Tjffth nine second innings\nits still standing at close of\n!he scores: Pakistan, first innings\n; second innings 285 for six de-\nred; West Indies, first innings\nij; second Innings 98 for one'\n_tet\nm-xsx\nWinnipeg Sportsman,\n. G. Paulley, Dies\n\u00bb!NNIF*Cr : (CP) - Active ln\nnnlpeg' sport circles for many\nus, Gilbert Giles Paulley, 49,\nd at his home here Sunday folding a prolonged illness.\nI'scout.for Toronto Maple'Leafs\nto the time of his illness, Mr.\nUey's sport activities extended\n-many fields. He was an honor-\nlife member On- the Manitoba\nBall Association, for many years\nexecutive member of the Mani-\n' Branch of the Canadian Ama-\nr-Hockey Association, and one of\n) founders of the Elmwood United\nc*r Club here.       ,\nIvors include a sister, Eileen,\nteuton,--Ont, and a brother,\nby, of Vancouver.\nOakland Goalie\nPenalized\n\u2022By. The Associated Press  .\nSan Diego's lowly Skyhawks\ncaught the hlgh-ridlng Oakland\nOaks with their goalie in the pen.\nalty box Sunday night and collected\na 3-2 win. y .\nYves Nadon, goal.keeper for the\nleaders of the Pacific Coast Hockey\nLeague's South Division, ;waa'penalized in the first period for delaying the game by knocking the cage\nout of position.\nSan Diego's CHI St. Pierre and\nDucky Skinner punched in two\ngoals, while tha Oaks wore short a\nman. ' '.'\u25a0'.'.'\u25a0'\nAt Seattle Ney> Westminster Increased their first place margin In\nthe Northern Division with a 5-4\nvictory over the Ironmen.\nA game scheduled at Portland between the Eagles and the Tacoma\nRockets was, postponed because of\nminor injuries to Portland players.\nO'Connor Back in  v\nAction Tonight\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014Buddy\nO'Connor, New York Ranger centre,\nwill rejoin his mates Tuesday\nnight for their game with Chicago.\nO'Connor, winner of the. National\nHockey League's most-valuable-\nplayer award last year, suffered\ntwo broken ribs in a traffic accl'\ndent Oct. 8.\nfi\nJ Something f|\nHew To Give\nis   A Man\n+ Here's a gift to\nplease a man' for\nmontha to come.\nThree handy new\nGillette Blade Dispensers, each holding\n20 Gillette Blue\nBlades\u201460 blades in\nall. Packed ta full-\nview glftbon.\nBLADE DISPENSER\nMAKIS B.I,.ADE CHANGING A BREEZE\nir Gillette Dlspenaer saves\ntime\u2014saves fuss, A simple\nthrust of the thumb, and\nZIP I . . . there's a new\nGillette Blue Blade unwrapped and ready for use\nin any Gillette Razor.\nColored Line\nMeans Tinkling\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWestern Division\n_     WL'T F APt\nSt. Louis  :. 14 4 4 89 51 32\nPittsburgh    _.\nBuffalo  ........ .\nCleveland ....\t\nIndianapolis\t\nEastern Division\nProvidence ........i.\nNew Haven ..........\nHershey \u201e\t\nSpringfield  :..\nWashington   ,\n; 12 7 3 85 59 27\n12 9 1 93 70 25\n. 10 6 4 79 65 24\n8 7 5 66 66 21\n15 4 110547 31\n'9123 8910721\n.   982606020\n.  \u00ab182 5511110\n3162 45108 8\nKaslo Golfers\nKASLO, B. C-'Thlrty-flve members qf the Kaslo Golf and Country\nClub attended a banquet and semiannual meeting in the'King George\nHoteL when trophies for the season\nwere presented. .-,\nAfter'the banquet the semi-annual\nmeeting was held, President E. Aldous presided and Secretary-Treasurer E. J.- Leveque reported; that\nmany improvements had been added to ihe Links. ~-_\nA successful barn dance had been\nheld In the Legion HaU. A \"nice\"\nfinancial balance existed. .  \\.\nMrs. C. R. Fahrni was presented\nwith the Ladies' Champion Cup\nwith a companion gift, Mrs. R. D.\nGardner as runner-up also received;\na gift. Mrs. E. South received'the'\nGordon Bowker Rose Bowl with\nMrs. \u25a0_,' .Clark as-!runner-up^' Both\nwere presented . with companion\njrlzesl \"      \" \u25a0'.''\u25a0        ,' .';'. '\";.-\u2022'\u2022'\nThe mixed foursome cups went\nto Mrs. R. D. Gardner who received\nthe Chandler Cup and C. J. White\nthe Graves Cup. Mrs. G. Browell\"\nand J, Cochran, as runners-up, received gifts. Mrs. J. Cochran cap-,\ntured the President's Cup with Miss\nSpencer-Smith In close running.\nBOth were presented with gilts.\nB: Clark was!awarded the men's\nchampion cup with companion-prize\nand C. R. Fahrni also received a\ngift as runner-up, Last, but. not\nleast, F. Aydon was presented with\nbeautiful urn, for outstanding\nefforts.\nBy The Canadian Press\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nNORTHERN DIVISION\nW-L'fT-Gr--\nN. Westminster 17  4\nTacoma 14   10\nVancouver .... 12' 13 1\nPortland \u201e,...;.   9   12   3\nSeattle, ...    9   15  0\nSOUTHERN DIVISION\nOakland :. 10    7   3\nS, Francisco .. 10 9 1\nFresno .:..,... 9 8, 2\nSan Diego ..\u00bb 7 ,7 2\nLos Angeles _  6  14  4\nGA T\n'59 34\n84 28\n97 25\n.81 21\n94 18\nA58 28\n85 21\n63 20\n74 16\n101 16\nMICHIGAN TOPS\nFOOTBAiL V6TE\n\u2022' NEW YORK (AP)-Mlchlgan ls\nthe mythical United States football\nchampion in the final Associated\nPress poll of the 1948'season,   !\nThe votes of 387 sports writers\nand radio coam'entators give the\nunbeaten, untied Wolverines a 163-\npotat margin over runner-up Notre\nDame, which will attempt to complete it sseco'\/l straight perfect\nseason at Southern California's' expense Saturday. In the, matter of\nfirst-place ballots, Michigan had a\nsubstantial 192-97 margin. In points\nit was 3448 to 3325,\nCanadian Swimming\nMarks Bettered\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014Four Csnadian\nand. 11 Provincial swimming marks\nwere bettered in a Quebec Provin-\ncial Swimming Meet held here dur\ning the weekend.\n, Lucien Beaumont of Quebec who\nset two .Canadian 40-yard records,\nAdin Merrow, 440-yard McGlll competitor, and Joyce Court, member of\nthe Canadian Olympic swimming\nteam, Were the. stars of the meet\nBeaumont won the 40?yard tree\nstyle event in 18.2 Seconds beating\nthe previous Canadian; mark of 18.6\nand alsp won the 40-yard butterfly\nevent in Canadian record time of\n28.8.. \"\n\u25a0 Merrow wearing the colors of Mc\nGill university won the 440-yard\nbackstroke event ta 5:28.3, lowering\nthe Canadian record from 5:58.0.\nJoyce Court representing Montreal Y.W.C.A., set Canadian and\nProvincial time in the 40-yard backstroke race winning in time of 25.3\nseconds and clipping 1-10 of a seoond from the best previous time.\nMAY SEEK COMPETITION\nFROM U.B.C. PUCKSTERS\nSASKATOON (CP)\u2014An unnamed\nofficial of the Men's Athletic Board\nof'the University of Saskatchewan\nintimated today overtures may be\nmade to the University of British\nColumbia to have the Weit Coast\nhockey |eam compete ln the Western inter-collegiate hockey finals.\nBritish Columbia now is an inactive member ofthe Western Canada Intercollegiate Athletic Union\nbecause Its sphere of Competition is\nprimarily w'th American-colleges.\n \u2014\u2014. \u25a0 '--    - H--'- \u2022\nScalpers Fined\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Two of three\nmen charged with scalping tickets\nto the East-West football final here\nSaturday-rwon by Calgary Stampeders 12-7\u2014were fined $25 or 10 days\nwhen they appeared ta court Monday.\nFirst Grey Cup for Calgary\nTurner of Ottawa Is tackled by Mitchener of\nCalgary In a.lino plunge In the first quarter, Thla\nwas action  In the  Eaat-Weit Canadian football\nchampionship .test that savy. .Calgary Stampeders.\ndefeat -Ottawa- Roughridera\" 12-7 to give the Foothill City Its.flrat Grey Cup.\nPHONE 144 POR CLASSIFIED\nBritish Soccer\n, LONDON- (CP) :-' The draw for\nthe second round of the Football Association Cup,- to be played Dec.\n11, Waa announced as follows:\nNotts County vs. Rochdale or\nBarrow; Walthamstowe Avenue vs.\nOldham Athletic; Torquay United\nvs. Norwich City; Weymouth, vs.\nYeovil; Hull City vs. Colchester\nUnited or -Reading; IpsWich Town\nor Aldershot vs. Chester; Halifax\nTown or Scunthorpe vs. Stockport\nCounty; Mansfield Town vs. Northampton; Bristol-City vs. Southend\nUnited or Swansea Town,.\nGateshead vs. Rhyl or Scarborough; Daringtonvs: Leyton Orient;\nBarnet or Exeter Clty'vs.*Hereford\nTown; Leytonstone or Watford ivs,\nNewport County; Bradford City or\nDoncaster Rovers vs. New Brighton;\nCrewe Alexandra.: vs. Millwall;\nSouthport vs. York City; Walsall vs.\nGainsborough Trinity. \u25a0 .'.', \u2022'\u25a0\nC If any replays are; necessary, they\n.will be-played.Dec. 18i- : ,,' r\n-'.',!)   \u25a0\u25a0'\u2014rr-i -r\u2014   -\n$100,000 in Bets\nBelieved Won\nBy Calgarians\n.TORONTO (CP)\u2014Estimates were\nthat the Calgary contingent won\n$100,000 ta bets on Saturday'efobt-\nball final between Ottawa Rough\nRiders and . Calgary Stampeders\nhere. Stamps won 12-7.\n.. Though the .amount that changed\nbands is difficult to judge, fans on\nthe Stampeder special were said to\nhave raised $49,000 to bet at odds\nranging from 8 to 5 to 2 to 1. At half\ntimaitt the game.wlth'Stamps-leadr\ntag 6-1, bookies.were laying off at\neven  money  and  had plenty  of\nWestern takers.\nN. H. L. Big Seven\n-,-.;-; '.\".'.'     .       '.-- y    '.\",,. V:--.'\nBy The Canadian Press\nAs the smoke clearqd after a high\nscoring weekend, Grant (Knobby)'\nWarwick, shifty ' Boston winger,\nstill held down first place in the\nNational Hockey League scoring\nrace\/ Doug Bentley of Chicago moved from fourth place into a second\nplace' tie with Toronto's Ted Kennedy after picking up a goal and\nthree assists over the weekend. Jim\nConacher, Chicago winger, moved\ninto third: place with' 16 points as\nhe garnered two assists.\nTheleaders. G\nWarwick, Boston ...:......\u201e   11  9\nKennedy, Toronto ,  8  9\nD. Bentley, Chicago .....     6 11\n3. Conacher, Chicago    8   8\nBabando, Boiton     8   7\nSandford, Boston ..............    7   8\nR. Conacher, .Chicago ....    5 10\nAPt\n9   20\n17\n17\n16\n15\n15\n15\nMackay Has Scoreless\nWeek, but Holds Lead\n-.NEW,YORK.(CP)\u2014Although he\ndid not score a point all week, Mur-\ndo Mackay .of Buffalo Bisons still\nholds top . scoring honors in the\nAmerican Hockey League with 37\npoints. ...\nFor the third consecutive week\nthe Fort William, Ont., centre led\nCarl Liscombe of Providence Reds,\nDefenceman Harry Dick of Washington ; Lions led the punishment\ncolumn, having, spent 56 minutes\natoning; for his sins in the penalty\nbox:-'.\"-\nRalph Almas of ,St. Louis again\npaced the goaltenders. in shutouts\nwith three, but yielded best.aver-\nage honors to Providence goalie\nHarvey Bennett. Bennett had allowed 47 goals ta 20 games' for an\naverage of'2.35. .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30,1948 \u2014 9\nAmateurism Up\nlor Debate\nBy JACK SULLIVAN    .\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nTORONTO (CP)r-A proposed 10-\npotat agenda, covering many phases\nof Canadian amateur and professional sport, has been drawn up by\nthe National Council of Physical\nFitness for the round-table confer-\nence in Ottawa Jan. 7-8 of 43 sports-\ngoverning bodies in the Dominion.\nThe' controversial, feud-provoking\nquestion of amateurism is included.\nThe agenda, released here by J.\nH. Ross of Calgary, Acting Chairman of the Fitness Council, calls\nfor day-long talks-fests in '.efforts\nto determine just what is wrong\nwith Canadian sport- Organizations\ngoverning lawn bowling to amateur.\nand pro hockey will be represented\nto suggest remedies, v.        ;.  '\u2022' y\nRoss, Chairman -of the conference;\nhas given the No. 1. spot on the\nagenda to the question of Canada's\nparticipation ta international competition. .Specifically, if asks delegates whether it Is feasible to withdraw and, If not, '.'who should pro\nmote, organise and conduct Canada's participation?\" .\nThis \u2014 apparently prompted by\nthe poor showtag.of Canada in. the\nSummer Olympic Games\u2014probably\nwill settle the status of the Canadian\nOlympic Association and its sponsoring, body, the Amateur Athletic\nUnion, The C.O.A. has plumped for\nIts own charter _nd bylaws and'the\nquestion has been hanging fire since\nit was broached last August.\nBut the sure-firs trouble', spot is\nNo. 9 on the proposed agenda which\nreads: . '. . ;   \"\n\"Should there be a Canadian definition of 'amateur* and should\nmeasures be taken to establish such\na standard and to obtain International, acceptance of it?\nThe Canadian Amateur Hockey\nAssociation, which has postponed its\nannual meeting to allow representation ait the Congress, probably will\nhave a lot to. say about this. The\nC.A.H.A. interpretation of. an amateur is a player who doesn't play\nprofessional hockey.      .    -\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0',\nIn effect,, this meshs a duly-registered - C.A.H.A. player may accept\npayment-r-any amniurMf he. doesn't participate ta'pro. hockey.\n.The' C.A.H.A.'s definition. Is. In\ndlrect.conflict with the :A.A.Uyver*\nsion which says clearly an amateur\nis one,who receives no material\ngain for lila athletic- prowess.'\nMONEY TIQHTlR,\nPARK EXPECTS\nMIAMI. Fla. (AP) -- Tropical\nPark launches Florida's glittering\n170.day Winter racing season Wed'\nnesday, Dec.-1, \u25a0!\u25a0'-.\nPreened, pruned and polished, the\npalm-lined oval on the outer fringes\nof Coral Gables anticipates some\n12,000 patrons for the debut\nTropical Park officials\u2014like Hialeah iand '\u25a0\u25a0 Gulfstream officers- \u2014\nfrankly expect td see mutuel play\nand attendance 'drop about 10 per\ntent from last year's:totals.\nBuffalo. Ankerite ; ....\nBufadison .:.\u201e;,T?..-,..'..\u201e\u00ab_\nBuffalo Red Lake .-.-,\nCastle-Tretb'ewey i.\u201e...\nCentral Patricia;.\u2014....\nCentremaque !.i..\u201e. ...\nCochenbur ..; v............\nConsolidated M & S ..\nConwest:'\u2122::\t\nCroinor       ..;,.;...,    \t\nDelnite' , , .,\u201e\nDickenson Red Lake\nDlscoVery' ............;...;....,\nPiverslffed' ..:.:\u2122.-.:.\nDome- 'Mtaea' \u201e\u201e,.\u201e\u2122_;\nDodalda _.....\u201e._j\u201e_i_\nDuquesne',....\nn&mmm -rt^^-smjSIS\nIf your truck is too big for its lob, it will\nwsste gas and oil...\u00abtoo small It won't\nstand op. You'll 'save money on upkeep\nand repairs with a track built to fit your\njob - the rigKt Dodge \"Job-Rated'' truck.\nDidge \"Job-Rated\" trucks \u00abve yrotime      f\"\"\u2122\"\"' .7\"J_7 \u00abm oh-^e-Job dV\n^y,by^ping.matatenance\u00bbquire-      longet-and ^v\u00bb yt\u00bb J\u00bb\"^N _^\nments at a ininlmvun. Your truck wiU be\nengineered with exactly, the right \u00abigtae,\nclutch, transmission, rear axle and g^t\nrado to handle your job most effldenfly.\npendabiUtyahi satisfscdon. A* yont\nDodge dealer tt help yo\u00abi \u00abd\u00abctr_e rig\"\nDodge \"Job-Rated\" trade far your needs.\n...AND THIY GIVE YOU THESE HEW PLUS FEATURES\n\/VipRf COMFORT AND SAKTY|\n1. Plenty of headroom. 2. Steering wheel, right where you want itl\n3. Natural bock support, adjustable for maximum comfort, 4. Proper\nleg support 5. Chair-height seats. 6. Seven-inch seat adjustment, with\nconvenient band control,\nI SHORTER TURNING DIAMETERS\nNew \"cross-steering,\" with shorter wheelbascs that accommodate full-   \u2022\nsize bodies, enable you to- turn in much smaller circles. You can park,\nback Into, narrow, spaces or up to loading platforms with much\ngreater ease. Front axles have beeh.moved.bsck\/ engines forward, More\nload is on the front axle.'.. giving much better weight distribution.\n', . Yeu ar* Invited to see the Second Annual Canadian\nChampionship Truck Rondco In tlio Automotive\nBuilding, Canadian National Exhibition Grounds,\nToronto, Monday, Dccombor 6th, 1948.\nFIT THE JOBv.\nLAST LONGER.^\nCUTHBERT MOTORS LTD.\n503 VERNON ST. PHONE 75\nCLOSING PRICES MONDAY\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES\nAmal Larder\nArmistice ....\nAubelle  ....-..,\nAumaque ......\nAunpr\nBase Metals Mining\nBevcourt, .,..\u2022.-.'.....,\u201e\u201e...,-;\nBoycott \u25a0 : ....\u201e\u201e...\nBralOrne \/\t\nBroulan.\nEast Amphl' .\u201e:..\u201e;\u201e_\nEast' Malartic ....\u2122_i.\nEast Sullivan;.:.._......-.'.\nElder j, ,.......\u201e ,r.\u201e.\nEldona  I;.............,\t\nFalconbrldge Nickel\nFroblsher U.,i.\u2014.;i.\nGiant Yellov&nife ....\nQod's Lake Gold .....\nGold Eagle; ,'. :_\nGolden Arrow .\u201e\u201e\u201e...;.\nGolden Monitou ....._\nHard Rock Gold'. .._.\nHarticana ... \u2014\nHeva Cadillac .\nBollinger. ;........\ntot Niokel \u25ba...\u201e\nInt Uranium ...\n\"\"gr\nJack Waite\nJoliet Quebec ........\nKerr-Addison  ..\t\nKlrkland Lake .......\nLabrador \u201e.\nLake Shore Mines ,\nLamaque Gold.\t\nLapa Cadillac \t\nLtagman Lake .........\nLittle Long Lac ....\nLouvlcourt.;.,....;..._\nMacassa ;;......,\nMaeDohald  \u201e.\u2022....\u201e\nMacLeod Cockshutt...\nMadsen Red Lake\nMalartic Gold F..:\nMc^tyie\"S*cu*iao;, _^.\nMcKenzie Red\"Lake \u2122._\nMcMarmac  :._S_i__S\nNegus  ;   \u201e___\nNew Bidlamaque ......(._.\nNew\/Galumet -..:\u201e;,;_\u00bb_\nNerahda <,...-;....,......\u2122.\u201e\u2122\nNormetal ....;.\u201e.\u201e\u201e\nOmnltrans Exploration\nPaymaster _.....-,\t\nPickle Crow Gold ...,\u201e.\u201e.\nPowell HouyivGor\nBeeves MacDonald ...__:\nPreston East Dom* .._..,\nQueenston _. .; ,\t\nQiemont\nSan Antonio Gold ..._\nSen Rouyn ;. ,\t\nSherrltt Gordon ...:......\nfladen Malartic ........\nPrtager  .7..... _\t\nStadacona ....-.......\u00bb.._\nStsep Rock _....; .....\nTeck^Hughes -'Gold\t\nUpper Canada .,..\u201e\t\nVentures, ;..:\u201e \u201e._'.\nWaite Amulet .-. ......\nWright Hargreaves ...\ntfu-sy; \u25a0\"\u2022-.\"\u2022\/' ''\"'\u2022''\nBritish American ......\nBritish riom __\nimperial ;...\u201e\u201e: \u201e^_.\nInter Petroleum'___\u2122\nMid Continent .._\nRoyalite- ..;\u201e\u201e.;..\u201e\u201e.____\nUnited ....\u201e\u2022. _^\n.10\n.08 Vi\n41\n.18\n195\nXI\n.22 Vi\n.03Vi\n7,00\n.28\n1.84\n.17\n.08\n\u25a0\u25a0va\n1.18\n.07\n1.08\n1.28\nUI\nJ5V4\n1.05\n.47\n'\u2022.28\n32\n1.40\n.54\n.40\n..08\n1.75\n8.10\n.35\n.88\n4.25\n2.01\n4.40\nJ8Vi\n.04%\n.07\n2.80\nS3\n.08%\n.09\n11.45\n34.75\n,    .45\n.10\n.48\n11.75\n1.22\n5.75\n10.25\nMS.\n.05\n.    .82\n.70\n'\u25a0 J7\nue\n:;..M r\nSB'.;\n124\n1.74\n50.50\nM\n.\u00bb\n110\n.08\n195\n55.50\n110\n.07%\nM\n1.00\n.57\n8.25 .\n1_8\n\u2022 .35%\n15.25\n3.50\n.40%\n114\n.23\n1.48\n.50\nL70\n151\n1.39\n5.-80\n175\n110\n24.00\n.41\n20.00\n13.00   '\n.09%\n2445\n.18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibl, Power \u25a0_\t\nBell Telephone ......_\nBrazilian. Traction,......;\nBrewers & Distillers ;\nB C Power A ..;._.:....\t\nB C Power B .......\nB C Pulp  :\nBurns. & Co Class A _\nBurns & Co Class' B .....\nCan Brew \u2022\u25a0\t\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCan Cement  \u201e.\nCan M Alcohol ........_\nCan Malting\t\nCan .Packers A ...'..._.\nCanPae fily..... ~~~\nCoast Copper'...\u2014...\nCockshutt Flow\t\nCons. Paper .....\nDistillers Seagrams\t\nDom Tar & Chem ..\u2014\nDom Textile ......\nFanny Farmer :.\u201e..._\nFord of Canada A ........\nGattaeau -.-..\nGen Steolwarea ...,.._\nGypsum Lime .__-\nHirun Walker\t\nImperial Oil _,\nImperial Tobacco _. _.\nInter Nickel .....\u2014\u2014...,\nLoblawiA .............._\nMassey Harris ...._.,_...\nMCCOU Front .'.\t\nMoore Corp .................\nPage HersSey\t\nPowell River .......\u2014..\nPOwer Corp _.\t\nShawinigan :.  ..\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnited Steel ...v.\t\n.   15.25\n.   43.25\n18.65\n.   15.15\n.   26.00\n.    3,00\n,11100\n.   29.75\nITJtt\n20.00\n.   80.50\n.   3115\n12.00\n49.00\n33.00\n,   16.00\n.    1.40\n.   1175\n.   10.50\n;   10.65\n22.50\n.  11.75\n37.50\n,25.50\n.17,50\n.   14.65\n16.00\n28.15\n10.85\n.   14.00\n\\S4.75\n30.00\n22.25\n13.15\n72.50\n-38.00\n44.50\n15.00\n23.78\n81.50\n6.05 \u25a0\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBayonne \u00ab\nCanusa .\u2022.-.\u00ab ....\nCariboo Gold ....'\nGrandvlew \t\nHedley Mascot...\nHighland BeU ..\nInfC & C :.-.\u2022..\u201e,_\nKootenay Belle .\nPend Oreille\t\nQUaislno  .;. *\u25a0 _-.-.\nReeves MacDonald .._...\nSheep Creek  \u2014\nSilver Ridge \u201e ;........\nUtica .;.'..,  _*-\nP'L8\nAnaconda\t\nAnglo Canadian\t\nA P Consolidated ...\nCal & Edmonton\t\nCalmont .\\ .......'.\u2014\nCommonwealth \t\nEast Leduc\t\nFoothills -.'....'. \u2014-\nGlobe' .\u2022...'\u201e......\nHome ..-.\nNational Pete ....\nOkalta Com _i.'.....:...\nPacific Pete . ;\t\nVanalta   -'.\t\nWest Leduc \u25a0\u2022\u2022\nUNLISTED MINES\nBrooklyn St ...\u201e..:...\nHedley Amal\t\nVananda ,-\t\nWhitewater\t\n.06\n.09\n1.05    '\n.22%\n.30\n.85\n.30\n.31%\n5.95.\n.10%\n3.25\n1.58\n.14\n.15\n' .15%\n4.20\n.26\n6.40\n.55\n.64\n.42\n2.60    '\n.78\n13.65\n.53\n1.75\n3.50\n.28\n1.00\n.05\n.01\n.48,\n.08\/\n^ORESTBURG Alta. (CP)\u2014A\nnew coal mine hase been opened\nhere. Some 25,000 tons of coal were\nlaid bare in a seam about 12 feet\nthick.       \u25a0\n Makes Debut\nInternational Romance!\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nMarilyn Ruth Take of Halifax\nand Toronto, a former Canadian\nIce tltleholder, ties a lace! or two\nbefore appearing In her professional debut as a member of. the\nIce Follies at Madison ' Square\nGardens, New York. She appears\nas a Gipsy In tha Follies' Mardl\nOras number, and waa roundly applauded for her exhibition.    :\n,'-'r-Central Press; Canadian\nWhen Miss Sharman Douglas, daughter of the U. 8. Ambassador\nto Britain, flew In from London recently, she was quoted as saying\nthat she hoped to see the young Marquess of Milford-Haven \"If he's\nla town.\" Apparently little time wss lost In fixing a date, for here\nthey are at a New York night club\u2014thus adding to romance rumors.\nCanyons Of Snow\nCanadian\nMissionaries\nTrapped\nIn China\nOne-way trafflo moves through ,10-foot-hlgh drift* of snow aftd1\nNebraska blizzard. The scene Is on Highway 8, about 29 miles East\nof Hastings, Neb., the laat major highway reopened to travel after\nthe storm. .... \u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nWill TakeOver\nNew Duties\n.:,,In'49   '\u25a0\nFifty-seven Roman Catholic missionaries have hein trapped by\nadvancing Chinese, Commuplst armies. Nuns have also;- been'cap-.\ntured, and others are endangered.\nFather Philippe Cote of Montreal\nIs In charge of the captured mission.    !..'' '\u25a0\nCaptured by Chinese near Suchow Is Rev. J. Oscar Doyou, of\nCornwall, Ont\n\u2014Central Press\nMajor-General G. W. E. J. Era-\nkino,  who   has   been   appointed\nJieneral officer commanding Brit-\nsli troops, Egypt and Mediterranean command, with the temporary\nrank of Lleutenant-General. General Ersklne, director of Territorial Army and Cadets, will be re-\nJlaced at the War Office by Ma-\nor-General E. O. Herbert, commander of the British troops In\nBerlin. The appointments will\ntake effect In the new year.\nTHROWS SELF OFF SHIP\n\u2022NAPLES (AP)\u2014Ship's records of\nthe liner Saturnia disclosed Saturday that a man committed suicide\nby throwing himself overboard\nwhile the vessel was at sea. He was\nCarmine Fijchetti, 53, of New\" York.\nHe was returning to his native Italy\nto take treatments for arthritis.   \"\u2022\nBIRKENHEAD, England (CP) -\nReviving an old building-trade custom,. R. O. Lloyd, a Birkenhead contractor, \"stood\" 250 workers a bottle\nof beer each' to celebrate the completion of masonry work on the last\nof 420 houses on a corporation estate.\nPeterboro, .Ont, missionary of\n.the Protestant Episcopal Church Is\nGreta Clark1, above. She was one\nof four women missionaries In Ho-\nnan province who were sent to\nShanghai when threat bf trouble\nbecame Imminent;'   ,y\nV - '    ' .- \\ :   '-'\u25a0\nOn the Air\nTUESDAY; NOV. 30, ,1948\nl'-c*th  \u25a0\n1240 ON'~THE piAL\n7:00^ Canada '' - ..' \u2022  '\n7:02^-Newa Summary \u25a0'\n7:07\u2014Sunrise Serenade\n8:00\u2014CBC News ,\n8:15\u2014Breakfast ..Club\n8:45-a-Mornlng Devotion\n8:00\u2014BBC News .  .. \u25a0  \u25a0\n8:15\u2014Western Tunes  ;\n9:30\u2014Morning. Concert\n9:59\u2014Ttate Signal  '\n10:00\u2014Traib Time .-.-'\n10:01\u2014Woman's World\n10:15\u2014Five Hoses Radio Kitchen\n10:2py-Mid-Morning Varieties \"\n10:45\u2014Nat Brandwyn    '.        \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'-<-\u25a0\nl^OO^-Musical Varieties'\u25a0'.\u25a0\u2022      \u2022\n11:16\u2014'Air Kindergarten\u2022'.\n11:30\u2014CBB Presents\n11:45\u2014Let's Waltz \u2022\"\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board    ','\u2022\u25a0.-. -.-\n12:15\u2014Press News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast ,\n12:55r-Interiude      ,\n1:00\u2014Old Favourites\n1:30\u2014Bernle Bradeh Tells a.Story\n1:45\u2014Music for Tuesday\n2:00\u2014B .C. School Broadcast  '\n2:80r-The Little ShoW\n2:45\u2014Westenr Five\n5:00\u2014Ethel .and Albert\n3:15\u2014Interlude' '    ; \u25a0   .\n8:20\u2014Sketches in Melody\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n3:45\u2014BBC NewB     -     --.'\u2022-.-'\u2022\n4:30-^-Children's Program\n4:14i-Traln Time\n4:15\u2014Afternoon Serenade\n4:30\u2014The Toy Poodle \u25a0;.     ,   - \u25a0   ,\n4:45\u2014Easy Listening  ...\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:15\u2014Echoes of the Gay Nineties\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n5:45-^Organ Reveries\ne.00\u2014Eddy Howard '-,-..\n6:15\u2014South Of the Border .\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:0O-CBCN6ws        \u2022\n7:15i-CBC News RoUttdup\n7:30-i-Lelcester Square\n8:00\u2014Music by Erie Wild\n8:30\u2014Old Timers\n9:00\u2014Points of View   .\n9:15\u2014ZapateO\n9:30\u2014Heritage of Music\n10:00-CBC News ::.\n10:15r-Les Way\n10:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte\nll:00-^God Save, the King\n\u2022-\u25a0 CJAT\n\\    \u25a0   \u2022    810 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Peerless News \u2022 ''.-.'\n7:10\u2014Breakfast for Two .\n7:35\u2014Fun at Breakfast .. -    \u25a0\n7:40\u2014Breakfast for Two\n7:50\u2014Hymn for the Day\n8:00\u2014CBC News \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0.'  ' '    -\"\"-\u2022\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club     \u25a0<\"\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd.-    >\n9:00\u2014Music Workshop- -..-       \u2022 *'\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy .\n9:30\u2014Lake of thei Woods Milling\n9:35\u2014Good Morning, Neighbor\n9:45\u2014Good Morning' Neighbor\n10:15\u2014Happy- Gang     ' '\u25a0 \\\nlO^S^-Singalong  '\u25a0';',\n11:00\u2014Furs on Parade\n11:15\u2014Musical Fill       --.''\n11:30\u2014Jumping Jacks .\n11:45\u2014Eddy Arnold Show        ,\n12;00\u2014Luncheon Concert  ,     ,\n12:30\u2014Press' .News\n12:45\u2014Smoke Rings       . \u2022\n1:00\u2014Centuries of Chrlstmaa   \u2022 ,'-..\n1:45\u2014Commentary, Dak Perry.\n1:30\u2014Bernie Bradeh ,;   ,.\nl:45r5Commentary., ,   .-.     ... - ...\n2:00\u2014B. Ci School Broadcast  '\"*>\n2:30\u2014Air, Kindergarten '\n2:45\u2014Western Five  '     -     .-<-\u25a0\u25a0\n3:00\u2014CJAT Goes Calling\n3:45\u2014BBC News\n4:00\u2014The Inside Story     .   .\n4;15\u2014Jack Smith\n4:30\u2014Christian Fellowship Hour -\n5:00\u2014Timely Tunes       \"   .\n5:15\u2014Wagstaff. Sportscrhft I\n6:20\u2014Press News-\n5:30\u2014Canadian Cavalcade   ,\neiOO^-Bob Hope Shoiv   -\u25a0\n' 6:30\u2014Fibber McGee and, Molly    '\n7-00-CBC News ,\n7:15\u2014NeWs Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square to Broadway\n8:00\u2014Music by Eric Wilde     .\n8:30-Mystery .Theatre-, ; -. .--'\n9:00\u2014Guy Lombardo Show:\n9:30-rHdur of'St Francia      .\n9:45\u2014Sports Cavalcade ;'   '\n10:15\u2014Musical Fill\n10:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte\u00ab''.-.\n11:00\u2014Opera Time\nU:30r-Peerless New*\nThe atmosphere Is.mainly a.mix-\ntare of nitrogin, oxygen and argon,\nwhich;are present,(h the amounts\nof 78,3,1, and-one per cent respectively\nTHE ANSWER, QUICK!\n.\" I; Which is farther North,' the Sa-\nliara Desert.or the Panama Canal?\n.J.-Is White a color? Is black?' ,    i\n3. In Longfellow's poem, The\nChildren's Hour, how many children\ndid Longfellow see in the lamplight,\ndescending the broad.hall stair?\n,4. Can you tell why migrating\ngeese fly In a V formation, the\nsame as a squadron of airplanes?   |\n5. Who was the last Dutch Governor of New Amsterdam, now\nNew'York?.; '   , y if: \u25a0\u25a0,\nHOWD YOU MAKE OUT?\nl.The Sahara.\n.2, White Is a combination of al!\nthe colors of the spectrum; black is\nabsence of color;\n3. Three\u2014\"grave Alice, and laughing Allegra .and Edith with golden\nhair;\" \u2022 ..\n' A. This- formation gives clear 'vie.\nIon, the air undisturbed by passage\nof .another, object, ii, :-',-\u2022 .      ...\n4. Peter,'Stuyvesant.  :\nYOUR FUTURE\nThe new moon accents your most\ndeepiy-held alms, ambitions and\nloves. Safeguard -. your, .health and\nexercise caution in business and be\ntactful with elders Today's child\nmay be somewhat delicate, and\nneed ; extra care, \u2022 but outstanding\ntalent is Indicated and .much personal charm,   y\nMODERN MANNERS\nDon't be' sharp and disagreeable\nwhen your phone rings while you\nare very busy. The person calling\ncannot, know of your activities.\nSwallow your annoyance taid answer wltn a pleasant ;\"HelloF ,\nIT HAPPENED TODAY\nPresident Franklin D. BoOsevelt\nBritish   Prime   Minister   Winston\nChurchill  and  Chinese  Generalise   \u2014\nslmn Chiang Kal-sheic met at Cairo.1 U\nEgypt, and pledged defeat of'Japan' fi\nand a free Korea. Oh Nov. 30, J908,i\nthe -United States made an agreement with Japan, establishing the\nstatus quo and equal opportunity\nin.tne Pacific: The Japaneje government undertook to. prevent -the emigration of laboring classes from Japan to America. -\n Wi\nFIED\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\nHANS\n.__.^SEN-To Mr. and Mrs. Mar.\n(Hansen of Klmberley at St Eu-\nhe Hospital, Cranbrook, Nov. 11,\nton.\nJOLIE\u2014To Mr, and Mrs, Alfred\nlie of Kimberley  at \/McDougall\n(tpltal Nov. 11, a son.\nHUNT-rTd. Mr. and Mrs. .James\nint of Klmberley, at- McDougall\nispltal, Nov. 12, a daughter.\nWHITE\u2014To Mr. and.Mrs. Godfrey\nnlte of Kimberley, at McDougall\nispltal, Nov, 16, a daughter.\nBLAJICHARD\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\niri. Blanchard, of; Kimberley, at\ncDougall HOspltal, Nov, -17, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nSHE CORPORATION OF THE\n. CITY OF KASLO\nApplications are invited by the\nCouncil of the Corporation of\nthe City of Kaslo for the position of Clerk, Treasurer, Asses-\nMr and Collector: Stating age,\nqualifications, references, salary1 expected, and when available. All applications must be,\non hand not later than Monday,\nDecember 8th at 5:00 p.m., addressed to the Mayor and Council and marked \"Application for\neitraerk.\"\nPYS \u2014' MAKE MONETt AND\nrain valuable business experience.\nWe have . good compact paper\nroutes coming open from tune to\nttate. Make application now to\nstart earning soon. Contact C W.\nRamsden, Nelson Daily News;\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n\"Buttonis'-i'\nCould.be our Theme Song.\nAND ALL SORTS OF     -\nSILKS AND SATINS\nAND LACES\nAND THINGS        t\nEverything for your Christmas\nsewing needs.\nDO VISIT THE\n. Singer'Shop\n,       SOONI    .\nMOTORCYCLES,  BICYCLES\n'-'- AUTOMOTIVE\nPERSONAL\nSEWING   IN   YOUR   HOME   OR\n. min*: Bhona.W-BtL' .-,\"\nwAWA*t_sA i#fUAt MB insurance Co. P. L. Kerr, Agent\nAnted\u2014 700x20 dual truck\nchains. 2017 Second Ave., Trail,\nB.C.\nRST CLASS BODY 'AND FEND-\nST man. Queen City Motors, Ltd.\n\/ANTED, MISCELUNEOUS\nOP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\n'iron. Any quantity. Ton prices\nRaid.  Active Trading Company,\n_ 18 Powell' St.. Vancouver, B.C\nOp Voiift hides toI. p. _tdS-\ntan.. Nelson. B.C\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n1 JOB MAN. PH. 256-R. Carpen-\n'heating service, kalsomlnlng.\nSHftCAt- MteSfc'6p\u00a3n foR\nagagement Phone  608-L.4,\nUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n^SALE \u2014 BEAUTY PARLOR,\n^ully equipped.. Good location,\nteasonable terms. Reply Box 828,\n}ally News.       -\u2022        . .\nBUSINESS AND\ntOF.SSIONAL DIRECTORY\n^SSAYERST AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nW. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nlyers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson,\n& ELMES, ROSSLAND, B. C\n.ssayer, Chemist, Mine Represnt\nQ. THOMPSON Bt CO. - AS-\niyere & Metallurgists; All \"work\nIvan prompt attention. 1155 Pen-\ner St, W, Vancouver, B.C\nCHIROPRACTORS\nSOLDI MCLAREN, D.C, CfflRO-\nraetlo .X-Rayy Splnography,\ntrand theatre Bldg. Trail, Ph, 328,\nDIAMOND DRILLERS\nTIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\n!o.i Ltd, Drilling and Bit.Ser-\n1c*. Box 508, Rossland, Ph. 420,\nIQINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nGGEN AND: CURRIE, B. C.\n.and Surveyors, Mining and Civil\nIngineers, Rossland, Kelowna,\nrand Forks.\t\nIKD C AFFL-dK. 2i8 GOR_ Stf.\nelse\nm\nI elson, B.C.. Surveyor, Engineer.\nURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nHARDY AGENCIES LTD.  IN-\nace, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\n[Machine Shop, acetylene and\nfectrlc welding, motor rewinding\n|onex593 . 324 Vernon St.\nEVENSON'S MACHINE,SHOP-\n\"pedallsts ta mine and mill work.\n|08 Vernon St., Nelson. Phone 98.\nHachlne work, light and heavy.\nSALES AGENTS\nFULLER BRUSHES\ntour new dealer ln town. J. C\n{Claude) McKim. P.O. Box 123\nkelson, B.C \u25a0 Phone 234\nIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n>R SALE - SIX-YEAR-OLD\nJersey cow, freshening ta Febru-\njury. Apply to Mr. Fete Gretchen,\nProcter, B.C\nTEAM HORSES, 1800 CWT,\nharness ahd hay, Apply A.\nft. Lavole, R.R. No. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nbr Phone 471-Y-l.\n1-1400 LB. HORSE AND HARN-\nness. Apply Box 10, South Slocan.\nDry Cedar 12 in. Slabs\nPlaner Ends and MIU Ends .\n$6 single load; $10 double load\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n\u2022Glacier Fuel Co.\nPHONE 1206\nFOR SA'LE \u2014 COMBINATION\ncoal and rock gaa Guerney range,,\nlike new. Less than halt price,\n$95. Write 1944 Second Avenue,\nTrail, B.C\nROLL RIM BATH AND TOILET\ncomplete. Will not sell bath or\ntoilet separately. Castlegar Build-\ntag Supply Store, Castlegar, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2IGOOD HEATERS\nwith fittings; Also 2 wheel sidewalk bike suitable for child 5 to\n10; years. Phone 448-Y.-\nBLACK AND WHITE ENAMEL\nrange, used 3 months. Reasonable.\nAlso table-desk. Phone 1340.L or\ncall 232 Anderson St    \t\nIT PAYS TO VISIT SHELLCRAFT\nWorkshop, 923 Gordon Rd. Ph.\n1263-L. Free item to each customer this week. ...\nFOR SALE \u2014 GAS CIRCULATING\nheater, like new. Cheap for cash.\nPhone 872-Y.\nFOR SALE-McCLARY SIMPLEX\ncombination gas and coal range.\nExcellent condition. Phone 450-L,\nJACK BOYCE GUN EXCHANGE,\nGuns for. sale and exchange and\nexpert gun repairing,\nONE TRAIN~TBANSFORMER\nwith automatic cut-out Also tuxedo jacket Phone 587-X.\nFUR.COAT FOR SALE\u2014 SIZE 88,\nCheap. Apply Rm. 8 Marsden Blk.\n410 Josephine St\nPIPE \u2014 FITTINGS - TUBES, SPE-\ncial low prices, Active 'trading\nCo.. 918, Powell St, Vancouver.\nFOR SALE-CHIFFONIER,\ndressing table, bedside table set\nte clear maple. Ph.-703-Y or 1100.\nFOR SALE-2 PR. BOYS' SKATES\nsizes 4 and 5. Phone 1010-L, \u2022\nFOR SALE \u2014 MODERN CONSOLE\nradio. Phone 1198-B.\nfDTES\nOIL HEATER AND  PIPES  FOR\nsale. Phone 257-Y or 82.\nFOR SALE - PIANO, DINETTE\nsuite, 214 Morgan St \u25a0\nFOR SALE-1 CHILD'S PLAYPEN,\n1 baby carriage. Call 321Baker St\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFARM FOR SALE\u2014IN GOOD Locality. All good buildings. 8 room\nhouse, part plumbing. Good soil,\nfruit trees, raspberries and strawberries. Good irrigation. Complete\nwltb stock and equipment Reasonably priced. Apply Box 844\nDaily News.\t\nFARM FOR. SALE NEAR HIGH-\nway. Good land, fruit trees, hay,\nwood and water. Also outbuildings, water in house, plumbing,\netc. Will sell for $2500. P. Dellecor,\nWinlaw, B.C. .    *\nSAVE MONTHLY WITH YORK-\nBhire Savings certificates. $7.00\nmonthly tor 120 months gives you\n$1000 cash.\u2014See Appleyards.\nWANTED TO PURCHASE WITH\nearly possession, 2 to 4 bedroom\nhouse in Nelson, Fairview preferred. Phone 38T-L-1.\nMODERN 4 ROOM HOUSE FOR\nsale with garage. Occupancy from\nDec. 1st $5000 cash. Apply 518-\nlst St. after 5 p.m,\nMODERN 4 ROOM HOUSE FOR\nsale on 1 lot with garage. Apply\nFrank ClauSsen, Creston, B.C.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nSAVE!FUEL!\nLet Us Supply You With Quality\nSJORM SASH \u2014 STORM DOORS \u2014 STORM WINDOWS\nStandard and Odd Sizes   \u25a0   ''' \u2022\nj WEATHER STRIPPING and BUILDERS' HARDWARE\nFree Estimates and Measurements\n,       PHONE 530 OR CALL AT\n907 FRQNT ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\n1948 Dodge V^en   .\nDelivery Truck\n1948 Mercury Light Delivery\n1947 Ford Light Delivery ,-\n1942 Ford Light. Delivery\n1947 Willys Jeep'\n1939 Wiiiys Sedariyy \u2022\n1946 Pontiae Sedan\n1940 Pontiae Sedan      -\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1938 Ford, Coach   .\n1932 Ford Coach\n1932 Ford 1-Ton Truck\n1929 Whippet\n1930 Chrysler Sedan    '.-';.\n1947 Austin 3-Ton Truck\n1938 Ford 2-Ton Truck\n1929 Plymouth Sedan\nTERMS \u2014 TRADES    ,\nWe Buy and Sell Good Used Cars\nEmpire Motors\n8Q3 Baker Si I Phone 1135\nWE CAN SUPPLY\nIMMEDIATELY  -\nInternational Diesel\n\u25a0\" Crawler\n, Tractors\n\u2022      Equipped with\nHydraulic Angle Dozers\nLogging Winches\nCentral Truck1\n& Equipment Co.\n1946 3-TON\nFord Truck\n176\" w.b., in good condition. Also\ngood rubber.\nApply\nWilliams Van Lines Ltd.\n013 Ward St..        Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 1948 3-TON MERC-\nury dump truck, complete with\nradio and heater, new $700 hoist\ninstalled. Only 8650 miles, just as\nnew. Insurance Included with\nprice. Will accept 1948r49 model\ncar as part payment. Anyone\ninterested contact Box 28, Klmberley, B.C. or phone 264 Kimberley.\nFOR SALE - 1947 CHRYSLER\nWindsor sedan, equipped with\nheater, radio, spotlight and fog\nlights. Gone 18,000 miles. Price\n$3200.00. Apply Box 805 \"Dally\nNeWs.\nFOR SALE - THREE TRUCK\ntires slightly used. 2 knobby\ntread\u2014700-20 with tubes; 1-650x20\nDunlop 90. Phone 24\n1939 HUDSON COUPE \u2014 FAIR\ncondition. What offers? Apply\nPercy Williams, Graham Landing,\nArrow Lakes, B.C,\n1948 SUPER DELUXE FORD FOR\nsale. 9000 miles. Heater and defroster. Best offer. K. C Store,\nBrilliant\nWILL PAY SPOT CASH FOR\nlate model passenger cars, any\nmake. Queen City Motors.\nNEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALL\nmakes of cars. City Auto Wreckers. Box 24, Granite Road,\nRENTALS\n$50 REWARD FOR INFORMATION\nas to where I can rent a 4 or 5\nroom apartment or house unfurnished any date from February to April. Permanent tenants.\nApply Mr. Van Maarlon, Hume\nHotel,     y     '\nNATIONAL FILM BOARD REP-\nresentatlve wishes to rent a three\nor tour; rooni house or suite.\nWrite or phone J. p. Patterson,\nHume Hotel\nNATIONAL  FILM  BOARD  REP-\nresentative wishes, to rent a three\n,or  four  room, house  or  suite.\nWrite or phone J, D. Patterson,\nHume Hotel\nw# \\Mii!m-i,vm.-' \u00abnr xtf-\n'tlques. Phone 1032 or \u00ab4Q Baker st\nto ceSWSI '_!ftTH -caKfflftdy'ito-\nformation . and catalogue of hygienic supplies. Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nMmtHH' \u2022 S<5ho6_   _6aKd\nSecretarles. We have a large stock\nof newsprint mlmeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order im-\n, mediately, Daily News Printing\nDept; Nelson. Brltith Columbia. \"\nMACHINERY\n. (Continued) '\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries, 19 Deluxe assorted $1.00,\nmailed in plain sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, .guaranteed.\nBargain catalogue tree, Western\nDistributors, Box 24HN, Begins.\nMEH, DC-NT? TAKE RISES'\"1\nBe safe. Guard your Health. Hygienic Supplies (rubber goods)\nmailed in strong envelopes: Absolute secrecy without embarrassment First-class merchandise,\nPrice $ 1,00 per dozen, mailed One\nhour after reoeivng' order. The\nGreb Trading Co,, Dept 255, 1275\nQueen St West, Toronto, Ont\nOne Trip    J\nAUTp LOANS\nWhen you phone first a single\ntrip will put the cash ta your\nhands. Niagara Finance accent\nspeed and friendliness ln all\ndealings. An Auto Loan' is the\nfastest ot Niagara's 4 kinds of\nloans. On owner's signature you\ncan get from $20 to $1000.  \u2022\nNIAGARA\nFinance Company Limited\nEst'd. 1930\nSuite 1   680 Baker St   Nelson\nPHONE 1095\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nSAVE MONEY, MAKE SURE OF\nChristmas collie puppy now. Canada's top sire, world-famous kennel For easy terms, photos, full\ndescription, write Alandale Collies, Whonock, B.C. -      ;\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOMED CABIN.\nPhone 186-R-2.' Grandvlew Serv-\nice Station, Granite Road.\nWANTED   TO  RENT \u2014 8   OR  4\nroom house. J. R. White, North\nShore Motel\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED HOUSE-\nkeeplng room suitable tor 2. Box\n919 Daily News. ' '\nWARM ROOM FOR RENT. CLOSE\nin. Phone 778-X.. .-' \t\nBEDROOM POR RENT. CLOSE IN.\nPhone 653-R.\nWANTED-4 OR 5 ROOM HOUSE.\nPhone 401-L-l.    '.-.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST\u2014SATURDAY. AFTERNOON\nin front of Civic.Theatre. Large,\nbrown purse containing money\nand personal effects, Phone 11(10.\n(Reward.) \u25a0 -\u25a0\nTWO TRUCK TIRES LOST BE-\ntween South Slocan and Willow\nPoint Finder please phone 77.\nReward. \u25a0\nFOUND - WALLET C\u00bbNTAININet\npapers. Phone 894-X.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nMACHINERY\nHARTWELL\nHICKORY\nHANDLES\nWe carry,a complete stock of\nthese famous handles for all\ntools.\n.      WE ALSO STOCK '\nGREY GORGE AXES\n(single or double bit)\n; the finest sxe made;\n'\u2022' AND .\nHARTWELL LOGGING\n'TOOLS,\nFeevees, pant.hooks, etc.\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n(Continued in next column)\nA1R-COMPHESSOBS\nfORBENTBY\nALL SIZ-IS \u25a0:\u2022\nDAY. WEEK.OB MONTH,      ,\nCOMPLETE WITH   ', '\nCONCRETE BREAKERS,\nBOOK DRILLS, STEEL\nDETACHABLE BItS, HOSE. ETC.\nPURVES E. RITCHIE & SON Utti\n- 658 Hornby St., Vancouver, B,C ,\n___tt6tr \u00abA_ft_w\".w<sast:-_-A\nwelding, Portable weldlpg equipment for field work, stevenson't\nMachine Shop, -708 Vernon St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nJoins Agency\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30,1948 \u2014 11\nSp_A* and, jAcltadJJ'OHXiN!\nsaw with four foot blade. New\nclutch, rings, chain and magnetp.\nSOtae spare parts. Write Box 1019\nDaily News.\nSAWMILL, WOODWORKNO. AND,\nContractors equipment of nil\nkinds. National Machinery CO.,\nLtd., Vancouver. B.C.\nTWO  D7  CAfS,  brtt t)6,<il*B\nTD18  for  sale,  fully equipped.\nBayes    Equipment Company,\nCranbrook, B.C.\ntottw .31 atlti teu\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and ,\nnon-consecutive   insertions.     ,\nlie line per consecutive inser--\ntlon after lirst Insertion.\n'48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions, ...\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers any number of Insertions. '..\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDERS, ETC.-20p per line;\nfirst Insertion, 16c per une each\nsubsequent insertion.\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS; 10%.\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy $   .05 '\nBy carrier, per week,   .\nIn advance    _5\n- By carrier, per year '!,  13.00\nMall ln Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month $ 1.00\nThree months     2.50\nSix .months     4.50\nOne year     8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom;\nOne year  $12.00 \u2022\nSix months'    6.00\nabove rates plus postage\nWhere extra postage is required:\nOne month ......:.............i.;..,    1,06,,;\nThree months , :     3.00 ,\nOils Continue Gains\nVANCOUVER CCP)-Oils continued to hold the feature spot during\nclosing trading on Vancouver exchange Mopday.\nGolds and base metals remained\nunchanged with little trading\nshown. Industrials were weaker in\na neglected market     \u2022\nTurnover was 885,400 shares.\nC and E again led the oils gaining\n5 points to 6.45; Anglo Was unchanged at 4.25; Central jumped .05\nto 1.70; Home Oil, Okalta and Pacific Pete wero unchanged at 13,50,\n1.77 -and 3,50 respectively.\nNOTES TRADE INCREASE\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Canada now\nis doing more trade with Denmark\nand the Netherlands than ln pre-,\nwar years, D. A. Bruce Marshall,\nnewly-appointed agricultural specialist to these countries from the\nFederal Trade Commission, -said\nMonday.\nHis task ln Europe will be to\nstudy the agricultural economies of\nDenmark and the Netherlands, and\nto report on new developments,\ncrop conditions and' their outlook\nas exporters competing with Canada\nR. A. Barford, who returts'to the\nadvertising agency field ta the capacity of Manager ot the Eastern\noperation ot James Lovick & Company Ltd. For the past four years\nMr. Barford was General Manager\nof Thomson Dailies, a chain of eight\nOntario newspapers. Prior to enter-\ntag the newspaper business, he was\nfor 20 years ^ith J. 3. Gibbons Limited, latterly, as a Director.\nAs a member of the Canadian\nDaily Newspapers Association, Mr.\nBarford headed the Bureau Management Committee, which was\nactive in promoting the cause of\nnewspapers both in Canada and ta\nGreat Britain. During the past two\nyears he was Chairman ot the delegation which toured Great Britain\non a trade mission.\nMr. Barford -now becomes a member of the firm of James Lovick &\nCompany Ltd. The agency has offices in Toronto, Montreal, Calgary\nand Vancouver.\nCANADA ROLE IN\nALLIANCE NEARER\nBy DOUGLAS HOW     '\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, (CP) \u2014Canada' Will\nshortly move a step nesrer to a\n$20,000,000,000.a-year defence alliance that likely will have Important effects on her internal policies.\nAt the ambassador level, spokesmen for the seven powers preparing\na North Atlantic security alliance\nwill' meet in Washington, possibly\nthis week, to consider a draft proposal of a pact that is being called\nthe -greatest defence alliance in\nhistory.    ..\nThe draft was prepared ln London by the five Western union\npowers of Europe tor submission to\nthe United States and Canada. The\nWashington meeting will prepare\nIt for submission to a formal treaty\nconference at cabinet level\nCanada's representative at the\nWashington meeting will be Am'\nbassador Hutae Wrong.   \u2022\nGOOD '49 CROPS\nCALLED FOR IN\nFOOD EMERGENCY\nWASHINGTON (CP) - The\nUnited Nations Food and. Agriculture Organization Monday warned that bountiful 1948 harvests may\ncreate a \"false sense of security.\"\n\u25a0 \"First of all,\" the 68-country\norganization said in a report\nadopted at the final plenary session\nof its fourth annual conference,\n\"this year's harvest was far above\nwhat could be expected in' an\naverage year.\n; \"Secondly, the Increased- dependence ot the world on supplies from\nNorth- America increases the element' of risk, because of the\nextreme fluctuations of output\nWhich' may occur in the United\nStates and Canada. -\n', ''Thirdly, world. stocks of food\nhave been Cut to the barest minimum and will still be low at the\nend of 1948-49, so that the Vorld\nwill again depend on the luck of\nnext year's harvest.\n\"For all these reasons, optimism\n{must be tempered with caution in\n1 appraising the future food outlook.\"\nThe report, prepared by one of\nthe three conference commissions\nafter twb weeks' study of world\nfood and agriculture conditions,\nnotes at one point: \"It may be that\nEurope sis a whole is tending to\ndepend - increasingly upon other\ncontinents for its supply Ot cereals\nand other basic agricultural products,\"'\n\"TIjis was not tied directly With\nthe caution against expecting too\nmuch of Canada and the United\nStates, but observers saw a link\nbetween the two in the thinking\nof many F.A.O. delegates.\nIn its only reference to Russia\u2014\nnot a member of the organization\n\u2014the Commission said: \"Unless the\nagricultural development envisaged\nfor the Eastern regions of the\nU.S.S.R. is particularly rapid and\nsuccessful, It is doubtful whether\nshe will become a -large exporter of\nfoodstuffs in the, near future except\nin extremely favorable seasons.\"\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDOWN\n1. Happening\nby chance\n..Awing\n3. Through \u2022\n4. Small bays\n5. Dry\n6. Beverage\n7. Spanish\ncard game\n9. Sailing\n' vessel *\n\u00ab.VIper\n13. Keeps    1\n15. Honey.\ngathering,\nInsect\n17. Bleat,\naeacalf\n18. Guided\n19. Exclamation\n31, A novel\nby Zola\n23. Adverbial\nparticle\n24. Largesnake\n25. A warship's\ndeck\n28. Music note\n28. Sultan's    '\ndecrees\n29. Troubled\n30. Head (slang)\n32. Lubricated\nHfJMUkJ   1-UiH.UlU\nUlUBIHU   EJl.ilJK'li\ni71huuhi:i aaiaa\nUHLita aura\namaa t_Hi_a\nauaa ana nn\naonaci nnaaa\nHQ   HUH   UailH\nanna aaaa\nUI30   LSURH\nisuiau Hunuiun\nlUUUWL)   QHBUE\nHHKIUllI   HBHHUI\nYeattrday's Anm-ti\n34. Keep\n37. Handle\nclumsily\n38. Oscillate\n89. Sleeveless\ngarment\nACROSS\nLHead\ncovering\n4. Feline\n\u2022 7. Masculine\n8,Metalllo\nrocks\n10. Glacial\nridges\ntl. Small bottle\n12. Father of, -\ngods\n13. River\n(Tex.)   .\n14. Gulf (Sib.)\n16. Buildings\nfor horses\n19, Garden tool\n20. Small ball\nof medicine\ntl. Back of\nthe neck\n22. City,\nS. Turkey\n34. A roll of\ncloth\n27, Fer, to\n.Ionia\n31, Openings\n(anat.)\n32. Province\n(Can.)\nS3. Mulberry\n34. Little girl\n85. A linen\nvestment\n(Eccl.)\n36. Precious\nstone\n38. Walk\nthrough \"\nwater\n40. Cover with\nasphalt\n41. In bed\n42. Marry\n43. Fuel\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOIE-Here's how to work It:\nAXYDIBAASE\nIs LONGFELLOW ;'\u2666\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O'e, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the' length and formation of the words are all hints. lach\n'day the code letters ate different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nTJVOV    8,J V   N O K C ' R   R {0 C   Q T N N R\nRJKQS   OS   -BBS   WV   VIVX   KBS   TOSJ\nSJV   (JKZ'B-NARFCXVO.\nWHOLESALE PRICES\nNEAR RECORD\nOTTAWA (CP)-Wholesale commodity prices climbed, to almost a\nrecord figure ta October, the Bureau\not Statistics reported Monday.\nThe general index number of the\nprices, on the base 1926 equals 100,\nwas 159.2 tor the month; The figure\nwas the highest since August, 1920,\nwhen it was 160.2,   ,\nThe Bureau said the current Index\nwas one point above September and\n19.6 points above October, 1947. Six\nof the eight sub-grpup indexes\nshowed increases in October. Most\nmarked gains were shown for wood\nproducts and non-ferrous metals.\nSub-group indexes were as follows, those for September being in\nbr&ckfits*\nVegetable products, 139.0 (138.5);\nanimal products 177.5 (178.4); textile products 160.7 (159.8); wood\nproducts 193.8 (189.3); iron products\n165.3 (165.0); non-ferrous metals,\n159.9 (155.8); non-metallic minerals\n187.3 (137.1); chemical products\n126.2 (126.8).\nMarket Trends\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Oils were\n1 the feature ot a heavy session.\nGolds and base metals were both\nunchanged to slightly stronger with\nslight gains posted in the leading\nstocks. Industrials, were weak with\nlittle activity carried out.       ,'\nTORONTO (CP) - \u2014 Western, oils\nrolled ahead for their third successive day of advance. 'Golds\nstarted slowly but perked up in\nmid-session for some strong gains.\nIndustrials and base metals moved\nquietly on mixed gains and losses.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Selected industrials were still fractionally improved during quiet trading.. Mines\nwere ahead in a narrow list as\ntrading was exceptionally active.'\nMONTREAL (CP)-Tradlng was\ngenerally quiet on the bond market,\nThe middle term Dominions, however, wefe improved slightly while\nthe long term issues were quiet snd\na shade-*Baier.-H>'--.'.--\\-'-- - \u25a0--.-\u2022\u25a0'\nNEW YORK (AP) -.Breaking\nout of a narrow range, the stock\nmarket dipped lower ta comparatively qUiet trading.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Prices were\nslightly easier. Idleness existed In\nall sections which were under the\ninfluence of the nearness of the\n.end of the trading period. The account ends Tuesday.: '\u25a0\nMUCH KNOWLEDGE OF THINGS\nTHROUGH   WANT   OF   FAITH-\nYeaterday's Cryptoouotc:\nDIVINE ESCAPES US\nHERACUTUS.\n'Jlstrlbutod by King Features Syndicate, las,\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG-(CP)-Win nip eg\ngrain quotations (basis Lakehead):\nOats: y\nDec.       79*    80    '., 78tt    79%\nMay        77N    77%' 77\u201e   77%\nJuly       \u2014   '\u25a0  \u2014   -   \u2014 .    74%\nBarley:\nDec.   .:  1,11% 1.11% 1.10% 1.10%\nMay   ....:... 1.08% 1.09% 1.08% 1.06%\nJltly  1.05% 1.05% 1.05% 1.05%\nRye: \\:y~\nDec  1.56% 1.57% 1,58    1.58\nMay  1.82% 1.62% 1.61% 1.81%\nJuly     1.38% 1.59% 1.58% 1.58%\nFlax:\nDec.   ....... 4.02    4.02    4.01    4.00%\nMay  ..;,'.... 4.11%    \u2014      -    4.11%\nCash prices: \u2022\nOats: No. 2 CW. 79%; No, ex. 3\nCW. 78%; No., 3 CW. 77%; ex. 1\nteed 77%; No. 1 teed 78%; No. 2\nfeed 71%; No. 3 feed, 68%; track\n79%.,\nBarley: No. 1 CW. S-tow 1.30%;\nNe. 2 CW; 6.rqw 1,30%; No. 1 CW.\n2-row 1!15%; No. 2 CW. 2-row\n1,15%; No. 8 CW. 8-row 1.30%; No.\n1 feed 1.07%; No. 2 feed 1.05%; No.\n3 teed 1.62%; track 1.06%;' No. 2\nCW. yellow 1.10%;' No. 8 CW.\nyellow 1.09%. \"\u2022   ,\nRye: No. 1 C.W. 1.58%; No. 2 CW.\n1.58%; No. 3 CW. 1.51%; rei. 2 CW.\n142: No. 4 CW. 1.41; track 1.58.\nFlax: No. 1 CW. 4.00%; No. 3\nCW. 8.93%; No, 3 CW. 8,64; No. 4\nCW. 875; track 4,00%.\nCAIGARY LIVES! OCK\nCALGARY (CP)-Trade Is men-\ntag at fully steady prices with a\ntew early sales. It looks like a fair\ntruck run.\nWeekend receipts: 1084 cattle, 111\ncalve;, 194 'sheep. Monday morning's receipts: 400 cattle,\nHogs closed laat week at $29.10\nfor A's at yards and plants. Sows\n$20.25 live weight.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n20,60-22.50; common to medium\n16.00-20.00. Good butcher heifers\n18.50-20.06; common to medium\n15.00-18.00.\nGood cows 15.50-16.00; common to\nmedium 13.00-15.00.\nGood stocker and feeder steers\n18.00-19.00. Canners and cutters\n10.00-12.60. 1\nSchool Bus Burns\nIn Slocan City\nGarage Blaze\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.-A 12-pas-\n,senger. school bus valued at about\n$3000 went up In flames in a fire\nthat destroyed the garage of Adam\nClough Saturday afternoon. A car,\nalso in the building at the time, was\nsaved. '\nThe fire started at about i:15'p.m.\nand in 10 minutes the garage was\ncompletely . demolished. Cause of\nthe blaze js unknown. Efforts of the\nSlocan City volunteer fire, brigade\nwere without avail. \u25a0      .     \u25a0\nMr. Clough was owner of .the\nbuilding. . -\n1 Mr. Clough -Monday transported\nstudents to and frrim Slocan City in\nhis'car. The bus served children living five miles South of Slocan City\nDefence Union\nMonty's Work\nBy STUART UNDERHILL\nCanadlanPreai staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) - Field Marshal\nViscount Montgomery, a super-\nplanner With a sharp tongue, ls\nresponsible for coordinating history's most ambitious effort in collective, security.\nAs chairman -of the Permanent\nDefence Organization of Western\nunion, he is laying the foundation\nof a five-power defence effort that\nmay shortly be expanded to Include\nCanada, the United States and\nScandinavian' countries.'\n\u25a0''At'the moment Lord Montgomery\nis not cast ta the role, of leader\nof anallled \"foreign legion.\" Hla\nimmediate job is planning, but in\nthe'event of siyden.war he, would\nautomatically become supreme commander.   ,\n; Lord Montgomery- takes his ord.\nere.from.the Western Union Defence, Committee, composed of the\ndefence ministers of the United\nKingdom, France, Belgium, ,The\nNetherlands and Luxembourg..\nThese are the powers which last\nMarch- 17 . signed , the Brussels\nTreaty, pledging . themselves \u25a0 to\n\"collaboration in economic, social\nand cultural matters and for collective \"self-defence.\" '\u2022-\nLord Montgomery has a two-fold\ntask: the development \u2022 of tactics\nto meet an immediate outbreak of\nwar in Europe and the long-range\nplanning that will guarantee a\npowerful united front against any\naggressor, \u2022'.      .       .'-;\nLord Montgomery's sppolntment\nwas greeted in Paris with grumbles\nthat he Would tend to put his own\ncountiy first >-',   ,:,- ',-.,'.' \u2022    -\nIf he is to overcome these suspicions, Lord Montgomery will have\nto draw on diplomatic powers he\ndid not always show during.the\nwar. He 'left no doubt about his\norganizing ability by the way he\nexecuted -Gen. Eisenhowers lnvas- \u25a0\nion plans, but sometimes his\nbrusque tongue injured sensitive\nfeelings.\n$1,210,750 FARM LOANS\nREGINA (CP) - Loans to Saskatchewan farmers totalling $1,-\n210,750 were approved by the Canadian Farm Loan Board during the\nfiscal year 1947-46, it was announced\nMonday by Provincial Manager R.\nS Hideout -\nMr. RldeOut said loans .during\nthe preceding period had totalled\n$911,750.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 lndustrlals-171.99 off .91.\n20 rails\u201452.47 off .59.\n15 utilities\u201432.53: off .43.\nCONSUL'S WIFR DIES\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mrs. Herbert J, Morris, wife of the Chilean\nconsul here, died in hospital during\nthe weekend. She was 50 years old.\nMrs. Morris was born in New\nWestminster and educated here.\nShe had been ill for some time.\nTURN EYES ON\nCONSUMER CREDIT\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Prices Commission Tuesday opens' final public\nhearings in its five-months probe\nof the high cost of living.\nAccording to their present-plans\nthe Commissioners will adjourn the\ninquiry for good Dec. .16.\nH. A. Dyde, Commission counsel\nWill call two Government,officials\nto report on the general credit situation In Canada. They ' are C. H.\nMacDonald of the Bureau of Statistics and H, A. Urquhart of the. Insurance Department.\nThey are to be followed, by A. P.\nReid of Toronto, Household Finance\nCorp. of Canada, and Gen. Walford '\nof Henry Morgan and Co. Ltd,, of\nMontreal.\nAll will be questioned about the\namount of credit that Canadian buyers are using to make purchases.\nThey are to be followed, by representatives of two automobile finance\ncompanies. Officials of two banks\nand of the Prices Board, will appear \u25a0\nlater in the week.\nEleven national organizations accepted the Commission's invitation\nto present briefs on present-day living costs. Some will make joint\npresentations. '\nPHONE 144 FOR OLA83IFIED\n\u2022Yours be the genial holly\nwreaths,\nThe stockings and the\ntree '<\nAn aged world to you\nbequeaths\nIts own forgotten glee.\nA Carol for Child\nOgden Nosh\nStockings, a tree, gifts, are all\/a part of Christmas,\nand so are\nGreeting Cards\nfor they remember those who would otherwise be left-\noff your Christmas list.\nSelect Yours From the Wide Selection of\nCHRISTMAS CARD DEPT.\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 30,1948\nDoes He Shave Every Day?\nEvery Second Day?\nOnce a Week?\nIn any case, for more enjoyable shaving,\nhe should haye one of the new\nSimm's Nylon Lather Brushes\n$3.50\nAustralian Parley Hopes To Solve\nEconomic Problems of Far East\nBy LESLIE BRODIE\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nLAPSTONE, New South Wales,\nAustralia (CP)-rAn economic conference which niay affect the lives\nof more than 1,000,600,000 has opened here. Delegates from nineteen\ncountries forming the United Nations Economic Commission for Asia\nand the Far-.East (E.C.A.F.E.) began 14 daya of talks at a luxury\nhotel here in the foothills of 'the\nBlue Mountains, 36 miles West 0.\nSydney. ,\nThey hope to arrive at solutions\nto Far East economic problems and\nto raise living standards of the peoples  now   living  in  squalor  and\n. lunger. \u201e.-\u2022\u2022'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0..'.\"\nThis is the fourth session of the\ncommission since it was established\nIn March 1847, and is the most important international conference\nyet held in Australia. E.CA.F.E. is\nan advisory body which appoints\nworking groups td gather facts and\npass on Information to the U. N.\nEconomic and Social Council.\nWANT RECOVERY PLAN\nThe delegates plan to create an\nAsian \"Marshall Flan\" to provide\n$13,000,000,000 for the economic recovery of Asia. Of this amount, $6,-\n000,000,000 will be raised in the\ncountries most concerned, China,\nIndia, Indo-China, Ceylon, Indonesia, Malaya, the Philippines, Siam\nand Burma. The remainder will\ncome from countries outside the Far\nEast The money will be spent during a five-year period.\nThe three previous E.C.A.F.E.\nmeetings  have  been  marked  by\nELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT\nPASTRY FLOUR\nBEST FOR CAKE8 AND\nPASTRY\nGUARANTEED TO  SATISFY\nYour Grocer Has It\nWWIIWfWUfHWIllMI\nYES\u2014 Your New Wave\nll bound to be MORE STYLISH,\nLA8T LONGER and   '.':..\nLOOK LOVELIER\nat the \u2022   ' \u2022\nHAIGHTRU-ART\nHOLDS NO FEAR\nFor the Wise\nMotorist Who\nProtects His Cor\nWith\nRELIABLE\nSERVICING\nROSCOE\nAND   \\\nFOURNIER     s\nGARAGEMEN\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 123      .   Nelson, B.C.\n,#t\nclashes between' Russian .and non-\nRussian opinion. There Is every indication.of similar clashes here, especially, otf. the' proposed nomination of the Republics of Indonesia\nand VletrNam as associate members.\nBoth Republics. will have .strong\nRussian approval' with opposition\nfrom: France, the Netherlands and\ntheir.supporters.. \u25a0>. .':\u25a0 .\nThe. Russian delegation of 15 Is\nthe largest attending the conference.' Other membera of the Commission are Australia, Burma, China, France, India, the Netherlands,\nNew Zealand,\"the Philippines,-Pakistan, Slam, the United Kingdom\nand the United States. Delegates also are present from Laos, Cambodia, Ceylon, Hong Kong, British Borneo and Malaya., .'..!,.\nFOUR ARRESTED\nIN WEEKEND\nCOAST ROBBERIES\nVANCOUVER, B, p. (CP)'-Four\nmen have been arrested.by police\nhere following four holdups and a\nFARM\nN C   IN: HEART  0 FiPARI S-- Artadewnitawn to middle of Paris near Avenue of Champs Elysses Is olowed for nlanttne ln this scene ln French Capital.   -.\"\"   <\"\nPower Shortage\nHo Aid to U.J.\n: By. The Canadian Press.\nOntario's electric power shortage\nhas Increased the outflow of United\nStates dollars and offset in some\ndegree the Government efforts to\nbuild, up the' dollar supply by curtailing imports.\nJust how much has been spent by\nCanadian individuals, firms and\ncommunities in electric generating\nplants' Imported from the United\nStates will not be known Until November figures are compiled.\nBut an official of the.Government\nsaid the quantity would be large\nalthough the total cost might have\nno serious effect on the exchange\nbalance.,\nThe policy of the Government licensing authority ia to grant import\npermits for electric generating\nplants when It is shown that'thby\nare needed to maintain essential\nproduction or transportation', or to\nease obvious hardship circumstances.\nImportation. of this i equipment\nfrom tbe United States runs normally at an average of only $35,000 a\nmonth.\nAnother, aspect ot the power\nshortage that has interested Government statisticians has to do with\nidleness and decreased production.\nCompanies: which have closed\ndown.for a day or two in the midweek and, operated Saturdays and\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 The Cani-\ndlan Government Is ready to rat-\nIfy a world wheat agreement on\nthe basis of that drawn up at the\nInternational Wheat Conference\nIn London In 1947, Rt. Hon. C. D.\nHowe, Minister \u2022 of Trade, and\nCommerce said > In: Calgary Sunday.   , \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'-, .,       .  ;,.:.:..\nHe was ln the.city to address the\nfinal meeting of the Alberta Wheat\nPool Conference and also to speak\nto the delegates to the United Farmers' of Alberta Convention Tuesday evening.\nMr. Howe was commenting an the\nrecent announcement that another\nInternational' Wheat Conference\nwould probably be held ln Washington, Jan. 25.\n3&__s___\nTASTELESS EXTRACT\nOF COD LIVER\nCOMPOUND\n14 \"*\u2022 $1.00\nYour Rexall (Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34\nBex 460\nwhat changes-would be likely in\nMr. Howe said he did not know\nany new draft for a world agreement, but felt thet Canada would\nratify, any agreement which wss\nsimilar to the last-one which, was\nturned down by Great Britain and\nthe United States. \u00bb\n\"There is a better chance of an\nagreement being agreed upon, this\nyear'by.the United States due to the\nnew democratic congress,\" he felt,\n,'Accompanying the. Minister was\nGeorge Mclvor, Winnipeg, chief\nGrain Commissioner, and several\nleading grain officials who flew out\nhere together arriving In the city\nSunday afternoon ior the conventions here, .;\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'.-. \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0':\nMr. Howe will leave'Wednesday\nfor Vancouver.\nbrutal strongarm attack on a 16- Sundays when general power con-\nyear-old boy during the weekend.\n, Neil Minnet, 18, laborer, and Walter Trymo, 22-year-old truck driver,\nface charges of assault with intent\nto rob Douglas Peat-man, who was\nfound beaten into unconsciousness.\nFirst of the weekend wave of holdups: was staged by a lone bandit oh\na, grocery store late'!;Saturday.' He\nescaped with $175. in cash.     ,,;.\":'.\nLater a clerk in a cigar store\nhanded over $35 to a bandit who\nheld his hand in his pocket as if\nclasping a gun and ordered: \"Open\nup or I'll shoot.\" -\nEng Wing was an early-morning 'With Ch inn Near La\u00abt\nvictim of two supposedly-armedi \"\"\" v'n,ma r'ear \u00ab\u00bb\",\nbandits when they walked into his I : VANCOUVER: (CP) \u2014Shipping\ngrocery store.' When the men moved firms in British Columbia'are keep-\naround the counter to open the cash ing a close watch on China's Civil\nregister Wing raced  through the War.\nsumption is lowest, have-reported a\ngreat deal of absenteeism, particularly on Sundays.\n: Other companies have had to\nshorten hours of work and while\nthere have been no reports to Ottawa or large unit shut-downs, It\nhas been noted that employers\nare showing hesitancy In replacing workers who Idave their Jobs,\nCanadian Dream\nOf Shipping trade\ndoor and yelled for police.\nThe bandits took $52 and some\ncanned goods. \u2022 \u2022     .'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0'\u2022   \":\u25a0'\"\nTwo. thugs took part jtartfwi sliig-\nng-holdup' of Gooey  (Jew, The\nhiriese. grocery store operator was\nStruck. OH the ;side- of the Tiead by\nohe man while the other carried off\nthe Cash register containing about\nTraders here say rosy dreams of\nbrisk trade with China, conjured\nduring the Second World War, have\nrapidly become mirages during the\nlast'nine months.     . .':.\nNo Chinese ports have yet been\nclosed because of strife, but Marine\nsources report United States ports\nof-call such as Chingwangtao, Tsing-\n.. In \u2022 two : Tveekenct burglaries tao and Taku Bar will probably be\nthieves' escaped-, with., more thanIabandoned before long.: \u25a0\n$2800 iii cash and- cheques.- .   Vancouver freighters trade fre-\n\u2022 The' Community Chest Office here' quently into Tsingtao and Taku Bar.\nwas \"robbed ofmore than $2000 inlce freezes up the port for a time\ncheques ,andt$95 in cash-late last during the Winter, but the port is\nnight...About $500 in Cash and;employing ice-breakers to keep\nt^^&^&ZJ \u00b0Penlat.er than usual.thls year.\nsafe from' the\nSimpsbh.Ltd..'0ffice.\nClarke';'-and\nFa*\nThe ancient Romans made a\npoultice of onions and barley meal\nas a cure fbr watery eyes. They\nthought the onions cleared the sight\nby the tears they drew,   i\nLET'S GO TO\nThe Children's Shop\nSuite 20S\nMEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDING\nJ.A.C. LAUGHTON\nOptometrist\nROSCOE\n\u2022       AND\nFOURNIER\nGARAGEMEN\nSKTf CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 122 Nelson, B.C\nsps\n,   \":^r \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 . '\\ , -\nLadies' Flight Boots\nKeep snug and warm in a pair ot sheep skin snow boots. Rubber,.\nsole and heel, zipper and snap fastened. Red only, sizes 5 to 8%. -\nCHILDREN'S AND MISSES' \\ '.'\u25a0:\nWhite Overboots\nSmart white overboots with strap, just like big sister and\nmother. Sizes 0 to 10 and 11 to 2., ,        ''..\nTHE BOOTERY\nHIGH QUALITY \u2014 MODERATELY PRICED\nPhone 1114 411, Baker St.\nMall Orders Given Prompt Attention \\\nCanadian Crews\nTo Berlin Lilt\nTo Be Discussed\nBy ALAN  HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nPARIS (CP) Discussions on\npossible Canadian participation in\nthe Berlin air U*t may be resumed\nin Ottawa after the'eurrent session\nof the.United Nations General Assembly adjourns next monthi lt Was\nlearned Monday.' .-\nIf the new talks take place, the\nemphasis probably will be on man\npower 'rather than machines.\nWhile official confirmation from\nthe Canadian' delegation here Is\nlacking, it seems obvious that some\nreassessment of Canada's -position\nmay be in the cards. Such re-examination-would- be' prompted by two\nrecent, developments: ...   ..,,'\u25a0'\n1. Canada's close touch with the\nBerlin situation' through.Gen. A. Q.\n1_, McNaughton,' permanent, Canadian representative to.the U,N^.Se-\ncurity Council, in,the,mediation efforts of the'little-six countries in the\nCouncil.-\n2. The weekend: visit to .'Berlin\nby Gen.' McNaughtprt and. L. B.\nPearson, head of the Canadian delegation to the United Nations...\nNocomment was forthcoming, on\nthese points when Pearson,and Gen.\nMcNaughton returned to Paris Sunday, !.:'\u2022\u2022 \u25a0;\"'-\u25a0\nBut it Is perhaps significant that\nthe' question; of: air-lilt crews came\nup during the weekend visit.\" At a\noriefing in Wiesbaden, given by\nBritish and American, officers i for\nthe Canadian partyj ah RAF Group\nCaptain mentioned that Australian,\nSouth African and New Zealanders\nwere Integrated among British crew\nteams., \u25a0\u25a0'.'\nWithout mentioning Canada,\nPearson asked whether air-lift fliers\nneed special training. The \u25a0 Group\nCaptain replied' it; takes about a\nweek to acclimatize them.\nThe eyes, unlike other parts of\nthe body, get stronger with use.\nPlane Searches for\nMissing, Trappers\nFORT ST. JOHN, B. C (CP)-An\nairplane is being used-in search;\nfor Adolphus Hodgson, a trapper,\nand his two sons missing in the\nFort Nelson, area 210 miles North\nof here.\nThe trio have not\/been heard\nfrom since they departed Irom\nhere some time ago to repair cabins on their trapllne.\nHodges Tells\nRotarians of\nHong Kong Fight\nThe- bitter, but abort; struggle\nprior to the surrender of- Hong\nKong early In, the war described\nto Nelson Rotary Club' at the Hume\nMonday by A. W. Hodges, Nelson\narchitect, who lived in'Hong Kong\nat the time.\n. Mr. Hodges traced the story from\nthe time preparations began \u25a0 in\n1040 up Jo the early part of hi? interment along with tbe other survivors df tbe battle.\n' Prior to the invasion by the Japanese, he said, air raid tunnels\nwere constructed^ in the hills at\nconsiderable expense, food caches\nwere spotted throughout the Island,\nplans for communal-kitchens made\nand organizations , set up to . deal\nWith various emergencies.\nAs the threat of invasion became\nmore acute, women and children\nwere evacuated.\nThe message that - \"we. were at\nwar with Japan\" came through\nDec. 8, 1041, and surrender took\nplace on Christmas Day. '\nThe Japanese moved quickly,\ntheir bombing attacks disrupting\nthe emergency organizations. Mr.\nHodges, was at KowlOon. on the\nmainland at the time of the. attack.\nDuring their retreat before the\nJapanese, he said, they blew. up\nthe railways, then were finally\nordered to .evacuate1 to the mainland, Your days after the attack,\nHIT BY BULLETS\nIntensive shelling began and food\nstores along the Hong Kong waterfront -set ;oaf ire. Water\" supplies\ndwindled as the mains were\nbombed. Mr.. Hodges was: hit by\nbullets in. the left foot and knee\nand watched part of the battle from\na1 hospital.   ;\nBombing and shelling was follow,\ned by Invasion of the Island, -the\nJaps using landing craft at night\nunder cover of-amoke. The British\ndefenders fought wejl but were\noverwhelmed as the Japs \"just kept\ncoming.\" .. , .   '\nHe told how, as prisoners, they\nwere forced to . march to boats\nthrough long lines of. Chinese coolies as a humiliation measure\u2014\"we\nwere the coolies now,\" he said.\nDuring the early part of their Internment, the average loss of. weight\n\u25a0due to-lack of, fbod was 40 pounds\nper person. There were, no. beds\nin their prison camp; and aged men I\n;and, women' particularly;-. suffered!\nhardships'in having to sleep on concrete floors. \u25a0 \u2022,'.\u25a0 : '.'y '\n'.. Further Internment experiences\nwillbe described to-the clublby\" Mr.l\nHodges at-a later date.    \u2022\u2022'.'\u2022\nGuests were Frank-Rowland Of\nKelowna, James 'Ball'iY of Trail\nand. J; C I. Rogers of Nelson.       !\nSTOCKHOLM .(CP)\u2014The Swedish Government ls to purchase the\ncollection of antique, art belonging\nto Swedish Sculptor' Carl Milles,\nnpw assembled in bis home in\nCranbrook, Mich.\nLaunch Campaign\nOnfacta of,\nBritish Empjre\nBy H. L. J0NE8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer -'\ni LONDON (CP) \u2014 The Colonial\nOffice, shocked at the recently-disclosed ignorance of Britons about\ntheir sge-oldi Empire, has launched\na campaign'to'teach them the facta.\nWhat alarmed the Colonial, Ofr\nflee' Into hasty action was the findings ot a recent Government social\nsurvey, which showed that 50 per\ncent of the people questioned could\nnot name a. single British colony.   \u2022\nEven more surprising were these\nsurveyfindings:   '.',.-\nThree per cent of those questioned thought the United States was a\nBritish colony; about one-third\nthought that thee olbnles paid taxes\nto Britain and 75 per cent could not\ndescribe the difference between a\ncolony and a Dominion or Commonwealth country.\nThe Yorkshire Post found these\nfindings most alarming and embarrassing and commented:\n\"If these answers truly reflect\nthe abysmal Ignorance of even a\nemail section of our people It Is\nhigh'time Indeed that the Colon\nlal  Office  undertook an educe-\ntlpnal campaign....\"\nAnd that is just what the Colonial Office is doing.\nGiving details of Its new \"know\nthe Empire\" campaign,'the Colonial\nOffice said films, lectures, film\nstrips, picture sets and lantern slides\nwould be used to make people\u2014\nespecially the chldren\u2014more aware\nof the colonies,\n' A booklet called \"Britain and the\nColonies,\" published for the Colonial Office, will be sent to all schools\nand educational and youth organizations in Britain.\nAT WORK A T, D A M S IT E _ Jackhanuners operated by Stan Cook, Pete McCIure and R. L. Zabcl (left-to right)-\ndrill base for tall-towers ot a cableway, for pouring. 3,000,000\noublo yards ot concrete at Hungry Horse Dam In northwest-Montana.-They're working on canyon wall, 600 feet above the Flathead river. The 5100,000,000 project will be world's fourth largest..\nCanada Exports\nCalfle to U. S.\nTo Ihe Limit\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Sources close\nto the livestock trade here said today that Canada is exporting cattle\nto the United States to the limit of\nthe. trade's ability'at the present\ntime on a- gentleman's agreement\nthat the United States will not cut\noff Canadian Imports once this\nyear's quota has been reached.\n. The sources were commenting on\nrumors here that the United States\nmight transfer Mexico's quota of\ncattle In the United State's market\nto Canada. At the present time Mexico la operating On a quota of 500,-\n000 head of cattle a year, while\nCanada has a ciu.ota of 400.000.\nFor all practtcaly purposes, however, the sources said, there is a\n100 per cent..embargo against Mexican imports into the United States\nbecause of a serious outbreak of\nfoot and mouth disease in Mexico.\nSince the embargo on slaughter\ncattle to the United States, was lifted Aug. 16, 218,464 head of live\ncattle have, been shipped South\nfrom Canada. In the same period, up\nto Nov. 20, 22,000, head - of calves\nhave been. shipped.\nCanadian Seamen\nArrive From China\nVANCOUVER (CP)A-'Biirty.nine\nCanadian seamen arrived here during the weekend on the last lap of\ntheir 12,000-mile air journey from\nwar-torn China.\nThey are the first of three plane\nloads of Eastern Canadian seamen\nwho had taken six ships built in\nMontreal to Hong Kong for use by\nNationalist forces.\nCapt A. Holdberg, one of the\ngroup, said the Chinese people\nvoiced their dislike for Chiang Kai-\nshek's, Government and are eager\nfor a new system.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n. \"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\n'-\u25a0','   AMBULANCE SERVICE\n.615. Kootenay St Phone 361\niiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCleaned and Recored\nRADIATOR REPAIRS'\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n801 Ward Sty Phone 63\nilllililiillliMlllllllilniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\niiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii\n-     MURPHY'S\n.'.-.'\u25a0   >For '\nWallpapers \u2014 Kdhpm.net\nPaints\u2014-Varnishes\n745 Baker St Phone 666\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nFor a Hqppy Yuie\nTour\nChristmas\nTree\nLights\nAre ar.the    -\nSmith\nElectric\n645 Baker St.     Phone 258\nGIVE HIM SOMETHING TO WEAR\nShop\nNom\/\nChristmas\nis\nNearer  ,\nThan\nYou\nThink\nI.\nWarning! Don't Robe\nHim the Wrong Way! ;\n\u25a0 \u25a0. ''?:\u25a0- -Ail\nIf you lave, honor, cherish or obey\nhim \u2014 ,or If you have a milder sentimental affection \u2014 give him a good\nrobe for Christmas. We mean a robe\nthat Is tailored well to look smart, yet\nIs roomy and comfortable ... a robe of\nfine quality flannel, wool or rayon In .\ncolorful patterns or rich solid colore.\nSelect his robe here tomorrow. They,\nare winnersl\n\u00a3jm&ujjL ^Imitod\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nMrs. Morrow-Tait's\nNavigator Leaves\nEdmonton Today\nEDMONTON, (CP)\u2014Michael\nTownsend, navigator, for Mrs. Richard Morrow-Tait on ihe British avi-\natrlx' attempted flight around the\nworld, will leave Edmonton Tuesday for Winnipeg and Montreal en\nroute home to England.\n\u25a0-, Meanwhile, Mrs. Morrow - Tait\nwho still is stranded due to lack of\nmoney to repair her plane, said she\n\"will not abandon the flight under\nany circumstances.\" ' ',\n, Mr. snd Mrs. \"Whltey\" Wilson of\nEdmonton have offered her temporary accommodation, in their home\nafter reading of her plight, and an\noil,company here also offered her a\njob as a stenographer.\n\u25a0Mrs. Morrow-Tait and her navigator, crashed on the Alaska Highway about '230 miles Southeast of\nFairbanks, Alaska. They left England Aug. 18. .\nTownsend was brought to Edmonton with Mra. Morrow-Talt\nwhen his foot became Infected In\nFairbanks where the two flyers\nreturned after the crash. <\n\"My biggest problem Is obtaining finances, hot securing parts fbr\nmy plane,\" the-pretty aviatrlx said.\nMrs. Morrow-Tait said on arrival\nSaturday she would take a job offered her in an Anchorage, Alaska\nnightclub, to raise enough money to\ncontinue the flight,\n> It was reported earlier that Town-\nsend would fly to Toronto to arrange for the parts but the plans\nWere cancelled and he now will return to his studies at Oxford\nUniversity.' ... '\u25a0 y\n' The killer whale Is capable ot\nswallowing a fur' seal or small\nporpoise at a gulp. .'\u25a0 '\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\n-   Auditors\n.660 Baker St Phone 236\nUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll-\n5' - \u25a0      ' \u25a0\u2022 I\ni Bed lamps I\nAssorted Styles        =\n$2.95 and up      |\n| Nelson Electric Co. \u00a7\n_        Authorized G.E. Dealer        5\n|   674 Baker 8t Phone 260  =\nrTillliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiihiiR\nAT REASONABLE COST\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nSmedley Garage Co.\nReo Sales and Service\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1178-182 BAKER ST.'\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURI\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n\u2022'\"\u25a0 -at the   \"'.'.\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hall St Phono 141\nFLEURY'S Phormocj\nPrescription\nCompounded\n. Accurately\nA Med. Arts Bll\n.PHONE*\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nIRENE'S\nMlELINERY\nAND DRESS SHOP\nBeautifully Boxed\nGift Haridkerchifefc\nSea rves ahd Gjloye,\n\u25a0 \u25a0 -and''        - -j ;\nSmdrf Hai^'oigs\nIn Suede and Bengaline\nAlways Xw^ome. gift\n. . .FOR THE MOTHEB-TO-B\nMaternity Dresses\n\\  '   and Slips,   '\nof Rayon Crepe, sizes BT-iBfMB\nPricesv$9.60, to $17.78'\nITS IN THE AIR!\nIT'S HERE!\nWinter\nValue Your Car and\nHave Its Winter Servicing\nDONE RIGHT\n \u2014'\u2014.\u2014\u2014At the Home of\nGM PARTS\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35    PHONE    35\n.\u2022\"ri\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_1948_11_30","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0424071","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"}]}}