{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0425677":{"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":"2023-02-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1949-02-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0425677\/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":" 0;\n<V\nSeven Trail Rinks,\n* j\nGreenwood of Nc\nIn Challenge Eights\n, TRAIL, B. C, Feb. 8 \u2014 With three competitions well under way,, and a fourth to start at 11:30'a.m. Wednesday, the\nB, C, Bonspiel was beginning to take shape'here tonight,\nThe first primary, the:6rand Challenge, and the first secondary, the Nelson Cup. had reached the eights, all of which\nWill be played at 8:30 Wednesday night. AH these rinks, of\ncourse, enWr the B.C. Championship everit.   _   \u2022\ntonight, 20 rinks reached the second round of the\nTrail Cup, second primary event. The Rossland Cup will tjp\nthe fourth event to start. It is the tertiary to the Nelson,Cup\narid will begin tomorrow morn- * ~rr^\nIng, P. Robertson of Trail, Calvert took\n\"   Spectators swarmed onto the ice.l A Creighfori'of Trail, and Green-\nand into the bleachers, as well as wood beat. a feliow club, member,\n\u25a0ocm Dail\n6C_NT8A COPY\nx *$tic Works, P.Q.E. Development\nEnd of Qleo Ban Proposed\nNELSON. BRITI8H COLUMBIA. CANADA-WEPNB8bAV MORNIK6, F-6. 8. f$4\u00bb\nwatching from the club room windows, toe majority to see D'Amour\nbeat 3. Hamson of Rossland 10-6 in\ntoe first round qf the secondary primary, the Trail Cup.\nNames long familiar In the B. C.\nBonspiel' fill  the ;Grand   Chal-\n'   lengo quarter-final brackets, and\nall but one have won every game\nup to late tonight Seven of them\nare Trail rlnks, the eighth from\nNelson. In the games tomorrow\nnight A. M. Chesser will meet H.\n. T. Beckett, Donald MacDonald\nwill meet T. D'Amour, P. F. Mclntyre will meet R. E. Stone, and\nA. E. Calvert will meet H. A; D.\nGreenwood of Nelson, only out-\n,  Vide entry left In, the Mi\", event,\nand the one with the best record\nso far\u2014five wins, no losses,\nGreenwood, first' to qualify for\nthe B. C. championship, played tour\ngames in. the Challenge, haying\nstarted in the preliminary round,\nand, the others.played .three.   .'*'.'\n*   Chesser, Beckett, MacDonald, believed by many to-be the \"hottest\nrlnfc in the Bonspiel,\" D'Amour, Mclntyre and Stone each have; four\nwins and no losses. Calvert has won\nthree rind lost one. The figures tor\ndude initial games played by these\nrlnks in the first round of toe Trail\nCup, Each .rink also won a game\nIn the Visitors, but these wins do\nnot count ln the Grand Aggregate,\nnl the Nelson Cup eights,\" R. P,\nDockerlll of Trail, will play, M. B,\nRyalls ot Nelson; J. H. Twells of\nKimberley meets L. F. Tingling of\nNelson; R. C. McGerrlgle of Trail\njlaysD. Sutherland'of Trail; and\nR. Somervllle of Trail meets W. P.\nRobertson of Trail. -\nDOMINATED'-BY TRAILITE8\nThe 16s of the challenge were\ndominated by TraiUtes. Chesser\neliminated A. M. Gibson of Trail,\nBeckett took but F. Strachan of\nTrail, MacDonald beat R. Soriler-\nylUe,' DIAmqw^-edg^d A. K Allan\nof Nelsbn, Mclntyre ousted J, H.\n.-Leokle-of Trail, Stone whipjped W.\nG. McMurchy.\nAllan took Dominion champion\nD'Amour  right to the  lost rock\n\" before finishing on the short'end\nof a 9-8 scoro. The Nelson, rink\n,   Was ahead 6-4 In the sixth end,\nbut D'Amour came up with one\nj ..In, the seventh and; four In'the\neighth for his nine. Allan closed\nin with two points In the ninth,\n;   and one In the final end,\nThe Nelson-alderman later dropped another 0-8 game, when he met\nR. Somervllle ;qf TrailTin. the second\nround of the Nelson Cup, Other,\nclose games Included- a 0-8 victory\nfor. Fred Tinling of Nelson oyer.\nC. Strachan' qf:Trail,' a 10-9 extra-\nend win for J. Niveri ef Trail over,\nDave 'Garnham of Vancouver and\nanother,' extra-end \u25a0 win for , 3'. 'H,\nTwells of Kimberley who defeated\nFrank Avery of Vancouver. \u2022 \u25a0\nThese games were also iri the\nNebjqn Clip. \"''\u25a0' I. ... \u25a0:',; '\n\u25a0 In games leading to toe eights bf\nthe Nelson, Cup, D. Sutherland qf\nTrail' came frqm: behind ari. XX-1\ndeficit in the eighth end to wind up\na point ahead ~f Herb Peacock of\nNelson with 12-11. to the same\nreund W. P. Rbbertseri bf' Trail\nedged J. G. -McMurchy of Nelsoh\n13-12, the ' Trail1 rink. rolling 'up\nseveral big ends. But' McMurchy\ntied it up in the 10th with' a great\nefofrt with, a three-ender, only to\nsee, Robertson score the winning\npoint with his laSt rock in the\nextra end.\nIn the wee hours two whopping\nends were  chalked up by J.  H.\nLeckle- of  Trail  to  beating  club\nmate T. W. Mathieson 14-11. Leckie\nscored a four-ender In the nnto\narid a big six-end in the 10th to\novercome an 11-4 lead.\n\u2022'\u25a0 Many  visitors are taking advantage,   of    conducted    tours\nthrough .the CM. & S. plant and\nfertilizer plants, and are occasionally able to Blip up to Rossland\nbetween  draws to see  Sno-Sho\n, .aotfvljles,    \u00a3..-.'.> ,;.%\u2022;     \u2022\u25a0\u25a0   -\n$3602042 Surplus\nIn B.C. Revenues\n1 VICTORIA, Feb. 8 (CP) - Public accounts of the B. C. Govern:\nmerit, presented at the opening of\nthe Provincial . Legislature this\nafternoon, showed that In the fiscal .year ended last March 31 the\nprovince's revenues totalled $67,-\n077,739 providing a surplus of $3,-\n602,042.    \u25a0\nThe Government had estimated\ntits, revenue for the 1047-48 fiscal\nyear at $58,888,030,\nExpenditures had been estimated\nat $62,106,680, but actually totalled\n4S3.47b.69S. '.'\".,'   '.'\n^The'Province's surplus revenue\naccoupt has an unspent balance of\n$18,900,737. It was emphasized that\nof this unspent balance only $3,907,-\n416 was not committed by.acts of\nthe Legislature.\nThe Government during tab 1947-\n48 fiscal year dipped heavily into\nits surplus revenue account. At the\nstart,of thb yer there remained an\nunspent    balance   of   $27,844,352.\nWhile only $3,602,042 was added,\n$11,545,657 Was^spent, ', :\n'Major sources of revenue which\nthe .Government- had underestimated for the 1947-48 fiscal year includ\ned liquor, estimated at $11,600,000\nbut actually $10,406,914; motor licence,fees, estimated at $4,100,000\nbut actually'$5,613,698; gasoline, eS'\ntimated at $7,825,000, but actually\n$0,295,742; timber royalties, estinv\nated at. $2,100,000, actually, $3,025,'\n735; timber sales estimated at $1,'\n950,000, actually $3,474,791;   ..:'.\nThe   Provincial   balance  sheet\nshowed assets at $360,649,491, an\n. Increase of $28,439,840 dUrlng the\n1947-48 fiscal year. Liabilities Increased by $18,f20,252 to $276,179,-\n846.\". ' \"\nSLASHER\nTERRIFIES\nMONTREAL\nSecond Attacfcon\nYoung Girls\nUnder investigation\nGUARD PUPILS\n; MONTREAL, Feb; 8 (CP) \u25a0- Police tonight sought a mysterious,\nknife-wielding, child-scaring.strang-\ner in toe usually quiet municipality bf Rosemount to the Northeastern section of Montreal.\nTheir vigilance followed the second attack within 10 days on a child\not school age which.left many parents terrified; and induced them to\nsafeguard their children by accompanying them,to school,\nA 12-year-old girl was overtaken\nyesterday and forcibly, thrown into\na car by a man who mutilated her\nface' With a knife' before 'she managed to break away.\n* -The child wasipiirher way home\nfrom school when the men\u2014police\nguessed he was between 30 and 40\u2014\nwearing overalls'and an aviator's\nhelmet,; drew up beside her in a\nblack car. Before she could run- so\npolice said, she was picked up and\ntossed into the car, the riiari holding a handover her mouta' *\n1 Inside the car, she told police, he\ndtew a knife and warned her not\nto scream. He took a slash Or two at\nher cheecks. A little later,.after she\nbroke a car window with her school\nbag, toe girl was pushed out to the\n.street   ..       \".\"...','.' \u2022       '\nThe child was found lying unconscious in the snow.\nA week ago. yesterday * 10-year-\nold Ukrainian girl, living four\nblocks from yesterday's victim, was\nsimilarly accosted as she awaited\nat a bus stop for herfathcr.\nIncome Tox Refunds\nTo Be Mailed\nDuring March        '\nVANCOUVER,: Feb. .8 (CP) r-\nPower-short,-Shivering British: Columbians got a glimpse of the diver\nlining today.       ,,  \u2022..\nThey learned that 400,000 of them\nwill share the sum of $31,500,000\nnext month. The money Is toe refundable portion of, 1943-44 Income\ntax. I ,\nChecks will start, going into the\nmall March 1 and should all be delivered; .March 31,: on. Income Tax\nDepartment spokesman .said.\nA harried spokesman called \u2022 it\n\"the most tremendous job' we've\never tackled.\"- lie* explained. that\none out of every four of- the fortunate 400,000 had changed his address, 'iff,'?-\nGov't Buildings\nUpkeep Cost Rises\nVICTORIA, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014The cost\nof maintaining t h e Legislative\nBuildings here, home of the Provincial'Government, rose to an all-\n^J^fl^987:dUring ^b^. regu1_7sta^-l=\n1047-48 fiscal year.\nDetails of the costs were disclosed in the public accounts tabled\nin the Legislature today. In toe previous fiscal year the cos t was $218;-\n191,\nDuring the 1947-48 year the Government spent $96,957 on repairs to\nthe buildings;\nEqualization School\nTaxes in\nRural Areas Planned\nHART SPEAKER\nVICTORIA; Peb, 8 (CP) \u2014 A 12-\npoint Government program, outlined In the \u25a0-, speech from the\nthrone at the. opening of tbe Brit?\nlsh Columbia Legislature today contained no sunrises.;\nThe speech, read by Lieut-\nGovernor Charles A' .Banks, proposed repeal of the ban In the\nsale and manufacture'of margarine; large ' leans' to finance a\nmajor public works program;\nadditional financial aid for the\nUniversity of. British Columbia\nand equalization of school taxes\ni   in rural districts.\n\"My Government will recommend\nthe rescinding of legislation which\npresently prohibits the sale of\nbutter substitutes,\" said the speech.\nSale 'Of margarine is banned\nunder a 1936 Provincial Act which\ntakes precedent,, over a ruling of\nthe Supreme Court qf Canada making It legal in other parts of the\nDominion. \u2022  ,   ft'.\nThe public works program will\ninclude power development,, and\nconstruction \u25a0 of -highways, bridges,\nsecondary roads, Schools, hospitals,\npublic institutions and Government\noffice buildings.\nDetails of the program including\nfinancing Plans, were pot given..\nIt also\/, recommended plans for\nimprovement and .development of\nthe' Pacific Great Eastern Railway,\na Government-owned line which\nAmerican interests have sought to\nlink with' the Alaska Railway.\n; Reading of toe .700-word throne\nspeech wis followed'by the election of John Hart, former premier,\nas Speaker of the House.\nTo Death\nCOPENHAGEN, Feb. 8 (Wednesday) (AP)\u2014A Scandinavian Airlines plane with 28 persons aboard\ncrashed.last night in the waters off\nthe Swedish Coast and it was feared all were killed.\n. The-plane, a Br^tUh-made.VlklnB\nafrcraf tcW.as. ce_,\u00abISta ft<iinr Madrid\nto Copenhagen with a crew of five\nand 23 passengers\u2014all Spaniards.\n' It had bberi overdue here since\n1:50 p.rn. CST Tuesday, after making a scheduled stop in Paris.\nPatrol vessels and aircraft searched through fog-swept seas and\nmisty skies; more than four* hours\nbefore finding traces of the crash,\nBootlegger to Sell\nHouse toJiVdde .\nPadlock Lbw   '\nVANCOUVER! Feb. 8 (CP) \u2014\nBootlegger Ed Garron, 41, of Vancouver, figures he.has,won his 42-\nday-old battle* with the police\nliquor squad.\n: Garron, ho says he's \"been- bootlegging all my life,\" has, played a\ncat-arid-mouse game with the law\nsince Dec 29 when police told him\nthey'd padlock. bis house if toey\nfound' it vacant. For weeks he's\nBut now he has a solution: \"I'm\ngbnria sell my house next month,\"\nIt was,-he Said, a \"lousy district\nanyway. You can buy a drink at\nevery'second .door.\"\nTo solve; a*current shortage of\ncash, he's planning, to apply tor\nunemployment insurance.\nPATROL ATTACKS\nRED BOATS\nON YANGTZE\nMany Sunk, Captured\nIn First Action in\nMonth; Gall Meeting\nCHIANG BACK?\nBy HAROLD  K. MILKS\nNAN KING, Feb. 8 (AP) \u2014\nChina's dormant civil war flared\nInto a light fight on the Yangtze\ntoday.\nGovernment patrol boats attacked a flotilla of Communist supply\ncraft West of Wuhu, which Is about\n40 miles West of Nanking. Several Communist boats were sunk\narid 31 junks captured, along with\n\". a few Communist prisoners. '    -\\\n\u25a0' A naval. spokesman \"denied'. the\nCommunists were trying a, crossing.\nThe action, first of importance in\na month, came as peace hopes wilted.    ',\nChiang Ka\"-shek, the retired\npresident, was reported by the authoritative Shanghai newspaper, Ta\nKurigPao, to be getting ready to\npreside over an \"important\" Kuomlntang'(government) Party meeting; iri Canton March 29. This was\ntaken by many to mean the long-\ntibie Chinese leader might take over\nthe reins of the faltering. Government from Acting^ President Li\nTsung-jen; ' k.\nThe Aeting'President, repeatedly\nrepulsed by; the Reds . when he\nsought to get them around a peace\ntable, wasvgiven slight chance bf\nsuccess. \u25a0\nLITTLE CHANCE\nMost- sources said he might be\nable to surrender Shanghai and\nNanking, before the Reds take them\nbut had. little chance of making\npeace for toe^reBt of China.   ,\nPremier Sun Fo's cabinet in Can-\ntori seemed determined to shake\nfree of the LI government altogether\nand determined to carry on the\nfight in South China.        \"\nB.C. COMPANIES\nCUT PRICE OF\nhia^iu^il:\n-V VANCOUVER, Feb.'8 (CP) ''\u00a3?\n.Price of heavy fuel oil has been\nreduced ,*frbrir' between five arid\n18 cents a barrel by several Brit-\n1   lsh Columbia companies.\nThe decreases, which affect the\ntypes of oil used In large build\nIngs, some apartment houses, and\nheavy Industry, follow similar\nreductions In price for the California I fields, source of most of\n\"'   B. C's ollii\nRate Cancellation\nTo Mean Higher\nPrices in B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 8 (CP) \u2014\nRailroad notices. cancelling 'special low rates on 200 commodities\nshipped to British Columbia coast\n-points today heralded new-'Increases. In the- cost of living in\nthe province\t\nToday's notification It the second; by the railways since the\nfirst of the year cancelling \"commodity\" rates. The first list, filed\nIn January with the Board of\nTransport Commissioners to be\neffective Feb. 12, listed 120 commodities.\nIncreases range from 18 cents a\nhundredweight to $16.82.\nNUMBER 244\nMindszenty Sentence\nStirs Western World\nJ08EF, CARDINA_,Mlr4D8ZENTY\n(See'also picture on Page 10.)\nMichel (reek\n: NATAL, B.C., Feb..8\u2014A petl\ntion; |Stgned by over 200 Natal\n. citizens and urging that Michel\nCreek- be controlled against pos\ntibia Spring flooding, will be\nforwarded to'Victoria for-\"Immediate consideration,\" .\nThe petition was drafted and\nsigned at a public meeting here.\nIt was felt that unless immediate\nefforts were made there was danger\nof a similar occurrence.to that of\nlast year, when the swelling Michel\nCreek broke through at the base'\nball field at the top end bf. Natal\nand practically flooded the entire\ntown. ',.,'*\nIt was hoped that Michel Creek\nwill- be either dedged when the\ncreek is;, at a low'Jevelt' or else\ncrJbti(pg-s*i~lt' to avoid ;''anyipbS'\nsible break\" n the course of the\ncreek,. , .   ,\nTile present creek bed is reported\nto be at a higher level'than that of\ntoe main highway, and the least\nrise in toe'ereek will result in-the\nflooding of NataL .\n; The coal company property at\nMichel .situated a'mile or so East\nof Natal, will take precautions to\navoid 0, flood.\n; .The Natal Board bf Trade was in\ncharge of the special meeting and\nS. G. G. Fisher of. Natal, President\nof the Board, was chairman.\nWilliam Chapman,' Colliery Manager at Michel, Thomas H. Uphill\nand K: Stewart ot Fernie, attended.\nT. Wilson,,President of toe Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Company bf Fernie,\nwas unable to be present,\nANSCOMB IN BED\nWITH LUMBAGO\n'. VICTORiA,.Feb. 8 (CP)-Ftoance\nMinister and Conservative leader\nHerbert Anscomb today was un\nable tb attend the opening ot the\nBritish Columbia \"Legislature.\nAn attack of lumbago confined\nhim to his bed arid his duties in the\nhouse were taken ever temperarlly\nlev\nby '..Public\nCarson,   '..\nWorks' Minister E.  C,\n11%\nOttawa\/ London Study Possible Action\n-To Aid Cardinal; Diplomatic Mores\nDemanded; Consulate Staff Resigns\n* ' \"V\n:\u25a0 .\u25a0 '    By Xlie Canadian Press\ni Church-leaders and stdtesmen in the world odrslde the\niron curtain angrily denounced the iife sentence imposed Tues-c\nday on-Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty in Communist-dominated\nHungary. \u25a0\u2022\nHigh,prelates of the. Roman Catholic Church expressed^\nshock and disgust at the treatment of the Hungarian Primote.\nPolitical- leaders added their condemnation, many de-\nmandi.ng that diplomatic action he taken against the Hungarian Government.\nPeoples of many faiths in democratic lands joined Rodman Catholics in sprayers for the deliverance or Cardinal\nMindszenty.' \"   \u25a0\u2666  \u2022''\" \u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014~r- .' \u25a0':\u2022'\u25a0 \u2014\nVatican City Informants said Pope\nplus knelt in prayer in his private\nchapel after hearing the news \"with\nmost profound sorrow;'' One source\n[said toe Pontiff wbpt When he\nheard the news, and another, that\nhe would take'the first occasion to\nprotest publicly, :\nIn London the British Foreign\n- Office was giving urgent consideration to the verdict\nIn Ottawa  Prime Minister St\nLaurent said Cariada; will consult\n' with other signatories of the Hungarian peace treaty to see whether any Joint action oan be taken\non behalf of Cardinal Mindszenty.\n' Warren -R.- Austin, Chief j tthited\nStates delegate to the United Nations, said Iri a atateirieriti  .     7\n\"The world has learned froni bitter experience that the persecution\nof religious groups Is not only an\noff ence against the moral conscience\nof mankind, but it is also a Warning\nsignal of the spread bf tyranny and\noppression of all Kinds,\n\"That is why Americans of all\nfaiths....are alarmed anl* shocked\nby this ominous portent.\"\n\"MOCKERY.OF JUSTICE\"\nHere are some typical reactions:\nJames, Cardinal McGuigan,, Archbishop of Toronto: \"The1'sentence\npassed on Cardinal Mindszenty following the -mock trial ot Budapest,\nthough riot unexpected, will nevertheless shock ;fhe civilized world.\" (\n. ..Dennis CardinaljOougherfyf Archbishop ibf Philadelphia: \"The so;\ncalled trial of the Cardinal Primate\nof Hurigary\\was a mockery of ius-\ntlce. A Cardinal has been condemned for) doing his conscientious duty.\",;\nand, according to Press reports, justice has riot been served.... Tha \u2022\nwhole world, except: such as the\nComrfluhists, will be disgusted.\"\n' Playwright Bernard Shaw said:\n\"Thf question:is a very difficulty\none, If the verdict is to be regarded\n'as purely anti-clerical it is indefensible. But the.notion that priests'\nand scientists should be exempted\nfrbm the common law Is equally indefensible.\"       ',,.'.',,-' Y\nLqrd Vanslttart, former chief diplomatic adviser to the British Government, said: \"K is a savage sent-.'\nencb'whlch means virtually*a ling- 2\nering death.\"       '\nCommunist spokesmen took the\nopposite view.  .\nHarry Pollitt, General Secretary\nof the British Communist Party,\ncommented: \"The trial has undoubt-.\nedly established, fbr all impartial\nopinion the accuracy of the charges\nand the justice of the sentence,\"\nThe   Hungarian   Apting   Consul'\nGeneral for New York, Belsa Bal-;,r\nassa, announced that he and \"\nstaff of four had resigned\ntest against the convic '\nCarUlnaL \u25a0*'\nMONTREAL,\nHealth Minister W& JPtaday'\nthe first pa*rt'.of abaflf;\u00bbi,\u00ab)d,000 \"or\nmbre'f -w^^^lh^aF^te- Quebec\nGovernment shortly to help build\na new mental health hospital, \"second to none on this continent.\"\n&nd in This Corner-^-\nVANOOUVER, Feb. 8 (CP'-Commlssloner David Lamb ef the\nSalvation Army, an 82-year-old power In the temperance world, today\ntook a look at British Columbia's liquor legislation problem and saldi\n\"Legislate for, never against, human nature.'!\n\"That will get hie In trouble with my temperance friends,\" he\n'.' ehuckled.     ,- ; \u25a0 ,   ', ,,,\u25a0\"..'\nCommissioner Lamb, who Is retired from active duty, Is en a \"self\u25a0\nImposed goodwill tour, visiting people over 80\u2014they're tho ones who\ncount.\" .      ;:' \u25a0 .... , ,  -   .\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014A nursery catalogue contains these is-\nmarks on a new variety of apple: \/ - \u25a0\n\"Will withstand any storm, Very thick skin. Sweet, though slightly\nbitter. Prolific. Wonderful keeper. Late bloomer.\"   *\nThe apple is called \"Winston.\"     .-.-.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>'   '\u25a0\nJERUSALEM, Feb. '8 (AP)-irnlted Nations* fq\u00bbd convoys to the\nJewish Army enclave behind Arab lines bn \"neutral\" Mount Scopus\nwas cancelled again today\u2014but for a new reason.\nThe heaviest snowfall in toe Holy City's history made the load\ntoo slippery. '\u25a0\nSix inches of snow blanketed toe Judoan Hills.\nLIVERPOOL, Feb. 8 (AP)-Tho licensing Ju\u00bbtloM decided here\ntoday that the corner pub must remain British.'That means no Juke\nboxes.    \",',- ' >\nMrs. E. M. Jones, licensee of a Griffiths :8treet pub, wanted to\nIntroduce one, and explained at length what It was. The box she wanted\nto Install had to be converted to British peculiarities. It had to be adjusted to take three British pennies Instead of one nickel.\n\"Too loud,\" said the police.\nCttrlers Ffom East Kootetiay to Coast SeekH       at Trail\nVictorious In their first game were these Rossland curlers and here they are pictured\nJust after beating the A. Phillips rink of Vancouver 12-1 In an extra end game In the B.C.\nBonspiel at Trail. From left, E. B. Off In, lead; W. J.Ternan, second;' E. E. Perkins, third,\nand J. A. Wright, skip. Mr.. Perkins Is the new President of the B.C.. Curling Association.\nHe was elected at the annual meeting Monday night ^ \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0,.\nCaught Just as they were going on tho Ice against M. M. Butorac of Trail was the Roily..\nDavid rink of Vancouver, above, Mr. David It a familiar figure In Kootenay bonspiels at Is\nEarl. Bennett, second. From' left, Mr. David,, Andy Ferguson, third, Mr. Bennett and - Les\nMHie^ieed..'-\".   :\":'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0''\"'      _._;_*_    ' ..  :.\u201e:._,..;..  ;\u2022\nCranbrook entry. In the Bonspiel'Is the Dune MacDonald rink, above, which took J. H.\nTwells of Kimberley Monday. Down one coming home, the MacDonald team laid down two\noh tho last end tb win*9-8. From left are, Let Chrlstlarison,-lead; Cece Morrison, second;\nOole Reld, third and Mr. MacDonald, skip.       1.   yr' \u2014Bally, Newt photos,'-\n b \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9,1949\nAdult\nEntertainment\n.\u2022.TiTiaf\nIce Artists Thrill as\nRossland Opens Rink\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 8\u2014This.wat a big night for Rossland\u2014a\nnight long awaited. . '     '\nIt wat opening night for the spanking new arena\u2014a sporting faoll\nIty that will enhance thit Golden City's role at a Winter tporttland.\nFlashing bladet of the 8no-8ho Ice Carnival tet the tempo for the\nevent. And a thrilling ohe It was, replete with the beauty of Ice performance!, the charm of young contestants and the polished Intrlcaoles\nof skilled Ice ertlste. -t\u2014\u2014. \u2014-\u2014.'\u25a0'..  '.. ..\u2014\nI    TONWHT ONLY,\nShows 7:00-r9i01       ;\nCivic\n''\"\u25a0;' PM IHI IAMI nOQUM.. -\nLATEST NEWS\nCOLORED CARTOON\n'.'CAT TROUBLE\"\nThe 'colorful carnival,' another\nserving < of the Sno Sho's, gala\nentertainment menu, was sponsored by the Trail Skating Club.\nMayor J. R. Cornet led opening\nceremonies.\nThe new arena contains an Ice\nsheet 185 taft by 85 feet, and It is\nexpected that artificial ice may be\nlaid within the next year' or two.\nIt is also hoped to put on an addition which would provide five\ncurling sheet*   -       v.    .-\u2022 _\nSeats are not yet installed, but\nbenches provide seating for 800\npeople. It it planned to install prefabricated metal ' seating stands.\nThese will lbave the underneath\nsections clear of all obstructions,\nThe nature! Ice sheet has, a\nsplendid surface. Although only\ntwo blocks from the curling rink,\nit is 150 feet higher iri altitude, providing an advantage ln natural Ice-\nmaking. -,  '   '\nTho building Is-of all steel, coh;\nstruction; the front is yet to be\nfinished, but eventually ofiices and\ndressing'rooms will be sot up, The\nexterior is, finished in gray transite,\n8 corregated composition material.\nTo date about 888,000 has been\nspent on the arena With $50,000 being contributed by the CM. & S.\nand toe balance raised by citizens.\nThere were laughs, plenty of\nthem, in the scintillating performance. And' no small serving of\nhumor Was that supplied by the\nFamily Picnic group of A,\"Wood-\nrow, G. Babcock, M. Ward, M. Mclntyre, J. Millen, Nick, Catalano, B.\nBurgess, M. J. Zerzuh, F. Koenders,\nJoyce .Klrkpatrlek,' Judy   Kirk-\nPatrick and Nell Perkins. ,\n- As .much a nuisance vs ants at\nthe \"picnic\" was The Brat, Neil\nPerkins; he ounded out his \"little\nbrother\" performance by falling in\nthe cak\u00ab. ...'.,\nMore comedy was provided by\nGerald Babcock and Isobel Breck-\nenrid^e-to \"Sophistication.\"\nAmerican skaters brought their\nartistry to the show. The. always-\npopular Doc and Carol Mittun,\nformerly ot Trail, now of Seattle,\nwon favor; while Shirley, and\nVivian Ingham, and Louise Waugh\nof Spokane glided through charmingly patterned performances.\n\"Vivacious\" described it, the lilting number by Sidney Swlngler of\nthe NelBon Figure Skating Club,!\n\"Queens Court\", a lovely scene,\nbrought 16 skaters to the ice, Joanne Errington, Helen Hild, B.\nLauriente, M. Myers, Eileen Frle,\nM. MacDonald, Betty Stewart, M.\nSturgeon, < Eleanor , Cull, Evelyn\n\u2022Jones,'- Lortia Turner, Joyce McLeod, Peggy McLeod, Myrna Wilkie;\nFat Reed, Dorothy Jones.\nOther performers were:\nPaddy Angus, Shirley and Mich;\nelle Ballentine; Eleanor Cull; Ceto:\nerine CampbeU, Betty Lou Millen,\nA Gavrilik, Connie Shutek, S. E,\nAngus, Ron Seattle, A. Curtis, ,M,\n3. - Verzuh; Michelle ' Ballentine;\nPaddy Angus; Shirley and Michelle\nBallentine; Stan Angus and Connie\nShutek Albert Curtis- and, Isobel\nBreckenridge; Betty Lou Millen\nand Connie Shutek; Ron Beattie\nand Ann Gavrilik; Albert Curtis;\nGerri Beattie,. C. Campbell, Ann\nGavrilik, G. Shutek; S. Angus, R.\nBeattie, A. Curtis, M. Verzuh.\nTaghum Woman\nDies al Trail\nMrs..Elizabeth Matilda Anudreas-\nsen, a Taghum resident, died in'the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital Monday eve-\nning.after a lengthy illness. She was\n\"V        <;\nBesides her husband, Hookan W\u201e\nMrs. Andreessen is survived by ber\nparents, Mr. and Mrs, A. Leaf'arid\na niece Dorothy at Taghum, two\nbrothers, George K Swedb'erg of\nTaghum and Oscar A. Swedberg of\nCopper Mountain, and one sister,'\nMrs. B. Wilson of Taghum.\nThe Weather\nSynopsis\u2014Milder weather is gradually returning to the B.C. Coast as\na series of rapidly moving storms\ncontinues to move in from the Pacific. Another Storm' centre in toe\nseries was expected to reach; the\nQueen Charlottes about daybreak\nWednesday and will move rapidly\nSoutheastward crossing the Southern coast during the afternoon.\nRapidly increasing cloudiness and\nrolxed rain and snow is expected\nahead ot the storm along the Coast\nwith, strong i Northwesterly winds\nand showery unsettled' weather'-in\nin its wake. In the Interior the disturbance will be accompanied by\nlight snowfalls.-\nBonspiel Results\nNelson x-\t\nMontreal. ...,..r\u201e.^.....J\nToronto   ...ie..-....\u2122.\nWinnipeg ,\t\nRegina........ ,~_\nLethbridge ..... ....\nEdmbntbn'  ...._-....\u201e..\nPentlcton ... _..,.*\u2014\nVancouver ,\u201e,,\u201e\u25a0\t\nVictoria ;...,........'..\u2014-:.\nCranbrook- .,...........\u201e_.\nCrescent Valley _._.\nKaslo ...    ..\u2014-\nGrand Forks ....\u201e__\nSpokane' '.'. .,-.__'-.. *\nWhitehorse \u25a0.....\t\nWednesday's Draws\n7 p.m,\u2014Winner of S. A. Maddocks\nand E. C. Hunt vs. winner bf R.\nFoxall and'J. P McLaren; R. A.\nPeebles vs. winner of H. Farenholtz\nand T. S. Jemson.\n\u25a0 They're starting to curl for keeps at this Mto Annual Bonspiel now\u2014\n\u25a0gradually toe stronger rlnks are coming to toe fore and when youloqk\nover toe eight rinks now in the Grand Challenge it reads like the Who's\nWho of curling in British Columbia. Frenchy D'Amour, naturally, is in\nthere, Rege Stone, Pete Mclntyre, Chess Chesser, Bert Calvert, Hughle\nBeckett, Donald MacDonald, and toe Only outside rink to challenge\n\u25a0thenvis Bud Sreenwood of Nelson. .  ,    .     > '\nBob McGerrlgle, also of Trail, could Have made it a completely.Trail\n\"\"'\"   he lost outcto the Greenwood rink on the late 1:15 draw on\n'it;       '*',\u25a0'       '    *'\u2022'     *\u2022 ' ''.'.-\u2022:'. \u25a0 \\\nno question in anyone's mind but. that Trail la now the\nl^f Curling: strength in this province. The situation may\nk Avery, -Dave Garnham,,Rollie. David and others of\nJt-e their own permanent ice, but at.the moment nb\nJJlth the Smokie City for curling ability. >' ;.\n'Trail leading In the way of shot making ability, they\nara also inag a new high standard In operating a bonspiel. Dick\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 MacKinnon, Max DesBrlsay and Paul Jordan nre'dolng a tremendous\njob In keeping tho draws going, smoothly. They, are a cooperative\ncommittee, they do their best to accommodate every request. Normally, the Bonspiel secretary It a harassed Individual who hat only a\ncurt answer to all the many Inquiries directed fill way,, but Dick\n,    MacKinnon arid hit boys always teem to have a cheery, courteous reply\n:    to every question.         ,.'\"\u201e\u2022'.*' '\nThis Bonspiel could bave had soma upsets, Alex Allan ot Nelson\nCould have, and almost did, beat the powerful D'Amour aggregation.\n; Alex with Jake Haynes, --Les and Harold Ronroark, almost Scored a\nj seven-end against toe Dominion champions,, but it didn't work out as\nFrenchy and-his boys went on to win.\n.   Rege Stone, too, almost didn't make the grade. He and his rink of\nScotty Ross, Hughie Miller and brother Hoy, were two down going horne\nto Scotty Balfour, A. Trozzo, J. Mondor and F. Ashe\/ but experience\nand ability came to the fore, and the former Consols winners scored four\n-to Win,'' '\u2022 - '-,-'\".'.\u2022:\u2022\u25a0   ;,'\u2022;' *'.\".Y        ',      ,.\n.   There's a rink known as the \"baseball rlrik\" ta this 'Spiel. It's made\n*' up of.Lefty Fairbum, Harry Hotoery,: Jinrmy Morris and Louis Demote.\nThey are all oldtimer greats in Kootenay baseball circles, they're having\n,\u00bb wonderful time, but their ability, to hit home runs and to. throw the\nhigh fast one through the middle Just doesn't seem to pay oft in this\ngame on ice.\nThe irony of toe draw cost Nelspn two places in the eights of the\n.Grand Challenge and with it automatic entry into the provincial chom-\n> plonship. Bud Greenwood beat out John McMurchy, to enter this really'\n| important bracket. Milt Ryalls, however, soon Jointed the Greenwood\naggregation. After a shaky start, this grpup started to click and in beating out Jlmmy.DeVito of Trail in the sixteens.of the Nelson Cup they\nbecame the second Nelsori rink to qualify tor the Consols.\nArbitration Board Hears Teachers'\nArguments lor Salary Increases\nFire peril is greater in the country, fully \u2022 one-third of the people\nkilled by fire in toe United States\nlive on farms, although c only one-\nfifth of the population are country\ndwellers..    -V\nHockey Scores\nBy The Canadian Prett\nMARITIME SENIOR\n1 Saint John .0, Dartmouth 3.\nACHES &\nMINS\n\u00aeEO IDS\nSORE THROAT\ni oWbstPrices I genuinc aspirin\nSSmS. \u25a0   1 IrttSWAY,\n.!'\u00bbtoubui..'----\u00bbLl\u2014\u2014-_\u2022*?\u00ab\u00ab)!\nQUEBEC SENIOR '    '\nNew, York 4,. Sherbrooke 1:\nQUEBEC JUNIOR      '\n.  Montreal Nationals 6, Montreal\nCanadiens 2,        \/*\nMANITOBA-THUNDER\nBAY 8ENIOR .. \\ \"''\nPort Arthur 13, Kenoro 0.\nO.H.A. JUNIOR A\nWindsor Spitfires 12, Gait Rockets\n5.\" .'   .'  '\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nMontreal 2, Shawlnlgan _\"\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nWinnipeg Monarchs 8, Winnipeg\nCanadiens 5. '\nMANITOBA SENIOR B\nWinnipeg   Army   4,   Sir   John\nFranklin 3.       .-,'\nTranscona 8, Selkirk 2,,   *\nWESTERN CANADA 8ENI0R\nCalgary 8, Lethbrldge 6.   ;\"\u25a0'\nEdmonton 7, Saskatoon 4.\nU.8.H.L.\nDallas2, Tulsai. ...'.',.\nWANTED\nBIRCH\nVeneer Logs\nA Vancouver client of ours requires a continuous supply of Birch Veneer Logs 6 ft. to 16 ft.\nlong ond 6ver 12 inches in diameter. Ploaae\nstate particulars and price tat\nDEPT. \"A\"\nJAMB LOVICIC& COMPANY LTD.\n535 Homer Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nArguments of Nelsbn District 2 years ,\nI Teachers' Association in its. salary\ndispute with the Board of Trustees\nof Nelson District School Board No.\n7 went before an arbitration board\nta Nelsqn Tuesday.      '\u2022\nThe sitting continues Wednesday\nWhe^iheSchobl Board's case will\nbe presented.\nThe Arbitration Board's decision will affect about 80 teachers\nIn the District, and School Beard\nestimates for 1949.- If Is the first\ntime that arblratlon hat been retorted to In the history ot negotiations between the teachers and\nSchool Board.\nThe teachers are asking for a raise\nof $58,412 Over the present payroll\nof $188,090, or an increase of 29,85\nper Cent or $700 per teacher per annum. The, School Board has offered\nan aggregate amount bf $23,700, or\nan increase of $300 per annum per\nteacher:\nThe over-all adjustment of the\nteachers' salaries is asked primarily\nto compensate for the decrease In\ndollar values since January, 1947.\nChairman at the Arbitration Board\nis Alton R. Dahlstrom,*Trail lawyer,\nand his arbiters are Jordan Guy,\nVancouver lawyer, and David Chapman of Kelowna. ; : , , -'\n, T. B. rt Ellis of Vancouver is\nrepresenting the Board ot Trustees\nof Nelson School District No. 7, and\nStanley.Evans ot Vancouver, tbe\nNelson District Teachers' Association. \u25a0,- :    .\nOthers listening in included N. S.\nMacleod, Secretary-Treasurer to the\nSchool Board, several Trustees including Chairman Dr. C. E. Bradshaw, and F. -. Parsons of the teachers' body.\nIt was the purpose of the teachers to arbitrate the present salary\nschedule, but Mr. Bills stated thai\ntoe School Board was not prepared\nto arbitrate the schedule, but rather\nsalaries, for, 1949, \"notwithstanding\nthat toe teachers are bound by the\npresent contract which became ef-\nfeotlveln January, 1847, and have\nno right to arbitrate,this year.\" \". '\nAs there must be agreement between teachers and school board before there can be arbitration ori a\nsalary schedule, correspondence was\ngone Into by toe arbitration board\nand evidence.given.\nMajority decision of the arbitration board wat that It did not\nhave \"Jurisdiction  to- arbitrate\nsalary schedule because there'wat\nno  written  agreement between\nthe teachers, and School Board on\nthe fixing  by , p*rbitr\u00abtlon  of\nsalary schedule.   \u25a0\nMr. Guy dissented on the opinion\nthat the effect of correspondence between the two factions Was based-)\nori negotiations then  In progress\nwhich failed, that the letters, as explained by resolutions, constituted\nan agreement to subriiit to arbitration a salary schedule.\nProposed salaries, as contained ta\nthe brief presented by Mr. Evans,\nfollow!\nELEMENTARY SCHOOLS\nTeachlrig ':'\" Salary\nexperience , asked\n0 years ;.. $1850\n1 years ...,...v   1800\n5 years .\n8 years ,\n7 years ...'...;...-,-.-,--.\u00ab.....-.\n8 years ..\u201e.,_................\u2014.....\n9 years ......_....._........\u2022.,.?.\u201e\u2014\n10 years --~ \u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\n11 years :..--.. - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nSECONDARY SCHOOLS\n0 years ...............\t\n1 year .....'..:...;<\t\n2 \u25a0years ...............\u2014...\n3, years .\u201e._...\u201eV. .*.....\n4 years ','. \u201e.,..\u2122.......\u201e....\n5 years  .....\n6 years . ......................\n7 years ......\u2014....\u201e.\u201e\u2122.\u2122....\n8 years ...............................\n'9 years -. .................\n10 years -.\u00bb.....\u2014........\nU years ...,..\u201e..:.\u2014;;\u2014.\t\n12 years\t\n13 years .\\ \u25a0.\t\n14 years ,...,; ;............_...,.,.\n \u201e..   1950.'\n3 years ........ , ... v2100\n4 years ..'.,...........\u2014...... .-   2259\n. 2550\n. 21,\n. 2850\n. 3000\n, 3150\n. 3300\n.$2000\n. 2150\n. 2300\n. 2450\n: 2800\n.2750\n. 2900\n: 3050\n. 3200\n. 3350\n. 3500\n. 3850\n.3800\n. .3950\n, 4100\nDoes ASTHMA Make\nYOU fight for Breath?\n\"I run 88 years bf ose,\" mites Mrs, A.\nCorson, Ksmloopi, B.C., \"and suffered\nfrom osthma and brinchlal cough tor\nyears. I choked, fought for breath snd\ncoughed until the muscleo In my chest\nwere tore. I took many things without\ndoing much good, then I heard about\nRAZ-MAH. Since taking RAZ-MAH.\nI've had real relief bad can deep\ncomfortably.\"        .  ,\n'Don't smother, choke,-sneeze another day. Take.RAZrMAH\u2014now\u2014and\nget quick, Safe j ellef. Used by thousands\nevery year, RAZ-MAH it Sold at druggists everywhere. 60c, $1.25.. R-35\nFor elementary school principals,\nit is asked that the elementary scale\napply and that $200 be granted fbr\nadministration, $75 per teacher su\npervised up to eight teachers, and\n$25 for each teacher supervised over\neight teachers,'and three $100 increments for experience. The same\nis proposed for secondary school\nprincipals, only $300 is asked as an\nadministrative allowance.\nAdjustments are also asked for\nvice-principals and principals of\nschools with less than five rooms.\nAs pertinent facts in answering\nthe question of what constituted a\nfair salary for a teacher, the brief\nstressed the following:   ,\nTbe general-public agrees that the\nteachers' salaries are low; toe law\nof supply arid demand has been applied to toe number ot teachers\navailable and to current salary\ntrends, and toe results are teacher\nshortages. and. .lowered qualifications; the problem applied locally\nshows toe grave danger of the Nelson District losing to more favored\ndistricts; the teacher believes that\nhis services merit a fair standard ot\nliving; programs of improving\nteacher, training are hampered by\nexisting salaries', dollar values are\npertinent, and general wage levels\nhave direct bearing on what con\nstituto feir salaries for teachers.\nINDEX NOT\nCOMPLETE MEASURE :.'..-\n.Teachers salaries have increased,\nbut are paid with inflationary 1949\ndollars, it was' emphasized. \"To\nmeasure toe extent of this inflationary quality in our 1949 dollars, we\nturn to toe Dominion Bureau, of\nStatistics cost-of-living index as our\nyardstick,'     , ' -\n\"This Association is riot requesting\na cost-of-living bonus. We hold the\n.view, that such adjustment may. only\ncompensate for the' higher prices\nwhich we pay for those articles selected for statistical purposes.\"\nA cost-of-living bonus did not\nmaintain the consumer's salary level\nori toe former bosis, the brief contended, in view of such extras as\nadded transportation costs, taxes\nand so ph.\n\"The rise in the cost-of-living index is reflected and often magnified to every use to Which the dollars of 1949 are put. In hbw many\ninstances, today can we purchase\nwith $1.89 what $1 would have\nbought 10 years ago?\"\nAs well as a cost-bf-Hying bonus,\nan over-all percentage inerbose bsd\nbeen studied and found unacceptable as other possible ways of bringing the 19,47 schedule up tb date, toe\nbrief added.\nThe minimum Scale ot the British\nColumbia Teachers' Federation was\nlisted as one source of structure for\nthe scale proposed.-  .        I\nTextile production In Britain for\n1948 was increased by 15 to 20 per\ncent over 1847.     '  \u2022      ,\n18\n19\n8\n\u202218\n-28.\n\u202218\n-28\n13\n27,\n84\n-3\n19\n15:\n\u202211.\n11\n27\n33\n42\n-5\n-8\nMS\n-12\n27\n39\n41\n22\n28\n27\n.02\n.06\n.25\n.20\n.10\n-10    .01\nGRAND CHALLENGE\nRound 2\nG. Balfour, Trail 7, X. E. -Stone,\nTrail 8. ;\nH. A. D. Greenwood, Nelson 8, R.\nC. McGerrlgle, Trail 8\nT. Mlhieson, Trail 11, J. H.\nLeckie, Trail'14\nR. Topping, Pentlcton 8, J. G.\nMcMurchy, Nelson 9\nA-.B.vPorter, Vancouver 5, A. E.\nCalvert, Trail 12\nA. .Phillips, Vancouver 2, A.\nCrichton, Trail 10\nW. H. Sheppard, Trail 8, W. P.\nRobertson, Trail'11 '   #'   ,\nRburid 8\nA. E. Calvert, Trail T, A. Crichton, Trail 8\nP. F. Mclntyre, Trail 13, J. H.\nLeckie, Trail.8\nA M. Chesser, Trail 7, A. M. Gibson, Trail 5.\nK.; E.' Stone, TraU 10, W. P.\nRobertson; Trail 4       \u2022.\nH. A D. Greenwood, Nelson I,\nJ. G. McMurchy, Nelson 4\nR. Somervllle, Trail 8, D. MacDonald, Trail 9\nA. H. Allan, Nelson 8, T. D'Amour,\nTraU 9\nF. Strachan, TraU 1, H. T.\nBeckett,- TraU 11\nNIL$ON CUP    \u25a0>\">\nRound!   '.-\u2022'\"'.\nJ. Beaton, Kamloops 1, A. A.\nSimonson, Trail 9\nS. Gray, TraU.4, R. P. Dockerlll,\nTrait 10\nS. Walker, Vancouver I, *.' J.\nAvery, Salmo J -.\nW; Rae, Trail T, \u00bb. Garnham,\nVancouver 10\nJ, Nlven, Nelson II, W. F. Doubt,\nTraii.8   . \" \".   \u25a0 '   \u25a0'..'\u25a0\nJ. Atwell, TraU 12, A Read,\nCreston 5 , .-. *\u2022 .\nIG. K. Falrbalrn, Trail 8. R. Rote,\nRossland 10.     ;\nM. B. RyaUs, Nelson 12, I. A\nMitchell, Rossland 8 ,^\nR. JoneB, Rossland 18, A. Albo,\nRossland.12 '\u201e,  ;,,. ..:\nG. E. Murdoch, Trail, won \u2022 by\ndefault from D. BcNaughton, TraU\nH. Peacock, Kelson 9, J. Camp\u00bb\nbeU,Trail7 ;  '  \u25a0\u2022'\u2022* \u25a0:\u25a0.:\nH. Farenholtz, Nelson:5, R. David,\nVancouver 11\nC. D.' Stuart, Nelson 8, C. Strachan\nNelson 14\nJ. H. Twells, Kimberley II, - J.\nReld,; Vernon 9     ;\nL. F. Tinling, Nelson 12, L. James,\nChapman Camp 4\nD. Sutherland, TraU 10, J, Hanson,\nRossland 4\nS. G. Smillle, Trail ,9, ft. J. MacKinnon, Trail 8\nJ. Wright, Rowland 10, J. Milne,\nNelson- 6\nJ. A. E. Montpellier, TraU 5, C.\nCowllh, TraU I -    -    ' -\nW. Forrest, Trail il, T. Mathieson, TraU 6\nG. Balfour, TraU 8, W. H. Sheppard, Trail 9.\nA, B. Porter, Vancouver t, A. P.\nPhillips, Vancouver 5.\nR. C. McGerrlgle.- TraU  12, R.\nTopping, Pentlcton 4.\nR. Somervllle, Trail 9, A a Allan, Nelsbn 8.. \u25a0\nG. SmiUie, Trail 7, R. David,\nVancouver 14.\n-.Sutherland,TraU 11,C. Cowlin,\nTraU 3.\nA. M. Gibson, Trail 11, F. Strachan,\nTraU 4.\nA. Crichton, TraU \u00bb, J. O. McMurchy, Nelaon 18.\nJ. H. Leckie, TraU 8, W. P. Rob-\nertson, TraU 8.\nH. Peacock, Nelaon 9, J. Wright,\nRossland 7.\nF. Tinling, Nelson 9, C Strachan,\nTrail 8.\nJ. Nlven, Trill 10, D, Oarnham,\nVancouverff.\nJ. Devito, TraU 12, R. Rose, Rosa-\nland 7.    \u25a0     ' \u25a0 \u25a0\nF. W. Avery, Vancouver 10, J, H.\nTwells, Kimberley 11.\n,S. Walker, Vancouver 7, M. B.\nRyalls, Nelson 16.\n' R. Jones, Rossland 8,1. Murdoch\n*\u25a0_\u25a0*. \"\u25a0\" ;.'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\"'\n\u25a0; A. Simonson, TraU 7, R, P. Dock-\n\u2022rffl, Trail\u00bb.\nA B. Pinter,'Vancouver 8, R. C.\nMcGerrlgle, TraU 10.  ' '   *\nW. Forrest, Trail 11, W. HV Sheppard, Trail 7.      '\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'l   ,''\n'  Rounds i.:        '\nW: P. Robertson, Trail II, J. O.\nMcMurchy, Nelson U.\nA. M. Gibson, TraU 5, R. Somer-\nvUle, TraU 7.\nD. Sutherland, Trail 12, H. Peacock, Nelsqn 11.\nL, F. Tinllng; Nelson If, R. David,\nNeSaon \u00ab;>      ' '   \"'\u25a0   '.' ' *.-     \u25a0\n3. Nlven, Tndl T, J. H. TweBs,\nKimberley ,10. \u25a0\nJ. Devito, TraU 8, M. B. BytHi,\nNelson 11\nR. P. DocktrlU, Trail II, R- 'ettaa,\nRossland x%f\nW. Forrest, TraU, 8, R. C. McGer-!\nrigle, TraU 18.\nTRAIL CUP\nSound 1\nT. T. Adams, Tesmon 7,1. R. Ky-\n1 doz. ladies'\n49e\nFINK'S\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nmond, TraU 8.\nJ. Beaton, Kamloops 9, R. E, Stone,\nTraU 18,\nC. E. MacKinnon, Cranbrook 8,\nA. M. Chesser, Trail 8.\nJ. Atwell, TraU. 11, C. D, Stuart,\nTrail 13,        '\nM. M. Butorab, TraU 8, L, James,\nChapman Camp 10,\nE: A, Mitchell, Rossland 10, R.\nMcNaughton, Trsil 9. -   i\nD. MacDonald, TraU 17, T. Mathieson, TraU 1-\nJ.  CampbeU, TraU 9, A,. Albo,\nRossland 8.\nW. Rae, TraU 8, H. F. Mclntyre,\n*rail'io.' -\u2022'..,' ,- ,\u2022;,,' ,\nA. PhUllps, Vancouver 11, S. Maber, Trail 8..   :\u25a0 ' r . f .'      y,. V'--s .\nR. Topping, Pentlcton 4, H. A D.\nGreenwood, Nelson111.\nE. Murdock, Trail 8, C. K. lair- ,\nba_n, Trail 8. '. .;\nG. Balfour, TraU 7, W. F. Doubt,\nTrail 8.\nD. Garnham, Vancouver 18; A.\nReed, Creston 8,,\nA. Simonson, TraU XX:, A _.' Mont-\npelUer, Trail 15.\nS, Walker, Vancouver t, X. T.\nBeckett, Trail 18.\nJ. Harrison, Rossland 6, , T.\nD'Amour, Trail 10.\nF. W. Avery, Vancouver I, A.JC.\nCalbert, TraU 8.\nS. Gray, TraU' 8, D. Sutherland,\nTraU 11,\nD. MacDonald, Cranbrook 9, W. P.\nRobertson, Trail 8.\nR. Rose, Rossland 8, M. B. Ryalls,\nNelson 7.   .\nC Cowlin, Trail 7, R. David, Vancouver 8.    *\nH. Peacock, Nelson T, BUI Forrest, TraU 8. .  ';'.'\nS. J. SmiUie; TraU 14, S. Jones,\nRossland 1.\nJ. H. TweUs, Kimberley 7, _. F.\nTingling, Nelson 9.\nJ. MUne, Nelson 8, R. P. Docker-\nill, Trail 8.\nJ. Wright, Rossland 8, H. Farenholtz, Nelson io.\nMiner, Pi*osp_ctor, Businessman . - .\nW. H. Crawford, Canada's Oldest\nPostmaster, Kootenay Pioneer, Dies\nCRESTON B.C., Feb. 8 -Canada's oldest poBtmaater has died.\nWilliam Henry Crawford, the\nman, who was postmaster at\nCreston since the fIrat pott office\nwot established In 1900, and who\nhelped build a tchool at Nelson\nIn 1894, died here Monday at 81.\nHe wat one of the orfrjlnal stokers\nof the Algoma Gold Mines group\nIn the 8loealn.. '\nin 1935 when\".'King. George, V\ncelebrated his Silver Jubilee, Mr.\nCrawford was one of the five oldest postmasters in Canada to receive the Jubilee honor,,   !\nA lumberman, a prospector and\na businessman, he was one of Koo-\ntenay's earliest pioneers. ,\nLanding at, Sproat's Landing from\nsteamer in 1891, Mr. Crawford\nwalked. 30 miles into Nelson for\nthe Dominion Day ,\u25a0 Celebrations.\nRobsop is on the Sproat's* Landing\nsitef . -\nFrom 1891 to 1898 he' was prospecting ; ,and ' mining in, Slocan\ncountry, chiefly around New>Den-\nver, with his partner, Fred Jbffer\nson. It was during this time that\ntoe Alpine Mine, one of the richest\nin Kootenay, was located.*\" \u2022\nHe was in Kaslo during the disastrous floods of 1894.\nThe same, year; Mr.' Crawfqrd\nhelped Al Tregillus build toe first\nschool in Nelson. At one time he\nrind Charles Foss bwhed the Stirling Hotel.\nPROSPECTED DEATH VALLEY\nBefore coming to Kootenay, he\nwas to the Western United States\nand at Vancouver. He came West\nto Spokane, Wash., from his, birthplace in Tara, Bruce County, Ontario, in 1885 and in 1887 moved to\nSan Francisco and, prospected'' in\nDeath VaUey; for. a yeah   ..\nVancouver where he followed his\ntrade as a sawyer in a lumber\ncamp, was the next stop. He worked\nln thb area .where1 thb old Vancouver Hotel stands,\nFIR8T CRESTON STORg\nWith Mr. Foss he established\nCreston's first general store, the\nfirm of Crawford & Foss; iri 1897,\nTen years later the store was\nregistered   under   name -. Creston\nMercantile Company, and has operated; under that title ever since, -\nIn  1993  Mr.  Crawford   married\nSophie  M.  Huscroft, , bt. an  last\nKootenay )jioneei'\"feri_!y. \u2022    \"-'J\nMatter, of the Orange Ledge at\nCreston, and a charter member\nof the Creston Board of Trade,\nhe took an active part In community'affbrti. Wh|le a member\nof the Board of Trade, Mr'. Craw'\nford wat'.\u25a0 ttong  supporter  of\nreclamation; he wat one of the\nmen  who worked  to  havo  the\nKootenay flats reolalmod,\t\nC r e a to n Telephone ' Company\nLimited waa established and operated through Mr. Crawford's efforts. He was also a shareholder in\nthe old Review Publishing Company. ' . *\n' Growth of the community, and\nactivities'for youngsters, Were foremost interest's in his life. ' * *\nA son, Tom, was killed overseas\nMay 25, 1845, while in service with\nthe Royal Canadian Air Force.\nSurviving are his wife; four sons,\nRobert Ben,  Frank  and  George;\ntwo:daughters, Mrs. Charles Perry,\nat home, and Mrs. Robert FoxaU,\n\"Nelson; and two brothers, Tom at\nWITHSTANI\nAND BESOM\n. Results of Tuesday night's games\nln the Nelson CurUrig Club's Stay\nat Home Bonspiel follow:\nE. C. Hunt 10, J. P. McLaren 8.\nR. FoxaU 8, W. A Duckworth 8.\nR. A. Peobles 11, J. Thom 4.\n9. A. Maddocks 10, A. Waters 8.\nT. S. Jemson 9, C. Ward 8. .\nR. FoxaU 9, D. E. McLaren 8.\nE. C. Hunt 6, S. Maddocks 0.\nS. Jemson 11, A Farenholta 7.\nWednesday's draws; ' ' '' '''\"' -   ',\u25a0\nCreston and Joe at Fort William.\nFuneral services were to be held\nfrom Trinity United Church, Wednesday. Rev. A. O. McNeiU was fo\nlead last rites, wbUe pallbearers\nwere to be W. Long, T. Spas, W.\nHuscroft, E. Huscroft, F. Huscroft\nand D. Young.*  '\nDOES\nINDIGESTION\nWALLOP YOU\nBELOWTHEBELT?\nHdpY\u00abF\u00ab|ottaWFor'n\u00bbKMOI\nMWTIi_Hdp.M*.Y\u00abRM_,T<.G\u00bb.\nlion than rail! of your dlintlon it a*\nbelow \u00bb_Tb\u00ablt-in yior 38l\u00abt ol t\nSo whm> todlgMUoo BtiikM, try \u25a0\u2014\nttnt hslps dlsesUon In Un .-\n,5WW\ntmiV,CaUt'.UM.ltnt\nToko ono Conor's UlUo Unr Pffl be{on\n\u00bbcU.Toko_\u00abmscoooidlii|to\nhelp wako up a larger flow\n* \u2014    - iur stonsaob\nCakoUiemao\nnfentlu-.\nsiulocainyoursl-.\u2014\nJp you digeot what you hays\neaten In Naturo'a own way.\nThen moot lolka got tho kind olrcllet that\nmakes yon fool better torn your head to yen\nsoce. Just bo'auro you got the genuine Carter's\nJiUlo lint Pills torn your druggist-S\u00ab\u00ab.\nT\n\"SayGoodby\nto\nti\nBig Business\nw\nAny story of Ctutadn's lnrgest lifo assurance company\n\u2014 the Sun Lifo Assurance Company of Canada\u2014is a\natoryof \"big; bueinaaa\" because more than one and o half\nmillion people the world over are safeguarded by the protection and security of Sun Life policies.\nII-I\n-SAYS GRANDMA\nBackache is a misery that strikes many -.\nWomen in middle life. But if you could ;\nsee Mrs; W. H. of Weliand,' Ont.,..'\na grandmother well past 60, working in\nher neat little home, day after day,\nyou would really appreciate how much\nOr, Chase's Kidney-Liver PUIS can do\nto relieve backache I --\u25a0\u2022\"        ,\nThat's because this time-provCn Dr.\nChase remedy for backache treats two\nconditions at once\u2014contains special\nremedial ingredients for both the kidney and liver disorders which often\ncause backache. So don't suffer with\npainful joints and\/backache\u2014try this\nreliable remedy proven by over half-a-\ncentury's me\u2014-Dr. Chase's Kidney-\nLiver Pills. At all drug counters,     is\nThe Utter Misery and Distress of\nHEADCOLDS\nGRIPPE\nRelieved Like |\nMAGIC.'\nWHY suffer the sntffly, stuffy distress toot aching, grlppy feeling\nof head colds, grippe when you're sure Of such fast relief In\nevery BUCKLEY'S CINNAMATEO CAPSUIE, a preicrlptlon-type\nformula containing not 1 but 4 proven eold-dlspelllng, paln-re-\nlloving Ingredients In every capsule, famous for their quick relief\nof those miseries. Get your tin now\u2014once tried they vylll be\na friend for life whon pain, colds, headaches threaten or strike.\nAt all drag counters.   15 doses, 35c. ojs\nBUCKLEY'S CINNAMATEO CAPSULES\nThe ever-growing goodwill\nwhich is enjoyed by thc-Sun Life\nof Canada is due to the diversity\nand liberality of the Company's\nlife, assurance policies, to the\ncharacter of its representatives,\nand to the promptness and efficiency oi its service to policyholders, throughout its entire 78\nyears' history.\nLast year alone, payments\namounting to more than $100,000,-\n000 were made to Sun Ww policyholders ahd beneficiaries.\nTi_J SON LIFE STORY of\n1948 is made up of many thousands\nof Individual records, each a simple\nhuman document, yet of vital\nimportance to those concerned:\nTho Story of Mrs. M.B.H.\n.'. , is a tragic ope.\nShe ,lost hir husband\nin an automobile accident and was left\nalone with three\nyoung Children to care\nfor. But to her husband, responsibility reached beyond death, end his\nSun Life Family Income policy\nprovides fbr the family until the\nyoungsters' ate grown, up, Arid\nthen gives, to the widow a regular,\nincome tor life.   '-'\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0:'\nC.J.3, Was e Good Salesman\n... who all his life looked ahead,\nThirty years ago he paid his-first\npremium' on,\u00bb Sun Life Retirement policy! Last October he\nmade his final business trip and\nnow, at 65, he enjoys the leisure\nthat his foresight made possible.\nT.L.M. Bought \u25a0 Business\n... and is now his own toaster.\nHe planned this when, on graduating from college, he took out a\nSun Life 'Endowment for assurance protection as well as systematic arid easy saving. The Endowment matured recently, providing\nthe means Which enabled him to\ntake advantage of a great opportunity.       ' .\nNo Need of Charity \\\nIn the small industrial\nplantownedbyD.B.L.,\n100 employees never\nhave to pass the hat\nwhen a bench pal dies.\nLike hundreds of thousands of\nworkers in other industrial and business organisations large and small,\ntoey are, protected by Sun Life\nGroup Assurance, ap effective instrument for good employee-employer relations, '' .\nYes, there are thousands of such\ncases in the Sun Life story of\n1948 \u2014 a story of service ta the\npublic, repeated year in, year out.\nFrom the 1948 Annual Report\n* Benefits paid to policyholders and\nbeneficiaries during lMSl '\nS10S,<U\u00ab,413\nTotal Bqneflta paid since Ilia first\n, Sun Ufa policy waa Issued In mil   '\n\u00bbMM,737,aj   *..:. i. i\nNew Assurances Issued during the years'\n. ' \u00bb\u00ab,\u00ab!!,\u00ab\u00ab\nAssurances In force:\n$45*4\"'\n|J,-(,181\nSUNUFEOFaNAm\nS\u00bbery policyholder will receive a copy ol the complete Annual Report (or WI,\nCopies may alio be obtained Irom: '\nj, ft. FUMING :  L. Q. CATLgY\nLocal Representatives\n^^^\n Communis! Aggression Against\nWorld Bringing Fads lo Citizens\nBy DEWITTMACKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\n\/ One bt the striking developments\nef the post-war period is the to-\ncreased knowledge of world affairs\npossessed by the average citizen of\nthe United-States ahd other Democracies.\nThe global war, of course, has\nbeen partly responsible for this\nchange.   Our  fighting  men   have\n. been sent to the. four corners of toe\nearth. Not only' have we had, to\n-learn about the outside world in\norder to keep track of them but they\nhave brought home to us much that\nY'is'.new.'.' '\"'.' ,  -, \"'j:\n'\u2022 However, most qf our new-found\neducation comes from another and\nparadoxical source. That is Communism, which has stepped out ot\nthe dark ages in a new guise and Is\nsnaking aggression against the rest\nof the world.'  N \u2022 \u2022\nDid you ever stop to think how\ngreatly bur lives are affected by\nthis Hed world' revolution?   ,\nWe live to a state of constant suspense. Spies arid fifth-columnists\nare working among us.\nUNSETTLED CONDITIONS\nThe high cost of living is due in\npart tb toe unsettled conditions of\nthe world. Taxes are swollen td de'\nfray expenses for defence against\ntoe Bed. aggression '\nAmerican wealth is being poured\nout to help many lands defend\nthemselves against the Red 'plague,\nThere's,aid;fbr China,-aid for Turkey, aid tor Greece, aid for all bf\nWestern Europe through the Marshall Plan which Russia is trying her\nbest to disrupt\u25a0'.;''\u25a0 .-.'\nSmall wonder, then, that most\ncitizens of the Democracies should\nbe making it their business to study\ndevelopments and personalities involved in this cold war.\nIt's a tough school we are attending but, we are acquiring knowledge\nfast We are moving fast- in\neducation.\nNO RAIN-MAKING BY INDIANS, JUST\nWAIT FOR SPRING CH^EF ADVISES\nVANCOUVER Feb. 8 . (CP)\nChief Khatsalano would like to\nhelp his paleface brothers during\ntoe power shortage in the Cower\nerMairiland, but he .doesn't believe\nhe could bring r?in.\n\"Not like the old days,\" he sadly\ntold reporters who visited his North\nVancouver shack. \"Not enough\nIndian peoples now with the power.\nThe power is gone from most of\nus.\";- .       .,-,..,  ;\n1 But August Jack, es he is known\nby many, didn't seem anxious to\ntry.     . ,;   \u2022'\n\"White man always warit what\nhe atajt got,\"' he' said? If it rata, he\nwant snow; it lt snow, he want\nl-atai\"'- .' '':-r iff\nTo clear up an old misconception,\nAugust Jack explained that Indians,\nin the old days that is, did not\ndance to bring rain. .-.\nInstead they .built a snowman\ndaubed it with charcoal Next they\ntied a miniature paddle to a long\nstick by a strip of deer, hide and\nwhirled this ribout their head.'\n\"Everybody whirl the sticks, even\nthe childrens,\" he Said. It make a\nsound like whrrrrr, whrrrrr. After\nwhile, maybe a few days, it rain,\n\"Airplanes got whirling paddles\non them^they should rata > Maybe\nyou should get airplanes to fly over\nthe city.\"  . *,\u25a0-'    '    y \u25a0\n\"Teli white peoples n0' to worry,\"\nhe said. \"By and by come Spring,\nBathing Suifs\nMake Debut\nLOS ANGELES, Feb: 8 (AP) -\nNext Summer's bathing' suits made\na formal debut yesterday, and to\nnobody's surprise they revealed a\nlot\" \u25a0 !    ;;*:\nThe occasion wss the opening of\nCalifornia Apparel Creators' Press\n, week.'.   \u25a0\nFred Cole of California explained:\n-,    \"A swim suit is not hung bn the\nbody\u2014it's an engineering proposition.\"' . ,y. .    ''\nOne of the. most popular entries\nwas Cole's sheath silhouette, designed by Marget Fellegi, which'follows the body contour ta graceful\nlines, set off by shirring. Another\nCole standout is a skirted print\nnumber designed by Elza of Hoi-\n.'\u2022'.., lywood. '\u25a0\" ,\": ','\n' The trend is to one-piece outfits,\nmostly without. straps, .But there\n-ivere plenty of the midriff variety,\ntoo, including one by'Garitner balled Black Magic, fashioned entirely without vertical seams. As a result, says the press agent, the, fit\nean't be Improved, y\nGINGHAM FAVORITE\nCaltax features, several short\nskirts and apron effects to flatter\nwomen a bit hippler than the models, A favorite is a gingham creation called Bloomer Girl. Catalina's\nentries - include two-piece black\ndecorated, with a white night-\nblooming cereus and a dressy\nboucleknit, with Ivy, ;print on a\nslimming front panel. Rose Marie\nHeld of, Vancouver has even done\nevening dresses over swim trunks,\nto metallic cottons. And a* favorite\nof hers Is a lightning-and-raindrop\n. Jacquard elasticized fabric.     '\nBasically, the new stuff has held\nfairly close to the previqusly accepted in design\u2014with, plenty of\nroom for suntan. But colors are generally softer, and all sorts of fabrics have gone to sea\u2014chambrays,\nseersuckers, terry cloth, jacquarded\nsatins, tie silks, nylons, and even\n(hep!) velvet and lame.\n, VANCOUVER, B. G, Feb. 8 (CP).\n\u2014In the city's first Successful safecracking in more than two months,\nyeggs last night rifled the safe of a\nchain bakeries store here and escaped with $191       '\u25a0[-''\nAnother  attempt  at  a sausage\ncompany office Was unsuccessful.\nU.K. ABANDONS\nEFFORTS TO BUY\nRUSSIAN \\VHEAT\nLONDON, Feb.'8 (Al?)-Britata\nhas abandoned efforts to buy 780,000\ntons 'of grain from Russsia for delivery in toe - next 12 months. '\nA Board of Trade spokesman said\ntoday toe grata will be bought from\nCanada, Argentina and toe United\nStates, instead.\nRussia delivered 760,000 tons of\ngrain to Britain in the 12 months\nended in December.' In return she\nreceived heavy machinery, rails and\nother capital goods.\n,Durlng the talks on a new eon-\ntract, Russia insisted: the Bobrd\nspokesman said, on penalties for late\ndeliveries, by British'; manufacturers. That .wbs unacceptable to Britain, so the talks ended.\nMan. Intent Upon\nFreedom Froni\nPower Shortages\nWINNIPEG; Feb..8 !<CP}^llenl-\ntoba's Legislators' are. Intent .upon\nmaking tho Province free frbm\nshortages of hydro-electric power\niri the future,   ..,-\";.\nThe Prpylrice now.develops 489,-\n000 horsepower, but industrial demand is rising. In the year ended\nNov. 30 lost, the Manitoba Telephone system installed 8,804 telephones\u2014 more than In any one year\nin the system's history. In the city\nof Winnipeg, 11,000 applications remained to be filled, and there were\nmore than 5,000 applications from\nrural areas, ''-\"\nThen, too, the Government is proceeding with a program of rural\nelectrification which eventually\nwill see all consumers unsettled\nagricultural areas served with power.\nConstruction of these installations\nduring 1848-49 would serve 5,000\nfarms. More than 12,000 would be\nconnected when the work was completed. \u25a0'\nEarly last year, Dr. T. H. Hogg,\nPower Consultant to the Province,\nindicated;a power shortage might\ndevelop in toe'Province by 1951\/\nIn his report, tabled in the Legislature, Dr. Hogg recommended ex-\npendlture'of a sum-probably ranging from $100,000,000 to $200,000,000\nfor adequate sources of power duringthe next 20 years.\nUrging Men To\nBuy Two Sets\n01 Clothing\n' By FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nMen can'look for (drive to get\nthem to have vitually two sets.of\nclothing, one for Summer, and one\nfor Winter,     y...\nIt Is one of the biggest opportunities' In the, clothing field and\none which would be a blessing to\nthe customer, as well -as to busln\ness.\nTrue, ari increasing number of\nmen now buy Summer weight suits,\nbut they-, still\" are to toe minority.\nAnd most of those who do buy them,\nbuy only one. That means that while\nit is getting pressed they have to\nrfevert to, Winter-Weight serges and.\ntweeds. Try it, sometime, in a sweltering city, '\u2022\u25a0-'.;\nThis year in Canada some stores\nalready are' advertising Summer\nSuits and one large department store\nis trying to get men to order two.\nLast year at least; one store which\nadvertised a group of well-tailored\nsuits at a_ moderate price was sold\nout soon after the doors opened and\ncould have sold several times as\nmany. This indicated that the market is there,  '.'.-\nIn the United States, industrywide carnpaigns are being organized. A spokesman fbr the men's\nFashion,Guild of America says that\nnew fabrics, new constructions and\nnew fashions in hot weather. Wear\nhave marked the most radical\nchanges in men's apparel ta a number of years.>\nNO DIFFERENCE\nFor Canadian industry, at least, it\nis a two-way opportunity, for most\nCanadian men dress neither'for the\nSummer or Wlnier. They may do\nbetter, on the Prairies, but in Eastern cities by and large there is riot\nmuch difference in wear between\n30-below and 100-above. Same suit,\nsame shoes, same hat, same collar\narid tie, probably; same underwear\u2014\njust an addition of overcoat, muffle and overshoes fbr the cold days.\n, The few men who do wear something fit for Winter, look as though\nthey are just ta from Baffin Island,\nand make a half-apology for being\nsensible..''.\nClothing designers have done\nlittle about developing a well-out\ndistinctive  Canadian ..wear.  Except the  skl-clothlng   designers,\n\u2022nd through their efforts to meet\nthe ski trade may He some hope.\nPerhaps some day the cold days\nWill consist of something.better than\ndashing from apartment to streetcar and streetcar to office, and one\nrriay be'abie'to enjoy'toem without\nfrozen ears from a hat stuck on top\nof the head.  ;\nWHY\nTHEY\nSAY\n\"AsQoodctsQdlt^\nBECAUSE \u2014 Gait Cool le still, after forty-Six\nyean, the fovorite of those discriminating people who\ninsist upon having the best.\nBECAUSE \u2014 Gait It free-burning and will not\"\ndeteriorate in storage. *<\nBECAUSE \u2014 it lath.\nPHONE 33\n719 BAKER ST.\n,    By STERLING F; GREEN\nWASHINGTON Feb; 8(AP)T-The\nHoover Commission called today for\na vast Government reshuffling\nwhich would squeeze C5'agencies into a tight group one-third that' size,\nall under firm control of the President.,, .', '. ''\u2022'\u25a0',  , \u25a0\nReporting to Congress on Its 18-\nmonth search for Ways to streamline the Government, the \u2022 group\nheaded by former President Herbert\nHoover urged ilvtag.the President\nbroad new powers over his official\nfamily\u2014powers it said pre needed in\nthe present \"critical state, of world\naffairs.\"   i...y. ..,\u25a0,;' \u25a0 \"\u25a0'\u25a0 *   \u25a0 '\u2022\u25a0-.\u25a0'. '\nIt said that under the present setup, \"authority; is diffused, llries of\nauthority ate confused, staff services\nare insufficient.\"\nTo remedy that, the Commission\nSAYOLEO\nSALE ASSURED\nVICTORIA, Feb. 8 fCP)-Man-\nufacture and .sale of margarine In\nB. C. Will Be made legal during\nthe-coming session of the Legislature, reliable sources Said last\nnight      '   '\nReports said the Speech From\nthe Throne,'to he read tomorrow\nwhen the 22nd session begins, will\nIndicate the Government's Intention of Wiping from the statute\nbooks the Dairy Industry Act of\n1986 which applied provlnclally\nall restrictions embodied In Fed-\n, era)' Legislation.        - -\nAt the-same time, Informants\nsaid, it Is understood manufacturers will be required to mark\npackages plainly as margarine\nand will be required as well to\nlist contents. Coloring will be allowed, It was reported.\nNo; other major recommendations for legislation are believed\nup for prediction In the Throne\nSpeech,.\n$40 Million Power\nPlant for Toronto\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014A $40,-\n000,000 auxiliary steam.power plant,\ncapable of producing 206,000. horsepower, will be built in Toronto,\nRobert H. Saunders, Chairman of\nthe. Ontario Hydro-Electric Power\nCommission, announced yesterday.\nThe plant, one of several planned\nto relieve Southern Ontario's power\nshortage, will'be built on Toronto's\nwaterfront The first unit of 103,000\nwill be ta operation by Sept. 1,1051.\nA second steam plant is under\nconstruction at Windsor. It will\nhave ari output of 160,000 horsepower, and, with additional units,\nwill cost $30,000:000. : .\n.. _ .. BROADWAY TEAM -*_ftving Berlin, Mess\nHart and Robert Sherwood (I. to r.) meet in Berlin's N. If. office to\nplan their new musical show, \"Miss Liberty,\" to open next Spring,\nWOULD ENLARGE PRESIDENT'S POWERS\nIN U.S. GOVERNMENT STREAMLINING\nproposed a Government pyramid\nbased on the 2,000,000 Federal employees . and buiHing I up to a score\not top-level agencies directly under\nthe President\u2014instead of the 65\nwhich* now; report to him \"If they\nreport to anyone.\" \u25a0<\nAt the head of this chain of command, the President would be fortified with new staff officials, a powerful \"managerial arm\" to an expanded budget office,'much wider\npowers to reorganize Government\noffices, and authority to nanie many\nofficials without the Senate's ap\nproval. .,   ;\u25a0    *\nThe report was the first chapter-\nof: a, massive blueprint for\" Federal\nreform. \u2014 which Hoover has said\ncould' save the taxpayers \"billions\"\n\u2014to be handed Congress ln 15 ta\nstallments before MarchlSl.\nTries to Explain\nAnglo-Candian\nTrade Picture\nLONDOSr, Feb. 8 (CP)HSir ft.\nGilpin, Chairman of an 11-man British engineering mission that toured\nCanada last Fall, said today thb Anglo-Canadian trade picture offered\nathreat to the \"whole structure of\nthe Commqnweelto.\"   , *\n\"It is no exaggeration to Say that\nthe,, limitation , of. purchase from\nCanada, if long continued, might\neventually threaten toe whole structure of the Cbmh)bnwealth,\"the mis\nslon's leader said In a statement to\nappear fo the British Board of Trade\nJournalFeb. 12,,    , ;;\nHe said the Government-appointed mission, during its seven-week\nCanadian tour, did everything within its power, to explain why, \"in a\nworld more and more tightly-laced\nin the strait-jacket of bilateral\ntrade,\" tae teadiiig accounts of two\nnations must Corne*tato'-'sbme.'sort\not balance. '\u2022';-'\n',;...'     '   '\u25a0,'; \u2014^-7\u2014 \u25a0*;\"\u00ab\u25a0\nTOSEEKTIM\nBUCK ELECTION\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 (CPJ'^A resolution passed at the National Convention . of \"-the', Labor-Progressive\nParty.;.stated \"the central task of\nthb Labor-Progressive Party in-all\nfields bf activity is the defeat of the\nWar parties.\" ' ' :\nThe resolution becomes toe party\nplatfqrm for the coming year, especially with regard, to the next\nFederal ejection.\nIt said the party's main emphasis\nin'the election would be in Toronto,\nTrinity, where the partyls national\nleader, Tim Buck, has\/already been\nnominated a candidate, and in Montreal and Winnipeg. There is also a\npossibility of - additional: nomina<\ntions in some 15 other constituencies. \u25a0_ .\u2022'\u25a0. ; ....-' y-',.\nIn ridings where' there Is no La:\nbor-Prbgresslve candidate, ,*.the\nparty Is pledged to support of C.CF.\nfarmer or Labor candidates, said\ntha resolution. -\u201e(The C.Q.F. party\nhas frequehtlyrepudiated such support.)     '-...r'\"'\"        \u25a0' ''-.\nIKE FREED j-OR\nWASHINGTON DUTIES\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (AP)-Col\numbla University has given a\ntemporary release from duty to\nIts President, Gen. Dwlght D. Els\nenhower, so he can give\"full-time\nadvice to the national, defence\nestablishment.\n\u201e , ,\u201e\u201e, \u201e\u25a0 Roberto Rossellnl (left) \u00bbnd John Huston,\ndirectors of \u25a0Talsan'' and \"Treasure of Sierra Madre,'* and Olivia,\nDe Havlllsnd, of \"The Spake Pit,\" hold N. Y. Film Critics scrolls\/\nPLAN DRIVE      i\nTO SUPPORT\nCpRPARTTTY\n. VANCQUVER,;B. C, Feb.-8 (CP)\n\u2014Three parent bodies of Canadian\nCongress bf Labor, Unions, -representing 50,000 iherhbers.ta British\nColumbia, are planning to launch\nan all-out drive iri support, of the\nC.C.F. Party ta Federal arid Provincial elections, Jim Bury, CCF.\nProvincial Secretary, taid here.\n\"The move follows toe ousting of\nCommunists from the executive\nranks of the B. C. Federation of\nLabor and the Vancouver, Labor\nCouncil and official endorsement of\nthe CCF. by those bodies.   .'*.\nWANTT.LC,\nREDS PURGED\nBy NORMAN WALKER\nyMIAMI Fla., Feb.'' 8* CAP)\u2014; The\nArnerican Fede'ratloh of y Labor's\nExecutive Council lt reported .drafting a statement blasting the, Cans?\ndlan Trades and Labor Congress\nfor harboring Communists or Communist sympathizers in Canadian\nUnions.\nA.F.L. President William Green\ntold reporters a three-man Council\nCommittee is, preparing a statement for approval at tomorrow's\nCouncil session. He said it will outline-recommendations for eliminating pro-Soviet men from the Canadian T.IiC\nThe Council Is nesting an end ef\nits Winter meeting and probably\nwill adjourn tomorrow.\nIn the-discussions of the Canadian labor situation, Percy' Ben-\ngough,, President of thb T.L,C.,: rind\nFrank Hall, Its Vice-President add\nhead of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks in .Canada, both appeared before the 'Council.\nHall charged the T.L.C with' being too Inactive fo weeding Red\nsympathizers but of the T.L.C. The\nCouncil was reported to have asked\nBengeugh to take\" a more militant\nstand but he is, reported to have\ndeolined - to moke any specific;\npromise. \u2022 '    ;   '\nSeveral Council members taid\nprivately that,. as a .result,' the\nA,F,L. will, sharply criticize, the'\nT.L.C. in a statement tomorrow, and\ncall for prompt action in elimiriat-\ning Communist influences.'. ;';'\u2022'\n10 Countries Sign\nFisheries Pact\nBy GEORGE  R'ONALQ\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON, Feb.! 8 (CP)-A\nmultilateral treaty for protection of\nNorthwest Atlantic; Fisheries Was\nsigned here today by 10 countries.\n\"Stewart';Bates,-'^Federal Deputy\nFisheries Minister, signed for Canada. Other countries whose representatives Sigried were Newfoundland, the' United States, the United\nKingdom, 'France, Iceland, Denmark. Norway, Portugal and Spain,\nAn Italian, spokesman said Italy\nwill'sigri within the 14-day limit.\nThe treaty is subject to ratification by the Governments concerned.\nThe treaty, agreed to yesterday\nby representatives of the Interested\ncountries, sets up ari International\nCommission for, the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n(o PILLS\n^^______'\nBelieves More\nPeople Should\nMove North\nREGINA Feb. 8 (CP)-A healthy\nshot of the get-up-and-go spirit\nWhich spurred'pioneers into pushing Canada's frontier across toe\nWestern plains and mountain ranges\nin the days of the Old West has\nbeen prescribed for present-day Canadians.'\n\"The \"prescription\" came frbm\nVilhjaimur Stefansson, famed Arctic explorer, who'suggested ta an\nInterview it was the only answer to\nthe'successful development of Canada's vast Northland. . .\n-But the \"Go North\" call was not\ndirected at everyone.\nAlthough flourishing cities of from\n10,000 to 40,000 persons could be expected, the pioneers of the North\nshould be unafraid of the cold and\nbe prepared for a different means\nof livelihood. \u2022 i  '\nThe still-vigorous. 60-year-old author ahd lecturerr-here with'his ati\ntractive young wife to gather data\nfor , an Arctic encyclopedia\u2014said\n\"some Canadians haye a defeatist\nattitude about colonizing the\nNorth.\"  '..:'.\n\"They, say If there are no \u00bb_-\nroads how can we have colonies?\nIf there are no colonies how can\nwe have railroads?\"\n'' The, Manltoba-bom explorer said\nthe extension of railroads should\nproceed in: the same pioneering\nspirit as the old Canadian Northern\narid Grand Trunk Pacific Railways,\nand the Canadian Pacific Railway,\n...... I..,m \u2022 ' - \u2022\nm\nwere built\nFINDS DEATHS SUICIDE\n, ALBERNI, B. C, Feb. 8 '(CP)-A\nCoroner's. Jury decided here that\nMrs. Sarah Jane Wiegand, 42, coin-\nmitted suicide Feb. 4 and took thb\nlife of her daughter, Marilyn Beverley, 4, by plunging with the child\nunder the wheels of a train.\nThb verdict last night absolved of\nall blame the crew of the Esquimau\nand Nanaimo Railways freight train.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, PES. 9,1949 \u2014 3\nOver $4 Million\nIn Sun Life\nMONTREAL, Feb. 8\u2014The largest\namount of new life Insurance issued\nby any Canadian life insurance\ncompany fo 1943 was-today reported\nby S,un Lite of Canada, bringing its\ntotal Insurances in force to well\nover the $4,000,000 mark. Benefits\npaid to Sun Life policyholders during the year exceeded $105,000,000.\nAt the 78th Annual Meeting,\nArthur B. Wood, President, described life insurance at essentially an\ninstitution of the average citizen,\nbuilt up by toe small savings of millions of people; an organization un-\nversally accepted because it serves\na public need. The highest form of\nsocial security,\" he declared, \"can\nnever be a Government Sponsored\nscheme. U must conform to the will\nof the people and be tailored to\nmeet their varying needs. Life insurance conforms to the rcquir-\nments of average citizen* familiar\nwith their own problems and able\nto determine for < themselves the\nsteps, necessary to meet them. Furthermore, it is bought in an open\nand highly competitive market -\n\"On toe North' American continent, over 80,000,000 people have: voluntarily obtained life insurance,\nhave .voluntarily planned lt according to their heeds, and have voluntarily selected the. Institution they\ndesire to carry out their plans. The\ncharacter and magnitude of tbe\nbusiness is a reflection ot public\napproval and a public endorsement\not the'sound principles on which\nthe business is founded.\"\nMr. Wodd taid that the new Insurances written by the Sun Life\nfor 'the. year amounted to $374,652,-\n000. Total life Insurance in force\nstood at the record figure of $4*089,-\n000,000, an increase of $251,000,000.\n.Total income for the year exceeded\n$232,000,000.\nADJUDICATORS ARRIVE\n\u2022HALIFAX, N. S., Feb. 8- Lady\nH. Claughton of London and G. H.\nHeath-Gracle, adjudicators to Canadian music festivals, are among\nthe 566 passengers aboard, the Canadian Pacific's Empress of Canada\ndue to dock here late Tuesday;\nThis is the first voyage for toe\nEmpress ot Canada since December,\nShe will proceed to Saint John on\nWednesday.\nDON'T LET THOSE\nBEARDS FOOL YOU\nThe Classified Phone Number H 144\nDOCTORS TODAY AGREE . .\nfamous old Si B: formula hai\n\u00a3top cough-relief ingredients.\nc Here't why. Prescription-type\ncough drops contain three medicinal\nIngredients vfed by doctors for yean\nfor coughs, help 3: important ways:\n1. Ease throat tickle    ,\n. i \u25a0\n_\u2022 Soothe raw, Irrllotetl\nmembranes\n3. Help loosen pMtam\n..\/\nCommerce-\na family tradition\nFrom Grandad to Grandson, the tradition\nof saving, and otherwise dealing with Tho\nCanadian Bank of Commerce has been handeVj\ndown in many families. From 1867, when the\nBank was founded, the value of \"COMMERCE\nSERVICE\" has been recognized by succeeding\ngenerations. Good service is a tradition of'\nthis Bank. i  '\u25a0]' ...   I\nYour family, too, win appreciate the courteous\nand efficient service which is available at\nover 500 branches of\nthis Bank* '\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMIRCE\nNelson Branch \u2014 J. R. McLENNAN, Manager\n \u00bb\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9, 1949\n:';\u201e ByGABHYCL^ELANP MYfiRS, Ph.D.\nHigh School Youth,Too Youthful\nTo Drive Own Car on Highway     - ;\nsmall community where the family\nare will known and highly regarded\nby the' police, the] lad may get off\nAbout the strongest .wish the _\u2022\nverage youth irom .fourteen; io\niv\/enty has is tb own a,car. Many, a\nlad has quit school in order to take\na job so he can buy some kind af a\near.,'- ... '\u25a0; .'-\u25a0 '-. \u25a0\u25a0        \u25a0 \u2022\nfSt course, some well-td-do parents'will .bribe the so'ri,'to Stay\/In\nschool by giving him a.-car, br -win\ngjve hlnV, the car regardless. 'With\nvery few exceptions,, ior\" youth in\nhigh school to bave:ii car is, in the'\nWidest sense, ...moraHy.ibiVniful' to\nhim' and a.mehace to the community. With more exceptions', this also\nholds true for sons^.and daughters\ninqollegfe '\u25a0'.'\u2022   \u25a0\n\" .Now--and .then a father will buy\na worn out-jalopy foryhis son and\nsen's Ypali to rebuild- at' .the., son's\nhome. The father reasons that this\nWill afford good education and keep\nthe lad: busy at. heme. As his father\nsees how his lad is wrapped up in\nthis enterprise he is proud of his\njfeclslbn. ;:'.-.-\nFATHERS TROUBLES\n-, 'But.the 'father hadn't figured, out\nwhat might happen when the jalopy was .ready to\" run. Before he\nfree after several arrests for vlb<\nlating-. traffic regulations. .Being\nyoung and daring' and egged on, by\nhis pals, he may .take more chances\nonly'to -face a. serious, 'even fatal,\naccident beferelong, perhaps.1 The\nfather's troubles and expenses may\ngrow with'leaps, and bounds.\nTheWis*.father providing ortp-\nprovlrig heme rebuilding of an old\nJalopy will, make clear to the son\nbeforehand the prerequisite for\nhis using the car; That the car shall\nnot leave the premises for the first\ntime before it is inspected by en expert mechanic, whether such be-de-\nquired by law br not; ahd thet the\nson shaw have driving and ownership licenses and liability insurance.\nUnless the father can be sure he can\ncount on his son to abide by all such\nrequirements nnd to drive carefully\nand observe all traffic rules, he\nwon't let his ton begin to repair or\nrebuild a Jalopy.. . '\nPROBLEM WILL INCREASE\nAs new cars become more plenti\nwakes.Up the son and his pals may; full this jalopy problem will rapidly\n|t p'nVthe street or increase.Many old cart still will be\nhighway,! even'.Without driver or\nhave ,the car' out pm the street or increase.Many old cart still\nbought by boys out of their first\nownership license or witltout' the\ncar's having; beeniiiBpected arid approved,by a reliable mechanic. So\n'the father's first Knowledge: of what\nreally has happened may corrie from\nthe police station. If it is in a rather\nINCANDESCENT\nond Fli\/oitEICiNT\nearnings. Consequently, an increasing number! of. boys will become\nvictims of accidents with these jalopies, not to mention the increase\nof victims at their mercy. 5s   ,\nThere should be, of course, strict\ner legislation requiring periodic inspection, and regulating the use of\ncars. 'But the first responsiblity is\nto the' parents. Let them enforce\nregulations above the law,\nNo parent who really cares about\nthe safety ot his fellows will sign\npapers permitting a minor son or\ndaughter to secure an ownership or\ndriver's license unless, nevhas very\ngood reasons to feel sure this youth\n-will be extremely careful with the\ncar.\nDeaths\n103,\nBy The Canadian Press\nLONDON\u2014Helen Cresswell,\nbelieved to be the, oldest former\nactress in the world. ,; , '\nTORONTCWemee A. Douglas, B7,\nwith the. bond department of the\nftoyal Bank 'of Canada, for many\nyears.\n, NEW YOHK-Dr. Francit'. Snow,\n72, author, linguist, and a former\nEditor of Current History Magazine,\nSAVED FROM TRAIN\nAND POISON\nGODEBICR OnWFeb, 8 <&>>\nMarjorie Williams, 21, was 'Charged\nwith attempted suicide today; after\nthe allegedly swallowed poison.and\nthen walked in front, of a train'\nSaturday. Engineer T. Schaus' said\nhe saw the girl in time, ahd braked\nthe train to a stop before it hit ber,\nShe was taken''to hospital in Lon\ndon, SO miles. South ot here, and\nsuccessfully treated for poisoning.\nBEODTA (CP)-Thli sUft blind\npersoht last, Christmas tang from\ncarol sheets with .carbjt thereon\nwritten ta Braille.\n, By JANE ATKINSON\nPlain Speaking Sometimes Best Way\nTo Remedy Careless Appearances\n\u2022 Troops of the V 8. First Infantry\nDivision, on Winter maneuvers In Germanic, draw an audience of curious villagers as they pass\nthrough a small town in an \"advance\" from positions on.the Rhine eastward to Hanau in the I). S, tone.\nBeauty Hints\nBy IDA IEAN KAIN\nBeware This Coutionry Tale and ;,,\nWatch for Miscellaneous Calories\nEverybody knows Minnie, (he\nMuncher. She's the gal who struggles-with diet, dally, but alas,- loses\npound and one-quarter only; tb\ngain back a pound and three-quarters. It's really' too discouraging,\nMinnie sighs ...over tea and frosted cup cakes.\nMinnie's calorie budgeting is real*\nly something to marvel at. With\nsylph-determination she gives up\n100 calories in a potato and takes\n300 in banana cream cake. But she\nconscientiously uses saccharin' in\nher beverages .'.. sugar is so fattening. In fact, the carries saccharin tablets with her, and triumphantly drops one in her coffee'. \u25a0 .while\nserenely ..eating a sweet dessert\nTHE UNCOUNTED\nOccasionally our \"dieter\" dutifully keeps a record of what'She\ntats during the -day, \"to; prove she\nreally, doesn't eat very much.. But\nMinnie's memos resemble the budget of the woman who carefully\nlists: one stamp .03, one -spool of\nblack thread, .10, one bunch bf eel\ney ,.18 i, . ,' miscellaneous $106.40.\nMunching comes under .the head of\nmiscellaneous, but uncounted, cal\nories.\" (Nature counts them).\nAt meals; Minnie diets rigidly..,\nwell, almost -rigidly, perhaps she\nwill take' just another .very smalt\npiece of the'.chicken . . . and,a little, dumpling .'with It' ...oh, yes,\ngravy;-''\njysT one ... ,\nMinnie' is completely optimistic\nabout getting her weight down.\nEvery morning she firmly resolves\nto stay on her diet that. day. And\nthe does too . . . until about 10:30\nin the morning, when she actually\nfeels faint and is compelled to have\na little something . ,..-\u00bb doughnut,\nor two, but only one piece of candy.\nAfter that she feels better, and, ber\nwill power strengthened, she doesn't eat lunch .\u00ab .titer all, she. must\nwatch her waistline,        \u2022   \u25a0 V-.,\nBut alongabout 3 00 she begins to\nfeel weak, and While the doesn't\nreally want to. eat\u2014because' goodness knpws, stye is trying to dietr*-\n\u2022he must have something to sustain her. So she has a cup of tea\narid a piece of fruit cake. My that's\ngood fruit cake; she concludes, finishing up the small end,\nMinnie never eats more than one.\ngood meal a day\u2014that's dinner. Arid\nsince she actually gains weight on\njust one meal a day she realizes\nthat she, must come by her weight\nhonestly. '\u25a0,'.\u201e,\u00bb. i \u2022 '\u00bb.''-\nPIECE-MEAUNQ:\nOuryMlnnle'the-Muncher It.riot*\nan exaggeration. So, many over-,\nweights eat only brie .good* meal a\nday arid-\"diet\" at. the: others,, but\nmore than make up for it by piece-\nmealing. They honestly believe they\neat \"next to nothing,\" and limply\ncannot understand what keeps their\nweight up.       ' -,. , ;-\u2022\u2022\u2022\nSeriously,, \"If ell; between-meal\nmunchers; would .',\u25a0 pin themselves\ndown to three adequate meals a day\nand use Ihe science of nutrition to\nget the best ot the calories, they\nwould'be better nourished, and they\nWould lose weight\nZ5\/o more weight\nmore suds\nmore cleaning power\nmM^^\n0&R\nNew improved VEL\nDoes This for You\nVEL cuts dishwashing time in half.\nNo wiping! No dishpan ting!\nCuts grease, banishes soap scuta.\nLoosens even cooked-on food.\nRehabilitation\nPasses Cos!\nOf Firs! War\nBy DOUGLAS HOW\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP)-jCaria-\nda now has spent as much to rehabilitate and cafe for her veterans\nof the Second World War as she\nspent to fight the flrstohe.\nvThe figure '.the Finance Department gives for the cost to Canada\nof the first War is $1,696,000,000, covering; munitions, equipment, pay,\nfood, etc. !By March 31, the cbstjsof\nrehabilitation, penslotis, hospital\ntreatment* and other'phases of the\nprogram unfolded after,the second\nwar will be beyond iWOO.OOO.OQO,\nor an average of more than $130 for\nevery Canadian. ;\n:.' Towering far above, them both is\nthe figure of between \u266618,0O0,000i000\nand $19,000*000,000, which the Finance Department give? as the cost\nof the second war.\nDeer Miss Atklnsorir\nI am 17, and am interested ln a\nboy of 18. We go to'school together\nevery day and he haB aBked me out\na few tiriies but I'bave been busy, i\nMy problem is that I liki iriy\nfriends, to always, look, .neat and\nclean but he is * definitely not a shining example., I would- like to know\nhow it can help him without hurting\nhis feelings or. embarrassing -him. I\nhave' dropped many' hints, all of\nwhich he has. picked up readily, but\nI arn^beginning to run out of gentle\nhints and don't want to resort to\nharsh ones. I Would like to go but\nwith him but not until he improves\nappearance. He is very nice ln\nother ways.\n\"C  B\"\nDear \"C. B.l\"      v \u25a0       '   ,  '\nI don't imagine the reason that,\nyou have not gone out with this\nboy. when he asked you was because\nyou were too busy, es you say. You\nprobably would not have been \"too\n\" ill\nC. N. R. Central\nRegion Vice\nPresident Dies\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 ,<CP)-tf.*F>\nPrlngle, 83, Vice' President' bt Car\nnadlan National Railways Central\nRegion, died-in -hospital today of\ncoronary thrombosis.:'\n\u2022 One of Canada's, outstanding railway executives, Mr.'Prlngle was\nbbrnln Cornwall, Orit. He was formerly Vice \u2022 Presiderit and General\nManager of the C.NJt,'s Atlaritic Region, with headquarters lh Moric-\nton,N. B.'\"\nDuring the First'World War he\nserved with 'the Royal .Canadian\nEngineers. He was one of a number\nof Canadian technical experts loaned\nto assist Iri' reorganizing national\nrailroads in Mexico in. 1930.\nbusy\" if he were all slicked up and\nlooked as he should.\nIf you go to school together every\nday, you have many \"good opportunities to give1 him an idea about\nhow.you'feel. My suggestion )s that\nybu do it by. bringing up from time\nto time'other boys that, you both\nknow, who look the way you'd like,\nhim to. look. '\u2022 Naturally,, you won't\ndraw' any comparisons, but -just\ntalk enthusiastically, about these'\nother boys and say how-nice they\nlook. Admire the way they dress, or\nhow neat they keep themselves. It\nyou do it in the right way, he will\nprobably get theldea and take more\ninterest in sprucing up. <,.\nThis. Is a project with which you\ncould really have a lot of fun seeing what you can do by. indirect\nmethods.. If all these fail, however,\nthen I think the next time he asks\nyou out yeu would be perfectly justified hv saying, plainly that you\nwould like to go, but you want hjm\nto look so nice that you'll be proud\nto be seen with him.\nUSE IT ON\nTHE TABLE\nAND\nIN COOKING\nJust add water to. Ogilvie\nGold Cake Mix. Pure vege-t\ntable shortening, eggs, sugar,\nmilk,' and finely-milled\nOgilvie Flour are already\nperfectly, measured and\n, blended for you. And at t\nlaying to -your pocketbqokl\nUSTEN tO YOlllt WOMBft  '\n:.'.-.-    BHTOR, KATE AITKIN, EVERY\n.. MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, >WD\nTODAY. C6NSUIT YOUS, IOCAI      .\nNEWSPAPER FOR TIMS AND STATION\nGives you soft water washing in\nany water.'  .'.*\nSafer for woolens, stockings\n-     and lingerie.\nMilder'to hands and to\nall fine washables.\nNo- dulling soap film.\nNo soap fading.\nMonarch Life\nBusiness at\nRecord High\nThe forty-third annual meeting\nbf the Monarch Life Company was\nheld at its head office,-at Winnipeg,\nJan. 25, with J. Elmer Woods, Vice^\nPresident,' presiding.'   :'\"\".,\"\nThe Company reported its most\nsuccessful year in history, New business placed at risk increased 9.4\nper cent to $25,524,000, while business in force Increased 13.3 per cent\nto $145,034,000. The amount of business in force has-increased rapidly\nin recent years for It was only in\n1946 that the Company first had\n$100,000,000 of business in force.'\nThe total amount'paid or credited\ntb policyholders and beneficiaries\nIn the year was $31893,690. While the\namount of death claims paid was\nsomewhat'higher than the preceding year, the Company's mortality\nexperience continued to be favorable.,.';* ''.\"..',N:-.,     . .'\u2022'..'\u25a0'\ntbir several years, prior to 1948,\nthe interest earning rate Showed a\nmarked decline from year to year, a\ngeneral: experience with all investors. Shortly after tiie beginning of\nthe year 1948, with the dropping of\nthe,price of, Canadian Government\nbonds, and the consequent increase\nin yield of them, a moderate rise\ntook place In the interest earning\nrate which could be obtained On\nnew purchases . ;bf securities. This\nmeant that during 1948, satisfactory\ninvestments were made at a slightly\nhigher income return than had been\nobtainable in 1947. This and other\nfavorable developments arrested the\nrapid decline in the average interest earnings, with the result that the\naverage rate earned on-the Company's portfolioy1h 1948, -was 4.31\nper' cent, a small, but satisfactory\nimprovement over1 the rate of 4,26\nper cent earned in 1947.   .;\u25a0\n5\nVlt Keeps Hands Lovable\nActual tests prove -VEL is milder\nto hands than ariy product made\nfor .washing dishes and fine\nlaundry; .  ,\n%, vet, vet XsM^^^m^eurj\nBalk at Wage Demand\n. NEW YORk, Feb. 8 (AP)- The\nfirst solid signs of a check in labor's steady 'drive for higher, wages\nin the United States appeared y.\nperhaps sigrilticantl^-last week.\nThey may forecast the end of a\nfairly steady 15-year climb in industrial wages.\nThis may.be especially, true:in\nlines.such as textiles thai are feel-:\ning the effects pt post-war readjustments. What effect, there may be on\nother ljnes ot business is yet fo be\ndetermined. \u25a0\nIn the woollen textile Industry\ntwo large, groups of. workers in the\nCongress of Industrial Organizations and the American Federation\nof Labor were denied 10-cents-an-\nhour wage Increases by arbiters\nwho ruled the time bad come when\nthe business could not support the\nhigher pay,   '\nOri Jan. 17, a group of Cotton textile, workers had-received a similar\nsetback.\nThe Classified' Phone Number It 144\nA\n IV\nContinuing Our Largest\nSHOE SALE\n,    Your greatest opportunity to S-A-V-E\nRo Attdrew & Go*\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1904\nMOTHER OF NATAL\nf WOMAN DIESAT7?\nJ'\/NATAL, B.C., Feb. 8-Mrs.;_, W.\n'J_owe of Natal received news,by\n^cable that her mother, Mrs. Mary\ny^ ftatcliffe of Wigan, England, died\nta her 79th year, Mrs. Lowe had\nplanned to visit her mother this\n* Spring.\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"BUILD  B.C. PAYROLLS\nIDEAL\nFOR\nBABIES\n0 n so 11 el te d testimonials\ncontinually, tell us that babies\nthrive when fed with richly-\nnourishing, irradiated Pacific\nMilk.* Set a handy, vacdum\npacked pan,today and,'prove\nthis fact for yourself! \u2022\nPacific MM\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\nmiimiHiiiiiHHiiiiimiimmiHinmm\nKASLO LEGION\nAUXILIARY\nNAMES DELEGATES\nKASLO, B. C. Feb 8--The Canadian Legion meeting at the home of\nMrs. S. Stocking with twenty-five\nmembers iri attendance, named delegates.for the Zone Council meeting\nto be held in Rossland on March 5.\nThe President with Mrs. J. Lon-\nkin will be bfficial Delegate with\nMrs. F.. McGibbon as alternate. The\nFraternal Delegates are: Mrs. F. S-\nChandler, Mrs., W. Moody, Mrs.\nHarbottle and Mrs..E. Garrett.,\nMrs, A. :F. Stephenson, who jis-\nited in Rossland, gave an interelt-\ning account of the Ski Meet, and\nW\". L. Billings who recently, .returned from Vancouver- Where he was\na patient in Shaughnessy Hospital\nfor several weeks,* gave p short de'\nscriptibn of the hospital and the\nwanderful Care the patients received.    '- ; iyyf      -.';*''\nPresident-Mrs. J, Tonkin presented Mrs. A. F. Stephenson with a\ngift from the -Auxiliary. Mrs.. Stephenson is leaving soon to, reside in\nthe east. ;'...,\/.'\u25a0\n. Hefreshinento were served by\nMrs. G..S.'Baker and Mrs. W. Moody as hostesses.'\n\u2022 Mrs. K. Bowles and her infant\ndaughter have left the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital for the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. John Bowles k at\nBalfour, where they will visit for a\ntime before returning to their home\nin the Lardo.\n\u2022 Rt. Rev. Msgr, A. K. Mclntyre\nof the Sacred Heart parish ta .Rossland spent Monday at the rectory\nof the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate.'\nO Mrs. George Conrad, Carbonate Street, visited friends in'Balfour Sunday.\nI  Jimmy Spencer of Wynndel\n\u25a0 Watch tor Our\nWeekend Specials\nButeherferia\nMEAT MARKET\u2014Phone 832\nNelson Social\n,    By.MHS.M.l.^GIteIX\nwas ta Nelson, Sunday enroute\nhome, from visiting relatives iri\nRossland and Trail.\n\u2022 Rev*. Father J.y J, Barnes of\nCastiegar spent the past couple bf\ndays in,town having come,to preach\nthe forty hours devotion in St\nJoseph's chapel which began'Monday.  '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0': '.\u25a0'.    , \u25a0','. '\u25a0 ' ''\u25a0'\u25a0 \u2022'.\"'\"\n\u2022 Mrs. Gene Hird. of, Slocan City,\nis. visiting her brothers. and sisters\nat-Balfour.''.      ' ','\u25a0 V \".'\"\n\u2022 Edward Hall of Balfour wap\nin the city:Monday on-hliiway to\nSeattle where he was called owing\nto the serious Illness of his mother.\nFruitvak...\nFRUITVALE, B, C- Mrs,. A.\nCrawford was hostess to Circle No.\n3 of the St. Paul's United Church\nWomen's Association, with 10 members in attendance. While engaged\nta doing sewing and knitting, plans\nWere made for the Circle's, birthday, party on March 17. The hostess,\nassisted; by Mrs, Miller.'served light\nrefreshments, Those present were\nMrs. McAloney, Mra ,S. Haskett,\nMrs. R. Leckett, Ms. G. Grieve, Jr.,\nMrs. D. Burt, Mrs.. A. Graham,-Mrs.\nE. Skinner, Mrs. T. Quaite, Mrs. D.\nMiller and the hostess,. Mrs.. A.\nCrawford.\nMrs. W, Mauchltae was hostess: to\nthe, Friendly Club on TBursday\nevening for their' regular meeting,\nThere were seven members present.\nAfter a brief business period a so\ncial hour, during which members\ndid knitting and sewing, followed,\nMrs. Mauchline, assisted \u2022 by Mrs.\nMclsaac served refreshments. Mrs.\nThomas Quaite won the hostess\nprize. Those present were Mrs. J.\nDeBruyn, Mrs. F. Cole, Mrs. S. Mclsaac, . Mrs. A. Graham, ..Mrs. W.\nGraves, Mrs. Thomas .-'Quaite, Mrs.\nFrancis Smith. Next hostess will be\nMrs. .D., Burt,\nCircle Bridge Club' met at the\nhome- of Mrs. Harry Matsen with\ntwo tables in play. Mrs. Davis held\nhigh** score while Mrs.. Anderson\ncame Second,. Those playing were\nMrs, James Davis Mrs. T. Anderson,\nMrs. A. Wilmot, Mrs. Louis DeBruyn, Mrs. M. Cherry; Mrs. A. Dilllng and hostess, Mrs.' H. Matsen,\nMrs. W.'.Duncan. The club .will\nmeet next at the home of Mrs.\nDuncan,  f.\nSirdar . .v\n-SIRDAR,;B.C.- Mr. and Mrs.\nHolms of Creston visited Mr, and\nMrs,;(R.' Heap.  ...\nMrs. John MecRury- Of Vancou'\nver is* visiting .her father, Dave\nQuaife, for a. few days. ' *', \u25a0\nIf Mrs. 'Dave1 Quaife> is a patient in\nEdmonton hospital. She became ill\n'while visiting her mother, Mrs. E.\nGratton. ;.\"\u25a0' '  ','. - \",'*<:\nMrs. J. Kpllman . has left for\nHope, where she was called by the\nillness of her mother. ' ].\n\/' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Simister of\nCreston visited Mr '\u2022 and* Mrs R.\nHeap.- \u25a0''..'. .   .\n\u2666 \u2666 \u2666\n\u25a0 KXSLO, B. C.\u2014Mrs. Stevenson of\nRossland is visiting her parents, Mr.\narid Mrs. A, F. Stephenson.*\nMrs. H. Greerisword and Mrs.' J.\nHall spent the' weekend in Nelson,\n, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Matthews left\nfor Montreal, where fhey will visit\nfor' several weeks, with their son\napd daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Matthew's; '\nHarrop*..\nHARROP, B. C-Mr. and. Mrs. T,\nLepitzki have returned from a vacation spent at Prairie points.   .\ne___\n\u25a0TSews of the Day\nRATES: 22o line, 27o line black face'type! larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nfflBBIIBBI\nDon't watl until after, the _Te,\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nPHONE 1177 AND 1178\nFAIRWAY FOR FRE8H MEATS\n.For expert .-service on all electrical appliances. Phone S'iklton, 91.'\nm\nK. E. Gardner, Edmonton, was greatly taken with the\nrecipe below. Ho wrote t\n\"Your Fondue recipe was a great success, which means\nyour Cream bf Tomato Soup will be a must on our shoppinglist.front now ori,\".' '\n. . Heinz wantcc to ttnowuhat recipes appeal to men. Several house*\nwives were ashed to serve dishes out of the hooTtlet \"57 Ways to\nUse Heins Soups.\" Atypical verdict is given above.\nBaked Cheese Fondue I\nArrange six dices of bread, crusts removed, in,the bottom of a       [V\nbaking dish (12\" 1f X 2\"). Cover the bread with X lb. packaged\nchMe^ufrtothtosUceS. Cover with six more slices of bread, cheese       1\ntopped. Beat i eggs; add one 10-oz. tin Heinz Condensed Crcarn\nof Tomato Soup, undiluted,! cup milk, 2 teaBpoons Heinz Prepared       |\nYellow, Mus\u2014rd, 1 tablespoon minced onion, 1 teaspoon salt, ^\nteaspoon pepper. Pour this mixture over the bread and cheese.       fj\nAllowto'etandfor 1 Hour. Sprinkle with crumbs\nfrom dried bread crusts. Balfo inn moderate oven\n(3508F.) for 50 minutes or until puffed and brown.\nWe still: have a few Firestone\nstudded tires. Enquire at\nCUTHBERT MOTOR8, LIMITED\n17 VARIETIES\nPLIA8I-Y0UI-MAN MCIPIS.\nFor the 100 best reclpos using Heinz Soup as an Ingredient, which have pleased the.man of the house, Holnx.\nwill send winners a generous assortment of Heinz Con- \u2022\ndenied Soups, Mall \"Ploase-Your-Mon\" recipes to H. J.\nHeinz Co. of Canada Lid., 420 Duponl St., Toronto 4,\nPlayers Fine Cut tobacco -' $1.10\nhalf pound at VALENTINE'S.,\nSomething new in Fyrex* covered\nroasting pans. HIPPERSON'S.\nHand tied Trout Flies for your\nValentine. 1 doz. attractively boxed\n$1.50.-JACK BOYCE.\nCIVIC EMPLOYEES\nSpecial meeting' City Hell, Friday\nEeb. 11th at 8:30 p.m. .'...-.\nOld papers, 15o bundle. Lay In\nyour* supply now, and cheat Old\nMan Winter.' Nelson Daily News,\nChildren's deep plates or mugs\nta English crockery back in stock at\n. HIPPERSON'S'\nBoys' tweed pants, sizes to 86\n\u2022Vales to *8.S0\u2014$3.29\n\u25a0    THE  CHILDREN'S 8HOP\nRead the hockey story of. the\nfamous Bentley family. WAITS\nNEWS.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for'reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nWhy not give vs a call to increase\nyour fire insurance protection 'today?\u2014C. W.APPLEYARD.\nOrder extra copies of the Pictorial\nEdition now, 15c per copy plus.5c\nfor mailing and wrapping, plus tax.\nELECTRICAL COimACTNG '\nAlterations,  New  Installations\nR. C. Catton      '       Phone 389\nSpecial this week. Have that old\nfelt mattress spring-filled. NELSON\nBEDDING, 550 STANLEY ST.\nPHONE 1314. \"*'.,\u25a0 -;,!. :.'\n(jourii20 (&\u00a3\u00a7 & ym\n____,'\u2022__\u25a0 L_i_ A\/if\/\nfoWwtii\nfeed Min\n$AINES\nNourish\nW.A. TO CANADIAN   LEGION\nGeneral meeting tonight 8 p.m.\nHospital Auxiliary meeting Friday at 3' p.m. at Nurses Home.\nGIRLS' OXFORDS\nta, Browns, Blacks. Moccasin and\nplain toes.   \",\nAT THE BOOTERY\nSCUTAN\u2014All purpose building\npaper. Rolls, BOO sq. ft\u2014Standard\n$2.50;  Medium $3,35;  Heavy $5.05.\nBURNS LUMBER _ COAL CO.\nFor your knitting yarns, problems\nand .advice* \u2014 drop   ta   at   the\nTOT-N-TEEN 8H0P\nFormerly Christine's Baby Shop\nt   .  .-' '_?-.* V1\u2014#\u25a0\"*\n*'    ;CLEARINa\nChildren's slippers. 50c pair\n\u2022  Ladles slippers $1.00 pair\nAT THE BOOTERY\nSt John's Ambulance Association\nannual meeting at Canadian Legion\non Wednesday Feb. 9 at 8 p.m. AH\ninterested in First Aid are cordially\nInvited. .    '\nA Scpttie rug at your door will\nsave you hours of work. We have\nfag mats and braided,,oval mats\nwith chair covers to match.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nHear Praise\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FfB. 9, 1949 \u2014 S\nKASLO, B. C;, FebY 8* >-\u25a0 Branch\nNo, 74 of the Canadian,. Legion,\nmeeting In Legion Hall on-Thurs-\nday under Vice-President E. Harbottle, \u25a0 approved the transfers of\ntwo members, and reinsfateinent'of\ntwo. former rriembers,'\nAn honorary membership badge\nand card was presented to P. E.\nGreen,.  ,-'.. .    , , *  ;\nW. L. Billings who recently-returned from Vancouver, .where he\nwas a; patient iri Shaughnessy Hospital gave a .short address on the\ncafe.of patients in the'hospital ahd\nvoiced his appreciation of. the- excellent treatment that he had received.    , ,'\u2022...'\n.A'ioiht, social evening, with- the:\nLegion Auxiliary was. discussed arid*.\nit was left iri the hands of the joint\nsocial committee! fo set a date.\nA delegation of two members was\nappointed-to attend the.; Court ot\nRevision on the assessment on the\nLegion, HalL\nThe Secretary, was Instructed to\ntake action in the case of an old\nKaslo veteran, who-is.thought to'be\nto rieed. of D.V.A. attention.\n,J. bewaf was appointed *sis rep-\nreseritative of Branch No. 74, to the\nZone .'Council,, which Is to.be held\nin Rossland in March.-\nJohnson's Ldg,\nJOHNSON'S LANDING, B. C.\u2014A\nWhist drive was held at toe school,\nto help raise funds to have the\nschool piano repaired and tuned.\nThe. prize winners were, Ladies,\nMiss Margaret Thompson,* consolation; Gents, Ray Roper, and' Alvin\nLake, tied tor first, and Ray Lake,\nconsolation; .\n. Miss Jean Mac Nicol laft for Nelson to resume her studies.\nJohn Cummings of Kaslo was a\nguest at the Mac Nicol home.\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHpNE 116 \u2014 NELSON, B.C,\nThe House of Furlnture Values\nYour $ $ $ Buy More at Freeman's\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nIf you need a'typewriter see me.\nWe have all standard makes rebuilt\nand can sell you either tor cash or\non Convenient payments, c D. W.' McDerby, \"The Typewriter and Adding\nMachine Man,\" ,554 Stanley Street,\nNelson. ,\n9334\nSIZES\ns-'io\nCANDY-BOX PRETTY\nEasy to do, adorable too! This\nsweet dress is just what you busy\nmothers, ordered. Ffbek ;opens ;.flat\nto iron and Sis can dress herself in\nthis gaily scalloped confection!\nPattern 9334 comes in sizes 2, 4,\n6, 8, 10. Size 6 frock, 2 yds. 35-i'n.;\nPanties included in pattern.\nThis easy-to-use pattern ..gives\nperfect fit Complete, .illustrated\nSew Chart shows' you every step,\nSend twenty-five cents (25c) iri\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly, SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS, STYLE HPM\nBER.\nSend your order to the NELSON\nDAILY NEWS,' Pattern Dept, 268\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nTHERE ARE A FEW MORE\nDAY8 LEFf TO SHOP FOR RE^L\nBARGAINS AT Mo - Me FEBRUARY SALE. CO MP.A RE OUR\nPRICES WITH MAIL ORDER\nHOUSES. \u2014 8AVE   DOLLARS   AT\nMe A Mc FURNITURE  DEPT.\n' Two thousand dollars will buy a\npartnership in a successful established business. The applicant will\nbe a commercial traveller' for, hit\nfirrri. Mu'st:have good personality.\nFor particulars apply to P. E.\nPoulin,'582: Wafd  Street, Nelson,\nb;c.\nYANKEE SCREWDRIVERS, HAM\nMER8, HAND AXES, HAND SAW8\nWOOD AND ALUMINUM LEVEL8\nALSO TORPEDO LEVEL8, COPING SAWS AND POWER TOOL8,\nELECTRIC MOTORS, 7\"\u20148\"\u201410'\nCIRCULAR SAW BLADE8.\nMo-A'Me\nfood- ,   iii\nS^!^ pound.;\npVo.\u00abn\u00bb\u00bb'^i cooked ost\u00bbfa;\n' D-208\nWhat counts with your\ndog is being nourished \u2014\nevery inch I. Feed him\nGAINES - keep him hapV\n\/, pier, healthifer \u2014he'll be\nmuch more fun! For GAINES is\nfeennef-testefi*-\u2014 biologically\nproved nutritionally complete.\nWherever dog\nfoods are sold\n2 lb.   5 lb, .\nand 25 lb, bags\nA Product of\nGeneral Foods\nComplete Meal for AIL Dogt\nLARGE SIZES\nin Dresses\nWe Cater to He Larger Sizes.\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\n.*** *********** * * * ****,\nIVootenay Valley Uaiky\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\n..mmm*\u00bb*m.*.mmmmamM\nY ALLURINGLY. YOUR8     .\nyours\" when your hair is styled\nby'us. YoU.will.be CONFIDENT\nACTON'S .\nB.E^UTY. PARLOUR\nise0\u00bbw\u00bb.\u00bbsf\u00bby ww\u00bb\u00bbw\u00bbsm\nFlonnel ond Corduroy\nJACKETS\n.   $.9.95 to $16:95.\nFdshjon.First Ltd.\n.***********************.\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat toe\nBRADLEY'S\n\u2022 Gay, novel and appealing, this fruited self-,\nlayering mold lias hew interest, new designs\nin each slice.Some fruitssink, somefruits .\nfloat in Jell-O'. . . so with Jell-0 you can\n.achieve no end of thtise \"self-layering des-\n' setts\", quickly-and easily,\"\nVot red economy.. .well-loved flavor\nbrilliant color, .^j Jell-0 dishes like this U,\nthe dessert'parade. ' r' -,;,.-\nEnjoy the ''lockedrin\"-flavor of Jell-O,-^\nregularly. Look for the big red letters on the '\u25a0\nJELL-0 box. ,\nThere are seven famous Jell-0 ffavort\nmitrtilB iiaos^um\n\"U u.,rv ]&\u00b0\n'       1P^^ \". :\n,'.\u25a0     \\ \u00ab\"EV*.\u00ab-'\u00bbUee\u00bb',\u2022\u2022\u25a0\".'\nVi,\u00abPb -i'iM Mtsog?.\n, 11.0 to'*\u00ab* *1' \"to_ v^\nrk'owned by Gen-rat.' Foods, Limited   '\u25a0\nJbII-0 U'a lrad\u00ab-mqrk*'owned by O-nsrai: Foodi, Umlh.d\nRegardless of Age. Ty|)e of Skin or Previous Beauty Cafe!\nHave a lovelier complexion ... fn Just 14 Days I\nTo gain a complexion men admire and wpmen envy-r-stop imprbper\n. cleansing. Instead, follow the Pahriolivo Plan-*-using PalmoUytf,\nSoap alone\u2014the way doctors advised, Yes, leading elfin specialists\n, proved that the Palmolive Plan brought lovelier,complexions        ';\nto 2 out of 3\u2014regardltps of age, typeOfsUn or previous '\nbeaOftyijarel Start ^oiir PalmOlivo Plan tlo'day. It's easy.  >,' j,\nf, Just wash your face with Palmolive Soap. 2. Then, for 60\nseconds, massage gently with Palmolive's soft, lovely lather.\nRinse I 3. Do this 3 times a day for 14 days. This cleansing\nmassage brings your skin Palmolive's full beautifying effect!'\nRemember... DOCTORS PROVE PALMOLIVE'S BEAUTY RESULTS\nmm\n Established April, 22, 1902.\nBiitlah Qolamblg'a\nMost Ihieresting Wewspoper\n\"Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia,\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, .\nPost Office Debartment, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU i OF CntCULATTONS.\n;'; Vv^EDNESpAY, FEBRUARY 9,1949\nCreston Civic Centre\nOpens Tonight\nA gala carnival under the auspices\ni of the Lions' Club tonight marks tfye\nopening of the Creston Valley Civic\n:'Ce'ntre.:\n\u00a3' \u25a0 The.building, which has been.undex*\n'^construction since 1945, Was erected at\na cost of almost $20,000, and houses\n,2500 persons.       :   \u2022\nThe Centre contains an artificial Ice\ni-sheet 7Q*by 180 feet, a dance flbor and\n\u25a0 aiswimming poolj the overall area being 222 feet by 102 feet..', .\nCompletion of the Civic Centre en-\n\u25a0lables Creston to be host for the1 first\ntime-at the 25th Annual Selkirk CurlJ\ning Bonspiel wljen five sheets of artificial ice will b6 available for play.\n.\u201e..' The Civio Centre project has been\ncompleted almost entirely through\npublic .contribution. \" v\n, Congratulations,: CrestonI\nKootenay Is Host to Pleasure\nSeekers This Week\n> Winter sports events of national\nand. international importance are taking place in Kootenay-Boundary this\nweek.\nRossland Sno-cJSho and Western Canadian ski championships are being\nwatched by the Canadian sports fans\nwith a good deal of interest. Th? events\nare made possible by the construction\nof a $30,000 ski lift and lodge operated'\n|v;by the Red Mountain Ski Club, the\n\"having been subscribed by in-\nand enthusiastic citizens. The\nsingle unit rise in\ncomparable to any ih the\n5Q70 feet to the top\n\u25a0    This\nties, and, be:\nJtuilimited po_nblll-\n\"a non-commercial and\ni non-profit enterprise, will grow with\nthe years, since all profits are reinvested in the betterment of the skiing\nfacilities.\nIn'Trail, the B. C. Curling Association Bonspiel is in full swing' the win.\n-ning rink in this 'spiel going on to'com-\n.pete in the famous Dominion cham-\n\"pionship competition.\nIce carnivals have been shown or\nwill be shown in three KOotenay centres. Cranbrook enjoyed the Gyro Ice\nFrolic, Kimberley, .the Rotary Carnival,\nand Creston, the Lions Club Carnival.\nIn Nelson this weekend there is a\nNelson High School Bonspiel and a\nround robin tq decide on a B. C. rink to\nbe sent to the playdowns in Edmonton,\nKootenay is rapidly becoming a\n.Winter playground as well as a Summer rendezvous. . ,      _\nDon't Generalize\nIsn't it funny how folks forget the\nbasic principle on which oUr democratic way of life is built? That is, that\nevery human being is an individual,\ndifferent from every other human being: Too often ,We casually condemn\nwhole neighborhoods, whole races, peo-'\npies by the millions. It doesn't make*\nsense on the basis of pur. history, which\nwas made by people of all ireligions^all\ncolors, from all over the world. Most\nimportant of all, intolerance and discrimination are a- fearful wasje of energy, manpower arid achievement,\nespecially at this^cruclal time,. ,-.\u2022\nDuring ^hls Canadian Brotherhood .\nWeek, there is,one point which should\nbe made clear. In our own interest and\nfor our children's sake, let's avoid careless generalizations about human beings. Let's judge every.person we.meet\nby his actions alone, and treat Win\naccordingly.-That, in essence, is what\nbrotherhood means. It's Canadianism.\nAnd it pays big dividends.    \u25a0\nLobkiiv^ Backwards\n: 10YIAR8 AGO '\"':'\nProm The Dally News oi\" Feb. 9, 1939\nYoung Tories'defeated Buddies 38-28 in a\ngame'of the Ladies' Basketball League at the\nMemorial Hall in Trail. J, Lepage of the Buddies and J, Davidson ot the Tories were the\nchief'sjiprers. .'\nMost Nelsonites kept well indoors Wednesday when: tiie mercury plunged to a frigid'\ntemperature of eight below.\nOfficers reelected In the Creston Rate-\n, payers' Assoclatlpn were:  Charles Murrell,\nPresident; Frank H. Jackson, Vice President;\nV. M.  Vasseur, Secretary-Treasurer;  J. G.\nConnell, Alex, Anderson and E. 3. Downes,\n.Executive.. \u25a0.,.\u25a0\u2022' :\nJ, H. M. Greenwood, Second Street, has\nreturned from a weett's visit to' the Coast,\nAfter an exciting campaign, Miss Jean\nKnowles, pretty 13-year-old, was chosen as\nIce Carnival Queen at Grand Forks.\nSBYEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Feb. 9, 19M   ;\nA. W; Anstlc ot Revelstoke, well-known\nInterior lumberman, has been appointed Deputy - Chairman of the Royal Commission on\nPulpwood for the Province of British Columbia,   '\u25a0    '  \"\u25a0'     -..\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0'.? '.\":.'.\nAt a special meeting of the G.W.V.A,'Monday, all ex-servicemen of Trail listened to an\nexcellent speech delivered (by L. W. Humphrey, M.P., of Nelsort. H. Jackson was elected\nto the Chair.\nAt -the annual meeting, ot the, Ladles'\nChurch Guild held at the home ot Mrs. Theo\nMahope, officers^ Were elected as follow\":\nMiss G. Clarence, President; Mrs. H. F. Reynolds, Secretary-Treasurer;'Mrs. A. Major, Vice\nPresident; end Mrs. E. Chandler, Mrs. H.\nSevern, Mrs. H. F. Reynolds, Walking Committee.  .\nP. E. Doncaster, District Engineer, Department of Public Works, returned Thursday\nfrom Ottawa and Toronto, where he attended\nthe meeting of the District Engineers of the\nFederal Department of Public Works.\n\"   40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Feb. 9, 1909   \u201e,'\nThe Ilth annual 'Spiel of the British Columbia Curling Association opened at Rossland\ntedey with three of Nelson's rlnks competing.\nCaptain Angus McLeod left Nelson last\nnight with the crew of the Valhalla in order to\njoin the boat at Procter.\nIt has been decided to form a concert\ncompany in Nelson, and arrangements are being made to hold a meeting for the purpose of\nselecting. committees and deciding upon a\ndate-on which a concert could be held,\nA Valentine reception as an object to assist\nin the good work of the Ladles' Aid of St.\nPaul's Presbyterian Church will be given by,\nMrs. and Misses Hipperson at their residence.\ni-Tom Marks and Company will return to\nNelspn next week for a one-day stay only.\nThe Answer, Quick!\n1. Give the plurals of oasis, species, opus,\ngenus and seraph.\n2. Which is heavier, milk or cream?\n3. Name the three trees whose names suggest a ship's shelter,.the shore, sea food.\n4. Who Was the author of the Acts of the\nApostles?   - \u25a0\nHOW'D YOU MAKE OUT? '-'.-\u2022'.\n1. Oases, species, opera, genera and seraphim. '     '\n2. Milk.\n3. Bay, beech, bass,\n4. St. Luke,\nIt's Been Said \u2022\nGoodness consists not in the outward things\nwe do, but in the inward things we are. To be\ngood is the great thing.\u2014Edwin Hubbell Cha-\n. pin..' ;',        '.\",.,'\u2022'     -\n^Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of person's .\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere.le no charge for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL, except when there le obvious necessity for privacy.\nJ. S., Kaslo\u2014Please give the addresses of some\nof the Texas dally papers.\nCommercial Record, Dallas; Times Herald,\nDallas; Commercial, Recorder, Fort-Worth;\nStar-Telegram, Fort Worth; Progress, Jacksonville; Times, Laredo; Express, San Antonio;\nDemocrat, Sherman;' Record-News, Wldhita\n.Falls\/     :...,. . :'    \"\u2022.-....'\n. V   .-'.*'\".-.'\nNameless, Nelson\u2014Were Eva Braun and Hitler\nlegally married before the end?\nIt has been-stated in print, though not\nofficially confirmed, as far as we know, that\nshortly before they died, Hitler was married\nto Eva Braun In a private ceremony that took\nplace in-bis office.\nMrs. J. H\u201e Nelson\u2014Please tell me the value of\nan Antonius Stradivarius 1715 model violin, It is ah American-made copy.\n,  We are afraid there is no particular value\nin this, part from the market price,\nD. C,,: Wynndel\u2014Where can JC write about tiie\n: value of an old coin? ..,.,..\nTake a rubbing of the coin on tissue paper\nand send this to the Numismatic Company,\nFort Worth, Texas, Don't neglect to make\nrubbings of both, sides. Please enclose self-\naddressed envelope and money to\\ cover postage.', ,       '.\" \"'\/  ,....'\nHostess, Nelson\u2014Please tell ma how to make.a\nrock garden .centrepiece.\nDissolve three tablespoons of salt in one\ncup of warm water, add two lumps of coal-\nmore or less according tp requirements, Into\nseparate portions put one or two drops of red\nink, blue ink, or even green ink. Do not sti:\nthis last is very important If the salt does not\ncrystallize, add more. Another way is to' make\na thick solution of ordinary washing blue and\nwater, pour this over the coal, then immedi-\nately sprinkle salt on the wet pieces,    ,\nCredit Unions\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR,\nLetters may be published over a nom\nde plume, but .the actual name of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as evidence of good faith, Anonymous letters'go\nIn the waste paper basket.\nBuses a \"Questionable\"\nAlternative Feels Nelson ite\nTo theEdltor:   ,: \"\u2022 (\nSir-rAnyone listening to Vancouver radio\nbroadcasts when the blizzard was on, could\nnot help but wonder just how Nelson would\nfare with its proposed bus service under anything like such circumstances in view Of the\nhilly streets compered with their level ones;\nalso the great volumes of snow piled along the\nsides, end the icy roadbed. :r-y-\nWith we Nelsonites. the street car service\nis an established and proven utility, whereas\nthe buses would be a highly questionable al\ntentative for the street cars, and Involve a lot\nof money at a time when the City has not got\nit, and there are so many other major proposi'\ntions in need of urgent attention, such as high\nschool, hospital, and other like matters,':\nThe amusing thing about the changeover\nfrom street cars to buses is that it Is advocated\nmostly by (citizens who almost always use their\nown cars, .while the railway, patrons are quite\nSatisfied with' things as they are. To outlying\nstreets some bus service (auxiliary) could be\nInstalled tp relieve the inconvenience. l\nIn any case, no major move in1 that direction should be undertaken by thp City Council until lt has been submitted to the property'\nowners for their approval.\n1  . A STREET CAR RIDER.\nThey'll Do It Every Time'     _\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0_*\u00bb-\u25a0'\u25a0->    By Jimmy Hatlo,\nYqu\/Horoscope\nBring your skill into play at this time,\nand you will make headway with personal interests. You may have some downs es well as\n,Ups in the year just beginning for you, but unexpected good fortune probably will eventuate and happy friendships be formed. The child\nborn under these influences should have a\nvaried, successful and interesting life.\nIt Happene'd Today\nOn Feb, 9, 1674, New York was\nsurrendered to .the English for the\nsecond time by treaty.v   ,\ntiwnLdisit\nTMEy _\/ME TO-HEEE\nUP THE _Uy IN BED\u2014\nfMNKMNDAWTTIP,\n\u25a0XOCmMOQBUGAO,\nPES MOINES, ,\u00a3),\n\u2022asm .^J\u00a3.\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nGray (reek Group\nGRAY CR__K,;.B.C\u201e Feb. 8 - A\nsocial evening in Gray Creek Hall,\nsponsored by the Porcupine Club\ndrew a full local attendance. The\nfeature of the evening was la talk\non Credit Unions given by C. C.\nFeenie of Gray Creek. Mrs.. Lymbery, President of the Club, introduced the speaker.\nMr. Feenie began by tracing the\norigin of the Credit Unions: now\nworking in Canada and the United\nStates...The first Credit. Union was.\nstarted by tha mayor of a German\nIndustrie! town in 1858. He saw that\nthe town workers were, in the hands\nat the moneylenders and' thought\nup a system which Induced them to\nsave in small amounts and borrow\nfrom the central fund in times ot\nsickness and emergency.\nThis was eminently successful\nand Alphorise Despardins seeing its\nworkings studied ihe scheme and\nbrought it to Quebec. With suitable\nlocal changes, it proved most workable in the Quebec rural communities, but ''the ideal place tb\nstart such a Union is in a factory\nwhere' there is a regular paycheck,\" said Mr. Feenie, \"and where\nthe Credit Union members are.welt\nknown to the directors especially\nto the thre 'Credit, directors who\npass on loans.\" \"   .        . '\nHe then described the start of\nsuch a Union. Each member bought\na five-dollar share, either outright\nor by payments as low aS twenty-\nfive cents a time. The case of a\nman putting in for a loan of perhaps, seventy dollars for fertilizer,\nwas immediately passed on by the\nthree Credit Directors in consultation and the money was made available at once, unless he was held to\nbe a poor risk. '\u2022';'\u25a0\nMr. Feenie dwelt on the low percentage of loss through unpaid\ndebts\u2014it amounted to less than one\nper., cent; taking the average. It\nseemed, Mr. Feenie observed, that\na shareholder took pride in supporting hs union.\nGOOD CONTRAST\n.The speaker contrasted this way\nof doing business with instances of\ninstalment buying and buying goods\non credit. He instanced the case cf\na man whp wished to buy a stpve\nlocally. The price was $55 cash or\n$70 on long credit. The man went\nto the Credit Union for a loan and\npaid cash for his stove. The interest\non the loan cost him 6 per cent and.\nhe retired it in. monthly payments\nwith a portion of the interest. Thus\nhe bought the stbve-fpr under sixty\ndellars. Mr...Feenie went on to\nspeak of installment buying. The\nbig mail-order houses did it, he\nthought, at around 10 per cent but\nhe did hot see how. they could make\nmoney at that if one figured extra\nbook-keeping-, costs .of re-pbssess-\ning and other factors. 'Here was a\nsphere for Credit Unions,', geared to\nsaving and loaning, sums of small\namount that were too' costly In\nbook-keeping to be attractive to\nbank business.\nRESPONSIBILITY\nHe emphasized the' importance bf\ngood Directors. The Credit Directors should be business-like yet\nhumane; they Should, know, the\ncharacters and circumstances of\ntheir members. The Supervisory\nDirectors had ah onerous job;,They\nWere responsible for the conduct\nand solvency of the Unibn tp the\nRegistrar, of Credit Unions in the\nreport, had to be sent in to the\nProvince. Every two months, a full\nRegistrar by the treasurer, and\nonce a. year, the Supervisory\nDlreetprs .had to check up, all the\npass-books against the Treasurer's\naccounts.. The Treasurer;was the\nonly paid officer of the Union, Mr.\nFeenie added. The office could be\ncombined with' that of Secretary or\nnot as seemed advisable. The other\nDirectors served without pay,\nMr, .Eeehie else described how in\nthe States\u2014and. soon to be in Canada\u2014the Credit Unions -were jpined\nin a national organization known\nas C.U.N.A. which was of great\nbenefit. The profit of the Unions\ncame from continual borrowing and\nrepayment. In the country, loans\nwere needed ln Spring and then\nbusiness, was, slack. In the, towns\nmoney. was borrowed in Autumn\nand Winter. By passing available\nfunds from one Credit Union ln the\nNational League to another in want\nof it\/, money was never idle but\ncirculated continually anjong small\nborrowers at. Interest they could\nafford to pay, He hoped a Canadian\nLeague of Credit' Unions would\nsoon come in Being.\nIn Quebec and the Maritlmes, the\nmovement was strong. Fifty members, he thought, was the essential\nnumber for the ' start of such a\nUnion.\nThen followed:* discussion period\nto which many live questions were\nput At the conclusion ot the talk,\nMrs. Anderson, Secretary of the\nPorcupines thanked Mr'. Feenie\nwarmly :for his lecture and spoke\nof Its-great interest andof its easy,\nclear .exposition of the subject,',\nSupper was then served by Group\nA- headed by Mrs, Feenie, and a\nsocialhour was then' enjoyed.\nAWARDED $6000\nIHUBII.SIUT\nBODMIN, Cornwall, England, Feb.\nB (Ci?)-^Jt|dgment fer $6000 and\ncosts today was awarded Capt, G. P.\nWilliams, Master of the Four Burrow Hunt, in his libel suit against\nRev. Cplin Craven-Sands of Redruth, Cornwall.\nThe suit was brought as a: result\nof letters to two newspapers writ-,\nten by Craven-Sands after eeetng\nthe wlndup of a fox hunt near his\nVicarage.\nReports Given\nAl New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Feb. 8 -\nThe monthly meeting of the Hospital Aid was held at the home of Mrs,\nWilliam Clever Friday with'President Mrs. C. W, Nelson presiding.\nVisiting committees report was given by Mrs.* John Taylor.\nCommittees appointed for the\nmonth were Mrs. A. E. Latto and\nMrs. James Latto.\n. The report tor buying and sewing\ncommittee was given : by . Mrs,\nJames A. Greer, All articles needed\nto be procured.\nFinal arrangements were made\nfbr Valentine's dance and committees appointed.'.\nRefreshments were served at conclusion of business. \u25a0;''\",\n$18 Million\nProfit Expected\nIn Liquor Sales\nVICTORIA. Feb.' 8I (CP) \u2014 Increased populatipn of British Columbia has kept sales of liquor on\nthe uptrend with a predicted profit\nof $18,000,000 for the fiscal year\nending March, 81 next; \u2022\nThis was shown in the public accounts laid before the House today\nas the Legislature opened.! The half-\nyearly profit was $8,122,991, an increase of $591,981 as compared with\nthe same period in the previous\nyear, The heaviest buying is around\nthe Christmas-New Year holidays.\nThe 1947-48 profit was $16,598,430.\nSales for the first six-morith period totalled $27,451,301, and' it is\nbelieved the fiscal year reports*\nwill show sales approaching $60,000,-\n000 as compared with $55,249,375\nspent on liquor ln the year ending\nMarch 31, 1948.\nCAIRO, Feb. 8 (AP)-Slx' Arab\nstates In addition to Egypt have,\ndecided to' enter armistice talks\nwith Israel, a senior official of the,\nArab League said today.\nr If tt ANO NUUHV WOK\nDOMINION    StED    HOI\nc* I 0 I C E 1 0 * \u00ab . 0 \u00bb I\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m. \u2014 Except Sunday\n....'- Y .\u25a0''-\u25a0.''    '    '\nTrail Livery Co.\n\u25a0. \u2022 \u25a0 i. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\nTrail\u2014Phone 135      Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n$311,\/78Sales\nTax on Liquor\nIn Six Months\nVICTORIA, Feb. 8 (CP) \u2014 The\nProvincial Government In the first\nsix months Ihe tax was levied collected $311,778 in sales tax on\nliquor.    \"'      .\nThe'three per cent tax was\nlevied' last July.\nThe statement of-the Liquor Control Bpard on the first six months\nof the current fiscal year's operations, from-April 1 to Sept. 30\nshowed today that this sum had\nbeen collected.\nDuring that period the Board\npaid over to the Government\n$302,424 of the tax.\nPEACE ENVOY\nGOES TO REDS\nSHANGHAI, Feb. 8 (AP) - A\nwartime Nationalist, Guerrilla\nleader has crossed Chinese Communist lines. North of Nanking to\ntalk peace with the Reds, the\nNorth China Dally News reported\ntoday.\nThe  British-owned   newspaper\n-said Gen. LI Ming-Yang saw Acting   President  LI  Tsting-Jen   In\nNanking Jan. 29 before crossing\nthe Yangtze and going North.\nPa waB my \"one and only sweetheart. May says I missed a lot by not\nbein' courted by several', but I doubt\nit. One was about all I could stand\nanyway.    . '\u25a0    . >\nMANCHESTER, England (CP)\u2014\nShortages and high prices were\nprobably chief causes.of the sharp\nincrease-in suicides among old peo.\npie in Britain last year.iJessel.Ry\ncroft, Manchester coroner, said in,\nhis annual repprt\nMcy^di life Reports\nFORTY-THIRD ANNUAL REPORT it:\n\u25a0 \u25a0 . I- \u25a0 ' \u25a0 ,  \\\nBtu-MM In Force,\nEaoreoBed 18.8% to.  yi4P,0_3,780\n,.'   New Business, \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0      .-\nIncreased 9.4% to   .  , $ 2o,B24,078\nPremium Income     ,,,;,,,   ,   ?  8,434,438\nPaid or Credited to ,     \u25a0\nPolicyholders and Benefloiaries _$  9JM6flMi.\n''\u2022\/juMl''... \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0':\u25a0\".:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 ':.'.>\u25a0 . '.   j^BMyao\nCapital, Bnrplns and\nBpeoial gesorves __\n\u25a0_\nEC\nMttrict Monoger, S.I.B.C.\nTRAIL, I. Ci.\nI\nm\nT~\nAssuraiieeGoci^Mjf\nHEAD OEIilCB   n  JWINNIPBO\nR.CA.F. Signals\nUnder One Officer\nOtTAWA, *eb. 8'(CP) - A new\nstep to strengthen Canada's defensive set-up was disclosed,, today\nwhen the Air Force ahnpuncei that\nall its Signals activities have been\nplaced' under one man, Air Commodore W, A. Orr, O.B.E.,\" of Wet-\naskiwin, Alta., and Ottawa.'\nQualified sources' said the appointment, restoring a wartime setup, reflected the vital importance\nof communications in the defence\nsystem. As chief of Signals, Air\nCommodore Orr will be in charge\nof developments, in radar,, electronics arid other fields.! ,'\n.............. 9 .........\nYou never s&ve~u0l you starfi\n.   f Most of us have a savings accountT\\\nBut to make it really mean something calls for planned\nsaving... and a strongmind: One way is to Work towardwhat   ,   ,\nyou want most: a new home, a car; an education for your\nchildren, the extra security or opportunity that a \"nest egg''\nprovidess\u00bbtiSavings can meari'so many things\u25a0 <\u25a0 The important\nthing is to starts*, and. tp put aside so much a week\u2014every week-\nRemember, some are born lucky; smart people save;\nTIIE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nNelson Branch \u2014 S. A. MADDOCKS, Manager\n m\nim CARS\nnd CAGES\n\u2022 HOIST, SKIPS\nAERIAL TRAMWAYS\n(For Additional Sports NoWb See Page 2)\nWESTERN\nBRIDGE\n\u2022 STEEL FABRICATORS LTD\nVANCQUyER, B.C\nBentley, Conacher Continue Lead;\nGoalies'Race lor Trophy Tightens\n\u2022 MONTREAL! Feb. 8 (CP) .\u2014\nWhile Chicago's punch duo: of\nDoug Bentley and Roy Conacher\ncontinue to make a' runaway of\nthe National Hockey League scor\nIng;race, the scrap for the Vezlna\nTrophy has developed Into a wide\nopen affair with three netmlnders\nhaving eri even chance to capture\noes\u2014that look ne good\nyour eye as they feel\nyour, feet\u2014atyle that\nlers admire and you,\noy\u2014long life In every\nh of their fine, sleek\nthere\u2014theae are the\nngs you get In Leckie'e.\nfor them at your*\nie atore.\nthe cup ahd $1000 that goes with\n..it .; \u25a0 \"        \u25a0 '\u25a0:..: ;..,.; \u25a0.\nOfficial statistics released today\nshow, Bentley and Conacher with\n81 and .49 paints respectively. In the\nthird spot with 40 is Detroit's Sid1\nAbel, while Jim Conacher of Chicago and Billy Reay of Montreal are\ntied for fourth with 37'each, '\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0).\nGoalie Chuck .Reyner of New\nYork, Rangers*leads' the way in-the\nbattle for'the Veziha,'which goes, to\nthe goalkeeper who has played, the\nmost games for the team with least\ngoals scored against it. But by. vlr-\nture of their teams having played\nmore games than Rayner, both Bill\nDurnan of Montreal and Detroit's\nHarry Lumley are in just as good a\nspot as the ranger cage custodian.\nCanadiens have had: 108 goals\nscored against them in 44 games and\nDetroit 109 in 45 games,..' \u2022;\nLumley's goals, against.average is\n2.42, Durnan's 2.45* and flayner's\n2.52, Of the 105 goals scored against\nNew York, tour were against Emlle\n(The Cat). Franciswho filled in for\nRayher in two fixtures.. ','.,.,'\nTOP8 IN,GOAL8 >,\nGetting baok to the marksmen,\nAbel is tops in goals with 20 while\nDoug Bentley heads the assists column with 32. ':\nWild Bill Ezinicki of Toronto up-\nped his penalty time by 13 minutes\nduring the Week ahd still leads with\nus.   - -\u25a0:\u00bb \";\nThe Leaders: yy- ':'\u25a0.'\u25a0':.\nG APtPh\nD. Bentley,' Chicago 19 32 51 34\nR. Conacher, Chicago ...* 18 31 49 ,8\nAbel, Detroit\nQUALITY\nSHOES\nwings of the\nthe red beret, the proud wings of the paratrooper are '\nworld famous, His is one of the many interesting and\nexciting jobs in the new Canadian Army Active Force.\nThe new Army gives you every chance for self-\nimprovement and advancement. There is unlimited\nopportunity for protnotion\u2014if you have what it takes.\n-You can become a paratrooper and enjoy the thrill\nend excitement of the newest Branch of the Canadian\nArmy.\nThis is your opportunity to join men who are starting \u2022\na career with a future\u2014if you meet these-requirements;\u2014good physical condition'. .<. 17 to 25 years of\nage... veterans with airborne experience will be taken\nqp to 30 . ..', pass the Army's entry' -requirements.\nThere is extra pay for parachute service.\nIf you,would like to win your winge,\nwrite or viait your lqcal recruiting office\ntoday. Bring ybur certificates'of age and\neducation wit_ you, ...\nNo, 11 PnnoDnrt Depot, Ills Avitms ft niRlibufy Scent, Jeileho,\nVANCOUVER. B.C., '-\u2022\nDin the CANADIAN ARMY ACTIVE FORCE Now!\nI\nJ. Conacher, Chicago\nReay, Montreal1 .........\nWatson, Toronto ........\nPoUe, Detroit ..:;.'.-.....\nBodnar, Chicago .......\nBabando, Boston .......\nLindsay, Detroit.........\nMosienko, Chicago ...\nWarwick, Boston ..\u201e.\nRichard, Montreal __.\nSandford, Boston ......\nCarveth, Montreal.....\n..\u201e\u25a0 20 20 40 35\n.... 19 18 37 35\n.... 18 19 37 23\n-10 16 35   0\n..\u201e 15 19 34   8\n-MS 19 84; 10\n.... 19 14 33 26\n... 17 18 3S 44\n..\u201e 15 18 33   6\n...18 14 32   8\n 16 15 31 94\n.... 18' 18 81 45\n.... 10 21 31   2\nIMfear-Old\nMay Be Olympic\nSki Contender\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nbanff,, Alta., yeb; 8 ,(CP)^Gor-\ndon Morrison, 18-year-old Banff\nHigh School student, may be one of\nWestern Canada's leading contendere tor a berth on the 1952 Canadian\nOlympic aid team,\nThe' young Albcrtan, who will not\nbe ready to enter, a university for\nanother year,; showed a clean pair\not heels to some of the leading college skiers of Canada and the United States in exhibition runs here\nlast weekend,' . i    .    y\nAlthough not eligible to compete\nin the international collegiate, ekl\nmeet here at the* weekend,.Morri'\nson made timed runs over exactly\nthe same slalom . and downhill\ncourses used by'the varsity alders.\nTimes easily eclipsed the best.turned\nin,-by the older racers.\n\u25a0 The slim, sandy-haired youngster's mastery of skiing techhltjue\nand cool daring on the steep Mount\nNortmay slopes, scene., of the international meet, won'favorable comment from both Canadian and U.S.\ncollege coaches. . .'*:\u25a0\nUNIVERSITIES\nINTERESTED ';\u2022'    \"'-,.:;...\nRepresentatives , of at least two\nUnited States universities were lib'\nderstood to have approached Morrison about attending an American\nuniversity on an athletic scholar\nship... .-,,\nThe young Banff student streaked\noyer the difficult slalom course set\nbut for the college meet in; 58 seconds, more than four seconds faster\nthan, the best time, turned in by\njack Griffin of McGill, who won the\nevent\nNative bf Dafoe, Sask., Morrison\nmoved to'Benff 15;yeara ago...\nfimJiSmmL-^\nBy CLIVE FLEMING\nJerry Lubeck fattened his scoring\ngreatly .in Spokane when he scored\ntwo goals in the Sunday night game,\nand four pliis one assist In the second. He pptted enough to beat Spokane alone. Maybe it's that he's be-'\nginning to get the* ones he has\nalwaysieen missing.;.; :\u25a0\u2022 ' ,.\nWhen I\/askcd how. Spokane's BUb\ngoalie Vera Ktieeshaw,, who was\nborrowed by the Leafs, was in the\nNelson nets, I' received the answer\nthat. -feed Madden could probably\nhave won the game, and with Seaby, in goal, they would have undoubtedly won. The-tall goaltender\nhad 24 stops to make in tho whole\nganie, In last Thursday's game at\nNelson, Ron Plckell made 38 stops,\nand only let one ln. But he was really sensational that night .0-  ,-.\nThe two goals* that Spokane did\nget however, Kneeshaw had no\nchance, since one was 'scored by\nRalph Luke, on a breakaway when\nthe- Leafs were applying the: pressure, and'. Hughie Scott's was a\ntricky, back-hand. *-.  -\nBut, Vern has Nelson Maple Leaf\nfans' thank 'you for playing for\nthe Leafs when our goalie couldn't be there for the game, and that\ngoes to the Spokane club, as well.\nStories have it that Nelson was\nfar irom the, favored team in the\nfirst game. It was stolen from us,-\nsaid one of the Nelsonites who saw\nthe game, -. '.:\u25a0 \",-\nOne of the things that came into\nmy ears waa.a penalty to.Fred Hergert Scoop Bentley. was butt-ending\nhim, so he tried to knock the Spokane defenceman away by lightly\nhitting him. Bentley took a wild\nlunge at Hergert but missed, and\npinned fellow defenceman Norm\nBlackett against the boards. Hergert,\nIn the meanwhile Was Just standing\nby and watching, Hergert got a\npenalty for it When he tried to protest it a little, the referee told him\nto keep quiet, or he would.get a\nmisconduct penalty. In the ensuing\ntalk, Hergert expressed his opinion\nthat the arbiter couldn't ref a juvenile ; game. He: got his misconduct,\ntoo. In the second game, on the face-\noff, Hergert slapped the' puck, and\nit hit Al Galipeau, and he gave him\nio minutes for that .-'.,\"'*\nIn the first game, Just after Hergert took his seat in the sin bin,\nRoy McBrlde clubbed George Barefoot over the head with hla'stick\n(I think I remember,something like\nthat happening-at Nelson, a while\nback) and^arejoot gbt two.mlnutes,\nand McBrlde five.\nWhen they were lh the* box, Hergert told Barefoot:to take oH his\ngloves. George obliged;: #nd took\nthem off, Hergert then addressed\nMcBride, and told him that since he,\nalways\" seemed to want a fight on\nthe ice, here was his chance, and\nthat he would see to it that no one\nwould Interfere. Apparently McBrlde quietened.\nJ. heard also, that after the game,\nthe referees came to the Leaf dressing room and apologized to Hergert.\nTonight the Nelion Maple Leafs\nstand a chance to move back Into\nsecond place, by one percentage\npoint, In their game with the Trail\nSmoke Eaters, who are still tasting a bitter eight game streak of\nlosses.  Also; that would  make\nthings set for a battle royal When\nNelsbn  Invades  Kimberley this\nSaturday.       '\nW.I.H.L. ALL-8TAR8: Number three, picked by Danny May, of\nSpokane,\nFirst team\nRon Plckell (S); \u2022\nNorm Blackett (S)\nGeorge Barefoot (N)\nRoy McBHdeYlS)\nBiU Snider (S)'  ;;      . .\" .\n\u25a0Buck Kavanagh (K)\nRookie of the year: Carl Cirrullo (S).\n,   Second team\n, o\n\u25a0 Jesse Seaby (N)\n,5\nCarl Cirrullo (S)\nD\n.   Les Christensen (T)\nC\nFrank Sullivan (K)\nRW\nRoy Allan <N)\nLW\nCy-Rouse (S)\nDENVER PEEWEES\nTAKE SILVERTON\nNEW DENVER, .B. C, Feb. 8-\nNew Denver Pee Wees'won b:\\ea-\ngue game from Silverton. 6-2 at\nNew Denver rink.\nCampbell of the locals sparked.\nthe attack with three goals. Oyama\ngot two and the other went to Ta,\nkallashi.     > ,\nErickson and Gordon , scored\nSilverton goals.       ,   ' ,:\u2022\n8UMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, N. D. Oyama\n(Kircts), 2:30; 2, N. p. Campbell,\n4:00. Pat Hardtag, 4:80: 3, N. D.\nOyama, 4:30. *     - ^     \u25a0\nPenalltles^-none\nSecond period'-*, Silverton,\nErickson, (B. Morrison) 3:50. 5, N.\nD.Takaliashi,'8:10.v.\nPenalities\u2014P. Harding and Steele.\n. Third perlod-^6,,N.D. Campbell,\n(Oyama), 5:15,7, Gampbell, (Takal-\niashi), 2:10, 8, SHvertbh,, Gordon\n14:00.'     . '     , .     .    -;.\nPenalities\u2014Kireto, 2 minutes for\nbumping, Campbell, 2 minutes tor\ntripping. '.'.\".\"\nLineups:       . V \u25a0.\u25a0\nSilverton\u2014P^Husberg, W. Morrl-\nSon, B. Morrison, T. Welsh, J. Steele,\nLf Harding, Pat Harding, E. Harding, L. Erickson, T. Gordon, R, Kyn-\nock, A, AvlsOri. -',; ..\nNew Denver\u2014G, Miyabana, N.\nTakaliashi, E. Isakson, D. CampbeU,\n3. Kireto, J. Oyama, E. Beigren.\nReferee was Lloyd 0eorge, Linesman, R. Nodan.\nEndorse Nelson\n'Spiel as Summer\nTitle Event\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 8-Appllca-\ntion of the Nelson Curling Club\nto have the primary event of the\nMidsummer Bonspiel reoognlzed\nas the official Dominion Summer\nCurling Championship event was\nendorsed by the annual meeting\nhere of the B.C. Curling Asc-coda\ntion.   ' :.'.\"..'\nThe B.c\/ body will In turn\nmake application to the Domlh\nIon Curling Association for reeog\nnltlon \"of the. .annual 'spiel, at\nNelson.,   .\n157 55\n19944\n221 39\n232 35\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\n.   PWX T FAPts\nDetroit .......... 45 27 14  4 145 109 88\nBoston' 43 21 18   4 124 120 48\nMontreal  44 16. 20  6 113 108.42\nToronto 44 15 18 11 108 119 41\nNew York .... 42 14 18 10 100 105 38\nChicago  \u201e*-44 IB 28  5 129 158 37\nUNITED 6TATE8 LEAGUE\nNORTHERN DIVISION\n\u201e. W L.T. F' Xpts\nSt; FatU ............ 28-18   8 208 162 80\nKansas City .... 24 16  9-204 151 57\nMinneapolis   .... 20 15 12 152 140 52\nOmaha :,..... 20^1 10 174 171 50\n80UTHERN DIVI8I0N\nTulsa   .'. :.^. '24 18   7.207\nDallas  16 21 12 175\nFort Worth  16 26  7 158\nHouston ., 15 30, 8 157,\nWE8TERT4 CANADA\nJUNIOR LEAGUE\n*.*\u25a0\u2022.-..\u2022\u25a0     *' W ._,T'F   A Pts\nCalgaw  \u25a0...,.\u201e, 17   9  2 106 113 45\nMoose Jaw ........ 18  8.1 112  83 42\nRegina ...:.:.....\u201e.;. 11 10   1   89   98 40\nLethbridge' 12 16   0   93 126 32\nBellevue  .....' IS 17   0 157 17?128\nMedicine Hat'.. 1017   2 109 132 27\nPep Confident\nOf Regaining Title\nHARTFORD, Conn., Feb. 8 (AP)-\nWiUle Pep, confident of regaining\nhla featherweight title Friday night\nat Madison Square Garden, admits\nhe took Sandy Saddler too lightly\nlast Oct 29.\n\u00bb\"I didn't think he waa a good\nfighter,\" said WilUe yesterday after\na good six-round workout. It still\npains him to remember the night he\nwas flattened' \u00a3y spindle-legged\nSandy in four rounds, losing bis\nprized crown. , ,' \u25a0..', .*   ',\nFights\n. By The Associated Praia\nMonday night matches:\nSAN FRANCISCO-rJesse FloreS,\n147, Stockton, Calif., outpointed Jose\nRocha, 151 \u201e, Montrey, Mexico (10),\nNEW ORLEANS-Kelth Hamilton, 134, New Orleans, outpointed\nEddie, Bertolino, 1ST _, Galveston,\nTexas (10).-\nCHICAGO- Anton TaadUc 16IH,\nEstonia, outpointed Eddie O'Neill,\n157%, Detroit (8).    ,\nP.HILADELPHIA \u2014 Ezzard\nCharles,, 179, Cincinnati, knocked\n'out Johnny Haynea, 204, New York\n(8).\nLONDON-^-Teddy AUen, 116, England, outpointed Hinty Monaghan,\n116, Ireland (S). Eddie Thomas, 142,\nEngland, outpointed Billy Graham,\n142,- New York (10).. Henry HaU,\n148%, England, outpointed Tony Ja-\nnlro, 148%, Youngstown, Ohio (10).\nDraws, Billeting\nPlease Visitors\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 8\u2014The smooth\noperaton of the Bonspiel draws is\ndrawing much, favorable comment\nOn the Draw Committee are R. J.\nMacKinnon, Chairman, Max- Des-\nBrisay and Harold ' Jordon, Trail\nSmoke Eater of pre-war days. The\nthree work in relays with never a\nhitch ln lining Up of the neve,r-\nehdihg draw demands.' The Work\nhas lasted, weU through the night\nwith the last daw at' 3:15 a.m. and\nthe first at 7 a.m. It is hoped: that\n3:15 draws wlU not be necessary\nafter Tuesday. . ',.,.\u2022\nBilleting has worked well, with\nmine visiting  rinks, staying  at  a\nCominco bunkhouse tfftd the balance staying either at hotels or\nwith friends or relatives. There are\neight rinks from Nelson, six each\nfrom Rossland and Vancouver, .twe\nfrom Vernon- and Cranbrook, and\none apiece from Kamloops, Creston,\nKimberley,  Salmo,  Princeton  and\nChapman Camp. TraU has 42.; - *,\n.Family  rlnks seem  almost  a\ntradition lo Bonspiel entries. This\ntime, R. Somervllle of Trail   Is\nplaying with his three sons, Bill,\nwhose home Is now In New Westminster and who acts as Skip,\nBob Jr, and Dave.    \u25a0\n$40,000 Jackpot\nMinneapolis, Feb. 8 (AP)-di-\nrectbrs of the United States Hockey\nLeague today set up a $40,000 Jackpot for the annual playoff series, to\nstart March 22. Season .play .ends\nMarch 20;  : , f\nCalgary Still\nAtop Junior League\nBy The Canadian Press\nCalgary Buffaloes today still are\natop the Western Canada Junior\nHockey League but Moose Jaw Canucks have edged to within two\npoints of them.\n,' Buffs took a trip to Medicine Hat\nAlta., Monday night to eke out i 8-5\novertime tie with Medicine Hat Tigers. Canucki trimmed Regina Pats\n8-4 to stay alone ln second place\nin the leop; , ,   :   '\n.     :     '\".' ..   ;..   '.'n    ,   . - ' I\nCanada\/Australia\nMeet in First\nRound Davis Cup\nNEW, YORK; Feb. .8 (OP)-Can-\nada wUl meet Australia in first\nround play for the Davis Cup this\nyisr.Y. :\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:,;\"''\n'\u25a0' The draw for tha international\ntennis trophy now held by the United States was made today by Trygve\nLie, United Nations Secretary-General. !-' .;\u25a0 ,; :'.  .\u25a0*;\nFour countries, including Auatra'\nUa, last year'a finalist chaUenged\nin the American Zone, and 24 in\nthe. European Zone.    - \u25a0'\nTHB DRAW iv\nFirst round, American Zone:\nAustralia-va,, Canada; Cuba vs.\nMexico. ;'\":'\u25a0   \u25a0;.:, w.. .,\nFirst round, European Zone:\nBritain vsi Portugal; France vs.\nLuxembourg; Israel vs. Denmark;\nEgypt vs, Argentina! Czechoslovakia\nva.,Monaco; Ireland vs, Chile; Italy\nvs. Turkey; Netherlands vs. South\nAfrica.\nSecond round (first round byes)\nHungary vs. Belgium; Greece vs.\nSwitzerland; Austria vs. Yugoslavia;\nSweden vs. Norway.\n2 Natal Skiers\nTo Vie for High\nSchool Honors\nNATA&; B.C., Feb. 8-r-Even though\nthe Michel-Natal Central School will\nbe unable to send any of their best\nskiers to attend the annual Kootenay\nSki Competition for all schools at\nRossland, two ot the best and most\npromising skiers from the Michel-\nNatal school, Andy Ormonzi and\nGeordy ,Malone both bf Natal, WUl\ncompete under the banner of the\nFernie High School.\nThis annual ski competition will\nsee the best skiers from the schools\nfrom both the Best Kootenay and\nthe West Kootenay. It is expected\nthat probably next year when sufficient funds have been obtained\nand the ski competition Is held at\na closer place, like that of Kimberley, a small contingent of skiers\nfrom Michel-Natal will be on hand\nto show their stuff,\nPHONE 144 for Classified 8orvleo\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9, 1949 \u2014 7\nJackie Robinson\nSigns Contract\nBROOKLYN, N.Y\u201e Feb, 8 (AP)\u2014\nJackie Robinson, Brooklyn Dodgers\nsecond' baseman, aald today he had\nsigned hla 1846 contract at a \"substantial Increase\" over last year,\nHe was said to have received $15,-\n000 last year, and it la beUeved his\nhew cantract is ln the neighborhood\npf$20,000.',;... -'    i        \u2022 '\n\"I am very happy over the terms,\nsaid Robinson, first'Negro to plaj\nin modern Major League baseball.\n' Later the Dodgers announced tha\nRalph Branca, right-handed pitcher\nhad sighed hla 1949 contract, mak\nIng him the 11th player to come ti\ntenps;\nBranca, starting his sixth seeserc\nwith the Dodgers, wen 14 games last\nseason and lost nine, He was sidelined for six weeks with leg and\nBhoulder,lhJurIes.   '    ,    .' \u25a0- -. *\nThe REST is jllways rewarded\n,    Be#tr*t .kas\ntill it e d wlfrli \u00abv e r\n' \u00a71 i.itls tit jrim\nfar aterit.\n, Available In\n26 Vi ox. bottles\nDUTIIHO,    IIINOIB     AND\nBO T TIED    IN   .'S C 6 T L A NO\nrhis qdvertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbjp.\nSENIOR\nHOCKEY\nNELSON vs. TRAIL\nMAPLE LEAFS\nSMOKE EATERS\n8:30 p.m.      February 9th      8:30 p.m.\nReserve $1.00 \u2014Rush 75<S \u2014 Students 2S<\nADVANCE RESERVE SEAT SALE v\n_\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0'     Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.      \u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0_!\nGAME I 10:00 a.m. .6:00 p.ni, I PAWE\n1 5 I       -\u2022 CIVIC CENTRE OFFICE I   \\ g\nNearly 40,000 cheques \u2014 worth\ntome two million dollars \u2014 covering\nlist year'a Compulsory Savings Refund\nfor 1942,are still unclaimed. They belong\nto Canadians who have changed their\nname or address, ot both, since 194}, and\nfailed to notify tbe Government -\n\u2022This year, cheques, which are going\nbegging\u2014worth up to as much as\n$15,000,000 \u2014 should be going out this\nMatch to ail many as 200,000 Canadians\nfor the return of 1943 and 1944 Refundable Savings. But proper names ot'\naddresses are lacking.\nDo'any ofthese refund cheques belong\nlo you?    ;,;'.   '*\nHave you changed your name'or\niddress, or both,'since 1943 ahd haven't\nnotified the Government? If so, we urge\nyou to fill in a Change pf Address Card\nand -tail it as soon aa you possibly can.\nYpu'll find these cards at any Post Office.\nBank of Montreal\nBRANCHES in NELSON and DISTRICT to serve you\nWORK INS   WITH\nNelson Branch';\nTrail Branch:\nCastiegar Branch:    .\nRossland Branch i\nKaslo (Sub-Agency):\nNew Denver (Sub-Agency)\nCAN AD I AN S, IN\nJ. B.' M.,BARi>\u00abW,.M__ger,\nH. RADCUFEE, Monogqr\n'    J. R. EtLIOTT, Mansger\nE. F. BARNES, Manager:\nOpen Tiftirsday and Friday\n:  Open Monday and Tuesday\nE V.B R.Y    W A L K    O* F    LIFE    S I N C 6\ni air  .\nP137B\n.:  \" \u25a0     .    Y-\n TODAY'S News Pictures\nMother Breaks Sad News to\nDaughter\nAtomic pirector\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nThe Atomlo Energy Commission\nhas appointed Dr. Walter F.'Colby,\n..above, ex-Unlvenlty of Michigan\nPhysics* Professor, Its Director of\nIntelligence. \u25a0 Colby's chief -duty\nWill be to supervise \u25a0 world-wide\n\" Intelligence system designed to\ngauge the standings In the-hectlo\nGlobal race for atomlo supremacy.\nDragged to Death\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nMrs\/Frederick Billion tries to comfort her daughter, Helen, a\n18-year-old model, at Toronto East General Hospital after telling her\nthst her fiance, William Miller, had been killed In the hit-and-run\naccident that shattered her leg and left her In critical condition.\n- One of the most Intensive manhunts in the history of the Ontario\nProvincial Police ended with the surrender of Virgil Barkman, 49, a\nToronto barber, In connection with the accident Barkman, with his\nwife at his side, said his conscience had bothered him ever since the\n\u25a0colderit and especially after he read of the terrible Injuries received\nby the dead youth's fiancee. Police said Barkman told them he was,\ndriving a borrowed ear when the accident happened. His own efr\nwas being' repaired, they aald.\n- ^-Central Press Canadian\nLieut Thbnias Coultry, Dartmouth, N. S., Navy fighter pilot\nabove, who was dragged fo death\nnear Ship Harbor, N. S\u201e when his\nparachute caught on the tallplane\nof his Seafury aircraft at he tried\nte Jump clear of the doomed plane.\n'The plane apparently caught fire\nIn the air. His body was found\nabout 10 feet,from the burned\nwreckage of the plane, .\nDramatic Sequel to Fate\/utHit'Ahd-Run Tragedy\n'\u2022\"T\"Trf-\"\" l'\"' '''l\"'T?.?yji'w-yyff.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nVirgil Barkman, 49-year-otd Toronto, Ont, barber, above, who'\nsurrendered to police In connection with the fatal hit-and-run\naccident which killed William\nMiller, 21, and seriously Injured\nthe dead youth's fiancee, Helen\nBlllson, 19. Remanded ln County\nCourt to Feb. 9, on ball of $4000,\nBarkman Was charged with manslaughter and falling te remain at\nthe scene of an accident\n\u2014Central Press Canadian'\nTwo distraught women, each worried over .'one She Ipveii met\ns face-to-fado for the first time amidst a strained atmosphere; Mrs,\n'Virgil Barkman, whose husband said he was the driver of the death\ncar, Is shown during a visit to the Billion home In Toronto, where,\n\"' she met the family of the girl, who Ilea serloualylll In hospital and\nc whose flahoe was killed In. a hit-and-run accident Mrs. Barkman,\nshown as she met Mrs. Frederick W. Blllson, offered her sympathy.\nLovetxbert-   -      Ailing XfaSt^Rttfy\nClaude Marian, a self-styled\nFrench expert on the art of pitching woo, takes up residence for\n90 days In the Los Angeles County.\nJail, a sentence handed him for\nhis conviction on charges of giving an Indeeent performance. His\nassistant, Barbara Weir, 24, drew\na 30-day suspended term.    '\u25a0\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nSoviet Deputy Foreign Minister\nAndrei Y. Vlihlnsk\/ (above) hai\nbeen reported \"gravely III from a\nnervous disorder\" at a 8ovlet Army sanatorium at Karlsbad, about\n70 mllis West of Prague, Cxeoho'\nSlovakia. A statement said that\nVyshlniky had been' unable' to\nconcentrate on anything, and, wai\nnot allowed to have any visltora.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nInternational Newa Service\nManager In Europe, J. Kingsbury\n8mlth (above)- received the statement from Premier Josef Stalin\nIn which the Sovlot leader de-'\ndared he li willing to meet with\nPresident Truman to achieve a\n\"pact of peace.\" Stalin also declared he wottld discuss the possibility of Implementing the' part\nwith measure! of cooperation Including \"mutual'disarmament\"\nFINDS PRISONER A GIRL\nPARSONS, Kas, Feb. 8 CAP)-*\nPolice Chief Frank Williams said he\ndiscovered today one ot the prisoners ln the City Jail is an 18-year-old\ngirl who has been masquerading as\n\u2022 man, ,\nSAYS SABOTEURS BUSY\nIN SOVIET ZONE\n.\u25a0MUNICH, i;eb. 8 (AP)-A 29-year-\nold German fugitive frbm a Russian\nZone uranium mine .said today organized resistance groups are sabotaging industry. in the Soviet Zone.\nEVESHAM, England (CP)-While\nplowing a hillside above the River\nAvon, Pat Lee was uninjured except for bruises and scratches when\nshe lost control of her tractor'and\ncrashed down an embankment. The\ntractor turned two somersaults with\nthe girl still clinging to: it\nOh the Air\nWEDNESDAY; FEB. ?, 1949\nCXtiN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:007-0 Canada, '\n7:02\u2014News Summary;\n7:07-Sunrlse Serenade    :\n8:00-CBC Newa\n8:16\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Morning Devotlen\n9:00r\u00bbBBC News\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes     '\n9:80\u2014Morning Concert ;\n9:69^Time Signal\nlOiOO^-Traln Tlm> .'\u25a0'\n10:01\u2014Ellen Harris . . . Women's\nProgram,     ' .-,\n10:15\u2014Mid-Morning Varieties\nll:00-;Musical Varieties\n11*15\u2014Air Kindergarten\n11:30\u2014Famous Voices\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n12:18>-C!BC,Newa\n12125\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B. C. Farm Broadcast       .\nl2:55rrFtve Roses Radio Kitchen\n1:00\u2014Old Favorites\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden Tells a Story\n1:45\u2014Commentary\n2:00\u2014B..C. School Broadcast.\n2:30-rTi\u00bb Little Show\n2:45\u2014Don Messer and His\n\u25a0 \".'\u2022'\u25a0 Islanders\n3:00-Ethel and Albert\n3:18\u2014What's New? ,\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n8:46VBBC News\n4:00\u2014Ed Hockrldge\n4:14\u2014Train Time        <.\"\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\n4:15\u2014Afternoon  Serenade\n4:30\u2014Children's Program y\n4;454-EaSy Listening yy ,       *\u25a0\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:15-01d Chisholm TraU\nl BiSO-^Peerless Newa\nBtfS-^Sports News\n6:(t0-rChlldreri*a Story.\n6:15\u2014Flreflgntera\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n6:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle Missionaries. Rev. C. A. Ch'owneiH--\nRound Table\n7:00-CBC News\n7:15\u2014CBC News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Samuel Johnson Goes to U\n8:00\u2014CBC Program\nlOiOO-CBC News\n10:15*-Stanley Reed\n10:30\u2014London Studio Concert\n11:00\u2014God Save the King\n'.*.'\\  :' CJAt;'.;\n.     (M0 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Press Newa ,\"\n7:15\u2014Breakfast Paradt\n7:35\u2014Fun at Breakfast\n\"8:00--CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd.\n0:00\u2014Music Workshop .\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Lake of the Woods Milling\n9:35\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n9:45\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\nlOsIS\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014They Tell Me\nlllDO-Mld-Mornlng Melodies\n11U6\u2014Femous Voices.\nllsSOr-MusIc Hall Variety\n11:45\u2014Eddy Arnold Show\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Concert '.-'\n12:80\u2014Pre\u00bbs'News     .\n12:45\u2014Plantation House Party\n1:00\u2014Moods In Melody.\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden \u25a0\"'\u25a0-.':\n1:45\u2014Commentary \u2014 Woman    _t\n';    Society '\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:15\u2014Family Favorites\nSMO^-Air Kindergarten '      ' *: '\n2:45-'Penthouse Serenadt    V ''\n3:00-CJAT Goes Calling\n3:45-BBC News\n4:00\u2014The Inside Story\n4:15\u2014Jack Smith Show\n4:30\u2014Tune Shop i\n5:00\u2014Club 610.\n8:15\u2014SpPrtscast, Company Store\n8)20\u2014Press News'\n5:30-Natlonal Hit Parade\neiOO-cfreemen Singers       \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0!\u25a0\nftSO-Muslcal Fill |\n6:45\u2014Melody Money Time\n7:00v-CBC-News \u2022\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014La Travlata'\nlfl:00-*-Press .News\n10:15\u2014Rossland Sno Sho Program\n10:80\u2014London Studio\nM;00\u2014Dlscapades\nHJJS-iPrera News ','\u25a0'',.\nl2;00^to Off\u2014The King ,\ntHURSDAY, FEB. 10, 1949\nCKLR\n, 1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u20140 Canada,' \\\n7:02\u2014News Summary\n7:07\u2014Sunrise  Serenade\n8:00-rCBC News    -\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Morning Devotions,\n9:00\u2014BBC News        - \\\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:80\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59^Time Signal\n10:00-Train Timo\n10:01\u2014Ellen \u2022 Harris\u2014Woman's Pro-\n.    .    grain'\n10:15\u2014Mid-Morning Varieties -\n11:00\u2014Musical VarieUea\n11:15\u2014Air Kindergarten\n11:30-CBR Presents\n11:45\u2014Let,'a Walte\n12:00\u2014The Notlce-Board\n12:15-CBC News.\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five Roses Radio Kitchen\n1:00\u2014Old Favorites  \u25a0\nj 1:30\u2014Bernie Braden Tells a Story\nJ:45-rCbmmunity Program ,\n2:00\u2014B. C. Schppl Broadcast\n2:30-The LitUe Shew.\n2:45\u2014Western Five'\n3:0O-Ethel ahd Albert\n8:15\u2014Interlude\n.8:20\u2014Sketches ln Melody\n3:80\u2014Divertimento \u2022.-;'\u25a0\u25a0.\n8:45\u2014BBC News and Commentary\n4:00\u2014Tony the Troubadour\n4:14-Traln Time*\n4:15\u2014Afternoon Serenade\n4:30\u2014Stories of Adventure\n4:45\u2014Easy Listening\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:15\u2014Bob Eberley\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n5:45-Mc & Me Platter Show\n6:00-Kraft Music HalT\n6:30\u2014Time to Sing      .\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n6:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle Round Table, with Rev. S\/A E. H. Kerr\nfrom Argentine, S. A.\n7:00-CBC News ;'-.\u25a0\u2022   '\u25a0'\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-:EveptIde ,  ,\n8:15\u2014Malklh's Money Time\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Symphony Orchestra\n9:15\u2014Nelson Hockey\n10:00-CBC New*\n10:10\u2014NelBon Hockey\n10:15\u2014Island Stories   \u25a0;\n10:30\u2014Nocturne\n11:00\u2014God Save the King   v\n PHONE 144\nFIED\nBIRTHS\nPERSONAL\nraS-ToMr. andMrs.'TrV,RiTOP   PRICES   RAID   FOR.  AN-\ntlgues. Phone 1032 or 640 Baker St'\nof Slocan City, at the Slocan\nrnlty Hospital, New Denver,\na-son.,\nB\u2014To Mr. and. Mrs. Brian\neb. 7 at EdmPnton, a girl. Mr,\nc .the son of Mr, arid Mrs. H.\n\u2022 of Nelson\nHELP WANTED\nN- INTERVIEWERS .TO DO\nional assignments fbr public\nj'n and ' marketing', research\nany. Senior matriculation\nred, Write details\/age, edu-\ni, experience. Gruneau Rett Limited, 80 Richmond\nI West, Toronto.\nWAWANESA MUTUAL; FIRE IN\nsurance Co, D. L Kerr, Agent,\nSPENCER   HEALTH   SUPPORTS,\nMrsfX A. Qibsdn.illO Kerr Apts,\nMACHINERY\nRENTALS\nm\n5W.s!\nImmediate Delivery-\non\n\u00ab*\nFOR  DRESSMAKING: AND   AL\nteratlons ph, .774-Y-2, Mrs. Martin\n10 CBNTSIBIRTH CpNTROt if*-\nformation |and catalogue ot hygienic supplies Write Western\nDistributers.' 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nS, GIRL TO LEARN PRINT-\nade. Apply Composing Room\nn Daily News, 9 a.m. to 8\nESSES. WANTED.\nlard Cafe,\nAPPLY\nUATIONS WANTED\nDB MAN. PH. 256-R. Carpen.\nilpe fitting, kalaomlnirig,\nREMOVE SNOW AND ICE\nJybur rbof. Phpne. 1102-L,\nTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSD - CEDAR' POLES,' 25'\nip, all classes. For price list\nspecifications, write Inter-\ntain Sales tt Building Con-\nirs, Nelson, B.C\nACCOUNTING. SERVICE-'\u2014 IN-\ncome tax returns,' pay rolls, letters and general typing, collec\ntldn of accounts. Photie 121B-Y or:\ncall at 820 Silica Street.\nATTENTION, SOHtJOli B6ARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stack\not newsprint, mimeb and bond\npaper end can fill any order immediately. Dally' News Printing\nDept,,' Nelson. British Columbia.\nMEN'S PBRSQNAL DRUG SUN'\ndries, 10 Deluxe assorted $1.00,\nmailed in .'plain sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed,\nBargain.catalogue' free Western\nDistributors, Box 24HN, Regina.\nJS YOUR SCRAP METALS\nIn. Any quantity. Top prices\nActive Trading Company,\n'owell St\u201e Vancouver, B.C.\nSOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR'\nfifclsori, B.C.\n-4ESS OPPORTUNITIES\n(CAPE, PULLY EQUIPPED\n-rent for long term. Apply\n) Cafe, Salmo,\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nSINGER SEWING\n'MACHINES'\nFOR RENT-\n'  by Week or month.\nThe answer to your Spring\nsewing problems.\nSINGER SHOP\n....\u25a0;    ENQUIRE AT\n839 Baker St >. -',\ndale Bridge will be closed\n:ular traffic while bridge is\njdecked.\nhProvinclel Public Works,\nNew Denver.\nRTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n\"BUILT 5 ROOM LOG\non Kootenay Lake; Good1\n' orchard, Abundant water.\nbunkhouse; etc Beautiful\nFine hunting and fishing.:\nle  either farm  or home.\n-B, Haynes, Sirdar, B.C,\n\u25baLE -co- ROOM STUCCO\nfull basement, . furnace,\nlocation. $4600 cash, $8000\njaa. Phpne 994-Y. ' ...\nALE \u2014 MODERN ' FOUR\nbungalow, Full cement\nent with furnace party\nerred. House must be sold\nliately. What offers? Apply\nChards St. .\nAUTO LOANS\nAt Niagara\nAre the fastest, simplest way to\nget\" ready bash in a hurry.\nNiagara Finance are Auto Loan\n\u2022Specialists. On owner's, signature you can get from $20 to\n$1000 quickly. And In a friendly,\nprivate interview arrange convenient repayment terms. There\nare many plans to choose froni,\n! For 17 years tys dependable\ncompany has given sound and\nhelpful loans lo thousands of\nsatisfied customers.       .<*.'.\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY L*D.\n\u25a0   Phoh\u00ab\"308S\nBst-d. 1930\nSuit* I, 680 Baker St, Nelson\nMOTORCYCLES,  BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE\nALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n^CIRCULATING OIL\n, kitchen blower type oil\nr, small, Wash, basin with\nhand wobble pump, floor\n\u00bb 14\"xl7\", floor register\n. hood for malting clrcu-\nheater into furnace. Phone\n'titter 5 evenings.\n__ - ROLL-A-DOOR ICE\nfreezer in excellent condl'\nalso milk shake machine,\nto Box 421, Rossland.\nScNEL WALNUT BED AND\nRest unit, i nearly new-\nTerms to reliable person.\n490 Dally News.        \u2022\n\u25a0 BABY'S\nGood   shape,\n%i:,\"\nCRIB   FOR\n$20.   Phone\nBOYCE GUN EXCHANGE,\nfor sale and exchange and\ngun repairing.\nBED AND MATTRESS,\ncabinet and Steel crib with\nnattress. 702 Nelson Ave.\nFOR\nSupply\n\u25a03.\nSALE,   $1.25  PER\nown  box.  Phone\nS) TO BUY \u2014 USED LUM-\nshiplap preferred. Percy:\nee, Box 262.\nFITTINGS - TUBES. SPE.\now prices. Active Trading\n116 PoweU St..  Vancouver\nE CRIB. PRACTICALLY\nApply 518 Houston St '\n:IER DUPLEX YACUUM\nIr, almost new. Ph. 1202-X.\nThe New Austin A40's\nAre Here!\nDevon Sedans\nDorset poaches  ,,\n!_ Toh Pickups\nVi Ton Panels\nUSED CAR SPECIAL\n1947 PLYMOUTH' SEDAN\nFully equipped for Winter.\n194t CHEVROLET SEDAN\n1942 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n.1940 DODGE SEDAN\n1936 FORD SEDAN    :'\n1934 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n1929 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n' Terms ond Trades\nWe Pay Cash for Good Cam\nEmpire Motors\nPhone 1135 .803 Baker St\nNELSON, B.C.\n'.Caterpillar-\"\nOieselEiigiiieS',\nD1700Q\nIndustrial \u2014 Marine \u2014 ElectrlcSet\n8-cylinder: \u2014 8%-inch bore.   '\n8-Inch stroke 'v\nIndustrial, Max. Output\n190 H.P.'@ 1000 R.P.M.\nMarine, Cont Duty;\n\u25a0\" 135 H.P.'.\u00ae 900 R.P.M.\nElectric Set, Rated Output\n' 100 K.W. \u00ae 900 R.P.M. !\nD13000''.'-\nIndustrial \u2014 Marine \u2014 ElectrlcSet\n8-cyllhder \u20145%-inch Bore\n8-inch, stroke    '\nIndustrie], Max. Output\n,150,H.P,: \u00ae;HOO.R.P,M.     ~\nMarine, Cont Duty\n115 H.P. @ 900.R.P.M. ,   -'\nElectric Set, Rated Output\n83 K,W. $ 800 RP.M. -,\nD'8800\nIndustrial \u2014 Merine \u2014 ElectrlcSet\n4-cyllnder \u2014 6%-lnch bore\n8-lnc|i stroke     ':'\u2022'.'\nIndustrial Max. Output\n102 H.P. \u00ae 1000 R.P.M;\nMarine, Cont Duty\/\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\n77 H.P. \u00ae 900R.P.M.\n\u25a0 Electric Set, Rated Output\n55 K,W. \u00ae900 R.P.M.\nD315, \u25a0'.'\u25a0'\"'. 'M\nIndustrial <tf Marine \u2014 ElectrlcSet\n\u2666reyllnder \u2014 ^Ms-Inch, stroke\nN      6%-inch bore\nIndustrial, Max. Output\n: 73 H.P. \u00ae 1800 R.P.M.\nMarine, Cont Duty\n53H.P. \u00a91600R.P.M.\nElectric Set, Rated Output\nS0K.W. \u00ae 1200R.P.M.\nD311\nIndhstrlal \u2014 ilarlne \u2014 EleetricSet\n4-cylinder \u2014 4-lnch bore\n'..;.- 5-inch stroke     .\nIndustrial, Max..Output\n55 H.P, \u00ae 8000 B.P.M.\nMarine, Cont Duty.,. *\n;.38 H.P. \u00ae 16O0 R.P.M.\"\nElectric Set, Rated Output\n21 K.W. \u00ae 1200 R.P.MT \/\nWELL BUILT FURNISHED BUNG-\nalow at Willow^ Ppint Garage;\nel. It, r, water,' bath, refrig,, etc.\nAvailable March 1. Suit retired or\nbusiness couple. Preference given\npermanent tenant., No children.\nFull particulars. Box 3082 Daily\nNews. '        \u25a0    \u25a0,....\u25a0''\nIS THESE, A* HOUSE LARG_ OR\nSmall somewhere In Nelson or\nDistrict for rent by March 15?\nPhone 417-R. ,\u2022-' \u25a0\u25a0\nGARAGE   FOR   RENT,   CORNER\nSilica and-Cedar, Phene 335-X.\nMODERN    CABINS,'   2*  ROOMS'.\nFerry Auto Court, Phone 387-R-1.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nFOR SALE - TERRIER PUPPIES,\n2V4 months, Apply Mrs, Duff,\nWillow Point'..:,'.     \"\nROOM A^D BOARD\nROOM AND BOARDFOR MAR-\nrled couple pr lady, Ph. 773-R-2,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAS8AYERS. AND MINtV    \"'\n,REPRESENTATIVES y\nRlcVr W1DDOWSON _ CO. :__\u2022\nsayers, 301 Josephine St, Nelspn\ntt S ELMES, ROSSLAND, B. C\nAssayer, Chemist;1 Mine Represnt,\nWc\"& THOMPSON St CO. i-TAS.\nsayers & Metallurgists. Ail work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pen\nder St, W, Vancouver, B.C.\nCWR0PRACT0R9\nJ. COLIN McLAllfcN. D.C., CHtRC-\npractio' X-Ray, Spinegraphy,\nStrand thgatrc Bldg, Trail; Ph. 328.\nDIAMOND DRILLERS'\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLtotft\nCo., Ltd, Drilling and Bit Ser-\nvlce, Box 508, Rossland, iPh 420.\nENGIN6ER8 AND 8URVEYOR8\nHAGGEN AND CURRIE, _rG,\nLand Surveyors, Mining and Qivll\nEngineers, Rossland. Kelowna,\nGrand Forks.\nBOYD C. AFB'LECk, 218 _ORE'S\u00a5.\nNelsonj B.C. Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND RJAlTISfATE\nMcHARDY  AGENCIES  LTD   Itl-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\ne\u00bb^-\u00bb,*j-*-jc.'---^\u00ab--M-..\u00ab-\n1B38 OLDSMOBILE FOR SALE. 5\npassenger coupe.' Goed ocndltion.\nCash deal only. Box 49 Slocan\nCity.\nWILL PAY SPO* CASH fOft\nlate model passenger cars, any\nmake. Queen City Motors.\nYes\u2014It's BIG news for air power\nusers. The tremendous expansion of\nengine manufacturing by Caterpillar\nTractor Co. now makes it possible\nfor your Finning Man to give you\nImmediate delivery on the \"Caterpillar\" Diesel Engines aifd Dleiel\nElectric Sets described above.,' ..-',',-\nYou can now put long-lived, hard-\nlugging \"Caterpillar\" Diesel work-\npower on your Job Immediately. The\nfive sizes described above^-with or\nwithout radiators, base or support\nmounted, open or enclosed clutches\n\u2014are readily adaptable to portable,\nsemi-porteble or perhianent installations, ... wherever dependable,\nlow-cost Diesel'. power, is needed,\nParts, or whole engines are interchangeable\u2014and ;close by is a Fin-\nning stcre with complete service\nfacilities and stocks of genuine\n\"Caterpillar\" replacement parts.\nGet in touch with your Finning Man\ntpday. He can new furnish you with\nthe right size \"Caterpillar\" Diesel-\nwhatever yeur power requirements\nmight be.\nYour \"Caterpillar\" Dealer\nBENNETTS LIMrMS\"\n- Machine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 893.    '-'..'. 324 Vernon St\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE.SHQP^\nSpecialists In mine and mill work.\n708 Vernon St, Nelson. Phone 98.\n..Machine work, light and neavy.\n:...::   ftaCtOr;\/...''\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n\/NELSON - CRANBROOK1\nFOR SALE - 1940 FORb Dei,u3i_,\nA-l, shape. Mike Chernenkoff,\nCrescent ..Valley,, B.C,\nNEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALIi\nmakes of cars. City Auto Wreck-\nera. Box 24, Granite Read.\nCC.M,   BKa   CLOSEST  OFFER\nte $25.00, Cabin 8, Lakeside Cabins\nQST ANP FOUjND\n1 TRUCK CHAIN, INTER\na Baker and Ward Sts.\nr please return to National\nCo.\n~ LADIES' RON SON\nrlri Hudson's Bay. Engrave\nlolly.\" Reward. 125 _ Silica\n' $10  LAST\nPnone 827-R.\nWEEK. RE.\nstifled Phone Number Is 144\n.ASSIFIED DISPLAY\n'ecorating?\n;guaranteed painting\nand paperhanging\nCAU,\nSamble &\nnne\none 729-E and 525-R-3\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBURNSIDE CHICKS. ARE GOOD.\n' We like them\u2014our customers like\nthem\u2014you try them for ybur 1849\nlaying- Hock. Satisfaction assured,\nDon't delajH-send for our Poultry\nHandbook and price , list R.O.P,\nSired S.C. White Leghorns, R.O.P,\nSired New Hampshlres, Approved\nS.C. White Legherns, New Hampshlres and Leghorn-Hampshire\nCrossbreeds. BUSNSIDE POULTRY FARM, A. E. Powell, Hammond, B.C. ...      ,\nORDER YOUR BABY CHICKS\nfbr 1949 from the Appleby Ppultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. specializing n the breeding of the large\ntype S.C.W.* Leghorns, New\nHampshires and White rocks, also\nthe White Rock,and White Leghorn cross bred chicks. Send for\nour price list which also contains\nhelpful information on all phases\nof the poultry business. -\nSuper-quality New Hathpshtre\nand Rhode Island Red chicks:\n$4.50 for 25, $9 for 50. $17 for 100.\n$80 for'BOO.\nGEORGE W. GAME\nTriangle Hatchery, Armstrong\nMONARCH ;\nHAND POWERS\nCement Mixers,\n\u2022 .      A,Sturdy Mixer ..\nAn Easy Machine to Turn\nIN STOCK FOR \\,\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY,\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 Hell St ,, Phone 18\nMining,   Milling   and   Sawmill\nMachinery, Building' and\n,    Contractors' Supplies.\n\"If it's machinery you want,\n' : CPttSUlt US. ,'-,\nioCOMOTIVE TYPE BOILER,\ncondition good, rated at .75 lbs,\npressure B.C., 2H\" tubes. Overall\nlength of boiler 10 ft, Ideal for\nlaundry, or creamery.:: Vernp'n\nMachine _ Foundry (jo. Ltd., Vjri\nnon. Phone 188.  .\n2 WIliE GAUGE D4 CATS WITH\nHoover Dozer loaders. For sale\u2014\n2 KR8's, 197 inch W.B. with or\nwtthbut-6 yd. steel hyraullC gravel\nbox. One with Noi 34 Tulsa winoh\nIf desired.\u2014M. S. Gee, Ponoka,\nAlta.:\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnen-cp,nsecut|ve  Insertions;\nlie line per consecutive' Insertion after first Insertion.      \u25a0\n.48c lino for 8 consecutive Insertions.   l -.\"\n:$1.56 line per rnenth  (29* eon-\n.'.'seciiflve Insertions). Box 'numbers lie extra. Covers any number ot insertions'\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, ETC-JOc per line,\nfirst insertion', 16c per lino eacb\nsubsequent. insertion.      C     <\ni  FOR PROMPtfPAYMENT  '\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nSubscription  Rates;\n. Single copy   ..      .;...\nBy .terrier; ner week,\nin; advance ;..\u2022\u201e.:..\u201e...,\ni By carrier, per year .;\t\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     $ 1.00\n- Throe iriohths ...\u201e;...;!,.;.\u201e    2.50.\n\u25a0 Six .months \u201e ,\u201e .\u2022,....'    4.50\nOne year.         8.00\nUnited States. United Kingdom:\nOne tbonth  ::.,y   1.00\nThree months     3,00\n- Six rhpnths  ....   6.00\nOne year- ..\u201e\u2022...  $12.00\nabeve rates, plus ppstage\nWhere extra postage is required:\nMINES\nAmal Larder .....!.,\u201e....\u201e\nAnglo-Huronian ,.,....\u201e..;\nArmistice '\u201e,.,..,\u201e..\t\nAubeile    ..._....;, ,\nAumaque ; .,...;.....,..\nAundr  , :..\u201e..,>.\nBase Metals.Mining'....\nBeaulieu Yellowknlfe\nBevcourt ..,\u201e\u201e....,. ;,\nBoycon \u201e..\u201e\nBralorne  ...........,,..,..;...'.,\nBroUlan  i..x\t\nBuffalo Aukerlte ;....\u201e...\nBufadison '.  \u25a0;   :............\nBuffalo Red Lake ..........\nCastle-Trethewey \u201e:\t\nCentral Patricia ...^..,.._\nCentremacjue \u2122.:\nCoohenoUr    ;; \u201e\u201e,..,....\nCoWmac Yellowknlfe\nCorilaurumvMlhes\nConsolidated- M It S ...\nConwest, \u201e,;,..\u201e ,...\u201e;\nCroliiPr  L:J.x\\ :,\t\nDelnlte. I    :. ',...,,\nDickenson Red Lake\nDiscovery  , , ;.;,;,.'\t\nDiversified; .-..';..\t\nDprite Mines ...x......\t\nDoftalda   \u201e..,.....\u201e.\u201e\u201e\nDuquesne   \u00bb\u201e,_.\u2122\nEast Amphl  \t\nEast Malartic  ;.,..._...\nEiist Sullivan .:..\u201e.,;.....,\nElder \u25a0 , \u2022\u201e; \u201e...,..\nEldona ..,::...,.. ;.\u201e.,...,\nFalcpnbridge, Nickel ....,\nFrobisher,   ' .\u201e....\u201e.\nGiant Yellowknlfe- ........\nGod's iLske Gbld ..\u201e\u201e..\u201e..\nGold Eagle ....,,., ,..;.,....,\nGolden Arrow ..,.:,........\u201e.\nGolden Manitou ..,.\u201e_\t\nHard Rock, Gold,..'...,.....\nBarker Geld  ,...\u201e\u201e\u201e\nHarricana  ......\nHeva Cadillac ...'...,......\nHollinger,, .,:.....,\u201e......:.\nHudson, Bay M & S .\nInternational Nickel\nInt Uranium .......,;........\nJack Walte :.:.....:...,\nJbllet Quebec  _\u201e....,\nKerr-Addison'. ..........:\u201e,\nKirkland Lake' --,\t\nLabrador .......;.\u201e\u201e: ..:.\nLake Shore; Mines ......\nLamaque Geld ...-.;.....;.\nLapa Cadillac  ;\u25a0._..\nLingman Lake: \u201e\u25a0.\nLittle Long sLic .. .,\nLouvicourt \".. ,\t\nMpcassa  , ;.^^4.\nMacDonald\n\u00bb   .05\n_5\n13.00\n- .16\n- 9.25\n. -.10,\n- JO'\n- ,v,.34\n.. 8,50\n. ,53\n. ;  .08(4\n;\u25a0\u2022-.\u2022\u25a0 ,28.\n- ,0f\n. , *05'\n. ,32\n. 2,50\n. .20 '\n.:    ,07%\n.','   1,58:\n. 1.36'\n. .06\n.    2.3S\n::     .06 .\n,      .90'.\n.110.28:\n1.21\n.45\n1.83\n' ',52 \/\n.29\n\u25a0 .20\n17.15\n,53\n.50\n.11%\n2.50\n2,95\n,.   ,36-,-.\n.65\n'.\"\u25a04.15 \"'\n2,87\n5.65\n.45\n.03\n.07\n2,68\n.16\n.09\n.09'\/i\n.11\n11.65\n48.75\n83.25\n.43\n.14*'\n'-.;42'.'\n15.00\n1,48\n' 5.60-\n13.00\n6-00\n., .08H\n,    .81'\n,.92\n.3914\n' 2.35\n. .52\n1.10\n2.77\n2,25\n53.50\n.42\n.14\n2.40,\n.06\n1.98\n57.25\n3.25\n,05U\n, ,3BH\n.75\nMacLeod Coikshutt ...\nMadsen Red-Lake :\nWarticGold F.'. .-..\nIclntyre-Porciipine ...,\nMcKenzie Red Lake ....\nMcMarmac    ,...\nNegus . ..:.\u201e..,_,, \t\nNew Bldlamaque ..\t\nNew Calumet ..............\nNoranda .;...'\u201e..;....,.......;\u201e\u201e.\nNormetal ...: ....;.\t\nOmnltrans Exploration\nPaymaster ..\u201e...'...;,...;........\nPerron Gold \u201e.....,\nPickle Crow Gold !.,._\u201e.......    2.17\nPowell Rouyn Gold       .88\nReeves MacDonald _.    3,10\nPreston East'Donie .... ..    1.50,\nQueenston .'..V...*..:.:.;;..'.,.\u201e.'\u201e:.r,   8I,5ff*\nQjiemont .'.  15.50\nRoche Lpng Lac _...\\      .11^4'\nSan Antpnio Gold    4,26\nSen Rouyn \u201e,...-.'. _..      .43\nSherritt Gordon ;\u201e..    2.18 '\nBladen Malartic .      .251A\nSpringer .'  \u201e .    1,33\nStadacona. : .........\u201e.\u201e.'. .50\nSteep Rock . -.     1:55\nTeck-Hughes Gold ....:.'....,.-.    2.75\nTob'urn Gold Mines ..'..\"\u201e...     .51\nUpper Canada ' 1.68\nVentures   ,\u201e.....:....;._ :     5.70\nWaite Amulet .....:..;..... ,...  18.00\nWright Hargreaves J ..:....    2,21\nOILS\nBrlf Amer \u201e.   23.50\nBrit Dom .;. _....     .34\nImperial ...,.;;     17.25\nInt Petroleum-......_\u2122- ; 10.15-\nMid;ConUn'mt ...^.~~^.. ,06\nRoyalite    ......I ,...\u201e,.._\u201e... 28.00^\nUriited-         .;.;..: _._\u201e,.. .18\nINDUSTRIALS '\nAbitlbl Power  ..\u201e.\u201e 15,25\nB^ll-Telephoiie   ..,.,.... .... 89,15\nBrazilian Traction   ...._...... 19.00\nBreWert tc Distillers .....  \u25a0 15,00\nB C Power A   .'\u201e..,.,  28,25,\nB C power B ..,'. ;..;...\u201e_.. 2,65\nRCPulp           _  101.00\nBurns &po Class A .\u201e...\u201e... 47.00\nBurris & Co, Class B  17,65:\nCan BrbW'    .-. ...... 20,25\nCan Celanese \u201e...\u201e......i... 19,75\nCan Cement     ..,,.., \u201e.\u201e,.;. 26,00\nCan Ind Alcohol \u00bb._\u25a0. 10.75\nCan Pacific flly \u201e\u201e,\u2122..._, 15,00\nCockihutt Plow  \u201e\u201e.. 13.50\nCons Paper' \u201e\u201e_. 16,75\nDistillers Seagrams \u2014\u201e 16,00 \u25a0\u25a0\nDam Tar & Chem  , .,,',.' ?t,50\nDom Textile    .;..,\u201e..;  11,15\nFanny Farmer ' \u25a0 ...,  38.50\nFord bf Canada A \u201e\u2122.\u201e, 22.75\nqatlneau' ..:.. . 18,75\nGen Steelwares ,....\u201e..\u201e  lWJ'\nGypsum Linie ., Xbxbb\nfilram Walker .\u201e  , 28,50\nImperial Oil,   *..;\u201e,.....,......\u201e;,.. 17,00\nIiriperiai Tbbacccf '\u2022; ....... 13.50,\nhit Nickel. '.'..; .;\u201e : 33,25\nLbblaw A     .,\"..\u201e....\u201e. \u201e...\u201e.. 29,00\nMassey Hfirrla ...,.'...,\u201e.\u201e\u201e..,\u201e..' 27,50 .\nMcCnll Front .....i. ^ 12,85\nPagb Hershey ....; :..  88,00\nPowell River .\u201e\u201e,\u00bb...\u201e,.,_..^\u201e 40,00\nPower Corp .',... :\u201e*...\u201e..\u201e.. 14.00'\nShawlnlgan    .,..., .*.'. '28,85\nSteel of Canada ...;.......\u201e, x. 81.00\nUnited Steel.               7.00\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9, 1949 _ 9\nVANCOyVERSTOCKS\nmines, ;-\"\u25a0'\u25a0     \u25a0   A; \u25a0';.''.'\nBayonne., ..\u201e...\u201e.._....\u201e'.....,... ,06W\nBralorne  ..,   ,,...\u201e:.:,\u201e,...., .,, ,9;00\nCanusa\",. J.............. \".1214\nCariboo Gold  ;,  1.30 -\nGblcpnda.-\u25a0',  ,, \u25a0 fM\\\nHedley Mascot \u201e_.\u201e....\u201e...\u201e.\u201e .48\nHighland Bell  \u201e.:.\u201e.. .55 .\nKePtenay Belle  ,  ,35-\nPac Eastern Gold .......... . .07:\n\u2022Pend:OrellIe ,L\u201ew.'... ...:. 5,10\nPioneer; Gold .:..:. \u00ab 3.25\nQuatsmb ,;...,.. ..\u201e.,....\u201e..;\u201e\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e. .12*4\nReeves MacDonald ....  3.10\nSheeJ Creek, .c..\u201e;.'..\u201e'\u201e. .1.48 \u25a0:\nSilver BIdge , ::i..............  .16'\nSurf; tnlet, .....^.....,  .08\nUtica .........r...^ ...J..... i.Xb. \\\nOILS\nAnaconda  ., *, ...\nAnglo; Canadian ...........\nA P Consolidated \t\nCalgary-& Edmonton\nCalmont\t\nGlobe   ...;\t\nHoine _\t\nMercury  ,..;...,-.\u201e.,.....'...\nOkalta Com: \u201e\t\nPacific Pete\t\nSouthwest Pete ............\nVanaita\t\nVulcan  ..y.. .,.\u201e..i.\u201e,\u201e...\nWest Leduo .; .....\u201e^.\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries ...........\nNeon Produots\t\nUNLISTED MINES\nBig Missouri\t\nBrooklyn,St ;',.'\u25a0\t\nCentral Zeballos \t\nCuyuni 'j\u201e,...i;.4i,x..^.i\t\nHedley Amal\t\nHighland.Silver \u25a0\t\nSpud Valley\t\nVananda\t\n.11\n4,50\n.22\n'\\B,15\n.40\n.65\n11.00\n.14\n1.21\n2.36\n.30\n.20\n.22\n.75\n8,20V\n12.50\n.10\n.0114\n,.57,.\n.10%\n.08\n, .08'\/4\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014Indus*\ntrials' slid downward on losses tanging from fractions -to about two\npoints. Golds-held steady following\nhews that South Africa sold some\ngold at.a,premium price end Western oils dipped from early firmness,\nBase metals moved narrowly on a\nSlightly easier tone.\nMONTRBAL,YFeb. 8 (CP)^Trad-\ning continued light In both Industrials and mines. Mines were steady,\nbut securities generally were easier.\nOils, beverages and steels led the\ndownswing. Papers and utilities also\nwere moving into lower ground, although firming tendencies* were noted among the leaders.\nNEW YORJt, Feb. 8 (AP) - The\nstock market held its ground in the\nface of a fresh' break on commodity\nexchanges.\nKey issues~swung pack.and fefih\niji a narrow price range. Upward\ntendencies appeared off arid on but\nnone had enough drive to'get anywhere. \u25a0.-\u2022'\n-LONDON\/Feb;.8 (CP)\u2014After ari1\ninitial period of easiness, London'd\nKaffir market turned firm. Nevertheless some uncertainty and hesitancy exists aj result of the South\nAfrican Flhlhce Minister's rio-de-\nvaluation speech and news of the\nsale of Union, gold in the free market.     ...   \u25a0'..' \" y',*.;  \".,:\"\u25a0,'.\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 8 s (GP) \u2014 A\nmarked decline appeared In all\nstocks during moderately Heavy\nopening trading. Base riietals wer\u00ab!\nweaker.    *   v '\nLicensed Between\nM,2J,-M,025\nBlack , numbers on ; bn, orange\nbackground are the new: colors for\nthe 1948 British: Colun-jSla license\nplates. License numbers for .District\ncars and trucks will \u2022 range Jrom\n64-276 to 66-025 for passenger cars,\nand 0:28,176, to C-29,200 for .commercial automotive service,       '\nLicenses may be obtained from\nthe Motor License Office In Nelsbn\nany time during February, and purchasers are. urged, to obtain their\nlicense as soon, as possible, to avoid\nthe rush-^ later In the month; All\ncars must have the new license by\nMarch: 1.\nLow Close\n674468%\n86% 66%'\n64% 64 Vt\n1.02% 1.02%,1.00% 1.00%\n97%    67% ,96%' 96%\nr-       \u2014'.;  \u25a0'\u2014 \u25a0', ', 6'2%.\n1.15% 1.15% 1.08 1,07%\n1.14% 1.14% 1.05% 1.06%\n1.13% 1.13% 1.03% 1.05\n-     '\u2014 ' \"\u2014    4.02\n-    4.03%\nSALMO INSTITUTE\nTQ HELP FAMILY\nSALMO, B. C\u201e Feb. 8\u2014Sahno\nWomen's Institute field their meeting at, the home of Mrs. Curwen.\nPlans went ahead for a bake sale\nand tea to be held this weekend.\nDonations will be received to help\na needy family with bedding.\nA social evening at the home of\nMrs, Grace;John on Feb. 14, was\nplanned,\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Feb.,8,(CP)-Winnl-\npeg'grain quotations:\nOats: '\u25a0Open  High\nMay        69%   69%\nJuly-   .';..'. -\u00ab7% '67%\nOct;     ..<    65%,* 65%\nBarley;\nMay \u25a0,,.:.\nJuly .'.,...\nOct,   ...:..\nRye:\nMay  ......:\nJuly\" ...*\nOct\t\ni Flax: -\nMay    \u2014\nJuly .........   ~\nCash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 2 (?,W. 73%; No. Ex. 3\nCW; 69%; No. 3 C. W. and Ex. 1\nfeed 68%;. No. 1, feed 68%; No; 2\nfeed 66%; No. 3 feed 62%; Track\n68%., . . .     .        '\nBarley\u2014No, 1 and 2 C.W. 8-rbw\n1.17%; No.1 and 2 C.W. 2-row 1.07%;\nNo. 3 C.W. 6-rbw\" 1.12%; No. 1 feed\n1.04%; No. 2 feed 1.03%; No. 3 feed\n\u25a098%; No. 2 C.W. yellow 1.06%;' No.\n3 CW. yellow 1.05%; Track 1,00%.\nRye-No. 1 and 2 C.W. 1.03%; No.\n8 CW. 69%; ReJ. 2 CW. 87%; No. 4\nCW. 82%; Track 1.03%.\nFlax-No. 1 CW. 4.00; No. 2 C.W.\n3.95; No. 3 CW. 8.84; No. 4 CW.\n3.75; Track 4;00.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nSO'industrialB-^-nMl, down .72.\n20 rails\u201449.90, Up .81.\n15 utilities\u201434.30, up .06.\nTwo New Claims\nRecorded\nTwo mining claims were recorded\nand nine.certificates of work were\nissued by the Nelson, Office of the\nDistrict Minirig Recorded during'the\npast three' Weeks, seven for claims\nin the Ymlr District and .orie'in-the\nSalmoDistrict,' ...\nMining claims recorded were:\nL-Ucky Zirie, just North West of\nthe; G.N, Railway bridge apprbxii\ninately four miles out of Nelsbn towards Ymlr, located- by J. CMcKlm\nof Nelson,\nCanada Bell No. 2, approximately\ntwo mileB North-of the International\nBoundary and about 1 i\/i miles\nNorthwest of -Boundary Lake; between Nelway and Camp'Lister, by\nH; J. H. Yerbury, Camp Lister?7\nCertificates of work' were issued\nto: -.    \u25a0 ' ' ''      \u25a0 c    -'\u25a0' '\nL.,L. Culblne, Salmo on the .Truman No. 7.\nOscar Anderson, Ymir.on the Shu-\nlite,'and Shulite No, 2,to No. 6, and\nalso on Contact mineral claims;\nKaslo Auxiliary\nHolds Salt\nKASLO, B. C\u201e Feb. .8\u2014 The Canadian Legion Auxiliary held a\nsuccessful tea and bake sale in the\nLegion Hall' \" . ' ','* ;.-*...\nIn charge of the bake table were\nMrs. \u2022 Slngel and Mrs. Harbottle.\nAt the miscellaneous table Were\nMM. W. Smith and Miss Mey Meers,\nwhile Mrs; F. McGibbon,and Mrs. ,\nA. Carney Sr., handled a Contest'\nfbr a-beautifully hand-mode cap ,\nand   mittens, . The   crowded   tea\ntables were served by a refreshment \u2022 committee under   Mrs,   S.\nStocking assisted by Mrs. T. Horner,\nMrs.: G. Waugh, Mrs.' J. Matthews,\nMrs; W. Moody, -Mrs. Carpenter and\nMrs. A. F, Stephenson. ,,\nThe President Mrs. J. Tonkin, was\ngeneral convener.\nKa.lol.O.D.E.\nReturns Slate\nKASLO, B. C, Feb. 8- The Re\ngent, Mrs. E. H. Latham, presided at\na well attended annual meeting.of\nthe Daughters of the Empire ln the\nI.O.D.E. Rummage Robm on Friday 'afternppn, when , all\" officers\nwere returned to office by acclamation,   ,\nThe Treasurer reported a good\nbalance In the Treasury. The.report of the Secretary showed an excellent '\u25a0. amount of work accomplished during the year. Eleven parcels were forwarded te an adbpted\nfamily in England. A set of encyclopaedia was:donated to the Kaslo\nSchools, Other recipients of donations included the Salvation Army,\nCancer Fund, the National Institute\nof the Blind, Flood Relief Fund; the\nInhalator Fund for the- local fire\nbrigade, the local Cenotaph Fund.\nChristmas Cheer. was provided\nfor'. jEaslo Victorian' Hospital pa>\ntlents. One new member was wel\ncorned, ... ' ,\nIt was decided to hold in evening -entertainment late In Februery\nwhich will include a bake table and\ntea. tea was served by Mrs. J. Strachan, Sr., as hostess.\nDAILY CROSSWORD-\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nwelding: Portable welding' equip,\nment for field, work Stevenson's\nMachine .Shop. 708' Vernon St,\nNelspn, B.C.\nFOR SALE - D4 CATERPILLAR\nequipped with angle-dozer and\nlogging Winch. Yeaf 1944. In first\nclass shape. Terms: $6000. Apply\nBox 206, Creston, B.C.\nYOUNG FRESH COW FOR SALE.\nBUI Chernenkoff, Crescent Valley\nB.C..       '\u25a0'\"''     '\nSAWMILL,, WOODWORKNG AND\nContractors equipment' ot all\nkinds. National Machinery Co.,\n_td\u201e Vancouver, B.O. \"'..\nSPEAR & JACKSON CHAIN SAW,\n4 ft. blade, good shape. $400 or\nnearest offer. Write Box 2259\nDally News, \u201e\u25a0'\n35TT1.P. CATERPILLAR DIESEL\npower unit, completely rebuilt\nCheap. Bayes Equipment Com.\npany, Cranbrook, B.C.\nReports Given at\nDenver Auxiliary\nNEW DENVER, B.C.,' Feb. 8\u2014At\nthe monthly meeting of the St.\nStephep's Women's Auxiliary, held\nat the home of Mrs, Dulcie Pearson Thursday, the committee's report was given by Miss M. H. Butlin.        . .   '_\nVisiting Committee for current\nmonth Mrs, Stanley E. Thomlinson.\nThe Dorcas parcel waa discussed\nand following committee was appointed to get goods and material.\nMrs. S, Thomlinson, Mrs. Nell 'C\nTattrie Jr. and Mrs. Julia Jones\nrepresentatives appointed' from\nW.A. World pey of Prayer.\nMrs, . May Crellin at the conclusion of business meeting closed\nwith prayer and a social hour enjoyed. ' Lovely refreshments .were\nServed by the hostess assisted by\nMrs. May .Crellin.       ,\nACROSS\nt. Sacred\"\npicture\n(Ritas. Ch.)\n5, Branch   I\n9. Girl's name\n10. Jewish\nmonth\n11. Dull (U.S.)\n12. Large,\naw'ord-lllte\nknife P.'\"-'\"\n(Phil.)\n13. Pallid\n(Poet.)\n14. An unfilled\nspace\n16. Half an em\n17. River .\n\u2022 :   <Swlt_)\n18. Belonging\ntome\n19. Afloat\n22. Projecting\nend of a\nchurch\n24. Naive-    -\"\n26. Chunk        '\n28. Dominion\n31. Forward\n32. Donkey\n33. Argent\n' (sym.l\n34.CoverfWith\nJewels\n37, Animal\nenclosure\n39. Dancing\ngirl,\n(Egypt.)\n40. Thump   *\nviolently\n41. quantities\n42. Poker stake\n43. Affirmative\nvotes\n44 Not living\nDOWN\nl.Awayfrom\n>   the sea\n2.SllghUy\ncold\n3. Carousal\n4. Negative \u25a0\nvote \u25a0     \u25a0'\n5.Work\n6. Heathen\nimage\nT, Large, ;\nwooden\nmallet\n8. Sweeping\n14. Without   ';\nahat   '.'\u25a0\n\u00ab.RIVeV:   '\u25a0''\u25a0'.'\n(Eng.), \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0.'- j\nIT.Astern  \"..\u25a0'\",\n20, Flowed\n-,21.yeie>,\"\n22. Viper\n23. Greek tetter\n25. Type\n'   measure*\n28. A goblin\n27. Constrained\n29. Tom\".-.,\n30. Before\nimplements 32. Accumulate\n13. A size 36. Adhesive\nof coal    S    mixture\nlauHHia uuni\n'JUII   DP   IIUHH\nSDt I   llL!l.l!!l,i   tj_\nua_aau a_i\ni.ii.10 uua\nran nuHuuH\nda uulhuu un\n(JUHU   a_   Q_E\njQHQHD   UOai.lU\nuuua auiin\n____  IJUOH\nYtsUrdsy's Answer\n36. Girl's name\n37. Walking\nstick\n38. A pilaster\n(arch.)\n40. Not good\na\n&\n'A\nTo Order Extra Copies of\n\u2022 i   . y-'.'y \u25a0     ;.;.:       -.'. , \u25a0   ;.  ; ,\".-'    \u2022\", ., .   y    \u25a0'-.   \u25a0   \/'.\nNelson Daily Newsi\\\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER\nCARRIER BOY OR TO THE DAILY NEWS\nCIRCULATION DEPARTMENT\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY IN\n\" :   BLACK PENCIL \u25a0   y\nNoma _\nAddress\nCity _\u25a0:\nNam* _\nAddress\nCity, _i_\n\\\nDAILY CBVPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work ttt    <\n\u25a0;-.'\u2022'   AX V DL B A AXB   \u25a0.'\"' \"   a.\n\u2022    l\u00bb LONGFELLOW - \"r\nOne tetter simply stands for another. In'this example A Ib used\nfor, the throe Ls. X for- the two O'e, etc.  Single lottors, opoe-\ntrophes. the length and formation ot the words are all hinte. Each\nday the code letters are different.\nI        A Cryptogram Quotation    '\nT    HJCTDV    X~PN    SLVW    XPN    JVQCJfi'\nALV    AJPNFRV    PI    XPNJ    BJTVWZ    CD\nXPN J    P8\/W - HRCN AND,\nYesterday's Cryptpfluote:   DO YOU GROW OpNTLER AND\nBETTER AS OtiD AG_ CREEPS OS?\u2014HORAOa\nName ._\nAddress*\nP-ty. \u2014\nNam* -\n. Addresj.\nCity -'__\nNam* \u2022\u25a0'_\nAddress\ncity \u2014\nYOUR OWN NAME\nYOUR OWN ADDRESS .\nCopy 15c + JcPostage\nPliit 3% S.S. ond M.A. Tax\nAnywhere in Canada, Gt. Britain or the United States.\n'\n 10 -r- NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9,1949\n>Th\u00bb gtnill Kleotifie preptm-\ntion fot' irpmedlii. tn_ prolonged freedom from ciul coogMuoD .. 9\n-Soothing and gentlt to tender done*. Cin\n!-he applied with tht handy dropptr bottle\n\u00abp pt In an itomlier u a tpny,\nJ Ttuht Aft*, itued hy HmfsHU Ctomht*\nk fcotlstf by NyaTa \u00ab**J new.\nMANNS\niDRUG STORE\nRussia Renews\nDemands on Mom\ni;Armr\nLAKE . SUCCESS, N.Y., Feb. 8\n(CP)\u2014Russia today renewed her\ndemands tor prohibition ot the\natomic bomb and a one-third reduction of Big Five armaments.\nJakob Malik, Russia's permanent\ndelegate to the United Nations, placed a resolution before the Security\nCouncil which termed recent regional groupings aa \"aggressive.\" ,\nHe apparently referred to the Atlantic Security Pact now being negotiated |\u00bby Western powers.\nMalik; did not name any country\nepeelfltjally but spoke of \"certain\nstates\" which he said were making\nextensive preparations for war.\nThe resolution was presented as\nthe Council considered a resolution\nfrom the General Assembly calling\nfor further study ot the question of\ndisarmament\nA Russian. proposal to arms reduction was defeated ln the General\nAssembly last Pall. Western powers\n' at the time referred to it as a \"phoney\" propaganda move.\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nProscriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Bit\nPHONE 25\nAT REASONABLE COST\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nSmedley Garage Co.\nReo Sales and Service\nSandwich\nToasters\n$10.95 \u25a0\nKelson Electric Co.\n'*.,*\u25a0,.' .,.     ,..\n\u25a0'     Authorized GE Dealers\nrtiene SCO        674 Baker 8t\nElection Dale\nUnknown Even\nTo Premier\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP) \u2014 Prime\nMinister St. Laurent told the Com-,\nmons tonight that not' even. he-7-\nthe man who sets the date\u2014-knows\nWhen the,next general election is\ngoing to be held.\nThe question arose during study\nof the bill to weld the union of\nNewfoundland. and Canada.\n\/ tfhe 'Prime Minister said there\nwas a question of whether the men\nto represent Newfoundland ln the\nCommons could be elected in time;\nto sit in the present Parliament\nStanley Knowles (CCF-WlnniT\npeg North Centre), with tongue in\ncheek, said the Commons wasn't\nreally concerned, about the.election\ndate but perhaps Mr. St. Laurent\ncould solve the problem by saying\nright now just when it will be,,\nMr. St. Laurent grinned and\nwaved his hands,\n\"If the Prime Minister knew the\ndate of theelection,\" Mr., St.\nLaurent said, \"he would be only\ntoo glad to confide in the Honorable Member.\" .*. '\nSpeaking seriously, he said the\nproblem 'of calling Federal by-\nelections in Newfoundland, which\nwill elect seven members, cannot\nbe approached until after the new\nprovince enters the Canadian community March 31.    - \u25a0 ,.'\nEven then,' it requires at least\ntwo months before a ^by-election\ncan be held. \u25a0\u25a0;..\nHe said the Government has been\ntold that it would be \"unfortunate\"\nif the Newfoundland members were\nelected and then, with a general\n-election called, would1'have to go\nthrough another campaign. and be\nelected again before, they could ait\nlnthe Chamber.     'v ,, ,    \u25a0\n\"We will have to see how even-\ndevelop to see it the holding of\nby-elections will enable them to\nattend thia Parliament,\" he told the\nChamber.\nMichel Woman\nLaid To Rest\nNATAL, B.C., Feb. or-The funeral\nof Mrs. Ellen Donald Robertson, who\ndied in the hospital after a long illness, took place at Michel, where\nlast rites were led by Rev. E. White\nof Natal, in the United Church. Mrs.\nRobertson was .48 years of age and\nwas born in the small town of Chap-\npelhall, Scotland. Surviving are two\nsons, Hugh and William; four daughters, Mrs, 8. Orydziik, Mrs. P. Slur-\nbert, Mrs. E. Murphy and Miss Mary\nRobertson, all at Michel; and two\ngrandchildren; .'\nSpending most of her years -since\ncoming to Canada at the coal mining\ncentre of Michel, Mrs. Robertson\nwas highly respected throughout the\ncommunity.\nShe was predeceased by her husband, a veteran of World War I, a\ntew years ago.     ' .\nBRIDGE RIVER PLANT\nOPENING DELAYED\nVANCOUVER, 'B; C, Feb. 8 (CP)\n\u2014A 62,000 horsepower generating\nunit of the British Columbia Electric\nCompany'a Bridge River develop1\nment will1 not be opened until the\nfirst of April, the Company announced today.\nOriginally scheduled to start pouring power into the Lower Mainland\nMarch 2, the plant will be behind\ntime because all available B.CX engineers are working against the\npower shortage here..\nIts lust Plain\nCommon Sense\n___\nNOTHING FANCY ABOUT IT \u2014\nWHEN OPERATING COSTS RISE\nYOUR CAR\nNeeds a\nMotor Tune-Up\nat     .     .\nDODGE -DE SOTO DEALERS\nOpposite Post Office \u2014 Nolson, B-C Phone 71\nCardinal Sentenced\nTo Life Imprisonment\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Feb. 8 \u2014\nHenry Kershaw, age 13, died, at\nFort Steele where1 he lived ever\nsince his arrival by steamboat up\nthe Kootenay River In 1897.\n-He went to Fort Steele' from\nEngland that year to * operate a\ngeneral store in the booming little\ngold mining town, and was Postmaster until retirement ln 1947. In\nacknowledgement of near 60 years\nin this office the Postal Department\nawarded him a- silver medal.\nBoth he and his wife, the former\nClara Tebiner ,were born in the\nsame town in England and came to\nFort Steele in 1897* when steamboat\nwas its only method of access. They\nWere married there that, year by\nC. M. Edwards, now of Wasa, who\nwas Gold Commissioner. '\nJosef Cardinal Mindszenty, who yesterday wai sentenced to life\nImprisonment, js seen sitting beside a guard In the People's Court of\nBudapest, Hungary, where he was found guilty of treason and Illegal\ntrading In dollars.he received from the-United States and the Vatican. (See stories bnrpage 1.)     '   , \u2014AP wlrephoto.\nKidnap-Counlerleil Case Hairbrained\nStunt by Novices Says\n. ByRAY TIM80N\nCanadian,Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER*, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014Engraver Ernest Conduit spent five\ndays in chains before he could convince a gang of novice couhterfeit-\ners mat he alone could never create\na plate for bogus $20 bills.    -\nThis was learned tonight from\nR.C.M.P. inspector R. S. Wilson in\nan exclusive interview with The Canadian Press. He described the\ncounterfeiting attempt as \"hair-\nbrained;\" '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 .!''\u25a0\nConduit, eBnyear-old former Toronto engraVer, 'was kidnapped  a\nmonth ago, imprisoned in a Dunbar\nDistrict home and chained in the\ncellar In an attempt to soften him\nto make counterfeit money plates.\nInspector Wilson said It takes\nat least $50,000 worth of Intricate\nequipment, three skilled tradesmen and weeks of Intensive study\ntb' produce  bogus  money.  The\nwould-be counterfeiters, he suggested,  were  pitifully  Inexperienced.'   \u25a0 \\ '\nHe said the R.CM.P.ls more concerned with the kidnapping of the\nengraver who, even tpday, still feels\nhe is a marked man and refuses to\ndiscuss With reporters his five-\"\nordeal at the hands of the abductors.\nHis statement-to police said at least\nfour men participated, each garbed\nin hoods of a Klu Klux Klan variety\nto avoid recognition,\nEorsbt least, three dpys, he said,\nConduit fruitlessly pleaded to the\nkidnappers; \"I can't make the* plate.\nWhat do you expect me to use\u2014a\npenknife, screw, driver and ham-\nmerr'   .\nMeanwhile across Canada a concentrated hunt is still under way for\ntwo members of the gang whom the\nHVC.M.P. claim they have Identified,\nOne is the ringleader, a blond youth\nwith a supercilious air and believed\nto be of Eastern European extraction.' '\u201e\u25a0-\"\nInspector Wilson said once the\ngang of novices realized they needed\nthousands, of dollars worth of equipment and skilled engravers, photographers and printers,' they 'aban\ndoned their plan and fled.\nThe R.C.M.P. chief said there was\nno connection between the Vancouver counterfeiters and any International counterfeit ring, He-said it\nwould be too far-fetched to link the\nConduit case with the recent discovery of counterfeit money at Oih\nawa, Ont '\nThere, investigators have,pointed\nthe finger, of suspicion to Donald\n(Mickey)\" McDonald, the elusive\nKingston Penitentiary escapee and\nconsidered. to be Canada's public\nenemy No.' 1. : , \u2022\nNO.TIEtUP .''\u25a0 .'\u25a0 ' : *-   \u201e\nMcDonald, whose younger brother\nEdwin has,been charged with pos-\nday] session of the American currertcy\nfound under a bathtub, was last\ntraced to Vancouver but la now believed' to be holed up in New York\nState.   \u25a0\nSaid Inspector Wilson: \"Our counterfeiters were hairbrained. A criminal like Mickey McDonald would\nhave known that one elderly engraver alone could never produce\na-. counterfeit money plate.\"        :\u25a0,\nUp Kootenay by Steamboat ...-, ,\nFori Steele Postmaster for 50\nYears, Henry Kershaw Dies at 73\ni Their nine children grew up In\nFort Steele and the family Waa\nactive in all community enterprise.\nTheir youngest son, Gordon, succeeded his father aa postmaster.\nBurial In the beautiful Fort Steele\ncemetery will follow funeral services thbre Wednesday afternoon.\nSurviving him are his wife at\nFort Steele, five daughters, Doris\n(Mrs. Fred Ryckman) Vancouver,\nEdith (Mrs. Harry Rowlands) Baton\nRouge, Louisianna, Ethel (Mrs.\nWilliam Nelly) New Westminster;\nElsie (Mrs. Michael Ruzzuto) Spokane, and Marian (Mrs, Malcolm\nSanderson) Cranbrook, and tour\nsons, Joe, Vancouver,' Alan, Cranbrook, Alfred and , Gordon, Fort\nSteele, 14 grandchildren: and one\ngreat-grandchild.\nStrikes and Spares\nStatistics of 'the. Government\nBowling League show that Bruce\nLatremoullle is the top point getter of the league in the games played from Oct. 7, 1948 to Jan. 21, Mr.\nLatremoullle not only rolled iip the\nhighest average of 200 in 11 weeks,\nbut also knocked the pins tor. a high\nindividual of 328 and' a high aggregate of 833. Eileen Sien, D; Burgess\nand W. Solheim who make up the\nLatremoullle team helped bring the\nteam to this high Btanding.\nI Thirty-two teams are included ln\nthe Government teague along With\n21' spares.\nBowling statistics follow:\nAverage Weeks\nBruce Latremoullle\nMel Mikkelson \u25a0\t\nAl.Larson\t\nH..Holmberg .;.._;.\nH. Forse .........\u201e._._.\nG. Gill \t\n200\n190\n188\n179\n178\n175\nJoe Wallach ;..........c.....c-  168\nI, B. Johnson.\nJim Watson .............\nB. Jones.\n\u25a0\u2022*\u2014-i\nA. Limacher _\nD. Terry .'.\t\nA. Boyce \t\nM.Klein\t\nW. Wicken\t\nL. Ott'iii. ....\nM. Paul .;....._._\nM. Gordon .._..\nS. McLean __..,\nL, Chase ..........\nD. Andrew\u2014\nD. Burgess .....\nA. Sien ....'.\u201e.-._\nP. MacLeod ...\nW. Waters..;.:..\nT. Cookson .....\np. Turner\t\nA. Brethour .. ..- US\nC. Foley . .  110\nC. Rushby  105\nM.Rowley .....\u2014_  98\nB. Bunyan ......\u201e...\u201e_.. 94 \u2022\n8PARE8\nJ. R. Johnston .....\nH. K. DeBeck ....\nA.Wuori..\t\nA. Moen ......_\u2014\n168\n187\n165\n163\n161\n158\n158\n156\n155\n153 '\n152\n149\n147\n145\n143\n140\n136\n195\n131\n117\nOffers European\nRecovery \"Bargain\"\nWASHINGTON, Feb.^8 (API-\nPaul G. Hoffman, Economic Cooperation Administrator; today offered the United States Congress a\nEuropean recovery. \"Bargain\"\u2014with\na $5,580,000,000phice tag.\n\"If that program brings us peace\nand stability,\" he said, \"And I (fervently believe it can, it will turn\nout to be the greatest bargain the\nAmerican people ever had.\" i: *\nHoffman laid before the Senate-\nHouse For'g'ein.Committees the, E.\nC. A. Aid Program for the 15-montii\nperiod of Aprii 3i 1949, to June 30,\n1950. But he warned this may not\nbe enough.      < , -\nHe asked: (1)! ^50,000,000'\"to\nhelp Non-Communist European\ncountries;over the next April-June\nperiod, (2) Another $4,280,000,000\ntor the fiscal'year beginning July\nand (3) $150,000,000,to be spent in\nlong-range planning beyond the end\nof that' fiscal year.      ,-' , .\nAeheson Learns\nNorway Wants\nBy JOHN 8CAL|\nWASHINGTON'1,Feb. 8 (AP) -r\nNorway's Foreign Minister has submitted personally to Dean Aeheson,\nSecretary of State, questions his\ncountry wants'answered before deciding whether .'to c join in. the North\nAtlantic Security Alliance.,\n,\u00bb\u00bbwwy\u00ab*wwsMiwi'^<ifrwww-p\u00bbs\n,.-'   Help Yourself to Bargains\nMID-WINTER\nCLEARANCE $ALE\nrat the\nChildren's Shop\n***************'*****'**\u25a0*'\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service''\n'    AMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St Phone 361.\nRO.SCOE '\nAND\nFOURNIER\nGARAGEMEN\nSKV CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 122 Nelson, B.C\nDISCUSS PROBLEM\nOF FILM MEN\nIN GRAY CREEK\nGRAY CHEEK, B.C., Feb. 8 -\nThe monthly'meeting bf the .Porcupine Club,was held at the home\nof Mrs, John Wolfhard when the\nquestion of responsibility for thb\ndifferent film shows Was discussed.\nThe Government film-man is training local people to run the show,\nbut so far only two men have'taken;\ninstruction; It was felt that this\nplaces a burden on two that ought\ntp be shared by others. It was resolved .to\u25a0.,bring1 the matter into,\ncommunity discussion at -the next\nfilm show,:        .    ,\nThe President spoke of the need\nagain for more; Warm, Serviceable,\nsecond-hand clothes for European\nrelief ahd it was decided that each\nmember should prepare her donation and bring it to the next\nmeeting..\nThe Dental. Clinic was the next\ntopic and. Mrs. Wo-hatd, who has\narranged it for some years, advised\nearly application for an appointment. Mrs. Grant was elected to\narrange this\\with Dr. Fraser of\nCreston. It was reported,by a parent that, school-nurse and medical\nofficer, had commented most-favor-\nably . on the Jocal children's teeth\nin contrast to those of other communities. It semed as if regular\ndental attention given every-year\nhad,made this improvement.\n'' The subject' of \"Happy Hours for\nBoys,' and >(}__\"\u2014a book of verse\nWritten by Robert Main of Bonnington and illustrated by J. Ingram'Rogers o? Nelson was then\npromoted. This :bobk, under, the\nsponsorship .of a Nelson club is\nraising \u25a0\u2022'.jtunda for ' crippled.. and\nunder-privileged children.' ;It,' was\ndecided to pass the copy around to\nall Porcupine members and to send\nit oh to the Crawford Bay Women's\nInstitute who might be Interested;\nThe decision as to purchasing copies\nwill be made next meeting.\nTwo dollars has been handed in\nas product of the Exchange pt\nServices'Fund. Mrs; Andersen proposed that every member should\ncut two. pairs, of stockings into\nstrips during the meeting at her\nhouse and she should dye and Weave\na cushion t(j be raffled as her contribution W the X.S. Fund.'It Was\ndecided to give a whist drive in aid\nof club funds in March.\nTea was. served by Mrs, Wolfhard. \u25a0    * \u2022.'\nE. a Hunt\t\nG. Macintosh ...<\u201e\nO. Moen  ,\nD. MacKay ..\t\nH. Ball.................\nS. Lanzarette\u2014:,\nL. S. Hope\t\nF. Cunningham\nW. House ......_.\nS. S. Simpson _.\nB. Dysart ..........\nB. Harvey . ;...\nM'Morrow;.,..\t\nJ. Johnson\nJ. Cunningham\t\nCD. Grove-White\t\nM Rowley -. ....,...:.\u201e\nHigh Individual, B .Latremoullle,\n328.-:,, -   ,'        -v'\nHigh Aggregate, B. Latremoullle,\n838.   ; ' \"..... .\nGOVERNMENT  LEAGUE \\\nPAUL -.f.yf.'r:\nM. Morrow 440, A. Boyce 386, L,\nOtt 457, Total 1283.\nLARSON     ,\nM; Gordon 495, H.'Forse 443,.'W.\nWaters Sis; P. Turner 301, A. Larson 458. Total 2010.\nLATREMOUILLE\nEillen Sien 457, D. Burgess 306,\nW. Solheim 587. Total 1850.\nMEKKLESON'' ' .'\nM. Klein 330, J. Wallach 820, A,\nva-\n188\n165\n163\n159.\n156\n155\n154\n152\n148\n146\n144\n188\n135\nISO\n135\n134\n124\n124\n101'\n101\n11\nVALENTINE\nPAPER\nNapkins and Table Covers\nCards and Cut-Out Books\nAt.Your Rexall Store ^\nCity Drug Co.\nBrethour 876, C. Rushby \\ 814, M.\nMlkkleson 624, Total 2172.\nfflLL!'  ' '    '   \"\nJ, Watson 466, J. Cunningham 412,\nC Foisy 362, L. Chase 454, G. Gill\n616. Total 2310.\nJOHNSON\nP. McLeod 483, D. Terry 428, A.\nlimacher 494, B, Bunyon ; 301, F.\nCunningham 524. Total,2230.    '\nCOMMERCIAL LEAGUE\nLIBERT.\nR. Jennings 620, T, Perry 800, C.\nRonellf-n 409, J. Kuntz 432, N. Nelson 552. Total 2413.\nSTERLING i ,\nB. Green 409, F. Townsend 892,\nK. Zabawa 868, V. Kennedy 392,\nM.' Townsend 215. Total-2076.   '\nSchedule of games, to be played\nfrom Feb, 10: to March 31 In the\nCommercial Bowling; League tol<\nlow:\nFeb. 10 .       .  ,\n7 p.m.\u2014Sterling vs Home Furniture; Liberty vs Hudson Bay No. 2;\nDaily News No. 2 vs Palm Dairies.\n9 p.m.\u2014North Shores va Fburex\nNo. 1; Dally News No. 1 vs Fourex\nNo. 2; Hudson Bay No. 1 vs New,\nStar. -\nFebVHY --'\n7 p.m.\u2014Hudson Bay No. 1 vs\nLiberty;! North- Shores vs Palm\nDairies; Fourex No. 2 va New Star.\n9 p.m.\u2014Daily Newa No. 2- va\nSterling; Fourex No. 1 va Home\nFurniture; Mudson Say No. 2 vs\nDaily News No. 1.      '\nFeb;;44' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0''.'\n7 pim.\u2014Palm Dairies vs Fourex\nNo. 2; Daily News No. 1 vs Hudson\nBay No. 1; Sterllng'vs Fourex No. 1.\n8 yitn,\u2014Hudson Bay No. 2 va\nHome Furniture; Dally Newa No. 2\nvs. Liberty; New Star vs North\nShore!.   , \"-,.-'\n.Marks'      \"\u25a0\"'.\u2022' -'\n7 p.m.\u2014North Shores va Hudson\nBay No. 2; Fourex No, 1 va Liberty;\nHome Furniture vs Fourex NO. 2.\n9 pan.\u2014New Star va DaUy News\nNo. 2; Hudson Bay No. 1 vs Palm\nDairies; Daily News No. 1 va Sterling.   '       \u25a0 :\u25a0;*:\nMarch 10\n7 i>.m.\u2014Home Furniture vs Hudson Bay No. 1; Sterling vs New\nStar;1 Daily News No. 1, va Liberty.\n1 * 8 p.m.-^Fourex No. 1 va Fburex\nNo. 2; North Shorea va Daily News\nNo. 2; Palm Dairies vs Hudson Bay\nNo.'2.,_'\".' ,\nMarch 17 ,'\n7 p.m.r-Daly, News No. 1 vs Fourex No. 1; Hudson Bay No. 2 vs\nFourex No. 2; North Shores vs\nSterling.    ,' .\"' f.\n9p.m.\u2014New Star ys Palm Dairies; Home Furniture vs Liberty;\nHudson Bay No. 1 vs Dally News\nNo.*2..'\n\u25a0 M-jch 24   \u2022'.\n7 p.m.\u2014Home Furniture ,vs Palm\nDairies; North Shores vs Liberty;\nHudson Bay No. 2 Vs Hudson Bay\nNo..l.     f\n9 p.m.\u2014Fourex No. 2 va Sterling;\nFoureX No. 1 vs Daily News No. 2;\nNew Star, vs Daily News No. 1.    '\nMarch 31\n\u25a0ill  p.m\u2014Daily  News No.  2- vs\nDally News $fo. l;,rlew Star vs\nHome: Furniture; Palm Dairies vs\nLiberty. :*\",;\n' 9 p.m\u2014Hudson Bay No. 1 vs\nFourex No. 1; North Shores vs\nFourex No. 2; Hudson Bay No. 2\nvs Sterling.\n82344 Tons Coal\nEast Kootenay\nColleries Output\nNATAL, B,C\u201e Feb. 8\u2014During the\nmonth of November, 1948, a total of\n89,789 long tons of coal were produced in the East Kootenay District,\nan increase over November 1947,\nwhen the tonnage totalled 79,415\nlong tons. :?\u25a0\",';\nThe district output Was divided\nas follows:\nThe\/Michel Colliery, the biggest\ncoal producer in the East Kootenay,\nover two-thirds of the output With\n85,748 long tons. .   * y\nElk River Colliery, a total df 24,-\n041 long tons. '\nThe Corbin Colliery, nil, compared to 6250 tons in November, 1947.\nMichel also- produced in November a total of 8436 long tons of coke;\nTotal coal produced ln the province\not B.C. in November, 1948; was 142,-\n789 long tons, as against 120,602\nlong tons in November, 1947.\nDuring the month of-December,\n1948, the Michel Colliery produced\na total of 87,647 long tons out of\na total of 82,344 long tons produced\nIn the.East Kootenay Mining Die\ntrlct. During the same month Ml\nc'hel produced a total of 8836 long\ntons of coke.\nKaslo Turns Bock\nProcter Visitors\nKASLO, B. C, Feb. 8-The Proe\\\nter Hockey team paid a visit to Kaslo' on Sunday and went down to\ndefeat 4-5. Fresh snow on the ice\nslowed the play considerably.\nYoung Joe Furlak was really initiated as it was his first experience\nIn the goal against, an outside team.\nPenalties of two minutes each\nwore served by G. Lind of Kaslo,\nM. Sockoloski and G. Brady, both\nof Procter.\nPrdcter\u2014 goal, J.'Heustonj M.;\nSockoloski, M. McKay, R. Noakes,\nC Noakes, G. Brady...\n-Kaslo^-J. Furlak, goal; F. Carney,\nH. Dunn, R. Jones, J. RIngheim, G.\nLind, Alternates\u2014R Driver, H.\nMatsuzaki, S. Shinmoto and F. Hill,\nReferee\u2014M. Palola; scorer and\ntimekeeper, D. Singel,\nFRUITVALE HONOR\nQUEEN AT DANCE\nFRIHTVALE, B. C, Feb. 8 -Before a large gathering at the Community Hall on Friday night, Miss\nDorothy Cherry was proclaimed the\nwinner of .the right '\u00b0 represent\nFruitvale at the Rossland Sno-Sho,\nhaving defeated her opponents by a\nnarrow margin. The other two contestants were Miss Ileene Wood and\nMiss Mary Wilmot. All the girls\nwere unsponsored by any organization and their standings were:\nMiss Cherry; 15,700; Miss Wood, 15,-\n275;, Miss Wilmot,. 14,925. Mr. E. Mc-\nCally representing the Rossland\nSno-Sho Committee, made the announcement and - presented\" each\nwith a lovely bouquet of roses ahd\ndaffodils. He was accompanied by\nH. Cloverdale of. Rossland. R. Hill,\nrepresenting the Canadian- Legion,\nBranch Nb. 196, sponsors df the\ndance in the girls' honor, acted as\nMaster of Ceremonies, The girls\nscrutineers were John Findlay,, D,\nMorlssette and Hugh Mclnnis.\nMusic for a dance was supplied\nby the Kootenay Boys of Trail while\nthe W. A. to the Catiadian Legion,\nBranch No. 196, had charge, of the\nrefreshments. ' ,  \" \u2022\nSEEK CHANGES IN (LEASES\nON NEWFOUND-ANABASES\nOTTAWA, Feb. 7 (CP) - Prime\nMinister St. Laurent disclosed today in the Commons that the Canadian Government is attempting to\nhave some, changes made in the 89-\nyear leases which the United States\nGovernment olds on three defence\nbason   In, Newfoundland.     '\nOnlt. Power Policy\nLegislature Problem\nTORONTO, Feb. .8 (CP) \u2014 The\nProgressive Conservative Government's electric power policy shapes\nUP as one ot the chief Issues of the\nfirst session; of Ontario's new Legislature, opening Thursday.\n; Political circles expect the C.CF,\nand Liberal Parties, numerically\nstronger; after the, Ontario general\nelection June 7; will accuse the\nGovernment of failure to develop\npower fast enough to meet the demand,.\nThe Speech from the Throne is\nexpected to. forecast some amendments to existing legislation, but no\nnew major policies.\nWOULD MAKE ADULTERY\nA CRIMINAL OFFENCE\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014Senator\nF. W-'Gershaw (L-Alberta) suggested .tonight that adultery, the\none ground for divorce in most\nprovinces, should be made a\ncriminal offence.\nHe told tbe Senate in the throne\nspeech debate thai Parliament\nshould consider ihe appointment of\na King's proctor or some other official to study every case of application for a divorce and to. report on it to the court,when the\napplication Is heard.\nAdultery was generally considered a personal matter, but it\nshould- be made an offence; If\nmarried life became Intolerable for\na couple, they should be allowed to\nappear before a court to seek relief\n\"but let's hot make it necessary\nfor.a crime to be the only way one\ncan escape an unhappy marriage.\"\nInstruction Course\nFor Denver Firemen\nNEW DENVER, B, CI Feb. 8'\u2014\nIn the New Denver Fire Hall, Wednesday, thb regular,meeting of the\nNew Denver Voluntary .Fire Brigade was held.. Assisting Fire Chief\nWilliam E, Rowe in the chair.\nRoutine, business was transacted.\nTwo new members joined J. E.\nDennison and Shig Kiyono. There\nw_l.be a visit made by Fire Marshall's Instructional Unit on the 8, 9\nand 10 of February, and all mem,\nhere were urged to attend to take\nthe-course.       ,,   .''-;. .\nCommittees Formed\nNEW DENVER, B.C, Feb. 8 \u2014\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nthe: Catholic Women's League was\nheld Thursday at the home bf Mrs,\nAndrew' Schnaebele when President Mrs. Nora C Clarke, R.N.,\nopened the meeting with the League\nprayer. .  ,\nCommittees were formed: for\nFebruary. Mrs.'F. Kenyon and Mrs,\nJ. Launderville will look after the\nchurch cleaning. Refreshments were\nserved by the hostess assisted by\nMrs. W. Gould.\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n' MASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii\nCjeoned ond Recored\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301. Ward St ; Phone 63\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliniiiiiiiiiiiiu\nHAVE YOUR FURNlfURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hall St ,    Phone 148\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE    r\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n'510 Baker Sb      '   ;\"' Phone\\235\nJ.A.C. LAUGHTON\nOptometrist\nMEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDING\nSuite 205\n.NEW\nSpring\nTop Coal\nSee these new topoci\nfor Spring.\nGarbardines\nCoverts\nLhasa\nTweeds\nNew shades and nev\nitylei\nEmory's L\nTHE MAN'S STOR\n!\nGyros To Mark\nSilver Jubilee\nIn March\nNelson Gyro Club earl\nmonth will celebrate' its\nJubilee.   .,\nCharter members will Jol\nat gala entertainment mar\nyeara as a friendship club\nson, and 1049 officers will\nstalled.\nKenneth R. McRory auccc\nH. Longden as. President w\nfleers were elected Monday\nthe club's: dinner meeting\nHume. H. Lupton; is Fin\nPresident; , Parry Forse,\nVice-President; F. L, Irwin\ntary; V\u201e C. Owen, Treasui\nH. O. Bofch, Sergeant-at-A\nDirectors are J, G. Watsd\nMann, Ted Swendsen and\nSterling. -.*.\nFISHERIES DISAPPOIN\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 8,(CI\nish Columbia's fishing indue\ndisappointed today because\nare not included in Sockeyi\ntions for the Fraser River t\nAlternation Sockeye Salm\nmission, regulations for\nnounced today Included ad\not fishing dates and times ti\nas a means of attempting\nthe Sockeye catch, fairly\nAmerican and B.C. fishern\nsystem, employed last year,\nin -United States f ishe'rmer\na lion's share ot the catch, tl\ndian fishermen complained\nTheir claims sparked a\nB.C. fishing interests to get\nquotas this year.      ; '\nSOckeyey fishing will oj\n\u00bb.'\u25a0;,.\nThe Classified Phone Numb\nELLISON'S ROYAL P,\nPASTRY FLO\nBEST FOR 0AKE8 *\nPA8TRY\nQUARANTEED TO 8A1\n,' Your Grocer Has I\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES\nOUR TELEPHONE LI\nWEST KOOTEh\nSTEAM LAUNI\nPHONE 1176\u20141-2BAKE\nillllllllllllllllllllllimilllllllll\nMURPHY'S\n.\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0* < ^or \u25a0,'\nWallpapers \u2014 Kalsoi\nPaints \u2014 Varnish\n743 Baker St Pho\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nYES \u2014 Your New Wave\nIs bound to bo MORE STYLISH.\nLA8T LONGER and\n1 '    LOOK LOVELIER\nat the\nhAightru-art\n.***********f*. mttmmssm*.*.*. __\nHand in hand with\ndoctor we aim to prei\nand improve your he\nSo send prescription\nus for pure, correct\nquick results.\nWe Carry a CcSmplf\nStock of\nSICKROOM anil\nFIRST AID SUPPL\nfLEURY\n*   PHARMACY\nPhone 25 \u2014 Nelson,  E\n<     Medical Arts Bulldln\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. 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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"}]}}