{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426187":{"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":"2023-02-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1952-03-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426187\/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":" Commons Argues\n&M$i0%\nIf     \"^fy\"   'l? \"'S \u25a0'\"'\"\u25a0-'\u25a0'\" '\u25a0\u25a0   \u00bb\nWEATHER FORECAST   -\nKootenay \u2014 Sunny with a few\ncloudy perloda in tho afternoon.\nContinuing cool, Light winds.* Low\nand high at Cranbrook, 10 and 40;.\nCrescent Valley, IS and 40; Revelstoke, 16 and 88.     ...    -\n.NOSON.'IWiiCANADA-vRUDAY.MOILING, iMAJtOI 21, 1952\nNo. 280\nFederal-Provincial Conference\nSuggested; Agree Necessity for\nEducational Expansion Exists\n. ;_)lTA%A, Ifarch 20, (CP)-^V>^ iforMervproyihcjai\npremiers, now sitting on opposite sides of the Cohimdns, today\nagreed that the- provinces should have sufficient ire venues to\npr_yic__.equality of education for all children. They disagreed\njon whether the provinces how can afford to spend more on\nIraucation. . *\u25a0'\n.Justice Minister Garson, former\n(premier and treasurer of Manitoba,\n^suggested federal-provincial   taxation:', agreements have placed  the\nbjiovlnces'lh a position where they\n_,-_,,'4p_nd';i_ore  oh  education.\n|AmOuhts spent, by them on highways and bridges were greater than\n[\u2022'Mucitlon.   .' \u25a0\u25a0'-_;\u25a0 -\nGeorge  Drew,  former   premier\nand minister of education ih Ontario, 'said  hla Progressive - Conservative party believes a federal-\nprovincial   conference   should   be\ncalled' to readjust taxation to provide the provinces with adequate\nrevenues'for education.\nRAISE STANDARDS ,   ',.'.-\n' lit'j.'<#idwelly p.C.F. leader and\n\u2022'former school teacher, said everything * should be done, to raise\nstandards oi education, especially\nin.literature,arid use of language.\n\u25a0The problem called, for more'and\ninoro financing and tjw municipalities artit the prdvinfiM coiild not\ntuitfyithp -'burd__. 'ig<'\nV'Sna* viewswere.exjl-pssed during\ncontinued debate on: a' motion of\n, it,; Knight (CCF -. Saskatoon*)\nurged the Government to con-\nler ,*-_ea__ of expanding and\niializing educational opportunity\n-.joss Canada,' by the granting of\nfinancial assistance to (ho\" various\n__\\\\\\P^riptw(ftr -thai pwiOs^..'. \u2022\". ,\u25a0\n;Mr. Drew, concluding avspeeiib\nstarted Wednesday, said the Government should be prepared to- accept the niotion and \"take'action\nwhich will' carry out its intent,\nHthout'In -any way Infringing upon\n_i_e.' exclusive jurisdiction-: of the\nprovincial governments In the field\njot education:\"\nMr. Crew-added:\n: <\u25a0':\"It:)\u2022'\u25a0 not a ease-of \u00bbdvanelng\neducation still farther.. We are\n\u2022 confronted  with  the  Imminent\ndanger that education I* going to\ngo back rather than: ahead because of a thortago of teachers,\n.and  because of the  Increasing\nI difficulty enooi.ntered by '_iuni_ \u2022\nt pal and educational authorities In\n\u25a0 providing  the   trioney  to  meet\nheavy educational -toata,.A.i: ii,\ni'.Gmon,'atre^*pp\u00bbSS6fj\n._\u00bba_ig views,; (aid-,B. agree!\ni.e. .cation is exclusively within\n^Jurisdiction; of the. provinces. '\n|Spe Red\u00abral Government;already\nl making sizeable grants ta uni-\nersltles, but this was hot an ad-\nisslon'that It' should contribute\ni well to primary education.\nr_LF-G0VERNINQ\n| Universities were self-governing\nBdnon-politicaL.Primary schools\nrare under the active control and\n.upervlsion of provincial depart:\nnerits of education.\n; If the Federal Government made\nge grants to primary education,\n_**' \"Dominion*; treasury   simply\nuld not defend handing out these\nJrge,.\u00abums of money to* the Legis-\ntures without assuming some re-\n..bnsibility, as to the manner, in\nMilch they would be spent,\" said\nDr., Garson.\n-'Tor the Federal Government to\nupervise the manner; in which\nphase grants'would be spent by a\nprovincial government for primary\n8__*tioh would .involve .'.' iin\nhterference-' .with1 the provincial\ngislatures'    exclusive-   authority\n'''education;.:..\" .*'.\niJn the last five years, the prov-\ntees'had built up surpluses total-\npgtKlOM.OQd.-    \"':\u25a0\u25a0 '   '\n\"It aeems to be reasonable to august that if they*wished to*do ao,\nhey.eould increase expenditures On\nnary education,\" said Mr. Gar-\nIon;,' '','\u25a0'*_>   ,       .''.'',\n1; J. H.-Harrison (L.\u2014Meadow Lake)\nMid'Ottawa  could not grant the\n|tapayers' money to the provinces\nwithout   exercising   some   control\nover expenditure.\nIf the federal government collected taxes and passed the money on\nto the provinces,', it would become\nnothing . more than  a  \"collection\nagency.\" ,. *ii'     '-       ', i. -   \u25a0;' ; .,-,\nDespite  tbe  C.C.F.  Contentions,\nmorp of his Saskatchewan constituents had suggested they wanted\nfederal aid to education. Rather,\nthey wanted the province to spend\nmore money in that field.      .   '..,,\nE. T. Applewhaite (L\/-8keena)\n\u2022aid the opposition.would raise a\nory which.would be heard from\ncoast to coast If the government\nmade 'grants for any purpose to\nthe provinces and  retained  no\nCheck on how they wort spent,\nThe problem was one that required   a   federal-provincial   exchange of views. Ho would fear\nany' policy under which the federal government would fix the\namount to be'received by each\nprovince tor equalization of educational opportunities.\n\"Let lis know Where we are going\nbeto__ we get bur fingers financially\nor otherwise 1_ the educational .pie\nof the provinces,\" said Mr. Applewhaite. .'\u00bb_;:\nProvince take\nfirst step\n|Rene Jtftras (L\u2014Proven Cher) said\nhe could not see, how'the resolution\ncould ba made\" compatible with provincial autonomy.\nMr. Jutras suggested the federal\ngovernment could not be expected\nto equalize education across the\ncountry before the provinces equalized education within-'their owii'\nboundaries. The first step was lip\nto the provinces.\nObsolete school' acta in many\nprovinces would; prevent the federal authority from making grants\neven it it wanted.\nIft ^llii^itt Trade\n\u25a0 \u25a0' OTTAWA, March*2ft ,(CP)\u2014Exports raced ahead of\nimports: during February to give Canada a $31,300,000 surplus\nin her foreign-trade account, the sixth monthly surplus in\na row. \u00bb   <    ' . iZ. :\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0... ''\u25a0\u25a0-'.-.' \u25a0'.-',\nWith the World clamoring for Canada's, strategic materials, exports climbed $76,600,000\"'during February to $313,-\n400,000 from $236,800,000 a year ago, the Bureau of Statistics\nreported today ih a preliminary statement on international\n\u25a0:. .;',*\u25a0' \u25a0.'.'\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022'\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022-.-.\u2022\u2022   :,'Itrsde.\nliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiili\nYes\u2014-Even the Sink.'\u25a0..\nOoir'f Jo Appeal\nOTTAWA, March,20 (CP) - The\nFederal.'Government will appeal\nagainst the use of.: income-tax returns ln a British, Columbia court\nprosecution,; Revenue Minister Mc*\nCann said today in * the Commons..\n* The returns-were.use_ by order\nof the court in a !_ob_making-\nconspiracy. trial, over the objection\nof Revenue .Department solicitors.\nThe,defendants Wereacqiiitteji,-\nReplying to questions from iloHri\nDiefenbaker (PC \u2014 Lake Centr_\u00bb:\nthe revenue minister said the British Columbia Appellate Division\nhas graft ted thO Government leave\nto appeal the trial judge's lullrig\nthat.returns must be produced en\ncourt order. , *.\nS.li Court Rules Race Law\nVoid; Malan to Defy Move\nSteam Baths Ittstead of Guns\nVANCOUVER, March ?0 (CP)\n\u2014Well Its happen.. \u2014 -thieves\nstole everything and the kitchen\n'stak. \u25a0'\u2022',\nPolice reported .today thieves\nstripped the house of Paul De-\nmuth, escaping with all its electrical fittings, wiring, door locks\nand plumbing. \u2022 \u25a0\n\u2022 The plumbing Included the\nbathtub, toilet, kitchen sink and\nwash basin. ,\nMr. Demuth Is at present out\nof town.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAncient Treaty\nRights Demanded\nVICTORIA,  B.  C,  March  20\n(CP)\u2014-A treaty, .mora than  100\nyears old, launched debate In the\nLegislature  Wednesday  on   the.\nwater rights of British Colum\nblahs In the Columbia River.\n':\u25a0 \u25a0 CCF. leader Harold Winch cal\nled On'the'Government to protect\nthe,rights.of the province's people under terms of an 1848 treaty\nbetween the United States ond\nGreat Britain.',...'\nThe 'treaty has never befW re-,\nvoked ond gives residents West\nof the Canadian RockleB free ne-\ncess,over any tributary*or the\nColumbia to the ocean, Just as\n. though they we're ettliehi of the\nUnited Statea,   '.\"\/.'\u2022   \u2022'*-'\nThe ti-sty wl|l be broken, Mr.\nWinch claimed, by the damming\nof thi-Colu|rtbla at Ulbby, Mont,\n.'*. and wanted Jto; know ..what'tht\nGovernment will do about It.\n\u25a0'\u25a0:'''.Lfn_Ia^'W^irter.'.,,E\u00ab''''t.:''K;ehney;\njwpfijsjirtsthjit ^iv;.p,- although\n'\u25a0- hayer;glven:!its full rights under\ntho treaty, will make sure ihe\n; province: doesn't suffer through\nthe Libby dam.,'.-..'.,\u2022:\n;Ho 'said B. C. will Insist on\ndownstream benefits to ah International Joint commission, and\n' will ilso I demand : sufficient re-\nImbursemeht for any reads, lands\n'orvother aMas 'floodedOby the\n.dam.y-Z'-i-:.\";:\u25a0'''\u2022\u25a0' '\u25a0\nSee New Pulp Mill     ..\nVICTORIA, B.C., March 20 (CP)\n\u2014The possibility of a second pulp\nplant In tho Prince Geprge'Ques-\nI nel area, In the Northern interior,\nwas reported Here toijay',-. ;\u25a0'.'-*\nA spokesman for the Forestry\n. Department .old the Westminster\nPaper Company, a pioneer British Columbia paper manufacturing firm, has applied,for.a forest\nmanagement licence on tho Willow River In that district\nNO MONEY ,   ;   ' Z' \"\nVANCOUVNER, March 20 (CP)\nNorman Mackenzie .aald today\nthere Isn't any money available\nfor salary Increases for University\nof British Columbia professors. *.';\nManitoba To lift\nMeal Embargo\n.WINNIHEG, March- 20, (G_\u00bb) :-,\nManitoba's embargo on shipment of\nsheep,-swine-, and, meat from Sas.\nkatchewan -and Alberta will, bo lifted at midnight Saturday, Agriculture Minister F. C. Bell announced\ntoday in.the Legislature.\nThe ban. On cattle; rawhides, wool,\nskin and bones, and the ban, on\nthe transport of livestock across\nManltpbai'.willirelnaui in effect\n1000 May Be Jobless\n\"OTTAWA. March',20 (CP). \u2014\nMore- thin 1000 highway tank-\ntruck .operators will be put.out\nof.work by .a proposed reduction\nIn rates'by\" the rallwaya'for two\nol) companies In Western Canada,\nthe Canadian. Automotive Transportation;: Association today told\n\"Transport1 Minister Chevrier\n\\Speciai to the Daily News)\n'VI(-tORIA, B. C-Negotia-\nIpiis between Canada and the\nInited Stafes in' connection\nirith Montana's Libby dam on\nhis Kootenay Ri ver h a v e\nea_ hed an \u201e impasse, Lands\n_id -Forests Minister B. T.\nCenney said in the Legislate- . \u2022 :Z' ,\n\"Representatives of the two comities have been appearing before\nE\"*i International Joint Commission\nIng to work out an agreement\nereby Canada will be compen-\nlated tor, 15,000  acres ot flooded\nmi.\nkenney made the statement ln\n*ply to-questions by: Walter Hen-\nIrlckS (Gov't. Nelson-Creston). and\n_sd Nimslck (C.C.F.-Cranbrook),\nluring : consideration of depart-\ntiehtal estimates, .\nThe Minister said. the. flooding,\nno) ihe various adjustments it re-\nulred, will costB. C. between $8,.\nDO.OOO and $7,000,000. This is the\nmount on which compensation ne-\notiations sre being held.\nOWER SHARE\nIt is not sufficient for the United\nMembers Pusti for\nDarn Project Aetion\nSUtes to simply reimburse Canada\nfor the flooding,' Kferiney stressed!\nHe said the province is entitled to\na share of the returns from power\ndeveloped downstream. \"We \"a_tn!t\ngoing to be gyped,\" said Kenney.\nHendricks, expressed the. fear\nthat If Canada held out for too\nmuch the United States may\nchange its mind and build the\ndam on Sanko River Instead,\nThe Minister replied that this\nmight.be possible, but \"we afe entitled to fair reimbursement.\"\nThe Nelson-Creston. member said\nfarmers are anxious about the sit'\nu.tion because they car. t.put homes\nOn the reclaimed -Kootenay.. River\nflats until there is some flood control, which the dam will provide.\nHehdricks said residents Hve in\nfear of floods because of the possibility of ihe dykes breaking. He*re'\nminded Kenney of Ihe\/1947: disaster, v   \u25a0    '\nNimslck explained to Kenney\nthat, farmers in the area would like1\nto see n decision \"reached. He'said\ntheir lands have \u25a0 been assessed in\npreparation' for flooding, and they\nare reluctant to 'spend money on\nimprovements.\nVictoria Proclaims\nAlternative Voting\nVICTORIA, B. C, March 20\n(CP), -*' T\/ie Provincial Government has proclaimed the.sections\nof the - Elections Act, permitting\n' use of the alternative ballot 'Sys.\n' tern of voting the coming general\nelection.\nThe action was taken by order-\nIn-councll.      ' \u25a0\nLast year*'session of the Legislature approved the alternative\nvoting' system, hut the Act. was\nnever proclaimed. '\u25a0'.';.   ,\nAlternative voting sometimes\ncalled preferential voting and the\nsingle transferable,voting system,\nallows, a voter a first, second.\nthird etc. Choice of: candidates,\nInstead of Just one choice as un.\nder \"the, usual system.' It Is de.\nsigned to prevent election of candidates on-a. minority .vote.\nImports also reached higher to\n$282,100,000 from $274,200,000, but\nthe amount of the climb \u2014 $7,800,000\n\u2014 was only about one-quarter of\nthe boost in exports.\nThus, lt appeared that Canada was\nheading for a year of favorable\nbalances to shift out of the deficit\not about $122,000,000 recorded ln\n1951,\nShipments to the United Kingdom\nduring February clinbed $10,200,000\n.to $43,900,000 from $33,700,000\" last\nyear, but imports slipped to $21,200,-\n000 from $27,800,000.\nCanada thereby chalked up a $22,-\n700,000 surplus, up $18,800,000 from\nthe $9,900,000 favorable; balance a\nyear ago.. -.*..-'\u25a0  'l:      s' -!\u25a0'--.,\nALMOST DOUBLE      \u2022        - >\nIn trade with other common*\nwealth coiintries, Canada's exports.]\nclimbei* to $25,300,000, almost double\ntbe $14,200,000 last year, but imports\n'were only $1,700,000 higher at $18,-\n800,000, compared with $14,800,000.\nThis gave. Canada a surplus ol\n$8,800,000, a reversal of-the $800,000\ndeficit in February, 1951. T'\nWithin the last few weeks, Britain, as well as Australia and New\nZealand announced new belt-tightening measures to restrict imports\nstill further in a drive tb bring the\nsterling area out of Its financial and\neconomic crisis.   . \\ , ,\nThis may' change the Cahadlan\ntrade picture .within the next few\nmonths,. but Trade Minister Howe, j\nthough anticipating \"a decline in J\nexports of some items, estimated last\nweek that in total exports, Canada's\nshipments to the United Kingdom\nmay climb by $75,000,000 or $100,-\nOOO.OOO this year.'. ::,  ;;:\nIn the realm of balances, Canada's\nbiggest he_dache wa,s with its^^ biggest market \u2014 -he* United States.\nExpo\"rts:\"*_icreSs8d'' $16,800,000 to\n$171,700,000- from- *$154,000,00O, 'but\nimports 'also climbed to $212,200,000\nfrom $199.000,000;' -.Z],*'*,':\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 '*\" !\n'-Th. deficit 4fe trtyWbn#l<itti:itade\nwithi-^hesU.S.-^ %as ,i!ftO,50ir,8_ll\ndown'slightly,''frbm-'$44,100,000 last\nyear.'      -\u25a0     ,  \u00bb .\nBarricades Down\nIn Canal Zone\nISMAILIA, Suez Canal Zone,\nMarch 20 (Reuters) \u2014 British,\ntroops began tearing down, the\n, mlle-jong barbed wire barricades\n;; running through the middle of\nthis former Canal Zone trouble\nspot. Z .,-' ,   \u2022',     i.--''\"''5\nIt was the start of Gen.. Sir\nGeorge \u25a0 Ersklhe'o .three-day oper.\natlqn to .withdraw British troops\nfront. Ismailia\u2014only a few weeks\nago the main hangout of Egyptian\n- 'tfuerslllasi,.'- :' ', ' \u25a0; ,\nEgyptian mounted and foot police\naccompanied the Tommies as they\npulled out iron stakes and roiled\nup' rusty colls of wire which have\nsealed off, Ismailia's' Arab i quarter\nfor the last two months.'    .\nThe wire was strung along the\ning the Sweetwater Canal after Sis*\nmile-long strip of territory border*\nter Anthony, Roman '\u25a0 Catholic nun\nfrom New Yprk, was shot down in\nthe grounds of St. Vincent de Paul\nconvent, in mid-January during a\nfight between guerrillas and British troops. ; ' .\n'.Hundreds of Egyptian families\nwere cleared from .heir homes, ln\nArab Town and given accom'moda'\ntion in requisitioned buildings elsewhere,,Now., they will be allowed\nto move. back.    .,         ,.\nThe move comes as relations between the British and the Egyptians\ncontinue to improve.\nSees Only Danger\nOf War in West's\nOwn Weakness\nLONDON, March 20 \\ (CP) -. An\nopen letter, to Labor-rebel Aneurin\nBevan from a1 Spanish. Republlcan-\nin-exile marked another round today in Britain's \"great debate\" on\nrearmament.-\nSalvador de Madarlaga, Spanish\nphilosopher, politician and author,\nwho has been living in Britain since\nbefore the Second World War, joined the verbal sparring with a published criticism of Bevan's \"puzzling\nincapacity\" to see What is really\ngoing fcn in the world...\n\"The. only danger of war In the\nWest,\" DO, Madarlaga wrote in a\nletter addressed to Bevah and published by the Independent Liberal\nManchester Guardian, \"comes-from\nthe West's own weakness;- and'one\npf the elements of thla Is, the division of opinion caused by. the lnr.|\ntelleotual and mbral chos you are\"\ncontributing*to create,':,;*;\nGERMAN ENGINEERS who designed Hitler's gunB and othe.\nmachines of War nowkeep themselves Occupied by designing gadgets\n'of peace. This appliance, made In West Berlin, Is a portable home\nTurkish bath. Milady Just climbs Into the oversize cylinder, turns on\nah Infra-red lamp, watches a thermometer rise to 120 degrees before\nshe shuts the heat off, and at the same, time listens to the radio or\ntelephones a friend.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nFormer Nelson Man\nMissing on Flight\nA former Nelson man.StarileyPage,W^alJiWalia arch'\nitect, is missing on a plane flight between Seattle arid Walla\nwalla..-:; '',:..:.:,.\u25a0.,.'.\/'.\u25a0.: ::.\"Zi:\/'i:iiiiii iZi\"ii:i::i<Z'\",'Z\n., Ri|pojts Jhipday.nig^t;fron\u00bbs.])JcChord Alf Porcobpsf\niii WasHirigton said air rescue, planes had Iruitlessly followed:\npup'c__e_ earlier in*.the da^ -in ,the'-first day of a fiill-sciie\nsearch'fdr Page and -his light'privateijpiane. *:      \u25a0' -,', '\"\u25a0    i i\n:.  An SB-17 and a C-82 from Might G, Poufth Air Rescue\nSquadron, were joined in the mission' by; civil air patrol craft;\nUNi6N;bFFIt^i^'^\u2122l*,^\nFIGHTlfOUT\nAfrican Court Says Act to Have\nSeparate Voting Unconstitutional\nCAPETOWN, March 20 (Reuters)-The'South African\nSupreme'Court today struck ,a major constitutional blow\nagainst apartheid (racial segregation), a cornerstone of Prims\nMinister Daniel Malan's Nationalist government.\n'The court ruled'null and void the Malan government's\nSeparate Representation Act, which discriminated against\ncolored;'.mixed-race) voters. Colored voters in Cape Province\nhad previously registered and voted; with white electors.\n.Under ^he act the colored voter? were struck from thi com*\nmon lists'; and were to vote separately for special representatives.  \u201e '    . '\nWhen he learned of the decision\u2014\nwhich brings to a, head one ot the\nmost Important constitutional issues\nSouth Africa has ever faced \u2014\nMalan' hastily summoned his cabinet and later addressed Uie House\ntof'Assembly. \u2022\nHe-said in the Rouse that the\ncourt's ruling created an \"intolerable\" situation ahd that the government will \"take the necessary steps\"\nto ena it. \u25a0,;*\nTO DEFY COURT _    i\n\"Neither parliament nor the\npeople of South Africa' will be prepared to acquiesce in a position\nw_here. _ the .legislative sovereignty\nof the lawfully and democratically\nelected;representotives of the people\nIs denied;\" he said.  , ,\nMalan, in Indicating he plans to\ndefy the Supreme'Court, did not\nsay what steps he would take.\nBut It appeared he would present\nlegislation after Easter to deprive\nthe coiirtt.of the right to test the\nvalidity of union legislation. This\nwould give the Union Parliament\nthe same degree of sovereignty as\nthat enjoyed by parliament In Britain, where the laws lt passes are\nbeyond legal challenge in the courts\nm elsewhere, tr \u25a0\nCAN BE CHANGED\n\u00bb*;Tb*- South'.: African v. constitution\ncan he changed;, AS, amendment\nsinjpj^.nw^tO;tt;passed;as,a joint\nsession of both houses by a jwO'\n.thlrds.imajorjte^^ff_\u25a0.\u2022:.\".;,\" '\u25a0 \u25a0'\nBut Malan apes not have a twp-\nIke May Return\nPAHIS; March 20-(AP)>- Pleased\nby primary returns, General Eisenhower is considering \"giving up his\nEuropean command and returning\n\u00bb\u00bbi*    * .\u00bb_..     i      __\u00ab   mt       home before the Republican convert-\nNelson-Wednesday .0.00, Thurs-tion to, campaign actively for the\nday 0.78. * ;\u2022     \u2022    Prealijentialnoihination.'\n(itcdsA. &vid&.\nOTTAWA,  MarOh  20  (CP) --.'\nThe two top officers of Canada's.'\nbiggest transport union, tho Canadian \"Brotherhood of Railway\nEmployees C.C.L.), are engaged\nIn a knock-down, fight ,\nCharges and* counter-charges haye\nbeen laid against each other within\ntheir union by A.' R. Mosher, president of the C.B.R.E. and. 'of. the\nCanadian Congress of Labor, and\nby  James :R   McGuire,   national\nsecretary-treasurer of the C.B.R.E,\nand a member ol the C.C.L. executive. ' ' \u25a0       ;\nA hearing is under way here at\nan' emergency; meeting of.the- 28;00Q\nmember CB.R.'E.'s. executive' board;\nand its outcome''could mean the\nehd 'of labor, leadership for either\nof .'the-antagonists. Apparent odds\nimmediately are on the .l-year*-old\nMosher'winning .at., least the first:\nround,of the scrap ', i    .*\nEast Germany     y\nDeveloping Baltic\nShipbuilding\nBERLIN, March 20 -(Reuters) \u2014\nEast Germany-is developing the\nlargest shipbuilding .'industry ever\nundertaken on. the German Baltic\ncoast-with a view to Increasing her\ntrade with China. .\n' The keel of the first East German-\nbuilt ocean-going ship will be laid\nby April 1, but it will take two\nyears work before the 9500-ton\nship Is completed. By 1055, East\nGerman intends to build 22 sea\ngoing ships of four types.*\nThe largest type \u2014 9500 tons -r\nwill be for trade with China; the)\nsecond type \u2014 8000 fons \u2014 is de-\n'stlned for trade with Persia and\nRussian Black Sea ports.    ..'.'    -\nThe North Sea 'area Is'to; be\nserved by 3000-ton freighters and\nthe Baltic by 1300-ton, freighters.\nGermany'. .formerly . built her\nocean-going ships at the North Sea\nports of. Hambtirg, Bremen, and\nEmden. The only port on the Baltic\nwhere large vessels were built was\nKiel, the naval harbor of pre-war\nGermany. This now IS In the British zone.* -1 \u2022 \u2022\u25a0 .:   *\nTwo Miners Die\n; PUN FLON, Man.. March 20\n(CP)-^Two, mine workers lost their\nlives in the depths of a Flin ?lon\nmine, Wednesday when they -were\novercome by poisonous gas .urines.\nFAVOR 'STRIKE. ACTION        ! '\nVANCOUVER, March 20 (CP)\u2014\nEmployees of West Coast Woollen\nMills Ltd. voted today.in favor of\nstrike action to back up wage demands. About 120 employees are\n1 affected by tha decision. '\nnesdiy afternoon _n. a flight home\nfrom.Seattle.-He,was ln Vancouver\nearlier Wednesday,     .\nA land rescue team has been'\nalerted at Snoqualmie..Pass and\nsearch headquarters have.been set\nup at Rento'n a&d.Jfillensb'urg.'?'\nPredicflbns of -clear weather, this\nmorning were a note ofv Kobe \u25a0 for\nfog-foiled searchers.;'   - ..-\u25a0'\nPoor ' visibility ' prevented - search\nWest of Ellensburg; Wash., they re.\nported, although-they, were able to\ntrack down clues\u2014unsuccessfully\u2014j\nln ihe Eastern; Search area. '   .'.'J  .;:\nHER^ F.OUR Y_AR8 V- '. I\n' Pdge.left ;Nelson ,to. live in-Wallai\nWalla between two and a half and\nthree years ago. He lived: here for\nabout four, years, coming to Nelsori\nfrom Tacoma. He Is married, and\nwas a member of Nelson Gyro Club,\nHe was connected wi_T tins 'bji3\nCady Lumber Company and was\nassociated with at least two 'architects. He had a role in designing a\nniimi>er of buildings throughout the\ndistrict, including \u25a0 drawing up bf.\nplans {it ihe Salmo junior-senior\nhigh school, since; redesigned and\npartially constructed. He hed, also\nhelped design the Tarrys school,\nwhich burned to the ground before\nIt had been used.  .\nthirds majority, holding only a\nnarrow edge ln both the Senate and\nthe House of, Assembly.\nThe Supreme. Court's ruling contained no moral Indictment of tho\ngovernment's law. It simply said the\nI law waa unconstitutional because\n' it had not been passed in. the proper\nway.   *\nThe South African constitution,\nadopted' ln 1909. long before tha\nunion became a dominion ln ths\ncommonwealth, states that. any\nchange in law affecting non-whito\nvoting rights or qualifications must\nbe passed at a joint session ot both\nhouses of parliament and by a two-\nthirds majority.-  \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0'.\nCLAUSE  ERASED\nMalan's government passed thi\nlaw through the two houses of\nparliament separately and by simplo\nmajority. He claimed that the Statute of Westminster ln 1931, which\nset up the dominions as self-govern*\ning countries within the British\ncommonwealth,* wiped out tha\nclauses ln question.\nThe opposition Unity party seized\non the ruling, demanding that tho\ngovernment should resign. Opposition, leader Jacobus Strauss said tha\ngovernment's \"immoral acts, now\nalso proved to hava been Illegal,\"\nhave already had serious, lasting\nconsequences and have shaken the\n\"faith bt non-whites in the leader-\nship and justice; of the white man.\"\n\u201e.,Xbe. .South -African '-wnsUthflOa\nmakes no provision-for appeal from\nthe Supreme' Court i\n0&$fs fm Bd|ar^ Leigh,\nU.N. May Agree to\nSecret Talks on\nPrisoner Exchange\nMUNSAN, March 2i (Friday)\n(AT1)\u2014The United Nations' coni-\nmand Indicated today it might agree\nto a secret discussion of prisoner\nexchange with the Commuhlsts in\nan effort to speed a Korean armistice. v\nthere-was no official sigh that\nthe Reds would a_|ree to the closed\ntalks. \"*\u2022\nfhe, issue of voluntary or forced\nrepatriation of prisoners Is one-of\nthrpe major blocks. The other two\nare Red nomination of Russia as a\nneutral truce observer and Red Insistence on rebuilding, military airfields lh North Korea during a\ntruce. ..'.\"'''\".\nThe possibility of secret talks pn\nprisoner. exchange was brought, up\nby. Communist cotrespondehts' in\nconversations with Allied reporters.\nThey have said nothing the last few\ndays that such talks could lead to\na solution. __\nBy BOB THOMA8    '\nHOLLYWOOD,' March 20 (AP)\n-\u25a0\"Humphrey. Begartj  gin-loving\nvagabond In \"The: African Queen\"\n. and Vivien Leigh,;faded, beauty\nof \"A 8.-eetear:Named .Desire,\"\n* wen   Hollywood's 'top  Academy\nAwards tonight        ;'    *!      ;  ,\n\"An American In Paris\" scored\none of the biggest upsets In Oscar\nhistory by being named the best\n'*>\u2022 picture- of 1961 arid winning seven Other honors.\nBogart who once called the Academy Awards \"silly\", accepted his\nOsiar with humility, The 51-year-\nold1 New-Yorker said \"It'sa.long\ntrey'front' 'the heart of the- Belgian\nCongo ' (where he made the film)\nto the stage of the Pantages Theatre\n(where he. received the award).\n\u25a0fjfts. nicer, here than it was there,\"\nHe then thanked his director,\nJohn Huston, and co-star, Katharine Hepburn, and walked' Offstage\nwith his Oscar. s\nMiss Leigh was not {present She\nIs appearing in New York with her\nhusband, Lawrence Olivier, in two\nCleopatra plays. Her Oscar was\naccepted by Greer Garson, a past\nwinner, i Miss Leigh, an India-born\nEnglishwoman, has had great sue*\ncess playing Southern belles. She\nwon her first Oscar as \"Scarlett\nO'Hara\" in \"Gone With the Wind\"\nin 1939.\n80. P0RT8. '.'\u25a0 '     \u25a0\u25a0\n'Awards for supporting-players also went to performers In' \"Street*\nILLEGAL WEARING OF\nQUEEN'S UNIFORM\nBRINGS FINE TO MAN\nVANCOUVER, March 20 (CP>-\nGeorge Capelle of Vancouver was\nfined $500 today in. Burnaby. Police\nCourt for illegally .wearing- the\n\"Queen's uniform.\"'\nIt was believed the first, time ln\nB. C. the words \"Queen's uniform'\nhave been used to describe the illegal wearing, ot an Army uniform,\nDuke to Decide on\nCoins'Portrait;\n' LONDON, March 20 (AP)\u2014The\nDufte of Edinburgh got the Job\ntoday of passing on which portrait of his wife, the Queen, will\ndecorate   Britain's   coinage.   The\n. Duke accepted an Invitation from\nR.* A, Butler,,Chancellor of the\nExchequer, to become president\nof an advisory committee on the\n\u25a0 design of coins, medals and seals.\ncar\"\u2014Kiih Hunter,.29-yea?-oldB_\u00ab\ntlve of Detroit, and Karl Maiden.\n38-year-bld Yuigpslav from Gary,\nInd. Miss, Hunter was not present\nand her Oscar; was received by\nBette Davis, another veteran of\nthese events.     - - - * \u25a0 '\nFor \"Ah American In Paris\" It\nwat a stunning victory. Seldom\nIs a musical honored by the dignified Academy of. Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,\nBut the M.G.M. film,' based OH\nthe music of Georgo  Gershwin,\nwon awards for screenplay, score,\nphotography,  art  direction,  cot-\ntunie design. Aside from the best\npicture  awards,  the   film  also\nbrought special honors te Its pro*\n. ducer, Arthur  Freed,  who. wat\nnamed    for   the    meritorious\nachievement award In honor of\n.the late Irving thalberg; and Itt\nstar; Gene Kelly, who wat cited\n. for   his   contribution' to   movie\nmusicals.\nRunner-up honors\u2014at slx-^wer*\nwon by \"A Place ln the Sun.\"'\nGeorge Stevens captured the director's award and the film was also\nnamed for screenplay, score, photography, costume design and editing.\n\"Streetcar,\" the Tennessee Williams story of seamy life in New\nOrleans' French quarter, was highly touted by the pre-award polls.\nWhile it 'Scored only one of the\nlesser honors\u2014 art direction\u2014 it\ntook the -lion's share ln the acting\ndivision.\nThe three acting Oscars marked\nthe first time In Academy history\nthat a film has won more than two\nin this category.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK, March 20 (CP) -\nThe Canadian dollar was down\n1\/32 of a cent at a premium of.17\/32\nper cent,In terriis.of United.States\nfunds in closing' foreign exchange\ndealings'today. The round sterling\nwas down 1\/10* of a cent at\n$2.80'\/s.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nEDMONTON, March 20 (CP)\u2014Several months behind bars fri\ndungeon-like cells are In store for the shorthand reporting staff of\nthe Editionton Court House,\nDue tb a shortage of room In the Court House the reporters are '\n. being shunted temporarily to the basement colls, ones occupied by\nprisoners during trial adjournments,   -'-,;'\nUntil they win a reprieve the reporters may gain aome comfort\n; from a philosophical prisoner's cell-Wall scrawling which has.remained\nuntouched by painters over the yean. It reads: \"Stonewalla do not\na prison' rhake, nor Irop bars a cage;\"\nINDIANAPOLIS, March 20 (AP)-xMore than a year ago Norman\nJanke quit his Job at the Indianapolis post'office and moved to Florida.\nOn his way South he mailed a penny postcard to his father, E. H,\nJanke. The card arrived just the other day, #pre than a year late, but\n, the post office charged the elder Janke one cent postage due on. thit\none. The postcard rate went up to two cents a few months ago.\n.-,\".f' \u2014-\u2014\u25a0 \u2014\nGILLINGHAM..England. March 20 (AP)\u2014J. Blundell Jonet. \u00bb farm\nInstitute lecturer, wat telling an audience the right way to feed laying\nhens. The hen brought along at exhibit A obliged by laying an egg\n. on the speaker's platform.        ,\n...\n'.!_!_.\n .\n2 \u2014 NELSON. DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH il, 1952\n\u25a0 \u2014i    \u2014I   is. is.\u2014 i     ,\u201e    .....     , .,     ,...,       .      ,,\u201e\u2014 \u25a0_\u25a0\u201e,._,._ t.      \u201e    ,. ,,,\nTODAY\nTbe lusty toga of a\nfightin* ship ond hw\n-SmLsIw' _m___.     '\u25a0____.   ''\nngwin 0_w- RH\nran high, wide and\ntoglotyl\nEXTRA ON THE SAME PROQRAM -       '\nCartoon, \"Helpful Genii\"\nSpecialty \u2014 \"Struggle for Oil\"\nLatest Newi i\nc\/wc\n(able Stringing Nears Completion\nIn Face of Hampering Conditions\nSuspending of the second power\ncable across Kootenay Lake is expected to be completed Friday\nmorning. The job was brought to\nnear completion, late Thursday\nafternoon, with the two-mile-long\nconductor installed on the East\ntower and drawn within a short\ndistance ot the West frame.\nAs ln the connecting up of the\nfirst cable,* it took several hours to\ninstall the line on the big East\nshore tower. Thla task requires Installing of relieving strands for a\nlength of 100 feet before the line\n'Is hoisted to tht tower top, and\nthla work is carried out on the\nbeach where a* template has been\nset up. ' '\nA heavy steel basket, which will\nweigh 3 _. tons when insulators are\nstrung Inside It, is first attached to\nthe cable then hauled to waiting\ncrewmen on th* 70-foot bridge at\nthe top of th* 888-foot tower, where\nit ia connected. The Insulator assembly built for a strain ot 25,000\npounds contains 218 insulators\u201418\non each of 13 strings. The \"dead-\nWearhome Bronchial\n-SSCOUGH\nCast aleep fbr toughing?, Bronchial\ntube* full ot tightly-packed phlegm that\nno amount of counting senna able to\n^? So tired from your wearisome\nhial cough you  can't\nyf Then aer\" -\n_ . .       work\n.          ____ GOOD NEWSI\nf Templeton'a RAZ-MAH Capsule*.\n'-**   satisfactory relief.  Strangling\n __\/ looaened to it comet away\neasily.   Get   RAZ-MAH   from   your\ndrussirt. 65c, |1,3S. \u00ab.j4\nhead,\" so-called because it prevents\nelectricity from entering the steel\ntower frame ls believed to be\nlargest ln the world.\nOn the West side, linking up of\ncable to tower Is slowed by loosening of rocks as the cable comes up\nthe cllffslde, making It hazardous\nto men on the cliffs below and boat\noperators steering the cable in the\nwater. ...',' \/;\nNear inaccessibility 1* another\ndelaying factor. Only power wagons\nand Jeeps are able io navigate: the\nwinding road from Ainsworth to\nth* site, which is about two miles\nNorth of Coffee Creek. Th* road is\na sea of mud for the tint mile, and\nthe balance ,ia covered with several\nInches of fresh snow which fell\nearly thla week. One driver counted\n120 turns on the steep winding\nroad, which passes Loon Lake.\nC.P.R. Names Hotel\nDepartment Manager\nMONTREAL, March 20 \u2014 Robert\nT. Duncan, of Montreal, has been\nappointed assistant general manager\nof tbe hotel department of the Canadian. Pacific Railway1, effective\nApril 1, it waa announced here today by It. A. Mackie, general manager.\nAnnounced ln conjunction with\ntha promotion of Mr. Duncan were\nthe appointments of W. A. Reynolds as assistant to the general\nmanager; and T. R. Tarlton to succeed Mr. Reynold! as chief clerk,\nBoth are Montrealers,\nNelson Group\nTo Christ For\nTrail Rally\nEvangelical Mission Covenant\nyoung people Friday evening will\njourney to Trail to attend a \"Christ\nfor Trail\" serW.ce.,\nAdult services of the Rally, which\nls sponsored by ther Christian Busl.\nnessmen's Committee ot Trail, began Match 16' and will continue\nuntil March 30. Many denominations In the district will take; part\nia the rally.   ;'\u2022'\u25a0',\nThe rallies are a unified effort\not evangelisation In Trail and District, and hav* as their main\nspeaker Rev, Earl M. Jensen of\nCentral Baptist Church of Seattle;\nThe young people, accompanied\nby .several church members, will,\ntravel in cart to th* service which\nreplaces their regular Friday evening Young Peoples meeting.\nBartender Fined\nServing Juvenile\nArn* S. Bystrom, a bartender,\nwas convicted Of unlaivfully supplying liquor to a Juvenile In City\nCourt Thursday morning.\nBystrom appeared before Magistrate William Brown and was fined\n.300 or three months lh Jail with\nhard labor, '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nTha defendant pleaded not guilty\nto the charge of supplying malt liquor to a Juvenile ln the licenced\npremises of the. Royal Hotel-March\nConstable 0. H. Forester aa chief\nwitness, testified to seeing the Juvenile enter the licenced premises\nMarch 4 ahd, through a window,\nseeing him being served bear. The\nconstable entered to take his name.\nThe Juvenile testified to entering\nth* beer, parlor on two previous\noccasions accompanied by a Mend,\nallegedly minor. On the three occasions he said, they were supplied\ntwo glasses of beer by the accused\nand were not asked to produce evidence of age.\nMr. Bystrom admitted supplying\nthe juvenile with beer on tjje second occasion he entered the beer\nparlor about a week previous to\nMarch 4, but only after, he claimed,\nth* six-footer had produced an\nadult driver's licence on the bartender's request for proof of age.\nOn an earlier occasion, the defendant claimed, he had refused to serve\nhint because .he did not appear to\nbe of age. He had asked both the\nJuvenile and his companion for\nproof of age, ho claimed.\nThe Juvenile, under examination,\nclaimed he had-: not produced a\ndriver's licence and. that he w_as not\nholder of a licence.\nThe third witness, the juvenile's\ncompanion, told the court he had\nbeen In ,the parlor only once prior\nto March 4, and at that time he had\nnot been questioned'before'being\nserved; On March 4, both had been\nserved two glasses bf beer without\nquestion, he claflned.     '       *'\nDefence counsel was L. M. McBrlde and, prosecutor was Leo S.\nGahsner.\nCranbrook Sends Two\nMen to Nelson Jail\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\"\u2014Remanded\nten days aga following conviction\nof theft of a wallet and cigarettes\nfrom a hotel room, James Tees was\nsentenced to 'four months in prison\nat Nelson when he appeared before\nJustice of the Peace A. J. Balment,\nEdwin Johnson, arrested during\ntile weekend, was found guilty of\nsupplying liquor to an Indian, arid\nwas* sentenced to three months im*\nprisonment at Nelaon ln default of\na fine of .150.\nWow Showing*....\nSPRING\nJACKETS\n3&l 7tlw. md young. Wm.\nCOLORFUL, WELL-DESIGNED\nJACKETS for EASY WEARING\nand SMART APPEARANCE\n17\n.98\nTHE RIVIERA\nIn corduroy . . . Hip-length,\nbutton front and detachable\nbelt  : -.'    \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\t\nGRENFELL CLOTH\nBy DEACON BROS. .'. The\noriginal shower-prOof golf\njacket . .,. constructed for\nbutton-in lining\t\nTwo Practical\nPIVOT SLEEVE JACKETS\nFor the man who likes freedom. . . .\n$1\/1.50\nGABARDINE |*F\n$11.50\nTACKLE TWILL ________      II\n16\n.80\nTHE RAMBLER\nA waist-length jacket . . .      '       . Z\nWith full zipper, in lustrous   $1 J.98\ngabardine-     13\nTHE MOUNTAINEER\nA really tough jacket,\nguaranteed   for   one   year\nagainst  normal   snagging\n.or tearing  \u25a0 \u25a0 ; . |j\n\"TOPPS\" JACKETS\nFor everyday wear,' . . made\nof pre-shrunk gabardine ________\n12\nPhone    -v    270    ;,4|;Box'\nProvincial Apiarist\nVisits Nelson Group\nJohn Corner of Vernon, provincial apiarist, addressed West Kootenay division of the B.C. Honey\nProducers' Association Wednesday\n\u2022night In W.I. roijm.\n\u25a0Jj He spoke on the \"two queen\"\nsystem, and showed films on \"The\nHarmony of Bees\" and \"The Benevolent Bee,\"\n100 Acres Tiniest\nforest Licence\nArea, Trail Told\nTRAIL, B.C. t Promoting forest\np rpetuity'is as, important to' the\nfuture welfare of the nation ahd Its\npeople as ls the setting up of social\nservices. This was brought out in an\naddress to the Chamber of Commerce meeting Thursday evehing\nby Harry B. Forse, district forester,\nNelsor. Forest District\nGordon Hoot, public relations\ndirector of the Celgar Development\nCompany who was to have spoken,\nfound he was unable to attend the\nmeeting,    .\nMr. Force traced the history' of\nthe forest industry from before 1850\nto the presen day. A noticeable drop\nin production was revealed between\n1812 and 1850.\nWith \u00ab chalk talk the speaker\naptly illustrated the* government's\nplan of, forest management licences\nreplacing the old cut out and get out\nmethpds. The government system\nwas an Ideal aet. up for sustained\np-oduction \"giving every incentive\nto the licensee allowing bim to keep\nthe area, ih a productive state at\nall times and providing him with\ncontinued security.\nMr. Forse artswered many questions stating that the area af the\n\u2022mallest  forest  management   II-\noenoe atfplled for-was 100 acres\nwhile the largest was to the Celgar Development Corporation of\nover three million.\nRights of access, to forests he said\nwould not be interfered with and\nwould remain the perogative of the\nForest Service.\nTo date. 13 licences had been\nawarded ln B.C. with 100 others\nunder consideration.\n_ETP_ RIDGE MEMBER TO VISIT\nIn a short business meeting the\ndate of the next chamber meeting\nwas changed to April 28 to enable\naccommodation of a contingent. of\nChamber members from Lethbridge\nmaking a goodwill tour through the\nKootenays. ;\u25a0;,'\nDr. P. Sutherland reported to date\non a successful \"Cnrlst for Trail\",\ncampaign extending a Special invitation to business men and members\nof service clubs to attend the, meeting to be held In the high school\nauditorium Friday evehing.\nFuneral Held for\nNatal Guide, Miner\nNATAL, 'B.C. '\u2014 Ftineral for\nRalph Porco, 52, miner and guide-.\ntor numerous hunting parties, was\nheld at St Michael's Roman Catholic Church here, Rev. Father E.\nBrophy officiating.\nBorn ln Aprlgllano, Italy, he\ncame to Canada ln 1823 and worked\nin the Michel mines ,untll recently\nwhen, owing to poor health, he\nbought, the well-known Sulphur\nSprings ranch, 20 miles West of\nNatal in the Blk Valley. Albert and\nRalph Porco teamed up to guide\nmany hunting parties from various\npoints In the United States and\nCanada.\nHe is survived .by his mother\nand four sisters in Italy, and three\nbrothers, Albert, Oscar and Pete In\nNatal The latter two only recently\ncame to Natal from Italy.\nThe Weather\nSynopsis\u2014It was sunny In most\nregions of the province Thursday.\nTemperatures we're about the 6ame:\nThe highest maximum reported\nwas 50 degrees at Victoria and Lyt-\nton.\n.\u2022\u25a0 A,f!.._.'.'     y\nNewsreel Story\nOn Lake Cable\nProject Planned\nMotion picture audiences across\nCanada and in the United States\nwill see a newsreel story of Com-\nInco's Kootenay Lake power transmission line crossing soon.\nIn': Nelson preparing to shoot\nscenes is Rolls. Beesley of Vancouver, Associated Screen News Western representative, who has covered various Kootenay events with\nhis movie camera in past years.\nv Mr, Beesley plans to visit the site\nof the two-mile crossing Friday.\nHe ls well known In this district\nparticularly in Trail, where he\nfilmed Cominco operations and also\nflood scenes In 1848, and in Rossland, where he did a feature* on\nRed fountain sktiow.\nThe pictures will be carried by\nParamount Universal Newsreel,\nM.G:M. News of the Day and Warner Bros. Pat^e News.\nKiwanians See\nFilm Urging\nOutlaw of War\nNeed for initiative of the church\nln a movement to outlaw\" war, \u00bbas\nstressed in a film seen by Kiwanis\nClub at the\"Hume Thursday night\n\"The Church and the Atomic\nAge,'! waa shown by Porter Carter\nof -Polville,' who is visiting district\nKiwanis clubs In his capacity as\nlieutenant-governor of Division 8.\nThe horrible devastation left by\natomic bomb blasts was pictured in\nthe effort to rally mankind, around*\na drive to end all wars. Scenes were\nfrom bomb tests and actual bombing scenes taken In Japan. The picture provoked \u25a0 considerable discussion, theme of' which centred on\nthe need fpr extension of the movement to other parts of the world\nand showing of such pictures behind\nthe Iron Curtain.\n\u25a0 Farewells were said to Lieut H.\nF. Lewis, in charge of the Salvation\nArriiy at Nelson and who is being\ntransferred to Kelowna. He has\nbeen a. member of the club since\nhe came, to Nelson last year.\nA .guest r-was-Frank T. Williamson; new owner, of the Royal Hotel\nln Nelson. Mr. Williamson was a\nKlwanian in Brandon, Man., where\nhe was mayor for six- consecutive\nyears and also served as alderman\nfor several years.\nVICTORIA, B.C., March 28 (CP)\n\u2014 Donald F. Greenhalgh,, 13-year-\nold soh of Mr. and Mrs. F, Greenhalgh died following a heart attack\nduring a basketball practice at\nBrentwood near here last night.\nThe boy was working out with\nteam mates at the Brentwood Community Club hall when he collapsed\noh the floor. He was rushed to hospital, but was pronounced dead on\narrival: \u00bb\nIt has not yet been decided\nwhether an Inquest will be held.\nNelaon   ...,:.\t\nMontreal \u25a0\nOtta-wa    *    \u25a0 . \u201e \u25a0\nToronto ...- \t\n.Port Arthur ____\nKenora     _.\u201e.\nWinnipeg  \t\nBrandon   ...._____.\nThe Pas  \t\nRegina   .\u2022_ i\nSaskatoon  \t\nPrince Albert  \u201e.\n-Medicine Hat .;...._\nLethbridge  \t\nCalgary    _.___.\nEdmonton \t\nPenticton    ,\t\nVancouver _.. ,\nVictoria ...\t\nKimberley   \u201e_\nPrince Rupert \t\nPrince George\t\nSeattle.  __.\nPortland\t\nSpokane ...,..?_____,.\nWhitehorse ;.\n.   22\n. 31\n.- 82\n. 38\n.28\n. 24\n. 22\n. IS\n. 8\n. 20\n. 17\n. 18\n.    7\n. -1\n.     2\n21\n,30\n, 31\n8\n. 27\n. -10\n., 35\n37\n.   18\n48 -\n38 .25\n38   .21\n.08\nMRS, JAMES JOHN8TONE\nDEATH claimed a pioneer resident of Nelsoh last week in Mrs.\nVirginia Holmes Johnstone, -widow\nof the late James Johnstone. Born\nin Blake.ey, Ga., Mrs. Johnstone\ncame first to Fernie where her husband was manager of the Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Company, and oh to\nNelson to ranch on the North Shore.\nShe was active in the Women's Institute movement, and had a variety of interests.\nSI. Paul's Singers\nPlanMusicale\nNelson music lovers will be presented with a pre-Easter program\nof music in St. Paul's United\nChurch Sunday,\nSome 25 members of St. Paul's\nBoys' Choir will be heard ln music\npeculiarly stilted to the lyric voice\nof the boy soprano.\nThe boys will include theirs and\neveryone's favorite \"The Holy\nCity.\" ;    '-.     -\nAlso featured on the Sunday\nafternoon program in solos and\nensemble will be four adult members of St. Paul's Senior Choir,\nMrs. Doris Bradshaw, lyric 'soprano,\nMiss Flora Johnson, mezzo-soprano,\nGary Barnhardt, tenor, add Paul\nHielscher, bass.\nIn accord with former choral\npresentations at St. Paul's this\nmusicale will offer an attractive\nselection from the best in sacred\nmusic.   ':\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\nMrs- T. J. S. Ferguson, organist,\nand choir leader at; St Paul's, wili\ndirect and accompany  the,group\nSunday,.'   , '.'-\".\u25a0\n-     \u2022',, \u25a0*       .- ;  .  ,    '\u25a0     _**\".     . i\nFINED FOR DRIVING\nWHILE ABILITY IMPAIRED\nSigrud - Johnson ol Nelsbn was!\nfined $50 or two months jn jail In.\nCity'Court Wednesday for driving\nwhile ability to drive Was impaired;\nby alcohol March 18. *\nIi* Mi McBrlde, barrister, 'was\nauthorized to appear before Magistrate William Brown for the accused and enter a plea of guilty.\nNorway's Wartime Prime Minister\nCousin Well Known Nelson Oldtimer\nNorway's war-time Prime Minister In exile, Johan Nygaardi-\n- void who died recently In Trond\nhelm,. Norway, af 73, was a cousin of T. H. Hulls, well'(mown\nNelsonlte.\nMr.. Hulls, although he hasn't\nseen his cousin since 1802 when\nthey met ln Quebec shortly after\nMr, Hulls arrived in Canada front\nNorway, corresponded with him for\nsome time and followed closely his\npolitical career.\nThe twd cousins lived about two\nmiles apart In Hommelvlk District\nIn Norway where they were born\nand attended the same school at\nBakken near Trondhelm, Norway\nfor four or five years, about 1888\nIn 1901 Johan Nygaardsvold went\nto Canada and was followed ln 1802\nby Mr. Hulls. They met In Quebec\nfor a short time before going their\nseparate ways.\nMr. hulls cama West first to\nWinnipeg and then ih 1807 to\nCrow's Nest and the following year\nto Nelson where he became a building contractor.\nTO MONTANA '\nJohan Nygaardsvold went to\nMontana where he took a railroad\nconstruoljon contract\nHowever Johan returned to Nor.\nway in 1908'and entered politics,\nbecoming Prime Minister in 1838\nwhen the Social Democratic Party,\nsimilar  to  the  Canadian  Liberal\nParty, was elected to-power at Ujc\ntime when tbe threat of war with\nGermany was upon the country.\nIn 1838 war broke out arid within a few days of the German Invasion of Norway the Prime Min-'\nlater with hli Cabinet was foroed\nto flee the country. With them\nwent King, Haakon VII and the\nCrown Prince of Norway, Olaf.\nThey esoaped to Namsos where\nthey boarded a  British  cruiser\nwhich carried them to England,\nIn   London Johan  Nygaardsvold\nwith the aid of the King, Crown\nPrince and hla Cabinet set. up the\nNorwegian Government in exile;\nForeign Minister of this war-time\ngovernment was Trygve Lie, now*\nsecretary-general of the United Nations.\nLARGEST VOTE\nAt the elose,ot the war ln 1845\nthe government failed to, win re-;\nelection. However, Johan Nygaardsvold, personally polled the largest\nvote In the country. ' '\nA biography of Johan'a life entitled 'Life History of Johan\nNygaardsvold'' written by a Norwegian on the'Prime Minister's\n80th birthday, la one of Mr. Hull's\nmost cherished possessions. Sent\nto Mr, Hull by his cousin personally, It  Is the only volume In\nCanada and one of the few still\nIn existence,\nthe volume has considerable value, Mr. Hulls said In an Interview,\nfor .the Germans during the dark\ndaya of 1838-1840 destroyed every,\nknown copy of the biography which\nwas v\/rltten in Norwegian. It Has.\nmuch historical value.     .\nMr. Hulls is'resldent at 518 Sixth\nStreet. -'\u25a0..-\".-.\nCastlegar Library\nHas 2080 Books\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.-Village com\nmlssloners learned the library bat\na record circulation last year. A\ntotal 5440 .books were Issued, 43T,\nof which went out to Juniors. Thi\nlibrary at thla time has a total o:\n2080 books, while the rest is mads\nup through the travelling library.\nA donation of $250 was granted\nthe library by the Village.\nThe current financial statement ot\nthe parks board in the monthly report showed they had $770.31,\nThe village has ordered 2500 feet\nof galvanized pipe and 2000 feet\nof transit pipe to be used for water\nextension in the village. They have\nalso ordered a ditch digger.\nIt was decided to plaoe parking\nsigns at various places ln Uie village.\nH. L. Crysler was appointed auditor for the year.\nWhite Horse...\nofcourse\/\nDistilled\/Blended and\nBottled in Scotland\n'-','.\".   '\u25a0-.-' \u25a0'' 2e_\u00ab_t_lt_e I\nThis advertisement la not publlahed\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government\nBritish Columbia.\nMrs. K. Keltlewell, Active Here\n45 Years, Celebrates 95fh Birthday\nA well known Nelson woman, who\nhas made this city her home for 43\nyears and who has been active in\nTrinity United Church for many\nyears, celebrates her 85th birthday\ntoday.    .\nMrs.'Kate Kettlewell makes her\nhome with her daughter-in-law,\nMrs. W. G. Kettlewell and grandson,\nDon, and: Mrs. Maud Hanna at 311\nCedar Street.\nMrs; Kettlewell, with her'husband\nand two sons, Walter and Keith,\ncame to Nelson in March 1807, where\nth. family has become exceedingly\nwell known.\nMrs. . Kettlewell  has a  record\nto be proud of In the Women's\nMissionary  Society. She  became\na member and took over treasurer\nduties In 1882. She believes the\ngroup to be the fourth such organisation founded l.i the Dominion of Canada. ' . \\\nThe Missionary Society was affiliated with Queen's Avenue Methodist  Church  of  London,  Ontario,\nover which Rev, i_eohard Gatey officiated. When Mrs. Kettlewell came\nto Nelson  she carried on in the\nsame  Society.  She  was  presented\nwith a life membership and pin,\nDecember 24, 1923.\nKNITTING\nIn recent years she has specialized\nin knitting as she has been unable\nto attend meetings. The Society\nbought the wool and sold her work\nah the year she was 80, the Society\nrealized $85'from Its sale.\nT.iere are probably few women\nin Canada who have held such ah\nactive membership in one society\nfor so many years.\nMrs. Kettlewell was also a member of the Women's Institute and\nwas one of a group who organized\na Fairview Sunday School that met\nin the original Hume School.\nShe was also, In earlier years, active in a W.C.T.U. group and was\nin  the Auxiliary of the  Y.M.C.A.\nduring the years it existed here.\nDuring the two World Wars, she\nfaithfully knitted for the Red Cross.\nMrs.   Kettlewell   believes   she\nhas lived through a most Interesting age, an age In whleh she ean\nrecall   her first phone call, car\nride and telegram, can recall first\nseeing an electric light, first hear-!\nIng a radio and many other recent'\nInventions.\nShe can also tell of the Fenian\nRaids, 8outh African and Russian\nWars as well as the last two World\nWare.\nBesides her only grandson. H.\nDon Kettlewell, she has a son, W\nKeith Kettlewell of Nelson. She is\nthe aunt of R. L. McBride and\ngreat aunt of Mrs. N. R. Jennejohn,\nand L. M. Mcj_r.de, and great, great\naunt of Robert, Billy and Bruce\nJennejohn and Leigh McBrlde, all!\nresidents of Nelson, and the late\nKenneth McBrlde,      '\u25a0\u25a0.'.\nHer youngest and only living sis-,\nU Mrs, Laura Stephens resides.in\nLondon, Ontario. In. many other\nparts of Canada are nieces and\nnephews.        , .\nMrs. Kettlewell's husband and son,\nY\/alter. predeceased her ln 1910 and\n1812, respectively.\nThe Provincial Voters List\nIs. Now Being Revised\n* ''\".;;.'.-\nIf you are not registered you will not be able\nto vote at the next Provincial Election\nRegistration'on the Dominion or Municipal\nvoters list) does not mean wat your name is\non -the Provincial Voters List.\nThe responsibility it YOURS . . .to see that\nyou are properly registered. *\nIF THE CANVASSER HAS NOT CALLED ON YOU\nGET IN TOUCH WITH\nK. D. McRAE\nRegistrar of Voters, Court House\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 1160\n.\nS\nare made belter, smoke better,\n9,^       arc better\nCANADA'S LEADING CIGARETTE\n JARMAN\nTHI SHOE OF\nDISTINCTION\nir Always Smart.\n\u2022 Always  Comfortable.\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n1553 Baiter St.     Phone 895\nfatal Hall\nopened\n>y Bishoj)\nNATAL, B.C. \u2014 Most Rev.\nitartin M. Johnson,: Bishop of\nkelson, officially declared St.\n\u25a0lichael's Church parish hall\nIpen at a ceremony here.\n1 The ceremony was attended by a\nIrge humber of Catholics, and non*\npath'olics.. -,--'\u2022\u25a0..'\nBishop Johnson expressed his ap*\neolation of the work of parishlon*\ni ln Natal and Michel during the\n; few years, and especially Rev.\nher E. Brophy, parish priest,\ncough .whose efforts the building\n1 the new hall was made possible\n.-, a minimum cost..\nSince Father Brophy came to\n-the parish mere than nine years\nago he has promoted the building\nJ of three parish buildings, \"credits\nI to the diocese,\" Bishop Johnson\naald.' The!first was the 8lsters'\nconvent, the second St Mlohae'l'i\nohurch and finally the new hall.\nThe chairman introduced seven\nnen of the parish who gave volun-\n' y labor to the extent of more than\nI working hours each toward the\nllding of the new ball. These in-\nlluded  Mike  Galla,   Albie   Krall,\npylvio Eeghenas, John, Ferchinsky,\n[oe Katrichak, Ettorie Reghenas and\nohn Chala. '  .''.'\nVOMEN SUPPORTERS\nThe joint members of the Catho-\ni Women's League ahd the Mount\nirmel Society were also praised\n: helping to secure funds towards\nhe expense of the hall.\nAttending the ceremonies were\nirlsh priests, Rev. Father Sullivan,\ni. Fa.her Anderson of the Crdw's\nit Pass and Rev; Father Cheevers\nFernie.\nThe hall was open for public inaction during which members ot\ni Mount Carmel Society and the\nV.h.    served    refreshments. . J.\natriehak of-Natal acted as chair-\n. and gave the opening address\njomlng Bishop Johnson and all\ni others tb take part in opening\nhe new. hall.    ,\nsonvenfion Plans\nfor Kaslo-Slocan\nfjnSW DENVER, B.C.\u2014Thomas M.\n: of Silverton, president of the\nflo-Slocan Liberal Association,\nannounced that a convention\nt be called In April io nominate\ncandidate for the forthcoming\novincial election. .\n.ther business to come before the\nastlng will be the election of\nfleers and also delegates to the\novtndal convention.\nh. Leask has returned from tour-\n_' the Arrow Lakes an an organ-\natfon tour.\nCandidates Named for\nCreston Blossom Queen\n\u25a0 > ,:* CRESTON, B.C.\u2014In Creston these days they're talkbg\nabout, the crops\u2014and the forthcoming annual Blossom Fe&\nuvar,which  draws* throngs\nC.E_*L*s Diesels Operate\neach year.\nThe pick of Creston Valley Lions\nClub crop of queen candidates for\nthe festival have been chosen' in\nthe persons of Miss Hazel Botterill,\nMiss Gloria Goodwin and Miss Violet McNeill.\nFOR INDUSTRIES        '\nMiss Botterill will stand as Lumber Queen candidate, Miss Goodwin\nas Apple Queen candidate and Miss\nMcNeill as Wheat Queen candidate.\nThe trio were elected from 10\nelub candidates by the _>ublic here\nrecently. A total of 642 ballots were\noast, with receipts amounting to\n$160. The money will be added to\nthe total festival receipts,\nLions' Club .members in teams of\ntwo handled the public vote in one\nday.\n100 PER CENT SUPPORT\nThe 60-member club has been divided into three teams which are\nswinging into action for the candidates. Each team' is backing one of\nthe glrlsT for the festival crown.\nTeam captains are Art Sutcliffe,\nR. Hood and Orin Plumb. W. Marph-\nbank, festival chairman, and W. J.\nScott, returning officer,, were St the\nballot-counting, alqng with Mr. Sutcliffe, Mr. Hood and H. K. Legg,\nclub president, :\u2022:.\"\u25a0:\nRosslander Wins\nCominco\nPromotion\n. TADANAC, B.C.. - R. F. MitcheU\nhas been appointed .maintenance\nengineer, for Trail operations of the\nchemicals and fertilisers division of\nthe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Ltd.   '\"\u25a0\nThe announcement was' made by\n1. A.* G. Colls, manager of the\nchemicals and fertilizers division.\nMr. Mitchell took over the post at\nthe beginning of February.\nRossland is Mr. Mitchell's birthplace. After receiving his schooling\nthere, he attended University of B.C.\ngraduating as a chemical engineer\nin 1933. In that year he began working in Cominco's smelting department. Later he served in the assay\nand research laboratories tor several\nyears before joining the chemicals\nand fertilizers division in 1040.\nHe was made superintendent of\nthe coke ammonia plant in 1944 and\ntwo years later became assistant\nsuperintendent of. the ammonia\ngroup. In 1051 Mr. Mitchell was\nappointed assistant maintenance engineer of the Warfleld department,\na position which he held until His\nrecent appointment.\n-Mr. MitcheU ia a feUow of the\nChemical Institute of Canada and a\nmember of the Association of Professional Engineers'of B.C. He was\nelected to the school board in 1047\nand is' stlU serving as a member!\nHe ls married and has one son, and\nUvea In Rossland; \u25a0\npilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nhe Highways\nkiiiiiiiiiiiiii     iiiiiiiiiiiiini\nI Revelstoke\u2014AU reads open.\n1 Columbia\u2014All roads open.\nJ Fraser Canyon Highway \u2014Open,\nfavement bare.\nHope-Princeton   Highway\u2014Good\nnditlon. Watch for rolling rocks.\nI Rossland -Nelson    Cranbrook-\nBrow's Nest\u2014Bare.\n[Rossland-Paterson   and   Nelson-\nfelway roads\u2014Bare.\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"TOUR FORTRESS OF\nHEALTH\"\n\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\n\u2022 SUNDRIES\nPHONE'\n1203\nRES.\n894-L\n433 Josephine St.\nKASLO CREEK\nPOLLUTION ENDS\nKASLO, BC. - Kaslo Creek pollution is going to come to an end,\nCity Council was Informed at its\n.meeting here; this- week.\nA letter from' the B.C. Water\nRights' branch advised the Council\nthat Base Metals Mining Corpora*\ntion has been asked to stop dumping\nmine tailings in the South fork of\nthe creek.\nThe Corporation's manager has\ninformed Council that his firm Is\ntaking steps to alleviate the situation. ,\nPayment of February account?\namounting to $2606 was approved.\nCouncil also decided to sell a lot on\nFront Street. _\\. Bate was issued a\npermit to build an addition to his\nhouse and A. G. Edwards was grant\ned a permit to erect a house oh his\nproperty;\nCouncil concurred with action\ntaken at a special meeting of the\nUnion of B.C. Municipalities on the\nHobb's report on education costs.\nEnumerators Busy\nIn Creston District\nCRESTON, B.C., \u2014 Four enumerators for revision of the provincial\nvoters' list have been named for this\narea. They are Mrs. Amy Erickson,\nW. S. McAlplne, Mrs. G. Vigne er.\nand H. H. Taylor.\nAnyone who is missed by the\nenumerators has been asked to\nnotify Roy AUen, government sub-\nagent here. The num! er of residents\neligible to vote has not yet been\nreleased. '\nMI88 HAZEL BOTTERILL\nMISS GLORIA GOODWIN\/\nMen\nFashion Show .\n' TEA and BAKE SALE\nat Civic Centre ,, -\nMarch 26, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m.\n'        FOR RESERVATIONS. PHONE:-\nMRS.' H. LUPTON, 1M0-L, or MRS.R. C. SMORY, 856-R\nTickets to be picked up at Mann's Drug Store\nMonday and Tuesday, 0-11 a.m. and 2-5 p.m.\nand Wednesday 'morning.    .\nMI83 VIOLET McNEILL\n9 PASS ARMY\nDRIVING TESTS\nNine members of the 111th Battery ln Nelson passed tests before\na driving testing team oftNo.. 11\nCompany of the R.C.A.S.C. of Vancouver.\nThe team composed ot Sergeant\nJ. C. L.' Duffin, Corporal J, H.\nTanche, Corporal W. R, ByrneU and\nPrivate S. J. Bylsma brought testing equipment from Vancouver and\nafter putting.the men through rigid\nexaminations granted standing orders to the foUowihg: Maj. E. W.\nWhite, W.0.2 L. M. Amundsen,, W.-\n0.2 E. Smith, Sgt. F. .H. Lipping,\nwell, Lance Bdr. K. M, White, Gnr.\nJ. Denholm, Gnr. H. A. Fleury,\nGnr. T. M. Stevens, and Gnr; J.S.\nHorswill. These tnerr are now qualified to drive wheel types 1, 2 and\n4 which includes jeeps and 15-ton\ntrucks.. .-\u2022-..\ntha testing team has been to\nTrail and is scheduled to go to various points In the Interior with\nVernon the next on the agenda.\nRomanian Held\nOn Illegal Entry     ;'\u25a0'\u25a0,\nBy Trail Police\n\u25a0TRAIL, B.C., March 20\u2014R.CM'P.\nhere are holding Nicholas Ivan, a\nRomanian, who is aUeged to have\nentered Canada illegally in 1048.\nImmigration Department officials\nare due here to return Ivan to Vancouver. PoUce here said Ivan jumped ship in Vancouver, four years\nago. Recently he had been working\nin _Uie Trail smelter but whether\nhe had been in Canada Since 1048\nwas not known. *\n _\u2014\u25a0 *   -\nLACK OF PROPER\nMUFFLER BRINGS FINE\nWiUiam W. Kazakoff was found\nguilty of failure to'have a regulation muffler on his motor vehicle\nIn City Court by Magistrate William\nBrown Tuesday. He was fined $20\nor a month in jaU.\nKazakoff pleaded innocent March\n11 and the hearing waa adjourned\nuntil Tuesday.\nRegulations require that all cars\nbe equipped with an exhaust\nmuffler of a series' of pipes or\nchambers so proportioned and con- j\nstructed as to allow exhaust gases\nfrom the engine to expand and cool'\nto the degree of noiseless explosion\n.Classified Ads Get Speedy Results!\nCRANBROOK, B. Cr-Canadian\nPaciflo Railway, Company's experiment in Koptenay' division with\ndiesel engines is showing excellent\nresults.\nSuccess , Of. the current < two.\nmonths' testing of the streamlined\ndiesels over Kootengy lines .waa re.\nported by David Sheppard, assistant\nsuperintendent for the division, at\nthe March meeting of Cranbrook\nChamber of Commerce,\n: He said careful. check showed\nstriking economies In volume of\nfreight handled, lowered malnten*\nance cost of rolling stock and accelerated circulation of cars.\n' As. a result, complete c'onverslon\nto diesel power would be effected\nin the division over' the next few\nyear*.  .\u2022;_\u2022'.,.\nUNTIDY PUBLIC\n! Main   discussion   at   the   well-\nattended meeting concerned methods of discouraging the public from\ndumping tii) cans; and rubbish \"at\nrandom along highways and secondary, roads, and a committee was\nappointed to investigate legal, reg\nulations and propose methods of\nenforcing tidier habits.\nDissatisfaction   was   expressed\nat .further postponement of plana\nfor construction of a new govern\nment office for Cranbrook, and\nalso at the lack of speolflo Information as to amounts available\nand plans for highway work In\nthe iflstrlct., \u25a0;'':\u25a0:\u25a0_..\u25a0\u25a0      ',   _ft\nPeter Irwin presided at the meet*\ning. Drive to Increase membership\nin the organization is continuing\nsuccessfully.\nW.I.U.C. Favors Bridge\nAf CasUegar, Re-Elecfs A. F.Dunn\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014The annual\nmeeting of t_fe Woodworkers Industrial Union of Canada, certified bargaining agent for many l.ggihg and\nlumber operations ln East and West\nKootenay, reelected A. F. Dunn' of.\nCranbrook as its president and as'\nvice-presidents named Stanley Eb-\ne_lein' and Otto Anderson of Crari-\nbrook, and \u2022 Len, KeUIdr _f Nelson,\nwith Roy Kfetlow of. Cranbrook recording secretary. Financial secretary is Charles Saunders of' Cran-\nbrook, conductor Claude Thompson,\nand trustees BiU Burdenle of Nelson\nand Joe Cormack and A. Sasin of\nCrinbrook.\nDelegates attended from about 15\nsub-locals in the Kootenays and\nheard reports of 50 per ceht Increase\nin organization and a_so in finances\nhandled during the ^year'.. Several\nadditional operations were certified\nfor W.I.U.C. negotiations, and nego.\nthe\nthe\nArt Club Ends\nCourse in Design\nNelson Art Club has held\nfinal lesson In- a course on\nfundamentals of design.\nTwenty-six people of all ages\nwere, enrolled ;in the.course, sponsored' by the dub' to impart an\nunderstanding of) the purpose and\nuse of design In every-day life.\nDescribed as \"completely success,\nful\" by Mrs. A. G. Pentland,\npresident, the course was under\nthe instruction of Miss Enid Etter,\nand Mrs. fyn J. White,\u2022 and\u25a0 was\nin 10 sections.\nThe course may be repeated next\nyear, or an advanced course'may\nbe given..At the start of the.course\nIn January a, few people wishing\nto enrpU.were turned away as* a\nlarger, number could not be given\ninstruction _ucce_sfully, \u25a0'. \u2022\",-.\nA display..of work completed.at\nthe -classeswill be shown at* the\nclub's Spring exhibition,\nSLOCAN PIONEER\nLAID AT REST\nSLOCAN CITY, B.\u25a0:*_.\u2022 - Funeral\nservice was- held in St. Andrew's\nPresbyterian' Church for Peter\nStrand, 83, one of Slocan City's\nearliest residents, who died in Slocan Community Hospital at New\nDenver after a brief illness.\nRev. A. D. McKellar. officiated,\nand burial took place ln. Slocan\nCity cemetery..\nAresident of Slocan. City, since\n1808; Mr. Strand came here from\nMinneapolis, Minn., and engaged in\nmining and prospecting. He was\nborn 'on a. British ship bound for\nNew York. ,\nThere are no known relatives.\nTADANAC, B.C. \u2014 Ores and\nconcentrates received by The Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany of Canada Limited at\nTrail, for the week ending February, 28, 1952 totalled 9212 wet tons,\nof Which 12B3 wet tons were for\ntreatment lh the Lead Smelter and\n1850 wet tons were for treatment\nIn the Zinc Plant\ntlatlons were satisfactorily concluded fa October \\__th individual operators for annual contract renewal,\nW.I.U.S; wages and contract conference to decide on 1052 objectives\nfor, contract renewal in September\nwas set fpr Cranhrook June 8. The\nmeeting Considered' and endorsed\na number of resolutions. Among\nthem was institution of recommendations concerning .hospital' Insurance drawn up by the nbh-pjoliticai\ncommission, and bIbo changes in- the\nWorkmen's Compensation rigtHa-\ntions.^ They, supported fuU civil\nrights for Indians in connection with\nliquor laws.\nOther resolutions endorsed called for construction of the CAtle-\ngar bridge, and support of Mine,\nMill and Smelter Workers as' bargaining agents fer .trail- operations.\nGuest Speaker at the meeting was\nDouglas Gold of Kimberley, secretary and business agent for Local\n651, MM. and S;W;\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii\nSCHOOL TRUSTEE\nVACANCY RIDES\nKIMBERLEY, B, C. - There\nwere no nominations for a two-\nyear municipal trustee office on\nthe' school board left vacant by -\nresignation of M. A. Thomas.\nAppointment of his successor i\nmust be made on recommendation of the Department of Education. ;' --.... ,':.--,\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII\nResults of Poster\nContest, Windermere\nINVERMERE, B. C\u2014Windermere\nDistrict Branch of tha Canadian Legion held a poster competition for\ntheir annual VImy Day dance\namong district school children. The\nwinners were Edna Barbour, Wilmer; Louie Patterspn, Wilmer, and\nEd d i e Paprocke, Radium Hot\nSprings.\nThere-were only seven entries and\nno entries from Invermere pupils.\nMarvin E. Tuhnaciiae of Invermere will replace J. j. Kimm is\nsecretary of'the branch for the remainder of the year. >   ......\nNELSON.DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21 .1*52 ~ t\nTrail-Rossland P-Cs\nNominate Dr. Wright\nTRAIL, B.C.-rDr. C. H. Wright, prominent inl.B.C.\nraigine^nng circles and in Board of Trade and Chamber of\nCommence activities,, is .the unaniipous ^choice of the\u00abTV\u00abil-\nRossland Progressive Conservative;Association aa-its cantfl.\ndate in the forthcoming pro- ~\t\nvincial election.\nDr. Wright won in a close-vote\nover. Mayor E, G. Fletchet, at the\nAssociation's open nominating convention ui Legion hall here last\nnight, attended by 250 people.\nRobert Waldie of Castlegar nom*\ninated Dr. Wright and seconder was\nMrs. J. Huntley Gordon. R. P. Pat-\nton nominated Mayor Fletcher and\nMiss E. Ferraro seconded the\nmotion. '' *\u25a0\n\u25a0RLATFORM SOUGHT\nThe Association also passed a resolution calling tor a Progressive\nConservative convention to draw up\nan up-to-date platform. The convention would be held prior to the\nelection, and would be attended by\nall candidates and one delegate from\neach* riding;\nE. B. Scott, president of the Asso-\nclaUon, conducted the* meeting.\nCreston Hears Two  '\nSchool Bands, Choir\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 A\"half-and-\nhali'**band.concert given by Kimberley . High School and Prince\nChstrles.Hlghf School band and\nchoir, showed progress being made\ntoward, developing talent of young\npeople-in-East Kootenay.  '\nA variety of instrumental and\nvocal offerings were applauded by\nparents and .other interested people.\nThe Creston High School band of\nabout '40. pieces, directed by G.\nKing, and Kimberley band of about\n50, directed by G. Yarwood, played\nmarches, waltzes and medleys. The\nchoir Was directed'by J.\nFesfival's Dance\nPlans Progress\n'' CKE13TON, B.& - Creston's\nBlossom Festival dance committee\nhas mailed Invitations to groups\nwhich; may perform to the coming\nevent.   ,\nInterest In 'the dance section, a\npopular feature of the 1851 festival,\nis* already being shown by some\ngroups.\nUnder the rules, any group ot\nsix or more dancers Is eligible to\nenteri:providing proper, entry\nblanks are to the mail by April 15.\nH. L. Dodd or Dr. T. H. Welhovd\nare handling entries.\nThe program this year will oe\ndivided into three classes: children\ntip to Grade VII, folk dances open,\nand sequence ballroom open.\nIt Is expected a trophy will' be\nposted for annual competition in\neach class.\nCreston Lions' Club\nLines Up Election,\nCRESTON. B.C. \u2014 Election -t>!\nofficers of Creston Lions' Club wiU\ntake place at the last meetipg in\nApril, the executive learned at a\nrecent meeting. Installation will, be\nheld at a ladies'night in May.\nFred MarteUo waa named nominating committee chairman.'\nCreston will play host to the zona\nclubs at the zone chairman's party\nFratrura. in June. .'\u25a0\nYou'll look your best!\nYotfttjf^^^       in a\nCome in and see ow escepttoW\nrange of jacket tweeds in all tha\nlatest weaves and patterns .. .ops\nwoollens and flannels specially\nselected by Johnston for their\neasy drape and fine taiioring\nqualities. Choose a\ngabardine, a flannel\nor a flannel worsted in a\n\u2022 \"-'      - \u25a0 . \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022*-,\nmatching ,or contrasting\ncolour for your slacks. Know\nthe endless satisfaction of\nclothes that feel right and look\nright because they have been\ntailored for you alone.\nJackets *$3S:o\u00b0 <md w\nSlack-*!?95 and up\nNo Matter Where You Live...\nYOU can enjoy the luxury of\nAutomatic\nClock-Controlled Cooking\nTHINK OF IT l! I\nWith o \"MOFFAT ROCKETGAS\" RANGE y6ur dinner Is cooked to perfection\nwhile you ore miles from Home . .>. readyito Serve on yotir-retum . .-'\u2022. Yes,\nyou can cook with every city convenience . . . with never-foilino Rocketaas.\nIt's thefuel for you.\nFor ROASTING\nBROILING\n1 BAKING\nWATERLESS\nCOOKING\nSee the Moffat\nRocketgas Ranges\n^\u2014\u2014s\u00bb.\u2014\u2014_>__\u25a0_____\u25a0\u2014\nPriced from\nft81.75\nIt's Clean - Hi Fast\u2014 and Economical, Tool\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n53* Baker St.\nfflakotd, Ssuadinq, OpplianoL Jlhm.\nPhone 155$\n Mean Baili. .gnu   \u25a0 LETTERS TO   ? Questions.?\nEfi_._tii\u00abh_\u00ab__i Ani-n 32. icnfi '\u25a0 ' -\"\u25a0 ifT?iT-.T T3*   T. T*\\T*T**'\/-\\T_ .'-\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0 ., \"^\nEstablished April 22. IDOa\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper{\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n269 Baker Street, Nelaon, British Columbia\nAuthorized aa Second Class Mall\n,   P,oit Office Department Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PHESS AND\n* THB AJTOII BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nFriday, March ill 13S2 ' i\n' ;,.,'..'\u201e i ' :\u2014___ ! 1_\u2014\nGeorge S. Pearson,\nHis Career a Moclel\nOf Public Service\nRetirement from a career of. public\nservice during which he has labored\nmore in the interests of his fellow-\nBritish Columbians than most men has\nbeen announced by, George S. Pearson,\nHis announcement that he was leaving\nthe :field of politics after 2*4 years was\n, made in the Legislature in the quiet,\nmodest way that those, who have\nknown him accept as characteristic of\nthe man.   \u25a0  - , ,\n_ Sympathy, kindness and foresight\nwere the keynote to the actions of Mr.\nPearson during the 16 years he served\nin Provincial Cabinet posts\", first as\nMinister of Labor and. Commissioner\nof-Fisheries, then when 'the job of Pro-\nvinciar Secretary was added, and\nfinally at the time of his resignation\nfrom the Cabinet in May, 1950, because\nhis devotion to public service had affected his health as Provincial Secretary and Minister of Health and Welfare. To all these offices and to his\njob as Member for Nanaimo .and the\nIslands he brought an unmatched understanding of the needs of the times\nand the people he served.\nLabor legislation he championed\nhas been outstanding in Canada; in fact\nmuch of it has served as model for\nI other Provinces. His extensions of the\nservioes of the.Health and Welfare De-\n* partment are well known. Mr. Pearson\nt has been an extremely useful public\nservant, he has helped to put British\nColumbia in the forefront. When he\nretires as Member of the Legislative\nAssembly he will have the well wishes\nof the entire Province.\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may Ua published ever a nom  <\nde plume, but th'e actual signature of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as\nevidence of pood faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In the waste paper basket\nMining History Interests\nAinsworth Newcomer\nTo the Editor:^\nSir\u2014As a reader of your paper, while\nreading .\"Ancient Scrap Book Uncovered\". I\nwas'wondering if lt couldn't be turned over to\nMr. Joy and a story written on it and published\nin your paper, for the benefit of we (and\nthere are plenty) newcomers from the East to\nyour Province, After all It Is an Interest to us,\nas we saw Oold Fields lh Ontario develop, and\nkhow that this, an undeveloped Province\n(with the machinery Jot to'dayi, holds great\ninterest and future'for us..'\n_'..\u25a0'      MBS. J. W. HOWD.\nAinsworth, B_ C\u00bb     - \u2022\na-\n_.,\nInvesting in Security\nSpeaking at Rochester, N. Y., Health\nMinister Paul Martin said that during\n1951-52 Canada would spend $1300 million on social security. The greater part\nof this will be spent by the\" Dominion:\nGovernment, whose welfare costs are\n\u2022now past the billion-dollar mark; Provincial Governments, lo_al authorities\nand vqluntary agencies will spend the\nremaining $300 million. , *\nThe magnitude of this expenditure\nmay be judged by measuring it against\nCanada's,14 million population. It represents a .per capita cost of close to\n\u2022$100. To put it another way, the average Canadian family is paying out between $300 and $400 a yeaiv-mostl. to\nOttawa\u2014for the purpose of making'\nthemselves and their \u2022 fellow-citizens\nsecure against need. \u2022\nYour Horoscope -\n.   Taking care of details and straightening\nout records should be helpful In the year just\n\u25a0beginning. Push all-your affairs and, have no .\nqualms about the outconie; Born under these '\nInfluences, a child should have many fine\nqualities, witha fine, loving disposition.\nQuestions Wisdom of\nLetting Forest Control   .',\n\u25a0   Go to Outside Capital;\nTo the Editor:     ' ...\nSir\u2014Judging by the letters that have been\nappearing ln your paper, the Celgar* development ls beginning to arouse the interest it\ndeserves, and considerable searching of hearts.\nA'concesslon of this magnitude which, by\nits size, practically constitutes a monopoly ot\nwhat ia \"the greatest natural resource the interior of British Columbia possesses, requires\nthe closest .scrutiny.\nThis proposed plant, situated at the junction of our two great rivers, and where there\nIs an ample supply of power, will,dominate\nthe whole watershed of the upper Columbia\nand Kootenay Rivers as' far as forest products\nare concerned, In fact, it will be to the forest\nindustry very much what the Trail smelter\nis to the mining industry.      \u2022'  ,',,,.-\nFifty years ago we recovered a very poor\npercentage of the values of our ores. Today It\nis very different! even the byproducts such as\nsulphur, which used to go off Into space, are\n'recovered and add to the general wealth.\nIt ls exactly the same story with the forest\nIndustry, To date we have recovered only a\n\u2022 proportion of the wealth that should have rewarded our labors, but this should be altered\nas soon as a' central processing plant ls established; but here the comparison ends.\nThe Trail smelter is both Canadian owned\nand Canadian controlled. It Is true that the\nlargest mines that-shlp ore'to it are owned-by\nthe same company, but they have never refused ore from the smaller independent mines.\nThe smelter ls not a monopoly in any legal\n. sense, but has become so from,the very.slze of\nits operations, and the same will happen with*\nthis, If one may coin the word, proposed \"wood\nsmelter\". - .- *   -.'\nIs lt wise to allow the control of our forest\nIndustry to slip from our. hands? Are not we\nrisking 'much the same situation that exists*\nln Iran today? Protests are being heard trom\n'all parts of the country, Including Parliament\nHill, that we are allowing our natural resources ln raw material to be exploited' for\nfeed for alien factories.\nAfter all, we are still a member of the\nBritish Commonwealth of Nations, and we do\nnot want to creep behind the \"dollar curtain\"\nand become a satellite of the United States,\nwhich, if we are not, very careful, we are\ngoing to do. .','       (..*\n*\"' It also does, not seem wise or even fitting\nthat a concession of this magnitude and lasting\nsignificance should he granted'by a Legislature\nthat ls about to appeal to the voters for a\nmandate to carry on.\nFinally\/in Canada one Is always a little\nehy.'of granting a concession that requires a\n\"public relations officer\" to sell lt to the public. This smacks too much of Washington's\nlobbyists and, mink coats, something we have\nmanaged to keep clear of so far,'\n'      \u2022     R. T. DEANE.\nNelson, B. C,      ' \u25a0_.-'\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not * be published,\nThe.\u2022-la no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILI. NOT BE AN8WBRED\nBV MAIL except when'there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy. .   *\nReader, Trail\u2014Please, print recipe tor chocolate covering on Graham wafers,\nThe best and easiest way to cover -waters\nls to melt a chocolate bar and pour it while\nhot over th'e wafers, Do not allow to boll or\nit will turn greyish.'It ls sufficient to let the\nbar melt until liquid. '\nReader, Creston\u2014What is meant by \"The\nMiracle of the Sun\" and the \"Solar Miracle\n. -of 1-17'.  .\nThe,Miracle of the Sun was reported to\nhaye been witnessed by three children and a\ncrowd of over 50,000 at the Cova da Irla, Fatl-\nma. Portugal. The sun is said to have appeared\nlike a silver disc that the eyes could look at\nwithout being daisied, and it at once began to\nturn like a wheel of fire, projecting in every\ndirection rays of lights with changing colors.\n; It Is raported-to have stopped, then continued\nto revolve, stopped again, and * third time\nthe fantastic fireworks, began. The display\nlasted with intervals for 10 mlriutes. \"Our\nLady of Light\", by Bertha's and Da Fonseca,\npublished by the Bruce Publishing Company,\nMilwaukee, will give you fuller details.\nReader, Rossland\u2014Please print address pf tha\nMaytag Washing (Machine factory,\nMaytag Washing'Machine Ltd., Box 2038,\nNo. 7 Hangar, Sfovenson held, Winnipeg.\nReader, Salmo\u2014Please give me the address of\nLever Brothers' head office in Canada,\nLever Brothers, Ltd., 399 Eastern Avenue,\nToronto 8,\nLetter to tlie Editor . . *\nUtters may be published over a nom de plume, but the actual name'\nof tha writer must bo given to the Editor as evidence of good faith.\nAnonymous letters go In the waste paper basket,\nNo Other Form of Wealth But Security\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\nProm The Nelson Dally News, March il, 1942\n* Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Bradshaw have returned from four and a half months' sojourn\nin the Bast., .   i\nFifteen senior matriculation students who\nleft an afternoon class recently to go skating,\nand who next morning were refused admission\nto the school, have since presented apologies\nand are back 'at school, stated L, V. Rogers,\nprincipal, at a School Board meeting.\n',\u25a0\u00bb YEARS AQO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, March \u00a31,1927\n1 A meeting waa held in the Canadian Legion building Thursday night, when the Boy\nScouts formed a football team called the Orioles, for the Juvenile League, James Bates\nwas in the chair.\nBobby Burns was appointed \".captain, Albert Jeffreys vice captain, James Bates secretary, and L. Kltto treasurer..\nThe lineup of the. team includes Albert\nJeffreys, Joe Vingo, John Wood, Boh Bell, Bob\nBurns, Jack' Burns, 3. Smith, James Bates,\nLottie Kltto, Harry Sttrzaker and John Dolphin.\nBOY EARS AGO\nProm The, Nelson Pally Miner, March 21,1902\nThe City workmen this ~week completed\nthe sidewalk on Latimer Street leading to the\nnew High School, and laid crossings at Baker\nand Falls .'Streets,; Victoria and.Falls Streets,\nand Victoria -and Hendryx Streets, Work Is\nalso progressing rapidly on the bed of Cottonwood Creek. * ' Z'Z *'\nMarconi left for Cape Breton tonight to\ncommence construction of his wireless station.\nHis contract with the Canadian Government\nwas, signed today. ,\nTo The, Editor:\nSir \u2014 Among the forums of Some,\nthere is one dedicated to the Emperor Trajan, which, since Rome fell\ninto the hands of the Barbarians,\nhas become a sanctuary for neglected cats,,These animals become the\ndarlings, not of the Roman children,\nnor of the shambling priests, nor yet\nof a good-natured .police force, but\not a handful of aging English ladles,\nfrom whose dainty fingers dally\ndrip the bits of liver and lights to\nthe comfort of the gnashful throng\nln the ruins, All around clanged and\nroared the., familiar bedlam of a\nmodern city,.Out of the midst of the\nforum rose a stark still, column, with\na.faultlessly lettered plinth, and the\nspiralling bass reliefs of the Emperor's victories ascending the shaft,\nThe cats fed, the grey ladles smiled, their hats were of the kind that\nforbade nodding, and presently they\nwent their ways. And there you\nhave a picture of two thousand\nyears, of htlman history.\nNelson, we know, lacks a forum,\nand its only genuine columns are\nln the Nelson Daily News. We have\nln fact, still a long way to go before\nwe can call ourselves \"citizens of no\nmean city.!' But we have an editor,\nas kind to catA walling In the wilderness as the' dear old ladles In'\nRome, And of course, In the Daily\nNews we also have a forum, again\non paper, but what should we do\nwithout It? .\nAhd perhapsy we should blame\nsome of the wailing upon the nature\nof the wilderness is itself. In.no\nother way can I account for my\nfriend, Mr. Griffith's becoming so\nsuddenly scornful of security. Surely he' would not count himself\namong those who believe that anything done by the State Is free? Or\nthat, security ln Itself ls demoralizing?\nHe should have those cats of Trajan. Tho curves of affection with\nWhich they greeted their benefactors were sleek and smiling.'As for\ntheir morals,-after making the due\nallowances for feline technique, a\nfiner body ot cats would be hard to\nimagine. One could not but pity\ntheir poor relations, condemned to\neke out a mere mousey existence ln\nthe human Jungle of the surrounding, streets. 'Mr. Griffiths' letter\nreads lika that of a man who has\nbeen goaded. I respect the forth-\nrlghtness of his expression, but I\nmust ask him plesse not to throw\nout the'bath with the baby-water.\nIt is possible that some ot the\ncauses of plans for social security\nare tn danger of being forgotten?\nSomewhere back In the dirty thirties It was reported In the London\nTimes, that nearly ninety per cent\nbf those men of .Lancashire who,\nsought to get in out of the economic\nblizzard by joining the army, were\nrejected as physically; unfit. Again,\nln fa3\u00bb, when the Canadian volunteers began. to mustet, thousands\nneeded to be trained to eat \u2014 three\nmeals a day.\nMen like Rountree, and Beveridge,\nand J. M. Keynes, however,, were\nnot to be diverted by the ephemeral\nblessings promised'by war, The British Health Plan was evolved as the\nnecessary compliment to the British\nCapitalist Lack-Plan: the one, the\nresult of conscious thinking; the\nother, of an' unconscious way of\nliving. Beveridge simply demonstrated In his report that It would be\nfar cheaper to put a roof over the\nnation's health than to leave it exposed to the vagaries of the 20th\ncentury economic climate. What was\nquite beyond calculation, of course,\nwas just how people would behove\nIn the new environment\nHUMAN ELEMENT\nNow in all our meditations of a\nPress Cortiment\n'   WHY HE VVANT8 IT      <\nMaybe the fat King Farouk wants the Sues\nCanal as he has outgrown his bathtub.\u2014Brandon Sun.\nIt's Been Said\nAdversity Is sometimes hard upon a man;\nbut for one man who can stand prosperity\nthere are a hundred that will stand adversity.\n\u2014Thomas Car lyle.\nStrip teaser Llll St. Cyr names the 10 most\n\"non-dlvorceable\" men ln the United States\u2014\nthose whose wives would be silly to part company with them. But if any one of them was\nwed to Lili, we wonder how long he would\nput up with her public and generous display\nof her feminine features!\u2014Windsor Star.\nGems of Thought\n.' MARRIAGE\nA happy marriage is a new beginning of\nlife and a new starting point for happiness\nand usefulness.\u2014Arthur P. Stanley.\n\u25a0   *. .  *     * \u25a0\nMarriage should improve the human species, becoming a barrier against vice, a pro-\n- taction tb woman, strength to man, and a\ncentre for the affections.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n.  _.   ':'_*   ,* .\nThe happiness of married, life depends\n' uporf making small sacrifices with readiness\nand cheerfulness,\u2014John Seldeh.\n*..    \u25a0*     *\nIt you would have the nuptial union last\nlet virtue be the bond that ties it fast.\u2014Nicholas Rowe.        \u25a0'*?''..\ngeneral nature.ylt is always necessary tb moke the effort to remember\nthe people who are always overlooked: the quiet, ungrabbing people whb'make up the mass of every\nland where the laws.enjoy respect\nHut look what happened in Canada when butter was freed from rationing, The consumption dropped.\nPrices rose later. SO, in England:\nIllness, from being a condition to be\ndreaded, changed Into a national\npastime; and the drug trade must\nrival advertising and armaments as\nartificial means of keeping the pay-\ncheques circulating. Incidentally the\nManchester Guardian recently reported that the manufacturers of\nvitamin preparations were \"amazed\" when they saw the figures, for\nthe rate of deterioration of their\nproducts, , No one was reslly to\nblame; but the public wealth was\nbeing squandered, with little change\nin public health to show for (t\nWhat we see being demonstrated\nby. the British Health Plan ls not\nthat such plans are Utopian, and\nbound to fail; or that they will always be so cumbered with'red-tape\nas to be unworkable, but-that In a\nprofit-seeking society, there exists\njust below the level of thoSewho\nare In the habit of. helping themselves .to profits,' perhaps in moderation, a. further strata of avarice\nthat will stop at nothing this Side of\nbloat \u2022   -\u25a0 . .  '--'\u25a0\u2022;'.\nWe are, doubtless, also witnessing symptoms of the desperate nature of the Injure done to the human soul by total wor. Coming so\nsoon after those barren - years, the\nbumper profits-reaped from wholesale destruction are not likely to be\nforgotten. At the same time, everybody knows that a continuation ot\nthe orgy can only be carrying us\nnearer to the point of total disaster.\nTherefore the very word Security,\nsounds today like a peal of bells, It\nstops, almost as unexpectedly as it\nbegan; leaving only the overtones\nOf hope, Bnd the undertones of doubt\nto roll on through our troubled\natmosphere.\nTHE PROBLEM   '\nBut before we dismiss social security as being undesirable or even\nunattainable; let us also consider\nthe problem Its designers were, and\nare attempting to solve. Years ago,\nthe 'late J. M, Keynes set out the difficulty more or loss in these terras.\nOur problem^ ls this, he says: how to\nput everyone to work, and Bt the\nsame time increase the national\nwealth, It sounds silly, doesn't It?\nOne thinks straight away there mUst\nbe a*, catch somewhere. And there,\nis. Hitherto, to continue with the\nquotation, all.the great civilizations\nof the past have succeeded ln putting ..everybody to work in the following ways: pyramid building,\nsinging dirges, cathedral building,\ngold-mining, and war. In plain\nterms: everybody sltjves,' but the national wealth,'\", elatlve to'the* effort,\nactually shrinks; as it Is obviously\ndoing so today, as the world's labors are being diverted out of the\nscales of security and into the scales\nof the war machine. The situation is\nmade the more immeasurably\nalarming as we have to contend with\nnot only the labor of human hands,\nbut that raised to the power by ap*\npiled Invention,\nIt should be easy enough to see\nthat Pharoah's labor problems on\nthe great pyramid were no more\nthan a weekend picnic compared\nwith ours. And all he needed to\nhave done was to relax, and distribute the cornl Because ..there Is no\nother form of wealth but security.\nMeanwhile, Mr. Griffiths, please\nlet us hear no more of your.womb\nto tombs. Those Bs bother' me.  \"\n\u25a0    G. A. BUTLING.\nENJOYING THEM8ELVE8 at a party given In their honor In a\nBrooklyn, N, Y, department store are (left te right): Roberta Reriny,'\n3; Albert Magee, 7, and Tommy Palva, 3. They made headlines recently when they plunged from windows and miraculously escaped\ndeath. Roberta fell six stories and said she \"felt like a bird\". Albert\ndived out of a fifth floor window yelling \"Geronlmol\" while Tommy\nsurvived a fall from his apartment 14 stories above the ground.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian'\nBusiness Spotlight .\nBrazil Tackled Housing Shortage\nWith lowering Apartment Blocks\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nBrazil ls in the midst of a boom,\nIf an expansion that has been going\non for 30 years can be called a\nboom. She also has Inflation. On a\nrecent trip bur party heard many\nstories about both.\nThe background is that Brazil\nproceeded for many years at a relatively easy pace; with an agricultural aristocracy controlling most of\nthe wealth. .'{\u25a0\"..\nNow she ls experiencing fast industrialization and growing pains.\nHowever, ' traditionally she Is a\nstable .country of calm people who\nhave shown capacity for working\nout their own problems.\nBrazil's development, though\nshared by the capital, Rlo de Janeiro, centres about the energetic\ncity of Sao Paulo, Sso \u25a0 Paulo's\ngrowth apparently started with the\nmovement to Its area of coffee plantations from the \"mined out\" areas\naround Rlo.\nNow the plantations are moving\nfurther South and West into the\nstate bf Parana, and this seems to\nforecast that the present surging\ndevelopment will spread throughout\nSouthern Brazil.\nThe situation has created its quota\nof new* Industrial borons and millionaires. \u2022''\nHere are some of the boom and\nInflation stories:   .\",,'.\nFirst, housing. Some 25 years ago\nRlo and Sao Paulo had virtually no\nbuildings of mora than three or four\nstoreys. Today their panoramas are\nfeatured by* hundreds of tall, white\nbuildings, 10, 20, SO storeys high,\nLarge number of these are apartment buildings and many are sold\nby 'Individual apartments, We were\ntold that a builder or financier will\nstart a building, sell the apartments\nat the. blueprint stage, and through\na combination of down* payments\nfrom the buyers and financing, will-\nbe out of the project with his profit'\nbefore the building is finished.\nDon't feel too sorry for those who\npaid high prices for, the apartments.\nBefore the building is finished, they,\ntoo, may have resold their apartments at another profit.\n$27,000 FOR SUITE\nWe met one young executive who\nIs paying $27,000 for an apartmentl\nof moderate .sized living room, one!\nbedroom, dining-room, kitchen and!\nbathroom. One man told us h'el\nbought a home In 1030 for $7500 and!\nsold it in 1950 for $75,000. Another]\nhome, beautiful, but by no means!\nan estate, Is being offered at $450,-r\n000. We visited one home oni\ngrounds about 200 feet by 450 teetf\nbought 45 years ago for $15,0\nwhich would bring $1,000,000 todo;\nfrom apartment builders.\nWe were told, and figures seen\nto bear it out, that the cost ot IlvJ\ning has advanced 300 to 400 per cent)\ntn seven years, and the cost of foot\n500 percent, *\nA one-family home rents for $21\nto $300 a month for those who cai\nafford it, If they can get It Then\nare'virtually no heating costs. Fooi\nseems to cost less than in Canada!\nbut the wages of the mass of peoplef\nare lower.\nUnskilled labor gets the equlval-J\nent of $100 a month. Stenographer,\nget $175 a month, and If bll|nguan\nup to $260. A maid or cook is avail!\nable at $30 a month, though house;\nwives complain that help ls-Bff\nWhat It used to be.     '\n\u2022Banks pay three to four per cehfl\non deposits and six per cent on deposits of six months or more. Bori\nrowers pay the banks up to 12 pad\ncent, the limit allowed by law, foi]\nsmall loans, and eight per cent fa\nlarger .ones. Real estate mortgage!\nrun'between 10 and 12 per cent,\nOttawa Police Grab\nLottery Tickets\nOTTAWA, March 20 (CP) \u2014 P.\nlice announced the seizure of\nsecond botch of lottery tickets anoj\nsaid Ottawa may be the Canadls\nheadquarters   of   a   country-wldaj\nlottery ring. j\nSeven parcels containing' 71\nbooks of tickets, and stubs ana\nmoney orders amounting to almost\n$1000 were confiscated by poltcaj\nyesterday\t\nPolice said the parcels contains\nticket books for the Irish sweepl\nstakes, the Army and Navy drasf\nahd  the  \"Brockvllle playground\ndrawing.\"\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\u25a0\u2014      By Jimmy Hatld\nToday's Bible Thought\nNever in human' history has so\nmuch provision been made for the\npoor, the sick, the unfortunate, the\nunemployed, the aged, the orphan,\nland it has not impoverished us,\nJllessed la he that eonslderoth the\npoor, the Lord will deliver him In\ntime of trouble.\u2014Ps. 41:1.'     \u25a0 -\nMaybe Amy's explanation is\n' right, but it'a a queer thing to\nme that none o' her children lit\non their feet when they fell.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n\u25a0uy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way.\n\"No weak tasteless tea for\nggrman,.._& wants ftnteikty\"\nHOW THE MEN GO FOR THIS RICH, GLOWING\nTEA! Every bit as much as the womenfolk. Which makes\nCnritorbury n family affair...FIRST CHOICE in\nthousands upon thousands of homes in Western Canada!\nThat full, vigorous flavor makes tea a nev kind\n' of pleasure. It buoys you* up, keeps you going. And\nit's all because this is no run-of-the-loaf tea.\nCanterbury's the very \"pick\" of the WORLD'S FINEST\nTEA GARDENS. One package will prove it.\nTAKE CANTERBURY TEA AND SEE I\nOfi\/y Csritedufg\/myou such tint to.\narfanftdwyiM'ce\/\nI. SAFEWAY\n \"It Pays To Biiy Quality\"\nMEN'S Am*l___\nWine Gillie\nHeavy neolife soles\n\u25a0 Sizes 6 - 1;T   -  \u25a0 \/.-\ni-   :mmZ\nThe most valuable thing we have\n: to offer costs you nothing .\u2014\n-FIT*.    .;,   '..\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHiON\nEstablished 1902\nJfaWoVd\nGomimttees Lined XJp\nFor Sqroptiri^\nSoroptimist Club of Nelson is busy with preparations\nfor the big 19th annual conference of Western Canada region\nof American Feder ,tidn of Soroptimist Clubs which will be\nheld in Nelson April 17, 18,\nEagles7 Auxiliary\nNominates Slate\nNominations for officers of Ladles'\nAuxiliary to NelSon aerie, Fraternal\nOrder of Eagles, were received at\nthe organization's meeting Wednesday night.\nThe meeting was conducted by\nMrs. Ruth Proudfoot, president, and\nincluded, a round table discussion\nand social.\nNominated were Mrs. Sarah Mannings,.president (acclamation): Mrs.\nEdith Smith and Mrs. Barbara Kid-\nwell, vice-president; Mrs. S. Terzian\nand Mrs. Kidwell,.chaplain; Mrs.\nSmith, treasurer; Mrs. Iva Santor\n, and Mrs. Terzaln, conductress; Mrs.\nRose DeFerro, Inside guard (acclamation); Mrs. Mary DeFerro,\n.outside guard (acclamation).\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nCOAL\nW TOW\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nNelson. B.C.\n11 lira ii ii i\nWeekend\nSpecials\nBELLAMY'S\nLl CQUORICE\nALL-SORTS\nFresh in today from England. Enjoy thern at their\nbest.\nFriday and\nSaturday Only\n30c the Vi lb.\nThe   Easter   Bunnies   Are\nReady To Welcome You at\nRANNIGER'S\nAll Sizes From\n3 Inches \u2014 3 Feet\nYOU'LL BE SURPRISED\ntaste the Difference at\nRANNIGER'S\nCandles Ltd.\n466 BAKER ST.\nNelson, B. C.\nI_ m ____________________________________ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 -Isories. A.pattern (or a I\nIII I....I I I I I llpf'nted right in the book.\n19 and 20.\nThe conference will be,attended\nby delegates from the .20 clubs in\nthe region, largest in territory in the\nFederation, covering the four West,\nem .provinces, Its theme will be\n\"Soroptimism\u2014What It Means to\nYou in Working for the World We\n.Want.\"\nThe event was held in Kamloops\nlast year, _md has been held in\nNelson previously, The regional\nboard will meet here April 16 and\n17, \u2022\nMIS? GILKER CHAIRMAN\nMiss Jean Gllker is conference\nchairman, and her committees are\nas follows.\n\u2022Finance\u2014Miss Hellen Sloan and\nMiss Eileen Mackenzie.\n\"Entertainment and program \u2014\nMrs. J. H. Coventry, Mrs. G. A.\nButling, Miss, Mackenzie and Mrs,\nW. A. Tickner.\nReception, registration and information \u2014 Miss Leona Boss; Mrs.\nHildred Hughes, Mrs. C. W. Tyler\nand Mrs. Thea Gibson.\nHousing, transportation \u2014 Miss\nAlma McDonald and Mrs, R. H.\nBradley.1' \\\n\"Decorations \u2014 Mrs. Hughes, Miss\n3owwl WhssdsA.\nEASY EMBROIDERY\nPICTURE NEWS! Embroider this\nneedlepainting, then add ready-\nmade ruffles to make the girl's skirt.\nGay, pretty\u2014perfect for a little girl's\nroom! *'....\nFrame or line this picture for\ngift, Patter 615; the transfer IS 15x19\nInches. *\u25a0*'\u2022'\u25a0;\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nIn coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Nelson Dally\n~r\nBetty , Freeman and Miss Irene\nL_ughton.\nHalls, meeting places, public ad.\ndress system\u2014Miss Dorothy Nor-\nfleld and Mrs. C. F. Blakeman.\nPublicity - Miss Emily Hamson,\nFavors and flowers f- Miss Mar-\njorle Whitmore, Mrs. Thelma Moon,\nMrs.-D. M. Sample and Mrs. A. E.\nRannlger,\nCatering \u2014 Miss Sloan and' Miss\nFawcett.\nUnderstanding\nOf East Needed,\nCleric Tells Club\n\"The World We Want\" was the\ntitle of an address given by Rev.\nCanon W. 3, Silverwood at a meeting of the Soroptimist Club of Nelson.-       . ,\nCanon Silverwood based his\nspeech on a book by, William .Douglas and also on Dr, Lauback and\nProfessor Blackett,- who have written-that people, outside Western\nrange of thinking and living and\nespecially people on the borders of\nthe Soviet Union, do not see the\nworld as Westerners see it.\nCanon Silverwood pointed out\nthat if people are to have the kind\not world they Want they should\nconsider the specifications laid*\ndown by Judge Douglas. He outlined\nthese points as:\nFirst, the West must give up all\nideas that the continent of Asia can\nor ought to be Standardized according to American specifications; second, people must try to understand\nthe Inner tension of these Far Eastern people from religious, traditional and political views; third, the\nWest, America specifically, with all\nits surplus food, must find means\nof sharing her surplus with the\nworld; fourth, if Asia Is to be saved\nfrom Communism, the West must by\ndeed as well as word show people\na*true Christian attitude, \"we must\ngo to the East with humility, not\narrogance and condescension \u2014\nmindful of the great debt for the\nImmense cultures which \"the East\nhas given us.\"\n8ECURITY VITAL\nAbove all, security was Important, Canon Silverwood said, for\ndemocracies would never be found\nin the balance of armed might but\nin the balance of political power.\nThe Far East wanted tbe good\nthings ot life, Mr. Silverwood pointed out, and the desire for freedom\nand justice was the powerful motive\nbehind the revolutions that sweep\nAsia. _,,\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n\"If we are to secure the world we\nwant, let us not forget it is lh the\nrealm of Christian idea and practice\nnot in the realm of military power.\"\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., Nelson,\nB. C. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. '\nSuch a colorful roundup of handl-\ni work ideasl Send twenty-five cents\nnow for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog. Chqose your patterns\nfrom our gaily illustrated toys,\ndolls, househol.d and personal accessories. A pattern tor a handbag ls\nC.W.L. 8PONSORS PARTY\nWYNNDEL, B.C. - The Catholic\nWomen's League held a card party\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Liens.\nPrize winners were Mrs. Mountford\nand Mr. Campbell.\n. Fall may be favored by some, but 'Spring is still the\nmost popular season for weddings.\nDENIM will, step out for\nSummer. The fharming- little dance dress th_t is shown\nis of denim and both the\nbare-top. bodice and separate sleevelets are trimmed\nwith white Venice type lace\naccented with sparkling\nrhinestones. The skirt has\nwide boxy pleats and is full\nenough to be worn gracefully over a crinoline.\nInvermere LA. Holds\nSt. Pat's Tea, Bazaar\nINVERMERE, B.C., \u2014 Tea tables\nwith a St Patrick motif, centred\nwith bright yellow daffodils were\nfeatured at the first Spring eVent in\nthe Lake Windermere .Memorial\nCommunity Centre here.\nThe annual St. Patrick's tea and\nbazaar held by the Ladies' Aid to\nTrinity United Church attracted a\nlarge patronage from district rest\ndents. ' .\nTea arrangements were in charge\nof Mrs. Barbara Laird, Miss Bever-\nlC Lockhart and Miss Lynn Tunnacliffe. Mrs. A. J. Dobbie was in\ncharge of home cooking and Mrs. E.\nE. Tunnacliffee and\/Mrs. Gallagher\na sewing stall. Mrs. Jack Payne\nlooked after a bean guessln . contest.\nGuests were welcomed by Rev.\nand Mrs. A_.A. Burnett. Cashier was\nMrs. E. Johnson.\nNatal Bride-Elect\nHonored at Shower\nNATAL, B.C, \u2014 A Miscellaneous\nshower was held In I.O.O.F. hail\nhere for Miss Alice Clvldln of\nNatal who will be an Easter bride.\nGuests presented gifts to the\nbride-elect, and games were played.\nWhist winners were Mrs. W. Mi-\nhalynuk, first, and Mrs. J. Myles,\nsecond, and bingo winners were\nMrs. A. LetaSy, first; Mrs. M. Balint,\nsecond, and Mrs. F. Rybachuk,\nthird.\nSpring Tea Planned\nFlans for a Spring tea were made\nby members of sewing circle of\nLadies' Auxiliary to Nelson aerie,\nFratenal. Order of Eagles, meeting\nat the home of Mrs. S. Maco.\nMembers spent a social evening.\nWindermere L.A.s Buy\n$850 Unit f&r Hospital\nINVERMERE, B.C. \u2014 An Important addition to the\nequipment of the Ladv Elizabeth Bruce Memorial Hospital is\n*to be donated througH the efforts of four district Ladies' Aid\ngroups.\nA modern* anaesthetic -machine\nwhich permits the inhalation of the\ngases ether, oxygen,.nitrous oxide,\ncarbon dioxide and cyclopropane\nwill be of great value in Uie operating room of the . hospital - This\nmachine is to be Imported from the\nUnited States at a cost of about $856.,\nA similar machine la in use at\nVancouver General Hospital and it.\nla a popular machine among\nanaesthesiologlsts. Apart from permitting more extensive surgery to\nbe carried out in the local hospital,\nthe machine will also be used for\nmaternity work. It may be used for\nresuscitation and haa an emergency\nauction valve. Its installation at the\nlocal hospital would put the operating room facilities on a' par with\nany other, hospital of comparable\nsize.\nA generous donation toward the\nanaesthetic machine has already\nbeen raised by the Windermere\nJunior Ladies'*Hospital Aid at tbe\nfashion show. Edgewater Hospital\nAid and the Senior and Junior Aid\nat Invermere will aU assist ln\nfinancing the project\nStudy Book Read\nTo Creston W.M.S.\nCRESTON, B.C - A study book\nwas rea_ by members of Trinity-\nUnited Church Women's Missionary\nSociety meeting at the home of\nMrs, W. J. Schlerer. Mrs. Hicks,\nMrs, Watts and Mrs. Johnston read\nfrom the book, and members joined\nin a discussion. , \u25a0      *\nMrs. Jones, a visitor, was welcomed, along with; a member, Mrs.\nE. Patterson, who has been at the\nCoast\nKinette Club\nTo Collect Recipes\nArrangements for collecting recipes which may be used in publication of a cook book were made by\nNelson Kinette Club at a recent\nmeeting,\n\u2022 The plans were discussed' at\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. E. L.\nFuller, with Mrs. R. E. Evans as co-\nhostess.\nCOLD, RAIN 0* SHIN!\nTHAT'S VI-TONE   .OR  YOU\nChosen from IRENE'S\nYou Will Look Your Loveliest\nIn Ah Easter Ensemble\n\u25a0;' Blouses (Nylon) ;-$4.95 to $7.95\nHats -Suits - Long or Shortie Coats \"\n* GALL IN TODAY ''   '\nPhone'SO        IRENE'S S69 Wa'd St*\nNelson Social\nPHONE 144\nAnd with the vernal season's arrival,   a   number   of   pre-nuptial\nevents are being held and planned\nfor the weeks to come.'   >\"'.-..\n,.'\u2022--'\u2022\nLEADER HONORED . . , Miss\nWynn Valantine, who will become\nthe bride of Leslie Piatt, April 10,\nwas honored Wednesday night at a\nparty given ; by her St. Paul's\nC.G.I.'i. group at the home of Mrs.\nTed Swendson, With Mrs. Verna Lapointe assisting. During-the combination \"open house\" and shower,\nthe girls'gave Miss Valentine articles for a sewing Icit, an. C.G.I.T.\nleaders presented her with a sewing\nbasket. Miss Valantine Introduced\nthe new leader, Miss Mary Yeardye.\n.'..*.\"*.-\u25a0\nTO KELOWNA . . J Mr. and Mrs.\nAllan Barton, 1014 Hall Street,' will\nleave today to visit' Mrs. Barton's\nparents\/Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Carew,'\nin Kelowna, for a few days. Mr.\nand Mrs.- Carew are former residents\nof Nelson. I-\nIN HOSPITAL ... Mrs. F. L.\nBeggs of Blewett, who underwent\na major operation recently in Trail-\nTadanac Hospital, ls progressing.\n...\nWESTERN STYLE .'. . Members\nof SL Paul's United Church Couples'\nClub engaged In' old-time dancing\nThursday night. The event is an annual one tor the club.\n...\nBACK FROM COAST ;. . Mr.\nand Mrs. Robert Foxall, SOD Second\nStreet, returned Thursday from\nVancouver where Mr. Foxall has\nbeen convalescing for several days.\n;\u25a0-.\u00ab. \u2022.'\u25a0*,\u2022 \u25a0-.\nAT TRAIL EVENT ... Atteilditig\nthe annual meeting and banquet of\nWest Kootenay District, Registered\nNurses' Association of B.C., In Trail\nWednesday night were a number* of\nmembers of Nelson chapter, They\nwere Miss Nancy Lee, Mrs. C. R.\nHiggens, Mrs, Agnes fraser. Miss\nGwen Clark, president; Miss Flora\nMcLean, Mrs. Edith Van Maarlon,\nMrs. Robert Emory, Miss Eleanor\nVulcano, Miss Kay Brown, Miss R,\nHornett, Miss I. B, Field, Mrr, C. W.\nA. Barwls, Mrs. B. Florib, Miss\nMarjorle Whitmore, Miss Dorothy\nMorr, Miss B. Pepper, >Mrs. L. Canty,\nMrs. J:- Weir, Miss Jean McVicar,\nMiss Margery ' Young, Mrs. A.\nMurphy and Mrs. M, Hunter.\nWYNNDEL, B.C. - Mrs. Thompson was hostess at a card party at\nher home. High scorers were Mrs.\nCooper and Mr. Kirtzlnger, and Mrs.\nMountford and Mrs. Campbell took\nconsolations.\nJUDGING TOUGH\nIN THIS EVENT\nNA1AL, B.C. \u2014 It was anyone's\nguess who would be winners at the\nannual Si. Patrick's ' masquerade\ndance ot Nata|-Mlchel band-\nMore masked couples than ln for-'\nmer years took part' In the grand\nmarch, and judges Mrs. .Joan Percel-\nlox of Michel, Stan Musll of Elk\nValley and Lloyd Phillips of Fernie\nhao a' hard1 job ln choosing* winners.\nThey were: Mrs. Janet Sanderson\nof Michel, as an old fashioned lady;\nMrs. F. Tlerney. of Natal as an In\ndlan prince; Mrs, J, Brown of Crow's\nNest as an Irishman; Mrs, Helen\nGuzza of Michel as a bearded lady,\nT. Krall of Natal as a Swiss and\nMrs. J. Brown of Crow's Nes'. as an\nIris.! colleen. '\nFruitvale Couple\nMarried 37 Years\nFRUITVALE, B.C, - Long-time\nresidents ot Fruitvale, Mr. and Mra.\nW. Hepburn celebrated the 37th\nanniversary of their marriage re.\ncently. Their daughter, Mra. Fred\nCullen, arranged a family dinner\nin their honor.\nMr. Hepburn, 80, wu bora in\nNorwood, Ont., and his wife, 76, was\nborn in Russell, Ont. They were\nmarried at Chestervllle, Oni\nBefore settling ln Fruitvale ii\nyears ago, they went to Vancouver,\nback to the Prairies and again to\nB.C., engaging ln farming for many\nyears. They have another daughter,\nMrs. Frank Halifax, in Fruitvale, *slx\ngrandchildren, and three great\ngrandsons, Mr. Hepburn served as\ntrustee of St Paul's United Church\nfor many years, and Mrs. Hepburn\nwas first president of both United\nChurch Ladles' Aid and Women's\nInstitute.\nTemperance Efforts\nOutlined for W.M.S.\nNAKUSP, B.C \u2014 Work of the\nB.C. Temperence Leagua in connec*\ntion with a liquor plebiscite which\nwill be held at the coming provincial election, was outlln. d for United\nChurch Women's Missionary Society\nat Its March meeting at the home of\nMrs, George Keys.      '.'\/\"\"'-\nMrs. E. C. Johnson spoke on the\nLeague's objectives.\nMrs. H. Hainsworth spoke on faith\nduring the devotional period.\nDaily Bath Essential\nFor Your Cleanliness\nBy JOAN BENNETT\u2022 ;\nStandards of eleanlirfess change. Our ancestors dldn.\nhave to pay a fortune te cleaners, or worry over the coal\ndust from factories. Unless we're careful'we can get out of\nfashion in this as in other ~~\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY,'MARCH 21, 1952 -5\nNew Denver Group\nMarks 31st Birthday\nNEW DENVER, B.C., - The 31st\nanniversary of the founding ot the\nLucerne temple, Pythian Sisters,\nwas marked at a social in K.P. hall\nhere. \u2022 .  '\nA birthday cake, made by Mrs.\nEve Balbirnie, past chief, was cut\nby Miss Dora Clever, charter member, Miss Elizabeth Nelson was presented with a silver cup by Mrs.\nRandi Anderson, chief, and at. a\nrecent meeting Mrs. Frances Nelson,\nwho has left for Calgary, received\na sterling spoon.\nJames Draper, T. R. Flint, Mrs.\nAnderson and Miss Clever were\nspeakers. A- display of work was\nstaged by the degree staff ot 16 with\nMiss M. H. Butlin.\n0AUL Wp. With.\nTnaJticuL Wxvdin,\nthings.\nWhile no fellow human wilt I\nshun us because [\nof an old hat,\nlet our ideas of\ncleanliness data [\nback    a    mere\nfew  yeara  and\nthe    sad, \"sad;\nstory of adver- j\ntlsements .turns!\nup to be true, j\nNot   only [Bra\nwa   left  alone, j\nbut   no   one1\ntells  us   what's,\nwrong.\nToday's standards of physical\ncleanliness  are  very  high.\nThey\nmust be. The work we do and the\nrush itt which we live makes us get\ndirty, faster.\nThere are no pretty words to help\ngloss over these paragraphs. And\nit's far easier to read general advice\nthan to wait for the best friend who\nnever speaks. Just'one, blunt sentence first. Don't take lt'for granted\nthat this part of the book Is meant\nfor Sally Sinklesmlth; check yourself brutally and honestly.\nCleanliness starts Inside. It begins\nwith your mouth.. You dont put\nfood into a dirty dish; don't put it\nin a dirty mouth. At home, at work,\nbrush your teeth at least twice a\nday; every day. If ydu smoke, a few\nmore brushlngs are advisable. A\nclean firm toothbrush, a good dentifrice, and correct rotary brushing, with a minimum ot two minutes for the job, are essential.\nYou know your body's normal\ntemperaturt-418.6 degrees f. Tfqu\nknow what would happen to perishable food If lt was stored in that\ntemperature., Well, lt happens to\nthe food you eat too. Luckily It\ndoesn't happen as quickly, since our\ndigestive system is built to convert\nmuch of the food to body tissue.\nBut the body is not built to store\nleft-overs. I overheard a very able\ndoctor say that all the great \"doers\"\nof bur world had good elimination,\nI don't know how-factual he was,\nbut I do know (and so do you) that\nt head that doesnt think, a face\nthat.doesn't glow, a body that doesn't live' vigorously.   .\nA DAILY BATH\nEveryone in our civilisation\nneeds * dally bath. I needn't Hat\n111 of tha causes of dirt from outside\nsources or get any more biological\nabout our own pores tossing out\ntheir daily wast*.\n, A dally bath may not hava been\nnecessary 80 years ago. It may not\nhav* been necessary ln the slower\n(and less demanding) Europe of\nyesterday. BUt it if necessary for\nthat \"clean look.\"\nThe four requisites for a -cleansing bath are: warm water, plenty\nof hand soap, a rough washcloth, a\nsoft but good brush, and a vigorous\napplication of all four,\nA once over lightly with soap,\nwater and cloth will NOT'produce\na clean body. Her* ls an order of\nthe bathl Try it fbr two weeks and\njudge its effectiveness for yourself.\nli- While you are scrubbing your\nteeth at the washbowl, let comfortably warm water Into th* tub. The\nwater should at least reach your\nribs when you sit in it. Pin up your\nhair. .\n2. Before you climb ln, wash your\nface, neck, ears. Ah\u2014ah\u2014remember\nthe BACK of your neck; up there\nby the hairline, and right under\nyour jaw-lip*. Rinse thoroughly.\nDry your face, put:a little cream\non your face and neck, then cllitob\nInto the tub.\n3. Lather and scrub your arms\nand chest with a soft body brush.\nOlve an extra second or so to your\n-elbows, Rinse.\n4. Lather and scrub your.back\nwith a soft body brush (preferably\na long-handled one). Rinse.\n5. Lather and wash th* soft fleshy\npart of your torso \u2014 stomach,\nbreasts, buttocks, thighs. Rinse.\n8. Lather, and scrub your legs\nwith a soft body brush. Rinse.\n7. Scrub your heels, ankle bones,\ntoes, and th* soles of your feet with\na little toughy ot a Hand brush.\nRinse.\n- 8. If your house can afford the\nwater and you can afford the time,\nempty th* tub and, with a soap-\nfree washcloth, splash j;our entire\nSECRET OF SUCCESS\nNEW NEW DRESS hu that old\nold secret of feminine charml See\nthat handspan waist, the full-circle\nskirt! That neckline, those buttoned\nsleevesl And hear th* rustle and\nswish of that petticoat! A concoction\nno beau ean resist!\nPattern R9153: Misses' Sin* li,\n14,16,18, 30. Sis* 16 dress 4ft yards\n39.inch; V, yard contrast; petticoat,\n3 yards SB-Inch. ..\nThis easy-to-us* pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(36c) ln oolns (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, ear* of Nelson Dally\nNews Pattern Dept, Nelson, B. C.\na stomach that isn't clean produces body with fresh water, from the tap.\nTEA 0\/iiBS,\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PUN\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nTh* House of Furniture Values\"\nPHONE 118 - NELSON\nAffianced Couple\nHonored at Party\nFRUITVALE, B.C., - A party for\nMiss Gloria  Webster and Mervin\nJackson who will be married Friday .\nwas held in W.I. hall here, with\nwhist and dancing on tb* porgram.\nMusic was played by Mrs. R. K\nLarsen; Wynn Campbell and Alex\nWebster, with dance calls by Herbert Bailey, and supper wu served\nby Mr. and Mrs. Dave Purdy, Mr.\nand Mrs. Fred Tull, Mrs. Bailey and\nMrs. Pat Pleated. Th* honor guests\nreceived many gifts.\n. Miss Webster was also honored at\na miscellaneous shower at the parish\nhall. Miss RoSalle Webster and' Mrs.\nStanley Walsh won at games, and\nMlsS*Merle Gordon and Miss Lucy\nWebster played piano, duets, Miss\nWebster received a corsage of\ncamellas, and gifts in a decorated\nbasket. Mrs. Frank Gordon and Mrs,\nRobert Davis, hostesses, were assisted by ' Mrs. Jule 1_wis, Mrs.\nGeorge Metcalfe and Mrs. Bailey.\n\u2022Canadtm\niwaraeiL\n:use\nDOMESTIC\ni-ftan\njargr\nioflier\nibtsni\nThese stunning coats ore\nnothing short of terrific!\nYou'll be impressed with\ntheir good looks,\ndistinctive styling,,\nhandsome fabrics and\ntheir simply-elegant fit.\nFrom famous makers - to\nyou, just in time for\n> Spring, Easter\njand after enjoyment.\nWi'\n\u2022\"\u2022aeiM* *\\\n 6 *-r- NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 3.1. 1952\nCONTENDS KIDS TAUGHT\nHOW TO REAR PARENTS\nEDMONTON, March 20 (CP) \u2014\nLiberal leader J. Harper Prowse\nsaid Wenesday a course being taught\nIn Alberta schools teaches children\n\"howl to bring up their parents.\"\nMr: Prowse told the Legislature\nthat a textbook used ln Grade 1\nand entitled \"Growing Up\" encourages children to criticize their\nparents. The provincial Liberal\nleader said \"someone has gone haywire\" and contended the course\ncould lead to \"a lot of trouble.\"\n... SOMETHING NEW In prophets Is this witch-doctor In Durban,\nSouth Africa. With Hie ..Id of his headdress\u2014which could bean antenna Into the future\u2014he labelling Hollywood director. Irving Levin,\nwho will win the'Various awards In the film capital. (And while\nyou're ln_he prophetic mood, bub, how about telling us Who Is going\nto win the King'* Plate? Or the Grey Cup next season?\u2014Central\nPress Canadian. ,;'\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP,* B.C. - Mrs, J, O.\nHarper, who spent an extended\nHoliday ln Calgary, guest of Mr.\nHarper's*mother, Mrs. J. F. Harper,\nand also visiting her daughter, Miss\nRuby Harper, who ia nurse-in-\ntrainlng at the Holy Cross Hospital,\nhas returned to her home. >\nMrs. T- Mitchell has left for a\nvlalt to TralL\nMr_ Walter L. Maxwell has left\nJot Vancbliver and will attend the\nannual meeting of the Canadian\nCancer Society. ,    _ .    .\nMiss Alice Bartch, Burton School\nteacher, was the weekend guest of\nMiss Viola Doerksen.\nMra. J. Parent, Jr., accompanied\nby her daughter, Judy, left for\nPenticton where they will visit\nMrs. Parent's sister and brother-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Acker-\nJMU.\nMr. and Mrs. A. M. Barrow left\nfpr Spokane, accompanied by their\ndaughter and son-in-law, Mr. and\nMmEdwin Humphreys who were\nenroute to their home in Windsor,\nOntario. \u25a0 ',.\u25a0'   '   '-','. i   .\nMrs. Harry MaxweU left for a\ntrip fo Vancouver. >. '\n' ^Attending the golden wedding an**\nnlversary celebration of Mr. and\nMrs. T. W. Harvey were their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr, and Mrs.\nT. Harvey of Trail and their young\ndaughter, Gloria. Mr. and Mrs. Joe*\nLandreVlll* of -lew Denver and\nMrs. FlprenceNelioh of Vancouver.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nW. - G. Armstrong of Silver Falls\nFarm has left for Medicine Hat to\nvisit Mr. and Mrs. G. Armstrong.\nHalvar Hanson and Oscar Scar-\natade have left on a trip to Vancouver.\ni    Jack Kennedy of Nelson was a\n. weekend visitor here.\nMr*. Rose Shaw and daughter\nj Carol Lynne, who have been visit-.\n\u2022 Ing the former's parents*. Mr. and\n1 Mrs. F. Pelle for the last month\n. have left for their home ln Merritt,\nB.C.\n\u25a0 . : :\u2014I\u2014ii \u25a0'-.\nOntario To Pay\nMunicipal Taxes\nTORONTO, March 20 (CP) - The\nOntario government will, break\nlong-established tradition by paying\nmunicipal taxes on its business and\nadministrative offices In some > 300\nOntario centres, Premier Frost announced today.\nThe premier, who Is also' provincial treasurer, said in his annual\nbudget, address to the Ontario Legislature that the publicly-owned\nHydro-Electric Power Commission\nof Ontario and municipal commissions also will pay municipal taxes\non their lands and buildings. He\nestimated the cost to the province\nat $2,000,000 with a similar amount\nfor hydro. -,-','- U-zsii \u25a0\nThe $2,000,000 cost rank<i_ low\namong- the expenditures included\nln Ontario's first 1300,000,000. budget\nBut, in a press conference, the \"premier said it made Ontario the first\nprovince in Canada to pay municipal taxation on Its offices. ;\n, For the coming year, the premier\nforecast ordinary , expenditure of\n$304,208,000 and revenue of $304,-\n288,000.: Biggest' single spending department \\yould be education\u2014$12,-\n418,000. Most revenue would 'come\nfropi the (provincial, treasurer's de'\npartment\u2014$161,1.4,000 with the big.\ngest sources corporations\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 tax of\n$88,000,000 and liquor profits of $36,-\nooo.Ooo.   ,.- -:.-\u25a0: \u2022 *'..'-'. i'U . ._;.-i\nRossland Notes\n\u25a0 Miss Anne Rowe, was'surprised\nby a number of her friends, on the\noccasion of her birthday.\"Games,\ncontests, and.music,were enjoyed.\nROCHDALE, England (CP) - A\npoliceman stopped a woman wheeling a baby-carriage ln this Lanca-\n' sidie. town when he noticed the\nsprings of the carriage were weigh-,\ned down. In it he found* 36 pounds\nof lead stolen from the roof of a\ncivic building. . r\nOslo Cheerfully\nFaces Deficit\nOSLO (AP)-The city of Oslo\nestimates cheerfully it will take a\n$1,540,000 beating for its pains In\nstaging the sixth Winter Olympic\nGames.   ,-.' .\"-.'\nArnljot Eng, secretary of the city\nfinancial department, said that's all\nright with Oslo.\n. He explained to a reporter the\nNorwegian {\/capital will get its\nmoney's worth.in.two.ways: world*\npublicity and the future use of the\nilg sports Installations built for the\nGaines. \u25a0\u25a0:\"      . .--   '\nThen, too, there ls the money\nspent in. Oslo shops ahd Hotels by\nthe .big influx of. visitors. There is\nno firm estimate on that _mount\nyet, but Norway is still fighting, its\nway back from the lean years'of\nthe war and can use all tbe foreign\ncurrency it can get.\nEng said the city will be around\n11,000,000 kroner ($1,540,000) ln the\nhole when the Games are over.\nIt spent 15,000,000 kroner ($2,-\n100,000) on preparations and expects to get. back about 4,008,000\nkroner ($560,000), mainly .profits\non ticket sales for the various\nevents. Looking at tho sunny side,\nEng Said in an Interview:\n'By putting on these Games Oslo\nhas established itself as one of the\nworld's big Winter sports centres.\n\"The actual deficit, we reckon;\nwill-be paid back ln a matter of\nyears by continued use of the facilities we built for the Games.\n\"We now have a new ice hockey\nr___-Jordal Amfl. We've got a\nmodernized . Bislett Stadium, the\nHolmenkollen ski jumping hill\nwhich will draw thousands ih future year*, and a ski centre at Nor-\nefjell. which* will attract' foreign\ntourists with hard*currency.\"\nWynndel Notes\n\u25a0 WYNNDBL, B.C. \u2014 Mr, and Mrs.\nE. A. Hackett are holidaying with\nfriends at Cranbrook.\nH. Curtis is in charge of the\nIntermediate room' of the local\nschool, replacing Miss Cotton.\nDan Colonel of Salmo was a\nweekend visitor here.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Crane returned to Savona after visiting the\nformer's mother, Mrs. R. Crane.\n6. Payette, who has been visiting relatives at Vancouver, has re.\nturned home.\nMiss Norma Gregory returned\nhome from Calgary after a.visit to\nfriends.  ...\nThe evening of the 17th; March\nwas celebrated in the hall with a\ncommunity social. Games for the\nchildren were '.held while adults\nplayed court whist and crib. Winners were Mrs. Musser and Lome\nUrl; ..consolation, Mrs. M Hagen\nand Arne Andestad; crib winners,\nCarl Carlson and A, Fletcher;\nDancing followed with R. Andestad,\nArne Andestad, M. Hindley. and\nMra W. J. Abbott supplying' the\nmusic.\nBring warm, glowing color to your walla with'\nlovely, washable MIRACLE WALL TONE. Just\nmlxwith water,, .onecoat cover* mostaurfaces,..\n. one gallon does th* average room. Choose\nfrom lustrous, deep Vogua colors or soft pastel\nshades...ASK FOR FREE FOLDERS ON\nLOVELIER HOME COLOR HARMONY.-  -\nTh* Modern Oil and Resin Wall Finish\nMARSHALL-\nSOLD \u00bbY\n132-P\nNAKUSP HARDWARE\nNakusp, B. C,\nPhone 4R\nB.C. Supplying\nNew Zealand, Potential Newsprinl\nExporter, Favors Buying Canadian\nBy J. C. GRAHAM\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nAUCKLAND, N\u00ab Z. (CP) ^Interests associated with a large private,\nnewsprint project maintain that\nNew Zealand s future Is as a newsprint-exporting country, . but the\nNewspaper Proprietors' Association\nhas declared Itself in favor of continuing to buy from Canada rather\nthan relying entirely on local production, * - .*'\u25a0..-\u25a0       \"\u25a0' \u25a0:' .,*.,- \".-\nHenry L. Cullen, president ot the\nCanadian Overseas Paper Company\nwhich, supplies about a third of the\ncountry's newsprint, recently visited New Zealand.\n\"We are' Interested in ;.. learning of your plans for* pulp and\npaper Industry,\" he said.\" \"They\nseem good, but lt would be very\nwrong 'to Wy on your own resources entirely.\n\"If you rely on one source, you\nare liable to| the full effects of all\nthe hazards that threaten it\u2014fires,\nstrikes and financial trouble. We\nhope that New Zealand will always\ncontinue to draw on Canadian mills,\nwhich have been a dependable\nsource for 50 years.\n\"If this Canadian lifeline la broken. .'.'., |t will be both difficult\nand expensive to obtain newsprint\nat short notice in an emergency.\nNewsprint production ls a long*.\nterm process and our program cannot easily cope with rush orders.\"\nEXPERTS SURPLUS i\nDavid Henry, managing director\nof New Zealand Forest Products\nLtd., largest private forest company\nin the Dominion, said New Zealand\ncould not absorb much more than,\n40,000 tons of newsprint a year.\nThis was only two-thirds of the\ninitial output of the plant for which;\nhis company was seeking a licence.\nIf another 50,000 ton, plant using\ngovernment forests waa established,\nthere .would be an immediate surplus, bf at least .0,000 'tons for export.     \"-.'.-,\nNewspaper proprietors would be\nable to build up stocks from local\noutput against the h\"arda Cullfn\n(eared, might threaten the Press.\nTho, local product would also be\ncheaper, than that from abroad.\nR. D. Horton, president of the\nNewspaper Proprietors' Association,\nreplied that tbe newspaper industry\nIs not prepared to sacrifice the.security of 'imported supplies, and - in\nany-\u25a0\u25a0case has long-term contracts\nwith Canada which it intends to\nhonor.   ...\n\"The Association has declared\nthat Its members will support the\nestablishment of newsprint manufacture by purchasing, si substantial proportion of their requirements from a local mill,\" he said.\n\"They are not prepared to rely\nwholly upon the'production of one\nmill, which would be vulnerable to\nall the risks mentioned by Mr. Cullen, They cannot regard Mr. Henry's suggestion that two mills be\nImmediately established as a convincing reason 'ter modifying their\nresolution.       . ,,\n\"We have always maintained the\nnecessity of continuing importations from Canada, which has established the largest and most efficient newsprint industry in the\nworld.\"   ,   .\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nRabbit Alcoholic Disappears After Cure . .\nSPOKANE, Wash., March\n(AP) \u2014 The Chronicle today\ntold of a pet household rabbit.:\nnamed Harvey who got drunk;\nby mistake, passed out, 'developed the habit, took the, cure,\nthen disappeared.\n\u25a0 \"It's true,\" wrote reporter\nBob Emahiser. \"If no names are\nmentioned it's purely out of\nconsideration for Harvey's own-\nen,who didn't quite know what\nto do when they had a confirmed alcoholic on their\nhands.\"     *\nHarvey, It seems, lapped up\na misplaced bourbon and soda\nat a card party here and hit\nthe skids fast He was out cold\nbefore the last guest was gone.'\n1 The rabbit, a 1951 Easter present for a five-year-old  girl,\nwouldn't eat after that until he\nhad a drink first, Emahiser\nwrote. An attempt to efect, *\ncure at home didn't work.\n\"After, Harvey nibbled five\nholes in the rug, they decided\nhe would have to go,\" th* account went on.     '    .\nThey-took Harvey to a farm\nnear-Addy, Wash, and the report came back later that Harvey was doing fine. He was\nacting like all the other rabbits\nand apparently lost his taste for\nbourbon. One night, he Just\nplain vanished.\n\"The Spokane family Is going\nto get another little rabbit for\ntheir girl,\" Emahiser wrote.\n\"And the first time he gets\nfried, that's exactly what will\nhappen to him\u2014he'll get fried,\nin a pan.\"\nVANCOUVER, (CP) -*\u2014 ..British\nColumbia is rapidly becoming' one\nof the key suppliers of tungsten for\nthe Western' world..\u25a0->\nTwo mines already producing\ntungsten, at least tour more are\nbeing developed to start operating\nas soon as possible, and many\nproperties are being Investigated,\nMbst btthe tungsten-for North\nAmerican industry once came from\nthe. Orient. With these, supplies, cut\noff, the price has almost tripled to\n$65 a short ton unit and defence industries are snapping Up any tungsten available.\nDoubling    of    productlqn    of\nCanada's biggest mine, at Salmo,\nB.C., 300 miles east of here,. Is\nexpected by Spring. A 250-ton mill\nbeing run fer the Canadian Government Is being enlarge, for the\nowners, Canadian Exploration Ltd.\nto make a total capacity of 600\ntons of ore a day,\nThe second producing mine Is the\nRed Rose of Western Uranium hear\nHazelton, 450 miles north of here,\nwhich is shipping to Britain.\nBlack Diamond Tungsten Ltd., expects to start underground work this\nSpring at a site near Atlln Lake,\n000 miles North of Vancouver,\nAlong the, Alaska Highway, five\nmiles north of Mile 701 in the Yukon, The Yukon Tungstep Corp.\nLtd., Is developing a deposit.\nAnother' property being developed is' on the Stikine River, 40 miles\nsouth of Telegraph Creek, ' \u25a0'\nBritish Columbia, and Yukon\nChamber of Mines reports properties ore being investigated all over\nthe province in a search for this\nstrategic metal. :\nJoint Attack On\nF-M Suggested\nLONDON, March 20 (Reuters)\nA conference of European countries to consider a joint campaign\nagainst foot-and-mouth disease, was\nsuggested In-the House of Commons by a Conservative member,\nAnthony __!_.\nHe said the disease Was believed\nto be brought to Britain from the\nContinent by starlings. He said It\nwas common to several European\ncountries,\nFell suggested setting up \"a sort\nof international fund for the express\npurpose of seeing whether this disease can be tackled at its source.\"\nSeek Kinder Word\nFor lll_gifjma.es\nLONPON (CPIJ-A British report\ndn illegitimacy suggests that.\"natural child\" might be a bett'er'-term\nfor children bom out bf wedlock.\nNearly all names how used, the\nreport notes, transfer to the children tho stigma caused by. their\nparents' conduct.\nThe descriptions \"illegitimate\nchild\" and \"bastard\" seemed out\nof date, and \"love child\" was hardly\nsuitable. Although no name was\nentirely satisfactory, \"natural child\"\nwas perhaps the best of those suggested.\nThe report was drafted by a Joint\ncommittee of the British Medical\nAssociation and the Magistrates'\nAssociation.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIMIIIIIII\nCHARGE REDUCED\nVICTORIA, Bid, March 20 (CP)\n\u2014Leslie Marlow,, young Victoria\nmotorist, was found innocent on a\nmanslaughter charge, by an assize\n^ourtjher*;W*dqesda,y. T.\n;' He waifjttnil giiHtjfon a danger-\nbus drlvlhl->cfiarge ahd f ejhanded\nin custody for' sentence at the end\nof the assizes.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBaptist Minister\n','By bT_L'%_M'..''\u25a0\nCanadian* Press Star\/ Writer\n\"HONG KONG, March 20 (CP) \u2014\nRev: Don A. Cunningham of Three\nHills,; Alta:, freed Sunday by the\nChinese Communists, has joined his\nwife and family on a nearby Island\nand now is recuperating from his\nordeal.\nCunningham was escorted to the\nLuwo frontier pest 32 miles North\nof here by Communist guards and\nturned over to British frontier police. He arrived without advance\nnotice after 11 months ln jail at\nLuchlen, in Szechwan Province of\nWest China..  ,,-       *     ,_\nThe Baptist missionary was the\nlast Canadian serving the China\nInland Mission in the Interior bf\nChina. About 60 other members of\nCanadian Protestant missionary\nfamilies\u2014mostly   of   the   United\nChurch of Canada\u2014still are there.\nRev, R. J. Rowland Butler, acting overseas director for the mission, said it is \"against China Inland. Mission policy to allow missionaries to speak publicly lest they\njeopardize the future of others still\nin Communist hands.\"   .\nSeventeen or \/IB other China Inland Mission staff, not Canadians,\nstill-arpjn China.\nButler said Cunningham and his\nfamily plan to sail 'for Canada\nApril 10,\nCanadian officials here said that,\non the whole, Canadian Protestant\nmissionaries in China are jailed but\nnot otherwise maltreated by the\nReds.\nGENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER Is\nshown taking the salute from an honor guard' of\nGreek armed forces on his arrival at flllnlkon\nairport In Athens. The general had Just completed\nan inspection tour of Turkey, which; together, with\nGreece, recently Joined the N.A.T.O. defence system.\u2014Central Press Canadian. --\nLate Brides Face\nThreat of Fine\nMILTON REGIS, Kent. England\n(CP)\u2014Wayward brides-who can't\nget to tho altar on time worry\nsome British vicars.\nOne Milton Regis vicar, Rev. R.\nA. F. Parsons, is so annoyed he\nthreatens to charge extra any time\na brMe is more than 10 minutes\nl\u00abt*.\nTime is important* because many\nclergymen schedule *three or four\nmarriages In one afternoon. One\nvicar, annoyed at a bride who was\nso late the next couple missed their\nhoneymoon train, decided on stern\nmeasures: \u2022\" **,   '.'\u25a0*,\n, He put late-comers at the end of\nthe queue. One bride so penalized\nwilted through three other ceremonies before her turn came. Since\nthen brides in the parish have been\nstrictly on time.\nBUDGET MONDAY\nWINNIPEG, March 20 (CP) -.\nPretnler. Campbell announced today\nthe provincial budget will be presented Monday-night\nThe premier made the announcement after the. Legislature had\ncompleted study of $40,099,606 in\nestimated expenditures for. the\n1052-53 fiscal year.\nBay of Fundy's New 1 War Ferry\nSAINT JOHN, NJB., (CP> - A\nspecial car ferry has been designed\nto cope with 30-foot tides in the\nBay of Fiindy'and avoid the expense bf building high wharves. The\nnew vessel, a unique development\nin ferry service history, will have its\nown built-in ramps and land on\nbeaches.\n. The idea for the novel craft came\nafter the New Brunswick Government commissioned a father-and-soh\nfirm of Vancouver naval architects\nto survey the'province's ferryboat\nsystem. The firm's younger member,\nRobert Allan, Jr., conducted the\nsu_vey.   -  \"'\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0 -\u25a0 -,.'-   '\nWhen the plana are completed;\nthe vessel will probably be built in\nNew Brunswick .or Nova Scotia. In\naddition, to the British Columbia\ndesigning, the wood, for the hull is\nexpected to be Douglas Fir from\nthe West Coast,\nThe ferry, to be Used on a three-\nmile rout* between the mainland\nvillage of L'etete, Charlotte County,\nand Deer Island, will replace a scow\ntowed by a power boat. The scow\naccommodates only four cars. In the\nbusy Summer season reservations\ndays, and even weeks, ahead have\nbeen necessary.\nTO CARRY 14 CARS\nPlans for the new ferry call, for\na craft 02 feet long and eapabl* of\ncarrying. 14 automobiles with their\npassengers. Two diesel engines, with '\na pair of propellers at each end,\nwill push the vessel along at a 10-\nkhot clip i\u2014 . fast \u25a0 enough to buck .;\nFundy's strong ,tldea. \u2022 .'. \u2022\nAvoiding .extensive wharf con- . i\nstruction   or  landing stages  In a   \u25a0\nhigh-tide area by', .using beaches, aa\nterminals * brought up the problem, 1\nof propeller placement and ramp   ']\ndesign. This h*s been'solved by the\nVancouver architects. The ferry will*\nsimply land on the beach at each\nend of Its route and the special ramp\nwill be lowered, enabling cars to be\ndriven off and loaded^       '\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0 .*.'\u25a0\n, Mr. Allan says; the beaches Involved are \"made td, order\" forth* Jd*.\nThey are covered with th* right\nkind of gravel, haye,the proper\ngrade, and because of the tidal currents . are   kept  free  of '\u2022 marine\ngrowth. \u25a0 \u25a0;\u2022 , \".. \u25a0]\nCost of the ferry is estimated at\n$125,000.\nIf the experiment proves successful, lt may be extended to other\nroutes in the province's ferryboat\nsystem where similar conditions\nexist\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nClassified Ads Get Speedy Results\n.v^mmmz'-iJ\nThis .advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by tht\nGovernment of British Columbia. -.',-    Y\nYoar dollars ean answer humanity's call for..\nThousands of lives are saved each\nyear by the timely transfusion of blood and\n\u2022 plasma. Hospital patients, mothers\nin childbirth, victims of accidents;\nthey live who would have died.\nBesides its day-to-day service, Red Cross has\nthe added commitment of providing plasma\nfor our armed forces and must meet   -,\nstockpiling requirements for civil    .\"\ndefence and national emergencies.\nIt needs funds, as well as blood,\nto expand this, one of its most\nImportant services to Canadians.\nThe work of mercy never ends,\n$5,222,000 is needed!\ntills Is flit Mtmtirt wllllf snd. fic\u00bb ysif thi icimtini\nIt ipprmi h iiiitirt at Mi imlttlm tintieiit\nNelson, Phone 316\n U. 8. C0A8T GUARDSMEN on the cutter Courier, the se*qolnq;\nbroadcasting station for the. Voice of America, prepare to launch the\ncaptive balloon which supports the vessel's transmitting antenna, fhe\nballoon, 35 by 69 feet, Is held \"captive\" by means ofa-wlnch-operated\nlino through a hatch opening In-the centre of the flight deck.\u2014Central\n.Press Canadian. '.-\".,'-.--\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0,-; - _-A\nplaces Blame For Grave Mistake\nOn B.C. Department of Education\n| VANCOUVER, March; 20 (CP)-\nhortages of $0000, In suburban\nllchmond School. Board funds were\nBURNETTS\nBmemd\nFttN 0 ON   bRY\nGIN\n' Because Burnett's is an\nEXTRA DRY (unsweetened) Gin. you can add\n> r-At-jeaye out\u2014sweetness,   when   mixing\n. drinks, and suit every\nIndividual taste.\nBe a wise host-\nserve Burnett's.\nNertHme\nbuy.\nIBURNETT'SI\ns advertisement is not published oi\nllsplayed by the Liquor Control\noard 6. by the Gov\u00abmm*iit' ol\n_\u00ab_.Columbia. \u201e_\nreported.today tolloWng sh'.auditors'investigation, \u25a0>;-.'\u25a0\n' The' repbrt of the auditors said\nthe funds had;been misappropriated\nby S8ryear-old Wallace' Gibbs, former school board secretary;'who\nwas dismissed Jen, 27\nGibbs, secretary pf the board for\nsix years,: has confessed, to misappropriation of funds, the auditors\nreported fo the'.'school- board; -.:.!\n- The report-said the mtsused'funds\ncame j: from R.C.A.F. tuition fees,\ndental clinic, tees, text book rentals\naijd charges to service clubs:who\nused school rooms for meetings.\nA systematic check of the books\nshowed Gibbs used duplicate deposit slips and receipt books ln\nhandling school funds.'    '\n$iodo PAiDTBAcX*:,' ';'';.''.-.\nHe '\u25a0 has repaid: the - board .$1000\nand a:Bonding company will tepla'ce\nup to'$.000 In the'board's funds.\".\n. Municipal. Clerk- R. C Palmer,\nwho ls acting school board secretary, placed some.of the blame on\nchanges rnnde by the department of\neducation. , . ,\n'This could never have happened\nif the department of education had\nnot brought in a ruling ln April,-\n1949, which.sallowed municipal\nschool boards to handle their own\nfinances,\" he said.\n\"In our case It was a very grave\nmistake,\" he added.\nGibbs, the auditors' report said,\nmisappropriated the funds between\nApril, 1049, and January, 1952.\nCOMMAND\nCHANGE FOR PATS\nOTTAWA, March 20 .(CP) _*\n\u2022Command - of * the *.'ist>- Mttillon.\nPrincess Patricia's* Canadian Llgttj\nInfantry, is changing* hands, Ip\nKorea;  '      ,   .- -.-; ;,-,.     ..'- :;;, '\u25a0''...\nThe Army i. announced ' tonight\nthaf Lt'Cbi; Norman Wilson-Smith,\n.5, formerly .of Winnlpegi; 1$ Waving the Patricias to become head\nstaff officer at headquarters of the\nComonwealth division in Korea.\nHis Job will be.taken,by.'tt-Coi:\nJohn Ralph Cahieroh, 37,\"*,former\nHalifax barrister now commanding\nthe 25th Brigade's reinforcement\ngroup In Japan :,\"\nThe reinforeefn... JoJ> will * be\ntaken b. L .iCpfc Gustave. Oliver\nTaschereau, DlS.O., 39, of Quebec\nCity;,who will leav*-sho'rjly tor\nJapan from Valc'artler, \"Que,\"   '\u2022\"\"\n'U-Col.. Wilson-Smith is taking\nUie divisional \"staff Job as general\nstaff officer, grade one, originally\nslnted.to go to __,-C6_ D. *vj. Cuh-\nnlngton,- Calgary, but unable tb go\nto Korea because of Illness.\nWKii.H Cerfaln\nBwiily Muni, red\nRumor Bloodstaine d\nRobe Found on Trail\n. \u2022*\u25a0 ''K|yj,.-_yi^'. -j^jTssuj:\" J*l*roh SO\n' (CP) \u2014 Deputy Sheriff James O.\nBarker said to (lay he bellevesithat\n, Mip.\"-.\"H.MBuMis Lemay, missing\n\u25a0 \"MontreaiVbeauty, \"was th* victim\n' of- :\u2022_;'.'\u00ab\u00ab_ ot violence.\"\nBarker presented \"new evidence\nto a. Monroe County grand Jury\ninvestigating the case of the 21-year-\nOld beauty who vanished while fishing with her husband ln the Florida\nKey* Jan. .4,', .\n. He was the first of several witnesses to appear before'the: jury,\nwhose proceedings are held in\nCamera*'\";\u2022''i'-'-V*\"---. \u25a0;:\u25a0-..\u25a0\".;\u25a0>;\u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 '>\u25a0\u25a0 -.,-\n\"I can't reveal what we've discovered at, this stage;!' Barker said\nwhen he came out of the Jury room.\n\"But you can quote me as saying\nwhat I've said several times before\nthat it. is my opinion Mrs. Lemay\nis c\"ead and that she was-the victim\nof. an act of, violence\"\nBarker, who has headet\" the investigation, sold Frank P. Weber,\nformer, Monroe County chief deputy\nsheriff would be among the witnesses testifying at the afternoon session.\n. Others scheduled to testify include\nDr, Dolphe Perron of Valleylield,\nQue., and. Alfred Quenneville, retired chief of the Quebec provincial\npolice, in the area .for th last 10\ndays working on the* case.\n' Barker had \"no comment\" today\n?>h a report that a, bloodstained robe\nou. d nhder; -aj bridge' on the Ta-\n______ Trail, might' be Introduced\nas evidence that Mrs; Lemay was\nmUrd*ri!d.'\u2022 \u25a0 *\u25a0'\u2022 \u25a0'.'' '.'*.\n.-MaiiShufll-in\nDiplomalrc Corps\nOTTAWA, March !M (CP) - bana\nWilgress, 50, an expert on Russia\nahd bn the Atlantic Alliance formed\nto contain Russian -aggression, was\nnamed: today to the top official post\nih Canada's Departrrient of External\nAffairs,   t '. ','\",'.'\u25a0 ,-'\"\u25a0\u2022\nHe will become Departmental Secretary Jun 1 as part of a major\nfour-man shuffle which makos J. W.\n(Jack) Pickersgill, 46, clerk of the\nPrivy Council and secretary of cabinet, a job sometimes unofficially\nCalled that ot a deputy prime minister.      \u2022 '\u25a0\u2022        ,-.-'.;   ,   \u25a0\nMivPickersglU, right-hand man ot\ntwo prime Ministers ibt seven years;\nis tha son of a war Widow and went\nthrough university on _.O.D__ bursaries. He became special assistant\nto then Prime Minister Mackenzie\nKing in 1945 and carried on when\nMr. St. Laurent took over .In 1948.\nTha shifts send A. D. P. (Arnold)\nHenney, 50ve-_tern_l undersecretary,\nto Paris April .15 as Canada's first\nambassador and permanent representative on the new hill-time North\n.\u2022AUan_c.G.uftcil..'..'\"-.\"v - y'Z'.--;<'\n.*Th-,exist!hg.P_rta'-phb'assy,.head-\ned .by Maj.-Gen. George Vaniei-, Will\nba separate from Mr. Heeney's embassy:. It represents C-ttada ln\nFrance. Mr. Heeney will be Canada's\nspokesman in the 14-country Atlan-\ntie, Alliance. \u25a0\u2022;\u2022:.<?\u25a0 -   - , ;;\u2022 .;-.. \u25a0 \"*.-\nThe shifts also bring back lrito\ndiplomatic life Norman Robertson,\nlong rated one of \u25a0 the brains in\nCanada's government, office. \u25a0\"\nHe leaves the job of clerk, of the\nPrivy. Council and cabinet secretary\nwhich he took in 1949; to go back to\nLondon as high commissioner, the\nJob being vacated by Mr. Wilipress.\nHe was .external affairs undersecretary through most'of the war. \u25a0\nA fifth sppblhtment, not related to\nthis shuffle, is that of Pierre Dupuy,\n55, a native of Montreal, who leaves\nthe post as ambassador to Holland\nto become ambassador to Italy. Nq\nSuccessor has been named to Holland. \u25a0\/\u25a0\nPHONE   144   FOR; CLASSIFIED\nTRAIL ond DISTRICT C_LEBRITYCONGEf?T ASSOCIATION:\n* Presents for the 1952 -1953 Season\u2022\u25a0\"'\u25a0'.',      '\ntjt   Outstandiiig Goneerts   ^\nat the Trail Junior High School Auditorium.\nJARQFF CHORUS and DANCERS Thiirs(Oct.3\nSerge Jaroff, Conductor\u201425 Don Cossacks I\n.-.\".;\u2022 '     \"Th4 greatest chorus I have ever heard or ever hopeitohedrl\"\n\u25a0 *!\u2022'.' \" .\".'   \u00bb,' '\"\u25a0' \u25a0    -^Deems Taylor;\n;.A superb choral instrument.\"\u2014New York Post        ~\nHENRY L; SCOTT \" +-Sat. Nov* 29\n\"The Will Rogers of the Piano\"\nThe incomporoble conceit humorist \"plays like o' whirlwind\" (Collier's Magazine)\nand is \"America's greatest artist in the humorous concert world.\" (Salt Lake -Telegram). \u25a0'..,-,',*: '\u25a0'':\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022'-*-, .\ni(3QR GORIN -Mon. Feb. 9 !\nThe Prince of Baritones \u2022 \"'       '','\",'\u25a0\".:''\u25a0\u25a0'.'''..'\n\"A highly trqihed artist naturally endowed with the divine lust of tong... a sense of\ntrue pitch and strong .emotional ten-lper_me.it . . . bright beautiful tons.\"-^-Torbnto'\nGlobe and AAailj    \u25a0     ... .., \"\nCOLUMBIA Canadian TRIO i^^.Mm.U\nAudiences delight in the richly varied, prograrns'of'iolos, duets and trios by this fine\nensemble; The. exceptional talents of Betty-Jean Hogen violinist, Joan Rowland pianist,\nand VVilliart. Hossack cellist, blend perfectly. \u25a0..:\u25a0. \u25a0\n'\u2022 *\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'.:'. '     ''.   \u25a0 '-ii '   i'   '\nSeason Memberships: 4 Events\u2014only $7.50 (including tax).   \u2014   $2.50 Deposit now,\nbalance in Fall. Now on Sale from:\nNELSON CASTLEGAR TRAIL.\nMre._E. Hyndman ' Mrs. H. Adie West Kootenay Power\nins Morgan st Box.ew .,',,        arid Light Company\u25a0,\nPhone 120-R, Nelson \u00ab\u00bb_\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb.\u00bb pn :\u2022 ;\"'\"-\"?_,\" ....'V'JU ''\n-Phorie UM-h   -\nSeason|_embe-__lps On Sale From March 21 to 29 ONLY\n.     '\u25a0iz^if^.ii\ni?-;*:a\u00bb,,...\u25a0>:-.\u25a0..;\u00bb.*,-\u25a0.   :iS':Zi'.____ J-i-a \u25a0\n iZ. \t\n* ,*--*r*_$i^S, 1  i\n- .AFTER A 24-HOURS 8EARCH by farmers of the Port Weller,\nOnt, area, the body of Bruce Nicholson, seven, was found In Eight-\nMile Creek. He had been playing with Lionel Poltras, seven, Inset\nwho waited for three hours before telling anyone that Bruce had\nfallen Into the creek.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nFishing, Tug Pulled Free From. Ice Floes\nOWEN SOUND, Ont, March 20\ntCP. \u2014The 45-foot fishing tug, Lorraine, and its crew'of three were\nrescued today from the drifting Ice\nfloes of Georgian Say. The vessel\nhad been caught fast since late\nTuesday.\nThe Lorraine was pulled free by\nanother tug' about 15 miles from\nthe fishing'hamlet of Kemble, on\nthe Bruce Peninsula about 10 miles\nNorth of here.\nAboard* the. stalled vessel were\nskipper .Lloyd Hpwell, and two\n.crev. members, Victor Garvie and\n-Tad Madlsta,\nJapanese Treaty\nRatified by 0. S.\nWASHINGTON, March'20 (AP)\n\u25a0\u2014.The United States today voted\nto ratify the Japanese peace\n..treaty..,\nThe vote was.66 for\/the resolution of ratification and 10 against\n\u2014well oyer the two-thirds margin, required. ' i\n, It'cama after frVe days of debate In which some Republican\nopposition developed. A'dmlnls*\n, .ration supporters described the\ntreaty- as one. of reconciliation\ndesigned to readmit Japan to the\nfamily, pf nations. \u25a0\nPearson thumbs\nRide To Meeting\nKINGSTON, Ont, March 20 (CP)\n\u2014Diplomatic protocol took a back\nseat to hitch-hiking Wednesday.\n. External Aff^rs Minister Pearson\nand W. -. Henderson, Liberal.'Member of Parliament for Kingston,\nwere d,ue\" here, whore Mr. Pearson\nwas.' to address two gatherings.\" A\nsnowstorm cancelled a scheduled\nplane trip from Ottawa and the two\nSet out in Mr. Henderson's' automobile. '\nNear Seeley's Bay, 22 miles North\nof here; the 'car broke down. '\ni In ankle-deep* slush, the minister\nstood with his thumb up. Robert\nDonnelly, nearby Westport garage\noperator, came to -the rescue,. -' ';\n: Mr, Pearson squeezed Into the\nback seat piled with automobile\nparts. Mr. Henderson 'joined the\ndriver. They arrived In time.       *\nIi; his speech he 'said Canadians\nmust see through to completion the\nNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization's present military effort\n. NELSOH PAllY N8WS, Nil. AY, MARCH\n3&.\nin Chained\nr\nSEATTLE, March 20 (AP) -\nWilliam  Olynyk of  Naw Westminster, B.C^ who Is suing for\n, $100,000 for being chained to the\nbridge rail of * ship for 67. days,\n, sat quietly In Superior,Court today and listened as the defenoe\nbegan Its aid* of tha itory.\nEarlier; he had testified that be\nhad' spent the.67  days  without\nproper shelter, could wash only by\ndumping a bucket bf water on, him-\n\u00ab*_  ahd '. was unable  to ' change\nclothes. H*e said that during the\ntime he contracted an Illness and\nlater  a  cold for  which he aald\nmedication was refused.\nOlynyk,'' a fqrmer boatswain\naboard the Clyde L. Seavey, Is\nsuing the; isthmian Steamship Co.,\noperators qf the vessel. He charge?\n\"cruel, ' inhumane treatment\" for\nbeing placed in chains for a trip\nfrom Batavia, Java,' to . Houston,\nTexas, in the Fall of 1048,\nThe steamship company has ad-\n' .mltted \u25a0 that   Olynyk,, 27,   war\nchained, but maintained this was\nonly because, he threatened the\nCANADIAN APPUUDED\nLONDON, Match 20 (CP) -\nBritish, theatre critics agreed today\nthat \"The Same Sky,\" a play.abou*. a\nmixed marriage with Canadian\nactress Frances Hyland in the leading role, fully deserved Its transfer\nto the West End.\nThe Times called Miss Hyland's\nperformance \"excellent\" and the\nDaily Mall and Dally Herald also\npraised her portrayal ot the Jewish\ngirl in love with a gentile soldier.\nsafety of the ship and was ringleader   of*   \"mutiny-minded\n*.,*'r*w.\" \u25a0 ., :    \u25a0    \u25a0\nOlynyk has said the chaining\noccurred after he had had an altercation with the ship's master.\nDepositions from officers aboard\nthe ship at the time.wera Intro*\nduced by the defence..   \u25a0.:. ....\nIn one, third mate Gerard Thomas*\nNealon told of seeking the master,\nSidney  Eric  Williams,  talking  to-\nOlynyk the day after he was put\nin chains,\n\"tbe captain asked him If he fait\nrepentant\" Nealon said,, \"and Olynyk answered- thst he wasn't sorry\nfor what he had done and that he'd\nget even before the ship reached\nport or if not then, later.\nNealon said there was lib brig on\nthe ship and the bridge was the\n'.'most convenient place\" to hold\nOlynyk.\nHowCOUSaffect\nYour KIDNEYS\nThe kidneys __ tut delicate orsini,\neasily aff-cted\u2014especially by scold. Their\nduly is to filler impuriti-i and ___u adds\n(rom As Hood. When you hare a cold\nextra work ii thrown -upon jour kidneys. -\nDodd's Kidney Pills kelp your kidney,\ndear your system of excess adda and\npoisons caused by colds, and |it* you a\ndunce to shake infection sooner\u2014led\nbellerfasler. 11 you hsie a cold (eland use\nDodd'a Kidney Pilli. 119\nDodd's KidnevPills\nthe car that has made\ngreater strides forward for '52\nthan any other in its class!\nIts designed to out-go, out-look, out-ride\n-   and out-last every other low-priced car!\nNOV eee lit.' t. bjfar the most beautiful car\nin its field for '52! It's the COMPLETELY\n' NEW '52 Ford : s: with longer wheeLbase\nt _: wider front tread;; ^'entirely new Coach-\ncraft Bodies with Htill-Tight Constructipn\nt:: with new increased power and performance.. It's the biggest Ford ever built with a\nt'oat of completely new features ::: new Full-\nCircle Visibility with huge one-piece Ciirva-\nLite Safe-ty-VueyWinclshieid and 48%\nlarger rejr window. New Strato-Star\nllO-Hpf V-8 Engine setting new standards of performance ana economy.'\nNew Power-Pivot clutch afcd brake\nSedate suspended from above to eliminate\noor board holes... ;.; new Centre-Fill\nFueling. And Improved Ride Control\nassures a brand-hew standard in smooth,'\ncomfortable riding.\nYes, ilea It, teat-di.ee it. Compare It\u2014feature for feature,\nvalue for value. Then you'll decide this big '52 Ford\n, givesI'you more\u2014by far\u2014at lower cost! <*.    \"\nCHOOSE FROM THREE GREAT DRIVES\ntot '52 Ford offers you three great drives i t i\nfbrdomallc\u2014the finest, most versatile aWomalle trans- .\nmission on lh* road, at extra cost . . . famous Ford\nOverdrive at extra cost thai saves up to 15% on gat\nI i . \"Synchro-Silent\" Shift OS standard  equipment\nSTRATO-STAR\niio-hp:\n$8 Engine\nMont pow_rf.il Advanced high-\ncompression V-8 design backed\nby Ford's oxpetlonco In building\nmore V-8 engines than all other\nmanufacturers comblnodl    .\nARRANGE FOR A\nK0lt-Celt\u2014Ml. i\/\u00ab_\u00bb-\nrORBOMATICs\n.       driven\neee SEE YOUR\nNEW rtiGHT-sms\nINSTRUMENT PANEl\nNewly-styled control\npanel blends gracefully\n\u2022Into Iho doors. Dlillncllvo\nCloar-Vuo Instalment cluster and controls compactly grouped for greater\nconvenience and safety.\nFORD DEALER\n561 Josephine Street\nPhone 43\n 8 \u2014 N-L50N PAILY N6WS, FRIDAY, MARCH 31. 1952\nNpws of the Bay\nRATE8: SOo line, 40e line black face typo; larger type rates ea'\n\u25a0 .quest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment\nEAGLES SOCIAL  MEMBERSHIP    Two-bedroom house for rent. -\nCLUB MEETS TONIGHT, 8 F.M. Completely furnished. Ph. 1208-X.\nCitric tor C.P.R. lunch counter.\nApply CP.R. Depot.  ,',.'.\nBlssell Carpet Sweepers.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nA Personal Property Floater (Ives\ngreatest protection. Blackwood Ag'y\nSheffield Bronte Powders, 20c tube.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nMore miles per foot on shoe \u00ab\u25a0\npairs at TONY'8 REPAIR SHOP.\nRemember a Birthday1. \u2014 Send\nflowers from VALENTINE'S.\nFor Sal*-\u2014 1841 Mercury Club\nCoup*. New tires, license. Ph. 386-R.\nDANOt AT TAGHUM HALL\nFRIDAY, MARCH 21.\nOur Sal* Contlnuea Til Saturday.\nSee the vacuum cleaner at half\nprice.   Me & Mo (NELSON) LTD.\nNew shipment of tuberous begonias. All colors. 29c each.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP.\nGirls* and.Boys' Coat Sets. Sites\n1, X I, Sx. Pastel shades.\n' TOT-N-TEEN SHOP.\nFurnaces and Stoves cleaned, odd\nJobs. Pounder Chimney Service,\nPhone 1541-L.\nIf BUTTER. IELD cant fix lt,\nthrow lt away Watch work promptly don* and fully .guaranteed at\nteasonabl* prices.\nSPECIAL TO CLEAR-25% OFF\nALL MINUTE MOPS.\nWHILE THEY LAST.      ,\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\n, RUMMAGE SALE, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH PARLORS,\nFRIDAY, MARCH 218T., FROM\n10100 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.\nWATCH REPAIRS\nFor reliable repairs at moderate\nprices try COLLINSON'S JEWELLERY STORE. 861 Baker Street\n.Free \u2014 Fr\u00ab*\nW*. paint them free. Order your\nwindows and screens now. Phone\n1474 .R.\u2014 Valley Mfg. Co.\nftlrsch\ncurtain rods, adjustable,\nround or flat; extensions to fit. Also\ncurtain cranes, brass curtain rings,\ncurtain hooks, etc. HIPPERSON'S.\nSUITS TO MEASURE\nFOX LADIES AND GENTLEMEN\n\".   .$59,78,    -\n.  Fit Guaranteed,\nltobt Nolle, -Master Tailor.'\nAnother shipment of Lamorene,\nthe wonder carpet cleaner, Just re.\ncelved. Clean your carpet the easy,\neconomical Way, Get. a jar today at\n'HIPPERSON'S.\nKiddles' Sanforized Cotton Sum-'\nmer Overalls. These have an attractive trim. Sizes 4 to 8, Values up\nto $2.55. To clear, per pair $1.40.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nRubber floor tile ln many attractive colors. Tile and linoleum laying expertly done. -\nT. H. WATERS _. CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St., Nelson, B.C., Phone 15*\nHALF-PRICE SALE OF COSTUME\nJEWELLERY, SILVER PLATED\nJELLY SPOONS AND BUFFET\nFORKS, CIGARETTE LIGHTERS,\nALL REAL BARGAINS.\nCOLLINSON'S JEWELLERY\nSTORE - 861 BAKER ST.\nDON'T. MISS SPARKLING  IRISH\nOPERETTA, \"DAYS OF THE\nKERRY DANCING\"\nTONIGHT, CAPITOL THEATRE,\n81OOP.M.\nby St' Joseph's Academy.\nBRING YOUR HUSBAND TO\nHUDSON'S BAY FA8HION SHOW,\nPRESENTED BY WOHELO CLUB\nOP ST. PAUL'S* CHURCH, HUME\nHOTEL, 8ATURDAY, 3 P.M. AND\n8MB P.M. TICKET8 ON 8ALE AT\nTHE  BAY\" THIS AFTERNOON.\nCivic Action Association invites\nyou to suggest names of possible\nand suitable candidates lor alderman at the forthcoming byelectlon\nop April 3rd, 4th and 5th. Send\nyour suggestions to P.O. Box 385,\nNelson, B.C. :..-.\"\u25a0_'\u2022\"'..,.\nATTENTION LADIES\nSpring cleaning ls just around the\ncorner. Brighten up your home with\nbrighter floors. For your floor sanding and finishing, call Johnny Art\nchuk at phone no. 401-YS. Free\nestimates.\nImperial Cook Sieve Range $199.\nWe will allow $50 exchange on your\nold range.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements,\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n.418 HALL ST.  PHONE 1M0\nCARD OF THANKS  '\"\nMrs. Ridley and Mrs. Bunyan\nwish to thank Dr. R. B. Shaw and\nall the nurses for their extreme\nkindness snd care of their mother,\nthe late Mrs. Virginia. H. Johnstone,\nduring her illness.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLove of Mushrooms\nProvesi Costly. ...\nEDMONTON. March 20 (CP) \"\n\u2014 Donald B. Cameron's weakness for mushrooms got the better of him ih a dowQtown beverage room,     i\nHe heard what was ln a bag;\n-  beneath an adjacent table. While\nthe owner left the table for a\n' minute, Cameron picked up the\nbag and left.\nAt a next-door restaurant he\nbanded the mushrooms to th*\n. cook tnd ordered steak and\nmushrooms.   '\u25a0\n. Dinner was over when police\narirved with tht first owner of\nthe edibles.\nCameron  was  fined $15  in\nSslice court today. Said Magis-\n'ate S. G. Main; \"There's no\nsteak and mushrooms (In jail)\nI assure you.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiifililiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii\nProgress Spreads\nAcross Canada\nSHAWINIGAN FALLS, Que.,\nMarch 20 (Cf) \u2014 .tesources\nMinister , Winters said * \"one of\nthe most striking aspects of our\nrecent economic history ls found in\nthe tact that major developments\nof our national wealth are not\nconfined to one or two provinces,\nbut are taking place from coast\nto coast.\"\nTo. the Canadian Club of _haw-\ninigan Falls and Grand Mere, Mr.\nWinters said that;many important\ndevelopments are \u2022 centred on the\nfringe and beyond the fringe of\nexisting settlements.\nTracing some of the developments, Mr. Winters said that a zinc\nand lead mine ln Cape Breton, N.S.,\nwill be ln production shortly.\"\nThe iron, ore discoveries* tn\nQuebec-Labrador, in Ontario and\nin other parts of th* country may\nboost this country's current production of 4,700,000 tons to as much\nis 33,000,000 tons annually within\nthe, next decade. - -, .\u25a0'\nA $50,000,000 program haa been\nlaunched to bring extensive nickel-\ncopper ' deposits at Lynn Lake,\nMan., into production by late 1983.\nIn' Saskatchewan uranium resources ar* * being developed at\nBeaverlodge Lake.\nIn Alberta, tha production of'oil\nand natural gas is steadily expanding. \u25a0-_\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0>-.- -,\nIn British Columbia, $500,000,000\nls being spent on a project for the\nproduction ot aluminum, and $125\nmillion oh Kooteniy area major\nprojects,'\nKomarek Jlales\nOalisInnocent\nOnfarlo Plans To\nlend To Farmers\nTORONTO, March 20 (CP) \u2014 A\nbill that will set up a $10,000,000\ncrown corporation to help young\nfarmers to establish themselves on\nthe farm was introduced In the\nOntario legislature Wednesday.\nThe loans, to be dealt with under\n\"The. Ontario Junior Farmer Establishment Loan- Corporation,\" would\nprovide up to $18,000 for a maximum\nof 25 _ years for trained and able\nfarmers between 21 and 35 years of\n.* *g*.\n. However, the bill also stipulates\nthat farmers must have lived ln the\nSrovince for it least three years and\nitend to farm on a full-time basis.\n\\ , The bill was introduced by Public\nWorks Minister Fletcher Thomas\nwho said it would help young farmers buy farms, erect farm homes\nand buildings, buy livestock and do\nanything else, approved by the\ncorporation.\nBritish Commander\nDisciplined\n,I_ONDON, March 20 (AP) \u2014 ,A\nretired British naval commander\nrecently was stripped of His tank\nbecause of his \"activities on behalf\nof the Communist party,\" the Government disclosed tody.\nFirst Lord of the Admiralty J. P.\nL. Thomas told the House of Commons that Cmdr. Edgar P, Young's\nactivities were \"proving a source of\ndistress and embarrassment to the\nRoyal Navy at home and abroad.\"\nYoung told newsmen later: ''I do\nnot belong to any political* party\nand my political activities at the\npresent moment are devoted entirely to the promotion of friendship with countries with whom we\nseem likely to become involved in\nwar, to the promotion of peace, and\nalso of Socialism.\"\nCHATHAM, N.B., March 20 (CP)\n\u2014FO. Alan Seavy, 21, of Regina,\nwas killed today when his Vampire\nJet aircraft crashed in taking off\nfrom the R.C.A.F, base here.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by th* Liquoi\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia..\nFRANKFURT, ' Germany, March\n20 (AP)-Vladimlr Komarek, \"mystery man\" of the William N. Oatis\ntrial, said today Oatis is an Innocent\nnewspaper man \"caught in the gears\nof the Communist policy machinery.\"\nKomarek, 21, ls a Czech political\nrefugee. The Czech court which\nsentenced Oatis on the espionage\ncharges tried to link Komarek in\nan alleged spy ring with Oatis arid\nother Associated f_ess employees.\nKomarek's name waa mentioned\nagain Saturday In Prague's account\nof the conviction of 11 Czechs and\na Yugoslav as spies and \"collaborators\" of Oatis. A death sentence\nwas pronounced on Josef Pavelka,\ncharged with having close connections with Komarek, Komarek says\nhe worked as an espionage agent-\ntor Czech emigres\u2014against the Red\nregime ln Czechoslovakia, but de-\nnies-he was connected with a Western government.\nKomarek said of the trial that\nended in Prague Saturday:\n'The Communist judges; were\nshort of one important link in their\nchain of trials\u2014myself. They claim\nthat I myself would have cdnVicted\nOatis of collaboration and conspiracy with .all the others.\" '\nR.C.M.P. Announces\nNew Inspectors\nOttawa, March 20 (cp> - ne\nH.C.M.P. today announced promotion -of three of its sub-Inspectors\nJo the rank of inspector, as of\nMarch 1,\nThe new inspectors are P. R.\nUsborne, 38, of Ottawa, who served\nas departmental secretary to the\nforce; T. A. Mudiman, 33, of\nMacleod, Alta., who comriiande the.\nforce's sub-division at Swift Current, Sask., and L. A. Denton, 82.\nwho is Criminal Investigation Bureau director at the. Edmonton subdivision.\nTHIS MODEL ATOMIC energy machine, new\ntouring Canada and) the U.S., shows graphically\nhow an atomle engine would.work. Power for the\noperation Is generated In the pile at the.left, Heat\nflows from tha'power souroe to a transfer tank\nwhere steam Is generated and then carried through\nsteam-lines to the turbines* In the centre. Spent\nsteam Is .condensed beneath th* turbine on the\nright and .returned to the original, tank via the\ncondensate pump,\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nAutomatic Phones\nNearer to Rupert\nPRI_.CEKUPERT, B.C., March 20\n(CP). \u2014 City Couhcil .Wednesday\naccepted a deal with Automatic\nElectric Co. of Canada < to install\nan automatic telephone system here\nwithin two years, at total cost of\n$502,888. *:'.'. \"'\u25a0--\"'. ';\"\nThere will be 4300 instruments,\n700 mainline and 3609 party line. At\npresent the city has an obsolete\n2600-instrument manual system. ...\nFending the installation of'\"\u25a0 the\nnew system, Automatic Electric will\nprovide the city with 300 relief Instruments. The deal Is subject to\nratification by ratepayers.\nVANCOUVER,' March 20 (CP) -\nMr. Justice A. M. Manson ln Supreme Court today approved a total\nof $4,337 in claims resulting from the\ncrash of the Grouse Mountain chair\nlift March 25, 1051.\nThe money .tent to Mr. and Mrs.\nFrederick Smith and their two\nchildren Lorraine, 8, and Marilyn\nLo-lsa,..\" ..,.'\u25a0'\nLifts. Ltd., which operates the ski\nlift, aslo undertook to pay legal\ncost of $450. '.,       .   :.;\u2022.,\nBy Nameless Young Musician\nVANCOUVER, B.C., March 20\n(CP)\u2014Music \u2022 dwelled through the\ncorridors of the Vancouver city jail\ntoday and prlsoners~stopped talking\nand listened raptly.   .\nIt came from an ancient organ ln\nthe jail's hospital ward and was\nplayed by a nameless young man\nwith professional finesser,\nHe is an amnesia victim who\nwalked into police headquarters last\nnight and asked officers to help him\nidentify himself.\nThe mah, ln his late 20s, played\nboogie-woogie and semi - classical\nmusic, but he had no memory for\nthe names of the songs.-\n'I can't remember, I just can't\nremember the1, names ol those\nsongs,\" he told police attendants.\nHe has a vague recollection that\nhe came here two days ago from\nSeattle. He claims he can remember\n..tending a basketball game at the\nUniversity of Washington, and he\nsaid that in connection with it he\nrecalls thp name \"Edmondson.\"\nThe young man carried ho Identification papers and the only money\nhe had was an American nickel.\nPolice In Vancouver, the Belllng-\nh .m State Patrol and Seattle officers are cooperating to establish his\nidentity.\nPolice here are investigating the\nlatest lead which came from a city\nwoman who read his description in\na newspaper. She said that it fitted\nperfectly a description televised, on\nthe program \"Could This Be You?\"\nfrom Seattle a week ago.\nThe man the program Was attempting, to Identify had been picked up a few days earlier in a snow\nbank ln Stevens Pass. State police\ntook him to a hospital either ln\nTacoma or Belllngham Snd detectives here are waiting now to see\nIf he Is still in one of these institutions.\nStanley Jones Urges Return\nOf Gov't Wiih Limited Functions\n.  SASKATOON, March 20 (CP)-\nStanley Jones, president ol th* Winnipeg drain Exchange, tonight expressed the belief that without a\nreturn to th* concept of governments of strictly limited functions,\n\"freedom in Canada will eventually\nbe as dea.d as it ls now in Russia\nor other totalitarian nations,\" \u25a0\nMr. Jones told the Junior Cham.\nBer of Commerce, there it an un*\nmistakable trend towards centralization and away from individual re-\nsponsiblllty, opportunity, initiative\nand freedom.\n\"We are heading toward central'\nization.\" he said.\nMr. Jones said \"no other belief is\nso mt ch a threat to this country and\nmany other nations as the one that\nFresh Meal On\nVICTORIA, B.C., March 20 (CP)\n\u2014 Agriculture Minister Harry Bowman said today fresh beet and pork\nwai start rolling toward British Columbia markets from the Prairies\ntonight\nThe embargo oh Prairie livestock,\n.ordered Feb. 28 because of the foot-\nand-mouth outbreak ln South Saskatchewan, was lifted Wednesday.\nMr. Bowman said the, shipments\nwill include live animals and dressed meat. No feeders will be included\nan. all animals must be slaughtered\nimmediately on arrival at- stockyards here. Shipments will be subject to federal'inspection and must\nbe certified free of foot-and-mouth\ndisease.\nConsider Fluorine\nTablets for Pupils\nVANCOUVER, B.C., March 20\n(CP) - The Metropolitan Health\nCommittee ls going to examine the\ncost of providing fluorine to school\nchildren in the form of tablets.\nAdvocates of fluoridation of water\nclaim it'will cut down the Incidence\nof cavities in children s teeth by\nabout 60 per cent   :\u25a0;.\nAt the meeting, Dr, Stewart\nMurray, medical health officer, opposed the motion.\n\"There hasn't been enough study\namong large numbers to indicate\nthe value of tablets,\" he said.\ndemocracy by Itself alone guarai\ntees liberty.\" -.'._\u2022'\n: Governments In  Canada we\ntaking mora ind mor* votes\nmon.' certain classes op groups\nrelieve legislators *f their d\u00abm\ncratlc duty to maintain and pi\ntect the rights of all their peop\nwhile posing is guardians oft\ndemocrats process,\nMr. Jones said the result of tl\n\"misuse\", of majority rule was tt\ncliques within groups were gover\nin? Freedom was thus being tak\naway from the Individual ctilz\npiece by piece and this trend wot)\nincrease as mor,e persons joined I'\nparade behind the pled piper i\nthe \"democratic majority vote\" i\nthe guarantor, of freedom. Etern,\nvigilance was necessary to defd\nthis illusion; _\u2022\nMany fundamental rights wel\nbeing taken away by majorttil\nInoculated by propaganda and hjjf\nsounding phrases by the planner!\npressure groups and seekers aft J\npower.\nDEFENDERS\nMr. Jones said those who figll\nfor freedom of enterprise are nl\nsolely profit seekers as branded t\ncompulslonlsts but are defenders i\nall freedoms.\n\"Free  competitive enterprlst\nthe corner-stone of our society,\" IU\nJones continued. \"But its privllega\nare sometimes abused.\" {\n\"Proponents of government md\nnopoly, state control. In grain man\nketing have deprived th 'r fanmf\nneighbor, who believed in free ma\nkets, of his freedom to market\nhe chooses.\"\nCanada had false prophets whi\ndenied adherence to socialism b|f\n\"would place under state contra\nthe complete direction of the con\nmerce of our country.\nSTOPS\nNEURITIC-NEURALGIC\n23JF\nASPIRIN\nVictoria to Offer\nEmployeeslMothing\n. VICTORIA, B.C., March 20 (CP)\n^-City of Victoria will offer 420\nemployees \"nothing\" when the\ncurrent wage dispute goes before a\nconciliation officer.\nAt a special meeting of the committee of the whole council they\nagain rejected by a 8-4 vote, City\nManager Cecil ! Wyatt's recommendations of 11.24 per cent Increase for the inside staff and 18',.\ncents an hour for th* outside\nThe two unions will anply for\nconciliation.\n\/They stated by letter they could\nnpt accept council's proposal of\nTuesday,. to reduce by .25.per cent\nthe Increase recommended by the\nmanager, ..-\u2022\".'\nCouncil instructed Wyatt'to offer\n\"nothing\" when he goes before the\nconciliation officer on behalf of the\ncity. \u2022\u00a7\n. ; M,\nIhe explosion of the steamer I\nThe explosion of the steamer Sultana on the Mississippi River in\n1808 caused 1450 deaths.\n wiowuL tha\nmomwM ^Sfio^\nERI C BI SHOP  \u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\t\nTRAIL, B.C.\u2014On this the second day of Spring, your' reporter\nbunchy and paunchy as ever, bursts forth with the current B.C. hockey\nnal serial featuring Trail and   Kelowna,-\nSpring is sprung, the grass is grisseng, whatlnell are the Smokies\npissing? \u2014 What became of that Triffi acorlng power? \u2014 Why their lack\n1 fire makes me dour.\n* \u2022    .*\nAnd Mister Man, the Trail Smokies haven't (aside from 8habaga's\nMine) flashed any scoring power thla week, Possibly that's due to the\nI fact their policy has been to back-check and fore-check. In other\nI words, they are all so busy running around after 10-goal-a-season men\n\u25a0 that their own 20-goal-a-season forwards art never In positions for a\nI real thrust. In the last two games Trail has played aa If they feared\nIthe Packer attackers although Kelowna coach Phil Hergeshelmer Is\n| actually their Ion* standout threat\nWHAT'S MORE, after blowing that 3-1 lead Monday, the Smokie\nBorate has dipped sharply while the Packers are \"up\" and have tossed\nside most of their respect for the Kootenay champs.\nBut still I can't foresee that for the third year; Trail's Smokies\n\"el foldo\" on their ear;\nTheir backs before have been against a wall; yet they have never\nken that big fall. (Editor's note: This ls verse?)\n* *     *\nNo sir, I can't believe that Hergeshelmer's kids will upset Gerry\nhomson's experienced crew. Methlnks Gerry, who had a big meeting\npith bis charges last night, will straighten things out or the boys them-\nklves will do so. It happened in the Spokane series, remember. There\nnail split at home and journeyed South of the border to take two out\nIf three on Flyer ice. And against Nelson, in the fifth and deciding tilt,\npey breezed.\nT. IT WOULD SEEM that the Smokies have to do everything the\nlard way; that early successes build them up for a let-down later. But\nney. have always bounced back.\n, Hergeshelmer's kids have only hustle, they lack experience and\nhen with muscle; Thomson's team, full of fight and fire, will make the\nPackers, Saturday, retire. (Editor's note: Enough, enough!)      ,\nI Ask Phantom Phil Hergesheimer how his club has upset three\nIther clubs and is now even with Trail ahd he'll honestly answer with\nII don't know, we have no experience, just guys who skate and check\nke fiends.\" . i\nThe Packers are not hitters either, but they dig, dig, dig. By\nlighting fire with fire the' Smokies will take the B.C. crown, but a\nbuple or three non-hungry Trallites could cause a \"disaster\".     \",\" \u25a0\nMethlnks all the Smokies are \"hungry\" once a game.\nlast\ntourney Biggest Yet\nAll-time peak Interest has been\neached in the 22-year-old annual\nlis. Kootenay Badminton tourna-\nient which \u2022-will take: place, to\nianbrook starting Friday evening\nt 7 ip.ra. and winding up with* the\nnals to begin Sunday at 8,30 and\nlay through to conclusion. Clubs of\nlolden, Edgewater, Invermere, Mi-\nhel, Natal, Fernie, Creston, Yahk,\namberley and. Cranbrook have\nubmitted 462 entries in the five\npen, five handicap and veterans'\nvent\nDefending open champions are:\nmen's singles, Bert Fergus, Kimberley; ladles' singles, Carol\nStanton, Kimberley; men's doubles, Fergus and George: Haras\nof Cranbrook; ladles' doubles,\nMiss Stanton and Patty Russell,\nKimberley; and mixed doubles,\nMiss Stanton and Fergus of Kimberley. The 1951 tournament was\nat Invermere.        '\nTrophies will be awarded in the\nIva open, five handicap events,\nhd supporting prizes have been\nbnated to winners and runners-up\ns these events.\nFive courts at the school, three\njt the gymnasium and two in the\nuditorium ot the Mount Baker\nunlor-Senior High School will be\nVailable. Play wUl run1 from T p.m.\nriday to 1 a.m., from 8 p.m. Sat-\nHiay to 12.30 a.m., and from 1 p.m.\nunday to the windup Sunday night\nillowed by presentation of awards\nm\ndvertlsement -Is ,'not published or\n\/ed by the Liquor Control Board or\n: Government of British Columbia.\nand prizes with Donald MacDonald,\nmaster of ceremonies.\nAnnual meeting of the East Kootenay Badminton Association has\nbeen set tor, Sunday morning to\nplan next year's tournament Special social event will be a private\nAssociation dance Saturday evening to the K.F. hall.,\nDraws are now to process of\npreparation By the committee making the arrangements, with Association President George Haras and\nsecretary Miss Margaret Bridges to\ncharge.\nThe annual Kootenay Junior\nBadminton tournament which has\ngrown to enormous proportions ta\nrecent years, has been set for Creston April 5 and 6. This is the event\nwhich produces district champions\nfor automatic entry into provincial\njunior play at the Coast with provincial winners continuing automatically to the Dominion championships later to the Spring.\nTrail All-Sfars\nIn Coy Cup Finals\nWith Kamloops\n\u2022 TRAIL, B.C.\u2014Trail Intermediate\nAll-Stars tonight earned the right\nto meet Kamloops All-Stars in the\nCoy Cup hockey finals here last\nnight when they defeated Kimberley Intermediates 10-.2 in the second\nof their two-game, total-goal series\nhere. Trail won the first game 12-1,\nEmil Kwasney and Mario Scodellaro paced the Trail sextet to their\ndecisive win with three goals each\nwhile singletons were netted by\nErnie Primeau, Herby St. Jean,\nDave Nicol and Dick Sissons.\nMarv Matthews notched the two\nKimberley tallies.\nThe Trail squad will open their\nbest-of-three series for the Coy,Cup\nto Kamloops on Saturday night\nIRONMEN WIN TWO\nIN MIDGET ROBIN\nIronmen squeezed out two close\nwins this week to take the lead to\nthe Nelson Midget League round\nrobin series and all but assure them*\nselves a berth to the finals.\nThe three teams a\u00a3e playing a\nfour-game round robin to eliminate\nOhc club.\nThe Ironmen downed the Rockets\n7-6 in tbe first tilt, then came back\nto edge the' Cougars 8-7 to another\nhigh-scoring encounter.    ._-,.\nSherwopd and Marquis led the\nIronmen to victory over the Rockets\nwith two goals apiece while Benwell, Ekstrom and Jordan added tbe\nothers.\nRead and Vance scored doubles\nfor the Rockets with McRory and\nScott netting the others.\nBenwell was the top marksman to\nthe Ironmen-Cougar battle with\nfour goals for the winners. Slier*\nwood added two while Marquis, and\nIsakson scored one each.\nBurgess and McKenzie scored two\napiece for the losers while stogie\ngoals were netted by Horswill, Lip.\nsack and Richardson.\nHOCKEY'S BIG SIX\nBy The Canadian Press\nG\nA\n42-\n30\nLach, Montreal .....   ...\n13\n40\nLindsay, Detroit \t\n25\n36\nRaleigh, New York\t\n18\n40\nSmith, Toronto \t\n27\n29\n30\n23\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nPhiladelphia* (A) 4, Minneapolis\n(AA) 8     !..\u25a0-\u25a0'\nBrooklyn ' (N)   4,   Ctoctonati\nIN) 0\nPhiladelphia (N) 2, Detroit (A) 0\nNew York (A) 8, St Louis (N) 2\nBoston (N) 14, Milwaukee (AA)\n12'     '        .'.\"\u25a0' -     '      -    ' '\nBoston (A) 14, Washington (A) 8\nNew York (N) I, St. Louis (A) 3\nHigh Praise for Leafs\nMcKay Memorial\nTrophy to Team\n\"The Nelson Maple Leafs\" wet-\ndeclared winners of the Dr. D, W.\nMcKay Memorial Trophy when the\nNelson3 Booster, Club paid tribute\nto the senior hockey team at a\nseason windup last night.\nThe .award, although a marked\ndeparture from the usual presentation to an Individual as the MOst\nValuable Player on the Maple\nLeafs, was enthusiastically received as an accolade to the exceptional team spirit shown this\nseason.  '\nIn making the., presentation to\ncoach Eddie Wares, Dr, N. E. Morrison said the award committee had\ndecided that no individual could\nbe chosen and that the trophy\nBhould go to \"our all-star hockey\nteam.\"\nIn accepting' the trophy, Wares\nrecalled a remark\/he had made at\nthe start ot the.season when he\nsaid, \"We may not have the best\nhockey club but we'll have the best\nhustling hockey club.\" Eddie added\nthat this had proved to be a \"big\nunderstatement.\"    .\nLater, Wares Introduced the play-\nera individually and told them' He\nwanted \"every one of you back neitf\nseason.\" He' said he also wanted\nthree more players for his next\nyear's team, players who would iilt\nto harmoniously with the spirit\nof the, club.\nSpeakers were high ta their praise,\nof the Nelpon team, the executive\nand the Booster Club for the successful season the club has had.'\nMayor Joseph Kary said the team\nhad \"won the hearts of every citizen\nof Nelson with your splendid,shoW'-\nIng\" while Norman Stlbbs saw thla\nteam as the \"forerunner of a championship club\" and suggested smilingly the Leafs make application to\ntour Europe next. Winter as Canada's representative at the World\ntoiirnamenl,\nWalter Duckworth, vice-president of the Western International\nHockey League, praised the executive for the \"baokchecklng\" It\nhad done all year on behalf of\nthe team. He felt the team had\ngotten a \"bad deal\" this season,\nthat It had been getting the \"dirty\nend of the stick for \u00ab long time.\"\nHe also predicted that \"times will\nchange\" and that \"one of these days\nwe'll knock .hem all over.\"\nB.C.H.A. secretary Leo Atwell\nbrought congratulations from the\nbranch and said he was sure the\nfans feel they'd been given a terrific\" hockey season,\nTO GET JACKETS '.*-.'-\nPresident Frank Hufty stogie-\nout the IJooster Club for its season\nefforts' and also announced that;the\nteam, would receive 'jackets, this\nseason in recognition of their fine\nshowing. '\":\u2022\u25a0'.',' ,\nAlso speaking at the banquet were\nH. D. Harrison, president of the\nChamber of Commerce, Booster\npresident Ray \"Newcomb, executive\nmembers George j Benwell, Stan\nSmith and trainer Steve Cameron,\nIn other remarks, George Geltoas\nsaid it was the \"best hockey team\nhe.d seen in 10 years\" while Civic\nCentre manager and Jaycee representative Jack Morgan said the team\nhad \"done more for Nelson In the\nplayoffs than many of us (Jaycees),\ncan do in a couple of years.\"\nWalter Walt was chairman and\nreviewed season highlights while\nother| speaking briefly Included\nCivic Centre Commission chairman\nFritz Farenholtz, Dr. Graeme Steed,\nDr. A. J. _.eauchamp, Vincent Fink\nand Bill Burns.\nCaptain Bill Haldane expressed\nthe appreciation of the players for\nthe banquet and the support the\nteam had been given all year.\n\"There's never been.anything to\nequal It In the five years I've been'\nhere,\" Bill .remarked.\nFollowing the banquet prSgtam.at\nthe Roundup Room, players were\nlater entertained at a stag at the\nLegion. More than SO attended.\nMinor Hockey\n\u2022   Roundup\n\u25a0 Saturday:\n12:30-1.:30 p.m.\u2014Bantam PooL\n1:30-2:30 p.m. \u2014 Bantam Black\nHawks'vs Red Wings (third game\nfinals).        .    , \u25a0\n2:30-3:30 p.m.\u2014Midget Cougars vs\nIronmen (second game finals).     I\nHORNETS TWO UP\nPITTSBURGH, March 20 (CP) -\nPittsburgh Hornets came from ;be.\nbind to beat .Hershey 3-1 tonight\nand take a 2-0 lead to the best-of-\nseven \"A\" serieB of the American\nHockey League's Calder Cup playoffs. \u25a0 '. -,\u201e -.   '. ;\nRay Hannlgan's goal at 16:09 of\nthe second period proved, to be the\nwinning marker for the Hornets\nwho won th* Western division\nchampionship. ;   '..   _?\u25a0*!\nHershey's only goal was triom\nSam Bettlo.\nBill Ezinlcki scored the tying\ngoal ta the second period.;   '   \"'-.\nBobby Hassard tallied Pittsburgh's insuranoe goal -;;''.,\nQuakers Halt Ironmen\nSASKATOON, March -20 (CP) -\nSaskatoon Quakers,tonight downed\nSeattle Ironmen 6-4 in a rousing\nPacific Coast Hockey League game\nhere jo spoil Seattle, bid for an\nunblemished Prairie tour.\nThe'Ironmen last night,downed\nEdmonton Flyers 8-4 to cinch fourth\nplace to the league standings. They\nmoved into fourth place Tuesday\nnight when they defeated Calgary\nStampeders 6-8. Saskatoon remained\nin second place. '\u2022\nBuller Rangers' MVP\nNEW YORK, March 20 (AP)*'^\nHy Buller, rookie defenceman .with\nNew York Rangers, today .was unanimously chosefl the club's most\nvaluable player by the New York\nHockey Writers' Association.    \u25a0   '\nTHE SMILING SENOR\nBy Alan Mover\nia5 r <seAeart\n'fnejnem\u00bb\nfccAMeter\n, ffAlUM20\nyfAfte\n\u25a07be\u00bber\nWmiiBfis~-\n\u25a0met* 0\/6\nfoorwoji\nAt-.\nLopez\nek\u00a3PARiu&\nroPtWsZm\neeA*OA'as eased?\nCl.Etrgl.AN0-\nHg.WOULP HAVE: -\ntfoMTTiefZASM\nMpe$UTif'rm '\n<s\u00a3A$oti #ap pee\/i\/\nS.weeKe eHoizTEfi-\no\/teep-r.ts\nHAP A OIlE-GAMe    \u2022\u25a0\nieAp ear ,\nwouwup\nSGAMee our\/\ntoT.Tmtfe&TiiimBATTiiici\nTfWMfie MfriNs ecHoo\/.,.\nWlTH^eCREf LBCTIJRE6 FRO\/A\nwhich rMUPPteeswAspAivtep\nUtfriftvtvtf 6y Bog Fcsiktcs flywfl&itJ\nWings Tune Up for\nPlayoffsWifafcWin\nDETROIT, March 20 (CP) \u2014- Detroit Red Wings tuned up for thl\nforthcoming playoffs by hitting for\ntheir highest scoring. total \u00abof the\nseaspn as they blasted New Yorjt\nRangers and sub-goalie Lome Anderson 7-3 here tonight\nGordie ; Howe and, Ted Lindsay\neach, scored twice a's the: Wings\npoured 47 shots on the New .York\ngoalie, drafted only two days ago\nfrom the, atoateur New York\nRovers.'   .'-..'-.*.'--,.'     '\u25a0''.'.,.\nTha tallies Were Howe's 43rd\nand 44th of the season, breaking\nthe all-time Detroit club record\nwhich he set at 43 last season.\nLindsay also gathered two assists\nto take a three-point lead over\nMontreal's Elmer Lach for second\nplace behind Howe In the National Hockey League scoring derby,'\nDespite the lopsided score, Detroit\ntwice had .0 come from behind, and\nthen was leading by Only one goalat\n4-3 with less than 12 mtaijtes to\nplay.\nAllan   Stanley   put   New   York\nahead 1-0 In (he first period and\nJohnny Wilson matched it.'\n* Herb \"tjickenson moved the Hangers to a 2-1 edge in the second\nperiod with his, 13th -before Lindsay\nhit | for the first time to knot It\nagajn. Howe quickly added one lor\na 3-2 lead, and Detroit didn't trail\nagain.;.' ,    \u25a0' >\u00bb*        \/-.,-'\n; Arnie Kullman added the other\nRanger tally to the third period and\nMarty Pavellch and Tony Leswick\ngpt the pther Detroit goals,\n8TANDINQ    .\n..-,:.,'. WL T.\"  A Pts\nDetroit ...,   43 14 11 208 128 97\nMontreal :   34 28   9 190,184 77\nToronto  '....  29,23 18 164 180*74\nBoston ,.....'.._... _4 29 16 188 174 64\nNevV York ,.,\u201e... .is ,83 13 186 212 69\nChicago'*....,.;..' .'IS 44   9 148 233 39\nCreston Sportsmen\nSeek More Pheasants\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 News coming\nfrom* the Creston Rod and Gun\nClub show the local organization\nplan to have a correct time schedule for hunters this Fall to aid all\nparties concerned.\nThe club was also Informed the*\nTrail,Kiwanis Club will be:raising\ntrbut fingerlings in Beaver Creek.\nReports. also show the local club,\nhope to release, some hen pheasants\nthis Spring to'.strengthen the -,val.\nley's, pheasant-population.:'\nFive cougars-were reported* lulled\nta January to the Gray Creek.to\nCreston: area.' \" \"\nRod' and Gtin Club' officials are\nrequesting that a watch on; dogs\nbe kept this Spring to order they\nmay , no_ molest- nesting hen\npheasants...       .     ,  . ' *\n'lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n'^English\" Team\nUpsets Mercutys  .    \u25a0\nTo Win Cup\nLONDON, March 20 (CP) \u2014'\nAn \"England\" team, made up\nmostly of Canadian players, to- '\nnight-scored a 8-4 upset victory\nover Edmonton Mercurys, Canada's world and Olympia hockey champion*, to win the\nChurchill Cup. .    \u2022\nThe   three-dub   competition\nalso involved the United States  .\nOlympic team, which waa beaten by both Canada and the tag-   ,\nllsh entry.\nThe cup was offered for the\nfirst time lest year when Lethbridge Maple Leafs won it\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNew Denver Club\nBig Winner In\nSlocan Shuttle\nNEW DENVER, BC. \u2014 The annual Arrow Lakes, and Slocah\nbadminton tournament was held- to\nNew Denver last weekend with\nthree clubs Nakusp, Naw Denver\nand; Slocan City represented.   *\nFollowing are the, cup Winners:\nLadies Singles \u2014 Miss Sheila\nSteuart, Nakusp. -\nlien's. Singles\u2014 Mr. Tom1 Pearson, Ney Denver.\n\u25a0Ladles' Doubles \u2014 Miss Monica\nButlin and Mrs. W. G. Tiring, New\nDeliver.       .'; ,\"\nMen's Doubles'\u2014 I. MacLeod and\nR, Smedbol, Slocan City.\nMixed Doubles \u2014 Miss: I. Ware\nand Mri Tom Pearson, New Dehvfer.\nMr. .Howard Parker of Slocan\nCity waa in charge pf the events\nand play* got,under way at -.10:30\na.m.. Results are as follows:\nLadies' Doubles\u2014M. Butljn and\nM. Hiring, New Denver beat M.\nSmith and K. Jeal, Nakusp; S.\nSteuart ahd G. Weatherhead, Nakusp beat F, Hicks and. B. Moran,\nSlocan City; I. Ware and W; Clarkson,' New Denver beat C. MacFarlane and M. Parker, Slocan.\nSemi-finals\u2014M. Butlin and M.\nThring beat. S. Steuart and G.\nWeatherhead; I... .Ware and W.\nClarkson .drew a bye.\nFinals\u2014M. BUtlta' and M. Thrtag\nbeat I. Ware and W. Clarkson;\nLadies' Singles \u2014 C. MacFarlane,\nSlocan City beat M. Smith, Nakusp;\nS. Steuart, Nakusp beat M Butlin,\nNew Denver. .\n.. Finals\u2014S. Steuart beat C. MacFarlane.-. '\u25a0' \u25a0 .   \"\nMen's Doubles^-T. Pearson.and N.\nHayashi, New Denver beat H. Wood\nopd D. Olson, Nakusp; L MacLeod\nand R. Smedbol, Slocan beat, H.\nMaxwell and. H. Leonard, Nakusp.\nFinals\u2014I. MacLeod and R. Smedbol beat T. Pearson and N. Hayashi.\nMen's Stogies\u2014I. MacLeod,\" Slocan City beat D. Olson,-Nakusp; T.\nPearson,'. Nety Den var beat R^\nSmedbol, * Slocan Cliy.'\nFinals\u2014T. Pearson beat L MacLeod.\nMixed Doubles\u2014S. Steuart and\nH. Maxwell, Nakusp beat M. Thring\nand N. Hayashi, -New Denver; I.\nWare, and T. Pearson, New Denver\nbeat A. Parker' and I. MacLeod,\nSlocan; B. Moran and E. Smedbol,\nSlocan beat L. Lindsay and D. Olson, Nakusp; M. Smith and H.\nLeonard, Nakusp beat G. Weatherhead and D. Bouvette, Nakusp.\nSemis\u2014I. Ware and T. Pearson\nbeat S. Steuart and H. Maxwell; B.\nMoran and R. Smedbol beat M.\nSmith and H. Leonard.'\nFinals\u2014L Ware and T, Pearson\nbeat B. Moran and IL Smedbol.\nFinals\u2014I. Ware and T. Pearson\nbeat B. Moran. and R. Smedbol.\nRefreshments were served by the\nNew Denver Club at the close of\nthe play. The annual meeting took\nplace at which H. Wood of Nakusp\nwas elected President: and Mrs.'V.\nSmith; Nakusp,. Secretary,\nSHIELDS QUITS\nPNN!$P_>ST\n.\u2022rfBWYOH-i.MARCH 20 (AP) -\nFr_iil_ SWeids ijuit today as captain\nof the United States'Davis Cup team,\nthe New York Herald-Trlbuhe says\nin a; copyrighted story.   .\nThe article said Shields made the\nannouncement to Alrick Man, chairman of the.Davis Clip selection com\nmittee ahd In so doing urged that\nDon McNeil be named captain of\nthe team this year.*\nShields said that he was forced to\nWithdraw, because, of new business\n.ctjnijectipns.',\"\n'\u25a0 \"I do not like to quit under tire,\"\nhe, said, apparently refering, to the\ncontroversy that has been raging tal Vancouver Eilers 86.\ntqnnis. ciroles concerning his sfdec-    (Vancouver  win a best-of-three\ntion  of  Ted   Sphroeder  to  play final 2-0).\nagainst the Australians- last .year   .. \u2022   '\t\nwhen the U.S. lost toe cup 3-2.    -IClassified Ads Get Speedy Results\nB.C. SENIOR \"A\" MEN'8\nBASKETBALL FINAL\nPrince   Rupert   Challengers'\n41,\nNELSON DAIIY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1\u00bb\u00bb_^2>\nSmokies. Packers\nGo Here Tonight\nTrail District\nShuttle Tourney\nFriday Draw\nFriday's draws:\n7:00 p.m.\u20141. M..Bennett and E.\nHaley vs G. Pearcey and J. Good-\nrick; 2. M. Tucker and J. Fournier\nvs J. Yerex and I. Harvie; 3. Winner Kerieff-Dobie vs winner Wilkinson-,.. Reed.\n7:30 p.m.\u20141. V. Miros and P. Harvey vs R. Ross and Partner; 2. R.\nBro and A. Nixon vs C. Lambert\nand N. Galilei 3. D.: Wilson and D.\nYerex va T. Lampard and B.\nKerieff.\n8:00 p.m.\u20141. J. Fraser and J. Wel-\ntoh vs M. Santano and K. Atkinson;\n2. L. Wilson and G. Pearcey vs D.\nMuirhead and J. Swihart; 3. J.\nSmith and B. Thompson vs L. Wilkinson and T. Dobie.\n8:30 p.m.\u20141. J. Taylor and T.\nLampard vs M. Knox and J. Munro;\n2. Winner Goodrick-Wiley and Clit-\nWilsonVs winner Rice-Jones-Haley\nand Jacpbsoh-Santano; 3. Winner\nMlros-Ha'rvey and Ross-Partner vs\nP. Buckley and B, Nicholson.\n0:00 p.m.\u20141. K. Atkinson and 3.\nSeed vs J. Leith and 6. Brandon;\n2. Winner Munro-Kennedy and\nJacobson-Reed vs N. Rhodes and J.\nWelton; 3. L. Wilson and, D. Yerex\nvs A. Nixon and J. Swihart\n8:30 p.m.\u2014l. .Winner Muirhead-\nReed and Buckley-Rhodes vs B.\nNicholson and D. Wilson; 2. Winner\nHarvie-Wilkinson and Smecher-\nBro vs V. Miros and B. Kerieff.\nHockey Scores\nMARITIME  MAJOR\nGlace Bay 11, Charlottetown 4.\nO.H.A. JUNIOR A\nSeml-Flnals\nToronto St Michael's 1, St. Catharines 5.:\n(Best-of-flve series tied. 2-2).\nALLAN  CMP\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nSeml-Flnal\nChicoutiml 5, Sherbrooke 1.\n(Chlcoutlmi   leads   best-of-seven\nseries 1-0).\nMEMORIAL CUP\nQUEBEC JUNIOR FINAL\nQuebec 3, Montreal Canadiens 1\n(Quebec leads best-of-seven series\n1-0).\nN.O.H.A.   SENIOR\nAllan cup finals\nSault'Ste. Marie 2, Noranda 4.\n(Noranda   leads   best-of-seven\nseries 2rl). *\nMANITOBA '\"\u25a0' \u2022\nALLAN CUP FINAL\nLetellier 11, Flin Flon 8.\n(Letellier wins best-of-three series\n2r0.. , -\nWESTERN CANADA JUNIOR\nReglna: 5, Edmonton B (overtime\ntie)'\n(Best-of-flve league final tied 1-1\nwith one game tied)\nTrail fans tare apparently going\nto carry out a \"boycott\" thlpeatitor\nthe fourth game to the B.C. final\nhere tonight\nCivic Centre manager Jack Morgan was advised early Thursday not\nto send any tickets to Trail for tonight's game. A block of 000 had\nbeen set aside for Trail fans.   -\nHowever, these were placed, on\nsale in Nelson last night and a brisk\nsale Indicated there would be a full\nbouse, despite the \"loss\" of Trail\nsupport\nIt appeared that Trail supporters,\nalthough not buying in Trail were\nbuying -ducats here ln sufficient\nnumbers to indicate a good representation.\nB.C.H.A. secretary Leo Atwcli\nsaid yesterday that the fifth game\nof the series would be played to\n?rail Saturday and a sixth, if\nnecessary; would be played back In\nNelson Monday.\nFRANCIS SHINES\nAS MOHAWKS WIN\nCINCINNATI, March 20 (CP) \u2014\nEmile (The Cat) Francis returned\nto the nets for Cincinnati - and\nturned to a brilliant performance\ntonight as the Mohawks edged\nBuffalo Bisons 2-1\t\nIt was the Hawks' second straight\nvictory ta the best-of-flve American \u25a0 Hockey League first-round\nplayoff.\nIan Mackintosh scored tho winning goal to the third period when\nhe knocked in Paul Musnlck's rebound, from six feet out. Eddie\nHarrison pojjed in a goal for tho\nHawks from one foot out and Lorn*\nDavis rapped to Buffalo's only\ncounter in the second period..   *''\u25a0\u2022\nYanks Eliminated\nBy Britain In\nChurchill Series\nLONDON, March 20 (AP) \u2014\nEngland stunned the United States'\nOlympic hockey team today by \u25a0'\nspurting for nine goals to tho.ftaU\nperiod to trounce tha Americans\n11-2.\nThe upset knocked th* American\nteam out of* contention for tho\nChurchill Cup.\nEngland will meet Canada, tht\ndefending Churchill Cup holders\nand Olympic champions, for tho\ntitle at Wembley Stadium tomorrow.\nATLANTA, Ga., March 20 (A?)\n\u2014Dick Fugler, 2.0-pound Tulana\ntackle, will play professional: football in Canada this year,\nCarl Voyles, coach of the \u25a0Hamilton, Ont, Tigers, said her* today\nthat the. White Oak, Tex., nativo\nhad signed fo play for his club.      .\nPhil Hergesheimer\nKELOWNA -PA____p6\nSENIOR HOCKEY\nPLAYOFFS\nKelowna Packers\n;*-:-.    *i: ii_\u25a0\u25a0' -:vs -* -\nTrail Smoke Eaters\nTONIGHT-8 p.m.\nRUSH TICKETS ON SALE\nCivic Centre 0\u00a3\u00a3ice 6:30 p.m. Tonight\nADULTS \u2014$1.00        STUDfNTS \u201450e\nGordie Sinclair\nTHAU, SMOKE EATERS\n _?'\nL\n},f-i\nr\n-_,k.\nL\n*_< ,\nbet-.;\nA\nB\n..   j_\nN\nE\nR\n>fl *T\n_ lo\nI'M '''J'    H\nE\nN\nR\n-     -.*.-,   .   .  .-\n>'Sra'^\nt\njMM>l\n2pjy\nJbL\n..J*? H _I.D ?B5CV MeGRBOOR of Crawford Bay glve-evldenoe\ntf'Mr2fffl8f.!^ll_y'*^^i.!_i\u00bb \u00ab-elr trophies, Tl In \\\\\\,m*\nduring th* 8prlng of 1911. Rose at the time was 10 and Percy 15. i\nTrophies and where they were won are as followsi ladles' handl- *\neap won at Windermere, mixed doubles, under 18, won at Creston!\ngirls', under 18, won \u00abt Creston! ladles' doubles, under 10, won at\nCreston; boys' doubles, under 16, Won at Creston! girls' doubles,\nunder 16, won at Creston; mixed doubles, undsr 18, won St Vancouver; girls' doubles, under, 16, won at Vancouver; mixed doubles,\nunder 16, won at Vancouver; boys' doubles, under 16, boys' singles,\nunder 16, mixed doubles, Under 16, girls' doubles, under 18, girls'\nsingles, under 16, all won at Cranbrook, and Kootenay Open handl- ',\ncap, won at Nelson.-Photo by Johnny McGregor. ,\"\nPRINCE PHILIP, right, site ll.\ntha cockpit of \"The Comet,\" the\nworld's first Jet airliner, which\nwill go Into service with British\ncommercial airlines In May. The\nDuk* mad* a flight In the plan*\nduring his visit to the Oe Havll-\nland Alroraft Company's plant at\nHatfield, Captain John Cunningham, chief test pilot, is at left\n\u2014Central' Press Canadian.\nSOVIET AGENTS In Germany\nare believed to have photographed the private diary ef Maj.-Gen.\nRobert Wi*Grow,a..,8. military\nattache to, Moscow who has slnoe\nibeeh recalled to Washington, and\nreturned the document before It\nwas missed. The theft occurred\nlast Summer when Grow was visiting at* Frankfort, In -Wast Germany. The diary I. now being\nused by the Reds In an attempt\nto prove that America seeks war.\nExtracts from It together with\nphotographlo copies of some of\nthe pages, are Included In a Com.\nmuhlst book, \"The Path to-War,\"\nby Richard Squires, published In\nCommunist 'East Germany.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDOWN\n1, Clears with\na broom\n2. Coronet\n\u25a08, Finish\n4. Tiny\n8, Tardier\n6. Afresh\n7. Doctrine\n8. To make\nspotted\n11. Girl's\n, name\n18. Digits\n15. Overseers\n18. Pronoun\n10. Boy's\n. nickname\n28.\n30.\nSloths\nSmall\nsecluded\nvalley      ;\nCravat\nHawaiian\ngarland   *\nCoarsely\nground\ngrain\nBowers\nMachine to,\nspread hay\nExcess .of\nchances\nTaxes\nBig\nAuction\n____._. Hu:_a\n\u25a0!_mr_ niiEiGi\nlM .'.j'ii    r.ii ii _i'_..'\n______ Hati ui\n*__]   tlBHUH   '\n:_!.(_i_i_ii>_ i-jii\ni.fcir. i.i-Ki\nEtHEl   HUH   HUH\n_TI_l..i:i   HtiaSH\naHuia t-Liau\nautiki i_rj____\ni*ai,\nVeslcrds. '\u25a0 Ans iser\n.88. Small hut\n(Eng.)\n89. Undeveloped\nflower       '\nto. Part bf\n\"to be\"\nACROSS\ni. Worry\ni slang)\nI. Placed\nR Fermented\njuice of\ngrapes\n10. Apparent\n. ends of   .\nSaturn's\nrings      ,\n11. English\nauthor\n12. Entice\n14. Over\ntpoot.)\n10, Famous\ngardens\n(Eng.)\n16. Italian river\n17. Splash\n50. Malt,\nbeverage\nft Roman\npound\ntl. Hasten\n23. Perishes\n34. Places of\n,    worship\n51. Injure\n38. Lamprey\n30. Toward\n81. Before\n13. Warbled\n84. Jewish\nmonth\n36. Distress\nsignal\n36.Afflx ' '\u25a0\"\n37 Notf enera)\n80. Posts\n41. List of -\nnames '\n43. Incite\n43. Observes   '\n44,Antlsr_d\nanimal\nDAILY CRyPTOQUOTE-Hero's how-to worlc It:\nA XT D LB A A X It\nhlon or,( now\nOne latter simply stands for another, In thl* example A Is used\n' for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters, ap'os-\ntrophies, the length and formation of; the words are all hint*.\nEach day the code letters are different, *,\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nGM    KMYXKI    'PZCG    PDCP    QMF    D H J-\nOXKV    GTCNTXQXXJ XT    P D X N X     P M.\nOX.-TM KXN HFQX.\n___erday'\u00ab CryptoquMe: OUR AMERICAN PEOPLE CANNOT BE TAXED WITH SLOWNESS IN PERFORMANCE-\nEMERSON,\nr_.>-tV_.__ \u00ab__\u25a0 _m__ t_.1t_.3a ___L,aU\nSMILING BROADLY, Mrs. Eleanor. Roosevelt folds'her hands\nIn traditional Indian salute oe she acknowledges the cheers of a.\ncrowd In Bombay during her current tour of India. Seated In the\noar with her Is Mrs. Vilayalakshml Pandit, former Indian ambassador\nto the U.S.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHAROLD DENEAU, 17-year.old farmhand, left, In custody of\nConstable Jaok MoKendry, Is oharged with tha murder of Sidney\nJames Goff of Burketon, Ont Dsneau, an employee cf Goff'a who\nhad coma from the boys' sohool at Bowntanvllle, 12 miles away, wa*\nfound In a vacant farmhouse a mile from where searchers found th*\nbody of Goff, a rope around his neck and his head battered with a\nblunt Instrument\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nA GRAND OLD GIRL Is Miss Jacque II, as these veterans of th*\n136th U.8, Bomber Wing In Korea are ready-to testify. Here they\n!iolnt with pride as they Inspect the Impressive record of the Thunder-\net which recently completed Its 364th combat sortie. Its 1000th hour\nn the air was clocked off when Miss Jacque II completed a mission\nover 8lnanju, In North Korea, and her crew believe It Is a record:,\nfor U.N. craft flying over Korea.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAl\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1952\n7:00\u2014News\n7:\n7::\n7:\n7:\n:09\u2014Norm's Coffee Club\n15\u2014Giant Toys\n:30\u2014News\n33\u2014Norm's Coffee Club\n00\u2014News \u00ab\u2022\u25a0\n:10\u2014Sport News\n13\u2014Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Towler Serened*     -,\"\"\n55\u2014Meal of the Day .\n:0O\u2014Western Tune Show\n,30\u2014Morning Concert\n:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n15\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n80\u2014Kenny Baker\n45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n:0O\u2014News\n05\u2014Dorothy Douglas\n10\u2014Foi Vou Madame\n;30\u2014Aunt Mary\n;45\u2014Forbidden Diary\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Sports News,\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014Ogilvie Reminder\n00\u2014Afternoon Concept\n45\u2014Needlepblnters\n\u202258\u2014Women's Commentary\n:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Album of Melody\n3:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:15\u2014Pacific News\n8:30\u2014Giant Toys\n3:45\u2014Novel Time\n4:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:80\u2014Sleepy Time Story Teller^\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament r*\n8:00\u2014Rawhld*        \u25a0\n1:20\u2014Giant Toy Program ,\n5:30\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:35\u2014Superman\n5:50\u2014News\n6:0O\u2014Bill Good Sports\n6:15\u2014Christian Science\n8:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News'\n7:15\u2014News Roundup-.\n7:30\u2014Report From Parliament 1\n7:45\u2014Frankie Lane\n.8:00\u2014Record Album\n8:30\u2014B.C. Hockey\n9:00\u2014Burns Chuckwagon\n9:30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n\u20229:45\u2014Festival Summer\n10:00\u2014News\n10:18\u2014Nesbitt Reporting\n10:30\u2014Design for Listening\nll:00-Nows Nite Cap\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014BI\" Good Sports\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Progrwi Resume\n0:00\u2014News\n0:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club,\n9:45\u2014SoRgs of the West\n10:00\u2014Children Theatre\n10:30\u2014World Church News\n10:45\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n3:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014This Week '\u25a0'\n3:15-Newe       i\n3:25\u2014Week-End' Listening\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1952\n3:30\u2014NBC Symphony Orchestra\n4:30\u2014Sports College\n4:45\u2014On The Record\n5:00\u2014Sports Page\n5:30\u2014Light Concert Orch.\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014N.H.L, Hockey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\n8:00-Share' the Wealth\n8:30\u2014The Jullett\" Show\n9:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:30\u2014Sweet and Lively\n10:00-News       \u25a0\n10: lS-iArmdale\"\" Chorus\n10:30\u2014Trooadero Orchestra\n11:00\u2014D'anctog'tarty*\nll;87-News -',     **\n 1 PFRSOWO-PERSON Mfi\/FADS\nFOR Q(\/\/CK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ada\u2014-5 p.m.\nPhohe 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - FEMALE SHORT OR-\n,  der cook. Steady job,,Room and\n- board furnished. State'age, experience and wages expected. Maple\nLeaf Cafe, Salmo, B.C,\nMINERS AND HELPERS WANT-\ned. Stope and raise miners. Apply\nYale Lead end Zinc Mines Ltd.,\nAinsworth, B.C.\n\u25a0WANTED\u2014YOUNG LADY ABOUT\n25 years of age tor cashier at\nArmson's. No experience necessary.   .\".' '\n.PUBLIC NOTICE\nWANTED-CAPABLE HOUSE'\n, keeper. Phone 666 or call at 337\nBaker Street,\nWAMED-EXPERIENCED WAlT*\nresses. Apply Diamond Grill, Nel.\nson, B.C\nHOUSEKEEPER    WANTED    FOR\none month, in modern home, cen\n, , tral. Bo* 7280, Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRETIRED BUSINESS MAN SEEKS\npart or full-time employment.\nActive and aggressive, Salary not\nfirst consideration. \"Box 7845, Dally\nNews. -\nLand and timber examina-\ntiona made anywhere in B.C. Con-\n. .fidential. Apply E. H. Hird, Slocan City. B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nR.OP. SIRED-ORDER YOUR RE.\ni qulrements now from one of the\n; most popular.breeds: S.C. White\nLeghorns, New Hampshires,\nRhode Island Reds. Now available\nat the Triangle Chick Hatchery.\nphone 3201, Armstrong, B.C\nROA_T_NG HENS FOR SALE\nLive weight; small birds 35 cents,\n. lirge birds 45 \"cents per lb. Will\ndeliver in city. Also laying hens.\nPhone 206-L3.\n;IF YOU INTEND BUYING BABY\nchicks or pullets this year, write\nfor catalogue of breeds and prices\nto APPLEBY POULTRY FARM.\nI  MISSION CITY. B.C.\niSO CHICKENS, 9 MO. OLD, GOOD\nlaying. Reason for selling, moving\nto town. J. Kohout, Bailey's Cottage, near.Question Mark.\nTOR SALE\u2014JERSEY COW, DUE\nto freshen March 27th. Apply Alex\nJ. Savlnkpff, Thrums, B.C.\nTOR   SALE \u2014 2 .GANDERS,   OR\ntrade for 2 geese. Mrs. 3. Flegel,\n.- R.R.'l, Nelson.'\"\nPERSONAL\n\"1. R, WATKINS QUALITY PROD-\nV nets. Phone 816-Y2. '\nWAWAJJESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co.. D L. Kerr Agent\n' SLENDOR TABLETS ARE EFFEC-\n,'   tlve. 8 weeks' supply $2; 9 weeks'\n' $5; at all druggists.\n1ALMEB HOTEL\" OPPOSITE C.P.R\n3   Depot Clean rooms and moderate\nrates $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.51) to\nj   .$3,00 doubles   Vancouver.   B   C\nAdults i personal rUbSKr\ngooda 23 deluxe assortment $1-\n\u25a0. bill Tested, guaranteed, fine\nquality. Mailed in plain, sealed\npackage, including free Birth\nControl Booklet and bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hygiene\nSupplies. Western Distributors.\nBox 102.1-PN   Vancouver\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nassayers and mine\nrepresentatives\nfe  W   WIDDOWSON & CO   AS-\nBayers 301 Josephine St., Nelson\n.H. S,   ELMES.: ROSSLAND.   BC.\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\n. AUTO WRECKERS\nbAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\"\nR. W   HAGGEN   Land Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.   I\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson. B.C., Surveyor, Engineer\nInsurance and real estate\nBlcHABDY AGENCIES LTD.  IN-\nsurance. Real Estate\u2014Phone 135\n*'       LIVESTOCK   DEALERS      \"~\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTO __*-\nContact H Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\t\n_           BENNETTS L_*\u00bbTED\nMachine  Shop,  acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 503 324 Vernon St\nPtisan Itttiij Sfama\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive   insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion,\n48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions.\n$1.50 line per month (26 consecutive Insertions)   Box  numbers  lie extra.  Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420e per line,\nfirst insertion.  16c per line\n' eacb subsequent insertion.\n.ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not Mora Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week,   ,\nto advance        .30\nBy carrier, per year  ....   15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month      $ 1.25\nThree months 3.75\nSix months              7.50\nOne year        15.00\nMail In Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month            1.00\nThree months   2.75\nSix months     ....    5.50\nOne year     10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF NELSON\n\"MUNICIPAL ELECTipNS\"\nPublic Notice ls hereby given to.\nthe Electors of the Municipality of\nthe City of Nelson that'I require\nthe presence of the said electors at\nthe City Clerk's Office; City Hall,\n501 Front Street, Nelson,* B.C., on\nThursday,, the 27th day of March,\n1952, at 10 o'clock a.m., for the purpose of electing a person to represent them as Alderman to fill the\nvacancy created by the resignation\n6fR. P. 3. Riesterer.\nThe mode of nomination shall be\nas follows:\nThe candidates shall be nominated ln writing, the writing shall b.e\nsubscribed by two electors of the\nMunicipality as Proposer and Seconder and shall be delivered to the\nReturning Officer at any time between the date of. thli' notice and\ntwelve noon of the day of nomination, the said writing may be to the\nform numbered 3 in the Schedule\nof the \"Municipal Elections Act,\"\nand shall state the name, residence\nand occupation or description, of\neach person proposed, in such manner as sufficiently to Identify such\ncandidate, and in the event of a\npoll being necessary, such poll shall\nbe opened Thursday, the 3rd day.\nand Friday, the 4th day of April,\n1052, between the hours of 12 o'clock\nnoon and 3:00 o'clock p.m. for Permitting duly qualified voters to vote\nwho shall sign a statement showing\nthat it is their expectation that they\nwill, be absent from the Municipality on the final day of the poll,\nnamely, Saturday, the 5th day of\nApril, 1952, when the poll shall be\nopened from 8:00 o'clock a.m., to\n8:00 o'clock p.m., to the Council\nChamber of the City Hall, at the\ncorner of Ward and Front Streets,\nof which every person is hereby\nrequired to take notice and govern\nhimself accordingly.\nGiven under my hand at the City\nHall, Nelson, B.C., this I9th day of\nMarch, A.D. 1952.\nC. W. R. HARPER,\n''   ' Returning Officer.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n\"MILLS\" ICE CREAM MACHINE,\n\"Savage' 'ice cream cabinet, \"Alaskan\" oil range, 2 oven; 3 plate\nglass mirrors, set of chrome\nbooths, 4 tables, 9 double and 2\nsingle seats, 2 sets chrome tables\nand Chairs,' Berkel meat slicer,\nhand power; McKasky' cash register, .\"**__. 'cTo^es \"frees,\"' cutlery,\nglasses, dishes, etc. Compressor\ndoor for walk-In frig. Apply Box\n88, Castlegar, B.C.\nSEE. AR* PfeT_.ftS_._t, CREEiTOl.,\nfor your, dressed pork. Also weaker pigs. First pigs ready.about\nApril 1st Phone 35-X, or write\nBox\" 144, Creston, B.C.\n\"Nu-i___\" Stainless Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer a special trade-In allowance\non your old cookware. Box 333.\nNelson. B.C\nFOR SALE \u2014 FOUR HOLE .UTtt-\nversal debp freeze; first class condition. Reasonable for cash. Phone\n180-R.\nCRESS    WART   REMOVER-\nLeavea no scars-  Your Druggist\nsells CRESS.     \u25a0\nFOR SALE\u2014ALL STEEL HOUlE\ntrailer, 7 _\" x 14'. $450 cash. Phone\n837-L3, Trail.\nALL ENAMEL GURNEY RANGE^-\nComplete with Queen oil burner.\nPrice, $75. Phone 161-Y2.\nFOR YOUR WOODWORKING RE-\nquirements phone 1282-L. Ainbr-\noso and Fazio, 818 Sixth Street.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TtlBES S_>E*.\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\n935 E Cordova St., Vancouver\nUSED BEATTY WASHER. G06ij\ncondition. Phone 1549.\n1   LIGHTWEIGHT   BABY   CAR*.\nriage; good cond., $12. Ph. 1435-X.\nMICRO NIC HEARING AlDS.-\nWrlte P.Q   Box 39   Nelson. B.C\nMACHINERY\nfor Spring\nSee Us Now for\nCATERPILLAR\nTractors, Diesel Engines, Electric\nSets, Motor Graders, Dozers\nSKAGIT\nOne, Two and Three,Drum Hoists\nfor Logging or Dragline\nJOHN DEERE\nTractors. Plows. Discs, Harrows.\n*   Manure Spreaders\nKOHLER  .\nGasoline Lighting Plants\nFrom 350 Watts and Up\nJOY\nCompressors, Alrleg Drills,\nRock Drills, Carbide Bits\nFor the Contractor.\nTRACTOR & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nNELSON - CRANBROOK\n.. .._.....--\u25a0_.._...-.I.._\u25a0-._,-...\u00ab\u25a0,\n(Continued ln Next Column)\nMACHINERY\n. (Continued:\n:,\u25a0-. New qnd Used\nSTANDARD PIPE\nAND FITTINGS\nond\nVICTAULIC PIPE\nAND FITTINGS\ni ir Ventilation Pipe\nit Mine'Rail\nir Ore Cart\ni   it Mucking Machines\nPHONE 18        .\n-Nelson\nMachinery,Co.\nCompany, Ltd.\n214 Hall St.     Nelson, B.G\nFOR SALE\u2014DISMANTLED SAW-\nmill plant We are dismantling a\nsawmill breakdown plant at\nOcean Falls Majority of equipment is for disposal Including log\nhaul chain and drive, log loading\nequipment 10-foot Clark band\nmill, lump saw, 60\" Sumner edger\nwith synchronous drive, trimmers,\netc. All or port for sale. For additional details write or wire Mr\nA R Dyrsmid. P.O, Box, 879.\nVancouver. B.C.   .\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING.\ni   SAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS* EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited <\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1, B.C.\nFOR SALE-ONAN, 1000 WATTS.\nManual starting, 110 volt, 60 cycle,\nA.C. lighting plant. Perfect running order. As is, f.o.b. Edgewood,\nB.C., $350.00. Apply Arlada Dairy\nCo., Edgewood, B.C.\nTRUCK, TRACTOR AND LOAD-\ning winches available from stock\nLeRoi 105 Compressor for rent\nBayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook\nB.C. ,-\u25a0:\u25a0-'      \u25a0\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nNEW BUNGALOW FOR SALE\n2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen\nwith built-in cupboards; wired for\nelectric range. Lot 85x75. Electric\nrange and oil heater included in\nprice. :\u25a0'\",\n$4750 Cash\nF. A. WHITFIELD\nReal Estate and Insurance\n302 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 FOUR BEDROOM\nhouse, living room, kitchen with\nbuilt-in cupboards, three piece\nbath, cut stone foundation and\nfull basement. Water and light\nStone built barn and chicken\nhouse, wood and tool shed, cut-\nstone cooler. Four acres of land,\nmixed fruit, On. main highway\none mile from City. Limits. $7500\ncash. Write Box 343, Nelson, B.C.\nor Phone 44-R-l.\nWHY RENT, WHEN YOU CAN\nbuy a 5-room house (needs some\nfinishing), 9 acres land; good garden, soil, fruit trees, small fruits;\noutbuildings, all fbr $4750. On\nmain highway to Trail; 5% miles\nfrom Nelson. Phone 188-X1 evenings. D. A. Hellikaon, Taghum.\nSUBDIVISION FOR SALE\u2014NEAR\nindustrial center of Trail and\nCastlegar. Main water pipelines\nInstalled and to service. This subdivision will -have more than 300\nhomesites. Will consider partnership or-housing project. Box 8388\nNelson Dally News.\nFOR SALE - 100-ACRE FARM\nwith Vt mile lake frontage: 40\nacres cleared. 3 acres fruit and\nwalnut .orchard. 7-rm. bouse with\nbasement; outbuildings, electricity\navailable, Irrigation flume under\nconstruction. $7500, David Orcutt.\nFauquier. B.C.\nIN APPLEDALE, B.C.\u201415 A_RE_,\ncleared, irrigated; good 5-room\nhouse, good barn for 12-14 cows,\nmilk house, and other buildings.\nHouse alone worth more than full\nprice of $3500. Apply Bill Vanjoff,\nCastlegar, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 5 ACRES WITH 2\nhouses. A very choice location on\nNorth Shore. $16,000, which is less\nthan cost of improvements. Offered for a short time only. Box 7264,\nDaily News.     '   .;\t\ni-A_RB, ALL CLEARED, -WITH\ntwo houses, 1 _ miles on Ymir Rd.\nfor sale, ;Prlcek $2500. For further\nInformation write Box 9204, Dally\nNews,' . .\n20 ACRES, BEASLEY. WONDER-\nful for auto camp. New 7000 gal.\nwater tank; Must sell. Apply H.\nClark, Corra Linn, B.C.\nWA-___D\"TO BUY-PARTLY FI_\u00a3\nisned house In town. Box 7286,\nDally News. *\nFOR SALE - FOUR ACRES OF\nland at East' Arrow Park, .B.C.\nApply W. Nesbitt, E. Arrow Park.\nSPOT CASH FOR 3-BEDROOM\nhouse in or hear city. Reply Bbx\n9018, Daily. News.\nFOR SALE - HOUSE, CLOSE IN,\nnewly decorated. Phone 517-Y.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n\/-SEE,..\nThe New    -\n70 H.P. AUSTIN\nSEDAN\n70 H.P, AUSTIN\n. PICKUP\nA  '\u25a0  l  . \u25a0   -   '\n--.    at   '\ni'' '-'\u25a0''.\nEmpire\nMotors\nand\n1951 Austin Sedan*\n1950 Chevrolet Coach\n1950 Austin Countryman\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1949 Austin Panel\n1949 Ford Coach\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1.48 Plymouth Coach\n1948 Pontiae 5-Pass. Coupe\n1947 Ford Sector)\n1940 Ford Coach\n1937 Ford C .upe\n1935 Ford Sedan\n1935 Willys Coupe\n1930 Model A Coagh\nil\n~r\n.y  SPECIAL\n1940 FORD COUPEy $550\n1950 G.M.C. Pickup   .\n1948 G;M.C. Pickup\n1947 Chevrolet Pickilp\n1947 Mercury 1-Ton\n1941 Fargo Pickup\n\"\".TERMS ahd*TO2&3__3\nEMPIRE\n803 BAKER ST. - NELSON. B.C.\nPHONE 1135 '\nAustin Sales and Service\nUSED\nINTERNATIONAL\nModel KB-8-F.Tandem, rear\naxle, new 9.00-20 12-ply\nlogger tires, long wheelbase*\nCHEVROLET\n1950 '\/2-Ton\nSPECIAL\nInternational 1939 1-Ton\nwith flat deck. Good tires.\n$395\u2014 No Trade\n& Equipment Co.\nPhone 1400 \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\nCastlegar\nShop'\nCUSTOM BUILT TRAILERS\nIN ANY SIZE\nHOUSE TRAILERS AND\nCAR TRAILERS\nOne complete 22-|ft.\nHouse Trailer \u2014 $l'80O\nWhen-Ordering Your Trailer\nWrite\nP.O. BOX 536\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.\nFOR SALE\u20143 MEN'S BICYCLES,\nvery cheap. Phone 508-E3.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY      (Continued In nox. column)\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n\"  '     (Contiruedl\nFOR SALE - DAMAGED 1947\nFord Pickup, Serial'No. 2124-\n47H3033, license No. C25-425, In-\n. pert it Nelson Transfer- Garage,\nNelson. Damaged 1949 G.M.C.\nPickup, Serial'No. 0831402244, license No. C28-623, Inspect at Oswald Motors, Castlegar. Damaged,\n1039 Ford Sedan, Serial No. 018442,\nlicense No. 70-874, inspect it Oswald Motors, Castlegar, Damaged\n1041 Plymouth Sedan, Serial No.\n9618191, license No. 104-944, Inspect at Motor Inn Garage, Trail.\nBids fo'r salvage on above vehicles to be made in writing to\nBourque le McGary, Insurance\nAdjusters, Box 13, Nelson, B.C.\ni05i\"M_i.A_i(.it_ sedam, 7000 m:\nA new car value at bargain price.\nRadio, heater, w.s. tires, overdrive,\netc Phone 1588.\nFOR SALE-MAN'S _._.__. ____t__\nballoon-tired bike. Scarcely used.\nPhone 474-X after 8:00 p.m,   :\n1848 1-TON DODGE TRUCK. PER.\nfact condition. Apply sifter 8:30\np.m. Phone 358-R.\n1950  FOftD   HAttf.TO*t\/!._l*ltt_V\nat sacrifice Phone 471-L6.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET TRICES PAID FOR\nacrap Iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron It Metals Ltd, 250 Prior St, Vancouver, BC. Phone Pacific 6357.\nWANTED-CEbAH POflB MOft\n20\" to 90' Inclusive, cedar 'posts\nsplit and round, impeded Larch\npoles, Albert Maida, Cascade, B.C,\nWAN_ED-CARtO__.. _P___\"C_I.\ndar fence posts.,7; ft. 18-18'*. Apply\n.JL A. Ellingson, Pres. Coalhurst\nConsumers Co-Op\u201e Kipp, Alberta.\nSHIP US VOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n016 Powell St, Vancouver\/ B C\nCedar pOLes. all ________\nand lengths Larch pole* Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 480. Nelson, B.C.\nSHIP YOUR HTbtefe TfO ti F\nMorgan, Nelson. B-C\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT BY APRIL 1-\n_ or 3-room apartment, unfurnished If* possible, Box 9801, Dally\nNews,\n_i_.<St_.__._._lObji _.trtfl_-FOR\nrent Immediate occupancy; business couple preferred. Apply Box\n7487, Dally News.   '\nFOR RENT-_ING__l HftfAAUi\nelectric sewing machine, $6.00 per\nmonth', delivered and picked upj\nPhone 41. Singer Sewing Centti.\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED FLAT\nfor couple from May td Septem*\nher. Phone, S64-R evenings.\nWANT TO REttf -\/2-BF)Dft66l*\nhouse, unfurnished, by April 1st\nPhone, S78-L1.\nW_Ji'i-J_i>-*W\u00ab5 c-Is w_____._H_S:\nroom house. Urgent Phone 1398-L.\nWANTED TO RENT\u20142 OR 3 RM.\napt or small house. Phone 922-L.\nFURNISHED CABIN FOB TISKT\u2014\nPhone 13S3-Y.\nWarm B_n_R6o_t i-dft MOT -\nApply 210 Vernon St. after 8 p,m.\n6ARAGE FOR RfcN* - JJ6 Ml\nStreet.\nROOM AND 10ARD\nWANTED\u2014BEDRM. FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Non-drinker, non-\nsmoker. Box 7292, Daily News.\nPETS. CANARIES. BEES, ETC.\nSIAME8E; KITTENS,   BRED   FE-\nmale. B,ox 9082, Pally News,\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\n1950 Plymouth\nSedan\nOne owner. Licensed.\n1949 Plymouth\nSedan-\nGood shape. Overhauled,\n\\946 Pontiae\nSedan\n* Heater. Colorr ________\n1947 Mercury ,\nSedan'      \u2022.*\u25a0\n1938 Ford Coupe\n1938 Plymouth\nCoupe\n1947 Fargo\n.4-1 -Ton Express\nNew pajnt\/\n1947 Ford Pickup\n1946 Ford\n1934 Plymouth\nCoach,     0\nPriced- at\n$325\n1940 Studebaker\nSedan\nBargain at\n$295\nTORONTO STOCKS\n-mines:\nAcidli. Uranium ..\u201e .....      ,19tt\nAkaitcho  ,.__..'  i.15\nAinal Larder    ._____._      .17\nAmerican Y.K. _.,     .82 _i\nAnacon ....  ,     _..____.\u201e__ 8.05\nAnglo Hurohian .................... 12.26\nAnkeno .'...._.\u201e...,.._^..\u201e..\u2122\u201e      .35\nArjon    \u2014i, ;\u00bb:      .12\nAdmaqu*  \u25a0 ,\u25a0',;;'\u25a0\"\u2022', : ; _.     ,19\nAunor  \u201e,_\u25a0 __., _. 8.00\nBagamao ,_.._,___^\u201e.....\u201e\u201e._     .15\nBarymln .,\u201e\u201e\u201e_____-,...._....,     .48\nBevcourt \u25a0;.-', ,.,-\u2022\u201e.;..,'.__..'\u2022 \u201e 1.00 '\nBobjo     . ......... __.\u201e_     .18(4\nBoymar Gold <\u2014\u2014 .     .12 Vt\nBralorne -.:\u201e'  ,\u201e , IM\nBrewIsrB. L. ^_.__.. i,     .17\nBroulan      1.40 ,\nBuffadison .;..___\u201e_._^ .     ,15H\nBuffalo Ank. \u201e.___ ^__.     .95 \u25a0\nBuff. Can; ._,._.__.._.._..__,      J.2V4\nCalllman '.. \u2022 \u25a0.,,:,\u201e*.\u201e\u201e.,.;; .25\nCampbell R. L, \u201e..__,\u201e____ 6.95\nCan. Mai.        .....'__.^_       .50%\nCariboo Gold      -  .\u201e, 1.25\nCentral 'Patricia . .66\nCentremaque ....-_._.,__.___.      .16\nChesklrk ..^.... . u_      .05%\nChestervill* ;...\u00ab...__\u201e      _J0\nCochenour  \u2122.:\u201e._ 1.52\nColomSc \u201e. \u201e      .03%\nCoha Mining It Smelting .... 36.00\nConwest \".       8.80\nDelnlte ..__ ___..\u201e 1.20\nDetta R, L. .\u201e\u201e___ _^       .15\nDiscovery ,....\u201e*...\u201e \u201er     .51\nDome      _._.._^  19.75\nDonalda ... \u201e____,,____     .40\nDuvay  .;..;. ...-. -...     ,12\nEast Malartlc ........ -___.      .93\nEast Sullivan .____, .  8.25\nElder Gold ._.,____.______.      .65\nEldona ....\u2014i.       .28\nEstell*   j \u201e 1.75\nEureka  ;......: __\u00ab 1.47\nFolconbsldge  -18.00\nFroblsher    5.30\nGiant Yel. ' 11.28\nGbd'aL*k*'       .86%\nGoldal* . ..\", _-i___i     .16%\nGolden Manltou ._._____ 6.10 *\nHalcrow ...._...______      .11\nHallnor   8.1a\nHarrlcana _^ ; .12\nHeath       .12\nHev*  '   - .11\nHolllnfer ,'\"\/,- 15.35\nHomer Y.K. _-. .:-: .18\nHudson Bay _______ 88.25\nInspiration       .35%\nJack Walt* ____* .14\nJollet Qu*. ________     M\nKayrand \u201e;......*_.____.__     .11\nKelore .1. \u2014.,\u201e',\u201e\u201e\u25a0     .16%\nKenvlU* ........:  : \u201e\u201e     .26\nKerr Addison _____\u25a0\u25a0 17.80\nKirk-Hudson Bay  2.00\nKirkland Laka __J .   .71\nLabrador  ______ 9.00\nLake Dufault  1.28\nLakeshor*  .._        , 11.75\nLamaqua   .__  6.00\nLeltch .'. ..-...-  1.12\nLlngman (new) ..._, .      .18\nMacDonald  ._ 1.89\nMacass*  ..-____ 1.85\nMacLeod Cock..._______ 2.72\nMagnet _.._\u201e__ *,16\nMalartlc O. F. __J  1.65\nMarcua G. ;_______     .11  ;\nMclntyr* _   78.00\nMcKerud* B b _______     .40%-\nMcW\u00bbttor\u00ab . . .81\nMining Corp.  8.00\nMoneta ______     .86\nNegus ..._____     ,88\nNew Calumet  2.35\nNew Goldvu* ,.   , \u201e .35\nNewLiind . 1,15\nNlplsslng ....^ ;  JJ5\nNoranda  :  79X_\nNormetals  8.05\nNorzone ... ' '       ,12 ..\nO'Leary ,\u201e.\u201e\u201e .      .20\nOrenada __________     .10\nOrlac  _, \u201e ,_\u201e,\u25a0\u25a0\u201e\u25a0.      ,10\nOslskA .....'       .94\nPamour.......   ,...\u201e, ,       .78\nPaymaster  . \u2014___     .62\nPickle Crow . ....__ 1.58\nPlacer Develop _____ 46.50\nPreston E. D.  1.38\nQuebec Lab .... ,,\u201e..\u25a0\u201e.,     .27\nQuebec Man  - 2.78\nQuemont ...'.....___.____ 21.50\nReevea Mac.      .58\nSan Antonio ...,.. - 2.35\nSen. Rouyn   .\u201e 1   .16\nShawkey  ______      .35\nSherritt Gordon .._____-_ 4.38\nSilvermllter ....\u2014_\u2014\u2122 1.58\nSisco* ... : \u2014_ 1 .62%\nSledon M\u00bbL \u00bb\"     .40\nStadacona        .40\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES       \"\"~* -- \u2014  -\nBeaVer Lodge ZZ.. ..,\nCariboo Gold ...'._;\t\nGiant Mascot , .\nGrwdview ..........__\t\nIn.. CteC\".' \t\nKootenay Bell*. ,.._\u201e.\u201e\nPioneer Obid   .\u25a0 __\nPremier Border    ...._;_\nReeves MacDonald .....\nSheep, Creek \t\nSilver\\Ridge   *\t\nSilver Standard ..._._\nVahanda .-;.  \t\nVan Roi _\nWestern Exploration ..._\nWestern Miner     . .;\t\nWestern Uranium  \t\nOILS    ;\nAnaconda       _.\u201e.\nAnglo Canadian  .....'...__..\nA P Consolidated     .\t\nCalgary & Edmonton ._\nCalmont \t\nHome  ;..\nMercury' .....___\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Dist     .....\t\nAlberta Diet V.T.,\t\nCapital Estates ..\t\nInter Brew\t\nStarratt Olsen .-\nSteep Rock ........\nSudbury Cont ._\nSylvanlte....: _\nTeek Hughes .....\nToburn ._,.;...\t\nTomblll '..*.........._i\n.Trans Cont Re*.\nUnion Mining ...\nUnited Kerio :.\nUpper Canada _\nVentures\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\nClean JP\nbins**1\"\n'^UtMtJj^\n4 LOAN HANS\nun immsfmam test\num_j ,\\\\\\\\\\yj\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21\u00bb,1!M2 \u2014 11\n1.10\n\u20221.30\n.63\n.82\n.80;\n2,20\n.20,\n5:25\n1.85\n1     .80\n2.35\n\" .20\n.55\n\u25a01.00\n.46\n8.00\n.19%\n9.25\n.58 '\n18.50\n1.65\n15,75\n.32\n2.65\n2.55\n17.2S\n4.50\nWait* Amulet ,.___.,\nOILS\nAnglo Can. .........\t\nB-A. Oil ...'.\t\nCalgary and Edmonton..\nCalmont\t\nCentral Leduc\t\nChemical Research\t\nCommonwealth Pet*.....\nDalhousle .........\t\nDavies Pet* . ,__\t\nDecalta  .\u201e_.\u201e.,\u201e\nDel Rlo \t\nFederated Pet*______\nHlghwood Z. \u2014\nHome.. :...\t\nImperial Oil \u25a0 ,.,\nInter Pete _._ -__\nKroy OU;\nMacDougal Segur\nMid Cont'....J......\u2122\nNkt Pet* .  _.\nOkalt*  ___\nPacific Pet*\t\nRoyalite _____\nRoxana .._,.___\nTow*r Pet*  .\nUnlted'Oll*    \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibi\nAlgoma Steel _____\nAluminum .\u201e\u201e,,.,;,,\u201e.\u201e,.\nArgus ..'.....:._.____\nAti\u00abs st :..\u2014___\nBell Telephon* \u201e\u2014.,...,\nBruillin  '\u201e\u201e...\u201e\u201e\nB.C. Forest..... .,.._,\u25a0\u25a0\u201e\nB.C. Packers A _____\nB.C. Packers B ,   , ,,. \u201e*\nB.c; Power'A ._\u201e,\t\nB.C. Pqwer B \u2014',.,\u25a0,.',;\",',',\u201e\nBrown Co :....___^\t\nBrown Co. pfd .._____\nBurns A ..'___\nCan Cement,. \u2014_\nCan. Malting ;..\u2014___\u00ab\nCan. Packers 'A __.\nCanadian Breweries ....\nCan Canners .(.......\u2014.\nCan Car & Fdy .....____.\nCan Car 6s Fdy A \u2014\u2014\nCan OU ................. .\nCan Celanese \u2014__\nCan Dredge _____\nCan Marconi ......\t\nCan Pacific Rly t_\nCan West Lmbr ;\t\nCocksbutt \u2014\t\nCM61S  __\nCons. Paper \u201e, ,,.,\nDist Seagram -, \u201e', \u201e\u201e\u201e,......,\nDom. Bridge 1\u2014_.\nDom Steel Sc Coil B\t\nDom. Stores \t\nDom, Tar & Chemical...\nDom. Textile* \t\nEddy Paper _\nFamous Players\t\nFord A ___\nGatineau S% pfd .. ,\nGreat Lakes .........'.__.\nGypsum Lime.\nH. R. MacMillan A ....\t\nH. R, MacMillan B\t\nImperial Oil ............. ,\t\nImp. Tobacco .. \u2014\u201e\u201e,.\u2014\nInt Nickd ____.\nInt Pete  .'. . .\nLoblaw A.\nMap!* Leaf Milling\t\nMassey Harris .'.\t\nMAO Paper  __\nMont Loco  \u201e_i\u201e.\nMcColl Frontenao ,\t\nNat Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey _.\nPowell River \u2014_____\nPower Corp .\nShawlnlgan \t\nShea Brew\t\nSimpsons A ...\nSimpsons pfd ___\u2014.\nSoutham  -\nSteel of Can .......\u201e_,___.\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nWinnipeg Electric com.\nWinnipeg Electric pfd ..\n.47\nT.00\n.17\n1.80'\n2.35\n.32\n.43\n\u2022 .63%\n.26\n13.23\n1.70\n17.00\n12.60\n6.18\n22.00\n18.00\n1.90\n8.70\n1.20\n4.10\n.44\n.47\n-.8\n2.89\n10.78\n.38\n16.23\n88,50\n30.63\n143\n.37%\n.40\n8.15\n8.85\n10.85\n16.75\n.53 ,\n1.it\n1.90\n16%\nSO\n112%\n13\n22\n36%\n-   11'\n7\n16\n15\n,  82%\n6%\n13\n107\n40%\n74\n46\n33\n18\n32V<\n13%\n16\n26%\n41\n82\n. 5.15\n36%\n9%\n17%\n36\n84\n24\n81%\n17\n10%\n40%\n'    11%\n25\n17%\n55\n100\n50\n81\n22%\n23\n38%\n19%\n44%\n30%\n31\n7%\n11%\n25%\n15%\n41\n27%\n65%\n26\n;30\n' 42\n14%\n36%\n38\n17%\n32%\n23%\n38%\n\/CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH';\n[FAI.GO-c^.^VTIP-E. fl\nTLniXO^d 'Nelson. HT\u00ae\nHERE IS- A BARGAIN...'\nAnd Bargains in Houses Art Hard To Get These Days.\nA NEW 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW ln Fairview, built to highest\nstandards, being offered at LAST YEAR'S PRICE. Construc-\n' tion costs continue to rise, and the best informed building opinion\ncalls for further rises this year. You save at least $1500.00 by\nbuying at current offering price. Full basement, piped hot-air'\nfurnace, oak floors throughout tully Insulated, level lots, 60x110;\nready to move Into. Financed under N.H.A. $20.00 a month pays\nboth .principal AND interest.    \u2022*... '\n*-\u2022'\u2022      FULL SELLING PRICE.\u2014 $9700,\nInspection Invited.\nREVENUE PROPERTY . . . Good duplex on Carbonate. Immediate occupancy of one dde. Both residences'are completely\n. Independent of each other. Three bedroom* each side..\nTHIS IS AN ATTRACTIVE BUY AT $4750  ,\nLiberal term*.\nAlso, a confidential listing ot a two bedroom bungalow ln Fair-\nview, on the flat No phone inquiries can be accepted on this.\nOccupancy about June. .,\n, PRICE $9000. T^RMS.   '\n.    -  For Inspection and further details, see R. D. P. GILDAY\n\u25a0THE GILDAY AGENCIES\n542 Baker Street\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents  '\nEvenings or Weekends Phone 692-R2\nPhone 1460\nMarket trends\nNEW YORK, March 20 (AP) -\nWith the pressure eased In the\nsteeiworkers dispute, price, turned\nupward. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0'.\ni, Canadian issues were mixed. Mclntyre gained % Dome Mines added\n% and Canadian'Pacific was tip %.\nDistillers Seagrams was up %, and\nInternational Nickel dropped % and\nHiram Walker fell %.\nTOR0NTO.:(CP):-Prices afibwed '\nfew changes toward the close of *.\ntrendies? Session.\nBase metal leaders eased as Consolidated Smelters,' Hudson Bay,\nNoranda, Normetal and Waite Amulet turned downward. East Sullivan,\nEstella, Golden Manltou and Sher-\nrltt-Gordon added pennies,\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Forenoon\nweakness was all but erased leaving prices' leaning only slightly, to\nthe downside near the close.\nMines continued mixed and trend-\nless under fairly heavy Interest\nDominion Asbestos, East Sullivan\nand Rlx-Athabaska firmed, whil*\nEmerald, Hudson-Rand and Tung,\nsten were oft\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Prices\nopened on a generally firmer not*\nresulting from the overnight announcement by Shell Oil Company\nof a one-four-tour scrip bonus. Thi*\ncaused a sharp marking up in th* '\ncompany's stock and ln other leading oils, while most leading Industrials showed gains.     ,\nVANCOUVER, March* 20 (CP) \u2014\nBase metals were, quiet and mixed\ntoday, Oils forged* ahead and gold*\nheld steady.\nNew York Approves\nCalgary Oil Shares\nNEW YORK, March 30 (CP) \u2014\nThe New York curb exchange announced today Its governors hav*\napproved the listing of 2,999,012\nshares of Western Homestead Oils\nLtd. of Calgary.'The shares are It\ncents par.\nMETALS\n; non-\nNEW,YORK.(AP) - Spot 1\nferrous metal prices: Copper, 24%\ncents a pound, Connecticut Valley.\nLead, 19 cents a pound, New York.\nZinc, 19% cents a pound, East St\nLouis. Tin, $1.21% a pound, New\nYbrk.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Marcn 20 (CP) \u2014\nTrade was moderately active oh th*\nCalgary livestock market todiy and *\nprice* continued steady. OS offer\nwere 120 cattl* end calve*. No\nstrictly choice butchers were available.   '\nButcher steer* ind heifer* w\u00bbr*\nateady at the week'* lower level\nBaby-beef cattl* were ln fair demand. Cows were steady to strong\nand bulls generally steady. Veal\ncalves were fully steady.\nHogs closed steady Wednesday\nat $23.75, sows at 111, No #heep\nmarket was established.\nGood to near-choice butcher steer*\n22.50-23.50; common to medium 18-\n22. Good to near-choice butcher\nheifers 21.50-23.50; common to me- j\ndium 1.7-21. Good to choice fed'\ncalves 23-24.50; common to medium\n20-22.50. Good cows 16.50-18; common to medium 13.50-10, \u2022'canners\nand cutter* 9-13. Good bulls 16-17;\ncommon to medium 14-18.60; Good\nto choice veal calves 31-36; common\nto medium 25-30.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, March 20 (CP)  -\nWinnipeg grain cash prices;        m\nOats; No. 1 feed, 92%,\nBarley; 'No. 1 feed,, 118%, -\nHOG ADVICE PANNED\nWINNIPEG, March 20 (CP)\nManitoba farmers were warned'to-S\nday against following Federal Government advice on' hog marketing.\nAgriculture Minister F. & BeU\nsaid he agreed with David Ure, Al-,\nberta agriculture minister, ln saying farmers could obtain a better\nprice for hogs weighing 200-210.:\npounds live weight at the farm\nthan to market them at heavier\nweights.\nThe Federal Government had ad-, I\nvised farmers to hold hogs until f\nthey weighed 230-240 pounds.\nMr, Bell said while tha producer\nmight earn the Government pr*-:-j\nmlum of $2 or $1, he might have to '\naccept some loss by having to tak* [\na lower price for a heavier weight |\ncarcass.\nB.C. Helps Meat\nPackers In Alia.\nCALGARY, March 20 (CP) \u2014|\nApproximately 300 meat packing-;\nhouse workers, thrown out of work I\nIn Alberta recently,as a result of I\nthe outbreak of foot-and-mouth I\ndisease among Saskatchewan cattle, \\\nare back at work today, said. Norman Riches, Western director of I\nthe United Packinghouse Workers!\nof America (C.I.O.-C.C.L.).\nThe employment situation for thai\nworkers, in Alberta \"never really I\ngot bad\" as compared to other part* I\nof Western Canada, he said. At one I\ntime, some 93 workers were laid oft]\nIn Calgary and another 200 in Edmonton. ,\nThe lifting of the meat embargoes I\nby British Columbia had possibly I\nhelped the situation in Alberta. As I\na result of the relaxing ot restrle-J\ntions, he felt too, that the 250 employees now out of work in Vancouver would be back on the job In a]\nweek or 10 days.\nPLAN 330-MILE LINE\nSALT LAKE CITY, March 261\n(AP)\u2014The Salt Lake Pipe. Line!\nCompany) announced plans today fori\nthe construction bf a 330-mile oil!\nproducts pipeline from Sail Lake|\nCity to Boise, Idaho.\n ;12*j- NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21,1952\nWhen You Think of\nPRESCRII^QN\nthink of\nMann's Clinic Pte\nand\nIrlAliN S\nB.C. Needs More\nVICTORIA, B.C., Mtrch 26 (CP)\n\u2014A bill to *dd mother justice to\nthe Supreme Court of Brtllsh Columbia was given first reading today\nIn the legislature. '\n.. The bill, would raise the number\not justices from seven 'o eight\n\"An extra Judge Is urgently heeded,\" Attorney-General Gordon Wis-\nmer said.. \"The great Increase ln lltl-\nSatlon In Vancouver nd throughout\nie Interior, particularly in-the\nNorth Okanagan and Trail' areas,\nmake* it impossible for. tha present\njudges to cop* with It\"\nThe new justice would b- appointed by the federal government.\nDEPOSITS DECREASE\nOTTAWA, March 20 (CP) \u2014 Dominion Government deposit* decreased $14,573,000 to 40,519,000 during the week ended March 19, the\nBank of Canada reported today In\nIts weekly statement;\nNave the Job Done Right\nVI-GRAVIS\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE815\nFour types of the polio virus have\nbeen traced but medical authorities\nOur Ellison's Best Flour\nIs Available In Tea Towel Bags\nSizes 24s and 49s\nEllison Milling & Elevator\n>'\u25a0.* Co. Ltd.\nPhoh* 238\nare not certain how it enters the\nhuman system.''\nTHOMPSON\nfUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n815 Kootenay St       Phone 861\nJ. A. C LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Buildlnn\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 26\nSpring Is Just Around the Corner.\nPrepare Now For Your Gardening Needs!\nf\n.4-Tlne\nSpading\nFork\n$3.00\nA tough, well\nbuilt fork, der\nsigned to stand\nhard wear. 30\"\nhandle, 'D' top.\nLevel Head\nGarden\nRake\n$2.30\ntong Handled\nPruning Shears\n$6.95\n14 tooth garden\nrake built for\nlong wear. \u2014\nHead   forged ...\ni<M*Jemf..btanttoa,.frMe, 5\"S*_!r'_iSi!J\nshrubs, hedges faster, cleaner. \u201e      aiA-foot      I\nAluminum   handles,   rubber h___l*        1\nhand grips. 29-lnchifs.long., ,n*\",BI8-      |\nHand Pruners - Grafting Wax\"- Pruning Saws\n\"\u25a0-   Garden\n\u00a7     Hoe\n|   $2.35\n.-Long plain fer-\n.rule, polished\nfinish  tough\nsteel blade,\ni-pojlshed' hard-\nWood 6-foot\n;   handle.  6\"\nblade.\nSteele Briggs\nQuality\nSEEDS\nRound\nPoint\nShovel\n$4.45\nTough; tempered steel blade\nIs fast scouring. Has Celn-\nforced blade,\nixtra strong\nhandle,\t\nHotkaps - Lawn Rollers - Hotents\nLawn\nLime\n5c Ik'\nBag\n$1.40\nHigh test, pure\nlime In bulk er\nIn 60-lb, bags.\nIdeal soil\nsweetener.\nCultivators\nLawn\n'\nBrume\n$1.75\nHas flexible\nmetallic teeth.\n'ZiZ^ZiiZ&zM^iiii:\nIt's light In\n:iZitiiZiZ\\jlhi^i\nweight yet\ntough and\njJ^^.. &\niprlngy. Rakes\njffimk WRL\nwithout tear\ning up grass\nroots\/\nFertilizers\n'  Elephant Brand\nVigoro\nUse\nHyponex\nThe perfect and balanced plant food. Grows\nplants iri soil, sand or\nwater. Just the thing to\nstrengthen your bedding\nplants.\nGarden\n' Gloves   ..\n$1.40 pr.\nAttractive,\nlong wearing\ngloves.- Made\nof plastic\ncoated cotton\nfabric\nTurf Edgers\nHand\nGarden\nTools\ni__.AN__SHAKE8 \"\u2022\u00ab'\u00abh\u00ab\"0ed IA Pari* at new French Premier\nAnteln* Pinay assures Oen. Dwlght b. Elsenhower that his govern-\nment-Y\/lll fu If-Mo the best of Its *blllty France's defence commitments. The Allied supreme commander said he had Intended his visit\nto b*.a \"courtesy cal\" and was \"delighted\" at the attitude\"ofYth.\nneyv-rtglme on collective seourlty of Western natlons_-Central Press\nCanadian.      . \u25a0   , ,\nDoctor Says Cash\nNot Available For\nFull State Care\nLONDON, March 20 (Reuters)\nA British doctor said today the\nstate-run 'health service may have\nto reduce treatment of the sick because there is not enough money to\npay for Britons' needs. '.,_,_-\nThe warning-was given by Dr,\nFfrangcon Roberts, 64-year-old\nWelsh radiologist who retired from\nthe state health service before publishing a book analyzing its faults,\nIn his ,s_ryey, \"Th* Cost of\nHealth\" he expresses doubt wether\nBritain can still afford the comprehensive cradle-to-the-grave medical\nplan started,by the former Labor\ngovernment in 1948.\nThe service, under which hospitals\nwere taken over and doctors became\ngovernment servants, was \"an adventure Into unchartered territory,*'\nRoberts said. ,\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED d REPAIRED\nRECORIIMG,    ,\nJim's Radiator Shop\n601 Ward 8_ Phone 6.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll,\nDress Up\nFor SPRING \u2022 . .\nwith a p. ir of plain\nSUEDE PUMPS\nBy Grenade\nColors: Blue and Black.\nCuban and Spike Heels.\nSizes 6-10.  -,r\nWidths AAA; AA, B,\n1095\nPhone 1114     Nelspn\n\u25a0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii\nSpecial Defence\nfund Planned\n, OTTAWA, March 20 (CP) \u2014 The\nGovernment is proposing to set aip\na special $1,400,000 fund to allow it\nmore flexibility in helping* the\nprovipces in. the field, of civil defence through1 special money grants.\nDiscussion* now tr* going on between' Ottawa ind the provincial\ncapitals to see if it Is possible to\narrange- a joint conference on use\nof the monby\u2014li It 1* voted by\nParliament,';   .\nThe estimates tabled gave the\nfirst Indication, of th* plan by including an Item, of $1,400,000 to provide \"for grants to province* tor\ngeneral civil defence purposes.\" '\nA Health-. Department official\nsaid the key word Is 'general.\"\nUnder preseht arrangements, lie\nsaid, the Federal Government\nspends money tor specific purposes \u2014 air raid sirens, hose couplings Ind tho like\u2014to help provinces tind municipalities.   \u25a0\"'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nThere arei however, various problems which come up which fall outside these Specific fields, the naw\nfund.I*.aimed at covering that no-\n-\"-\"j-lar*\nlind.\n, $1,400,000 figure, He aald, is\ntentative. The Government wants\nmainly to get approval of the Idea.\nThat Item is. mainly responsible\nfor boosting' total civil defence\nestimates, by roughly 80 per cent,\nto $6,508,830 from $4,106,202.      _\n\"Chu Chin Chow\" .Isolds the record fbr long runs of any plays staged in London with 2238 performances. ..;..-,   -,\ncSCS JElv*,\nWATCH REPAIRS\nYEARS EXPERIENCE\nNEISON, B.C.\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n\"-.\u2022tthf:   ','\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 148\nJail three For Brulal Conduc!\nIn Calgary's Cume Barracks\nCALGARY, M*rph SO (CP) - Mr.\nJustice C. C. McLaurin hu called\nfbr a \"rigorous investigation\" by the\nDefence Department of Discipline\nat the Army's Currie Barracks here.\nHe made the request after imposing jail terms on three soldiers convicted of assaulting a woman at tbe\nbarracks.:He said discipline.at the\nbarracks the-night of the offence\nwai \"virtually non-existent\" ,..\nPrivates James R. Qulnh, Francis\nPrlineau and Raymond Madera of\nthe Royal Canadian Army Service\nCorps were .each,sentenced to two\nyears less one, day at\" hard labor.\nThe trail judge reduced the charges\nfrom rape and indecent asault. -\nPolice witnesses said-the huts in\nwhich the'assault occurred were\nstrewn with1 the woman's clothing\nand. liquor bottles., They Said the\ngeneral condition \"of the buildings\nwas \"f'lthy.\"\nBADLY BiiATEN ';.''.,\nEvidence; revealed the woman\nwas brought to Currie Barracks by\nQuinn and taken to a hut where she\nwas attacked by three mem She\ntestified she was. later taken to\nanother hut and assaulted by other\nsoldiers. Pictures,entered aa exhibits\nshowed,she -was badly beaten about\nthe _\u00bbce. '. *\"-   . .\nMr. Justice McLaurin said ihe\nevents during the early morning of\nDeo: 23, 1081, were \"disgraceful.\"\nA38URE3 INSURANCE .   .\nEDMONTONiMarch 20 (CP) \u2014\nElmer Roper, Alberta CCF. leader,\ntoday said that \"absolutely complete\" motor: vehicle Insurance Is\nprovided under, a Saskatchewan\nGovernment scheme at one-quarter\nto one-third the cost of \"vastly inferior\" coverage supplied ln Alberta by private companies.\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS! LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\n\u2022'\"\u25a0: For th* B'est'lr.\nBaby Bottle Nipples\nEtc.\nAsk fbr STORK\nBold Only it Your Rexall Store,\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\" '\n, Phone 34, Day - 807-R Night\nBOX 480\nYmir\nDancing\nEVERY\nSaturday\nMICKEY MeE WEN\nAND HIS\n\"MELODY MAKERS\"\nCome end Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir\nDANCINO \u00bb TO 1\nADMISSION 76o\nClassified Ads Get Speedy Results\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nIftsrKooTM\/iyBelie\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY,  LIMITED\nPhone 1530     Wholesale\u2014Retail    Nelson, B.C.\nAccording to Harwell a jury!>\n- \"twelve people chosen to dee id*\nwho has .ho bettor lawyer!\"\n-udget-wise homemokers\nhave learned the mony\nadvantages of our laQn-\ndry services.\" Extra leisure\n.;. sparkling bright Iduri-\ndry. Send us your wash-\nables. .-.. i...\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE .OUR CLOWES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONI    '   :\nClassified Ads Got Speedy Results\ntjMsr-' \u2022 '\u2022***\u2022\nGENERAL ^\u00a7 ELECTRIC\nSfiaca, WtafaJL\nRIMIGERATOR\nNELSON ELEaRfC GO. LTD.\nGENERAL\nAUTHORS\nELECTRIC\nLID DEALER\nThe soldiers had \"behaved ln * depraved and brutal manner\"\nHe said he would have Imposed\nmore severe sentences It the woman\nhad been ot a higher moral standard\nPrimeau crumpled to the court\nhouse floor when sentence was pronounced. He had to be revived by\nthe R C.M.P, escort. A fourth soldier\nwas acquitted,\n574 Baker St.\nNelion, B. C.\nPhone 260\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants.\nAuditors\n078 Baker 81.      '   Phone 835,\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nTHE USUAL, UNUSUAL-\nSport Shirts\nNEW PATTERNS\nNEW COLORS\n$6.95 and $7.95\nplus\nQUARTETfE\n\u25a0:\u25a0\"*-\u25a0 ::*||p5y:-;:''\n\u25a0. ;-a.- *y\u25a0\u25a0'':.\nEitioty's Ltd_\nTHVAAANi STORE\nDenim\nWork Clothes\nFORMER\nftW.G. \u2014 NORThERN \u2014 PIONEER\n'     BRANDS\n* COWBOY KING PANTS       \u00bbff.\nll-oz. Buckskin Denim. ,....._\u201e.._. -\u25a0'.''   _ .ssf\n\u2022 COWBOY KING SHIRTS      IC\nBlu\u00ab Denim, \u201ej '    ,   ,.'.,..'.;,,.    ',, \u2022':  sf\n\u2022 DENIM PANTS\n8-os. Blue, Pre-Shrunk. Tough Wearing. _,\u201e\n8 pocket*.  Sizes 30-44.\n\u2022 BIB OVERALLS\n8-oz. Blue, Pre-Shrunk. Size*. 88-48.\nfl\nRule pocket and hammer sling.\nit DfNIM JACKETS AM \/i\nPre-Shrunk. Short ___\u2022 _.....,'.-\u25a0\"    longityfoTT\nTHE BEST WORK CLOTHES AT\nM\n1 Immediate Delivery\n1952 Chevrolet\n;\u25a0   and\nOldsmobile Cars\n\/and, -\n1952 Chevrolet\nHalf *Ton Pickups\nUSED CAM\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\n1950 Meteor\n1950 Austin\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1948 Ford Coach\n1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1941. Plymouth Coupe\n1937 Nash\n1937 Chevrolet Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\nUSED TRUCKS\n1949 Mercury 1-Ton\n; 1940 Chevrolet Panel\n; 1937 Chevrolet Pickup\nNELSON TRANSFER\nI * Company, Limited\nI The largest and most completely equipped garage In\n'      the Interior of British Columbia\n35 PHONE 35\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1952_03_21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0426187","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}