{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426556":{"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":"2023-07-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1952-12-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426556\/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":" Glum Outlook For\nfn 1953\nHospitals Predict Cuts in Staff *\nOr Service in View of Freeze Order\n12. '       .     JJ\/'-- '\u25a0    \u25a0 ::2 2   \u25a0\" '\u25a0   \u25a0' .\nVANC&UVER\" (CP)^-British Colijmbia hospitals tc\n. day .predicted!...staff reductions or'curtailment of service\n\u25a0'' because of Health Minister Ei^ic Mattin's,freeze oh,.953\n|irJHospitil Insurance paymeptsto ths1952.1evel.\nf;    \u2022 ., A proyjjnce-Wide survey'of-B.C. hospitals showed most\nhospitals fece increases in wages and costs and want more\n\u2022 money from, the provincial\ngovernment, i\nMany of them have sent vigorous\nprotests to tie government and two\n;bf them\u2014Enderby and Revelstoke\nI\u2014have indicated the government is\nwelcome to tape over next year. ,\n- A, H. L. Svifencisky, president of\nI the B. C. Hospitals Association and\na director of St Paul's Hospital\nhere, accused Mr. Martin of making the freeze announcement after\nI hospitals   had   granted   wage   in-\n|rcreases, \"for political reasons.\"\nMr. Swenclsky also said St Paul's\nlospital's budget will be up $300,-\n[000 In 1953.,...\nVancouver General has also ln-\nI pleated'its.J953 budget\u2014which has\nIheen submitted to Victoria\u2014is high-\njer than in 1952.\nIUNION8 PROTEST\nUnions, have protested. Vancou-\nI yer. JPradeS and Labor Council (TL-\nIC) is arranging a meeting with the\nJ cabinet to discuss the matter. And\nI W. M. Black, business agent of the\nIrrpospital Employees' Union (TLC)\n1 warns hospital services may have\nto be curtailed because wage agree\nments must be honored:\nOther comments:.\nKijnberley: East Kootenay Hospitals Association said Mr. Martin's\naction was \"completely arbitrary.\nSecretary S. B. G. Simons said it\nwill be virtually impossible to maintain patient services level in 1953\non 1952 budget\n\"We are disgusted with the government announcement.\"\nHe said several hospitals ln the\narea have already discussed higher\nwages in an effort to curtail employment turnover.\nVictoria: George E. Masters, administrator of Royal Jubilee Hospital, expects a $63,000 operating\nexpense increase next year. This\nwould be boosted another $60,000\nit nurses' wages demands are granted in full.\nHe declined to say whether the\nhospital would have to cut services.\nNanaimo: Wage, increases will\ncost the General Hospital an extra\n$20,000 int 1953.\nlYailf Hto- freeze order is being\naccepted es a challenge .by Trail-\nTadanac Hospital board, which has\ndecided to \"try to get by.\"\nmew Officers Elected\nBy Castlegar Chamber\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Because   ot   t\nracked agenda, action regarding the\nnt letter from Hon. R, E. Som-\nRossland-Trail MLA, \"advis-\n| ing there will be no bridge lor\nl Castlegar in 1953 unless perhaps a\n(toll bridge, was deferred to the\n[ February meeting by Castlegar and\nristrict   Chamber   of   Commerce\nhurs|*y night\n\"\"* Chamber elected i\u00bbw ef\nfor the coming year, end'\nI heard an account of the -work and\n1 plans of the Castlegar and District\nI Hospital Society. There was also a\n1 discussion of the telephone and*\n[radio reception in this area. \u2022 '.\niPJ&hm.&Jl^.mk\n. _-T-Oglowr-viosrpresident;\ni Couchman, secretory-treasurer,\nI J.-R, BUiDtt, w, % Waldie,Dr.\nS. Towler and ft. V, Campbell,\nncll members.\nGordon Reitb of Klnnalrd, chair-\nof the hospital society, out-\nI lined the progress thus far toward\n[a hospital in this area. The imme-\nl-iate aim ot his group now, he\nI (aid, li to organize an improvement\n\u25a0 district for hospital'purposes under\nI the Water Act. The area proposed\nj to be covered ln this district has\nI been submitted to Victoria, and the\n[aociety is now preparing to circ-\n[ulate, a petition for this-district\n1 The petition must be signed by\nt every' property holder concerned,\n| he explained. Owing to tremendous\n['preparatory machinery, it would\nI not be before March 1 that the petl-\nI tion will be circulated.\n\"Then it will be up to the Individual land owners,\" he said.\n\"They will decide whether we will\nget a hospital or not.\"\nIf the improvement district which\ncorresponds exactly, to the Castlegar\nschool district, with a population of\n6800, is approved, trustees will be\nelected, who will prepare a financial plebiscite for approval by the\nratepayers.\n\"We are aiming for approximately a 32-bed hospital,\" he said. \"We\ndo not know the cost. The best we\ntan hope for is $10,000 to $12,000\nper bed.\" With assistance from the\nprovincial and federal governments,\nthis would mean a two or three\nmill rate or $8 to $12 per year for\nthe average resident.\nRegarding the Chamber's complaints about poor telephone and\nradio reception in the area, a letter\nwas rcadfrom the B.C. Telephone\nCompany at Vancouver advising\nthat a direct line from Castlegar to\nNelson was not practical at present,\nbut will certainly become so, once\nthe anticipated district expansion\nensues.\nThe Chamber was also advised\nthat faulty telephone reception between Castlegar and Trail is being\ninvestigated. The matter is to be\npursued further by the Chamber\nat a later date..\nThe secretary advised members\nthat no answer had been received\nregarding the Chamber's request\nfer a radio booster station at Castlegar to improve radio reception.\nHe was. Instructed to ask the department of transport for an early\nreply.\nHEADS MUM ON\nRAIL TALKS\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canada's\nrail wage dispute has hit the top-\nlevel stage, but if any progress has\nbeen made in. discussions, it remains\na secret.\nFrank Hall, chief union spokes\nman and chairman of the negotiat\ning committee for the 15 interna,\ntional and two national brotherhoods\ninvolved, emerged Thursday from\n40-minute meeting he requested\nwith Donald Gordon, president of\nCanadian National Railways, and W.\nA. Mather, president of the Cana.\ndian Pacific Railway, and told re.\nporters:\n\"We've had an amicable dls-\ncussion.\"\nAsked if and when the talks were\nto continue in an effort to settle the\ndispute involving 144,000 non-operating personnel of the carriers, he\nsaid only:\n\"I bave nothing more to say.\"\nDOLLAR HIGHER,\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014The Canadian\ndollar was 1-32 cent higher at a\npremium of 3 3-32 per cent in terms\nof U. S. funds today. Pound sterling\nwas 3-16 cent higher at $2.80%.\nMOtoEAL (CP) - The U. S.\ndollar today closed at a discount of\n3 1-16 per cent in terms of Canadian funds, off 3-16 cent from Wednesday's close. Pound sterling was\n$2.72%, down 5-16.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWee Tot Had the\n5 Millionth Ticket\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Delta\nAir Lines Carried its 5,000,000th\npassenger today and not without a flurry of excitement.\nWheh ticket No. 5,000,000 was\nissued in Chicago to Miss Mar-\ncia Chapman, the line prepared\nto give her full honors Including\nan orchid corsage and a set of\nmatched luggage.\nBut when Miss Chapman\nstrolled in to claim file ticket\nshe turned put to be four years\nold and could barely be seen\nover the top of the ticket\ncounter.\nA doll was substituted tor the\norchids.\nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinio\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRARY\nM'C\naob7\nM^R\n^r;\u00abijjpj\u00bbiA\nLicit*.<f j*iwi*\u00b0U\n*vlce to the Kootemay-Boundjtry ,-   1952\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Cloudy. Little change\nln temperature. Winds' light. Low\nand high at Cranbrook, 10 and 30;\nCrescent Valley, 15 and 30; Revelstoke, 15 and 32.\nVol\" SI\ntiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiilliiiiiiiiiniiiiliiiii\nTrains and Dolls\nAre Still Favorites\nBy The Canadian Press\nIt's still trains for the \u2022 boys\n. and dolls for the girls when it\n' comes to buying this year's\nChristmas toys.\nA Canadian Press survey\nshows those two old stand-bys\nholding their own in popularity\namong shoppers for the 4,300,000\nCanadians under 14 despite tne\ndistractions of new-fangled playthings of the atomic age.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIMHIMIIIII\n(auslic Comment\nOn \"Paid Horses\"\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The government\nwill be asked by thfe opposition if\nhorses on the payroll at Camp Petawawa'paid.income tax.\nThe Currie report, tabled Monday in the Commons, disclosed that\nhorses got on the Army's payroll\nas \"non-existent laborers.\"\nMrs. Ellen Fairelough* (PC-Hamilton West) Thursday sent' seven\nquestions about the horses to Leon\nRaymond, clerk of the Commons,\nfor printing on .the order paper\nwhen it resumes Jan. 12. They were:\n1. Were there any names*of persons listed on Petawawa payrolls\nwhich did not represent living human beings?\n2. If so, how many?\n3. At what rate of pay were ttiey\nlisted?\n4. Was remuneration ln cash or\nby check?\n6. If the latter, who cashed the\nchecks?\n6. Were deductions made for income tax purposes at source?\n7. If so, what claims, if any, were\nmade for exemptions because of\n(a) married status; (b) other dependents.\nThe questions may be answered\norally or in writing.-\nAnother reference to the horses\nwas contained In a telegram received by Stanley Knowles (CCF-\nWinnipeg North-Centre) from Dauphin, Man..\nIt read:\n\u25a0'.\u2022Understand tiiat horses now eligible tor regular army pay lo Canadian Army. On behalf local nags;\nsubcategory E. and nqtrfit-(tor sBr^\n* wloen I- appeal to the government\nChristmas just around the corner.\nAs alternative, appointments to\nSenate will be considered. Please\n\u2022end checks airmail .,. .\" ft was\nsighed. \"Pinto.\"\nLOW EXPENSES FOR\nPM ASSISTANT\nOTTAWA (CP) -Parliament\nhas learned that Jack Pickcrsgill,\nfdripet cbiet assistant to two prime\nministers, claimed only $98.84 this\nyear in expenses to the government\non trips with Prime Minister St\nLaurent to Quebec, the West coast\nand the United Kingdom.\nMr. Pickersgillj 47, has been the\n$15,000-a-year Clerk of the Privy\nCouncil\u2014the cabinet \u2014 since last\nJune 1. Opposition members have\nvoiced suspicion that he Was attempting to combine civil service\nand political activities..\nHe was chief secretary and adviser to former prime minister Mackenzie King during the war years\nand after.\nMr. Pickersgill's expenses, detailed in areturn printed in Thursday's Commons record: $29.10 for\na visit to the Lake St. John district of Quebec; $30.35 for a visit to\nBritish Columbia, and $39.39 for a\nvisit to the United Kingdom.\nThe return also mentioned that\nhe visited Mr. St Laurent at his\nsummer home in Quebec without\nputting in any expense account,' al.\nthough this was described as i\nVisit dealing with the discussion of\nofficial matters.\n1500 PEOPLE DIE\nIN LONDON FOGS\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The recent record fogs that blacked out London\nkilled up to 1500 Britons, a government spokesman indicated today\nHealth Minister Ian MacLeol told\nthe House of Commons deaths in\nLondon during the foggy week\nwhich ended Dec. 18 totalled 4703\ncompared with 1852 the corresponding week of 1951.\nU3(SO>I,B.!C.,eANADA-FHIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 19,1952\nNo. 194\n - i that? gripped Southern,England\nand parts Of Europe, traftle came ilmoit to \u00bb starfdstlll; people remained Indoors ap much as possible; stocks of food rotted as'truckers\nw,ere unable to, move them. This Lopdohrbus trles.bravely tp pierce\nthe fog with strong lights, but succeeds In moving only at a snail's\npaco. London.pedestrians often Joined, hands' as they crossed.streets\nto -keep from bumping Into flie another even in midday.\n\"-   \u25a0       ..--.'\u25a0      \u25a0\u25a0-      r  ),'.\".\\f'\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nNew Labor\nTo Save\nCommittee To Study\nVICTORIA (CP) - A complete\noverhaul of the organizational setup of British Columbia's live-man\nLabor Relations Board was announced today by Labor Minister\nLyle Wicks.\nThe minister said the existing\nfull-time basis under which the\nboard has been operating will be\nabolished in January and replaced\nby a part-time board paid on a\nper diem rate. *\nChairman D'Arcy Baldwin will\ncontinue in his present position on\na full-time basis,'   '        \"' *'    *\n\"We believe, the part-time' eetup\nwill save money and :6g mere efficient\" said the-ministry '\u25a0\nHe' explained that terms of the\nfour board membera explM&anuary\n12, and that tlie organizations which\nappointed them have been asked\nto submit jiaineiS of nofti^ees tor-\nthe next term. Each group wiU sub.\n^'anflwi^wr'ar'ttB'oft\"\nWill be chosen to ^represent' tech\nbody.  -    ,,\u25a0 \u25a0.!\" .\u25a0'. ; -\"\u25a0  -j\nMembers whose terms' are expiring are C61. M. F. Macintosh, Canadian Manufacturers' Association\nnominee; Thomas Dunlop, appointed only recently to represent the\nTrade Union Congress of B.C.;\nHarry Strange, Canadian Congress\nM Labor representative, and Fred\nSmelts, appointed by the Industrial Association of B.C.,\nThe new members, instead of a\n,000 Year\nsalary of $6500 a year plus travelling expenses, will be paid $15 a\nday \"plus reasonable travelling expenses,\" Mr. Wicks said.\n,   TtLi $15 a day wjll.be paid only,\nfor days the board sits.\n, ,Jfr- Wicks estjmatefl when the\n;hew: board settles down opiy two\nmeetings weekly will be' required.\n'   Cti-irman' Baldwin will continue\nwitb'his $8000 annual salary*\nOFflCE?'IN VICTORIA\n\u2022 Offices ol the board will be lo-\ncateB in Victoria, but is IS expected\nmost of the hearings' will be held\nin'Vancouver.  \u25a0.'\u2022'.-\u25a0 .\"\u25a0 ' '  ' '\n\"Mr,'Wicks in tbiifident the part-\ntim'e board \u25a0 can - do' an  adequate\nJob'ltor B.C. ;;\n\u2022\u25a0-He estimated the'new setup will\nsavp' $10,000 a year in board salaries aldne, but'do'wri gdmlnlstra-\ntipjir costs and'result In better-work\noll'fciind. \/ . rr*'-\"'\n^''TXSlitiimip, .'fihiji.. ''and''m_uage-\n!ment today prepairecfio protest the\nprovincial government's plans to\nplace the; B.C. Labor Relations\nBoard on a part-time basis.\n..Spokesmen for the major labor\ngroups said they plan to ask the\ngovernment 'to \"reconsider\" the\nplan., \u2022\nAt the same time, a spokesman\nfdr the Canadian Manufacturers'\nAssociation said his organization\nfavors a full-time board operation\nrather than the hew setup.\nTo Try,to Beat\nRecord in Jet Boat\n' SOUTHAMPTON, Eng,.(Reuters)\n\u2014Mrs. Stella Hanning-Lee left for\nNew York on ?the liner United\nStates Wednesday to 'attempt to\nbreak the world water-speed record\nin Flbrida in a jet boat she and her\nhusband designed.\nMrs. Hanning-Lee, 29, from Boston, and her English husband Frank\nspent most of the Summer plotting\na record run on Lake Windemere\nin the English lake district\nBullet Removed\nFrom Bank Manager\nWILLIAMS LAKE,'B.C.*(CP)\u2014A\nbullet has been removed from the\nchest of a man who swapped gunfire with an RCMP posse, and hospital authorities say he has a good\nchance of recovery.\nRCMP said the man shot and\nslightly \u25a0 wounded bank manager\nLeonard Hellyer in the hip Tuesday\nin an abortive attempt to rob the\nWilliams Lake branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce.\nBRISTOL (AP) \u2014Bristol's prized\nstatue of the 15th century explorer,\nJohn Cabot, was turned overnight\ninto Santa Claus. Holiday pranksters did the job with a bucket of\nred paint. City officials covered\nthe statue with a tarpaulin while\nthey figured put how to remove the\npaint       .   ... ' -,    \"\nDOCTOR SQUEEZES\nHEART TO KEEP\nMAN ALIVE\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A doctor whose\nhand ached tor a week afterward\nkept a patient alive -by squeezing\nhis heart when it stopped during an\noperation.\nFor 40 minutes Dr. David Pratt\nused his hand for a heart, the blood\ncontinued circulating and 74-year'\nold James Taylor remained alive.\nTjr. Pratt said the patient's heart\nactually stopped for 1% minutes but\nit was 40 minutes before the normal beat was restored..\nPort Moody Man\nConvicted of\nManslaughter\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)\nThomas Alfred Preston of Port\nMoody was convicted of man.\nslaughter in the death of James\nAllen Stevenson, caused by a blow\non the head with a whisky bottle,\nA New Westminster assize court\njury Wednesday found Preston\nguilty but recommended leniency.\nHe, was remanded to the end of the\nassizes for sentence.\nStevenson died Nov. M of a\nfractured skull following an all-\nnight drinking party, in his home.\n:r:;rr * rr;,r:... \u25a0\n\\mA*\nWHAT APPEARS TO BE en innocent mechanical assembly Is In reality a machine that ean\nchange the history of the world. It Is the new\nU.8, ttom-apllttlng gun at Palo Alto, Cal., which,\npowered by the moot powerful vacuum\never built, shoots electrons down the 200-foot\nbarrel at a speed almost equal that of light\n186,000 miles an hour. Thle Is the highest, speed\never attained by electron \"bullets\" and opens a\nnew vista for atom physicists.\n. '.. '    \u2014Central.Preee Canadian.\nParents Walch\nAnxiously Over\nSeparated Twins\nCHICAGO (AP) - The newly-\ndivided Brodie Siamese twins went\nseparate way 'safter their historic\noperation, one becoming conscious\nbut the other taking a turn for the\nworse and then improving only\nslightly. .'\/\nRodney, favored fofe \"survival of\nthe fittest\" by ,chpice,-;0f surgeons\nwho separated him from his bigger\ntwin brother, regained consciousness with a cry and a smile Thursday morning. '\u201e\u25a0\nHis twin, Roger, whose brain circulation was impaired by the operation\u2014the 13th on the twins\u2014suffered one relapse but then showed\na slight gain. .   .\nSurgeons said Thursday night,\nhowever, that his condition still is\n\"precarious.\"\nAt the height of the 12-hour and\n40-minute operation, surgeons discovered their earlier fears were\nwell founded. There was only one\nsaggltal sinus, the main passageway or vein. draining blood back\nfrom both brains. They had been\nborn with the tops of their heads\njoined.\n.This called for an immediate\nchoice. The incision could be made\nto give one twin ot the other the\nvital vein.\nr.Or. Eric Oldberg, head of the\nUniversity of Illinois' department of\nneurology, said' Rodney got the\nbreak because he was! holding up\nmuch better under the strain of the\noperation,' and surgery in his favor\ncould be more easily performed,\nr. gqth,: p\/Hns .'rWere \u00abn\u00ab\u00bbMOipU\u00bb A&\nnight, and Roger took; a \u2022aharp'tsrl*\ntical turn at 5 a.m., when his throat\nbegan to swell, shutting off h 1 s\nbreathing!\nDr. \u25a0 Cecilr Riggs, - resident doctor\nat the university's neiiropsychiatrlc\ninstitute, performed an emergency\ntracheotomy, slitting an opening in\nthe throat and windpipe- to aid\nbreathing. Roger began to rally after this.\nDoctors said then that.. Roger's\nheart was beating slowly and not\npumping much blood to.his brain,\nand that small, collateral veins were\nthen able to substitute for the large\nmissing vein.'\nHowever,, Dr. Goldberg said the\nchances were \"almost nil\" that ne\\v\ncollateral' veins Would grow and\nhelp carry the burden.\nTTie parents, Mr. and Mrs. Royt\nBrodie of Moline, 111., maintained\ntheir harrowing vigil near the\ncribs of their tiny 15-month-old\nsons.\nBrodie, a, small, dark-haired man\nof 35, showed signs of strain and\nhis hands trembled. He said:\n\"I was hopeful since the day\nthey were born. Now we're waiting\nand praying.\"\nCurrie Report First\nItem of Business '\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Prime Min\nlater St, Laurent says the Currle\nreport will be the \"first Item of\ngovernment business\" before the\nCommons when It reconvenes on\nJan. 12.\nHe made the statement In a\nletter of reply to George Drew,\nProgreslve Conservative leader,\nwho had sent a 1200-word letter\nto Mr. St Laurent. Both letters\nwere Issued to the Press Thursday night\nOxygen Lack Cause\nOf Mystery-Deaths\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Dr. T. R.\nHarmon, olty pathologist, reported\nThursday two people died because\na burning gas fire used .up all the\noxygen in their almost airtight\nroom.\nThe dead are Harry James Grove,\n36, and Mrs. Ruth Wolrlch, 50; both\nof Vancouver. Their badly decom.\nposed bodies were found Tuesday\nand it is believed they died sometime Friday night.\nCoast Man Wins\nNavy League Award .\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The highest\nmeritorious service decoration of\nthe Navy League of Canada has\nbeen 'given to Lieut. W. H. Watts,\ncommanding officer of RCSC Lonsdale corps; North\" Vancouver.\nThe league Thursday announced\nthe Award for Service Medal was\ngiven on Lieut. Watts' retirement\nafter three years' service as commanding officer.\nKILLED IN CRASH\nEDMONTON (CP) - Donald. L.\nSmith, 83, formerly of Nanalmo,\nB.C., was killed Thursday in a\ntrain-car collision near Leduc, 16\nmiles South of here. -2\nBennett Names Group of Seven to\nStudy Situation, Advise Gov't Policy\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014A seven-man committee, consisting\nof four cabinet ministers and three engineers has been\nappointed to study all phases of the Columbia River basin\nproblem, Premier-W. A. C. Bennett announced today. ;\nThe committee yrill consist of Lands and Forest Minister R. E.. Sommers, chairman; A^orijey-General Rpbert\nBonner, Agriculture Minister Kenneth Kiernan, Municipal\nAffairs Minister Wesley Black, S. R. Weston,, chairman of\nB.C. Power Commission, Thomas Ingledow, vice-president\nand chief engineer of the B.C. Electric, and Robelt G. Ander-\nsop, general manager of West Kootenay Power and Light Co.\nThe committee's task will be to\nreview information now available\nregarding water resources on the\nColumbia River basim   -\n2. Evolve and recommend the poU\nicies which should be pursued' by\nthe government, particularly In regard to cooperation with the U...S!,!\nthrough the medium of the International Joint Commission to the mutual advantage of'both, countries .\n3. Report to the government on\nthe following matters regarding the\nspecific proposal made by tha U. S.\ngovernment for the erection of a\ndam at Libby, Mopt:\nA\u00bb The over-all effects of the\nLibby development upon the economy of B. C.\nB. The protection and indemnity including recompense which\nthe province should receive for the\nnatural resources it contributes to\nthe project\nC. The extent to which trie principles adopted to formulating the\nbasis of settlement could be applied to other future developments\nin the Columbia River1 basin which\nhave international Implications.\nPremier Bennett explained that\nthe'committee, must be fully conversant with the situation by April\nwhenthe-L J. G. meets\/ '; r \u2022\u2022;:.\u2022\n- \u2022;r,uiw,i(i1  T-M--   ,ri'.J  fl\"i .'.'WS'-iWCr.\nCtAXfdN PLEASED\nWitH NAfO MEET\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014Defence Minister Claxton of Canada says the\n\"firm-commitments on which each\nAtlantic Pact country agreed for\n1052 have been largely fulfilled.\"\nClaxton,, who has been attending\nthe four-day NATO conference that\nended here Thursday night, said,,\n\"we have established the macnih-\nery as well as the will and habit to'\nwork togetHer.\"\nReferring to'his weekend visit\nto the RCAF wing stationed in\nFrance, Claxton'said: \"The. morale\nof our menis splendid. They are as\nhappy as one can be some 300O\nmiles away from home.\nDown on Raffles\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Chief Constable Larry Partridge says that\nhenceforth no car raffles or bingo\ngames will be permitted in Calgary\nunless they conform with the Criminal Code.\nCar raffles and bingo games have\nbeen operating wide open in Calgary.\nThe chief Thursday said \"occasional bingos\" are permissable under the Criminal Code when sponsored by charitable and religious\norganizations. He said the meaning of the word \"occasional\" would\nhave to be left to lawyers.\n. The Lions Club of Calgary, which\nhas been operating large-scale\nbingo games at the Stampede Corral, had been informed of police\nintentions prior to its bingo game\nWednesday night. It had.been given\npermission to proceed for that night\n' Ross Ironside, a club official, said\nthe organization has decided to\nSeek legal advice.\nSentence Mounls\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Raoul Pro-\nvost, the convict whose daily sentences for contempt of court have\nbeen coming as sure as sunrise, got\nanother three years today.-\nCalled as a witness at Montreal's\nvice inquiry, Provost has stubbornly\nrefused to testify.\nWhen he first balked Tuesday,\nMr. Justice Frahcois'Caron slapped\ntwo years oh the 15-year penitentiary term Provost is already serving.\nWednesday   Provost   was   mum\nagain. Another two years.\n'  Today it was the Same story, and\nthen eame the three-year jolt\nfir. Justice Caron ordered an adjournment until Jan. 12 and sent\nProvost back tb penitentiary, telling hhn he may be brought back\nagain for questioning next month.\nCOAST JEWELLERY\nSTORES PICKETED\nVANCOUVER (CPX \u2014 Striking\njewelry workers Thursday switched\ntheir picket lines from six manufacturing and repair firms to downtown retail outlets.'\nThe surprise move by more than\n50 pickets brought protests from\nstore operators and threats of injunctions. The picketers caught the\nstores at the peak of their Christmas\ntrade and union secretary Fred\nHunter .said the men were getting\n\"good support\" from the public.\nHe said the picketing may be\nextended to other retail*stores.\nSome 58 jewelry technicians,\nmembers of the International Jewelry Workers (TLC), Local 42, went\non strike Dec. 8 following the companies' rejection of a 10-cent hourly\nwage boost recommended by a conciliation board. Present rate is $1.67\nan hour.\nLuTLE KIM DUCK JU Is a\nsix-year*old Korean piano prodigy. After. winning a national\nschool competition, he toured military and naval establishments ,\nentertaining  UN  personnel.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nAnd in This Corner. \u2666.\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014Police said Thursday they settled the case of\nthe cast-off hat containing $20 stuffed In the band. They returned\nthe cash to the original owner\u2014the.man who sold a bundle of clothes\nto a second-hand store.\nAn 11-year-old boy found the hat In a lane and turned the monev\nover to police, .\nInvestigation disclosed the,hat wat among a bundle of clothing\n\u25a0old to the second-hand store by the son of a woman recently deceased.\nIn turn, the store auotloned the bundle off to another man who\nthrew the hat away.\nHONG KONG (AP)\u2014Michael Patrick O'Brien, who became a\nnautical yo-yo for lack of a passport, today started his fourth month\nof ferry boat rides between Hong Kong and Macau.\nHe began his 74th round trip, thankful that \"anyhow, I've got a\nroof over my head.\"\nSince he boarded the ferry Lee Hong at Macau Sept. 18 he has\nlogged nearly 6000 miles and spent 19 days in drydock.\nHe can't get off at either end of the 40-mile run because immigration authorities refuse to recognize him. He entered Macau from\nRed China and was given permission-only to pass through.\nO'Brien, 57, says ne was born in the U.S. The state department\n\u2022says he is Hungarian.\nSo he seems doomed, like the legendary Flying Dutchman, to\nsail the seas forever.\nCAMDEN, N.J. (AP)\u2014Maurice Crist, a beer salesman, was laid\noff for a spell, so he went to the state unemployment office to apply\nfor Jobless compensation.\nThe place was packed with applicants and Crist settled down for\na long wait\nCatching the eye of one of the girls on duty, he said: \"Seems to\nme you could use more help around here.\"\n\"You're so right,\" said the girl, and one thing leading to another,\nCrist waa hired on the spot ('\n '\n\"aSJF\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952\n\\)jrHE IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT!\ni j& THEATRE TICKETS *_... ... fAa\u201e _\nfin   Gift   Envelopes Tf\nDelivered to. your door \u2014 Phone any of theatre staff '\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\nC\/tWC\nDoors Open 6i30\nFeature 7:35 - 9:39\nCARTOON     NEWS\nthe Kiwanis 6th annual turkey\n\u2022h-ot got off to a fine start at the\nArmories Thursday evening when\ntern* 13 turkeys were won by\nmarksmen of the district Stanley\nMorris, chairman of the shoot laid\nthat competition was keen.\n' Dr. Joseph Vingo, one of* the\nKiwanians In eharge of the bingo,\nstated that participation in the\nfatties wu (ood and that many fine\nprfies had been carried off, Including fcur turkeys.\nBoys'Choir Will\nSing Carols at\nHospital, Infirmary\nThe St Paul's Boys\" Choir under\ntile direction of Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, will on Sunday from 2:30 until\nlift) pjn. visit the patients at Kootenay Lake General Hospital io give\na conoert ot Christmas carols.\nTho choir oh rae following Sunday will visit Mount.fit Francis Infirmary where they will alio sing\nfor the patients. .\nWEU KNOWN\nSLOCAN WOMAN\nDIES HERE\n. Mrs. Annie Cameron, pioneer re\nsldent of Slocan City, died at Mount\nSt. Francis Infirmary ea-'v Thursday morning. Funeral services will\nbe held ln Slocan Sunday,\nThe Wee\nith\nei\nNELSON   -\n32\n3D\nWinnipeg  \t\n-8\n10\nToronto  __\nSS\n84\nRegina  .\n-4\n12\nEdmonton \t\n14\n28\nPrince Albert .._._,_\n-28\n4\nLethbridge\t\n10\n20\n14\n25\nKamloops _\n33\n38\nPentlcton  ..\u2014...\n84\n48\nVancouver \u201e\t\n10\n42\nVictoria \t\nJ9\n44\nKimberley  _\n22\n11\nCrescent Valley ....\n10\n38\nKaslo  \u201e\n24\nST\nPrinee Rupert \t\n27\n89\nPrince George \t\n14\n20\nSpokane \t\n28\n23\nWhitehoria \t\nT\n15\n.04\nTr\nIn a treatise on dancing, the Hindu sage Bharat* llsteg. 37 different\nmovements of tlie hands.\nCHRISTMAS SHOPPING WORRIES ?\nHARRASSED?\nCome See the Home Furniture\nof Practical\nGIFTS\nSUGGESTIONS:\nCard Tables \u2022 Rocker*\nChenille Bedspreads\nOccasional   Chain\nLamps -Ind Tables\nClothes Hamper*\nCoffee Table* - Picture*\nScatter Rugs\nI W^.I%MWM\\\u00a32'i wmm V-'\n,|-';;W. _^f#W% v       , y^U\n\u25a0Ir *Sto>*^ :\u201ey\/%2 \" 1\"  ri.rv\"r \u25a0' 'r jS-V..     ^*\n-\\<*~.-''2   ''% \u00ab''\u25a0 \u25a0'   'r^'\/v \" ~ ' \u2022'      I U  \\ % ~-     \"\nd   ..\u25a0,**-.'\u25a0\u25a0\nHoW about a sparkling new KITCHEN CHROME\nSUITE for Christmas. . . Treat the family.\n(Trade In your old table and        f (Oft SA\nchairs). Up from _-.:      ^\/JU\nExtra company? No bed? Try a ROLLAWAY-\nFOLDAWAY with spring-filled fjf |-A\nmattress  im I aJ\\J\nLOUNGES, frieze. .     %OA   Crt\nOne only .\/...... 0*IWU\nCHESTERFIELD SUITE, rich\nwine. Lustre weave. 2 pieces\t\nHOW ABOUT A NEW SPRING-FILLED\nMATTRESS FOR CHRISTMAS?\nSleep tight on a \u00bbupersoft.\nUp from \t\n\u202218950\n\u2022IG-FILLED\nTMAS?\n\u202229.50\nHOME\nFURNITURE\nLIMITED '\n.640 Baker St.\nPhone 1032\nDoctors jiA See\nHazards In\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The National Education Association has\nstruck out at what It called high-\npressure sports competition among\nyoungsters of elementary or junior\nhigh school age.\nA committee completing i three-\nyear study condemned such* things\nas \"little league\" baseball,' \"little\"\nbowl games, midget football and\n\"biddy\" basketball for youngsters 12\nyears old oi younger. For real mites,\nby the wsy, there's even \"iddy\nbiddy\" basketball.\nThe committee said highly-organized competition gives youngsters\nan exaggerated idea ot the importance of sports and may even be\nharmful to them.\nThe views of the committee were\nsummed up in a 46-page booklet\nentitled;: \"Desirable Athletic Competition for Children.\"\n< These views were amplified on\nThursday by.the committee's chairman, Simon A. McNeely, et a press\nconference. McNeely is a specialist\non health and recreation for the\nUnited States office of education.\nMcNeely said a survey of doctors\nShows they fear highly-competitive\nsports may be injurious to health.\nHe aald doctors listed dangers from\nover-exhaustion or bone injuries.\nYoungsters mature at different\nrates. Those who stand out In Sports\nat the age of 13 or to usually are\nboys who have matured taster then\nothers.\nThe committee's suggestion: Informal Intramural competition for\nchildren in upper elementary grides\nand physical education for all\nyoungsters.\n\"We're for sports end we're for\ncompetition,\" McNeely said, \"But we\nthink the study shows lt shouldn't\nbe highly competitive ln which win\nning becomes too important.\"\nLake Level Down\nA Foof In Month\nThe water level In Kootenay Like\nis continuing to show a drop,\nAt Queen's' Bay Thursday morning, tha reading wu ibout a third\not in Inch below Wednesday's reading. Water for the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Compiny'i\npower requirement* is not being met\nby the Inflow te the like trom Its\ndrainage bisin. Water itorage in\nacre feet * year ago wu 1,044,090; a\nweek ago, 601,000; Wednesday, 073,\n400, end Thursday, 669,100. Water\nitorage hu dropped by 8800 acre\nfeet since Wednesday.\nHere Is t summary of the Kootenay Lake water itorage picture\nover the past month. Since November 16 the laka level his dropped\nabout 14 Inches, an avenge of\nslightly less than half an inch per\nday. Water itorage hu shown a proportional decline, being reduced In\nthe same period by 184,810 acre feet\nor approximately 4349 acre feet per\nday.\nDROWNS IN FRASER\n\u2022 NBW WESTMINSTER (CP) -\nCharles D. Inman, 33, of Burnaby\nwas drowned Thursday when he fell\noft i dredge Into the North arm of\nthe Fraser Hiver.\nLe_fcftf Idge Man\nHume Manager\n' Emit (Chum) Schumaker arrived\nin Nelson recently to take over the\nmanagership of the Hume Hotel,\nsucceeding Howard Thurman, who\nhas lett to go Into i business of\nhis own.,_.   i   .\nMr. Schumaker hu hid a-wide\nexperience In the hotel business,\nhaving spent twenty years in Lethbridge, two years in -Edmptiton, and\ntwo yeirs in- both Grand Prairlo\nand Faust, Alta,, all in hotel w6rk,\nMr. Schumaker wile' ftSlrn and\nrailed in Lethbrid\u00abe.\nFllchodrRefwej\nConlracf Terms\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (OP) \"-FrankieFll.\nchock has declined to etfn * new\ncontract offered by Edmonton Eskimo!, leaving the Western Interprovlncial Football Union champion! without \u00ab coach.\nAn announcement Thursday uld\nFllohock's contract expires Dee. 81.\nThe management said It ottered a\n\"new two-year contract With a very\nsubstantial Increase ln pay and with\nworking conditions, which in the\nopinion of the club were fair end\nreasonable.\" .   ,',;,\nBut, Fllchock explained, then\n\"fair and reasonable\" working .conditions, included a clause which\nwould terminate the \"two-year\"\npact at the end of next season if\nEskimos fall to mike the playoffs.\n\"I came to terms with them,\"\nflingin' Frankie said, \"but they\ndidn't come to terms with me.\"\nThe American - turned - Canadian\nfootball mastermind, who this yesr\npiloted Eskimos to their first Grey\nCup final ln 30 years, was unhappy\nwith the Eskimo management.\nHe uld he and the team president,\nKen Montgomery, had agreed to\ntermi and \"shook hind!\" on the\n\u2022greement before the Grey Cup\ngame. Then the management drew\nup a new contract and aiked him\nto sign.\nHe said thit under the \"working\nconditions\" my money he nyde\noutside football would have to be\nturned over to the club. Ha mentioned his weekly radio broadcist\nmd severil newspaper columns he\nwrote prior to this year's Grey Cup\nfinal.\nSttdenfoSfafl\nHolidays Today\nNelson and district students pack\nup their books end icrlbblers for\nthe two week Christinas holiday\ntoday.\nFinal exams in the Nelson Junior\nand .Senior high schools will be\nwritten todiy. \u2022\u25a0'    *    '\u2022',-,\nIn the Senior High the holidays\nWill be heralded tonight with\" the\nsnow bail frolic, annual Christmas\ndance, while the Junior High will\nhold class pittlet followed by a\nmusical program- which will include violin and instrumental tel-\nootlons and carol singing to be followed by the! Gride IX onntial\nChristmas dance in tho evening.\nStudent! of Notre Dame College\nbegan their holidays Dec. 13 following t pre-Chrlstmas banquet\nand pirty Die 10. An extra week's\nholiday at Christmas is allowed as\nsome students work end there is no\nEaster recess tor the college,\nElementary ichooll over the past\nweek h\u00abve been holding Christmas\nparties, md concert! wltb parents\ninvited to many of them.\nWith Stone\nand Besom\ntfelson curling result! for Thursday's drews in toe sectional playoff\nIn the Jeffs Cup competition'are\nM-Oltowi:\nM. B. Byalls 10, E. Mason 4.\nJ. Hingwing 8, C, H. Parrish 8.\nW. Twer 8, L. Chase 8. ,\nT. A. Wallace 13, R. B. WaUace 8.\nJ. Harvey 6, Ryalls 10.\nJ. Morris 1, A. Kraft 0.\nA, B. Gilker 11, T, S. Jemson 6.\nJ. Hingwing 6, W. Torer 8.\nFriday's draws in the sectional\nplayoff for the Jeffs Cup will match\nM. B. Hayalls vs J. G. McMurchy,\nT, A. Wallace vi G, Fleury, W.\nTo\u00aber vi A, Firenholto, at 7 p.m.\n9:00 p.m. \u2014 The winner of the\nToier-Ferenhelts geme will meet\nthe winner of the Wellice-Fleury\ngame.\n\u2022US MISHAP KILLS ONI\nLICHFIELD, England (AP) - A\ndouble-deck bus plunged through\nan Iron bridge rill Into the River\nTrent Thursday night One woman\nwis killed.and eight perioni Injured.\nThe bus landed upright. It eel-\nlir '.ed with i seven-ton truck drawing an entl-aircraft fun ind then\nskidded through the rill md took e\n8C toot plunge.\nTrail Jaycees\nSee Busby Films\nOf Soufh Africa\nTRAIL\u2014Native life, scenes of the\nZambesi River and pictures of\nAfrica were enjoyed by members\nof the Junior Chamber of Commerce St their .Thursday evening\nsupper me'etlngr A. H, W. Buiby,\non leave 6f absence from Cominco\nlast Spring to serve the Anglo-\nAmerican Corporation of South\nAfrica, is consultant engineer, gave\nan interesting commentary and\nshowed i collection of colored flUn\ntaken during two monthi ln Northern Rhodesia.\nPete Berry, reporting for the air\ncadet committee, said that e Link\ntrainer for instruction in blind fly-\nlng>had been ordered by the squadron. An air cadet tather-and-jon\nturkey shoot is scheduled for Tuesday. A dance wltb Junior Chamber\nmembers and various cadet units is\nscheduled for Jan. 9.\nTrail will be host to Rossland and\nNelson chambers it the next regional meeting in February.\nJohn Gouge, recently moved to\nMontreal, and who is back In Trail\ntor a short visit, wu a guest at\nthe meeting.\nMAIL OFFICIAL\nAIDS IN DISTRICT\nCHRISTMAS RUSH\nHere to mist kootenly post-\nmisteri in organizing toe Christmas\nmill rush, Allen McLean, transportation officer tor the Post Office\ndepartment, was in Nelson Thunday,\nFormer Nelson resident and now\nof Vancouver, Mr. McLean hu been\nvisiting Cnnbrook, Kimberley, Trill\nand other points.\nNew Quarters for\nAndrei Vishinsky\nMOSCOW (AP) - Foreign Min-\nister Andrei Vishinsky has returned to Moscow from the United Nations general assembly meeting in\nNew York, it wu announced Thursday.\nHe found a new office wiitlng\nfor him, too. Virtuilly tho entire\nforeign ministry has moved to deluxe quarters in a new skyscraper\nbuilding in Molenak Square.\nTb4E WARMEST GIFT OF ALL. . .\nSLIPPERS\nA complete selection for the family\nBefore you buy, see the large selection . . .\nthen compare the price.\nGiive a pair of\nSKI BOOTS\n.  By DAOUST\nLodlei', Bay*', Men's\nPh6ne 1114      Nelson\nmmmmmmmmmmmms\nGODFREYS'\nChristmas Tree Suggestions\nTIES\nSOCKS\nJEWELRY\nWHITE SHIRTS\nSPORT SHIRTS\nHANDKERCHIEFS\nBELTS SUSPENDERS\nDRESSING ROBES     PYJAMAS\nGLOVES    WALLETS    SCARVES\nSWEATERS       JACKETS       VESTS\nSLIPPERS       OXFORDS       OVERSHOES\nHATS\nRIPONS\nSLACKS\nSHORTS\nNYLONS\nGARTERS\nDONT FORGET OUR GIFT CERTIFICATES\nOpen Saturday, Monday and Tuesday Nights\nAnd All Day Wednesday\nPhone      \u2014\n~ ..'.\u25a0'    $ox\n0LA88IPHD APS ^irneSOLTSI PHONi 1\u00ab PO\u00bb CLASSIFIED\n'        \"   ''\"r' '       '     '     *   ... \".   '     \u25a0   \" '-\"\u25a0'-    \u25a0 \"       \u25a0\u25a0-:\u25a0\u00bb \t\nMEN:\nSolve Your Gift Problems\nThis Easy Way. i . \u2022'\nGIVE HER\nWADES*\nSelect a complete\n\u2022et or one pfeci\nat a time' from\n|iieh FAMOUS\nnames In luggage\n\u2022 CARSON'S\n\u2022 McBRINE\n\u2022 TRAVELGARD\nOvernight Cases from _, $|5,00\nTrain Cases from .__.._  $|5.Q0\nAn ideal way to biiild up q complete set of luggage '\n'for her.\nFOR MEN. . .Wehgve\nBillfolds    Key Cases    Utility Cases\nWriting Cases     Brief Cases\nSHOES and LEATHER GOODS\n330 Baker St. Phonff 1330\nm-m-m . . . It's a mighty good\nGOOSE\nfrom the LIBERTY\nComo. in today and select your\nchoice bird. Hundreds to choose\nfrom. We will hold it until next\nweek for you.)   \u25a0\nGrade A.\nUndir18 lbs.\nGrade A.\nOver 18 lbs.._.\nGrade A.\nGrade A.\nlb. 58c\nlb. 48c\nIb. 45c\nIb. 45c\nSMOKED PICNICS       Ib. 41c\nSMOKED HAMS Ib. 53c\nSLICED BACON\nPkgs.\n* ROASTING CHICKEN\n* CHOICE POT ROAST\nIb. 49c\nIb. 62c\nIb. 50c\nFRESH HOLLY IN TODAY FROM DUNCAN\nDlreet from the orchard assuring you of finer berries that will last.    $| .75\n1 Ib. box sent anywhere in Canada. Postpaid          I\n1 lb. box in town $1.25        1 lb. pkg. in town 65c.\nBrussel Sprouts S\"5_u.33*\nLettucetT.c^.r'Im:.c:isp:.. 2\\*\nCucumbers S\u00b01:...^ady! \",.... 27*\nCelery 'J,mw,\u00bb.Sw*rt Armstrong; I 2 4\nGreen On^ons^'itor 23*\nGroin Broccoli ^sh:       22*\nN\u00bbw Arrlvsli t\u00bbr Your Chrlitmu Dinner \u2014\nPrsih Grenn popper., Wstercreu (on Monday),\nJreih Bunch Csrrott, Froih Spinach, Avacadoei,\nPrsih Date., Fre.h Plgt. Fre.h H.w.llin PlnV-\n\u25a0PPlti Pome_r\u00abn\u00abte\u00ab,\nCellophane Gift-Wrap\nPoInjetU beiiin,\nEach, Specie! \t\nCabbaged\nCalifornia; | f\\A\nFresh Beets Bunches,   2 for 27*\nCauliflower fnbow:wwt:; 24*.\nSweet Potatoes Lb 190\n: Hand-Plekea, Washed and Waxed\nHove You Ordered Your\nFRUIT BASKET\n75e to $1.65\nFruits extra amounts from 75c to $2.00'\nCellophaning qnd wrapping 20e extra\nPrices Effective\nFriday, Saturday, Monday\nTuesday, Wednesday\n ':'^&f\nGIVE PAD\nA Pair of Smart\nJARMAN\nSHOES\nAll Styles and Sixes\nPriced From\n$12.95 to $16.95\nEXCLUSIVE AT\nTHE SilOE\nCENTRE\n632 Baker St\nPhon* 895\nISas Thief Faces\nCharge in Alberta\nI INVERMERE \u2014 In   court   here\nunder Magistrate A. M. Chisholm,\n.'Glen Victor Anderson of Saskatoon,\nSask., was charged with theft under\nISpi and was sentenced to two days\n'imprisonment   in   the   Invermere\nrlo-k-up.\nfri; At the expiration of the sentence,\n| Anderson was turned over to an\n.\u25a0Alberta escort for escort to Calgary\non d charge of the theft of an auto-\nCranbrook May Repeat\nArtificial Ice Bylaw\nCRANBROOK\u2014Supporting the proposed installation\nof an artificial ice plant for the arena and curling rinks,'\nthe Canadian Legion branch here at a special meeting decided to offer $1000 to the city to be used for this purpose.\nThe Gyro Club-already has more\nWORK STARTS\nON CHURCH HALL\n' INVERMERE \u2014 Work of excavat\ning under Trinity United Church\nhere to build a Sunday School hall,\nhas begun.\nFunds to build a Sunday School\nroom to house the increasingly-large\nattendance were raised earlier in\nthe year in a whirlwind campaign\nwhich received generous response\ntrom parents and the congregation.\nThe auditorium will be a room\n25x40 feet, and there will also be a\nsmall kitchen, furnace room and\nwashroom.\nThere are now between, 50 and 60\nchildren attending Sunday School,\nand there is difficulty in providing\nprivacy for the individual classes in\ntbe church proper.\nmobile. The local charge arose\nthrough theft of gasoline from the\nFairmont store at Fairmont\nCUTLER'S\nQift Suggestions\n\u2022 Wrist Watches $5.95 up\n\u2022 Rhinestone Sets $4 up\n\u2022 Dresser Sets  $9.95 up\n\u2022 Compacts $3 up\nA Small Deposit Will Hold\nThese and Many Other\nam Selections Awaiting\nYour Approval,\n^SJEtv,\nv WATCH REPAIRS\nYEARS EXPERIEN\nNELSON, B.C\nthan $10,000 In its fund for this purpose, ftowever, a city bylaw last\nJune which asked ratepayers to\nauthorize debentures of $47,000 to\ncomplete the financing, was defeated.\nThough no official action has\nbeen started, there are indications\nthe City Council is considering a\nrepeat vote early in 1053 on this\nbylaw. The Legion has undertaken\nto raise the $1000 by various means,\nproviding the project is undertaken.\nThe Christmas social program of\nthe Legion started Wednesday with\nthe afternoon party, Christmas Tree\nand presents from Santa Claus for\nchildren of service people. Active\nand asosciate. members will have\ntheir smoker December 20, and will\nentertain their friends at a private\ndance New Year's Eve.\nAlso authorized at the special\nmeeting was installation of a public address system in the clubhouse\nto provide batter coordination\namong activities there.\nRESIGNATION of R., A. O.\nWeat at chief of Caatlegar'a volunteer fire brigade has been\nhanded to the Castlegar Village\nCommission. Mr. Weit stated he\nwas leaving the post owing to\nbusiness reasons. The village\ncommission has made two suggestions for Mr. West's consideration, that he reconsider his resignation and remain In office, or\nthat h. carry on until at least\nJan. 15, so-that another appointment oan be arranged.   .\n\u2014B. Huber photo.\nNew Equipment, Remodelling...\nKitchen \"Treated\" at\nInvermere Hospital\nINVERMERE\u2014Domestic arrangements at the Lady Elizabeth Bruce\nMemorial Hospital are functioning\nwith increased efficiency, with the\nremodelling of the kitchen of the\ninstitution.\nAn institutional-type electric\nrange was purchased by the hospital board of directors tome\nmonths ago, and a modern double\nsink with dishwashing attachments\nwas donated by the Senior Ladies'\nAid here.\n, The kitchen has now been remodelled, with huilt-in cupboards,\nbins and counters, and redecorated.\nCupboards are white enamel with\nDelft blue inside, and counter tops\nare blue arborite with chrome trilp.\nNew Inlaid linoleum is a cream\nmarble, pattern.\nA white enamel tray wagon holds\n14 trays for patients, and new\ndishes are on order for these. A\ndouble-size pop-up toaster is a further convenience. A garbage burner\nprovides auxiliary warmth, and is\na useful item in the kitchen.\nPAINT JOB r\nA hatch near lit* stove leads to\nthe nurses' dining room, assuring\nthem of piping hot meals. This little\ndining room has been painted a\nsoft cheerful daffodil yellow and\nthe Senior Ladies' Aid has offered\nto buy bright curtains for the North\nwindow.\nThe institutional-size electric refrigerator, which* was also a gift\nof the Senior Ladles' Aid at Invermere several years ago, fits neatly\ninto a convenient corner of the\nkitchen. Fluorescent lighting adds\nanother modern touch.\nCarpentry work to modernize tlie\nkitchen* was done by G. H. Cartwright and Harry Saunders, and\nredecorating was done by Gordon\nRad.\nQueen's Bay\nQUEEN'S BAY \u2014 Mrs. F. M.\nHughes has left for Trail where\nshe will spend Christmas with her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Alan Harkness.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Digness and\ntheir fcaby daughter have gone to\nSaskatchewan to spend the Christmas holidays.\nTeacher$' Pay Dispute\nTo Qo to ArbitrMion\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Arbitration proceedings are being asked here by\nKimberley District Sehdol Board,\nand Kimberley Teachers' Association, B.C. Teachers' Federation affiliate, in connection with increases\nproposed in the teachers'. salary\nschedule by the Association, which\nthe Board claimed it was unable to\nmeet. ,\nThe two organizations are in process of appointing their representatives for the arbitration procedure,\nexpected to take place next month,\nand these representatives will appoint a chairman. No announcements of requested scale or counterproposal have been made.\nThe Klmbprley city mill rate for\nschool purposes for 1952 has been a\nrecord 51.9 mills, and the recent\nplebiscite in conjunction with municipal elections undertook debentures ot about $48,000 as part of the\nbadly needed $160,000 school Construction project\nSimilar disagreement has occurred at Cranbrook where Cranbrook Teachers' Association submitted notice in October of termination of the present agreement and\nasked increases in their schedule\ntotalling around $18,000. The school\nboard , offered Increase totalling\n$5200, and the matter is still in\nabeyance.\nCranbrook city tax rate for 1952\nis 70 mills, of which its school rate\nis 59.1 mills, highest in the province\nthis year.\nCranbrook Triples\nFund Donations\nCRANBROOK\u2014A total of.$645.17\nhas been raised for the Children's\nHospital for, British Columbia by\nthe Chamber bf Commerce, more\nthan three times last year's total.\nA. W. Hunter was campaign chairman, and following his report, the\nChamber decided to remit the entire amount and pay the expenses of\nabout $50 entailed in the campaign.\nThe final chamber meeting for\n1952, under chairmanship of P. M.\nIrwin, named Jan. 19, as date for\nIts annual meeting, which will be a\ndinner at the Mount Baket high\nschool with representation from\nother Kootenay Chambers. A speaker will be brought in for the occasion.\nDick Hardisty of Cloverdale was\na guest speaker, outlining the function ot an advertising medium In\nconnection with the tourist industry.\n\t\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL-Miss Wolfe of Calgary was a guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Wolfe.\nMiss Marie Hook of Washington\nvisited here with her mother and\nsister.\nAt a card party sponsored by the\nCommunity Club, six tables were\nin play. Prize winners were Mr. and\nMrs. Vicarasczy, Mrs. Grunnke and\nO. Steiner. G. Eshman, Carl Carlson,\nA. Wright and W. Popovich won\nconsolation prizes.\nFood Freezer\nami Refrigerator aomMnedl\n.\nCyela-moik Dofrosting\nIn Refrigerator!\n\u2022\nRoll-to-You Shelve*\nNew Cycla-mtrtU lovotcoldl\nlee the new Cycla-matlc Frigidaire now I Also see the new\nDe luxe, Mooter and Standard\nmodels\n97 hi. ft.\n$48.40\nDown Payment\n6.0 c u. ft.\n$30.90\nDown Payment\nBalance vp to 24 monthi\n\u2022     in\t\nLAKESIDE  HOBBY  CENTRE\nOpposite Castle Theatre\nFor All  Your  Craft Supplies\nPrompt Mall Orden\nBox 492 - Phone 8331 - Caitlegar\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952 \u2014 3\n$1740 DAMAGE\nTO NINE AUTOS\nIN ACCIDENTS\nCRANBROOK\u2014 Nine motor\nvehicles have been damaged to a\ntotal extent of $1740 ln the past\nseven days in a half dozen separate\naccidents attributed to difficult\nWinter driving conditions.\nOnly one charge has arisen from\nthese encounters,- with\" transient\nManfred. Klucket pleading guilty to\noperating a car as a minor without\nthe required insurance, and was\nfined $25 and costs. He slid his car\ninto the rear of a car driven by a\nfriend.. Both were enroute to Edmonton to deliver the cars.\nThe largest vehicle, a transport,\nhad least damage at $25 near Wardner when it was struck head-on by\na private car which was damaged\naround $400, and a second car behind the transport slid into its rear\nwith resulting damage to itself\nof $150.\nThough more than a dozen passengers were in the nine cars in the\nsix accidents, only one was slightly\nInjured.\nIt has been estimated by rabbit\nbreeders that one pair of rabbits\ntheoretically could produce 281,000\noffspring in a year.      . '.\u00ab\nSATURDAY\nEAGLE HALL\nMU8IC\nBY THE\nMELODY PALS\nKaslo Council\nLeaves Vacancy\nKAsi.0 - KSslo City Council has\ndecided to make no appointment to\nfill a vacancy on the Council.\nCouncil is one alderman short as\na result of Its recent civic election.\nOnly two candidates offered for the\nthree seats ; which became vacant,\nand were elected by acclamation.\nThis left an unoccupied seat '\nBy its action in deciding against\nmaking an appointment, Council is\nl-aving an opening for a citizen to\npetition the Lieutenant-Governor to\ncall a by-election.\nAt the same meeting, Council was\nInformed that Dr. A. M. Barrera had\naccepted the post of medical health\nofficer. Imperial Oil Company, Ltd.,\nasked arrangements for an electrical\ninstallation for pump at its oil tanks\nhere. February 11 was set fbr court\nof revision. Accounts amounting to\n$3963 were ordered paid.\nARE SPECIALISTS\nAT THEIR TRADE\nIN PARTICULARi\nElectrical\nContracting\nBoth Commercial\nand Private Residence*\nGood Selection of'\nChristmas and ornamental\nstring lights and lamps.\nElectric Kitchen and\nalarm clocks.\nElectric   Blankets\nOpen till 9 p.m.\nSaturday, Monday, Tuesday\nand on Wednesday till\nS p.m.\nSmith Electric\nPhone 258   645 Baker St.\nv .\nELDERLY TRAIL\nMAN HIT BY CAR\nTRAIL \u2014 In fairly good condition in hospital Thursday morning\nwas Cecil Andrews, 75, Trail, who\nwas injured Wednesday night when\nstruck by an automobile.    * '\nMr. Andrews, whose address, is\n2316 Riverside Avenue was crossing\nColumbia Avenue after coming off\nthe Fast Trail bridge, when an automobile brushed against him and\nthrew him to the ground-\nHe received\" lacerations to his\nforehead.\nSome 250 Americans nitercept a\nlethal bolt of lightning each year.\nWE'LL GIFT-WRAP YOUR  PURCHASES IF YOU WISH\nThe New\nFRIGIDAIRE\nElectric Range with the\n\"WONDER OVEN\"\n\u2022 The first Range of fa kind!\nAnother Frigidaire tint One big\noven become! two separate ovens\nin just a twinkling I And imagine\nthe new cooking convenience youll\nget with the \"Wonder Oven.\" Now\nyou can broil a steak and bake a\neaka in the mme oven at the tern\ntime.\nCome in and ma thlt nor Electric\nRant, sensation today I\nBe Una Modi! RO-W\nFrigidalro Sltdrle RarrM\nRO30C\nRO60\nR035C\nRM4\n$269.75\n$459.75\n$299.75\n$239.75\n8AN.DWI0H GRILL\nChrome finish.  $8.29\nCOMBINATION SANDWICH\nGRILL AND WAFFLE\nBAKER   $14.50\nALL PURPOSE GRILL\nSandwiches,   steaks,   chops:   K\ntoasts, it fries, ft bakes\nwaHks $39.95\nCHRISTMAS\nTREE\nHOLDERS\nNo other tree holder like it!\nNo screws or bolts are needed\nto assemble the legs. It takes\nyou less than a minute to set\nup your Christmas tree. It holds\nyour tree securely. You can have\na well-balanced, good-looking\nChristmas .tree the entire season.\nThe price is less than you would\nanticipate.\nNo, 3\n$1.75\nNo. 4\n$2.55\nNo. 7\n$3.95\nSUNBEAM RADIANT\nCONTROL TOASTER\nAutomatic beyond belief. No\nlevers to push. Drop in the\nbread; toast rises itself, automatically. No popping or banging.\n$39.95\nElectric Mixers\nRegular $39.95\nThis mixer originally sold for\n39.95. This puts It at a price you\ncan't afford to\n3 Only \u2014 Regular 35.25\nSpecial $27.50\nSLEIGHS\nBy Thistle\nTow ropes attached. 4 sizes\nto choose from. All beautifully finished with hardwood.\n3.93   6.45   6.99   7.90\nREVERE\nCHROME SET\nA five-piece chrome let absolutely guaranteed.\nAll colors. Al illustrated ...\n$ft_4.75\n84\nWARE\nCopper Clad Stainless Steel\nFor brighter kitchens use Revere for \"woterless\" cooking. Perfect\nfor fast, effortless cooking. Preserves vitamins and minerals.\nSavei in many ways. Food tastes better,\nBUILT FOR A LIFETIME \"\n1-qt. S_uco Pan $5.00\nl'\/i-qt. Sauce Pan _ $6.60\nI'\/i-pt.. Double Boiler $8.00\n6-qt. Dutch Oven _ $14.00\n8-cup Percolator _ $12.35\n3-qf. Seuee Pan $8.50\n8\" French Chef Skillet $7.70 .\n4-qt. Sauce Pet $9.35\nGuaranteed  by Good\n<-oup  Percolator _\nEgg Poacher Insist\n\u25a0   Alone\t\n$11.00\n... $3.00\n8-cup-Drlp Coffee\nMaker  ___ $15.35\n1 V_-qt. Double Boiler $10.35\n12\" French Chef Skillet $12\n1-qt. kettle JL . $6.50\nHousekeeping  MagaeHw\nGLASSES\nFrom plain ond\nfancy, right up to\nthe exquisite.\nEach\n10c to 75c\nMC&MC\n(NELSON) LTD.\nYOUR FRIENDLY STORE\n476 BAKER ST. PHONE 1300\nLAMPS\nBy such famous manufacturers as Breslin, Hallmark,\nSinger, Alwyn, Electrollier,\netc.\nAS LOW AS\n$5.95\nTHE NEW SUNBEAM\nDEEP FRYER\nThe highly accurate thermostatic controlled fryer. Prevent\nguest work and enjoy fried\nchicken, doughnuts, potatoes,\nere.\n$41.95\nPopular Wearever\nROASTER\nA Size For\nEvery Christmas Turkey\nFor 10-lb. turkey $6.95\nFor 12-lb. turkey $7.95\nFor 18-20-lb. turkey .... $9.50\nCi\u00a3__-_W-iS\n :\u25a0\u00a3., \u201e.w,,r\n3$<\u00a3)\n\u25a0Setoit lath}Wm    LETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nEstablished April 22, 1802\nBMth Columbia'*    ,\nMoat Interesting Newspaper\nPublished overy morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n296 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthor-ted as.Seoond Class.MaU.\nPost Office. Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nFriday,-December 19, 1952.\nSome Criminols Just\nSchemers, Others\nMentally Incapable\n\"Crime is a major industry on tha\nNorth American continent,\" declares\nDr, Rojjert 0. Jones, professor of psychiatry at Dalhousie University. \"We\nin Canada like to pride ourselves on\nthe fact that our situation is better\nthan in the United States, but we still\nhave no trouble keeping our courts\nbusy.\" .\nThis, he submits, offers ample evidence that our methods of dealing with\n\u2022 crime have been notoriously unsatisfactory. Our crime rate has gone steadily up,'and a very large number of\n'people go right on repeating crimes\ndespite having been exposed to all the\nreforms of our system. So any thinking person has a right to ask whether\nwe c&nnot do something better, and\nperhaps cut down on crime through\nprevention.    \u2022\n\"I don't think all crime is primarily\npsychiatric in significance,\" states Dr.\nJones at the outset. \"I have a feeling\nthat a good deal of what might be\ncalled 'organized crime' is'carried on\nby smart and clever people whose personalities are not distinctly different\nfrom those of successful men te other\npursuits. They have reasoned that an\nactivity outside the law will bring\nthem more profits in an easier and\nquicker way. These men may be lacking in some sort of moral sense, but I\ndon't believe they are mentally ill.\n\"I'd have some difficulty in drawing sharp lines between the moral\nsense of the bootlegger and that of his\ncustomer, between the radetrack bookmaker and the man who gambles, or\nperhaps even better, the activities of\nthe- ring that furnishes protection\nand certain smart business practices.\nPeople like those are problems for\nsociety as a whole, and not particularly for specialists in the more limited field of psychiatry.\"\nDr. Jones declares, however, 'that\nthere is a considerable proportion of\ncrime which can best be looked upon\nas indicating some type of sick personality. That is, a criminal acting in\nthe way he, does because of certain\ndefects within himself, which really\nand honestly prevent him from doing\nmuch better. \u2022\nA survey a few years ago of 10,000\nprisoners in Sing-Sing Penitentiary\nreported fhat more than a third were\nconsidered to be either mentally defective, or psychotic (insane), or they\nhad some sort of emotional upset\nWhich rendered them not really responsible for what they did.\n, \"I think if anyone looked at the\nroster of crimes to come before any\ncourt sitting, he'd agree that at least\na third of them were not the acts of\nreasonable people, but of people acting ln a very stupid way or acting, in a\nway which suggested that they.were\nemotionally upsey '\n\u2022 A new public attitude toward the\npart psychiatric treatment can play in\nbringing this onMhird beck on to the\nstraight and sane .way might make it\nLetters may bo published over a nom\nde plume, but tho actual ilonature of the .\nwriter must be given to the Editor as \u25a0\nevldenco of good filth. Anonymous letters\nDo In the waste paper bosket. ~\n\u2022   \"Nothing But Praise\"\nTo the Editor: ,-\nSir\u2014In reply to s letter published ta ypvx\ncolumn Nov, 2D from Mr. Axel H. Nielsen,\nKlnnalrd, B. C, we have moiled the following\nreply, and would be glad it you would also\nkindly publish this copy. ,'\u2022, ... \".\nMr. Axel H. Nielsen,\nBox 82, \".'. \u2022..\u2022:.\nKinnaird, B. C.\nDear Sir\u2014At the regular meeting of the\nSoroptimist Club of Nelson, I waa'instructed\nto write to you and express bur regre.t that\nthe newspaper account of Miss Eileen Mackenzie's report on the Soroptimist convention\n.in Copenhagen was rather misleading.;\nWe can assure you that-Miss Mackenzie\nhad nothing but praise for. the. country and\nthe people of Denmark, and one point that'\nshe stressed over and over was amazement St\nthe number bf people who spoke English.\nWe are indeed sorry the report caused\nmisunderstanding.\nYours truly;\nCorresponding Secretary\nof the Soroptimist Club.\nVeTi\nse\nGrowing Older\nA little more tired at the close ot day,\nA little less anxious to have our own way,\nA-little less ready to scold and.blame,\nA little more care for another's name.\nAnd so we are nearing the journey's end,\nWhere Time and Eternity meet and blend.\nA little less care for bonds and gold,'\nA little less zest than in days of old,\nA broader view and a sane; mind,\nAnd a little more love for all mankind.\nA little more careful-of what we say,\nAnd so we are faring a-down the way.\nA littler more love for the friends pf youth,\nA little more zeal for-established, truth,\nA little more charity in our views,\nA little less thirst for the daily news.\nAnd so wb are folding our tents, away\nAnd passing In' silence at close of day. '\nA little more leisure to sit and dream,\nA little more real the things unseen,\nA little bit nearer to the pilgrims ahead,\nWith comforting Visions of those long dead.\nAnd so we are going'where all must go,\nTo the place that the living may never know.\nA little more laughter, a few more tears,\nAnd we shall have'told our increasing years.\nThe book is closed and the prayers are said,\nAnd we are part of the living dead.\nThrice happy, then, If some soul can say,\n\"I lived because he has passed my. way.\"\n-FLORENCE L. UHLER.\nTheir Own Account\nTo those who have been skeptical of\nreports of massacres by Chinese Communists,\ninclined, to believe that such reports were distortions, comes The Manchester Guardian to\nreveal that Po Yi-Po, one,of the chief dignitaries of the Peking Government, has just\npublished in the Comintern Journal an official estimate of the numbers executed by the\nChinese Communists. Thus: .'''...\n\"In the past'three years we have Haul-\ndated more than two million bandits. Bandits\nare non-existent in China now, and the social\norder has become stable as never before.\"\n\"Bandit,\" The Manchester Guardian points'\nout, means anybody who possessed a little\nland, or who was disliked by the CommunlBts,\nand adds: .'.,.,\u25a0,'\u25a0'  .\u2022 \"    .\n\"Thlris the first public admission bry -\na member of the Chinese Government that\nthe Communists have killed, 'by execution\nand .not In.battle or aa the consequences\nof civil war, 2,000,000 of their subjects (the\nfigures were broadcast By the Peking radio). Since Tsmburlalne, what Government would have gloried ln it?\"\n\u2014Ottawa Journal.\n\u25a0 1    '  ''    \u25a0\nYour Horoscope L\nAt this time use your ingenuity to improve old methods of performing important\ntasks, and good fortune should come your way.\nToday's child probably will be generally lucky,\nin money matters.\npossible for this scierice to play a fuller\npart in the worthwhile rehabilitation\nof sidetracked humans.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\n.   Open to any reader.  Names of personi   \u2022\n'   asking queitloni will not be published.\nThere  Is  no  eharge  for'thli  servloe.\nQueitlons  WILL  NOT  BE  AN8WERED\nBY MAIL except where there ll obvious .\nnecesilty for prlvaoy:\np. R\u201e Nolson\u2014Where could I train ss an sir\nhostess without holding nurse's certificate!\nWe are not sure If you would be accepted'\nby any company for actual flight, but there\nare airport positions that might bo available.\nWe advise you to get ln touch wltb Trans-\nCanada Airlines, Headquarters, Montreal; or\nCanadian Pacific Airline?, Headquarters, ta\nMontreal.. ;'.<\u25a0. \":.-\nMrs. Ri, Salmo\u2014Where could bna-rbuy;\u00bb\nspringer spaniel pup in this district?\nWrite Mrs. Hubner, .Wynndel, who has\nsome puppies for sale; or' Mrs, Saiverspn,\nSproule Creek, who also has springer kennels,    ;\nJ. IM., Nelson\u2014Can you print, briefly,', thb\nrules for playing,ping pong? \u00ab\nIn ping pong, or table tennis, the net is\nsix inches high, six feet long, fixed apross' a\nnon-reflecting table-top nine by live feet, 30\nInches high. When dropped from a height of\n12 Inches the ball' should rebound from the*\ntable to a height of eight to nine Inches; The\nserver hits the ball so it bounces first oh his\nside of table, then over net; ball is then struck\nto and fro directly over net (volleying is illegal) until point is. scored by failure to make\ngood return. The winner is he who tirst scores\n21 points. Service alternates after every five\npoints, but at the score 20-aU it alternates\nafter each-point and winner must score two\npoints more than his opponent. In doubles,\npartners alternate in hitting ball.\nStudent, Procter\u2014What Is the average yearly\nrainfall for the Nelstm district?\nOver a period of 48 years, the Nelson average per year Is 27.95 inches.\nAnother  Student,  Klmberleyr-What  Is the\nhighest city ta Cahada? \"'-'..\nKimberley, B.C. Elevation is 3602 feet\nRossland Is second at 3917 feet\nLooking Backward\n10 YBAR8 AQO\nFrom the Nelaon Dally News, Dec. 19,1942\nGeorge A. Hoover has been nominated\npresident of the Nelson Board of Trade fpr\n1843, and^N. R. Freeman has been nominated\nvice president- .',       ...\nPupils of Central School ln the past four\nmonths have purchased. War. Savings Stamps\nto the value of-$363, Principal F. B. Pearce\nreported.;, fry.'.,\u25a0,,, \".' '\nY.\/-V\u00bbVtAM..AGO- y\nFrom the Nelson Dally Newi, pee, 19,1927\nAdditional iftreet car service In the forenoon is to be given from how on, with an\nextra trip <ehed_ledirCityiElectrical Engineer\nJ. F. Coates announced last-night\nCity Clerk W. E. Wasson was appointed\nreturning officer-last night by City Council\nfor the civic elections to be held Jan. 12.\n60 YEAR8 AOO\n.  From the Nelson Dally Newi, Dee, 19, 1902\nMr. and Mrs. John A Turner of Nelson\nhave left to spend Christmas ln Toronto.\nW. K. Esling of the Trail Creek News is on\na visit to Tacoma.\nDr. LaBau was elected president of the\nCherry Creek Gold Mining Company.'\nIt's Been Said\nWalt, thou chUd of hope, for Time shall\nteach thee all things.\u2014Martin Farquhar Topper.\nA government should not consist of a lot\nof yes men, declares the King's County Record\nof Sujsex, N. B. \"The Government is our\nboard of directors for the handling of our tax\nmoney. If we ask for things we can't afford;\nwe should be told we cannot have thein. The\nGovernment has that power, and uses it in a\ngreat many cases; However, when It comes to\nsaying W to people who think they are getting somethtag.for nothing, governments are\nprone to speak less decisively in the negative.\nThe Canadian Government must come to grips\nitself, w(th the, problem of public .expenditures. There are a great many Canadians who\n* do not appreciate having yes men to guide\ntheir financial structuje.\"\nIt's not true that women give away secrets, comments the Dutton (Ont.) Advance.\n\"They trade them.\"\n| TheyTl Do It Every Time\"\nhtlMwd N. i MM Nt*\"''\n-jiJIB COMBS WUCM FB-MjS\n'lxiT\/~cmJS wnw fever.'\nv-ll a Tizzy-\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\ntoday's Bible Thought\nIt hai been laid that If we knew\nall we would forgive all. We ihould\nbe very sure we have all the facts\nbefore we become angry at anyone.^ .....\nHe that Is slow to anger Is'of\ngreat underitandlng,\u2014Prov. 14:29.\nFrom an\nNotebook\nBy, R. O, JOY, Historian '\nNelion. Dlitrlot Oldtlmon An'n.\nIn searching my oldtlme stories,\nI came across .one about. Duke\nHarris, known as tha Flying Prospector and promoter. I hsve tried'\nto get information as to bow ho\nreceived' this title; maybo it tyas\nlike unto Colonel Lowry and Colonel Topping, both of whom received their .\"rank\" from their friends.\nWe have also CoL Peyton of Leroy\nmine fame.\nIt is 12 years on more ago when\nI visited Duke Harria at the Stirling Hotel.;on: Vernon,' Street:; I\nshook hands with the.Duke and his\nwife, who I believe la still living:\nWe find, that his real initials are\nw.S. Harris, and that ha wai born\nIn tbe town of Kildare, Hulton\nCounty, Ontario, which was p few\nmiles .from Milton, Guelph and\nHatollton.  ' \u25a0 ,\n\"My father was born on a farm,\nbut left same to learn tha grocery\nbusiness: ta those days one had'\nto serve ah apprenticeships for\nthree years. Later he went to Sault\nSte. Marie In the, year 1888. His\nfaMI|y remained till 1898. '\n\"I (Dryke) was at North Bay,\nCopB-r. Cllffe, and Sudbury, and\nplayed baseball -at.\". all points\n\u25a0found there,\" he told me,   *    r\n\"My ifncle came down from\nRossland to see hiB brothers who\nwere scattered all over Ontario.\nHe dropped off to see me, and\nfinally asked me to go West saying\n\"Pack your bag and trunk and I'll\ngive you a job at,the Leroy Mine\nat Rossland,' I was working for a\nrailroad company. I handed ln. my\nresignation, and later arrived in\nRossland, Bi C. \"My uncle was manager, Captain Hall the superintendent an'd Roy Clark was assayer,\nsucceeded by Col. Peyton. '\n' \"Rossland was in. the course of\nconstruction and the smelter at\nTrail was being built by Hblnze. I\ncame by boat to Trail, by four-horse\nstage to Roisland. I worked there\nto different capacities. The mine\nwas later sold tp the British-American Corporation, of which ^Whlt-\naker Wright wai the head..Governor Macintosh was an old schoolmate of Whitaker Wright's, and he\nrepresented the company at Rossland.\"\nX worked for them about four1\nyears ,then I went to Phoenix and\nworked under Yolen Williams, who\nwas superintendent' of the mine\nthere. I also prospected for yblen\nWilliams around Grand forks together with my father. I left Grand\nFotks arid wentto work for J. P.\nGraves in. Montana, US.A, My\nuncle and Al Corbett'were there\nalso. Then I went ,to SewareV.-Alisk'ar,\nI started development iricoapfields\nthere, then went to Northern Brit\nIsh Cobtaibla to the town of Hazel\nton. I remained' there for some\ntime and located a number of claims\nbefore the railroad reached the\ncountry. I sold them, made some\nnice money, mostly from silver-\nlead properties. This was the year\n1931, In 1934 I came to Nelson and\ntook up the Bayonne mine.\"\n19,000 MILES IN 33 WEEKS\n\"I understand you did considerable flying around that time,\"\n\"Yes; I flew 19,000 miles to 33\nweeks, covered a lot of. ground, I\nwps working for DaveffSloan, Col,\nSpencer and others. I'put prospectors in the field all over the\ncountry by airplanes.\n\"I have three brothers, all to\nmining. My aunt yfas Mri. James\nHarris, one' time of Nelson and\nKaslo; Mrs. Garland of Kaslo is\nMrs. Harris' daughter.\nSaid I to Duke: \"Mining and\ndealing in mines must be ta the\nblood.\"   .. \"\u2022\n\"Yel,\" he answered. \"Mrs. Jennie\nHarris was quite a mining broker\nand real estate dealer.\"-\nIt was runiored; that this lady\nmanaged the sale of most of the\nland that' 'the late Peter Verigin\nbought for the settlement of the\nDoukhobor Society.\nThe Duke continued;- \"I was at\nSpider\"' Mine\" (this mine is being\ndeveloped and according to reports\nis showing up well\u2014R.G.J.) \"The\nproperty Is near the Meridian in\nthe Lardeau. I was also at Dawson\nCity, Atlin and the Charlotte Islands,\nCarcross, N.W.T., Seward, etc. I also\nIntroduced the present Yankee Girl\nmines to the owners.\" This was the\nlast time I saw Duke Harris. He was\na real, active Canadian oldtimer.\nHis cousin, O. Harris, now lives\nin Kaslo,'B.C.\nSenator's Words\nShock Senator\nOTTAWA (CP) - senator John\nT. Haig, Progressive Conservative\nleader in the Senate; says he is\n\"shocked beyond words\" by the suggestion Tuesday by Senator R. B.\nHorner (PC-Saskatchewan) that\nseparate schools be abolished to reduce taxes.'\nSenator Haig, now ta Winnipeg,\nsaid ln a statement issued Wednesday through hii office here:\n\"1 am chocked*beyond words.by\n-the.''statements' of Senator Horner\nIn the Senate which I have Just\nread.' Everything he said was directly coritraty to the well-known and\nclearly-established- policies of the\nProgressive Conservative party.\"\nSenator; Horner said:\n\"If we could. agree to send our\nchildren to one school' without the\ncost of maintaining separate schools\na huge saving at the municipal level\nwould result.\n\"Further It would demonstrate to\nthe world in example\/of unity ta\nCanada.\"\nmg\u00a5ffl**?\n*MAA\/PO\/$0#\nH\u00ab\n.ENRY vni beheaded two wives,\nBluebeard polished oft six\u2014but tb*\ngreatest ludy-klller of them all waa a\nTurkish aristocrat, \/ichrnm Bey, who\nmurdered tblrty-als wives in one evening! For In 1994, tbe year or this\ndramatic event, a revolutionary, law\nbad been passed ln Turkey, a law that\nto Aobram meant the ond of hia world.\nThis law abolished the. centurlcs-old\ninstitution of tne harom, making only\none' wl\/e legal thencolorth. ynablo to\nface thla bleak prospect, Aohram\nplanned a diabolical end, for bll wlvoa\n\u2014and hlmselt as well. Shortly before\nChristmas he Invited all 86 ladlea to\nan elaborate banquet to be held em\nChristmas bay, Thoy were to drear\nin their \u25a0_\u00bb finery\u2014for tills was\nto be \"a banquet to end aU banquets.\"\nFor daya the ladles preened In anticipation\u2014and at lost- tho festive holiday arrived. Aohram'o wives gathered\nat a magnificent banquet table and\nbefore dinner Were entertained by.\nOriental toualelana and dancers. As\ntbe last strains of music faded, Ac-ram\ngazed for a moment on hla beautiful\nharem, Then he ordered them to dine.\nWithin one hour all 36 women had\ncrumpled to the floor, victims of a\nquick-acting poison. Aohram sprawled\nacross one end of the table\u2014a man\nwno ohosc death rather than lose hla\nhareml\nTHANKS: Mrs. Either L. Leigh, New\nrorkClty\nSend In m facta to \"Whore On Harth,\"\n\u25a0are of thil newspaper.    .\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 (The Sen'\nate Labor Committee Is sending an\nInvestigator to Seattle to probe that\ncity's recent waterfront tieup, the\noffice of Senator Magnuson (D-\nWash.) reported Wednesday.\nThe\" committee will report its\nfindings when the new Congress\nconvenes,    '   '\u2022\nThe jurisdictional dispute which\nparalyzed the waterfront 82 days,\nended last Saturday \"when the AFL\nInternational Longshoremen's Association withdrew pickets in compliance with a Superior court in-\njunction. The ILA bad set up the\npicket line when 100 longshore fore\nmen pulled out of the union and\nformed an independent organization.\nTho committee investigator .will\nstudy all phases ofthe dispute, including its effects on Alaska and'\nthe Pacific Northwest 2'\n' They siy a woman's work n never\ndone, .but a man's wouldn't either,\nif he tried to finish everything ih\nsight before qullln'. \" . ,\nViews\n,   from the \u25a0\nNews Fronts\nBy J. M. ROBERTS, Jr.\nAiioolated Preii Nawi Analyit\nRecent emphasis on the economic\nproblems of the North Atlantic\nTreaty Organization, and tha delays\nta planning for its expansion in 1993,\nhavo created.a widespread impression that lt isn't doing very well.\nThat is a matter of relativity.\nWhile there has been a tendency\nto slip back from the goals set 10\nmonths ago, and there will.not bo\nas many divisions.available ta 1933\nas was anticipated, progress during\n1933 has come close to'what was\nexpected \u2014 a defence force of 38\ndivisions with the same number\navailable for mobilization in from\nthree to 30 days.\nThis progress has eliminated tha\nfear dominant among miliary men\ntwo years ago that in event of war,\nRussia could run over Western\nEurope with little difficulty.\nNAiTO estimates, were for 78 divisions by the end of next year and\n100 by the end of 1954. That was\nadopted as the critical date, when\nRussian policy and military ability\nwould most nearly balance. Some\n100 divisions, backed' by modern\nstrategic weapons in which the\nAllies think they have a distinctive\nedge snd which could be turned\ndirectly against Russia herself, were\nconsidered sufficient to deter her\nfrom any break, or to hold successfully pending full Allied mobilization if she Insisted on a break.\nWeapon developments and increasing quality ofthe forces has led\nto estimates, particularly in Europe,\nthat these figures can be shaved\nsor.ewhat. .without too nrnich risk,\nso that the lame economic leg of\nthe defence structure may be\nstrengthened. \u2022\nOne factor which has led to a new'\nassessment of needs is the belief that\nalready NATO has\" achieved\nstrength which Russia could not\nhope to overcome without calling\nup\" reserves from behind her \"front\nline\" forces in Eastern Europe. That\nmeans a Warning period in which the\nAllies would have time .to deploy\nand mobilize.\nThe NATO meeting In Paris may\nbe taken as a sign bf the doldrums\nInto .which it has fallen ta recent\nmonths with regard to planning. Bui\nthis period will, end how ta a month\nor two, when the members have \u25a0\nbetter look at their budget prospects\nand the new Washington administration is installed.\nVernon Blind Man\nReconciled lo\nParting From Dog\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A blind\nbookstore owner said hero ho is reconciled to being parted from his.\nseelng-eyo' dog for nine months\nwhile he visits Nov Zealand.\nJohn Gordon, i 41,. his wife and.\ndog,\"Flag, arrived hen from their\nhome ta Vernon, B. C They plan\nto fly to Australia. Friday.\nMr. Gordon denied a Ntw Zealand report which said he intended\nte stay with hia dog while lt is\nht' 1 in quarantine tpr nine months\nby New Zealand immigration authorities. \"'      .V..     \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\"til just have to get along without Flag,\" he said. \"Byt 111 visit\ntbe quarantine station, as often as\nthe\/ will let mil.\"    ,   . , , 'A\n'They granted mt one oonces-.\nslon, though,\" he said. \"Normally\ndogs are not allowed to land from\nNorth America at all because of *\nthe tear ot the effect of rabies on\ntheir livestock.\"\nMr. Gordon is taking the dog be-\ncause he plans to visit AUjstralia I\nafter his New Zealand trip.        ,' Jl\nOffawa Asked fo 1\nControl Rabies\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 AgHcultur*\nMinister Ure said Thursday the;\nfederal government has been asked\nto regard the renewed outbreak of\nrabies to Northern Alberta* as an\nepidemic threatening the country's\nanimals, and to pay compensation to\nfarmers losing livestock from the\ndisease. ',       ,,; j\nDr. E, E. Ballantyne, provincial\ndirector of veterinary services, reported Wednesday thst the rabies-\noutbreak, first spotted six months:\nago 10 miles inside Alberta'sr North-\nem boundary, now has spread\/to\nwithin 174 miles of Edmonton and\nEast across the ^province's Northland to near the Saskatchewan\nborder;-':     ' ' '   >.;\n.SO GOOD with FOOD\nHAVE A\nHuge Marijuana Haul\nNEW YOftK (AP) - An unem-\nployed tailor was arrested Wednesday night and accused of possessing\n$120,000 worth of marijuana. Police\nsaid they picked up Homer Jackson,\n38-year-old Negro, as he. walked\ndown a Brooklyn street carrying a\ncanvas .bag containing 10 pounds of\nthe weed. They said they found 70\nmore pounds at his home.\nBEST\nin Coffee\nPacific Miflc giro\ncoffee \u00bb riclv\ncreamy flavor.\nBiy B.9. nMMH\nJOHANNESBURG, SOttth Africa,\n(Reuters)-rNlneteen African miners wars entombed Wednesday 4S00\nfeet underground by a subterranean landsUdb, TwA. other. Africans\nend a Europban were killed by the\nlahdsUd*.\" r'\nTHIS ADV-HTISEMENI II NOT PUBUSHEP OR DISPIAY6D BY THE rllQUOK CONIRCH. *OA\u00bb0 Ol IV\nTHI GQVMNMBNf OF IIITI9H COIUMIIA f\\\u2122 :\":*\n 'It PayiTo Buy Quality\n2 FOR Wb and SON '\u2022\nMEhl'S ROMEO\nSLIPPERS\nWine leather upper,: elastic\ngore or slide zipper. Neolite\n... sole and wedge heel.\nSizes 5\/1.25\n\u25a06 to 11 iLl\n\u00ab\nR. ANDREW\n& ca\nLEADERS  IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902 '\nFINAL PLANS\nFORWnrULE\nCONCERT MADE\n'. Final arrangements for the Gran\nite Road Women's Institute Christ-\nI ,mas concert to be held'in Shirley\n' Hall' Saturday were made at the\nregular meeting of the W. I. Tuesday.   \u2022\"\nPurchase of a fire extinguisher\nfor Shirley Hall will be made by\nthe Institute, members decided,\nalong with four dozen cups.\nMrs.'E. P.rMuraro and.Mrs! J.\nCullinane were named chairmen\nbf the phdning committee;..\nA vote of thanks to retiring officers for their work during the past\nyear, was mad&:'. ......\nThe meeting was held at toe home\nof Mrs. 8. Lust. Hostesses, were\nMrs. E. R. Clark, Mrs. \u00a3.- Ironmonger and Mrs. G. R. Pickering.\nI  New Denver\nNEW DENVER\u2014Mrs. ,C. W.\" Gbr-\nhy entertained a number of friends\n.In honor! of her husband on his\nbirthday. \u2022 \u2022    '\u25a0\nMr. and-Mrs. Al C. D'Amour and\nson have| Teturned from \"a holiday\nto Spokane and Vancouver.\nMrs. Ada L. Levy has left for\nCreston, where ahe will be. the\nguest ol-Mr. and Mrs. C.B. Twigg\nfor a couple of days, en route to\nCalgarjf to spend the Christmas\nholidays with her brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nCaffelle, and other relatives.\n||\nstmas\nCandies\nPecan Rolls, each _ $1.00\n'A Marzipan Highballs\n80#._!\/4lb.\nMaraschino Cherrlei\n$2,00 lb.  \"\n!   Duncan's   Imported\nChocolates in lovely gift\nboxes \u2014 $1.73 box\nA special Christmas\nMixture of\nChocolate Drops\nFrench Creams, etc.\n39*\u2014 1\/2 lb.\nChildren's boxes of\nMixed Candy\n'  Helm Royal Chocolate\nCoins, etc.\n500 box\n\"   ; *\n?Me'et Your Friendi at Rannlger'o\nWhere Candy Is a Specialty.\n'  j      ,   Not a Sideline\nRANNIGER'S\nCandies Ltd.\n?      466 BAkfe St\nNelson, B. C.\n'(\u25a0mmmmmm\nNelson\nSocial..'.'..\nPHONE   144\nFROM REGINA ... Mr. and\nMrs. John Home of Reglna are here\nto spend the Winter with Mrs.\nHome's mother, Mrs. A. D. Graham,\n710 Josephine Street\n\u2022\u25a0*\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nCITY VISITOR . . . Mrs. G. Mc-\nGillivray of Riondel was a visitor\nto Nelson Thursday.\nMarriages\nThe wedding of Miss Christine\nAgnes Webber arid Sonny Olaf\nNomland will take place Saturday,\nDecember 20, at 8 p.m., to St An-\ndrew'a United Church, Kaslo.\nFriends of the bride and groom\nare Invited to the reception to be\nheld to the IOOF. Hall.\nINVERMERE AID\nELECTS SLATE\nINVERMERE\u2014The annual meeting of .the Senior HospitI Aid here\nelected Mrs. Thomas Gallagher as\npresident and Miss Ethel M. Fisher\nas vice-president Mrs. W. S. Rogers\nwas reelected as secretary-treasurer. ...\nRepresentatives from nearby villages are Mrs. K. M. Marples>'for\nWindermere, Mrs. W. Pye for Athalmer and Mrs. Thomas Seaton for\nWilmer. Mrs., Marples is also in\ncharge of publicity and membership.\nThe telephone committee is Mrs. J.\nJ. Kimm and Mrs. F. E. Coy and\nMrs. Gilbert Taynton convenes the\nbuying committee.\nThe group reported very satisfactory proceeds from a home cooking\ntable at the recent hospital bazaar.\nThis has been turned over to the\nX-ray fund for the hospital.\nWI APPOINTS\nNEW CONVENERS\nHENATA-^Conveners of standing\ncommittees were appointed by Renata Women's Institute at its meeting\nand Christmas party here.\nThe conveners, are Mrs. Isaac'\nWiebe, assisted by Mrs. C. H. Schmok, citizenship;' Mrs. Funk, agriculture; Mra, William Hale, social welfare; and Mrs. Henry Friesen, home\neconomics and .handicraft Mrs.\nHenry Toews was appointed cemetery convener, and auditors for next-\nyear are Isaac Wiebe and Arthur\nKoch;      :\nA donation of $5 was voted to the\nKootenay Society for Handicapped\nChildren.\nThe Christmas party featured carol .singing, a demonstration of\nChristmas cake decorating, a reading, and showing of a snow scene\ndecoration on a mirror. Members\nexchanged gifts, and Mrs. .Tom\nHunchak, secretary-treasurer, was\nhonored with a special birthday\ncake.\nInvention School\nDance Gala Affair\n, INVERMERE\u2014Students of the Invermere high school held their annual Christmas dance in the school,\nauditorium. Music was provided by\nthe high, school orchestra, \"The\nSlowpokes.\" .   '.-\nA Christmas, tree and gay Christmas* decorations made the hall a,\nfestive, scene, and the many novelty\ndances added to the fun. Supper was\nserved by tbe committee of students.\nMRS. J. MePHAIL\nWINS AT CARD PARTY\nMrs. J. McPhail took top honors\nat the St Alphonse's Guild card\nparty. Held in the\" Blessed Sacrament Church hall in Fairview,\neight tables were to play.\nMrs, Lindsay, and C. Newell won\nthe travelling prizes and Mrs. L.\nColetti, consolation prize. Mrs. A.\nvan Ruyskensvelde won the. door\nprize.\nMiss Rita Campbell was mistress\nof ceremonies.\n(Dama. 14fL CtJiiJL\nWlamatiMnhliiL\nOQOQONESa.\nWW  MEOIUM\nONE-YARD BEAUTY!\nWho would ever guess this crlsfc\ncharmer Jakes only ONE YARD\n35-inch fabric for Medium Size (14.\nto 16)! Just look at the unusual\nshoulder capelet effectr-the bO.w-\ntied pockets! Use a. gay remnant,\nbind with a colorful contrast \u2014\nand you'have the gift'\"that's * the\nhit of the shower, the. biggest\nmoney-maker at the bazaarlSend\nfor Pattern 9080 how! ,\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nln coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRE88, 8TYLE NUM.\nPER.-   ,'\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN,\"care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B.C.\n- Mount,Logan to fate Yukon, highest peak in Canadian territory, has\nan altitude of 19,580 feet.,'.\nMott-Bradshaw Vows\nHeard at New Denver\nNEW DENVER-Spokane. TraU,\nRemac'and Nelson are points bn the\nhoneymoon itinerary of Leonard\nKeith Mott and his bride, the former Miriam Gwendolyn Bradshaw,\nwho were married to Turner Memorial United Churcb here,'Rev. D. R.\nStone of Nakusp officiating.\n' On their return, the couple will\ntake up residence in New Denver.\nTlie bride Is the third daughter of\nMrs, Roy Leslie-Bradshaw of New\nDenver and the late Mr. Bradshaw,\nand tho groom is tbe son of Mr.\nand Mrs. George Mott of Zincton.\nFor the . ceremony, the couple\nstood under an arch of pastel flowers, evergreens and silver bells, and\npot plants decorated the church. The\ndecorations were by Miss G. L\nReynolds, who also played the wedding muSie, and Mrs. James Draper. *\nTRAPITIONAL WHITE\nGiven to marriage by her groom's\nuncle,' Mr. J. H. Bennett of New\nDenver, the bride chose a white\nsatin gown misted by white nylon\nlace, featuring lily point aleeves.\nHer finger tip length white nylon\nnet veil, with ita heavy embroidery\nedge, was held by a coronet of white\nvelvet.flowers, and ahe carried a\nshower bouquet ot pink carnations\nand white chrysanthemums. '' . '\n. Two sisters attended her. They\nwere Mri. .Ernest George of Remac,\nwho wore yellow taffeta, pale blue\ngloyes and a yellow bandeau of\nflowers, as matron of honor, and\nMiss Virginia .Bradshaw of Trail, to\nmauve nylon net over mauve brocaded satin, matching gloves, and a\nbandeau. Both carried Colonial bouquets of carnations.\nMr. George Lane of Nelson was\nbest man, and Mr, Arthur Mott of\nZincton, the gtoom's brother, and\nMr. George were ushers.\nMr. Stone proposed the toast to\nthe bride at, a reception at the home\nof the bride's mother, nib. bride's\ntable was covered with a lace cloth,\nand centred by a three-tier wedding cake set in white nylon net\nwith red roses and fern. The guests\nwere received by the bride's mother,\nwearing a navy blue' nylon dress\nwith matching accessories and a corsage of red carnations, and the\ngroom's mother, in a wine velvet,\ndress, with black accessories and a\ncorsage of white carnations. Miss\nMaureen Peterson pouredand, serV'\ners were Miss Margaret Anne May-\nbonlf, Miss Jean Mott ot Zincton,\ntbe groom's sister, and Miss Rowena\nBradshaw, sister of the bride.\nBefore leaving on her. wedding\ntrip, the bride donned a navy blUe\ncrepe dress trimmed to white, with\nmatching accessories) a grey topcoat, and a corsage ot white carnations. T\nOther out-of-town guests were the\nbride's aunt,\" Mrs. W. C. Bradshaw\nOf Trail, the groom's sister, Mrs.\nHenry Benthan of Nelson and Mr.\nGerald. Corbett ot Nelson.\nKaslo Church WA\nHolds Yule Sale\nKASLO- The Women's Auxiliary\nto-St Andrew's United Church held\na successful Christmas sale of serving, baking and miscellaneous articles.\nMrs. J. R. Hunter andMrs. J. Tonkin handled tbe sewing table, the\nhome baking'table was to charge of\nMrs. H. E. Singel and Mrs. T. H.\nHorner, at the Miscellaneous table,\nMrs. H. Beck and Mrs. J. Strachan\nsold a variety of articles. The candy\nbooth, conducted by CGIT members\nunder the direction of Mrs.. Agtkto'\nSon, was well patronized\". Tea, under\nMrs H. Carlson as convenor was\nserved by Mrs. T. R. Allen, Mrs. D.\nW. McDerby, Mrs. B. Laybourne,\nMrs. E. Johnson, Mrs. C. Hendricks,\nMrs. S. Stocking and Mrs. C. Ewlng.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO \u2014 Mrs. E. Cameron has\nreturned from an extended visit\nwith relatives in Nova Scotia.\nLAC Joseph Furiak, now stationed at Calgary, Is spending a three-\nweek vacation here at the home of\nhis mother, Mrs. A. Furiak.\nMrs. Colin Cameron and daughter\nof Wasa are visiting Mrs. Cameron's\nmother, Mrs. M. McQueen.\nI\nC0A\nmt        TOWLER\nFuel A Transfer\nPhona 889 Nelion. B.C\nI ..:.y r    :, '       .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1?52 - 5\nyfaw&w^w\u00aem^>mimiwmb^\nGift Suggestions for\nthe Children to Make\nTheir Christmas Perfect\nSLEIGHS\nSizes to suit any child.\nSturdy oafo construction.\n$4.75-$5.10-$5.75i\n\u2014: \u25a0 \u25a0\u00ab     '        u\nM.\n1\n$17,951\nChildren's Rockers  I\nHardwood . $\"\u00bb.95 \u00bb\nconstruction ________       \/       *5\nMUSICAL ROCKER ^'      S\nTABLE and CHAIR\nSETS\n$11.95\nWE WILL REMAIN OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. SATURDAY NIGHT\nDOLL STROLLERS\n, and\nFOLDERS\nJust like Mother's.\nSturdy eonstrurtion. >7 -\nStrollers.. $3.95 \u2014 $6.95 %\nFolders\t\nThe perfect gift to gladden the\nlittle girl's Christmas.\nI jfieewatiL |\n&^^^^^^l^^^_ft^ft^^^^_\u00a3\u00ae!$\nOut of N ew York \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nISWASI\nHousecoats  :\nYou'll skip around the house ln\nthese '-\u25a0 comfortable  quilted  housecoats from Fashion. First; In satin,\nbehgalthe wool and tie-silks.'.\nPriced from $10.93\n'Kerchiefs\ni\nyummmts\nY\n>4M I\nI\nThe teen-age crowd \"go\" for these\ngaily colored sweater 'kerchiefs .\nBoxed, these make ideal gifts.\nPriced from  -. $1.98\nSkirts\nBefore 1001 the Swedish rulers |\nwere known as Kings of Upsala.\n.^^^^^^0.\u00ae0.l30.\u00a70.\u00aefe\u00aet\nTake, your choice . . . the new .washable- orlon\nand-wool ekirts, by.Jonathan Logan, that dry\novernight 'and keep their pleats without pressing,\nor the popular all-wool skirts by Golflex, Nat\n- Gordon or Sportscraft. These creations are all\nthe> products of the top designers you are all\nfamiliar with from the leading fashion magazines.\nFashion First'* buyer\nhas just returned from\nNew York' with the\nvery latest' styles and gift items destined\nfor m'lady's, Christmas tree. Already in\nare those fascinating Waist Cincfiers, guaranteed to \"make your waist little and your\nfashion reputation big,\" and, to add a\npractical note, to help keep your blouse\nsecurely tucked in.\nHere for your approval is only a partial\nlist of Fashion First's Christmas selection.\n... Remember, it's Fashion First for Gifts\nat Christmas.\nI\nTT?\nMatched\nCharm Sets\nYou'll fall for \"Luxltea\" lingerie ...\nso lovely with its double inseta ot\nnylon net and lac* ... net ruffle trim\n.. .its rows'of dainty elastic encircling\nthe waist (ot the gown). Fashion First\nhas these feminine CHARM SET3 BY\nLUXITE , ..tho same style of lovely\nnylon tricot lingerie aa worn by Yo-\nlande Donlan, star of the British movie\n\"Penny Princess.\" Sizes 32 to 40. Colon\n\u2014white, pink, blue.\nGOWNS, each ..,..\u201e_..... ?14<9S\nSUPS, each   $8.95\nPANTIES, pair  -$3.98\nHaridherchiefs\nIrish linens with borders'of lace or\nembroidered.\nPWoe* *\u00b0m $1.08 to $$.00\nGloves\nSweaters\nmake the\nfinest\ngifts. . .\n\u2022 Sheared\nRacoon\n(Dyed)   3,4-length\n'795\n\u2022 JAPANESE MINK\n(dyed)\n*i\n8\\\nAlways a favorite with the younger set are\nFashion First's sweaters by Dalkeith and\nLansea.\nPriced from ...... r  $6.93\nKnitted Suits\nMore women every year are taking to the\nknitted \"all-purpose\" suit. Fashion First has,\nthem by Lady Anne, Jantzen and Nan-Shire\nKnitwear.\n'mt&\u00ae\nthat add toat touch ot disttoo-\ntion for evening or day wean\nby Maroo and Perrtas,  to\nsuede and kid. Colors: red,\ngold,  brown,  navR  purple,\nfrey.\nPriced from $4.98\nHandbags\nPriced from\n$29.50\nDresses\nFashion ts swinging back to the large, roomy\nhandbags, and of course Fashion First has\nthem.'\nPriced from ._ ____.__,  $6.99\nWaist Cirichers\n'895\n\u2022 BLUE FROST\n(Mutation Mink\n'2500\nYou will be pleased with the breath-taking\nglamor of these up-to-the-minute New York\ncocktail and afternoon dresses. In novelty\nfabrics..                                 -\nPriced from   $14.93\nA large selection of this latest fashion\nsensation  at  Fashion First.\nHats\nGIVE HER A. GIFT OF QUALITY\nGREENWOOD\nI      FURS\nAt Fashion First you'll find a chapeau. to suit\nevery occasion.\n***** ftom ~-~ $3.95 to $11.98\nWonderful\nWinter Coats\nH you've a ypguish flair for fabulous fashions, ybu won't want to take-them off. New,\ndramatic fabrics with surface interest and\nwonderful colors combinations . .'.new\nshoulder lines ... . brilliant styling ... all\nexpertly tailoaed to make any one a wise\nfashion investment.\nPriced from _..\u201e $49.95\nBed Jackets\nFor. that after-toe operation recupera-'\ntion or just lazy, reading-to-bed lounging, these bed jackets from Fashion\nFirst are just what the Doctor ordered.\nIn quilted satin, blue or pink; medium\nand large.\nPriced from  ._...._ '......$$,95\nil\nBaker St.\nPhone 272\n\u2022 Use Your Budget or Charge Account\n\u2022 Suit and Coat Specialists\nBlbu\nses\nA beautiful selection ot blouses to'all the\nwanted fabrics\u2014nylon, alluracel, crepes, jersey.\nPriced from $2-98\n=   ^%e4\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY MEWS,\nFR|DAY\/DEC; 19, 1932\n'.Business Spot Ijght \u2022\u2022,'\u25a0\nNorth American\nTrade Essenfial\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\n\".The North American eonttnent. Is\nso well off that other countries find\n\u00abj it rdifficult; to move in the same\n.'Ctcircles.'-..-'.      . ; \"\u25a0'.\u2022-,\n'\".',. Thla fact,:to various wor-tof,\npops into about every discussion of\nworld trade problems,'-..-'\nFor instance, the recent Common-\"\n. wealth   economic   conference   ta\n-    London, voting that various countries have felt it necessary to re-\nvit strict their buying of American\n..'.;  goods, phrases It as follows: r\n''The rate of progress in renjov-\ni ing discrimination will depend tipon\n\u00bb the advance toward equil'brulm be-\nr^tween the United States and the\nrest of the world.\", .\n\\p r. This; is another way of saying\n,\u2022\u25a0 ...i. that other countries can't buy from\n\u2022.- the United States tor Canada) unless\n. they lean sell there, and until their\niff .prosperity more dearly approaches\nr*   America's. \".'\u2022''.\u2022'\n^CANADA'S DECISIONS\n; .   Cahada took part to the confer-\n\u2022 enceahd Its decisions are of great\n;r |-importance to her, but in a com?\n\u25a0'; j mercial way her Interest js similar\nj to that, of the* United States,-: \u25a0\u25a0':'-\n'., Tbe communique outlining the\ni.i conference decisions, some say, is\n'i. a - constructive document. Others\n',- call It a meaningless recital of good\n\u2022 \u2022 Intentions,-\".'- .-      'i   ; \"\u25a0        \u2022,.:\n'.;       It can be argued, however, that\n. '\u25a0;   even as a statement of good inten-\n1 tions it has unusual significance at\nthis tyne. >:\u25a0\u2022..;'.\"\n\u25a0yi r\\ It }j rato\u00abr a.wllet to And that.\nthe good intentions are not accom-\nr    panied, as they have so often been,\nby a list: of new entergeincy rfstrio-\ntions. Tie intentions'are immedi-\n2 ate, rather than deferred.\nj'^-SEtj'STAfjE'\"--:' \"'.-'\u25a0\"\n-, More important,  the document\n,. :,;\u25a0 seems to set the.stage for possible\n'developments on a broader International scale by declaring an intention to deal with certain internal\n.', matters that have been the subject\nr.r   of outside criticism. It would curb\n2 \u25a0 rising prices; promote higher pro-\n. if auction; provide' more goods that\n4 if, may be. sold abroad; encourage in-\n\" i vestment in sound developments.\ny    la all, one, can get the imprests sion that the document, aside from\n'     its   merits   within   the   Commonwealth, is aimed at the next step\nto <an international way\u2014probably\n,    \u25a0 conference with the United States.\n.   .One can get the impression that\n;    all the objections which the United\n'    States might raise have been con-\n.    sldered, and an effort made to, an-\n|    swer them in advance.\n'rh.   One might interpret the docu-\n-.y  ment as saying, in effect partlcu-\n.' larly to the United States:\n. '2. 2 \"Our situation has been bad, but\n&\u00a3 it is better. At the same time, lt Is\n.not good enough. In our mutual to-\n\u2022 terest, what should be done about\nit?\".\nLike all expressions, of good in-\n. tentions, tbe ultimate result will depend Upon the determination and\nability of all concerned to make\nthem effective.\nNATO Ministers\nAgree lo Risks\nPAKIS (AP)\u2014The North Atlantic\nTreaty countries agreed Thursday\nto spend $239,600,000 in 1953 for'airports and other solid defences\nagainst possible' Soviet aggression,\nThis is just a shade more than\nhalf the 5428,000,000 which Gen.\nMatthew Kidgway, supreme commander in Europe, had outlined as\nthe \"minimum\" to provide-security.\nBene Pleven, French defence minister, \u25a0 said- tbe reduced figure was\nagreed upon by toe NATO council\nafter a four-day debate. The money\n; voted will provide enough to begin work on airports and other\nlong-term projects as soon as, weather permits. ,\nDecision on the final figure was\ntaken a few hours before the projected conclusion of the meeting,\ncalled to get the 14 members to vote\nall the money they could afford\nwithout going broke.\nCALCULATED RISK ,\n', The statesmen, including Finance\nMinister Abbott of Canada, met in\n' the shadow of hard times over Europe, an economic slowdown which\nled them to take what their military\nadvisers believe to be calculated\nrisks. lAmong them were:\n1. A broad decision to scale down\nthe army, air force and naval goals\nfor the coming year. The advisers\nhad wanted toe equivalent et 75\ndivisions under arms by the end bf\n'1053; now they will have to settle\nfor about 60.\n' 2. An attempt to modernize gradually their weapons during' toe next\nfew years, slowly getting rid of outdated planes, guns and tanks ahd\nconcentrating also on guided missiles and atomic bombs and shells.\nEuropeans Trust\nPresidenl-Elecl\nBOSTON' (AP) \u2014 Senator-elect\nJohn F- Kennedy (Dem.-Mass.) says\nthe attitude of Europeans is that\nthe Russians will hot attempt. a\nmilitary invasion of Western Eur\nope. He returned Wednesday night\nfrom a three-week tour of Western\nEurope and also told reporters that\nEuropeans seem .to. feel there will\nbe no major change In American\nforeign policy under Elsenhower.\nThe. chrome process'for tanning\n'feather, using salts of the metal\nchromium, was .discovered about\nTelejjlio^\nAfcWf\nSetting potaifor new tong distance lines\nis not always a ease of just digging holts.\nOtef point: of B.C.'s rougher country Oil\nhotel must be-Hasted out of solid rock.\nHigh to the mountains between Hope and Princeton a B.C.\nTelephone-Company lineman tightens, tip newly-strung wire for\nadditional long distance oircuiis between British dplumbipand\n. the Prairies and .Eastern Canada.\nPotp-setting far ntwlohg distance Bwsfa IvtirUir British Columbia\nis bachbriiMng work despUi the ttsapf modmjpaihiniry. Hire\na telephone company ground crew usss a \"gin\" poll tp set anew\n'. pole pH a high bank in the Hope-Princeton country.- (   -\nThs mors beautiful the semry, ths more difficult thi work when\nbuildingnewlongdklancelekphonelincsthraughB.C.'Smountains.\nBut ths telephone lineman wins put <mr rock and cliff as nets\ncopper mice'highways aire buiU through rugged terrain in the\ninterior of ihe prolines. '\u25a0 \".;   \"\n\"Difficult\" il understating the case when applied to ths hazardous work of building long distance circuits\n\u25a0through British Columbia's mountain country. A \"daring-yomg'-man-on-tltc-flying-trapeze\" act is\nperformed here by fiarlesi numbers pf the, B.C. Telephone Company's Construction Department as they\nsiting new Nelson-Penlkton circuits Pm. Bock Creek Canyon.at Bridettttk. '\nA vitally-Important and continuing phase of the B.C. Telephone\nCompany's big expansion program Is the-addition of many long\ndistance circuits to provide more talking highways between points\nin British Columbia and between B.C. and the Pralrioa, Eastern\nCanada and the United. States. ;. \u25a0'\nIn fact, in thr past seven- years the company has spent well over\n$6,000,000 on outside long distance plant alone\u2014With more in the\nplanning stage. This figure does not include expenditures on long\ndistance switchboard and other associated central office apparatus.\n'\"'.    rr 2 ..\u25a0\"\u25a0 ' \u25a0'-... \u2022  .   ...      ' -\/ '\u25a0',.'     :;\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0   .....   , *'\nMuch of this longdistance expansion is being realized by the Installation\nof complex \"carrier\" equipment which in some cases enables us to\nobtain as many as 22 voice highways from a single pair of wires! For\nlocal service, only one conversation can be carried on a pair of wires\nas carrier circuits would be too expensive for such short distances.\nThe use of certain types Of \"carrier\" equipment has made it possible\nfor us to increase facilities between, B.C. and Prairie and Eastern\nCanada points by approximately 50 percent. This particular \"carrier\">\nproject required the construction of,a new, 83-mile pole line between\nHope and Princeton and the erection of a chain o'f \"repeater\" stations\nbetween Vancouver and Fernie.\nBRITISH   COtVMBIA\nTELEPHONE   COMPANY\nm\nxssSs\n c9d^3\nLomprey Enemy of\nGreat' Lakes flth\n'WASHINGTON (AN-Represent-\natlves of Canada ahd the United\nStatu met Thursday to form an alliance against the destructive sea\nlomprey, which Is destroying vast\nquantises of fish to the Oreat Lakes.\nThe State department said the\nlamprey .\"now Is Invading Lake Superior and threatens to destroy lake\ntrout fisheries there, as it has already destroyed those bf lakes Huron end Michigan.'' '\nCLASSIFIED ADS OET RESULTS\nJapan's Strike Settled\nTOKYO (AP) - Japan's bone-\nchilled, candle-burning' millions\nperked up Thursday when the national electric strike 'was' settled\npnl^'24 hours after the country's\nc ! miners-went back to work. For\nmore than two months the ' twin\nstrikes cut Japan's heat and light\nto a minimum, Electric workers\na:c9pted a government compromise\ngiving the workers an average raise\nin pay from the old $46.50 to $55.50\na month. '\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ''\" : \u25a0', -'\u25a0   :'\u25a0 \u25a0.   ,-.-.\nSHOWING\nAT THB\nSTRAND\nA Famous Playera Theatre\nTRAIL, B. C.\nHpwto Pay Doctor Hot U. S. Issue -.;'\u2022. .   .\nCommission Comes Up\nWitt Health Service Bah\nEgypt supplies the oldest, historical record of ships.\nDee. 22 - 23 - 24\nVl\nit\n.Macao\n(Adult Entertainment Only)\nRobert Mltchum \u2022 Jane'Russell\n\"Trail Guide\"\nTim Holt \u2022 Linda Douglas\nDee. 25-26-27\n\"last of the\nBuccaneers\"\nPa.ul Henrled - Jack Oakls r\n'CrippleCfe^fc'\n(COLOR)   :\nlontgomi\nBooth.\nGeorge Montgomery\nKarln \"     \"\nMATINEE\nEvery Saturday\nShows Continuous From 2 P.M,\nD.B. MERRY\nPhone 444 \u2014 Trail\nWHILE THE SUPPLY\n\u25a0\u2022 lasts. . ;.A v;\n4x8xVi Panels Fir\n3-ply, sound one side.\n$4.00 per sheet\n2x4 ond 4x4;\nArborite Sink Top\n60c sq. ft.\n2\"x4\" ond 4\"x4\"\nPrimtile Wallboard\nbaked enamel finish\n35c sq.ft.\nSalmo Agents:\nTAYLOR BROS. GARAGE\nU)sdcomsL\nAwaits Your\nVisit To Trail\nAt The\n12 A   \\\n-:''Wrr'\n\u25a0 ' *T \u25a0:'\nI\nR\ni\nA:\nHOTEL\n\\     Phone 1865\n!<i Mile From City Centre\nTurn Left At funnel\n156 HAIG ST.\n\u2022      TRAIL, BX.\nTry\n\"Sariitorie\nChmmsfl\nPrompt Attention\nto country orders\ni:::.^$$^i:\nCourteous Service\nalways   '\n'':*:*;*2'\nCRYSTAL,\nLAUNDRY\nLIMITED\nSANITONE\nDRY CLEANERS\n1358 McQuarrie St.\nEast Trail, B. C.\nPhone 1540 -1541\nTRAIL SALES\n& MACHINE SHOP\nPhone 1851\nGLENMERRY\nTRAIL\nBox 207\nELECTRIC and ACETYLENE WELDING\nGOVERNMENT CERTIFIED WELDERS\nSTQCK OF PIPE FITTINGS\nBOLTS \u2014 CAP SCREWS\nINDUSTRIAL HARDWARE FOR RE-SALE\nCOMPLETE TIRE SERVICE\nWe ean handle tire sizes from 525-16 ta 1400-24\nNUTSHELL \u2014 600-16\nKNOBBY OR CHAIN BAR RECAP\n$12.00\nCOMPARATIVE   PRICES TOR  OTHER  8I?E8\nWe pay express one way on all tires shipped to us.\nThree-Day ServleS on All Passenser Recap, Jobs\n[      Fleet Discount 0n rrwkh Tlx\u201e, Ete,       |\nO.K. Rubber Welders\n(Kootenay West) Ltd.\n801 Victoria St. TRAIL, B. C, Phone 1486\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Priest-\ndent Truman's commission on tho\nhealth needs of the United Statei\neame up Thursday with a middle-\nground proposal r tor solving one\nof the hottest issues in the U, S.\u2014\nhow to pay. the doctor's bill.\nThe commission proposed a $1,-\n500,000,000 annual outlay'of federal\nand state funds to bolster voluntary\ninsurance plans covering the costs\nof hospital and medical care for ail\npersons lacking full ability to pay.\nThe program would be administered chiefly by the states, which\nwould match federal money.\nIt, differs both from a plan unsuccessfully espoused by Truman\nand a rival proposal of the American Medical Association.    .\nTruman has. vainly, plugged for\na federal system of pre-paid sick\nness insurance for 129,000,000 wage-\nearners, to be financed by a compulsory tax on employees and em-\nployer*. ..,\u2022-,',\nAMA CAMI-AIGN8  '        \u25a0':', '.', -.\nThe ASIA has terified IVuman's\nproposal \"socialized medicine\", ond\nhas campaigned for the extension\nof \"voluntary\" Insurance plans \u2014\nthat is, plans which a. person can\npurchase if he wishes. Tbe.AMA,\nhowever,, baa never taken a stand\nas to whether it favored federal\nsubsidy of. such plans,\nOne of, the commission's main\nfindings was that \"despite superior\nmedical service ahd low death rates,\nAmericana are not enjoying as good\nhealth as might be expected in this\ncountry.\" :\nLACK MEDICAL CARE\nOne prime reason was that poo.\npie In low-income groups cant afford adequate medical care\u2014even\non present pre-payment plans.\nThe 'commission, whose formation\nin 1091 was termed by the AMA a\n\"political expediency\" also called\nlof.2\n1. The training of more doctors,\nnursei and other health personnel.\n2. Construction of more hospitals.\n3. Increased medical research,..\ni. Support of industrial health ahd\nof migratory workers,\nMan, Mining From Port Alberni,\nRegains Memory in Kitchener, Ont.\nTrigger-Happy Tactics\nDisturb British Press\nLONDON: (AP)-^Three leading\nBritish newspapers express misgivings Thursday over the shooting\nof riotous Communist prisoners in\nKorea and demand a fuller explanation..-' .     \", \" r '. I\nThe Liberal Manchester Guardian\nand the Conservative London Daily\nMail warn that the shootings may\nweaken the whole UN position on\nthe prisoner-of-war issuer\nThe pro-Labor London Daily Herald calls the latest shooting episode\nat Pbngam, where 82 Red .prisoners\nwere killed ahd 120 were wounded\n\"disturbing\"' and ilertiadds \"Let's\nhave.the facts.\"\nADMITS DIFFICULTY\n; The Guardian concedes that lt is\n\"ejftremely difficult fo keep order\nIn a crowd of fanatical Communists\" but it asks \"Has everything\npossible been done ln this and other\ncamps to make them secure and to\nensure that the prisoners are not\nincited to revolt by surreptitious\nmessages from North Korea as they\nhave been in 'the past?\"\n| In a .'tt(mtJpage: editorial, the\nDaily Mailcautiohs against playing\ninto Communist hands by calling\nthe Americans \"trigger happy.\"\n\"The question to be asked is not\nwhy the Americans fired but Why\n3600 prisoners were allowed to concentrate in sUch a fashion,\"\nWeakens confidence       .\nThe..Daily' Herald \u2022 refers .to a\nstatement in the House of Commons\n'W\u00abttes4aj,\"th-t Bfltaihfh'as- Been\npressing the U. S. government, for\nfull reports on earlier Korean prison incidents but the reports have\nnot yet been received.\n'This is not the way to establish\nconfidence between allies who have\npr: Joint responsibility in KoSrea'\nUnder the UN,\" the Herald Mysr\nLoggers Demand\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Loggers\nfrom here,to the Alaskan border\nwill demand fare allowances to\nand from the job Dec. 23.\n\u25a0_ 'Allowances will be one of the\nbiggest issues raised at the annual\nmeeting of the International Wood-\nworkers of America, Loggers Local 1-71 CCL-CIO here,\nSeveral resolutions coyer the\npoint, but most of them suggest oneway fare, be paid after 30 days on\ntbe Job, with return fares paid after\nBO days. \u2022 \u2022  \"\nOther items to be considered in-\ndude hospital insurance, the Unemployment insurance Act and recommendations on union wage demands next year. ' ,\nSnow for Europe\nAfter Gale Drops\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Heavy snows In\nthe wake of battering gales covered\nmost of central and nothern Europe\ntoday with a Yule-like white blanket, but moderating winds allowed\ntwo big trans-Atlantic liners* to get\nunder way for New York\u2014hours\nlate;'\nSnow was reported from Italy,\nSwitzerland, Belgium, Germany and\nthe Scandinavian countries. In\nFrance, . however, there were\nthreats of floods around the Bordeaux area due to melting snows.\nThe 33,320-ton liner United States\nfinally pulled out of her berth at\nSouthampton, more than 20 hours\nafter'scheduled sailing time, and\nthe French liner Liberie also left\nLe Havre, France, 10 hours late.\nBoth-had been delayed by English\nchannel gales.\nMINOR DAMAGE\n..The United- States, which holds\nthe Atlantic speed record, suffered\nminor damage to her bridge and\nobservation deck Wednesday when\nhigh; Winds slammed the vessel\nagainst the dockslde as she was\nbeing manoemted away from her\nmoorings in a Vain attempt to get\nout of port\nThe drop in the winds also permitted Removal of, 20 officers and\nmen from the Swedish jninesweep-\ner Orskar, aground off the southeast\nCoast of Sweden, near the port of\nKalmar, Thirty other officers and\nmen.remained aboard the vessel\nand: Swedish navy experts said\nthey expected to have the 380-ton\nship afloat In a few days.\n'\u25a0 The gale left a trail of roofless\nhouses, broken fences and tangled\nroad traffic.' . . . . '\u25a0\u25a0,'\u25a0\n. Two men were reported missing\nwhen a boat overturned \u25a0\u25a0on the\nTrent river and an English workman was lost when he fell overboard from the 8025-ton Norwegian\nship Rind* at Birkenhead.\nFreak Accident\nEDMONTON .(CP) \u2014 City workman Nick Scbtscberbak was detained in hospital today for treatment after injured Wednesday when a barricade fell down a manhole and\nstruck Ijim on the head.\nPolice said a truoker was trying\nto 'squeeze his vehicle between a\nbuilding and rthe barricade around\nthe mouth of the manhole when the\nvehicle struck the barricade. \u25a0\nTORONTO (CP)-Albert Thomes\nHetherington was walking down\nthe street at Kitchener, Ont., the\nother day* when a buzzing started\nin his mind and he began looking\nfor the harbor ot Victoria. \"\nThis isn't Victoria; this'is Etltch-\ncner,\" an astonished stranger replied to his question and Mr. Hetherington of Victoria and Port Alberni, B.C. began rthe long road\nback from a 20-day memory lapse.\nThe last thing the 47-year-old\njanitor remembers before, the\nblackout was making a $2 Grey\nCup bet .on .Toronto Argos in the\nstreets - of Nanalmo, B. C. Since\nthen RCMP officers have sought\nhim along the West Coast Mott of\nthis time he was forking as an\norderly in Kitchener hospital..\nCOMPLETE BLANK-\n\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 Mr. Hetherington has no ides\nhow he got from Nanalmo to Kitchener or why he made the' trip. Psy-\nchiatrlsts said they believe, his unwitting return to centrat Ontario\nmay. in some way be connected with\nan unhappy childhood spent In virtual servitude to a farmer in Kitchener district, . L-. : '\n\u2022The 12 days as a hospital orderly\nthey link with a period in 1030\nwhen he was in hospital while serving with the Calgary Highlanders,\nWhile convalescing he assisted in\nthe wards ot Col. Belcher Military hospital, Calgary.  -     .*'}.'\u25a0\"\nMr. Hetherington told hla Btory\nhere Wednesday. Friendless and bewildered, he passed , a City newspaper building and recognized the\nname because he subscribed to the\npaper ln Port Alberni. He entered\nthe building and told his story.'\nPHONED WIPE\nMr. Hetherington went to the\ntelegraph office to let his wife\nknow he was all right. He still remembered he bad been working\nln th* hospital and returned to get\nthe address of the boarding-house\nwhere he had. lived.\nMr. and Mrs. Hetherington moved from Victoria to Port Alberni\none month before the blackout. The\nmove was made necessary after Mr.\nHetherington' suffered a heart attack and had to give up his painting and decorating business. It wts\nthen he obtained a caretaking Job.\nBee-keeping experts say the. best\nand quickest cure for a bea sting\nis an ordinary mud-pack.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952 \u2014 7\nDuchess Windsor Still\n\"Best DressedWoman\"\nNelsonite Aboard. ..':.\nOntario Crew Good Ambassadors,\nSays Captain, Back at Esquimau\n. VICTORIA (CP)-The 3H-month\ncruise of. HMCS Ontario, which\nended here Wednesday was a \"tre.\nmendous success from the stand'\npoint of good will\" Capt E. H. Tls.\ndoll her commanding officer reported. '\nT%e 8000-ton cruiser circumnavigated South America on this voyage intended to cement Canadian\nrelatione with the four principal\ncountries ot that continent\n\"The sailors did very well ss\nCanadian ambassadors,\" said Capt,\nTisdall. \"They are \"'largely a very\nyoung crew, and \u25a0 they handled\nthemselves in a manner that gives\nme nothlrg but the highest admiration.\"\nUNEXPECTED WORKOUT\nDamage   control   officers   and\nRepublic Resents\nRoyal Title\nbUBLIN (AP)-Forelgn Minister\nFrank Aiken said Wednesday night\nthe people of the Republic of Ireland deeply resent the listing of\nNorthern Ireland as a part of tbe\nUnited Kingdom in the royal title\nof tbe Queen.\nParliamentary approval of this\nphrasing, will \"but steel their determination that the counties cut\noff will tdoner or later be restored\"\nto the rest of Ireland, h^. declared\nin a statement.   '\nOnlr\u00a3 the six northeastern counties of Ireland\u2014Ulster\u2014still maintain allegiance to the Crown. The\n.stand's other 26 counties, the independent Republic otIreland, refuses\nto recognize this \"partition\" and\ncontinues to demand' that .Ulster\nbe made part of'the republic\n\"BRITISH  AGGRES8ION\"\n\"These six northeastern counties\nare In an alienable part of the Irish\nnational territory,\" Aiken said. \"It\nIS too bad the British government\nshould be Induced to link the British Crown and the royal family so\ndireotly with the cruel wrong of\npartition which Is the latt remnant\nof British aggression in* Ireland.\"\nThe title proposed fer the'young\nmonarch's coronation, announced\nDec. 12, would proclaim her \"Elizabeth the second, by the grace ot\nGod of the United. Kingdom of\nGreat Britain and Northern Ireland\nand of her other realms. and territories, Queen, head ot the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith.\"\n\u2022Southern Ireland- gained inde-.\npendence in 1040. .\nworking parties received an unexpected workout after a collision ln\nBuenos Aires harbor with a Chil\nean steamer. y. -\nThi freighter, attempting to overtake Ontario, collided with the war-\nship's starboard quarter, severely\ndamaging a propellor. Superficial\ndamage.was also,sustained above\nthe witer line. . -\nMore than 100 members of families and friends met the ship at\nHMCS Naden jetty when die had\ndocked. <\nLt E. J. Dawson, ion of Judge\nond Mrs. E. P. Dawson, Silica\nStreet, la one ef the engineers on\nthe Ontario.\nFor\nChristmas Gifts\n,        Cut Flowers\nGerman Roller Canaries\nGold Fish\nAnd All Fish Supplies\n, .^tloe'Younj\nBaby Budgies\nJust out of'aviaries.\nEasy to train.\nDogi, Peta, Bird Supplies\nB. C. Flower\nand Pet Shop\n1847 Bay Ave.      -    Trail, B.C.\nttlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|||lll||||||||ll||||||||||||||||||\u00a3\nNEW YORK-CAP) 'L Tha New\nYork Dress Institute's list of best-\ndressed women of the world nup-\nbers 12\u2014not the usual 10\u2014to include two new political figures.\nThe 'additions an Mamie Eisen-\nhower and Mrs. Qvifc Culp Hobby,\nnamed U.S. federal security administrator by president-elect Elsenhower..\nThlt institute said Tuesday Mrs.\nElsenhower and Mrs. Hobby were\n\"late starters,\" but came up so\nstrongly in the voting that they tied\nforrjlth place. '-'.'\u25a0:\n: We first 10: '\nThe Duchefce of Windsor: - Mrs.\nWilliam PaJey of New York; the\nDuchess of Kent; Mrs.- Byron Foy\nof New York; Mme. Louis Arppeli\nof Paris and New-York: Marten*\nDietrich; Mrs. William Randolph\nHearst Jr.; Mrs. 'Winston Guest,\nthe former Lucy, D. Cochrane of\nBoston; Countess Rodolfo Crcspl of\nRome, the former Consuelo O'Con-\nnor; and Mae. Henri Bonnet, wife\nof the French ambassador to tho\nUS,  '\nThe Duchess of Windsor is at the r\ntop of the list for the 10th timo\nsince 1042. '\":'\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nOntario Reserves\nANG Judgment\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The Ontario\nlabor relations board has reserved!\njudgment for three, or four weeks\non an application by Toronto Lo-\ncal 87 of the American Newspaper\nGuild CIO-CCL for certification aa\nbargaining agent for editorial employees of the Telegram Publishing\nCompany,\nThe guild claimed lit persons are\neligible tor membership and John\nOsier, guild counsel, said the 119\nmembership cards on file repre- -\nsent TO per cent of employees. He\nurged certification without a vote.\nASK FOR Scotland's Favourite Son...\n'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'' \u25a0'. j';\nWALKER\nBORN 1820\u2014\n\u2022rilt GOING STRONO\nFINE OLD SCOTCH WHISKY\nDistilled,\nBlended and\n.   Bottled in\nScotland\nContents 2<SJ_ a*. j4\nJohn WAtKCR & Sow Lro, Scotch Whisky Distiuers, Kiimarnock, Scotland\nrhis advertisement it not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n1\nHAZLEWOOD\nDRUG\nFor HER Christmas\nTIFFANY\nCOXOGNE\n( *^ A modem, dj\u00abo.   $]{(}\ny\u00ab the-mlnote fritnac*     *\nthe-mlmite f\nthtt (l trenm\nalso\nGIFT SETS\nat $4.00 . $5.00 - $6.75\nand $8.50\nHazlewood\n\u2022\u2014Drug\nTRAIL, B.C.\nWESTON FUR Co.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nESTABLISHED SINCE 1910\nManufacturing Furriers\nPHONE 2125 1681 BAY AVI.\nStores ln Vancouver and Trail\nTRAIL\nCURRIERS'\nAU Risk\nInsurance Agencies\nINSURANCE REAL ESTATE\nFIRE AUTOMOBILE CASUALTY\nINLAND MARINE\n1460 Bay Ave.   TRAIL, B. C.   Ph. 1589\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 PHONE 3281\nWE CAN FILL\nALL ORDERS\nA Complete Stock ef\n, ALL WIRING MATERIALS\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS AND SUPPLIES\n\"\u25a0' 4   \u25a0\"'- -'\u25a0   ,  ;r\nTHE BEST IN EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL\nCO. LTD- |\n|   1457 Bay Ave. Phone 133 Trail, B.C.   \u00a7\nT<iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:\nTrail's Super Service Station\nMOTOR INN\nLIMITED\n,     1608 BAY AVE., TRAIL; B.C.\nRepairs To All Makes of Cars.\n\u25a0' ' See Us For .Better Used Cars.   \u25a0\nSee and Drive the terrific NEW 1953 DODGE\nnow on.display at our premises.\n6 MODELS -TO CHOOSE FROM\nPhone 899\nTrail, B.C.\nKLINE) S\nYOU'LL ALWAYS DO BETTER AT KLINE'S\nTRAIL- B. C.\nYour Friendly Christmas Gifts Headquarters\nThe Stpre with the large stock and easy selection\nFOR\nCASH\n10   DISCOUNT\nStore Open 'Til 9 p.m.\nSaturday, Monday and Tuesday\nDec. 20-22-23\n5:30 p.m., Wednesday, Dee. 24\nlaboest trade.in allowance - easiest terms\nKLINE* S\nPhone 533\n1474 Bay Ave.,\nTrail, B.C.\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEV\u00bbS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952\nMountbatten to Paris   &fa\u201e*!TTtne\u2122 -f-\nVALETTA, Malta (Reuters) - \u00ab\" ^W\u00bb\u00ab;\"\u00ab*t marker buoy, which\nVlca-Admlral Earl Mountbatten, cpmes ,0 \"\"> 8Urta<!e wheD\" tub-\nRoyal Nevy eommander In the mirine fails .to surface from a dive,\nMediterranean, lett Thursday for is being fitted in British submarines,\nParis to talk over his new Job as the Admiralty announced today.\nAtlantic pact commander-in-chief The light can be seen for two miles.\nfoi* the   Mediterranean.  He will\nmeet Gen. Matthew Rldgway, At- . Europe,   under   whom   he   will\nlontlc pact supremo commander In  \/serve.\nFog Cause of\nTraffic Death\nCANADIAN VISITORS\nARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT\nJkcJunojvL moid.\nSPOKANE'S  FINEST   DOWNTOWN   MOTEL\nCORNER W. 1020 6TH AND CANNON - PH. RIVERSIDE 9271\nWe Wish To Take This Opportunity of Wishing\nEveryone A Merry Christmas and A Very\nProsperous New Year \u25a0\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The B.C.\nlower mainland area Thursday\nI emerged from .heavy fog which\n| Wednesday caused a. number of\ntraffic accidents, including one fatal,\nand masked one minor holdup in\nVancouver....\nThe traffic victim was Frank\nGraham,'69, of Burnaby, The re-'\ntired Canadian Pacific Railway Express man had been assisting at the\ncompany's Vancouver offices during\nthe Christmas rush and was returning home when another car. bumped\ninto the rear of his vehicle.\nGraham got out to Inspect the\ndamage when a truck-struck the\nsecond car, pinning him against his\now car. Four other ears pller1 up\nbehind tbe truck.\nHeld up was the Seasonal Produce\nstore where two men, one armed,\nescaped with $11.40 shortly before\nmidnight       .'\u25a0\nTraffic was seriously. hampered\n.in many areas by the fog. At one\ntime 21 cars and six buses were re-\n1 ported involved in a tie-up. How\never, no ono was injured, -.\nNews of the Bay    1^ ft,nese Jeek A-Bambrs Secret\ntl   30n    Una.    Jlf..   la '-_\u25a0___ .    .        \u25a0     *^\" .1        WUT1T      \\rr\\-nrr       * a _. _\u25a0\n50^\nRATES; 30o Una, 40o Una black face typo! larger typo rates ~on'\nrequest Minlmunvtwo lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes ai TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nEAGLES SOCIAL  MEMBERSHIP\nCLUB MEETS TONIGHT.\nFOR: CHRISTMAS TREES\nSee Davison Confectionery. 402 5th\nGranite Road Community Christmas Concert, Sat., Dec. 20, 7:00 p.m.,\nat Shirley HaU.\ni\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney -SerVico\n; Phone 1M1-L.\ng\nGifts for the children. \u2014 Toys,\nclothing. Your choice at\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nGIVE\nA New Modern \"Flcetwood\"-Dosignod\nRADIO\nCOMBINATION\nLatest type \"Webster\" 3-speed record changer, full\nrange ton* control in.walnut and mahogany finish.\nA superb Christmas gift for your home, designed to\ngive you many hours of listening pleasure. Models in:\nir 9-tuba Console ________ Only $299.50\nir 7-tube Combination ._ Only $228.00\nic 5-tube Combination._ Only $179.50\n. \u2022 *  \u2022 .\nONE ONLY \u2014 EMERSON 7-TUBE\ni\nConsole Combination\nWebster,3-speed record changer, in walnut.\nfrom, \u2014 $228.50\nAll machines carry Simpson's Guarantee . . .\n\"Satisfaction or Money Refunded\"\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nCrosiey TABLE MODELS\nir Coloradios ir Dynamics\nir Decorators ir Tablettes\nPriced $24.95 to $74.00\nWe hav* \u00ab complete line ef suggested gifts\nWaffle Irons - Steam Irons - Toasters\nElectric Grills\nTricycles - Wagons - Carriages\nand complete line of lamps.\n|     FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE WILL REMAIN\nOPEN SAT., DEC. 20\n]   UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK\n\" and Monday and Tuesday till 9 o'clock.\nWednesday till 6 p.m.\nIF ITS FOR THE HOME...\nITS AT\nJohn Bull Spirit\nCOVENTRY, Eng. (AP) *- Dereck\nH'ckering is a man ot principle\u2014lie\nis coing to spend Christmas ln jail\nrather than pay a \u00a32 parking tine.\nThe 47-year-old motorcycle engineer received a ticket io. parking\nhis car\u2014as he's done for 13 years \u2014\noutside his home without lights. He\nthinks a police warning would have\nbeen In order, especially since he\nlives on a dead-end street\nPickering instructed the court not\nto accept payment ln his behalf from\nfriends either.\n\"Some people would pay up, but\nno* me,\" he rr-.id. \"It's a matter of\nprinciple. I'd sooner go to the\ncooler.\" \u25a0\nfriendly enemy\nHe must pay by next Tuesday or\nserve 14 days. Monday he and his\nwife, who supports his crusade, plan\na pre-jail Christmas party for\nfriends and will invite the chief\nconstable of Coventry.\nThe determined Pickering is no\nnovice to principle. Twenty-five\nyears ago he refused to pay a \u00a325\nfine for a motoring offence.and went\nto Jail for two months.\nKorean Casualties\nOTTAWA (CP)-A Korean casualty list today included one man\nkilled and three .wounded in action.\nThe last list was issued Dec. 10.\nThe list brought to 1261' total casualties so far suffered by Canadian,\n'troops in Korea. They include 237\ndead, 913 wounded, -28 missing, tt injured and one captured.\nI . In addition the navy has reported\nthree dead and three Injured in action and the RCAF har reported one\nmissing. .;\u25a0\u25a0-..'\u2022'\"-. '\u25a0 -'..,\nNo B.C. names are on the lists.\nFLOWERS, THE PERFECT GIFT.\nPHONE  187-*\nGRIZZELLE'8  FL0RI8T8\n\"CHROMEX\" BATHROOM\nACCESSORIES\nBURN8 LUMBER CO.\n\\ . _______________\nOne dozen hand-tied trout files\nin plastic container makes a .gift\nto please at $1.93. Jaek Boyce.\ni '\nChristmas flowers and plants. \u2014\nReserve yours now and avoid disappointment.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP.\nStill time to have that chesterfield cleaned for Santa Claus. \u2014\nPhone 1709. Kootenay Rug & Upholstery Cleaning Service.\nFor the child or adult who has\neverything\u2014A gift certificate to be\nredeemed later.\nTOT-N-TEEN 8HOP.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed, at\nreasonable prices.\nAdult .supervised baby-sitting\nduring sbopplngr hours provided' by\nGirls' Auxiliary of St. Saviour's on\nSaturday and on the'. following\n[shopping days, to allow parents to\ndo their, last-minute shopping without being harassed' by their children.. THe charge is small, the place,\nMemorial .Hall. Ad compliments of\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\n\u25a0- VtaARO' QF 'THANKS\nMy sincere.gratitude to Dr. G. R.\nBarrett, nurses and staff of KLGH\nfor their kindness te me in my\nrecent, accident. A Happy Christmas to All.' .-;;\"\u2022:\n... \u2014     Mrs. Margaret Parks.\n,  ;.CARD OF THANK8\nI wish to thank Rev. Dean Leadbeater, Mrs. Leadbeater and con-\nI grega'tion for. tl^elr beautiful; flowr\ners. while in hospital.  . '\u2022'..,\n'   \u2022\" ,   . \u25a0;;'     Mrs.'Margaret Parks.\n. \u25a0 FUNERAL NOTICE\nJAftBEAU,\u2014Requiem \u2022 Mass for\nthe. Iqtg John Nelson Jarbeau wlU\nbe sUng at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate Saturday .at 10 a.m.\nRosary will be recited ip Thompson\nFuneral Home Friday (tonight) at\n8:30 p.m. Interment will be in Nel\nson Memorial .Park.    ....''\u2022\n.-.' FUNERAL NOTICE ' \u2022\nCAMERON\u2014Funeral services .for\nthe late Mrs. Annie Cameron of\nSlocan City will be ljeld from the\nFirst Presbyterian Church at Slocan\nCity, Sunday at 3 p.m. Rev. D. A.\nMackellar will officiate sind interment will .be in the Slocan-City\ncemetery.\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Romney\nWheeler, NBC correspondent ln\nLondon, reported' Thursday he\nlearned that Chinese sources are\nputting the squeeze on Russia tor\nuld ln building atom bombs.\"\n* Wheeler's broadcast quoted diplomatic sources in Moscow as saying a Chinese delegation lir in the\nSoviet , capital  offering  to  \"grant\nthe technical,know-how in the con-\nstructlon of atomic weapons.\"\nCHURCHILL, Man! (CP) - Several tons of Eskimo carvings have\nbeen sent from Ungava Bay to the\n[Canadian Handicraft Guild at Montreal. Most of tbe work was done ln\n<r \"  stone. since  ivory  is  scarce,\nS^ang provlncejn exchTg?\u00abEl\u00a3-5M^^:*?*\u00bb\u00bb\n\u25a0mam%__r*^=t^r=_^r=^r-: __^\u201e\"cent_years, 'PHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\n:*..'- I\nToronto Sniffers to\nTour Proud City\nTOfcONTO (CP). - Science is trying to find out what smells ia\n'Toronto. .... ..\u201e\u2022' .\nThe Unlversit of Toronto is selecting a team of sniffers to tour the\nicit; noting the location and Intensity of odor* they encounter.\nPlotting smell zones will, enable\nworkers to find the cause' arid work\nfo^ a solution.. -. ' '.\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nMaple Leaf brand 3-ply knitting\nyarn; good colors. Special purchase,\n25c a ball.    '\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nStaff Reaction\nFor BETTER LIVING in'53...\nPut\nELECTRICAL\nGIFTS\nUnder the Tree.. %\nBe sure of a bright Christmas '\u2014\nStock up now on Westlnghouse\nlight bulbs. We have all sizes, Including trilight and fluorescent\nbulbs. - HIPPERSON'S.\nRUGS AND UPHOLSTERY cleaned\nin your home; use same day. Enlivens pile. Revives.colors. Worldwide service. \u2014 DURACLEAN\nSERVICE \u2014 PHONE 244.\nNpW On Sale\u2014St. Paul's Boys'\nChoir Anniversary Booklets. Mail\norders to Mrs. E; W. Paterson, 520\nSecond St., Nelson. $1.25 and 5c\npostage.\nDivorce Granted to\nQueen's Relative\nEDINBURGH (Reuters) - Lady\nClodagh Douglas-Hamilton, cousin\n' of the Queen mother,' Wednesday\nwas granted an uncontested divorce\nfrom Lord Malcolm Douglas-Hamil-\nto.i on grounds of adultery. Lady\nDouglas-Hamilton, 42, Is the daughter of Lt.-Col. Malcolm Bowes-Lyon.\nShr married Lord Douglas-Hamilton\nin 1931.\nVANCOUVER. (CP)\u2014Staff reaction at city hall has bewildered\naldermen. '.   :'\u25a0.''.::\nThe aldermen ruled earlier in\nthe week that city hall will close\nat noon Deer 24,.giving the workers\nan. extra half-day off to complete\nChristmas, shopping.\nTha order\u2014while it made no mention, of it\u2014ruled out the traditional Ir\noffice parties. Now staff members\nare -grieved. They say the move\nimplies that \"previous parties were\nmarked by excessive drinking,\nwhich they indignantly dehyl ;'-!\u25a0'..\nMany civic departments had to\ncancel party plans, and caterers got\ncancellation notices today:\nThe aldermen are' still bewild-\n ^_ ered.' They thought the half-day off\nRegistration of veterans' children ^iT^^i'^S^16 -\"\nfor Legion Christmas party Thurs- Uroval of city hall employees,\nday and Friday,  2 to  5  p.m.  at\nLegion. Christmas tree at 1 p.m.,\nDec. _0.       v\nVisit McKay & Stretton Now\nFor Gift Suggestions to Please\nthe Whole Family ...\n_\u00ab\u00abntew\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abw.*!\u00ab\u00ab!\u00ab<\u00abut\u00ab!_ifi\u00bbtst\u00abi\u00abi\nCombination Wa\/fle\nIron and Sandwich\nToasters\nCombination Radios\nRefrigerators\nElectric Kettles\n* Automatic Toasters\n* Food Mixers\n* Electric\nand Gas Ranges\n* Electric\nCoffee Makers -.*\u00ab\n_\u00bb9_fc*riMMl\u00bblMMlMlMKMMlMtM\u00bbMt\u00bb\nSee These and Many Others at\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532  BAKER  ST. wrien-. PHONE   1555\nAnother shipment Just received\nof Westlnghouse electric bljinkets,\nsheets,-roaster ovens, food mixers,\nand heating pads. Remember Mother with a Westlnghouse gift.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nHUME HOTEL\nThe'dining room will.be closed\nfor Christmas day and Boxing Day.\nMake your New Year's dinner reservation early to avoid disappointment.\nC7\/& fcfcristtnos\nTotem Pole Design\nFor Dollar Stamp\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A Pacific Coast\nIndian house and totem pole will\nform the design of a new $1 stamp\nto be issued Feb. 2, the post-office\ndepartment announced today.\nThe new stamp, black, will be\nprinted in a vertical' position, a\nchange from the normal-horizontal\nla.'out of Canada's high-denomination stamps.\nIt was designed by Emanuel Hahn,\nToronto sculptor.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Vancouver Highland Association' announced 30 persons signed up tor a\ncourse ln the Gaelic language, to be\ntaught as part of th* night school\ncurriculum here. Cost is SS per person for weekly two-hour lessons\nuntil next March.\nCANORA, Sask. (CP)-Two Winnipeg boys, Robert Ellison, 18, and\nGlen Fisher, 16, had to abandon\ntheir hope of paddling from Winnipeg, to the junction of the Asslni-\nboine and Qu'Appelle rivers In Saskatchewan. Their canoe was stolen\nI while they were making a portage.\nChildren's Gift's at Sterling\nDoll Prams      $4.30 up\nRockers      $6.75 up\nShoo-Fly Rockers  $7.95. up\nKindergarten Sets  $9.95 up\nTricycles, ;... $14.95 up\nSleighs, boys' deluxe    $7.95\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nI        STORM WINDOWS AND\nI COMBINATION DOORS\nWe can equip your home, with\nfuel-saving storm sash and combination doors. Don't delay, have\nthat extra comfort now. Just call\nT. H. WATERS 4 CO. LTP. '\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St, \u2014 Nelson\n8PECIAL-10-Plece Walnut Bedroom Suite. Reg. $219. Now $199.50.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL 8T.        PHONE 1660\nA novel, inexpensive gift for\nyoung and old, Theatre Gift Tickets\n. . . Priced from $1.00 to $2,55 .\nAttractively packaged In gay, colorful gift cartonettes . . . On sale at\nFluery's, Wohelo Club Members,' or\nat the Civic Theatre . . .Honored\nat all Famous Players Theatres\nacross Canada . . . Your Christmas\nshopping solved ... Give happy\nhours of entertainment.\nYoucanfqo\n* This fine,\nfully-aged whisky\nl\u00ab the delight,\nof oil who        \t\nappreciate a smooth,\nmellow drink.\nBo wise\u2014ask\nfor Wiser'j DeLuxel\nTHE *\/^\nWHISKY W7-\nTHAT'S PROUD >;<\u00a3*\n*   of .ts   m\nOLD AGE     -23-\n' Luxe-\nW I S I t ' S    O I S T I 1 I I \u00bb V    UMITID\nIF you feel\nAUIN\n< aovertisement Is not published or displayed by the Llouo, oil\"iY ' t'' '-*'\u00ab\u25a0*\n  ^vernrnent^of^g^y,!.^^0' Contr<* Board or by th.\nThtM _i;i moit people work under\npressure, mny more, sleep tesa. This\nstrain en bodj end brain 'miles physical\nCtness easier to Ion\u2014harder to regain.\n. Today\"a tense lirinf, lowered resistance,\noienrork, mny\u2014any oi these nay affect\nnorma! kidney action. When kidneya get\nout ef. order, eicesa adds and wastes\nremain in the system. Then backache,\ndisturbed rest, that \"lircd*out\" heasy-\nheaded feeling often follow. That'a the\ntimo to take Dodd'a Kidney Pills. Dodd's\nannulate the kidneys to normal action.\nThen you feel better\u2014aleep better\u2014work\nbetter. Ask foe Dodd's Kidney Pills at\neny drug counter.        , si\n Bring the\nChildren...\nOn your visits to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane. \u25a0\nTo better serve put\nguests, children under 14\nstay frdB with their\nparents.\ntiring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire ...\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSilver Grill \u25a0     \u2022     '\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoorl\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nON RED MOUNTAIN SLOPES\nSix Ski Teams From Washmgtm,\nMontana, B*C. To Cdrnpete Jarw 24\nTRAIL \u2014 The sixth annual International Inter-Collegiate Invitation'\nal (Triplo I) tournament will ba\nheld at Red Mountain January 2, t,\nand 4 with six teams'participating\ntrom University of British Columbia,\nUniversity of Washington, Washing,\nton State College, Wenatcbee Junior\nCollege, Whitman College of Walla\nWalla, and Montana State University- . '- \u25a0\u2022:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\nTbe event will open the tournament season for Red Mountain.\nA Red Mountain team will participate but will not bo eligible for\nan award. The events tip scheduled\nu follow*...-\nJan. 2, 1:30 p.m.\u2014Cross Country\nJan. 8,10 __n.-TSIalom; 1:80 pjn.\u2014\nSlalom.\nJan. 4,10 a_n.\u2014Downhill..,\n1:80 p_n.\u2014Jumping, . ,\nThe Jeldness Trophy will be prf.\nsc \/.fed to the winning team on Sunday. A special award will go to the\nbes*In four-way competition. The\nJeldness .Trophy Was woitlaat yeat\nb; the. University of Washipgton.\n. number of former Red Mountain\nskiers will be present as members of\nvisiting, teams, George Merry, who\nis now attending U.B.C. will ski for\nthat Institution at the meet. Gordon\nMcKenzie, Al Fisher, and Harry\n'A GOOD NEIGHBOR POLICY'\n.I^|!-^,-M^e.Kd''.Me_&    .\nwiien yoa esrvo good, good Gubd,i\n... the ektra-Datisfyiig\nfaMwh-IrabMy ginger alo\nmak wfih real Jamaica\nBoy Orb's today]\nMalt* a better drink\nDRY GINGER ALE\nCOLUMBIA BOTTLING WORKS\nNelson, B.C. Phone 412\nS_S\u00bb_i_jMfij_B*gg__Mg8SJS\nTho wfemor in any\n\u2022port has juat that\ncnrtta edge on Jib com-\npetition, that's what\nHanraod'o has over\nother brands of quality\nrye. So, for years,\ndiscriminating people\nhave agreed that this la\nCANADA'S FINEST\nThis aavertlsement b not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or bj tho Government of British Columbia\nMann ot Rosalind, who are now\nattending Washington State Col-\nlego will be representing their Alma\nMater.- Other skiers, who learned\ntheir art on Red Mountain slopes\nand will ba attending the Meet as\nrepresentatives of American Colleges, and Herman. Schnldrig of\nTrail and Ron Cameron |nd Claire\nStlnson, both of Rossland. .  >\nSeven ot these sportsmen are now\nstudying applied sciorlco at Universities on athletic scholarship. All\nhave been members of Red Mountain\nSki Club teama entered In the triple\nI meet at one time.;\n. ihe competing skiers will be the\nguests of tbe Red Mountain Ski Club\nat ft dinner to be held in tho lodge\non Saturday, January 8.,-'..'\nHOCKEY SCORES\nMARITIME  MAJOR  ':\u25a0-..',\nHalifax 1. Glaco Boy 3\nOHA 8ENIOR\nBrantford 4, Hamilton S -\nNORTHERN ONTARIO SENIOR\nSudbury 6, Sault Ste. Merle; Ont.,\n8 (three)\nQUEBEC 8ENI0R\nMontreal 8, Shawlnlgan 3\nSherbrooke 1, Chlcoutlml 8\nNEW BRUNSWICK SENIOR\nMohcton 5; Frederlcton'-    *\nONTARIO-QUEBEC JUNIOR .\nOshawa 8, Quebec 8\nTHUNDER BAY JUNIOR\n.Port Arthur Flyers 4, Fort William Canadiens 8. \/V\nCanadiens Drub Rangers 6-2;\nTwo Ties in Other NHL Play\nBy The Canadian Press    r ..\ni Big Jean Bellveau\u2014le groa BW\u2014\nIs right at home in the: National\nHockey League.    -    - \u25a0\u25a0 v\nIn his first game with Montreal\nCabadiens he blasted three' goals\nto help beat New York Rangeri\n8-2. Bernle Geoffrlon got the other\nthree ln an unusual double hat\ntrick.\nIn other Thursday night games,\nBoston tied Chicago 3-3 and Toronto\ndrew with Detroit M.\nBellveau, crack sharpshooter in\nthe Quebec Senior Hockey League,\nwas brought up from Quebec Aces\nfor a three-game lend-lease stretch..\nHe hai refused for two seasons to\nlump to Canadiens. Thursday night\nhe rtltted Into the first line with\nMaurice (Rocket) Richard and Bert\nOlmstead as if be had'been playing\nwith them tor years. Richard had\na'part In all three goals by Bellveau.    .    '\nCanadiens' undefeated string now\nhas reached six In which they collected 10 points of a possible 12.\nA howling crowd of 14,641 saw a\nbristling, ^crappy game In which\ntwo Montreal goals were disallowed\nand two major penalties were handed out culminating a rousing fight.\nNew York's goals were scored by\nPaul Ronty and Nick Mickoski In\nthe second period, tying the game\nat that stage.\nThe big f)ght broke out with Jim\nMacpherson of Canadiens and Allen\nStanley of Rangers Whaling away\nat each other just'after Cookie Ian\nMacintosh, up from the Western\nHockey League, was sent off for\ntripping;.    .;r.r'..r.r'r.        \u25a0.....<:.-...'   -\n\u2022^t'1\u00bbtrat;;3-fett6.''piryi^.\"a-to\nRed Wingi whipped across a goal\nin a spectacular third-period scoring thrust that gained the 1-1 tie\nwith Toronto.\nMARGUERJTE NORRIS\nWatching* her first .National\nHockey League game since'becoming Wing president woo Marguerite\nNorris. '   \u25a0     \u25a0\u2022\"\/\u2022\u2022>\u2022..  .;.-- .-r. ,\u201e'..;,.\nThe Leafs forged ahead In the'\naecond period, on Hany Wataotfs\n83-footer past goalie Terry' Sawchuk. And from then on the Wings\nworked 'desperately to galfl la\/He-\nbt victory for their new owner, who\nhad-takea over following the death\nother father, Jim Norrli. '> .'\nPrystai started from otte side, of\nthe net about 12 feet out. He weaved\n.across ln front.'of thenet to close\nIn on the other side and. ou'tfaked\ngoalie Harry Luihley. Gordie Howe\nand Marcel Pronovost assisted IA\nthe goal.v\n. Thus the league-leading Wlngo\nitretched their unbeaten streak to\n10' games. Toronto has won only\ntwo of the last 14. .\nABEL TIES IT UP\nAt Chicago, Sid Abel scored at\n14:47 of Jhe third, period to bring\nthe Hawka into a 8-8 tie with the\nBruin*\nChicago trailed all the way up\nto that point, from the time Real\nChevreflls converted Milt Schmidt'a\npass into a Boston goal at '2:44 of\nthe opening perioB. r\nr The B.ruinn,went up by M when*\nPenttl Lurid-connected. Georgo Gee\nscored hii first of two goals for\nthe Hawki to taring it to 2-1 at the\nend of the first\nAt 2:49 ot the second, Jack Mc-\nIhtyre jut Boston ahead again by\n4-1, only to have Geo hit again\nat 9:S0, It remained at 8-2 until\nAbel'i goal, ,\nMoore Plans No\nResl on Laurels\nBy MURRAY ROSE\nST. LOUIS (AP)-Archie Moore,\nthe newly-orowned light heavy,\nweight champion, doesnt Intend to\nWaste too much timo cashing in on\nhis title. T     .\"\"\u00bb\";\nthe 88-year-old veteran of I.\nyeara of pro battling AyhO took the\ncrown from Joey Maxim trill rest\nabout a month and then start working on thebusy campaign his manager, Charley Johnson, is mapping\nfor him, -\u25a0  i'\u00bb\nMoore's next flint may be t non-\ntitle affair in St Loula.Feb, 18 with\nthe winner of the Danny Nardico-\nJake Lamotto clash, scheduled for\nMiami Dec. 81. --'- '<'\u25a0\u25a0'\nInlermed Tussle\nWith Cresfonifes\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The Cranbrook\nIntermediates oh Wednesday won\ntheir first game ln the newly-formed Alberta-B.C. Intermediate Hockey League when they downed'the\nCreston team' 10-2. Thegame, scheduled for Cranbrook, was played in\nCreston due' to the lack of ice In\nthe'-Cranbrook rink. These: same\ntwo clubs will meet again on Dec.\n27 In Cranbrook, thus evening up\nthe home games.\nAndy Dropot waa the high scorer\nIn the game, netting three goals;\nJoe Downey and Jerry Dixon each\nscored twice while singleton* went\nto Tommy Dolling, John Walmsley\nand Ray Armstrong. Creston marksmen were Smith .and Huth.\nAs results of play in the last\nweek, Kimberley and Coleman\nshare top spot ihtthe standing with\none win and no losses, Cranbrook\nia next with one,win and one loss,\nColeman has one loss,\nFernie and Natal have as yet to\nsee action, due to their first game\nbeing cancelled because of lack of\nice. ..\"\u25a0',. i1\n:;:;\u25a0^.FIGHTSr^^\u2022l,\n\u25a0    By the.Associated Press\nSACRAMENTO, Caltt - Jimmy\n.Carter, 136.%, New Yorit, ind\n'Freddie (Babe). Herman, 139, Los\nAngeles, drew, 10 hon-tltle.\nSALT LAKE CITY - Kenny\nNicholes, 159, Boise, Idaho, stopped\nKid Leon, 156, Salt Lake City, 6.\nNEWARK, N.J. - Jimmy Champagne, ISO, Philadelphia, stopped\nVinnie Decarlo, 149, Philadelphia\n4. '\u25a0 '..''\u25a0-..\nStrikes and Spares\nOllie Watson came back Into her\nold form on Tuesday evening al she\ntook, the aggregate honors in the\nSenior Ladies Bowljng League with\nd 891. Mary Mcfioujgall took the\nsingles honOra with a 484. Three\nothers bowled, in the . eod'a.\"Dot\nWaterer with a 861, Lena! Koehle\nand Rose Browne both had'631 '\"\n. Ilia itcbougali r'iulhtette1 coppid\nthe team honors with a singlo of\n1002 arid ah aggregate of 2708.\n: The league Blinding shows Maloney and Waterer on .top. with, ifl\npoints each followed by Watson\nwith 15, Mann \"18, McDougall 12,\nBrowne 8, Mortis 8,' Koehle 1%\nLocatelll ,7, Blaney t, Allen 6, and\nSpelr\u00ab8H.. .        4r '\u25a0\u25a0  -\u25a0-\nThe ten fop bowlers In the Senior\nLadles League are Dot Waterer 219,\nIsabel Locatelll 206, Lena Koehle\nand Ollie,Watson each-hpv\u00ab205,\nHose Browne 203, Peggy Gentles\n180, Helen Morris 179, Betty: Maloney 179, Tip Gill 177, and Margaret Crowe' 177. ,    > -\u25a0\";\nIn the Men's Commercial League\non Wednesday night Herb Lovett\nsparked the Queens Hotel quintet to\nvictory ao he took both the singles\nand the aggregate honors with a 819\nand' a 796. The Queens themselves\ntook the team single and aggregate\nwith a 1184 and 2905, :y .\"\u25a0.\nOther high scorers for the evening\nwere Arvid Schneider of Bennies\n700, Keith Loewen; of the same team\nwith a 887, Red Koehle of Queens\n882, Dyne .Macrae 614, Fred Ozeroff\nof Eagles 608, and BlUy. Hillo of\nIslanders 806.     >\nThree teams are tied for top spot\nin the leagili; with 43 point-, Sennits, Lumber Jacks, and 'Welshs.\nSuperiors holdj down aecond' place\nwith 40 pointer followed by Civics\nwith-89,-   -;. -.';' 2   '\"22yr,,\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian Press\n. Q .A Pt\nHowe, Detroit  17  IB 32\nHergeibeimer, N.Y.  14 ,16  80\nLindsay, Detroit  12   IB \u2022 27\nKennedy, Toronto _.\u201e. 11   15'26\nRichard, Montreal .j.  10 18  28\nDelvecchio, Detroit ..-._ T  18  25\nPrystai, Detroit ......__._. 0  IB  24\nBritish Soccer\nLpNDON (Reuters) \u2014 Result of\nsoccer gomo played in tho United\nKingdom today:. \u2022 ' '-\"\u25a0,-'.\nASSOCIATION MATCH        '.\nBrighton 8,The Army It - ;>\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DM. 19, 1952 \u2014 9\n\u00bb\nSmokies' Five Goals Too Much\nFor Rallying Leafs, Win 5-4\nTRAIL -> Trail hockey fans witnessed a good,' close-checking game\nof hockey in the Comlnco Arena\nThursday night The Leaf* almost\ncame from a 6-2 scoro to tlo up the\ngeme but they couldn't quite make\nit. As it was-the game closed 5-4 for\nSmoke Eaters.\nThe WIHL triumph stretched the\nred-hot Smokies' win streak to six\ngames. It featured a two-goal performance by Captain Frank Turik\nahd a bout of fisticuffs between\ntwo of the.mildest meq in the international league. \u2022 \",'\nThe Trail crew edged the Maple\nMrs. V. Alcock\nBlaylock Cup\nTRAIL\u25a0 \u2014 Mrs. V. Alcock's rink\nwon the Blaylock Cup in the Trail\nLadles Curling i Club competition.\nRunners up In tha competition were\nthe Pattullo rink.. '\nMembers of the first place crew\nwera Mra, V. Alcock,, skip, Mrs. E.\nPage third, Mrs. A. Pearson second,\nand Mrs. K. McMynn leid. Members\nof the runner-up rink were Mrs. P,\nPattullo skip,. Mrs. M-. Ink third,\nMrs. S. Biker second and Mrs. V.\nRooney lead.\nResults of the final week's play\nwere:\nMilburn 11, Potter B\nJones 11, Mondor 5\nLangill 2, Pollock 0\nKingwell 4, Murpby 11\nPattullo 10, Potter 4\n, Alcock 7,' Milburn 14.\nTrail Curling\nTRAIlr-The results of curling in\nTrail Curling Club's Crown Point\nround robin Thursday are:\nG, S. Ortner 9, D. MacDonald 7.\nG. Morrison 1, J. Devito 0.\nV. E. Ferguson 6, 0. H. Gill 12.\nM D. DesBrisay 6, W. P. Robertson 12.\nR. Bainbridge 3, D. Sutherland 16.\nA. Dafoe 8, J. H. Hargrave 6.\nDrayra for Saturday:    .\n8:30 p.m., Round 8\u2014A. F. Snowball vs G. K. Fairbajrn, A. G. MacKinnon vs L. F. Wendel, A. Forrest\nvs J. Atwell, T. H. Weldon vs J. D.:\nRae, J. H. Mark vs E. G. N. Player;\n(round 9)\u2014L. Landucci'va J. A:\nRobinson.    '..\"\"'\u25a0'\u2022'\n8:30 p.m., Round 8\u2014A. H. Woolf\nvs D. J. Minto, A; A. Robb vs T.W.\nMathieson, A. B. Ross vs J. A. E.\nMontpelller, H. T. Beckett vs A. J.\nBurwash; (round 9)\u2014G. Balfour vs\nR. C. Hose, W. S.1 Rosa v\u00bb W. G.\nSiddall.  ' . ' \u2022\nBI\nIndian Head\nCLEVELAND (AP) - ElUl W.\nRyan has resigned as president ot\nthe Cleveland Indians, and his supporters in the baseball club's front-\noffice dispute agreed to sell nearly\nall their stock holdings, Myron H,\nWilson was elected to succeed Ryan.\nAfter a four-hour directors' meeting which followed a special meeting of 30 stockholders, an announce-\nment was made that Ryan had quit\naa president, but would continue is\na director fot tha time being. :(\u25a0\nThe announcement said the Ryan\nfaction bad agreed to sell Approximately 1300 shares of their stock to\nthe Opposing group,\nLawyers will go ahead with the\npurchase, which the announcement\nsaid should be completed about\nJan. li,'.:\nLETHBRIDGE (CP)-Lethbridge\nNative Sons went on a scoring ram.\npage Wednesday night to bombard\nCalgary Buffaloes 11-0 and moved\nInto a tie with Edmonton Oil Kings\nfor second place in the Western\nJunior Hockey League.       \"\".-\nMIAMI BEACH, (AP) \u2014 Skip\nAlexander, St. Petersburg, Fla., and\nJim Ferrler, San Francisco, fired\noovon-under-par 65s to pace' the\nfield Wednesday in a pro-amateur\ncurtain-raiser to the $13,000, International four-ball golf tournament.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULTS\nADULT\nSKATING\n8:15-10:15\nB\nSATURDAY NIGHt\n42:2L\\':4''2BiWf>M.\nTrail All Stars vs Nelson\nADULTS 50\u00ab ' CHILDREN 25c\nLeafs by t 2-1 icore In tha first\nperiod. The play consisted mostly ot\nthi. Smokies butting around the\nMaple Loaf net Frequent end-to-\nend rushes occurred os the nimble\nNelson Maple Leafs slipped through\nthe Trail defence stationed at their\nown blueline, but neither team\ncould get their sticks on tbe puck\nlong enough to do any. harm during\nthe first half of the period.\nTha first, goal came at the 11\nminute mark when Cavanaugh replied' to a pass from Mailey by\nflipping it into the Nelson cage.\nNelson got a turn shortly after when\nHaldane broke the Trail barrier at\nhis own blueline and scored. Sinclair, put Trail one up with only\nfour minutes left to play In the\nperiod.\nIn the second period the Trail\nSmoke Eaters strengthened their\nlead by one point setting tbe (core\nat 4-2, Turik opened at 3:43 putting\nTrail ahead the two extra points,'\nonly to have Nelson come back Into\nthe game with a goal by Lovett\nPLAYERS TANGLE\nAt the halfway mark the crowd\nreally got their money-'a worth\nwhem they witnessed a prize fight\nplus a good hockey game.. Terry\nCavanaugh and Lee Hyssop bad\nbeen pushing each other around for\nthe first, half 'of the period and\ntheir troubles bunt into sudden fist-\nswinging followed by a double five\nminute penalty,\nSecco scored the final goal ot the\nperiod for. Trail leaving the acore at\n4-2. In the third period the Nelson\nMaple Leafs lost nearly all hop* of\na victory or even a tie when Cop-\ntain Franky Turik fired ln an early\ngoal, bringing the scoro to 6-2. The\nNelson club fighting bard to get\nback Into tbe game could not at\nfirst make their plays click, but\nlater ih the period tha hard work\npaid off. The Leafs fired in two\nlast period goals bringing them\nwithin a point of a tie. Tha buzzer\nsounded with Nelson, now using six\nforwards, without that to important\ngoal.\nLineups:\nTRAIL \u2014 Goal, Sofiak; defence,\nHamilton, Sinclair, Cook, Corrado;\nforwards, Turik, Bursaw, Cavanaugh, Rypien, Secco, Shabaga, Mailey, Kromm, Young.\nNELSON \u2014 Goal Rodzinyak; defence, Malacko, Gare, Pasqualotto,\nAnderson, Gilhooly; forwards. Hyssop, Lovett, Haldane, Smith, F.\nKoehle, -Haley.\n8UMMARY     . ;\nFirst period \u2014 i Trail, Cavanaugh\n(Mailey.r Turik) 11:88; 1 Nelson,\nHaldane 13;42; I. Trail, Sinclair\n(Bursaw, Secco) 15:41.\nPenalties \u2014 Hamilton 18:00, Gare\n18:03.\nSecond period -^ 4. Trail, Turik\n(Cook) 3:43; 8. Nelson, Lovett (Gare,\nAnderson)' 8:44; 8. Trail. Secco\n(Cook, Ryplen) 10:82.    '\nPenalties \u2014 Anderson 8:57; Hamilton 7:54; Cavanaugh (major) 11:46;\nL. Hyssop (major) 11:48, Mailey\n16:20., ,   ;\nThird period \u2014 7. Trail, Turik\n(Mailey, Cavanaugh) 4:57; 8. Nel-\nSmith (R. Koehle, F. Koehle)\n9:41: 9. Nelson, Hyssop (Haldane)\n17:02.\nPenalties \u2014 Anderson 11:35, Ry-\npieh 18:0L.   \";,',..\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiv\nSanta Knows All ' *\nThe Answers ^\nNEWARTtAP) -rNtw Y\u00ab*\u25a0'\u2022*\u25a0\nitalversity football coach Hugh ol\nDevora probably doesnt believe _j\nln Santa Claus \u2014 not alter los- .\u00ab'\nlng five or eight gamei. But hell\nbave a bard time convincing hii\ntwo youngest children.\nDevore brought Joe, 2 and\nNoreen, 4 to Newark to see a\ndepartment store Santa. After\nthe youngsters had porched on\nbis knee and whispered their\nwishes, the man in tbe rod suit\n\u2014apparently recognizing Di-\nvore \u2014 replied!\n\"Yes. And I bet I know -what\nyour old man wants\u2014a couplo\not good halfbaoka.\"  . i\nII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIII8\nThfci advertisement b not publiAed or displayed by the Iiqsor-\nControl Board, ot by the Government ot British Columbia.\nNELSON KIWANIS\n6TH ANNUAL\nTURKEY SHOOT\nond\nCARNIVAL\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\nNELSON ARMOURIES\nDoors Open 7 p.m., Each Evening\nFREE\nADMISSION\nTickets for\nTurkey Shoot\n50c\nAll Guns\nProvided\nNo Privately Owned Sum\nPermitted\nTicket entitles holder to two\nshots at the target and participation in the nightly |H\ndraw for prices and a\ngrand prlxe drawing\nSATURDAY\nNIGHT\nDEC 10\n\u2022 A Kiwanian Project for the u nderprivileged and community\nefforts.\n\u2022 PLENTY OF TURKEYS ~ Oet your tickets from any Net-\nson Kiwanian. *\n $&U>\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952\ni uui if n mi1\n2.22222y2     '\u25a0',\nPW0W0-PRS0N WANPAk\nFOP Q(J\/CK PPSOLPS \/\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nDeadlino for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nMECHANIC WANTBD V Experienced electrical and tune up\nmechanic i wanted for large expanding dealership. G.M. experience preferred but not essential.\nEf cellent working conditions.\nWrite or phone Syd. Smith Ltd.,\nBox 10, Kamloops, B.C.\nWAITED \u2014 HOUSEKEEPER. \u2014\nRoom, and board; Wed. and Sim.\noff!-All comforts of home. Must\n.like children; boy and girl, 8-2.\n$50.00 \/first month, increase if\nsatisfactory. Write Box 470, Grand\nForks, B.CI\nMECHANIC WANTED \u2014 EXFEBI-\nenced mechanic wapted for large\nexpanding dealership.- G.M. experience preferred but not esen-\ntlal Excellent working conditions. Write or phone Syd. Smith\nLtd., Box 10, Kamloops, B:C\naTJSWOBHAPHEH FOR PERMANi\nent employment. Experience preferred but not necessary. Apply\nTurner, Meredith and Company,\n580 Baker St., Nelson. B;C,\nWANTED \u2014 2ND CLASS SflEAM\nengineer for shift work. Apply\nMaster Mechanic, Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Company Limited,\nMichel, .B.C. -'.'.\u25a0. v'r\nWANTED-ilD-LWRIGHT, fUEE?\nexperienced; able to hammer and\nlook after saws as well. Top wages.\nApply Halston Planing Mills Ltd.,\nKamloops, B.C.\nWANTED\u2014STUDENT FOR LIGHT\nhousework. Board and room,\nsmall salary. Apply Box 5847,\nDaily News.   .   \u25a0 .    '\nWAM'l^ULL-'MMI EXPBM-\nenced bookkeeper. Phone 1818.\nRENTALS,\nFOR RENT\u2014FULLY FURNISHED;\nfully modern cottage, including\nwater, light gas. stove, steam-\nJheated. No children. Windsor\nCabins, 821 Nelson Avenue.\nFOR RENT \u2014 BUILDING WITH\noffice and warehouse space. Apply Central Truck & Equipment\ni Co., phone 1400.\nFOR RENT-THttEE-ROOM COT-\ntage at Willow Point; sonie furniture. Rhone 482-X2i\nFOR RENT\u2014ONE LIGHT HOTJSE-\nkeeping room for two. Apply 214\nHouston St., or phone 878-Y,\nFOR RENT \u2014 HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms with general heat. Phone\nNorth Shore Motel, 387-L-4,\nTWO BOOM OFFICE f6r RENT\nln Trail, best location. Phone\n334-R Nelson or 248 Trail.\nSINGLE CABIN FOR RENT \u2014\nLakeside Bungalow Court. Phone\n884.\nBEDRd&M FOfc r*n*-^Gb!NTCE'\nman preferred. Call 923 Vernon\nStreet-r:*       \u2022'- *\nfor reni^-furnishe6~fou5:\nroom apartment. Available immediately. Phone 1233,\nHousekeeping room fOr\nrent. Phone 967-X-2.\nWARM SLEEPING HOoAl.  &N-\ngle or double. Baker St. Ph. 385\nAGENTS WANTED\nTWO YOUNG MEN WANTED BY\nNational Finance Company; one\nto reside in Trail district, the\nother in Nelson. Duties will include contacting dealers and public. Some knowledge of automotive business preferable. Car. provided. State age, experience and\nsalary expected to Box 8888,\nDaily NeWs.   ;'  .\nA STEADY REPEAT PROFIT\nbusiness will be yours In 1953 If\nyou join our ranks. Sell in a protected territory our 250 guaranteed products to friends and\nneighbors. Write for free catalogue and. ' details. FAMILEX\nDept. A. 1600 Delorimier, Montreal.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERniNCED STENOGRAPHER\nwould like steady employment.\nFive day week preferred. Apply\nBox 8553 Daily News.\nDAY OR bmiilT isABt SMTiNft\n80c an hour, Phone 1157;\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHE? US YOUR SCRAP METAL\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top price\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n918 Powell St- Vancouver. B.C\nCEDAR POLES, - ALL CLASSES'\nand lengths. Kootenay Forest\n,Products Ltd.  \" '     \"\nWANTED\u2014SKATES, SIZE i, F6ft\nsmall child: Phone 1110-L,\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM  AND   BREAKFAST   FOR\ntwo girls. Phone 1170-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\/FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nWanted\u2014house \u2014 To buy \u2014\n. In'Salmo. Require at least 600\naq. ft. floor space, plumbing, and\nbe available for immediate occupancy. Have $3000 cash. Contact\nB. L. Allard, c\/o Canadian Ex-\nploratlon Ltd., \"Tungsten\", Salmo,\nHOUSE FOR SALE AT PORT\n\u25a0Crawford. Three bedrooms, one\n. big front room, kttcheh and bedroom. Fruit trees, woodshed and\ntool shed, running water. Price,\n$4500. $2000 down payment Box\n8188, Dally News.\nFOB SALE OR RENT, EIGHT\nmiles West of Nelson on highway:\n20 acres; two-room dwelling; excellent location for roadside business. Rent $20.00 month. Phone\n2847 or write A. A. Lambert Kinnaird, B.C.-\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AYERS AND MINI\n.    \u25a0NEIr'R|58ENTATIVEa.\nt W frlfiboWi_6N 4 CtX-'AaV\nsayers. 301 Josephine St, Nelaon,\n2\"\ns. ELMEi Bo&uihvr s:e:\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Rep. \u2022\nENGINEER8 AND 8URVEY0R\u00bb\n' Nelson, B.C. Surveyor. Engineer.\n  .LIVESTOCK PEAUfcR8\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK\u2014\nContact H. Harrop.. Phone 117.\nmachinists'\n \u201e hnyo^jSfy.   ~.\nMachine, Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593. 324 Vernon Stroot.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 8357.\nSPRINKLING IRRIGATION SY\u00a3l-\ntem, complete with McCormick-\nDeering 50\u00bbh.p. P.D. 40 diesel\nmotor. Practically new. Will sell\nor trade tor feed. Marysville\nStock Farm, phone 478-T, or write\nBox 79, Marysville, B.C.\nSACRIFICE\u2014LARGE REFRlGjSR-\nator, genuine bargain; two only,\npractically new glass ahowcases.\nOpen for offers. These items must\ngo as we are remodelling. Arm-\nson's, at Bus Depot,\nFOR SALE: MAROON Alto GOLD\nband English dinnerware, 2 covered vegetable dishes, platter,\ngravy boat and stand, five dinner\nPlates. $10.00. Phone 1289-R,\nORGAN FOR SAU. - \u00a753gTe,\nmanual, suitable for small church,\ncomplete with automatic blower;\nvery reasonable price. Apply F.\nPennoyer, 1401 Front St., Nelson,\nFOR SALE \u2014 BEST QUALITY\nElectrolux, A-l condition, $86.00;\nbaby sleigh, $4.00; go-cart $3.\nPhone 812-X\nFOR SALE \u2014BROWN STEEL\ndouble bed spring and mattress,\nand child's large-size crib. Phone\n762-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 GUftNEt SANGE\nwith Queen oil pot burner, $73;\nand small DeLaval cream separator, $20. Apply Box 81, Nelson\nFOR SALE-r-BENCH SAW, 4-lNCH\nedger, and 1\/3 h.p. motor; brand\nnew, never used, st wholesale\nprice, App, Box. 6811, Daily Newa.\nPIPE - FltTINGS - tfUBES\nSpecial low prices. Active Trading Go, 938 E. Cordova St, Vancouver.\nBOYS' i SKATES, SteS 14 Alto\nsize 4; also girls' figure skates,\nsize 5%. Phone 866.\nSELL OR SWAP GIRLS' ft_HC\"-'\nulea bicycle for Singer treadle or\nelectric. Value $25.00. Phone 874.\nf5r\nSALE-l_-iN'S febbtS AND\nskates anil ladies' skating boots.\nPhone 1162.\natESS WaAT ftiMGVB-l-\nLeavea ho scans. Your Druggist\nsells CHESS.\nkm sal* - fOSQWbiSfc #6tt-\nmal dress, size 10, $10.00, Phone\n\u25a0 1276-Y;   .-...\u2022\u25a0 ,\npipe, MiM. AnB pLiMSNg\nfixtures. Columbia Trading Co,\n902 Front Street Phone 1611,\nFOR SALE - Bok StoVjfc AND\nfelt mattresses, cheap; Phone 884.\nIPbR SalI; - tftlLlGHt tftbdft\nlamp with shade., Phone 688-X\nTIMBER CRUI8IN0, ETC.\nBSCTS cftuisiNG ANYWffltidi\nte'B.C K.H Hlrd, Slocan City.\nThe Catskill mountains in New\nYork state, cover an area of 1000\nsquare miles.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDOWM\nl.Shut\n2. Detested\n3. Evening\niflloet)\n4. Crazes\n5. Feminins\n. pronoun\nfl. Mongrel\n7. Awry (dial.)\n8. One who\nlives in\nretirement\n11. Knob\n13. Open plea\n1\u00ab. Sea eagle\n19. Passage\nfor air\nM. Not working\n22. Beetle\n25. River\n(Bohemia)\n28. Ahead\n27. Humble\n28. Reported,\nabroad\n29. Whether    '\n32. A chain\n(nast)\ntt. Disease of\ncattle tear.)\n37. Touches\nend to end\nSt. Morsel\n40, Produced,\nnsatextao\nrjJUril   LdUHU\nJlrilUrjH   HBO-IE\naa uaa Hians\nlaaa aan ma\n.\"v.i Tm   sdiiirrm\nrjaiiua aaaai.\nBand aaHH\n;aaa aaa aaa\naaua ana uu\nnnfflua D-aauis\naojaua uHiiaa\nmama saaa\nw-te\nWfetd-y'e Anjww\n4jJ. S-Shaped\ni . molding\n46. Perish\n4\u00ab.Tree\n48.Beam\nACROSS\n1. Chief cook\n5. Cicatrix\n8. Volcanio\nrock\n10. Immense\n11. Illu-trloua\n12. Upright\n14. Employ\n16. Southeast\n(abbr.)\nIT.Guido'a\nhighest\nnote\n18. Layero\n20. Narrow\ninlet\n(geol.)\n28. Biblical\ncity\n\u00bb4. Situated tn\nthe extant\nrear\n2T.MeIodles\ntfi. Narrow\nroadways\n31. Slapper\n33. Part of\n\"to be\"\n84. Attempt\n36. A.ktog\nof Israel\n19. Female\nP*\n41. Dawn\n(combining\nform)\n43. Japanese\nsash\n44. Eat away ,\n47. Coarse\nmeal\n49. Wicked\n50. Orient\n61. Believe\n52. Organs    .\nofaight-\nDAILY CRYPTOQDOTE\u2014Hero's how to work Itt\nlaLONOFBt LOW\nAXYDLBAAXB      \u25a0\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A M used.\ntor the three L'o. X for the two O'o, etc.   Single letters, apos-.\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different -\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n,    8.K     AKHD     Dl     D S K     A X H O 3 A 1-     JQ\nDSJNK    ASJ    NEKFD-RJZBO.\nYeaterday's Cryptoquotei GOOD AND MUCH COMPANY, AND\nA GOOD DtNN_3R-\u00bbPBPYS.       r     -\nGIRLS' WHiTE G.6.M. tlGVRE\nskAtes, size I; price $5. Ph. 968-Y.\ntelCRbNlG toARlNG Albi-\nWrite P.0 Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE--DELt)i_E d.b.ll tifi-\ncycle; reasonable. Phone 1418.\nFOR SALE-GEfll-ON AkPLMSS[.\n.  Phone 604-R.    \u25a0.\"-,'\u25a0'\nskis, poles, fbotibX stiAji\nengine, ciotheshorse. Phone 894-X\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE \u2014 MUST SELL IM-\nmediately at sacrifice prlce>due\nto ill health excellent restaurant\nbusiness in thriving Interior city.\nTurnover $65,000. Equipment on\nhand $8500. Terms can be arranged. Apply Box 8589 Daily News.\nMACHINERY\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR\nCaterpillar\/\nTRACTORS, ELECTRfC SETS\nDIESEL ENGINES\nEARTH-MOWING\nEQUIPMENT.\nAthey Loaders ond Wagoni\nTraxcovators\nHyster Winches and Logging\nEquipment.\nV, Pioneer Crusher* and\nGravel Plants\nRogers Hydraulic Shop\nand Utility Presses i\nKohler Light Plant*\nJoy Air Equipment\nHolcomb  \"Westeeco\"\nScrapefs\nSkagit 1 -2.-3 Drum\nWinches for Logging and\nDragline\nPreco Backrip Scarifiers\nRichardson Rotary\nSnow Plow\nYoung Iron Works Block*\n\u2022  and' Logging Tools\nDunlop Air, Water; Fire\nHost\nJOHN DEERE\nQUALITY PARM\nEQUIPMENT\nTRACTOR & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nBox 119 Phone 930\nNELSON, B. C.\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED   '    '\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MDnNOt\n.SAjrajU^LOGO-NG' AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\n' Enquiries invited\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1, B.C.\nWINCHES\nOf All Types\nBayes Equipment Co.\nCranbrook \u2014 Phone 80\nFOR lALB-ii-VdL* ttGiff\nplant. Guaranteed in A condition.\nApply Emil Niederman, Box 74,\nEdgewood, B.C.\nFOR SALE-65 H.P. DIESEL POW-\ner unit; good shape. Apply _L\nM. Card, Robson, B.C.\nLOST ANP FOUND\nLOST\u2014RECEIPT BOOK, 8ATOR-\nday, Deo. 13, downtown. Return\nwould be appreciated. Reward.\nPhone 1360-L. D. L. Barrell, 911\nMiU Street.\nLost'At CIVIC SKAflNG WW.\n\u2014One maroon plaid Hit. Belongs\nto Grade VN atudent. Ph: 1377-L.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS mo om no maj.\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nFRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1952\n:00\u2014News\n05\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n13\u2014Sports Page\n:20\u2014Breakfast.With Boates\n.30\u2014News\n35\u2014Breakfast With'Boates\n:00-News\n:10\u2014Sport News\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n:55\u2014Sporta Corner\n:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n15\u2014Western Fre\/i\n09\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n15\u2014News\n20\u2014Coffee Time\n:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n:0O-Shnt-In Show\n15\u2014Dorothy Douglas\n:20^-Date With D'Arce\n:00\u2014Notice Board\n15\u2014Sporta New8\n,25\u2014News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Behind the News\n:00\u2014Music Mill\nrOO\u2014School Broadcast    '\u25a0>\n30\u2014Easy Listening\n8:00\u2014Backgrounder  \u25a0\n3:05\u2014Here's Harmony\n8:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:80\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n4:15\u2014Santa's Mall Bag\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Tims Storr Teller\n4:45\u2014Pacifie News\n4:58\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n5:00\u2014Rawhide\n5:30\u2014Spotlight en a Star\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Christian Sdenoa\n6:15\u2014Musical Jewel Box\n8:30\u2014A Man and His Magic\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade fo Melody\n7.-0(K-Newa\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Sports News\nWS-This Is Civil Dofonoo\n8:00\u2014Music and Reverie\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Music From the Films\n9:30\u2014Armdale Chorus\n9:45\u2014Speaker's Choice,\n10:00-News .\n10:15\u2014Resort Mexicano\n10:30-Stariight Ballroom\n11_)0\u2014NEWS Nightoap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nV . SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2f0, 1953\n8:00-^News <\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sports    \u25a0\"-\"\u25a0'.:\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Sample Cass\n8:00\u2014Newa\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Songs of the West\n10:00-^:hildren's Musical Theatre\n10:30-World Church News\n10:45\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n,3:00\u2014News\n3:10 - Weekend Listening\n>3:15\u2014This Week\n3:30\u2014Dixieland Jan\n4:00\u2014John Fisher\n4:15\u2014Sports College\n4:30\u2014Roy Rogers Show\n5:00\u2014Sports Page .\n5:30\u2014Piano Playhouse\n8:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014N.HX. Hookey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\n8:00\u2014Share the Wealth\n8:80\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Symphony Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n10:30\u2014Dancing, Party\nll:57-News   \\\n ' .. \u2022\n\u00aecn^\n11 VVII\/lla-1!! tllV\nLuMrlnfl.lliN\nmSfUIJO-MRSOH WAflfADS\nFOROU\/a >.'\nPhone 144\nDeadline fpt Classified Ads-~5 p.m.\nPhone 144\n. AUTDMPTlVr\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n'Have*! r\nNew ';Aust!if\n\u2022DE'UVERED\n,'\" to Your Door\nCHRISTMAS\nMORNING!'\nChoice of\nBlue, Mendip Grey, Black\n1952\n1951\n1947\n1940\n.,1939\n' 1938\n1938\n1952\n~ 1951\n1950\n1950\n1950\n1949\nChevrolet Sedan\nFord Tudor ,\nFrazer Sedan\nStudebaker Sedan\nWillys Sqcjan\nPontlqe Sedqn \u25a0,.\nChevrolet Sedan '\nOldsmobile Sedan\nAustin Sqit*Bra\u00abt\nAustin Devon\nAust'n Devon\nMorris Oxford\nMorris Minor\nHillman Minx\n1951 Austin Panel\n1951 Austin Countryman\n1949 Ford Vft-Ton\n1949 Dodge \u00bb4-Ton\n1946 Mercury 3-Ton\n\u25a0*\u2022'      Hoist and Box\n1939 Ford Sedan Delivery\nTERMS ond TRADES\nSpot Cash for Late Model\nCars\n\u25a0   ly '.,-.\nEMPIRE\nMotors\n803 Baker St.\" Phone 1135\nNEL5CHB.C.\nSAVE! SAVE!\nCome In and See Our\nU -   YEAR-END\n- Specials!\n\\ :DeFOE\nSEE VICE.\nLIMITED\n1951 HILLMAN\n1950 HILLMAN\n1947 AUSTIN\n1946 CHEVROLET\n1940 BUICK\n1938 DODGE\n1934 CHEVROLET\nTRUCKS\n1950 STUDEBAKER\n1941 CHEVROLET\nYOUR-STUDEBAKER DEALER\n213 Baker St. Nelson\nfOR owTStAfWlNfi' fiUAiaW\nIn oslves, used Polled Shorthorn\nSires. Snowshoe Ranch often\nyoung Sires st ell timet. C Flick.\nEdgewood.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTOHCYCI.8S,   BlCYCieS\n'\u25a0.-'\u25a0'    (Conurtupai\n.WW+F^fm*^)!\nEXTRA SPECIAL\n'Si 2rTON AUSTIN\nIn new condition,\nOnjy ?1295..\nR. DAUPHINAIS\nSALMO. B.C.\nInvestigate Our\nLAV-AWAV PLAN TOR SPRING\nDELIVER* OF IfOUR NEW\nMOTORCYCLE\n'Eity terms, trade-ins.:\nKOOTENAY MOTORCYCLE\n.SALES AND SERVICE\nBox 350-Phone 3601 - Castlegar\n\"Ths Shop of Friendly Servloe\"\nONE TON FLAT DECK 10S1\nDodge Truck. Driven only 2700\nmiles, Tires ant) truck, now condition. Complete with overload\nsprings, chains and spare, Full\nprice $1000.00. Phone 86 Rossland,\nRowland Feed Company,\nf6ft- 'SAUS-rdim' WB TJBff.\nium site bicycle; 3-speed\/fear,\nMO Phone 471-L-S..-\nUVeSTOCK, POULtRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n10 REGISTERED SAANEN GOATS\nfor sale. Bred to milk the year\n'round--flood foundation stack to\nstart a paying herd, A good market for f oat milk ln Nelion. Can\ngive a good deal to anyone who\nwould like.to take advantage of\nthis opportunity. Henry Knowles,\nCrescent Valley,. B.C.\nlogging horse and 10-tons hay tor\n1990. Apply J, Po-nlkotf, Apple-\ndale,.B.C.\nraw\nenad. APPly Fate Taraioftl Glade.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nP,0 POX 389. NELSON, fl.C.\nWAWANSSA'rJ-tityAir'ttMI'W;\nsurance Co. D- U Kerr, Agent\nklwr botes d^oswe era\nDepot Clean rooms <nd rtaaon-\nable rates Vancouver. B.C\nClaiiified Advertising Ratei:\nISO per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\n, lie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion -\n48c line for 6 consecutl-e insertions\nI1.H line per month (88 consecutive insortlons). Box number*\nlie extra. Covers any number\n..- of insertions.\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES\nTENDER;, Etc.\u201420c per line\nfirst insertion. 16c per Un*\n. each subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n. Subscription Rates:\n(Net Mora Than Lilted Hare)\nBy carrier, par week, \u25a0\nln advance -10\nBy carrier, par year 515.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOnemonth . ...._\u201e . $ i.S5\nThre* monthi  \u25a0.,,.\u201e    3.75\nSix months .\u2014\u201e\u2014*\u2014    7.80\nOna ya\u00abr ..'   .    19.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nona month ._._._.._.,,_.,. i.oo\nThree monthi        ' 2.75\nSix montha ,..._._____...   5,50'\nOne yaar     10,00\nWhere extra postage !s required,\n\u2022hove ratal plus postage.\nCLASSIFIED, DISPLAY\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nm**0m\u00bbp^m\\\u00bb*imef'0itml0t*\n.'.>; Peebles Motors \u25a0\nUsed Gars.,\nar\u00ab tha choicest |n town,-\nCompare them with anything\nelse BEFORE you ^uy!    .\nYou'll be delighted with\n\" the selection. \u2022\n1946 Chevrolet\n,  Se'dpn \u2014 $995\n1949 Dodge Gpdch\n$1295\n1948 Chrysler\nRoyal Sedan\n1949 Dodge Sedan\n1951 Plymouth.;' ^\n.Special\nDeluxe\ns Only 15,000 Miles.\n1952 Plymouth\n' Sedan\nOnly 7000 Mil\"-\n1951 Austin\nCountryman\nStation Wagon\n..Only W,000 Miles,\n1951 Austin A-40\n\u25a0'\u25a0 '     Sedan   v\nLike New.\nAND OTHERS TO CHOOSE \u2022\nfROM-\nAll our fine NEW CARS are\nunder epver. See our lower\nfloor display room.\nVERNON STREET   ill\nUSED CAR LOT\nBIGGER, BETTER BdYS\n1952 Ford Mainline\nJust Uke New.\n1951 Ford Prefect\n1<?50 Austin Devon\n1949 Hillman Minx\n1046 Ford Sedan\n1940 Plymouth Sedan      >\n1937 Plymouth -Sedan\n1937 Dodge'Sedan\n1934 FortPSedaii..\nCOMMERCIALS!\n1950 Austin Panel\n1945 International 1-T\u00a9n\n1940 Chevrolet 3\/4'Toh   ',\u25a0;.\nTERMS snd TRADES   \u2022\nRIGHT ACROSS EROM' *HB\nBOTOADROME ON\nVERNON STREET;   '\u25a0'.'\n-\u00bbm*m++ pi\",,\n4 loan plji\nIt reaionible wte\u00ab\nIACAFM\nFOR  SALE - NEW  1952  f6bD\n\u2022 iadani>?oo fmm price. Ph. loi-L\n(Continued la Next Column)   .\nllillll WJT \u00ab,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e, \u00bb imimiui tarn\nSUITE!\nPhone 1650      360 Baker St.\n\u25a0CHRYSLER-PI.YMOUIh\ni_FAB.GOvJ..\/ii\u00bbn_TI KE'\nTLh\/1090 .tfe\/sonro.i ^\nthe KEY lo fr'\na worryless (|\ntomorrow!    *\u201e\nOne of your many guests\nmay slip on an icy step or\nmeet with .some other serious accident. ..:\nAre you protected against\nliability?'\nCALL 135    -\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES\n554 Ward St.    Phone 133\nWinnipeg Grain\n, WINNIPEO (CP) ir. Winnipeg\ngrain oash prices!\nOats, NO. 1 teed 7\u00abH.\nBarley, No. 1 teed 1.17%.\n' RED DEER, Alta. (CP) - Mayor\nPaul.Crawford reports that although,\nbuilding permits worth (1,500,000\nhave been Issued this year, Alberta's\nfifth city is experiencing one ot Its\nworst housing shortages.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n;'-.-\u2022'?\u2022-   (Closing Prloea)\nKTIMBt. ,; .;\u25a0  ,]y-\nAcadia Uranium ..'..-... ii     .18\nAkaitcho    ' .- ,\u201e....-_l .':).)\u00bb.\nAmerican Y K   \" it\nAnglo Hutonian .....-...\u201e-_... 18.00\nArmistice ...,.,..,\u00bb, _\u201e\u25a0\u201e\u25a0\u201e,.     .08\nAtlas Y K ......~~.\u00ab--^-_-_    ,ii\nAumaque __\u2014.-__-_-__     .lH\nBagamac  -....\u201e.\u25a0.\u2014...-;_...,     .171\nBarymin   \u2014:....,......_..,.-._.,..     1.28\nBevcdurt ,.\u201e.-..______-_-__     .98\nUobjo  \u2022',',_) \u201e._-_._.-_--__      .17\nBoymar Gold \u201e.,--._-_,-,.     .11\nBralorne        _______--   iU\nBuffalo Ank .\u201e.-____\u201e.._._      ,\u00ab1\n*U\u00ab 0\u00abh \u2022\u2022. \u201e <LL-     \u25a0\u00ab'.\nCalllman   .;,.:..\nCampbell R L\nCastle Troth , ..._-_-,\nCentral Patricia X\nCentremqau* ......___\nChcstorville .........-._.\nChlmo O ........_\u2122_.\nCochenour  ,...-^_\u201e,\nCoin Loke .................\nConiaurum  .....\u201e_-_.\nCons M & 3 \u2014,--_.\nConwest ','\u201e _\u00ab^_,\nDa)tl RI...,.\u2014-\u00bb_.\nDome ..\u201e....,..__,\nDbnalda  .......-._...\nEast MaIartio\".'I~\nEait SulUvan .._\u2014__\nElder Gold ..\u201e.\u201e_-_-\nEstella,.,. \t\nEureka \u2022.. ,....._.___.\nFalconbrldge -._-.'-.\nFrobisher ..\u201e_....,\nailnt Yai   ~_\nGod's Lako ..,.-..\u2014_.\nGoldale    .......\nGoldcrest ........\nGolden Manitou\t\nHardrock m\nHasaga ..,'. .........__\nHaaS    \t\nHoilinger .,.., ~.\nHudson Bay ___-._\nInspiration  ......_...,.-.\nlat Nickel  \u2014\nJollet Que  \u201e...._,.\nKerr Addison\t\nKirkiand Lake ._.---.\nLabrador        \u2014\nLake Dufault ......\nLakashor*.  ,__\nLake Waia .....-..-\nU\u00abch.   .........\nLlngman (aaw)..\nLouvkourt\nMacDonald  _.\nMacassa      ..........\nMadLeod Coels ...\nMadsen R L ,.._.\nMalartic G F\t\nMarcus O '\u201e'_\nMcKenzie R ti\nMw?ata   ,-,.\nNegus\t\nNew Alger \t\nNew Calumet ...\nNew Goldvue \u201e\nNew Lund  _\nNbraod-   ...-__\nNormetals   \t\nNorth Can\t\nO'Brien  \t\nOslsko    \t\nPtmour ...._...._-_\nRaymaiter   _\nPicltla Crow ..._r\nPioneer\nPliCer Develop ..\nPowell Rouyn ...\nQuebec Lab .,\u2014\nQuebec Man' _..._\nQueenston   ...:~\n(Suemont   ....\nSan Antonio ....\nSherritt Gordon\nSllvermiller   \t\nSilanco ..;'..\u2022\u25a0\u201e\nSteep Rock  \t\nSudbury Cent....\nTeck Hughea\nThompson-Lund\nToWn\t\nTorbrit  .\nTrans Cont Res..\nUnion Mining ....\nUnited Keno   \t\nUpper Canada ...\nVentures  i\u2014\nViolamac       _ __..\nWaite Amulet \u2014.\u2014......\nOll,\u00bb\nAnglo Can \u2014\t\nA F Con ,.\u201e, -,.\u201e\u25a0\u25a0\nB A Oil ,.\u2014     .\u201e.,\u201e.,\u2014\u2014\ncai&\u00ab\u00ab LLL&\u2014-\u00bb\nCalmont ',..--~~\t\nCentral Leduc ,.r., ......\t\nChemical Raiearoh- __-\nCommonwealth Pet* .___-.\nDalhousie        ,..,..,, \u2014i\nDavies Pat*   \u2022\u2014-\u2014--\nDeoalta ' .    -'____\t\nCan Explorers :-____\nDel Rio  : ^\nFederated Pete .\nHighwood      \t\nVpnfcouver Stocks\n,   (Closing Prices) \u25a0\nMINE*    .-.   \u25a0;\"\u2022\u2022\nBraliia'a 'i.y.L.\nCanusa.   .\nCar(bob Gold .\nEattll* r-r-.,...,..\nGolc.nda   ........\nGiant Masopt ...\nHighland B\u00bbU .\nKoot* Belle    ...\nPac Bast Gold .\ntlit\/mpt 0tli' .v.,-*.\nPremier B6rder ,..:\nfioitp).1\"'    ,'LL\nRJavap. MaoDortald\n\u00abfc*\u00bbp .ptaajf yy.L\nSherritt Gordon...._,\nsilvtrRldjle ......v.\nSilver Standard......\nUUca -'\u25a0-..','. \u201e.-.--_\nVananda  .,.;.,.,,___\nVenjtoi. . ,-l&-l\nWellington ..............\nWestern Ex\nYai*  .... ......\n6iu 222\nAngle Can \u201e..'-,\u201e ,\u201e,-, .,\u2014   7.15\na Jew.,,.,..._,,., _,.,\u201e\u201e.. u,    .it\nCal & Ed ...A | \u25a0 i,   12.S0\nC^mont \u2022..    . ,^^,m^m    1.80\nCommonwealth  ......_....    4.38\nHome ; ..... . - i2.no\nMercury         ......,__-....   . .1014\nN*Ooi\u00abil Pet* 3. 1.70\nOkalta Com ....-.__.____. 3,18\nPae Peta .,.:. ..\u201e.. .\u2014...   11.25\nRoyalite   \u201e.\u201e..._-\u201e\u201e_....' 19.80\nVanalte -,-\u201e\u00ab _j;   -\u00bb\nYul**n .\u2022 .,..'.-....:.,,___~_\u00abU     .\u00ab\nINDUSTRIALS     .\nCapitalist ..r;,...'..',__.'4__., M.ob..\nInt Br\u00abw B ...\u201e,,.\u2022...'... -: 4,\u00abQ'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952 -, 11\n4.18\n.03\nIU. ,\nAt\n.21\n.41\n47\nm\n:' iiw\n'\u2022\"is-,\n1.78\nW\n.10\nn\u00bb\n:.nw\n\u25a0 M\n.08H\nm\nB\u00ab C Natural Resource^ Keep U^\nWth Canada's Spreading Wealth!\nHorn* -.1 ,\t\nImperial Oil ,\u2014-,___\nInter Pete .,.._-.\u2014\u25a0*-,\nStoj?   \u25a0:   ......~r^LLL\nMid Cont ..___-__^_\nNat Pete .,..._;_...\u00bb..\nOkalta '. ...___L._-.\nPaeifle Pat* ..__--,_-..\nRoyallt*  , \u201e__-_-.\nRoxana      __._-..\nTow*r Pat*  .\u201e.\u201e..\nUnited Otla :.....,\u201e._\u201e\nINDUSTRIALS    .\nAbitibi    _-_-_-\u201e\nAlgoma Steal ,_-.\nAluminum \u2014_.\nArgus     ......._\u201e,\nAtlai St    \t\nBeattie Bros   .\nBall Telephone \u2014__..\nBraiilian ,  ..-..-\nBC Elao ';.>. ,.^.\t\nB C Forest  \t\nKG Packers A _\nB C Packers B \u2014\nBuilding Product* ._-.\nBurl Steal\u25a0'...:,.__..,._-_\nBurf\u00bbf4A ______\nCan Brew ,....__..___,\nCan Canners  ...._\nCan Car & tiy \t\nCan Car li Fdy A .__.\n<-Hi Oil.   .     \u2122_\nCan Celanesa .'......._._\nCan Dredge ...____.\nCan Pac Wy _____\nConsMi'8,..r,_..-~_-\nDist Seagram\t\n:Bom.F6taiari*i ..\"...\nDom Steel ts Coal B\nDom Stores \t\nFamous Player* .,;\t\nFord A., ;. ___\nGatineau    ____\nGoodyear pfd \t\nGreat Lakes   \t\nGypsum Lime ..\u201e.._\u201e.\nImperial Oil  \t\nImp Tobacco _._-.-_\nIptMetal ..;\u201e.._\u2122\u2014\nInt Nickel \u2022L&jLjLii\nIntw P*t* ,\u2014..-..,.\nKalvlhatbr ... r ,.;.\nMaple Leaf Milling .\nMajaey Harria,:.'..-. \u2022:\u2022?\u00ab\u25a0.\nMoore Corp\t\nMcColl Frontenac .......\nNat Steal,Car:..._w_\nPag* Hershey ...___-_\nPowell 9ivpt2~-r-~v\nPower Corp \u2014__~.r-\nSbawlnlgon ,\u201e...,\t\nSimpsons A    _____\nSimpsons   pfd   ........_\nSteel, ot Can , -j\nUnion Gas ot Can -\nUnited Steel i\nWeston George  .......\nWiii Elee com'...\u201eJ_-_\nWin Elec pfd\t\n_,_   18.00\n..._ 38.88\nM 14.83.\/\nl. , Lir\n;\u2022-_'\u2022     M \u25a0\u25a0\n__. im\n_.' 310\n_\u201e-11.88'\n__ 18,75\n_.. .83\n2i .42\n___    1.88\n*&L   13%\n'50\u00ab\n, 121?\n2014\n714\nS7H\nXIH\nSH\n19\n3314\n38\n20\n8\n17\n3014\n18\n1614\n13\n4014\n44%\n38%\n30\n24\n14%\n13%\n13%\n18%\n20%\n18%\n47%\n18%\n34%\n35%'\n8%\n11\n-41'\n.   24%\n:\u25a0   18; I\n\u25a0'.  'W\n,' .m\n:  V  .\n.38%\n38\n. 70-;.\n23%\n38':\n41%\n- 80\n104.80\n34\nm\n. 18%\n40%.\n83\nBy DAVE M0INTO8H\nCanadian Press Staff Writer.\nVANCOUVER (CP)-T-BriUsh Co-\nlumbla'e Industrial forcei paused\nto regroup during 1883.\nThat Is, ienerally speaking. A few\nipearheads, notably, oil and electric power, kept thrusting ahead.\nThere were also some retreats.\nThere, wu not the same'broad,\nfull expansion that the coast province expetienc-d In JOJl. Business\nmpn were still talking In millions\nbut they werq keeping a .harp eye\non tha thousands. In short, quiet optimism replaced tha blatant optimism of 1951,\nLABOR TROUBLES\nTha! yoar was on* ot labor upheaval. Management fought as it\nhadn't since before tha war against\nwage increases. Th* result was on*\njtrike or lockout after another.\nBiggest advances were mado in\nthe fields Ot oil and electric power.\nBy the time Inow atartad to fall\nIn tha Interior, Trans Mountain\nOil Pipe Line Company nad completed h\u00ab)f lt< 711-mile, 888,000,000\nEdmonton-Vancouver oil line, Oil\ncompanies, ire npnding about $80,-\n000,000 to expand refineries hare.\nAs the yiar ended, plana were announced for a new 83,000 refinery\nat Kamloops, alohg the Tram Mountain rout*..-\u25a0\u2022     -f   *: . '.:.\nCompanies war* wending $1,000,-\n000 a month looking for oil and nat.\nural ill in northoaitcm B.C., where\noU was flrat found Nov. 1, 1881.\nWestcoast Transmission Company\nawaited approval trom ths U, S.\nfederal. power commission to start\ncomtruction ot a 8111,000,000 gas\npip* -line trom Peace River to\nPortland, Ore. Mora than 30,000,-\n000 acres were underpermlt for oil\nand gai exploration. , *\nBOOST HYDRO OUTPUT\nIn' the last fiv* years, B.C. Elec-\ntrie Company hai increased\/hydro\noutput from' 333,000 horsepower to\n805,000. It says the increase la a\nyardstick tb measure expansion\nand development during that time\nin th* southwestern corner of the\nprovince,: tha main population\narea.\nAt Wanata, naart-aa work pro-\nMALTBY. England (CP) \u2014When\nthe name of Charles H. Grey ot\nMelton, Yorkshire, was called out\nin magistrate's court there was no\nreply. Later the chief clerk found\nhe had aent the summons to Malta,\nin error.       r*\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Trading w\u00ab\nslightly higher with most of tha\nftrongth concentrated in th* rail\",\nroads and a few Individual Issues. :\nIn Canadian issues, Canadian Pacific and Pom* each advanced %,\nInternational Nickel was up %. Me-\nIntyre wai unchanged aad Distillers\nSeagram slipped %..-.\nTORONTO <CP) - Wutorn olli\ncontinued strong toward tha close\nwhile other sections remained weak.\nOils added mora than two points\non tha exchange's index after gaining steadily throughout tha session.\nBase metals recorded a loaa ot half\nan index point while industrial! and\ngolds lost smaller amount*.\nMONTREAL (CP) - PrlCH w*re\n\u25a0lightly higher in alow dealing! with\nincreases in the majority but confined to fractions. \u25a0 '\nPapers, utilities, senior metals,\nmiscellaneous industrial! and senior oils improved.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Tho outstanding feature was tb* marked\nimprovement in activity in Japanese\nbonds. 1Mb followed atatemehts\nconcerning tha probable course of\nJapanese sinking-fund operations\nand net gains up to 2% points ware\nrecorded.\nElsewhere, however, the-foreign\nbend section was quiet.\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK (CP)-Bpot priats:\nLead, N.Y., ,14. .   .\nZinc, East St. Louis, .13%.\nTin, N.Y, 111%. -\ngreased- smoothly on Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company's\nnew $30,000,000 power dam. Initial\noutput will be 205,000 horsepower.\nIn north-central B.C., the Kenney dam,' third-largest rock-till\nbarrier in the world, waa completed\nacrosl tha Nechako river. It will\natora water behind lt which will be\ndriven through the coast range by\n* 10-mlIe tunnel to creato power\ntor an 'aluminum plant ,ot tidewater. Thia $8|IO,000,000 project will\neventually turn out 1,500,000 h.p.\nThere-were gain* and losses in\ntransportation. The Pacific Great\nEastern Railway, province-owned,\ncompleted its $13,000,000, 82-mile\nlink from Quesnel to Prince George\nin the interior, connecting the PGE\nwith Canadian National's transcontinental Una. British Columbians\nbegan to grouse about th* coastal\nsteamship service and this was aggravated by th* sinking of Canadian Pacific's Princess Kathleen. It\nwaa estimated it will take two to\nfive yeara beyond tha original 1908\ntarget date to complete B.C.'s portion of the trans-Canada highway.\nL08E8OROUND\nThp provlnce'i major industry\u2014\nlumbering \u2014 lost grorflnd, World\nmarkets tightened as Scandinavia\nunderbid B. C. for the United Kingdom lumrtf trad*..   .    '....      :\nDuring the summer * 48-day\nstrike paralyred the industry and\ncrippled the, province's entire economy. Fifty-four cents of (very\ndollar made In B.C. comes directly\nor Indirectly from the forest industry. Th* Vancouver Board of\nTrade estimated tha strike coat B. C.\na .staggering $170,000,000. Th* strike\nwai followed by a 20-day closure\nof the woods because of forest\nArea.   .'\u2022\" '\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0.\nA bright spot vas til* opening of\nthe first unit of a $44,000,000 newsprint mill at Duncan Bay on Van.\ncouver Island. Ifwer the first\nwholly newsprint mill for B.C. in\n33 years, But production ot sulphite and lulphate pulp was out 2C\n\u00a3er cent because of narrower mar-\neti,\nTha construction industry in seven eoait cities wai hemstrung for 87\ndaya by strike! and lockouts. .\nAt one Urn* during th* summer,\n40,008 workers were on strike on\nvarious trades and industries.\nFISH PRIC58 DROP\nHi* lilhing industry was hard\nhit by falling markets and a dls-\nput* over lalmon prion, which tied\nup the fleet for 41 daya. Near year's\nend. the herring fishery was still\nnot operating although th* season\nwu moro than halt gone. The rea-\nTho 1423-mlle Alaska Highway,\nbuilt as a war measure in 1942, cost\nan estimated $140,000,000.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nCalgary Livestock\nCAWARY.(CP) - The cattle\nmarket waa active Thursday with\n833 head 6f cattle and calves on of-\ntef ot Which. 252 were late arrivals\noff cars. Good to. choice butcher\nsteers were steady st the week's advance. Thar* wtt a fair demrid for\ncOws at about steady prices.\nHogs sbld Wednesday at 14 a\nhundredweight, up 25 cents. Sows\nware steady at 12. Good lambs 21.80\nand good ew'ei 8-9.   .     ' \u2022\nGood to Choice butcher steers\n24.80-24,30, common to medium 18-12\nGood bKtCher heifers 1950-21 com-\nmon to medium 15-19. Good light\neOwi 12.50-18; common to medium\n10-12; canners and cutters 8-9.80.\nGood stocker and feeder steers 19.\n21.80; eoipmta) to medium 15-18.50.\nGood to choice veal calves 21-24;\ncommon to medium 18-20.\nPUZZLED OVER HOLIDAY GIFTS?\nSee Our Complete Display of\nIDEAL GIFTS FOR THE MOTORIST!V\nPrlce$ Rqnot from $ 1.00 to $150\nHere Are a Few Suggestions:\nLOW PRICED MEDIUM PRICED   '\u25a0     HIGHER PRICED\nLOW PRICED       -'2\nClip-On Ash.Traya \u2014 Tail-Pipe Extension\nChrome Cis\u00bbr- Lightera \u2014 Sun-Glare M|jat'\n, Dash Trays - Chrome Door, Handl* C\nOutside Type Mirrors \u2014 Arm Rest-Zipper Covers\n- . Vent Wing Air Deflectors - Rubber Scuff Mats\n- -;:     MEDIUMPRICEDv     ...\nZipper Plaid Plastic Travelling Bags \u2014 Elictrd Operated Gal Capi\nSeat COvess 7-DunloplllS'Cushions \u2014 fiatteriet\nNew Type Helen Tir\u00ab Chatpa *- Tirea \u2014 Bhwikets\n\u2022    ^ \u25a0 HIGHER PRICED    -   \/\nRadios \u2014 Custom Type Siat Covers \u2014 Polaroid Siln Visor*\nSpotlights \u2014 Air C\u00abnditfofl.efe \u2014 Kilters\nFOR THE KIDDIES\nImperial Esso Service Stations (12-Piece Seta). CI fPt\n'ONLY... .......,'  :.   \\   ....  *la*\u00ab\nToy Chrysler Car Dime Banks \u2014 And Many. Other Items\nPeebles Motors Ltd. \u2022\nsons were tbe same. The one bright\nspot on the fishing front wax*\npost-war record catch of whales\u2014\n481.-\nThe tourist industry was up 10\nper cent to about sbs.ooo.ooo. western  Canada, Steel  Co.  Ltd.  an- .\nnounced construction of a $4,000,000\nelectric furnace to produce steel\u2014 ,\nfirst inroad into repeated demands\nfor a steel industry In B.C.       .  .\nThe mining industry, one of the\nbig four in B.C. forestry, agrlcul-\nture, fishing and mining fell bock\nduring 1952, though not far. Production was estimated at $163,000,-\n000 tor 1962 compared to $173,869,891\nin 19?1'. ...       '     .    ..'(\nCamp\nSuperintendents\nHqvo you taken core of your\nrequirements for tenti, tar*\npaullns and bedding.\nWo oan offer the followlno In\n\u2022tool cots and msttrenei;\ntpciwriTE\nCAMP REPS\n3- o\".'x.$! q\"-iv 'f C\u00a7 yt\nangle iron, frame.Jtech ***\" *\nic e-x e* ir-r-r. angle .'\\ijm\niron tram*. Eafeh -. \u2022\u2022'SSr\nMATTRESSES\n8' o- x tf o\"-no. i box a in\nEdge F*lt Each ..........    \u2022\u00ab\u00ab\u00a5\n918\"r I 8' 8\"-No. 1 Box \u00ab1 Ok\nEdge Pelt Each ..'..,..,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:'+*\u2022\"*>\nM\"?f %\"***\u25a0' 19.28\nEUled, Each   \u00bb\u00bb**\u00bb\u00bb\n8' 6\" x 8' 8\" Spring- 99 BA\nEUlad. Each _..',   \u2022\u2022aW\nAlso Available Prom Stock \u2014\nSheet.,  Blanket), Pillow tllps,\nand all Camp Supplies,\nCLEMENT & CO.\n1925 Burrard St.\nVancouver, 8. C. .')\nOB\nNolson - Sale* Representative\nMOAT BROWNE\n80S Vernon 8t 'Li Phon* 1880\nPut Seagram's \"83\" to the water\nteat, Water, plain or sparkling, reveals \u00bb '\n. whisky's true, natural flavour\nandboaqneti   :     -\n^Sanation\n0? Seagrams w& Surf\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by\nte Uquor Control Beard \u00a9r by tho Government Of British Columbia\nD-R-Y?\nNearly ono hundred wotor wells have been drilled and\ndeveloped by us In the Eoit Kootenays, adding to the\ncomfort and convenience of hundreds of user*.\nYeii too, con be tho proud owner of o\nreliable, drilled well, capable of\nproducing large quantities of\ncrystal-clear water, as you\n'\u25a0;     ndedlt.\nCOMPLET1LY AUTOAAATIC PUMPING\nEQUIPMENT, INSTALLED BY EXPERTS\nOver VS years' experience In the ground water supply\nbusiness enables us to drill, develop and equip your\nwall more efficiently and economically, increasing the\nvalue of your property.\nPoet, Modern, Truck-Mounted Drilling Equipment\nWith Qualified Drilling Crews\nHUB ESTIMATES'ON  MUNICIPAL,, INDUSTRIAL,\niIRBK.A-.ON AND, DOMESTIC WELLS   \u2022\nContact -.\nBUD HENNING\nDRILLING CONTRACTOR\nPhone Cranbrook 787 .\nTemporary. Plaid Address \u2014 kootenay Bay, B.C.\ni\n 3&f&\n12 \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 19, 1952\nTHAT\nMAN!\nThere is no one more difficult to shop\nfor than that awfur'male person vyho\nalready has everything - he doesn't\nsmoke - he has enough ties and\nshirts, he already has a book.\nWe can supply the answer from our\ndisplay of gifts for \"THAT MAN.\"\n|Vldrm\u00a3lH\nDRUGS LTD.\nFrench Vote to Draff\n'\u2022..-'\u25a0\u25a0 V '\u25a0'.\u25a0'        ,',\u25a0    . ' \"'-\" - '\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 .\"'\u25a0   \u25a0 '.\u25a0'\n^patriate Amenc^\nPAHIS (AP) \u2014 The French Na-'\ntlonal Assembly has'voted to draft\ninto France's Army Americans of\nconscription age living here more\nthan a year, either in one stay or\noi. several visits.\nThe draft age in France is 18%\nto 28 years, \",\nThe assembly passed the bill\nwithout''a debate. Raymond Trl-\nboulet, speaking for the national\ndefence committee, frankly said the\naction was being taken as reciprocity- \"of thij worst kind\" (for UiS.\nlaws which make Frenchmen living\nin the United\/States subject to\nAmerican military seryice,      ,.' \u2022\u2022'\nTREATY REGRETTED\nTribpulet expressed regret that\nnegotiations for a treaty granting\nreciprocal treatment to nationals of\nthe two countries had not succeeded.\n\"A French citizens will never admit,\" Triboulet said, \"that ft is\nequitable, when- he has fulfilled\nmilitary obligations, in France and\nis even in certain cases a reserve\nofficer, to see himself submitted in\nthe United States \u2014 if his profession-\nal obligations have kept him there\nmore than a year \u2014 to 24 months\nservice in the Americ n Army with\nthe possibility.of being sent to combat in overseas territories ...\"\nAsk Your Grocer for     V\nEllbon't U-Bake Brood Mix\nWhole. Wheat or White\nIt makes excellent\nhome made bread\nv    ELLISON MILLING\nA ELEV. CO., LTD.\nPHONE 238\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"DlstlncUva Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nSIS Kootenay St       Phone 381\nNEW YORK (AP) - The publisher- of I,ife magazine next week will\nissue their first foreign^language\nmagazine, Life en Espanol, a Span'\nish publication to-be sold ln Latin\nAmerica. Roy E. Larsen,. president\nof Time, Inc., announced today the\nstart of the new magazine and said\nit would be a fortnightly published\nevery other Monday.\nMassey Suggests\nArts Festival\nOTTAWA (Cpl'\u2014An interna tlonal\nfestival of the arts, to be held in\nOttawa,, was. suggested today by\nHt. Hon. Vincent Massey, Canada's\ngovernor-general.\nThe festival mighty be attempted\n-*\u00abt least once as an experiment\u2014\n\"to stimulate and encourage that active partteipation r lrir music and\ndrama and the other arts which are\nbecoming increasingly characteristic of life in this city and in Can?\nada as a whole,\" he. said,,\nTlie proposal fey. .'Mr. Massey,\nwho headed the royal commission\nwhich produced a monumental report on Canadian culture, in 1951,\nwas made in a speech'to the Canadian Club here-\nMr. Massey said the festival\ncould find a pattern in the annual\nfestival of music ahd arts held in\nEdinburgh.\n\"There.would be all sorts of difficulties! in the way, of course;\" he\nsaid, But, throughout this country's\nhistory \"unimaginable things have\nbeen done.\"\n\"They still can' tie done.\" he\nadded.   .\nCLASSIFIED'ADS GET RE8ULT8\n'There's convenient shopping for all ihe\nfamily at your friendly hardware store.\nSILVERWARE\nCommunity Plato\n*79'7S\nSet\n42-Plece, long life, guaranteed\nollvorplate. Packed In beautiful\ncloth lined gift box. Choice at\npatterns.\nHOT'SEE\nHOTROD\n$|.1S\n'I\nSpecial\nStrings of\nLights\n$1.30\nTo Clear\nChristmas Tree\nStands\n\\Wiife Jhey Lost\n$1.69\nCCM. Trikes\nBicycle*\nWagorw\nPocket Knives\nBEAVER\nPower Tools\nTable Saws - Band Sows\nJig Saws - Lathes\nJointers - Sanders\nCHRISTMAS\nSHOPPING SCHEDULE\nOur Retail Store\nWill Be Open\nSat. Dec. 20, till\n8 p.m.\nMon. Dec. 22\nTues. Dec. 23\nWed. Dec. 24\n8 a.m. \u2014 5 p.m.\nShop Early!\nMember Wanfs a\nHealthy Deficit\nOTTAWA (CP)-An independent\nmember of the Commons believes\nthe country has had enough financial surpluses tor a while and IVe\ntime tor a 'Wee healthy' deficit.\"\nHe sits among Liberal members.\nJ. r I,. Gibson, member for the\nBritish Columbia Constituency of\nComox-Albernl, made the state,\nmenf|Wednesday-in saying the government shouldn't \"overtax\"'Canadians to the tune of $1,000,006\n\u00abJay.\"  \u25a0 .','\u25a0<'  \"'.. ',';f,.' -       rr'   , *\nThat, was the estimated'rate of\nthe ; government's surplus under\npresent taxation. It was all right to\nsay the national debt was being\npaid off but he did iy>t believe one\nshould worry about a: national debt\nthe size of Canada's which called,\nfor interest at only three per cent.\nISLAND TERIillN08\nHe also believed; that the trans-\nCanada highway, should not have\nits western terminus at Victoria\nbut should continue to the northern\ntip of Vancouver Island. Tha government also should aid B.C. authorities to build a road from. Port\nAlberni to the strategic military air\nstrip rat Tofino on the west coast of\nVancouver Island..\nOutlining the political situation\nin British Columbia, Mr, Gibson\nsaid that the people of his province\nare hot crazy. About 75 per cent\nof them don't understand Social\nCredit,, and 7B per cent of them do\nnot want Socialism.\n. Turning to Prime Minister St\nCommerce Secretary Says Confusion\nIn United Slates Agencies in Europe\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Commerce. Secretary Charles Sawyer,\nback from a 10-country study ln\nEurope, criticizes' American agencies abroad for' \"confusion and\nwasted effort i;. . too many people\ndoing too many' things ln Western\nEurope.\"\n\u2022 The time has come, Sawyer said\nin a report to President Truman, to\ntake the emphasis off foreign economic aid and place it on trade,\n'within tpe framework of long-term\neconomic thinking, He said Europeans, agree. ... ,% \".\nTREMENDOUS RECOVERY.\nSawyer reported there has been\ntremendous recovery in countries\naided by the United States; and\nEurope can go on to prosperity, if\nit keeps faith in itself.\nThe U.S. must avoid dictating or\neven guiding European policies,\nthe secretary wrote, but should\nstand by. \"to give the encouragement which comes from having an\nunderstanding and helpful friend\nat band.\"\nHe added emphatically that nothing the U.S. does to help Europe,\nsuch as cutting tariffs, should\nundermine, the American economy\nbecause \"a prosperous America is\nnecessary not only for us but for\nthe rest of the free world . . .\"\nOn the subject of tfS. establish-\n\u00ab\u00abiff\u00ab\u00bbWi\u00abi\u00abWigCT\u00ab>tWM\nments abroad, Sawyer stated:.\nThere was almost unanimous\nopinion that we haver too many\npeople and too many agencies in\nWestern Europe '.'...'\nCONFUSION, WA8TE\n\"Confusion and waste are the result.\n'The solution.. . .is the abolishment of emergency agencies whose\ntask is either-completed or can be\nabsorbed by the regular1 departments. We still have Mutual Security Agency mission in some countries to which we are not now giving and for some time have not\ngiven economic aid.\"\nThe mission visited Great Britain, France, Western' Germany,\nItaly, Greece, Turkey, -Belgium,\nSwitzerland, The Netherlands and\nSpain.\nSawyer reported i the general\nlevel of turopean economic activity is about 40 per cent above prewar.\nLaurent, he said he does not expect\nthat \"you will have too much\ntrouble\" ta British Columbia in the\nnext election.\nCOCKTAIL\nGLASS SETS\nMatched sett In. colorful designs. Sett of 8 begin at only\nProm\n'5\n>2S\nHOME GIFTS\nHassocks\n$3.95 Up\nChrome Kitchen Step Stools $19.50 Up\nClothes Hampers ...... \u201e $9.95 Up\nAxminster Rugs, 9x12 ..... $129.50 Up\nMirrors _____._______!_.._. $2.25 to $69.50\nOdd Lamp Shades\nPlatform Rocker ...... $59.50 Up\nSheets and Pillow Cases\nBy Wabasso, arie lasting gifts.\nPillows, a pair '.\nNUTCRACKERS\nSpecial 50c\n.' . Authentic\nSUPER\nTRACTOR\n$1.40\n1\nSkates and Boots\nSkifs, Ski Poles\nSleighs   .\nToboggans\n' $kate Guards\netc.\n*\n$5.95 Up\nTable Lamps .\u201e_\njfoudoif Lamps \u2014\nBed Lamps\t\nTriligh.s    .'\u2014_.'\u2014\n: $9.95 Up\n$3.50 Up\n$1.95 Up\n$18.95 Up\n$18.95 Up\n$94.50\nTorchieres . ___..\n5-pce. Chrome Kitchen Suite\nHostess Chairs, Reg. $26.50, for $21.50\nBed Throws, 100% pure wool.. $14.95\nChenille Spreads . _____.. $8.95 Up\nCHILDREN'S ROCKERS \u2022\n' . fft.75 Up \u2022\nSiHOO-FLY ROCKERS\n$7.95 Up       r \u2022\nBABY SWINGS$2.50 up\nDOLL BUGGIES\n$4.80 Up\nSLEIGHS ... $4:50Up\nPhone 553\nNelson, B.C.\n441 Baker St.\nSee Our Displays\nCheek Our Toy Dept.\nFire Screens \/\nAndirons\nFireplace Sets\n\\Vood Boskets\nFenders, etc.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY   LIMITED\nPhone 1530     Wholesale\u2014Retail    Nelson, B.C.\nMAKE IT A\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nThb year gtvo a gift lint will soy Me.ry Chrlstmorr for years to eome. fii.o\nGENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES\n\u2022 RADIOS\n\u2022 cleaners\n\u2022 polishers\n\u2022 steam irons\n\u2022 Mixers\n\u2022 toasters\n\u2022 KETTLES\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\nGENERAL   M ELECTRIC\n574 BAKER ST.      AUTHORIZED DEALER\n\u00a9\nPHONE 160\nTHERE'LL ALWAYS\nBE SANTA CLAUS\nNEW, YORK (AP)-Even that\nfamous Santa Claus editorial could\nnot quite save Virginia.\nYou know about the New York\nSun reply to a little girl's letter asking if truly there was a Santa Claus.\n\"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa\nCiat(f,\" lt said. \"Be exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist. ...\"\nThat was more than a half-\ncentury ago, but Virginia, now Mrs.\n.Edward Douglas, and a grandmother\nsix times over, remembers that, ail\nsht could understand then was the\nassurance in the first line.  '        I\n\"It sustained me for two o- three\nyears,\" she'said Thursday.\nWANTED TO BE SURE\nVirginia O'Hanlpn, aged 8 in 1897,\nwanted to be sure. So she wrote a\nWtter. to the Sun asking, \"Please\ntell me the truth, is there a Santa\nClaus?\" ,\n\"He lives, and he lives forever,\"\nthe editorial said. \"A thousand\nyears from now, Virginia, nay, ten\ntimes ten thousand years from now,\nhe will continue to make glad the\nheart of childhood,\"\nThe editorial received .national\nacclaim and has been reprinted\nwidely over the years.\n\"Santa always exists when you\nhave your own children,\" the grown\nVirginia said. \"You pass it on to\nthem, and they to their little ones,\nand,, that keeps Santa alive .always.\"\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n878 Baker St\nMed. Arte Blk.\nPHONE 2ft\nAccurately r.\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nPhone 835\nfor a\nwhite\nChristmas\nA welcome gift indeed . i',\nForeyth'White Shirts ..i easy-\nfitting masterpieces with all\nthe famous Forsyth points of\nsuperiority . . . taper-carved\ncollars *. . fall fit. . ,c,noa- ''-\nravelling cuff . . . custom\ntailoring ... and a freedom\nand comfort hell appreciate\nevery day of wear. CotpA in..'\nChooseyowForsythGift now.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 827  .\n876 Baker St.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors  '\n876 Baker 8t Phone 238\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUlCK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work o Specialty\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT ST. PHONE 68\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 148\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nIn Time for Christmas      h\nTUSSY\nCHARMEROSE\nCOLOGNE \u2014 TALCUM\nSOAP \u2014 RAND LOTION\nIndividual Packages or .Sets\n$1.75 \u2014 $4.75\nYour Hexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY     .*.!\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nBOX 460\nPhone 34 Day - 807-R Night\nSee Us Today for an\nOK\nUsed Car or Truck\n1951\n1950\n1951\n1946\nCHEVROLET 2-DOOR SEDAN\nPONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN\nFORD SEDAN\nDODGE SEDAN\n1952 CHEVROLET '\/a-TON PICKUP\n1950 MERCURY H-TON\nWe hove several other units\nfor you to choose from.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped garago\nin tho 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_12_19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0426556","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"}]}}