{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427603":{"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":"2023-03-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1954-01-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427603\/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":" \u25a0m&\nCoffee Prices May\nRise to $1.33 Pound\nNo \"Market Manipulation,\" Just\nGenuine Drop in Coffee Production\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A government food expert Wednesday attributed the rise in coffee prices to a \"genuine\" drop\nin production and not the result of any \"market manipulation.\"\nHe-was commenting on a Washington dispatch reporting President Eisenhower as saying the United States\nFederal Trade Commission will make a full inquiry into the\nprice-rise.\n\"There seems to be no hocus\npOcus or marketing engineering in\nthis rise,\" the trade department official said. \"It Seems to be simply\na case of declining production ln\nBrazil.\" ......\nMeanwhile, ln Toronto importers\npredicted the price of coffee will\nIncrease about 34 cents a pound to\n$1.33 ln the next few months. Ottawa importers did not believe the\nprice would go that high, but they\npredicted a rise of two Or three\ncents. i\nCanada imports about 100,000,000\n\u25a0 pounds of coffee, annually, imports\n\/ from Brazil\u2014world's leading pro-\nJ dueer,1-- in 1052 totalled ; 42,000,000.\nef   pounds.. Colombia, the. other  big\nsupplier, shipped 30,000,000. Cost of\nImports In 1952 totalled $50,800,000.\nFROST OAMAOI \"';>''.\nBrazil normally hat about 16,000,-\n000 bags of coffee available for\nshipment annually. Each bag weighs\nabout 13.2 pounds. However, frost\nhas damaged trees and available\nsupplies are estimated at 14,000,000\nbags.\nReports reaching here are that\nfrost damage to Brazil's young trees\nls extensive. This may, reduce\nBrazil's production for the next\nseveral years, thus limiting available world supplies. i\nAs ih any other commodity, cot-\nfee , prices are usually fixed by\nworld Supply and demand, the official here said. However,, since the\nU. S. Is the world's biggest import\ner, she sets the world's importing\nprices. Canada's prices usually are\nIn line with those prevailing in the\nU. S.\nSlasher Active\nIn Montreal\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014The slasher\nstruck again Wednesday as police\npressed a city-wide search for a\nman Who has attacked and injured\nseven women since last Friday.\nAnother woman was gashed on\nthe leg with a razor blade as she\nwaited for a bus oA'St^Denis Street.\nPolice described him as a \"notorious and brutal sadist\" who served\na lengthy penitentiary term 12\nyears ago following a wave of indecent assaults.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nOccasional snow Hurries, Low.\nhigh1 Cranbrook, 10-25; Crescent\n\u2022Valley 18-30, -yW\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING. JANUARY 28, 1954\nNo. 234\nCoast t\u00ab$for Stirs Storms\nWith Book-Burning Plan\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nMolotov Wined and\nDined by Eden\n\u2022' BERLIN (Reuters)\u2014Russian\nForeign Minister Molotov, sue\nrounded by armed bodyguards\nand secret service, agents, made\nhis first social visit to West\nBerlin Wednesday night to dine\nwith.Foreign Secretary Eden.\nA procession of long, black\nautos crossed the sector boundary at high speed carrying the\nSoviet minister and his aides\nto their appointment.\nThe Russians were asked\nwhat they would like to eat,\nand they waved aside offers of\ncaviar for \"a typical English\nmeal\". German wines were\nserved with each course.\nMolotov was accompanied by\nAndrei Oromyko, Jacob Malik\nand V, S. SemeohovT high commissioner in Germany, and an\nInterpreter.\ntiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!\nEDMONTON (CP)-A provision-\npacked RCAF Dakota landed at icy,'\nisolated.\" Perry Rivet, 1200 miles\nnorth of here, Wednesdsy to end\nthe plight of about 12 families of\nnear-starved'Eskimos.\nIt was the plane's third attempt\nto deliver its load of 2400 pounds\not buffalo meat ahd rolled oats, bad\nweather having blotted out previous\nflights from Edmonton and Yellow*\nknife.\nMilder Weather May\nPose Flood Problem\nEDMONTON (CP), \u2014 The worst'\nis over. These words from weather,\nfprecasters Wednesday warmed residents of western Canada who have\nshivered through more than two\nweeks of the worst cold wave in\nfour years.\n\"There is a definite change for\nthe bettpr .setting in,\" the weather\noffice said,. But it emphasized that\nthe- change to higher temperature?\n.will be:slowi parftcularly In northern regions.-       '\"\"\"\"\"\u25a0       '\"-'.\nWhUe the Prairies Welcomed the\npromised relief from sub-zero temperatures, the return of milder\nWCather posed a flood threat in\nBritish Columbia's Fraser valley,\nburied under heavy snow. There\nare drifts of eight to 10 feet on\nsome side roads.\nB. C. got prepared for \"operation\nmop up\" as warm breezes and rain\nmoved in from the southwest in the\nwake of a record 14-day snowfall\nwhich dumped more than 96 inches\non Vancouver. ',-\u201e. I\nMore than 100,000 lower mainland students returned to School\nclasses Wednesday after a two-day\nholiday Occasioned by a transportation breakdowhi^Door-to-door milk\nand bread deliveries were resumed\nafter a lapse of, two days. ,\nEASTWARD    \u2022 \"\nSnow was blatiied for derailment\nof a CPR locomotive and baggage\ncar at WaterdpWh, near Hamilton.\nA passenger car, behind stayed-on\nthe tracks, No one was hurt.\nIn Caledon township 30 miles\nwest of Toronto, road - clearing\ncrews gave'up a losing battle. An\nofficial said:\n\"The snow is blowing in faster\nthan we can plow it out.\"\nToronto police put an emergency\nban on parking on all city streets\nto let ploughs and trucks get the\nsnow away. Heavily-laden branches\nfell from trees, causing some\npower cutoffs.\nIn Lacombe, Alta., Benjamin\nBrowner, 66, died of frostbite, 25th\nvictim of bone-chilling temperatures in the western provinces.\nDies\nVANCQWEIt *(CJP> - p. &. .Gal;\nbraith, 55, a former newspaper publisher who -starteji hie Journalistic\n(^efrvas^.a-rctoler^hsryi died-fhefi\nWednesday after a long; illness,. '\n. He retired as publisher of the\nVahebuver Province'in 1051. Earlier, he had been publisher of the\nCalgary Herald 'ahd Calgary Alber-\ntan, and ln 1926 established The\nNorthern Mail at The Pas, Man.\nMr. Galbralth, a soft-spoken man\nknown to. Ills colleagues across\nCanada as \"Pete,\" 'had his first\ntaste of newspaper work in Saskatoon. He.became a reporter on the\nSaskatoon Star-Phoenix, and later\nworked on the Regina Leader-Post\nand the Winnipeg Tribune, specializing ,ln legislative coverage.\nIn 1006 he moved to Calgary as\ngeneral manager of The Albcrtan,\nand ln 1040 joined theCalgary Herald as managing editor. In 1941 he\nwas appointed publisher,\nFive years later he came to the\nVancouver Province as assistant to\nthe publisher, O. Leigh Spencer,\nwhom he had succeeded at the Calgary Herald. He became publisher\nIn 1048. Ill health forced his retirement three years later.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014This.staid old capital, rocked with\ncharges of \"witch-hunting\" and \"interfei;ence\" Wednesday\nin the wake of ari announcement by Mayor Claude Harrison\nthat he intends to burn all Communist books in the city's\npublic library. - f\n\"There's going to be no pussy-footing at all,\" said the\nmayor. \"It's very easy to see which is Communist literature\nand I'd soon find them.*.\n17th century England, books were\nvery, often ordered burned by the\ncommon hangman,\nQUITE A SIGHT\n\"It would be quite a sight to see\nMayor Harrison, attended by the\ncommon hangman, burning books\nin Beacon Hill Park.. The only\ntrouble, people would want to buy\nthein\n\"This is no way to deal with sub\nversive activities. Book burning be\nlongs to \"Jazl Germany, not to British-Victoria.\nMayor Harrison received, support\nfrom Mrs. M. F. Lougbeed, member\nof the library boajid,. who said\n\"Any book which IncitfcsVthe downtrodden working man^to revolt\nshould be removed. These books\nare in the library; I've seen them.\nAid. Brent Murdoch said he was\nalso in accord with the mayor's\nremarks.\n' \"Any books or literature which\nare' of a seditious or subversive\nnature will go out of the library\nas far as I'm concerned. And any\nmember of the library staff who\nbelongs to a Communist organization will go out behind the books,\",\n\"   \"'\"   this week, John Marshall,\n^to operate the: library's\n' robile, was dismissed by\necause of Mb alleged,\non with leftist organ!-\nThe colorful mayor, who usually\nwears a flowing black cape, said\nhe wodld throw the books \"ir my\nfurnace.\". >,     .\nHe admlttdd he didn't know.of\n\"any specific Red books, but I've\nheard some are there. I don't know,\nhaw many there are, but we can\nget rid of them pretty quick,\"\nReaction to the mayor's remarks,\nmost of it heated, was not long in\ncoming. .    '\nRoderick Haig-Brown, Vancouver\nIsland sportsman \"and author, said\nMayor Harrison's statements represented \"interference . . . bordering\non intolerance.\"    ...\n\"If the mayor has this attitude\nthen he's going to* have a let of\ntrouble.\"\nRev. William Hills, Anglican clergyman, said the mayor was starting\na \"Witch-hunt\". ':;'\n\"Pretty soon I'll have to. Bubmit\nmy sermons, and I never write them\ndown.fhey'll have to put down the\nBible, especially, the Magnificat, for\nexample: ' ;\n'\"He hath put .down, the mighty\nfrom their seats and hath exalted\nthe humble andmeek. ' *___.'\n'\"The rich He hath sent away\nempty.'\"   ,\nDean P. R. Beattie of Christ\nChurch  Cathedral here aaid,  \"In\nQuestion of Big\nStalls Big Four\nFind No Support\nFor Oakalla\nDisgrace Charges\nVICTORIA (CP)-^e'attorney-\ngeneral's department can find no\nsupport for Judge Harry' Sullivan's\ncharge of a \"disgraceful condition\nof affairs\" at Oakalla prison.\nOfficials of the department said\nWednesday preliminary investigation did not substantiate evidence\nat a trial of two women'who allegedly threw a canister of narcotics\nover the Oakalla fence. The charge\nagainst the two women was dismissed by Judge Harry Sullivan.\nAt the trial evidence said Mrs..\nBlanche Johnson had seen one of\nthe women throw the can over the\nfenced .'\u25a0 '\nIt was also stated that Mrs. Johnson saw a guard,-, identified as\n\"Baker,\" crawl behind ar hush for\na smoke,\nBut the. attorney-general's department said there was no bilsh in the\narea and the guard had not smoked\niixciivmyesii   \u25a0      ,;-.y-\nMeanwhile the British Columbia\ngovernment Wednesday struck a\nblow ,it toe alleged narcotic infiltrations into Oakalla Prison with\nnew .regulations allowing a thorough Search, of prisoners.\nThe new regulations, which apply\nto all provincial jails, also allow\nprisoner quarantine and taking\nfurthere steps to ensure recovery\nof narcotics-on or in the bodies of\nprisoners,. ',..?..: -.\nJSyery person, shall be searched\non admission'to the prison.\n.If there are reasonable grounds\nfor suspecting a-,prisoner of concealing - Ittioit., goods,. Mi .may.,.be\nheld h> special custody for* 10- days,\nexamined by a medical officer and\nfelv'en \"such treatni'eht as-ls a&rned\nheoessary'to expel or re'eoverdrugs\noriicontraband\" i     '   :':\u25a0-'\"\u25a0\nTHE FIRST PICTURE to be released by the British government, revealing Its atomic progress, shows the-lnterlor of the crude\nuranium oxide plant at Springfields, England:.It Is here'that the\ncrushed ore Is ground to powder and dissolved In acids. Other\natomic fact-fret, ojWrith.-\" their doors following lifting of seourlty\nblackouts, were the plutonlum plant at Windscale, Capenhurat, where\nuranium It purified and the headquarter! at Rlsley, In Lancashire,\nfrom which all operation! are conducted.\u2014Central Preit Canadian,\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Commons\nhas rejected an Opposition attempt\nto cancel $293,000 owed by 299\nFirst World War veterans who settled on farms more than 30 years\nago. About 25,000 veterans took up\nfarrhing in 1919 under the Soldier\nSettlement Act   .\nMembers Wednesday defeated by\n113 to 75 a motion asking the government to consider writing oft the.\ndebt still owed by the 299 veterans,\nSoviet Teachers Must Learn\nTo Play a Musical Instrument\n, By BILL B08S\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nMpSCOW (CP) \u2014 Like it or not,\nschool teachers here must play a\nmusical, instrument.\nIn the\\ooms of Moscow Pedagogical Technical School No. 2 there\nare 13 concert grand pianos, 200\nviolins, 46 cellos ahd. six bass fiddles, Enrolment at the school, which\nis training teachers for elementary\nclasses, is 450 pupils', all but three\nof them girls.\nMikhail P. Bbrtkevich, 68-year-\nold principal, said:\n\"Every student teacher must decide on registering whether he or\nshe wahts to play the piano or a\nstringed ! instrument, If a 'student\ncannot master one of these instruments he may turn to accordion or\nconcertina, but -after,- -four years\nhere he must be able to play some\nInstrument\"      -' :\nMOSTLY GIRLS\nWith such a high proportion of\ngirl students, principal Bprtkevich\nsaid \"medical tests are being made\nto determine whether reed Instruments such as - the flute, clarinet,\noboe and, bassoon are harmful, to\nwomen and it not the plan is to\nadd them to our curriculum.\"\n. The school, whose staff of SO\nteachers includes a head of music\nand three music teachers, has a\nstring orchestra ot 58 pieces composed of the better players.\nThis school is one, of two of its\ntype in Moscow and the students\nare being prepared for the time in\n1960 when compulsory -education\nwill extend from it_.pre.eht Seven\ngrades to 10. By that time, too, 400\nmore schools will be open, bringing Moscow's total to more than\n1100.\nGirls planning to become school-\nma'ams in Russia start training for\nthe job at 14 or 15 and are ready\nfor their first teaching assignment\nat 18 or 19.\nAt the moment, students ,who\nhave completed seventh year-(in a\n10-grade school (Russia's combined\npublic and high school)., may try., a\npedagogical school's entrance examination. .If successful, they undergo four* years of teacher training.        '    '.*_,,.\nBeginning 'nsxt' September, Bort-\nkevich's school will accept only\n10th grade graduates and the pres\nent four-year program will.be seal;\ned down to 2% years..      ,        ' >\nIn the school'for teachers, student? borrow, text books froro a\n40,000-volume , school \u25a0 \u2022 library and\nmay keep them for the year. They\nalso draw on the library for reference material and supplementary\nreading.\nBy the halt-way mark of their\nfirst year students must be members of the teachers' union. Bort\nkevlch said 82 per cent of his,students belong to the Yqung Communist League, from which the\nCommunist party is recruited. In\nthe present curriculum Marxist\nteaching is limited to study of the\nRussian constitution, history of\nRussia and history bf the Communist party. .:', -,\nA novel feature of the pedagogical school is that student teachers\nlearn to make their own teaching\naids: The schqol has shops for work\nin wood, metal and cardboard;.:.,\nIn them, students learn to make\nrulers,: pointers, large blackboard\nCompasses, 'micrometers, protract-\nors, garden tools (every school has\na garden) and papier mache models\not cows, horses and wild animals.\nThe principal said there is no\nshortage Of these articles .in Russia\nbut \"we work on, the principle that\nteachers should be able to. produce\nall their own teaching aids.\" \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\nOn graduation, the top 10 to 20\nstudents go automatically to pedagogical Institutes to quality for senior-grade teaching. The others are\nassigned Immediately to schools\nwhere they draw the 650 rubles\nmonthly prescribed for Moscow's\nprimary-grade teachers:\nIn Highway Construction\nBy F0RBE8 RHUDE\nCanadian'Press Business Editor\nVANCOUVER (CP), \u2014 The Canadian Construction Association\nurged the federal government Wednesday to set up a national highway\ncommission and said there is continuing need for federal aid for\nhighway construction.\nConstruction of the trans-Canada\nhighway, the association said, demonstrates that federal and provincial\ngovernments can work,together.in\naccord. The trans-Canada Highway\nAct, however, would expire In 1956\nahd there were no commitments for\ncontinued federal participation in\nprovincial highway programs after\nthat date.\nUnder housing, the government\nwas urged, in Its new legislation,\nto extend the 90 per cent loan provision beyond the proposed $8000\nlending value limit and was asked\nto \"give serious consideration to\nthe creation 0? 'open-end' mortgages and loans to finance the pur-\nMcGILL FENCE LESS\nCOSTLY THAN\nRADAR STATIONS\nBy DAVE MclNTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)'.\u2014 The. M o G i 11\nfence now is being erected In Canada, to supplement-.other radar defences, it was learned Wednesday,\n. The fence, which ..works on a\nslightly different principle than\nradar, does not supplant the radar\ngridwork but is .regarded here, as\na means to \"thicken up'.' the existing defences of aircraft detection\nand,plotting, ,  >.,.v ..\nHow the fence works and Its location, of course, are secret. But it\ncan be said that the fence is not\nbeing constructed ln the far north\nand that it is cheaper to build and\noperate than conventional radar\n\u00abtatlor>||\nEden Believes Austrian, German A\nQuestions Should Be Dealt With First   \u00a7\nBy DANIEL DE LUCE       ;  :    'r f1\nBERLIN (AP)\u2014Russia stalled the Berlin conference\nWednesday from taking up the German peace problem\nand .fought to .compel the Western powers to recognize Rejd\nChirij. as an equal. , .' '\u25a0'-',-f i\\W.\nSoviet Foreign Minister Molotov\/refused to-.aKsoegt\nan Allied fNo\" to a Big Five parley in May or June with,\nthe Chinese Communists on \u2014\"\nTWO FRENCH\nUNION POSTS\nFALL TO REBELS\nSIGON,'Tnde-Chlha (AP)\u2014Vietr\nrhfnh rebels, seizing the initiative\nagain- in. central Indo-China, have\nlaunched a tough offensive on a\ni87-mile front' and captured two\nFrench .Union posts within 24\nhours.\n' The Communist-led troops apparently are trying to slice Indo-China\nin ~ two again \u2022 acr,oss the -narrow\nwaist extending from Viet Nam'\u00ab\nseacoa'st through Laos to the Thailand border. They already have\nseized 65 miles of strategic colonial highway No. 9 connecting\nQuang Trl, on the coast, with the\nFrench-held post of Seno in western Laos.     <\nThe French high command announced Tuesday night that a Vietminh battalion,, perhaps 600 men,\nhad captured Muong Fha Lane, oh\nthe colonial highway 40 miles east\nof Seno. '\nworld disarmament,\nHe countered with an 20-minute\nspeech repeating his Big Five proposal in detail and conjuring up a\nprospect of settlements in Asia from\nsuch a talk.\nForeign Secretary Eden, chairman.,, for the day, said Peiping\nshould firs): prove its sincerity for\nworld peace.by enabling the Korean political conference to- get\nstarted. tifc,'1 -'i i\nIf the German and Austrian ques*\ntlons were solved here, Eden said;\nthe Big Four would be better situ-;\nated to look at other questions,:...\nState Secretary! Dulles said the\nconference here'should not \"fritter\naway time in discussing .whether\nand how to set up a new conference\" but should get started on'\ndiscussing the unification of Germany and granting Austria independence.\nHe emphasized- these two , problems are the whole purpose of the\nBig Tour meeting here. If they ,are\nsolved \"then, and then only, can we\nstand before the world, as capable\nof assuming other and heavier\ntasks.\" .,\".'-\".'.'\nFrance's Georges Bidault said the\nBig Five parley wpUld serve no\ngood as long as Peiping was \"indirectly, supporting\" 'the Vietminh\nrebpl? In, Indp-.ClJina, \u25a0.\". \"\nBidaulJ edfledt however,- tteOf\nthe fpcts.and situation, of the -Red\nChinese, rufirs' were fo- change, :*\nBig.Five nie.tin_f;nught'ultimately,\nbe conslderedv -\u25a0-.  -     .... \u25a0*.',\",>:,\nWestern.argument for taking up\nthe -German setUerttertt. wijhout fur-\nfher .del^y. h'ed no. effect\/on Molo-\ntovV   -,',.\u2022' .    '.''., '\u25a0',.\"-'.'\n. Molotov. hinted that :the French\nmight get, a settlement Of! the war\nin Indd-China by playing' ball with\nRed China..-'. \u00ab.'\"'''\nMolotov  asserted  the  questions\naside from Asian issues that a future  Big' Five'  conference'- would\nhave to consider-were:\nt.; Disarmament: by  the jimjjor\nchase and rehabilitation of existing\nhouses.\" 'V\nThe government was also asked\nto give \"serious consideration\" to\nthe principle that only the \"underprivileged and aged should' be\nhoused in subsidized low-rental\nprojects.\"    '\nProvincial and municipal governments were asked to take action\nwhere necessary in co-operating\nwith the federal government in\n(and assembly schemes under the\nprovisions' of the National Housing\nAct      ,\nAnother resolution urged: \"An\namendment of existing labor relations legislation to require the use\nof secret ballots under the supervision of electoral officers or other\npublic officials when trade unions\nvote on strike action.\"\nSpectacular Blaze\nDestroys Theatre\n' MEXICO CITY (AP) \u2014 One of\nMexico City's most spectacular fires\nin years Wednesday night destroyed\nthe Granat theatre. Police said\nquick action by theatre employees\naverted a panic and there were no\nfatalities. Only a few of the audience of 1900 persoris were injured\nin escaping from the burning .building, authorities said.-\nAn explosion in the projection\nroom touched off the fire.\n\u2022A crowd* ot over 25,000* quickly\ngathered, hampering work'of police\nand rescue squads. -.  \u2022  '\nThe film being shown at the time\nwas \"They Also Sing of Sadness.\"\nThirty-five minutes after the\nblast flames could be seen a mile\naway, and the red glow of the tire\nwas visible from the outskirts several miles distant. \u201e :     ;\nKootenay  Lake water level\nTuesday 4.25 feet above zero.\n33 BUSINESSMEN\nFROM U.K. SEEK\nSOVIET TRADE\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - Thirty-\nthree British business men arrived\nhere Wednesday night in special\nSoviet air lines planes for two\nweeks of negotiations which they\nhope will result in increased trade\nbetween Britain and Russia,\nThey represent 26 private industries and comprise the biggest British trade delegation ever to visit\nRussia.\nThe Britons are not here on an\nofficial mission, but have the British government's blessing.\nThey hope to sell Ships, cars, electrical equipment, ' machine tools,\ndlesel engines, cables, cranes, woodworking machinery and food'manufacturing equipment. And they are\ninterested In buying food, chemicals\nand cotton from Russia. \"\npowers and reduction of military'\nforces. \".-,'\u25a0 : v&\n. 2. International renunciation. p-fh\natomic and hydrogen weapons as\"\nmeans of warfare, ' v'ffip\n3. Freer and greater.. economJe>'\nrelations between the Commurn.t\nbloc of 800,000,000 people and thy-'\nnon-Communist world. t*f\nU.K. Renews\nMADRID . (Reuters)   -ri Brtt\u00bbajf.\nhas protested to. Spain for the-sHf :\nond time in five days against dam?!,\nage  done  to  British , property, In\ns t u d ent   demonstration ' against.\nQueen Elizabeth's scheduled visit to,\nGibraltar next'May.''  v    ' \"\"SJMM\n. The protest, handed .to' the Spaifcr ,\nish forelgta ministry Wedne'sdayt-ji'\nthe British embassy, cited damage\nto the Bank of London and South\nAmerica here, and to the British,\nconsulate-general hv Barcelona ari-\nvlce -consulates   at   Huelva    and\nMalaga. Hi]\nSpain has not yet replied to tjtjs\nfirst. British protest, delivered last.\nFTiday. \u25a0       ,'','.    .'\u25a0: fijli\nStudents -Wednesday   continued\ndemonstrations in T^adf (oV and Co-\nruhna. \"\"\"'.. V;.^i\u00a3_.'..',J\u00a3 \"'\"'. \"..'\u25a0'\u00ab\u25a0 .'\u25a0\n| Eoiipe; pnno;~p\u00a3<j.f-&et ,18 persoij^\n.were: hurt.in:M6nnay?s, demqns'tS!?'.\nticms. near the, British er-hbassy,'\",. ;:\n: Government: offleia)s;r.faid Wednesday that police: will itake. sterner\nmeasures if. the-students persist in\ntheir demonstrations,   ' \"V;\n'\u25a0.\"\u25a0\"'\u25a0\u2022..''\"\u25a0 \u25a0\"'\": \u2022' \u2022  :\nDOLLAR 8TILL AT PREMIUM i\nNEW YORK' (CP) ;-,The Canadian dollar was at' a' premium of\n3 ,1\/32 per cent in'terms of U. S.\nfunds. Found ' sterling ; unchanged\nat'$2.81 3\/18..: J  \u2022'.\".\u2022',>:\n' A DOG'S TWO-HOUR VIGIL by the aide of a flve.foet dee*\nwater-filled, hole probably saved the life of his six-year-old master.\nWhile on the way to school, young Billy Cummings stopped to play\naround the hole Into which he fell. Unable to pull himself tout,\nstuck aa he was, he stood there Ih mud and water up to his shoulders\nfor two hours until hla father came to his rescue. Rowdy's refusal\nto come from the farm ianeWay to the house when called aroused\nMr. Cummlng'a suspicions. On investigation he found his son stuck\nIn the post-hole\u2014-Central Press Canadian.  '   '\u2022*-&\nNEW FLAG\nUNDER STUDY\nMObSE CREEK, Ont. (CP) -\nTransport Minister Chevrier said\nWednesday night that many Canadians, including himself, think Canada should have a distinctive national 'flag. - A-\nThe transport department in Ottawa issued a summary Wednesday\nnight of a speech Mr. Chevrier Was\nscheduled to make at a meeting of\nthe board of. trade ln this eastern\nOntario town 55 miles southeast of\nOttawa.   . \"\\\nAn unofficial committee of Commons-members, composed of Liberal members front every province,\nhas been studying a new flag design containing the coat of arms on'\na red-and-whlte background. The\ncoat of arms includes the crown,\nfleur de lis .and Union Jack: The\ncommittee Also ,1s considering\nwhether to add a maple leaf to the\nflag deslgh.\nAnd in This Corner..\u2666   K|\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014Mayor Orville Hubbard of suburban- Dearborn\nhaa come up with a new order for olty department heads. It directs\nthem to observe a 30-minute \"think period\" upon reporting at 9 a.m.\nAlready *nay are required to know by heart \"a message to Garcia\"\nand be familiar with the boyhood and exploits of Gen. Robert E. L*e^\nThey also-must attend school one night a week, but can take couraea\nof their choosing. \u2122 '\nUnder his new order Hubbard said city administrators \"are to\nshut .themselves In their offices, take no phone calls nor see any!.\nbody.\" Mi\nl -\"They are supposed to sit and think. They can Jot down any net\n-Ideas. If they think enough, they may have Ideas, That Is the way\n'Newton discovered the law of gravity.\"\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014A group -f scientists say they will soon be\nable to tell the odds on whether it will rain or snow, be hot or\ncold tomorrow\u2014but it takes an electronic brain to compute the odds.\nThe new method of weather forecasting was described Tuesday\nln a paper at the national meeting pt the American Meteorological\nSociety. : \u25a0  i :;    .\nSo far, the scientists said, they are only processing temperature\nforecasts\u2014\"five to four it will hit so,\" But they soOn hope to- be\nable to say \"Two to one lt will rain tomorrow\" or \"odds are even\nit will snow.\" k  .\n-. JG? the temperature forecasts, figures oh barometric pressure, ?(h\n91 different spots, in North America are. used in equations. Only, an\nelectronic brain can do the mathematics in a reasonable time..-.:.\nKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)\u2014A citizen bristled Tuesday when We\nsaw t red flag displayed at a local school\u2014and no American tlSL\nHe started calling school officials, .---\u25a0\n, ' Miss Luclle Sherman, principal, explained the United States flag\nwaa not up because ,of the bad weather, The small red flan, she\nadded, warned children to enter, the building Immediately and hot\nplay outside until class time, because of the weather. \"si\n\"We've used that storm signal 16 years,\" she said, \"and thhrls\nthe-first time we've been accused of un-Amerlcanlsm.\" r-.\n\t\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 1954.\nA PICTURE YOU WILL NEVER\nFORGET... FOR IT IS ONLY\nONE HEARTBEAT AWAY\nFROM YOU!\n^B^dt^h\nCLAUDE DAUPHIN\nWlTrl CHRISTIAN FOURCAOB AS THS LITTLE BOV\nA PARAMOUNT PICTURE\nComplete Show* 7:00\nGynrt, Library, PoolPlanned.'. ,y    ,    , .    M\nTrail Aims To Have New'\nSheets for BC. Spiel\nr\nTHEATRE\nKA8LO, B.C.\nSHOWINQ TONIGHT,\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nfine Show Tonight, Friday, 7:30 p.m.\n\u2022at, Two Shows, 6:00 and 8:80 p.m.\nr      \"TAKE ME\nTO TOWN\"\n\u25a0; (TECHNICOLOR)     '\n*\u25a0 ANN SHERIDAN\nJTIRLINQ HAYDEN \u2022 P..REED\n;&mslsWs*ssmmmmmm\nRossland Circle\nMarks 25fh\nAnniversary\n-i  _i '    >\n%SOBSS_AJn. - Friendly Circle\nof St Andrew's- United Church celebrated Its 25th anniversary Tuesday afternoon in the church annex\nIn the form of a Bobby Burns' party,\nThe. Circle was organized 25 years\nago when the late Rev. and Mrs.\nC. H. Daly were In charge of St.\nAndrew's.\n3 Rev. and Mrs. Daly felt an organ-\nintion which mothers could attend\nand bring their children to would\nfill a gap at this time.\nEntertainment tor the afternoon\nincluded a program of two vocal\nselections \"My Laddie\" and \"Coming Throughthe Rye\" by Mrs.-Harry Smith, a recitation of Scottish\n.'\u2022'poetry by Mrs. R. Donaldson and\n\u25a0 a duet \"Tlow Gently Sweet Afton\"\n;by Mrs. Haddow and Mrs. Torry.\n'Accompanist was Mrs. Harry Smith.\n. Women all Joined in' a sing song\n,,of Bobby Burns favorites to dose\nfine program. \u00ab\n|   Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Donaldson, Mrs.\n.Douglas and Mrs. Haddle were In\n' charge of refreshments.\nI A beautiful anniversary cake\nmade and decorated by Mrs. Gordon\n\u2666Seafoot waa cut by charter member\nMrs. Robert Donaldson. Cake was\n\u00a3 decorated with colored musical\nnotes and the inscription \"Happy\nAnniversary, Friendly Circle.\"\nj   Guests   were    Rev.    and   Mrs.\n: Laughton, Mrs. Tarrar, Mrs. Don\nMartin and Mrs. Brown of Cranbrook.\nAh eweroent communication\nof Nelson Lodge No. 23, A,F.\n- A.M. will be held Friday,\nJanuary 29, at the Masonic\nTemple at 1:18 p.m. for the\npurpose of attending the\nfuneral ef our late Wor. Bre.\nCharles Henry Hookings, a\nmember of Loyalty Lodge No.\n388, Bermuda.\nFuneral services at Church ef\nthe Redeemer at 2 p.m.\nVisiting   Brethren   are   cordially Invited to attend.\nBy Order of the Worshipful\nMaster.\ni. A, Braeken,\nSecretary.\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nTRAIL \u2014 Enthusiastic and prom-\nI ising reports were heard Wednes-\n' day evening at the annual meeting\nof the Trail District Recreational\nProjects Society held In City Council chambers. The completion of the\nthird unit of the Trail Memorial\nbuilding, alongside the curling rink\nand the Cominco Arena, was the\nerection of the \"kids' rink,\"\nTwo extra curling rink, which\nwere started towards the end of\n1083 are expected to-be 'completed\nbefore the provincial bonspiel to\nbe held here in February.\nChairman of the voluntary labor\ncommittee reported a successful\nyear. M. Marshall, second vice-\npresident and co-chairman of cam-\"j\npalgn and canvass committee, reported 600 or 700 new members but\nstated that with people moving\naway and recent layoffs a membership of 2800 had.been reduced to\n2048 at December 31.\nDr. C. H. Wright, the 8oclety\npresident, In dealing with future\n1 plans said the public will be\n.pleasantly surprised at the extent\nof facilities In conjunction with\nthe Memorial Centre which Is to\nInclude gymnasium with 900 seating capacity, meeting rooms,\napace for library, etc.\nARTHUR McMIKELL, ef Deport, Texas, awaits rescue crews\nwho finally managed to free him after he wat trapped between a\nload ef steel rails and the end of a freight ear In which he waa\nriding, The 48-year-old transient was found by a railroad worker\nwho heard his groans. McMlkell aaid the load shifted at the train\nwas going down a grade between Vleksburg and Baton Rouge, La.,\nwhere he wat rescued, and he spent 17 hours trapped like thla,\nMcMlkell wat not serloutly Injured.\u2014AP Wlrephoto,\nPROCTER SEES\nAUSTRALIAN FILM\nProcter' residents saw. an Australian film at a show-presented\nby Nelson District Film Council\nTuesday night. The show, part of\na promotional program to create interest In the council, was held In\nthe Community Hall by National\nFilm Board, representative William\nOrr and-W. H. Davidson. About 130\nattended, Australian film, \"Coral\nSea Wonderland,\" was an exchange\nfilm from the Australian Film\nCounefl. '\nA similar show was given at\nCrescent Valley last week.\nA film \"Angotee,\" meaning little\nman, highlighted the program. It\npictured the life of an Eskimo boy\nfrom birth.\nAnother -Km shown was \"Peter\nand the Potter.\"\nThe film council le seeking to\ncreate interest ln outlying areas and\nincrease membership so films can\nbe shown in areas without theatres.\nFebruary 4~and 8 the Film Council is.giving a review of films to\ninvited guests,\nJAPAN TO EXPAND\nDEFENCE FORCES\nTOKYO (Reuters) \u2014 Japan will\nexpand her defence forces this year\nin view of American wishes to\nwithdraw troops from the country,\nPrune Minister Shlgeru Yoshida\ntold the opening session of.Parliament Wednesday.\nIncreased trade With Communist\nChina was predicted in another\nopening address by Foreign Minister Katsuo Okaiaki. He said\nJapan expects to expand trade with\nthe Communist bloc, especially Red\nChina, as long as it does not run\ncounter to the policy of co-operating with the free world.\nP08TAL CENTENARY\nNEW DELHI (CP)\u2014The Indian\npostal department will celebrate its\nphilatelic centenary here next October. Postal administrations and\nphilatelists, and stamp dealers all\nover the world, are being invited\nto join in the international philatelic and postal exhibition being\norganized on the occasion.\nAT GODFREYS'\nLAST WEEK\n' For Two   Important  Itemal\n1. EXTRA PANTS FREE\nWith  all  made-to-measure\nsuits.   Tailoring   by   Cam-\n:   bridge and Fit-Reform.\n2.20% DISCOUNT\n. '\\On All Stock Clothing\nSUITS, TOPCOATS, JACKETS\nGODFREYS'\n_      PHONE \u2014 270 \u2014 BOX\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\nStung by Wasp\nIn This Weather!\nSPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -\nWith a raging snowstorm howling outside, Mrs. R. A. Miller\ngot stung by a yellow-jacket,\nwhich had apparently survived\nin a window frame, wobbled\nout and nipped her.\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLeaving For Yukon\nIan Comer, popular member of\nthe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nin Nelson, has. been transferred to\nthe bank's branch at Whitehorse,\nYukon Territory. Mr. Corner will\nbe leaving Nelson shortly to take\nup his new post.\nANCIENT SIRENS\nEgyptian women in Cleopatra's\ntime .painted their lower eyelids\ngreen, and the upper lids and eyebrows black.\nAbout It per cen| of the original\nprogram of Improvements set- out\nby the Society has been completed\nsince construction started In 1040.\nAlong with the gymnasium, meeting\nrooms and public library over the\ncurling rink there remains to be\ncompleted a grandstand' and swimming pool at Butler Park at an\nestimated cost ot $330,000. This will\ninclude completion of a, community\nhall in the village ot Warfleld.\nAlteration of constitution made\nprovision for representation, On the!\nboard from the village of Warfleld.\nThe directors felt that with the\nsame support shown ln the past six\nyears the remainder of the program\ncan be completed by the end of\n1055.\nDuring 1053 the outdoor theatre\nlighting was completed and . the\nbeach extended. A breakwater was\nalso built at Gyro Park to make\n.wlmming safer. At t Jubilee Park\nplayground lighting equipment was\npurchased. A baseball backstop was\nconstructed and suitable plaques in.\nstalled. Shavers Bench ^nd Sun-\nningdale carried out improvements\nto their facilities. Progress was\nmade on the Warfleld Community\nHall.\nIntermediates Become Legionaires;\nSponsor, Executive, Coach Named\nAlthough Nelson's Intermediate\nHockey Club has been practicing\nfor some time, it wasn't until Wednesday evening that it came up\nwith a name and a sponsor.\nThe team, which will see many\nex-Leafs in the lineup, will go\nunder the name of the Legionaires\nwith the Canadian Legion Branch\nNo. 51 being the sponsor.\n\u25a0 At a meeting Wednesday evening\nJimmy (Shorty) Malacko was narn-\ned coach for the club which has\nsome 25 prospective players trying\nout.\nThe organization set up an executive body with Jesse Seaby, former\nstar netminder for the Leafs, being elected as president. Harold\nMayo, who is well known to both\nbowling and lacrosse fans, will act\nas secretary-treasurer with Jack\nBrinley and Bill Leslie acting With\nMayo and Seaby on the executive.\nMost of the players trying out\nfor the team are well known to\nNelson hockey fans as players with\nthe Leafs last year. Some are Herb\nLovett, Neil McLenaghan, Boomer\nRodzinyak, Les Hufty, Red Wassick,\nFrank. Doyle and Syl Benedetti.\nThe boys will hold another practice Friday evening and they'll\nhave a big welcome for anyone\nwanting to turn out.\nLAST RITES HELD\nFOR MRS. E. WHITE\nFuneral services for Mrs. Ethel\nElizabeth White were held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home Wednesday afternoon. Rev, Canon W.\nJ. Silverwood officiated. Mrs. White'\nwaS a Nelson resident for the past\nthree years.\nTwo hymns, \"Nearer My God To\nThee\" and \"Abide With Me\" were\nsung. Mrs. W. A. Manson was\notganist.\nPallbearers were Colin Baker,\nCliff- Clark, M. T. Harris, Thomas\nManson, Jack McMillan and Dave\nRichardson.\nInterment was in Nelson Memorial Park.\nProjects Society\nNames} Directors\n' TRAIL. \u2014 Trail and District Recreational Projects Society elected\nthree directors to continue for a\nthree-year term at their annual\nmeeting Wednesday night.\nDr. C. H. Wright and G. R. Mc-\nMeekln will continue office for another term, W. F. Watson and W.\nStohberg tied for the third vacancy\nA second ballot saw Mr. Watson\nsuccessful candidate.\nThree civic officials addressed\nthe meeting briefly. Mayor E. G.\nFletcher of Trail City Council ex\npressed Interest in the works of the\nProjects Society.\nHarry Simpkinson, chairman of\nWarfleld Village Commissioners\nwas surprised to hear of the extent\nof the Society's activities while Allan Broom, commission on. the\nTrail-TadanaC Board of Parka, suggested, as a member of the Recreation Society, not as a Commissioner,\nthat consideration be given to utilizing a section of Jubilee Park in\ndowntown Trail, to erect a swimming pool rather than Butler Park.\nHe said thla was In the center of\nTrail and close to the Junior High\nSchool through which all children\nwould eventually pass. Swimming\nis fart of the school curriculum and\nthe pool in this location would afford an opportunity for each child\nto have proper instruction, he pointed out\nAt a meeting of the Board of Directors earlier in the evening Dr.\nC. H. Wright was returned as president: G. R. McMeekin, first vice-\npresident; M. Marshall as second\nvice-president and W. D. Crowder,\nsecretary-treasurer.\nThe Weather\nNelson     10    29 1\nSt. John's    26 35 .16\nToronto       15 24 .74\nNorth Bay      0 0 .  \u2014\nPort Arthur  -1,7 7 \u2014\nKenora  -10 10 .04\nMedicine Hat \u201e. -33 -15 \u2014\nLethbridge -35 -14 Tr\nCalgary       -32 -15 \u2014\nEdmonton     -27 -13 .01\nKimberley   ..,..'.     3 10 .10\nCrescent Valley    10 25 .00\nGrand Forks     8 24 \u2014\nKamloops       -8 10 \u2014\nPentlcton      7 26 .03\nVancouver    30 36 .16\nVictoria      36 42 \u2014\nSeattle    .'.....   30 37 .12\nPortland    34, 38 1.65\nSan Francisco       43 57 \u2014\nA BOXER RALLIED te the aid of Golden\nGlove boxer Jimmy Hager, 17, (left), who was\ntaking the mandatory count of .eight. The dog\njumped from the Lexington, Kentucky, audience\nand tried to scramble under the ropes when Hager\nwat knocked down In the second round. Referee\nJames Varney stopped the dog and an unidentified\n' man t J \"\"    '     *       '\"     ' \"\nfight\n' man scooped'the dog from the ring and left. The\n\"    \" \u2022\u25a0 continued   with  Hager winning   over  his\nopponent, Joey Miller (not shown). In the next\nround.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nOddfellows,\nRebekahs\nInstall Officers\nQueen City Rebekah Lodge No.\n16 and Kootenay Lodge No, 16 IOOF\nheld their annual joint installation\nof officers in- the IOOF Hall on\nKootenay Street.\nDistrict Deputy President. Emma\nW. Tlckher and. Deputy Grend\nMaster Frank Llpplngwell were ln\n-charge of .installation ceremonies.\nInstalling officers were tor Queen\nCity Lodge \"NO.\" 16; Grand Marshal\nAnnie Peters, Past Noble Grand;\nGrand Warden, Emma Wood PNG;\nGrand Secretary, Lily Langridge\nPNG; Grand Treasurer, Ellen Mc-\nAvinn PNGj GrahdChaplain, Mary\nBradshaw PNG; Grand Inside Guardian, Fanny Perasso^ PNG; Grand\nOutside Guardian, Lucille Barn-\nbrick PNG.\t\nInstalling officers for, Kootenay\nLodge No. 16 IOOF were Grand\nMarshal D. -H. Proudfoot, Past\nBrand Master, Grand Warden, Mr.\nBoyce; Grand Secretary, R. C. Cat-\nton; Grand TrearsUrer, R. Boats.\nQueen City; Officers installed\nwere Noble Grand, Dorothy Im-\nming; Vice-Grand Emmie Kirkham;\nRecording - Secretary Rhoda M.\nLewis; FinancHM-Secretary, Dora\nPerasso; Treausrer Christina-Hong;\nRight Support of Noble Grand, Gertrude Whitehead, PNG; Left Support of Nobie Grand, Florence Andrews, PNG; Right Support of Vice-\nGrand Emma Tickner, PNG; Left\nSupport of Vice-Grand, Hilda p-\nzelle, PNG; Warden, Jean Taylor;\nConductor, Edith Wood; Chaplain,\nBeryl Andrews. Inside Guardian,\nEthel Benthdm; Outside Guardian,\nIrene Day and Color Bearer, Madge\nPrice.\nFor Kootenay Lodge No. 16 IOOF\nNG. J. McClelland; Vice-Grand\nLee Hall, Recording - Secretary,\nA. O. Allen; Treasurer, W. Trlggs;\nChaplain, D. S. Scott; Warden,\nDavid Paul; Conductor, D. H,\nProudfoot; Inside Guardian', G.\nStrong; Oiftside Guardian, I. E.\nLewis; Right Support of the Noble\nGrand, W. Fisher; Left Support of\nNoble Grand, A. Tulloch; Right\nSupport of Vice-Grand, H. Harrison; Left Supoort of Vice-Grand, N\nCollett; RSS R. C. Catton; LSS, R.\nBoates. \u2022\nAfter Installation lunch was\nserved,- \u2022.      V  .\n. \" \\\u2014:\nOSHL Standings\n-   By The Canadian Prest\nOKANAGAN LEAGUE  ',.'\nIncluding games of Jan. 26\nGP W L T Pts\nPentlcton     47   31   14\nVernon      46   22   21\nKelowna    50   21   28\nKamloops     48   10   25\nRAISING MONEY ORDER\nBRINGS JAIL TERM\nAn Edmonton man, Jarpes John\nBurke, who allegedly raised the\nvalue of a money order to purchase\na woman's ring was given six\nmonths hard labor ln city court\nhere Tuesday. He was charged with\nraising the value of a railway express money, order from eight to $80\nin making the purchase of a\nwomen's (20 ring.\nHe appeared in city court Monday, pleaded guilty and was remanded by Magistrate William\nBrown to Tuesday for sentence.\nRobert F. Gordon appeared ln city\ncourt Tuesday before Magistrate\nBrown and pleaded guilty to a\ncharge of receiving money known\nto be obtained under misrepresentation. He allegedly accepted $80 of\nthe money. He was remanded to\nWednesday for sentence and was\ngiven three months hard labor.\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RE8ULTS\nFINED FOR HAVING LIQUOR\nJ. W. Klemola of Nelson was\nfined $50 or 30 days ln jail on a\ncharge bf having liquor in a restaurant.- He appeared before Magistrate William Brown in city court\nand pleaded guilty.\nC. J. Elsen was fined $25 by Magistrate Brown on a charge of driving without a'driver's licence. He\npleaded guilty.\nGREAT MOUNTAIN8\nThe Andes mountain chain runs'\nnearly 4000 miles up the western\nside of South America from Cape\nHorn.\nCOA\nL\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel A Transfer\nNelson.  B.C.\nPUBLIC OPENING\nOF\nC. P. R. Diesel Shop\n2 P.M. ,o 5 P.M.-\nJanuary 29th, 1954\nAT NELSON, B.C.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY CO. Invites ALL CITIZENS\nTo visit the NEW DIESEL SHOP.\nFROM  2  P.M.  TO  5  P.M,  FRIDAY,  JANUARY  29th,  1964.\nOFFICIO. CEREMONY by Mayor Joseph Kary\n\u25a0\u00bb-. At 2:30 p.m.\nENTRANCE from East End of Station Platform\nII*\nVfrlT US ON TH|S DAY AND SEE\nThe Most Stodern Dietel Railway Shop In Canadd.\nEVERYONE WELCOME\n2\nRACING EARL .\nThe first Derby stakes race was\ninstituted by the Earl of Derby at\nEpsom, England, in 1780.\n- A NEW POWER -TAKE-OFF BALER whole low cott will bring\nthe advantages of mechanical haymaking to the average farmer,\nwas unveiled at the Pennsylvania State Farm shou,. Th\u00ab i_,_--.i\u00bb\u00bb~\nwas unveiled at the Pennsylvania Statu Farm Show. The low-priced\nbaler la designed especially for farmers growing small acreagea\nof hay who want a high-capacity machine. \"Capable of making up\nto alx bales a minute, or seven tons an hour, this new baler uses\npower take.off from the tractor for operation to help cut down\nthe cost of the machine. With Its new over-running clutch, farmers\ncan shift gears, up or down, to meet changing windrow condition's,\nand bigger Windrows can be handled without choking or stalling\nof the tractor.\u2014Central Prest Canadian.\n-The finwt sod largest Cattle, we\nhave ever issued, now 164 pages, all to help\nyou enjoy the loveliest garden ever. Many fine new\nthings like Bush Form Sweet Peas, a Miracle Flower that\nchanges color every day, Salvias so early they flower in the seed\nflat, Miniature Glads, Giant Hybrid Begdhias and Gloxinias,\n_._.>-..,. .,_--,..  _\u25a0     ... >, uM, HybriJ\nseed, Nursery\n...    . _, j, Supplies, etc\nSend today.\nDOMiNIOH SEED HGUSE \"SBST\nIndoor Snaps of Your Family\nare Easy....\nFun to have.\n\\fVe have the\nKodak Verichrome Film\nand flash lamps\nyou'll need.\nStop in and let us\nshow you how simple\nindoor picture-taking\nreally is.\nYOUR HEADQUARTERS\nFOR ALL YOUR PHOTOGRAPHIC NEEDS\n. ' .   , i-\nRAMSAY'S Camera Store\n407 BAKER ST.   \u00bb\n_____\nPHONE 106\nSIMPSONS-SEARS\nFull\nFashioned\nFirst Quality\n(GUARANTEED)\nCHOICE OF\n3 WEIGHTS\nAT\nONE LOW PRICE\n\u2022 51 GAUGE   15 DENIER\n\u2022 54 GAUGE   15 DENIER'\n\u2022 60 GAUGE   IS DENIER\nYou'll want several pairs at this\ntow pricel Three weights . . \u2022\none price, and all first quality.\nSALE\nPRICE,\nPolr \t\n95c\n556 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1490\nAn extra special for those who\ndesire a heavier weight. See the\nlow price. Buy now and save.\n45 GAUGE  30 DENIER\nSALE\nPRICE,\nPolr _...\nSIMPSONStSEARS GUARANTEE ,\nSATISFACTION OR MONEY REFUNDED\n___a__si_sii\n SHOES\nfor\nall the family\n' .   ! Expert.Fitting .:\n|     Satisfaction Guaranteed\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n563 Baker Si\nPhone 89B\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nJ\nThe New\nLAND\nz\nROVER\n4 WHEEL DRIVE\nUp\nPick\nTruck\nAT LAST ...\n' AN ALL-PURPOSE\nPICK-UP TRUCK\nTHAT IS EASY TO SERVICE\nThe New Lahd-Rover \u2014 A\nrugged, dependable, 4-wheel\ndrive vehicle with B forward\nspeeds and 2 reverse.\nYou'll find THE LAND-\nROVER PICK-UP will cost\nyou lesB to owr, an,d operate\nthan other vehicles.\n\u2022     \u2022\nCALL or PHONE\n18 DAYS\nPhcns 7.2-Y  Evenings\nCompany Ltd,\nTt It's Machiherj You Need.\nConsult,US first\"\n214 Hall St.  ^Nelson, I. C.\nW. A. Burton Library Association Chairman...\nCranbrook Library Growth Brings\nPermanent Building Requirement\nCRANBROOI? - Drive to\nward'construction of a library\nbuilding here is under con.\n..deration by the Cranbrook\nP u b 1 i e Library Association,\nnow starting its 25th year of\noperation,. It. has always occupied u p s'W i r s quarters,\neither-rented or contributed,\nand with its stock now at 3909\nvolumes, perfoarient housing\nat ground floor level is considered desirable,.\nAnnual meeting showed that circulation for 195. was 11,404 volumes, more than half adult fiction,\nand 3718 circulation of Juvenile\nbooks. Adult memberships num\nbered 242, and there Were 609 Juvenile memberships for whom there\nIs no fee and lending service ls\nthrough school .channels. Addition\nof 235 new current books was made\nduring the year, adult fiction and\nhon-ficllon and children's books,\nLibrarian's report was given to\nthe\" meeting \"by regular librarian,\nMrs. A. B. McKenzle.\nTreasurer W.L.r Irvine reported\ntotal receipts for the year of S1000.\nfrom comblned.grarfts of city and\nthe Public Llb'raryCommisslon, and\nmembership fees -and fines of\n$187.54. Year started with a, balance of $808.'-..Operating expenditures were $678, -and nearly $300\nwas spent on new,bo6ks. Balance to\nstart this year is $7u8.\nOfficers are: W. \u25a0 A. Burton,\nchairman; Mrs, W. O, Green, secretary, and Mr...Irvine, treaturer,\nand directors. Mist E. B. Paterson\nand F. P. Levlrt, all returned to\noffice. Added to the directorate\nwere Dr. W. 6. Oreen and W. H.\nWilson.,-\nRed Reporters at\nBig Four Meet\nBERLIN' (AP) -\u25a0 Red China got\na jdurriallStlc .foot In the door\nat the; fig Pour, foreign ministers conference .'\u25a0\nthe -tyestern -powers have cold\nshouldered the Idea of letting the\nCommunist Chitiesejoln their parley with Rusgia. put they aren't\nso particular'.] about Communist\nChihese r-porter..''< \u25a0\nHo Chinese actually were visible\nTuesday but Soviet officials put a\nsign on an office'..- the conference\npress centre in the American sector: \"Press of the People's Republic of China.\"\nThC Russians assigned 30 rooms\nIn the Western press building to\nCommunist satellite press.\nTh6 Western powers have been\npromised an eilual number of\nrooms in the Communist press\nCentre -when the Big Eour parley\nshifts to Bast Berlin next week.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!\nIN MEETINGS\nMARYSVILLE - Bad weather\nkept most members away;-\nsuiting In cancellation of the annual meeting of the Marysville\nSocial and Athletic Club, but\nthose who turned out didn't let\nthe evening paoa unsuccessfully.\nThey held their own square\ndance. ' '- '. K-'i^\nMr, Wilcox, who had spent the\nevening In the village directing\nsquare dance classes, called the\ntett, while Mr. and Mrs. Vic, Win\nfield of Kimberley supplied, the\nmusic for some lively, tquare\ndancing, This proved to enjoyable\nthat the members and directors\nof tho Social and Athletic Society\npresent decided to hold'a social\nevening when all members may\nparticipate,\ntlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllll.llllllllll\n,\nSATIN-LATEX\n16 Beautiful\n(Mrs\nDRIES IN 20 MINUTES\nLumber Company\nPHONE\n1180\n602 BokorSr.    Nelson, B.C\ne-Builder\"        PHONE\n.....   .   r 1181\nBERMUDA-BORN Lola.'Marie\nBrowne, 26, made Island history\n\u25a0by becoming the \u2022 flrtt woman\nlawyer to be admitted to the Bermuda bar, She It shown leaving\nsupremo court at Hamilton, wearing traditional robe and wig, the\nstandard court wear in the British Island- colony.\n\u2014Central Prest Canadian.\nPasserby Rescues     ,\nWomen From Fumes\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014 Two elderly wonhen were rescued from thoir\ngas-filled home Tuesday night'by\na passerby who battered down the\nfront door and pulled them to safety.   '\nGeorge. W. Balderson said he- was\nwalking home after working overtime for the cfty when he smelled\ngas outside the house:\nMrs. Catherine Travis, 86, and\nher daughter, Mrs. Catherine Andrews, 55, were revived by an in-\nhalator crew and taken to hospital\nfor treatment. '     ....'\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n!'Vou mean I got two fart fo poyl\"\nTake pressure oil\nyour budget with a\nNIAGARA\nLOAN\nFigure how much money:\nyou need\u2014$1001 $5001 $1000!\nMore? Your Niagara friendly\nloan Is made quickly, simply .\nand you pick the payment\nplan. Loans to $1500 life Insured at no extra cost to you,\nLOWER RATES ON '\nMANY FRIENDLY LOANS\nYou\n0.1\nM-nlhly\nPaymanl\nN.iarf \"\nP-ymanls\n$1000 ,\nS3UJ\n\u00ab\"\u2022 i\n730\nsr.es\ntkf\n400\n37.82\n1-\nISO\n44.61\n\u00ab\u201e -\u2022'\nVt EVEN OS ODD AMOUNTS\nNiagara\nUJIUI Wni emsstmt tt mtwus, sammn\n560 BAKER ST.\nPhono 1638-\nAn Afl-Conodlon Company In over 60 cll'm\nRtENDLY lOANS4U)$S FRIENDLY IOANS J\u00bb\u00ab\nPTA Hean Talk\nOn School Boards\nRIONDEL \u2014 Quest speaker at\nBlue. Bell' PTA meeting held- in\nthe Riondel school this month was\n3 L. i Crowe. Mr.: Crowe has had\nseveral years of duty' on 'school\nboards and gave some of his experiences as examples of accomplishments and difficulties the\nSchool boards find In their aim to\nmake better schools., His talk was\nfollowed; by a question -period.-\nNext month's topic to be discussed will be. isafety.\" It is, hoped\none or more of the police force will\nbii guest speakers,\nA $45 dqnatioh has been made by\nthe C. M- & S. Company towards a\npiano for the school,, it was re\nported by the treasurer. The school\nboard has also offered to help financially, with the purchase. -. .;\u25a0'..\nResignation-of Mrs. M. Robertson\nas vice-president was accepted and\nMrs. Neilson was elected to'fill the\nvacancy.-    - ' -y    \u25a0'::'\u25a0 '\u25a0'\nProgram chairman Suggested-that\nideas for meeting entertainment be\ndropped in a suggestion box.\n\"Number of magazine subscriptions Is low,\"-.Mrs. \"-H.-C. \"Christen-\nsen told members.\nMrs. J. McDonald! .hostess,, welcomed.new members. A guest book\nIS being used to record .the guests.\nBurns Night Feted,\nWith Dancing, Songs\nKASLO \u2014The Canidlanrlieglon\nLadles' AuHlid-a\/ .under'the' direc:\ntion of President Mrs.. W. f. fyers\ncommemorated Burn's!. Sight with\nan entertaining program in the Legion Hall. .     ,\"- -:   '\"'\nMrs.S. S.-Nofleld announced the\nItems of the program, which opened\nwith \"piping the haggis\", when Mrs.\nF. C. Yoxall marched With a tray, of\nhaggis about ,,the i hall, followed by\nMrs.-E.'-,W.. GaWe'tt playing; the\nmouth' organ. J. M. Saunders followed with a solo,-.\"Annie Laurie\",\naccompanied by Mis. Carol Boames.\nMiss Beamesplayed\"-; piano solo.\nPat Dahlquist and Anne Schon-\nberg treated the- audience dancing\nthe \"Arabian Ballet Dance\". Dancing followed with a cpmmunity sing\n16'd by C.-C. Hallerah..-,Mrs,-,J, Galas\nand Mrs:' H..-E. Dahlquist in -duet\nsang an;old favorite.,.Mrs\" C: C. Hair\nlefan .was-accompanist: TheiswoVd\ndance and .-Hig'hlahd -Fling, were\ndanced by Mrs: F.'. C, YbxalL-' Mrs:\nS..S. Nofield also\/gave an eiiterr\ntainlng monologue, arid.J.,M..Saunders as a-colored boy sang two old\nsongS. 'I\nThe program ended with dancing\nuntil midnight .'.,,        ; -I\nPer rue P-TA Qratits\nj$y\n, FERNIE\u2014Fernie Parent'Teacher\nAssociation Monday; night approved\ngranting of a $100 .scholarship to\nIhe Fernie High SohooL-'The award\nwill be allocated to the most eligible Ipupil-,. entering the teaching\nprofession-,. ,! \u2022  '\u2022\u2022'\u25a0'.\nHarry Gardner of the Crow's Nesl\nPass'Coal Co. Ltd. engineering staff,\ngave an interesting and Informative\ntalk on iron-ore development ln\nLabrador. His talk was Illustrated\nwith, colored slides taken at the\nscene. Mr. Gardner stated that exploration and'locating of the huge\nore deposits was an exceptionally\nfine engineering job, A-deposit 10\nmiles wide and 40 miles long was\nsurveyed arid blocked-out. The deposits contain an estimated 400 million tons of high grade ore. American steel companies were financing\nthe huge undertaking, estimated to\ncost between -,$_50,000,000 and S300,-\n000,000.   .\u2022'\u25a0-,'-.- .\n>\u25a0   I\n\u2022 Difficulties, faced were the need\nto fly much equipment to Burnt\nLake, the scene ot the ore deposit,\nthe, construction ot' o - railway\nthrough virgin'.country where it\nwas necessary to bring in all needed\nsupplies and equipment' as construction proceeded, the building of\ntwo power plants, one near the site\nof the ore deposit and the other at\nSeven Islands on the St. Lawrence\nRiver, and the building, ot,docking\nand handling facilities - at Seven\nIslands.\nMr. Gardner explained that Central 'Labrador was a true plateau\ncovered with lakes, streams, patches\not scrub forests, caribou moss\nwhich grew to a height of about\none foot arid.alpine shrubs. Fishing\nfor eastern speckled trout and lake,\ntrout was the best he. had ever\nseen: Bird Ute Included ptarmigan,\nand Canada geese. Game was main,\nly caribou,in limited numbers. '\nFEItNIE \u2014 Fernie City Council\nhas decided ,to renew Its contract\nWith the RCMP. for pbllclnj the city.\nThe action was. taken at a council\nmeeting following receipt of a letter frbm the RCMP asking'the city\nIf it Intended to renew its contract.\nThe rate Is set at $2000 per constable\nper' annum. This rate was established, in .1953. Prior to that it was\n$I400.-In addition the city, will provide office accommodation.\nBylaws covering mayor's Indemnity, council indemnity.prepay-\nment of taxes and an amendment\nto the streets and traffic bylaw\nwere given final reading. Mayor\nUphill's annual indemnity has been\nraised from $300 to $500. Council\nindemnity arid interest paid for prepayment of taxes remain the same.\nAmendment to the streets and traffic bylaw gives the,council authority to order:owners of property to\nremove snow from the sidewalks in\nfront. of their premises, especially.\nIn the business section of the city.\nA delegation from, the park'area\nln the south part of the city was\nassured' by Mayor Uphill that definite action would be taken this year\non- the request to provide sewerage\nservice to that district.\nANTI-POLIO -EFFORT\nFernie Kinsmen Club-was given\npermission to hold a polio tag day\nand a city-wide canvass In February for fund? for their annual polio\neaimpaigh'. The canvass will be in\nthe form of a mothers' drive when\nthe City will be covered by a large\nri'_mb_r. of volunteer women canvassers. Council gave permission to\nUse the city siren to signal the start\n.of the. drive, '\".;\u25a0-\nAlderman John. .Sweeney was\nnamed to represent the city at the\nCivil Defenoe Orientation Staff\nCourse to be held in Arripripr, Ont.,\nearly   in   March.   City . eleotriclah\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n.;. no Obligation\nat all\n-. MAWSyjLLJt,- Teachert'and\npupils of Marysville ichool were\nobliged.to'take.several days' holt-\nday .when the furnace brake\ndown, causing considerable damage when the water plpet froze\n' and bunt- \\r .'\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n2 CRANBROOK ACCIDENTS\nRESULT IN $1100 PAfaAGE\nCRANBHOOK-About $1000 damage was' done tb an 'Alberta-Pacific\nmotor transport .when lt <left.the\nroad near the junction' of the Fort\nSteele road arid the Southern Trans-\nprovincial highway. The driver was\nunhurt,; and. most, of the, damage\nwas to the. trailer'. Accident occurred, an even week after a similar\nPrairie-Pacific transport truck was\ndemolished and .trailer damaged. In\nalmost the same.location.     ,\nAllan. Holmes pleaded guilty in\ndistrict court- before ..Magistrate\nRichard Shieil to a'charge of driving' while his ability was impaired,\nand was fined, $100 and costs of\n$6.50. Charge arose when the vehicle he was operating was in collision with, a stationary city works\ntruck on | the highway just outside\nthe east gate of the- city. His car\nwas damaged to the extent of about\n$150. City truck damage was negligible, but operator of the truck\nwill be charged with failing to have\na tall light on the vehicle.\nNeLSON DAILY NfcWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 1954 \u2014 1\nH. Dahlquisl Named Legion President\nKASLO\u2014A meeting, of Branch 74\nof the Canadian Legion was held in\nthe Legion Hall club room, when\n1954 officers were formally Installed.\nPresident is H. E, Dahlquist; vice-\npresident, E. A. McCartney; second\nvice-president, R. H. Gilker; executive, Rev. W. S, Beames, L. Bradshaw, E. A. Wardle, S. S. Nofield\nand William Smith; sergeant-at-\narms, E. A. Wardle; padre, Rev. W,\nS. Beames,      - .;\t\nCommittees appointed were:\nBuilding and hall, S. S. Nofield,\nchairman. By-laws, J, L. Humphrey;\nmembership, J, L. Humphrey; en-\ntertalnment, E. A. McCartney; visiting   committee,   William   Smith;\nWllliam'J. McLennan.was named as\ndelegate to the, conference of Electrical Inspectors to be held-in Van-\ncouver dn Feb: li) and.20. Chief topic\nat the' conference will be the new\nCanadian Building Electrical Code.\nNumerous complaints of, radio interference were received from\nvarious parts of the city, Council\nis referring these complaints to the\nproper authorities with the request\nthat they be. investigated.\nNEW!!\nLaying Mash\nCut Feed Costs by Feeding\n Less Feed  '\"'\n\u2022.\n\u2022 MORE PRQTEIN    '    .\n\u2022 MORE  MINERALS\n\u2022 MORE-VITAMINS\n\u2022 MORE ENERGY\nin Each Pound of Feed\nDon'. Wait Til Next Year,\n\u2022   Save Money Now!\nBe Wise 1 Be Prof It-Wise!\nBUY SHUR-GAIN\nAvailable at\nNelson Farmers\nSupply Ltd,\n524 Railway St.  Phonefl74\npublicity, R. H. Gllker; finance, H.\nE. Dahlquist; zone representative,\nE. A. McCartney; service, H. X.\nDahlquist; poppy fund, J. L. Humphrey and Rev. W. S. Beames;\nschool \/advisory committee repre-'\nsentatlve, A, E. McCartney,       1]\nEASTERN ORIGIN\nPeache8 . were introduced inl\nEngland from Iran in the 16th cei\ntury.       ,. X', :' ,';  '\nCILUX Is ideal for porch and laws'\nfurniture. Rain won't mar it. Its fresh.\ncolours resist hard wear and weather.\nUse CILUX Indoors,\ntoo, for more colourful\ndinette sets\u2014to ttarts-\n_ form dingy old chain,\n-tables, cheats. --J j\nCILUX is an excellent, easily ap\nplied Sniih for automobiles. It goea\non smoothly, dries quickly, gives ^ '\ntough, lustrous surface that standi\nhard knocks and b      -  - 'MitiS\neasy to keep smart\nand dean.\nCILUX comes in\n24 gay colours, plus\nwhite, black and\nclear gloss. Also in j\nS special automobile'\ncolours.\nNelson Hardware\nco.\nFRIENDLY SERVICE      ,-\nPhone 21      446 Baker St,\nNelson's Independent Hnrdwaro,.\nBeautiflor makes other\nfloor care methods old fashioned!\n\u25a0 Why clean your wood floors, then wax them, when\nBeautiflor actually cleans as it waxes! As you apply\nit. Beautiflor Liquid Wax loosens embedded dirt, dissolves grease,, removes heel marks, stains, even road\ntar. All the dirt cornea up on the eloth. The wax stays\nright on the ficiorl      \u25a0 ''.'.'     ,w- . :\n.' You let it dry a few minutes, then buff. You get a\nrich, protective, real wax lustre that lasts and lasts,\nbecause Beautiflor contains lots of genuine wax.\nWhy clean, then wax? Do both at once, with Johnson's\nBeautiflor Liquid Wax!    \u25a0,..,'.\n'    Get Beautiflor today\/\nwherever Johnson's Wax is soldi\nTIV THIS TESTI On your dirtiest wood\nfloor, Smear grease pencil, lipstick,\neven rood tar: Then rubra little\nBeautiflor - aropnd' with a cloth.\nond see that it icilly cleans as\nit waxes!.'   \u2022 . ' '\u2022'.\u2022'\nPork and Beef.\nNice for any meal.\nCORNED BEEF\nVery nice flavor.\nChoice euti  :\u2014.\u2014\nEFFECTIVE\nTHURS., FRI., SAT.\nJAN. 28-19-30\nPOT ROAST\nRed Ribbon Beef.\nlb. 48c\nSTEAKS\nSirloin.  \u25a0\/-\nlb. 65c\nSAUSAGE\n__ lb. 39c\nVEAL STEAKS\nShoulder.\nTender.\nlb. 49c\nlb. 48c\n1\n]\nSIRLOIN TIP ROAST\nBlue Ribbon Beef.\nBoneless.\nlb. 69c\nPORK-VEAL-BEEF\nMinced and blended together\nfor a delicious meat loaf.\n3 lbs. 35c\nBEEF SHORT RIBS\nLean\nand thick.\nlb. 35c\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii\nALSO A FULL LINE OF\nGROCERIES, PRODUCE AND IMPORTED FOODS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiliiiiiiiiliii\nPAIRWAV\nI 3-V-TT' Km*) 111 U-Ti'\nMEAT.S\nPhone  1177\nGROCERIES\nFree DeHvery\n-^ '\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0' ' :':'x:^ \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \"\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0>- \u25a0        '\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\" <\"-::f..}f\\i^    ;\u2022\u25a0;;:.::, ; \u25a0\u25a0\u2022   -\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \u2022 -\n\"-: \u2022\"\u25a0>-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\n :.'\u25a0\u25a0'.;:'\nM\ni\nEstablished AprU 22. 1.02    '\n|; 0    i\\ British Co\/umWaa\n|,     Most IntereMing Newspaper\nPublished ever; morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n260 Baker Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nEMBER Of' THE' CANADIAN PRESS AND\n;hb AUUIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThursday, January 28, .95.\n!\u25a0'._*.Competition For .Bridge\nI     Dollars Should Be Kept <\nIn Mind; Survey Coming\nMost welcome Is the announcement\n| of Hon. Wesley Black, member for\n| N.lson-Creston, that orders have gone\nI out to start surveys for a West Arm\nI bridge.\n3 With the bridge authority estab-\n| lished and with the on-the-spot sur-\nl s veys completed at least two steps will\n5 have been taken toward bringing about\nI \u25a0\u00bb valuable link in the Southern Trans-\n|.Provincial Highway system, and a real\n'.. asset to district travel facilities.\ni News to most citizens will -be the\n1 fact, contained in the announcement,\nI that five different sites hold prospects\n| for bridge foundations. It will be ex-\n| \"ceedingly interesting to know their\n1 location. Without doubt location of a .\nI bridge would have considerable impact\ni on travel habits, North Shore develop-\nl|ment, and attitude of travellers ahd\n; citizens \\ toward the project. There\nI should be a deliberate attempt to avoid\nI controversy over the bridge site. Engi-\n| neers, without doubt, can decide which\nI site would be best from a construction\n,- view, and other experts should be able\nto advise on other aspects. In big projects there is room for big outlooks and\n^spirit of necessary compromise.\nIt can probably now be accepted\n.-, that bridge engineers will be at work\n...soon. That fact should put an en_ to\n-suggestions that all that is planned is\n.another new cable ferry. However, it\n;| should never be dropped from the pub-\nlit mind that there will be competition\nifor the bridge-building dollars.   The\nefforts of the member to attain the\nSpan sought for nearly half a century\niave public backing, and this support\n'lould be made evident at every oppor-\ninity.\nJ Winter Safety\nFire and accidents are on the upswing\u2014due to winter conditions. It is\nestimated that nearly 45,000 fires occur\neach year in homes, with a loss of $20,-\n000,000. Insurance companies pay out\n.more than $3,000,000 every year in accident claims.\nOfficials of a Canadian insurance\ngroup report that fires and accidents\nare more prevalent during the winter\nbecause of increased hazards such as\nheating and icy pavements. They rec-\nommended some precautions against\nneedless death and injury:\nKeep sidewalks well shovelled; be\nsure the approach to your house is\nsafe for family, visitbrs and tradesmen.\nGuard against falling snow and\nicicles. Coa'rse salt is best for melting\nicy snow on- sidewalks and steps.\nIf oil burners and furnaces break\ndown, call in an expert technician.\ni  Never leave snow shovels, sleds,\nskis or other objects lying on sidewalks and steps.\nUse firescreens in front of hearths.\nNever use kerosene or other inflammable liquids to \"quick-start\" fires.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters to tha editor on any toplo ot ,\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\ntha signature and address of the writer.\nUnrrollolted correspondence cannot ba returned.\nContends English\nShould Be Single\nTongue of Canada\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The suggestion of Governor General\nMassey that English Canadians should learn\nto speak French needs to be reversed that all\nCanadians learn to speak the language of\nCanada\u2014English, To speak, read and write\nthe language qf one's country Should be the\nfirst essential of anyone's education. Imagine\nthe confusion of our neighbors of the South\nif all spoke only their mother tongue. One\nlanguage has been an important factor in their\nindustrial and cultural development, and one\nlanguage should be the policy tor Canada,\nwith whatever other one has time and inclination for.\nCanadians unable to talk the majority language of Canada\u2014English\u2014should recognize\ntheir defect and remedy It.\nOur Governor General ls in the position to-.\ninitiate such a- movement.\nJOHN PRICE.\nSilverton, B. C.\n> No Fumes Damage\nAt Marysville\nTo the Editor: k\nSir\u2014In order to counteract the effects of\nthe news item on page .eight of your January\n22 issue, would you please publish prominently\nthe following:\nThe Marysville Chamber of Commerce\ndeplores the in accuracy of a statement in\nthe Nelson Daily News of Friday, January 22,\non a part of Its business at the January meeting.\nThe Chamber points out that the Village\nat present is not affected by any fumes, that\nCominco has provided safeguards against\nharmful discharge of fumes and acid, and that\nthe Marysville Chamber of Commerce are. at\npresent enquiring into the possibility of damage or discomfort by fumes or acid at a time\nln the future, and wish to emphasize that the\nterm \"protest\" was used inadvisedly.\nMARYSVILLE CHAMBER\nOF COMMERCE.\nPer Fred C. Ingram,\nPresident pro tem.\n\"IJnipn Security\"  ...\nJ. S. Vanderploegi\nThere is no mandatory provision in the\nlaw requiring an employer to confer any form\nof \"union security\". This phrase is interpreted\nin several ways, but first and foremost in the\nminds (apd pockets!) of union officials it\nmeans that they expect the employer to Collect the union dues of employees and remit\nthem to the union treasury. I feel, however,\nthat employers should not agree even to the\nso-called voluntary revocable checkoff. In\nbusiness we get our own orders and collect\nour own accounts or perish: no one guarantees our security. Likewise, unions worth their\nsalt should get their own members and collect\ntheir own dues. It is ridiculous to expect employers, by collecting dues, to guarantee the\ncontinuous salary sec-rity of paid union officials. The Rand forrnula requires even nonunion members to make contributions toward\nthe dominant union, and is a form of compulsion to which I am opposed.. A recomme.nda-\ntion of any form of checkoff made by a conciliation board should generally not be acceded to, particularly when unions are tied\nup with a political party. \"The CCF Is the\nofficial political arm of the CCL, and some\nother union organizations, and there is no\nreason why Canadian employers should be\nasked to assist, through collecting dues, in\nbringing about a Socialist form of government\nwhich aims at State control of industry and\nbusiness. In fact, I think- that unions with\npolitical affiliations Should me legally disqualified from checkoff privileges. Once an\nemployer helps to collect union dues, they,\nwill be expended to some extent in a political\ncampaign against private enterprise. Let me\nremind you that there is nothing to prevent\nexpenditure of union funds in political campaigns.\nIncidentally, there is no checkoff in England, that bastion of trade unionism.\u2014In the\nRural Scene.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen Many reader Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere' Is   no   charge   for   tnls   service,\nQuestions  WILL   NOT   BE   ANSWERED  .\nBY MAIL except where there Is. obvious '\nneoesslty for privacy.\nO. Y., NakusrA-To, settle an argument; could\nyou please print the date when the Forum\nin Vancouver collapsed due to snow on\nthe roof? '    -\nThe Forum roof collapsed Jan. 1.33, and\n18 Inches of slush were blamed for the catastrophe.\nNewcomer.- Nelson\u2014Where can I buy baby\nchicks?\nIn our list of name's published recently\nwe should have Included Rump & Sendall,\nLtd., Box N, Langley Prairie, B. C, or Vernon,\nB. C.j and New Siberia Farms,' N. Balakshin,\nR.R. 3, Chilliwack, B. C. These are all advertised regularly in the Dally News.\nD. M., East .Vrrow Park\u2014Please prints little\nstory about soldier who used a pack of\ncards for a prayer book.\nWe ore indebted to Mrs. T. O. B., Nelson;\nG. A., Wynndel; J. E. F\u201e R.R. I, Nelson, and\nG. L., Nelson, for sending this in to us:\n\"A soldier arrested for having a pack of\ncards in church addressed the Judge as follows:\n\" 'I have been about six weeks on a march\nand have no Bible, only a pack of cards, 'but\nI hope to satisfy you, sir, with my intentions,'\nand spreading the cards before, the judge, he\nbegan with the ace. 'When I see the ace it reminds me \"there is but one Gd_; when I see\nthe deuce lt reminds me of Father and Son,\nand when I see the trey it reminds me of\nFather, Son and Holy Ghost; when I see the\nfour it reminds me of the four evangelists\nthat preached, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John;\nand when I see five it reminds me of the five\nwise virgins that trimmed their lamps; there\nwere ten, but five were wise and ten were\nfoolish and were shut out; when I see six it\nreminds me that.the Lord mad heaven and\nearth in six days; when I see seven it reminds\nme that on the seventh .day He rested from\nthe great work He had created and hallowed\nit. Eight reminds me of eight righteous persons who were saved when God destroyed the\nworld; viz., Noah and his wife, .with their\nthree sonB and their wives; when I see nine it\nreminds me that the Lord made heaven and\ncleansed by our Savior; there were nine out of\nten that never returned thanks; when I see\nten it reminds me of the CommaadmentF\n-which God handed down to Moses on tablets\nof stone; when I see the King it reminds me\nof the King, of Heaven, which is God Almighty; when I see the Queen it reminds me\nof the Queen of Sheba who visited Solomon,\ntor she was as wise a woman as he was a\n.rnan. She brought with her fifty, boys and\nfifty girls all dressed in boy's' apparel for King\nSolomon tb tell which were boys and which\nwere girls. King Solomon sent for water for\nthem to wash; the girls washed to the elbow\nand the boys to the wrist, so- King Solomon\ntold by that. When I count how many spots\n. there are in a pack of cards I find 365, as many\nas there are days in a year; when I count the\nnumber of cards in a pack I find there are\n52, file number of weeks in a year; I' find\nthere are 12 picture cards in a pack, representing the number of months in a year; and on1\n.counting the tricks I find 13, the number of\nweeks in a quarter. There are four different\nsuit cards representing the four seasons. So\nyou see, sir, a pack of cards serves for a Bible,\nalmanac, and common prayer book.'\"\n\\ Your Horoscope\nProvided care is exercised in dealings\nwith certain people who may have some authority, your industry and initiative should\nbring great rewards. A tremendously hard\nworker with mechanical abilities may be\nlooked for in today's child.\nIt's Been Said\nWomen and men of retiring timidity are\ncowardly only in dangers which affect themselves, but are the first to rescue when others\nare endangered.\u2014Henri Richter.\nIt's unfair to class all Doukhobors together, warns the Saint John Telegraph-Journal. Most of them are excellent citizens. .\"The\nreal Doukhobor problem rests with the 2500\nor so who are known as the Sons of Freedom.\n. . . Canadians should not allow the bad example of sortie to sully the sound integrity of\nthe people who came to this country to find\npeace and freedom and who have in their own\nway helped all of us reallie our ambitions.\"\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nm_sWlLMMM\u00bb\nBy Jimmy Hatlo \u25a0 Today's Bible Thought\nMEN MRS.GASK\n.    TRIED TO PICK OUT\nL   NEW LMMa-rasOM\n1 WALLRIPER.TME\n\\  FAMILY WAS MO\n\\ HELP AT 4L.L-\nSpaniards Again\nBattle Police\nMADRID (Reuters) \u2014 Spanish\nstudents clashed Wednesday with\npolice, for the' third Straight day\nduring a demonstration outside the'\nUniversity of Madrid,    <   \u25a0: .  :  ,\nAt the Same time, informed sources said Generalissimo>'. France's\ngovernment is prepared to invoke\nsevere measures to quell the'outbreaks. \"\",\u25a0 '' '\" ,'\nPRQTE6T PRESS RBP0RT8\nAfter gathering outside the university grounds early, some 1000\nshouting students tried to march on\nthe Ministry of Information building, but were driven'off by police.\nThe students have been protesting against Spanish press and radio versions of earlier demonstrations demanding the return of British-held Gibraltar to Spain. Queen\nElizabeth's scheduled visit to the\nrock bastion next May had prompted the new outcry against Britain.\nThe demonstrations began, among\nthe. students, themselves but Tuesday turned against police for trying to curb them.\nCol. Dixon Resigns\nScout Position\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Lt-Col.\nKeith Dixon of Victoria has re-,\nsigned from the volunteer position\nof assistant provincial commissioner of the Boy Scouts Association,\nthe B. C: provincial council reported\nWednesday.\nHe resigned because of the pressure of private business.\nFIRST TACTICAL, unmanned flying weapon against ground\ntargets, developed by the U.S., the Matador pilotless bomber, takes\noff from' Its mobile launcher at Cocoa, Fla, This la the fIrat photo-\nsequence released of the production Weapon being fired. At top,\nthe Matador la shown on Its launcher. Second photo shows the\nMatador' picking up speed, a rocket adding thrust. Photo In inaet,\nthe exhausted rocket Is automatically ejected,\n\u2014Central Preas Canadian photos.\nBermuda Advised\nAgainst Reforms\nHAMILTON, Bermuda (Reuters)'\n\u2014Bermuda would ruin her thriving\ntourist trade by rushing through\nlaws against racial discrimination,\nsays a committee report td the coltf\nony's legislative assembly. - j\nThe report, published , Tuesday,1\nrecommends gradual reforms so as\nnot to dislocate, the community.\nThe recommended reforms Include\nwider job opportunities for the island's Negro populatlon'and broad-:\ner representation for Negroes on\ngovernment boards.\n\"Reforms, however necessary,\nmust win acceptance and the goal\nmust be towards steady progress,\nwith the minimum dislocation of\ngovernment services and the private sensibilities ot all sections of\nthe community.\"\nThe report acknowledges the existence of color prejudice in government service .and recommends\nits elimination \"consistent with\nmaintaining and improving the efficiency of the civil service.\"\nOntario Approves\nControversial Film\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The motion\npicture, \"The Wild One\", banned;\nby film censors ln both British Columbia and Alberta, has been approved by Ontario censors as adult\nentertainment and will be released.\nin Toronto shortly. The production'\nis the story of a motorcycle gang\nwhich descends on a southern U.S.\ntown ih a wave of terror, brutality!\nand death.\nNABISCO SHREDDED rVWBVr\ngives me eherou-fot-alt\nbig morr.ir.gfc work, m i\ngof real -food value.'\nW<\nere a\nNABISCO\n\u25a0Tamilu!\nYou'll agree with the Woods\nonce you've tried delicious,\nnourishing nabisco shredded\nwheat for breakfast! The only\ncereal you can serve HOT\n(Just pour on boiling water\nand drain)... or COLD (fresh\nfrom the package) nabisco\nShredded wheat is rich in\nvital food elements. Contains\nthe whtat germ with bran \u2014\nfor regularity. Join the thousands who eat golden nabisco\nshredded wheat for Energyl\nNourishment! Economy!\n100% Whole Wheat\n-including BRAN 1\n 2i|\nWATCH\ntMi\nSPACE\nFor BIG Things\nTo Coma\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\ni Established 1902\nGrand Forks\nGRAND FORKS\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nW. G. Mathers of Claresholm, Alta.,\nare visiting their son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jaek Mathers,\nahd family. They, will be in Grand\nForks for several weeks.\nThe first motion picture theatre\nwas opened at Los Angeles April\n2, 1902.\nAltar Bound?\nir Wedding Gowns\n\u25a0fr Bridesmaid Dresses\nEverything for the Bridal Party\nHas Been Personally Chosen\nby Mrs. Arthur of\nARTHUR'S\nBRIDAL SALON\nKuhn Bldg, Spokane\nFor Children's\nStomach Upsets\nFor quick, happy\nrelief, give Children \u25a0\nOwn Ta biota, dca-mod\n(or   youn&ten  from\nS to 16. Speedily help\nsweeten   sour   upeet\nstomach,   dean-   out Ni\nbowela   gently \u2014 yet\nthoroughly-   Floaaant,\n\u2022aiily.-awallovod.\nMedo by the makera of v__ \u25a0\nB-by'i Own Tablet*\u2014 **\nyour assurance of a reliable product. Be sun\nto get a package today at your druggiftl\nRecipes. .-..'.\nChildren at School\nNeed 3 Qood Meals\n{By, Auuia. Wk&skx\niron-on uesigns\ncolors\nBy MARGARET CARR\nAll across the country, a new\nschool term Is now well under\nway..And as the students apply\nthemselves to their studies with renewed vigor, Mother must focus her\nattention1 on the task of filling that\nschool lunch box. This is the season of stimulated appetites, appetites which must be satisfied with\nthe right foods.\nEvery school child is entitled to\nthree good meals a day, and whether the lunch is taken at home or\nat school, the challenging responsibility of providing -an attractive\nlunch, packed with appetite appeal,\nremains the same. .\" \u25a0\nA good lunch, and that means\nproviding one third of the dally\nfood requirement, is as important\nto your child as his classroom lessons, for his lunch is a vital part\nof dally living\u2014it helps to strengthen his mind, body and spirit. Every youngster needs \\ nutritious\nfood for growth and energy, in the\nclassroom and on the playground.\nPlayground hours are most important hours to children, for play\ntime ls fun time. Lunch.time too\ncon be tun if you make lunches\ntempting and appealing. Give them\nsomething to anticipate, such as a\nsurprise bag of peanuts or raisins.\nAvoid the same monotonous lunch,\nday after dayl Tempt those eager\nappetites with imagination and ingenuity by packing some things\nyou'd like to eat, such' as a cup\ncustard, milk drlnk,fcheese cubes\nwith crackers, rice pudding, or a\nfresh fruit cup in a jar.      >\nWhen you market, watch for\nfoods which can be used easily in\nlunchboxes or for home lunches.\nIf your school-ager  carries his\nlunch be sure to provide varied,\ngenerous  lunches.  Here are suggested menus for a week:\nMONDAY\nHam salad sandwich (wrap a\nsliced dill pickle separately to be\nput on the sandwich at lunch time);\nwhole tomato, fresh pear, milk,\nbrownies.\nTUE8DAY\nChili con carne (in vacuum bottle);'crackers, carrot sticks,-milk,\nfruit cup (in covered plastic dish\nor small glass jar), cup cake.\nWEDNE8DAY\nGround   bologna-pimiento   stuffed olive sandwich; cole slaw (in\nsmall   covered   container);   milk;\napple; graham crackers.\nTHUR8DAY\nSliced meat loaf on whole wheat\nMarysville Notes\nMABYSTOfi; - Visitors-at the\nJohn Rose home were Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Deschamps ot Meadow-\nbrook,\nLes. Ordway ls a patient Iti Kimberley Public Hospital. Charlie\nShannon, while not ln hospital, has\nbeen UI at-home for some time,\nMr. ^nd Mrs. J. Findlay h.ve as\ntp_ir guests Mrs. V.rSammon and\nher daughter Sherry of Trail. \u2022'\nWord has been received by the\nfamilies of Jim McWhlrter, Jr.\nJimmie Ogilvle, Lloyd Findlay and\nBill Baumback, who recently joined the Air Force, that they are now\nstationed at St. John's Quebec,\nTeachers and pupils of Marysville\nschool were obliged to take Several day's' holiday last week when\nthe furnace broke down.\nCarl Quick and his mother, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. D. H.\nTurnbull, motored to Grassy Lake\nto' attend the wedding of Mr.\nQuick's cousin, Douglas Hazel, and\nMr. Turnbull's only sister, Joan, at\nwhich Mrs. Turnbull was matron\nof honor and Mr, Turnbull best\nman.\nThe Upper Bridge Club met at\nthe home of Mrs. J. Wright with\nMrs: J. Ogilvle winning first prize\nand Mrs. Gale Carpender consolation.   \u00bb\nMrs. Eric Thompson Is a patient\nin Kimberley Public Hospital.\nMr. ahd Mrs. J.R. Fraser of New\nWestminster visited their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nJabk Tarns.\nMrs. K. O. McKenzle entertained\nat bridge. Mrs. A. Jeffries of Kim-,\nberley won first prize  and Mrs,\nOur\nCONTINUES\n\u00ab\nFLANNELETTE PYJAMAS IT\u00bb\nRegular WW- SALE _ _.'. _ _.-_,..    \u2022*\u25a0',\nFLANNELETTE NIGHTGOWNS *4\"\n(Two-piece\u2014bedjacket and gown.) Reg. $6.98. SALE       u\n'   w\ni   \u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0_#.\nKnitted Suits\nRegular.$32.95 SA\u00a7 $25.50\nRegular $34.95 SALE $26.50\nRegular $39.95.\nRegular $45.95.\n SAif $30.50\n.._._._ SALE $34.50\nLadies'Afpparel\n:    \"THE FASHION CENTRE IN NELSON\"\n535 BAKER ST. PHONE 775\nTHERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BEST\nQUALITY GOODS AND SERVICE OUR MOTTO\nFOWL\nGrade A.\nLb\t\n49*\nVEAL - PORK - BEEF\nMi.\u2122. ___ 3 ||,s $1.00\nBREAST VEAL\u2014    lb. 23c\nRoasting Chicken lb. 59c\nVEAL STEAKS - ROASTS\nShoulder.\nPOT ROASTS7    ~\nBoneless. Round bone.\nLb ,\t\nTROUT\n4 lb. overage.\nWhole or half. Lb.\n49'\n45*\n49'\nbread (wrap a lettuce leaf separately for  putting on sandwich);\ncheese stuffed celery; hot cpcoa (in\nvacuum); peeled orange; cookies.\nFRIDAY   '-      \"fiy^fy\nCream of tomato soup (In vacuum); deviled ham-plckle relish\nsandwich; radishes atjd carrot\nsticks; milk, banana; oatmeal\ncookies,\n0MA&, Vfi, Wfc&i\nWafiiatL TilaAiuL\n90S7\n1*4-24!.\nHALF-SIZE 8TYLEI\nHere are the slim, trim lines that\nflatter you most\u2014in a pattern that's\nperfectly proportioned for shorter-\nwalsted, fuller figures. No alteration worries! It's the perfect gadabout casual to take you- right\nthrough spring\u2014and it's 1-2-3 sewing! Make it now!\nPattern 9087: Half Sines M\u00ab,\n16%, 18V., 20V., 22V., 24V.. Size 16V.\ntakes 3% yards 39-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern \u25a0 gives\nperfect fit. Complete, Illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENT8 (35c)\nln coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews,-Pattern Dept., Nelson, B.C.\nIt's wonderful tha way\nChewing Laxative\nacta chiefly to\n(REMOVE WASTE\n-ffl\nGOOD FOOD\n\u2022 Here* the wtrwt million- ha~i\ndiscovered about FEEN-A-MINT. th.\nwonderfully different chewing luta*\nUvo. \u2022; ;\nFEEN-A-MINT It different becausa\nyou chew lt. It's different, too, because it removes mostly waste\u2014nel\nIoo- food I You sae, FEEN-A-M-N.\noea not work ln the stomach, Where\nfood ls being digested. That's why it\ndoes not take away a lot of the good\nfood you need for energy.\nDoctors know that FEEN-A-MINT\nworks chiefly in the lower bowel,..\nremoves mostly waste, not goad food!\nSo to feel Ilk* a million, do aa mil-1\nlions do, Chew delicious FEEN-A-\nMINT ... and feet full of life and\nenergy. Oct FEEN-A-MINT, todayl\nFEEN-A-MINT\nFlower of spring. No embroidery\n\u2014iron on! Violets by the. dozen in\nlovely purple with glossy green\nleaves turn linens into beautiful\ngifts! Scatter 'em on guest towels,\ndresser sets,- pillowcases, sheets.\nDecorate tablecloths, place mats,\nnapkins, aprons!\nIron on! Colorful! Washable! Pat-\ntren 835 has 12 iron-on design's;\neight, 2%x5% to 4V.X4V.; four, 2V.X\n1% inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., Nelson,\n-U'-. Print plainly PATTERN NUM.\nBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nSEND NOW for our new 1954\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog\n\u2014the best ever| 79 embroidery,\ncrochet, color-transfer, dressmaking\npatterns to send for\u2014plus 4 complete patterns printed in the book!\nIdeas tor gifts, bazaar sellers, fashions. Send 25 cents!\n.       , \u25a0 ...\nMrs. H. Mdxwell Returned^\nAs Hospital Auxiliary Head\nNAKUSP\u2014Annual: meeting of the\nArrow Lakes Hospital Auxiliary\nwas held at the home ot Mr, and\nMrs. V. Smith. In spite of a fresh\nsnowfall of 28 inches, 19 members\nwere in attendance.\nA report on the Christmas cakes\nand holly was given. Thank you\nletters from the board were read.\nMrs, H.'Bolstad took the chair for\nthe election ot officers.\nMrs. H. Maxwell was returned\nas president, for the third term,\nwith vice-president Mrs. R. Joy.\nMrs. A. Henderson is secretary and\nMrs. W. F. Tyers\nAngus Profit,  also of Kimberley,\nconsolation.\nTwo sets of Marysville children\nperformed  square  dances   at  the\nRotary Club amateur show in Kimberley on Saturday evening.\n\u25a0\nKASLO\u2014Annual meeting of the\nLadies' Auxiliary of Branch 74 of\nthe Canadian Legion heard a treasurer's report showing a balance on\nhand and all accounts paid.\nIn 1953 donations of cash, were\nsent to veterans hospitals in Vancouver and to patients in Essondale\nand Tranquille. Donations were\nmade to various institutions, including the Canadian National Institute for the Blind and Salvation\nArmy. Parcels \"were sent overseas\neach month and help was given to\nBranch No. 74, j . s\nMrs. J. Tonkin, retiring president,\ninstalled the new officers. Mrs. W.\nF. Tyers, as new president, then\nappointed her'committees.\nSecretary Mrs, S. S. Norfield read\na list of suggested projects to raise\nfunds to be worked out. at later\ndates. ..-'.-\u25a0\nAs the branch was unable to procure an orche-tra for their annual\nBurns Night dance, the Auxiliary\nput on an entertainment. A number\nOf members turned in talent money.\nAn offer trom Mrs. W. F. Moody\"\nto make a pottery centrepiece as\na contest prize was-accepted. Tea\nwas served, by Mrs. W. S. Beames,\nMrs. E. W. fSarrett and Mrs. H: E.\nDahlquiBt\nKASLO NOTES .\nMr. and Mrs. R. Hearing have\nreturned to Ainsworth after spend- j\ning the holidays on their ranch at\nShutty Bench.\nA. D. Macdonald has returned\nfrom New Denver, where he spent\nthe past three weeks.\nMiss Maureen Sydall ot Shutty\nBench has left for Edmonton where\nshe has accepted employment.\nMrs. V. Craig of Shutty Bench\nhas returned from a few days' visit\nin Spokane.\nMrs. R. Blyth was re-elected treasurer. Buying committee is Mrs. B.\nCrowell and Mrs. William. Murison.\nPress reporter. Is Mrs, A. Stanley;\nPlans were discussed for the annual Valentine dance, and committees were appointed. Members are\nplanning a supper meeting in the\nnear future. Ways and means for\nraising money were discussed, and\nmembers were asked to make a\nfinal decision on methods by the\nnext meeting. Bake sales are to be-\ndiscontinued for the next year.-\nHostesses assisting Mrs, Smith\nwere Mrs. B. Crowell, Mrs. N, Wai-\ndum and .Mrs. A. Stanley. The\nbooster contcaf was won by Mrs.\nF. Maxfield,\nThe treasurer's report for 1953\nshowed a balance on hand from\n1952 of $373.\nReceipts were from; Dues, $14;\nposter and teas, $26; donations, $17;\nbake sales, $70) cash donations, Hospital. Day, $35; Christmas cakes, $43;\nValentine dance, $77. Total, $282,\nThe money was spent on the\nlinoleum ln nurses' bedroom, wall\nboard in nurses' bedrooms; curtains\n.for- nurses', rooms; slip covers for\nchesterfield suite and bedroom\nchairs in nurses' home; new furnishings, dressers for. nurses'-room;\nassistance to dental clinic; new\nchairs for staff dining.-room,\nADDS ZEST\nto all\nsorts\nof\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 28,-1954\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO-^Mr. and. Mrs. Ralph Patterson have returned from a few\nweeks' visit at;the Coast.\nMr, and Mrs. A, Riley and son\nDouglas of Shutty Bench are in\nTrail, where they plan to spend a\nfew months.\nMrs. O. Sobko of Shutty Bench\nwas hostess at a whist drive. Four\ntables w.ere in play. Prizes were\nawarded to Mr. and. Mrs. A..B.\nJacobs.\nMr. and Mrs. S, A. Bridge and\nson Harold have returned from a\nholiday spent in Vancouver. They\nplan to spends the next two months\non their farm at Shutty Bench.\nBuy. Spll. Trade the Classified Wm-\nFASHIONS\nBUY THAT VALENTINE GIFT NOW\n\u2022llll IBM.\u2014 \"\u2022\"'\"        II _.\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0        \u2014\u25a0\u25a0I-M I     Ill- II\nBUTTERFLY HOSIERY\nSpedal-95t pr., 2 pr. $189\nNice Selection of SUITS   $21.95\nSMOCKS:... ...... $2.95and$3:95\nCOBBLER'S APRONS:\nDRESS SPECIAL: L\n1 WEDDING DRESS:\n1 WEDDING VEIL:___\n. $2.95\n$10.00\n$30.95\n$13.50\nJh&. SioJiz. eg, (joiVdaoiLL SsJwkiL\n449 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 874\nIRENE'S 4^ SALE\nNEVER BEFORE SUCH VALUES\n* HOUSE DRESSES\n : Reg. to $5.95. SALE\nir HOUSECOATS\n Reg. to $10.05. SALE\n* WOOL FABRIC GLOVES \u00a3Q*\n  ...Reg. 91.5JJ. SALE        **\u2666*\n$2.95\n'4.95\n25%' DISCOUNT\nON ALL WEDDING GOWNS\nAKBVrA$T\u00a3 TA\u00a3ATf\nWHITE \u2022 CHOCOMTE \u2022 COMBINATION \u2022 SPICE\nA PAIR AND A SPARE!\n3 full-fashioned,\nSl'gauge, 15 denier\nforonly %\nS2.2S vol..\nWith a box top from any\nBRODIE xxx CAKE MIX\nSand coin or mono\" order to - - $\u2022 '\nBRODIE & HARVIE LIMITED\/\n.P.O. BOX Ml, WINNIPEG.    ,\nB\n-CE\nTUwjl\nt\n'BETTER MEATS FOR LESS*'\nHADDIE FILLETS: Lb..\nRAINBOW TROUT: Lb.\nFRESH CODFISH: Lb\n45c\n85c\n29c\nVEAL STEAKS\nDelicated.         \u25a0  _CIT*\nPer lb. ..  93\nMILD CURED TONGUES\nPer jb ____' t5\nPORK ROASTS\nShoulder. CC*\nPer lb  ______  J J\nCALVES LIVER\nFresh. QC*\nPer lb    Oj\nBREAKFAST BACON\nVz lb. cello pkg.    A(\\$\nEach     t\\J\nGRADE A LARGE EGGS\nCartons extra.      C A t\nPer doz. _  3i\nBLUE LABEL STEER BEEF\nPOT ROASTS: All cuts. Lb,.  45c\nRUMP ROASTS: Lb ..__ .. 59e\nHAMBURGER\nGood'       2        OQ*\nlean.\nRUMP VEAL ROASTS\n59*\nPer lb.\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE\nMade daily. ACt\nPer lb... -'ID\nLOIN VEAL STEAKS\nAnd Chops. _CC*\nPer lb. _: ,0_?\n\u2022 FRESH CRUMPETS\n\u2022 FRESH OYSTERS   '\n\u2022 CREAMY\nCOTTAGE CHEEESE\n\u2022 PETERS. ICE c'r.EAM\n\u2022 DELICIOUS\nMINCEMEAT\n\u2022 DANISH\nBLUE CHEESE\nPhones 527-528\nFree Delivery\nonly\nonly\nsews by itself! ;\nhas these 2 magic features!\nfe_#>: -&\u2022*\nthese 2 magic features do every sewing job automatically\niirr\nL Magic Lever!\nSOW oa bT\n\u25a0MMBi brind\nII\nAil WITHOUT ATTACHMENTS!\nThe (ire-mn ef many women ha* come (rue.\nFor the first time in history...a tewing machine that automatically embroider) and\nmake* fancy stitches and detioft*, limited\nonly by your Imagination. You need not be\nan export to ttw expertly-you con make\na complete wardrobe without any effort...\nNECCHI does the. work for you.  .   .\nA wide toloclbn of. portable and\ncontote models available In a variety\nof beautiful stylet and finishes from\n$139.00\nEvery NECCHI b covered by a lifetime Guarantee Bond. Nation-widp\nservice and parts available.\nFor Appointments in Trail, Phone 1153-L\nNova NECCHI\nSEWING CIRCLE\nNelson, B.C. 307 Baker Street\nI'Your  New  Necchl  Zlg  Zaq   Is  an,.Investment  In  Quality\nWith a Lifetime Guarantee\"\n _____ , -j|_\n\u25a0___ \u25a0\u25a0-.:.-     \u25a0\u25a0 .\u25a0\u2022'. - --:' --\u25a0\u25a0 -.-   -\n. -\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0\n______\n\u25a0\"     \u2022  -\n1,-\u2022\u201e'!?.'..\u25a0',.\n-.\u2014(IMrirMi^l\n\u25a0\n BHo\nSeek Honorable\nDischarge for\nGovl. Employees\nWashington (AP)- PrisMint\nEisenhowor Wednesday accepted B\nsuggestion thit I sort of \"honorable\ndischarge\" ba given employeoi who\nloavo the government eorvico In\ngood standing, ,.   ' ,\nTh* idea would bi to keep these\npeople from being under suspicion\nof having been lit out ai security\nrisks.\nA reporter asked Elsenhower it\nhis press conference whether suoh\nah \"honorable (Uncharge\" might not\nbe arranged. The president replied\nthat ought to be pqsslble and he\nwould ask government departments\nCNR Suggests Grade  Crossing Council\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian\nNational Hallways Wednesdey suggested a govirnmint-rallway advisory council of grade -crossings\nbe established,\nThe railway made the proposal\nlu a submission filed with the\nboard of transport commissioners\nfor consideration at final hearings\nIn a year-long inquiry by th* board\ninto thi grade crossing question.\nThi hearing! resume here fib, 3,\nThe CNR said thi preaent method of dealing with crossing im-\nprevements--by applications to thi\nboard from railways or provincial^\nto find some way ot Identifying, as\nnon-security riskfl, those who leave\nIn good standing,\nTha suggestion was advanced by\nSarah McClendon, a correspondent\nfor Texas newspapers,     .      ,\nor municipal, governments\u2014 is not\n.mtlitaptorjy \u25a0\u2022'.',*\nIt suggested thi council could coordinate proposals for crossing Improvements and see that those most\nneeded are dealt with first. ,\n. As a prelude to such \u00bb plan, thi\nCNR said, lt \\trould. be helpful If\nthe federal government deolared its\n'own grade crossing policy by\namending the Railway Act, Thi\ngovernment ordered thi board Inquiry In 1052.\nCRADLE CONVERTIBLE\nPRAGUE (Reuters)\u2014A factory at\nProstejev. Communist Czechoslovakia, has produced * metal tubular\ncradle which la convertible Into\ncollapsible bids, swings, a table for\ntwo children er a flower stand, the\nCrech People's Party newspaper\nLidova Demokratole reported.\nOld? Gwe Whole Body New ?ep!\nFeel Years Younger at\n40,50,60 or Over\nMEN, WOMENIrj.lt bbawett, low la emrtf, -\u00bb-, ran-\nIII down jjr ol-,,Ba mora Ilka U-.o r-ajpy jpanonyou uicd jo bo,\nyam aaorirV lavlijoia_-i, itUnr\n'l*W___r_Pl\nHo.'eo or ov\u00ab. ita\ngqp\"\nToolo T.bliU today'.\nup ant.\nutiniw vl\nIron\nw vim.\n,.ai ikowb lo .sura at rtaht. B-U1I1\nA to btllova you avw felt old.\nNew Youngir Pep Amo.is Thousands\n\"i Bed wlv.i oftan take Oifjji to <W op\" tetathar. Thou.\nraud at sulokat-a.il, K 78-y.ai.ol. do-tot write., \"I wok\n,OI\u00abdI(0uod_l.rJsliti\u00bbe_lcIao.\"Haitoiloni_\nRail\nliodi ami\t\nIt myialt, Haiulta\npop and a-aify wl\n-  Start for N\u00bbw Vlflor Today\nDemandOlltai. DotflacotBlawtaktllubaUtott. Oi_..\u00ab!veil_i\u00bbort\nlur-l amuoh youostj (ttUoi. Try Ityounill te the it.ult. thai have\nr-ai n eaili\nsecretary, and Henderson, teen above, a security officer In the\nBritish embassy, were married In Meieow' In 1846. In -1M7. after\nLondon advised Motcow employees who had married Ruttlant to\nresign, Henderson left Russia for Canada but was unable to g\u00b0*\nan exit vita for Rota, whom he never saw again, Recently a re-\npatrlated German war prisoner released from the Verkute Jail In\nSiberia, spoke of teeing Henderson's wife there, She told him that\nshe had been arrested In 1861 on the ttreet while working with\nthe Brltlth em batty In Moaeow.\u2014Central  Press Canadian photos.\nNew Offer by\nNorthwest Gas\nWASHINGTON (AP) -Northwest Natural Gas Co. Wednesday\nproposed an amendment to Its application to serve the Pacific Northwest with natural gas.\nTha proposal was vlewld as a bid\nto breathe new life Into the company's hopes for the Northwest\nmarket. Northwest has taken little\npart In a Power Commission hearing now underway on applications\nby four concerns to pipe gas into\nthi area. Northwest so far has been\nunable to obtain permission from\nAlberta authorities to export gaS\nfrom Canada.\nEXPECT OBJECTIONS\nUnder Its new proposal, North-\nwist would Import natural gas into\nthe United States near Eastport,\nIdaho, for delivery to Idaho and\n\u2022astern Washington communities,\nand to Pendleton, Ore. It also would\ndeliver gas to Trail and nearby\ncommunities in eastern British Col\numbla.\nArthur G. Logan, company attor\nney, said the amendment would be\nfiled with the  commission today.\nirpng objection to Its acceptance\ne expected from rival applicants.\nAlso seeking commission approv-\n\u25a0to serve the Northwest market\ne Pacific Northwest Pipeline\nCorp., Westcoast Transmission Co.\nand Trans-Northwest Gas Co.\nWeather Raises\nUnemployment\nNANAIMO, B. C. (CP)-Wlnter\nweather has increased unemployment Jo the iJonalmo district, J. H.\nTo*, manager of the National Employment Service office, reported\nWednesday,\n\"This is-ii usual seasonal trend,\nwhen thi: area ls blanketed by\nheavy anbw,\" said Mr. Fox in Hii\nmonthly report. \"The situation has\nbeen aggravated to a greater degree than the aami period ln IDS.,\nbecause the continual fall gradually\nforced closure of all outside industries.\"\nHi said the tew job vacancies\nWhich havo been listed were\npromp&y filled.\nPlan Air Warfare\nOn Dangerous Tsetse\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Aviation\nexperts ari planning to wage aerial\nwarfare on Africa's most active disease carrier\u2014the tsetse fly.\nThe deadly fly carries to man and\nanimals the disease commonly\nknown as sleeping sickness.\nThe fly Infests the whole ot central Africa from the east to the west\ncoasts and from the southern edge\nof the Sahara to the mlddli of\nSouthern Rhodesia, an area of aomi\n4,000,000. square miles.\nThe experts are investigating the\npossibility ot dropping Insecticide\nsmoke bombs across thi huge areas\nof bush where tha fly lives md\nbreeds.\nHew It Happened\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A dated man\nran Into the police station here\nTuesday night, and confessed to\nbreaking Into the Salvation Army\nsurplus clothing store, but said it\nwas an accident.\nPrescott Moody of the Army hostel said he arrived at the building\ntoo late to get in by the front'door\nso he attempted to climb the rear\nfire escape.\nHe slipped while climbing, richo-\nchettcd from the ladder through a\nwindow and into the store.\nHe told police he had to break the\nhasp of the door to get out then he\nwent straight to the police station.\nNew Hebrides Rumor\nTermed \"Nonsense\"\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 Austra-\nlbn and British spokesmen Wed-\n'n '-- rti-rn'rised as \"nonsense\" a\nl>at Britain plans to \"sell\no \" -or Interest in the New Heb-\ntides, a group of Pacific Islands\njointly governed by Britain and\nFrance.\nPrime Minister Robert Menzies\nsaid: \"I've never heard of-It. I don't\nexpect I shall ever hear of lt\"\nIn London, a colonial office\nspokesman said the report Is \"nonsense\". He added: \"The New Hob-\nrides are not ours to sell. Nor can\nFrance sell them to us.\"\n \u00a3.r_L '\nPope Unable To\nSee Montgomery\nVATICAN CITY (Riutira)-Pope\nPius Wednesday cancelled a private\naudience scheduled Friday with\nBritain's Field Marshal Viscount\nMontgomery.\nThe pontiff's condition, however,\nwas reported improved and he\nworked ln his private apartments.\nHis illness was. disclosed Tuesday\nas a form of \"nervous stomach\"\ncaused by overwork ln an announcement cancelling a general audi-\nence scheduled for today.\nThe Pope skipped his normal afternoon walk ln the Vatican gardens Tuesday and underwent a\nphysical examination Tuesday\nnight\nMontgomery, deputy supreme Allied commander in Europe, ls due\nln Rome Thursday for talks with\nItalian government and military\nleaders. i\nS. Korea Asks\nHelp for ROKs\nSEOUL (AP)-South Korea has\nasked the United States to help\nbuild RoK armed forces to a point\nwhere South Korea can defend itself without aid of foreign troops,\nPrime Minister Paik Too Chin aaid\nWednesday.\nPaik said the request was mads\nthrough the U.S. Army secretary,\nRobert T, Stevens, who visited\nSouth Korea last week.\nPaik would not disclose what alia\narmy, navy and air force his government wants. Hi said Stevins\npromised to discuss the request\nwith U.S. authorities ln Washington.\n3 DAYS ... Bt Sun \u2014 Shop and Savo\nTHURS., MN. 28 TO TUBS., FIB. 2\nSolo.\n3 ibs. 99c\nYOUR CHOICE.. .CANNED FOOD BUYS\nSLICED PINEAPPLE:\nTyphon. 20.es. tin _, \t\nCHOICE MEDO PEAS:\n15 oi. 2 tint !\t\nCREAM CORN:\nDewkiir. 15 oz. 2 tins\n24 VALENTINES:\nAnd 8 Crayons. Cut out and color.\n15 VALENTINES:\nWith Envelopes\t\n\u2022 TOMATOJUICE SE__ 3 for 99c\nVALENTINE NEEDS AND CANDY\n15'\n25'\n49'\n19'\n39'\n43'\n10'\n33'\nLibby's.\n12 oz.\nCUT GREEN BEANS K__t\nCORNED BEEF\nSWIFTS PREM\nRASPBERRY JAM\nNelson's.\n48 oz. tin\n2,\u201e39*\n2,\u201e99*\n3fc,95'\n 95'\n14 CHOCOLATE BARS:\nV\u00abn KIVK \u25a0.\t\n4 DAIRYMAID BUDS:\nFor \u25a0 ,..\nJELLY BEANS:,\nValintlm; Lb \t\nCINNAMON HEARTS:\nValintlne; Lb\t\nHEARTS:\nChocolate Covered;  _..\u2014- .....\nXXX MINTS:\nWatson's; Lb  \t\n5*\nm  and\n\u2022 APPLE JUICE\nSUN-HYPE, CLEAR\nLAST CHANCE\nAT THIS PRICE.\n48 OZ. TIN 35c.\n\u2022 TOMATO KETCHUPiS4for89c\nWHITEFISH\nlb. 34c\nDaily Herald Snaps\nAt Sir Winston\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The Dally\nHerald, often regarded as the organ ot the Labor party, said Wednesday that all the lamps of Europe\nwould not be doused if \"one ancient\nllgh.'-Prime Minister ChurchiU-\nwent out of public life.\nTin newspaper was commenting\non criticism that growing rumors\nof Churchill's retirement are hurting Britain's case at the Berlin\nconference of foreign ministers.\nTuesday night the - 79-year-old\nprime minister told the House of\nCommons that speculation about\nhis retirement next summer Is \"a\ndelusion\".\nThe Dally Herald said;\n\"The whole of Europe has known\nof Churchill's declining authority\nfor many months. Nothing ls going\nto stop the newspapers of Europe\ndiscussing his health, his age, his\npossible retirement. Only in Britain\nwe must notice nothing.\n\"All must keep their mouths shut,\nthe critics say. What hypocritical\nnonsense it Is.\"\nLean Stew Beef lb. 45c\nPot Roast Beef lb. 38c\nBreakfast Sausage lb. 39c\nPork Shoulder Roast lb. 49c\nCottage Rolls        lb. 62c\nSoo tho Nolson Advertiser for Locker Quantities.\nMiscellaneous Specials\nMARGARINE: _>     77*\nGood Luck;  mm lbs.   '  '\nGIANT RINSO: \u00a3Q*\nPkg    y T\nCOLGATE BEAUTY SOAP:   A     ?Q*\nSale, _ ~ for   *\"^\nLIGHT BULBS: IQ*\nWestlnghouse; _5W to 80W, each  _._..,  _    \u25a0 *7  \u2022\nDIAMOND WALNUTS: AC*\nLb    TV\nDELTA RICE\nLong Grain.\n2 lb. pkg. 43c\nSHIRRIFFS LUSHUS\n3'\u00b0<29c\nLEMON PIE FILLER\n2 for 35c\nGINGERBREAD MIX:\nSherrlM's;  Pkg\t\nCAKE MIX:\nWhite or Chocolate, Sherrlffa; Pkg.\n29\"\n33*\na-tmroM now.\nlb. bag\n_39*\nZ4 lb. bag __.-_    1.79\n98  lb, bag 6.79s\nROYAL INSTANT PUDDINGS\n 2 for 29*\n3 Flavours.\nBuy 2 Get 2 FREE\nFROZEN FOOD SPECIALS\nAYLMER PEAS: J     AG*\n12 oz. pkg,,,. 1   \u00ab*\u25a0 for     **\nRASPBERRIES: J     AG*\n18 oi\u201e Nelson? \"for   ~*W\nSHRIMP MEAT: \u00a3Q*\n6 ot., Rupert; Pkg  W<^\nPIECRUST: 25*\nFresh Ire-en; Pkg  mm*w\nORANGE JUICE: 2     39*\nPasco; 8 oz.,  .\u2014__ *\u25a0*, tins *** **\nDRY FRUITS IN SEASON\nPRUNES: AV\nFresh Pak; 2 lb. pkg. -      ***\nAPRICOTS: CJ*\nLarge Evaporatede; Malkin's Best; 12 os. -_  Wafc\nAPPLES: 35*\nSunrypi; 12 oi, pkg,    \u2022* *w\nBLACK FIGS: J 7*\n18 or. pkg    mtmf\n1 LB. SWEET MIXED BISCUITS\nor Chocolate Mallowettes; 12 os. pkg\t\n37'\nFRESH\nGuaranteed by Liberty.\nGrade A Large.\nCtnt. Extra.\t\ndoz. 52c\nGrand Forks No, 2 or Lethbridge\nNo. 1. New low price.\nApprox. 100 lb. bag.\t\n$2.69\nException buy. Snow\nwhite. At thli priee\nyou would wont leverol. _.,..\nCRISP, CLEAN CELERY:\nLb.   _\t\nCARROTS:\nCalifornia, Large Bunches;\t\n'for\n14*\nIT\nTOMATOES E__ 24c\nTOP QUALITY, JUICY.\nORANGES i 79c\nONIONS\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb45c\nTEA:\nRoyal Tudor; Lb. -\t\niCOFFEE:\nLiberty's Fresh Ground for Aroma; Lb. ....\n75*\n\u20221.09\nCranberries\n_29*\nEatmor.\nLb\t\nSPINACH\n25*\nFresh, Jumbo pak.\n14 oz. ........\t\nCABBAGE\nB.C. .\u00a3\nFirm heads. Lb  \"O\nDELICIOUS\nAPPLES\n4 lb. bag   49 '\nLIBERTY\n.OiiH-e.--.\ni.-.  _\ns*1*^8^^ - -^^^\n PRf\nCanada Outdoors\n(anvasback Flies\nQuickly, Sucker\nFor Easy Decoys\nBy BRUCE  LEVETT\nj Canadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)-As a duck,\nthe canvasback ls a flying fool-\nstupid, but fast.\nWith many of British Columbia's1,\nsport-fishing streams roaring swift,\nmuddy and deep, outdoorsmen nro\nlaying aside their tackle .or shotguns and decoys. One of their main\ntargets is the canvasback duck.\nFrom coast to coast, the \"Can\" Is\nknown as the most delectable of the\nspecies. One of the largest, he Is\nrarer in B.C. than the mallard or\npintail.\nEASILY FOOLED\nHowever, the bird is a sucker\nfor a set of decoys\u2014and they don't\neven have to be good decoys.\nAs long as they float and have\nthe same general outline as a duck\nthe canvasback will dive for a look.\nOnce he catches on, the gunner has\nto be nimble. The canvasback, receiving no reply to his squawked\ngreetings, may do one of two things:\nHe may take off at full throttle or\nhe may dive and head for weeds\nwhere he'll sulk with only his beak\nprotruding.\nBritish Columbia is split into several climatic zones, each of which\ncloses its season as cold weather\nforces the ducks closer and closer\nto the coast Warmed by the Japanese current, the coastal area enjoys duck hunting until mid-January.\nAmong the more canny ducks luring the hunters is the pintail- or\nwidgeon, the most numerous of the\nquackers. He's rated as an alternate by 'duck-shooters and is not\nas popular as the* canvasback.\nALL-ROUND DUOK\nThe mallard is an all-round good\nduck. One of the best from an eating standpoint, he isn't so swift as\nthe \"Can.\" The big bird is known\nas the \"greenhead.\" He's one of\nBritish Columbia's most brightly\ncolored game birds.\nThis season the shooting has been\nalow ln in coastal areas and above\naverage in the interior where a mild\nwinter is keeping the water open\nlonger.\nMaybe as a result of the alow\nhunting some hunters have been\nBmgevies of Xoimg (^^ertoti\nFooted IMexciry Qerris\nff\"f ffyy\n; I           -\n\\ 1\nW^mU\n, -i^h\"'^ H   f\nW~-     \t\n ,.;\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0   : -v.-;,':     ' - '\"\"'\u25a0^'hsv\t\n,:\u25a0 \"'\u25a0\u25a0 \" -l       -''\u25a0                       '    '\u25a0\nm i\n\"--:\t\nyf 'if 'ii'-i' '.\/JI      ..\u25a0'\u25a0;\u25a0..:\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nsWm'sr\n^    ...-IP11       up\n.\u25a0.!,:..,:' '\u25a0* '       ....    \":J-\"-;S -\u25a0\u00ab., J.fjl|i 'li!!li!,.ll!H!:lf!'i-',n...\n^ife^.\n\u25a0;-'.;,.!.,.'-.>:'.;':. '\nThis old drawing-depicts Chatterton'a suicide.\nNote the vial of arsenic fallen to the floor.\nCentral Press Canadian\nCorrespondent\nIn the furore over thi spurious\n\"memoirs\" of George Dupre of Calgary, recently published and sold\nunder the impression they were\nths factual experiences of a member of the French underground in\nWorld War II, some of tha commentators called lt the \"greatest\nliterary hoax in history.\"\nLike fun it wasl   .\nThat dubious honor can belong\nto none other than Thomas Chat,\nterton, a marvellous boy who lived\nbriefly in the mid-eighteenth century. \u2022'\nChatterton, a lad In his teens,\naped the language and. style of the\nfifteenth century so perfectly that\nhe fooled experts into believing\nthat \"ancient manuscripts\" he pro-\nstaying out later and caused a lot\nof damage,\nChris Burton of the B. C. Gun Dog\nClub, once resident of Willow Point,\nnear Nelson, reported' that recently\nin the Fraser river, delta area he\nwalked round four miles in 90 min-'\nutes and got six ducks without firing a shot All were cripples, presumably left by night hunters, and\nwere retrieved by his dog.\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order Extra Copies of -\nNrlann lailg -foaia\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER\nQR TO THE DAILY NEWS CIRCULATION\nDEPARTMENT\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY\nBLACK PENCIL     .. \u2022\nIN\nName _\nAddress\nCity   \t\nName _\nAddress\nCity   ___\nName _\nAddress\nCity   _\nName _\nAddress\nCity   \t\nMame _\nAddress\nCity   __\nduced were genuine and not forgeries born of an amazing brain.\nThi posthumous son of a Bristol,\nEngland, schoolmaster, young Tom\nhad Just barely learned to read\nwhen ho came across some old\ndeeds and papers ln an antique\nchest in the church of St. Mary\nHe-field, where an uncle was sexton.\nThe little boy taught; himself the\nantique idiom in which the papers\nwere written and thi times of\nwhich they told so captured his\nImagination that he could not resist writing, a \"fifteenth century\"\nduologue, or conversation piece between two persons, Elinoure and\nJuga.\nThis first forgery was written\nwhen Tom was only 11 years old.\nTo his immense delight, he was\nbelieved when he offered it as a\nfifteenth century manuscript which\nhe happened to \"find\" in the church\nchest\nChatterton next did a whole\naeries ot manuscripts supposedly\nwritten by an imaginary fifteenth\ncentury monk named Thomas Rowley. Expert antiquarians and highly\nplaced scholars swallowed these\ncolossal phonies hook, line and\nsinker. Even the great Horace Wai-\nole, the fourth earl of Oxford and\none of the top literary lights of the\nday, fell for the teen-age Thomas'\nfakerles. '\nAmong the pieces he produced\nwen such magnificently done literary gems as The Parliament of\nSprites, Aella, The Tournament,\nGoddwyn, The Battle of Hastings,\nBristowe^Tragedle or the Dethe of\nSyr Charles Bawdin, The Balade\nof Charitle all ln antique poetry of\nrare-beauty.\nHad the Chatterton writing come\ni the acknowledged work ot a\nseasoned master, they would stand\nvery*high among literary works.\nThe added fact that they were done\nby a boy not yet 18 years old ls\nSlmost unbelievable.\nChatterton did a coat-of-arms on\na piece ot parchment which he\npalmed off to a gullible townsman\nas the dupe's own family pedigree,\nwhich young Hamas claimed he\nhad found in the old chest For this\nhe received the \"magnificent sum of\nfive shillings (about 65 cents!).\nYoung Tom had no trouble getting his fakeries accepted for publication, but the pay was pitifully\nsmall and- slow.   .\nOn today before Easter in 1770\nhe contemplated suicide and wrote\ndown a last will and testament in\nwhich he made a number of farcical bequests\u2014willing his religion\nto a church dean, his modesty to\nName _\nAddress\nGity   ___\nYour Own Name _\nYour Own Address\nCopy |5c and Qc Postage\nPlus 3% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 22e per copy covers wrapping and mailing by\nut to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain .\nor the United States.\nPHONE 144\nKVliiutt Satlg .Nero*\nthe townsman with the fake family\ntree, and. his humility to the pastor\nof hla church.\nChatterton removed to London,\nbut his financial luck was no better there. He faced starvation and\nthus, on Aug. 24, 1770, he put an\nend to an existence wh|ch to him\nhad become a farce, by downing\na cocktail of arsenic.\nBrilliant to the end, the epitaph\nwhich he wrote himself was engraved oh i his tombstone in St.\nMary Redcliffe churchyard, It\nreads:\n\"To the memory of Thomas Chatterton. Reader, judge not It thou\nart a Christian, believe that he\nshall - be judged by a' Superior\nPower. To that Power only ia he\nanswerable.\"\nDunedin Sums Up Duke in Three\nWords; Queen Inspects Hospital\nDUNXSIN, N. Z. (OP) -\u25a0 1*1\nQueen, now on thi 88th day of her\nNow Zealand tour, Wednosdy met\na little girl who was once One of\nthe world's smallest babies. \\\nThe girl, Rosslyn Gray, now S,\nweighed only 2H pounds at birth.\nShe presented thi) Queen with a\nbouquet during the Royal visit to\nKarltane hospital, on Dunedin's\noutskirts, where Rosslyn has been\nsince birth,\nThi Queen saw through a glass\nscreen a number ot premature babies  In the hospital and  visited\nolder premature babies.\n\u00abCOV_R8 8ITUATION\"\nWhile the Queen was at the hospital the Duke' of Edinburgh met\n45 of the city's leading sportsmen\n*t the town hall. Among the athletes he met were two members of\nthi New Zealand Himilayan expedition, which leaves next month.\nAfter the duke had spent an hour\nchatting, Mayor L. M. Wright called\nfor \"three cheers tor the duke.\"\nThe mayor aaid: ''Everyone here\naaya hi Is a daihn good chap,- and\nI think that covers the situation.\nTha royal couple drive .130 miles\nThursday to Invercargill, New Zealand's southernmost city, where\nthey will stay until they sail for\nAustralia Saturday irom nearby\nPort Bluff in the royal litter Gothic.\nREAD TH; CLASSIFIED DAILY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 28,1M4 \u20147\nDangerous Influence\nLONDON (Riutire)' \u2014 A-general\nblames \"momlsm\" for softening\nBritish'soldiers,\n\"British mothers an almost a bigger problem than the enemy,\" Lt.-\nGen. Sir Brian Horrocks declared\nTuesday In a speech at London University.. The modem British recruit\n\"lives under the malignant influence of 'mom'\u2014and believe me It\nls a dangerous Influence.\" .\nMight SpMd Aid\nTAff_jH,'. Tomos* (Ajl') \u2014 Army\nSecretary Robert T. Stevens of thi\nUnited States arrived here Wednesday and laid that* It American\nmilitary aid to Nationalist China la\nalow \"I might bi able to speed It\nUp,\"   .'\u25a0..'- . ,*K .\nStevens was accompanied by tha\nU.S. Ambassador to South Korea,\nKarl L. Rankin-. Both were dinner\nguests ot President Chiang Xu-W\nshe-u- :\u2022\u25a0 .   ; i'\"\n_i__i_ ';:.'__\u00a3;'\n;;\nSpies fo Exploit\nU.S.-U.K. Tiffs\nBy A. L, MelNTYM-\nSINGAPORE (AP)\u2014Reports\nfrom behind the Bamboo Curtain\nindicate China's Communist bosses\nhave made plans for invasion of\nsoutheast Asia with Burma u the\nfirst target\nObservers who regularly monitor Chinese Red broadcasts say\nLaos,,in Indo-China, and Thailand\nare othej Invasion targets after\nBurma. To coincide with the main\nRed push, Communist agents in Indonesia and the Philippines would\nstep up campaigns to create internal disorder. No dates hava been\nmentioned.\nAGENTS TRAINED\nSpecial Communist agents, trained in Chinese spy schools, will:\n1. Collect Information on U. S.\nmoves in the Pacific and try to\nlearn how much liaison exists between U. S. and British authorities.\n2. Exploit differences ' between\nthe United States and Britain on\nPacific defence policies.\n3. Encourage anti-British sentiment In Malaya.\n4. Lure Chinese business men into supporting Red China economically.\n5. Encourage Chinese students ln\nsoutheast Asia to return to China.\nAIDS ATHLETES\nHULL. England (CP) \u2014 This\nYorkshire seaport established a local committee to aid in raising\nsome \u00a340,000 to send an English\nteam to the British Empire Games\nat Vancouver this summer.\nBritish Dub New\nComedian Second\nCharlie Chaplin\nLONDON (Reuters) - A little\nfellow with sad eyes and a rubber\nmouth is being hailed, as a second\nCharlie Chaplin.\nNorman Wisdom, 33, has been a\nvaudeville and television headlln-\ner here for the last few years, but\nthe critics broke out in a new burst\nof praise for his first movie,\n\"Trouble in Store.\"\n\u2022LITTLE O.N1U8\"\nWisdom, onca a homeless wait\nwho had to join the army to ba aura\nof a meal, takes the part of a luckless salesman ln a big store, a\nChaplinesque role he exploits to\nthe full for slapstick and'pathos. ,\nThe critics commented: \"A little\ngenius '... potentially tha greatest\nliving comic.of tha screen ... the\ncomedian the screen has been looking for since Chaplin and Harold\nLloyd stopped being funny.\"\nWisdom, five foot four and 112\npounds, hit the big-time in vaudeville five years ago. Since then he\nhaa become Britain's most popular\nTV comedian and now ia starring,\nat $9000 a week ln a Christmas, ice\nshow, \"Slnbad on Ice.\"\nHAD RAPID RI8E\n\"I feel grateful,\" said Wisdom\n-of his success. \"If I felt otherwise,\nI should just think back a couple\nof years to when I did not matter\nto anybody.\"\nBack In 10.p, he mattered only\nto his bride, Janet a 20-year-old\ndancer: With assets of only a couple of pounds, they wen living in\none room.\nA few months ago, tha Queen\ntoured television studios and asked\nhim: \"Why don't we sea more of\nyou on television? I could go on\nlooking at you forever.\"\nHis ambition ls to play \"The\nHunchback of Notre Dame.\"\n100% PURE INSTANT COFFEE\nGuarantees, Cup after Cup,\nBETTER FLAVOUR IMP Will\nGMUND COFFEE\nSo toffee-rUh, we\nguarantee you bettet\nflavour in your tup\nthan with ground toffee\nOR YOUR\nM0MYBACK!\nCanada Inspiration\nNEW YORK (CP) - Viet Nam,\nlargest of the three Indo-Chinese\nstates, wants a status In thi French\nUnion similar of that of Canada ln\nthe Commonweal-., Dr. Phan\nQuanrg Dan, Viet Nameso leader\nnow in the United States, says ln an\nInterview in the current issue of\nTempo magazine,\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nNlSCAFF\nINSTANT\nCOFFEE\nJ00\u00b0\/.'PURE COFFEE\n'Now an amazing Jet Process explodes pore,\nchoice coffee\u2014the finest there is\u2014into million.\nof genu of Nescafe', All the pun flavour, body\nand aroma of fragrant coffee.beans at their\nbeat are sealed in. Even the deep, natural\nroasted coffee-colour tells you that nothing has\nbeen lost. The result is a flavour not \"just as\ngood\" as ground.coffee \u25a0... but better.\nHertfithtNtseafiguararUet. If you don't agree\nthat new Nescafe* gives you better coffee flavour\nthan any brand of ground coffee, your money\nwill be refunded. Just send the u_flr~*hed jar\nto Nestle\" (Canada) Ltd., 80 King St. West,\nToronto. Start today. Make new Nescafe1\nyour Family Coffee. ^   .\nUS! US* . New Nescafe Is so coffee-rich. H toe-\nspoonful per eup Is enough.\nSAVE UP TO 40C A POUND\never ground coffee by drinking\nNescafe Instant coffee\n.:._.\u25a0\u25a0  .-    .     \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0  .\u25a0'-.\u25a0'     ..    ..\n_\n\u2022...'\u25a0\u25a0 .'. ..   ..,,.- .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022.   :rr    :..\u25a0>\u25a0.: ,;.,.\"',, :.-.\n\t\n_j____S__\n '''\u25a0\u25a0'\nmm\n\u00ab--\u2014\u2014\u00bb\u2014\u2014\u25a0\n\"#&'\n8\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 28,1954\nSwiss Urge Gpyernmeiif Jo Press\nBERNE\n' By, JOHN MYER8   , .;\/\nSKI, (Beuters)  \u2014  Swissair,\n5 Sw^rald'n eeml-prlvate . national\nair .company, fighting to expand its\n';; services,ih the face .of foreign competition, is .urging the Swiss sov-\nerhinent to exert pressure on foreign countries Which refuse it landing-rights.\njhe: airline says that Britain and\nFrajice, in particular, have shown\nhostility to Swissair plans by refusing 'valuable transit rights at\nLondon and Paris,\nThese rights,' which most foreign\ncompanies enjoy-in Switzerland, enable a company to make an intermediate, stop to collect passengers.\nOn, long-distance flights, fares collected at intermediate stops are\nli sometimes the only way of making\n:. a \u25a0service-pay.:\nWhile British. European Airways\n|    and British Overseas Airways hold\ntransit rights at Geneva' and Zur-\nIchjfor a wide\u25a0.variety\u2022 of destinations, Swissair has. so far been refused transit rights at London for\nits service to New YOrk. At present,  Swissair  is   limited to less\nI profitable British transit rights at\n.  Manchester and   Prestwick, Scotland,'and Irish rights at Shannon.\n1    Swissair  has  failed  to   obtain\ntransit rights in Paris tor its New\nV York' line or for a service to Lon-\n,   ddn and Air France has made it\nj  ilear that lt would rather give up\nIta .transit  rights ln   Switzerland\nthan allow Swissair transit rights\nVtapfaris.\nDENIED ROME\nItaly has so far refused Swissair\ntransit rights in Rome, where several other foreign companies hold\nthem., Spain, Portugal and Belgium\ni are other countries which have so\nfir refused Swissair demands.\nCLASSIFIED AD8 OCT RESULTS\nnlffWW XtVtrtwwmm SmtmmWfs\nmi|M|   ny m* m \u00a7mr\\t\\   \u2014' \u2014\n-. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022IJ^v   mwmr WKAl Mr   DIM\n ' r- :::\u2022';'''--'-t' \u25a0.\/\u2022,'-\u2022<\"- :\nBy ELTON C. FAY   \u25a0\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Air Secretary Harold- E. Talbott has hurriedly revised a statement ot United States intention to use bases in\nSpavin during time of war to say\nit will be in line with agreements\nbetween the two,\n\"Who is going to stop us?\" Tal-\nbott quickly asked when a reporter\nsaid reports are current that the\nagreement under which the U. S.\nls starting, to .build . several large\nair bases in Spain does not provide\nfor U. S. use of the bases In wartime;    \u25a0\u2022'\u2022.'\nAt another point he said: \"There\naTe certain agreements on the use\nof bases, but when the balloon goes\nup we are going to use them.\"\nTalbott made the remarks at a\npress conference also, attended by\nDefence Secretary -Charles Wilson\nand other air officials,\nTYPED STATEMENT\nShortly after the conference\nended, Talbott- office sent to the\ndefence department press room a\ntyped statement in which the secretary said he wished to clarify his\nremark. It added:\n\"The U. S. Air Force has every\nIntention of living up to the agreements between the United States\nand those foreign countries that\nhave granted air base rights to our\ncountry.! We realize that such base\nrights are an undertaking in the\nmutual defence and we enter such\nundertakings .with every spirit of\nco-operation.\"\nTalbott's clarifying statement obviously was Intended to counter the\nlikelihood that his first remark\nmight annoy the Spanish govern-\nment in its inferences about sovereignty.\nDuring a visit to' Madrid last fall,\nTalbott was quoted as saying the\nU. S. intended to stock atomic\nbombs at the Spanish bases. He later denied saying that. *\nAcheson Mourns\nH. HumeWrong\nNEW YORK(CP)-In a letter to\nthe New York Times Wednesday,\nDean Acheson, former United\nStates, secretary ot state, paid tribute to the late Hume Wrong, former Canadian ambassador to Washington who died in Ottawa Monday.\nAcheson, whose parents were Canadian, and who was born shortly\nafter they went to the United States\nwhere his father became a bishop,\nsaid the death \"is a. loss which is\nshared and mourned by Americans\nwith out Canadian neighbors\"\nThe. letter speaks of Wrong as\n\"one of the pioneers of the Canadian foreign service, one of that\nsmall but extraordinarily brilliant\ngroup' which Included Lester B.\nPearson, ' Norman Robertson, Dr.\nOscar Douglas Skelton, and Justice\nJohn Reed.\"\nCLASSIFIED AOS GET RESULTS\n.\nJANUARY 28th to 30th\nGREEN BEANS\nTOMATO JUICE\nCHOICE PEAS\nSunny Down.\nFancy quality.\nA' mealtime appetizer.\n20 oz. can\t\n6for85c\nTaste Tells.\nSieve 5.\n15 oz\n4for55c\nVanity Fair. Choice quality.\nServe cold or in\ncasserole dishes;\n28 oz. can .... ___..\n4fe,95c\nPolly Ann\nNdw( made, vylth   more   milk.   Sliced,,\n\"wrapped.'full 1\u00bb oz. loaf,1 white, or brown.\n2,or27c\nENTER NOW\nWin a 21\" Phillips Table Model Television Set\nIn Safcway's big Stronnheart pet \"food Contest. It's\neasy, enter aa often aa you w|sh. Be sure each entry\ncontains a Stronghear.t label or facsimile.\nStrongheart Dog Food\n15 oz. tin ..._.....__._  2 for 25c\nGet full details at your Safeway Store.\nQawwL UsupdabktL\nGOLDEN CORN: \u2022>       JQt\nTaste Tells, Choice; 15 oz., ** for -\"\u00ab\"*\nDICED CARROTS: ,     J       -)C*\nAylmer; 15 oz. can,'-     **\" for \u2022V\u00ab\u00bb-r\nLYNN VALLEY PEAS: g      7a*\nStandard; 15 'oz. can \" for   ' ** \u25a0\nSAUERKRAUT: 7       3 \u00ab5*t\nLibby's, Fancy; 15 pz. can,... *? for W *f\nQtmmd. SoJupA.\nCHICKEN SOUPS: 1 Og\nCampbell's; lO'oz. can ...'     I O\"\nVEGETABLE SOUP:     g      ncsj\n\\ylmer; 10 oz. can, \" for   ' '\u2022?\nrOMATO SOUP: JM\n\\ylmer; 20 oz. can    \"\u2122\n.IPTON'S SOUP: \u2022)       -) a*\nChicken Noodle; 2H oz., . -\" for \u00ab\u00bb-\u00ab\u00bbr\nBulk. $DijdSu\nPEARL RICE: .,  ar\u00a3\nMonarch; 2 lb. pkt.    -*_\u00ab\u00bbr\nWHITE BEANS: 3 a*\nSmall; 2 lb. cello          \u25a0\u00bb 5\u00bb~\nROSETTA PRUNES: 57$\nLarge; 32 oz. cello ef \u00bb ~\nSsafoodL\nSOCKEYE SALMON: 9\u00bb\nCourt, Fancy; 1% oz. can    efef~\n&2tf\u00a3?**%t      Clip fHis'Coupon\nFANCY PEACHES\nCastle Crest; 15 oz. can\nFRUIT COCKTAIL:\nHunt's, Choice; 15 oz. can\t\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE:\nTownhouse, Natural; 48 .pz.'can ....\nTOMATO JUICE:    r\nSunny Dawn, Fancy; 48 oz. can ...\niBaldnq, TlesdL\nCOCOANUT:\nMonogram, Med. Uns.; 8 oz. cello\nPITTED DATES:\nMonogram; 32 oz. cello\t\nSEEDLESS RAISINS:\nAustralian; 2 lb. bag \t\nCAKE MIXES:     .\nLittle Dipper White or Choc. 15 oz.\nTffljJvrflamoiiL\nMARGARINE: -    ?\n1 for\nSAVE 10e\ntin the purchase of a 10 lb, or larger bag of\nKITCHEN KRAFT FLOUR\nGuaranteed to work wonders with any\nreclpel Brlrfgr this coupon -to our store\nand get 10c off the regular price of a\n10 lb, or larger bag of Kitchen Craft\n. Flour. .'. . ,.s .   .\nOffer expires February 21, 1954.\nSwift's Allsweet; 16 oz. ctn., \u25a0\nMILD CHEESE:\nBerkshire Cheddar; Lb\t\nMACARONI:\nCreamettes; 3 lb. pkt\t\nSTRAWBERRY JAM: .\nEmpress- Pure; 48 oz. can\nWAX PAPER:\nMilady, Refills; 100 ft. roll\n$1\n75*\n49*\n.05\n25*\nKitchen Craft Flour\nPre-fluffed  for  finer  bafclni!   Guaranteed  to   work\nwonders with any recipe.\n10 lb. Paper bag\n$ .73\n24 lb: Paper bag _...........___. $1.67\n49 lb. cotton sack  $3.45\n98 lb. cotton sack .___.__.___ $6.85\nBlade Chuck Roast Beef\nBlade Bone In. It)\nReel or Blue Brand.      \u2014\nSweet, full of lul\u2122\nSirloin, T-Bone or Wing.\n-        .      Sirloin, T-B<\nSteakS Red Brand;\nCross Rib Roast Kd\nGround Beef 85% Lea\";' lb--*-*\"' I\nLb 69*   \u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\"\u00ab\"\u25a0\u25a0?\u2014 85% \u2014\u00bb       \" bQ$\nCross Rib Roast fiU - \u00bb4|l   IgK '*&*\u00a3 29* '\nPork Chops .fe^ .. - 65*   ^*^\u00a3L\u00a3?*& 62*'\n- \u00ab \u00ab        _~ Jst, 2nd Cuts (J 7*     CottageRoHS or Half; Lb' P~,T\nBeef Rump Raasr |& m. u\u00bb. _> \/\u00bb   ww\" M    \u2014.\u2014 \u2014-\u2014\n.  \"\"mmm+~\". -.\"\u25a0__.\u25a0___.\u25a0   -    - -t    __ D.-.t Renf. __SS_T 1 \u2014\ni;mgc6d0^r,'P^29*\nWeihers'R;,-v2ib\u00ab69*\nWe Reserve Ihe Right To Limit Quantities\nFWd Tomatoes\"-     27*\nBroeeolf  lender, Nutritious;     tf.\ntert^' Crisp, fresh...\nheads. Ideql for sd|QdsLb\n23*\nikWmWiMmA\nImported Crisp fresh stalks\nServe stuffed with cheese lb.\n\u2022     \u25a0\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n\t\n WM.\nGlasr\nWith.MAX DES BRISAY\ni   east kootenay playd0wn8:\n\u25a0men- \u2022   -\nHarold Jordan's rink decisively\n(   defeated Alex Caldwell's over the\n\\:p: weekend to the tune of 13-8.\nA game which saw a packed gallery watching Jordan fight for the\nsecond - spot to represent the East\n\u2022 Kootenay in the B. C. Playdowns at\nTrail was close up to the ninth end,\nwhen Jordan scored a big end to\ngo six up.\nThe first end saw Jordan lying\nfour only to have Caldwell come in\nwith a beautiful draw shot to count\none with his last rock. On the second Jordan had a possible three\nbut missed on his second shot when\nit rolled to count two. Caldwell,\nafter Jordan had a rock shot and-\ndouble guarded on the third end,\ndrew through a narrow spot at 1-2\no'clock to take out Jordan's shot\nand lay two. When Jordan missed\n\u2022 his second shot, Alex drew to the\naide of the house to count a big\nthree and go .up 4-2. Each skip\ncounted a single. The next two ends\nsaw nice draws, by Jordan on the\nfourth end and Caldwell on the\nfifth.\nThe sixth end turned out to be\nthe turning point of the gsme. Blsgrove (Jordan's third) missed twice,\nshooting at a pair of sitting ducks,\none just behind the button and one\non the four-foot at 9 o'clock. Alex\nlay four with two other biters on\nthe outside ring. He then drew ln\n\u2022 fifth shot rock; Harold Jordan\nthen made a beautiful take of Caldwell's second shot on the four-foot\nand stayed for a shot. Caldwell\nmissed his second shot, his rock\nstaying wide of the centre line, although it had nice takeout weight.\nJordan then made a draw to the\nface of the second shot rock of\nCaldwell's to count two and tie the\nscore of five each.\nJordan counted another two on\nthe seventh; Caldwell a single on\nthe eighth to set the stage for the\nninth end. On this end Jordan had\nfour rocks In the house\u2014shot on\nthe four-foot at 3 o'clock, third shot\nat 9 o'clock in the eight-foot-\nfourth and fifth shots at 3 o'clock\non the 12th foot and 11 o'clock on\nthe 12-foot Caldwell had second\nshot rock touching Jordan's shot on\nthe four-foot. Jordan then made a\nnice take-out of Caldwell's second\nshot and stayed to count a big five\nand go six up.\nOn the 10th, ln an attempt to get\nback In the game with.a three-\n\u00abndef..^ald,^ell;,to?.-tw.ot(shoyn.\nthe eight-fOot between 1 ahd 8\no'clock oh the 12-foot), rdan then\ndrew to the four-foot Just ahead of\nCaldwell's rock for shot Caldwell\nattempted to pass out his rock\u2014hit\nthe broom perfectly, but the rook\nfell back against the turn, leaving-\nJordan\/shot and up 13-6,\nCaldwell made a nice draw to try\nand score two on the 11th end, but\nwas a shade light and counted one.\nThis end, as well as the 12th, saw\nJordan's rink passing out rocks at\nevery chance. MacKenzle, lead, and\nShore, second, were dead in and\nTINY TOTS SKATING\n2:30-4:00 p.m.\nCHILDREN'S SKATING\n4:00-5:45 p.m.\nFor  Guaranteed\nMarfak Lubrication\nPHONE 75\nMechanical Repairs by\nFactory Trained  Mechanics\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nOpp. Poat Office on Vernon.\nBudget Plan Available, on All\nSales and Service\nleft nothing, of Caldwell's ih the\nhouse, and with Blsgrove and Jordan following suit with excellent\nshots, Caldwell did not have any'\nchance to build a house. ,;.\"..\nPersonnel of the two rinks ar.e;\nrl. Jordan, E. Blsgrove,, R. Shore\nand J. MacKenzle. , ' >-i).\n\u25a0 A. Caldwell, R. Matheson, D. Hon'\neyman and \"Red\" Harrison.\n8,0, REPS\nVancouver Island is to be represented by Lunn of Nanaimo and\nthe winner 6f the OUle Panzer and\nHowey.\nDodge's game \"is this weekend.\nDodge will be remembered as the\nstandout defenceman of the Prince\nAlbert hockey club that the Dynamiters defeated on .their Way to the\n\u25a0Allan Cup In 1936. He ls now located at Duncan, B. C.\nVancouver and Mainland will\nhave Fred Tinllng, who needs no\nintroduction to Kootenay curlers;\nBung Cartwell, who came from behind to defeat Chess Chesser and\nrepresent B. C. a few years back;\nand Harry McConnachie, one of the\nbest lobbyists in the business,\nOkanagan District has Hobbs of\nKelowna, who showed well in defeating Stone in the Grand Challenge of last year's 'spiel; Dr. Ot-\ntem of Kamloops, who'has a seasonal rink of veterans, including Cy\nGlover; and Lynn Valair of Vernon, who won the Nelson Summer\nBonspiel two years back and last\nseason had a big year\u2014winning at\nVancouver and Kamloops.\nEast Kootenay, as , mentioned\nabove, has Caldwell and Jordan of\nKimberley. Both of these rinks\nhave had considerable bonspiel experience, and from this corner\neither one could wind up as B. C.\nRep to the Canadian Playoffs at\nEdmonton. *\nNorth Central B. C. \u2014 Nothing\nknown as yet.\nWest 'Kootenay\u2014Is to have four\nreps, but as the playdowns will not\nbe on until January 29. and 30, no\nre_\u00a3 are decided.\nWest Kootenay Playdowns\u2014This\nseries will be held in Nelson January 29 and 30, and should provide\nsome excellent sport. Four rinks are\nto be picked from 16 centres, and\nwe understand from double knockout play.\nThe Trail Club will be represented by Otto Gill, Jim Moore,\n\"Sootty\" Ross and-\"Chess\" Chesser\nof.r'geo>o ,.'.7V' jind \"Frenchy\"\nD'Amour, Bob McGhee, Perry Landuccl and John Cameron, Section\n\"B\" winners.\n-The Nelson Club wilj probably\nhave Milt Ryalls, Dave Jleaklns,\nJim Milne, Earl Hunt and Len Peerless representing the green and\nwhite.\nThe representatives from Rossland, Salmo and Grand Forks are\nunknown at this writing.\nKEEP IT TO YOURSELF\nOn past perfarjrmnces of the rinks\nand from whig this \"Behind the\nGlasser\" sees, we predict the rinks\nof GUI, D'Amosua Cameron and Ryalls to keep ihb West Kootenay\nbanners flyinS*t the B. C. Bonspiel. A lot of .really good rinks\nare'left at the post, but seeing as\n\u25a0we have to get on the limb, there\ntis. Best of luoh to all rinks, and\nmay the best wht!\n \u2014-_\u2014\t\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Establishment\nof an international surgeons' hall\nof fame patterned, after the -halls\nof fame created for the all-time\ngreats in baseball and other fields\nby Dr. Max Thor.k, founder of the\nInternational College of Surgeons..\nThe medical hall of fame will\nbe set'up in a building adjoining\nthe headquarters of the international college here. Each country\nrepresented in the college will nom\nlnate its own candidate, but the\nfinal selection will rest with the\ncollege of electors, 100 medical historians in countries throughout the\nworld.\nRichard, G-bffrioh Score,\nGancidieris Bl^feLe^ 2^0\nMICKEY MANTLE, star centre-\nfielder and Yankees' slugger, reveals a Certain expectant look aa\nhe peruses some' of his fan mall\nat his home In Commerce, Oklahoma. Perhaps Mickey Is looking\nfor that piece of paper notifying\nhim of a hike In hit contract fee\nfrom $16,000 of last year to $26,000.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nPro-Rec Students\nAs Title Contender\nWithin a short time students of\nEd Kelter will be striving .to make\na place on the senior men's team\nthat will take in the Dominion\nChampionships in Vsncouver next\nJuly.\nIt is expected all seniors will be\nworking hard to be one of five chosen for both individual and team\ncompetitions.\nEd Kelter said Wednesday there\nis still the possibility of there being a senior girls' competition, but\nas yet no further word has been\nreceived from the Coast.\nThe names of those children\nchosen to appear on the first television boxing card in Spokane on\nFebruary 13 have been named by\nKelter.\nIn all six boys will appear on the\nprogram with three spares going\nalong. Those named to .the team are\nKen Peerless, Earl Farenholtz, Jack\nFrench, Ted French, Jim, Cain and\nPhillips. The spares are Gerry Kelly, Gerry Kllpatrick and .Terry\nGreen. ' \u2022'\nFurther leader tests are under\nway and the results are expected to\nbe completed within a few days,\nKelter said. Tests for the senior\ngirls are almost completed with\nsome remarkable scores being tabulated by the girls.\nSUPER-KEEN, MIRROR-FINISHED EDGES\nGIVE THE BEST-LOOKING SHAVES EVER!\n^Gillette\nBlue Blades\nTiny Give You Smoother\nShovei And Lost Far longer Than\nOrdinary Blades\n\u2022 Gllletto Blades are sharp, plenty\nahirp and give the best-looking, most\ncomfortable shaves possible.\nNow to save time, save fun and\nmake blade changing easy, ask for\nGillette Blue Blades in fho modem\ndispenser that dealt'em out unwrapped\nready for use. You pay just the regular\nprice of the blades alone.\n20 fer $1.00 \u25a0 -     10 for SOe\nIn IMPROVED DISPENSERS  with\nBuilt-in Compartment fer Used Blades \\\nRegular Package 5 blades 25c\n\" look jH^'feel ir**9\\ be if' use Gillette Blue Blade\nwild the siM\/t\/'tsr edge, ever honed\nFights\nBy The Astoclated Press\nPhiladelphia\u2014Gil  Turner,   157%,\nPhiladelphia,   outpointed   Pierre\nLanglois, 157%, France, 10.\nPittsburgh\u2014Johnny Eubanks. 148,\nPittsburgh, outpointed Roger Why-\nnott, 158, Mahone Bay, N.S., 10.\n8TATELY CR08SING\nThe Graf Zeppelin crossed the\nAtlantic from Germany to the United States in 1928 In four days, 15\nhours, 46 minutes.\nTORONTO (CP),,-, Goals,; by\n\u25a0MauriCejRIchard and Bernie Geoffrion gav.e Montreal Canadiens a\n*'0 totpry over Toronto Maple'.\n\u25a0Leaf-in-a National Hockey. League\ngame before 13,537\" fans Wednesday night and gave the, Montreaiers\na tighter grip on second place.\n; j It waa < goalkeeper Gerry McNeil's\nsixth shutout of the season and Toronto's seCond loss oh homo ice. '\n-The win moved Canadiens within\nthree points of the leading Detrdit\nRed Wings. Toronto is in third place\nthree points behind Montreal.  ';'\nLeafs .couldn't get organized\nthroughout the game and lost many\nscoring chances when their plays\ndied at the goalmouth.\nRichard scored his first goal on\nToronto ice this Season and his 29th\nso far-when he went ln on the unprotected Harry Lumley.\nRichard drew the' goalie out of\nthe net and dribbled the puck into\nthe net. Defenceman Tim Horton\nscooped the pud. out of the net\njust as it crossed the goal line but\nreferee Red Storey ruled it a goal.\nCOSTLY PENALTY\nA penalty to leftwing.Erlc Nest-\nerenko early ln the second period\nwas costly to the Leafs. Geoffrion,\nalso scoring his first of the season\nhere' and his 25th to date, took a\npass from Eddie Mazur during a\ngoal-mouth scramble and slammed\nlt at Lumley. The puck hit .Lumley,\nbounced over htm and into the net.\nCentre Elmer Lach, who made only\none appearance, was also given an\nassist. \u2022\nLeafs pressed a heavy attack ln\nthe third period ln a desperate attempt to score but the Canadiens\nturned them back on every occa\nslon. Geoffrion was penalized with\nonly two minutes remaining but\nMontreal was able to ice \u00abhe puck\ninto the Toronto zone safely,\nDespite the- bruising play, only\nfour penalties were called by referee Red Storey.\nViolamac Rink\nWins New Denver\nAnnual Bonspiel\nNEW DENVER - The Violamac\nrink skipped by Van Hansen captured the annual Miner, and Loggers bonspiel at New Denver when\nthey edged past the Bert Robinson\nrink from Slocan.\nTen, rinks entered the 'spiel with\nrepresentatives from Slocan City,\nSandon, Silverton and New Denver.\nAt the conclusion of the 'spiel\nthe lady members of tho New Denver Club served a bean supper for\nvisiting curlers. Mrs. Jean Clarke\nwas in charge of the supper committee.\nWomen's Bonspiel\nKIMBERLEY \u2014Sixteenth annual\nKootenay Ladles'.Bonspiel will get\nunder way Thursday morning at'\n8 a.m. with 24 rinks competing-In\nfive competitions,\nAH district clubs are well reore-\nsented, with Trail having five, Nelson three, Creston four, Cranbrook\none, Salmo two, and Kimberley\nei.ht,\nKootenay Ladles' Curling Association president-Mrs. Lu Maartman\nof Kimberley. Secretary Mrs. K.\nHobden and Bonspiel draw chairman Don Morrison have lined up\ntwo primary events' for the Kimberley and Trail Cups. Secondary\ncorhpetitlons to these will be the\nNelson and Rossland Cuns. Consolation competition will be for the\nCranbrook. Cup and the grand aggregate will be supported by the\nCreston Club and.will be \"awarded\nto the rink with the highest percentage of wins. \u25a0'\n8 A.M. START\nDraws in the Kimberley primary\ncompetition will start at 8 a.m. with\nfurther play at 10 and 12, Trail\nCup primary games will get under\nway at 2 o'clock, with further draws\nat 4 and 9 o'clock to complete the\nfirst round, after which second\nround games in the Kimberley pri\nmary will be played,\nThe annual banquet will, be held\nat 7 o'clock in the Kimberley Unit-\ned Church hall..'.'1' i'\u2022\u25a0'.-.-',-.- (\nPlay will begin in earnest Friday\nmorning when, the rinks, get under\nway at 7 a.m.\nThursday afternoon.draws:\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Yaschuk (K) vs Mil-\nburn (T); Blundell (K) vs'Sherling\n(Cr); Goodwin (K) ys'Jones (T);\nSutcllffe (C) ys:Carney (K).\n4:00 p.m.\u2014Mannings (N) vs Hanson (K); Martin (K) vs Avery (S);\nGraham (T) ys Rochon (K); Davies\n(C) vs Parsons (S).\n, 9:00 pm.\u2014Muraro (K) vs Wallace\n(N); Watts (C) vs Murphy (T); Pattullo (T> vs Burns (C); Maartman\n(K) vs Craig (N).\nLegend\u2014K, Kimberley; T, Trail;\nC, Creston; Cr, Cranbrook; N, Nelson; S, Salmo.\nKimberley \u2014 Blundell, \u25a0 Carney,\nGoodwin, Hanson, Maartman, Martin, Muraro, Rochon and Yaschuk.\nTrail \u2014 Graham, Jones, Mllburn,\nPattullo and MUrphy.\nNelson \u2014 Craig, Mannings and\nWallace.\nCreston\u2014Burns, Davies, Sutcllffe\nand Watts.. .\nCranbrook\u2014Sherllng.\nSalmo\u2014Avery and ParSons.\n;.\u25a0*.. .\"\u2022   \u25a0   \u25a0   - ,- -v       \u25a0-,-\u2022\u2022'-;    \u201e    ,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0   \u25a0.-.\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0;'\u25a0'\u25a0:    , .    .     * .\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 rfm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. JW,.9*4 fej.!;\nMoore Floors Maxim\nTo Retain Championship\nBy MURRAY ROSE\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP)-LIght' heavyweight champion Archie Moore\nfloored Joey Maxim twite with\nsmashing rights and handed him a\nsavage beating Wednesday night to\nscore his third straight title victory\nover the former titleholder.\nThe 37-year-old 175-pound King,\nwho entered the ring as a 8-5 underdog in a-surprising late shift of\nodds, sent the 31 year-old Cleve-\nlander crashing to the canvas for\na six-count in-the eighth round and\na seven-count ln the 11th. '\u25a0'\"'\nThis was the most impressive of\nthe three wins the ancient St. Louis-\nborn Negro has racked up against\nthe light-hitting but dead-game\nMaxim.\nIt was the 18th straight victory\nfor the champion who hasn't lost\nin two years.\nMoore stormed after his old rival\nfrom the opening belL Ha wore\nhim down with thudding blows to\nthe body through the early rounds,\nsoftened him up further with power-packed left jabs and hooks and\nsent pal Joey oh the way with his\noverhand right-'to the head.\nArchie beat Joey at his own specialty.*--While Maxim couldn't keep\nArchie off with his stabbing left\njabs, Moore snapped Joe's head\nback repeatedly with left jabs that\nhad all of Moore's power behind\nthem.\nDom DiMaggio\nWould Return\nTo Cleveland\nLAWRENCE, Moss. (AP) - Dom\nDiMaggio has no immediate plans\nto-return to baseball but admitted\nWednesday that if he has a change\nof heart \"Cleveland would get first\npreference because it was the first\nclub to approach me after I became a free agent.\"\nThe 38 - year - old bespectacled\n\"little professor\" who patrolled the\nBoston Red Sox outfield with brilliance for many years quit last\nyear after an off season ailment\nprevented his participating ln the\nspring training.\nThree Players Fight lor Scoring\nLeadership With Haldane Leading\nAlthough a week ago Buzz Mellor\nof the Kimberley Dynamiters took\nover the WIHL scoring leadership\nfrom Bill Haldane for the first time\nthis winter, his stay at the top was\nshort-lived. Bill (Red Tilson of the\nSpokane Flyers gained possession\nfor one night only to lose it again\nto Haldane last weekend.\nHaldane's lead, however, is so\nthin that any one ot the other two\nplayers may pop back into the\nleadership at any moment. Haldane's mark of 51.85 is followed by\nTilson with 51.78 and Mellor with\n51.00.\nIn fourth place, also in contention, is Nelson's Lee Hyssop, last\nyear's scoring champion, with a\n48.71 followed by Trail's Mike Shabaga with 48.03.\nHaldane still holds on to the goal\nsniping lead with 36 to his credit,\nwhile' Red Tilson is right behind\nwith 35. Tilson's 45 assists places\nhim far ln the lead ln this department. Lee Hyssop, with 35, is in\nsecond place.\nGordie Andre of the Kimberley\nDynamiters continues to be the\nleague's bad man with 105 minutes\nserved in the penalty box. Bernie\nin line with 84 minutes served.\nAlthough Gerry Fodey of the\nSpokane Flyers has earned the most\nshutouts, four, the goal-tending\nhonors are being held by Seth Martin of the Smokies, with an average\nof 3.55 goals scored against him\nper game.\nThus far in the league, there have\nbeen 740 goals scored by the four\nteams.\nHaldane. Nelson\nTilson, Spokane\nMellor, Kim\t\nHyssofr Nelson .. 27\nShabaga, Trail ...    28\nLilley, Kim    25\nKavanagh, Kim. 20'\nRamsden, Spo. ..    32\nMcNally, Spo    29\nRozzinl, Spo    22\nJohnston. Spo    27\nHockley, TOm. .. 21\nScott, Spo. . . 22\n- Goalies' averages:\nMartin, Trail\t\nGold, Kimberley\t\nHodgson, Nelson\nFodey, Spokane ...\nBetker, Kimberley\nPaterson, Nelson .\nGibson, Trail\nA TP\n30   66\n35   45\n18   33\n51\n62\n61\n45\n45\n64\n62\n37 59\n32 59\n14 35\n32 54\nG GA A.ve. S\n9   32   3.55   0\nATP\n51.85\n51.76\n51.00\n48,71\n48.03\n45.00\n45.00\n41.41\n40.11\n38.17\n38.17\n35.00\n34.94\nGrebinsky of the Flyers is next Rodzinyak, Nelson\n1 4\n8 34\n49 215\n33 151\n8 37\n28 133\n25 127\n4.00\n4.25\n4.38\n4.57\n4.82\n4.75\n5.08\nJUST ARRIVED\nT-SHIRTS white)\nBOYS' AND GIRLS'\nSixes 24 \u2022 34. Eaoh\t\nMEN'S AND WOMEN'S,\nSizes 36 - 44.\t\n$1.24\n$1*59\nFor Pro-Rec and Gym 'Activities\n**Hs\n547 Baker St.\nBOYS' ANDMl_N'8_laOP\nPhone 1717\nTrabert, Seixas\nOusted From\nAussie Doubles\nSYDNEY (AP)-Tlred Tony Trabert and Vic Seixas, who won the\nDavis Cup doubles for America,\nwere knocked out of the Australian\nnational doubles championships\nWednesday, 24 hours after Trabert\nwas blasted from the singles in a\nmajor upset.\nAustralians Clive Wilderspin and\nNeale Fraser, a second-string combination, defeated Seixas and Trabert, 6-4, 12-10, 10-8 ln the' doubles\nsemi-finals at White City Stadium.\nTuesday, aging John Bromwich\nlost two sets to Trabert, the No. 1\nAmerican player, 1-6, 1-6, then rallied to defeat the Cincinnati star\nin the next three sets, 6-2, 6-3, 6-1.\nSeveral Australian tennis writers\nsuggested the .Australian Lawn\nTennis Association look Into Tra-\nbert's actions,and send a report to\nthe U.S. Lawn Tennis Association.\nTrabert,'smarting Wednesday\nover - complaints that his court\nmanners weren't all they should\nbe, retaliated by saying manners\nof Australian spectators are pretty\nbad, too.\nGOING TO TELL\nAnd he vowed that when he gets\nhome, he's \"going to tell officials\nthe truth about what goes on down\nhere, where tennis is really a big\nsport.\"\nTrabert, 23, got a bad reception\nfrom the gallery when he lost to\nBromwich.\n\"We're not animals \u2014 we play\ntennis for fun,\" he fumed. \"People\nhere come and pay their 70 cents\nor so and maintain it gives them\nthe right to shout their heads oft\nat us.\" ,.   \"\u25a0\nEdmonton Match\nEDMONTON (CP) - Canadian\nheavyweight champion Earl Walls\nhas signed to fight veteran Freddie\nBeshore ln an Edmonton match\nFeb. 15, promotor Jack Berry announced Wednesday.\nWalls suffered his first setbapk\nsince 1951 when he lost a unanimous -O-'round decision to Tommy\nHarrison of Los Angeles ln Toronto\nTuesday night Walls has fought\nmost of'his professional career in\nEdmonton.\nBeshore, who has been beaten by\nseveral of the world's top boxers,\nhas yet to be knocked off his feet.\nCHSA Announces\nB.C. Champions\nTORONTO (CP) - The Canadian Horse Shows Association Wednesday announced the names of\nowners of horses which won championship awards ln shows ln Can\nada during 1953:\nB. C. NAMES\nJumper, D. B. Carley, Victoria;\nHunter,-Mrs, C. C. Carpenter, Victoria; Hack and Arabian, two classes, Miss Daphne Snow, Cloverdale,\nB. G.; Saddle and Harness, one\nclass, W. J. Lesagei Abbotsford,\nB.. C; Pony, Miss Pat Pattinson,\nChilllwack, B. C; Palomino, Frank\nShier, Chilllwack, B. C.; Parade\nHorse, Mrs. Ann Dean, Lynmour,\nB. C; Stock Horse, Jack Robinson,\nSardis, B. C; Equitation, Miss Heather Barnes, Crofton, B. C.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nCapacity 40-45M per day. Two locomotive type\nboilers. W. H. Allah Steam Engine. Excellent dynamo\nand engine. Simplex Steam Pump. Twin cylinder feed\nsteam engine, etc. Saws, Bull edger, trim tables, 250\nfoot sorting chain etc. Everything to make a first class >\ncomplete working unit. Will sell for one quarter of\nreplacement cost or any reasonable offer.\n'   -i r>     ..     _.            N. J. MelNTYRE\nLOntacU           10123-112 Street\nEdmonton, Alta.\nPhone 44195 ,\t\nREUNITED after a seven-year lapse, Bentley brothers played \u2022''*\nlike 18-year-olds, scoring three goals ahd five aaalsts between them-'n\nto lead the New.York Rangers to an 8-3 triumph over Bostono-iT\nBrulna. Greying 37-year-old Doug (right), playing his first gam**}.'\nfor the New.Yorkera, notched one goal and three assists while Max-...\n33, fired two goals and assisted on two others. The victory was a.\nkey game for Rangers, who rose to a fourth-place tie with Brulna?\nTo Join Rangers, Doug temporarily gave up hla Job aa player-coacfi5\"-\"\nof the Saskatoon club In the Wcatern League. He haa returnedt-t**\/\nSaskatoon, but will rejoin the Rangers If the latter ean negotiate--1'\na deal,\u2014Central Press Canadian. .ur,\nWith Stane\ndnd Besom\nResults of play in ih* Nelson\nCurling Club's Collinson Cup competition Wednesday wen: .\nW. Burdenle 6, R. a W-Uao* of\nL..J, -daurer 8, A. Fare-Jwlt- lit\n3, -Young 9, 1: Rern-rbottom Tf\nR. M. Chandler 0, W. DeFoe. If\nH. A. Greenwood 9, 3. Harvey T(\nR. F. Wallace 6, H. Bush 8;\nL. McEachern 9, ft. C. Hunt 8)\nD. Porteous 8, O. Moir T)\nT. H. Bourque 8, R. Carmiobael'\n19; ,\nW. Taranj 5, E. Mason 11.\nPapers Beg Rex\nHang Up Cloves\nSALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Tb*\nsports editors of both of Salt Lake\nCity's, daily newspapers begged Rex\nLayne Wednesday to hang up hia\ngloves and get a Job.\nThe advice came' in signed columns by John Mooney of the Salt\nLake Tribune, and Hack Miller of\nThe Desert News and Telegram;\" i\nBoth were commenting \"on the\nytah heavyweight's fechniegl\nkhockbu. Monday in New York lit\nthe hands of Tommy Jackson, and\nhis assertion following the fight\nthat he planned to rest a few\nmonths and then get in shape for\nanother comeback attempt.\nHIOHE8T PAY^-        i -**\nCINCINNATI (A_>>-T*d Kl-HM\nzewskl, home-run UHtng first beast\nman, waa signed ta a -9M contract\nby the Cincinnati Re^legs Wedrra\u00ab-r\nday for the highest pay ever glyeft-\na player by th. ehib. .- sev*- \u25a0\nThe guess was \u00bbJ35,000; . M>\nPHONK  14* FOR  CLASSIFIED\nStrike the\nright note\nThe good host strikes the right note by\nserving Scotch Whisky; it ia the drink\nmost appreciated by his guests. Make\nyour choice \"Black & White\" and you\nwill add an extra touch of quality to\nyour entertaining. How could  it be\n-  otherwise when the. pick of the finest\nScotch Whiskies are blended in the\nspecial \"Black & White\" way;\nBUCHANAN'S\n.\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nDheSccidiS in the Blending\nBy Appointment\nto tha lata King Gaorga VI\nScold. WM.ky DlatllMra  .\nJomat Buchanan & Co, Ltd.\nDistilled, Blended and  Bottled in  Scotland\nCONTENTS 26!. OUNCES\nB-W3\nthis advertisement is not published ot displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government ol British Columbia*.-\n  \u25a0 -\/-\"- .wv,.^..,.-_,^^\n r'--'.,'^:.r.\n _\u2014\n\"f\n10 \u2014N-LSON DAILY NfcWS, VHukiOAY, JAN; 28,1944\nc J\u00a3lj~^ '\u25a0&\nH_\n\u00ab\u00a3_>'\u25a0'.   :v4\ni>\nH?\ntlSSIFIEII HIS\nPERSON-TO-PERSON MNTAb\nFOR QUICK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Clestilied Ada\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\n; BIRTHS\nSCHEER \u2014 To' Mr. and: Mrs.\nThomas Sclieer of Vancouver, at St.\nPaul's Hospital, Vancouver, January 22, a daughter, Leslie Ellen. \u25a0.'\u25a0!\nWOLINSKI \u2014 To Mr. and, Mrs,\nNick Wollnski, Salmo, ot Kootenay\nLake 'General Hospital, Jan. 21, a\nson,.\nSTRACHAN \u2014 To Mr., and Mrs.\nRobert Strachan, 388 Crease Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Jan, 21, a daughter,      .-'-'.   -\nDICKEY - To Mr. and Mrs.'ty-\nall Dickey, Salmo, at, Kootenay\nLake General Hospital,'Jan. 23, a\nson..?>>\"'\u25a0 <'. -.','\u25a0'.\u25a0'   -   \u2022    \";\",    ,.;    '\nLANG'\u2014 To Mr. and Mrs; Joseph\nLang, General Delivery, Nelson, at\nKootenay - Lake General Hospital,\nJan. 23, a son.'   ,       .*'.,'\nTOWNSEND \u2014 To Mr; and; Mrs,\nFrederick. Townsend, 610-7th Street;\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nJan. 24, a.son.' . . '\nMUNCH\u2014.To Mr. and Mrs. John\nMunch, Castlegar, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Jan. 24, a son,\nWIKPORD -, To Mr..,arid Mrs.\nErnest Wilford, Vallican, at Kootenay. Lake General Hospital, Jan.\n25, a daughter,.      -       , \u2022''...\nREPIN - to Mr. and Mrs. Nick\nRepln, SKoreaores, at > kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Jan. 25,\ntwins, boy and girl.        I       \u25a0'-.,'\u25a0\nSCHMIDT - To Mr. and,Mrs.\nSylvester Schmidt, .Mountain Station, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Jan. 26, a'sop.,'-\nANDERSON \u2014 To Mr, and-Mrs.\nEric Anderson, 507 Silica Street, at\nKootenay Lake \u2022 General Hospital,\nJan. 27; a-daughter.-\nMcNOWN - To Mr; and Mrs.\nChester-McNown, .R.R.I,-Nelson, at\nKodtenay Lake General Hospital,\nJan. 27. a daughter. ...  -\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nTenders are invited for the purchase of Lot 4 of Parcel C, Plan\n2358,' situate in the business area\non the east aide ot Columbia Ave-\nnue In Castlegar..' \u25a0' ,   .\nTenders must be accompanied by\na marked cheque for 5% of the\nprice, offered and be; In the hands\nof the Clerk, P.O. Box 130, Castlegar, on of before 5:00 p.m., February '.(Jit, 1054. the lowqst or any\ntepder not necessarily accepted.\n..- '.' Al T. HorswllI,\ni '-.-.\", Municipal Clerk.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nLE ROUGE BAISER.INDELIBLE\nLipstick. $1: Hair On Face Instant\nRemover, $.2.' Corrective Cosmetics. 211 Birks Bldg'.. Van.. B.C,\nCOMPLETE HOUSEHOLD FURN-\n,   itiir., chrome kitchen sets, cafe\ndishes,, gas grill, Venetian blinds\nlike' new, and effects. Phone 306Y.\nPIPE-:- FITTINGS - TUBES -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trad-\ning Co., 935 E. Cordova Street,\nVancouver,\n? x 12 AXM1NSTER RUG WITH\nfelt; also chesterfield and chair,\ncoffee table, Phone \u2022687-L.  -..\nONE WHITE-ENAMELED AUX.\nburner, one double bed, 'and on\u00ab\nJunior bed, baby sleigh. Ph. 909-X,\nHELP WANTED\nGIRL FOR HOTEL WORK. -\nSteady, fulltime. Apply Box 0338,\nDally News.\nSITUATIONS;WAfirTEO\nJUNIOR OFFICE CLERK DESIRES\nposition in. Neslon. Office.' Has\nknowledge ot typing 'and 'book*\nkeeping Write Box Hii, Daily\nNews    .... ,'. \u2022\nDRESSMAKING AND - ALTJ-RA-,\ntions. Reasonable prices. Phone\n1016-Y.-. :. \u25a0    ;    ..,.-\u25a0 \";.. .\nWANTED--HOUSEWORK BY \"THE\nhour. Phone 274-R.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nESTABLISHED COliNER GROtf-\ntry and 'confectionery for sale.\nIndustrial payroll city.\" Near\nschool; Modern' house attached,\nfor rent or sale. Box 9076, Nelson\npally News.      .\"-    v\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co, D. L- Kerr,- Agent.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE CPR.\nDepot. Clean rooms and reasonable rates. Vancouver, B.C.'.\".\nWANtED - E-FLAT ALTO SAX\nand trumpet. Box 9116 Dally\n' News.\nFOR SALE\u2014'HEAT WAVE' ELEC-\ntrie -range; good condition. Phone\n535-L, 1011 Hall Street,\n12-FT.ALUMINUM TIJATlER,\ncash: term, or rrade land, or -\nBox 9318, Dally News.\nHOfrsi-HOLD FURNITURE, LIKE\nliew. Apply 1011 Falls St. after\n2 p-m., or phone 797-R.\nCRE|-S CORN SALVE-FOR SURE\nr.llef. Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nEASY VACUUM CUP WASHING\n^.machine, Phone 658-X   .\nBABY BUGGY FOR SALE. LIKE\nnew. Phone 892-Y.\nLIVESTOCK. fOULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHE CHICKS a,WHICH GIVE RE-\nsuits\" Over 30 years-of experience in selection of breeding\nbreeding stock and' actual poultry raisin)! Is your guarantee of\nhigh quality chicks The follow,\nIng breeds and, cross breeds are\navailable and suited to every\nneed: SC 'White. Leghorns. Nevy\nHampshires. Barred Rocks. White\nRocks. Light SUMex. Rhode Island Reds Black Australorps. also\nLeghorn-Hampshire Cross, Austra-Whites,. Rock-Hampshire\nCross and Hampshire-Rock Cross\nBroad Breasted; Turkey poults\nOrder early and, remember \"It's\nResdlts That Count\", Particulars\nand prices sent Immediately upon\nreouest RUMP AND SENDALL\nLIMITED, BbX.N; Langley\nPrairie, B.C., or Vernon. B.C.\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS-R.O.P.\nbred Leghorns, also R.O.P. sired\ngrades of Leghorns, New Hampshires, Leghorn jlampshlre cross.\nBuy our chicks': and follow bur\ndirections how to raise them and\nkeep them.for complete success,\n29 years' experience-with chicks\nand poultry.' Apply our- agent\nNelson Farmers- Feed Supply,\nNelson, or writer direct to New\nSiberia Farms, N, Balakshin,\nR.R. 3, Chilllwack, .B.C.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES.PAID.FOR\nscrap lrort. steels, brass, copper,\nlead, etc Honest grading Prompt\npayment made Atlas Iron & Mo-\ntals Ltd.. 250 Prior St.. Vancouver,\n6C Phone Pacific 8357 ,\"-$,\nWANTED-8 OR ,10 THOUSAND\nfeet bf good grade ,fir lumber.\nApply Edward Couckuyt, Box 1,\nWolseley, Saskatchewan,        \\hiM\nRENTALS\nLAKESIDE   BUNGALOWS.   SlrTO\ngle,or double room cabins Comfortable,  propane gas; heat and '\ncook Hot water all the time See\nlt or phone 864. ', '\u25a0*,\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\n. rent. Hot' and cold water and- gaa\nrange.  Private  entrance.  Phone\n834-R.v. ,   ,--   -.-\u2022 .', v-J\nSINGLE   AND   DOUBLE  ROOMS'!\n\u2022  for  rent   General  heat;  electrte.\nstoves. N Shore Motel. Ph. 1684.'\nHOUSEKEEPING' OR SLEEPING .\nrooms > by the day, .week...of.'\nmonth Allen Hotel. 171 Baker St.\nWARM   BEDROOM   FOR   RENT;\nclose ln. Phone 653JR:\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS.\nApply 305 Victoria St. Ph. 157-L.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm. Mission City. B.C We have\nover 7000 extremely, healthy and\nproperly conditioned -Breeders On\nour own farm. Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock ln White Leghorns. White\nRocks. New Hampshires arid\nCrosses. Hatalogue on request.'\nFOR SAL-^ybuNG; COWrJtJST\nfreshened. M. Legebokoff, Goose\nCreek, B.C.   .''\u25a0\u25a0 .L .'\u25a0;'.   '\nWANTED\u2014BULL, ABOUT 18 MOS.\nold. Write P.Q..Bpx S7, Trail. B.C.\nMACHINERY\nFOR RENT-2 FURNISHED LIGHT\nhousekeeping rooms. Ph, 723-Y,.\nPARTLY FURNISHED 2-ROOMED\nsuite Apply-723 Silica Street,\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS -\nWrite P.O. Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,    BICYCLES\nMUST SELL 1950 ANGLIA SEDAN\n\u2014 Good rubber, body excellent\nshape, motor overhauled. $150.00\ndown payment, $40.00 per month\nfor 12 nionths; everything lnclud-\n. ed except insurance. Box No. 9291,\nDally News. .,\n1949 AUSTIN\" SEDAN. GOOD RUB-\nber,-perfect condition; very reasonable price. $200.00 down, balance 14 monthly payments of\n$40.00. Box No. 9292, Dally News.\n1938 (JHEVROLET H-TON. GOOD\nrunning condition. $120.00 cash or\n$75.00 down and 3 months at\n$18.00. Box No. 9293. Daily News.\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n44.\u2014- the\nRed, early-\nexplorer\nDOWN\n-.'Selection '\n2. Blunder\n3. River:\n(Eng.)   .\n4. Man*\nnickname\n5. Railroad\nbranch\n6. Lyrtq\n\/   cantata of\nrural life\nT. Skill\n8. Required\n9. Involuntary\nmuscle\ncontraction\n11. Male bee\n13. Indue time\nJ5. Sacred\n18. Gelerityl\n19. Man-   '\nifest-\niy\ndemonstrative\n21. Country\nhouse\n- (Bur.)\n25. Gull-like\n- bird\n26. Not\nsmooth\n27. Fruits\n28. Remain\n29. Of groups\n..of races\n30. Peasants\n(India)\n35. Gang\nauuiaa -iuh\naa_M_3.i aaaa\naaaiaia _n_nninN\nJIHi.   MULl-l\nS.UJ1J   LIU   Hiil_i\ni-liaS-USa   -U-._S'\nauani-i\nlii-ti-lill   _jI.l_IB.aiQ\n\u25a1oa uj aaaa\nlamnHQai. asm\n'Trim.lH    r-\";'.l|-l|.\nYeitcr-ay'a Anawtr\n38. Indian\n.   mulberry\n39. Elevator\ncage\n40. Keel-\nbilled\ncuckoo\n42. Tellurium\n(sym.)\nAC.WSS\nI. Yield by\ntreaty\n6. Reach\nacross',\n9. Scrap\n10. Peeled\n12. Minute\ns'\u00ab4n\nopening\n13. Long, light\nOver,\ngarment\n14. Three-toed\nsloth\n15. Injure\n18. Perform\n17. P|ace of\nInstruction\n20. Baking\nchamber\n22. Contempt,\nible  (slang)\n23. Be borne\n24. Ptgpen\n25. Dancer's\ncymb-ls\n26. Price ,.\n28. Vender .\n,31. Give\n. access to\n32. Formal .\n. document of\nInternational\nagreement\nS3. Overhead\n34. Scrutinize\n36. .Exclamation\n37. Like the\nwhite of\n-   egg;\n39,Jargon\n41. Hoist with\neffort\n42. Ruined\nCity   :\n(Lower\nEgypt)    '\n43. Killed t-tt\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:\n\/''.'X'ytfl-Bji'^XE\n, ..--..I.'i.d.S '0' FELLOW\nOne Jetter simply stands fpr-anoth'efr In this example A Is used\nfor the three L'a. X for the two O's.'etc. Single letters, epos-\ntrophies, the length and formation i\u00abf the words are all hints,\nEach day the code letter* are \"different.\nI-'-'  A.Crypt\u00bbirir>';'\u00abr>iit\u00bbUeB\nr'\"^Ah KDA VFM T.G.A MO M8NM\n\"Af.LJF'VSKDA.M IS.^ES FV ENBBDH\nV L WW D J-V | N R D V W D N J D.\nYesterday'* Cryptoquot*:; TT IB A -WOMAN'S BUSINES3\nI     TO'GET MARRlEb AS SOON AS POSSIBLE-SHAW.\n'   \"wjuib-n. to Hint r.aluru tre-lata\nRam|i> Bfidy and - ,\nFender Vv'orks\ndealers'.to&i','': \u25a0\u25a0\".'.'\"\u25a0\nBRADEN ond TULSA\ntruck winches .\nfor every Application\n3 to 50 Tons Capacity\nNelson,'B.1S'-'    \".\nPhone 195 \u2014 55ft Joaebhlne St -\nPRICES ON. APPLICATION\nFOR BENT^, SHdVSLS. 8ACK-\nhoes. draiUhe,'. log \"\u00bb*'der; .Jbull-;\ndozers, compressors, etc. Bay*?\nEquipt Co.. Cranbrook; phone .80.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nbusiness lady. Phohe 474-X.\nFURNISHED LIGHT HOlfS->\nkeeping rbqrn. Phone 491-L.\nopm,\n\"FOR\nBEDROOM FbR.RENT - CALL\nat 923 Vernqn Street.   , -\nF U-R-KIS HED' HOUSEKEEPING^\nroom for retit. Phone 3-9-R\nFOft RENT-2-ROOM FURNisSt\ned suite. Phdne 879-Y. \u00bb;\npekmanent Resident wants ;\n'tq.Wpt.family honie; Ph  1750-L.\nWINCHES: FOR RUBBER, TIRE\ntractors, oats, trucks...eta Bayes\nEquipt Co..Cranbrook, phone 80,\nPROPERTY   HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., TOR SALE\nFOR SALE -'NEW ONE-ROOM\nshack, 14x18 ft. Electrically wired.\nApply Wm: OglQw;>Castlegar, Box\n419, or phone: 3326.'-'\nClassified Advertlalho Rates:\n150 per line first insertion and\n\u2022'-. pon':cons.ecutiy. insertions.\nHe line pet consecutive Insertion otter first Insertion.\n48q lino, for 6; consecutive inscr-\n(bns. ':'\u2022'-.,',.'\n$1,56 line for month (28 consecutive- insertions)   Box num- -\nbars  He extra.. Covers any\nnumber of insertions,\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL) .NOTICES,\nTENDERS \"etc - 20c per line.\nfirst; Insertion   16c  per   line\n, each subsequent InsMtlon,' \u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0\nALL   <A80VBr'-RATES   LESS\"\n\u25a0Vn'tOB PROMPT PAYMENT.   \u2022\n\u2022 '\u25a0;\u25a0 ' Subicrfiition Rates: ,\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier: .per week. ;\nV   In advance ' . -30\n\u2022 -By-carrier, per year    -    $15.60\nUnited States,- United; Kingdom\nOne month     ..._.,_;._.._.  t 1-25\nThree months ___. S.7J\nSix months   ..       7.50\nOne year \"      15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month    '.: \u2014...   $ 100\nThree months 2.7S\n' Six Mdnths .:,-_.-, 5.50 .,\n0$ie year      -,   .:       10.00\nWnere extra postaoe '\u00ab requ'red,\n;,' ilboye rjstes plus postage.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... 1240 on thb dial\n:.'.,.   fPaciflc Standard'TlmB\nTHURSDAY, MNUARY.28; 19.54\n7:00\u2014News      '\u2022  ...  \u2022\n7:05\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:30\u2014News.':      -.. ,       \"\n7:35\u2014Warren's Wigwam'..\n8:00\u2014News ,'.\u2022\u25a0''\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Woman's World   -\n9:00\u2014Earl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Vl.it\n10:30\u2014Story  Parade\n10:45\u2014UBC Digest\n11:00\u2014Gabriel Heatter -\n11:15\u2014Homen.aker. Harmonies\n11:'5\u2014Consumer's Corner\nl-:no\u2014 Noon Special,'.- ,       \u25a0\n12:15\u2014Spoils News   '\n12:20\u2014News.. .       .\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast.\n12:55\u2014Oddities in the News\n1:00\u2014Noon Concert .   .  .'\u2022\n1:'5- -Hollywood Calling\n1-30\u2014 Falrview snupping Guide\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast \u2022\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada ..Matlr.ee\n3:1S-Paciflc News\n3:30\u2014Sacred. Heart\n3:43\u2014Tops in Pops'\n4U5\u2014AsTunes Go By    t\n4:30\u2014Hudson's Bay Express\n4:45\u2014Talking - tb'Teehs\n6:00\u2014Music Shop\n5:05-^Pacifjc Newa\n5:15\u2014Int. Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the N,ews\n5:?5\u2014Report; from Pari. Hill\nStfO^-SUpper Club\n5:43\u2014Sports News\nj:50\u2014News\n6_t0rrTlre. Hit 'Parade\n6:30 -Cavalcade ot Melody .\nfaO^-NeWs'' ;'\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Nelson Sr. High School   \u2022\n8;00\u2014Citizen's Forum   \u2022\n8:45\u2014Notre Dame \u2022 to, Entertain\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n#:30\u2014 Wlnnliseg Drama\n10:00\u2014News.;\n10:15\u2014Midweek, Reylew\n10:30\u2014Sports Rqundtip\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around1 the Town\n13:00\u2014NEWS Night; Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Tlme\n'   FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1954\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\nMS\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News, ,-\n7:35\u2014Musical  Minutes -\n7:40\u2014Mornirig Devotions\n1:55\u2014Musical  March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15-Breakrasr Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC .News\n9:15\u2014Aunt'Lucy    '\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00-M'orntna Visit:.\nlOail^-Happy Gang' \"\u2022'.\n10:45\u2014Musical' Kitchen   ' -      ,\n11:00\u2014Kate Attken ''.'\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten ot thv'Air\n11:30\u2014A Mah and His Magic\n12-15\u2014News'- -, ''\u25a0 :\n12:25- -Showcaes ' \u2022    \u25a0\n12:30\u2014Farm  Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to ptie ;,'.; .,,'.-\n1:00\u2014Recital Form Art Galory\n1:30- -Afternobn-. Concert\n2:00-National School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Prugrame Resume\n3:45\u2014BC Roundup\n4:15-rDate with ,Fred Hill\n4:30\u2014glories of \u2022 the Ballet\n5;00\u2014Music Shop .\nSuS-^Inter. Commentary\n5:20\u2014News and Weather\n5:30\u2014Rawhide\n5:55--Have You cjeard .,\n6:(NH-Bill Uo'.u Sports\n6: is-^Keybptird Capers\n(KSOr^Songs of My People\n7:00-^News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7130\u2014Tor, Symphony \"Pops\" Orch\n8i3b-4.er.e.'e jullett*   ,\n\u20229:00\u2014Sports, Page\n9:30\u2014John Fisher \u25a0('\n9:45\u2014Myth' or, Legend\n10:00\u2014News. - \u2022   '\n10:15\u2014Canadian Short  -lories\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choir*   -\n.\"'-,.''-v- i-'j_ v.v.,!.-',-..-:'\nI\nI\n____!____________\n^^\nif^f -    \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-   .   ..Jmmm\\\n \\W\"'\nPIP\nCLASSIFIED\n',      PHONI 144 v\n. (...\u25a0    Deadline for Classified Ads\u2014S p.m.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00abW\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bbi\u00bb-^.\u00bb\u00bbi-'\n$\u25a0\u25a0' '\nIf'\nBetween the ages of 17 and 40\n\u2022ingle with grade VIII education.\n;,;\u25a0 women,.\n-Between the ages of 18 and SO,\ntingle with grade IX education,\nare  offered  the  opportunity  ot\nI enlisting in the v\nROYAL CANADIAN\nAIR FORCE\nThere are a number of technical\ntrades available. For full Information fill in and forward this\ncoupon without obligation.'\nTO: Commanding Officer,'\nRCAF Recruiting Unit,\nPost Office Building,\n..   Lethbridge, Alberta.\nPlease send me, without obligation, full information on how I\nmay Join the Roya'l Canadian Air\nForce.\nCity . .     Province  _...\nMarried (Yes)        (No) \t\nWANTED\nl-95Q-'51r'52 CHEVROLET\nOR PONTIAC\n4 DOOR SEDAN\nLow Mileage.\nIf you have one and want an\nattractive deal, contact us\nIMMEDIATELY.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n'      (Closing Prices) ,\" \u25a0\nMINIS', \u25a0', .. *\";\nAcadia Uranium ..\u201e  ' 42 -\nAkaltchbj..       ..\u201e.,..    1,55\nAmerican Y K ...,.._        ,20\nAnglo,Huronlan ...\u201e.......;.....  13.00\nArmistice ...\nAtlas Y K.\nAunor .\nBagamac ...\nBarymln\nBase Metals\t\nBevcourt ....-....,\t\nBobjo  ;\t\nBoymar Gold  ,      .13\n,21\n,15U\n2.10\n,1-H\n1.53\n.16%\n.20'\n,26 -\n- THE ABOVE DRAWING, released'by the U.S. department of\ndefence, shows details of the first atomic-powered submarine, the\nU88 Nautllua, Thanaw underaaaa craft Wks launched and formally\naccepted by the United States Navy at Groton, Conn., oh Jan. 21.\nIt Is described by U.S. Navy men as the ship which renders obsolete\nevery other naval vessel In the worlds-Central  Press Canadian,\nBrawls R L      ,H\nBroulan _     2.20\nBuffalo Ank' - 65\nBuff Can .'. _.      .23\nCalUfah       .15Vi\nCampbell R L ,    8.50\nCariboo Gold\nChestervllle\nChlmo G ...\nCochenour\n.83\n.30\n1.40\n,72%\nCons M li. S .'.    22.75\nConwest-\nCons Discovery.\n3.65\n1.96\nDelnite- _     1.10  .\nDetta R L ; 16\nDonalda 51 Vi\nDuvay     (....._ _,.      .20*4\nEast Amphl       .11\nEast Malartic '   2.03\nEastern Metals     1.26 '\nElder Gold _     .'50 '\nElsol       .Mi\nEstella  - 20,\nEureka  _. 63''\nFaleonbrldge    14.50 .\nFed Kirk ..: ..... 12\nFrobisher         4.90 '\nGiant Yel      9.50\nGod's Lake .\nGoldcrest .\n.Hardrock .\nHasaga\nleath\n,85\n.17 '\n,16tt\n.18\n.11\nM-\n38.25\n2.10\nI CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH\nIFArVGO-,jW<y.TlrU. \/\n\u25a0<oi09Q.'Mon.2i.C. *-'\nHomer Y K .\nHudson Bay\nInspiration \t\nInt Nickel    84.85\nJoliet Que        37\nKerr'Addison    17.23\nAirstrips Needed,\nNew terminals\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n_. w  \\rVi_60wS6N S CO.. AS\nsayers 301 Josephine St   Nelson\nB  S  tam. R6S..LAM6   BC\nAssayer Chemist  Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYOR8\n'   BOYD-C   AFFLECK. M.E.l.C\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 -Sore St.. Nelson   Phone 1238\nR K COATES, STE NO 8. 373\nBaker St... Nelson. Phone 1118\nB.C  Lands Surveyor\nS   V   SHAYLER   PO   BOX  252.\n-Kimberley. Phone 54\nB.C  Land Surveyor. Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIM-TED\nMachine   Shop    Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.  Phone 593, 324  Vernon St.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Profit-tak-\n,lng arising from Tuesday's sharp\nadvance came into the stock market\nand cut prices down.\nHiram Walker led Canadian\nstocks higher, up %. It was followed by Canadian Pacific and Dome\nMines, each ahead y* and Distillers\nSeagram, up li.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Prices were\nmixed and trading was unusually\nquiet toward the close of session.\nPapers led an industrial rise as\nutilities, agricultures, foods, financial institutions, textiles, liquors,\nmotors and agricultures were also\nhigher. Retail stores and manufactures were down a little.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Dominion\nBridge shares reacted to a company\nproposal ot flve-for-one split of\ncommon stock and bolted ahead 8\npoints to 85 in afternoon trading.\nOther prices were generally higher and trading throughout was mod\nerately heavy.'\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The new\naccount started well and most sections saw small widespread gains,\nBritish government stocks went\nahead in a small way.\nInternational Issues again were\ngood, with Canadian Pacific again\nthe feature.\nKirk-Hudson Bay .\nKirkland Lake\nKirk Townslte '..\nLabrador\nLake Dufault ....\nLakeshore   \t\nLake Wasa \t\nLeltch\n.75\n.41\n.20\n8.35\n.22\n.64\nLingman (new)  18ft\nMacassa\nMacLeod Cock\nMadsen R L ..\nMalartic G F\nMcKenzle R L\nMining Corp\n1.60\n1.30\n1.61\n1.38\n.35\n10.85\nMoneta  *'\nNew Bidlamaque       .60\nNew Calumet 64\nNew Goldvu* __--\u2014--     -48i4\nNew Kelore  16\nNew Lund           -.9\nNew Larder U      1-59\nNew Mylamaque\nNoranda    ,..\nNormetals ...\nNorth Inca\nOslsko   \t\nPaymaster ...\nPickle Crop\nPioneer\n.22\n60.50\n2.50\n.12\n.46:\nMV\n\u25a01.10\n1.45\nPlacer Develop-.?.    27.00\nPreston E D .....JI..\nQuebec Lab  Ai_.\nRadlore    ' -..-\nReeves Mac  -..j-\nRoche L L  _\u2666_..\nSan Antonio\n.285 ,\n.14\n.76\nISO\n.15W\nL60\n4.10\n.92\nTHE T'REN'b IN 8WIM 8UITS for 1954 Is toward animal skin\neffects and luscious Betty Koch models two of them In California's\nannual Spring Market Week In Los Angeles. At left she weara a\nfetching one-piece ault which Cole of California calls \"double\ndare,\" with plunging back and front At right she models a two-\npiece \"zany rebra.\"\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nSays Woodworkers\nWant Strike Over\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014It was reported here Wednesday that early\nreturns ln a referendum Indicate\nthe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica (CCL-CIO) favor an end\nto the three-month-old southern interior strike.\nThe settlement formula calls tor\na 10-cent hourly wage increase over\na three-year contract. The strike\ninvolves 2500 workers.\nB. C. District President Joe Morris said, heavy snow is delaying\nfinal' tabulation of the vote. It is\nexpected 'to be completed by Friday.\n' Majority\" Of the operators have\naccepted the settlement plan.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Cattle and\ncalves 1771, Including 890Tiead held\nover. Trade slow; 'good butcher\nsteers 50 cents to $1 lower in spots;\nbutcher heifers weak to 50 lower;\ncows steady; bulls generally steady.\nGood to near-choice butcher\nsteers 17.-18.25, common to medium\n13-16.50; good to choice butcher\nheifers 15.50-16.50, common to medium 10-15; good cows 10-10.75,\ncommon to medium 8.75-9.75; canners and cutters 6-8.50; good bulls\n12-13, common to medium 10-11.50;\ngood stocker and feeder steers\n14.50-16.50, common to medium 10-\n14.25; good to choice veal \"calves\n21-25, common to medium 15-20.50.\nGrade A hogs closed 50 lower\nThursday at 34.25; cows 19.50 live-\nweight.\nGood lambs 19.50-28.\nSherritt Gordongc\t\nSllvermlller ...~~\t\nSiscoe ..  *v \u2022\"\nStadacona i....L~L\u2014 30\nStarratt Olaen....::. -      -M*\nSteeloy  J\u00a3v 1J\nSteep ROck     6.70\nSudbury Cont 25\nSurf Inlet 19\nSylvanlte    -    L13\nTeck Hughes      LM\nTombill          \u2022\u00ab\nTorbrit  \u2022\u2022 -    L40\nUnion Mining  19\nUnited Keno   \u2022   ,6.25\nUpper Canada     LI!\nVentures  _    H\u00ab5\nViolamac  .-. \u2022\u2022\u2022'\u2022    LBS '\nWaite Amulet   -    9.63\nOILS ,f  '\nAnglo Can      5150\nB A -Oil      - .-.    21.1-tt\nCdn Atlantic      5.05\nCentral Leduc     2.10\nChemical Research      1.81\nDecalta  , 7*\nDel Rio 1      1-78\nFederated Pete  _     4.55\nHighwood Sr    '  -1*\nHome   -     9.75\nImperial Oil    20.75\nInter Pete  -   23.MM1\nKroy      WI\nNordon  - - \u25a0    <1_\nOkalta       1-90\nPac Pete  -     8.70\nUnited Oils          1.21\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbi    18\nAlgoma Steel -    41%\nAluminum    47%\nAtlas St -    15%\nBathurst Power '.    42 <\/\u00ab\nBell Telephone    39%\nBrazilian  .-\u25a0    ?V\u00ab\nFamous Players ..:. 20%\nFanny Farmer  22\nFord A '.. .,  74%\nGatineau  22%\nGatineau 5% pfd   104M\nGoodyear :  105\nGreat Lakes         18%\nGreat Lakes pfd  51\nGypsum Lime  35%\nImperial' Oil  39%\nImp Tobacco  9%\nInt Metals ..\".:  31%,\nInt Nickel  34%\nInt Pete ,  23%\nKelvinator  24%\nLoblaw A'..;. .'.  30%\nLoblaw B  43\nMaple Leaf Mliing  7%\nMassey Harris       8\nMcColl Frontenac  '28\nMont Loco  16%\nNat Steel Car ......  25J4\nPage Hershey ,  71%\nPowell River-  27%\nPower Corp  35\nRuss Industries   17%\nShawlnlgah   39%\nSicks Brew. \u201e  24\nSimpsons A .'. '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 15%\nSouthern ..,,.,. ,  29%\nSteel of Can   SO\nUnion Gas of. Can,  35%\nUnited CorpB   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 13%\nUnited Steel   12%\nWinnipeg Gas     8%\nin\nOf Gas - Porter\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Attorney-\nGeneral Dana Porter of Ontario\nsays his fuel-hungry province needs\ndefinite assurance soon of a supply\nof natural gas. ,\nMr. Porter, here for talk* with\ngas industry officials, said In an Interview that there is a great potential for Alberta gas fn ..Ontario.\nBut, in order to compete with\nother fuels, it would have to sell at\nan average price of 45 to 48 cents\nper 1000 cubic feet-\nMr. Porter estimated selling price\nto Ontario utilities at 55 to 60 cents\nper 1000 cubic feet, and 35 cents to\nindustry on interruptable basis. He\nsaid a likely retail price to Toronto\nconsumers would be $1.10 to $1.30\nper 1000 cubic feet.\nCANNOT WAIT\nThe attorney-general said Ontario cannot afford to wait five years\nor so for the securing of U.S. markets before the line'is built. He estimated constructon of the crosscountry line would take a full two\nyears with a start late this year\nbeing probable.\nMr. Porter said about 25,000,000,-\n000 cubic feet of. storage space will\nbe available in depleted Ontario gas\nfields within three years, with another 40,000,000,000, probably available at a later date.\nBy FORBE8 RHODE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014 A few million dollars Invested In airstrips\nIn Canada could result In benefit to\nthe Canadian economy beyond calculation, R,\" A. Keith, assistant to\nthe president, Canadian Pacific Airlines said Wednesday,\nIn a'speech delivered to the Canadian Construction Association, he\ngave the aviation industry's reply\nto the Association's question: \"How\nwould you spend 31,000,000,000 on\ntransportation in Canada?\"\n. Like earlier speakers from rail,\nsteamship and truck he said he\nwould not try t6 outline in detail\nI how such a sum might be spent.\nI However, northern airports and\nnavigation equipment were of top\nimportance in any program.\n\"We can derive the most slgnlfl-\n' cant return for the smallest investment by spending some money for\nbuilding airstrips and installing\nnavigation aids at carefully selected locations ln the north.\n\"There are almost unlimited regions of the north rich in untapped\nmineral wealth,' where high costs\nand difficulties - of transportation\nhave locked the wealth In the wilderness.\" '\nMADE HISTORY\nThe first bush planes made history because' they could produce\n100 ton-miles per hour of transportation compared with four ton-miles\nper -hour with the canoe. Freight\nand passenger rates had been still\nfurther reduced when larger planes\nwere introduced. \"Now imagine\nwhat could be achieved on the main\n'arteries of the north, with planes\nof 4500-ton-miles per hour.\n\"With suitable landing strips and\nall-weather flying facilities such\nbig and efficient aircraft could fly\nnight and day, delivering their 30,-\n000-pound payloads to selected distribution centres in the north. They\ncould provide low-cost air supply\nto entire regions now depending\non  infrequent,  tedious and high-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY. JAN. *B,TM4 \u201411\n-~    ':\nAlberta Reaps Record Sum From\nTwo-Day Sale of Oil-Gas Leases\nFord Offer Thrown\nBack by Union\nWINDSOR (CP) - The bargaining committee of Local 200, United\nAutomobile Workers' Union (CIO-\nCCL) Wednesday threw a four-cent\nwage increase sharply back at Ford\nMotor Company of Canada.\nThe Ford offer was tour cents ln\nreturn for extending the present\ncontract, due to expire Feb. 19, to\nJune 1, 1935.\nThe union said the company offer\nwas an attempt to freeze the present contract for 16 months. It accused the company of attempting to\nby-pass legal bargaining methods\nin outlining the proppsal to workers\nby mall.\nThe original union demands were\na 30-cent-an-hour wage Increase,\nmore Insurance benefits, three more\npaid holidays and other fringe demands. The company said it could\nnot meet them although the union\nIndicated they could be modified\nin negotiation.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG (CP)   \u2014   Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices; ,\nOats, No. 1 feed, 70%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 92%.\nEDMONTON (CP)- - Hie Alberta government made $31,675,041 in\na record-setting two-day sale of oil\narid natural gas leases and reservations.       \u2022...,'\u2022\u2022\nThe sum ot $1,257,859 was added\nWednesday to Tuesday'receipts of\n$30,417,182. Unlike. Tuesday, the\nlecond portion of the sale produced\nno record prices.    .\nThe total proceed! were some\n$18,000,000 over the previous high\nfor a single sale, $12,381,436 in 1952.\nPRICES SMASHED\nIndustry excitement over the\nprospects of the new Pembina field,\nAlberta's top oil discovery of 1958\ncontributed to the all-time high\ntotal receipts by smashing previous\nprice records for reservations.\nFour oil companies paid a combined $27,000,283 Tuesday to explore\nabout 275,000 acres of the Pembina\nlight gravity oil region. They paid\nas much as $140 an acre for reserved\nland 13 to 18 miles from Pembina's\nnearest producing oil well\nFIRST OARDIUM 8AND\nThe Pembina field,, about 80 miles\nwest of Edmonton and only 45 miles\nwest of Wizard Lake field, produced the first cerdium sand oil ln\nCanada, June 20,1953. Nine producing wells now are turning out 37\ngravity oil.\nThe highest reservation - rights\nprice of the first day's sale, $13,-\n000,125, was paid by Texaco Exploration Co. Ltd. for 92,160 .acres, more\nthan' $141 an acre, ln areas adjacent\nto the Pembina discovery well.\nTuesday's profits brought to about\n$139,000,000 the government has received from such \"cash-bonus\"\nsales since, the Leduc discovery of\n1947 ushered in the oil bbom.\nMetal Prices\nNEW'YORK - Spot prices!\nLead, N. Y., .18.\nZinc, East St. Louis, .09%.\nTin, N. Y\u201e .84%.\n\u00bb ..... ,' ..\u2022\nReceipts for \u25a0 the current  flsfaV;\nyear, since April 1 last, total $51,684,,\n541 \u2014 mora than 25' por cent of thoh\nprovince's record' expenditures ofr\n$174,000,000 estimated in the 1053-54\"-\nbudget, 'and-almost-30 per cent ot\nestimated revenue pf $138,368,000.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge _ \t\nBralorne    _._. _\nCariboo Gold\t\nEstella  \t\nGiant Mascot _\nHighland BeU\t\nPend Oreille\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nQuatsino\t\nReeves MacDonald\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilver Ridge \t\nSilver Standard ....\nUtica ___\nVananda\nVan Rol.\nWestern Tungsten\t\nYale\nOILS\nAnglo Can\nA P Cons ..\nCal _ Ed .\n.50\n8.10\n.87\nJ0ii|\n\u2022\u00ab _?'\n.32 3\n3.60    .\n1.41  fl\n1,31 ^\n4,00 y\nCan Anaconda .\nCdthmonweatlh .\nDalhousie\t\nMercury\t\nNational Pet*\t\nOkalta Com\t\nPac Pete \t\nRoyalite  _,\nVanalta\t\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIALS\nInt Brew B\t\n1.00\n.29 \\J\n10.50 -'\u25a0\n.13 ;\n3.90.\n.17**\n.18 \u2014\n1.5-^\n1.80\n8.65 j-rj\n12.00*-'\n'\u201e\u00bb--\nss, -\n-J.V-\nplanes would distribute these cargo\nloads on tributary routes.\"\nMUST IMPROVE TERMINALS\nMr, Keith also recommended Improvement of passenger terminals\nat major airports, In particular the\nInternational terminals at Vancouver and Montreal.\n\"We : have magnificent airports,\non the mainline route, able to accommodate any airplane flying today. The terminal buildings, however, are sadly out of harmony\nwith the other phases'of airway development1\n\"And- lt ls the terminal building,\nrather than the runway or radio Installation that impresses, or depresses the visitor. It is the overseas\nvisitor's first and perhaps most en-\ncost surface transportation. Smaller during Impression of Canada.\"\n0XECUTORS AND  TRUSTEES  POO OVER  MALI\nvalue for your\nmoney-\nBequeath to your heirs\nall tho benefit.\nthat com* from\nexperienced\nestate administration\nroyal trust\nOOMPAN.Y\nI\nV,tm tVfWfta.\n426 WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER   \u2022   MA. 8411\nGEORG. O. VAIE, -UMMR\nDIVIDENDS\nBy Th* Canadian Preas\nGulf Oil Corp., 50 cents, March\n10, record Feb. 5,\nCanada and Dominion Sugar Co.\nLtd., 25 cents, March 1, record Feb.\n10.\nB C Elec 4s\nB C Forest ...\nB C Packers B\nB C Power A .\nBuldlng Products\n79\n6%\n3\n18%\n37\nBurl Steel \u2014 20%\n._    51%\nBurns A \t\nBurns B  -\t\nBurrard A  ~ \u2014\nCan Cement _.\t\nCan Packers A \u2014\nCan Packers B ...._;\t\nCan Breweries\t\nCan Canners\t\nCan Car & Fdy A\t\nCan Celanese\t\nCan Dredge ..._._\u2014\nCan Oil _.\nCan Pac Rly ....-._.-...\nCockshutt    .;....-;_.\u2014\nCons M tt, S ., __..-\nDist Seagram\t\nDom Foundries .\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chem\t\nDom Textiles     \t\nDom Magnesium ...\t\n7%\n96?\n37%\n32%\n22%\n30\n19%\n22%\n55\n14-\n24%\n10\n22%\n29%\n14%\n10%\n19\n8%\n6%\n13\nHeat Wave Continues\nSYDNEY, Australia (AP)\u2014Heatwave conditions continued Wednesday jn many parts of eastern Australia. Torrid weather from Hobart\nto Sydney sent thousands to the\nbeaches and gave a busy tlmff to\nfire-fighters as vast areas of forests,\nbushland and grazing, country'\nblazed. The mercury has been near\nthe 100-degree mark since the\nweekend.\nMARILYN POLLS demonstrates an eleetronle calculator at\nNew York. The machine waa produced by ihe International Business Macnlnes Corporation, The 12-machlne ooilectlve. \"brain\"\naa It waa Introduced translates Russian Into Engllah and can be\nadapted to ether languages, In addition to.its language work, the\nmachines take seconds to do an equation which might take years\nof mental calculation.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nMAIL\nYoijr Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM    1\n\u2022\n\u00a3\n1\n\u25a0             *\n'\n'     ,\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nI-\nTHIRD LtKI\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\nO Put ond word in each space\n(Each group.of numbers or' letters count as one word.)\nO Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words\n(Box 0(3 Nelson News'.) \u2022-_-\"',  .\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nLINES S TIMES 6 TIMES\n2 .74 .90\n3 1.11 1.44 \u2022 Add lie for Box Number\n4 1.48 1.92\n5 l.JM 2.40 \u2022 Deduct 10% from above rateo if payment in\nj -   jjflj 2.88 \u25a0 eneloied\n8 298 \u2022\"\u25a0*\u2022\u00bb * Tako advan,aae of ,ho ,ow ,ix ,im0 ,ot0\n\u2022 Minimum charge its two lines\n\u2022YOUR NAME\nADDRESS\nNo. of Days Ad It To Run .\nPayment Enclosed _____\nmm\n?\nYou Roach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B. C.\n'^\"\u25a0\u2022\u2022' Av\n___\n \" \u2022\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'.-.\u25a0 o1 '->-\u25a0\u25a0--.  \u2022-. -  \u25a0     '-   -.  -\u25a0\n - '\"\u25a0\u25a0-.','..*        '.    '   '-      '-.     '       .    ''-\u25a0'.       \u25a0'      '     '' *     '.  . '''\"\u25a0''.- I   '*' \u25a0'\u25a0'\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 28,19S4\n\"-MISS- :.\ny.jEAN   -ii, i '-'-.';,'\n;:.; WltiSpN:-,-;,\n-    Will be iriourstore TODAY-...' If you have any\nbeauty: problems she will be happy to advise you.\nMISS WILSON is our Rubinstein repre-       \\\nseritative, she has a wealth of knowl-\n:   edge for your \"make-up\" guidpnce and y.\nwe are sure you will gain from a chat\nwith her. '.\"\u25a0-.' ;:,'\u2022\nDrop in anytime today and leigrn for yourself.. No\nobligation to purchase our products, but please come in\n\u25a0Wm$- of the Bay\nRATES: 30o line, 40e line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nSt. Matthew's, South Slocan\nSunday next \u2014 3.-30 p.m.\nSkates and Ski Boots\nJACK BOYCE.\nj Potted Hyacinths, Tulips and Daffodils for the hospital or the home.\n-.,      MAC!8 FLOWER SHOP.\n?\u25a0 B BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow It away. Prompt watch work,\nguaranteed, at reasonable prices.\n| . | _        t\n.\"Feeling Blue?\" Phone 962 for a\nBouquet of Spring Flowers.\n*fcOVENTBYS'   FLOWER   SHOP.\n5. Trade your old tires at\nI SUPERIOR MOTOR8\nJ; Tire Department\nK'' -f :\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\ni \"Distinctive funeral Sorvloo\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n) SIS Kootenay St        Phone MI\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED .& REPAIRED\n*RECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n618 t-'RONT 8T. PHONE S3\nHave trie Job Dane Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER .PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHAIGH\nTRO-ART\nBeauty Salon,\nPhone 327\n570 Baker Street\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED  \u2022\nart the    .       . .    I'\nNolson Upholstery\n40* Hall Street Phone 14S\nm\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAININS\nMedical Arts Buildlne\nSuite 206      Phone 141\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nW        PONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\n;.Body and Paint Work a Specialty\n*\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n670 Baker St Phone 235\nSIDEWALKS AND ROOFS\nCLEANED. \u2014 PHONE 329-L.\nFLO-ON\nRubberset Nylon Brushes.\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY.\nJoymakerS' Whist Drive and\nDance, tonight, Eagles' Hall. Cards\n8:00. p.m. Prizes and refreshments.\nDance 10)30 p.m. Regular admission.\nSpecial Sale of Odd Lines of CCM\nSkates and Boots. Vi Price \u2014 While\nthey last.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nMake your oven bright and clean\nwith Oveno, the wonder oven cleaner. Works while you sleep, no fuss\nor muss; Inexpensive. Get a can\ntoday at HIPPERSON'S. \"\nYou  get more heat per dollar\nwhen you use a Fawcett Torrid oil\nheater from\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nEBERLE'S   MID-WINTER\nCLEARANCE  SALE  CONTINUES\nSample.items: Rubbers, zippered\nor with buckles, Reg; $4.05, at (3.49.\nI would like to take this opportunity to thank my many friends\nfor flowers and kind wishes; also\nDr. Brummltt, .nurses and staff for\ntheir kindness and care while I was\nin hospital\nHelen MacKenzle.\nSCRATCH PADS\u2014AN EVERY-\nDAY NEED FOR BUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL MEN. GOOD,\nCLEAN STOCK; 40c PER LB. -\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, PRINT\nING DEPT., PHONE 144.\nfir8t aid classes tomorrow night in legion hall,\n8:00'p.m. c08t of cour8e, $2.00\nplus Share of doctors' fees\nfor Examination.'\"\nlearn first aid,\nYou can buy Lamorene, the wonder rug cleaner, with confidence. It\nremoves shoe polish, lipstick, cray-\njon, grease, tar, chewing gum, etc.,\nquickly, easily and economically.\nGet a jar today at HIPPERSON'S.\nSpecial\u2014One all-enamel kitchen\nrange, used two months. $30.00 off\noriginal price.\nAntique furniture repairs and\nFrench polishing.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.-\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n'     413 Hall Street\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFRASER\u2014Funeral service for the\nlate Eliza Catherine (Woods) Fraser\nwill be held Friday,' January 20, at\n1:00 p,m., from St. Paul's United\nChurch, Fruitvale. Rev. ,B. Boyle\nwill officiate assisted by -lev. D. W.\nMore. Interment will be in Columbia Riverview Cemetery, K. of P.\nClark's Funeral Chanel in charge.\nRetir^itidtit a -DelusiQ^\nSays Winst:on \u20achiurcii_l( jg\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nHOOKINGS \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Charles Henry Hookings\nwill be held from the Church of\nthe Redeemer, Fairview, Friday at\n2 p.m. Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood\nwill officiate and interment will\nbe in Masonic Plot, Nelson Memorial Park.\nBy AXAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n' LONDON (CP) - Britiih polit.;\nclans are-just about-agreed that\nwhen. Sir Winston Churchill 'retires -as prime minister it will be\nin his own good tlrne. ,\nPredicting the prime minister's\nplans has become one of Parliament's favorite pastimes, The latest guess, ventured by Conservative MP Cyril Osborne, was that\nChurchill would call it a day when\nthe Queen returns from her Commonwealth tour in May,\n\"NO MYSTERY\"\nKingsley Martin, editor pf the\nleft-wing New Statesman and Nation, writes in this .Week's issue:\n\"There is no Churchill, mystery.\nThe fact, I understand, is that his\nmedical advisers have told him\nthat, to prolong his life, he should\nleave off working. He is quite incapable of listening to such dangerous prudence ... I cannot imagine anything that would now deter Sir Winston from preferring a\ndramatic end in full harness.\"\nTuesday night the prime minister\nsmilingly called for his hearing aid\nbecause \"I don't want to miss anything\" when the subject came up\nin the House.\nSocialist Eric Fletcher said in the\nhouse Tuesday \"The prime minister\nknows -that there has been some\nspeculation as a result of the speech\nmade by Mr. Osborne .', . and upon which no doubt we shall be receiving some distinguished enlight-\nment shortly.\" '\u25a0\u25a0\nThe 70-year-old Sir Winston then\nmurmured: \"It is a delusion.\"'\nWhen  Fletcher  first  mentioned\nbis retirement,  Churchill grinned\nand- apologized  for  \"not  having\nbrought my hearing aid.\"\nGETS HEARING AID\nHe then sent his-son-in-law and\nparliamentary , private secretary,\nChristopher Soames, out to get the\nprime ministerial ear trumpet.\nLoud cheers greeted Soames' return with the hearing aid.\nChurchill listened -with a smile\nto attempts by Fletcher and Labor\nmember Roy Jenkfns to draw, him\nout but said nothing more.\nOnly Monday the prime minister\nwent out to a wind-swept range to\nmake' a personal try-out of the new\nBelgian F.N. Rifle which Britain\nhas decided'to adopt as the standard- infantry weapon. Wearing\nheavy overcoat and. seated in\nchair, Churchill fired two dozen\nshots, and the range warden said\nhe got \"a very good score.\"\nIn the House the prime minister\ndiscussed the ...-calibre rapid-firing Belgian weapon which also ls\nundergoing tests in Canada, the\nUnited States and several other\nmember countries of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Adop\ntion of a standard rifle for NATO\ncountries has been a subject for\ndebate in the West for some time.\nChurchill said he has \"reason to\nbelieve\" that U. S. military authorities concur in Britain's adoption\nof the Belgian weapon, but did not\ngo as far as to say the U. S. plans\nto adopt it too.\nWanb Embargo\nLifted on Wines\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A Victoria\nimporter has urged the provincial\ngovernment to lift the unofficial\nembargo on American wines.\nA spokesman for the company\nsaid today table wines are available\nat Liquor Control Board it'ores from\nevery part of the world except\n\"from, our nearest neighbor.\"\nAmerican wines were taken off\nthe lists of the LCB in the 1920's\nto help the then infant B. C. wine-\nmaking industry. The spokesman\nsaid it now is no longer necessary\nto protect it        >\nf\nI\nImportant Notice I\nOur Entire Establishment,\nBoth Wholesale and Retail Will Be .\nCLOSED FOR STOCKTAKING I\nALL DAY |\nMONDAY, FEBRUARY 1st, 1954 I\nWood Vallance Hdwe. J\nCo. Ltd. I\nWholesale \u2014 Retail                      , .  \u25a0\n_     PHONE 1530                                    NELSON, B.C. jj|\n1\ni\n!\nCaddy Shows Up,\nSign of Spring!\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Cadborosaur-\nus the sea serpent made his second\nappearance of the year here Tuesday.\nThree residents of nearby Sidney\nspotted him ln Bazon Bay just\nsouth of there. None of the three\nwould give their names.\nOne woman described him as a\nseries of \"ups and downs.\"\n\"He moved quickly and with the\nundulating movement of a worm.\"\nMen in Cells 5\nDays Before\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Failure '[et\ncity police to bring two prisoners\nbefore a magistrate within the 24-\nhour time limit specified by the\ncriminal .code of Canada-,,-was\nstrongly censured . in Alberta.'Supreme Court by Mri Justice E. B.\nWilson., y '\u25a0'-.-\nThe censure came during the\ntrial of three men charged with\nthe theft of. miscellaneous * articles\nfrom a car Nov. 28. last. Evidence\nrevealed that two of them .were\nheld in police cells for-five days\nbefore a charge was,laid and six\ndays before they were brought Intb\ncourt.\n\"It astounds me,\" Mr. JusUce-'Wi-T\nson commented. \"This is a very,\nvery serious situation. There' ;Js\nsomething terribly wrong with a\nsystem that allows such practices.\"\nHe indicated he would bring the\nmatter to the attention of proper\nauthorities. '    ,:\u25a0\nDefence counsel William Bldor\nsaid it was not until after one of\nthe two men gave a statement to\npolice that he was charged. He said\nthe fact that his client was properly\nwarned by police before'giving the\nstatement did not remove the possibility ot. duress, 'since his client\nmight have been under psychological stress.after being kept in a cell\nso long. .  .\nThe defence counsel submitted\nthat in holding the man without\ncharging him, police used \"illegal\nmeans to obtain a self-Incriminating sta'tement.\"\n, The justice said he would disregard anything in the statement\nthat would incriminate the man.\nHarrison Denies\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Mayor Claude\nHarrison said today that British\nColumbia liquor, isn't, \"bad\", and\ndenied that he had presented a brief\nto the government charging it with\nfailing to carry out proper inspection.    ;    \u2022 >\u25a0\nEarlier, it was reported the mayor\nhad charged in a brief that lack of\ngovernment Inspection is resulting\nlu impurities finding their way into the liquor.\n'T never presented any brief to\nthe government,\" he said.\nMayor Harrison said he had given a copy of a brief to a newspaper\nreporter \"just for his information.\"\nIt was a \"private document, prepared a long time ago,\" he said.\nThe earlier report quoted the\nmayor as saying \"rank- poisons\"\nwere ih the Kquor because there\nwas no longer proper government\nchemical analysis in Canada.\nPLYMOUTH. England (Reuters)\n\u2014The Royal Navy announced today\nthat it is holding an unidentified\nSeaman in connection with the latent case in a wave of malicious\ndamage which has swept the fleet\nsince Christmas.\nAs in previous cases, a gauge\nglass was broken aboard the 18,000\nton light 'aircra.it carrier Ocean, a\nveteran .of.Korean service now being refitted here as a training ves\nsel.\nSimilar damage has been reported since Christmas aboard the aircraft carriers Eagle and Indefatigable, the light fleet carrier Warrior and\\ submarine depot ship\nMontclare.\nThe first lord of the admiralty,\nJ. P. L. Thomas, has decided to\nmake a statement on the situation\nin the House of Commons next\nweek.\nW##'\nFO-ft-YEARriOttt*e(.L-tfeRT (DEBBIE) OAIN8, 'the 1.54,\nMarch of Dirties Poster Bey, ta^es aim with'a elon as Mrs. Dwlght\nElsenhower,, wife.of the President, furnishes a guiding hand at a\nllnevof contribution bottles In front of a Washington, D.C., theatre,,\n. Debbie Is In the nation's capital .to publicize the drive for funds\nIn the fight against polio, a disease that crippled hlmovhen he was\nfour months old. The Gooding, Idaho, boy has spent\" most of hla\nlife Itt i hospitals learning to -Walk, -with crutches and braces. In\nBSqkground Is Basil-O'OonHpWprasldent of the National Foundation\nfor Infantile Paralysla.\u2014AP Wlrebhoto.\n:Paraiy.r\u00bbV-Ap'wirec\"n.t\"o\"*\nlo\nTROPICAL DELICACY\nTips of tender bamboo shoots are\npickled as a table delicacy in parts\nof the West Indies.\nIgypl's Actions\nReuse Israeli\n' -^RUSAIJ-W (A&>-Premier\nMoshe Sharett told the Israeli Parliament Wednesday ' that Israel's\nUnited Nations delegation haB been\nInstructed to submit a complaint to\nthe UN Security Council against\nEgypt-1  '\u25a0<   --  .-\u25a0 ''\"'\u25a0,'\u25a0\u25a0 -'\u25a0'' 5\nIsrael will... protest against the\n\"arbitrary' actions\" of Egypt in\nholding up ships bound {pr Israel\nor sailing from Israel arid passing\nthrough the .Suez Canal\u00bband the\nseizing of their cargoes, os welt as\nagainst Egyptian attempts to block\nsea passage to Elat, the Israeli port\nat the northern end of the Red Sea\nGulf of Aqaba.    ^ '\nEgyptian restrictions oh Israeli-\nbound shipping are part of the Arab\nStates' economic boycott of Israel,\nwith whom they technically are\nstill in a state of war as a result of\nthe 1948 Palestine conflict.\nB     . I      . ' -\"  |\nFor, Problem 8kln\nTUSSY '*\"\nANTI-BLEMISH SET\nHelps Heal and Hide Blemishes\nContains Creamy Masque and\nMedicated Lotion.\n$2.75\nSold,Only at Your Rexall 8tore\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Dispensing Chemists\"'\nPhone 34. Day -. 807-R Nlghi\nBOX 4M\n\"The     J\nCOAT\nMAIL\"\nNew Model\nA string vest that'will'?\nkeep you warVn in Winter,\ncool in summer.\n\u2022' Comfortable To Wear\n\u2022 EatyTo Wash \\ yj,\n\u2022 Guards Against Colda'1:'\n\u2022 Low Priced ot\n$3.95\nEmory's\nLimited '!\nTHE MAN'S STORE\n571 Baker    , .Phone 31\nV ENTEBBE, Uganda (AP) -' Novelist Ernest Hemingway, recover-'\ning here from slight Injuries received in -two weekend air crashes,\nsays he plans to get another plane\nso he and his wife can- continue\ntheir East African tour.\nThe famed writer told reporters\nTuesday night he and his wife, the\nfor a \"Couple of days\" before returning to Nairobi, Kenya,- to \"get,,\nformer.Mary Welsh, will stay here (j\nourselves a new .plane.\"\nThe Hemingways planned to fly\nover the, Belgian Congo and northern Kenya as far as the Somallland\nborder, where the writer is making\nan elephant survey for the Kenya\ngovernment-\nThe Highways\nNo. 3 Southern Trans-Provincial\n\u2014Open. Hope-Princeton good, carry\nchains. Prlhceton-Osoyoos good, Os-\noyoos-Cascade good, snowing lightly. Cascade-Rossland* compact snow,\nplowing; carty chains. Rossland-\nTrail-Castlegar plowed, sanded,\ngpod. Castlegar - N e 1 s oji - Balfour\nsnow surface, breaking up in sections.'Kootenay Bay-Creston-Goat-\nfell, plowing, widening between\nKuskanook and Wynndel and between Creston and Kitchener; Goat-\nfell-Crahbrodk-Elko, no new snow,\nplowing. Elko-Eernie-Crow's.1 ftest,\nvery narrow; widening and sanding.\nNo. 3A, Trail-Salmo\u2014Plowed and\nsanded.\nNo. 99, King George\u2014Open, sanding and widening.\nNo. 97, Rossland-Paterson\u2014Good.\nPlowed, sanded.\nCreston-Porthill\u2014Open, plowed.\nNo. 6, Nelway-Vernon\u2014Nelway-\nNelson, plowing and widening. Nel-\nson-Slocan City-Nakusp, fair to\ngood; plowing ahd widening, narrow at Cape Horn. Nakusp-Needles,\nnew snow, plowing. Needles-Mona-\nshee, open, plowing.\nNo. .95,.  Kingsgate - Cranbrook -'j\nGolden\u2014Open, road passable.\nBanff-Windermere \u2014 Road passable, plowing.\nNelson-Kaslo\u2014Fair to good.\nKaslo-New Denver\u2014Narrow sec- [|\ntions. \"\nWASHINGTON\nSnoqualmle Pass; Snowing, compact snow artd ice on road from 24\nmiles west of summit to 20 miles |\neast and beyond. Four inches new\nsnow for total of 154 inches in ski\narea. Temperature 22.\nStevens Pass: Snowing and. blowing, compact snow on road from 15\nmiles east of summit and beyond to\nefght miles west and beyond. Chains\nrequired. Four inches new snoW\nfor-total -of-145 inches in ski area.\nTemperature 20.\":\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\nUbyssey Reporters\nDemand Free Press\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014 Reporters\non' the UbysSey, a Student newspaper of the University of British Columbia, are on strike.\nThe walkout today entered Its\nsecond day following demands by\nthe student reporters that they be\ngiven more say in the publication\nof the tr.i-weekly paper.\nThey have formed a guild recognized by the Student Alma Mater\nSociety and have been negotiating\nfor 10 days with the editorial staff.\nThe reporters have demanded\nthSt the Ubyssey be organized \"like\na club rather than like a downtown\nnewspaper where staff receive\nwages.\"\nPicket lines appeared outside the\nnewspaper's - office - as senior editors\npondered whether to attempt to\nput out an -emergency issue from\nheld oVer copy.\nFor All Your Baklnq Needs Try\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe tla'vnr Is right; On* Sale at\nYour Grocer, or Phone 238.\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR-CO. LTD.\nLT. JAMES F. CAHILL, Jr., 27, Navy frogman,'.plashea ashore\nat Salem,, Mass,, after snatching a-.couple of three-pound lobster\ndinners from the depths. Cahlll, assigned to. a Boston harbor defence\nunit, keeps family supplied when heeded In the course of his\nunderwater duties. Its. against: the law to'mutilate lobsters so frogmen cannot use spears. Instead Cahlll makes a bare-handed grab\nat back of lobster to avoid powerful claws.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.    ,\n(p\/ioduxjL OopjcudmsmL\n\u25a0m.   ORANGES California Navels, Medium Size 252's;\t\n* SUNKISTtEMONS_.r.e S1.e, 3M'S;\t\n* FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT HBlt -^ Si\u201e m.\n* MelNTOSHAPPLES^ceuoBag;\t\n* DILICIOUS APPLES -ancy CeuoB.g! :\t\n* ROME BEAUTY APPLES Goo(1 Coolte-,, \u00ab_,*-\n* FANCY GRAPES _\u201e;\t\n* BANANAS Goiden Ripe; ; _ \t\ni* 9\"?'\" ~||?|liT \u00b0reen HcadsiLb --\t\nT^ CELERY HEARTS Cell0 Fkis,. Each \t\n~K  TOMATPH., yigjjj Grown; 14 oz. cello tube  \t\n* GREEN' ONIONS \\ Bunches;\t\n* CALIFORNIA CABBAGESoli(li G.een Heads; Lb ..\n* SWEET POTATOES Mea, for Baking;      \t\nit BRUSSEL SPROUTS \u201e 0_. cell0 w  \t\nX   BROCCOLI   Fresh, Green Bunches; Lb. ..._..-._\t\n\u2022JC   NEW CARROTS California, Clip-Top; 16 or bags, \t\n10ib,98*\n-_2..,.43*\n3for2^\n.... 3^.44^\n... 3ib,. 4$*\n5>b. 45*\n 2ib,.45*\n 2.b,. 45*\n :.- m\n :-:-:.. '28*\n2 for 23*\n : im.\n U- 3;5*\n...:...:,::... 35*\n , , 2^*\n....,2for'l5*\nThey re New! ROYAL INSTANT PUDDINGS\nChocolate, Vanilla, Butterscotch.     \u00bb Just add milk and serve.\nSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER\n\u25a0    Buy 2 ond Get 2 FREE\n4 pkts. 29c\nSee Our Modern Dairy Case   '\nIt hat just been completely rostqeked with every variety of cheese.\n'.       To mention a few (ferns, we have . . .\nCHEESE WHIZ Kralt. 8 ... -j... , ;  39*,   18 oz. glass 69*\nSt'CED GH\"SE Canadian, Pimento, Old English; % lb. pkts   37*\nKRAFT HANDY SNACKS %lb   19***  33*nb   59*\na>RArT CHEESE Canadian or Velveeta;  2 lb. ctns. $1.15\n'\"ARTY PACK; vHEESEN^py*s\u2122key* Garlic; Vt lb. rolls   39*\nswrFrs|ouND|R  16o,celIoroll; _..-;.... 550\nALLSWEET MARGARINE swift,_b ctn,, 2ta 75*\nLOCAL EGGS Grade A, Medium, In Cartons; Doz _   5'D*\n\u2014\u25a0*-\nSaocbjUj, CbBpcudmsmL\nyif.  ROYAL CITY CORN  cream Style;. 15 oz. tins _...2 tor 35*\nTAT \/PORK AND BEANS Malkin's Best; 15 oz. tins,  2 for 27*\n'fV WHOLE-GREEN BEANS Malkin's Best, Fancy;-15oz. Uns, ... 2for   51*\n^|f   CUT WAX. BEANS Bullman's, choice; 15 oz. tins,  ;...2for 35*\n':jAf.  CORN NlBLETS Del Maize; 14 oz. tins \/....-.;. 2-for--45*\n^ SUN-RYPE APPLE JUICE dear; \u00ab.\u00ab. \u00ab_,                      2for 69*\n\u25a0jlf-  BABY FOODS Gerber's or Heinz, All Varieties;    _._._. 3 tins 28*\nSTEAKS\nRound Bono Roast\n7ftcaL (Dsfmhimsmt\nSIRLOIN '\"-\u2022\nT-BONE\nCLUB  Blue Brand Beef. __\nlb^69c\n45*\nDelieated Steaks^; Lb 590\n_,      ..,.       .Lb,\nBlue Brand Beef\nHomade Sausage 3 ibs. $1\nBacon Squares Lb 43*\nCod Sliee$ib. .;.,...:,;\u201e; _ 35*\nPRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY) FRIDAY, SATURDAY\n\u2022 Star Grocery *\nPHONE 10\nH. A. D. Greenwood\n468 BAKER ST.\nfe^' -   - '   '       \u25a0      ' \u2022\t\n%\u00a3M&m\nM&:-,.\nMi\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_1954_01_28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427603","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"}]}}