{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427654":{"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":"1954-03-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427654\/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":" \u2014\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\nForesee Loss in U.S. Tourist Trade,\nMore B.C. Shoppers Buying in U.S.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014British Columbia retail merch-\nints Friday protested any planned increase in sales tax to\nfinance hospital insurance.\ni'\u25a0\u25a0'. In a letter to Premier Bennett, the B.C. section at\nthe Retail Merchants' Association said 87 per cent of its\nmembership was opposed to a\nhigher sales tax.\n\"Members of the association are\nopposed to the socialization of hospitals in B.C.\" said the lfetter, \"and\nWe.urged, upon your government\nthat BCHIS continue to seek its\nrevenue from premium payments.\"\nThere have been reports from\nVictoria that .the hospital premiums might be dropped and the\nlales tax increased from three to\nfive per cent'to finance the scheme.\nThe merchants said an increased\ntax' would discourage American\ntourists from* buying in B.C. and\nwould \"encourage British Columbians to increase their purchases in\nhe U.S.\"\n\"Experience during and- after the\nMir. with heavy luxury taxes on\nlertoin goods,\" added the letter,\n'Clearly demonstrated to retailers\nthe reduction of trade which results\nfrom the application of direct\ntaxes.\" It added:\n\"The merchants feel that the present method of premium paying\nplaces the burden of paying for\nhospital care where It belongs and\nthat as a result it js a deterrent to\npeople who might otherwise use\ntheir hospital' service indiscriminately with attendent higher operating and capital costs.\"\nThe merchants, in the letter signed by Grant Deachman, manager of\nthe association, further said:\n\"The conversion from premium\npayment to payment of hospital services by taxation, is in effect, the\nsocializing of hospitals.in B.C. Just\nas they were socialized in England.\"\nThe letter pointed to \"the abuses\nof the system which sprung up in\nEngland.\"\nEranbrook To Be Host fo Over 60\nj Associated Chambers Meeting\nCRANBROOK \u2014 From 60 to 75\nlelegates are expected here for an-\nrUal meeting of the Associated\nChambers of Commerce and Boards\nJS Trade of Southeastern British\nloluinbia Monday find Tuesday.\nThe visitors from throughout the\ntdotenay-Boundary will plunge in-\n_\u2022 a heavy business agenda Monday\naoming and will wind up about\nloon Tuesday,\nAnnual banquet will be held Mon-\nlay night, with an address to be\nJiven by Howard T. Mitchell, edi-\nor of Western Business magazine,\n'ancouver.\nResolutions proposed for consid-'\nration cover highway improve\nlienta, setup of a B.C. bridge com-\nnission, survey of the Jumbo Pass\n\u25a0out*, position of drive-in theatre\nireens alongside highways, amendment of the Old Age Pension Act,\nreed for amendment to provincial\nlentol regulations in connection\nrith shortage of dentists in rural\n\u00bbaaa,i. andfebarder jjorta.r of entry\nj6urt-\"'; \u2022<*\n4T. D, Rosling of Nelson is presl-\nient of the association.\nReports are expected to he heard\nI the Trans-Canada \"Highway As-\nMsjation (Crow's Nest route); pub-\nSSty, Industrial growth, Doukhobor\nflairs, and other matters.\nJleach Powers\nlew Submarine\nBARR0W-IN-FUHN_SS, England\nReuters)\u2014Hydrogen peroxide, the\nleaching chemical, will power Bri-\nllh's latest top-secret submarine,\nrhlch was launched here Friday.\nEverything about her except her\nlie\u2014225 by 15 feet\u2014is secret, but\nHie Ib said to be able to cross the\nrtlantic under water at between 20\nnd 30 knots.\nShe is also ssid to be faster than\nie American atom-powered Nau.\nlift. Explorer has the latest in es-\nijje apparatus, Including a radio-\njulpped signal buoy which shoots\ni; the surface and sends distress\ngnals, and two one-man escape\numbers, one on each end of the\nilp.\nOne man at a time enters the\n.amber, floods it and escapes. It\nin be drained and used again,\nhere is also a new-type breathing\nsparatus.\nieVanites Stage\nilibuster\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Five Labor\nembers kept the House of Com-\nons sitting for 17 hours through\ne night in an unsuccessful bid to\nim the government's budget esti-\nate of \u00a3491,640,000 for the RAF.\nBut the socialists, most of them\npporters of left-wing leader An-\nrrin Bevan, were matched 7 to 1\n' Conservatives, and the debate\nrded without a vote.\nAbout 40 red-eyed members\nniched out into the daylight at\n15 a.m. only three hours and 35\ninutes before Friday's session\ngan.\nBlack Market\nThrives in Soviet\nBy RICHARD  R.  KASISCHKE\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 Soviet newspapers-complain that speculators\nand black marketeers are making\na lush and easy living off the\nshortage-plagued people while Premier George Malenkov's government is attempting to increase the\nsupply of consumer goods.\nBlack marketeers do a big business in such cities as Moscow, Kiev,\nand Riga; and even reach into the\nsmall towns. But drives are under\nway, newspapers say, against these\n\"leeches, parasites and monsters\"\nwho would rather live on speculation than do honest work.\nThe press, scolift.police ior.being\ntoo lenient with the black marketeers. It claims many of them have\nbeen let off with warnings rather\nthan being handed over to the\ncourts for punishment \u2022\nThe newspaper also scolded citizens who patronize the black marketeers saying \"any person having\nrecourse tb the services of speculators is committing an act opposed\nto the spirit of Soviet ethics, and\nshould be ostracized.\"\nGibbs Urges\nRescinding of\n10 P.C. Mine Tax\nVICTORIA    (CP)    \u2014    P.    A,\nGlbbs (I Oak Bay) said In the\nlegislature Friday the Nelaon\narea Is becoming a \"depressed\narea\" In British Columbia because\nmines are closing down.\nSpeaking In the throne speech\ndebate which concluded Friday,\nMr, Glbbs called for the Immediate rescinding of the 10 per cent\ntax on mining companies' profits\nover $25,000. He said the tax must\ngo If the mining Industry la to\nsurvive,\nIn the last two years 28 mines\nhad shut down and between 2000\nand 3000 miners had been laid off.\nHe admitted that bad markets had\ncaused the mines to shut down\nbut said without the 10 per cent\ntax they would have been able to\nremain open longer and the min\ners now unemployed could have\nworked longer.\n.-If m..\u201e _    \u25a0 -'f   '     \u25a0':'iify-y- - *G-^\n693\n'\nvol. 5*       xj*W3moatl\nWEATHER FORECAST....,.,\nKOOTENAY\u2014A few ijloudjr periods. Not much change in temperature. Low-high at Cranbrook, zero.\nand 35, Crescent Valley 5 and 40,\nOutlook for Sunday\u2014Cloudy.    \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nNELSON, B. C-rCANADA-^-SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 6, 1954\nNo. 266\nBlack Presses For District Road Improvements;\nAsks Continued Survey Salmo-Creston Cutoff\nRiondel Road Needs, West Arm\nBridge, College of Agriculture\nMooted by Municipal Minister    ?\nAUTOMOBILES that were caught In the\nrecord 12-Inch snowfall In Chicago are shown\nstalled on south take Shore Drive at 39th Street.\nsnow most of the night, causing drifts that stalled\nhundreds of cars In the Chicago area.\nAP Wlrephoto.\nthe Chicago area,\nv -AF\nNegligence at Whatshan\nCaused Disaster\u2014Clyne\nBlack Praises\niiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiinii\nSales Campaign Not\nGetting Results\nFAIRFAX, Va. (AP) - Frank\nCurtin has been ordered to remove those five gallows he\nerected on his land adjacent to\na Cemetery and to tone down\nbis hillbilly records broadcasts\nduring funeral services.\nAn injunction against Curtin\nwas issued by Judge Paul E.\nBrown in Fairfax' county circuit\ncourt, It has been asked by owners of National Memorial Cemetery who accused Curtin of\nrying to coerce them into buy-\nng his property, which in re-\nffiSuyears has been surrounded\nby the cemetery.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nReporter Saved\nBy Artificial Leg\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Brian Lough,\nnan, 31-year-old reporter who lost\na leg during the Second World War\nescaped serious injury here Friday\nwhen his high-powered sports car\nplunged over a 250-foot cliff. He\nsuffered minor abrasions when he\nwas 'thrown clear.\nLoughnan's artificial leg was\nfound jammed in the wreckage of\nhis car, the straps broken. RCMP\nwho investigated said if the straps\nhad not broken or the leg had been\nthe driver's own, ,he would have\nbeen killed.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The British Columbia Power Commission and its chief engineer failed to take \"reasonable\nsteps that would have prevented the disastrous slides at\nthe Whatshan power project, Mr. Justice J, V. Clyne said\nin a report tabled in the legislature Friday.\nThe justice, appointed to Investigate the slides that pushed the\nporject on the Lower Airrow Late\nlast'-AuOTBtcsaldt. ;. -f\"-'iryft.\n\"The meihpers of the B.C. P6.WO-\nComraissioh and their chief engineer wer.e negligent in failing'to take\nreasonable steps' to prevent the\ndanger of the landslide which they\nknew or ought to have known\nthreatened the power plant and its\ninstallations.\" .\nMr. Justice Clyne said he had\nbeen Instructed to answer three\nquestions; what technical or engineering advice did the commission\nreceive in connection with the development, was such advice sound\narid was it followed, and did negligence or faulty judgment or any\nperson or persons contribute to the\ndisaster.\nIn the planning stage of the project, Mr. Justice Clyne said, th?'\npower commission received advice\nfrom H. G. Acres and Co., hydraulic\nengineers of Niagara Falls, Onf. On\nthe main design and construction\nstages, it depended on technical and\nengineering advice of its own staff.\nDuring the construction, Dr. Victor Dolmage, a geologist, gave advice \"in respect to additional lining to tunnel with concrete.\"\nThe advice given was \"sound and\nwas followed.\nIn his hard-hitting report, Mr.\nJustice, Clyne said the commission\nhad warning of the possibility of\nthe slides\u2014on Aug. 11 and 16\u20141_\nyears before damage unofficially\nestimated at, $1,000,000 was done to\nthe $5,800,000 project.  \u2022\nVANDERVOORT CLEARED\nHe exonerated G. A. Vandervoort\nchief operations engineer, and J. T.\nKirkpatrick, station superintendent.\nThere was no blame on Mr. Klrk-\npatrfck because he kept \"his superiors fully advised of the dangerous situation which existed.\"\nMr. Justice Clyne said the commission had repeated warnings\nfrom Mr. Vandervoort \"and the\nperil could not have been stated\nmore plainly than in Mr. Vander-\nvoort's report of February, 1952, in\nwhich he said: 'Hie possibility of\na major breakaway cannot however\nbe overlooked and this could lead\nto severe consequences.'\n\"That is actually what occurred\na year and a half later.\"\nVICTORIA (CP) - Provincial\nSecretary Wesley Black forecast\nFriday that in 20 years there would\nbe no such thing as the chronically\n111 mental patierit.\nMr. Black wound up the throne\nspeech debate in the legislature with\na talk on the advances made ip\nthe field of mental health in British Columbia in the last tew\nyears. He had particular praise for\nthe Crease clinic which was opened\nin January, 1951 and which has since\nreceived praise from specialists\naround the world.\nThe minister outlined new facilities to be constructed tor the mentally ill. These included a 300-bed\naddition to Woodlands school for\nmentally defective children, 300\nbeds for the Port Coquitlam home\nfor the aged, a day hospital and a\nchild guidance clinic, and a, 228-\npatlent unit for infectious diseases\ncases.\n3000 Civil\nServants Screened\nBy DAVE  MclNTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Some 3000 federal civil servants have undergone\nroutine security checks in the last\nyear.\nThe number approximates the Intake in the civil service during that\ntime plus transfers involving security within government departments.\nChurchill SHU\nGoing Strong\nLONDON (Reutetrt \u2014 Close\nfriends of Sir Winston I Churchill\nare saying that if he maintains his\npresent form they foresee him continuing as prime minister after his\n80th birthday In November.\n20 Men Owe\nLives to Death\nTORONTO (CP)-A fire authority said Thursday a fire which\nbroke out in a building where 20\nmen were sleeping was set deliberately.\nPlatoon chief Percy Taylor aaid\nthe blaze in the downtown Jarvis\nStreet house in which the men had\npaid 75 cents each for. a place to\nsleep \"could not possibly have\nstarted without someone setting It,\"\nConstable Wilfred Death waa\ncredited with Saving the men,\nbringing his life-saving total for the\nmonth to 53 persons.\nShooting in U.S.\nHouse Causes\nAlert in Britain\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Police here\nhave taken special security precautions to guard Buckingham Palace,\nthe Houses of Parliament and Prime\nMinister Churchill's residence at 10\nDowning Street from any imitation\nhere of the shooting in Washington\nMonday of flve\\United States congressmen.\nA stricter watch than usual will\nbe kept on persons approaching\nParliament. Details of the precautions are secret, but Scotland Yard\nofficials said similar action is\ntaken after any unusual outrage in\nany pert bf the world because police experience has shown that an\nunusual crime often attracts im!\ntutors.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n'Of Course She Is'\nAgreed the Duke\nROCHESTER, Australia, (CP)\n\u2014   The   Duke   of   Edinburgh\nsauntered   up   tp   an   elderly\nwoman in the royal tour crowd\n...Mre; iLima's?'?1 ''Wtttoribott,.and .\n. 'askedJSer^.o >.,,Y^ ...    \u2022\u25a0>'\"\u2022 \u25a0\"\n\"How lbhg have you been\nwaiting?\"       :'i--\"       .    -      \u2022 '\n'.'Since 10:45 this mbrnlng,\"\nshe told him..\n\"Was it worth lt?\" the Duke\nasked.\n''Of \u25a0 course,'1, the woman replied. \"Isn't she (the Queen)\nlovely?\" \" \u2022'\n''CM course she is,\" the Duke\nsaid with a broad grin, as he\nsauntered away, unrecognized.\n111) I \u25a0 II \u25a0 IMI \u25a0 1111111M111M \u25a0 IC11111' I _ 11:\nPENSIONERS ASK\ntOSf-OF-UVING\nBONUS INCREASE\nVANCOUVER. (CP) - An Increase to $20 In their cost-of-living\nbonus waa requested here Friday\nIn a mass meeting of several hun\ndred Vancouver and New West\nminster old age pensioners,\nThe provincial government now\npays $10 a month bonus with\nmeans test In addition to the $40\nIssued by tha federal government.\nPensioners asked that the means\ntest be raised to $1000 Income a\nyear for tingle persons and $1800\nfor married persons. \u2022\nWhile protesting the govern\nmerit's reported plan to boost the\nbonus by $2,50 the meeting alto\ncondemned any proposal to finance B.C. Hospital Insurance\nService through sales taxet. The\nresolutions will be tent te the\nprovincial government.\nCPR To Appeal\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Canadian\nPaolflo Railway Friday moved to\nappeal to the Supreme Court of\nCanada against a board of trans\nport commissioners' decision shutting off a rallviray attempt to' get\nhigher revenue through a new\nfreight rate tyttem.\nBUDGET TO\nBE BROUGHT\nDOWNMOMDAY\nVICTORIA (CP) -\/The legislature Friday unanimously accepted\nthe speech from the throne read by\nLieutenant-Governor Clarence Wallace on the opening day of the session.\nThe throne speech debate concluded with a motion by Provincial\nSecretary Wesley Black thanking\nthe Lieutenant-Governor for .the\nspeech.\nMonday, the government will\nbring down jts budget telling more\ndetails of promises made ln the\nthrone speech which included some\nchanges in1 the Hospital Insurance\nAct and changes in taxation.\nFurther, demand for an Inquiry\ninto the PGE-Squamish-Vancouver\nextension, came from P. A, Glbbs\n(L-Oak  Bay.)\n\"The government has rjo right to\ncommit the people to an expenditure of $12,000,000 on an insolvent,\nbankrupt operation\" without first\ngiving the people information on\nit, said Mr. Gibbs.\nMr. Black, a school teacher for\nmany years, aaid as far as school\nteachers are concerned there Is no\nIndoctrination of school students.\nHe said he was answering a ques.\ntion from1 J. t>,: Tlsdelle (SC-Saan\nich). Students-may be-ifldoctrinated\nby politicians*- he said. \"But as far\nas! school teachers are concerned\nthey are. not.\" He added that the\nCCF party was \"tending to springboard the education system of this\nprovince into politics.\"\n\u25a0VICTORIA (Special to the News)\u2014\"Keep your eyes'\non the kootenays.\"\nThat .was the theme song of Hon- Wesley Black, pro-,\nvincial secretary-minister of municipal affairs, MLA for\nNeison-Creston, when he spoke Friday in the legislature.\nMr. Black gave each MLA a copy of the recent pictorial-industrial edition of the \u2014\"\u2122\nNelson Daily News.\nBomb in Mosque\nMARRAKESH, Morocco (Reuters)\n\u2014The Sultan of Morocco was injured by a bomb exploded inside\na mosque in Marrakesh Friday.\nThe sultan, Sidi Mohammed Ben\nMoulay Arifa, 65, was installed last\nAugust after French authorities deposed and exiled his relative, Sidi\nMohammed Ben Youssef for exposing the nationalists' independence demands.\nThe sultan suffered head injuries\nfrom the bomb which exploded inside Marrakesh mosque, where he\nwas taking part-in-Friday prayers.\nA nationalist attempt to assassinate the new sultan as he was\ngoing to prayerj in a Rabat mosque\nfailed- last September.\nIn Marrakesh, hilltop city of\nsouthern Morocco, an unsuccessful\nattempt was made last week on the\nlife of one of the sultan's principal\nfollowers, El Glaoul, Pasha of Marrakesh.\nHousing Legislation\nRaked by.Opposition\nNEW GENERARTOR\nQUESNEL (CP)\u2014 A 1000-kllo-\nwatt generator will be added to the\ndlesel-electrre generating station\nhere bringing capacity to 4200 kilowatts, the.B. C. power commission\nsaid.\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Commons\nheard a charge Friday that^ there\nis i danger that new housing legislation proposed _y the government will set up a \"giant new government bureaucracy'' under Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation.\nAfter detailed consideration by a\ncommittee the legislation came back\nto the Commons Friday for clause-\nby-clause study! Criticism was offered by the three opposition parties\u2014PC, CCF and Social Credit\nA lawyer, Donald Fleming (PC\u2014\nEgllnton) made the bureaucracy\ncharge and added that the government has \"exaggerated\" what the\nlegislation would accomplish. The\nbill would not create a \"new heaven\nor new earth\" for the prospective\nhome buyer and it was \"cruel'1 to\nIntensify their hopes.\nThough the PC party intended to\nco-operate in getting the bill\nthrough tha  Commons, member*\nmust be warned they were legislating in the dark. Tha bill was in\nessence a mere \"shadow.\" The.real\nmeat was in the still-secret regulations which the government had declined to divulge to the Commons\nbranking committee.\nAlistair Stewart (CCF\u2014Winnipeg\nNorth), a chartered accountant, said\nthe bill is a \"rather shabby piece of\nwool\"' which the government had\ndrawn over the eyes of Canadians.\nThe government should' be \"shot\"\nif it allows the interest rate to rise\nto 5% per cent trom tVt per cent aa\nhaa been reported ln some quarters.\nC. I. Johnton (SC\u2014Bow River),\na school teacher, agreed with Mr.\nStewart that one-half of Canada't\npopulation,, those earning late\nthan $8000 a year, will reeolva ne\nbenefit from th* bill whloh had\nbean tet up to maintain and In\nereate Canada'a\n\u2666Worts.\nFlagstad Bows to\nYoung Substitute\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Klrsten Flagstad, top Wagnerian soprano, permitted Elisabeth Schwartzkopf's\nsoprano to substitute for hers on\ntwo high \"Cs\" in a recent operatic\nrecording of \"Tristan and Isolde.\"\nThis Is the first official admission\nof what several American record\ncritics already had told their\nreaders.\n\"Miss Flagstad was not satisfied\nwith the playback of the two notes,\"\nthe British recording firm, His Master's Voice, said. \"She was very\nhappy to have her good friend,\nElizabeth Schwartzkopf, sing them\nfor her.\"\nThe dubbing occurs in the famous \"Liebes Nacht\" (Love's Night).\n40-HOUR WEEK\nFOR NURSES\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - Nurses of\nthe Royal Inland Hospital ln Kamloops have been awarded a 40-hour\nWeek ln 1034 contract negotiations.\nThe work week reduction is effective JUne 1 along with a $5 a month\nreduction In take-home pay. New\nrate will be $225 a month:\nMr. Black said: \"I would particularly like to refer the members to\nthe section dealing with the present industrial development within\nthe Kootenays and .while I know it\nmay not be -possible for the. members to do anything more than peruse this Issue at this\" time I would\nrespectfully suggest when they do\nhave some leisure time they give\nsome study to the Kootenay area so\nthat they might better be able to\nassess not only the great opportunities of the area but also some of its\nbeauties.\".\nMr. Black said he would like to\ncompliment The Nelson News for\n\"this splendid edition.\"\nThe minister said how delighted\nhe is to hear of the proposed dam\nsite in the Mica Creek area.\nHe said, \"I feel the carrying of\nthis project into fruition will pos\nslbly he the key to the opening up\nof the entire Kootenays for industrial development, for there, within\nthe Kootenays\", lies untouched an\nuntold natural resources to be de\nvelpped for the benefit not only of\nthe people in the Kootenays but of\nthe people of the entire province.\"\nPOWER EXTENSION\nMr.' Black spoke of power, saying\n\"I mean to.keep pressing- the West\nKobterfay; PoW\u00ab *Stlijht'rdmpt^'ny',-\nfor thOxtensIdh of electrical power\ninto the Slocan area and areas of my\nconstituency.\nOnce more Mr. Black drew attention to the pressing need for \u00a3\nbridge across the West Arm of Root-\nenayLake.\nDealing with the need for road\nimprovements, Mr. Black said;\n\"Of extreme importance to my\nconstituency is the continuation of\nthe survey of the Creston-Salmo\ncut-off, which was only partially\ncompleted last year\u2014and I sincerely\nhope the minister of public works\nhas made an adequate appropriation\nin his estimates ton the completion\nof this survey. We are watching\nwith more than casual interest the\nprogress of this survey.\n\"We, the people of Nelton-Crei-\nton, are determined that the Creston-Salmo cut-off must be completed as a vital part of the Southern Transprovincial Highway tyt-\ntem.\n\"I would urge the minister, that\nonce  the   surveys  are  complete\nand   (ia   hat  an   opportunity to\nassess hit position, both from an\nengineering and financial point of\nvtow, he will urge the government\nto commence work on this vital\nlink as toon at possible.\n\"I hope, too, the minister of public\nworks has given serious consideration to the completion of the Wynn-\n.del-Kuskanook road\u2014and I'll, go so\nfar as to suggest that I personally\ncannot' see any reason why the remaining section of that road cannot\nbe completed and hard-surfaced by\nthe time the snow flies again this\nFall.\n\"For many years the people Of\nthe Crestpn section of my constituency have been seriously concerned\nover the condition of the Creston\nRykerts road\u2014a piece of road some\nsix miles long from the United States\nborder. This road, is sadly In need\nof improvement and I would urge\nthe  minister  of public  works to\ngive serious study to putting thl$\nroad In first-class condition\u2014hard- ,\ntopped, of .course.\"\nMORE FOR RIDINQ\nMr. Black said he's going to camp\non Public Works Minister Gaglardi's\ndoorstep until he, does more work\nfor Neison-Creston riding.\nHe went into minute detail about\nthe road needs of his district. He\nmentioned the Salmo-Nelway section which he said \"only needs 4.4 -\nmiles of completion to give access\nfor Americans into the. Salmo and .\nNelson districts.\" \u201e\u25a0      \u25a0 \u25a0\nThen Mr. Black asked the minister\nof public works for Improvement\not the Riondel road.\nHe said: \"Industrial areas, within\nmy constituency are for the most\npart the heart and soul of this particular area.\nRiondel, rapidly becoming an industrial area, Is looking forward to\nthe day when it will rival the Sullivan Mines for production. A better\nthan adequate access to the main\nhighway cannot be too long delayed within this area.\" *       ;\nHARROR-pROCTtR .   Y\nMr. -Black had -some more probi\nlems for the Minister oi Public\nWorks. r--Sr-.;A; \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. ;\u25a0 \u25a0 ...v^ii.\nrpgXrfeel,,ihat-Jiie south -hbre; of\nthe West Arm orthe'Harrbp-Prootei.\n.area haa beep too long, neglected.\nThe good people of that area are\nalready beginning to feel isolation\ndue to neglect of road problems.\nThey are becoming increasingly annoyed at the lack of what they con-\nsider fair treatment and recognition\nof their need for an outlet.\n\"I -want, too,' to reiterate- what\nmy friend, the hon. member for\naKslo-Slocan', pointed out \u2014 that is,\nmuch-needed improvement and development of the road conditions\nfrom Balfour to Kaslo through the\nQueen's Bay area.\n\"I would also like to see improvements of the Blewelt road,\nand an improvement of the road\ninto thd Slocan area.\"\nMr. Black then turned his attention to Attorney-General Bonner\nand told him \"the people of Salmo\nare patiently waiting for your decision relative to the establishment\nof a liquor store in their area. I\nhope your affirmative answer will\nbe forthcoming soon.\"\nThe Minister of Agriculture came\nnext on Mr. Black's' list\" and he\nasked him to please consider an\nagricultural college ' in Neison-\nCreston.\nNEW  H08PITAL\nAnd now to the minister of health,\nand welfare: \"The people of Nelson\nare moving towards construction of\na new hospital. I sincerely hope that\nwhen all the details at the local\nlevel have been completed the\nproblem will find your sympathetic\near.\"\n.' As he wound up the section of hla\nspeech dealing with his own riding,\nMr. Black said: \"When assessing the\ngreat potential of this province, and\nits development \u2014 keep your eyes\non the Kootenays. I look forwardrto\nthe day, not too far hence, when\nfrom the hub \u2014 Nelson \u2014 a great\nmany'Vspokes will be radiating to\nall the areas of this section of the\nprovince.\nDOLLAR LOWER\nNE WYORK (CP)\u2014The Canadian\ndollar was 1-16 of a cent lower at a\npremium of 3% per cent in terms\nof U.S. funds. Pound sterling was\nunchanged at $2.81 7-16.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The U.S. dollar closed at a discount of 3% per\ncent ln ternis of Canadian funds, up\nhouse-bulldlng 1-32. Pound sterling $2.71 15-16, up\n1-Mt\nAnd in This Corner ...\n1 GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP)\u2014A manufacturer here It conducting\na \"look for the silver\\lining\" contest among hit 130 employees,\nThey are en'couraged to clip newspapers and magazlnet for cheerful and optlmlstlo news Items.\nSays their boss, Gordon _S. Carbonneau:\n\"Many encouraging thing, are taking place If we will see them,\nand a contett of'thls kind can help allay jitters and feart caused by\ntome aspects of the world situation.\"\nCarbonneau offers prlzet totalling $360. Entrants mutt keep scrap-\nbooks for a month to be eligible,\nBOSTON (AP)\u2014The Massachusetts legislature, 262 years late, is\nmoving to rest the wraiths of Salem's witches.\nThe committee on constitutional law Thursday approved a bill\nclearing the names of those hanged as witches in 1692.\nThe proposal reads in part:\n\"That the several indictments, convictions, judgments and attainders of witchcraft... obtained in the special court Oyer and Terminer\nat Salem ... in the year 1692, and not heretofore reversed and\ndeclared null and void, be and hereby are reversed and declared to\nbe null and void.\"\nLegislators indicated there would be no opposition to the gesture\nbut thought it should have been done sooner\u2014say, in 1692.\nCHATHAM, Eng. (AP)\u2014Freddy French and Jack Brlngate each\nawung a mighty punch In an amateur boxing match Thursday night\n\u2014and knocked each other cold.\nThe referee calmly counted both of them out Then he lifted\nBrlngate't hand aa the winner.\nHe had been leading on points.\nMADISON, Wis. (AP)\u2014Ronald Malm, 10, Jack Carson, 12, were\nmarooned on a large floe in Lake Monona Tuesday when they ventured on thin ice. Police officers went out In a boat but the boys\nran to the other end of the floe and it required considerable coaxing\nbefore they let themselves be rescued. Their xplanation: \"We thought\nyou wanted us because we ware playing hookey.\"\nWmWm\n ^ _.\n__,.  _.__..:_,:._.... .... y.\n_'______.:\n MH\nMUSICLAND\nTHEATRE\nKASLO, B.C.\n8HOWIN0  TONIGHT\nTwo Shows, 6)00 p.m, and 8:80 p.m.\n\"YOUNG BESS\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nSTEWART   GRANGER\nJEAN SIMMONS\nJunior Shufflers\nLaunch Tourney\nCASTLEGAR\u2014Results of opening\nplay In tte fourth annual West Kootenay Junior badminton tournament\nat Stanley Humphries High School\nFriday night, ln which 106 players\ntram nine dlstrlot centres are taking part, follow:\nBob Lee beat J. Fenner 1B-5,\nU-12; M. LeRoy beat J. Pinckn\u00aby\nJ8-J, 1S-B; C. Vennberg beat B. Feh-\nner 18-8, 18-3; M. MeBride beat B.\nKanlgan 15-0, 18-4: R. Rhodes beat\nt. Gerenaai* 1B-T, 18-8; W. Eldridge\nbeat L. Donelly 16-14,15-8; R. Craw-\nlord beat L. Haley 11-6, 11-2; B.\nTaylor beat R. McLeod 18-13, 15-12;\nK. Mulrhead beat E. Inkster 15-5,\n15-0; D. Drew beat A. Evans 15-7,\n154; L. Fife beat R. Smith 15-8,\n18-1T, 15-10; A. Sandberg beat N.\nNewlove 18-10, 15-12; R. Mitchell\n$nd T. Mitchell beat D. F. Haley\ntnd R. McLeod 15-8. 11-15, 15-3; N.\nHughes beat B. Creighton 15-11,\n17-15; F. Pierpoint beat B. Salter\nby default; J. Pinckney and B. Fenner beat J. Fenner and D. Davies\n15-8, 8-15, 15-7; C. Sookachoff and\nA. Evans beat D.' Drew and E.\nThompson 5-15, 15-7,15-5; Y. Mitchell beat V. Kinakin 11-1, 11-5; J.\nBergen and M. Creighton beat L.\nHaley and D. F. Haley 15-8, 15-11;\nt. Paterson beat J. Jlawer 11-4,- n-0.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.llllllllllllli\nNo News 6opd News?\nCretton't annual Butterfly Ben.\ntplel li In full swing at tha agrl-\nouture eentre't Clvlo Centre, but\nInformation an garnet oan't bt\nobtained,\nIt teemt that everybody In\nCreston la Just toe buty enjoying\nthe event te find time to atnd results te tha Dally Newt, whose\neorrttpondtht Is among those\nparticipating In what hat beooma\none of Koetenay't biggest ourllng\nshows.\nIt It expected that tempo of the\nevent will hava tlowed down\ntufflelentty by Sunday to enable\nthe Daily Newt te obtain a ttery\nfor MondayV papar.\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI\nNearly $1000 In\nFirst Day for\nRed Cross Drive\nRed Cross campaign headquarters\nreport that nearly $1000 wat collected in the flrat day ot their\nmonth-long drive. This represents\nonly about 40 per cent of the can\nvassers, who staged a one-day blitz\nof the residential areas. The can'\nvass wat undertaken by Nelson\nwomen, while the business areas\nwill be canvassed by the men.\nCanvasers were urged to turn In\ntheir collections as toon as possible.\nVAST COUNTRY\nLafgest country ln South America, Brazil cover 1,288,000 square\nmiles-\nMrs, 1.6. (alley New Exhibition\n> resident; $9596 for 1954 Show\ns West Kootenay Agricultural and\n-bdustrlal Exhibition-Friday night\nbegan plans for the 1954 Fall Exhibition.\n| Mrs. L.. d. Catley was elected\npresident at a meeting in the Chamber of Commerce rooms.\n.i Financial report showed a bank\nbalance of $0596 to work with in\nflanlng this year's exhibition to be\nBald September 9, 10 and 11.\n\u2022 The new executive Includes as\nhonorary presidents; H. W. Herridge, MP, Kootenay West; Hon. -W.\nD. Black, MLA, Neison-Creston;'\nMayor Joseph Kary and A. B. Gllker, past president.\n3 others on the active executive are\nRobert Foxall, first vice-president;\nF. H. W. Chanter, second vice-presl-\n<Jent and Mrs. Inez Eckmier, secretary. Carl B. Mutchler continues as\ngeneral chairman, but has been relieved of his duties as treasurer by\nJ. G. Watson. Mr. Watson also assumes the position of business manager for the association.\n2 Directors elected are; M. B. Ryalls,\ninance; Lorn E. Kennedy, publicity;\nFor\nQuick\nEasy\nSatisfactory\nService\nUse This\nPhone No.\n1707\nI  \u2022 Groceries\n) Fruits and Vegetables\n)  CSnfefctions\nBEnsure   Delivery the  Same\n.Day by Calling Before Noon.\nBickerton's\nStore\n83.5 p;c.,^|DENJ RATEPA^ElS IN FAVOR,...    ' .       \u00bb\n2265 of 2951 Property Owners Give\n76 p.c. Approval to Hospital District\nOver 2265 of 2956 owners of property it) the are* have\nsigned petitions approving the establishment of the Kootenay\nValley Hospital Improvement District. This represents 78.6\nper cent of all owners whether resident or non-resident in a\n2700 square, mile district surrounding Nelson sni- bounded\nby. Queen's Bay, Balfour-Procter, Passmore; South Slocan,\nSalmo-Nelway and Ross Spur. '.-,.       '\nOf resident, property owners .83.5'per. sent .gave their\napproval. Only 155 owners said \"no.\"\nAmong large industrial enterprises, Consolid\u00bbted Mining\nand Smelting Company of Canada Limited, Passmore Lumber Company, Eitirns Lumber Company, Kootenay Forest\nProducts Ltd,, and West Kootenay Power and Light Company Limited have put their names to petitions to support\nthe move for.a new district hospital to serve Nelson and\ndistrict. Petitions have yet to be returned from head offices\nof a number of other industrial ahd commercial concerns. .\nA 70 per cent approval must be given by property owners before application can be made to Victoria for establishment of a hospital improvement district, This percentage\nwas reached by mid-January in an effort that began in June,\n1953, representatives of district centres were told by organising committee members at a meeting in Nelson Friday night,\nThe Committee, with the assistance of district canvassers,\nhad striven to obtain an additional five per cent to allow a\ngenerous margin for any error, ft was explained.\nA money bylaw will be held to seek Support of Nelson\nproperty owners in. the joint project. \u2022\nThe committee, traced persons who own property in the\ndistrict, but are resident elsewhere, in all provinces, in many\ncentres of .the United States, in France and the United Kingdom in the endeavor to obtain signatures. The majority of\nnon-resident owners who returned petitions gave their approval- Numerous Trail residents who own property in the\ndistrict signed approving petitions, it was reported.\nDistrict petition statistics by areas follow:\n. Pereent      Pereent\nResident    ef Total\nCorner of Cedar\nObservatory\nand\nGeorge Benwell, Industrial exhibits:\nMorton A. Brown, entertainment;\nWilliam Burns, midway and concessions; Robert Foxall, prize lists;\nRoland Anderson, agriculture; Frank\nHolt, agriculture; Mrs. T. Swend-\nson, arts and crafts; L. G. Catley,\ngates; Mrs. J. Doerksen, women's\norganizations; H. Meredith and Miss\nJoAnn Hopwood, school displays;\nGordon Webb, display arrangements; and B. Sutherland, piano.\nBEST EXHIBITION\nIn giving his directors' and financial reports Mr. Mutchler-stated that\nlast year had been a most successful\none. The bank balance had increased\nfrom $7776.20 to the present figure\nof $9996.20. It had been the most\nsuccessful exhibition ln .its .six-year\nhistory.\nThe association suggested several\nimprovements that could be made\nto this year's event. More variety ln\nentertainment was mentioned and\npsslbility of additional attractions\nwas discussed. It was generally expressed that prize lists should be\ncompiled as soon as possible so tjiat\nthey would be ready for distribu-\nUon at an earlier date than last\nyear. The association would like- to\nhave them ready for distribution in\nApril. Improved lighting of the exhibition grounds was also discussed.\nA finance committee was named\nwith Mr. Ryalls as chairman to invest some of their funds ln \"readily\nnegotiable securities.\" Others on\nthis committee are Mr. Mutchler\nand Mr. Watson.\nNo. of\nOwners '\nOwners\nDlstrlot               Owners\nf Yee\nNo\"\nApproving Approvlr\nApex     7\n7\n\u2014,\n100\n100\nBalfour  101\n70\n9\n.6\n69.3\nCanadian Ex,\nSheep Creek ....   22\n8\n2\n57.1\n36.4\nCrescent Valley 47\n41\n1\n90.7\n87.2\nGranite Road ..   78\n66\n6\n85.1\n84.6\nLongbeaeh     155\n111\n14\n'   81.6\n71.6\nNorth Shore .... 180\n133\n1\n94.5\n85\nPassmore\nSlocan Park .... 100\n71\n7\n80.4\n71\nProcter-Harrop 212\n140 '\n27\n78-2\n66\nQueen's Bay ....   55\n45\n5\n86.6\n81.8\nRemac    53\n'   31\n3\n85.7\n58.5\nRoss Spur-Erie   58\n45\n3\n84.4\n77.5\n267\n7\n83.5\n75.2\nSouth Slocan .. 131\n98\n2\n80.1\n74.8\nTaghum .;.........   82\n69\n1\n91.7\n84.2\nUpper 1. airView\nSouth Shore ..Y160 ;\n138\n.   4'\n\u25a0   91.1\n86.25\nWillow Point .. 307\n256\n6\n93.6\n83.3\nNorth Shore .... 180\n153  \u2022\n1\n94-5\n'   85\nBlewett   113\n82\n5\n76.9\n72.6\nYmir    1381\n92\n11\n82.4\n66.6\nUphill-\nRosemont .......... 602\n473\n41\n, 83.7,\n.78.6\nTotals ....... 2956\n2265   \u2022\n155\n83.5\n76.6\nNew M6spitcd Qroups\nTwenty representatives ef dli-r   This committee will meet March\ntrlct centres Friday night gave 113 in Nelson.\ntlrelr , recommendation to tht\nKootenay Valley Hospital Organization committee that It carry to\nVictoria petition! and formal application for setting up the district en the basil of a 80 per cent\nshare of the east ef a proposed\nnew district hospital.\nTha decision wat reached after\nleng discussion and examination\nof tha faotora Involved,   \u25a0\nTurning point for the decision\ncam* whan Colonel C. P. Perry of\nEmerald, C, H. Bland of South Slocan and W. J. Shukin of East Fair-\nview advised the meeting that their\ncompanies had explored the tactorl\nInvolved, and had agreed that the\n60-40 split was equitable.\nThe 60-40 division was the one\nuaed at all district meetings when\norganizing committee speakers addressed district property owners. It\nwaa also Used in Information literature distributed to 3000 ratepayers.\nThe district people approved for-\nmatlon of th* distript by signing the\npetitions, 2285 being favorable to\nthe proposition out of a total of 2996.\nOnly 1SS had repected the petitions,\nthla recommendation of the district representatives paved the way\ntor formal application to Victoria.\naettlng up of letters patent, and the\nelection of district trustees.\nIt was emphasized by three\nspeakers, Mayor Joseph Kary,\nchairman, J, W. Graham and R. H.\nProcter that the organizing committee had at all meetings said\n. district people would hava a part\nIn decisions regarding the new\n$1,800,000 hospital.\nTo earry egt tills pledge two\ncommittees were named, made up\nof bath city and dlstrlot people.\nA committee to study and make\nrecommendations on sites comprises\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmo, chairman;   B.   J.   Fltchett   of  Procter,\nGeorge Penniket ot South Slocan,\nJ. W. Graham and Alderman Arthur Foster.\nFly\nVancouver\n(From  Castlegar)\n2 Hrs, 20 Mini.\n.28\nNearly 100 per cent approval was given by Harrop resident owners, their committee had reported. Twenty-nine\nnon-resident property owners of Procter could not be located' ,    \u2022\nDeMarco Wins\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Brooklyn's Paddy DeMarco won the\nworld lightweight ohamplonshlp\nFriday night by outpointing Jimmy Carter, the 4-1 favorite, In a\nfurious 16-round bout in Madison\nSquare Garden, The decision was\nunanimous, '\n*45\nRETURN\n(17-Day Limit)\nPHONE 204\nm Awl\n9am\nAIRLINES\ns coNTiNum ___ \u00abj eoMMusrrita h Canada\nOver 1700 Enjoy \u2022\nTrail Ice Show\nTRAIL \u2014 More than 1700 people\nenjoyed the flrat night of tha ice\nshow put on lh the Cominco Arena\nby the Trail Skating Club, featuring 25 guest artists from Vancouver\nand over 300 of -its- own members.\nLloyd Crowe High School Band\nand drum majorettes started the\nshow off and junior club members\ntook over for the first portion,\nbringing to life the fabulous characters ln Peter Pan. The second\nhalf of the show Included guest\nartlata from VancoUvtr, eanier\nmembers ot the Trail club, a high,\nstepping chorus, and professional\nacta.\nCelebrating Its twentieth anniversary, part of the show revolved\nittt\\t around a \"happy birthday\"\npresentation.\nFORD THEATRE\n<   Presents\nBurgesa Meredith\n\"Married\nBotehelor\"\nSUNDAY, 9:00 P.M.\ntill\nf j\t\nChimney and Window Service\nCHIMNEYS CLEANED -\"nECAPPED\nVACUUM  EQUIPPED SERVICE\nFOR STOVES, FURNACES! PIPES\nWINDOWS CLEANED - STORM  SASH  REMOVED\nDomeitlo er Commercial Work .\nNo Job Too Large er Tee Small\nPhone 1284-L \u2014 Free Estimates\nFrame and Mason Chimney Service\n(OUT-OF-TOWN INQUIRIES SOLICITED)\nA committee to consider applications and make recommendations\non an architect included H. D. Harrison, chairman; W. A. Taylor of\nSalmo, Gene Bodard of Upper Fair-\nview; C. P. Parry of Emerald and\nAlderman Elizabeth Wallach.\nThli committer will matt March\n13 ln City Council chambers.\nCommitteei were nominated from\nthe floor and they elected their\nown chairmen.\nSIX DISTRICT ZONES\nDistrict representative) offered\ntheir advice oq the zoning ot the\ndistrict. As a result six aonei will\nbe set up from which aaven trustees will be elected. The large Salmo\nValley zone will elect two trustees,\nif Victoria approval is granted.\nZones comprise: (1) Harrop, Procter, Balfour, Longbeaeh and Queens\nBay; (2) the West Arm area from\nKokanee to Orohman Creeks; (3)\nSlocan Valley area and South Slocan; (4) Beasley, Taghum, Sproule,\nBlewett, Granite Road and Nelson\nextra-municipal areas; (9) Hall\nCreek South to International Boundary; (6) Industrial zone along the\nKootenay river area.\nThe city's share of the overall\ncost, amounting to 40 per cent of\nfSOO.OOO, must be approved by the\nproperty owners ln a money bylaw.\nPresent were:\nH. W. Wilton and Gene Bodard,\nUpper Falrview; W. J. Shukin and\nE. L. Vance, East Falrview; Mlsi\nJoyce Hirst, Queen's Bay; B. J,\nFitchett, Procter-Harrop; Gordon\nSargent, Longbeach-Balfour; A. M.\nBanks, West Arm; W. P. F. Green,\nNorth Shore; W. A. Taylor, Salmo;\nCommission; C. P. Perry, Emerald;\nM. C. Donaldson, Salmo Village\nAlex Ferworn, Ymir; C. H. Bltfnd\nand George Penniket, South Slocan;\nWalter F. Chernenko, Taghum;\nAdam Doyle, Rosemont; W. Roy\nHunter, Alderman Elizabeth Wallach, Alderman Arthur Foster, Harry D. Harrison, George Turner, Nelson.\nTourists lo Pass\nUpf rail if Vole\nIs Dry \u2014Bengert\nTRAIL\u2014\"To make TraU the moat\npublicized town ln B. C, jutt defeat\nthe liquor plebiscite scheduled to\nbe held hare In the near future,\"\nsaid J. E. Bengert of Vancouver,\npresident of the B. C. Hotel Assoc,\niatlon, guett speaker at the Trail\nHotelmen't annual banquet ih the\nColumbo Hall Friday evening.\nStating that ha waa not a wet or a\ndry, but neutral, Mr. Bengert said\nthat.if tha plebiscite is defeated,\ntourists will be passing by this city\nsaying, \"Don't bother to go there,\nyou cen't get a drink in Trail.\"\nHe Invited all to attend the b_-\ngest annual provincial hotelmen's\nconvention yet, to be held in Vancouver No, 16, 17 and IB.\nAccompanied by directors J. Cos.\ntock,' K. J. Campbell and A. Ruoc-\nco, Mr. Bengert said that he was\nvisiting Trail for purely social purposes and not to discuss business.\nHowever, he conceded to a request\nby local hotelmen to hold a meeting\nand question period Saturday afternoon before leaving for Nelson.\nBesides the Vancouver guests, the\nbanquet was attended by visitors\nand civic officials trom Nelson,\nRossland, Fruitvale and Castlegar,\nMayor E. G. Fletcher of Trail, a\nguest speaker, announced that concerning the liquor plebiscite and an\nearly date will soon be announced\nfor the vote. Clause A of the act\nwill ba eliminated as far as the\nTrail vote ls concerned, meaning\nthat public houses and beer parlors\nwill not be affected by the outcome.\nWith Stone\nand Besotfi?\nResults of play In tha Nelsoi\nCurling Club's Jaffa competitloj\nFriday were:\nT. S. Jemson 7, J. Milne 8; 9\nP. Stranberg 10, M. 8. Ryalls 9;\nW. DeFoe 12, F, Carmlchael 8; .\nW. M. Young 8, E. Mason 7; 1\nJ. Learning 10, R. D. Wallace 7.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULT!\n\"'\"Wllr 'I '\"   I\nCOA\nL\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWE8TERN LEAQUE\nVancouver 4, Seattle J.\nOKANAGAN SENIOR\nPenticton 7,' Kamloops 5.\nSASK, SENIOR\nYorkton 4, Melville 0.\nBest of seven semi-final series\ntied 2-2. s\nTQWLEP\nFuel __ T .*risf\u00bbr Y\nPhone 883 Nelson, B,C.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllinilllllllMllllil.il\nWelcome Canadians\nFRIENDLY\nHOTEL\nRooms With Bath.83.00 \u2022 33,50\nWithout Bath 82.00  $2.60    I\nSpokane W. 213 Riverside\n \"\u25a0'IMIIIHIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll\nA TREAT FOR YOU\nAND YOUR  FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY;\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelion\nChanges Delay Post Office Tenders\nMrs. J. Wilks\nDies at Coast\nMrs. Winnie Mae Wilks, former\nNelson resident, died in New Westminster March 3 at the age At 67.\nSha came to Nelson in. 1948,with\nher husband, James Wilks, who\npredeceased her in I960, then want\nto Lethbridge after her husband's\ndeath, and moved to Now Westminster last July.\nShe was born ln Revelstoke and\nWas married there, and lived at\nMedicine Hat for 16 years, Coronation, Alta., for four years and in\nEdmonton fbr IS years.\n. Survivors include three sons, Reg\nof Edmonton, Robert of Nelson,\nHarold of Lethbridge; three daughters, Mrs. Bob Macdonald of Edmonton, Mrs.-Freddie Folka orf New\nWestminster, Mrs. Lyall Barrl. ot\nCourtenay, 15 grand children and\none gr*at grandchild.\nCity Assessment\nUpheld By Judge\nCity assessment of $23,680, an Increase ot 3680 Over the 1992 assessment, on property of Wood, Val-\nlance Hardware Company, Nelson,\nwas confirmed ln e judgment by\nHis Honor Judge E- P- Dawson ln\nCounty Court Friday.\nThe company had appealed ta\nCity Court of Revision to remove\nthe 3680 increase, but without success, and the appeal was token before Judge Dawson, who upheld tbe\nincreased assessment. ,\nR. Blake Allan was counsel fer\nWood, Vallance and Leo S. Gansner for the city, Court costs ware\ncharted against the apellant.\nTenders for the proposed new\nfederal building at Nelson will\nprobably not be callod until May,\nHen. James Sinclair, Minister\nof Fisheries, Friday notified Harry D, Harrison, President of the\nKootenay West Liberal Association, that ehanges In the planned\nbuilding construction would cause\nthe delay.\nMain alteration was that tha\nnew plana would not Inolude tht\ntop floor called for In ihe original\ndrawings.\nWilliam Spooner,\nWillow Point\nResident, Passes\nWilliam Spoonar, resident of Willow Point and former well known\nTrail resident, died suddenly at his\nhome Thursday night.\nBo.n in Browhhtlls, Shropshire,\nEngland, Adg. 14, 1876, he came to\nCanada about 1907. He resided at\nGreenwood until 1918 and worked\nIn the Greenwood smelter until lt\nclosed down.\nHe then moved to Trail and work\ned in tha Trail 'Smelter until about\n194S, whin he moved to Willow\nPoint.     \u2022\nWhile in Tfall, Mr- Spooner was a\nmember et tha first aid team which\nwon the Wallace-Nasbitt trophy, a\nmember ot the Odd Fellows and a\nmember of the Trill Lodge 6f the\nKnights o'f Pythias. At ohe time he\nwaa chairman of the Male Boys\nChoir if Tfalt\nSurvivors include ohe son, James\nWilliam of Fruitvale; one daughter, Mrs; M, T.'Altai.'0* Calgary; hi*\nwife, Florence bt Willow Point; two\ngrandsons, Pale Edward Spooner ot\ndmbntdn; S. W: Harris of Vancouver, and one great-grandchild, Pat\nHarris of Vancouver.\nThe Weather\nNelson \t\nKimberley\t\nCreseaht Valley\t\nKaslo\nGrand forks .'. is\nKtrn_ooj.e \u2022\t\nPentlcton\nVajicbuver .\u201e\t\nVictoria     _...\u201e....:...\nprince Rupert ..: ..\nSettle ;5>. _.....\n6)at: Francisco ....'..._\t\nSdokine\t\nCmtte  _._ .',\t\n him i i'i-BSS.\n41   .30\n.80\n\"I'LL MEIT YOU ATJTrtiCASTH\nIN THI HEART OF THE CITY\"\nHotel Castle\nMArine 1531\nVANCOUVER. B.C.\nAl. Black, Manager\n750 Granville Street\nRossland Royals\nTake Washington\nHoopsters 59-33\nROSSLAND \u2014 Rossland High\nSchool Royals played their last\ngame bt the season ln style when\nthey dumped the visiting Wellipinit\nWash., hoopsters 88-33 in the second game of a home .and home series. The win gave the locals their\nninth win in 12 Starts Including exhibition and league games.\nIn the Friday night encounter at\nthe school'gymnasium a capacity\nCrowd watched the Rosslanders lead\nthe visitors in all four quarters.\nCentreman Psddy Bell displayed\ntremendous accuracy as he potted\n28 pblnta with an array ot hook,\nsat and jump shots.\nBell led the ROyals In the scoring\ndepartment throughout the past season. Cagey gUard Peter Bourchier\nwa6 runner-up In s.orin$ honor*\nwith 12 points.\nLeading the boys from the Washington* Indian Reservation, was\nCharles Tandy, who parted the net\ntor 18 points,\nIn a P-ellminary game, Rossland\nJuniors beat Wellipinit Juniors 28-\n24, with' Rossland getting the nod\nover their opponents in the final\nminute of the last quarter. Half time\nmargin waa 16-11 tor the Rosslanders but the leoai five faltered in\nthe last quarter. Kenny Smith led\nthe Aoaslehriers with eight points\nwhile Cava Wynecoep- sparked the\nvisitors with 15 points.\nPoster Contest\nWinners Named\nWinners ot t poster contest, \"Education is Everybody'a Business\",\nsponsored .by the Nelson District\nTeachers' Association have been\nnamed. First, second and third prize\nwere given each elementary and\nsecondary school.\nPrize money was donated by the\nNelson School Board and will be\nawarded at a public meeting March\n12,\nWinners are:-\nSecondary \u2014 Gaetana Robinson,\nHigh School; first; Joan Stallwood,\nHigh School, second; Cameron Stall-\nwood, High School,'third.      \u2022 ',\nWinners ot honorable mention\nwere Frank Matovleh of the Convent, and Tarmena Moras, et tha\nHigh SchooL    YY. .\"- \u2022 '\u2022\"    i\nElementary Denis Leahy, St Joseph's Academy, firft; Maureen Ac-\nleft, St Joseph's; second, Terry\n\\nne Beauchamp.'St Joseph's third.\nPHONE 144. FOI*.  CLASSIFIED\nSYLLABUS REVERSION\nKootenay Musical Festival \u2014 April 26 to May 1, 1954\nUnder Date of Feb. 27, Western Music, Vancouver, Advises\nThat the Following Music Is en Hands\n20 Copies, Class 4 (\u25a0) Holy Night\n3 Copies, (b) Ursula Dancing\n800 Copies, Class 73 (a) Rustle.Pence -\n300 Copies, (b) Saucy Chipmunk\n16 Copies, Class 87 Humeresquo\nIn View of Above, Decision to Change the Above Classea to\n\"Own Choice\" Is Rescinded. Above Test Pieces Will: Stand.\n\u2022Y   \". iffW:<  \"rh     .i&mf\"\nGet Your Entries In Early \u2014 Penalty Definitely Appllea ;After\nMarch 18' Y'.-Y ';-,   'V.;\nFestival Secretary, Ron Fleming\", 224 Behnsen St.\n- Walter Urn\nvsmt\nLois Smith * Irene Aping\nDavid Adams * Jury Gotshalks\n30 DANCERS\nMonday March 22:\nSwan Lake, Giselle, Don Quixote, Nutcracker,\nTuesday, March 23:\nSylphides, Dances From The Classics, Copellia.\nMarch 22 - CIVIC CENTRE - March 23\nAN ATTRACTION OF THE FIRST MAGNITUDE |\nSpecial Newel Vancouver Has Sold Out a Full Week-\nBooking at Nearly Twice Nelson Prices.\nOver Half Our Seats Sold for\nThe Two Performances.\nTickets \u2014 $2.00 and $2.50\nGet Yours Now at\nSUTHERLAND'S MUSIC STORE -d\nAuspices  Nelson  Musical  Festival  Association;       .Y\nmm\nG. HtJONG\nI Chinese Herb Remedies\nFor All Ailments\n| (0  YEARS'  EXEPER1-\n_NCE IN CANADA\nCorner 6th Ave. and 1st St E-\nCalgary\t\nNOTICE\nTO BE HELD IN\nKASLO DRILL HALL\n8 p.m.\nMonday, March 8th\n... . \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 ' ;.- '''\u25a0.' \u25a0'.'-'. \"'.\u2022\u2022\u25a0 :\nTo clarify, question and inform on\nhospital and medical situation in\nKaslo and District\nSponsored by o group of citizens interested in a\nreturn to a stable and equitable settlement of the\nabove.\nY\n.i\n mimapm.\nMaftibags\n' 'TO MATCH\nYOUR SPRING SHOES \"\nSMART ,BQX, -.\n\u25a0 . ..ENVELOPE and\n, ',-\".    DRAWSTRINa STOLES\n'j0k. SHOE\nCENTRE\n,583 Baker St.\nPhone 895\n318,8.2 School\nIxpendilure\n:or Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK\u2014Total Cranbrook\nSchool District expenditures ol\n818,842 in 1953 exceeded the year's\nntal school revenue by $1498, ac-\nmrding . to the audited financial\nrtatement, but a 1952 surplus of\n14754. more than filled the breach\nind left a net Surplus of $3256.\nProvincial government grants for\nill, purposes amounted to 3109,491,\nHe city school levy $119,813, ana\nKe'rural school levy $83,706, and\nhe rest came from tuition fees,\nehtals and sundry sources.\nInstruction and building opera-\nIons took $233,160 bf expenditures,\nriant: and ground maintenance $9,-\n59, and conveyance of pupils $24,-\nWestern Soroptimist\nConfab at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK\u2014-Cranbrook has\nbeen, chosen by Western Canadian\nRegion Soroptlmlijt Clubs for Its\nspring conference April 30 and May\n1, with Cranbrook and Kimberley\nSoroptimists joint hostesses, and'\nMiss Muriel Baxter, of Cranbrook\nand Mrs. May Slade of Kimberley\nJoint conveners. Mrs. Eric Brolln of\nChilllwack, district governor will\nbe chairman.\nDelegates from all 24 clubs ln the\nwestern regioi) are expected to attend, and will make plans for the\nbiennial conference of the American Federation of Soroptimists, the\ncobana, which will be at Banff in\nJune. Miss Ida Rae of Vancouver\nconvener of the cobana, will be\nguest' speaker at the regional meeting here.\nCranbrook Ventures Club, started\nunder Soroptimist sponsorship, has\nvolunteered help to the Cranbrook\nand Kimberley ' Soroptimists in\nhosting the regional meeting.\nWith closing out of the.1953 Tuberculosis Society Christmas Seals\ncampaign, which Soroptimists sponsored here, committee \u2022 chairman\nMrs. Carl Gill reported that total\nreturns from Cranbrook and district were $1351.\nPipeline\nANCIENT LAND\nAbout 80 per cent of the people\nof Turkey are engaged In agricultural occupations.\n532. Debt services cost $24,258, in\neluding retirement of $14,500 prin\nclpal. Admlnstratlon cost $9106.\nCapital account showed payable\ndebentures totalling $275,875 as liabilities, with capital surplus of $454,-\n500 and fixed assets ot lands, buildings, furniture, equipment and vehicles of $809,547. '\nImportant Message!\nCKLN\nMonday\n10:15\np.m.\nHon Robert Bonner\nv* Attorney-general\nMINISTER OF EDUCATION\n1EPORTS\n.     ON\nPRESENT SESSION\nf\nVr^^Ukf  H        _$__?   tBm\nand     TRANSFER\n526 Stanley Street . . .  Nelson\n\u25a0+-\nNAKUSP-At the annual meeting\nof the Nakusp Develdpiinent pis-\ntrlct In the Parish Hall G. H. Gardner was elected chairman and H. L\nMiller secretary. '\nThe commissioner's report showed\n400 feet of new.pipe ha^-been replaced on the main line to Spicer's\nHill, including 60 feet of steel pipe\ncrossing the road at Jansen's. Renewal of the four-Inch pipe in the\nlane from Jansen's garage, to the\npool hall has been completed kond\nanother crossing was' made with\nsteel pipe from the Nakusp Dry\nCleaners to the Leland Hotel.\nA great deal of improvement was\ndone along the \"Seven-mile Creek1\nline and some 17 new connections\nhave been made.\nThe possibility _ of larger water\nstorage above the dam was gone\ninto and it was found Impossible\nto use a bulldozer in the area. Thjs\nwill be one of the first matters to be\ntaken up in the Spring..\nG. H. Gardner was re-elected commissioner; I. F. Morehouse was reelected auditor.\nIt was suggested that fire stand-\npipes be erected at Bartholomew's\ncorner, Hanson's, Elder's and Kirk's.\nVic Smith addressed the meeting\nregarding street lights. It was decided to leave discussion of same\nfor a public meeting, which will be\nadvertised.\nPost Office Figures\nAll Show Decreases   .\nCRANBROOK\u2014Sharp decreases\nla all departments of operations are\nshown for. February In Postmaster\nE. T. Glrllng's statistical summary\nfor the month.   .\nBiggest decline was In sale of unemployment insurance stamps that\nIndicates the volume of employment\nin the immediate area. Total came\nto $2651, compared with $3724' for\nIhe corresponding month last year.\nThe post office issued 2555 money\norders, compared with 2606 issued\nlast February, and paid 818 money\norders compared with 844 paid the\nsame month last year.   .\nRevenue from postage meters and\nstamp sales for the month was\n52809, compared with'$3424 for February of 1953.\nB.: MITCHELLS ..->.. D. C. MANLY      \".-'-,\n,. ,R,ETJ.R!l' __A? PRESIDENT of Grand Forks Community Hos'-\npltal is D.-C. Manly. His *u-_.s\u00bb.r la E. B. Mitchell. Mr, Manly, an\nactive community worker, was one of-the organizing members of\nthe hospital aoolety which reopened the hospital In Maroh,\\r1M\u00ab.\nHe has been grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias Ledge, past\npresident of the QyrO Club and dlstrlot governor of Gyrt International, and Is a former mayor of Grand Forks. Mr. Mitchell, here\nsince 1941, Is also a past president of Gyro Club, city council member tor three years, past noble grand of Gateway Lodge IOOF, bf\nwhich he Is now treasurer.\u2014Don't photos.\n?'\u25a0$ '-:^fyJ'y'f'V^^f:\nY   NELSON OAI-Y NEWS, SATURDAY, MARgH j 1934^.3\nE. J. Nicholls, Marine Engineer,\nLast of \"Originals\", Retires\nlowlers' Trophy\nToW.LRivett\nKAfiLO\u2014TMe ahhual riieeting;\nhe Lawn Bowling Association was\n'eld at the -home of Mrs. C. Saal-\neld when preparation of the bowling greens was discussed and plans\nfor an early start this season were\nmade.\nW. L. Rivett was presented with\na silver trophy which he won last\nseason. '\nOfficers elected were: President,\nJack Morris; secretary-treasurer,\nMrs. C. Saalfeld.\nKaslo Council Orders\nNew Adding Machine\nKASLO\u2014The. city council at a\nregular meeting decided to purchase an adding machine for use in\n| the city office at a cost of $349.\nA letter from the Boy Scout Association of Nelson was read in which\nthe association thanked the council\nfor turning over the fish hatchery\nbuilding to the Kaslo Boy Scout\ntroop.\nOliver Players\nTo Grand Forks\n' GRAND FORKS \u2014 Community\nPlayers from Oliver, B. C, will\nmajte an appearance In Grand\nForks April 2, jvith the play, \u2014\n\"George Washington Slept Here\"\nby Moss Hart.\nThey aVe being invited by the\nGrand Forks Hospital Auxiliary.\nHumans Cause\nMost Accidents\nRotarians Md\nNAKUSP\u2014Guests at Rotary club\nmeeting were Peter Thom, master\nbuilder, and Q.\"L. Phillips, Kootenay division superintendent of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway, Nelson:\nBob White, Ron Jordan,, Don Mc-\nCusker and Carl Dumont of Nakusp^\nand Ray Beaton, safety Inspector of\nthe Workmen's Compensation\nBoard.\n\"The human, element is responsible for 99 per cent of all accidents,\"\nstated Mr. Beaton, and backed up\nhis claim with particulars and a\nfilm. \"The best) safety; device there\nis,\" he said, \"is what we have above\nour ears.\"\nA man fell seven feet on June J3\nat Kitimat, and will be crippled .for\nthe rest of his life. A lifetime pension will cost $70,000. The same\ncould happen here and cost the\nsame. Each firm is assessed a porf\ntion of the total cost of all accidents,\nthe rates being set on costs. The\naccident happened under normal\nconditions and through thoughtlessness of the supervisor.\nN \"There is no excuse for any accident. We are all entirely to blame\nfor them,\" he said.\nA 45-minute showing of. a film\n\"Paradise Valley\" was enjoyed: .\nMefnb'ers later attended a showing of a film on industrial accidents\nat the fire hall.     '---      \\   ,'.v\n' \\  '      '\nKaslo Enthusiasts\nEnjoy HMS Pinafore .\nKASLO\u2014Thirty-three members\nof the Kaslo Choral and Orchestral\nSociety travelled to Nelson to at-\ntend'\"HMS Pinafore\" as presented\nby the Rossland Light Opera Company.\n- The Kaslo Society plans to make\nits first public appearance in the\nsame Gilbert and Sullivan Opera ln\nthe spring with a cast of 54, under\nthe direction of Mr. and Mrs, C.\nHalleran.\nNaomi Service Club\nHolds Bean Supper\n.SOttJHS SLOCAN-The Naorpl\nService Club at No. 3 plant held a\nsuccessful bean supper.' A large\nnumber attended and Rev. W. J.\nSilverwood showed films which\nwere much enjoyed.\nLast Riles Held\nFor F. W.Young\nFRUrrVALE-St. John's Anglican\nChurch. In Fruitvale was filled to\ncapacity by friends and neighbors\nwho gathered to pay their last respects, to Frederick William Young,\nwho died after a lengthy illness.\nVen. Archdeacon- B. A. Resker of\nCastlegar conducted the service and\nwas assisted by Lay Reader William\nEdington, Mrs. James Davis was\norganist and the congregational\nhymns were two favorites, \"Sun of\nMy Soil)\" and \"What a Friend We\nHave in Jesus.\"\nArchdeacon Resker said Mr.\nYoung had been a good builder of\nthis country as one Who pioneered\non the railroad and a faithful worker of St. Joha's Church In seeing it\ngrow from a mission field to a self-\nsupporting church.\n. Honorary pallbearers were F. M.\nBarrett, D. C. Mason, Robert Kidd,\nThomas Moon Sr., Albert Bath, Will-\nlam Powne, Julius Olsen, R. Hepburn, George Ross.\nActive pallbearers were. James\nand .Robert Davis, Thomas Moon\nPROCTER\u2014Forty-seven years of\nservice as marine, engineer'on the\nlakes .and rivers of British Columbia for E. J. Nlcholls, engineer on\nthe Kootenay Lake ferry MV An-'\nscomb. ' \u25a0 v   '\u25a0'.'\u25a0\n\"'. He is the last of the original B. C.\nlake and river service engineers to\nretire, ,-\n'Leaving Liverpool \"May 3, 1907,\non\" the CPR Lake Champlaln, he arrived in Quebec May 18 and reached Procter May 34,1907; Four days\nlater he jollied the CPR tug Ymir.\nHe served as second and chief engineer on the. tugs Valhalla, Hos\nrner and; .Graiithall- on Kootenay\nLake;, the tugs Castlegar, York, Kel-,\nowna, and Naramata On Okanagan\nLake; on the tugs Columbia, Arrow\nLakes and Rosebery on Slocan Lake,\nand on the stern-wheelers Nelson,\nKokanee, Kuskenook, Moyle. and\nNasookln.on Kootenay Lake; the\nMinto and Bonntagton oh the Arrow\nLakes and the Okanagan and Sica-\nmous o.n Okanagan lakes.\nHe joined SS Nasookin ln 1940 on\nthe ferry ^run between Fraser's\nLanding and Gray Creek, and then\ntransferred to the MV-Anscomb in\n1947. V\n* He .was engineer of the steamera\nBonnlngton, qkanagan and Nasookin on eafch of their final trips.\nA few years ago, he sold his property..^ Procter to C. Fltchett and\nbought.the property of the late C.\nF. McHardy at Balfour. As soon as\nhe disposes of this he plans to take\na trip to England to visit two sisters.\nOn completion of his last shift\nSunday, February 28, he was presented with a matched set of luggage by his shipmates of the Anscomb - and }ils former shipmates\nfrom the SS Moyie.        \u00bb\nFernie Kinsmen Tag\nNeighbors' For Fund\nNATAL\u2014The Kinsmen Club of\nFernie, yhich sponsored the polio\nlund'drive in that city, held a\nhouse-to-house canvas and tag day\nthroughout Natal-Michel and Sparwood, which netted the Kinsmen\nover a reported, sum of $230. The\nobjective of the Fernie'Kinsmen\nwas $1500 which was reached and\npassed by well over $200 in the last\nreport. The money raised will contribute towards the equipping and\nmaintenance of the Western Society\nfor Physical Rehabilitation at Vancouver.\nmm\nWilliam and John Grieve and\nenneth Knowler.    \u2022\nInterment was In. the family plot\nto-the-Fruitvale cemetery.\nOut-of-town people who attended\nwere Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Staahal of\nOmak, Wash., Mr. and. Mrs. Thomas\nJones ofOrville, Wash,, aridlfrSand\nMrs.' D- C. Jones pf TralL\nNICHOLLS\nDeer Park Farmers'\nElect Officers\nDEER PARK - At a meeting of\nthe'Deer Park Farmers' institute\nthe following officers were elected:\nA. Law, President; \u2022 P. Romaine,\naecretary-treasurer, and C. Phelps,\nvice-president R. C. Coleman and\nR. Briggeman were nominated\n\u2022directors and C. Phelps and C. T.'\nWilliamson as auditors. \"Sv\nFurther plans for the Road Opening program, In co-operation -with\nthe Women's Institute, were discussed-,at the meeting. The Wo-\nmeh'a Institute was represented by\nseveral members who served refreshments. '.\"   > \/\u2022\u25a0\nCustoms Revenue Of f\nCRAN8RQOK\u2014At a total tit $24,-\n480 last month, collections of inland-\nrevenue and.customs at the port off\nCranbrook and its outport of Roosi\"\nville were down from the January\ntotal of $29,354. Cranbrook collec- .\nted all but $124.82 ot the amount. .\nOpened af Kaslo I\nKASHO-i-TheKfaalo public library\nwas officially opened- lp thecltjf\nhall, with Rev. H. Howarth, Mri\nw; V.SDrayton tod Mrs, W. J. _jj'\nWalker ln attendance.\nSixteen Children and 11 adults registered at once for books. i\nThe library -yylll be open to thi\npublic on\" Wednesday and Saturday\nafternoons of each week with Rev.\nH. Howarth In charge.\nIF you feel\nALLIN\nThese ixj, moil p\u00bbpli work under -,\n*_\u00a3\u25a0* .w WSMk m Thi\u00bb\nrtnSn on bodj ind bum nukes phjik.l\nfails easier W Ioi.-h_rd.r to r.,_in.\nToday's tenio liijnj, lowered reijiUnc,\n\u2022Term*, worry-any el flwio may aJett; '\nnormal kidney action. When kidneys ,.t\n\u2022ut ef order, eiceia adds and wailes\nremain in lhe ayilem. Then backache,\nistaU test, thst \"M^rf- W\nbuM feeling often Mow. That's Ih.\nKm. to take Dodd'a Kidney Pill.. Dodd'aI\natmmlato the kidney. U normal action.\nThen you feel belter-tleen better-work\nboiler. Ad.br Dodd'a Kidney Fill. \u00abl\naaydmieounter. .,    _.\nfor Kootenay District\nYoung Man With Late Model Car.\nSend Application! to\nC. H. ILER\nBox 214. Nelson Daily New*.\nKaslo Seeks Means\nOf Boosting Power\nKASLO\u2014Mr. Bartelmeau of Vancouver is being asked to come to\nKaslo to study and advise the council as to the possibility of Increasing hydro power for the city from\nthe present source. A. W. Thiessen,\nrecreation director, Nelson, gave\nfurther information regarding the\norganization of a recreation commission' in Kaslo.\nPIONEER  LINE\nRailway history in South Africa\nbegan with construction in 1859 of\na 40-mile railroad from Capetown\nto Wellington.\n=_\n\u00abwe a OOOD MM\n_._\u25a0__\u00ab__-_\u2022 SS.   \" .._ \u25a0.-i,&;\u201e',;\u201e'i\\\n\u25a0 This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nBuying-Sellinq-Rentinq\nMAU , s '\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy   .\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LIN*\n-\ni   '  V\"1\n\u25a01\n,       ,    '\n5\n\u2022\n_____\n4\t\n\u2022- Put one word in each space\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\nm Box numbers count as four words\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nLINES 3 TIMES 6 TIMES\n'.'*\u25a0\u25a0 .74 ,M|\n3 1.11 1.44\n4 1.48 1.91\n5 1,85 2.40\n\u00ab   \u25a0 \\   2.22 2.88\n7 2.59 3.38\n8 .     \u25a0       2.98\n\u2022 Minimum chargo is two lines\n\u2022 Add lie fer Bex Number\no Deduct 10% from above rates if payment Is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage ef the lew sis time rate\nYOUR NAME\nADDRESS\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run\nPayment Enclosed ;\nBill Me \t\nYou Reach Over 16,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B.C.\n.-. -Ft\n\\\n* . r<f\nfrj':..'.,-_.-'--...\" ^_   \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 --\u25a0  . \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0    -..    .'\u25a0   -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nyy    r:..r.:^r^' :.__.._\t\n , r\t\n H efismt Bailij ita\n,   Bullish CdtimWcr-.'\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING- COMPANY LIMITED,\n269 Baiter Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Socorid Class Mail,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF TOE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTBE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS,\nScriurdery, Mctrc_-6, 19S4   '\nSome Killers Gain,\nWhile Others Falter  ;\nWhile deaths from most causes\nshowed a steady decrease over the\nyears, four major killers appeared to.'\nhave gained strength. Heart diseases\nkilled 39,295 Canadians in 1951, as compared to 17,896 average in the years\n1936-1940. Cancer and other, malignant\ntumors killed 17,821 as compared to\n12,283. Bronchitis killed 549 as compared to 327. Polio deaths have shown\na steady increase from 24 in 1945 to\n311 In 1952-   '.\nCanada rated 13th among nations jn\nits infant mortality record, with 38\ndeaths per 1000 live births during'1951.\nSweden rated- first with only 21 per\n1000. France's 195. record was the only\none listed as worse than Canada's with\n51 deaths per-1000 live births.\nIndicative of the need fpr greater\nintensity of research and education tn\nthe matter of infant mortality Is the\nfact that the greatest number of deaths\nof children under four from 1942\nthrough 1946 had to be listed in the\nHealth League of Canada's latest survey under the heading \"Miscellaneous\nDiseases (Cause Unknown)\". Out of\n91,228 deaths.listed during that peritid,\n44,765 were accounted for by that designation. Diseases of the respiratory\nsystem ranked second for children-Under four, accounting for 13,934 deaths,\nand diseases of the digestive system\"\naccounted for 11,146. Accidents accidents accounted for the greatest\nnumber ofdeaths in children over five,\nwith 1738 accident-deaths among children five through nine, and 1437 among-\nchildren 10 through 14. Tuberculosis\nassumed second place in both of these\nolder groups, accounting for 872 deaths\nin the five through nine group, and\n1010 deaths in the 10 through 14 group.\nIn all groups vehicle and other transport accidents accounted for most of\nthe accident deaths, with drowning in\nsecond place.\nAmong disease preventable by immunization, smallpox has decreased to\nzero, and diphtheria has decreased\nfrom 2786 cases and 271 deaths in 1945\nto 190 cases and 26 deaths in 1952.\nHowever1, on the darker side, whooping cough and scarlet fever have increased in incidence, though use of the\nantibiotic drugs may account for a\ndecrease in the'number of deaths from\nthese diseases. In 1952 there were 8520\ncases of whooping cough and' 142\ndeaths, compared with 7671 cases and\n231 deaths in 1946. There were 19,010\ncases of scarlet fever and 24 deaths in\n1951, compared with 9308 cases and 58\ndeaths in 1946. Health Departments\nthroughout Canada provide free immu-\n\u25a0 nization against these diseases. Canadians should avail themselves of the\nBetty's Wefekly Letter to:'\nDear Jane:\n?Questions?\nWell, nowS we've had Just about avery-\nthing! \u2022'.  ,    - ' Y\nNot satisfied with having every corner of\nthe earth militarized, tha U.S. armed forces\nara aponsorlng a sky-sweeping search for tiny\nearth-moons which could be used aa space\nplatforms to launch missiles In time of war.\nAccording to our press, \"the value of an\narmed weapons station ln space, prepared to\ndeal deadly, blows from'overhead, ls obvious\nand has long intrigued military, minds.\" Well\ndo I remember when military mlnity were\nintrigued with dropping the atom bomb on\n\u2022 Hiroshima, v-r\nCan't we even keep our bloodthirsty hands\noft the stars? This Idea of Hunting out the\nheavenly bodies to use as stations from which\nto launch death missiles In time of war may\nIntrigue the military' mind, but lt leaves me'\u25a0\ncold .'. . no,'I think I would be much more\nhonest to say lt makes me hot I feel ashamed\nto look a star in the face.\nAren't there something like 197 million.\nsquare miles on the surface of the earth? One\nhundred and ninety-seven million square mile*\nseems plenty of space ln which to place destroyers and submarines and guns and bomb-\nera and bombs and all the rest of the deadly\nthings - we Invent, without trying to rope in\nthe satellites too. Couldn't we Just leave those\nheavenly bodies alone If we can't think of a\nbetter purpose than to use them for hurling\ndeadly missiles on other human beings\u2014this\nidea which intrigues the military mind! .That,\nold expression about are we men or are We\nmice\u2014'honestly now, Jane, do you ever wonder\nare we men of are We devils?\nOne thing sure', we of the common herd\nare thinking and talking along the lines ot\npeace more than ever, and If we keep lt up I -\ndon't believe even \u00bbthe military minds will\ndare to tamper with the heavens.\nI wish there wouldn't always be something\nin the Thursday paper to make me forget the\nthings I was going to write to you about, Jane.\nThis scheme, so clearly described^ made me\nforget everything else. Surely we should be\nwilling to leave, the heavenly bodies out of\nour military plans. Just one look it the sky\nthese beautiful evenings gives us enough of\nwonder and glory to help us through the dayr\ndon't you think Why should we want to\n\"civilize\" the sky, or those same stars whieh\nof old \"The stars in the bright sky looked\ndown where __e lay\"?\n(With apologies to the poet)   \".\nTwinkle, twinkle, little star,\n.   It'll be your turn to wonder what we are,\n.    If \"we get acreage ln the sky\nJust to let more destruction fly.\n\u2014BETTY BLYTHE.\nHealthy Record\nRetail sales at a record $1,225,155,000\n(that's right, -$iy4 billion) in British\nColumbia in 1953. It couldn't have\nbeen such a bad year.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters to the Editor on any tpplo ot\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they ara\nbrief, accurate and fair. No tatter will be\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe algnatura and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\n' Asks Protesting MPs To\nPut Extra Pay Into Fund;\nCut Parliament Size\nTo the Editor: '\nSir\u2014If Mr. Abbott and his colleagues cannot live on $22,000 a year, with freedom to add\nto it from a private income, how can they\npresume to tell others they must live on $480\nto $600 a year, with a penalty lor earning over\n$10 a month besides?\nIf the Minister of Finance finds his bank,\naccount on the wane since 1946 (when he took\noffice), how does he expect those living on\nsmall private incomes and pensions to meet,\nthe rising, cost of living? To say nothing .of\nthe decrease in the sterling dollar. exchange.\nAll these people have to \"grin and bear it\",\npraying all the time against extra taxes and\nhigher food prices, with no chance ot Increasing their, incomes by striking for higher wages\nor by voting themselves a raise ln salary at.\nthe public expense.\nWe blame the strikers for causing the rise\nin prices\u2014but equally guilty are the Parliamentarians (MPs, Senators and Ministers\nalike) who by raising-toeir own salaries are\nplacing ah extra burden of taxation on everyone. This was proved when Mr. Abbott said\nthat \"owing to money not being so- easy to\nobtain now\" it was impossible to lower the\ncost of cigarettes or to increase pensions. On\nthe heels of this announcement came a bite to,\nraise the salaries of MPs and Senators, and\nanother to raise postal rates, which will affect\neveryone, including those whose pensions \"it\nIs impossible to raise.\" It would seem that\nOpen te any raadar, Names of persons\naiktrig questlolis will not be published,\nThere II no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBV MAIL except where there li obvious\nnecessity for prjvooy,\n.'Pupils, Crescent Valley\u2014Hoye  these names\nIndian origins, and what do they mean?:\nNakusp, Kaslo, Slocan, Kootenay, Ma-\nnee, SItcum and Revelstoke?       ,\nNakusp is derived from the Indian word\n\"Nego'Sp\",' meaning whirling water; Kootenay moans flatbow, tho contours of the lake\nhaving been likened to the flatbowa used by\ntha early Kootenai Indians; Kokanee, also an\nIndiaa ^vord, means redfish. We believe Kaslo\nis a misspelling of the name of an early French\n.prospector of these parts, and we are uncertain about Revelstoke, Perhaps  others  can\nhelp? SItcum is undoubtedy an Indian word,\nbut so far we have not been able to trace the\nmeaning.\nF. t, Nelson\u2014What is the difference between\n* a crocodile and an alligator? Iii what play\nare the words, \"There ls a tide ln the affairs of men ...\"?.\nThe crocodile ls the largest living reptile,\nand differs from the alligator principally in\nhaving a longer, narrower head and more\nobtuse inout. The alligator is so closely allied\n* to .the crocodile that old naturalists classed\nthem as forming one genus, and in popular\nspeech the two are often confused. The alligator has a fourth, enlarged tooth of the under\njaw, received, not Into an external nptch, but\nInto a pit formed for it within the upper one.\nIt also lacks a jagged fringe which, appears on\nthe hind legs of the crocodile, and in having\ntoes of the hind feet webbed not more than\n'.half way to the tips. 'There ia a tide ln the\naffairs of menVhich, taken at the flood, leads\non to fortune.\"\u2014Julius Caesar, Act IV.\nA Reader, Riondel\u2014Will you please tell me\nwhere one-should write for a course in accountancy?     '\n' High School Correspondence Branch, Waller Building, Victoria, B. C.\nTke Senate\n(Calgary Herald)\nMany hard things could be, and have\nbeen, said about the Canadian Senate, starting\nwith ita ludicrously lopsided nature. We ourselves believe in having an Upper House as a\nvital part ot our democratic system, a place\nfor sober second thoughts, a brake on governmental Impetuosity, a place to watch over the\nrights of fhlnorlties.\n.But the Canadian Senate needs a major\noverhaul to fulfil Ita historic purpose, and in\nthe meantime remarks like Senator Robertson's do not sit well at all.\nYour Horoscope\nMany beneficial changes may.'be ln store\ntor you, so go confidently ahead with your\nplans. Today's child may be of a genial, jovial\nnature.\nFOR SUNDAY,.MARCH 7: The months\nahead may he something of a mixed grill, but\nbusiness expansion is foreseen. Look tor an\nenterprising individual to develop in today's\nchild.\nThey il Do It Every Time\ntsmtmem 1.1 Setts* 0*-\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nA--WlMTER_\u00bbkS\nT&EHEWSBOy \u25a0\n\/MADE WIS\nDEJJVERIES-\n,   AMD THE\nTRUCKLES\njust took rr\nPOR eRANTED~\npeople who cannot budgjt thefr own Incomes\nare not very well suited to manage the finances of the nation!\nI would suggest that those MPs and Senators who disapprove of salary raises at this\ntime, pool their extra $4000 a year for the benefit of those they they feel shoul^ have been\nhelped first This, of course,.\"would only represent a fraction of the large sum voted, as\nmost of the MPs and Senators are Liberals\nand therefore approve the measure; also, there\nls the extra appropriation for the $5000 a year,\nsoon to be added to each Minister's salary, all\nretroactive to last November. .\nHowever, such a move would at least\nregister disapproval, and give some slight idea\nof the sum that might have been available for\nmore worthy causea.\nIf our governors are such expensive luxuries, the only thing ls to cut down their number\u2014\"cut our coat to suit our cloth,\" in other\nwords. The Senate, tor Instance, apart from\nproviding a sure source of extra support for\nthe Government, appears to serve no useful\npurpose other than acting as a kind of divorce\n, court tor the provinces of Quebec and Newfoundland.\nM. C.TAWSE.\n.RJt. 1, Nelson, B. C.\nToday's Bible. Thought\nBehold they are become rfew.\u2014\nII Cor. 6:17.\nMuch of creation ls renewed every year. Even the tissues of animals are renewed again and again,\nthe very bones and teeth are renewed. Character is not formed at\none fell stroke, but lt too must be\nrenewed. If it is not renewed we\ntend to deteriorate and decay. The\nfirst day of the year Is a good time\nto start on a renewal process. We\nneed to take stock of ourselves and\ndiscard the imperfect and lay hold\nof the sublimities'.\nNewspapers\nShould Change\nWanteds\nr F. B. Peoree\nOwiL sKat\nWhen one looks at the many\npages devoted to advertisements ln\na large city page, the wonder Is that\nanyone can possibly read all of\nthem, Doubtless, however, each\nreader .chooaea those advertisements in which he is particularly\nInterested.\nAdvertisements are interesting,\npot only tor what they say, but also\ntor what can be read into theim.\nSere, for example, Is an advertise-\nent in the Help Wanted column:\n\"Office boy tor accounting office,   around   18.   high   school\ngraduate. Duties cornmence Feb.\n22. Apply Room 408, CPR Station.\" ,    '\nReading    this,    one    can    only\nImagine that the advertisers have\ngiven little thought to their advertisement. They ask for a boy of 18\nwho has passed through high school\n\u2014and what would such a boy be\ndoing  now  if he  graduated   last\nJune? They do not state his duties,\nor what chances there are for pro*\nmotion. In short, they are not selling-the job to the best applicant,\nbut rather treating them all somewhat  with   contempt.  There   are\nmany like this, anonymous firms\nwith  indefinite  requirements \u2022 and\nthe ignoble request, \"State salary\nrequired.\"\n\"Wanted, 1st class meat cutter\nand counter-man. State age,\nqualifications, references, and\nwages   expected.   First   class\nworking conditions. Box. .\"\nLooking at it from the point of\nview of the applicant, what has the\nedvertiser to offer beyond the bare\nand neubulous statement, first class\nworking conditions?\nHere k another which offers\nnothing:\n\"A young married man as dispatcher and shipper. Must have\nknowledge of lower mainland\nand city. State salary expected.\"\nHave  you   any  Idea  why  they\nwant a married man? They certainly don't offer extra wages for that\nqualification.\nBEST FIRM8 KNOW   -\nWHAT JOB IS WORTH\nThese anonymous and indefinite\nadvertisements make dreary reading, and must be most disheartening\nto an intelligent man looking for a\njob. But there, they are probably\nsmall and Insignificant businesses,\nwithout much pride in themselves\nor respect tor their employees. Contrast them with those of the proud\nand powerful B. C. Electric.\nHere is one tor an electrical protection and control designer:\n\"The B. C. Electric requires\nan Electrical Protection and\nControl Designer. Qualifications\nuniversity degree in electrical\nengineering or equivalent, plus\nseveral years experience in protection and control of automatic\nand remote sub-stations. Salary\nrange plus generous benefits,\n$374 to $506.\"\nIf you think that It Is just for this\none particular job, look at the\" advertisements for telephone operators by. the equally important B. C.\nTelephone Co. They are just as\ndefinite and indicative of the fact\nthat these companies know what a\njob ls worth and are willing to pay\ntor It.\nNot all large organizations are as\nlorthright. One claims to be\nlarge financial corporation with 800\nbranches, and yet cannot tell Its\nname, nor, despite all its rosy promises, is there one sentence which\nstates anything definite. -\nSome advertisers expect too much\nfrom applicants without offering\nmuch ln return. Here is one from a\nschool district for a supervisor of\nbuildings:\n\"Applicants should have experience in construction work,\npreferably some knowledge of\nheating , systems and maintenance of electrical equipment:\nin short, an all round man. capable of maintaining the school\nplants in good condition. Must\nhave ability to maintain good\nrelations with both personnel\nand public.\"\nWith such diverse qualifications,\nnot usually found in one person, the\nsalary should 'be stated, but no; the\nadvertisement simply says, \"Give\nstarting salary required.\"\nAfter studying these few examples, It becomes obvious that\nmany employers have failed to\ndevelop a satisfactory concept of\nemployer-employee relationship.\nThey appear to believe, or at least\nleave  one  with the  Impression,\nthat they eonslder their duty consists of demanding as much ai\npossible from the employee and\ngiving as little jnoney In return,\nModern opinion of the employer-\nemployee  relationship  la that It\nIs a-matter of an equitable exchange, services for an adequate\nremuneration, plus, on both sides,\nthe ordinary consideration of one\nperson for another.\nNewspapers are today our most\npotent educational factor. It Is not\ntoo much to expect that they can\nchange the pattern of the employers' Help Wanted advertisements.\nThey have on their staffs men who\nare experts ln producing attractive\nsales and merchandising advertisements. It would be to their benefit,\nand to the employer and apolicant,\nif they added to their staffs men\nwho would make Help Wanted advertisements  definite,  informative\nand attractive.\nWildcat Strike\nTl esUp Hew\nYork Waterf. tat\nNEW YORK (AP)-WJldcat striken tied up Mew York .huge port\nFriday, defying a federal court\norder In a battle for union control\nof-the waterfront.\nResentful members of the Independent International! Longshoremen's Association refused to work\nluxury-liner and other tilers in Manhattan, and stayed oft the job at\npiers in Brooklyn ond Staten Island.',\nWaterfront police reported that\nthe rival AFL union of the same\nname also .refused to report to work\nat strikebound piers, apparently to\navoid any brawling.\nThe' two unions are fighting tor\ncontrol of the dock workers.\nThe striking ILA longshoremen\nsaid they acted because ot a federal court restraining order obtained against them Thursday by the\nnational labor \u2022 relations board.\nPassengers boarding the liner\nQueen Elizabeth were forced to\ncarry their own luggage.\nGirl Wltk Green\nHair Stops Work\nLONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - A\npretty young miss whose hair was\ngreen for a day returned to work\nat Douglas Aircraft Co., Friday as a\nbrown-haired girl, and plane production resumed a steady pace.\nMrs. Lucille Balllnger, a clerk\ntold a friend pne day at work,\n\"When you cut your waist-long\nhair, I'll color mine green.\" The\nfriend cut her hair.\nSo 'Thursday Mrs. Balllnger appeared on the job wearing a bright\nred blouse\u2014and green tresses. The\nlacquer she applied had made her\nhair grassy green.\nCAME TO STARE\n\"I suppose 200 or 300 workers\ncame by to stare,\" said Mrs. Ballin-\nger. \"I didn't think it would cause\nsuch a commotion. I must admit it\nstopped production.\"    ,\nA foreman finally ordered her to\ngo home, saying: \"Please be brown-\nhaired' again by tomorrow morning.\"\nMrs. Balllnger applied soap and\nwater to her locks Thursday night.\nSaid her husband: \"There'll be no\nmore of that going on.\"\nHelp Unemployed\nWithout Food\nVANCOUVER <CP)\u2014Unemployed here who are physically able\nto work but without money tor food\nare to receive assistance under a\ncity-provincial benefit scheme.\nFinal details qf the plan were\ncompleted by civic, provincial and\ncommunity chest officials.\nIt covers workers not eligible for\nunemployment Insurance because\nof the nature of their former jobs.\nIt they can prove they have no\nmoney for food, they will get an\nas yet undetermined sum each\nmonth until they find work.\nThe present social service program allows only destitute who can\nnot work through disability to qualify for benefits. About 2000 here\nnow receive such aid, $62.50 a month\nto a family of two, plus $12.50 for\neach additional dependent.\nUnder the new scheme, married\nmen with families will be considered for assistance before single men.\nAll will be \"carefully screened\" for\neligibility.\n\u2022lord, TEACH US TD VmlUlKBiN\n, What our country needs is more\nkind hearta. Too many folks have\ngot enough religion to fight about,\nbut not enough to live by. \u2022\nBOYS SET WOMAN AFIRE\nBARIi Italy (AP) - A band of\n\u25a0boys showered a 71-year-old woman\nwith firecrackers and flaming paper and set her afire In her home.\nMrs. Annunztata Verlcelll. drove out\nthe boys but fell in the chase and\nbroke a leg. She rolled on the floor\nto put out the flames on her clothing and that set the house afire.\nNeighbors rescued her ln critical\ncondition.\nSocreds lo Take\n(ily Assessment\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Clty assessment commissioned Don McQueen\nsaid Friday the provincial government will take over control of\nproperty assessments from city\ncouncil next year.\nUnder legislation adopted last\nyear, the present court of,revision\nsystem composed of aldermen will\nbe scrapped.\nA three-man commission appointed by order-in-council will\nhear all assessment appeals Instead.\nThus aldermen, who now can\nalter assessment in the hearings,\nwill have no say in compilation\nof the annual assessment roll, on\nwhich taxes are based.\nA 8HERLOCK HOLMES 8TORY\nThe Naval Treaty^\nBy SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE    \"\nWASHINGTON (AP) - President\nEisenhower Thursday nominated J.\nErnest Wilklns, 60, Chicago Negro\nlawyer, to be assistant secretary of\nlabor, \"The first time, so far as we\nknow, that a Negro has been appointed to a cabinet or, sub-cabinet\npost,\" White House Press Secretary\nJames C. Hagerty said.\n(Published by arrangement with\nthe estate of Sir Arthur Conan\nDoyle. World rights reserved. Illustrations copyrighted, 1954, by\nKing Features Syndicate, Inc.)\nPercy (Tadpole) Phelps, British Foreign Office official, is\nfacing ruin when a secret naval\ntreaty is stolen from his desk\nunder most mysterious circumstances. His one-time schoolmate, Dr. John H. Watson, has\nInterested Holmes In the case.\n. They are quizzing Phelps, convalescing from a nervous breakdown, in his country home,\nwhere he Is being nursed by-\nAnne Harrison, his fiancee. Her\nbrother Joseph is f. guest.\nPhelps asserts that even Scotland Yard could find no real\nclues. He's just told Holmes,\n\"You are absolutely my last\nhope.\"\nCHAPTER   II\nPhelps sank back upon his\ncushions, tired out by this long recital, while his nurse poured him a\nglass of some stimulating-medicine.\nHolmes sat silently, with his head\nthrown back: and hie eyes closed.\n\"Your statement has been so explicit,\" said he at last, \"that you\nhave really left me very few questions to ask. There is one of the\nvery utmost importance, however.\nDid you tell anyone that you had\nthis special task to perform?\"\n\"No one.\" .\n\"Not Miss Harrison here, for example?\"\n\"No. I had not been back to Woking then.\"\n\"And none of your people had\nbeen to see you?\"\n\"None.\"\n\"Did any of them know their way\nabout the office?\"\n\"Oh, yes, all of them had been\nshown over it.\"\n\"Still, of course, if you said nothing to anyone about the treaty these\ninquiries are ih-elevant.\"\n\"I said nothing.\"\n\"Do you know anything of the\ncommissionaire?\"?\n\"Nothing except that he is an old\nsoldier\u2014Coldstream Guards.\"\n\"Thank you. I have no doubt I\ncan get more details from Forbes.\nThe authorities are excellent at\namassing facts, though they do not\nalways use them to advantage. What\na'lovely thing a rose lsl\"\nHe WHked past the couch to the\nopen window and held up the\ndrooping stalk of a moss-rose, look.\nIng down at the dainty blend of\ncrimson and green. It was a new\nphase of his character to me, for I\nhad never before seen him show\nany keen Interest in natural objects.\n* \"There Is nothing In which deduction is so necessary as in religion,\" said he, leaning back against\nthe shutters. \"It can be built up as\nan exact science by the reasoner.\nOur highest assurance of the goodness of Providence seems to me to\nrest .in flowers. All other things\u2014\nour powers, desires, food\u2014are really\nnecessary for our existence in the\nfirst' instance. But this rose ls an\nextra. Its smell and color are an\nembellishment of life, not a condition of it. It Is only goodness which\ngives extrEts, and so I say again\nthat we have much to hope from\nthe flowers.\"\nPhelps and his nurse looked at\nHolmes during this demonstration\nwith surprise and a good deal of\ndisappointment written upon their\nfaces. He'had fallen Into a revorie,\nwith the moss-rose between his lingers. It had lasted some minutes\nbefore the young lady broke ln upon\nIt \"Do you see any prospect bf solving this mystery, Mr. Holmes?\" she\nasked.\n\"Oh, the mystery!\" he answered,\ncoming back with a start to the\nrealities of life. \"Well, It woifld he\nabsurd to deny that the case ls a\nvery complicated one, but I can\npromise you that I will look Into\nthe matter and let you know any\npoints which may strike me.\"\n\"Do you see any clue?\"\n\"You have furnished me with\nseven, but I must test them before\nI can assay their value.\"\n\"You suspect someone?\"\n\"I suspect myself.\"\n\"Whatl\"\n\"Of coming to conclusions too\nrapidly.\"\n\"Then go to London and test your\nconclusions.\"\n\"Your advice ls very excellent,\nMiss Harrison,\" said Holmes, rising,\n\"I think, Watson! we cannot do better. Do not allow yourself to indulge in false hopes, Mr. Phelps.\ntThe .affair js a very ..tangled .\u00ab}\u00a3,*'\n\"I shall be\" In a fever till I set-\nyou again,\" said the diplomatist.\n\"Well, I'll come out by the same\ntrain tomorrow, though it'a more\nthan likely that my report will be 1\nnegative one.\"\n\"God bless you for promising to\ncome!\" exclaimed our client. \"By\nthe way, I have had, a, letter from\nLord Holdhurst.\"\n\"What did he say?\"\n\"He was cold, but not harsh,\ndare say my severe illness prevented him from being that. He\nrepeated that the matter was of th<\nutmost Importance, and added thai\nno steps would be taken about inj\nfuture \u2014 by which he means,; ft\ncourse, >my dismissal \u2014 until inj\nhealth is restored and I have ar\nopportunity ot repairing ray misfortune.\"\n\"Well, that was reasonable anc\nconsiderate,\" said Holmes. \"Come\nWatson, for we have a good day'i\nwork before us in town.*'\nJoseph Harrison drove us to thi\nstation, and we were soon whlrliril\nup in a Portsmouth train. Sherlrjcl\nwas sunk in profound thought am\nhardly opened hla mouth until wr\nhad passed Clapham Junction.\n\"It's a very cheery thing to tomi\nto London by any of these line\nwhich run high and allow yoii't\nlook down upon the houses Ilk\nthis.\"\nI thought he was Joking, for th\nview was sordid enough, but h\nsoon explained himself. \"Look\nthose big, isolated clumps of build\ning rising  above the elates, likl\nbrick islands in a lead-colored sea. j\n\"The board-schools.\"\n\"Lighthouses, my boy! Beacons <\nthe future! Capsules with hundre\nof bright little seeds in each, out <\nwhich will spring the wiser, bet!\nEngland of the future. I supposj\nthat man Phelps does not drink?\" )\n(To Be Continued)\nPolio Ban Fails To Keep\n4000 From Seeing Queen\nCASTLEMAINE, Australia (Reuters)\u2014Plans to prevent crowds gathering here to greet Queen Elizabeth because of an infantile paralysis outbreak were completely Ignored when the royal train arrived.\nFour thousand persons\u2014among\nthem hundreds of schoolchildren \u2014\ncrowded the station at Castlemalne\ndetermined to go ahead with their\nwelcome.\nEarlier reports said the royal train\npassed through Castlemalne without stooping.\nMAYOR  IGNORES RULE\nThe mayor. Ignored an instruction\nthat he should hand over his address of welcome to Sir Michael\nAdeane, the Queen's private secretary, i\nAvoiding the outstretched. hand\nof the secretary, he read the address himself to the'royal couple\nwho stood smiling on the observation platform of the train. The\nQueen handed her reply unread to\nAdeans, who passed it to tha mayor.\n8TAYED ON TRAIN\nThe royal couple did not step\ndown from the- train. Newspaper\nmen aboard were asked to remain\non the train and only John Cain,\npremier of Victoria, some officials\nand five photographers went out\non to the platform.\nMayor G. W. McMeeken chatted\nwith' the Queen for two mlmltes.\nwhose train is mal.ing a two-day\nwhistle stop tour of northern Victoria.\nClub Bartenders\nStage Walkout\nVANCOUVER (CP)- All butorJ\nof Vancouver's ten private llquo]\nolubs were shut down Friday ln |\nwalkout by bartenders. . . SI\nThe strike began officially at \"\na.m., after a last minute meet!\nbetween members of the Beverajj\nDispensers Union (AFL) and cluj\noperators failed to avert the waS\nout\nUnion spokesmen George Fau\nner said tho workers were breakli\noff negotiations.\nEarlier club operators announce!\na final wage offer of $88.40 for a 4CJ\nhour week. The present scale 1st\nThe only club open signed a sejj\narate agreement with the union la\nmonth. j\n vJT\nCHURCH HISTORY\nLONDON (CP)-A film unit '\ntached to tho United Church of\nJames-at-Bbwes In Wood Green\nmaking a picture on the churcl\nhistory. During the war the chun\nwas a rest centre, and persons WI\nworked there are being asked\nUlr-i .art ta ih* film\n.. ..   .-\u25a0 .'\u25a0   \u201e   \u25a0 .a\nffl,^6_ii!^_(____6^ii_S_5?j\n' \u25a0\u2022-\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\n>_   , L-i fj&-JLuA\n mmmmmwm\n'It Pays to Byy'Quality\"\nifmhimsii[f':f\nWORlt BOOTS\nBrown,' pliable bll-tainned upiierso\nWain-box-'toe tor comfort. Red\nrubber lug soles tor extra wear\nand.no-aWdi '\n- i ,\u00bbl\u00abes e:tA;11.     -\n\u25a0 r',.r$\u00bbi\u00bb5\nR.ANDREW\nLEADERS DJ EOOTFASHION\n\u25a0 Established 1902\n^fftktjsp Notes\nNAKUSP-rMrs. A. M. Barrow Is\nwith her husband at Trail. Mr. Bar-\nrow is in hospital there.'    ,   .'\nWarren.LaKon is a business visitor to Winnipeg.\n-William Murlson of the Celgar\nDevelopment Co. is employed at\nCastlegar 'tor a short period;\n'Emit Hanson and son Roy left\ntor Kaslo but encountered a elide\nabout 100 feet across and 8 feet\ndeep. They turned back and visited\nMr. and.Mrs. Ted Anderson in Silverton. ;\u2022 \u25a0' '\"\n1 Rev. and Mrs. D. R. Stone have\nreturned trqin Vancouver. Rev,\nStone.hos been invited to the pas-\ntoroge bf East Trail United Church,\nHarold Doyle has returned from\nVancouver\/ fc\n' Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Maxwell have\nreturned from Nelson.\nirittttg Itufe*. fi^itrdj\n.   Josephine and Silica Sta.\nMinister: REV. ALLAN DKON, B.A., B.D.\nOrganist and Music Director: Mra. C.-W. Tyler\n8:45 a.m.-'Sunday \u00a3_hooT\n11:00 a.m.\u2014THE DISTURBING JE8U8\"\n(Broadcast over CKLN.)'\n7:30 p.m.\u2014LOOKING THROUGH'LEVITICUS\n(Continuing: \"Books of the Bible\")\n\u25a0\nSilica and Stanley Streeta\nMinister: Rev. G. W Payne. S.T.M.\nDirector ot Music: Mra. T. J. S. Ferguson. BA.. A.T.C.M.\nSUNDAY. March Tth:\nSunday School as Usual\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nSubject \"THI SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME\"\nGirl. a Choir\n7:30 p.m.-\"QUE\u00bbTING TIME\"\nBroadcast over CKLN\nSpecial Music; \"Hear My Prayer\"\nExcelsior Club, Monday at 8:30, 911 Edgewood Avenue\nft.\" datrfma. h prn-f ailj?fcral\n(ANGUCANXi\nDean Thomas I_ Leadbeater, DJ).\n\u2022 LINT I.\n8;00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n9:45 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday Schools\n11:00 ajn.\u2014Pariah Comm,union\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Willow Point\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nMissionary Slides in Hall After Service\n\u00a7retfiigftnatt Ottjiirdj tit Canada\nflRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nKootenay and Victoria Streeta\nMinister: Rev. L. S. van MosseL, BA.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m\u2014\"TODAY SHALT THOU BE WITH ME ...'\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Salmo\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Bible Study\nCOME AND WORSHIP\nJirut Baptist\n.    Minister: K. Imayoshi\n718 Stanley St., Phone 965-Y\nMB a.m.\u2014ChurA School\nRaiment tor Korea '\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"THOU ART THE\nCHRIST\"\n, Communion Service to Follow\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"SERVING WITH\nGLADNESS\"\nSehior Choir\nwill sing.\nThursday, 8:00 p.m\u2014Bible Study\nand Prayer\nJtoat QtfptrrM\nOtyrtel ftfc tttiHt\nA Branch of the'Mother Church\nThe Flrat Church of Christ,\nScientist, ln Boston, Mass.\n' Sunday School \u2014'9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service' \u2014 11:00 a.m.    .\nSUBJECT \u2014.\n\"MAN\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily From 3 to 5 p.m.\nAll Cordially Welcome\nmty\n\u00a7aitratfcm Armg\n513 Victoria Street   '\nLieut, and Mrs. H. P. Thornhill\nSUNDAY:\n.11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Directory and\nSunday School\n.7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation Meeting\n. ONE OF NELSON'S NEWEST AUXILIARIES is that of the First Baptist Ctiurch\nFourth Nelson Boy; Spout Group. Here the mothers' auxiliarysoffjciates, 'at its first,\nfunction, investiture of the group. Ready to serve, coffee and doughnuts, they are,\nfrom left, Mrs. G. K. Robertson, Mrs. B. Hoskin, Mrs. J. J. McEwen, Mrs.- G\"Kennedy,\nMrs. W. Ogden, Mrs. R. Anderson, Mrs. J. Palac and Mrs. F. Aikihs. ' '\n \u25a0         .        \u2014Daily News photo.'\nNylon Raincoats Dazzle\nWomen at Fashion Show\nBy CHRISTINE 8IROI8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canadian\ntextile producers \u25a0 beset by rugged\ncompetition from foreign producers,\nare pinning their hopes.on Montreal's Canadian fashion festival to\nboost lagging demand for their\nproducts.\nFifty leading textile and fashion\nfirms are taking part in the festival organized by the Canadian\nFashion Association ln this fashion-\nconscious city.\nThe six-day festival was officially\nopened Tuesday night by Mayor\nCamilllen Houde.\nOrganizers say they hope 100,000\npersons' will view the displays.\nMost impressive feature so far has\nbeen the excellence of Canadian designs ln swim suits, raincoats and\nchildren's clothing.\n0MAL lAp. COM.\nTnaAUUL TftoAiVL\nFull Gbspel Church\n812 Stanley St. \u2014 Phone 1710\nSunday' Services: Sunday School\nand Bible Class, 9:45 a.m.\nMorning Service, 11:00 a.m.\nGo_\u00a3el Service, 7:30 p.m.\nPaster: Arthur Ashford\nFor April showers coats with rag-\nIan sleeves are back in vogue,\nwhether they be in rayon, leatherette or' cotton.\nStar, attraction in the first of the\nseven fashion parades put on in\nconnection with the festival wa? a\nraincoat created from' grey nylon.\nStraight cuj In distinctive material, it achieves its flairs with collar\nand buttons fashioned from black\nleather.\nFor swimming, blue and rose are\nthe choice colors. One. suit in royal\nblue with, a long scalloped torso\nfringed with pearls, arou_ed great\ninterest. Others settle for pleats, depending for impact on the brilliant\ncolors of the fabrics igi which they\nare fashioned.\nIn tailoring Canadian desingers\nfavor'straight-cut jackets and narrow skirts. One of the country's top\ndesigners, 26-year-old David Nasler,\nis showing a two-piece worsted suit\nin golden yellow, its simplicity relieved by a half-belt.. across .the\nrear of the coat and' luxuriously\nlarge cuffs.\nAlso seen: a severely-cut costume\nin strawberry hue ahd a grey flannel creation with collar and plunging pockets in grey off-shade.\nIn children's wear nylon is immensely popular,,although denim\nisi largely used for boys' clothing.\nCOTTON HOLDING OWN Y\nThe new synthetic materials\nreally come into their own in milady's lingerie. One ejfpert, however, F. A. Field, general manager\nof one of the country's leading lingerie firms, says cotton ls oldlng its\nown especially'in underwear for use.\nwith sports clothes.\nNlyon gloves made in clear\nfabric or opaque grades, also are\non view.\nIn this festival even the fashion-\nconscious man is taken care of. He\nhas two stalls of his own, one exclusively tor shoes,\nThe well-dressed man this Easter\nwill be stepping out in black, not\nbrown, shoes. \"Black colors blend\nbetter with the light shades of\nspring clothing,\" one fashion expert\nsaid.\nOf course if it's color he wants,\nthere's a sea-blue suede trimmed\nin lizard skin of the same shade.\n9051 O-Mi 30-W\nTO  SIZE 421\nYou've asked us again and again\nfor your, favorite \"good classic.\"\nHere it ls! Depend on lt to go everywhere at the ring of the phone, to\nkeep you crisp and cool everywhere\nyou go this spring and r summer. If\nyou're a golfer, sew it for a -smart\ngolf dress.\nPattern 9051: Misses' sizes 12, 14,\n16,18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40,42. Size\n16 takes 4 V4 yards 35-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step,\ni Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (3\u00abc)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) tor this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS. STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, Care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson, B. C.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR \u2014 Mrs.\" Vera Strobrive\nwas the winner of the.fourth prize\nin a contest for naming a parrot.\nThe prize was a roasting oven.\nL. V. Behmann was a business visitor to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. VF. Simi6ter of Creston were visitors to Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Heap. '\nTrail Woman\nTRAIL\u2014Officers for 1954 were\nelected at the annual meeting of the\nKootenay Presbyterial of.the Women's Missionary-; Society, the\nPresbyterian Church1 In Canada, at\nFirst Presbyterian Church'in Trail.\nThey were honorary .president,\nMrs. A. J. ' Balment, Cranbrook;'\npresident, Mrs. D. Downie, Trail;\nvice-president, Mrs. j. M. Young\nTrail; recording secretary, Mrs. J.\nT. Henderson, Trail; corresponding\nsecretary, Mrs. E A. Martin, Kimberley; treasurer,' Mrs. L. S. van\nMossel, Nelson; 'supply secretary,\nMrs. J. E. Carter,. TVall; welcome\nand welf are -secretary, Mrs. H. H.\nTaylor, Creston; glad tidings secre-\nary, Mrs. M..E. .Hagen, Kimberley;\nevening department secretary, Mrs.\nGrainger, Cranbrook; yOung women's secretary, -Mrs.' J. Garret, Kimberley; girls' work' sacretary, 'Mrs.\nA. R. .Waldie', Trail; children's worjc\nsecretary, Mrs'. J.- MacBeth, Kinnaird; home helper secretary, Mrs.\nJ. W. Dow, Creston; literature secretary, Mrs. A. J. Edminstone, Trail:\nlibrary secretary, Mrs. W. Black;\npress secretary, Mrs. R. McCreight,\nNelson. -'.,',..-' )\nMrs. W. G. Mur'dock, Vancouver,\nsynbdical president, installed the of:\nfleers and also'.addressed the gathering on the responsibilities that go\nwith 'the name \"Christian.\" \"A\nChristian must be Christ-like in all\nthings,\" aaid Mra. Murdock.\nMiss Grace MacKay, regional secretary for B. C\u201e addrbssed an open\nmeeting in the church. She spoke\nof the work being - done by the\nPresbyterian Church in the province, mentioning the- new church\njust organized in Prince George.\nAlso the work being done among\nthe Hungarian and Chinese people,\nwas spoken'of by Miss MacKay.\nAt the supper served by the ladies of First Presbyterian Church of\nTrail, greetings were brought from\ncorresponding bodies of the other\nProtestant Churches bf Trail.\n-r-\nForks' Girl Passes\nRN Examinations\nGRAND FORKS^-Miss. Patricia\nCairine Edwardson is on the list ol\nthose successfully.passing the 1954\nregistered nurses'examinations.\nThe only daughter ot Mrs. Katie\nEdwardson and the late John Edwardson, Patricia attended Grand\nForks schools and is a graduate of\nSt. Paul's Hospital, in Vancouver.\nShe ls currently nursing in Rossland.\n.:,-..-'\"-.,'\u25a0\nkelson\nSocial\nPHONE 144\nTO CRESTON .;.. Mrs. Rex Mc-\nConnell and two daughters, North\nShore, leave today for Creston tp\nvisit Mr. 'and Mrs..Alex McConnell.\n.'*.*\u2022 '\u25a0\u25a0',\nVANCOUVER VISITOR . . ij Mr.\nand Mrs, J. G. Watsorf, Josephine\nStreet, have as guest, their son-in-\nlaw, E. B. Stevenson of Vancouver,\n- \u25a0      \"+\u25a0:... f i--'' \u2022   .-\u25a0; ' \u25a0'\u25a0\u00bb '\u25a0\u25a0\n-HOSPITALIZED . . . Mrs.' Bud\nCooper leaves at the weekend tor\nVancouver, where she will undergo\nsurgery at the Vancouver General\nHospital.  ,\n\u2022 .. \u00bb\nFROM SALMO . . . Mrs. H. E.\nCosnett and son Norman ot Salmo\nwere city visitors.\ni        '.\u2022*.',.,\nRETURNS . . . Mrs. K. Haynes\nhas left tor her home in Billings,\nMont., after visiting her son and-\ndaughter-in-law. Dr. and Mrs. W.\nMurphy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022     >\nFROM GRAND FORKS ... Mrs.\nW. Bay, Jean Bay, Loren Bay, Lil\nChahley. and Alice Chahley of\nGrand Forks were visitors to Nelson at the weekend. i\n\u25a0 \u2022   *   *\nWHIST DRIVE ... The Ladies\nAuxiliary to the Fraternal Order of\nEagles held a partner whist drive\nThursday evening. First prize winners were Mrs. G. Van Ruyskenr\nvelde and Mrs. J. Grant; second\nprizes Mrs. E. Llndell and W. J.\nHipperson. The travelling prize was\nwon by Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Wallden.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nFROM EDMONTON . . . Miss\nMargaret Maco pf Edmonton is> visiting her parents, Mr. - and Mrs.\nSteve' Maco, Stanley Street, for a\nfew* days. '.    \" '\nmmmmimvmm\n$f?\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 6,1934\u20143\n$50 TRADE-IN\nOn Your Old 2 or 3 Piece\nCHESTERFIELD or\n; - LOUNGE SUITE .\n\u25a0    .   (RefltwJIeii of Age ot\u00bb Condition)   '\u25a0\nY      When You Purchase a New Suite at\nY,\nRecipes. . . , <.\nSome Tasty Dishes\nFrom Hew Cookbook\nBrownies Invite\nParents to Meeting\nEMERALD TOWNSITE - The\nFirst Emerald Brownie Pack invited\ntheir parents and local association\nto their March .meeting.\nMaureen Copley was enrolled as\na Brownie by Mrs. Blodwen Wilson\nand was welcomed Into the Fairy\nsix by sixer Jane Stevens.\nGolden Bar badges were presented by Mrs. C. Ball, president of the\nlocal association, to Betty Ash, Barbara Clayton, Carmen LeFort, Sandra Simmons and Linda Thompson.\nFollowing the ceremonies the\nBrownies sang \"The Dancing Lesson\" accompanied at the piano by\nMrs. Yvonne Jones.\nBrownies Wendy Anderson and\nMdira McDermott thanked' Mrs.\nJones and Mrs: Ball for their help.\nJane Stevens, Judy Stevens, Karen Chenowith and Pamela Gordon\nsent a message In semaphore to\ntheir guests which read \"Thank you\ntor coming.\" - \u2022\nThe evening closed with the singr\ning of \"God Save the Quten\" and\nBrownie Taps.'\nDrussella Ulbright\nHonored at Shower\nGRAND FORKS-Miss Drussella\nUlbright was honored at a miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs.\nEd Beliveau. Hostess was Mrs. John\nO'Connor.\nPresents for the bride-elect were\nbrought in a basket decoratbd with\nwhite and green.bows and streamers.\nMiss Ulbright was also guest of\nhonor at a shower.in Oliver where\nshe was i resident at one time, Mrs.\nHerb Woodruff entertained in her\nhonor.\nBOSWELL NOTES\nMrs. E. Whitney who has been a\npatient in the Creston Valley Hospital has returned home.\nREAD THE. CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBy MARGARET CARR\nA new cookbook has been published hy the Council of Canadian\nBeef Producere which I know- is\ngoing to prove very popular. It's\ncalled \"Beef- Dishes, Neva, and\nDifferent\" and is available free to\nanyone who requests it from, the\nCouncil's office at 28 , Michael\nBuilding, Calgary.        \u25a0>\nThe recipes look Aid sound interesting, and those we have trie-\nhave been very gpod. They represent contributions from some of\nCanada's leading dietitians and\nhome service directors, each-of\nwhom was asked to submit her\nfavorite beef recipe. The result Is a\ncollection ot recipes which will in\nterest the meal-planner, who re\ncognizes the goodness of beet but\nwishes to incorporate variety along\nwith appetite appeal.\nFrom Lenore B. Newman, Home\nEconomist,. Consumer Section, \"Canadian Department of Agriculture,\ncomes: '.\"..\"\nWESTERN POT ROA8T\nFour to 5-pound pot roast (blade,\nshort rib or cross.rib), % cup fat,\n2 tablespoons water,\" Vs teaspoon\nsalt, potatoes, carrots, onions (peeled), pepper,' flour. ,\nBrown meat well on all sides ln\nfat in roasting pan. Add water and\nfloured vegetables cut in serving\nsize pieces. Season meat and vegetables with salt and pepper. Cover\npan. and roast in a moderate ovta\n(325 degrees F.) tor 30 to 35\nminutes per'pound. At beginning of\nlast hour of cooking, remove meat\nfrom oven and? cover with sauce.\nReturn meat to oven and uncover\nfor remainder of cooking time.\nBaste occasionally. Use liquid In\npan for gravy.\nSAUCE\nOne-quarter cup catsup, 2 tablespoons1 brown sugar, 2 tablespoons\ndry mustard, 1 teaspoon chili\npowder, 1 tablespoon horseradish',\nVt cup chopped onion, 2 tablespoons\nchopped green pepper, 2 tablespoons vinegar.    -\nffo make barbecue sauce, combine\ningredients in above order and mix\nwell. .\nAnd, from   Joan   Venini   Ross,\nHome Service Director,' Canadian\nWestern Natural Gas Co., comes:\n8TAMPE0E 8TEW\nTwo, pounds beef, top round or\nchuck,, % to 1 cup flour, Vs cup fat,\n3_ cups stock or tomato broth, 2\ncups sliced carrots, 1 cup celery,\nchopped, 1 bay leal, dash of peppar,\n1 teaspoon salt, 3 medium-sized\nonions, sliced, 2 cups cooked macaroni.\nCut meat into  on*-inch  cubes\nRoll in flour. Melt fat in a kettle\nand add meat, Sear thoroughly to\nretain Juices. Add boiling stock\nand seasonings. Cover pan and simmer tor 1.4 hours, or until meat is\ntender. Add vegetables and cook\none-half hour longer.'Ten minutes\nbefore serving, add macaroni,\n$110 Raised fir\nNurses Home\ni.\nGRAND FORKS\u2014An enterprising effort on the part of the Grand .\nForks Hospital Auxiliary to raise\nmoney tor the Nurses' Home, turned\nout successfully. Nearly $100 .was\nraised to be augmented by' other\nlines of endeavor.\nA combination tea and bake sale'\nin February was followed In the\nevening by a whist drive. Theaffalr\ntook place in the Oddfellow's Hall,\nProceeds will go towards renovating the dining  room of the..\nNurses' Home Into a private suite\nfor the matron of the Grand Forks\nCommunity Hoaltal- .\nConvener of the tea was Mrs. E.'S.\nReynolds who was assisted by Mrs.\nAlan Clapp. Mrs. E. Champlon-Tay- \u25a0\nlor and Mrs. Walter Ronald were\nln charge of the bake tables,\nThe whist drive which saw 18 '\ntables in play, was convened.by\nMrs. Jim Lorlmer assisted by Mrs..\nLaurie Lichty,\nBy coincidence winners of high-,\nest scores when individual points\nwere added,' were attained by Mr,;\nand Mrs. Carl Wolfram Jr, wh4r\nwon the two top prizes. Walter Ron.'\nold won the men's second prize,\nwhile Mrs. Walter Ronald won women's second prize. Consolation\nprizes were won by Alan Clapp and\nMrs. Dan McKinnon.\nSuccessful Whist\nDrive Held\nNATAL\u2014The Women's Auxiliary\not St Paul's Anglican Church sponsored a successful ladies' whist\ndrive in St. Paul's Church hall at\nMichel. Prizewinners were Mrs. J.\nMyles of Natal,. Mrs. A. Krall, Sr.,\nMichel, Mrs. J. Jenkinson of Michel.\nEight tables were in play. The\nW.A. has been sponsoring these\nladles' whist drives for some time\nwith each one a success.\n,Boswell Notes\nBOSWELL - Jamie Whitney Is\nhome for 10 days' leave from San\nFrancisco. He is visiting his par-\"\nents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Whitney. On\nhis return he will be stationed at\nGuam.\nGIVE TO THE CAUSE THAT'S CLOSEST TO YOUR HEART\nThe umbrella bird of Ecuador,\nabout the size of a crow, can spread\nits crest like an umbrella.\n(Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nCanon W. J. Silverwood\n\u25a0 9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning. Prayer\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nSouth Slocan, 11:00 a.m.\nFamily Service\nJMteum\n(Kountattt\n802 Baker St.\nRev. D. A. Butterfield, B.A.\n18T  8UNDAY   IN   LENT\n9:45 a:m:\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n, \"THE GOD WE\nWORSHIP\"   .\n(First in Series)\n12:00 p.m.\u2014Communion\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangel Vespers\n(Junior Choir)\nNo one knows how many liv*s have been saved by timely\nblood transfusions. Each day sees mothers in childbirth,\nand victims of accidents brought safely through the hour of\ncrisis. But preparedness is the all-important factor. The.\nblood and the equipment must always be ready for the need.\nSupport your Red Gross in its work of providing blood\nwhere and when it is most needed.\n*5,422s850 is needed this year\nMM Croat Headquarters\n. Sterling Home Furniture\n441 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\n.'\u00ab\u2022\u00bb;\nMmiiMif\\*\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 6,19S4\nMium^W\nPattern Service\nii KITCHEN END TABLE\n.'} By Donald R. Brann      v\n.'..\u25a0   A recent survey made by home\n\"economic students revealed the Interesting fact that housewives rated\nE\"mbre  working counter space in\n'their kitchens\" as their number one\nneed. Additional storage space ran\na close second. Several other sidelights of this survey indicated the\ni many changes that have occurred\nduring recent years.\nPeople now ,reallre that the time\nspent preparing a meal is of sufficient value to warrant the investment in labor saving devices. War-\natime employment at X dollars per\n' hour has made everyone conscious\nof its true worth.\n8TEP SAVER\nt The modern unit Illustrated above\n\u25a0Is a handy piece of equipment It\ncan be used at the end of a sink or\nrange,,or, if mounted on casters, as\nan all purpose working and serving\ncart. Besides providing additional\n-eounter 'space, it offers ample storage for large trays, cookbooks, radio, recipe file, etc.\n, Like all other \"built it yourself\nprojects, this one can be built at\ncomparatively low cost. By following the step-by-step method of construction outlined on the pattern\n...offered below, anyone with ordi\nnary hand tools can build this end\ntable in very little time.\nBy using the new plastic surfaced\nplywood, a \"really .professional job\ncan be turned out. Available at lumber-yards everywhereiithla counter,,\ntop material comes In a variety of\nimperishable colors.. Burnproof ariS\ncompletely impervious torstains and\njuices, the -material is. easy to' use\nand maintains its finish .with very\nlittle'.care. '\u25a0'.''    ''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nThe full size pattern for building\nthis unit takes all the mystery out\nof building. Each flart Is cut and\nassembled tn position shown on the\npattern. Whenever screws or nails\narfe required, the pattern indicates\nexact position.\nSend 75 cents in,coin or money\norder for Step'Saving Kitchen End\nTable, Pattern No.. 3,.,to N.D,N\u201e\nQuinn Lumber and Builders' Supply\nCompany, 260 Maitland Street, London, Ont.- ' '; ,\nAdmit Drug Addicts\nMove to Island\n' NANAIMO (CP) - Police in this\nVancouver Island centre' admitted\nFriday that drug addicts gravitate\nhere from Vancouver but said the\nsituation is not serious.\nSteff-Sgt A. M. Hutchinson of\nthe RCMP, said addicts flee here\nwhen police pressure is too heavy\nin Vancouver, then move south to\nVictoria, on to Seattle and eventual'\nly back te Vancouver. He was commenting on a report Thursday by a\nVancouver narcotics detective^ Rex\nCray, who said addicts were moving\nout of Vancouver, to Victoria, Nanaimo, Prince Rupert and Prince\nGeorge.\n\"It's been going on for years,\"\nsaid Staff Sgt, Hutchinson.\nClipsham News\nShocks Builders\nCLIPSHAM, Rutland, England\n(CE)\u2014 British builders, have, been\nshacked by the news that supplies\nof Clipsham stone,.used extensively\nin the restoration of many famous\nbuildings including Buckingham\nPalace, have -rim-out.       '\nThe announcement comes as\ndisappointment to- contractors who\nhad hoped that opening of a new\nquarry 10 months ago would safeguard supply of the fine, soft, grey\nstone for at.least 50 years.\nMANY TE8T8U\nClipsham stone, considered\namong the best of all British building stones, has been quarried here\ntor centuries. It has been used on\nBuckingham Palace, the restored\nHouse of Commons, buildings at\nOxford and Cambridge and. on Canterbury and. Salisbury cathedrals.\nMany tests were made ton Clipsham stone, particularly under Lon-\ndoil conditions, ahd lt was found\nto be one_.of the best weathering\nstones available.\nNow' D. J. Davenport-Handley,\nowner of the. Clipsham Quarry\nCompany, announces that the new\nsite, dubbed the Coronation Quarry,\nwill be closed because itl s unworkable. He said the company\ncleared away 40 feet of clay and\nfound that the stone had been\nshaken to pieces, presumably by\nancient volcanic action.\nJfuL Wad&hn, dfamsL\nPlan Needed Now\n'- -.'IS\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ., nnw cu. n. vat\nTruly original design is incorporated with- utility in\nthis exceptional home. Entry hall is separated from\nliving room by clever inside lattice. Unique fireplace arrangement allows use of more wall space\nand separates living-dining area from hall. The\nroomy kitchen features snack bar, convenient work\nspace.\nCAB PORT\nOn Way To Death\nBROUGH, England (AP) \u2014 The\ncoroner here decided that 45-year-\nold Ronald Lacey died of heart\nfailure while climbing a tree. Evidence at the inquest brought out\nthat Lacey was climbing the tree to\nhang himself.\nPruning Your Own Fruif Tree\nEasy as Falling Off Ladder\nPlanning to move? Call ua\nfirst. Oar modern vane and >\n\u25a0killed movers assure a SAFB\nmove wherever you go. Wa\nare agents for North American Van Lines, America's\nheading long distance moving\norganization. It costs no more\nto enjoy this finer service!\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson,\nPhone 13\nB.C.\nPruning your own fruit tree is as\neasy as falling off a ladder, Doug\nTTiorpe of the provincial horticultural branch claims.\nIn demonstrations of pruning,\nbidding and grafting, Thorpe pointed out that the general idea is to\nkeep the branches as close as possible to right angles from the trunk.\nand k\u00a3ep the tree \"open and well-\nbalanced. \u25a0\nHOW Tp DO It\nStarting wj#. a newly-planted,\nthe horticulturist lopped off everything to a height of three feet from\nthe ground. Then he took the tips\noff the remaining two or three branches, because it lost at least a third\nof its roots when the nurseryman\ndug it up. He cut Back the tips to\nthe first bud underneath the branch.\nIn the case of second season trees,\nThorpe selected his main branches\nso they would be a foot to a toot\nand a half apart on the trunk, and\nin the form of a cross if you looked\ndown on the tree fron) straight\nabove it. After the first year there\nis no more tipping ln his routine,\nunless one branch out-grows its fellows and puts the tree out of balance. He favors cutting off all unwanted branches, shoots and suckers from new trees as they pop out\nin summer, although winter is thfe\nusual pruning period.\nTransition period from a wood-\ngrowing toa fruit-bearing plant is\nbetween tlie ages of four to six\nyears, and Thorpe warned against\npruning off all the fruit spurs, easily Identified by their birdfoot appearance.\nIn pruning each branch, right out\nto the tip, he advises the grower to\ntake off all branches growing upward or downward, so that the remaining stock grows out flat. Where\na branch forms a fork at the outer\nend, he takes off the upper one.\nA main branch should take off\nfrom the trunk at right angles, as\nmuch as. possible, he says because\nthe upward ones break off easily\nand also tend to curve down to the\n.ground.\nWhen the tree reaches nine to 10\nfeet in height, he takes the tip off\njust above the first lateral branch\nwhich points northward. A southward branch would keep sun out of\nthe tree.\nThorpe is against cutting a tree\nback to keep it small. For that rea\nson he would allow from 30 to 40\nfeet between large types and 10\nfeet between dwarfs. For a city lot\nor other restricted space, he recommends dwarfs.\n8HAVE OFF 8UCKERS\nFruiting spurs left should also\nbe those vttiich grow out parallel to\nthe ground, he said.\nIn planting young trees, the graft\njust above the root.shouid be just\nbelow ground level except for the\ndwarfs, in which case it should be\njust above the ground. Reason he\ngave was that if the trunk should\nroot, the tree won't dwarf, for it's\nthe dwarf rootstock that does the\ntrick.\nCutting suckers off at ground\nlev*, is worse than useless, the horticulturist pointed out. It is essential, he said, to dig right down and\nshave them off the root.\nPear trees present a special problem since.they tend to grow too upright, so for these, Thorpe advises\nuse of spreaders to push the\nbranches down, or cans of rocks\ntied to the branches for the same\npurpose.\nThese plans are published tor the Interest and Information value\nrally News oannol\ntipns. Those contemplating\narchitect, designer or builder.\nI pi\nonly. The Dally News oannot supply detailed blueprints or specifications. Those contemplating building homes should consult a local\nYour Garden . . .\nEarly Spring Flowers if\nBuds Forced Indoors Now\nIt is easy to have flowers tor\nhome- decoration well in advance\nOf spring by cutting some branches\nand forcing them Into bloom weeks\nahead of their natural season. Their\nsmall green leaves and star-like\nblossoms add a special charm during the dull days of winter.\n\u25a0Most branches, whether of flowering trees, shrubs or fruits, can be\nforced, but it is best to 'cut them In\nthe order of their natural blooming.\nJASMINE READY\nWinter lasmine starts the parade\nand in sheltered locations it may\nbe in bloom at the present time.\nBy cutting branches of forsythla\nnow you can have it in flower .in\ntwo weeks' time.\nThen, in the following order, you\ncan cut and force pieces of peach,\nflowering almond, cydonia or Japanese quince, and cherry, After these\nyou can still force twigs cut from\nplum and apple, both of which are\namong the loveliest of blossortis.\nPieces are cut ranging in size up\nto the thickness of your little finger.. Make the cut on the slant. After\nsplitting or crushing the end of the\nstems, submerge completely in a\nlarge vessel of lukewarm Water.\nLeave them submerged overnight to\nhelp swell the buds.\nWhen it is not convenient to use\na really large ve^sel^ place the\nbranches upright in a deep pall, so\nthat as much stem as possible will\nbe under water.\n8WELL IN FEW DAYS\nThe next day the submerged ones\nare stood upright in deep water and\nplaced where they can get sunshine,\nbut away from the direct heat of a\nfire or radiator.\nAfter a few* days you will notice\na decided swelling of the buds, and\na short time later they-will commence to -flower.\nThese brandies can be used as a\nbackground in association with a\nfew shqrt-stemmed cut flowers or\narranged alone.\nMagnolia soulangeana is another\nfavorite tor forcing, its knotty\nbranches being ideal for arrangihg.\nThis is a sure way of having an\nextra early spring indoors, at no\ncost and very little trouble.\nEach year many people move to\nproperty where a complete new\nstart has to be made in laying out\nthe ground for a new garden.\nWhether It Is new property in the\ncity or an acre In the country, the\nworst thing they can do is be in too\nbig a hurry to get started. This ls\n.the equivalent of \"putting the cart\nbefore the horsed\"\nInvariably by being too anxious\nto make a quick showing, fruit\ntrees and shrubs will be put ln\nwrong places, causing a serious\ncheck when they have to be moved\nlater,, not to mention insufficient\ncare being taken to prepare the soil\nproperly at the time of planting.\nMany other features such as the\nposition of paths, hedges, pool,\nwindbreaks, lawns, vegetable, flower and rose heds, rockery, etc., need\ncareful consideration from the very\nstart.\nTAKE IT EASY\nGood advice would be to take It\neasy and start planning now in the\ncomfort of a warm room. You will\nneed seed andmursery catalogues to\nremind   you   of  the. many  trees,\nNew 'Lift Slab* Methods\nCut Cost of Construction\nfer\nY\nfill\"\nGOODBYE  TO  PUMPING\nDISSOLVES  TREE  ROOTS\nELIMINATES  DIGGING\nDISSOLVES GREASE\nNO  MORE  ODORS\nIT'S MODERN...REVOLUTIONARY!\nVo nor* expomtvo unhoallhy pumping and digging\nup.of cettpoali, lopllc tflr)ki,seepage pooli, greoie\nfrapi and clogged line*.\nHere's the moil reliable ond laloii method to\nliquefy, diiiolve and saponify greoie, sludge, hair,\ndoth and other organic solids.\nThis modern chemical guarantees quick and efficient results In 12 lo 16 hours. NO SHUTDOWN\nof pool or lank necessary while chemical Is working.\n3, 10, IS, 23, 50, and tOO II. CONTAINERS\n\u2022too. CtJftodlor. Pol. Off. Ik- U.S. Pot. OIL Pindlno\nSpeech lesions\nTried in Jail\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014Public speaking as a crime-\ndeterrent is being tr|ed out with\nsome measure of success in the\nBritish   Columbia   penitentiary.\nWarwick C. Angus of Victoria,'\nwho specializes in effective speaking, is giving free courses. Each\ncourse runs for 15 weeks and 35\nprisoners are selected for each\nterm. \u2022\nOne man serving a 10-year sentence said: \"The course has made\na different man out of me . . .\nNow that I have learned to express\nmyself freely with other people, I\nhave a different attitude toward\nlife . . . I'm going to stay out of\nthis place for good when I leave.\"\nMr. Angus said it is still a bit\nearly to ascertain the results of the\ncourses, \"but I feel confident all\ninmates will b'enefit to some extent.\"\nGOOD HORSEMEN\nThe Gauchos of the Argentine\nplains, noted for horsemanship,\nare chiefly of Spanish - American\norigin. \u2022   '\nA new system of construction,\nthe \"lift-slab\" method, is being used\nto erect a three-storey apartment\nbuilding on West Boulevard at\nForty-eighth Avenue in Vancouver.\nThe floors and roof slabs are of\nreinforced concrete, nine inches\nthick. The building when finished\nwill consist of two offset units,\neach 47 by 65 feet, giving the whole\nstructure about 6000 square feet of\nground coverage.\nFor each  of the two units the\nroof and floor slabs are cast, one\nat a time, on top of one another.\nFLOOR-CEILING\nThe top surface of the slabs are\ncarefully trowelled and a coating\nof a special substance is spread.\nWhen the next slab, with only a\nnine-inch surrounding board for a\nform, is cast, its underside has so\nsmooth a surface that it does not\nneed any treatment other than\npainting to form a ceiling.\nPurpose of the special \"spread\" is\nto enable, the slabs to be separated\nand lifted each to its proper place,\nby means of powerful hydraulic\njacks.\nBefore the slabs are cast, nine\nvertical steel columns tor each\nbuilding unit are erected on foundations calculated by engineers to\nhold the weight required. A set of\ncollars on the columns ' tor each\nfloor unite with the reinforcement\nof the slab to provide guides and\nmeans of attachment for the lifting\nrods.\nFirst, the roof and an upper floor\nslab are hoisted about half-way up\nthe columns and temporarily supported by welded brackets. This is\nto prevent side movement before\nthe building is braced by the permanent attachment of the lower\nfloors in their places by similar\nbrackets. Then the upper slabs are\nlifted and attached.\nR. H. Little, of Keystone Construction Co. Ltd., explains that\nthis method results In _ such\neconomies that the cost of a fireproof self-owned apartment Is In\nline with the cost of similar accommodation   in   a   frame   and\nstucco Individual home, with lets\nmaintenance cost.\nOne of these economies results\nfrom the lifting, with the slab, of\nmuch of the building materials\nfor partition and curtain walls\nwith the slab Itself. Another\ngreat saving Is In the material\nand labor costs Involved In normal concrete forming, Including\nIts removal. Pumice blocks are\nbeing used for the partitions and\ncurtain walls, none of them\nweight-bearing.\nOnly one 15 h.p. electric motor Is\nrequired to operate the hydraulic\npump which applies 3000 pounds\npressure per square inch. The\nweight of each concrete slab when\nlifted is 200 tons, plus Its load of\nmaterials.\nlittle Patients\nHelp Painter\nLONDON,' Ont. (CP) \u2014 William\nO. Moore, a London artist, wanted\nto do something for the children In\nWar Memorial Hospital here. And\nthe children helped him do it.\nHe decided to paint a woodland\nnursery mural in a corridor of the\nhospital. Tiny patients milled about\nhis feet as he worked and he asked\nif they would like to help. They\nwould.\nAs fast as brushes could be supplied the children set to work under his guidance.\nIn \"odd moments\" over a three-\nweek period, Mr. Moore completed\nthe mural, nine feet high and 22\nfeet long. It was the biggest job\nhe had attempted.\n\"But then, on this job I had lots\nof help,\" he said.\nThe children kept on painting\nafter the mural was finished and\ncovered every inch'of glass panelling in their ward.\nNurses say the children love to\nsit and admire the mural and their\nown work.\nCanadian Electrical\nWorkers Autonomous\nNEW YORK (CP)'\u2014 The International Union of Electrical Workers\n(CIO) announced Friday that its\nCanadian district has been organiz-\nas an autonomus and self governing\nunit within the union. .   ',\nThe Canadian district, which\nclaims a membership of 10,000, previously has operated under administrative guidance from the union's\nNew York headquarters.\nEffective Way to\nRepaint Spout\nPeeling paint ls complaint of a\nreader who says a contractor placed\nan already painted Tainspout on the\nfront and back of the homeS Now\nthe paint is peeling. Should the metal be conditioned before new paint\nis applied?\nAnswer: Evidently the downspouts are of galvanized metal. Remove the remainder of the paint\nand then wash the surfaces with\nvinegar. When dry, coat the metal\nwith red lead or a zinc base rust In-\nhibitive paint. The final coat of\npaint can be ordinary house paint\nto match the walls.\nshrubs and plants, also their prices;\nA book with illustrations of garden\nplans will also be of much help. 9\nIf'you are particularly .interested\nln a few special features, let these\npredominate. . >   ,   .\n. Try to envision lit .your mind's\neye your own fancied layout. Yoti\ncannot properly start to roughly\nmark these on paper until you have\nthe measurements of the new site)\nUse graph paper for preference)\nusing a. measure of .say a foot to\neach small square.' .\nYou will nceo. many sheets before the final, - but on the first, put\nin roughly where you can visualize\nthe main features, then on a fine\nday measure these distances outdoors, so you can adjust them more\nto scale on subsequent sheets.\nTHIS 13 DOODLE TIME\nThis is the time to doodle away\nand keep changing the measurements and ideas, during the plan*\nning' stage, so that there will be no\nneed to flounder about when the\nactual outdoor job has to be\nstarted.\nMany properties will, have \"natural\", features ..such as a slope\nwhich could be terraced, put-crop-'\nping large rocks for a rockery,'a\nsmall stream, trees which may be\nleft standing as specimens, etc. Advantage could be taken of any of\nthese and they could be clearly outlined on Ihe plan.\nAnother Important item is the\namount of money one has to spend.\nIf there is not sufficient to complete the whole project, go slowly,\nmaking a thorough job of each\nsmall section as funds and your\ntime will allow.\nBoost Coffee Seven\nCents, Regina\n\"REGINA (CP) \u2014 The five-cent\ncup of coffee vanishes from Regina\nMonday.\nA sign in two department stores\nFriday \u2014 the last to serve coffee\nfor a nickel\u2014said the price, effective Monday \u25a0 will be seven ^ents.\nBoth stores blamed increased coffee\nprices.\n!\nMINERAL SOURCE\nNorthern Rhodesia produces al\nmost one-fifth of the world's cobalt\nand 12 per cent of its copper.\nAcadehiy Nominates\nCanadian Film\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A Canadian\nfilm has been nominated for an Ac.\nademy Award by the Academy of\nMotion Picture Arts and Sciences\nin Hollywood, the National Film\nBoard announced Friday.\nThe film, \"Herring Hunt\", is an\nNFB documentary on British Columbia coaBtal fishing crews. It will\ncompete with one Italian 'and ,three\nHollywood films In the one-reel\nshorts category. Results of the voting will be announced March 25.\nHome Barbecue Fireplaces\nInteresting to Construct\ni\nBuilding an. outdoor barbecue\nfireplace is an easy and Interesting\nrnasonry project for anyone handy\nwith tools.\nHere are some of the barbecue\ntips from masons:\nAn outdoor fireplace built among\ntall trees and heavy shrubbery will\ncall tor a taller chimney. Overhanging branches may be killed by the\nheat of the fire, so you have to\nfigure on this.\nPlan the opening of the fireplace\nso that it faces prevailing winds and\nyou will be assured of a good draft\nand freedom from smoke in your\neyes.\nForms are not needed for footing,\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO\/LTD.\n351 BAKER ST        T.S. JEMSON PHONE 666\nUnited Trucking & Storage Ltd.\nSTANLEY ST., NELSON, B. C.\nDAILY FREIGHT SERVICE TO\nFRUITVALE \u2022 SALMO' i\nNELSON \u2022 CASTLEGAR -  TRAIL - ROSSLAND\nl^fuUndeffoot\nNot Juit Floors\nBut\nBP\nFlortile\nFloors\nWhether you buy,'\nbuild, remodel or renovate, you'll wont your\nhome to have up-to-\nthe-minute B. P. FLORTILE, Canada's foremost\nasphalt or vinyl tiles, ere the choice of thousands of\nCanadian home owners from coast to coast. Laid \"tile\nby tile\" ft offers unlimited scope for handsome color\ncombinations. Give your home this added touch.\nADVANTAGES:\n\u2022 Color Permanence\n\u2022 Easy To Clean\n\u2022 Easy Te Repair\nbut fbr the slab a wood form will\npermit a rise of two inches abpve\ngrade. It's a good idea to pitch the\nslab forward, so it will drain out\nthe fireplace. Half-inch- round reinforcing bars are laid out' in the\nslab after \"the first two inches are\npoured. Then the last two Inches\nare added and smoothed off. .\nNOW IN STOCK\nThe New\nROVER\n4 WHEEL DRIVE\nLAND\n1-TON\nPICK-UP TRUCK\n\u2022 The  perfect vehicle for any\nJob.\n\u2022 Wheelbase 107 Inches.\n\u2022 Pick-up body 67 Inches wide,\n6 feet long.\n\u2022 Famous Land - Rover \"F\"\nhead engine.\n\u2022 Five 700 x 16 lug tires.\n\u2022 Auxiliary equipment available.\nPHONE 18\nPhone 792-Y Evenings\nNELSON\nMACHINERY\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If It's Machinery You Need,\n',     Consult Us First\"\n214 Hall St.     Nelson, B.C.!\nHQRTILM\n\u2022 Fire Resisting\n\u2022 Wide Range Design\n\u2022 Economical\n\"It Will Pay you to Obtain Our Prices\"\nTHE\nK. W.DIXON CO.\nw\n\u2022won**\nThis ultra-modern styled F-M Furnace is\ndesigned to give the highest hearing\nefficiency. It offers more than jost ordinary automatic heat... it also conditions _\nthe air, giving the advantages of moist'\noutdoor air. The F-M Furnace is finished\nIn attractive green and designed as a\nCompact unit that uses only a small floor\narea. It Is available in 5 sizes. Let us give\ntoo the complete story of the F-M Oil\nFired Warm Air Furnace.\nThese units are being sold at new low\nprice. The prices that these units can\nbe installed in your home for will\namaze you. Drop in today for free\nestimate. Install now and obtain a\nliberal discount on all units. We will\nbill you for the installation this\nautumn.\nBennetts Ltd.\nI\nI\n (faovitidL ihiL\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllUs\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIllllllllllllllllllllllli?\n' .By BILL McLOUGHLIN\nTRAIL\u2014If by chance the reason for sending a Canadian team to the world hockey championships at Stockholm\nwas to strengthen international relations, then the project\nshould be abandoned in favor\t\n' of some other measures.\nIt comes somewhat of a shock to\ndiscover thai the East York Lynd'\nhursts have been described, as some'\nthing slightly less than a band of\nthugs and if newspaper accounts\nfrom Sweden are to be relied upon\nimpartiality is not a keynote of the\nSwedish temperament. The Cana'\ndian team under manager Don\nPreston and coach Greg Currie went\nto great lengths to develop a mild\nunassuming brand of fiockey for\ntheir European Jaunt Thanks to\ntheir efforts they suffered, two losses which might have been wins If\ntheir tactics had been more Canadian and less diplomatic. The outburst Thursday in a leading Swedish paper brought the matter to a\nhead.\nIn the game against Germany a\nGerman player ,was Injured, btu\nsaid afterwards it was an accident\nand not the fault of the Canadians.\nIt would appear that the German\nwas a beter sport than the Swedes.\nThey discounted his statements and\nImmediately, described tha attack as\ncriminal.\nThe conclusion of the European\ntour fiasco leads Canadian observers to believe that political propaganda has been the basis for the\nattacks and that Sweden, the de-\ntending champion, would much\nrather see Canada staying out of\nworld play.\nNext time let's send fhe cheer-\nleaders.\nGetting back to the local sports\nwe notice this week that play in\nthe Western International League\nperked up somewhat as the teams\nbegan their usual season wlndup\njuggling routine.\nWhile playoff positions may decide the fate of the eventual winner of the league title the old question arises as to why the 4eams\ncouldn't have done their Juggling\nearlier in the season?\nMany an observer has come up\nwith what has been considered excellent suggestions, but just for the\nrecord books a new one developed\nthis week should interest the players on some teams. I\nThis solution was revealed during\nlast Thursday night's game at Trail\nbetween the Smokies and Spokane.\nA hockey fan of many years feels\nthat an assessment against each club\nshould be levied each year and that\nthe proceeds from the assessment\nbe. split with the four teams, in\norder of finish. The amount of the\nassessment and therefore the cash\ndisbursements would be left to the\nleague to solve, but the top three\nclubs would be included in the payoff. While this solution may be unworkable or may meet with rebuff\nfrom league evecutives, it at least\nshows the present thinking of hockey fans in, the Western International.\nThe second solution is one which\nhas been bandied about in tha\nleague since four teams became a\nreality instead of fiction. That's the\nsolution thas recommends a three-\nteam playoff with the top team getting a bye into the finals.\nThis may seem to be the easiest\nand most obvious answer to the\nquestion of how to improve league\nplay? There is, however, one drawback to tbe proposal. The drawback\nis, naturally, financial.\nIn this day of high priced talent\nand high priced hockey, semi-final\nand final playoff series frequently\n' mean the difference between the\nred and the black on the ledger.\nClubs who through the season\noperate on a slim marginal basis\nare neither willing to consider nor\naccept the proposal. The only way\naround this touchy subject would\nbe for an asessment to be paid the\nclub dropped out of the playoffs\nand this poses an even more interesting problem.\nIf the money levied to assist the\nfourth place club were Inviting\nenough then It might just prove to\nGENERAL\nSKATING\nTODAY\n10 to 11:45 a.m.\n~t\nan attractive suggestion to get paid\nfor running out of the money.\nIn either case you either play for\nmoney or take it as a gift.\nAny more suggestions?\n*   \u00ab   \u2022\nSporting Extras:\nTrail's Cominco Big Four Hockey\nLeague players held their annual\nnapkin night last night and in the\ncourae of the evening named Leo\nSoligo as the loop's most valuable\nprayer on Earl Breamer's league\nwinning team . . . High School\nskiers from three provinces and\nfour states will be in Rossland next\nweekend for the seventh annual\nInter-high school meet . . . basketball crowns are being worn by Trail\nMotors ond Torchettes in the city's\nsenior B cage loops . . . the motor-\nmen won their series two straight\nfrom the Rossland Royals whilj\nTorchy Torresson's girl's crew Won\ntheir series from the Whippets . . .\nKamloops Senior B men's squad\nwill be In Trail March 12 and 13 for\nthe B.C. quarter-final, interior finals\ntwo game total point series . . .\nJohnny Merkley's All-Stars are favored tb cop the series . . \u25a0 midget\nand bantam squads from Trail and\nNelson meet in Nelson tonight for\nthe second game of their West\noKotenay title series . . . learns\nfrom the Silver City currently lead\nthe series . . . Western International Hockey League referee Bob\nMaker moves to Colville March 22\nto take over duties as pro at the\nElks golf club . . . Maker has signed for two years with the club and\nwill commute next season to Spokane to ref the games in the Flyer\ncity ... just thinking that it really\nIsn't so far off season at that . . .\ngolfers were busy on the Wander-\nmere course just outside Spokane\nlast weekend.\nIntermediate\nSeries Resumes\nIn Trail Sunday\nWest Kootenay Intermediate\nhockey playoffs resume in Trail\nSunday when the Nelson Legionnaires play Trail for the right to\nmeet the East Kootenay winners.\nTrail won 5-3 in Nelson Thursday\nto take a one-game edge into the\nsecond game of their two-out-of-\nthree-game series.\nTrail will be hard to beat on\ntheir own ice surface, but they will\nfind It hard to win against the\ngame crew of Legionnaires, who\nhave ex-Leaf Boomer Rodzlnyak\nplaying goal. Rodzlnyak was a\nstandout ln the last game, kicking\nout pucks from all directions.\nRed Wasslck, Rich Wassick.\nSwede \"Larson and George Barefoot\nwill be on defence.\nDune Jameson will centre Herb\nLovett and Les Hufty on the first\nstring with Ludlow, Neil McClen-\naghan and Johnny Bachynski on the\nsecond string, and Arnold Sherwood, Sam Slminoff and Syl Benedetti forming the third line.\nService Clubs\nBonspiel Tonight\nThe bonspiel of the year as far\nas the Nelson service . clubs are\nconcerned will be run off Saturday\nnight, when two draws will be held.\nMost of the clubs are expected to\nhave rinks ready for the event, Captured last year by the Junior Chamber of Commerce.\nThe Jayceea will have three rinks\nvielng to hold the championship:\nwhile the Kiwanlans are expected\nto have two. Just what the other\nclubs have in the way of strength\nis unknown, but a large entry is\nanticipated.\nThe Jaycees, as trophy holders,\nare responsible for this year's event\nand the boys will be treated to a\nbanquet before the gabies.\nADULT SKATING\nSUNDAY\n3:00 to 5:00\nTONIGHT\nMinor Hockey Playoff\nWait Kootenay Bantam-Midget Series\nCivic Centre - 7:00 p.m.\nTRAIL vs. NELSON\nADMISSION \u2014 ADULTS 35c - CHILDREN 16c\nMatt Baldwin Bink \u00a9icings\nIn Alberta's Fifth Title\nFINAL STANDINGS\nWL\n0   1\nBritish Columbia\t\n8   2\n6   4\n6   4\nS   4\n    g   4\n4   6\n    4   8\n    3   7\nP.E.I\t\n3   7\nMonteleone Stars\nAs Reps Go Ahead\nIn Minor Playoff\nBernie Monteleone gave the Bantam Reps a one-game' edge ln the\nMidget playoffs this week when he\napored four goals and assisted on\nthe fifth as the Reps won 3-4 In\novertime over the Cubs.\nThe victory gave the Reps three\npoints ln the best-of-three playoffs\nas the first game ended in a 2-2\ndeadlock. The Cubs, who were not\neven rated a chance in the series,\nhave come up with two fine performances and are forcing the Reps\nto go all out to gain the championship.\nAltera scoreless first period the\nCubs took a two-goal lead in the\nsecond when Dinham Drew and\nPetroskl scored. They added a third\ngoal in the third when Smith scored\ntrom Jennings. -\nThe Reps completed a long uphill\nbattle when Monteleone counted\ntwice and assisted on Wah's counter.\nMonteleone's second goal proved to\nbe the tieing marker which sent\nthe game Into overtime.\nTom Hufty counted the Cubs'\nfourth goal in the overtime, but\nMonteleone counted twice to tuck\nthe game away.\nFour penalties were called with\nCubs taking three of them.\nTonight will see the West Kootenay Midget and Bantam playoffs\ncontinue when Trail will be the visitors at the Civic arena.\nThe' winners of this series will\nmeet the East Kootenay tltllsts at\nthe home of the West Kootenay\nwinners in a two-game total-goals-\nto-count series March 12 and 13.\nAnother series to get under way\non the 13th will see the Juvenile\nchamps from the East Kootenay\nplay off with Trail. The juveniles\nfrom the Silver City ousted Nelson\nin two straight games, 3-2 and 5-3.\nThis series will be best-of-three\nwith the winner taking on the Okanagan champs and then going to the\ncoast for the B.C. crown.\nTrail Juvenile club members are\nJ. Patterson, A. McClusky, M. Devito, W. Davis, D. Swanson, G.\nStelgo, L.' Allegretto, J. Soberlak,\nE. Secco, G. Mclntyre, L. McLaren,\nM. Mondln, B. Tanner and L. De-\nRosa.\nCanada's Part in\nWorld Hockey To Be\nDecided in May\nSTOCKHOLM (Reuters) \u2014 Whether Canada withdraws from future\nworld hockey championships will\nbe decided when the Canadian\nAmateur Hockey Association meets\nin May, CAHA president W. B.\n(Baldy)  George said here Friday.\nHe was commenting on an angry\ndenunciation of^the Swedish press\nand public made Thursday by Canadian manager Don Preston.\nPreston said Canada should not\nenter any more teams in the competition because \"we are not welcome here.\"\nGeorge said he had \"no comment\"\nto make on the suggestion. Much\nof the criticism of the Canadian\nteam. Toronto East Yorks, has been\n\"entirely newspaper propaganda,\"\nhe added.\nMeanwhile, Czech and Finnish\nsportsmen insisted the Dominion\nplayers were' \"gentlemen of the\nrink\" and not gangsters, even\nthough they play' a rougher game\nthan their European'opponents.\nMIDLAND, Ont. (CP) \u2014 George\nDudley, secretary-manager of the\nCanadian Amateur Hockey Association, said Friday Canada may snub\nfuture ^vorld hockey championships.\nDudley said in an Interview that\n\"if they don't like us in Europe\nwe might just as Well stay home.\"\nDudley emphasized he was speaking unofficially.\nWorld Hockey\nStandings\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) \u2014 Standings\nat the end of the eighth day's play\nin the world hockey tournament:\nW L T F A Pts.\nCanada      6\nRussia      5\nSweden     4\nCzech _.   4\nGermany     1\nFinland    1\nNorway     1\nSwitz.      0\nFRIDAY'S RESULTS:\nGermany 5, Finland 1.\nCanada 5, Czechoslovakia 2\n' Russia 1, Sweden 1.\nSaturday's Games:\nSwitzerland vs Finland.\nSweden vs Czechoslovakia.\nSunday's' Games:\nGermany cs Norway.\nCanada vs Russia.\n57 5\n30 8\n26 16\n39 17\n15 31\n9 49\n5 36\n12 31\nKDMQNTON (CP)-Matt Baldwin, 27-year-old Edmonton draw-artist, brought Alberta its fifth Canadian curling championship Friday when he won the 1954 championship here with a 10-5\/victory over R. T. McCully's New\nBrunswick rink.\nIt was the 20th time In 25 years\nof competition that, the title has\ncome west. It was won In 1933 by\nAb Gowanlock of Manitoba.\nBaldwin, leading 9-5 with last\nrock coming homo and with a New\nBrunswick rock ln the rings, slid\nalmost halfway down the Ice before\nreleasing His .rock. It went to\nthe button behind the New Brunswick rock.  '   \u25a0 \u25a0\nThere was some confusion as to\nwhether the Alberta rock would\ncount but the officials awarded\nBaldwin one on the last end.\nImmediately after the game, Baldwin and his Edmonton rink were\npresented with the Brier Tankard,\nemblematic of Canadian curling\nsupremacy. '\nThe curlers from Canada's 10\nprovinces then formed up behind a\nmassed Highland pipe band and\nparaded through the Edmontorf\ngardens to the cheers of more than\n3000 spectators.\nONLY ONE DEFEAT\nBaldwin won the title with nine\nvictories against one loss in the 10-\ngame round-robin. His lone defeat\nwas an 8-5 Iosb in the eighth round\nagainst 71-year-old Ross, Tarlton of\nHamilton. Eleven rinks competed.\nOntario had two entries, one representing Northern Ontario.\nSecond was Saskatchewan's\nCampbell brothers rink who wen\neight games and lost two. They defeated Quebec's Arvida foursome\nskipped by W. R. Tracy, 12-9 ln their\nlast game of the competition.\nNova Scotia, skipped by Reg\nPlercy; British Columbia led by E.\nC. (Bung) Cartmell, Northern Ontario, skipped by Don Groom of\nSudbury, and Ontario, led by Ross\nTarlton pf Hamilton, were tied for\nthird place with six victories and\nfour losses  apiece.\nNew Brunswick and Manitoba\nhad four victories  and  six losses\neach. Prince Edward Island and\nQuebec each won three and lost\nseven and Newfoundland lost all\n\u202210 of its games.\nOntario defeated Nova Scotia, led\nby Reg Plercy, 13-7 In their last\ngome, Manitoba, under veteran\nJimmy Welsh scored a 15-4 win\nover Newfoundland skipped by R.\nJ Kent.\nCLOSE BATTLE\nMcCully and Baldwin battled on\neven terms over six ends as they\nboth favored a moderate running\ngame. In the firt end, they exchanged rocks until Baldwin counted one with his last stone.\nMcCulley threw away his last rock\non the second end when he went,\nthrough the empty house with last\nstone in order to have last rock on\nthe next end.\nOn the third end, McCully scored\none when he took out an Alberta\nrock lying shot and went out himself. Had he stayed he would have\nscored two.\nBaldwin got a house going on the\nfourth end and had two in the rings\nwhen McCully raised one of his\nrocks to cut out one Alberta counter. Baldwin was light on his last\nstone and Alberta got one.\nMcCully scored one on the hext\nend when he drew Into the empty\nhouse. The sixth. end was almost\na dead end but the umpires measured and'gave Alberta one for a rock\njust touching the edge of the 12-\nfoot circle.\nMcCully missed a take-out on the\nseventh, end and Alberta scored\ntwo. That seemed to make a difference. The Baldwin crew gained confidence.\nThey got another on the eighth\nend, gave up one on the ninth,\nsmashed in for three on the 10th\nand then contented themselves with\ndraining away McCully's rock\nsupply until it was impossible for\nhim to overtake them.\nOlsonr.McGovern\nWin Two Games\nInKitsvsKafs\nMrs. E. Olson and Mrs. T. McGovern captured two victories in\nNelson Women's Curling Club Kits\nand Kats competition this week.\nMrs. Olson downed Mrs. B. Hille\n15-3 and Mrs. C. H.'Parrlsh 12-6,\nwhile Mrs. McGovern won over\nMrs. A. J. Hesse 7-6 and Mrs. W. J.\nHipperson 14-4.\nIn other games, Mrs. P. Kuntz\ndefeated Mrs. C. H. Parrish 14-5,\nand Mrs. A. J. Hesse beat Mrs. T.\nA. Wallace 12-11.\nThe draw next week:\n, Monday\u2014Mrs.   T.   McGovern   vs\nMrs. T. A. Wallace and Mrs. B.\nHille vs Mrs. P. Kuntz.\nTuesday\u2014Mrs. E. Olson vs Mrs.\nP. Kuntz and Mrs. W. J. Hipperson\nvs Mrs. A. J. Hesse.\nThursday\u2014Mrs. W. J. Hipperson\nvs Mrs. T. A. Wallace and Mrs. C.\nH. Parrish vs Mrs. B, Hille.\nStrikes n Spares\nLadies' League:\nLena Koehle came through with\na season's record, breaking 321 along\nwith a 250 and 233 for a 804 aggregate to gain all the honors and pace\nher team to a four-point win.\nHelen Morris also was high with\na 308 single and an aggregate of\n755. In bowling her high aggregate\nKoehle boosted her season's average to 195, placing .her seventh ln\nthe race for the average honors.\nTea honors went to the Waterer\nteam with a 989 single and an aggregate of 2751. This team held on\nto first place with a total of 15\npoints, followed by the Koehle team\nwith 12,\nVARIETY CLUB\nMarg Laughton captured the honors with a>l00 single and an aggregate of 685.\nTeam honors went to the Deadend Kids with a single of 982 and an\naggregate of 2535.\nRoss MacSorley with a 294 single\nand Herb Lovett with a 669 aggregate captured the individual honors\nwhile the Commerce team took the\nteam honors with a 1035 single and\na 2904 aggregate.\nJUNIOR HIGH\nRay Young took all Individual\nhonors with a 252 single and a 605\naggregate. Also hitting the 200 single was Albert Brett with a 200 and\n232 and Dave Turner 223.\nBowlers hitting the 150 mark were\nR.   Anderson   160,   Sonny   Nadeau\n162 and 168, Art Peterson 160, Harry\nHufty 170 and Steve James 165.\nMIKED COMMERK LEAGUE\nJake Koenig took the jump on all\nbowlers when he scored singles of\n288, 263 and 258 for a 809 aggregate\nto take the aggregate honors.\nThe singles honors went to Dick\nMcCallum with a 320. Bill Horner\ncame up with a 309 to place second\nfor the men.\nBetty Apostolluk with a 293 single and Gwen Macrone with a 692\naggregate were high for the women.\nBarney Jarbeau hit the 700 mark\nwith a 788 as did Bob Bennett with\n713, Frank Beresford 718 and Bob\nWright 712.\nTeam honors went to the Playmors\nwith i 1244 single and an aggregate\nof 3282.\nALL-STARS MEET\nKIMBERLEY IN\nINTERMED SEMIS\nCRANBROOK\u2014Though they lost\ntheir preliminary playoff series to\nFernie Rangers 3-8, 7-10 in two\nstraight games, Cranbrook All Star;\nwill continue Into AlbertaiB. C. Intermediate- Hockey League semi-finals against Kimberley in best-of-\nthree series next week, because\nFernie defaulted when it was discovered that four unregistered players were iced in. the preliminary\nseries.\nFernie's new artificial Ice plant\ndid not come into service for home\ngames until January 15, and the\nteam lost all nine of its league\ngames at home and on the road-\nTeam was given an extension on\nthe 18-player registration deadline\nof Jan. 15 but 'It waa discovered\nwhen Cranbrook-Fernle playoffs\nwere well underway that players ln\nthe series did not coincide with registrations, and Fernie did not contest .the matter of continuation in\nplaydowns. Dick Pauls effected a\nterrific improvement as coach of\nthe team over the season.\nPlayoff rdsult is that All Stars\nwill now meet Kimberley Legionnaires, undefeated in their nine\ngames in the schedule, in best-of-\nthree series next week, winner to\nbe finalist for league playoff championship against winner of .the\nColeman-Belle'vue - Michel - Natal\nplayoffs for the east end championships. Winner of this final series\nwill continue toward Coy Cup playoffs.    -\nFights\nAkron, O\u2014Sandy Saddler, 130,\nNew York, stopped Charlie Slaughter, 130, Elizabeth, N. J., 4, non-\ntitle.\nWest Palm Beach, Fla. \u2014 Irwin\nSchultz, 165, New York, outpointed\nJimmy Jewell, 169, Birmingham,\nAla., 10.\nFall River, Mass.\u2014Roy Andrews,\n139%, Lowell, Mass., stopped Bob\nEnglish, 137W, Fall River, 1.\nHartford, Conn.\u2014Graham Holmes,\n134, Manchester, N. H., outpointed\nTommy Tibbs, 132, Boston, 10.\nTacoma, Wash.\u2014Pat McMurtry,\n183, Tacoma, knocked out Al Kelly,\n192, Harrisburg, Pa., 1.\nAussies Send Four\nOarsmen to BEG\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) r\u2014\nAustralia, which holds all the Brit-\nIsh Empire Games rowing titles except the fours, will include only\nfive oarsmen in its team for the\nB.E.G. at Vancouver next July.\nThe rowers are Peter Evatt,\nMervy Wood, Murrey Riley, Geoff\nWilliamson and David Anderson.\nThe Australian Rowing Council\nsaid that lack of funds restricted\nthe size of the rowing team.\nGolf Ball's Dimples\nTo Be Diamond Shape\nNEW YORK (AP) - Now theyr'e\napplying aerodynamic principles to\nmake golf balls fly farther.\nOne golf ball manufacturer has\ncome out with a \"diamond\" cover\nmarking, In place of the usual round\nor square dimples, and promises it\nwill add at least 10 yards to any\ngolfer's drives and that some will\nget a lot more distance,\nTROPHY-WINNING Grand Forks Juvenile\nteam, the Flyers, Is this. The team took Spokane\n5-4 at Spokane to win the Slmohuck Trophy.\nFrom left, front row, Roy Pennoyer, Al Morrison,\nJohn Fedorak, Ed Babluk, Bernard Hartlnger,\nCapt. Ron Babluk; baok row, Nick Sckriptnlk,\nDick Mathews, Jim Qualterle, Jim Hamaguchi,\nFred Fedorak, Mike Baldlgar*, Ted Morris, Coach\nJoe Altomare.\nFlyers, Leafs in\nCrucial Series\nOver Weekend\nWhen Nelson Maple Leafs Invade\nSpokane Saturday and Sunday for\ntheir final league games of the\nseason,.they will be under heavy\npressure for second place in the\nstanding is at stake.\nThe Leafa, In order to stay in\nsecond, must at least gain a tie in\nthe two games. If Spokane wins\nboth games they will take over the\nsecond slot.\nAlthough Trail's loss to the Flyers\nThursday dropped them Into the\ncellar, they could still gain third\nplace if they should defeat the\nDynamiters in Kimberley Saturday\nand if Nelson won both Spokane\ngames.\nCoach Willie Schmidt will be\ncarrying all hands for this important series, which will decide whether the Leafs will meet Trail or Kimberley in the playoffs, due to get\nunder way next Tuesday.\nEric Paterson will be tending\ngoal, with Buck Jones, Lloyd Ailsby, Ernie Gare, Red McCarthy and\nSchmidt at ths bluellne.\nThe forward lines will be drawn\nfrom Bill Haldane, Jimmy Lowe,\nBruno Pasqualotto, Don Appleton,\nRed Koehle, Fritz Koehle, Marlowe\nMcDonald, Marty Burton, Mickey\nMaglio and possibly Lee Hyssop.\nTrail Kid Teams\nHere Tonight\nTrail Bantam and Midget teams\nmeet the Nelson teams at the Civic\ntonight in the second games of\nthe best-of-three series for the West\nKootenay championships.\nA week' ago the Nelson teams\nopened the series ln Trail, with\nTrail winning both divisions. They\nwon the bantam game 7 to 2 and the\nmidget tussle 10 to 1. Both Nelson\nteams are expected to make a big\neffort to even up the series.\nThe Midgets, under Neil McClen-\naghan, will have Don Holmes in\nthe nets, Lome Freno, Bob Maber,\nBob Bealby and Bob Olson will\nform the bluellne brigade. Forwards will be chosen from Barry\nWilson, Vern Eckstrom, Don Ball,\nPhil Spencer, Bill tHbbon, Jim\nSteadman, Bill Watson and Bruce\nRoberts. For the bantam game, Nelson will have Dave Grundy in the\ncage, Barry Waters, Don Stevenson,\nWayne Farenholtz, and Tommy\nBalfour on defence. Up front Bernie\nMonteleone will centre Mike Borch\nand Lloyd Atwell on one line, Vern\nBenedetti will have Gordon Jeffs\nand Fred Nudd on tm> wings; Dale\nSkapple will be flanked by Ernie\nWah and Earl .Farenholtz. Eugene\nKraft will be utility forwasd.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Presa\nMARITIME  MAJOR\nCharlottetown 4, Sydney 8.\nGlace Bay 4, Halifax 5.\nN.8. SENIOR\nWindsor  3,  Stellarton  5.   (First\ngame ol best-of-seven finals.)\n8ENIOR INTERCOLLEGIATE\nMcGill 3, U. of Toronto 6.\nNORTHERN ONTARIO 8ENIOR A\nSault Ont. 2, Pembroke 1.\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nGait 2, Guelph 12.\nONTARIO SENIOR A\nKitchener 6, Hamilton 2. (Kitchener wins best-of-five quarter-final\nS-l).\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nToronto  St.  Michael's  6,  Kitchener 2. \u2022\nToronto Marlboros 6, Barrie 2.\nNORTHERN ONT. SENIOR A\nSudbury 2, North Bay 3.\nSASKATCHEWAN JUNIOR\nSaskatoon L Flin Flon 6. (Flin\nFlon wins best-of-seven semi-finals\n4-3).\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJohnstown 0, Fort Wayne 2.\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian' Press\nG   A Pts\nHowe, Detroit     28   42 70'\nRichard, Montreal     34   24 58\nLindsay, Detroit     23   30 53\nKelly, Detroit     15   33 48\nGeoffrion, Montreal ....   25   21 46\nReibel, Detrdlt ,  15   31 46\nRonty, New York    13   33 46\nI\nCanada Point Ahead\n\\ y. \u25a0,\nOf Russia for Title\nSTOCKHOLM (CP)\u2014A fighting Swedish hockey team\ntied Russia 1-1 Friday night and shifted the pressure onto\nMoscow Dynamos in,their pay-off game with Canada Sunday\nfor the world title.\nBoth the Dynamos and Toronto\nEast York sre unbeaten ln six\ngames. \"But Friday night's tie left\nthe Russians one point behind the\nCanadian entry, which needs only\na draw in Sunday's game to retain\nfirst place.\nCanada's representatives had\ntroubles of their own earlier Friday before they disposed of Czechoslovakia 5-2. Tlie Czechs trailed\n3-2 at the end of two periods and\nwere battling hard to get back into\nthe game until Insurance tallies by\nRuss Robertson and Eric Unger set\nup East York's winning margin.\nTOUGHEST TE8T\nIt was by far the toughest test\nof the tournament for the Canadians. All their previous opponents\nlost by seven goals or more.\nA crowd of more than 10,000\nwatched the game, cheering wildly\nthe Czechs gave East York\ngoalie Don Lockhart his busiest day\nScoreless Tie for\nRangers, Hawks\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 New York\nRangers were held to a scoreless\ntie by Chicago Black Hawks Friday\nnight to move into a fourth-place\ntie with the idle Boston Bruins in\nthe National Hockey League race.\nIt was the fourth shutout of the\nseason for each goaUe. However,\nJohnny Bower of the Rangers had\na rougher time as he was required\nto make 37 stops to 28 for Al Rollins\nof the Hawks.\nThe game was slow for the most\npart, enlivened only by a third-\nperiod fist fight between Lee Fogo-\nlin of Chicago and Ivan Irwin of\nNew York. They drew five-minute\nmajor penalties.\nOtherwise, both' teams resorted\npretty much to cautious defensive\nhockey. The Rangers particularly\ntook no unnecessary chances.\nForks' Shufflers\nPlay Lake Club\nGRAND FORKS\u2014Grand Forks\nBadminton Club- players went to\nChristina Lake on invitation of the\nChristina Lake Badminton Club to\na badminton social.\nMixed games were played be.\ntween clubs. Refreshments were\nserved by women members. Miss\nFlorence Kimura, president of the\nLake club, welcomed the visitors\nand Louis Hank, president of the\nForks club, thanked the hosts.\nof the tournament ,\nStockholm Three Crowns, fight*\nIng to retain a title won last season\nwhen Canada, Russia and Czechoslovakia were not entered, barely\nmissed a victory'that would have\nkept them In the running. A Swedish goal was scored less than a\nsecond after the bell ended play ln\nthe second period.\nTAKE EARLY LEAD\nIn a game hampered by soft Ice,\nthe Canadians took an early lead,\nover the Czechs as Earl Clements\nscored shortly after the seven-minute mark, but a goal by Bacilek\nevened the count leas than two\nminutes later.\nThe Canadians launched a steady\nattack which waa rewarded by two\nquick goals by George Sayliss and\nMoe Galand before the first inter-\nmission. It was the 15th goal of\nthe series for Galand, tha .tournament scoring leader.\nIn the second period the Czechl\nabandoned European-style combln-\nation play and began shooting on\ngoal In the Canadian manner. The\nswitch In tactics, together with Improved defensive work, appeared to\nunbalance .the East York club.\nFinally centre Martin Zebrodaky,\na veteran of the 1940 Czech team\nthat beat Canada 3-2 for the title,\nproduced the losers' second goal.\nAfter Robertson and Unger gave\nCanada a safe margin the winners\nappeared to coast, possibly saving\nthemselves for Sunday's final test.\nIn Friday's  curtain-raiser, Germany downed Finland 5-1 to climb 1\ninto fifth place in the eight-team\nround-robin series.\nThe Czechs, beaten by Russia\nearlier in the tournament by the\nidentical 5-2 score, face Sweden today in a battle for third place. The\nSwedes currently hold a one-point\nedge, having taken an 8-0 beating'\nfrom Canada for their only defeat,\nWinless SwitzerlanU , meets Fin- '\"\nland in the day's only, other ae\u00bb j\ntivlty. ;,'.'\nGermany and Norway close out*\ntheir schedule Sunday before the E\nCanada-Russia game.\nFor Expert\nBODY REPAIRS\nPHONE 75\n* Two-Toning\n* Reconditioning  Upholstery\n* Glass Installation\nir Fender Retouching\nSuperior Motors\nDodge - DeSoto  Dealer\nOpp. Post Office, Vernon St.\nOils advertisement IS not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British' Qolumbia.\n ; i %\t\n_______\n:-: .\"L.'.'-'i'- \u25a0\"\u25a0. \u25a0   -    .    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\"\u25a0\u25a0\" ,\u25a0\n_______\n.\n____.\n.\u25a0:    .   r' r. :  .. ;\n'\n' ' \u25a0    \u25a0 \u25a0        \u25a0 . - - , .        . .   \u25a0\u25a0:..\n !\u2014\u25a0...-.. H   .\n3\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1954\nr\nL\nm\nB\nN\nEgg,\n6\u00ab60S4rM-cHbCKl-Ejr\nttHiiiyj^irHev'ftEr'\nAUDIENCE V USED TDTHE\niSMISHTySFINtSTlN\n^        TBI\nH\nR\nY\njTHEYtE\/Vp^F W.NGER0U6\/\nLTHWTie THE LONE\nRANGER-AND.\nTHE* JAIED US ONCE, BUT H^\n.THBY WONT DQ IT AGAIN\/\nWELL AMBUSH THEM\/\nn\nfes0\nI PERSON JO-PERSON WANE ADS\nFOR QUICK RFSUI7S \/\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Clauified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nMOHAN\u2014To Mr. and'Mrs. David\nMohan of Lister at the Creston Valley Hospital March 1, a daughter, \u25a0\nHOSS-To Mr. and Mrs. Nelson\nHoss of Winnipeg, at Winnipeg, Feb.\n15, a son.   ;\nWILSON-To Mr. and Mra. R, H.\nWilson et Silverton Bt the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital in Neva Den-\nver March 2, a daughter.\t\nHELP WANTED\nTRAINING FOR\nACCOUNTANT\nCLERKS'\nThe Canadian Armx has many\nopenings for young men as Accountant Clerks. The Army will\ntrain you in bookkeeping, accounting, costing. You will learn\ntyping. You will learn to keep\nrecords and ledgers for supplies.\nYou will be trained to maintain\nstocktaking records and assist in,\nstocktaking procedures.\nThere are also openings in the\nArmy for men to train as:\nElectricians\n,   Radio Station Operators\nTelecommunication\nMechanics\nSurveyors\nDoctor's and Dentist's\nAssistants\nV  Technical Assistants\nAn Army career offers good\npay, pensions, excellent conditions of service, variety of work,\ntravel, medical and dental care,\n30 days holiday.\n.To be eligible for this trades\ntraining, you must have Grade 10\neducation or equivalent, be 17 to\n40 years of age, and physically fit.\nFor full information write or\nvisit the Army Recruiting Station\nnearest your home.       i\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot,\n4201 West 3rd Avenue,\nVancouver, B:C.\nTelephone CHerry 2111\nWANTED: A PARTY OR COUPLE\nto look after invalid, old age pensioner in his own home ln Castlegar. Write 2017, Second Ave. Trail,\nB. C.\nAGENTS WAh|TED\nENERGETIC SALESMAN FOR\nNelson-Trail area to represent\nMeat Packing Company. Prefer\nexperienced man with knowledge\nof industry. Car essential. Fo.\nfurther details Write to Box 14,\nNelson' News, stating age experience, education, references. Interviews, will be arranged about\nMarch 10th. All replies strictly\nconfidential.\nTEXTILE SALESMAN FOR BRlT-\nish Columbia wanted by a well\nestablished wholesale House. Extensive Line, Cottons, Rayons and\nNovelty Fabrics. Must have connections with Departmental, Chain\nand Retail stores. Our staff ls advised of this ad. Write Box 208,\nDaily News.\nHOUSEWIVES: ADDRESS AD-\nvertising postcards. Must have\ngood handwriting. LINDO 903,\nWatertown, Mass.\nREAL OPPORTUNITY tOt A\nhustler to sell Rawliegh Products\nin Nelson District. Write Raw-\nleighs, C1534m, Winnipeg, Man.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nMAN AND,WIFE DESIRE WORK\nin small camp as cook and truck\ndriver. Apply Box . 429, Nelson\nDaily News.\n.WANTED-PLAjfcfc  TO  Clft.   Cfe-\n\u25a0 dar posts on shares. Apply Box\n428, Nelson Dally News,\nWANTED - JOB BABlf-Sl'Wlt.fi,\navailable every evening,'phone\n213-R after 4 o'clock if possible.\nQUALIFIED BOOKKEEPER DE-\nsir.es, position, part I or full time.\nBox D88l Dally News.\nRENTALS\nUNFURNISHED COMFORTABLE\ncentrally located apartment. Ideal\nfor business couple or>2 working\ngirls. Phone 1542.\nWANTED TO REftT: bAl_.\u00a5\nfarm by reliable young Dutch\nfarmer. State particulars, Box 27,\nNelson News.       .     ' \"\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM,' MOD-\nern kitchen with fridge. Also\nsleeping rooms. By day, week, or\nmonth. 171 Baker St.\nNEW FOUR ROOM HOUSE, NEAR\nschools, stores and highway. Reasonable rent. Paul Markoff, Slocan\nPark.\n3-ROOMJ3yi'i'E WITH BATH t6\ncareful adults. Private entrance.\n719 Stanley St.\nSELF CONTAINED PARTLY FUR-\nnished suite. Apply Ste. No. 2,\n723 Silica St.\nFURNISHED, HEATED APART-\nment for rent. Available April 1.\nPhone 879-L.\nFOR RENT \u2014 SELF-CONTAINED\nApt Heated. Close in. Box 425,\nDajly News.\nFOR RENT: 1 FURNISHED LIGHT\nhousekeeping room, and 2-room\nfurnished suite. Ph. 879-Y.\nFOR RENT: CABIN BY WEEK OR\nmonth. Ferry Auto Court. Phone\n1680.\nM.JDR06M OR LIGHT HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Close ln. Phone\n1077-X.\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE ROOMS\nfor rent Central heat; electric\nstoves. N. Shore Motel. Ph. 1684.\nFOR   RENT\u2014TWO-ROOM   FURN-\nished suite. Phone 359-R.\nFOR RENT\u2014WARM HOUSEKEEP-\ning room. Phone 405-L.\nTWO-ROOM FURNISHED SUITE,\nclose in. 414 Silica St. Ph. 1147-R.\nFOR RENT - 2-ROOM HOUSE\nNorth Shore. Phone 1685-R-l.\n2-ROOMED UNFURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Phone 386-Y.\n3 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\u2014M.\nPopoff, Fruitvale, B.C.\nONE ROOM SUITE FULLY FUR-\nnlshe'd for two. 171 Baker St.\nFOR RENT\u2014UNFURNISHED DU-\nplex, heated. Phone 981-R.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT; GENTLE-\nman preferred. 410 Victoria St.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsuronce Co. D. L. Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot Clean rooms and reasonable .rates  Vancouver. B.C\nTOBACCO ELIMINATOR-A SCl-\nentitle guaranteed remedy for\ncigarette addiction. Quick-Sure-\nPermanent. For free booklet write\nC. King Pharmacal Corp. Ltd.,\nBox 303, Walkerville, Ont.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nH______H   EMM\nDOWN\nt. Magistrate\n2. Sick\n3. Displays\nboldly\ni. One of a\npeople\ndwelling\nin Latvia\n5. Half an em\n6. Plant insect\n7. Husband of\nRuth (Bib.)\n8. Part\n9. Vexes\n12. Worn out\n13. Shut\n16. River\n(So. Am.)\n18. Affect.\nled\nmanners\n22. Cover\nthe\nInside ot\n23. Gained\n24. Sacred\nsongs\n*6.Waya\nout\n28. Bog-lands\n31. Old measure\nof length\n33. General\ntendency\n35.Alevcler\n36. Weary\nHIS   MHH_.-rl._nL3\nnna saaanaE\naaE@ mala an\nassams    aiaa\naaanman\nana    ai3Pnr\"ra\nas iriau [\nuaN'JHHCi mail\nHaHviintlHEl HB\n33HH   EC\nHHiu Kitaiai\nYesterday's Answer\n37. River\n(Eng.)\n38. Beige\n42. Shoshon-\nean Indian\n44. Fart of\n\"to be\"\nACROSS\nL Firearm\n8. Hillside\ndugout\n10. Glrl's'name\n11. Destitute\n12. Brilliance\nofsuccess\n13. Crayon\n14. Foreign\nOffice\n(abbr.)\n15. Makes\nuse of\n17. Girl's    .\nnickname\n19. Food fish\n20. Prepare for\npublication\n21. Like\n22. Fold over\n251 Concise\n27. Sends forth,\n\u2022a rays\n29. Bitter\nvetch\n30. Xenon\n(sym.)     .\n32. Pier\n(arch.)\n83. Sesame\n34. Genuine\n35, Disturbs\nsuddenly\n39.1 am (contracted)\n40. Shelters\nfor bees\n41. Type of\nChinese\npottery\n(pi.)\n43. Metal\n44. Rugged\nmountain\ncreat\n15. Fix\n46. Pondered\nDAILY CRYPTOQU0TE\u2014Here's how to work itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In thla example A la used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,., apoe-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hlnU\nEach day the code letters at* different.       . j,\nA Cryptogram Quotation '\nQOV   GNJJUIULQ   BVNP*'   WBJQNPL\nSL   QOXJ   LUIQSWUIQNPSLQ\u2014FN JPZPU.\nYesterday's Cryptoimotc: THEN FLY BETIMES, FOR ONLY\nTHBY CONQUER LOVE. THAT RUN AWAY-  CARKW\nDuuivulut lu. bat i'sUvs* s*\u00abwv\u00bbt\n\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0:.\u00bb\n1\nJ\u2014\nr-\n5\u2014\n\u2022i\ni1\n1\n6\nn\na\n4\n%\nIO\n%\nII\n%\n15\n!\u2022*\u25a0\n18\n16\n\\i\n%\n.4\nty\n^\n'^\n20\n%\nil\ny4\n\u25a0a.\n\u25a0a\nIA\n25\n%\nV)\n2B\nJ9\nw\nSI\n%\n\u00ab.\nm\n%\n%\nss\n%\ni4\nss\n36\n37\nse\n^\nit\n44\n%\n*i\"\nii\n43\nl\nV.\n1\n45\ni\na,\n%\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n\"THE,CHICKS WHICH GIVE RE-\nsuits\". For 1954, raise chicks from\nOne of the oldest, established\nhatcheries and poultry raisers in\nB.C. Since 1920 Western Canada\n- poultrymen have been raising\ntheir famous chicks. The following breeds and cross breeds are\navailable and suited to every\nneed: S.C. 'White Leghorns. New\n^Hampshires. Barred Rocks, White\nRocks, Light Sussex, Rhode Island Reds. Black Australorps.\nAlso, Leghorn-Hampshire Cross,\nAustra-Whites, Rock-Hampshire\nCross and Hampshire-Rock Cross.\nBroad Breasted Turkey Poults.\nOrder early and remember \"It's\nResults That Count\". Particulars\nand prices Sent immediately upon\nrequest RUMP AND SENDALL\nLIMITED, Box 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-Hampshire cross.\nBuy our chicks and follow our\ndirections how to raise them and\nkeep,them for complete success.\nv29 years' experience with chicks\nand poultry; Apply our' agent,\nNelson Farmers' Feed Supply,\nNelson, or,write direct to New\nSiberia Farms, N. Balakshin,\nR.R. 8, Chilllwack, B.C.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditiored Breeders on\nour .own farm. Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks, New Hampshires and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request\nIF INTERESTED IN BABY\nChicks send for our free 1954 Illustrated catalogue. The Appleby\nPoultry Breeding Farm, Mission\nCity, B. C.\nBAILED ALFALFA HAY FOR\nsale. First cut 40 tons. $19.00 per\nton F.O.B. Creston. Apply Arthur\nSommerfeld, Lister, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u20144-MONTH-OLD BULL\ncalf. Apply William Zoobkoff,\nBlewett, B.C.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - IB FOOT 2 SEATER\nrunabout boat. Oak ribs. Needs\npainting. $60.00. Can be seen at\n922 Fourth Street. Phone 821-X.\nWANTED\u201414- OR 16-FOOT ROW-\nboat with small outboard motor.\nArply Box 412 Daily News, or\nPhone 632-L-2 after 5.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nOffered for the first time . . .\nNew North Shore residence, on\nthe beach, five minutes from\nNelson Ferry..Excellent view of\nthe city, beautifully landscaped\nproperty with good fruit trees,\nall types, plus assortment of\nberry canes, root cellar, etc.\nHouse has three bedrooms, living room-dining room combined, 26x14, with two large picture windows. Good oak floors\n\u25a0 with Inlay trim, heatolator fireplace, .knotty cedar play rbom,\nplanned kitchen, two bathrooms, laundry room, all on one\nfloor. Part concrete basement\nhas ping-pong room, store room,\nworkshop, etc. Automatic oil\nheat from HaleCo oil furnace.\nStorm sash, garden implements,\netc. 106 feet of good sandy\nbeach, and good road all year.\nThis is a family home that is\nunmatched in the Nelson area.\nDesigned to be duplexed, this\ncan be a good home for a large\nfamily or a couple, with revenue on the side. Priced at well\nbelow replacement cost, with\nseveral extras optional. Prices\nand liberal terms can be discussed on request.\nALSO NORTH SHORE\nTwo-bedroom bungalow. Automatic oil heat, colored plumbing, just completed, within\nthree minutes of Nelson Ferry.\nSnpricf64*2'00: $6500\nNELSON CITY CLOSE IN\nA two-bedroom older type bungalow within a few minutes'\nwalk of Baker Street. Quietly\nsituated on two lots; this is a\nbetter-than-average buy. Good\njnout. \u2014 Cash\n\u00a3tered'$1M0:      $3800\nFAIRVIEW\nOn Sixth Sit., one block from\nbus. An attractive bungalow on\ntwo exceptionally well-landscaped lots. This house must be\nseen to be fully appreciated.\nLiberal terms SkfiAOfl\navailable. Price  JOUUU\nFAIRVIEW\nFirst offering of a two-bedroom\nbungalow In upper Fairview.\nFull basement, new piped, hot\nair furnace, cabinet kitchenj living room, excellent bathroom;\nsituated on a corner lot 110x75,\nthis is a good family 47910 '\nhome. Price . * \u2022 \u00a3ov\nTerms .can be discussed.\nFor these and other residential\nand business properties in the\nNelson area, see\nR. D. P. Gilday\nTHEGILDAY\nAGENCIES       '\nREAL ESTATE.AGENTS\n542 Baker St. Phone 1460\nOr Weekends and Eves., 1603\nAlways Ready to Serve You\n(Continued in Next Column)\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\n(Continued)    '   '\"\u2022' *\nONE ACRE SELBY STREET.\n5 rooms and bath, full basement,\nchicken house, fruit, good garden. Room for sev- <\u00a3K\u00a3AA\neral houses. Terms... \u2022P\u00ab\u00abWv\nSTANLEY 'STREET &*\n2 lots. NEW 3 B.R. Bungalow.\nL.R.-D.R., fireplace; wall to yrall\ncarpet. Nice kitchen and bath;\nbasement and hot -CIA AAA\nair furnace $ly,UyU\nTerms.' i\nINNES STREET    I\n21,000 sq. ft. 4 lots, orchard lind\ngarden. Large, comfortable 2\nB.R. home. Large L.R., fireplace,\nkitchen, bath and large den,\nwith partly finished upstairs for\nPrk0ere..r.\u2122mS' ;$9000\nWith Seasonable Down\n-   Poyfnent\nCARBONATE STREET\nTwo lots. Revenue home: $200.00\nper month, plus owner's suite\nof two rooms on main floor and\n2 in basement. Automatic coal\n& $12,600\nGORE STREET ..,.,..\n2 lots. Well built home on corner. L.R., fireplace, D.R.. 2 B.R.\nBath and kitchen on main floor\nwith two smaller COIAA\nB.R. up. Terms  \u2022P\u00bbOUU\nOBSERVATORY StREET\n4 lots. Four-roomed S.C. suit*\non each floor, up and down.\nPart basement,      CIA AAA\nwith oil furnkce.   \u2022Ply\u00bbwUU'\nTerms.\nROSEMONT\n3 lots. L.R.-D.R., .front hall, back\nporch and nice kitchen on main\nfloor, with 3 B.R. and bath\nabove. Full basement; coal furnace. Nice children's playhouse.\nGarage, fruit and     JjtfiOOO\nHALF BLOCK\nf$ret $1650\nWith lumber for 20x30 building.\nGORE STREET\n2 lots, cleared for CACA\nbuilSing. Cash price   .. \u00abPO\u00abW\nYMIR ROAD\n2 acres. 2 small houses; elee.\nTen4fet0.p.0: $3300\nNORTH SHORE\n6-Mile. 12 acres, all good building site. Level with long high-\nTearmsfr\u00b0ntag<L $6000\n3.3 ACRES KlORTH $HORH\nClose in, 60 feet lake frontage;\n30 fruit trees; 1% acres good .\nsoil with building site.\nKOOTENAY STREET\nClose   in.   Five-roomed   house\n\u00a3?cebath'... ...$5000\n$100.00 Per Month and Name\nYour Own Down Payment\nHIGH SJREET\n60   x   120.   3-roomed   cottage.\nBathroom,   pantry   and   back\nporch; full basement; CJAAA\ngarden. Terms. Only \u00abP'\u00bbWVW\nMcHARDY\nAgencies Limited\nPhone 135 or Evenings 290-Y\n\u201e Exclusive Listing\nIf you are looking for a good\nhome, very reasonably priced,\nsee this one. Almost immediate\noccupancy.\nA very nice 2-bedroom house in\nFairview; or if you don't require a dining room, this one\nmay be used as a 3-bedVoom\nhouse. Lovely living room, modern kitchen and bathroom. One\nor two bedrooms down and one\nvery large upstairs bedroom\nand small hall bedroom. Full\nconcrete basement and laundry\nroom, fruit room and drive-in\ngarage. Landscaped grounds\nand cerfient walks, etc. Located\non 2 30' x 120' corner'lots. Hot\nwater heat in all rooms. Full\nprice for quick sale\n$9500\nWe could help finance this onel\nPhone\nHerb Peacock\nFor an Appointment\nPhone 68 532 Ward St.\nFARM. - COMPRISING 14 ACRES\nland, 5 room modern house, surrounded by spacious lawns and\nfruit trees, also 20' x 80' chicken |\nhouse, 20' x 40' work shop, will\nsell all or half of above land.\nPrice reasonable. Apply J. Raine,\nRobson. Phone 3704.\nFOR SALE - BEAUTIFUL NEW   1\n3 bedroom house, fully modern,\n6'  x   10'   picture   window   overlooking lake, 14 lots, fruit trees.\nImmediate possession. Sacrificial I\nprice $7500. Mrs. R. J. Roberge,  1\nKaslo. B.C.\nFOrt SALE OR TRADE: HALF\nsection close to Cranbrook. Lot\n9395, north of town. K. 1. Anderson, 10180-107 St.. Edmonton, Al- .]\nberta.\n6-ROOM HOUSE, FURNISHED OR\nunfurnished.  Ph.   952-X  or  call (\n318 Observatory St., mornings for\naDpointment.   .\n$2000 DOWN. DUPLEX WITH\ngood revenue at low cost.' For\nparticulars Phone 423-R.\nBUILDING LOT IN UPPER FAIR   I\nview. 60' -120'. $600. Phone 1099-L I\n(Continued on Next Page)\n'\u25a0\u2022 '     '   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 -\n \u25a0MM!\nI\nPERSON-70-PERSON WANE ADS\nFOP QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. PARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nGOOD DUPLEX\nUPHILL\nCorner location; beautiful lawn\nand garden. Lot 100x120. Just\noutside of city limits. Upper\nsuite: 3 bedrooms, modern with\nbath. Rents for $60.00. Lower\nsuite; 2 rooms with shower-bath.\nRente for $3500. \u2022\nFull Price $9500\nTerms: $6000.00 Down and\nBalance Monthly of $50.00\nPlus 6% Interest\nBUILDING SITES\nWe have several in Fairview\nand Uphill.\nNEW BUNGALOW\nNear completion, on 2 corner\nlots, Uphill. Two bedrooms and\nden, or three bedrooms. Fully\nmodern. Oil automatic furnace.\nPrice $10,500   \u25a0\nTerms may be arranged.\n- TWO BEDROOM\nBUNGALOW\nOn Robson Street. Very neat,\nquite new.\nPrice $5500\nTerms: $1500.00 Down and\nBalance Monthly.\nEIGHT. ACRES\nOn Upper Road, Longbeaeh,\nNorth Shore..Property has new\nshack and basement dug and\nwall footings.\nPrice $1000\nTerms: $500.00 Down and\nBalance Monthly.\nSUMMER CAMP SITE\nSVs acres \u2014 350 ft. beach, South\nShore, 9 mile. Bargain\n$425\nBEAUTIFUL   FAMILY\nRESIDENCE ON CORNER\nLOCATION \u2014 FAIRVIEW\nCompletely modern, built 1946,\nFull concrete basement. Oil,\nautomatic hot water i heating.\nGarage In one corner of basement Ground floor has mahogany trim, 1st grade oak floors\nand two bedrooms and bathroom. Upstairs has three bedrooms, sewing room and trunk\nroom, and bathroom ready to\ninstall  fixtures.\nPrice $17,500\n$8500 CO WiU Handle.\nWa have Cash Buyers for two\nor three bedroom houses in the\neity, or on the North Shore. If\nyou have property to sell, list\nit with us today for an early\nsale.\nC.WeAppleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nReal Estate\nFire..Car and General Insurance\nEstablished 41 Yeari\nUS Baker St Phone 269\nf   >\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\nART'S\nTIRE SHOP\nThe One Tire Shop ln Nelaon\nDealing in Tires Only\nVULCANIZING  -   RETREADING\nNEW AND USED TIRES\nWHEEL BALANCING\nPlenty of Parking Space\nNear  My  Door\nTrade tn   Your  Old  Tires\nt\/B9 Lake St Phone  1122\nmt+majf+^m\nton sale\u20141950 Austin sta-\ntion Wagoh, motor reconditioned.\nLots of power\u2014easy on gas. Cheap\nfor quick salt. Phone 48-R.\nIMo to-TdN cttEV. trUcK. SAC-\nrifiee. Owner left .for Vancouver.\nPriced at $975. 3. Abrosimo, Tag-\nhum, B.C.\nFOR SALE: 1949\" METEOR BT.\nluxe Sedan in good condition.\nGood rubber, radio, spot light, sun\nvisor, Indicator lights. Phone\n58-Y, Kaslo.\n\u00abUHL'iS\u00a5'bAvTDSdN M6WK-\neycle for sale or trade. Good condition. Apply M. Piquard, Box 43,\nKinnaird.\nDO to-i-fort dodge delivery\nvan   and   steel   box.  Cheap  for\nquick   sale.   Apply   H.   Sanders,\n'- Rosemont Golf Course gate,\nTOR SALE: 1881 CkEV. SEDAN\nDel'y Reasonable terms Phone\n1394-L after 5.\nISSi AtisfiN SEDAN, good\nshape. On terms. Box 23 Salmo,\nB.C.\nJTJY'S' bIcyclB' FOh.siALE\nNewly reconditioned. Ph. 1253-L.\nf8i< SALE --41450 CREWf NOTE\nm for '54 ford. Phone 1395-Y.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nCENSERS WILL BE, ACCEPTED\n*t the Secretary-Treasurer's office\nup to 5 mm. on March 8th, 1954,\nfer the clearing, grading, levelling\nand burning of stumps and brush\n. sn the grounds of the Salmo Elementary and Salmo Junior-Senior\nHigh Schools. Particulars ot the\ngrades and levels can be obtained\nfrom the Maintenance Supervisor\n613 Ward Street.\nG. S. Livingstone\nSecre'tary-Treasurer\nI iSchool District No. 7\n812 Ward St., Nelson\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nDRASTIC Price Reductions\nlean. DRASTIC\nLARGEST STOCK\nTHE INTERIOR OF B.C.\nDrop In and Make Your Choice\n1953\nMonarch Monterey\nWas $3400.00\nNOW $3200\n1952\nHenry J Corsair\nWaa $1500.00\nNOW $1300\n1951\nVanguard\nWas $1100.00\nNOW $995\n1952\nFargo Pickup\nWas $1600.00\nNOW $1395'\n1953\nAustin A-70 Sedan\nWas $2200.00\nNOW $1900\n\u25a0\n1952\nStudebaker Sedan\nWas $2100.00\nNOW $1795\n1951\nStudebaker Sedan\nWaa $1800.00\n.    NOW' $1395\n1953\nFord Pickup\nWas $1700.00\nNOW $1495\nNew 1953\nFord Sedan\n.   Waa $2850.00\nNOW $2550\n1952\nA-40 Austin\nWas $1500.00\nNOW $1295\n.1951\nFord Sedan\nWaa $1500.00\nNOW $1395\n1951\nAustin Pickup\nWas $1000.00\nNOW $850\n100 LIFETIME GUARANTEED TIRES AT WHOLESALE PRICES!\nReuben Buerge; Motors Ltd.\n600 BLOCK VERNON ST. NELSON, B.C.\nAUSTIN SERVICE\nPHONE ]66\\\nAUSTIN SALES\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDOMESTIC ELECTRIC REFRIG-\nerator, $95; Drop Leaf Table, new\nbut marked, $15; Remington\nTypewriter, rebuilt, $75; 14-qt.\nPressure Cooker, like new, $19.95;\nNew Chrome Table, top chipped,\n$34.95; Portable Radio, $20. A few\nused doors and windows. J. P.\nMorgan Store, 301 Baker SL, Ph.\n47.\nNEW GOOSE FEATHERS FOR\nsale. No wing or tail. Olean body\nfeathers, $2 per pound. P. S. Gross,\nFlncher Creek, Alta.\nFOR SALE - NEW VON SCHRED-\ner rug deterger. Suitable for\nhotels or business. Box 303, Nelion\nDally News.\nFOR SALE - 12 FT. TRAILER,\ncash, terms or trade. V. M. Hoskins, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova Street,\nVancouver.\nBEDROOM SUITE, OAK, FULL\nsize Vanity Dresser; $35. Phone\n1394-X.\non gainaday (sub iron.\nvery good condition. Mrs. J. E.\nParker, South Slocan, B.C.\nMJCRONiC HEARING A\u00bbS-\n. Write P.O. Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\n} Wheel \"Trailer, hArdWOOB\nbox 6 by 4 ft. Phone 668-L.\nmn T    in i    >\"iw    \u00bbn iisiw\nLOS1 ANP FOUND\nLOST-ONE LADY'S WATCH IN\nthe vicinity of Silica St. Reward.\nPhone 647-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nC   W   WIDDoWsOf.  St  CO., AS\naayers 301 Josephine St.  Nelaon\nH. S   SLMBS   bdSSlAnd  SC\nAssayer Chemist. Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C   AFFLECK! M.E.LC'\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng < Civil)\n318 Gere St.. Nelson   Phone 1238\nft.\" rt '(MATES. STE No 'a. JM'\nBaker   St,   Nelson.   Phone   1118\nB.C, Lands Surveyor\nft V. SHAYUttt Pd BOX Mi.\nKimberley. Phone 54.\nB.C  Land Surveyor. Engineer.\n \u00ab\u25a0   Lijeiniinii   \t\nMACHINISTS\nBENNliTtS LIMITED\t\nMaehlne Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motoi rewind-\nIng   Phont 593. 334  Vernon St\nCLOTHIERS     ~~\nGKORGE EL'SeV,~REPRESENTA-\ntlve for Park Fletcher Made-to-\nMeasure Suits. Pants, Topcoats\nOvercoats, Slacks, etc. Write box\n12. Nelson News.\nB\nEACON'S\nETTER\nUYS\n1954 Meteors, Mercurys in Stock.\n1947 PONTIAC SEDAN\nHeater. Plus Tax\n$795\n1952 Ford Fordor     195Q Ford Fordor\n1951 Meteor Fordor 192,2B?\u00bbtt\n1946 MERCURY\nGood Rubber, Seat Covers, Heater.\n$695\nPlus Tax.\n1949 Ford Custom Fordor\n1949 Dodge-Fordor, Radio\n1948 Mercury Club Coupe, Rebuilt Engine\n1948 Chevrolet Fordor\nUSED MERCURY PICK-UPS, 48-52\nALL EXCELLENT CONDITION\nBe\nSafe\nBe\nSure\n1950 Austin\n$720\n. Plus Tax\nBuy\nin\nConfidence\nBeacon Motors\n701 8oker-Street\nMERCURY \u2014. LINCOLN \u2014 METEOR\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE*- IMMEDIATE. POS-\nsession long established country\ngeneral store In progressive community. Splendid opportunity for\ncommunity minded couple, Attractive .deal tor right party.- Apply Box 302, Creston, B.C.\nTAXI MSiNESS M* SAtE IM\nTrail.  Write Box No.  13, Dally\nNewa.\nf'i-..       CLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n\u25a0 f;\"r; '.:y.   \\:.\\ \u2022.,;\u25a0 ; (C^unusd):,.,'  ,\u2022' \u25a0.;\u25a0%:\n*mm1j'mm.m.m\u00bbmmmmB0*m* v. ...*.\n'*fif<emm-ti%tti\nINSTRUCTION\nLEARN TO WELD AND BE A\njourneyman and command top\npay. Night classes. Welding and\nConstruction School, 148 E. First\nAve., Vancouver, B. C Phone\nFAirmont 3101.\nJho. Went JtfitL. Gml dteiA.!\nJhe. Tim WjDJuvudtA. GLhsl KsViSL-l\nJh^Tbito JtfuL fijicAufiA. Ojul dim.!\n\u25a0  \" -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0f'f.Mf \"\".' ,'J:'\n608 OxVowfL Stmt\n-   TkLwtX. iHome. fit JttttbL\nIt's LUCKY SEVEN for the Next\nSEVEN DAYS at our USED CAR LOT\n1953 Ford Sedan  ......\n1953 Consul. Sedan  - \t\n1953 Pontldc 5-Pass. Coupe, Automatic, Radio\n1953 Plymouth Belvedere Coupe ,\t\n1953 Austin Sedan   .,   .     , '\u201e,\n1952 Austin Somerset Sedan .\n1952 Ford Sedon ...\n$2177\n1477\n2477\n2477\n1477\n1577\n1877\n1877\n2177\n   1577\n   977\n   677\n   777\n   777\n   377\n   277\n   777\n   777\n   677\n 1   377\n   377\n   477\n   477\n    177\n    77\n    177\n   137\nPHONE 1744 - 1745\nRemember One Quart of the Only 10-30\n. Oil R.P.M. Including Tax 77c\nLUCKY OLD 7 SAVES YOU $ $ $\nIf You Deal In Our\nTrUecL J\/tudL lSw^oim'\n1953 Fargo Pickup  _\n1952iFojd picfeifcjt> _\u2014__*\u2014j&L, \u2014*v\n1951 Mercury Pickup ____\n1952 Chevrolet Pickup  ;\t\n1952 Dodge Pickup ___\t\n1951 Fargo Pickup.\n1952 Pontiac Torp. Coach, Radio, Outvisor, etc.\n1952 Monarch Sedan   _\t\n1951 Meteor Coach ,\t\n1950 M.G. Midget :\t\n1950 Morris Minor __.\t\n1950 Austin Countryman\t\n1949 Ford Coach ', ___.\n1949 Austin Panel*\t\n1948 Flying Standard \t\n1948 Mercury Coach\t\n1947 Chevrolet Sedan \t\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan ...   \u201e' ; .\t\n1946 (-(udson Sedon     ..  1\n1941\/ Ford Sedan l.\t\ni]94), ;':.^pdge Sedan .,_ Ssu '\n19\u00bbj6'' Plymouth Sedan ;\t\n1937 Terraplane Coupe .\n1937 Buick Sedan\t\n1935 Oldsmobile Sedan\t\n1934 Plymouth Sedan  .\t\n1948 Mercury Pickup .\n1947 Chevrolet Panel\n$1777\n1577\n1577\n1577\n1377\n1277\n877\n677\nOne Quart of No. 10-30 R.P.M. Oil\/\nIncluding Tax 77c\n1952 Mercury 3-Ton Dump and Hoist $2277\n1949 Ford 3-Ton Cab and Chassis, New Motor _       777\nPHONE. 1744-1745\nSEVEN gallons of gas with each purchase\nPlus\nSPECIAL DEAL for all NO TRADE CUSTOMERS\nel Buerge Motors\nLimited\n608 VERNON ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nNrfeira lailg Urns\nClassified Advertising .Rates:\nItV par Una drat insertion and\nnon-conseoutlvo insertions.\nUa line par consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line tor 8 consecutive lnaer-\n\u25a0 ions.\n81.58 Use tor month (38 oonse-\neutive insertions)   Box numbers lie. extra  Covers any\nnumber ot Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS etc. - 'tie per line,\nfirst Insertion.. 18c per  Una\neach subsequent insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% a OR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSubscription Rates:\n(Net More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, par week.\nln advance SO\nBy carrier, per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month    I US\nThree mbntha       1.78\nSix months          WO\nOne year     18.00\nKail th Canada, outatda Nelaon\nOne month        _,._    8 1.00\nThree month!      178\nSix Moptha . m>      8.80\n,  One rear      _...     10.00\nREAD \/THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILV\nMACHINERY\nRAMP\nBody and Fender Works\nDistributors Con\nPhil Wood hydraulic holste and\nbodies for truck or trailer. 8\ntypea. 90 modela S to 40.tool\ncapacity Pumps, power take-\noffs, unlvorsals. eta\nPhona 198      888 Josephine St\nNelson. B.C\nFOR RENT - SHOVELS, BACK'\nhoes, dragline, log loader bulldozers, compressors, ate. Bayes\nEqulpt Co;, Cranbrook, phone 80.\nwTOOTSi reS RUBBER hrs\ntractors, cats, trucks, etc. Bayea\nEqulpt Co., Cranbrook, phone 80.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED  - CATERPILLAR  DI\ntractor equipped with bulldorrer\nand agricultural loader. Please\nstate condition, pile* and terms to\nBox 88 Nelson News.\n.\"'\u25a0 |V'. \u25a0..;;. vViyr.r.     r v\"T\\ r-r,:r   ,r~V:,,>M\u00ab\" >\\\\)$f.\\!,&$r^M\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 6,1954\u20149\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)   ,\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron; steel,- brass, copper,\nlead, ete. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron eV Metals Ltd., 380 Prior St,, Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Pacific 685T.:    '     ',:.\nWAinskr-yiHoW prs stand.\ning Cedar, or will contract making\nand skidding poles. Box 554, Casr\ntlegar,  \u2022\nTfe\nNEW YORK (AP) - Trading waa\nboosted along by buying ln railroads\nand oils, ,\nAmong Canadian stocks Distillers\nSeagram fell, Canadian Pacific eased and Dome Mines slipped.\nTORONTO (CP) - AH groups\nwere stronger in moderate trading\ntoward the close of session-\nPaper, utilities, foods, motors manufactures and financial Institutions\nwere stronger in Industrials.\nUraniums were slightly ahead.\nMONTREAL (CP) -i\u00bbpjk market prices continued to move upward ln moderate trading.\nMiscellaneous industrials, beverages, papers, senior metals; senior\noils and steels edged forward while\nutilities, carriers and banks were\nmixed.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The general tone remained satisfactory'but\nweekend considerations kept business small and selective.\nIndustrials were quiet with the\nmajority of movements ln tune with\ncompany statements.  ...\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 The liveitoek\nmarket was closing fully steady on\nlight offeringa of 390 cattle and\ncalves today.\nButcher steers and heifers were\nsteady; cows and bulls firm; stocker end feeder .steers .steady; .Veal\ncalvea steady to strong. .\nHogs at $34.25, gained 31 cents\nThursday; sows steady at $21.25-\n21.80; good lambs fell SO cents at\n18.50.\nGood to near-choice butcher\nsteers 18.80-17.75! common to medium 12-16.25; good to choice butcher\nheifers 15-17^.common to medium\n10-14.75; good'cowjlO.SO-llJO; common to' medium 0-10.25; canners\nand cutters 5-8.50; good bulls 12-13;\ncommon to medium 10-11.50; good\nstocker and feeder steers 14-16.80;\ncommon to medium 10-13.75; good\nto choice veal calves 31-35; common\nto medium 12-30.\nWinnipeg Grain\ni WINNIPEG  (AP)  - Winnipeg\ngrain cash, oricea:   ,;       ,.   :.'.-.',\u201e\nOats; No. Heed 87*.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 88V4.\nPHONI  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nClose Gen. Motors\nPlants in India !\nNEW DELHI (AP) - American-\nowned General Motors Corp., Ii).\nrdia'a largest automotive plant;jami'\nnounced Friday lt la closing Ma^sh\n31 aa .a result of Indian government restrictions on imports needed\nfor ita assembljiJlrtfle; '\u25a0\u2022\"\n,   The restrictions had been ordei'- I\nad la an effort to create-a domdstla\nauto manufacturing industry.       H\nFord Motor Co., of Canada, which\noperates the second lorgost plant, Is\nexpected, to announce similar action\nshortly. 'Indian-'government sources\naaid Ford of Canada la expected to\ndispose of ita holdings.\nQuebec Premiere\nPleases Suter\nMONTREAL (CP) t Grahamgn-r\nter, regional adjudicator of the Dominion Drama, Festival greeted the\npremiere of a new French CanadtB\nfarce aa \"a light, charming expeljl\nment\" in which. Montreal author\nClaude Jasmin \"had caught the sob-\ntet of a very difficult atyle.\"     f, ,\";\nMr. Suter was judging two plays\npresented on the second night of\nthe. five-day western Quebec regional competitions. The plays were\n\"A Sleep of Prisoners;\" by Christopher Fry, presented by The Every,\nman Players, and Jasmin's \"La Nou-1\nvelle Gigue\" produced by lie The- I\natre Essal of Montreal.\nMr. Suter characterized.The Ev- I\neryman production of \"A WeejrtsH\nPrisoners\" as a performance \"If i\nvery ilgh order.'\" r       .',\nVancouver Stacks\n: , (Closing Prices)\nMINES\n\u25a0Beaver Lodge   ..\nBralorne _ -\t\n'Estella .\nHighland .Bell ....\nPac Eastern' Gold\nPioneer Goi'd.'.\t\nQuatsino \u201e....!\t\nSheep Creek .'...._:\nSilvdr Rldge :\u2022\u201e.\nSilver Standard ...\nUtica :..\nVananda \t\nVan Roi\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Tungsten\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian\t\nA P Consolidated ....\nCanadian Anaconda\nHome    .-..\t\nMercury \t\nNational Peto .\nOkalta Com .\nPacific Pete\t\nRoyalite  ..._..\nVanalta j.\nVulcan\t\nINDUSTRIALS)\nCapital Estatea ..:...,   38.71\n(M '' '.\"M ;    > '..\u25a0 \"',\t\nMetal Prices\nNEW YORK (CP) - Spot priceK\nLead, N. Y.,.12M; Zinc, East St.\nLouis 9H; tin, N. Y\u201e 87K,        g&\ntf AMEd-TWo TIMBERS U\"xlSu\nxSO* or 10\"xl2\"xS0\\ new or uaed,\n. must be sound. Reply Box 62,\nRossland. \u25a0   \u2022\nCiirtewtas been rung aver\u00a3 evening tor 500 years in the town of\nPresteigne, Wales.\nJOURNEYMAN MACHINISTS fer C. M. .4 8. Co., Kimberley.\nApplicants must ba under 40 yeara ef age and physically\n.    - fit 40-43 hour week. $1.88 per hour. Must be able to do\nheavy plant 'repair and machine ahep works\nApply to;\nPersonnel Division,\nThe C. M. 4 8. Co. of Cahada Ltd.,\nKimberley, B.C. (\nfll MIND...\nYOUlXCAICJi\nTHE BEST\nBARGAINS\nON OUR\nUSED  . CAR\nLOT\/\nBear In Mind That Our Constant Policy U to Make Sum\nLasting Customer Satisfaction   '\n1948 Chryder Sedan\nCustom Radio. A-l Shape.\n1941 DeSoto Sedan\n'    Fluid-Drive.\n$488\n1949 DeSoto Sedan\nOutstanding 2-Tone.\nRadio, Air Conditioner.\n1949 Dodge 4-Dr. Sedan\n' Scotia Green.\nIn very good shape,\n19S1 Dodge Sedan\nNew Motor. Shiny Blue.\nGuaranteed.\n1947 Ford Sedan\n4-D0or. Excellent Condition.\nOne Owner. Low Mileage.\n1948 Hlllman Sedan\nNew Paint\n1946 Mercury 4-Dr. Sedan\nwne\n1947 Mercury 4-Dr Sedan\n\u2022976\n1947 Oldsmobile Sedan\nHydramatic. Heater.\n1939 Plymouth Sedan\nN(\n1950 Plymouth Sedan    ,J\nSurf Blue. Beautiful Shape.\" ;\n1951 Plymouth 4-Dr.        ,\nRadio. Two-Tone.        U\n1951 Plymouth Club Coup*'\nTop Shape. .)\nUSED TRUCKS     M\n1949 6.M.C. Vi-Ton\nNioa Shape.\n1941 Chevrolet Piek-Up\nNew. Paint.\n1952 Fargo Light DeKven\/,\n10,000 MUes. , j\n1947 Fargo Ixpreet\n. Good Condition.\n1948 Fqrgo Half-Ton\nCole*; Green. ^\n1950 Fargo'Express\n%-Tin';'n.0pp Miles. A-J.\n1940 Ford Pick-Up\nGood Mechanical Shape. -\n1946 Ford Dump \"\nWith or Without MoM.\n1910 Austin Sedan\nGood Condition.\n1952 Austin Countryman\n\u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0  A-t.\"   '\n'ew Engine.\n1948 Plymouth Coach\nMaroon. One Owner.\n'        ln good condition.\n1949 Plymouth Sedan\nPrice 91329\nDROP IN FOR A DEMONSTRATION\n.       Other Bargains! -\n1947 Plymouth Sedan\n...    One Owner.\n1948 Dodge 2-D*. SedW\nMoss Green,\nL\nir.,r-^,..    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .   '\u25a0     \u25a0       '   '    \u25a0      '\u25a0yfr\n'mm\n :A;\nmmmm\nwm\nksa\nTOh^NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 6,19S4\n.<\u25a0.*'\nI       THE CURTAIN ROLLS DOWN ON OUR'\nHalf-Price Sale\n25c.NYAL.MILK OF MAGNESIA TOOTHPASTE\n'    2F0R2BCV    '\u25a0'\n50c MASSO TOOTH BRUSHES\n2 FOR 25*\n50c NYAL MILK OF MAGNESIA TOOTHPASTE\n2 FOR so*\n29e HUTAX TOOTHPASTE      ,\n2 FOR 29tV\n$1.50 IARBARA GOULD FACE POWDER\n2 FOR $1.50\n75c dagelle Makeup\n2 FOR 78*\n85c LIQUID DEODORANT\n2 FOR 85*\n55c MASSAGE CREAM   2 FOR 88*\n$2.75 BOOKS OF FICTION 2 FOR $2.78\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\n?\"A\"tomplete line of spinning rods\nland reels at JACK BOYCE'S.\nL.A, to F.O.E. Spring Tea, May 1st.\ni  Pork  delivered to your locker,\n140 lbs, dressed. 38c per lb. Phone\n1323-Y.\nFLO-ON\nRubberset Nylon Brushes.\nI    I    BURNS LUMBER COMPANY\n\u2022 FOR EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone B. J, Kelly. 378-R-3.\n'YOUR MIMEOGRAPH 8ERVICE\n,   Tuberous Begonias, Gloxinia and\nAmaryllis Bulbs now in.\n\u25a0COVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n' Dont forget the Hi-Lo Coffee\n(Party in St. Paul's Church Hall,\nThursday, March 18, 10 to 13.\n'-..Drapery  Material,  large  assortment. Reg. $3.08, now $2.49.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nNOTICE\nPhone 740-X for appointments at\nHelen's Beauty Parlor, 815 2nd St.\nEnquire about our summer tbe\nretreading now.\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\nYOUR   NEW   PULLER   BRUSH\n.representative, is Don E. Sergent,\nI     308 Morgan St., Phone 1335.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow it away. Prompt watch work,\nguaranteed, at reasonable prices.\nLUMBER   MEN'S  APRONS\nin two sizes at\nWADE'S Shoe A Leather Goods\n; For your Tupperware phone Mrs.\nJ. Lewis, 806-Y, your dealer for\nNelson.\nReserve March 27th for Jobs\n' ughters Tea and Bake Sale,\nI.O.O.F. Hall.\nMotors, Radiators, steam-cleaned.\n. High Pressure Jenny Service.\nSHQRTY'S Repair 8hop, 714 Baker\ni :\t\nRummage sale to be held Saturday March Oth, 1:30 p.m. at Salvation'Army.\nYmir\nDancing\n'    EVERY\nSaturday\n\u25a0 ' MICKEY McEWEN\nAND HIS\n\u2666'MELODY MAKERS\"\nCome and Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir\nSi     DANCING 9 TO 1\nADMISSION   75e\nStudents Must Present Cards\nGeneral\nRepairs\ntor\nRadios\nand\nCommercial\n:   Refrigeration\nWELLS\nService Shop\nNelson, B.C.\nTry an ice cream sandwich at\nWait's News Depot.\nRemember Falrview C.W.L. Bake\nSale today, 2\u20145 p.m. at Mc & Mc.\nDon't forget St. Patrick's Dance\nMarch 17, Cathedral Hall.\nGifts of Jewellery for everyone\nCUTLERS JEWELLERY, 611. Baker\nField Officer J. R. Woods of\nD.V.A. at Nelson Legion Saturday,\nMarch 13. Phone 546 for appointment.\nLadies' all-seisan Coata, attractive\ncheck, sizes 12 to 20r-$22.50. Navy\nTrench Coats, 12 to 20\u2014$16.50.\nEBERLE'S JUNIOR SHOP\nPLAN TO SAVE\nInvestors' Syndicate of Canada Ltd.\nJan S. M. Harts\nR.R. 1 \u2014 Phone 289-X-3 \u2014 Nelson\nSATURDAY 8PECIAL\nPEANUT  BRITTLE\u201460c PER  LB.\nGRAY'S CHOCOLATES\n884 JOSEPHINE ST., PHONE 1347\nWe may be a little early but for\nthose who start their seeds indoors,\nwe have a full stock of Steele Briggs\nSeeds. - HIPPERSON'S.\nASSORTED   ENGLISH   BONE\nCHINA    CUPS   AND   SAUCERS.'\n8PECIAL 79c\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nWanted\u2014Cotton Rags, must be\nclean and of good size. No wool\naccepted. Will Pay 12c per Ib. Nelson Dally News.\nPrinted \"Wondersllk.\" Beautiful\ndesigns for your summer wear.\n44-irtch. $1.59 yard.\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOODS\nBULBS\nTuberous    Begonias.    Gloxinias,\nAmaryllis and Baby Orchids, Just\narrived.\nMAC'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nMARCH 13\nP.T.A. Shamrock Tea, Silver Room\nHume Hotel. Proceeds to Bursary\nFund. Tickets from any P.T.A. member, 35c.\nSCRATCH PAD8 - AN EVERYDAY NEED FOR BUSINE88 AND\nPROFESSIONAL MEN. GOOD\nCL.EAN STOCK; 40e PER LB. -\nNEL80N DAILY: NEWS, PRINTING  DEPT., PHONE  144.\nJust arrived. New Trunks, $24.95\nand up. Also 8 used rengettes, and\n5 used, washing machines.\nWe buy and sell new and used,\nfurniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n413 Hall Street.\nGive your floors new life and\nsparkle with Johnson's Penetrating\nFloor Cleaner. It quickly and thoroughly removes old wax and dirt.\nEspecially recommended for linoleum and tile. Available in quarts\nand gallons. - HIPPERSON'S.\nMEDICINE CABINETS\n.Metal   medicine    cabinets   with\ngleaming plate  glass* mirrors and\nsparkling crystal glass shelves, Four\ndifferent styles to choose from at\nT. H. WATER8 A CO. LTD.'\nPhone 166 \u2014 101 Hall 8t. \u2014 Nelson\nIN MEMORIUM\nNELSON\u2014In loving memory of a\ndear husband and father, Erik Nelson, who passed away March 6,1953.\nSweet memories will linger forever\nTime cannot change them it's true.\nYears that may come cannot sever,\nOur loving memories of you.\n\u2014Sadly missed by wife Anna,\nGeorge, Gerry and Donnie.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prloes) \u2022\nMINES ,.\nAkaitcho ,......'.......\u201e :...      .88\nAnglo Huronlan     13.00\nAumaque , ,       .22\nAunor    f. .'.     2.09\nBase Metals       .14\nBevcoUrt 22\nBoymar Gold i 17H\nBralorne    :   3.50\nBroulan    .\u25a0\u201e..<     2.09\nCamjjb'ell R L     8.00\nChlmo O ..is'.     1.23\nCons'Mining <i Smelting ....   2215\nConwest         3.80\nCons Discovery      1.92\nDetta R t ,.; 14\nDome    16.35\nDonalda  , 55\nDuvay  .' 18\nEast Malartic     2.35\nElder Gold 52\nEureka  '....'.......,.      .72\nFalconbrldge      14.85\nFrobisher :     4.75\nGojdcrest  16\nGolden ManitSu      1.35\nHardro'ck' 16H\nHollinger     13.35\nHudson Bay     40.00\nInspiration ..  - 2.19\nInt Nickel     36.00\nJoliet Quebec  41\nKerr Addison    17.25\nKirk Townslte ; 17\nLabrador          8.20\nLake Dufault -      .85\nLakeshore  .-.     5.50\nLake Wasa  23\nLexindin 14\nLittle Long Lac ....: 80\nLynx    11\nMacassa      1.65\nMacDonald        . .50\nMadsen R L       1.75\nMcKenzie R L 35\nMcMarmac 10\nMcWatters    17\nNew Alger  .% 10\nNew Bidlamaque  57\nNew Lund   18\nNew Larder U       1.06\nNew Mylamaque  16\nNoranda       62.50\nNormetals      2,.40\nO'Brien  62\nOsisko  .' r..._       .49\nPaymaster  39\nPickle Crop      1.03\nPlacer Devel     24.25\nPreston E D     .2.85\nQuebec Man -.      .60\nRadiore    \u2014 - 54\nRoche L L  -       .16\nSan Antonio      1.60\nSherritt Gordon  _    3.95\nSigma M      5.60\nSUvermiller      1.07\nSlscoe  38W\nStadacona  - a- v.      .31\nSteep Rock   -    7.30\nSudbury Cont  18tt\nTeck Hughes      2.20.\nTombill    42\nTrans Cont Res        .34\nUnited Keno      5.90\nUpper  Canada       1.25\nVentures   \u25a0.\u2014    16.25\nViolamac      1.75\nWaite Amulet     9.45\nOILS\nAnglo Can      5.25\nB A Oil       21.25\nCalgary A: Edmonton     10.78\nCdn Atlantic   .  '   5.00\nCentral Leduc      2.10\nCentral Explorers      8.15-\nChemlcal Research  -    1.89\nDeealta  71\nDel Rio      1.90\nFederated Pete     5.05\nHIghwood Sr 11\nHome      9-20\nImperial OU  _    33.33\nIntenPete    21.25\nKroy       1.85\nMacDougal Segur Ex 13%\nMid Cont  46\nNat Pete     1-60\nOkalta      180\nRoyalite    12.25\nUnited Oils           1-03\nINDU8TRIAL8\nAbitlbi     18M>\nAlgoma Steel     45\nAluminum    50%\nAtlas St    15\nBathurst Power  42%\nBell Telephone     41%\nBrazilian      7%\nB C Electric 4s  -    82%\nB 2 Electric 4%s     96V4\nB C Forest      6\nB C Pakers A     15\nB C Power A  .*,....   19%\nBuilding Products     36\"\nBurns B     45\nCan Cement  _    90V4\nCan Malting    57\nCan Packers B     32%\nCanadian Breweries     22%\nCanadian Celanese     22%\nCan Oil     16%\nCockshutt      8\nCons Mining \u25a0& Smelting    22%\nCons Paper    44\nDis Seagram     28%\nDom Foundries    14%\nDom Steel & Coal B    '9%\nDom Stores    20\nDom Tar Si Chemical      8\nDom Textiles    ....     7%\nDom Magnesium ..'.    13%\nEddy Paper    25\nFleet Air  150\nFord A     86%\nGatineau     22%\nGatineau 5 per cent pfd   106\nGoodyear  HI\nGreat Lakes     22%\nGypsum Lime    36\nImperial Oil     33%\nImp Tobacco      9%\nInt Nickel     38\nInt Pete      :\u2022\u2022   21%\nLake of Woods     31\nLaura Secord     14%\nLoblaw A       41\nMcColl Frontenac -    28%\nMont Loco    16V<\nMoore Corp  -    25%\nNat Steel Car    25%\nSicks Brew     24%\nSimpsons A     15%\nSteel of Canada _    29%\nStandard Paving    25%\nUnion Gas of Can .'\u25a0\u25a0   36\nWeston George  -    27\nWinnipeg Gas        8H\nIN  MEMORIUM\nNELSON, ERIC\u2014In loving memory   of   Dad,   who   passed   away\nMarch 8, 1953.\nHis memory is as dear today,\nAs in> the hour he passed away.\nWe loved you, but God loved you\nbeat,\nSleep on, dear daddy and take your\nrest.\n\u2014Ever  remembered   by  daughter\nEvelyn and Jack'.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n(Continued)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nWILKS\u2014Committal services for\nthe late Winnie Mae Wilts will be\nheld from the Thompson Funeral\nHome Monday at 1 p.m. to the Nelson Memorial Park Cemetery. Rev.\nQ. W. Payne will officiate.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nNelson's newest  Boy\nCHARTER NIGHT of Nelson's newest Boy\nScout group, the First Baptist Church Fourth\nNelson Group, wai attended by Nelson districts\nleaders. Admiring'new oharter, from left, are\nGeorge Fuell, new scoutmaster; Frank Alklne, cub\nmaster; W. M. Vance, group committee member;\nJ. J. McEwen, district association president; District Commissioner Den Ure, Rev. Kutch Imayoshi, assistant cubmaster, and E. K. Evans, assistant'\ncommissioner.\u2014Dally News photo,.\nCORRECT MANNER In which to tie kerchief\nis pondered by newly Invested Cubs of Flrat Bap-\ntlat Church Fourth Nelion Boy Scout Group. From\nleft, the boyi are John Walkley, Kenneth Morley,\nGarry Nicholli, Steven Hoikln, David Robinson,\nEd  Hollington  and  Douglas  Mcintosh,\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n(Pacific Standard Time\nSATURDAY,\n7:0O-News\n7:05\u2014Bob's Inn\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Bob's Inn\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15 Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Bob's Inn\n9:00\u2014Western Serenade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30-Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Stu Davis\n10:00\u2014Serenade\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Old fcbuntry Sporta\n3:30\u2014Sports College\nMARCH 6, 1954\n3:45\u2014Armdale Chorus\n4:00\u2014Now 1 Ask You\n4:30\u2014Curtain Melodies\n5:00\u2014Report from Pari. Hill\n5:05\u2014Pacific News\n5:15\u2014All Aboard for Adventure\n5:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014NHL Hockey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music    -\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Music for Dancing\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Saturday Special\n9:30\u2014The Music Box\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Dance Time\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\nI2:00-NEWS Night Cap\nSUNDAY, MARCH 7, 1954\n8:00\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n8:30\u2014This Is My Story\n9:00\u2014Overseas News\n9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardener\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014Way of the Spirit\n11:00\u2014Trinity Church Service\n12:00\u2014N. V. Philharmonic\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarns\n2:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:12\u2014Weather\n3:15-tThe Way of a Parent\n3:30\u2014The People's Church\n3:45\u2014Musicale\n4:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n4:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n5:00\u2014Sunday Choral\n5:30\u2014Sunday Serenadj\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Stage '54\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Questing Time\n8:00\u2014Sunday Night Show\n9:00\u2014Ford Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Seeing Society\n10:b0\u2014Serenade\n1I:00-\"NEWS\" Night Cap\nCBC  PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time\nSUNDAY,\n8:00\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n8.30\u2014Sunday Morning Recital\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Question Box\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n|0:0O\u2014B.C. Gardner\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014 Way of the Spirit\nIl:00r-News \u25a0*\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n11:30\u2014Religious Period     ' \u2022... i\n12:00\u2014N'. Y. Symphony , o\n1:80\u2014Critically Speaking'\n2:00\u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarns\n2:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05- -Av   the Weatherman\n3:12\u2014Weather Forecast ,\nOr-\nMARCH7, 1954 '\n3:15\u2014The Way of a Parent\n3:30\u2014Vancouver   Symphony\nchestra.\n4:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n5:00\u2014Sunday Chorale\n5:30\u2014Chamber Music\n6:00-i-Stage 54\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Little Symphony Orchestra\nBiOO\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n9:00\u2014Serenade\nStfO-^Vesper Hour\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Seeing Society\n10:30\u2014Australian  Royal  Tour\nMONDAY, MARCH 8, 1954\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast '\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical .Minutes\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\nSiOO-r-News\n6:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014BreuUjst Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning  Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kato Altken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten oj the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canadr Matinee\n8:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n8:45-:-B.C Roundup\n4:15\u2014Maxlne Ware stags.\n4:30\u2014The Thuhderblrd Curse\n5:00\u2014TIN on the Record\n8:18\u2014International Commentary\n5:20-News   ,\n6:3<MUwhide\n8:85\u2014Have You Heard?\n8:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre\n7.00\u2014News\n7 J5- -News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte'\n8:00\u2014Presenting\n8:15\u2014CBC Symphony Orch.\n9:00\u2014Nat. Farm Radio Forum\n9:30\u2014Cafe Continental.\n10:(X>7-New8 ti\n10:15\u2014Provincial. Affiira.\n10:30- Bob McMullin Show\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 An official portrait of Prime Minister\nRobert G. Menzies, hanging in Parliament House, was found today\nslashed shoulder to shoulder. The\nslashing was attributed to a- political fanatic. It waa discovered by\nah attendant an hour after several\nparties ol tourists had been conducted through the building.\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the    -. t..\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 148\nFor a Better Flavor and-\nTastier   Home-Made   Bread  Try\nEllison's U-Boke Bread Mix\nFull directions on every package.\nTake a Package Home Today ar\nPhone 238 ?\nELLISON   MILLING\n4 ELEVATOR CO, LTD.\nJhsL MqhwctyA.\nThe No. 3 Southern Trans-Provincial highway, Hope-Crowsnest\u2014\nopen, Hope-Princeton\u2014good condition, icy on summit,' sanding, carry\nchains, watch for falling rocks.\nPrinceton-Osoyoos \u2014 good, Osoyoos\nto Cascade rough sections for 7\nmiles between Eholt and Grand\nForks. Cascade-Rossland \u2014 compact\nsnow with few bare sections, carry\nchains. Rossland-Trail-Castlegar\u2014\nbare. Castlegar-Nelson-Balfour \u2014\nBare, frost heaving. Kootenay Bay\nCreston-Goatfell\u2014bare. Goatfell-\nCranbrook-Fernie - Crowsnest \u2014\nMostly bare, sanding where necessary.\nNo. 3 A Trail-Salmo\u2014bare, frost\nheaving. ,\nNo. 97\u2014Rossland-Paterson\u2014bare.\nCreston-Porthill\u2014bare.\nNo. 6\u2014Ijelway-Nelson-South Slocan\u2014bare, frost heaving. South Slo-\ncan-Nakusp*Needles\u2014fair to good,\nsome rough sections, bare lower levels, icy; higher levels, frost heaving. Needles-Monashee-yernon \u2014\ngood, rough lower levels.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Gol-\nden\u2014blasting operations at Moyie\nat 1 p.m.\u2014one hour delay expected.\nBanff-Windermere\u2014Mostly bare,\nicy sections, sanding.\nNelson-Kaslo \u2014 Rough sections.\nKaslo-New Denver\u2014good and narrow.\nKaslo-Lardeau\u2014Closed at Schroe-\nder Creek due to blasting operations.\nWASHINGTON:\nSnoqualmle Pass\u2014Clear, road icy\nin places from one mile west ol\nSummit to one mile east, 128 Inches\nold snow in ski area. Temperature\n18.\nStevens Pass: Clear, \u00abnow and ice\non road in places from six miles\nEast of Summit to five miles West,\n158 inches old snow ln ski area.\nTemperature 20.\nDaughter of Father\nOf Confederation\nHurt In Accident\nVICTORIA ' (CP) \u2014 Miss. Lena\nGait, 90, daughter of Sir Alexander Tilloch Gait, one of Canada's\nfathers of Confederation, was in\ncritical condition here Thursday\nfollowing a traffic accident. v\nMiss Gait was a passenger in a\ncar driven by her sister Muriel, who\nwas unhurt. Lena suffered \"shock,\nfractures and bruises,\" hospital officials' said.\nThree passengers in the other car,\na taxi, were also hurt, none of them\nseriously. One of them,. Mrs. E.\nHerjck of Saskatoon, suffered back\ninjuries.\nThe Gait sisters have lived here\nfor many years. Their father was\nfinance minister ih the Cartier-Mac-\nDonald government ln 1858.\nw\nIGINT0N\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C.  TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nHave tha Jab Dona Right\nVIC CRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\n:  RECORING *\u00bb\nJim's Radiator Shop\n818 FRONT ST-:   ;PHONB<\u00ab\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAlNlNO\nMedio*) Alia Building\nSuite 206 Phona 141\n12 From District\nAt Community\nRecreations Meet\nWest Kootenay had a representation of 12 at the provincial conference of Regional Recreational Consultants, Directors and Recreation\nCommission Representatives held\nIn Victoria February 22 to 28. The\nconference was sponsored by the\nCommunity Programs branch ot the\nDepartment of Education, and was\nthe first ot its kind to be held in\nBritish Columbia on the broad\nfield of recreation.\nThe meeting gave general leader;\nship training, The result' of the\nmeeting will probably be in the\nrepresentatives reporting \"back to\ntheir communities and the communities in turn forming Recreation Commissions. Where these are\nalready formed the . Information\ngained can be used in expanding\ntheir programs.\n\u2022 The, vast variety of things recreational that a community can do\nwere pointed out and it was also\nemphasized that the regional consultant for the Community Programs branch ls the contact to make\nregarding most, of these activities,\nAlso emphaslzeoVwas the fact that\na community muStJbulld slowly and\nwell in recreational programs and\nnot too, big a project at one time.\nDistrict representatives were: A.\nThiessen, regional consultant for\nthe West Kootenay area; Dmitri Gol-\noubef, Trail athletic director; Ed\nKelter, Nelson recreational director;\nand these representatives of communities: P. A. Ritchie, Procter; E.\nHulme, Wynndel; T. M. Ricketts,\nCreston; Mrs. Phillis Tobiasen,\nCrescent Valley; Henry Godderis,\nRossland; Karl Monk, Fruitvale and\nDavid Campbell, Castlegar. Representing the Orthodox Doukhobor\ncommunities were Peter Arlshen-\nkoff and Alex Pereverzoff.\nProminent speakers at the-meeting Included: H. L. Campbell, deputy minister and superintendent of\neducation; Joseph Lewis, recreational instructor for the blind; Hon.\nR. W. Bonner, minister of education; and Professor Robert Osborne,\nhead of Physical Education School,\nUniversity of British Columbia.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n878 Baker St Phona 236\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n878 Baker Street\nSLACK\nSPECIAL\n$10.50 pr\nA NEW SELECTION\nOF GABARDINE\nIN WHIPCORD WEAVE\n'\u2022 The Wrinkles Hang\nOut\n\u2022 Repels Water\n\u2022 Moth-'Proof       .,\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S StORE\nPHONE 31\nThieves Abandon\nLoaded Truck\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)\u2014Coffee and cigarets valued at $12,000\nwere abandoned by thieves here after police broke Into the W. H, Mal-Y.pt\nkin   warehouse   while   they  were   *\nloading a stolen truck with the loot,\nThree men escaped on foot after'\ntwo constables fired five warning\nshots. ' \u2022:\nA big motor transport, apparently   stolen   for   the  occasion,   wai'\"\nfouno) half full of the produce. Police said that If the truck had been -\nloaded the loot would have totalled\n$25,000.   \u2022\nPolice broke into the warehouse\nwhen they noticed most of the building's lights had been turned on.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service*\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n818 Kootenay St        Phone 881 \/\nLEAVE YOUR\nPRESCRIPTION\nIn Our Care\nPrompt, Accurate Dispensing\nModerate Charges\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\nBOX 480\nPHONE SS*\nBARGAINS\n.... . tf\nPick-of-The-Market\nThe Finest Selection of\nGood Used Cars in the Kootenays\nPRICED RIGHT\n1953 PACKARD DELUXE SEDAN\nModel 300. Hydramatlc Drive, Custom Radio,\nCustom Air Conditioning Unit. Only 4000 Miles   .\nPRICED TO CLEAR\n1953 FORD CUSTOMLINE SEDAN\nCustom    oir    conditioner,    two-tone^ upholstery,\nbeautiful maroon.\nOnly 6000 easy miles.\t\n\u20222250\n1952 CHEVROLET SPECIAL SEDAN\n'Air conditioner, seat covers, low 'l\"77\"?\nmileage, one owner. Real value, only _     I I  S J\n1948 INTERNATIONAL     \"\"\"\n. Vi TON PICKUP\nGood motor, good rubber, hedter,           'fC\"71\nanti-freeze, J954 licence. ... W'3\nToday's 5** \u2022\u2022\u2022Special\n1936 Dodge 4-Door Sedan\nGood Motor, Good Rubber, 1954-Licence,       <** 1 fifi\nHeater. Ready-to-go. Come early       IUU\nSEE US BEFORE DEALING\nPhones 121 -122\nCome ond Do Business With Ut on Baker\nWiginton Motors\nLTD. <\n281 Baktr Street       Limited       231 Baker Street\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK \u2014 G.M.C. TRUCKS\nListen to Wiginton Motors Supper Hour 8:30 p.m, to 6:45 p.m.,\n\u25a0 Every Day, Monday to Saturday\n:.' V: \u2022,:\u2022':\u2022\nj.. ..yt-yy.\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_03_06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427654","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"}]}}