{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427701":{"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":"1954-12-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427701\/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":" AP?to\nIhurchill Apologizes\nthat the telegram had not been\ntraced in official wartime records\n\"though a search to the utmost extent has been made and is still\ncontinuing.\" ,\n\"In those days of victory the\nthought which filled my mind was\nthat all the efforts we had made\nto free Europe from a totalitarian\nregime of the West might go for\nnaught if we allowed so much of\nEurope to fall into the hands of a\ntotalitarian regime from the East.\"\nSays He Might Have Been Mistaken\nBut Defends Spirit of Telegram\nBy WALTER DAVIS\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Prime Minister Churchill said\nedrtesday his controversial wartime telegram ordering\na\"t Nazi arms be stacked for possible German use against\ne Russians, may never have been sent\u2014but, he vigorously\nfended the spirit and aim of the telegram, whether it\nis sent or not.\nDie prime minister told a startled\niuse of Commons that he might\nve been mistaken when he told\npolitical,gathering last week of\nmessage he had sent to Field\nirshal  Viscount  Montgomery   in\nspring of 1945. He apologized\n; the possible error, then defend-\nhis reasons for considering using\n>nnan troops against the Russians\nlile the Second World War was\nLI in progress.\nHe declared that all the accomplishments of the war might have\njone for naijght If much of Eur-\n>pe had fallen In 1945 to \"a totalitarian regime from the east.\"\n\"The attitude of our Russian\nlilies at that time gave ample\njround for this fear,\" he told the\nHouse.\nHis statement on the possible re-\nuing of arms to the Germans\nis criticized Wednesday as \"most\nfortunate and inopportune\" by\nnanuel Shinwell, former Labor\nfence minister.\nChurchill told the House that per-\nps the telegram text was actually\n[patched and acknowledged that\nhad been wrong to inject the\nntroversial statement into what\nis purely a political speech of\nj constituents at Woodford, near\nndon.\nthe message to Montgomery gave\niers that  German  arms should\ncollected.'carefully and stacked\n5 they could easily be issued again\nthe German soldiers with whom\ni should have to work if the\nviet advance' continued,\" acoord-\n! to Churchill.\nMontgomery, on a visit to New\nrk, told reporters last-week he\ntailed having received the tele-\n_m.\n_PERS CRITICIZE\nJifluential British papers, includ-\n. The Times of London and the\ninchester Guardian, immediately\nticized the disclosure'for imply-\n;, at *a time when German tenement is still ^ delicate issue,\nit Britain might have joined with\ni Nazis to fight her ally. The\neech was seized upon by .the\nviet Communist party newspaper\navda and other Iron Curtain\nlirnals as \"proof, of Western war-\nihgering.\"\n3hurchill   admitted    Wednesday\nFloods Recede\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Flood waters receded in many parts of Britain Wednesday as bright sunshine\ndisplaced the heavy rain and fierce\ngales of the last few days.\nOnly exceptions to the general\nimprovement were in western England and the countries bordering\nLondon.\nRoads were still under water in\n23 counties or made impassable by\nuprooted trees. Rail and phone services were cut in some places but\ngenerally the waters were going\ndown.\nAlong the upper reaches of The\nThames, however, the water \"was\nstill rising vand spreading over a\nwide area. Eton, small town on the\nbanks of The Thames opposite\nWindsor and the site of the famous\nboys school,, was surrounded by\nwater. At Cookham in Berkshire a\nnumber of families had to be evacuated frpm their trailers.\nThe River Severn in, the west\ncountry also continued to rise and\nabout 100 families in four towns\nin Gloucestershire were evacuated.\nU.S. Pact Is\n\"Purely Defensive\"\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The United States has assured Britain that\nher mutual security pact with Nationalist China, announced Wednesday, is \"purely defensive,\" a foreign\noffice spokesman said Wednesday\nnight\nCommenting on the treaty which\nguarantees American protection- off\nFormosa and the Pescadores, the\nforeign office spokesman emphasized Britain's interests in ending\nthe fighting in the area.\nAight Blockade China To\nhote^ct Citizens1 Rights\n\\ By WARREN ROGERS, JR.\nWASHINGTON (AP)-State Sec-\n;ary Dulles said Wednesday the\nlited States might blockade Red\n_ina if peaceful means fail to pro-\nit'the rights of citizens like the\nAmericans jailed by Peiping on\n7 charges. He said he was confi-\nnt, but not certain, that peaceful\n.ans would be sufficient.\nDulles made the statement during\n>ress Conference which he opened\nannouncing \u25a0 agreement with\n.tionalist China on a mutual de-\nice treaty pledging the United\nites t'p retaliate, probably against\ni Communist held China mdin-\nld, if the Reds attack the Nation-\nst'stronghold of Formosa,\nrhe treaty, Dulles said, would be\nit is \"another link ln the system\nof collective security\" against Communist aggression in the western\nPacific.\nDulles' remarks about blockading\nRed China came when reporters\nsought clarification of his statements in a speech Monday night\nat Chicago. The secretary said then\nthe United States would \"exhaust\npeaceful means of sustaining our\ninternational rights and those of\nour citizens.\" He ruled out for the\npresent any blockade of Red China\nsuch as Senate Republican leader\nWilliam Knowland of California has\ncalled for.\nWAR ACTION\nDulles said that would be a \"war\naction\" and the White House issued\na statement Tuesday agreeing with\nhim. '\nKnowland, however, stuck to his\nguns. He said he had a difference\nof opinion and remained unconvinced measures short of a blockade\nwould win relief for the 13 Americans.\nSenator Joseph McCarthy (Rep.-\nWis.) Wednesday declared himself\n\"in complete sympathy\" with\nKnowland's blockade proposal. Senator William Jenner (Rep.-Ind.) did\nlikewise, terming the jailing of th6\n13 \"perilously close to an act of\nwar.\"\nANOTHER THREAT OF WAR is evident In Central America,\nhis time centering in Costa pica and Nicaragua. President Jose\nIgueres of Costa Rica, and President Anastaeio Somoza of Nicaragua\nave been conferring for some time. Somoza recently purchased\n5 flghter. planes from Sweden. The proximity of the Panama Canal\nlakes the area of vital Interest to the Western world,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\npftOV.NClAt|\nLIBRARY\n\u25a0!\u25a0'\"\u25a0\u25a0- \u2022   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'  :\u2014'\t\n%rii\nVo). 53\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 2, 1954,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay \u2014 Light winds.' Low-\nhigh Cranbrook B-25, Crescent\nValley'0-23.\nNo. 188\n22RF*<-..- v\nFirst Tunisians \/\nTo Take Advantage\nOf French Truce\nTUNIS, Tunisia (Reuters) \u2014\nTwenty-two Tunisian rebels Wednesday surrendered to French officers. They were the first to take advantage of a new. French truce campaign offering amnesty or extermination.\n.The guerrillas, wearing old American uniforms, handed in their arms\nin the maieur region atid were given certificates of pardon.\nOne of then), leader of a band\nof 100 fellaghas, kept His gun and\nreturned to the hills to try to convert other rebel leaders to the truce.\nHe agreed to return Friday for another meeting with the French-Tunisian surrender team.\nUnder the French amnesty offer,\nthe guerrillas win complete freedom and get aid in rehabilitation if\nthey turn in their arms. The offer is\ngood only until Dec. 10, when the\ngovernment has promised it will\ntake \"pitiless measures\" against\nrebels who continue the terrorism\nwhich has raged in the territory\nfor 35 months.\nRUSSIA TO GRANT\nLOAN TO FINLAND\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Moscow\nradio reported Wednesday night\nthat Russia has agreed to grant a\nloan to Finland, her northern non-\nCommunist neighbor.\nThe two countries have also\nagreed on the principle ot further developing and strengthening    relations   within   the    Fin-\n' nlsh - Soviet mutual assistance\npact of 194B, the radio said. They\nhave also agreed to exchange\ntechnical   Information   regarding\nspecific branches of Industry.\nU.K. PRESS WARNS\nAGAINST STRIJDOM\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 British\nnewspapers are raising warnings\nagainst the racial segregation and\nanti-Commonwealth views of Johannes Strijdom, who became prime\nminister of South Africa Tuesday\non,,the retirement of Daniel Malan,\nTh. Titties says Strijdbm may be\nexpected \"to be uncompromising In\nenforcing the policy of apartheid\nracial segregation and to use every\nmeans to overcome those provisions\nof the constitution which seem to\nhinder it.\"\nThe Times adds that Strijdom's\nelection will \"bring to the front in\ntheir acute form\" the. extreme nationalist doctrines which set South\nAfrica- at odds with, other Commonwealth countries, particulaMy\nBritain.\nThe Daily Telegraph comments',\nhis policies carry the danger\nof rupture . within the Commonwealth and tragic division between\nthe two branches of the white race\nin South Africa, Mr. Strijdom's election may also cause a split within\nhis own party.\"\n'If\nWoman's Body Found,\nIdentity Sought\nCOLLING-WOOP, Ont. (CP) -\npolice are seeking to' identify 'the\nbadly-decomposed body of a young\nwoman clad in a torn, maroon bath'\ning suit and found Tuesday by\nhunters in bush near here.\nPolice'' said the body' was in the\nbush about seven months and could\nhave been.a summer visitor at nearby Wasaga beach..No persons were\nreported missing in this area 40\nmiles west of Owen Sound.\nThe condition of the clothing,\nskull fracture indicating a sharp\nblow to the head, and the fact the\nremains were dragged off the high\nway, led police to believe the girl\nwas murdered.\nVancouver Bandits Grab $51500\n$50,000 Loot Is 3rd Largest\nIn History of Coast.City\nFIVE AIRMEN WERE KILLED and a sixth\ncritically injured In the crash of an Air Force\nB25 near Friendship International Airport, Baltimore, Md., Nov, 28. Rescue parties which reached\nthe \"scene found one man still alive. He was flown\nto Boiling Air Force Base near Washington, D.C,\nThe plane was returning to Andrews Air Force\nBase after a training flight to Tulsa, Okla.\n\u00ab \u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nWebster Defends\nCo-Op Buying\nVANCOUVER\u2014Criticism of a cooperative discount buying scheme\nwas answered by a leading B.C. exponent of the co-op principle.\nArnpld Webster, leader of the\nCo-operative Commonwealth Federation opposition in-the B.C. legislature, said he could \"see no reason''\nfor the critical remarks by Grant\nDeachman, general manager of the\nB.C. Retail Merchants' Association.\nMr. Deachman referred Saturday\nspecifically to the B.C. Teachers'\nFederation Co-operative Association\ndiscount buying plan. He said it\nand others like it are harming retailers.\n\"This is not out of line with cooperative   practice   all\nworld,\" said Mr,.3Yebster. , *V\nTransit Workers\nDecide Walkout\nover >S#^;^fjW^,.%..\n-.,*.. T   WmNIPEcT(CP)-Winnipeg will\n'As a matter of fait. I believef {eel the. pinch of a transit tie-up\nwe are behind the times here in\nthis regard.\n\"Co-operative enterprise is a\nwell-established principle. Why the\nteachers should be singled out for\ncriticism I can't tell. Unless it's\nperhaps the fact they are making\nthe retailers take notice.\"\nMr. Webster said any body of\ncitizens is free to get together in\nco-operative ventures, as permitted\nunder provincial and federal law.\n\"Co-operatives are perfectly legal\nand certainly aren't open to criticism unless they're not meeting the\nterms of the law,\" he stated.\nRailway Revenues\nHave Improved\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Donald\nGordon, CNR president, said in\nan Interview Wednesday that there\nhas been an improvement in the\nlast two weeks in railway revenues.\nIndicating a feeling of \"restrained optimism,\" Mr. Gordon\nsaid that increased pnovement of\ngrain has caused the improvement.\nQuestioned. in regard to railway\nlay-offs, he said these were re\nflections of traffic conditions and\nthere is no indication ^of anything\nfurther in this respect in the immediate future. \\\nMr. Gordon, accompanied by\nMrs. Gordon, J, R. McMillan *of\nWinnipeg, vice-president of the\nwestern region, and Mrs. McMil\nIan, arrived in Edmonton Wednesday.\nWHITE PASS WILL\nBE RE-OPENED\nOLYMPIA (AP) \u2014 White Pass\nacross the Cascade mountains will\nbe re-opened to traffic between\nDec. 10 and 15, if .present conditions\nprevail, the State Highways Department disclosed Wednesday.\nThe pass has been closed since\nmid-August because of a huge rock\nand earth slide. The Federal Bureau of Public Roads contracted for\nremoval of the slide and the State\nHighways Department. kept the\nroad free of snow..\nThe opening date was qualified\n'With an if\u2014\"if we do not \"get too\nmuch heavy snow and if we do not\nhave another slide.\"\ntoday,   with   awareness   that   the\nworst may be yet to come.\nWorkers who ride to their jobs\non streetcar or trolley bus will find\nthemselves stranded if they snatch\nan extra few minutes of sleep or\nlaze around the breakfast table.\nThe Christmas shopping crowd\nwon't have any public transportation.\nBy 9:30 a.m. all Winnipeg Transit Commission vehicles .will have\npulled into garages. *They will remain there at least until 1:30 p.m.\nwhile union workers meet to set\nthe date for a general walkout.\nThere were no new developments Wednesday and only an 11th\nhour move on the part of the com\nmission or the union could halt the\ngo-to-meeting interruption of service.\nThe more than 1000 employees\nare demanding an increase of- 10\ncents an hour and fringe benefits.1\nThe commission has agreed to the\nfringe benefits but has rejected\nhigher wages.\nDOLLAR LOWER\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Cana^\ndian dollar off Vb of a cent at a\npremium of 3 1-16 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds Wednesday.\nPound sterling off 1-16 of a cent\nat-$2.78 9-16.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U.S\ndollar closed at a discount of\n2 21-32 per cent in terms of 'Canadian funds, up 3-32. Pound sterling\n$2.70 5-16, up 3-16.\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Holdup alarms jangled a wild,\nrefrain here Wednesday as smooth-working bandits, striking;\nin quick succession, looted two branches of the Bank of [\nMontreal of $51,500 in a new wave.of crime.\n. Mayor Fred Hume, immediately summoned the police\ncommission into emergency session to discuss means of curb-\ning\" the crime wave that has resulted in six bank robberies\nin as many weeks and more \" \"\nStale Winds Up\nCase Against\nDr. Sheppard\nBy ARTHUR EVERETT\nCLEVELAND (AP)\u2014Pretty Susan Hays detailed Wednesday in a\nnear whisper a ,15-month illicit\nlove affair with Dr. Samuel Sheppard.\nShe also testified that the handsome osteopath gave her a ring,\nprofessed his love for her, and\nspoke of divorcing his wife, Mar-\nlyn, before her July 4 murder. Dr.\nSheppard is accused of the slaying.\nTheir intimacies began late in\n1953, Miss Hayes said, as a series\nof stolen moments ol love In his\nautomobile and ln an apartment he\nmaintained outside his home.\nThe final witness for the state at\nSheppard|s first-degree murder\ntrial, Miss Hayes was demure and\nmodest-appearing \u2014 a chic, attractive 24-year-old brunette. Often she\nbowed her head in emotion.\nShe. kept her eyes straight ahead,\naway from her former lover. The\nosteopath is on trial for his life,\naccused of beating his $ regnant 31-\nyear-old wife to death after his\naffair with Susan.\n' Sheppard maintains a bushy-\nhaired prowler invaded his Lake\nErie home last July 4 and beat his\nwife to death in her bed.\nThe defence has pictured the 30-\nyear-old Sheppard as a man of\neven temper, hardly the type to\ncrush his wife's skull with angry,\nsavage blows. \u25a0\nHowever, Marilyn's cousin, Thomas R. Weigle, 26, testified that in\nAugust of 1953 Dr. Sam flew into\na rage at his seven-year-old son,\nChip, \"drew him over his legs and\n, proceeded to give him what I considered an unmerciful beating.\"\nThe state rested jts case at 1:17\np.m. o\u00a3 the 45th trial day, with Miss\nHayes the 30th and final witness.\nThe defence then launched an im-\npressioned and well-nigh unprecedented two-hour and 24-minute plea\nfor a dismissal of the murder charge\nagainst Dr. Sheppard. Defence lawyer Arthur Petersilge said at one\npoint that divorce was not a mbtive\nin the case. Even assuming it was,\nhe added:\n\"If that's what Sam had in mind,\nto divorce his wife, why would he\nkill her? It's an easy matter to get\na divorce. If divorce was what he\nhad in mind it wasn't worth1 it ...\"\nthan 40 smaller holdups,\nIn the first of Wednesday's two\ndaylight robberies, three masked\nand armed bandits forced their way\ninto the suburban West Point Grey\nbranch of the Bank of Montreal,\n\"cleaned, out\" a teller's cage, scooped more money from the open vault\nand escaped in a car driven by a\nfourth accomplice.\nTheir $50,000 loot was the largest\nobtained in a bank robbery here ln\n12 years and the third largest in\nthe history of the Greater Vancouver area.\nLeo than two hours later a lone,\nnattily-dressed bandit entered the\nbank's main Granville Street\nbranch and shoved a note at a teller reading: \"Hand over your cash\nor I'll blow your brains out.\"\nHe w\u00bblked out of the bank with\n$1500 under the note of a police\nman itandlng In the doorway and\ndisappeared Into streets orowded\nwith Christmas shoppers,\nTwice more during the afternoon\nthe harried police force was galvanized into action as jittery bank\nemployees touched off alarm bells.\nBoth were false alarms.\nWhile Mayor Hume, chairman of\nthe police commission, was meeting\nbehind closed doors with other com\nmission members, polioe officers\nscoured Vancouver's underworld\nseeking leads on the two latest holdups that raised to some $88,000 the\namount of money taken in bank\nrobberies here this year.\nDozens of men known to police\nby their Tecords were checkei In\ntheir homes, on the'streets and In\nunderworld haunts. Several, were\ntaken to police headquarters for\nquestioning.\nThe bandit foursome worked so\nrapidly they had made their getaway before police could arrive on\nthe scene. An alert citizen tipped\nSenate Condemns McCarthy's Conduct\nBy ED CREAQH\nWASHINGTON    (AP)   \u00ab_, The\nSenate condemned by a vote of\n67   to   20  Wednesday   night  the\nconduct  of  Senator Joseph   McCarthy   on   the   first   of   three\ncensure charges against him and\ncleared the way for final action\nIn two other counts today.\nThe action amounted to a vote\nof guilty on the charge McCarthy\nobstructed   the   Senate   and   acted\ncontrary to its  traditions in' fial-\ning to help a sub-committee which\ninvestigated him in 1951 and 1952,\nand    in    \"abusing\"    the    group's\nmembers.\nMcCarthy himself did not vote\non the censure resolution but de-\nnounced it as \"a foul job\" and\nsaid the American people know \"I\nam being censured because I\ndared to do the 'dishonorable'\nthing of exposing Communists in\ngovernment.\"\nThe Wisconsin Republican also\n(got a wholly new investigation\nstarted  by  charging  that forgery\nand suppression of evidence have\nbeen used against him.\nNAMES COMMITTEE\nIn an outgrowth of this charge,\nSenatSr William Knowland of Cali-\nfprnia, the Republican majority\nleader, named a special committee to look into the alleged checking of senators' incoming mail by\nauthorized persons. .\nAll the Democrats present and\n,23 Republicans joined in voting to\n\"condemn\" McCarthy's behavior\ntoward th$ Senate sub-committee\nwhich investigated. his financial\nand other affairs in 1951 and 1952.\nRowland and 19 other Republicans backed McCarthy. The vote\ncame after a series bf attempts to\nspare the Wisconsin senator from\ncensure were defeated by similar\nlopsided margins.\nStill to be disposed of ara\ncharges that McCarthy:\n1. Abused Brig.-Gen. Ralph W.\nZwicker when the general appeared as a witness before McCarthy'! permanent  investigations\nsub-committee.\n2. Abused the Senate censure\ncommittee headed by Arthur Watkins (Rep. Utah) which recommended he be censured on two\ncounts. McCarthy had called the\ncommittee an \"unwitting handmaiden of the Communist party.\"\nBefore leaving he managed, however, to stir up a fresh investigation as well as to tell the Senate it\nhad \"disgraced\".itself. Referring to\nthe censure debate, he. said \"I want\nto get rid of this foul job and get\nback to work.\"\nTWO ACOUSATION8\nMcCarthy based his call for ah\nInvestigation on two related accusations. \"He said:\n1. Somebody forged the name of\nSenator Guy Gillette (Dem.-Iowa)\non a request to postal authorities\nfor a \"mail'cover\" \u2014 a check of\nthe return addresses on mail to\nMcCarthy ahd aides \u2014 during the\n1951-32 investigation.. Gillette headed the probe for-a while.\n2. The staff of the Watkins com\nmittee had evidence of this but\n\"suppressed\" it in the inquiry that\nled to the filing of censure charges\nagainst him.\nChairman Watkins and Senator\nJohn Stennis (Dem.-Miss.), a member of the ' Watkins committee,\nblocked McCarthy's demand for an\nimmediate investigation either by\nthe Senate or by the justice department. Watkins said emphatically\nthat the committee's staff members\nwere honest men.\nKnowland later won unanimous\nconsent for the appointment of a\ntwo-member committee to see who\nhas been \"tampering with\" senators' mail and how this can be\nstopped.\n. He named senators Homer Ferguson (Rep.-Mich.) and Walter\nGeorge (Dem.-Ga.) as the committee, with instructions to make their\ninvestigation at once and report\nwhat they can before the Senate\u2014\nas expected \u2014 quits for the year\ntoday.\npolice off as the gunmeh drove up\nto the bank In a stolen car, their\nfaces hidden behind black paper-\nbag masks.\n\"There -was quite a commotion\noutside before they burst ln tht\ndoor,\" said Mrs. Ida M. Randle, liability clerk at the.branch. \"It must\nhave taken the three of them to\nforce the lock.\"\nOne carrying a shotgun ln one\nhand, a pistol in the other, stood\njust Inside the door covering bank\nmanager .J. R. Purser and the 18\nmembers of his staff.\nThe bandit leader forced the\nbank employees to He on the floors\n\u2022aylng:\n\"We've all got to make a HvliKl\nsomehow. Now Juat He down en\nthe floor If you want to live t\u00bb\nenjoy- Christmas.\"\nEveryone did.\n\"They took everything they cotfld\nlay their hands on,\" said Mr. Pur.\nser.\nIn less than three minutes ifce\nmen were fleeing from the bank ia\ntheir stolen vehicle, which wai\nfound abandoned a few minutes lat*\ner about three miles from the bank.\nTwo hour?\" later, at 11:30 a.n_|..\nthe bank's main branch was robbed. The young, nattily-dressed bandit walked up to teller Terry Cran\nand shoved a cheque blank through\nthe cage bars. On the cheque wa\u00ab\nwritten:\n\"Hand over your oash or I'll blow\nyour brains out\"\n\"I tried to stall him,\", said Mis I\nCran. \"But he tol(_- me to l\\urrs or\nI would get it, so I pushed some\nmoney to him. At the same time I\npushed the alarm under the counter.\"\nSo. quietly was the holdup carried out by the briefcase-carrying\nbandit that other tellers and some\n20 customers were unaware of What\nwas going on.\n5-Poinl Plan to Combat Crime Wave\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014The police\ncommission in Canada's third largest city, forced into emergency session by six bank holdups in six\nweeks, Wednesday night formed a\nfive-point plan to combat a rising\nincidence of crime. \\\nThe meeting was called by Mayor Fred Hume scant hours after\nbandits raided two banks for a total of $51,000, to bring bank loot to\n$88,000 in lfts than two months.\nBoth banks hit Wednesday, were\nbranches of the Bank of Montreal.\nThe suburban Point Grey branch\nlost $50,000 to four shotgun-armed\nbandits and the main downtown\nbranch lost $1,500 several hours\nlater to a lone holdup artist.\nThe five-point plan, announced\nafter the meeting by Mayor Fred\nHume and Police Chief Walter Mulligan, included:\n1. At least 50 more police to be\nthrown into criminal investigation\nfrom other duties.\n2. Substitution of civil defence\nauxiliary police for city police at\nmost of the city's 54 school crossings.\n3. Release 20 officers from a refresher course to active duty.\n4. Review police details with the\nobject of putting more men on active crime prevention work.\n5. Ask the school board to help\npatrol crosswalks with veterans or\nwomen..\nChief Mulligan said a series of\nlectures would be given at all city\nbanks to instruct personnel on the\nmethods used by holdup men with\ninstructions on how to distinguish\nfacial characteristics of bandits,\npictures of- known holdup men\nwould be shown to bank staffs.\nThfe chief declined to ^o into details, but did say the lectures would\nstart Dec. 9 in every bank throughout the city.\nHigh   police  officers   Will   meet\nwith the city's central clearing\nhpuse executives, who \"represent all\nbanks, \"to consider alarms and other\npleasures.\"\n\"There has been a oonBlderable\nincrease in the incidence of major\ncrime lately,\" Chief Mulligan said.\nMayor Hume laid he had not\ngiven consideration to asking for\na larger police budget, but \"we're\nnot going to spare any money. Aa\nfar as we're concerned, we're going\nto enforce the law,\" he said.\nNEHRU'S BURDENS\nBEING LESSENED\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) \u2014 The\nfirst major step toward relieving\nPrime Minister Nehru of some of\nhis heavy burdens of office was\ntaken Wednesday with the appointment of a new cabinet minister.\nBesides heading the administration, Nehru is defence minister, external affairs minister, chairman\nof the planning commission ahd\nhead of the department of atomic\nenergy.\nPandit Govind Ballabh Pant, 87,\nnow chief minister of the state\nof Uttar Pradesh (united provinces), was named a minister in\nNehru's cabinet. No portfolio was\nlisted, but he is expected to become home minister, taking office\nbefore the end of this month.\nThat will free the present home\nminister, Kailas Nath Katju,, for\nother duties. He is expected to take\nov,er the defence ministry from\nNehru.\nDIES AT 107\nCAMBRIDGE, England (AP) \u2014\nMrs. Julia Gray, who had claimed\nshe was the oldest woman In Britain, died Wednesday. She was 107.\nUntil she was 102, Mrs. Gray\nsaid she had never had a day's illness.\nAnd in This Corner,*.\nURANIUM CITY, Sask. (CP)\u2014Mechanic Jack Crass had an expensive bus ride.\nHe pleaded guilty at-Uranium City Tuesday to stealing a bui\nfor a Joyrlde and was fined a total of $125, $75 for the theft and an\nadditional $50 for obstructing an RCMP offlcer'who tried to remove\n. him from the vehicle.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Thirty days hath November \u2014 except the\nBBC.\nAn announcer opened Wednesday's schedule, to the appreciation\nof schoolboys and other alert early risers, by declaring the date to\nbe Nov. 31.\n_^^^__\n________\n\u25a0\n ^ilPPPiRPpWii^li^i\n'^.i^y^.p^swj^'j*^^'^^^'  vi-mswmmmmm*!^\nsm:\n*ii\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSpAY, DIC. 2, IM\nJAMES-\nSTEWART\n\u25a0U |if(| 11 hJIfCHCOCK.'..'\nREAR WINDOW\ngWa.CKKE\/,LY .::;\u201e';,\u201e\u201e,.\nELL COREY\nM-lHllTRf   .\u2014< \u25a0*%!-\u25a0\nKTUN\nTODAY\nShow* 7:00-9:00\nCitfic\nMUSICLAND\nTHEATRE\nKASLO, B.C.\n\u2022HOWIN4 TONIGHT,\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nShow Starts at 8:00 p.m.\n\"BY THI LIGHT\nOF THI JILVIRY MOON\"\n(Technicolor)\nDorta Day - Gordon MoCrea\nLeon Ames\nM.U8 CQLORED CARTOON\nPoppy Campaign\nRealizes $951\nTo. Canadian Legion Poppy campaign realized $994.39 this year from\n. the nle of popples, and wreaths the\nSaturdoy before Remembrance Day.\nHill waa derived from Hie city of\nNelson and the immediate district\nwhich made the campaign a success.\nHelping jnake tha campaign iuc-\nce9-M were the taggers which\nwere oomprised of 36 girls and 93\nboya, and the Ladies Auxiliary to\nthe Canadian Legion Branch 91 who\norganized the taggers. Net proceeds\nof the sale assist the Legion's local\nwe~_are work.\nCUSTOM RETURNS\nSHOW INCREASE\nCustoms return* tor November\nclimbed ilightly from that ol last\nmonth. November's figure wai $25,-\n553.28 compared to the f30.63_l.92 of\nOctober. _\nLISTENING \u00abi\nENJOYMENT I\nAAodoiy-707\n9VtCTMtA\"-niit.fhtiomp\\t\nmmoR\n7-tube radio for standard\nand shortwave broadcast\nWorld'i finest automatic\n3-speed record changer\nExclusive \"Golden\nThroat\" tone\nLuxurious modern\ncabinet\n$\n269\nSlightly Higher In Walnut or\nLimed  Oak\nNOW AVAILABLE AT\n|    Ben\nSutherland\np\nj'.Music, Appliances, Radios\n645 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C.\nMan To '\nHead Klnauclion\nJ. O. ALLAN\nThe third Xlneuetlon will be\nheard over CKLN tonight. James O.\nAllan will be master of ceremonies,\ntaking over from Dr. T. H. Bourque\nwho handled the second auction\nFriday night\nMr.-Allan vr1& be assisted by Jack\nBagnall who will be to' charge of\nthe entertainment for the program.\nOther Kinsmen and individuals who\nhave volunteered will also help out\nwith the entertainment\nFred Lena, publicity chairman\nfor tile auction said Wednesday the\nresponse by local merchants has\nbeen very good.and that 158 articles\nare in 'and more are anticipated.\nThe response has been so good that.\na fourth auction will definitely be\nheld, said Mr. Leno.\nProceeds from the Kinauctions\nwill go for a portable iron lung for\npolip patients in the Nelson hospital,\nwelfare work and the community\nswimming pool fund.\nGlade Children\nOrdered fo School\nThree Glade Sons of Freedom\nwere given suspended sentences\nhare Wednesday foi\" riot, sending\n-their children to school, They were\nordered to have their children in\nschool by Monday snd warned, If\nthey did not, the children would\nbe taken from them.\nThree children arc Involved,\nGlads parents with non-school-\nattending children wera -notified\nthoy must plaos their children' ln\nschool after a temporary ferry was\nInstalled across the Kootenay River to their isolated village by the\nDepartment of Public Works two\nweeks ago. Qlade and Krestova are\nonly Freedomite villages untouched\nby government policy to force children to school,\nThree charged under the Sohool\nAct, John W. Logobokoff, E, Fred\nParkin and Nick Koorbotoff, entered no plaa ln provincial court Wednesday explaining they didn't send\ntheir children to school because lt\nwas against their religion. They had\nno defence counsel, All appeared\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans.\n16 RAINY DAYS\nLAST MONTH\nRain fell ln Nelson on it days\nduring November, records show,\nAdding to the unseasonable weather\nwas the fact that high temperature\nfor ths month wis 54,2 degrees.\nThat waa November 23.\nThe .chilliest day for the month\nwas just this week when the\nmercury dropped to 24.5 >on Monday, the 29th,\nTotal rainfall for the month was\n3.34 inches. It rained on 11 consecu-\nitve days during ths month, from\nthe 9th to the 19th.\nALD. GEORGE ECKMIER\nALD.  ARTHUR  FOSTER\nALD. STANLEY SMITH\nNominations Close Today...\nEckmier, Foster, Smith Toss Hats\nBack Into Civic Election Ring\nDistrict Mine To Play\nRole at Spokane Meet\nVisiting Evangelist'\nAddresses Baptists\nHighlight of Wednesday, night's\nevangelistic service at First Baptist Church conducted by evangelist Reginald ^Greenway, was a\nclassical rendition of the carol\n\"Silent Night\" on the theremin.\nIn the message, he stated that\nChristians must witness personally\nin their homes, community and\nwork, so that the world may receive the benefit of the uplifting\npower of the Christian life\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Pren\nWE8TERN JUNIOR\nMoose Jaw 2, Edmonton 4\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nSt.  Boniface 8, Winnipeg Monarchs 0\nWESTERN LEAGUE,\nNew Westminster 2, Victoria 8\nSaskatoon 3, Calgary B\nOKANAGAN  LEAGUE\nKamloops 8, Vernon 8\n\u2022With their two-year terms up December 31, three\nNelson aldermen have tossed their hats back into the Civic\nadministration ring,\nAldermen George Eckmier, Arthur Foster and Stanley\nSmith filed their nomination papers Wednesday. Alderman\nSmith had said at a city council meeting two weeks ago\nhe would not seek re-election.\n,  Their seats are the only ones to\nbe vacated on city council this year.\nOther cltlzeAs are known to be\nconsidering entering the field and\ncould file their papers before nomination deadline at noon'today,\nWhen Nelson voters go to the\npolls December 9 they will also\nhave to choose four trustees for\nSchool District 7 and one police\ncommissioner.\nSchool Board Chapman George\nMermet and trustees P. H. Hoskins\nand L. M. McBride have ell indicated th*y will seek re-election.\nFourth vacancy on the board ls one\ncreated by the resignation of Dr.\nW. K. Massey ln August. Dr. Massey\nresigned when he left Nelson for\nMontreal. j\nOn the police commission, term\nof Edward T. Stromstead ls complete. Mr. Stromstead has not indicated whether he will seek reelection or not.\nAid. George Eckmier entered the\npolitical field In 1852 on a Civic\nAction Association ticket. He filled\na vacancy created by the resignation\nof R. P. J. Riesterer in 'March,\nby acclamation.\nAid. Eckmier came to Nelson In\nAugust, 1944, after retiring from- a\nhardware and drygoqds'business in\nOrion and Warner in Southern Alberta.\nIn Alberta he waB a school trustee 15 years and after coming to\nNelson served on the Civic Centre\nGaglardi To Attend\nTrail Highway Meet\nTRAIL \u2014 Hon. P. A. Gaglardi,\nB. C.'s public works minister, has\nannounced that if the weather permits, he will attend the annual\nmeeting of the Trans-Canada Highway Association (Crow's Nest route)\nto be held here Monday. .\nThe Association, headed by E. R.\nMcFarland of Lethbridge, is holding its annual meeting here for the\nfirst time.\nTraditional Kettle To Again Call\nFor Aid for Christinas Needy Ones\nPHONE   144   fOR   CLASSIFIED\nittraswaesE\nYOUR PORTRAIT\nTHI GIFT THAT IAYS\n'mij\nON CHRISTMAS MOKN\n.(EAtf   I'Hfc   CLAoolrll'.U   UAIL.)\n... AND preserves the mem-\nories of the delight with\nwhich the gift was received\nthrough all the days to coitie.\nSTEVEN'S\nSTUDIO\n6S9 Btfker Sr.    Phono 1205\nNights, 1470-R\nThe huge Iron  kettle with  Its\nJangling Christmas belli that hai\nstood more than 40 yean on Nelson's itreet corner! at Christmas\ntime, will be back In three weeks.\nFrom the kettle last year came\ngift and food money for more than\n50 Nelson and district families who\nfaced a cheerless Christmas.\nBig hearted Nelson and district\ncitizens dropped $500 in nlckles and\ndimes In it in five days.\nSalvation Army Officer Ljeut. H.j\nD. Thornhill estimates Just as many\nwill need' its help again this year,\n\"possibly a few more.\"\n* The history of the kettle goes\nback to an enterprising Salvation\nArmy officer in England many years\nago*. In his citadel the larder was\nemptied by masses of unemployed\nEnglishmen. According to Lieut.\nThornhill the officer hadn't the\nheart to turn the men away. In a\nmoment of inspiration he dug out a\nhuge iron pot and appealed to the\nman on the street with the plea to\n\"keep the pot boiling.\" It has boiled\never since.\nThis is the time each year Lieut.\nThornhill stojjs to estimate tHe number of unemplqyed and needy in the\narea, then orders his supplies from\nNelson wholesale houses accordingly.\nFrom the Social Welfare Department, the churches and alert citizens comes word of a family in\n\u25a0need.\nWith these names as guidance the\nbusy Salvation Army officer with\nthe help of his wife (also a commissioned officer) investigates the families, determining their size and the\nfood they'll need for a nourishing\ndinner. , ' *\nHe's Santa Claus to the children, for he oounti their numbers\ntoo, and teei that each hai a shiny\nnew toy on Christmas morn.\nOld toys, unless exceptionally\ngood, Just won't do, he maintains.\n\"Kids, .whether rich er poor,\nare the lame et Christmas time.\nThey want a new toy,\" A paint-\nchipped toy under the Christmas\nt.ee\\Just wouldn't make them\nhappy.\"\nLieut. Thornhill laments no Nelson organization repairs toys \u2022 for\nneedy kids. \"We haven't the facilities.\" Jie explained, \"but it would\nbe a rewarding task.\"\nJust before Christmas, Salvation\nArmy members \"usually about six,\"\nget together and make up the hampers.\nInto them goes the Christmas dinner . . . except the turkey, which is\n\"Just too expensive.\"\nOut-of-town hampers take the\nform of-grocery credit slips valid\nat community stores. They're sent\nout about two weeks before Christ\nmas-\"so full use can be made of\nthem.\" _\n. In Nelson the hampers go out\nChristmas Eve. They're delivered\nby Lieut. Thornhill,.his wife, and\nvolunteers.\n\"If necessary we call on Service\nClubs for transportation,\" Lieut.\nThornhill explained.\n\"And on Christmas Eve when we\nknock on a door, the gratitude of a\nfamily anticipating a cheerless\nholiday ls a bountiful Christmas\ngift.'1\nCommission since 1951. He resigned\na few months ago.\nHe was on St. Paul's United\nChurch Board of Stewards for seven\nyears, leaving it only this year because ot 111 health.\nAlderman Foster seeks re-election for his third term, having\ntaken office at the end of 1950. A\nwell known Nelson businessman,\nhe has long taken Interest ln local\naffairs. He ls treasurer for Wood\nVallance Hardware Company.\nAlderman Smith took office at\nthe close of 1049, filling a vacancy\ncreated by the resignation of N. C.\nStibbs, then . seeking election as\nmayor.\nA resident of Nelson 60 years, he\nis'a former locomotive engineer of\nthe Canadian Pacific. Railway where\nhe served on various committees of\nthe Brotherhood of Locomotive\nFiremen and Enginemen and chairman of the Local Grievance Committee. He has been active ln civic\nwork for some years.\nr   Champion Regrets\n152( Blowing His Top\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Doug Hepburn\nrecently said he was disappointed\nbecause his home town of Vancouver didn't give him a big reception\nafter he won the world's weight-\nlifting championship in Europe last\nsummer.\nBut Tuesday, on a tour of Eastern Canada, he confessed in an interview he's sorry he said it.\n\"I blew my top,\" he said. \"Now\nI know I was wrong and shouldn't\nhave said such a thing. I got mad\nwhen I saw the wonderful reception\nToronto gave Marilyn Bell after she\nswam Lake Ontario. I began to\nthink that perhaps Vancouver\u2014and\nI don't mean the average citizen\ndidn't appreciate having the World's\nstrongest man for a citizen. Now\nknow I shouldn't have said it, and\nI'm sorry.\"\nPHONt889\nTqwler Fuel\n& Transfer\nProbation Period\nEnds At Short Creek\nKINGMAN, Ariz. (AP) \u2014-A year-,\nlong-probation has ended for nine\nresidents of once- polygamous Short\nCreek, Ariz.\nJudge Robert S. Tullar, who\npassed the original sentence against\nthe men in 1953, turned down a petition to revoke the probation and\nsend tho men to Jail. The State\nclaimed the'men had resumed the\npractice of plural marriages,.\nEach of the men testified he had\nnot practised, polygamy during the\nlast year, and did not intend to\npractise it again.\nThe story of the Mineral King\nIViinfi near Invermere will be told\nat the 60th annual convention of\nthe Northwest Mining Association\nto be held in the Davenport Hotel\nIn Spokane Friday and Saturday.\nDuring a Canadian'session in Saturday's program, T. R. Thompson,\ngeneral superintendent of Sheep\nCrebk Gold Mines,. Ltd,, will speak\non \"Development of tile Mineral\nKing. Mine.\"\nKarl'W. Jasper, president of the\nNorthwest Mining Association, will\nconduct the meeting, and talks will\nbe given on various subjects of\nmining and mineralogy by leading\nIndustrial and mining men. Uranium will play a leading role In the\ndiscussions, but other topics will be\npublic relations! the Northwest's\nwater resources, U.S. mining laws,\nand mining equipment.\nFriday's luncheon will be given\nby toe Spokane Chamber of Com\npierce mining bureau and the\nNorthwest Mining Association, and\nlater ln the day there will be a\n\"miner's' soiree.\"\n..Saturday will begin with a \"som-\ndpugh breakfast\" at the Spokane\nClub, a stag affair, and at noon another joint, luncheon will be given,\nthla by the American' Institute of\nMining and Metallurgical Engineers\nand the Canadian Institute of M\ning and Metallurgy. The anni\nbanquet will be held at night.\nAs ls customary, a number;\nKootenay mining mon Will atte\nThe delegation from tho Cham!\nof Mines of Southeastern Brit\nColumbia will be, -fe by H.\nDoelle, president. '* %'\u25a0>\u25a0\"\n.\u2014    . %\"y ,.\"iffi\nThe Weather\nM|n Max 1\nNELSON  _.  24 37\nHalifax    22 26\nToronto  28 88\nWinnipeg  13 18\nRegina  10 28\nSaskatoon  - 1 21\nMedicine Hat ,. 0 27\nLethbridge   _.. 2 IS\nEdmonton   18 24\nKimberley ,'.  19 29\nKamloops  28 38\nPenticton   22 83,\nVancouver  _ ,. 22 42\nVictoria      35 42\nWhitehorse   ^-lO 8\nSpokane   _.. 10 34\nChicago   _  81 39\nNew York  39 )43\nBEAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   DAI\nThe Scottish .fishing port of Dunbar, near Edinburgh, has picturesque ruins of.a castle ind- monastery of the 13th century. Vi'\nOtettn\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nORUMHELWR DEEP SEAM\nfor Real COMFORT and SATISFACTION\nPHONE 889\nFuel & Transfer\nLISTEN\nCKLN\n'his advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nPHONE 6-1477-1478\nAnd Win One or More of These 17 Valuable Prizes To Be Given Away Tonight . .\nValue    Donated by:\n1 8et Seat Covers to Fit Any Car  37.60-Taylor-Wilton Sales Ltd.\n1 Eversharp  Pen and  Pencil  Set   15.00 -Kootenay Stationers\n1 8x10 Colored  Portrait,  Mounted          11.50-Vogue Studio\n1 Musical Box. \u25a0    7.50-Cutler's Jewellery\n2 boz. Christmas Cards by Coutts (Name and\nAddress printed)  \u2022     7.00 -Leno & Ramsay Commercial Printers\n1 Fairy Princess Moss Green Cardigan, Size 18     6.9S -Milady's Dress Shop\n1 Cuckoo-Novelty Clock    5.95-Doherty Novelties\n1 Cigarette Lighter and Case .  \\    5.00 -EdI's Food Bar\n12 20-oz. Packages Brodie Cake Mix :.:.....\/.  ,4.00 1\n1 Bread' 8erver TupperWafe Bfead Box     3.35 -Tupperware Home Parties\n3 Mb. Packages Overwaltea CoffSe    3.27-Overwaltea\ni\/j-Doi. Men's Handkerchiefs ..'          3.00\u2014Brown & Co.\n1 Mechanical Mamma\"'Doll ....     !    3.. 8 -Liberty Food Store\n1 Lingerie. Silk 8Hp,' Size 32-38 ....     ( 3.98 -Dee's Ladles\\ Apparel\n1 Gainers' Superior Picnic 8ho_|lder (7 Ibs.)    3.01-Gainers' Ltd.'\n4 Carry-Home Handlpacks Gurd's Ginger Ale ,..,    2.40 -Columbia Bottling Works\n2 8-Bottle Cartons McDonald's Giant Orange     1.20  -McDonald Jam Co. Ltd.\nTotal Value $134.53, T.'eketi SOs. Each, 3 for $1\nThe Same Ticket Gives You a Chance on th e Grand Prixe To Be Given on Final Auction\nPHONE 6 -1477 - 147S\nAnd Bid On Any of the Merchandise or Services Auctioned Over the Air.\nThese Items Listed Below Are in Ad .\"'Ion To Those Already Advertised.\nCash  Donation     2,00 \u2014BM's'Barber Shop\n'Credit Cleaning  '.  2,60 -Tlckner Tailors\nSpiral Bristle Brush and Comb ....... ,  8,25 \u2014 Don Sargeant\n1 Hamper Groceries ....    ,.    2.80 -Bradshaw Grocery\nChristmas Tree ....    -....   .,.._. 1,.... ,  2,!>5\u2014Davison's Confectionery\nCredit on Cleaning-.  B.OO \u2014Kootenay Laundry  &  Cleaners\n1 Gal. Maple 8ymp \u201e  8.78 -Star Grocery\n1 Locker Rental    16.00 -Farmers' Quick Freeze Lockers\n2 Baok-Up  Lights      .'      _.\u201e 1H.no -Nelsori Transfer Co. Ltd;\n10. Packages Ellison U-Bake Bread Mix   3.A0 -Ellison Milling Company  -\n.2 Goodyear Pllotron Washable Warm Air Filters  80.00 \u2014Towl.r Fuel St Transfer\nCredit oif Repair Job  F.00 \u2014 Beatty Washer & Repair,Service ,\n4 Pali's Cameo Nylons' ..'.'. ,....,  7.00 \u2014Irene's Millinery & Dress Shoppe\n8 Lbs. Koctenay Honiy         ...__._  e.no -A. G. Smith\n.6 Exhibition Dahlia Reots      '.  4,00 -Andy Sinclair\n1 Pair All Wool White Blankets, 8lae 72x80  j  27.\"0 ~T Eaton Co. Ltd.\nCredit Vouoher   B.OO\u2014 Hooil's Bakery\n2 Tickets Volunteer Fire Dept. Annual flail  _ \u201e... 2.60\u2014Nelson Volunteer Fire Dejjt.\n. * Tonight's Broadcast Sponsored by\nKOOTENAY FOREST PRODUCTS LTD.\nand\nRAMSAY'S CAMERA SHOP\n'.-,'..   . -'      \u25a0\u25a0\u201e :'   , ''< \/'t Y ': .. i. .'.    . ,.'. .\u25a0_'\u25a0\"..''\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ' *\nTonight's Broadcast Starts at 7:30 p.m.\n^w\n'\u25a0_______________.\n'''.'...\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0.'.. :.'\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0 \u25a0-\u25a0,'.'\"..\u25a0\u25a0 .'\u25a0_.. ..'.\u25a0'. \u25a0. .:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\n\u25a0'*        i'.v'1,','-;.\n '    -.,.. \u25a0\u2014-\u2014\u25a0 '\".\" . ,\n! W%'9:\nEFEATED SCHOOL REFERENDUM\n5 BE PRESENTED AGAIN IN SPRING\nNVERMEHE \u2014 Board of school\nstees ofiWindermere district has\nided not to present a. school\nIding referendum to ratepayers\nIn before Spring,\n'ollowing the defeat of tiie $322,-\nreferendurri recently by.a nar\nrow margin, the Board had announced lt would pre'sent the program again in January. It has decided now that no schools could be\ncompleted in time for the September term even if a referendum\npassed in January.\nThe board has announced that\nprovisions will be made for Canal\nFlat high school students to be\ntransported to Invermere next year.\nNo other changes- have been an\nnounced. . -    ...\nFirst Pilot Qets Wings\nAt Castlegar Airfield\nPowers of the corporation.)? Dublin, Ireland, are derived:,.frpht' fl\nseries of charters dating frortii 1171.\n\"      ' 1 r\u2014Bi\nCASTLEGAR - Dennis Hughes is\nfirst pilot to get his wings from\nRalph West airfield here.\nLet\nUs Help You\nGET READY for WINTER\nWith Our\nHOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN\nOrder your lumber and building materials f .om \"BURNS\" and get started now on your\nhome improvements. Do-it-yourself we'll tell you how and you'll be surprised how easy\nthe work can be done and how low the cost.\nYOUR ONLY REAL SECURITY ... A HOME OF YOUR OWN.\nWeather Strip\nSeveral different varieties\nof \"name\" brand weather-\nstripping to suit your\nevery, need. 1 AA    Bp{\nUp from      I >v    Jf*^\n____yfiri\nCongov\/all\nand Decawall    j\nWall coverings for bathrooms and kitchens. 4\"\nsquares, 54\" high. ^7 Off.\nLin. ft. up from .\nStick-Fast\nWallpaper\nPaste\nl-lb. carton    T1?*\n2-lb. carton    ,' Ojr\nStay-Put\nWallsize\nl-lb. cartons\n45* I\nPaint Brushes\nComplete line of Rubber-\nset brushes for the amateur\nor professional painter.\n, Heatform\nCirculating\nFireplace\nMost efficient and durable\nof all. Priced <t\"TC\nup from    ^> \/ J\nFLOOR-TILE\nNAIRNS,  TILEVEIN,  AMTICO\nColor to suit your taste. 1-C^\n9\" x 9\" squares. Priced up from    I \u2022?\nThese Tiles Were Chosen by BURNS,\nFor Their Excellent Qualifies.\nFamous\nTnonamsL\nLine\nIncluding MONAMEL GLOSS and SATIN\nMONOSEAL, MONOSEAL SATIN LATEX\nand Many Other Finishes.\nUSE ONLY THE BEST . . .\nWallpapers To Order.\nThere Is Only One\nGenuine\nMono-Dor\nThe Tested and  Proved\nSlab Door\nAll sizes in stock of entrance and inside doors.\nInsulations\nZONOLITE, FIBERGLAS\nand GYPROC WOOL\nn bulk, batts, and rolled blankets to suit\nyour individual needs. In stock for immediate delivery.\nCombination Doors\nIdeal for Winter or Summer. .\u2014\nComplete with screen and storm\nsash.\nUse the\nPhone\nToday\nACE-TEX\nINSULATING\nSIDING\nWe have a SPECIAL on this type of siding while it lasts, to make ready for new\nstock. Reg. per square $24. $1 Q\nSPECIAL PRICE, per sq _      I-O\nPHONE\n1180\nBURNS\nLumber Company\n\"Everything tor the Builder\"\n602 Baker St.    Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE\n1181\nOr Writ\u00a9\nDrawer 70\nToday\n-.r. Hughes started his (lying\nshortly after the opening of the\nRalph West airport earlier this year.\nHe continued his flying when time,\npermitted, and has now gained his\nwings as a private pilot.\nTaking dual and solo instruction\nfrom* Instructor Jack Connell of\nTrail, Mr. Hughes completed his\ncourse this week when he took his\nflight test from flight examiner Ed\nSanderson of the Cranbrook Flying\nService. His written examinations\nVere taken about three weeks ago\nfrom the Department of Transport\ninspector.\nTjhis private pilot's certificate permits Mr. Hufehes to fly passengers\n(but not for hire), anywhere in Canada or United States in daytime only\non any aircraft up to 4000 pounds.\nMr. Connell states that Mr.\nHughes was a very willing and\nhard working student, and that he\nis the first of his students to get\nhis wings and the first from the\nRalph West airfield.\nThere are a number of students\nyet to complete their course.\n1 Men, Woman\nTsek Election\n'o (reslon Posts\nCRESTON \u2014 A woman and four\nlen are in the running for Cres-\n_n Village Commission seats which\n.ecome vacant at the end of this\nvear. Unless more mimes are filed\nby today's nomination, deadline, they\nwill form the slate of candidates.\nThe ^ive are:\nD. Andrews, superintendent of\nthe West Kootenay Power and Light\nCompany, Ltd! (Creston division),\npast zone chairman of Rod and Gun\nClubs, past president of the Creston Valley Hospital and past president of Creston's Rod and Gun Club.\nMrs. A. Erickson, seeking re-elec\ntion, and who has served on the\nCommission's cemetery, light and\nwelfare committees; past president\nof the Ladies' Auxiliary to Creston\nbranch of the Legion and of the\nProvincial Command Ladies' Auxiliaries; member of the Ratepayers'\nv.ssociation and Cancer Society.\nDr. W. N. Fraser, past president\n\u00a3 the Creston Board of Trade, past\nice-chairman and for many years\nshool trustee, past president and\n\".ember of the Lions club, president\nif the Creston Valley Liberal Association, past chairman of war-time\nbond drives, past Civic Centre director, and honorary officer of the\nLegion.\nAndrew Toth,-president of Creston aerie. Fraternal Order of Eagles,\ninterested worker in many youth\nmovements, community worker and\nsports enthusiast.\nBen Wills, candidate for re-election, who has served on Commission water, sewerage and fire departments; member of the Ratepayers' Association and the Knights of\nPythias Lodge, president of AFL\nlocal and committee member of a\nSocial Credit group.\niinimiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi\nMore District\nNews On Page 7\n.limiiiiiimmilHi-immmmimmim\n'Phone Office\nAl Cranbrook\nNearly Ready\nCRANBROOK - Erection of the\nnew automatic- telephone central\noffice building in Cranbrook will\nbe completed early this month, and\na somewhat smaller building in\nKimberley already has been finished, A. W. Hunter, district manager\nof B.C. Telephone Company, has\nannounced.\nThe two buildings, total cost of\nwhich is more than $178,000, are\nmajor moves by B.C. Telephone\nCompany to expand and improve\ntelephone facilities here. - '\nB.C. Telephone Company took\nover from Kootenay Telephone\nCompany, Limited, in November,\n1953, retaining Mr. Hunter as district manager.\nIn his statement disclosing building progress, Mr. Hunter said:    '\n\"In addition to the program for\nautomatic telephone systems in\nCranbrook and Kimberley, the company has added to existing facilities in Creston, Fernie and Natal.\"\n\u2022 He-added: \"Cranbrook and Kimberley residents will have automatic telephone service by Fall,\nnext year.\"\nCranbrook's new building at the\ncorner of First Street South and\nEleventh Avenue is 56 by 80 feet\nand consists of one floor and part\nbasement. Of'fcteel frame construction, the building has a reinforced\nconcrete base with brick facing. *\nThe front portion will be used\nas the business Office, with rooms\nat the rear of the building for auto-\nmafic equipment and 'switchboard\nto handle long distance and assistance calls for both Cranbrook and\nKimberley.\nConstruction of the building in\nKimberley is similar to that here.\nCHARITY DANCE\nWith the co-operation of Mr.\nHunter, the new addition to Cranbrook business buildings will make\nan unusual but worthy debut during the pre-Christroas season when\na charity dance will be held in the\nbuilding. Proceeds will go to the\nChildren's Hospital in Vancouver.\nScheduled tentatively for December\n18, the dance will give local residents first inside glimpse of the\nup-to-date structure.\nArchitects for \"both buildings\nwere Semmens and Simpson of\nVancouver and contractor was\nHalse-Martin Construction Company Ltd., also of Vancouver.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2,1954 \u2014 3\nNatal Society\nNames Officers\nNATAL '\u2014 At a meeting of the\nNatal-Michel Community Fund Society held in the arena, new officers\nwere elected. v\nJohn Thomson of Michel was reelected as chairman of the Society,\nwhich has been responsible for the\nsplendid modern arena built. Vice-\npresidents elected from the aotive\narena-committee included Bruno\nBevilacqua of Natal and Dominic\nRomano of'Sparwood. John (Jock)\nMyles of Natal was elected secretary, replacing Morris Duncan,\nwho was unable to continue the position for business reasons. Mr. Duncan will, however, continue to act\non .the arena-committee. Louis Lowe\nof Natal was elected treasurer. Formerly the positions of secretary-\ntreasurer were held by one member. The arena committee, consisting   of   16   members,   was  elected.\nSix members of the arena committee were chosen to act on the\nneVly-formed Community Recreation Commission at Natal-Michel,\nalong with five women elected at a\njoint meeting of the public and\nParent-Teacher Association held\npreviously at the Sparwood Junior-\nSenior High School. These were Mr.\nDuncan, Mr, Thomson, Mr. Bevilacqua, Ed. Whalley, Fred Venzie\nand Mr. Myles. The women appointed previously were Mrs, Bea\nMogielka, Mrs. G. Sofko, Mrs. E.\nBakken, Mrs. L. Mullett and Mrs.\nR. Taylor.\n$144 Given So Par\nIn March of Dimes\n' NATAL \u2014 The latest report regarding the March of Dimes campaign in Natal-Michel and district\nsponsored by the Alexander temple\nPythian Sisters, in aid of the crippled (hildren in B. C, shows that\n$144.41 has been collected.\nChairman Mrs. Agnes Phillips\nstated that the donations have just\nb^gun coming in. The drive open\ned with a miners' collection amount\ning to $107.41. Other donations have\ncome from Ladies' Auxiliary to the\nEagles $5, Crow's Nest Pass Coal\nCompany, Ltd. $25, Joe Gaal, $2 and\nTrites-Wood Company (Fernie) $5.\nThe drive will continue until December 31'.\nFUNERAL HELD       ;\nFOR FERNIE MAN\nFERNIE \u2014 Funeral services for\nWilliam Benjamin Phillips werflj\nconducted at Christ Anglican;\nChurch here by Rev. Canon R. E. m\u00a3\nYerburgh. Mr. Phillips* a long-tlmfc\nresident of Fernie, died in the' FerS\nnle Memorial Hospital after a\nlengthy illness. *      .    .       w\nMr. Phillips was born In St,\nClair's, Wales, ln 1871. He came to\nCanada in 19Q7, settling in Fernie.\nHe is survived by his wife, om'\ndaughter, Mrs. Vernon Uphill, am\nfive grandchildren, all of Fernie;\nBurial was in St. Margaret's cem.jj'\ntery.\nCOMPULSORY  DRILL\nMilitary drill  is compulsory for\nboys of 18 years in Mexico.\nMaster's Degree\nFor Invermere Girl\nINVERMERE \u2014 Miss Edith Mac-\nLean, now of Toronto, an Invermere\ngirl who has achieved a fine record\nin her chosen field of Social Welfare Work, won her master of arts\ndegree recently from Toronto University.\nMiss MacLean took her high\nschool education at Invermere and\nwon the Windermere district scholarship in her final jeaf but did not\ntake it up. She enlisted in the RCAF\nafter which she went to UBC where\nshe won her BA degree with honors. After a year of post-graduate\nwork at UBC, Miss MacLean went\nto Toronto for a special course. She\nhas been working in the Eastern\ncity for some time and this year\ncompleted her thesis for her MA.\nEdinburgh u\/\"as known as Ead-\nwinesburgh in the seventh century,\nfrom the Northumberland King\nEadwine.\nCorrection\nThe\nSPORT\nSHIRTS\nRegular 4.95, 5.95, 6.95\nAs Advertised Wednesday, Dec. 1\nShould Have Been\n2for6\nNot 2 For $2.69\n69\nHARD WOOD\n. Ebony wood, extremely hard timber used for special purposes, comes'\nfrom India, Ceylon, Africa and the\nWest Indies.\nSTONEBORD\n\u2022 \u2022\nTHE MODERN\n-    FIREPROOF\nWALLBOARD\n\u2022 \u2022\nSmooth, Invisible Joints\nHard ond  Durable\n4 ft. Wide ond in Lengths\nof 4 to 9 ft.\nSPECIFY STONEBOARD\nON YOUR NEXT\nBUILDING JOB\n\u2022    \u2022\nCALL or PHONI\n18 DAYS\nPhon* 792-Y  Evenings\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If It's Machinery You Need.\nConsult Us First\"\n214 Hall St.    Nelson, B.C.\nFAIRWAY'S\nQUALITY MEATS\nFowl\nGrade A.\n6 lbs. and up.\nIb. 43c\nChicken furs.\nGrade A.\nup\t\nlb. 55c\nLiver \u00a3_\u2022..\nlb. 25c\nBoiling Beef\nLean.\nlb. 20c\nROUND\nSTEAK\nTop\n$teer\nBee..\nib 63c\nTHIS WEEK'S  FEATURE\nPOT ROASTS\nTop Steer\nBeef.\nBlade\nremoved.\nlb.\nPORK\nLean.\nROASTS *\"\"\u2022'\u25a0\nib. 45c\nRl DietS   Tende'r Pork.\nIb. 25c\nJowls\nSmoked.\nTasty.   .\nIb. 39c\nLET'S \"TALK TURKEY\" NOW\nBe Sure of Your Christmas Dinner\nORDER   NOW\nfAIEWAV\nMEATS\nPhone 1177\nLimited\nGROCERIES\nFree Delfivery\nfelV'-\n      \u25a0 \u25a0..:   \u25a0 . _;,......    .    y\n______________________________________________________________________\n____^^__\n ppfpllpf\n\/fY'Y:;;Y;,: '\u25a0    \u25a0\u2022\u201e\n.......\nfWWWiVl^WW\nJWf*.   -wr-w   \u25a0\u25a0\u00ab \u25a0> . v.hv<^m\u2122\"\n.._.______.___._..__...,\ntfrlnnf Baily Hrnu LETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\n| Established April 22.  1902,\ni British Coiumbia's\nI      Most Interesting Newspaper\ni^i-lished every morning except Sunday by the\n'MEWS  PUBLISHING COMPANY  UMITED,\n$6 Baker Street.   Nelson.   British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail  -\n*<       Post Qtfice  Department, Ottawa'.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\n|      Thursday, December 2, 1954\n|        The Press Fights\nIt is one of the concerns of Canadian newspapers that a.body of their\nreadership shows evidence of accepting one of the attacks upon the fundamentals of our free way of life. These\npeople, among them the sensitive and\nthe intelligent, see in the fact that\nnews is not told or presented in the\njhanner that they have come to believe\nit should be, evidence that there is\nIS\nControl.   They   do   not   realize   that\nfheir very attitude is part of the success of an insidious effort to make\nthem believe just that. This; effort is\nInspired because the undermining of\nthe Press is the undermining of one\nBf the bulwarks of the way of life in\nwhich the dignity of the individual\nas against the interest of the state is\nheld supreme.\nThere are, of course, irresponsible\nindividuals in the newspaper craft as\nin' any, but generally the Canadian '\nnewspapers are awake to tjieir responsibility to maintain the freedoms\ncertainly to the equal of any other\ngroup. It is for that reason they are\nthe target of those who represent another outlook\u2014of those people who\nas one of their methods of attack seek\nto sew distrust of one of democracy's\ngreat representatives, the free press.\nThese attacks are only one evidence\nof an enemy. It is a supportable opinion\n\u25a0{hat narcotics are being used as an\ninternational weapon to weaken youth;\nthat a definite barrage of slanted\nperiodicals are being used in an attempt to weaken the thinking of this\nand other nations; that use of a letters\nto newspapers campaign has been attempted to get widespread distribution\nIf damaging notions. This latter has\nbeen especially tried to cause a breach\nhi United States-Canadian relations,\njfhis newspaper, as just one Instance,\nJ_as received letters on identical paper\njfrom' identical typewriters. Only the\ntext and signatures were different, but\nit was readily discernible - that they\n\u00a3jad been prepared in a single office\nand distributed to those who were\nfilling to sign them and pass them\n\u25a0ilong in an attempt to obtain their\npublication. Editors and columnists,\nwho particularly are recipients of such\nletters and periodicals, soon become\nadept at spotting 'the telltale phrases\nlhat tell the true purpose. The public\nJorum is one of the pillars of freedom;\njeven its misuse is valuable if readers\n'Ave able to spot the mischievous intent\nof such writings and be warned that\nthere are those willing to take advantage of one of freedom's tools to ,\nreach the gullible.\nL Newspapers may' regret any evidence that one of the. subtle phases\n-tof cold war technique, of fifth column\n'tactics may be to a measure successful;\n\u25a0they make no apologies for standing\nfigorously for the systems of demo-\nracy, for standing for a better way\n:ef life for individuals, and for telling\n!|he facts the way they see them.\n,.; If there are those' who doubt that\nNewspapers are a weapon in the fight\n|or freedoms let them ponder the sober-\nUattert to tho Editor on any topic bf\ngenuine Interest are welcome It they are\nbrlet. accurate ani| fair No letter will be\nInserted in whole, or In part except over\nthe signature and address of the' writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nYale Local Denies\nEndorsation\nTo the Edite:\nSir\u2014In reference to the letter ln your\n\"Letters to the Editor\" column, Friday, Nov.\n26; 1954, \"Ask China Recognition,\" by Local\n901: I hereby take this opportunity to deny\nany endorsation of the above by the Yale\nUnit of said Local.\nJAMES B. STRACHAN,\n\u25a0   Chairman Yale Unit\nNelson and District Mine\nand Mill Workers' Union.\nLocal 901.\nKaslo, B. C.\nPress Comment\nPROBLEM   CHILDREN\nMaybe some youngsters are called problem children because they think they know all\nthe answers.\u2014Kitchener Record.\nERROR  OF  PIONEERS\nThe only thing wrong with the pioneers\nwas that they located the cities so confoundedly far from the airports.\u2014Hamilton Spectator.\nIf Canadian trout and Scandinavian trout\ngot together and spawned in the St. Lawrence\nRiver, and the children fish . . . were served\nin a New \"?ork restaurantTiy an Italian owner,\nhow would that . . . owner label (them) . . . ?\nThat would be a fine kettle of fish. . . . (And)\nwhat about striped bass and pickerel?- Are\nthey not entitle^ to protection against the un-\nAmerican kind? What kind of shy discrimination is this?\u2014Representative Emanuel Cellar\n(D.. N.Y.).\nBook Bonfires\nMembers of the Junior Chamber of Commerce of Victoria have made a wise move\ncalling off their plans for book fires.\nWe were outspoken against horror and\nother undesirable comic books long before\nthe Jaycees moved into their campaign. But'\nwe have always been against book burning. It\nsmacks too much of Nazi and Communist tactics. It is a dangerous custom to encourage in\nany country for any reason.\nOnce some people start burning books of\nwhich they disapprove, it starts other people\nthinking they should burn the books they\ndon't like. Such a custom followed through\nwould end with us having no books at all. as\nthere propably is not a book that somebody,\nsomewhere, does not like. Swift would be the\ndecline of our civilization. Intolerance would\nnot confine it6 rule to the field of books.\u2014Vancouver Herald.\ning fact that where the dictators rise\nthe life of an editor is not worth a\nplugged nickel; that since the war 90\nfree newspapermen have not come\nback , from their forays behind the\niron curtain in search of facts.\nOne of the problems of those trying to distinguish the difference in the\nactions of our systems and its' aims\nis an inability to separate ideas from\npeople. They will disagree with the\n(Communistic idea, but uphold the\nfact that Russians as a people do not\nwant war. We probably believe Russians want peace as well as we do, but\nwe do see that the Russians are the\npeople supporting the idea of world\nrevolution. Until they see the difference between their objective, as a\npeople, for peace and the idea they\nsupport, then, we say,' we cannot be\notherwise than wary.\nThe systems of the democracies are\nfar from perfect. But the most sincere\ndirection for those who would see them\notherwise is to work for their perfection. The free press sincerely believes\nit is doing just that.\n? Quest ions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Name* ot periom\nasking- questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nReader, Nelson\u2014Kindly furnish some information regarding the Harvard School of\nBusiness.\nWe cannot trace a business college of this\nname. Can a reader help?\nV. H., Nelson\u2014Please give me the present address of Dr. Lotta Hitschmanpva, or, falling that, the Toronto address of the Unitarian Committee with which she works.\nDr. Lotta Hitschmanova, 48 Sparks Street,\nOttawa.\nInterested, Nelson\u2014What is the area covered\nby Bulgaria? How is it governed?\nBulgaria covers an area of 42,796 square\nmiles. In elections of' 1946 the Communist-\ndominated Fatherland Front won an overwhelming victory. December 4, 1947, the constitution was modeled after that of the U.S.S.R.\nMuch of Bulgaria's industry has been nationalized.\nL. K., Trail\u2014Have you a recipe for homemade grape wine?\nGrape wine: The grapes must be free from\nblentish and not over-ripe. Part of them at\nleast should be of the black variety. Strip\nthem from the stalks, wash, and then brufse\nthem well in a wooden tub without crushing\nthe.seeds. To each gallon of bruised grapes\nallow one gallon of water, from three to four\npounds of sugar, quarter ^unce of gelatine, and\na little brandy. Add water in this proportion,\ncover tub, and leave for a, week, stirring occasionally, then strain carefully through jelly-\nbag or fine sieve. Add sugar and allow to dissolve, then pour all into a barrel, Leave bung\ncovered lightly until hissing has ceasefl. add\nbrandy (about one gill). Half an ounce of bitter almonds cut in pieces may also be added.\nTie \"gelatine in muslin, attach it to the bung,\nand clcse barrel securely. Keep six months\nbefore bottling and store another six months\nbefore using.\nM. P.N, Nelson\u2014Please give headquarters address of the National Council of Women\nNational   Council   of   Women,   204   Plaza\nBuilding. Ottawa, Ont.\n\"Boiler Kid\" Dies\nAfter 18 years in an iron lung, Mr. Frederick B. Snite Jr. is dead. The \"Boiler Kid\",\nhe called himself, when infantile paralysis\ncrippled and confined him to the respirator at\nthe age of 28. This cheerfulness he retained\nthrough his long years of dependence on a\nmechanical contrivance for every breath he\ntook.\nYet he worked out a life for himself. He\nmarried and became the father of three children. He became a football fan and something\nof an expert bridge player. This life of his had\nits inspirational side, for he proved that cheerfulness could break into even the* most repressive handicap If permitted. He was an\nenco\"ragement to all who are similarly afflicted.\nIn his case it helped to have a rich father.\nHe vis provided with a 21-hour nursing service. As respirators were improved, the latest\nwere made available to him. Yet all this was\nnot the boon it may seem to persons of lesser\nmeans. His family being rich, he had more to\nlose of those things money can buy.\nIf the Snite story does not quite produce\na hero, it calls attention to,a quiet heroine\u2014\nhij wife, who waited on him through his long\nillness, and was ;it his pulsating \"boiler\" when\nho died in his sleep.\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\nHe Asked for It\nDr. Albert Einstein has been presented\nwith a plumber's union card, following his\ncomment that if he were starting life over\nagain he might become a plumber or a peddler.\nNow he'll have no excuse when someone asks\nhim to fix that leaking tap.\u2014Windsor Daily\nStar.\nVICTORIA\u2014Are Premier Bennett and his political followers playing politics with the name Social Credit?\nThat's the fear of a group in London called fhe Company\n\"of Free Men, which, as far as one can tell at this distance, is\nthe parent body of {he world's dyed-in-the-wool SC'ers, those\nwhom SC's political enemies\n\"apifral Memo\n_9Y   JAMES  K.   NESBITT,\ncalled   the   \"funny   money1\nmen.\nA copy of a publication called\nThe Sun, published In London,\nreaches this column. It comes \"from\nVancouver,' but it doesn't say who\nsent It; likely it came from a Liberal\u2014or, less likely, a CCF'er.\nIt's a quarterly bulletin, and it\nexplains: \"The Company of Free\nMen exists to establish Social Credit. Social Credit will make money]\nreflect real wealth. It will\" free\nmankind from the scarcity, frustrn-1\ntion, strife and slavish toil imposed\nby the world's big bankers, who, by\nkeeping us short of money, now\ncontrol our lives.\"\nThe Sun (no relation to The Vancouver Sun) takes a dim view of\nthe political goings-on of Premier\nBennett and his B. C. SC'ers, who,\nin The Sun's opinion, give the cold\nshoulder and the old heaive-ho to\nreal Social Credit. Indeed, one\nmight say it gives the Premier a bit\nof a dressing-down; perhaps, if one\nwere not so polite, one might say it\ngives the Premier a good swift kick\nin the pants. It intimates Mr. Bennett's Social Credit in name only,\nthat he lust grabbed the name Social Credit when he was in political\ndesperation.\nThis, of course, is quite the case.\nLeave us face facts: Mr. Bennett,\nlooking about a few years back for\na political roost, hopped up on to\nsomething foreign to him called\nSocial Credit, and, bango, it worked,\nand so now he's the Premier of\nBritish Columbia, calling himself a\nSocial Crediter, though he knows he\nisn't in the true meaning of Social\nCredit.\nBut let the organ of the arch-\npriests of Social Credit\u2014The Company of Free Men\u2014speak for ftseif.\nHere's what The Sun (not The\nVancouver Sun) says:\n\"We would like to see more frequent and more precise statements\nof genuine Social Credit objectives\nfrom the S. C. Association of Canada.\n\"British Columbia, under Premiet\nW. A. C. Bennett, is particularly\nlax in this respect. For instance, we\nhave received a leaflet headed 'Social Credit Keeps You Informed,\nissued by the B. C. Social Credit\nLeague, which tells us what the\nB. C. SC Government has done and\n'is doing Tn the way of debt reduction, higher pensions, lower taxes,\nextension of the, PGE, new highway construction program. The leaflet also states: 'Social Credit is genuine,free enterprise, but opposed to\nmonopoly. Fair treatment to all and\nspecial favors to none- Social Credit is in favor of social reform, but\nis opposed to state socialism.'\n\"This is all very nice, but what\nhas thjs to do with Social Credit?\nWe may be simpletons, but we see\nno object in fighting for Social\nCredit if Social Credit means nothing more than mild Socialism or\nmild Conservatism within the\nframework of the existing crazy financial structure. It. is a'dangerous\nwaste of time.\n\"COME CLEAN, B. C! Social reform without financial reform is in\nthe long run futile, Why not say so?\nKeep Us informed on Social Credit\nonce in a while. Don't run away\nfrom the deep issues. To dd so is -Xo\nbe unrealistic. Clever politics? We\ndon't think so! It will end in a bog!\nWe must keep going on the hard,\nstraight path! No pandering! No\nconfusion!\"\nThere you have it! The grand-\ndaddy of all tjie world's SC'ers\u2014\nThe Company of Free Men\u2014is bewildered and a little annoyed by\nB. C.'s government which calls itself SC, but which, according to tne\ndeep-down SC'ers of Londorf, isn't\nthat at all, at all,\nThis is, of course, no surprise to\na lot of B. C. people, who insist that\nthe SC Government of B. C. is just\nljke a Liberal or Conservative government.\nUBC and ICA Io\nPlan (-Year\nJoin! Courses\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A six-year\ncourse leading to the double degree\nof Bachelor of Commerce and Chartered Accountant is planned by the\nUniversity of B. C. in cooperation\nwith the B.C. Institute of Chartered Accountants.\nUnder the new program, students\nwill attend University classes from\nMay until mid-August. During the\nwinter months they will be articles\nto firms of chartered accountant.,\nthroughout the province.\n(PR to Study\nTruck Hauling\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 The Canadian\npacific Railway will study the possibility of hauling trucks or trailers for private firms to help overcome a declining rail traffic, N. R.\nCrump of Montreal, senior vice-\npresident, said Wednesday.\nHe said in fn interveiw the impact of trucks on the railways has\nbeen \"very heavy.\"\n\"We will look at anything that\nwill ollow us to earn an honest\ndollar.\"\nHe said the company's experiment in hauling its own trucks between Montreal and Toronto was\nworking out well.\nUnearth Old Teeth\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Communist\nChina claimed Tuesday to have unearthed remains of a primitive human roughly related to the mysteriously missing Pekin man. Human teeth dating from about Pekin\nman's era in the paleolithic age\nhave been found in the southern\npart of Shansi province, Peiping radio said. The Chinese Academy of\nSciences estimated the owner of\nthe teeth belonged to the period\nfrom 200,000  tb 600,000 years ago.\nYour Hornsmoe\nIf you attend strictly to business 'and\nrefrain from quarrels, you may expect a fair\namount of success. A great deal of courage,\nboth physical and moral, may be noticed in\ntoday's child.\nDream not that helm and harness are\nsigns of valor true. Peace hath higher tests\nof manhood than battle ever knew.\u2014John\nGreenleaf Whittier.\nTheyTl Do It Every Time       *\u2014*\nBy Jimmy Hadb\nUEfe A'-WAYS TRyiNG TDGET THE\nhelp fired\"!think he'd like\nthat bartender's j08 for\nhimself\neuysWHo^\nDO THE\/HOST\nToday's Bible Thought\nI heard the voice of the Lord saying, Whom shall I send, and who\nwill go for us?\u2014Is. 6:8.\nGod^has neither hands nor feet,\nhe must use mortals for the accomplishment of his purposes. If we\nlistened we might hear a similar\ncall.\n' CO?_- M\u00b1 IJHC ra\/.TUECB STWDICJlTt. m, nvUB MOBW \u00ab_-__-.VED.\nWaicminsihe HOUSE\nCOMMITTEE OMIRVIAM\nDEVELOP CAULIFLOWER\nEARS-\"\nTHjMX ahoa tip OF\nTHE HATLPlW TO   _\n\u2022___ *club Employee?\nBKs     GAUIMCSS., MD.\nOixnL ?{&L\nlifted\nI don't blame our preacher. Wives\nand little younguns get spoiled the\nsame way if they are treated like\n\"little tin gods.\nWhen Confidence becomes\nan Imposition...\nMany a man ha$ lived to rue the day when a\nfriend appointed him Executor of his estate.\nOnce an Executor becomes involved in the\nmany complex details of estate administration,\nhe finds that what was intended as an expression\nof confidence is, actually, a heavy imposition.\nIn consideration for the friend you might appoint,\nwe suggest that you name The Royal Trust\nCompany as 'Co-E^ecutor with your friend to\nrelieve him of much of the detail. We offer the\npraclical experience and continuity of service\nwhich are essential to the efficient administration\nof an Estate.\nAsk tor ear booklet\n\"Whal We Can Do For You\"\nroyal trust\nCOMPANY\n626 WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER   \u2022    MA 8411\nGEORGE O. VAIE, MANAGER\t\nNo Need for\nCandidates'\nTimidity\nF. B. Pearce\nOnce more election time draws\nnear, and once again our shy civic\ncandidates are hiding behind the\ndoor hoping to slide in at the last\nmoment, unseen and unheard, uncommonly like the little children\nwho have stayed out too late. Well,\nas the French say, it gives one furiously to think. But stay, we may be\ndofng , these people an injustice.\nMaybe they really would Tike to do\nsomething.for the good of the community and their own glory, but\nthey are dissuaded by fear, for in\nthese days the psychiatrists make\ncowards of us all. Let a man aspire\nto some position of importance, such\nas the honorable and dignified office of mayor, and all his friends,\nremembering the quasi-psychology\nthey have acquired through reading\nthe magazines and digests, immediately cast speculative glances at\nhim. The poor man senses this, and\ndoes not like the looks* 'which so\nplainly say, \"I wonder if he is\nworth it?\"\nThen, too, there may be some dif\nfident souls who would most willingly immolate themselves on the\naltar of sacrifice, but for their lack\nof words. They have no gift of language, but this Is understandable. It\nis only the modern generation\nwhich has fluency without ideas.\nBut at that something might be\ndone for these worthy persons.\nWithout mentioning any names,\nthere are some good ghost .writers\nin town who would be more than\nhappy to assist the hesitant aspiring\ncandidate with something like this:\nLadies and gentlemen: I stand before you tonight on a solid platform\nof ultramatic progress for this fair\ncity. It is my intention, if elected\nto replace the present rural routes\nwhich masquerade as city streets\nwith super-de luxe highways. With\nthe co-operation of the Kin Auction\nand the Jaycees I propose to proceed with the construction of a new\ncity hail. I shall also explore the\ncoloramatic possibilities of our\nparks and playgrounds, as well *,s\nthe feasibility of a removable Expandable centre boulevard for the\n500 block of Vernon Street.\nCOURSES FOR CANDIDATES\nBut this hesitancy on the part of\ncandidates to come forward may\nalsq be due to fear of the unknown.\nIn this the school board might well\nhelp. They  could sponsor coursps\nfor candidates in advance of.\nelection with such topics as:\nBylaws and how to get by thej\nC I vie accounts limply\nplained.  (This will  be the  m|\ndifficult part of the course.)\nThe retort courteous to a dl\ngruntled citizen.\nThe reproof dignified to a\nlow alderman.\nHow to, make promises wh\nwill bend without breaking. T>\ncould also give a course In pi|t\nspeaking with special attention\nsuch phrases as: Mr. Mayor, hi\nored guests, members of the c\ncouncil, ladles and gentlemen-L\nis my privilege\u2014I am deeply cJ\nsclous of the honor\u2014As a mem_|\nof this esteemed civic body\u2014T|\nfair   city   of   ours\u2014Nelson,\nQueen Bee of the Kootenays.\nBut, really, something -should j\ndone to brighten and enliven\nactivities of the city council,\nare  entering a very blue perltj\nThe   Irish   Sweepstakes   hqve\neeived a setback; the couptertoL\nhave been seized by the Post Q\u00a3ti|\nthe   Vancouver   Province  arid \\\nSun have had to stop their footbB\npools, and the police are breathy\nheavily down the necks of the _\nladies playing bingo. It is unplel\nant, for some people will find the|\nselves   walking   dizzily   down\npaths of rectitude instead of puttil\na dollar on their favorite hocM\nteam. These people will need sonl\nthing to take the place of their _,!\npleasure. Why not put the couril\nmeeting on the air, something li]\nhockey broadcasts? Ladies and ga\nflemen: You are now listening L\nthe broadcast of the council mel\ning, brought to you by the courte|\nof your friendly laundry at the i\nof Front Street.\nPAKISTAN   TOBACCO\nPakistan produced 201,000,1\npounds of tobacco in the 19531\nseason, an increase of 22 per c%\nover the previous year.\nFor the Best Known Names '\nIn\nBUILDING\nMATERIALS\nSe\u00ab\nTHE\nK. W. DIXON\nCO. LTD.\n\"It Will Pay You to Obtain '\nOur Prices\"\nPhone 1704\n301 Baker St.\nTILE-TEX\nASPHALT TILE\n- 9\" x 9\"\n12<t\nA Wonderful Qift\nTURISSA\nULTRAMATIC\nSewing Machine\nSwitzerland's Finest Free Arm\nHand Made Sewing Machine . ..\nWith a\nLifetime Guarantee\nTake Advantage of This\nOutstanding Offer\nThis $25.00 Coupon and your old machine could make\nthe down payment on your new\nTURISSA ULTRAMATIC\nPhone 1653\nFor free home dsmonstration without obligation\nor present the coupon at\nCUSTOM Sewing Centre\nLIMITED\n305 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. ;\nSPECIAL ON  PRINTS\nThursday,  Friday, Saturday.\nmt    yards for      I . W\\J\n_____________________________\n_____________________________________\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0--''.\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;..\u25a0\u25a0   .    ,\t\n^^^mmmmmmm\n ffjpf^ps^\nffwf^PS^Pp\nMl'te d& tltjkt!\nrvory norto I know b juri wild about\nUioic ihowl f alwayi soy they're tho\nmt shoo yoo oan bay for tho money.\n$12.95\nGENUINE 0OODYEA0 WELTS\ninto avoiloblo AAAA lo E, Stw to 12\nEt. ANDREW\n& CO.\nEstablished 1902\nEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\njle Bazaar, Tea\neld at Invermere\nNVERMERE \u2014The Windermere\nlies' Social Club scored an out-\nlding success at its annual pre-\n.istmas bazaar and tea held in\nWindermere Hall,\nhristmas poinsettias set amid ailed pine needles made attractive\nDU CAM DEPEND ON\n'hen kidneyo fail to\nmove excess acids\nid   wastes,   back-\nihe, tired feeling, i\nsturbed rest often 6\nillow.   Dodd'oft\nidney Pilla stimu-1\n,to  kidneys tof\n>nnal doty.  You I\nol better\u2014sleep |\nrtter, work better, t\net Dodd's at any '\nruf store, You oan\n1 on Dodd's,\nOODDS\nKIDNEY\nPILLS A\nSalmo Interest\nIn Landry Riles\nSALMO \u2014 In a pretty ceremony\nsolemnized at Landry, Eev. Sinclair\nReike united in marriage Roberta\nMay Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. L. Cox > of the Landry district\nand formerly of Salmo, and Douglas\nSmith Frederickson, son of Mr,\nSmith Frederickson and the late\nMrs. Frederickson of Kilkerran district.\nThe bride, who was given in marriage by her father, looked charm-,\ning in a gray suit with pink accessories).\nMiss Dorene Scott, cousin of the\nbride, was bridesmaid and chose a\nlight blue suit with pale pink accessories.\nThe groom was. attended by Mr.\nBarney Anderson.\nThe wedding reception was held\nat the home of Mr .and Mrs. W. Vel-\nander. The bride's mother, assisted\nby Mrs. Velander, presided at the\ntable which was centered with \"a\nthree-tiered wedding cake. Mr. Jim\nCox, upcle of the bride, proposed\nthe toast.\nA wedding dance was held in\nKilkerran hall.\nThe happy Qpuple will make their\nhome at Dawson Creek.   v\nOFFICIAL VISITS\nSALMO GROUP\nSALMO \u2014 At their November\nmeeting, the Pythian Sisters of Twin\nTemple had an official visit from\ntheir district deputy grand chief,\nMrs. Edith Lund of Salmo.\nIn addressing her home Temp|e\nMrs. Lund gave an interesting account of her recent visits to neighboring temples and her cordial reception at each. She told also of her\nplans for forthcoming visits. She\nthanked Twin Temple for a gift\nwith which she was presented.\nMembers moved a proposal to approach the community Christmas\ntree committee with a suggestion\nthat the annual tree be moved to\nsome other location to avoid the\npossibility of children being injured\nby cars on the arterial highway. A\ncommittee was also delegated to approach the Knights of Pythias in regard to furthering plans for a KP\nChristmas party.\nQay Yule Decorations\nAt Redeemer Bazaar\n< NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 19S4 \u2014 5\nMrs. W. J. Silverwood and Mrs.\nE. McLachlan . received the guests\nat the Church ot the Redeemer\nService Club's annual Christmas\ntea and bazaar Wednesday afternoon. \u2022\nThe hall, arranged by Mrs. H. T.\nGumbert, was appropriately decorated with Christmas greenery, and\nminiature trees ol sparkling tinsel\nwere placed on the individual\ntables.\nMrs. T. C. Lambert was in charge\not   the   servers,   and  her   helpers\nTRAINMEN'S LA\nBAZAAR, TEA\nWELL ATTENDED\nThe Ladies' Auxiliary to the\nTrainmen held a well-at1;ended Fall\nbazaar and tea in the Legion hall.\nConvener ol the bake and fancy-\nwork tables was Mrs. M. McLean,\nwith Mrs. C. Beltner, Mrs. Bob Parker, Mrs. J. Edwards, Mrs. Emma\nRenton, Mrs. C. Fraser and Mis. C.\nHorwood assisting. '\nMrs. D. Renton was general convener and tea hostess with Mrs.\nBob Wilks in charge of tea arrangements with Mrs. M. Stevens, Mrs.\nR. A. Hyssop and Mrs. W. Towhey\nassisting.\nThe tea tables were decorated\nwith Autumn flowers and lightpd\ntapers, with Mrs. M. McLean, Mrs.\nC. Beltner and Mrs. F. N. Emmott\npouring tea.\nThe children-enjoyed \"lishing\" in\nthe pond in charge of Mrs. S. Smith.\ntea table decorations. In charge of\ntea arrangements were Mrs. Thomas\nCameron, Mrs. Ernest Ede, Mrs. Pat\nNeild, Mrs. Sepp Wenger and Mrs.\nJane Lindholm. Mrs. Steve Shymko\nwas in charge of the fancywork and\nMrs. Anton Staberg was in charge\nof the home cooking stall. Mrs. Edwin Ede had a candy stall and Mrs.\nHarriet Chalker, a white elephant\nstall. Mrs. Lloyd Tegart looked after\nthe raffles. A grocery hamper was\nwon by Kenneth Tegart and a second hamper by Mr. Derbyshire.\nMrs. Melvin McArthur won a hand-\npainted cushion donated by Mrs.\nWalter Hart.\n!W\u00ab\u00abi\u00abis\u00ab'ss\u00ab!-\u00abi-is\u00abWfetiwcttw\u00abi\u00abia\u00abi_\u00abi\u00abi!i\nyw;NYioN\nMake Her\n\"CJvd&ttojaA?\nSheer Splendor\nChoose\nNow!\nSlips\nLace and, embroidery trim present a\nlovely gift. All size\nranges.\nPriced right, from\n$3.98 to $10.95\nNightgowns\nThe filmiest, laciest\nnightgowns in new,\ndramatic styles of\nwonderful nylon. \u2014\n4 attractive shades\nin white, rgd, blue\nor pink.\nPriced from\n$8.95 to $14.95\nBe sure you take time to examine\nthe many other nylon gift-lovely\nitems we have to offer this year.\nNylon Briefs\nA   very   appreciative\ngift to go along with\nthe   various   other\nnylon gifts. \u2014 From\n,   $1.00 to $2.95\nTAKE ADVANTAGE\"\nOF\nOUR   CHRISTMAS\nLAY-A-WAY   PLAN\n\u00bb,\u00bb2.2l&\u00bb\u00bb3_2.\u00bb&\u00bb__\u00bb_h\u00bbi-\u00bb-_._h\u00bb*&&fc*_S_ia*^\nThree Principals at\nLister-Christening\nLISTER \u2014 The infant daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. R.-.Huscroft was given\nthe names Brenda Louise, at a christening service held in All Saints\nChurch here, Rev. E. R. Hope of\nCreston officiating. Miss P. Samuelson is the baby's godmother.\nThe children of, Mrs. Florence\nHuscroft were also christened. Their\ngiven names are Elmej Garth and\nMona Marie. Godparents are Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Dale of CreSton and\nMr. and Mrs. Leonard Huscroft\nPTA Addressed On\nSlocan Excursions\nNEW DENVER - ^t the November meeting of the :New Denver-\nSilverton Parent-Teacher Association held in the Lucerne High school\nSandy Harris gave an interesting\ntalk oft Sunday afternoon and weekend excursions which can be taken\nin this vicinity. In an era of bought\namusement, which consists to a\nlarge extent of indoor entertainment, it is exhilarating to find people who can get enjoyment from\nnature, ha said.\nNorman MacLaren's well-known\nfilm \"Neighbors\" was shown.\nwere Mrs. S. T..Lea, Mrs. John\nApplewhaite, Mrs. J. P. Horswill,\nMrs. W. DeFoe,>Mrs. B. E. Hogwood,\nMrs. Gumbert, Mrs. A. W. Gibbon,\nMrs. H. B. Forse, Mrs. E. P. Baker\nand Mrs. W. L. Hall.\nThe bake table was convened by\nMrs. Ray Newcombe, assisted by\nMrs. E. K. Evans arid Mrs. D. McRae; Mrs. A. K. McAdams was work\ntable convener, helped by Mrs. W.\nMotion and Mrs. E. Alien; the fish\npond was convened by Mrs. J. R.\nCorner, with Mrs; P. Amsden assisting,' and kitchen convener was\nMrs. Reg Taylor, who had as her\nassistants Mrs. Frank Pennoyer,\nMrs. J.'Taylor, Mrs. T. W. Halsey,\nMrs. James Dawson,^Mrs. W. Phillips, Mrs. E. Benstead, Miss Vi Porter and Mrs. W. Fleming. Mrs. A. C.\nVanSacker and Mrs. George Palethorpe were cashiers.\nINVERMERE M\"A\nSERVES LUNCH\nTO 88 PUPILS\nINVERMERE \u2014 The hot lunch\nprogram at the Invermere school,\nsponsored by the Windermere District Parent-Teacher Association, is\nexpanding by leaps and bounds. In\nNovember 1465 meals were served\nin 20 days, averaging 70 a day. This\ncompared with 1062 in 17 days in\nOctober, averaging 62 a day.\nRecord day since the program was\nstarted came #this week, with 88\npupils served. Mrs. Gordon Lake,\nwho handles the hot lunch program\nfor the PTA, reports that when the\ncold weather starts the number of\nchildren taking hinch increases suh-\nstantially and as the weather has\nbeen mild to date this year a larger\nnumber of children for hot lunches\nis anticipated in December and\nJanuary.\nThe children get a balanqed hot\nmeal for 25 cents, consisting of a\nmain dish containing meat, fish,\neggs or cheese, vegetables, one of\nwhich is raw; pudding or fruit arid\na beverage.\nGuides To Build\nCentre in Mexico\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Girl Guide\nmovement decided at a recent world\nconference to build a second international centre near Cuernavaca,\nMexico, to be known as \"Our Cabana.\"\nFirst world centre, a chalet, was\nbuilt in Switzerland in 1932. Here\nguides and girl scouts from all nations have taken training.and enjoyed mountain climbing and win-'i\nter sports. The Mexican cabana is\nthe first centre to be built in the\nwestern hemisphere and the Canadian Girl Guides Association plans\nto send representatives there. Land\nhas been purchased and construction will start -soon.\nIRENE'S\nAcross From\nthe Capitol\nFor This Season's Festive\nWhirl, Wear One bf Our\nAfter-Five Dresses\n\u2022 Taffetas    \u2022 Tissue   Faille\n\u2022 Shot Silk    \u2022 Crepe\nChic Cocktail Hats\nJu_f Imported Directly From\nNew York\nUSE  OUR   EA8Y\nLAY-AWAY  PLAN\nBRADLEYS\nMEAT   M~ARKET\nWE  SPECIALIZE  IN\nGood Quality Fresh Meats\nFor Tenderness and Flavor\nRABBITS:\n3-lb. average;    :.Lb.\nROASTING CHICKEN:\n5 to 8-lb. average;  _ .\", Lb.\nPORK RIBLETS: \u2022)\n59'\n55*\n35'\nStew Beef\nand Kidney.     AtZ$\nLb. ~rj\nVeal Steaks\nShoulder. J\u00ab\nLb.   3 J\nBreast Lamb\n_. _____25*\nHoddie Fillets\nThick jumbo.    C 3 ^\nLb..   3D\nVEAL, PORK, BEEF:\nMinced; \t\nPOT ROASTS:\nBoneless;   \t\nlbs.\n1.00\n45*\nXMAS. TURKEYS\nAsk Us About the New\nVacuum Sealed Oven Ready Turkeys.\nPlace Order Early.\nDieting Can Be\nSimple, Sale\nBy IDA JEAN  KAIN\nMake no mistake, it you are toting excess pounds you would feel\nbetter at normal weight.\nBut you can never become healthily slim by the starvation plan.\nWhat do you want* out of a diet?\nLess weight, to be sure, but more\nthan that . . . you want better\nhealth and increased strength instead of weakness. Then analyze\nwhat kind of diet would do that for\nyou and follow it. You get out of\nthe three meals exactly what you\nput into them.\nIf you've never tried to elim\ndown, there's a pleasant surprise to\nstore. You can lose two pounds a\nweek and have more energy, not\nless. Regardless of what you are\ntrying to do about your weight, the\nbackbone of every menu should be\nprotein. So the start is to build each\nmeal around a complete protein\nfood\u2014eggs, cheese, milk, lean meat\nor fish or fowl. These foods provide repair material needed to make\ngood the daily wear and tear. The\nregulating minerals and vitamins\nare also essential in the daily menu.\nThese are furnished by dairy products, vegetables, fruits and whole\ngrains. These protective foods add\nup to health and strength.\nLuckily for overweights, all the\nessentials can. be included within\nreducing calorie limits, .which\nmakes reducing safe.' Here is a\nsample energy diet for-reducing.\nBreakfast Calories\nCitrus Fruit or juice, 2-3 glass   75\nAn egg \u2014 -soft boiled,\npoached, baked or scrambled in top of double boiler    75\nToast, 1 thin slice     50\nButter, Vt pat _    25\nCoffee, clear  :     0\nLunch\n\u2022Soup, 1 cup\t\n\u2022Open-faced sandwich\nTangerine _\t\n225\n100\n200\n..   50.\n350\n4 P. M. Pick-up\nHot tea with 1 lump of sugar ..     25\nDinner\nLean meat, liberal serving\n1 green vegetable (green\nbeans, asparagus, Brussel\nsprouts, spinach)\n1 starch food \t\n(choose roll, potato or other starchy vegetable)\nRaw vegetables, liberal serving   \u2014      25\nButter,  Vi pat      25\nFruit: fresh, frozen or\ncanned     loo\n250-\n100\n475\nTotal calories for day '..   1075\n\u2022Note: Soup should be made with\na cup of skim milk, plus vegetable \u2014 tomato, celery, asparagus, spinach.\nOpen-faced sandwich can be\nwith lean meat, cheese or hard-\ncooked or scrambled egg. A grilled\nsandwich is most satisfying.\nInfants Baptised\nAt Slocan City\nSLOCAN CITY\u2014A United Church\nbaptism and Holy Communion service was held in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church here. 'Rev. A. R. T.\nDixon of Trinity United Church ta\nNelson offtciated and Rev. T. J. S.\nFerguson of St. Paul's United\nChurch in Nelson performed the\nbaptism service, assisted by Mr.\nDixon. Mr. Ferguson, when minister of St. Paul's Church some\nyears ago, also conducted, from\ntime to time, services in Slocan City\nand other Kootenay points, and had\nmany friends to welcome him here.\nReceiving baptism were the two\nsons of Mr. and Mrs. J. Moran, who\nreceived the names of Michiel\nThomas and Robert John. The Ben\nLister's baby daughter was named\nAlice Ardele and their son, Kenneth\nBrian. Mr. and Mrs. H. Myers' baby\nson received the name of Arthur\nHenry and the infant son of Mr.\nand Mrs. F. G. Warner of Kinnaird\nwas christened Richard Arthur.\nFrom\nFreeman's 18th Anniversary Sale\nPicture Top\nCard Tables\nRed Seal\nA cash and carry special.\nRegular $7.95. Sale \t\n*5.77\nThe ideal Christmas gift. $\nRegular $69.50. Sale _\nMirror\nBeautifully   made   plate\n3<x4'. Reg. $49.95.\nSale \t\nglass   micror.\n'11.11\nCedar Chests\n59.77\nEnd Tables\nChoose from walnuts and light woods.\nIdeal for gift giving. jLf mm\n.Regular $10.50. Sale  Oil\/\nK*<sf!\u00ab<\u00abw\u00abi\u00ab**wmw.i\u00ab\nPark A-Niter\nA beautiful living room piece by day and a comfortable bed by\nnight. Nylon covering.                                          ?_CT *\nRegular $82.50. Sale  O \/ \u2022 ,\n^k*>MA><*Ml--Mdn_M-\u00bb_Ml\u00ab-_H-_Ha_M_n_\u00bb-M-M_\n5 Piece BEDROOM SUITE\nConsists of full size bed, double\ndresser, chiffonier and two night\ntables. Limed oak finish. \u2014 Reg-\n$349.77\nular $449.\nSALE \t\n5 Piece SECTIONAL SUITE\nConsisting of 2 end sections, centre\nsection, armchair and ebony cocktail table. <\u00a3 1 __\"\"T *TT\nReg. $205. SALE  J>IJ I . I h\n10.6 cu. ft. COOLERATOR\nREFRIGERATOR\nAcross top freezer, butter keeper,\ndoor  racks. d* ^ J, ft  m em\nReg. $439. SALE 3>3*t JF. \/ \/\nTRI-LIGHTS and TORCHIERS\nA   good   selection.\nChoose  one for Christmas.\n10% Off\n2 Piece CHESTERFIELD SUITE\nBeautifully styled for years of comfort agd wear. A-rfoara\ncushioning.  Quality covering. <_._>__.\/_   \"If\nRegular $445.00. SALE     3>__0*t. \/ \/\nWrought Iron TV HASSOCKS\nBe comfortable while viewing TV. <tl A If\nRegular $26.95. SALE  \u00abj> UV. \/ \/\nChase Those\nWASHDAY BLUES\nWith an Automatic Washer and Dry**\nPriced Way Down For This Sale.\nAUTOMATIC WASHING  MACHINE\n$339.77\nAUTOMATIC DRYER\n $247.77\nRegular $439.50.\nSALE \t\nRegular $319.50.\nSALE \t\nJ^ficm\u00ab\/il\nLister Institute\nElects Officers\nLISTER \u2014 Mrs. A. Marzke was\nre-elected president at the annual\nmeeting of the Lister-Huscroft Women's Institute at the home of Mrs.\nCharles Huscroft.\nMembers elected Mrs. C. Millner\nas vice-president, Mrs. M. Powers\nas secretary-treasurer, and Mrs.\nHobden and Mrs. M. Bird as the\nexecutive.\nA oheck for $100 will be sent to\nthe Creston Valley Hospital as an\nadditional payment on a two-bed\nward.\nA fruit cake made by one of the\nmembers will be offered for weight\nguessing contest\nHOU8EWARM1NG PARTY\nFOR LA FRANCE HALL\nBOSWELL \u2014 The hous-warming\nof' the La France Hall took the\nform of a card evening. Mainly it\nwas just a local affair, with 23 persons attending.\nHigh scores at whist were won\nby Mrs. Helmer and Mrs. Smuin,\nand consolations were taken by Mr.\nand Mrs. O. Hellman. Games for\nchildren were also greatly enjoyed.\nThe La France Community Club\nserved supper.\nWJhdLjl, FASHIONS\nIt's Almost Christmas ...\n(pMftotM. Tbw!\nWe Have\nPARTY\nDRESSES\nin\nTaffeta and Velvet\nTaffeta and Bengaline\nALSO\nSKIRTS\nPARTY BLOUSES\nand\nEVENING SWEATERS\nIn All Sizes.\nREASONABLE\nPRICES\nASSURED\nDUTCHERTERIA\nU_=_____=__9teu====-\n\"Nelson's Premier Meat Market\"\nROASTING CHICKENS\nGrade A.\nPer Ib. _\n55*\nMargarine\nTulip Brand.\n3 Ibs. for 99\nBoneless Brisket\nLean. Suitable for JJQ^\npot roasting. Lb. 3 Tr\nMinced Beef\nLean.\n3 H* for'1.00\nPickled Tongues\nMild cure. AC*\nPer Ib  Im*\nCorned Beef\n_45<\nWelners\nMild cure.\nPer Ib. _\nFirst grade.\nPer Ib. \t\n39'\nSirloin, Round, T-Bone Steaks\nTop Quality Steer Beef. rfCC*\nPer Ib OP\nRump Roasts\nChoice veal or '   CQ^\nbeef. Per Ib J*\nShoulder Roasts\n35'\nor Steak. Veal.\nPer lb.\t\nBeef Liver\nPsr   Ib  mm J\nBeef Kidneys\n15*\nFresh.\nPer Ib. \t\nAlberta Turkeys\nGrade A. 12 to    CC*\n20 Ibs. Per Ib  J J\nPicnic Shoulders\nTenderized. JJQ^\nPer Ib __- Dm9\nPlace Your Order For Your\nChristmas Turkey\nWith Ui Today. All Birds Drawn and\nDelivered Free of Charge.\nOpen a Convenient Charge Account With Us Today\n.and Become One of Our Many Hundreds\nof Satisfied Customers.\nPhones 527-528\nFree Delivery\n-\u25a0 - \u25a0\n ; :\t\n ^i^^w^mww^^^^w^^^'^' !  \u25a0'\"^ippf\"'1''i'',:',\"\": '\"''\u25a0'''\"''\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"r    '\n\u2014\n'\u25a0.;\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0 .'\u25a0-'\u25a0't'-'. ; \u25a0\n\u2014\nby, <XawuL (iJh&sdsJL.\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1934\nInter-Universify\nSport Planned\n'\" VANCOUVER (CP) - Bus Phillips, director of athletics at the University of British Columbia, says\nthdt western Canada universities\nare investigating the possibility of\nestablishing an inter-university\ncompetition covering a wide range\nof sports.\nPhillips said the University of\nAlberta has sent questionnaires to\nUBC, University of Saskatchewan\nand University of Manitoba asking\nthe universities to list the sports\nthey would like included in the\nschedule.\nThe University of Alberta and\nUBC have been pressing for resumption of intercollegiate sports competitions, especially football, in 1955.\nPhillips said UBC would consider\nentering teams in swimming, football, golf, tennis, track and field,\nbasketball, wrestling, fencing and\nsoccer.\nLACKMAN'S\nMOTEL\n(Formerly Snider's)\nPhone RI-9271 \u2022 W. 1929 6th Ave.\nSpokane. Wash.\n22 DELUXE  UNITS\nKitchenettes, Electric Heat and Gai\nHeat.  Simmons  Bods,  Radio,\nTelevision, Private Baths (Tubs and\n8howers). Adjoining Cafe and Store\nHenry Lackman, Owner\nClose  to' the  Heart  of  Spokane\nOff the Highway\nLIBERTY\nMOTEL\nNorth 680l Division St,\nThree Mile! North of City Centre\non  U.S. 395,  195, 2\nSPOKANE\nPhone Glenwood 4112\nTelevision\nForced Air Heat\nTrail and Creston Men Awarded\nCertificates for Life-Saving\nHe's 32\" inches high \u2014 big as a\nlittle boy. We love him and your\nyoungster will love having a boy\ndoll for a playmate.\nPattern 663 has pattern pieces,\neasy-to-follow directions for a 32-\ninch boy doll only. Dress him in\nSize-two outgrown boy's clothes!\nSend TWENTY - FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to LAURA\nWHEELER, N.D.N., 60 FRONT ST.,\nWEST, TORONTO, ONT. Print\nplanily PATTERN NUMBER, your\nNAME and ADDRESS.\nDon't miss our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Catalog! An exciting\nvariety of crochet, embroidery and\niron-on color transfer patterns*to\nsend for. Pius four complete patterns printed in book.\" Send 25\ncents for your copy today! Gifts\nand bazaar best sellers!\nHAMILTON (CP)\u2014Award of two\ngold medals for heroism and one\nbronze medal was announced Wednesday by the Royal Canadian Humane Association.\nGold medals were awarded posthumously to Sub.-Lieut. Arthur\nLatimer Corscadden of Toronto and\nJohn Ramsey Mitchell of Waterloo,\nOnt.\nTwelve of the parchment certificates for bravery go to British\nColumbia, nine to Ontario, two to\nSaskatchewan and one to Newfoundland.\nThe certificate awards follow:\nClayton George Black, 37, of New\nWestminster, B.C., for the rescue of\nBryon Crittenden from drownlng.in\nMunday Bay, Coquitlam, B.C., July\n25.\nClayton George Black, 37, for the\nrescue of Charles Gerald Warren,\nfrom drowning in Munday Bay,\nJuly 25.\nGary Strazza, 12, Crofton, B.C.,\nfor rescuing Lance Compton, 4, from\ndrowning at Crofton, B.C., July 28.\nErneit William Mann and Daniel Adolph, both of Creston, B.C.,\nfor assisting In the rescue of several passengers from serious in-\nJury and drowning at the scene\nof a bus-truck accident near\nCreston, Dec. 2, 1952.\nKarl  Eric  Forssell,  New   West'\nminster, B.C., for saving Larry Russell from drowning in Como Lake,\nCoquitlam, B.C., Sept. 7.\nJean Russell, Fort St. James, B.C.,\nfor the rescue of Doreen White\nfrom drowning ln Stuart Lakes,\nB.C., Aug. 7.    *\nGrant Jopllng McNeil, 18, Trail,\nB.C., for rescuing Donald DeJong\nfrom drowning in the Columbia\nRiver near Trail, July 25.\nJames Henry Morris, Trail, for\nassisting In the rescue of Donald\nDeJong July 25.\nCapt. HJdward Norman Bell, Vancouver, for the rescue of Flying\nOfficer William G. O'Rourke from\ndrowning in the Fraser River, May\n12.\nEdward LeBus, 77, Victoria, for\nthe rescue of Roy Rhymer, 4, from\ndrowning June 6.\nRaymond Lorne Bell, 15, Victoria,\nfor rescuing. Gary Quick from\ndrowning in Beaver Lake, B.C.,\nJune 20.\n'54 Biggest House\nBuilding Year\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canada is\nclosing out its biggest house-building year and prospects for 1955\nwarrant optimism for another\nhealthy building program, Works\nMinister Winter Wednesday told the\nElectrfcal Club of Montreal.\nMr. Winters said new housing\nstarts this year, including conversions, will be between 110,000 and\n115,000, and completions will range\nfrom 104,000 to 108,000.\nMr. Winters said that at the end\nof this year Canada will have 65,000\nto 70,000 dwellings under construction, a considerable increase over\n1953.\nAverage yearly rainfall at Cairo\nin Egypt is not more than 1.2 inches\nat Alexandria, 8 inches.\nOttawa Post for\nU.S. General\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The United\nStates Air Force has appointed\nBrig.-Gen. James C. Jensen, to a\npermanent Ottawa post as co-ordinator of its activities in Canada, the\nRCAF announced Wednesday.\nAn RCAF spokesman, whb said\ndetails of General Jensen's job\nwould have to come from American authorities, suggested, however,\nhat appointment of a one-star general was indicative of the growing\nof joint defence projects being undertaken by Cartada and the U. S.\nIn the past American military\nofficials have usually come to Canada on an observer basis, or for\nconferences. General Jensen, howi\never, will be coming to stay.\nAward Widow $11,000\nFor Husband's Death\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A supreme\ncourt jury today awarded the widow of CPO Kenneth Gordon McCrindle of Victoria $11,000 damages\nfor the death of her husband here\nOct 12, 1952.\nCPO McCrindle, attached to\nHMCS Sioux, was drowned when\na car in which he was riding back\nto his ship fell off the CPR ferry\nslip at Pier A during a fog. The\ndriver, PO Robert Stewart, 25, of\nHMCS Naden, escaped.\nThe jury ruled the railway was\ntwo-thirds liable for the death of\nthe 35-year-old naval officer.\nDamages were assessed at $16,500\nbut Mr. Justice Norman Whittaker\nawarded Mrs. McCrindle judgment\nfor two-thirds of the sum under the\njury's verdict.\nPope's Hiccups\nSlowly Ceasing\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters)\u2014P<\nPius spent a restful'night and '\nhiccups which have tormented h\nin the last week seem to be dis\npearlng gradually, a Vatican sou\nsaid Wednesday.. .,\\',\nThe 78-year-old\\Pontiff reihali\nin his private apartment on\nthird floor of the Vatican pal(\nfollowing the rest cure prescrll\nby his doctors.\nThis morning he received Mi\nAngelo Dell'Acqua, substitute ln\nVatican's secretariat of state, to c\ncuss routine church affairs.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIE\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified W\nBLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa\n(Reuters) \u2014 A giant tusk of a\nstrange prehistoric elephant thought\nto have been nearly six feet taller\nthan the present-day elephant has\nbeen found in the Orange Free\nState. It is thought to have belonged\nto a beast which stood about 16 feet\nhigh. >\n.MPORT-D FROM LONDON, ENGLAND\nThis advertisement is not published or displaced by tha\nUcjuor Control Board or by tho Government of British Co\/umbir\nThank You NELSON!\n... for the wonderful way you have welcomed McGAVIN'S\nGOOD BREAD since its introduction just a few weeks ago. If there's\nstill anyone who hasn't enjoyed the delicious flavor and Oven freshness\nof McGAVIN'S various bread varieties . . . then they have a real treat\nawaiting them. Try McGAVIN'S GOOD BREAD ONCE ... and you'll\nalways ask for it.\ndon't say\n\"bread\"\nsay McGAVIN'S\nMcGavin's\nNow Available at\nEDI'S   FOOD   BAR\nSTANGHERLIN'S   GROCERY\nHILLTOP  SERVICE\nCORNER  STORE\nBICKERTON'8  GROCERY\nSUGAR BOWL GROCERY\nCAPITOL GROCERY\nNEL80N GROCERY\nBENNIE'S  GROCERY\nFAIRVIEW CASH STORE\nGood Bread and McGavin's Fine Cakes\nthe Following Stores in Nelson and District...\nCOOPER'S STORE\n8COTT GROCERY\nJORGENSON'S\nHI-WAY GROCERY\nWILLOW POINT GROCERY\nQUESTION  MARK GROCERY\nLONE  STAR  SERVICE\nBRADSHAW GROCERY\nYMIR CAFE\nMCMILLAN  8ERVICE\nLIBERTY  FOOD STORE\n(New Location)\nTHRING'S STORE \u2014 New Denver\nJ. L. WILSON \u2014 Silverton\nOVERWAITEA \u2014 New Denver\nOVERWAITEA - nakusp\nOVERWAITEA - Kailo\nHENDRON'S   STORE\nSouth Slocan\nNOTICE\nA SPECIAL MEETING\nof tha\nKootenay Lake General Hospital Society\nWill Be Held in\nTRINITY UNITED CHURCH HALL\nCorner Josephine and Silica Streets, Nelson, B.C. On\nDECEMBER 6, 1954 at 8:00 P.M.\nAt Which It Is Intended To Propose the Following Alternative Resolutions and the Adoption of\nOne as an Extraordinary Resolution:\n1. RESOLVED THAT the by-laws of The Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Society be amended by\nrepealing by-law No. 10 and substituting the\nfollowing:\u2014\n\"10 (a) At the first meeting of the Society held after thli\nby-law become* effective the term of office of every\nelected Director serving at that time shall expire and\na new slate of elective Directors shall be elected as\nprovided herein, and the Board of Directors shall be\nre-constituted with a membership of ten persons as\nfollows:\n1 to   be   appointed   by   the   Lleutenant-Governor-ln-\nCouncil;\n1 to   be  appointed  annually  by  the  City  Council  of\nNelson;\n1 to be appointed annually by the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Kootenay Lake General Hospital;\n1 to   be   appointed  annually   by  the  Trustees   of the\nKootenay   Valley   Hospital   Improvement   District;\n6 to be elected by the Society to serve until the annual\nmeeting of the Society In the ye*r 1955.\n10 (b) At the annual meeting of the 8oclety In 1955 six\ndirectors shall be elected; three ti serve for one year\nand three to serve for two years and until their\nsuccessors are elected.\n10 (c) Thereafter as the term of each eleotlve. director expires a successor shall be elected by the Society to\nserve for a term of two years and until his successor\nIs elected.\n10 (d) No person other than a member of the Society shall\nbe elected as a director. The term of office of an\nelective director shall Immediately terminate If he\nceases to be. a member of the Society or If he otherwise becomes disqualified under these by-laws and\nthe Board of Directors shall fill the vacancy so created\nas soon as may be convenient in the manner provided\nIn these by-laws.\n10 (e) The Board of Directors may appoint as an \"honorary\ndirector\" any person who has rendered outstanding\nservice to the hospital, Honorarv direr-tors shall neither\nhold office nor vote at any meeting of the said-Board.\"\n2. RESOLVED THAT the bv-laws of the Kootenay\nLake General Hofvtal S<*-ietv be om^rded by re-\npealinq by-law No. 10 and substituting tLe\nfollowing:\u2014\n\"10 (a) At the first meetlno of the Society held after this\nby-law becomes effective the term of office of evr^v\nelected Director serving at that time shall exDlre ?-d\na new slate of elective Directors shall be eleeteH =s\nprovided herein, and the Board of nirectors shall he\nreconstituted with a membership of ten persons as\nfollows: l j\n1 to   be   appointed   by   the   Lleutenant-Governor-ln*\nCouncil;\n1 *i   be  appointed  annually   by the  City  Council  of\nNelson;\n1 to be appointed annually by the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Kootenav Lake General Hospital:\n1 to  he   appointed   annually  bv the  Triist\"\u00bbs   \u00abf the\nKootenay Valley Hospital   Improvement  District:\n6 to be elected by the Society to serve until- the annual\nmeetlnq of the. Society In the ve=r 1955. 3 of whom\nshall he rural director* arM 3 shall be urban directors\nas defined In by-law 10  .b\\\n10 (b) At   the   annual   meetlnn   of  th\u00bb   Poclety   In   1955   six\ndlp*-*or\u00ab shall  be  elected  as fallow*:\n(I) 3  directors  hereinafter  referred to  \u00abs the  \"rural\ndirectors\" who shall   be  memhers of the  Society\nresiding within the Kootenai Valley Hospital Improvement District and  outside the  boundaries of\nthe Citv of Nelson to serve for a term of one year\nand  until their su **<.\u00ab*_ so rs are  elected:\n(II) 3  directors  hereinafter  referred to  *>s +he  \"t_rh_>n\ndirectors\"  who  shall   he   members  of the   So'-letv\nresldlnq In the City of Nelson to serve for n term\nof two years and until their successes ?re elected.\n10 (c) Thereafter as the term of each elective riire\"*or exn'-s\na successor shall be elected bv the Society to serve for\na term of two ve\u00bbrs pnd until his successor Is elected.\nNo, person shall  be elected hb a\u2022 ru-al  director or p*\nan urban director and no person shall be ao anoint\"*\nby the  Board of Directors unless he !\u00ab a member of\nthe Society who has the residence n\"a||fk<itlons. soeel-\nfled In by-law 10 fb) of a rural or an urban director,\nas the case mav be.\n10 (d)  Excent as herein   provided, th* term  of office  o' an\nelective   director   shall   Immediate v  terminate   If   fce\nceases   to   be  a   member  nf  the* Society  or  ceages  to\nhay^ the  r'\u00ab'dence  qualifications specified  In bv-I-w\n10 fb)  or If he otherwise becomes dlsaualifled iin^-\"\nthese  by-laws  and the   Board  of  Directors  shall  fi'l\nthe \"acancv so created as soon as may be convenient\nIn  the   manner  provided   In  there   b*Maw*.   Provld\"d\nalways  th-->t nn  urh\u00bbn  or  rural director shall  not ^>e\nprevented  from   j-rwlni.  <\u2022\u2022\u25a0*  HU t\u00bbrm   h\"   r*ason   of the\nfact that he Is a rural director who has taken no\nresidence In the City of Nelson or an urban d'recMr\nwho has taken ud residence In the Koo*.nav v*||ev\nHosoltal Improvement District, provided he continues\nto be otherwise oualified aa a director.\n10 (e) The Board of Directors may aopolnt as an \"honorary\ndirector\" \u00bbnv ner*on who has rendered nutotandlna\nservice to the hosoltal. Honorarv directors sh\u00ab'l nelth-r\nhold office nor vote at any meeting of the said Board.\"\n3. RESOLVED THAT the by-lows of the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Society be amended by\nrepealing by-law No. 10 and substituting the\nfollowing:\u2014\n\"10 (a) At tht first meeting of tha Society held ifter this\nby-law becomes effective the term of office of every\nelected Director serving at that time shall expire and\na new slate of elective Directors shall be elected aa\nprovided herein, and tha Board of Directors shall be\nreconstituted with a membership of sixteen persons aa\nfollows:\n1 to   be   appointed   by   tha   Lleutenant-Governor-ln-\nCouncil;\n1 to  be  appointed annually by the  City  Council of\nNelson;\n1 to be appointed annually by the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Kootenay Lake General Hospital;\n1 to  be appointed annually by the Trustees of tht\nKootenay  Valley   Hospital   Improvement   District;\n12 to  be  elected  by the  Soelety to  serve  until  the\nannual meeting of the Society In the year 1955.\n10 (b) At  the   annual   meeting   of  the   Society   In   1955   12\ndirectors shall be elected; 6 to serve for one year tnd\n6 tp serve for two years and until their successors ara\nelected,\n10 (e) Thereafter as the term pf each elective director explroo\na sucoessor shall be eleeted by the Society to serve\nfor a term of two yeart and  until  his sucoessor It\nelected.\n10 (d) No person other than a member of the 8oclety shall\n\u2022   be elected as a director. The term of office of an elective\ndirector shall Immediately terminate If ha ceases to\nbe a member of tho Soolety or If he otherwise becomes\ndisqualified   under  these   by-laws  and  the   Board  of\nDirectors shall fill the vacancy so created as soon at\nmay be convenient in the  manner provided  In these\nby-laws.\n10 (e) The Board of Directors may appoint as an \"honorary\ndirector\"  any   person   who   has  rendered  outstanding\nservice to the hospital. Honorary directors shall neither\nhold office nor vote at any meeting of the said Board.\"\n4. RESOLVED THAT the by-laws of the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Society be amended by\nrepealing by-law No. 10 and substituting the\nfollowing:\u2014\n\"10 (a) At the first meeting of the Society held after thlt\nby-iaw becomes effective the term of office of every\nelected Director serving at that time shall expire and\na new slate of elective Directors shall be elected at\nprovided herein, and the Board of Directors shall be\nreconstituted with a membership of 16 persons at\nfollows:'\n1 to   be   appointed   by   the   Lleutenant-Governor-ln-\nCouncil;\n1 to be appointed  annually  by the  City Council  of\nNelson;\n1 to be appointed annually by the Women's Auxiliary\nto the  Kootenay  Lake  General  Hosoltal;\n1 to be appointed  annually by the Trustees of the\nKootenay   Valley   Hospital   Improvement   District;\n12 to  be  elected   by  the   Society  to  serve   until   the\nannual  meeting  of the  Society  In  the  year  1955,\n6 of whom shall be rural directors and 6 shall be\nurban directors as defined In bv-law 10 fb..\n10(b)  At  the   Annual   Meeting   of  the   Society   In   1955   12\ndirectors shall  be elected as follows:\n(I) 6  directors  hereinafter  referred to  as the  \"rural\ndirectors\" who shall  be members of the Society\nresiding   within   the   Kootenay   Valley   Hospital\nImprovement District and outside the boundaries\nof the City of Nelson to serve for a term of one\nyear and until their successors are elected;\n(II) 6 directors hereinafter referred to as the \"urban\ndirectors\" who shall  be members of the Society\nresiding In the City of Nelson to serve for a term\nof two years and until their succeBsocs are elected.\n10 (c) Thereafter as the term of each elective director expires\na successor shall be elected  by the  Society to  serve\nfor a term of two years and until his successor Is elected.\nNo person shall be elected as a  rural director or an\nurban director and no person shall be so apoolnted hy\nthe Board of Directors unless he ls a member of the\n8oclety who has the residence qualifications specified\nIn By-law 10 (b) of a rural or an urban director, as the\ncase  may be.\n10 (d) ExceDt as herein  provided, the term of office of an\nelective   director   shall   Immediately  terminate   If   he\nceases to be a member of the Society or ceases to h\u00bb\u00abe\nthe residence qualifications specified In by-law 10 fb)\nor  If  he  otherwise  becomes  disqualified   under  th\u00bbse\nby-laws   and   the   Board   of   Directors   shall   fill   f*e\nvacancy so created as soon as may be convenient In\nthe planner provided In these by-laws. Provided always\nthat an urb?n or rural riJr-\u00bb-*->r shall fl** bt prevented\nfrom servlnp out his term by reason of the fact that\nhe Is a rural director who has taken uo residence In\nthe City of Nelson or an urban director who has taken\nup residence In the Kootenay Valley Hosoltal Improvement District, provided he continues to be otherwise\nqualified as a director.\n10 (e) The Board of Directors may appoint as an \"honorary\n\\ director\"  any  person   who   has   rendered  outstanding\nservice to the hosoltal. H*rorar>' dire-1\"-* shall \u00abelth-r\nhold office nor vote at any meeting of the said Board.\"\nAny REGISTERED landowner in the C'ty of Nelson or in the Kootenay Valley\nHospital Improvement District mav become a member of the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Society and be entitled to vote by signing an application at the meeting.\nJ. *\/\u2022 fout, SsLCMiaALp\n\u25a0\u25a0\"'\u25a0w\t\n_____\n\u25a0 \u25a0- --  :-       . -:    \u25a0  'Y, ;1Y-\n__U________-_-_i\nfill\n ___ __\u2014, _\u2014\nTrade Board Holds English (lasses\n..INVERMERE\u2014 Classes in Englit*\n(or new Canadians will be sponsored in the Windermere district by\nthe Windermere district board of\ntrade.\nConvener   of   arrangements   ior\nPRIZED POSSESSION\nDE LUXE WHISKY\nIN SMART DECANTER\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nOr   by   the   Government   of   British\n\u2022 Columbia- .\nclasses is Miss Alice Curtis, principal ot the Invermere school. It is\nprobable that classes will be held\nin at least three communities: Edge-\nwater, Invermere and Mineral King\nmine. Arrangements will be made\nfor a class at Canal Flat also if\nthere is sufficient demand.\nHeintz Seel of Edgewbter ls In\ncharge of arrangements for the class\nthere, and G. H. Cartwright will investigate the demand at Canal Flat.\nPlans were made at a meeting of\nthe executive of the board of trade.\nThe meeting was told that B. C.\nranks highest among the' provinces\nln respect to new Canadians taking\ncourses.\nCLASSIFIED  ADS GET  RESULT8\nPHONE   114   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n\u2022by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, December 2nd \u2014 Such joy . . .\ngo with the thrilling gift of a WESTINGHO\nROASTER OVEN!\n. will\nwithjhe thrilling gift of a WESTINGHOUSE\nJust think what it will mean\nto a business girl ... a young couple ... or grandparents ... in particular . . . ana to anyone wjio\nenjoys good food as well. The Westinghouse\nRoaster Oven has all the convenience of electric\ncooking*... at negligible cost. Just plug it into\nany standard wall socket... it will cook a complete oven meal or moat,\nvegetables and dessert, automatically \u2014 in one operation. It roasta meat\ntnd fowl to a tender perfection; cooks fish, casserole dishes apd\nvegetables . . . bakes delicious cakes, bread and pastry. Oh I Be a\nreal Santa with this gift I\nOh-Oht Here It Comes . . . The .season of good food and merrymaking! Wonderful for everyone but those ,f\\      fi\\\nwho are bothered with excess stomach acid-       AA       cr 'S     > V\n\\ ity. But if you know of anyone who has these\n, .symptoms \u2014 heartburn,   sour   stomach,   acid\n: indigestion or loss of appetite \u2014tell them of\nI the  famed  PFUNDER'S  TABLETS  . .  .\n: which bring help right away! Pfunder's are\n^mnm\nmade from a very special triple-action formula; neutralizes stomach\nacidity; maintain a normal alkaline reserve in the^ blood stream;\nprotects irritated ftomach membranes. I think you'd be wise to\n6tock up with Pfunder's. Get them from any drug store. (Your money's\nrefunded if you're not satisfied with them.)\nthe  family\nCheery,\nrelatives drop in\nTrusty  Friend ...\nthrough all this\nseason of cheer\nand goodwill is\nInstant Chase\n& Sanborn\nCoffey. Nothing\nnicer to sftrve\nwhen friends or\nthan fragrant.\nlull-bodied INSTANT CHASE <fc\nSANBORN COFFEE \u2014prepared\nquickly and easily \u2014and at a\nHiving of up lo J,0c a pound oucr\nregular coffee. Serve H to your\nfamily\u2014each one's personal taste\nsatisfied with medium, mild or\nthong coffee. Enjoy a cup yourself for a mid-morning break . . .\nand tackle your Christmas preparations truly refreshed! Instant\nChase <fc Sanborn has become an\nessential part of gracious living in\nmany thousands of homes. What\nabout trying it yourseljf\nLate  Home  \u2014 and\ncoming in, starving? No need to\nworry if' you\nkeep a package\nof BISTO on\nyour shelf. With\nthis famed English product you\ncan whip up a\npiping-hot, delicious gravy to\nserve with loft-over meats ... or\nmake a sauce that's got the delicate flavour usually associated\nwith long, slow cooking. Canadian\nwomen are finding Bisto a good\nfriend for good food . . . and are\nadding it to soups, stews, meat\npies, casserole dishes, meat loaves.\nA good friend to busy home-\nmakers because more and more,\nwe want to serve hot, flavourful\ndishes that can be prepared quickly. Bisto will help you time and\ntime again!\nIt Could Happen To You! ... in this, the fast week of the thrilling\nBLUE BONNET SUE Fine Furs Contest! Yes, you\ncould win one of the fabulous furs offered as prizes \u2014\na fur coat, jacket, cape-stole, cape or scarf 1 They're\nlovely! So hurry . . . take this last opportunity . . .\ncomplete the sentence \"\/ like Blue Bonnet Margarine\nbest because . _ .\" in 25 words or less, and mail with 2\nend-flaps, each with Good Housekeeping Seal, (or\nfacsimiles) from any Blue Bonnet Margarine packages,\nand your name and address, to Blue Bonnet Sue, Box\ntltS, Toronto Ont, Your opportunity to win is as\ngood as anyone's. Just be sure your entry is postmarked on or before December 11th.\nWe Are In The Happy Season Of Entertaining. If you were to ask\nme  what  are  the   two  most important  things to\nremember when friends drop in \u2014I'd say Bright's\n*74\"  SHERRY and \"74\"  PORT!   I'd  almost  bet\nthat  you'll   be  astonished   at  the   reception   these\ntwo   unfversally   popular   Canadian   wines   receive\nfrom everybody!  Whoever drops in \u2014 a maiden\naunt,   a   favorite   cousin\",   the  young   couple   from\nnext door \u2014 \"74\" Sherry with hors d'oeuvres they'll\nfind   delightful.   And   \"74''   Port   with   cheese   and\ncrackers \u2014 m'mmm,   I've  made   my   mouth   water!\nTry these  wines  soon,  and  let  me   know if  I'm\nnot right!\nYon Don't Need To Accumulate\nb u n d 1 es of\nready cash to\ndrive a good,\ndependable car!\nAcross Canada, I\nthe IAC\nMERIT PLAN\nis the moat-\nused financial plan for buying out\nof income such all-important family possessions aa a car. Your contract is completed right on your\ndealer's premises . . . and you\nget good service at a fair cost.\nYou get life insurance protection\non the balance of your contract\n. . . emergency travel service\nacross Canada . .. and many other\nvalues! \/'\/\/ send you, FREE, the\nuseful booklet \"Better Living\"\nwhich tells you the whole story.\nWrite Confidentially Yours, 1411\nCrescent St., Montreal.\nWhat A Monthl Seems\nDecember all\nthe year round 1\nYou'll want lo\nkeep yourself\nprepared f oi , ,\nthe bothersome\/yy I\n\"Nasal Catarrh\"\nand dry nostrils\nduring the festive weeks ahead. So do takp good\nadvice and keep a jar of\nMENTHOLATUM handy. The\nmoment you have that stuffy feeling in your nostrils \u2014 spread a\nlittle of this fine product inside\neach nostril and sniff well back.\nYou'll know the comfort of relief\nfor irritated membranes . . . of\nclearer nostrils ... of ' easier\nbreathing ... as Mentholatum s\nmedicated vapors do their work.\nSend today for a FREE GEN-\nEROUS sample! Write Confidentially Yours, 1411 Crescent\nSt., Montreal.\nA Delight Of The Christmas Feasting \u2014 delectable Shortbread\nCookies made with BENSON'S or CAN AD *\nCORN  STARCH \u2014 an easy, easy recipe!\nSHORTBREAD   COOKIES\ntt cup Benson's or 1 cup, sifted al_-\nCanada Corn Starch purpose   flour\nVt cup icing sugar 1 cup   butter or   \u25a0\nmargarine\nSIFT together Benson's or Canada Corn Starch. Icing sugar and flour\ninto bowl. (Have butter or margarine at room temperature.) BLEND\nbutter into dry ingredients with a spoon until a soft dough Is formed\nSHAPE into balls about 1 inch in diameter. PLACE on ungreased cookie\nSheet about VA inches apart. H-ATTEN dough with floured fork. BAKE\nin slow oven (30o\u00b0F.) for 20 to 25 minutes, or until edges of cookies are\nlightly browned. YIELD: 3 to 4 dozen.\nNOTE: If using sweet butter or margarine, add % teaspoon salt to\ningredients. If dough is very soft, cover and chill for Mt hour.\nIt's Such A Comfort . ... to fee! confidently sure that never \u2014 under\nany circumstances \u2014 is there * danger of\noffending with underarm odor. New Fresh\nCream Deodorant brings you that comfort.\nFor only Fresh has the \"Moisture-Shield\"\nformula that keeps underarms absolutely drv. That means not the faintest trace *\nof odor. Use new FRESH CREAM\nDEODORANT every day. You'll find it fluffy\nand light, gentle in action, yet sure. Trust\nyour loveliest clothes to Fresh Cream\nDeodorant. You will be delighted with its long-lasting protection. On\nsale everywhere.\nMy Husband Calls It \"Byrne Magic\" \u2014 when I take a simple dinner\n\\. \/ and dress it up like a festive meal. Last week we had\njP-k. spaghetti and meatballs, but you never saw a more\n,\\ glamorous meal I We started off before the soup with\n\/ a glass of Bright's \"74\"' Sherry, served at room tern- ,\n^perature. And with the main dish, I put a glistening\n-bottle of thoroughly chilled MANOR ST. DAVIDS\n\"^ white wine on the table with a flourish. It was cold\nv enough to form a little film of moisture on the outside of the glasses as my husband poured it, and\nwhat that delightful Bright's wine did for our simple\nmeal was pure magic. Try a bottle soon \u2014let me know if you don't\nagree with me! \u201e\nfhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nChange in Management .^ .\nRossland Museum Has\n1000 Visitors to Date\nROSSLAND-A committee of interested Rossland citizens will ensure the continuance and expansion\nof the Rossland museum project,\nestablished by the local Rotary\nClub.\nAs it Is not the policy of the local\nRotarians to undertake a continuing program, a public meeting was\ncalled to set up a committee to take\nover the project.\nG. T. German, Rotarian, who Is\none of the initiators of the museum\nproject, gave an outline of the\ngroundwork that has been laid- Mr.\nGerman explained how the Rotarians hBd obtained use of two rooms\ni nthe basement of te uhroCt EHT\nin the basement of the Court House\nfor the project. A small showcase\nhad been purchased and several\nothers had been donated. A number\nof work \"bees\" by the Rotarians\nand a great deal of individual effort\nresulted in the Rossland museum\nas it stands today.\nA session book records all photographs,   their   sources,   and   their\nnumbers, corresponding with numbers in the provincial archives. Wil-\nlard   Ireland,   provincial  archivist,\ngave valuable advice when needed.\nThe museum was opened to the\npublic June 12 this year, and well\nover a thousand people have passed\nthrough the doors since that time.\nMr. German said that to operate   properly,   the   exhibits   need\n'changing regularly, and he offered   suggestions   for   carrying   on\nthe project. Pamphlets and papers\nfrom around the turn of the century   turn   up   occasionally   and\nmust be filed. There could be a\ncompi.atlo'n   of   family   histories,\nwhile    Rossland    still    has   old-\ntimers   around  to   give   Information.  Other  projects  might  be  a\nlist of the pioneers of  Rossland,\nold  family photographs, research\non past musicals and theatricals,\na history of the churches in Ross\nTURKEY SHOOTS\nHOLD SWAY IN\nWINDERMERE\nINVERMERE \u2014 Indoor turkey\nshoots are the order of the season\nat Windermere district points.\nThe first took place at Canal Flat\nand Sunday a .second is scheduled\nin the Edgewater Community hall.\nDecember 11 and 12 turkey shoots\nwill be held in the Lake Winder-\nmere Memorial Community Centre\nhere. All are sponsored by the Lake\nWindermere District Lions Club.\nConveners are Joe Renwick, Canal\nFlat; Rudy Hecher and Les Outton\nfor Invermere and Windermere and\nHarry Moore for Edgewater.\nThe local Lions' club realized\nover $600 from the sale of Christmas\ntrees from the Lions Club Crossroad Park property. Trees were cut\nby Lions' Club members during\nworking \"bees\" and sold to a Christmas tree firm. Convener was Logan\nAtwood, Edgewater. The Lions' club\npark is now completely paid for.\nChristmas hampers will be delivered by the Lions to needy local\npeople again this year.\nland, history of the mines, a history of such sports In Rossland\nas hookey, curling, skiing, basketball and football, tracing down\nwhere Rossland streets got their\nnames, and Important current\nevents, since these become his-\n, torlcal oventa In time,\nAnother good suggestion was that\nmarkers on the highways in and\nout of Rossland could point out the\nnames and locations of the old,\nwell-known mines around which\nRossland's history evolved. Finally,\nsaid Mr. German, there is research\nand writing always to be done In\nconnection with the museum.\nA suggestion from the meeting\nreceiving favor wat that personal\nInterview recordings of Rossland's\nremaining oldtlmers might bea\nvaluable addition to the project.\nIt was decided to form an organization to be incorporated under the\nFriendly Societies Act, with a name\nto be chosen later. For this pup-\npose, the meeting chose a committee\nto draw up a constitution and bylaws, with the intention of incorporating the organization at the\nannual meeting to be held in February.\nThose acting on the present committee will be John D. McDonald\nRobert K. W. Greene, G. T. German, Donald D. Martin, Mrs. A.\nCoombes and Mrs. L. Couture. A\nvote of thanks was extended the\nRossland Rotary Club from the\nmeeting for all the work done by\nthat group in giving the Rossland\nmuseum an excellent foundation.\n'FORKS CPR AGENT\nMOVED TO COAST\nGHAND FORKS - Retiring from\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway January 1 is A, W. Anderson of Grand\nForks, who has been agent there\nsince September 1940 when he was\ntransferred from the Vancouver\nDivision.\nMr. Handerson started in the ser-1\nvice of the CPR In May, 1010, as an\noperator at Ruby Creek in the Van-1\ncouver division. He became an ag-1\nent.in'1013, remaining in the Van-!\ncouver Division until 1940 when he 1\ntransferred to Grand Forks.\nHe has remained in Grand Forks!\nuntil the present, with the excep- [\ntion of one year, when he again returned to the Vancouver Division\nfor a short time.\nDelegate Chosen\nBOSWELL \u2014 A. Mackie will attend the 66th annual convention of\nthe B. C. Fruit Growers' Association\nto be held in Kelowna in January,\nit was-decided at a meeting of Boswell local at Mr. Mackie's home.\nFew growers attended.\nBrazil's most important manufacturing industry is cotton  weaving.\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\niiio\nTHE MIRACLE\nlustre EN AM a\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1954\u20147\nNATAL \u2014 The Crow's Nest Pass\nBand, under bandmaster Frank Edl\nof Frank, staged its first concert\nhere recently. Sudden cold weather\nwas responsible for the poor attendance.\nHISTORIC PEERS\nSince 1672 the office of Earl Marshal of England has been hereditary .\nin the ancient Howard family\u2014the\ndukes of Norfolk.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nThe COAL\nthat burns\nall night I\nPHONE YOUR DEALER TO0AY \"\nNorth Windermere\nGets Curling Rink\nINVERMERE \u2014 A curling rink\nto serve the northern end of the\nWindermere district is under construction at Radium Junction on\nthe Stanley sub-division. A work\n\"bee\" was held Sunday and the\nground was levelled and prepared\nfor building. A group of Radium\nwomen have met to form an auxiliary to help finance the project.\nThe curling rink will serve curlers from Radium and Radium Junction, Edgewater, Brisco, Spillimacheen and Giant Mascot mine.\nm\n.    \u00b0OAV. ,\nmt\nCADILLAC\n<* GALT\nLETHBRIDGE DEEP SEAM  HARD COAL\nSoy...\n\"Merry Christmas\"\nwith\nMusic\n\"THE GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING\"\nSelections From the Paramount Production\nWHITE CHRISTMAS\nChristmas Selections\nBy Great Artists\nDick Haymes\nEthel Smith\nThe Voices of\nWalter Schumann\nEddie Fisher\nBing Crosby\nMarian Anderson\nAll-Girl Orchestra\nand Choir\nAndrews Sisters\nRobert Shaw Chorale\nCaruso and McCormack\nMantovani\nDennis Day\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1555\nThe \"Bay\" Will Pay\nfor your old\nWASHER\non this New 1954\nEasy Spiralator\nCome in and see the New Easy Spiralator Chrono-\nstat. . . Automatic timer, the automatic power\npump, the exclusive Spiralator, the new giant\n10 Ib. tub, the new contour, safe-a-matic wringer\nand the biggest value ever offered.\n  199.50\n $40\nRegular Price\nLess Trade In Allowance .\nYOU PAY\n159\n50\n'\n_\u25a0_\u25a0\nM\n_________________\n___________\n_________\n\u25a0   -    ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-\u2022\n;.i-\".'Yr_i_.\n TT^ rm. . \u2022     -.      .    :'     -\n2>fft\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1954\nRumor Rokossovsky     Russ Commander\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Marshal\nKonstantin Rokossovsky, wartime\nhero of the battles for Moscow and\nStalingrad, has been named as the\npossible commander of a new Com-\nmuViist military alliance, informed\nsou.ces said Wednesday.\nLeaders of the Communist world,\nmeeting here behind closed doors,\nare discussing the creation of a\nmutual defence pact as an answer\nto th, rearmament of West Germany.\nPitched Bailie\nRages In\nHeart of Saigon\nSAIGON (AP) \u2014 Vietnamese police and a company of national army\ntroops fought an hour-long pitched\nbattle in the heart of Saigon's\ncrowded Chinese section early Wednesday. Four policemen and two\nsoldiers were killed before the\ntroops surrendered to fire from police bazookas and machine-guns.\nThe fray was reported to have\nstarted when soldiers refused to pay\nfor items they took from sidewalk\nvendors. It apparently had no direct\nconnection with the long feud be\ntween Viet Nam's Premier Ngo\nDinh Diem and Gen, Nguyen Vpn\nHinh, who was fired from his post\nas army chief of staff this week.\nThe clash occurred near the centre of suburban Cholon, within a\nfew yards of several thousand\nfrightened refugees from Indo-\nChina's Communist ^ dominated\nNorth Viet Nam.\nThe police chief refused to ac:\noept the soldiers' surrender for\nseveral hours until ^hey raised if\nwhite flag over their barracks! They\nmarched out, leaving their .arms behind them, and were turned over\nto army leaders fqr disciplining.\nSang said the same company of\nsoldiers had been involved in a\nscrape with police Nov. 16 and \"a\nsimilar incident had been narrowly\naverted.\"       \u25a0\n(Duma, Mp, U)itk\nVnawn. Ttuvdln,\n9057\nMK-2414\nHAl.F-8.Z__ FASHION\nSo slenderizing!.If you'd like\nRMA Plans to Conduct Consumers'\nPoll on Sale ol Beer by Grocers\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Retail\nMerchants Association of B. C.,an\u00ab\nnounced Tuesday it plans to conduct\na consumer poll throughout B. C_\non the sale(of beer and wine in grocery stores.\n\"We will place huge forms in\nnearly 1000 food stores starting within a week or 10 days,\" said Grant\nDeachman, manager of the association which last week sent a circular\nto B. C. merchants asking their\nopinion on sale ol beer and wine in\nfood stores. '\nFOR OR AGAINST\nMr.' Deachman said store custo\nmers would be asked to, sign the\nforms expressing their desires .for\nor against such sale.\nSale' of beer  and wine in food\nminimize your measurements, the\nPRINCESS effect is for you! Unbroken line from bosom to hem\nmakes you look so much taller,\nslimmer. Cut To Fit the half-size\nfigure \u2014 no alteration problems.\nMake this in faille, crepe, wool.\n\u2022 Pattern 9057: Half Sizes 14%, 16%,\n18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% takes\n4%  yards 35-ii}ch fabric.\nSend THIRTY - FIVE CENTS\n(35c> in _oins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE  NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W\u201e\nToronto, Ont.\nstores would require an amendment\nto the present B. C. Liquor Act\nwhich provides for sale of drinks\nby .tiieVg^ajs in licenced beer parlors, dining rooms and cocktail\nlounges and by the bottle through\ngovernment liquor stores.\nThose Were Days\nLONDON (CP)\u2014A cheeky young\nWinston Churchill pushed one of\nhis seniors into a swimming pool at.\nHarrow years ago, and the victim\nrecalled the incident on the television program of tributes for Churchill's 80th birthday.\n\"It is 65 years since I felt the impact of your aggressive and irresistible personality,\" said Leopold Am-\nery, 81-year-old retired politician\nwho gave his name to a peak in the\nCanadian Rockies.\nAmery, something of a Harrow\nhero at the time, angrily chased\nChurchill and in turn heaved him\ninto the pool.\n\"I taught Winston respect for authority,\" recaHed Amery last year\nin an interview on the occasion of\nhis own 80th birthday. \"He later\napologized.\"\n_\nGraves from the bronze age \u2014\nold as 500 BC \u2014 have been found\non the island of Gotland in the Baltic sea.\n\u25a00&e4* \u00abTA*i2S -9-4*^\nfoASTMAsrei-\nBAKED TODAY\n\u00ab\nSOLD TODAY\nwm>^\nHere's bread so fresh and delicious \u2014 it puts new enjoyment into\neating. 4X ToastMaster is slow-baked to give it a superb flavor\u2014a\nbeautiful texture that toasts to perfection \\ . . it's \"Mighty Fine\nBread\"! ToastMaster and. a wide variety of delicious baked .goods\nare made right here in Nelson and delivered to your store at the\npeak of freshness. Try 'em.\nFOUREX   BAKERIES\nRainmakers Not\nCoast Climate\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Vancouver island residents need have no\nfear of the rain-makers. '\nM. J. Foley, executive vice-president of the Powell River Co. Ltd.,\nsaid in a statement Wednesday he\nhad been assured that rain-making\nexperiments now under way could\nnot possibly change the weather\npa ttern on Vancouver island or the\nLower Mainland.\nHe said'the assurance came from\nDr. Irving Krick, head of the Wafer\nResources Development Corporation of Denver.\n\"We are assured by Dr. Krick\nthat his operations can be effective;\nonly in a limited area and could\nnot possibly change the weather\npattern on Vancouver island or the\nLower Mainland.\"\nMr. Foley also noted that last\nsummer when there were no rain-\nmaking operations, Powell River\nexperienced the wettest summer in\nmany years.\nA year ago the Powell River\ncompany contracted for a six\nmonths trial of weather modification services offered by the Denver\nfirm. Powell River was concerned\nover the low level of two lakes\nwhich provide power for its big J\npaper mill.\nThe experimental. services extended from Oct. 1, 1953 to March\n31, 1954, and were resumed Oct 1,\n1954. .\nMr. Foley said the earlier results\nwere \"not too conclusive.\"\nIn Victoria,, a protest against man-\nmade rain was made by George I.\nWarren, Victoria and Island publicity commissioner.\nHe said the man-made rain would\n\"drench\" Vancouver island's tourist\nbusiness.\nAustralians Using\nB.C. Lumber\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An Australian businessman said here Wednesday that booming home construction in his country resulted in\nlumber imports from British Columbia.\nA. V. Morris, director of the Walter and Morris Ltd., lumber importing firm ot Adelaide, said in an\ninterview that rising freight costs\nwas the major stumbling block to\neven greater imports of B.C. lumber.\nMr. Morris is in Vancouver following a tour of several lumber\nmills on Vancouver island and the\nmainland. He expects to return to\nAustralia next week.\nFord Blames Union\nFor Lengthy Strike\nTORONTO (CP) - The Ford\nMotor Company of Canada said\nTuesday the United Auto Workers\n(CIO-CCL) has set up a new issue\nto \"prolong the strike at Windsor,\nOnt., and continue, to keep thousands of employees away from their\njobs.\"\nThe company made the comment\nin a statement issued shortly after\nexploratory talks between union\nand company leaders broke off\nwhen agreement could not be\nreached on how wide negotiations\nshould be for Ford's 5700 striking\nworkers.\nCLASSIFIED  AOS GET  RESULT!\n.toriA--WA-\nSAVINGS\nifteig Values\nlimit cim\n4;\nColdspot Refrigerators\n\u2022 7.7 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR\nReg. $239.95. NOW  $199*95\n\u2022 7.9 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR\nReg. $269.95. NOW .'..  $229.95\n\u2022 9.2 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR\nReg. $379.95. NOW     $329.95\n\u2022 9.9 CU, FT. REFRIGERATOR\nReg. $304.95. NOW $254*95\n\u2022 11.5 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR\nReg. $384.95. NOW  $534*95\n\u2022 11 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR\nReg. $334.95. NOW --$284*95\nSATISFACTION OR MONEY REFUNDED\n2 pee. Chesterfield Suite\n>n\n$199,881\n\u2022 Sturdy Construction\n\u2022 Frieze Covering\nReg. $244.95 NOW\nHomart Water Heaters\n30 gal. Reg. $164.50 NOV\/   ,_ S148.00\n40 gal. Rc?g. $184.50. NOW ... $166.00\nKENMORE WASHERS\n\u2022 Porcelain Enamel Tub\n\u2022 8-Lb. Capacity\n\u2022 Drain Pump\ng. $124.95 NOW _\n$112.50\nKenmore Space Heaters\n\u2022 Heavy-Gauge Construction\n\u2022 50,000 B.T.U.\n\u2022 Heats 3 to 5 Rooms\nReg. $91.95 NOW\n$82.50\nCOLDSPOT FREEZERS\n10 cu. ft.\nReg, $354.95, NOW\t\n14.7 cu. ft.\nReg. $474.95, NOW .\t\n20 cu. ft.\nReg. $539.95, NOW ...\t\n$318.88\n$385.88\n$449.88\nKENMORE\nTRIPLE TOP GAS RANGE\n\u2022 20-Inch Thermostatically Controlled Oven\n\u2022 Easy To Set Kentimer\nReg. $222.50. NOW ...._,    $199,991\nJohnsoni\nbrightens wood floors\nBy deep-shining\nthe grain,\nseeping infothe pores!\nIf protects and reflects\nthe Johnson \\w\/\nthat won't wear My!\nWax once...\nrelax months!\nJohnson's\nPaste Wm\nmakes floors shine longest!\nw\n_______\n__________\n':\u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0   \u25a0 !___!\n\u25a0_____________________________________\u25a0\n_____________________________________\n mmmm, ___ , .\nUPP \u2014\u2014 \u25a0 ;\n\u2014\n\u2022rW\n3\/85\ntoound, ihsL\nKOOTENAY i* Sp&iL\n(Continued from Tuesday's column.)\nBy LEN WALKER\nExcerpts from the Dynartiiters hockey handbook for\nL034-35 brings the following to light on the dldtime hockey\n;edms which played for the McBride Trophy: ,\nIt was in 1911 that Phoenix got prominently on the\niport pages of many Eastern dailies. They had added some\nlew players to their roster, 'Saunders, Lynne and Oulette.\nUp to.this time Lynne was the flashiest thing that.ever\n.appenqd' on ice hereabouts, ahd Oulette, who had come\n:rom the East and had been on several Stanley Cup teams,\nvas specially effective as a\n:oach. Later in the season\ntfcWha and McGregor, both\n'rom Cranbrook, rounded out\ni classy team.\nPhoenix that season won all\neague games with Grand Forks\nind Greenwood, then went to Ross-\nand Carnival and made somewhat\n)f a sensational clean-up there of\n)oth the International and B. C.\n:hampionship competitions in which\nhey battled against stellar teams\n'rom Rossland, Nelson and elsewhere. The Nelson team had Frank\nind Lester Patrick along with\nHarry Bishop on their lineup.\nWhen news arrived that Phoenix had advanced to the finals in\nboth events, Tom Love, secretary\nfor the Phoenix club started a\nbuzz around the mining camp and\nby morning had a special train\n(famous as the first sport special\nout of the Boundary district) with\nbrass band and scores of rooters\nhitting a lively pace for the Rossland Carnival, where they rooted\ntheir team to the double championship honors. People of Phoenix\nwent \"over the top\" In grand\nstyle In extending a home-welcome to the puck champions.\nCHALLENGE FOR STANLEY CUP\nAll pepped with success and a\nDock of silver trophies to their credit as 1911 champions of British Columbia a challenge was sent to the\nStanley Cup trustees on their behalf\nand dates were asked for.\nThis was  the first  time  that a\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTomorrow\nNew York\nRoamer Girls\nv\u00ab.\nNelson\nHarlem Clowns\nvs.\nNelson\nBritish Columbia team had challenged for this aristocratic and battered 'pewter of Eastern Canada,\nand was the occasion for a great\ndeal of newspaper comment.\nNo less than 10 challenges had\nbeen received that year for the\nStanley Cup. and there was extreme\ndifficulty in trying to arrange dates\nto\" all. As Phoenix was the last received its application with several\nothers, was set over till the following winter. As Phoenix felt handicapped in not having its team in\npractice, suggested dates for the\n1911-12 winter was cancelled.\nSHARE CHAMPIONSHIPS\nIn 1912 the Boundary League series could not be carried out on account c. a great deal of mild weather, but Greenwood and Phoenix\nboth sent teams to the Rossland\nCarnival, where Greenwood captured both the International and B.C.\nchampionship competitions. The\nBoundary championship, however,\nremained with Phoenix.\nDue to the fact that when Phoenix won the B. C. championship at\nRossland they had to return there to\ndefend ft, and the fact that although\nPhoenix had won the Boundary\nLeague, Greenwood had gone to\nRossland and with the aid of several\npew players had won the so-called\nB. C. championship at Rossland,\nlocal hockey fans sought more satisfactory arrangement for settling\nchampionship honors.\nOn November 25, 1912, a conference of League officials was held at\nGrand Forks. Tom Love, who had\nbeen secretary of the Phoenix team,\nhad, in the meantime, moved to\nGrand Forks and become secretary\nof the Forks team.\nLOVE AT HELM\nWith a view to pepping hockey\nLove worked to gather together a\nteam of hockeyists to beat his old\npals at Phoenix. He was elected\npresident of the Boundary League,\nwhich was the first organized hockey league In B. C. and with a view\nto righting the championship angle,\nsuggested to the premier, the Hon.\nSir Richard McBride, that he put\nTODAY\nTiny Tots\n2:00 - 4:00\nChildren\n4:05-5:55   *\n100th Goal For Kelly...'\nLeafs Blank Bruins;\nWings Beat Rangers\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nGoalie Harry Lumley scored his\nthird shutout of the National Hockey League Wednesday night as\nToronto Maple Leafs ran roughshod over Boston Bruins for a 6-0\ndecision before 12,412 fans at Maple\nLeaf Gardens.\nThe victory kept Leafs in second place, a single point ahead of\nDetroit Red Wings, who took the\nmeasure of New York Hangers 6-1\nbefore a Madison Square Garden\ncrowd of 8,650.\nLeafs scored once in the first period, added another in the second,\nthen rammed in four tallies in the\nfinal 20 minutes against fifth-place\nBoston.\nEric Nesterenko led Leafs to their\ngreatest goal outburst of the oam-\ngn with two counters. The o.hers\nMINOR\nHOCKEY\nTONIGHT -8:00\nCANADIENS vs.  BRUINS\nCANUCKS vs.\n, BANTAM   REP\nAdults 25c      Children 10c\nup a cup for Interior Hockey championship, which would always be defended on the ice of the winning*\nteam.\nSir Richard forwarded the cup\nIn  January,  1913, and   Mr.  Love,\n1. G. Blaylock of Trail, H. C. Ker-\nman of Grand Forks became the\nfirst trustees.  Both   Mr.  Kerman\nand Mr. Blaylock have since passed  away  and   Mr.  Love  Is the\nsole remaining trustee.\nThere was a residence clause in\nthe  new   Boundary   League  rules,\nttime limit as  to getting in  new\nplayers), and there was a keen battle for supremacy in which referees\nhad to be imported. Bernie Morris,\nlater a sensation in big time hockey,  was  a  bone  of  contention,  as\nhe had been brought in from  the\nprairie after the time limit by Phoenix:\nFIRST TO PHOENIX\nGrand Forks and Phoenix finished that season a tie in games\nplayed, and in the home and home\ngames they were still deadlocked\nPhoenix won after a 30 minute\novertime battle and became the first\nwinners of the McBride Trophy.\nSupt. J. A. McLaughlin of Gran\nby Mines, and F. S. Norcross of the\nB. C. Copper Co. were outstanding\nbusiness chiefs for Phoenix and\nGreenwood respectively, while Tom\nLove acted for Grand Forks. This\nwas the season of 1912-13\nThe following season saw Mickey\nMcKay and Johnny Matz arrive in\nGrand Forks from Edmonton. McKay later became a notable star in\nthe professional hockey world, and\nMatz also appeared in the lineup\nof professional  teams.\nThe Forks also closed a deal for\nJoel Rochon, said to be the inventor\nof the hook check, in these parts at\nleast. They had also closed a deal\nfor Dummy Lobsinger of Regina\nwhen they found#Phoenix was also\nbidding for his services.\nOne Sunday afternoon Phoenix\nand Grand Forks hockey moguls\npassed the afternoon in the telegraph offices of their respective\ntowns trying to outbid the other\nfor the services of Lobsinger, an\nexcellent   defenceman.\nscored by Sid Smith, Tim Horton,\nParker MacDonald and Ron Stewart.\nLumley, who has allowed only\n38 goals in 23 games, faced only\n18 shots but handled most of them\nbrilliantly as Bruins fought hard to\nget on the score sheet.\nKELLY GETS 100TH\nRed Kelly, big Detroit defence-\nman, scored twice in Wings' victory at New York, his second goal\nbeing the 100th of his NHL career.\nKelly, an all-star defenceman for\nthe last four years, registered his\nfirst goal while Detroit waa short-\nhanded late in the first period. He\nslid a soft shot underneath Johnny\nBower, who had a bad night in the\nnets for New York. His second\ncame at 14:50 of the second period.\nGordie Howe also scored twice\nfor Wings and Vic Stasiuk and Marcel Bonin netted the other markers\nfor the winners.\nDon Raleigh put New York in\nthe scoring column midway in the\nfinal period to' rob Terry Sawchujf\nof a shutout.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nResults of play in Nelson Curling Club's competitions Wednesday:\nJ. Teague 0, T. A. Wallace 1;\nA. B. Gilker 6, E. Ramsbottom fl;\nH. 'Hinitt 7, R. F. Wallace 9;\nH. Ronmark 8, J: E. Young 9;\nW. Young 3, C. R. Mattice 12;     .\nD. Cathcart 7, H. A. Greenwood 6;\nL. J. Maurer 11, fl. Chandler 8;.\nD. M. Sample 0, N. Lutkiwich 1;\nW. A. Triggt 7, J. Haines 8.\nFlorida in Nelson\nSay (ily Golfers\nNot many places can, on December 1, brag about having Florida\nweather. Seven golfers of. Nelson\ndid just that Wednesday afternoon\nas they played on the Nelson Golf\nand Country Club course and reported the weather \"great.\"\nAlex Freeman, after playing a\nround in the afternoon, reported\nthe course, although frozen, was in\ngood shape and the weather perfect\nand not as cold as some would believe.\nThose playing Wednesday afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. Herb Peacock, Mr. and Mrs. S. Cameron, A.\nFreeman, L Bradley and R. Brown.\n60,000 Fans Watch\nEskimos' Parade\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014Roughly 60,-\n000 football fans, biggest crowd to\never watch an Edmonton parade,\nswarmed over the central business\nsection Wednesday in a mammoth\ncheer for the Grey Cup champion\nEdmonton Eskimos.\nRoughly twice as many fans\ncrowded the curbs for the parade\nas turned out to hail the 1952 Edmonton Eskimos on their return\nfrom an unsuccessful bid for the\nGrey Cup after being beaten, by\nToronto Argonauts.\nJasper Avenue. Edmonton's main\nstreet, was left white with ticker\n1000 Helping\n\"Cheer Up Chuck\"\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The \"cheer\nup Chuck\" campaign started by a\nMontreal radio station was snowballing into such proportions Wednesday that the station was ^el-\nuged with dimes.\nThe campaign is something of a\ngoodwill effort to cheer Chuck Hunsinger, Montreal Alouettes' half-\nbak, the goat in the team's loss of\nthe Grey Cup game last Saturday\nsto Edmonton E-skimos.\nHunsinger left for his home in\nHarrisburg, 111., immediately after\nthe game in Toronto, dejected over\nhis wold heave of the ball that gave\nEdmonton a touchdown and a 26-25\nwin. (\nFor their dime contributions each\nwho be- j fan's name will be among the sig-\ncame the highest priced player! natures to a telegram telling Hun-\nof the  league.  History does not singer he is appreciated and to for-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1954 \u2022\nYanks'Orioles Complete\n18Man \"Turley Deal\"\nHOCKEY\nEVENT 9 \u2014 W.I.H, LEAGUE\nSenior Hockey\nSATURDAY\n8 p.m.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTrail Smoke Eaters\nl V8\nNelson Maple Leafs\nContract and  Reserved Tickets on Sale at\nKootenay  Stationers  Friday and  Saturday,\n10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m,\nReserved, $1.25 \u2014 Rush, 85c \u2014 Children, 35c\nHOCKEY\nrecord which teams he played for.\nPossibly some oldtlmers can fill\nthe gap In records.\nPhoenix   and   Greenwood   clubs\nhad both  been plundering Winnipeg teams for  players, and  when\nthe Boundary League got under way\nsome of  the  finest hockey battles\nthat had ever been seen on ice occurred.\nEvery game meant a special train\nand in the final game played at\nPhoenix, Grand Forks captured\nboth the Boundary and .the McBride cups. On this occasion Grand\nForks sent some 500 fans by special\ntrain to see the job done.\nThe McBride Cup was later\ncaptured by Trail, and since that\ntime the Interior championship\ncup has remained In the Kootenay until recent years when the\nOkanagan won the title several\ntimes.\nPossibly the reason for the championships going to another district\nwas because of the First World War\nwhen many of the Boundary players wended their way to France.\nNo attempt was made to re-establish senior hockey teams in the\nBoundary .during the war period and\nsoon after the armistice the big\nmining plants at Grand Forks and\nPhoenix closed-and support for senior hockey was dissipated.\n(Contribution of Dave McDonald\nof South Slocan who has preserved\nthese historic facts about pioneer\nInterior hockey is gratefully acknowledged\u2014Editor.)\nSINUS\nSUFFERERS*\nYour cope lo NUT hopeless!  You can\nI be COMPLETELY   free  of sinusitis |\nby usinE NEVO Sinus Remedy, eveo\nif all other methods 0\/ treatment have\n' foiled   , - Proven effective In thousands (\nof   cases.   NEVO   li   not   merely\n1 temporary    relief    measure\u2014It   Is   _\nI SINUS REMEDY. Completely safe\u2014 (\ncontains no harmful drugs.\n\"A Wonderful Healer\"\nPACIFIC PHARMACOCO. LTD.\n144 Water Street. Vancouver 8. B.C. (\nSold on a mono, iback guarantee\n.'\u25a0    -at alNfugrcouiite-J \u2022    -\\\nget the Grey Cup episode and come\nback next season.\nJimmy Tapp, manager of station\nCJAD said more than 1,000 letters\nand dimes had poured into the\nstation Wednesday and the end was\nnowhere in sight. The Tdea was\nfirst put on the air Tuesday night.\nSeixas, Trabert\nDefeat Aussies\nMELBOURNE (AP)\u2014Vic Seixas\nand Tony Trabert sent America's\nDavis Cup stocks up another notch\nWednesday when they subdued\nAustralia's Lew Hoad and Ken\nRosewall in a bitterly-fought, five-\nset semi-final doubles match in the\nVictoria tennis championships.\nThe U. S. tandem, surprise winners last year in the challenge-\nround doubles, turned back the 20-\nyear-old Aussies, 10-12, 6-2, 3-6, 6-2,\n6-4.\nJ\n+\ns!\nEXPORT\nCANADA'S   FINEST\nCIGARETTE    .\ntape and paper that fluttered down\ncontinuously on the players as their\nconvertibles moved for nearly an\nhour along the 18-block downtown\nroute.\nThe  excited fans  mobbed the\ncars bearing Jackie Parker, former  Mississippi  state back who\npicked up a loose ball to race to\nthe    winning    touchdown    over\nMontreal Alouettes Saturday, and\nNegro scatback Rollie Miles.\nHigh school cheerleaders further\nplugged up post-parade traffic as\nthey snake-danced through the cars\nalong six-lane Jasper.\nThe Grey Cup, making its first\nearned appearance in Edmonton\nsince pskimos began the East-West\nfootball classics in 1921, nested in\nthe white furs of Miss Eskimo, Isle\nLeverenez, as she and other warmly-clad cuties fronted the parade\non a non-commercial float.\nA temperature of 20 degrees failed to chill the exuberance of\neither the crowd or the 500-odd\nmarchers. Almost every kid in town\nwith a football helmet followed one\nof the seven bands that separated\nthe players' cars,\n, It was probably the biggest crowd\never to cover Jasper. The parade\nwas held off purposely until the\nplayers had been given a 36-hours\nrest to prepare for the procession\nand the round of invitational recep-'\ntions scheduled later Wednesday\nnight \\\nOnly player missing from the\nparading gtidders was quarterback\nBernie Faloney, who along with\nhis wife left Toronto following the\nGrey Cup game for his Pittsburgh\nhome. He was to stop there only\nbriefly before resuming studies at\nUniversity of Maryland.(\nThe .paraders didn't forget to\nstress   the   Injuries   that   would\nhave been a plausible excuse If\nEskimos hadn't downed the Mon*\ntreal   crew.  An  ambulance with\nan effigy of Parker as a figure-\nthead brought resounding cheers,\nEagle Keys, who limped into his\ncentre spot for three;quarters despite what was-found later to be\na broken leg, received one of the\nbiggest ovations.\nColored Ghosts\nTo Appear Here\nFriday Night\nWhen the Iowa Colored Ghosts\nbasketball team take to the floor at\nthe Civic Auditorium Friday night\nthey will be demonstrating some ot\nthe finest cage game antics seen\nhere in some time.\nThe New York Roamer Girls club\nwill add more top notch T-asketball\nto the fame program.\nThe Ghosts will trot out many\nfine players including Coach Monroe (Rip) Collins, who plays both\nguard and centre. He is better\nknown in basketball circles as \"Old\nReliable\" and is very effective as\na rebound man.\nTallest man on the club is Er\nnest Garland who stands six feet,\nthree and tips the scales at 190\npounds. He is playing his sixth season with the Ghosts. He has attended Kentucky State College and Cards ^\/onf To\nmade All Ohio team which repre- ._, r       _ _fi_   _\nsents the state. Transfer Farm Club\nOne of the top players, Rufus HOUSTON, Tex. (AP.^-The Am-\nJohnson, a forward and guard, is erican 'Association Wednesday una-\nplaying his first season after being nimously granted St. Louis Card-\na member of 'the Ali-American j inals permission to negotiate for\nteam. He holds the record for most I transfer of its Columbia, Ohio, fran-\npoints in one game, 38 against the j chise to Omaha, Neb, now in the\nCalifornia A.A.U. in a tournament. Western League.\nBesides these players Ghosts have George Sisler, Columbus gen-\nPhilip Beam who is a set shot art- eral' manager, has been negotiat-\nist and a man who made the all-star ing with the Western League, which\nteam in Korea; Ray Goodwin who\naverages 25 points a game and is\nreported to be as fast as greased\nlightning; and Ross Washington who\nhas a terrific one hand shot.\nii ._\nHOUSTON (AP) \u2014 New York\nYankee, and Baltimore Orioles\nfinally completed their 16-man\n\"Bob Turley\" deal Wednesday\nafter the minor league draft machinery had disposed of a low\ntotal of  .4 play\u00bbrs for $136,460:\nDetails of the \"Turley deal\" had'\nleaked out by dribs and drabs until\nonly official confirmation was lacking. The two clubs made it official\nafter the final draft session \"unfroze\" the rosters of minor league\nclubs. -\nInfielder Kal Segrdst (.291 . at\nKansas City), infielder Don Leppert\n(.313 at Birmingham) ahd left-\nhanded pitcher Bill Miller (0-1 with\nthe Yanks) go to Baltimore in the\nnew switch. Outfielder Gene Woodling,    shortstop    Willie    Miranda,\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBuy, Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nis asking a reported $100,fi00 damages for loss of the Omaha territory. Cardinals own both the Columbus and Omaha franchises.\nEd Doherty, American Association president, said the negotiations\nwere strictly between the Cardinals and the Western League.\ncatchers Gus Triondos and ,H_l'.\nSmith and pitchers Harry Byrd and,\nJim McDonald had been announced\"\nearlier.\nThe Yanks will get six new then,\nincluding five for their farm sys-\ntem in addition to the original package of pitchers Bob Turley, pan\nLarsen and shortstop Billy Hunter.\nThus the deal comes down to nine\nfor nine, although only four actually wind, up on the Yankee\nroster. ^,\nKRYHOSKI RETURNS    ' \\\nFirst basernan Dick Kryhoskl (.260\nat Baltimore), a forrrter Yankee^-\nturns to New York. Pitcher Mike\nBlyzka (1-5 at Baltimore), outfielder Jim Fridley (.247 at Baltimore)\nand catcher Darrell Johnson (.252\nat Richmond) go \u25a0 to the Yai^ft*\nAmerican. Association .farm,, now\nDenver but formerly Kansas City\nBlues. Centrefielder Ted Del G(jS__--\nicio (.321 at Wichita in the Western\nLeague) goes to the Yanks' Birmingham farm in the Southern Association. Another player to be named\nin April will Come to the Yanks.\nBOXER COLLAPSES, DIES\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Welterweight\nBobby (Cannonball) Callaghan who\ncollapsed after a boxing match' It\nsuburban Leyton Monday, iSled\nWednesday after an operation;\nCallaghan fought a draw with fellow Londoner Don Sleet. On tht\nway back to the dressing room h*\ncomplained of feeling tired and ot\nan injured hand. He collapsed >\nfew minutes later.\nand there's another\nWelcome foryou...\nCALVERT   HOUSE\nIMS ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT PUBLISHED OX DISPLAYED BY THE LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD 01 BV IHE GOVHKUEHI OF QRIIISU COLUMBIA\nJuy, Sell, rraiie tne Classified Way\nRemember him on Christmas with one of these\nGillette Gifts i\n\u2022 You'll get plenty of \"thank yous\" when .you select\nGillette gifts for the men on your shopping list Each\ngift is practical, beautifully packaged and sure to please.\nGirt PACK ^.spENSERS\nGlUETTE\nTKn^oF*6\"\"^\nso\nip\u00a3^\n*2!\n50\n\u2022 Any man wi\u00ab\n^fSiUette\nfa... 10 &nT\nSa.W-\u00a3*5\n& Shaving\n&eatn,ptoanexW\n10-blade dispenser.\n$020f\nROCKET GOT \u00abT^\ni\nIT\nMii&im1\nSpSII\nGlUETTE ARISTOCRAT #66 SET\nJ^eflolblade dispenser and  *$\ntravel caee.\nGIFT\nCARTON Of 100 GIUETTEBIUE BLADES\nIN DISPENSERS.,\n\u2022 Months of shaving comfort are\n$P00 ahead for every man who gets this\n3 attractive carton holding five 20-\n!r*       blade dispensers. 100 blades in all.\nq\n_____________\n\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022' \u2022  \u25a0' - \t\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2,1954\nrrrr: - ; ^rw\n'\u00a3&&\n~\nY\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL\nO\nN\nE;\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE.\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nY\nW\nE\nR\nG\nG\nS\n44\nINFORMATION\n11.      \u2022S\ni\\   si.\nIr\ni^tlSmmm-L\nJ\nWILDA, REMEMBER TH6\nOIL PAINTING IN THE\nBRIEF CASE . (VE BEEN\nASSIGNED TO THE\n'BRIE.-CASE CASE'I\nSIT DOWN, C0RR1SAN-1\nWANT TO flu .01) IN ON THE ,\nBRIEF HISTORY OF THAT\nPAlNTINfi!    .\nARTISTICALLY,\nIT'S AVERAGE-\nAND YET IT'S A\nMASTERPIECE!\nUK NATO'S JEWEL,\nDARLING. AND 151HE\nSHE' \\ a gem! sues going\nI THOUGHT \\T0 BABY-SIT TONKHt\nI WAS IN\nTHE\nHOUSE.\nVOU'RE ALWAVS BEUTTLINS MV\nFAMILV.' WELL- M.   BBOTHK CANNY j\n.IS MAKING MORE PRQGRESS N\n\u25a0    SOCIETY THAN *\u2014) ARE\/r \"\nHE'S DINING TONkSHT MT\nBAPON SOIL'S HOME-1\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS Market Trends\nThe Dally Newi does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nIn\nPowell -Rouyn       ?63\nPreston E D .'...    4.30\nQiieenston 20\nQuemont  ...'. ._.    20.15\nRadiore       1.04\nReyrock BO\nRoche L L 17%\nSan Antonio   .'....>     1.45\nSherritt Gordon      4.85\nSiscoe   '      37\nStartatt Olsen  14\nSteep Rock          7.10\nSudbury Cont  50\nSurf Inlet    10\nSylvanite          1.17\nTeck Hughes          3.50\nof an error In tha following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAkaltcho    \t\nAmal Lardsr      \t\nAnglo Huronl-tn \t\nArea        \t\nArmistice \t\nAtlas Y K \t\nAumaque \t\nAunor     \t\nBagamac\t\nBaryroin      \t\nBase Metals\t\nBelloterre    .*.\t\nBevcourt  \t\nBrendan \u2022\t\nBralorne   \t\nBrunswick   \t\nCaliffan\nCampbell R L \t\nCariboo  Gold\t\nChimo G   \t\nCochenour   \t\nConiaurum\t\nCons Golden Arrow \t\nCon Denison\nCons Mining & Smelting\nConwest \t\nCons Discovery \t\nDelnite     \t\nDetta R L \t\nDonalda   \t\nDuvex      \t\nEast Malartic \t\nEast Sullivan \t\nEastern Metals \t\nElsol    \t\nEstella   \t\nEureka  \u25a0\u2022-\nFalconbridge\t\nFrobisher\t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel  \t\nGod's Lake \t\nGold Hawk \t\nGoldcrcit \t\nGolden Manitou \t\nGold Hawk     \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHallnor\nHardrock\t\nHasaga    -.-\u25a0\nHollinger\nHomer Y K\t\nInspiration\t\nInt Nickel \t\nJack Waite   \t\nJoliet Quebec \t\nKenville \t\nKerr Addison \t\nLabrador\nLakeshore  \t\nLake Wasa \t\nLamaque     \t\nMcMarmac   \t\nMcWatters  \t\nMining Corp\t\nMoneta\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Calumet .. ..\nNew Goldvue \t\nNew Kelore\nNew Larder U\nNew Mylamaque\nNew Thurbois \t\nLapa.ka  ..'\t\nLeitch      \t\nLexindin\nLingman   (new)   ..\nLittle Long Lac ..\nLouvicourt   \t\nMatassa\nMacDonald\nMacLeod Cock   ...\nMadsen R L \t\nMagnet \t\nMalartic G F  \t\nMclntyre Pore \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nNoranda\nNormetals   \t\nNorth  Can  \t\nNorth Inca \t\nO'Leary\t\nOsisko   \t\nPamour      \t\nPickle Crop \t\nPioneer \t\nPlacer Develop   ...\n.12\n.68\n1.01\n13.75   ,\n.38\n.13 .:\n.11 Vt\n.12\n2.15\n.15\n2.24\n.35\n2.80\n.18%\n1.45\n2.90\n0.75\n.16\n8.35\n.76\n1.54\n.00\n.43\n.27\n1.38\n29.85\n3.10\n2.85\n1.00\n.171.4\n.35\n.21\n2.90\n5.00\n.60\nMVt\n.14\n.90\n20 12V4\n4.10\n9.25\n7.95\n\u25a0.88\n.34 Vi\n.173\/4\n1.85\n.34y4\n10.00\n3.00\n.11\n.24\n16.00\n-.18 ifi\n2.01\n55.50\n.10>_\n.46',.\n.16\n16.85\n8.15\n5.05\n.20  \u2022\n3.95\n.12%\n.14\n16.50\n.45\n.35\n..54\n.11\n.12V4\n1.00\n.40\n.17\n.12%\n.70\n,ioy4\n.15<.<_\n.56 Vi\n.13%\n1.70\n.57\n1.68\n1.67\n.13 Vt\n1.71\n66.50\n.34\n87.75\n3.25\n.68\n.11\n.24\n.55\n.70\n1.17\n1.85\n32.50\nThompson-Lund  14V4\nTombill    29>A\nTorbrlt        1.55\nTrans Cont Res  35\nUnion Mining 17Vi\nUnited Keno          6.50\nUpper Canada       1.15\nVentures    .    16.75\nViolamac            1.80\nWaite Amulet     12.00\nOILS\nAnglo Can      4.95\nB A Oil        28.75\nCal & Ed         13.25\nCdn Atlantic       5.55\nCentral Leduc     .1.      1.28\nCentral Exriorers       4.95\nChemical Research       3,75\nCommonwealth Pete      4.30\nDalhousie     19\nDel Rio 105\nFederated Pete      3.30\nHighwood Sr  12\nHome       7.05\nImperial Oil     38.00\nInter Pete       23.00\nKroy              1-08\nMid Cont 43\nNat Pete      '-50\nOkalta      \u25a0\u2022\u25a0      I-27\nPac Pete     H.40\nRoyalite       H.00\nRoxana       10\nUnited Oils 6\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     ?5>A\nArgus       .-      J %\nAtlas St         14\u00ab\nBathurst Power     58\nBell Telephone     \u00ab'A\nB C Elec 4s     50%\nB C Power A            24%\nBuilding Products     47',t\nBurns   A   ....          _?\nBurns B            4J\nBurrard A \t\nCan Canners     \t\nCan Car & Fdy A ...\nCan Oil \t\nCan Pac Rly \t\nCockshutt     \t\nCons M & S\t\nCons Papers     \t\nDom Foundries\nDom Steel & Coal B\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chem \t\nDom Textiles   \t\nEddy Paper        \t\nFamous Players      \u00ab'\u00ab\nFanny Farmer   JS'*\nFord A   \t\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pfd\n8 V.\n28'.\n25\n15%\n29%\nVA\n29%\n60',;.\n17%\n16=4\n31''.\n9,i\n7Vs\n30 V,\n104\n27%\n110\nGoodyear     ^-*\nGreat Lakes  M'\"*\nGypsum Lime   48li\nHiram Walker \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 67%\nImperial Oil   38\nImp Tobacco   \u00ae^\nInt Metals   36\nInt Pete     23\nKelvinator       23%\nLrura Secord         17%\nMaple Leaf Milling   9%\nMassey Harris   9\nMont Loco  e \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 13\nPower Corp  48\nSicks Brew  27%\nSimpsons A  '.... 1\"%\nSoutham     35\nSteel of  Can     39\nStandard Paving     ?5%\nUnion Gas of Can   40%\nUnited Corp A   30V4\nUnited Steel  14%\nTELEVISION for TODAY\nKXLY-TV\nChannel  4\n10:45\u2014Portia Faces Life\n11:00\u2014Welcome Travelers\n11:30\u2014Seeking Heart\n11:45\u2014Secret Storm\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff (L)\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby (L)\n12:45-Bob Crosby (L)\n1:00\u2014On, Your Account\n1:30\u2014 Valiant Lady\n1:45\u2014Brighter  Day\n2:00\u2014Kitchen Kapers\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3:00\u2014Love of Life\n3:15\u2014Robert Q. Lewis\n3:30\u2014Garry   Moore\n3:45\u2014Garry Moore\n4:00\u2014What's Cooking\n4:30\u2014Strike it Rich\n5:00\u2014Dale Starkey Show\n5:30\u2014Range Rider\n6:00\u2014Barker Bill Cartoons\n6:15\u2014Uncle George\n6:25\u2014Weather Girl\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards (L.\n6:45\u2014Jane Froman\n7:00\u2014Star Showcase\n7:30\u2014Rarnar ef the Jungle\n8:00\u2014Pro-Football Hi-Lites\n8:30\u2014Clmiax (L)\n9:30\u2014Lone Wolf\n'.0:00\u2014Four Star   Playhouse\n10:30\u2014Musical Merry-Go-Round\n11:00\u2014The Late Show\nKHQ-TV\nChannel  6\n12:15\u2014Test Pattern\n12:30\u2014Color Test Pattern\n12:45\u2014The Night Hawk\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014The Greatest Gift\n3:15\u2014Golden Windows\n3:30\u2014Matinee Melodies\n3:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00-^Hawkins Falls\n4:15\u2014^Lady Fair\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:0O-^Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\n6:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Cisco Kid\n7:30\u2014Dinah Shore\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014You Bet Your Life\n8:30\u2014Waterfront\n9:00\u2014Dragnet\n9:30\u2014Treasury of Plays\n10:00\u2014Lux Video Theatre\n11:00\u2014Pardon My Stripes\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\n12:35\u2014Bible Reading\nTV INSTALLED\n$38.92 DOWN\n$14.50 per month\nIncludes Installation Charge\nJ<hSLWLCLtlL\nGeneral Electric\nTelevision\nNELSON  ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\n574 Baker St Phone 260\nFor\nG.E.   ULTRA VISION  TV\nIt's\nTHE BAT ELECTRIC\n1460 day Ave. Tn\nPHONE 939\nIN   CRESTON   IT'S\nCreston Electric\nFOR   R.C.A.   VICTOR   TV\nSALES AND  8ERVICE\n, For\nPHILCO TV\nSALES AND SERVICE\nCall  In at\nKLINE'S FURNITURE\nAND  APPLIANCE8\n1474 Bay Ave Trail\nMARCONI\nLIFE-TESTED TV\nHERMAN'S  APPLIANCES\n1241 Cedar Avenue\nTRAIL PHONE 668\nNEW VORK (AP) - The stock\nmarket rallied and posted some excellent gains in', the early afternoon\nfollowing a lower start.\nCanadian issues were higher. Distillers Seagram rose % .and Mcln\ntyre and Canadian Pacific 1\/4. Dome\nMines slipped Vn.\nTORONTO (CPU \u2014'The stock\nmarket moved irregularly on the\ndownside in slow trading.\nThe industrial index was off a\npoint, with weakness in papers, liquors, refining oils and motors\nSteels, however, moved well ahead,\nand utilities gained narrowly.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Prices were\nirregularly lower in moderate trading on the stock market.\nGeneral Dynamics lost 1% points\nand    Canada   Cement   slipped    a\nWestern Grocers   105\nWeston George    61\nWinnipeg Gas       15V4\nWinnioeo Groin\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, .81%.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.16.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRE8S\nBank of Nova Scotia, 40 cent!\nFeb. 1, record Dec. 31.\nGeorge Weston Ltd., 25 cents Jan.\n% record Dec. 10.\npoint. Half-point losses were shown\nby Ford and International Nickels\nPrice Brolhers, Aluminium and Famous Players were off %.\n__ '.'''\nLONDON (CP) - The stock market dipped sharply in early trading,-,\nbut a later rally reduced the losses\nand established a few gains.\nForeign bonds were dull, and Canadian Pacific lost ground in a dull\nrail section. Industrials and gilt-\nedged issues recovered early losses.\nHudson's Bay was firm, and road-\nbuilding shares were in demand.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240  ON  THE  DIAL\nTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1954\n(Pacific Standard  Time)\n6:30\u2014Koffee and Kay\n7:00-News\n:05\u2014Koffee and Kay\n:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15-Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Serenade\n:55\u2014Behind the News\nlOO-'-Homemaker Harmonies\n:30\u2014Harmony House\n:45\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n15\u2014News *\n20\u2014Musicale\n30\u2014Story Parade\n45\u2014Coleman Concert Hall\n:00\u2014Women's World\n05\u2014Musicale\n15\u2014Shopping Guide\n:45\u2014Consumers' Corner\n;00\u2014Noonday Merry-Go-Round\n15   Sports News\n20- News\n30-Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nI '5--Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Specialty Shop\n1:45\u2014Musicale\n1:55\u2014Women  Today\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2\"J0\u2014Trans Canada Matines\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n:00\u2014Concert Hour\n:30\u2014Time for a Story\n:45\u2014Camp  Wilderness\n00\u2014Wax Wagon\n:15\u2014The Lighter Side\n:25\u2014Fashions for You\n:30\u2014Sports News\n:35\u2014Today in History\n:40\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n:45\u2014Bowling News\n50\u2014News\n:00\u2014Rawhide\n:15\u2014Hit Parade\n45\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n00\u2014News and Roundup\n30\u2014Kinauctlon\n30\u2014B. C. Telephone Program\nOil-News\n:15\u2014Kinauction\n:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nFRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1954\n(Pacific Standard Time)\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n1-\n7:15\u2014 Musical  Minutes\n2\n1:30\u2014 News\n1.\n7:35\u2014Musical  Minutes\n\u2022V\n7:46\u2014Murning  Devotions\n3\n7:55\u2014 Musical   March   Past\n4\n8:00\u2014News\n4\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n5\n8-15\u2014Breaklast   Club\n5\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n5\n9:00\u2014 BBC  News\n5\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n6\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n6\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n6\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n1\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n7\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n8\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n9\n12:15-News\n0\n12 25- Showcaes\n9\n12:30\u2014Farm   Broadcast\n11)\n12-55\u2014 Five to One\n10\n1:00\u2014Art Gallery Recital\n10\n1:30\u2014Afternoon. Concert\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\nl:'ii)\u2014Trans Canadfa  Matinee\n! '.Hi\u2014Prograrne Kesume\nJ:4^-Share the Wealth\n1:00\u2014B. C. Roundup\n1:30\u2014Anne of Avonlea\n5:00\u2014Current and Choice\ni:15\u2014International Commentary\ni:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Folk Song Time\n1:00\u2014Rawhide\n1:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n5:30\u2014Sing for Your Supper\n\/ 01)--News\n,:30\u2014Toronto Symphony P6p Concert\n1:30\u2014 Vancouver Theatre\n)!00\u2014The Nation's Business\ni:15\u2014John Fisher\n9:30\u2014Sports Page\n) til)\u2014 News\n\u25ba:15\u2014Ballad Time\n):30\u2014Curtain Melodies\nDAILY  CROSSWORD iwmm\n2. Among\n3. These\nsisters were\nfamous in\nsilent movies\n4. Poker stake\n5. Hunt for\n6. Seize\n7. Sick\n8. Hint\n9. A vicious\nold hag\n10. Coming\ninto\n16. Before\n19. Erbium\n(sym.)\n20. Descry\n22. Enactments\nof,\nlegislature\n23. Able\nto\nread\nand\nwrite\n24. At\nhome\n25. Gajlg\n29. Measure\n(Chin.)\n32. Ncga-\n.    tive\nreply\n33. Head\n(slang)\n34. Wild\nass\n(Asia)\n38. Great\nquantity\n40. Withered\naaaaia naHUP\nbh&kih > Haa_3i.-\na3Q mm sas\nas ranama as\nanmaoa n_.f-.r_\n__E10 m@\nSO' 0HE_Sn   __]__!\n_______S_3-3   HHE,\naaaas naaam\nBIlG-HaH\nainHUi--;\nMm\nYeiterdfty'i Auwtl\n41. Chair\n42. Mountain\n(Thessaly)\n43. Prophet\n45. Strange\n46. A Marsha)\nof\nFrance\nACROSS\n1. Medieval\nstories\n6. Wall recess'\n11. One of a\nclass of\ncompounds\nfrom\nammonia\n(chem.)\n12. Man's name\n13. A long view\n14. Utter\nsuddenly\n16. Stick to\n17. Before\n18. American\nIndian\n21. Iridium\n(sym.)\n22. Slides along\nthe surface,\nas a snake\n26. Twofold\n(prefix)\n27. Prong\n28. Scheme\n30. Close to\n31. Disturbing\n35. Tellurium\n(sym.)\n36. Celestial\nbody\n37. Biblical\ncity (poss.)\n39. Male singing\nvoice (pi.)\n44. Claw\n47. Web-\nJooted birds\n48. Musical\nstudy\n49. Rub out\n50. Covered\nwith seeds\n51. To resurface\nwith tar\nDOWN\n1. River\n(Yugo.)\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is Ms\u00abd\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, upok\ntrophies, the length and formation of the wtrds are all hinto,\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram quotation\n'     OTAL     RIOR     FITV     RTD     RISV     H G tl 3\nAC     RLIZO,     ELSOFC,     SUO     DATOTSB\nTO \u2014 FUSEKLFFUB. ,\nYesterday's Cryptoquotc:   IN THE FIRST DAYS OF MV\nDISTRACTING GRIEF, I FOUND MYSELF-HOME.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\n1\n%\n_\n\u2666r\ni\nb\n7\ne\n9\nIO\n1 i\n%\n11\n13\nVA\n14\niff\n\\6>\n^t\nf\/<\n(7\n%\n%\n%\n%\n1\u00a9\nf>-\nIO\n1\n11\n21\n25\nvt\n25\n%\n2(,\nIT\n^\n%\n\\W<\n23\n29\n\u25a0\nit,\n%\nj.\ntl\n33\n3*\n_-\"\n%\nJS\"\n%\n%\n'^\n'ti\nj\/\n\u00bb\n%\nVA\nw\nAO\nAt\n41.\n45\nAA\nAb\"\nAt>\n1\n-\u00bb7\n\u25a0W\n1\n49\n50\nI\n%\n61\n : ! I\t\n _J i    \u25a0- '-.   \u25a0':\u25a0\n \u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0    i : : _____\n\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'' '   ' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022'\u25a0' \u25a0 ''- ')\n \u2014\u2014 -mmm, ; ; :\t\n__-\u2014_- _ \u2014 . .\u2014.\n3\/<S7\nGolden Opportunitles and Wise Buys\nA Daily Classified Directory For - The Buyer - The Sell er\u00ab The trader - The Swapper and Shopper\nBIRTHS\nMORRIS - To Mr. find Mrs.'Jack\nAorrls, Kaslo, at Kootenay Lake\nScnoral Hospital, Nov, 30, t son.\nLIVINGSTON -To Mr. and Mrs.\nidmund Livingston, Salmo, at Koo-\nenay Lake General Hospital, Nov,\n0, a daughter.\nMEALEY \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Dan\nflealey,  R.R.1,  at Kootenay  Lako\nenerai Hospital, Dec. 1, a son,\niHELP  WANTED\nWANTED MALE OR FEMALE\nbookkeeper for local garage to do\ngeneral record keeping. Must,have\nknowledge ol typing and ability\nto meet the public. Apply Box 6667\nNelson Daily News\nSCANfEP kttMMMT TO\ntake full charge of office and accounting for local garage. Apply\nBox 6734. Nelson Daily News.\n'STENOGRAPHER WANTED AT\nOnce as Office Assistant, Fernie\nMemorial Hospital, Fernie, B.C.\"\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nEXPERIENCED SALES WOMAN\nto act as manager for new store\nopening in Nelson. Must be experienced in dry goods. Reply in\nwriting, giving experience and\nphone number to Box 6778, Dally\nNewa.\n.ALES LAfaY FOR CANbY STORE\nPrefer one with local references.\nApply Ranniger's Candies Ltd.\nAfternoons only.\n'aNISB' - Competent sTeno-\njrapher-clerk for business office.\nWood Vallance Hardware Co.\n1UNI0R SALES CLERK FOR NEW\nstore opening ln Nelson. Apply\nto Box 6694, Nelson Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nft ANTED - LIGHT HOUSE WOR^I\nPhone 445-Y.\n?0R   NEW   CONSTRUCTION   OR\nany repairs, ph   434-X-2\n'UK   SALt   MUK-fcLLAINtUU-\nWHEN IN SPOKANE, STOP AND\nsee Al Edwards at North 1209\nHamilton Street He has, toys and\ngames, electric trains, bicycles and\nwagons, guns and shells, automatic\nsteam and dry Irons, Sunbeam\nshavemasters, electric clocks, tumbler sets, steak sets, complete line\nof hardware. Pre-Christmas sale\nbegins December 1st. Uhiversity\nHardware, Prop. A. C. Edwards.\nSEALERS IN ALL TYPES 6?\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings, chain,\niteel plate and shapes, Atlas Iron\nSt Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St.,\nVancouver, B.C. Phone PAcific\n6357.\nf-1 SHOPSMITH BENCHSAW,\ndrill, lathe, sander with lathe\ntbols, wire and grind wheel, face\nplate, 1\/3 h.p. motor, $200. Apply\nEfaily News Box 6887.\n270 MAGNUM RIFLE, CUSTOM-\nized by Weatherby, as new. Off\nseason price, $175. Box 6749, Dally\nNews.\nJUTLER'S NEW AND USED FUR\nnlture, basement 301 Baker St\nPhone-47   \"We  buy  used  turnl-\n. ture \"\nSLACK AND WHITE SMALL KIT-\ncheh  range,  water  front. Phone\n_9-Y.\nfOR SALE SKI BOOTS, SIZE 8.\nHockey pants, pads. etc. Small\nchild's auto. Ph. 448-Y.\n_ARGE TRICYCLE FOR SALE OR\nwould like electric radio in exchange. Box 6795 Nelson News,\n3NE THOR SKILL SAW 8\" HEAVY\nduty with metal case $115.00. Co-\nlumbia Trading Co. 902 Front St.\nrOR SALE 9X12 INDIA RUG IN\ngood condition. 324 Victoria St.,,\nSuite 18.\niUSTOM BUILT RADIO.PHONO-\ngraph, 8 months old, $195. Ph.\n550-L.\nion Sale 6 circulating oil\n'heaters,   also   6  electric  heaters.\nPhilips Motel.\nBNE REAR END AND CAR\nframe, ideal (or trailer, $10. Ph.\n1363-X-3.\nFOR SALE: KITCHEN SET. PRAC-\ntically new. Phone 1352-R after\n5:30.\nPOR SALE-3- OR 2-PIECE CHES-\nterfleld Suite in good condition.\nReasonable. Phone 965-Y.\n*iPT5 FITTINGS    -     IUBES   -\nspecial Low prices Active Trading\nCo  985 E  Cordova St   Vahcnuvei\nTRIOIDAIRE, 9 CU. FT. ELECTRO-\nlux cleaner. Deep freeze. Box 6564\nFOR SALE - WOODEN CRIB. AP,\nMrs. V. Rawley, Harrop. B.C.\n.1\n11' i, 11;.\nV t i l.- nn\nFINE PORTRAITS BY PETTIT'OF\nCastlegar\n>ROP\u00a7RTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nETC..  FOR SALE\nQUICK SALE: 26 ACRES VALU\nable cordwood property. Easily\ncleared for farming. W%ter avail\nable. Lower Blewett, 6 mile:\nfrom Nelson. Ph. 1209-L.\nUNFINISHED HOUSE JN KIN\nnalrd, will take late model car\nanti part cash In trade. Ph. Kin\nnaird 3544\n.ASTLEGAR - TWO-BEDROOM\nhouse. Two lots. Low down pay\nment. Terms. Phone 2671.\nWANTED: SMALL, MODERN\nhouse for couple. $1000-$1500 down\nPh. 798-Y.\nJOT    FOR    SALE.    PH..\"   476-Jt-l\nevenings.\nPERSONAL\n[HE ALMER HOTEL, OPP. C.P.R\nDepot, Vancouver. B.C. 100% fire\nproof. 24 hr Elevator Service\nClean, quiet and comfortable Reasonable rates'. Qity Centre.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.     BICYCLES\n* mmmmmmlmm hKW**\nTHE BEST IN\nUSED-\nCARS-\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1954 Austin Sedon\n1954 Ford Fordor\n1954 Chevrolet Cooch\n1953 Chevrolet Coach\n1953 Austin Sedan\n, f952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Ford Tudor\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\nMANY MORE'\nCHOICE UNITS\nINCLUDING\nAN EXCELLENT STOCK\nOF LIGHT DELIVERIES\nSPOT CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL CLEAN CARS\nCASH     TERMS     TRADES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\n500 Blk. Vernon Phone 1661\n803 Baker St. Phone 1135\nNELSON, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 1950 FORD 2-DOOR\nA-l. shape. 2 tone. 5 news tires,\nradio, heater, signal lights and\nwinterized. . Quick sale $1000.\nCould be financed. Phone 134IS-L\nor 921 Latimer St\nWRECKED '41 FORD 2-DOOR.\nRadio, heater, good tires, etc.\nWhat offers? Apply 820 Richard\nSt. after 5,\nFOR SALE 1954 CUSTOMLINE\nFord Sedan, like new. 7000 miles,\n$2000. Can be financed. Phone\n1226-Y.\nRENTALS\nBEDROOM WITH HOT AND COLD\nrunning water, ste-ftn heat Monthly rate $26. Also room with bath\nat winter rate. Apply Sterling\nHotel. \u2022\n3 ROOMS AND BATH, SEt\/fl\nfurnished. Vacant Dec. 1. 3 min-\nutes to ferry. Phone 1623-L-2\nmornings or evenings. Con Cummings,\nton HeTJT - 2 _t66to tJNFi.ii.\nnlshed heated apartment and\nbathroom, bright, comfortable,\ncentral. Phone 1580\nH6USE T6 REfifT. NOttatf'jfi.OR-.\nwithin walking distance from\nferry. Ph. 1175 before 5, 487-Y\nafter.\nUlVE IN COfiffdRf WltH W6\nworry. Winter rates at Ken Court\nMotel, 14 miles South on Ymir\nRd. Ph. 1581-L-2.\nNORTH SHORE - FURNISHED\nsuite near ferry, one bedroom,\ngarage, adults only $65.00. Phone\n2-BEDROOM HOME IN ROSK-\nmont for winter months. Box 9786,\nDaily News.- or phone Trail\n1844-L-2\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE, CL\u00a3aN.\nmodern, ins'ulated, reasonable\nrent. McHardy Agencies Ltd. Ph.\n135.\n8 ROOM APARTMENT AND BATH\nprivate entrance, very reasonable.\nBlock from town. Vacant Dec. 1\nCall 306 Victoria St.\nLARGE 3-ROOM SUITE, IDEAL\nlocation close to Post Office. Rent\n$65 month Box 6758, Daily Newa.\nCOZY ROOM WITH OR WITHOtff\nkitchen and fridge privileges. 410\nVictoria St.\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n\"ORDER YOUR BABY CHICKS\nfor 1955 as early as possible. Our\nchange tn breeding methods show\ngreat evidence of waking our\nstock much stronger, and more\nhighly disease resistant.- Over 8000\nbreeders on our Dwn farm in\nWhite Leghorns, White Rocks,\nNew Hampshlres, White Rock by\nWhite Leghorn cross and New\nHampshire by White Leghorn\nCross,\" Appleby Poultry Farm,\nMission City, B.C,\nfoR'lALg - ebW'-UsT t-ftESH:\nened. N. Poohachow, Winlaw, B.C.\nFor SALe !_ toiLki'Nd ebWis.T.\nPii-ton. Ss'mo, B. C.\nMACHINERY\nCHAIN SAWS, NEW AND OLD,\nfor rent or sale and repair.. Apply\nBud's Saw Shop, 806 5th St.. Nelson  Ph. 791-L.-\n'U.S. CANARIES, BEES, ITC.\nWANTED: FAMILY DOO (COLLtB\nor^Shephard) Willing to wait until Spring for pup, H. Herbison,\n318 Second St., Nelson.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSMALL GROCERY AND CON\nfectionery business for sale Good\nlocation Apply U0S. Hall Mines\nRoad\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYER?   AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n-rw\"~W-BD6w\"SoNT.\"'fld.\nAssoyra. 301 Josephine St  Nelson.\nrr-g \"fiLMBS. ftaSSLAMTBC\nAasayei  Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nb5Y_) c  AmBcf-i.M.-iXc.\"\nBC Und Surveyor P Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson    Phone 1238\nA.\"L.TUfer.y,\"B.e.L:s.\nSui     No  8. 873 Baker St., Nelson\nfhone 1118   p   C   Lend Surveyor\na   V   fekiAflJlR   Pt   B6X   !5l\nKimberley, Phone 84\nB C Land Surveyor, Engineer\nLumber Prices Dip To\nMeet Competition;\nBuilding Holding Up\nMACHINISTS\n\" \"BENNETTS LTMITE6\nMachine Shop.    Acetylene tnd\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593. 324 Vernon St\nSfalaon Saity Netna\nClassified    Advertising    Raton:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive Insertions,\nbers   llo  extra.   Covers  say\nnumber of Insertions.\nllo line per consecutive Insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line tor 6 consecutive insertions.\nSI 56 line tor month (28 consecutive Insertions)   Box num-\nPUBLIC   (LEOAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc - 20c per line\nfirst   insertion.   16c   per   line\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n(Subscriptions  Rates:\niNot More-Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier per wees\nit} advance .30\nBy carrier   ' $18.00\nUnited States, Unltod Kingdom\nOne month          .     $ 1.25\nhree months  _     j 3 76\nSix months      __   ._    $ 7.80\nOne year       ...    $15.00\nOne year ... $10.09\nMall in Canada outside Nelson\nOnt month $ 1.00\nThree months $ 2.75\nSix months $ 5.50\niVhera extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nKeen competition tor lumber orders Is bringing \"about price reductions on oil grades. Competition\nhas been created by a dwindling of\norders from-United States and Prairie markets in the past month.\nThis factor combined with wet\nweather has also brought about\nsome curtailment In logging and\nmilling operations in the Nelson\narea.\nHowever, js a counterbalance in\nthe employment situation, conditions In the construction industry\nhave been especially favorable and\ncarpenters and laborers are busy\non a number of projects.\nApproximately TOO persons art\nregistered  for work  at the  National Employment Service office\nhere \u2014 seme 800 list than In the\ntamt weak last year, $81,880 In\nunemployment  Insurance   payments were made last month.\nWoods worker and employer alike\nare feeling the adverse effects of\nthe unusual wet condition earlier.\nMills  which normally  htve   their\nwinter log reserves on hand at this\ntime of year find them now dangerously low and In some casts will\nbe forced to shut down sometime\nduring the. winter through lack of\nsaw  logs  instead  of operating  as\nthey normally do weather permitting.\nBase metal mining remained stable\nduring the month- and those operators Urtt are mining lead and silver predominantly, are able to operate at a fair profit at present.\nOne large combination logging\nsnd sawmill .operator on the other\nhand suspended logging operations\nentirely, having s sufficient log in\nventory on hand for winter consumption. This shutdown resulted\nin the layoff of approximately 200\nmen.\nOne large sawmill has been\nforced to operate its planer mill\nonly four days a week for the past\ntwo weeks because of the Inability\nto dry the surface moisture on material caused by excessive wet weather. This short time condition will\nexist as long as wet weather continues.\nA number of smaller sawmill operations also started cutting back\ncrews during the month. This condition is ln most cases normal lor\nthis time of year.\n\u25a0MINING STABLE\nWith the exception of the Fay-\ntheck Mine there were no new\nmining developments of any great\nsignificance during November. The\nPaycheck Mine was forced to suspend operations due to insufficient\nore being available to operate the\nmill. Twenty men are affected by\nthe shutdown.\nThe five major producers in the\narea continue to maintain capacity\nproduction, this being made possible\nby mining ore reserves with a high\nratio of lead and zinc.\nWork on the geographical survey continued throughout the\nmonth at Yale Lead & Zinc Mine\nat Ainsworth. This work is at present employing 10 men and will\ncontinue into December.\nShould results prove satisfactory,\n10 to 18 men will be employed\nthroughout the winter on a large\ndiamond drilling program.\nWeather conditions also were expected to be a determining factor\nin the tempo ot construction activity.\nDuring November a number of\nqualill-d miners registered wllh the\nNelson Employment Service office,\nthese men being for the most part\nemployed on exploration and development work which was suspended for the winter on. a number\nol small properties, In some eases\nthese men were placed In other\nJobs.\nRENTAL IMPROVEMENT\nl^ie wholesale and retail volume\nis reported to have held level with\nlast month. It is expeoted, however, that the usual number of extra help will be required in the\nstores lor Christmas business,\nHousing conditions eased notic-\nably during the last month, especially In properties for rent, although\nchoice and numbers are still limited.\n5-ROOM BUNGALOW FOR RENl.\nImmediate possession. Phone\n364-L-2,\nTORRENT DEC. 15,1854. 4 ROOMS\nand bathroom, close in. P h 0 n e\n1254-R. No children.\n4~ROOM H(_)USE AT S'LOCAN\nPark, low rent. Apply Paul Mark-\noff. Slocan Park.\nFOR RENT 4-ROOI4, UNFURNISH-\ned apartment, Fairview. Private\nentrance. Ph. 1220-Y.\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE HOUSE-\nkeeping room, private bath, heated North Shore Motel. Ph. 1684\nHOUSEKEEPING (f)R SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, heated Day,\nweek   monthly  rates   171   Baker\nFOB RENT - NEW MODERN\nhome. Uphill .-District .Eh. 484-R-3.\nMODERN HOUSE IN FAIRVIEW\nPh. 1287-L.\nFURN.   SUITE   CLOSE   IN.   SUIT\ncouple. Phone 343-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING   OR   SLEEPING\nroom for rent. Phone 359-R.\n3-^OlOURN!\u00a7_.ED~ SUITE. 811\nVernon St., $35 month. (Adults).\nFURNISHED 2-ROOM SUITE  At\n'140 Baker, Ph. 491-L.\nLARGE HEATED 1-ROOM SUITE.\nfully furnished for 2. Ph. 385\nHOUSEKEEPING RM   FOR RENT\nPhone 1564-X\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nbusinessman. Phone 28-1-R.\nYIELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.'\n814 RAILWAY ST.\n.   PHONE 1402\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Trade on the\nlivestock market was moderately\nactive Wednesday, With 2088 cattlG\nand calves on offer, Including 1300\nheld over.\nGood to choice butcher steers and\nheifers met good demand at firm\nprices, while the odd strictly choice\nsteer topped $21.50, Fair to medium\nsteer* and helterB were uneven. \u25a0\nGood coWs 60 cents or more lower\nfor the week; bulls, canners and\ncutters about steady; medium to\ngood stocker and feeder steers\nsteady; butctier weight heifer Calves\nwere steady to strohg, with odd\nsales up to 16.\nGood to choice butcher steers $19\nto $21.25; common to medium $12 to\n$18.75.\nGood to choice butcher heifers\n$16 to $18.50; common to medium $7\nto $8; -canners and cutters $4 to\n$6.75.\nGood bulls $9.80 to $10.\nGood stocker, feeder steers $16 to\n$17.50; common to medium $10 w\n$15.50.     '\nGood to Choice veal calves $13.50\nto. $15; common to njedium $10\nto $13.\nHogs closed Tuesday at $24 for\ngrade A sows; $14.50 to $14.75 live;\nand $18.85 Jo $19.50 dressed.\nGood lambs $16.50 to $17.50.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1954 \u2014 11'\nLarchf Fir Lead Forest Scale Jump\nj\nLed by big gains ln larch and tlr,\nthe scale in Nelson Forest District\nlast month rose- morb then nine million feet board measure over the\n\u25a0total for November, 1083,\nThe scale reached 48,873,021 f.b.w.\ncompeted with 38,042,045 f.b.m. In\nNovembef last year. The year's' total\nto \"the end of the month is still\ndown, however, from last year, being 26B,235,B24 f.b.m. compared with\n303,066,463 to the end Of November\nlast year.\nFir scale'Increase from more than\neight million to more than 11 million f.b.m. and a larch scale rise\nfrom more than eight milllbn to\nneatly 13 million f.b.m. accounted\nfor the month's spurt.\nComplete figures follow:\nSawlogs (f.b.m.)   1953 1954\nFir            6,356,481     11,445,325\nCedar         1.412,044      1,717,165\nSpruce       ..      9,378,418     10,270,210\n{_odgepole\npine        i;41B,B__      1,981.339\nPRENTIOE  SOLD  BY  ESKS\nHOUSTON (AP)\u2014Shreveport of\nthe TexaB League Wednesday pur-\nchafed catcher Dan Prentice frnm\nEdmonton Eskimos of the WeBtern\nInternational League. Prentice hit\n.200 last year for Edmonton which\nwill operate- in the reorganijed\nNorthwest League in 1955.\nCLASSIFIED  ADS GET  RESULTS\n,'i\nHemlock   ,. 3,168,864 3,878,341'\nBalBam  . ... 811,622 768,263!\nWhite pine 2,665,403 -  8,180,500\nYellow pine 828,346 470,298'\nLarch   8,303,913 12,972,280j\nBirch .......' \u2014 \u2014     s ;\nCottonwood \u00ab164 205\nTotal          36,042,048     45,673,021\nTotal to end\nNov.          303,8B8,46S   268,235,824\nMinor Products\nPoles and plies\n(lineal feet\t\n588,375   359,625\nMine timbers\n(lineal feet) \t\n236,337   221,837\nMine props\n(cords)\t\n110\nHewh ties\n408          \u2014 \u2022\nCordwobd (cords)\n267         395'\nFence posts\n- 1\n\u2022 (cords)\t\n343         52\u00a3j\nGreetings From B.C.\nTo Sir Wi niton\nVICTORIA (CP) Premier Bennett joined thousands _rouhd the\nworld Tuesday In wishing Sir Winston Churchill a happy birthday. \u25a0\nThe gre'eting Bald;\nt\nexecutive council of the'province\nof British Columbia extend to you,\nSir Winston, their sincere falici-1\ntations anfl express-the hope that!\nthe years to cpme^ \"Will fee filled'\nwith good health\/' '\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nRHEUMATIC\nPAIN\n\"On this happy and historic,day,\nthe Premier and fhembars' Ot the\n\"T\"\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES     (C'6,in' Prl\"8)\nBeaver Lodge\t\nBralorne\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold\nEstella   .   .   I..\"..'\"'\nGrandview    '\u201e\u201e\u2122\nGiant  Mascot\t\nHighland Bell  '\"[\nPac Eastern Gold\t\nPend Oreille      .'....\"'\"\nPioneer Gold  \"\"\"\nPremier Border  '..!\nQuatsino\nReeves MacDonald  '\n\u25a0Sheep  Creek    \u201e  ,.\nSherritt Gordon  \"..\nSilver Ridge        .\".\nSilver Standard \t\nSurf Inlet .,\t\nUtica     \t\nVananda     \t\nWestern Ex \"\u201e\nWestern Tungsten    _.\nOILS\nAnglo Can \t\nA- P Cons    \t\nCal& Ed \t\nCommonwealth  \t\nHome \t\nMercury        \t\nMid West Gas \t\nOkalat Com  \u25a0\nPac Pete \t\nPeace River Gas   \t\nRoyalite\t\nVansita   . ,\nVulcan \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates\t\nInt Brew B\n,48\n2.90\n.044\n.77\n.13\n.174\n.53\n.41\n.14\n4.00\n1,75\n.04\n.154\n1.56\n.73\n4.75\n.23\n.75\n\u25a0   .09\n.01\n.014\n.55\n.38\n4.70\n.26\n12.50\n4.20\n7.10\n.07\n1.55\n1.26\n11.374\n7.40\n11.50\n.28\n.25\n4.90\n5.00\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nLOST AMD POUND\nLOST BROWN FOLD WALLET\nbetween New Star and Hume Hotel, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Finder\ncontact Mr, Gordon Smith, Hums\nHotel, Reward. \\\nLOST - BROWN 'qToTe~TWS-\nday. Baker St. Leave at Dally\nNewi.\n.just assyR\nThere's on *xtra appeal to\nChristmas fiasting when you\nplan Yuletide menus around the\ndelicious festlvt goodness of Union\nTendermade Ham. Sugar cufed,\n\u2022low smoked, in the special Union way,\nthis famous western horn is readily\nacknowledged the featur^ treat of the\nYuletide'j most memorable medil.\nOrder from your store, today.\nAvailable Thres Ways\n\"Cook Before Eating\",\n\"Ready-to-Eat, Fully Cooked\",\n\"In Tins Ready-to-Eat\".\n.  >.j,.Y:_. * \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 '\u2022..\u2022\u25a0'.\u2022:..\u25a0.\u2022\u25a0\u00bb_\u25a0., . .'-.   ..._,_.\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0..  :..-..\u25a0\u25a0 ,-'    m\u25a0\u25a0'..-. Y     | m\t\n,\t\n*__!*,___\n-  ,. \u25a0'.   \u25a0\". :;...- :\u25a0      \u25a0\u25a0;\u201e,,;,  -..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u201e\u25a0',. .-,-'\u00ab    ,Y\n\u25a0\n;*--,tf\">t-\n___.\n_______________\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, 1>EC. 2, 1954\nNANN\nConway castle in North Wales\nwas built by Edward I in the 13th\ncentury.'\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n610 FRONT 8T. PHONE 68\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827\n676 Baker Street\nCroeses, whose enormous wealth\nbecame proverbial, was a king in\nAsia Minor in the sixth century, BC.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 8.5\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nWeather Holds Up\nLumber Industry\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) \u2014 A\nlumber industry official here Tuesday held out little hope there will\nbe any major back to work movement in northern- camps before\nChristmas.\nRobert Gallagher, secretary of\nthe Northern Interior Lumbermen's\nAssociation, indicated that the damp\nweather had killed all chance of a\nfull-scale   employment   movement.\nHe said at least 10 days of severe\nfrost was needed before the mills\ncould reopen.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nDismiss Threat\nAs Pure Bluff\nBERLIN (AP)\u2014Allied quarters ln\nBerlin said Wednesday the Moscow\nconference threat to beef up a Communist East German army i_T probably pure bluff. *\nPrime Minister Otto Grotewohl\ndeclared at the satellite security\ngathering in the.Soviet capital Tuesday that his \u2022 government will leel\nobliged to build an army if the West\nratifies the Paris treaties to rearm\nWest Germany.\nWestern circles in Berlin viewed\nthe Moscow declaration as propaganda designed to throw a chill into\nthose segments of Western parliaments which still have some doubts\nabout the wisdom of giving West\nGermany a half-million-man military force.\nAllied . military quarters which\nkeep informed on the East German\nCommunist \"police\" force contend:\n1. The present East,.German army\nof 130;000 men represents almost the\nlimit, of military manpower the\nSoviet zone can afford at the moment. ,','.-\n2. Voluntary recruiting has been\na failure-and even repressive measures amounting almost to a draft\nof Communist youth have managed\nonly to balance out desertions to\nthe West. These desertions now total 12,000\u2014more than a full division\u2014since 1951.\n3. Imposition of a draft for expanding the army would be a highly dangerous move for the East zone\nReds, making the army even more\nunpopular than it is now.\n4. The ambitious economic program is the Soviet zone, soaking up\nall available manpower and still\nthirsting for more, would be dealt\na body blow by siphoning off able-\nbodied men for military training.\nSuggests Atomic\nMarshall-Plan\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014An \"atomic\n\"Marshall plan',' for the financing of\natomic power plants in under-developed countries over the next 100\nyears is proposed by a leading United States manufacturer.\nJohn Jay Hopkins, chairman and\npresident of General Dynamics\nCorp., made the proposal in a\nspeech delivered Wednesday before\nthe annual- convention of the Na;\ntioal Association of Manufacturers.\nopening its 59th congress of American industry.\n\"I propose,\" said Hopkins, \"that\nthere be initiated now a' 100-year\nprggram for the financing and con\nstruction on atomic reactors in the\npower-short, food-short, water-\nshort and life-short areas of the\nworld by American private enterprise and the American government working together with friendly national governments and their\nown private enterprise groups.\"\nREPAYMENT   PLAN\nThe program would be achieved\nby \"diverting a very substantial\npart of the present international\neconomic aid from what has been\na giveaway plan to what would be\na repayment plan.\"\nAs an example, Hopkins suggested that India and Pakistan could\nuse some Marshall-plan funds still\nunspent to build reactors.\nHopkins described atomic energy\nas a factor that could enable some\nparts of the world \"to leap-frog\nthe- conventional fuel systems, the\nconventional communications systems, the conventional medical\npractices, and the conventional agriculture of the 19th and early 20th\ncenturies.\"\nHe warned at the same time that\nthese areas \"could become our industrial equals and unfriendly competitors through the use of atomic\npower reactors donated by Soviet\nRussia.\"\nThe Ehglish concertina was invented by Sir Charles Wheatstone\nin 1829.\nSPORTING GOODS\nfor Christmas Qifts\nCCM Bicycles\nFishing Tackle\nCCM Tricycles\nBadminton Rackets\nCCM  Skates and  Boots\nWinchester, H. & R., Cooey Rifles and Shotguns\nDOMINION AMMUNITION and SHOT SHELLS\nSkiis, Ski Equipment - Bear Paw Snow Shoes\nWood Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWholesale-Retail\nPhone 1530 Nelson, B.C\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line black faco type; larger typo rates on\nreqaest. Minimum two lines. 10%. discount for pronjpt payment\nGifts of Jewellery for everyone\nCUTLERS JEWELLERY, 611 Baker\nAvon  representative Is fn town.\nPhone 1243-L.\nTwilight Club will meet at 8 p.m.\nTop prices paid for used furniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nNails all sizes, per keg $11.95.\nCOLUMBIA TRADING\nFuller  Brush  Representative.\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phone 1339\nRegular general meeting, Nelson\nLegion, tonight at 8 sharp. Nomination of officers.\nTOR EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone B. J. Kelly, 378-R-3\nYOUR MIMEOGRAPH SERVICE\nCLAN McCLEARY business meeting and election of officers Friday,\nDec. 3 at 8 p.m.\nHAVE   YOUR   RADIO   TUBE8\nTESTED   IN   YOUR   OWN   HOME,\nPHONE 1324-R\nA new shipment of leather handbags and cocktail hats at ADRIAN\nMILLINERY, 259 BAKER ST.\nDRY CEDAR SLABS\n12\" length, immediate delivery.\nQueen City Fuel Co. - Ph. 1518\nMen's heavy weight Cruiser Coats.\nAll wool, double all\" through. Sizes\n36-44, $13.95. \u2014 WADE'S.\nNew  Fall  Skirts  and  Dresses.\nAll  sizes,  especially  teens.\nEBERLE'S\nWade's store will be closed this\nafternoon out of respect for the late\nJ. M. Ludwig.\nFor Rent\u2014Nice 3-room apartment,\nclose in. Apply Box 9592, Daily\nNews.\nImported Rayon Damask-. Cloths,\ndainty pastel shades, 51\"x63\". Each\n$3.75 TAYLOR'S DRY GOODS.\nSee our display of Kenwood blankets. Pastel or vibrant shades priced\nfrom $8.95.\nSTERLING   HOME   FURNISHERS\nCHRISTMAS CANDLES\nExcellent choice at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 962\nPROCTER, FRI., DEC. 3, big re\nopening dance. Bring your friends\nto try our new maple floor. Free\nferry, refreshments, door prize.\nFLOWERS   FOR   EVERY .\nOCCASION\nPHONE  187\nGRIZZELLES' FLORISTS\nMotors, radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh   pressure  Jenny   Service\nSHORTY'S  REPAIR  SHOP\n714 BAKER ST.\n\u25a0Come and bring your friends to\nSt. John's Lutheran Ladies' Aid\nBazaar and Tea, Sa.t\u201e Dec. 4, at 3\np.m. Corner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nPEOPLE'S CREDIT JEWELLERS\nmoved to 1001 Latimer St. Come in\nany time during days or Evenings.\nPh. 1367, Mrs. K. Mason, agent, Nelson district.\nGifts fdr the outdoor man or boy!\n.22 or heavier calibre rifles, pack-\nboards and pack-sacks, sleeping\nbags, air mattresses, Coleman fold\ning camp stoves, pup tents, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S\nREMEMBER -.St'Paul's Excelsior Club Xmas Bazaar and Tea\nwill be held Sat., Dec. 4 in the\nChurch basement. Everybody welcome.\nVery Important called.meeting to\nall'members of local 2458 of the\nUnited Brotherhood of Carpenters\nand Joiners of America, Friday, Dec.\n3, Eagle hall.\nC.C.F.- members and friends are\nInvited to meet Mr. Arnold Webster,\nMLA, and provincial executive at a\npot luck supper at 6:30 p.m., Sat.,\nDec. 4 at the Oddfellows hall.\nBuy sleeping bags for the whole\nfamily for Xmas. They are the best\nfor   outings,   auto   trips,   summer\ncamps, etc. We stock several types.\nWOOD   VALLANCE   HARDWARE\nToys,  Toys, Toys  . . .  Games\nGifts of all sorts. Newer and better\nitems this year.\nKOOTENAY  STATIONERS\nAND SPORTS SHOP\nMary Maxim Northland Sweater\nWool retains natural oil. For shower\nresistant sweaters, use Mary Maxim wool only. Your authorized dealer is EBERLE'S'ON BAKER ST.\nROTARY BINGO\nIn Aid of\nSwimming Pool Project\nTonight, Eagles-Hall, 8 o'clock\nSocial meeting of Rod and Gun\nClub Monday, Dec. 6, Legion hall,\n8 p.m. Showing of Walt Disney Bear\nCountry arid other films, plus coffee and doughnuts. Members to\nbring wife and friends.\nIn stock for your Christmas buying! Westinghouse automatic electric\nsheets\u2014Westinghouse and Sunbeam\nelectric mixers\u2014Westinghouse Flite\nweight irons\u2014Toastmaster pop-up\ntoasters. - HIPPERSON'S\nSTORM WINDOWS  AND\nCOMBINATION DOORS\nWe  can  equip your  home  with\nfuel-saying storm sash and combi\nnation doors. Don't delay* have that\nextra comfort now. Just call\nT. H. WATERS \u00ab. CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St. \u2014 Nelson\nNELSON ART CLUB\nMembers, associate members, and\ntheir friends are reminded of the\nPreview Tea this evening of local\npaintings, featuring the work of Na\ndine Redman and Geoff Rees. Also\non display is a fine collection of\nreproductions from the p.B.C. Ex\ntension Dept. Time, 7:30 to 10:00\np.m., W.I. Room, Civic Centre.\nCARD   OF  THANK8\nWe wish to thank our friends and\nrelatives for their many acts of\nkindness and sympathy during our\nrecent bereavement in* the loss of\nour daughter. Special thanks to Dr.\nGibbons and the nurses on the third\nfloor of the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, for their kindness and\ncare. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. J. DeJong and\nfamily. \u00ab\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBLANE \u2014 Passed away Dec. 1\n1954, in hospital, Vancouver. William Samuel Blane, resident at the\nMarble Arch Hotel and formerly of\nNelson, in his 80th year. Funeral\nservice, Mon., Dec. 6. ,at 2:30 p.m.,\nin Centre and Hanna Funeral Chapel, 1049 West Georgia St., Vancouver,\nfollowed by cremation.\nBogota, capital of Colombia ii\nSouth America, is built at an alti\ntude of 8700 feet above the sea.\nIdeal\nGIFTS\nfor the Kiddies at Christmas\nDOLL PRAMS: From  $7.95\nKINDERGARTEN SETS:  $10.95\n(Natural finish.)\nPEDAL CARS\n$4.95\nROCKING  HORSE\n$7.95*\nWHEELBARROWS\n$5.50\nTRICYCLES\nFrom $16.50 to $29.50\nBOYS'WAGONS: From\nft   \u25a0\nCHILDREN'S ROCKERS\nSee All These and More at\nSterling\nHOME FURNISHERS\n441 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 553\nProtests Rain\nMaking Machine\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The first\nripples\" of protest against raln-mak-\nlng experiments in British Columbia came here from university\ncircles.\nDr. Gordon Shrum, head of the\nUniversity of British Columbia\nphysics department, said in an interview that, such experiments\nshould not be carried on without\nthe,approval of \"a competent government authority\".\nHis statement followed newspaper disclosures that a Denver, Colo.,\nfirm, has set up rain-making machinery on Vancouver Island to\n;'shoot\" silver iodide into clouds.\nThe object Is to make it rain on\nthe mainland area around Powell\nRiver and bolster the water supply\nof a pulp and paper firm in the\narea. The firm has the Denver company on a year's contract.\nDespite his opposition to the experiments, Dr. Shrum said: \"I don't\nbelieve there is any \"positive evidence they can make rain wh^ch\nwouldn't have fallen anyway;\"\nThe Highways\nNo. 3 Trail-Salmo\u2014Frosty sections, sanding.\nRossland-Patterson \u2014 Frosty sections, sanding. . \u25a0\nCreston-Po\/thill\u2014Good.\nNo.- 6 Nelway-Vernon \u2014 Nelway-\nNelson-South Slocan, frosty sections, sanding. South Slocan-SJlocan\nCity fair. Slocan City-New Denver\nrough. New Denver-Nakusp fair,\nrough Summit Lake. Nakusp-Nee-\ndles fair to good. Needles-Monashee\ntwo inches new snow, slippery higher levels, carry chains. Monashee-\nVernon\u2014fair.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Gol-\nden\u2014frosty sections, sanding. Banff-\nWindermere\u2014good.\nNelson-Kaslo\u2014fair, some slippery\nsections. Kaslo-New Denver\u2014fresh\nsnow higher levels, slippery sections. Kaslo-Lardeau, Lardeau-Ger-\nrard\u2014fair, rough sections.\nVANCOUVER fTJP) - Deadline\nfor applications for Athlone Engineering fellowships, enabling engiT\nneering graduates to.take two years\npost-graduate study .in the' United\nKingdom, is Dec. 15, University of\nB,Ci officials announced today. Cost\nof travel, tuition and maintenance\nare covered by the awards.\nELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull  Directions on  Every Package\nTake a package home today or\nPhono 238\nELLISON MILLING'\n&  ELEVATOR  CO.  LTD.\nYour Gift\nTo Yourself ,\nAn EMORY'S\nTreat    yourself    to    an.\nEmory's  suit  and  you'll\nhave a gift that's guaranteed   to   satisfy   you.\nthroughout its long service.\nCharcoal Greys, Bluet\nand Browns,\nOne or 2 Button Models.\n$59.50 and Up\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nVICTORIA (CP) - Attorney\nGeneral Robert Bonner said Mon\nday price cuts on 13 brands 0\nliquor by the Liquor Control Boan\nhave been made \"to bring price\nin line with competing brands.*\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Serv|M\"\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n315 Kootenay St        Phone 36!\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker 8t\nPhone 286\nHave You Selected Your\nCHRISTMAS GIFTS?\nWe Have a* Wonderful Display\nfor Your Convenience\nCosmetic Sets\nShaving Kits\nBridge and Writing Kits\nPen Sets - Toys \u2022 Decoration!\nCity Drug\nYOUR REXALL PHARMACY\n653 Baker St, Phone 895\nStar Specials at the Star\n^JiocsAt\/, (bsLptvdmsint\n* PORK AND BEANS T\u2122s; 2*>. 29*\n* APPLE JUICEr\u201eft?ns,Clear; .. 2for 75*\n* PEANUT BUTTER^! ice-box Jar.. 49*\n* COFFEE Sase&.Sanborn:  $1 19\n* MARGARINEMip, 2ib. 65*\n* FRUIT CAKE MIX pRk\u00b0gbin Hood;      71*\nWe Have.a Complete Selection of\nChristmas Crackers\nFrom\n59V2.75\nPLACE YOUR ORDER NOW\nfijvojduoL OspjahimsmL    *\n* GRAPES Tokays;   2lbs.   31*\n* SWEET POTATOES 2ibs. 37*\n* ORANGES Navels; 2ibs 29*\n* ORANGES  ^vels; 2>bs   37*\n* POTATOES 25 ibs $1.27\n* CABBAGE Lb 7*\n* CLIP TOP CARROTS 2i_s 29*\n* CELERY HEARTS Each 28*\n* DRY ONIONS 3 bs 23*\nTftaai WsLpLOfdmsinL\n* BONELESS VEAL ROASTS Lb 49*\n* ROUND BONE ROASTSS^ 43*\nSIRLOIN, T-BONE, CLUB . *\n* RNDi STEAKS, ROASTS Sit 69*\n* DELICATED STEAKSKband    59*\n* STAR *\nGROCERY\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\n488 BAKER ST. PHONE 10\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 ; \u2022 - '\u25a0'\n^\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022-^ \u25a0\u25a0--'.\u25a0'   -       \u25a0 v-  \u2022\u25a0  \u25a0 \u2022   ' j \u25a0       \u25a0\u2022\u25a0;-i#fjjf\n-YY''.- _.\u25a0'.   \";-   ;:'\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0.'{'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0. ' \u25a0     .   :\"-'.' \u25a0 \u25a0'*- -.   -   .:\n\u25a0__\u25a0____\u25a0\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_12_02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427701","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":"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:\/\/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"}]}}