{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427706":{"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":"1954-11-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427706\/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":" wmmmm^mmmmmm\n\u2014\n\t\ntail Workers Get\nion a Year\nSloan Suggests Federal Subsidy, Says\nRails Unable To Meet Full Demands\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The politically-touchy proposal of\nsubsidy on' Western grsin freight rates was made Monday\nI Chief Justice Gordon Sloan of British Columbia in award-\n.g non-operatin,? railway employees a $7,000,000-a-year\ngment of their fringe bene-\nt demands,\nThe chief justire, 'cabinet-ap-\nInted arbitrator in the long dis-\nte that threatened a general rail\n\u25a0ike last summer, gave the 145,-\n) workers a fraction of what they\n\u25a0ced, granting only' partially two\ntheir four requests.\nHe said the railways cannot af-\nd to meet their demands in the\n:e of declining revenues, and he\named the decline in large part\n\"distortion and imbalance\", of\nfreight rate structure caused\nthe low \"Crow's Nest Pass\"\ntes on export grain moving\nrough the West.\nHe suggested a federal subsidy\nspread \"some fair share at least\nthis burden\" across the national\nonomy.\nIncreased freight rates now are\nt the answer to rising railway\nsts, the arbitrator said. These\nve been used to cover previous\nst-war increases in the wage bill\nthe carriers.\n>MPET1T!0N STIFFER\nBut the competition stiffening,\nlief Justice Sloan said, higher\ntes would probably only \"tend to\ncrease the present imbalance\nexpose greater areas of rail-\nly traffic to outside competition.\"\nWhile his observations on the\now's Nest rates went outside his\n;ms of reference and constituted\nly an opinion \u2014 he was em-\nwered just to write contract\nms for the disputants \u2014 they un-\nestionably will stir up political\npercussions.\nPremier Campbell of Manitoba\nifomptly Bald there should be no\nubsldy to the railways until It Is\n'abundantly .established\" that\ntheir revenues are not meeting\nexpenditures. The west was prepared to \"fight to the finish\" to\nmaintain the grain rates.\nFederal ministers who would be\nrectly concerned with the ques-\nm of a subsidy were not available\nr comment Monday. However, it\npeared probable\\the suggestion\n)uld be discussed before the open-\ndf Parliament, and Commons\n.bate oi\u00bbit was likely.\nThe Crow's Nest rates are em-\ndied in a 1925 federal statute\nilding them at levels set in 1897,\nlen the CPR depressed the rates\nreturn for a federal grant. They\nt the'ir name from the fact the\noney was used to help the young\nmpany throw a line through the\n>ckies' Crow's Nest pass.\nWhile Chief Justice Sloan's sug-\nstion did not specify his idea of\nNo Comment From\nBennett On Sloan\nRecommendation\nGRAND FORKS, B.C. (CP)\u2014\nPremier Bennett, visiting in\nthis West Kootenay rail town,\ndeclined comment Monday\nnight on Chief Justice Gordon\nSloan's recommendation for a\ngovernment''subsidy on Crow's\nNest pass wheat shipments.\nMr. Bennett said he had not\nheard details of the report and\nwould have to study it first.\nthou mmln\n\"'_ '0vj^__-0    .\"\"\u00bb\nWEATHER FORECAST f\u00a7f\nKOOTENAY\u2014A few clouds. Wli\nln West Kootenay. valleys early thlfi.\nmorning. Continuing mild. Light.'.\nwinds. Low-high, today., at Craij\u00ab\nbrook 28 and:52, Crescent ValUjy\n30 and SO.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 23, 1954\nNo. 180\nTEN-YEAR-OLD Kenny Schultz\nf Brldgeton, N.J., displays his\niggy bank and a savings* bond\nn a Philadelphia bus station after\nticket seller called police when\nienny tried to buy a ticket for\nlaltlmore, Md. Seems Kenny,\nolice said, was planning to run\nway from home but the ticket\ngent noticed the unusual amount\nf baggage. Police after taking\nnventory listed the following:\nwo suitcases, portable typewriter,\nwo bulging paper bags, a flute,\nook on dogs, three alarm clocks,\nIve penknives, bowling shoes,\n_eb belts and a Bible.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nthe size of a subsidy on the grain\nrates, it appeared to go beyond the\n$7,000,000 of his award to the employees and to contemplate some\nfurther amount that would basically strengthen railway finances.\nGET FIVE HOLIDAYS\nIn the award, the justice:\n1. Granted five paid statutory\nholidays a year for hourly-rated\nworkers \u2014 who now receive none\u2014\nagainst eight sought by the unions.\nHolidays worked would be paid at\ndouble time \u2014 the unions asked\ntriple time. The arbitrator estimated the cost at $4,281,000. Selection\nof the holidays was left to negotiation.\n2. Awarded three weeks vacation\nwith pay after 15 years' service at\nan estimated cost of $2,650,000. The\nmaximum now is two weeks after\nfive years. The unions asked three\nafter 15 years and four after 25\nyears.\n3. Tdrned down demands for' paid\nsick leave and higher overtime pay\nfor Sunday work. The unions asked\n18 days a year sick leave, and\ntime-and-a-half for Sunday work\nwhen it is a regular work day and\ndouble time when it is normally a\nday. off. ,-,__._-.    _\u2014*\u2022.>;\u25a0'      -.>.;\nEffective  date  is  Jan.   1,   1855.\nUnder the terms of reference, contracts cannot run beyond Dec. 31,\n1955.\nCHAPPELL   DISAPPOINTED\nPresident H. A. Chappell of the\n34,000-member Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employees (CCL),\nCanada's largest transport union,\nsaid here that the contract terms\nare \"extremely disappointing\" but\nthat the findings will be of long-\nrange benefit,to rail workers in\nthat the chief justice has shown\nhow the railways are \"hogtied\" in\ngetting revenues.\n\"He  has  brought  matters  Into\nthe open and put It on the doorstep  of  the  government,\"  presl-\nI    dent Chappell said.\nIn Montreal, officials of the CNR\nand CPR declined comment. Frank\nH. Hall, chairman of the union's\ngeneral negotiating committee, was\nnot available.\nWhile Chief Justice Sloan's find-\nI ings on the grain rates go beyond\nany submitted publicly by a government appointee in many years,\nit is known that federal officials\nlong have been studing the question of a subsidy against the rates.\nThe   Canadian   Press   reported\nthis Sept. 22. The federal experts,\nIt was reported, have found the\ntwo   big   railways   lose   between\n$20,000,000 and $25,000,000 a year\non the Crow's Nest rate traffic.\nChief Justice Sloan summarized\nhis findings this way:\n\"1. The railway employees repre,\nsented in these proceedings are not\nenjoying, to a degree, fringe bene\nfits now in force for like employees\nof other comparable Canadian industries.\n\"2. This disparity' ought, within\nreason, to be removed.\nCAN'T MEET COST\n\"3. The railways are not now\nfinancially able to meet the cost,\nfrom net operating rail revenue, of\nremedying the existing disparity.\n\"4. A major factor contributing\nto the present serious decline in\nrail revenue is the distortion and\nimbalance of the freight rate\nstructure due to the direct and indirect but consequential effect of\nthe Crow's Nest pass rates ...\n\"5. A proportionate loss of rail\nrevenue due to the Crow's Nest\nrates is being borne, in varying\ndegrees, by (a) the railways, (b)\nshippers and consumers of high-\nrated commodities, and (c) by railway employees . . .\n\"6. The Crow's Nest rates are\nthe reflection of a national policy\nand the loss of rail revenues consequent upon this policy is being\nin effect subsidized by those\ngroups also, the justice added, by\n20.000'- laid-off rail employees.\n\"7. The Crow's Nest rates have\ncontributed in great measure to\nthe economic stability of the nation\nby moving the wheat crop of Canada to world markets at competi-\nSheppard Had\nSpoken of Divorce\nCLEVELAND CAP) \u2014 An old\nschool chum testified Monday Dr.\nSamuel H. Sheppard spoke twice\nwithin three years of divorcing his\nslain wife, Marilyn. The osteopath\nis on trial for her murder July 4.\nOn the second occasion, said Dr.\nLester Hoversten, he wanted Dr.\nSheppard that his wife was a tolerant woman and that \"he might actually be juming from the frying\npan into the fire.\"\nDuring less than half a day on\nthe witness stand, Dr,' Hoversten\nalso testified:\n1. He saw no sign of unhappiness or discontent as a guest In the\nSheppard  home.\n2. When he- saw Dr. Sheppard a\nday after the murder, the defendant wept and told him, \"Why\ncouldn't they have killed me instead _ of Marilyn, because , Chip\n(his son) would need Mariliyn more\nthan he would need me.\"\nHenderson Lefler\nAdmits Slaying\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 A letter in\nwhich Donaid Winslow Henderson\nadmitted responsibility for the\ndeath of his fiancee was introduced Monday in Henderson's trial\nfor the 1949 murder of 22-year-old\nYvonne Levesque.\nIntroduced by the crown, the letter to Henderson's 73-year-bld\nmother, Mrs. Jenny Henedersorl of\nMoose Jaw, was ohe of three he\nwrote Ho members of his family\nfollowing the . fatal beating of the\nformer Edmonton waitress in a Calgary- auto camp the night of Aug.\n11, 1949. Henderson was arrested\nago after a five-year police search,\nago after a five-year police esearch.\nIn the letters, read into the record as the trial moved into its second vieek, Anderson wwo_a,.ftat he..\nhad been bven*6rli__ng and nervous\nprior to the girl's death and that,\nas near as he could tell, he must\nhave gone into a violent delirium.\n$400 Million\nPipeline\nRumored\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Vancouver Herald says an agreement\nentailing the construction of a $400,-\n000,000 pipeline to pipe Peace River\nnatural gas to the United States, is\nexpected to be signed ''within 48\nhours.\"\nThe newspaper, quoting a \"city\nstock broker,\" said Monday night\nonly a few minor details stood in\nthe way of the agreement. The pipeline would stretch from San Juan\nbasin in New. Mexico to Fort St.\nJohn, B. G.\nThe story says the British Columbia section of the line would be\nbuilt by Westcoast Transmission Co.,\nwould reach the California border\nand would cost more than $100,-\n000,000.\nCompanies involved in the venture with Westcoast the Herald says,\nare Pacific Northwest Pipeline\nCorp., Pacific Gas and Electric -and\nEl Paso Natural Gas.\nStart of the Canadian line was\nsaid to be planned for early In\n1955 and would take about two\nyears to complete.\nB. Ci the story says, Is expected to sell 500,000,000 cubic feet of\ngas per day under the agreement.\nGUNMAN GETS $70 .\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A lone\nmasked gunman escaped with $70\nin cash Monday night when he held\nup a fruit and vegetable stand\nhere. The proprietor, H. Fong, and\nhis niece were forced into their\nliving quarters at the rear of the\npremises and forced to lie on the\nfloor while the bandit scooped the\nmoney out of the cash register.\n.iiciiimiiiimniiiiiuiiiiiiHE-iimimiii\nDec. 27 a Holiday\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A public\nholiday on the Monday following Christmas Is'on the books\nfor British Columbia. The provincial government has pro-,\nclaimed December 27 a public\nholiday under both the Factories Act and the Shops Regulations and Weekly Holiday Act,\nIt was announced Monday.\n\u2022u.fniiiiimmiiitiiii-.niiiiiiiiiiimiii\nComic Book\nAction Taken\nEDI\/tONTON (CP) \u2014 A citizens'\ncommittee will be formed to carry\nout \u25a0 a campaign to eliminate objectionable comic books and magazines from newsstands in Alberta.\nThis waJ decided Monday by representatives of 40 social, welfare,\npolitical, religious and library organizations who met at the request\nof Attorney-General Maynard.\nMembership on the committee\nwill be decided later.\nMr. Maynard said the committee\nwill be a policy body, charged with\nreviewing newsstand comics and\nmagazines and making necessary\nsuggestions to distributors.\nThe attorney-general said if the\ncommittee's recommendation is ignored, then the committee would\ninform his department, recommending prosecution.\nSWIM TO SAFETV\nENDERBY (CP) \u2014 Four persons\nescaped unhurt when their car\nsomersaulted into Shuswap Lake\nnear Enderby Monday. The car,\ndriven by J. Rimmell, failed to make\na turn on the highway and landed\nwheels first in the lake. All were\nable to swim to safety.\nSOUTH KOREA\nWARNED BY UN\nSEOUL (AP) \u2014 The United Nations command Monday warned\nSouth Korea it would protect Communist Czech and Polish members\nof the neutral nations supervisory\ncommission. v\nLt.-Gen. Won Yok Duk, South\nKorea's provost marshal, _a few\nhours earlier had sent a letter to\nMaj.-Gen. L. Krzme, head Polish\ntruce inspector, and Brig.-Gen. j.\nHecko, chief of the Czech team,\ngiving them a week to get out of\nSouth Korea.\nAs he had done last summer,\nWon accused Communist truce inspectors of spying and helping the\nRed underground. He gave them\na week to \"leave Korea peacefully\" or face \"the most positive\nmeasures.\"\nlive prices . . .\n\"8. It is my respectful opinion,\nhowever, that the effects of these\nrates both direct and indirect,\nwherein their application results in\nloss of rail revenues, should be\nshouldered in some fair degree by\nthe national treasury, and not as\nnow continue to be borne* by a\nsegment of the national economy.\"\nChief Justice Sloan said the railways have estimated that the rate\n\"distortion\" in 1952 caused a direct\nloss to overhead costs cot $85,000,-\n000.\nWith Color Problem\nBy ADRIAN BALL\nCOVENTRY, England (Reuters)\u2014\nA growing color problem in Britain\ngained ground Monday with a trade\nunion move to impose discriminatory restrictions on the flood of\ncolored workers arriving daily .from\nBritain's colonies.\nEconomic ^hardships. in the colonies, combined with the prospect of\neasy jobs in \"full-employment\"\nBritain have' brought thousands of\ncolored persons to Britain in recent\nmonths.\nAs colonials they are British subjects and therefore not subject to\nany immigration controls here.\nOqe hundred union leaders will\nmeet here Thursday to debate a controversial plan under which colored\nworkers would be deprived of promotion prospects and working security.\n\"TO AVOID TROUBLE\"\nThe plan will be placed before the\nregional advisory council of Britain's 8,000,000-strong Trades Union\nCongress'by Jim Leask, organizer\nfor 60,000 engineer members of the\nTransport   and , General   Workers\nUnion.\nLeask declared Sunday night he\nis putting tKe plan forward to\n\"avoid a great deal of trouble\"\nshould unemployment return to the\nindustrial Midlands.\nHis plan has four main points:\n1. Colored workers should not be\ngiven supervisory jobs over whites,\n2. They should not get jobs if\nwhite workers are available.\n3. There should always be talks\nbetween employers and unions before any colored staff are employed\n4. Colored employees should be\nthe first to be fired iij any recession,\nLeask expects the regional council\nof 'the TUC to support his plan,\nwhich would then go to the gerteral\ncouncil of the congress in London.\nUnion leaders say they are opposing the newcomers, not just because of their color, but because\nthey are flooding the labor market.\nThey claim that, if the colored\nworkers gain a foothold, the jobs\nof many whites would be jeopardized should unemployment return.\n31X1 Veterans'\nPolicies Issued\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A total of 36,-\n561 veterans' insurance policies with\na face value ot $113,571,000 have\nbeen issued since the Second World\nWar, the veterans' affairs department said Monday.\nAt the same time, the department\nissued a reminder that the deadline\nfor purchase of veterans' insurance\nby servicemen discharged before\nDec. 31, 1944, is the end of this\nyear.\nAbout one-third of Canada's 1,-\n000;000 Second World War veterans\nwere discharged before the end of\n1944. Those discharged later have\nuntil 10 years after discharge to purchase veterans' insurance.\nUnder the Veterans Insurance\nAct, life insurance up to $10,000 can\nbe obtained by veterans without\na medical examination, except in\nrare cases.\nRates are slightly below those of\ncommercial companies because the\ngovernment pays administration\ncosts and there are no extra preml\nurn charges for. occupation, travel\nb^resii^ncer'-1^*'   \"f* \"':'\nCABINET TO HEAR\nCIVIL SERVANT\nDEMANDS DEC. 3\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The British\nColumbia cabinet will hear civil\nservants' wage and arbitration\ndemands Dec. 3.\nProvincial  Secretary Wesley\nBlack  set the  date  following\nrequest for a  hearing from  the\nB.C. Government Employees' As\nsoclation.\n'Illlllllllllllllllllllllll-lllllllllllllllllli\nNow He Knows How\nMuch It Holds\nLondon <ap)\u2014Alee Panton\nreported Monday he survived\na surprise trip part way down\na. pelican. He emerged smelling fishy and with two -abrasions on His forehead.\nThe Incident, Panton said,\noocurred at the London zoo.\nHe and his two small children were leaning over a wire\nfence watching a flock of the\nfeathered fish-eaters with the\noutslzed bills taking an after-\ndinner nap.\nMindful of the old rhyme\na wonderful bird Is' the pell-\ncan, holds more In his, beak\nthan his belly can, Panton\nwarned the kids not to get too\nclose.\nAt this point, Panton told a\nreporter, one of the birds waddled over, reached out, and\nsnapl Thero was Panton with\nhis head Inside the pouch where\npelicans normally jtoro their\nspare fish.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTWO SHAKESPEARE\nPLAYS SLATED FOR\nSTRATFORD '55\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The Stratford\nShakespearian Festival announced\nMonday it has selected \"Julius Caesar\" and \"The Merchant of Venice\" as its two leading productions\nfor 1955j '   \" *'\nThe board of governors also has\ndecided to inaugurate a Stratford\nmusic festival in conjunction with\nits drama productions.\nThree plays will be presented in\nthe festival's third annual season\nnext summer at Stratford, Ont., 100\nmiles west of here. The Greek tragedy \"Oedipus Rex,\" one of the three\nplays produced last season, will be\nrepeated for a limited number of\n(performances.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canadian\ndollar was 1-32 of a cent higher at\na premium of 3V4 per cent in terms\nof U.S. funds Monday. Pound sterling wown V4 of a cent at $2.79 1-18.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\ndollar closed at a discount of 3 5-32\nper cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, down 1-32. Pound sterling,\n$2.70 7-16, down 3-16.\nHeart Attack Claims 4'\nLife of Soviet's \"\nUnited Nations Envof\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN .    '   .\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)-Andrei Y, Vishin-;\nsky, rapier-tongued mouthpiece of the Soviet Union, diei\ni of a heart attack Monday as he drafted an important state*\n! ment of his country's views on President Eisenhowqj'n\natoms-for. peace plan, He was 7$.\ntified only as a Dr. Kosoff. Nf*\nYork police were called when >h^\ndied, and they said he was lying\non a bed fully clothed. \"'<\nThe Soviet delegation announced\nit  would  keep  tile  headquarter*\nopen for a public viewing of Vun\u00a7\n' insky's remains. .y*\nMendes-France and other top lii-   ,\nternational figures visited the $ef\nviet delegation headquarters btieCf\nto pay respects.\nU.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot\nLodge, Jr., who in recent days hai\nhad several private talks with Vishi\ninsky on the atoms-for-peace pro-_\nposals, saw the Soviet delegate at\nthe Mendes-France party Sunday\nnight. He said Vishinsky was \"in\nfine good humor, laughing and talkative as always.\" j'?.-'\n\"Mr. Vishinsky represented one\nof the world's greatest powers with\nextraordinary energy and resource-\nfulness,\" Lodge stated. \"We who\nvigorously disagreed with him respected his forensic talent. The\nsympathy of the U.S. delegation\ngoes out to his widow, his daughter\nand the Soviet delegation.\"\nVishinsky had been a spectacular\nperformer on the world stage sine*\nhe prosecuted Stalin's blood purge\ntwo decades ago. He was a master\nof withering scorn and searing \u2022\nsatire. His rapier-like wit won the\nadmiration, however grudging, et\nhis colleagues. ,'   \"\nACTED ON ORDERS\nVishinsky's death, While It remote's a colorful figure 'front the .\ncold war, Can hive' little effect\nupon the course of Moscow's relations with the western world. Vishinsky, however brilliant-his -performance, consistently carried out\norders from the Kremlin to tht\nletter. No Western .observers credit-=\ned him with any decisive voice hi\nSoviet policy.\n70 years old.\nThe fiery chief Soviet delegate\nto the United Nations cojlapsed at\nhis delegation headquarters on Park\nAvenue at 9:3? a.m. after getting\nup early to prepare fat the important debate.\nThe debate, in which delegates\nof all countries anxiously awaited\na reply to the U.S. challenge that\nthe Soviet Union prove its peaceful\nintentions, was postponed.\nFifty-nine countries of the 60-\nmember General Assembly gathered in plenary session in the afternoon to pay final tribute to the\ncolleague whose steel-trap wit and\nforensic fireworks aroused general\nadmiration, even among those who\nmost bitterly opposed him.\nNationalist China, whose seat in\nthe UN had been regularly challenged by Vishinsky at every opportunity, did not attend the eulogy\nsession. But Victor Hoo, Chinese\nNationalist UN undersecretary in\ncharge of conference affairs, visited\nthe Russian delegation headquarters\nMonday evening with Secretary-\nGeneral Dag Hammarskjold to pay\nhis respects.\nPLAN FOR FUNERAL\nThe Moscow radio said the central committee of the Soviet Communist party and the Soviet council\nof ministers had gathered at the\nKremlin to appoint a commission\nto take charge of the funeral arrangements.\nOnly recently they had awarded Vlshlnsfcy, a depgty foreign\nminister, the highest Soviet honei1\n\u2014 the Order of Lenin \u2014 for his\nwork.\nThe Kremlin announcement\nsaid Vishinsky's body would be\nbrought home for burial,\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles extended his condolences and said the\nSoviet  leader  was  \"an   able   and\nvigorous' advocate of hjp country's\npolicies.\"\nVishinsky only Sunday night had\nattended a gala dinner party at\nthe French consulate in honor of\nPremier Pierre Mendes-France,\nnow ivsiting the United States.\nThe little white-haired Russian\nwith the florid face and ready wit\n\u2014known as the \"nyet\" or \"no\" man,\nof the United Nations\u2014was seen in\nanimated conversation with the\nFrench leader.\n-Sources close to the Soviet delegation said Vishinsky appeared in\nnormal  health   when  he  left  the\nMendes-France dinner.\nTREATED' BY DOCTOFf\nWhen he collapsed, he was treated by his personal physician, iden-\nSenior Citizens\nSeek Pension Hike    ;\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Sen.\nior Citizens' Association of Vancouver will hold a mass meeting Dec. S\nto consider proposals for a $20\nmonthly increase in old age pensions and for the right of non-resident Canadian senior citizens to receive pensions.\nGeorge Edwards, association pres-\nideht, said all members of the log.\nislature from the lower mainland\nhave been invifed to attend the\nmeeting, expected to draw more\nthan 1000 persons.-\nAmnesty Offered Tunisian\nOutlaws if They Surrender\nSCORES, OF HIS FAN8 follow the flower-covered casket containing the body of actor Lionel, Barrymore Into Calvary Cemetery,\nLos Angeles, Calif., where. Roman Catholic funeral services were\nheld. The body was laid to rest In a erypt beside those of his\nbrother, John, and his wife, Irene Fonwlck, who died 18 years ago.\n\u2014AP Wlrophoto.\nl.llllllllllllllllllllllMllllllimillll.llllll\nPremier Obliges\nHarried Newsmen\nV\/A8HINGTON (AP) \u2014\nFrench Premier Pierre Mendes-\nFrance says his dignity won't be\naffronted If harried headline\nwriters use his Initials, \"P.M.F.\"\nNewspaper men have had\ntrouble fitting \"Mendes-France\"\nInto a one-column headline.\nAt the Instance of the Washington PoBt and Times Herald\nheadline writers, the French\nleader was asked last week\nwhether he would consider It\ndisrespectful to shorten his\nname to \"Mendes\" or \"P.M.F.\"\nIn a scribbled note reproduced\nIn the Post and Times Herald,\nthe premier said he preferred\n\"P.M.F.\"\nIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIII1I1I1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIU\n*\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014The governments of France and Tunisia agreed\nMonday to give a choice of 3000\narmed Tunisian outlaws hiding in\nthe mountains\u2014amnesty if they\nsurrender or \"pitiless\" destruction\nif they refuse.\nThe ultimatum will go out over\nthe radio and will be printed on\nleaflets to be dropped by airplanes\nover the hill country in southern\nTunisia.\nThe outlaws, known as Fellaghas,\nup to now hive laughed at the efforts of two entire French divisions\nto find them and root them out of\ntheir mountain fortresses.\nThe marauding Fellaghas, wfte\nhave made life a nightmare .ior\nFrench planters in Tunisia, h\u00bbv\u00bb\nslowed French-Tunisian negotiations'on promised home rule \"lit\nthe territory. <%.\nFrench Premier. Mendes-Franpe\nis on record as saying Tunisia #{11\nnot be given home rule until tho\nFellagha problem has been settled.\nFrance also hopes that the etyl\nof terrorism in Tunisia will reducij\ntension in neighboring Algerltji\nwhere Fellaghas crossed the border\nand organized rebel bands now Infesting the Aures mountains.     .' *.\nAnd in This Corner\u2666\u2666.\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Klyoshl Murakl today reported a theft to poile*\n\u2014his two-storey wooden building. .\n, \u00bb_,_i1S._,,ald ne'd,D0ught the 5000-square-foot building In August for\n1,000,000 yen (about $2700), Intending to turn it into apartments.\nMurakl went out to Inspect the property In suburbs.. Shlnluku last\nweek and found only an empty lot. \u25a0 '   .\n\"The neighbors told police 20 laborers recently dismantled the\nstructure and carried It off piece by piece In three days. They eSfd\nthey thought the site was h ' \"-;\u2022-*.'.r\nOfficers said \"real estate thieves\" made off with two of\", b\" \u25a0',;..\nIngs In Tokyo this month.\nWOOLWICH, England (Reuters) \u2014 Johnnie Masterson, 3, '!'\u25a0'_\nnjorning clutched.a space gun and a toy panda and.asked :his n\"-'-**\n\"Will my mommies and daddies come see me again today \"\nSunday 200 of them came to the Goldle Leigh Hospital here arid\nstood in line in the cold, wai.i\"\" *. \u2014 . P-\u00bb f-ohaned boy whbne\npicture appeared in a newspaper Saturday with the caption: \"Nobody\nEVER comes to see Johnnie.\" - >\"<.,\nFor two years Johnnie watched parents visit. other children i_j\nthe ward after he had been sent to the hospital with' a skin disease.\nHis parents abandoned him, and police have been unable fo trace them.'\nOrtly 100 of the visitors could get into the room Sunday. %J.\nsupper time Johnnie's bed was piled high with shiny new toys, cari.qjfc\nand fruit. \u25a0' \u25a0.       \u25a0?.'\nJohnnie smiled up at the photographers and reporters clustered\ntnA  I..-  Korl   or.\/.   c_i___.  \"T   ant  Into  nf  __a_.__.0c  nm\u00bb. \u2014 \u2022 _ _\n '\u2022    '        \u25a0'  -\u25a0\u25a0-       \u25a0\u2022\"\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'*\u25a0\n i i \u25a0':-''\u25a0\u25a0:  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0-  '\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'  \u25a0  \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'--   .   -    \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0'.:\naround his bed and said: \"I got lots of daddies now.\n\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0'-\u25a0 -   -\u25a0'\u2022 \u25a0    :\t\ni*\n'    '\u25a0     :\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0'\n _______\nPffSI\n\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV, 23, 1954\n.\u2014-\u00ab\u2022\u00bb,   --     , s~\t\nLAST TIME TONIGHT -\nAt 8:00 p.m.\nBEST LOVED MOST\nHONORED PICTURE^;\nOf ALL TIME!\nONE <_Wl;ET|''SHOW''   \u00a3\n\u2014 Doors 7:30\nSAMUEL liOLDWVII'S\nTHE BEST YEARS\nOF OUR LIVES\nWinncf of 9 Academy Awards\nI MVRHA10V - FREPRIC MARCH\n-.-\u2022DAHA AHDHEWS - TEftESA WRIGHT\nVIRGINIA HAYO - HOAfiT CARMICHAEL\ntakes you to\nGod's last outpost\nbeyond the\ngranite-walled\nRochies...vvith\nROBERT\nMITCHUM\nMARILYN\nurn\nmiLWM...\nHim III hla Mro\nfi.___._!\u00abMei-_\u00bb\nmiSilvirMlir\ntaUmtrilHltMa\nfophme>\nJkmA   '\nm\nfilmed\nmXmtlti\"\n*>^\n\u00ab-f_-Sjjatesf--\nSTARTING ^     ^\nTOMORROW\nCanada Bank Deputy\nLinked With Kootenay\nThe family of John R. Beattie, 44,\nnew senior ijeputy governor of the\nBank of Canada, had early-day associations with West Kootenay, particularly with Greenwood and Nelson.\nThe information has come to\nlight as a result of the announcement of the coming retirement ,5f\nthe bank's governor, Graham Towers; James E. Coyne's promotion\nfrom senior deputy governor to\ngovernor, and the appointment of\nMr. Beattie to Mr. Coyne's old Job.\nMr. Beattie was born irt Greenwood. His mother was Miss Maude\nMinkler of Greenwood, a i relative\n.of Greenwood founders, and his\nfather, John T. Beattie, member of\na Kamloops family, had been an\naccountant in the Bank of Commerce's Nelson branch in 1906,.\nA_v aunt, Miss Emily Beattie,\n'taught at the Central school here\nwhen H. R. McArthur was principal.\nAnother child of Mr. and Mrs.\n7ohn T. Beattie, Margaret, is now\nthe wife of Canada's immigration\nminister, Hon. J. W. Pickersgill.\nFrom his childhood days in\nGreenwood John R. Beattie went\non to become a Rhodes scholar and\na graduate of the University of\nManitoba. He joined the Bank of\nCanada when lt was set up in 1935.\n\u25a0He is married and has four daughters.\nHis new post as senior deputy\ngovernor carries a yearly salary\nof $30,000.\nV\/ork Told to\nRotary Club\nMUSICLAND\ni        THEATRE\nKASLO, B.C.\n1    TODAY  and WEDNESDAY\n' | Showing at 8-.0O p.m.\n|    \"SH-VIR LODE\" (TecW\n(Technicolor)\n-..   John Payne \u2022 Lliabeth Seott\nDan Duryea\ni Plut LATE8T WORLD NEWS\nSOCRED LEAGUE\nELECTS OFFICERS\ns\nI At   the   annual  meeting   of  the\nI'ederal Council of the West Kootenay Soda! Credit League at Nelion a fuH -Sate of officers was elect-\nl.\na\n:R  J,  Wiglnton   of  Nelson   was\ntleeted president along with three\nilce-presidents, T. Nichols of Trail\nft. Patterson of Kaslo and Mrs. E\nVan Maarion of Nelson. A secretary-\nJreasurer will be appointed by the\nexecutive later.\n5 Regional problems were discussed\n%t well as the constitution.\n\u00a7\/ ^fja-        \"   A COMPL-T. CHOICE Of\n''\"  \u25a0S3_S==a    Weli-ap. ointeo and\n_:tfl\nWEU-APPOINTEO \/\nPUUY SERVICED\nAPARTMENTS AND\nHOTEL ROOMS AT\nMODERATE RATE!\nJohn H   Con., Ma-aglf .\nSHAVERS GROUP\nDISLIKES\nCOUNCIL PLAN\nTRAIL \u2014 Various committe* reports were heard at the monthly\nmeeting of the Shaven Bench Improvement Association Monday\nnight.\nWilliam Kasslan, representative to\ncity council meetings, raid it Is\nhoped by oounoil to complete the\nFifth Avenue approach to the\nBench next year with blacktop,\nsidewalks ahd lights. The sum of\n$15,000 has been spent this year on\n000. Information as to further pro-\nthe road, bringing the total to $25,-\nvincial government assistance on\nthis project is expected when Hon,\nP. A. Gaglardi, minister of public\nworks, visits this district December\n6 to attend the annual meeting of\nthe Trans-Canada Highway Association.\nA letter was received from city\ncouncil suggesting that 'the three\nlots with the community hall be\nturned over along with the other\n26 lots comprising the park to eliminate the necessity of making a\ngrant in lieu of taxes each year.\nThe hall^and lots could be used by\nthe\"Association until such time as it\nceased to exist.\nPark committee members felt\nthat this move would destroy interest in the Association and lose all\nchance. of any assistance for the\nplayground, skating rink or hall\nwhich might he forthcoming from\nthe Trail Athletic Association or\nProject Society.\nRenovation and addition to the\ncommunity hall assisted financially\nby the Trail District Recreational\nProjects Society has been employed.\nMOTORISTS FINED\n$485 IN 5 CASES\nFive' motorists were ordered to\npay $485 in fines In provincial court\nhere Monday. One was the result\nof a minor accident near Krestova.\nJohn Maloff of Crescent Valley\nand Mike John Popoff of Blewett\nwere both fined $201) and costs for\nbeing in care and possession of a\nvehicle while their ability to drive\nwas impaired by alcohol. Their\nlicences were also suspended for\nsix months. - *\nMaloff was Involved In an accident with George E. Markin of\nGrand Forks near Krestova. Mar-\nkin's car received about $150 damage. Maloff pleaded not guilty.\nPete Legebokoff of Krestova, a\npassenger In Maloff's vehicle, was\nfined $10 and costs for being drunk\nin public.\n, E. L. Harris, North Shore, pleaded guilty to exceeding the speed\nlimit and \"was fined $35 ind costs\nand Roy E. Lewis of Nelson pleaded\nguilty to exceeding the speed limit\non Ymir Irtoad and was fined $20\nand costs.\nGeorge Goode Boyes, North\nShore, pleaded not guilty to speed\ning through Willow Point school\nzone arid was found not guilty. He\ntestified he entered the zone about\nTraffic, Street Sip\nSurvey Urged by Mayor\nRotarian Roy Pollard, ln a vocational talk to the Nelson Rotary\nClub a,t the Hume Monday, told of\nsome of the work done by the pro'r\nvincial water rights branch. Mr.\nPollard is district water engineer,\nwater rights branch, department of\nlands. He is stationed at Nelson, one\nof four water rights districts in the\nprovince. This district covers all\nof the Kootenay except Revelstoke,\nhe noted.\nReferring io the'high water problem in this area last Spring, he said\nthat tha situation would have been\nworse but for the fact that thert\nwas \"a long peak'* last. Spring.\nWater rerpained at a high point for\nsome \u2022 time, bl__\u00a3 this was i not as\nserious as lt would have been had\nit reached an' even higher point for\nbut a short time. As a result of the\n\"high peak\" dykes became saturated. \"We are getting more water\nthan we used to,\" he said, and he\nfelt the solution was upstream storage which is coming by degrees.\nFrom a publication, \"Water Powers in B.C.,\" Mr. Pollard noted the\nvarious dams or proposed dams on\nthe Columbia River which will increase upstream storage.\nAt a business session, K. R. Yale\nreported that the club had made\n$60 at an entertainment put on last\nThursday. He urged more Rot'ar-\nlans to take part in this activity,\nfunds from which will go to the\nRotarians' swimming pool fund.\nFuture programs will be held every\nother Thursday, it is planned. President W. S. Ramsay urged Rotarians to support the Kin-auctionS,\nwhich will also assist the swimming\npool fund. Swimming pool committee will contact High.School students, who have also shown an interest in. assisting the swimming\npool fund.\nJohn Erb Introduced a new member to the cltib, A. M. Noxon. Mr.\nRamsay reported that the club was\nnow in seventh place in attendance\namong the clubs of the province\nwith a percentage of attendance\nof 92.79.\nThree guests of the meeting were\nJack Kirk of' Trail, R. Alex\nCreighton of Castlegar and Ed\nMayon of Vancouver.\nTwo surveys\u2014one by a trafflo\nengineer and one to re-name and\nre-mark City streets\u2014were eisen-.\ntlal In Nelson's near future, Mayor\nJoseph Kary told City Counoll\nMonday night\nK survey by a traffic engineer,\na man specialized In the field of\ntraffic regulation, and In setting\nup an orderly traffic pattern, was\nespecially stressed by the mayor.\n\"A complete survey, followed by\na recommendation to the City Council, would, have far more merit,\" he\nsaid,   than   small   traffic   changes\nfrom time to time. \"We've added\nhere, and taken there, but the job\nisn't complete.\"\nLarger cities \"do , just that and\nit might pay us.\" An engineer, the\nmayor said, could probably be borrowed, possibly from the provincial\ngovernment. Traffic advice received\nwhen the control lights were installed on Baker and Vernon\nStreets was \"very worth while\"\nand was only an example of a full-\nscale survey.\nCHANGE8 \"A MUST\"\nVancouver employs a full-time\ntraffic engineer, while the government makes a study of traffic. Nel-\nVANCOUVER  B.C.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nOUR SPECIAL\nPre-Christmas SALE\nOn Gift Lines Continues ,..\nFor  Example:\nThe Famous\nKETTLES\nReg. $13.50\nSALE\n$Q95\n9\nThis and many more\nhuge' Items on sale,\n'Including such larger\nItems'. as Refrigerators,\nWashers, Radios, Electric Stoves, etc.\nSEE THEM NOW AT\nCo. Ltd.\n574 BAKER 6T\n\u00bb\nPHONE 260\n30 and was slowing to 15 when\nstopped.\nHelmuth Mayrhofer- of Nelson\nwas fined $30 and costs for exceeding, the speed limit on Ymir Jl'oad\nMonday. He pleaded guilty.\nAll appeared before \"Stipendiary\n.Magistrate William Evans.\nJAILED FOR TRESPASSING\nTwo Nelsonites,. Kenneth McGee\nand Earl Kenneth Chapman, in city\ncourt Monday were charged with\ntrespassing on a railway car. They\npleaded guilty and were, sentenced\nto 19 days in jail by Magistrate\nWilliam Brown.\nX.minor, Wayne Nowlin, appeared Saturday, charged with speeding\npn Front Street. He pleaded guilty\nand yas fined $25.\nMORE SAVINGS       .    .   .\nSavings bank deposits in Austral\nla increased by ,14 per cent in five\nyears to $2,272,700,000 in 1954.\nDistrict Miner,\nLeo Boyar Dies\nFuneral services have been held\nfor Leo Boyar, formerly of Nelson,\nwho died at the Coast after a long\nillness, in his 52nd year. He had\nbeen in New Westminster.\nMr: Boyar came to the Nelson\ndistrict about 1933, and was engaged\nin mining.\nBesides his wife, Rose, there are\ntwo daughters, Bertha and Albina,\nall at New'Westminster, and a son,\nFred, in Nelson.\nRequiem high mass was celebrated in St... Anthony's Church,\nRev. Father G. J. Hanrahah Officiating, and interment was in the\nCalvary section of Ocean View\nCemetery.\nQood Response to\nFirst Kin*Auction\nson's car population had grown to\nthe point where changes must be\nmade, Mayor Knry stressed, arid the\ncar traffic was only part of' the\nproblem. Pedestrian '.travel must\nalso be effectively controlled.\nMayor's suggestion stemmed from\na request for further traffic control on Latimer street. John 8. DeGirolamo asked Latimer Street be\nturned into a through street, with\nstop signs.on Cedar and Hendryx\nstreets, to aid in winter driving\nwhen \"momentum was needed to\nget up the hill.\"\nMr. DeGlrolamo's suggestion will\nbe turned over to the public works\ndepartment for a report, but council feared Latimer may become a\n\"speedway\" If it were a through\nstreet. It is-used extensively by\nJunior and senior high school students. ,\nAnd a survey to re-mark and\nre-name the streets must come\nsoon the mayor said. Signs were\nterribly weathered, and their replacement would do much to\nbrighten up the olty. It would be\na good project for one of Nelson's\nservice clubs, or for the Junior\nChamber of Commerce.\nThe Weather\nNelson\t\n    41\n48\n\u2014\n    43\n63\n\u2014\nToronto \t\n    SI\n39\n.04\nWinnipeg  _..\n    27\n36\n\u2014\nCalgary    \t\n    32\n58\n\u2014\nKimberley \t\n.....   39\n58\n.03\nCrescent Valley .......\n    40\n53\n.03\nKaslo \t\n    41\n46\n.24\nPenticton \t\n    45\n52\n.05\nVancouver   \t\n    49\n56\n.73\nWhitehorse \t\n    29\n40\n\u2014\n.._..   35\n54\n\u2014\nNew York \t\n38\n42\n\u2014\nAid.- Eckmier \"Fine\"\nAfter Operation\nAlderman George Eckmier is\nfeeling ,rfine\" following an opera\ntion at St. Paul's Hospital in Van\ncouver, Mayor Joseph Kary told\nCity Council Monday night. Alderman Edkmier \"enjoyed the good\nwishes sent him while he was away\"\nand was well, the Mayor said.\nConspiracy\nCase Adjourned\nCounty court trial of five youthful Sons of Freedom charged with\nconspiracy to cause an explosion\nwas adjourned indefinitely here\nMonday.\nCrown counsel R. B. Allan told\ncourt,he had been given authority\nby Attorney-General Robert Bon-\nnsr to enter a stay of proceedings.\nThis, in effect means the case is\nsuspended until such possible time\nas more evidence is. available. The\ncase was. heard before His Honor\nJudge E. P. Dawson. D. MacDonald\not Trail appeared for the accused.\nThe case followed a speedy trial\nof Alex A. Konkin, one of the five,\nln county court over a week ago.\nKonkin, charged with acting with\nintent to cause serious injury by\ndynamite to a power transmission\nline, was acquitted. Mr. Allan then\nsought,instructions frfim the Attorney-General in dealing with the\np p        c.| case of the five. Charged were Alex\nlayrOS >ee film A.  Konkin,  Sam-A.  Konkin,  his\nA film showing entertained mem- brother; Paul Perepolkln, Joseph P.\nbers of the Nelson Gyro Club after Gevatkoff and William Perevorsoff,\ntheir dinner meeting Monday night I all from the Goose Creek-Shore-\nin the Hume. acres district\nCity Endorses Recreation Commission\nThe Kinauctions of 1954 .got off\nto a good start over 6KLN Monday\nnight The auctions,, revived after\nan absence of a year, appeared, to\nbe still popular with the people of\nNelson and district\nA group of two dozen members of\nthe Nelson Kinsmen Club, Nelson\nJunior High School students and\nothers assisting in the charitable\nproject were kept busy auctioneering merchandise, answering telephones and providing entertainment\nfor the radio audience.\nWith Kinsmen president J. E.\nKeegan as master of ceremonies the*\nshow went on the air at 8 p.m.\nWell over 100 items of merchandise will be sold during three auctions. Others are on Nov. 26 and\nDec. 2 and there is a possibility ot\na fourth auction. Merchandise donated by Nelson merchants and\nothers interested in the cause Includes a wide variety of items such\nas credit vouchers, furniture, gro\nceries, a Christmas turkey and two\ncocker spaniel puppies.\nProceeds of the auction-will go\ntowards paying for an iron lung\nfor polio patients now in use at at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nThe Kin and the Junior High students are together paying $1000 on\nthe $14*16 lung, Further proceeds\nwill go to the Rotary swimming\npool fund and other Kinsmen charities.\nAuctioneering staff Monday night\nconsisted of Walter Duckworth\n(auctioneer-in-chief),\u00abL. G. Catley,\nA. K. McAdams, T. S. Shorthouse,\nG. A. Clark and Tom Balsham. Merchandise committee .was made Up\nof Fred Morris, M. B. Ryalls, J. C.\nMuir nhd Roger Bell. In charge\nof the auction contest, a feature of\neach auction, was Ben Sutherland,\nFred Leno and J. C. McAdams.\nSTUDENTS ENTERTAIN\nAt the telephones taking bids were\nL. M. McBride, Carl Golling and\nGeorge\" Harvey. Entertainment in\nbetween auctioneering Intervals\nwas provided by the junior students with J. W. Bagnall in charge.\nStudents taking- part In vocal, Instrumental, monologue and recitation numbers were Ronallee Som-\nmei's, Lois YoBt, Dawn Beatty, Beth\nStenson, Marlene Amoroso, Shirley\nSommerville and Len Wise.\nThe Kinsmen Monday night were\nfairly well pleased with results considering It was the first night. Pro\nceeds could not be determined yet\nsince a number of items receiving\nbids Monday night were not sold but\nwill be carried over till the follow\ning auction with the hope that bids\nwill be incressed. Auctions in the\npast have realized the club as ml\nas over $1000,\nBEN\nSUTHERLAND\nMusic, Appliances, Radiol\n645 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C\nBUS FARE8  UP\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Pacific\nStage Lines has received permission from the Public Utilities Commission to increase bus fares on\nthree of ,_its lower mainland routes.\nInvestigation pf the recreational\nneeds of Nelson, and of the facilities\navailable was the prime object of\nthe soon-to-be formed Civic Recreation^ Commission, City Council\nlearned Monday night.\nCouncil endorsed setting up of a\nrecreational survey committee aqd\noffered support to the group.\nCommittee would compile a list\nof recreational program -needs in\nthe City, along with facilities \"we\nnow have and ones that may be\nrequired' a letter from secretary\nJ. B. MQrgan said. Present commission, ' working on a temporary\nbasis, felt formation of a permanent\ngroup was the first step to be taken.\nCONTROL PARK-\nCommission eventually would\ncontrol all park facilities in the\nCity, _ including any premises that\nQoimdL ^iUnpu\nCity Council made a further\ngrant of $500 to the\" .Nelson\nChamber of Commerce for the\noperation of their Information\nbureau and publicity work Monday night Grant was moved by\nFinance Chairman Alderman\nArthur Foster after a letter was\nread from 8ecretary-Treasurer J.\nA. Bracken, thanking Council for\nan earlier $600 grant.and requesting further assistance. Last year\nCouncil donated $1260 to the\nChamber,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. J. Smith, who made application to purchase three small lots,\nwill be advised the City does not\nplan to sell the property at present.\nMr. Smith offered $600 for the\ntriangular-shaped property bounded by Anderson, High and Front\nStreets in Fairview.\n* *   '\u2022\nAid. Stanley SmitH will represent\ncould be had f6r indoor activities,\nsuch   as   art   classes   and   hobby\nwork, Aid. Elizabeth Wallach told\nCouncil, while Aid. T. H. Bourque\nstressed the first need was accommodation. Two committees, headed\nby recreation leader Ed Kelter, and\nG. A.  Butling, have been set to\ninvestigate present accommodation.\nPark facilities ln Nelson were\nbeing   Improved   \"as   quickly  ai\nfundi are available,\" Aid. J. H\nCoventry pointed out. Bulldozers\nMonday started t<t level the uphill playground to-prepare It for\nuse next year.\nRecreation    Commission    woulcl\nease,the load on the Civic Centre\nCommission which has been supervising the recreation needs of the\nCity as well as administering the\nCivic Centre building.\nCity Council at a reorganization\nmeeting of the Nelson Civil Defense Organization. Notice of the\nNov. 30 meeting was sent, by coordinator Major E. W. White, who\nsaid the meeting would be held to\n\"revamp\" the Nelson association.\nNeed of civil defence in peacetime,\nas well as during war, was emphasized by the destruction left in\nthe path of Hurricane Hazel in\nEastern- Canada' and the United\nStates, Major White said.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00ab\nDenis C. Coen was granted a\nlicense to open a toy shop for\nChristmas sales on Baker'Street.\nMr. Coen, who holds a wholesalers\nlicense- on Front Street, plans to\nopen his shop Tugsday at 321 Baker\nStreet. License was also given\nElizabeth M. Mondini for operation\nof Adrian Millinery, 259 Baker\nStreet.\nOnde*\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nMtUMH-Utt DEEP SUM\nFee Rial COMFORT mi SATISFACTION\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER Fuel & Transfer\nCOAL\nFRICIS and EMMA KURMINS\nAre Pleased To Announce the Opening of\nRiver View Service\nAT TAGHUM. BC\nOffering a Complete Gas Station Service\nAnd a Large Grocery Stock\nNAILS\nCommon Bright.\nBy the Keg, Any Size. .\n11.95\nBy tho Lb. 14*\nFinishing 1\" to 2V^'.\nBy the Keg.\t\n_'14.95\nBy the Lb. 16*\n3\".\nBy the Keg.\nf13.95\nBy the Lb. 15*\nColumbia Trading Co.\n902 Front St.\nPhone 1311\nBALTIMORE (AP) \u2014 A 50-year-\nold steeplejack who hung head\ndown from a tower atop a down\ntown building for more than ar\nhour, fell 100 feet to the ground\nMonday as police and firemen attempted to rescue him.\nNEW\nPICTURE\nHere's superlative picture qualii\nid the world's most dependah\nTV \u2014 now priced for everyofii\nIn gleaming\nwalnut finish.\nSllghfly higher in\nmahogany or\nlimed oak finJihi\nReceivers\nPriced From\nI$214.9!\nCOME IN TODAY?\nBy Special Agreement Wit\nMc & Mc (NELSON) LTC\nInstallation and Line Facil\nties Are Arranged For Eac\nIndividual Purchaser.\nStrike the\nright note\nThe good host Strikes the right note by\nserving Scotch Whisky; it is the drink\nmost appreciated by his guests. Make\nyour choice \"Black & White\" and you\nwill add an extra touch of quality to\nyour  entertaining.  How  could  it  ba\notherwise when the pick of the finest\nScotch Whiskies are blended in tht\nspecial \"Black & White\" way.\nBUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITE'\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nDke SccUtiS in the Blemliny\nBy Appointment\nto tha lots King Gnorgo VI\nScotch Whl.ky D.itlllo.i\nJames Buchanan & Co. Ltd.\nDistilled, blended pnd bottled in Scotland '\nAvailable In 26V_oz. and 13!4o_. bottles     . Bin\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LIQ\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\n^\u00ab ' ;; '\u25a0\n 1INDEER 8TEAKS\n_.app reindeer herders In north-\nl' Norway now take reindeer to\nslaughtered in sanitary state ab-\nbirs. \u2022\u2022' \u25a0\u25a0.;\nHONE   144   COR   CLASSIFIED\nLefs keep Christmas\nfe call friends \"hard to shop\n\u00ab*\" \u2014 yet who does not need\nve, consideration, a helping\nind? We \"can't feel the Christ-\nas spirit\" \u2014 yet who cannot\nijoice at Jesus' coining?\nIn December Reader's Digest,\nBtcr Marshall (subject of A\nIan Called .Peter) tells how we\nin keep Christmas' glory in\nve homes \u2014 and in our hearts.\nBe sure to read this pertinent\nlessage on the real meaning of\nhristmas in December Reader'?\nigest. It's just one of 35 articles\n. lasting interest, condensed\nom leading magazines nnd\nmerit books.\nMinlo Chapter of Eastern Star\nConstituted al Castlegar Event\nJOHN\nNIAGARA\nTalks about.\nBills marked\n\"PLEASE\n91\nMost people have had a bill\nsometime, bearing the words,\n\"Please remit by return qaail\".\nAnd many of us have not\nalways   been   able   to   send\nfiayment by return mail. A\narge unplanned bill, or a lot\nof little ones, can often cause\nthis to happen. Most people\ndon't realize that all they\nneed to clear away their\ndebts is time; yes, time tp\nspread the payments into\n| future pay envelopes. A friendly loan gets you a lump, sum\nof money, with which to pay\nyour bills. You then have.\ntime to repay, with payments\nyou can handle more easily.\nIt's a simple way to get back\non your feet. Friendly loans\nup to $1500 from Niagara\nare life-insured at no extr,i\ncost to you. Besides, on many\nfriendly loans, the rates are\nlower. If you need money why\ndon't you give yourself time\nto pay by arranging a Niagara\nloan. We'll be glad to see you\n... so just drop in.\nMl AG ARA\n560 Baker Street\nPhone 1638\nCASTLEGAR - Minto Chapter,\nOrder of the Eastern Star, was .officially constituted in ceremoriies\nheld in the Twin Rivers hall here.\n(The constitution ceremonies 'were\ncarried out by the Grand matron,\nMrs. J. H. Argyle of Nelson, and\nthe Installation of officers by tho\nGrand patron, Sydney G.. barker of\nVancouver.\nAssisting in the ceremonies-were\nJessie Albright, Vancouver, associate Grand matron; 'Mary Buchan,\n\u25a0past Grand matron of Trail, acting Grand secretary; Helen Rae,\npast matron of Trail, acting Grand\nconductoress; Joyce Jupp of Nakusp, acting associate Grand conductoress; Mrs. Wallace of Nelson,\nacting Grand chaplain; Helen\nThompson of Fernie, Grand marsh-\nall; Mary Johns of Trail, acting\nGrand organist; Gertrude Barker of\nVancouver, acting Grand warder,\nand Murdo Graham of Trail, acting Grand sentinel.    \u25a0   ,\nA large nutaber of members from\nTrail, Rossland, Nelson, Cranbrook.\nFernie and Nakusp were in attendance, along with a number of v^-\nitors from chapters in Kettle Fails,\nNorthport and Spokane. Members\nof Kettle Falls and Northport chapters presented an American flag to\nthe Minto Chapter.\nA banquet was held at the Marine Grill. Members of Minto chapter also served refreshments after\nthe meeting.\nFRUITVALE GROUP\nELECTS OFFICERS\nFRUITVALE - At the annual\nmeeting .of B branch of St. John's\nAnglican WA held in the'parish\nhall, reports were heard from officers and committees and revealed a\nvery, successful year of activity.\nThe election of the 1955 slate of\nofficers was held, with the following being elected: Mrs. Melvin Sadler, president; Mrs. Thomas Moon,\nvice-president; Mrs. T. R. Anderson:\nrecording secretary; Mrs. R. F. Davis, correspondent secretary and\npress representative; Mrs. Stephen\nZuk. treasurer; Mrs. Geor\u00b0e Metcalfe, social convener; Mrs. W.\nEdington, living message; Mrs. L.\nGravson, Dorcas secretary.\nFinal plans were made for a\nbreakfast to be served November 30\nwhen W. Edington will be ordained.\nPOPULAR TYPE\nFour-door sedans constituted\" 65\nper cent of Canada's production of\n360,000 passenger autos in 1953.\nCOAL\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nNelson. B.C\nWfi    P\nSquare Dancing\nAl Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE T At the quarterly\nmeeting of the Fruitvale Recreation\nAdvisory Council, first reading was\ngiven to the proposed constitution\nand bylaws which had been drawn\nup by the recreation commissioners. A copy is to be given to each\nof the advisory 'council members,\nwho will in turn read them to their\nrespective groups to familiarize\ntheir members with work of the recreation community program.\nTo date, the only club formed under the sponsorship of the council\nhas been the Square Dancing Club\nMiss Nelson reported that there\nhas been close to DO people enrolled\nand it is expected that this figure\nwould be exceeded by the deadline\nfor enrolment Saturday. A special\njunior square dance club could be\narranged by the senior group, the\nmeeting was told, as could the badminton club. This club is still open\nto members and if necessary, some\ninstruction can be arranged for the\nyounger ones wishing tq join.\nTo help teen-agers find winter\nactivities, a meeting is planned for\nDec. 3 to allow young people 13-19,\nplan and assist them in organizing.\nMr. Newton is to arrange for the\nteen town organizer, now in the\nKootenays, outline the program of\nthe teen town.\nAfter his report on the Kootenay\nDistrict Drama Association meeting in Nelson, Roy Hunter was appointed to start the plans for forming a Fruitvale Little Theatre.\nFred Walker reported on the regional conference of recreation commissions in Nelson.\nDiscussion iof ostdoor activity\nwas held and commissioner C.\nHaines reported that a hill nearby\nwould be made available for certain hours of the day for children's\nsleigh-riding.\nThe next meeting of the council\nwill be late in December.\nMrs. C. Rogers on- behalf of the\ngym club invited the members to\nattend an \"open night\" display the\nclub is giving on November 30.\nTOBACCO GROWER8\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) \u2014 Immigrants from Italy are extending\na small but profitable tobacco growing industry in .New South Wales.\nAlmost all the 500 acres of tobacco\nharvested in tfie state last season\nwas produced by Italian share\nfarmers.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nPHONE   144   FOR, CLASSIFIED\nlt'\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abl?\u00ab'8lJ!eiSt5lSl3[lS!6l<t5iaiK(fi!2l5tS,S\u00ab'eitl-l-'-l5BIiS!_l5l_lS\u00ab<5\u00ab\u00abieiS\u00ab \u00ab WTO_sl_.\u00abW\u00abttW\u00ab\u00ablS\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab<5W'\u00abWSWiJ!\n' \u00ab\nWhether the gift you ore shopping for is for\" Mother,\nDad, Sister or Brother - or for the home - you will find\nthe right gift at the right price in our store. Gift items\nfor the whole family are now on display.\nTEACHERS' GROUP\nHEARS TRAIL MAN\n. CASTLEGAR \u2014 Hans Johnson of\nTrail, geographical representative\ntot'West Kootenay and Boundary\nTeachers!, ODistrict Council, was the\nguest. df \"\" the Castlegar District\nTeachers Association at Its monthly\nmeeting.\nintroduced by Chairman Dr. F.\nThorne] Mr. Johnson spoke on a\nwide \"Variety of subjects, including\nB. C. Teachers' Association, opposition tq a provincial salary scale\nwhich, he said, \"not only tends to\nreduce teachers' salaries but reduces Incentive toward higher\nteaching qualifications and seriously curtails teacher-recruitment in\nrural areas.\"\nt J. Buhr, salary committee chairman, reported he had presented a\nsalary brief to the board and outlined the proposed schedule.\nJames Corbett reported that the\nplay \"Puss in Boots\" had been \\tery\nsuccessful with an attendance of\nmore than 1000 adults and children\nand a profit of $84.06 for the CDTA.\nThis money was voted to the student scholarship fund.\nThe possibility of presenting two\nplays each year is being investigated, the second to be staged in\nthe spring.\nPublic Relations Chairman J. .A;\nCharters announced a day .long public relation! workshop of all West\nKootenay and Boundary public relations representatives will be held\nat Castlegar December 11. Senior\nBCTF public relations officials will\nbe present and press and radio rep-\nresentat'ves are being invited.\nMrs. V. Sammonsj ond T. Wilk-\ntnrnn were named to represent the\n\".DTA..\nRITFS TODAY FOR\nMRS. McLEOD\"\nTRAIL \u2014 Funeral services will\nbe held today for Mrs. Janet McLeod who died here after a long\nillness. Rev. James Young wtil officiate.\nMrs. McLeod, formerly a resident\nof Nelson and Greenwood, was a\nresident of Trail for more than 41\nyears. She was predeceased by her\nhusband in 1941.\nShe is survived by three daughters: Mrs. C. R. Glover, Trail; Mrs.\nT. R. Allan, Trail; Mrs. G. L. Mor-\ntin, Kaslo; three brothers. Adam\nConnell, Andrew Connell. Scotland;\nArchibald Connell, New Zealand;\none sister, Margaret Connell, Scotland, and seven grandchildren.\nKASLO COlfPLE\nMOVE TO COAST\nKASLO\u2014A former Kaslo alderman and a resident for more than\n50 years, t. McGibb_on has left with\nhis wife to make their home at\nthe Coast.\nHe was a constant, worker for\nthe progress of Kaslo, and took a\nspecial interest in Legion affairs.\nMrs. McGibbon arrived in Kaslo\nfrom England as a bride in 1919.\nShe is a past-president of the\nLadies' Auxiliary to Kaslo branch\nof the Canadian Legion, and she\nhad taken an active part In other\nwomen's^ organizations.\nGaa.ardi To Speak\nAt Highway Meetinq\nTRAIL \u2014 Guest speaker at the\nluncheon at the seventh annual\nmeeting of the Trans-Canada Highway Association (Crow's Nest route)\nto be held here Dec. 6, will be\nHon. P. A. Gaglardi, B. C.'s public\nworks minister.\nMorning and afternoon business\n-sessions will be held in the Masonic\nbuilding, and the luncheon will be\nheld in the Crown Point. Delegates\nfrom the three western provinces\nare expected.\nDirect To Patient\nMELBOURNE, Australia (CP) -\n, A blood transfusion pump invented\n| by an Australian doctor here enables transfusions to be made direct from donor to patient. About\nthe size of a o^gar box, the pump is\ncontrolled by a hand wheel.\nLAY-AWAY-PLAN\nShop early while selections are at their best. We will\nhold the gifts of your choice for you until required..\nSHOP TODAY\nEVER NOTICED?\nA, cat's jaw, unlike that of a dog,\nmoves only up and down, not sideways.\nSight of Minto Recalls\n1913 Trip of Visitor\nNAKUSP \u2014 Fond remerftbrances\nof the Minto have'been set down by\nMrs. Ada McGeer of Vancouver, a\nprovincial director of the Canadian\nCancer Society, writing'in the B, C.\norganization^ publication of .a trip\nshe took recently to Jtykusp.\nShe writes:    ',,_'\n\"I 'called back time', for it was\n41 years,since I .had last \"seen the\nArrow \u25a0 Lakes.-; With four other\nyoung and carefree students I was\nreturning from Montreal via the\nCrow's Nest Pass.\n\"As so many thousands,have done\nsince, we made the trip from Castlegar to Arrowhead on the lately retired- Minto. As we drove up the\nlake into the lovely 'closed in' town\naptly called Nakusp,by the Indians,\nyesterday returned, for there was\nth\/ old stern wheeler lying at anchor in the place where she-was\nbuilt 50 years ago. looking much as\nshe did on that lovely spring night\nA. A. Schultz, 39,\nOf Riondel Dies\nRIONDEL\u2014 Alvin Alfred Schultz,\n39, prominent in Riondel community affairs, died suddenly Saturday.\nA heart attack is believed to have\ncaused his death.\nBorn in.Tofield, Alta., he came\nto Riondel six years ago. Besides\nhelping to organize the Bluebell\nRecreation Club, he took an active\npart in business of the Riqndel sub-\nloc^l of Kimberley local, International Union of Mine, Mill and\nSmelter Workers, and the Kimberley Benevolent Society.\nHis wife, Dorothea, has been a\nNelson Daily News correspondent,\narid his son, Bob, a Daily News carrier. He is' also survived by two\nother children,-Joe and Babs; his\nfather and two brothers in Tofield,\nand a sister, Mrs. Stan Jack, at Edmonton.\nThe funeral will be held in To-\nfield, Thursday.\nfernie Hoop Teams\nScore Victories\nFERNIE \u2014Fernie High School\nbasketball teams won four games\nin the East Kootenay High School\nBasketball League over the weekend. Friday they travelled to Sparwood and easily won both games\nagainst the Michel-Natal High\nSchool squads. The scores were\nFernie High School girls 38, Michel\nHigh School girls, 17, Fernie high\nschool boys 32, Michel High school\nboys  18.\nRolling up a 30-8 first-half lead\nat Kimberley Saturday night, the\nFernie High School boys coasted to\na 44-27 victory. Fernie's top scor\ners in this game were Bill Quail\nwith 17 points and Stanley Oleshko\nwith 12. Scoring 12 points Shirley\nLees led the Fernie girls to an 18-11\nwin over the Kimberley girls.\n'Flu Attacks 10,000\nBritish Children\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 An estimated\n10,000 British children, mostly in\nthe north of England, were ill with\ninfluenza and absent from school\nMonday.\nMedical officers said 7000 children of the Middlesborough region\nin Yorkshire are suffering from a\nmild type of flu. Backpool reported\nabout 700 cases and 100-girls of a\nschool at Tetbury were confined to\ntheir homes. Other communities reported outbreaks.\n\"They are outbreaks, not an epidemic,\" said a Health Ministry\nspokesman. \"Local health authorities are. in complete charge.\"\nROTORUA, N. Z. (CP) \u2014 Deer\nhave become so numerous in parts\nof New Zealand that the government pays mpn to shoot them because of the damage they cause to\nforests. One man in the Urewera\ndistrict of the North island has shot\n200 in the past few weeks.\nFREE GIFT WRAPPING SERVICE\nIf required we will gift wrap your purchase for you.\nWrapping and cards are provided for your convenience. There is no charge for this service.\nEXPRESS\n(jOU\/t,\nEARLY!)\n\u2022k    PACK CAREFULLY\nDISAPPOINTMENT\nMcLennan, McFeely & Prior Ltd.\nPhone 1300    (Nelson Branch)    476 Baker St.\ni\u00bb\u00bba\u00bb_i\u00bba__\u00bb2,___fc-ha\u00bba_._,.\u00bb\u00bb-ft&s\u00bb&\u00bb\u00bb&Mi-i-._t^^^\nTO POINTS IN.\n- Newfoundland . . . . \u25a0\nMarilimo Provinces ... .\nOntario ond Quebee . . .\nManitoba and Saskatchewan\nAlberta\t\nBritish Columbia   .    .    .    _\nCANADIAN    \/\/S\nPACIFIC      I\n&CfVlM    ''i\nADDRESS CORRECTLY\nSHIP BY EXPRESS\nNOT LATER THAN\nDecember 8\nDecember 10\nDecember 10\nDecember 13\nDecember 14\nDecember 15\nCANADIAN\nNATIONAL\nwhen we had docked there.\n\"The townspeople have just\nbought the fatpous boat from the\nCPR for $1.05 including tax, and\nthe burning question in the community now is what will they do\nwith her\u2014keep her anchored as\nmuseum piece in the water, where\n.some-say she will last another 50\nyears, or beach her and make\nrecreation centre\/ '\n\"The problem of her ultimate fate\nis just'another piecf of business for\nthe 1100 inhabitants \\frhose days are\nso filled with work and their nights\nWith meetings, that, as one oldtimer\nsaid, 'a man hardly gets time to go\nhome and kiss his wife.'\nHELD MEETINGS\n\"I was\" travelling with the field\norganizer of the B.- C. branch of\nthe Canadian Cancer Society on her\nregular visit to the active Arrow\nLakes-Slocan unit and there were\nonly three minutes available to\nspeak in Nakusp that week lo thank\nthem for their support of the Society. However, they did take time\nto arrange meetings and transportation up and down the lake to Silverton, West Arrow Park, Burtrfn\nand Edgewood where we always\nencountered some grateful patient\nwho had been treated and cured at\nthe Institute in Vancouver.\n\"In Nakusp, the field organizer\nwas able to arrange at once for an\nexpensive drug to be administered\nto a needy patient.\n\"This welfare work of the Society\nhas saved the lives of many cancer\npatients in the province by providing means for early treatment. It is\none of the reasons why the 82 units\nof the Cancer Society in B. C. are\nso strong and active.\"\nPlanning to move? Call us\nfirst Our modern vans and\nskilled movers assure a\nSAFE move wherever you\ngo.' We are agents for\nNorth American Van Lines,\nAmerica's leading long distance moving organization.\nIt costs no more to enjoy\nthis finer service.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 33\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 23,1954 \u2014 3    I\nEASY ON THE PURSE.\nPRICES EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 22 to 27.\nSee What You Pay\nAs You Buy!\nYour food dollar goes farther at our store. You know\nhow much you are spending because the price is\nclearly marked on each item of merchandise. When\nyou reach the checking stand, you see the price of\neacli item and correct total in large, casy-to-read\nfigures at the top of the cash register.\nThen, for your additional protection and con.\nvenience, when you get home you can comparer the-\nprice stamped on each item with the price printed\noh the register receipt.\nYo\/always know the price of each item it correct\nYou know your total is correct.\nCorned Beef f2er0ftrfn F.r.\u00b0\u2122,A.r.g.en.t'ne; 470\nBrunswick Sardines ] 0 for 99*\nPork & Beans S^JZZZI 2 for 25*\nCake & Pastry Flour Economy bag       39*\nShredded Wheat Cerei      2 *\u00bb 33*\nCorn Flakes \u00a3\u00ab0, size 2 for 47*\nCream of Tomato Soup\nHeinz puts in the cream.\nAdd only water. 10 oz, ._\n3 for 43*\nPeaches   Brentwood. Standard.\nCnrnn   FrJ's. The favorite of millions.\n*-OCOO   Lb. tin \t\nHot Chocolate\nFry's. See howe the kids\ngo for it. Lb. pkg\t\n2 for 45*\n85*\n62*\nFRESH EGGS\nGrade \"A\" Medium. Guaranteed.\nCartons extra. Doz \t\n50*\n2 Doz. 99*\nFresh Eggs g\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00bb:  5Q*\nPitted Dates \u2122\u00b0'pack  2n... 39*\nCoffee LPbemium..B'end: ~$ 1 15\nBC- Sugar LIIIlOibs.99*\nPurex Tissue 4 for 490\nSolo Margarine 2 for 55*\nGIANT RINSO\nSALE.\nPkg \t\n65'\nGiant Rinso PkfJ 55^\n.-*\u00ab\u00ab'\"\" sssr; 4 ib, 72*\nMint Humbugs  Lb 39*\nBullseye Molasses Lb 43*\nChocolate Bars Herse\/, 6 for 25*\nIce Cream \u00ab\u00a3.  450\nPeanut Brittle '^esh made- ^     45^\nFOOD PLAN ... moer and more wise shoppers now can compare\nwhere quality Is known ind price Is right. Home freezers food plant\nin this area can be had . . , arrangements have been made to give\nyou the lowest in finance charges ... '\/jj of 1% on approved accounts. No better variety is found in this area than at LIBERTY ..,\nFrozen Foods, Staples, Meats.\nDONT FORGET . . . Mall orders accepted. Your Christmas Turkey\ndelivered from our New Food Centre. $1.00 dowh and $1.00 week\ngivet you a free draw on a big Ham.\n\u00a3i\u00a3>\u00a3Aiyk Qualify WburtL\nVEAL SHOULDER STEAK: Lb    35*\nVEAL SHOULDER ROASTS: Lb ...... 35*\nLEAN   HAMBURGER:    3 Ibs. $1.00\nBEEF LIVER: Lb.  25*\nBOLOGNA by the piece: Lb , 25*\nSliced SIDE BACON: Lb 49*\nHOTHOUSE TOMATOES\nB.C.'s tasty, firm, No. I. Lb. only   mm\u00ab_\u00bb\nPREMIUM QUALITY POTATOES\nGrand Forks Gems. <\u00a3 j gp Grd. Forks. | (\\ _> 3 #)l\nNo. 1. Sack     4>5.0D     No. 2 I Ulbs.   _>_>T\"\nORANGE SALE CONTINUES\nFloridas. , lilt\nJuicy _    \/ lbs.  I Ir\nGrapefruit J*J      _ _    10,b.. 89*\nCLEARANCE ON BALANCE OF 8PRING BULBS, TULIPS, NAR\nCISSUS, HYACINTHS: Hurry, hurry, nice selection. AQ<_.\nBelow cost sale. Final chance, pkg.  ^efr\n8TOP . . . Walt until you see LIBERTY'S LOW PRICES on Toys,\nGlftwares, Small Appliances, kiddles' Needs, at the BIG GRAND\nOPENING SOON. Brand new stock . . . Biggest selection.\n\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0'   \u2022'''   \u25a0 '   \u2022\"'\n\u2022'\u25a0i;\"    '\t\n\t\n ; '\u25a0 y'  \\.    .   \u25a0 \u25a0\n___________\n \u25a0\u25a0HWWTO\nmmmw\n\t\n , _\n\u00ab\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014 ,-.   \u25a0 ......      \u25a0     . .\u2022,\"...\u25a0;\n~^?\nSfrlaim laih; fJeius\nISslubllshed  Aplll  22   IUUV\nBritish Coiumbicrs ,\nMosl _n_e.es.ing Newspaper  \u25a0\nPublished every murning txcept Sunday bv the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n268 B.Ker Street Nelson British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPnsl Office Department. Ottawa\nMEMBEtt OF THE CANADIAN HRESiS AND\nTHE AUDIT BOHEAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTuesday, November 23, 1954\nWhat Do\nProfits Mean?\nRumors and half-truths are the stock\nin trade of propagandists and troublemakers. The most effective' antidote\nis a true statement of the facts set out\nclearly and effectively.\n'., The Toronto Globe and Mail makes\nthis point clear in countering the Ontario CCF claim that corporation\nprofits rose eight times in the 1926-51\nperiod while wages and salaries went\nup only four times.\n.This claim does not take taxes into\naccount. After taxes were deducted\nstatistics show wages and salaries actually rose more than corporation profits.\nThe Globe and Mail goes on to note\nthe inter-relationship between the two,\nand says:\n\"This is what a business ought\nto be talking about. Important as\nprofits may be to corporation officials and shareholders, they are a\ngood deal more Important to the\ncommunity at large. (Not to mention the Canadian Government,\nwhich depends directly on them\nfora quarter of all its revenues.) It\nis profits that build new plants and\nmodernize old ones, that make for\nhigher pay and shorter' hours\nthrough increased productivity,\nthat\u2014more than anything else-\nhave quadrupled paper wages and\nsalaries, and doubled real ones, in\nthe last twenty-five years. If business brought this simple fact home\nto the Canadian people, agitators\nwould not be able to alarm their\naudiences by saying that profits\nwere up. They would only be able\n'to alarm them by saying that\nprofits were down.\"\nThey All Cost Money\nIt is getting harder and harder to\nsay just what a person earns. It may\nhe either more or less than he imagines,\nojr it may be both.\nThe Montreal Gazette points to a\n\"curious inclination\" that has developed in the years since the war not to\nrepresent earnings.for what they really\nare. The most recent of these trends ha.\ntaken the form of what are called\n''fringe benefits\".\n; Fringe benefits may be concerned\nwith the cash equivalent of holidays\nwith pay, sick leave, pensions, or any\none of manj other forms of payment.\nAnd yet they are not presented and\nargued for as just another addition to\nregular pay. They are set aside as something different.\nThe very phrase \"fringe benefit\"\nstiggests that ,they are m;nor mattsrs,\nsupplementary considerations. Yet, in\nterms of dollars and cents, they can\neasily pile up into millions.\nFor those who have to run an industry or business, and for those who\nhave to pay, as customers, for that\nindustry's products or .services, it does\nnot matter whether the added cost is\ndue to straight pay or to fringe benefits. In such costs, a dollar is still a\ndollar.\nAnd by the same token, the earner\nSta&e Business\nIs Tricky\n(8t. Thomas Times-Journal)\nPeople who write or produce plays and\nhave high hopes for success are often disappointed. The producers may spend $100,000 on,\na big musical play, or one that calls for spectacular settings, and then the public stays\naway ln droves. A fortune may be lost In one\nweek's run. On the other hand, plays like \"Life\nWith rather\" or \"Abie's Irish Rose\" (which, by\nthe way, is being revived iii New York), with\nsmall caBts, run for years.\nA rare example of success of a musical\nplay with music by an unknown comp.oser\nand not a known actor in the cast, Is afforded\nby the advent of an English production called\n\"The Boy Friend\" in New York a few days\nago. While it may appear too soon to predict\na long run, the Broadway critics hailed It with\nenthusiasm, the New York Times describing it\nas \"an established hit of the first magnitude.\"\nThe extraordinary thing about \"The Boy\nFriend\" is that a young man known ss \"Sandy\"\nWilson wrote and composed it as a short feature of a ni .ht-club revue. There was such\nenthusiasm at the opening of the show that\nWilson was asked to expand it to a full length\nmusical. This he did, and after lt opened in\na West-End theatre last December it is still\nrunning to packed and delighted houses. Cost\nof the production was $2750. Two New York\nimpresarios-saw it and bought up the rights for\nproduction '\nProducers who have gone hroke on big\nmusicals should note that it was brains that\nmade \"The Boy Friend\", not hordes of half-\nnaked chorines.\u2014St. Thomas Times-Journal.\nPotato and Caviar Wars\nThe world does pnove toward higher-\nmore expensive, that is\u2014objectives, in spite\nof the current wave of pessimism and despair.\nTake what the Polish-German military author,\nClausewitz, in his masterwork. On War, called\nWars With a Restricted Aim- In the last quarter of the eighteenth century. Frederick the\nGreat moved a Prussian army against two\nAustrian armies in what became known as the\nPotato War because its aim was not to fight\nbattles, but either to obtain control of the\nfood supply or to deny it to the enemy. A\nm'nor matter of the Bavarian succession lay\nwell back\" in the shadows, so far back that no\ndecisive battles were fought. It has never\nbeen qpite clear since the peace of 1779 who\ngot the potatoes, But they have been dearer\never since.\nToday's war with a minor objective Involves control of nothing less than caviar.\nThe only semblance of a battle was even less-\nspectacular than in the Potato War; but Iran\nseems to have won over Russia. In February\nlast year, a twenty-y*ar treaty which gav<.\nRussia fishinu rights off the Persian coast in\nthe Caspian Sea came to an end, Sturgeon,\nwhich produce the best caviar, flourish there.\nAfter the second World war, when it became\napparent that Iran would not renew the treaty\n\u2014having' already announced a plan to breed\nbigger and better female sturgeon and to\nmarket the product itself\u2014Russian troons infiltrated and quietlv occunie'd the seabocrd\nprovince of Azerbaijan. Wi'hout bothering to\nconsult the Government at Tehran, the Iranian\narmy moved in and ousted 'he Russians.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail\nPress Comment\nA TOUCH OP SHAME\nThere is something almost obscene in the\nnews stories describing the \"death watch\" of\nnewsmen and television peonle outside the\nhome of the actress. Marilyn Monroe, and her\nhusband, Joe DIMaggio. in the hope of getting\nsome morsel of gossip from this ill-fated pair.\nThe spectacle of more than a hundred of these\npeople standing in rows \"nine dren\" is in a\nreal sense a commentary on the civilization of\n. wri.h we boast so proudly\u2014Toronto Globe\npnd Mail.\nDISTRUST, FEAR EVERYWHERE\n\"E^ery star in the universe Is rapidly Tuning away from ail other stars,\" says an astronomer. Distrust and fear seem to be spreading\neverywhere.\u2014Kitchener-Waterloo Record.\nhimself may be led to feel that what\nhe is demanding is not really higher\npay at all. If he should happen to win,\nin any industrial dispute, a gain in the\nform of fringe benefits, he would be\nunlikely to consider that his pay had\nbscoma any higher -hap before.\nEverybody is deceived all round. The\ncost is the cost. But everybody is rendered from sesing clearly just what the,\ncost is and what it really means.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen ^o any reader. Names ot persons\nasking questions w(ll -not be published,\nrnoro. Is no charue for this service.\nQuestions WILL' NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL .except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy. ',-'\nJ   \u25a0\nE. E. E,,.'Nelson\u2014Is it a voluntary act on the\npart of the employers that the staff g*t a\n10-minute break morning and afternoon,\nor is it compulsory by B. C. law?\nIt is _a voluntary gesture on the part of\nan  employer  tq  allow  a  10-minute  coffee\nbreak for staff that Is employed for a period\nof less than five hours consecutively without\nmeal or rest period. The Female Wage Act\nmakes it compulsory.\nCurious, Nakusp\u2014What newspapers are published in Edmonton? Please give their adr\ndresses too.\nEdmonton Journal; People's Weekly,\nSouth Edmonton News, Weekly; The Spotlight, Weekly; Starland Reporter, weekly; Sun,\ntwice weekly; La Survivance, French, weekly.\nThere are also the Ukrainian News, published\nweekly, with information for Ukrainian settlers, and Western Catholic, weekly.^ Edmonton, Alberta, is sufficient address for any of\nthem.\nM. E. Y.. Castlegar\u2014Will you please tell me\nthe name of an agent who sells the Electric Hygiene vacuum cleaner?\nCan other readers help?\nC. J. S., Trail\u2014Please give me name and\naddress of head manager of all safeway\nstores in B. C.\nW, J. Kraft, 840 Cambie Street, Vancouver.\nE. Y. E\u201e Nakusp\u2014Could you please advise me\nwhere I can obtain necessary entry blanks\nfor the Embroidery Guild exhibition as\nannounced in your paper of Nov. 17?\nWrite to the United Kingdom Information Office.Ottawa.Ont.\nCrow's Nest Rates\n(Alberta W\/ioat Pool Budget\nThe Crow's Nest Pass agreement entered\ninto in 1897 between the Canadian Pacific\nRailway and the Canadian government provides low freight rates on export grain and\ngrain products from the prairie provinces of\nwestern Canada. In consideration for maintaining the rates in perpetuity the railway got\n$3,404,702 in cash from the Canadian govern-\nment in addition to a land grant from British\nColumbia of 3627 acres of land including mineral rights. The company was also able to acquire the charter of the British Columbia\nSouthern Railway with all its subsidiary rights\nfor a nominal sum. The railways are now\nanxious to have the agreement thrown into\ndiscard. They claim that rates prevailing 57\nyears ago are unrealistic at the present time.\nThe rate on wheat from Calgary to Fort\nWilliam. 1267 miles, is \u00a36 cents a hundred, and\nfrom Calgary to Vancouver, 642 railway miles.\nit is 20 cents a hundred. The railways say this\nis unprofitable. On the other hand, the Win-\nn'o .^ Free Press points out that over a period\nof 29 years since 1907 the exnort grain traffic\namounted to over 30 per cent of total prairie\ntraffic. The net earnings of the CPR on western lines was $753 334.134, against $;61.615.198\non eastern lines. The Crow's Nest rates apply\nonly on export grain products. Domestic ratns\nare substantially higher and were recently\nraised.\nPrairie farmers oneratlng from the heart\nof t^e continent need every assistance possible\nin the way of low freight rates to maintain\ncompetitive naritv with other whet 'exoori-\ning nations. On the o'her hand, railways' expenses have increased at a rapid rate. They\ncomn'iln that while freioht rates have pone\nun PS 2 per c ,nt since the be'lnnim; of 1948.\ncosts have risen even greater. They say the\nlatest demands by employees, if granted, would\nmean an increase in cost of $60 million a year.\nCapital Memo-\nYou may encounter delays and obstacles\nin b-siness. but should surmount the difficulties through help from good friends. A profound intellect is likely for the child born\ntodav. who should be trained early in self-\ndiscipline.\nIt's Roan CliH\nHow would you be. if He, who is the top\nof . \"^\"Tient, should but judge you as vnu are?\nO. think on that, and mercy then will breathe\nwi'hin your lins, like man new made.\u2014Will-\niam Shakespeare.\n.BY JAME9 K.  NESBITT,\n\"Nobody. I think, ought to read poetry,\nor look at pictures or statues, who cannot find\na great deal more in them than the poet or\nartist has actually expressed.\"\n\u2014Nathaniel Hawthorne.\nToday's Bible Thouqkt*\nAnd as ye would that men should\ndo to you, do ye even so to them,\nlikewise.\u2014Luke 6:31.\nThat Is an amazingly simple and\neffective rule.\ndunt M&L\nU.K. Male Nurse\nHopes fo Meet\nFewer Obstacles\n' MONTREAL (CP) \u2014 A British\nmale nurse arrived here during the\nweekend* aboard the Empress of\nScotland en route to a Saskatchewan hospital where he hopes to\nfind less prejudice against male\nnurses than in Britain.\nDick Bruce, 44, a graduate of\nBury General Hospital, Lancashire,\nseid he finds being a male in a traditionally female profession is an\nuphill fight.\nHe is one of a party of 16 nurses,\nfirst of a group of 200 nurse3 being\nsent from Britain to help relieve a\nshortage in Saskatchewan.\nThe male nurse is becoming a\ncommon sight in British hospitals,\nMr. Druce said \"(jut the main barrier to the growth of their numbers\nis a strong prejudice among matrons.\"\n\"We believe there should be an\nall-male nursing staff in male\nwards,\" he said. Prejudice among\nyounger nurses is slight, he said.\n\"They've accepted us, where\nsome of the older, raal martinets,\nhave not.\"\nVICTORIA\u2014Senator Nancy Hodges, af)er more or fess\nburying herself in the Senate the last. y$ar, came out the\nother night and made ohe of her punchy political speeches,\nwhich had good Liberals delirious with joy, they said she\nwas that good!\nMrs. Hodges doesn't like the political stripe of Mr. Bennett's coat,\nthese two having become legislative enemies when Mr. Bennett decided to do all he could to wreck\nCoalition. He had much success,.remember, and while he wa_uabout it,\nhe wrecked Mrs. Hodges' provincial\npolitical career.\nThough really, come to think of it,\nMrs. Hodges might thank Mr. Bennett, because ii his SC'ers had beaten her at the polls, she wouldn't today be In the Senate, and that's a\nfar safer place for a politician than\nthe B. C. Legislature.*\nAt a Liberal meeting here (Byron\nJohnson wasn't there), Madame\nSenator determined she'd box the\nPremier's political ears, and all the\ngood Liberals who heard her said\nshe was wonderful, just like good\nold Nancy, In her best fighting trim,\nand that she'd better do more speechifying lots more, if Liberal colors\nare to be kept flying.\nMrs. Hodges didn't bother calling\nthe chief of B. C. government the\nPremier, or Mr. Bennett\u2014she just\ncalled the man Bennett!\nShe said she wished to goodness,\noh, how she did wish it, yes, if only\nBennett would pop his head into the\nmeeting room and see all the Liberals, so enthusiastic, so sure of eventual victory, so determined to fight\nback to power, so resolved to end\nBennett SC^Ism, well, said tyrs.\nHodges, if only Bennett could have\ntaken just one little peek\u2014what a\nshock he'd get! Yes, 100 Liberals\ngathered together to try and pin\nBennett's SC ears well back.\n\"This party is by no means dying on its feet,\" said Senator Hodge?,\nand if she had any doubts about\nwhat she said, she didn't mention\nthem.\nIf Mrs. Hodges Is now to run\nabout the country sniping at the\nPremier .that gentleman will have\nto muster his full powers of oratory trying, to keep her down.\nThe, Premier doubtless wishes\nthat Senators, not being elected,\nwere forbidden to make political\nspeeches. Especially since all B. C.'s\nsix Senators are^Liberals!\nVictoria MP Frank Fairey was at\nthis meeting, too. and he gazed into\nhis crystal ball and came up with\nthe news that he could see, plain as\nplain, what the Bennett Government's campaign slogan will be next\nelection: \"We tried to do so much\nfor B. C, but the Federal Government wouldn't let us.\"\nYes, there are indeed signs such\nwill be Mr. Bennett's slogan when\nnext he appeals for votes.\nSo it is that already Liberals and\nSC'ers are fighting the next election campaign. The Conservatives\nare fighting among themselves, and\nwill soon disappear. The CCF'ers.\nhappy enough, are gaining from all\nthis political bickering of people\nwho are, underneath their party\nlabels, all the same free enterprisers, and who should be getting together if. as ihey all say, they want\nto keep CCF socialism out.\nSnow On Adirondacks\nALBANY, N. Y. (AP)-.Central\nand northern New York State shivered Monday under a cold white\nblanket case over the area by a\nstorm that spread up to eight inches\nof snow over some sectors,\nState polfce said up to eight\ninches of snow covered the Old\nForge area in tfle Adirondack\nMountains and described roads-\nfhere as \"passable\". Utica reported\nfive inches and Syracuse four.\nFreezing rain and snow flurries hit\nParly Politics\nMay Spoil Gift\nLONDON (CP) - Sir Winston\nChurchill's birthday autograph book\nfrom the House of Commons will be\nshy at least 10 names, a Labor MP\nsays.\nMrs. Bessie Braddock, the outspoken member of Liverpool's Exchange constituency, said in a\nspeech \"there are'St least 10 of us.\n. . . . who are not having our names\nhanded down to posterity tacked on\nthe snd of Winston Churchill's\nname.\n\"There are 10 of us at any rate\nwho remember Tonypandy and\nsome of the other things that Winston  Churchill  did.\"\nThe autograph book has been\nprepared by the Commons as a gift\nfor Sir Winston, whp celebrates his\n80th birthday Nov. 30. His 624 colleagues of all parties were to have\nsigned,  and most have.\nTonypandy in South Wales \/was\nthe scene in 1910 of riots during a\ncoal strike. Troops were sent in,\nand Churchill, then home secretary,\nsent in several hundred extra police from London.\n.Frank McLeavy, Labor MP for\nBradford East and chairman of the\nall-party presentation committee,\nsaid of Mrs. Braddock's statement:\n\"I would resret any attempt to drag\nin party politics on this occasion.\"\nChurchill Dieting\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Prime Minister\nChurchill was reported Monday to\nbe dieting.\nThe news came out this way:\nArthur Lubin, an American movie\ndirector, rented an apartment from\n-Air Chief Marshal Sir Ralph Cochrane.\n\"Lady Cochrane has been wonderful.\" said Lubin. \"She suggested\nI try Sir Winston Churchill's cook.\nWhen the cook carne ground, I\nasked her how she\\could cope with\nboth me and the Prime Minister.\nand she said:\n*' \"That's easy now. Sir Winston's\nthe eastern part of the state Sunday, on a diet.''\nJpfclNOAV AMILABLE^|f%:\nW-;.vl3^nz. BOTTLES W^.\nHaig & Hai;\nSCOTCH   WHISKY\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nI find most- folks pretty much\nalike. Some are1 classed ' as extra\nfine, but they are the ones who do\nthe classifying.\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED\" DAILY\nBuy. Sell, Trade tne Classified Way\nGift Boxes of\nEnglish Holly\nANYQNE \u2014 ANYWHERE\nHeavily berried ... to brighten and cheer your'Eastern friends.\nBEAUTIFULLY   WRAPPED   AND   DELIVERED   ANYWHERE IN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES.\nYour Personal Greeting Card  Enclosed.\nLARGE BOXES .... $2.00    DOUBLE SIZE\ndrone 600-Acre Site for Aklavic\nOn Mackenzie River East Channel\n\/\n$3.50\nDeadline Shipping Dates:\nUnited States - Dec. 7th\n, Far Eastern Provinces \u2014 December 13th\nPrairie Provinces \u2014 Dec. 17 th\nWRITE:\n, RITCHIE'S LTD.,\n840 GRANVILLE. 8T\u201e VANCOUVER, B.C.\nOTTAWA (CP) - A new'600-acre\nsite has been found for the remote\nArctic community of Aklavik.\nNorthern Affairs Minister Lesage\nannounced Monday thaf Canada's\nlargest AroMc community will be\nmoved to a1 new location on the\nEast channel of the Mackenzie River about 33 miles east of the present\nsite.\nPlanning for the new to^nsite\nwill start immediately and take Into\naccount requirements of a population bigger than that of the \"present\n96-acre settlement. The population\nof Aklavik now fluctuates Between\n600 in winter and 1500 in summer.\nMost inhabitants are Eskimos and\nIndians.\nUrpes Americans\nTo Buy Canadian\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014J. A. Calder,\npresident of the Canadian Manufacturers* Association, said Monday\nthat solution of current Canadian\nAmerican trade problems could lay\na foundation for almost unlimited\nextension of exchange of good be.\ntween the two countries.\nSuch a solution might also develop principles and ideas capable\nof much wider application in international trade.\nMr  Calder, Montreal industrial\nist, spoke to a joint gathering of the\nInternational   Advertising   Associa\ntion and the Committee for a National Trade Policy.\nCanada, said Mr. Calder, buys\nabout $3,000,000,000 worth of goods\na year from the United States, or\nabout one-quarter of American ex\nports.\nBIGGEST BUYER\nThe United States buys about $2,\n350,000,000 worth of goods from\nCanada or about 60 per cent of\nCanada's exports.\nThus, American exports to Can\nada exceeded Canadian exports to\nthe United States by between $600,-\n000,000 and $700,000,000 a year.\nTo wipe out this adverse balance\nevery Canadian would have to reduce his purchases of American\ngoods by more than $40. However,\nthe same end could be achieved,\nand in a manner more in harmony\nwith the best interests of international trade, if every American increased his purchases of Canadian\ngoods by only $4.\n33 Japanese Quit\nLiberal Parly\nTOKYO (AP) \u2014 Thirty-three\nmembers of the Japanese Diet bolted Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida's Liberal party Monday and\na cabinet minister quit his post in a\nmounting drive to pressure the old\nprime minister to retire.\nMasazumi Ando, who angrily re-\nsigned as minister of state in Yoshida's cabinet and nine other Liberals announced they would formally qu.it the! government party\nTuesday.\nThe mass bolt could mefan that\nparty leaders had failed in efforts\nto persuade the 76-year-old premier to step down tn the^ interest of\nmaintaining unity.\nExport Applesauce\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Japan expects to\nexport 100,000 cases of applesauce,\nworth about $416,000, to the United\nStates this winter, Kyodo News\nService said Monday.\nJhtfeowMwtct\u00a3>\nSWOPM SHEEP:\nOur ovine friends will be glad\nto know that in future they may\nbe spared the undignified and\nchilly experience of being sheared\nof their wool to keep us warm. A\nnew lightweight lining material\nfor men's and women's clothes\ncombines fabric and aluminum\nto give more than three times\nthe insulating value of a similar\nweight of wool cloth.\nHumans, too, will be glad if\nthis hastens the end of heavy,\nbulky winter wear. The materia]\ncan be dry-cleaned, drapes well\nand is sufficiently porous to let\nthe body \"breathe\" ... Just one\nmore example of the way\nCanadian manufacturers are\ncombining aluminum and\nimagination for better, easier\nliving. Aluminum Company of\nCanada, Ltd. (Alcan).\nh\nth\nThe 42-year-old community, si\nuated on a delta on the west banl\nof the Mackenzie 70 miles' souU\nof the Arctic ocean, must be movei\nto prevent lt from sinking througl\nmelting permafrost _\\nd being en\ngulfed by the river,\nThe   present  settlement  also\nhandicapped by poor sanitation, ex\npansion room and the impossiblllt;\nof providing an airstrip to link\nwith   the   outside   world   durlri;\nbreak-up and freeze-up,\nWONT BE SAME\nMr. Lesage said that when thi\nthree or four-year moving job i\ncompleted the resemblance betweei\nthe new and old Aklavik will be\nname only.\nThe new community wilj be\nmodern as climatic conditions, per\nmit. It will be provided with an ad\nequate sanitation system, roads an\nan airstrip which is exoected to b\nlocated about 4\\4 miles to\nsoutheast.\nOn the present site the heat\nsummer, ground warmth created b;\nbuildings,   excavations   and   road\nturn the permafrost terrain Into\nquartmlre.\nMr. Lesage said the new commun\nity will be located on two wet\nwooded terraces with a thick laye\nof gravel under the permafrost.\nBirch and soruce trees grow to\nheight of 25 feet over part of th\nsite and will provide protectio:\nfrom northerly winds.\nThe channel adjoining the site\n500 feet wide an* deep enough fo\nriver transport.\nSTART .flEXT 8UMMER\nMr. Lesage said a work camp wl\nbe established at the site next suit\nmer. The new townslte will be lai\nout, roads built and prellminar\nwork started on the airstrip.\nIn the summer of 1956 construt\nHon of permanent buildings will I\nstarted. By the end of 1957 the sit\nshould be ready for buildings mo\\\ned from the old location. The mov\ning job ik expected to take\nwinters.\ntw\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nSEE AND FEEL THE\nDIFFERENCE IN\nAFTER OUR 7 POINT\nSANITONE DRY\nCLEANING,\n\u2022 Spots Vanish\n\u2022 All Dirt Gone\n\u2022 Original Texture\nRevived\n\u2022 Colors Sparkle\n\u2022 Better lasting\nPress\n\u2022 Minor Mending\nFree\n\u2022 No Cleaning Odor\nAvoid the last minute rushl\nBring in your winter coats\ntoday! We'll make them look\nlike new again then you'll be\nall set when the cold snap hitsl\nPHONE 1175\nKOOTENAY\nLAUNDRY\nand Cleaners\n182 BAKER ST.\n\t\n. \u25a0 \u25a0;., \u25a0..\u25a0\u2022.,  _\u25a0*..'_... \u25a0-.\u2022\u2022. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0:.\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\t\n '\u2022\u25a0 \u2022 '\u25a0'\u25a0      \u25a0       '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0  ''\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0'\n________\n__________________\u25a0\n -tr;,\n^\u2014y\u2014\u2014\u2014T- \u2014 i 1 = ; ...    ....  ,  ....\nSti^f\nREGoodrich\n^7%*\u00a3*\nFOR THE WHOLE FAMILY\/\/\nKL Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOTTASHION\nEstablished In 1902\nKaslo Notes\nCASLO\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Don Tyers,\nroute to New Westminster, were\nests of ihe former's parents, Mr.\ni Mrs. W. F. Tyers, for a few\nCS.\nA. Carlson of Mirror Lake has\nt for a visit to his native Sweden\ner an absence of 45 years. Before\niving West to make his pennant home at Mirror Lake, Mr.\nrlson lived for a time in Chicago,\nalso farmed at Irricana, Alta.\nth Mr. and Mrs. Carlson are keen\nglers.\nA farewell party was held for\nMiss Jeanette Guerin, who is leaving Kaslo with her parents to reside at Nakusp. Miss Gloria Greensword and Miss Cathy Tyers were\nhostesses at the home of Miss Tyers.\nBoth the hostesses and the guests\nwere school, classmates of the guest\nof honor. Various games formed the\nprogram of entertainment and the\nhonored guest was presented with\na pair of gloves.\nDUTCH UNIVERSITY\n\u2022 Holland's most important university was founded at Leyden ih 1575.\nTtti -Iws-Jm\" ctoflnp ilt-ltj. That'* _h\u00bb joenj pioplt it Mm\n\u25a0wd lira urn vitamin \"0\" pmHetta- id. Hdin. lapM. ol\nWampita's Extract of Cod Urn. II contains no ill and is ptaanl and\n^^ggm\\ us. to talti. Alreslod family\n^^^mft-lKm Ionic lit Ml  III\n\u2022-_.'!\u00bb\nEXTRACT OF COD LIVER\nHKW-3\n*\u00abM#     Nelsoii Social\nby. tZcuuia. WhswhA,\nCROCHETED JUMPER\nNEW! You crochet this shell-\nstitch jumper of knitting worsted.\nWear it over blouse for daytime \u2014\nfor 'evening, trim with metallic-\nthread-flowers and omit blouse.\nPattern 667: Directions for crocheted, sleeveless, jumper. Sizes\n12-14, 16-18 Included.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, N.D.N., 60 Front St., West, Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME 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. Plus four complete patterns printed in book. Send 25 cents\nfor your copy today! Gifts and bazaar best, sellers!\nThe more than 6000 islands of the\nPhilippines cover a land area about\nas big as Italy.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nOHOIME 14-1\nW.'JH. Saunders of Balfour has\nreturned to his home after undergoing an operation ln Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\nGROUP HONORS\nCHARTER MEMBER\n. KASLO \u2014 The Canadian Legion\nLadies' Auxiliary held a farewell\ntea in the club rooms of the Legion\nhall honoring Mrs. F. McGlbbon,\na charter member, who has left\nKaslo to reside at the Coast.\nA contest, \"what did she have In\nher suitcase?\" was conducted by\nanother chartered member, Mrs. T.\nH. Horner. The contest was won by\nMrs. G. H. Baker. Mrs. H. T. Driver,\nalso a charter member, poured.   \u25a0\nThe president, Mrs. W. F. Tyers,\non behalf of the Auixliary, presented Mrs. McGlbbon with a handmade knitting and utility bag, the\nhandiwork of the president.\nAnglican Auxiliary\nRe-elects Officers\nNAKUSP\u2014All- officers were reelected for the coming year at a\nmeeting of the Evening Auxiliary\nto St. Mark's Anglican Church, held\nat the home of Mrs. P. Hurry.\nThe president, Mrs. Armstrong,\nspoke of the need for a new Sunday\nschool room, and the group decided\nto work for this project A dinner\nis planned for early in the new year.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER-Mrs. J. Law,\nmother of Mrs. George R. Stewart,\ncelebrated her 84th birthday at the\nhome of her son-in-law and daughter.   \u2022 '\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Thring, Sr.,\nof Robson, are spending a week\nvisiting their son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Thring,\nand two children and their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Cruise and four children.\nHarry Humphries of Taghum, an\nold friend, is visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Merrltt of Silverton for a few\nweeks.\nCpl. and Mrs. W. G. McLauchlin\n'attended the Shriners' ball in Spokane.\nAntarctic whales move thousands\nof miles each year to breeding areas\nin tropical waters.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 1954 \u2014 5\nATTENDING\" A FASHION SHOW In London, Princess Margaret became the centre of style-conscious eyes herself as she appeared In this Jaunty hat and modelled this fur stole. Queen Elizabeth's embroidered collar also caused comment In fashion circles.\nThe embroidery was repeated on the pockets of the coat.\nPancakes Served To\n200 Nakusp People\nNAKUSP\u2014A pancake supper was\na novel -and profitable social event\nfor, the men of the United Church\nChoir.\nFive cooks working at hot griddles dispensed pancakes with the\nassistance of the other male members of the choir to 200 customers.\nThe cooks, Bob Joy, Walter Maxwell, Harry Maxwell, Bob King and\nVic Smith, accompanied by Lloyd\nCrowe at the piano, entertained\nwith Negro songs and joke's while\nflipping the pancakes. The informal\nMaking the most\nof marriage\nMany people 'fear something's\n\"wrong\" .with them if they can't\nachieve the physical response\nthey've read about \u2014 but by\nneglecting marriage's spiritual aide,\nthey often lose the beauty .of\nhuman love.\nDecember Reader's Digeat\nbrings advice to such troubled\ncouples to help them find the\nhappiness they lack \u2014 shows how\nthe greatest satisfactions in married\nlife are not confined to its physical\naspect.\nGet December Reader's Digest\ntoday. There are 35 articles ol\nlasting interest, condensed from\nleading magazines, current books.\natmosphere and the genial, easy\nmanner of the hosts soon had the\nwhole assembly united in community singing with the colored chorus\nleading. Other artists were Marilyn\nHorrey and Marlene Ferguson.\nTraditional setup of a string quartet is first violin, second violin, viola\nand cello.\nGUIDERS COURSE\nCONDUCTED IN\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER \u2014 An interesting\nGuide and Brownie training course\nwas held in New Denver. Training\nCommissioner Mrs. A. Rizzutto and\nDivisional Commissioner Mrs. J. D.\nHartley of Trail were both ln attendance.\nLeaders from almost the entire\nArrow Lakes district were here to\nreceive the training. These included\nCapt. A. Millar, Lieut. L. Ewings,\nBrown Owl Y. Donselaar and District Commissioner Kirkman, all of\nEdgewood; Capt. A. Kunze of Arrow\nPark, Capt. L. Bolsted, Tawny Owl\nW. Gardner, and Company Leader\nB. Waterfield, all of Nakusp; Lieut.'\nD. Welch and Brown Owl M. Fairhurst of Silverton, and Capt. M.\nSherwood and Lieut. G. Butler of\nNew Denver.\nSeveral local association members\nand other interested persons from\nboth Silverton and New Denver also\nattended.\nSupper was served by the New\nDenver Ladies' Association.\nMrs. Hartley was presented with\na framed picture of \"Scalping Knife\nMountain,\" by District Commissioner Kirkman on behalf of the district.\nBeautify\nYour Home\nFor Christmas\nWith a Lamp From\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET  RtSULT8\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\ni pe9t JIFFY\nQUICK\nAGKAVlt, ,\nRfiYALClTV\n\u25a0&$SM\nXWH-H'WWW.-K'\n<-.*-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n0\nSWSHW\nFLAVOR!\nGOLDEN LINED\nVACUUM SEALED\nCAN\nmc-\n* The on\u00bby canned milk processed in\nThe \"Bay\" Will Pay\n$\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 lb. tub, the new contour, safe-a-matic wringer\nand the biggest value ever offered.\n\u2014- 199.50\n $40\nSpecial...\nR.C.A. VICTOR\nCONSOLE RADIO\nRegular Price\nLess Trad* In Allowance .\n7-Tube Standard or Shortwave Radio\nThe World's Finest 3-Speed Record. Changer.\nRCA Victor Famous \"Golden Throat\" Tone.\nA Big 12-Inch Speaker.\nClean, Straight Lines.\nGenerous Record Storage.\nAvailable in Walnut, Mahogany or Limed Oak.\nPayments at Low as $10 Per Month.\n'     . . ::        \u25a0 ,iH._w\\*.,.v:'\n__________\n.   \\ .    ..\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0\n IPffiP^ I      PfPHjWpP p T-; \u2014- ' : - ~ '\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\"\u25a0       \"        \"  . *         *\t\nw\nP\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 19S4\nForm Pakistan\nInfo Two Units\nKARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters) \u2014\nPrime Minister Mohammad All announced Monday his government\nhas decided to dissolve all the existing provinces of Pakistan and\nmake the country a federation of\ntwo units\u2014West Pakistan and East\nPakistan.\nThe main reason for the proposed\naction, he said, was to unify the\np.ople by eradicating the \"curse'\nof provincialism.\nIt would also mean acceleration\nof the development of the country\nincluding ( its present backward\nareas, and the saving of large administrative costs.\nAll said ln special broadcast that\nthe four provinces aftd 10 princely\nstates of West Pakistan will be amalgamated to form one administrative unit with a population of 34,-\n000,000 and an area of 310,000 square\nmiles.\nEast Bengal, to be renamed East\nPakistan, with a population of 44,-\n000,000 and an area of 54,000 square\nmiles, would form the second unit\nof the federation.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nHehru Credits U.S. and Chinese\nLeaders With Easing World Fears\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's\nPrime Minister Nehru Monday\npraised both the leaders of Communist China and the United States\nfor bringing about an \"Improved\nworld atmosphere\" in recent\nmonths.\nThe prime minister also claimed\nthat his own visit to Peiping last\nmonth   and   his   discussions   with\n0AMJL 74fi. Wtik\nTttoAuut WaJdtiiL\n9008\nCommunist leaders there contrlbut\ned to \"easing existing tension) ln\nIndo-China and ln southeast Asia.'\nOfficials of the Peiping regime as\ntared him, Nehru said, that they\nwere anxious to end \"fears snd ap,\nprehensions\" caused by the \"vicious\ncircle\" of actions snd counter-actions by ths two big-power blocs,\nNehru, who wss answering i\nquestion ln Parliament, then ob\nserved that \"a severs international\ncrisis\" hsd recently been surmount\nsd snd added: \"In this matter I\nshould like to pay tribute to the\npart played by ths president of the\nUnited States in ths avoidance of\nwsr.\n\"Thers hsvs.bssn msny Indications in recent months sf this Improved world stmosphere for which\ncredit must go to sil powers.\"\nSTARTED WITH GENEVA\nThs prims minister said the recant easing of world tension began\nwhen ths Geneva conference on the\nFar East produced a settlement thst\nended the Indo-China war.\nHe criticized the West by Implication when he declared that \"unfortunately\" ths Southeast Asia se-\n15-Year-Old Loads\nGang of Burglars\nTORONTO (CP)-A tlve-m?mbsr\ngang, led by s 15-year-old boy,\nfaces s total of 100 charges ln connection with tha breaking snd entering of 61 downtown district\nstores during the last few months.\nPolice' said Monday the gang,\nmade up of 12-year-old boys, stole\nalmost $1600 in merchandise snd\n$400 in cash. They broke Into sil\ntypes of shops.\nThe bresk-ins had all the marks\nof s professional gang, police isid.\nOSLO (CP)\u2014Under sn agreement\nwith ths Royal Air Force, flying-\nboat crews of the Norwegian Air\nForce will receive training in reconnaissance ind other msrltlms\nduties >t KAF schools In Britain.\nLsuion, shlp-buildlng centro ln\nLevis county, Que., was nsmsd\nPoints ds Levy by Chsmplsln ln\n1625.\nREAD  THI  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBROMLEY, England (CP) -\nnew church, fan-shaped snd fj\nroofed, Is plsnnsd ln Kent. Rev.\nShsv* says It's s modern sdaptsth\nof 17th snd earlry lath csnlui\nmeeting houses,\nHALF-SIZE FASHION\nJiffy-sew, jiffy to iron \u2014 snd designed especially for the half-size\nfigure! This pattern Is cut to fit-\nno alteration worries If you're shorter, fuller than svsrsgs. Pick ons of\nths new winter-weight cottons for\nthis\u2014sccent It with colorful eon-\ntrsst rickrack.\nPattern 9008: Half Sisss HVi. 1614,\n161., 2014, 2214, 2414. Size 1614 takes\n3% yards 35-inch.\nperfect   fit.   Complete,   illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) ln coins (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., West,\nToronto, Ont.\nNow Anti-Frost Idea\nPERTH, Australia (CP) - Research with vertical windmills to\nstop frost damage to crops Is being\ncarried on by ths Australian scientific research organization, Dr, C. H,\nPri06tley, meteorology chief, ssid\nthe Ides Is to drsw down wsrm sir\nto ground level\nRARE BIRD\nThs picsrthartes bird of Sierra\nLeone on ths African west coast\nhas never been kept alive in captivity.\neurlty pact signed by the U. S., Britain and six other countries ln September \"came somewhat in the way\"\nof ths favorable stmosphere generated at Gensvs.\nSINUS\nUFFERERS\n^&WfW'Wti\nV If 111 earn metbode ef treatment ttvrt\nI (ailed ... Proeen e-Teetfre Id thou-ind] I\net  eeem.  NEVO  Is  lot  Barely  a\nk temporary   relW   mm-It   If   \u25a0\nI SimjS SEMEDT. Completer Bit- I\n[ contain! ao harmful druta.\n\"A Wonia-M Hsafcr\"\nI PACIFIC PHARMACO CO. LTD.\n'' l Water Street, Tananm S, B.O. '\n\u25a0\nAnnouncement\nWa Are Pleased To Anounce the Coming\nOPENING ON DECEMBER 1 of a\nNew\nFinancing Service\nFor the People of Nelson and District\nOur Head Office Will Be Located in\nSUITE 21}\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDING\nMOUNTAIN\nFinance Co.. Ltd.\nP.O. Box 419\nW. L. Clark, Manager\nON   DISPLAY TODAY  WITH\nTHAT  NEW&^^'lOOKI\nSUPER\nA \u2022INISAl UOTOSI\nVAIUI\niVefer jo new as note;:: never so jar ahead! It's the dazzling, all-around-new Super n8ff*\nOldsmobile for 1955! Inspiring new styling everywhere you look! With a bold, masi\nsive new front-end design... handsome new hooded headlights.:; a dashing sweep of\nfender and door ::; a dramatic new flair at the sides! It's Oldsmobile's daring new\n\"Go-Ahead\" look! New power, too, with the \"Rocket\" 202! This means 202 homes\npower in the mightiest \"Rocket\" yet! New color, vrtk surpassing last year, with th\u00ab\nwidest selection erer in brilliant new \"flying color\" patterns! With gloriou* new\ninteriors ::; a superb new \"Rocket\" ride ... all the newest new ideas an wheels! Sea\nus and see the ear that's out ahead i:: 'way ahead 11: OLDSMOBILE FOR '551\n0--5S* -\u00bb\nSEE THE ALL-AROUND-NEW 1955 OLDSMOBILE AT YOUR NEAREST DEALER'S\nMaM^HH_aa^MM^^^MM^M________________________________i__\n______\n ' \u25a0:\u25a0 -'-\u2022.\n>\"^\nSSW1-'\".- \u25a0'''\". \u25a0 \u2014.'\u25a0'\u25a0.\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ,  \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0- \"\u25a0 ...=-\nOT\nWestern Coal Miners Make Bid\nFo Save Industry From Closing\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Western coal\nnlneri and operators Monday urged\nhe government to increase _ub-\n\u25a0entlons on coal and Increase tar-\nlb on American 'imports to help\nsve their industry from ruin.\nThe recommendations were in-\nluded ln s brief, submitted to\nlines Minister Prudham and mem-\ners ot the csblnet by District 18\nthe United Mine Workers of\ntmerica (CIO-CCL) snd mines op-\nrstors.\nf MINIS CLOSED\nProduction in ths w\u00abit had drop-\nisd by 3,000,000 tons to 9,392,000\nMis since 1940 snd 32 mines hsd\nlosed during that time. Many mines\nlow operated only a few days s\n'sek.\nL. Pstrick, s coal operator from\nJrumheller, Alts., said ln a separ-\nte submission that some cabinet\nnlnlstcn consider ths cosl industry\n'expendable.\" Mr. Prudham denied\nht charge.\nMr. Patrick said that if the coal\nndustry is to be allowed to die,\niperators who have an estimated\ni60,000,000 invested in western coal\nsires should be warned ahead of\nIme to liquidate their sssets.\nFisheries Minister Sinclair said\nis knows of no minister who said\nIhe cosl industry is dying. The\nproblem is how far the government\niould go to help the coal industry\nind still not hurt the gas snd oil\nndustries.\nMr. Prudham snd Mr. Sinclair\nndicated little support for a na-\ntonal energy control beard to gov-\nirn s fuel policy covering cosl, gss\nind oil.\nTthey alto doubted that the fed-\niral government could tell consumes what source of energy they\nmist use. That wss one of the slt-\nlotlons that would result from es-\nsblishment ot a national energy\nrontrol board.\nMr. Prudham said the matter of\nt board has been suggested many\ntimes but no one has said how lt\nSeuld work.\nTrack Star and\nFather Safe\nNANAIMO, B. C. (CP) - Track\nstar Terry Tobacco, 19, and his\nfather walked out to safety Monday\nafter being reported missing on s\nhunting trip nesr their home st\nCumberland.\nSearchers set out at dawji after\nth pair failed to return at nightfall\nSunday from a hunting trip along\nthe Campbell river.\nNeither was harmed. They said\nthey bedded down for the night\nafter a thick fog closed in over the\narea.\nYoung Tobacco was hailed as one\nof Canada's most promising young\ntrack stars after he placed third\nln the 440-yard dash at the British\nEmpire Games this summer.\nFraser Canyon\nHighway Open\nHOPE, B. C. (CP) \u2014 The Fraser\ncanyon highway was re-Opened to\nlight traffic today 12 hours after\nflood waters washed out one ap\nproach of the Yale creek bridge.\nPublic works officials said it\nwould be another 24 hours before a\ntemporary bridge was raised snd\nstrengthened to Urtte traffic weighing more than three-quarters of s\nton.\nSays Canada Can\nBecome Strong\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Dr. Normsn\nMacKenzie said Monday Canada\nwill become the richest land on\nearth if it can build a strong nation on the principle of diversity.\nCansda, with differing languages\nand cultures, wss a new ides and\nexperiment ln human history. If it\nwere successful, it might offer a\npattern to the world; but' success\ndepended on how Canadians learned to live co-operatively snd ln\nunity.\nThe only alternatives to the experiment were unification by force\nor the melting-pot process which\nwould lead to conformity and a\n\"dull level of mediocrity.\"\nQueen and Tito To\nRace Rival Pigeons\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Queen Elizabeth and Yugoslavia's President\nTito have entered racing pigeons' to\ncompete against esch other in an\ninternational pigeon show here\nDec. 3.\nDEATHS\nDes Moines, lows: William Bard-\nsley, 33, three-time governor of\nlows.\nRegina: Donald Hood, 48, wealthy\nbusinessman and candidate for the\nleadership of the Saskatchewan\nLibra! party.\nWichita, Kan.: Clyde Cessna, 74,\npioneer aviator and plane manufacturer.\nPrince Albert, Sask.: W. L. Davis,\n56, publisher of the Flin Flon Miner,\nSpillman, N. J.; Albert Ennis Dale\n64, former editor of Hearst newspapers. \u00bb\nLONDON: Sir Henry Oetty Chilton, 77, former British ambassador\nto Chile, Argentina and Spain,;\nToronto \u2014 Lawrence A. Colley\nPanton, 60, principal of ths Ontario\nCollege of Art since June, 1991.\nMONTCLAIR, N. J.: Hugh K,\nMonro, S3, Canadian-born financier\nsnd prominent Presbyterian lay\nman. A native of Of-sngeville, Ont.\nhe waa president of the Montcair\nNational Bank.\nHingham, Mass.: Thomas Pende-\nton Robinson, 76, author of more\nthan a score of chidren's books. His\nbooks ineuded \"Buttons,\" \"Trigger,\nand \"Lost Dog Jerry.\"\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nBusiness Spotlight...\nSmall Business\nShows Profits\nBy Ths Canadian Press\nA shift which may have a bearing on the shape of Canada's industrial future appears to have\ntaken place on the business scene.\nThe ranks of the little business\nmen showing profits have increased\nwhile those of big business showing\nprofits have declined.\nThis development showed up ln\nthe 1952 taxation yesr. The number of companies with annual incomes of more' than (1,000,000 showing a profit dropped by 19 that year\nto 36S from 385 ln 1951.\nBut the' number of companies\nwith less thah $10,000 income showing a profit Increased by 1510 to\n19,697 from 18,lS7.\nThe figures were contained in tht\nfederal revenue department's 1954\nedition of the \"green book,\" s hefty\nvolume of detsiled snalysis of tax\ncollections.\nMAY BE INDICATION\nFederal officials suggest the shift\nmay have resulted simply because\n1932 may have been a good year\nfor little business and a bad year\nfor big business. But on the other\nhand, it also may have been sn indication of a big expansion in the\nnumber of little Industries snd s\nslow down in the development of\nnew glsnts.\nEven In the $25,000-$30,000 in-\ncome class, the number of companies showing s profit ln 1952 dropped to 2603 from 2680. But those\nin ths $10,000-115,000 income clsss\nwith profits rose to 2943 from 2877.\nThe higher tha incoms bracket\nthe smaller the number of companies showing gains.\nDROPS IN EACH CLASS\nIn the $50,000-3100,000 income\ncategory, the number dropped to\n1758 from 1808; in the $100,000 to\n$250,000 group, to 1476 from 1353;\nin the $250,000 to $500,000 clsss, to\n639 from 643; in those with incomes\nOf mors than $3,000,000 to 78 from 83.\nBritish Leading In\nAus'sie Cricket\nBRISBANE, Australia (Reuters)\n\u2014Ths English Marylebone Cricket\nGlub team Monday led by 24 runs,\nwith nine second-innings wickets\nstanding, st ths end of the third\nday of its game against Queensland here. The match ends Tuesday, v\nBatting stubbornly against an accurate attack, the Quccnslanders\u2014\nout for one overnight\u2014carried their\nscore to 288 before being all out\nhalf an hour before close of play.\nRay Llndwall did not bat. He\nhas gastric Influenza and wss advised to rest for two days.\nThe English tourists, who made\n304 ln their first innings, lost Colin\nCowdrey with only one run scored\nwhen they batted a second time.\nAt stumps (hey were eight for one:\nIt wss Cowdrey's second failure\nin the match as opening batsman.\nHe made only four in ths first innings.\nPHONI  144  FOR   CLASSIFIED\nREAD   THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nIt was because of the increase in\nthe number of little companies\nshowing gains that the total number\nof companies reporting a profit in\n1952 increased, to 32,432 from 30,992\nin 1951.\nThe total federal income tax paid\nby all companies that year increased\nto $1,228,800,000 from $1,161,600,000.\nSchool Prayers\nBarred lo\nWelsh Catholics\nCARDIFF, Wales (AP) - The\nArchbishop ot Cardiff warned Ro,\nman Catholics ln his diocese Sunday that they will be excommunicated If they permit their children\nto receive Protestant religious instruction in Welsh public schools.\nThe srchblshop, Most Rev. Michael McGrath, had his instruction\nread out by priests in all churches\nof the diocese.\nIt said the Roman Catholic church\nhas been unsble to provide separate\ngrsde schools in all parishes and\nthat many children have had to go\nto the public schools. There are\nabout 200,000 Catholics in 'the dio,\nesse.\nThe archbishop said all parents\nmust write school authorities not\nlater than the first Sunday In Jan\nuary saying \"their children are Ca\nthollcs and must not attend any\nnon-Catholic religious service what'\never in the school.\"\nHe added: \"Failure to comply will\nmean the parents 'being excommunicated.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 1954 \u2014 7\nUnemployment Low\nCANBERRA (CP)\u2014The Australian statistics bureau reported a\nrecord, total of 2,656,400 in oivilian\nemployment at the end of July, not\ncounting rural industry and private\ndomestic service. As of November,\nthe federal employment bureau reported 55,000 job vacancies. ''\u2022'\nPHONE   144  FOR   CLASSIFIE\n.READ  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBuy, Sell. Trade ths Classified Way\nNow\nAvailable\nin 13'\/i-eunco bottles\nJOHNNIE   WALKER\nFine Old Scotch Whisky\nBom 1820-Still going mmg \u25a0\nThit advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nEnjoy New Ycar-Round Comfort!\nINSULATE with\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\nSPINTEX\nPres foldori available\nfrom your J-M dealer, or\nApproved Insulation Contractor or writ* Canadian Johns-Manville,\nDept. N-43, 199 Bay\nSt., Toronto.\nB-224 ,\nBeats summer heat!\nSaves fuel costs!\n$   Stops heat loss!\nSEE YOUR  NEAREST J-M   DEALER\nK.W. DIXON CO.\n301 BAKER\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1704\nR. H. MAC CO.\nNelson, B.C.        12A K.W.C. Block        Phono 1368\nLazareff & Co. Ltd.\nRossland, B.C.\nROCKETS     INTO     19 5.5   !\nCLASSIC\n4 SIMItAl MSTSIS\nVAIUI\nXVinety-JZ,igh.t You can't miss the newness.! It's everywhere from\nroad to roof! And when you swing wide a door you open a wonderland of\nrich fabrics and leather, deep carpets, delightful trim; Note the crisp, low-level\nlines s 11 the dramatic new color toning that fairly sings of action! Performance\nreaches new heights, too! The new \"Rocket\" 202 Engine is up in compression to\n8.5 to 1 j i s and horsepower zooms to 202! Plus a new high-lift camshaft\u2014new\nhighertorque! Of course, all power features are available. \"Oldsmobile for 'SS is\nin our showrooms now;;; see it soon!\n;    ,   i \u2022\u2022 f\n\u2022OmmeU, etten .Ime mm,, ell-eneni-em irmM, h Hn, w \u201e*,, fo, \u2022SB^-NhmrrtleM, S\u00bbp.r '\"\u00bb\u00ab.\u00bb,\"\u00ab\u00bb -,\n0-235\/1 (R)\nNELSON TRANSFER CO. LTD.\nCORNER STANLEY & VERNON ST.\nNELSON R.C.\n.     .     ' .-,\u25a0\u25a0 -v.'- \u25a0.. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u2022 \u25a0-\u2022        \u25a0-     ^\n- ... \u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0:.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 ^:i.:*,:.^>3<fej>\n \u25a0:\t\n *\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESPAY; NOV. 23, 1954\n\u25a0\"\u2022'. \u25a0;.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u00ab\u00ab. toii\u00bb\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0pa w mn mm wm mm mm ma\n_M HH MH I6&\u00bb\nCHOICE\nHalves o' Gold.\n15 oz. can\t\n      _......      Miin'ii     M*_______l__r    mm     U__M____t     IWtHMt     HUMM    ___M______    OBMHI     MMBI     __M___________.     _Mtt.Hl     JJJtt'U1!    AWUM     !_)____________    ITOtitt     BttM\n\u25a0Ma m III Mi HI Mi Mi Hi Mi Hi Wm HI BBS SM mm tfm Km mm\nCampbell's.\n10 oz. can _\n2for25c\nSeed less R AI SIN S HE 69c\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0piHHHaMHHHHmHHMHHHIiMlMHllH\nSARDINES\nBrunswick. In Oil.\n3!4 oz. tin\t\n6 for 55c\nmRS WSm \\Wr\\m BSw.  BSh Bb-rW H9SR ffin  RSR hhI i^n MR hmh Mh .R^M I^m XHi\nhHjW Im hhBE\nSAUERKRAUT\nLibby's Fancy.\n28 oz. can\t\n2f..49c\n\u25a0 HnHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHini\u00bb\nChoice PEAS\nTaste Tells. Choice. No. 5.\n15 oz. ean \u25a0__\n6.o,79c\n1-&.J WSm 388 RR HSR NnH \u00ab9h8 hhr fflR S^\u00bb\nPineapple Juice jf\u21221\n2,or 35*\nSugar Belle. Sieve 4.\nGrapefruit Juice\u00a3*\u00bb,, 29*\nApple Juice\nPrices Effective NOV. 23rd to 27th\nSun Rype. Blue\nLabel. 48 oz. can\nFruit Cocktail f5un0t,sc^\u00b0ice'\nCrushed Pineapple ^0\u00ab 32*\n33*\n27*\n16*\n15*\nChoice Tomatoes Jft*^ 21*\nFancy Peas i5 oz. can\nGolden Corn ^t^5:.Chdce..\nPork Luncheort Meat f2anM 39^\nCohoe Salmon \u00ab\u00a3 Fcy; 29*\nCorned Beef loaf \"m    33*\nCut Green Beans J& 2 te 35*      Tuna Flakes\u00a3\u00ab, 5?7_.. 32*\nWhole Kernel Corn i4oz tin\n37*      Spaghetti\nLibby's T.S.\n15 oz. can ...\n18*\nIt\nAirway Coffee\nA Mild and^ Mellow Blend\n16 oz. $1   11     2 1b. $\npkg-\n1.11\nbag\n2.20\nAustralian Currants\nSeeded Raisins\nPitted Dates\nWalnuts\nCleaned.\n16 oz. cello .\nSunmaid.\n15 oz.  pkg _\nMonogram.\n32 oz. cello \t\nLight pieces.\n16 oz. cello \t\n23 * Fresh Bread\nNob Hill Coffee\nRich Aromatic Flavor . .\n16 oz.\npkg. _\n1.15\nbag\n7.28\nEdwards Coffee\nNo Finer Coffee Packed . . .Always Fresh . . .\nDrip or Regular Grind. $'\n16 oz. vacuum tin\t\n1.19\nInstant Coffee\nEdward's 100% Pure,\n2 oz. jar \t\n61*\nAlmonds 8 ozece_io.______.-.\t\nCut Mixed Peel EX3\nGlace Cherries KT& _\nMincemeat .2??r\u00ab. jar \t\nDUtter    Alberta First Grade. \t\nf I        1       \u2022 Snowflake.\njnortening i6 oz. ctn\nCLE Grade \"A\" Mediurrv\nrresn eggs in cartons. d0z\nLb.\nPolly Ann. Wrapped,\nsliced. 16 oz. loaf .\t\n27* David's Biscuits*<ToSg*L\n39* Wax Refills TA \u201e,\t\n79* Purex Tissue s oz ron\t\n37* Quick Oats i'T^\u2122!\"^:\n34* Granulated Sugar iocib.\"bog _\nCalgary Packers.\n16 oz. ctn.  ,\t\nLever's.\n16 oz. pkg.\t\n65* Frozen Peas R32~\n2175- SPECIAL OFFER! SAVE 15c\n25*\n4 ^ 49*\n 42*\n57* Pure Lard\n42* Solo Margarine\n2\n3\nAll Brands.\nCase of 48 tins .\n49* Fruit Cake Mix 300\u00ab.X\n2 ^ 47* Evaporated Milk\n99*\nfor 39\nfor 85\n19'\n'7.39\n_ 65*\nKITCHEN CRAFT\nFLOUR\nGuaranteed To Work Wonders With Any Recipe ,\nBeverly\nPEANUT BUTTER\n98c\nMade From No. 1\nQuality Peanuts.\n4 Ib. can \t\nCANTERBURY\nTEA\n_ 95c\nA Luxury Blend\nIn Every Respect.\n16 oz. pkg\t\nEmpress Pure\nSEVILLE ORANGE\nMARMALADE\n10\n24\n24\n24\nlb. Paper bag with 15c off\t\nIb. Paper bag with 15c off\t\nIb. Cotton Sack with 15c off .\nIb. Tea Towel Sack with. 15c off .\n_._.. 58*\n1.52\n$1.60\n$1.74\n4 Ib. can\n69c\nDecember Issue\nFamily Circle\nGet This Month's Interesting Copy Only 5c\nLAMB SHOULDER ROAST\nServe a Delicious Lamb Roast With Mint Sauce.\nGenuine Spring. Whole or Half.  _  \t\nib.29c\nLoin Pork Chops\nPure Pork Sausage\nFrying Chicken\nSide Bacon\nCross Rib Roast\nOxtails\nDelicious\nEnd cuts\nLb.   ._\t\nS.C.\nLb.   .\nPanco. Cut up\nin trays. Lb. ....\nLean, layer, tasty.\nLb.   ......\nGrade \"A\" Red\n49 Blade Rib Roast Grade a Red Lb\n43' Round Steak j^^^l\n59p Ground Beef %\u00b0%\\eL X4\t\n49* Stewing Lamb En_^__\nLean, tender. Lb. ..._..\nFor tasty stews.\nLb.\t\n55*\n65**\n39*\n25*\n49* Veal Blade Roast uade removed    29*\n15* Chopped Suet\nFor Christmas baking.      ^^(\n16 oz. cello \u2014   tmmm\nJOIN SAFEWAY'S\nEMPEROR GRAPES\nCalifornia's Finest.\nSweet, Plump Clusters..\n2 lbs. 29c\n*\u2022 ,  \u25a0>    .    i Nutritious,\nbweet Potatoesdeiicious\nm . Flavorful,\nlUrnipS yellow flesh\t\nDanish Squash l^!:..........     12* Bananas\nCooking Onions n\u201e. . 3 u. 27* Cranberries\n2^tf\\tf     f       I \u2022   \u25a0   I Refreshing, stimulate *\u00a7\u25a0 3 <\nibs 39   Sunkist Lemons ng 3oos Lb     Zi\n2 ibs 11* Delicious Apples \u00a3anTyn 2ibs29*\n24*\n35*\nGolden ripe.\nLb. ____..\nOcean Spray.\n16 oz   ctn.   ..\nNAVEL\nSunkist 252's.\n5 Ib. cello \t\n69c\nTURKEY CLUB...\nHave your Turkey paid for by Christmas . . . Stamps available at all KvlvSHCll\/:!,\nSafeway Stores. , \u2022:\u2022:\u25a0:\u2022:\u2022:\u25a0:\u2022:\u2022:\u2022:\u2022....rf.-Mv.\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n' .\nJuicy, fresh flavored\nNavels, 220's\t\nSunkist Oranges\n 2 ibs: 3 3\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n\t\n\u25a0\n-\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0-\"\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 -\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0-:    --\n:^.--.:.-i.y:>\u25a0:\u25a0\"\u25a0:.  \u25a0\u25a0^..:-  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\/ ..-,':\u25a0 \/..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0 \u25a0. - ..\u25a0..     \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 ..    \u25a0\u25a0 -..\u25a0    ' -  - -*\u25a0<:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\n________________\n_____________\u25a0\n  ,\u2014\n\u2014 \u2014\nmm\n***\"\u25a0 \u2014^ : ^t*^\n.\u25a0\u25a0'\"'.\"'.\u25a0 '\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0':\":K \"\u25a0\n,\n3073\nBehind\nthe\nGlass\nWith MAX DES BRISAY\niUto Bonjplels\nA favorite toptc which has\nsused a lot of controversy since\n.3 inception has been the effect\nn curling of the \"bib prize\" Bon-\npiels.\nFrom our spot \"Behind the\nrlass\" we see this gathering of top\nbtch curlers and rinks, as excel.-\nag that of the \"Briar.\" In the\nBriar\" one would participate with\nr watch about 5 top rinks; in the\n_uto Bonspiels you now have 20\n) 30 rinks capable of \"taking home\nie bacon.\" Thus the top rinks are\nroviding themselves with better\nnd better curling, and also giving\nie spectators the best to watch,\nllpawln\nThis far northern Saskatchewan\nletropolis had, we believe, two\nlain objectives in starting the\ngrand daddy of them all.\" Firstly,\n_> improve the calibre of curling\n1 their district. Secondly, to ad-\nertise and atract newcomers to\nheir rjch agricultural district,\nuccess or Failure?\nThe calibre of the Nipawin curing fraternity has grown by leaps\nnd bounds. The names of their\nJstrict rinks are amongst the top\na their province of Saskatchewan,\nnd will be In all of our wide-\npread country in the near future.\nThey have also, succeeded in\nlopulating their district by*brlng-\nig in participants and spectators\nlike to view this Spiel and'their\nountry.\nAnd, of course, other centres\n.earing about and seeing this suc-\niss \u2014 have emulated Nipawin in\nlUtting on their \"shows\" \u2014 such\ns the \"Closed Saskatchewan\" at\ntosetown; the Edmonton Charity\nSpiel, and the Calgary \"Oilmen's.\"\n.uccess is always copied \u2014 not\nailure!!\ntow Wa\u00ab It Done?\nIt has always been a sporting\n.xiom that \"to Improve at any\n:ame one must play against, or\n\/ith, someone who is better than\nipeself.\" Now, we're not forgetting\nhe intensive practise and training,\nlat is also necessary, if one wants\n_t reach the top.\nIt is also a definite fact that the\nxperience gained in playing \"with\nir against\" top notchers will rub\niff on one, if one has the desire\nor that knowledge-\n(jioul-t You Attend?\nWell, there are two main divi-\nlons of curlers from where we sit\nJehind the Glass. Every club, we\nFEELING HEADACHY\nbecause of irregularity?\nCHEW\nFEEN-A-MINT\nA modern medicinal laxative in\nchewing form,\nFEEN-A-MINT il\npleasant to chew and\ngentle in its action, gentle\nenough for little children.\nFeen-a-mint l\u00bb a safe, dependable\nind thorough laxative and has a\ndelicious candy-coating \u2014 refreshingly flavoured with mint. Why feel\nheadachy in the mornings? Or off-\ncolor, sluggish and miserable any-\n1 time, (because you need a laxative?\nGet feen-a-mint at your druggist\ntoday and feel fine again.\nFAMOUS CHEWING LAXATIVE\n2-5. .\nbelieve, is split about evenly in\nthis breakdown. And when we say\ntwo \u2014 we mean two main groups\nwho want to attend Bonspiels.\nOne group wants to go ahead \u2014\nthey want to be the best; the other\nis content to have curling' supply\ntheir entertainment, and he (or\nshe) is happy playing with hi$ (or\nher) .friends \u2014 whether they are\ntop notch or not, and whether he\n(or she) Is a top notch Bonspleler.\nExceptions\nThere are, of course, exceptions to\nthis breakdown ln any club \u2014 as\nwitnessed by the Trail Club \u2014.\nwhere aprpoximately 100% of those\nwishing to go to Bonspiels are\ninlere3ted sufficiently to have an\nintensive playdown for the right\nto represent their club. And, of\ncourse, it breaks into bigger segments in other portions of our\ncountry \u2014 such as Manitoba or\nAlberta or Saskatchewan, (witness\ntrie big 'Spiels in these provinces)\nwhich attracts both groups at the\ngame. ' \u2022   '\nIf you are interested in going\nahead In Spiel curling, we believe\nyou should atend these Bonspiels.\nOn the other hand, if you want\ncongeniality only, go to the smaller\nones. You'll get your full share of\ncongeniality at the big one, and a\nsmaller portion of good calibre\ncurling at the smaller 'Spiel.\nBut remember! You are a curler,\nand playing to make shots each\nand every end. And with this in\nview, we thing practically all of\nus want to reach the top ! 1\nKeep It To Yourself\nA poster to hand from my friend\nand fellow curler, Art MeBurney of\nYorkton, Sask. Art Is on the Saskatchewan Provincial Curling Executive, and Is known throughout\nhis province as th_e father of \"two-\nbit\" curling. He also travels the\nnorthwestern Manitoba district for\na well known fertilizer manufacturer. This poster advertises an\n$11,600 Cash Bonspiel at Swan River\nto commence January 10th. Sixteen\nrinks of the restricted entry of 64\nare guaranteed their entry fee bf\n$200 being won back. How's that\nfor odds, eh \"Scotchman\"? First\nprize is $3800, second Is $2000. Interested rinks send their entry to\n'Harry Chapman, Bonspiel Secretary.\nThanks to George Bloor, I-had an\nopportunity when in Trail last\nLabor Day to have a look at the\n\"Kids' Rink\" and the two rink\nextension to the \"Curling Club.\"\nIt definitely showa what our community effort can build by contributing their \"fair share\" to the\noverall picture. Nice going to all\nyou contributors. A swell job well\ndone.\nComing Next Week\nOur \"Behind the Glass\" comments on the B.C. Spiel! Be seeing\nyou. P.S. We'll tie these remarks\ninto the Auto Bonspiels. Boo! Mr.\nMcConnachie.\nHigh Jinks To Rule\nGrey dpp Weekend\nPlastic-Coated\njTenpin Approved\n: MILWAUKEE (CP)\u2014The American Bowling Congress announced\nMonday it had approved the first\nplastic-coated tenpin In fowling\nhistory.\nAn ABC spokesman said the formula would \"easily double the life\nof a bowling pin.\"\nAn all-wood pin compresses at\nthe ball line, the congress said, and\nbecomes Knocked out of shape after\nprolonged use.\nSKATING TODAY\nTiny Tots\n2:00 \u25a0 4:00\nChildren\n4:05 - 5:55\nKIWANIS\nTURKEY SHOOT\nNOV.\n25-26-27\nCIVIC CENTRE\n\u2022  Bingo\n\u2022 Games\n\u2022 Turkeys\nFREE\nADMISSION\nBy MILT.MmPHAIU*. .\nCanadian Press Staff \"Writer\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 ThU.year's\nGrey \"Cup weekend, > football flavored mardi gras, shaped up Monday\nnight ai the biggest and best of\nthese, annual handshakes 1 between\nEast and West.\n\"We're pulling out all .stops to\nmake the show the best yet;\" aaid\na confident official of the Toronto\nJunior Board of Trade which promotes the celebration to foster\nEast-West goodwill.\n\"We've had six committees working since last Christmas on this\nand things are just about complete.\"\nThe celebration before and after\nthe East-West football game has\nbeen an annual affair since 1948\nwhen supporters of Calgary Stampeders stormed into the city and\nstaged a parade that startled staid\nToronto. They cooked flapjacks on\nthe streets, rode around on chuck-\nwagons and even put Toronto's\nmayor on a horse.\nThen they capped it by upsetting\nOttawa Rough Riders 12-7 in the\ngame.\nOfficials believe this year's show\nwill top the Calgary invasion and\nanything since.\nEVERYONE IN THE ACT\nJust about everybody is getting\ninto the act with money and effort\njupplied by the major football\ncities, business concerns and gridiron-conscious groups.such as quarterback and booster clubs.\nMore money \u2014 about $200,000 \u2014 is\nbeing spent this year than ever\nbefore. It's a bonanza, tod, for Toronto business men who reap a rich\nharvest from the thousands who will\ninvade the city for the football\nclassic between Montreal Alouettes\nand Edmonton Eskimos.\nHighlighting the weekend festivities will be the Friday night $10-a-\nplate Grey Cup dinner, the choosing\nof \"Miss Grey Cup\" that night and\nthe mammoth Grey Cup parade Saturday morning.\nAbout 30 floats, some valued at\n$2000, gaily-costumed girls, dog\nteams and 20 bands will be on the\nthree-mile march. Bands and floats\nare coming from Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Regina, Winnipeg,\nToronto, Hamilton, Sarnia, Kitchener and Montreal.\nOttawa's plans have not yet been\nannounced.\nContestants for the title of \"Miss\nGrey .Cup\" are from all cities in\nthe Big Four, Western Conference\nand the Senior Ontario Rugby Football Union. The winner will be presented with a motor car before the\ngame at VarEity Stadium.\nNaglioli (racks\nRoad Race Record\nCHIHUAHUA, Mexico (AP) -\nUmberto Maglioli, a pipe-smoking\nItalian who laughs at danger, took\nboth of Monday's legs in the Pan-\nAmerican road race and knocked\nthree minutes oft his old record,\nin doing it.\nThere was no reason for Maglioli:\nto flog his flame-red 4.9-litre Ferrari so hard except his love for\nspeed and his disdain of danger.\nHe started the fourth day with a\n10-minute lead over second place\nPhil Hill of Santa Monica, Calif.,\nin a 4.5 Ferrari and finished with\na 25-mlnute advantage.\nWith only today's 222-mile lap\nremaining, and Maglioli the record\nholder on it, the Italian is the apparent victor in the big aports car\nclass in this five-day race.\nLeclair Eyes Okay\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014 Jackie Leclair.\n.rookie, centre with Montreal Canadiens, was discharged from the\nMassachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary Monday with assurance from\ndoctors that his vision is unimpaired.\nLeclair, 25-year-old native of Quebec City, was hit in the eye Sunday night as the Canadiens were\nwhipped 2-0 by Boston Bruins in a\nNational Hockey League game.\nNHL LEADERS\nStanding: Montreal, won 13, lost\n5, tied 1\u2014points 27.\nPoints: Geoffrion, Montreal, 24.\nGoals: Geoffrion, Montreal, 16.\nAssists: Mickoski, New York, 14.\nShutouts: Sawchuk, Detroit, 5.\n\u2022 Penalties:    Flaman,    Boston,    39\nminutes.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nResults of Monday nigty's games\nin the UDL compemiui. 01 Nelson\nCurling Club wer$.\nH. Moore 12, J. Leeming 8:\nD. Cathcart 10, H. A. 6. Greenwood 8;\nR. Palmer 8, W. Marr 6;\nR. Carmichael 9, A. Barrett 5;\nA. B. Gilker 10, H. Farenholti 6.\nH. Hinitt 10, L. McEachern S.\nW. Burdenie 10, R. Chandler 9.\nL. G. Maurer 6, G. Moir 10.\nE. Mason 9, J. Harvey 8.\nJ. Milne 0, L. G. Peerless 1.\nFans Escape\n30-Hour Lineup\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Football fans\nstarted lining up 30 hours ahead of\ntime for Ottawa's share of the tickets for the Grey Cup game at Toronto Saturday.\nWith 534 tickets available for Its\nseason ticket-holders, the Ottawa\nRough Riders had scheduled the\nsale for 7:30 a.m. Monday but\nenough early birds showed up by\n5 p.m. Sunday to consume the entire supply and the club allotted the\nticket^ rather than have the fans\nshiver overnight in a lineup.\nKimberley Curling\nKIMBERLEY - Curling results\nin the Kimberley Curling Club\nMonday:\nCowan 5, Tulll 10\nCimolai 9, Archibald 6\nSmith 10, Young 12\nAdams 10, Case 6\nCaldwell 8, Holmes 10\nMartin 10, Twells 8\nOrhsted 8, Leamah 9\nSilverwood 9, Anderson 8\nEsks lo Grey (up Play With\nPoor Statistical Showing\nBy DON HANRIQHT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (CP) - Edmonton\nEskimos probably will eiiter the\nGrey Cup as the lowest western conference underdogs In many a moon.\nEskimos, who clash with the powerful Montreal Alouettes in the Canadian football final at Toronto Saturday, have enough Injuries and\nstatistical flaws to warrant confident betting from Big Four enthusiasts.\nEdmonton barely topped the\nWestern Interprovincial Football\nUnion while finishing at the bottom\nof the five-team, 16-game statistical\nheap In yards passing 1798; first\ndowns on passing 69; yards oh kick-\noff returns 686; average kickoff return 19.6 yards; total yards in punts\nreturns 742 and average punt return\n6.1 yards.\nTheir pass-completion average of\n49.2 per cent was only third best\nduring the regular season schedule\nand their eight meagre touchdown\npasses bested only the lowly British\nColumbia Lions, who won one game.\nAgainst pass-happy Montreal\nquarterback Sam Etcheverry, who\nracked up 434 yards through the\nair ln beating Hamilton Tiger-Cats\nln the Big Four final Saturday, Eskimos don't seem to be too promising as the team to return with the\nWIFU's first Grey Cup since 1948.\nCalgary Stampeders won it that\nyear.\nBut Eskimo coach Frank (Pop)\nIvy might have,the last laugh- Most'\nof the figures cover a period when\nthe former Oklahoman was charging his. Injury-plagued squad\nthrough modest use of the split-T,\nthe club's most outstanding offensive\nfeature.\nTHE GOOD 8IDE\nIvy beams on his own sheet of\nthe statistics, where it shows his\nclub topping the following departments: Times carried in rushing\n575; total yardage rushing 3119;\nfirst downs rushing 169\u2014a WIFU\nrecord; touchdowns 37\u2014only 22\nwere scored against Edmonton; and\nconverts 37\u2014a conference percentage record\u2014with only 14 against\nWith that, he advises:\n\"The Eskimos have 'won every\ngame this year they have absolutely\nhad to win. The Grey Cup is such a\ngame.\nWild Bill Scores\n19 (tols In 20\nOSHL Games\nKELOWNA, B. C. (CP) - Bill\nWarwick of the Penticton V's of the\nOkanagan Senior Hockey League\nwas leading the circuit in two departments when statistics were released here Monday.\nWarwick, christened \"Wild Bill\"\nby other OSHL players, kept his\ngrip on the scoring crown with 19\ngoals in 20 games, was far in front\nin the penalty department with 91\nminutes, and was tied with Vernon's\nFrank King for most hat tricks.\nBoomer Rodzinyak of Kamloops\nremains top netminder, with an average of 3.33 goals allowed in  15\ngames.\nTHE LEADERS\nG A Pts Pirn\nB. Warwick, Pen    19   9   28   91\nD. Culley, Kel    12 12   24   19\nJ. McDonald, Pen      6 18   24   42\nB. Hryciuk, Kam      9 12   21     2\nF. King, Ver    15   4   19   20\nD. Kilburn, Pen      9 10   19    6\nG. Warwick, Pen      7 12   19   28\nK. Booth, Kel.           5 14   19     0\nM. Durban. Kel      9   9   18   16\nD. Slater, Kam      8 10   18   22\nDart Champ To Be\nDeclared Soon\nThe winner of the newly-posted\nRobert Main trophy for the Legion's\ndart championship, will be decided\nin a few days.\nIn the meantime, play is going\non at the club room. In games Monday night, Frank Hufty -defeated\nS. J. Newell, Peter Marken defeated\nGordon Strong, George Butler beat\nGib Goucher, Lee Hyssop won over\nCharles Rushby and Fred Ozeroff\nbeat Jim Stout.\nCLASSIFIED  AOS  GET  RESULTS\nQiants Draft Qrasso as,\nMajor Leagues Pick 13\nBy  JACK  HAND\nNEW YORK (AP) - Catcher\nMickey Grasso, who played for\nCleveland in- the 1954 world aeries,\nwas drafted Monday by New York\nGiants as the major league clubs\npicked J3 men from the minor\nleague pool for $122,000.\nGrasso began his career in the\nGiants' farm system and played\nseven games for them in 1946. He\nbecame eligible for the draft when\nhe was sold to the Indians' Indian-\napolis farm club 11 days after\nCleveland had lost the series in four\nstraight to the Giants.\nIt was Grasso's bouncing peg that\nlet Willie Mays steal second base\njust before Dusty Rhodes hit his\nwinning homer ln the 10th inning\nof the opener.\nEight pitchers, three outfielders,\na shortstop and a catcher were\nplucked from the minors, most from\nleagues of the higher classes.\nRoberto Clemente, I speedy outfielder who hit .257 with Brooklyn's\nMontreal farm, was the No. 1 selection. Pittsburgh, with the first\npick, got Clemente at a bargain\n$4000 because he was a \"bonus\"\nplayer who had received more than\n$4000 (a reported $20,000) to sl$n\nwith the Dodgers out of Puerto\nRico. At lasl reports Clemente was\nhitting .380 in the Puerto Rican winter league, second only to Mays.\nThe new Kansas City club, drafting as a major league team for the\nfirst time, ironically picked left-\nhanded pitcher Art Ceccarelli from\nthe Kansas City roster itr the, American Association.\nParke Carroll, Kansas City business manager, also selected Bob\nSpicer, a righthanded knuckleball\npitcher, who had a 13-16 record at\nLos Angeles. In a delayed draft he\npicked Cloyd Boyer, ex-St. Louis\nCard    righthanded    pitcher    from\nFree Delivery\n$0i\u00a3W$2\u00a3A_4\nKOOTENAY  BREWERIES   LIMITED\nBe Sure To Order by Brand Name\n\u2022 COLUMBIA  LAGER      \u2022 FERNIE LAGER\n\u2022 KOOTENAY \u2022 COLUMBIA\nPALE ALE CREAM STOUT\nEMPTY BOTTLE8 COLLECTED ON DELIVERY ONLY\nthis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nRochester.\nChicago Cubs grabbed outfielder\nJim King from St. Louis Cards'\nRochester club and righthanded\npitcher Jerry Dean of Buffalo.\nGorbus, a native of Drumheller.\nAlta.. performed on the Dodgers'\nFort Worth farm in the Texas\nleague, hitting .283, before he was\nmoved up to Montreal.\nSENATORS TAKE KLINE\nCal Griffith, Washington executive vice-president, and Chuck Dressen, his new manager, teamed up to\ntake shortstop John Robert Kline\nfrom Toronto. Like most of the\nothers, Kline played with some\nother club during the '54 season and\nhis name on the Toronto roster was\nstrictly a paper move. Kline batted\n.319 and drove in 84 runs for Birmingham in the Southern Association.\nJoe Trimble was picked off the\nWiHiamsport roster of the Eastern\nLeague by Boston Red Sox. Trimble,\na righthanded pitcher, had a 9-12\nrecord at Burlington, N. C.\nMilwaukee grabbed lefthanded\npitcher Roberto Vargas, a Puerto\nRican, from Cleveland's Indianapolis farm.\nBen Flowers, 27-year-old right-\nhanded pitcher who had several\ntrials with Boston Red Sox, was\ntaken by Detroit from Louisville.\nHelps You Overcome\nOr Money Back\nYou io not biv\u00bb to bt torhirtd _od\ne-i.bo_T_.---d by ti\u00bb Itehlni ior\u00abool -_4\nbuns-nl pain of piles any longer. Hen H\nIM.1 h\u00abTp for you. .,\u201e_,_     _ ' _\nG\u00abt n pickigo of Htm-Rold, \u00bbn Internal pit* treatment.at any toil itora\nand uie ai directed. You will ba pltaeed\nat how quickly your pile trouble li re-\nSaved. Oily 11.59 .or the big 80 table!\npackage. If you ate not 100% pleated\nattar uelng Hem-Bold - tot 3 daye, at a\nteat, aak (or your money back. Refund\nagreement by all drag etorei.\n'FORKS SCHOOL\nHOOPSTERS WIN\nAGAINST SALMO\nGRAND FORKS - Grand Forks\nHigh School Wolves and Wolverines .took both basketball games\nwhen they met Salmo High School\nSaturday. The scores were Grand\nForks boys 66. Salmo boys 7, and\nGrand Forks girls 25, Salmo girls 13.\nThe Grand Forks girls led all\nthrough the game when Mabel Per-\negoodoff, a steady player, scored\nthe majority of points during the\nfirst half of the game. Fast-playing\nBernie Benniger and Connie Zmaeff\nhelped score additional points.\nSalmo girls, In their first year\nin the West Kootenay League, proved good sports and show a potential\nof becoming a strong team in a\nfew years. Particularly noteworthy\nwas their scoring of foul shots. Han-'\nson and Metcalfe were their outstanding players.\nLineups:\nSalmo\u2014E. Kraft, M. Hansen, N.\nMang, M. Hanson and G. Metcalfe.\nGrand Forks\u2014C. Zmaeff, M. Bar-\ntolac. N. Kondo, B. Diepenbeck, M.\nPeregoodoff and B. Benniger.\nGrand Forks boys were at a distinct advantage when.they met the\nnewly-formed Salmo boys' team for\nwhom\u201ethe game was. their second\nin the West Kootenay League.\nGrand Forks' steady player, John\nMalloff, and sharp-shooter Lawrence Fofonoff combined with the\ngood defensive play, ended in a\none-sided game.\nLineups:\nSalmo\u2014W. Scribner, B. Dodds, T.\nPelch and G. Baturin.\nGrand Forks\u2014B. Lusk, C. Plotnlkoff, L. Fofonoff, L. Forrester, J.\nMalloff, F. Fedorak, J. Lusk and\nA. McKay.\nHockey Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nOSHL STANDINGS\nW L T   F    A Pts\nPenticton    12   7   2   84   70   26\nKamloops        9 11   1   75   78   19\nKelowna\nVernon ....\n9   9   0   73   74   1'8\n8 II   1   71   77   17\nNELSON DAILY NE>VS, TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 1954 \u2014r9\nHIS LEFT EYE swollen shut, lightweight champion Paddy\nDe Marco Is almost helpless as challenger Jimmy Carter, left\/\nbatters him In the 14th round of their 15-round title\" fight in San,\nFrancisco's Covy Palace. Carter set a record by scoring a'TKO In,\"\nthe 15th to win the lightweight crown for the third time. De Marcoi\nwon the title last March in a surprise upset from Carter and thli '\u25a0\u25a0\nwas his first fight since that time.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nStamps Release\nCoach Seimerling\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Larry Seimer-\ning has been released as head coach\nof Calgary Stampeders, officials of\nthe Western Interprovincial Football Union club announced Monday.\nEd O'Connor, club president, said\nSeimering's contract, which does\nnot expire for another year, has\nbeen bought up by the club. Seim-\nering has not announced any plans\nfor the future and the club executive gave no indication of plans for\nfiring a new chief mentor.\nIt was the second consecutive\nyear that Stampeders released their\nhead coach after a one-year stint.\nBob Snyder, hired after Les Lear\nwas fired in 1952, was not retained\nafter Stampeders finished at the\nbottom of the four-team league in\n1953.\nSeimering. who previously was\nline coach of the National Football\nLeague Washington Redskins, led\nStampeders to eight victories in ,16\ngames this season but they failed\nto make the three-team playoffs.\nSLADE GETS \u00bb\nCLEAN SHEET\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Jimmy Slade\nof New York was absolved of any\nwrongdoing in connection with his\neight-round defeat at the hands bf\nFloyd Patterson of Brooklyn tn\nMadison Square Garden Friday\nnight.\nRobert Christenberry, chairman\nof the state athletic commission,\nsaid he had found \"nothing dishonest\" in the fight and ordered\nthat Slade be paid.\nAustralia's coastline, including the\nisland state of Tasmania, totals 12,-\n210 miles.\n\u25a0 .'\u25a0 ..it\nSKATES\nComplete  Line of\nHOCKEY and FANCY SKATE?\nRocket Richard  Matched Sets'\n$20.(0\nJack Boyce\nMEN'S SHOP\n514 Baker St,\nFred Whiteley, Prop.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT8\nHOCKEY\nj    [[JI.     f               EVENT 8 \u2014 W.I.H.   LEAGUE\nPi Senior Hockey\nWH              WEDNESDAY\n!   yy.f                              8 p.m.\nMM    !                     CIVIC CENTRE\nBbM              Spokane Flyers\n\u25a0 fM                           vs\nM_i___B         Nelson Maple Leafs\nHpfeS 1    Contract and   Reserved Tickets  on  Sale  at\nfl (Ma                   Kootenay Stationers Today and\nD IH                     Wednesday, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m,\nHJJBB    Reserved, $1.25 \u2014 Rush, 85c \u2014 Children, 35c\n____\u25bc _B_B 1    Kootenay   Stationers   Will    Remain   Open\nWA Bk                      Wednesday Until 5 p.m. For\nj                                      The Sale of Tickets Only\nH\n0\nC\nK\nE\nY\nHOCKEY\nChampion Malabar's Cold Caih, son of a Champion sire and Champion dam.\nBred and owned by S. W. Scarpa, Point Fortune, Que.\nounce for ounce\nlo the best dog goes the judge's award that makes him a\nchampion. Lord Calvert Canadian Whisky is a champion too.\nIt's judged best by those who know its clean, mellow taste and\ndelightful bouquet. Ounce for ounce\nthere's no finer whisky than Lord Calvert\nIord Calvert\ni\nCALVERT     DISTILLERS      LIMITED,     AMHERSTBURG,     ONT.\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT is NOT.PUBtlSHED OR DISPLAYFD BY THE LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD OR BY THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n^________...\u00bb\u00ab.\u00ab........\u25a0\n'\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0    - : \u2022\u25a0 '\u25a0'     ' \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0  ;  ' \u25a0  -fc-&--\n ,\\: \u25a0.'-\u2022    \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0''\u25a0-,\u25a0'' ;\u25a0   -,:.v'.!_\"',,\";.Jv \"-\\rv. yyif\"if;-,\/-'\n* .; ' \"V      \u25a0 \u25a0' \" \u25a0\n10 ~ NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 1954\nmmwmw:\np'i.::':i. '\/\\' \u2022<\u25a0\"\u25a0\u00ab\nWW : : ; : -mrn^\n\u2014\nmm.\nyft^\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL\nO\nN\njE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\n:R\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nS\ne\ne\n\u2022R\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\n.U\nZ\nS\nA\nY\nW\nE\nR\nDON'T ANYONE TOUCH THALF OF HII. IS\nTHE BOD**.'.' I'M y'IN MV COUNTY.\nGOING TO CALL Tl\nMEDICAL E*AMIN__R'> HV MEDICAL J\nOOUNTV. A EXAMINER. DON'T\nANVQNE MOTE HIM\nWAL-INTHETCASE.AH'LLHAFTA 1\nMOVE MAHSELF.,  LES QO.AUHT\/       j\np <cq\nWHAT DO VOU SUSSEST\nTOR AN UPSET STOMACH,\nHENRV f>\nHOW ABOUT k\neETTiNe i-y't\nSTARTED\nON THAT\nHOME-,\nWORK,\nPOP?\/\nr* AYOUNG S\n(   FEUOW LIKE I\n)>  VOU SHOULD^\n( LEARN TO STAND\n\\   ON HIS OWN\n'  ((\\-Y   FEET\n.THAT'S THE WHOLE I\nTROUBLE WITH THE\n-r -tOUTH OF TODAy r-\nI SEE NO BEASON WHY A BO\/ )\nVOUR ASE CAN'T DO HIS\nHOMEWORK WITHOUT HIS JI WASN'T i\nBATHER'S \u00abv^_y\/v__^--^ TALKIN6\nHELP riSWK 1\/ (ABOUT My\nHOMEWORK\u2014 \/\nI MEANT THE WORK\nVOU BROU6HT HOME\nFROM THE OFFICE A\nTHAT YOU\nASKED ME _:\n7DHELP\nVDU   <;\nWITH\nST DISAPPEARS IH THE HAZE,\nTHEN SUDDENLY REAPPEARS\nON ITS FIRST FLY-BY.\nmemj*fj%i ^\nm\n\u2022\";.   >'**      \u2022\u2022--, \"* ...' (cowROLj)\u2014\/bwWIHG\nITS^\nVancoMver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 51\nBralorne             3.00\nCanusa          .04\nCariboo Gold       ,75'\nEstella       14%'\nGiant Mascot  58\nGrandvlew       1714\nHighland Bell        .41\nPac Eastern Gold  12\nPend Oreille \u2022        4.50\nPioneer Gold           1.85\nPremier Border 04\nQuatslno      ..  16\nReeves Mac .: .       1.55\nSheep Creek 75\nSilver Ridge           .27\nSilver Standard  81\nSurf Inlet  10\nUtica      01\nVananda    02\nVan Roi          .02t4\nWestern Ex .         57\nWestern  Tungsten 37\nYale    41\nOILS\nAnglo Can       4.70\nA P Cons        .25\nCal & Ed    13.75\nCan  Anaconda        .06\nCommonwealth  _      4.20\nHome         7.00\nMercury  0714\nMid West Gas       162\nOkalta Com       130\nPac Pete .   .         H.\u00ab7t4\nPeace River Gas       6,90\nRoyalite      H-W\nVanalta    25\nVulcan          -25\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates      4.90\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Cattle and\ncalves 1950. Market generally\nsteady; good butcher steers and'\nheifers steady; butcher cows barely\nsteady; no bulls offered; stocker\nand feeder cattle in strong numbers\nand moving freely at steady prices;\nveal calves steady.\nGood to choice butcher steers $19\nto $21; common to medium $13 to\n$18.50.\nGood To  choice butcher  heifers\n<5?.\ni^UNO. Lrtajvfr \u2022\nDeposits Grow\nId New Height\n. TORONTO \u2014 Deposits, assets and\nprofits of' Imperial Bank of Canada\nall increased materially ln the year\nended October 81.\nFinancial 'statement shows total\nassets of $682,374,145. This Is an\nIncrease of $59,225,000 and is re-\nported as the largest Increase in a\nsingle year in the history of the\nBank..\nProfit of $2.21 per share compares\nwith $2 per share in the previous\nyear.\nAt $650,299,889, total deposits are\nIncreased more than $54,0CI\\000.\nPersonal savings accounts payable\nafter notice total $336,743,771 and\nother deposits by the public total\n$259,216,617. Deposits by the government of Canada and by other\nbanks are reduced somewhat, but\nthis reduction is more than offset\nby an increase in provincial government deposits.\nQuick assets total $118,119,182, a\nnet increase of nearly $8,000,000.\nSecurity investments are up more\nthan $34,000,000 to $231,326,924.\nTotal loans at $318,630,675 are up\nabout $18,400,000.\nA new item in chartered bank\nstatements is mortgages, which in\nthe case of Imperial'show loans ac\ntually completed at $1,357,752 ln\nthe first year of operation of this\ndepartment. This Is exclusive of\nsubstantial additional applications\napproved but not yet drawn up.\nWinnioeq Grain\nWINNIPEG  (CP) \u2014 Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, .88V4.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.20%.\nCLASSIFIED  ADS G(ET  RESULTS\n$16 to $19; common to medium $10\nto $16.50.\nGood cows $9 to $9.50; common\nto medium $7.25 to $8.75; canners-\ncutters $4 to $7.\nGood stocker-feeder steers $16 to\n$16.50; common to medium $10 lo\n$15.50.\nGood to choice butcher weight\ncalves $13 to $16; common to medium $9 to $12.50.\nGrade A hogs closed last week\nat $24; sofas $13.75 to $14.25 live,\n$10.85 to $18.20 dressed.\nGood lambs $17 to $17.\nThe lively flavour refreihei you and the pleasant\nchewing gives you a happy little lift. Refreshing\ndelicious Wrigley's Spearmint Gum is good to chew\u2014\nand good for you. Enjoy it every day!\nTELEVISION for TODAY\nKXLY-TV\nChannel  4\n10:30\u2014Sign On\n10:45\u2014Portia Faces Life\n11:00\u2014Welcome Travellers\n11:30\u2014Seeking Heart\n11:45\u2014Secret Storm\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n1:00\u2014On Your Account\n1:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n1:45\u2014Brighter Day\n2:00\u2014Kitchen Kapers\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3(00\u2014Love of Life\n.3:15\u2014Robert Q. Lewis\n3:30\u2014Garry Moore\n3:45\u2014Beauty With Sally\n4:00\u2014What's Cookin'?\n4:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n5:00\u2014Dale Starkey Show\n5:30\u2014Western Roundup\n6:25\u2014Weather Girl\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n6:45\u2014Jo Stafford i\n7:00\u2014Life With Father\n' 7:30\u2014See It Now\n8:00\u2014My Hero ,\n8:30\u2014Badge 714\n9:00\u2014Meet Millie\n9:30\u2014All American Game of Week\n10:00\u2014Danger\n10:30\u2014Rocky King\n11:00\u2014Late Show\nKHQ-TV\nChannel  6\nNoon\u2014Test Pattern\n12:15\u2014Color Test Program\n12:30\u2014Mandarin Mystery\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014The Greatest Gift \u2022\n3:15\u2014Golden Windows\n3:30\u2014Matinee Melodies\n?:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00\u2014Hawkins Falls\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Lone Ranger\n6:30\u2014Bar 6 Bunkhouse\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Life With Elizabeth\n7:30\u2014Dinah Shore\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Martha Raye   \u25a0\n9:00\u2014Fireside Theatre\n9:30\u2014Curtain Time\n10:00\u2014Spokane Wrestling\n11.00\u2014Lightning in the Forest\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\n12:35\u2014Bible Reading\nGeneral Electric\nTelevisipn\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\n574 Baker SL Phone 260\nPhilco Television\nSales and Service\nJEFFERY RADIO\nAND APPLIANCES\n446 Ward St Phone 1302\nTop Stars in. TV Homes\nCrosley and Hallicrafters\nTV SETS\nat\n|N   CRE8T0N   IT'S\nCreston Electric\nf6b'I..c.a.- VICTOR TV\nSALES   AND   SERVICE\nFor -     i f.\nG.E.  ULTRA VISION  TV\nIt's\nTHE BAY ELECTRIC\nt460 Bay Ave. \" Trail\nPHONd 939    ,\nMARCONI\nLIFE-TESTED TV\nHERMAN'S APPLIANCES\n1241 Cedar Avenue\nTRAIL PHONE 568\nFor\nPHILCO TV\n8ALES AND 8ERVICE\nCall  In at\nKLINE'S FURNITURE\nAND  APPLIANCES\n1474 Bay Ave. Trail\nYour Daily News\nBrings Entertainment and\nInformation fo All the\nFamily \u2014 6 Days\na Week\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Steels led the\nmarket higher in active trading.\nCanadian issues were higher, Canadian Pacific, Dome Mines, International Nickel and Distillers-Sea\ngrams advancing fractionally.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Prices relaxed\na little in afternoon dealings after\nhitting two successive 20-year highs\nin the morning.\nThe industrial index, which rose\nmore than H4 points to a 20-year\nhigh of 368.98 at noon, fell off slightly later, but at 2 p.m. was still ahead\nmore than a point on the day. Western oils were up 1V4 points in the\nindex, senior base metals were\nstrong and golds were mixed. Uraniums eased.       ,\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014The market\nmoved to irregularly higher ground\nin active trading.\nNoranda advanced a point ahd\nDominion Steel  %. Half-time im-\nJapanese Fishing\nCatch Spectacular\nTOKYd (AP) - The numbet.o\nJapanese fishing boats and thei\ntotal catch now exceed the pre-wa\nlevfjl, which was highest in th\nworld, the foreign office said Mor\nday. The announcement said that i\na \"remarkable* post-war revival,\nJapan's 440,000 fishing boats la!\nyear caught 4,250,000 tons of flsj\ncompared with 3,700,000 tons i\n360,000 boats in the big pre-wa\nyears.\nON THE AIR\nprovemenls were made by Shawlr\nlgan. International Nickel and Ci\nnadian Celanese.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Prices mair\ntained a firm appearance and thei\nwas good investment support fc\nSelected issues.\n- Interest in industrials centre\nmainly on engineering and electr\ncal equipment. Leading motors wer\nfirm and good gains were recorde\nin cotton textiles.\n -^4\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE U1AL\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1954\n(Pacific Standard  Time)\n:30\u2014Koffee and Kay\n.01)\u2014 News\n:05\u2014Koffee and Koy\n: 15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n.00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n;: 15\u2014 Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Serenade t\n:55\u2014Behind the News\n:00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nDO\u2014Carnation Entertains\n15\u2014News\n20\u2014Musical Program\n30\u2014Stor-y Parade\n45\u2014Here's Health\n00\u2014Woman's World\n05\u2014Musicale   \u25a0\n15\u2014Shopping Guide\n45\u2014Consumer'. Corner\n00\u2014Monday Merry-Go-Round\n15\u2014Spurts  News\n20\u2014News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n00\u2014Musicale\nl.i- -Hollywood Calling\n30\u2014Specialty   Shop\n:45\u2014Musicale\n1:55\u2014Women Today\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast    \u25a0\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n4:00\u2014Iftuslcale '\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Steepytime Story Tellej\n5:10- -Wax Wagon\n5:15\u2014The Lighter Side\n5:25\u2014Fashions for You\n5:30-'-Sport News\n5:35^-Today in History\n5:40-H3potlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n5:50\u2014-News.\n6:0(\u00bbRawhld_\n6:15\u2014Hockey Boosters Sho#\n8'30;-~Cavalcade jf Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup .\n7:30-Music Hall .  .\n8:00\u2014Record Album\n8:30\u2014Musicale\n9:00\u2014Songs Chez Noul\n9:30\u2014Anthology\n1000\u2014 News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n1045\u2014Devotions\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1954\n(Pacific Standard Time)\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's  Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical  Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n-8.15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:3 -A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014CBC-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45-Share. the Wealth\n4:00\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Men of Music\n5:00\u2014Neighborly News\n5:15\u2014International Commentary\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Ragtime Rhythm\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014In Reply\n6:30\u2014Hawaiian Moods\n6:45\u2014Introduction to Wednesday\nNight\n7:00\u2014 News\n7:30\u2014McGill Chamber Ensemblt\n8:00\u2014Oedipus Rex\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Cameos\n10:30\u2014Recital\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Side\n6. Black, In\nCeltic names\n9. Vessel for\nliquors\n10. Price\n12. Behold!\n13. Gourmeto\n15. To be\nIn debt\n17. To darken\n18. Evening\n(poet.)\n20. Young goat\n21. Revive\n23. Polish\n26. Even (poet.)\n27. Unit of\nwork\n28. Single unit\n28. Man's\nnickname\n(poss.)\n30. Bottomless\n32. Fuss\n83. Fruit of the\nhawthorne\n(Old World)\n84. Gather\ntogether\n38. Scold\npersistently\n40. Not\ncultivated\n42. Radium\n(sym.)\n'43. Sacred\npicture\n(Gr. Ch.)\n44. In high\nspirits\n46. Female\nsheep\n47. Chest\nsounds\nDOWN\n1. Blossomed\n2. Music note\n3. Mature\n4. The bullfinch (Eng.) \u2022\n5. Descendant\nof the\nDutch\nsettlers of\nNew YorB\n(. A priest\namong\nancient\nCelts\n7. Musical\ninstrument\n8. Shoshonean\nIndians\n9. Girl's\nnickname\n11. East southeast (abbr.)\n14. Tending to\noling\n16. Levels\n19. East by\nsouth\n(abbr.)\n21. Charge\nfor\nprofet\nslonal\nservices\n22. A dive\n(colloq.)\n23. Native\nof\nRome\n24. Un-\nexpect\nedly\n25. Chief god\n(Baby!.)\n31. Shilling,\n(abbr.)\n32. Solitary\n34. Russian\nmilitary\nengineer and\nmusic\ncomposer\natanu aaam\nBBGHH HHHHEl\n[___-_.___ UH.__.__L:,\n__I__.0__1_..__.H      UH\napt*.    Hn___.__.at_\nHHH   HHHQ\nGinaiaHHHtKBBH\n._____[\u25a0___   HH@\nHEtSBHB     QBE\nHta   o\n__H__I_]__  HEDB1\nHEaBH  HHBHS\nGIHHR.   HBIHH\nYesterdBjr'a Amwer\n35. At one tima\n36. City\n(Sov. Un.)\n37. MembranO\n(anat.)\n39. Wander\nabout Idly\n41. Any split\npulse\n45. Tellurium\n(Sym.)\n%\n1\nV\n5\u2014\n?-\nT\"\nt.\nI\n7\nV\n%\n9\n%\nIO\nII\n12.\n'^\/f\n1*\n*\nA\niS\n\\b\n^\n17\n^\nIB\n19\n%\n20\n'^\ny\/A\nVA\ntl  .\nax\n1\n25\n24\n25\nlb\nl\n27\n%\n28\nV)\nl\n.0\n\u25a051\n'\/\/\nVA\n\/ft\n32.\n%\n33\n^\/t\n34-\n35'\n3b\n37\nft\n36\n33\nio\n+1\n'^\n42\n4-3\n1\n44\n45\n\u00a7\nAb\n%\n47\n%\n11-23\nDAILY CRWTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work its\nAXT DLBAAXR\nIs   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is usti\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apo>\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code- letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nNLG     WGCN    HS    EGIGMUGC    U.C    K\nWGGS-CKGKD    KYKUVCN    CGK-CUJD.\nVGCC \u2014 WFEHV.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: YOU'LL IN YOUR GIRLS AGAIN\nBE COURTED. AND I'LL GO WOOING IN MY BOYS \u2014\nCOOPER.\n\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,'\"\u25a0 - -  \u2022  \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0 ' \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\n_^\t\n.^^mm^m^^^^^^\n ^^W-W*^*^ :        -^PPPR\n*\n\u00a9Mem Opportunities and Wise Buys\nA Daily Classified Directory For - The Buyer - -The Sell er - The Trader - The Swapper and Shopper\nHELP WANTED\nree informatio'-TTvaTl\"-\nablc about Canadian, U.S.A. and\nForeign job opportunities paying\nhighest salaries. Write immediately, Dept. 8GG, National Employment Info. Scrv. 1020 Broad, Newark. N.J., U.S.A\nIMBERLEY CARRIER WANTED.\nFor Nelson News. Upper Lois\nGreek, new route to be opened\nby carrier canvass. 2.1c for each\nnew customer. Good possibilities\nof steady route. Ph. Mr. Bate,\n864-X. Kimberley.   \u25a0\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n1,0 U S E KEEPER-WANTED~ AT\nonce. Apply 612 Carbonate.\n..MALE COOK -WT-APLE\nLeaf Cafe, Salmo, B. C. Ph. 89.\nSALESMEN   WANTED\nWING TO THE TREMENDOUS\nexpansion in our business, we\nhave an opening in your vicinity\nfor a young, ambitious salesman\nwith high school education, good\npersonality, aggressive, willing to\nwork hard to build a permanent\nand profitable fu.ure with Canada's fastest growing and most\nprogressive advertising calendar\nand specialty house. If you have\nan ambition to make more' than\n$5000 a year, you are the man we\nare looking for. Our line contains\nover 500 exclusive numbers in every price range. Applicants must\nbe able to furnish best of character\nreferences. All replies confidential. Write at once to Sales Manager, Commonwealth Advertising\nCompany Limited, Clarkson, On-\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n[OR   NEW   CONSTRUCTION   OR\nany repairs, ph  434-X-2.\nRENTALS\nfOR RENT: SMALL SUITE, BED\nLsitting room and'kitchen, suitable\nfor bachelor or two working girls.\nPHvate   entrance.   Phone   381-R\nmornings.\nROOMS AND BATH, SEMI-\nfurnished. Vacant Dec. 1. 3 minutes to ferry. Phdne 1623-L-2\nmornings or evenings. Con Cummings.\n\u25a0BEDROOM HOME IN ROSE-\nmont for winter months. Box 9786.\nDaily News, or phone- Trail\n1844-L-2.\n-ROOM, PARTLY FURNISHED,\nself-contained suite for rent. 723\nSilica St. Apply Suite 6.\n[WO. 2-ROOM APTS. FURNISHED\nj and steam heated. Hot and cold\nwater. Srtathcona Hotel.\nI-ROOM   FURNISHED  APART-\n1 ment, $45 per month. 718 Silica\nSt. Ph. 1342-L.\nFROOM    NEWLY    DECORATED\napartment, 516-Carbonate. Phone\n19-Y.\nfelNGLE AND DOUBLE HOUSE-\nkeeping room, private bath, heated. North Shore Motel, Ph. 1684.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, heated Day.\nweek,  monthly  rates   171   Baker\nCOR RENT LARGE HOUSEKEEP-\ning room, suitable for two Gentlemen nrotorred   Ph  620-X\nt-ROOM   COTTAGE   FOR   RENT.\nj Close in. Apply McHardy Agencies\nPMTEi.ni OUSlTTO~RENfTPH.\n1367 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.\nFOR RENT\"- HEATED HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 405-L.\n(jEATED   BEDROOM  FOR RENT.\nApply 410 Victoria.\nPleasant 3-room suite\nclose  to town   Ph.  1022-L.\nfOUSE   FOR   RENT\u2014PH.   12S7-L.\nICELY  FURNISHED Be5r3oT5T\n' close in. Ph. 488-R.\nHeated \"furnished\"apa r T\"-\nment for 2 adults, Dec  1   1604-R\nHousekeeping rm for rent\nPhone 1564-X\npVSSTOCK.  POULTRY  AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nfOO 4-MONTfv OLD WHITE ROCK\nby While Leghorn Cross Pullets\nfor sale at $175 each Any quan\ntity can'be shipped The Appleby\nPoultry Breeding Farm. Mission\nCity   B   C\nPLANTED 7 GOOD FRESH\" HOL-\nstein milk cows. Give_ prices to\nBox 6856, Nelson News\"\nROOM AND BOARD.\n|tOOM AND BOARD FOR ONE OR\ntwo. Phone 660-Y.\nClassified     Advertising    Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions\n$1 56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers lie extra Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc - 20c per line\nfirst insertion 16c per line\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL    ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMFT PAYMENT\nSubscriptions  Rates:\n\\Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier per wees\nin advance .30\nBy carrier $15 00\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month\nhree months\nSix months  ....\n[ One year   \t\nOne year\n$ 1.25\n$ 3.75\n$ 7.50\n$15.00\n$10 08\nMail In Canada   outside Nelson\nOrt(  month $ 100\nThree months $ 2.75\n| Six months $ 5.50\nabove  rates plus  postage.\nWhere extra postage 11 required\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.     BICYCLES\nMACHINERY\nA REUBEN BUERGE\n\"PRICE - PRODUCT\"\nCOMBINATION\nCANNOT\nBE EQUALLED\nIN\nTHE KOOTENAYS\nDROP IN TODAY!!\nNEW\nAUSTIN SOMERSET\n1954 Austin Sedan\nLow mileage.\n1954 Ford Fordor\n1953 Chevrolet Tudar\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Austin A-70 Sedan\n1953 Zephyr Sedan\n1952 Hillman Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n.1951  Austin Sedan\n1951 Ford Tudor\n1951  Chevrolet Sedan\n1951   Vanguard Sedan\n1951   Ford Coupe\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950  Hillman Sedan\n1950 Mercury Fordor\nWith radio.\n1949  Ford Tudor\n1947 Monarch Fordor\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1941   Chevrolet tudor\n1949 Chevrolet Tudor\nSPECIAL!!\n1951 Chevrolet Power Glide\nA-l   condition.  Only  $950.\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1952 Chevrolet Half Ton\n1952 Dodge Half Ton\n1952 Fargo Pickup\n.1951 Thames Pickup\n1951 Austin Pickup\n1950 Studebaker Pickup\nSPOT CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL CLEAN CARS\nCASH     TERMS.    TRADES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nPhone 1135  803 Baker St.\nPhone 1661 600 Blk. Vernon\nNelson, B.C.\nSACRIFICE FOR QUICK SALE\n1949 Anglia 2-door sedan, $199.50.\nPhone 532-R.\n. FINNING'S\nBONDED BUYS\nIN  Used  \"CAT\" D2's\n\"CAT\" D2 with rtordheimer\nLoader. Only 1 yr. old. Equipped\nwith dozer blade, No. 44 PCU,\nHyater winch, guards. Just like\nnew! Bonded Buy, 30-day war-\nwarranty, f.o.b. Pen- C|A enn\nticton. FT-2315. \u00abPI\"j-JUU\n\"CAT\" D2, 5U series. \"CAT\"\nangledozer, No. 44 PCU, Hyster\nwinch, guards. Only 1 yr. old!\nBonded   Buy,   30-day   warranty,\n\u00a3\u2122n2 $8550\n\"CAT\" D2. 5U series, hyd. dozer,\nNo. 44 PCU, guards, Dull hook.\n1952 model. Bonded Bi'v, Dl-rlav\nwarranty. Van- StfiftAfl\ncouver. FT-2208. . \u2022P\"\"\"\"\nSATISFACTION GUARANTEED\nP.v Your\n\"CATERPILLAR\"\nr.s'er\nFINNING   TRACTOR\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\nPhone 930, Nelson\nPhone 61. Cranbrook\nCHAIN SAWS. NEW AND OLD.\nfor.rent or sale and repair. Apply\nBud's Saw Shop, 806 5th St., Nelson. Ph. 791-L.\nFOR   SALE   MISCELLANEOUS\nFAWCETT FACTORY - BUILT\nwhite enamel oil range; copper\ncoil, fan, some stove and water\npipe. Excellent condition. Phone\n1507-Y.\nBOOKS OF KNOWLEDGE, 20\"VOL-\numes. World Books, 10 volumes.\nLeatherette Jacket size 20. Call at\n308 Robson St.\nCUTLER'S NgW AND USED FUR\"\nniture. basement. 301 -Baker St\nPhone 47 \"We buy used- furni\ntnre \"\nONE COMBINATION GURNEY\ngas range with or without tanks.\nPhone 697-X.\nGENERAL ELECTRIC RADIO AND*\n45 RCA Record Player. Also end\ntable. Phone 774-R-3.\nPIPE'-   FITTINGS   -  TUBES  -\n\u25a0 special low prices Active Trading\nCo  93.. F.  Cordova St   Vancouver\nCHROME SET FOR SALE, LIKE\nnew. Ph. 1352-R.\nHAY FOR SALE. WRITE F. K.EK-\nshaw, Box 77. Nakusp, B. C.\t\nHAY FOR \"SALE\u20141ST AND 2ND\ncut Ed Hilgren. Creston, B.C\nFINE PORTRAITS BY PETTIT OF\nCastlegar.\nMlfRONIC HEARING AIDS -\nWrite PO   Box -.9   NHson   BC\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nHOUSE .FOR SALTS\u2014FULL BASE-\nment, 4 rooms not completed. For\nlow down payment $75 per month.\nFull price just $2500. On 7th Ave.,\nCastlegar. Write P. Gretchen, 2535\nBirch St., Vancouver, B.C\nFOR SALE 4-ROOM HOUSE IN\nTrail. Small down payment. Ph.\n1173-Y.\nPERSONAL\nTHE ALMER HOTEL. OPP. C.P.R.\nDepot, Vancouver, B.C.. 100% fire\nproof, 24. hr. Elevator Seryice.\nClean, quiet and comfortable. Reasonable rates. City Centre.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nme Dally  Nowb doei not  hold  Itialt reopun\u00bblblo In tho ovoni\nof an error  In tha following  MiU-\nTORONTO STOCKS   'Fedcrated Pete    3-50\n(Closing Prices)\nmine;\nAcadia Uranium \t\n 12*yj\nAkaitcho       .68\nAmal Larder      ; 13\nAnglo Huronlan  ::...   13.50\nArea 40\nArmistice    16\nAtlas Y  13\nAumaque    12\nAunor    ;     2.12\nBagamac    * 16\nBarymin     2.28\nBase Metals  35\nBelloterre   ...,     2.85\nBevcourt    20\nBobjo          '.24.\nBralorne        3.00\nBroulan         1.50\nBrdnswick        9.75\nBuffalo Ank   61\nBuff Can  15\nCaliffan  W\nCampbell R L      8.25\nCan  Mai   37\nCariboo Gold  75\nCastle Treth      2.85\nCentral Patricia 68\nCentral Pore  '5\nChesterville    \u25a0 33t4\nChimo G         1-70\nCochenour  \u25a0\u2022     1-37\nConiaurum\n.42\nCons Gold Arrow        -29\nCons Denison      1-40\nCons M & S    29.3\nConwest   3.0-\nCons Discovery   \u2022\u2022\n1.00\n.17%\n16.35\n.37\n.2oy4\n1.22\n2.90\n4.10\n.64\n.60\n.15\n.90\nDelnite\nDetta R L\t\nDome     \t\nDonalda  \t\nDuvex \t\nDyno \t\nEast Malartic ..\nEast Sullivan ..\nEastern Metals\nElder Gold \t\nEstella    \t\nEureka   .     \t\nFajconbridge       19.00\nFrobisher       4.20\nGeco\t\nGod's Lake \t\nGold Hawk  \t\nGoldcrest    \t\nGold Eagle '     .\nGolden Manitou\nGiant.Yelo\nGunnar Gold ....\nHallnor    \t\nHardrock \t\nHasaga  .... , 14 V4\nHollinger  -       15.75\nHomer Y K  17 V4\nHudson Bay     52.00\nInspiration\nInt Nickel ..\nJack Waite\nJellicoa..\n9.40\n.58\n' .26\n.20\n.10V4\n1.75\n8.00\n.26\n2.90\n.11\n1.96\n5&00\n.10\n. -10%\n8.35\n.64\n5.35\n.20\n4.00\n.17\n.57\n.13\ni.e\n.55\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE OR TRADE, 1950 FORD\n'4-door sedan. Ph. 461-X-3 after\n5 p.m.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead. etc. Honest grading Prompi\npayment made Atlas Iron it Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancou\nver   B C  Phone PAcific 6357\nWANTED \u2014 CLEAN COTTON\nrags, must be clean and at least\n12 inches in diameter. Will-pay\n12c per lb. Nelson Daily News.\nSMALL GROCERY AND CON-\nfectionery business for sale Good\nlocation. Apply 1103. Hall Mines\nRoad\nWarn Against 'Flu\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Dr. Christopher\nAndrewes warns doctors to watch\nfor an influenza outbreak in Britain\nabout next January. \"Flu epidemics\ntend to occur in Britain every other\nwinter,\" he wrote in a medical\njournal.\nJoliet Quebec  51\nKerr Addison      17.00\nKir-Hudson Bay  47\nKirkland Lake  35%\nKirk Townsite       _.12\nLabrador   .\nLake Dufault\nLakeshore   ....\nLake Wasa ...\nLamaque   \t\nLapaska   13\nLeitch  ...   \t\nLingman  (new)\nLittle Long Lac\nLouvicourt   \t\nMacassa   \t\nMacDonald   \t\nMacLeod Cock      1.61\nMadsen R L        1.65\nMagnet  15\nMalartic G F       1.70\nMclntyre Pore      64.00\nMcKenzie R L _       .34\nMcMarmac    -        .13\nMcWatters    - 14\nMining Corp ...'. _    17.15\nMoneta          .43\nNegus     - 11%\nNew Alger  f.... *A\nNew Bidlamaque \t\nNew Calumet \t\nNew Goldvue \t\nNew Kelore\t\nNew Larder U \t\nNew Mylamaque \t\nNew Thurbois\n.12\n\u2022 7.10\nHighwood Sr\nHome\nImperial Oil\nInter Pete    21.00\nKroy  1.17\nMid Cont  46\nNat Pete   1.65\nOkalta     1.36\nPac Pete    12.00\nRoyalite       12.25\nUnited Oils   .95\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     25(4\nAlgoma Steel  45%\nAluminum    68\nArgus   19\nAtlas St  13%\nBathurst Power   5914\nBeattie Bros         6%\nBell Telephone    45%\nBrazilian        6%\nB C Elec 4s       92%\nB C Elec 4%s  102\nB C Forest         8%\nB C Power A   24%\nBuilding Products    4614\nBurrard A   8M_\nCan Cement   137\nCan Packers A  39\nCan Breweries   25V&\nCan Canners       28\nCan Car & Fdy      24%\nCan Car St Fdy A  25\nCan Celanese     23%\nCan Oil          .-.  18%\nCan Pac Rly   29\nCockshutt      -  7\nCons Papers   61%\nDist Seagram   33%\nDom Foundries         17^\nDom Steel & Coal B   15%\nDom Stores  .         - 31%\nDom Magnesium     12%\nEddy Paper   30%\nFamous Players ..._  27\nFanny Farmer  _  27\nFord A  98%\nGatineau             28%\nGen Steel Wares  10%\nGreat Lakes      30%\nGypsum Lime     47%\nHiram Walker   67\nImperial Oil  38%\nImp Tobacco   9%\nInt Metals    35\nInt Nickel   53\nInt Pete   21\nInt Util   35%\nLake of Woods  '..  43\nLaura Secord    - 17V4\nLoblaw B               70%\nMaple Leaf Milling   9%\nMassey Harris        8%\nMcColl  Frontenae    35\nMont Loco __.  17%\nMoore Corp    33%\nNat Steel Car  25%\nPage Hershey  _.._  62\nPowell River  39%\nPower Corp     48\nRuss Industries   14%\nSicks Brew  _  ?2%\nSimpsons A     18%\nSoutham      .-  87\nSteel of Can  39%\nStandard Paving   26\nUnited Steel        13%\nWeston George   62%\nWinnipeg Gas  13\nINDUSTRIAL CITY\nFinland's third largest city, the\nmanufacturing centre of Tampere,\nreceived its first civic charter ln\n1779.\nNew Records\nIn All Phases\nBank Activity\nNew records in all major areas of\nthe bank's business are reflected ln\nthe general statement published (o-\nday.'rfy the Canadian Bank of Commerce which contains the balance\nsheet and undivided profit statement for the fiscal year ended October 31, 195*4.\nTotal assets climbed to an all time\nhigh, at $2,058,716,970, being up\n$147,000,000 from last year's record\nfigure. Total deposits increased by\n$140,000,000 to also reach a new peak\nof $1,938,666,112. Notable among the\nincrease In deposits was a marked\ngain in personal savings' deposits\nand a substantial increase in other\ndeposits.\nTotal loans are shown at $880,696,-\n775, the highest point in the bank's\nhistory. This represents an increase\nof over $60,000,000 from a year ago,\na major part of which is reflected\nin commercial and other current\nloans. Call and short loans in Canada and elsewhere -were up $26,-\n000,000 to reach $77,779,738. Investment holdings of . Government of\nCanada securities increased by $105-\n000,000 to $608,132,429.\nThe statement again reveals a\nstrong liquid position, cash assets of\n$318,359,590, representing 16.10% of\nthe bank's public liabilities. Total\nquick assets increased by $116,000,-\n000 during the year and amounted\nto $1,190,057,659, equivalent to 60.19\nper cent of total liabilities to the\npublic.\nNet profits increased $615,108 to\n$6,404,350 after provision of $6,807,-\n000 for Government of Canada taxes\nand depreciation of $1,685,029. A\nfurther transfer of $3,000,000 from\nunllvided profits was made to rest\naccount,'which also was increased\nby the transfer of $10,000,000 from\nthe bank's tax paid reserves. After\ngiving effect to the above transfers\nthe bank's paid up capital and rest\naccounts now stand at $81,000,000\nand the balance of undivided profits at $647,648.\n3C4&\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 23\/1954\u2014.11\nWelcome Presents\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Scores of\nbig fat cigars are arriving at No.\n10 Downing Street here as advance\nbirthday gifts for Prime Minister\nChurchill, who will be 80 Nov. 30.\nSweden and Britain are the only\ncountries in Europe which still have\ntraffic keeping to the left.\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nB.C. NATURAL GAS\nSHARES IN DEMAND\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia natural gas shares were\nin heavy demand on the Vancouver\nstock exchange Monday following a\nSunday night Walter Winchell tip.\nPacific Pete soared to $12 on\nearly trading, up $1.12 fropn Friday's close and less spectacular\ngains were recorded by other stock.\nExchange officials said the buying\nwave, second to hit the stocks within a week, was touched off by Win-\nchell's Sunday night broadcast in\nwhich -he advised his listeners to\nbuy B. C. natural gas stocks.\nA similar buying wave hit the\nmarket last week following publication by the Vancouver province\nof an article predicting an early\nagreement between the Westcoast\nTransmission Company and American companies for distribution of\nPeace river natural gas to the\nlower B. C, mainland and the United\nStates.\nPeijce River Natural Gas, which\nSmallest Stale\nHas 5-Year Plan\nMONTE CARLO (Reuters)\u2014Europe's smallest state, Monaco, has a\nfive-year plan to make the country\na bit bigger\u2014and has hit upon the\nmost peaceful way of doing it ever\ntried' in Europe.\nThe principality, consisting of\nlittle more than the city of Monte\nCarlo, -intends to gain mo?e elbow\nroom by expanding its area by\nabout one-tenth\u2014but at the expense\nof the sea, not of a neighbor.\nOn a Mediterranean promonotory\nof reclaimed land, government officials plan tp build, as might be\nexpected, a big hotel and a new\ncasino.\nThe expansion program is part of\nan ambitious plan for rejuvenating\nand modernizing this Riviera resort\ncentre, now fallen on hard times.\nGovernment officials also plan a\nnew and broader seaside promenade, a stretch of sandy beach installed .along Monaco's waterfront\nand a glittering new shopping\ncentre.\nBuy, Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nLATEST REPORT\nAsk your Invaitment Dcafe?\nfor tha lotos. Roport\nond Prospects ol\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nEmployers Asked\nEliminate Overtime\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A plea^io\nBritish Columbia employers tojud\nthe unemployment problem by tii\\*\nting out overtime and hiring additional employees instead \u25a0 has been\nissued by the provincial department of labor. <\u2014i\nThe department has written 20$00\nbusinessmen in the province*, ask-\nirg their co-operatipn.\nThe letter says iioVertime permits\nwere issued after the Second World\nWar as a result of a labor shortage,\nbut there now is rnore than enough ,\nworkers tq meet the demand.\nThe department also has planned\na meeting with business leaders to\ndiscuss other means of alleviating\nthe unemployment problem which\nhas been described as \"serious.\"- ,\nholds substantial acreage in the\nPeace River area was up 15 centg4o\n$7.20 and Canadian Atlantic, \"another company with Peace Rwfer\nholdings, climbed 20 cents to $5.0f.\nOld? Get Pep, Vim\nFeel Full of Vigor; Years Younger\nMEN WOMEN of 40,50,60. Don't bo\n\u00a3N,VVU_VltN old.wea^wom-ouUn\nin, exhausted. Try Oi trex Tonic Tablcti,\nOften needed after 40\u2014by body old, rundown because lacking iron; Increase, vim,\nvigor, vitality. Thousands feel full of pep,\nyears younger. Quit being old. Get Ostrc*\ntoday Introductory or \"get-acquainted\" tin\nonly 601. At all druggists. ^ A\n-il\nGo Great to\nVANCOUVER^\ni from Nelson ^\nI Comfort's great when you\nI     go Great Northern. Relax on\ni     either of two great stream-\n|     liners, the Empire Builder\nor the Western Star from\nSpokane to Seattle. Connect\ndirectly at Seattle or Everett\nwith the Internationals fo\u00bb_J.\nVancouver, B. C,\n|     | Railroad tickets honored\non connecting bus. Bums   :\"'\nleave Nelson daily at 7)00\nA.M. and 11:40 A.M.   -\nfor Spokane.\nEMPIRE BUH.DGR\nloavos Spokane at 11.39 P_M. dallj*, '\n'    WESTERN STAR\nloaves Spokane, ot 9:00 P.M. dally,\nTh* Morning International\nleave. Soalllo ot 7.4S Km. (tally,\nIoovm Evcrott ot 8.40 A.M. dally,\nar r IveiVoncouvor, B.C. ot 11.40 A.M.\nPHONE sr\nWANTED\u2014CHILD'S PEDAL CAR,\ngood condition. Box 6799 Nelson\nNews. '.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST   DARK-RIMMED   BIFOCAL\nglasses. Reward. Ph. 811-L.\nPt IS. CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nBEAUTIFUL PEKINESE PUPPIES\nfrom champion bloodlines. Show\nand pet stock. Mrs. S. Abrey, 515\n19th St.. N., Lethbridge, Alta.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS   \u00abND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   WIDDOWSON & tO\nA-rsayVrs, 301 Josephine St  Nelson.\nI'    S   ELMES.   ROSSLAND   BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nBOYD  C   AFFLECK.  M.E.I.C.\nBC  Land Surveyor P  Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson     Phone 1238\nA L. PURDY. B.C.L.S\nSul.    No  8. 373 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1118    B   C   Land Surveyor\nV    SHAYLER   PC    BOX   252\nKimberley. Phone S4 ' \u2022\nB C Land Surveyor. Engineer\nGRAVEL\nFLETCHER'S SAND AND CRUSH-\ned Gravel Wholesale and deliv\nered   Phone 1677 R\nMACHINISTS\n\"BENNETTS LIMITED\"\nMachine Shop    Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motot rewinding. Phone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nAUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP) \u2014 When\na pedestrian gets a ticket from a\ntraffic policeman here it could be\ngood news. Free tickets to' the\nmovies are handed out to pedestrians who set a good,example of following safety rules.\nROYAL  VISITOR\nt- King Faisal of Irati wis\namong distinguished visitors\nviewing dembnstratlpn of British mllilrry vchlclt.- at Chert-\nscy, England, research center.\n.10\n.33\n.60\n.11\n.12\n1.00\n.44\n.18\n.25\n.56 V4\n.70\nNipissjng        2.31\nNoranda  _   81.00\nNormetals    \u201e       8.15\nNorth Can  42\nNorth Inca .._.. _ 10V4\nO'Brien    65\nOgama   ...I 10\nO'Leary *\"\nOsisko\nPamour   \t\nPaymaster    .'. 42\nPickle Crop         1.15\nPioneer       1.81\nPlacer Develop     30.75\nPowell Rouyn        .64\nPreston E D      4.25\nQuebec Lab 10\nQuebec Man  1 70\nQueenston  20\nQuemont   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   20.75\nRadiore    95\nRayrock   _ 86\nReeves Mac      1.55\nRoche L L 2314\nSan Antonio  .       1.45\nSherritt Gordon       4.75\nSigma M           5.25\nSilvermiller      1.05\nSilanco   12._\nSiscoe 35\nStadacona    _       .25\nSteep Rock      1.30\nSudbury Cont  59\nSurf Inlet \"\"\nTeck Hughes\n1-.14\n3.45\n\u2022Thompson-Lund   J5\n33\n1.6\nTombill\nTorbrit\nTrans Cont Res  33 .\nUnion Mining  18\nUnited Keno     6.50\nUpper Canada      1.22\nVentures     16;50\nViolamac        2.20\nWaite Amulet        12.50\nOILS\nAnglo Can \t\nB A Oil     \t\nCal & Ed\nCdn Atlantic\nCentral Leduc\n4.75\n28.60\n14.25\n4.85\n1.33\nChemical   Research     8.90\nDalhousie         20\nDecalta    65\nDel Rib       1-12\n_^Se_5i__V\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE\nHEAD OFFICE . TORONTO\nSTATEMENT A3 AT OCTOBER 31, 1934\nASSETS\nCash Resources (Including items In transit) )  118,359,390\nGovernment of Canada r 1\nSecurities I  Nol ,m.^a   I 608,132,429\nProvincial, Municipal    1 \u2022 markot valm   f\nand Other Securities. I                     J 185,785,902\nCall and Short Loans (Securei)   77,779,738\nTotal Quick Assets $1,190,057,659\nLoans and Discounts  797,101,541\nMortgages and Hypothecs Insured under the\nN.H.A., 1954  '     5,815,496\nCustomers' Liability' under Acceptances,\nGuarantees and Letters of Credit, as per\ncontra  i       29,813,441\nBank Premises        19,396,069\nOther Assets         16,532,764\nTotal Assets  _. $2,058,7i 6,970\nLIABILITIES\nDeporth $1,998^M,1 H\nAcceptances,  Guarantees and  Lottors of\nCredit        29,813,441\nOther Liabilities   8,589,769\nTotal Liabilities te the Public $1,977,069,322\nCapital Paid Up \u201e \u201e        30,000,000\nRest Account   .\u00bb_.._*      51,000,000\nUndivided Profits \u201e  647,648\nTotal Liabilities _,..... $2,058,716,970\nSTATEMENT OF UNDIVIDED PROFITS\nYear Ended October 31, 1954\nBalance of profit for the year before the undernoted deductions but after appropriation to contingency reserves\nout of which full provision has been made 'for bad and doubtful debts  $14,896,379\nlessi Provision for depreciation on bank premises $1,685,029\n\u25a0   Provision for Government of Canada taxes \u00b0    6,807,000 8,492,029\nBalance, available for distribution  $. 6,404,350\nDividends    - '.  3,600,000\nBalance carfW forward :  $ 2,804,350\nBalance of undivided profits Optober 31, 1953 .,.  843,298\n$ 3,647,648\n.....' ;  3,000,000\nTransferred to Rest Account\nBalance of undivided profits October 31, 1954 :     $    647,648\nJAMES STEWART\nPRESIDENT\nN. J. McKINNON\nGENERAL MANAGER\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0         * \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0    \u25a0'\u25a0    \u25a0'  -\u2022\u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0'\u2022-\u00bb\n \u25a0 .'  \u25a0   \u25a0 .\t\n\t\n\/   \u25a0\n \u2022^|^PP^||PPPP5^PPf^WWW\u00ab\u00bb\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV.' 23, 1954\nThe Best in Town\nThat Is:a Very Boastful Statement, But\nWe Fee. Sure You Will Agree That Our\nBox\nChristmas Cards\nAre Better Than Most You Will See.\nProduction of coal In Pakistan has\nsteadily increased since  1949 to a\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n4 CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n678 Baker 8t Phone 235\ncurrent rate ot about 600,000 tons\nyearly.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL. TRAINING'\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nppjjf\"\n'\u2022\"\"^\"\"WP\nfppppp*1 \"HP\n'$ffl(j'\nWILLIAM 8. SPELLMAN, seated, father of, Francis Cardinal\nSpellman, receives a check'representing full payment on hit life\nInsurance policy from Edward Livingston, left, and Charles H.\nKerrigan, life Insurance representatives in Abington, Mass, Insurance officials said the 96-year-old man has outlived the policy\nwhich happens only one time In 100,000. The' amount of the check\nis several thousand dollars.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nNfld. Adds Farming lo Fishing as\nMeans to Increase Home Production\nNews of tfrl Day\nRATES:' 30o line, 40c Una black face type; .larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nTop prices paid for used'furniture.\nHOME  FURNITURE  EXCHANGE.\nParty Dresses, sl_\u00bb 3, SX, 6, 8Jt\nTOT 'N' TEEN\n: Trinity Clothing Aid open every\nWednesday, 2 to 4 and 7:30 to 9 p.m.\n\u2022 Best materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE, REPAIRS.\n'' Gifts of Jewellery for everyone.\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY, 611 Baker\n~r '\u2014\nBINOO, LEGION HALL TONIGHT\nNails all sizes, per keg $11.95.\nCOLUMBIA TRADING \"\nRawleigh's G004 Health Products,\nCreekside Auto Court, Nelson.\nFuller Brush Representative.\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phone 1336\nPeople's Credit Jewellers. Phone\n1367, Mrs. K. Mason, Agent, Nelson\ndistrict ,\nA colorful new belt by Hickok\nwill give your clothes a lift. $1.50\nto $3.00 at WADE'S.\nFLOWERS FOR EVERY\n?        OCCA8ION\n.    PHONE 187\nGRIZZELLES' FLORISTS\nWood  and  steel  wagons  in  all\nsizes, $2.80 and up. Kiddip liars and\ntricycles  for  all  ages.  C.C.M.   bicycles in all sizes and styles.\nHIPPERSONS\nYOU\nLADIES   . . .   HAVE\n. WINTERIZED?\nFall  and  Winter  Corsages  in   a\nwonderful assortment. Only 75c ea.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nCheck our window display for the\nlatest in Christmas c__rds, the utmost  in English  bone china,  and\nnew patterns in  Italian  figurines.\nKOOTENAY  STATIONERS\nAND. SPORTS 8H0P\nC.A.R.S. will be at home at the\nclinic in the old isolation hospital\non Wed., Nov. 24, 2 tq 5 p.m. Tea\nat the Nurses' Home, also display of\npatients' handicraft. Everyone welcome.\nBy STEWART MacLEOD\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) \u2014 Newfoundland, better known for its\nfishing than its farming, is trying\nto increase agriculture production\nthat at present provides only 45 per\ncent of the vegetables consumed in\nthe province.\nThe    government    is    spending\nBig aownto\nBrass Ttacks...\n8k)\nI wish I had a dollar for every time someone asked what we\nbankers do with the money we hold on deposit. Actually, it's quite a\nsimple question to answer\u2014there's no mystery attached to it.\nThe money that the B of M has on deposit is kept at work, because\n\u2014 except for the reserves \u2014 no dollar is allowed to He idle.\nIt is either loaned to individuals and enterprises or is invested\nin Canada's .future.\nWithout adequate financial resources, expansion and progress of\nmost Canadian businesses would be impossible. And, it is\nthe Bank's job to supply a good part of these resources in the\nform of loans and-investments. Quite simply then, it is\nyour money that turns the wheels of enterprise \u2014 your savings\nthat contribute so largely to Canada's progress.\n\u25a0Getting down to brass tacks, let's see the fdcts behind the 6gures\nin the BofM's 1954 annual report:\nTHE MONEY YOU DEPOSIT:\nAt the end of the Bank's year,\nOctober 31st, 1954, you and\ntXvo million other Canadians\nhad 52,365,669,857 in deposits with the B of M \u2014 the highest on\nrecord. Although much of this money be*\nlongs to institutions and business firms,\nwell .over half of these deposits represent\nthe savings of everyday Canadians \u2014\nsavings that, day by day, are working for\nyou .,. and for Canada.\nTHE MONEY WE LEND: Your savings are\nplaying an important role in our expanding\neconomy in the form of loans\nto Canadians of every calling\n\u2014 farmers; miners, fishermen,\nh oil men, lumbermen, ranchers\njSS^\u2014to industrial and business\nj\u00a3r       enterprises and to Provincial\n' and Municipal Governments.\nAs of October 31st, B of M\nloans totalled $903,148,964--\nthe highest figure in the history of the Bank, In a thousand ways, these dollars\nplayed their part in sustaining our standard of living.\nTHE MONEY WE INVEST: At the close of\nthe year the B of M had $952,522,945 in>\nvested in high-grade government bonds\nand other public securities which'\nhave a ready market This money\nIs helping to finance government\nprojects for the betterment of\nthe country and the welfare of\nCanadians at large. Other secur->\nities held by the Bank \u2014 which include\nmany short-term credits to industry \u2014\nbring total investments to $1,170,406,863.\nWhen you open an account at the\nBof M, you are not only putting your\nsavings in a safe place but you are also\ninvesting in Canada's future. Every\ndollar you deposit is put to work in\nsome Canadian endeavour that contributes to the steady progress of this\ngreat country of ours.\ntfc*m\\A. rt \/$><****\nARCHIE R. BURNIE, MANAGER\nNEISON'BRANCH, BANK OF MONTREAI\nn i mtiitoauDim\n\u25a0:::. :SMS\n$541,200 this year fo help the province's 3700 farmers step up\" their\noutput. A royal commission, headed\nby Dean Shaw, ap agricultural expert from Ontario, has studied the\nfarm problem and its report and\nrecommendations are expected soon.\nAgriculture has not. kept pace\nfoith industrial development in\nNewfoundland since the war. Lack\nof good transportation to markets,\nstiff competition from the mainland and the island's rocky soil are\namong the deterrents.\nMORE FOR DEVELOPMENT\nA development program that began under the commission government before Confederation in 1940\nis being pursued, however, and the\nmore than $500,000 spent this year\nis $194,000 greater than last year\nand $270,000 more than in 1952.\nBut blueberries still are the province's only, agricultural export.\nMuch hope is placed in the report of the royal commission. Provincial Resources Minister Howe\nsays \"I feel certain there afe certain types of agriculture which cari\nbe pursued enabling us to compete\nsuccessfully with outside competition.\"\nMany predict there will be recommendations for increased mink\nfarming. Pot-head whales sell for\ntwd cents a pound as fodder, making Newfoundland perhaps 'the\ncheapest place in Canada to raise\nmink, of which there are 5000- in\nthe province.\nBOARD ESTABLISHED\nThe farmers, apparently anxious\nto develop their land, have borrowed more than $30,000 since last November when a provincial loan\nboard was established to assist 1\nthem in this development I\nA federal \u2022 experimental farm at\nMount Pearl, five miles from here,\nco-operates with 18 field-men .of\nthe provincial agriculture: department. One of the farm's most ijn-\nportant duties is blueberry testing.\"\nThe 14,000 cattle, mostly Hol-\nstein, produce 35,000,000 pounds of\nmilk a. year but only half of this\nreaches the market and during the\nlast six years imports of evaporated milk rose to 600,000 cases from\n400,000 cases a year. Farms produce 200,000 pounds of butter annually; local margarine production\nis 10,000,000 pounds.\nThe province's 75,000 sheep rep-'\nresent a 10 per cent increase in\nfour years and poultry have increased 25 per cent to 400,000 in\nthe same period. The 13,000 horses\nmost of them used in lumbering,\nrepresent little change in the last\n20 years; swine and goat populations have declined 10 per cent\na year since the Second World War\nto 3000 and 6000 respectively.\nVegetable production, all for\nhome consumption, is valued at\n$875,000 and comes from 3000 acres\nof potatoes, 825 acres of turnips,\n610 acres of cabbages, 148 acres of\ncarrots and 74 acres of beets.\nLadies' Nylon Pullovers, sizes 32\nto 40. Attractive patterns, round\nneck, $3.99 \u2014 EBERLE'S.\nCheck our displays of quality carpenter tools for Xmas Gi,fts.\nWOOD  VALLANCE   HARDWARE\nLADIES OF FIRST BAPTI8T\nCHURCH BAKE 8ALE AT Mc &\nMc's, 8AT.,  NOV. 27, 10 A.M.\nReduced prices on all nylon hosiery\nat ADRIAN MILLINERY\n259 Baker St.\nJunior-Senior P.T.A., Wed., 8 p.m.\nJunior High School. Program, audience participation, skits.\nChild Health Conference tq. be\nheld today at the Selkirk Health\nUnit offices at 303 Baker Street.\nFOR EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone B. J. Kelly, 378-R-3\nYOUR MIMEOGRAPH SERVICE\nHAVE  YOUR   RADIO   TUBE8\nTE8TED   IN   YOUR   OWN   HOME,\n\u2022      PHONE 1324-R\nHave you seen our ball fringe?\nAssorted colors, 25c yd.\nSTERLING  HOME   FURNISHERS\nCorduroy for the smart jumper.\nAll the leading shades' in 38\" width\nyd. $1.79. TAYLOR'8 DRY GOOD8\nMotors, radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh  pressure Jenny  Service\nSHORTY'S REPAIR 8HOP\n714 BAKER 8T.\nGLASS SHELVES and BRACKETS\nPlat* and  Crystal glass shelves\nfor homes, stores or cafes. Chrome\nand cadmium plated brackets and\nother fittings at\n\"T. H. WATER8 & CO. LTD.\nPhone 166 101 Hall Street\nGift Suggestion for Mother!\nCarving set of fine quality Shef;\nfield steel. Set of hollow ground\nstainless steel kitchen cutlery. Chest\nof Wm. Rogers silverware in hardwood storage case.\nHIPPERSON'S\nProgressive Mothers' League (a\nnon-political, non - denominational\ngroup) of Vancouver, B. C, cordially invites all unsupported\nmothers and others of progressive\nmind towards improved legislation,\nto attend a Branch organizational\nmeeting Thursday evening, Nov. 25,\n1954, at 8 o'clock, at Civic Centre.\nCARD OF THANKS\nI wtfsh to express my sincere\nthanks to all who were so kind to\ndrop in and give their good wishes\nto my future success.\nBETTY MONDINI\nAdrian Millinery.\nGolden Luck for\nHomeless Greek\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Aristotle\nSophocle^ Onassis, Greek shipowner\nand one of the world's richest men,\nbegan his golden career at 16 when\nhe emigrated to Argentina with $75\nin his pocket.\nHe ffed his native Smyrna in\n1922, a* refugee from Kemal Ata-\nturk's reign of terror. In Smyrna\nhis father was a tobacco impotrer.\nWhen young Onassis arrived in\nBuenos Aires, he took a job as a\nnight telephone operator. When his\njob was over at 7 a.m., he went home\nto sleep until 10 a.m. and then went\nout to \"do business.\"   '\nCLOAK OF MYSTERY\nBy the time he was 25 he had\nmade $1,000,000 with which he\nbought Canadian ships.\nOnassis always has moved about\nunder a cloak of mystery. He feels\nthat his business ventures are his\nown business and newspaper reporters usually receive a polite\nbrushoff when making detailed inquiries.\nOnassis, 4&, has fully staffed\nhouses in Paris, New York, Long\nIsland, Montevideo and Antibes,\nHostess at these far-flung- homes\nis 24-year-old Tina Onassis, the\nshipping king's wealthy wife.\nBy his marriage, Onassis formed\nlinks with two other Greek shipping families. His wife's father is\nStavros Livanos, operator of one of\nthe world's biggest shipping busin\nesses.\nShe is also the sisLer-in-law of\nStavros Niarchos, whose fleet of oil\ntankers is second only to Onassis'\nThis puts the two rivals in the odd\nposition of sharing the same powerful father-in-law.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe would like to express our sincere thanks to the Sisters and staff\nof Mount St. Francis Infirmary for\ntheir untiring care of our mother,\nand also to the many friends who\nsent expressions of sympathy, flowers and spiritual offerings, 'during\nour recent bereavement. \u2014 The\nfamily of Mrs. M. G. McGillivray.\nCARD OF THANKS\nTo the nurses and staff of K.L.G.H.\nsincere thanks for the service and\nkindness during my recent stay with\nyou, and to Dr. N. E. Morrison, your\nskill and attention is unsurpassed.\nW. H. Saunders, Balfour.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nKITTO \u2014 Fftneral services for the\nlate Henry Richard Kitto will be\nheld at the Thompson Funeral Home\nSaturday at 2 o'clock. Rev. F. T.\nBalmer will officiate, and Interment\nwill take place in Nelson Memorial\nPark.'\nThe Highways\nNo. 2 Southern Trans-Provincial\u2014\nHope Princeton, Princeton-Osoyoos-\nCascade gopd, Cascade-Rossland\ntravelled road bare, fair to good,\nRossland - Trail - Nelson - Creston -\nCranbrook - Fernie - Crow's Nest,\nnormal.\nNo. 3A Trail-Salmo. normal; Ross-\nland-Patterson and Creston-Port-\nhill, normal,\nNo. 6 Nelway-Vernon \u2014 Nelway-\nNelson normal, South Slocan-Na-\nkusp-Needles, fair to good; Needles-\nMonashee fair, rough sections. Mon-\nashee-Vernon fair.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Qol-\nden-Banff-Windermere, normal.\nNelson-Kaslo, Kaslo-New Denver,\nLardeau-Girrard, fair to good, rough\nsections.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 415\nDAY'S\nAll Wool\nWhipcord\nTrousers\nCanada's Largest\nSelling Whipcord\n\u2022 Longest Wearing\nFabric\n\u2022 Inserted Tunnel Loops ]\n\u2022 Reinforced Pockets\n\u2022 Never-Rip Seams\n\u2022 More Resistant to Acid j\nAnd Wrinkles\n$14.95\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORf\nBuy, Sell. Trade the Classified Wj\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n-Distinctive Funeral Stai-vice\" '\nAMBULANCE   SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St        Phone 381]\nRADIATORS]\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shopj\n616 FRONT  8T. PHONE\nHAIGHI\nTRU-ART\n* Beauty Salon, j\nPhono 827\n676 Baker Streetl\nMake Your Own Home-Made Bre_|\nW(th ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on Every Packaf\nPhone 238 or Call\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.'\nCHOCOLATES\nJUST ARRIVED\nSMILES n' CHUCKLES\nAlmond Roca $2; Elite Assorted!\n2 Ib. $3.25; Orchid, 24 oz. $2.75*1\nFruit and Cream, 1 Ib. $1,359\nTurtles, 4 oz. 60c; Turtles, '\/2 Vat\n$1.00; Turtles, 1 Ib. $2.00.\nCity Drag]\nCompany\nYour Rexall  Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Box 46Cf\nSPIRITUALLY CORRECT\nVIEW BRINGS PEACE\n\u25a0 How the spiritually correct view\nof God and man destroys anxiety\nand restores peace of. mind \u25a0 was\nbrought out at Christian Science\nservices Sunday in the Lesson Sermon entitled \"Soul and Body.\"\nSoriptural selections including the\nfollowing from Psalms (42:11):\n\"Why art thou cast down; O my\nsoul? and why art thou disjjuieted\nwithin me hope thou in God: for I\nshall yet praise him, who is the\nhealth bf my countenance, and my\nOod.\"\nAmong the passages read' from\n\"Science.and Health With Key to\nthe Scriptures\" by Marjf Baker\n.Eddy-was the following:   '\n\"We cannot deny that Life'is self-\nsustained, and we should never\ndeny the everlasting harmony of\nSoul, sip-ply because, to the mortal\nsenses, there is seeming discord.\nIt is our ignorance ot God, ths\ndivine Principle, which produces\napparent discord, and the light un-\nIderstanding of Him restores harmony.\"\nHie\nTlew OLDSMOBILE\nROCKETS Into 1955\nNOW ON DISPLAY\n-Sup***\"-,\n\u2014ffiSft\nar-.\n*u*ft\u00a33rf\ndto\u00abe\u00bboineffe.edlSi\n^rpo^fi<-\u00bbfeonw^^dow9\n8ro^acce\nOldsmobile Offers 10 Exciting, Ail-Around  New Models  in Three  New\nSeries for 'SS \"Ninety-Eight,\" \"Super 88\", and \"88\"\nNELSON TRANSFER Co. Ltd.\n323 Vernon Street\nPhone 35\n , , : __\t\n__ ; __ \u25a0. \u25a0,.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.  \u25a0\t\n : I : \u25a0     :;    *-W.,.;lj.:\n .\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_11_23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427706","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"}]}}