{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427744":{"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":"2023-02-22","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1953-02-17","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427744\/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":" mm********.\n,\"     x-   \u25a0.\u25a0 \u2014\t\nU.S. Promises No\nswain, in f mpt, i! iiiii-iimnn^mMii|iiiiAiwiuj.i,iiif>\nCTC-HIA. a. c,\n%\u00b0 '\u25a0\n****************\nni\nWEATHER FORECAST\n, KOanSNAY.-Varltble cloudiness\nwith i few snowflurrles. Little\nchange in temperature, Light winds.\nLow-high it Cranbrook IS and SB,\nCrescent Volley 20 ind 35, Revelstoke 28. and 88.    , ' i  \\   .... -     \/\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Canadian government Regrets\"\nthat tho United States has found it necessary to deneutralize\nFormosa, but does not '.'condemn\" it for that, External\nAffairs Minister Pearson said Monday night in the Commons.\n;>j la \u2022 foreign-policy speech reply--'     '. !\t\n'ing to demands for 'clarification of \"\"tag calculated to bring on in-\nthe Canadian attitude on the U. S.^vement ta * wWer r\" Eartern\nTormost move, Mr. Petrson said '_.. Dun,,, he -^ hld made lt\nthe government - has expressed clear that some of the fears that\n\"concern\" to tbe TI. S. authorities, have been read into the Formosan\nHe defined \"concern\" as'\u00ab diplo-action are not Justified. The aim\nmatic word not meaning \"vigor-of the U. S. waa to do what could\nou\u00bb protest.\" But he added that, be done to keep the enemy off\nin a weekend visit with State Sec-balance.\nretary Dulles of the U. S\u201e he had Reviewing the world outlook a*s\nexpressed \"anxiety\" lest anythingthe final speaker in a debate that\nbe done that would extend the war began last Wednesday, Mr Fear-\nin .the Far East, son said \"there is no cause for\nI He said Canada had made it either optimism or despair at pros-\nknown that there should be a dls-ent.\"'\nUnction drawn between action \"I would suggest avoiding an ex-\ntaken by the United Nations and cess of optimism or an excess of\naction taken by the U. S. pessimism. We should not get too\nHowever,.he had received \"rea-optimistic when things s$em to get\nsonable assurance\" in Washington good or too panicky when they do\nthat the U. S. has no desire to do not seem to go well.\"\nanything that would  be rash or   Mr. Pearson  will  conclude  the\nprovocative and would not do.any-lengthy debate today.\nit's a pretty loosely knit coalition, it won't last, and there's\nreally nothing much between them, but these three have\nbecome soulmates in their determination to keep Social\nCrediters in their place.\nReport from Victoria\n\"BY JAMES K. NESBITT\nVICTORIA\u2014Premier Bennett frequently looks across\nthe aisle to CCF'ers and Liberals, and mutters \"It's a coalition\nagain\u2014another coalition.\"\nAs the CCF forced coalition ot Liberals and Conservatives in 1941, so Social Credit has forced a legislative, sort-\n\u2022^eW\nNELSON, B. C.\u201e CANADA-TUESDAY MOHNINa; FEBRUARY 17, 1953\nNo: 343\nGrain Elevators\nStrike-Bound\nMCoasf\nVANCOUVER (CP) - \u2022 Wheat\nshipments through the ports,of Vancouver and New Westminster were\nparalyzed Monday when 250 grain\nelevator workers threw up picket\nlines. ,. ,\nFive big elevators were closed.\nMembers of the Grain Workers'\nUnion (CIO-CCL).voted 199 to 47\nfor strike action to back up wage\ndemands.\nA dozen ships were tied ,up by\nthe strike. They were destined to\nload grain for 14 different countries. \"*\nAnother 12 ships were loaded by\nround-the-clock crews Saturday\nand Sunday and sailed before the\nstrike deadline, They, carried more\nthan 2,000,000 bushels of wheat.\nStrike action came after the five\ncompanies rejected . a conciliation\nboard majority report recommending a five-cent hourly pay Increase\nand a 10-cent hourly dust premium.\nThe workers also seek eight in-\n^^^\"^^Xi^-trTjryurt,' tea*   \u00b0f   six   statutory   holidays.\nOf coalition of CCF, Liberals and Conservatives. Of course,' double time for ail overtime and\nThe Premier Is sure he ean see\nmany signs of this new CCF-Lib-\neral coalition. For instance, Liberal\nMrs. Nancy Hodges said that Mr.\nBennett used to be the talkingest\nshe'd ever known ln the legislature tnd CCF Mr. Leo Nimsick of\nCranbrook tgreed with Mrs. Hodges\nsnd said the Premier sure used to\ntalk a lot when he was in oppo-\nlition.\nCCF Mr. Randolph Harding of.\nKaslo-Slocan got up and said that\nLiberal Mr. Gibbs made a fine\nspeech, so fine Indeed, that he had\nlaid nearly everything that he hlm-\nlelf intended to say.\n\"Hie Premier beamed\u2014\"Ah-ha,\u2014\nie coalition again,\" he smiled.\" \u2022'\"\ntikis new little coalition is going       .\nrhre. the. Premier some Snajun.-. r:bt*ri:.sitting i*^-****.^' \u2022\u25a0\u2022\nOTbtf*i\u00bbfcrh*dsflft^ of Oik Bay\nng to say that Liberals and CCFers\nire exactly the same, that he saw\niroof of it in the Legislature. In\nhis way hell hope to: swing a lot\nif normal Liberal votes pto Social\nJredit. He will attempt to build up\ngreat fear of Socialism, ond say\njberals are Socialists, only going I\nittle slower than CCFers:\nThe only answer to this new\nhreat of Liberals and CCFers gang-\nng up is a strong Social 'govern-\nnent. That's what Mr. Bennett will\nell file people. He hasn't much\near of the Conservatives. He's Wise\ninough to know they're pretty well\ninished.\n\u2022   \u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\n-The Legislature this session is\nfull of frustrated opposition politic,\nlana. There never was such frustration.\nIt's all because of that vow of\nsilence Social Crediters have taken.\nThis infuriates, enrages ahd frustrates CCFers, Liberals and Conservatives.\nOne after another they get up to\ntell the Social Crediters tor goodness sake to stand on their two feet\nand open their mouths.\nI In addition to frustration, the\nclient Social Crediters are creating a curiosity almost too great\nto contain. What on earth ire\nthoy like? Can they speak at alt?\n. Have they any Ideas? Nobody\nknows yet\u2014and the House his\nInsertion of job classifications in\nthe master agreement. .\nThe companies want to hold the\nwage scale to the present $1.50-an-'\nhour rate.\nBeer Walters Talk\nOfStrikeVote\nfrustrated too, because of Mrs.\nRolrton's habit of being late. Mr.\nGibbs wondered tf Mrs., Rolston\u2014he called her the Hon. Tilly\u2014wears the trousers In the 80-\nclal Credit household: It looked\nthlt way to Mr. Gibbs. He hid his\nsuspicions. There's, only one pair\nof pints In the Sooltl \" Credit\nhousehold, he said, but he dldnt\nsay who own* them er wears\nthem.   '        ..\nNow all this fell rather flit,\nind poor Mr. Gibbs knew It, because Mrs. Rolston wasn't there.\nJust as he finished this, In, she\nwalked, tnd Mr. Gibbs seemed on\nthe point of ropeatlng \u2014 but he\ndldnt '\u25a0'\u2022;\u25a0\nEDMONTON (CP)- Nearly 200\nbeer parlor employees are scheduled to meet today to discuss feasibility of a strike vote in their wage\ndispute with 22 Edmonton hotels.\nThe hotel owners have rejected\nand the employees have accepted\na government-supervised i arbitration board award.\nI_ F... Slinger, president ot the\nEdmonton Licenced Hotel Owners'\nAssociation, Kaid-ih.e.emplpyei\"\"'have\n'rejected wage boosts which would\n* make them the highest paid in Western Canada.\nTo comply with provincial regulations, the employees would have\nto take a government-supervised\nstrike vote before any walkout is\nlegal. . \t\nMr. Slinger ssld the workers re.\njected an-offer.which.would give\ntapmen $60.50 a week, waiters and\nglass washers $94.50 and spare men\n$1.25 an hour.\n\u00abW AIR SERVICE\n)VER SOUTH POLE\n'SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\u2014\nArgentina hopes to launch an air\nlervice across the. South Pole to\nAustralia in the near future, Edu-\nirdo Echauge, retiring Argentine\nxmsul-general in Australia, said\nlere Monday before leaving for\ntoine..\nANADIAN DOLLAR\" DOWN\nNEW YORK (C?)\u2014The Canadian\nlollar was 1-32 cent lower at a\niremlum of 2 11-32 per cent ih\nerms of U.S. funds Monday. Pound\ntterling unchanged at 52.81%.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\nlollar Monday dosed at a discount\n2 9-32 per cent in terms of Cana-\nli_n funds, up 1-16. Pound sterling\nVtt 7-16.\nEUCTIOK ACT NOT\nTO BE CHANGED\nVICTORIA <CP) \u2014 The provincial government has abandoned Its plans to' Introduce legislation streamlining the' Elections\nAct at the current session of the\nLegislature, It was learned Monday.\nAn official source said the government hat deolded against\nchanging the act In any way,\nThe government previously hid\nhopes of Introducing several\namendments to the act, chief of\nwhich would hive been steps to\nshorten the 63-day period It takes\nto call a general election.\nSEGUIN LINKED WITH\nCOUPLE DISAPPEARANCE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nhave linked Henry Seguin, Ontario\nmurder suspect, with Mr. and Mrs.\nFrederick'J. Labrie, who vanished\nmysteriously from a Kamloops auto\ncourt three months ago.\nHe was identified as the man\nwho livedvin the auto court with\nthe couple prior to their disappearance Nov. IT.\nbiaistiL cXswak.\nNelson: Monday,*4.45, Saturday 4.42.\nAnother Step to New School*\n- NELSON'S SCHOOL BUILDING, program began to\ntake shape with signing of $496,000 in debenture bonds\nby*;; Mayor Joseph Kary, right, and City Clerk Reeve\nHairper, at City Hall. The money is being borrowed to\nfinance the city's share in a $2,000,000 district school\nimprovement program, including at Nelson a new high\nschooV'Junior High renovation, Hume \"School addition\nand conversion of the present High School into an ele-\nmentary school.\u2014Daily News photo.\nCily to \u00bbudy $199,195 School Budget\nTax requisition amounting to\n$109,195.-. tor the city of Nelson\nand' $239,404.17 for the rural area\nwas presented to City Council in\nthe 1953 School District No. 7budget\nestimates. Council briefly studied\nthe,budget at a meeting Monday.\nIt was referred to the Finance Committee for a report and-reebmmend-\nations.\nThe budget represents an approximate $41,000 inorease over\nthe 1951 estimates.   ,.-\nSum of $17,075 Is to cover pay\nment of guards on the schools at\nBlewett ind  Ymir, i  letter to\nCouncil stated.\nthe school board also plans to\npurchase a new bus. \"It has been\nfound necessary,\"the board stated,\n\"to Include the amount of $9000 for\nthe purchase of a school bus,\" because of the rapidly expanding pop\nulatlon on the North Shore.\nOf the requisitioned amount, 45.4\npet- cent is sought from the city\nand 54.50 per cent from the rural\nNehru Would Consolidate\nWorld Bank Confers\nWith U.K. on\nDevelopment Plan\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Eugene\nBlack, Jr. president of the World\nBank, Monday conferred with Richard Butler, chancellor of the exchequer, on Britain's plans for industrial and agricultural development of Commonwealth countries\nand colonies.\nBritain has told Commonwealth\ncountries she will allow the bank to\nuse an extra \u00a361,500,000 from her\nquota if the bank in return grants\nsubstantial loans fbr economic development in parts of the sterling\ncurrency area, of which Britain is\nbanker.\nDEVELOPMENT OFFER\nBritain's loans would he made\npartly in dollars. Her release of the\nquota funds, In sterling, will be\nspread over six years.\nThe development offer Is part of\nher contribution to Commonwealth\neconomic plans snd was made during the Commonwealth prime-ministers'  conference ' here last year.\nOne ot the first objectives of the\nplan, drafted by the prime ministers conference and still secret, is\nto expand production and develop\nthe natural resources ot the sterling area\nPERON VISITS CHILE\nBUENOS AIRES (Reuters)\u2014Ar-\ngentine President Juan Peron will\ntravel by special train when he\nleaves Friday for a six-day visit to\nneighboring Chile. It will be his\nfirst trip outside Argentina since\nhe came to poorer.\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Nehru urges the building\nup of a 'third area of nations who\nwish to work for peace and do not\nwant to align themselves with any\nbloc.\" \u2022\nHe was speaking Monday shortly\nafter listening to Aneurin Bevan,\nBritish left-wing leader,'.call for the\nemergence of a \"third bloc\" to compel the United States and Russia to\nlisten to weaker nations.\nNehru, however, counselled that\n\"the idea of a third bloc or third\nforce frightens or embarrasses people.\"   :\n\"Let us rather work to get as\nlarge an area as possible of countries which do not want to encourage any tendencies to ..war, who\nwish to work for peace and do not\nwant to align themselves with any\nbloc,\" he said. \"But we must do this\nwithout too much shouting.\"\nNehru, speaking in the Council\nof States upper house of parliament,\nsaid the main reason for the present\nsituation in the Far East is non-recognition of Communist China's\nreality and the acceptance of a\n'small island off the co-st.\" Formosa as representing China.\n'Non-recognition of reality leads\nto artificial policies and programs.\"\nEarlier Bevan, on a three-week\nvisit to India, had told members\nof Parliament at an Informal meeting that it is from the \"weaker nations that most sense is being spoken at the present time.\"\nHe declared: \"I believe that not\nonly for you but for mankind it\nis necessary that there,, should be\na realignment of the forces of the\nworld, that there should emerge a\nthird bloc of nations holding the\n8KATING ALONE on Hamilton\nBay, it Burlington Beach, Ont,\n10-year-old Carolin Wallace, seen\n\u25a0hove, broke through \u25a0 thin section of lee ind fell Into 20 feet\nof water. For 10 minutes she\nfloundered until she managed to\n\u2022math her way across six feet bf\nthin ice In a channel opened by\na dredge several years ago, and\nte crawl on \u25a0 thicker wedge of\nlee where she lay exhausted.\nWhen rescuers began working,\ntheir way toward her In a boat,\nthe plucky girl yelled: \"Dont\nbring the boat any closer or you'll \u2022\nbreak the lee and I'll fill In\nagain. I cant swim-any longer.\"\nRescuers credit the girl's ability\nnot to panic at such \u25a0 moment\nwith saving her own life,\n\u2014Central' Press Canidlm.\nSovietrType Planes\nFife on JJJS. Jets\nALASKA (RATER\nAsh, Sulphur\nSmell Carried '\nHundred Miles\nKODIAK, Alaska (AP) \u2014A fiery\nvolcano-at the base of the Alaska\nPeninsula erupted again Monday\nlor the second time In less than 24\nhours, shooting a mushroom smoke\ncloud like an atom blast eight miles\nInto the sky.\nA dense' pall of ash and smoke\nbillowed outward for more than\n100 miles in' some directions from\nthe angry; cone, swirling on wind\ncurrents by the intense heat - of\nthe still! unidentified volcano.\nNo villages rimming the thinly-\nsettled wilderness area of the Mt.\nKatmai National Monument\u2014a region df active volcanos and the\nValley of 10,000 Smokes\u2014were believed in any danger.\nThe nearest settlement. ot King\nSalmon, about GO air milcsto the\nnorthwest, was covered with * thin\ncoating of cocoa-brown ash, but\nprevailing winds carried most of the\nvolcanic debris' in the opposite direction.\nA Northwest Airlines pilot reported he had measured the height\nof the amok* with a sextant and\nfound It had reached 42,000 feet\nSmoke and ash continued to pour\nfrom the. volcano Monday night as\nan aftermath of the second' eruption, and the smell, of sulphur was\nstrong in the air 100 miles away.\nLoss of animal, life in the region\nis expected to be-heavy.  -\nworld balance of power and compelling the-two giants to listen to\nwhat they have to say.\"\n'\"The voice of India in the counsels of the nations has recently\nbeen of the utmost' Importance.,\nThough her advice has not always been accepted, do not. make\nthe mistake of supposing it has not\nhad its influence.\"\nThe Soviet Union suffers from\nrigidity and the United States from\ninstability, Bevan said. Both were\nridden by fear \"and since both are\npowerful both think they can afford to dispense with wisdom because it is only the-weak that need\nwisdom.\"\nPay Boost Asked\nBy Beer Waiters\nVANCOUVER. (CP)-A 40-eent\nhourly wage boost will be sought\nby some 700 beer-parlor waiter* in:\nthe Greater Vancouver area' thi*\nyear. \u2022 ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022   \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0\"' \u2022' ' -\nRequest lor the pay increase,\nwhich amounts to $16' weekly, has\nbeen forwarded to employers by\nthe Beverage ' Dispensers Union\ni 3H)fctert\u00bb'\"~rl,~ * --'\u2022'-- * \u2022 Xy\"\"-'\n, Bargaining for tavern workers, in\n84 hotels, the union is also seeking\na health and. welfare plan tb be\nfinanced equally by employer and\nemployee., Robert, Beddome, busi-\n\u201e jness agent, said the plan would\ncost th\u00ab employer about 8*4 cents\nper man hour. '      ,      &\".j\n\"Many hotels are doing more\nbusiness with reduced staff and\nproductivity of the employees has\ngone ur\" Mr. Beddome said!\n\"Present'hourly rates are:tap men,\n$1.4354, waiters, $1.25 and utility\nmen, $1.15. The contract, expires\nMarch 81.  i\nNeeds of CCF Riding,\nDoukhobor Poser Aired\n. By JAMES K. NESBITT\nVICTORIA. \u2014 Kaslo-Slocan's Randolph Harding ast\nmade two speeches in the throne speech debate.\nFriday he spoke for an hour, but he didn't finish his\nspeech. The premier and the Speaker very courteously said\nhe'might continue Monday ahd Mr. Harding jumped at\nthe opportunity. ,\nLots of MLA's don't finish their speeches, but never\nbefore in this reporter's memory has one been.permitted\nto continue next sitting. On Friday Mr. Harding made what\nwas mostly a political speech. Monday he stayed with the.\nproblems of Kaslo-Slocan, which he called \"the most beautiful lake area in the entire\nDriver Charged\nWith Manslaughter\nEDMONTON (CP) - William\nAmbrose, alleged driver of a car\ninvolved in an accident which\ncaused the deaths of two persons,\n\u2022was committed for trial on two\ncharges \"of manslaughter Monday\nafter preliminary hearing.\nAmbrose is charged in connection with the Feb. 1 collision on an\nEdmonton street Corner which resulted in the deaths of 70-year-old\nPaul Volrath and his 87-year-old\nwife.\nNine photographs showing the accident, scene, the bodies of the victims and the cars allegedly involved were entered ,as evidence\nat the hearing. A witness testified\nthat the car, driven by Ambrose,\nwas travelling \"over 50 miles an\nhour.\" The same -witness identified\naccused as the driver of the ear.\nTOKYO (A_>)-The United States\nFar Eastern Air Force today said\ntwo Russian-type planes made\nhead-on tiring passes Monday at\ntwo U, S. jet interceptors and then\n.ought i a 10-minute air battle before they were chased out of Northern Japan.\nOne of the Russian-type planes\nwaa \"damaged and smoking\" es it\nstreaked toward th* security of the\nKussian-held Kurile Islands.\n. An air force spokesman said the\nRussian planes fired the first shots.\nAmerican Jet pilot* ot the Japan\nair defence force have instruction*\nto fire across the bow of an intruding plane as a signal to land. The\nspokesmen's statement indicated the\nRussian planes opened fire before\nany signal bullets were fired by the\nU. S. planes.\nMonday's clash was the first reported by either the U. S. or Russia line* a series ot stern warnings\nwere issued Jan. IS by the Japanese\ngovernment ind the USAF. -\nThe warnings followed Russian\nrejection la^t' December dfAmerl--\ncan claims that. Red planes shot;\ndown an unarmed B-29 Superfort\nflying in northern Japan last October.\n\"\u25a0;x\"x .o   H\nGALE McOARTER, nine-year-old girl who bant walk because\nof tuberculosis of th* spine, has a new don to pull her miniature\nsulky. ^Rusty, the doa who pulled' her little cart f\nky.\u201eRusty, the dog, who pulled her little cart for,years, was\nstolen,recently? Newspapers told'the 'story of Rusty'e loss and\n. Gale was'\"damped with offers of new dogs. Here she I* it 8anta\nMonica, Calif,, with the two dogs she selected. Christina, a six-\nmonths-old white Pyrene, pulls the sulky as Gale clutches an\neJaht-weetc-old'8amoyed puppy, who'll be her .cuddling net\nn-.Y; \u2014AP wlrephoto.\nprovince:\"\nMr. Harding had some complaints\nabout roads. He said there should\nbe a new road to the Lardeau\ncountry..Because neither the Southern Transprovincinl nor the Trans-\nCanada Highway go through Kaslo-\nSlocan \"We haven't had the road\ndevelopment we're entitled to.\" '\nMr. Harding pleaded for more\nrural electrification in his riding.\nHe said the government \u25a0 should\nmake a deal with West Kootenay\nPower and Light to see that a power line is\" brought up the Slocan\nValley to Slocad City \"to give the\n300 or so customers the electricity\nthey should'- have in this day and\nage.\"' '-.,\u25a0.\nIn Silverton, Mr. Harding said,\nthere Is so little power that often\nfrlgldalret and washing machines\nwon't work,\nBetween  Needles .and  Nakusp,\nhe tiidr there's no power it all\n\"Some of the people are rather\nbitter,\" he said. \"Especially since\ntho chairman of the Power Com.\nmission., visited the area In 1945\nand said all .these little communities would have power.\"1\n:.   Mr. Harding said he knows the\nPower Commission doesn't want\nto   take   ohances\u2014and-  perhaps\nrightly so, \"but we In Kaslo-Slo-\noan-have faith and we believe\nwe should Invest Iii the future.\"\n'-..'! \"\u00abl_1id-\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0 -**\u2022>' yeu'r* arowlng,\"\nsaid Premier.Bennett\n*v.v:\u00ab^||.((r|ri^|r; V***,-* **ry\n>  rapidly and Ifs going to continue\n' 'to grot*\"' replied Mr.- Harding.\nHARD ON'SMALL LOGGERS\nLogging, Mr. Harding said is becoming of increasing importance in\nKaslo-Slocan.\n\"But,\" he said, \"the small loggers\nare'going.to be fcrCed'rlghf Out of\nthe woods if the policy of. boosting the stumpagegoes on.\n\"Let us; fry and preserve for these\nsmall independent operators the\nright to go out and make their own\nliving in the bush,, instead of having to go to work for other people.\"\nHARMING KOOTEWAY\nMr.  Harding: dealing  with  the\nDoukhobor situation, termed k a\nvery serious problem.\n\"How would ybu like to have every one, of your schools guarded\nday ahd nlghtf\" he asked. \"Train\ncrews are afraid to go out of Nelson at night\u2014they never know\nwhen a chunk of track might be\nblown out\u2014or a bridge, and they'll\ngo into the Kootenay River.\"\nThe whole situation i* hu\nthe district, 'Mr. Harding said, ;\nsettlers wont go in because there's\nso much turmoil and unrest\nMr.' Harding said the Douhho-\nbors should be made full Canadian citizens, with the right to vote.\nONE SMALL MOVE\nHe said many of the'lands'lost\nby the DouUiobore when Peter Tet-\nigin was leader* were lying idle\nand unproductive.\nRelocation might help.to aolva\nthe problem but at the tame tin*\nit seemed unlikely that moving the ,\nSons of Freedom from one are* to\nanother in tbe province would get\nat the root of the matter. -\nHe had spoken on the subject sit\nevery session sinoe 1945, and \"even\nif we make just one small move\nthis year, it will be a start\"\n\"I believe we have been wren*\nIn making' second class eltieens\nout  of these   people,\"  he  said.\n' \"The people of B. C, have been\nvery unfair in many-oases, to the\nDoukhobors. After ill, It'a only.\n\u25a0a-rdlglOii1 wi_;;lrM(t<>s*'lif-f*-\u00b0'\n\u25a0lljloW freeBbm.*. , ;.-'      Y'v;y-\n\"But,\" Mr. Hardlng.seld, \"If iny\n. of these people are taught try.\ning to burn down a school or dy-\n, namlte a power pole, they should\n' be treated exaotly as any other\nGinadlin elrli-n.\"  , ,     ...\nYes, it was a wonderful opportunity Mr. Harding had., the opportunity to make two speeches in ihe\nthrone  debate\u2014one  in which he\ncaused some political furore and\nanother in which he had: an uninterrupted chance ito present -th*\nneeds   of   Kaslo-Slocan.   Uninterrupted bacause  the Social Credit\nmembers -tin asent talking.\nIntern, DoMfeJiobor Affairs\nReceive House Mtentim\nVICTORIA (GP) \u2014 The problems of two 'British\nColumbia minority group's were put before the provincial\n-legislature Monday. ' i     ,.- \u2022\u25a0\u25a0.....\u25a0..;.-- ,\nFrank Calder (CCF\u2014Atlin), only Indian member of\na Canadian legislature and spokesman for 28,000 B.C. Indians,\nsuggested that jurisdiction of Indian df fairs be placed entirely\nunder the province. Jurisdictionnow is divided 'between\nthe 'federal and provincial governments.,\nRandolph Harding (CCF\u2014-Kaslo-Slocan) said Doukhobors should be granted full Canadian citizenship. They\nnow are denied the right.to vote and weVe bee\"n wrong\ntrying to make them' Nb.' 2 .  ..   \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0 ,   \u25a0\u25a0'. ', .  \u2022'-\".'  . .\nlature\"should be given the. sole\nright on approval of such project'\nFroblsher plans to build a 5,000,-\nOOO-horsepower project straddling\nthe B.C-Vukoii border, using the\npower lor a giant chemicals indus-\nH'  \u25a0'\u25a0:'        .   .'\"   '\nINDIAN ASSIMILATION\nMr. Calder also suggested that\nmore Indiana be assimilated into\nthe-public school system; that some\nIndians be accepted Into tile RCMP\nso they could police reservations;\nthat. Indians be permitted to buy\nland off the reservations; and that\nthey be protected from loss of trap-\nlines because of,expanding timber\ninterests.\nFrank Mitchell (CCF \u2014 Esquimau\".) suggested that the B.C, Power\nCommission investigate the possibility ot using atomic energy in\nthe future. A power shortage on\nVancouver Island might become\nacute; in 10 years.. Already one\ncompany had declined to establish\na plant on the island because it\ncould not be guaranteed an adequate power supply.\nWillisra Moore .(CCF \u2014Comox)\nsaid the hospital insurance..scheme\nis in *n \"utter state of confusion.\"\nHe said, the government should\ntry to do something about falling\nloreign' markets'- for 8-C. lumber,\nfish ond fruit It might persuade\ncitizens.\"\nMr. Calder, starting his fourth\nsession in the Legislature, said:\n\"There's one Indian in the House\nnow. There are 47 more seats. We\nmay take, the.country back yet\"\nHe explained that nearly all\nnatives in B.C. are non-treaty Indians; that is, the white .pioneers\ndid not sign treaties with them,\n\"We still consider every inch of\nB.C. an Indian reservation,\" Mr.\nCalder said. \"This legislative building is on the reservation, but we're\nnot getting- any rent for it,\n. .   But B.C. hid done more for the\nIndians than any other province,\nThey had the franchise and the\n-right to.drink beer with whites in\ntaverns. Though; there \"'Was' still\n.  much to be done \"we are practically free compared to Indians\nEast of th* Rockies.\"\n<\u00b0 Commenting;on the government's\nannouncement that it has given\nFroblsher, Ltd., permission to make\nsurveys ii for. .a possible hydroelectric project in the Northwest\ncomer of the province \u2014 Mr. Cal-\nder's riding \u2014 he said the company\nshould undertake * to - safeguard\nNorthern' communities.\nHe said a dam below Whitehorse\nin the Yukon might back- up water\nso that lt would wipe out the towns\nof Carcross and' Atlin, cut the\nAlaska highway, and flood the\nWhite Pass Railway.   \\;\nHe wanted to see the North\nopened up, hut the government\nshould malt* certain that the province'* right* were protected. Plants*\nwhioh use the water power should'\nbe built in Canada. And the leg's-\ntile federal government to try to\nfunnel more economic ud to\nunderdeveloped,countries. \u2022       :'\nBOY. DROWNS\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C. (OP).'.j-,'\nRCMP said Monday a young boy,\nidentified as Bruce Carlson, was\ndrowned at Alice Arm on the Portland inlet 106 miles North of here.\nGERALD I8AAC8, the Mlrq: .\nOf Reading, reports Britain does\nnot anticipate \u25a0 U.S. blookade\nof the Red China coast that would\ninterfere with British shipping.\nThe British foreign undersecretary said In London: \"The.'only\nquarter from which we would\nanticipate' interference It the\nChinese Nationalist strongholds\non Formosa and, neighboring\nIslands.\" If such Interference'\nshould develop, the British navy\nwill \"protect British ahd Ceylon-\nese ships carrying cargo to Com-\n.munlst China.\" ',   \u2022 . \u2022\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\njfcwl m This Corner ... .\n\u25a0     ;<_ALVOntY(CP)T-\"Wlth a name like mine, I'cant help being\n\u25a0honest'' \u25a0 \u2022   ., \u201e..\nWith those words, a m-h turned over to police a, wallet containing $50, shortly after \u00ab woman reported It lost,\ni  . For the records, police jotted the man's name: V. Crook.\nHi\n Sw^jS^ps\n\"     \"  '     '  \"*',\u25a0\nt \u2022,,*:**,,<*W*,*^\u201e\n2 \u2014 Kelson daily news, Tuesday, pel u, ito\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Show* at 7:00 \u25a0 6:20\nmm ' \u25a0 '*****\n*>* v*\u00bb^_\"\u00abi_u_stz\u00ab mm\n7:00\n9:46 *\u2022\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb.\n*,,B   ....      *M_*\nThs Bowory Boys\nIn     '\n\"ANGELS* ALLEY\"\n90 Seek\nHousing\nIn Nelson ~\nAbout 80- housing questionnaires have been returned to the\nCity of Nelson Housing Committee, Alderman J. H. Coventry reported to Counoil Monday,\nThe committee ' Is ourrently\ngathorlno Information on kvall-\n\u25a0ble building properties In Nelton tnd district.\nA report ind reoommendatlon\nwill likely be submitted at the\nnext council mooting. . \u25a0.\nU.S., District\nNelson Electrical Workers'\nWage Dispute To Conciliation\nWage dispute between tho City\nof Nelton ind members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical\nWorkers Local No. 1003, employed\nby the Ciry, has flon* to conciliation.   .\nA letter from the Labor Relations\nBoard\" advised council that G. A.\nCarmichael was appointed concilia\ntion officer. Mr. Carmichael- will\nconfer with both parties to assist\nthem to conclude a collective agree.\nment.No igreement wat reached\nby either after 10 days' bargaining.\nTalk* will involve wag* schedules for linemen, groundmen, substation operator*, meter repairmen\nand installer* and employee* ot the\ncity's' Bennington plsnt\nWarfleld Okays\nApartment Site\nWA-UT-BLD-Vll-ige of Wirfleld\ncommissioners at Monday night's\nmeeting approved the site chosen\nby Jsmet Calder for the proposed\n20-suite apartment building, Plans\nfor the actual building, however,\nire it'll subject to study ind approval by the Town Planning Commission.\nApproval was _iven for the letting up by the government ot i regional planning area In the Lower\nColumbia basin.\nI Ah Invitation to Join the Trail\nChamber ot Commerce wa* accepted.\nCommissioner T. W. Collingwood\nwai ippolnted to represent the village tt the annual meeting ot the\nVictorian Order of Nurses.\n. Village Clerk James Evan wis\nippolnted is representative of the\nTrail Coroottlon Committee.\nOVERDRAFT POWER \u00ab\nGRANTED\nA letter from the Nelson School\nDistrict No..t Monday asked Coun-\nell't permission for an overdraft up\nto $75,000 until August 1 this year.\nThe draft will be met by grants received from the Department of Education and the Municipal Council.\nThe City Council granted the request\nCOUGHS\nAND\nCOIDS\nARE\nBY\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nTHAN BY ANY OTHER\nREMEDY. ONE SINGLE SIP\nTELLS WHY\nExtensive Damage\nIn 2-Car Collision\nA head-on collision near Beaaley\ninvolving two automobiles caused\nsome $1200 damage. A car driven by\nJack G. Tolland of TraU collided\nwith one driven by Gordon Neil\nPatterson of Salmo. RCMP said\nslippery road conditions caused the\naccident The mishap occurred about\n3:30 p.m., Saturday.\nNelson Woman\nDies al (oast\nMiss Wanda Edith Fink, first child\ntb be born In Wardner, B. C, (May\n1, 1898) died at Vancouver Sunday\nafter a lengthy illness. She was 54,\nMist Flhk, with her family, moved\nfrom Wardner to Cranbrook in 1890\nwhere she attended ' Cranbrook\nschools, later teaching school there.\nShe received her ATCM at tile Toronto Conservatory of- Music ind\ntaught music ln Cranbrook tnd in\nVancouver. She came to Nelson in\n1038. \u25a0'.'_>'\u2022?\nMiss Fink was predeceased by her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Fink, it\nNelson in 1048 tnd 1949.\nShe is survived by one brother,\nVincent Fink of Nelson and one sister, Mrs. J. E. Lafek of Vancouver.\nFuneral services will be held in\nNelion Wednesdiy morning.\nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWHAT'S FUNNY,    \u2022\nABOUT A BREWERY?\nThtr* will be* no committee\nmeeting* of City Council Wednesday afternoon, Council hai\naccepted en Invitation to vlow\nthe new bottling machine at the\nKootenay Breweries Umlted.\n\"I think it's a good idea,\" said\nMayor Kary,\nCouncil laughed.\n\"Havo they got an unbottllhg\nmachine?\" one alderman asked.\nCouncil foirad.\"\n\"Do we take our own tomato\nJuice?',' uld another.\nAnd council laughed even\nharder. , r\nThe Invitation wai extended\nby R. D, Barnes. \"So don't call\nany committee meeting* Wednesday afternoon . . . \"   -\nA COMPUTE CHOICE or\nWIU-APP01N1ED AND\nfUUY SERVICED\nAPARTMENTS AND\n,    HOTEL ROOMS AT\nMODULATE RATES\nJ\u2014in H. Cm, Mms*i\nVANCOUVER   B.C.\nFinal Reading Given\nStreet Names Bylaw\nFind reading was given * new\nstreet names bylaw by City Council Monday night The hill road behind Kootenay Lake General Hospital, known as Bluffsyde, was named Morgan Street as an extension\nof a street already existing in the\narea.\n' Tlie short street bordering Like-\nside Park from the South shore\nferry landing to the North boundary of Nelson Avenue was named\nFerry Street and the short road\nin Gyro Park area on which teverel\nhornet are situated will be known\nas Gyro Pork Road.\nBrother of Nelsonite\nTo Coronation\nWith RCMP Group\nWor. hai been received by Mrs.\nWilliam Wlcken ot Nelson thtt her\nbrother, Constable E. A. Berthliume\nwho was stationed with the RCMP\nIn St. Paul, Alto., has left for Rock-\ncliff. Ont, where h* will undergo\ntraining with the RCMP in the musical ride in preparation for the Coronation ceremonies.     , ,.\nConstable Berthiaume will tour\"\nEngland with the RCMP following\nthe Coronation.'\nFor Mothers' Day\nTRAIL \u2014 A committee of Trail\nRifle* Aerte No. 2838 met it the\nCrown Point Monday to tinilt-e\nplans for their second annual\nMother's Day celebration.\nThe Eagles were the first organization to campaign for such a publle observance'of i Mother's bay.\nHundreds ot American visitors are\nexpected her* to take part In th*\nactivities. Group* already signifying their Intention ot attending ar*\nit Coeur d'Alene, Sand Point Spokane, Wenatehee, Trail,, Rossiand,\nKinnaird ind Castlegar.\nCelebrations will be opened by \u25a0\nbig dance. Sunday, May 10, services will be held following * parade from city centre to Butler Park\nln which local and visiting bind*\nind drill teams will take part.\nA reception will be held for visiting Eagles it Columbo Hall Sunday noon.\nFestlvltlei will close with * *o-\ndal evening Sunday in honor of\nvisiting brothers and sisters.\nEagles hope to make thla * day ot\ninternational goodwill.\nCastlegar Group\nProtests Funeral\nHome Location\nCASTLEGAR\u2014A petition against\nth* proposed establishment of a\nfuneral home on Third Avenue\nSouth of Maple Street In Castlegar\nwas discussed by th* village commission here Monday night\nSigned by IB resident* ot th*\nlocation proposed, the petition emphatically protested tha establish-,\nment because lt was \"felt that the\nconstruction and operation of such\nestablishment would be highly\ndetrimental to the interest of adjacent property owners, Inasmuch\nas the presence of such an estab-\nllshment and depressing atmosphere\nrelative thereto would render the\nsurrounding ire* les* desirable as\nI residential district and property\nvalues would be depreciated accordingly.\"\nFrank Richardson, who applied\nfor construction of tbe $8000 home\ntwo weeks ago, appeared at the\nmeeting. \"The petition teems most\nridiculous,\" he said. Many funeral\nhomes in larger cities are located\nin residential districts tnd far from\ngiving a depressing atmosphere to\nthe district they are most respectable tnd well kept Their presence\nhas often Increased the value of\nadjacent property,\" he said.        '\nThe commissioner* decided to Investigate the matter thoroughly before coming to* decision.\nOne building permit for I,two-\nstorey tWOO horn,* \"by: Iv\u00bbr Helns-\nbakken and five trade, licence tp-\npllcttlont ware ipproved, The trade\nlicences an for an agency office\nhere of the Nelton Laundry and\nDry Cleaners, i building contractor,\ndrive-in theatre, bulldozer contractor and a lunch counter; The\ndrive-in theatre, licenced to Nick\nShelfontluk of Saskatoon, Sask.,\nwat. ipproved, tubject, \u25a0 to further\ninvestigation of. road access and\nwater service stipulations, licencee\nto be charged.\nThe commlttionert tgreed to\nattend the Education Week issenv\nbly at the High School March t.\nThe annual rates bylaw was\ngiven three readings. It provides\nfor i tax of 20 mills on the dollsr\non 100 per cent of issessed value\nof land, and 20 mills on B0 per\ncent of Improvements.\nWithStane\nand Besom\nThe J. Morris rink Monday night\nwon Nelson Curling Club section\nplayoff game when they downed\nthe R. F. Wallace rink 0-7. In other\ngames played list night In the Plugs\nand Colts event the resulti were:\n,   E. Ramsbottom \u00ab, W. Kline 8;\nD. Cathcart 11, W. Toier 8;\nJ. Hingwing T, L. J. Peerless 11.\nTonight will see a revision of the\ndraws. ._ _\nSection playoff at 1 p.m.\u2014T. H.\nBourqu* v* winner of Section O,\nand E. Maaon vs N. R. Jennejohn.\nIn the Plug* *nd Colts event:, T. A.\nWillies v* J\". G. McMurchy; Q. Ck'\nLake vt R. Nash tnd C. Arcurl va\nG. Btrefoot\nI p.m.\u2014J. Rothery ti L. Kubin,\nL. Chase v* L. McEachern tnd\nR. B. Stewsrt v* W. M\u00bbrr. Also the\nsemi-finals ot the lection playoff\nwli lbe played with V. KlUeen\nmeeting E. C. Hunt Winner ot tiie\nBourque-Sectlon G playoff will\nmeet tne winner of the Mason-Jen-\nnejohn game.\nIn the flrtt draw on Thursday\nthere it one change. A. Seaman will\nplay J. Rothery on sheet four Instead of the original Colllnson Cup'\nsemi-final game.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCoronation\nMeeting\nMonday\nCity Council will call i public\nmeeting of representative! ot city\norganizations and Interested persons to organize a Coronation Committee. The committee will draw\nup plans for celebration June 2\nwhen Queen Elizabeth will be\ncrowned.\nAt a meeting Monday, i program\nheld during coronation ot King\nGeorge VI was outlined. The committee will be guided by thi*. The\nInitial meeting wlU be held In the\nCity Council chamber* Monday.\nA latter from Jack Brinley, manager ot the Canadian Legion here,\noffered hia assistance in tho program.\nTaxi Companies\nProtest $10\nWater Rales\nSeven Nelson taxi firms, ind one\nfuneral parlor ire protesting the\nadditional $10 water charge over\ntnd above the regular assessment\nIn I letter to City Council Monday the companies pointed out that\nnone of the taxi stands hive \u25a0 private tip for their own use on the\npremises. They also stated that water used to wssh cart runs through\na metered tap already covered by a\nflat rate.\n\"Does lt seem Just or right that a\ncab owner should have to pay $10\na year above and over the regular assessment while hit neighbor\nwishes his car without extra\ncharge?\" the letter asked.\n\"They, do w\u00bbshcar\u00bb more often\nthan a private owner,\" one alderman sald.-\nThe matter waa referred to the\nwiter and light committee for study\noijd recommendations.\nPrisoner Through\nTrail Chambers\nDisturbs Council\nTRAIL \u2014 An application was\nreceived at City Council meeting\nMonday night by Trail Auto Courts\nsituated at the Glenmerry Subdivision to convert two discarded\ncity buses into tourist cabins. A\nmotion that thte matter be placed\nbefore the Town Planning Commission wu defeated, Councillors\nfrowned on the Idea of \"anything\nbeing erected which might detract\nor be i detriment to the community\nas a whole. The application was\ntabled for a week to allow conference! with the legal department\nJanuary building report showed\nconstruction tor 1993 tor that month\nreached $13,230 as compared with\n$60,000 for the same period In, 1053.\nChairman ot the board of works\nreported that work on the water\npipeline from Violin Lake was\ndelayed due to heavy rock conditions. \u2022   l\nNEW ACCESS\nFollowing tha conducting' of a\nprisoner through Council chambers\nby police officers, Alderman F. A.\nSindell objected to the dignity of\nth* meeting being upset in this\nmanner. The disturbance ha* oc-\ncured before as it is the, only\naccess to place of confinement. He\nwu isked to include ln the budget\nthe necessary amount to overcome\nthii difficulty.\nA letter from the Trill Junior-\nSenior P-TA congratulated Council\nfor Instituting legislation covering\nthe playing of pin ball machines.\nReadings were given to the bylaw prohibiting the operation ot\nplaying of pin-ball machine* by\npersons under IB year* of age.\nThe Weather\nNelton  -....._\nLethbrldge\t\nCalgary    .\nEdmonton \u201e\u201e___..\nKamloops  __.__..\u201e\nPentlcton\t\nVancouver _.__.\nVictoria    '. ..-_\nKimberley\nCrescent V\u00bbUey\nPrince Rupert ....\nPrince, George ....\nSeattle _\nPortland  _\nSpokane   ....\t\nChicago\n29\n-5\n4\ni\nSan Francisco .......\nNew York  .._\nWhitchorst t_\nIT 43\n35 41\nSO 50'\n40 47\n21 32\n20 32\n82 41\n6,84\n44 48\n42 50\n28 41\n17 23\n40 01\n82 42\n-14 IS\nLIBERTY INVITES YOU TO PLAY\n, OVER CKLN AT 12 NOON AND AT THE STORE\nIf you don't win tho fint day, you still hove the next 9 day*. First draw start* this Thursday, Feb. 19, and continue*\nuntil March 4, except Saturday and Sunday. The more label*, the More chance*. Shop today and bring in or mail\nthe label* now.\nSimple Rules:\n1. Write name and addrei* with phone number, tf any, on the back of any of theie 14 advertized,\nwell-known quality product*. Mail or bring |t to Liberty \"Telephone\" Barrel at the (tore.\n2. Each day a customer will draw 2 winning name*. If name drawn contain* a telephone number,\nthe lucky customer will be called by Earl Warren to answer the queition. If no phone, customer's\n, ' name will be announced over the air and the ihould write the answer down and lend it ta Liberty\n\"Telephone\". If question answered right, she will win a great big hamper, to be picked up at\nLiberty. Simple, isn't it? If no winner after 3 draw*, prize* doubled next day, tripled third day, etc.\nI.   Over $125 given away In merchandise. Join the fun at the Liberty. Special pricei on theie \"Tol-\n'v'O    ophono\" items. Clip the tops ond join the fun now.\n\u2022Ol HON lAYSi\nJeU-0\nUse the end* or back for\n\"Telephone\". Keep the\nfront for the Coronation\nentry which will be announced later thi* week\nby Jell-0 maker*.\n6 Pkgs. 57c\nNabob Coffee\nUnsurpassed for Flavor\nLb. 94c\nNabob Tea\nTea As It Should Be\nLb. 85c\nU-BAKE\n3 lb. pkg.\nLovely for' Bun* Too\n37c\nTin 16c  Case $749\nRobin Hood\nCake Mix\nYour choice.\nPkg.   \u201e\t\n27c\nA Favorite With All\nLiberty Meats\nAre Tops\n37'\n49*\nBurn's Side Bacon\n8 oz. pkg. -if... \u25a0\u25a0\t\nFor Telephone Put Wrapper In Envelope.\nBurn's Back Bacon\n8 oz. pkg \t\nFor Telephone Put Wrapper In Envelope.\nEvery item above* eligible for the \"Telephone\" fun.\nGuaranteed for Quality or Money Back\nManitoba White Fish\nLb.  : ; ..: __,\t\nSmoked Picnics\ni_ \u2022 \u2014_ -__\nFresh Picnics\nIA.       ...    ..,..\u2014\u2014i '\t\n28'\n39'\n39*\nTHESE PRICES EFFECTIVE to MARCH 4\nON ^TELEPHONE\" PRODUCTS\nGOOD LUCK; SHOPPERS, SHOP EARLY\n8\nMcCormick'*\nSodas or Saltines\nLb. pkg _ J2C\nHeinz Baby Food\n6 for 57c\nWidest Variety\n10 -\u2014-\u2014\u2014-\nHeinz Ketchup\n2 bottles 63c\nn       \u2014    -\n> Heinz\nCream of Tomato\nJ*m ox\u00a3\nJuit Add Water\n3 for 47c\n.-.;>.\"-\nHeini\nTomato Juice\n20 oz., fancy\n2 for 37c\nSwiftning\nFor All Your Baking     _fc A C\n14  Grand Cooking \u2014 Top Quality Brand\nGEM POTATOES\nFor Contest Er)try Clip the 8tamped Portion of the Big\nNot Eligible on Liberty's \"Telephone'\nSHROVE\nTUESDAY\nTODAY\nBuckwheat Mix ^^< Crown B. \u00bb1 jJPf\n20 ot. pkg.'  \u2014.\u2014\u2022 Syrup __ is\u25a0 tins 3 \u25a0#   .\nPancake Flour. PJ^ Rosebud Pancake   1 ft*\n3V4 lb. bag ....... J*> Flour. 20 oz. - ..   IJ'\nLIBERTY\nFOOD STORE\n 111111111 ''-'l'ln--'\"'  -\u2022 \"   '\"\"\u2022' \"\u2022\u25a0 '\n'\n-rrr--\nmmmmmm^mm\nS^BPPSi\n'\"Connie?\nShoes\nby the leading\nstylists of\n- America\nExclusive at\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n; Biker 8t\nPhone 895\nSupport\n2 Percent Salary Boost\nFor Kimberley Teachers\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 An average salary, increase of approximately two\nper: cent.was granted Klmberley\ndistrict teachers as a result of arbitration proceedings held ln Cranbrook.      \\\nIn the elementary basic classification, the new salaries range from\n$2300 to $3800, the maximum being\nreached in 10 years.\nIn the secondary basic classifica\ntion, the range is from $2000 to\n$4800, the maximum to be reached\nin 12 years. These figures represent\nan average overall Increase of $100\nper teacher per year.\n' Arbitrators were A. B. Dohlstrom,\nTrail; T. E. H. Ellis,. Vancouver, and\nV. L. Dryer, Vancouver, S. Evans\nof the B. C. Teachers' Federation\npresented the teachers' case and\nFrank Wilson the board's case.\ninie legion\nleeks\nDn Liquor Brief\n[\u2022ERNIE \u2014 The Fernie branch of\nli Canadian Legion is asking its\n\u25a0ember ot the legislature, Mayor\nOrn Uphill, to support the brief of\nle B. C. Provincial Command of\n\u25a0\u00a7 Canadian Legion when the ex-\nicted new B. C Liquor Act is\nrOught before the House. The brief\nas drawn up at a specially con-\nshed Legion meeting at Vancou-\nS, Jan. 25. Representatives of 77\nigion branches in'British Colum-\na drew up recommendations fbr\ne Liquor Act as lt would affect\niterans' clubs.\nStanding . committees   appointed\nere:   Finance,   Aubrey   Dayman,\nran Gill, Frank Butula; Can-\nGus Peters, Mike George, Au-\ney Dayman; Building, J. Brown,\nllliam Reed, Eddie Brown; Enter-\ninment, Wilfred Pbirier, Les Ha-\ner, Joe Sprovieri; Sports, Norman\n111, Gus Peters; Publicity, Leon\niahcalL Les Hamer; Lake, Bob\n>we, Ken Wilson, William Kobel-\ni; Membership, Frank Butula,\nen Wilson; Constitution and By-\nws, Leon Rushcall, Harold Wheels'' Cemetery, Norman-Gill, Bob\nSwe, Arthur.. Arrowsmith; Sick,\nsv. E. M. Yerburgh and Dick\n\u00abdy.\neat Performance\nKinnaird Play\n[ARD\u2014 Preparation-' were\nd for a repeat performance\ni Bathroom Door\" at a meet-\nof.the Kinnaird Little Theatre\nap at the home of Mr. arid Mrs.\nSommerfleld. The play will 'be\n&t*d Friday,at*' variety eon-\nsponsored by the Robsdn Dra-\nclub.;\nmembers joined tha club,\nM. Piquant, Mrs. Z. Snaibert\n\"Alio Jacobson: !'\u2022'\nnew play, \"Small Toyra Romeo\"\nstudied. The three act play\nbe- produced near, tlie end of\nKelson Committee lo Stimulate\nInterest in UN Rofarians Told\nTHE.CLASSIFIED  DAIVY\nA small committee to stimulate\ninterest et citizens ln United Nations Organization attain has been\nset up in Nelson, Very Rev. T, L.\nLeadbeater, Dean ot Kootenay, told\nRotarians at a luncheon In the\nHume Monday. Dean Leadbeater\ndeplored the declining interest ln\nthe work of the UN. Through the\nmedium of this committee, lt is\nhoped that the following plana will\nbe carried out, the Dean explained:\nEncourage all organizations to\nset aside one program each year\nfor a United Nations or World Affairs topic.\nTo set up a speakers' bureau by\nwhich speakers, on these topics will\nbejjrought in from UBC, Vancouver and, other sources.\nTo sponsor the annual United Nations day in October;\nTo send from this area one student- to the' University of British\nColumbia' to the seminar on UN.\nWhen this student returns he will\nprovide stimulus to ^Uow students\non the subject.\nTo set up a library at the Nelson  high   school   and   to   display\nthings relating to United Nations.\nVALUABLE GROUP    .\nThe UN, he sa!\", is of \"tremend\nOU8 value.\" It is the only opportun\nity to try and establish order In\nthese critical times. Dean Leadbeater believes that the significance of\nUN ii being reduced. He referred\nto a stack of newspapers and magazines in which he found \"not one\"\nreference to the UN.\nL08ING PLACE ?\n\"Is'this an indication that increasing feelnlg among our people and\neditorial staffs of newspapers that\nthe United Nations 'is losing its\nplace in the life of our world?\"\n. Morels heard of the U.S.A., he\nsaid, than of the UNO.\"We respect\nthe position of the U. S. in promoting UNO,\" Dean Leadbeater continued, but it: is feit by some that\nthe.U.S- is \"exercising far too much\ninfluence\",In the UN, whose prime\npurpOSe is to discuss and bring\nabout a solution to world; issues.\n\"We cannot Just stand,-, still,\" he\ns&U describing the \"reactionary\nmovement in the world today as\n\"tending to draw behind our political defences.\"\nPREVENTED WAR\nDuring the j#st Beven years, the\nDean said;.UN has quelled many\nIncidents that could have provoked\nwar. Some ot these, he said, were\nwhen Truman supported aid to\nGreece and Turkey program; the\ndefiance of the Western world to\nthe Berlin blockade in 1048;\u2014 support of the defiance of Tito, Korea,\nand Increasing armament shipments\nto members of the North Atlantic\nTreaty Organization.\n\"There is not sufficient penetration into the minds bf our people\non the significance ot United Nations,\" he said.   .-\u25a0\u25a0._. \u2022\nWORLD ACTIVITY\nDean Leadbeater outlined some\nof the issues recognized by UN; International Children's Emergency\nFund; established after World War\nII, to take care ot war orphans;\nWorld Health Group whose primary\npurpose is to raise the standard\nof international health; UN agricultural group which tries to help\nmember nations to improve the\nstandard of agricultural production\nand industrial output; International\nCivil Aviation Organization whose\npurpose is to preserve aviation freedom, to facilitate migration of planes and to set a standard of international safety and UN Education,\nScientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) which is trying -to\npromote world peace and raise the\nstandard of living.\n\"As Individuals,\" he concluded,\n\"we play an important part in the\nworld affairs.\" The danger is in\ndoing nothing; in \"standing still\nmentally, spiritually and otherwise.\"\nBoswell Group\nHears of Work\nOf Missionary\nBOSWELL\u2014A small balance on\nhand was reported at the annual\nmeeting of the Anglican Church-\nhere. The meeting was held at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. Pryke.\nGuest speaker was Rev. E. Greg-\nson, missionary to the Anglican\nChurch in Canada. Mr. - Gregson\nwas formerly with St. Paul's in\nCambridge,' England, and was an\nRAF padre during World War II.\nHe outlined his work with the\ntroops abroad and his work in Burma, England and Canada.\nMr. Pryke was named vicar's\nwarden and Mrs. W. Thompson as\npeople's warden.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TU-5BAY, FEB. 17,1953 \u2014 3\nLpgati McPhee Chosen\nKasl#s Best Citizen\nNEWLY ELECTED OFFICER8 of the Creston\nBranch of the Canadian Legion are pictured here.\nThe Joint Installation ceremony was held at\nCreston Wednesday. In the back row, from left\nto right, are Eric White, secretary; Frank Naden,\nchairman of the House Committee; J. Wilson,\nlife-member; Jack.Fell, first vice-president; Jack\nVeltch, president; Charles French, second vice-\npresident; G. Vlgne, sergeant-at-arms. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022'\nFront row (Ladles Auxiliary), left to right;\nMrs, G. Vlgne, secretary; Mrs. A; Erickson, executive and provincial president; Mrs. Mabel Weir,\nsergeant-at-arms; Mrs. T. Turk, president; Mrs. M.\nStandldge, first vice-president; Mrs. F. Harden,\nsecond vice-president.\u2014H. M. Buckna photo.\nFlood Fund Over $lfi0QfWWiHtt.\nValentine Dance\nOpened 12 days ago, the European:\nFlood Relief Fund by Monday was\nwell over the $1000 mark.\nSaturday $00 came In from Individuals and business firms ln the\n-two hours the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce was open, and Monday\n$200 was added; bringing the total\nto $1434.90. A $100 donation from\nNelson Rotary Club and $31 from\nthe High School helped swell the\nfund to the highest single day receipts since the-fund opened.\nHigh   8-hool   students,   In   a\nroom-to-room canvass sponsored\nby the Junior Red Cross, collected\n$31.65 for the fund.\nThe Junior High School student\ncouncil in a room-to-room canvass\ncollected $58.93 for the fund, which\nwill help to bring aid to flood victims of Belgium, Holland and\nBritainY.\nPermission for a tag.day Saturday to help raise funds was granted\nthe Junior High school students\ncouncil by School District No. 1\nBoard of Trustees and City Council.\nTags fbr the day will be made by\nschool art classes.\nWork en Slocan\n6-Year-0ld in\nHospital After\nSleigh Accident\nA six-year-old girl was .taken to\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nlate Sunday afternoon after a\nsleighrlding accident, Nelson's third\nthis Winter.\nMarilyn Green, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. George L. Green, 904 Mill\nStreet, suffered a fractured leg; cuts\nand bruises when she sleighed into\nthe front of a car driven by George\nClerihew at ,the Latimer:Cbdar\nStreets intersection about 4 p.m.\nSunday. The driver was unable to\nsee the child until entering the\nintersection. '  ,\nKINNAIRD\u2014The Columbia Valley Aerie, Fraternal Order of Eagles\ntheir friends and guests enjoyed a\nValentine cabaret dance at the community hall here. About 200 attended.\nDancing to old time rhythms, an\nentertainment hour featuring some\nof the best In district musical talent\nand refreshments contributed to the\nevening.\nThe concert portion, arranged by\nJohny Clarke and his social committee, included a selection of gypsy\nalrs.on t|ie violin by Miss.Muriel\nStewart, formerly of Nelson, vocal\nduets by two sisters, Tannis and\n*Babs Killough, songs by Mrs. Helen\nMcLeodeend songs and jokes by\nWally Walper, accompanied by MrB.\nWalper at the piano. Victor Jenks\nwas master of ceremonies.\nKASLO \u2014 Kaslo Board of Trade\nat its annual Valentine floor show\nin Legion Hall presented Kaslo's\nBest Citizen Award to A. Logan\nMacPhee;  - '\nBefore 200 people, President C,\nA. McLtesh made the presentation\nto.Mr. MacPhee, \"who has taken,\nhis place not only' as a citizen, but\nln his ever ready response and\nkindly service at any time. He has\ndone much in the interest of the\nCity generally, takes \"a special interest in church and hospital work,\nand has been an.ardent and faithful\nmember of the: Board of Trade for\nmany years.\"\nThe program was in charge of W.\nV. Drayton, with the President announcing the. events. It opened\nwith a round dance by the Rainbow Square Dance Club on call of\nMiss Irene Carruthers.    .\nThe young dancers were the\nMisses Jean Nomland, Peggy O'\nShaughnessy, Shirley Harris, Pat\nSmith, Sybil Chalmers and Judy\nMclntyre, with. Yosh Shimoto,\nPeter Haering, Ted Carpenter,\nGeorge Shlmizu, Frank Tyers and\nDanny Shimlzu, who carried out\nthe .figures with charm and grace\nthat won the hearts of the audience.\nThe dance' was followed by St\nMark's Anglican Church quartette\nwith Airs. Barbara Dahlqj-ist, Miss\nPat. Halleran,, Miss Joan Kllppel\nand Mrs. Betty Morphet, that earned a repeated-applause.\nAnother square dance by the\nRainbow Square Dance Club, on\ncall of Douglas Cake was again\nwell received. These young people\nall students of the Kaslo schools,\nwon ttie prolonged applause for\ntheir performance.\nHighlights ot. the program Included a vocal solo by Mrs. Barbara. Dahlqulst who with her fine\nsoprano vole*, was well greeted,\nand the ever-popular E. J. Leveque\nof. Nelson made his usual bit\nA supper and dance wound up the\nevening.\nAWE MARY 8TEVEN80N\n,. \u25a0 who will start RCAF training\nat 8b John, Quebec, February 23.\nAW2 Stevenson Is formerly of\n8unshlne Bay. \t\n3 IN MAYOR RACE\nJASPER PLACE, Alta. (CP) \u2014\nThree men were nominated Monday\nto contest the mayoralty of. Jasper\nPlace, an Edmonton suburb, in tha\nMarch.2 town elections. They are\nMayor J. H. Stone, John S. Edwards\nand J. H. Birtle. Although holding\nonly town status, Jasper Place, with\na population of more than. 10,000, Is\nthe fifth largest centre in Alberta.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nPILES that\nItch and Burn\nf you now suffer from the itching iorenws\nmd burning pain of piles you can be\nLelped.\nJust get * \u2022.-. package of Rem-Rold, an\nntcmal pile treatment, at any drug store\nnd use a. directed. You will.be pleased\nt how. quickly your pile trouble is relieved.\nOnly $1.59 for the big 60 tablet package.\nIf: ybu; ire 'riot 100% pleased after using\nHeni-Koit. 2 or 3 days, as a test, ask for\nyour money, back. Refund agreement by\nall, drug stores.  O;\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF\nHEALTH\"\n\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\n\u2022 SUNDRIES\n\u2022 *\u2022 -\u2022\nListen to\nDrama ef Medicine\nOver CKLN 6 p.m.\nPhone 1208   \u2014   Ret. 894-L\n433 Josephine St.\ntefrwliaticfe\nwith mOFFRT\nCANADA'S   NO. 1    RANGE I\nC. E. FINDLATER\nROTARY GUEST\nC. E. Fintllater of Vancouver,\nfounder and director of the Elgar\nChoir, currently in Nelson on a\ntalent scouting tour, visa guest at\na Rotary luncheon in the Hume\nMonday. In a brief address, he told\nRotarians of the international goodwill the choir has achieved.\nLast year, he said, the choir performed in 24 European cities. \"They\ndid a grand job.\" Other guests Included Russ Aird of Vancouver,\nRev. W. K. Roberts, who is director\nof the \"Christ for You\" rally here,\nSnd Keith Ausler of Trail...\nA nominating committee consisting of Jack McDonald, R. B. Allan\nand D. H. T. Mollison- will submit\nsuggested slate of officers for 1953.\nNO SUNDAY FISHING   -\nBLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa\n(CP)\u2014The Orange Free State authorities decided not to relax the\nprovincial ordinance which forbids\nangling on Sundays. The decision\nrejected appeals from angler's after\none man waB fined about $10 for\nfishing on Sunday. ,\nGolden Slipper Mines Limited\nhave advised shareholders thai\nwork on- the company's Slocan base\nmetal holdings will be deferred but\nthat the company proposes to become active in the. uranium area of\nNorthwestern Saskatchewan. Nine\nunsurveyed claims in the Lac la\nRpnge section, regarded as good\nprospecting ground, have been tentatively arranged for. R. Crowe-\nSwords, president, will confer with\nowners of the property irr Regina\nto complete a purchase agreement\nand arrange for exploration.\nAll Slocan properties warranting\nfurther exploration will be retained\nin good standing pending improve\nment in prices for lead and zinc.\nIt is proposed to lease a modern\nconcentrating' plant in preferenceto\nbuilding a mill under present conditions. .\nAndrew Preliminary\nIn Cranbrook Feb. 19\nCRANBROOK-Joe Andrew, 3f\na logger' and farmer ot the St.\nMary's Indian Reserve will appear\nfor preliminary hearing here Friday. Andrew is charged with the\nknife slaying of his 29-year-old\nwife Therese. She died Dec 23 In\nSt. Eugene- Hospital here.\nAndrew had been held in Nelson\njail and remanded every eight days\npending preparation of the crown's\ncase.\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nThey're here! . . . The new completely '\nautomatic Moffat Ga* Ranges fer 19531\nIllustrated is Model No. 2108 with the \"X-Ray\nOven\" that eliminate* \"oven peeking\", and\n\"Irittamatic\" clock-central for cooking while\nyou are away for the day. Other feature* include Warming Oven\u2014Minute-Minder\u2014Automatic lighting of ell burner*. See thi* and other\neasy-to-eperate Moffat Ga* Range* today.\nThem hi a model to suit your every requirement in \u00abtyle . . . (lie v. .price!\nCONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS ARRANGED\n\u25a0\/\u2022-\u2022\u25a0_\u25a0;\nKay & Stretton Ltd.\n\"Nelson's Leading Appliance Store\"\nPHONE 1555 NELSON, B.C.\n\u00a3astbCt\u00a3AN\nic\nbrilliantly white enamel that stays\nwhite. Dries with a sparkling porcelain-like surface that's easy to dean\nIS a piece of china. Keep kitchens,\nbathrooms, refrigerators, sparkling\nwhite with DULUX Super White.;\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n\"FRIENDLY   SERVICE\"\nPhone 21 446 Baker St.\nState Vacuum Stores,\nBOX 9694, NELSON DAILY NEWS\nI would like a Free Home Demonstration ef your\nrebuilt Eleetrolux.\nNAME\nADDRESS\n-State Vacuum Stores ltd.\nBOX 9694, NELSON DAILY NEWS\n \"W\"1'\n \u2014\t\n.. *J A recent civil action In the Quebec\nl\nEstablished April 22, 1802\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Biker Street,   Nolson,   British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Malt\nPost Office Deportment, Ottawa.\nMEMBER Of TBE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU 0*F CIRCULATIONS.\n\u25a0 i.     I        i,    . in    ,-, ii i ., ' ....\nTuesday, February 17,1953\nTime to Heed\nThe Warnings\nHaving failed to heed repeated\nwarnings, says the Financial Post in\nan editorial entitled \"They Asked for\nIt,\" British Columbia labor and industry now face a painful decision.\nThey must either get costs and prices\ndown In the main lines of production\nor face a huge loss ln export markets.\nThe lush war and post-war marketing\nera has passed. There are no longer two\nbuyers for every plank, fish or pound\nof metal. There is competition again\nin world markets and it is on world\nmarkets that the major industries of\nB.C. must depend. To no other Canadian province, save possibly Saskatchewan, is export trade so essential.\nThe Vancouver Sun summation of\nthe situation is quoted by the financial\npaper:\n\"It's shocking to learn that last\nyear the value of production of three\n'    out of four basic industries in B.C.\nshowed an appreciable drop from\nthe previous year.\n\"Ever since the war, economists\nand businessmen have warned this\nprovince against pricing itself out\nof world markets. They said the time\nmight come itfhen our customers\nwouldn't or couldn't pay enough to\nkeep us in the style to which we\nwere becoming accustomed.\n\"Last year the sensational boom\nln forest products began to taper off\nwith values down from $504.8 million in 1951 to $500 million. Mining\nfell from $175.8 million to $165 million. Fisheries dropped from $83,8\nmillion to $75 million.\"\nIn the last five years, wage rates\nhave advanced 52.6 per cent in British\nColumbia until they are now much\nthe highest in the country. Arjd they\ncontinued to spiral up even'after the\nfirst warnings that competition was\nreturning.  The British Government\nannounced that its huge contracts for\nlumber and salmon were to be terminated.   The   Canadian   dollar   gained*\nsteadily on the American and thus\nwiped out the automatic advantage\nin  U.S.   and  domestic  markets  for\nlumber, \u00bband pulp and other things.\nLeaders, however, paid no attention.\nThey went right on with their demands .,..._' '\nNow, like the cat on the telephnne\npole, says the Post, these people are\nfinding it much harder to get down\nthan it was to get up. But get costs\ndown they must if they are to sell\ntheir lumber, their fish and their\nminerals; Perhaps we should begin\nthinking more'clearly along the lines\nof this and the other warnings B.C.\nhas had. >   -\nIt's Been Said\nBe not unwilling in what thou dbest,\nneither selfish nor unadvised nor obstinate;\nlet not over-refinement deck out thy thought;\nbe not wordy nor a busybody.\u2014Marcus Aure-\nllus.\nA recent civil action in the Quebec courts\nhos turned attention once again to the practice ol tipping.' The dispute was between a\nhat-check girl and her employer, and involved\nthe disposition of gratuities which th* girl\nreceived from customers of tha place where\nahe worked, There was an important principle\nat issue, but perhaps the most striking feature\not the case was the girl's claim that tip* over\na period ol 120 days amounted to $3186, which\nwork* out at almost $25 a day.\nBat checking is not an occupation requiring any particular (kill or training. It\nconsists ol taking a hat from a customer's\nhand, sticking one half ol a numbered ticket\nInside the band and giving the other to the\ncustomer, placing the hat on a shell, and going through the process ln reverse when the\nhat la reclaimed, From behind her: counter\nwhat extra service could my hat-check girl\nperform that would be -worth $25 a day. in\naddition to wages? The thing 1* absurd; and\nso also are most ot the tips meekly surrendered to thousands ol employees ln other occupation* for routine attention that they tr*\npaid wages to give. Why, for example, should\nanyone have to suffer \u25a0 embarrassment under\ntbe icy stare and scantily concealed discourtesy ol a waiter 11 he tails to tip at the end ot\na meal ln respect ol which he pays lor lerylee\nas well as for the food itself?\nWhatever it may; have been originally,\ntipping as practised in these time* has degenerated into an evil habit\u2014an imposition on\nthe customer, often a form ol extortion on\nthe part ot the recipient,-and* an indignity to\nboth. Moat of the trade union organisations\nare opposed to it In principle, maintaining\nthat an.employee should be paid what he is\nworth and not have to \"depend on the often\ngrudging charity of the customers lor part\nol his earnings. It would be better lor everyone il the practice were abolished, but.the\ndifficulty is that-there are not enough people'\nwith the moral courage to break a long habit\nthat In many respects h*s grown Into an out-\nand-out racket\nWky\n(New York Times)\nTbe days may'be short, but the evenings\nare long, plenty long enough to puzzle out\nsome of the answers\u201411 there are answers.\n. . . Why are the long shadows ol morning\nand evening So blue on the snow? Why does an\noak hold so long to its dead, dry leaves? Why\ndoes a dogjlet out ol the house, roll happily\nln a snowbank, then demand to be let back\nin as soon as It begins to anow again? How\ndoes a blue Jay roll .an ear ol corn, tightly\npacked against the slats or wire mesh ol a corn\ncrib, to get at the kernels on the other side?\nWhy does a squirrel run up the side ol a\nbarn, over the roof, and down the other side,\nwhen he could so easily go around? Why does\na crow choose the middle ol a Snow-covered\nmeadow as a place to strut? Don't his feet ever\nget cold? Why does a white pine have live\nbranches in each whorl, live needles in each\nbunch, instead of ;three or six? Flies freeze,\neventually; .why don't woolly bear caterpillars? Why don't cats like snow? They like\nmilk, which is the same color. Some cats will\neven eat frozen milk.\nWhy are woodchucks allowed to hibernate and rabbits made to stay awake all Winter? Why does smoke twist even when rising\nfrom a square flue? Why does a nuthatoh'*\nbeak tilt up at the ertd, like a disdainful nose?\nAnd why does a nuthatch look as 11 he were\ncross-eyed? The tbwhee'B eyes are red, some,\nowls have yellow eyes; is there such a thing\nas a blue-eyed bird?    -,\nThe day lengthens by 48 minute* during\n' 'January, but it gains only 14 ol those minutes\nIn the mornings. Why? In layman's-language,\nplease. Why do January afternoons lengthen\nso much more than January mornings? Why?\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nliking questions Will hot be published.\n\u2022 Thtr* I* et charge for thi* servlo*.\nQuestions WILL NOT \"H ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except whore there la obvious .\nnecessity for privacy.\nMrs. A. M., Rossiand\u2014Ia there anyone ln thla\ndlitrlct who makes braided rugst - '\nGet ln touch with Mrs. A. Poty, Box 7,\nN*l*<m.  .' -\nI. A., Frultvale\u2014I have been trying to waterproof a garment. Can you iupply me with\nthi* Information?\nYou do not say what material you want to\nwaterproof, but her* Is * lormula given' tor'\n'\u2022coats\"\u2014presumably woolen coats; Isltt'glass\nalum, soap, equal put*; water, sufficient. Dissolve each separately and mix the solutions,\nwith which Imbue cloth on wrong side. Dry\nind brush well, first with dry brush ind then\n(lightly) with bruih dipped ln w\u00bbter.\nFor linen or cotton, here la the way fishermen do co*t\u00ab ind leggings; Whatever the article iii let it be itretched on t table. Make *.\nv\u00abry thibk paint of whatever color Is wlihed-J\nan invisible green Is, perhaps, i* good as any.\nTake a large lump of- common broad aoip,\npretty freshly cut from * b\u00abr, and every thn_.\nyou replenish the brush, with paint rub well\non the soap ind take up as much as possible\nand rub well on one surface of calico or linen.\nIt will take long to do and should be hung tn\nthe windiest place you can find. Summer is\nth* belt time, and a moil-, will see it in usable\norder, and you will have is supple and perfect\na waterproof garment u paint can make. Alter\nwearing * few time* i second eoit would ba\nadvisable, which will dry in hall tb* Urn* of\nth* first and must be don* the same way.\nReader, Creston\u2014Could you give me the name\nol * gunsmith at th* Cotst?\nHartley Sc Haywood, Vancouver, B. C.\nL. G., Nelion\u2014Would you pleaie give me the\ncorrect pegging count in the following\n'   card* as played In tour-handed cribbage\ngame: Queen, five, three, four, six, ace,\ndeuce?\nWe have bean told the count ihould be as\nfollows: North plays Queen, 10; East plays five,\n15; South play* three, 18; West play* four, .2\n(run,.three points to West); North plays six,\n28; last plays see, 29; South plays deuce, 31.\nOne of the nobler symbols of our present\ncivilization is the dollar watch, now selling\nfor $2.89.\u2014Sudbury Star.\nGems of Thought\nO, human love! thou spirit given,\nOn Earth, of all we hope ln Heaven!\n\u2014Poe.\n*      *\u25a0\u25a0*.,\nII the motives of human affection are\nright, the affections are enduring and achieving\u2014Mary Baker Eddy. '\n*'..   *      *      \"\nMy bountry is as boundless at the sea,\nMy love as deep; the more I give to thee\nThe more I have, fer both are infinite.\n\u2014Shakespeare.\n'\u00bb      *      *\nI love thee, as the good love heaven.-   '\n\u2014Longfellow.\n:*      *'     *\nIf thou must love me, let it be lor nought\nExcept for love's sake only.\n\u2014Elizabeth B. Browsing,\n*\u25a0*'.\u00ab\nMy heart shall o'ertake you\nWherever you are.\n\u2014Clinton 8collard.\n\" ^Lookin^ Backward\n10 YEARS AGO ,\nProm the-Nelson Dally Newi of Feb. 17,1943\nSeventy tingle men of Nelson'and district\nregistered at the Nelson Employment and Selective service. These are men who had not\npreviously received their military call-up. The.\ndeadline for registration is March 1.\nThe Kimberley Red Crou revenue lor\nJahutry waa $579.58.\n25 YBAR8 AQO\nFrom th* Nelson Dally Newi of Fib. 17,1928\nSteps taken In Trail thla afternoon indicate the construction of a new hlgh-cUsi hotel\nfor $200,000, to be located In the heart Of Trail'*\nbusiness section. .   -\n, Heavyweight boxer George Harlow of\nNelson will meet Jim Gorman of Drumheller,\nAlta., at the Canadian Legion gymnasium.\nA net gain of *2 customers during 1927 w\u00bbl\nthe gratifying record ol the civic gas plant,\nth* anttu\u00bbl report submitted to the City Council reveal*.\n60 YEARS AQO\nFrom th* Weekly News ef Feb. 14, 1903\nThe advisability ot Incorporating the town\nof Ymir is now b\u00ablng lerlouiljr taken ln.na.nd.\nAt the last meeting of the Citizen*' Association\na committee was appointed to gather all possible data.\nYour Horoscope\nDo riot mak* \"*fty unconsidered radical\nchanges at thit time, but in the months ahead\ndo not be afraid to adopt new and original\nbulkiest methods. Th* result* ihould be gratl-\nlying. Today's child li likely to be energetic\nand enterprlilng,\nMAN INSIDE THE SUIT\nWe suggest it Is \"not what the man wean\nbut what kind ol * man 1* itWlde the suit. Th*\npeople ot the U.S. have selected Elsenhower\nfor leadership. An Insignificant matter about\nhow he drene* can hardly arouse much excitement \u00bbmong th* people of the U.S. In th*\npast Eisenhower ha* been a man of accomplishment\u2014not a man of show.\u2014Strathmor*\nStandard.\nToday's Bible Thought\n\" Yet we have seen one ol the vilest\ntownt completely reborn and trani-\nlormed Into I delightful beautiful\nand moral city by th* influtnee of\none man and hia organizations.\n1    Wo* to me thtt I sojourn In\nMesheck, that I dwell In th* tents\nof Kedarl\u2014Pialm 120i1B.\nPolice Chase Coyote\nOn Edmonton Airport\n, EDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Police cars\nraced up and down-the runways\nat the- Edmonton municipal airport\nchasing a coyote Saturday for the\nsecond time in'three days. This\ntime the coyote lost.\nI The coyote was run over and shot\nto death. Its brain lyill be examined\nfor trace* of rabies, Infecting many\n\u25a0wild animals In northern Alberta.\n. Police armed with shotguns and\nrevolvers chaied the coyote into\nbiish near the airport. But unlike\nThursday, when he stayed in the\nbush and made good his escape,\nthe wily animal, made the mistake\nol sneaking back onto the Held.\nHERNE BAY; England (CP) -\nThree miniature trains which in\nthe: old days carried passengers at\nthis Kent seaside resort are coming\nout ot retirement. They have been\nfold for a private collection of.\nminiature, railway equipment.\nViefas o\nfrom'tha\nNews Fronts\nX \u00bby J. M, HCBERT8, Jr.   -\nAiieolited Press News Analyst\n\/\u25a0 When the United Statei lost its\ncontest with ihe Communists lor\nthe rubber ol Ceylon it lost a skirmish in an increasingly Important\npattern of cold war.\n\u25a0For 2W years now, since the\nKorean war proved to the Kremlin\nthat Its post-war days of physical\nexpansion were over, unless it\nwished to risk shooting, Stalin has\nbeen putting emphasis on economic\nwarf\u00abr\u00bb.\ni Last year's Moscow economic\nconference was sufficient to show\nhow the Kremlin'.waa thinking.\nPolitical warfare against the Western Allies had reached Its peak\ntnd, after Communist successes in\nCzechoslovakia tnd Red China\nCere teemed little prospect that\nadditional conquests would be made\nby means ot the coup.\nThe Soviet Union must have recognized then that the world was\nplacing blame directly where it belonged, and that any new outbreak\nwould be accompanied by the risk\nol direct retaliation.\nIn efforts to tie together the\neconomies ol the various countries\nwithin the Soviet sphere became\napparent. -     ,'\nCommunist trade Is based against\nentirely on barter. The Chinese\nReds paid Ceylon the equivalent of\nabout three times in .foodstuffs\nwhat the United States offered in\ndollars for the rubber. This not\nonly helps the Communists on a\nhighly strategic material, but also\nprevents Ceylon from earning Just\nthat many dollars so badly needed\nbi the sterling area group of\nnations.\nThis is one of the things being\nwitched closely as the Communists\nattempt to make hay through anti-\nU.S. propaganda being spread by\nArgentine and other rightist forces\nIn Latin America,\nObservers are wondering now\nwhere to place the emphasis \u2014 on\nStalin's warm welcome fer the new\nArgentine ambassador to Moscow,\na perennial advocate of more trade\nbe'tween the two countries, or on\nPresident Peron's. statement that\nthe change of administrations ln\nthe U.S. had eased Washington-\nBuenos Aires tensions.\nEden Reassures\nCommons on U.S.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Foreign\nSecretary . Eden Monday assured\nthe House Ot Commons the United\nStates lully understands that Britain \"leels a right to consultation,\nto discussion ln advance\" on any\nmajor decisions affecting pence.\nHe was asked by Woodrow\nWyatt, a Labor member, whether\nJohn Foster Dulles, U.S. state, secretary, has agreed that there would\nbe such consultation\u2014\"not merely\nInformation.\"\nEden said his talks with Dulles\ncovered a \"wide range Of topics in-\neluding all the main problems ip\nwhich the United States and ourselves Bhare a common Interest. The\ndiscussions dealt especially with\nthe European Defence Community\nand th* Far East.\" '\n\"I *m confident that as a result\nol these talks we sliall develop a\nclol* co-qperatlon with the new\nU. S, administration ln the Inter\nnational field tnd I look forward\nto renewing these discussions during a visit I will be paying to the\nUnited States later this month.\"\n\"There i* no doubt In the minds\nof th*' U. S. government that this\ngovernment feels lt has the right\nto consultation, to dlscuslon in ad\nvance, on any major decision which\nwould affect war policy,\" Eden\nsaid.\nDEFENCE PROGRAM\nOSLO, Norway (CP) \u2014 The mln-\nlltry. Of delence has started a new\nthree - year defence construction\nprogram. Work now is proceeding\non \u00ablx airfields, lour bomb-prool\nmountain shelters and 10 barracks\nto provide ?48 apartments for ol-\nlicers.\nThis Week\ni at Victoria\nliH JfBY KAY ANN BOBBITT\nof Br*denten,:Fli\u201e wai born last\nFebruary 15 with all her Internal\norgans, except her liver . and\nspleen, outside her body. Doctors\n\u25a0\u25a0Id oddi against her survival\nwere better thin 100,000 to 1.\nSurgeeni operated Immediately\nand put organs In place. Within\nfive weeks the wu home, and\nnow Is getting ready to celebrate\nher first birthday.,\n\u2014AP wlrephoto.\n;      By L. T. NIMSICK, M.L.A.\nCrinbrook-Klmbei-ley\ni Another week has elapsed and the\ndebate1 on the Speech from the\nThrone Is last coming tc an end,\nyet not as> fast as the. Premier\nwould like. -\u2022'..'\nLast week I informed you that\nthe Government had withdrawn all\ntheir speakers from thii debate and\nthis has ushered in a unique situation i\\ that lt is now.a one-sided\naffair \u2014 all the speches from the\nOpposition side of the House and\nSilence from the Government\nbenches.\nAccording    to   -Parliamentary\nhistory It has been customary for\nall Members to participate In this\n- debate to state the case for their\nown   Constituencies   before   th*\nHouse. This has always been con\n\u2022Idered a  duty of each elected\nrepresentative. H nee the policy\nOf silence- by all the Members of\nthe Government.Is considered by\nLiberal, Conservative, and CCF\ngroups to be a deliberate attempt\nby the Premier to dictate to hit\nprivate  Members.  Perhaps It It\nan attempt by the  Premier to\navoid the political version of feot\nand mouth disease \u2014 which It to\nopen mouth and put fo-1 In same!\nAs the Premier has none ot his\nown, speakers ,up he is trying to\nconfuse the rest by calling night\nsittings unexpectedly on the pre\ntext  that  he  wants  the  Budget\npresented Tuesday; however, this\nmove on his part has called forth\nmuch opposition as most Members\nhave several days notice as to when\nthey are to speal. and friends from\nii.  and near whose prearranged\nplans were therefore upset when\nthe Premier called a night sitting\njust about an hour before the end\nof the afternoon. Unlike the Premier,   the   Opposition,   ln   their\nefforts to cooperate, tquiesced to\nthis demand under protest..\nI spoke at the night sitting and\ntook almost two-how to cover all\nthe points I desired to for, with so\nlittle in the Throne Speech; and\nwith no other indication as to what\nis  crming up, one has to Cover\nmany   questions.   You  may   rest\nassured that I not only took the\nGovernment   to   task   for   doing\nnothing    on   the   Compensation,\nLabor, and Hospital report* but impressed them with the necessity of\nincreasing all the rates for Social\nAssistance,   Old   Age   Assistance\nMothers' Allowance, and others in\naccordance with the increased cost\nof living. We must not forget that\ntl.e receipts from taxes originally\nlevied to* cover these' expenditures\nhave increased in relation to the\ndecreasing value of the dollar and\ntherefore,   at   least   part   ot   the\ntwenty million surplus lor last year\nbelongs to these unfortunate people.\nDuring my speech 1 emphasized\nthe necessity for'bridges, a new\ndeal   on   school   taxation,   rural\nelectrification, a new government\nbuilding for Cranbrook, the Libby\ndam, t probation office for East\nKootenay, the  urgency for th*\nImmediate erection of the Boys'\nIndustrial School, and for mora\nroadwork In the Cranbrook area.\nI alto took to task the Liquor\nEnquiry Commission for not hav\nlng a hearing In the East Koo\ntenay;   special   reference   wit\nmade by Tilly Rolston, Minister\nef  Education, that the enquiry\nhad cost a mere $10,000 whloh li\nquite pditlble when a Itrge per\ntion of the Province li left without * hearing.\nDuring   the   week  Mri.. Naney\nHodges, one ol the Liberal Members   of   Victoria,    (and   former\nSpeaker  of  the House)   gave  an\nexcellent talk and made up for her\nenforced silence during the three\nor four years she was Speaker.\nSome time this week the Budget\ncan be expeoted to be presented\nand we have been warned that it\nIs a most unusual one which is\nquite possible lor we have an\n\"unusual\" Government! That will\nbe thirty lor this week, friends.\nTo Question A-G\nOn Clemons Case\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The Clarence\nClemons case may come before the\nlegislature. -\nClemons, 52-year-old Negro longshoreman, was arrested by two\nVancouver policemen in July. He\nwas taken to hospital, where he lay\nparalyzed and unable to speak until\nhe died Christmas Eve. ;\nl A coroner's inquest cleared the\ntwo constables of allegations they\nhad beaten Clemona and decided\nthe dock worker, had died from ag-\ngravtion of an old injury.\nJim (Bury (CCF-Vancouver Centre) gave notice Monday he will\nask the attorney-general whether\nhis department was represented at\ntbe corner's investigation, whether\nsuch a representative made any re-\nport and whether the report,\"'! any,\nwiji be made available to the\nlegislature.. ...\nMr. Bury is an official of two\nVancouver drganliatlons which\nseek to combat racial dlserimina\ntion.':'      .   .     v_;\nBritish Extend\nManstein's. Parole\nBONN (AP) \u2014 The medical pa\nrole of German Field Marshal\nErich von ManBteln haB been extended for another month, British\nauthorities said Monday. The physical condition of the 66-year-old\nwar criminal will not pen.ilt him\nto be moved baclj, to prison at present, they said. Manstein \"was gran-\nted a medical parole last Aug. 20\nlor a cataract operation. \"\u25a0\"-,     ' -\nRESIDENTS of Graverideel, Holland, place furniture and house- ,\nhold goods In \u25a0 street.outside their flooded homes to permit the sun's\nrtys to de \u25a0 drying Job after the disastrous floods, The huge windmill\"\nIn the background It one of hundreds being used to pump the flood-\nwater from the Inundated areas.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nProfit Drop for\nWestern Plywood\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Western\nPlywood Cobapariy Monday reported * drop ln net profit for th* year\nended Oct. 31, 1932, to $209,300 from\n(410,013 in 1931.\nSales decreased from $5,042,007 to\n$4,803,086 and working capital to\n$248,313 from $329,157.\nPresident John Benet said keen\ncompetition and higher wages were\nresponsible for the decline In prof-\nIts.\nJail Break Stopped\nAt Prince George\nPRINCE GEORGE, \"B.C. (CP)-\nOuards thwarted a jail break.I\nthe city jail Saturday night afte\neight prisoners-broke down a mai\ncell-block'door.\nGuards and police officers rush*\nthe prisoners as they broke throuj\nthe door into the main corridor al\nfnrcid them back into the eel\nblock. No one was injured. |\n\u25a0 RCMP said Monday charges of 'i\ntempting to break custody may 1\nf.'l-d against the men. Damage w\nestimated at $100.\nTho ja'l bu'lt to house 12 me\nwas occupied by 30.\n'V, * very beneficial\nto our firm\"\nRecently the owners of a new business\nwrote their bank about the way the\nlocal branch had helped*,\n\u25a0'Having completed our first year in\nbusiness, and one which we feel has been\nmost successful, we would like to advise\nyou of the splendid co-operation we have\nreceived from the officials of your branch.\nWe have consulted your heal manager\nmany times, nof only regarding financial\nproblems but business problems in general,\nand his advice has been very beneficial ,\nto our firm.\"\nSuch service is part of the job of every\nmanager of Canada's 3700 branch banks.\nHe must know the problems of the\npeople he serves\u2014whether business men'\nor primary producers, wage earners or ,\nsalaried workers. He welcomes every\nopportunity to make his bank useful\nto them\u2014and to you.\nThis advertisement, based\non an. actual letter, li\npresented here by\nTHE BANKS SERVING\nYOUR COMMUNITY\n.    '\n HHHHpr -**mm*\nmim*wmm^mmmmmmm.\nRff\nCOMECT\nSHOES\nFOR ACTIVE, NORMAL FKT\nsums\n\u2022\"\u25a0   nsfcU.s.'m.oe.wf.tMH\nFLEXIBLE SHANK OXFORDS\nUofs kow LoiySooW\nrlulbh 5honk walls\nwCh your loot, Al QtM\nMM QOMyMf W#NI<\n-   INSIDI\nOutside counter pac*\nkit. No linings lo\nwrinkle. My, bill\nthey're comfort-Mel\n\u00a3St_K_>for Active Comfort and Comfortable Attloa\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nJewelled Clips\nAdorn London Hats\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Gemstone embroidery lends a glittar to London's\nlatest  millinery   fashions.   In   the\n. _ case of formal hats jewelled clips\nI or brooches are used as brlghtenms.\n'\u2022'     The newest pftce for jewelery is\nat the nape of the neck to give\npoint to the new hat depth at the\nback.   Close   head-hugging   little\ncaps of velvet or panne have gathers softly grouped to the nape of the\nneck, where they are adorned with\na jewelled bow.\nBEST\"\"\nwwvi*,\nCOIDS\n1001 Attend\nValtotine\nTea, Sale\nMor* than 100 guosts filled\nTrinity Church hall for Uie annual\nValentin* tea of Friendly Club Two\nSaturday.\nCay Valentino motifs, red tapers\nand white dollies decorated the tea\ntables with; red taper* and red\ntulip* centering the main table.\nMrs. Allan Dixon and President\nMrs. Donald Hunter received the\nguests. Mrs.- N. C. Stibbs, Mrs. B.\nB. Crawford, Mrs. G. W. Payne and\nMra, W. H. McCandllsh presided\nat the tea urn.\nIn charge, of the bake table were\nMrs. Bert Ramsden, Mrs. Douglas\nWlnlaw and Mrs. R. D. Bothamley.\nMrs. T. V. Kennedy was general\nconvener' and Mrs...,Helen Peachy\nwas ln charge of the kitchen.\nProceed* will go to Trinity\nchurch work.\nWillowPointWI\nCelebrates\n39lh Anniversary\nWILLOW POINT \u2014 Founder's\nDay and the SDth anniversary of\nWillow Point Women's Institute\nwaa celebrated with a potluck\nluncheon.\nAmong the 24 present were three\ncharter members, Mrs. H. I. Middle-\nton (life member), Mrs. I. C. Campbell and Mrs. C. Shannon. Mrs. B.\nHeddle, who joined -the WI four\nyean after formation, waa also\npresent\nA summary of the Wltyearly days\ncompiled by the late Mrs. H. H.\nApplewhaite, was read. Entertainment Included songs, recitations\nand stories by members. Mrs. A.\nT. Banks, vice-president, in the absence of President Mrs. R. A.\nGrimes, was hostess.\nA $5 donation to the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children\nwas authorized at a meeting following the luncheon. A letter from\nUniversity of B. C offering a home\neconomics course was read.\nNew Denver\nMr. and Mrs. Clifford N. Uphill\nreturned from a week's holidays at\nFernie with the former's parents,\nMr. and Mrs, Thomas Uphill.\nFred A. Johnson ot New Denver\nand E. .Hallbauer have returned\nfrom Invermere.\nNational Council\nTo Meet in June\nMONTREAL (CPl-Tiie 80th *n-\nnual meeting of the National Council of Women of Canada will be\nheld in Winnipeg next June 15-20.\nHighlight of the jubilee conven\ntion will bt, a pilgrimage to the\nInternational Peace Gardens, on the\nCanadian-United Statea border of\nManitoba and North Dakota. A\nbronze plaque will be unveiled to\ncommemorate the founding of the\ncouncil in 1893 by Iahbel, Marchioness of Aberdeen ahd Temair, wife\nof the then Governor General of\nCanada.\nTHE FIRST INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S\norgananlzatlon for keeping the free nations united,\nknown as \"Women for Union of the Free!1 Is\nmeeting In New York to begin plans for setting up\nchapters In all of 48 states and every free country\nIn the world. The purpose of the organisation Is\nto educate citizens of the free world, particularly\nwomen, to understand the dangers facing the free\nnations, and to l,.,_rm them as to proposals being\nmade to keep the democracies united, against\naggression to prevent World War III. Among members attending meeting are: Mrs. Suzanne Schumann, left, of Germany; Mrs. Hattle May Pavlo,\nRye, New York, president of the organization;\nMrs. Marcelle Henry, of France, and Mrs. N. C.\nStephens of Toronto.\u2014Central   Press  Canadian.\nQueen Mother, Margaret to\nMake Home at Sandringham\nAMONG THOUSANDS of Canadians attending coronation of\nQueen Elizabeth on June 2nd In\nLondon will be 16-year-old Virginia Kalmak'off, seen here holding her pet cat A high sohool\nstudent, at New Westminster,\nVirginia waa chosen, along with\nanother student from the same\nschool, to represent Canadian\nJunior Red Cross at famous event.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nANNUAL MEETING\nB. G. Cancer Society\nCITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS, FRIDAY, FEB. 20\n8 P.M.\nTonight\nat\n8RM*\nottht\nGapitol Theatre\n\"Christ\n\u00bb\nwith\nWayman K. Robert!\nNine Nelton Churches Cooperating\nYQU ARE INVITED\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER\u2014Jbseph Miklt*,\nwho has been employed at New\nDenver Garage, hu left tor New\nWestminster to visit his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Mikita, Sr.\n\"Mrs. Thomas McNelah of Victoria\nwas the weekend guest of Mrs. E. I.\nAngrignon. She was accompanied\nby her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Leveque of\nNelson, who spent the weekend In\nNakusp with relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. R. McGorman and\nson Donald' were weekend visitors\nto Nelson.\nMrs. Norman F. Brooke* is visiting in Oliver, the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Crook. '\nMr. and Mrs, Glen Emory and\nfamily ot Nelson hove taken up\nresidence ln New Denver.\nMr*. T. W. Clarke left for Vancouver where ihe will visit relatives and friends. She will also\nvisit her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Crawford Clarke and\nson Clayton, at Nanaimo.\nDennis Clarke of Nelson \u00bbpent\nthe weekend with hi* parehts, Mr.\nand hlrs. T. W. Clarke.\nMr. and Mrs. A. C. D'Amour and\nson James left Tuesday for San\nFrancisco where they will take up\nresidence.\nMrs. E. Hallbauer and daughter\nMary-Anne of Zincton were weekend guests of the former's brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nFred A. Johnson.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Queen Mother\nElizabeth and Princess Margaret,\nback ln London after a stay  at\nFirst Woman\nAdmitted as Bayer\nTORONTO <CP) - Slim and attractive MTs. Edna Watkins. is \"tho\nfirst woman admitted to the ranks\nof the Toronto branch of the Canadian Purchasing Association.   '\n\"They frowned on women members for a long time,'!, she says.\n\"However, they finally took a vote\nand decided tp admit them. Mine\nwas the first application. But there\nwill be others' now that the way is\nopen.\"\nAa a purchasing agent she\nhandles a long list of equipment\nand supplies for her company's\nToronto factory and suburban\nbranch. She buys everything from\ntons of steel strips and heavy machinery to office equipment\nMrs, Watklna-started her career\nas a bank accountant, switching to\nindustrial accounting. She became\npurchasing agent for her company\nwhen her superior resigned in 1948.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 17,1953 - S\n1\nit'I,'\"-.\u25a0,..;'\u2022   \" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*;'    '\u25a0\u25a0 ,.\u25a0:\u25a0 ;:>-'-   x . \"HQNK   144  '\nHoliday visits to and from the Coast are,among the\nmost popular of Nelson social activities.* .\nVANCOUVER VISITORS .., Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack, Morrison and ion\nJohnnie of Vancouver are visiting\nMr. Morrison's parehts, Mr. and\nMrs, J. Morrison,. 1009 Carbonate\nStreet.\n,   e   o   *\nRETURNS . . . Mrs.. John Kun-\nesky of Hillerest, Alta., has left for\nher home after holidaying with her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\n$10 Made By\nStudents al\nValentine Tea\nAlNSWORTH - Almost M0 wss\nmade at a Valentine tea and candy\nsale sponsored by Alnsworth students, \u25a0\"-'   -\nThe tea\" was held at Uie Com-\nmunlty. Hall amid gay valentine\ndecoration*.\nEntertainment wa* provided by\nMiss Heather Frazer who sang two\nsolos and a group of junior pupils\nwho sang a number of choruses accompanied by Mrs. H. S. Currie.\nProceeds will go to the Junior\nRed Cross.\nMri Nick Szkico, Svoboda Ranch,\nNelson and also with her son and\nd. -ghter-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. N.\nAndroaschuk, at Castlegar.\n1 \u25a0  *'**:.'..\nFROM MARA . . .. Homer Eby,\nwho 1* with Gas-Ice Corporation\nLtd. at Mara, spent the weekend ln\nNelson with his family.\n. *  *. *\nHOSPITALIZED . . . Grant   Hj.\nSaunby  of Trail 1* a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\n*  *- * ,\nHOME AGAIN . . . Mr. and Mrs.\nS, E, Briard, Josephino Street, re-\nturned Sunday from Vancouver.\n\u25a0   '  \u2022  \u2022 '\u2022\nCOAST HOLIDAY ... Mr. and\nMrs, G. L. Well*, Seventh Street,\nhove left for a holiday In Vancouver and Seattle.\nSandringham, are supervising final\nalterations to Clarence House, first\nLondon home of the Queen and the\nDuke of Edinburgh.\n\u2022The.house is being-fitted as.two\nseparate'flats. The rooms on the sec\nond floor, formerly day-and-night\nnurseries for Prince\u25a0 Charles and\nPrincess Anne, will probably! be\noccupied by Princess Margaret.\nThe Queen Mother, it Is said, will\nuse the ground floor.\n, The Queen Mother now spends\nmost of her spare time at Clarence\nHouse, studying plans and color\nSchemes for interior decoration. It\nIs said that little escapes her, and\nplans must be carried out to her\nspecifications.\nNo dote has been set for the move\nfrom^ Buckingham Palace, which\nmay'be in March. One big delay\nhas been caused by removal of\ndownstairs panelling presented to\nthe Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh as a ^redding present This\nhas been stored.\nKeen interest Is taken by both\nPrincess Margaret and her mother\nin the fitting of the kitchens. The\nQueen moved most of her up-to-\ndate kitchen \"equipment from Clarence House to Buckingham Palace\nto' Establish this first kitchen 'ht.\n..     ...     . , tached to the royal apartments-\nManufacturing Increased from 52 one that could perhaps rival that\nto 58 per cent of Canada's net value\nof commodity production between\n1938 and 1950. ,   , -i\npresented to Countess .Alexander,\nwife of Britain's defence minister,\nby the women of Canada.      ' -'   -\nr\nbe sure to get\nDELNOR\nfomoctf to fay&c fad\nMrs. Mart Kenney\nPuts on Blue Bonnet\n-r- Sings Its Praises!\nTake your lead from Mrs. Mart\nKenney, Norms Locke of singing fame.\nCompare Delotc. Blto Bonnet Margarine with any spread at any pricei\nLike the well-known Canadian band-\nloader's wife, you'll find M~~~ Bum\nBonnet's fresh, sweet flavor is always\ntop on Uie hit parade. You'll love\nDe_ot_- Blue Bonnet's year-round\nnutritional value, too. It's pre-cut in\ngolden-yellow quarter., pounds, eaoh\nquarter is individually wrapped in pure\nalumium foil with inner parchment\nlining. And you'll really save money\nwhen you use Delude Blub Bonnet\nEnjoy Deluxe Blub Bonnet convenience and quality. Get golden-yellow\nDeluxe Blue Bonnet. \u00abt~\nWluit do ttteij scuj about VOO?\nYour good appearance can mean success! Employer*\nseek well-groomed men for better jobs. Our dry cleaning service assures you of the finest clothe* care that\nmeans a smart appearance, alwaysi\nPHONE 1175\nSPECIAL\nU-CALL SERVICE\nIN AT NINE\nOUT AT FOUR\nAND   ALWAYS   LOOK   YOUR   BEST!\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nAND CLEANERS\nPhone 1175\nNelson, B. C.\nLister Notes,\nLISTER \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nSommerfeld and son of Kimberley\nvisited relatives in Lister and Canyon.\nMiss Rose Krannabetter and Miss\nOlive Sherstobedoff of Calgary\nwe're visitors at Huscroft and - Lister. - ;\u25a0 ;\nMr. and Mrs. 0. -Fleming and\ntwo children of Nelson and Lorn*\nHobden of Klmberley were guest*\nof their parents', Mr. and Mrs. Bert\nHobden.   '\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nDalanco 18 Month*\nHamilton Inlet on the coast of\nLabrador 1* more than 150 mile*\nlong with an average breadth of 14\nmiles.\nGOAL\n%-,w TOV\nPhone It*\nTOWLER\nFuel <_ Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\nCROSSFRETTY\nBABY$\n\u25a0f-uMii-e   Mvttls.s\nUpset\nConstipated\nTesthlng\n\u2022In Bubr'i Own I-bUu\nlo quickly brlnf the relief\nthat eneouriBea restful\noomfort.  Thoroughf\ndc.pen__.lo. Mo\"\n-leepr -tuff \u2014 no\ndulllne .HecL Died\nai Mothers tor oTor\nSO r.ars. (sat t .\nIsiokiK Msr at rota dr-MM.     .\n\u00ab0w\u00bb\nRoyal ltd.\n\u2022an ,:.\u201e X,\n20 oi. tan\nTownhouse lw\u00abet*ned.\n20 o*. tan\t\nDown Paney,\nm* ;\t\nTart* Tolh Cholet.\nIS ox. *en .\t\n* SLICED PEACHES S^\n* CRUSHED PINEAPPLE ****\n* GRAPEFRUIT JUICE\n* TOMATO JUICE ir-'\ni\n*\n*\n* QUICK OATS Xt&t\nGOLDEN CORN\nFANCY PEAS S\u00ab^\nPork.   \u2022\noi. ten.\nLUNCHEON MEAT it\nCHICKEN SOUPS\u25a0\u00ab\u00a3\nRITZ BISCUITS ?r__\n\u2022 CANTERBURY TEA WB,\n* DOG FOOD 3\nTop*\",\not. con\n18c\n31c\n15c\n34c\n17c\n17c\n29c\n18c\n19c\n41c\n83c\nHe\n\\}a&&Jl fihoduoL\n\u2022 Sunkist Oranges i***., n\u00abv \"\u00b0v.i. _ 1 lbs. 23c\n\u2022 White Grapefruit a**\u00ab s.edi\u00ab. ___ Lb. lOe\n\u2022 Lettuce urg., \u00bbo\u00bbw h*** \u25a0\u25a0_ l Lb. 17c\nSjuWuwjLqmL TYImLl\n* GrOUIld Beef \u25a0\u2022\u2022<\u00ab* Brand. 85% loon\n\u2022 Smoked Shoulders\n**Y IrVhlteXlSh   Manitoba. For Lenten meal*\nPlenl* ttylo, whol*\nor thank half <\t\nLb. 45c\nLb. 39c\nLb. 27c\nPries* Effective February 17 and 18\nifkE Em WwJsL*\n \\.'?^W^1?-*,\u00ab't^P\n-\u2014\nr-,,r,:-; .;\"p\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 17, 1953\nWatch Stolen In\nEngland Returns\nVia Whitehorse\nPENSE, Sask. (CP)-Ih 1920 W.\n0. Bull's inscribed watoh was stolen\nfrom his valise on a Liverpool dock\nas he arrived in England to visit\nhis father.\n\u25a0\". The loss of the watch was a blow\nto the postmaster at the small town\nof Pense because it had been given\nto him by his friends here in appre.\nciation of his service in the First\nWorld,War.\nWhen he returned to Canada a\nfew months later, he had heard no\nmore of the missing watch and as\nthe years passed the incident faded\nin his memory. '\nLast September a letter arrived\naddressed to\"the Legion, a public\nofficial or postmaster, Pense, Sask.\"\nA* postmaster and a member of the\nLegion, he felt entitled to open it.\nThe letter concerned his lost watch.\nThe watch had been inscribed \"to\nW. O. Bull from Pense and district\nlor service in the Great War.\"\nPAWNSHOP PURCHASE\nPostmarked Whitehorse, Yukon,\nthe letter wai from an English girl,\nHilda Regan, who explained she\nwould, like .to get in touch with Mr.\nBull.  ,X-\" ,   \u2022* OY- ' ii.\nTHe\"Pehse ppfctiriaster replied arid\nletejr.'jbSi' \"got-' a'Jet&r 'from- the girl's\nfaatoi-YX,,\n- Mr.- Regan,.*\npoliceman, laid he bought the\nwatch':in a'pawnshop. H*. tried to\ntrace the ownertbut no one had ever\n__ \u25a0 _t'2_-'-'<_____..-:_i_i.._ tj      l\nNominate Clare Luce\nU.S. Envoy to Italy\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 president Elsenhower tent to the Senate today the nomination of Clare\nBooth Luce to ba ambaitadbr to\nItaly. ',,' :\"\nMr*. Luce, a former Congrest-,\nwoman,   It  the  wife   of   Henry\nLuce, editor of Time, Life and\ni Fortune magazines.\nNewcomers Show\nTo Calgary Fans\nheard-of a;toW,named Pens*.\n.,0_i?Mi,;r*tirfegnt.the 'daughter\ntook the watch as-a.travelling. clock\nand .b.ought,\"'^,with her when, she\ntoured Cariafe in-1952.'While Jiitoh-\nhiking thrbugl\u00bbJ,\u00abaslcatchewBn,..sh\u00bb\nsaw* 'pighpost bearing the: name\n-VotrttW ox-:''v-' O'O ;\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0'\nSo-'-^teupsI\" St-year, to ttoe'dayllt\n. illsuiii.il)*! nil.' tht 'inlnh ;oame back\nto Mr.'    '\nCALGARY (CP) - Additional\nproof that Alberta is full of possibilities\u2014If proof is needed\u2014is found in\nthe activities of Kurt Reinze and\nGusti Pfifflg, newcomen from Germany, and Austria, respectively.\nThey show 16mm copies of the\nlatest European feature movies\nwherever and whenever they feel\nthey can find a worthwhile audience.   .\nThe^two newcomers\u2014with Manfred Melnert, another new Canadian\n\u2014one evening may be In Calgary,\nMedicine Hat the next, and later in\nLe&brldge.\nCENSORED AT EDMONTON\nSince newly imported films must\nalso PASS the board of .censors, they,\nalso: go toEdmonton onah ayerago\nof once a week,, to attend to that\np*rt of tljofa; business. '  X\n* Their high-powered Canadian car\n. ^Liverpool 4, their Ayorkshop.-Onto it and-ih-\n\"\" '\"'   \"\"\" side they pile film,, wires, a jjrojic-\ntor, and sound equipment '-.\nPfiffig. ldpks after 'the financial\nNelion. and DlHrle. Dlitrlbutors:\nWood YalioMki\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n8M Baker tt.\nPhon* 1630\nend, selling' ticketsrbobkihg--future\nshows, putting up posters and so on.\nThe trio's stock In trade are 16mm\ncopies'ot full-length films. In addition, ':eaclj*sfec|,w'is- -preceded- by.\n$b,e ..Igtest i German newsreel, en-\nabun|?13l-ir audience to keep in\ntouch; :with.-what is happening in\nSfceii; (\"former homeland. ;\nBU8INE8S IS GOO.D      . _,...     .\n''The average show is attended by\n400 people and Is neyerTsHowh more\n\u25a0fhajj.once ih one locality.\n' Kurt Heinze was a fruit dealer\nbefore he came to Canada 13 months\nago to'.work in Ontario gold mines.\nThere, he and Melnert and others'\nfound evening* long and devoid of\ndistraction., ,,- -\nOiie dayi \"Heinze saw a German\nfirm's advertisement offering to expert films. With the help of Meine'rt\nhe'iented-ftfilm and a single showing at the mine was an instant success.      \u25a0 \u2022   .    ',:.';\nThen they decided to go to the\nWest Invest in a oar and projector.\nThough handicapped by an inadequate knowledge ot English they\nfound' themselves in buslnes?..\n- A chanoe meeting resulted in\nPfiffig joining the organization. A\nwell-known oonductor ' in Vienna\nbefore emigrating to Canada seven\nmonths ago, Pfiffig had no! technical knowledge to qualify himself\nfor the theatre business. [But he\nspeaks perfect English, and gets\nalong well with people.\n08LO, Norway (CP>-The 65th\nanniversary of the Salvation Army\nin Norway .waB celebrated with a\nconference here at which, tile work\nof the organization was praised by\nrepresentatives of- the government\nand clerical organizations:: X,0  '\u25a0\u2022.\nChangchun Rail\nDeal Not Quite\nA Noble Gesture\nA PHYSICIAN (centre) examines Mill Ora\nEagleman, 20, of Watonga, Okla., after the and\nthree other girl aerlallcti with the Shrlne-Polack\nCircus, being hoisted aloft for their \"human but\nterflies\" act In Louisville, Ky., fell 20 feet-when\nthe cable broke. None of the girls wai seriously\nInjured.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto\nUBC Growing\nHothouse Bananas\n. ..VJWCOy^R^CP)-^TO* bai*Ha\nbelt's : northern' limit ijow \" runs\nthrough a tropical hothouse at the\nUniversity of' British Columbia. \u2022\u2022'\n- There Erofesar.A. F.Barss, head\nof the department horticulture, his\nstudents-and:.staff are producing\nripe bananas almost faster than\nthey can pass them around .to .officials to taste. ,    :\u25a0\u2022'\nThe first banana tree (it's actually a herb, but it looks like a\ntall, tree) was planted 21 months\nago \"for fun.\" The bananas that are\nbeing strijipod-off-.rtow.are from: a\nsecond shoot..\nProf.   Barss   says  banana  trees'laid down in the 1880s, was carry.\nsometimes grow .'to a height, ot 40\nfeet The UBC tree is about 12 feet\nhigh..-..\n' Dr. Barss believes the bananas\ntike the first-grown In British Columbia. He growi other things, too\nin his tropical, room. Pomegranate,\navocado, guava, coconut, palm,\norange, lemon and fig trees are all\ngrowing. Dates are one tropical\nplant that will not grow.\nONE SMALL SECTION\nAll the tropicals ar* housed\none small section of the UBC greenhouses. The remainder of the 13,-\n000 square feet under glass is devoted to plant nutrition studies and\nso on. A modern building houses\noffices,' workshops and a lecture\ntoom. O .,-'[\u25a0 -.. \u25a0 - .'.\n' All this is a culmination of Dr.\nBarss' fife work.. J^Thefl he retires\nthis spring after 36 years at UBC,\nhe'll be wandering back now and\nthen to poke around.\nOne object of his visits will be\nto admire his greatest joy\u2014a cutting from the Hampton Court grape\nvine,In Britain. The vine, planted\nin 51788, i* worid famous.\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RE8ULT8\naaimonrjcweff \u2014Meanw nt ant taom to\nLoeroMt Chomplonship.\ntilt famous\nwhs tilt Canadian\n:.B.:C.1B_|]\u00ae\nIn 1904, William Bnid founded B.C.'* first\ndistillery, and established the standard of quality\nthat distinguishes B.C. Double Distilled Rye.\nDiscover for yourself why B.C. Double Distilled\ni* preferred by British Columbians for its superb\nflavour... its light body and mellow smoothness.\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY CO. LTD.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nhp     Th6,jmtingulshed Producte\/pJMrttisk 'Co2tbs^y'F^|riMffi\u00ab\u00aby'','--:'.\n\u2022-.B:C ODUBLE pisTiU.D   .   I.C. EXPORT   \u2022   I.C \u00ab\u00bb|HVI   \u2022   I.C. SHCIAL   -   B.C. STERIW. LONDON DRY .IN\n:*u_,\n-^ \u25a0 ' This advertisement is not- published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nT   \"^.X_\"'X    \"'\"' \"\u2022oi\"by the_rwrnmentof British-Columbia. - \u25a0--...\nDiesels Excite\nBy STEVE   HERDER     ,,\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld.  (CP)- the\nsound of a horn the other day\nbrought villager* from their homes\nin a Newfoundland settlement.\nThey-rushed out to see a diesel-el-\nectric powered locomotive rumble\npast-bulling 22 freight cars.\nThe incident heralded a new era\nin railroading.. in Newfoundland.,\nThe-HfSrfow gauge railway, first\ning a new monster\u2014a General Motors diesel engine\u201455 feet of modern hauling  power..\nThese locomotives, part'of a modernization program for the province's 705-mile rail *servlce, yrere\nespeclally- designed for the job,\nstandard bodies on custom. built\ntrucks to fit the 36-inch rail gauge.\nCanadian. National Railways took\nover the Newfoundland government\nRailway at confederation in March,\n1940, and has been spending steadily since In an effort to provide\nequipment and service capable of\nhandling increased freight and pas.\nsenger demands.\nTHE.\"NEWFIE BULLET\"\nI The,time for reminiscences had\ncome and old timers talked about\nthe'TJewfie -Bullet\" The improvfc-\nments'.were coming, thej said, but\nthe old railway was losing its char,\nacter. '   '     \u25a0\n.It's, costing quite a bit to do\naway with the \"character.\" ^CNR\nNewfoundland service spent about\n$40,000,000 in 1052 and the expen\nditure will be heavy again this\nyear.\nA diesel costs nearly twice as\nmuch as a steam locomotive. It\nhas 30 per cent more power. At pres\nent the new 110-ton engines are\nbeirig used for freight trains. Three\nare In use and six more are on\norder. They cost $225,000 each. Until the service is modernized the old\nstories and the old name, \"Newfie\nBullet\" will stick. During wartime,\n.United .States soldiers Bpent 50\n-much time travelling across country\u2014it's 547 miles from St. John's\nto Port aux Basques \u2014that they\nnicknamed the train the \"Newfie\nBullet\" '\nFAMOUS   8T0RIE8\nThey should have been around\nfor the incidents which brought\nother oft-repeated yarns about the\nrailway.\nNewfoundlander* vouch for the\naccuracy of the story that it was\npossible to pick blueberries without Interrupting a trip on the \"Bullet.\" They say that on one occasion\na train, slowly making its way\naround the curves of the Bqnavista\nbay branch of the line, had a number of holidayers on board. Some of\nthem walked to the front car while\nthe train was moving, picked a hatful of berries snd then boarded the\nlast car.\nThis, say the old railwayman, is\ncharacter.\nThe character was the downfall\nof a newly-hired waiter back in\nthe days when first-class passengers gave their meal orders to waiters before they Went to the diner.\nThe waiters, men of superb mem.\noriei, so the story goes, never\ntook the order down in writing\u2014\nbut never made a mistake' either.\nBut the newcomer, confused over\nwhat had- been ordered, queried a\nlady passenger when she reached\nthe diner: \"Pardon me, madam, but\nare you the cold salmon?\".\nCOAL FOR HUNTER8\nThe old timers say that hunters,\ncamped near the railway line in the\ninterior, often flagged down a train\nto borrow coal from the engineer\nfor their campfires.\nThe . good old times have not\nquite disappeared, but they are on\nthe way out. For instance, the heating system has been modernized.\nAs one. old' timer put it:\n\"This steam heat: might be as\niwarm, but, yoii can't- jet- UP clos*\nto it, and .smoke and yarn like\nyou could around- the, -pot-bellied\nstove* in: the old car*.\"\nWinnie Judd Makes\nAnother Attempt\nPHOENIX (AP) \u2014 Winnie Ruth\nJudd, convicted trunk murderess\nof almost 22 years ago, has made a\nnew bid for freedom\u2014but this time\nit wasn't an escape attempt.\nSince her original death sentence\nwas commuted, Mrs. Judd has fled\nfrom the Arizona state hospital five\ntimes.\nMrs. Elizabeth Harvey,' legal\nguardian,of Mrs. Judd,. last week\nfiled in Superior Court a petition\nfpr a writ of habeas corpus, seeking her release from the hospital\non the grounds that- Mrs. Judd no\nlonger is insane;    ' \u25a0;-.\nThe hearings probably will be\nheld late next week.\nNEW INFANTRY TERM\n\u25a0 CAPETOWN,. South Africa (CP)\n\u2014; The de_l_nation \"private\" hat\nbeen abolished in.all Sbuth African\nInfantry'regiment*. The new term\n\"rifleman\" bring* .the infantry info\nline 'wTttToftier\" units, which\" Sav*\"e\ngunners, sappers tnd trooper*.\nBy WUD HAMP80N       .',\nHONG -KONG (AP) - Russia's\nreturn of the Changchun Railway\nln Manchuria to sole Chinese Red\noperation on Dec. 31 has about convinced Asiatic skeptics here that\nthe Soviets didn't give up anything\nbut a lot of expenses'.\n.. The turnback of this maze of\ntremendously vital rail links took\nplace in Harbin. No less a personage, than the!Chinese premier and\nforeign minister, Chou Eh-Lai, attended while Russia sent Ambassador Alexander S, Panyushkin.\nifHID FANFARE '\nSj The fanfare that followed told\nabout Russia's generosity and the\n'new international relations' among\nCommunist countries, but not\nword was said about farewells to\nRussian engineers, traffic managers,\ntrain creWs, technicians, rail guards\nand administrators who shared the\nactual operation of the line with\nChinese.', '\u25a0\"'\u2022'\u25a0\nYYou don't have%to know much\nabout Chinese Communist propaganda to realize thatPeiping never\nWould pass up material like that-\neven if the trainmen were merely\ngiven other jobs in Manchuria.\nTo expert. China observers in\nHong Kong, it looks as if the same\nRussians are working on the same\nJobs on the same railroad system.\nNobody here would bet the Soviet\ntrainmen won't still be there at\nthis time next year,  -    -\nUnder joint operations the costs\nof administering and running the\nrailroad were shared by Russia\nand China. There was no mention\nof joint costs in the agreement\nreached at Moscow last Fall for\nreturn of the, line to sole Chinese\noperation.\nRETAINS RIGHTS\nRussia still retains, occupation\nrights ih the old Japanese Kwang-\nturig leased territory which embraces Port Arthur and Dairen.\nThese make up the most important\nterminals of the railroad inside\nManchuria.\nThe- Siberian  terminals  of  the\nCut-Down .22 Rifle\nWounds Young Boy\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A M-year-\nold boy was accidentally wounded\nSunday when a cut-down .22 rifle\ndischarged as he demonstrated it\nto a friend.\nIn fair condition in Vancouver\nGeneral hospital is Rudy Butula.\n\u25a0- .    1\"     '. . .\nCalgary Streets\nBailie Northern\nBoat Operators\nCALGARY (CP) - A couple of\nnortherners say.travelling on north-\nland rivers is easy compared with\noperating a pick-up truck on Calgary streets.\nFor Barney and Woods Streeper\nFort Nelson, B.C., driving around\nCalgary was also complicated by\nthe fact that they hadn't driven\nin traffic. for about 35 years.\nThe brothers are northern river\nboat operators. They hadn't been in\na city for 35 years-when they drove\nabout 700 miles to Edmonton and\nthen to Calgary \"on business.\"\nBarney says Calgary \"sure has\nchanged some. The last time I was\nhere I remember . . . seeing only\nono large building. I was on my\nway from Nevada to the north.\"\nThe pair operate two river boats\noh the Liard and Mackenzie rivers,\ntravelling each year to Aklavik and\nother Far Northern points with\nsupplies, hauled on scows.\nThe brothers say they've no Intention of moving to a city and are\nhappy in the north.\n\u2022mmm*mmm\nNavy-Royal New\n(olorlorMen\nLONDON- (CP) \u2014 Blue leemi to\nbe the fashion shade for men in\nCoronation year. ,...- ,\nTropical midnight navy-royal,\naqua mist, leisure blue and safari\ngreen are the new'shades for aen'ti,\noutfits in everything from tropical\nsuits to smart wear..\nNavy-royal is 0 blue popular\nwith yachting men for many year*,,\nIt makes smart lounge suits. There -\nis spectator blue for suede shoe*,\ncity green and lilac haze for shirts.\n\"The general character of men's\nwear colors this year shows depth;<\nand richness,\" said Britain's, color\ncouncil.\nMost of the shades are navlet\nwith a twist towards purple that,'!\ngive varied depths of a \"permanent\"'\nblue\" ink shade. I\n\u2022 f ,,',,..... t., *.,...\".....At \u2022 fVtOy\nGOODRM\nfor your money I\nrail network already are Russian-\ncontrolled, so both ends are in\nSoviet control and Russian workers\nare presumed still on the line.\nThe official Communist organ\nPravda, hailed the turnback as an\n\"example of the entirely new inter-\nnational relations among countries\nof the socialist., camp.\" Skeptical\nChinese are asking one another\nwhat that.means.\nAt the .moment, everything lndi-\ncatesthe Muscovite still is on the\nrailroad, still controlling the terminals and stijl getting a free ride.\nThis advertisement is not published'\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by. the Government of\nBritish Columbia. ,\nahead\nwifli so much\nfiner styling j\nfiner Wonder Ridel\nK mote power i\nWMtewall tins ted thro\u2122 whsel\ntrim rings optional at extra cost\nCompare the beautiful, youthful '53 Meteor\nwith any other car in tho low price field! See\nwhy eo many more people are buying this\nfiner value. Meteor with the new Wonder\nRide\" moves with greater smoothness than\never before. Meteor offers two great V-8's, including 120 Hp. \"Fury\" V-8 \u2014 most powerful engine in the low price field\u2014built by tha\nworld's largest manufacturer of ;V-8's. Before\nyou buy any new car, drive a '53 Meteor!\n3-way eholco In iran.mlsit.ns In all Metoor m-debt\nAferc-O-JlfaEwr Drive or .Touch-O-Matic Ocerdriot\n0othoptionolatextracost) orStandardTransmissum.\nBE M\/IE& AHEAD WITH\nTRYHM;6TEO.R;W@Kl[o)[i[JI \u00a3\u00bbr befoae you decides\nBEACON MOTORS\n901 Baker St.\n\/tm'\nPhone 578 and 379\nFOR   A    SAFE-BUY'  IN   A   USED  CAR ... SEE  YOUR  METEOR  DEALER\n_______\n__.- . ... ,_Y\n :,1>VV,,,,\nLails Order Embargo\niDti Wlieat l^ovanetit\nEDMONTON (CP)-An embargo\ni*n movement ot export wheat from\nAlberta to five Vancouver and. New\nWestminster strikebound elevators,\nhandling 90 per cent of this traffic,\nwas ordered, Monday by the. rail-\nIwaya. All Alberta grata loadings\n|_estlned for the affected elevators\n>*o were ordered stopped.\nSome 3000 grata cars loaded or\nr. ving  West trom Alberta were\nlieved affected by the strike of\n|50 - .{est grata handlers to back\ni wage demands.\n{Railway officials here.said lt Is\nllikely that the embargo will take\n, effect before Tuesday, as load-\n! at some Alberta points still wis\n;: progress Monday.\nl.;Henry G. Young, president of the\narmors' Union of Alberta, said\norganization is watching tha\n|ituation closely. He was Informed\npat the tour top grades of wheat\n^ere being shipped from Alberta\ntbe Coast for export before the\n(je-up occurred.\nBesides the CNR and the CPR,\n. t embargo order applies to the\nNorthern Alberta Railway, serving\npoint: ta Northern Alberta, and the\nbig Peace River gtata belt.   ,\nA CNR official said that 175 to\n2.'Westbound grata cars carrying\nsome 300,000 bushels of wheat.bad\nbeen - dispatched dally West trom\nEamonton over CNR lines. The\nu.'R wai believed movin0 a slmi-\nla amount while the CNR moved\nabout 6C car* daily.  .      Y   -\nThe official said the embargo results: in loaded westbound grain\ncars being \"stopped all over the\nplace, some of them at British\nColumbia points.''      Y\nExport grata can still be moved\nfrom Alberta to one Vancouver\nterminal not affected by the strike.\nBut it is smaller than the others\nand' railway officials here said\nwhat it can handle of the Alberta\nexport trade amounts to only \"a\ndrop in the bucket\"\nExport grain shipments to Prince\nRur rt, B.C., also go unaffected\nbut the CNR moves only about 25\ncars to that shipping point dally.\n\u2022RMINE MAY BE MINIVER, VELVET ,\n\\AY BE VELVETEEN AT WESTMINSTER\nBy ALVIN 6TEINKOPF\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Sheen of velvet\nnd gleam of ermine will make a\nright show ta Westminster Abbey\n,t the Coronation June 2.\nRobed peers and peeresses, with\nfcrOnets  gleaming,  will  make  a\nIrand spectacle.\nBut,   it  is' confessed  ta   abbey\nlircles,  all  that glitters isn't er-\nniner- and some of that velvet is\n!otag to be velveteen. Many peers,\n,f lower grades, are going to be\nHow would you build a 200-foot\ntelevision tower without a single\njit construction worker leaving\nthe ground.\nI Hire's how Bell Telephone\nCompany did it. They madeeight.\nfoot tower sections oot of aluminum tubing. Then they placed\n, the first section within a base on\nthe ground. Next they hoisted\n{that section and fastened another\n\u2022ection underneath it They kept\non repeating the process \u2014 raising the completed part off tba\nground by means of a hand winch.\nOne test tower was.dismantled\nand re-erected on another site, all\nin one day. Just goes to show that\nwe live in an age of speed \u2014 and\naluminum. Aluminum Company\nof Canada, Ltd. (Alcan)\nthanking synthetic textiles for that\nstately front which they will present to the world.\nThe reason ot course is the expense  of the outfit, and it isn't\ncheap even it it's chemistry.\nEXPENSIVE LUXURY'\nA peer may figure on having one\nor maybe two opportunities in a\nlifetime to wear a coronation robe,\nwhich isn't often for an expensive\nsuit which is quite worthless lor\nany other occasion. A robe which\nis absolutely, correct and ta the best\ncoronation tradition costs about\n\u00a31250, the outfitters estimate.\nSuch an expenditure ta times\nlike these is quite beyond many\npeer* and peeresses, so concessions\nhave been made. The concessions\npermit rabbit fur, called miniver\nto make it sound better, and synthetic fabrics.\nA robe bought by a peer really\nbent on economy can be had for as\nlittle as \u00a3245.\nEven such a sum 1* a burden to\ntome of the 041 hereditary peers.\n. The concessions to have robes ot\nmaterials other than the traditional\nvelvet and ermine does not apply\nto the higher grades ot the peerage.\nThe peerage has live grades,\ndukes'at the top and then, ta descending order, marquesses, earls,\nviscounts and barons.\nDress regulations were drawn up\nafter consultation with Norman\nHartnell, fashion designer for the\nQueen.\nThe makers of synthetic materials will have more scope within the\nabbey than at the many receptions,\npresentations, balls and dinners\nwhich will bi a part of the coronation season.    , ,-\nFor most other functions the tip\nto British women 1b that the gown\nmust be silk. At balls and receptions\ngowns are subject to closer scrutiny\nthan ih the congestion of the abbey.\nAt recent fashion shows by London's 11 top designers the emphasis\nwas silk. ?\nYouth Breaks Neck\nIn Laboratory\nGARY, Ind. (AP)\u2014A yoking photo\nlaboratory employee caught his\nhead in a photographic developing\nmachine Sunday? ond died ot a\nbroken neck. Police said Robert\nLawrence, 17, a$t>arently dropped\nsomething ta the dark-room and\nwas lopklhg tojfjft ta the developing machine. Hisijhead was caught\nbetween an electing bar and a\nsafety guard.'- '.di. '\u2022-.\".\n\"When I tend money home, I've found\nA MONEY ORDER'S best,\n\"they're safe and such a cinch to cash,\nMuch better than the rest.\"\nAlways be sttre of fast, courteous service\nBank at\nUJtfULlUseMfotaite'\nBttPERIAl BANK OF CANADA\n. LARRY 8CHINCKE, 17, li helped Into a car by hli mother (left),\nafter being rescued from under a anowsllde in the rugged Cascade\nMountain Snoqualmlo Pass, East of Seattle, Wash., where he wai\nIQMlfL\nGloria $*wdnson Tells SorrnS Plain\/\nTri#Hs^4?oyt Hollywood Industry\n.. wa.i\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD.(API - Gloria\nSwanson Monday threw a damper\non Hollywood'*:\\ enthusiasm for\nthree-dimensional'. films.\n\"They will be a flash in the pan\"\nshe remarked. \"After the novelty is\nover, the film industry wlU.be laced\nwith th* same big.problems.\" \"\u2022' \"\nMiss Swanson- is uniquely equip-\nped. for commenting on the film industry. : She-is one \u00b0' Hollywood's\nall-time great stars and has spent\nthe majority ot her'years in and\naround the film business. But sha\nI remained detached enough\nfrom the movie whirl, to keep it\nto perspective. \u2022 . .'\nSTARTLING THINGS\n\"After I made 'Sunset Boulevard',\nhi 1050,\" she said, \"I went on a\n3,-ejty tour to,exploit \"the picture.\nI talked to people in all walks\nof life and learned some startling\nthings About the picture business.\"\n\"One ot the things I learned was\nthat toe older generations had\nabandoned the movies. They could\nno longer identify themselves with\nthe movies.since they could not\nsee their favorites of their own age.\nHollywood aimed its appeal at\nyouth and neglected the millions of\nmore mature citizens.\n\"Another thing I found out\u2014It\nwai just too much trouble and expense for many people to go out to\nthe movies, It's a major production for a couple to attend a theatre\nFACE8 NEW PROBLEMS\n\"The: Industry will', still'.have,to\nface these problems when the thrill\nof new-dimensional movies has past.\nThat'* why I think - the only\" real\nfuture tor films is in developing\nsome kind of box to collect money\nfor movies on-'TVi\" ' ',' --'{'\n'.. .WJiile peering Into thetutuire, the\nactress'predicted that lite again will\nbe centred tathe home. She cited\nthe great increase in home buying\nand the decentralization of cities. -\n\"It is the greatest thing that: could\nhappen to ui,\" she commented; \"Tt\nWill meean bigger families and: happier people. We will get- back > to\nthe basic \u25a0qualities of lite and: not\nbe forced to seek entertainment\naway from Jhomel\"\nHttSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, KB. 17,1933 - 7\nCPS Buys French Liner De Grasse \u00a5*%\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The Canadian Pacific Steamships Company\nhas .bought the 20,000-ton French\nliner De Grasse to replace the Empress- of Canada,* which was destroyed by fire in \/Liverpool last\nmonth, it was announced Monday.\n- The purchase was announced ta\na jotaf. statement, by Canadian Pacific Steamships and\" the Companle\nGeneral* Trans-Atlantique. The\nprice \"was not disclosed.\nThe De .Grasse, built in England\nin.1942, can, cany, more than 700\nfir's1 and tourist class passengers.\nShe will be put into the service\nwith the Empress of Scotland and\nthe Empress of France' to maintain\nthe CPS weekly service between\nLiverpool and Montreal.\nHer maiden voyage under new\nownership is expected to begin from\nLiverpool April 28.    .\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT8\nBuy. Sell, .Trade the Classified Way\nMon Leaps to Death\nFromkPatu..o Bridge\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) \u2014 A\nman jumped to his death.from Pattullo bridge Monday. The-body was\nrecovered by police but the victim's\nname was withheld pending notification of next-of-kin.\nThe lost .legal'trial in Scotland\nof persons accused of witchcraft\nwas ta fflli\n50 mini,\n10 mini.\n10 mini.\n25 mln*.\n50 mini.\nCOMPLIMENTARY MEALS.\nHALF FARE FAMILY PLAN - MONDAY,\nTUE8DAY, WEDNE8DAY\nSee your Travel Agent or TCA Office\n888 Howe: 8treet (Opi\nPHONE\nlap. Georgia Hotel)\nTA. 0131\nburled for almost nine houn. One of his companions wai killed, a\nthird escaped the avalanohe, which occurred while the trio were skiing. 8chlnoke was not serlouily hurt\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nShort Rations\nCause Worry lo\nGeneral Taylor\nBy PETER ROBINSON\nNAMWON, Korea (Reuters) .\u2014\nHunger emerged Monday as an insidious enemy ot South Korean\ntroops fighting a guerrilla cleanup\ncampaign on meagre rations ot rice.\nThe short rations are linked directly with South Korea's currency\ncrisis. Sunday the government\nswitched its currency unit from the\ninflated won to a new kwan ta an\nattempt to stop black marketeers\nbuying up supplies and starving\nfront-line troops.\nLITTLE EFFECT\nBut the changeover wUl have\nlittle immediate effect on Republic\nof Korea troops who are ta rear sectors, fighting Communist Irregulars\nin rugged mountain' country without aid of Allied rations.\nTheir officer* describe their\nplight as desperate. A medical team\nrecently discovered\u2022 thrrie-quarters\nof the men in two battalion* were\nsuffering from serious diseases\ncaused by near-starvation including; tuberculosis, bronchitis and\nberi-beri.\nBrig. Lee Yong Moon, commanding the southern security forces,\nsaid, these troops who marched\nmore than five miles over the most\nrugged terrain in Korea every day\nwere the only soldiers at present\nenduring the full strata of serious\nbattle.   .\nUnder the present supply system\nKoreah commanding officers allocated >he money to buy rations on\nthe open market. Consequently\nunits with'Tess experienced marketing officers got smaller rations.\nMore divisions would send prices\nhigher and cut the already meagre\nration* the troops are getting.\n\"STURDY SOLDIER8\"\nGen. Maxwell D. Taylor, 8th\narmy commander in Korea, said\nSunday he would investigate reports that South-Koreans were not\ngetting enough to. eat,'-,    '    '\u25a0'\u25a0'\n\"I am going to give that sturdy\nlittle soldier all the breaks that I\ncan,\" the general added.\nSouth Korean.shops, restaurants\nand business offices, closed today\nas uncertainty grew over President\nSyngman Rhee's- drastic step to\ncurb Inflation.\nThe rate ot the U. S. military dollar soared from the official 6000\nwon to 45,000 and the'price of gold\n800,000 won an ounce.\nWork Resumed on\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP)-\nEngineering difficulties which have\ndelayed completion ot the Parsnip\nRiver bridge on the Hart highway\nhave now been licked,'public works\ndepartment officials reported Monday.\nWork on the $1,000,000 span came\npractically to a. hilt ta Decernber:\nwhen contractors encountered\ntrouble ta preparing concrete forms\nfor ope main pier. A cofferdam suffered damage in installation and it\nwas found impossible to pump it\ndry of water.\nNow, the pier concrete is being\npoured despite the fact that two\nfeet of water still remains in the\nbottom of .the dam. As soon as a\nseal coat of cement has been laid\nin the bottom, the {der will be\npoured.   \"\"\nIt is expected the 600-foot long\nspan will be opened to tho public\nearly ta May.\nSedgwick Award to\nDr. W.G. Black\nVANCOirtfp. '(CP)\u2014Dr. W. 0.\nBlack Monday was named winner\nof the 1952 Garnet Sedgwiok award\nfor outstanding work ta the field\nol civil liberties.\nDr. Black is citizenship ta liaison\nofficer for B. C. and a part-time lecturer at. the University ot British\nColumbia. Th* award will ba presented Tuesday.\nDefence Fund Hike\nRefused, Washington\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014A defence\ndepartment-request for $1,200,000,000\nta new funds for the current year\nwas rejected ta lull by the House\nAppropriations Committee Monday^\nThe committee' said the depart-:\nment should use available funds to\nfinance the programs lor which\nthe new money had been requested:\nMost ol the new money sought\nwas lor army, navy and air lorce\nmilitary pay increases voted by\nCongress since the last defence department budget was approved.\nFestival Fun in\nManitoba Town\nTHE PAS, Man, (CP) - The\nmodern counterparts of dangerous\nDan McGrew are gathering in this\nnorthern Manitoba town for the\nbiggest blowout since old Dan\nbreathed his last in the Malemute\nsaloon.\n'. The northern Manitoba Trappers' Festival, to run four days\nstarting Tuesday, has all the color\nof a county fair combined with the\nexcitement of a wild-west rodeo.\nBIG EVENT\nThe big event of the festival ,is\nthe-Canadian open championship\ndog race, a rugged 200-mile tost\nover snow-covered countryside,\n, The race goes in four laps run ta\nfour days. The mushers will travel\nfrom The Pas to Cranberry Portage, from there to Flin Flon, then\nback to The Fas, stopping.again\nat Cranberry' Portage.\n\u2022First prjze is $1000 and a trophy.\nA second prize of $700 and a third\nof.$i00vplU6-prizes of$IQ0 a, (lay for\nthe fastest laps provide further incentive-fdr the racers.\nLUCK AND8KILL ..'.\"X\" *\nThe rollicking party offers a\nnumber, of skill and luck tests in\neluding a net-setting contest, a dog\nhandling competition in which con\ntestant? don't use either their hands\nof a whip but guide the animals\nby voice alone, a fishing-through,\nthe-ice contest and tea-boiling, trap,\nsetting and rat-skinning contests.\nThe more athletic Will be attracted to the greased pole climb\nin Which the men, dressed iii moe\ncastas and parkas, must climb a\nslippery pine pole.\nA torch light parade and grand\nopening ball will start the festival.\nOther, evening activities include a\nvaudeville show, numerous modern\nand old time dances and on the\nfinal night the queen's ball, which\nwill feature the crowning ol toe\nFur Queen ol the North, from\namong numerous candidates ol\nnorthern towns.\nAn Indian trading post will be\nset up in the town featuring bead-\nwork,  silkwork  and leatherwork.\nArmy and RCAF detachments\nwill provide artillery fireworks and\nflares and low formation and stunt\nlying.. \u25a0\n3rd World Power\nUrged by Bevan\nNEW DELHI ,(Reutera)\u2014Aneurin\nBevan,- left-wing British Socialist\nMonday urged rise of a third world\npoWer bloc to compel the \"two\ngiants,\" Russia and the United\nStates, to listen to weaker countries\nspeaking \"the most sense.\"\nHe claimed the U. S. today suffered from instability and Russia\nfrom rigidity.\nBoth are \"hagridden by tear and,\nsince both are powerful, both think\nthey ean afford to dispense with\nwisdom because it 1* Only the weak\nwho need wisdom,\" he told members of both houses of Parliament.\nHe praised India's effort ta the\nUnited Nations to end the Korean\nwar and urged that tbe government\nShould-not become discouraged be.\ncause these efforts have not been\nsuccessful. ,\nBevan, who arrived here last\nweek, is on a 21-day visit to India.\nHia- address -was heard by Prime\nMinister Nehru and most other cabinet ministers.\nGREAT NEW FEATURE OENEFITS \u00a7_ OUR CUSTOMERS\nCHEVRON-MATIG is the greatest improvement-\nin service station ehafge account handling since-,\nSTANDARD introduced the oredit eard system to!\nB.C. over 17 years ago. It.means.added protection:\nfor our oredit customers and extra speed for ALL\ncustomers at our busy stations.\nWHAT-ITIS:-;Ghevron-matr?isahght-weight.printHig\nstrip with name of customer and account number\nattached -to the proteotive oover of Chevron Credit\nCards. It makes record-keeping almost automatic,\nguarantees accuracy and helps ne give you the\nbeat. mxserwer FAS_.\nTHI \u00bb Ml IT Will\n1. With the new Ghevron-matic printing strip, our credit cards still fit easily\ninto wallet or purse. New card6, which\nhave been mailed to our \"customers,\nare honored coast-to-coast through\nCanada and the United States.\nS. A specially designed imprinting\nmachine prints your account number\nand name, and the: dealer's name and\nlocation, on the charge slip automatically.\nNo chance for errors... give* you all\nthe advances ot credit buying with\nnew oonvenience-and speed,\nWe fake better care of your car\n8. NO \"WATTING FIDGETS\" with\nChevron-matic. When you're'next in.\nline you know there'll be no delay*\nin closing the purchase. The same\nservice will speed, you on your way\n{aster.when.you reach the pump-block.\nSTANDARD'\nSTATION   !\n\\      or\nCHEVRON\nGAS STATION\nM\n wmvmwnimvw\n\u2122**vmmm\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FSB. 17\/lisI\nHERE'S A PICTURE of a real scared dog as Rusty (left) goes\ngoggle-eyed when Godfrey, the big, baleful Boxer, makes an unfriendly pass. Rhonda Wuuak, 3, hangs on to Qorfrey's leash with\nboth hands while Rusty's mistress, Karln Flynn, tries to pull her pet\nout of reach. The dogs were entered In the dog show of the Madison\nSquare Boys' Club of New York City when this meeting took place.\n\u25a0\u25a0**!   - ,s _. Y* \u2014AP Wlrephoto\nAlia. University\nBans Endicoll\nIDHONTON (CP)-Th* Uttlvtr-\nslty of Alberta will not permit Pr.\nJames Endlcott, chairman of the\nleftist Canadian Peace Council, to\n.address a meeting of the political\nscience club.\nIn; a statement displayed Monday\non university bulletin boards, Dr,\nAndrew G. Stewart, president, said\nhe and the board ot governors are\nopposed to having Dr. Endlcott address any itudents..\nThe president ordered ths elub\nto cancel the meeting and his action\nwas supported by the board of governors.\nConnect Explosion\nWith Powder Robbery\nVICTORIA (CP* - Mystery of\nan explosion which startled residents over \u25a0 wide area of Greater\nVictoria Saturday night may be\ncleared up by Saanich police, who\nMonday are investigating theft of.\nabout 30 sticks of stumping powder\nfrom a sawmill.\nThe blast shook doors, rattled\nwindows, and shattered the glass\nin a living room window at .the\nresidence of V. Vosper.\nW. A. Burnham, owner of the\nW. A Burnham and Son Sawmill,\nreported to police that the blasting\npowder was stolen sometime'Frl-\ndsy.\nThe exact spot where the .explosion occurred has not been' lo-\ne\u00abted\\\nResidents who heard the -blast\ngave widely varying estimates of\nthe area.\nSt. LAURENT SAYS\nSASK. PREPARING\nBRIEF ON PROJECT\n0TOAWA (CP)X-i \u00a3rim*,Min*.\nster St. Laurent said Monday ln the\nCommons the Saskatchewan government is preparing a brief commenting < on recommendations of\nRoyal Commission on the South\nSaskatchewan river and irrigation\nprOJ*ct\n. Replying to John Diefenbaker\n(PC\u2014Lake Centre), Mr. St, L*ureht\nsaid Premier Douglas of Saskatchewan notified him that the brief,\ndisagreeing with some of the rec-\ncommendation*,; 1* being prepared,\nMr. St. Laurent said> he has asked\na delegation representing the South\nSaskatchewan $tv*r Association to\ndelay a visit, to Ottawa until the\nprovincial government's brief was\nrsoeivedv \u2022 -\n5 Applications for\nNatural Gas Heard\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Routine\npreliminary procedures took the\nwhole stage today as the federal\npower commission opened what\npromises to be a lengthy, hearing\non five applications to pipe natural gqs to the Pacific Northwestern states. .  .\nExaminer Glen Law tirst called\non opposing counsel to note their\nappearances, then asked for statements of position from the applicants and the many interveners in\nthe case. . <.,..\nApplicants ar* the Westcoast\nTransmission Co., Inc., Wilmington,\nDel.; Pacific Northwest Pipeline\nCorp,, Houston, Tex.; Trans-Northwest Gas Co., Spokane, Wash.\nNorthwest Natural Gas Co., New\nYork, and Glacier Gas Co., Butte,\nMont \/\nPrince George\nHas Busy Time\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP)-In\"the\nbiggest crackdown on motorists In\nPrince George history, 75 drivers\nhave' been summoned for \u2022 traffic\nviolation*.\nThe summonses started flowing\nat a fast clip on Thursday after it\nwas charged tp a newspaper story\n-that a recently drawn parking bylaw was not being enforced by police,     y. . '    '\u2022     '    .\".Y''\nMonday, there wu a steady\nstream of motorists to.city hall to\nsquare their $2 penalties for overtime parking and other traffic violations.   -  '\nQuebec province  cover*  594,860\nsquare miles, Compared'to 287,339\nto Texas, largest state of the United\nStates.      '   \u25a0\nFINE POINT OF HERALDRY ARISES FROM\nSOV-REjlGN'S TITLE, QUEEN OF .CANADA\nfirst arid fourth; quarter are, how\nHALIFAX (CP) -\"An authority\non hera.dry has suggested now that\nthe 'Queen; hat been designated\nspecifically as Queen of Canada the\narms of Canada\" therefore are the\narms .of the Queen of Canada and\ncan be displayed as such.\nThle tin* point of heraldry has\nbeen uncovered by Forbes Thrasher, Halifax hotelman whose hobby\nis the itudy ot arms. Ih 'considering\nCoronation \u2022 decorations lor his\nhotel*, Mr. Thrasher, a. wartime\nservice corps major,, wrote his\nScottish herald friend, Sir Thomas\nInnes of Learney, Lord Lyon King\nc- Arm*. \u25a0'.'\u25a0'\nKINO OF ARMS .EPLIES\nSir Thomas .replied: Tt 1* difficult to see how *ie arms recorded\nfor Canada Cannot be regarded as\nthose of Her Majesty as sovereign\nof Canute. The quarterly British\nroyal arms with England ln the\never, thost whloh Her Majesty, la\naccustomed to use to Indicate her\npersonal presence,\n\"Oi course if you ore making up\na decorative scheme you could use\nthe Canadian arms, and the quarterly royal arms, both.Scottish and\nEnglish versions, for doubtless the\nScottish version would be of somo\nInterest In Nova Scotia.\";.\nFor King George's coronation Ifr,\nThrasher used the English arms\nbecause at that time the soverlgn\nhad not been specifically designated K|ng o' Canada. '\nADOPTS CIVIC FLOWER\nOSHAWA, Ont. (CP) - The Osh-\nawa Horticultural Society has\nadopted the rose as the civic flower\nfor Oshawa. All that is needed to\nmake it official is recognition from\nOlty council   .\nRoast for Dinner\nIn. Ancient Family\nALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (AP)\n-Indication* of how pre-hlstorlc\nhumans carved \u25a0 cave-man's rib,\nrout from a slain mammoth have\nbeen found on a ranch near Estan-\ncia, N. M, Officials at the University of Mexico say a skeleton turned\nup by a plow proved to be that of a\nhuge beast slain by Folsom hunters\naome 40,000 years ago, It bore indications that a 800-pound rib roast\nhad been hacked out by some flint\nInstrument. Folsom man Is a prehistoric' human believed to have\nlived in this area about 10,000 B.C.\nEDMONTON (CP) - H. B. Lane\nof Edmonton suffered facial lacerations and undetermined head in:\nJuries Monday when the truck he\nwaa driving collided with a Canadian National passenger train at\nsuburban Stony Plain. Lane was\ntaken to hospital In a semi-con-\nsclous state. Y.   <\".;\nMarch Dale Sel\nFor Rosenbergs\nNEW YORK (AP)-ExecuOon of\natomic spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Monday was set for the\nweek of March 9.\n. Judge Irving Kaufman scheduled\nthe new execution date for the husband arid wife, whose appeal to the\nPresident for clemency has been\nrejected.\nThe couple was convicted nearly\ntwo years ago of conspiring to\ntransmit atomic information to.Russia. '   ,.\nWETASKIWDJ.Alta. (CP)-Con-\nvicted of tampering with the malls,\nrural carrier Harold Pettigr'ew of\nMillet has been sentenced to six\nmonths. Postal authorities said\nMonday that Fettigrew was blamed\nfor a number 'of thefts of money\nfrom letters-over a short period.\nDEATHS    ,\nBy Th*> Canadian Piftp* j -J\nHalifax -r Thomas James Pourt\nney, S3, director of the Nova Scotii\nbureau of information and a note!\nCanadian naturalist, X\nMelrose, Mass.\u2014Thomas J. Kan\naly, 82, secretary dt the Bostdi\nAthletic Association for 25 year\nand assistant to the president 0\nthe Boston Garden Corp.\nPebble Beach. Calif,\u2014Clark LS\n49, well-known'foreign correspond\nent, -     :..\nRome \"- Alberto Mantanarli'sW\nconductor arid composer of the op\neretta, \"The, Rough of Paris \"   X\nCalgary \u2014 Sidney Baldwin, ta%\nDominion   vice-president  of P-\nArmy. Navy and Air Force V\u00ab\nans in Canada,    '.- 8\nToronto\u2014Canon B. H. A, Hasiai\n81, scholar and missionary of ,tt\nChurch of England ia Canada. Y\nGranada, Spain\u2014fialbino Santi\nOlivera, 87, archbishop of Granad\nNews of tfic Dciy\nRATES: 30o line, 40o Una black face type; urger type r\u00abtes on\nrequest Minimum two lint*. 10% dlsoount for prompt payment\nMAC'8 COFFEE AND MILK BAR WANTED - USED OWDB OR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.        BROWNIE UNIFORMS. PH, 678-L,\nSuede overalls, all colors, sires\n1, 2 and 3. \u2014 $2.98.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP,\nBoys' smart bow-ties, plsln colors,\nblack, plaids. Your choice, 49c and\n75c. \u2014 THE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save' their soles!\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP.\nAbsorene Wallpaper Cleaner, Paint\nCleaners, Brush Cleaners, etc.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nSHEFFIELD LIQUID PORCELAIN\n\"Waterproof\"--2 oz. 40c, 1 oz. 25c.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nWhite flannelette sheets, regular\n$7.93, on sale, $8.30, at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nWorkmen! You can get Wool\nWork Socks in sizes to fit your\nfeet.. Sizes 10 and 11 at $1.10. She\n12 at $1.20. \u2014 WADES'.\nLADIES' AID FIR8T PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, WILL BE\nHOLDING A FOOD SALE ON FEB.\n21 ST AT MC 4 Mc's.\nIt BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow lt away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed, at\nreasonable prices.\nHere 1st rich candy goodness ln\nmany assortments\/moderately priced. Stop in today at GRAY'S, 324\nJosephine Btreet, Phone 1347.\nJust Received! All metal combination cake decorator,and: cookie\nmakers. Well made, inexpensive,\neasy to use. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nYou are invited to hear Mr. J.\nPerdue, President B.C. Social Credit\nLeague, speak in Canadian Legion\nHall Tuesday, Feb. 17th, at 8 p.m.\nON YOUR ANNIVERSARY, MAKE\nHER FEEL LIKE A BRIDE AGAIN\nWITH FLOWERS FROM\nC0VENTRY8' FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 982. .\nGLASS SHELVES and BRACKETS\nPlate and crystal glass shelves\nfor homes, stores or. cafes, Chrome\nsnd cadmium plated brackets and\nother fittings at\nT. H. WATERS 41 CO. LTD.\nPhon* \\U    ._..\u201e.-.   101  Hall 8t\nV      '*\" '\u25a0.':\nJunior-Senior High Sohool P-TA\ntonight at Junior High School at\n8 p.m. Discussion:\" \"What do you\nthink of .supplemental examinations?\" Also Canadian Travelogue.\nRefreshment*.\nGive your floor* new life and\nsparkle with Johnson's Penetrating\nFloor Cleaner. It quickly and thoroughly removes old wax and dirt,\nEspecially recommended for linoleum and-tile. Available In quarts\nand gallons. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nATTENTION CANADIAN LEGION\n. AND '\nLADIES' AUXILIARY MEMBER8\nMembers are requested to meet at\nthe Canadian -Legion Tuesday at\n1:45 p.m. Yor the purpose.of attending the funeral of our late comrade\nRalph Geoffrey'Furneaux Hamlyn.\nCHURCH PARADE in commemoration of founder of Scouting,\nLord Baden Powell, on Sunday,\nFebruary 22. Members of Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate meet at Cathedral Hall at 10 a.m.;of Fairview\nchurches, meet at Hume School at\n10 a.m.; of other upton churches,\nat Scout Hall, Cedar Street, at 10\na.m. This Includes all Cubs, Scouts\nsnd Leaders.\nSee our selection ot used ranges.\nAll prices. \u2022\nDrapery material clearance sale\n\u201430% off regular price.\nPrints, regular 59c a yard, special,\n45c yard.       ':-'\"'\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nSpecial price quotation* given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirement*. -.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.        PHONE 1380\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFINK\u2014Funeral services -for the\nlate Wanda Edith Fink will be held\nfrom Trinity United Church Wednesday at 11 a.m. Rev. Allan Dixon\nwill officiate and interment win be\ntn the family plot, Nelson Memorial\nPark. Fiord expressions of sympathy graciously declined.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSMITH\u2014Funeral services for the.\nlate William Edson Smith Of Crescent Valley will'be held from the\nThompson'Funeral Home Wednesday at 2 p.m. Interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park. The Rev.\nT. J. S. Ferguson will officiate.\nw~j______j_______^ flfe ____________#\/\nt* I* enportd *_ly writ, htgfwr-tirlcoil coral\nThe glamorous new Bel Ab Series for\n1953 it so distinctive in design, and so\nrich in appointments that it is truly a\nnew kind of Chevrolet, The four, new\nBel Air models \u2014 the ,4-Door Sedan,\n2-Door Sedan, Convertible and Sport\nCoupe\u2014 create a new and wonderful\nclass ail.their own.\nTHE \"TWO-TEN\" SERIES\n*H**tlM*l advances from tamper lo bumperl\nThe \"Two-Ten\" Series offers dramatic\nSOW ttyling, new costlier-car feature*\nin seven beautiful models: two new\nitatlon wagons \u2014 the Townsman and\nthe \"Two-Ten\" Handyman \u2014 the\n4-Dom, 2-Doot, Convertible, Club\nCoupe and Spot Coupe. ;'->'.\nTHE \"ONE-FIFTY\" SERIES\nl*W*lt-fricMl *f _ (polity corsl\nThe \"One^Fifty\" Series offer* smart\nnew Chevrolet styling and advanced\nnew Chevrolet feature* at lowest cost\nThe five models include the 4-Door and\n. 2-Door Sedans, Club Coupe, Business\nCoupe, and \"One-Fifty-* Handyman.\n\\\\,<3fifyfwofjoo 00 Jranvora\niratod k tfipsMHiW '\n\/4#&z\/\/igty \u00a3cohomfcal\/ .\nsvm^myiXJ.\u2014m.\n**.:\"'\u25a0'-Y:'\"\"Y .\"\u25a0        \u25a0!'\u25a0\"-\u00bb\nft CHEVROLET\nA OlNHAl MOTORS VALUE\nIn the great new Chevrolet line for 1953, you can\nchoose a car for any purpose... a model for any taste\n. \u2022 .with .new and^wonderful features never before\navailable in the low-price field. Choose high-compression power with the great new 115-h.p. Blue Flame\nengine teamed with new Powerglide* for the finest\nautomatic driving. Or choose the new, high-compression 108-h.p. Thrift-King engine for finest standard\ndriving. Choose the improved standard steering, or\nnew GM fPower Steering.\nCome in and choose the car you want with what\nyou want. The most wonderful selection in the low-\nprice field is yours with the great new 1953 Chevrolet\nIt's yours at lowest cost, ior the 1953 Chevrolet is\nCanada's finest low-price car.\n'Combination of Powerglide automatic transmission and 115-h.p.\nBlue Flame engine optional on-\"Two-Ten\",,and Bel Air models at extra cost..\niGU Power Steering it optional at extra cost on-all Powcrglidc-equippid models.\n(t^Mi\/d\/ \/i\/^^om\/) atoCifitQugfrl\nCS5JA\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\nCorner Stanley and Vernon Street*\nNelson, B. C.\nI\n w\n\u2022 was on 11 sheets, five in the\nng rink and six in the skating\nTo get the six sheets in the\nting rink,' space between, sheets.\nreduced to a minimum but\ni so they had. cut it so tine that\nwas not room .for a biter'at\nIdes of the house. However, it\nfair to', all teams.\nin the skating rink was per-\n: and that was where they had\n| matched rocks and where all\nnpionships play 'took place. In\n| curling rink there were sharp\n\"; and sliders being used by the\nteam, making  it hard for.\n\u25a0weepers and  shot-makers.\nI ice was heavier, too, than in\n| skating rink.\n\"popular practice over there,\n;;o o;x-www.yr,.\nMaiiy are called j but ;fe*\u00ab s*e rchown. At. least that\njthe way. il; seemed at Vernopwhen they started handing\n; the prizes of the B.C. Bonspiel at the conclusion of play.\nout 80 rinks came..out.'fighting. Monday morning hut\nI the time Saturday. hatt rolled around .'many had fallen\nthe wayside; old age had crept up 6& some; over-con-\n|ence had snipped others; bad breaks had eliminated a\nabet1, said the few who wete qhlyithere.fcir the ride had\nfen ridden. As for our'own peculiar case, it was.the, altitude\nI the lowtitude. We are not. sure which; but as that was\naly excuse not used by ihe kj-iflg rinks,' we adopted it.\nmost bohsplel* not:.*11 the     \u2014\nnding games ire played in\ntail. In tact some of the pdor-\nirling can come out in' the\n_, though this was not the case;\nVernon. But there were 'some'\n\" 1 games along the- way.\nthe rail-birds something\n:-about One of them was the\nn-Stone game in the B.. C.\n|mpionBhip.  These  two   teams\n\",44' rocks.before there w-S'a'\nThere was alBO'the RyallSr\ni game when Ryalls had Stoiie\ntwo ln the tenth and then\nid the house to allow the }at-:\n> take out his ropk and lie four;\n'8 LOST TOSS \"\nI Was the HObbs-Stone game\nhe Grand Challenge, mainly a\nIckout affair when the fans saw\n-really great playing. Draws\nhe button were numerous; and\n' case of the grand aggregate\n.Was flipped to decide the\n. That was between Hobbs of\nlowna and Ryalls of Nelson. The\nBear had left for his home' lit\nfowna and no other type of de-\nbn was possible. He. won the\nne Gordon Moir rink ot Salmo\nthe Eric McKinnon  rink of\nnbrook, both, representatives'ot\ni depending on natural ice for\n)ing, a non-existent item this\n.both played well and gave a\naccount of themselves. With\n.'breaks the latter club should\nartificial Ice for next year,\nno will have to wait a little\nand one reminiscent of rtrawber\nrl*t. and oherriet to the Nelion\nSummer Bbniplel participants,\nwas'tho setting out ot boxes, of\napplet.at the end of the iheeti\nfer the .benefit' of the players.\nA beautiful custom.\nIf. you are ever asked, \"Who do\nyou think I ran into?\" at any B. C.\nor Washington bonspiel, you can't\n?o far wrong if.you answered. Dick\n'opplng or Mel Towrlss. Even if\nthey are not the Individuals meant,\nat least..you'll have perennial at\ntendants anyway. Sick, by the way,\nplayed a brilliant game against\nStone.in the.provincial finals and\nonly lost out by one point It he\nhad won the two teams would have\nhad to play again as Stone had lost\nnot a game and was entitled to one\nbefore. going \"out. We understand\nDick is;, thinking in terms ot taking a rink to the Edmonton Car\nBonspiel. Good luck!\nSalmo's delayed bonsplel will be\nheld on the Nelson ice this coming\nSaturday and |unday.\nJottings . .. \"Met Bill Brown ln\nVernon; Formerly with the Nelson.\npally News, Bill is now advertising manager of the Vernon NeWs\n. Also met \"Beaver\" Jones and\nAI Denegrle ot the Kelowna Courier ..X Saw the hockey game between Kelowna and Vernon in Vernon Saturday night They pass\nthe puck a little oftener than in\nthe Kootenay League, but they\nplay it just as rough. We were given to understand that when'Pen.\ntic ton plays the game is always\nrougher. We thought Bill Neilson\nand Johnny Ursaki refereed*a good\ngame Saturday night Neilson, es<\npecially ia. * competent-looking\nreferee .. .Johnny Harms, fowner\nNelson Maple Leaf seemed to have\nchip on his shoulder and betides drawing a misconduct penalty, also figured in i fight with\nMiddleton . .. Diminutive Bill Tar-\nnow turned in a fine game. They\nused him for killing Off penalties\nalong with Bobby Ballance and\nthey work much like Red and Fritz\nKoehle .... We hope there won't\nbe too many people ask us how we\ndid in Vernon, we would sooner\ntell them about the day we hit one\nwith the bases loaded,\no,   Salmo Curling Club\nAnnual Bonspiel\nAT NELSON CURLING CLUB j\nFebruary 20 to 22\nTHREE EVENTS \u2014 VALUABLE PRIZES\n\u25a0 .,'.'\u25a0;    ENTRY FEES j\nFees\u2014Membert  ef  Curling  Clubi, $2;   Non-Memberi,  $4\nDeadline far Entries: - p.m. Thursday, Feb. 19\nSubmit Entries to E. J. Avery, Stlmo Serviee Station,\nJ. H. Long, Nelton Curling Club\nB\u00ab*u.*...lti\n-up\u00abrb quality\nni*l<\u00abmn\u00bb\nbelt buy on A*\nffl*rWt\n**r>\u2014i.\/^>*\n\u25a0\u00bb^*_*_v.\n****>\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\n*i*o distill*** or\nROCK- MOUNT LONDON DRV GIN\nAND \u00abOLE AGENTS *OR\nCATTO'S Gold Label and EMra Special\nFlheit Imported Scotch Whiskies\nA-BERTA BISTILLERS, llMlTED\nCALGARY, CANADA\nThii advertisement It not'cubllitied or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by, the Government el British Columbia\nColeman Takes\ni'ERNlE \u2014 Coleman Grands de.\nteated Fernie Rangers 7-4 in a postponed Sard-fought Alberta-British\nColumbia Intermediate Hockey\nLeague game here Saturday night,\nIt was'the first hookey game\nplayed in the new Fernie arena\nand was also the first hockey game\nplayed in Fernie this Winter.    ,\nTo Ted Kryczka of Coleman went\nthe honor of scoring the first goal\nin'the new arena when he scored at\nthe 11:20 mark of the first period;\nDick Pauls became the Urst Fernie player to take similar honors'\nwhen he netted the puck at 9:04 in\nthe second period\nShowing better finish Coleman\ntook a 3-0 first period lead even\nthough play was fairly even. They\nincreased their lead to 5-0 before\nPauls scored for Fernie. In the\nthird period Wilt Ashmore, Joe\nBossio and Dick Pauls scored three\nquick goals lor Fernie in less than,\nfour minutes to open a wild and\nfurious third period.\nColeman goals were scored by\nKrycrka and Koentger,' two each,\nand singletons by Colllngs, Hud.\nand'BIegun. Fernie scorers were\nPauls with two, Ashmore and 1'\nBosslO. There were nine penalties,\nseven to Coleman and two to Fernie.\nSoccer\nStandings\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 British soccer\nstandings, including Saturday's\ngames:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nW T LPt\nPreston North End  14 7   8 SB\nWest Bromwlch A; 18 8,10 35\nBurnley ..\u2022 12 10   5 84\nWolverhampton W IS 8   8 34\nArsenal  18 7   8 84\nDivision II\nSheffield United  ._ 18 8   8 42\nHudaerfjfleld Town  17 7   5 41\nLuton Town  18 .4  7\nBirmingham City  14 7   7 85\nLeicester City 14 8   9 34\nDivision III Southern\nBristol Rover.-  2 7   2\nNorthampton Town 19 4  7 42\nMillwall  18 8   8 40\nBristol City 15.10   8 40\nCoventry City  18 8  7 40\nDivision III Northern\nOldham Athletic .\",.\u201e\u201e 18 8   4 44\nGrimsby Town 17 8  7 42\nPort? Vale 1- 10   8\nWrexham      18 4 1136\nYork City 13 9  9 35\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE     :\nDivision A &\u00bb>\nHibernian 14 2   5 SO\nEast Fife 12 5   4 29,\nClasgow Rangers  11 5  3 27\nSt. Mirren   10 5   7 25\nClyde  __-.. 10 4 10 24\nDivision B\nHamilton A'l .... 18 2   5 34\nStirling Albion .... 18 2   8 34\nArbroath .-. 11 73\nAyr United   12 2   8 28\nMorton    11 2   9 24\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWESTERN JUNIOR\nCrow's Nest 2, Calgary 7     '\nLethbrldge 4, Regina 8\nLITTLE LEAGUE STADIUM\nCANVASS IS OKAYED.\nThe Council Monday night authorized the clerk to advise the secretary ot the Little League that their\nrequest to canvass the business and\nresidential districts wss granted.\nThe letter stated that the money\ncollected would be used to erect\na stadium for Little League and\nPony League baseball ln Nelson.\nThe Strait of Georgia between\nVancouver Island and the mainland has an average breadth of 20\nmiles.\n_H - ,:;^iM _f\nI:\ntw\n\u25a0^MWtFw\nPT;-?\n1\nA\nB__^_r^__i\n\\\\\\\\\\\\\\t'        t9 \u2022    ^*\n^H\nU^^J-t\nWB     * mm\n1 &\ny . \"'** ?i\nJJSf^\nx-y^yO\/Oxxx-^x-^^\ny:yyyyy:is::\"\n\u2022'\nryO:XyyyyY:\n\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:.&'$i&M-&:!%i Siii.:-::-\\^My&K ;'\u25a0\u25a0\n::Illllli;ffilli\nA MERE FRACTION of a point was the difference between\nvictory or defeat for Frances Dafoe and Norrls Bowden, Canadian\nentrants In the world figure-skating pairs championship at Davos,\nSwitzerland. The Toronto skaters placed second In the event,-Just\n.09 points behind the championship English brother-and-tlster team\nof Johnny and Jennifer Nicks. The -Nicks' performance and - the\nf Ive-minute stint of the two Canadian! (teen above) were-to smooth\narid' precise that the placing was In doubt until tho very end.      t\n- \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nWings Down H#ks34\nDETROIT (AP)- \u25a0\u2014 Detroit Red\nWings moved to a six-point National Hockey League lead\u2014largest\nin a month\u2014by whipping the fifth-\nplace Chicago Black Hawks 3-1\nMonday night Chicago's only consolation was In holding high-scoring Gordie Howe goal-less..\nDetroit piled ur}- its three goals\nln the first 24 minutes.,Ted Lindsay converted Bob Goldham's pass\nmidway In\" the first Glen Skov\nclicked.on a long breakaway while\nboth sides were a man short start\ning, the middle session. Marty' P-v-\nelich quickly added anpther.\nAfter that,-the Hawks stiffened\nand also came up with their bast\noffensive play. The Only one who\ncould' penetrate Terry, Sawchuk\nwas Jim McFadden, just three seconds after Johnny Wilson drew a\ntripping penalty.\nSawchuk played smartly In: the;\nfinal minutes against the desperate Hawks who could have moved\nahead of Toronto and into a third,\nplace tie with Boston by -winning.\nMild Weather Forces Salmo\nBonspiel to Nelson Ice\nSALMO \u2014 Annual Salmo Curling\nClub bonspiel, postponed because\nof. mild'January, -weather, will- be\nplayed this: weekend,: Feb. 20-22,' at,\nNelson. . ,    .\nBonspiel officials have stated,\nplay-will commence Friday evening or Saturday morning, depending on \"the number of entries.\n-Three events are scheduled,'tro\nphies and prizes will he awarded\nsemi-finalist and finalists.\nCurlers are requested to submit\nentries to E. J. A. Avery at Salmo\nor J; H. Long, secretary'of the Nelson Curling Club. Entry deadline\nis 5 p.th. Thursday.\n\"?. J. Avery and L. G. Moir are\nin charge.of the 'spleL. ,.,'    i\nTURPIN OUtPOJNTS\nDUGGIE MILLER\nLEICESTER, England (API-\nRandy Turpin, Britain's contender\nfor the,world.middleweight boxing\nchampionship, outpointed Doug Miller of > South Africa in a 10-round\nbout betor* a capacity crowd of\n8000 Monday night\nlt was. an easy victory for Turpin;. former middleweight cham\npion of the world.\nTlie Leominster larTuper took\ncommand from the opening bell.\nHe dropped the easy-to-hit Miller lor two In the second round; for\neight in the ninth, and had toe\nSouth African on the canvas twice\nin the last round.\nThe referee had counted seven\nover Miller when the bell rang end-\ning-the fight\nExact weights were, not announced but each'had to make 163 pounds\nfor the non-tlUe; tight\nFootball\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The draw\nfor the quarter-finals of the Football Association Cup made here\nMonday resulted as follows:\nAston Villa vs Everton\nArsenal vs Blackpool or Southampton.\nGateshead-vs Bolton-W   .. ..'\nBirmingham C vs Tottenham H.\nThe -matches are to be played\nSaturday, Feb. 28 with replays if\nany oh or. before the following\nThursday.  -.X.X\"\nSenior\nHockey\nWednesday\n8 p.m*\nEDDIE WARES\nNelson Maple Leaf* ;\u2022'   <\nSPOKANE FLYERS\n-..  'vs...'-\/;' \u2022\u2022,x ;\u25a0\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\nTickets on Sale \u2014 Kootenay Stationers\nToday, 10 a.m. -5 p.m., Wed.^ 10 a.m. -12 Noon\nCivic Centre Office, Wed., 12 Noon - 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.\nOut-of-Town Ticket' Order*\nPhone 362\nStrikes and Spares\nThe MisFlts provedYthat .'they\nwere anything but Friday night\nwhen they took top honors in. the\nMixed Government League, they\ntook the singles with, a 1118 score\nahd also the aggregate with a 2913.\nTwo players of the MisFits also\ncopped the individual honors as\nRuby Scheops took the high singles\nwith a 317 and the'aggregate with\na 670. Floyd Jennings took the\ngents high singles with a 233 and\nClyde Mills took the aggregate with\na 658. Jennings had 650, Jo Ann\nMorrison had 615, and Jimmy\nWatson 814,   Y Y.        , \u25a0'- -'-\u25a0\nIn the league standing three\nteams the MisFits, Odd Fellows and\nthe Tamaracs are all tied for first\nplace with 23 joints.\nThe top six lady bowlers are Jo\nAnn Morrison 182, Fran.James 174,\nFlo Gill 170, Betty Wicken 188,\nHuby Schoeps 159 ..and Elsie Tait\n159. The six leading gents are\nJimmy Watson .with .189, Clyde\nMills 188, Doug McKeen 182, Howie\nPhillips 180, and Floyd . Jennings\nand Jim James each with 179. -\nIn the Mixed Commercial League\nArvid Schneider rolled ta: big '315\nalong with a 265 and a 238 lor a\nlarge 818 aggregate. For the ladies\nit was. Gladys Schneider' and Helen\nBelyk With a 214 single and Isabel\nLocatelll with a 581 aggregate.\nThose bowling in- the -800'f were\nB.u t c h Hamakawa. 888, Benny\nSchneider 621, George Dimor 633,\nand Kon Senger 625. The top fdiir\nteams in the 18-team. league are\nDynamos 63 points followed .by\nPalms 62, Wigintons 52, and Grange\nCrush 51.      ** '\n. Dot Waterer is'the top Isidy\nbowler with a 224 average in\ngames while Bruce Malcolm leads\nthe men with a 225 in the same\nnumber of games.\ni; So far this season there have\nbeen 102 games bowled with a score\nof over 300,.Dot Waterer and Bob\nMcDonald have each turned the\ntrick seven times. Dot's 385 is the\nhighest of the ladies, while Jimmy\nDennett leads the men with a 388:\nSingle Point Gives\nNakusp Cage Win\n. NAKUSP \u2014 Nakusp senior balk,\nelfeall team at-New Denver \\for a\nfriendly same with the senior basketball team there in the Activity\nRoom of the Lucerne High School\nsfcrried off a 46-45 .victory.\nYoung Amputee\nHopes to Tend Net\nTORONTO' (CP) - A 12-year-pld:\nboy whose legs were amputated two\nyear* ago may soon be playing goal\nfor a suburban hockey team. -\nBobby Hutchinson was run: oyer\nby a frelght'train.'Parts of both'legs\nhad to be amputated about two .Inches belbw the knee. But he promised himself: \"I'll skate again.\"\nDoctor* fitted artificial legs -and\nthe boy was soon able to walk. He\nlearned to use his bicycle again after weeks of falls and'bruises.   .\nThis last, summer he played first\nbase for his school baseball team in\nsuburban East York. Stan \"jVadlow,\nrecreation director of the community, says the boy also played pitcher\nand catcher for the team at various\ntimes and when he was at bat other\nboys ran the'bases for hln_ \u2022\n\"Bobby.has relearned to swim and\nplays goal in soccer,\" Wadlow said.\n\"But his biggest interest Is hockey.\"\nRight now Bobby is.in training\nfor probably, the biggest thrill of\nhis life. He is taking his first strides\non skates with hiB artificial limbs,\nand-next, month hell be; given a\nchance',to'- try-out with one. of the\nEast YOrk Pee Wee teams..... X\n1 thlnk:he'll\"make a good goalie,\"\nWadlow say*. \"We're *11 cheering\nfbrhim.''      IX\nNEW. YO*9K\"(CP)\u2014Eddie KuU-\nman of New York Rangers, who\nso ably handles the Job ol checking Detroit's Gordie Howe and\nMontreal's Maurice (Rocket) Richard, has; stepped into the debate\nover which; Is the better. ,\n\"Richard is tougher to handle,\"\nKullman says. \"He can break faster,\nalways does the unexpected. And\nhe'saU-overthe Ice\u2014on either wing\nor at centre ice. You never know\nwhere, he's going to be\u2014this way\nor thatway, over the top\", of yOii or\nunder, you. He's much shiftier than\nHowe\/''.;, O  \u25a0 Y *\u2022 .-.    '   ...\nIn 11 games, on Madison Square\nGarden ice this season, the blonde,\nsquat 29-year-old native of Winnipeg, who seldom scores' himself,\nhas kept Richard scoreless,- while\nHowe h^as only'one goal. Away trom\nNew York, Howe has scored tour\ntimes against the Rangers, Richard\n:1hree.'   : ',.-'.'\nOntario Rink\nTakes B.C.1MO\ni SASKATOON (CP) \u2014 Saskatdi-\newan, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,\nOntario and Alberta: scored victories,ln the opening round of th.\nCanadian Bchool curling championships Monday.\nHighlight'of the first draw was\nan extra-end'vv\u00bbln: for the-, host\nprovince, I represented by Regina\nScott 'Collegiate rink, Bkifeped -by\nDennie Cochrane.'\nDown; most of. the way, the\nSaskatchewan, boy* - scored two - on\nthe-10th'to' force an. extria end\nagainst Northern Qhtarlo and then\nskipper Cochrane made a^ beautiful\nshot on the Uth tor victory. The\nfinal score' was' 9-7 with Don Cook\nof Dryden,' skip lor the Northern\nOntario' foursome, missing. a. dlfft\ncult'take-out to leave tee. Sask\natchewan boys lying two on the\ndeciding end. \u25a0   '__\nIn the most lop-sided game, On\ntario ran, away from British Columbia 19-9. :\u25a0':.': X\nOther matches saw Nova Scotia\ndefeat Manitoba 124, New, Brunswick defeat Quebec 9-7 and Alberta\nscore an U-7 victory over Prince\nEdward Island.\n1 British Columbia made a bold bid\nagainst Ontario, scoring four on,the\nsecond and to go ahead 4-1, but\nthen dropped: behind steadily as\nBob Walker and his mates, from\nOshawa posted a five-ender and a\nslx-ender tb run out of numbers on\nthe scoreboard as they won easily\n19-9;\nScores by ends:\nMan. 201 010 080.1\u20148\nN. S.X; 020 104 4010-12\n. 120 101 011 00\u20147\n; 00MH0 000 22-9\n... 201 003 0l0\u00bbr-7\n... 610 220 201t-8\n.. 103 2050820\u201419\n,040 020 2004\u20149\n000 801 100-2\u2014.7\n. 214 002 011 0\u201411\nNor. Ont.\nSask,   .-...'.\nQue,\t\nN. B: .....\".\nOnt.; :\nB,-<*\u2022.._..\n$\u00a3.i _...\nAlta. .........\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian Press\nGsA   Pts\nHowe, Detroit-\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,\u201e_\u2022.\u2022_ -41 '<.33 74\nLindsay,'Detroit  22   33 55\nRichard, Montreal     22-28 50\nHergesheimer, N. Y. ...   28   25 48\nDelvecchlo, Detroit     10   36 48\nRonty, New: York .......   15 ,27 42\n\u2022Prystai, Detroit :...... IS' 27. 40\nWIHL STANDINGS\nP.WLT-F   A  Pet\nSpokane .... 50 27 20 3 254 220 .570\nTrail  ;... .43 23 191 214 193,546\nNelson* '41 21.18 2 190187 .537\nKimberley .40 11 25 4 155 226 .325\nlllllllllllll'lllllllllllllliilllillllllllllllll\nDoggie Express\nTHE PAS, Man. toP), \u2014 The\nbow-wow special arrived at\nThe Pas Monday.     .\nA Canadian National Railways train had one baggage car\nwhich contained 82 sled dogs\nshort-leashed to prevent fighting \u2014 five drivers' and live\nsleds, all headed tor the Northern Manitoba Trappers' Festival\nwhich begins here Tuesday-\nFour of the teams Will take\npart in the,Canadian championship sled-dbg.race. The others\nwill provide taxi service for\nylsltors to the: fair. ,\nllltllllllllllllllllllllllslllllllllllllllllllll\n\"KINO OC PAIN\"\nLINIMENT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 17,1953 \u2014 9\nRichard Tougher to Handle\nThan Howe Says Kullman\n\"The records make out a good\ncase for Howe,\" kullman. admits.\n\"He must be the bettor player, But\nI still say Richard gives me' a\ntougher time, and I doubt that Howe\nis as good as Richard was at his\n'peak. '.\n\"Another thjng, I'll argue '6n\/Y\nsays Kullman, \"and \"that's the general disposition to call Howe a cleaner player than Richard. I find\nHowe more temperamental, and\nhe's more apt to give you the elbow or the stick to'a spear Job-\nthan Richard.\" \u25a0  Y '.'  ; ,\nHowe, 24-year-old native'of Floral, Sask., is the youngest player in\nNational Hockey League history\nto score 200 goals, He got his ,200th\nand 201st Sunday night against; Chi-'\ncago. His total for the'season,now\nis 41 and he has 18 games in which\nto score 10 goals and break Richard's record of 50 tor a season. -\nNelson Bants Bump Rossiand From\nPlayoffs, fo Meet Trail in Finals\nThe Nelson Bantams advanced\ninto the finals Of the West Kootenay Bantam. League by downing the\nRossiand, Bantams 4-1 on the\nstrength of .some spectacular goal\ntending by Don.Holmes and Gordon\nWood. , . . . '.\n' The Nelson team got away to a\n3-0 lead in the first period'' 'as\nWayne Farenholtz scored twice and\nFreddie Wah;'added another. Nel.'\nDAVEY WAS IN\nFINE SHAPE, 'FLU\nRUMOR FALSE\nCHICAGO (AP) - The niinolB\nAthletic Commission was told Monday.that .Chuek Davey was in\nexcellent physical condition 'for\nhis fight with Kid Gavilan, showed\nno symptoms of the flit and had a\nvitamin shot Jriitead pt a penicillin\nshot a day before the bout\n. The hearing probed published re.\nports after-the fight last Wednesday that Davey was weakened by\nthe flu. He wai-knocked down four\ntimes in the welterweight title bout\nby champion Gavilan and was un-\nable, to come out for the 10th round,\n, Issy Klihe, Davey's trainer, who\n\"was.to testify -Monday, failed to\nappear. The commission wants to\ndetermine whether Davey actually\nhad the-'flu or whether members of\nhis entourage said ha did as a\nmeans of alibiing.\n\"In- the 'emotional surroundings\nof the dressing room after the fight\nI may. have said that Davey three\nweeks previously had a slight,\ncold,\" Hector,' Knowles, Davey's\nmanager, testified. \"Davey was in\nexcellent shape for the fight.\"\nYankees Sign Up\nSchmitz, Miller\nNEW- YORKi (AP) -- The New\nYork Yankees ^ave re-aCqulred\nlefthander \"Johnny Schmitz from\nCincinnati Reds and also have\nsighed' Bill-Miller, another Southpaw hurler, to his 1953 contract.\nSchmita'was\"purchased by the\nYankees last season from Brooklyn,\nand was sent* to the Reds in the\ndeal in which the Yanks obtained\npitcher Ewell Blackwell.\nN.H.L. LEADERS\n: ' By Th*-Can*dlan Pren  -\n,   Standing\u2014Detroit, won 26, lost 13,\ntied liM^pbihtj.\nPotato\u2014Howei Detroit\u20147t\nGoal--4_owe, Detroit\u201441.\n. Assists^-Delvecchio,  Detroit\u201436,\n. Shutouts-rMcNeil, Montreal\u2014..\nPenalties\u2014Lindsay, Detroit\u2014 100\nmlnutosX      '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0'   -\nWILL BICK HAVE\nTIME TO TALK\nTO THE\nSals?\nOLEN BICKNELl\nOLD TIMERS\nHOCKEY GAME\nSATURDAY, FEP. 21\n8:00 P.M.\nCIVIC; CENTRE\nson made it 4-0 early In the second\nstanza When Eugene Kraft counted.\nRossiand fought hard the remainder\nof the game and with less than two\nminutes to go In regulation tune\nMazeppa robbed Nelson': ol a shut\nout by counting Rossland's lone\ngoal. .  .   . \u25a0.    X\nThe, game wa* played in Ross-\nland before a fair crowd and the\nlittle fellows showed some fine\nhockey with the scrappy Rossiand\nboys never, giving up throughout\nthe entire game. ' '\nNelson will now meet the Trail\nBantams   In   a   two-out-ot-three '\nplayoff   lor   the   West  kootenay\nchampionship.,\nLOSE TO ROSSLAND\n. In an exhibition game the Ross-\nland Midgets started fast and by\nthe end of the second period had\nbuilt up a 5-1 lead over the Nelson\nMidgets. In the third stanza the\nNelson boys came back to count\ntwo more goals but were short of\nthe mark and Rossiand ski-ted off\nthe ice with a 1-3 victory.:\nJohnny Kosianclc led the Ross-\nland team with four goals, a good\nnight's work in any league., The\nfifth Rossiand goal was scored by\nMacAuley. Lipsack led the Nelson\ngoal-getters with two, he also had\none assist, Richardson picked up\nthe other Nelson goal and he also\nhad two assists.\nThe Nelson Midgets, who. drew a.\nbye into the finals, will meet a\nteam from Trail for the West Kootenay title.\nTiny Tots'\nSkating\n2:45 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nChildren's\nSkating\n4:05 p.m. to 5:50 p.ni.\nThe world's\nfinest tobaccos\nthe most pleasing\ncigarette\nyou can smoke!\n mmmimmmmmmm^^\n1 msoHopimwh'Tm\nFOR QUICK RESULTS!\nMEN AND WOMEN WANTBD\nfor trad* training in the R.C.A.F.\nYou ctn learn t trad* end be *.\nmember ot Canada's most popular\nservice. See the career counsellor* at to* Canadian Legion,\nThursday 10th and-Frlday 20th of\nFtbhury,        , \u2022-.\u25a0:\u2022'. \u25a0-. \u25a0'--    ...\nWAimftrlM_ffi_W\u00a5-CAP-\nable woman for modern all-electric hem*. Two children! no cooking; private room with bath. Reference* requierd. E. J, Zinkan,\nRocky Mountain Lodge, Invermere, B.C,\nV-vKWib - oTO oV'W>mAn\"\nfor rooming house work. Good\nhorn*, good wages for right party.\nPhon* 847-X Trail, or write Box\nMM, Dally New*.\nWANTED RELIABLEiPERSON TO\nlook after two email children ln\nmy own horn* during working\nhours, phone 17* evening*.\nW-*-WrW-_\u00ab.iflf_! IsAiisiriAN\nlor soft.drink firm, Salary and\ncommission. Box 0544, Dally News.\nWANMV-Utti-aMcto Vto6l\npressor. Apply Empire Cleaners,\n827 Baker St. \t\nWANW-: tfEMALE 6rilL cook\ntor Armson's Cafe.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG HONEST MAN EXPER-\nienced ln Diesel,. automotive,\nhome heating system* etc. wants\nwork ta evenings. Have own\ntool* will do anything. What have\nyou? Box 0687 Daily News.\nDRESSMAKER ALTERATIONS A\nspecialty. Reasonable rates. Phone\n1878-L.\nACGbtHWArff, fcfcMNK utAh-\nager, can handle a few account*.\nC, A. Melchers, phone I302-X,\n_*6r,V6i)r pruning needs -\nPhone- 1151-t. '\n-\u25a0___.ll \u25a0!   II- IWSSIIIS MSI   I    11.11   SEBf\nClassified 'Advertising Rates:\n13c per llnr first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nlie line per consecutive inser-\nt'oa after first Insertion\n48c line lor * consecutive insertions    i\n$1.59 line tor month (20 consecutive Insertions). Box number* lie extra.'Covers any\nnumber of Insertion*.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\ntint Insertion. It* pet  line\nitch subsequent Insertion.\nALL)   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% TOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates;\n(Not Mor* Thin Listed Her*)\nBy csrr'er, per week,\nIn advance        .30\nBy carrier, per year ...-, $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month   $ 1.25\n\"\"\"hree months\"     !,75\nSix month*  i     7.50\nOne year 15.00\nMall In Canada, outside Nelson:\nOn* month      1.00\nThree months      2.75\nSii month*        550\nOne ye*r     10.00\nWr-TO extra postage Is required,\nabovej-atei plus pontage,\nNOTICE OK SALE BY SHERIFF\nPURSUANT TO THE \"\n\"EXECUTION ACT\"\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIN THE MATTER OF THB\n\u25a0lEXEOTTION ACT\" BEING\nCHAPTER 114, R.S.B.C. 1048,\nAMD AMENDMENTS THERETO,\nAND  IN THE MATTER OF AN\nAPPLICATION OF ANNIE JUNG\nNOW KNOWN AS\nCARRELL BANNER\nJUDGMENT CREDITOR\nAGAINST {\nHUGO CHRISTOPHER YOUNG,\nOTHERWISE KNOWN AS '.\nHUGH JUNG\nJUDGMENT DEBTOR,\n(1) Parcel No. 2 (D.D. 14005-1) ot\nBlock \"K\" of Lot 5547, Kpotenay\nDistrict, Flan 824, save and ex.\ncept thereout Parcel \"A\" (explanatory Plan 14524-1); and\n(2) Lota 2,3 and 4 ot Lot 5817, Koo-\ntenay District, Plan 1506 save\nand except from the said Lot 2\nthat part thereof lying East of\na line parallel to and 6 chains\nand 37 links perpendicularly\ndistant trom the Eastern boundary of the said lot;\nThe interest of the Judgment\nDebtor ln the above described property will be offered for sale on Friday, the 20th day of February, 1053,\nat the hour of two o'clock -In the\nafternoon, at the Court House ln\nthe City of Nelson, Province ot\nBritish Columbia, to satisfy the balance of the judgment in the above\nnamed action amounting to the sum\nof $1158.00, and subsequent costs\nand Interest.\nRegistered Owner: H,u$o C.\nYoung.\nThe   charges   or   encumbrances\nappearing on-the register against\nsaid property are os follows:\n37836-D-Certificate of Lis Pendens\ndated 1\/0\/51 in an action\nNo. 823\/50 whereto Annie\nJung, now known a* Car-\nrell Banner is \"Plaintiff\nand\" Hugo   Christopher\n. Young,  otherwise  known\nas Hugo Jung is \"Judgment Debtor.\" Application\nreceived   24\/8\/511 at   2:18\np.m.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 80th\nday ot January,' 1053,\nThomas G. C. Fox)\nSheriff for South Kootenay,\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nWE PAY CASH FOR OLD BAT-\nterles, car radiators, brass, copper,\nlead, aluminum, etc. Apply 1115\nFront- Street, Nelson.\nSHIP US VOUR SCRAP METAL\nor iron Any quantity Top price\n, paid. Active Trading Company.\n016 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C,\nWANTED - CARPET BOWLING\nset. Write or phone Vince Phil-\nlips, Creston Bakery, Creston\nCEDAR. POLES - ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Kootenay Forest\nProducts Ltd.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST-A GOLD BULOVA WRIST\nwatch with gold bracelet. Apply\nto F. J. Novak. 503 Victoria St.\n, Suitable reward.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\ntt Shade* of*\nprlmiry\ncolor\nDOWN\nL Caper\n(colloq.)\nt. Invader -\nI. Malt\nbeverage\n14. A ball\n17. Superficial   '\n\u2022how\n18. Neon (sym.)\n22, Stylish\n25. Astern\n17. Canadian\nprovtac*\n(abbr.)\n4, Greek letter 20. Character-\n6, Dwell istic of man\n(.Order of\nMerit\n(abbr.)\nf. Warp-yarn\n8. Astringent\nfruit\n.. Encamped\n10. Daubs\n30. Stops\nSI. Turn upside\ndown\n32. Bog\n33. Banished\n34. Parts\nof stepi\n37. From\nVestfrdaj-'i An.vrer\n40. Weird\n(v*r.)\n44. Coin (Peru)\n45. Employ\n48. Music note\n40. Biblical city\nACROSS\nt Stuff\nS. Cook* meat\nIn an oven\nIL Abode ot\ndead (var.)\n11 Badge\n18. Contend\n14. Doctor of\nScience\n(abbr.)\n15. Piece of\nskeleton\n18. Hypothet-\n\"\u2022 Icalforce\nIT. Conceited\n19. Greek letter\n20. Music note\n21. Concluded\nS3. Erbium\n(sym.)\nKAhilf.\neoweiofl*\n\u25a0tat*\n36. Poles\n28. Charge for\nservices.\nit. Female fowl\n30, Quote\n32. Assemble,\nSi troop*\nalt an em\n36. Chambers\n38. Greek\nletter\nSO. Hall!\n41. Ravel\n42. Part ot\n\"to bets. Observe*   .\n45. Indefinite\narticle\n46. Mexican\nrubber tr*\u00bb\n41 Mistake*\n4*. One who\nuses'thing*\n60. Faahlona\nDAILY CBOTTOQUOXEr-Here's how to work It:\nO AXYDLBAAX B\n| bLONGFHI. LOW\nOh* letter itinply \u00abt*nd\u00bb .tet. another. In this example A is used\ntor tho threo L'a, X for the two-O's, etc. Single lettera, epos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*.\nEach day the code lettera are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nNLGEG    DC,    LHRGPGE,    K    TUIUN    K r.\nIt L V J t    B H E W G K E K VitO    1GKCOO    KJ\nWO    K    PT-HNBO \u2014 WBBDO. V\nYestorf-y'B Cryptoquotoi OF SEASONS OF THE YEAR THB\n. a-UTUMN IS THE MOST MELANCHOLY \u2014 BURTON. ' \u25a0\nOuin.uu- Mr XUs Itattm. Iradlcau\n3\nRamp Body and\nFertderWorks\n'    DEALERS FOR\nBRADEN and TULSA\n1 RUCK WINCHES\nFOR EVERY APPLICATION\nS to 60 Ton* Capacity\nNelion. B.C,\nPhone 195 - 656 Josephine St\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nFOR SALE FROM OWNERS, AS\nwe have no further uie lor the\nfollowing; 1 portable sawmill, I\nwood* planer and moulder No,\n128,1 Waukeshaw Industrial unit,\n1 Chrysler industrial unit, 1 heavy\nduty double drum hoist on skids,\n1 Hornet 1-man chain law. All at\nbargain price* for cash. Apply\nCreston Builders Supply\/Ltd.,\nCreston, B.C. \u25a0\n2 PORTABLE SAWMILLS, 1 EDG-\ner, 1 GMC Diesel power unit, rebuilt 2 planers, 1 cat, 100 h.p.;\n1 55 h.p. with belt pulley drives.\nBayes Equipment Company.\nCranbrook, phone 80.        \/   .\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1. B.C.\nJfbR'aAtE-SAW-fl---: (.ON-\ntilt* ot 42-ln. head saw and complete equipment Including edger.\n$4000. C. B.,Schlndeler, Box 194,\nWestvlew, B.C,\nFOR SALE-r WELDCO 2-DRUM\nhoist, V-8 Mercury power, chain\nlaw attachment. Apply Kelra'n,\nR.R, 1, Nelson,\nWANTED-1 PORTABLE EDGER\n9 In good condition, E. C. Shunter,\nBox 344, Kaslo, B.C.\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT - FAMILY\nhome on permanent basis, by\ntelephone employee; considerate\n: tenant*. Phone 1714-L,\t\n1_P_S T6 REkT: 2 OR 8 RI.6M\nfurnished suite or house by quiet\nreliable- couple with ohe baby.\nPhon* 1316-L.\nfor ktm~.UVm*tWmtli\nrooms with general: heat. Phone\nNorth Shore Motel. Phone 1684.\nVAWTtD-^2 kddWb ttotft BY\nMarch 1st, Quite, young couple;\nno children. Box 9968, Daily News.\nWANTED-UNFURNISHED SELF-\ncontained bachelor suite. Box\n9693, Daily News.\nCABIN FOR \u00abENT. PROPANE\nheat. Lakesidis Bungalow. Court.\nPhone 864,\nHOUSE WITH 3 BEDROOMS\nwanted, to buy or rent Phone\n599-R-3, Nelson\nUNFURNISHED' 2-ROOM APART-\nment for rent. Apoly 214 Vemon.\n1 Stfe-iPiNG ROOM. pSlbNB\n247-Y. 80i\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. JARS\nETC. FOR SALE\n26H ACRE FARM WITH 8 Al\n\" under cultivation. First\nright*. 10-yr. old house\nroom* and bath, electrlcii\nhouse and outside building*'\nbuilding* fair condition. Local\non Nelson-Trail highway. Pri\n\u26667000, halt down, or 16000 ca\nNo triflers please. Apply B\n9516, Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u20143-ROOM HOUSE,\nbedrooms, 1 combination kitch\nand living room; lights and wat\nCompletely finished. $2000.00;\nreasonable Otter. 2Vs miles tri\nSalmo on airport road. Apply\nWrite Don Bracken, Salmo.   *\nFOR SALE. OR RENT, felfl]\nmile* West of Nelson on hlghwi\n20- acres; two-room dwelling; <\ncellent location for roadside tr\nlnesa. Rent $20.00 month. Phc\n2847 or write A A Lambert K\nnalrd, B.C,\nFOR SALE - NEW iWH-RO-\nhouse, also new cabin, on la!\nshore, Ideal for retired coup\nperfect for Summer home; lovi\nlocation. Apply Mr. R, E. Coi\nwell, Silverton, B.C.\nRES-DfcNfiAL Lots FdR $R\nln Salmo, ill high, dry and lev\nClose to store and school Ci\nor terms. Clear titles issued i\nmediately. R. H. Street Salr\nB.C.\nFULLY MODERN FOUR\nroom house, garage and tr\ntrees. Also, 3 roomed cottage\ntwo adjoining-lots, Robson Ton\n1 site. Apply E. S. Martin, P.O. B\n284 Robson, B.C., or Phone 3468\n6 ROOM HOU^E, CORNER U\non Main St, Castlegar. Ap]\nBox 9602, Daily News,\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOI\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES I\nused equipment mill, mine a\nlogging supplies; new and ui\n' \/wire rope, pipe and fittin\nchain, steel plate and shapes, i\nlas Iron St Metals Ltd. 250 Pr\nSt. Vancouver, B.C Phone I\nclflc 6357.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - Wfe-ffl\nSpecial low prices. Active Tri\nlng Co, 933 E. Cordova St. Vi\ncouver.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CHILD'S CRIB\ngood condition. Apply 913 Si.\nStreet after 4:00 p.m.\nWOODS  ARCTIC  TliREE   S.\nsleeping robe. Like new;. Ji\ncleaned, $79.50. Phone 160.\nFOR YOUR CABINET REQi\nments or alterations Phone 'li\nAmoroso Woodworking. 518 6i\nCRESS CORN SALVE-s-OR SU\nrelief.- Your Druggist Sells Cri\nMICRONIC HEARING EB5.\nWrit* P.0 Box 39. Nelson. B.C\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, El\nPUPPIES \u2014 PARTI-COLOR\nCockers, Pekes, blk. Labs. Y\nthey sleep on the chesterfield\nprefer new slippers to chew i\n. P.S.: You need a mop. Clerihei\nKennels, 8th and Kokanee _\nPhone 1305-L.\nFOR SALE-TERRIERS AND Ol\nCocker Spaniel. Phone 714R-3.\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n\"ON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... i-\u00abr on the dial\ni: (Pacific Standard Time)\nTUESDAY; FEBRUARY 17,-1953. I\nS:05\u2014Here'* Harmony\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlne*\n4:30\u2014Benny Bashful! Boxcar\n4:45\u2014Piclfic New*\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament\n5:00\u2014UN Commentary \u25a0\u25a0-\n5:05\u2014Roll Back the Yeara\n5:30\u2014Spotlight on a Star\nSiSO-^News\n6:00\u2014Drama ot Medicine\n6:15\u2014Musical Program\n6:30\u2014Dollars and Sense\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade ot Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Rfcport from Parliament H\n7:45\u2014Candlelight and Silver\n8:00\u2014Nation's Business\n8:i5-Talk\n8:30-Music Hall\n9:00\u2014Haunting Hour\n0:30\u2014Mr. Showbustaes*\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014South Sea Saga\n10:30\u2014Hawaii Calls\n10:35\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n10:46\u2014Sports Roundup\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:0O-NEWS Night Cap\n:15\u2014Sports Page\n:20\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n:30\u2014New*\n.35\u2014BreaKfast With Boates\n:00\u2014News\n:i0-\u00a3ports New*\n:15-Breakfast Club\n:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n:35\u2014Sports Corner\n:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n:15\u2014Western Fred\n00\u2014Riders ot th* Purple Sag*\n15\u2014New*   \u2022\n25\u2014Cotle* Tim*\n,45-Muslcal Kitchen\n:0O-^Muslcal Minutes\n:15\u2014Homemaker's Harmony\n45\u2014Consumer's Corner    \u25a0*\n:00\u2014Notice Board\n: 15\u2014Sports New*\n20\u2014News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Behind the New*\n:0O-Muslc Mill\nOO\u2014School Broadcast\n:30\u2014Sentimental Recollections\n:00\u2014Backgrounder\nCBC PROGRAMS\n,   (Pacific Standard Time)\nWEDNESDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fishermen'* Broadcast '\n7:15\u2014Musical Minute*\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minute*\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:1&\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC.New* Commentary\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n0:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00-Morrlng Visit\n10:16\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45-Mu*lcal Kitchen\nll:0O-Ktac\"erg*rtert of th* Air\n1H5-A Man and His Music\n!2:15-Newi\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55-Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\nFEBRUARY ,18, 1953\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Easy Listening\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Musicale\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlne*\n4:15\u2014Young Man With t Soni\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins '   .\n4:45\u2014News\n4:55\u2014Spotlight\n5:00\u2014UN Commentary   . .\n5:05\u2014Rawhide\n5:30\u2014Something in Harmony\n5:45\u2014Neighborly News\n\u00ab:0(Wim Nesbltt From Vlctorl\n6:15\u2014Encore\n*':45-Intro to Wed. Night\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014String Music\n8:00\u2014Two Operas in English\n9:15\u2014Canadian Foreign Policy\niq:*0-News\n10:15\u2014Recital\ni ..:  .,..\u201e._\u25a0, ;  ,_\u2022\u25a0..\n rnmmmm^mmm^W^m^Wy\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nIMMEDIATE\nDELIVERY\non\nomersets\nAlso Mpny Other\nNew'& Used\nCar\naims\n1931 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Ford Tudor\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1949 Ford Fordor\n1946 Ford Fordor\n1940 Studebaker Coupe\n1939 Pontiac Coach\n1933 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1953 Ford Consul\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Hillman Minx\n1950 Morris Oxford\n1947 Morris Coach\n195.1 Austin Panel\n1950 Austin Panel\n1949 Dodge '\/.-Ton\n1948 Mercury Pickup\n1947 Studebaker Pickup\n1946 Mercury 3-Ton\nHoist and Box\nSPOT CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL \u00a3LEAN CARS\nTERMS AND TRADES\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOmt BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear trom the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm, Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock ln Whit* Leghorns, White\nRocks, New Hampshlres and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request.\nFOR SALE-ONE COW, 7 YEARS\nold. Jersey Holstein, will freshen\ntn February. Apply to Joseph\nZambon, New Denver, B.C.\nFOR SALE-COW, TO FRESHEN\nabout Feb. 14th. Apply Alex*\nChernoff. Thrums, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014COW AJTO A CALF,\nln good shape. Apply H. Smith,\nBlewett, B.C.        ; '    ,\nTORONTO STOCKS\n- '\u2022-\u25a0-'    (Closing Prices)\nMINIS..,-     .'X       -.*\u25a0\"'\u2022\nAcadia Uranium\nAkaitcho Y ;,.i.X-\nAmal Larder...\nAmerican Y K ...\nAnglo Huronlon .\nArjon    .        ......\nArmistice   ...-_\u2022_.\nAtlas Y K _____'\nAumamie ....\u201e__\u2014\nAunor  ...,_\u2122.\nBagamac  .;._.\nBarymin      \"*__.\nBase, Metals ........\nBevcourt        _,\nBidgood Kirk ......\nBobjo \t\nBoymar Gold ...\nBrewls R L ...__-.\nBroulan\/......,.___\nBuffadlson    _\nBuff Can\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nP.0  BOX 388. NELSON, B.C.\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurance Co., D L. Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C.P__\n\" Oepot Clean rooms and reasonable ratea  Vancouver. B.C\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W   WIDDOWSON St CO- AS.\naayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH  S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND,   B.C\nAssayer,, Chemist, Mln* Rep.\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAULING\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAULING,\n\u25a0and anil gravel Day, hour or\ncontract H. Harrop, Phone 117.\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYOR8\nbo Yd d AsttMm, _I5 -toftE St.,\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone -03 324 Vernon Street\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n803 Baker St.   Phone 1135\nNelson, B.C.\n~i\t\nClean \"P\n0S with a\nLOAN Pt AN*\nure mtraa at no exim wt,.\n..\u201e...,_.\nCampbell R L .....\nCariboo Gold ....\nCentral Patricia\nCentral Pore\t\nChestervlUe \t\nChimo G  -.\nCochenour ...\nConlaurum .\nCons M & S .\nConwest\t\nDelnite\nSetta R L .\nbnalda  -.\nDuvay ... \u25a0\t\nEast Amphi \t\nEast Malartlc\nEast Sullivan ..\nElder Gold .....\nElSol    \u25a0\t\nEstella   \t\nEureka      \u2022'\u2022\u2014\nFalconbridge .\nFroblsher    \t\nGiant Ye!    \t\nGillies Lake ....\nGod's Lake ....\nGoldale    \t\nGoldcrest\nGolden Manltou .\nHardrock   ...'.\t\nHasaga  r\nHolllnger   \t\nHomer Y K\t\nHudson Bay ......\nInspiration  ...\u2014\nInt Nickel......\u2014\nJack Waite\t\nJollet Que \u2014\nKayrand   \t\nKelore\nKerr Addison    \u2014\nKirk-Hudson Bay _.-.\nKirk Toynslte\t\nLabrador ....._\nLake Dufault\t\nLakeshore   \t\nLamaque  --\nLlngman (new) \u2014\u2014.\nMacassa  \u2014-\nMacLeod Cock \t\nMadsen R L     \t\nMagnet \t\nMalartlc G F -\nMclntyre       \t\nMcKenzle R J-\t\nMining Corp  \t\nNew Alger\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1650   560 Baker St.\nNew Bidlamaque -...\nNew Calumet  \u25a0\nNew Goldvue  \u2014\nNew Thurbols \u2014-\nNorahda    \t\nNormetal*  \u2014~\nNorseman ..-,.\u2022\u25a0\u2014-\u2014\u25a0\nNorth Can\t\nNorth Inca \u2014\nNorione  -.\u2014\t\nO'Brien -\nOrlas,   \u2014_~\u2014-\u2014\nOslsko'  \u2014\nPamour\n1951  Vi Ton Chevrolet\n16,000 Miles. Mechanically Good.\n.   I? $1400\n1951 *AA Ton Willys 4x4\nMechanically Good. 17,000 Miles.\n$1500\n.1950 V4 Ton Chevrolet\n18,000 Miles. New Tires. Excellent.\n$1300\n1939 Chevrolet 5-Pass.\nCoupe\nPaint Good. Radio, Heater, Visor,\nSeat Covers; 4 New Tires.\n-        Mechanically Excellent\n|o *     $650    .\n1941 Chevrolet Army\n15CWT.\n$400\nAPPLY\nNEW DENVER GARAGE\nCO. LTD.\nNew Denver, B.C.\nDay JO - PHONES - Night 76-X\nHAVE YOUR MACHINE IN\nGOOD REPAIR FOR SPRING\nComplete overhauls, accessories, etc.\nAll work guaranteed.\n\"The Shop of Friendly Service\"\nKOOTENAY MOTORCYCLE\nSALES AND SERVICE\nBox 350 \u2014 Phone 2601 \u2014 Castlegar\nFOR SALE-1042 CHEVROLET Vt-\nton truck. Solid throughout 4-\nspeed transmission. Good motor\nand 7 good tires. $025.00 cash. Call\nat 319 Observatory St. between\n5 and 8 pm ____^^\nFOR SALE-ONE COMPLETELY\noverhauled 1942 Harley-Davidson\n45 motorcycle. New motor, has\nonly 60 miles; good rubber. Cheap.\nWhat offers? Apply Box 9632,\nDally News.   I\nFOR SALE\u2014'37 OLDSMOBILE 6-\ncyllnder sedan. Good motor, heater, radio and good tires. Terms\ncan be arranged. Phone 664-Y.\nFOR SALE-1951 PONTIAC SB\ndan. Radio, heater, etc. Apply 617\nVernon Street  ,\nWealth Salvaged\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP)-A 600-\nton British salvage ship has nearly\nfinished salvaging a \u00a3250,000 cargo\nin deep waters off the, Australian\ncoast -\nA year.ago the specially-fitted\nship Foremost came to Australia\nto salvage nearly 2000 tons of lead,\nzinc and.copper ingots ln the sunken freighter Cumberland. The vessel was lying in 300 feet of water\noff Green Cape, near the New\nSouth Wales-Victoria border.\nThe Cumberland sank in 1917 after hitting a German mine. A salvage expedition Iri 1938 failed to\nfind her but the Foremost 17, using\nasdic, found {the wreck at the first\n'attempt   \u25a0  '\nThe Foremost 17, with 31 trained\nsalvage mgn aboard, laid six permanent buoys ln a circle 800 yards\nacross the wreck ln the centre. The\nship then was manoeuvered exactly above the Cumberland. This was\nnecesaany because the exposed post\ntion made ordinary diving methods\nImpossible.\nTICKLISH WORK\nThe divers, working from a diving bell and by telephone, supervised the laying of the explosive\ncharges and later the actual salvaging. This is done by a SVs ton 'grab'\noperating from a derrick. When the\ndiver in the bell sees a load in the\njaws of the \"grab\" he signals for\nthem to close and the salvaged material is hauled up and unloaded\non deck.\nThe copper has come up as untarnished as the day lt left Sydney\nbound for Britain 35 years ago.\nWeather has been the main difficulty. Even a slight swell makes the\n\"grab\" swing about the wreck like\na pendulum. And in such conditions\nthe diving bell also could-be\nsmashed against the side of the\nwreck, in the three months' operations there were 29 gales ln the\narea.\nWhen the weather is fine the\ncrew of the salvage ship works day\nand night. When it roughens she\nmakes tor the little port of Eden\nand every few weeks comes to Sydney to refuel, restore and unload\nthe ingots.\nThe crew get much more than\nordinary seamen and, claim they\nearn it Last year, after a few\nmonths of succesful operations, the\ncompany flew them all back' to Britain for a holiday.\nPaymaster --\nPickle Crow -~\nPlacer Develop ....\nPowell Rouyn\t\nPreston E D  \u2014\nQuebec Lab\nQuebec Man\nQueenston \t\nQuemont   \t\nReeves Mac ....\nRoche L L ...\nSan Antonio .\nShaWkey\nSherritt Gordon ....\nSilvermiller i \u2022\nSllanco  - -\nSiscoe  \u2014\nStarratt Olsen\t\nSteeloy  \u2014\nSteep Rock ......-'.-\nSudbury Cont \u2014...\nSylvanite .  .\"\u2022\u2022-\u2022\nTeck Hughes\t\nThompson-Lund ....\nToburn -\nTomblll   \t\nTrans Cont Res ...\nUnion Mining \u2014\nUnited Keho \u2022\u2022\u2022\nUpper Can \u2014\nVentures     \u2014\nWaite Amulet\t\nOIL8\nAnglo Can \t\nA P Cons \u2022\nB A Oil\t\nCal & Ed -\nCalmont\n1.18\n.20\".\n25Vt\n12.05\n.12\n.17\n:    J2V4\n.18>i\n2.70\nSB\n1.35\n.25\n:   ' .82\n.10\n.39\n.   .15\n.11%\n3.20\n.12\n.84\n9.50\n1.43\n.90\n.20\n.53\n2.85\n1.44\n.65\n30.00\n5.00\n,. 1.61 :\n*   .14'\n.    .60\n.47\n.12,\n2.72\n6.40\n.59\n.11\n.86\n1.11\n20.19\n8.70\n10.50\nMVs\n.87\n.20\n.26\n195\n.15\n.15%\n15.65\n.24%\n64.75\n1.75\n43.80\n.10%\n.35\n.10\n.15%\n19.00\n1.03\n.12\n10.25\n1.12\n8.50\n5.00\ni \u2022\u00ab\n1.70\n2.55\n1.56\n.15\n1.70\n64.00\n.35\n14.00\n.23\n.      .18\n,    1.06\n.      .41\n.10\n,   76.50\n,    3.50\n,     .13%\n.      .83\n.      .16%\n.      .11%\n.\"   1.00 .\n.      .10\n.      .50\n.    1.02\n. \u25a0    -51\n.    1:48\n43.00\n.     1.14\n.    1.60\n.19\n1.00\n.41\n19.25\n2.55\n.17\n2.15\n.17\n5.05\n>   .85\n.25\n.55\n.      .28\n..11%\n.    8.80\n.18\n.    1.85  .\n,    2.02\n.\"'\"    .1*\n.35\n,-'     .23\n.48*\n,      .19\n.    9.00\n.    1.60\n.   23.13\n.   11.85\n.     7.00\nltti.es Paper\nAl Beaverlodge\nNEW 7 YORK CAP) - - ..'Trading\nmaintained a fairly steady aspect\ntoday but there were signs of slight\nweakness here, ind there.\nCanadian Issue* were mixed.\nInternational Nickel gained %, Distillers Seagram added Vi and Canadian Pacific lost %, Dome Mines\nwas unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) - Western oils\nmade' good gains in brisk trading\ntoward the close. Low-priced mln.\nlng Issues continued active although\na few uraniums weakened.\nIndustrials held firm although the\nIndex showed a small loss on leading issues. Western oils added almost t% index points and golds\nmade' a smaller advance. Base met-\na'  slipped.'\nMONTREAL (CP)-Tradlng was\nIrregularly higher in dull dealings.\nTraders Finance jumped two\npoints to pace the upswing. Other\nmovements were less than one\npoint. \u25a0\nAcquiring plus signs were Industrial Acceptance, Price Brothers,\nUnion Gas, Seagrams, International\nNickel and Royalite.\nLONDON '(Reuters) \u2014 Biishiess\nwas small but the undertone held\nfirm In most sections and domestic\nstocks continued to make steady\nprogress.\nGilt-edged Issues closed with'\ngains of up to Vs.\ns\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG   (CP), \u2014   Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 78%.\nBarley, No. 1 teed, 1.18%.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)   .\nMINES    i\nBeaver Lodge     1.83\nBralorne     4.85\nCariboo Gold        1.40\nEstella 86-\nGolconda  .      .20\nGrahdvlew \t\nHighland Bell..\nPac East Gold\nPioneer Gold\nQuatslno\t\nSheep Creek\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, KB. 17,1953 A. 11   \u2022\n28\n.42\n.12%\n2.01\n.45.\n.80\n1.20\n5.O0\nSilver Standard  ......\nSherritt Gordon\t\nVan Rol  \t\nWestern Ex  ~.       -5\nWestern Uran         3.6\nOILS\nAnaconda  \t\nAnglo Can -\t\nA P Con  \t\nCal & Ed \t\nCalmont    \u2014\nCommonwealth  \u2014\nHome     -\nMercury    \u2014\nNational Pete \t\nOkalta Com  j\nPac Pete \t\nRoyalite, \u201e.,.\nVanalta  . ___.\nVulcan          .80\nINDbSTRIALS    '      ~ :\nCapital Est      20.00\nInt Brew B     4.05\n\u25a034\n7.10\n.34\n12.26\n1.71\n4.50\n10.50\n.18%\n2.40\n2.75\n\u202211.25\n15.50\n.31\nCan Canners\t\nCan Car & Fdy\nCan Oil    .:.:.'.\t\nCan Celanese\t\nCockshutt ...\nCons M & S .\nDlst Seagram \u2014\nDom Foundries      i\u2014\nDom Magnesium ..\"    12%\n32\n16\n14\n41%\n18\n30\n25%\n13%\nDom Steel & Coal B.\nDom Stores ,'.\nDom Tar & Chem .\nEddy Paper \t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord A\t\nGatlneau\t\nGoodyear \t\nGreat Lakes\t\nGypsum Lime \t\nImperial Oil\n14\n14%\n. 37%\n22%\n18%\n24%\n61%\n21'i\n90\n15%\n35\n33\nFOR SALE \u20141937 CHEVROLET\ncar, fair shape, cheap for cash.\nApply Daily News Box 9932.\nWindsor Castle, 22 n le: from\nLondon, was started by William the\nConqueror who reign. 1 from 1068\nto 1087.\nBond Prices\nMONTREAL 'CP)\u2014Prices were\nfirm and trading quiet on Montreal\nbond markets Monday. Medium-\nterm Government of Canadas were\nln demand. On the corporate side,\nprices were firm and unchanged.\nCentral Leduc  -\nChemical Research ....\nCommonwealth Pete\nDalhousie \u2022-\nDecalta\nCentral Explorers\nDel Rio \t\nEastcrest\nFederated Pete\nHighwood \t\nHome\nImperial Oil\nInter Pete\nKroy -        \t\nMacDougal Segur .\nMid. Cont\nNat Pete\nNew Pacalta  .--_.\nNordon\nOkalta\nPacific Pete ....\t\nRoyalite\nRoxana\nUnited Oils .\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nArgus\nBathurs Power .\nBeattie Bros     ...._ \u2022\u2014\u25a0\nBell Telephone .._  \u2014\u2014-\nBrazilian\nB C Electric' ....\nB C Forest    ...\nB C Packers A\nB C Packers B .\nB C Power A\nB C Power B\nBUrl Steel\nBurrard A\nCan Cement\n19.75\n12.50\n1.74\n8.70\n... 1.33\n4.05\n-.23\n.75\n5.60\n8.00\n.11*\n.21\n.23\n10.75\n33.35\n26:50\n1.70\n.11\n.31\n2.60\n.11\n.11\n-2.\n' 12.00\n16.00\n.25\n1.80\nImp. Tobacco ,.   10\nInt Metal     29\nInt, Nickel      43%\nInt Pete :.\u201e..;>_.: :    26%\nLoblaw A ..J... .-_...   87\nLoblaw B  ....   39\nMassey Harris \u201e.\u201e..\u201e.\u201e ... 9%.\nMoore Corp -._..._..._ :..   25\nNat Steel Car, _. __\u201e-.'. 26%\nPage.Hershey ., . ...    .70\nTowell River    22%\nFoyer Corp .,:   37\nRuss Industries ... ..    22\nShawinigan , _.._._ _..- 42\nShea. Brew .....\u2014 .._      14\nSicks Brew .'. !    20%\nSimpsons A    12%\nSoutham     2%\n    32%\n    33 '\n    18%\nSteel of Canada\nSteel of Can pfd ...\nStandard Paving\nTaylor Pearson ...\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\t\nWeston'George ...\nWin Elec com\n28%\n13%\n28 Vt\nCORNWALL, Ont. (CP) \u2014 The\nrough-and-ready, mining town . of\nBeaverlodge, Sa*k\u201e has a hew six-\npage newspaper edited and published by a youthful' accountant\nwith a yen tor poetry.\nDavid Good, 24-year-old native of\nCornwall, started his1 publishing\ncareer with the twice-monthly\npaper, The Venture, a few months\nafter he arrived at Beaverlodge\nlast May to work as an accountant\nWith the Eldorado Mining Company,    i \u25a0   '..\nEditor Good, who has been vacationing here with his family,\nchuckles when he recalls hie first\nIssue. He was the only member of\nthe staff with previous newspaper\nexperience, and that was limited\nto a stint on the Queen's Journal,\ntwice-weekly student publication at\nQueen's University In Kingston.\nEAGER CUSTOMERS\nAt Beaverlodge, he says, they\nworked uritil 4 a.m. preparing the\nfirst issue of the new paper for\nmimeographing. Then they found\nonly 200 of their 500 copies were-\nlegible enough to be sold',\n. But there was no trouble selling\ncopies, first at five cents and then\nat 10 cents per copy, to the newt-\nhungry residents. Now he has the\nprfnting done, ln Edmonton, 200\nmiles Southwest of Beaverlodge,\nGood admits the news isn't always hew but he finda the time\nelement hot too Important In a\nfrontier town where even a paper\nthat is months old is read with\ninterest.\nThe Venture offers * digest of\nworld-events, news of local interest\nand occasional features on life at\nBeaverlodge.\nAs an editorial writer, Good expresses strong personal views. He\nsermonizes on what he terms the\ngrowing despotism of unions, criticizes the company that employs\nhim for not providing better living\naccommodation, and pleads for better care for Indian residents.\nPoetry, a special Interest to the\nyoung publisher, also appears.\nGood finds publishing takes all\nhis spare time.\nReporting news In a relatively\nsmall community is a tricky job\nif news sources are not to be\noffended.\ni'We haven't been sued yet but\nwe've trod on several toes and they\nhave trampled back,\" he says.\nSugar Refiners\nTo Go lo Cuba\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A representative of the Canadian sugar refining\nindustry will go to Cuba Immediately In the hope of ironing.out\nsugar trade problems with that\ncountry, Trade Minister Howe said\nMonday in the Commons.\nHe was reporting on a conference he hold Friday with members\nI of the sugar industry, following an\nannouncement  in the  House  last\nweek dealing with sugar imports.\nAt that time, the minister said the\nCuban.sugar trade.a'greeii to.hold\noff from exporting refined sugar to\nthose parts of Canada where sugar\nbeets are grown\u2014western Ontario\nand the Prairie**provlnces.\nThis was conditional upon the removal'of what the minister termed,\ncertain undesirable practices on the\npart ot Canadian refining trade rer\nacting against Cuban exports.\nThe developments grew out of\nthe minister's recent trade mission\nto Latin-Anierlcan countries and\ndemands by some Commons members for restriction of the entry Of\nrefined Cuban sugar into Canada.\nGov't Bond\nOver-Subscribed\n6TTAWA (CP) - Finance Mln.\nister Abbott announced; Monday\nthat a $300,000,000 government bond\nissue was \"heavily over-subscribed\"\nwithin two after the books opened.\nSale of- the bonds started at 9\na.m. and the books were closed at\n*   -:.m.\nThe issue Included two series of\nbonds. The first, totalling $100,000,-\n000 and bearing two percent interest, will become' dlie July 1, 1954;\nthe second, totalling $200,000,000\nand bearing Interest of 2% per cent,\nwill become due July 1, 1955.   .\nProceeds from the new! loan along\nwith cash from the treasury \"will\nbe used to pay $325,000,000 of three-\nyear bonds maturing March 1,\nREADYING  A |Q U E E N ' \u2014 A worker eheck* one of the Queen EHirteth's tour 12-ton\npropeller* as the giant ocean liner lie* tn drydock at Southampton, England, tor perlodie overhauling.\nI Hull, anchors, chain and propellers win be ebeoked, painted or repaired as needed.\nCrude Oil Output\nClimbs Higher.\nCALGARY .(CP) -Crude oil production In Alberta.climbed back to\n187,486 barrels daily during the past\nweek, as 3769 wells put out- crude\nin excess bt dally average allowable\nrate set by the petroleum and-natural gas conservation board.\nThe average rate for the week\nending Feb. 9, the last week on\nrecord, was up 49,746 barrels dally\ncompared to the previous seven-day\nperiod, and showed a dally Increase\not 74,685 barrels ln comparison to\nthe same' week ln 1952. '.-'\nBusiness Spotlight\nCanadians Help\nU.K. Fur Trade\nAnd Old Cars af Automobile Show\nUXBRIDOE,   England    (CP)\nCanadian plans tor a new British\nindustry are wrapped up In five\npairs of chinchillas.\nThe little squirrel-like animals,\nwhose pelts in a full-length woman's coat may cost up to $56,000,\nare to provide breeding stock for\nBritons interested in chinchilla fur\nfarms.\nPelts produced here are thicker\nthan Canadian pelts', experts say,\nChief of British operations is\nanimal breeder Clifford. Beswick,\nwho says he Is trying to line up\n\"money and Interest\" for the\nproject.\nANNUAL LITTERS\nHe was appointed by G. Grant\nof the Montreal Chinchilla Breeding Association, which supplied the]\ngrey, vegetarian' rodents. One set\nhas reproduced already. There\nshould be two litters annually of\ntwo or three little chinchillas if all\ngoes well, \/\nBeswick, 43, say* he's handled\neverything but chinchillas in a\ncareer he started at 14. There are\nonly about three British' chinchilla\nbreeders at present, he says, If Sufficient animals are raised they'll\nbe exported to Canada for breeding\npurposes, perhaps, and liter for\npelting. Sets for breeding eost\nabout $84 to $140.\nThe animals are native to the\nEastern- slopes of the Andes mountains in Chile and Bolivia.\nBy FORBE8 RHUOl\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nThe man who hadnt attended*\nmotor show ln some year* was surprised. '   ;' \u2022. \u25a0 '.,\n\"People,\" he aald, \"wer* standing oh slushy pavements in a line\ntwo blocks long, waiting to pay 60\ncent*; to give somebody a chance\nto sell them a car. And when they\ngot inside, the place was already\npacked.\"\nThe man was referring to Saturday night at the national automobile\nshow now being held (Feb. 13-21)\nat the Canadian National Exhibition\nToronto.\nSHINING SHOW   ...\nWhether qr not the people would\nbuy.they were seeing the. most\ngleaming spectacle of motor-cars\never shown In Canada\u2014a revival\non a grander scale of the shows\nstaged ln the pre-war years 1932-39.\nAs side bits, they might see a\nfastilon show and models wearing\n$250,000 worth of furs, or hear entertainers.\nEven such eye-filling attractions,\nhowever, could\" hdld attention for\nonly a little' while from the 200\nstreamlined creations of motordora *\nwhich made the car-owner think of .\ntrade-ins,- and wore to a wafer the\nsales resistance of other*.\nMUSEUM PIECES\nAlong with the new Is * showing\not old-time cars dating from 1896 to\n1914 and, as museum pieces, some\nof these had higher price-tags than\nthe highest-priced beauties of 1953.\nThe gleam and glitter, we are\ntold, are not Just for pleasure but .\nto put sn attractive garb on ragged\nmechanisms with' which people go\nabout their work-a -day life..\nFor, research men say, pleasure\ndriving accounts for only one mile\nin 10 which thf average Canadian\ncar owner drives.\n\"Mr. Average owner,\" they add,\n\"bought his car for work or business, for travel in connection with\nhis livelihood, or some necessary\npurpose.\"\n' Natural hot water from Iceland's\nvolcanic springs provides heating\nfor buildings in Reykjavik, the capital. XX- ;\\ y\nForesees Improved\nCanada-..K. Trade\nTORONTO (CP) - Sir Archlb\u00bbld\nNye, high commissioner for the\nUnited Kingdom in Canada, *ays(\nCanadians may expect better delivery of British good* than they\n\u2022lave been getting. And there will\nbe greater .readiness by United\nKingdom firms to Invert in Canada,\nIf the market seem* right    \u25a0\u25a0\nSir Archibald made hi* predictions Monday in an address to the\nBritish Trade Centre, which is managed by the Canadian Association\nof British Manufacturers and Agencies.   .  ,\nAltogether, said Sir Archibald,\nthe future of Anglo-Canadian trade\nmay be viewed with \"cautious optimism.\" '\nHe said certain steps taken by\nthe British government should have\na good \"effect. These included relaxation of controls and should give\nthe British Industrialist more freedom of action and opportunity to\nuse Initiative.,\nBuffer Slocks Sufficient to Meet\nAll Needs, Says Minister Gardiner\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Agriculture\nMinister Gardiner said Monday the\ngovernment's 'stock of 29,000,000\npounds of butter will be sufficient\nto meet Canada's butter need* until\nthe new production season'opens\nin the spring. X\nMr. Gardiner said In the. commons that \"government butter will\nsell at .62 cents a- pound wholesale in Quebec and Ontario. The\nonly condition will be that whole-\nCan Packers1 B .\nCan Breweries .\n35W\n7\n20\n7H\n78\n29\n19\nAMERICAN   AID   F O R   K OR E A N   T O T Si Marine Capt. French N. Smith, *\u2022-\nof Corpus Christ!, Tex., helps a Korean orphan select a pair of mittens In Korea. Funds and clothing\nfor orphans have been donated by II. S. servicemen and their relative, back tn the State*. - -\n'h \u25a0 ':\".:-y.t-'i::\nsalert must \"make Immediate delivery to retailers and that the\nmark-up for cutting, wrapping and\ndistributing would be fair and reasonable.\" ^\nPRE88ED BY TRADE\nMr. Gardiner did not say when\nor ih what quantities the government butter would be.released. He\nhas been1 pj-essed by the.trade to\nrelease government stocks to avoid\na threatened shortage.\n. Tho minister said that, \"due to\nthe wide variety of conditions governing, retail trade lt is very difficult to name a mark-up that will\ngovern all situations.\"\nHe added that In many larger\ncentre* * price of 62 cents a pound\nwholesale for solids in the past has\nenabled a large section of the retail\ntrade to sell at retail prices of 65\nand GO. cents a pound.' '\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nNelson\nMachinery\nColumn\nOLIVER O.C. 3\nTRACTOR\nWITH WARE LOADER\nand\nBACK FILLING BLADE\nThe Idealcomblnatlcin for\ntruck loading, ditching, *tc.\nHART\nKATHANODE\nPROPULSION\nTYPE\nBATTERIES\ntor\n\u2022 Mining Locomotive*\n\u2022 Industrial Truck*\nand   other   motivo\npower purpose*.\nIMMEDIATE SERVICE\nON PARTS\n\u25a0 fO# :0\n. Color Styled\nROOFING\n';;.'      '    by'\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\nTo   Beautify  Vour  Home\nSOLID,COLORS    ' -\nor\n''DRIFT BLENDS\"\nThe new blended\nAsphalt Shingles '\nYears ot Protection\n\"\u2022\u25a0''\u25a0 Guaranteed\nCALL or PHONE\n18\nNelson\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If lfs machinery you need,\n, , consult us.\"\n214 Hall St.    Nelson. 8. C.\n \u2022\u25a0'.\" \u25a0 ' \u25a0'.-'\u25a0. -   -\u2014-\nn \u2014 NELSON DAILY hlfiWS, TUESDAY, Kl. 17,1933\nWe tell STATIONERY\n'   Wo soil COSMETICS\nWo tell CAMERAS\nWe sell CANDY\nWe sell FIRST AID SUPPLIES and PATENT\nMEDICINES and all those items\nthat are usually found in a well-\nconducted Drug Store or Stationery\nStore.\nBUT.\nour business is the DISPENSING of\nYOUR DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTIONS\nand because of this we have two\nwell-stocked dispensaries and five\nregistered pharmacists.;;\nMANN\nRCMP Question Seguin on\nMissing Kamloops Couple\nTANCOBVBR (CP) - The Van-\nProvince  in  a*** newspage\n\u00abtory Monday says Henry Seguin,\nOntario murder \u2022 suspect, has been\nQuestioned by RCMP in connection\nwith the disappearance of a man\nMake your own Home Made Bread\nwith ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFurl Instruction, oh every package.\nPhone 238 or call\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\u2022Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nMo\" Kootenay St       Phone 361\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n\u20221t FRONT ST. PHONE Bt\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n(71 Biker St Phone 285\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n.     at ths\nNelson Upholstery\n408 Hall Street Phono 146\nHave the Job Done Right\nTIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPROM **w\n\u25a0Tt Biker tt.\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nMed. Art* Blk.\nPHONES\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nIWBaker tt. Phone Itt\n\"Your Hobby Is\nOur Business\"\nComplete supplies for Leather-\ncraft Dresden Painting, Petit-\nPoint, Copper Tooling, Oil Painting and many other crafts.\nLakeside Hobby\nCentre\nCastlegar, B.C.   \u2014   Phone 3331\nand wife trom ah auto court at\nKamloops three months ago.\nPolice on Saturday said murder\nwai suspected in the disappearance\nof Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Labrie\nof Williams Lake, who disappeared\nNov. 17.. i r\nSeguin now Is serving a five-\nyear prison sentence for an attempted bank robbery at Williams\nCake last December. He is also\nwanted at Maxviile, Ont, on a\ncharge of murder in the robbery-\nslaying of taxi driver Leonard Hurd.\nINTERVIEW WITNESSES\nThe Province said Seguin has\nbeen identified by witnesses as the\ncompanion who was living with Mr.\nand Mrs. Labrie in the.auto court\nThe newspaper said at least one\nwitness Wa* taken to the B. C. penitentiary at New Westminster to\nidentify Seguin.\n\"The witness said he knew Seguin as Godin. They worked - together last fall at Williams Lake\nfor \u25a0 lumber company.\nGodin was the name Seguin gave\npolice after his arrest following a\ngun battle in the badlands north\nof Williams Lake.\nRCMP declined to comment on\nthe report that' Seguin had been\nquestioned in the Labrie disappearance.'\nFurther Hearing\nOn Buttle Lake\nVICTORIA (OP)-The special 11-\nman committee of the legislature\nappointed to probe the -Buttle Lake\nissue and recommend to the house\na final disposition of the two-year\nargument arranged Monday for another hearing of all parties concerned.\nThe hearing will begin next Monday with the B. C. Power Commission scheduled to be heard first.\nThe commission will present arguments in favor ot damming the\nlake so the John Hart power development ean be completed,\nConservationists who oppose a\ndam on the lake will be heard\nlater. .  \u2022\nOBEYING GOD'S LAWS\nBRINGS JOY, HEALTH\nHappiness, joy and health are\nassured to those who obey God's\nlaws \u2014 these are among the blessings indicated in the Lesson-Sermon entitled \"Soul\" read in all\nChurches of Christ, Scientist Sunday.\nTbe Golden Text was: \"My soul\nwaiteth for the Lord more than\nthey that watch for the morning.\"\n\u2014 Psalms 130: 6.\nHie Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"Praise the Lord with harp; .. .\nSing unto him a new song;. .. For\nthe word of the Lord is right; and\nall his works are done in truth.\"\n\u2014Psalms 55: 2,3, 4.\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health With Key to the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker- Eddy, were\nthe following: \"Music is the rhythm\nof head and heart Mortal, mind is\nthe harp of many strings, discoursing either discord or harmony according as the hand, which sweeps\nover tt, is human or divine.\"\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nDid You Ever Think\nWhat a Difference\nA NEW SINK\nWould Make in Your Housework?\nThe link I* the hub of a well-planned kitchen,\nand will tare *tep* and labor.\nWe have a well-assorted stock to choose from.\nCONSULT US FIRST    .\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST.       T. F. JEMSON        PHONE 666\nGotlfef ence Secrets\nAwgtke Sp^eidatite\n\u25a0WASHINGTON (CP)\u2014President\nElsenhower discussed plans for repudiation of certain secret international agreements in V busy\nround of conferences Monday.\nHe met Wth a score of.administration, congressional and military officials for a hush-hush conference which stirred speculation\nas to whether the possibility of using atomic weapons against the\nCommunists in Korea was under\nstudy,       I\nAmong those who sat in at the\nWhite House session,were members\not the Atomic Energy Commission,\nthe congressional atomic, committee, and Gen.' Omar\" Bradley,\nchairman ot the joint chiefs of staff;\nVice-president Richard Nixon and\nother members of the National\nSecurity Council also attended.\nThe White House also announced\n'that Eisenhower will confer today\nwith Adloi Stevenson, the Democratic presidential nominee he de.\nfeated in the November election.\nAfterward Stevenson will join\nEisenhower at a luncheon he has\nscheduled fpr a group of about 20\nCongress . members,- both, Democrats and Republicans.\nStevenson plans - a round-the-\nworld trip starting March 2. He and\nEisenhower   have   not'met   since\n1947. : y,- \u2022 ...  \u2022-'.-\u25a0;\u25a0'      '.;\nState Secretary John Poster Dulles sat. in with Eisenhower and the\ncongressional leaders tor the dis.\nmission of the repudiation plans.\nThe President also stepped,up\ntbe new administration's cold-war\nplanning by appointing a special\nassistant, C. D. Jackson, to work\nwith the various government agencies engaged in the psychological\nyvarfare field.\non\nHydro Development\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A .Canadian\ncompany has been given federal\npermission to make water power\nsurveys in the Yukon with a view\nto establishing a huge hydro-electric development on the Yukon\nPritish Columbia border that eould\nbecome one of the word's largest.\nResources Minister Winters said\ntoday in an interview that Fro-\nb.sl.er Ltd., big Canadian exploration and development company, has\nbeen given the go-ahead to survey\nthe power possibilities .in certain\nlake dnd river basins in the Yukon\nbelieved to hold a potential of\n5,000,000 horsepower.        Y\nAt (he same time the minister\nconfirmed that the federal, government has rejected a bid by an\nAmerican  firm  to   use   Canadian\nwaters to power a huge aluminum;\nproject in Alaska. ,1\nHe said he has informed I. W.\nWilson, president of the Aluminum\nCompany of America, that the gov-\nernmentcould not consider its proposal to use water of the Yukon\nriver to power the Alaskan plant\nThe aluminum company, which\nplanned a $400,000,000 smelter near\nSkagway, for production of some\n200,000 tons of aluminum a year,\nwas told Canada must reserve Canadian waters for Canadian iise.\nThe Yukon river cuts through Alaska, but has Its headwaters ln the\nYukon and Northern British Columbia.\nMr. Winters said the American\ncompany has given no indication\nthat it plans to'proceed further ih\nseeking use of Yukon river waters.\nAussie Overseas\nCash Reserves\nShow Increase\nCANBERRA (CP)\u2014 Prime Minister Robert Menzies said Monday\nAustralia will permit import of a\nfurther \u00a350,000,000 worth of nondollar and non-Japanese goods in\nthe fiscal year beginning June 1.\nHe said this and earlier minor\nmoves would represent a 25 per\ncent-increase in imports since import restrictions were put into force\na year ago. ,\nDetails of the relaxation will be\nannounced later.\nThey are the first major relaxations announced since the Commonwealth economic conference in London last December.\nMenzies said overseas cash reserves had improved stea<HJy since\nthe. opening of the export season.\nWatch Scottish\nNationalists Says\nOne Who Knows\nY' '   \"     .'      \\  '\nSEOUL (AP) \u2014One of the Scots\nwho -helped engineer the theft -of\nthe Stone of Scone two years ago\nsaid (with his tongue in his be-\nwhiskered cheek) Monday: There\n\"might be some trouble\" unless\nQueen Elizabeth n is crowned\nElizabeth I of Scotland.\n\"Vague rumors are emanating\nfrom Scotland,\" said Lieut James\nGamie) Hunter, a Royal Navy carrier flier. \"     .   \u25a0'\n\"T'..e boys have been saying that\nif they don't crown the Queen as\nElizabeth! of Scotland, there might\nbe some -rouble.\" .\nScottish Nationalists maintain\nthere never has been an Elizabeth I\nof Scotland; that the first Elizabeth\nruled only England.\nJUST A JOKE\nHunter spoke with a menacing\nburr but he was quick to tell a\nreporter \"be sure to emphasize the\nhumorous aspect of this.\"\nHunter is a senior observer ot a\nreconnaissance dive bomber squadron on the carrier HMSi Glory, on\ntemporary duty as a naval liaison\nofficer with the U.S. 5th Air Force.\nJust before the stone was stolen\nfrom Westminster Abbey in . the\n1950 Christmas season, Hunter wss\npresident of the Scottish National\nAssociation of Glasgow University.\nHe describes himself as a behind-\nthe-scenes man in the \"recovery\"\u2014\nfor Scotland, that is\u2014of the traditional coronation stone of Scottish\nkings. The stone was returned to\nthe Abbey in the Spring of 1051.\nCarleton College to\nAward Scholarships\nOTTAWA (CP) - Carleton College announced Monday it will\naward four scholarships, valued at\n$500 each, on a regional basis to\nstudents wishing to enter college\nthis fall.\nOne scholarship will be awarded\nin Ontario, another in Quebec, a\nthird\"* in the four. western j pro'vr\nlnces and northern, territories and\nthe fourth in the maritime' provinces. \u201e\";\u25a0'\u25a0, '\nOne - quarter of the scholarship\nwill be\" paid each year i for four\nyears, applied against tuition fee*.\nBomb Injuries Kill\nPrison Manager\nWALLA WALLA Wash. (AP)-\nThe man who was holding the Inmate-made bomb which exploded\nin the state prison's-business office\na week ago died Monday.\nHe was Alfred F. Gruber, 42, state\nprisoner business manager for the\nlast five years.\nInjuries trom the blast included\nthe loss of an arm.\nA second prison official, Al ftem-\nboldt, deputy warden, also hurt in\nthe explosion, was reported improving. \u25a0 ,   -.\u25a0   .\nTo Help Pay for\nTACOMA (AP) \u2014 The two-boys\nwho flooded Lincoln high school\nhere with a fire hose causing \u00a35000\nin damage will spend the next year\nWorking to help pay for it, juvenile court Judge B.ertil' Johnson ruled\nMonday.   '\nThe families of the two boys have\neach mortgaged their homes for\n$1000 and have turned the money\nover to school authorities to help\npay for the damage.\nThe two boys must work one\nhour each school day\u2014not less than\nfour days a week\u2014and eight hours\neach Saturday, school holidays and\nduring vacation periods at a gainful\noccupation. The: money they earn\nis to be turned over to the school.\nThe rofating-bree,ch revolver, firing six shots without reloading, was\npatented by Samuel Colt in 1835.\n\u2014_-, _\t\nOttawa Diverts\nPipeline Talks\nAs \"I\nLIEUT.-GEN. ALBERT C. WEDEMEYER, former commander of\nU.8. troops in China, reads a newspaper account of an Interview In\nwhich he urged that the U.N. carry out \"unrestricted\" attacks on\nRed China's mainland. General Wedemeyer expanded his views In a\ngeneral new* conference later. He reltrated his belief that such action\nwould not necessarily start a general war. He said the U.N. should go\nall-out, use atomic bombs and launch massive land, tea and air at-\ntacks against the China mainland If necessary to-bring victory In\nKorea. On,the wall behind General Wedemeyer- In his New York\nhome Is one of the Oriental paintings he brought back with him from\nChina.\u2014Central Press Canadian. vi\nPrime Minister's Wife Unhurt. . .\nStand Collapses as\nLaunches Carrier;\nMrs. Churchill\nEleven Injured\nBARROW-IN-FURNESS, Eng.\n(Reuters) \u2014 Britain's newest aircraft carrier, the 18,300-ton Hermes\nwas launched By Mrs. Winston\nChurchill Monday in a ceremony\nmarred by the collapse of a temporary \"structure.\nEleven shipyard workers were\nslightly injured when steel plating\natop a scaffolding behind the ceremonial stand gave way. under the\nweight of 200 onlookers. About 30\nin all toppled to the ground.\nThe prime minister's wife and\nothers on the stand were not injured.\nThe Hermes, a light fleet Carrier\nnamed for one sunk by the Japanese in 1042, is said to be the most\nmodern in the world. Many,new\ndevelopments embodied ln her still\nare on the government's secret list.\nShe cost an estimated \u00a310,000,000.\nCar Plunge Kills\nDriver Near Chase\nKAMLQOPS, B.C. (CP)\u2014Robert\nRobertson of Kamloops died Saturday when his oar plunged over an\nembankment on the Trans-Canada\nhighway near Chase, 38 miles east\nof here.\nNew Differential\nPatented By\nIsraeli Inventor\nTEL AVTV (AP) \u2014 Israeli authorities have granted a patent to an\ninventor for his \"hydraulically driven differential\"\u2014a unit which supposedly will make possible the manufacture of automobiles without a\nclutch, .drive-shaft, gear box or conventional brakes.\nDov Baalkoreh, owner of a machine works near Tel Aviv, told reporters his patent \"provides a power supply to the car's rear wheels\nby a hydraulic pump carrying, oil\nthroegh tubes to small hydraulic\nmotors attached to the wheels.\"\nThis pressure would -drive the\nwheels fprward, Baalkoreh said.\nHe added: \"By regulating the direction of the flo* of the fluid\nthrough differential turbines, the\ncar can be reversed. To bring the\ncar to a halt the fluid supply is\nturned off and hydraulic pressure\nagainst the speed bands will bring\nthe car to a complete stop.\"\nYAWNS MEAN ERR0R8\nMANCHESTER, England (CP) -\nEducation Minister Florence Hors\nburgh told parents here that every\nyawn by tired students in class\nmeans another mistake on the ex\namination paper. A headmistress\ncommented that students are kept\nup late by television, movies, parties ahd youth clubs.\nPeter lawford's\nFather Dies in\nHollywood Home\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Peter\nLawford's father, Lt.-Gen. Sir Sydney Lawford, who once objected to\nhis son's acting in the movies but\nlater not only approved but'did a\nbit of acting himself, died Sunday.\nHe succumbed at 87 after a relapse\nof influenza.\nSir Sydney, who retired after\nmore than 40 years of service ln\nthe British Army, was an enthusiastic amateur gardener and an animal lover.\nBorn in London, Sir Sydney was\nknighted in 1918.\nHe objected when Peter acted in\nseveral British films as a boy but\nin recent years played bit parts for\na lark in several of Peter's films.\nHe was a barrister in \"Kitty,\" a\nclubman in \"The Picture of Dorian\nGray,\" and a general in \"The\nRogues' March.\"\nPRESIDENT EISENHOWER beams his characteristic smile as he\nreceived a standing ovation whon he appeared before a Joint session\nof Congress In Washington, D.C., to deliver hit first State of the\nUnion message. Behind the chief executive aro Vice President Richard Nixon (left) and Speaker of the House Joseph W. Martin, who\nlook* grim Indeed In comparison to the President, Highlights of the\naddress, which was Interrupted frequently by applause, were announcements that the U.S. 7th Fleet would withdraw from the blockade of Formosa, thus freeing Nationalist Chinese troops to raid the\nRed mainland, and the President's call for disavowal of, \"secret\ntreaties\", which, tho.President tald, permitted the enslavement of\nfieople. The first Republican President to chart a course for the U.8,\nn two decades, Elsenhower alto dwelt on domestlo affaire In hit\naddress, proposing a program that would turn the country toward a\nfreer enterprise tyttem and \"natural\" economio lam\u2014Central Prett\nCanadian.   .'.'\nU.K. Objects to\nParing Yalta Pad\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden has told the\nHouse of Commons that Britain\nhas registered objection with the\nUnited States against any plan to\nscrap parts ot the talta agreement.\nHe told a questioner Monday that\nit has been made clear to the U.S.\nthat Britain does not agree that, a\none-sided repudiation of an inter\nnational agreement would be i\ngood thing.\nPresident Eisenhower haa ah.\nnounced that he will ask Congress\nio wipe out certain secret wartime\nagreements permitting the \"\nslavement\" of peoples. A section of\nthe 1945 Yalta agreement by Britain, Russia and the U.S.. promised\nthat Russia could take from'Japan\nthe Kurile Islands and South Sakhalin Island. That part of the\nagreement was kept secret at the\ntime because Russia had not yet\nentered the war against Japan.\nEden was believed to have made\nBritain's position clear in his talks\nhere recently with the U.S. state\nsecretary, John Foster Dulles. He\ndid not tell the Commons Britain's\nreasons for objecting, but British\nofficials In private talks have\nvoiced these points:\nA one-sided repudiation would\nset a bad precedent which Russia\nmight copy, particularly in respect\nto Berlin.\nRepudiation would be academic,\nInasmuch as. Russia already occupies the former Japanese islands\nand is not likely to vacate because\nof a resolution by the American\nCongress.\nThe U.S. should consult with\nfriendly signatories to an agree-\nment, at least before tearing it up.\nTo Labor questioners Eden repeated Monday that Britain is con.\nfident the new Washington admin\",\niatration will consult on any far-\nreaching, policy changes in the\nKorean war and that the U.S.\n'wishes.to.work in harmony\" with\nits allies\t\nStephen Davies, Labor, asked\nEden to pull British troops out of\nKorea because, he said, Britain is\nbeing treated \"with contempt by\nanother power\" and American policies are intensifying the danger of\na third world war.\nNo, sir,\"' said Eden In declaring\nhe would not accept Davles' arguments.\n,\u00bb\nOTTAWA ^CP). - Two British\nColumbia Commons members tried\nunsuccessfully' Monday to open an\nurgent\" debate on the intention\nof Trans-Mountain Oil Pipe Line\nCompany to pipe Alberta oil into\nthe United States.\nThe move by T. H. Goode (L\u2014\nBurnaby-Richmond) and George\nCruiCkshank (L\u2014Fraser Valley)'\nwaa ruled out of order by speaker\nRoss MacDonald on the ground\nthere was not enough urgency for\na special debate. The topic could\nbe discussed in the'normal way.\n\"ADVERSE EFFECTS\"\n.Mr. Goode said B, C. members\nwanted to discuss the \"adverse ef.\nfects\" on B. C. employment and\nOn the economy of that province\nin Uie company's plan to divert\n\"huge' quantities\" of oil from Its\nAlberta-Vancouver pipeline, how\nunder construction.\n'The company recently received\npermission from the Board of\nTransport Commissioners to build\na 24-inch branch line from its main\nline to the U. S. border in B. C.\nPreviously, it indicated it planned\nto pipe all its oil to Vancouver and\ntransport the surplus, from there\nby tanker to the U, S.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nFred Babakaiff\nOf Perrys Dies\n. A resident of Perry Siding for the\npast 13 years, Fred Babakalff, 32,\ndied in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Sunday afternoon after a\nlengthy illness. He was born in\nBrilliant.\nMr. Babakaiff was last employed\nwith the Great Northern Railway\nat Salmo. -\nHe is Survived by his wife and\ntwo sons, Wally and Frankie, two\nbrothers, William and Nick, and\none sister, Lucy, all ot Perry Siding.\nFuneral services will be held at\nPerry Siding.\nConducts Defence\nIh Speeding Charge\nRichard Moore of Nelson, conducting his own defence, was found\nguilty of exceeding the speed limit on Nelson Avenue and was fined\n$30. i\nHe appeared before Magistrate\nWilliem Brown in City Court Tuesday, pleaded not guilty and the\ncase was adjourned to Friday. Police Chief Robert Harshaw was\nCrown prosecutor.\nConstable R. - House testified\nMoore had exceeded the speed limit\nand both Moore and his wife gave\nevidence for the defence.\nMoore told the court he was not\nproceeding at an excessive speed\nand had from time to time glanced\nat the'speedometer.\nWe have just received\na new shipment of\n3 month*' wear er   .\n3 NEW PAIR FREE\n\u2022 Longer Wearing\n\u2022 Easier Washing\n\u2022 Shrinkproof    \u25a0\n' \u2022 S-O-F-T  '\nShrinkproof - Wearproof\nMothproof\nEmery's\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nThe first history of Canada for.\nschool use was published by Mrs.\nJennet Roy, school-mistress, ln\nMontreal in 1847..\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206\nN\nPhone 141\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK '\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody end Paint Work a Specialty\nPYRITHEir\nCOMPOUND\nSAf_\u00bb_CONOM>CA_   i\nHI BANDY TuBR\n-H ECONOMY M\u00abM0\nFor the relief of symptoms of\nColds and Hay Fever\n12 for 65c \u25a0 40 for $1.90\nAt Your Rexall Store    .\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Leave your Prescriptions with\nus for reasonable pricing.**\nTHIS\nWEEK'S\nW&aL 0spaJdnismL\nFeaturing Flavor-Tested Red Brand Beef\nKOlind   StCdlCS   Red Brand. Lb.  79\n32*\n39*\n53'\nBrisket Beef\nBeef Liver \u00a3\"!:\nHamburger\nGrade A.\nRed Brand. Lb\t\nFresh, lean.\nRed Brand. Lb.\nSide Bacon \u00a31\u00b0.. ii,\u2014 59\n\" pJwduai OsspaodmnL\nApples\nGrapefruit\nOranges.\nCelery\nCabbage\nTurnips\nFancy Newton's.\n5 lb. pliofilm bag \u2022\u25a0\nFlorida, Pink      ^\nflesh    I,,   -fa lbs.\nSunkist Navels.\nLb. J\t\nCrisp\ngreen stalks. Lb,\nNew, California. Solid\ngreen heads. Lb.\t\nLocal.\nLb.\t\nCoffee\n\"SJioaJiif, (OspaJihmnL\nChase and Sanborn's.\nLb. \t\nT_-_     Malkin's Best.\nBlue Label. Lb.\n55*\n27*\n11*\n14*\n10*\n5*\n96*\n89*\n39*\nft... \u2014 \u2014 -   Libby's. Deep Brown.      ^\nDeanS   \\$ oz. tins   -fa for\nRolled Oats ft* 43'\nTomato Juice ?ce;n20oZ 2 ^39*\n-fatins-JD\nC'bell's.\nAll var.\nChicken Soup\n\u2022 STAR*\nGROCERY\n488 Baker St.\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\nPhone 10\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_1953_02_17","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427744","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}