{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427997":{"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":"1953-04-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427997\/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":" Allied POW Plan\n','  \u25a0 ' \u25a0''\u25a0'.\u25a0,''   ''*''. \u25a0' ''-'\u25a0     .','\u00bb.'\u25a0*.', ''\u25a0 'y    \\ \u25a0\u25a0;'.' '.,'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 *,-\nOpposed by Reds\n::..:!\nPANMUNJOM (CP) \u2014 The Communists returned to the\ntruce talks Sunday with a new six-point plan for exchanging\nthe 'only\nusing them for nothing but propaganda'. ' . .,'. \u25a0.;. \u25a0 *   '\nNam It's proposal Sunday embraced these sik pqlqits:   :\n1. Prisoners who want to go\nhome should be sent there within\ntwo months after on armistice.\n2. Within one month after this\ndirect repatriation,, the prisoners refusing to go honie should be sent\nto a neutral state \"agreed upon\nthrough consultation of both' sides.\"\nThe authorities of the neutral state\nwould have .control of the prisoners. ,'\",    \/.*,. .*\u25a0  x\n.3. Within six months after the\nprisoners' arrival in the* neutral\nstate, the nations to which they\nbelong would be allowed to send\nrepresentatives to talk to the cap*\nfives \"so as to eliminate their apprehensions and to inform them of\nall matters related to their return\nto their homelands, particularly of\ntheir full right to return borne to\nlead a peaceful life,\"\n4. After these explanations, the\nprisoners who then ask to go home\nwould be sent to their homelands.\n5. The fate of. prisoners still re*\nmalning in the custody of the neu*\ntral state would, be decided at the\npolitical conference to be called to\nsettle the Korean conflict after a\ntruce is signed,\n6. The expenses of prisoners\nduring their stay in the neutral\nstate and the travel expenses to\ntheir homelands would be paid by\nthe nations to iphich they belong.\nAfter hearing Him out, Harrison\ntold him:\n\"We *note that you have made\nno comment regarding the nomina*\ntion of a neutral nation. We consider that the obvious choice\nSwitzerland since that state has\nacquired in the eyes of the entire\nworld a neutral status which is un*\nsurpassed by that of any other state.\nprisoners \u2014 tne only issue\nblocking the end of the Korean War.\nThe plan was Immediately rejected by the United Nations command.\nI The two* sides were divided on\nthise points:\n. ' 1. Naming of a neutral state to\nhandle prisoners who refuse to be\nreturned to their homeland. The\nReds suggested further debate on\nthis while, the UN urged that Switzerland be named.\n2, The Reds proposed that up to\nnine months be .taken to dispose\nof the question of what to do with\nprisoners unwilling to go home, after which their fate would be turned\n-over to a political conference. The\nUN Insisted this should be cleaned\nup in 60 days.\n1 8. The place prisoners 'refusing\nrepatriation should be held while\ntheir fate is being decided. The\nCommunists said the prisoners\nshould be sent to the neutral state\nor to an area designated as neutral.\nllie UN command said they should\nremain in Korea under Swiss custody. '\u25a0'' . . \u2022\n* The UN command refuses to hand\nback about 50,000 Chinese and Ko?\nreans who say they are unwilling\nto be returned to Red rule.   ,\nEach side went away from the\nstraw-matted conference hut Sunday urging the other, to take another\ncareful look at the compromise pro-:\nposal's to revolve the prisoner problem and thus end the war, how near\nthe end of its third year.\nNorth Korean Gen. Nam II headed\nthe Red delegation and Lt.-Gen.\nWilliam Harrison' was the senior\nAllied delegate as the talks'-relumed. The UN had suspended'them\nOct 8 after .accusipg the Reds o^\nMeds Scty Prisoner\nFREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea (CP) - The gate to freedom closed Sunday \u2014 at least temporarily \u2014kfter the Com-\nmunists said they had no more disabled Allied prisoners to\nrelease. .-'::   *'\u25a0'.'*\nThe Reds traded 684 Allied troops \u2014 including two members of the Canadian Army \u2014 during the first week.of the ex1\nchange. The return by the Allies of nearly .6,000 .disabled\nKoreans and Chinese is half\nfinished and continues today.\n1 Hear-Admiral John C Daniel,\nhead of the Allied liaison team\nhandling the trade, soid he Is going\nio,?>ry 'to- get mpre'Allied prisoners\ntatof Red hands.\nDaniel had proposed that an exchange be continued during hostilities but the Reds apparently dashed\nthis plan by insisting no more men\nwere eligible to return home.\nThe Reds actually repatriated\n'more sick and wounded than thoy\noriginally had promised\u2014084 compared with 005 originally offered,\nland the Allies reciprocated by addling to the number they would re-\niturn to the Communists.\nI Eighty-four men came back to\n'freedom here Sunday\u201413 Americans and 71 South Koreans. In all,\n149 Americans were freed compared\nwith a promise originally to send\nhome about 120.*\n1 The Reds reported in the truce\ntalks about a year and a half ago\nthat they held about 12,000 Allied\ntroops as prisoners, including 3000\nAmericans. The UN command disputed the figures at that time. It\ninsisted the Reds held tens of thousands more South Koreans and several thousand more Americans.\nBut the tales told by returning\n,POWs struck a blow at Allied\nhopes. They reported thousands of\n'Allied soldiers died from wounds,\nStarvation, poor treatment, exhaustion, bitter cold, cruelty and the\nfortunes of war.\n'One of the last Americans to\ncome back, air force Capt. Zach W.\nDean, described Red feeding and\nindoctrination and told of a futile\nescape attempt he made 18 months\nago with Associated Press photographer Frank Noel.\nThe 34-year-oia pilot said he and\nNoel were both put in solitary confinement for VA weeks' for trying\nto get away to Allied lines.\n\"We have a constant flow of people trying to escape. Frank Noel\nand I escaped on Aug. 20, 1051.\n;  \"We managed to stay out three\ndays.\" '\nI Dean said he saw Noel just a\nWeek ago, the evening before he\njoined a convoy of disabled men\nbeading for the exchange point at\nPanmunjom.\ni Dean said the 48-year-old Noel\nIs in \"good snipe except for bad\nteeth\" and the Reds weren't planting on returning him in the trade\nSf disabled men.\nThe downed pilot said Red in-\nJoctrination attempts were intent\nlive in his camp.\n\"They subjected us to inhuman\nstudy. During the summer of 1951\nwe were required to attend classes\nbefore breakfast for about two\nJours, after breakfast for three to\nsix hours and for about two hours\nIfter the evening meal.\n.\"These classes were forced on\nus. We demonstrated and did every-\nhing in the world to try getting\nrat of the classes. Then about six\nmonths ago they dropped the classes\nDid did not force us to attend any\npore,\n\"They taught uathe principles of,\nMarx, Stalin, Engels,. and such\nwriters in the States as Howard\nfast and William Z. Foster.\"\nDean, said the Reds allowed pri-\nWhers in his camp two meals a\nlay.\nHaggen Again\nForks-Greetiwooi\nCCF Candidate\nGRAND FORKS-A CCF nominating convention at Rock Creek\ncommunity hall Sunday afternoon\nunanimously endorsed a resolution\nof the Rock Creek CCF nominating\nRupert Williams Haggen of Grand\nForks, member of the last two legislatures.\nThere were 60 present, representing all districts from Beaverdell to\nChristina Lake. A campaign'was\nset up with \u00a3red Mahoney of\nGreenwood as chairman and Mrs.\nJ B. Blaine of Bridesville as secretary.\nMr. Haggen is a mining and civil\nengineer and surveyor. He is 65\nyears old and now enjoying good\nhealth after a lengthy illness.\nI Before the nomination, Mr.\" Haggen gave1 a report on the last session of the legislature and on matters affecting the district. Announcement was also made that Arnold Webster, provincial CCF leader, would be speaking in Grand\nForks May 23, and Randolph. Hard-\nink, MLA, for Kaslo-Slocan would\nalso hold three meetings in the district around June 1. A district picnic was planned for May 31 at\nChristina Lake.   ,\n80-Year-old\nsenator duff\ndies in sleep\nLUNENBURG, N.S. (CP)-Sena-\ntor William Duff, 80, died in his\nsleep at his honie here Saturday\nnight.\nHe was appointed to the Senate\nin 1936 after having been a Liberal\nmember of the Commons almost\ncontinuously since 1917.\nSenator Duff, familiarly known\nas \"Admiral,\" was one of the most\npopular and colorful figures on Parliament Hill during the last 35 years.\nHe was out of Parliament only\none year in that period. He was\ndefeated in the 1926 general election and returned a year later in a\nby-election.\nMore than six feet tall, huge of\nframe, Senator Duff's pungent and\nsalty wit often liven d the debates\nin both chambers.\nHe was born in Carbonear, Newfoundland, son of a one-time member of the Newfoundland legislature, and came to Canada in 1895.\nHe was a practical fisherman and\nbecame widely interested in Nova\nScotia and Newfoundland fishing\nand other enterprises associated\nwith-seafaring. ,,\nSenator Duff's death leaves the\nSenate standing at Liberals 71 and\nProgressive Conservatives eight\nThere is a record of 23 seats vacant\nin the 102-seat upper chamber..\nMe\nm\njmmm\n*fWl''\u00ab\u00abl:\npff^^S^pppppppi\n\u25a0 \u25a0OOO :!\u25a0\u2022.;>\u25a0\u25a0'-  \u25a0  \u25a0'\u25a0     .\n$ftftt>0\nm\nWEATHER FORECAST >\nKOOTENAY: Mild, unsettled periods of sunshine with Bhowere.  .\nNfiLSON,B.\u00bbC, CANADA-MONDAY MdRNING, APRIL 27.1953\nNo. 5 >'\nImmediate Aitioa Sbcan s Dem*rf\nReport | rom Metoria\n\"BY JAMES K. NESBITT,\nYOUTH BURNS SELF\nCALGARY (CP) - Eight-year-\nold Danny Blanchf ield died in' hospital from third-degree burns after accidentally setting his clothes\nafire Friday while alone In his\nhome end trying to burn.garhage.\nVICTORIA-*-When, in last yeart election campaign,: I\nvisited'the beautiful Kootenay country for the: fjjrst time\n(though I was born in Victoria and had been in Europe and\nAsia), I woridered; rather vaguely, how Fernie got its name.\nSomehow I thought of the woods\u2014or the wSderne'ss\u2014oij\nferns, no doubt. ' '\u2022:...O.O'\u2022'...:,..\"''.'0:...\nThe other day I learned that Fernie was named- after a\nquite fabulous character called William, Fernie.'1 And: so,.\nbeing intrigued, I looked a \u25a0'.'\u25a0\u25a0 *.\u2022\u2022.' ':.*.\"0. \u25a0 '..*,. , .;. \u25a0\nMountain Range. In. the.summer of\n1887,'Mr. Fernie went Into the trackless mountains and found some of\nthe large coal seams which aja now\nbeing operated by the company of\nwhich he is a director, thus laying\nthe foundation for oqe of the* leading industries in this southeastern\npart of the province.\"'\nAs he grew older; William Fernie\nvisited the Kootenay country less\nand less, spending'more'time in bis\nOak Bay garden, pottering among\nhis roses and dozing ih the sun,\ndreaming of the days when he was\nyoung and' in love with the mountains .and lakes.and rivers of the\nwonderful Kootenay country. \u25a0 ' .:\nPIONEERING SPIRIT\nIn 1920, at the age of 84, he died,\nand, editorially, The Colonist said,\n\"The province owes a great deal\nto his energies and what he accomplished will always be recalled with\npride. In a just cause he was never\nappealed to in vain, and he always\ntook * staunch and earnest.Interest\nin those matters of, public importance, which bespoke progress, lie\nlate Mr. Fernie, during the years\nof his active career \u2014 and they\nwere full of achievement \u2014 wrote\nhis name into the history ot British\nColumbia, of which he Was a\nworthy pioneer. He had.the true\npioneering spirit, which discounts\nhardships aijd only looks upon\nthem as rungs in the ladder of success. As a prospector he had to face\nmany privations and disappointments, but like all of that race who\nrefuses to be discouraged, he met\nwith ultimate success. His persistency won him wealth and a place\nin the annals ot the province which\nhe chose as the scene of his labors.\nWilliam. Fernie left.an.eaWe-.\nttsojaoi:. :^\"inu-b*#f'*' Mi: fidends,\nand charitable organizations, and to\nrelatives in EnglandO ' . > -.'.' |\nHis beautiful Victoria home;\nwhich he called \"Kiinbbitop,\" aftet\nhis birthplace in England, stands\nyet, on Oak Bay Aveiiue,'but. today\nits once-splendid; gardens are cut\nup and a row of stores more or less\nhides the big house from .the street'\nlittle into Jfernie's life.\nI found that he was an Englishman, born in 1837, who early started\nto roam the world, to Australia,\nNew Zealand, South America, California. He reached Victoria hi, 1880\nin the bark Victory, from San Fran;\nCisco.\nHe looked .around Victoria, but\ndecided it was far too.settled for\nhim. He would push on into the\n.unknown interior. And so he went\nto the Kootenay country, and some\nyears later was joined by his\nbrother, Peter Thomas Fernie, who\nhad fought in the Crimean war.\nTogether the brothers roamed the\nwildnerhess, * prospecting, looking\nfor adventure and riches. They\nfound plenty, of adventure, but not\nmuch in the way ot richness until\nfar later.    ' ' .' ,    ,\nSo it was that William Fernie had\nto take some mundane jobs, as we\nsee by flipping hack the v pages of\nThe' Victoria Colonist, thusly \u2014\nMay 3, 1876 .4: \"Appointments -r\nMr. William Fernie has,been appointed customs collection on the\nSouthern border, in place of H. E.\nSeelye, lately deceased.\"\nMay 18, 1879 \u2014 \"Gazette notices\n\u2014W.illiam Eernie, and A. W. Vowel!,\nCassiar, to be assistant commissioners of lands and works in their respective districts.\"\nJune .22, 1079\u2014\"Gazetted\u2014Yesterday's Gazette contains the following\nappointment\u2014 W. Stephenson to be\ncoroner for the Keithley Creek district of Caribo*) and William Fernie\nto be coroner for the electoral district of Kootenay.\" \u25a0\nCOAL .FIND\n.!;!The years went by and Victoria\n\u25a0lost track of. William and Pater\nFernie. \u25a0>\u25a0 \u25a0*-\"  '- *\"<V        *\nIn the summer of 1887 came big\nnews from the Koptenay country\u2014\nthe discovery of coal, and the\nbrothers Fernie were-into the news,\nas we see in The Colonist:\n\"A discovery of coal has been\nmade In the Kootenay district,\nwhich promises to prove one of\nthe richest coal measures In the\nworld; Many years j ago Messrs.\nWm,' and Peter Fertile of Kootenay were laying out a trail\nthrough the Crow's Nest Pass In\nthe Rooky Mountains, and.while\nIn the neighborhood of Marten\nCreek In that pass they discovered the eropplnga'of some coal and\na seam which appeared to bo of\neontldbrable magnitude.\n'The projected railway Into the\nKootenay  Valley  and   the  fact\nthat its course must pas- over the\n\u2022pot where the coal rests Induced\nMessrs, Fernie and others to form\na company In order to take out a\ncoal  prospecting  license and tp\nsearch for the se am which had\nbeen previously noticed. Accordingly,   Mr.   William   Fernie,   In\ncompany which  some workmen\nstarted for the scene of action last\nJune and the results will, ahow\nthat  his  energy  and  enterprise\nhave been amply rewarded.\" .\nIndeed,  tht-y  were,  and almost\novernight William Fernie became a\nwealthy man. But he worked on in\nthe Kootenay country. At the turn\nof the century he decided to retire,\nand came to Victoria. *\nHe chose several acres ot land in\nOak Bay, then a long way out from\nthe centre of the capital, and there\nhe built a splendid home, though\nhe was unmarried. He cultivated\nfine gardens about his semi-mansion, and he hired a housekeeper\nand gardener. Meanwhile his brother Peter, also a bachelor, had\nsettled .on a Saanich farm.\nVI8IT8 KOOTENAY\nBut the Kootenay country frequently called to William Fernie,\nand then he would leave his beautiful garden in Oak Bay ahd call on\nhis old cronies in the part of the\nprovince ,where he had struck it\nrich, and which had glyen him eo\nmuch in the way of adventure.\nOne\" such visit was in June of\n1904,, and The Nelson News;noted:\n\"Willaim Femie, the discoverer of\nthe Crow's Nest Pass coal fields and\none of the directors of the Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Company is in the\ncity from Victoria, visiting hia old\nfriends. He was seen yesterday by\na representative of the Daily News\njust as he was about to cross the\nlake for the purpose of accompany,\ning James Johnstone, whose guest\nhe is, to his fruit farm on the opposite side of the lake.       '\n\"During the short talk had with\nMr. Fernie, he told* with modesty\nthe story of the finding ot what is\nprobably the largest coal field in\nCanada, In the year 1887.\n\"Float from the coal veins was\nfound miles from where the veins\nwere, being brought down by the\nrapid mountain streams which have\ntheir source high up on ths Roefey\nD. t MacDonald\nCCF Nominee\nIn East Kootenay\nCRANBROOK \u2014 East Kootenay\nCCF in a surprise move today unanimously nominated Donald C. MacDonald as candidate for the Fall\nDominion election.\nMr. MacDonald has worked full\ntime with the national CCF since\nhis navy discharge in 1948 and as\norganizer has been a frequent, visitor in East Kootenay, his native\ncountry. He was born here 39 years\nago, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nP. MacDonald, Cranbrook grocer\nand wholesale grocery traveller.\nHe left here as a boy, taught\nschool and worked his way to a\nmasters degree in history, politics\nand economics at Queens University. After two years newspaper\nwork he enlisted in the navy in\n1941, was intelligence officer, editor, editor of Canada Digest, and\nchairman of the weekly CBC servicemen's radio forum in 1945. He\nhas been attending provincial CCF\nnominations in East Kootenay in\nrecent weeks. \u2022\nWith his wife, and three children he plans to make his home in\nCranbrook.: His name was proposed\nby Tom Biddulph of Fernie and\nseconded by Doug Clarke of Creston, O. A. Eliason was named, but\nwithdrew his name. Tom Anderson\nqf \"Kimberley was convention\nchairman and provincial candidates\nLeo Nimsick, Crahbrook - Kimberley, and Mrs. Eileen Madson, Columbia, attended the meeting along\nwith over 100 delegates.\nGIBSON LILLOOET\nLIBERAL CHOICE\n\"LILLOOET, B.C. (CP \u2014 Gordon\nGibson was chosen as: the Liberal\ncandidate for Lillooet riding Saturday at a convention addressed\nby liberal leader'Arthur Laing.\nDelegates attended from Bralorn,e,\nSquamish, Britannia Pembertoh,\nClinton and other: points.'\nMr. Gibson is a native of Vancouver Island. '  .\nNo End Seen in\nBus Driver Strike\nSPOKANE (AW - Ijwre, is. a\n\"cqmplete deadlock\" between the\nstriking city bus drivers and tho\nSpokane City Lines, a state mediator announced at'the end of a\nshort meeting with both parties tor\ndar.\nExtra Police Protection,\nPayment for Guards Asked;\nCommittee Members Heard\nvitPPpaSALE -r- Lower^Slocan Valley is just not gatog\nto be sidetracked from its demands for immediate action oh a\nsolytiqniito the terrorism problem, haunting them anew at U\nhas for decades now. .-''''\u25a0 ..'-.'..'\n; Advisfed from Victoria -that a curfew to-curtail night\nimovemtat of DouKhobors in the area was not possible under;:\nexisting laws, a demand for new legislation was raised Sun-\nfoy. o      i '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 j] -,\"'.. t\n...Also demanded js increased police protection, and reimbursement from public funds of property owners forced to\nstand guard against possible arson attacks. .\n\"Action now\" :that was the keynote of the Slocan's feelings evidenced at a meeting that packed Appledale Hall Sunday. It was easily evident that more resolutions and recom-.\nmendations was not what the\nGEN. MARK CLARK, back to camera at-right, was on hand to\ngreet Lance,-Corpl. P. Dugal (on stretcher) of Quebec City, P.Q., following his exchange by Communists on the first day of the U.N.-Red\nexchange, now under way at Panmunjom, Korea.      *\nHeavily bearded- Cillps Ceh'stan'dlnos of the Green contingent Is\nshown being helped to an ambulance by two unidentified Alllod soldiers following his arrival at Panmunjom from a Risd prison camp.\nThe day thpy we're- released by Reds will long be remembered. and\ntreasured by U.N. men as they tasted their first freedom In many\nmonths and even year-.\u2014-Central Press* Canadian photos.\nRail Strike\nIs Avertel\nOTTAWA (CP) ;\u25a0.\u2014 A posable rail\nstrike threat was removed Saturday\nin an arbitrator's- decision favorable to the Brotherhood of Railway\nTrainmen in a dispute with.the railway.   '.'  .  .    .,-\u2022; -  ' I \u25a0 O \u25a0\njfr. Justice j R. X.- Kellock of the\nSupreme. Court of Canada, gave a\nverdict largely upholding the BRT's\ncontention on retroactive application of a 12-per-cent .wage-increase\nobtained by the union in February\nunder the threat of a general strike,\nTht* decision came as several\nbrotherhood locals across*the country were pressing the union leadership to order a strike\u2014which would\ntie up the railways\u2014to emphasise\ndl&atisfaction,at tlie way the companies proposed to, put the seitle-\nment;into \u2022effect..-.-\nAfter, reading -the arbitrator's\nverdict, binding on the .disputants,\nA. J. Kelly, Canadian chief of, the\n22,000-member. BRT, .said ho expects, that this \"relieves the entire\nSituation.\"   j :*,        .' *',        -, \u2022?.;\n. \"Ii is a very ^satisfactory - decision and sustains pur.,contehti(i_)S,\"\nMr, Kelljr said in an interview. ;\nFIRE SEASON Ji\nOPE^MAY 1 *   .   tf\n', VICTORIA (CP)-\"1:he fire season  In  British Columbia opens\n,   May 1 and continues until Sept.\n,30, the B.C,  Forest Service an\n'pounced  Saturday.  During  this\nperiod a permit will be required:\nbefore fires may be lighted out*\ndoors: for cooking,  war': th,  or\nlahd-olearing.\nCHILDREN' BURNED\n8AU1.TE   8TE,   MARIE,   Ont\n^CP)\u2014Eight 'Children.' were burn\ned to' death' early 'Sunday whon\nfire destroyed a four-room frame\n.hpine In neighboring Tnrentorouo\n: \"townihlp.      .    N , * O\n11 Bodies Recovered\nIn Mexican Mine Cove\n.ANOANGUEO, Mexico- (AP) \u2014\nMasked; rescue Workers Sunday\nbrought out the bodies of 11 workers willed Saturday In a cave-In\nand- explosion of ..an American\nSmelting Company silver, mine\n. here,' ..   \",* ;\u2022;;';;..':, \u25a0,. ;\u25a0\nWith black, and yellow cmoVo\nstill .pouring from the.mouth of\nthe mine, the search teams hunted\nfor the bodies of, 14 other known\ndejd and six other miners still\nunaccounted for In Mexico's worst\nmine disaster In recent years.\nw\nKrestova Store\nOeslrpyed\n. Fire; - destroyed an unoccupied\nKrestova store early Saturday night\ncausing about $2000 damage. The\nstore,'owned by Fred P. Plotnikoff\nwas filled with furniture and clothing. It .was situated in the Goose\nCreek'village1 of 'LOwer' Krestova.\nMr; Plbthlkoff first saw the glow in\nthe sky'from his store in the main\nvillage. When' he arrived on the\nsceiie; a number of Sons of Freedoip\nwere already there.-'Last week, an\nattempt-was1 made on the Kinakin\nstore in Krestova. This is the 24th\nincendiary fire in the West Koote--\nhay within the last two weeks.\nKbewlifwr\nSocreds-Bennett\n,; TrtCTORIA (CP) \u2014Premier Bennett,' head of British Columbia's\nSocial Credit administration, said\ntoday the Liberal government in\nManitoba fear* Social Credit.\n'He said in an interview that the\nfear of Social Credit was responsible fbr the Manitoba government\nsetting its election date for June 8,\none day before the B. C. provincial\nelection.\nValley people had in mind.\nOver 139 embittered residents\n-gathered to draft these resolutions\nand to hear members of the Consultative and Research Committee\non Doukhdbor Problems. Tbe curfew resolution was raised-first a\nweek, ago, and was reiterated by\nthis second mass meeting.*\nFire raids \u2014there have been 24\nin -the Sims ot Freedom area this\nmonth \u2014 have brought about the\nSlocan demands for a cure'.    ,\nThe three-hour meeting was\npunctuated with protests against\nfurther delays. 'We>e stood the\nsituation 45 years, we want action\nnow and Wre going to have it\"\n... \"things are getting desperate;\nhere and I don't want to answer for\nwhat may happen if nothing is\ndone\" ... and^ \"well drive. them\nfrom the valley,\" were' phrases\nflung from the floor as consultative\ncommittee members attempted to\nexplain the committee's report\nCol. P.'J. Mead, Prof. W. G. Dixon and R. F. Mawer,: Consultative\nCommittee members, flew in from\nVancouver for the meeting. Emmott\nGulley, Dr. C. H. Wright oi Trail,\nHugh Herblson arid Boyd & Affleck also attended. *\u25a0 ll_\n-Randolph Harding, MLA \"'-for\n'Kaslo-Slocan,. promised full cooperation in jirging government: action. He believed the \"Consultative\nCommittee's report \"would bring action if the government would put\nit into effect,\" he told the stormy\nmeeting.\nImpatient citizens at one point\nwalked out Interrupting Prof.\nDixon ao he outlined committee\nrecommendations, protesting it\nwasnt what had been aecomp\nlished In the past but what was to\nbe done now they were. Interested\nIn.\nFour resolutions dratted were\n(1) that provincial government provide'valley residenta with adeauate\nprotection immediately, and strong\nly urged a detachment of special\npolice be stationed in the Slocan\n(2) That until such protection is\nprovided the provincial government reimburse those who have\nfound it necessary to guard or employ guards to protect their prop*\nerty.* -        \u25a0 .\n(3) That steps betaken to inaugurate a curfew or someother effective means of protecting property\nand citizens.\n(4) That government embark\nupon. immediate program of relocation of Sons of Freedom.\n(5) That <t meeting be called. St\n1 p.m. Sunday, May 3, to consider\nthe reply frota the provincial government\nPROTESTS\nThe iboukhpbor problem \"is not a\npolice - problem fundamentally,\"\nCol.; Mead felt \"it requires niore\nskilled understanding of Doukho-\nbor's background. Some of trie-spirit\nhas gone from thdlr religion. Things\nthey profess it stands for no longer\ncount,\" the Colonel felt\nI'A statement that \"over 1000 were\nsent to.jail three years ago.and it\n,did np good,\" by Col. Mead brought\nSrotests. from the audience \"you\nIdnt keep them there.\"\nProf. Dixon, pointing out the sit-\nuation had \"no magic solution\", out-\nlined'tecommendations of the committee. Committee's suggestion that\nthe government should' return *he\nland to the Doukhobors'and that a\nDoukhobor Land, Commission be\nset up to deal, with the. problem Of\ndeciding ownership, brought loud Doukhobors.\nprotests from she floor against Sona .\nnot paying taxation, policy of moving in with a family thep gradually\nspreading out to take'in neighboring land'and inability of anyone.to\nsay who has rightful ownership. ' f\nConstant warnings that further\ndelays would result In the ten-\noion-weary residents taking their\nown action In driving Doulchobore\nfrom the valley brought reminders from the committee only proper action oould come from the\ngovernment Any aetlon on their\n' own part would.result In \"chaos.\"\nAs Prof. Dixon continued hii outline, many who later explained\nthemselves aa \"weary ef hearing\nonly of recommendations ahd no\naction,\"'walked out \"We have been\nreading this in the newspapers lor\nthe. past 30 years \u2014 the report ia\nthe laughing stook of the Slocan.\"\n\"If the committee were formed of\nmen who have lived lei tbe are*\nthey wouldn't have published such\na report;? said. one. \/ *\nTHERE 18 A SOLUTION ..-;\n; Emmott Gulley, who, sincebefore\nformation of the committee hat\nbeen in the district studying the\nproblem \u00bbaid whe% he - came #mn '\nOregoh'he was \"shpeked at seeing\npeople guarding their homes with\nshotguns in a democratic province.\"\nThe government has- never. taken\nthe problem seriously,\" he believed,\n\"for there ie a solution.\" Provincial\nand Federal governments have constantly shuffled the problem from\none to the other neither wishing to\nshoulder the responsibility with tht\nresult they finally just \"skip it\".\nWANT, GOVERNM ENT TO .ACT.\nAdmission by Gulley Vthere ;io\nbut twb ways to settle the problem.\nTake the law into your own hands\nor: let the government settle it,\"\nbrpught declarations feom.Jhe Adds\nagainst taking such drastic measures: proyided the government acted\nhmneditely. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0.'.' '\u2022\nOne Passmore\u2014an, Frank Flynn,\nprotested leaving relocation op.\ntional. \"You can't drive them. buf\nof* here, we're wasting time talking\nof. relocation.\" To this Hugh Herbi-\nson, member of the committee urged\na relocation plan be set before the\nDoukhobors to test their sincerity,\nEducation was not the solution, Mr.\nFlynn felt. \"Third generation Doukhobors are causing a large amount\nof. the trouble.\" ^\nDoukhobors make poor neigh-\nbors, Mr. Flynn believed. \"If they\nsee no smoke from your chimriej\nfor several days they will not comi\nto see if you are sick. Only tune\nthey come is when they want something.\"\n;'T want to niove from the district\nalthough my wife afld I originally\ncame with Intentions of making out\nlifetime home here* However, Bf\none will buy.\" '.     *   .    : :\n.Solution Mr. Flynn offered waj\nrelocation of the sect in a far Nortr\nBiC. valley where they could \"liv|\nas they pleased.\" \\\nAsking why no. curfew could bi\nenforced as suggested in a resolution to Attorney-General Rober\nBonner 10 days.ago, Col. Mead ex-\nplained law permitted curfews oiflj\nafter a riot Curfew in the Slocai\nwhen passes were needed for Japanese to enter or leave the valley\nwas possible under wartime law\nCol. Mead explained when asked\nwhy 4t could not be enforced or\nAnd in This Corner . . *\n'WARWICK, Va. (AP) \u2014 A sick feeling gripped fire Capt J. R.\nBateman as his fire vehicle neared a flaming structure Friday. He re;\ncalled that seven years ago when he answered ah alarm on the par-\n\"ticular street, It was.his father's house afire. Friday, just as- on thai\n' cold morning in February, 1948, hii father's home was ablaze\u2014and ,\nburned to the ground this time.\nREDONDO BEACH, Calif. (AP) \u2014 The front door was unlocked.\nThe'burglar walked In, took $25 from the trousers of Ruban Sylvester while 8y.lves(er, hie wife and tholr son slept >\n. On,hit way out the burglar tossedJlhe pants In a bush. A neigh,\nbor taw, them and called police, who awakened Sylveater at 6 a.m. to\nInform him of hit lost,            '                         >,\nSylvester operates the Sylvester Burglar Alarm System.\nLAKE CHARLES, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Jeanne Thomson, a Lake Charlei\nschool teacher, tried to avoid driving on a flooded street after mon\nthan.five inches of rain hit this southwest Louisiana city. '\nShe came to what she thought was another flooded street \u2014 one\nshe hoped led to higher sections \u2014 and found herself under 12 feet ol\nwater.        .\nWhen she swam to safety, she discovered she had driven into ?\ndrainage ditoh..\n>______.\n________\n #\n\u2022 ' * ,'   *   * .,. .   .   \"'    l      ' \u25a0'\u25a0      '. ' -.    ..''''*\"'-  ,r  '''*''.,-' .'*\u25a0        .'','\u25a0 -,-'*'\u25a0;*'* .. : \u25a0'\u25a0>, '-;\u25a0\u201e\u25a0    '\u25a0'',!-'\u25a0  \u25a0-.'*.   j. '\u25a0      \u25a0    ' ,>'*\u2014- _-. j.   \\    .'i      '.; \"\u25a0'\"-'',,*-,'*;\n' ., . -I ,' :'->.*\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0       .,',-,    .'-        \"    ,    \u201e.. ; :      \u25a0\u25a0   ... ,:. -, , , \u2022'.,.-!.    .:.    * V     '    O'        '' i-     -      '\n\u2022*     t,  .,-.\u201e;;    \u25a0  \u2022;.\u25a0,':,..      .;.'-\u25a0' v- $     .,,-., < .-\u25a0 - \u25a0\u25a0     '',,..  >   \" '       : ,;.V': ':.,   ; \u25a0).\u25a0'\u25a0 \u2022:.,';\"      \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 ;: ;  \u25a0 \u25a0' '\u25a0:\u25a0.'\u25a0 '..\"\u25a0\u25a0, j' .       \/  ,\nt--N8l40N DAILY NIWS\/MQNDAY, APRfL iy,T953\n\"?wwr\nFOUR BIG STARS.|ESff\nIn Revolt-\nRidden\nOhandaharl\nwllUEIl\nIxtri on tin Same Programme\u2014 -\nLotert World,New\u00ab\u2014Canada Series: \"INLAND SEAPORT\"\nCartoon In Color: \"STARTING FROM HATCH\"\nComing Wed-Martin-Lewis in 'The Stooge'\nSHOWS 7:40-6:45\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"FORT WORTH\"\n(Technicolor)\nStarring RANDOLPH SCOTT\nALSO\n\"STIEL FIST\"\nCemhtgi \"SIXTEEN FATHOMS DEEP\"\nW MILE8  EAST  OP  NILSON\ne\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nGATHERED HERE POR THEiPlRST CONFERENCE IN, YEARS Officers of the Salvation\nArmy throughout the Kootenoy attend aorvlces In\ntho Nelson Citadel. Introduced at the serviee were\nBrigadier and Mrs, R, W, Gago, newly appointed\ndivisional commanders for Southern British Columbia, Other officers pictured here are back row:\nLt William Hodge of Fernie, Mrs. Barr, Lt J.\nBorr-of Trail, Captain and,Mrs. A. Millar of Cranbrook. Middle row: Lt J. Hording bf Ronland, Lt\nH. Thornhlll of Fernie,* Major and'Mrs. J. Moil of\nKinnaird! Front row! Lt 0. Allen, Major W. Lorimer bf Vancouver, Brigadier and-Mro. Gage, Lt E.\nC. Stoke* of Nelson.'     \"       *    * \u00ab '   i.'.\u25a0':,\nFORTHE FIRST TIME IN THE INTERIOR \u25a0\u25a0' beautiful flannel-.\ngraph was unfolded before the congregation at the Salvation Army\nCitadel here. Brigadier ami Mrs. Gage stand beside the finished product The flannel picture was made by the- Brigadier while Mrs.\nGage rocltod the Ssrlptures, The entire prooedure was spotlighted.\n.. , *     .'    Dally News photos.\nCRANBROOK\n:\u25a0..\n'-\nI-:\nv\n11VY\nDrive-In Theatre\nCRANBROOK, D. C.\nTW|ll\u00abHT AND TUESDAY\nFIRST  8H0W  AT  SUNSET.\nEaoh Show approximately\n\u2022 TWO H0UR8\nNEW8REEL  -  CARTOON\n8H0RT8,\nMEN S\nBELTS\nByHICKOK\nQuality - Style - Leadership\nA splendid selection of fine\nleathers in plains and\nfancies, featuring new\ncolors and designs in either\nbuckle style or initialed.\nPrleet range $1.50 - $2.00,\n$2.50 for bucklei, and\n$3,00 and $4.00 for*\ninitialed sets.   I\nSixes 28 to 46\nGODFREYS'\nPHONE \u2014 270\u2014 BOX\n{ * 0\nGlenmerry lob\nDemand Grows;\nOnly 26 Left\nTRAU-\u2014Only al lots remain to be\nsold ln the 358-lot Glenmerry subdivision, according to a Central\nMortgage and Housing Corporation\nofficial Saturday.\n\"Sales of the lots seem to he\ngathering momentum now,\" he stated \"and there ls greater' activity\nthis spring than last.'*\nA large number oi the lots sold\nare to builders planning to construct houses for sale,\" he went in,\nthe rest going to Individuals.\nMost of the units to be built ln\nthf subdivision will go to defence\nworkers, ssid the official.\nSale of the houses is under section 83 of the National Housing Act,\nthe land assembly program. It la a\njoint agreement among th*\/federal, provincial and municipal governments.\nThe municipality services and\nsubdivides the property and the federal government acts' -as selling\nagent working' through the Central\nHousing and Mortgage Corporation.\nAttend Provincial\nSynod at Coast\nVery Rev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean\nof Kootenay, leaves today for Vancouver, where he will attend the\nProvincial Synod'of the Anglican\nChurch in British Columbia Wednesday and Thursday. \". \u2022 .   .       :\nRt. Rev. F. P. Clark, MA, DD,\nbishop, of Kootenay, has already\nleft and will attend the meeting of\nthe''House of Bishops Tuesday..    '\nAlso to attend-the synod is Rev,\nJ. Rogers of Trail. \"-, ,\n+ FINEST MATERIALS\n*'FAST SERVICE;\nOur Expert Repairmen will\ngive your shoes a  new\nFactory-Rnish look.\nMAX\nKASPER\n\"Your,Friendly Shoemaker\"\n350 Baker Street   .\nNelion, B.C.\nLOCATED AT WADE'S\nBid for Rowing Events\nHopes for Nelson gaining rowing\nevents of next year's British Empire Games at Vancouver have been\nrevived.\nThere's still a chance of Wiilt\nArm waters being chosen, for the\neyents, developments of the weekend have disclosed.\nLast year a delegation Interviewed Col. W. G. Swan at the Coast,\nand put forward a good case ln\nfavor ot the Nelson site, mindful\nof the opportunity it would give\nsoutheastern B. C\u201e Alberta and U.S.\npeople to see a major sports show.\n> Later CoL G. A. Taylor Inspected\nthe course for the BEG rowing\nevents committee, and after that\nthings, petred but, mainly because\nno. decision Was forthcoming from\nthe organizers.\nBut a letter to Nelson promoter,\nH.A.D. (Bud) Greenwood Saturday brought the proposition back to\nthe local spotlight. Col. Swan, the\nchairman of the Games' facilities\ncommittee, stated Burnaby Lake is\nthe preferred spot, hut that the big\nquestion is whether or not a site\ncan be developed from a financial\nstandpoint This will be answered\nwithin 10 days.\nIf the Burnaby Lake deal, collapses a small representative committee .of tho BEG will visit the\nthree interior sites prospects^\nSkaha Lake at'Pentlcton, Kelowna\nand Nelson. .\n, In this event, he advised, the Nelson boosters to be prepared to state\nits arguments In favor of the rowing being held here.'\nCheered by the development, a\nsmall group, of the original contacts got together Sunday morning\nto discuss the letter. H. D. Harrison,\nchairman, is drafting a letter, which\nwill assure the committee that the\nutmost co-operation can be expected, and that the group will be well\nprepared for the .committee if it\narrives. V \u2022 \u00bb,.;'\u25a0\nShould Nelson be successful in\nIts hid, members of all service clubs\nand other .interested, persons and\norganizations will be asked to participate in staging the events and\nother entertainment. \u25a0\nVerigin Urges Orthodox Co-Operale\nWith Police if Know of Terrorists\nLodge Members\nAttend Riles\nFor Mrs. Barries\nFuneral services for Maud Louisa\nBarnes, Northport pioneer and long\ntime resident of Trail, were held\nSaturday afternoon' from the\nChurch of the Redeemer with Rev,\nCanon W. J. Silverwood officiating.\nRepresentatives of the Trail, Kaslo and District'Association'of the\nRebekah Lodge joined with a large\nnumbmer of.friends and members\nof the Queen City Rebekah Lodge\nNo.. 16. * ;\u25a0 \u2022 \u2022    ' .\nRebekah Lodge No. 16 attended\nthe service in a body and formed\nopen ranks from the church to the\nhearse, The Church of Redeemer\nWomen's Auxiliary was also rejp-\nrttented.   ,   .*.,\nTwo' hymns were sung, \"Tight\nthe Good Fight\" and \"Jesus Saviour,\nPilot Me\" with, Mrs. J. A. Fraser at\nthe organ.\n, The pallbearers were all members\not the Kootenay Lodge No. 16 IOOF,\nEd Boyce, Walter Fisher, B. L. Hall,\nJ. McClelland, A. S. Read and Alex\nD. Tulloqh. '    '   -,-\nThe Lodge burial service was performed at the graveside .in : the\nIOOF plot of Nelson Memorial Parle.\nMrs. Barnes, who has resided in\nNelson lap the, past seven years';\ndied at her home last Wednesday*\nASHFORD, England '' (CP) '-.\nCouncil of this Kent town decided\nto retain two cement \"pill boxes!'\nbuilt during the last war, although\nthe housing ministry offered to\npay for demolition, One win be retained as an air-raid shelter, and*\nthe other is being used as a storeroom.\nHundreds of Orthodox Doukhobors gathered at Brilliant Sunday\ntp declare they had 1.0 connection\nwith the recent arson outbreaks in\nSons of Freedom settlements in the\nSlocan Valley,' at Shoreacres, Glade\nand Thrums. Chaired by Fred W.\nKalmalcoff, the meeting was dominated by lengthy address of John\nJ. Verigln, secretary of the Spiritual\nCommunities of Christ (Orthodox)\nDoukhobors.\nThe group's declaration was^that\nthey had nothing to do' with the\nSons of Freedom and that they\nwould rigidly adhere to their \"belief\" not to destroy, but to build.\nOrthodox groups, although their re.\nligion forbids taking Oaths of * allegiance, or the eating of meat and\ntheir outlook is paclfistlc as is the\nSons,* they do pay taxes and adhere\nto education policies* of the.province. \u25a0'.'  -,*\nMr, Verigin urged anyone having\ninformation'on terrorists to pass ij\nalong to authorities. Nothing, he\nsaid, should, be hidden.\nKelowna Hlflh\nWins Volleyball\nAl Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK,*ac. - Kelowna\nhigh school; won the boys' championship here, Saturday in the annual provincial schools'volleyball\ntournament, with Westbank high\nschool- taking the girls' championship. , '.:*'-\nSchools entering teams for the\nday-long double knockout competition toward championships were\nCranbrook, Procter, Golden, Kelowna, Westbank, Maple Ridge and\nCreston. -Runnersup for the boys'\nwin was Maple Ridge high school\nwhich went through the meet with\na single loss to the final bjacket,\ntaken from the Kelowna. team\nwhich they knocked into the second\nbracket in the first round. Final\nscore of the hair-breadth final was\n15-8, 9-15, 18-16, 15-11.\nCranbrook girls met Westbank In\nthe finals with Westbank winner\nwith a fairly easy 15-2 score. Cranbrook students did the detail work\nin preparing for the meet which required 15 continuous hours, of,play\nat Mount Baker.high school.\nSchofield Road\nTRAIL\u2014Widening \u00bbf the provincial, Schbfiela Highway is 60 percent completed, District Engineer\nT. D. McCarthy said Saturday.\n\"All that.remains .to be done Is\nthe widening .of a hairpin bend on\nthe road and replacing of a wood-\n'en- culvert with a metal one,\" he\nstated.   , - ,    ,     '\n* The road 'likely will he closed to\ntraffic at the end of this week, Mr.\nMcCarthy reported, when the wooden culvert wiil.be removed and \"the\nbend widened.\nWithout removing the culvert lt\nis unlikely, that motorists would\nrealize;any benefit from the bend\nbeing widened, he said.\nAlthough a survey had been made\nand the matter taken to Victoria\non occasion, nothing official had\nbeen revealed on whether or hot\nan underpass would be installed at\na railway crossing on the highway,\nstated Mr. McCarthy. ' i.' \u25a0'\nThe matter had been given consideration both here. and in the\nprovincial legislature, he said.\n\"PROBATION AFTER\nDEATH\" IS SUBJECT\nEmphasis was placed in the expectancy of preservation of individual identity after death in the\nLesson-Sermon read in all Churches\nof Christ, Scientist last Sunday. The'\nsubject was \"Probation After\nDeath.\"\nThe.Golden Text Was \"God hath\nboth raised up the Lord, and will\nalso raise us up by his Own power.\"\n- I Corinthian 6:14.\nThe Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"And it came to pass, as he sat at\nmeat with them, he took ' bread,\nand blessed it, and brake, and gave\nto them. And their eyes were opened, ahd they knew him.\" \u2014 Luke\n34: 30, 31, l;.\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science and Health With Key to. the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy,\nwas the following: \"Our Lord and\nMaster presented himself to his\ndisciples after his resurrection from\nthe grave, at the self-same Jesus\nwhom they had loved before the\ntragedy, on Calvary?'. ,,   ,',,\nkootenIy kiltie\npipe uand\n,'...\u25a0.'\u25a0.<;.; will be held In the O       '    '\nCITY HALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 28\nat 8 p.m.\n;'\u25a0\u25a0,:\u25a0  EVERYONt WELCOME\nRosslander\nCompares\nRoad Routes\nHOSSLAND - F. E. Batt, chairman 'of the roads and bridges* cont*\nmittee ot the Rossiand Chamber.of\nCommerce, addressed members ot\nthe Rotary 'Club on the development of public works in the greater\nTrall-Rosslan- area. Mr. Batt claimed that the various proposal) now\nbeing put forth are confusing the\nissues in regard to the proposed\nnew trans-provincial route..\n\"Even the name is. misleading,\nhe said, as the Blueberry-Paulson\nroute \\vhlch, has been proposed as\na replacement to the present Ross-\nland-Cascade route is not the entire\nlength of the passage. \"It should\nbe called Cascade-Blueberry route,\"\nMr. Batt stated.' '''\u25a0\u201e '': \u00ab\n\u2022 He asked \"Why hadn'^ the railway thought to use this supposedly\nsuperior route.\nMr. Batt said \"the present route\nfrom Trail to Cascade via Rossiand\nhas six to seven miles of road that\nIs already paved, which at the estimated figure ot $100,000 a mile tor\nnew road would make the cost\n$4,600,000\". The route from Trail to\nCastf-cje via Blueberry ls a total distance, of 66 miles, which would\nmake the cost of that road $6,600,000.\nThe Blueberry route would cost\nin additional $1,000,000, according\nto Mr. Batt, for improvement of tbe\npresent road between Trail and\nBlueberry.\nStill one more detriment to the\nproposed route was the traffic\nhazard which,would bo encountered by having the trans-provincial\nhighway run, through the smelter\narea, he stated. I y\n\"The Rossiand chamber of Commerce Is not Opposed to tho proposed route,\" Mr. Batt concluded.\n\"We have asked the department ot\nworks to make a thorough survey ot\nboth routes and then make a de*\ncision on the route on the basis of\nthese facts.\"\nNew Farmers'\nMarket Busy\nOn Opening Day\nThe new Farmers' public market\non Front Street did a thriving business Saturday as City-built out-\ndoor stalls were officially opened,\nThe stalls were bright with fresh\nfarm produce that included < eggs\nranging' from oversize and Jumbos\ndown to peewees. Dressed fowl and\nlive cockerels and hens were sold.\n;. Four-year-old walnut trees sold\nat $2.50; raspberry canes at 73 cents\nper dozen; certified British sovereign strawberries at 50 cents a doz*\nen, or 100 for $4. Black and red currants were SS to 50 cents a root\nRhubarb and horseradish were\nquickly disposed of, Daffodils sold\nat 60 cents a dozen, grape and hyacinth at 50 cents for blooming bulbs.\nWarba seed potatoes were $7.25 per\nsack,       .\nTables were laden with bedding\nplants of the. more hardy variety.\nEarly cabbage, cauliflower and lettuce were in good demand and\ndouble violets, and pansles were\nbest sellers.\nOne of the vendors had on exhibition a real Christmas rose grown\nin a Rosemont garden to shpw to the\npublic and children especially gained delight when told that the flower wbuld bloom under the snow\nChristmas Eve.\nThe market closed, early ln the afternoon, ' when a cold breeze\nsprang up.  '\nARM RESIDENT\nBURIED HERE\nFuneral services for the late William John Allen,.long time resident\nOt Russell's Landing, was held in\nThompson Funeral Home Saturday\nafternoon, with Rev. Allan Dixon,\nBA, BD, officiating.\nTwo hymns, \"The Lord's My\nShopherd\" and \"Abide With Ma\"\nwere sung with the organist being\nMrs. W. A. Manson.\nPallbearers were Jack Bayltss,\nFred: Deacon, Tom Halsey, Bobby\nMarks, George Mills and J. Horlick.\nInterment was in the Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nFLEET, England (CP)\u2014A policeman on the trail of a \"stolen milk\"\nmystery saw a black Labrador dog\nScrape the cover off milk bottles\nand drink ihe contents. The dog's\nowner contended it learned the\ntrick from blackbirds.\nDENIM\nPANTS\n8 oz., regular cut\nSanforized Blue Denim\nSi*ei30-44\n%vn\t\nKING\nSanforized   .\n\":y:yxx*s.,i'-\nSlxei lB-40\n$5.65\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit\nDeadline Today for B C    I\nVoters list Registration\n, Today Is th* deadline for votera' Hit registrations.   *\nNewcomers to electoral districts who nro ellfllblo to vote In tho    \"\nJune 0 provincial eleotlon won't bs able te exercise their franchise -.-.'\nunless their names haVe been placed with registration offices by\neloilna time todtf.\n.    Nor will personi who filled to vote last June, unless they In- &\nform the office thoy trt still resident In their riding and wish their *\nnames to bo kept on the list. Cords were mailed to theie penoni\nfor returning, and also to those who did vote la.t year, stating their '\nnamoi are still on tho list, Thi latter did pot, of course, have to ba\nreturned,   ' ,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-; -; \u25a0\u25a0,,..:'\u25a0 \u2022\u00bb\u25a0...    a\nThe usual procedure of having enumerators pay door-to.door   .\ncolli to make iura everyone eligible to vote Is on thi Hit, was abandoned thii time'.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii\nGovernment Employs\n304,587 in January\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The federal\ngovernment and Its Crown corporations employed 304,587 workers in\nJanuary, 1033, at a cost of $74,-\n270,710, the bureau of statistics reported today.\nOf the total 131,978 worked ln\ndepartmental branches and services\nof the government. They earned\n$37,315,339. The remainder \u2014 142,-\n709 \u2014 were employed by such* corporations and companies as Uie\nCanadian National Railways, CBC,\nCanadian National West Indies\nSteamships, Ltd. and Central Mortgage and .Housing Corporation.\nThoy netted $36,964,880 In salaries.\nPermanent, employees ot the departmental branches and services\ntotalled 57,465, with their earnings\nreaching $15,982,669. Temporary\nemployees were 72,088.. earning\n$14,633,890; prevailing rates workers, 19,348, earning $4,154,935; casuals, 11,464, earning $2,104,803 and\nships' crown, 1,613, earning 1379,\n842.\nThe bureau reported that the\nnumber employed by departments\nduring the month wai lower than\nthe previous month. December's\ntotal of departmental employees\nwas 160,352 \u2014 1,626 lyess than Jan-\nMiss Stevenson\nTo Adjudicate\nAt Kelowna\nMiss Janie Stevenson, well-known\nNelson elocution and drama teacher,\nwill judge entries Tuesday at a one-\nact play festival at Kelowna.\nShe will adjudicate entries from\nWestbank, East Kelowna and Kelowna, and the, winning play will be\neligible for entry in tht South\nOkanagan Drama Festival in May.\nMiss Stevenson has over the last\ntwo years adjudicated at festivals\nin Vancouver, Pentlcton, Osoyoos\nand Rossiand. She leaves today and\nwill return Thursday.\nThe Weather\nNELSON  38 59 .1,4\nSaturday     36 60 \u2014\nCrescent Valley  43 32 .18\nSaskatoon    80 59 \u2014\nSpokane'   49 62 .10\nuary. Some 143,544 worked for the':'\ncorporations during December, 539*\nmore than January,\nPlanning to move? Call W\ntint. Our modem nu eat\n\u2022killed movers assure \u2022 SArt\nmove wherever yea go. We\"\nare agents tor North Amu.-\nean Van Lines, Amietetl\nfeeding long distance moving\norganization. It costs ne more\nte enjoy this finer eerrleet\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.  Nelion, I.C\nPhone IS\nFree Booklet Reveals Why\nLoss of Hearing Should\nBe Checked Immediately\nCHICAGO (SPECIAL) - Does a\nhearing Impairment become progressively worse? Are persistent\nor recurring ear noises a sign of\ndeafness? Does lost hearing cause\nother complications?\nThese and other important, questions of vital Interest to the 15\nmillion persons in the United\nStates who are hard of hearing\nare answered in an authoritative\nnew Illustrated booklet, \"How You\nCan Help Yourself to Hear Better.\" It ia how available to the hard\nof hearing readers of this news-'\npaper without cost or obligation. I\nTo obtain your free copy, which\nwill be sent in a plain wrapper,\nsimply send your request to: Elec-'\ntronlc Research Director, Beltone\nHearing Aid Company, 1450 West\n19th Street, Department 640A\nChicago 8, Illinois. A postcard\nwill do.\nExpert Plumbing\nand\nIf you aro building or Improving you will certainly\nwant the most in plumbing or hearing. Let us take\ncare of your problem!. We will gladly make, a survey\nof ypur requirement! and furnish an estimate free of\ncharge, without obligation.\nCALL US AT 666\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\nWe Have Alloyed!\nWe .wilh tie announce that we are now located\n. In our new. premiiei, at\n.    20$ BAKEJft STREET\nWo cordially,invito you to visit uo\nin our now location,,.\nCITY TIRE SERVICE\nFIRESTONE and TEXACO Products\n* '     \"W. Gi Macintosh'' '\n \u25a0\u25a0jPTn*p^r'^\"Y^\n\"'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. \u25a0';_''; ><\u00ab>'.:   .       \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022.',.. '. '   \u25a0\u25a0- .*'.. . -\u25a0\u25a0:.'.'\":  -.'\u25a0' '-'.\u25a0 if:\/-,'--\n\u25a0'Or--  '''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0iy'y,'l\nW\u00bbW*P''^\n~   \u2014   \u2014\n-     ;\t\n\"     ,;*,00\nW&(:\nSADDLE\nOXFORDS\nfor the Junior Mite\nft    \u00ab\u00abft\n8-101\/, - 11-8 - SVi-9.\nBLUE AND WHITE\nBLACK AND WHITE\n'   BROWN AND WHITE\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n633 Baker St\nPhone 895\nTaking Shape\n- OSOYOOS \u2014 The first map !of\n. the Osoyoos district, drawn up by\nGold Commissioner W. G. Cox in\n1880, is among-the articles being\narranged for display in what is to\n: be Osoyoos*  -nuseura.\nI The village ..as purchased a show\ncase and placed it in the councU\nchambmer. Pioneer of the district,\nGeorge J. Fraser is laying out and\nitemizing the articles which will be\ndisplayed.\nA fine collection of Indian relics,\ngathered in the district by W. D.\nLong, is being arranged in the case.\n;'K. includes tomahawk weapons,\n'spears, headdress, pipe, markers,\nand mixing bowl. Most of the items\nire in remarkably good shape. ,\n\/Considerable exhibits of the old\nOsoyoos Dividend Mine are being\nprepared.\nI All items are being name-tagged\nby Mr. Fraser.    :  '\nAn official opening of the\nmuseum is planned in the near future at which time a museum organization will be formed.\nAn appeal is being made to people\nWho own items from Osoyoos' early\ndays ot have them displayed at the\nMunicipal Hall.\nA. MATHISEN\nPAINTING AND\nDECORATING\n(07 Kokanee Street\nRHONE 1036-L\n22.5 POWER\nMICROSCOPE s1ro\nTHAT'S ALL\nTk|t Inotrumont ipagnlriej\nobjects many times, gel\nthousand., of Nutans'*\nhidden secret*\u2014study Insects, foods, minerals, ate.\nEducational \u2014 luclnuihr,\nior youngsters 6-60. N6\nComplete kit in*\neludes rtpmrbase,\ntiltlne stanli. ndi\nJustaBta . reflector,\nPowerfullenseswlth\nfocusing adjust;\nswat. slf.ee and\ndirection's, ardor\nseveral at this unbelievable low pries *\nof M.on 8lus sse!\nSimply wSFtSSt!\n\u2022 m cash, cheque or\n- money   order   tot.\n\u2022ach you order.\ntnuTroH Mra eo, DEPT- MB-o.\nSt Adelaide tt. tt~\nWMNfO, CANADA I\nthrough.\nEDUCATION\nRESEARCH\nWELFARE\nTREATMENT\nFACILITIES\nCHAIRMAN\nMr.\nHarold Lupton\n502 BAKER ST.\nNELSON, B. C.\nCONQUER CANCER\nCAMPAIGN\nB.C. DIVISION\nCAN. CANCER SOCIETY\nB.C. CANCER FOUNDATION\n086 W. 10th Avenue\nVancouvor 0, B.C.       ,\n'\u25a0   O   rl'-:  y    *,;,\u2022;\u25a0     ,-\u25a0\".'.      ,,; \u25a0\u25a0\u201e\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u2022.;y I   -'    :   '.\u25a0;,      \u25a0\u201e'     '-.-' O&\/0?   ''.  '\u25a0'' - T ,-'.'      '   :\u2022''.;\u2022 '.. ;     ',    ; '>.,   '*;;.'        .''\".'    .-\u25a0.*.:;*''\"\nSevered StMrn^ Receive Mention\nOSs Xfa      Falk on Drama Festival\nGRAND FORKS\u2014Special mention went to several students for\noutstanding performances as the\nhighly .successful West Kootenay\nand Boundary Schools Drama Festival wound up its sessions in the\nGrand Forks high school auditorium\nSaturday night\nThe honor-roll was divided into\ntwo categories, one for outsanding\nacting, and the other for exceptional or worthwhile acting in the opinion of adjudicator Sidney Risk of\nVancouver. -.\/,'*.\u25a0\nThe outstanding student, actors\nwere Tannis Killough of Castlegar\nhigh, Elvina Kraft of Salmo high;\nFred van Hoorne and George Bow-\nering of Oliver high and Nancy\nJones and Barry Lusk of Grand\nForks high.   *\nIn the second classification-were\nthe entire cast of .\"The King's\nCreampuff\", entered by Trail Central elementary school; consisting\nof Gerald Schiavon, Marilyn Casey,\nApril Hall, Gerald Kelly,. Gerry\nMartin; Russell Curtis, Allan Martini, Bonnie Denier .and Nola Lan-\nducci; Kay Osachoff of Grand Forks\nelementary; and Peg Peters, -Arthur\nHeaven, Violet Razansoff and Barry\nLusk of Grand' Forks high; Alan\nJacobson, Alice Hiestad, Donna\nMuirhead, \u25a0 Walter, Poohachoff and\nDouglas Burrows of Castlegar high;\nKathleen Corteau of Kinnaird elementary; Jim Muirhead of Trail\nelementary; and John Forrest and\nJack Jablonsky of Trail junior high.\nPINCH- HITTER\nOwing to the death of Mrs. Christine Chanter, Mr. Risk was called\nupon to adjudicate the 17 plays entered in the festival The'dlrectOr of\nEveryman Theatre and member of\nth$ drama staff at UBC enchanted\nthe large audience at festival sessions with his acute observations,\nhis worthwhile comments on the\nplays and the humor he interspersed with the adjudications.\nHe was impressed with the outstanding calibre of plays presented\nrecently in drama festivals in all\nparts of the province, and found\nthat the West Kootenay and Boundary festival was no exception.\nThe directors of the plays were\nintroduced by C. E. Clay, inspector\nof schools, and W. E. Brown, chairman, spoke on the success of the\nfestival, and gave credit to the\ncommittee of teachers in charge.\nSaturday night's program opened\nwith \"Queen Street\" by J. D. Kelly,\npresented by Trail junior high under the direction of Miss- E. Mam-\nmone. In the cast were Murray\nJohnson as Bill Hart, a burglar,\nLoretta Santini as Liza Hart, John\nForrest as Albert Smith, Louise\nSaunders as Edith Hart, Jack Jab-\nlonskyy as Joe Smart and Ross\nPeterson, as a detective.\nMr. Risk said this play was too\nmature for Uie young thespians\ncalled up to play it, and although\nhe was impressed with the youthful maturity at them,, this perionn-\nance was not too convincing.\nThe importance of plot'line was\ngiven in this play, and \"the adjudicator showed how It worked and\nhow it was missed. Special attention\nshould be given to voice at the beginning of a play hi order for ideas\nto get across, as the ears oi the audience may not be attuned to the\npeculiarity of actors' voices. The\ncast members showed certain slowness in eues, but there was some,\ngood comic by-play displayed by\nJohn Forrest and Jack Jablonsky.\n\"Utter Relaxation\", a light com-\nery by Bert Grisom, was presented\nby Nelson high school. Director\nwas J. Holden and in the cast Pat\nMoran as Wilbur, Jeannie Stringer\nas Amy, Sylvia Shorthouse as Ella,\nMaureen Paterson as Mrs. Froswick,\nRon Graham as Mr. Clement and\nBob Grayson as Joe.\nOhe performers in this play needed more enlargement in' their actions. Timing of the climax was\nblurred. A good sense of comedy\nwas displayed but it was too slow\nin most parts.\n\"The Golden Touch\" by Alice C.\nD. Riley, performed by the students of James L Webster elementary school in Trail, was directed\nby Mrs. R. Ringheim, and had in\nthe cast Jim Muirhead, property\nman; Lois Broadhurst as Snip, Sharon Bisaro as Snap, Don Johnson as\nKing Midas, Joan Gill as Marigold,\nRichard Jones as the stranger and\nValerie Lucas as the cook.'\nSome of this was done in pantomime, and Mr. Risk illustrated the\nFEELING\nSEEDY?\nHow often do yoa feel so sluggish and\nheadachy that you just long for the\nday to be over? \u00a5ou know these days.\nYou feel tenth-rate from the time you\nwake up in the morning. Every hour\n6cem3 like two.\nQuito possibly you are suffering tin-\nnecessarily. K 'ordinaiy constipation\nand sluggish kidneys are preventing\nproper waste elimination your system\nis slowly being poisoned. That's what\nusually makes you fed all dragged-out\nKruschen Salts are the answer. Because they offer the same benefits as\nseveral famous Mineral Springs,\nKruschen Salts are a valuable aid\nbecause they act two ways\u2014laxative\nand diuretic Kruschen is a gentle\nyet effective laxative and also stimulates heafyhy kidney action.\nBuy a package today. You'll be repayed\na hundred times over in relief from the\nmisery of a sluggish system.\nKRUSCHEN\nH AU DIMS STORES\ndifficulty in performing in this medium, but congratulated the cast\nfor its remarkably convincing performance, He also complimented the\ncast on the way they kept thtir\n'golden posies\" . when .they*-were\ntransformed to gold by the touch of\nMidas' hand.    .'\u25a0*,'.',     I. :\nThe last play of the evening was\n\"The Vane. Effort\" by Winston Tol-\nles, staged by the South Okanagan\nhigh school at Oliver. >.,-...,-.\"\u25a0'.'\nItt the cast were George *Bower-\ning as Bud Kinney, Joyyce Pollock\nas Mrs. Vane, Barbara Gregory, as\nCynthia Vane, Ray Calleth as Charles Vane,; Gordoh Bauer as Dave\nKing, Sylvia Mcintosh as Lucille\nand Shirley Orr as Virginia Cooley.\nThere was a good approach to the\nplay by all actors, with an amazing\nperformance by.the herd.\u25a0\u2022'.    *   V\nThe only criticism was that there\nwas some masking, and in spots it\nwas a bit statit-.    ' .\nMusical selections were played\nby the neiwly-formed high school\norchestra, the Dipsy Doodlers before the opening and during intermissions. The 24-voice high school\nmixed choir under the direction of\nW. J. Zoellner, gave a musical program of seven numbers, .\nSaturday afternoon two plays entered by elementary groups and one\nfrom a senior'group were presented before a good audience.\nSidney Risk gave a general adjudication at the end of the sessions.\nFurther criticises and comments\nwere confined to private sessions\nfor director-teachers and actors.\nHe made special mention of\n\"slovenly speech whereby vowels\nare not pronounced correctly,-and\ntalking is done through tight jaws\"\nto produce the \"uh\" sound\". Examples of poor enunciation were words\npronounced \"mounuhn\" for \"moun?\ntain\" and \"muhrrage\" for \"marriage\" to mention a few that were\nused in the afternoon plays. He de.\nscribed this as an accent peculiar\nto Canadians,\nThe Crystal Flash\" by Karen As-\nbrand was the choice of the Kinnaird elementary school' under the\ndirection of Mrs. Andreashuk. The\nplays oast consisted of Kathleen\nCortesu as Princess Lilita, Jerry\nSenner as the King, Shirley Wolf\nas the Queen, Patsy Rourke as Cara,\nFlorence Pierpont as the first fairy\ngodmother, Elaine Ellis as the second fairy godmother, and Grant\nLeSave as Prince Sigwald.\nCostuming was excellent in this\nplay, and it was a good dramatic\ntry for the young children. Enunciation was not clear in all instances,\nbut the. adjudicator  enjoyed  the\nplay very much.       -    .     ,\n\"The King's Creampuff\" by Martha Swlnte,, was Staged.by the Trail\nCehtral elementary school under\nthe'direction, of R. Miller; In, the\ncast were. Gerald Sch'aivon>as the\nking, Marilyn Casey as the queen,\nApril Hall as the princess, Gerald\nKelly as Algernon, Getry Martin as\nthe page, Russel Curtis as the her-.\naid,.Alan Martini as the baker and\nBonny Denier as first witch, and\nNola Landuccl as second, witch,' *\nMr. Risk gave a complimentary\nadjudication of this play in .which\nthe young actors seemed to be enjoying themselves on the stage. Costuming was excellent, the talking\nclear for children of this age, and\nmovements. and expression were\nvery good. ;\u25a0';\u25a0 ,'.\nNelson senior high'school-presented \"The Florist Shop\" by Win-\nnifred Hawkridge. Director was 1.\nHolden, and in the cast weie Nora\nCarney as Maud, George Zabawa\nas Henry, Bruce McKenzle as Slov-\naky, Nan Bruce as Miss Wells and\nNeil Horswlll as Mr. Jackson.\nHaving played in this play, Mr.\nRisk was familiar with its intricacies. Pace, he said, was too slow,\nand the cast showed self-consciousness on the stage. With the proper\ntiming and picking up of cues, tho\nproduction could have been excellent   '\nThe,Friday night session was described by adjudicator Risk as a\nfascinating one during which the\nhighest peak had-been reached.\nTremendous applause was given\nMr. Risk by the capacity audience\nwhen he demonstrated-'his acting\nability to illustrate the importance\nof voice and body synchronization.\nHe selected a passage from Chekov's\n\"The Marriage Proposal,\" and\nbrought dowh the house with his\ncomic interpretation.\nIn adjudicating,-Mr. Risk said he\nlooked for three things: direction\n(interpretation of ' right spirit,\ngrouping), acting (individual and\ngroup, mechanics and acting instruments, voice and body co-ordination), and production ' aspects\n(makeup, costumes, lighting and\nscenery); .\nLOCALLY WRITTEN\n\"The Glove and the Lions,\" based\non Leigh Hunt's famous poem, was\nboth written and presented by the\nGrand Forks high school drama\nclass, directed by W. J. Zoellner. In\nthe cast were Mable Feregoodpff as\nAnnabelle, Elizabeth i'olonicoff as\nAmelia, Lulu Belle Sookochoff as\nRosemary, Cecil' Plotnikoff as the\nking, Shirley Aim Forrester as the\n\u2022queen, Violet Makaeff as' Princess\nRosilin, Mike Baldigafa as Prince\nof Dunmore, Peter Konkin as Lord\nLbrwood,';\u25a0 figgy tyeumetzlii.:. as\nLady Norwood and John Jinaefttas\nthe page. *     \".       ;\n* Mr. Risk said this play, the first\nhe had seen written by a high*\nschool group, was well-handled.\nSetting) scenic effects and costumes\nlent the right medieval atmosphere.\n\"The Marriage PrqpSsal\" was the\nchoice of the,South Okanagan high\nschool at Oliver. Director was F. A.\nDunford, and in the cast were Fred\nVan; Hoorne as Ivan Vassiliyitch\nLomov, Jeanette Bitter as Natalia*\nStepanovna Tschiibukovi and Alex\nMacLenttan as Stepan S. Tchubu\nkoy.' :<\u25a0' \u25a0'. \u25a0    ',:'.,;    , *,\"\nThe Chekov play had been acted\nand directed by the adjudicator *-t.\n120 performances; and had' been\nseen by him on a'i'great number of\noccasions. Although the .perform*\nance was one of the best he had\nseen given by high school students,\nhe gave pointers as to how it'could\nbe improved; \"Action in this, must\nbe like a whirlwind or tornado let\nloose,\" he said, illustrating how\nniore drive, and animation, could\nhave added effectiveness.\n\"Women . ta Council,\" a Greek\nsatire, adapted by E. Starkey from\nAristophanes, was stage* by the\nStanley Humphries high school at\nCastlegar. In the cast were Donna\nMuiihead as Praxagora, Annette\nZarcbikoff. as first woman, Muriel\nScott as second woman, Fat Coorir\nas third woman, Walter Poohachoff\nas Blepyrus, Paul Zanet as neighbor, and - Douglas Burrows\nChremes.' Director was G.' Rice.\nMr. Risk was \"quite thrilled\" by\nthe extremely good performance,\nand congratulated the cast for its\nseeming spontaneity and simple naturalness. He ventured into personal\nadjuciation, and lauded Dohna\nMuirhead for her vitality, and Poohachoff,' who was very-fluid ta his\nspeeches. The play's humor and\nideas were well portrayed by the\ncast\nThe last play of the night Was\n\"The,Lovely Miracle\" by Phillip\nJohnson, performed by members of\nthe Grand- Forks High School\nDrama Club, under the direction of\nW. J. Zoellner.\nMr. Risk was also pleased with\nthis effort He paid generous tribute\nto the actors for being able to hold\nthe- audience's .attention so well\nthrough the sentimental drama to\nthe climax. They had passed a test\nin audience control. In addition, the'\nstaging and lighting received favorable comment from the adjudicator.\nTake Airport Grant Credit\nLiberals Press for Better Radio\nReception for' Slocan, Arrow ,Lafees\nNEW DENVER \u2014 The Liberal\nParty and not H. W. Herridge,\" MP\nfor Kootenay West, should have\nbeen given the credit for obtaining the recent grant to tbe Castlegar airport, Harry D. Harrison of\nNelson told an executive meeting\nof the Kootenay West Liberal Association here Sunday afternoon\nto the Legion Hall.\nTbe meeting, attended by 45 delegates from Nakusp, New Denver,\nSilverton, Kaslo, Nelson, Castlegar,\nPassmore, Trail and Fruitvale, also\ndrafted a resolution strongly urging Federal action to remedy weak\nradio reception in tiie Slocan and\nArrow Lakes areas, and heard an\nenthusiastic account of the recent\nB.C.. Liberal Convention.\nRegarding the Castiegar airport,\nMr. Harrison said, \"It is unfortunate that Press reports gave Mr. Herridge much of the credit for obtaining the $125,000 grant announced recently. The Liberal Party\nshould have had the credit for this.\"\nPRE8SED MINISTER\nMr. Harrison said, that at the Liberal convention in Vancouver, he\nhad explained the need for additional assistance for the Castlegar\nfield to Hon, James Sinclair, minister of fisheries. He said the minister had maintained no money could\nbe made available for such assistance .because of heavy defence expenditure. When Mr. Harrison had\nreasoned that assistance to the field\nwould also.be a form of defence expenditure because of the important\npower developments served by the\nairport, the minister agreed to press\nthe matter with the department of\ntransport and the $125,000 grant re-,\nsuited.\n\"Representations were made, by\nMr. Herridge On behalf of the airport,\" Mr. Harrison admitted, \"but\nthey had been without sucess.\"\nradio reception in the Slocan Val-\nFollowiag a discussion on \"poor\nley and Arrow Lakes-areas\" during\nwhich it was charged there are no\nCanadian radio stations clearly\naudible in these districts, the secretary, Clayton Stewart of Trail,\nwas asked to write Mr. Sipclair to\nbring this situation \"forcibly to his\nattention.\" The letter is to request\nthat a CBC station be set up sufficiently powerful to reach all areas\nin the West Kootenay, or if this is\nnot possible, to Install booster sta\ntions to give the required radio\ncoverage. '\nReporting on the B.C. Liberal\nconvention Mr. Harrison described\nit as \"one of the biggest and most\nenthusiastic conventions I have\never had the privilege of attending.\"\n\"Tbe 800 of a possible 006 delegates showed a great unanimity of\npurpose,\" Mr. Harrison said, \"and\nelected a leader of the highest calibre, whose inspiring words can be\na guide to all of us not only in the\nelection campaign but throughout\nour lives\"\nIan (Curly) Somerville, Liberal\ncandidate for' Kootenay West federal constituency, told the meeting\nhe entered politics because he wants\n\"Kootenay West to receive the government benefits it is entitled to,\nwhich representation by an Opposition member can not achieve.\"\nHe called on'the representatives\nof aU communities in the riding to\nadvise him of the needs of their localities that he might press for their\nattainment\nMr. Harrison, who was elected\nsecond vice-president of the B.C.\nLiberal Association at the provincial convention, spoke again to tell\nthe meeting of the strong revival of\nLiberal sentiment all over the province.\n\"At the Coast there are tremendous gatherings of 400 to 500 people\nevery week where last year at\nabout this time the same gathering\nwould have, been attended by 75.1\nam quite confident\" he concluded,\n\"that B.C. will have a Liberal government after June 0.\"\nMARYSVILLE BOY HURT\nMARYSVILLE \u2014 'Robert Jobe is\nin Kimberley public hospital after\nreceiving a deep gash above the\nknee from, a fall from the'school\nmerry-go-round. Six olamps were\nrequired to close the wound, and\nthe boy will wear a cast for some\ntime.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILV\nii\nMVP-MIMAST-ACTIM\nCHEST RUB\nIN SOLID FORM\nPHONE\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nMILIEU'S\nfjlir   FOR (Oil\nFOR C0UCHS AN0 HUM\nF<ST MEOICMI0H\nCLEnN MEDICMION\nMORE MEDICATION\nbty to apply\u2014\nHindi riay dMff\nS<tf\nContract Awarded\nFor Radium Job\nRADIUM HOT SPRINGS - Lud,\nwig Shellian of Canmore, Alta., was\nsuccessful bidder lor the massage\nconcession in the Aquacourt at this\nWestern gateway to Kootenay and\nBanff National Parks, Hon, Robert\nWinters, minister bf resources and\ndevelopment, has notified'J. \u25a0 A,\nByrne, MP for Kootenay East. Tenders were called by the Department\nseveral weeks ago. ''\nTherapeutic value of these famous hot springs had been discovered by Indians long before this\narea, was settled. Since settlement\nand park construction, the springs\nhave been developed to a climax\nwith completion last year ol the\nnew pool and buildings, which were\ndesigned with an eye toward con*\nvenience for use by handicapped\npeople and special facilities for\nthem, in addition to the tens of\nthousands of people it serves as a\nrecreational facility on a year-\nround basis.\nKaslo Tax levy\nCuHo5J Mills\nKASLO \u2014 While many district\ncentres this year are- facing tax\nincreases, Kaslo has brought its\nrate down to 57 mills, two mills\nbelow last year's levy.\nEstimates for 1053 were finalized\nSEEKING re-eleotlon a\u00bb MLA\nfor Grand Forks-Greenwood tn\nthe June 9 provincial election le\nR. W. Haggen, above. Ha waa\nnominated Sunday at tho CCF\nnominating convention at Rock\nCreek.- -'   --O-'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AI*RIL li, 1953\u20143\nDistrict Students Win Contest Honors'\nDistrict students have figured in the 1953 poster contest sponsored by .the Canadian Cancer Society's B.C.\n.division.  : ' '.'      '- :'\u25a0     , ,'l';'      ' \u25a0,\nA total of 77 posters were entered and more than 100\nessays by students all 'over* the province in Grades IX\n: tottt-   '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nJean Stijes of New Westminster, was, winner of the\ngrand provincial championship in the poster contest; and\nprovincial champion, in the essay contest was Evelyn\nHeal of Victoria.   .'... , '\u25a0\u25a0'.,'\nIn the poster field, Kootenay East district winners\ntwere Lynn Oliver and Deli Sacilotto; both of Kimberley,\n, jand Kootenay West winhers were Joyce Geb'ert and Vir- \u2022\nginia Clark, both of Needles.\nHelen Harman, a Salmo stutjent, and Irene Krane of\n*   Nelson were winners for Kootenay West in the essay contest, and in Kootenay East,. Blanche Baker and George\n,S6fko, both of Natal, carried off the honors.        O\nfrailer Smashed,\nFour Htirtas\nTruck Hits Bridge\nCRANBROOK \u2014 An Edmonton,\ntruck trailer outfit was demolished\nduring the weekend when it struck\nthe concrete edge of the highway\nbridge over<-the Moyle! River and\nwas' flattened, with only the tires\nemerging intact.\nDriver was a young Edmonton,\nman, Harold Paul,-and he ond three'\nother occupants were rushed to hospital here by ambulance when they\nare all recovering. One of theinjur-\ned was Bill Plervner, of Edmonton\nand names of tiie other,two-have\nnot yet been made available.\nThe Impact knocked out the concrete buttress. The trailer left the\nroad and turned over down the embankment It was loaded with canned goods. Men. were called item\nnearby. Yahk late Friday' to. help,\njack up the sab to get Uie people\nout\nWith \"High Ground\" ; . ., ^\nTrail Thespians Hdld\nAudiences < Spe^otmd\nCranbrook Man Buys\nMarysville Business\nMARYSVILLE \u2014 Lyle Craig of\nCranbrook has bought the Marysville Meat Market from H. D. Kemp,\nwho has owned and operated the\nbusiness for the last four years.\nMr. Craig plans to enlarge and\nrenovate the building.\nTRAIL'\u2014 \"Strange Bedfellows,\"\nthen \"Quiet Weekend,\" ahd now\u2014\n'High Ground.\"\nThe last a Charlotte Hastings\nthriller,,presented Friday and Saturday nights by. Trail Little Theatre\nin the downtown school auditorium,\nwaa a departure from the two comedies presented last year, * but it\nagain showed what fine entertainment the Trail Little Theatre members'can offer under'the competent\ndirection of Misa Jonio Stevenson of\nNelson.      ;        ,\nThe play's setting is the convent\nof Our Lady of Rheims at Denzil St\nDavid near Norwich. Flood waters,\nbrought on \"by a rainstorm, have\nforced people in the district to sm\nrefuge at high ground of the co!\nvent and the visitors- include Sara\nCorn, a woman, convicted of murdering her brother, and her uniformed custodians. The nunc learn\nthe ins and outs of the ease, and\none, Sister Mary Bonavedture, un-\nravels tile threads trom a deftly-\nwoven murder pattern,, and pro-\nvents Miss Cara from being the\nsecond victim of a \"perfect crime.'\n* While the plot follows traditional\nwho-dunit form, it is a good vehicle\nfor some fine character studies and\nsome intensely moving scenes.\nThe Trail group played it 'til it\nhummed like a high tension w^e.\nIn Addition to an excellent east and\nexcellent direction, the production\nbenefitted from a set that reproduced to the last detail the interior ot\na convent. The work of Norman\nMayne and his assistants, gave tiie\nBeverley\nCASTLEGAB \u2014 Miss Beverley\nLipsett Grade 12 student of Stanley Humphries High School here,\nwas toe winner in ihe Castlegar\nfinals of the 8th annual Knights of\nPythias public speaking contest\nheld in tho Twin Rivers Hall Sunday afternoon.\nA large crowd of district residents\nattended, the competition and heard\nthree-senior students speak on the\nassigned topic, 'Highway Safety\nand How to Attain It\" In addition\nthere were junior competitions for\nthe first time, with two junior high\nschool students speaking on topics\nof their own choosing.\nMiss Joanne Dunlop, Grade B*\nstudent was the winner. Her topic\nwas \"Where Do We Go Irom\nHere?\" She received a plaque to\ncommemorate her wnnning entry\nand Miss Lipsett received a cup.\nBoth awards are for annual competition.\nMiss Lipsett wiH now go on to\ncompete with winners from other\nWest Kootenay centres in the district finals to ba held at Castlegar\nnext Sunday afternoon. Entries are\nexpected from Nakusp, New Denver, Nelson, Salmo, Rossiand, TraU\nand possibly Grand Forks.\nOther contestants in the Castlegar\nfinals were Jean Hardie and Bev-\nerley Cowlin, senior division; and\nCory Ajin Barnes, junior division.\nTie judges were Mrs. A. T. Hon-\nwill, Mss. E. MoCaba and t. t.\nOgl,ow.\nMrs, Horswlfl, in summing up the\njudges' findings, praised the speakers tor their excellent work. She\nsaid ahe was pleased with the\nspeeches heard. although somo of\nthe contestants' could hav* used\ntheir voices to better advantage.\nGeorge Santano, chairman, also\ncongratulated the orators and lauded J. A. Thomas, high school principal, for his whole-hearted co-operation with the KPs in the annual'\nspeaking competition. Between\nspeeches, district performers eater-\ntalned. The' numbers included a tap*\ndance by Jimmy Merrif ield, a vocal\nduet by Babs and Tannis Killough,\nand a trumpet and piano duet by\nJacie Ford and Billy Atchison.\nand the tax rate struck at a meeting of City Council Monday night\nInstructions for purchasing od\nfor Kaslo's streets, were given.\nE. C. Croft's tender for two oity\nlots and G, G. Avison's bid of $75\nfor a city lot were accepted.\nMarch  accounts  of $3110  w*\npassed for payment\nv  NORTH SHORE\nRESIDENTS\nOur drilling equipment is now working\non the North Shore, where we hove\nconstructed\/several good water wells.\nHave your well drilled now, while rig\nin the area.\nPUMPS \u2014 PIPE \u2014 CASING\nCONTACT\nBUD HENNING\nDRILLING CONTRACTOR\nCastlegar \u2014 Phone 4186\nor Box 546 \u2014 Castlegar\nL:\nproduction a decided, edge, technically, over its predeoessors of last\nyear, and, in fact over many an\namateur production in this district\nin years.\nThe acting load was carried by\nGina Landuccl os Sister Mary\nBonaventure, who portrayed admirably . the. depth* of character' of\nthe institution's matron.\nDenise Miles as Sara Carn, Connie\nNicholson as the mother superior\nand James Fitzsimmons as Dr. Jeffreys, also gave worthy performances, and' if- another example of\nfinely-drawn characterization may\nbe selected, it would ba of the\nmother superior. Supporting roles\nware ably taken by Chris Wiggins\na_| Willie Pentrldge, May Williams\nas Sister Josephine, Marion Johnson and BQtti.Hall as tbe two burses, Margaret Cooper as Martha\nPentrldge, Rolane Lejtosc as Melting and Grace Poole ai Miss Fierce.\nBut tbe primary honors must go\nto tba director for putting a third\nfeather in the cap of Trail Littlo\nTheatre as a leader in live theatre\nin tho Kootenays. The east and\nMiss Stevenson received warm applause from large audiences both\nnights.\nWhy pay \u00bb\u00ab\u00bbwhen yoa caa\nget all the worthwhile good-\nness _a& atkalftkeprioe.^\nwith Borden's Stariac\nStariac is milk\u2014with orfy\n*e water and fat removed.\nOne lb. Stariac makes 4\nqaarta of skim milk containing all the vitamins, proteins\nand miaerala of fash whole\nmilk.\n\u25a0D-wJUifal, good tasting,\nStariac is grand fer drinking,\nideal fer eooking. Veiy easy\nto use, and Stariac keeps\n*-thoat refrigeration.\nStart saving money this\nmodem way\u2014get Stariac at\nyour grocers in 1-lb. or\nWb. cans. ~\n >*^!SS!!WW^^\n^SUiP^^au^njr^.^^^a^^i^.iW^^l-^M.u.,, ^..,1.,J_(I..,!.L,JI,. ,,^\nO      -   , Established April 22, 1002\nBilQsh Columbia's \u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\nMeal \/niorosllng Nowapapor\nPubllihed every morning oxcopt Sunday by tha\n'    NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n\"      .261 Baiter Stroot,  Nolson,  British Columbia,\nAuthorised os Second Class Moll,\n*   Post Ofllco Department, Ottawa.    \u2022 .-\u2022'\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHU AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS.\n'  \u25a0 Monday; AprH Vt, 18S3   ' ' \u2022 i*\nPattern of Progress\n'Maintoinea;\n\u25a0Nelson property,owners will be\npaying higher taxes this year chiefly\nbecause of an extensive schools b'uild-\n.' ..   ing program to which, with their rural\n\u25a0;'\u2022   neighbors,.they gave approval last Fall.\n\\   The 7.69 mill levy is within the assurance of cost, given taxpayers when the\nprpgram was proposed, and wiH make\nthe largest investment in public buil-dr\nings by Nelson property owners since \u2022\n'     1035 when the GJivic Centre was raised. The.nearest approach to this spending was the addition to tjie city power\nplant four years ago. This taxation will\nmake possible, besides additions to various schools, Nelson's sharing-in a fine\nnew district high school.\nBalance ot the extra 18 mill levy\nbringing the civic, tax, rate to 64 mills'\nprovides for a continuance of the pattern of progressive improvements de-\ni minded by property owners through\ntheir civic action program. It was to ari\nextent a budget bf \"compromise striking\nt medium between all the improvements an all-out progress program\nwould call for and the-necessity of\nreasonable, moderation ih new spending. Undoubtedly, most property own-\n-       Wi wquld'like to see a greater streets\nprogram, modern lighting for the business section and more beau tification\nadvances, but these-things will come if\n\u25a0   . an air of progress is maintained*;.:\nEven   with   the   compromise  in.\nspending, a minimum of $116,000 will\ngo into new streets, new walks, water\n:  main renewal, new sewers, anew bus\nand a npw bathhouse for Lakeside\n:.,:' Park. One of the budget declarations\ntaxpayers will welcome most was the\npolicy statement that a prpgram of\nO maintenance and improvement would\nbe maintained;on civic utilities, notably the electric power and light plant\nand distribution system. Nelson must\nnever again yield to the policy of\nbleeding these . utilities, of revenue\nwith maintenance provided chiefly by\ncapital, outlay. A year-by-year, modernisation keeping always abreast of depreciation and expansion-needs is by\nv     far the most economic and sensible.\nasset. For the Launch Club it could\nmean greater revenue, and fuller utll-\"\nizatlon of its facilities. The Club has\nspace to spare in its yards to accommodate the boathou_.es at present on the\nCity's floating walks and the Nelson\nRowing Club buildings, One thing that\nshould accrue from the negotiations\nshould be a better arrangement fdr.\nwaterfront lighting:. There1 should be\ninsistence on this point. Present light'-.\n< ing is no point of pride for the city-or\nthe club, and is inadequate in safety\nand service for visitors, boaters, and\nothers who njay enjoy the! Waterfront. '\nAnother consideration is that the\npossibility of Nelson being host to the\nBritish Empire .Games rowing events\nstill strongly \"exists. Any waterfront\nimprovement wguld augment our host\nposition in this and other such events.\nNelson is a.'lakeside' city ahd this\npoint should not be forgotten when it,\ncomes to lighting and-the features of\nsafety and beauty lighting.can bring,-'\nI;\nsa\naperman\n?\nWaterfront Lighting,\nImprovement Possible From\nBoathouses Amalgamation\nAmalgamation of I the. City boat-\nhouse yards with those of the Kootenay Launch Club is a move that would\nbe benefit to property* owners, th,e\nLaunch Club members and those who\nin any way prize Nelson's waterfront.\nIn the best interest of all, it is to be\nhoped 'that, negotiations between the\nclub and the corporation will reach the\npoint where complete steps can be carried through before the Spring season\nis over.\n\u25a0 Greatest benefit that would accrue\nfrom the amalgamation would be an\n\u2022'immediate improvement of the sea\nplane bay paving the way for a'full\nprogram of development of this civic\nPRANK TUMPANI\n' He works in an office that is often* crowded and seldom uriljittered. Ho works in shirt;\n, sleeves ahd smokes Iriveterately. Piles of copy\n' make mounds around him. He works amid a\nclatter he has learned to shoiit out with a mental switch. Teletype nfcch.inei clatter furiously\nalong one wall. Tlie stories come from far-off\nplaces. Madrid, Dublin, Paris, Prague. And\nsome come (rom near-by places.\n1 He deals ln tragedy, all right, does your\nnewspaperman, But he also deals. in the\ncharming things ot life and in tru.it and in\nmercy and ln thing! like tha first robin and\ngolden anniversaries \u25a0 . y .\u25a0'..';\u25a0\nHIS FIR8T ASSIGNMENT\n-' He may be a nervdui cub hurrying out\n- on his first big assignment and laying to himself: \"How will I ever cover this? What will\nhappen when I come back.and theyfind out\nI couldn't co*er It?\" (He always gets it cov-\n!! ered, howavor, if he's any good and belongs.)\n' He has little reverence for the great names\nthat figure in the news. \"Mrs. Rlchbucks is\ngetting married again,\" hell say. \"Ii that still\n'\u201e news?\" He aniweri telephone queries trom\n. -people \\ylth.strange notions and'seeks assistance from his colleagues.\n: He may be _n*'editor and sit on the universal desk \u2014 that HorseshOe-ihape affair that\n.(. you tliid in niany newsrooms. Moitly he ls\ncalm, but sometimes, near a deadline,-he will\n, hover near a writer and say: \"Gimme the story\n.. \u25a0 In short takes, will yout\"   -.\nKltPITiHfORT  -\n-He may write headlines, counting out\neverything carefully in units. \"Lad's Home-\ni made Bomb Wrecks Dad's Car.\" That'i the\nkind of thing he wrltei, Tell it all in a hurry.\nSell the story. Keep it bright\n, He li a clannish'fellow and sticks mostly\nwith his own kind, And no matter who ha ll\nor no matter where he worki, ho always\nknowi ho could run tha paper better than\nthe publisher.\nHe is a lot of other things, too, Of course.'\nHe is skeptical but lt he is also cynical ha\nisn't as good a newspaperman as he might be.\nHe usually hit a fast eye for.the pictures of\nthe pretty women that appear In his ''paper.\nHo never yells; \"Stop tha presses\" hor does\nhe wear a hat at his desk. He dreuai well but\nnot richly.\u2014Tha By-Liner.\n? Questions ?\nOpen to any reader. Names ot partem\n. liking queatlona will net bt publlihed.\n*   There   li  he  ohorge  for  thii'larvloa,\nQueitlont; WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\n'.   BV MAIL except where thoro li obvious -\nMotility for privacy.   '.\nG.O.B., Klmberley\u2014Ploaso print address of\nSmith'! \"Mother Nature Brooder''.\n' . J. A. Smith Co., Dept,'27-b, SL Thomos,\nOntario.-;\/ ; \u25a0'\u25a0\nD.T., Castlegar\u2014Could you give mo addresses\nbt plaoei In NiliAn where I could nil or\ndonate uied clothing? *\n'Thb Thrift Shop, Stroth'conn Hotel, sell\ngarments that are In good condition. The Public Health Nursos are glad to rocolvo uied\nclothing, nnd oo nro tho churches, nil of which'\nhave groupi that do,work of thii kind, :* ,\nReader, Kaslo\u2014Ploaso toli mo whit'kind; ot a\nschool there is at Bowmiriville, Ontario,\nwhere boyi'can learn abrade?\n*. we have written ifor'thi!'iritormitlon to\nthe Ontario Training School for'Boys, Bow-\nminvlDe.' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0' O \u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0.\u25a0    .\u25a0\"'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n' Curloui,' Trail\u2014Is juvenile delinquency _h-:\ncreasing, ln the Statei? ;\/vO\nIn 1951-52 more persons under 23 yean of\nage were arrested than any other age group,\nnnd 110,670 under 21 made up 14.4% of all\npersons arrested during 1051, >\nJ.J., Nelson\u2014What is the height of the Statue\nof Liberty above, the water-line?\nJOS feet.   \u2022\nMrs. P,,I\u201e Grand Forks\u2014Please let-me know\nhow to ropiovo old wax trom linoleum and\nfrom the dark stain on the surrounding\nboardi?    , \" J\nAll  hardware\" storei   sell   preparations\nmade specially,for this purpose.\nLooking Backward\n\/ \u25a0'\u2022 :l 10 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom the Nelion Dally Newi, April 27, 1943\n,... Films showing Canada's tlghtlng'men and\nthose of the United Nations as they Join in the\nlight for the' Four Freedoms, and covering\nsuch areas as Northern British Columbia,\nAlaska, the Solomon Islands and the Russian\n. fronts, were shown to the Kootenay Engineering, Co, employees living 'at the, Brilliant\nProject.      O\nMeat famine that threatened the Kootenay\nas a result tit the tieup of through freight\nservice at Kootenay Landing bridge has been\naverted, Four carloads of meat due at1 the\nbeginning ot the week had to be diverted via\nSpokane ahd Grand Forks, and arrived in\nNelton Thursday instead of Monday.\n60 YEARS AOO\n>rom the Weekly Newi, April, 27, 1903\n- Rossiand is likely to have another oil\n' cdncehtrator this Summer.. The White Bear\nhas mide a proposition to the Elmore people\nfor the installation of a 100-fon plant, and the\nmatter it now being negotiated,' Shipments\nare gradually increasing, arid within 90 days\nlt ls almost certain 10,090 tons-will be shipped\nweekly from the camp.\nTypographical Errors\n'..'.. All newspapers are plagued by typographical, arrbrs. There are no exceptions. It ll\nunlikely that any issue of any paper wai ever\nput on the street wlthout'ot least one of these\nslips. The whole matter is far from a joke\namong people Connected With the publishing\nbusiness.\nEditor and publisher hat lilted the mott\ncommon embarrasing errors seen in the papers. Out of hundreds submitted, there are 14\nwhich are thorns in the flesh of all editors.\nThey recur in wanton pattern throughout the\ncolumns of newspapers from coast to coast,\nand always will so long as papers are written,\nedited and printed by human beings,\nSin for. son, Cuties for duties, Bride for\nbridge, Bridge for bride, Fiend for friend.\nPlague for plaque. Wrench lor Winch. Winch\nfor wrench. Metal lor medal. Bother lor brother. -Loving lor living. Desire lor residue.\nMoneynioon lor honeymoon, Uninformed for\nuniformed,\u2014St. Mary's Journal-Argus,  i\nYour-Horoscope\nPrevailing Influences are good, so go\nahead with your plans. Outstanding business\nsuccess ihould bo yours during the next 12\nmonths. Born under these auspices, a child\nshould evince many lino traits and have a\ncharming disposition.\nIt's .Been Sqid\nTrutt men and they will be ,truo to you;\n. trust thorn greatly, and they will show thorn-\nselves great.\u2014Ralph-Waldo Emerson,  '\nWhy Editors\nGrow Gray\n\"When the local Baptist minister wat leaving for a new charge, the congregation of a\n\u25a0mall Western Ontario town selected an ornamental mantel timepiece as a farewell gift.\n\u25a0 To the horror of all concerned\u2014the editor\nIncluded\u2014the local weekly reported the ceremony al being \"climaxed by the presentation\nto the Reverend Clark ot a handsome crock,\nwhich the recipient accepted with obvious delight arid emotion.\"\u2014The By-Liner.\nIt's a far cry from the virtual repudiation\nof Alberta's public debt by the late Premier\nAberhart in 1037, says the Lethbrldge Herald,\n\"to the-announcement by the Provincial auditor that, as at the end of 1052, Alberta was\nout of debt to all Intents arid purposes.\".\n. They'll Do It Every Time\n****** *. i. ***** cm*.\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nSO^J\u00ab4DROQM SHE GOT>~7HEN\ni; -SUE AJTBIbLHER cm OBSTACLE ,\nToday's Bible Thought\nGod does not want his children to\nbe enslaved; Those.who reject God\nare apt to find themselves in bondage even today.      ; j^Jt\n'Of,old tlmt have I broken thy\nyoke, and bunt thy bands. \u2014Jeremiah 2:20.\nCapital .lilepp\n\"BY JAMJM K. NBSBITf-^,\nVldtemX\" \u2014 The election this year won't be quite -so\ncostly ai last y\u00abar'|..v \u2022  ...,'V \u25a0 \u25a0..;.'\nThia year there's no new votora' list, and that saves a'lot\nof money. Too, this yetr, it's not necessary to advertise so extensively the whys and whereforea of the alternative system\nof voting..The g&vfernment figutes-if the electorate doesn't\nknow all about it now' it!\nnever y. ill. * , ' '\nLait year the election coit 9750,-\n000; this yeir the colt ihould bo\nheld down to about SBOO.OOO. '\nOrganization of a general '\u2022 eleotlon li a ti'omondout undertaking\nfor election day; 8000 poll clorks\nat 910; hundreds ot lupervlitng deputy returning olficors at 815; dor-\nens ol tpeclal constables, at ft, If\nyou rent your houte for a. polling\ndivision you get 312 for the day,\n(or one ballot box and $0 for each\nadditional box. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nIn addition, there are 41' returning officers. No one sooms quite\nsure how much theyget. They work\nsix weeks or two months, so it's\nconsiderable', but the teal are not\nmade, public.:.\nII'll,' *\u2022;-,\u2022\u25a0 '  .'-   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 - \"\u25a0\nIt teem snow that Liberal Mr.\nStraith wai right when he said at\ntha recent session that it ho could\nonly lind out whon milk pricei\nwould bo decontrolled ho'd be ible\nto .toll the date, ot the election.\nMr. Straith Insisted that the election would be a week alter control!\ngo. He tried to smoke out Agriculture Minister Kiernan to this effect,\nbut Mr.\" Kiernan wouldn't be\nsmoked out.\nThere have been rumors recently\nmilk price control would go May 1,\nNow it ippeari It will be delayed\nto June 1\u2014and the election will be\nJune 0, bo Mr, Straith wamt tar\nout ln his suspicion'. Mr. Straith was\nsure, at tho'session, and still is,\nprobably, that lifting\" of milk price\ncontrols ls just one big Social Credit\nbribe to the electorate,\n''\u2022'\u2022\u25a0\u2022, \u2022>'.'\nChief Justice Sloan ll being\nsworn in thlt week at administrator of government during the absence at the Coronation of Lieut-\nGovernor Clarence Wallace, Hit\nHonor, and hii wife, with Mrs.\nWallace's private secretary, and\nher personal maid, sail iri mid-May\nfrom New Vork in the liner Queen\nMary and, in London,.will put up\nat exclusive Dorchester House in\nPark Lane, They'll be back in Victoria by June 30.\nThis it the fourth Coronation at\nwhich British Columbia has been\nofficially represented. In 1838 when\nVictoria wai crowried, there wat\nno British Columbia. In 1802 Premier and Mrs. James Durismulr\nwent to the Coronation of King\nEdward VII and Queen-Alexandra;\nin 1811 Premier and Mrs. Richard\nMcBride were at the coronatlqn of\nKing George V and Queen Mary;\nIn 1837 Lleut.-Governor and Mrs?\nEric Hamber were in Westminster\nAbbey for the.crowning of Xing\nGeorge VI arid Queen Elizabeth.\nPremier Bennett was Invited to\nthe Coronation ot Elizabeth II, and\ndesperately wanted to go. But political business came 'up at home\nand thatis muoh more Important to\nhim, naturally.\n\u2022     \u2022     *'} -.\nPolitical leaders thii year, aren't\nmaking the exhausting province-\nwide-tours that were made last\ncampaign.  Premier   Bennett  Isn't\nWhere on iarth\n*^*^tKJMU,r-\nEgBBJWM\nCbMMi\n\u25a0 \u25a0 Bill ll goln' to be sorry. If a girl\ncomes from a poor family that\nnever tried to save, lcttin' her tote\nthd pocketbook ls just a short-cut\nto bankruptcy.\nDum.xu World War B. a squadron\not United .State- bombori. were\nwinging tot. aid Jtp-_> at as altitude ot well over 10,000 tut, when,\nsuddenly, thoy stopped dead in\nmidair. Quickly, pilots ohtoked\nthilr iaittumenu, eut everything\nwu in order. They had not stalled;\nthoro w_i no motor trouble. To\ntheir amuemint thoy (ound that\ntheir progrea had been'halted by\nwest-cast winds of 350 mllil u\nhour, mon than tuna times hurricane Telocity.'\nSince then, toveral Syen haw\nreported .similar oiperlonoos, and\nmotoorologUta have tagged thi\nresponsible winds Jot streams. Both\nnorthern and southern hemispheres, thi weathermen report,\nhave Jots, which nlwayo travel\nwithin an altitude ot 10,000 to\n40,000 (Nt, At tholr moat powerful,\nthey blow at 100 miles on hour.\nSolonco has yet to Solve the mystery\nol tholr origin, though one theory\nholds that they an caused by tho\nmooting ot hot and' cold mlnea\nof air. .    i  -\nInvariably their paths are narrow\n\u2014seldom.moro than a Jew hundred\nmiles\u2014hut thoy lead would-bo\ntracken a merrj ohast lor the\nimams curve, meander, algug,\nipieoi up and slow down, lometimei\ncomo to a halt. When eolentuta\n. Dn-Uy traei tholr patterns, they\nmay be ablo to forecast the weather\ntor monthi la advanoe,  Already,\n.: they have discovered that whan a\nJet'strum curves -to the louth, it,\nwlU nek In cool polar air, thui\ncausing a eold wave. The reverie U\ntrue whiri a itraaai moves to the\nnorth. At a male ot tropical air\nrushes to-au tho void, heat wfvei\necoroh thi land below. ' ,-.\n; Another eieltlng promise that\nthe Jit etreams hold out la Inoreued\nspeed for planu. Whan the itreami\nare oharttd, modern aircraft, upi-\nolally jets which fly best at altitude*, will be able to ride a roaring\n. tall wind Hut win hurry thom to\ntheir destination in record time.\nCopjrliai. 1011. H\u00ab\u00bb tort Ornie Trtbunt Inl\nTHANKSi Sydney Bell, -el.oit.'lro-\nlend.\n* tend In t\u00ab\" <<\"\u00bb *\u2022 \"Where On lorlb'.\nran el lh- uvvMea  ._       . .\n\u25a0 ' t. vs  .\nbothering with place! he's positive will go Social Credit, or places\nhe teeli sure Social Credit can't\ntake.from the CCF, He'i concentrating on those rldtngt he thinks\nhe might take* away from the CCF,\nsuch at ftevelltoke, and placet thtt\nmight turn their back on Social\nCredit\u2014tuch as Salmon Arm and\nPrince George, He'i going to spend\na lot, of time in Vancouver and on\nVancouver Island, That'i where he'd\nlike tome soats-on tho Island, Last\nelection V.I,, didn't elect one Social Crediter. Mr. Bennett li determined to change that.\nSalmon Arm li bound to bo a hot\nspotv That's the home riding of\nSocial Creditor J, A. Reid, who\nsterted the rumpus about education\nMr. Reid said the other day that\nthe Premier approved what he Sad\nlaid, which wai a shock to the\nPremier. Said Mr. Reid; \"ThCj Premier tpld me ln caucus I had done\na good thing, arid that he wai behind me 100 per cent\" Doesn't Mr.\nReid'know that MLA's aren't supposed to run around talking about\nwhat went i on in caucus, even after they're no ldnger MLA's?'The\nnew Reid statement had added to\nthe contusion, for an hour after\nMr. Reid hod spoken in the House,\nEducation Minister Ralston, on behalf of the government, repudiated\nMr, Reid and most of what he said\nabout B.C, education..\nBy FSM RIOH\nLONDON (Routers)\u2014If you want\nto get that, old Coronation feeling\nJune 2, like It wli when Queeri Victoria wai crowned ih 1838, go to tlie\ncountry\/ *-    -.:\n'..Iri tho villages mcrrlc England\nwill live again. There'll be ox-roasting in market squares, dancing on\nthe green, bonfires,' pageants and\nbarbecues.     '        ['\u25a0  '\u25a0;\nTaverns will be jampneked with\ncelebrating farmers, drinking i\npowerful brew specially concocted\nin honor of'tho Queen.\n. Coronation eve* every hill and\nhillock will have a bonfire, Ut, of\ncourse by a Boy Scout. The Scouts\nhave formed e country-wide' chain\nto build and light'the fires.\nThe ox-roasting privileges came\nonly-after some hard thought by\nfood ministry officiate who, In thii\nland ot rationed meat, jealously\nguard all edl>le four-footod beings.\nIt leemt that the Coronation planning committee ot one- village,\nauthorized to slaughtor one pig,\npainted It red, white end blue lo\nfolks would recognize lt and fatten\nit up with-extra rations, Tho food\nministry'people did riot consider\nthit to be -sporting. .*\u25a0:'..\nUSVIVE OLD CUSTOMS t\nThe villages will'revive many of\nthe centuries-old traditions of Cor-\nScotland Yard to\nScreen Visitors\nBy SEYMOUR TOPPING\nLONDON (AP)-Scotland ;Yard\nis forging a security cordon around\nBritain to ' intercept the crooks,\ncranks and political agitators who,\nmight disrupt the celebrotion.of the\nCoronation,\nThe Yard's special branch ls being\nheavily reinforced to screen the\nthousands of foreigners flooding\ninto London for the ceremony, Police, of ovory country outside the\niron curtain have been asked to\nalert the yard to the movement ot\nany \"undesirables\" toward Britain.\nAt seaports and airfields visitors\nwill be checked against black lists\nsupplied by British embassies and\nInterpol, the International police\nlnlormation centre in Peril, There\nwill be not unpleasant grilling. The\npolished and tactlul gentlemen of\nthe Yard are niore discreet than\nthat But all suspects will be trailed\narid' watched'.. \u2022 .' '; . _ \".\"\u25a0',':.;;,;\nTO SAFIOUARO QUHN   , v\nThtt screening li only one of the\nYard's precautions to safeguard the\nQue'en and the thoutandt ot tour*\nlttt coming here tor the Coronation.\nScotland Yard ls reluctant to discuss its security plans, but tome de*\ntails are known about the elaborate security wall which will go up\naround Westminster Abbey, when\nthe Queen ls crowned.\n'Overall police supervision of the\nCoronation will be directed from\nan \"lnfprmatlon room\"* ln New\nScotland. Yard, a five-minute walk\nttom the Abbey. Top Yard official!\nthere will be kept ebreatt of every\ndevelopment by radio.\nWhen the Queen rides from\nBuckingham Police to Wettmlnster\nAbbey, the \"Information room'\"\nwill map her movement;\nThe shifting crowds alohg the way\nwill get hawk-eye attention. Mobile\npolice will be rushed to meet any\nemergency.\nBAR TRACCIO.\nRegular traffic will be barred\nfrom Uie processional route at midnight Coronation eve. A itlll larger\nCoronation area will be off-limit!\nto all cars without special passes\nafter 2 a.m. Coronation day.\nThe;Yard-will*check every one\nof Ihe thoutands of\u25a0\u2022 penons oc*\ncuplng a teat ln :the ttands along\nthe route or at a window overlook*\ning.\\ lt. Every person granted such a\nplace must register with the police\nln advance.\nBetween 12,000 and 15,000 police,\n800 troops and 200 over service personnel Including Canadians will\nline the processional route to con*\ntrol the crowds. Nine-foot-high\nwooden barriers across main streets\nwill help dam the crowds,\nWOMEN ON DUTY\nWomen police will mother the\nthousands of school children who\nwill back special stands on Victoria Embankment,\nStringent security measures again\nwill be in lorce when the; Queen\nand Duke of Edinburgh make their\nCoronation viiiti, to Northern Ireland and Scotland shortly after the\nLondon ceremony.\nCoronation visitors also will \"get\nspecial protection .arid they will\nneed it. Any large tourist gathering\nattracts droves of swindlers, jewel\nand for thieves, pickpockets and\nother shady types.- .\nProminent Coast\nArchitect Dies\nVANCOUVER (CP)- Qeorge C.\nNaime, an architect who helped\ndesign much of Vancouver's skyline, died Saturday in hospital. He\nretired from -active business two\nyears ago. ':\n' Born iri Inverness, Scotland, Mr.\nNairno came to Vancouver shortly\nbefore the First World War.\nHis architectural assignments included the Marine Building and he\nacted as consultant In the building\nof the Hotel Vancouver.\nIn 1840 Mr. Najrne was president\not the Architectural Institute of\nB.C\nFor True Coronation Spirit Rural\nEngland Will Excel Cily Gaiety\nonatlon  day,  Their  homely  paf\u2022 I\ncants will be juit at genuine historically as the rltei performed in\nWcstmintter Abbey,   *..'\u25a0.\nVillagers of Somerset already\nare busy polishing up the rickety,\nhorse-drawn coach which rumbled\nregularly from Bath to London at\nthe close of the 10th century. In the\ncoach villagers will carry messages\nto the Queen promising that tha.\npeople of Somerset will stand by\nthe Monarch through thick and\nthin. '.:\nPageant! will be moro \"glamorous\nin the seaside and riverside towns,\nwhero mediaeval tales will be re-\nenacted on floats, Mott pt them will\nbe on themes from the robust ege\nof Queen Ellznboth I.   '\nBrighton, garish channel resort,\nwill live up to its reputation for\nmaking fun. ,* , \u2022   '.      * - m\nBANG GOES SIXPENCE\nin Dundee, Scotland ,the bor-,\ndugh's Coronation committee Viral;:\ntpld the traditional 21-gun salute\nwould cost them $70 for ammunition. They decided the nolle would'\nbe worth it. Scotsmen hnvo Insisted\nthat the Queen should bo called\nElizabeth I, not Elizabeth II, since\nthe first Elizabeth did not rule over\nScotland. ?\n1   Only.one thing hai not;been organized\u2014tho weather. \/>.\n\"Buzz Bombs\" lo\nUEBERLINEN, Germany (Reuters)\u2014The \"buzz bombs\" th_t. Ger-\nmany launched during the Seoond\nWorld War are going to \"war\"\nagain\u2014this time against \\ germs,\nbugs and cold.\nThree peacetime products, de*\nveloped on the \"buzz bomb prim\nclple,\" aro ready lor distribution in\nCanda, the United Statei and other\nwestern hemisphere countries.\n, Under the over-all trade name\n\"swlngflre\" three devices\u2014\"swing-\nheater,*' \"swlngfog\" and \"swing-*\nbumer'V-have been -designed, to\nutilize the \"buzz-bomb\" idea to give\nquick warm-up thott to engines on\ncold mornings, provide easily-installed emergency heating units for\nbuilding! and construction sites,\nand develop a heavy insecticide\n\"fog,\"\nResearch on the devices was begun just after the German rout at\nStalingrad when tbe Russians'\n\"general cold\" stalled German mobile equipment, After the Stalingrad detent, Germen scientists were\nassigned thq tetk of finding a way\nto enable vehicle! to operate In\nintense cold. *\nThey hit upon the idea of using\nthe idea behind the \"buzz bomb\" in\nwhich a mixture of fuel and air was\nIgnited to provide tho oscillating\npulse Jet to 'lupply the thrust for\nthe bombs. '?\u201e\u25a0'.'\u2022.\u25a0\nFOR N. AMSRIOAN 8ALE\nBefore the scientists completed\ntheir work, the war ended. Their,\nresearch wat taken.over by private\ninterests here. A Brltlih firm acquired interests in the product! and\nrecently a licensing agreement for\ntheir tale in North America waa\nconcluded with a U. S, firm. .\nThe \"twlngheater\" device it attached, to the cooling system of a\ncar, truck, plane or almost any\nother liquid-cooled Internal combustion engine. A tmall tpark from\nthe vehicle's battery is enough to\nset the \"swlngheater\" in operation\nad quickly bring the engine temperature up to normal operating\nheat.' *\nThe company claims that 40 per\ncent of engine wear li caused by\ncold Starting. The device may also\nbe adapted to lupply heat for the\npassenger teCtlOn of the vehicle,\nIn the battle against Insects and\ngerms, \"twlngfog\" atomizes solutions of standard Insecticides to\ncreate a heavy, blanketing fog and\nits makers claim it cari do the same\njob quicker and more effectively\nthan standard \"dusting\" or \"spraying\" methods with a fraction of .the\nintecttcide. *\nNevada Blast\nSeen at Coast\nLAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)\u2014A nuclear blast, involving large-scale\nmanoeuvres by army troops from\nall over the country, flared brii*\nlinatly over the Nevada desert at\n4:30 a.m. Saturday.\nSeventeen congressional observers were treated to what appeared\none of the most powerful shots of\nthe pnring series, of which today's\nwas the seventh.\nThe-flash, as observed in this\nresort city 711 miles from the atomic\nerierg ycommisslon's* YUcca Flat\nproving ground, seemed fully as\nbright as last Saturday's, which was\nthe most spectacular of the series.'\nThe Hash was seen as fer away\nas San Francisco\u2014600 miles distant.\nA U. S, Navy Skyraider' drone\nplane, flown into the churning\natomic cloud, crashed. Such craft\ncarry instruments to obtain scleri-\ntllic data, which is relayed to the\nground by radio!\nFitty-two aircraft were in the air\non various missions.        -    <\nThe army rnaneouvres was conducted by two combat teams of 1200\n[men eech. With\" them in the\ntrenches were 250 military observers.- \u00bb. * '\nYOU CAN DEPEND ON\nWhen kidneyi fall to     ^__W_fl_J!m\nremove eteen eeidl\nend matte, beak-\nache, tired fealim,\ndlalurbud rut olttn\nfollow. DoiTd'a\nKklaoy Pills ntlmu-\niate kidneyi to\nnormal duly. You\nfoel better\u2014aleep\nUtter, Wek better. I\nUet Dodd'a at any H\ndrug atom You can\ndtpeod on Dodd'a\nDODDS\nKCONEY\n% pius 4\nVictoria's Mayor to\nRun as Independent\nVICTORIA (CP) - Victorle'l\nMayor Claude. Harrison will run\nns an independent candidate ln thp\nJune 8 provincial election.\nMayor. Harrison announced Friday the main plank of hi! political\nplatform will be a new deal for\nmunicipalities.\nThe mayor's name has been\nlinked with the Social Credit movement ln the last few months, Ho\nsaid he will support a Social Credit\ngovernment \"when lt is right.\"\nTempler Plans\nPeace Moves\nBy WILLIAM PARROTT\nSINGAPORE (fleuters)\u2014Britain*!\ntough high commissioner tor Mir\nlaya, confident his stringent measures have at last broken the power\not the Communist terrorists, is\nturning his attention toward the\nproblems ol peace.\nFirst step in ,Gen. Sir Gerald\nTempler'i new program was the\nremoval of an Important emergency regulation granting, powers ot\nmass detention and deportatlon-r-\n\"the- need for which no longer\nexista,\"   \u25a0* .*    ,:.*.\u25a0 .liM\nHe announced his new program\nin a recent 10,000-word policy.,\nspeech in which he devoted less\nthan 10 per cent of the text to thet\ncampaign against the terrorists.   ::\nThe general said he wants to apply to the whole administration\nthe principle underlying \"operation\n\u25a0ervlce,\" a highly successful police\nexperiment aimed nt establishing\nfriendly relations ahd a spirit of\nconfidence between the police and\nthe public. ;'\nCIVIC GUIDANCE\nAs a high priority, his plans included the Inauguration and guidance of elected local, town and municipal councils.    \"\nEmployment exchanges are to be\ninaugurated and new labor legislation aimed tn part at \"encouraging\nthe growth of responsible trade\njunions\".i_i to be Introduced.   \"\nThe high commissioner's plans Include improvement in the amenities of Malay villages, increasing\nthe countty's rice harvest, better\nmarketing and credit facilities tor\nthe rice grower, and .general rural\ndevelopment.\nKilled in Kenya |\nNAIROBI, Kenj(a (Reuters)\u2014 't\nwhite settler, his wife and two chil*\ndren, aged 14 and 16; have beej\nmurdered in a suspected Mau Mat\nterror raid, police announced Set\nurday.\nThe bodies were found in a re\nmote spot east of Nyeri, capital <\nCentral province.\nPolice patrols with dogs and\npatrol of troops were summoned\nThere have been many attack\nagainst farmers ln remote areas bu\nthe death toll has seldom been mor\none or two; >\nlifer\nThis advertisement il not publiihe|\nor displayed by The Liquor Conn\nBoard oc by the Government\nBritish Columbia.\n_________________________\n v^mmmF^w\nwmwmmmmmkkm\n\u25a0\u25a0. \"*  ..'\n\/0fe2\n\"It Pqys To .Buy Qtlatity*'\nSADDLE\nOXFORDS\nBy B. F. Goodrich\nWhite elk uppers; blue trim;\nHard wearing white ribbed\nPanco soles.\nWidths A and C.  Sizes VA to 9.\n... yM^'i-i,';\u25a0'\nRe ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS  IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nlady Golfers\nName Officers\nI Nelson Lady Golfers have elected\na new slate Of officers fbr the coining season.\n-Mrs. Helen^Noxon Is president\nMrs. Irene Peacock is vice-president and Mrs. Edna Cummins ls\nslpretary-treasurer.* Mrs. R. L. Mc*\nbride is the group's honorary presi*\ndent. Miss Mary Juriloft was elected captain of tb; match committee,\nand Mrs. Jean Young is the vice-\ncaptain.\n\u2022 New members have been Invited\nto women's matches to be held after\n5 p^n. on second and fourth* Thurs*\ndays of each month, opening match\nbeing on May 14, The matc{i will be\nfollowed by supper at the club\nhouse.\nThe opening dance of the season\nis planned for May 16 at the. club\nhouse.\nPrincipals' in 4 pretty, wedding\nceremony, performed Friday at 8\np.m. in -the rectory at the Cathedral of Mary\" Immaculate, were the\nformer Patricia Dawn DeFoe and\nGilbert Maurice Helbecque;\nThe bride is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. William DeFoe, and the\ngroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs.\nG. M. Helbecque. Rev. Father R.\nD. Anderson officiated,\nFor. the ceremony the bride se:\nlected a smart, silver corded silk\ndress with a pink hat and accessories. Her corsage was qf pink carnations and lily of the valley.\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Koenig attended the young, couple, Mrs.\nKbenlg wearing a navy blue dresa\nwith navy and  white accessories\nAID8 WELFARE\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-Former\ntheatre operator here, J. B. Kielly\nof Montreal has contributed $1000\ntowards the Archbishop Skinner\nsocial service welfare projects here.\nThese include establishment of a\nhostel for working girls.\nTEACHER'8 PAY\nSASKATOON (CP) - Saskatoon\nhigh school teachers have been\ngranted a $300 salary increase, in\nlieu of the cost of living bonus that\nlast year amounted to $400.\nBRONCHIAL ASTHMA\nDo yon gasp, wheeze and fight for breath.\nbo yon can't get proper steep? Templeton's\nRA2-MAH capsules help yon to breathe\neasily, relieved of wheezing and gasping.\n. They loosen tight-packed phlegm in\nbronchial tubes, bo it comes away easily.\nSleep and work in comfort, take RAZ-\nHAH today. 65c, $U5 at druggists.   R-55\npawn DeFoe Is Bride\nQf Gilbert He!becqii\u00a3\nand a corsage of pale blue carnations.\" ,, '..ii    \u25a0 ?\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 :.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.' .:-'.'-'\nAfterwards, a reception for Immediate relatives of the bride and\ngroom was held at the home of the\nbride's parents at 621 Elwyn Street\nMr. and Mrs. Helbecque will\nmake: their home at 2879 Columbia\nAvenue ih Trail.     *\u25a0 \u25a0_-\nEmerald Guides,\nBrownies Enrolled\nEMERALD MINE \u2014 Enrolment\nof the First Emerald Guides and\nBrownies took place recently in the\nRecreation hall here. '\nMiss Greta Curwen of Nelson,\ndistrict commissioner, and Mrs. R.\nA. CuBter of Nelson, badge secretary, were introduced to an interested gathering by Mrs. R. E. Baker,\npresident of the local association.\nPresentations were made by Mrs.\nRalph Stevens, of a toadstoll and\nBrown Owl to the Brownies, and a\nflag to the Guides, on'behalf of\nthe local Parent-Teacher Association. .\nMiss Curwen presented enrol\nment badges to 15 Brownies and\neight Guides. Officers and ihem-q\nbers of the local association in aid\nof the Brownies and Guides were\nalso enrolled.,\nRefreshments were served under\nthe direction of Mrs. F. Robins,\nsocial convener.\nPythian Sisters\nGo To Convention\nA large delegation of- Nelson\nPythian Sisters attended the annual\ndistrict convention in Trail Saturday, v\nGoing were Mrs. W. Davis, deputy\ndistrict Grand chief; Mrs. J. Bereau,\nGrand treasurer; Miss Joan\nLowndes, district convention treasurer; Mrs. Li Bond, Mrs, H. Cain,\nMrs. F. Norcross, Mrs. A. Whitehead, Mrs. E. Morgan, Mrs. A.\nTrickett,- Mrs. A. Fletcher, Mrs, W,\nWabftsley and Mrs. L. Ott'\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\neison\nN\nSI\nVjV\/lClJL    PHONE 144\nSeveral members of the Nolson\nLittle Theatre attended Saturday\nnight's presentation by the Trail\nLittle Theatre of \"High Ground.\"\n* *   *\nFROM VICTORIA ... Mrs. T.\nAirey of Victoria; formerly of Cedar\nPoint North Shore, is visiting her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs.' C. H. Hamilton, Robson Street\n,.\u2022\u2022,\u2666':..\nON LEAVE ... William Mau-\nriello; who is with the RCAF is on\nleave and visiting his parents in\nTrail, spent a few days in Nelson\nlast week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOVERSEAS TRIP ... Mrs. D.\nUnderwood leaves today for England on a four-month holiday trip.\nShe .will sail from Quebec City May\n1 in the SS Francbhia.\n(Dm&a. lAp, With.\nWaJtiaiL WUvdifL\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953\u2014S\nRecipes. . . '\nThese Prize^Winners\nAre Taste Phenomena\n' \u25a0;\"\u25a0;'; ACCESSORIES thatare different lend a freshaccent\nto the very new fashions that -mark this season. Softly\n\u25a0gleaming mother-of-pearl is high on-the list of mar\nterials used for fine costume jewe&y, a* pleasant alternative to. glitteri Goro sponsors mother-of-pearl and cpm-\nbines.twd of the.year's top colors-\u2014whit6;and gold-r-into\na-design that is as smart as it is basically simple, Overlapping mbthertof-pearl discs centred with gold form a\ntailored j'ewelry ensemble that would be-at its best with\ntried and true classic fashions.\nLove Problems. . .\nGM Should Tell f knee\nShe Is Adopted Daughter\nBy MARGARET CARR,\n,Every fall.there's a big nationwide baking contest in New York\nCity that brings forth a number of\nbrand new ideas.\nContrary to the general custom,\nwherein most' hew cooking and\nbaking procedures as well as most\nnew recipes are the result of the\ntesting done in the big food laboratories; the contestants in this an*\nnual^fall, bake-down are using\nrecipes evolved in their own ordinary, everyday home kitchens,\nThe recipes themselves are not\nonly unusual from an ingredient\nand technique standpoint, but the\nresulting products are simply\nphenomenal when judged by that\nnever-failing standard \u2014taste.\nYbu may ha\"e seen the first three\nprize-winning recipes printed in\nmany of the home magazines early\nin the year, but in case you have\nmissed them, here are the first and\nthird prize winners which we have\nadded to our own personal collection and which we feel are full\nvalue for high honors they achiev*\ned. .\n8NAPPY TURTLE C06KIE8\n1% cups sifted pastry flour,\nVt teaspoon soda\nVt teaspoon salt\nVt cup butter or other shortening\nVt cup   firmly   packed   brown\nsugar\n1    egg\n1'   egg yolk (reserve egg white)\nVt teaspoon vanilla\nVs teaspoon maple .flavoring\nSplit pecan halves\n,.,.,.     sets\n9158 **(.\"      \u00ab-\u00bb\nNEWI  NEWI  NEWI\nTake the freshest cotton you can\nfind, ice with a frosting of whit? \u2014\u2022\nyou have fashion's newest recipe\nfor flattery. And oh, how cool and\nhappy you'll look on those warm\ndays coming up. The bodice is brief;\nthe waist \u2014 a cinch; the skirt\u2014-a\ngraceful flare.\nPattern 9158, Misses' sizes 12, 14,\n16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes 2% yards\n35-inch; % yard contrast\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives a\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THfflTY-FlVE CENTS (85c>\nIn coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\n.NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept. Velson.\nWE WELCOME YOU TO OUR\nNEW STORE at\n624 Baker St.\nNext to tha Liberty Food Store\n(\nWe invite your inspection of our,\n.    new and complete stock\nTAYLOR'S\nDRY GOODS\nPhone 1485\nBY JANE ATKINSON\nOf all the pathetic problems that\nfind .their way to my desk, I think\nthe saddest are those which involve\nthe lives of young people. Ahd most\npathetic amorig these are the problems' which, are,> thrust upon, the\nyoung people by life itself, through\nno fault of their own, leaving them\nhelplefcly Vulnerable to possible\ndeep hurt from the outside.\nOne instance of the sort.of tiling\nI mean appears in the following letter from a young woman of 20;\n\"I was adopted at the age of four\nweeks,* and have known this ever\nsince I was old enough to be told.\nhave n^ver cared to,know any-\nthirigabout my.mother;T have only\none mother, whomjlove dearly.   .\n\"In our ;very. happy home, none\nof this is ever discussed. I have the\nmost wonderful mother and dad. I\ncan never remember any friction\nin our home. I have a brother and\nsister* and I don't: know whether\nthey were also adopted or not We\njust' -all'-, love one another. Our\nfriends* are welcome in our-home\nat all times: I am telling you all this\nso: you will know what a grand\nhome life I have had.   ' ,\n\"Now my problem, is that I am\ngoing steady, and before too long\nwill probably be married. Shall I\ntell my boy friend that I was adopted? I fear it may make a difference.\nI dread to discuss it with anyone, as\nto me it is a:sacred bond, between\nmy family and myself.\n'1 have talked this matter over\nfly. ctawicL Whaslnh,\nSlffttogether flour, soda and salt.\nBlend^ together    shortening\nwith my mother and it has made\nher very Bad. She feels it is up to\nme to decide whether or not to tell\nthis boy, but in her opinion she can't\nsee why It should be told at all.\"\nIN8PIRING LETTER\nThis is a very touching letter, and\nas inspiring as it is touching. For\ncouid anything be lovelier than\nsuch a relationship of confidence\nand devotion between an adopted\nchild and her foster parents? Apparently thia young woman has had\nthe rare good fortune to have been\nadopted by unusually fine and\" intelligent people, and I think also,\nthat they have been equally fortunate in having such a daughter.\nlean see why this young woman's mother feels as. she does on the\nquestion 'of whether or not her\ndaughter should inform' the young\nman she plans to marry about her\nfamily background. At the same\ntime, however, it is my belief that\nthe young man should be told, and'\nriiy reasons are these:\nIf he is the right kind of chap, to\nlearn the fact of her adoption \/will\nmake no difference whatever in'his\nlove for her, or, rather, \"I think it\nmight- make him love her even\nmore. For to hear such a beautiful\nstory as she tells in her letter to me\nahould make any prospective husband happy and proud that he is to\nhave ijuch a.nice girl for his wife.\nOn the other hand, if the new\nknowledge should make a difference to the young man,'then there\nis something wrong with him; some\nbasic defect of character, some serious immaturity, that would eventually crop out some time anyhow.\nIf he is the sort to be upset so easily, then he is the sort who would\nbecome* iasily upset about other\nimmaterial* things, and his .wife\nwould find herself constantly called\nupon to deal with his emotional instability. If this is the kind of young\nman she is thinking of marrying,\nshe had better know it now.be'fore\nshe puts her whole life's happiness*\nln his hands.\nBE FRANK\nMoreover, It seems to me a big\nmistake for people to marry with\none of them concealing something\nfrom the. other. Sooner or later,\nthrough some unpredictable circumstance, carefully withheld facts\ncan suddenly come out into the\nopen, often seriously disturbing, the\nrelationship between the two sole-\nand\nbrown sugar', creaming well. Add\negg and egg yolk; beat well. Blend\nin flavorings. Add dry ingredients\ngradually mixing thoroughly. Arrange split pecan halves (rounded\nside up) in groups pf three\ngreased baking sheets to resemble\nhead and legs ot a turtle. Mould\ndough into balls (use rounded tea-\nspoonful of dough for each). Dip\nbottom into unbeaten egg white and\npress on to nuts. Bake in moderate\noven (350 deg. F.) 10 to 12 minutes.\nDo .not overbake. Cool and frost\ngenerously.\nCHOCOLATE FROSTING\nCombine 2, ounces chocolate or\n1-3: cup semi-sweet chocolate pieces,\nVt cup milk and 1 tablespoon butter\nin top of double boiler. Heat over\nboiling water until chocolate melts;\nblend until smooth. Remove from\nheat; add 1 cup sifted icing sugar.\nBeat until smooth and glossy.\nMERINGUE CRADLE CAKE    .\n2 cups sifted cake flour\n3 teaspoon double acting baking powder\n1' teaspoon salt\n4 egg whites\n1 cup sugar      '\n1 (up pecans\n1 square chocolate, grated\n% cup butter or margarine\n1   .cup sugar \u2022\"\u2022 - \u25a0'\n4    egg yolks\nVi cup milk '\n1    teaspoon vanilla\n\u2022Sift together flour, baking powder and salt. Beat egg whites until\nsoft mounds- begin to form,* Add\ngradually .1 cup sugar, beating constantly until meringue stands in\nstiff glossy peaks. Fold in pecans,\nfinely chopped (filbert or almonds\n-| may also be used) and grated chocolate. Prepare 9 or 10-ipch-tube pan\nby greasing well and lining bottom\nwith waxed paper. Spread meringue\nevenly over bottom and % up sides\nof pan.\nCream butter' or margine; add\ngradually 1 cup sugar, creaming\nwell., Add egg yolks;, beat well.\nCombine milk and vanilla. Add alternately with dry ingredients to\ncreamed mixture, beginning and\neliding with dry ingredients, Blend\nthoroughly after each addition,\n(With electric mixer use lower\nspeed). Turn into meringue-lined\npan. Bake, in slow oven (325 deg.\nF.) 65 to 75 minutes. Let cool in pan\n20 minutes before turning out,\nNOTE: Cake may also be baked\nin.two 9x5x3-inch.bread pans for\n50 to -60 minutes.\nInlaid\nLino\nDISCONTINUED\nPATTERNS\nRegular $2.95 Sq. Yd.\nN    SPECIAL\n$199\nSQ. YD,\nWilliam Lilye, English grammarian who died in 1522, was said\nto be the first to teach Greek in\nLondon.\nEAGLES LA\nTEA SUCCESS\nLadies' Auxiliary to the Fraternal Order of Eagles staged a successful tea Saturday. A large tea\ntable was centred by daffodils and\nfern, while a small tea table had a\ncentre of pansies and daffodils.\nMrs. E. N. Mannings welcomed\nthe guests and convener of the tea\nwas Mrs. D. H. Proudfoot.\nPourers were Mrs. L. Santor,\nMrs. J. McNabb, Mrs. W. Sommers\nand Mrs. W. P.* Kidwell. Others\nwere:\nSewing Table\u2014Mrs. L. Santor\nand Miss Claudia MacLean.\nBake. Table \u2014 Mrs. Mary De-\nFerro.\nServers \u2014 Mrs. J. Blight Mrs. G.\nFraser, Mrs. B. Browell arid Mrs. H.\nJohnson.\nHelpers \u2014 Mrs. M. Peloso, Mrs. J.\nLudwig, Mrs. A. Smith, Mrs. B.\nHille, Mrs. Trinca and, Mrs. T-\nLissato.\ndo tins job\nfor you\nFor that\nLike New\nFinish\nly because of the previous concealment Is it worthwhile to run such\na risk, pr to live with such uncertainty hanging over one's head?\nTo boil all this down, I simply\nbelieve that, come what may ot it\nthis girl's future will be happier\nand more secure if she is completely frank with the young man right\nnow. And I cannot believe that a\ngirl of her qualities would' have\npicked a young man who would be\nanything but sympathetic and understanding toward anything she\nmight tell him.\nTo out, grease\nclean and deodorize\nhousehold drainpipes*\n... for sink, bathtub, basin\nand basement drains, flush\nwith boiling water and follow\nwith Va to Vi cup of Javex*\nand let stand.\njavex\nMADE IN BRITISH CQlUiVWA\nMen's ond Ladiei'\nSUITS : r $1.25\nDRESSES\n1-pce.; plain $1.25\nPANTSand\nSKIRTS      ... 60c\n\u2022 ...\nFREE PICK UP\nand\nDELIVERY\nSERVICE\nWst\nPHONE 288\nDry\nCleaners\n\u25a0'.,   ..   M-M-MI  PRETTYI\nFlowers of soring to embroider\non buck toweling. Iris, daffodil, dogwood and rose are shown. In. addition, there's pansy and poppy. Dec*\norate towels,, scarfs,- knitting bags\/\n! Make gay igifts.      '\nColorful! ERsyl Pattern 770: has 12\ntransfer motifs for buck.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE''GENTS :in\ncoins (stamps' cannot be accepted)\nI (Or this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NDMBER.\nyOur NAME and ADDRESS.\nExciting value) Ten, yes ten popular, neiy designs to crochet sew.\nembroider, knit\u2014printed in the new\n1853 - Laura Wheeler . Needlecraft\nBook. Plus many niore patterns to\nsend for\u2014ideas fdr gifts,, bazaar\nmoney-makers, fashions! Send 25\ncentsJor, your copyl.\t\nWE ARE\nNOW IN OUR\nly.\n624 Baker St.\n(Next to the Liberty Food Store)\n.\"'\nWe invite you.to visit us at our new Jocation. We assure you of our\n- usual top-quality products and courteous service.\n\/\nHOOD'S BAKERY\n\"o\n -emstf^-wr\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953\nYoung Peace River Farmer Held\nIn Missing Trappers Case\nQueen Preserves British Tradition\n\u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0\n' PBACBI RIVER, Alta. (CP) - A\n22-year-old farmer, In RCMP custody since April 15 in connection\nwitb t bank robbery, was charged\nSaturday with tho murder of two\ntrappers mining in thla northwest-\n. era Alberta region,slnoo ml(l-Mnrch.\ni Th* murder charge wai read, in\n'police court hero against Henry\nAlexander Alfred, Sprlngburn farmer. Ho was previously also charged with the daylight armed robbery of tho Canadian Bank of Corn-\nmere* branch at Orlmshaw, Alt*,,\nwhich notted * long (unman (3443.\nLOOT RECOVERED\nAlfred was arrested th* same day\nthe bapk was robbed, The bank\nloot was recovered.\nGrimshaw ~is IS miles west of the\ntown ot Peace Biver.\nTha trappers war* Harold Sher-\nrls. 59, and hii partner, George\n-Craig. They disappeared while\ntouring their traplin* In the .Reno\n, area, also ln th* Peace River block\nand about 880 mile's northwest of\nEdmontoh. -,\nThe body of Sherrli was found\nFriday buried under moss about\ntwo miles from a burned-out cabin\nwhere the charred body of a second man wis found April 12. This\nbody, believed that of Craig, has\n* been sent to Edmonton for further\nexamination and possible identification.\nTh* discoveries ware made during\n* two-week search of the region by\n* 12-msn RCMP patrol and.a like\nnumber of bushmen.\nREMANDED TILL MAY\nAlfred has been reminded to\nMay 1 for preliminary hearing on\nthe murder charge.\nA sawed-off shotgun found i\nmile from Grimshaw, was believed\nthe weapon used in the holdup by\n' the gunman, who woro sunglasses.\n'   Alfred, who farmed 17 miles east\nof Grimshaw, was arrested in i\ntown cat* within four hours on the\ndescription furnished by the 10-\nyeor-old woman teller, who was the\nholdup man's victim, ,\nBecause Sherrli' body was frozon,\nImmediate examination to* determine cause of death was not possible. Tha RCMP htt not disclosed\ncircumstances .leading -to recovery\nof the bojiy,\nOn March 12 Sherris and Craig\nleft Reno, 850 miles northwest of\nEdmonton, to tour their traplihe\nln tha district. A few dayi later,\nSherris returned' to Reno for. supplies. That was the last either man\nwas seen alive.\nFIND TRACTOR\nOn March 26; Login Sherris,\nbrother bf the dead mm, went with\na friend to visit the ti ppers, At the\nfirst cabin on the trapllne, they\nfound a note saying the trippers\nhad gone to a second cabin at Island Lake. Sherris' brother found\nlt burned to the groud but did not\nsearch the ruins, When the RCMP\nlater combed it, they found the\ncharred body.\nOn April 12, Craig's tractor was\nfound abandoned about five miles\nfrom Reno,- At the same time, it\nwas reported an attempt was made\nto steal \u25a0 car from tha town.\nSherris is survived, by\/his widow\nand five children.  '\nRULES FOR SCHOOLS\nTORONTO (CP) - The British\nond Foreign Bible Society In Can*\nada will distribute some 50,000\nclear-typo bibles per year lo\nschools in Canada. Tho. presents\ntion of the bibles, which will be*\ncom* tha personal property ot stu*\ndents receiving them, ii part of the\n150th inniversiry celebrations of\nths Society,\nIF YOU\nARE GOING\nTO THE *\nCORONATION $\nImperial Bank will be pleased to arrange\nfor Travellers Cheques, Letters of Credit\nand foreign currency. Come in is soon\nos you ctn to avoid any last minute tush\nbefore your trip.\nWhllo you'ro awqy\n\u00ab-\u00bb YOIN VAIUABIES IN A \u00abVITY PIKfflT BOX\nA few eents i dty keeps your vtluiblej ssfe tnd\nsound in t Safety Deposit Box\nA DEATH SENTENCE whloh hung over Sandy, a dog accused\nof biting a 2-yoor-old boy so severely, he died, was lifted, by n Los\nAngeles court order when hi wos awarded to Mrs. lv* Rayrhoro,\nshown with hor attorney, Morrli Lavlne, at the animal shelter where\nthey greeted him, After leaving with Sandy, Mrs. Raymon was Informed she had been named defendant In I 360,000 damagiiiult filed\nby the parent, of the dead boy, Frederick Gigo,\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nZe Liner, She\nIs Come In\nBy ARTHUR EVERETT;\nNEW YORK (AP)-HoKt -e tricolor. Uncork te champagne. Raise\nze toast.'As arrive tha liner Flandre,\nre power ill her own. A sight jolle,\nThe 20,500-ton French Lines ship\nwas making her first call to til*\nlis de Manhattan sine* list July\n30, a diy horrible. She broke down\nthen on ze maiden voyage and\narrived 24 hours late at the end ot\na towiine, her bar dry.\nAlors, that was. a day tres grim\nfrlm France. Flags they flew,\nwhistles they toot, but the harbor\nwelcomed tbe Flandre that day\nwith a tear in ze eye. *\nBut Thursday was another stor-ee.\nNO BREAKDOWN\nThis time, no breakdown, no short\ncircuits to cease ze propellers. And\nno bar run dry of the rich vintages\nof la belle France.\nThe Flandre left Le Havre seven\ndays ago. after nine months of reconditioning. So easy she handle\nthis time, ze tugs they were hot\neven' necessaire When she stop In\nEngland. [t .\n. One mlntue early she arrive at\nAmbrose lightship. Quel speed and.\ngrace and beautyl Then proudly up\nze bay she come.\n\"Beautiful, beautiful,\" murmured\nze capitaine, Pierre Schupin,\nNo flags, no whistles, no welcome\nthis time, true, mon ami. But behold, no tears either.   >'\nViva la Flandre.\nI\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nRed River Now\nIf Lowest Ebb\nWINNJPfiG (CP)-The Red river,\nwhose spring floods sometimes\nbring disaster to Manitoba, is' at its\nlowest, point for late April in 18\nyeari.\nA.*,J. Taunton, deputy city engineer, said Saturday river readings\nShow s level Ot 3,7. feet above datum average lie level. This compared with 3.1 feet above datum in\n1037.\nLast April 24 the level was 11,9\nfeet above datum; vin 1051, 14.7. In\n1030, the year a wide, section of\nsouthern Manitoba and Greater\nWinnipeg were flooded, the level\nApril 24 was 21.4 feet above datum\n\u2014or about three feet above initial\nflood stage,\nSuutn(&B<-A-D-brs)\nHOUSE\nSEAGRAM\nMEN WHO THINK OF TOMORROW PRACTISE MODERATION TODAY\nTbli odvertliement Is not publlihed or dhployod by th* Liquor Control Board or by Ih* Government of Brltlih Columblai\n\u2014-,\u2014\u2014 , ___. _\u2014\u2014. \u25a0\u25a0  ft  ....\u2014,**'.,..    iV    .\t\nBonn Government'\nMokes NATO Terms\nBONN (Reuters)\u2014West Germany\nhas agreed to pay $221,000,000\nmonthly to the European Defence\nCommunity as soon as the EDC\ntreaty goes into, effect Finance\nMinister Fritz Schaeffer announced\nSaturday. *   , \"\nHe said the Bonn government has\nreached full agreement with the\nNorth Atlmtlc. Treaty powers,\nmeeting in Paris, on the amount\nof West Germany's contribution to\nEDC.\nIn addition' to *tho $221,000,000\nmonthly contribution, he said West\nGermany will pay * $92,000,000\nmonthly for the maintenance of\nNATO troops on her.soil for the\nfirst six months after the EDC\ntreaty goes into effect\nCanadians Made\nSongfamous\n,*:A-__UQpKQI\u00ab,''i..'M;(:AP)1:--\nSomo 40 years.\u00bbgo a young.Vale\nstudent named Alonto Elliott wrote\ni march for hii fraternity convention,.*\/, \u25a0  .'\"\nIf'the music, world'ever noticed\nIt It wos quickly forgotten. A copy\nsubmitted to an English publisher\ngathered dust for years.\n. 'Then came thi First World Ww\nand tho English publisher, strolling along th* Thames, ran into *\ngroup of Canadian soldiers quick-\nstepping along and singing: \"Thore's\no Lopg, Long Trtll A-Windlng..-'!>\u25a0\nThe publisher hurried b\u00abck to his\nofflco to start off tho song officially\non the long, long way which his\nSrought, iuthor Elliott $70,000 in\nroyalties over tho years, It still\nbrings Elliott in overogo of about\n$1000 \u25a0 year.\nEARLY SUCCESS NOT QOOD\nAt tt, Elliott still is writing music\n\u2014as * student in the music department otthe University of New Mexico, It lt seems strange for a successful song write to ba sharing a\nclassroom with youngsters, Elliott\nhas an explanation: -    *        '\n\"Early success con be detrimental; ai it wu in my case,\" ho admits.\nThero's no doubt about ths success Of his \"Long, Long Trail,\"\n' Canadian soldiers picked lt up\nfrom J-Ulott's fraternity brothers,\nAi a marching song, lt spread quickly to -other British troops,*.\n\u2022When the V.S, entered the war,\n\"Long,  Long Trail\"  was  slowed\nfrom march to a ballad and sung\nas a nostalgic reminder of horn*.\nWith the money from 'Xong,\nCalif., testified In U.8, Dlrtrlot\nCourt at Pittsburgh, Pi., that sh*\njoiriid *Communi\u00bbt P,t<iy In 1944\nat request of FBI ar-d spied on\nparty activities until 1949. Shi\ntestified at trial of flvi Communists who are oharped with conspiring to advocate t'e ylolont\noverthrow ef the oovei iment, -\n...... -AP Wlrephoto\nLONDON (Router?) - Thi\nQueen's decision to accept a symbolic embroidered glove from a\n'stand-In\" haa saved a centuries.\nold. Coronation tradition from extinction;   \u2022''',\n, Th* 400-year-old' custom of bo-\nstowing the glove on the monarch\nappeared doomed when officials\nruled.last yoar thit an Incorporated\ncompany could not toko over tlie\nrol* from tho lord of an ancient\nmanor., . '. \u25a0  ....\nEver ilnce th* time ot Henry VIII\nth* Coronation ceremony has Included the bestowal of the glove\nby,the current lord of the minor\nof' Workshop In central England.\nH*nry claimed th* glove In return\nBritain Promises\nTo Support EDC\nPARIS (Hiutsri) - Britain, in*\ntlcipating trouble through her fill-\nure to join the projected six-nation\nEuropean army, promised th* Atlantic Pact Council hero Frldiy sho\nwould glv* unlimited backing to\nths European Define* Community.\nAn authoritative sourco Mid Sol'\nfor granting the minor landi to tho\nfirst lord.'1'\nBut tho present incumhont, tb*\nDuke of Newcastle,-Joined.the ancient manor with other lands and\nturned them into a corporation.\nThe duke himself hn moved to\nSouthern Rhodesia,\nOfficials of tho Court, of Claims\nruled that the corporation could\nnot perform th* function in th*\nduke's place.\nSolution of the problem cam*\nwhen Lord Wool ton, chancellor of\nthe Duchy of Lancaster, was named\nApril 22 to mike the presentation..\nLord Woolton'i dutlei as chancellor are largely honorary, but Ml\njob makes him available fdr special\nduties that cannot be properly assigned to other notables.\nLong Trail,\" Elliott went to Europe\nln 1929. H* travailed th* continent\ntrying to write Jight popular songs\n\"like Irvln* Berlin.\"   \"\nAfter repeated failures, he settled\ndown and wrote tho militant opera\n\"Top Sergeant\" following 20 yeari\nof work. *..;'',\nAnother of hit better known,\nworki is the \"British. Eighth\" wyn Lloyd, British minister of\nmarch, accepted ai their much by state for forejgn gffalri, mad* thll\nMoptgomery'i troops while they promise but added Britain alone\nwere chasing Rohirael'i Afrlki ,wai not prepared to keep troopi In\nCorps. Europe for th* B0-y\u00ab*r-llf* of th*\nHe took his bachelor's degree in community, aa requested by Prince,\nmuaic from the University of Ari- France faces Intersil trouble\nzona In 1948 and now ia working on over the controversial issue ot Ger-\na muster's degree. Elliott is com- man troopi joining the army md\npoling n southwestern opera ln the wants mora practical British IUP-\ngrand style band on the lit- of | port for tho plan to offset domestic\nBilly the Kid-. \" crltlclim,\nCtiusK your ThvoI Attnt er\n\u25a0 C*n\u00abdlan Piilfte Ahdtmo\nBelgrade Breaks\nCatholic Talks\nBELGRADE (AF) - The official\nYugoslav pres3 reported Saturday\nthat consultations between a special\ngovernment commission and representatives of the Roman Catholic\nchurch on a new religious law here\nhave been broken Off. The press\nreports said the split came because of interference by the Vatican.\nThe first meeting was held two\ndays ago to discuss terms of a.new\nlaw. spelling out the privileges and\nlimitations of religious activity in\nthis Commupist country. The law\nwas to be submitted to Parliament\nfor approval later this'year.\nCLAIM INTERFERENCE\nTanjug, the official news agency,\nand Borba, voice of the Communist\nparty, . said the Catholic Churoh\ngroup came to the conference with\nInstructions from the Vatican to\noppose in principle the separation\nof church and State affairs.    .\nChurch spokesmen here were unavailable for comment.\nYugoslavia broke off diplomatic\nrelations with the Vatican last De-,\ncember.\nDuke, Princess\nWatch Ceremony\nWINDSOR, Eng. (CP.-Bags full\nof congratulatory telegrams flooded\nIn Saturday .for Prime Minister\nWinston Churchill who Friday night\nbecame Sir Winston Churchill,\nKnight of the Garter, invested at a\nspecial ceremony here by the Queen.\nSir Winston and his wife,stayed\novernight at the castle and had\nlunch with the Queen Saturday.\nThe Duke of Edinburgh and Frirf-\ncess Mirgaret watched as, the\nQueen made him t knight of the\nexclusive order rarely awarded to\ncommoners. .   ',..'\nSome time in the future there\nwill be a formal installation at\nwhich Churchill will assume his\nstall in .the Chapel ot St. George at\nWindsor. _0\nO'Brien Still\nLacks Passport\nHONG KONG (AP) - Michael\nPatrick O'Brien\u2014the mah without\na.passport\u2014ls still In the brig of the\nferry Lee Hong, plying between\nhere and Macao, \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0 \/'\nThe ferry company says all efforts to have O'Brien admitted to\nSouth America hive'failed. No one\nelse seems to want him either..   *\nO'Brien, who says his former\nname was Steve Ragan, haa been\non the ferry sine* Sept. 19, 1952,\nAbout a month 'tgo, he got .in an\nargument with, the captain and\nwai sent to the brig. Before thtt he\nlived ln the ship's salon.,   '\nO'Brien got out of Red Shanghai last September on t set of special Red Cross papers, which neither Portuguese Macao nor British\nHong Kong will recognize.       ,\nThe i-eiult?' \u25a0.....'. . \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0    -\u2022 .\u25a0 \u25a0\nO'Brien can't get off the boat.\nLettuce, rich lh vitamins and\niodine, originated from a plant that\nwas native, td southern Europe.\nAsk for Maryelube and you'll\nget protection against damaging engine wear, Marvelube\nhelps cut down costly'engine\nrepair bills and high maintenance costs';.. keeps your\nengine young longer. Marvelube is antl-acld\u2014battles\ns bearing corrosion. It's highly\ndetergent\u2014cleans as it lubricates. It's a tough, heavy-\nduty oil that,flows freely in.\nevery kind of weather. -For\nall-around engine protection\n. . . ask for Marvelube\u2014\nCanada's largest selling motor oil I\nCanada's\nlargest selling\nMotor Oil.\nQe&ywr\n\u2022MS\u2014now America Petrol-urn Inttitule classlncallon denanrft thf moil sevora aervleo\n(million, \u2022raunt.rai  Mnvtlubt Stult til miilremtntj hi this typo ol unlet..\n :, : m\n liv^mr^ii^^m^\ni\nwpqww> '. ** vimmmmmt^^\n\u25a0o\n\/^a_,Sr\nNative Daricfer Wins\nUth in Wood Memorial\n, '    '\u25a0;  .'ByJOHpCHARbLER      ,\nNEW YORK (AP);-i The greatjrey Native Dancer raft\nhis unbeaten string tp li rae,! iri aroW Saturday when he un-\ncolled'^owerful, stretch drive,^o capture the: $123,750 Wood\n.Memorial at Jamaica. OO \u2022\"~\nHis brilliant performance solidified his chances tor a victory In tho\nKentucky Derby next Saturday, at\nLouisville. This was Native Dancer's   richest   race and he easily\ngrabbed the 187,000 first prize In\nthe wealthiest threo-year-old race\never staged in New York. '\u2022\u2022'.\nAlfred   G.   Vanderbllt's speedy\ncolt was given a superb ride by ihis\nJockey; !Jric Giierln. He overhauled\nthe pace-setting Tahltlan King near\nthe top of the, stretch In the 29th\nrunning of this famous Dorby test,\nahd drew away with ease to win\nwith the authority of a champion.\nTho.crowd'qf 40.352 watching him\nln a sunny setting and which had\nbacked the Dancer and his stable\nmate, Social Outcast, down to 1-to-\n10 favoritism, gave a mighty cheer\n' when the Vanderbllt express really\n\"began to move.\nHe edged ahead of Tahltlan King\nand suddenly shot ahead in the final eighth ot a mile to blast under\n.the  wire  by   a  margin   of  4%\nlengths,\nTahltlan King,   rated right behind Native Dancer among the'1952\njuveniles, managed to'save second\nmoney of $20,OOO.by a head over In-\nvlgorotor. The latter was the second\nchoice at 6 to 1,   Invlgo'rator,   in\nturn, was three lengths ahead of\nSocial Outcast in the field of seven\nthree-year-olds.\n' The' time was close to the trjck\n\u25a0 record for the mile and one-eighth,\n1:90 3\/9, on a fast track. The. record, held by Bryan G\u201e is 1:401\/5,\nset Oct. 27, 1951. Bryan 0*. then a\nfour-year-old, carried 117 pounds,\nwhile all the colts ln this race had\n128.  _.\ni Native  pancer  paid  a  skimpy\n$2.20, $2,10 and $2.10. Tahltlan King\nreturned $2.30 and $2.10 and Invlg-\norator $2.10.\nSandringham House, the Royal\nestate in Norfolk, stands in a 200*\nacre park ln which deer graze,\nMarysville Ball\nSeason Planned\nMARYSyiLLE-The Rocket ball\nclub nt a meeting here decided to\nform young boys and girls and\nmarried women's tepms this year.\nA work party was out on tlie ball\ndiamond On Saturday getting the\nfield ready for play.\nPlans have been made to run a\ndance to be held In the near future\nto raise funds tor equipment for the\nvarious ball teams. *\n^IsmBq^^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953\u20147\nUNITED STATES\nNAMES GOLFERS\nCHICAGO (AP) - Jim Turnesa\nand Julius Boros, ourrent PGA and\nNational Open champions, respoc*\ntively, end five other top money\nwinners were named Saturday to\nrepresent the United States lh the\nInternational golf matches against\nCanada June 4 at Montreal.\nOther members are Cory Middle-\ncoff, Jackie Burke, Sam Snead, Ted\nKroll and alternate Doug Ford, listed by the PGA on the basis of priority ln accumulated money winnings from Jan. 1, 1992, 'through\nApril 19, 1993.\nDoSPIRITO 8USPENDED\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014 Jockey Tony\nDeSpirito drew a 10-day suspension\nFriday at Suffolk Downs\u2014effective\ntoday through May 9 \u2014 for careless riding aboard Lll's Joy in the\nfourth race Thursday.    -       -\nThis was the second suspension\ntor. the 1992 riding champion. The\n18-year-old jockey's other setback\ncame in Florida late last December\nand nearly cost his reco'rd.He came\nback strong, however, to post 390\nwinners\u2014the all-time high.\n8_.VEF.AL OF TH 18 YEAR'S crop o.'nlayaw\ntrying out for the Nelson Maple Leaf boxla team\ntake tlmo out to hear a few words of encouragement from Coach Rennie Mltohell.  \"\nFrom left.to right they are; Ren Lott's and\nEwan Wallace of Castlegar, -Hirold Mayo, Doug\nGriffin,  Frod   Graves  and Red Wanlok behind'\nMitchell.        . ..;;'.       ..?\"\u25a0';,,\nThe boyi hovo been working out almost nightly'In order to round into' shape for their opening\ngame against Trail on Saturday,        -,    *  ,\n'. \u2014Dally News photo.\nto Olympic\nBy GAYLE TALBOT\nNEW YORK \"(AP)-Australians\nare fine, hospitable people, what\nthere are ot them, and as a three-\ntime visitor to that country we are\nhappy, that the Olympic committee\nand Avery Brundorge quit, horsing\naround and made It official that the\n1988 Olympic games will be held at\nMelbourne.' *\nWe cannot get too- excited over\nthe. prospect that there may be no\nequestrian events because of Australia's suspicion of stfange horses.\nWe have looked lt up and discovered that there were neither horses\nnor canoe races in the original\n-games outside,Athens.\nThe big thing ls that the international Olympic body has kept\nfaith with a great sports country\nwhich wanted the games'and which\nis preparing to give the task a ter\nrific rassle despite manifold obstacles. Our personal guess is that the\nMelbo\\)rne games will be a thundering success. -\u2022 \"\nCbLES CHAIRMAN   \u25a0  :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nFor One, thing, the chairman of\nthe Australian . committee, Arthur\nColes, ls a man with h -long record\nfor having got thlhgs done \u2014 the\nbigger the challenge tho better.\nColes has gathered Uie most capable citizens of Melbourne' around\nhim and is bringing in experienced\noutside help. Throughout Australia\nmen ln Important positions, experts\nin housing, communications;.transportation . ami such,'. are' keenly\naware the games are coming to\ntheir country and are anxious to\nhelp.'We accompanied one committee, on publicity,. which drove 80\nmiles out of .Melbourne to confer\nNow... Ford Track Engineering\nIntroduces New Drivirtztd Cabs\nHere's the newest, most advanced\nIdea in track design ... Driverized\nCabs\u2014planned with the driver in\nmind.. \u25a0designed to reduce fatigue,\nstrain and discomfort . . . built to\npromoto, greater driving ease snd\nhigher efficiency. Check over the\nall-new driving features . . . see for\nyourself how Driverized Design\nmakes Ford Economy Trucks the\nmost comfortable, most efficient\ntrucks on the road\u2014the best trucks to\ndrive from Ibt driver's paint ef vicwl\nNEV\/ VISIBILITY- ALL AROUND\nNew one-piece cimed wiod-\n\u25a0hltld with in Increase of more\nthan 50% ln nlais area gives\nwide-angle visibility for safer\ndriving. Bull-width rear window\n\u2014over 4 feet wide\u2014and bigger\nside windows give so increase of\n19% in nil-round visibility.\nNEW COMFORT SEAT -\nFinest truck seat ever built\u2014 ,\nover a full 5 feet wide with non-\nsag springs\u2014provides roomy\ncomfort for titric men: .New\nbuilt-in shock anubbera smooth\nout roughest bumps. Seat adjusts\nforward and back\u2014seat.oack\nangle also adjustable.\nNEW, CAI POSITION\nNew forward positioning of engine and.\ncab over'the longer,\nsofter, more flexible\nfronc springs gives\ngreatly improved\ndriver comfort.\nPLUS THESE\nNEW FEATURES\nOF DRIVERIZED\nCAB DESIGN\n\u2022 Larger sldi windows wllh sills al irm-rstt lengthi\n\u2022 Wider doors open rlgM out for      antnnctl -,.\no Now Intutati.D seals against engine noise, heat and luraosl\n, o Now role-typo door locks... quieter, safer, mora durable!\n. \u2022 Nowluliyweel_ier.sealedcensUuellon...dusl-tlghl,(umo-llglit,walor-llghil\n\u2022 Nsw curved Instrument panel wllh qa_y-t_-ro.il \"Cockpit\" cluster!      .\n\u2022 Nsw healing snd rintllitlng system lor added all-weather comfort!\n\u2022 New push-button door handles... easy to oporalo, mon dspendablel\n: fompletefy MErV-fer-SS\nNEW STEERINI Ull\nShorter wholbuei\ntod wider front trctdi\nmake   all   '53   Ford\nTrucks easier to itcer\nthan ever before .,. .\nshorter turdoB radiui\ni... more mtnoeuvri-\nfront-end liability.\nFOR\nSMOOTH HAIIDLIIIQ\nFamoui Ford V-f)\non'oinea deliver\nplenty of melr\nSower for tough\naula , . . girt\nanJooth, dependable performance\nmile alter mile.\nEFF0RHEII SYNCHRO <tlLENT\nSHIFTING - Synchro-Siknt\nSWfdo* on ill modeli meant\nmuch le\u00bb effort tor the driver.\nsmoother operation lo traffic\nAutomatic Traumliiion* and\nOverdrive* available In all\nF-lOO Seriei. (* at extra coit).\nill YOUR FORD TRUCK DIALIR\n(any mom and tatty if larlW...iwivnTTRuguNSDOiuit\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS\nCorner Vernon ond Josephino St., Nelion \u2014 Phone 74 or 1744\nLOOK FOR THE.Jffflks.GN OF VALUE WHEN YOU BUY A USED TRUCK-SEE YOUR FORD TRUCK DEALER\nwith Coles,\nNumbers of athletic officials and\nreporters Who expect to make the\nlong trip ln '36 have been asking\nabout Melbourne and Its capacity\nto absorb a large throng ot visitors,\nThe simple truth is thgt the Olym-'\npic planners do not anticipate! any\nImportant invasion* trom overseas\nbecause of the vast distances and\nare quite prepared to settle, specta-\ntorwise, for their own sportsmlAded:\npeople.\nAs tor the several thousand reporters' and officials,who may be\nexpected to accompany the athletes\n\u2014say,, one to each,competitor\u2014we\nare assured that they will . find\nplaces tp sleep and that their working and eating conditions will be\ngood, if not ideal,\nA Tough Break\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nPASADENA, Calif. (AP) \u2014 The\nQueens University champion Irish\nrugby team was playing on empty\nstomachs when it beat UCLA Saturday, 32-10. Then a broken-down\nbus, which .they still had enough\nenergy to'push, cheated .them out\nof steak dinners just before they\ntook a plane toward home.\nWard Nash, match secretary for\nthe Southern California Rugby\nUnion, said tha visitors stayed at\nUCLA fraternity houses, where\nther* ls a customary weok-end rt'\ncess In meal-eating, Nash said, he\nguessed they'd previously .spent\ntheir food allowances and they went\ninto the rose bowl, game without\neating.'*. \u2022  \u25a0\nAfterword ha arranged 34 steak\ndinners at a Los Angeles Interna-\ntlonal Airport restaurant. A chartered bus carrying tha Irish players\nbroke down a mile from the airport, but the stalwart Queensmeh\nwere pushing it along the highway\nwhen a second bus arrived for\nthem.\n.It got them to the airport Just in\ntime to board their plane for New\nYork. Nash bought up -all the restaurant's box lunches and fruit and\nshoved these, their fi,rst meal of\nthe day, aboard the plan* with\nthem. '\nSoccer\nStandings\nLONDON  (AP) \u2014 British soccer standings:\nENGLI8H LEAGUG\nDlvlslon I\nW T L Pts\nArsenal  '20 1-  \u00bb 5*\nPreston N E  20 12   .02\nWolverhampton   19 13 10 51\nWest Bromwlch  21   8 13' 50\nBurnley ;  It 12 11 48\nDivision II .\nSheffield U  ,  28 10   -\nHuddersfield T  23 10   8 56\nLuton Town       22   8 11 62\nPlymouth A  20   S 12 49\nLeicester C   18 12 12 48\nDivision III Southern\nBristol H  26 11   7 63\nNorthampton T  26   \u00bb 10 61\nMilwall   22 14   8 58\nNorwich C     24  9 11 57\nBristol City   20 15   9 5B\nDivision III Northern\nOldham.. A\t\nPort Vale,.\nWrexham '..\nYork City .\nSouthport .\n8COTTJ8H\nDivision A\n22 14 0\n19 18 8 M\n33 8 14 54\n19 13 13 51\n30 11 15 51\nLEAGUE\nHibernian    18\n5   6 41\nGlasgow R    17\n6   540\nEast Fife ..._   16\n7   6 39\nClyde ... ..   IS\n4 1130\nSt Mirren , 11\n8 11 SO\nDivision B Final Standlno\nStirling A i   20\n4   0 44\n8   743\nQueens Park    15\nKilmarnock ...................  17\n7   8 37\n2 1130\nAyr United \u201e\n17. Ull 36\ni WENATCHEE,  Wash.  (Aft  -\nWenatehee evened Its Western International League series with Yak-\n' m nt. One game each Saturday\ngtitsWith.a 7-4,'wlft bahind the\n\u2022o-ttll   pitching,, of   righthander\nud Bauhofer.\nDoWhs for Kentu^^^ P&by\nence\nBOSTON (AP)\u25a0- Tommy, Collins,\n-Who stoutly got,up off the floor 10\ntimes Friday night.ih hlaloslng trjr\ntor the world lightweight championship; Just as .stoutly defended\nrofereb Tommy Rawson Saturday.\nRawson, o boxer himself for 14\nyears ,and a ring .official for 13,\nwas roundly criticized for not stopping the televised title match in\nwhich Collins absorbed a-fearsome\nlacing from the drumming 'fists of\nchampion Jimmy Carter. '    * '\nThe scheduled IB-round fight was'\nstopped, in the fourth with Collins\nhelpless.        -    '\nAfter a formal meeting the Massachusetts boxing Commissioners\nissued a statement absolving Raw-\nson and other fight officials 6f negligence. They olso ordered a complete examination of Collins by medical specialists. \u25a0'\"-'.'.'.\u25a0\u25a0\"\nThe commissioners said evidence\nwas heard from'Rawson; a statement .was received from Collins,\nond a full .'report taken from Dr.\nEdward Hommel who examined\nCollins'and sat behind the boxer's corner during the fight   ,.\n\"It was decided,\" the, commissioners said, \"that there was no negligence 'on the part of any official\nconnected with the contest and apparently Collins suffered no serious\ninjuries\/'\nCollins was nil usual cheerful\n.belt Sunday as he arose before\nnoon and told newsmen \"I feel fine,\nhiven't got an ache in my body.\nDon't I look ok!\"   \\\nHe did. The only Visible evidence\nof tlie drubbing ' he took was a\nsmall plaster over his left eye where\na doctor took one stitch in'a cut.\nColluis said he plans an early vacation trip to Canada and. will make\nup his mind about his ring future\nwhen ho returns. ' *''u'.\nCollins defended th* referee.\nJohn Conlon, Collins' manager,\nalso supported Rawson. '\n\"I think Rawson did.tho right\nthing. Tommy Was hurt at th* tnd\not tha third round and yot his mind\nWas clear.\"     ,        >\nBASEBALL SCORES\nSUNDAY .;\u25a0'.  '      O -':.::r- ->,k\nNational League'\nFirst\nPittsburgh...... DOO 100 02M 11   1\nPhiladelphia .   120 201 01x-7,16   0\nFriend, Waugh (4), Hotkl (3), Pat-\ntit (7)' and'Garaglola; Roberts and\nBurgess.     .. :.. '\nSecond :*\u25a0',.\nPlttsblirgh ...   000:100 000-1   T\nPhiladelphia    203 010 02X-8 11  0\nMacdonald, Hall (3), Face (7), and\nSandlock; Drews and Lopata.\nNew York ....   010 010 011-4 11  1\nBrooklyn ......  010 430 00x-8 12  0\nHearn, Hlller (4), Wilhelm (6)\nCorwln (9), and Westrum; Calder-\nono (0); Loos and Campanella.\nSt Louli i   000 (11 000-6 11  0\nChicago  ........   000 DOS 40x-7 16  0\nStaley, Brails (6),Clark (7), Col-\nlum (8) ond D. Rico; Schultr, Bac-\nzowsl-11 (4), Lown (6), Kllpjuitein\n(7), and Atwell.\nCincinnati' at Milwaukee (2),\npostponed. .\nAmerican Leagu*\nFirst    '\nDetroit :    010 000 000-1   6   1\nCleveland  ....   OOO 101 00x-2  4  0\nGray, Jordan (7) and Betts; Feller\nand Tipton.\nSecond\nDetroit    020 000 000-1  7   1\nClevland    120 000 00x-12 13 0\nGarver\u201eHoutteman (7) Wight (8)\nFoytack (8) and Bucha; R, Lemon\nand Hegan.\nWashington .. 200 800 000-8 8 1\nNew York ....   000 MO 02O\u20144 10  0\nMarcro and Grasso; Reynolds,\nScarborough (3) KJuzava (8) Sain\n(9) and Berra.\nFirst\nChicago      000 001 100\u2014\u00bb  4  0\nSt. Louis    00O41O2OX-7   9   0\n.Pierce, Fopnieies (8), Harriet (7):\nAloma (8) and Wilson, Sheeley\n(8);-LitUofiold, Poigo (6), Stuart\n(7) and Moss.\nSecond\nChicago    000 000 008-6   6' 2\nSt; Louis ........   000 000 000-0   4  ft\nDobson and Lollar; Blyska and\nCourtney.\nPhiladelphia at Boston postponed,\nWestern International\nYakima 6-1, Wenatehee 3-1.\nEdmonton at Tri-City and Calgary at Salem, postponed, due to\nrain.    ' ,\nPaolfle, Co\u00bbst .      \u25a0;>'.>\nHollywood 8, Oakland t.\nSacramento 1, Portiand 6.\n.  San Francisco 1-0, Los Angeles\n8-4:\nSan Diego 4-1, feattle 3-5.\nSATURDAY\nChicago 6, St. Louis 4.\nPhiladelphia 8, Boston 4,\nDetroit i, Cleveland \u00ab.\/:'.\nWashington 2,, New York 4.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 7.\nNeW York 7, Brooklyn 5.\nCincinnati '4, Milwaukee 8. '\n' St. Louis 6,(Chlcag6,10. .'   ,\nTHWFTY SCOTSMAN O\n*! DUNDEE, ScoUand (.CP) 1- The\nCoronation celebratloriiJ committee\nhete.voted byA to S\u00bb omit the\n21-gun salute On Coronation Day,\nbeoaus* of ths coM of ammunition, Treasurer* James'Gillies said:\n\"We don't want to ba' standing bv\nwith' taxpayers saying at each\nround,'bang goes another \u00a31.\"'\n\"O r By KYLE VANCE I\n''-:\" LOUISVII-LK, Ky. (AP) '\u2014 Louisville's pulse beat,\nquickened several degrees Sunday as the hci-ms cameback\nto ChiirchiU'Oowns ior the start of Kentucky Derby week.\n''*!', It ;Wlll,ffck up lntentiity until the'big.raeeis run Saturday before some 100,000 racing fans from-all over the United\nStates and many parts of the\nWorld'.\n- As usual, many of the visitors\nwill see little or none ot the race,\nThey'll get lost ln the rear ot\nthrongs that fight tor every inch Of\nthe mile oval, The race itself covers\na mild and a quarter. >\n, But at least 85,000. fortunate\nenough to claim seats in the Downs\nlimited facilities will be able to\nwatch the thrilling two-and-a-\nfraction minutes of American turf-\ndom's mast,famous show.\nIn general, the 1953 Derby, the\n79th, will be little different from the\npast 78. The only substantial change\nwill be an opportunity to spend\neven more money th'on recent ones\nhave afforded.\nThe difference here, will be .stag-\nBall Workouts\nAlthough.bad weather once again'\njinxed tiie:*fastball and baseball\nplayers Sunday afternoon, much\nwork was done on preparing the\nRecreation grounds for the season's\nplay. Before short practices were\nsqueezed in, players of both the\nbaseball teams and the girls fastball\nsquads, racked and picked stones\noff the field;\nAt Fairview work on tho little\nleague.fencs progressed.\nOn the fastball diamond over 20\ngals turned out for a short workout\nunder, Lou Chase and Ed Tolman,\nwho after' having .them snag files\nand playing catch, organized a short\ngame.to give tho girls a turd at\nbatting practice.\nBoth the Outlaws and the Maple\nLeafs had* poor turnouts but spent\n(short time tossing the ball around\nas well as getting in a tew licks at\nth* bat   . .  ;\ngorlngovon to somo Vho have paid\nthe price Of Louisville's Derby\nweek hospitality in the past'especially those who have paid for* \"the\nworks\" on the weekend of thb big\nrace.     '\u2022'.\u2022..    :     '\u25a0' j.- \u25a0\nPRICE CEILINGS     . . ',*\n' Price ceilings have been removed,\nso It will be possible to pay mor*\nfor hotel rooms, food jind enter-:\ntalnment. Moat hotels, however, ar*\nsticking by their old policy of\nCharging \"only\" $78 to \u00bbB0 for thre*\nnights' lodging without the prlvi- <\nlege of staking less time for less\nmoney. At least one hotel has gone\nup to $100 for the room that formerly cost t90.\nTrack prices for food, and drink\nwill be unchanged. A mint Julep,\none of' the Derby's trade marks,\na^ill wi|l Cost $1.25 and you can\nkeep the souvenir highball glass,\n: The throng will have a chance to\ngo with favored Native Dancer or\nCorrespondent or an opportunity\nto out-do the experts with one of\nth* dozen, niore or less, other horses\"\nthat challenge them.\nfHIS ONE DIDN'T\nGETAWAY\nWe've Just heard ih* first fish\nstory of tho season, and,It isn't,\nabout the .big one that got away,.\nGordon Stewart Rosemont boy,\nscooped up a four-inch flngerllng\nFriday night and no one was mor*\nsurprised than Gordon.\nTho boy was ln a rowbbat with a\ngroup at other boya returning from\nDick Spurway's home opposite.th*\nCity across the West Arm after hav-,\ning enjoyed some movies.\nGordon, trailed a cellophane bag\nin the water about midway across,\nand when th* boat cam* within\nrange of th* lights on the city side,\nhe was startled to find the finger-,\nling inside tho bag.\nTwo Die in Auto Race\nBRESCIA, Italy (AP) \u2014A French driver, and a boy were,\nkilled and seven others were injured In accidents Sunday in\nthe running of Italy's Mille Miglia \u2014 thousand mile\u2014auto\nrace, won by Italy's Giannino\nMarzotto in a Ferrari.        .\n\u2022 Martbtto,\"* former winner af'the\n\"race of seven thousand curves,\"\nroared over the finish line ,in 10\nhours, 37 minutes and IB seconds,\nat the record breaking average\nspeed of 142.347 kilometres an hour.\nOFrehchdrlyer Pierre' Gilbert\nUgnon was fatally injured when his\nEnglish Jajjuar swerved off the\nhighway neer Ferrara, 141 miles\nfrom'the starting point He died of\na fractured .skull.\nHii co-driver, Luc Doscollonges,\nwas injured. Five  other drivers\nwere injured,  i.'\nThe boy and an old man wer* ,\nstruck by a Fiat car near Ancona,\nsome 2B5. miles from the start, as\nthey were crossing the road. The\nboy was killed and ths old inan\nseriously injured.\nRoberto; Rosselllnl, the movie\ndirector husband of actress Ingrid\nBergman, quit after reaching Rome\nin seven hours, 28 minutes and 28\nseconds.\nAt home or away\n. There is nothing to equal\n\"Black ft White\" whether enjoyed at home or away. This\nspecial blend of fine Seoteh\nwhiskies has n .quality to pat it\ndistinctly in a class of its own.\nBUCHANAN*\nBLACK&WHITE'\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nDff\u00a3 StctetlS in tfaBfmdtnp\nBy Appoipln.cnF\n\u2022o Unlet. King Oooroo VI\nScolch Whlllir DUiHIcti\nlomoi Buchanan & Co; ltd.'\nDistilled, Blended and Bottled In Scotland\n, CONTENTS 26W OUNCES -,\u00ab\n,\". \u25a0' i   ' ..        *       \" ...'       '    '    .' i\nl\"his advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government ot British Columblo,\n______\n______\u25a0\n i. .v.wwfum-mi m ,m.lip,,p,i,lMti\u201ell i, itmttmmtmm\nfimnr-m V\n.mt^rexmy It\n,   iockhts -\n'AB'iOtMVev\nABOUT\u2014\nN-NOTff-HK.T-)\nK\nJo\nN\nG:\nd\np\nR.\nc.\nM.\nP.\nliWfEkiit.KWfSi ittWKtWI?\nfB TfSHILbS Tall&tT.WATPlSPUVOFj\nWEALTH WOULD tLMTAUHLVt&ff\npeRSW,ierALONeA caoaef\nWTAMNGl\nCOLLECTION---\nONE OF THE FELLOWS\nIN THE OFFICE IS   .\nGETTING MARRIED j\nT SIGHT.' A GENUINE,^\n=3U GUARANTEED,  k\n1 TIME MACHINE.,,\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953\nMIU m\nPERSON TO-PERSON tf ANT APS\nPOP QUICK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline-for.Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\nExperienced  propane  gai\nman to sell, service ana ln-\n' stall propane gas\nappliances.\nExperience essential. Money no\nobject if you are capable of delivery the goods. This is an extraordinary opportunity for a man\nwith ability and willingness to\nwork bard. Application treated\nwith, confldehce.\nSykes Gas. Co.\n130 Central Avenue\n\" Swift Current, Sask.\nSALES PERSONNEL, MALE OR\nfemale, to handle nationally-\nknown product in West Kootenay,\n\" on a salary plus commission basis.'\nAll employees covered with doctor, hospital apd life insurance\nplans. Reply to Box 8872, Daily\nNews, stating previous experience and whether or not the\n, owner of a car.\nWANTED \u2014APPRENTICE FOR\nPrinting Dept., Nelson Daily\nNews. Apply to C. D. Pearson,. .\n(Continued in Next Column)\nCoronation\nPageant\nSTAFF BEARER  .\nHe carries St. Edward's Staff\u2014\n\u2014originally a walking stick\u2014\nwhich \"guides the new sovereign\nin the path of righteousness.\"\nColors: Tunic and trousers, dark\ngreen, red and gold collar; gold\nbuttons; red cloak trimmed \"with\nermine, lined with white satin;\nred belt.\nHELP WANTED\n(Continued)\nHELP WANTED\n.      MALE-\nLarge business firm in Nelson requires a \"junior to\nlearn accounting, good opportunity for advancement!\nPlefase reply in your own\nhandwriting, stating age\nand phone number, to\nBOX 1722, NELSON DAILY\nNEWS.\nHELP WANTED\nMALE and FEMALE  \u2022\n4X Bakeries are now taking\napplications for employment in their new Nelson\nplant. Previous experience\npreferred but not necessary.\nApply in writing, giving^full\nparticulars to Daily News\nBox 1982. Please do not apply in person.\nWANTED \u2014 MAN FOR JANITOR\nwork and general maintenance by\nlarge local garage. Stoker fired\nhot water boiler. Apply^ox 1877,\nDaily News. ~;\nEXPERIENCED     PAINTERS\nwanted. Phone 792-X.\nHOUSEKEEPER   WANTED   AT\nonce. Apply 612 Carbonate Street\nWANTED-LEGAL  STENO-\ngrapher. Phone 870, Trail, S.C.\nAGENTS WANTED\nAct Nowl Start youf own business\nwith FAMILEX. Be a go-getter^.\ndouble your income\u2014sell cosmetics, tonics, domestic products, full\nor part time. Dealers wanted in\nYOUB vicinity.\nFAMILEX, 1600 Delorimier,\n. Dept. 8, Montreal,\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nTHOSE\" LITTLE JOBS THAT\nnever seem to get done. Phone\nHandyman, 1324-R. .\nFOR- THE GOOD ROTARY GAB-\nden plough, phone 451-Y.\nPROPERTY\/HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nFOS 'SALE - MODERN S-ROQM\nbungalow with full basement, on\ntwo landscaped lots on bus route,\nRoomy kitchen with plenty of\ncupboard espace; Vnodern bathroom, living room, with oak floors\none large bedroom, one smaller.\nCash deal'. Phone 513-Y evenings.\nFOR SALE OR TRAM\u20144-ROOM\nhouse in Kimberley, B.C, Full\nbasement, plumbing and oil heat.\nClear title. Value $4500.00. Will\ntrade for.husihess or res. property\nin Or around Trail, Castlegar,\nRossiand or Nelson. Write to Box\n1675, Daily News.\n(Continued tn Next Column)\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n4. Musie\nnote\n(.AtapM\n& Detest\nT. Emmet\n-.AfemaJ*\npoet\n0, Music\ncharacter\n11. Showy\nflowers\n15. Frigid\n16. Clement\n18. Narrated\n21. Boast\n\u00bb. Tribe in\n\u00bb.Muaie\nsymbol.\nM.AromaUe\ninner\nbaric\n(W.l.tm.\nSB.Ahead\n26. Departed\n18. Female\nanaaaa aaaa\n.QiT.a   UBB   ilHU\nm      C1QEHBK1-1\n\u25a0jhbh lii-ia\nJ_.UI_M  uanuK\nnaa nuau\n'Jill  hhb auis\n\u25a03UUH   HEIBQBB\naaaa aauta\n'jj'irj 'j'Jiiu\n\u00bb.B_bNcal\nliberator\nM. Praise*\n38. Wading\nbird\nS3. Perform!\nNaga HiHs. JS. Cook in\nS8. Audience\nW. Hawaiian\nherb '\n4L Jewish\nACROSS\n_L Listen\nS. Fellow\n\u2022.Stop\nW. Indo.h_i.si\ndty\n13. Loiter*\n13.Typcof\nsailing\nM. Everting\n(poet)\nM. A particle\nof dust\nM. Music not*\n17. Proliflo\n19. Plural suffix\n20. Ancient\n21. Foundation\n23. Chide\n26. Masslvo\n27. Worker\n28. Extinct New\nZealand bird\n29. Indefinite\narticle\n30. Maimed\n34. Music not*\n35. Caliber\n36. Past     .\n37. Give    .\n'  pleasure to\n39. Unadulterated\n40. Allay,\nas thirst\n41. Assistants\n43. God of war\n(Gr, Myth.)\n43, Inner bark\nof the ,\nlinden tree\nDOWN\n1. Hoist\n2. Anxious\n3. Beast\nof burden\nDAILVCRVPlOQUOTE-Here'showtoCTOritlt:\nAXYDLBAAXR\n.      h LON GFE LLOW    '.    ' ,*.\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example. A k used '\nfor the three Vs, X for the two O'o, etc Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of too words are all hints.\nEach day the-oode lettera an different,  -\n,-'. '       A Cryptogram Quotation\nK HFTFBMAS.FTI    HTIAW    FT.   ZCNHt\n\u25a0 ZA BAA,   HTJ   HT   HTIAW   TAAJ   GCLAM\nTC CMVA8    JAI8AA-TAHLAB.\nSaturday's Cryptociuote: MAN LOOKS AT HIS OWN BLISS\n_*.' .WEIGHS IT WITH CURIOUS FINGERS; AND 'TIS GONK-\nWATWN. i\nJ&ttMluiAttl _____\/\" _^i*_* V_mM_mam _________4______ll_l\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE       .\n(Continued)        .'.\nMODERN TWO BEDROOM HOME,\nJust completed. Third bedroom\nand garage in basement. Modem\nkitchen cupboards and bathroom.\nLiving room has beautiful picture\nwindow and view; hardwood\nfloors, automatic oil heat; grounds\nin good condition. Apply at 520\nSixth. Street, Nelson.\nVALUABLE CORNER PROPERTY\napproximately 9000 sq. ft., on\ntrackage and main highway. Centre of industrial and business section In Nelson, B.C. Best offer\naccepted. Phone or write W.\nAbrosimo, 320 Beasley St., phone\n1681-R, Nelson, B.C\nFOR SALE. EIGHT MILES .WEST\nof Nelson on Highway\u201420 acres;\ntwo-room dwelling; excellent location for roadside business, \u2014\nPhon\u00a32847 or Write A A. Lambert, TCinnalrd. B.C.\nONE OF NELSON'S BETTER\nhomes. Lovely nine-room house\non three 50' x 120' landscaped lots.\nHot water heating. Owner transferred to Vancouver, Full price;\n$18,000. G, W. Sterling. 685-L.\nRESIDENTIAL LOTS FOR SALE\nin Salmo, all high, dry and level.\nClose to store and school. Cash\nor terms. Clear titles issued immediately. Ft H. Street Salmo.\nB.C.\nWANTED TO BUY (OR WILL\nlease) \u2014 Revenue property cen.\ntrally located. Preferably in Trail,\nor large house or hotel. Apply\nBox 1878, Daily News.\nV4 ACRE OF LAND; 70 FT. FRON-\ntage, North side Castlegar ferry.\nNo buildings. Apply John Hblo-\n' boff at Castlegar ferry or Box\n224, Castlegar, B.C.\nFOR SALE-46 ACRES, HOUSE,\nsmall bldgs, water rights, river\nfrontage. 1 mile from Procter.\nGood buy. C. W. Seebald. Rt 1,\nWhitehall, Mich., USA.\nUNFINISHED 4-ROOM HOME\nGood situation in Castlegar. Cash\nand some terms. Write Box 1546,\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE-FOUR-ROOM HOUSE\none and a half* miles from city\ncentre. Apply Box 1540, Dally\nNews,\nPROPERTY\/HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE   '\n(Continued)\nHOUSE FOR SALE \u20145 ROOMS\nand \u00abbath, with or without acreage. Phone 1885-R-2.\nMODERN 3:BEDROOM HOME. \u2014\nBasement, furnace,, etc. Good lo-\ncatlon. nice view. Owner, 1204-Ij.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR -ACT\"\n(Section)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT,TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE.\nNotice is hereby given'that on Use\n22nd day of May next, the undersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent to\ntransfer of Beer Licence No. 9620,\nissued in respect of premises being\npart of a building known as Ymir\nHotel, situated on Front Street\nYmir, British Columbia, upon th*\nlands described as Lots seven (7)\nand eight (8) Block nineteen (19),'\nMap six hundred forty (640), District Lot twelve hundred forty-tw\u00bb\n(1242), Nelson Land Registration;\nDistrict, in the Province of British\nColumbia, from Joseph Saliva and\nMariana Sauve to Stanley Marciniak and Antonina * Marciniak tho\ntransferee.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this 24th\nday of April, 1953. ''     '\n,   Signed,    ..-.,....,'\u2022\n<   . Stanley  Marciniak,\nAntonina Marciniak.\nFOR SALE *AT BALFOUR, 1%\nacres, 330' lake frontage with\nfurnished cabin, 18x18. $1500 cash.\nFred Tompson, Riondel, B.C.\nHOUSE FOR SALE\u2014$1600 TERMS\n1\/3 cash, balance monthly payments.. Apply-TLITwlst, Street-\nvile, Salmo, B.C.\nTW6 LtHTS FOR SALE, VICINITY\nof Junior High School. Box 1751,\nDaily News.\nFARM FOR SALE OR RENT IN\nCrescent Valley. Very reasonable.\nAlex Verigin, Robson,,B.C:*\nLOT FOR S^LE.GOOD LOCA.-\ntlon. Phone 808-L.\t\nCLEARED LOTS FOR SALE \u2014\nWrite P.O. Box 103, Nakusp, B.C.\nLEVEL BUILDING LOTS FOR\nsale. Apply 1324 McQuarrle Ave.\nA MEETING WILL BE HELD on\nWednesday, April 20th, 1053, at tho\nCommunity Hall, Salmo, B.C., at\n8 o'clock p.m. for the purpose of\ndiscussing the advisability, of trans-1\nferring the assets (including the\ntruck and fire equipment) of Hi*\nSalmo Volunteer Fire Society over\nto the Corporation of the Village\nof Salmo as this society is now\ndefunct\n, All those who have donated to,\nor have claims* against this society\nare requested to attend and .the decision of the majority of those\n'donators present at this meeting\nwill be followed out, and the' last\npresident secretary-treasurer and\ndirectors of this defunct society will\nnot be responsible for any further\nor past actions of this society.\nSigned: F. R. Rotter,\nH. H. Street\nNOJICE TO CREDITORS\nMrs. Minnie Whiteley, formerly\nof Nelson, B.C.   DECEASED.\n- NOTICE JS. HEREBX jGIVEN that\nanyone having claims'against tbe\nabove deceased are hereby required\nto send them to the undersigned at\nP.O. Box.938, Vancouver, B.C., before the 15th day bf May 1958, after\nwhich date. The Hoyal Trust Company will distribute the funds in\nits possession belonging to the de-,\nceased among the parties entitled\nthereto having-regard only to th*\nclaims of which it then has notice.\nTHE HOYAL TRUST COMPANY,\nBy Brown tt) Kirby,\nIts Solicitors. \u25a0\nONTHE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAM! ... .wo on ns mm.\n(Pacific Standard Timo)\nMONDAY, APRIL 27, 19SS\n7:00\u2014News .\n7:05^-Breakfa_t With Boates\n7:15\u2014Sports News\n7:20\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n7:30J-News .\n7:85\u2014Breakfast With Boates .\n7:45\u2014Rise 'N' Shine\n8:00\u2014Ne*s   i\n8:10\u2014Sporta News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n'8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sports News\n0:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n9.15\u2014Western Fred ,\n10:00\u2014Sons of tho Pioneers\n10:l&r-News\n10:20\u2014Coffee Time\n10:45\u2014Musicaf Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Shut-In Show   .\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Consumers Corner\n12:00\u2014Liberty Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Behind the News\n1:00\u2014Around the Town Part 1\nMS-^Voices of the \"Passion\"\n2:00\u2014Melody Matinee\n2:30\u2014Sentimental Recollections\nI\n3:00\u2014Here's Harmonf\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matte**\n4:15\u2014Road Show .\n4:80\u2014Pebble From Plut*\n4:45-Pacific New*\n4:55\u2014Report from ParliMMHt\n5:00\u2014U.N. Commentary\n5:05-Rawhide\n5:30\u2014Spotlight on * Star.\n5:45\u2014Sports Hews\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Musical Program\n8:30\u2014A Man and His Magi*\n6:35-Cavalcada of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-CCF Talk\n7:45\u2014Romance of Famous\n8:00\u2014Red Cross Show\n8:15\u2014Symphony  Oroh.\n9:00\u2014Farm Forum\n9:30\u2014The Shadow\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial AHatas\n10:30\u2014Hawaii Calls\n10:35\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n10:45\u2014Sports Roundup\n11:00\u2014Around the Town Part t\n1?:00-NEWS Night Cap '.'\u25a0'.\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nMONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n':45\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News   \"        '\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00-Mornlng Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen   .\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014A Man and Hia Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase . '\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55  Fiv.etoOne i*\n1:00  The Concert HoUr\nl:45r-The Passion\n' 2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n2:30\u2014Presenting\n2:45\u2014PlaygW\nSKM\u2014Brave Voyag*\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Mattoe*\n4:15\u2014Road Show\n4:30\u2014Benny Boxcar   ,\n4:45\u2014News.   - - - '\n4:55H3potlight\n5;00\u2014UN Co-ameotary\n5:05\u2014Roll Back the Yean\n5:30\u2014Design for Listening\n6:00\u2014Here's a Holiday\nOiSiy-Kenya \u00bb ,J\n7:00\u2014News   ' , \u25a0,\".\n7:15-:News Roundup\n7:30-;Lelcester Squar*\n8:00\u2014The Nation's Business\n8:15\u2014Trappers Festival\n8:30\u201420 Questions\n0:00\u2014Colo Continental\n'9:30\u2014Mr Showbusincss\nlOrtO-^News\n10:15\u2014Jewish Passover\n* 0:30\u2014For Vour Approve!\n.    .\n WiPW.M,pa,\u00bb,W^^\n....'^' ;\"';\u25a0:\u25a0   .'\u25a0\nwmmmm\nmm.\nm\n^ PERSONEV-PERSON WANT ADS\n)    FOP QUECHRESUITS7 0\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u2014$ p.m,\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nsn-s*-**^\"^--*^ ~t+t*+?**'*^+*~*'+\u25a0+***\nPackard\n.\u00abfor 1953\nAmerica's Most\nIndividual Gars\nNew Austin Convertible\nNew Austin A-70 Hereford\nNew Austin A-30 Seven\nALSO     *0 ',.\u2022\n1952 Meteor Tudor\n1952 Studebaker Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1949 Pontiac Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan  \u25a0\n1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1948 Monarch Sedan\n1947 DeSoto Fluid Drive\n1946 Ford FoVdor\n1940 Studebaker Coupe\n1939 Ford Tudor\n1939 Pontiac Coach\n1937. Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Austin Devon\n1948 Ford Anglia\n1951 Ford Prefect\n1938 Hillman Minx\nCOMMERCIALS\n1951 Studebaker Pickup\n'1951  Ford Pickup\n1951 Austin Panel\n1950 Austin Pickup\n1952 Austin Countryman\n1949-Ford Panel  .\n>   TRACTORS\nNew Massey Harris Pony\n'New Model D Gibson\nSPOT CASH FOR\nLATE  MODEL\n**     CLEAN CARS '  -\nTERMS ond TRADES\nEMPIRE\n803Bak*rSt.   Phone 1135\nNELSON, B. C.\nHenry J\nCorsair ,,  ;\nNo. 1 Smart. Buy\nOf Today!\n\u2022\n1951 Studebaker Coach\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n1950 Meteor Coupe\n1952 Austin Somerset .\n1941 Studebaker Sedan\n1950 Ford Prefect    ',.' '\n' 1937 Oldsmobile\" Sedan\n\u25a0 1949 Ford Prefect    .;\n' 1936 Chevrolet Sedan*'\n1951 Studebaker .Pickup\n1950 -Austin Pickup ,\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1946 G.M.C. Panel\n1950 Austin Panel\n1934 Ford Fordor\nVVE DEAL FOR CASH TERMS\nAND TRADES\nSEE THESE BARGAINS\nAT;\/,\nVernon Street\nMotors\/\nB18 Vernon St. Phone 1881\nNELSON, B.C.\nFOJ? ECONOMICAL TRANSPOR*\ntation up tb 139 miles per (allonl\n.New and used motorcycles, priced\nfrom $200 and up. * Trade, int.\nterms. Guaranteed'repairs, Accessories. Kootenay Motorcycle\nSales, Box 350, Castlegar: phone\n$101. \"The Shop of Friendly Service.'\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nVALUES\nin- ,\nGood Used\nTRUCKS\n'51 5-Ton Ford\nNew motor \u2014 \u2022\n$3*500\n'51. International\nVi-Ton   -\u2014\u2014 -\n$1475\n'51 Chevrolet\nVi-Ton ..._;...\n$1350\n'49 Mercury 1 -Ton\nwith van body\n$1350\n''49 Dodge 1-Ton\n. Express\n$U75\n'48 Dodge 3-Ton\nH.D. _\u25a0      i._\n$1100\n'47 International\nKBR-11, air brakes,   '\n162-H.P. motor,'\nlogger tires   <    $4500\n'47 Mercury 3-Ton\nNew motor,\nlogger tires .._.\n$1200\nSEE THESEXlNITS AT\nCENTRAL\n& Equipment Go.\n703 FRONT ST      PHONB 1400\nNELSON  BC.\n\u2022 GOOD VALUE. HERE I\n1950 Fargo 3-ton special 4-yd.\ndump body and twin cylinder\nhoist, $2000 complete. Also other\nequipment to choose from. Apply\nDewls Transport Garage Co. Ltd.\nSilverton. Phone 27-F.    '\n038 V-8. EXCELLENT CONDI-\ntion. Must be driven to be appreciated. Will sell or trade for light\ndelivery. Phone 1282-L.\nFOB SALE-PLYWOOD HOUSE\ntrailer, insulated, furnished, without under carriage, $400, Inquire\nR. Winters Store,'Nelway.\nFOR SALE - 1948 PONTIAC SE-\ndan. Privately owned; good condition all around. Apply 140 Better\nSt; Victor Apt\u00bb;, Room 1.   '\nFOR SALE-1931 CUSTOM MET-\neor. Two-tone; A-l condition. \u2014\n$1750, Phone 418-X.    .\nFOR SALE-1942 CHEV. COACH.\nA-l shape. Apply Vernon Street\nMotors.\nFOR SALE-1938 WILLYS COACH,\n1048 Jeep motor $150.00, Apply\n104 Chatham St Phone 092-R.\n1849 FORD: 4-DOOR IN GOOD\nshape. New paint job and tires,\nApply 85S Josephine or phone.195.\nFOR SALE\u2014MODEL A FORD\nCoupe. Apply 418 Mill St.\t\n'47 DELUXE . FORD 4-DOOR -\nPhone 181-L-2.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBEAUTY PABLOR' EQUIPMENT\nfor sale. Two chrome dryers, new\n(one old); two chrome operating\nchairs; one Enfield perm,'.machine; new; rods, clamps,. spacers,\netc. This equipment must be sold\nas loon as possible. Write or\nphone W. B. Eddy, Box '261,\nCreston, B,C.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogglnl supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe, and fittings;\nchain, stcol plate and shapes Atlas Iron It Metals Ltd, 250 Prior\nSt, Vancouver. B.C Phone Pacific 8367\nWMttW CLEARANCE OH\nused portables and standard machines; completely . overhauled\nand guaranteed for 1 year. Phone\n200. Address: 536 Ward StA\nFOR SALE-WARDROBE, PLAY-\npen, table and. buffet desk, bassinette with pad and'stand, rifle,\n50-06 with 4K Weaver 'scope,\nnew, price: $150. phone 629-L.\nTRU-FIT WINDOW, DOOR AND\nframe* Unitat made \/to order. G.\nGolOft Lumber Co., 713 Victoria\nStreet* Phone \"970-L.\nCAWtia ' ULtli ' .WlCKlSR DOLt\ncarriage, as: new; a set of the\nBooks of Knowledge, and a firescreen. Pfiorie 1778-R,\nPEST? i-WrfflG. S tuW'.-\nSpecK- low prices Active Trad'\nlhg Co, 835 E. Cordova St. Van*\neouyer\nchase 1939 Dodge Coupe addressed\nto tbe undersigned will be considered. Garland & Gansner, P.O.\nBox 490, Solicitors for the Executrix of the Estate of Neva Pearle\nBorden, deceased.\ntCm SALE\"\"- '41 \"SfWM.fi.AKJS\ncoupe. No reasonable. offer re-\n:. \u2022fused, Phoqe 816-R-3.\n\"MODEL B FORD SEDAN. GOOD\nrubber, heater. Phone 803-X.\niCuntinued in Next Column)\n* I   .   '\u25a0'\"\nFOR sALE-UPHOLSTh-RY MA-\nchirte. $112, good shape. Paul Woy-\nkin, Cottonwood City.'\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC;\n\"THE CHICKS\nWHICH GIVE\nr RESULTS\"\nNOW is thPtirne tb order\n\u25a0. , '    your chicks.\nOver 30 years' experience In producing good poultry ls your guarantee of quality. *\/*(\nTen Pure and Cross Breeds to\nselect from White Leghorns, New\nHempihires, Barred Plymouth\nRocks, Rhode Island Reds, Leghorn Hampshire Cross, Austrn-\nWhlte Cross, Rock-Hampshire\nCross, Black Australorps, White\nRocks. Light Sussex.\nWrite for particulars and prices,\nend remember, \"It's Results Thet\nCount\"..                       ....\nRump & Sendqll Ltd,\nBox N.< Langley Prairie. B.C.,\nand Vernon, B.C.\nBUY'YOUR BABY CHICKS THIjS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City.B.C We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks. New Hampshlres and\nCrosses Catalogue on request\nWBANER P1G.S. RfiAbY APP.1L\n25th and May 15th, Apply Guy\nHamilton, R.R, No. 1.\nCOW FOB SALE - FRESHENS\nsoon, Also 6-week-old calf, 'J,\nPodmoroff, Blewett B.C.\nOUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nOPPORTUNITIES IN DRIVE-IN\n, hand'- but - the - window. D a I tf\nstores use Eagle Continuous\nFreezer to produce a firm ice\ncream-product with curl on top\nof cone. For Information write\n5815 Fifteenth, Seattle, Wash.\nFOR SALE - BUILDING WITH\nroom and equipment for store,\nwith four-room living quarters\nabove -in Dumont Subdivision,\nKinnaird. Write Box 251, Kinnaird, or phone 8003.\nSELLING OAFE EQUIPMENT\nWith fridges, Including walk-in\nfridge. Bargain prices. Oscar\nHougland, Creston, B.C. (For location inquire at Creston Taxi.)\nFOR SALE-SMALL CAFI1 BUS-\nIness with complete stock and\nbusiness in NelsOn business section. Immediate occupancy. _Box\n9762 Dally-News.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurance Co.. D L Kerr. Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and reason-\nable rates Vancouver. B.C\nALtf&ttoMc'S ANONYMOUS\nAlano Club meets Tu.s. and Frl..\n425 Baker. St. Nelson. Write P.0\nBox 388\nAblATSI PERSONAL RUBBER\nGOODS-24 assorted $1.03; 18 better quality assortment $1.03; 15\nfinest quality assortment $2,08.\nSpecial: All three assortments\nfor. $3,75, Tested, guaranteed.\nMoiled in plain, sealed package,\nIncluding -free Birth \u2022 C 0 n tr o 1\nbooklet and bargain catalogue of\nmarriage hygiene supplies. Western Distributors, Box 1023-RN,\nVancouver.. '.'\u2022''. !\u25a0\nRENTALS\nRAILROAD TELEGRAPHER PER-\nmanently located, desires furnished apartment within walking\ndistance to downtown office. Will\nconsider any offer. Contact Mr.\nWatts, Phone .57 at 557 Ward St.\nduring day.\nWANTEb-LIG'rlT JiOTJS\u00abIK\u00abt!*.-\ning room by business girl, by\nMay 4th. Phohe 1690, 0-6, Miss\nGiroux,\nBU-fiftLV CbtfPlti Mtmti tt>\nrent cottage at Willow Point. Box\n1733, Daily News.\nROOMS\u2014SLEEPING, DA^,'WE*_\u00a3\nor monthly rates. Allen Hotel,\n171 Baker St., Phone 383.\n3-RObM start: Mr taT aT\nCrawford Bay. Adults. Box 1891,\nDally News.       \":,'\"\nFOR SALE-CONNOB WASHING\nmachine, two tubs and stand, \u2014\nPhone 324-X.\nWE SALnS-tHiLCd'ttfiffliflER.\nator, 11 cubic feet,  with deep-\n* freere unit.Like new. Phone 160.\nrex gas Water heate^ 30-\ngal. water tank* 619 Silica Street\n'CHESS C6AN SALW-For SurI.\nrelief. Your Druggist Sella Crest.\nFOR SALE - VARIOUS TOOLS\nand galvanized pipe. Ph. 611-L-2.\nMl.C'ftONl'C HeArinG All'SS'-\nWrltc P.0 Box 39. Nelspn. B C\n\/\nMsan lafljj tea\nClassified Advortlslno Rates:\n15c ,per Une first insertion ond\nnon-consecutive  insertions\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion\n48c line tor 6 consecutive lnser-\n.. lions' ,     \\ \u25a0\n$1.56 line tor mpnth (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covert any\n.   number Of insertions. .\nPUBJ.IC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDEJtS, etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion.  16c per line\netch subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n_ 10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nOubtorlptlon Retail\n(Not Mora Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per we^k,\nin advance      30-\nBy carrier, per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month     ............    $ 1,25\nThree months ..,..'.       3.75\nSix months    ...'.......,....,,.,      7,50\nOne year ..,. 15.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\n* One month *   , I 1.00\nThree months         2,76\nSix months ,.....-,    * !8,50\nOne year , \u25a0   10.00\nWhere extra pottage,It required.\nabove rates plus postage.,\nMAgHjNBRY\n' NATIONAL MACHINERY CO\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS  FOR   MINING!\nSAWMILL, LODGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' IWHPMBN1\nItmulrfei invited     ',   ,\nGranville island Vanomwei I. BC\nl.SJNQLE-DRUM M'NtiH'WrTE.\nengine, new; < 1 double - drum\nwinch with engine, new; 1 double\ndrum only, used, Bayea Equip-,\nment Co., Cranbrook, B.C.\nWti SALfi-i?oftty JjtyCK*\nwith front end h.d. loader and implements. W. Dempsey, Kinnaird.\nBOATS ANP ENGINES\nFOR SALE\u201421-FT. CABIN BOAT.\nSleep; 2; 14 h.p. EvinrudO. Uied\n1 seaton, Ideal tor weekend fishing and hunting trips. Apply 320\nHall Mlpes Road, or phone 1542.\nWAMl.D.\" MISCELLANEOUS\nCEDAR POLES - AIL CLASSES\nand lengths Kootenay Foreit\nProducts Ltd\nBUSINESS AND'\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8 AND MINS  *\nBEPBMENTATIVB8 .   _\nI ^ VnJiioWSbN it' ce-., A*.\nsayers 301 Josephine 8t\u201e Ne)ibn,\nB- S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,. p C.\n\u25a0 ABtayer, Chemist' Mine Rep.\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAULING\nBULLDOlSWG, TRUCK HAULING,\nland and gravel. Day, hour or\ncontract. H. Harrop, Phone 117.\nENGINEER8 AND SURVEYORS\nR. K* COATES, STE\u201e NO. 8, 378\nBaker St., Nelson. Phone 1118\nB.C. Land! Surveyor. '   .\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST.,\nNelson, B.C, Surveyor, Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\n\u2022mmmrmtw\nMachini Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593   324  Vernon St.\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nBriiiSrh^occer\nLONDON (AP)-Results of soccer matches played Saturday in tht\nUnited Kingdom:\nENGLI8H LEAQUI    \u2022\nDivision I\nBurnley 2, Charlton A 0.\nCardiff C\u00aby 1, Aston Villa 2.\nLiverpool 2, Chelsea 0.\n, Manchester C 5, Blackpool 0.\nMiddlesbrough 5, Manchejter U 0.\nNewcastle U 2, Bolton W 3.\nPreston N E 2, Arsenal 0.\nSheffield W 4, Sunderland 0.\nStoke City 1. Derby County 2.\nTottenham H 3, Wolverhamp W 2.\nW Bromwlch 2, Portsmouth 0.\nDivision II\nBirmingham C 4, Everton 2.\nBury 2, Nottingham F 0.\nFulham 1, Sheffield itIX\nLeeds U 1, Doncaster R 1.\n\/Leicester C 3, Lincoln C 2.\nLuton Town 0, Brentford 1.\nNotts County 2, Hull City 0.\nPlymouth A 3, Swansea Town 2,\nRotherham U 0, Huddersfield T 0.\nSouthampton 6, Blackburn R 1.\nWest Ham U 8, Barnsley 1.\nDivision III (Southern)\nAldershot 2, Leyton Orient 0.\nBristol R 3, Newport C 1.\nColchester U 1, Northampton T 2.\nCoventry City 2, Bristol'1 City 2.\nExeter C 2, Crystal Palace 0.\nGilllngham 2, Watford \"1.\nMllwall 1, Brighton I.\nNorwich City 3, Torquay. U.O.\nQueens P R 1, Reading.0.\nShrewsbury T 1, Bournemouth 0.\nSwindon T 2, Ipswich T 0.\nWalsall V Southend U 1. :'\nDivision III (Northern) .\nAccrlngton S 1, Darlington 0.\nBarrow 1,* Port Vale 2.\nBradford 1, Scunthorpe U 1.\nChesterfield 2, Hartlepools U 0.\nGrimsby Town 1, Crewe Alex 0.\nHalifax Town 8, Rochdale 1.\nMansfield T 3, Bradford C 1.\nOldham A 1, Stockport CI,',\nTranmere R 4, Carlisle U 1.\nWorkington 0, Gateshead 2.\nWrexham 7, Chester 0. \u25a0\nYork City 8, Southport 1.\n8COTTISH CUP FINALS\n\u2022 Aberdeen 1, Rangers 1.\n8COTTI8H LEAGUE\nDivision A\nHibernian 7, Third Lanark 1.\nPartlck T 3, Airdrleoniahs 2.\nSt, Mirren 3, Ralth Rovers 2.\nDivision B\nKilmarnock 4, Forfar AO.\nMorton i, Queen's Park 2. *\nStirling A p, Albion Rovers 0.\nScottish Non-League\nAyr United 3, Celtic 1.\nCowdenbeath 1, Dunfermline A 1.\nFalkirk 0, East Stirling 1.    .\nMontrose'8, Arbroath 0.\nIRI8H CUP FINAL\nColeralne 0, Linfleld 5.\nIRISH LEAGUE\nDistillery 1, Pertadowh 0.   , ,\nMonks Weave Part\nOf Coronation Robe\nFARNBOROUGti, England (CP)\n\u2014In a tiny, fifth-floor cell of a\nHampshire monastery, monks st\nSt Michael's Abbey are weaving\npart of the Queen's Coronation\nrobes, -\nDom Edmund, in charge Of silk\nproduction, continues a centuries-\nold craft weaving tapestries from\nhis own threads. The tools have\nchanged little through the yeara..'\nVestments for use In Roman\nCatholic churches aire also made\nat the abbey.' The monks keep th,eir\nown grovel pt mulberry' .trees to\nraise silkworms;      : .\ni The first census in the Dominion\nof Pakistan In 1051 showed 75,042,-'\n000 population,    i\nTHE EXTENT OF reoent declines In bate metali pricei It shown\nby these charts. Both lead and zlno are well below the lowest leveli\nIn 1862, Tha result has been a curtailment of mliib activity'whloh\nhai been felt ihirply In the Kootenay country.\nSuburbanization, Small Teen Group\nFactors of This Decade Noted\nMONTREAL \u2014 Canada it ln the\nmidst of \"a boom in children and\na depression In teen-agers and\nyoung adults,\" with both factors\nexerting a decided effect on the\npresent and future economy of the\ncountry, the Banl. of Montreal comments today in its monthly Business\nReview entitled \"On Counting Canadian Heads.\"\nThe bank hba devoted the review\nto an analysis of some of the highlights of . Canada's present-day\npopulation figures and their business connotations. It notes that\nmuch of the information recorded\nby tha 1051 census li still being\nsorted and that \"because the results\nhave been appearing piecemeal,\ntheir Implications may not have\nbeen fully appreciated!\" ,\n\"The course of business Is,affected by many and varied influences,\"\nthe review remarks, The weather,\ndevelopments beyond our own border!, all have their effect upon the\ncouniry'e economic scene. \"But beneath all these transient and fortuitous movement! there Is the ground\nswell of the changing atee and composition of the' population;.\u2014 a\nground swell that gradually and\nsubtly, but none the less Inevitably\nand profoundly, altera demand and\nSupply, if or ih the lait analysis con-\nsumers and producers are people.\"\nA special supplement accompanying the . bank's analysis carries\ntables showing the growth of Cana?\nda's population from 1871 to 1951,\nand population increases of .the\nprovinces and metropolitan areas\nover the :0-year period from 1941\nto 1951. Other tables give further\nbreakdowns of population figures.\nAn interesting fact the supplement\nreveals Is that, despite the'heavy\nimmigration during recent years, 85\nper cent of the country's population\nKIU0N OAltT N-Vtf|_,;MONDA?( APRIL XI, J \u00bb53^\u00bb\nHall Imperial\nOil from   ;1\nCanadian Wells\nTORONTO (CP) - George L.\nStewart preildent of Imperial. OU,\nLtd., said Friday Imperial would\nlike to sec \"economic markets for\nWestern Canada gai developed as\nsoon as possible.\"\nAddressing the company's annual\nmeeting, he added:\n\"We do not feel that the distribution or marketing of gas is our business, but we do feel that the time\nhas come when we and others\nahould be able to realize a return\non the long efforts and large expenditures that have been made in\ndiscovering the gai reserves.\"\n6ALES SOAR *    *\nMr. Stewart laid sales of Imperial products during the first'\nthreo months of the yoar were larger that! In the corresponding period\nof 19l}2,\nHalf tho crude oil processed in\nImperial refineries laat year wai\nfrom Canadian fields, With com-,\nplotion ot.tho two now crude pipelines\u2014those from Superior, Wis., to\nSarnia, Ont, and from Edmonton to\nVancouver\u2014\"We expect that, Canadian crude will supply nearly two-\nthirds et the requirements\" of Imperial refineries, Ip fact, only two\nof the eompany'i nine refineries-^*\nat Dartmouth, N. S\u201e and Montreal\u2014\nwill then depend on crude from\nforeign aourcei,\nU. K. Cup Finals\nTo Be Televised\nin 1051 wai native born, a higher\nproportion than at ahy time since\nthe turn of the century.\nSUBURBANIZATION\n\"The past decade hos Been a resumption in the tendency for the\npopulation, aa it grows, to shift from\nthe farm to the city \u2014 a.long-term\ntendency which had been interrupted during the Ws.\" The country's\nurban population grew by 88 per\ncent between 1941 and 1951, whlltf\nthe farm population increased by\nonly seven per cent' ''Even more\ndramatic' than this urbanization,\"\nthe batik states, \"was the 'suburbanization' movement within the\nmetropolitan areas.\" For metropolitan centers \"this phenomenon will\nno doubt continue to' give rise to\nproblems of taxation, transportation,\nmuncipal services end.school facilities for years to come,\"\nTurning to the ago composition\n'the climate af public.(!BinlQn\"_ah4 qf..the population,*, thereyiew notel\nthat the size of the 10-24 age group\nhas Increased only slightly in recent years, in contrast to sharp increases ln the size of other age\ngroupi. This Is attributed to the\nlow marriage rate and low birth\nrate ot the depression years and,\nthe Bank of Montreal observes, its\nimpact will be most keenly felt\nduring the present decade.\n\"It signifies a tightening of-an\nalready tight labor situation for lt\nis from thla age (roup that new\nentrants into the labor market must\n(some,\", comments' the. review, \"It\n.is ireadlly apparent that without\nsubstantial Immigration there will\nbe no.significant easing of the stringency Until the 1980* For employers at large, the keen -competition\nfor new recruits may bring about\ncertain changes in employment\npolicy and a reddnsideration of the\nrole and retirement age of older\nworkers.'\"\nLONDON , (CP)-Brltaln's Teot;\nball Cup final-rtbe:big,show of.the\nsoccer season\u2014will be shown on\ntelevision in Canada and Britain, It\nwai reported Saturday.\nPublished reports here ssy the\nentire game will be televised under\na deal between the CBC and the\nBBC. The BBC originally intended\nto film only the second half of\nthe match, lt was reported, but the\nCBC offered to put up enough\nmoney so the entire game could be\ntelevised in both \u00abouhtries.\nThe cup final, climax of a season-\nlong sudden-death tournament, will\nbe played at Wembley Stadium, a\nweek ftom today.'.\u201eThavrlval teams\nare Blackpool and .Bolton Wander*\ners. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\";'.' .*,',*',     '    .\u25a0: \u2022' \u25a0\nAga Khan Stops\nAlyr$Racer   o\n, BRSSCIA, Italy (API-Tie Aga\nKhan Saturday forced his son,\nPrince Aly'Khan; to withdraw from\nthis weekend's hazardous Italian\nroad speed classic, the Mille Miglla\n\u2014thousand mile race.\nPrince Aly,. an avid auto race\nfan, had entered his Alfa Romeo\nracer*with Goffredo Zehender of\nFrance aa his eo-drlver.\nAt the last minute the Aga Khan\nsaid \"no.\" He insisted the course\nthat Italians call''the race' of 7000\ncurves\" is too dangerous.\nPrlnpe Aly was in India, until\neight days ago. He came to Milan\nFriday, accompanied by Hollywood\nstar Gene TierneyT then Tiurried,'tb\nHrescla to look over his racer   *'\nPreferred Prison\nCamp to Europe\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Pfc. Tibor Rubin\ncould have walked out of a Com-\nmuiiist prison camp a free man if\nhe had agreed to go home to Hungary.' . : ., .    , ,...' .>..\/\n\"They asked me many times. I\ntold them no,\" the 23-year-old Hungarian-born aoldier said in an army\nhospital Saturday.\nRubin, to the U.S. Army, was repatriated at Panmunjom this week.\nAlthough he lived in the United\nStates only 18 months, he considers\nIt home.    '   'll... *.\nCAPTIVE 80 MONTHI\nIn 80 months as a captive of the\nChinese Reds, Rubin said ha went\nthrough experiences as terrible as\nany of the Allied prisoners repatriated so far.\n' Yet, he -laid 14 months he ,spent\nin a German concentration camp\nduring the Second World War were\nworse.;\n\"Over 2000. of my buddies died in\nsix months at the camp where I\nwas in North Korea,\" Rubin said.\n\"In the concentration campa in Get-\nmany, I lost my mother and lather\nand my sister.\"\nBRINKOPF OUT     \"\u25a0':\u25a0\u25a0 i.\nFOR (JO DAYS\nCHICAG6 (AP)* - Power-hlttlng\nLeon Brlhkopf, who slammed 27\nhomers for Los Angeles last season\nwas .placed on the' -voluntary retired list Friday by, Chicago Cubs\nwith a back ailment that *ill\nshelve him at least 60 days.\nThe 25-year-old third-basemen\nhai beer* under observation for a\nbad back the last three weeks, and\nfurther treatment includes the\nwearing of a brace: '\u25a0 O;\nBUENOS AIRES (Reuters) \u2014Argentina will import \u00a38,000,000 of\nBritfeh-made goods under an Anglo-Argentine trade agreement sign*\ned Saturday. An official-announcement said: \"Talks on; other important' aspects of ^Anglo-Argentine\ntrade are continuing?' but gave no\ndetails. It also, said Britain agreed\nto Import quotas- of Argentine\n| goods.\nBest Year for\nOil Company\n' MONTREAL \u2014 Tht year 1952\nwas in many ways the best in the\nhistory of McColl-Frontenac Oil\nCompany, Limited, T. ,C. Twyman,\npresident, told the-annual meeting\nof stockholderi held in Montreal,\nand. the pictures continues favorable\nfor 1953.\nEarnings for the first quarter,\nafter taxes and preferred dividends\nare estimated at $1,313,253, or $0.50\nper share common, aa compared\nwith $1,046,488, or$0.40 a Share, for\nthe first three months of 1952. Total\nsales of gasolines increased 4.0 percent; sales of automotive lubricating\noils increased 8.7 percent; sales ot\nindustrial oils Increased 7.6 percent;\nand sales of greases Increased 7 percent They continue the growth of\nthe past several yeara and should\nbe further stimulated by* the new\nsals training methods the company\n.has introduced and which have\nbeen favorably received.\nIn the Wert, eompahyi refinery\nat Edmonton, built In the lait two\nyean, It rated at a dally erude\ncapacity of 6500 barrel!, whleh It\nbeing exoleded. Its eipaolty villi\nshortly   have   to   be   enlarged.\nAnother development lo the 700-\nmile,' 24-lnoh pipeline, from the\n'   oil field! of Alberta to Vancouver,\n'whloh will toon be brought Into\n\u2022ervlee, with. Its capacity ef 160,-\n- OOO1 barreli per day. fhli I't ,i\ncommon barrier line, operated by\nTrane-Mountain Pipe Line Company.  With \u201e Ito  completion late\n.thlt   year,   It   le   reasonable   ta\nassume that, allowables will  be\nIncreased ind' that  McColl will\nbenefit proportionately. '\nJi H. BLACK . 1\nAPPOINTMENT  of  Jamet   H..J\nBlaek at vloe-pretldont of Conad-  ,\nIan Chemical end Cellulose Com-   \u2022\npony, Limited hai bean nnnouno- -\ned by M, W. Mockenrlo, exeou-\ntive' vloe-praildent   Mr,   Blaok\nwill continue at treaturar of the\noompany, a petition he hat held\nalnea Itt formation a year ago,\nA native of the United Statei,\nMr. Black wai educated In Sedt-\niand, where he received hli certificate ai a chartered occountont\nIn 1935 he oame te Canada,-and\ntwo  yeart  later  moved  to  tha .\nUnited Statu where ha obtained\nhit CPA Dlirlng World War III\nhe larved with the United Statei _.\nNavy..   ..,.', . \u2022';\nP.'Ior   te. Joining   Canadian\nChemical and Collulote Company, r\nLimited, he was at.oclatod with\nthe    belan'ete    Corporation    ef .\nAmerica. '     \u25a0 '\"--\nSPEEDY AIRCRAFT\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) \u2014 Piloting\nan - all-Swedish jet- plane .129,\nknown as the \"Flying Barrel,\"\nCaptain Nils Hellquist of the Swedish Air Force hung up a mark of\n693 miles an hour over a distance\nof 326 miles. He was aided ty a\npowerful tail wind.\nLead Price Oil\nHalf-Cenl Again\nNEW YORK (AP)-PredletloBii\nthat copper prices are headed lowtr\ngained aupport lait week when custom smelters began selling tht refined metal, a'. 39% cents a pound\u2014\na quarter-cent* below the quotation\not major producer!.\nAt the somo time, load lost an-\nnother half-cent a pound whllo tin\nstaged a email recovery at 84 cents\na pound, New York. j\nMajor metals pricei:\nCopper \u2014 29.5-80 cents a pound,'\ndelivered. Foreign 80-88.5 eents,\nNtw York,   :\nLead \u2014 li centi a pound, Kew\nYork; 11.60 centi, It Louii.    - .\nZinc \u2014 H cents a pound, Stat St.\nLouis; 11.83 centt. New York.\nSilver \u2014 85.26 centi ta ounce,\nNew York; 74 pence, London.\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Routers)-Results of\nSaturday's Rugby Union gamea ta\nShe United Kingdom:\nBarnstaple 11. Telgnmouth 0.\nBedford 2J, Bradford 0. ,1\/.\n\u2022 Birmingham 8, Ebbw Vale 14. H\nCamborne 0, Redruth 0.\nCheltenham 0, Cardiff 11.\nCoventry. S,5'rBlstol 11.\nDevonport 13, Gloucester I.\n.Exeter 8, Bridgend 8.\nHartlepool R 1B,.R: F..OakM 11\nHeadlngley 0, Halifa* 14.     ,\nMbseley'6, BaiS\"K\t\nNewbridge 11, Newport 0.     \u2014..\nNorthampton 9,'Notts t.  '      -\u25a0\/\u2022,'\n,   Penryn 0, Newto8 Abbot J.    \\, .\nPenzance 16,_Falmouth 0.\n^Plymouth A 3, Swansea I.      '\u2022'\nPontypool 3, Llaneliy t.\nTaunton 11, Stroud 3.\nWeston'6, Somerset Pollet 0.\nNeath 21, West Walts 1.\nExmouth 8, Torquay A VA\nAbertiUery 8, Cross Keys.    \u00bb,\nROyALtFOLIAGE\nLONDdN (CP) t- The Crown\nand the royal cipher reproduced ln\nflowers and* foliage form part of\nthe Coronation decorations In\nLondon'*: famous parks. Thousands\nof plants are being nurtured to\ncome into full bloom* by June 2.\nwith, bedding -schemes dominated\nby red. white olid bluef as well as\npurple and gold. >  .'\nfor MINING\nCOMPANIES\nWe are equipped to\ngive you service   ,\non any kind of mining\nforms* o\nPayrolls, cheques, time\ncards, assay sheets, mill\nrecords, letterheads, envelopes, vouchers, etc.\nWo will gladly'give you an estimate\nof your, printing needs.\nNelson IJaily News\n\/ PRINT Ii<!(|DEPARTMENT\nNelson, K\"C.\n_____________________\n_________________________________\u25a0\n pppl-p-p^^\nJO\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953\nW     A \"\u25a0-. \u2014-r-77.\u2014: ,.'.,..'     ! ...-- \u25a0 . 7\u2014\nTHE PHARMACY ACT\nOF BRITISH COLUMBIA\ndoos not exist for the protection of\ntho Pharmacist, but for tho\nPROTECTION  OF THE PUBLIC\ntoday, Nelson is host to the officers of\nthe association which has made the\nabove statement possible.\nWE ARE HAPPY TO WELCOME\n: Dr. W. A. Matthews\nMr. A. F. McDuffee-\nMr. F. H. Fullerton\nMiss Verna Enves\nA MM\nPRUGS LTD.\nYoshida's Parly\nScores Triumph\nTOKYO (API \u2014 Prime Minister\nShigeru . Yoshida's Liberal party\nrolled up an'Impressive triumph in\nFriday's Senate House of Councillors election, possibly strengthening Yoshida's position ln his fight\nto keep his job.\nThe Liberals had nailed 38 of 97\nSeats bf 5 p.m., and Independents\nwho frequently vote with the Liberals had collared 25 more, The\nLeftist Socialists had ll. feats, the\nnext highest, total. The small but\nvocal Communist party didn't win'\na.seat. \",'     \u2022'\nGeneva Meeting\nEnds Hopefully\nGENEVA (Reuters) \u2014 A seven-\nday economic1 conference among 25\nEuropean nations from both sides\nsf the Iron Curtain ended Saturday\nwith optimism \u25a0 over future East-\nWest. trade. \u25a0'-,;\u2022\nGunnar Myrdal, executive secre-i\ntary of the United Nations\" economic commission f bt Europe which\nconvened' the conference, told a\npress conference: \u201e\n\"The meeting Was. by far the\nmost important and .encouraging\ntride ni'eeting we have had in the\npast six years. That is a view shared\n\u25a0by ill the delegates.\"\nHe said the delegates laid the\ngroundwork for full-scale trade negotiations ih various European capitals. *\nCocktails Shock\nJapanese Society\nTQKYO (Heuters)*7-The Japanese\ntemperance society Friday protested\nto Emperor Hirohito because his\nitenl. Crown-Pripce Akihito, IB, had\nbeen reported sipping cocktails on\nhis current wOrld trip.\nA solemn delegation of five left\na note at the palace saying Akihito\nwas. openly revolting against the\nJapanese law which forbids alcoh.ol\nto ndnors;        .\nAkihito officially tame of .age\nat 18-^two'years earlier than re*\nquired by lay.:\n.TOO^OUSE, France (Reuters) \u2014\nLouis Brassat, 18, simple-minded\ncoh of a local farmer, told police\nFriday he chopped his father,\nmother and older brother to death\nwith a hoe and then burned down\ntwo farmhouse because uiey had\ncriticized the way he looked after\n*tbt\u00ab cows. '\nOak Bay Nominates\nGunderson, Saanich\nChooses Snowsell\nVICTORIA (CP) -Finance Minister Elnar Gunderson has been\nnominated to' represent the Social\nCredit party in Oak Bay in the\nJune 8 provincial election.   '\nMr. Gunderson won unanimous\n-upport from the constituency nominating convention after Humphrey\nGolby declied nomination.\nMr. Gunderson' was \"drafted\"\nearlier this year by a group representing a large part of the association membership.\nMr. flolby said he turned down\nthe nomination \"because I feel it's\nin the best interests of all.\nMeanwhile, Frank Snowsell, CCF\nmember of the legislature.was nominated to contest Saanish constituency for the party again this year.\nMr, Gunderson told the 42 dele<\ngates at his nominating convention\nthat the Social Credit party will be\n\"back in power without a doubt.\"\n\"We'll have a large majority .. ,\nwe're an hAheSt government ahd\nwe intend ti stiy that way,\"   .\nBennett Confirms\nDecontrol Date\nVICTORIA (CP) -.Premier W.\nA. C. Bennett Friday confirmed\nthat decoritrol ot milk prices in B.C.\nwill not take place May 1 as originally planned.1 .\nReason for the delay, he said, is\nthat all the details of decontrol\nhave not been worked out partly\ndue to the illness bf Agriculture\nMinister Kenneth Kiernan, con'\nfined to his Chilliwaok home on\ndoctor's orders. The minister last\nwejek expected decontrol to go\nahead as scheduled.\nThe premier could not say when\ndecontrol Will be ordered and it\nnow appears decontrol will not be\ninstituted until towards the end of\nMay.\nSeek Banning of\nCoronation Film\nDUBLIN, Eire (A*)\u2014An indignant Irish nationalist group, has\ncalled on Irish cinema workers \"to\nban the film of Queen Elizabeth':\nCoronation from movie theatres.\n\"In normal circumstances, the cor*\npnatlon of foreign -nionarchs is of\nno,more than passing Interest to\nIrishmen,\" said the group, which is\npledged to fight against the partition of Ireland, in a letter to the\nMovie Workers' Union.'\nBut because of the powerful\nBritish - propanganda machine,\" It\nadded, \"our people are being subtly\ncoerced Ijito the acceptance of an\nEnglish queen as queen of part ot\nIreland.\"\nThe announcement a few weeks\nago that the Queen would continue\nto call herself Queen, of Great Britain and* Northern Ireland drew\nstrong protests from Irish national*\nists who oppose British rule in\nNorthern Ireland.\nPTA Big Business Nelson Delegate,\nlearns; Effective Living Discussed\n\/&*\nAWARD WINNER here Is Brian Roberta, 17-year-old Nelson\nHlqh School student, shown receiving a Klwanis Club safe-driving\ncertificate from City Police Chief Robert Harshaw, left. Chief Harshaw praised Roberts for using care during his two year's driving\nexperience.\u2014Dally News phqto, -   . *\nCan't Up Taxes More, Says City;\nWages Cover Mere Needs -Workers\nDEATHS\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nWashington-Sir Albert Seaver-\nyear, 56, head of.the British team\nwhich took part in working out ah\nextension ot the international wheat\nagreement iri- Washington in recent\nmonths.\nLos Angelfs^-William Moser, 37,\noriginator and producer of the American television show \"Space Cadet.\"      \u2022:.\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0. ' - .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022:\nLondon \u2014 Commissioner Charles\nHubert Baugh, 72, territorial commander of the Salvation Army in\nCanada fi-om 1946 to 1951.\nMontreal\u2014Msgr. Adolph Sylves-\ntre, 76, arehdeac6n. of the Montreal\narchdiocese.:'i   \u25a0-._\u25a0\u25a0 ' .\nPasadena, Gall*, \u2014 Richifd J.\nMuirhead. 79, founder ol Toronto'*\nfirst cafeteria 48 years ago. .wWch\nhe built into a chain of restaurant'\nbearing his name.\nPte. Baker Flown\nTo Kure, Japan\nBy BILL BOS8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nPANMUNJOM, Korea (CP) \u2014\nPte. Arthur J. Baker, second Canadian freed by the' Communists in\nthe current exchange of sick and\nwounded prisoners Of war, headed\nfor Kure, Japan, by air.:Saturday.\nBaker will receive a thorough\ncheckup in hospital there before\nheading for home in Montreal.\nThe 31-year-old soldier, asmem-\nber of the Royal 22nd Regiment,\nwas among. the prisoners .turned\nover to the Allies Friday.        %\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n\u2022*' City ot Nel\u00ab6ri,':it:\u00bb cohciliation\nhoard hearing Friday, argued that\nwith a tax rate of 64 .mills, they\ncould tax citizens no further to\ncounter a Civic Employees Federal\nUnion stand- that higher wages\nwere needed to raise standards\nabove mere essentials.\nCivic employees are. seeking a 22-\ncent-an-hour wage increase and 10-\ncent differential for, cement finishers, sewer maintenance men and\ngarbage workers, Present basic\nwage for laborers is $1.18.\nSitting on the conciliation board,\ncalled after collective bargaining\ncollapsed, were A. R. Dahlstrom,\nsolicitor, at Trail, as chairman,' William Evans representing the city\nand Aubrey Burton, business agent\nfor Trail, and District Civic Workers, representing the .union.\n' Wages paid civic employees are\nbelow those ot west Kootenay centres, Trail, Rossiand and Tadanac,\nthe union pointed out.\nThe city has responsibilities to its\nemployees \u2022 as, well as its citizens,\nthe union felt, and should be duty-\nbound to pay wages similar to\nothex'district centers. City in .1954\npaid 13 per cent less than the three\ndistricts and coast centers.\n, Two family men, Dennis T. Underwood and Richard A. Grodzki\nwere called to give evidence that\nwith present wageB they could give\ntheir families only basic essentials\nwith nothing left for entertainment,\nadvanced education for their children or'ability to meet doctor bills,\nUnderwood receives $256 a month\narid Grodzki with three children,\n$251.\nA city, bus driver, Gordon Sar\ngent told the board responsibility\nand skill Involved in city bus driv*\ning exceeded that of long distance\ndriving considering number of\nstops and school children using the\nbuses each day, but drivers' wages\ncompared unfavorably with Grey*\nhound and sehool bus drivers; i\nLeo .Gansner, quoting wige\nagreements froril Pentlcton, Vernon,\nKamloops and Kelowna, pointed\nout the city's scale wit's considerably\nabove these cities of comparable\nsize -and industry.\nWith the present drop in the edst\nof living, the city maintairied,\nworkers, at their 1952 wage level\nare actually better off than a year\nago. .\nSince 1949 the cost of living had!\nincreased 15 per cent, the city explained, while wages had been increased .30 per cent.\nStill' another argument held by\nthe city was the tax rate lifted to\n64 mills, in fairness to citizens\ncould be pushed no higher to in\nelude wage increases. ,. ich increases had not been budgeted\nwhen the rate was set.       *\nFor the ultimate in motoring satisfae-\n''.\u25a0'\u25a0 ' '\":'. ,.,,.        ;'* \u2022 y.\ntion, we urge you ft? see the new\nStudebaker now! on display.\n\u25a0We service what we sell. Any make or model is o\nbetter ear after it has been setviced at\nDefoe Service\nDrive in Today\nDeFoe Service\nLtd.\nPhone 1234 \"Bill Defoe\" 213 Baker St.\nBurma lo Seek\nUN Sanctions\nRANGOON (Reuters) \u2014, Burma.\nwill, demand United Nations sanctions against the Chinese Nationalists unless all Nationalist guerrillas\nare withdrawn from the Burma\nfrontier by September, U Kyaw Ny-\nein, acting Burmese foreign minip-\nter, .announced Saturday*.\nHe told a press conference Burma\nis not completely satisfied with the.\nUnited Nations resolution on Burma's complaint.\nThe UN poltical committee voted\nthree days ago to declare that 'foreign\" forces In Buhria.must be disarmed and interned or evacuated\nfrom Burma forwith.\n. Pupils of Gra^o. Seven, under the\ndirection ot Howard Meredith, entertained members of the. Junior-\nSenior High Schools P\u00abenf. Teacher Association at the monthly meeting. The young players presented\nthe Pyramls and Thisbe scene from\nShakespeare's Midsummer, Nights\nDream with obvious appreciation of\nIts humorous situations and historical setting. .\nStudents taking part in the skit'\nwere Lynn Burnie, Norma Evans,\nBob Gates, Judith Godfrey, Kath<\nIeen Holllngtoh, Lynn Derby, and\nRoy King, \u25a0' Arnold Bates, Joan\nWalker and Betty Duckworth. Margaret Reisterer assisted with the\ncostumes.   *\nAfter a short business sesston,\nduring which Mrs. Steadman gave\na report on the Medical Advisory\nCouncil, arid a group Volunteered\nto make flowers for the High\nSchool entry in the Drama Festival,\nMrs. F. Stevens' gave a report of\nthe recent PTA convention iri Van*\ncouver. ;,' '','       '   f, \u2022*.\u25a0\u25a0:    \u25a0''\u25a0*,\nPTA is \"Big Business,\" Mrs.\nStevens said she learned at the cori-\nvention. Theme-v of the three-day\nevent was Live Effectively and\nvarious speakers.from the U.S. and\nCanada had outlined ways of doing this, Teaching was .likened to\npouring from a big-Jug into a little\nmug, Parents and teachers together\nmake the world of tomorrow,' and &\n'sound foundation for a sound future\nis a return of family life. PTA\ncould help the teacher shortage by\nstudying and supporting programs\nof the Teachers-Federation ind advocating better teacher training and\nsalaries.,.-,'* \u25a0 :.~\u25a0-,-,-.- ', ;.\n. \"We must realize;\" the delegate\nquoted, \"that education is changing, and we must keep informed\nWe cannot afford to be indifferent\nor namby-pamby about anything\nwhich affects our children.\"\nMrs. Stevens spoke ot the number of riien attending the convention and the great contribution\nwhich they made to the work of\nthe P-TA.. \u25a0'-.'.\nFIRST GRADUATES\nIntroducing a panel discussion on\nthe Effective Living course; J. A,\nFraser of, the High Schoi- said that\nalthough the course was introduced\nas Effective Living in 1950, it was\nactually a new name for three old\ncourses, Physical Education, Health\nToy Balloons Burn\nStore Customers\nBRUNSWICK,'Germany (CP)\u2014\nExploding toy balloons severely\nhurried five persons and slightly\ninjured\" 17 at the opening of a new\ndepartment store here. The gas-\nfilled balloons were released with\nsmall gifts attached to th-m. Police\nbelieve the balloons exploded as\nburning cigarets touched them.\nMOIRA MUST REST\n! LONDON (AP)\u2014Moira Shearer,\n27-year-old ballerina, was advised\nby physicians Friday to give, up\ndancing until she has recovered\nfully from an injury to a tendon\nshe suffered last month. She agreed\nto take a rest, and it was expected\nshe would* not take part In any\nmor* performances by the Sadler's\nWells ballet at the Royal Opera\nHouse this season,,      '.'.fAH.\nGENEVA (CP)\u2014 Twp.shlps carrying 2290 immigrants will sail .for\nCanada this v week from German\nports. Most of the migrants are\nGerman and Austrian farmers arid\ndependents.of farmers already settled in Canada.'\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nand Guidance. This year's High1\nSchool graduates will be the first i\nto cbmpldte the course in its new\nform and some time will be needed\nbefore its full value can be estimated.\nSpeaking on some aspects of the\nmaterial dealing with family and\ncommunity lit., Mi's. C. F. Kearns\nread excerpts from text books used\nby teachers or available to pupils\nthrough -the 'school library. .These\nchapters, she explained,' amplified\nthe answers > to such questions as\nwhat do children expect from parents \u2014 listing such things as example, education, religious training, shelter\u2014ond what do parentB\nexpect from children -i tor Instance,- respect, obedience, consideration for the family name, and\nso on. Discussions outlined by the\ntetx bdokS endeavored to explain\nhow these expectations can and\nshould be fulfilled. I     .. \u25a0\u2022\/\nMrs. E. B. Home of the High\nSchool staff spoke on the handling\nof moral issues by the course, and\nshowed how the schools try to\nteach facts, leaving the' teaching\nof atjltudes to,the home. In dealing\nwith alcohol, for Instance, the Effective Living course aims to show\nhow drinking habits can be affected by personality traits and\nmental'health. \\\nMrs. F. Drew, who said she had\nstudied the books on alcohol during this weekend.to the* point of\nfearing a synthetic hiccup, said she\nhad found, them well balanced.\nThey seemed to her to\/give facts\nwhich would help.the student,.with\nthe. guidance of', hip parents, to\nmake up his own' mind. The text,\nshe said, showed 'how tensions\nsometimes lead* to drinking, and\nalso the desire to dominate and\nsucceed. Drinking was described\nas an old and long-established social custom \\vhich the pupil must'\nbe prepared to riieet in later life.'\nFacts were alsp given, she said,\nwhich showed alcohol in quantity\nto be a depressive and not, as so,\ncomiriorily thought, a stimulant,\n, The president, J. A*. B. Wills, was\nln the chair.\nRefresh Your\nWardrobe With\n\"new\nSUIT\nThese superb new Spring\nsuits, mean years of good\nlooks through the rough-,\nest going.   '-\nSingle and double\nbreasted models\n$59.50 and Up\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPHONE 31 BOX 100\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nAnsae Day Honored\nAt Ottawa Memorial\n6TTAWA (CP) \u25a0'\u2014' High cohimW\nsioners F. M. Forde of ..Australia\nand T. C. Hislop-of New Zealand\nplaced wreaths at .the national war'\nmemorial Saturday to commemorate Anzac Day. .'..\nThe anniversary of the landing of\nAustralian and New Zealand Army\nCorps at Gallipolt in 1915 will be\nmarked Sunday with services in AU\nSaints ChurchV The services will\nbe attended by Governor-General\nMassey and the high commissioners\nof the two countries.   ...\nWOMEN VOYERS HECKLED\nKARACHI (AP)\u2014Veiled Moslem\nwomen went fo the polls in Karachi's first,municipal elections Friday, and extra police had tb be\ncalled out to break up a near-riot\ncaused by male hecklers. Karachi's\n1,500,000 adults elected a city council of 98 members and there were\n.880 candidates. Three women were\ncandidates, ....\nCANCER 80CI$TY REPORT\nTOMWTQ (CP) \u2014The annual\nfinancial' report Of the Canadian\nCancer Society shows receipts during 1952 as $1,412,482. Surplus for\nthe year was $91,883. Expenses for\nthe year amounted to $1,320,799\nwhile Uie surplus added to the\ncarry-over from 1951 .amounted to\n$829,040.\/ ;.\".,'\u2022'\u25a0-     \u25a0    '\u25a0,'\n876 Baker St\nMed. Arte Bin.\nPHONE\u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nPhono 285\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED a REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 FRONT ST. PHONE 6S\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVI8UAL TRAINING ,\nMedical,Arte Building\nSuite 204 Phone 141\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n,'. .itthaj;   \u2022:-'...'\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall'Street: - \u2022 -'* Phone 14\u00bb\nCAMPBEU, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\n'Chartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n678 Baker St Phone 2M\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 9-7\n678 Baker St\nWIGINTON\n'MOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC -BUICK\nO.M.C, TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\u2022Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St        Phone 381\nHove tho Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE*.!\u00bb!;.,. .*\u25a0,:\u2022\u2022.\nate\nVour Own Home Made.\"Bread\nIs Tastier Made Prom'-\nEllison's U-Bake\nBread Mix\nAsk Your Grocer or Call 238\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\n\"*' Lot Us Dispense Your\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nSave With Safety at Your\nRexall Store\n\u25a0 Try Us tor LoWer Prices\"\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n.\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\n'Phone 34, Day \u2014 807-R, Night\n.   ;        BOX 460\nJfews of the Day\nRATES: SOo line, 48\u00ab line black face type; larger type rates ori\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount tor prompt payment\nPlease support Guide and Brownie cookie sales. SOc per package.\nL.A. to F.O.E. prize winners\nMrs. Coleman and Mrs. Hille.\nfor Sale\u2014New automatic washer:\n$300. Phone 734-R.,\nKootenay Decorators\nPhone Long Distance, Shoreacres:\nFishing Licences.\nJack Boyce Men's Wear.\nHear R. G. Simms over CKLN tonight at 7:30, speaking on the CCF.\nFootwear tor girls and boys. All\nsizes at the\nCHILDREN'S  SHOP\nMonks cloth in stripes, plaids and\nplain, 48\" wide. $1.79 a yard and up.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L :\n....  FLO.ON      .*\nRubberset Nylon Brushes.\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\nLawn Furniture, assembled or In\nkits. Fotterly Wood Products, 1007\nCottonwood* St., Phone 1548?\nEverything in seeds. Lawn grass,\nvegetable^ and. flower seeds\u2014package and bulk Steele Brlggs,' * \u25a0*\n\u25a0'\u25a0' \u25a0 \u25a0 :>HiF_>ERsojrso-:'\nBlaok Currants,. Red Currants,\nGooseberry Bushes and Strawberry\nRhubarb  Roots  at. Mac's Flower\nRun* fflfr  '-'   \u2022;*.\u25a0';.-\u25a0; v\nIF YOU HAVE SCRAP METAL\nTO SELL, COLUMBIA TRADING\nCO. IS THE PLACE-902 FRONT\nSTREET.\nChild Health Centre and Preschool Immunization Clinic today,\nChurch of Redeemer HaU 2 to\n4 p.m. ..   .      \u2022\nH BUTTERFIELD cant fix it,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done arid fully, guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.'\nRoller skates. Double ball bearing wheels, adjustable to any size,\nfirm heel support, and felt ankle\npad. - HIPPERSON'S. ' -   \u25a0 . .\nAPPLICATORS\nWe are prepared to take on any\nbuilt-up  or  asphalt roofing  Job.\nSide, wall shingles and shakes. All\ninquiries promptly attended to.\nD. B. Merry Luniber Co,- TraU.\nExclusive Factory Arrangement\u2014\nTan can now choose draperies, trpm\nthe largest selection In Nelson., A\ncomplete factory output'te available'\nin all patterns, pleat styles, linings,\netc. ir- Home Furniture Ltd., 840\nBaker Street       : .' \u2022\u2022' \/'*   ',.\n,    VENTILATORS        .\nAluminum ventilators fer gable\nand eave ventilation. Four sizes and\ntwo styles to choose from. Also\naluminum eave sheeting at\nT. H. WATERS 4 CO. LTD.\nPhono 108 -101 Hill St - Nolson\nIN.Me-MfllJIAMS\nla loving memory of my dear\nhusband Joseph Grill who died\nApril 97, 1044. From*his wife and\n:\u00ab-01liM]_.:s,. \/.\nm\nWhen in Trouble \u2022 \u2022.\nRemember35\nA fULLY EXPERIENCED\nWRECKER CREW WILL BE\nON THE WAY WITHIN\nA FEW MINUTES.\n24 HOUR SERVICE\nAT.\nCompany, Limited\n'\" \"I. *    . ;.'*'''.     ;S   '.\"'.     .   .\"'*   ' \u2022.    '\nThi largest and mott completely equipped garage\nin the Interior of Gritish Columbia.\n323 Vernon St.'\nNelion, B. C.\nmm\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_04_27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427997","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"}]}}