{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429001":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-03-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1956-01-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429001\/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":" Request for Higher\nRelief Payments\nTurned Down\nOttawa Expects Administration\nConcessions Will Mollify Ontario\nBy JOHN LeBLANC '\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Federal authorities Thursday rejected a new Ontario request for higher treasury payments for unemployment relief but were optimistic the\nprovince will sign an agreement based generally on\nOttawa's latest terms.\n^~\n. A two-man Ontario cabinet delegation heard from federal ministers that the central government\nis sticking to its basic financial\nformula on relief aid but is willing to meet Ontario requirements\non administrative procedures.\nFederal informants said later\nthey feel their concessions on administration for Ontario give good\nprospect that the province will\nenter into an agreement with the\ngovernment here.\n\"We expect nine provinces to\nsign,\" one high official said after\nThursday's conference. Quebec is\nregarded here as a certain holdout.\nAt Toronto, Premier Frost said\nhe will have no comment until his\nministers return from the Ottawa\nmeeiing.\nTHREE SIGN  UP\nUp to^now, three provinces have\nsigned up for federal-provincial\nagreement terms sent out from\nOttawa last month. They are Newfoundland, British Columbia and\nPrince Edward Island. It was reported here Alberta has advised\nthe government it is signing, but\nits official document has not yet\nreached Ottawa.\nProvincial Treasurer Turner of\nManitoba said Thursday at Winnipeg his province is awaiting\nclarification of some aspects of\nthe latest federal offer before\nsigning. He said Manitoba is expected to net \u25a0 an extra $150,000\nto $200,000 from concessions made\nby the federal government to\nprovinces in its newest draft\nagreement.\nThe federal concession!, announced by Prime Minister 8t.\nLaurent to the Commons Wednesday, would have the treasury\nmake payments to the provinces\n- for some types of aid to the\nneedy beyond the scope originally contemplated In the central government's first offer last\n^iimrjuMv. - -~ , \\- i - vr-\nHowever, no large amount of\nmoney  Is Involved. The whole\nprogram\u2014even  If all  provinces\nwere   In   It\u2014might   run   to  no\nmore than  $10,000,000 from the\nfederal  treasury under existing\nemployment conditions.\nThe  federal   government's  formula,   with   some   variations   to\nmeet   an   abnormal   situation   in\nNova Scotia at the start, is that\nParliament's treasury would provide   half   the   cost   of. care   for\nneedy   unemployed   over   .45   per\ncent of.an  individual  province's\npopulation.\nEdinburgh Scotsman\nHas New Editor\nParliament\nThursday\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe Progressive Conservatives\nand the CCF moved want-of-confidence motions in the government\nafter attacking its wheat policies.\nOpposition Leader Drew proposed a five-point program on the\nwheat surplus, including immediate cash advances for farm-stored\nwheat.   ,\nCCF leader Coldwell said the\ngovernment's policy of guaranteeing bank loans of farm-stored\ngrain is inadequate, cumbersome\nand bound with red tape.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent said\nthe government plans no legislation this sessiog to establish a Canada Council.\nRev. E. G. Hansell, acting Social Credit leader, summed up the\nPrairie situation^ as starvation in\nthe midst of plenty.\nS. R. Balcom L-Halifax urged\nthat the West Indies be made Canada's 11th province and that the\nMaritimes be granted far north\nland.\nThe Commons will continue the\nthrone speech debate. The Senate\nis adjourned until Tuesday.\n-\u2014\na\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy. Occasional light rain or rain and snow\nmixed. Continuing mild, Light\nwinds. Low-high at Crescent Valley 30-40; Cranbrook 25-40.\nNELSON, B. C\u201e CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, JANUARY  13,  1956      Not  More Than Co Dally,  10o Saturday\nNo. 222-\nA CHILEAN ARMY PATROL walks along\ntracks In a Santiago railway station after military force took over the railway system, to\nprevent   possible   sabotage   during   a   general\nstrike, Chilean President Ibanez declared a\n\"stage of'siege\" to f|ght the strike, which was\ncalled as<a protest by workers against government  economic  plans.\u2014AP Wirephoto,\nMillion Dollar Robbery\nSolved After Six Years\nU.S. Plans Spring\nA-Weapons Tesi\nWASHINGTON CAP) \u2014 The\nUnited States announced plans\nThursday for a new series of atomic tests in the Pacific this\nspring \u2014 but with, weapons \"substantially\" lass powerful than.the\nmighty hydrogen blast two years\nThe Atomic Energy Commission\nand the defence department issued a joint announcement saying\npreparations are under way for\nthe tests at Eniwetok proving\nground in the central Pacific.\nThey took pains to explain this\nwas being done because no effective international plan exists for\natomic weapons control.\nThe statement did not say what\ntype weapons would be tested. It\ndid say that \"one of the important purposes of the series will be\nthe further development of methods of defence agaihst nuclear\nattack.\"\nIn a supplementary statement,\nAEC chairman Lewis L. Strauss\nsaid the forthcoming, tests \"will\ninvolve weapons generally smaller in yield than those tested during the 1954 test series.\"\n      BOSTON (CP) \u2014 The Federal\n\u25a0* j HI1 f ' Bureau \u00b0f Investigation announced\nplftlTV WlVGS   OH ! Thursday u has solved the biseest\nStratford Agenda\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 William\nShakespeare's \"The Merry Wives\nof Windsor\" has been selected to | federal\"\"charges' of conspiracy To\nbank robbery in United States'\nhistory\u2014the $1,218,211 Brink's job.\nThe FBI said that six of 11 men\n\u2014all with criminal records\u2014who\ntook part in the robbery of the\nmoney transfer office here six\nyears ago have been arrested on\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Alistair Mac-\ntavish Dunnett, former editor of\nthe   Blasgow   Daily   Record,   has\nbeen   appointed   editor   of   The! DOLLAR UNCHANGED\nScotsman,    Edinburgh newspaper     NEW YORK (CP) '\u2014 Canadian\nowned by Canadian publisher Roy; dollar closed unchanged at a pre-\nThomson. #        ; mium of Vs per cent in terms of\nHe succeeds acting editor John i U.S. funds Thursday. Pound ster-\nBuchanan, who becomes his dep-'iling up 1-16 of a cent' at\nuty. I $2.80 25-32.\nJet Squadron Guards\nCanada Pacific Coast\nBy LARRY STANWOOD ,\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCOMOX, B.C. (CP)\u2014Possibility\nof a sneak air attack on North\nAmerica's west coast by planes\nout of enemy skies has launched\nthe Royal Canadian Air Force on\na unique and dramatic peace-time\noperation.       ,\nGuarding the continent every\nsecond of the day and night\nagainst an aerial onslaught\u2014such\nas wreaked chaos and havoc on\nunsuspecting Pearl Harbor in\n1941\u2014is Canada's first complete\nall-weather jet fighter squadron.\nRCAF 409 Squadron with its\nfleet of sub-sonic CF-100 Canuck\ninterceptors now is operating on\na basis of actual combat.\nBased at this Second World War\nair station on the east coast of\nVancouver Island, 409 operates on\na minimum two-minute alert. A\nstreaking CF-100 must break its\nwheels\u2014be airborne\u2014within two\nminutes of a radar report that an\n\"unknown\" aircraft is flying the\ncoastal \"tracks,\" regardless of\nweather, day or night.\nSPLIT-SECOND   ACTION\n\"Scramble\" is the dynamic order which rings the general alarm\nin 409 hangar. Ready-dressed pilot\nand navigator grab their safety\nhelmets while on the tarmac their\nshare the Canadian Stratford\nShakespearean Festival's fourth\nseason with \"Henry V,\" it was\nannounced Thursday.\nArtistic director Michael Lang-\nham of Britain announced \"Merryi\nWives\" as the second production\nfor the 1958 season and named\nCanadian actors to the chief roles\nin both plays.\nToronto-born Christopher Plum-\nmer, currently in the Broadway\nproduction of Jean Anouilh's \"The\nLark,\" will play the title role in\n\"Henry V,\" announced earlier as\nIhe first of this summer's plays.\nDouglas Campbell, British-born\nbut a member of the festival\ncompany since it was formed, was\nselected to portray Falstaff, the\ncomic, \"fat paunch\" of \"Merry\nWives\"\nMr. Langham, at a press conference, said the two Shakespearean works will alternate during\na nine-week schedule from June\n18 to Aug. 18.\nCanuck has been made ready for\nimmediate take-off.\nThe twin jets flare and the\nscreaming interceptor wheels\ndown the 8000-foot runway.\nCivilian aircraft who fail to file\nflight plans, who become lost or\notherwise deviate from their air\ntracks provide numerous occasions for round-the-clock \"scrambles,\" which keep the squadron\nin fighting trim.\nPilots and navigators are continuously kept in various stages\nof alert, putting in 90 hours a\nweek and often 48 hours from\ntheir quarters at a time. About\nhalf of them are married and live\nwith their families on the station.\nThey range in age from 19 to 37.\n\"But even the youngest is mature far beyond his years,\" said\nthe 37-year-old squadron commander, whose home town is Medicine Hat, Alta.\nBIG RISE IN\nLIVING COSTS\nAT VANCOUVER\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Living costs\nshowed a substantial rise in Vancouver during November mostly\nbecause of price rises associated\nwith a severe cqld spell, the bureau of statistics reported Thursday.\nBut in other regional cities there\nwere only minor changes in consumer price indexes in that\nmonth, the bureau said.\nThe big rise in Vancouver was\nin food costs, particularly fresh\nvegetables. Mid-November freezing temperatures proved an important factor in this rise, the\nbureau said.\nThe consumer price indexes,\nbased on 1949 prices equalling\n100, on Nov. 1 with Oct. 1 standings in brackets:\nToronto 118.9 (119); Vancouver\n120.3 (,118.6); Halifax 114.7 (114.9)\nWinnipeg 116.9 (116.9); Saskatoon-\nRegina 115.7 115.6); Edmonton\nCalgary 115.1  (115.1).\nTRACKS CLEARED\nEVERETT, Wash. (AP)\u2014Tracks\nof the Great Northern Railroad\nwere cleared of the big' mudslide at Mukilteo, five miles south\nof here, Thursday noon and full\ntrain service to Seattle has been\nresumed.\nThe slide covered about 300 feet\nof track to a depth of 30 to 50 feet.\nFind Site For New\nCoast Airport\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The site for\na secondary airport to serve Van.\ncouver and the surrounding area\nhas been selected, the transport\ndepartment announced Thursday.\nIt will be located about 25 miles\nfrom downtown Vancouver by\nroad. It is about 18 miles southeast\nof Vancouver International Airport and north of the town of\nWhite Hock.\ncommit bank robbery and theft\nof government property.\nTwo other men already were in\ncustody-serving time in other\ncases. Two others are sought and\nthe 11th man is dead.\nThe FBI listed the six newly\narrested men as;\nAdolph Maffie, 44, of North\nQuincy; Joseph F. McGinnis, 52,\nBoston; Vincent J. Costa, 41, of\nPembroke; Michael V. Geagen, 47,\nof Milton; Anthony Pino, 48, Boston; and Henry Baker, 49, of Na\u00bb\ntick1. '\" r \u2022\"\u25a0   '\u25a0\nAlready in jail in other cases,\nbut charged with the others are\nJoseph J. (Specs) O'Keefe, 47, of\nBoston; and Stanley A. Gusciora,\n36, Boston.\nTWO STILL AT LARGE\nThomas F. Richardson, 48, of\nWeymouth and James I.' Faherty,\n44,  of Boston   are  being sought.\nThe 11th man named by the FBI\nwas Joseph S. Banfield, 45, of\nBoston, who died a year ago.\nFire Kills 4 of Family\nHounded by Disaster\n17, 1950, said it was \"an FBI job\nall the way.\" Because of that,\nBrink's Express may not have to\npay any of the $100,000 reward it\noffered for \"information leading to\nthe arrest and conviction\" of the\nrobbers. FBI men cannot accept\nsuch awards.\nThe FBI had been close on the\ntrail of the arrested men for\nlong time. All but one of the arrested men were called before a\nU.S. grand jury here three years\nago in an inquiry which failed,\nhowever, to produce any indictments.\nThe FBI announcement did not\ndisclose who was the leader of the\n11-man robber gang.\nO'Keefe was the reported target\nof a gun attack by Elmer (Trigger)\nBurke, now awaiting execution in\nNew York for a murder.\nFlooded\nRivers\nReceding\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 The worst\nappeared over Thursday in flood-\nstricken Nova Scotia.\nMost rivers gradually receded\nand waters stopped rising on\nothers. Some areas still felt the\npunch of the million-dollar floods,\nbut the over-all picture was encouraging.\nThe Medway River on Nova\nScotia's south shore, the last big\ndanger spot, stopped spreading.\nThe Sherbrooke dam on the La-\nHavre River, also on the south\nshore! held firmly as waters\ndropped slightly.\nThe weather office still did riot\npredict a break in the 10-day spell\nof drizzle, rain and warm temperatures that brought on the\nrecord-breaking floods, but officials don't expect further major\ntrouble.\nSome of the 1100 persons driven\nfrom their homes moved back\nThursday. Some sections of highways were still impassable but repair crews were beginning work\non them as waters dropped.\nSaves Supervisor\nFrom Harbor\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A slightly-built customs officer rescued\nhis 200-pound supervisor *vhen a\ngangplank collapsed and plunged\nthe pair into the chill waters of\nVancouver harbor.\n\"I thought he was a goner when\nI saw- him floating face down in\nthe water. I really thought he'd\nhad it,\" said rescuer Jack Horgan\nThursday   as   he   described   the\nThe FBI said it has turned overi night-time accident,\nall its evidence and reports in the      Customs supervisor Gerald Ross\ncase to Boston's Suffolk county\ndistrict attorney Garrett Byrne.\nByrne announced that' he has\nextended the sitting of the Suffolk\ncounty grand jury\u2014now in session\n\u2014and will set aside all other business to proceed with the Brink's\nprosecution.\nThe announcement of the solution of the baffling crime of Jan.\nwas knocked unconscious in the\nfall while boarding the freighter\nMount Ithome for a routine inspection.\n\"If it hadn't been for Jack's\npresence of mind in hanging on to\nme, I would have gone down for\nsure,\" Mr. Ross said gratefully.\nHorgan cracked a rib in the mishap.\nTax Formula Encourages\nContinued Tax Rental\nBody Identified\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A badly-decomposed body found near\nExhibition park Tuesday has\nbeen identified as that of Ingvald\nAhlskog, 35, who came here from\nFinland four years ago. A rifle\nwas beside the body.\nHEALTHY AT 104\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Mrs. Jennie Robison, Vancouver's oldest\nresident, celebrated her 104th\nbirthday Wednesday. Still in gpod\nhealth, she lives with a granddaughter, Mrs. H. J. Westman.\nSoviet Plans\nArctic Survey\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Russians\nsay they are planning a mass\nscientific assault on the Soviet\nsector of the Arctic.\nThe statement is contained in an\narticle on Russian Arctic research\nin the latest issue of the Soviet\nNews Bulletin, published by the\nRussian embassy here.\nThe article says that during the\n1957-58 international geophysical\nyear, scientific observations will\nbe conducted at the 100-odd reg\nular Russian Arctic stations and at\nmore than 500 points in the central\nArctic basin. Mobile scientific\nteams will be landed on the ice by\naircraft.\nThe article says that a new station on a floating ice island, known\nas North Pole-6, will be set up.\nTwo other drift stations have been\nin operation for some time and\none of them more than a year ago\nfloated through waters on the\nCanadian side of the pole.\nOfficials here have said that\nRussia is about 10 years ahead of\nCanada in Arctic research.\nThe Russians say their Arctic research is 'aimed mainly at finding\na better Arctic shipping route because many Soviet northern communities are dependent on shipping.\n4 Missionary\nBodies Found\nMother, 3 Kiddies Perish While Dad\nat Funeral of Niece Susan Cadieux\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Stajf Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A family which is no stranger to\nviolent death lost four of its members by fire early Thursday.\nMrs. Joseph Cyril Moynahan, 39, and three of her\ndaughters\u2014Maureen, 11, Sandra, 6, and Joanne, 4\u2014were\nburned to death in an upstairs bedroom of their two-\nstorey frame house on west-end Tweedsmuir Avenue.\nDianne, 17, with the help of a courageous neighbor,\nhelped to rescue Ricky, her 18-months-old brother. She\nand Ernest Hawley, the neighbor, were taken to* hospital\nsuffering   from   burns   and ~~~ L      ~~\nshock. , .\nMrs. Moynahan was found facedown on her bed and.firemen said\nshe probably suffocated before she\nknew the fire was upon her. The\nbodies of her three children were\nfound in a corner of her room.\nTheir faces were turned toward\ntheir mother.\nTha father,  Cyril  Moynahan,\nwas In  London, Ont, whero he\nacted as a pallbearer Monday at\nthe funeral  of  his  niece, 1\\ve-\nyear-old   Susan   Cadieux.   The\ngirl died of exposure last week\nafter being criminally assaulted.\nIn 1948, the Moynahan's six-\nyear-old son, Anthony, was killed\nin a traffic accident. The fireman's\nbrother lost a son by drowning a\nfew years ago.\n32 FIRE DEATHS\nThe fire brought to 32 the number of persons killed in Ottawa\narea fires since Nov. 17. Twenty-\nthree of them were children.\nFive of the six children of Mr.\nand Mrs.  Sidney Roud perished\nWednesday in a blaze on west-\nend Northwestern avenue, about\n12 blocks east of the Moynahan\nhome.\nFire chief John Foote told The\nCanadian Press arson Is not suspected in Thursday's fire although\n\"we don't rule it out.\"\nHe also said there had been\nrumors that a peeping torn had\nbeen seen in the neighborhood\nshortly before the outbreak but\nthere was \"nothing to it.\"\nINQUEST ORDERED\nAttorney - General Roberts of\nOntario ordered an inquest into\nthe latest of the series of tragic\nfires which have left the capital\nshocked and frightened.\nHe also ordered Ontario fire\nmarshal W. J. Scott to proceed to\nOttawa to take charge of the investigation.\nIn the Commons, Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent said the government\nis distressed by loss of life in\nfires in Canada this winter. A\nCanadian Press survey shows the\ntoll In Canada since Nov. 1 is 167.\nBy HAROLD  MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The new federal tax-sharing formula is so de-\nsigned as to encourage provinces;\nto continue rental of one or more\nof the direct tar fields to the central government in return for proposed higher payments.\nFederal authorities said Thursday there is no provision under\nthe formula for the federal collection of provincial taxes for a fee\nJustice Minister Garson said in a\nspeech at Winnipeg last November that there would be such a\nprovision.\nThe officials said the choice to\nthe provinces either is to impose their own taxes and set up\nexpensive collection machinery\nor to continue renting out one or\nmore of-the direct tax fields to\nthe federal administration in return for annual payments.\nDirect taxes are those imposed\non personal and corporation income and inheritances. The most\nexpensive collection machinery\nis that for gathering personal income'taxes, It is this field that officials here expect many of the\nprovinces will rent out to the federal government in return for annual payments.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent announced In the Commons Thursday that legislation will have to\nbe introduced to bring, the formula\ninto operation. It is planned to go\ninto effect April 1, 1957, when the\ncurrent federal-provincial tax\nrental agreements wepiw.\nQUITO, Ecuador (AP)\u2014A radio\nreport received here Thursday\nnight said a U.S. Air Force helicopter has located four bodies in\nthe Auca Indian country near the\nRiver Curaray where five American missionaries disappeared five\nday ago.\nThe bodies have, not been identified, the report said. The helicopter had landed in an attempt to\npick up two bodies, sighted earlier in the vicinity, with the aim\nof taking them to Shell Mera for\nidentification.\nDiary entries indicate the five\nmissionaries, attacked in the Amazon basin jungles of northeast\nEcuador, were lured by signs of\nfriendship from the savage Aucas,\nThe diary turned up in the party's base camp among the personal'effects of Peter Fleming of\nSeattle, Wash., one of the missing\nevangelists, Excerpts were given\nto reporters Thursday by Abraham\nVanderpuy, president of the Inter-\nMission Fellowship of Ecuador.\nA 29-man ground rescue team\nled by Dr. Art Johnson of St. Catharines, Ont., meanwhile, was reported near ing the campsite\nwhere the missionaries were attacked Sunday by the Aucas they\nhad sought to convert to Christianity. Rev. John Shalanko of Niagara\nFalls, Ont., also was reported to\nbe a member of the search party,\nSays Election Void\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014A Poujadist\nmember of the National Assembly\nAlbert Privat, Thursday asked a\ncourt to declare the French gen\neral election of Jan. 2 null and\nvoid. He claimed in a letter to a\nParis administrative court that the\nelections were irregular because\nPremier Edgar Faure published a\ndecree on the revision of electoral\nrolls after he had been defeated\nin the National Assembly.\nn Britain . , , '\nHigher Rents Bring\nGalls for Higher Pay\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Demands\nof British workers for Increased\npay to cover higher rente were\nIntensified Thursday as talks on\nthe claims of about 1,750,000 men\nwere held here.\nThe workers are from four key\nindustries - railroads, building,\nroad haulage and electrical contracting. They represent about\none-fifth of the entire affiliated\nstrength of the central union body,\nthe Trades Union Gongress.\nIn addition, Ernest Jones, president of the National Union of\nMineworkers, announced that the\nNational Coal Board will reply on\nFeb. 9 to miners' demands of \u00a31\n$29 Million Pulp\nMill Extension\nFinished in June\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Crown\nZellerbach, Canada, Ltd., has set\nJune next year as the target date\nfor completion of the combined\nnewsprint and kraft pulp machine\nnow under construction at the Elk\nFalls subsidiary at Duncan Bay\non Vancouver Island. The $29,-\n000,000 extension will boost capac\nity to 500 tons of newsprint daily\nfrom 320. Kraft output will total\n500 tons.\nMAY HAVE TO\nIMPORT WORKERS\nFROM U.S.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Electrical workers may have to be imported from the U.S. to meet demands of expanding industry in\nthe province, Jack Ross, western,\nrepresntative of the Electrical\nWorkers' Union (AFL) said here\nThursday. Ross said every possibility of hiring Canadians for\nKitimat and Kemano and the distant early warning radar line in\nthe north would be exhausted before approaching immigration\nauthorities to bring in Americans.\nAID FOR SCHOOLS\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 President Eisenhower called Thursday\nfor a new school aid program under t which the federal government would put up $1,250,000,000\nin direct grants for school con^\nstruction during the, next five\nyears. In a special message to\nCongress, he labelled his plan an\nemergency measure aimed at providing \"the basis for better etfu\ncation in America in the years\nahead.\"\na week extra for 400,000 workers\nwho are paid by the day.\nEight hundred building workers\nparaded from Hyde Park to employers headquarters in the London west end in support of their\nclaim. The men, who carried banners calling for \"A Living Wage\"\ncaused a traffic jam in Oxford\nstreet but police described the parade as \"orderly\/'\n*They chanted slogans outside the\nbuilding where the national joint\ncouncil for the building industry\nwas debating their claims.\nDEMANDS PARTLY MET\niThe building workers got at least\npart of their demands. The council\nagreed on an increase of one penny\nan hour in accordance with previous sliding scale agreements based\non the retail prices index.\nEmployers said that the agreement affected more than 1,000,000\nmen and would mean an annual\ncost to the building industry of\nmore than \u00a310,000,000. It will add\nabout \u00a312 to the cost of a three-\nbedroom house, they said.\nNo Blame Attached\nIn Double Death\nVERNON, B.C. (CP) \u2014 A coroner's jury found Thursday that a\nVernon man and girl died from\ncarbon monoxide poisoning New\nYear's Day. No blame was attached.\nThe proprietors of the motel\nwhere Donald Roy Johnson, 28,\nand Rosemary Elizabeth Knox, 16,\ndied said the interior of their\ncabin was covered with soot and\nthe propane gas heater was still\nburning when they were discovered, about 12 hours after death.\nThere was no sign of a struggle.\nThe jury recommended locked\nthermostat controls on similar\nmotel heating appliances.\nENGINES BLAMED\nFOR FOREST FIRES\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The forest\nservice says 143'of 319 fires in the\nVancouver forest district last year\nwere caused by railway engines\nNinety-seven were blamed on\nconstruction operations of the\nPGE.\nAnd in This Corner\u2014\nSANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP)\u2014A motorist told police Wednesday night of a horse that resented hU horseless carriage. Johnnie\nMartinez said he was driving along when a horse ran out of a\nfield and leaped on the hood of his car, smashed the windshield\nand darhaged the hood, a fender and the radio antenna, then ran\nback Into the field.\nJACKSON, Tenn. (AP)\u2014Note to Dominic A. Tata of Niagara\nFalls, NY.: That gift you left in Jackson Wednesday turned out\nto be pointless.\nAs service station attendant K. C. Hankins tells it:\nTata drove his sputtering car into Hankin's service station.\nasked for a fountain pen, asked Hankin's name and then signed\nover the title of thenar to him. Tata asked and got a lift to the\nbus station for himself, his wife and their luggage.\nSaid Hankins later as he poljshed his car:\n\"I put a new set of points in the distributor and now it runs\nlike a sewing machine.\"\nOMAHA (AP)\u2014Two men plr.l<ed a unique place to sleep off\na hangover.early Wednesday.\nSurprised policemen found \u00bbhem snoozing peacefully in a car\nthey had driven Into the central  police station garage.\n\u00ab\n  i ! - \" ...    V\u00abH#\n\t\nl***********^-******---*\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1956\nTHE MOST IAUGHPACKED MARTIN AND LEWIS PICTURE EVER\nTECHNICOLOR\nYISTAflSIOH\nA Paramount  I'kturo\nMission Covenant Church Reports\nGood Year; Alan Smith Re-Elected\nReports showing good progress\nduring the year were given at the\nannual meeting of the Mission\nCovenant Church, held recently,\naccording to Rev. 2. Hansen.\nElection of officers saw Alan\nSmith returned to office as chair\nman. Magnus Christensen is vice-\nchairman; Miss Maragaret Stavast,\nsecretary; Alvin Olson, treasurer,\nand Mrs. Harris, Sunday School\nsuperintendent.\nThe Church is one of the first to\nhold its annual meeting in Nelson\nthis month.\nN. C. Stibb* Again President . . .\nNelson Red Cross\nYear \"Outstanding\"\nAn outstanding year In which\nNelson Red Croat branch exceeded both Its campaign quota\nand It* blood donor quota and\nplayed Its part In Stratheona\nfire relief, waa reported at the\nday night\nThe branch's successful and active year was commended by, both\nDivisional President Mrs. J. N.\nMawer of Vancouver and B.C.\nCommiseioner Col. C. A. Scott who\nattended the meeting held in the\nChamber of Commerce Room.\nBoth officials felt the Nelson\nworker* had been outstanding in\nall phases, and particularly in\nfund raising. \"It was one of the\noutstanding campaigns of the\nprovince,\" Col. 'Scott said. A total, $7519.42 was collected in Nelson and district, which was over\nthe quota.\nJunior Red Cross members at-\n*v*t7*wwwwwwvm*vw*www*mtmwww%.\nBEN\nSUTHERLAND\n\\n56WMn\nby     \u00a9i\nrcaVictor\nNelson Woman Hurt\nIn Traffic Accident\nMrs. G. F. Hartridge, 117 Houston\nStreet, is in Kootenay Lake General Hospital with injuries suffered\nwhen she was struck by a car near\nthe intersection of Baker and\nStanley Streets Thursday afternoon.\nShe ,is reported to have a left\nshoulder injury, shock, bruises and\nabrasions, Including abrasions to\nher face and one hand. Her doctor\ndescribed her condition as good.\nCity police said these were no\nwitnesses to the accident, but that\na car driven by Robert Ratcliffe,\n17, of Nelson, had been travelling\nWest on Baker Street, and had\nmade a left hand turn South up\nStanley Street when the accident\noccurred. He was driving a 1952\nsedan.\nMrs. Hartridge was said to have\nbeen accompanied by her young\nson, who was not hurt.    ,\nMr. Hartridge, an insurance adjuster, was in Nakusp on business\nat the time. He was Immediately\ncalled back to Nelson.\nPercy Druskee, who was on the\nscene shortly  after  the  accident\n21\/NCH'QOOBWm\"\nWITH\ntended the earlier part of the\nmeeting, giving their own reports\nfor each Nelson school. Martin\nHorswill gave the Hume School\nreport; Robert Shorthouse, Central School; Carol-Ann Locatelli\nJunior High School; and Audrey-\nLouise Elmes, the Senior High\nSchol report. Visiting officials expressed pleasure at the reports,\nwhich indicated e n t h u s iastic\nmembers in the clubs. \"It is the\nfirst meeting I've been at that\nJunior Red Cross members have\nattended,\" Mrs. Mawer said, conv\nmending the young Red Cross\nworkers for \"their very fine reports.\" Miss Dorothy Peirson and\nMiss Enid Etter were in charge\nof the junior grop.\nNorman C. Stibbt was return-\nad to tha  presidency    of    the\nNelson branch with R. B. Mor-\nrl\u00bb, hpnorary president, George\nA, Hoover, f1r*t vice-president,\nMrs,   Stanley    Morris,   second\nvice-president and   L.   M.   Mc-\nBride,     third      vice-president.\nTreasurer It A. R. Burnle, secretary Mrs. C. W. R. Harper and\nauditor Charles F. Hunter,\nCommittee      Chairmen      are:\nBlood Donors,   Henry E, Stevenson; Civil Defence, Major E. W.\nWhiU; Disaster Relief, Major E.\nW.  White;  Home  Nursing,  Miss\nJean   Hood,   R.N.;   Junior   Red\nCross, Miss Enid Etter; Loan Cupboard; Mis* Flora McLean, R.N.;\nPublicity, C. D. Pearson; Swimming Safety,   Thor   Andreassen;\nWomen's Work,  Mm.  C.  W.  R\nHarper.\nExecutive Committee is: Nelson\nAllan, E. Bloxham, R. M. Brightly, Fred Balderson, C. W. Ramsden, Don J. Thomson, Fred Wah,\nMrs. L. G. Catley, J. A. Dennison,\nMrs. A. S. Lockwood. J. McMillan,\nJ. McLelland, Ken D. McRae, Albert Maida, J. F. Morrison, Mrs.\nRoy Pollard, Mrs. A. T. Richards,\nDr. H. Lowe.\nEx officio members are Mrs. W.\nBucknell, superintendent of nurses at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital and Sister of St. Ann,\nMount St. Francis.\nMiss Lillian MacMillan, director of Red Cross outpost hospitals\nin B.C. and R. T. Fraser of Rossland, regional representative, also gave interesting talks.\nYouths Arrested\nIn Connection\nWith Cofe Theft\nTwo teenage boys, allegedly Involved in a $45 theft from a Nelson cafe, were arrested Thursday\non the Westbound Kootenay Lake\nferry MV Anscomb by RCMP of'\nficers. A third teenager was ap\nprehended by city police Monday\nnight, shortly after the theft had\ntaken place at the New Star Cafe.\nCtiy police reported that* one\nof the boys will probably be\ncharged with the theft and that\nthe other two will face charges\nof retaining stolen property. The\ntrio will appear in juvenile court.\nThe 15-year-old boys arrested\nThursday were hitch-hiking from\nLethbridge, it was stated.\nhappened, made the injured woman as comfortable as possible until she was taken to hospital by\nThompson Ambulance.\nCity police are investigating,\nCastiegar Field\nWell Maintained\n\"Serious exception\" with a statement in Wednesday's issue of the\nDaily News that the Castiegar airstrip is \"ice and rough\" at this time\nof year, has been taken by Ralph\nWest, chairman of the airport Committee of the three municipalrties\nof Nelson, Castiegar and Kinnaird.\nMr. West is reported as stating\nthat the runway is especially well\nmaintained, and has been plowed\nand sanded constantly.\nReference to the surface was\nmade in a story on the attempted\nmercy flight in the case of poliomyelitis victim Mrs. Doreen Herrick of Kaslo.\nSelkirks. Rangers\nto 5-5 Tie\nPlay i\nCRANBROOK\u2014Cranbrook Selkirks and Fernie Rangers wound\nup here with a 5-5 tie in the third\nAlberta-British Columbia Intermediate Hockey League schedule\ngame, which also ties their series\nat a win and a half each.\nFirst period ended in a 3-3 tie,\nsecond with a 4-3 Cranbrook lead,\nand third at 4-4. Vic Marasco got\nhis second goal for Fernie and\nTullio Fabbro his second for\nCranbrook in the overtime ses\nsion. Other scorers were Wilf\nAshmore, Bud Niedig and Joe\nBossio for the visitors and Denny\nNelligan, Fred Anderson and John\nWalmsley for Cranbrook.\nFernie had seven of the twelve\npenalties ruled during the game\nSelkirks visit Coleman Grands at\nColeman Saturday, while Cran\nbrook arena will have an event\nincluding figure skating, broom\nball and service club hockey as\na benefit for Arvon Price, who\nbroke his ankle in a Commercial\nHockey League game.\nMrs. Elliott, JO,\nPasses Here\nMrs. Edith Alice Elliott, 80, In\nNelson and district isnee 1921, died\nThursday morning at Mount St.\nFrancis Infirmary where she has\nresided for the past two years.\nBorn in Lewis, Sussex, England,\nin 1875, she moved to London in\n1896 where she married Henry\nAlbert Smith. Mr. Smith prede\nceased her in 1906. In 1909, she\nmoved to Southall, just outside\nLondon and lived there until coming to Canada, to Abernathy, Sask\nin 1911. She married Albert Edward Elliott, who was postmaster\nat Kenlls, Sask., in 1812 and in\n1921 they moved to Appledale and\nto Nelson in 1922.\nMrs. Elliott is survived by two\nsons, Albert Henry Smith, and\nGeorge Leslie Elliott, both of Nelson; 14 grandchildren and six\ngreatgrandchildren; a brother and\nsister in Montreal and another sister in England.\nFuneral services will be in Nelson Monday.\nCominco Awards New Legion,\n$925 lor Ideas     (LA Officers\n^Installed\nTRAIL\u2014A' new suggestion\naward list published by The Con'\nsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany shows employees re-1 Nelson Canadian Legion branch\nceived $925 lor \"on the job\" sug-' executive officers, including pres-\n1 ident C. R. Higgins and Ladies\nAuxiliary president Mrs, Norman\ngestions. Since the plan was started in 1942, the Company has paid\na total of $100,712 for employees'\nsuggestions.\nR. McGhie of Trail tops the\nnew list of winners with a $200\naward. He suggested an alteration\nto the bags used in the baghouse\nto filter the -gases from the lead\nfurnaces. The idea saves time and\nreduces maintenance costs. On\nthe same award list, Mr. McGhie\nwon another award of $20 for suggesting relocation of conduit inside the baghouse.\nA. J. Kelly of Trail has earned\n$175 for suggesting a modification\nto filter frames in Cominco's oxide leaching plant. Eighty-five\ndollars was previously paid for\nthis idea and an additional $90\nrecently recommended.\n. R. McNeil was awarded $50 for\na suggestion on pump operation.\nMr. McNeil is with the engineering services and lives in Trail.\nR. Brenton of Kimberley headed\nthe Kimberley winners with his\n$20 award. He suggested a new\ntype of car block. Awards of $30\nwent to R. W. Carter and C. F.\nArchibald of Trail and R. C. Foyle\nof Rossland.\nWinners of two awards each on\nthis list were M. GeOrgetti of Trail\nand E. Krell oi Kimberley, as well\nas R. McGhie.\nIn Trail, awards from $5 to $25\nLleul.-Governor Caffle Installs\nKiwanis Officers; Eberle President\nBrown, took oaths of office during\ninstallation ceremonies staged on\nThursday-night.\nCecil Pitt of Nelson, fourth vice-\npresident of the Canadian Legion's\nB. C. Command, and Spencer J.\nNewell, deputy commander of the\nWest Kootenay zone, conducted\nthe ceremony.\nIn election proceedings carried\nover from the December meeting\nof the branch, C- W. House was\nelected first vice-president, R. H.\nWatts as second vice-president\nD. J. Potosky and R. McNabb were\nelected to the branch's executive.\nFred Cassell was elected to his\n10th consecutive term as sergeant-\nat-arms. Other officers elected to\nservice in 1956 were C. H. Robinson, trustee, and executive members J. D. Mitchell, C. L. McDon-\nough, and B. D. Balderstone.\n*In addition to president Mrs.\nNorman Brown, eight officers of\nthe Ladies Auxiliary took part in\nthe installation ceremony: Mrs.\nG. E. Thompson, first vice-president, Mrs. Irene Day, second vice-\npresident, Mrs. Irene Kerr, secretary Mrs. Blanche Gray, treasurer, Mrs. F. Cassell, Miss C. Elliott,\nMrs. R. Keffer, executive members and Mrs. E. Forbes, sergeant-\nat-arms.\nA check for $250 was presented\nwere paid to A. E. SmithJM. Bla-j to  the  branch  from  the  Ladies!\nhut J. F. Fleming, O. L. Person, \\ Auxiliary. The presentation  was[\nW. P. Home, M. H. Hurlburt, T.\\ \u2122ade by Mrs. Norman Brown and\nreceived by past president W. H.\nBurns.\nUnger, S. Tortorelli, J. G. Flanagan, W Coates, G. R, Craig, R. J.\nHubberstey, M. Morgan, R. Clark.\nJ. DeBiasio, L. Nyman, A. R.\nHarmston, R. Robinson, J. R. Kil-\nlough,  L Murdoch,  W.  Stickley,!\nTwo applications for active\nmembership In the branch were\napproved and seven applications\nfor club membership were refer-\nBASKETBALL SHUTOUT\nMOST EMBARRASSING\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A shutout In\nbaseball or hockey Isn't a rarity\nbut in basketball it can be downright embarrassing.\nThe red faces Thursday were on\nEast Riverdale's Playground Intermediates. Malvern Intermediates shellacked them 90-O in a\nscheduled league game Wednesday\nnight.\nThe losers couldn't even get a\nfoul shot. Not one Malvern player\ndrew a violation.\nThe Weather\nNelson   27   37\nPenticton      34   37\nVancouver     37 '48\nBETTER Vi AYS!\n\u00bb*K\u00a3S.   Sites-\nnriStabil,*        \/B.ll\u201eSo\u201e\u201ed\nAt\nBEN\nSUTHERLAND\nMUSIC  \u25a0\nRADIO\nAPPLIANCES\nTELEVISION\nServing Nelson and District in\nRadio  and  Music  Since   !927\n645 BAKER ST. PHONE 258\nJust Across From the Bus Depot\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII\nShowing at the\nBOSUN HALL\nNEW DENVER\nSATURDAY 8 P.M.\n\"The Yearling\"\nIn Color\nGregory Peck - Jana Wyman\nAnd Selected Shorts\n'MIIIIIMIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllMIMIII!\nMemorial Pedestal in Trinity\nDedicated to Mrs. E. M. Fleury\nDedication of a memorial ped- \\\nestal In memory, of Mrs. Ethel M. j\nFleury, a former member and ac-,\ntive worker in the Trinity United j\nChurch congregation, took place\nrecently at the regular morning\nworship in Trinity Church.\nThe beautiful piece of church\nfurniture was constructed by J.\nBurgess of Nelson and is an excellent piece of workmanship, modelled on the style of the baptismal\nfont in Trinity Church. As a me\nmorial pedestal it will be used\nfrom Sunday to Sunday to hold\n\"flowers presented in memory of\nloved ones by various families and\nfriends of the congregation.\nRev. Allan Dixon dedicated the\nmemorial \"To the worship and\ninspiration of the congregation, to\nthe Glory of God, and in memory\nof Mrs. Ethel M. Fleury.\" The memorial itself carries a plaque with\nthe simple inscription: \"Dedicated\nin Memory of out Mother, Ethel\nM. Fleury, 1955.\"\nFor Relief From\nDEEP SEATED\nCOLDS\nWaterbury's  Compound\n8  Days'  Supply \u2014 $1.50\nWyovin Compound\n8 Days' Supply \u2014 $1.10\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your  Fortress of  Health\"\n433  Josephine St,  Ph.  1203\nK. Brandt, A. Yuzik, A. Cristofoli, \u25a0 red to the February meeting of\nJ. Hall, J. Jardan, G. Finlay, A. j the branch.\nSchleppe, W. Popoff, A. Bragg, J.! a request from the Nelson Mid-\nGoodwin, L. Montgomery, C. Bu-j Summer Bonspiel Association that!\nchanan, G. Babcock, J. Goodrick, j the branch enter a candidate in!\nJ. Granstrom, S. Henke, J. Robin- the bonspiel'* queen contest was!\nson, G. Brennan, S. Gallo, G. S.   ais0 referred to the next meeting.'\nSpain, F. Piscitelli, M. Vetera, M.|\t\nDunlop, H. Leonard, W. Ball, A.i\nLeal, C. Lane, A. Pasutto. j MOUNTIES BUY\nKimberley winners were R. La-1 MASTERTON CONTRACT\nNew officers of Nelson Kiwanis\nClub were installed by Kiwanis\nInternational division lieutenant-\ngovernor Dr. Lee Cagle of Col-\nville, Wash., before a large gathering of Kiwanians, their wives\nand guests at the Hume Silver\nroom Thursday night.\nIn its 40th anniversary year.\nKiwanis was continuing to grow\nand was .extending its sphere of\ninfluence, Dr. Cagle said during\nhis charge to the hew executive.\nThere were now over 4100 clubs\nwith about a quarter - million\nmembers.\nIn stressing the seriousness of\ntheir offices, he told the gathering\nthat wherever Kiwanis served, the\nneeds of the local community\nwere given prime consideration,\nOnly then did a club justify its\nexistence. Its goal must be to\nchoose projects of greatest importance to all members of the\ncommunity.\nInstalled were:\nFrank Eberle, president; W. B.\nChristie, vice - president; Ralph\nBlack, treasurer, and B. D. Bal-\nderston, A. C Cawley, D. E. Hunter, W. H. Langridge, J. S. Livingstone, George Latta, and E. W. J\nKopecki, directors.\nDr. Cagle also presented a past-\npresident's pin to retiring president Norman Buckley, and presented him with an engraved\ngavel as a memento of his year of\nservice, and also gave pins tn\nE. W. White and to Walter Clark-\nson, secretary.\nThe lieutenant - governor was\nalso called upon to induct two\n.lew members, ,Fred Doubt and\nSteve Maco, Nelson businessmen\nRetiring executive members\nwere asked to stand while Dr.\nCagle read out a review of Nelson\nKiwanis activities during 1955,\namong them sponsorship of a\nLittle League baseball team, sale\nof  licence  plate  slogans.  United\nFRANK  EBERLE\nStates - Canadian high school\nstudents' exchange, aid in blood\ndonor and Cancer Society drives,\ndonations to me atrathcona hotel\nfire fund and to other fire victims and substantial assistance to\nthe Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children.\nThirteen members received perfect attendance pins from Dr.\nCagle, An eight-year pin went to\nDr. Joe Vingo; six-yearf George\nLatta; five-year, Frank Eberle\nfour-year, Bernard Kelly and J\nS. Livingstone; three-year, Nor\nman Buckley, E. W. Kopecki, A.\nW. Gibbon and D, E. Hunter; two\nyear, W. Ciarkson and W. H. Lan\ngridge, and one-year, W. B. Chris\ntie and Ralph Black.\nPrior to the ceremonies, the\ngathering was led in singing by\nE. W. White, accompanied by Mrs.\nA. C. Cawley, and a dance followed the installation.\nBrash, J. Poisson, J. Maclnnis and\nG. M. Quin,\nRossland Native\nTransferred Here\nNelson Fire Department\nLAST CALL\nCHRISTMAS TREE BONFIRE\nCOME - ON\nTring your Christmas trees to the airstrip or firehall, or\nphone any  Boy Scout for free pickup.\nJANUARY 18-7:30 P.M-.\nAr tha  Airstrip\n\u25a0MMMflaWMjMWaMMBai\nA native of Rossland and an\nemployee of the National Employment Service at Trail for the past\nsix years, has become insurance\nofficer at the Nelson unemployment office.\nCecil Pitt, who has taken up his\nduties at Nelson, was superintendent of the employment section\nat Trail. Prior to joining the\nTrail branch he was a Cominco\nemployee.\nHe is particularly active in the\nCanadian Legion and is at present\nfourth -vice-president of the B.C.\ncommand. He was president of\nthe Rossland branch for two years\nand zone commander for West\nKootenay Zone three years. He\nhas applied for his transfer from\nRossland Legion to the Nelson\nbranch.\nMr. Pitt has also been interested ! s^.iTtp\nin sports. Before the Second World\nWar and immediately following it\nhe was a member of the Rossland\nRedmen lacrosse team. He was a\nmember of the Rossland Civic\nActivities Association, an association concerned with sport in the\ncity. He was also a member of\nthe Rossland Welfare Association\nfor two years.\nMr. Pitt has a wife and two\nsons, William, a postal employee\nat Trail, and Gordon, 13, who attends school in Nelson.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Vancouver Mounties of the Pacific Coast\nBaseball League have bought the\ncontract of catcher Don Master-\nton. The 26-year-old ball player\nwas purchased outright from San\nAntonio of the Texas League, a\nfarm club of the American League's Baltimore Orioles who have\na working agreement with the\nCanadian Club.\nTO COACH 49ERS\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) \u2014\nFrankie Albert, who dazzled the\ncollege football world as its first\nmodern T-formation quarterback,\nThursday was named coach of San\nFrancisco '49ers with whom he\nstarred for seven years.\n\"I intend to put a colorful, representative team on the field,\" the\n35-year-old, who never has been a\nhead coach before, told a press\nconference.\nSafeway Contract\nTo Be Let Soon\nWord of the appointment of a\ncontractor for the supermarket\nCanada Safeway Ltd. will build\nin Fairview is expected shortly\nA telegram from a company official Thursday said all bids were\nin, and announcement of the con\ntractor would be made as soon as\nconfirmation of the contractor had\nbeen received by them.\nThe company will build a 103\nby 125 foot supermarket and\nblacktopped parking lot to accommodate more than 140 cars\non a 20-lot area on Anderson\nStreet between First and Pine\nStreets. It will replace the present, smaller premises the company\nleases on Baker Street.\nF\nRIENDLY\n*MILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor   Bills,   Fuel.   Repairs.   Ca\"t.\nor any good  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arts Bldg.\nPHONE   1786\nFuneral Held For\nMrs. Partridge\nFuneral service for Miss Agnes\nPartridge, 79, was conducted\nThursday at Thompson Funeral\nHome by Rev. Allan Dixon of\nTrinity United Church.\nOne hymn, \"Abide With Me\"\nwas played by organist. Mrs. W. A.\nManson. Interment was in Nelson Memorial Park. Mrs. Partridge\ndied at her home on the North\nShore Tuesday.\nMAYOR KARY TO\nCOAST MEETINGS\nMayor Joseph Kary leaves today on a four-day trip to the coast\nto attend meetings at New Westminster and Victoria.\nHis Worship, newly appointed\nto the executive of the Union of\nB.C. Municipalities Association,\nwill attend an executive meeting\nat New Westminster Saturday and\non Sunday go on to Victoria for\nconferences with municipal departments concerning city business. He will also \"join a delegation from Kootenay Lake General\nj Hospital board of directors for a\nmeeting with the minister of\nhealth and welfare on matters affecting progress of the new city-\ndistrict hospital.\nHe will also take in the opening of the B.C. legislature January 17, before returning to Nelson, i\nLOCAL AND\nLONG DISTANCE\nMOVING\n\u2022 PADDED  VAN8\n\u2022 CAREFUL   PACKING\n\u2022 EXPERT  CRATING\n\u2022 LARGE  STORAGE\nFACILITIES \t\nTwice Daily\nFreight Service To\nCastiegar, Trail\nRossland\nLocal Pickup and Delivery\nService\nUnited Trucking\n& Storage Ltd.\nAgents for Allied Van Lines\n\"Canada's Master Movers\"\nNELSON   B.C. *\nPHONE  1106 OR  1471      '\nFrank Hufty, Manager\nLORD PLUNKET, handsome\nyoung bachelor with an aristocratic title that goes back 129\nyears, has been an almost constant companion of Britain's\nPrincess Margaret. Still, nobody\nso far has dared mention that\nIt's a romance. The 32-year-old\nlord, whose formal name Is\nPatrick Terence William Span\nPlunket, Is an equerry at Buckingham Palace.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nGERTRUDE ZOLLMER, 8 months old, Is not very, happy as\nshe sticks her head through a porthole of the transport Gen.\nLangfitt as the ahlp arrives In- New York -harbor Monday. The\nlittle German mlsB was among 1152 refugees arriving from\nEurope, most of them happy to be In the United States. But\nGertrude couldn't hold  back the  tears,\u2014AP  Wirephoto.\nROBIN HOOD\nVitamin. ^nkichsuL\nFLOUR\n, Best For All Your Baking\nALWAYS FRESH at\nNELSON FARMERS\nSUPPLY LIMITED\nPHONE 174\nWE   DELIVER\n\"Give Us a Call \u2014 Our Prices Are Better\"\nRECORD\nClearance Sale\nOur entire stock of records are on sale \u2014\n33 - 45 - 78 R.P.M.\nAS LOW AS\n50c\nEACH\nNelson Electric Co. Ltd.\n1\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\n474 Bator St. Phone 260\ns\n \u25a0 \t\n . ,\t\nPlans Trip to Australia ...\nQame Warden Sinclair\nDue for Retirement\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Corporal\nAlex F. Sinclair, iormer member\nof the provincial police and game\nwarden for the past 25 years in\nthe east and west Kootenays, is\n6laled to retire at the en* of January.\nCorporal Sinclair is well known\nall  over  B.   C.   While   with   the\nBudget Figures\nDelay Hospital\nPlans Approval\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 At the recent\nmeeting of the Hospital Society,\nthree trusteeds were in atten-\nandce as well as the Hospital\nCommittee.\nScheme No. 10 Is now In the\nhands of the B.C. Hospital Insurance Service; awaiting approval.\nAs it has been learned from\nVictoria that plans are acceptable but the budget figures are\nholding up acceptance by the\nBCHIS, E. Norris of the Committee will leave at the weekend\nfor Creston to obtain necessary\nInformation on the matter from\nthe Creston Hospital Board.\nFined for Giving\nFalse Information\nCRANBROOK\u2014False information in her application for unemployment insurance benefits at\nthe Selective Service office here\nresulted In a fine of $25 and costs\nof $3.50 for Mary Yaschuk when\nshe pleaded guilty before Magistrate Richard Shiell.\nFor failure to equip his car\nwith British Columbia plates within the required interval Peter\nCabelguen of Cranbrook pleaded\nguilty in district court and was\nfined, $25 and costs.\nNo Fuss - No Muss \u2014 PHONE\nARMSON'S\nand reserve your family dinner\ntabic. \u2014 Attractive, low-priced\nmenu served Sundays from 4\nto 9 p.m.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTrail  B.C. \u2014 Now Showing\n\"THE SEVEN  YEAR  ITCH\"\nWith\nMarilyn Monroe\"\nHillcrest Motors Ltd.\nTrail's Car Accessory House\nFirestone Home and Auto Supply\nRadiator Specialists\n2795 Highway Drive \u2014 Glenmerry\nPHONE 1555\nOIL HEAT\nC. J. MILES\nPlumbing,   Heating,   Sheet   Metal\nWork\n1274 Bov Ave.      Phone 30\nTrail, B.C.\nLOWEST    PRICED   SEWING\nMACHINES\n! In the Kootenay,.\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1510 Bay Ave., Trail \u25a0 Phone 8080\ni BUYING A Tar?\"\n8ee us about l^w co*t auto finance\nCURRIER'S\nALL-RISK INSURANCE\nAGENCIES\nTrail,   B.C. Phone  1589\nMITCHELL\n;   transffr and fuel ltd.\nBooker Furnaces Sales and Service\nTrail, 125? Bay Ave. Phone52, 1321\nCastiegar   Box'\nPhone 3551\nSCHRUMP'S SHOES\nFOR THE FINEST IN\nFASHION FOOTWEAR\nPhone 2514 1447 Bay Ave.\nTRAIL. B.C.\nNew NORGE\nAutomatic Dryer and Washer\nMODERN  ELECTRIC\nPHONE  133\n'1532 Bay Ave. Trail, B.C.\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHING\n\u00a3 LOCKSMITHING\nFISHING   SUPPLIES\n1561 Bay Ave. Phone 1998\n-    TRAIL.  B.C,\nSPEEDWAY\nSERVICE   &   GARAGE   LTD.\nSales and Service\n,';   Mercury     Lincoln - Meteor\nCedar and Farwell Sts. Trail\nPHONE   834\niiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiniii\nHAZLEWOOD  DRUGS LTD.\n<Xj Prescriptions,\n'\u2022Stationery.   Tollqtries,   Books\n$43 Spokane St.    Phone 11\nTrail, B.C.\nlIMIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nprovincial police, which he joined\nin July. 1922, he was stationed at\nChilliwack, on the Queen Charlotte Islands and near Jasper.\nWhen he transferred \u2022 to the\nGame Department in September,\n1930, he went to the East Kootenay with headquarters at Cranbrook. In 1941 he was trapsferred\nto Nelson and In 1945 to Grand\nForks where he has been since.\nThe retirement postponed previously is not as yet confirmed\nbut Corporal and Mrs. Sinclair\nhave made plans to sail to Australia in mid-February where they\nwill stay for a year. They plan to\nreturn t0 Grand Forks in' the\nspring of 1957 where they will\ncontinue to reside. They have\nmany close relatives in Australia,\nLife Nol Dull\nOn Cruise Ship\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014SS. Maz-\natlan, known from Alaska to Mexico as a cruise ship turned jinx,\nmay yield her 75 crew members\n$700 each through her impending\nsale at San Pedro, Calif., says\nuniop agent Norm Cunningham.\nThe Liberian-registered Mazat-\nlan, formerly the SS. Alaska, has\nbeen, impounded in San Pedro by\nport authorities and tenders have\nbeen called to satisfy debts.\nMr. Cunningham, business agent\nhere for the Seafarers' International Union (AFL-TLC), said\n.Wednesday the union has obtained\na lien against the ship for about\n$54,000 in back pay.\nThe Canadian crew of the 6000-\ntonner returned here last July\nafter a cruise in which the ship\nran into its most spectacular run\nof bad luck. She was built here in\n1918.\nHARD LUCK\nThe returning Crew told how\nthey signed on last May 29 for a\ntwo-week cruise to Acapulco,\nMexico, which took more than a\nmonth.\nPeter McMullen, an engine room\nwiper, said \"the boilers started\npopping like corn\" after the first\nfew days out.\n\"Then everything went wrong.\"\nPassengers housed in below-\ndecks staterooms were forced to\nslpep on deck due to lack of air\nconditioning.\nThe ship put into Le Paz, Mexico, when it ran short of oil. There,\nthe hoses got mi^ed^up and the oil\nwas pumped into the water tanks.\nThere was no cash aboard to buy\nprovisions.\nMcMullen said the ship's Le Paz\nagent gave them \"26 watermelons\nand two packs of wieners.\"\nWhen they put back to sea, only\none of four boilers functioned, and\nit blew out. The Mazatlan drifted\nfor 20 hours until a tug towed her\nto San Pedro.\nBefore the ship made port, provisions ran short and the 96 persons aboard raided lifeboat rations, living on \"pancakes, crackers and jam\".\nIn San Pedro, her bad luck held.\nA customs official, investigating\nthe reported disappearance of 110\ncases of liquor, turned a water\ntap.\nOut came Scotch whisky which\nhad somehow been put into the\nwater system.\nCommission\nIs Sworn in\nAl Silverton\nSILVERTON\u2014Continuing commissioners and newly - elected\ncommissioners R. H. Hambly and\nM. A.- Wright were sworn in at\nthe monthly meeting of the Silverton Village Commission.\nChairman Dewis, speaking on\nthe free garbage service and its\ncost, said the collection was very\nsatisfactory. After discussion on\ngarbage disposal, it was resolved\nthat a circular letter be sent to\neach resident outlining the different systems, and to call a public\nmeeting in the municipal hall for\nfurther discussion.\nFLOOD CONCERN\nReporting on the creek, Commissioner Hording said he had received a letter from the minister\nof highways stating \"he was sorry,\nbut no definite policy was on\nfile in connection with iloocf relief\" and that \"the matter was\nbeing looked into.\" Commissioners\nexpressed deep concern about\nthis, because of the present condition of the creek channel, attention must be given before the\nSpring runoff as there would be\ndanger to property situated in this\narea.\nCommittees for IJie year were\nformed. They are Mr. Hambly,\nchairman, assisted by H. Elsmore\nand Mr. Wright, for waterworks\nboard; Mr. Wright, chairman, and\nMr. Hambly, public works; Mr.\nElsmore, chairman, and R. Harding, halls; Mr. Harding, chairman,\nand Mr. Elsmore, health and\nparks, and Mr. Dewis, chairman,\nand Mr. Wright, finance.\nUrges Bids for\nTimber Licence\nVICTORIA (CP) - End to \"cut\nand get out\" schemes and proper\nmanagement of forest resources to\nensure stable commitments rather\nthan \"boom and bust\" towns was\nurged by B. C.'s largest trade union Thursday.\nB. C. District of the International Woodworkers of America (CIO-\nCCL) representing 60,000 workers,\nmade its plea to the Sloan royal\ncommission on forestry here.\nThe brief hit out at allocation\nof large blocks of timber in perpetuity through management permits as \"monopolistic.\"\nThe union urged instead a policy\nthat would permit the sale of timber licences under competitive\nbids. It also proposed co-operatives for small operators who want\nto band together to buy and handle forest products.\nA forest resources corporation\nwas proposed along with expanded\nresearch facilities and a pattern\nfor integrated, complete wood util-\nitization.\nPTA Plans Panel\nTalk on Teenagers'\nCASTLEGAR\u2014Executive members of the Stanley Humphries\nParent-Teacher Association held\ntheir January meeting at the home\nof Mrs. J. Ford, Castiegar, Monday\nevening.\nH. Hyson, Ways and Means committee, reported that plans for the\nannual Spring art exhibition were\ngoing ahead, also plans for the\nvariety concert. Tentative date fori\nthe concert is March 16.\nR. Cail reported on Programs\nplanned for the January 30th\nmeeting, suggesting the possibility\nof having a special speaker at the\nmeeting, and a panel discussion in\nFebruary on teenage-problems.\nA request from the Majorettes\nfor aid towards purchase .of uniforms was read. This will be\nbrought up at the regular meeting.\nDelicious refreshments were\nserved at the close of the meeting.\nEleven members were in attendance.\nSOCREDS WANT\nNEW FIGURE ON\n'PHONE SERVICE.\nLONGBEACH \u2014 Question of\ntelephone service for upper Long-\nbeach road residents was pronounced too expensive by the\nLongbeach-Harrop Social Credit\ngroup meeting at the home of J.\nHobson. A new estimate will be\nrequested.\nThe financial report showed an\nencouraging sum.\nChristmas greetings sent to a sick\nmember at the coast were replied\nto by an interesting letter.\nMembers decided to subscribe to\nthe B. C. Bulletin rather than to\nthe Social Creditor, as more B. C.\nnews was available in the former.\nThe meeting ended with a game\nof bingo.\nWasa Ranch Worker,\nCharles led berg Dies\nCRANBROOK - Charles Edberg, employee at the E. T. Clau-\nson ranch at Wasa for the past\n23 years, died at Vancouver General Hospital last week. The body\nwas brought here for funeral services Saturday at Mcpherson\nFuneral Chapel and burial will\nbe in Westlawn.\nHe was born in Sweden 69 years\nago and came to Canada and this\ndistrict in 1909. He worked at logging and sawmills for a number\nof years before joining the staff\nat the Clnuson ranch in 1933. His\nhealth had been poor for the Dast\ntwo years and he went to Vancouver a week prior to his death\nHe has no surviving relatives.\nB.C Liberals to\nHold Convention\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014An election platform will be drafted and\na new party constitution considered at the British Columbia Liberal Association convention here\nApril 5 to 7, Grant Deachman,\nexecutive secretary, said Wednesday night.\nHe made the statement following a meeting of Liberal officers.\nSenator Gray Gurgeon of Vancouver has been appointed to head\nan organization committee to report to the convention. H. G. T.\nPerry of Victoria, former Liberal\neducation minister and speaker of\nthe legislature, heads the convention resolutions committee.\nIt will be the first convention\nheld by Liberals since April 8.\n1953.\nSlocan Van Rio To Start lip\nRevamped Mill in Six Weeks\nNEW DENVER - Slocan Van\nRoi Mines Limited is preparing\nto sink a production winze to mine\na silver-lead-zinc ore shoot confirmed below No. 10 level by recent diamond drilling.\nThe Transcontinental Resources\nLtd. management says drill results\nhave been very encouraging.\nNo. 1 hole directed to test for\nthe eastern extremity of the 10-28\norebody 100 feet below the main\nhaulage level cut 22 feet of zone\nmaterial, returning two core sections as listed below:\nDepth, 94.3 ft-100 ft.; core length,\n5.7 ft.; silver ounces per ton, 18.70;\nLead %, 1.7; Zinc %, 14.50.\nDepth, 113.6 ft.-llS ft.; core\nlength, 2.4 ft,; silver ounces per\nton, 3.60; Lead %, Tr.; Zinc %,\n20.90.\nNo, 1 hole cut the zone 120 feet\nEast of an intersection obtained\nin former drilling below No. 10\nlevel, which returned 24.9 feet of(\ncore assaying 24:3 ounces silver,\n4.3 per cent lead and 11.4 per cent\nzinc.\nNo. 2 hole In the new program\nhas entered the main brecciated\nzone midway between the above\ntwo holes. Results are delayed due\nsilver, 69 per cent lead and 7 per\ncent zinc, Net value per ton was\n$240.\nThe company** mill at Silver-\nton has been rehabilitated and Is\nready for operation on a custom\nbasis. Larger flotation cells were\nInstalled to be able to handle\nthe ejtpected high sulphide content of hand-sorted custom ores.\nOne leasor has started stockpiling ore at the mill In preparation for the Initial run about\nthe end of February.\nCraft in 11th Year as\nDistrict 9 Chairman\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 School Trustees of District No. 9, Castiegar, reelected J. G. Craft as Chairman of\nthe*. Board at their meeting this\nweek. Mr. Craft has served as\nchairman for the past ten years\nand is now entering his eleventh\nyear in this capacity.\nRepresentatives from outlying\npoints elected J. Marshall, of Blueberry Creek, to position of rural\ntrustee to represent their areas.\nRepresentatives in attendance were\nMrs. A. Mackereth, Deer Park, W.\nRempel, Renata, and Mr. S. Kon-\nkin, Tarrys.\nThe Board announced that the\ngrade three^lass from Castiegar\nto caving in the hole, which neces-1 Elementary\u25a0 School would be mov'\nsitated cementing and casing.\nDrilling will be continued'to the\n200-feet horizon below No. 10 level.\nProduction from leasing operations in the upper levels of the\nVan Roi Mine continues to approximate about 300 tons per\nmonth of hand-sorted ore averag-\ning'10.12 per. cent lead, 15 ounces\nsilver and 6.7 per cent zinc.\nRecent smelter returns on lead\nconcentrates shipped during October showed a grade of 75 ounces\nHISTORIC POST\nFirst Constable of the Tower of\nLondon was Sir Geoffrey de Man-\ndeville, appointed about 1078.\ned into the Twin Rivers School\nshortly.\nMiss Florence Cecconi has been\nappointed stenographer at the High\nSchool on probation, to fill vacancy caused by Miss Horswill's resignation,\nA request for use of all-purpose\nroom at the High School for Scouts\nand Guides Own Service February\n26 was approved and also a request for use of activity room, for\nSpring Art Exhibit sponsored by\nthe Stanley Humphries Parent-\nTeachers Association.\nMaterials for lunch tables at the\nHigh School is on hand and the 32\ntables required will be built in the\nTHERMOMETERS IN GRAND FORKS\nHAD UPS AND DOWNS LAST YEAR\nGRAND FORKS\u2014The Dominion weather observer, lookmg over\nthe weather report for 1955, has\nmade  some  interesting  remarks.\nThe hottest day here was July\n22, with 99 degrees. The coldest\nday was December 18, when it\ndropped to 19 degrees below zero.\nGrowers Io\nMeef at Vernon\nVERNON \u2014 The 67th annual\nconvention of the British Columbia Fruit Growers' Association\nwill be held at Vernon Tuesday.\nW. MacGillivray, deputy minister of agriculture, Victoria, will\ndeliver the opening address. This\nwill be followed by a report from\nthe executive, B.C.F.G.A. on its\nactivities of the past year. Reports\nof the various industry committees will be submitted.\nOn Tuesday afternoon, B. C.\nTree Fruits Limited's affairs will\nbe reviewed and reports presented of the board of governors, the\ngeneral manager and the general\nsales manager. Resolutions dealing\nwith B. C. Tree Fruits Limited\nwiil be discussed during Tuesday\nafternoon. At the evening ses\nsion the report of the pooling\ncommittee will be presented and\nresolutions dealing with pooling\nwill be discussed.\nOn the second day, Wednesday,\nthe morning will be devoted to\naffairs of British Columbia fruit\nboard. In the afternoon there will\nbe the reports of B. C. Fruit Pro\ncessors Ltd., the presentation, of\nresolutions.\nThe City of Vernon and the\nVernon Board of Trade are tendering a banquet to the delegates in\nthe Allison Hotel Wednesday evening.\nOn Thursday morning will be\nheld the elections of all the industry officials, including the president of the B.C.F.G.A. and the\nchairman and two other members\nof the B. C. Fruit Board, elected\nby the convention at large. Following this, the district councils\nwill meet separately to select\ntheir representatives for the com;,\ning year for the executive B.C.F.G.A., board of governors, B.C.\nTree Fruits Limited; and board of\ndirectors, B, C. Fruit Processors\nLid.\nOn Thursday afternoon, the\nbudget of the association will be\npresented for approval. Following\nthis, and continuing through the\nevening session if necessary, all\nremaining resolutions will be presented and discussed.\nThe precipitation was 16.05 inches, which is lower than overage. In other years it has measured 17 to 18 inches. August* was\nthe dryest month with practically\nno rain, or to be correct, .003 inches.\nSnowfall from' January 1 to\nDecember 31 was 50V\u00ab inches\nwhich measurement converted to\nprecipitation is included with the\nprecipitation for the year.\nMaintenance Shop at the High\nSchool.\nThe Board also granted use of\nthe facilities at Kinnaird School\nfor the West Kootenay Administrators' Association meeting on February 18.\nBasketball hoops are to be installed in the Kinnaird activity\nroom for the use of the elementary\npupils.\nA request for leave of absence\nfor two weeks to complete practice\nteaching at Vancouver was granted\nto R. H. Leech.\nThe Board authorized the Secretary, C. H. King, to put on an\nadditional bus driver-maintenance\nman.\nPlans for establishing the dental\nplan in the primary grades are\nprogressing, the Board announced.\nInstallation of the telephone at\nBrilliant school has been delayed\nowing to the B.C. Telephone Co.\nhaving a backlog of work to attend to.\nInspector B. Harfojrd and Mr.\nKing reported on investigations\ninto the matter of Glade bus transportation. The road is unfit for\nbus travel, and the public works\ndepartment has advised improvements will be made.\nThe Department of Public Works\nwill also improve the condition of\nthe Brilliant hill and will keep\nthe road sanded above the bridge.\nAt Renata the Forestry Barge is\nbeing used for ferry service.\nThe Board announced that with\nthe arrival of the latest Department approved bus, the fleet now\nnumbers six buses, one 43-passen-\nger and five, 55-passenger. ]\nDisbursements in amount ofj\n$52,404, General, and $31,970, Bylaw, were approved, and payment\nof Claim No. 12, on High School\naddition was authorized.\nArchitect's report on High School\nconstruction showed the project\ncomplete except for a few items\nand it is awaiting final inspection.\n93\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1956\u20143\nEnlargement Possible\nHarrop Qroup Starts\nSmall Hall This Year\nHARROP - The Harrop and\nDistrict Community Centre held\nits quarterly meeting at the Harrop school'recently, when work on\nthe hall construction was reviewed and finances discussed.\nA. Sicotte presented-the executive's suggestion to the members\nthat a centre section of the hall\nbe built this year, measuring '36\nfeet by 32 feet with adjoining\nkitchen cut to 12 feet by 12 feet.\nOriginal architectural plans called\nfor a building 64 feet by 36 feet tS\naccommodate a badminton court,\nwith a kitchen, cloakroom and\nlounge section measuring 12 feet\nby 24 feet. The original plans were\nprepared in such a way that contractions and enlargements could\nbe made in the structure, according to the means of the members.\nIt Is felt that the present membership could handle this smaller\nbuilding with material on hand,\nThree Men Seek\nOffice al Salmo\nSALMO\u2014Three men are in the\nrunning for a seat on the Salrno\nVillage Commission from which\nM. C. Donaldson resigned recently\nhalf way through his second term\nin office.\nNomination papers were filed\nby the deadline Thursday noon\nby Clarence J. Anderson, electrician; George D. Christie, retired, and Denis W. Powers, as-\nsaye'r.\nElection will take place January 19.\nDefeated PC to\nSpeak in Ottawa\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Douglas\nJung, defeated Progressive Conservative candidate in a four-way\nfight for the provincial Vancouver\nCentre seat last Monday, will address delegates to the annual\nmeeting in Ottawa next week of\nthe national party association, it\nwas announced here.   \u2022\nProminent Conservatives, who\nasked their names not be mentioned, said Mr: Jung, 32-year-old\nChinese-Canadian lawyer, may be\nthe means to heal the rift between\nthe British Columbia and federal\nparties, \u25a0     ..\nand as means and neej arise expansion would be possible.\nYOUTH CLUB REVIVED\nThe Centre agreed to help the\nJolly Junior Club become active\nagain. The Jolly Juniors were\norganized by the school children\nfrom eigth to twelve years of age\nfour years ago under the guidance\nof Mrs E. Irwin, This group will\nbe under the leadership of Mrs.\nJ. Paulhus and will be open to all\nboys and girls in the district in\nthis junior age group, to meet in\nthe Harrop school on Saturdays,\nfor a varied program of sports,\ngames, handicrafts and folk dancing.\nPlans were made for a community sleigh ride party, an annual event which Is extremely\npopular with all age groups.\nThis will be held on Ben Crea-\nley', hill on the last Sunday\nafternoon In January, to be followed by cocoa, coffee and\ndoughnuts on the Clntre's property.\nBi-monthly fund raising social\nevenings will be held during the\nwinter and early Spring months,\nthe first to be held January 19 in\nthe school. Bingo will be played,\nfollowed by - refreshments of\ndoughnuts and coffee, and dancing\nto records will wind up the event.\nCANMORE\nBRIQUETTES\nYou Get The\nI Highest Heat Value\nfof Any Domestic\njFuel In Canada,\nfWhen You Buy\nI Canmore Briquettes\nINADA'S HOTTEST FUSL'\nTowler\nFuel and Transfer\nPHONE 889\nTHIS IS LIVING . ..\nA Modern Bathroom\nMokes lite mors pleasant and housework easier.\nYour family will appreciate it . . . your guests\nwill admire it. Visit our showrooms and See the\nlatest styles.\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Phone 666\nCOMMUNITY PROGRESS\nDEPENDS ON YOU!\nA progressive community invites new\nindustry, and YOU will be the one to reap the\nbenefits. New business means more jobs for\nlocal people. The money they earn buys homes,\nclothing and food, thus building more business,\nproviding more jobs. And the cycle goes on.\nPROMOTE YOUR COMMUNITY\nSEND THE\nBi\u00ab 1956 Pictorial\nIndustrial Edition\nTo Your Friends; Relatives, or\nBusiness Associates\nPHONE 1844\nNelson Daily News\nPer Copy\n6 and g^t Postage\n25,a\u201ed6\nPlus 8.S. and M.A. Tax\nW. m\n2>..f\n \t\n \u2014 .\nBfalaon flatly N?tua\nKstaWliihed  April  Vi.   1111)2\nInterior  British Columbia's  Largest  Daiiy  Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays    by    the    NEWS    PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Clam Mail Poat Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER   Ot    ['HE   CANADIAN   PRESS   AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nFriday, January 13, 1956\nThe Throne Speech\nThe speech from the throne announcing the government's program\nfor the forthcoming session of Parliament, while producing few surprises, shows that the government is\nmaking an attempt to keep abreast\nof public heeds.\nContinuing the trend set recently\nby CHMC, the government intends\nto further liberalize loans to home\nowners and builders. It will also seek\namendments to make land cleared of\nslums available for industrial purposes, which should promote more\nbuilding, and the new industrial\nbuildings can be expected to increase\ncity tax revenues.\nIt is an ironic situation ,that,\nwhereas early civilizations based on\nagriculture were beset by recurrent\nfamines, the present Western civilization, based on manufacture and\nindustry, is plagued with a surplus\nof food products. The government\ngives no indication as to how it will\ndeal with this surplus, which is becoming a millstone round the country's neck, but the prospect of disposing of the surplus is so remote\nthat something must be done to enable the farmers to live. The government proposes to enact legislation\nwhereby the taxpayers will bear the\nstorage charges and interest on above\nnormal  carryovers  of wheat.  This\nshould ease the farmers' burdens,\nwho should also benefit from the\nincreased size of loans for improvements which the government proposes to make.\nThere is a strong body of opinion\ntoday that men and women doing the\nsame work should receive equal pay\nThe bill proposed by the government\nwill apply to the 73,000 women who\nare working in Industries under federal control, such as railways, communications and shipping. Though\nworkers in three provinces have\ngained the right of equal pay for\nequal work, there are still many\nwomen who are paid lower rates than\nmen. The recognition of the principle\nby the government will undoubtedly\nlead to an extension of it by industry.\nIt will be a satisfaction to the\nprovinces that the Dominion government has decided to increase its\naid for provincial unemployment.\nBritish Columbia, as the winter\nhaven of the workless, has been hard\nput to at times to deal with winter\nunemployment.\nGovernment should have an uneasy sense of the will of the people.\nWhen it loses that, government becomes out of hand and almost unconsciously sets up its ivory tower\nof administration.\u2014C. L. Burton.\nRandom Comer\nBy  GRETCHEN   GIB60N\nTo go back to New Year's Day\u2014did you\nhappen to listen to Lister Sinclair's radio\nbook review? The two books reviewed wert\n\"The Voice of the Desert\" and \"The Edge of\nthe Sea\"; nature books, as you would guess\nfrom the titles. In the course of his talk Mr.\nSinclair compared the town dweller with\ntha country dweller.\n. \"Tha town dweller enjoys nature,\" he\nremarked, \"but he seldom experiences nature.\"\n(It's too bad wa haven't the privilege of\na two-way communication on radio! I felt\nlike interrupting Mr. Sinclair-vwhich would\nhave enchanted him\u2014to tell him about two\nof our town dwellers who a few days before\nhad certainly experienced nature.\nNow, thl\u00ab is not a story of startling encounters and humorous mishaps; it is merely\na tale of town dwellers at grips with the\ngreat out-of-doors.\nDuring the last week of 1955 two of our\nNelson young men were seized with tht\nurge for adventure. They looked about them.\nSilver King and vicinity shone with a come-\nhither brightness. Thereupon they decided\nthey would snowshoe, not to Silver King,\nhut to Copper Mountain, about three miles\nsouthwest of Silver King, and spend the\nnight in a snug little lookout near the peak,\nwhich they knew contained a stove, fuel\nand cooking utensils.\nEquipped with sleeping bags, and well-\nclothed and provisioned, they snowshoed off,\nskis for the return trip attached by tow lines\nto their packs. They went the Blewett way,\nfollowing Forty-Nine Creek. Past the old\nMay and Jennit mine, past Gold Hill, up and\nup they ploughed. Nature impeded them at\nevery step, forcing them to raise each foot\nhigh before the next step was taken, deterring them, buffeting them, mocking and\nyet alluring them. By four in the afternoon\nthey had gained the heights all right, but\nyou can well imagine how fatigued they\nwere, and the Copper Mountain lookout was\nstill a distant goal.\nIt was getting dark. There was nothing\nfor it but to spend the night in the open on\ni    win,   m   ti)\"-im    lji.\u201e   ni(,ui.   111    nit-   u|jou   uit\nm,t IWlMW\u2014 \u2014 mmm i \u25a0 \u25a0\u2014 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014 - \u25a0\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nW-AHD\nthe mountainside, to face a bitter experience\nwith Nature in one of her cruelest but loveliest aspects, a clear winter night, moonlit\nand below zero.\n\"It was bitterly eold,\" one of the young\nmen related afterwards, \"but unbelievably,\nbeautiful.\"\nFortunately they had brought along a\nfew shingles, matches and paper, but they\nhad to gather a certain amount of fuel before they dared to start a fire, and fuel was\nnot easy to find, with dried underbrush\nburied deep in the mow and they in a near-\nexhausted state. However, faced with the\nperils of a below-zero night in the wilds,\nand armed with the hatchet they had\nbrought along, somehow they managed to\ncollect enough for a fair-sized fire. They had\nfood, but were almost too tired to eat.\nSince it was essential to keep that fire\nburning all through the night, or they would\nsuffer from frostbite, they took shifts of\nthree hours each in a sleeping bag. One slept\nwhile the other gathered the hard-to-find\nfuel.\nIt was eerie for the lonely worker\u2014the\namazing beauty and brilliance of the surroundings, the many vague but alarming\nnight noises. What was that? A prowling\nanimal? What? The ceaseless heavy ploughing through the snow in search of wood.\nAnd what a contrast to the previous night\u2014\nswift-moving TV in a comfortable livjng-\nroom; and' here in the sparkling cold, the\nslow-moving moon and Orion's eternal combat with the Bull on the vista vision screen\nof the heavens.\nHowever, when daylight broke they had\nno urge to turn back. It was the last day of\nthe old year, and they must be in town before evening, but they went on as far as\ntime permitted, to the ridge at the source\nof Forty-Nine Creek, from where they could\nsee the lookout and the peak of Copper\nMountain. They they donned their skis and\nturned toward home.\nThe results of the hardships of that\nnight on the mountainside faded after a good\nnight's sleep, but the adventure of their actual experience will be unforgettable\u2014our\ntown dwellers at grips with Nature) in the\nwilderness had held their own.\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persona aslflng questions will .not bo published. Thera l> no charge for this service, Questions WILL NOT BE AN.\nSWERED BY MAIL except whom there\nIs obvious necessity for privacy.\nJ. H., Nelson\u2014Can you give ma titles of\nbooks\" written by Grey Owl?\nThe Men of the Last Frontier; Adven.\ntures of Sajo and Her Beaver People; Tales\nof an Empty Cabin; The Green Leaf; The\nTree; Pilgrims of the Wild. These are all we\ncan trace, but If there are any missing, will\nother readers help, please?\nReader, Nelson\u2014Who were the highest paid\nplayers in the American and National\nLeagues during 1955, and what were the\nsums they received?\nMajor league players' salaries are not\nmade public. Lots of guesses are made, but\nnothing authentic has been issued.\nA. D., Nelson\u2014Can you tell me the name of\nthe author of a book called, I think,\n\"The Singer of the Kootenay\"? If ahat\nwas not the title, it was used for one\nof the characters.\nCan other readers help, please?\nAnother Reader, Kimberley \u2014 Could you\nplease give me the names of the leading\nnewspapers in Duncan and Nanaimo?\nAlso names and addresses \u00abf.a real estate man in each of these towns?\nDuncan newspaper:  Cowichan Leader,\nweekly. Nanaimo, Free Press, daily. Real\nestate firms: Duncan, Duncan & Christmas.\nLtd.; Nanaimo, Nanaimo Realty Co.\n\"S.O.S.\", Nelson\u2014Is it legal for anyone-\neven the bank\u2014to withdraw money (almost $1000) from my account without\nany notification to me, and without my\nsignature? I was out of town when it\nwas done. I know tha deposit was a\nmistake, but was the withdrawal legal,\nwithout my signature and consent?\nOur  advice  is  that you  consult, your\nbank manager.\nMrs.  G.  O., Creston\u2014Referring  to list of\nZane Grey books:\nThis wonderful author wrote 46 books\nin all, Including the following: Code of the\nWest, Drift Fence, Fighting Caravans, Forlorn River, The'Wash Knife Outfit, Knights\nof the Range, Light of the Western Stars,\nThe Lost Wagon Train, Men of the Forest.\nThe Mysterious Rider, Robbers' Roost. Shepherd of Guadaloupe. Stairs of Sand, Sunset\nPass, Thunder Mountain, Wilderness Trek,\nWildfire, The Dude Ranger. Some of these\nare more or less sequels to others\u2014at least\nthe same characters figure in them.\nResponsibility\n(Stettler, Alta., Independent)\nIt seems to us that the householder is\n. responsible for the snow and ice on the sidewalk in front of his residence while the\ntown is responsible only for the condition\nof the. concrete. If that is the case, which\nseems reasonable, then the town should insist on having all sidewalks cleared, and if\nthe householder does not take action, the\nstreet men should get out and clear \u25a0 away\nthe snow and ice and charge trie bill Jo the\nhouseholder.\nWhen the town goes to the expense of\nlaying pavements, the householders should\ndo their part. Otherwise we are just a backward village with no regard for the safety\nand convenience of the citizens generally.\nSHORT   HAUL   ON   THIS   RUN   \u2014 Tom seta of railway tracks are laid at Saint\nAtoll la Brlcrc, West France, to facilitate moving of eight-room house to new site in foreground.\nParents Dread Night With lb\nThreat oi Tragedy and Fire\nBy   DAVE   MclNTOSH\nCanadian  Press 8taff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A shocked\ncapital woke up Thursday to another multiple-death fire.\nA chill fear\u2014the fear of death\nby fire\u2014hung over the city like\nsmoke in a windless sky.\nIt is no exaggeration to say that\nOttawa is frightened. There seems\nto be no explanation for the series\npf fires that have killed 82 persons, including 23 children, since\nNov. 18.\nIn many cases the fire department has been unable fo find the\ncauses.\nController Roy Donaldson, at\nthe scene of the latest four-death\ninferno, said the. situation is\nalarming and that there seems to\nbe no control over it.\nMr. Donaldson, who reports to\nCity Council for the fire department, said he will look into the\npossibility of bringing the Ontario\nfire marshal here to launch a fire\nprevention campaign.\nHe suggested Ottawa citizens\ndiscuss fire prevention around\ntheir family tables, especially\nhow,   if  possible   to  avoid   panic.\nBut nearly every family is al\nready talking about this, and had\nbeen for some time.\nMAY SLEEP IN RELAYS\nSome parents are talking of\nsleeping in relays so that there\nwill be at least one person in the\nhouse awake throughout the night.\nMost of the fires have occurred\nin homes where there were sev.\neral children. The worst blaze,\njust before Christmas, killed five\nchildren and their mother.\nHome-owners and landlords are\nchecking wiring systems and\nclearing rubbish out of nooks and\ncrannies in their houses.\nSome parents SBid they plan to\nsieep in the same room with their\nchildren and leave lights burning\nthrough the night.\nOne mother said: \"I'm afraid to\ngo to sleep. I don't mind admitting it. I'm scared.\"\nAt every street corner, at work\nand in the home, fire is practically\nthe only subject of conversation.\nB.C. Not Alone in\nTimber Problems\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Public\ntimberlands and their disposal is\nas much a problem in the United\nStates as in B. C, an American\nforest industrialist said- here. Joseph McCracken of Portland, Ore-,\ntold the annual truck loggers convention here that B. C. is more\nfortunate than the U. S. where\nonly 25 per cent of the timber is\npublicly owned. In B. C, 95 per\ncent belongs to the crown.\nParatroops off\nTo Cyprus\nfly TOM  OCHILTREE\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Britain Thursday began speeding some 2000\nparatroops toward Cyprus as a\nshow oi, strength in the tense\nMiddle East.\nDispatch of the airborne \"Fire\nBrigade\" to Britain's Middle East\nheadquarters on the Mediterranean island came amid reports that\nthe government is considering\nslowing down _ troop evacuations\nfrom the Suez Canal zone because\nof the restless situation In the\narea.\nTransport planes in the morning\nbegan ferrying the special combat\ngroup eastward through heavy\nrain clouds to reinforce Britain's\nestimated garrison on Cyprus of\n100,000 men, many of whom are\ntied down by disorders arising out\nof demands for union of the island\nwith Greece.\nThe giant airlift is due to be\ncompleted by Friday night.\nDressed in a camouflaged uniform, the paratroopers' 42-year-\nold commander, Brig. A. M. H.\nButler, took off in the lead plane.\nHe has held his present command\nleBS than a week.\nWINTER  FLOWER\nThe Christmas rose, or Black\nHellebore, with evergreen leaves,\nis a European native plant which\nflowers in winter.\nFranz Josef land northwest of\nSpitsbergen consists of some 60\nislands of volcanic origin.\nFINEST WAXES\nfor\nFINEST SHINES\nBring the\nChildren. \u2022\u2022\nOn your visits to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.      \/\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire . . .\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoor!\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSilver Grill\nCar Defects\nIn a recent roadblock check in Southern\nOntario, 7Q cars out of 200 were found to\nhave some mechanical faults. If this is a fair\nsample, 35 per cent of the cars in use have\ndefects. No matter how high garage bills go,\nthey are still cheaper than paying one's way\nout pf a serious accident. A campaign to\nstimulate thinking along this line is evidently needed.\u2014Ottawa'Citizen.\nPI\nIt's Been Said\nThere is no such thing as luck. It's a.\nfancy name for being always at our duty,\nand so sure to be ready when the good time\ncomes.\u2014Bui wer-Lytton.\n*n\u00ab\nIrJ 4MV CLUB OR\nCIVIC GROUP THERE'S\nthe euy who is.oh,\nSO 4VE-SHy WHEN\nIT COMES TO TOTING\nHIS SH4RE OF THE\nAUD NOW WHOU UOLUNTKR FOR\nTHE BE4NS 4ND MEAHS CO-MMITTEE P\n4H.' THENK MXJ-THEWK KxJ. TU4T WINDS\nUP THE COM-MrTTEES-NOW TO GET\nDOWN TO THE BUSINESS AT H4NP-\nMOTIONS \/IRE IN ORDER-DOI HE4R-P\nBy Jimmy Hado]\n*Q?mrmm77nnnaBm7777r7\\\nWatch Your Language\nLUCK\u2014(LUKK)\u2014Noun: That which\nhappens to one seemingly by chance; hap;\nfate; fortune; good luck, favorable fortune.'\nOrigin: Middle Dutch\u2014Gheluc, Ghelucke.\nDutch\u2014Geluk; Luk.\nToday's Bible\nThought\nBe thou an example) of bellav-\ners, In word, In conversation, In\nfaith, In purity.\u2014I Timothy 4:12.\nWe need not be sanctimonious\nprigs. But if our hearts are right\ntoward God and our neighbors we\nwill be good examples of our faith\nttwL oH&L\nAnd then when\nhe's free op 4ll\nofpici4u responsibility who does\nall the sideline\nquibbling md\ns4ck-se4tqu4rteb-\nBdCKINGPk'Ee-RECT.'i\nMR.CH4IRM4N-I NOT ONLY MOVE,\n' I DEM4MD TM4T AIL CHAIRMEN'OF\nCOMMITTEES SUBMIT EvERV PROPOSAL\nIN TRIPLICATE TO TUB BOW flOllTIC\"'\n' k MO TH4T 64ID CrMIRMENOp NOT\n-BELONG TO, OR WILL RESIGN FFOM.\n*\u00a3f\u00abL>WV \u00b0\u2122eR ORGANISATION'\n'\"\u2022 (l - l   \u2014,4ND BJS1HERM0RE-\nww\/Mum\n\/SI\n\u00bb'\n*#.\n'V'\/\\\"5r*\u00bb'\nT never knew a woman to call\nher husband pet names In public\nthat didn't treat him like a stepchild in private.\nTM JUST WILD\nABOUT HOW MUCH\nMONEY, WANT ADS\nHAVE SAVED ME I\"\n\"All the girls In my crowd have learn,\ned how easy it is ta SAVE with classified ads in this paper! Sa many good\nbuys are offered each day, on all kinds\not merchandise, that we just don't\nknow where to look first . . . Take\nmy advice, ladies, shop these classified ads and save!''...\nWhat do  YOU  need??  Get  it  fast\nwith    a    low-cost    classified    adl!\nThrifty women - and men, too - read our classified ads\nevery day for fhe best reason in the world: YOU SAVE!!\nWant ads in this paper are a market place for everything\nyou want to buy, sell or swap and - for expert services ...\nGet the classified shopping habit, now ...\nREAD the WANT ADS\nIn Your\nNelson Daily News\nPhone 1844\n ~.\nHarrop Wl Names Works Croups,\nLines Up Monthly Projects\nHARROP\u2014Harrop and District\nWomen's Institute committee conveners were named for ,the new\nyear at the group's meeting at the\nhome of Mrs. D. P. Fairbank. Soc<\nial welfare is under the leadership\nof Mrs. E. Smith and those In\ncharge of other committees are\nMrs. C. McNown, agriculture; Mrs.\nL. Bouillet, arts and crafts, Mrs.\nF. E. Boyce, citizenship, and Mrs.\nFairbank, publicity.   .\nA schedule of monthly projects\nYOUNG   MARLENE\n\u2014 Marlene Dietrich of stage\nand screen wears an oriental\nsilk brocade evening wrap as\nihe arrives at a film premiere\ntn a Hollywood theater.\nr- w\u00bbli im.\nMaw\nwas arranged, to Include such entertaining programs as a pie baking contest and bingo social, St.\nPatrick's card party with added\nfun of silent charades, a daffodil\ntea and plant sale, prizes to be\noffered for a Harrop school competition and active participation\nin the community spprts day. During the summer holiday months\nthe members will sew an extra\napron to be turned in at September meeting when plans will be\nmade for a Fall bazaar;     '\nOPEN TO ALL\nFinal arrangements were made\nfor the February project, the pie\nbaking competition, which is open\nto all men, women and children in\nthe district. Free admission will be\ngiven to those bringing apple pies\nwhich will be judged and then\nprovide the refreshments for the\nevening. This will also be bingo\nsocial, and will be held in the\nHarrop school on the Saturday\nevening preceding Valentine's day\nso that a Valentine decorating\ntheme will be used.   .\nTea was served by co-hostesses\nMrs. E. Serres and Mrs. J. Paul-\nhus. Cancer fund prize donated by\nMiss L. Grant was won by Mrs.\nA. Feller.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nWl TO SPONSOR\nDANCE REVIEW\nSOUTH SLOCAN\u2014The mothers\nat South Slocan are busy at their\nsewing machines these days, preparing costumes for a dance revue\nto be held January 26.\nThe dances under the direction\nof Mrs. H. E. Dahlquist are putting on a varied program, the first\nhalf of the program consisting of\nvarious dances, the second half, a\nplay\/ \"Sleeping Beauty\" with dia-\ni logue and dancing. Most of the j\n! youngsters started dancing for the\nfirst time last September.\nThe revue is being sponsored by\nthe Women's Institute.\nI , .\"\/? A. 5 , R * ~\" The!e fur mask\u00bb adorned with jewels were hit of a fashion show In\nParis. At left Is Persian lamb with jewelled clips and bracelets; center, white mink with turquoise,\nemeralds, diamonds and rubles; and right, white kaloan with emeralds, sapphires and diamonds.\nThe Doctor.\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order Extra Copies of\n21st ANNUAL\nand\nINDUSTRIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER\nCARRIER OR TO THE DAILY NEWS\nCIRCULATION DEPARTMENT\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY IN\nBLACK PENCIL\nName _\nAddress .\nCity\t\nName -\nAddress .\nCity\t\nName _\nAddress .\nCity .._._\nName _\nAddress .\nCity\t\nName -\nAddress .\nCity _...\nName _\nAddress .\nCity .....\nYour Own Name ._\nYour Own Address\nCopy _\\ jc and Qc Postage\nPlus 5% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 32c per copy covers wrapping and mailing\nby us to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain\nor the United States\nPHONE 1844\nIs\nMost Dangerous\nRoom in House\nBy DR, HERMAN N. BUND^SEN\nThe most dangerous room in the\nhouse is the kitchen.\nThings^like turning the handles\nof cooking pots parallel with the\nback of stove and wiping any\ngrease or water spilled on the floor\nimmediately are common sense\nsafety habits.\nBut there are other practices for\nboth you and your children which\naren't as well known and which\nmight well prevent a serious injury or even death.\nHOT  GREASE\nSpattering hot grease causes\nmany burns. Since water makes\ngrease \"spit,\" be careful that none\ngets into a frying pan or deep fat\nfryer while cooking.\nThe temperature of grease must\nbe controlled both for cooking and\nsafety and the best way to do this\nis with a thermometer. If that isn't\npossible, drop a small piece of\nbread into the fat. When the fat\ntoasts the bread to a golden brown\nin 10 seconds, it's ready for deepj\nfrying.'\nYou can prevent fat from catching fire by filling the kettle to no\nWynndd Notes i Hallie Carnegie\nSuits Epitomize\nLadylike Look\nWYNNDEL \u2014 Mrs. W. Towhey\nand son of Calgary are guests of\nMrs,'Hayhurst.\nSt. Paul's United Church tea\nwas held at the home of Mrs. K,\nF. Packman with Mrs. F, Mer-\nriam as co-hostess.\nAt a meeting of the Community\nClub held in the memorial hall,\nfinal arrangements were made for\na banquet for January 27. Mrs. W.\nLeins will be in charge of the\nkitchen, and Mrs, Fred Hagen in\ncharge of serving. New playing\ncards and serving spoons will be\npurchased.\nA military whist party was held\nin the community hall sponsored\nby the Community Club. Prizewinners were Mrs. M. Wigen, L.\nBenedetti, A. Wright and A. Mar-\ngitan, and consolation winners\nwere Mrs. E. Uri, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nWigen and Fred Hagen. Winner\nof the draw was H. Russill,\n(Dama, lifL With,\nWlaJtian, OflaAtut\nmore than four lncnes from the\ntop. If it does ignite, turn out the\nflame immediately and with a\nlong fork, place the cover over the\nflaming pan.\nGREASE FIRE\nIf a grease fire starts in the\nbroiler, throw a handful of ordinary salt or baking soda on it.\nNever use water on a grease fire.\nWhen you light a gas oven,' light\nthe match first, then stand to one\nside- and place the match to the\noven burner.\nAs {or the gas stove, remember\na correctly adjusted flame has a\nblue inner cone. The presence of\na yellow flame indicates the burner needs adjusting.\nTo protect your youngster from\nburns, start* training him while\nhe is young.\nSay \"hot,\" and let him touch\nsomething just warm enough to\ngive him a start. Also, you can\nwarn him, by touching something\nwith your hand and immediately,\npulling it away exclaiming, \"Ow,\nit's hot.\" Or you can try pulling\nhim away from the stove or a hot,\npan exclaiming \"hot.\"\nIf none of these ideas work,\nmaybe you'd better give him a\nspanking while repeating the word\n\"hot\" whenever he gets too near\nto something which might burn\nhim.\nBy DOROTHY ROE\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The ladylike look for spring, 1956, reaches\nits zenith in the skilled hands of\nHattie Carnegie, who always has\nknown how to make a suit well-\nmannered, suave and feminine.\nHer current collection, previewed for fashion editors this week,\nstars the slim, short-jacketed suit\nand the sheath-and-jacket costume\nas favorite outfits for the Easter\nparade, adding those subtle surprise touches which have become\nalmost her signature. Little double\nvelvet collars, soft tab and button\narrangements, unexpected jewel\naccents, lingerie touches \u2014 all\nthese identify the Carnegie suit.\nAlthough the line Is for the\nmost part straight and slim, jackets are carefully and lovingly\nshaped to flatter the figure, curving in at the waistline, and sheaths\nalso have an easy, fluid line while\nappearing straight and narrow.\nA Carnegie trick of the season\nis the \"winkie\" velvet trim \u2014 a\ncurved velvet eyelash ending a\ntab trim. She used it on a costume\nof silky blaok and white cotton\ntweed, with short, velvet collared\njacket and shapely sheath with\nsquared neckline. The \"winkie\" is\nplaced like a watch fob just above\nthe midriff on one side.\nThe fuller coat silhouette Is\nunderscored by Monte-Sano and\nPruzan, known for trend-setting\ncoats arid suits. They show a loose,\ndolman-like coat with fullness\nloosely gathered beneath a low\nback belt. Some of these new\nspring coats have the look of the\nold-fashioned dusters, worn in the\nearly days of the automobile.\nKeep fn Trfm\nIndividual Rale\nOf Weight Loss\nUnpredictable\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nOn the basis of calorie subtraction, it is possible to predict the\napproximate date at which you\ncan expect to be down to healthy\nnormal weight. Calorie science\nreally has taken the guess work\nout of reducing. However, the\nweek to week rate of reducing is\nan individual matter and depends\non whether you tend to store water\nin the tissues or release the surplus\nwater at the beginning of the\ndiet. Being alert to water \"swings\"\ncan keep you from becoming discouraged.\nAs a rule, the more overweight\nyou are, the more you can expect\nto lose at the start of a diet. If you\nhave considerable soft fat, there\nis likely to be more surplus water\nin the tissues and you will lose\nvery fast in the beginning. However, don't expect to continue losing at this rapid rate or you will\nbecome discouraged when the pace\nslackens, as with the reducer in\nthis letter . . .\n\"The first 11 days of my diet I\nlost a pound a day. Now I just\ncan't seem to lose any more, even\nthough I am on th^ same diet. I\nam very much discouraged. What\nis the reason for this, and what\ncan I do to lose now?\"\nHere's the reason. Your initial\nrapid loss was due to the fact that\nconsiderable water was released\nalong with the fat. Once the water\nbalance is adjusted, you will lose\nat the rate established by the cal-\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBLOODY FIGHTING\nALGIERS (AP) \u2014 Twenty-eight\npersons were killed and 37\nwounded Monday and Tuesday in\ncontinued bloody clashes between\nFrench authorities and Algerian\nnationalist rebels. The casualties\nincluded for French soldiers killed\nand seven wounded; 17 rebels\nkil'ed. 30 wounded and 14 captured. Seven Algerians were killed\nby political assassins.\n9366\nSIZES TO 50\nSizes up to 50 can make this 3-\npiece lingerie wardrobe in a jiffy\nGraceful slip, chemise, panties \u2014I\nall proportioned for the larger\nfigure; for comfortable, wearable\nfit. Easy to sew \u2014 in crepe, nylon,\nor plisse!\nPattern 9366: Women's Sizes 36.\n38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36\nslip, 2'\/b yard 39-inch; chemise, \\xk\nyards; panties, 1% yards.\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step\nSend THIRTY - FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted), for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St!. W.\nToronto. On$.\nBaby's\nColds'\nRelieve Suffering\nFast-Effectiveiy,\n\u00ab        with\/\nWICKS\nf VapoRub\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nFOR SKI ENTHUSIASTS all over the country the time Is\nright to take to the slopes and get fun and excitement of famous\nwinter sports. This parka Is a happy choice If you are an active\nskier as It Is practical as well as colorful. It is made of royal\nblue cotton poplin with a round white embroidered yoke and\nwhite trim on the cuffs. Weather-proof and water repelent, It Is\nlightweight, cozy and  plenty roomy.\nParaplegics\nTake Part in\nBusiness Life\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP) \u2014 There\nare wheels instead of legs on office chairs of one of Windsor's\nnewest and most aggressive business ventures.\nTheir occupants are handicapped young men and women\ndetermined to prove they can\nclaim a living In the competitive\nlife of a modern industrial city.\nLarry Parker, one of seven victims of maiming accidents and\ndisease who got together to form\nSecretarial Services, says the\ngroup can perform almost any\ntype of office work,\nLarry, who was elected president  of  the* infant  firm,  types\nneatly with the knuckle of one\nindex finger.\nEAGER WORKERS\nOther members of tha group\ncan perform business services\nranging from poster work and\nmimeographing to telephone answering and bookkeeping. They\nhope to attract many more handicapped workers.\nThe eager business people don't\neven wait for work to come to\nthem. Jim Armaly, who has partial use of limbs, operates a fast\nbicycle pick-up service.\nThe idea of getting the group\ntogether was that of a^ble-bodied\nUrsula Diemer. She got It from\nher cousin who has done similar\nwork at nearby Essex since injured nine years ago.\nMiss Diemer wrote to Health\nMinister Paul Martin, who put her\nin touch with a number of handicapped persons here.\nA card party was held to raise\nInitial capital for the new business. It financed the first typewriter.\nFurther fund-raising enterprises\npaid for more equipment and a\nnewspaper advertisement .announcing the new service. \"Then\nwe left them to It,\" says Miss\nDiemer.   -\nMost of the work is done at\nhome. The workers and officials\njoin in the share-out of jobs on\nequal basis according to their\ncapabilities.\n''We want work, not charity,\"\nsays president Parker.\n\"Our motto is 'ability not disability'. We can do a job to compare with the best.\"\nFUR COAT SOURCE\nMore than 4,000,000 Alaska fur\nseals breed each year on the Prib-\niloff islands in the North Pacific,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1956\u20145\nKINETTE CLUB\nSLATE INSTALLED\nNew officers were installed and\nyearly reports showing a successful year were' given when the\nKinette Club held its annual\nChristmas party Tuesday night at\nthe home of Mrs. Audrey Nuyens.\nMrs. Hilda Morris is the new\npresident, taking over from Mrs.\nFlorence Sutherland.\nA turkey supper was enjoyed\nby members.\norle deficit.\u201eKnow that this standstill period is temporary. Continue\nyour diet, eat a complete protein\nfood at every meal and you will\npresently start to reduce at the\nrate of one or two pounds a week.\nFrom now on the loss will all be\nin body fat.\nNow for those of you who have\nfailed to lose. Hold on! While you\nmay not show any weight loss for\nanother week, this stubborn period\nwill be followed by a rapid loss,\nand the end result will coincide\nwith the estimated date. You'll\ncatch up with the fast starters.\nYou can even appear to gain on\na reducing diet! This paradoxical\nbehavior on a diet is due to the\nfact that stored water weighs more\nthan the fat it has replaced. If you\nare cutting calories, you are losing\nweight, regardless of the pointer\non the scales'. Stay With the diet...\nand one morning soon, you'll find\nyourself many pounds lighter.\nWswUsuJiaQL\nby, c&utAcL Uth&sikh.\n681\nJIFFY! THR1FTYI\nTakes only one yard 35-Inch\nfabric to whip up this pretty apron!\nNo embroidery! Iron-on pink wild-\nroses with green leavesl\nPattern 681: Jiffy-apron! Tissue\npattern, washable iron-on color\ntransfers in combination of pink\nand green. Medium size only.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted),\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto.\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLook for smartest ideas in\nneedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting,\nembroidery and lovely things to\nwear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons, novelties..\u2014 easy,.fun to make! Send\n25 cents for your copy of this book\nNOW! You will want to order\nevery new design in it\n2 Piece\nConvertible\nLOUNGE\nSUITES\nCovered in grey, red and\nchartreuse.\n2 Pieces\nNAKUSP LEGION\nAUXILIARY SLATE\nIS INSTALLED\nNAKUSP \u2014 R. McPhee, president of Nakusp Legion' branch,\ninstalled new officers of the\nLadies' Auxiliary at the latter\norganization's monthly meeting in\nthe club room.\nThe new officers are Mrs. H.\nSteenhoff, president; Mrs. B. Ker-\nsaw, first vice-president; Mrs. E.\nFerrie, second vice-president; Mrs.\nN. Johnson, secretary; Mrs. E.\nShelling, treasurer; Mrs. D. Jones,\nsergeant-at-arms; Mrs. M. Knih-\nnicki, standard bearer, and Mrs.\nA. Chadwick, Mrs. M. Donnelly\nand Mrs. E. Aalten, executive\nmembers.\nThree new members, Mrs. N.\nSatterthwaite, Mrs. I. Stewart and\nMrs. T. Berard, were Initiated Into\nthe auxiliary.\nMrs. Ferrie reported that she\nhad made five visits to the hospital in December, taking magazines to the patients. She also\nmade six visits to sick members\nat home. Mrs. Aalten reported\nthat Christmas parcels had been\nsen^to 11 local boys serving in\nthe armed forces.\nThe group is planning to hold\nits annual bazaar in May. Mrs. D.\nJones will be the convener.\nMrs. Aalten, on behalf of the\nLA, presented Mrs. Steenhoff,\nMrs. Shelling and Mrs. Kershaw\nwith corsages in appreciation of\nall the work they had done Jn\nthe past year. Mr. McPhee congratulated the women on the fine\nwork they were doing and expressed sincere thanks for the cooperation and support that the\nbranch had received from the LA.\nHow Christian Science Heals\n\"Intelligence Is Available\nWhere Your Are\"\nCKLN, 1240 ke, Frl, 6:16 p.m.\nSwlft-Knjt\nHome Knitting\nMACHINES\n$49.95\nLevenda  English  Wools     i\ni   HOBBY SHOP\n(Craft Classes Continuing)\nThe Right Shoes for\nEvery Age.\nSizes 0 - 7\nPriced From\n$1.00\n4 OUT OF 5 BABIES WEAR\ndfrt (pOALaStJbL\nSHOES\nKnown\nThe World Over\nCHILDREN'S SHOES\nScientifically Fitted\nby EXPERT8\nPHONE 1114\n411 BAKER ST.\nTASTE BEST WHEN THEY\nx A ARE MADE WITH\nPACIFIC MILK\nPacific Evaporated Milk has the\nrich creaminess... the fresh,\nsweet flavoo that really counts\nin cooking. When a recipe calls t v    iv\/ipniiAUD\n'  for milk, use Pacific Milk and\ntaste the wonderful difference.\nW       tVJPJlAltU, -0\nily evaporated milk processec\n 'PHI\n6\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13,1956\n\u2014\u2014\nSOVIET   SPECIES \u2014 A Siberian wool-hair tiger enb of one of the most ferocious species\nto tbe world bares Its fangs after arrival at Hamburg, Germany, Zoo. Two tigers came to the\nZoo from Siberia through barter agreement between the Zoo and Russia,\nMILADY'S   PANTALETS - Doreen Casey's fin.\nyard nylon net skirt flares to reveal knee-length silver lame\npants during London ballroom dance with Harry Hampshire.\nPAC INC SINBAD TH E S A I L 0 R_ A TJ. S. Air Force Hughes XH-17 emulates\nthe legendary roc in a test program at Culver City, Cal, by lifting a 7,800-pound Air Force\ntrailer van. Hughes engineers believe It was the heaviest load ever lifted by a helicopter.\nFLEET  CHIEF-vice\nAdmiral Stuart H. IngersoU\nis the new commander of the\nV. S. 7th Fleet In the Far\nEast He succeeds Vice Admiral\nAlfred M. Pride.\nHEADLINERS MEET- Helen Hayes, left, and Joan\nCrawford meet at * Sun premiere in New York for benefit\nof Actors'  Studio,  non-profit workshop  for  theater, people.\nBABY BOUNCER \u2014 Kenneth W. Hayes eyes world\nwarily day afler birth In Troy, N. Y., hospital where he\nchecked in at 13 pounds, 11 ounces, top in the hospital history.\n[\u2022AST TOOT\u2014 Bandmaster Merle Brans Mows farewell\nduring nation-wide TV show at Sarasota, Fla,- of Mingling\nBros, and Barnnm A Bailey Circus with which he spent 17 rears.\nWINTRY    T 0 P-\nAmong recent Paris fashions is\nsnowball hat by Jean Barthet,\nof white swansdown studded\nwith graduate* snowflake pins\nourrounded by diamonds.\nOVERWEICHT MATCH- Muffin, three-months-\nold lioness, wrestles puppies at home of Lincoln Park Zoo trainer\nPete Pinyan, Oklahoma City. She'll get her own cage at Zoo soon.\nTINY REPLICAS \u2014 Christopher Columbus' ship Santa\nMaria and a 1904 limousine built by Jean-Marie Broussart\nare  displayed at exhibition of  Miniature  Models  in .Paris.\nNO CLUE, NO PINS \u2014 Alex Anderson, 83-year-old\nformer fanner and blacksmith of Okolna, Ky., carved this chain\nfrom one piece ot wood.  He's been whittling for 30 years.\nCARNIVAL   CLOWN \u2014 A. Faraut finishes clay model\nof giant head of the \"King of Humor\" which will smile on\ncelebrants at the Nice Carnival on French Riviera.\nEASINC A HOUSINC PROBLEM \u2014 The \"Second of December\" housing project\ndominates Caracas, Venetucla, hill following opening to 11,830 former slum dwellers. The 13-\nmillion-doUar project has 13 blocks of 15-story modern apartments and 52 four-story buildings.\nCEOLOCICAL   JIGSAW \u2014 Orville Gilpin, of the\nChicago Natural History Museum, assembles skeleton of 40-\nfoot Gorgosaurus, huge dinosaur which roamed, the earth 75\nmillion years ago. Bones were unearthed near Edmonton, Canada.\nEXCHANGE   OF   COURTESIES \u2014 The Vatican's Swiss Guards, In traditional\n\u2022 medieval uniforms, march In St. Peter's Square in ceremony welcoming Italian President Gronchl\nto Vatican  City.  It  was  Gronchl's  first  official call on the Pope since taking his office.\n \u2014 1\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n-\u25a0\n'\n\u2014\n. '.\n\u2014\n, w,,,-,^\n.\nSPORTS\n<V\nRyalls In . . .\nThree Rinks Vie for\nTwo Playoff Spots\nSkip Jim Leeming led his rink\nto a narrow 13-12 victory over I\nFritz Farenholtz Wednesday night j\nto take his fifth victory in the\nNelson Curling Club's regional\nchampionship playoffs.\nA rink skipped by Milt Ryalls j\nproved itself to be top contender\nin the competition by listing its\nseventh victory in eight starts and\nis assured of a spot in the W%st\nKootenay playoffs.\nThe win for Leeming moved his\nrink past Dave Cathcart into the\nfourth place in rink standings.\nRoy Maurer and Len Peerless also\nwon their games in the competition's eighth round to retain second and third place in the standings.\nThe most crucial games in the\nfinal round of the playoff competition to be played Sunday\n\u2022will  pit Dave  Cathcart against\nStan, Red Sip\nWith'Cardinals\nST. LOUIS (AP)\u2014Stan Musial\nand Red Schoendienst, 'a $125,000\npackage of baseball talent, Thursday signed their 1956 contracts\nwith St. Louis Cardinals.\nThe joint signing was announced at a press conference by August A. Busch Jr., Cardinal president.\nBoth players expressed satisfaction with the terms of their one-\nyear contracts, reported the same\nas last season when Musial drew\nabout $80,000 and Schoendienst\n$45,000.\nMusial will play in the outfield\nnext season, Frank Lane, general\nmanager of the Cards, said, with\nWally Moon taking over at first\nbase. Musial played in both positions last year. He has said he\nprefers the outfield. ,\nThe 35-year-old Musial has won\nthe National League batting title\nsix times, led the league in total\nbases in six seasons, led in slugging percentage five times and set J\na major league record by hitting\nfive home runs in a doubleheader\nI in 1954.\nf Schoendienst, who'll turn 33\nnext month, is regarded as the\nclassiest fielding second baseman\nin the majors.\nMaurer and Leeming against J.\nHarvey.  Peerless Is  favored to\nwin his game against Dick Palmer.\nDeadlocks remaining'among the\ntop three teams after games played Sunday will be played off early\nnext week.   -\nThe top three teams will form\nthe Nelson Curling Club's delegation to the West Kootenay regional\nplayoffs at the Diamond Jubilee\nBonspiel opening in Nelson Thursday. The winner of this 16-rink\ncompetition will Represent the\nWest Kootenays in the B. C. championship playoffs in Victoria in\nFebruary.\nThe Standings:\nW L\nMilt Ryalls     7   1\nRoy Maurer     6   2\nLen Peerless    6   2\nJim Leeming     5   3\nDave Cathcart ..\".    4   4\nJim Harvey     4   4\nFritz Farenholtz     4   4\nDon Lord     2   6\nEarl  Hunt      2   6\nDick Palmer     1   7\nHere are results of the eighth\nround of this competition completed  late Wednesday night,\nRyalls 10, Hunt 8.\nMaurer 10, Palmer 5.\nPeerless 10, Cathcart 6.\nLeeming 12, Farenholtz 11.\nHarvey 9, Lord 8.\nFairer Refereeing, Says Warwick,\nOr V's Won't Play in Vernon\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 Grant War-  minute penalty in such a case,'\nwick, playing-coach of Penticton\nVs, said.in an Interview Thursday\nnight his team will play no more\nOkanagan Senior Hockey League\ngames in Vernon until refereeing\nshows an improvement there.\nWarwick, who led Vs to the Allan Cup two years ago and to the\nworld hockey championship last\nseason, said he is awaiting word\non a protest lodged with league\nofficials regarding Vernon Canadian' 7-6 overtime .win last Tuesday.\nThe Penticton club claims a mis- j\ninterpretation of the rules by a\nreferee kept Dick Warwick off\nthe ice when he should have been\nallowed to play.\nDick was banished from the\ngame after receiving two five-minute penalties.\n\"The rule book calls for a 15-\nGrant said. \"If Dick had been allowed to sit out his 15-minute\npenalty instead of being banned\nfrom the game, he would have\nbeen back in action when Vernon\nscored its winning goal.\"\nGrant, Dick and their brother\nBill form the Vs famed brother-\nline.\nCoach Grant said that under the\nconstitution and the rule book,\nthe league must allow the protest.\n\"With neutral referees, the Penticton Vs are four goals better\nthan Vernon any day, any game,\"\nGrant said.\nThe Penticton coach said Kelowna Packers have also criticized\nVernon officiating.\nVernon leads the OSHL, 14\npoints ahead of second-place Penticton.\n1955 Grey Cup Top\nFinancial Success\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nChicago \u2014 Johnny Holman, 201,\nChicago, stopped Bob Satterfield,\n184Ws, Chicago, 8.\nBuenos Aires \u2014 Pascual Perez,\n107%, Argentinia, outpointed Leo\nEspinosa, HlVfc, Philippines, 15.\nPerez retained world flyweight\ntitle.\n24-HOUR\nWRECKER SERVICE\nNow Available  In  Slocan  Valley\nPhone 1-J, Appledale, or Call at\nTEXACO   VALLEY   SERVICE\nAppledale, B.C.\nTractionizing \u2022 With New Needles\nREDS WOULD\nINVADE COWES\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Russia has\nasked for permission to take part\nin one of the most exclusive events\nin British sports\u2014the royal regatta at Cowes.\nThe Russian embassy is sending\na naval commodore and two other\nsenior officers to Cowes to discuss\narrangements.\nCowes officials said the Russians\nhad simply suggested the visit of\na Soviet naval unit to Cowes during this year's regatta.\n\"But my impression of the naval\nvisit is that they would want to do\nsome racing in the regatta,\" Makor\nA. M. Fitzpatrick-Robertson, the\nchairman of the Cowes council,\nsaid.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The 1955,\nGrey Cup final at Vancouver's\nI Empire Stadium produced the!\ngreatest financial packpot of any!\nsingle attraction in the history of\nCanadian team sports. Nothing\napproaching the figures has been\nhit in the colorful 47-year history\nof the football classic.\nFigures released Thursday by\nsecretary Harry McBrien of the\nCanadian Rugby Union showed\nthat the Montreal-Edmonton game\nsmashed all existing cup records\nwith a gross gate of $284,682 and\na net of $216,000. The $116,000\ngross gate and net of $126,940 taken in at the 1953 final at Toronto were the previous highs.\nThe Big Four and Western In-\nterprovincial Football Union each\nreceived a whopping $108,131 to\nsplit up among their teams and\nthe CRU took In a record $35,000\nas its share in promoting the\nclassic. Expenses of $68,419 also\nwere an all-time' high for the final.\nThe   attendance   of 39,491 was\nthe   greatest   in   Canadian   football. >\nPEAK'FIGURES\nOther highs: Gross revenue \u2014\n$226,326; television rights \u2014 $55,-\n000; radio rights \u2014 $20,000; film\nrights \u2014 $10,000.\nRights for the program were unchanged at $2,500.\nThe figures are a far cry from\nthe finansial statement for 1909,\nthe first year the cup final was\nplayed. Gate receipts for that\ngame, played at the old Toronto\nRosedale field, were $2,616.40.\nExpenses were $396.40, the CRU\nSalmo Bonspiel\nPostponed\n8ALM0 \u2014 The Salmo Open\nBonsplel, scheduled to start\nhere today, was postponed\nThursday after a prolonged\nspell of warm weather had soft-\nened the curling rink ice.\nA spokesman for the Salmo\nCurling Club, sponsor of the\nevent, reported that the club\nwill stage the annual event January 27-29 providing Ice conditions are favorable.\nCash for fuel, repairs\nand new-born heirs\n-i \u2022\n'   *WA*\nt* Jj.\ni'WZ\nHere's the kind of event that always seems\nto take a little more money than you have\non hand . .. when borrowirfg seems both\na necessary and sensible solution. And that's\njust the time to take your problems\nto the leader in the consumer finance field,\nto ask the help of the best trained staff anywhere.\nThousands of men and women have found\nthat Household Finance can be relied on to give\nthem prompt money service. If you have '\na steady income and can make regular monthly\npayments, no endorsers are needed.\nThere's a HFC office near you.\nWhy nof phone or drop in toddy \/\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nR. M. Brlghty, Monoger\n608 Baker Street, second floor, phone 1890\nNELSON. B.C.\nLIONS FIGHT\nOVER REICHOW\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014B.C. Lions\nof the Western Interprovincial\nFootball Union may lose out to\nDetroit Lions of the National\nFootball League in bidding for\nthe services of Jerry Reichow,\nIowa quarterback.\nClem Crowe, Lions' head coach,\ntelephoned president Don Mackenzie here to tell him Reichow\nhas decided to wait until the NFL\ndraft Is announced Jan. 17 before\nmaking a decision.\nCrowe has* been in Reichow's\nhometown of Decorah, Iowa, for\nsome days now in an effort to sign\nthe much-sought footballer.\nHe said Detroit Lions, seeking\na replacement for veteran quar\nterback Bobby Layne, offered to\nmake him their No. 1 draft choice.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014Results of\nThursday's   Football   Association\nCup third-round replays:\nBedford T 1, Arsenal 2.\nHull City 1, Aston Villa 2\nScunthorpe U 4, Rotherham U 2\nRevised  fourth  round  ties on\nJan. 28:\nArsenal vs Aston Villa.\nreceived $150 as its share and the\nparticipating teams \u2014 the University of Toronto and Toronto Park-1\ndate \u2014 each received $1,035.\nThe all-time low cup attendance\nand gate receipts were set In 1940\nat Atlawa when Toronto Balmy\nBeach met the Ottawa Rough\nRiders. A crowd of only 1,700 paid\n$1,798 to see the game at Lans-\ndowne Park.\nGuild Crumbles\nAs 29 Resign\nNEW YORK (AP)-State athletic commissioner Julius Helfand\naimed specific charges Thursday\nat promoters of the Monday night\ntelevised fights at St. Nicholas\nArena and announced continuing\ndisintegration of the New York\nBoxing Managers Guild.\nHelfand filed eight specific\ncharges against Tex Sullivan,\nmatchmaker, and Willie Gilzen-\nberg, treasurer, of the London\nSporting Club and seven charges\nagainst the corporation itself.\nHe ordered Sullivan and Gil-\nzenberg to appear before the commission Jan. 19 to show cause why\ntheir licences as- promoters in\nNew York should not be revoked.\nThe main charges were that Sullivan and Gilzenberg associated\nwith known criminals and, In\nattempting to move their enterprise to Baltimore last week,\nsought to hamper the state athletic commission's efforts.\nHelfand's office also announced\nthat 29 members of the once\ndefiant New York guild have re\nsigned and more withdrawals are\nexpected,\nAmong, those to leave the body\nwhich Helfand had ordered\nbanned effective Jan. 18, were\nWillie Ketchum, manager of ex-\nlightweight champion Jimmy Carter, and Bobby Gleasort, who\nhandles Cuban heavyweight contender  Nino  Valdes.\nBill Daly, secretary-treasurer of\nthe International Boxing Guild\nwho has been indicted with president Charlie Johnston, tha IBG\nand the Cleveland local on federal charges of violating the antitrust laws, said he is sticking with\nthe New York Guild as a member.\n32 Rinks Curling\nIn Fernie Spiel\nFERNIE\u2014The third annual Fernie Bonspiel got away to a fine\nstart Thursday with 32 rinks competing. Included among the 17 visiting rinks were rinks from Card-\nston, Lethbridge, Galloway, Pin-\ncher Creek, Creston, Taber, Kimberley, Blairmore, Coleman, Cranbrook and Natal.\nFive events, two primary, two\nsecondary, and a consolation, ensure all curlers at least five games.\nPlay with eight draws each day\nwill continue until Sunday when\nthe finals will be played.\nResults of the first round of the\nprimary event No. 1, the East Kootenay Power event, follow: H. A.\nJack, Pincher Creek, defeated Ben\nSmith, Fernie; John Audia, Fernie\ndefeated Art Reid, Creston; Eric\nHornquist, Fernie, defeated Dr.\nD. Glasgow, Natal; Henry Zak\nBlairmore, defeated Bob Hains-\nworth, Fernie; Albert Dicken, Fernie, defeated Tom Strain, Tager:\nBen Hutcheson, Lethbridge, defeated Jack Irvine, Fernie; Mike\nPolomark, Fernie, defeated Vern\nBurns, Pincher Creek; W. Piper\nCreston, defeated A. Marasco,'Fernie; Eric McKinnon, Cranbrook.\ndefeated Bill Prentice, Fernie;\nLouis Maffioli, Fernie, defeated\nWilliam Holtman, Taber; Alex\nCaldwell, Kimberjey, defeated Jim\nLittler, Fernie; John Hughes. Fernie, defeated R. J. Shaw, Blairmore; John Salvador, Creston, de\nfeated Henry Nelson, Galloway.\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Fullback\nBob Davenport, 22, of the Uunver-\nsity of California at Los Angeles\nfootball team, has been signed to\nptay next season with Winnipeg\nBlue Bombers of the Western Interprovincial Football Union, club\nofficials announced Thursday\nnight. Terms of the contract were\nnot revealed.\nDodgers Start\nTraining Feb. 22\nBROOKLYN (AP) \u2014 Brooklyn\nDodgers will invite five players\nwho weren't on their team roster\nlast year and eight who still belong to minor league affiliates to\njoin early training at Vero Beach,\nFla., next month.\nTraining for the pitchers, catchers and invitees is scheduled to\nstart Feb. 22 and assistant general manager Arthur Patterson\nsaid at least two other regulars,\nGil Hodges and Carl Furillo, have\nindicated they will be on hand,\nThe five new Dodgers asked to\nshow their wares in early trials\nwere Dick Gray, a third, baseman\nwith Fort Worth last season, first\nbaseman Jim Gentile from Mobile\nshortstop Jasper Spears from St.\nPaul'and outfielders Bob Wilson\nand Gino Cimili from Montreal.\nx    *    5eajratn*5 V.O\n0T Seagram*\nmtSJe Sure\nSeagrams \"83\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbit\nHall Scores\n8th Shutout;\nBassen, First\nBy The Canadian Press\nR6okie goalie Glenn Hall of\nDetroit Red Wings notched his\neighth shutout of the National\nHockey League season Thursday\nnight as the Wings blanked New\nYprk Rangers 6-0.\nChicago goalie Hank Bassen\nmeanwhile chalked up his first\nNHL shutout as the Black Hawks\nblanked Boston Bruins 5-0.\nDetroit's victory on their home\nice moved the Red Wings within\nthree points of the second-place\nRangers.\nGordie Howe placed the winners\nwith two goals. His first, with Aldo\nGuidolin serving a penalty, put\nDetroit in front early in tha game.\nThe Wings wrapped up the game\nwith a four-goal outburst in the\nmiddle frame as Howe, Marty Pavelich, Real Chevrefils and Metro\nPrystai connected. Red Kelly added a sixth tally in the finale.\nGuidolin was off again when\nChevrefils scored and Harry Howell was serving time when Kelly\ngot his goal. Hall only handled\n23 stops for his shutout compared\nwith Worsley's 41.\nLeafs Out To Stretch\nWIHL Lead Tonight\nINJURIES HIT\nCANUCK SKI TEAM\nKITZBUEHEL, Austria (AP) -\nInjuries have reduced the Canadian men's Olympic ski team competing here this weekend to a\nsingle man. Even the coach is\nout of actiom\nBecause of the mishaps, Andre\nBertrand of Quebec, the downhill\nspecialist, will be the only Canadian in the men's events.\nThe brothers Andy and Art\nTommy of Ottawa are both on the\nsidelines as is coach Franz Gabl\nafter a series of accidents on three\nsuccessive days.\nArt Tommy, rated Canada's best\nslalom competitor, hopes to be fit\nfor the Olympics beginning in\ntwo weeks, Bertrand said.\nThe injuries began when Andy\nTommy vroke his leg 10 days ago,\nthe fourth such accident he has\nhad in skiing. The following day\nGabl, ski instructor at Banff. Alta.\nfell and suffered bruises and\nsprains which have kept him off\nskis since.\nThe jinx next hit Art Tommy,\nwho tore several ankle ligaments\nin a practice run.\nNELSOti DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1956\u20147\ni With the Smoke Eaters closely\ntrailing the first-place Nelson\nMaple Leafs, Chuck Rayner has\nlittle reason for complacency.\nTonight at the Civic Arena, the\nSmoke Eaters will be striving to\nupset yesterday's WIHL standings\nby ousting the Leafs from their\nlofty perch and regain the league,\nlead, which they fumbled to Nelson January 2.\nBut the odds lean 3-2 in Nelson's\nfavor. After five visits to the\nCivic Arena this season, Smokies\nhave picked up two wins, one an\novertime decision.\nReno Zanier will step Into the\ngoaltending breach, replacing\nTrail's regular goalie, Seth Martin, indefinitely sidelined with an\neye injury suffered in Kimberley\nMonday night.\nCoach Rayner was undecided\nThursday night about a replacement for Wendy Keller, up for a\nthree-game stint in the WHL with\nthe Saskatoon Quakers. Rayner\nsaid that he did not know how\nlong Keller would remain with\nthe Quakers.\nTeam officials are negotiating\nwith the New York Ranger organization for a replacement for\nKeller in the event that he earns\na regular spot on the Quakers.\nThe other half of tonight's\nWIHL hockey card has ihe Spo-\nFast-skatlng Herb Jeffrey will\ncentre Joe Bell and Vis Howe\ntonight when the Maple Leafs\ntake on the Trail 3moko Eaters\nat the Civic Arena. Jeffrey's\nscoring total for the season\nstands at 24 goals and 24 assists,\nkane Flyers engaging the Kimberley Dynamiters. Flyers, have\nrecorded two wins and two losses\non Kimberley ice this season.\nPatricks Head List of Sport\nLights Going to Fund-Raising Feed\nLangford [Tar Baby)\nBoxing Qreat Dies\nCAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)-Sam\nLangford, boxing's fearless \"Tar\nBaby,\" died Thursday just three\nmonths after he gained the hall-of-\nfame recognition which almost\neluded him in his sightless old\nage.\nLangford died in comparative\nobscurity after a long illness in a\nnursing home a the age of 72.\nBorn in Weymouth, N.S., Langford ran away from home as a\nyouth to embark on a career encompassing some 642 bouts from\n1902 through 1923. His performances have caused many ring\nexperts to consider him the greatest pound-for-pound fighter machine in'the history of the professional sport.\nDespite his maximum 162*4-\npound weight and five-foot, 6!\/z-\ninch height, Langford took on\nmany heavyweights. Hjs most\nmemorable battle was a bloody\n\u25a015-round loss on a close decision\nto Jack Johnson in nearby Chelsea\nin 1906 in which he was outweighed by 49 pounds.\nSam was knocked out in the 13th\nround by Clem Johnson in El\nPaso, Texas, in 1923\u2014his final\nbout.\nFIGHTS COST SIGHT--\nThe following year Langford\nbecame blind as the result of eye\nInjures suffered over years of savage ring battles.\nHis only source of income In\nrecent years was a trust fund set\nup by the New York Herald Tribune after sports writer Al Laney\ndiscovered the destitute \"Tar\nBaby\" huddled in a small, cold\nroom In New York's Harlem section. The fund drew contributions\nfrom sympathetic readers and\nreached a reported $10,892 at the\ntime.\nA squat, broad-shouldered fighter with tremendously powerful\narms, he was among the few mentioned in the Canadian Press half-\ncentury poll as fighter of the half\ncnetury\u2014Jimmy McLarnin topped\nthe poll.\nEarly in the century Langford\ntravelled to London, Paris, Melbourne, Sydney, Perth and Brisbane as the uncrowned heavyweight champion, unable to get a\ntitle bout, He later toured the\nUnited States, picking up fight\ndates wherever he could.\nAt 17 he already held a 15-round\nnon-title decision over lightweight\nchampion Joe Gans.\nIn 1935 he underwent surgery\nwhich temporarily restored the\nsight to his right eye. With the\nphysical and financial collapse\nwhich followed for the forgotten\nman came a complete and final\ndarkness.\nRENT A\nCAR\nas private\nas your very awn\nIt's practical and modem to pay for a car ONLY\nwhen you use ii..\u00bb the Rent-a-Car way. low ratei\n. include FREE GAS, OIL and IN-\nl\/jlg _ SURANCE. You have no capital\noutlay, storage costs, depreciation or repair bills. Rent a car\nwhenever you need one, for an\nhour, day or week. Go anywhere\nfor business or pleasure. Call in\nto-day let us show you the inexpensive way to run a car.\nII\nCOAST.rO-COASI\nINCLUDED W MT|g\n*tow\nDEPOSIT\n* PROPER\nINSURANT\nWiginton Motors Ltd.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Hockey's\nrenowned Patrick family heads a\nstar-studded roster of sports personalities coming to Toronto Feb.\n2 for a $25-a-plate dinner to raise\nfunds for crippled children.\nThe Ontario Sports Writers and\nSportscasters Association, sponsors of the annual sports celebrities dinner, announced Thursday that Lester Patrick is coming\nfrom Victoria and will be joined\nat the head table by sons Lynn,\nmanager of Boston Bruins, and\nMuzz, manager of New York\nRangers.\nThe list of celebrities includes\nthe two pitching stars of the 1955\nworld series\u2014Johnny Podres, who\npitched Brooklyn Dodgers to victory in the third and seventh\ngames, and Whitey Ford, who won\nfor New York Yankees in the\nsecond and sixth.\nKWONG   FOOTBALL'S  REP\nNormie Kwong, one of the stars\nof Edmonton. Eskimos, represents\nCanadian football. The China\nClipper was voted Canada's out\nstanding athlete of 1935 In a year-\nend Canadian Press poll. Another\nfootball figure is from the United\nStates\u2014Joe Stydahar, a former\nall-star tackle with Chicago Bears\nof hte National Football League\nand a former coach of Los Angeles\nRams and Chicago Cardinals.\nOther celebrities who have confirmed they will attend include:\nLeo Dandurand, who signed\nHowie Morenz to his first pro\nhockey contract with Montreal\nCanadiens; Archie Moore, unsuccessful challenger for Rocky Mar-\nciano's heavyweight boxing crown\nlast year; Jack Kramer, the tennis\nstar who runs the touring professional group.\nThe dinner, fifth in the annual\nseries, has a twofold purpose: To\nboost the Canada-wide Easter\nseals campaign for crippled children opening March 1; and to\nraise funds for the Ontario Society for Crippled Children. The\nfirst four dinners netted more\nthan $90,000.\n281  BAKER ST.\nPHONE 121\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nSENIOR HOCKEY\nTONIGHT\n8:00 p.m.\nTrail\nvs.\nNelson\nTickets on Sale\nToday at\nKootenay Stationers\n10 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nCivic Centre\nIssllllililifei 7:00 p.m.\ndon McGregor\nSATURDAY\nCOMMERCIAL\nHOCKEY\n7:30 P.M.\nSlocan City vs Queen's Hotel\n9:15 P.M.\nTrail vs Reuben Buerge Motors\nAdults 506      Students 256      Children 136\n ,*-.'.. \u25a0.,.,'\n\u25a0\"\/\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\nppfPfpppif\n\t\nT :  \u2014^^^^^^^\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13, Ifc.\n\/SHE DID? S\n(on, she didn'tj\n'\u25a0\u2022ML\n0\n\\\nSSI m\nAte-   \u25a0   vt jPS\nfc^i\"jjl\nI DON'T KNOW WHAT\nIT WAS, BUT YOU'VE\nGOTTOTELLME-DID\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News doet not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof in error In the following lists.\n1 1 1JII It 111111 111 lit\nQuotation lltti from tht,\nCanadian ttook markets are.\ncomplied and published by the\nDally News as a service to\n. subscribers. The hits are added to or revised constantly.\nStocks in which tnere Is particular Interest and not now\nquoted, can be added at the\nthe request of readers,\niiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuimiiiiiiiii!\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES |\nAcadia Uranium\t\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAnacon Lead  _\nAnglo Rouen \t\nAtlm Ruff \t\nAubelle   \t\nAumacho \t\nBarnat \t\nBaska Uranium \t\nBase Metals   \t\nBibis Yukon\t\nBobjo   \t\nBrilund \t\nBroulan  _\t\nBrunswick  \t\nBuff Can       \t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nBulldog _  \t\nCallinan  |....\nCanadian Lithium ...\nCampbell C  \t\nCan Met _ I ...\nCassiar Asbestos\t\nCentral Patricia \t\nChimo* . \t\nConlaurum   \t\nCons Denison\t\nCons M & S  _.\nCons Orlac \t\nCon Ran      \t\nConwest  \t\nCon Sub \t\nCons.  Discovery  \t\nCons Howe        \t\nCopper Man   \t\nD'Aragon ,  \t\nDetta M .      _\t\nDonalda   .\n! Dyno\t\ni East Malartic \t\ni East Sullivan \t\nI Elder Gold      \t\nFalconbridge  ....\nFaraday   \t\nFrobisber    \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGod's Lake \t\nGoldale        \t\nGoldcrest    \t\nGold Eagle        \t\nGolden Manitou \t\nGoldora\nGrandine \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHarricana   \t\nHasaga .._\t\nHeadway \t\nHollinger       \t\nHudson  Bay  \t\nInspiration    \t\nInt. Nickel _\t\nJoliet Que\t\nJonsmith \t\nKerr  Addison   \t\nKeyboycon       \t\nKristina   _.     \t\nLabrador \t\nLake Lingman   \t\nLakeshore   \t\nLexindin \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLorado \t\nLouvacourt     \t\nMacassa  \t\nMacDonald\nMacfie Exploration\nMackeno\nMadsen R. L.    \t\nMalartic G. F.    \t\nManeast \t\nMart McNeelv   \t\nMcKenzie R L \t\nMcMarmac     \t\nMining Corp\t\nMogul \t\n! Multi Mins    \t\nNew Alger\ni New Bidlamaque\nNew Delhi\nNew Harricana   \t\nNew Highridge _\t\nNew .Tason \t\nNew Lund         ,\nNew Thurbols \t\nNoranda   \t\nNorgold      _\t\nNormetals    \t\nNorpax      \t\nOmnitrans  \t\nOsisko   \t\nPardee ....        \t\nPickle Crow \t\nPlacer Devel \t\nPreston E. D\t\nQuebec Conner  \t\nQuebec Lab\nQuebec Lithium ....\nQuemont     \t\nRadiore . \u201e\n.23 Vi\n19.50\n3.20\n1.75\n.17\n.OWi\n.21\n.94\n.40\n.88\n.10'\/!\n.46\n1.61\n1.90\n13.00\n.17V4\n.09\n.13\n.27\n1.55\n20.37',4\n3.30\n8.80\n1.31\n1.85\n.59\n10.12%\n37.25\n.17'A\n.20\n6.20\n5.00\n3.50\n4.20\n.38\n.33\n.17\n.43\n1.29\n2.40\n6.20\n.56\n31.73\n2.15\n4.25\n13.25\n5.50\n.60\n.33\n.23\n.n%\n3.75\n.15'4\n.48\n19 50\n1.18\n.20\n1.26\n23.87%\n65.87'\n1.62\n.83\n1.15\n.42\n17.75\n.12\n.16\n20.50\n.14'\/4\n4.70\n.30\n1.40\n1.51\n.29\n2.18\n,95\n.20\n.49%\n2.33\n2.20\n.40\n.21\n.36\n.21\n21 12Va\n3^25'\n1.50\n.35\n.21V4\n1.03\n.34\n.61\n.43\n.72\n.33\n54.00\n.40\n7 25\n.52\n.06%\n.50\n1.38\n1.45\n38.62%\n7.85\n3.00\n.13%\n13.50\n27.37%\n1.70\nVancouver Stocks\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nEstella\nGiant Mascot\t\nGranduc       \t\nGrandvlew \t\n5.00\n.66\n.04%\n.79\n8.20\n.21\nRayrock         2.50\nSan Antonio         1-29\nSherritt Gordon        8.45\nStadacona     \u2014      -31\nSteep Rock     16.75\nSilver Miller   95\nSlocan Van Roi  28\nSullivan Con      ._      5.75\nSurf Inlet Vane        .09%\nSylvamte              1-29\nTeck Hughes      2.36\nTombill      50\nTorbrit _ .' 98\nThomp^Lund           2.11\nTrans Cont Res  37%\nUnited Keno            7.70\nUpper Canada       LOO\nVentures       39.25\nVicour         -21\nViolamac       3.15\nWaite  Amulet           15.00\nWright Hargreaves       1.09\nYakeno  '2\nYale .        . \u2014       \u202253\nYellnwknife Bear      2.28\nOILS\nAmer. Leduc       \t\nB. A. Oil        \t\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Collieries\nCan Decalta \t\nCentral Leduc\nHamilSll _ 061,4\nHighland Bell  :..      .78\nJackson  Basin  34%\nKootenay Base Metals 04%\nNational  Ex  80\nPac Eastern Gold  11\nPend Oreille _ 28\nPioneer Gold           1.85\nPremier  Border   07%\nQuatslno  ; 49\nReeves MacDonald        2.35\nRexspar  68\nRix-Athabaska Uran       1.05\nSheep Creek            1.39\nSherritt  Gordon        8.30\nSilback Premier  17%\nSilver Ridge  28\nSilver  Standard      52\nSunshine Lardeau    37\nTaylor  21\nVan Roi  27\nWestern Exploration  43\nWestern Potash  65\nWestern Tungsten   53\nWoodbury    19%\nYale       51\nOILS\nAltex   20\nA P Consolidated       30\nCalgary & Edmonton      20.25\nCanadian  Anaconda   18\nCharter      1.74\nDel Rio   . .. _ ._.      1.52\nGas Exp      1.55\nHome     11.50\nNational Pete         3.70\n.90\n36.75\n20.75\n14.10\n.68\n_    _ _ 2.30\nCentral  Explorers        5.00\nCons. Peak\nDuvex\nGreat Sweetgrass\nHome    \t\nKroy \t\nLiberal Pete \t\nMarigold\n12\n.26 %\n4.45\n12.00\n1.11\n3.10\n.35\nMid \"emit 83V4\nNat. Pete             3.85\nNew Gas X  _      1.59\nOkalta       1-83\nPacific Pete      13.37%\nPathfinder   81\nPetrol    _      l'la\nPonder     79\nRoyalite       1350\nTriad      5.95\nUnited Oils .  .\u2014      I-73\nYank C  18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     3.W4\nAlgoma Steel _\t\nAluminum     104%\n22%\n18'\/\u201e\nVA\n50\n7%\n105\n16%\n14V*\nArgus\nAtlas St\t\nBeattie Bros\t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian\nB.C. Electric 43,is .\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers B\nB.C. Power A '  37%\nBrown Co  19W\nBurns  A          11%\nCan. Cement                34%\nCanadian   Breweries   _ 311\/4\nCanadian   Canners         35%\nCanadian Celanese      21\nCan Chem Co              10%\nCanadian Dredge        23\nCan Oil  21%\nCanadian Pacific Rly _ 343\/\nCockshutt     8\\i\nCons. Gas        22%\nCons Paper     35\nDist. Seagram   39\nDom. Foundries        29%\nDom Magnesium          19\nDom. Steel & Coal B   _ 18%\nDom. Stores                    32ft\nDom. Tar & Chemical   13%\nDom. Textiles             8\"\nEddy Paper         65\nFamous Players    _  21V4\nFanny  Farmer    24\nFleet Air            190\nFord A               129\nGatineau                _  31%\nGen. Steel Wares    11\nGoodyear           150\nGreat Lakes       42%\nGypsum Lime     \u2014  56\nImperial   Oil     39'1\nImp. Tobacco   IIV4\nInt. Metals  35\nInt.  Pete                 .-   29%\nInternational Utilities   SO1\/,\nLaura Secord       21\nMassey Harris     9%\nMont. Loco       18\nMoore  Coro  40%\nNat. Steel Car _  29%\nOgilvie Flour     50%\nPage Hershey   80\nPowell River     57\nPower  Corn  57\nRuss. Industries _  14\nShawinigan           89%\nSicks Brew.                 :  21\nOkalta  Com         1 SO\nPacific Pete           13 25\nPeace River Gas       8 00\nRoyalite       13 35\nUnited         1.70\nVanalta    _ 1B%\nVantor.    95\nVulcan ..      52\nYankee Princess    65\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers       2.05\nB C Forest            16.75\nB C Power         37.50\nB C Tc'.enhone _    50 00\nInt Brdw B       5.10\nInland Nat Gas          3.75\nLuckv Latter       5.15\nMacM & Bloedel B     42.50\nMid Western       4.45\nPowell River      ..    _    57.50\nTrans Mtn     49.50\nWestern Plywoods       21.00\nWestminster Paper      27.00\nUNLISTED\nWestern Mines       _ 53\nMidwest Copper  65\nAnuwon     32\nOnem'.'ka          9.10\nBANKS\nrtank of Montreal     48.75\nFUNDS\nBalanced  Mutual       5.21-5.73\nCanada Investors           9.00-9.87\nCommonwealth Inter.   ..    7.63-8.38\nLeverage 5.69-6.25\nTrans-Canada \"C\" 6.00-6.4O\nSimpsons A\nStandard -Paving\nSteel of Canada\nUnited  Steel\nWeston George\nWinnipeg Gas\n175S\n35%\n60\n15\n34\n13\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n10:00\u2014Sign On\n10:15\u2014Love of Life\n10:30\u2014Love Story\n11:00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n11:30\u2014Houseparty\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n12:45\u2014TBA\n1:00\u2014Brighter Day\n1:15\u2014Secret Storm\n1:30\u2014On Your Account\n2:00\u2014Variety Hour\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3:00-Valient Lady\n3:15\u2014Garry Moore\n3:30\u2014Garry 'Moore\n4:00\u2014 What's Cookin'\n4:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n5-00\u2014 Baulah\n5-30\u2014Andy's Gang\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Weather Vane\n6:15\u2014Dong Edwards\n6:30\u2014Jungle Town\n6:45\u2014Patti Page Show\n7:00\u2014Navy Log\n7:30\u2014Square Dance Party '\n8:00\u2014Great Gliderslcave\n8:30\u2014Our Miss Brooks\n9:00\u2014The Crusoders\n9:30\u2014Science Fiction Theatre\n10:00\u2014The Line Up\n10:30-A A U   Boxing\n11:30\u2014Story Theatre\nKHQ TV - Channel 8\n8:40\u2014Test Pattern\n8:45\u2014Colur Test Program\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading\n9:00\u2014Tan.. Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014Ernie Kovak\n11:00\u2014 Home\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Women\n1:30\u2014Queen For A Day\n2:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n2:30\u2014Howdv Doody\n300\u2014Mv   Little  Mareie\n3:30\u2014Trouble Witb^Father\n4:00\u2014Mr   Engineer\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Rounoup \u2022\n5:00\u2014Bar 6 Corral\n6:00-Wild Bill Hickok\n6:30\u2014Little Rascals\n6:45\u2014 Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Cavalcade of Sports\n7:45\u2014News Canwan\n8:00\u2014Truth or Consequences     *\n8:30\u2014Life of Riley\n9:00\u2014Big Story\n9:30\u2014Stage Star\n10:00\u2014Dr. Hudson's Secret Journa\n10:30\u2014The Falcon\n11:30\u2014Firelight Playhouse\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n2:30\u2014Test Pattern\n245\u2014Movietime on 2\n4:00\u2014Story Land\n4:15\u2014Music Room\n14:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:55-Watch the Birdie\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Huh\n6:00\u2014Autry-Rogers Western\n7:00\u2014Counter Point\n7-215\u2014 News\n7:30\u2014Rin Tin Tin\n8:00\u2014Ozzie & Harriet\n8:30\u2014Ragal Theatre\n9:0(1\u2014Ethel and Albert\n9:30\u2014The Vise\n10:00\u2014Dollar a Second\n10:30\u2014News\n10:30\u2014Million Dollar Theatre\n(Program* subleei to change by stations without  notice t\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8*30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014Pnone 1300\nEvenings - Phone 1033 R\nDally Except Sundays\nand Holidays\nMc & Me\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n \u2014By Trances Drake\t\nLook   in  the  section   in   which\nyour   birthday   comes   and   find\nwhat  your outlook   is,  according\nto the stars,\nFor Saturday, January 14, 1966\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014There's lots of variety and liveliness in this day's aspects. But use\ncommon sense and save having to\nrecheck, retrace steps because you\nwere over-enthusiastic.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 20 (Taurus) \u2014\nA good period in which to promote your talents apart from\nwork, business, study, etc. Improve a skill, a hobby, any pursuit which helps you to create,\nbuild, relax. Be happy.\nMAY 21 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nIf work Is part of your schedule.\nreckon with it quickly, but not\ncarelessly, and you will have more\ntime for good fun, hobbies, needed\nrest.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancel-\nAvoid discord with family, friends.\nbusiness associates this promising,\nhappy day. Fine vibrations for\nworthwhile interests; for wholesome recreation, too.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 22 (Leo)\u2014\nYour usual congenial disposition\ncan be a gainful aid now:' You\ncan judge more clearly, will be\nmore assured and hopeful when\nin serene mood. Varied, stimulating interests favored.\nAUGUST 23 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 There's authority, stimulus in today's offerings. Be\nacquisitive and ambitious but rin\nnot exceed reasonable demand?.\nArtistic endeavors favored.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Slowly developing\nprojects and matters requiring\ndeftness rather than speed should\nbe handled with patience. Day's\nefforts can produce distinctive\nearnings, but don't strain. Have\nsome rest.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Unless obligatory,\ndon't crowd your day with a lot\nof work. Present planetary influences are splendid and you can\nachieve in any worthy endeavor\nEnjoy some diversion from usual\nroutine.\nNOVEMBER'23 to DECEMBER\n22 (Sagittarius) \u2014 An impressive\nday on the whole \u2014 one suitable\nto matters of higher ^learning,\ncrcalivencss, devising new methods to raise living standards.\nImprove your thinkindg by good\nreading, research.\nDECEMBER 23 to JANUARY 21\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Be neither too\nsharp nor too conciliatory on this\nintriguing but, on the whole,\nresponsive day. New ideas ar\u00ab\nencouraged, favored. Seek and see\nwhat you can find, and do, tc\nadvantage.\nJANUARY 22 to FEBRUARY 20\n(Aquarius) \u2014 This should be an\nagreeable day in which to work on\nunusual matters. Try to finish\nincompleted tasks, then enjoy due\nrest, recreation.\nFEBRUARY 21 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Some extra precautions\nsuggested in unknown or untried\nventures but familiar matters and\ntasks should run smoothly. Don't\nneglect personal needs, family\nwishes.\nYOU BORN TODAY have great\norganizing ability, can hold together groups of people through\nyour tact and commanding dignity.\nTrue-to-type and right-living\nCapricorn natives do not stoqp to\npetty thinking or actions. You can\nbecome profound in learning,\ngovernment management, in any\nundertaking where business acumen is required. You are especially capable in handling machinery, tools, equipment for big\nenterprises; could also be successful in surgery, dentistry, politics,\nmanufacturing. Keep cheerful,\nhopeful and be careful of your\nhealth. Pray when troubled. Birth-\ndate:  Pierre Loti, French author.\nKing Features.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACBOSS\nShinto\ntemples\nWatt upon\nKind of tree\nDaisy\nSilly\nUnit ot\nmagnetic\nflux (Elec.)\nRoad\nWas carried\nFrench\nchalk\nInsects\nName\nWing-like\nScorch\nCut, as wood\nOvules\nLong-tailed\nbird (Afr.)\nPrice of\npassage\nAstonishes\nTake as\none's own\nShort\n(comb, form)\nThe same\n(as before)\nMonsters\nProof\nBird\n(aquatic)\nDOWN\nDispatched\nListen to\nSkin\ndisorder\n. Pieces\nof paper\nPull along\nafter\nHabitual\nactivity\nT. Biblical\nmountain\n8. Colored,\nas cloth\n9. Twice\n11. Before\n15. Tantalum\n(sym.)\n18. Lieutenant\n(abbr.)\n19. Part of\n\"to be\"\n20. A wing\n21. Observed\n22. Laws\n24. Small cone\nof earth\n(golf)\n25. Youth\n26. Bitter\nvetch\n30. Note\nof\nthe\nscale\n31. Emblem\n33. Music\nnote\n34. Craze\n35. Mine\nentrance\n36. Method of\nlearning\n38. Jason's\nship\n(myth.)\nQBHE   EB@G\ntdHHHB   HHHI1_\nS3H11H  HMHBB\nms      taarsi hb\nHQSHOHU  T1HB\n\u25a0\u25a0;' H0BEJ&.    \u2022\nisam aannais\nHE   BSIH   \u25a0\naaiama 0HBHE\nDiaHHli   UHkJHS\nHBHM   WMHH\nYesterday', Aniwer\n39. Cipher\n40. Level\n41. Little\nsister\n43. Little child\n%\n1\n2\n3\nA\n1\n5\nu\n7\na\n%\n9\n%\nIO\n*\n12.\nW\n15\n14\n\\^A\nlb\n^\nV\/(\n%\n%\n17\n18\n^\/\/t\n%\n%\n19\n30\n21\n22\n1\n23\n24-\n15\n2b\n27\n%\n%\n28\n29\n30\n%\n^\n%\nm\n32\n53\n%\n%\n%\n%\n34\n35\n3t>\n%\n37\n18\n?9\nAO\n4-1\n4 2-\n45\n|\n44\n45\nl\n4b\n%\n\u25a047\nVZ,\n44\n%\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nis LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, apos\u00ab\ntrophies, the length and formation of the' 'words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\n\\  _...\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nZQV    WGWPB    JEWHEWPV     DWOOJ\nEFJ    DZOW    CQVWP    DEW     E Z A D E X P Q\nFQ     DEW     VZOW \u2014 NFODXQ.\n\u25a0 Yestcrdny'a Cryptoquotc: THROUGH THE WIDE WORLD\nHE ONLY IS ALONE WHO LIVES NOT FOR ANOTHER-.\nROGERS.\nDistributed by King Features Syndlcatt\n jpfl\n\u25a0\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  -  PHONE   1844\nBIRTHS\n~~PLUMPTON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nDerek Plumpton. 309 Nelson Avenue, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital. Jan. 11, a daughter.\nPOPOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nSam Popoff of South Slocan, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJan. 12, a son.\nGIZA \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Giza of Ymir, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Jan. 12, a\ndaughter.\nHELP WANTED\nWE~ REQUIRE^ A~ FURNITURE\nsalesman immediately. Experienced preferred, but an interest\nin retail selling accepted. State\nmarital status and personal history in first letter. Our employees know of this ad. All replies\nconfidential. Apply Box 1138,\nNelson Daily News.\t\nNational firm requires a\nrepresentative for Trail area.\nMan about 30 with some clerical\nexperience preferable. Reply in\nown handwriting to Box 7435.\nNelson Daily News.\nMEN INTERESTED IN A RAW-\nleigh route. See me for interesting information Nearby district open Mike Cheveldaeff.\nBox 36. Brilliant. B. C\nWANTED - 3RD CLASS STEAM\nengineer. Shift work, steady employment. MSA medical plan.\nApply Kootenay Forest Products\nLtd.,\"Phone 1200, Nelson.\nYOUNG MAN OR WOMAN\nwishing to learn newspaper\neditorial work. Apply A. W\nGibbon, Daily News, after 4 p.m\nAMBITIOUS MAN WITH CAR\nFOR Nelson area. Above average earnings tp start. Apply D.\nSergent, 208 Morgan St. Ph. 1335\nFIRST CLASS MECHANIC WITH\nmotor truck experience. Top\nwages and other benefits. Apply\nBox 1268. Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFOURTH-CLASS ENGINEER DE-\nsires steady position. Years of\nexperience In high pressure\nplant. Write Box 1120, Daily\nNews.\nWill knit Indian sweaters\nuo to size 8. Phone 1567.\nCARPENTER, ODD JOBS. REAS-\nonable rates. Phone 1282-L.\nRENTALS\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in Truck Terminus\nBldg on ground floor. Ph'one 77\nfor particulars.\nLAKESIDE BUNGALOW COURT\n2 to 4 rms. Fully equipped. Day,\nweek or months until June. 805\nNelson Ave. Ph. 864.\nWANTED-URGENT, HOUSE IN\nor around Nelson, wired for electric stove. Box 7449, Nelson\nNews.\nFOR RENT: 5 RM. UNFURN.\nhouse, Anderson, View St. $35\nmo. Ph. 99, Mrs. Breshear.\nFOR RENT-BASEMENT STOR-\nage space, central location Baker St Apply Box 8142. D News\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nROOMS. Fully furn. Day, week,\nmonthly rates. 171 Baker St.\nFOR RENT-SEMI-FURNISHED\napt. Feb. 1, near Baker. Petty\nApts. Phone 1184-Y.\nFOR RENT\u20143 BEDROOM HOUSE\nnewly decorated, close in. Adults\nPhone 612-X.\nFOR  RENT\u2014SMALL  FURNISH-\ned Apartment. Phone 337-Y.\nHOUSE AT BEALBY'S POINT $20\nPhone 804-X-l, after 5 p.m.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   $20.00\nmonth. Phone 405-L.\nFOR RENT\u2014SLEEPING ROOM,\nsuitable for gent. Phone 450-Y.\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n% SECTION GOOD FARM LAND\nin Ponoka district. 160 acres\nbroke. 11 miles from town on\ngravel highway. Vz mile from\nschool, bus and power line. Cash\nor trade for small business or\nduplex. Box 634, Ponoka, Alta.\nMUST SELL 5 ROOM HOUSE IN\nCastiegar on two lots with basement, furnace and garage. Will\ntake late model car as part payment. Box 7456 Nelson News,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   WIDDOWSON &.CO\nAssavers 301 Josephine St   Nelson\nS    EI.MES   ROSSLAND   BC\nVs.tvt'i   ('hernial    Mine Ren\nENGINEERS AND  SURVEYORS\nG   W   BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34  Frutvale  BC\nSuccessoi to the late A   L  Purdy\nBOYD C   AFFLECK   M E1C\nBC  Land Surveyor P Eng iCivtl\n218 Gore St    Nelson    Phone 1238\n\u00a3    V   SHAYLER    PC     BOX   252\nKimberley. Ludlow 2-2136.\nBC   Land Siirvevoi   Engineet\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding   motor rewind\nIne   Phone 593   324  Vernon St\nTIMBER  CRUISER\nEUGENE   H    HIRD\nSlocan City  B.C.\nConfidential estimates\nClassified  Ads Get Results\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X69367\nThere will be offered for sale at\nPublic Auction, at 10:30 a.m. (local time) on March 12, 1956, in the\noffice of the Forest Ranger, Nakusp, B. C, the Licence X69367, to\ncut 2,425,000 cubic feet of hemlock, cedar, white pine, spruce,\nfir and balsam and 196,000 lineal\nfeet of cedar poles and piling on\nan area situated on part of Lots\n8509, 8503. 9170 and part of S.T.L\n6907p. 6908p, 6910p, 691lp 6912p,\nSlewiskin (McDonald) Creek,\nKootenay Land District.\nTen years will be allowed for\nremoval of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend the Auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to be opened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Victoria, B. C, or the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B. C, or\nthe Forest, Ranger, Nakusp, B. C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nDrop In at.\nReuben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\n, Today\nAnd Deal With Confidence\nWith the Largest\nAutomotive Dealer\nIn the Interior of B.C.\n,      \u2022    \u2022    \u2022\n1956 Austin Sedans\n1956 Meteor Hardtop\n1956 Ford Sedan\n1956 Dodge Sedan\n1956 Meteoor Sedan\n1955 Dodge Sedan\n1955 Ford Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1954 Nash Sports Coupe\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Plymouth Sedan\n1952 Meteor 2 Door\n1952 Vanguard\n1952 Chevrolet 2-Door\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1951  Consul\n1951 Austin\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet 2-Door\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1949 Meteor Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1956 Meteor Cntry. Sedan\n1956 Dodge Suburban\n1955 Chevrolet Pickup\n1955 Chevrolet 3-Ton\nCab and. Chassis\n172\" Wheelbase\n1952 Fargo Pickup\n1952 Austin Stn.  Wagon\n1951 Austin Pickup\n1950 Plymouth   Suburban\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nWe Pay Spot Cash for\nLATE MODEL CARS\notors Ltd,\n803 BAKER STREET\nPHONE  1135\nWORK OR PLAY. 1951 CHEV\nPickup. 24,000 miles. Motor, tires\nA-l. Radio, heater, low box. Extra fitted camping outfit; two\nbunks and tent with full headroom. Bargain. Phone 1290. *\n1954 FARGO PANEL. GOOD\nrubber, good running condition.\nVery reasonabie. Phone 1808-R-2\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nFOR\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n608 Vernon St.\nPhone 1744- 1745\n1955 PLYMOUTH V8\n$2595\n1955 FORD\n\u25a0   FAIRLANE SEDAN\nRadio. Low Mileage. <S9fiQ^\nGuaranteed ^i,\\HJO\n1954 CHEVROLET TUDOR\nSon $1745\n1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n$1645\n1953 FORD 2 DOOR\n$1495\n1954 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nRadio,\nSeat Covers.\nRadi0' $1945\n1954 FORD TUDOR\nRadio. Very Low       SIQQ1!\nMileage. One Owner. * ' oi\"i\n2 ONLY\n1938 CHEVROLET SEDANS\nBOTH \u00ab75\nFOR ONLY  '*\"*'\n'Pickups\n1952 GMC PICKUP\n2\u00a3g . '  *1095\n1954 FORD PICKUP\n5000 Miles. \u00ab1 7Q5\nDeLuxeCab  *l\/\u00bb0\nME\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 368 or  Phone 366-R\nTHE ALMER HOTEL. OPP. C.P.R.\nDepot. Vancouver. B. C. 100%\nfire-proof. 24-hour elevator ser\nvice. Clean, quiet and comfortable. Reasonable rates, city\ncentre.        ,\nBEAUTY BEGINS WITH THE\nright foundation and brassiere\nSpencer is designed just for you.\nFree figure analysis. Mrs. Winifred H. Naylor, SpeMcer Dealer.\nPhone 1074-X.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nFOR SALE OR TRADE-2-YEAR\nold Hereford bull. C. W. McCal\nlister, Ymir, B. C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nNEW BUNGALOW\nFAIRVIEW\n1\u2014(NHA built.) Three bedrooms. Oak floors, oil heat,\nm\"nPtlagae;.ar.\"$,3'0<>0\nTerms: $3500 Down and\nAssume N.H.A. Mortgage\n$66.00 Per Month.\nFAMILY HOME\n2\u2014Fairview, near mill. Modern\nplan. Wired for electric stove.\nTwo bedrooms and bath\ndownstairs. % concrete basement, with oil furnace, and\n\u00bb $8000\nTerms:   $4000  Down.\nSMALL COTTAGE\nSILICA STREET\n3\u2014One lot. Very convenient lo-\n$5500\ncation.\nPrice\nSome Terms,\nALSO SILICA STREET\n4\u2014Rooming house. \u2014 Revenue:\n-00 per month. jggQQ\nPrice\nSome Terms.\nAND\nTwo-storey, newly renovated\nthree bedroom and family\nhome on one lot. Sifi^flfi\nPrice\nSome Terms.\nIf You Plan To Sell\n\u2022 May We List\nYour Property ?\nOur   Mortgage   Facilities   get\nthe deals through quickly.\nSPECIALLY  REQUIRED\nHOMES\n$5500  to  $8500\nBUYERS WAITING\nDON'T FORGET\nA   PACKAGE   POLICY\nSAVES 20%.\nIt's Better than you think.\nC.W.\n&CO, LTD\nREAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nT. C. Lambert, Mgr.\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nEstablished 1912\nP.O. Box 26 Nelson. B.C.\nEXTRA\nOne and one-half storey, 3-\nbedroom home, 7 years old.\nHardwood floors throughout.\nAutomatic stoker. Full cement\nbasement. Storm windows. \u2014\nWired for electric range, automatic washer and dryer. \u2014\nExtensive landscaping. Close\nto new high C I I e An\nschool. Price * ' ' '0UU\nTerms can be arranged.\nFor Appointment to View\nPHONE 1912\nBERNARD  J.  KELLY\nRobertson,\nHilliard, Cattell\nRealty Co. Ltd.\n456 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARM ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nYour Choice . . .\nTWO LARGE\nOLDER STYLE\nDWELLINGS\n1\u2014Two-storey, seven rooms, full\nbasement, concrete foundation and floor. Hot water\nheat piped to both floors. \u2014\nHoover Street, just outside\ncity limits. Lot'75x120. Needs\nrepairs but priced COO^A\nfor quick sale ^A^OV\nTerms can be arranged.\n2\u2014Two-storey. Seven rooms. \u2014\nStone and concrete foundation. Under-floor style oil\nfurnace. Houston Street, in\ncity limits. Needs finishing\nupstairs. Can be purchased\nwith 175' frontage $5399\n2eWat.th \"' fr\u00b0nt\" $3800\n3\u2014Listings required for city\nand country property from\n$2000 and up.\nFOR   PRICED-RIGHT\nPROPERTIES, SEE\nT, D. Rosling\n& SON LTD.\nMurray Parker, Salesman\n568 Ward St. Phone 717\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment mill, mule #nd\nlogging supplies: new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St. Vancouver. B.C. Ph\nPArific 6357\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals, copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment Active Trading, 935 E.\nCordova. Vancouver\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-\npacity $45. while they last. Active Trading Co.. 935 E Cordova.\nVancouver\nFIR AND LARCH CULL LUM-\nber. good fire wood, limited supply. 1 truck load equals 2 cords\nSpecial $15 delivered. Ph. 1702-R\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture. 301 Baker St. Phone\n47  We buy used furniture.\n2 SUBURBANITE TIRES. .SIZE\n650-16. Price $40. Box 1119. Nelson Daily News.\nMEN'S SKI BOOTS. SIZE 10. $10;\nSkates, size 8, $2.50. Phone 395-Y\nmornings.\nMACHINERY\n1948 IHC KBS8'\n197-Inch Wheelbase\n1949 IHC KBS7\n197-Inch Wheelbase\nWith Isumber Deck\n1947 IHC KB7\n176-Inch Wheelbase\n1951   MI90 Mercury 4-Ton\n1953 Ford 3-Ton\n1947 Ford 3-Ton $350\nWith Deck\n1952 Studebaker 3\/i-Ton\n$600\n1953 Ford Pickup $999.95\n1951  Ford Pickup $636\n1952 IHC Pickup\n127-Inch Wheelbase\n1951   IHC   Pickup\n127-Inch Wheelbase\n1\u2014Used TD6 Crawler\nTractor\nWith Blade\n1\u2014Used Cub  Farm Tractor\nWith Plow\n1  Set Caterpillar D-4 Track\nChains $500.\nWith  Ice  and  Snow Pads\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1400    Nelson, B.C.\nWe Offer\nSubject To Prior Sale\nUsed\nTractors\nOne Used DT34 (D standing for\nDiesel Power) with $3gQfl\nangledozer. *\nOne DT34 with $3910\nangledozer. \u00abrw >\nOne DT34 with\nangledozer.\nOne DT34 with angledozer and\ngearmatic $3800\nwinch \u00abkw\u00abv~\nAll Above Prices Dominion\nTax Paid.  F.O.B.  Vancouver\n$4350\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 11, 1956\u20149\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - SILVE-R IDENTIFICA-\nbracelet (Judy) vicinity Jr. High\nPlease phone 1333.\nLOST-BLACK COCKER SPAN'\niel with collar. Phone 1123-R.\nAdvises Alternative\nCrops for Growers\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Alternative crops may be the answer to\nproblems of berry growers In the\nLower Mainland area who lost\ntheir livelihood in November\nfrosts. A Canadian Fruit Distributors' spokesman said here Thursday that more turnips, carrots,\nbrussels sprouts and parsnips\ncould be accepted from local\ngrowers if standards of U. S. competition were met.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Cash prices:\nOats 1 feed 72%, barley 1 feed\n9914.\nLTD.\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE-ONE ALPHA 15\"\nconversion blower air conditioning fan assembly comprising:\nfan and housing. V2 h.p. Westinghouse motor, filters, plus metal\nhousing. Apply Box 1076, Fernie,\nB.   C.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n1 LARGE BABY CRIB, SPRING |\nand mattress; 1 Hollywood dou-1\nble bed. Phone 1010-Y. :\nEASY  WASHING MACHINE IN i\nnew condition  Ph. 1282-L. eves ,\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nBAR REPAIR\nSERVICE\nFor ALL Saws\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper. Used parts for\ncars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking. Box\n132. Granite Road, Nelson. B.C\nPHONE 189-R-4\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products   Box 450  Nelson\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736\nNelson Dailv News\nWE BUY SCRAP METAL PHONE\n882-Y for honest deal. Warehouse 41514 Latimer St, City\nIndependent Trader\nUSED COAL AND WOOD FUR-\nnace in good condition with\npipes. State price. Box 1294.\nDaily News.\nWANTED - 60 CARLOADS OF\nfence posts before June 1. Ted\nAnderson, Silverton.' B. C.\nHOUSE, 6 APARTMENTS, 5 REN-\nted $150 per month. 4 rooms for\nowner. $14,000 with half cash or\n$13,000 all cash. Also 5-ro6m\nhouse at Slocan City, lights and\nwater, 2 lots, fruit trees and\ngarden. E. Maher, 914 Stanley\nSt., Phone 217-Y.\n(Continued'In Next Column)\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM k BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone 1179-X.\nROOM AND BOARD. APPLY 622\nVictoria Street. ' ,\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman. Phone 1682.\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nNelamt Daily Npuib\nCirculaiton Dept Phone 1844.\nSubscription   Rates\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday.\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month ... $ 1.25\nThree  months        $ 350\nSix  months              $ 6.50\nOne  year $12.00\nBy Mai] to United Kingdom\nor the Uniled States\nOne month\n$\u20221 75\nThree   months\n$ 5 00\nSix   months\n$ 9 50\nOne  year\n$18 00\nvV'here  extra   postage\nIs\nrequired\nabove rates plus\npostage.\n\u2022 REGROOVING\n\u2022 JOINTING\n\u2022 WELbING\n\u2022 STRAIGHTENING\n\u2022 END WORK\nSpecial equipment\nexperienced Operator!\nLET US SERVICE YOUR BAR NOW\nAuthorised\nDeals!1\nOREGON\u00ae CHAIN\nAND ACCESSORIES\n\u2022\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.  LTD.\n614 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE   1402\nREgD   THE  CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPHONE  1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered In Nelson\n\"Do  It  the   Easy   Way\"\nSAVE TIME - SAVE MONEY\nSAY! Have you seen the\nwonderful selection of\nUSED\nUSED\nTRUCKS\non display at\nPEEBLES MOTORS?\nDrop in this week-end\nto see them.\nLARGEST\nSELECTION\nLOWEST\nPRICES EVER\nPEEBLES\nMOTOR!\nCHRYSLER.-PLYMOU'i'\n. FARGOv*W\u00bbATIR.er\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The \u00abto*k\nmarket extended ltg recovery\nmovement Thursday with galnB ot\naround two points marked up by\nsome shares. '\nHigher Canadian stocks included\nMclntyre, up ty and International\nNickel, up %. Lower were Canadian Pacific and Hiram Walker,\nboth down Vi.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket advanced Thursday on the .\nlargest volume in four months.\nThe lively dealings in mining Issues boosted the volume to 7,208,-\n000 shares compared with 5,516,000\non Wednesday.\nPrices moved higher at the opening and advanced cautiously, levelling off in mid-afternoon and\nholding steady to their gains until\nthe close. Selectivity underlined\nindustrials trading and price changes seldom went beyond a point.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Industrial\nprices continued to move forward\non the Montreal and Canadian exchanges on Thursday, almost ill\nclassifications showing Improved\npatterns at the close.\nThe mining-western oil group\ndisplayed a majority-of narrow'\ngains with speculative Issues providing the bulk of heavy volume:\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Although\nthe stock market was looking better than of late, there was 1 general reluctance Thursday to open\ncommitments in view of the prevailing economic uncertainties.\nThe.rise on Wall Street helped\na little but the disappointing United Kingdom trade figures twm a\ndeterrent\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY ICP) \u2014 On ofler \u00abg>\nto 11 a.m. Thursday on the OalgeiT\npublic livestock yards: 1808 cattle;\n200 calves. Wednesday's sale* M88\ncattle, 286 calves; Ml hogss M0\nsheep.\nOfferings of 1808 cattle end\ncalves included 1300 heed held.\nThe bulk was steers, heifers end\ncows of medium cruallty and down.\nTrade moderately active and prices about steady.\nChoice steers 17.90 to 18.29! good\n16.50 to 17.50( medium 13.80 *\u00bb\n15:50; common 9 to 13; choice heifers 1S.25 to 15.75; good 14 to 1\u00bb;\nmedium 12 to 12.50. Common 8 to\n11.50. Good cows 9 to 9.S0, medhrm\n8.50-9; common TJO to 8.J5< canners and cutters 4 to T. Good bufls\n11-13.25; common to medium 7-10;\ngood feeder steers 13.50 to 14J0;\ngood stock steers 13.90 to IS, common to medium 9 to 18i good stock\nsteer calves 13.50 to 18.90.\nGood to choice real 18 to 18.80;\ncommon to medium 14 to 15.90)\ngood butcherwelght heifer selves\n350-450 pounds 15-18.80..\nHogs sold steady Wednesday, 19\nA grade; sows steady 11.90-11 acre-\nweight.\nGood lambs 17-17.90; good ewes\n5.50 to T.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nB\nEACON'S\nETTER\nUYS\nMERCURY \u2014 LINCOLN \u2014 METEOR\nNEW AND USED CARS\nShop Tested and Guaranteed\nProof Drive\n1956 METEOR NIAGARA AUTOMATIC\n\"Demonstrator at your disposal\"\nNew Cars and Trucks in Stock\nClean Used Cars Ready to RoM\n1953 MONARCH SEDAN\n1954 NIAGARA SEDAN SPECIAL\n1953 METEOR TUDOR\n1953 FORD FORDOR\n1952 METEOR FORDOR\n1950 FORD FORDOR\n1949 PONTIAC SEDAN\nSPECIAL   \u2014   SPECIAL\n1951 Plymouth Fordor $1050\nTOP CONDITION ENGLISH CARS\n1953 Zephyr \u2014 1951 Vanguard\nSNAP DEALS ON THESE\n1949 AUSTIN \u2014 1949 PREFECT\nCOMMERCIAL UNITS\n1953 Pontiac Sedan Delivery\n1953 Ford 1\/2 Ton \u2014 1951 Ford V4 Ton\nLowest Prices in Town for the\nBest Cars in Town\n701 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONES 578-579\nEvenings, 1039-X. for Sales Appointments\nCanada's Original Mutual Fund\nHAS DKIARED ITS\n92nd Consecutive Quarterly dividend\nEIGHT CENTS PER SHARE\nPAYABLE FES. t, 1956 TO SHAREHOtDERS Of RECORD JAM. 1\u00ab\nCurrent declaration Is tame rale at year ago. Total of latett foar quarterly\ndividends declared It 34 cents per shorn \u2014 100% greater than hi 1945.\nTOTAL CASH DIVIDENDS SINCE ORGANIZATION EXCEED $19,000,000\nCanadian Investment Fund, Ltd.\n \u2014\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 19S6\n'\nFascinating\nEducational\nFun\nThat is what stamp collectors say\nAbout their hobby.\n200 FOREIGN STAMPS  2.J\nUnited States \"5117*\n150 ANNIVERSARY STAMPS \"Mj\nTHE PREMIER WORLD STAMP ALBUM $*\u00bb.50\n(Capacity 12.000 Stamps) A*\nPEERLESS STAMP COLLECTORS' OUTFIT $\"1.45\n(Everything for the beginner)        II\n$1.29\nMAGNIFYING GLASS  \t\nGel- It at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nInspector Stales Gun Found in\nSlump May Have Killed Sinclair\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The gun\nused in the slaying of Constable\nGordon Sinclair the night of Dec.\n7 was found by police hidden\nunder a stump eight blocks from\nthe slaying, Inspector Peter La-\nmont testified in city police court\nThursday.\nHe was a witness at the preliminary hearing of 33-year-old\nJoseph Gordon of Vancouver,\ncharged with murder in the death\nof the police officer,\nConstable Sinclair was shot to\ndeath while investigating a routine prowler call in the Kitsilano\ndistrict.\nInspector Lamont identified the\ngun as a ,38-calibfe Webley revolver.\n\"It had two spent shells in it\nand four live shells,\" he told the\ncourt.\nInspector Lamont also testified\nthat when he went to Oakalla\nprison to charge Gordon with\nmurder, Gordon said:\n\"It's a frame-up.\"\nGordon was in Oakalla awaiting a hearing on a charge of pos;\nsession of a weapon after a taxi\ndriver complained he had threatened him.\nPrior to the slaying, Gordon was\ncharged with a $26,000 bank robbery here and at the time was\non $15,000 bail.\nThe gun was found by Lamont\nand other officers accompanied by\na man identified as James Miller,\n,a police informant.\nIt was recovered 11 days after\n;the slaying. Sinclair was felled by\nNew Drugs Show Promising Results\nIn Treatment of Slight Strokes\nBy ALTON  L.  BLAKESLEE\nROCHESTER, Minn. <AP)-\nMany crippling and fatal brain\nstrokes apparently can be prevented by wise use \u2022%! anti-blood\nclotting drugs.\nThe drugs are bringing encouraging results against brain strokes\ncaused by formation of blood clots\nblocking main arteries to the\nbrain. They cannot help against\nstrokes due to other causes, such\nthat each little stroke might be\ndue to temporary interference in\nblood flow to the brain as the clot\nincreased in size with a new layer.\nAnticoagulant drugs might prevent growth of the clot. If the clqt\nblocks the artery completely,\ndeath or severe and permanent\ndamage results.\nDrs. Millikan and Siekert report\npromising  results  from   daily\nregular use of heparin or dicum\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest  Minimum two lines.  10% discpunt for prompt payment\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS\nDON   ELDER  STUDIO\n659 Baker St     \u2014    Phone 1205\nWhist Tonight Sacred Heart Hall.\nHall Mines Road at 8 p.m.\nas the blowout of weakened ar- < arol, the same anticoagulants often\nteries in the brain.\nDrs. Clark H. Millikan and Robert G. Siekert began using the\ndrugs on patients suffering from\nspecial types of strokes. These\nstrokes bring numbness, staggering gait, weakness, sometimes a\ntemporary paralysis of the eyes\nor limbs, slurred speech, unconsciousness or other troubles.\nSome persons have several such\nstrokes a day, or several a week.\nThe Mayo neurologists reasoned\nused in treating heart attacks\ncaused by blood clots.  .\nIn a number of patients, the\nlittle strokes stopped- completely,\nwith no further trouble. Other patients showed great improvement.\nThe drugs have been used to date\non 53 patients, with only 14 per\ncent succumbing to strokes. But\nin another 23 persons not given\nthe drugs, nearly half have since\ndied from strokes.\nThe studies are continuing.\nJ. A. C LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arti Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\ntwo bullets, one in the head, the\nsecond in the back, as he stepped\nfrom his car.\nDet.-Sgt.  Percy Easier  told\ntaking plaster casts of shoe  impressions found in the mud underneath  Granville  bridge,  close  to\nthe scene of the shooting.\nHe said'he checked the impressions with a pair of mud-covered\nshoes taken from Gordon's home.\n\"I compared the right shoe to\na plaster cast impression and\nthere is a similarity in size, especially as to the heel,\" he said.\n\"There are certain similarities\nand the impression might have\nbeen made by the right shoe,\" he\ntold prosecutor Stewart McMor-\nran.\nGordon was arrested the night\nof the slaying, but was released\nafter five days. He was re-arrested Dec. 30, and charged with the j\nSinclair slaying.\nWAS  FIRED   BY WEBLEY\nSgt,\nshots from the Webley revolver\nfound near the church and made\ncomparisons between them and\nthe bullet taken from the head\nof Constable  Sinclair.\n\"I identify this bullet as having\nbeen fired by the Webley,\" he\nsaid.\nHe also identified a bullet taken\nfrom Sinclair's chest as having\nbeen fired from the same gun,\nGordon was sitting near a telephone on the night of the slaying\nwhen several officers, including\nInspector Lamont, burst into his\nbasement room.\nInspector Lamont said Gordon\nadmitted owning a pair of mud-\nsplattered, brown shoes and light\npants, which were found in.a bag\nin the room.\n\"I brought the shoes and pants\nto headquarters and turned them\nJhsi  dtiqhw'ayA,\nSouthern Trans-Provincial \u2014\nHope-Princeton good, plowing and\nsanding, carry chains. Princeton-\nOsoyoos-Cascade mostly bare,\ngood, some icy sections on higher\nlevels, sanding, carry chains. Cas-\ncade-RossIand compact snow, widening, carry chains. Rossland-\nTrail compact snow, sanding. Trail-\nCastlegar mostly bare. Castlegar-\nGoatfell bare sections, icy sections,\nsanded. Goatfell-Crow's Nest icy,\nsanding.\nTrail-Salmo compact snow, sanded.\nj    Creston-Porthill  slippery, sand-\nof; ing, foggy.\nNelway-Vernon Nelway-Nelson-\nSouth Slocan compact snow upper\nlevels, mostly bare lower levels,\nsanded. South Slocan-Nakusp-\nNeedles icy sections lower levels,\ncompact snow upper levels, Need-\nles-Monashee fair, carry chains.\nMonashee-Vernon normal winter\nconditions, carry chains.\nKingsgate-Cranbrook - Golden\nicy, sanding, Canal Flats to Golden\nplowing and sanding.\nNelson-Kaslo fair, slippery sections, sanding. Kaslo-New Denver\ncompact snow, slippery sections.\nKaslo-Lardeau and Lardeau-Ger-\nrard fair winter conditions.\nAdjudicator Lauds\nLittle Theatre\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Adjudi-\nEasler testified he fired 10 j cator Pamela Stirling praised the\nVancouver Little Theatre production of \"Darkness at Noon,\" a\nplay set during the Russian purge\nof 1937. The performance was\ngiven at the second night of the\nBritish Columbia regional drama\nfestival.\n\"I can't find anything bad to\nsay. 1 personally was quite excited\nby the performance,\" declared\nMiss Stirling.\nDirector Ian Thorne drew congratulations from the adjudicator,\nwho will continue judging nearly\n80 other plays in 13 regional festivals across Canada. The Dominion finals will be held in May\nat Sherbrooke, Que.\nNEED  FOR  FOOD\nWorld population, now about 2,-\n500,000.000 may be doubled in another   50   years,   say   population\nover to Det.-Sgt. Easier,\" he said, i experts,\nyour DECEMBER COUPON\n$n.oo\n,,\u201e\u201e, \u00bbw MARSHALL WELLS STORES\nUtim CALENDAR IS WORTH\nDURING JANUARY ON THE ITEM SHOWN BELOW\n2\nCALENAD SPECIAL\nWEAR-EVER\n2-QUART\n\"Ctppertone\" SAUCEPAN\nSmart, quick heating saucepan with non-\ntarnish COPPEBTONE covers. Highly polished\nexterior satin finished interior. Well shaped\nheat-proof handle.\n.50\nBring in your December 1955\nCALENAD Calendar coupon\nend    t a v e    $2.00    en    this\nCALENAD-ircm-of-tlio-month.\nMERCHANDISE VALUE 5.50\nLESS COUPON VALUE    2.00\nSpecial Calenad Price\nTO CALENAD CALENDAR OWNERS\n3\nMARSHALL-WELLS STORES\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n(Owners)\n395 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 497\nNeW Angle on\nEqual Pay\nHAMILTON (CP)\u2014A women's\ncommunity leader says that many\nwomen here oppose the suggestion of equal pay with men for\nequal work.\nMrs. John Munro, president of\nthe Hamilton Liberal Women's\nAssociation and the Hamilton\nWomen's Civic Club, says the plan\nwould result only in a lowering of\nstandards for men who must support a family.\nThe speech from the throne\ncontained notice that the government was considering a move toward equal pay for women in\ncivil service.\nSaid Mrs. Munro:\n\"It also lowers the man'8 Initiative to get married.\"\nADRIAN  MILLINERY\nFrench and Italian Velours Reg.\n$10.95 on sale $5.95 Thurs. Fri. Sat.\nGuaranteed Radio and\nTelevision, Service.\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\nGlass Tops for Furniture. Cut to\nany shape. -Edges polished.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.     Nelson\nIrish   Linen   Tea   Towels   and\nGlass Cloths. Rainbow stripe design, large size. E-ach 65c.\nTAYLOR'S   DRY   GOODS\nWeatherstrip now for Winter\ncomfort! We have everything in\nweatherstrin for door and window\nuse.       \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoveis vacuum cleaned.\nPounder's Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-1*\nBaby Wool, 3 and 4-ply, super\nfingering, wool blend, Scotch fingering, Nomatta and Polar. Tot-\nN-Teen Shop.\nCoast Hearings\nReopen Tuesday\nVANCOUVER     fCP)   \u2014  Ray\nMunro, former writer for Toronto\ntabloid Flash whose articles helped bring on the royal commission\ninto Vancouver police affairs, will\nbe one of the first witnesses when\nthe inquiry resumes Tuesday.\nMr. Munro, who severed his\nconnections with lawyer Neil\nFleishman after the hearings adjourned last October, said he will\n\"not need counsel\" to represent\nhifcn.\nAmong other witnesses expected\nto appear are deputy chief Gordon\nAmbrose, accused gambler Bruce\nSnider, superintendent of detectives Jack Horton and former detective Jack Whelan.\nMORE OLDSTERS\nPersons more than 65 years old\nnow comprise eight per cent of the\nU. S. population, compared to four\nper cent in 1900.\nR. TARLING,   TAILOR\nCleaning, alterations, pressing,\nhats cleaned and blocked. Room\n207 Johnstone Block, Phone 1256\n576 Baker Street.\nLoggers Aim fo\nEnd Accidents\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia's loggers are making big\nefforts to cut down what they\nterm a \"terrible accident rate\"\nin forests caused by inadequate\nsafety measure*\nMidwinter   Sale  Continues.\nEBERLE'S  JUNIOR   SHOP\nFor your dog. Collars of all sizes,\npadlocks, leather and chain leads,\nmuzzles, harnesses and brushes.\nHIPPERSON'S.\n20% discount on all new metal\nbeds iri all sizes while they last.\nWE BUY AND 8ELL\nNEW   AND   USED   FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n\u25a0   PHON,E 1560\nR. Andrew & Co,, 54th Anniversary Sale continues to bring you\ntop values in shoes. Naturalizers,\nGeorginas, * Enna Jetticks and\nmany others. R. Andrew & Co., for\nquality shoes.\nNOTICE TO THEATREGOERS\nReserve seat ticket holders can\nexchange seat tickets at the City\nDrug on or after Jan. 21, for Canadian Players presentation of\nSaint Joan.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nELLIOTT\u2014Funeral service for\nthe late Mrs. Edith Alice Elliott\nwill be held on Monday at 2 p.m.\nat the Thompson Funeral Home.\nDean T. L. Leadbeater will officiate and interment will be in\nthe Foresters Plot of Nelson Memorial Park.\nlllth Battery\nNews\nSgt. Heroux, administrative clerk\nwith the lllth Battery will be\nleaving for Vancouver on a 10-\nday, administrative and drill refresher course, an January 19.\nRecent application received for\nenlistment in the battery was that\nof Richard Lewis Bonderud, Senior\nHigh School student. Richard has\nserved with the Air Force Cadet\nCorps in Nelson.\nThe following personnel have\nbeen accepted in the lllth Battery\nin the rank of Gnrs: L. H. J. At-\nW. R. Malpass, director of safe-1 well, G. M. Donaldson, G. G. M.\nty programming for the B. C.\nTruck Loggers' Association, told\ndelegates meeting at their 13th\nannual convention here that something is finally being done about\nthe accidents.\n\"We are getting operators to\nrealize that safety costs nothing,\nbut pays off in less accidents,\" he\nsaid.\nMilligan Brothers Logging Co.\nof Alberni won the safety award\nfor firms with less than 15 em\nployees. Ramsey Arm Logging\nCompany won the ward for the\n16- to 35-man operation and the\nOlympic Logging Company won\nthe award for firms with more\nthan 35 employees\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y., 18%.\nZinc, East St. Louis 13%.\nSilver, N. Y., 90%.\nVACUUM CLEANER with\n'finger-tip\" cleaning\nthe cleaner rolls.. \u2022\nthe nozzle rolls...\nEVERYTHING ROLLS.'\nNEW LOW PRICK\nNew, Lswyt brings you NEW features \u2014NEW beauty! ALL AT THI\nLOWEST PRICE IN LEWYT HI5TORYI And-BOTH CLEANER AND\nNOZZLE ROLL ON WHEELS! No more carrying or arm-itralnl A\n\"finger-tip\"'iouch rolls the nonlc over rugs and floors\u2014rolls the\ncleaner room-to-rooml\n>\nCOMBINATION RUG 'N\nFLOOR NOZXLEI Clean, both\nrugt ond floor* without changing tool.I fiol\/i on whsaiif\nPLUS!   POWER   DIAL!   Dial,   e*aci   suction\nor  cotton  rugi,  floor*  or   draptHl\n\u25ba   BUILT-IN   TOOL   RACK I   Tool,   roll   along\nwith you\u2014no chaiing back and forth 1\nNO DUST BAO TO EMPTY) \u2022 Newl Et-\nciutivn vinyl hote\u2014won ' clog! \u2022 Powerful \u2022\nTubes lock \u2022 Corns, with all roolil\nJEFFERY\nRADIO AND APPLIANCES\n446 WARD ST. ..' ' PHONE 1302\nKidd, A. A. Watson,\nWeekly parade will be held at\nthe Armouries Friday at 1955\nhours. All ranks to attend in uniform.\nPart One Orders, issued by Lieut.\nF. W. M. Drew, A-Officer Commanding:\nDuties Orderly officer for this\nweek, Lt. H. Delquist; Orderly\nNCO, Bdr. R. McGhie; Duty driver.\nL-Bdr. J. Denholm; canteen steward, L-Bdr. Denholm; canteen orderly, Gnr. A. A. Watson.\nParades Friday at 19S5 hours.\nDismissal at 2155 hours.\nDress Battle dress, berets khaki,\nboots ankle black, anklets web,\nbelts waist, ties O.D.\nTraining As per Syllabus.\nNote All Ranks. Capt. Morris, 24\nMAA Regiment RCA Trail, (M.T.\nofficer) will be in Nelson on Friday\nnight, January 20 for driver testing. (3 ton stake).\nIt is proposed to hold a rifle\nshoot Tuesday 1900 hours. Dress\noptional.\nAccuses U.S.\nArmy of Bad\nRoad Manners\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A CCF\nrfiember of the British Columbia\nlegislature says he will launch an\nofficial protest later this month\nover what he called the \"gross\ndiscourtesy\" of United States\narmy drivers engaged in Exercise\nMoose Horn.\nFrank Howard, who drove here\nfrom his northern riding of Skee-\nna, said in an interview \"bad\nmanners\" by U. \u00a3. Sixth Army\ndrivers forced \"at least half a doz\nen\" British Columbia vehicles off\nthe road into ditches and snowbanks Jan. 7,\nAVOIDS COLLISION\nHe said the incident occurred\nbetween Quesnel and Williams\nLake, 300 miles northeast of here\nHe said he was forced to drive\ninto a snowbank to avoid a col\nlision with huge army lorries near\n.Spence's bridge.\nThe matter will be brought up\nin the legislature when it resumes\nsitting Jan. 17, he said, and he\nwill seek a full investigation.\nThe 215-vehicle convoy carrying\n1000 men crossed into British Columbia Jan. 4 on the way to the\nAlaskan army exercise.\nSays Politics and\nChurch Bad Mixers\nLETHBRIDGE (CP) \u2014 Religion\nand politics do not mix, says Mrs.\nA. L. Caldwell of Saskatoon, vice-\npresident of the National Federation of Liberal Women of Canada\nShe told the annual convention\nof the Alberta Liberal Women's\nAssociation: \"The person I suspect\nthe most is the one who comes to\na political meeting with a Bible\nin one hand and waving the flag\nin the other.\"\n\"\"Every woman should affiliate\nherself and work with a church\nsaid Mrs. Caldwell, \"and once she\nis fulfilling this task should do\nher duty as a citizen and work\nfor her beliefs through a political\nparty which follows the line of her\nway of thinking.\"\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED    and    REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St Phone 63\nHave The Job Dane Right\nWIC GRAVEQ\n\"        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St\nPhone 235\nSHIFFER-\nHILLMAN\nMade-tOrMeasure\nSUIT\nSALE\nDon't pass up this opportunity to get one of Can-\nodas' finest suits made-to-\nmeasure at a great saving.\nFit and satisfaction guaranteed.\nREG. $eo\nREG. $94\n$64     $72\nREG.  $100\n$80\nCMORY'C\nLimited    ***\nThe Man's Store\ni\nClear Slide From\nNear Revelstoke\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A huge\nsnow slide, more than 700 yards\nlong and up to 20 feet deep rumbled down on the CPR main line\nnear Revelstoke and held up the\nwestbound Canadian for 12 hours.\nCPR officials here said the line\nwas clear at 9:45 a.m. Thursday.\nThere was no delay of the CPR's\ncrack train to the East and the\nCanadian was held east of the\nslide area before -proceeding to\nVancouver. Passengers left Montreal and Toronto Tuesday.\nOfficials said all were comfortable and there was plenty of food\non hand during the 12-hour delay.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone  327\n676 Baker Street\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt makes excellent\nhome made bread.\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEV. CO. LTD.\nPHONE 238\n\u2022as\nYour REXALL Headquarters\nCan Supply You With\nSUPER   PLENAMINS\n$7.95 - $4.79 - $2.59\n9 important vitamins\nincluding B12.\nA-SA-REX TABLETS\n$1.19   (200  tablets)\n.65  (100 tablets)\nFor relief of headache,  neuralgia, muscular aches, colds.\nCity Drug\nBox 460 Phone 34\nHOUR\nUp-to-Date\nWrecker Service\nPHONE\n3 5\nTHIS SERVICE IS YOURS\nThe  latest  and   moBt  modern   towing   and   wrecker equipment\nmounted on  a  modern  heavy  duty Chevrolet truck chassis. \u2014\nThis   assures   you   of   expert   service   whether   you require   i\nminor tow job or a major power wrecker service.\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\nTHE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETELY EQUIPPED\nGARAGE IN THE INTERIOR OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\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. 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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"}]}}