{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429008":{"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":"2023-03-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1955-04-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429008\/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":" Canadian Battalion\n.Vi   \u2022 '\u2022} . .' '.\u25a0 ;       . -1 ' \u25a0''   y '    ' .'-r'< V$'^\u00ab' \u2022.'\nSails from Korea\nGov't Undecided About Complete    -\nWithdrawal of All Country's Forces\nOTTAWA .(CP)\u2014Canada's one .remaining infantry\nbattalion in Korea, the 2nd Battalion, Queen's Own Rifles,\nwas scheduled to sail for horn? Wednesday, tiie army announced. ..'_\u2022  ('\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. .'-j... \",\nBut officials in the defence-and;e*ternal affairs department said they do not know whether repatriation of\nhe Queen's Own means final withdrawal ot all Canadians\n'rom Korea.\nThey could not say whether other\nCanadian soldiers would be sent to\norea. The army disclosed earlier,\nowever, the closing of the Maple\neaf Club in Tokyo, main leave\nintre for Canadian forces In the\nEtr Bast.\nDefence Minister Campney said\n'arch 11 that the planned move-\nent of the 1st Battalion, the Black\n'atch, based at Aldershot, N.S., to\norea to relieve the Queen's Own\nas suspended pending talks with\nher Commonwealth countries with\nrces in Korea to decide on a pos-\nble complete pull-out.\nThe    Commonwealth    countries\nconcerned \u2014 Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand \u2014 apparently still are discussing the matter. If\na decision has been' reached, nobody here is prepared to say what it\nis.\nHowever, the government has indicated ever .since December that\nit wants to withdraw all Canadian\ntroops from Korea.\nWith departure of the Queen's\nOwn, the number of- Canadians in\nKorea will be reduced to some BOO\nfrom 1200. The remaining 500 auxr\niliary troops are expected to start\nhome soon on rotation.\nOLDUP MEN\nRAB $305,243\nHistory's Biggest\nCash Bank Holdup\nSmooth as Clockwork\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Four cock-\nire bandits Wednesday pulled his-\nryV biggest cash bank holdup.\nThe Job went off as,smooth as\nockwork. Not a shot was fired,\n>t an outcry raised.\n\"Dont do anything foolish,\" the\nctims were warned.\nThe robbers had painstakingly\nised the bank, a Chase Manhattan\nranch in Queens. They remarked\nt one employee that they had\nudied the layout for six months.\nThey knew the names and work-\nig habits of some 11 employees.\nhey even knew first names of the\nsople under their guns.\nIn an unrelated holdup in lower\nlanhattan, miles away from the\nink, three masked men robbed\njewelry firm of $75,000 to $100,-\nW in uninsured diamonds.\nThe bank branch is on Long Isl-\nnd, in the Woodside section of\n.e borough of Queeifs.\" -'-\u25a0 '*\",'.\nThe loot in no way approached\nie record $1,319,000 taken in the\nrinks Express Co. stickup in Bos-\nm five years ago. But it was eas-\ny the largest cash strike ever\nu_.de against an American bank,\n.argest previous haul was $100,319\nl1953 from a bank in Floral Park\nn Long Island.\nThe $271,000 holdup in 1911 of a\nlank of Montreal branch in New\ntfestminster, B.C., was believed to\nthe world's biggest cash bank\nob heretofore.\n5.C. Signs Pension   .\nHan With Ottawa\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Three more\nrovinces have,signed agreements\nrith the federal government for\n\u25a0bint financing of $40 monthly pen-\nlions to needy disabled persons, the\nnealth department announced Wednesday.\nft said completion of agreements\n\\vilh Quebec, British Columbia and\n.Newfoundland brings to eight the\nnumber of provinces which have\nformally joined the plan. The agree-\nnents go into effect in Quebec from\nhe start of this year and in B.C.\nNewfoundland from April 1.\nThe announcement said Ontario\nhnd Manitoba are expected to complete agreements shortly.\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanley Knowles (CCF\u2014Winnipeg North Centre) said U.S. State\nSecretary Dulles is primarily interested in other countries as a\nU.S. defence line.\nGeorge Hees PC\u2014Toronto Broad,\nview) said the government should\nspeak out more strongly on U.S.\nactions adversely affecting Canada.\nImmigration Minister Pickersgill\nsaid police investigation ls continuing into press reports of U.S.\ngangsters moving into Montreal.\nParliament adjourned tor the\nEaster recess, the Commons to\nApril 18, the Senate to May 8.\n&VM*\n \u2022' \u2022 ' \u25a0  \u2022;'\u25a0'    II.JI'Mit\u00bbHWIWiAWHIHV,i.i!:lfl..l_in-\n$M\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny and warm,\ntight winds. Low and high at\nCranbrook, 26 and 60; Crescent Valley, 26 ahd 66. Outlook for Friday:\nCloudy and cooler.\n,!tiT\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY 'MORNING. APRIL 7. 1955\nNo. 293\n-me Out They Found a Man of Cyrene,\nSimon By Name...\"\nChurchill Leaves\n10 Downing Street\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Winston\nChurchill said farewell to 10 Down,\ning Street Wednesday, his lips\nquivering and his eyes filled with\ntears.\nWalking: out' A.tMiiesUtS^ei \u25a0\nBritiS'h tprlrae ministers \u2014 itoi: tie\nlast time as its rightful occupant-\nproved too much for the old war-\nMo..\nHe just stood there on the door\nsteps and cried.\n\"Good old Winnie\", came a shout\nfrom the mass that jammed the\nnarrow dead-end street,\n\"God bless you, Winnie.\" Then\nall crowds were lost In. the. roar of\nthe orowd.\nChurchill stood there on the\nsteps of No. 10, bareheaded and\nhiding from no one that his last\nact of resignation wrung at his\nheart\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Sir Anthony Eden kissed the hand of\nQueen Elizabeth .Wednesday and\nbecame Britain's 42nd prime minister since the office was established 234 years ago.\nLess than five hours later the\n57-year-old former foreign secretary told the House of Commons 'his\nfamed predecessor in , office, Sir\nWinston Churchill,' \"will still be\nthe dominant figure amongst us.\"\nDOLLAR DOWN      -\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar was 3-32 lower at a premium of 1 19-32 per cent in terms\nof U. S. funds Wednesday. Pound\nsterling unchanged at 2.70W.\n*mr\nff'f:tffftfi0m&t0ffwf\ntiff \u25a0 \u25a0    \u25a0\u2022'\nfyffttff- tr~:::.\u25a0:.:\u25a0:\u25a0\nFIRST VESSEL of the 1956 navigation season to pan through\nthe Welland Canal at Port Waller It the tanker Imperial Cornwall.\nWith the bridge raised In salute, the tanker emitted a series of\nwhistles as It passed Into the looks\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nThis paitit'mg'by lioulse Paul pore, French master,:shpws;4the. ^gjfljejjit LJ^itlifl--\nPassion.;.^en Sirtiojv' the;.Cyrene' helped'Christ 'Mrtjt;StapESI*otti'fhey.'y^tr-\nGolgotKaY'\nSaskatchewan Rivers Rampaging\nREGINA (CP) - Swollen by .a\nheavy spring run-off, streams In\nsoutheastern' Saskatchewan burst\ntheir banks Wednesday with flood\nwaters knifing through highway\ngrades, knocking out bridges and\nflooding low-lying farm lands.\nAt Carnduff -in the extreme\nsoutheast the normally docile Antler Creek went on its second rampage in 20 years, knocking out a\nmunicipal bridge and' * seriously\nweakening a concrete span on No.\n8 Highway southeast of the town.\nAt Tantallon, 160 miles northeast\nof Regina, citizens were using boats\nto negotiate some streets in the\nvillage under iy% feet of water from\nthe Qu'Appelle River. The river\nwas reported dropping Wednesday\nas ice jams cleared.\nWashouts on the CPR main line\neast of the village and on No. 8\nHighway six miles southeast isolated the town until Wednesday when\nrail service was restored.\nFlooding began Monday when the\nriver backed up behind a barrier\nof ice and spilled into the village.\nA boat was the only means of\nescape for two school teachers\nboarding at one home.\n\u2022   The farm home of Jim Dunn east\nT-4 Slips Forged\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Vancouver Sun says hundreds of persons in British Columbia face prosecution in a widespread income\ntax fraud.    l\nOne man .has been arrested and,\nthe newspaper said, hundreds of\nadditional, arrests \"will be made\nas the result of an investigation\ninto a large-scale income tax fraud\nscheme which saw hundreds of\nforged T-4 slips filed from Vancouver.\"\nThe T>4 is the statement of\nearnings and tax deducted slip.    .\nThe story, quoted police as saying\na forgery racket in the documents\nhas been operating in Vancouver\nfor weeks and has tost a email\ngroup of tax. dealers and the\nfederal government thousands of\ndollars. .       I \"    '\"   ~\nLudger Tasse,  50,  was  arrested CACIf    LIBERALS\nlast week and charged with fraud. ***d\"'^ lJ0WU\"iL^\nHe'has been remanded until today\nwith bail set at $5000.\nThe Sun story, quoting unnamed\npolice officials, said men, mostly\nloggers, laid off during the winter\nwere being charged 50 per cent\nby a number of dealers who cashed\ntheir tax rebate clairAs.\nPolice were quoted as saying 50\nper centers had been cashing\nrebates for some time before the\nracket started. Since it began,\nhowever, the investigators were\nquoted, \"a very large number\" of\nthe T-4s cashed through dealers\nhave been forged.\nOne dealer was quoted as saying he handled $30,000 in income\ntax claims.\nThe newspaper explained the\nsystem used by the dealers in\nrebates:\nForgers made out fake T-4 slips\nfor men seeking the illicit rebates,\ncharging between $5 and $20,\ndepending on the rebate. The men\ntook the slips to a dealer, where\na T-l statement of income was\nfilled out The customer gives the\ndealer power of attorney to collect\nthe full rebate through normal\nchannels and is paid 50 per cent in\nreturn. Thus, he avoids the one-to-\nthree-month waiting period before\nhe could collect a full, legal rebate.\nPolice said, the Sun story says,\nthe forged T-4 slips would be\nspotted by income tax officials and\nthe dealers who . cashed them\nwould be out their money.\nELECT NEW\nSECRETARY\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Two warring\ngroups in the Saskatchewan Liberal party\u2014one seeking provincial\nautonomy and the other federal\ncontrol over the provincial party \u2014\nhave agreed to a compromise in\nselection of a new Liberal association secretary, the first step in\nuniting party strength.\nThe Saskatchewan Liberal Association executive, meeting behind closed doors Wednesday in\nwhat was termed a caucus to review the legislative session and\ndraw up summer campaign plans,\nnamed Mrs. Marjorie Totten, a\nminor association employee, to the\npost.\nA spokesman Wednesday night\nsaid she will hold the job until a\nnew man can be found who will\nsatisfy all party factions.\nMrs. Totten is the third secretary in the last nine weeks. Juggling of the position re-opened a\nbreech between young and \"old-\nguard\"' Liberals which was evident lapt fall at the convention\nwhich elected A. H. McDonald as\nnew Liberal leader.\nMr. McDonald replaced Glen\nBruce as secretary with Sam Carr,\nmember of the legislature for Rol-\nthem. Mr Carr quit last week and\nMr. Bruce was reappointed. Mrs.\nTotten will not take on the organization duties which go with tho job.\nof Tantallon was isolated by water\nwhich flooded farm lands along\nthe stream.\nStudents wnb attend Tantallon's\nconsolidated school started their\njourney to' classes in a bus and\nthen changed to trucks after a few\nmiles. When trucks bogged down\nhorse-drawn trailers took over.\nLast, lap of the trip was made\nby boat.\nThe usually tiny and lazy Pipestone River began flowing over the\nspillway of the new Pipestone dam\neight miles south of Moosomin east\nof Regina near the Manitoba bor\nder. Federal irrigation experts had\nestimated it would take better than\ntwo years of normal flow to fill\nthe nine-mile-long reservoir behind\nthe large earth-fill dam. It filled\nin three days.\nWater was pouring ever the spill\nway Wedriesday.\nTraffic over a portion of No. 16\nHighway two miles west of Kip\nling 80 miles southeast of Regina\nwas stopped Wednesday as overflow began.pouring over the grade\nin a strip 200 yards wide.\nRural customers were met at the\nwashout by enterprising Kipling\nmerchants who drove them to town\nand back. The customer had to\nwade over the washout.\nIn ttie Alameda-Carlyle areas\nnear Kipling the countryside Wednesday was a chain of lakes. Every\ndepression in the land was filled\nwith water.\nWest Vancouver Wins\nB.C. Phone Fight\nWEST VANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The\nmunicipality has won a two-year\nfight with the B.C. Telephone Co,\nover taxation of telephone cable\nrights-of-way. Court of appeal ruled that West Vancouver was entitled to assess all property held\nby the company for its submarine\ncables connecting with Bowen\nIsland.\nThird Suspect Tried\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Eng Git\nLee, third suspect in the slaying\nof storekeeper Ah Wing, was identified Wednesday as the driver of\na getaway car.\nAlready sentenced to hang June\n21 are Donald Cathro, 26. and-Chow\nBew, 44. Richard Wohg, 17, has still\nto be tried.\nConst. Bob Lycett was commended officially for capturing the four\nsuspects less than half an hour after\nthe slaying and robbery attempt,\nHe said \"Eng Git Lee was behind\nthe wheel.\"\nBritons Expect Big\nin Concept\nOf Gov't Under Eden\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiMMiiimiiimiiiiiiii\nNo Paper Friday\n\u2022 The Dally News will not be\npublished tomorrow, Good Friday. Next edition will be de-\n'livered Saturday morning.\nIIIIIIIIIIIMIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFIRE DAMAGE\nOVER$l,000,0M\n2000 See Calgary     *\nWarehouse Gutted,\n200-Foot Flames\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Flames fed by\nexplosive and highly-combustible\nmaterials ate out the interior ot\nMarshall-Wells Ltd. hardware warehouse in downtown Calgary Wednesday.\nAmmunition, hundreds of gallons\nof paint, oils, greases, floor coverings and tires were consumed as\nthe fire of undetermined origin\nswept through the four-storey\nbuilding for six hours and did damage estimated unofficially at more\nthan $1,000,000.\nA crowd estimated by police at\n2000 watched as the explosion-\npunctuated fire destroyed the interior of the brick building in the\ndowntown business distHct at 118-\nUth Ave.\nSeveral exploding paint cans\nwere hurled to the street but no\none was hurt. One fireman, Laurie\nCollins*-was overcome iy smoke\nand given' hospital treatment    .,\nWater vaporized before it hit\nflames while1 being thrown by firemen on ladders. The heat became\nso intense the firemen had to leave\ntheir ladders. At one stage the\nflames roared .200 feet above the\nbuilding.\nOfficials considered the exploding ammunition as not too serious.\nThere was little of it in the building as the fall stock had been\nnearly sold out and the spring\nsupply had not arrived, said R. B.\nSutherland, vice - president and\nmanager of the company.\nFire officials said that while the\nsituation provided a hazard, ammunition exploded by fire does.not\ncarry deadly velocity.\nMr. Sutherland said the merchan\ndise contained in the building,\nwhich it 1^ expected will be \"a\ntotal loss, was worth about $1,000,-\n000 while' the building itself was\nvalued at $300,000. The business\nemployed 135 Calgarians.\nPakistan PM Weds\nFormer Alta. Girl\nKARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters)\u2014\nA dark-eyed young Canadian of\nLebanese extraction Wednesday became the bride of Prime Minister\nMohammed Ali of Pakistan, it was\nauthoritatively learned here.\nShe is the former Alya Saddy, 28,\nformerly of Edmonton, who met\nMohammed Ali when he was Pakistan's high commissioner to Can.\nada and who has been his social\nsecretary for more than two years.\nShe Is the 45-year-old prime minister's second wife. He has been\nmarried to the first Begum Moham\nmed Ali for more than 14 years and\nhas two sons.\nUnder Moslem law a man is permitted to have as many as four\nwives provided he treats them \"with\njustice and equity.\"\nMock Battle\nBegins Sunday\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A mock-\nbattle test of west coast anti-aircraft defences is scheduled to begin\nhere Sunday when an attack by\nhigh-flying RCAF and U.S. aircraft\nwill be repulsed by anti-aircraft\nartillerymen.\nKnown as Exercise Totem Pole,\nthe test will run to April SO and\nwill have air force, navy and U.S.\nobservers.\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Twenty-five\ncars of an eastbound Canadian National Railways freight train were\nderailed Wednesday near Welby,\nSask., blocking the main line near\nthe Manitoba-Saskatchewan border.\nA railway spokesman here said\nno one was injured.\nMore of a Team Effort Expected'\nEdeh, Butler, Macmillan and\nSalisbury Likely To Be \"Big Four\"\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON  (CP)\u2014Britain went under new management Wednesday, and people braced for a big change in\nthe concept of government.\nUnder Sir Winston Churchill it was pretty much a\none-man show.\nUnder Sir Anthony Eden it will\nbe more of a team effort. The \"Big\nFour\" In Britain's affairs will probably be Eden, Finance Chief Richard Austen Butler, Defence Minister Harold Macmillan and the Marquess of Salisbury, lord president\nof the council.\nButler, only 52, confident and assured, a smooth hand at public relations, has been a success at the\ntreasury and is bound to be a big\nname, in British politics for a long\ntime to come. When he has an announcement to make affecting Canada he calls Canadian correspondents in to tell them about it.\nMacmillan, 60, probably ranks\nnext in -the hierarchy.\nLord. Salisbury, 61, keeps In the\nbackground but has considerable influence. His family, the Cecils, were\nborn to rule. He is a direct descendant of Wiliam Cecil, the first\nLord Burleigh, for 40 years the power behind the throne in the days of\nQueen Elizabeth I.\nDOGGED WORKER\nEden certainly will be the top\nman but in a phrase beloved of\n3rit_sh. politicians he win probably\nbe primus- lnter^^1~WS'.'anrtM-g\nequals.\nUnder Churchill, cabinet meetings often were \u2022 dazzling monologues.\nchairman of committee, paying close\nheed to the sense of the meeting.\nChurchill had flair, panache,\nflashes of genius. He leaned heavily on Intuition seasoned by\nbroad experience. Eden Is more\nthe workhorse, accustomed to\nlearning hit brief, sticking doggedly to his point whatever the\ndiscouragements.\n8ome critics might say Eden\ncarries studied moderation to tha\npoint of. dullness. Churchill, right\nor wrong, could never bt dull.\nChurchill was a hard taskmaster,\nand sometimes an erratic one. There\nwere undercurrents of criticism at\nthe old man's methods in the last\nfew years, even from those who\nfreely admitted his Olympian qualities. Churchill kept unearthly\nhours and had his idiosyncrasies.\nIt will be strictly business under\nEden, the trained foreign-office\nman.\nThe contrasts can be multiplied.\nSir Winston has had experience in\n11 government departments through\n50 years ln politics. The new prime\nminister has served in only three.\nVirtually all his time has been spent\nin the fqreign office, which he has\nheaded three times.\nPROPER NOISES EXPECTED\nIn domestic affairs Eden is a novice. Little is known about' hli\nviews on bread-and-butter issues.\nBut he is far from a red-eyed reactionary.\nA minority view of Eden as prim*\nminister might be that he will moke\n'allihe correct noises,' but seldom do\nanything inspired. The left-wing\nNew Statesmen and Nation said last\nFebruary lt was confidently predicted among  Conservative  mem-\nEden may well be more like a bers that when Eden did take over\n\"Butler  will  proceed  to  eat  him\nalive.\"\nA more common opinion is that\nthough Eden may latk color, he.\ndoes not lack strength of will or\nfirmness of principle. Prudence, his\nfriends say, 1? not t\u00b0 he confused\nwith weakness. Eden's family motto,\nincidentally is \"Si Sit Prudentla\"\u2014\nIf There Be But Prudence.\nNay Spend More on Defence in 1955\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Though defence estimates show the government plans to cut defence spending\n$133,000,000 this fiscal year, actual\nexpenditures may be as much as\n$161,000,000 higher than last year.\nThis seeming paradox is brought\nabout by two factors:\nActual expenditures sometimes\ndo not approach forecast spending.\nA defence department fund\nknown as the \"special account.\"\nFor the fiscal year ended March\n31, the government forecast defence\nexpenditures of $1,908,000,000. For\nthe fiscal year just started, the estimate is $1,775,000,000 or a decrease\nof $133,000,000.\nBut instead of spending $1,908,-\n000,000 last year, the defence department actually spent $1,677,000,-\n000. The government term for this\nis \"short-fall.\" It means the defence\ndepartment spent $231,000,000 less\nduring the year than it planned to\ndo when the year started.\nThe special account was set up\nfive years ago to credit the armed\nforces, chiefly the army, with the\nvalue of equipment given to Canada's allies.\nCREDIT GIVEN ,\nFor example, say the Canadian\nArmy shipped $10,000,000 worth of\ntrucks to NATO members. It was\nshort this amount of equipment. So\n000 In the special account on which\nit could draw in the future.\nOfficials have estimated that $9,7,-\n000,000 will be drawn from the special account this year, thus making\ndefence spending, instead of $1,775,-\n000,000, a total of $1,872,000,000.\nSo, if the defence department\nspends its full budgetary estimate\nof $1,775,000,000 \u2014 this appears unlikely however, in view of previoui\nshort-falls \u2014 plus the $97,000,000\nfrom the special account, it will be\nlaying out $161,000,000 more than\nactually spent last year.\nEstimate Population,\nSpokane, At 182,000\nSPOKANE (AP) \u2014 The population of Spokane, Washington state's\nsecond largest city, was estimated\nat 182,000 Wednesday by the city\nplanning director in a report to\ncommissioners. The official 1950\ncensus gave the population as 161,-\n721.\nKUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) \u2014\nThe Malayan government Wednesday announced the surrender of 10\nrebel terrorists including a top official, Hor Leong, 28. The surrender was negotiated in letters, carried deep into the forbidding jungle\nthe army was credited with $10,000,- by aborigine tribesmen.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nOIL CITY, Pa. (AP)\u2014 Officer* of tho county humane society report a man drove up to the dog pound the other day, grabbed a nine-\nweek-old  pup and drove away.\nIronically, anyone can get a pup there free merely by asking for it,\nBRIER HILL, N.Y. (AP)\u2014Outraged townspeople, armed with an\nunloaded First World War machine-gun and barricaded by parked\n, cars, have won at least a temporary respite for a beloved elm tree.\n\"Over, my dented car,\" one defender proclaimed as tree cutters \u25a0\nadvanced'on the elm Monday,\n\u25a0The state public works department had ordered the tree removed\non the ground that it was diseased and likely to blow across a street,\nA score of partisans stood guard in this St. Lawrence county\ncommunity Monday while a tree surgeon examined the elm. He said\nit could be saved with treatment. i\n8T. LOUIS (AP)\u2014The quiet of St. Louis' city art museum was\nshattered by a piercing scream Tuesday, The reason.\nA boy's pet snake, two feet long, got loose and went slithering\naeross the marble floor of the sculpture room.\nSheila Murphy, secretary to the museum director! gave forth\nwith the iscream when she noticed the snake. Then a small boy\nrushed up and explained \"he got away.\" He stuffed the snake Into\na ppeket and calmly resumed his Inspection of museum exhibits.\n____.\n warn\n\u25a0\n\u2014\nmjp\u00ab ipi\n,     ;.\u00bb,.-.:-;'.,     <\nPipSPWPW*\u00bbps|\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1955\nWinner bf the Academy Award as Ihe Best Documentary Feature of The Year.\nAgftlfl Walt Disney unfolds\n\u00ab^_ the broad canvas of America... presenting vivid,\nS**-\"    throbbing adventure to be seen at least once...\n!        | and remembered forever!\nlmmm \" rtftni^wWh^\nUfaKOtanMfk\nWILLIE,\nTHE OPERATIC WHALE\n* cartoon novolty\nfeaturing the\ntalent, of Nelion Eddy!\nTECHNICOLOR\nRegular Pricei,\nMATINEES FRIDAY, SAT.\nAT 2:00 P.M.\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0\nTomorrow Night\n^STARUGHTST\nOpens far Another Season\nWe say In all honesty, that never were so many good pictures on their way to you .... SEE THEM AT THE STARLIGHT... YOU CAN'T FIND BETTER ENTERTAINMENT ANYWHERE.\nI\nI\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nIn The Comfort of\nYour Own Cor\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nChildren Under 12\nFREE\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nSmoke\nIf You Wish\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\nNo Baby Sitting\nProblem\n\u2022 * \u2022\nFree Bottle\nWarming Service\nIn the Snack Bar\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nALWAYS\nA CARTOON\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nFriday Night Special\nA FREE CUP OF\nMALKIN'S BEST\nCOFFEE\niwm^-mmmttmiK\n\"WITCH-CRAFTY\"\nWoody Woodpecker\n'STAR STUDDED RIDE\"\nA Color Variety Short.\nSPORTS REVIEW\nSHOW STARTS 7:30\nMAIN FEATURE 8:00\n!\nGRAND OPENING TONIGHT\nELK Drive-in\nCASTLEGAR\n2 BIG HITS\nSHOWING TONIGHT AND FRIDAY\n\"MARA MARU\"\nWith Errol Flynn - Ruth Roman\nA Thrill-Swept Tropical Adventure' Aboard a Terror Ship\nPLUS\n\"TEXAS CARNIVAL\" (Color)\nRed Skelton \u2022  Either Wllllami\nAnd   See   Our   New   Solf-Servo 'ConcenG.on,\nNo More Waiting To  Be  Served.\nGATES OPEN 6:30 P.M. \u2014 SHOW STARTS 7:10 P.M.\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\n,- LAST TIMES TONIGHT\nAt 6:46 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.\n\"THE STORY OF\nTHREE LOVES\"\nPlor Ang.ll (nd Farley Qrangar\nPlua CARTOON and  NEWO\nFRIDAY  and  8ATURDAY\n\"SECRETS OF INCAS\"\nCharlcton Helton - Robert Young\nSHORT and CARTOON\nChurches Will Be Ful\nFor Easter Services\nNelaon churches will bo filled\nand overflowing thli weekend ai\nNelson people murk the great religious holiday of. Eaiter.\nThe'y will hold special services\ncommemorating Christ's death on\nthe crosl  Good  Friday and  his\nresurrection   Eaiter   Sunday,  as\npeople aorosi the world have done\ntlnoe tha first Eastertide.\nOn Good Friday seven minister.\nwill take part ln a special service\nat   St.   Saviour'i   Pro-CathtdrHl\u2014\na three-hour \"mentations trom the\ncross.\" The service will be from 12\nnoon to 3 p.m. and people will come\nand go as they choose. Each minister, Very Rev\/ T. L. Leadbeater of\nSt. Saviour's, Jlov. G. W. Payne of\nSt. Paul's United Chur,ch,- Rev. Allan Dixon of Trinity UnltM Church,\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood of\nChurch of the Redeemer, Lieut. K.\nP. Thornhill of the Salvation Army,\nRev. E. V. Hanson, Evangelical Mission Covenant Church, and Rev. K.\nImayoshi of First Baptist Church,\nwill speak.\nSPECIAL MASSES\nCathedral   of 'Mary  Immaoulate\nand Redemptorlst Catholic Church\nwill hold special masses Thursday,\nFriday, Saturday and Sunday.\nAt  St   Saviour'i  Pro-Cathedral\nFriday, a special family service will\nbe held at 10:30 a.m., entitled\n\"Christ's Finished Work.\"\nAn evening service will be held\nat Willow Point followed by a colored film strip on events of Good\nFriday.\nAt Church of Redeemer ln Fair-\nview morning meditations and an\nevening service will be held Friday with special music ln the evening by soloist Colin Baker and the\nchoir. \"Excerpts from Olivet to Calvary\" will be sung.\nRev. Carl J. Hennlg of St. John's\nLutheran Church will hold morning\nservices Good Friday. His service\nwill be the final service on \"The\nSeven Words from the Cross.\"\nAt the Redemptorlst Catholic\nChurch In Fairview Holy Maes will\nbe held Thursday at 7 a.m. Exposition will be held all day and Holy\nHour at 7:30 p.m. Good Friday the\nMass of the Pre-Sanctifled will be\nheld at 0 a.m. and devotions at 8\np.m.\nSaturday morning there ls no\nmass but a Pre-VlgU Easter Mass\nwill be held at midnight Saturday.\nCeremonies begin at 10:45 Saturday night Rev. Father John Lambert will conduct the Easter service..\nAlpine Presidentr\nDies in Crash\nFirst Kokanee Cruises\nIn Store for 50 Boys\nA new voice sounded Wednesday\nover West Arm waters\u2014that of the\npowerful dual air horns of the\nmotoi. cruiser Kokanee, jointly owned by William McDonald of Nelson\nMarine Service and R. A. (Dick)\nSpurway. .\nDuring the Easter holiday period\napproximately 60 boys will take\nshort cruises ln order to familiarize\nthemselves with the procedure laid\ndown by thbsc anxious to preserve\nthe safety and dignity of water\ncraft\nFrom the pool thua formed two\nboys will be selected in turn, provided with suitable uniforms and\nrequired to perform routine tasks\nduring their tour of duty.\nComplimentary ticketa will be\nIssued parenta and friends of those\non duty.In thli way the maximum\non duty. In this way the maximum\ned to six, and any excess of this\nnumber will be issued tickets valid\non the next cruise. '\u25a0'\nThe range may be somewhat curtailed owing to low water. Later it\nis planned to make the trip to the\noutlet each Thursday and Friday,\nleaving city wharf at 4 p.m., \\o\nKootenay Bay on Saturday leaving\nat 9 a.m. and to McDonald'a Land-\nKLGH\nHead\nNursing\nResigns\ning and Camp Koolaree on Sunday\nat 10 a.m.\nEvery safety device li Installed\naboard, including a motor powered\ndinghy. Boys qualified to use the\ndinghy will sport lightning flashes\non their left sleeves and will make\ntrips from the cruiser to lakeside\nservice stations and return with\nsandwiches, pies and soft drinks\n.which will be arranged for before\neach boat trip.\n\"The co-operation of parents and\nadults during these cruises will \"be\nmuch appreciated,\" Mr. Spurway\nsaid.\nIn the meantime a crew of four\nis busy putting In a marine railway\nJust West of Mr. Spurway's rock\nharbor, and this will be completed\nbefore high water In order to service the Kokanee.\nThis is seen as the first phase\nof the proposed recreational centre\nfor city and district youth, to cost\nseveral thousand dollars.\nluperintendsnt of nursea of Kootenay Lake General Hospital Mrs.\nWarwick Bucknell has submitted\nher resignation. It becomes effective\nAprU JO.\nMrs. Bucknell, aa English woman\nof nursing experience ln Great Bri\ntain and the Far East and ln military hospitals in South Africa,\ncame to Nelson in January. Coming\nto British Columbia late in 1053, ahe\nwas at Ocean Falls General Hospital, where she was superintendent\nfor nine montha.\nSince her arrival here, Mrs. Bucknell has become known in church\nand club circles having been a guest\nspeaker on her overseas experiences\non a number of occasions.\nMrs. Bueknell's resignation wes\naccepted by the executive of the\nhospital, society board thii week\nafter Administrator. T. G. Reed and\nChairman J. W. Graham had asked\nher to reconsider an earlier resignation.\nKokanee Bridge\nWork Resumed\nKenyon Conitruotion Company of\nPenticton may start today pouring\nconcrete at the new bridge being\nbuilt to replace the. narrow Kokanee Creek bridge on the North\nShore.\nIt will probably be a month and\na half however, before the bridge\nis open to traffic, an official of the\nprovincial public works department\nat Nelson said Wednesday.\nWork on the structure started last\nFall, and finished before Winter's\nonset after steel framework had\nbeen erected.\nJohn B, White, 69, former Spokane prosecuting attorney and\npresident of two Northwest mining\ncompanies Including one with\nproperty near Nelson, waa killed in\nan auto accident Saturday near\nPendleton, Ore.\nWhite   was   returning   from\nbusiness trip to Nevada with  his\nwife, Nellie, when his car plunged\ndown an embankment. Mrs. White\nwas injured seriously.\nDISCOVERED GOLD\nWhite was prosecuting attorney\nln Spokane from IBM to 1918 and\nln 1938 was a candidate for superior\ncourt judge. He was associated with\nFred J. Cunningham of-Spokane as\na law partner for 11 years.\nHe waa born ln Ontanagon,\nMich., and was a 1(109 graduate\nof Stanford university law school.\nHe was president of Mttalamith\nMines corporation and Alpine Mining company, owner of the Alpine\nGold properf near Nelson. In 1935\nhe found a gold placer In Ravalli\ncounty, Mont, which yielded gold\nworth 65 cents to the cubic yard.\nWhite was married in 1910 to\nHazel Grlnnell White, now a hostess at the Spokane club. They were\ndivorced In 1946. He married his\npresent wife in 1949.\nWhite is also survived . by two\nsons, John White,'Missoula, Mont,\nand Lt COL Fred G. White, Falt-\nville, N.C.; a daughter Mrs. James\nC. Doyle, Beverly Hills, Ca.lf., and\n15 grandchildren.\nPONOKA TAKES\nTRAIL THREE\nSTRAIGHT\nPONOKA, Alta. (CP) - Ponoka\nStampeders entered the western\nCanada* intermediate A hockey\nfinals Wednesday night with a 7-4\novertime victory over Trail All'\nStars to finish their semi-final in\nthree straight games.\nStampeders, who won the first\ntwo games of the best-of-five series\n7-4 and 4-3, now meet the winner\nof the Brandon-Kenora series in\nthe final opening here next week.\nExact dates will not be known\nuntil the other finalist ls declared.\nShorty Gordon paced Stampeders\nwith three goals, Ken Head scored\ntwo and others oama from Reml\nBrlason and Clark.\nTrail counted on goals by Frank\nTurik, with two. and Frank Sullivan, Laurie Bursaw and Malley\nTurik's tying goal came ln the last\nfive seconds of regulation time.\nPost Office Does\n$195,968 Business\nTransactions at Nelson post office during March totalled $195,-\n369.94. This was $54,168.77 less than\nIn March a year ago.\nPostage sales remained nearly the\nsame, this March at $9303.43. A year\nago sales weer $8568,45. Other revenue 'in March totalled $1488.91.\nMoney orders issued were 3662\n26 less than 1994 and money orderi\npaid  were 6188, 114  (ewer.\nAT THI\nW* MKit-31\n**^ r.r.Tlrnlr.TKn\nIt  cost   the   U.S.   $368,850,000\ndig the Panama canal, plus approp\nrlatlon tor its defence.\n\u2022fi\nm\nARE YOU\nMOVING?\ntMCKXMM\nNelson Girl Wins\nJournalism Award\nA University of B.C. co-ed from\nNelson, 19-year-old Pit Carney, has\nbeen awarded the annual Canadian\nWomen's Press Club scholarship in\nJournalism, Dean Walter H. Gage,\nuniversity scholarship committee\nchairman announced at Vancouver\nWednesday.\nMiss Carney, a third-year student majoring in political science\nand economics, edited two Vancouver newspaper supplements for\nthe University's triennial \"Open\nHouse\" March 5. She has been\nfeature editor, news editor and,\ncolumnist on the student news-!\npaper, the \"Ubyssey,\" and was ap-!\npointed copy editor on the 1955-58;\nstaff. I\nMiss Carney will be graduated'\nfrom the University in the spring;\nof 1956. She said Wednesday she1\nhopes to do post-graduate work in\nher two major courses at the.\nUniversity of B.C. j\nMiss Carney is the daughter of\nDr. and Mrs. J. J. Carney, North\nShore, Nelson. A twin brother, Jim,\nand a younger sister, Norah, also\nattend the University.\nMiss Carney was born In Shanghai in 1935. Her fafher, a veterinary surgeon, practised in China for\n20 years. Later the Carneys lived\nin Victoria until.moving to Nelson\nln 1944.\nMiss. Carney attended  school in\nNelson.\nICLAS8IPIED ADS GET RESULTS\nThe Seoson's\nOPENING\nDANCE\nThis Coming\nSATURDAY\nNIGHT\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nIT'S SMOOTH\nGOING WHEN IT\nGOES WITH US .\nTOWLER\nFUEL AND TRANSFER\nPHONE 889\nFOR THE KIDDIES . . .\nAn Eostor Gift Buy.\nCute\nCuddly Toys\nTo tuck into Easter baskets. Made from\ncolorful non-toxic plastic in several\nanimal shapes. Complete with built-in-\nwhistle. They're safe and durable.\nPriced From\nPhona 25 Free Delivery\nJuvenile Th6ft\nCose Adjourned\nTwo Nelson juveniles, about 13\nor 14 years, old, appeared in juvenile court Wednesday on a charge\nof Iheft and the case was adjourned to April 20. The boys allegedly\ntook sweetmeats from the Fourex\nBakery.\nCase was adjourned to allow the\nprobation officer to investigate.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nNelson    _  SO 38 \u2014\nEdmonton    33 69 \u2014\nKimberley ,  25 59 \u2014\nCrescent Valley .'.  23 61 \u2014\nGrand Forks _  27 65 \u2014\nVancouver  37 63 \u2014\nVictoria    _  41 60 \u2014\nPrince Rupert __  40 44 1.52\nPrince George  35 52 \u2014\nWhitehorse     23 34 \u2014\nSpokane   ' .     30 82 \u2014\nHEATING FOR HEALTH ... No. 2\nFor greater comfort and better health modernize your\nheating system. Save money on every heating dollar\nyou spend and enjoy hew comfort during the winter\nmonths.\nKootenay Plumbing and Heating\n3.1   Baker St. Co.  Ltd. Phone  666\nKootenay Lake\nTrout Derby on\nThe Kootenay Lake trout derby,\nrevived under new sponsorship of\nthe Nelson Rod and Gun Club, has\nofficially opened. It will last until\nNovember 30.\nThe organizers hope that tickets\nwill be available for fishing this\nholiday weekend.\nThe big season's prizes will be,\nfirst, for the heaviest trout weighed\nin, a 10 horsepower outboard motor;\nsecond, $100 worth of fishing\ntackle, and third, $50 worth of\nfishing gear.\nMonthly prizes will be awarded\nfor the largest Rainbow, and the\nlargest Dolly Varden recorded.\nThere will also be a grand contest\nprize of a refrigerator.\nA wind-up banquet will be held\nlate ln the- year at which prize*\nwill be presented to the' winners\nThis will carry on a tradition\nestablished when Nelson Gyro Club\nsponsored the derby,\nWeighing stations are located at\nall resorts on the lake, at Riosdel\nand Lardpau.      -     - *   .\nCHILDREN!!\n1 To 7 Years Old\n3rd Annual JC\nEASTER EGG HUNT\nLAKESIDE PARK \u2014 2 P.M.\nEASTER SUNDAY, APRIL 10TH\nParents Bring Your Children!\nNO ADMISSION\nSAL)\nTHE   C_fl_i.SIK.ED   DAILY\nHey Kids!\nFOR 2 EMPTY SWIFT'S ALLSWEET MARGARINE CARTONS\nYOU CAN GET\nA FREE TICKET\nto the Civic Theatre Matinee Friday or Saturday\n.  Jilit Take the Two Allsweet Cartons To The Civic Friday or Saturday Afternoon.\nSWIFT'S\nALLSWEET\nMARGARINE\n16 oz. pkg.\nZ for 65\n% lit 9-fiI EiWmY\nNOTICE\nHOLIDAY HOURS\nTONIGHT \u2014 OPEN UNTIL 8 P.M.\nGOOD FRIDAY \u2014 CLOSED ALL DAY.\nSATURDAY \u2014 OPEN 8 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.\nMONDAY \u2014 AS USUAL.\n^^^^ \u00abn\u00ab<f% ^^r\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY and\nDRY CLEANERS\n182 Baker St.\nPhone 1175\nFree Delivery\nPHONE 24 and 175\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Name\nColumbia   Lager    \u2022 Fernie Lager\nKootenay \u2022 Columbia\nPale Ale Cream Stout\nEMPTY   BOTTLB8   COLLECTED   ON   DELIVERY   ONLY\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquo\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTHERE IS A DIFFERENCE\nIN TELEVISION RECEIVERS!\nPHILIPS\nPRESENTS '\nA DIFFERENCE THAT YOU CAN SEE AND HEAR!\nPerfect Picture Reception, Superb Tone'\nBeautiful Cabinet Deiign.\nTRY AND COMPARE World Famous PHILIPS TV\nIn Your Ov\/n Home Before You Buy.\nCONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE*\nTo Includo TV 8ot and Cabla Installation by Mc e\\ Me\nPhone or Call In Today.\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nNELSON'8   OLDE8T   APPLIANCE   FIRM\n532 BAKER ST. PHONE 1555\nmmmm^m^*Mmtimmmmmmmmmmm\u2014mmmm\n\u25a0 \u25a0   ...    .-  \u25a0 .a'   ; .   . . ;-        -     \u25a0'\u25a0\n'      -\u2022-'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   *     \u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n ^mm^wrm%viwmwmm^^,i:r        ~ *%ww^^\u2122''l'-^<^m\n\u2022        :   \u25a0\nmmmm*\n^5\nLoan Cupboards To Be\nSet Up in Windermere\nINVERMERE \u2014 Red Cross Sick\njoan Cupboards will be established\ntwo points in the Windermere\nllstrict as soon as equipment can\ne obtained. Arrangements were\nlade at a meeting at Invermere\nrhen plans were laid to have loan\n^uipment for sick rooms available\nI both Edgewater and Invermere.\nMrs. J. A. Laird, secretary of the\nflndermere District branch of the\ned Cross, explained the plan to\n>e meeting. She said there are 31\nich cupboards in B.C. Necessary\njulpment is collected locally\nhere possible and then supple-\nented by, further supplies from\n-d Cross headquarters.\nEquipment will be lent from the\nlillcresf Motors Ltd.\nTrail's Car Accessory House\nreitone  Home and  Auto Supply\nRadiator Specialist.\nPHONE  1665\nfl)5 Highway Drive \u2014 Glenmerry\nMITCHELL\nTRANSFER  AND  FUEL  LTD.\noker Furnaces Sales and Service\nall\u2014126S Bay Ave. Ph. M and 1321\nCastlegar\u2014Box 668. Phone 3651\nExciting New\nSHORTW to\nGreat Music!\nRCA VICTOR\nListener's Digest\nHere's a complete package\nIncluding (I) an album of 12\ngreat classics, masterfully\ncondensed on 10 RCA Victor\n\"45 Extended Play\" Records;\n(2) an automatic \"Victrola\n45 phonograph; (3) a 42-page\nMusical Enjoyment Guide...\nAll TO* ONIY\n$54\"\n{wHh model 43EY4 \u00abho\u00bbni)\nAlio atraltebb Willi \"Vtrtrol-*\nh model 4.'\t\n, S3. .93\n45 phonograph model 45EY2.\ntor only $\nBen Sutherland\nMusic and Appliance!\nServing Nelson and District ln\nMusic and Radio Since 1927\n645 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 258\ncupboards to anyone requiring lt\nfor nursing a patient ln the home.\nIt Is leht'fJAS of charge. At Invermere the equipment will be located\nat the Public Health Office with\nMrs. Wayne Lacy in charge'.\nResidents of the Windermere district are asked to donate articles\nfor the sick loan cupboard if'they\nhave such things stored in their\nattics. The equipment would be\navailable .again on loan whenever\nlt should be required and ln the\nmeantime would be available for\nother needy patients.\nSuch articles as are needed are\nbed blocks for raising a bed, canes,\ncrutches, pillows, bedtray, backrest, bed pans, bed pads, old blankets, hot water bottles, ice caps, air\ncushions and rubber or plastic\nsheeting.\nArticles for the Invermere cupboard may be left at the Invermere\nMercantile or If too large will be\ncalled for if Mrs. Lacy is contacted.\nEquipment for the Edgewater cupboard may be arranged by contacting Mrs. H. W. Beamish.\nREPORT GIVEN\nA report of the annual Red Cross\nprovincial council meeting held In\nVancouver in February was given\nby Mrs. Laird.\nMrs. Laird announced that there\nwill be a blood donor clinic at\nInvermere May 30, for which arrangements will be made at a later'\nmeeting.\nDEATHS\nBy the  Canadian  Press\nMoscow   \u2014   Nikolai   Invanovich\nVeretenikov, 85, cousin of Nikolai\nLenin, Ihe first premier of Soviet\nRussia.\nMoscow \u2014 Lt. Gen. Ivan A. Gros-\nulov, member of the Supreme Soviet\nof the Russian republic.\nInterested In\nChinchilla Raising?\n8ee Larger Ad  In This Paper\ndr Write Nelson Dally News\nBox 6732\nhst film\nDEVELOPING\n\u25a0   SERVICE   |\nL\u2014\u2014-J\nen\nRegular er\nDouble Size Print.\nRAMSAY'S\nCAMERA STORE\n497 Baker Phone 106\nANNOUNCEMENT\nOur Radio Service\nDepartment\nIs Now Equipped To Do\nTV SERVICE\nAll Mokes of TV Sets Repaired .,,\nAll Work Guaranteed.\nPHONE 1555\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nNelson's Oldest Radio and Appliance Firm\nDolt\nThe United Way\nEASIER\nFASTER\nCHEAPER\nSAFER\nKinnaird PTA\nTold ol Plans\nFor Swim Nol\nKINNAIRD - t. \u25a0M.'.pie'rpO.ht,\nspecial speaker at the, monthly\nmeeting of the Kinnaird Elementary;\nSchool Parent-TeacAer; .Association\ntold the members of the proposed\nswimming pool to be built In the\nKinnaird Park.\nAt present a canvass of community opinion ls being held and\npledges are being received. If the\nproject gains the support of the\nresidents It ls planned to build a\npool 30 feet by 75 feet with a depth\nof three feet at one end and lOfeet\n6 inchea at the other. This pool will\nbe completely enclosed being fenced\non three sides with access being\nthrough a building on, the fourth\naide. It will contain dressing rooms,\nshowers and ft.Het facilities. Provision will be made for adding a\nwading pool at a later date.\nMr. Pierpotnt also showed a film\nshowing the Influence of home life\non a child's life ln school.\nGOOD RETURNS\nThe ways and means committee\nreported a gross take of about $130\nfrom-the PTA concert held to mark\nthe official opening,of the activity\nroom at the school. A special vote\nof thanks waB extended to the\nteachers of the school for the tremendous amount of work they had\ngiven to the preotnirapa felg'6\"re-U\nchildren for the concert\nCreston Gritis Elect Slate.\nICctifeer Bam 'Tittanee\"\nIlapped by Liberal MP\nRyan Awards for\nCominco Mines\nTRAIL \u2014 Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company mines at\nYellowknife, N.W.T., and Tulsetmah,\nare winner's of John T. Ryan .regional safety trophies for 1954. The\nCompany has been informed of the\nawards by the Canadian Institute\nof Mining 'and Metallurgy, organizers of the competition. The awards\nare sponsored by the Mine Safety\nAppliances Company of Canada\nLimited.\n, The Con mine at Yellowknife has\nnow won the Prairie Provinces and\nNorthwest Territories region trophy\ntwo years ln succession. The Con\nis the oldest gold producer in the\nNorthwest Territories, . It provides\nemployment for about 250 men.\nTulsequah, winner of the rltish\nColumbia and Yukon region award,\nis a zinc-copper-lead operation in\nNorthwestern B. C, $0 miles east\nof Juneau, Alaska. About 200 men\nare employed. In winning-its first\nRyan trophy the Tulsequah operation had the distinction of registering an accident frequency of 10.2,\nthe lowest ever reported for the\nB.C.-Yukon region. In addition to\nthe Ryan trophy Tulsequah received an award of honor from the\nNational Safety Council for its fine\nsafety record.\nThe John T. Ryan awards are\nmade annually to the metalliferous\nmines having the best safety records in four Canadian regions. Basis for Judging winners ls accident\nfrequency, the number of accidents\nper 300,000 man shifts. An accident,\nfor Ryan trophy purposes, is defined as an Injury .auslng more\nthan six days lost time and for\nwhich the man gets compensation.\nC-tESTDN\u2014The annual meeting\nof the. Creston Valley, Liberal Association held here Tuesday heard\nJames Byrne, MP for Kootenay\nEast, apeak on recent Liberal legislation Accompanying the Member\nwas'J? Provenzano o_ Cranbrook,\nEast \"Kootenay Liberal Association\nprt-ident. ' ''\n;TW meeting re-elected Dr. W. N.\nFraser as'prea-dent. Honorary presidents are Frank_Futnam and C. H.\nMessinger; honorary vice-president\nP. Miipux; first vice-president V. L.\nMosher; second vice-president A.\nKemp, and secretary 1. Barcley.\nDwelling on the subject 'of water\npower .and storage, Mr. Byrne stated that the federal ' government\nduring the last 10 years had been\nmaking thorough surveys of the\nfacilities of the Columbia River\nbasin. .The expenditure for this\nwould .amount to some $10,000,000\nby this year.\nThe Mica Creek and Murphy\nCreek projects had been investigated and found feasible, the guest\nspeaker said. In regarda to the\nefforts of the provincial government toward the Kaiser dam project, Mr. Byrne stated that if it\nwere put into effect it would be\ndetrimental to the best interests of\nCanada. The agreement would grant\npower rights to the U.S. aluminum\ncompany practically In perpetuity,\nwithout adequate- return to the Canadian- people.   -   .\nWhile Hon. R. E. Sommers had\nOR, W, N. FRASER\nsaid that tha province would re\nceive  $2,000,000   per  annum,   it\nactually would be $1,250,000, Mr.\nByrne stated, and this was shown\nfn a copy of the contract which\n. he had with him. \"This Is a mere\npittance,\" he said.\nMr. Byrne also dealt with recent\nlegislation such as increased unemployment Insurance ahd war veterans' allowance benefits.\nSt. Eugene Hospital\nAddition Recommended\nCRANBROOK -Medical staff of\nSt. Eugene Hospital in a written report to the bfard of management,\nhas approved an addition to St\nEugene Hospital.\nOriginal hospital accommodation\non' this site was built In 1901, with\nwing additions subsequently as the\npopulation served Increased, and the\nthree-storey building Is a combination, of brick, frame and stucco.\nBoard of management believes replacement of the entire building will\nbe necessary before long.\nBoard reviewed the report for the\npast month which showed facilities\nwere' used to capacity during the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7,1955 \u2014 3\nGood Profits\nRecorded From\nFirst Shipment\nROSSLAND-rthe Snowdrop\nMine, on the Cascade Highway just\nWest of Rossland, has netted operators $1785.70 after deducting smelting charges ot $45 oft the first shipment of 69.31 pounds qf ore.\nThe high grade ore was uncovered two weeks ago and the' small\nshipment was forwarded to , the\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany at Tadanac for treatment\nReturns show a gold content of\n1628.595 ounces and silver 239.45\nounces per ton.\n- The mine is in the same area\nas the I.X.L. and Midnight - Mines.\nThe rich ore compares favorably\nwith strikes found on these properties in former years..\nThe Snowdrop is owned by Warren Crowe, and is under lease to\nthe Snowdrop Mining Company\nLtd., of which Mr. Crowe Is one of\nthe chief shareholders.\nTwo men have been employed\nat the mine for several months\ndoing development .work, and since\nore was encounteredr a considerable qAntity has been broken\nready for shipment. Plans are now\nunder way which will bring the\nmine into full production.\noutbreak of Influenza and that a few\npeople had to be refused admisison\non this account. Operating profit\nof the' hospital for the month was\napproximately $1900. The board at\npresent is awaiting completion of its\nfinancial statement for 1954, and approval of its budget for 1955.\nEast Kootenay Regional Hospital\nAssociation meeting has been set for\nCranbrook May 11, when the engagement of a staff radiologist to\nserve hospitals through the district\nwill be discussed, along with hospital administration problems common to all East Kootenay Institutions.\nCaAdui VtwMina'\nUNITED TRUCKING & STORAGE\nAgents for Allied Van  Lines, \"Canada's  Master  Movers\"\n(phonsL\nNelson 1106\nTrail 191\n212 STANLEY ST.\nFUNERAL HELD\nFOR JOHN ROSS\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Funeral ser-\nvlqps were held Wednesday for John\nRoss, a resident here for 45 years\nwho died Monday in the Grand\nForks Community Hospital at 75.\n_lev. J. C. Jackson of St. John's\nUnited Church conducted the service in Manly's Funeral Chapel, and\nMrs. TV.' H. Cuff was organist. Inter-,\nment was in.Evlgreen Cemetery.\nPallbearers were Walter Ronald,\nWilliam Reeves, John Skilllng,\nLouis Rossi, Carl Wolfram Sr., and\nJohn Duralia Sr.\nMr. Ross was born.in Latheron;\nCaithness, Scotland. He came to\nGrand Forks in 1910 to work at the\nGranby smelter. Prior to taking em-\nplyoment with the CPR bridge crew\nfrom which he retired in February,\n1945, after 21 years, he ran his own\nfarm for seven years when work\nslackened at the smelter, then worked at the sawmill.\nHis marriage to Mary Middleton\nBrown took place in 1913 when his\nbride arrived in Grand Forks from\nAberdeen, Scotland. Mrs. Rosa survives him and one nephew in Edin-.\nburgh, Scotland.\nFire Victims Get\nHome, Equipment\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Injured ln a\nflaah fire which destroyed their\nhorae, all its' contents and all their\npersonal .property January 23, Mrs.\nLes Adams, her three children and\ninfant nephew are re-established in\na home again through efforts of\ntheir own neighborhood, and Les\nAdams, in critical condition from\nburns for weeks afterward, ls still in\nhospital and faces a series of skin\ngrafts, but is recovering.\nRetired elderly man of the Selkirk\nsubdivision neighborhood where the\nfire occurred, G. T. Brodie has turn\ned over use of his home and has\n\"moved into a one-room house on his\nproperty. Selkirk Community Club\nappeal, with help of the Canadian\nDaughters, elecited stove, beds and\nother household goods to re-establish the home and clothing for the\nfamily. City stores issued the family\ncredits for food and household goods\ntotalling $201 in value.\nCASH, DON ATION8\nAdditional cash aid raised through\nvarious efforts by this neighborhood\nclub of under 100 people amounted\nto nearly $1000. It came from a fund\nwhich, the club established for\nstraight donations which brought in\n$349, from a tea, and bake sale they\nput on in their community hall\nwhich returned $238, and from a\ndance: they sponsored with Dale\nZemp's Westerners which returned\nthe rest.\nMr. Adams is driver of a Canadian Pacific Express truck which\nmakes the daily trip to Kimberley\nfrom Cranbrook, and there was no\ninsurance on the contents of the\nhome. All members of the household\nwere injured to some extent in the\nfire.,\nFreight Service Twice Daily To .. .\n\u2022 NELSON        \u2022 CASTLEGAR        \u2022 TRAIL\n\u2022 ROSSLAND'    \u2022 FRUITVALE\n\u00a3oAbVL\nLUGGAGE\nWe Hove\nA Top Selection of\n\u2022 McBRINE\n\u2022 SAMSONlTE\n\u2022 CARSON\nWADE'S\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\nSwallows Return\nTwo Days Earlier\n\u2022NAKUSP \u2014 The swallows\nhave returned, reports Mrs. E.\nT. Edgington, who- each year\nkeeps a record of their travelling habits.\nThe vanguard's arrival was\nannounced with merry chirpings and graceful flights over\nthe town. Next day the whole\nflock arrived and were busy\nlooking over their Summer\nlodgings in the numerous bird\nhouses provided for. them by\n. Mrs. Edgington.\nIn keeping with the age of\nspeed, the swaUows this year\nknocked two days off their flying time, according to Mrs. Edg-\nington's records. T-iey usually\nreturn April 6 almost without\nchange.\nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinim\nLand Donated for\nHealth Centre\nWARFIELD (CP)\u2014 The Warfield\nvillage commission announced Wednesday that three lots in the village have been donated to the West\nKootenay unit as the site for a proposed health centre.\nThe lots were originally owned\nby Cominco and donated by Cominco to the village commission.\nDr. A. F. Balkany, health unit director, said the unit will approach\nboth the federal and provincial governments for some $30,000 needed\nfinancial assistance.\nSettlement Sought\nFor Rin|c Damages\nNAKUSP \u2014 The Nakusp Rink\nCommittee is trying to obtain settlement for damages caused when\nthe rink collapsed..\nV. C. Smith^chairman, went to\nNelson Wednesday to interview\nlawyer on the matter.\n194,504 Spent\nUp te New on\nWest Airfield\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 A total of $194,\n504 has been spent by the federal\ndepartment of transport on runways\nat the Ralph West airfield, the annual report of the Castlegar airport\ncommittee discloses.\nBiggest item in this expenditure\nwas the $147,000 spent by the department in late 1953 and early Jast\nyear to give the field a fully-paved\nrunway. The year just past was the\nfirst year of operation with the full\nrunway and it has proved a great\nassistance in keeping the field serviceable in all weather conditions.\nThe paving is standing up perfectly and shows no signs of breaks.\nThe.report announces that an instrument landing system installed\nduring the summer on a trial basis\nby the manufacturer and Canadian\nPacific Airlines waa found to be un-\nreliablain; snow conditions, and had\nto be abandoned even though by the\nfirst tests were \"most encouraging.\nAll equipment has been maintained In good working condition,\nfences have been repaired, and some\npainting done. An agreement was\nProcter Road Survey\nThis Year, MLA Says\nLONGBEACH - A lurvey ot the\nHarrop-Procter road will beistarted\nthla year, but lt will take mora than\na year to straighten, widen add surface it, Hon.' W. D. Black, MLA tot\nNelson-Creston, told a public meeting in the Longbeach school.\nA petition has been prepared asking for improvement to the road,\ncondition of which Is expected to\nworsen with the Spring thaw. Mr.\nBlack pointed out that the proposed\nsurvey did not mean that normal\nupkeep Of the road would be neglected.\nMr. Black reviewed highlights of\nthe past session in the House chiefly\nwhere they touched on this district.\nHe reminded the meeting that all\nreports on the House proceedings\ncould always be obtained from his\nTrail, Nelson\nBatteries Enter\nCoast Contest\nTRAIL \u2014 Men of Trail's 109 Battery and Nelson's 111 Battery will\nrepresent, the 24th HAA Regiment,\nRoyal Canadian Artillery (Militia)\nin a Quarter Guard competition.\nIt will be held in Memorial Park,\nVancouver, April 18.\nThe competition will take place\nin two parts. In the morning there\nwill be an inspection of each guard\nfollowed by rifle inspection.\nIn the afternoon each unit guard\nwill give a demonstration of Quarter Guard drill. Judges will be\nthree Regimental Sergeant Majors;\none from each of Princess Patricias\nCanadian Light Infantry, Royal Ca-\nnadiah School ot Military Engineering and Headquarters Station, Esquimau. About 13 British Columbia\nunits will be taking part. After the\ncompetition all guard parties will\nbe grouped and inspected by the\nMinister of National Defence.\nIn the 24th's party will be Guard\nCommander Lieutenant R. L. Aus-\ntad, RSM Ian Selkirk. Sgt. R. HiU,\nBdr. Stevens, Bdr. S. W. Littlewood\nand Gunners L. Chernnie, K. Grieve,\nR. S. Dart, W, Stott, E. Schultz, M.\nFuriak, W. E. Orenchuk, W. Thompson and J. Harkness.\nTrail authorities have extended an\nInvitation to friends and well-wish\ners of the Regiment to attend \u2022\ndress  rehearsal   demonstration   by\nconcluded with CPA under-which the Quarter Guard. It will be held\nthe airport committee has bought at the Trail Armories Saturday at\nthe snow-blower machine on a ren- 3:30 p.m.\ntai basis under favorable terms.\nThe committee ended the year\nwith a surplus of $749, biggest\nsource of revenue being landing\nfees totalling $2541. Annual grants\nfrom Nelson, Kinnaird and Castlegar, joint owners, totalled $1200.\noffice. During the last sitting 120\ntrills were passed which alone showed the pressure of business.\nA column ln the Nelson Daily\nNews kept the public up to dare\ndaily. It was stated that tlie (ore_i\nmanagement question was still in\nthe hands of the Royal Commi.\nslon, and the Kaiser dam projepi\nwas far from settled so no further\ninformation could be given at the\nmoment\nThe West Arm bridge was an item\nthat has only become a possibility\nbecause the district people banded\ntogether democratically and urged\nthat the bridge was a dire necessity. The work stoppage on the site\nwas explained. Before tenders could\nbe called all drilling data has to\nbe completed, and this has now\nbeen finished. It had been found\nthat the toll system was the best\nmethod of financing this bridge,\nthough many were against it. A\nfair commuter's rate would be set.\nRural electrification ls not yet\neverywhere in this land of great\npower lines, but lt ls hoped that in\nthe near future all outlying points\nwill have this great asset.\nMr, Black stated that B. C. Is experiencing its greatest industrial\nexpansion. In the Kootenays with\nits great possibilities, even advertising by organizations and boards\nof trade would help to attract Industrial capital, which ls at the moment seeking new fields for operation.\nPrior to the meeting Mr. Black\nwas entertained at a dinner at the\nHoliday Inn at Procter, where 17\ngroup members welcomed him.\nPettis Relieves\nPark Superintendent\nINVERMERE \u2014' J. A. Pettis,\nformerly park engineer for Yoho\nPark, is relieving Frank A. Bryant,\nsuperintendent of Banff and Kootenay National Parks who is away on\nsick leave. \u25a0\u00bb\nMr. Pettis has taken up. residence\nat Radium Hot Springs. Mr. Bryant\nis due tor retirement ip July.\nFOR  CLASSIFIED ADS\nPHONE 1844\nKASLO THEATRICAL SOCIETY\nPresents\n\"Pirates of Penzance\"\n\u25a0    By Gilbert & Sullivan '\n8econd Annual Production\nSponsored by Crawford  Bay and  Riondel  PTA\nCRAWFORD BAY HALL \u2014 APRIL 11TH\nAfternoon 2:30 Evening 7:30\nAdults $1.00 \u2014 Students 50c \u2014 Children 25c\nLand Purchased\nFor New Hospital\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Purchase of a\nDortion of the former Poohachoff\nproperty ln the Southern part of\nCastlegar as a site for a Castlegar\nDlsrict Hospital has been finalized.\nThis was announced by R. A. D.\nWest, chairman .of the \\ trustees of\nthe Hospital Improvement District\nThe deed title to the property has\nbeen received, and land now belongs\nto the Hospital Society.\nSketch plans for the.35-bed hospital ire nearly finished.\nThe site ls just east of the Projects\nSociety property and consists of\nabout four acres. Price ls $3000 an\nacre.\nResignation of A_ A. Lambert\nfrom the Hospital Society board of\ndirectors has also been announced.\nMr. Lambert is succeeded by Guy\nGuido as Kinnaird representative.\nStudents Asked For.\nBath House Designs\nINVERMERE \u2014 Invermere High\nschool students are being offered\ntwo $5 prizes by the Village Commission for designs for bathing\nhouses at Beach Park-\nRequirements are for a design for\na women's dressing room about 12\nby 20 feet at a value of about $250\nexclusive of labor. A second design\nis required for improvement of the\nexisting building for a men's dressing room at a cost not to exceed\n$100. The commission reserves the\nright to modify the winning designs. It ls hoped that volunteer\nlabor from among the fathers of\nthe swimming groups and others\ninterested in using the beach will\nbe available. The design contest\nends May 1 when entries must be\nin the hands of the village clerk\n| at Invermere.\n^^^s^it^^^^miis^^msm^\nQoidwvui\nFOR YOUR\nEASTER ENSEMBLE\nNew notes in costume\njewellery with gay color to\nadd a bright sparkle to\nydur new outfit. Find\nthem at our jewellery\ncounter.\nMatching Pendant\nand Earring Sets\nFor Easter and After\n$3.95 and Up\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) \u2014 A big new\nswimming stadium to be built at\nEriksdal near here will have a large\npool for swimming contests and an\nartificial lake for public bathing. |\nThe stadium, costing more than\n$1,000,000 will accommodate 5000\nspectators,\nCollinson s Jewellery\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND  HEADQUARTERS \u2022\n561 Baker St. Phone 120\nWhsn you sutler from pain of I. \u25a0[\nHeadache, Neuralgia or ,11 \u00a3 I\nMuscular aches you want to J\".;'; ]\nstop that pain last .\u00abb-So ; '* II\ntake Aspirin! A tablet starts y***\ndisintegrating almost the instant you\ntake ft\u2014starts to relieve that pain\nalmost instantly!\nYou Have an\nInvestment\nIn Your\nChicks!\nProtect Your\nInvestment With\nOnly 2 Ibs. needed per chick.\n\u2022 Faster Feathering.     \u2022\nMORE 6HUR-QAIN 18 SOLD IN CANADA\nTHAN ANY OTHER BRAND\n\u2022 25% more growth\nEarlier maturity.\nNelson Farmers Supply Ltd.\n524 Railway St. Phone 174\n Y    illilMHIWW!\n'.\"\u25a0 \u25a0.\u2022\u2022\u25a0' ,\u25a0 ~       ;      ^^T\u2122\n... _\n~T\n-- \u2014- T -     '\n~~^~~\" Y ~ \u2014--T -f-:   f-f ;T:    \u25a0-ft-f-.Tft^\nSMamt latin Neroe\nEstablished April 22. 11102\nBritish Columbia's\nMost .-.foresting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266 Baker Street. Nelson. British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail.\nPost Office Department, Ottawa:\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThursday, April 7, J 955       .\n,Churchill's Heir    '\nThe man who quit the Chamberlain\ngovernment rather than go along with\nHitler appeasement and the man who\nlast year largely laid the groundwork\nfor the Indo-China armistice is to be\nGreat Britain's new prime minister. Sir\nAnthony Eden is a demonstrated \"defender against dictatorship and of confirmed reputation as a diplomat and\nparliamentarian. Noted for his \"public\nschool\" grooming and bearing, his\nother qualities may have been to some\nextent obscured until the period of the\nlast few years when he became the\napparent successor to the great Churchill. Since his negotiating skills have\nbeen on full display at the Geneva conference, in the Iranian oil negotiations,\nthe Anglo-Egyptian Suez disputes,\nand in European Defence Community\ntreaty moves.\nExperienced as a foreign secretary\nand a minister for nearly a quarter of\na century, he can be expeeted to enhance the already notable position of\nhis country and the Commonwealth in\nthe world sphere.\nTax Changes Intended\nTo Spur Economy,\nBusiness, Employment\nYou can't have it both ways.\nFinance Minister Harris' first budget\nhas shown that Canadians apparently\nneed highly vigorous economic conditions and high taxes to have national\nsurplus budgetting. Even on the basis\nof last year's substantially strong economy revenues were insufficient by\n$148 million to meet government\nspending.\nThe big thing from the budget will\ncome in the next few months provided\nbusiness and industry, including manufacturers, respond to the guidance of\ntax reductions in pricing of consumer\nproducts, labor demands do not outweigh tax relief, and consumers put\ntheir greater spending power\u2014created\nby income tax cuts\u2014into action. The\nbudget, it is evident, was intended as\na spur to an economy that last year\nshowed some recession from the buoyancy of earlier post-war years. An\nimproved economy, it has been reasoned, will provide greater employment\nso the onus has been put not only on\nbusiness, but on labor to adjust itself\nto a somewhat changed outlook.\nThe fact that incentive- tax concessions for oil, gas and mining industries are to be made permanent\nwill have general approval. Industry\nrelying on these resources is highly\nexpensive and requires heavy capital\noutlays in years of exploration and\nfirst years of production. To make it\neasier to have these resources put into\nuse merely means the government is\nassisting to create new sources of tax\nrevenue.\nSuch concessions are based in far-\nsighted taxation policy, and might well\nbe adopted in the lower levels of government. \\\nConsidering that the old age security fund had to be bolstered from other\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLottrro to ths Editor ori any toplo of\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe ilgnature and address of the writer. -\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nFan Suggests Leafs\nEnd Ranger Arrangement\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Now that all the alibis have been\noffered and all the back-slapping and mutual\npublic congratulating done, it ia time to consider the cold, historic facts with regard to the\nNelson Maple Leafs of the past two seasons.\nAt the close of the 1933-54 season the\n\"Leafs\" were in a solvent financial position,\nand had, moreover, a powerful, colorful\nhockey team\u2014a team so good, in fact, that\nthey were able to extend the mighty Penticton Vs to eight games before bowing out ih the\nB. C. finals; and even at that they were distinctly robbed, in the opinion of many fans,\nincluding this writer.\ni We seemed all set for a sure-fire championship team in the 1954-55 'season, having\nonly a couple of \"dead-heads\" to get rid of\nand replace.\nWhat happened? It's history! Someone sold\nthe executive a bill of goods!! That's all! But\nwhat a \"bill of goods\"!\nUnder the parental guidance of the New\nYork Ranger organization the club finished\nthe 1954-55 season deep in the red financially,\nin spite of the $9000 effort of the Booster Club\n, to pull them out, and the very considerable\nsums secured by bingo and public panhandling.\nTo describe the team itself at the season's ,\nclose there is only one suitable expression\u2014\n\"mediocre.\"\nWith the exception of the few sterling\nlocal players who were permitted to hold the\nteam together for honor, glory and peanuis,\nthe \"Nelson Maple Leafs\" looked like nothing\nbut a bunch of so-so hockey players striving\nvery hopelessly to get goop! enough to try out\nfor Saskatoon!\nWill the fans swallow the same dose\nagain? This writer can only answer for himself and the round dozen or so he associates\nwith hockey-wise; but our answer is a very\ndefinite, \"Not on your tintype.\"\nOur new executive, in our humble opinion,\nwould be well advised to jettison forthwith'\nthe* whole caboodle of the New York Ranger\nbusiness, together with all appurtenances\nthereunto and encumbrances thereof, et al, and\netc\nEither that, or start figuring out some\nreally super-duper begging and bingo campaign for 1955-56 so that they can get along\nwithout around 40 per cent of last season's\ncash customers. *\nJOHN WELLS.\nYmir, B. C.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any .end... Names of persona\n\u2022\u25a0king question, will not bo published.\nTnero lo no oharge for thla aorvloo.\nQuoa.lona WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL axcapt where there la obvlouo\nnoceaalty for privacy.\nE. r., Trail\u2014Is there anyone ln the district\nwho does hemstitching? I find that tha\nSinger Sewing Machine people here no\nlonger do that kind of work.\nWe have, been Informed that Singer Sewing Machinp, 339 Baker Street, Nelson, still\ndoes hemstitching.\nMrs. J. N., Nelson\u2014Please print names and\naddresses of nylon stocking manufacturer!\nin Canada for men, women and children.\nAristo Knitting Mills, Ltd., Brompton-\nville, Que.; Belding-Corticelli, Ltd., Montreal;\nBeau-Monde Hosiery Mills, Ltd., Montreal;\nBurlington Mills Hosiery Co. of Canada, Ltd.,\nMontreal. P.Q.; Butterfly Hosiery Co., Ltd.,\nDrummondville, P.Q.; Canada Hosiery Mills,\nRichmond, P.Q.; Eaton Knitting Co., Ltd.,\nHamilton, Ont.; Gotham Hosiery Co. of Canada, Ltd., Montreal; Grey-Mist Hosiery, Ltd.,\nHanover, Ont.; Holeproof Hosiery Co. of Canada, Ltd., London, Ont.; Kaiser Julius and Co.,\nLtd., Sherbrooke, P.Q.; McCurdy Hosiery Ltd.,\n\\r_ctoria, B. C.j Kerinebec Knitting Mills, Ltd.,\nPintendre, P.Q.; La Salle Knitting Ltd., Montreal; Lewis, Ltd., Truro, N. S.; Lincoln Ha-\niery, Ltd., St. Catharines. Ont.; Mercury MilTs,\nLtd., Hamilton, Ont.; Monard Knitting Co.,'\nLtd., Toronto, Ont.; National Hosiery Mills,\nLtd., Hamilton, Ont.; Orient Hosiery (Ontario)\nLtd., Brockvllle, Ont.; Prlnceville \u2022 Hosiery\nMills. Princeville, P.Q.; St, Maurice Knitting\nMills, La Tuque, P.Q.; Sheer Silk Hosiery\nMills. Ltd., Sherbrooke. P.Q.; Supersilk Hosiery Mills, London. Ont.; York Knitting Mills,\nLtd., Toronto, Ont.\nK. G. Mc, Beaver Falls\u2014I would appreciate\nany  information  on  where  I  could  get\nbooklets  dealing with  Canada's   natural\nresources.\nWrite to the Queen's Printer, Ottawa, Ont.\nA. P., Ymir\u2014Referring to your question regarding licensing farm dogs: Every dog\nover age of four months within a city must\nhave a licence, and every dog over six\nmonths outside the city.\nPress Comment\nNO SEE, NO DRIVE\nA judge has ruled that it is no defence for\na motorist in an accident to plead that the sun\nwas in his eyes. The basic rule remains that\none should not drive where he cannot see.\n\u2014Port Arthur News-Chronicle.\nYour Horoscope\nCheck any tendencies to extravagance and\ndo not speculate, and your affairs should go\nwell. Constant encouragement to give the best\nvalues possible may be needed for success of\nthe child born today.\nrevenues last year no tax reductions\ncould be expected, and in fact increases\nmight have been in order. Originally\nit seemed to be Ottawa's intention that\nthis should be maintained on a contributory basis.\nGovernment concern over export-\nimport trade is reflected in a decision\nfor surveys of tariff structures and of\neconomic prospects. Canada is a trading nation, and if its lifeblood is to\nbe maintained, must recognize that its\nown standards depend largely on its\npossibilities in the. world market. The\nmore information it has on its standing\nfor competition the better wilj_ be its\nlong-range position. Such surveys as\nproposed are not only essential to the\npresent trade situation, but to the\nfuture.\nGems of Thou&ht\nGENEROSITY  AND  SELFISHNESS\nHe who is afraid of being too generous\nhas lost the power of being magnanimous. The\nbest  man  or woman ls the most  unselfed\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n\u00bb      *      *\n\u2022       He that gives all, though but little, gives\nmuch; because God looks not to the quantity\nof the gift, but to the quality of th\u00ab givers.\n\u2014Francis Quarles.\n* *      *\nCaution is the confidential agent of selfishness.\u2014Woodrow Wilson.\n* *      *\nMen of the noblest dispositions think\nthemselves happiest when others share their\nhappiness with them.\u2014William Duncan.\n* *      *\nA man is called selfish, not for pursuing\nhis own good, but for neglecting his neighbor's.\u2014Richard Whtely.\n* *      *\nSlowly and painfully man is learning that\nhe must do to others what he would have\nthem do to him.\u2014Anthony Eden.\nSchool Boards\nMust Turn Focus\nOn Staff Quality\n...Kb. pearce\nOne of my friends expresses tye\nthoughts of so many people when he\nsays, \"I don't mind teachets having\nhigh salaries, but I do think we\nshould not have to put up with poor\nteachers. In almost every case the\nperson is talking of some particular\nhigh school teacher \u2014 never an elementary teacher \u2014 a.nd one who\nteaches his child. His impressioij of\nthe teacher is gained second hand\nthrough the pupil, who is seldom\nunbiased and is not necessarily a\ncompetent Judge of teaching.\nIt is expecting too much to have\nnothing but excellent teachers in the\nprofession. There will always be\nsome that are not so good as the\nbest, but the really poor teacher\ncannot survive in a high school. He\nsimply has to deliver the goods or\nhis discipline goes to pieces, and\nwhen that goes, he goes.\nHigh school pupils are very\nworried by ichoo!. None of the\nsubjects they take are easy and\noften their difficulties are such as\nto make them find mora fault with\ntha teacher than Is really Just.\nOften, too, they neglect to take\nInto account their own attitude toward the subject and the teacher.\nAs a rule their complaints are\nthat a teacher wastes time by bo-\nIng discursive, Is not sufficiently\nclear or does not trouble to help\nthe slow learner. None of these\nthings by themselves make n-poor\nteacher though every teacher who\nIs worthy of the name will endeavor to enunciate his words\nclearly, expressed his Ideas concisely and give reasonable assistance to those who are slow learners.\nThere is a great deal more in the\ncurriculum than there was some\nyears ago, which makes teaching no\neasier, but it is of no use for the\nteacher to excuse hitnself on the\ngrounds that his pupils just cannot\nunderstand. He should adopt the\nmethod of a principal who, in the\nbad old days of the entrance exam,\nhad a reputation for passing all his\npupils.   His  method   was   to   keep\nThii advertisement ii not published or\ndiipltyed bv rh< Liquor Control Boird\nor by the r.ovrrnment of British\nCAliimh\"\nAtoms for Peace May Mean Fights\nBetween Washington and Industry\nWASHINGTON cAP) - An im-\nplugging away at the dumbest child\nin his class, when that one knew\nthe subject, all the class knew lt. It\nwjjs hard work and most uninteresting, but it got results.\nAt the same time, in the old days,\nit Is possible that the pupils made\ngreater efforts to learn. They certainly had fewer outside distractions.\nDEPARTMENT CONCERNED\nDespite the very large building\nprogram throughout the Province\nwhich it has had to guide and control, the Department of Education\nhas been more than ever concerned\nwith the quality of its teaching.\nThere is a shortage of both elementary and high school teachers, so\nthat there are, in many districts,\npersons teaching with no professional training. Until the supply\ncatches up with the demand there\nwill continue to be some persons\nwho are not too efficient in their\nwork. Recently the Department has\ninitiated a system of giving aid to\nits young teachers, by skilled teachers who are called Primary'Consul-\ntants. No doubt such a system could\nbe worked out In the high schools to\nthe advantage df both teachers.and\npupils.\nBut the strength of the teaching\nstaff in any school district will depend largely upon the attitude of\nthe board of trustees. All through\nthe Province trustees have been\nconcentrating their efforts on building programs' and have paid little\nattention to the prime necessity of\nstaffing. Because of the difficulties\nof obtaining teachers they have\ntended to leave their selection in\nthe hands of the inspectors. As a\nconsequence they know little or\nnothing of their teachers as persons.\nAttempts have been made by Nelson\nteachers in the past to furnish opportunities for the Board to meet\nall the teachers, but without much\nsuccess. School trustees are busy\npeople but it is not too much to\nexpect that they make time at a\nspecial meeting at the beginning of\nthe year to meet alf the newly appointed teachers and to get to know\nthem as individuals.\nSIMPLE\nNext month will see the beginning\ndf the exodus of teachers fuom this\nschool district. With salaries higher\nin Creston and Castlegar it is hardly\nto be expected that the teachers in\nthe smaller centres of District No. 7\nwill remain, the Board will again\nbe faced with the problem of replacing large numbers of high and\nelementary school teachers. We may\nlose indifferent teachers but we\nshall certainly lose many of the best.\nIn the end the problem of obtaining\ngood teachers is simple. If you pay\nthe best salaries you can attract the\nbest teachers.\nportant engagement was announced\nhere recently.\nIt gave public notice that from\nnow on American industry will be\n\"going steady\" with the United\nStates government. They .have been\njoined under the new Atomic Energy Act to develop peaceful industrial uses for the atom.\nPR08PECT8 DUBIOU8\nWhether the engagement will\nripen into a happy and harmonious\nmarriage remains to be seen.    ,\nSome observers are skeptical.\nThe Atomic Energy Commission\nretains authority:\n1. Over who gets a licence.\n2. What hi ther to-secret information necessary to build and operate\na reactor shall be declassified.\n3. Who gets \"limited-access\"\nclearance to receive the information.\n4. To release fissionable material\nto fuel the privately-owned reactors,\nfix the price, and fix the price of\nany plutonium the government later\nbuys from private industry.\nAny one of these could be a\nsource of friction between the government and the private operator.\nDr. James Beckerley, a physicist\nformerly with the AEC and now\nv\/ith a Connecticut enginee\/ing firm,\nhas said:\n\"Not only will our continued secrecy on non-weapons matters fail\nto affect the Russian, rate of stockpiling of fissionable,and fission and\nfusion weapons, but ft will weaken\nour national strength 'by reducing\nour exploitation of this new source\nof energy.\" -\nPatents also raise problems. Suppose a firm's engineers come up\nwith important nuclear-reactor improvements. Csn it get a patent?\nLawyers do not agree about what\nis patentable.\nThere are many other potential\npoints of dispute.\nThe basic approach of government\nis different from private industry's.\nGovernment can, afford to gamble,\ntake big risks. Industry must move\nmore cautiously, try to ensure a ra\nturn on the millions it must ipfend\nin this expensive field,\nWhooping Cranes To\nTake Flight Soon\nCORPUS CHRIStl, Tex. (AP) \u2014\nThe only flock of whooping crones\nleft in th* world are expected to\nstart their annual migration to\nwestern Canada within the next\nlew days.\nJulian Howard, manager of tht\nAransas Wild lite refuge at Autwell,\nTex., said the birds usually legve\nby April 15,\nThe flock now consists of 11\nbirds. Last week some of then\nwere believed sighted near Weatlv\nerfori, Tex., but Howard aald\ncheck showed that all 21 were atll\nat the refuge.\nIf You re TIRED\nALL THE TIME\nEraybody gets a bit run-down now and\nthen, bred-out, hury-headed, snd mijrba\nbothered by backaches. Perhaps nothing\nicrtouily wrong, just a temporary toxic\ncondition caused by excess adds end\nwastes. That's the tine to take Dodd's\nKidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys,\nsnd so Help rcitoro their normal action of\nrenwring excess acids and wastes. Then\nyou feel better, sleep better, work better.\nGet Dodd's Kidney Pills now. Look for\nthe blue box with ths red band at all\noVugguU. You can depend on Dodd'a.   $2\nPremier To Open New\nRegional Library\nKELOWNA (CP)-Premler Ben\nnett and Mayor J. J. Ladd will tak\npart at the official opening of th\n$60,000 Okanagan Regional LIbrar\nin Kelowna April 15. Other officia:\nattending will Include Educatio\nMinister Williston and Lands Mil\nlater Sommers.\nBring the*\nChildren...\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, tpo!\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoor\/\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSillier Grill\nComic Report\nLast summer 28 publishers of \"comic\"\nbooks formed the Comics Magazine Association of America, Inc., to afford the industr.v\n'self-policing against the'kind of publications\nthat have aroused public indignation. The\nassociatipn appointed a well-known New York\nmagistrate as \"tsar:, and he has been working'\non the books slated for 1955 publication.\nSo far; he says, 70 per cent of the objectionable material has been deleted. His review\n. staff have \"blue pencilled\" 5656 drawings, rejected 126 stories in 440 magazines.\nThe association represents about half the\nindustry. The largest concern of all, Dell Publishing Co., Inc, not in the organization, says\nit has never issued \"horror\" material. So the\noutlook is promising and the method\u2014self-\nregulation\u2014certainly the best.\nThe association's president says: \"It is\nnow possible to write effective, best-selling\ncomic book stories without in any way violating accepted standards of good taste.\"\nIf the publishers he represents do not live\nup to this hopeful statement there are thousands of aroused parents ready to tell him so.\n'\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nThey'll Do It Every Time       _*-.>-._-.\nJimmy Hatlo\n\u00a5 Hai (Mr\n,EVgK8E TRUSTED'\nTO PUT OUT THE\nTOWdlTONVbU\nH^ND^NDFOCT.'.\nAWNcmlER THING-\nIF yoU THINK ITiS\nfun fdr me to\nHold ,4 job\nAtiD\u2014\nHE BUys DRAPER\nToday's Bible Thought\nIf the right hand offend thee, cut\nIt off, and cast It from thee Mat!\n5:30.\nAn attractive but unworthy friend,\na pleasant but evil habit, a materialistic philosophy that lowers our\nmoral standards. Denounce one and\nall and cast them from you.\nOiutl disit\nLfc-. I. ,i   ^i I\njyt. tw. Kma Tfgvrn hwd.cah.i-*. worn, mcum mswid. \u25a0\"\nThe poor folks I Jcnow don't\nsuffer for anything. They'd\nprobably think they had plenty\nif nobody else had more.\nWANT-ADS\nCAN SHOUT\nLOUDLY TOO!\nLittle boys and want-ads may\nbe small but they eon attract\na lot ot attention ond get big\nresults! When you want to\nbuy, tell, rent, hire \u2014 look first\nin our classified ads. You'll\nfind just what you wont \u2014 at\na lower cost \u2014 fast I\nCheck our Want-ads every day! They are the town's\n, busiest market place with the best buys in merchandise\n. . .services . . . real estate!\nPHONE 1844\nNelson Daily News\n, . , ;\t\n\t\n------------\n mm^m'^.'^mmmmmmimmmw\u2014\nw     \u25a0\u25a0'.\"\u25a0\u25a0,'\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\nWP--' \u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0 :\\' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0   \u2022 ^-^^mm^iw^\n\u25a0-\u25a0 :;;\u2022\"\"\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 .:   v    \u2014T\n^a\nFor You .in the\nSHELL PUMPS\nD'ORSAY PUMPS\nby Jolene\nIn glistening patent with slender\nhigh heel and white underlay\ntrim and bow f\\  Qe\npair      . ....    y.yj\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished   1902\nNew Officers Elected ...\nKootenay MS Deplores\nJapanese Shack Homes\nBritain    exported    nearly   98,000\nagricultural tractors in 1954.\nENJOY\nTHE CONVENIENCE\nOF  A   BUDGET  ACCCJUNT\n696 BAKER ST.\nBABY'SCRY\nIS NOT\nALWAYS\nTEMPER\nDISTINGUISH between your baby'i tay\nof pain and cry of temper. Tho 'pain cry\n\u25a0hould have Instant attention. If ft la caused\nby the distress due to gas on the stomach or\nbowels, or those common digeatlve upssU,\ntry sweet-tasting Baby's Own Tableta.\nAs one Ontario mother reports,\u2014\"\/(used\nto be a worry what (0 use when my buoy had\nan upset spell, needed a regulator. V7\u00abU Wai\nproblem was solved when my sister said, OiH\nBaby's Ovm Tablets.' And during teething\ntime\u2014when babies are feverish, restless due lo\nirregularity or have an upset tummy\u2014Baby's\nOwn Tablets not only relieve *gkiently,bui\ndo it quickly. J wouldn't be without them.\nEasy to take . . . mild, yet effective (or\nconstipation, digestive upsets, and other\nminor infant troubles. No \"sleepy\" stuff \u2014\nno dulling effect. Get \u2022 package today.\nMrs. L. C. Johnston of Castlegar,\nwife of the United Church minister\nthere, was elected president of the\nKootenay Presbyterial of the United Church Woman's Missionary Society as It wound up its two-day\nmeeting ln Nelson Tuesday,\nOther   officers,   all   but   one   of\nwhom were elected by acclamation,\nare Mrs. W, C. Aston of Trail, past\npresident; Mrs. F. T. Lowe of Nelson, first vice-president; Mrs. L. G\nCatley of Nelson, second vice-president; Mrs, J. A. Wilson of-Nelson,\n\u25a0'third   vice-president;   Mrs.   F.   M.\nPeitzsche   of   Fruitvale,   recording\nsecretary; Mrs. J. M. Armstrong of\nNelson,    corresponding    secretary;\nand Mrs. H. D. Wilson, treasurer.\nA  letter will  be lent to  Ijon\nW.   D.   Black,   MLA  for   Nelson-\nCreston, drawing hli attention to\n\"appalling  conditions\"  of  shacks\nInhabited by Japanese pensioners\nat New Denver, urging that \"these\nshameful conditions\" be corrected,\nDelegates attending the 29th annual meeting also heard interesting\n' highlights   of   Conference   branch\nheld at Vernon, and of areas where\nWMS work is carried on.\nOf $1,200,000 spent In 1953. 43 per\ncent was spent in overseas fields\nand 34 per cent at home. Eight per\ncent of the funds went to administration, and. the remaining 15 per\ncent was spent for periodicals, miscellaneous services, scholarships,\nretirements,  pensions,  bonuses for\nHow   Christian  Science  Heals\n\"The Prayer That\nHeals Polio\"\nCKLN, 1240 kc, Friday, 6:16 p.m.\nDecorate...\nwith PORTRAITS\nA Now Way To Beautify Your Home\ntlave you included a miniature photo gallery ln your\n&lans for Spring redecorating. This new approach to\niterior decorating is smart and personal and can be\nadapted in a myriad of clever ways. We'll be happy\nto assist \u2014 See us soonl\nVOGUE STUDIO\nPhone 1552\n460 Word St.\nretired   missionaries   and   rest.   Of\nthe money collected, B. C. sent in\n$57,250.\nOTHER  OKf ICERS\nOfficers, for various Kootenay\nWMS Presbyterial departments\nelected were Mrs. A. G. Elder, cit-\nIzen_shlp; Mrs. J. Sutherland, community friendship; Mrs. C. Backstrom of Kimberley, associate members; Mrs. G. W. Payne of Nelson,\nExplorer Girls; Mrs. Catley, Press\nsecretary; Mrs. W. Ronald of Grand\nForks, Missionary Monthly and\nWorld Friends; Mrs. M. T. Harris\nof Nelson, literature; Mrs. J. W,\nHicks of Creston, supply; Mrs. J.\nClarke of Wycliffe, CGIT; Mrs. J\nD. Street of Creston, mission and\nbaby bands; Mrs. J. C. Chambers\nof Nelson, Christian stewardship;\nMrs. J. B. Carr, Rossland, mission\ncircle; and nominating committee,\nMrs. J. A. Wilson, Mrs. Lowe, with\npresidents of the five auxiliaries,\nMrs. A. J. Lawton of Rossland, Mrs.\nE. Jones of Trail, Mrs. J. J. Sutherland of Cranbrook, Mrs. A. Watts of\nCreston and Mrs. J. Henniger of\nGrand Forks.\nPretty Wedding\nHeld af Invermere\nBRADLEYS\nMEAT   MARKET\nEASTER\nSPECIALS\nTURKEYS: CO*\n\"A\" Grade, lO-Lb. Average; Lb _    \u2022** **\nROASTING CHICKEN: .   CQ*\n\"A\" Grade; Lb.   \u2022**\u25a0**\nLAMB SHOULDERS: 3Q*\nRolled on Request; Lb.     **** ^\nTENDERIZED HAMS:. C3*\nHalf or Whole;  Lb.     *** J\nTENDERIZED PICNICS: 33*\nLb.     >*? **\nSTEAKS: \/TO*\nT-Bone. Sirloin; Good Steer; Lb    *** **\nPORK LEG ROASTS: 57*\nCOD: JQ*\nSliced or Piece; Lb  *****\nSPARERIBS: AC*\nSmall, Side; Lb   '.....     \u25a0 ***\nWE WILL BE OPEN THURSDAY TO 8 P.M.\nINVERMERE-At a quiet wedding at the home of the bride's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. James Boyle at Invermere,\nmarriage vows were exchanged by\nGrace Evelyn Noland, third daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Noland\nof Radium Hot Springs, and Mr.\nHenry Charbonneau, formerly of\nSaskatchewan and now moved to\nPenticton from Windermere.\nRev. A. A. Burnett officiated at\nthe early evening ceremony, and\nJaest man was Mr. Robert Kimm.\nMr. Noland gave his daughter in\nmarriage.\nTwin suits in navy blue were\nworn by the bride and her groom,\nthat of the bride being highlighted\nwith a white nylon blouse with\nwhich she wore a becoming hat in\nwhite and shades of blue and white\ngloves. Her corsage was of deep\npink roses and lily of tha valley.\nBRIDESMAID\nThe bride's attendant was Miss\nMarian Pietrosky, who had chosen\na suit of lighter blue than the\nbride's. Her corsage was of pink\nrosebuds and lily of the valley.\nFor her daughter's wedding, Mrs.\nNoland wore a becoming dress of\nblack velvet relieved by pink on\nthe bodice and she wore a rosebud\nbouttoniere. Mrs. Boyle had chosen\na dress in princess style of peacock blue bengaline.\nAfter the ceremony, open house\nwas held for friends of the bridal'\ncouple. The wedding cake, made\nby Mrs. Boyle, was topped by an\neffective decoration of white wedding bells, rosebuds and lily of the\nvalley raised above the cake by a\nwhite lattice-work stand.\nAfter a honeymoon at Calgary\nthe young couple will reside at\nPenticton.\nEurope is estimated to have five-\nsixths of the whole world's supply\nof motorcycles.\nCHARGE IT\nat\n596 BAKER ST.\nVksdbeXJvnft.\nby. _tauma. LOIwdsA\nJUMPER--) I.ES3!\nDress or Jumper \u2014 embroidery-\ntrimmed to make it all the lovelier! For special occasions, add glittering sequin. an<_ beads.\nPattern 80$: Tissue pattern, tran.-\nfers and instructions for jumper-\ndress. Misses' sizes 12, 14, 18, 18,\n20. State size.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\ntor this pattern to LAURA WHEELER, NDN, 60 Front St W., Toronto,\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER and SIZE, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nINSPIRED IDEAS \u2014 pages and\npages of novel designs in our NEW\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog for 19551 Completely 'different\nand so thrilling; Send 25 cents for\nyour copy now! You'll want to\norder many of the patterns shown.\nOFFICERS NAMED\nBY EASTERN STAR\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Mrs. A. K. Watson\nhas been installed as new matron\nof Harmony Chapter, Order of the\nEastern Star, with.H. W. Shorle-\nmer patron, Mrs. K. J, McKenzie\nassistant matron and T. S. Dawson\nassistant patron.\nPast Grand matron. Mrs. B. H.\nBentley officiated at the installation assisted by Mrs. Thomas Med-\nlicojt, Mrs. R. O. Macwhirter, Mrs.\nAlec Jones, Mrs.' Henry Howe, Mrs.\nArchie Archibald and Mr. Dawson.\nOther officers installed were Miss\nRhea Montgomery, treasurer; Mrs.\nA. S. Downing, secretary; Mrs. L.\nW. Eckford, conductress, and Mrs.\nJohn Wightman, Mrs. R. J. Port-\nman, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. Archie\nArchibald, Mrs. W. G. Neeve, Mrs.\nR. E. Gibbons, Mrs. Evelyn Beduz,\nMrs. W. A, Worth, Mrs. J. D. Munro,\nMrs. Nancy Legatt, and Mrs. Ida\nMcKenzie.\nLadies1 Aid Honors\nMrs. Jack Crane\nINVERMERE \u2014 Mrs. Jack Crane\nwas guest of honor at a special tea\nmeeting of the Ladies' Aid to Trinity United Church. Mrs. Crane has\nbeen a valued member of the organization and was presented with a\npicture of the valley as a memento\nof her associations with the Ladies'\nAid. Mrs. Crane is also a charter\nmember of the Swansea branch of\nthe Eastern Star.\nMr. and Mrs. Crane have left to\nreside at Prince George, to which\npoint Mr. Crane has been moved\nby the General Construction Company.\nFRUITVALE CWL MEETS\nFRUITVALE - Catholic Women's\nLeague members of St. Rita's parish of Fruitvale and Montrose held\na combined social evening and business meeting at the home of Mrs.\nJ. Colligan In Montrose.\nCrowd feptads\nKaslo Schools'\nVariety Show\nKASLO \u2014 The Kaslo schools held\na very successful entertainment ln\nthe school auditorium, and despite\npoor road condltons, there Were\nmany parerits and friends from\nAlnsworth and Shutty Bench In the\naudience.\nThe program with Miss Mary-Ann\nMurphy as master of ceremonies,\nopened with a junior high school\nchorus \"April Showers,\" in costume,\nand directed by Mrs. N. S. Miller,\nfollowed by \"Little Darling.\" a one-\nact play directed by H. E. Dalqulst,\nwhich was rich in humor and well\nreceived. In the cast were Claudette\nRemiUard, in' the role of Juniper,\nColleen Kennett as Jessie Burton,\nFlorence Allen, as Eleanor Burton,\nDoreen Bacon as Viola Burton, Gary\nGilker as Lew Mandes, Keith Yoxall as Mr. Burton, Pat Armstrong as\nassistant director and Linda Perkins\nas stage director.\nSCHOOL CHEERS\n\"School cheers \\ised at basketball\ngames were demonstrated by Hope\nJacobs, Cathy Tyers, Evelyn Ken\nnett and Joan Carpenter. The student council, In session, with Danny\nShlmizu as president, Introduced all\ncouncil members, vice-president\nLynne Smith, secretary, Irene Riley,\ntreasurer, Darleen Gilchrist, House\ncaptains Danny Shimizu, Barbara\nGavelin, Johnny Tonkin, Darleen\nGilchrist Jim Rhindress, Hope\nJacobs, Norman Command and\nCarole Collier, class representatives,\nGrade 10, Toby Gripich, Grade 9\nRonald Anderson, Grade 8 Lance\nMiller and Grade 7, Lorne Dickson.\n\"And That's No Bull\" made a real\nhit, especially when the bull parted\nIn the middle, when each section\nhurried off the stage in different\ndirections. The cast members were\ntoreador, Gloria Greensword; tbe\nbull, Jim Rhindress and Gerry\nMossman.\nDANCE  NUMBERS\nThree solo dance numbers by Mrs.\nH. E. Daiquiri's pupils were also\napplauded. A ballet dance by Pat\nArmstrong was well received, girls\ntumbling display, directed by Miss\nThompson received hearty applause.\nIn the tumbling club are Peggy\nBurns, Leona Dickson, Hope Jacobs,\nGail Shuto, Joan Carpenter, Thelma\nMcLeod, Carol Rlngheim and Gloria\nGreensword.\n\"Start Dust\" mombo and tap\ndance by Patty Dahlqulst, also\n\"Some Like Them Thin,\" a skit\nplayed by Betty Nomland, and Judy\nMclntyre were given. A saxophone\nsolo by Keith Yoxall accompanied\nby Florence Allen, and a tap dance\nby Charmalne Armstrong, both received their share of appreciation\nfrom the audience.\nThe real hit of the program waj\nthe \"Fashion Parade\" when every\ntype of costume of the 18_0's from\nwedding gowns to bathing suits\nwere modelled by 22 high school\nboys and girls, which went over in\na big way with the audience.\nThe program closed with \"Easter\nParade\" by the junior high school\nchorus, with 28 boys and girls in\ncostume. A dance followed the entertainment\nDelegate Named by\nNelson Institute\nMrs. J. A. McNabb was chosen as\ndelegate to the district Women's\nInstitute conference to be held at\nGrand Forks, at the monhly meeting\nof the Nelson Institute.\nIt was reported that another quilt\nhad ben donated to the Nelson Hos.\nel for Aged Men. Tea hostesses were\nMrs. J. Sutherland and Mrs. H. E.\nThain.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RE6ULT8\nSave 20 c Washing\nYour Woollens!\nMany women who started uslna the\n59c package of ZERO Cold Water\nSoap for washing woollens . . . now\nare regular users of the 98c tlxe.\nContains twice as much ZERO\u2014\ngood for over 100 washings\u2014saves\n20c. ZERO does not shrink wool-\nfens. For FREE sample, write Dept.\n7W, ZERO Soaps, Victoria, B.C.\n~~~~ often sign of\nUPSET TUMMY\nFor minor digestive upsets, children so\noften suffer &s & result of overeating or\nealing too much candy or sweets, give\nChildren's Own Tablet!, new corrective\nfor youngsters 8 to 15. Thoy quickly help\nsweeten sour stomachs and act apoedily to\nclear out from the bowels, offending waste\nmaterial in a gentle, thorough manner.\nMade by the makers of Baby'i Own\nTablets\u2014your assurance of a reliable\nproduct. Got a package today at your\ndruggist.\nCi-AriSltf-ED ADS GET RESULT.)\nTriple Christening\nHeld at Wilmer\nINVERMERE - St, Andrew's\nUnited Church at Wilmer was the\nscene of a triple christening ceremony when Donna Elaine and Don\naid Keith, daughter and son of Mr\nand Mrs. W. A. Reid, and Shirley\nLaura, lnliuit daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Joseph Klrsch, all of Wilmer\nwere baptised,\nAt Trinity United Church _\ndouble christening service was held\nwhen Betty Jean, Infant daughter\nof Mr. and Mrt. Junes Frater, and\nAnne Jean Margaret, Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Edward Thour-\net, all of Invermere, were baptised. Rev. A. A. Burnett of Invermere officiated at the ceremonies.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7,1935 \u2014 5 1\nThe Doctor . . .\nVitamin C\nFor Ihe Baby\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDB8BN, MD\nMost babies like orange Juice and\nwill drink lt readily.\nOrange juice contains vitamin C\nan important part of a baby's diet.\nFROZEN OR CANNED\nYou can give your baby frozen\nor canned juice or juice from fresh\noranges. Frozen or canned juice\nshould be mixed with\\water which\nhas first been boiled and then allowed to cool.\nIf you use fresh oranges, sweet\n.oranges are probably best. If you\ncan't get sweet oranges, you might\nadd just enough iuga*r to sweeten\nthe juice.\nBEFORE CUTTING ORANGE\nBefore cutting the orange, dip it\nand the knife you use briefly Into\nboiling water. Be sure you wipe\nthem with a clean cloth. This will\nhelp get rid of any dirt and germs\nwhich may be on them.\nSome doctors advise straining the\njuice. You'll have to do this If you\ngive the baby his juice from a\nbottle. Pour the juice through a fine\n36-mesh strainger.\nWHEN TO GIVE IT\nI think you will find H best W\ngive your tot his orange juice right\nafter he gets his cod-liver oil. That\nwould be about 9 a.m., or an hour\nbefore his 10 o'clock feeding.\nThe baby will probably take his\norange juice from a spoon. However,\nif he refuses to t\u00bbke it this way, try\ngiving it to him ln a bottle.\nA FEW TIP8\nHere are,a couple of tips about\nthis:\nWhen he first begins taking\norange juice ud only > few tea-\nspoonfuls ire needed, dilute the\njuice with an equal amount of lukewarm water. The water, of course,\nmust be either specially prepared\nbeby water or boiled water. By diluting it ln this way, you make sure\nthe baby gets all hit juloo. You can\nstop' diluting lt by the time he is\ngetting more than four teaspoonful..\nOne more thing to remember.\nDon't mix the juice with water that\nis too hot. Heat destroys many of\nthe vitamins in the juice.\nBy the time your baby Is lix\nmonths old, he'll probably drink his\njuice from a cup.\n10000\nTRADE-IN\nALLOWANCE\nFor your old Refrigerator on the purchase\nof any new Refrigerator in our store.\n\u2022:\n$75.00\nTRADE-IN\nALLOWANCE\nFOR YOUR OLD RANGE (Coal or Wood)\nOn the Purchase of a New Electric or Got Range\nFrom Our Stock.\nJ>Arnnan!L\nWl Ask Edgewood\nTo Renata Road\nDEER PARK\u2014A resolution asking for conitruction of a road South\nfrom Edgewood to join Renata, was\nendorsed by members of the Deer\nPark Women's Institute at their\nApril meeting.\nThe resolution will ba presented\nto the coming district WI^ conference in Grand Forks.\nMembers voted a donation to the\nCIRCLE MEETS\nSt. Ann's Circle of the Ukrainian\nCatholic Women's League met re*\ncently at the home of Mrs. N. Apos-\ntolluk, 324 Beasley Street, Mrs. B.\nApostoliuk was winner of the\nevening's prize.\nCanada's first printing houso wu\nestablished at Halifax in 1751 by\nBartholomew Green, formerly of\nBoston.\nCanadian League of the Deaf-Blind\nin Vancouver from the proceeds of\nan old-time dance.\nj&t. fcaufour'a JJra-(&a%&ral\n(ANGLICAN)\nDoan Themes L_ Leadbeater. DJ3.\nGOOD FRIDAY\nT\n10:80 a.m.\u2014MORNINO PRAYER  AND  SERMON\n(Family Service)\n1_,:00 Noon\u2014MEDITATIONS   FROM   THE   CROSS\nto (Nelson Ministerial Association)\n3:00 p.m.\nT:80 p.m\u2014Willow Point \u2014 Story of Good Friday\non colored slides.)\nA SPRING\nFAVOURITE\nPert and casual injmmp or strap\nstyles Your choice ot suede or\nleather.\nAA and  B's.    Slics 4 -10.\nPriced from\n$3 95   $4.95\n411 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1114\nEASTER\nP\nAnd a Hott of Accesioriei\nTo Make an Outfit Complete,\nWhite Gloves     BLOUSES\nAdds  a   note  of dis-    Long or short sleeve, fine quality,\ntinction, to any outfit,    delicate designs for as little as\nFrom $1.95 From $3.98\nThe Finest of\nQuality HOSIERY\nAll eolor shades.\nFrom $1.25\nHandbags\nIn a full range of styles.\nFrom $5.00\nUse Our Charge Account\nWfiBlUO\n 1 \u2014\u2014\u2014 .\n\u2022m\n\u2014-- .. \u2014!^ \"7  \u25a0       \u25a0\u25a0     . .?\n'.'; \u2022\u2022\u25a0\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY. APRIL 7, 1955\nCoasl Business\nGirls Practice\nBallet Dances *\nVANCOUVER (CP) -The foxtrot and mambo may have their virtues, but there's nothing like the\nFrench can-can tor curing migraine\nheadaches and kneecaps that slip\nout ot.plgce..\nVancouver business girls plagued\nby such ailments as the \"typewriter\nslouch\" (Ind welcome therapy In\nthe business girls' ballet class.\nDreamed up by business girls tak\nIng private lessons, the class was or-\nTHE   SIX-YEAR-OLD   triplet   daughters   ot\n;   Mr. and  Mrs. J. W. Yeats heard that there were\n: triplet boys born In  Oklahoma City and  begged\n'*   their  parents to  let them  visit the boys. Above,\nSuzette, Paulette and  Annette Yeats hold Terry,\nMark and David Howard, nine-months-old sons\nof Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Howard. The girls decided\nthey'd like to take the boys home.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nMore to Licorice Than Just Taste\nBy  LEE  HANCOCK\nCentral Press Canadian\nA professor of journalism routinely springs an odd assignment on\nhis class. \"I want,\" he announces,\n\"a 3500-word article on the subject\nof licorice.\" Later, he explains his\nrequest to a subdued audience.\n\"If you can research licorice,\"\nhe tells his students, \"you can dig\nout facts about anything. In 60 years\nthere have only been six articles on\nlicorice published in North American periodical literature. There are,\nto my knowledge, no books on the\nsubject, outside of pharmaceutical\ntextbooks. The licorice plant is perhaps the most mysterious in the\nworld.\"\nThe professor is right. Licorice\nhas persistently defied laboratory\nanalysis. Chemists have spent years\ntrying to produce a synthetic licorice, and are today as far from\ntheir goal as ever. The licorice plant\nseems immune to the tampering of\nhorticulturists. Today it is the same\nas it was when first described by\nLIBERTY\nMOTEL\nNorth 6801 Division St.\nThree  Miles  North of City  Centre\non   U.S.  395,   19S,  2\nSPOKANE\nPhone Glenwood 4112\nTelevision\nForced Air Heat\nLACKMAN'S\nMOTEL\n(Formerly Snider's)\nPhone MA-6430      W. 1929 6th Ave,\nSpokane, Wash.\n22 DELUXE UNIT8\nKitchenettes, Electric Heat and Gas\nHeat,  Simmons  Beds,  Radio,\nTelevision, Private Baths (Tubs and\nShowers). Adjoining Cafe and Store\nHenry Lackman, Owner\nClose   to  the  Heart  of  Spokane\n' Off tho  HlQhway\nthe Greek scientist, Theophrastus,\nabout 300 BC.\nWithin ttie past quarter of a cen\ntury licorice has invaded a half\ndozen booming industries.\nOnce the sweetening agent is\nboiled out of licorice, the tough\nfibres of the root have been found\nideal for use as an insulating board,\nA half-Inch thick insulating board\nmade of licorice root will compare\nin resistance to noise, heat, or cold,\nwith a six-inch wall of concrete.\nThe formerly discarded \"spent\"\nlicorice root is combined with wood\npulp or waste paper for use in the\nmanufacture of sturdy paper board\nboxes.\nIN SMOKES\nEven the foam that arises in ttie\nprocess of boiling the roots is used.\nCombined with soda ash, k produces a remarkably effective fire-\nextinguishing agent.\nIn the United States, the biggest\nuser of licorice is the tobacco in\ndustry. Much of the mildness and\nflavoring of oigarettes, cigars and\npipe tobaccos is achieved by its use.\nThe pharmacists run the tobacco\nmanufacturers a close second. Lie!\norlct camouflages the taste of bitter medicines, and has remarkable\nsoothing  properties.\nMcAndrews and Forbes, one of\nthe larger licorice importers, has\nan unflagging faith in the versatility of licorice. Observing its present use as a therapeutic agent in\nthe treatment of Addison's disease,\nthey've set up several fellowships to\nstudy the medicinal properties of\nlicorice.\nLicorice is fussy about climate.\nBack in the 1920's, one leading importer tried to grow the plant commercially in southern New Jersey\nfinally junked the experiment as a\ntotal failure. The economics of the\nbusiness were unsatisfactory and\nthe plant would not develop sufficient root growth.\nIn its native lands, however, the\nlicorice shrub grows as prolificacy\nas a weed. Once planted in a field\nin Turkey, licorice takes over completely, weaves its roots together\nunder the soil and within two. or\nthree years renders a field useless\nfor other crops.\nThe hapless farmer is faced with\nWELCOME CANADIANS TO SPOKANE\n\\      at\nALLEN'S TIN PAN ALLEY\nCOCKTAILS \u2014 ENTERTAINMENT NITELY\nTop Sirloin Steak Dinner Complete $1.00\nALLEN'S CAFE AND RECREATION\n412 W.  RIVERSIDE SPOKANE, WASH.\nganlzed In a downtown dancing hall\n10 years ago.\nThose taking Instructions include\nnurses, recptionlste, telephone girls,\nstenographers and young.'matrons\nThey meet every week tor an hour's\ninstruction.\nM08TLY FUN\nThe health and beauty section of\nthe class dance to keep tit, slim\nddwn, or put on a pound where* It's\nmost welcome.\nThe irfajorlty of members, however, just want to have fun and get\naway from everyday routine. ,\nAnd the French can-can, on the\ncourse of studies at present, affords\nplenty of fun, laughter and- relaxa\ntion.\nThe other section of the ballet\nclass is more concerned with serious\ndancing. Members belonging to this\nSocial Service Open\nTo Drug Addicts\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Drug addiction Is Insufficient reason tor\ncutting*,; a man from social service\nassistance rolls, city social services\nadministrator J, I. Chambers said\nIn an Interview h'e're.,..-  Y\n\"We know we have cases known\nto police, but' It Is difficult to say\nthat because a person Is an addict,\nor an alcoholic, or. ohe'ira garlic\nthat he should receive assistance.\"\nInclude those who' drfeaiped from\nchildhood of taking dancing lessons.\nMrs. Olga Heldecker, who at 72\ncan still do the \"split-',\" says: \"You\nwill never be old as long as you can\ndance.\" j\n$2000 Taken From\nFinnish Freighter\n\u2022 VANCOUVER (CP) - More than\n$2000 ln currency from six nations\nwas stolen here from the Finnish\nfreighter Margareto,\nCapt. K. A. IStromberg told police\nthe money was taken from a strongbox in his cabin. The thieves apparently entered through a porthole and used a key from the skip-\npet's desk to open the safe.\nRESTING PLACES\nBIGGLESWADE,'England (CP) -\nOfficials of this Hertfordshire town\nbought seven -sidewalk benches because \"older persons would appreciate the resting places\" while on\nshopping expeditions.\nB.C.'s Timber Cut\nShows Increase\nVICTORIA (QP> -'Timber cut\nln B.C. fpr the first two month) ol\nthis year, showed 713,349,000 board\nfeet compared with 467,173,000 b.f.\ncut for the' same period last year,\ntrade minister Ralph Chetwynd said\ntoday.\nThis followed on the heels of record provincial lumber production\nlast year when 4,233,106,000 b.f. were\n.sawn, up from 4,045,724,000 ln 1053.\nNEW DELHI (CP) \u2014 The government of India ls setting up an\noil and gas division to Intensify\npetroleum exploration work. Indian\npersonnel will be trained in oil\ntechniques, including deep and shallow well-drilling.\nthe task of digging it out in its en-\ntirety.\nTHIRST QjENCHER\nThe Greeks called licorice \"Scy\nthian root\" and claimed it had remarkable ability to quench thirst\nWith It and mare's milk cheese,\nthey said, the Scythians could go\n11 or 12 days without drinking.\nLicorice was on the ration list\nfor the armies of Alexander the\nGreat, and the conquering legions\nof Rome carried it on their marches\ninto Africa, Gaul and Spain.\nWhat does this ancient plant look\nlike? A native of southern Europe\nand parts of Asia, the licorice plant\ngrows approximately three feet tall,\nbears spikes of white or pale-blue\nflowers similar to those of the pea.\nLicorice roots collect within themselves an odd substance called\nglycyrrhiza, a sweetening agent\nwith nearly 50 times the saccharln-\nity of cane sugar, so persistent that\nit is still detectable in a dilution\nof one part in 20,000 parts of water.\nOver 40 million pouads of licorice\nroot and 600,000 pounds of licorice\npaste annually make the long journey to North America. In industrial-\nminded America, research laboratories keep experimenting with the\nstrange root.\nWith an eye on the startling developments that have occurred in\nthe use of licorice in the past 25\nyears, scientists believe that licorice,\nwith its romantic past, is headed\ntoward an even more exciting future.\nPredicts Longer\nLife for Tires\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A United States\nscientist predicts that within five\nyears you may be able to buy a\ntire that will last 100,000 miles, a\ndloth fibre that can stand a temperature of 350 degrees centigrade\nand a plastic that will remain inact\nin boiling water.\nDr. H. F. Mark, director of the\nPolytechnic Institute of Brooklyn,\ntold the National Research Council Science Association here that\nthe cloth, made from materials\nthat do not melt, could be boiled\nin an acid withouf changing tex\nture.\nIt could also be pressed with an\niron registered 350 degrees\u2014eliminating the scorching and shrivelling that results from pressing\npresent synthetics with too hot an\niron.\nA tire made of synthetic polyster\nrubber has been run for 50,000\nmiles, Dr. Mark said, and probably could reach the 100,000 mark,\nIt is highly skidrresistant and now\nis used on some'jet aircraft.\nAtomic radiation would produce\nthe non-melt plastic. The irradiation process, either by atomic pile\nor by x-ray, would produce a plastic with a melting point 35 degrees\nhigher than normal, he said.\nPAYING THEIR WAY\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Three valuable\ncats left London for Tasmania, complete with luggage. When they arrive, one of the party, a Siamese,\nwill have kittens which, when sold,\nwill help pay the fare.\nPORA\nLASTING\nSHINE\niii\n1\nI\ni\nI\ni\n[]\nD\nthe\nlabel of\nquality\nflllCl CNWflyS ... for real refreshment, for triia \u00bb(7i>\nfaction it's Malkin's Teas and Coffee ... by test the best since 1895.\nThe world's finest teas are skilfully blended by Malkin's for full flavor,\nfragrant bouquet. And Malkin's Coffee! Rich, full-bodied, roaster\nfresh . . . you'll have to try Malkin's yourself to know how good\ncoffee can bel\nat your grocer's new!\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nyou'll find all Malkin's Family of\nFine Foods at special, money-saving\n60th Anniversary prices. Stock up\nfor grand eating, great savings)\nFREE Coffee Measure\nAttached to each pound of Malkin's\nCoffee, for limited time, a handy\ncoffee measure in attractive colors.\nHurry and get yours,   ,\nI\n\u00a7\nI\ns\n1\nI\nI\n1\n1\n1\nLi\nI\nte-ao\nJ.L-WILSON\nGeneral Merchant\nSilverton, B.C.\nHIGHWAY STORE\nAcross Lake Ph. 1(82\nVI'S GROCERY\n921 Davies St.       Ph. 820\nHILLTOP STORE\n1302 Stanley St.     Ph. 1414\nSALMO\nCORNER STORE\nSalmo, B.C.\nCAPITAL\nGROCERY\n551 Ward St. Ph. 264\nNELSON GROCERY\n338 Baker St. Ph. 89\nLONGBEACH\nSERVICE\nGordon Sargent\nR.R. NO. i\nNAKUSP\nGROCERY\nNakusp, B.C.\nRONMARK'S\nSTORE\n102 Morgan St.\nPhone 1819\nUi\n':\n^^   '   \u25a0 ^M   \u25a0      *)' '\n_______\n___\n wmmmmmm\nmmm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTHURS, APRIL 7,1955 \u2014 7\n$4000 Hospital\nAfter the familiar mushroom of the recent\n.8. atom explosion in Nevada had blossomed up-\n'ard, the sky. showed this long streak of radlo-\n:tlve cloud extended for miles. The cloud moved\niitward and is etlll under study by the monitors\nof the Atomic Energy commission which reports\nthat It Is not radioactive enough to be dangerous,\nThe explosion had a force equal to close to 40,000\ntons of TNT.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nerridge Pleads for Better Radio\nwerage in Kootenay West Areas\nITTAWA (C-*) \u2014 A plea that\nladian radio programs be made\n(liable to thousands ot'residents\nInterior British Columbia was\nde Wednesday in the Commons\nH. W. Herridge.\nhe. CCF member for Kootenay\net said many parts of his con-\nuency will be unable to hear the\niter programs of the CBC.\nlie problem could be solved, he\nd, by construction of low-power\nay broadcasting stations connect-\nby wire to the CBC's radio net-\nrk.\n.here had been a long-standing\naiand for such a service. Popu-\nion at points such as Nakusp,\nKan and Balfour in the Arrow\n_es region was large enough to\nitify the expense.\ntOVIDE FOR ALL\nRThen the CBC was spending mil-\nns of dollars to extend television\nrvice to a majority of Canadians,\nitse   fine   people\"   In   outlying\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by The Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nareas should be provided with CBC\nradio service.\nMr. Herridge said he does not\nthink CBC \"reluctance\" is the only\nreason for the lack of service. It\nwas possible that the Canadian Pacific Railway did not want to spend\nthe money needed to drop up\" its\nold telegraph poles In the area to\nhold the two lines required to serve\nrelay broadcasting stations*\nElect New Members\nTo Council of CPS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Five new\nmembers have been elected by a\nmall ballot of doctors throughout\nB.C. to represent them on the\nCouncil et the College of Physicians\nand Surgeons.\nThey are Dr. H. M. Edmison of\nVictoria; Dr. H. A. DesBrisfy and\nDr, J. R. Neilson, both of Vancouver; Dr. L. S. Chlpperfleld, by\nacclamation, for New Westminster;\nDr. J, A. Macdonald, Prince Rupert,\nrepresenting northern B.C.\nAt the game time, Dr. Roy Huggard, Vancouver, retired as Coun.\ncil president. His successor will be\nelected at the annual meeting of\nthe council May 20.\nDr. Frank Bryant, Victoria, also\nannounced his retirement from the\nCouncil.\nRemove Blemish\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Two garbage cans mined the elegance of\nSir Anthony Eden's emergence\nfrom his home to drive to Buckingham Palace Wednesday morning\nfor his appointment 86 .prime minister.\nThe garbage cans stood on the\nsidewalk between Eden's fashion'\nable home and a shiny limousine\nwaiting to take him to the palace.\nAs photographers moved forward\nto snap \\he top-hatted statesman,\na qUick-witted policeman recognized the strange contrast and hastily\nrolled the garbage cans away.\nOfficial\nAnnouncement\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Here Is\nthe text of the official announcement Issued' by Buckingham Pal\nace Wednesday naming  Sir Anthony Eden as prime minister:\n\"The'^ueen received the Right\nHon. 8lr Anthony Eden, MP, In\naudience this morning (Tuesday)\n\"and offered him the, post of\nprime minister and first lord of\nthe treasury.\n\"Sir Anthony Eden accepted\nHer Majesety's offer and kissed\nhands,.upon his appointment\"\nJews Mark Beginning\nOf Passover Feast\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014Jewish\nfamilies gathered in' their homes\nWednesday to re-enact the flight of\ntheir ancestors from slavery 3300\nyears ago. It will mark the begin\nning of the eight-day Passover Festival of Freedom.\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nOpensatCoast\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Mayor Claude\nHarrison has started Investigation\nof a case of suspended British Columbia Hospital Insurance benefits\nthat has resulted in a woman being\nbilled for $4000.       ,.\nIn a letter to city hall the woman\nsaid her child had spent a year In\nhospital ,but that BCHIS had approved payment for only 76 days.\nShe was not informed when approval ended.\nThe social service department of\nRoyal Jubilee Hospital later reduced the bill to about $350.\nAuthorities said Tuesday BCHIS\nmay suspend further payments on\nbehalf of a patient if its board of\nmedical consultants consider, the\ncase chronic, and not acute. In some\ncases the ruling may not be made\nuntil the claim is complete.\nSt*. Laurent Greets\nSir Anthony Eden\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister\nSt. Layrent Wednesday sent two\nmessages of congratulations to Sir\nAnthony Eden, Britain's new prime\nminister.\n\"My colleagues Join me in send-'\ning you sincere congratulations on\nthe honor Her Majesty, the Queen,\nhas accorded you,\" he said in one\nof the messages made public\n\"As you assume your high office,\nwe wish you success in the carrying out of Its heavy responsibilities\nand we assure you of Canada's continuing co-operation in all matters\npertaining to the Commonwealth.\"\nThe message made public \"was\nsent on behalf of the Canadian government. Mr. St. Laurent's other\nnote to Sir Anthony was personal\nand will not be made public.\nFOX   BREEDER\nCharles Dalton, lieutenant-governor of Prince Edward Island who\ndied in 1933, was a pioneer silver\nfox breeder.\nSee how\nBetter-blending\nCarnation Milk\nawes Your\nImp\nWhatever your previous experience with evaporated milk, you\nwill be surprised and delighted when you cook with Carnation\nEvaporated Milk.\nCarnation\u2014the evaporated milk with betler-blending qualities\n\u2014combines more smoothly with other recipe ingredients. Brings\nout more of the fine flavor. Gives more enjoyment too, when you\nuse it on cereals and fruits, in coffee, for whipping.\nNext time you shop, get Carnation ... in the can designed\nexpressly to keep evaporated milk fresher . .. longer.\nFREE RBC.PW       . m every\n^^_S* \u00a3\u25a0*'\u00ab*\u25a0_\nCarnation taW-r       Fa5t mail\nFOR BETTER RESULTS, COOK WITH      L MlL_f\nCARNATION-TOE MILK THAT WHIPS. (;^l^\u00ab;!r;:^\/\nCarnation MILK\n...ftafmost\n-floats way!'\n-.rize-winiwrfl like '\nPurity, the all-purpose\nFlour that gives new\nHie to your baking ..;\nso light it almost floats\naway!\nPurity Flour works wonders whatever you're\nbaking . . . makes bread and cakes lighter-\ncookies tastier\u2014fie crusts and pastries flakier.\nFor your family, there's more food benefit in\nPurity Flora too, because it's Vitamin-Enriched.\nTry this all-purpose Flour for prize-winning baking\u2014fight,\nas-a-feather Purity 1\npUR.Ty\nMOCHA CAKI\n'A,M'\u00a3T\u201e.3taklnS''<>\u00bb<1\"'\n3 lnoipoo\" Bow\"9\nll cup Bu'W\n2c.p.-\u00bbwnSugor\n3 taoipoo\"1\n_ Cup Milk ,.\nTl Cup Cold Strong CoHe.\n2 E99'\n\u00ab, cup Cocoa     i\nfl2c.p.PurilYFI\u00b0u'\n^.ddbrownsugar^ \u2014 * ** \u25a0\nt   Cream butter very sott,\nand light'     ,\nAdd well beafexWS\"^ ^ .j, and baking pow*\n$\u00a3&\u00a3?\": \\   ,   . *, ingredient, A*-^ *\n\u2022  _.      \u2022  -reas-d and Bouk\"\/.,,,.\ntvder and\n\"from Contented Cows\"\nTmn flour ,mi-LS limited\nJMm_fft\u00bb.yC-l\u00bbW-u,.-r_jr.l-Cri\u00bb.MI_,\nPurify Ooll ond Pioneer Fuji.\nPURITy Vitamin\nENRICHED FLOUR\nDID YOU USE\nTHE VALUABLE COUPON\nFROM\nTHE PURITY ADVERTISEMENT\nWHICH APPEARED IN THE NEWS\nMARCH 24TH?\nANOTHER ONE WILL RUN APRIL 14\nWishing you joy with your family at Eaiter. All\nLiberty extend Easter Greetings to you,\nofu,at  Shopping 9 p.m. Thursday\nClosed Good Friday.\nOpen Until 6 p.m. Saturday.\nALL BRANDS \u2014 With transfer\nand magic writer.  .\t\n.fcpkgs. t\u00a3mj\nEGGS S\nFresh Local\nLarge.\t\n(Carton Extra)\ndoz. 48c\nDark,\nCalifornia.\nCRANBERRY SAUCE\nRED EYE SALMON\nOcean Spray. Whole\nor jellied. 15 oz.\t\nRed. Riverdale.\n7Va oz. tin\t\n2 ib. pk. 43c\n2 for 49c\n\u201437c\nGreen Peas K Y!_ 2\ni pkgs.\n43*   Corn Kernels\nNabob.\nPkg.  ._\n23\u00ab\nMILD CUBAN 1Q\u00a3\nONIONS: Genuine.   I?\nWATERMELONS:\nCuban. Lb.\t\n25'\nASPARAGUS:\nGreen, tender. Lb.\n37*\nor Yams. Lb.\t\n23'\nCandyland\nNEEDS\nOnly 2 day\u00ab left. All pu.cha.e_\n95c or over entitles to free draw\non 2 \u2014 $3.00.\nCHOCOLATES \u2022\nPrivate  Stock. (\u00a3 |   \u00abjq\nSale Price, lb. box   \u00bb)> I ,_Vy\nBUDGET'\nHOMCMAKIRS\nEASTERPePARADE\nPOT ROAST:\nLb __.\nSLICED BACON:\nLayer; Lb \t\nLEAN BACON:\nBy the Piece; Lb\t\nSMOKED PICNICS:\nLb.    \t\nTURKEYS:\nOven-Ready, Whole or Half; Lb.\n39*\n47*\n47*\n33*\n65*\nBBB FRYERS:\nLb\t\nEASTER HAMS:\nVEAL SHOULDER STEAK:\nLb.   \t\nCOTTAGE ROLLS:\nTenderized, Whole or Half; Lb _ \t\nCQOKEp HAMS:\nUnion; Extra Tasty, No Cooking; Lb\t\n59*\n53*\n39*\n55*\n59*\nFRENCH ICE CREAM:\nBrick   \t\n45*\nFOR YOUR\nHAM NEEDS\nWHOLE CLOVES:\nNabob; 1 pz \u201e.\nBROWN SUGAR:\n2-lb. pkg \t\nHONEY:\nBlossom; 4 lbs\t\nWHOLE CHERRIES:\n8 oz. fkg\t\nSliced Pineapple:  J\nMalkin's; 15 'oz.,  ***i\n19*\n23*\n99*\n28*\n49*\nMEN . . .\nREMEMBER YOUR WIVES\nFresh cut FLOWERS\n,TO PLEASE HER\nDaffodils   Tulips\nDoz. 75c        Doz. $1.98\nCHECK and CLIP This Handy\nSHOPPING LIST NOW!\nCHECK YOUR STOCK ON THESE STAPLE ITEMS\nBaby  Poods _ Jams, Pet Foods ...     Cleansert  .\u201e \t\nBread and Cake* ....    Marmalade* Nuts Soft Drinks  \t\nBaking Items \u2122     and Jellies  Paper Products  Soups   \t\nBacon   \u2122 \u2014 Juices    ....... Peanut Butt\u00bbr -.... Specialty  Foodt \t\nBlsoult*  \u2014.... Ice Cream  -t Poultry  Spicei   \t\nButter .._   Macaroni, eto, Pickles  \u201e   Sugar  \t\nCandy     Matches    -..Polishes     Tea  \u2014\t\nCereal (Hot) Meat (Fresh) ...- Salad Dressings -Vegetables\nCereal -(Cold) Meats (Canned) Salt \u2122     (Fresh)   \t\nCheese    .\u00ab.. Meats (8mokedr)  Sauces   Vegetables\nCoffoo    \u2014 ., Milk Soaps and (Canned)    ^\nCocoa  \u2014\nDesserts  ..~ \u2014.\nDelicatessen   \t\nDietetic Food* \t\nDried  Foods \t\nDrugs   _ _\t\nEggs  \u2014 _\nExtract*    \t\nFish (Fresh) \t\nFish  (Canned) \t\nFlour and Mixes .\nFrozen Foodi \t\nFruit* (Canned) .\nFruit* (Frssh) \t\nBAKtRY- FRESH\nFreshest in town,\nDoz. \t\nHYDRANGEAS:        *\nPotted; Each \t\nPALM TREES: $2.98\nliso ROSE BUSHES ^\"''\"' $2.95\nEach\nPHILODENDRONS and SANSEVIERA in all sizes.\nCopper and china planters.\nEASTER LILIES\nFree delivery in town. A beautiful\nEaster tradition. Hurry, supplies limited.\n2.35 to$3.50\nRose Bushes or Climbers-No. 1 B.C. Hardy Grown\n2 yean old ... Money back guarantee. Every bush worthy of Its name ... \"For reputation lost, comes not again.\" Consists of famous names such as Peace, Mission Bells, President Hoover, etc.\n99C each   2 for $1.95   6 for $5.J5   doz. $10.45\nMAIL ORDER8 ACCEPTED \u2014 EACH  ROSE  BOXED, WAXED,   MOI8TURE ON  ROOT8 tft*\u00abr #\nWok** \u2022*\n,e\u00bb\u00ab'nB\nvt\\  _ ~\u2122\".lo    .,\n4 **.\u00ab.: ****.\n \u25a0M-.W.\u00bb \"\n\u25a0;:,.-\nPfPfiPPifii^^Pf7'' w*!\n. ..._,_ , . ,\nt T\"   %\n\u25a0 \"7~\u2014\n., \u25a0\u25a0 -\n\t\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7,1955\ny>;\nCIUDAD ACUNA, Mex.\u2014Caught while placing\nbanderlllos, Patricia Hayes, 23, a San Angelo, Tex.,\ncollege student turned bullfighter, la mauled by\nLa Playa fighting bull In local bull ring. Knocked\nto the sands more than six times while battling\nwas her\n.rtna\nbrain concussion In \/^capulco, Mex., ring last January.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\n:*\u00a3\u00bb\nNullFE\nRCMtOIFS\nPHONE 18.4 FOR CLASSIFIED\nSH0RTIE8 EL1GABLE\nCANBERRA (CP) \u2014 To broaden\nthe recruiting field, minimum\nheight of recruits joining the Au\u00bb.\ntralian army has been lowered from\nfive feet four inches to five feet\ntwo inches.\nHow good can a good rum be\nsMkis.\n(J)luiribiis Htim & rt^ ^^u>^\nThii advertisement is not published or displayed' by the liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nHew Soft Plastic\nHolds Plates Tighter\nEases Sore Gums!\nAccept no lubifitutei lor now Snug\u2014\nlh. only lotting toft plaillc dintur.\ncushion.\nCushions the mouth yet grips\nplates like \"Living Tissue!*9\nNow, quickly stop pain and trouble\ndue to loose fitting plates with new\nSNUG Dentijre Cushions. Amazing soft\nplastic grips plate firm and tight yet\nfeels soft and comfortable\/like \"Living\nTissue.\" Gums feel wonderful. You eat,\ntalk, laugh in comfort. SNUG stays\ncushion-soft Can't hardeti and ruin\nplate. Peels right out when ready to\nreplace. Tasteless, odorless, cleaned in\n. a jiffy. No more daily bother with\n\"stickums.\" Get Penture Cushions\ncalled SNUG and^Jo away with your\nplate troubles. Money-back if not satisfied. At all druggists.\nT. FULFORD CO. LTD., BROCKVILLE. ONT.\niJp^JFIDENTIflLLY YOJJRS\n' ->Y     ''\u2014by By'rnd'..ope'Sav'hdorsl ' '\"\u2022\"'\u25a0'\u2022<-,;\"'\nMONTREAL, April 7th \u2014 Dreams can come true\n. . . and we oan have the important pleasures of\nlift.\u2014nou> when our families are young and we can\nenjoy them all together! That's what thousands of\nCanadians are finding out\u2014through the popular\nIAC MERIT.PLAN. Using the Merit Plan, I\nbelieve, is a sure step forward to better living. If\nwe plan our buying and pay for the things which\nmean grUcious living, as we earn our incomes, then we have found the\nmodem, sensible way of buying\u2014and of living. Do ask your dealer\nabout the many valuable advantages of buying your new cur, stove,\nrefrigerator, waning machine or TV through Industrial Acceptance\nCorporation's Merit Plan. He'll be glad to tell you about it\u2014and help\nyou to better living I .\nWin One Of 10 C.C.M. Bicycle'  . . . given  enrh  week  . . , ui a\ncontest for this province only!. What, a, wonderful\nchance\u2014offered you by the new\/ BLUE BONNET\nMARGARINE CONTEST. Easy to enter-just write\nin 25 words, or less, the remon why you need a\nbicycle! Mail with end-flaps from two Blue Bonnet\nMargarine packages (each with Good Housekeeping\nfiea]) and your name and address to Blue Bonnet\nMargarine Contest, Box 4-100, Vancouver, B.C. You\ncan enter as often as you like in the three contests\nleft, closing April 9th, April 16th and April 23rd.\nPrizes are boys' or girls' beautiful C.C.M. bicycles\u2014so\nhurry and enter each contest!\nMixed Reactions\nTo New Budget\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanadians Wednesday gave general welcome to tax reductions an-\nnounced in tho federal budget and\ntabbed them as a rtimulant to bus\ninesi.\nThe welcome, hpwever, was mixed with criticism, especially from\nsections of the economy which fell\ntheir needs had been overlooked,\nAmong the most disappointed\nwere'the woolens and tobacco industries.\nFrancis E. Cleyn of Huntington,\nQue., chairman of the wool cloth\nsection of the Primary Textiles Institute, said, '.announcement that\nthere 'would be no tariff Increase\non imports from Britain \"had dis\nappointed many thousands of Canadians who rely on the Industry\nfor their \"livelihood.\"\n30. MILLS CLOSED\nRuinous competition from abroad,\nhe said, had caused more than 30\nCanadian wool-cloth mills to close\ndown in recent years.\nWilliam A. Wecker, president- of\nGeneral Motors of Canada, said\nthe reduction in excise tax on automobiles from 15 p.er cent to 10 per\ncent \"is certainly welcome\" but\nregretted that the government could\nnot see its way clear to remove the\ntax entirely.\nE. C. Row, president of Chrysler\nCorporation of Canada, thought the\nexcise-tax reduction was\nAttlee Speaks\nWith Emotion\nOf Predecessor\nLONDON (AP) - .Sir Anthony\nEden mode his first appearance as\nprime minister In the House of\nCommons. Warm tribute was paid\nto !Slr Winston Churchill, his predecessor.\nOpposition leader Clement Attlee,\nrising to make the first speech, said\nChurchill \"gave leadership to this\ncountry when It needed It most.\"\n\"Hli place In history ll assured,\"\nhe added,\nThe 72-year-old Labor leader's\nvoice seemed to break a little when\nhe spoke of his porty's \"warm affection\" for Churchill.\nFear Livestock\nBuried by Snow\nCHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) \u2014 \"Extremely heavy\" livestock losses\nWere feared Wednesday In the wake\nof a fierce storm whose 16-foot\nsnowdrifts paralyzed parts of Wyoming and Montana.\nHundreds of motorists and rural\nresidents stranded by the two-day\nstorm are believed safe and in no\ndanger.\nEntire Cities ln northeast Wyoming still are Isolated from highway and air travel, however. Some\ntrains resumed their schedules with\ndifficulty early Wednesday\nwinds continued to drift snow\neverywhere in the stricken area.\nAn estimated 500 persons are still\nstranded at Douglas, in ^ast-central\nWyoming but officials said all are\nbelieved to have sufficient' food\nand shelter.\nIN LINE with' the balmy\nweather, Mrs. George White\n\u2022hows off her \"sprlno\" hat whloh\ntook first prize at a mad-hatter\nparty held by the Army Ord-\nnance Ladles Asoociatlon. Cut*\ntomed from an old chair spring,\nsome small tension springs and\nflowers, the hat wound up with\nthe funniest topplece award at the\ngathering. Mrs, White's husband\nIs a colonel.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nTo Add 504 Bed Unit\nTo Coast Hospital\nVICTORIA (CP) - Plans have\nheen approved by the provincial\ngovernment for a 504 bed acute unit\nadditldn to the Vancouver General\nhospital health minister Eric Martin\nannounced today.\nCosts will not be kndwn until\ntenders are received. Mr. Martin\nsaid final approval would be given\nonly If construction costs were\n\"reasonable.\" Provincial government grants towards the project will\nbe more than $5,000,000.\nOpposition Shown\nLundberg's Plan\nSAN FHANCISCO (AP) - Th.\nAFL Musters, Mates and Pilots\ncounter-attacked Wednesday\nagainst Harry Lundberg's plan for\nreduced onemnlon crows for bulk\ncargo ships.\nNine MMP executive committee\nmembers, ending a closed two-day\nmeeting, announced that talks on\norganizing a merged union of all\nlicenced officers will be renewed\nwith the CIO Marine Engineers.\nLundberg has declared hli plan\nwould enable AmerWan shippers to\ncompete with foreign registered\nships by reducing crlws and lav.\ning labor coitl.\nAll maritime unions except Lund'\nberg's own oppose him in the dispute centred now on e bulk cargo\nship, the Tonsina. Under a contract\ncovering that ship, Lundberg provided all crew members Including\nlicenced officers.\nThe contract ral.ed base pay for\ncrew members but eliminated\nweekend overtime.\nVancouver Enjoys\nIts Warmest Day\nVANCOUVER (CP) -\"Residents\nof British Columbia Wednesday\nmade the most of the warmest day\nso far this year, facing a forecast of\na damp Easter weekend.\nVancouver's temperature was 60.\nwhile, the mercury heated up to 70\nat Kamloops and 71 at Lytton, both\nin the interior. Only similar tem\nperatures recorded at the Dominion\nPublic Weather Office here was the\n70 for Chicago and Los Angeles' 73\n\"Rain, cooler and unsettled\" was\nthe forecast for the weekend.\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District\nNOTICE\nOF ANNUAL MEETING\nZONE NO. 4\nSproulo Creek, Taghum, Blewett, Granite Road,\nRosemont, Uphill, South Nelion, Upper Fairview,\n(all outside the city limits) and South Shore to\n-Atbara.\nNotice is hereby given that the annuel Oeneral Moot-'\ning ef the Property owners of the above Zone will be\nheld in SHIRLEY HALL, GRANITE ROAD on MONDAY, 18th day of APRIL, 1955. af 8:00 P.M. for the\nfollowing purposes:\n(a) To receive from the Trustees of the Zone o report\non the undertakings of the said Improvement District foi the preceding fiscal year and a statement\nof the financial condition of the said Improvement\nDistrict prepared by the auditor.\n(b) To discuss with the Trustees any matter relating\nto the undertakings or finance of the said Improvement District.\nTrustee: Mr. W. A. Anderson, Chairman of the meeting\nDoted; The 15th day of March, 1955.\nBY ORDER OF THE BOARD.\nC. P. PERRY,\nSecretary.\nPHONE   1844   FOH   CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET  RESULTS\nRed Press Lauds\nSir Winston\nLONDON (CP>\u2014Political leaders\nand the press of the Western de\nmocracies lavished tributes Wed- [\nnesday on Sir Winston Churchill.\nHe even got a pat on the back from\na pro-Communist paper.\nIn general, the 80-year-dld statesman's departure from the prime\n\u25a0ministry was recognized as an historic moment. He was lauded far\nand wide as a leading architect of\nvictory In the Second World War\nCOULD RECTIFY  ERROR8\nFrom  Britain's Communist  ally,\nYugoslavia, Radio Belgrade praised\nlogical I Churchill's wartime leadership and\nstep if the industry was to be ex-| 8aid he was \"so great\" that he\npected to maintain a high level of .could \"change his own errors and\nemployment: To most Canadians the lecognize his own mistakes\/\"\nPm Grateful ... to the skill of\nmodern scientirfls\nwho design Binh\nrnmforta as ---the\nCurad P la st io\nBandage I Grate*\nf n I . . . because\nthoy are bo com'\nplcicly satisfactory. When vou\nuse a ClUtA-D\nPlastic Hs.nd.ise,\nyou'll find it has a wonderful,\nnew \"Slick-Quick\" adhesive\u2014ana\na new polyethylene facing that\nwhisks off clean! . . . Tlicy stay\non'so well . . . won't curl or fray,\nwhatever kind of housework .\nyou've been busy with. A Curad\nplastic bandage haa the germ- .\nfighter..right in it\u2014and it's pafn.,\nless! Of course, they're absolutely\nwater-proof. Do keep a supply\nhandy for family usel\nWhat Price For Your Valuables?\n. . . Why risk it\nwhen you can\navoid the tragedy .that happens day after\nday somcuflicre\n\u2014when precious\njewelry or valuable p ape r a,\nwhich cannot be\nreplaced, are burned, lost or\nstolen? You can eliminate this\nfear in your own home by rent- \\\ning a Safety Deposit Ilox at tho\nBANK OF MONTREAL. The\nseosc of security meatus so much\n\u2014and the cost of retitlrtg a safety\ndeposit box is so small\u2014less than\ntwo cents a day I Why not rent\nyour Safety Deposit Box today\nat your, local branch of \"My\nBank\"?'- You'll find the small cost\ninvolved well worth the saving\nin peace of mind.\nOno Of The Nicest Time$ ; . . of :the, day, in our house, is dishwashing tune, when the children and I.^are tbe\nday's adventures, or play \"Twenty Questions.-\" It's.\nall the nicer, now, that we use (JAY\u2014the., new 5\nwonder-working LIQUID DETERGENT. - For t\nGay has a delightful fragrance' tt begin with;\nmakes the nicest suds\u2014and washes dishes,. g&sg-\nware, silvern-sparkling clean! It-has eztmgrease-\ncutting pawer\u2014yet is gentleman thehands. Oelv is\nvery economical, a^you'll find\u2014for one bottle does\n, fifty dish-washings! You'll get more in Gay\u2014for the price\u2014than any\nother liquid or powder detergentf.It's really good! Ask today-tor\nLiquid Gay!\nmotor car was not a luxury but a\npart  of their means of livelihood.\nHe also felt the tax should be eliminated entirely.\nREMOVE8 BOTTLENECK\nRhys M. Sale, president of Ford\nMotor Company of Canada, said\nthe budget removed the uncertainty\nwhich had created a bottleneck in\ncar sales for the'last several weeks.\nThe tax reductions should mean a\nbrighter economic picture for Canada.\nRubber companies welcomed removal of the 10-per-cent excise tax\non tires and tubes.\nMining and exploration circles\nwere cheered by the budget action\nof making permanent certain tax\nconcessions in the mining and oil\nfields.\nMrs. Viola MacMillan, president\nof the Canadian Prospectors and\nDevelopers Association, called li\na step In the right direction which\nwould give mining companies further Incentive.\nLESS WHALE OIL\nOSLO (CP) - Reports from the\nAntarctic reveal Norwegian expeditions had produced only 435,370\nbarrels of whale oil at March 1, or\n50,000 fewer than at the same time\na year ago,\nMoscow radio reported Church-\nIll's  resignation  to  the   Russian'\npeople without comment,\nRome's  > pro * Communist   newspaper,  Paise  Sera,  called him  \"a\ngreat old mail.\"\nUplands Airport\nTo Build Tunnel\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A supersonic\nwind tunnel is to be built at Uplands airport at a cost of- about $3,-\n500,000. It was apparently part of a\ngrowing government program in\naviation research.\nConstruction of the tunnel was\nannounced: Wednesday in a joint\nstatement by Defence Production\nMinister ,Howe and Defence Minister Campney that said this \"may\nweir mark a new and exciting era in\nCanadian aviation research.\"\nConstruction on the tunnel will\nstart this Summer and is expected\nto take three years. It will have\na speed range of 200 to 3000 miles\nan hour with which to test the\nspeed, manoeuvrability, control-\nability and other performance qualities of new aircraft and missile\ndevelopments.\nYou Gin\nRaise\nChinchillas\nIn Th*\nBasement\nof Your Own\nHome.\nLOOK AT THESE ADVANTAGES\nTHE CHINCHILLA\nli   \u25a0   Strict Hao No Harbor, No\nVegetarian Odor, V-rmln\nIt   bear,  tha  world',   most   pr.clou.  fur.\nREADY MARKET FOR ALL PELTS\nAt last year', auction,  prime  pelt, averaged  5101.46.\nStart Now ...\nInsure Your Future\nWrite Today For Full Information To\nNELSON DAILY NEWS BOX. NO. 6732\nNew Alkyd Flat\nSEALS IN\nONE COAT\nHo primer noodedl Monomel\nVolvot qIvci a boouliful flnltK\nSodIj in one coat ovon on walk ,-\nand colling* with pa.ch-_.--up\nfracki. For eomplelo covorago\non difficult turfacoi, lomotlmoi\nand    extra    coat    ii    required,\n$7.95\n1_\n^VELVET\nGallon in 10\nStandard Colon\nSEE   YOUR   GENERAL   PAINT   DEALER\nBurns Lumber Co.\n602 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1180\n.Kootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District\nNOTICE\nOF ANNUAL MEETING\nZONE NO. 5\nV From Hall Creek, Ymir, Sheep Creek, Erie, Rosi\nSpur, Canadian Exploration and H.B. Mine,\nsouth to U.S. Border.\nNotice ii hereby given that the annual General Meeting of the Property owners of the above Zone will be\nheld in COMMUNITY HALL, SALMO, B.C. on MONDAY, 18th DAY OF APRIL, 1955 at 8:00 P.M.\nfor the following purposes:\n(a) To receive from the Trustees of the Zone a report\non the undertakings of the said Improvement District for the preceding fiscal year and a statement\nof the financial condition of the said Improvement\nDistrict prepared by the auditor.\n(b) To discuss with trie Trustees any matter relating\nto the undertakings or finance of the said Improvement District.\nTrustee: Mr. M. C. Donaldson,\nChairman of the meeting.\nMr. C. P. Perry in attendance.\n.     Dated: The 15th dav of March, 1955.\nBY ORDER OF THE BOARD,\nC. P. PERRY,\nSecretary.\nPROBLEMS?\nLET OUR WANT\nADS WORK\nFOR YOU...\nLooking for something special in\nan auto ... a home ... a worker\nfor your business? Then read, and\nuse the Want Ads for quick results!\nRemember, no other medium offers so much for so\nlittle. Just think \u2014 your message on a post card sent to\nall our readers, would cost you hundreds of dollars \u2014\nyet, this same message in a Want Ad, costs you just a\nfew cents per word. Get action ond results \u2014 Use Nelson\nDaily News Want Ads, regularly.\nPHONE 1844\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\u2022 -,\/.. \u2022\u25a0-, Yi,.. \u25a0:\u25a0., \u2022      \u25a0 \u25a0 .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.   \u25a0\u25a0}\n\u25a0    \u25a0\n Dicks Heads Fernie Curling;\nliner Meeting Ends Season\n5RNIE \u2014 The Fernie Curling\n) wound up Its season's activities\nthe annual dinner, hieeting,\nentation ot prizes, election of\n:ers and plans tor the 1955-58\n_n. Retiring president Jim\ner, reported a successful season\nicially and in the amount of\nIng played. A local btmspiel, an\n|atlonaV bonspiel, a mixed bon-\nj three club round robins and\n|ioct.out competition had been\nbit. In addition the ladies club\nIthe High School league had\nJed on successful activities.\nJcted were president Teller\nfirst vice-president, Robert\n, and second vice-president,\nPauls; secretary' treasurer,\ntence Sharun; executive combe, James Littler, Ernie Cham-\n] Louis Maffioli, Albert filcken,\n\u2022Colgur, Ernie Gibson, John\nFred Dawson, Tony Megale,\nlHarry McKay.\nle new executive was author-\nIto proceed with improvements\nlie club room and the installa-\n! s large trophy display case\nto arena approval and\n>le costs. Improved seating\nnodation for spectators was\n. Harry H. Gardner volun-\nhi to look into this! The club\nped to set up a rock replace-\nfund by setting aside $500\nbally for the purpose. It was\nI decided to hold the local bon\n, toward the end of the season\n\u25a0 than the middle of the curl\n[season. Due to lack of sufficient\n|rmation, the matter of affilla-\nI with the B.C. Curling Associa-\n1 was left to the executive.\n|lst of prize winning skips foi-\n: Local Bonspiel, No. 1 Event\u2014\nI Rahal   &   Sons),  first,  Albert\nMarasco,- second Albert Dlcken,\nNo. 2 Event (East Kootenay Lumber) first Albert Marasco,, second\nLouis Maffioli. No. 3 Event (Mc\nDonild's Consolidated) first Bruno\nMegale, second Stan Smith. No. 4\nEvent (Fernie Garage) first Albert\nDlcken, second Stan Smith. No. 5\nEvent (Quality > Meat) first Bob\nHainsworth, second Robert Craig.\nErnie Gibson's rink of Harry\nMcKay, third, Jack Uphill, second,\nand Ernie Chambers rolled up a\nrecord of 25 wins in 27 games, not\ncounting playoffs in the three\nround robin events to win all three\nround robins. Runnersup were first\nround robin, Jim Littler, second\nround robin, Bruno Megale, and\nthird round robin, Jack Irvine.\nSpic & Span knockout competition \u2014, first Bruno Megale, second\nAlbert Marasco.\nFRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\ntasonal Loans\nBills,  Fuel,  Repairs,  Cart,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. LTD.\nSuits 212,   Medical Arte Bldg.\nPHONE 178.\nAshburn (lose lo\nLeague Record\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Don't snicker when they call Richie Ashburn\nthe new \"iron man.\" The Philadelphia Phillies whippet centre fielder\nmay turn out to be the most durable athlete ln National League history.\nNobody ever confuses little Richie\nwith muscle men like big Ted Klus-\nzewski of Cincinnati or Gil Hodges\nof Brooklyn. He's built more like\nthe boy who tops the pyramid of\nstrong men in a carnival act. But\nAshburn stays in the lineup day\nafter day while stronger men rest\ntheir aching bones.\nAt the close of the 1B54 season,\nAshburn had played 730 consecutive\ngames since June 7, 1950. The National League record is 822, set by\nGus Suhr, Pittsburgh first baseman,\nfrom 1931 to 1937. With 92 games to\ngo, Ashburn should beat Suhr's\nmark by Aug. 1, barring injury.\nThe major league record of 2130,\nset by the late Lou Gehrig of New\nYork Yankees, Is beyond reach of\nAshburn or any other present day\nmajor leaguer.\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results of\nRugby Union matches in the United Kingdom Wednesday;\nCheltenham S, Gloucester 11\nBlalna 8, Abertlllery 8.\nShuttle Stars of B.C. and States\nInvade Nelson for Open Tournament\nBadminton stars of tha province\nalong with several from United\nStates points will conv^rgq on'Nelson this weekend for, the three'\nday annual West Kootenay > Badminton Tournament.    '      Y...Y'\nFrom Vancouver will corttt Bert\nFergus, one of Canada's top ranking players, and Rose McGregor1',\nformerly of Crawford Bay. Both\nare strong contenders for the\nsingles.'\nVictoria will send Ed Hedley, a\nformer Creston player, and 14-year-\nold Harvey Heard, who last spring\ncaptured the hearts ot all spectators when he excelled in the B.C,\njunior tournament in Nelson. He\nis expected to team up with Hedley\nin the men's doubles and should\nbe strong contenders for the title.\nAlthough last year's singles champion, Jack Harvey of Spokane, will\nbe unable to defend his crown due\nto playing In th^ National at Long\nBeach, California, the Inland Empire city will be represented by\nFrank Gaylord and Avery Paytoh.\nThe Okanagan city of Kelowna\nwill be depending on Chester Larson to bring honors to the orchard\nvalley of the province.\nThe Kootenays won't be without\ncontenders for the largest tournament of the season, for Kimberley\nwill send well-known Grant McGregor, Eric Bodln and Patsy Russel and Cranbrook will again be\nrepresented by the three Chlopan\nsisters. Bonnie Chlopan, last year's\nsingles crown winner, will be defending but will get a great deal\nof opposition from last year's runner-up, Rosa McGregor..\nMany other players will he on\nhand for this event, in which over\n200 sets will be played.\nThere are entries from Calista,\nKelowna, Spokane, Crawford Bay,\nCranbrook, Kimberley, Kinnaird,\nWillow Point, Nakuap.'Trail, Procter, Castlegar, Vancouver, Victoria,\nSalmo and Nelson.\nPlay will commence \u00bbt 9 a.m.\nFriday, continuing to 10 pjn. Although the draw ls made up to\n11:30 a.m., play will start again\nat 1 p.m. and players,are asked to\npick up their time cards from the\ndraw secretary.\nSaturday's play will get under\nway at 12:30 p.m. and commence\nuntil 6 p.m. when the contestants\nwill be entertained at a buffet supper, party and dance.\nSunday morning the finals ln the\nB and C flights will be staged with\ntha finals ln the Open beginning\nat 1 p.m.\nFRIDAY'S DRAW*\nMixed doubles, 8 a^n. \u2014 M. Browi.\n(Trail) and M. Creighton (Nelson vs\nF. Nutter (Nelson) and J. Corrlgan\n(Cranbrook); 3. Butling  (Nelson)\nand E. Chamber.(Calista) vs M. and\nE. Hearn (Salmo); M. Creighton and\nJ. Neill-on (Nelson) vs B. Chlopan\n(Cranbrook) and M. Wilson (Nelson); E. Chlopan (Cranbrook) and\nB. Fergus (Vancouver) vs B. McDonald ahd A. Wilson (Nelson;\nDonald and A. Wilson (Vancouver);\nE. Hougland and E. Megraw (Crawford Bay) vs D. Fife (Nelson) and\nN. Hughes (Vancouver); G. Jerome\n(Nelson) and R. Garner (Procter)\nvs A. \u25a0 Meneice and S. Donaldson\n(Nelson).\n9:30 a.m. \u2014' M. H. Grutchfield and\nK. StDenis (Salmo) vs P. Butling\nand W. Hamilton (Nelson); M. Bing\nand B. Latremouille (Nelson) vs\np. Russell and E. Bodln (Kimberley) ; E. \u2022 LeRoy and .6, Shannon\n(Willow Point) vs P: Ratellffe and\nG. McGregor (Kimberley); P. Buckley (Trail) and M. Horcoff (Castlegar) vs J. and J. DeYoung (Nelson);\nG. Muirhead and F. Waldie (Castlegar) vs K. and B. Thompson Nelson); R. and P. McGregor (Crawford Bay) vs G. Male ahd G. Johnson   (Nelson).\nLadles singles, 10 a.m. draw \u2014\nB. Chlopan (Cranbrok) vs N. Wet-\nmore (Trail); S- Butling (Nelson) vs\nB. Hougland (Crawford Bay).\nMen's   singles,   10   a.m.   \u2014   G.\nMeneice (Nelson) vs G. Malone\n(Trail); S. Donaldson  (Nelson) vs\nC. Dalin (Calista); J. Dunnett\n(Trail) vs N. Hughes (Vancouver);\nM. Harcroff (Castlegar) vs J. Corrlgan (Cranbrook).\n10:30 a.m. \u2014 B. Collinson (Nelson)\nvs B. Dalin (Calista); K. St.Denis\n(Salmo) vs P. McGregor (Crawford\nBay); L. Ponti (Salmo) vs E. Bodln\n(Kimberley); B. Latremouille. (Nel\nson) vs L. Fillers (Crawford Bay)';\nF. Waldie (Castlegar) vs E. Hearn\n(Salmo).\nLadies doubles 10:30 \u2014 G. Peircy\nand J. Hogan (Trail) vs P. Butling\nand F. Nutter (Nelson.\nSwimmer Crosses\nJuan de Fuca\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Bert Thomas.\n28-year-old distance swimmer from\nTacoma, Wash., Wednesday successfully crossed the chill, treacherous\nstrait of Juan de Fuca \u2014 on a ferry\nbetween here and Port Angeles,\nWash.\n\"But next time I take this trip,\nI Won't need a boat,\" he said as he\nwent aboard. He'll try to swim the\nstrait next Wednesday.\nBert Is off to Tacoma, Wash., to\nbring back the final members of\nhis swim team. One ls his daughter,\n11-year-old Sharon Lee, whom' he\nregards as \"essential\" to the success\nof his swim attempt.\n\"She supervises tha final stages\nof my training diet and adds up the\ncalories for meY Bert explained.\nWalter Wait Heads Curling Club;\nBanquet Winds Up 54-55 Season\nEXPORT\nCANADA'S   FINEST\nCIGARETTE\nNelson's curling season official\nly eame to a olo-e Wedneiday\nnight when 126 members attended\na banquet In the Silver Room.\nWalter Walt well known sportsman, was elected to head the club\nfor the 1865-56 season. To aid Mr.\nWalt, Max Sample was elected\nvice-president, with an executive\nof James Harvey, C. R. Mattice,\nDon Porteous, Bob Bruce and Art\nWaters.\nAlter past president Dave Cathcart welcomed the guests, to the\nannual banquet and vice-president\nWalter Wait did likewise, A. S.\nHorswlll proposed the toast \"to the\nroarin* game.\"\nMr. Horswlll emphasized the Importance of the Nelson Mid-Summer\nGillette\nONE-PIECE\nRAZOR\n\u2022 Here's the modern razor\nthat takes all the fuss out of\nshaving! You get clean, good-\nlooking shaves that make you\nfeel refreshed. This one-piece\nGtUitteRocketRazor changes\nbUdea instantly, cleans instantly. Get real shaving comfort with a Gillette Rocket.\nOold-Ploiod Gllloiio Doluxo\nRocko! Ono-Plo.o Raxor, 10- .\nBlade Dl.pons.r And Handy\nTravel Caia\u2014(1.S9\nNlckol-plalad GIII.Ho Rock-I\nRazor, 10-Blado Dl-pon-or\nHandySlyr-no And Travel Cas.-SI.S9\nTravel Caio  ' .\nBonspiel. It was an international\naffair and every effort should be\nmade ot strike up a game between\nthe traditional Scotchmen and a\nrink made up from Chinese members of the club, with all ln their\ntradltlonal dress.\nIf the Scots should lose, their\n\"wailing\" would be heard throughout the Interior of the province,\nhe suggested.\nMr. Mattice responded saying the\nNelson club had chalked up another year In history with formation of the West Ko6tenay Curling\nAssociation. This, said Mr. Mattice,\nwas either making history or repeating it, for many years ago the\nWest Kootenay Bonspiels were the\nbest in the province.\nTELLS OF  HISTORY\nCurling had been here a long\ntime, for a club was formed In Kaslo ln 1885. The following year rinks\nfrom Kaslo appeared In Nelson to\nplay games. In 1806 the B. C. Association was formed and from that\na great wealth of tradition had derived. ,\nHe told members of the three\ntypes of rocks that have been used.\nOne stone said Mr. Mattice was\nmade In 1511 and was nine inches\nlong, seven and a half inches wide\nand weighed 28 pounds. This type\nof rock lasted about 150 years, when\nIt was replaced by one that had\na hole for the thumb ahd finger\ngrooves. This type, he said, was a\nboulder with a handle on ii About\n1800, the present stone came into\nbeing and has been used by millions.\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nCOLDS\nmiiiiuui\nI   \"^*\"W-__BB-__-\u00bb**^Y, I\nurniisnai\nTrophies won throughout the season were presented by Dave Cathcart.\nJack Cathcart thrilled the mem-\n'bers with several Irish selections.\nBenny    Monteleone    accompanied\nhim at the piano.\nICE BED BAD\nMr. Wait said it had been a difficult season for the ice was bad,\nyet it was no fault of the Ice-makers. \"The bed of the rink.itself was\nlike the - contours of the Selkirk\nRange.\"\nOne of the main failures\" of the\nclub this season, he said, was the\nnumber of defaulted games recorded. He felt the thirds had fallen\ndown in their job, for they were\nresponsible for seeing that a rink\nwas notified of a game.\nIt is anticipated that new pipes,\neither steel or plastic, would be\ninstalled this year, Mr. Walt told\nmembers. The Civic Centre. Commission is striving to remedy this\nfault. Should the ice fail, then the\nSummer Bonspiel would be a thing\nof the past, for other centres were\nwaiting to step in'and take over.\nFor this reason the curling rink\nmust be fixed up, he stated. \"If the\npresent ice conditions continue to\nexist we will lose our spiel.\"\nOne'other question arose regarding the choosing of rinks for competitions, next winter.\n\u25a0 ' It was suggested skips pick three\nmembers and one new curler. If th.6\nwas done, then membership would\nincrease. The meeting passed a motion to this effect.\nLetters will be sent to city council and the civic centre commission\nasking that something be done\nabout new pipes for the curling\nrink before the Summer spiel.\nThe supper .was .catered to by the\nNelson Ladies Curling Club.\nPILES that\nItch and Burn\n.     If you now luffo-  from tha !tc_!__\n1 (o-e'-.i. -ad burning pain of pile- yoa\neanbohelp-d.\nJu-t gat o package of Ham-Hold, aa\nInternal   pllo   treatment,   at   nay   drug\n, itoro and wo ot dlre-tcd. You will bo\nEleased ot bow quickly your pile trouble\nrelieved. Only S1.59 for tha big 60\n, tablet \u25a0 package.  If you are not  1.0%\npleased after using Hem-Roid 2  or  0\n.  dayi, as a test, oik for your money back.\nRefund agreement by all-drug itoroo.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\n11 n.m. draw \u2014 B. and E. Chlopan\n(Cranbrook) vs G. Jerome and M.\nCreighton (Nelson); D. Muirhead\nand J, Swlhart (Trail) vs J. Miller\n(Nelson) M. John (Sal-no);'B, McDonald and O. Male (Nelson) vs B.\nDuff and L. Leroy (Willow Point);\nD. Fife and S. Butling <Nelson) vs\nM. Whltmore and M. Brown (Trail).\nMen's double \u2014 M. Ramsay and\nJ. Corrlgan (Cranbrook) vs. N.\nWatertleld and D. Thixton . (Nakusp); F. Waldie and F.. Harcroff\n(Castlegar) vs A, Wtlsoii and B.\nThompson (Nelson).\nLadies' doubles 11:30 draw\u2014M.\nHearn and M. H. Grutchfield (Salmo) vs L. Healy and M. Salter\n(Trail); M. Bing and K. Thompson\n(Nelson) vs R. McGregor and E.\nHougland (Crawford Bay).\nMen's double \u2014 J. Goodrlck and\nD. Yerex (Trail) vs J. Dunnett and\nB. Collinson (Nelson,); H. Coates ond\nR. Menzies (Nakusp) va B. Hamilton and J. Cummings (Willow\nPoint); L. Ponti and K. SLDenls\n(Salmo) vs M. Wilson and S.#Doh-\naldson (Nelson); E. Hearn (Salmo)\nand M. Creighton (Nelson) vs R.\nGarner (Procter) andD. Drew (Nelson).       J\nSADDLER WANTS\nLIGHTWEIGHT\nTITLE BOUT\nBUTTE, Mont. (AP)\u2014The world\nfeatherweight champion wants to\ntake a crack at the lightweight title.\nSandy Saddler, who whipped\nKenny Davis of Los Angeles ln\nButte Tuesday night in a non-title\nbout, says he is ready to strike\nat the lightweights.    \u25a0\nCharlie Johnston, Saddler's manager, said the champ wants a crack\nat the lightweight crown now held\nby Jimmy Carter.\n\"There's no one left of the featherweights to fight,\" Johnston said.\nWillie Ki.chum, Carter's manager,\nsaid in New York the 135-pound\nking would give up his title It he\ncould get a ^hot at the winner of\nt h e welterweight championship\nfight between Tony DeMarco and\nCarmen Basilio.\n\"Jimmy is going to meet Orlando Zulueta ln Washington April\n20 in a non-title fight,\" 6aid Kit-\nchum. \"After that we haven't any\nplans.\n\"Jimmy has Just about cleaned\nup the lightweight class. He fought\nDeMarco to a draw in Boston and\nwe would like ' to fight \u2022 lor the\nwelterweight title.\"\nWomen Cagers Seek\nCanadian Title\nVANCOUVER (CP)- Saskatoon\nAces and . Vancouver Eilers will\ntangle here tonight in the first\ngame of a best-of-five series for the\nCanadian women's basketball championship.\nEilers will be seeking their sixth\nstraight Canadian iitle. The team Is\nthe same group which lost eight\nstraight games.in the tournament\nat the Pan-American Games in\nMexico City recently.\nSaskatoon Is. the team which deposed of Calgary Maxwells 75-53 in\nCalgary Wednesday, to take a best-\nof-three 6eries in two straight\ngames. \u2022 \u25a0\nTo Train Lawn\nTennis Players\nVANCOUVER.(CP) - The B. C\nLawn Tennis Association will\nlaunch a training program this year\ndesigned to encourage development\namong junior players on the lower\nB. C. Mainland.\nAssociation president Jim Skel-\nton said coaching clinics will be\nconducted at schools and public\ncourts in Vancouver and New Westminster by some of the area's top\nprofessional and amateur players.\nKencos Seek\nCage Crown\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 Hopes of\nPenticton will rest on Penticton\nKencos Friday and Saturday when\nthey meet Vancouver Eilers in a\ntwo-game total-point series for the\nsenior \"B\" basketball championship of B. C. Kencos are Interior\nchamps while the Eilers swept away\nall opposition at, the Coast.\nFalse Teeth Often\nHave a Certain Odor!\nSoak your plates\nin Polident daily\nto avoid \"Denture Breath\"\nPolident is the specially designed\ncleanser that keeps false teeth\u2014and\nbreath\u2014clean and fresh always.\nFollow thesq simple rules.\n1. Noyer use a bruih on them I Your\ndental plates are much softer than\nnatural teeth. Brushing wears down\nfitting ridges so they get loose.\n2. Never uie soap or toothpaste I They\ncan leave film which collects bacteria and food particles, a major\ncause ot offensive \"Denture Breath.\"\n3. Use a soaklng-typa cleanser nwdo for\nfalse tooth only... Polldentl Polident is\nthe denture cleanser recommended\nby more dentists than any other.\nNo brushing, no handling of soapy\npita that can slip'arid break. Poli\ndent gets where a Drush can't reach.\nBe_t of all, Polident always leaves\nfalse teeth odorfree.Get the world's\nlargest selling denture cleanser,\nPolident, at your drug counter.\n'          .    D.I43\niiuiiiiiimiiiiii|iiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiinnni\n\"Sorry, Bud, You\nCan't Get In\"\nKANSAS Crry;(AP)-Kath. .\noniel.Loverone, chairman ol the\nboard of Kansas City Athletics,\ngot (topped at the gate when he\ndropped by the Municipal Stadium to see how preparations\nwere coming for the opening\ngame next Tuesday.\n\"Sorry, bud, you can't get In,\"\nsaid a workman, explaining\ncasual passers-by weren't allowed In for 1^ look-see anytime they felt like it,\nleverone said later he didn't \u2022\nthink it would do any good,to\nexplain he was part owner of\nthe club using the park. He was\nabout to leave when another\nworkman Identified Leverone\u2014\nfrom a recent television appearance. \/\n11111iMJinm11.111i11.1111.111.1111i1.111.il\nAthletics Win\nWestern Title\nALBERNI, B.C. (CP)-The Alberni Athletics .rolled to their first\nwestern Canada senior men's basketball championship Wednesday\nnight by crushing Edmonton Towne'\nHallers 92-67 ln the fifth and deciding game of their final > series.\nThe fast-breaking British Columbia champions grabbed a big lead\nIn the first quarter and never looked back.\nThey now will meet the winner\not the eastern Canada series between Ottawa and Sault Ste. Marie\nfor the Dominion title ln Alberni.\nTown Hallers, who forced the\ndeciding game by bouncing back\nwith a 61-59 victory Tuesday night,\nwere never close ih the final.\n, Athletics racked up seven unanswered points after the opening\nwhistle and held a 46-29 lead at\nhalf-time.\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results of\nsoccer matches ln the United Kingdom Wednesday:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\n(Division III, Southern)\nTorquay U 1, Swindon Town 1\nSCOTTI8H LEAGUE (Division A)\nAberdeen vs Raith R postponed\nto AprU 23.\nHearts 2, Kilmarnock 2.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nCALDER CUP\nPittsburgh.3, Buffalo S\nPittsburgh leads best-of-seven final 3-1\nWESTERN INTERMEDIATB\nKenora t, Brandon 1\nKenora leads best-of-five western\nsemi-finals 2-1\nWESTERN INTERMEDIATE A\nTrail 5, Ponoka 7 (overtime)\nPonoka wins' best-of-five semifinal series1 8-0.\nHockey Rioters Fined\nMONTREAL (CP) - Twenty,\nseven participants ln Montreal's\nMarch 17 hockey riot Wednesday\nwere ordered to pay fines ranging\nfrom $25 to $100.\nAll were ordered to post $200\nbonds to keep the peace for a year\nor spend 30 days in jail.\ntttflSON DAIiy NEWS,THURSDAY, APRIL?, 1955 \u2014 \u00bb\nThirdGame Tonight...\nIrvin to feely On \"Thin\n^i\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nn \u2022\nin\ns\nMONTREAL (CP)-Detroit'Red\nWings, full of confidence, arrived\nin Montreal Wednesday night bent\non mopping up Montreal Canadiens in the Stanley Cup final.\nWinners 4-? and 7-1 In the iiist\ntwo games;on Detroit ice, the tied\nWings, were'favorites to wind up\nthe Series in short order. The third\nand fourth, games are scheduled\nfor tonight and Saturday, and unless Canadiens show a reversal of\nform on home ice they won't be\nin the picture long.\n\"I'm only a rookie coach and I\ndon't dare prodlct anything,\" laid\ncoach Jimmy Skinner, \"Of oourie\nI'm .pretty happy the way things\nare,\n\"I feel rather sorry for coach\nDlok Irvin of Canadiens because\nhe has. had a rough season, what\nwith Maurice Richard's suspension\nand everything,\n\"But  I > don't think   Richard's\npresence would have made much\ndifference'   In    the    games    In\nDetroit\"\nCoach Dick Irvin ot Canadiens\nsurprisingly wasn't downhearted.\nHe took Ln stride the loss of the\nfirst two games of the best-of-seven\nseries. But be made no predictions.\nHe still .has to go with what he\ncalls his \"thin red line.\" Jean Beliveau, the big Montreal centre, ls\nstill 111 but playable. The infection\nBeliveau suffered on arrival in Detroit hasn't cleared up.\nDickie Moore, who went berserk\nin the Tuesday game in Detroit,\nwill be back ln the lineup for Montreal tonight- Moore blew his top\nand went charging about the ice\nin a futile effort to catch up with\nDetroit's Ted Lindsay.\n\"Lindsay was bugging me all\nthe time,\" said Moore who drew\na minor penalty, a misconduct and\nfinally a game misconduct penalty.\nThe penalties cost him $75.\n\"I haven't considered any further\npunishment,\" said president Clar-\nenct   Campbell   of   the   National\nHockey League.\nFANS GLOOMY\nBut no matter how Irvin himself felt about it, you could cut the\ngloom among Montreal fans with\na knife.\nThey found l\u00a3 hard to believe\nthat their team, top dog ln the.Na-'\ntional Hockey League through\nmost   of   the   season,   appeared\nbeaded for quick elimination from\nthe Stanley Cup playoffs.\n. The gloom settled ln thick and\nfast Tuesday - night when Canadians took on, unmerciful 7-1 shellacking from Detroit Red Wings.-\nTho Wings are riding the crest of a\n15-game' winning streak.\nPOSITIONS CHANGED\nTo Montreal'fans It seems onlj\na short time ago that the favoitie'\ntopic ot conversation around the\nNHL was the poor showing of the\nDetroit team. At that time tht\nWings were third in the league\nand not showing the form that won\nthem the Stanley Cup last year\nNow the positions have been reversed and the question is \"what\nhappened to Canadiens?\"\nIn Detroit Tuesday they were\ndescribed aa weak In goal, shaky\non defence and up front and\nwobbly straight down centre\nboth ways.\nCanadians ara without Maurice\n(Rocket)    Richard,   fiery   right-\nwinger suspended for a flit and\nstick-swinging episode In Boston\nMarch   13,  Jean   Beliveau, tho(r\nstar centre, hai a mouth ailment\nkeeping him off solid food.\nWith the teams on the road between Detroit and Montreal lt was\nnot known If coach Dick Irvin of\nCanadiens    planned   any   major\nshakeup.\nIf he is, one problem confronting him would be that farm teams\nto which he might ordinarily turn\nfor help are all In their own postseason playoffs.\nChief's Retirement\nBecomes Official\nLYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) \u2014 The\nretirement of Allie (Chief) Reynolds became official Wednesday\nwhen the former New York Yankees pitcher was placed on the club's\nvoluntary retired list\nReynolds announced his desire to\nquit baseball due to an ailing back\nin January but the club dldh't receive a formal application for retirement from the righthander-until Wednesday.\nReynolds, 37, bad a 182-107 record\ntor 13 years ln the league. He shares\n(he record for most world series\nvictories, seven, with another ex-\nYankee pitcher, Red Ruffing.\nHOW IS YOUR\nFISHING TACKLE?\nReliable fishing tackle will ensure success for that Eaiter\nweekend fishing trip. See us\nnow! Our tackle stock Is at Its\nbest\nSPINNING TACKLE\nSPINNING REELS: Priced from _ $9.50 to $36.00\nSPINNING RODS: Priced from $6.00 to $30.00\nSPINNING LURES: Priced from 49tJ to $3.50\nJACK BOYCE Men s Shop\n514 BAKER ST. PHONE 160\nBetter Living\nPlanned as a positive contribution to better living        1|k\nfor Canadians, the International Calvert'House Architectural   ^i\nCompetition for the \"Canadian Home of Tomorrow\" attracted   M\n661 entries from 17 different countries, the largest response\never accorded a competition of this kind anywhere in the world.\nPlan tubmitttd by George Abtam \u25a0\nand James Craig, WillawdaU. Ont\nAivardtd Honorable Mention.\nA brochure illustrating the winning house doiigni\n(elected by i distinguished jury is available\non request. Write to Calvert Distillers Ltd.\nAmheritburg, Ont\nThis cdvcillsomoiil is nol published or displayed by ths Liquor Control Board or by tho Government ot British Columbia.\n'\"^\u25a0y\"' \u25a0\u2022-\u2022-\"\u25a0 \u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022>\u2022'\u25a0\u2022 ' ' -    '\n*^L_^kt^t_^__^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^^^^^^^^\n\u25a0 \u25a0>..;..- ...     ..;..\nMHH\n pps\u2014: ^pp\n\u2022\n\u25a0 'trjttttffi'it^ff'tt'tfi\n.........\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7,1955\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nY\nW\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n-EASrttJSttbiPSSIEM,\nTHET AH WERE A SWEET\nOLE-\nWIPE,VEILEDINMP\u00a3fl\nBAG,VISITS SLAYER\nOFAUNTABB1EH\nn\n'He. I go t' the ehali; but ah wll I\nalius tot\/e him, art tils orphan\nSon villi alius respeck him,\"\nshe sobs.\n.ill,,\nU*\u00bb BAR8A1N BENNV - THERE 15\ntwwc m m! wi \u00abwst auay\n.-.SPICWN! VOU Will PRETEND TO\nPISH   rtHllECORBia\/lM\/WPI\nWADE ASHORE!\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... 1240 on the dial\n. (Pacific Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY,\n8:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:18-Chapel in ths Sky\n130\u2014News\n7:85\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:45\u2014Farm Fare\n7:50-Rise V Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9:00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n10:15\u2014News\n10j20\u2014Musicale\n10:30\u2014Story Parade     ,\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014News\n11;0_\u2014Call One-Nine\n12:00\u2014Noon-Day Show\n13:10\u2014Shopper's Guide\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Brosdcast\n12:55\u2014Here's Our Story\n1:00-CKLN Reports\nl:1.--Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Sports Column\nAPRIL 7,,1955    .,\n1:40-Lighter Side'\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:O0r-B'. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trine-Canada Mptmoo\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n8:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n4:00\u2014Concert Hall\n4:30\u2014Last o{ the Mohlcsns\n6:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:15\u2014International Commentary\n5:20\u2014Musicale\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight on s Star\n5:40\u2014Journey to Fashion\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n5:50\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Rawhide\n8:15\u2014Hit Parade\n6:49\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:30\u2014Nelson High School\n8:00\u2014Footloose Among the\nPygmies\n8:30\u2014T.B.A.\n9:00\u2014Concert Orchestrs\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Theatre\n.10-00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Way Back When\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\n11:05\u2014Vespers\nFRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1955\n8:30\u2014Koffee snd Ksy\n7:00\u2014New!\n7:05\u2014Kof.ee and Ksy\n7:15\u2014Chapel In ths Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Koffee and Kay\n7:45\u2014Farm Fare\n7:50\u2014Rise \"n' Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9:00\u2014Homemaker Hsrmonles\n10:00-CKLN Entertains\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Musicale\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n12:00\u2014Noonday Show\n12:10\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n10:30\u2014Houseparty\n10:45\u2014Portia Faces Life\n11:00\u2014Welcome Travelers\n11:30\u2014Road of Life\n11:45\u2014Secret Storm\n13:00\u2014Big Payoff (L)\n12:30\u2014Armchair Adventure\n15:45\u2014Bob Crosby\n1:00\u2014On Your Account\n1:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n1:45\u2014Brighter Day\n2:00\u2014Old World Flavour\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3:00\u2014Love of Life\n8:15\u2014Woman's World\n3:30\u2014Garry Moore\n4:00\u2014What's  Cookin'T\n4:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n5:00\u2014Rick Myers Show\n5:30\u2014Smilin' Ed\n8:0O\u2014The Green Thumb\nQ:15\u2014Armchair Adventure\n6:25\u2014Weather Girl\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards (L)\n8:45\u2014Perry Como\n7:00\u2014Star Showcase\n7:30\u2014Theatre at Home\n8:00\u2014Lucky Sport Time\n8:30\u2014Topper\n9:00\u2014Square Dance Party\n9:30\u2014Favorite Story\n10:00\u2014The Lineup (L)\n10:30\u2014Flamingo Theatre\n11:00\u2014Texas Wrestling\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n10:10\u2014Test Psttern\n10:25\u2014Color Test Program\n10:4O\u2014Bible Reading\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014Curtain Time\n1:30\u2014TV Kitchen\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:0O\u2014The Greatest Gift\n3:15\u2014Golden Windows\n3:30\u2014One Man's Family\n3:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00-Hawklris Falls\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Superman\n6:30\u2014Bar 6 Bunkhouse\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Cavalcade of Sport\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Red Buttons\n8:30\u2014Life of Riley -\n9:00\u2014Big Story\n9:30\u2014Dear Phoebe\n10:00\u2014The Star and the Story\n10:30\u2014The Falcon\n11:00\u2014Four in a Jeep\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\nFRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1955\n10:45\u2014Inner Flame\n11:00\u2014Welcome Travelers\n11:30\u2014Road of Life\n11:45\u2014Secret Storm\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff (L)\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby (L)\n12:45\u2014Bob Crosby (L)\n1:00\u2014On Your Account\n1:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n1:45\u2014Brighter Day\n2:00\u2014Old World Flavour\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3:00\u2014Love of Life\n3:15\u2014Robert Q. Lewis\n3:30\u2014Armchair Adventure\n3:45\u2014Garry Moore\n4:00\u2014What's Cooking\n4:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n5:00\u2014Rick Myers Show\n5:80\u2014Range Rider\n6:00\u2014Barker Bill Cartoons\n6:15\u2014Superman\n6:25\u2014Weather Girl\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards (L)\n6:45\u2014Jane Froman\n7:00\u20141 Search for Adventure\n7:30\u2014Beulah\n8:00\u2014Bishop Sheen\n8:30\u2014Climax\n9:30\u2014International Police\n10:00\u2014Four  Star   Playhouse\n10:30\u2014Willie\n11:00\u2014Follow That Man\n10:10\u2014Test Pattern\n10:25\u2014Color. Test Program\n10:40\u2014Bible Reading\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n11:00\u2014Homo\nNoon\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014Petticoot Politics\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014The Greatest Gift\n3:15\u2014Golden Windows\n3:30\u2014One Man's Family\n3:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00\u2014Hawkins Falls\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\n6:30\u2014Bar 6 Bunkhouse\n8:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00-Cisco Kid\n7:30\u2014Dinah Shore\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014You Bet Your Life\n8:30\u2014Waterfront\n9:00\u2014Dragnet\n9:30\u20149:30 Theatre\n10:00\u2014Lux Video Theatre\n11:00\u2014Racket Squad\n11:30\u2014News Headlines\nKREM-TV \u2014Channel 2\n2:45\u2014Test Pattern\n3:00\u2014\"What a Man\"\n4:50\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n4:45\u2014The Story Lady\n5:00\u2014Krem's Kamera\n5:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n5:55\u2014Johnnie's Flower Time\n8:00\u2014Whst's the Weather?\n:05\u2014Western Movietime\n:00\u2014Roller Derby \\\n:30\u2014Orient Express\n:00\u2014Crusade in Europe\n30\u2014Stecklers Beauty Digest\n:45\u2014Find a Hobby\n:00\u2014International Playhouse\n30\u2014Old Time Comedy\n50\u2014\"Eternally Yours\"\n'\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n11:30-\nFRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1955\n2:45\u2014Test Pattern\n3:00\u2014\"Forgotten Village\"\n4:30\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n4:45\u2014The Story Lady\n5:00\u2014The Service Hour\n5:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n5:55\u2014What's the Weather?\n6:00\u2014Western Movietime\n7:00\u2014Ozzie and Harriet (ABC)\n7:30\u2014Name's the Same (ABC)\n8:00\u2014Meet Corliss Archer\n8:30\u2014China Smith\n9:00\u2014Dollar a Second (ABC)\n9:30\u2014The Vise  (ABC)\n10:00\u2014\"Victoria the Great\"\n11:50\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nFor\nG.E.   ULTRA VI8ION   TV\nIt's\nTHE BAY ELECTRIC\n1480 Bay Ave. Trail\nPHONE 939\nIN   CRESTON   IT\"8\nCreston Electric\nFOR   R.C.A.   VICTOR   TV\nSALES AND SERVICE\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Here's Our Story\nL00-CKLN Reports\nl:15-Hollywood Calling\n1:80\u2014Sports Column\n1:40\u2014Lighter Side\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Paclflc News.\n3:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n:00\u2014B. C. Roundup\n:30-The Little Loyalty\n:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n15\u2014International Commentary\ni:20\u2014Musicale\ni:30\u2014Sports News\n:35\u2014Spotlight on a Star\nGeneral Electric\nTelevision\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\nS74 Baker St Phont 260\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300\nEvenings \u2014 Phone 617-X\nDally Except Sundays\nand Holidays\nMe  &  Me\n5:40\u2014Journey to Fashion\n5:45\u2014Bowling Newa\nB:50-News   .\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n8:15\u2014Christian Science Progrun\n8:80\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014St Joseph's High\n7:45\u2014Report from Parliament H\n8:00\u2014This Is My Story\n8:30\u2014Vsncouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014The Nation's Business\n9:15\u2014John Fisher\n9:30\u2014Sports. Page\n10:00\u2014News\n10:13\u2014By tnvltatlon\n10:30\u2014Curtain Melodies\n11:00-NEWS Night Cap\n11:05\u2014Vespers\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nFRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1955\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30-Naws\n7:35\u2014 Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Musical Program\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014The Passion of Our Lord\nJesus Christ\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Orchestrsl Concert\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Musical Program\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and Hli Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25- -Showcaet\n13:30\u2014Farm -Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Art Gallery Recital\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014Trans-Cansdo MatlneJ\n3:30\u2014Programe Resume\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:00\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:80\u2014The Little Loyalty\n5:00\u2014Traiflo Jamboree\n5:15\u2014International Commentar;\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014The Homely Virtues\n6:00\u2014Featlvsl Choir\n6:30\u2014Songs of My People\n7:00\u2014News\n7:80\u2014Toronto Symphony\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Organ Recital\n9:15-John Fisher\n9:30\u2014Sports Page\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15--By Invitation\n10:30\u2014Curtain Melodies\nSATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1955\n7:00\u2014News and Weather\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:80-News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014BUI Good\n8:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n8:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Sounding Brass\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Sounds Fun\n10:00\u2014Post Msrk U.K. \u25a0\n10:30\u2014World Church News\n10:45\u2014News snd Westher\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:30\u2014Songs to Grow On\n3:45\u2014Great Days in Canadian Sport\n3:00\u2014NEWS\n8:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n8:15\u2014New-oundland Spindrift\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n3:45-Thls Week\n4:00\u2014Buff Estes Sextet\n4:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n4:30-Now 1 Ask You\n5:00\u2014Sons of the Ssddle\n5:80\u2014Meet Lorraine\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05-N.H.L. Hockey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\n8:00\u2014Carl fspscott Choir\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Rsy Norris Quintet\n9:30\u2014Dixieland Jazi\n10 00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Bill Goo.\n10:30\u2014Serensde for Strings\nFire Nof Caused\nBy Propane Gas\nPENTICTON, B. C. (CP) \u2014 Fire\nat the home of S. J. Rathbone of\nKaleden March 27 did not involve\nthe explosion of a propane gas tank,\nit was disclosed following investigation.\nAn explosion which followed the\nfire wss in an oil drum in a garage\nstorage shed. It was erroneously reported that the propane gas tank\nhad exploded.\nThe Canadian Press regrets any\nInconvenience which may hav*^\nbeen caused through the publication\nof the erroneous report\nCampney Plans Mon\nCuts In Defence\nVANCOUVER (CP)- Def**n\nMinister Ralph Campney says\nhopes to make further reductions\nthe $2,000,000,000 budget for his (\npsrtment, but will do it cautious\n\"I hope to save without endangi\ning services,\" he ssid in sn inti\nview. \"To do so would be ve\nfoolish.\"\nThe defence department budjj\nwas   slsshed   by   $125,000,000\nyear.\nLiberal  party  rally  here is\nVancouver to open a new federl\ncustoms building.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Girl's\nnickname\nB. Fringe of\nhair on the\nforehead\nt. One hundred\nlao (Ind.)\n(0. Nest-build-\nIng fish\n(8. A.)\n12. Showery\n13. Cease*\nto have\n14. Capital\n(Nor.)\n18. Small\nperfumed\nbe?\n16. Northeast\n(abbr.)\n17. Subsided\n15. From\n(prefix)\n19. Queer\n. 22. God of wu\n(Scand.\nMyth.)\n23. Pact\n24. The\nstltchblrd\n(Maori)\n26. Viper\n38.A sequence\nof rulers\nfrom same\natock\n82. Gutdo'o\nlowest note\n83. King of th*\nAmalekltel'\n84. Hawaiian\nbird\n85. Idle talk\n87. Outer\ncovering\nof a tree\n89. Run away\nand marry\n40. Mother-\nof-peari\n41. Vexes\n42. Epecie*\nof Iri*\n43. Small\ndepression\n44. Obnoxious\nplant\nDOWN\n1, River in\nCanada\n1 Stir tip\nt. River (It)\n4. French\nmarshal\n8. Poising\n11. Showy\nflower\n15. Capu-\nchin\nmonkey\n17. Dullest\n20. Knock\n21. Silver\n(sym.)\n22.lt\nla\n(corf\ntractcd)\n25. Exclamation\nBaOHH  MIIHHla\nI.HHR   EH3iai=(-.\nn\u00abB   MHfclil\nDH-IHHS   HER\n8. In a cocked 26. Hole-\nposition\nr. u. s.\nhumorist\nt. Avarlclou)\n9. Ugly old\nwoman\nboring tool\n27. Dull\n29. Bark, u\na dog\n10. Hot\n81. Couple*\n;r_!'ji_w KM-iac'\nBUllisH   BEBB\nYesterday's Antra\n8$. Tree\n28. Fish\n27. Unadorned\n38. Mcasuro\nof\nland\n40. At th*\npresent\ntime\n*\n1\n1\nj\n4\nl\n5\n6\n7\n8\n%\n9\n^\nto\nII\n11\n'^A\ni!\n4\n%\nIF\nlb\n%\n%\n17\n^t\nA\n19\nia\nil\n'^\nXT.\nt*\n%\n\u00ab\n^\/\/(\n24\nIS\n%\n%\nW.\n\/\/\/\n23\nV)\n}0\n31\nit\n1\n%\nl\nJW\n'?\n\/*'\n%\nw\nii\n39\n1\nto\n\u2022\n%7\nI\nM.\n\u00ab.\n44\n^\nM\n^\/A\n4-1\nDAILY CRYPIOQCOTE\u2014Here's how to work Itt\nAXTDLBAAXR\nI*  LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply Mands for another.  In this example A It used\nfor tli* three L's, X for the two O'*, et*. Single letter* apo\u00bb\ntrochlea, the length and formation of the word* are all hlnta\nta&t day Uw cod* letter* ar* different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nUPNOXENO    Sit-   iCM J   CFO    LEFO    Bit\nONRIVJ   PQXrWU-_I.QXVXI_U. \u2022\nYesterday'* Crypfcxruotei WHEW DEATH HAS TAKEN\nOFF THE MASK, THEY WILL KNOW ONE ANOTHB8\n\u2014PENN.\nDistributed by King Features BysiUcatt\n______\n\u25a0   Y \u25a0\u25a0    -\n \u2022*-?*-*\u25a0 \u2014\u2014\u2014 -  ..   i , ;-y\nH\u00bbMMYW^lW|fWWa\u00bb#w,uiww n maji ^lu-umpu. j.uliim^to\n'*W\\\nHOUSECLEANING TIME FINDS\nTHINGS YOU'LL WANT TO SELL\nTry a Want Ad-\nPhone 1844\n BIRTHS\nDeGUGLIELMO - Ti Mr. and\nMrs. James DeGugllelmo, 1219 Cedar Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital. April 5, a son.\nSHLAKOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Shlakoff, Shoreacres, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nApril 6, a son.\nZOELLNER - To Mr. and Mrs.\nW. J. Zoellner of Grand Forks, at\nthe Grand Forks Community Hospital, April 4, a son.\n* HERMSEN \u2014 To Mr.' and Mrs.\nAnton Hermsen of Grand Forks, at\nthe Grand Forks Community Hospital April 5, a son,\n   HELP WANTED _\nCATERER TO TAKE OVER CAT-\nering for Nelson Golf Club. All\nfacilities provided, including living accommodation. All profits go\nto caterer. Also require steward\nfor bar, monthly salary. Consideration will be given to married\ncouple to handle both positions\nPeriod of employment May 1 to\nOct. 1. Apply In writing to Sec\nof Nelson Golf Club, Box 141,\nNelson, B. C.\nMAJOR APPLIANCE SALESMAN\nfor large retail organization in\nTrail. Must be neat appearing and\naggressive. Commission basis with\ndrawing account. Write Box 5763,\nNelson News. \u2014\nWANTED - CASHIER. SOME\nknowledge of typing necessary.\nApply evenings Civic Theatre.\nWANTED STEADY BARBER AT\nonce, 334 Baker St., Nelson. B.C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED JUNIOR STEN-\nographer, high school graduate,\navailable. Box 202, Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 611-L-l.    '\nIF BUILDING A HOME OR RE-\nmodelling, tor reasonable estimates, phone 434-X-2.        ,\nHAVE YOUR GARDEN PLOWED\nwith a rotary plow. Phone 808-L\nafter 6 p.m.\nDRESSMAKER. ALTERATIONS A\nspecialty. Reasonable rates. 1678-L\nPHONE    1815-R   FOR   CAPABLE\nbaby-sitter.\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice, automatic heat. Day.\nweek, or monthly rate. Allen\nHotel. 171 Baker St\t\nSMALL FAMILY REQUIRE.2 OR\n3 bedroom house, immediately.\nCan supply references- if neees-\nsary. Phone 278-X.\t\n4-ROOM UNFURNISHED APT.\nclose in, piped for gas, and wired\nfor electric tank heater, $45 mth.\nPhone 662 business hours.\nFOR RENT: 4-ROOM COTTAGE,\nsemi-furnished, with good garden. 3 minutes. walk to Nelson\nferry. Ph. 1623-L-2 mornings.\nFOR RENT: FURNISHED SUITE,\nMay 1 to September 1, adults.\nPhone 394-R evenings.\nFURNISHED APT. PRIVATE EN-\ntrance, close in. Adults. 719 Stan-\nley St.\t\nB C. TELEPHONE EMPLOYER\nwishes to rent 3-bedroom house\nIn Fairview. Ph. 1714-L.\nFOR RENT - MODERN 2-BED-\nroom furnished house April 15 to\nSept. 15. Phone 754-X.\t\nFURNISHED SUITE, 1 B.R., AND\ngarage. North Shore, Vs mile from\nferry, $65. Available now. Ph. 289.\n3-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT,\npartly furnished. Apply 311 Vernon St., adults.\n1 ROOM SUITE FURNISHED, GAS\nstove, Iridge, and linens, suit\ncouple.  171 Baker St.\nFURNISHED   HOME   FOR   RENT,\n3 bedrooms. April 12 to Sept.\nPhone 1096.\nFURN. 2 OR 3 HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms, clean and warm. Suit couple.  Phone 335-X.\nCLEAN 3-ROOM SELF-CONTAIN-\ned suite. 718 Observatory St. or\nbus line.\n3-ROOM   APT.,   PARTLY   FURN-\nished, block from Baker. Call 306\nVictoria St.\nFOR RENT: ATTRACTIVE FURN-\nished   suite,   adults   only.   Apply\n112 Vernon St\nWANT TO RENT FAMILY HOME.\nPhone 617-X.\t\nHOUSEKEEPING CABINS. NORTH\nShore Motel   Phone 168.\nSELF-CONTAINED 3-ROOM APT.\nprivate entrance-central. Ph. 1542.\nUNFURNISHED    2-ROOM    SUITE\nfor rent Phone 1652-X\nFOR   RENT   -   3-ROOM   SUITE.\n917 Edgewood Avenue. Ph. 650-X.\n3-ROOM SUITE, HEATED, FURN\nelectric range. Central, Ph. 653-R.\nHousekeeping or sleeping\nroom, Phone 359-R.\nATTRACTIVE   SELF-CONTAINED\n3-room suite. Phone 697-X.\nFurnished   light   house-\nkeeping room for rent. Ph. 879-Y.\nWANTED   1  OR  2-ROOM  CABIN\nclose to Nelson ferry. Phone 90.\n2-BEDROOM   HOUSE   TO   RENT,\n131 Chatham St.\nPARTLY    FURNISHED    2-ROOM\nsuite, 723 Silica St\u201e phone 614-L.\nFOR   RENT:   5-ROOM   HOUSE\nand 1-room cottage, Ph. 484-R-l\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFOR SALE: REGISTERED AYR-\nshire bull from R.O.P. dam, 16\nmonths old. W. L. Haule, Canyon,\nB. C. phone 397-X.\n2 COWS FOR SALE. 1 FRESHEN-\ned 3 months ago with 2nd calf.\nJohn Kabatoff. 1st Raspberry village. Castlegar.\npublic; notice\nNAVIGABLE WATERS\nPROTECTION ACT\nR.S.C. 1952, CHAPTER 193\nPROPOSED HIGHWAY BRIDGE\nOVER THE WEST ARM\nOF KOOTENAY LAKE   '\nAT NELSON, B. C.\nThe British Columbia Toll Highways and Bridges Authority, being\nan Agent of Her Majesty tn right\nof the Province of British Columbia, hereby gives notice that lt has,\nunder Section 7 of the said Act,\ndeposited with the Minister of Public* Works at Ottawa, and in the\noffice of the District Registrar of\nthe Land Registry District of Nelson at Nelson, B. C. a description\nof the site and plan of a highway\nbridge proposed to be built over\nthe West Arm of Kootenay Lake at\nNelson. B. C, from a point on the\nhigh water line on the south bank\napproximately 148 feet east of the\nexisting south ferry approach centre line, to a point on the high water\nline on the north bank approximately 505 feet east of the existing north\nferry approach centre line.\nAnd take notice that after the\nexpiration of one month from the\ndate of the first publication of the\nnotice the British Columbia Toll\nHighways and Bridges Authority\nwill under Section 7 of the said Act\napply to the Minister of Public\nWjrks at his office ln the City of\nOttawa for approval of the said\nsite and plan. '\nDated this 15th day of March,\n1955. '\nJ. V. FISHER,\nSecretary.\nBritish   Columbia\nToll Highways and\nBridges   Authority\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria,  B.  C.\nAUCTION SALE\nTIMBER   SALE  X62635\nThere will be offered for sale at\nPublic Auction, at 11:00 a.m., on\nMay 30th, 1955, in the office of the\nForest Ranger, Winlaw, B. C, the\nLicence X82635, to cut 1,479,000 cubic feet of Spruce, Balsam, Hemlock, Fir, Yellow Pine, Larch, White\nPine, Cedar and Lodgefiole' Pine,\nand 158.000 lineal feet of cedar poles\nand piling, on an area situated on\nVacant Crown Land on Trozzo\nCreek, Kootenay Land District.\nSix (6) years will be allowed for\nremoval of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend\nthe auction in person may submit a\nsealed tender, to be opened at the\nhour of auction and treated as one\nbid.'\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister of\nForests, Victoria, B. C. or the District Forester, Nelson, B. C, or the\nForest Ranger, Winlaw, B. C.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section   161)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot 8 of the\nSouth Half of Lot 4274) Kootenay\nDistrict, Plan 1123.\nProof having been filed In my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 21232-A to the above mentioned lands in the name of Mary\nAnn Hascarl and bearing date the\n8th June, 1916, I HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE of my Intention at the expiration of one calendar month from\nthe first publication hereof to issue\nProvisional Certificate of Title In\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having any Information with\nreference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle is requested to. communicate\nwith the underslgnedf1\nL. A. McPHAlL,\nDeputy Registrar\nDATED AT NELSON, B. C.\nthis 22nd day of March, 1055.\"\nDate of first publication,\nMarch  24,  1955.\nNOTICE\nNO.  6  HIGHWAY\u2014Nelson-Vernon\n(MONASHEE SECTION)\nEffective immediately No. 6 Highway from Inonoaklin Valley Road\nCrossing in Kaslo-Slocan District to\n5 ml. East of Cherryville,. ln the\nNorth Okanagan District (Known as\nthe Monashee Pass Road), will be\nclosed until further notice due to\nroad conditions.\nJ.   A.   DENNISON.\nDivisional Engineer\nCourt House.\nNelson, B. -C.\nApril 6, 1955\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nFIR LUMBER WANTED. 2X4 TO\n2x10 R\/L.' Carload quantity Payment on each car when loaded\nWrite giving details to Box 5719.\nNelson Daily News.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST   \u2014   LADIES'   PURSE   ON\nYmir   Highway.   Urgently   needed.\nPhone 369-R-l.\t\nLOST: GLASSES IN GREEN CASE\nPlease return to Mrs. Davis, Court\nHouse. Reward. .\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCVCLM,   BICYCLES\nSee\nEmerge\nAND\nDEAL WITH CONFIDENCE\nWITH\nTHE LARGEST CAR DEALER\nIN THE INTERIOR OF B.C.\n19$4 Austin Sedan\n1952 Morris Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Vanguard Sedan\n1951 Austin Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n* \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Chevrolet V8 Sedan\n1955 Pontiac V8 Sedan\n1955 Pontiac 6 Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet 6 Sedan\n1955 Plymouth 6 Sedan\n1954 Pontiac Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1949 Pontiac Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1952 Dodge Pickup\n1950 Studebaker Pickup\n1949 Ford 1 Ton\n1947 Willys Pickup\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\nRueben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\nPhone 1135     803 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPERSONAL\nDRINKING PROBLEMS?'\nPhone   Alcoholics   Anonymous\n161-L-3   or   366-R   or   Box   388\nNelson\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nWANTED 25 H.P MERCURY OUT-\nboard. Phone 430-L aftCT 5 p.m.\n's\nUsed Cars\nand Trucks\nSpecial In Good Used Cars\n1952 Austin Somerset\nIn A-l  condition.\n1952 Studebaker Sedan\n1951   Hudson Sedan\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Hillman Sedan\n1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951   Hillman __ _\nExtra Special\n1951 HILLMAN\nLike   New  Inside  and  Out,\nLow Mileage.\nA   Real   Trouble-Free   Car.\nTRUCK SPECIALS\n1954 Studebaker Pickup\n1950 Mercury Pickup\nYOUR STUDEBAKER  AND\nHILLMAN DEALER\nService\nLTD.\n213 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1234\nFOR SALE: L190 I.H.C. TRUCK,\n193 W.B., 1950 10.00-20 tires, A-l\ncondition. $3500. Apply Box 614\nphone 582-M evenings.\nFOR SALE - 1949 DODGE SEDAN.\nThis car ls in lovely condition\nPrice $1095.  Phone  151-X.\nNplann Batty Jfamfi\nClassified     Advertising Rates\nPer line, 1 time 20\n2 consecutive times   .  . 35\n3 consecutive times .45\n4. 5 and 6 consecutive\ntimes .60\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions   ' .20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc. - 20c per line\nfirst Insertion 16c per Line each\nsubsequent insertion\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not  More  Than  Listed  Here)\nBy carrier per week\n- in advance .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month ..... .        $ 1.25\nThree months         $ 3.75\nSix months              S 7 50\nOne year        ' $15.00\nMal) In Canada outside Nelson\nOne month $ 1.00\nThree months           I $ 2.75\nSix months      $ 5.50\nOne rear $10 00\nWhera. extra postage Is required\nabove  rates   olus  oostage\nCLASSIFIED   ADS GET   RESULTS\nMACHINERY\nSUPER VALUE\nUSED TRACTORS\n1\u2014D2 Caterpillar\n1\u2014D4 with dozer and winch.\n1\u2014D4 Cat., like new. 400 hrs,\nWide gauge with Cat, angledozer, elec, starter and lights.\n1\u2014D6 Cat. Late model, with\ndozer and winch. Std gauge.\n1\u2014D6 Cat. Late model with\ndozer and winch Wide gauge.\n'1\u2014D7, with dozer and winch.\n1\u2014D8, like new; 675 hours. With\n'  angledozer and winch.\n1\u2014International TD9, wide, with\ndozer and winch available.\n1\u2014TD14, wide gauge, with dozer\nand winch.\n1\u20145-Ton  Dodge Logging Truck.\n1\u20143-Ton Chev Special, with\n4-5-Yd. Dump Body.\n1\u2014D4 Cat. Logging Donkey.\n1-BU15 Skagit with 2 main\ndrums and 2 swing drums.\nl-iGU5 Skagit 2-drum hoist.\n1\u2014Sawmill, like new, with GM\ndlesel unit.\nSee H. \"Fritz'  Farenholtz.\nC. Ross or Alex-McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.  LTD.\n614 Railway St..    Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7,19SS\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nm ununited\nFOR SALE: BUILDING AND LOX\nsituated ln wholesale section, Apply Box 5784, Dally News.\nTO^BTBEEfftOTTICTJi-FTN\nor out ot town. Ph. S71-X--\u00ab-ter 4.\nPOr SALI - 'S-flBIAdOH HOME\nclose In. Phone 1289-X.\nTOMB   -.MBtiOOM   HWst\nlor cash. Phone 1185-L.\nBUSINESS OPPOft I UNITIES\nGROCERY AND CONFECTION\nary bushiest for sale Good location Aopl.v 1103 Hall Mines Road\nduSlNEsS For saLe: Apply\nPetite Dress Shop. Box 308, Salmo\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nassaybrs and mine\nREPRESENTATIVES\nWIDDOWSON   Is\nE.   W   WIDDOWSON   tt   CO\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nELMES\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  _ 15\nAkaitcho       .60\nAlgom Uranium    17.80\nAhacon Lead              3.48\nAnglo Huronlan     13.00\nArea 58\nArjon         .' \u201e 18\nAtlas YK  - 12\nAumaque  13%\nAunor         2.08\nBagamac          .14\nBarymln             2.60\nBase Metals   84\nBelloterre          2.10\nBevcourt         19\nBobjo  31\nBoymar Gold   14\nBralorne          2.70\nBroulan             1.60\nBrunswick          11.85\nBuffalo Ank   62\nBuff Can  28\nBuff Red Lake        .15\nCallffan .  35\nCampbell R L      9.90\nCan Llbblum          2.50\nS   KLklES    ROSSlAKD. B   C\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD  C.   AFFLECK,   M.E.I.C\nB.C  Land Surveyor P  Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St.     Nelson     Phone 1238\nTHE\nSELKIRK'S\nEQUIPMENT CO., LTD.\nAgents for:\nLincoln Electric\nCanadian Controllers\nB. F. Goodrich\nBriggs and Stratton\nSimonds Canada Saw\nUsed Sawmill Equipment\nPHONE 1590\n520 Lake St. Nelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE - 8M 1949 FORD\ntractor, power lift. 2 bottom plow\nand 6 ft. mower. Excellent condition. Cheap for cash. F. O\nHampton. Arrow  Park.  B.C.\nFOR   RENT:   210   COMPRESSOR.\nPh. 445-Y or write 912 Latimer.\nrOR   SALI   MlbCfcLLANEOUi\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies: new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings, cham\nsteel plate and sh-pes Atlas Iron\nSt Metals Ltd.. 250 Prior St..\nVancouver. B.C' Phone PAclf'.c\n6357\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS,\ncopper, brass, lead, aluminum\nHighest prices, prompt payment\nActive Trading, 935 E. Cordova,\nVancouver.\nUSED 12-PCE. HEAVY' ALUM1N-\num waterless cook-ware set. Excellent condition. No reasonable\noffer refused. Box 5746, Nelson\nNews.\n\u2022UI'LER'S NEW AND USED FUR\nniture. basement 301 Bakei Si\nPhone 47 \"We buy used furni\nture \"\nFOR SALE: 1 WATER WHEEL, 1\nBeatty pump, 1 800-gal. galv. tank\nDavid Nelson, Crescent Valley,\nB.C.\nCHILD'S CRIB AND PLAYPEN\nbaby carriage and 4'6\" bedstead.\nElectric motor, Mandrill and\nsaw. Gas heater. Ph. 1250-Y .\nWHITE PORCELAIN PROPANE\nstove, also studio lounge Best\noffers.  Phoi . 1211-R.\nV   SHAYLERV P.C.   BOX   282\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB C Land S-trveyor, Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED \"\nMachine Shop     Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding  Phone 593. 324 Vernon St\nCan Mal\nCanmet     _.\nCariboo Gold  \t\nCastle Trelh      \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nCentral Pore \t\nChesterville   \t\nChlmo G.     \t\nCochenour \t\nCoin Lake  \t\nConiaurum \t\nCons. Golden Arrow\nC M & S\nCons Sannorm   \t\nConwest\nIN8URANCE AND REAL E8TATE\nMODlp OFFICE SPACE TO\nrent Phone Charles Catalano, 376\nInsurance and Real Estate Agents.\nTrail.\nTIMBER   CRUISER\nrimber Cruiser   Anywhere tn -C\nE   HIRD   SLOCAN  CITY   B.C\nBOMBER HOrSTS 1500 LBS CA-\npacity. $45. while they last Active\nTrading Co.. 935 E Cordova, Van\nCHESTERFIELD AND 2 CHAIRS,\ngood conditon. Radio and record\nplayer and cabinet. Ph. 742-Y.\nM 1 C R O N I C HEARING AIDS -\nWrite P  O  Box 39. Nelson, B C\nFINE PORTRAITS BY PETTIT OF\nCastlegar\nFOUR-BURNER  NEW   ELECTRIC\nrange, used 5 months   Ph. 682-R.\nLADY'S BICYCLE, GOOD CONDI-\ntion. Ph. 1426-L mornings.\nPROPERTY   HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nFOR SALE: ORE MILL BLDG. (50-\nton cap.) like new. Will consider\nmoving and rebuilding, or sell as\nis. For particulars phone 312, or\nwrite I. H. Toevs, Box 873, Crah-\nbrook. B. C.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SUITABLE\nsecond mortgages or agreements,\nNelson properties. Give details\nand discount you will allow. Reply Box 5750. Daily News.\n\u25a05-ROOMED HOUSE AND BATH,\n6 lots in Fairview. Close to school\nand bus, splendid view, $4500.\nPhone 792-X.\nFOR SALE: LOT 70X140, NORTH\nShore,   Jorgensan's   Subdivision,\nWrite te E. Bebb, Montrose, B.C.\n(near Trail, \u00bb. C.) Phone 3293.\nBEDROOM HOUSE\nMUST SELL 3\ngood   location\nservatory.\nApply   310   Ob-\nFOR SALE: 5-ROOM HOUSE ON\n4 acres. A. Keyes, Blueberry\nCreek, B C,         ,      _\nHouse For sale on airpor'i\"\nroad, 2% miles from Salmo. Ph.\n1365-L, Nelson, \t\nWant to buy mod1_-in 3-bed-\nroom home. Early occupancy not\nessential. Box 5761, Daily News\nWANTED   TO   BUY  2-BEDROOM\nhouse, Fairview or Uphill district.\nReply Box 5751. Daily News.\n4-BED.R.   HOUSE   WITH   OTHER\nbuildings, 3  miles  out of town.\nBox 5909, Daily News.\n-(Continued in Next Column)\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK \u2014 The stock market\nwas higher Wednesday with steels\na buying feature.\nGains reached around 2 points at\nthe best. Losses, with the exception\nof some extreme cases, went to\naround a point.\nTORONTO\u2014Stock market trading, which sped along at a record\npace, eased slightly toward the\nclose.\nMost sections of the market moved ahead with industrials in the\nlead. Westons led the advance with\na jump of 3... Confederation Life\nclimbed three, Ford A 2V4 and\nCanadian Canners one.\nBase metals were also strong.\nMONTREAL \u2014 The stock market\nvas higher at the close of active\n.rading Wednesday. Gains were\nmostly fractional.\nMiscellaneous Industrials, papers,\nutilities, beverages, senior metals,\nsenior oils and steels were higher.\nCarriers were shaded.\nMines were strong.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The overall picture on the stock market\nWednesday continued satisfactory\nwith extra investment demand and\nthe appearance of some good company statements aiding sentiment.\nGilt-edged stocks eased in the\nabsence of interest after opening\nsteady. Rails were, firm with Canadian Pacific higher.\n.46\ni 2.25\n.78\n3.35\n.80\n.18\n.36\n1.89\n.75\n.20\n.45\n.30\n31.00\n.28\nS.B0\nCons Discovery       2.96\nCroinor . .....: _ 20\nDelnite      1.04\nDetta R L    34\nDome    17.00\nDonalda   34\nDuvex        .23\nDyno      2.08\nEast Amphl      _      .10%\nEast  Malartic           2.40\nEast Sullivan          6.05\nEastern Metals      1.04\nElder Gold    _ 71\nElsol  14\nEstella               11\nEureka  *      1.20\nFalconbridge    24.00\nFed Kirk       _ 11\nFrobisher    _,      4.05\nGeco    12.50\nGiant Yel            6.90\nGod's Lake       .68\nGold Hawk\nGoldcrest\nGold Eagle\nGolden Manitou\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)\"\u2014 Receipts on\nthe livestock market Wednesday\nwere light due to spring road bans.\nOfferings, including 380 cattle and\n20 calves up to 11 a.m., were mostly\ngood butcher steers.\nChoice steers strong and active,\n18.50-19; good 17.50-18.25; medium\n18.50-17.50; common 14-16; choice\nheifers fully steady 16.75-17.50; good\n15.75-16.50; medium 14.50-15.50; common 13-14; good cows steady to\nstrong 12.50-13.50, odd sales up to\n14; medium 11-12.25; common 9.50-\n10.50; canners and cutters 6-9; good\nbulls steady 11.50-12.50; odd sales\nup to 13; common to medium 9.50-11.\nGood feeder steers firm 16.50-\n17.50; good stock steers 16-17; common to medium 13-15.50; good to\nchoice veal firm 21-25; common to\nmedium 12-20.\nHogs 15 cents higher- Tuesday at\n21.65 A grade; three loads of hogs\nto eastern shippers at 16.85, live-\nweight; sows steady 14 liveweight.\nGood lambs unchanged 18-18.25.\nt\nMetals Prices\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y., .15.\nZinc, East St. Louis, 12.\nWinnineq Grain\nWINNIPEG   (CP) \u2014 Cash  grain\nprices:\nOats: 1 feed, 76%;\nBarley: 1 feed, 1.04%.\nSeven Drug Suspects\nHeld Following Raid\n- VANCOUVER (CP) - Seven\npersons are being held for Invest!\ngation following raids by police\novernight on known drug hangouts.\nPolice said they seized drug paraphernalia and are awaiting analysis\nof it before laying charges.\n 25\n 17%\n 13%\n      2.10\nGunnar Gold          15.00\nHallnor             3.30\nHardrock    _ 12\nHasaga         - 20\nHeadway            2.79\nHollinger         17.85\nHomer Y K     , 19\nHudson Bay       59.00\nInspiration          2.55\nInt.-Nickel    63.50\nJack Waite\nJellicoe \u25a0     \t\nJoliet Que\t\nKerr Addison \t\nKeyboycon\nKirk-Hudson Bay .\nKirkland Lake\nKirk Townslte \t\nLabrador\n.12%\n.12\n.52\n16.50\n.18\n.35\n.48\n.14\n..    10.25\nLake Dufault       1.34\nLakeshore          6.00\nLake Wasa     24\nLamaque      \u201e    8.75\nLeitch 62\nLexindin  \u201e....' 97\nLlngman (new)  \u201e \u201e      .20\nLittle Long Lac         .67\nLouvicourt   36\nMacassa          _    1.71\nMacDonald        _\u201e 78\nMacLeod Cock        1.32\nMacfie Ex         \u201e.      .14\nMadsen R L   _     1.70\nMagnet\nMalartic G F   .\nMart McNeely .\nMclntyre Pore\nMcKenzie R L .\nMcMarmac\nMcWatlers\n.17\n1.80\n.20\n89.00\n.40\n.45\n.35\nMining Corp  -    18.00\nMoneta \t\nNew Alger\nNew Bidlimaque\nNew Calumet\nNew Kelore\n.52\n.33\n.27\n.54\n.41\nNew Laguerre ...._ 18\nNew Rouyn Merger .\nNew Mylamaque .\nNew Thurbols   ....\nNipissing    \t\nNoranda   \t\nNorgold\n.16\n.32\n.45\n2.45\n88.00\n.97\nNormetals      4.05\nNorth Can\nNorth Inca .\nO'Brien .\nOgama\nO'Leary\nOrenada   ....\nOsisko \t\nPamour\nParamaque\nPaymaster\n.40\n.14\n.65\n.25\n.44\n.11\n.41\n.62\n.12\n.31\nPickle Crop       1.36\nPioneer      2.04\nPlacer Develop   ...,    31.00\nPowell Rouyn  50\nPreston E D _     8.00\nQuebec Lab        10\nQuebec Man       72\nQuebec Nickel       1.51\nQueenston    20\nQuemont   \t\nRadlore   \t\nRayrock    \t\nReeves Mac ....\nRegcourt\nRoche L L   ...\nSan Antonio\nShawkey\n 11.50\n '   2.20\n1.41\n.24\n.41\n1.95\n.14\nSherritt Gordon      5.75 '\nSigma M       6.00\nSllvermiller          .95\nSilanco  - 15\nSlscoe 41\nStadancona  - -      .32\nSteeloy         30\nSteep Rock       _    9.05\nSudbury Cont  _ 36\nSurf Inlet        12\nSylvanlte  _      1.59\nTeck Hughes              3.05\nThompson-Lund  '..      .55\nTomblll 26\nTorbrit       1.20\nTowagamac         12\nTrans Cont Res   40\nUnion Mining  26\nUnited Keno           6.90\nUpper Canada         1.05\nVentures     29.00\nVicour         58\nViolamac       1.85\nWaite Amulet           13.15\nWrite Hargreaves      2.15\nOILS\nAnglo Can      4.75\nA P Consolidated        .40\nB A Oil     26.00\nCalgary & Edmonton     15.62%\nCdn Atlantic           6.00\nCentral Leduc             1.55\nCremlcal Research  -    8.40\nDalhousle  - 16%\nDel Rio     1.15\nFederated Pete      4.15\nHIghwood Sr 12\nHome       9.05\nImperial Oil     37.50\nInter Pe(\u00ab     26.00\nKroy _    1.23\nLis Pete      S.30\nMid Cont 50\nNordon -      .12\nPacific Pete      10.37%\nRoyalite     11.37%\nUnited Oils      1.20\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  _     28%\nAlgoma Steel      52\nAluminum       82%\nAmer Tel k Tel   180%\nArgus      .       22%\nAtlas St. \/     14\nBathurst Power      61\nBeatHe Bros       _      7%\nDom Tar Se Chemical\nDom Textiles      \t\nDom Magnesium\t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFleet  Air  \t\nFord A \t\nGatineau       \t\nGreat Lakes    ,\t\nGypsum Lime  -\nHiram Walker \t\nImperial Oil   \t\nImp Tobacco \t\nInt. Nickel   \t\nInt  Pete     \t\nInt Securities \t\nKelvinator      \t\nLaura Secord  _.\nLoblaw A   \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris     \t\nMcCol] Frontenac \t\nMont Loco     \t\nMoore Corp   \u25a0 \t\nNat Steel Car \t\nPage Hershey \t\nPowell River  _....\nPower Corp   \t\nRuss Industries \t\nShawinigan      \t\nSicks Brew   .....\nSteel of Canada \t\nStandard Paving .\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian     \t\nB.C. Electric 4s    ..\nB.C. Electric 4%l\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers B ....\nB.C. Power A\n45%\n9\n95%\n104\n7\n13\n16%\nCan Cement  _     38\nCan Malting     19%\nCan Breweries      26%\nCan Canners   \u201e     33\nCan Collieries     91-5\nCan Oil      56\nCockshutt          7%\nC M & S            81\nCons Papers      65%\nDist Seagram            30%\nDom Foundries      19%\nDom Steel __ Coal B      19\nDom Stores     32\n- 11\n        I\n10%\n..     7%      |\n..  ia\n..    28%\n..    23%\n.. 225\n.. 110%     I\n..    81%     '\n..    33H\n...    55\n..    67%     .\n- 37%\n...    11   '\n-.    \u00ab3%\n..    26\n..    88\n...    20\n...    18%     I\n...    44%     I\n...    71% ,   I\n...      9%\n...    35\n...    16%\n...    36\n...    27\nUnion Gas of Can \t\nUnited Corp B \t\nUnited Steel   \t\nWeston George\t\nWinnipeg Electric pfd\n42%\n53%\n17\n53%\n28%\n43%\n32%\n40%\n19\n15%\n90\n.13\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prions)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorhe \u2014\nCariboo Gold  _\nEstella     \u2014\nGiant Mascot  \u2014\nGrandview     _\nHighland Bell     \t\nPac Eastern Gold ...\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nQuatslno   \t\nReeves MacDonald .\nSheep Creek\t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilver Ridge   \t\nSliver Standard \t\nSurf Inlet\nWestern Explorstion ....\nWestern Tungsten \t\nYale  _\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian \t\nA P Consolidated \t\nCalgary St Edmonton ....\nCommonwealth \t\nHome\t\nMid West Gas  \u2014\nOkalta Com \u2014\nPacific Pete     \u2014\nPeace River Gas  _\nRoyalite  ,.\t\nVanalta \t\nVulcan  ...\nINDUSTRIALS\nLucky Lager \t\nInt Brew B \t\nWestern Plywoods \t\n.72\n1.80\n.75\n.10\n.75%\n.35\n.46\n.11\n8.00\n2.00\n.20\n1.55\n.78   ,\nI.7S\n.22\n.65\n.10\n.61\n.11\n.47\n4.68\n.39\n15.00\n8.40\n9.00\n2.65\n1.35\n10.28\n7.50\n11.00\n.19H\n.30\n8.00\n5.25\n12.37%\nTime to think...\nPlanning for the future H Important-\nreaching decisions and acting on them h ad-\nImportant for effective planning.\nIf you are undecided about your Wltl, w\u00ab\ncan be of help to you in arranging your\nplant to the best advantage of those you\nwish to protect.\nWe invite you to talk the matter over wfm\nus in confidence and without obligation.\nAilr for our booklet\n\"A Practical Way In Plan teen Will\"\nroyal trust\n'COMPANY\n424 WEST  PENDER ST., VANCOUVER\nGEORGE O. VA1E, MANAGED\nMA.  8411\nThis advertisement is nol published or displayed by\nths Liquor Control Board or by Ihe Government ol British CoTumfcM\n 12 _. NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1955\nEaster Cards\nEASTER EGGS\nEASTER BUNNIES\nEASTER EGG DYES\nand\nCHOCOLATES\nSuitably Boxed\nfor Easter Qiving\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nIngrid Bergman III\nROME CAP) \u2014 Actress Ingrid\nBergman has scarlet fever and Is\nconfined to bed with a temperature\niip to 104. Friends Wednesday reported that the Swedish star came\ndown with the disease a day after\nIjer return to Rome from a visit\nlh Sweden. Her condition is not\nSerious.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive   Funeral   Service\"\nAMBULANCE   SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St Phone 361\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker Street\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n676 Baker St. Phone 285\nAuditors\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and  REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516  FRONT ST. PHONE 63\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nCancer \"Cure\"\nDisappointing\nMADISON, Wis. (AP) \u2014 A two-\nfisted new cancer drug has slugged\na few of MO hopeless human cancers\nwith dramatic temporary effects,\ntwo University of Wisconsin researchers report.\nTwo of these cancer victims are\nstill alive a year later, but this is\nnot a cure, and \"we don't think we\nhave the right drug yet,\" they emphasize.\nLike other drugs, H can damage\nthe bone marrow and blood system. The most spectacular recoveries for a time came in two patients who also developed anemia\nand later succumbed.\nIt was developed by Dr. Charles\nHeidelberger, noted biochemist, in\nco-operation with a pharmaceutical\nfirm, Lederle Laboratories. He\nfound it could cure some kinds of\ncancers in animals.\nEaster Blooms Fly\nTo Distant Points\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 The annual\nairlift of Easter daffodil blooms has\nstarted here for distribution in the\nPrairies and eastern Canada.\nFive and possibly six Trans-Canada Air Lines, freight-carrying\nNorth Stars will be brought into\nservice to handle 6,000,000 blooms\nfrom the neighboring Saanich peninsula.\nEach aircraft wil) carry 11,000 cartons of 35 to 40 blooms.\nOne aircraft left' Tuesday and\nothers leave Wednesday and Friday.\nThe cargo space of regular passenger (planes have also been loaded\nwith the blooms.\nOrders for the blooms come frOm\nas far away as Prince Edward Island\nand Great Slave Lake.\nat\nSbuJintj,\nol\nCurtains\nLarge and\nSmall\nRUFFLED WHITE FLUFFY DOT MARQUISETTE\n11.95\n- 21.50\n9.95\n12.95\n9.25\n5! 75\n5.75\n4.50\n6.50\n5.95\n6 95\n5.95\n92\" x 90\".\nPair    \t\n122\" x 90\", S dot.\nPair    _. *..\n65\" x 90\".\nPair    _\t\nSHIR BACK. 8 DOT.\n72\" x 90\" _\t\nPLAIN RUFFLED..\n84\" x 90\".  _\t\nLARGE DOTTED.\n46\"  x  Bl\". \t\nRAYON  PLAIN.\n63\" x  90\". \t\nCHROMSPUN   PANELS.\n42\" x 81\". Pair \t\nAQUA-CEL CURTAINS. Extra sheer.\n40\" x 81\". Pair \t\nFLOCKED RAYON PANELS.\n41\" x 81\". Pair  \t\nNYLON.\n42\" x 81\". Pair  \t\nORLON.\n42\" x 81\". Pair \t\nSTERLING\n1 HOME FURNISHERS     ^^\n441 BAKER ST. PHONE 553\n*_2h.\nCanada Taxes Low\nBy Comparison\nWith U.S., U.K.\nOTTAWA   (CP\n\u2014The  new  per-\nsonal Income tax\nrates announced\nTuesday night by Finance Minister\nHarriB\nindicate these comparative\nfigures\nlor   Canada,   the\nUnited\nKingdom and the United States:\nEarned\nSingle\nMarried\nMarried\nIncome\nPerson Childless 2 Child.\nCanadian\n$ 1,200\n...   .   26\n\u2014\n\u2014\n2,000\n    130\n\u2014\n\u2014\n4,000\n    450\n'\u00bb  280\nS   235\n10,000\n.. 1,780\n1,500\n1.428\nUnited\nKingdom\n$ 1,200\n.   t  115\n|    52\n\u2014\n2,000\n.. ..    318\n222\n$    78\n4,000\n  1,060\n938\n700\n10,000\n.... 4,036\n3,920\n3,705\nUnited\nStateo\n$ 1,200\n....$    98\n\u2014\n\u2014\n2,000\n      242\n?   122\n\u2014\n4,000\n      625\n485\n245\n10,000\n  2,096\n1,636\n1,372\nInvermere Has\nBuilding Boom\nINVERMERE \u2014 Invermere appears to be on the verge of a building boom, with at least three large\nbuilding projects scheduled for\nearly start of construction.\nThe new hospital for the Windermere District has progressed beyond the dream stage and i6 now\na practical fact on paper and is due\nfor construction-as. soon as necessary preliminaries are completed.\nA new post office for the village\nwill also be started this .spring and\nplans arq now awaiting signing of\na contract between the federal government and W. C. Davidson of Invermere, who is providing a building for lease to the post office department.\nA third project will be a new\nCanadian Legion Club room on land\ndonated by tlie Invermere Contracting Company close to the curling\nrink. s\nIt is rumored that a new medical\nclinic is also planned for the district and it is likely that 10 new\nresidences will be under construction within a few months.\n3 RE-ELECTED BY\nUNITED CHURCH\nINVERMERE \u2014 At the annual\ncongregational meeting of Trinity\nUnited Church here M. E. Tunna-\ncliffe and Mrs, A. J. Dobbie, were\nre-elected for three year ter.ns as\nchurch managers.\nA gratifying report on Sunday\nSchool attendance was'given. Last\nSunday's attendance was a record 61\nand the attendance was steady\nthroughout the Winter. Mrs. Earl\nWilder is Sunday School superintendent.\nRev. F. E. McPhee of Kimberley\naddressed the meeting, and Leslie\nMarples gave a comprehensive review of the year's work.\nThe church has undertaken to\nraise $600 for Union College at the\nUBC during the next three years\nand $250 was given for missionary\npurposes during the past year.\nVancouver Man To Be\nFestival Adjudicator\nINVERMERE \u2014 John Emerson of\nVancouver has been appointed adjudicator for the East Kootenay\nDrama Festival which will be held\nApril 30 in the Lake Windermere\nMemorial Community Centre at Invermere.\nIt is hoped to have five plays presented in the one-day festival ip-\ncluding plays from Kimberley, Fernie, Flagstone, and Windermere District. Mrs. R. B. Harris, secretary\nof the East Kootenay Drama Association is in charge of arrangements.\nPRESERVE8 HISTORY\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Aluminum\nfrom Canada is being used more\nand more to help preserve historic\nbuildings in the United Kingdom.\nOne British firm has made a specialty of aluminum roofs for old\nchurches and is now completing the\nfourth installationof this kind, in\nOxfordshire.\nTo Import U.S.\nHeavy Wafer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada plans\nto Import substantial quantities of\nheavy water from the United States\nduring the next three years for use\nin this, country's atomic energy\nprogram'.\n. This was disclosed tonight by a\ngovernment official after Finance\nMinister Harris announced in''his\nbudget that a 15-per-cent duty on\nImports of heavy water has been\nremoved, effective immediately, until July 1, 1958.\nVThe move won't affect anyone\nbecause the government, through\nAECL. is the only purchaser of the\nmaterial. Removal of the duty\nwould reflect a saving of about $1,-\n000,000 in the books of the company.\nTHESE TWO ARMY NURSE8 are shopping\nfor their Spring bonnets. Stationed at Kingston^\nMilitary Hospital Lieut. (N\/8) P. M. Betti of Sydney River, N.8., and Lieut H. L. McCaffery of Saint\nStephens, N.B., will be all dressed up for the big\nEaster Parade . . . weatherman permitting.\n\u2014National Defence photo.\nNews of the Day\nRATE8: SOc llni, 40c line black face type; larger type ratei on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nFuller  Brush   Representative\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phone 133S\nPeople's Credit Jewellers Agent,\n615 Victoria Street Phone 1367.\nGuaranteed radio service.'McKay\n& Stretton. Phone 1555.\nStove Wood, $11.00, big load.\nPhone 447\nEAGLES   SOCIAL   MEMBERSHIP\nCLUB  MEET8 TONIGHT\nHave-your diamond remounted at\nCUTLER'S Jewellery, 611 Baker St.\nFor   Watkins   quality   products\nPhone 1215-Y.\nNew Crinoline Slips, all sizes at\nEBERLE'8  ON   BAKER  ST,\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIR8.\nFor Rent \u2014 Small furnished^ house\nfor 5 months, May 1. Phone 870-Y.\nFloors sanded and polished.\nOak, maple and tile supplied.\nA. H. Ronmark \u2014 Phone 1229-L-3\nKARDEK the strongest and most\nversatile car-top carrier safely carries any kind of cargo.\nRegular general meeting Nelson\nbranch Canadian Legion tonight at\n8 sharp.\nNylon Corduroy in colors. Reg.\n$2.00 yd., Special $1.39.\nSTERLING   HOME   FURNISHERS\nFor a special treat, visit the\nTILLICUM DINING ROOM\nover  the  Easter   weekend.\nNothing  Bespeaks  the Beauty  of\nEaster as well as  FLOWERS  . . .\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nL.A. to Canadian Legion CARD\nPARTY, Monday, AprU 18, 8'p.m.\nPrice 50c.\nROBERT NOLTE\nMASTER TAILOR\n253 Baker Street\nFor Indian Sweaters\u20142 top wools-\nMary Maxim and Newlands Sportsman \u2014 Complete assortment of patterns at EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFast color Wabasso prints in small\nand bold designs. Some bordered\npatterns.\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nComplete Selection of Potted Plants\nfor Easter . . . Shop early.\nMAC'S   FLOWER   SHOP\n321  BAKER ST. PHONE 910\nFLOWERS  FOR   EVERY\nOCCASION\nPHONE 167\nGRIZZELLES' FLORISTS\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classitied Way\nCity of Nelson\nPUBLIC\nNOTICE\nThe bus route on Falls Street, Delbruck\nStreet, and Stanley Street to the South\nof Houston Street will be discontinued\ncommencing Thursday, April 7th,\n1955, until road conditions improve.\nNELON TRANSPORTATION\nCOMMITTEE\nRemember friends and relatives\nwith a Rustcraft Easter Card . .\nKOOTENAY   8TATIONER8\nAND 8P0RT8 8HOP\nNEL80N SALES A 8ERVICE LTD.\ncan supply your Spring Cleaning\nrequirements. Call ln at\n746   BAKER  ST,  OR  PHONE  977\nB. C. Rose Bushes are still the\nbeat. Priced as low as $1.00 each.\nOrder today from COVENTRY'S\nFLOWER SHOP.\n3. M. Glaze Coat Ceiling Panels\n12\"xl2\", I6\"xl6\", '16\"x32\", white,\nivory.\nT.  H.  WATERS  __  CO.  LTD.\nPhone 156        101 Hall St., Nelson\nRemember your Church, Home,\nand Friends at Eaiter time with\nbright Eaiter Flowers from\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER 8HOP\nv PHONE 962\nWash your car, windows, outside\nfurniture, etc., with a Dixon Auto\nWasher.   Screws   on   garden\" hose,\ncleans quickly and easily.\n.   HIPPflRSON'S\n4 used bicycles in excellent condition, also wide selection of used\nranges at THE HOME FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, 413 Hall St., ph. 1660.\nSee our selection offered at all time\nRetired Rossland\nCity Clerk Honored\nROSSLAND \u2014 John A. McLeod,\nrecently .retired city clerk of Rossland, was honored at a gathering\nof civic employees, the mayor and\naldermen in the clty'chambers.\nOn behalf of the Civic Workers,\nMayor Harold Elmes presented a\nbeautiful pen and pencil set to Mr.\nMcLeod.\nTo Build Pulp\nPaper Mill, Alfa.\nTORONTO (CP) - North Canadian Oils has announced the completion of financing of the several\nphases of its association with St\nRegis Paper Co. in the construction of a $33,000,000 pulp- and paper\nmill at Hinton, Alta.\nNorth Western Pulp and Power\nLtd., an Alberta company jointly\nowned by North Canadian Oils and\nSt. Regis Paper, will build and\noperate the new mill under the\nmanagement and direction of St\nRegis, which will also market the\nmill's production.\nThe financing Includes $25,000,\n000 of senior funds which are being\nfurnished by the Bank of Nova\nScotia and the Royal Bank of Can\nada.\nGive yourself a treat on ironing\nday with a Rid-Jid all metal ironing\nboard, with perforated top. Adjustable for height, built to last, two\nmodels, $10.25 and $18.95.\nHIPPERSON'S\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our thanks\nto Dr. Morrison for his kind attention to Mrs. Strookow, during fier\nlong illness. We are deeply grateful\nto our relatives, neighbors and\nfriends for the kindness and sympathy shown in our bereavement,\nthe death of wife and mother, and\nall those whosent floral tribute and\nmaterial help. Also thanks to Messrs. Edwards and Christie of\nThompson Funeral Home for their\nkindness. \u2014 George N. Strookow\nand Family.\nNAKUSP LINES UP\nSITE FOR MINTO\nNAKUSP \u2014 Nakusp's committee\npresiding over the future of the\nMinto is dickering with the Canadian Pacific Railway for a permanent home for the retired Arrow\nLakes sternwheeler.\nIt is negotiating with the company for a site immediately ashore\nof its present mooring by the shipyards. The CPR has indicated that\nit favors the suggestion and is seek\ning permission from the Montreal\nhead office.,\nThe intention is to turn the Minto\ninto a museum-meeting place.\nCARS Official\nVisits Windermere\nINVERMERK \u2014 Miss Mary Pack\nI of the' Canadian Arthritic and\nRheumatism Society 'visited Invermere. Radium Hot Springs and\nWindermere Monday, paving the\nway for regular visits by Miss Julia\nReid, physiotherapist for East Kootenay.\n\u25a0Miss Reid. accompanied Miss\nPack on this visit during which\nthey i addressed and showed films\nto High School students at the Invermere School, to the Lake WlnT\ndermere District Lions Club and\nto a meeting of the executive of\nthe Windermere District Women's\nInstitute called for the purpose of\nmeeting Miss Pack and Miss Reid.\nGARDENERS' DEFENCE\nWINCHESTER, England (CP) -.\nMarket gardeners in ,Hamshire\nworried by the damage caused by\nsupersonic bangs, from, jet .fighters\ncrashing the sound barrier, have\nformed a supersonic defence league.\nJhiL diiqhuJcu^A.\nSnoqualmie Pass: Clear, road bare\nand dry, 120 inches old snow in ski\narea.\nNo. 3 Southern Trans-provincial\u2014\nHope-Princeton good, watch .for\nrolling rock, Princeton-Osoyoos-\nCascade good, rough sections between Greenwood and Cascade.\nCascade-Rossland compact snow and\nIce on summit, mudy lower levels,\ncarry chains. Rossland-Trail-Castle-\ngar-Nelson - Creston - Cranbrook -\nFernie-Crow's Kest mostly \u2022 bare,\nfrost heaves.\nNo. 3A Trail-Salmo \u2014 Mostly\nbare.\nNo. 6 Nelway-Vernon \u2014 Nelway-\nNelson-South Slocan fair, frost\nheaves. South ' Slocan-Nakusp-\nNeedles rough and muddy, rolling\nrocks at Cape Home. Needles-Mon-\nashee impassable. Monashee-Vernon\nfair.,\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Golden \u2014 bare. Banff-Windermere \u2014\nfair. Nelson-Kaslo \u2014 Road surface\nbreaking up. Kaslo-New Denver \u2014\nopen at present, may be closed at\nKaslo-Lardeau \u2014 rough and muddy,\nany time due to sluff and slides.\nLardeau-Gerrard \u2014 rough and\nmuddy.\nGRANT EXECUTION\nSTAY FOR HOODLEY\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Robert\nHoodley, 21, under sentence of death\nfor the Nov. 13 slaying here of John\nTonick, has been granted a stay of\nexecution until May 16.\nHoodley had been sentenced to be\nhanged April 12. Mr. Justice James\nCoady granted the stay Tuesday to\nallow Hoodley to appeal the sentence to the Supreme Court of Canada. The B.C. Court of Appeal rejected his appeal last week.\nTonick was shot following a-quar*\nrel. He had objected to Hoodley\ncourting his daughter.\nRuss To Maintain\nTwo Polar Stations\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The Soviet\nUnion disclosed Wednesday she\nplans to maintain two permanent\nweather stations drifting on ice\nfloes near the North Pole.\nThe first station, known as North\nPole 4, was set up a year ago and\na second, North Pole 3, three days\nlater.'\nDisclosure of the plans was made\nby Moscow radio, which broadcast\nan article from the Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda by\na man named Burkhanov. He was\ndescribed as \"the head of the main\nadministration of the northern sea\nroute.\"\nBurkhanov wrote that North Pole\n4 is expected to continue drifting in\nthe polar area and will be retained.\nNo.Jh Pole 3 was expected soon to\nwash out into the Greenland sea\nthrough the straits between Greenland and' Spitzbergen, Norway, and\nwould be replaced by a new station\nto be known as North Pole 5.\nWjrephoto of Eden\nSent In Color\n\u25a0 NEW YORK (AP) - The Associated Press transmitted by wire-\nphoto a portrait of Sir Anthony\nEden for reproduction in color.\nTwenty United States and Canadian newspapers participated in the\nproject.\nThis was the fifth time within a\nyear that AP wlrephoto had sent\ncolor separation prints for spot\nnewspaper publication.\nNewspapers participating in today's project included the Toronto\nStar and Vancouver Sun. <\nFix Pates For Fairs\nIn Frpser Valley\nABBOTSFORD tCP)\u2014Fair dates\nfor the central Fraser Valley have\nnow been set and approved. The\ndates:\nChilliwack: Aug. 15-17; Abbots-\nford: Sept. 7-9; Langley: Sept. 9-10;\nNorth Delta: Sept. 14-16; Cloverdale: Sept. 16-17; Agassiz: Sept. 16;\nMission: Sept. 17; Aldergrove: Sept.\n23; Ladner: Sept. 23-24.\nCHILDREN'S GIFT\nAMSTERDAM (CP) \u2014 Pakistan's ambassador.to the Netherlands,\nBegum Liaquat All Khan, thanked\nchildren of the Netherlands for\ntheir voluntary decision to collect\nmoney to provide schools in Pakistan with radio sets.\n\"Children the world over are very\nclose to one another,\" she said.\nLook Your\nSmartest\nThis Easter\nIn a New\nHAT\nThe new Spring Hats are\nreally different. Narrower\nbrims, wider bands and\nnew colors.\nSee the Latest\nBy person,  Biltmoro.\nand Christy.\n$6.50 to $10.95\nEMORY'S\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nWe Carry Complete Stock of\nPoultry and Dairy Supplies\nPhone or Call at the\nELLISON MILLING\n4 ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\n623 Front 8treet Nelson, B.C.\nEaster - Suggestions\n\u2022 Chocolate Novelties\nQ. Toy Rabbits\n\u2022 Easter Eggs, etc.\n\u2022 Easter Cards\nDon't Forget Our\nle SALE\non April 13, 14, 16 and 16\nCity Drug\n\"YOUR REXALL PHARMACY\"\nPhono 34 Box 460\n|  For Fine Quality\n\u25a0 1953 CHEVROLET DELUXE SEDAN\n\u25a0 Radio, conditionaire.\nn 1953 FORD CUSTOM SEDAN\nTwo tone green, conditionaire.\nD 1953 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SEDAN\n\" __y\u00b0 tone, conditionaire.\n\u25a0 1952 \"CHEVROLET TWO DOOR SEDAN\n\u25a0 Conditionaire, radio, good rubber,\na 1951 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n_ Light grey, radio, heater.\n^ 1951 PONTIAC SEDAN\nConditionaire, overhauled.\n| 1951 METEOR COACH\n_ Heater, nice condition.\nf| 1948 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN\nOverhauled. Big car luxury ot low price.\n\u25a0 1948 CHEVROLET TWO DOOR\n\u25a0\n\u25a0 English Cars\n\u25a0 1953 AUSTIN SEDAN\n_ 1952 AUSTIN SEDAN\n_ 1951 VANGUARD SEDAN\n\" 1950 AUSTIN SEDAN\n\u25a0 Trucks\n\u25a0 1951 FARGO 1\/2 TON PICKUP\n\u25a0 1950 STUDEBAKER V_ TON PICKUP\nD 1949 CHEVROLET \\_ TON PANEL\n_ 1949 MERCURY V_ TON PICKUP\nSPRINGTIME SPECIAL\n1952 DODGE SEDAN\nHeater, good rubber.\nNice Shape. ONLY .\n$1200\nY2   NELSON TRANSFEl\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nLOCATED AT 323 VERNON STREET\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0 \u25a0  '  '\n'-   -\u25a0- \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 - ' \u25a0\u2022'\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0'-\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1955_04_07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429008","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}