{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430862":{"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":"2023-04-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1958-02-25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430862\/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":" Nelson's  Record\n2000\nTraffic  Fatality-Free  Days\nVol. 55\nrbati\na^i\n%^^2^\nJELSON, B. C\u201e CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 25, 1958\nHansard Urged\nFor Legislature\nNeed Seen for Verbatim Report1\nTo Avoid Misquote Complaints\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014A government backbencher went\non record Monday afternoon as favoring a Hansard in the j\nHouse.\nA. V. Lundell (SC\u2014Revelstoke) said he \"can't see\nanything much wrong with having a Hansard;\" a verbatim\nreport of the daily proceedings in the Legislature.\n\"In the four weeks I've been sitting here this year\nI've counted 27 times when government and opposition\nmembers said they were mis\nquoted.'\nMr.   Lundell,   publisher   ol   the\nRevelstoke Review, suggested the\ngovernment \"make the press more\ncomfortable   in   a   press   gallery\ncommensurate with the importance\nof the work performed there.\"\nHe said that While \"we often\nwish    that    something    drastic\nwould happen to them, we can't\ngo on forever denying them new\nquarters in the hope that one by\none they will fall down the ladder lo their nest and break their\nnecks.\"\nHe was referring to the ancient\npress gallery, situated half-way\nbetween the floor of the Legislature and the public galleries,\nreached by narrow stairs that rise\nat a very steep angle. Several reporters have tumbled down these\nsteps in recent years.\nPRELIMINARY  SESSION\nHe also made a \"very revolutionary suggestion\" that a short\nsession of the legislature be held\nprior to the regular opening of\nthe House.\nHe said  the  government  could\nthen  \"present,  within  reasonable\nlimitations,  some  of  the  legisla-\n, tion contemplated at the regular\nsession.\"\nHe said after the short session\nthe MLAs could leave with an\nopportunity for \"serious and considered study.\"\n\"Such a course could eliminate\nthe passing of ill-conceived  and\nhurried legislation.\"\nHe urged closer liaison between\nbers, including copies of all correspondence affecting MLAs' districts.\nMr. Lundell said the people\nin his constituency want a \"concise, understandable answer to\nthis   question.\n\"Will Mica Creek be built reasonably soon and by whom?\"\n\u25a0He said they were \"not happy about the delay in Columbia\nRiver development and think\nthis government could be more\nspecific in regard to this matter.\"\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with a few\nsunny periods. A few showers in\nafternoon. Not much change in\ntemperature. Light winds. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley, 32 and 45.\nNot More Than 6c Daily,  10c Saturday\nNo. 258\nCuban Govt Blames Rebels\nAs 5 Killed in Race Mishap\n\"LAW OF SEA\"\nMEET IN GENEVA\nGENEVA (Reuters) - The 80-\ncountry \"law of the sea\" conference opened Monday in landlocked Switzerland and elected\nPrinice Wan Waithayakon of Thailand as chairman.\nCalled by the United Nations,\nthe nine-week conference is the\nfirst ever assembled to attempt\ninternational agreement on maritime law. The Canadian delegation\nis led by George Drew, high commissioner in London.\nPrince Wan, former president of\nthe United Nations General Assembly, said in his acceptance speech\nthe welfare of international society depends on the conference's\nsuccess.\n\"This makes it impossible for\nus to regard our work here as a\nthe cabinet ministers and the mem-mere exercise of diplomacy.\"\n.Eversfield Says Facts\nGiven Bonner in 1955\nBy H. L. JONES\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A 46-year-\nold accountant whose disclosures\nsparked the Sommers bribery-conspiracy hearing denied from the\nwitness box Monday that he had\never been promised sums of money\nor immunity from prosecution in\nreturn for making his evidence\nknown.\nCharles W. Eversfield, on the\nstand for the fifth day in the hearing involving former lands and forests minister Sommers and others,\nsaid he had received a total of\n$1700 for expenses from Vancouver\nlawyer David Sturdy. It was\nthrough Sturdy he first made the\ndisclosure and he said .they laid\nthe basic facts of the case before\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner in\nDecember, 1955.\nMr. Sommers resigned his portfolio early in 1956 as Mr. Bonner\nordered an RCMP investigation of\nthe Eversfield file. The charges\nagainst the former minister, three\nother individuals and four companies were laid last November\nFILES MISHANDLED\nAt one point Monday, Walter\nOwen, B.C. Forest Products counsel, said his defence was being\nseriously endangered because of\nImproper police handling of files\nseized by pblice from his client last\nDecember and now being returned\nHe said two of them had simply\nbeen torn out of the files without\nany notation as to where they had\ncome from. The police seemed to\nhave no proper record of what they\nhad seized.\nMagistrate Oscar Orr said if\nwhen it came his turn at cross-\nexamination of Eversfield Mr.\nOwen still felt the same, the case\ncould be adjourned while the matter was rectified.\nEversfield testified that he and\nSturdy went to see the attorney-\ngeneral in December, 1955, after\nthe accountant had carted the documents back from Los Angeles\nwhere he' had taken them in\ntrunk. He said Mr. Sturdy told\nthe attorney-general at that time\nthat the documents should be investigated further, either through\nthe Sloan Royal Commission on\nforestry then sitting; through a\nnew commission or by the police.\nHe had later given all his information to RCMP Inspector W. J.\nButler who visited him in Los Angeles and later conducted the government-ordered investigation.\nEversfield told J. R. Nicholson,\ncounsel for Pacific Coast, the Gray\nBrothers and Evergreen Lumber,\nthat he was involved in some of\nthe alleged transactions in pass\ning money and bonds to Sommers.\nBut he insisted he was only \"following instructions.\" ,,\nCounsel Nicholson suggested\nEversfield did not resign but was\nfired by Pacific and that there Was\n\"another reason\" behind his \"purloining\" of the documents. Evers-\nEUGENE FORSEV, director of research for the Canadian\nLabor Congress, told the Canadian Conference of Education in\nOttawa that we are in danger of \"making our high schools adolescent playpens and our high school teachers glorified baby-sitters.\"\nHe derided, some of the tests and examinations in high schools\nand said the universities had to teach what should have been\ntaught in high schools. Secondary schools, he said, were wasting\ntheir resources on pupils who were stupid and lazy.       \t\nStumping With\nThe Leaders\nLEMBERG, Sask. (CP) \u2014 The that announcement with a promise\nonly opportunity Canadians haveIin.this important textile manufac-\n\u25a0 ,, m u o, r a , ,1 \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,..,! taring city that his government\nin the March 31 federal general  m ^ whatever action is neces.\nelection  to  express  their protest |sary  to  assure  that  textile  and\nagainst  current   condtions   is   to j other industries essential to Canada\n(PR Heads Talk\nWilh Starr\nOTTAWA (CP) - Two CPR vice-\npresidents conferred Monday with\nLabor Minister Starr on the diesel\nfiremen dispute that produced a\nnine-day tie-up of the company's\ntranscontinental system last winter.\nAfter a meeting of an hour and\n20 minutes in Mr. Starr's office,\nthere was no information beyond\nstatements that the company officials had brought the minister\nup to date on the controversy between the CPR and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and\nEnginemen (CI.C>.\nNo union officials were present\nat the meeting, which was sought\nby the CPR after a breakdown of\nnegotiations Feb. 14, on the question of the CPR's proposal to eliminate firemen gradually from yard\nand freight diesel locomotives.\nvote for the CCF, M. J. Coldwell\nsaid Monday night. ,\n- In an election speech, the CCF\nleader said the Liberals' and the\nProgressive Conservatives \"have\ndropped Ihe little difference that\nthere had been between them and\nthe CCF takes up the fight for a\nnew approach, a real alternative\nto the-present Joiicies being carried on.\"\nMr. Coldwell said the Liberals\nin Laurier's day were the defenders of Parliament's rights, and in\nMacdonald's day the Conservatives\nhad protected Canadian development.\nBut both parties had abandoned\ntheir earlier positions. Now the\n,CCF \"is carrying on the fight for\nparliamentary rights that was once\none of the proudest'traditions of\nthe Liberal party.\"\nThe CCF also was carrying on\n\"the fight for protection of Canadian control of our public utilities\nwhich once found expression in\nConservative support of a development like the publicly-owned Ontario Hydro Commission.\"\nNEW FARM ACT\nCORNWALL, Ont. (CP) - The\nfederal government's new Farm\nPrice Support Act will come into\neffect March 3, Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker announced Monday\nnight.\nHis statement, before an election campaign audience of more\nthan 2200, indicated that the price\nfloors under the Progressive Conservative government's new measure will be proclaimed before the\nMarch 31 election.\nThe Conservative leader coupled\nwill  not  be  subject to  cut-price\ndumping of foreign goods.\nHe said that with the March 3\nproclamation of the farm price\nsupport legislation, a farm-representative advisory committee will\nbe established immediately.\nMISSION TO RED CHINA\nVANCOUVER (CP) -.. -Liberal\nLeader Lester B. Pearson said\nMonday night he will send a cabinet trade mission to Red China if\nhe is elected prime minister March\n31.\nHe said also that the Liberals\nwould transform the government's\npresent Export Credits Insurance\nCorporation into an export bank\nto provide medium and long-term\ncredit for the purpose of expanding\nCanada's exports to all parts of\nthe world.\nAddressing a political rally at\nthe local exhibition Forum, he\nsaid:\n\"These credit'facilities would be\nused especially to promote more\nvigorously the sale of wheat and\nflour and lumber and fish all over\nthe world as well as to assist the\nsale of manufactured goods, especially to the Caribbean, Latin\nAmerica, and the Far East where\ninadequate credit facilities now are\nparticularly a handicap to our exporters.\"\nHe criticized the Progressive\nConservatives' moves to increase\ntrade with Red China as inadequate. The Liberals, he said, believe \"we should trade wherever\nvie can in Asia \u2014 irrespective of\nthe form of government \u2014 except\nin strategic goods with Communist\ncountries.\"\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was unchanged at a\npremium of 2 1-16 in terms of U.S.\nfunds Monday; a week ago 2 13-32\nper cent premium. The pound\nsterling was 5-32 lower at $2.81 9-16.\nCO-OPERATION, so they say, is necessary for\na successful marriage, and it looks as If the.\nblizzard that covered Ontario gave an opportunity\nto prove the future of newlyweds Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Goode in Oakville. They had to. dig their\nway out of their garage lo start on their honeymoon. The snowfall accompanied by sub-zero\ncold and strong winds, closed manv rural schools\nand stranded thousands of motorists.\nStudents Fail   k\nTo Faze Bennett\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An overflow crowd of students alternately\njeered and applauded Premier\nBennett Monday during a speech\nhe made at the University of B.C.\nThe premier remained undaunted.\nMore than 1200 students jammed\ninto the university auditorium\nwhich seats only 950. They stood\nin the aisles, lined up at the doors.\nMore tried climbing through windows to hear the Premier.\nThere was no physical demonstration.      >\nTwo weeks ago, Attorney-General\nRobert Bonner was shouted down\nas he tried to speak to the students\nabout Canada's 'role in world af-\n'fairs.\nMost of the premier's hajHiour\ntalk was devoted to' provincial\ngovernment grants to the univer\nsity. He said the government will\nmatch private grants of $10,000,-\n000 if the university development\nfund realized that amount in its\ncurrent campaign.\nPreviously, the government had\nundertaken to match $7,500,000.\nDespite incessant shoutjng and\nstamping, tempered with mild applause, the Premier's aplomb was\nunshaken. ,\nOil Spread on Curves Caused Skids;\n40 Injured; Champ Driver Kidnapped\nBy LARRY ALLEN\nHAVANA. (AP) \u2014 Cuba's biggest auto race was\nbrought to a fatal, shattering halt Monday by what the government called rebel sabotage. One racer plunged into\ncrowded stands, killing or injuring an estimated 50 persons.\nPolice Monday night said five were killed at the crask\nscene and at least 40 others were injured. They believed\nsome injured died en route to hospitals and were checking\navailable reports.\nAuthorities immediately said the fatal accident and\ndangerous skids by five other cars were unquestionably due\nto the work of rebels.\nOfficials said a preliminary investigation indicated, rebels had\nspread oil on the curves of the\ntricky road course, sending the\nhigh-powered racers out of control.\nHalting of the race came only\nhours after rebel forces pulled\noff another spectacular coup, kidnapping world champion driver\nJuan Manual Fangio, an Argentine who had been favored to win\nMonday's $10,000 Gren Premio.\nSTILL MISSING\nHe was still missing when the\n27 cars roared off, despite an announcement at the track that he\nhad been freed and was on his\nway to Malecon race course.\nThere were reports also of a\nrebel attempt to kidnap British\ndriver Stirling Moss. Hotel authorities were reported to have\nthwarted the attempt, with Moss\nand his wife locking themselves\nWould Crack Down\nOn Hoodlums\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 W. J. Stewart (PC-Parkdale) Monday called\nfor corporal punishment for hoodlums who carry weapons or attack citizens.\nSpeaking in the throne speech\ndebate in the Ontario legislature,\nhe said:\n\"I am opposed to pampering and\nadherence to modern psychology\nUiat supports self-expression by\nundisciplined children and youth.\"\nChurchill Making\nSwift Recovery\nROQUEBRUNE CAP MARTIN,\nFrance (Reuters 1 \u2014 Sir Winston\nChurchill sat up in bed Monday,\nsmoked a cigar and had a chat\nwith an. old friend, Pierre-Jean\nMoatti, the prefect of the French\nMaritime Alps department.\nMoatti said he found the 83-\nyear-old former prime minister\n\"chipper and looking fine,\" making a remarkable recovery from\nthe attack of pneumonia and pleurisy that struck him last Tuesday.\nA sixth medical bulletin, signed\nby Lord Moran, Churchill's personal physician, and Dr. David\nRoberts, his local doctor, said on\nMonday the \"pneumonia continues\nto resolve and the pleurisy is caus\ning him less discomfort.\"\nMakes Polar Flight\nLONDON (Reuters) - A Bristol\nBritannia airliner on acceptance\ntrials for Canadian Pacific Airlines\ntoday completed the first non-stop\npolar flight from Vancouver to\nLondon.\nIts time for the 4800-mile flight\nwas 13 hours, 54 minutes.\nin their hotel room and refusing\nto answer telephone calls.\nThe rebel blow at the race was\nthe  boldest  venture  in  Havana\nNasser\nVisits\nSyria\nDAMASCUS, Arab Republfc (AP)\n\u2014President Nasser made his first\ntrip to Syria Monday as head of\nthe new United Arab Republic\nand was greeted by crowds shouting \"Long live Nasser..\"\nNasser flew in unexpectedly for\ntalks to get Syria operating as a\nprovince in the UAR. It was reported Syrian officials were not\neven aware of his arrival until\nsince gunmen invaded the pres- his plane landed at the deserted\nidentia! palace last March 13 in\nan attempt to seize or slay President Fulgencio Batista. F orty\npersons were killed at the palace\nand elsewhere in Havana that\nday.\nTrouble in  Monday's race began almost as soon as the racers\nstarted   around   the  3.5   -  mile\ncourse.\nSMASHED  INTO  STANDS\nA Ferrari driven by Garcia Cif-\nuentes, a Cuban relief driver,\nplunged off the course and\nsmashed into the packed stands\nnear the U. S. Embassy, causing\nthe casualties. None of those\nkilled or injured was identified\nimmediately.\nMoments later, other cars began skidding on an oil coating on\nthe twisting curves, narrowly\navoiding other serious crashes.\nRed flags went up on the\ncourse, halting the competition\nand bringing an urgent meeting\nof the national sports commission.\nAmbulances went to the crash\nscene near the embassy to move\nthe dead and injured.\nA short time later authorities\nannounced that the race was off.\nMystery heightened meantime\nas to the whereabouts of Fangio,\nArgentina's great driver who five\ntimes has\"1-won the world:auto\nracing crown.\nHe was seized Sunday night by\ngunmen in a downtown Havana\nhotel. Rebel groups claimed responsibility for the kidnapping.\nAs the crowd awaited the start\nof this afternoon's race, an announcement at the track said he\nhad been freed and was on his\nway to the course. But he did\nnot appear and belief mounted\nthat his kidnappers had decided\nto hold him a while longer.\nIn Sub-Arctic\nRuins, Bones of\nVanished Race Found\nairport.\nNasser was accompanied by Abdul Latif Boghdadi, speaker of\nEgypt's National Assembly; Field\nMarshal Abdul Hakim Amer, commander-in-chief of the UAR armed\nforces, and Anwar Elsadat, head\nof Egypt's single political party,\nthe National Union.\nThey drove directly to the hom\u00bb\nof Shukri Kuwatly, Syria's president until the uni\u00bbn was proclaimed Saturday.\nAfter a brief conference the two\nleaders stepped to a balcony in\nanswer to the chant of Syrian\ncrowds below: \"We want to see\nNasser.\"\n423,000 Jobless\nIn Britain\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Unemployment in Britain has risen to\nits highest level in nearly six\nyears, Labor Minister Iain Macleod\nsaid Monday night.\nAbout 28,000 persons became\njobless this month, he said, bringing the unemployment figure Uf\n423,000.\nMob Opposes\nRent Decontrol\nLONDON (CP) - A mob of angry opponents of a new rent decontrol act Monday night turned\na.public meeting into a wild meles\nand chased Housing Minister Henry Brooke from the platform.\nBrooke fled to a room at the\nback of the hall after the mob\nsurged forward, throwing chair*\nand fighting with other officials on\nthe platform.\nThe rent decontrol act permits\nhigher rents for millions of British homes and empowers landlords of about 800,000 houses and\napartments to evict tenants.\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CPI-A field of\nskulls and stone ruins found on\nbleak, treeless Southampton Island\nin the Canadian sub-Arctic may\nhave been the home of a vanished\nrace of early Canadian Eskimos,\na Smithsonian Institution archaeologist reported Monday.\nReporting on an expeditibn undertaken by Canadian and U.S.\nscientists in 1054 and 1955, Dr.\nHenry B. Collin said the party un-\nRipple Rock to Blow April 5\nBy JOHN E. BIRD i five, the weather must be clear\nCanadian Press Staff Writer       and  crisp  with  a  low  humidity\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Ripple Rock! and a fairly strong wind blowing\nwill be blasted Saturday, April 5,\nwith 1,400 tons of high explosive\nin an effort to pulverize the twin-\npeak navigational hazard in Seymour Narrows 100 miles north of\nVancouver.\nA Works department official\nsaid Monday that zero hour will\nbe 8:30 a.m. local time provided\nweather conditions are right. If\nthe weather is unsuitable, the explosion will be delayed. He said,\nhowever, the department is confident that suitable conditions will\nprevail for an explosion between\nApril 5 and 9.\nExcept for atomic explosions\nthe blast will be the most power-\nfrom the south.\nThe tide also must be low so\nthat a minimum quantity of\nwater will be covering the rocks\nat the time of the blast.\nA\u00bb' heavy atmosphere would\ncause a severe downdraw pressure which would reduce the force\nof that part of the blast designed\nto pulverize the two peaks.\nThe official explained that the\nblast must break up the two rock\npeaks, push aside the water spr-\nrdunding them and throw the pulverized rock into the narrows. He\nsaid a heavy atmosphere would\nmake the blasting agent do more j blast\nto pack the explosive under\nthem.\nThe explosive will be packed in\ncans weighing 38M. pounds. This\nmeans that about 70,000 cans\nmust be placed within the peaks\nand arranged to explode simultaneously.\nThe explosive, supplied by the\nDupont Company of Canada Limited, will be shipped into the area\non 100 freight cars. Each car will\ncarry 20,000 pounds of explosive.\nThe blast will lie set off by one\nof two employees of the company. The two men \u2014 both of\nwhom will be \"explosive experts-\nwill be located in a special shelter on Maud Island some 1500 to\n2000 feet from the centre of the\nful known to have been set off J work.\nanywhere in the world to date.   SOUTH WIND\nThe largest explosion on record I   The wind  must be from the\ninvolved 2,ll8,000 pounds \u2014 or I south   to   prevent   fumes   beina\n1059 tons of explosives used Jan. spread   over   nearby   inhabited\n5 to break away a 300-foot cliff\nof rock for a causevay across\nGreat Salt Lake in Utah.\nGREATER POWER\nThe 2,800,000 pounds of explosive which will be detoned\nwithin the two peaks of Ripple\nRock also will have a greater\nblasting power than the agent\nused in Utah. It is known as\nnitramex 2H, \"and amonium nitrate base blasting agent.\nWork has been in progress on\nthe blasting project since late\n1955. One rock in only nine feet\nbelow the surface at low tide and\nthe other is about 20 feet under\nwater.\nFor the blast to be most effec-\nareas around Campbell River\nand Duncan Bay.\nThe official said cost of preparation for the blast now is estimated at $3,100,000, including $2,639,\n000 for the mine-tunnelling operation to get under the rock peaks\nand some $461,000 for the explosive.\nThe blasting agent will be\nplaced directly under the two underwater- peaks which are about\n450 feet apart. An ordinary mine\nshaft was dug on nearby Maud\nIsland and a tunnel drilled under\nthe channel to points beneath the\ntwo peaks. Shafts then were\ndrilled up into the peaks.\nIt will take about three weeks\n6000 FEET AWAY\nAll other eyewitnesses, including press and radio observers,\nwill be in a shelter \u2022 6000 feet\nfrom the rocks. This shelter, on\nthe mainland, will give them a\nclear view of the explosion.\nFederal officials are confident\nthat sufficient explosive is being\nused to blow some 40 feet or\nmore from the peaks of the underwater mountain. The result will\nbe a clear and relatively rip-free\nchannel through Seymour Narrows, which is 2,500 feet wide at\nthat point and is on the main\nnorth-south B.C. coastal shipping\nroute.\nIt is estimated that since 1875\nsome 14 large ships have been\nlost or damaged on Ripple Rock\nand another 100 smaller ships\nsunk with a loss of more than 100\nlives.\ncovered ruins of 75 semi-subterranean dwellings and more than 100\nburial sites on the 17,000-mile-\nsquare island, which lies in the\nmouth of Hudson Bay about 1400\nmiles north of Toronto.\nThe ruins are believed to have\nbeen left by the Sadlermuits, a\nstrange, primitive tribe of Eskimos\nwhose ancestors moved eastward\nfrom Alaska over Canada's Arctic\ncoast and islands more than 2000\nyears ago and who became extinct\nin an epidemic in 1903, before scientists became interested in them.\nThey are known to have inhabited\nIhe island.\nSTONE AND SOD HUTS\nWalls of the dwellings were made\nof stone and blocks of sod, with\nthe floors, roof supports and sometimes the roofs themselves of\nstone. The ground outside the\nhouses was littered with skulls and\nbones of seal, walrus, caribou and\npolar bear.'Stone cairns and meat\ncaches were found by the hundreds\naling the beach.\nMore than 100 human burials\nwere found in the village itself and\nalong adjacent beach ridges. Away\nfrom the habitation site, the bodies\nhad been placed in well-constructed\nvaults of limestone slabs.\nHEAD - SCRATCHING Is in\norder thinks Robert Wosntg, 5, as\nhe ponders the problem of how a\nkettle can support Itself in midair \u2014 and upside down to boot!\nOle' man winter is the answer,\nRobert, as he flooded your area\naround West Ailis, Wise, with\nsub - freezing temperatures. Be\npatient Robert, spring Is said\nto be just around the corner.\nAnd in This Corner. \u2666..'\nENID, Okla. (AP) \u2014 Six-year-old Joe Dobson Jr. showed Ms\nparents something about golf Sunday.\nHe scored a hole-in-one on the 115-yard fourth hole at Meadow-\nlake course, using a No. 5 iron.\nDARTMOUTH, N. S. (CP) - Graham Moir parked his car iri\nfront of the barber shop, went in, sat in the chair and got clipped \u2014\ntwo ways.\nAs the barber snipped away he swung the chair around. Moir\nwas unable to see the street.\nWhen the chair moved back, Moir saw only a vacant space\nwhere his car had been.\nThe car is still missing.\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) \u2014 All high school girls should date\na few \"creeps\" to prepare for marriage because their husbands will\nbe \"half-creeps anyway,\" psychiatrist Dr. William Powles told more\nthan 200 teen-age girls Sunday.\nHe described steady dating as \"too confining\" and said the\n\"unhealthy romanticism\" of television and movies Is leading to disillusionment In the normal marriage routine of_ \"budgets, babies,\nand battles \u2014 all of which are healthy signs of a working marriage.\"\nDr. Powles, psychiatric consultant at the nearby Burnaby Medical Centre, was addressing the 22nd mid-winter conference Hi-Y\nclubs from 37 British Columbia centres.\n\u00ab*\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1958\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows 7.00-9.05\nM-G-M's POWERFUU-OVE DRAMA!\nJEAN SIMMONS\nI0AN FONTAINE\nPAUL NEWMAN\nPIPER LAURIE\nUi\\iT,L\nTHEY*\nSAIL\nMORE ~.\n'\"\"\"THE LIVING DESERT\" NL M, -\u25a0\u25a0 \u00bb\u25a0__ -A\n\u2022THE AFRICAN HON\"     C_^W        : '    ,A'r {.<\nMORE D\/UAHofc- THAN ^_Av^iWv_u8-    '\n.    T   \"VANISHING PRAIRIE\"\nWalt Disney\n('RESENTS ' _\u00bb   af\no\nTTrrt true-life Taatafti\nnuogRm_-Hs> J\nChildren 25c Anytime\nWALT DISNEY'S\nCartoon Special   (\u00a3,   \u2022\n\"The Truth    .#\/j \u00a3>.\nAbout   'w%Mr-i\n!elody,\u201eand Fascinating Fact!\nPRISONERS GO\nTO OAKALLA\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCity Leads With 20Q0\nFatality Free Days\nNIOK,\nthe tale of o baby\nelephant and a boy\nin COLOR\nl\u00abWIM\u00abMMWftMIWWfliW^\nCIVIC\nRCMP and city police must now\ntake all prisoners to Oakalla Prison\nFarm at Vancouver. Eaph police\nforce must provide escorts for its\nown prisoners, said officials Monday,\nOn Friday a man was sentenced\nto 30 days on a drunk charge in\ncity court. Police took him to the\nprovincial jail and were informed\nhe could not be handled there.\nMonday Chief Robert Harshaw\nsaid the man was still in the city\nlockup awaiting transfer to Oakalla.\nWhen he found a man guilty of\nan offence last week, a city magistrate fined him $25 and costs or\n311 days in Oakalla. observing\nprisoners could no longer be detained at Nelson jail. The fine was\npaid.\nImpending closure of Nelson\njail has been prolested by many\ngroups. G. D. Kennedy, deputy attorney-general, told city council by\nletter the government had to consider closing one or two custodial-\ntype institutions, such as Nelson\njail, in favor of modern correctional methods such as those used\nat the Haney Correctional Institute.\nMyor T. S\nestablished in other parts of B.C.,\ncould not be established here. A\nroad to Kokanee Glacier Park and\nthe centennial ski lift were projects on which he thought inmates\ncould be used. Coun'cil voted to\ninvite a B.C. government representative here to discuss all phases\nof the question.\nMeanwhile, warden A. D. Tuf-\nloch said Monday some of the\nprison staff and their families are\nbeing moved to Haney. Others are\nleaving for other employment.\n(apt. Pearson\nDies, Aged J6\nNelson has enjoyed 2000 successive fatality free days today. Motorists and pedestrians\nin this city are to be congratulated on this achievement.\nWhile it is not our intention\nto boast, we feel proud for lead-\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNiedermanns Please\nNorth Shore Audience\ning the way and setting an\nexample to other cities in the\nprovince.\nTrail, with 1165 fatality free\ndays, is also to be congratulated, we are sure the Silver\nCity will endeavor to keep pace\nwith Nelson's fine example.\nCaptain Harvie Allen Pearson,\nformerly of Nelson and a resident\nof Sunshine Bay since 1935, died\nin the Kootenay Lake General Hospital Monday night at the age of\n76.\nWhile   spending   the  winter  in\nSanta  Cruz,   California,  with  his\nwife  Kathleen,   Captain  Pearson\nsuffered a chronic condition which\nShorthouse wondered ! became  acute.  He  and  his wife\nwhy a work camp, similar to those returned lo Nelson and he entered\nBonspiel Meet\nSuccessful Affair\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTONIGHT and WEDNESDAY\n\"Revolt at  Fort  Laramie\"\nJohn Dckncr, Gregg Palmer\nNews - Short\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON  (Reuters)\nin Monday night's soccer league\nmatches:\nENGLISH LEAGUE, Division II\nRotherham  0  Cardiff 0  (abandoned at half-time, wet grounds).\nOne of the largest and most successful Mid-Summer Bonspiel Committee meetings was held Monday\nnight in the Women's Institute\nRoom, Civic Centre.\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse, who\ncalled the meeting, gave a brief\noutline of proposed bonspiel week\nactivities and E. T. Bodard, past\nchairman, outlined 1957 bonspiel\nadministration and financing.\nMayor Shorthouse was elected\nchairman and administrator by acclamation with directors Arthur\nWaters, Mr. Bodard, Mrs. R. H.\nBush. E. S. Owens is secretary\nand R. A. Munro treasurer.\nChairmen are: J. E. Keegan,\nResults | Kinsmen's Club, entertainment:\nMrs. J. C. Eckmier. ladies' entertainment; Roger Gagnc, motel association, accommodation: Albert\nMaida, queen contest; F. W. Leno,\nKinsmen, publicity with  co-ordin-\nCENTRAL   MEMOORIAL\nThe International Peace Garden, on the Manitoba-North Dakota border, is almost theh geographical centre of North America\nADORN\nSelf-Styling   Hair  Spray\nBy TONI\nSpray before you comb for\namazing self-styling action.\n7 oz. spray $1.75\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\nTransportation Will\nBe Discussed Here\nCLASS ADS GET  RESULTS!\nASTHMA-\nCHRONIC\nBRONCHITIS\n. . \u25a0 lufferen\u2014Templelon'i RAZ-MAH\ncon help you cough Ion, brealhe mors\neoi\u00bby. Mr. S. Woldmon, 367 ChorluSl.,\nWlnnlpefl, loyt \"I have luffered a flreot\ndeal from chronic bronchllli ond oilhma\nfor tho poll 20 yean. I whltiB and htivn\nprolonged attack! of coughing. Since\nwing RAZ-MAH, I have hod luch fine\nrelief from coughing ond wheeling, and\nbreolhe io much more COmforlobly, |\nheartily recommend RAZ-MAH lo\neveryone who luffen oi I hove.\" Try\nTemplelane RAZ-MAH, 79c and S1.S0\nat all drug counter,.\nTwo meetings have been scheduled for this week to discuss existing transportation to and from\nthis district.\nIn Creston Wednesday, tbe Creston Board of Trade and representatives of other district chambers\nand boards will meet at the call\nof president W. A. Kemp to discuss\nfreight service with the Canadian\nPacific Express Company manager\nfor the Pacific region. Business\npeople and fruit shippers are concerned about possible damage to\nfruit during shipping. Two or three\nmembers of the Nelson chamber's\nfreight and transportation committee plan to attend.\nRepresentatives have also been\nInvited to meet Hon. George Hees,\nfederal transport minister, in Nelson Saturday morning to discuss\nthe overall transportation situation\nas it exists now. The meeting had\nbeen scheduled for Friday.\nCastlegar and District Chamber\nof Commerce and Trail, Chamber\nof Commerce have indicated they\njivill send delegates and it was\n| hoped other invited bodies would\n; do the same. Members of the Nel-\n. son freight and transportation com-\nj mittee hope to present a letter to\nthe minister.\nMr. Hees will speak here Friday\nnight in support of Peter Dewdney\nof Trail, Progressive Conservative\ncandidate in the March 31 federal\nelection.\nOrganizations have complained\nabout transportation services after\nthe CPR took mail, freight, dining\nand sleeping cars off ils K e\"t 11 e\nValley line. Freight and mail now\ncome by truck. Recently sorvice\nfrom Nelson to Penticton was\nslashed to twice weekly with runs\nduring the daytime. This was attributed to terrorist attacks.\nators J. A. Jackson and J. Boates;\nA husband and wife team, Otto\nand Florence Niedermann of Trail,\npresented an enjoyable program of\nviolin and piano music at St. Andrew's - by - the - Lake Church hall\nFriday night.\nThe Niedermanns, Introduced by\nRev. W. Edington, opened the program with a piano and violin duet,\nSonata No. 1 by Beethoven, Opus\n12 No. 1, followed by \"Romance\"\nand \"Allegro.\" Mrs. Niedermann\nplayed two sets of niano numbers,\nwhich included \"Ecosaise\" and\n\"Prelude\" in D flat by Chopin.\n\"Night in May\" by Palmgren and\n\"Le Petit Negre\" by DeBussy.\nViolin and piano Gave a fine rendition of A. Cnrelli's \"La Folia\"\n(.Variations Serieuses', and a set\nGeorge Benwell, parade; W. Motion\nand Kerby Grenfell, regatta. Nelson Junior Chamber of Commerce\nwill be official greeters at all city\nentrances and the main lake fer\nries and will also hold their annual\nhoedown,\nD. M. Sample recommended the\nnublic assist in welcoming by greet\ning visitors on streets and inviting\nthem to their homes for teas, thus\nhelping to create a general \"wel\ncome\" atmosphere.\nMerchants should try to decorate\nwindows suitably that week, he\nsaid.\nA large open-air breakfast will\nbe held by the Lions' Club on the\n500 block Baker Street. Ernest\nBouillet was asked by Mayor\nShorthouse to investigate a proposed loggers' sports day and report at the next meeting. The program would include pole climbing,\nsplicing and a log rolling contest.\nThe Booster Club and Maple\nLeaf Hockey Team propose to run\nthe hockey game with name professional players.\nEntries from the United States\nand prairie provinces are expected\nfor the square dancing, of which\nJ. G. James is chairman.\nAt the end, the mayor thanked\nabout 40 persons representing service clubs, past directors and\ncurlers. He praised Ihe fine relationship between past and present|\nexecutives and parties interested\nin the event. With such fine support, he thought. 1958 should see\none of the finest bonspiels since\ninauguration of the events 14 years\nago.    \u25a0\nCommittee chairmen and directors were to meet later this week.\nthe hospital on his arrival January\n20.\nBorn in Lindsay, Ontario, in 1882,\nCaptain Pearson served in the\nFirst World War with the First\nCanadian Division, holding t h e\nrank of captain. He was a member\nof the Canadian Legion. He was\npredeceased by his youngest 6on,\nF\/Lt. Robert Allen Pearson, who\ndied on active service overseas\nin July, 1944.\nCaptain Pearson is survived by\nhis wife, two sons, Jack M. Pearson and William H. Pearson, of\nVancouver; four sisters, Mrs. G.\nM. Garnold of Haliburton, Ontario,\nMrs. O. L. Pearson of Toronto,\nMrs. K. F. Lane of Portland. Oregon, and Mrs. M. Moran of Los\nAngeles; and two brothers, L. A.\nPearson of Neotsu, Oregon, and\nWilliam M. Pearson of Los Angeles.\nwhich included \"Legend\" and \"Mazurka\" by Wieniawoki, \"Molly on\nthe Shore\" by Gftinger and \"En\nBateau\" by DeBussy. Vocal solos\nby Mrs. J. Arichuk of Willow Point\nand H. R. Anderson of Harrop and\ntwo vocal duets featuring Mrs. E.\nMarsden and Mr. Anderson rounded out the enjoyable program,.\nMr. Niedermann with his violin\nand   Mrs.   Niedemiann   at   the\npiano displayed sensitive musicianship in their well varied program,   receiving   generous   applause from some 50 gathered in\nthe hall.\nMr. Edington presented the two\nartists with a plant, thanking them\nfor their generosity with their time\nand talent. Proceeds went to the\nvicarage fund.\nA reception followed at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Ludgate,\nWillow Point.\nCENTENNIAL PLANS were consolidated recently\nby North Shore residents who decided to light a beacon\nduring a flag raising ceremony next April. Pictured\nabove holding the North Shore Centennial flag are committee chairman Ray Wallace and vice-chairman Douglas Askew, who display the banner which will welcome\nall to the community. During a recent meeting at Mr.\nWallace's home, members voted to purchase 100 chairs\nfor the North Shore United Church Hall as part of the\ncentennial project.\nSchool Bond Issue Passed\nUnder Protest From Trustees\nA $32,000 bylaw, to raise $31,302\nwhich the B. C. government was\nunable to pay last year, was passed under protest Monday night by\ntrustees of Nelson School District\nNo. 7.\nMrs. Richard Palmer did not\nwish to be associated with the protest. Louis Hanic was against the\nbylaw, thinking it \"morally\nwrong.\"\nOf Cabbages and Kings\nLetter to the Editor . . .\nLetters to :he editor on any topic ot genuine Interest are welcome\nIt they are brief, accurate and fair No Iptter will be Inserted in\nwhole, or In part, except over the signature and address of the\nwriter    Unsolicited   corre-inondence   cannot   be   returned\nDouble School Taxes Being Paid? \u25a0\nfor the sum pf $32,000. These de\nbentures are to be signed by the\nNELSON-CRESTON   DISTRICT\nAdvance Warning of\nLoad and Speed Restrictions\nof Highways\nDuring the Spring thaw ir will be necessary\nto impose load and speed restrictions on vehicles\nusing highways and secondary roads in this District.\nThese restrictions may be imposed on short notice\nand trucking and transportation companies should\ngovern themselves accordingly.\nThe restrictions will limit the axle loadings of\ntrucks and buses and will restrict the speed of\nsome vehicles.\nVehicles with solid tires will be prohibited\nfrom using the highways.\nW.   M.  SPROUL,\nDistrict  Engineer.\nCranbrook. B.C.\nFebruary Hi, 1956.\nTe The Editor:\nThe rise nr fall in taxation is a\nsubject of great importance to all\n-taxpayers. Education costs are Ihe\nlargest single item in our tax bill.\nIt seems to me that we in British\nColumbia are asked to pay not\njust our tax assessmenl. but also,\na suhlle form of double taxation\nfor education.\nLocal school business is taken\ncare of by your elected School\nBoard. Every year they spend long\nhours to preppre a budget for the\nensuing year. This has to be approved by the hoard members, by\nthe City Council, and by the Department of Education. In February. 1957. a budget was prepared\nand approved for 1957.\nIn November.  1957,  the Nelson\nSchool Board received word from\nthe Department of Education that\nthey were unable at lhat time to\npay Ihe final S32.0O0 of the amount,\nto which they had agreed in February Therefore, the Board had\ninsufficient   money   to   pay   the\nteachers, bus drivers, and maintenance staff. But, the Department\nI of Education gave the Board permission to overdraw at the bank;\nfor the above sum. They gave per-:\nmission   to  overdraw  for  money I\nthey owed the Nelson District tax- j\npayers.\nI wonder how far an individual\nwould get if he sent a token pay- j\nment for his taxes, with a letter j\n| lolling the Provincial Assessor that'\nhe had permission to overdraw for\nthe amount the taxpayer still j\nowed? Perhaps we taxpayers\nshould be grateful for Ihe privilege\nof borrowing money on the gov-i\nernment's behalf, but what about\nthe interest charges? We are also!\ngiven permission tn pay half the!\ninterest charges, which amounts to\n$509.\nThe government collected the\ntaxes last year. In fact, they collected so much they have announced a surplus. The amount of\nmoney agreed to in February\nshould have been available to all\nSchool Boards.\nThe Scl'iol Board now has been\ninformed lhat they should proceed\nimmediately  to  float  debentures\nSchool Board chairman. Therefore,\nthe debentures will be registered to\nSchool District No. 7. In the end,\nIhe government will have to pay\n$43,520.00 for the sum of $32,000.\nwhich failed to materialize from\nthe Provincial coffers last November.\nThere are eighty-two school districts in the province, to which the\nDepartment of Education owes\nthree ard one half million dollars.\nWould it not be more practical,\nmore economical, for the Department to borrow the whole amount\nand pay the Boards in cash. Apparently, from the government's\npoint of view, it looks belter if the\ndebentures are registered in the\nnames of the school districts.\nI wonder why the B.C. Trustees'\nAssociation does not take strong\naction to condemn such unorthodox\nfinancing.\nI have written this letter as a\nworried taxpayer, and would ask\nall those that are interested to\nacquaint themselves with the facts.\nThen let your School Board and\nyour government know your\nopinion.\nL. HANIC,\nR.R. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nAlthough the government pays\ninterest and principal, the bond\nissue is shown on school board\nbooks. Last year the government's\nshare for capital expenditures was\n$41,737, of which only about $10,-\n000 was paid.\nThe board did not approve of\nthe government's financing methods but had no choice other than\nto pass the bylaw. Sent by the\ndepartment of education, the\nlengthy document was read bv\nchairman Gordon Sargent. It will\nnow have to be designed by the\nsuperintendent of education ar.ri\nthe lieutenant-governor of B. C.\nDated March 15, the bonds wi I\nbear 4 per cent interest. Total interest paid by the government wi!\nbe $11,520.\nA Vancouver company W\"\nawarded contract to print the '1\nbonds. Their tender of $109.20 wr.i\nlowest of several received.\nAlso approved was a $175,0\"1\nbank overdraft to cover Fehruar\"\nand March accounts. This is no-\nmal procedure according to sc-\nretary-treasurer J. S. Livingston\".\nSERIOUS EPIDEMIC FROM\nDANGEROUS WATER - IF\nROSSLAND (CP)-This city was\nwarned Monday that it may be\nfacing a serious epidemic unless\nThe Weather\nNELSON     39 42 .64\nToronto   18 39 .05\nBrandon    20 41 .09\nRegina   20 43 \u2014\nSaskatoon          13 34 \u2014\nMedicine Hat   34 49 \u2014\nLethbridge     35 58 \u2014\nEdmonton     23 38 \u2014\nKimberley  33 40 .04\nDied in England\nI Word was received from England\nby Mrs. F. W. M. Drew informing\nher of the death of her mother,\nMrs. E. M. Dyball, aged 83.\nMrs. Dyball visited Gray Creek\nin 1937 and spent the summer of\n1951 in Ne'son.\nsteps are taken immediately ti\nremedy its \"dangerous\" water\nsupply system.\nThe warning was sounded by Dc\nC. J. G. MacKenzie, medical healp\nofficer, at the annual meeting i'\nthe West Kootenay Union Boar;!\nof Health.\nFor three straight years, he saH\nRossland had averaged 92 cases r\nhepatosis (infectious jaundice) i:\neach' 12-month period.\n\"It is frequently a water-born\ndisease,\" the doctor stated, \"pre\ntection can be provided only b\ntreating the present water supply.'\nMORE PEOPLE BUY\nUCKLEY'i\nMIXTURE'\nTHAN ANY OTHER COUGH REMEDY\nB\nPeter Marken's basement has yielded an extremely odd\n\"flower\". A* cabbage got ambitious and sprouted a two-foot-long\nstalk complete with yellow leaves and cluster of blossom buds at\nthe top, to say nothing of sprouts around the stem. Mind you, it\nlacked the perfume one likes to inhale, but what can one expect\nfrom a humble cabbage doing its best in a basement.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDRUMHELLIR DEEP SEAM\nPhone 889\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\nCKLN\nTonight\n6:45\nH.W.\nHerridge\nCCF   CANDIDATE\nWANTED\nThe following  person or persons to take part in\nthe big talent lhow to be held at the Capitol\nTheatre on FRIDAY, MARCH 7th.\nSINGERS...\nDANCERS...\nMUSICIANS...\nRHYTHM GROUPS ...\nother ENTERTAINERS\nREWARD\nAnyone answering the above description should get\nin touch with the Recreation Office where they may\nlearn something to their advantage.' Sections for\nprevious winners, Adults, Junior High Students,\nElementary Students (grades 3-6) and Tiny Tots.\nWrite, Call or Phone the\"\nRECREATION OFFICE\u20141620\nJ. R. JOHNSON,\nRecreation Director.\nit's   all\nPRE-PLANNED\nOur experts \"blueprint\" every detail in advance\u2014'\ntake all the work and worry off your hands. And!\nwe move you in a \u00aeSanltiied Van I No extra cost.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n719 Baker St.\nPhone 33\n\u2022 Nelson, B. C.\n.....ijiii.. iimwumm iM.,ej.i'.U\"i. u \u25a0\u25a0>l.\u00bb.w\u00bbi:*tvx. I-.PW'WI\nSERVING UNITED STAT-S\/i\nCANADA, ALASKA, %$\\\nHAWAII & PUERTO R|CO J\n ^3\nWANDA KELLY KEN ERICKSON\nTWO STUDENTS of the Salmo Junior-Senior High\nSchool who attended the University of British Columbia\nStudents' Council Conference in Vancouver. The conference is designed to show delegates from the various\nhigh schools in the province the facilities for a higher\neducation in that institution. The two students will present\na full report on the 11th conference to the student body\nof the high school.\nTo Urge Nakusp Berth\nFor Arrow Lakes Ferry\nNAKUSP\u2014That Nakusp become\nthe home port of the Arrow Lakes\nFerry, thus improving services and\nlessening operating costs, was\nurged in a resolution formed by the\nNakusp Chamber of Commerce.\nThe resolution will be forwarded\nto provincial government authorities.\nThe chamber, which had information from the Government that\nthe ferry was not paying its way,\nsaid passengers could make Revelstoke to connect with trains both\nEast and West, and passengers\nfrom the Coast could connect the\nsame way with, the ferry Arrowhead.\nThe resolution will also point out\nthat most the officers and crew\nmembers lived in Nakusp.\nLetters were received from H.\nW. Herridge, M.P. for Kootenay\nWest, stating that a portion of the\nold government floating wharf\nwould be available to the town.\nMr. Herridge also wrote, in answer to requests for a booster radio\nstation, that 97 were to be built in\nCanada as soon as money was\navailable. The board decided to\nwrite the department of transport\nasking if Nakusp was on the list\nof 97.\nTONIGHT\n11:00 p.m.\nEast Kootenay Time\nCBC Relay From\nLethbridge\nChannel 7\nSEE\u00abHEAR\nA request from the Travel\nBureau asking for information on\nboat launching sites in the area\nwas received and the secretary instructed to inform them that the\ngovernment wharf was suitable\nand available lo the public.\nStreet lights were discussed and\nthe chamber's committee was instructed to take the problem to the\nannual meeting of the Nakusp Development District.\nReport on publicity folders was\ngiven by E. 0. Johnson, who said\nthat the Lower Arrow Lakes was\nanxious to join the Nakusp Chamber on the project.\nMr. Johnson was appointed head\nof the nominating committee to\nbring in a report to the annual\nmeeting in March.\nThe Week\nAt Victoria\nPRIME MINISTER\nJohn Diefenbaker\nPublished by the      ^\n\u00bb   Progressive Conservative\nParty of Canada\nFATHER, SON\nBANQUET HELD\nINVERMERE - The annual\nfather-son banquet sponsored for\nthe Lake Windermere Wolf Cub\npack by the group committee and\nan assisting group of mothers was\na successful event.\nSome 16 cubs and their proud\nfathers enjoyed an ample repast.\nGrace was said by Cubmaster\nFrank Greenwood.- Percy Dean\nwas master of ceremonies and the\nguest speaker was game warden\nJ. M. Mackill. Windermere Cub-\nmaster. Roy Clement .was a guest\nof honor.\nCub Jimmy Coy made the toast\nto the fathers and C. E. Osterloh replied, pointing out the pride\nof a father in his son and the ways\nin which a cub can be worthy of\nhis pack.\nGame warden Mackill talked to\nthe boys about the safe use of fire\narms. Following the dinner, films\nand slides were shown by Mr.\nMackill and by E. J. Zinkan of\nthe Rocky Mountain Boys Camp\nand other aspects of outdoor life.\nAssistant Cubmasters are Sonny\nNomland and F. Coy.\nNakusp Man\nSuffers Injuries\nNAKUSP- John Chernoff of Nakusp suffered a painful accident\nwhile changing a tire on his logging truck.\nWhile Mr. Chernoff was In the\nprocess of changing the tire, the\nrim blew out and he was cut about\nthe face, eyes and lips, and lost\nseveral teeth.   .. -    .\nThe accident occurred In the\ngarage and Mr. Chernoft was able\nto reach the house about 50 yards\naway before collapsing on the\ndoorstep. His brother Bill, rushed\nhim to the hospital where he was\ntreated for cuts and concussion.\nHe will be in hospital for a few\ndays.\nBy LEO T. NIMSICK\nThe fifth week of the session\ncommenced wdth the invasion of a\ncouple of hundred trade unionists.\nThe purpose of this delegation was\nto present to the standing committee on Labor, their brief setting out\nthe serious nature of our unemployment situation and their suggestions for alleviating the problem.\nThey accomplished their purpose\nin a very orderly fashion with each\ndelegate carrying out his assigned task of either meeting with the\nselect standing committee or interviewing individual MLAs on unemployment matters.\nThe brief was well documented\nwith statistics of the situation in\ndifferent parts of the province and\nit included quotes from the Financial Post to show that the outlook\nfor 1958 is not very bright which\nproves that unemployment is not\njust of a seasonal nature.\nA summary of their recommendations are:\n1. An expanded public works pro\ngram.\n2. A conference to be called be\ntween the government, municipal\nities, labor and management.\n3. Recommendations to the Federal Government for increased unemployment insurance.\n,   4. Study of seasonal unemployment.\n5. The government should ar\nrange a debt moratorium to pre\nvent unemployed persons from los\ning their furniture, etc.\nOn Monday, I made my contribution to the budget debate and to\nme it was an interesting afternoon.\nMy talk dealt with a number of\nmatters concerning the Kootenays.\nRural electrification took up\nsome of my time and I suggested\nthat as the B. C. Power Commission was now buying power from\nthe East Kootenay Power Com\npany, it was time for the Power\nCommission to buy the East Kootenay system and thereby handle\nthe distribution of power in the\nwhole area. If this were done,\nplaces such as Fort Steele and\nWasa could receive power on a\nlower initial cost basis than can\nbe offered by the East Kootenay\nPower.\nFailing this, my suggestion was\nthat the government set up a revolving fund from which the people in these areas, including West\nNewgate, could band themselves\ntogether and borrow the money\nfor the initial cost of installation.\nThis money could be paid back\nover a period of time at a low-interest rate.\nI also spoke on the gaol situation both in Nelson and Cranbrook\nTo close the Nelson gaol will prevent people visiting short-term\ncases which are usually held in\nNelson, and place an extra burden\non the municipalities for transportation charges for these cases..\n\"OTosirig the'Nelson gaol will aggravate the situation El Cranbrook\nwhich is overcrowded at the present time; in fact, the Cranbrook\ngaol is a disgrace and although\nit may have been all right 50\nyears ago, it certainly does not fill\nthe requirements today.\nI argued that the Cranbrook\ngaol should be a provincial responsibility as many of the prisoners\nare from outside the city and consideration should certainly be\ngiven to a provincial gaol at Cranbrook.\nMy talk criticised the government for not giving the increase to\nthe civil servants without having\nthem wait till now and still they\ndo not know what they are getting.\nR was interesting to note that,\nalthough the government denied\nany cuts in the institution, they\npassed an order-in-council only the\nother day, to inicrease the staff\nby\"over 70 persons.\nNo answer was forthcoming from\nthe minister of Recreation in regard to the cuts in the Game Department and Parks vote. He\nspeaks today so I hope he will\ngive his reasons. Since my radio\ntalk, I have received many letters\nfrom interested people on this matter.\nThe balance of the week  was\nConservation Car to Visit Southern Interior\nBACK IN BRITISH COLUMBIA for its first\nappearance of the 1958 season, the Canadian'\nForestry Association's Conservation Car will\nspend a month In the southern interior touring\nthe lines of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The\ncombined picture theatre and lecture 'halt on\nwheels opens its spring engagement with a 3-day\nstop-over at Penticton, March 3, 4 and 5. Other\npoints to be visited between then and April 5 are:\nMidway, Castlegar,, Trail, Nelson, Creston, Cranbrook, Kimberley, Lake Windermere, Golden,\nRevelstoke and Salmon Arm. The car> with a\nity\nmessage to cities, towns, villages and way stations along Canadian rail lines from Prince Edward Island to the Pacific Coast. In addition to\nregular showings for the general public, staff\nlecturer Paul Pageau will visit local schools with\nspecial programs for younger audiences. On its\nfourth visit to B.C. last fall, the car smashed all\nCanadian attendance records when it reached a\ntotal audience of more than 14,500 persons. Itinerary of a southern Canadian National Railway\nlines tour to follow immediately on the conclusion\nof the CPR circuit is now being mapped.\nLast Riles for\nDenver Man\nNEW DENVER - The altar of\nSt. Stephen's Anglican Church fc!\nNew Denver was banked with\nflowers at the funeral of Herbert\nCranston Crellin, who died in the\nSlocan Community Hospital at the\nage of 68. Officiating clergyman\nwas Rev. E. R. Hope.\nBorn in Cumberland, England,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Philip\nCrellin, he came to Canada in 1923\nand settled in New Denver.\nSurviving are his two sisters In\nNew Denver, Mrs. Dulcie Pearson\nand Mrs. Isabel Pendry; one sister\nin England, Mrs. J. C. Harris,\nthree nephews and one niece.\nHymns offered at the service\nwere \"Safe in the Arms of Jesus\",\nand \"Rock of Ages,\" with Miss\nGladys L. Reynolds at the organ.\n\"Nunc Dimittus\" was intoned as\nthe funeral procession left the\nchurch.\nPallbearers were Neil Tattrie,\nWilliam Henderson, J. I?. Irwin,\nFred H. Angrighoh, Robert Robinson and Anthony E. Thomas.\nInterment was in the New Denver Cemetery.\nOVER 90 AT\nKASLO FATHER,\nSON BANQUET\nKASLO \u2014 A Father and Son ban-\nqeut was held in the Vimy Park\nHall, with nearly 100 parents and\nguests present. The Rev. E. Hope\nof New Denver opened the program, followed by toasts to the\nQueen and Lord Baden-Powell,\nleaders were introduced by J.\nHumphries, MC. Speakers were\nGerry Gordon and John Langley.\nA special presentation of a trophy\nfor the best Scout of the year was\nmade to Leonard Bacon. Movies\nJamboree was led by Campfire\nleader Les Stilwell. The program\nwas under the direction of president Mrs. Mossman. Banquet was\nconvened by the Mothers' Auxiliary to Cubs and Scouts.\nBeacon Fire to Open\nSalmo Celebrations\nSALMO \u2014 The Centennial Year sented to the committee. Proceeds\nwill kick off with the lighting of\na beacon fire by the volunteer fire\ndepartment to coincide with lighting of beacons throughout the province on April 27.\nThis decision was made at the\nrecent meeting of the Salmo Centennial Committee. The committee\nwill contact the Maple Leaf Band\nof Trail to arrange an afternoon\nconcert during Salmo's weekend\nCentennial celebration. Plans are\nfor a non-denominational church\nservice to be held the same day.\nArrangements for these two events\nare in the hands of Frank Burger\nand E. John.\nReports from the Legion and Rotary Club of a prospective giant\nbingo  game  May  10  were  pre-\nwiH be given to the Centennial\nFund. Donations will be solicited\nfrom business men and organizations, a delegation being chosen\nfrom the committee for this purpose,\nAn old timers banquet is planned\nto which native sons over 40 years\nof age will be invited and senior\ncitizens who have lived in British\nColumbia since 1886. This event\nand the Folk Festival will be held\nthe same day. The old timers' banquet is in charge of the Ladies'\nAid.\nA beard-growing contest will\ndraw competition from all over\nthe district.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1958 \u2014 3\nCapacity Crowd Sees\nFernie Ice Carnival\nFERNIE \u2014 Seating was at a\npremium when a capacity crowd\nof 1200 saw the Fernie Rotary\nClub's annual car-nival and ice\nshow. .\nThe main production, \"The Legend of Fernie\", was well enacted\nby a large cast of 80 skaters. Of\nthese, nine were pre-school age\nchildren, eight were from the Junior High School and the balance\nwere, elementary school children.\nAccording to legend, William\nFernie reneged on a promise to\nmarry a Kootenay Indian princess\nif shown the location of the coalfields. The princess' grandmother\nput a curse on the city of Fernie,\ndecreeing that it be destroyed by\nfire and other means. The Fernie\nfire of 1908 and the recent closing\nof Elk River Colliery were enacted\nas resulting disasters.\nLeading roles in the production\nwere taken by Donald McRitchie\nas Wijliam Fernie. Kenny Yip as\nLeading Buck, Lois Smith as Indian Princess, Jacklyne Skilling as\nMedicine Man, Brenda Baker as\nthe Chief, Joan Morris as the Indian Grandmother, and Judy Morris as The Flame.\nDoreen Danielson was crowned\ncarnival queen by Mrs. Violet\nKnight, last year's queen. Miss\nDanielson was escorted to her\nthrone by an honor guard of Boy\nScouts. She was accompanied by\nprincesses Helen Bachlet and Nina\nBezak. During the intermission\nVictor   Bossio   entertained   as\nclown dressed as a squaw carrying\na papoose.\nFollowing the intermission, Cran-.\nbrook and Fernie figure skaters\npresented the following acts: Solo,\nPat MacDonald; pair, Eileen and\nPauline Serek; solo-, five-year-old\nJacqueline Brown; pair, Penny\nWestgate and Annette Livingstone;\npair, Joan and Judy Morris; solo,\nDonald McRitchie; group of three,\nMyrna Kasmar, Mary Craig and\nArlene Whalley; solo, Eileen Serek; pair, Pat MacDonald and Joan\nPouchard;- pair, Mary Craig and\nMyrna Kasmar; dance number,\nGladys Littler and Mike Struve.\nFace-Lifting\nFor Arrow\nLakes Hospital\nNAKUSP \u2014 Wards in the Arrow\nLakes Hospital in Nakusp have undergone a face-lifting. At the request of matron Miss McKenzie,\nall clubs sponsoring the wards supplied the paint and in many ca*es\nthe labor for a complete renewal\nof interior decoration.\nNew curtains supplement the\npaint job.\nMARCH 31st\nVOTE\nDEWDNEY I*\nHigher Rate Group\nFor Natal Phones\nNATAL - Natal telephone exchange will move into a higher\nrate group in accordance with a\ndirective from the board of transport commissioners for Canada.\nThis action by the board is the\nresult of information filed with\nthem by the Telephone Company in\nOctober, 1957. Natal subssribers\nwill pay slightly more for telephone\nservice.\n\u2022 The System of rate grouping is\nbased upon . two principles. The\nfirst is that the volume of service inicreases with the increase\nin the number of telephones that\ncan be called free of toll charges.\nIn the case of Natal, the limits\nof Group 1 are Irom 1 to 250 telephones. Natal now has 304 telephones in service. The second prin-\nvery quiet with two night .sittings.\nWith the following quote I will\nsay, \"thirty\" for another week,\nfriends.\n\"Woman juror to 11 exasperated\njurorsr\n'If you weren't so stubborn, we\ncould all go home.' \"\n6500 X-Rayed in\nDistrict Program\nCRANBROOK \u2014 More reliance\nwill be placed in future on tuberculin tests with regular check on\nthose reacting positively, Dr. C. C.\nMcLean has reported to East Kootenay Board of Health. Positive reactors are those most likely to get\ntuberculosis in the course of their\nlives, he said.\nHighlight of the tuberculosis control section of the Department of\nHealth in East Kootenay in 1957\nwas the community X-ray survey\nwhich covered 6457 persons exclusively of Cranbrook and Kimberley. Of these, 164 X-rays were\nreferred for investigation, locating\nso far one new active case of tuberculosis and early lung cancef\nin a few others. All referrals will\nbe notified regularly to have a\nchest X-ray, since most of them\nshowed previous infection and may\ndevelop the disease again.\nHowever, future program in tuberculosis control will emphasize\nsuberculin tests, particularly in\nchildren up to 15 years old so that\nprevention and early treatment\ncan be emphasized along with prevention of exposure to tuberculosis.\nThis community X-ray survey\nwas in addition to the routine work\nof the 24 X-ray diagnostic and 26\nconsultation sessions of the Kootenay Travelling Tuberculosis Clinic. This clinic read 3161 X-rays\ntaken in hospitals and referred -422\npersons for further examination,\nsome of whom were found to have\nnon-tuberculous pneumonia from\nthe Asian flu epidemic. East Kootenay program sent 14 patients to\nsanitarium, half newly discovered\ncases. Thirty-two tuberculosis patients in East Kootenay received\n724 streptomycin injections through\nthe Health Unit in home treatments.\nciple upon which the rate system\nis based is that the cost of providing service generally increases\nas exchanges grow in size. Other\nareas affected by rate increases\nat this time are Golden, Gulf Islands, Hope, Salmo, Tofino, Uc-\nluelet, Lake Cowichan, Ladner\nand Kitimat.\nyou wont be stuck\nif you save regularly at\nIMPERIAL.\n\u25a0 iTiriiiiinii\nIBANK\n117-7\nWzm\nTHIS BADGE\nserves all CANADA\nThe R.C.M.P. provides a challenge to\nqualified young men who are willing\nand able to meet the demands of a\nLAW ENFORCEMENT CAREER.\nThe prime requisites of a member of the Royal\nCanadian Mounted Police are intelligence, loyalty, integrity and courage. Service requirements\nfrequently entail long hours, inconvenience and\npersonal danger. Service benefits and advantage*\ninclude a certain prestige, good comradeship, a\nmeasure of adventure and satisfaction through\nl service to Canada.\n\/\/ you are interested in a career in the Force,\nsome of the qualifications are:\nAge: Between 18 and 30 years,\nHeight i between 5'8\" and 6'5\",\nBritish subject or Canadian citizen,\nUnmarried,\nGood physical condition,\nAbility to pass an education test\nbased on a Grade X level. ,\n^ If you feel that you possess the basic tjuatifico\nftinns, you are invited to apply at the nearest\nR.CM. Police office ar write to:\nTHE COMMISSIONER,\nR.C.M. POLICE, OTTAWA\n Established April 22. 1902\nJntsrfor British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.   \u25a0\u2022\nAuthorized as Second Class Malt, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OH   1'HE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER Oil  THE CANADIAN PRESS.       ,\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to ,the use tor republication of ail news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters tn this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nTuesday, February 25, J 958\nNasser Poking Out Chin Too Far\nColonel Nasser seems to be doing\nquite well these days. He has Joined\nSyria to his empire and now he is\ntaking over part of the Sudan. How\nwell he will fare with this latest adventure can hardly be forecast, ior\nalthough the Egyptians have always\nclaimed that the Sudan is part of their\ncountry, they have never been able\nto enforce their rule.\nEgypt would like to annex the\nSudan, because that country controls\nthe headwaters of the Nile and the life\nof Egypt depends on that river. It also\nwants to control the country because\nCol. Nasser intends to make himself\nas great as any other dictator and\nWelcome Aid\nWhen ballistic missiles are mentioned we are apt to think of the United\nStates and Russia and their long range\ninter-continental rockets, and overlook\nthe fact that other countries may be\ndoing research along the same line,\nBritain now announces that she has\na missile with a range of two thousand\nmiles which the United States will produce for her. These will be fired from\nunderground chambers, which, it is\nhoped, will make them reasonably\nsafe from retaliatory action.\nThis is a much more Important\nachievement than most people believe, for it places many important\ntargets   in   Russian   territory   within\nprobably with the same final result\u2014\noblivion.\nThe Sudan, which, unfortunately for\nher, did not decide to remain in the\nCommonwealth, can only appeal to\nthe United Nations, and that is small\ncomfort. The debates will go on for a\nlong time, there will be no impassioned\nspeeches about aggression and the\nrights of small nations, the United\nStates and Russia will not intervene\nand the dictator will be puffed up a\nlittle more. Eventually like Mussolini\nand Hitler he will go too far. Then the\njob of cutting him down to size will\nbe greater. We may wish that the\nBritish and French did finish the job\nat Suez.\nFrom Britain\nreach of these rockets from Britain. It\nsubstantially reinforces the efforts of\nthe United Stales to bring every part\nof the Soviet Union under direct attack\nby the rocket bases to be established\nin Britain.\nIt should be particularly heartening to the United States for there must\nbe many times when that country\nmust feel -that all the burden of defence and its cost falls heavily on her.\nThis establishment of her own rocket\nbases by Britain is an assurance that\nat least one country ln the world is\nprepared to do the best it can to defend Itself and lighten the burden on\nthe.U.S.     '\nCanada's Grievances With U.S. Are Tragic\nToday there are \"more grievances, mora\nirritations and more misunderstandings between the United States and Canada than at\nany time since the Alaska boundary dispute\nin 1903\". At a time when Canada's self-\napplauded skill in interpreting America to\nthe world is more vital than it has ever been,\nthis rift is \"more than unlucky, it is tragic\",\nBlair Fraser, Maclean's Ottawa editor, reports from Washington.\nWriting under the title \"Where we really\nstand with the U.S..\" Fraser pins responsibility for most of Canada's present anti-U.S.\n. bias on three \"political shuttlecocks.\"\n1. The 15% cut the U.S. has lopped off\nCanadian oil imports. While they admit the\ncuts are arguable on principle, Fraser writes,\nthe Americans are seriously annoyed over\nthe charge that they've simply ignored Canadian interests.\n\"Look what we did,\" one Washington\nofficial told the Ottawa analyst.  \"We con\nsidered you at every step. We did all we\ndared to stack the cards in your favor, took\na chance on losing every friend we've got\nln Venezuela and the Middle East. Then you\nCanadians tear our arm olf and beat us over\nthe head with the bloody stuirlp\".\n2. U.S. arm surplus disposal methods.\nOur protests over barter and \"tied-in\" wheat\nsales have had some effect on U.S. policies,\nthe Maclean's analysis states, but again\nAmericans are worried because \"the average\nCanadian wouldn't know there'd been any\nchange\", to listen to political speeches here.\n3. The joint-command mlxup over North\nAmerican air defence. A formal agreement\nsetting out lines of authority has now been\nsigned. \"But the fog surrounding NORAD's\norigins,\" Fraser writes, \"and particularly\nthe discovery that the new minister of external affairs knew nothing about it in December, raised some perfectly genuine fears\nin Ottawa. These in turn raised doubts and\nfears in Washington.\"\nTrade With Red China Our Best Defence\nThe British, at least, are not asleep when\nit comes to potential trade with Red China.\nWhile Canadians are worrying about the\nexport market the Peninsular and Oriental\nLine is reported readying trans-Pacific pas-\nGems of Thought\nCHARITY\nBenevolence is the distinguishing characteristic of man. As embodied in man's conduct, it is called the path of duty.\u2014Mencius.\nIt is another's fault if he be not grateful;\nbut it is mine if I do not give.\u2014Seneca.\n*      *      *\nThe place of charity, Uke that of God, is\neverywhere.\u2014Francis Quarles.\nsenger service with two ships of. 40,000 to\n45.000 tons now building.\nAccording to Sir Donald Anderson, managing director of the P 4 0 Line currently\nvisiting Vancouver, his firm's ships now\ncall regularly at Shanghai and Tientsin iri\nthe U.K.-Orient service.\nWe don't see why Canadian trade thinking is not consistent with Britain's when it\ncomes to trade and services with the Chinese mainland.\nWhen are we going to realize that the\nChinese millions are ready, willing and able\nto buy our goods\u2014just like the Poles, Czechs\nand Yugoslavs?\nAnd what better way to fight the economic war started by Soviet Russia than\nto trade with Red China? A trade offense\nis our best economic defence.\n\u2014Kamleops Sentinel.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to tht Editor on any tople et\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they art\nbrief accurate and (sir. N6 letter will ba\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\ntha ilgnatura and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence canrtot bt returned,\nTime to Think\nOf City Tax Cuts'\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The time is close when bur City\nCouncil will be figuring their budgets for\n1958, and thereby setting the mill-rate for\nthe city. It would seem a good time to think\nof lower taxes for our citizens. Over a period\nof years the tax rate has jumped to such\nan extent that many of us have a hard\ntime to pay them, and persons with a limited\nincome or small pension have to deprive\nthemselves of the necessities Of life.\nIt should be realized by the council that\nless than 3000 taxpayers are responsible for\nthe monies required, plus some from the\nprofits of the power plant.\nHow long can we keep going on this\nspending spree? At the rate we are going,\nit will soon take most of the money to pay\nour debts. What wijl we do then?\nThe council should be satisfied to complete the outstanding work necessitated by\nthe last by-law, and do only necessary repairs until the debt structure is greatly reduced.\nIt is noted that a counle of aldermen\nare for putting $150,000 to $200,000 into a new\ncity hall. The time is not now. A vast number\nof people are of the opinion that with a\nsmall outlay of money the old post office\ncould be made into an ideal city hall and\nserve us well for at least ten years. The taxpayers authorized the city to get this property\nfor that purpose, but it is apparent that some\nof our council would like a monument at\nour expense. The people of this town should\nnot bs saddled with added expense at this\ntime. A few days ago a Social Credit member\nviewed with alarm the terrific rise of taxes\non' homes in the province and suggested\nlegislation to stop th-? rise on citizens' homes;\nwhen things like this are brought to ths\nnotice of the government it Is getting serious,\nand councils should take note. Nelson is not\nVancouver, and It is time we stopped trying\nto keep up with it. It has a much larger\npopulation, or have we not realized it yet?\nThe time is coming, and sooner than we\nrealize, when the whole country will have\nto change its ideas. Wages and costs of\nmaterials and other thinss that make for\nliving, are getting to such a state that if\na halt is not called soon we shall all be\nbankrupt. This would be a good time for\nNelson to start showing some concern for\nits inhabitants.\nThere are not a large number of wealthy\npeople here and a good many, while putting\non a good front, and trying to keep up with\nthe Joneses, are finding the going pretty\ntou\u00bbh. Let the council show a little of the\nmilk of human kindness, before it is too\nlate. They have a chance now.\nSPENCER J. NEWELL.\nChildren To Be\nDenied Sleighing?\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Your editorial on sleighing is a fine\nexample ot selfishness.\nWe make our country what it is. We train\nthe people. 'The devil finds work for idle\nhands\" is as true now as It ever was. Our\nchildren have little work at home, because\nmother and father no longer need muth help.\nAre children to ba denied this most healthful exercise because adults, who are too lazy\nand too unmindful of their own health to\nwalk, must go a few blocks out of their way\nto help these children grow into good citizens?\nWhy should the Parent-Teacher Association give a guarantee the youngsters will\nuse only these streets? We provide police\nbecause grownups will not guarantee they\nwill behave. Do you expect children to exercise more restraint than adults?\n\"We love to indulge our children\" should\nbe written \"indulge ourselves\". It gives us\na lovely feeling of importance to shower\nthem with gifts. But do we say when they\nask for help, \"not now, I must go to a meeting ... I must wash the car or the walls\n... Do go and play!\" In the next breath\nwe say \"Don't throw the ball against the\nhouse . . . don't climb on the fence , . . don't\nride your bike on the lawn\" , . . don't, don't,\nall day long. If town children cannot play\non the streets, provide places for them to\nplay, beside a 50-foot lot with a house taking\nthe lion's share of the room.\nNANCY DERBYSHIRE.\nRiondel, B.C.\nThey'll Do It Every\n_ls _ WITNESS, QRULLER WdS\nTSLE TO'DESCRIBE- THE SUSPECTS\n10 A T-\/WD WM A BLOCK MAY-\n\u2014 \u25a0ii   .-n.i \u25a0_.-..--.\u25a0   ..      .    \u25a0    .      --\n\u2014       By Jimmy Hatlo\nI S4W 'EM I7UM OUTA ^P*\nTHE &AM-A BIO GUV\" W-^ZTyJli^S\nSIX FEET, HUraED,^ K     $&$,\nErCHlV-AH'A BLONDE M .,_    BA^\ntJAME-TiVENTy-PIVE, AU \"l\/gf^_?S.\nGREEN EVES, MOLE   \/J rilFH-^\nON LEFT CHEE^'-_\u00abm>&r\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nLord, What wilt thou have me\nto do? Acts 9:6\nNo mortal man ever did so\nmuch as did Paul. God has tasks\nfor us also. Only eternity can determine the value of our labors.\n(hint d(stt\nHospital\nLife\nin Music\n. . . F. B. PEARCE\n2-25\nMarried manners ought to be like\ntable manners. You accept what's\nset before you when you're company, and a wife ought to be that\npolite, too.\nWhen I awoke in the hospital\nand saw all the crowd of orderlies\nand nurses it reminded me very\nmuch of a musical comedy scene\nHOnce the following:\nTime: Early morning before\nsunrise.\nPlace: A hospital ward.\nEnter an orderly carrying \u25a0 a\nhand basin, bangs on the basin,\nputs it down, does a horn-pipe\nand sings Wakey-wakey, rise and\nshine.\nAll the bed patients wake, throw\nback their covers, sit up and sing\nin chorus, \"Oh what a lovely morning, oh what a beautiful day.\"\nEnter dancing demurely three\nyoung nurses dressed in white,\nPyllidia carrying pill, Thermom\netrix with a themometer and Cas-\ntoria with a glass.\nPyllidia sings. With great regret\nmy gentle sir I wake you from\nyour slumber. I hope you will\nnot mind but you must take this\nnumber.\nChorus of patients: nine.\nThey sing \u2014\nOh the number nine is the best\nof pills\nAnd the pride of the British\nArmy\nWhenever you go to meet the\nfoe take along a number\nnine-o\nThis paragon of pills will cure\nall ills and leave your\ntroubles behind-o.\nThermometrix waves a thermom\neter and sings-\nGentle sir. Oh gentle sir,\nI much regret to say,\nYou cannot leave today,\nYour temperature is up.\nChorus \u2014\nDoes  she  care,   oh   does   she\ncare If you are sick or sorry\nDoes she care? We all declare\nshe doesn't care if you are\nsick with worry.\nYou cannot leave today.\nCastoria \u2014\nToss this dram down laddie, toss\nthe dram down\nThe sooner it's gone the sooner\nto rest,\nAnd  never   forget  that  nursle\nknows best.\nChorus \u2014\nOh. Yeah.\nOily, oily, oily. Oily in the morn\ning we oil our poor sore\nthroats.\nWithout the oil we sure would\nspoil.\nThe loveliest of notes.\nOil of the morning, beautiful oil.\nGive the'man plenty so he won't\nspoil.\nGive the man plenty so he won't\nspoil.\nExeunt maidens   dancing   digni-\nfiedly.\nEnter matrons eagerly \u2014\nWhere Is he? Oh where is he\nwho In our youth\nWas then so young and charm\ning.\nFirst matron disappointedly \u2014\nOh, his hair is grey,\nSecond matron \u2014\nHe's old.\nThlitJ matron proffering a goblet\nof nectar \u2014\nDrink this, and then perchance\nyour youthful vigor will\nreturn' again.   \u25a0\nPatient drinks \u2014\nHail to the fairest of the fair.\nMatrons simper and all sing \u2014\nDo you remember the days of\nour youth,\nWhen we roamed the fields to\ngether.\nAnd our hearts were high and\nour spirits gay,\nHowever bad tne weather.\nThose day are gene it's no\nlonger  May\nBut do not haste to leave us\nstay, stay.\nJack in  the  oCrner,   waving  a\nCrutch \u2014.',',\nNay, nay. He shall not stay,\nAway with him, Away with him\nHe shall not stay. He snores.\nChorus \u2014\nHe snores. Away with him.\nAaway with him. He shall\nnet stay he snores.\nEnter the Fair Ermintrude carrying a white banner with the letters\nSC on It.     -\nShe sings -\nNever In my life since I became\na wife \u2022\nDid I meet a man I admire so\ngreatly\nWill you please accept this\ninvitation hearty\nTe Join the Social Credit party.\nWill you, won't you joint the\nparty.\nPatient sings \u2014\nI pray you dear lady net to\ntake it amiss\nIf I say that life was never\nUke this.\nI never expected in this dull\nplace,\nTo find a young lady with such\na fair fact.\nThe pleasure 'is mine, but alas\nI can't sign\nWith the Social Credit party,\nBut il you'll be sociable, I'll\ngive you the credit.\nEnter ward maid et al brlnjlng\nbreakfast trays.\nChomi all \u2014\nBreakfast Is here hurrah,\nhurray.\nIt seta us all up for the rest of\nthe day.\nThe mush may be mushy and\nand the toast all burnt\nThe teat May be tasteless but\nas we're all learnt.\nThere's nothing like breakfast\nin bed.\nThere's nothing like breakfast\nIn bed.\nCurtain.\nBritish Columbia has 40,500,-\n000 acres covered by mature\ntimber.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2014By Vtmmaaa Drake\u2014\nLoGk in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars.\nFor Wednesday, February 26, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Mars, planet of great energy, is\nstrong in your sector. Today its\napathetic aspect indicates turning\nsome time to deliberation, contemplation. But don't let up in\nrequired activty.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nClarlty; peace, cheer, hope, appreciation of the beautiful and\nfamily interests are to be stressed\nif you would have the happy, successful day that Is possible. YOU\nmust put forth the effort.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nHere is a day for curtailing investigation and inquiry to the necessities, not indulging useless chatter or busying self with others'\naffairs. Simplify arrangements,\nprotect nervous system.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014Your Moon's position suggests\nthat you hasten to finish the truly\nsmall details and get after the\nmore important items that build\nthis day and week to the satisfying\nclimax it oan attain.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) -,\nA very dreary time is had by all\nwhen lack of controversy and venture are forsaken, and many mistakes occur through unenlighten-\nment. Fight sturdily all obstacles\nto real achievement.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 A mildly Inauspicious\nconfiguration of planet Mercury\n(though fine yesterday and tomorrow) suggests a note of caution and\nthoroughness, always needed in a\nwell-run life. Eliminate tension.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Intensify interest in\nright and happy things, curb whatever you know you should \u2014 and\nYOU know what you should, most\nof the time. If in doubt, review,\nsay a prayer, ask questions; then\nDECIDE.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio)  \u2014 Under Mars  today\nstrive to increase interest in intellectual matters, children's affairs, community and far-reaching\nbenefits. Stimulate leadership, correct decisions.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Jupiter's several excellent configurations at\nthis period Indicate advances in\noperations connected with government, judicial, spiritual and sociable activities. Strengthen benevolence.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Looking forward to\nanything is often happier than the\nactual doing. So enjoy making\nplans, talking matters over, enhancing tha outlook, and do not\njust hasten through these periods.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 \"Your\" planet\nUranus, in fine aspect, urges you\nto step forth with all your resources\nand wits and corral (or at least\nset up the pattern for attaining)\n(Pisces) \u2014 Neptune also favors\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\nnew lop rewards. You can!\ndecisive action and, as soon as\npracticable, after investigating all\npossible outcomes. If you have\nfacts, and carry principles will}\nyou, you will do well.\nYOU BORN TODAY of Pisces,\nunder Neptune, can reach great\nheights in any undertaking (it must\nbe worthwhile or you will lose interest), if you develop and use\ndaily your many God-given talents.\nYou have neutral tendencies; don't\nlet them turn to chaotic channels,\nbut to the wonderful, spiritual\nstanding you can attain. Change\nyour environment where you\nshould; shun anxiety. Choose companions of pure and worthy status.\nYour intuition, logical conclusions\nand intelligent nature should overcome hazards quickly when you\nencourage your self-confidence.\nBirthdate of: Victor Hugo, French\nauthor, dramatist; William F.\n(Buffalo Bill) Cody, famous scout,\nsoldier.\nKing Features\nSupreme Court Denies\nPerepolkins' Appeal\nOTTAWA   (CP)-The  Supreme quashed by the B.C. Appeal Court\nCourt of Canada Monday denied a\nDoukhobor couple's attempt to\nappeal a judgment of the British\nColumbia Court of Appeal in connection with their son's committal to the New Denver, B.C.,\nschool.\nAnne and Bill Perepolkin of the\nSons of Freedom Doukhobor sect\napplied for leave to appeal a decision of the B.C. Appeal Court\nthat lower courts examine committal of their son Bill, Jr., 9,\nunder section 13 of the B.C. Protection of Children's Act.   \u25a0\nTheir    sen's    committal    was\nNegro Girl\nEnters\nMixed School\nNEW YORK (AP) - Minnejean\nBrown went to school Monday,\nmore than 1,000 miles from home.\nThe 16-year-old Negro girl, expelled recently from Central High\nSchool in Little Rock, Ark., began classes at the New Lincoln\nSchdol, a private Interracial institution.\nThe Manhattan school offered\nher a scholarship of $1,050 a year\nafter her expulsion from Central\nHigh.\n\"My education Is the important thing,\" the girl' said on her\narrival here Saturday.\nUntil a few months ago she\nspelled her name \"Minnie Jean.'\nShe changed it to \"Minnijean,\"\nshe said, \"when I became a\ncelebrity.\"\nRACIAL TROUBLES\nOne of nine Negro students attending Central High under the\nprotection of federal troops, she\nwas expelled following a series of\nracial incidents.\nShe acknowledged Saturday\ncalling a white girl \"white\ntrash. She said the girl had\nStepped on her heels and called\nher names.\n\"It was the first time I ever\nreally get mad enough to sav\nanything like that. I just let go,\"\nsaid Minnijean.\n.   She added: \"This is all in the\npast. I'd like to forget it.\"\n\"I'm praying constantly for the\nother eight kids,\" the girl said.\n\"They need it.\"\nThe New Lincoln School was\nestablished 19 years ago to continue pioneer work begun by predecessor Institutions dating back\nto to years age.\nNo records are kept of students'\nracial background, a spokesman\nsaid, but the majority are white.\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMontreal \u2014 Frederick Thomas\nMcKesn, 78, former president of\nChamplain Oil Products.\nLos Angeles \u2014 Major Charles\nGoguel, MBE, 75, veteran of the\nBoer War and the first and second world wars.\nToronto\u2014 Rev. W. C. Perry, 73,\nformer presWing elder of the\nAfrican Methodist Episcopal\nChurch in Canada.\nNICE, France \u2014 Gaston Ravel,\n80, a pioneer of the French movie\nindustry.\nwhich referred the case back to\nthe B.C, Supreme Court to see if\nthe committal could be enforced\nunder the section covering unfitness of parents to keep their\nchild.\nThe Perepolkins sought to prevent this re-examination of the\ncase on the ground that the section is outside the legislative\npowers of the province and interferes with their religious freedom.\n\"COULD BE CHAOS\"\nThe Supreme Court here denied leave to appeal because th*\ncommittal order was quashed and\nbecause the B.C. courts have not\nexamined the case in the light of\nsection 13.\nTo a suggestion the committal\nInterferes wilh religious freedom,\nMr. Justice Charles Locke, one\nof three judges who heard the\nappeal, said compulsory school\ncould be refused by parents simply because, they do not like the\ncurriculum.\n\"If so, there would be chaos\nall over Western Canada,\" said\nMr. Justice Locke, former British Columbia lawyer.\nPolice Work on\nCup Mystery\nBIRMINGHAM, England (AP)\nA 63 year-old mystery, the thelt\nof the original British Football\nAssociation Tournament -Cup, apparently was solved Sunday when\nHarry Bulge. 80, confessed he\nhelped steal it.\nB'urge said he and two other\nmen now dead stole the cud from\na sporting goods store where lt\nwas on display, melted lt down\nand mane counterfeit coins out of\nthe silver. At the time, the cup\nwas held by Aston Villa, which\nhad won Ihe 1895 tournament.\nThe cup was made in 1872 at\na cost of \u00a320.\nPolice said they ml*ht charge\nBurge with the theft if they can\nfind any record of the case in\nofficial annals. Burge told a reporter: \"I just wanted to get it\noff my mind\" and said be would\nplead guilty if charged..\nReform School\nBoys Earn\nPrince's Badge\nWARWICK, England (Reuters)\nSeven teen-age boys at a reform\nschool are to receive Prlnc<\nPhilip's silver badges, awarded\nfor character, initiative and physique.\nThe Kineton Reform School\nboys competed with more than\n7,000 other youths in elite private\nschools, state schools and boyi\nclubs throughout Britain ln a\nrugged series of physical tests\nand demonstrations of strength oi\ncharacter.\nThe seven were among only 300\nwho won silver badges. Seven\nhundred others qualified to receive the prince's bronze award.\nPrince Philip established tht\ncontest last year.\nThe boys had to pass tests In\nexpedition and rescue work, physical fitness and public service.\nTwo Projectiles\nFired at\nFort Churchill\nFORT CHURCHILL, Man. (CP)\nTwo rockets were fired within 35\nminutes of each other to altitudei\nof 128 and 91 miles in International Geophysical Year tesul\nmade here early Monday.\nAn Aerobee rocket reached the\ngreater altitude after being fired\nfrom the sub-Arctic base neat\nthe shore of Hudson Bay at 1\na.m. CST. A Nlke-Caiun solid-fuel\nrocket was launched 35 minutes\nlater. Information from both was\nradioed back to ground stations\nmanned by American scientists\nand personnel of the Canadian\ndefence research board and the\ntransport departroent.\nThe first rocket was designed\nto test atmospheric pressure,\ntemperatures, air density and\nwinds at high altitudes. Special\nmeasures such as sealing the\nrocket and polishing its surface\nwere taken to ensure that it did\nnot carry with it air from the\nearth's surface to upset the tests.\nM\u00bbNY MEASUREMENTS\nThe projectile also measured\nauroral effects.\nAir pressure, temperatures and\nair density were measured by\ndifferent techniques by instruments in the Nike-Cajun rocket.\nBoth experiments were pronounced successful by United\nStates scientists directing them,\nScientific data from the Aerobee\nrocket was described as \"excellent,\"\nThe Aerobee was sponsored by\nthe United States naval research\nlaboratory at Washington, and\nthe Nike-Cajun rocket by the U.S.\nAir Force Cambridge research\ncentre and the University of\nMichigan.\nAmerican Envoy\nArrives Paris\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 American envoy Robert Murphy arrived here\nMonday to continue talks on settlement of the French-Tunisian dispute.\nAfter talks in London with the\nBritish member of the two-man\n\"good offices\" mission, Murphy,\ndepuly undersecretary of state,\nflew to Paris to see Premier\nFelix Gaillard and Foreign Minister Christian Pineau.\nHe is expected to go on to Tunis\nTuesday to see President Habib\nBourguiba and members of his\ngovernment.\nMurphy will be followed to\nParis shortly by his British colleague, Foreign Office Underset\nretary Harold Beeley.\nSide of Bacon\nSaved the Ship\nEINDHOVER, THE NETHERLANDS (Reuters) \u2014A four-pound\ncide of bacbn saved the 100-ton\nDutch ship Zuiderzee from sinking in the harbor here, the vessel's owners disclosed Mondav.\nThe ship sprang a leak after a\ncollision Saturday. A crew member rushed to the nearest butcher\nstore.\n\"Sell me a side of bacon,\" he\ndemanded.  \"My ship's sinking.\"\nThe bacon was rushed back to\nthe ship and the captain plugged\nthe hole with it. The ship stayed\nafloat and next morning was\ntaken to a repair yard.\nCanadian Singer Gisele\nWeds Robert Shuttleworth\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY, vorce in 1950.\nLAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-Msn-\nitoba-born singer Gisele MacKenzie, 31, and her personal manager\nRobert Shuttleworth, 44, were\nmarried here early Monday.\nThey flew from Hollywood with\na small party of friends after\nmidnight.\nThe ceremony was performed\nby district court judge Frank\nMcNamee in a penthouse suite\nof the Flamingo Hotel.\nMiss MacKenzie, born in Winnipeg, wore a gown ef pale blue\nsatin with gold flecks, a matching hst and gold slippers. Shuttle-\nworth wore a dark blue business\nsuit.\nMaurice   Kessler,   a   Toronto\nbusiness  man.   was  best  man.\nMrs.   Axel   Slordahl   was   the\nbride's attendant.\nFIRST FOR GISELE\nThis was the first marriage for\nMiss MacKenzie. Shuttleworth's\nprevious marriage ended in di-\nThe couple said they had been\nconsidering marriage a long time\nbut definitely decided only last\nSaturday night.\nThey plan to honeymoon here\ntwo days. They will live in Beverly Hills, Calif.\nshuttleworth first met her during the Second World War when\nhe was serving with the Royal\nCanadian Navy. He persuaded\nher to sing at a naval'function.\nAfter the war he organized a\ndance band and signed Miss\nMacKenzie as his singer.\nMiss MacKenzie starred on\nseveral CBC programs before\ncoming to the United States. She\nstarred on' the television show,\nYour Hit Parade, before starting\nher own show last September.\nIt has been reported that the\nshow's sponsors are dropping it\nin April because of production clashes between Shuttle-\nworth, the show's producer and\nthe sponsors themselves.\n U^b\nVflfiVaUL jjOAAlfi ...\nEd Wynn Tells How To Be\nYoung When 70 Years Old\nEDITOR'S NOTE: II you\nwant to stay young, actor Ed\nWynn thinks, you must think\nand act young, Wynn hai certainly done that\u2014but he had to\novercome moments of despondency when, Hearing 70, he felt\nthat life had shouldered him\naside.\nBy ED WYNN\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - It isn't\ngiven to many people to start a\nwhole new, exciting Career after\nthe age of 70, but 1 have been\nso blessed.\nFor 54 years, I thought that\nGod put me on this earth to make\npeople laugh. I never worked at\nany other profession.\nAs 1 neared my 70th year, I\nwas told I could not get work as\na comedian. The men Who run\nthe television shows said the\ntrend was against comedy, that\nthe people wanted drama for\ntheir entertainment.\nThis was hard for me to take.\nI had never been anything but a\nstar. 1 had produced and owned\nmy own shows on Broadway. I\nhad starred in the golden days\nof radio as the fire chief.\nI was depressed; I felt that 1\nhad been passed by. But my son\nKeenan and others urged me to\nkeep active. I was offered a serious role in the movie, The Great\nMan. I was hesitant because I\nhad never played a dramatic role\nln my life. But I did it.\nDRAWS RAVES\nThe results were beyond' my\nwildest dreams. I found myself\nbeing hailed by the critics as a\ndramatic find, and I was sought\nby many film and TV producers\nfor serious roles.\nNaturally, this has been highly\nratifying to me as an artist. But\nhave enjoyed even more the;\ninspiration that my example has\naiparently given to other mature\ncitizens.\n\\ have been asked by several\noi ganizations and governmental\ngroups for my ideas on such\nmatters as growing old and retiring, and I have been happy to\noblige.\nSome of my ideas are strictly\npersonal. I may be unique in that\nI feel I have always had a Peter\nPan mind. I have thought of myself as young all my life. ami I\nstill feel that way at 71. This\nlatest boost to my career has\nbeen so exhilarating that it takes\nme back n or 30 years in outlook.\nTHINK,  ACT YOUNG\nThis is corroborated by my\ndoctor, who says that I am in the\nphysical condition of a man much\nyounger 'nan my years. I feel\nthat if yo'i want to stay young,\nyou must -think and act young.\nI don't mean that you must\nkick up your heels at a night\nclub,   though   I   do   enjoy   late\nI parties if the company is stimulating. The important thing is\nnot to let yourself be caught in\nthe agin1! process. I have ni desire to sit around and talk about\nthe old days with my contemporaries. I'd much rather discuss the\ni present   and   the   future   with\n'\u25a0 younger people.\n!    I  remember  with  great  fond-\ni ness the party Keenan gave for\nme on my 70th birthday. Out of\n! a  sizable crowd,  not one guest\nI was over 40.\nI believe there are great dangers in retirement. No one should\n! retire or be forced to retire on\nI the basis of age alone. Disability\n- should be the bas;s for retirement, especially in hazardous oc-\ncunations where age might impair co-ordination.\nIf you must retire, I feel the\nmost important thing is to keep\nyour mind active. Find new interests, new activities, new friends\nto keen vour mind a'ive.\n1WWT  NEW FRIENDS\nI beiieve it's a good idea for-\nretired neon'e to move to a new\nneighborhood instead of living\nwhere they have for many years.\nThe reason is lhat your younger,\nunretired friends may be too busy\nto sp\u00bbnd time with you and you\nare liable to become a very\nlonely person.\nOne of the dreadful things\nabout old ?\".e is loneliness. It\ncan be avoided if you remain an\ninteres'ing nerson yourself.\nAnother dan\u00aber of old age is\nexaggeration. If your mind isn't\nactive, your fears can be blown\nup beyond all proportions. You\nbegin to worry that each ache\nand pain is \u00bb nortent of death,\nthat your children don't want\nyou any more. You worry about\nyour financial status, even about\ncrossing  a  street.\nI've found a formula for avoiding these exaggerated fears of\nage: YOU take care of every\nday; let the calendar take care\nof the years. \u2022\n|ABOUT\ni the\nI 11\nni.iiiii.niimiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii\nPHONE 1844\nA shower for Miss Ida Catenae-\nci, a member of the Daily News\noffice staff, was held Sunday night\nat the home of Mrs. J. Short, 510\nSilica Street, co-hostess being\nMrs. S. Ross. Miss Catenacci, who\nis to be married Saturday to John\nDeJong, was recipient of miscellaneous shower gifts presented to\nher in a basket prettily decorated\nby Mrs. J. Brooke in rose and gold\npaper. Attending were members'\nof the office staff and Miss Caten-\nacci's sisters, Jo and Ann. The\nguests were entertained with\ngames, two-time winner being\nMrs. Brooke.\n* *   *\nMrs. J. DeGuglielmo, Cedar\ni Street, has returned from a week-\nj end in Kelowna, where she visited\n| her father, II. Miller, who is ser\n; iouslv ill in the Kelowna General\nHospital.\n! Mrs. J. H. Blunt, 1211 Falls\nStreet, left Ne'son Saturday to\nvisit her daughter, Mrs. R. T.\nDickson in Reve'stoke.\nC. McKinnon of Vancouver, who\nhas been'visiting his mother, Mrs.\nF. McKinnon of (he Medical Arts\nBuilding, has left for the coast.\nIn Nelson to visit relatives during the weekend were Mr. and\nMrs. Lyle Saute' of Salmo.\n* *   *\nFollowing a holiday trin to Ihe\nUnited States, Mr. and Mrs. Rob\nert L. Kidd. 302 Union Street, returned to Nelson Sunday. They\ntravelled to Los Angeles; east to\nReno, Nev., and through part of\nthe eastern states.\nWhist Party Follows\nCampaign Meeting\nPROCTER \u2014 Peter Dewdney,\nProgressive Conservative candidate for Kootenay West, presented\nprizes to winners Mrs. N. C, MacLeod, Mrs. S. Bryan, William\nHenke and P. T. Carroll at a whist\nparty, following a campaign meeting at the Procter community hall,\nTen whist tables were in play.   '\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest, Minimum two lines. 10% discount (or prompt payment,\nt\n\"    Rotary Luncheon Tuesday, 12:15\np.m., Hume Hotel.\nrisherman'8 Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C.\nFILM FESTIVAL\nMarch 19 - 20 - 21.\nRunning shoes in all sizes.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nCordurov Slim Jims, size 3 to 14X.\nTOT *N' TEEN SHOP\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nFoam Rubber for Flowers.\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paper-hanging. R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson\nFibreglas Drapery, no ironing, po\nstitching, no sagging, $4.93 yd.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nGrow your mushrooms. We have\nmushroom spore. '\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nJiffy pots of peat, 30c doz.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n492 BAKER ST.\nStandard size window glass,\nsingle and double weight.\nT. H. WATERS _ CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156\nOn Sale \u2014 Polar Indian type\nsweater wool, 79c; Maple Leaf\nwool, 3-ply, 22c.\nEBERLE'S,  ON BAKER ST.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nShoes for girls and boys! A good\nvariety in all sizes at sensible, low\nprices, at\n,  EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nOut of respect f6r Mr. W. J.\nHipperson, our store will be closed\nWednesday afternoon.\nHIPPERSON'S  HARDWARE\nCO. LTD.\nSale on Ironite Barn Paint, red-\nGals., reg. $4.40, now $3.00.\n5 Gals., reg. $21.00, now $13.75. .\nWOOD,  VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nThe annual meeting of the Slocan Community Hospital Society\nwill be held in the Legion Hail,\nNew Denver. B.C., on Thursday,\nFebruary 27th, at 8 p.m. Membership dues: $1 per annum.\nCARD OF THANrfS\nI would like to thank sincerely\nall our kind neighbors and friends\nfor the beautiful flowers and words\nof sympathy sent during the loss\nof our dear husband and falhcr.\nMrs. C, Inman and family,\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nHIPPERSON - Funeral services\nfor the late Mr. William John\nHipperson will be held at First\nBaptist Church Wednesday at 2\np.m. Reverend K. Imayoshi will\nofficiate and interment will take\nplace in Nelson Memorial Park.\nFriends are requested to please\nomit flowers. Friends wishing to\npay their last respects may do so\nat Thompson Funeral Home until\nnoon Wednesday.\nTlmikcMit\n\u00a3y, catcuiM, b)lwlsx\nFlowers bloom in your bearoom!\nDo this quilt in sun-flower yellow\nwith brown centres, or use gay\nscraps. Simple to piece\u2014just five\npatches.\nPattern 874: charts, directions,\npattern for quilt patches: yardages for single, double bed.\nSend THIRTY FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be acceptedi\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN. 60 Front St., W\u201e Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly Pattern Number,\nyour Name and Address.\nAs a bonus, two complete patterns are printed right in our 1937\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Book\nDozens of other designs you'll want\nto order\u2014easy fascinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts\nbazaar items. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book today!\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nWith all the controversy about the blouoc look, the sack look,\nand the low lines, there Is still the ever-present classic style that\nalways looks chic. Just such a dress Is this pleated style that is\na real classic. The deep V neckline has a removable white collar.\nThe graceful skirt is washable and pleat-controlled for permanence.\n0A&U, lAp, LVitk\nWsvdan, TtiaMui\nPrinted Pattern\n_,._     SIZES\n\u00b0167      2-8\nWEEK'S SEWING BUY\nMom, look! it wraps, to the back,\nopens flat for fast ironing. Sew\nseveral of these \"jiffy-wraps\" for\ndaughter to play in al! summer.\nIt's the easiest sowing with our\nPrinted Pattern to help you. Sew\nit now!\nPrinted Pattern 9167: Children's\nSizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 takes 2V\u00ab\nyards 35-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS and\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.\nToronto, Ont.\ntoday's\nbiggest value\nin home\nconvenience\n... an\nextension phone\nML$  BRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\nExperiences in\nWest Africa  \u25a0\nIllustrate Talk\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Her experiences\nin West Africa were used to illus\ntrate the talk given by Mrs. L. C.\nHooper, who spoke on the theme\nof the World Day of Prayer,\n\"Bread of Life\", at the service\nin St. Paul's Church, attended by\nsome 30 women.\nMrs. Hooper outlined the use\nof offerings and prayers in furthering the Gospel of Christ, \"The\nBread of Life.\" \"We are not alone\nin our service, many thousands of\nwomen of various races, oolor and\ncreed are praying with us\" said\nMrs, Hooper.\nThe service this year was held\nin more than 110 countries. The\ntheme was prepared by women In\nAustralia, many of whom had\nflown hundreds of miles to attend\nthe discussions of arrangements\nMrs. James Davenport conducted\nthe service and was assisted in\nprayers by Mrs. R. Nay, Mrs. S.\nLapka, Mrs. A...Womacks, Mrs. R,\nWebb, Mrs. F. Phares and Mrs.\nW. Mauchlin. Soloist was Mrs.\nVerne Wilson and Mrs. F. M. Peitzsche played the organ.\nFollowing the prayer service,\nMrs. Mauchlin was elected at a\nbrief business meeting to fill the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1958 \u2014 5\n\"Bread of Life\" Theme of\nPrayer Day Observance\nPROCTER-Women of this district congregated in the Procter\nUnited Church to observe the 39th\nannual World Day of Prayer, this\nyear prepared by the women of\nAustralia and marked universally.\nThe theme was The Bread of Life.\nOffering prayers were Mrs. G. A.\nPhillips, Mrs. Albert Ogden, Mrs,\nM. D. MacKinnon and Mrs. F.\nBonacci of Procter, Mrs. J. Heus-\nton and Mrs. J. McClintock of Balfour, Mrs. E. M. McNbwn and Mrs.\nR. E. Laidlaw of Longbeach and\nMrs. J. Paulhus and Mrs. H. R.\nAnderson of Harrop. Mrs. Alec J,\nGarner, - soloist, sang Evening\nPrayer. Mrs. Eric Smith of Longbeach, accompanist and organist,\nplayed the hymns \"Jesus Shall\nReign\", \"Praise the Lord\", \"Dear\nLord and Father\" and \"The Day\nThou Gavest, Lord, Is Ended.\"\nMrs. Anderson was guest speaker.\nMrs. Anderson built her talk on\nthe chosen theme but applied it\ndirectly to the women in the home,\nusing the story of Martha and Mary\nto illustrate her point that man\ndoes not live by bread alone. She\nquoted Mary Hallam's poem:\n\"Lord of the pots and pans and\nthings since I have not time to be\nA saint by doing lovely things and\nviglling with Thee,'\nBy watching in the twilight dawn\nand storming Heaven's gates,\nMake me a saint by getting meals\nand washing up the plates,\nAlthough   I   must   have   Martha\nhands, I have a Mary mind.\"\nShe gave the women the message that it is their problem to\n\"fill Martha's role with Mary's\nspirit.\"\nFollowing the service Mrs. Garner entertained half the group at\ntea and Mrs. J. MacLeod was hostess to the other half.\nArrow Lakes Hospital\nAuxiliary Installs Officers\nNAKUSP - President Mrs. J.\nRaven and other new officers of\nthe Arrow Lakes. Hospital Auxiliary\nwere installed at the meeting at\nthe home, of Rev. and Mrs. R.\nBooth.\nOther officers were Mrs. D. Mc-\nInnis, vice-president, Mrs. D. Duncan, secretary, Mrs. B. Crowell,\ntreasurer and Mrs. R. BIyth, publicity. Mrs. R. Joy, past president,\nofficiated at the installation ceremonies.\nA report on the redecorating program being carried out in the hospital indicated showed the work is\nalmost completed; paint for the\nsponsored wards was provided by\nthe sponsors and the auxiliary supplied expenses and work for the\nunsponsored ward..\nA committee was formed for the\npurpose of meeting with the Centennial. Committee to obtain facts\nconcerning expenses and profit or\nloss problems connected with the\nsponsoring of a big name band\nduring the Centennial celebrations.\nThe comimttee is composed of\nMrs. F. Maxwell, Mrs. A. Dunn\nand Mrs. F. B. Maxfield. Report\nof the group will be heard at the\nnext meeting.\nDenis Rolph\nBaptized Sunday\nDenis Nathaniel Rolph, son of\nMrs, Everett Rolph and the late\nMr. Rolph, was baptized Sunday\nmorning by Rev. Canon G. W.\nLang at St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral.\nScouts, Cubs, Guides and Brownies paraded to the service in honor\nof Boy Scout-Girl Guide Sunday,\nChurch Group\nSale Successful\nA successful bake sale was held\nby the Jubilee group ot the St.\nPaul's-Trinity Church Saturday in\na downtown store.\nProceeds of the sale will be given\nto the Federation for the work of\nthe church.\nThe bake table was in charge of\nMrs. D. Benedetti, Mrs. H. A,\nWiens, Mrs. P. Mason and Mrs.\nD. Lowry.\nposition of secretary-treasurer for\na two-year term.\nAn invitation to hold the service\nnext year in the Pentecostal ohurch\nat Beaver Falls was accepted.\nA bake sale will be held In\nMarch, the sum of $30 being reported from the February sale.\nMrs. C. Ball was the winner of\nthe Round the World booster prize,\nthe award being crystal candle\nholders from Sweden.\nThe sewing committee reported\n40 baby gowns made and delivered\nto the hospital: Material for diapers is ordered and will be made\nup by the auxiliary.\nMembers were requested to attend the annual hospital meeting.\nBaby's\nCar Seats,\nCar Beds and\nStrollers\nQueen Mother Leaves\nFree-for-AII Early\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) \u2014\nThe Queen Mother was the centre\nof a virtual free-for-all Monday\nas Australians struggled to get a\nglimpse of her at a civic reception.\nObservers described the wild\nshoving and pushing as the worst\ndisplay of bad manners so far in\nthe Queen Mother's tour of New\nZealand and Australia.\nThe Queen Mother left the reception 20 minutes before schedule,\nleaving her glass of champagne\nuntouched.\nAs soon as she left, a man\nclimbed on the dais, tipped th*\nchampagne into another tumbler\nand pocketed the Queen Mother's\nglass.\nKeep Yonr Eye on Classified!\nWhich of these exciting events will you see\nj.|_ \u2022 _ r^_mn+__'riri'l a 1 voa *\u00bb*? Make your plans now to see the sPecial events, the\nHUB WeniBD-UHU ye\u00bbrr memorable projects, the festivities and festivals that\nmark the 1958 British Columbia Centennial I Everywhere - there are things to do, places to visit, sights\nand scenes to be enjoyed, and all planned to make 1968 our most exciting year! Here are highlight events\nto jot down in your date book. Hundreds more are on the Centennial programme - sporting events, bon-\nspiels, musical programmes, special celebrations. Watch your newspapers, listen to the radio for the dates!\nMUSBUM TRAIN\nWorld's only train of Its kind,\nbringing back the romance\nof early railroading in B.C.\nSTAOB COACH RUN\nqrbv cur\nCanada'i football classic - tha gam*\nyon want to see abort all others!\nFrom Victoria to Barkerville re-enacting j\nthe color and action of the early j\ndays of our Province! I\n I\nI\nI\nVANOOUVBR FESTIVAL. OP THB ARTS\nThree weeks of the world's finest music,\nart exhibit!, top films - all in one\nplace for your pleasure!\nPORT LANOLBV\nB.C.'s mainland birthplace has been\nrestored - aee this historic fort!\nFrom Frlnce George to Vancouver, canoes\nwill travel the mighty Fraser, re-enacting\n.- Simon Frater'i Journey of 150 years ago!\n\u25a0(\u2022NATIONAL NAVAL RBVIBW\nShips from 15 countries - the\nlargest assembly of fighting\nships since the Coronation!\n\u25a0*^tl*__V*\"*    \",C\" \"\"\u25a0\"NATIONAL THAOB PAIR\nA huge show put on by the nations of\nthe world who trade with us - fashions,\ncommerce, Industry, transportation!\niff\n\/    \u2022ao.eoo oolp tournament\nNorth America's top golfera competing\nfor one of the greatest purtea ever.\nA golf match that will make history!\nJ.\ns\nROMP MUSICAL RIDB\nCanada'i finest! A special tour\nappearing in a dozen communities\nthroughout the Province!\nHISTORIC OARAVAN\nTreasured historic exhibits from\ntha Provincial Archives and\na** Museum will tour the Province.\nPACIFIC NATIONAL EXHIBITION\nBigger and better than avert New and bigger\n4 Gayway, mora exhibits, mora prises,\nmore performers, more days to aee It all!\nWhy not take in these goings on? You'll get a welcome when you visit these events!\nCanadian Junior Ski Championships, Rossland, March 1-2\nCentennial Butterfly Bonspiel, Creston, March 6-9\nInternational Invitational Ski Tournament, Revelstoke, March 6-10\nSee B. C. in Centennial Year \u2014 there's no other place on earth at exciting!\ni '%\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1958\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nI_\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\nW\nY\nE\nR\nB.\nB\nA\nI\nL\nE\nY\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n\/Twill devote mv life amp mv\n(  millions to bringing SOME\n> HAPPIMESS INTO VOUR\nt_SHATTERED LIVES.'.'\n\u25a0AH DIDWT WANTA MENSHUN\nIT-BUT THET PLACE WAS\nGITTIN' RATHER SLOPPY.\"\nMother Tries To Save Children ...\nFive Die in Blazing\nOntario Log Cabin\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe death of five persons in a\nfire near Kenora, Ont., early Sunday has raised Canada's accidental weekend death toll to 27.\nTwo adults and three children\ndied in 'the fire, bringing the toll\nin Ontario to 10\u2014highest in Canada\n\u2014a Canadian Press survey from\n6 p.m. local time Friday to midnight Sunday showed. The other\nfive Ontario deaths occurred on\nhighways.,\nQuebec, with seven fatalities,\nhad the second highest toll. Alberta reported five deaths, while\nBritish Columbia and Saskatchewan each had two and Manitoba\none.\nThere were ID traffic deaths during the weekend, while fire claimed\nseven lives. One man was asphyxiated in a car and a boy died when\na skating arena collapsed.\nLYING IN SNOW\nDistrict    temperatures    were\nnear freezing Saturday night.\nEna   is   a   whistlestop on the\nVictoria Turns Down Plan\nTo Aid Fernie Unemployment\nCanadian National Railways\nmainline, 129 miles east of Winnipeg.\nMr. Clark and another man\nplaced the injured woman in their\nhome and returned to the Link-\nlater home. It had been destroyed\nand Mr. Linklater was lying injured in the snow. They took him\nto the Clark home.\nThe men then flagged a CNR\nfreight train and placed the injured persons on board for a six-\nmile journey to Redditt.\nHarry Prystie of Ena went\nahead to inform police of the\nfire and arrange for an ambulance to take the young couple 25\nmiles  to  Kenora  hospital.\nMrs. Linklater died three hours\nafter reaching hospital. Mr. Link-\nlater was reported Monday in good\ncondition.\nAn inquest will be held.\nEna is a hamlet of about 25\npersons. It has no telephone or\ntelegraph communication system.\nMr. Linklater is a CNR section\nman.\nIndonesia Warns\nInterventionists\nJAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters)\nA government spokesman Monday\nwarned against foreign intervention in Indonesia's \"internal problem\" which might lead to \"all-\nout war.\"\nThe warning came as government planes continued the anti-\nrebel offensive by bombing targets ill Northern Celebes.\nIn his statement, a spokesman\nfor the foreign ministry said there\nare indications some members of\nIndonesia\" tried to invite international powers to intervene by\nseeking help and  recognition.\n\"It should be realized any attempt to intervene in this internal problem will only and ultimately result in a bigger international conflict which might lead\nto all-out war,\" said Ganis Har-\nsono.\nBritish House Gravely Attentive . . .\nWhen Sandys Outlines\nJoint Rocket Pact\nLONDON (API - Defence Minister Duncan Sandys announced\nMonday that the Anglo-American\npact setting up rocket bases in\nBritain provides \"that the' missiles shall not be launched except\nby a joint, positive decision of\nboth governments.\"\nSandys told a gravely attentive\nHouse of Commons:\n\"The nuclear warheads will remain in American custody and\nwill be kept in an unarmed condition so that there can be no risk\nof a nuclear explosion; and the\nweapon is designed in such a way\nthat it would be impossible for it\nto be launched accidentally.\"\nCries of \"shame\" came from\nthe Labor benches when the minister announced the rocket bases\nwill be mainly in East Anglia,\nLincolnshire and Yorkshire on the\nEnglish east coast.\nSandys added:\n\"It would obviously not be in\nthe public interest to disclose the\nnumber of missiles, or the number of sites or their precise location.\"\nMANNED BY RAF\n' Sandys  estimated B r i t a i n's\nshare of the bill will be about\n\u00a310,000,000.\nThe defence minister emphasized  that  the missiles  will  be\nU.S. Satellite\nConies To Life\nPASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The\nhigh-powered radio transmitter\non the U.S. satellite Explorer has\ninexplicably come to life after apparently dying Feb. 12.\nThe California Institute of\nTechnology's jet propulsion laboratory, which developed the satellite and created its radio system, said \"reasonably strong\"\nsignals were picked up at various places Sunday and Monday.\nDr. Henry L. Richter Jr., electronics supervisor for the lab,\nsaid signals have been picked up\nat the nearby tracking station in\nTemple City, in Illinois, Cuba and\nother places.\nRichter said that while scientists lack factual knowledge, they\nhave developed theories for the\nradio  signal's rebirth.\nOne is that as the satellite orbited the high-powered transmitter was in such a position that it\nreceived no heat from the sun\nand froze. As the Explorer continued its flight the position of\nthe satellite changed and the\nsun's Meat thawed out the transmitter.\nAnother theory is that the\ntransmitter \u2022 became overheated\nand was temporarily out of commission.\nmanned  and  operated  by  RAF\nunits.\nThe basic agreement for setting up the rocket bases was\ntaken last March in Bermuda by\nPrime Minister Macmillan and\nPresident Eisenhower.\nGeorge   Brown,   the   Labor\nparty's chief defence spokesman,\n! asked whether  Britain proposed\n] to make her own warheads.\nj    Sandys  replied:   \"We  are  not\ni planning development of a British warhead for the Thor rocket\n! (the   American   1,500-mile  intermediate range missile)  but are\nconcentrating our efforts on developing an all-British rocket of\na more advanced type.''\nThis project was announced recently.\nOn the joint Anglo - American\ndecision for using the missiles\nSandys said: \"There will be special arrangements to ensure that\nthere is rapid consultation.\"\nFisherman Saves\nMarooned Boys\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B. C.\nTwo boys marooned on a rock\nin turbulent Seymour Creek Sunday were saved by a slender lifeline cast 75 feet by a skilled\nfisherman.\nBill Miles, 16, and Ron Watson, 14, both of nearby Burnaby,\nwere hauled ashore by a line of\nnylon fishing line, garden twine,\nand rope a fter several fruitless\nattempts.\nHigh school teacher Robert\nCampbell, 41, was the expert\nfisherman. He teamed with firemen and RCMP to rescue the\nyouths, who later were treated in\nhospital and sent home.\nThe rushing water was six feet\ndeep where the boys were\ntrapped. They had been swept to\nthe rock when they tried to ford\nthe river.\nMr. Campbell's easts with six\nand 20-pound-test lines failed\nwhen the lines broke.\nFireman Jack Hasting tried to\nwade and swim to the boys but\ncouldn't manage to heave the\nheavy rope. It wouldn't float\ndownstream because of the eddies.\nFinally the fishing line was\ntied to the twine, and the twine\nto 'he rope. With two quarter-\ninch \"buckshot\" weights on ihe\nend of the line, Mr. Campbell\ncast right between  the boys.\nFirst one then the second was\nhauled ashore by the rope.\nNEW-TYPE   PAINT\nA stone facing, developed by\nDanish and Scottish interests,\nmay be painted on buildings.\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n00 Good Morning\n30 Search For Tomorrow '\n45 Guiding Light *\n00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n15 Love of Life\n30 As The World Turns *\n00 Beat The Olock *\n30 Houseparty *\n00 The Big Payoff *\n30 The Verdict Is Yours *\n00 Brighter Day *\n15 Secret Storm *\n30 Edge of Night *\n00 Garry Moore *\n30 Godfrey Time *\n00 Fun At Home\n30 Dotto *\n00 The Early Show\n00 The News\n15 Doug Edwards News *\n30 Name That Tune *\n00 High Adventure \u2022\n00 To Tell The Truth *\n30 Red Skelton *\n00 $64,000 Question *\n30 Studio 57\n00 Badge 714\n30 The News\n35 The Late Show\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n:10 Color Test Pattern\n:13 Test Pattern\n:25 NARTB\n:26 Bible Reading\n:29 Program Previews\n:30 Q Toons\n00 Tic Tac Dough \u2022\n30 It Could Be You *\n00 Dough Re Mi *\n30 Treasure Hunt *\n00 Price Is Right *\n30 Kitty Foyle *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n00 Queen For a Day *\n:45 Modern Romances *\n00 1 Married Joan *\n30 Truth or Consequences *\n00 Matinee On Six\n\"Music For Millions\"\n:00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"Tarzan. the Ape Man\"\n:30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n:45 NBC News *\n:0O Twenty Six Men\n:30 Treasure Hunt\n:00 George Gobel (C) *\n:00 Adventures of McGraw '\n:30 Robert Cummings *\n:00 Californians *\n:30 Late Movie\n\"Panama Hattie\"\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n5:00 Sir Lancelot \u2022\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Club '\n6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Frontier Doctor\n7:30 Cheyenne *\n8:30 Wyatt Earp \u2022\n9:00 Broken Arrow *\n9:30 Telephone Time *\n10.00 West Point *     \u2022\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:35 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nVICTORIA (CP) - Several\nlands and forests jobs suggested\nto help the unemployment situation in Fernie have been ruled\nimpractical  by  the  government.\nThe legislative committee on\nlabor was advised in a letter\nfrom Lands and Forests Minister\nRay Williston lhat the jobs suggested by the Fernie Chamber\nof Commerce are not  feasible.\nThe jobs mostly concerned forest access roads in the Fernie\narea.\nMr. Williston said that because of the snow conditions-\nthree to seven feet\u2014and the distance of some of the jobs from\nFernie he did not think they were\nto be recommended.\nThe majority of Fernie's workers have been out of work since\nthe Crowsnest Pass Coal Co.\nplant there closed down.\nSEEING EYE\nX-ray equipment capable of\npenetrating steel up to three\ninches thick has been installed\nby a London firm. \t\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC   STANDARD   TIME)\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1958\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15-Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8-20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:30\u2014All The Weather\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n9:30\u2014Women Today\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Story Parade\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Seven-Come-Eleven\n11:30\u2014Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Song Serenade\n11:55\u2014Entertainment World\n12:O0~The Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Spnrts News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Halifax Symphony Orch.\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2 30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n'3:40\u2014B.C. Road Report\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boates\n4:45\u2014Children's Story\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home\n6:00\u2014News\n6.10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014Canada At Work\n6:45-CCF Talk\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Legislature Report\n7:35\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Drama in Sound\n8:30\u2014Anthology\n9:00\u2014Jazz Workshop\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Critics At Large\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC  8TANDARD TIME)\nWEDNESDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n10:10\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages from Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Theme and Variation\n12:15-News\n12:25-CBC Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\nFEBRUARY 26, 1958\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n8.45\u2014 B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014The Music Picture\nLady\n4:45\u2014Legends of the Longhouse\n5:00\u2014Bands on Parade\n5:15\u2014News\n5:25\u2014On The Scene -^\n5:30\u2014Sports Desk .\n5:40\u2014Byline\n5:45\u2014Mostly Music\n6:00\u201411th Resources Conference\n6:3,0\u2014Lolly-too-dum\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Introduction to Wed. Night\n7:40\u2014The Bible Today\n8:00\u2014Chamber Music\n8:30\u2014Marrying of Anne Lester\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Ask Teacher\n10:30\u2014Recital\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n11:57\u2014News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Stands up\n3. American\narctic\nexplorer\n4. Common\ncontraction\n5. Pronoun\n6. Lamina\n7. Tardy\n8. Skill\n9. Afternoon\nnap\n10. Aircraft\nshelter\n14. Cautions In\nadvance\n16. Sets down\n19. Prison\n(G. B.)\n20. Vend\n22, Stumble\n23. Move,\nas\nwind\n25. Fencing\nsword\n26. Drew\n27. State\n\"\u2022   confidently\n29. Wolfish\n30. Unrolled\n32.\u2014\u2014 '\nIsland,\nresort\n35. Give\nover\n_____  _i?iia_t\n__D__   _B__D\n_____ uutaiif\nKh      HNMlflHL\n__   _____\n_\u201eBH_I-U3   I\n_____ iimrjiiii\n___ ieiuciinatiii\n_____ sir:\n-jr.lHr.xmi ,        rvn\nYpBtrrrJay'B AniwtS\n36. Spoken\n38. Cut, ar\ngrass\n39. Antelope\n(Afr.)\na. Iridium\n(sym.)\nACROSS\nl.A dervish\n(var.)\n(. Gleam\n11. Angry\n12. Genus of\nbean\nweevils\n13. Clears of\ncotton seeds\n14. Make plump\n15. Employ\n16. Jest\n17. Specific\ngravity\n(abbr.)\n18. Music note\n19. Pierce with\nhorns\n20. Station\n(abbr.)\n21. One's\nproperty\n23. Endure\n24. City\n(New M.)\n26. Greet\n26. God of manly youth\n31. Viper\n32. Ship's\ncomplement\n33. Overhead\n34. Pronoun\n35. Solid figure\n36.Open (poet.)\n37. Units of\nlight\n39. Broad'\nsmile\n40. Eat away\n41. Silly\n42. American\nadmiral\n43. Governed\nDOWN \"**\n1. Image'\nDAILY CBYMOQtOTE \u2014 Here's how to work id\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is use*\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints-\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nHJN    ATHD    ZHXMB    ECSSMEB    S C O If\nS V D    D C C    ZVLT    GMJPDOi \u2014 B T H X M \u2022\nB FMH E M.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN SUN IS SET THE LITTl*\nSTARS WILL SHINE \u2014 SOUTHWELL.-\nDistributed by Jims Featuru Syndicate\n1\nZ\n7-\nT\"\nb\n1\n6\n7\n8\n9\nIS\nII\n%\na\n13\n%\n14\n15\"\n%\nio\n^\n17\n10\n%\n19\nt\n\u00bb\nSI\n32\nf\/t\n33\n%\n^\nA\n3S\n^\n^t\nlb\nn\nd\n20\n3.9\n30\nM\ni\n31\n^t\n33\n3-1\n%\npr\n^\n3b\n37\n3b\nt\n39\nio\n^A\n41\n-12\n^\nA3\n Wl\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story S PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nHELP WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nCLERK OF WORKS\nKootenay Lake General Hospital will receive applications\nfor the post of Clerk of Works\non new hospital project. Duties\nto commence as close as possible to March 1, 1958.\nApplicants should state qualifications, experience, references and salary expected.\nCandidates should have highest character references and\ngood general knowledge of\nconstruction including concrete, masonry, insulation,\nsteel work, plastering, ceramic\nand glazed tile work, acoustical, floor and cabinet work,\nstainless steel work, painting\nand decorating, plumbing,\nheating arid ventilating and\nelectrical work.\nApplications to\nAdministrator K.L.G.H.\nNelson, B.C.\nLEARN DRAFTING OR BLUE-\nprint reading by home-study for\na well-paid secure job. Diploma\nawarded. Free folder. Mention\ncourse of interest. P r i m a. r y\nSchool of Drafting, Dept. G,\nBox 123, Station \"Q\", Toronto.\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE RE-\nceived for city newspaper carrier boys. Apply Circulation De-\npartment, Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED - MAN WITH FAMILY\nto work on farm. Must be qualified and experienced. Apply\nBox 8886. Daily News.\t\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE^\nEXreRlENCED WAITRESS FOR\ncounter work. Apply Dennis Klee,\nLord Nelson Dining Room.\nSITUATIONS WANTED^\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT\nting, appliances, oil burners serviced. Norm Bowcock, Bonded\nLicenced Gas Fitter, ph. 385.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd., or phone\n186-X-3.\t\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPH-\ner desires full time position. Ph.\n908-Y after 5.\nDC CAT FOR HIRE. SKIDDING,\nk road building and land clearing.\nV    Phone 247-X. Nelson.\t\nRELIABLE 17-YEAR-OLD GIRL\nwill baby \"sit days or evenings.\nPhone 1572-Y.\t\nFOR HOUSE REPAIRS, ALTER-\nations, lino laying, ph. 597-L-2.\nWILL DO HOUSEWORK BY THE\nhour. Phone 202-R.\nFOR ALL YOUR PRUNING, PH.\n1989-X.\nMACHINERY\nLINCOLN\nARC WELDING\nEQUIPMENT\nA Size and Model Machine\nfor Every Use.\nTime and Money-Saving\nElectrodes for Every Job.\nFor All Your Welding Needs\nMachines, Electrodes, Holders\nand Accessories\nSee\nH.   \"Fritz\"   farenholtz.\nCharlie   Ross  or  Alex   Mr-Donald\nWELDING &  EOUIPMENT\nCO.    LTD.\nPHONE   1402\nFOR SALE OR TRADE - 30 CAT\nwith bulldozer, in good condition\nTrail Auto Wreckers, ph. 2441.\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND - IODE BADGE, 2 BAR\nPhone 684-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nft. S.  ELMES,  ROSSLAND,  B.C\nAssayer Chemist Mine Ren\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Of\nfice Mgr. Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc.\nM15-8th St., Nelson. Phone 144-R\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nUSED  CARS\n1957 Olds Super 88 Sedan\nFully  Equipped\n1956 Olds 88 Sedan\n1956 Plymouth\n4-Door Suburban\nRad'o and Automatic. -\n1955 Plymouth 4-D. Sedan\nAutomatic.\n1954 Chev. 4-Door Sedan\n1954 Pontiac 2-Door Sedan\nRadio.\n1953 Chev. 4-Door Sedan\nRadio, Turn  Indicators.\n1953 Chev. 5 Pass. Coupe\n1953 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan\n1953 Studebaker Sedan\nAn Economy Car.\n1952 Chev. 4-Door Sedan\n1952 Meteor Tudor\nPriced at $695.00.\n1951  Studebaker Coupe\nA Steal at $325.\n1950 Ford Sedan\nReady for the Road. \u2014 $325.00\n1949 Ford Tudor\n$195.00\nFOR A FAIR DEAL SEE\nBUERGE.\nLTD.\n323 Vernon St.,\nPhone 35 - 36\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\"\ntractionlzing. Used-parts for 1949\nto '52-Austins. '49 to '51 Hillmans,\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '53\nAustin, Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 1363-L-2, Box 382,\n24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nCCM 3-SPEED BICYCLE, SPORTS\nmodel. Recently overhauled, $30\nPhone Gerry, 565-R,\t\nRENTALS\nTO RENT\n2nd   Floor   K.W.C.   Block\n2 Large, Attractive Offices\nNewly decorated, large  windows.\nVenetian   blinds.   Rent   monthly,\nincluding heat and light \u2014 $55.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD AGENCIES\n536 Ward St.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nIf Listed at a\nFAIR   PRICE\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.        Nelson. B.C.\nOffers in writing will be received by the undersigned up to\n4:00 p.m., Friday, the 7th day\nof March, 1938, for the following\ndescribed property at Salmo,\nB.C.\n1. Lot 6 and that part of Lot 7\nin   Block   14,   of   Lot   206-A\nKootenay District, Plan 622,\nlying  North-East  of  a   line\nwhich bisects Ihe North-Westerly   and   South - Easterly\nboundaries of the said lot.\nTerms of Sale\u2014Cash.\nThe highest or any offer not\nnecessarily accepted.\nTHOMAS G. C. FOX,\nOfficial Administrator,\nCourthouse,  Nelson.  B.C.\nAdministrator of the\nEstate of JOIIN.KUZEK,\nDefeased.\nOffers in writing will be received by the undersigned up to\n4:00 p.m., Friday, the 7th day of\nMarch, 1958. for the following\nproperty at Salmo, B.C.\n1. Lots, 18 and 19 in Block 12 of\nLot 206-A, Kootenay District,\nPlan 622.\n2. Lot 8 in Block \"A\" of Lol 208,\nKootenay District, Plan 2501.\n3. Lot 6 of Lot 20fi. Kootenay\nDistrict, Plan 2670.\nTerms of Sale\u2014Cash.\nThe highest or any offer not\nnecessarily accepted.\nTHOMAS G. C. FOX,\nOfficial Administrator.\n, Courthouse,  Nelson,  B.C.\nAdministrator of the\nEstate of Charles Mazer-\nall, Deceased.\nTRAILERS\nones\nCastlegar,  Phone 2701\nCranbrook,  Phone JU-6-2270\nFor the Best in Mobile Homea\nSee These:\u2014\n\u2022 PATHFINDER      * REX\n\u2022 MERRIMAN      * A.B.C.\nif MARATHON\nAlso a Good Selection of\nUsed Cars.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash. When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar.\nSHOPPING OR VACATIONING -\nIt's-more fun when you stay at\nthe Colonial Hotel. Exact centre\ndowntown Spokane shopping and\ntheatre district at Post and Main.\nClean, quiet rooms at $2 to $4.\nRamp parking across the streel\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-ONE LARGE HEAVY\nduly breaking tractor plow, any\nshnne. Rox 885R. Daily News.\nWANTED-USED REESE BATH\ntub, one basin, one closet outfit.\nSate price^Ed Kilgren, Creston\nWANTED - .CLEAN gOTTON\nrags, free of buttons, 10c per\nlb. Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE BY OWNER - MOD-\nern home at Nelson. Beautifully\nsituated on North Shore, facing\nLakeside Park and Fairview.\nRanch style, oil furnace, modern\nin every respect, 100 ft. frontage,\n1.06 acres, some fruit trees, moderate taxes. Full price $13,000.\nFor information call 348-Y.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe  Dally  Newt does  not  hold   Itself  responsible In  the  event\nof an error In tne following lists.\nTORONTO   STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium 06%\nAlgom Uranium    14.3714\nAnacon Lead ...'.. 66\nAtlin Ruff 27>4\nAumacho   13V4\nAumaque    07',4\nAunor      2.35\nBarnat  43\nBase Metals   26\nBaska Uranium  14%\nBibis Yukon 06\nBrilund 52\nBrunhurst     '.     2.55\nBuffalo Ank    81\nBuff Red Lake .\\ 06\nCampbell C         4.45\nCampbell R. L     7.60\nCan Met       1.50\nCentral Patricia  80\nChimo   50\nChromium       2.75\nCoin Lake ,.      .17%\nConiaurum  32\nCons Denison     11.37%\nCons. Discovery     2,75\nCons Halliwell  27%\nCons Howe      1.82\nCons Mining & Smelting   .   17.50\nCons Red Pop 10%\nCon Sanorm 06%\nCon Sub  17\nD'Aragon   15\nDonalda    16\nEast Malartic     1.46\nEast Sullivan     .1.90\nElder Gold    65\nFalconbridge       23.37%\nFaraday     1.63\nFrobisher      1.48\nGeco      8.80\nGeo. Scientific Pros 35\nGiant Yel     5.45\nGold Eagle        07\nGolden Manitou 28\nGunnar Gold     15.87%\nHarminerals  10\nHeadway 58\nBollinger    21.75\nBUTCHER SHOP-WELL-ESTAB\nlished, fully equipped butcher\nshops for sale. Low cost on Mac's\nMeat Market in Trail. Illness\nreason for selling. Full particulars may be obtained from\nSteve Matovich, Mac's Meat\nMarket, Phone 163 or at 1382\nCedar Avenue. Trail.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood. Contrac\ntors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 3600 E Has\ntings St., Vancouver. B.C.. GLen\nburn 1500\nROOM AND BOARD\nMarket Trends\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices\nwere mixed to lower in moderate turnover Monday on the\nMontreal and Canadian Stock Exchanges.\nThe banking and steel groups\nwere strong spots.\nMiscellaneous stocks, utilities,\npipelines, base metals, and beverages were lower. B.C. Power\nlost a point at 40% and Trans-\nCanada Pipeline  =\/,   at  26%.\nNewsprints and constructions\nwere mixed. Powell River slipped % to 33.\nWestern oils were weak in the\nmines and oils section. Pacific\nPetroleums declined % to a new\nlow of 17% and Central Del Rio\n20 cents to 5.50.\nMines were mixed in a % point\nrange.\nClosing averages', banks up .71\nat a new high of 48.42, utilities j Hudson Bay    42.00\nunchanged   at   137.5,   industrials | inspiration        \" .53\nunchanged at 237.7, combined un-'        -- - - \t\nchanged 204.3, papers up .68 at\n1,098.48 and golds off .10 at 67.52.\nTORONTO (CP) - Western\noils recorded a moderately steep\ndecline Monday but the rest of\nthe stock market was irregular\nin trading which turned sluggish\nnear the close.\nObservers said the decline was\nnot a result of any new reports\nbut rather the same factors\nwhich ha\\(e kept oils from running forward with the rest of the\nmarket for months \u2014 no mar-\nkefs for western oil and the current ban of export of natural\ngas. The American government\nannounced late last week that it\ndidn't intend to make an exception, of its restrictions on imported oil to Canadian producers.\nThe volume of 2.354.000 shares\nwas lighter than Friday's 2,539,-\n000 but above the average of several sessions in the last month.\nIndividual losses among oils\nranged to 30 cents \u2014 by Bailey\nSelburn at $7.35 \u2014 among the\nlower-priced stocks and to nearly\n% point among the senior stocks.\nIndustrials were generally mixed\nwith most changes occurring in\na fractional range. A few low-\npriced mines moved in a 20-cent\nrange but most changes in this\nsection were small.\nNEW YORK (AP) - Stock\nmarket trading slipped Monday\nto another low for 19,i8 and prices\nunderwent a moderate decline.\nIt was the fourth straight daily\nretreat but slack turnover de-\nemphasized the loss.\nLeading slocks fell fractions lo\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2 | ?J\u00b0'J>} \u201e0,r..u.orLfJor.,s,\u00b0.n?(':.A.i\u2122 I Radi\nInt.   Nickel      72.37%\nIron Bay     1.45\nJonsmitfi  11\nR J Jowsey 50\nKenville       06\nKerr Addison     18.12\nLabrador           15.50\nLako Lingman  10\nLakeshore           4.50\nLexindin ....'. 05\nLittle Long Lac     1.85\nLorado   i   .56\nLouvic't   '   .12\nMacassa            2.90\nMadsen R. L     2.35\nMalartic G. F     1.07\nManeast  08\nMaritime Mining  45%\nMart McNeely    13\nMcLeod      1.00\nMcKenzie R. L 13\nMllliken-   \u00bb     2.22\nMining Corp 10\nMogul  \u201e       .40\nNew Delhi      50\nNew Fortune \u201e     .16\nNew Highridge 12\nNew Harricana 13\nNew Jason 07\nNew Lund 15\nNipissing      1.25\nNisto  05%\nNoranda New     \u2022 .37Vi\nNorgold     07%\nNormetals     2.42\nNorpax 25\nNorth Rankin  50\nOpemiska        6.05\nPickle Crow  1.17\nPlacer Devel     9.50\nPreston E. D     5.25\nQuebec Copper  29\nQuebec Lab  07\nQuebec Lithium      5.65\nQuebec Metallurgical     1.10\nQuemont        7.70\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1958 \u2014 7\nRailways Have\nUntil March 10\nTo Appeal\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Canadian\nrailways Monday were given\/until\nMarch 10 to apply for leave to\nappeal to the Supreme Court of\nCanada against the size of a 3.6-\nper-cent general freight rate increase awarded them in December.\nMr. Justice C.H. Locke granted\nthe extension of time from the\nprevious Feb. 28 deadline, with\nthe consent of the provinces\u2014all\nexcept Ontario and Quebec \u2014\nwhich opposed the rate increase.\nThe railways Feb. 17 filed notice of the appeal to Wie court\nfrom the award of the board of\ntransport commissioners. They\ncontend the board, in calculating\nthe size of the increase, erred in\nnot taking into account increases\nin the rail investment of the\nCPR since 1947.\nThe CPR is used by the transport board as the \"yardstick\"\nline in setting freight rates.\nIn a separate action, the eight\nprovinces have appealed to the\nfederal cabinet to disallow the increase altogether, and the cabinet has suspended its applica-\ntion until at least March 1 pending a hearing. This date likely\nwill be extended further in view\nof the general election campaign.\nCan Decalta    10.50\nCons Peak  07\nDuvex  08\nHome A        15.00\nLiberal Pete          1.32\nLong Island Pete      .10%\nMarigold  17\nMidcon  65\nNat. Pete      1.75\nNew Continental  .-.....,..      .32\nNew Gas Expl     \u00bb1.20\nOkalta             1.40\nPacific Pete    17.75\nPetrol  43\nPonder  32\nProv Gas      2.52\nRoyalite    12.50\nSpooner 20\nStanwell Oil 76\nTriad       4.40\nUnited Oils       2.08\nYank Canuck  07\nWestern Pacific 26\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   28\nAlgoma Steel  23\nAluminum  26Va\nArgus 2nd pfd  4,7%\nAtlas St\nB.A. Oil \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian    \t\nB.C. Forest   \t\nB..C. Power A\t\nBurns A \t\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Celanese \t\nCan. Cement\t\nCan Chem Co\t\nCanadian Dredge \t\nCan Oil ... .\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCan. Packers A\t\nCan. Packers B\t\nCons Gas\t\nDist. Seagram\t\nDom. Foundries\t\nDom Magnesium \t\nDom. Steel Ord \t\nDom. Stores\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nDom. Textiles\t\nEddy Paper     \t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord A \t\nGatineau \t\nGypsum Lime \t\nImperial Oil\t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInd Acceptance pfd ....\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMont. Loco '.\t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat. Steel Car\n35'i\n42\n,   6-%\n10%\n40'2\n12\n27'-j\nlft\n13\n29\n5\n15%\n26 h\n23V4\n38\n35\nin\n26%\n25%\n\u25a0 11\n21\n53%\n11\n7V\u00ab\n38%\n'15\n15VS\n74%\n30%\n29%\n39\n13%\n27%\n19%\n23%\n23%\n6\n51\u00ab\n15 >'4\n66\n21%\n\u2022 Hershey      114\nvoting gentlemen Phone 1179-X_\nore\nFOR SALE - DUPLEX HOUSE,\n6 rooms, furnace and bath in\neach. Apply 715 Josephine St.\nROOM AND BOARD\n1106-Y.\n; PHOME\nmining slocks and other selected j nninvllle\nissues bucked the trend. j payrock\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young man. Phone 284-11.\nPERSONAL\nHOUSE AND LOT IN' KIMBER-\nley, B.C. Apply H. Harrop, phone\n1278.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fillings.\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B C. Ph.\nPAcific   6357\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms;   furnished   and   heated.\n. Rates by day, week, month. \u2014\nAllen Hotel. 171 Baker Street.\nNEW MODERN HEATED 3 RM.\napartment with electric range.\nAdults. Apply 1019 Latimer St.\nor Phone 790-Y after 6 p.m.\nFOR RENT OR SALE - NORTH\nShore, about 10 miles, 2 bedroom\nhouse, fully modern, with excellent beach. Phone 1766-L-2.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    PhoneJ238\nG. W7BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\nJ73 Baker St.    Nelson    Phone 1118\nHEATING\nti-ROOM HOUSE. GAS FURNACE,\nwired for TV. Close in. Adults.\nRnx 8845. Dai!\" News.\n5 ROOMED HOUSE, 311 OBSER-\nvatory. Apply 1212 Hall Mines\nRoad.\n2-ROOM    FURNISHED    APART-\nment, close in. Phone 839-R.\nFOR SALE-2 CLEAN, V STEEL\nboilers: 4' diam. x 12'; 5' diam.\nx 16'. 350' VA\" clean copper\ntubing. Phone 378-X-2.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and_evenings. 924 Davies Si.\n4 STEEL TANKS; CAPACITY 350\n\u00bbn\"nrf. rsal.OO ^ach. Ph. 378-X-2\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nWE   WILL   DELIVER   BY   OUR\nown  truck  pullets of any age\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS\nFridays, ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nFALSE TEETH DISCOMFORT?\nTry \"Dentur-Eze\" today. Wonderful plastic re-liner that makes\nteelh fit comfortably, prevents\nslipping, wobbling, tasteless,\nodorless. One application lasts\nwks  Only *1.95 at all druggists\nN.laun Satly N etun\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday .\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance.\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month         $1.25\nThree months    $ 3.50\nSix months     $ 6.50\nOne year          $12.00\nBy Mail lo United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month         $ 1.75\nThree months     $ 5.00\nSix months       $ 9.50\nOne year       $18.00\n.52\n.21\nThe  Associated  Press  average -_'  |t, Gordon' ' 4.20\nof 60 stocks declined 70 cents to SS             43\n$158.60 with the industrials down 3 \\\u201es\"r     eon\n$1.20. the rails down 90 cents and Sleep RoS,k\u201e     ,,J\nthe utilities up 20 cents. *u llva\" Con ,     ?'2S\nCanadian   stocks   also  suffered Sylvanite          \u25a0\"\u00bb\nin   the  general   decline.   Hudson Teck Hu8Ves        \u00b0,\nBay  Mining  was  hit  for  a  IV, Temagami          \u25a0\"\nloss.  Canadian  Pacific and Dis- Thprnp-Lund      1-24\ntillers - Seagrams  closed lower, Tombill  .'. \u00abj\nDome   Mines   made   a   !'4   gain Ventures  23\nwhile other shares  were mainly Vicour   94 h\nunchanged. Violamac     1-25\nAmerican   Stock   Exchange,Waite Amulet     6.05\nprices were off. Losers included\nNorthspan Uranium.\nHOUSING   REPORT\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Central |\nMortgage and Housing Corporation Saturday reported construction of 120.700 houses was started |\nin January, up 169 per cent\nfrom  the January  1957  total  of Cdn Atlantic\n44.800. but lower than the 132,800 I Canadian Collieries  :...    4.35\nrecorded in December 1957.        Canadian Devonian 5.50\nWiltsey Goglin      19\nWright Hargreaves     1.40\nYeliowknife Bear 73\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  20\nBailey Selburn      7-25\nBata Petroleum    07\nCalgarv and Edmonton ...   18.00\n--    \u25a0-    -      3.90\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nDelivery to be made in July or i Where extra postage is required\nAugust. Orders taken from now!       above rates plus postage,\non. No deposit necessary. Sound, | For delivery by carrier in Cran-\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances. Free Estimates.\nPhone 774\u2014523 Cedar St., Nelson\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nrent. 614 Victoria.\nFOR\nhealthy stock guaranteed. While\nLeghorns, New Hampshircs,\nWhite Rocks and Cross breeds.\nAppleby's Poultry Farm, Mission\nCil\". B.C.\nbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely.\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown,\nln Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nIn Rossland. Mrs. Ross Saundry\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'SdMITED\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\n2-BR.   HOUSE   FOR   RENT-\n1323-L, Nelson.\n-PH.\nSMALL COTTAGE IN FAIRVIEW.\nPhone 1287-L.\nPARTLY FURN. 2 RM. SUITE\ngas. 723 Silica.\t\n3 RM. FURN. SUITE, HEATED,\ncentral. Phone 653-R.\nFOR SALE AT CRAWFORD BAY:\n10 yearling Holstein heifers; 10\n6-month old Holstein heifers; 6\nBorder Collie pups. H. Harrop.\nNelson, phone 1278.\t\nFOR SALE - PUREBRED TO-\ngenberg milking goat. North\nShore. Phone 401-R-4.\n3 ROOM SUITE FOR RENT-608\nFront St.\n: i =\nGUERNSEY MILKING COW FOR\nsale, third calf. Apply N. Sam-\nsonoff, Koch's. Passmore. B.C.\nFURN; 2 RM.\n1469-X..\nSUITE - PHONE\nWANTED TO RENT\n  [RESPONSIBLE    TENANT    D E-\nPARTLY FURNISHED 6 - ROOM!   sires unturned suite or apart-\nhouse for rent. Phone 926-L.       '    ment. Box 1955.\nThreatens Strike\nBEIRUT,   Lebanon   (AP)-The\nLebanese    press    syndicate    de-\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 14\nBrafcrne         .'.     520\nCanusa 93\nCariboo Gold        62\nFarwest Tungsten 09\nGiant Mascot  08\nGranduc :      1-90\nHamil Sil       94\nHighland Bell      1.25\nNational Ex      19\nPioneer Gold          1.30\nPremier Border 08\nQuatsino         28%\nSheep Creek      36\nSherritt Gordon      4.10\ncided Monday to strike next week[Utlca\nin protest against a new law governing journalists.\nThe new law provides for the\narrest of journalists before trial\nin libel cases and cancels their\nright to appeal. .\nUntil now journalists went to\ncourt directly in libel suits without arrest and could appeal the\nverdict.\nSilback Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard  ...\nSunshine Lardeau\nTaylor \t\nTrojan \t\n.05\n.03\n.15\n.10\n.10\n.15\n.01%\nOILS\nAltex     15\nA P Consolidated         38\nCalgary and Edmonton ...   17.37%\nCharter      1.70\nHome     15.00\nNew Gas Ex      1.10\nOkslta Com     1.35\nPacific Pete     17.55\nPeace River Gas  35\nRoyalite    _  12.25\nRoyal Can  .39\nSparmac  , .13%\nUnited   :. 2.05\nVanalta 17\nVantor           1.18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers      1.35\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.30\nB C Forests  10.25\nB C Telephone         43.00\nCrown Zeller.iCan)   16.00\nInland Nat Gas         6.50\nMacM _ Bloedel B   26.50\nMid Western   1.45\nPowell River  32.25\nHope Teenagers\nSurvive Ordeal\nHOPE (CP)-Two Hope teenagers, who spent Sunday night in\nrain on the side of 4,000-foot\nMount Ogilvie, walked out safely\nMonday.\nThey had been the object of an\nintensive search by civilians and\nthe RCAF.\nRichard Webster, 16, and Ar-\nlene Keim, 14, had both climbed\nIhe mountain before. They left\nHope Sunday afternoon to climb\nit agaiir, driving to the mountain\nbase at Othello, a railway siding\n15 miles from Hope.\nA party of loggers s'earched the\nmountain\u2014but on the wrong side\n\u2014until late Sunday night. This\nmorning 35 men were out again,\nand   an   RCAF   helicopter   was\ncalled from Vancouver.\nPlan Larger\n111 Satellites'\nWINTER PARK, Fla. (AP) -\nThe United States Army plans to\nwork progressively up to satellites of 500 pounds or more, says\nMaj.-Gen. John B. Medaris, head\nof the army ballistic missiles\nagency.\nHe said Sunday night that another satellite launching attempt\nwill be made by the army \"not\nearlier than tomorrow or later\nthan the 1st of April.\"\nThe army placed the first U.S.\nsatellite, Explorer, in orbit from\nCape Canaveral, Fla., Jan. 31,\nusing a Jupiter-C rocket as the\nlaunching vehicle.\nMedaris said the next satellite\nwill be similar to the Explorer\nbut with advanced Instrumentation.\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss. Industries ...\nShawinigan  \t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A\t\nStandard Paving ...\nSteel of Canada \u201e..\nUnion Gas of Can .\nUnited Steel\t\n33\n59%\n7%\n24%\n23\n17\n37%\n48\n74tt\n13%\nIATEST REPORT\nAtk your Investment Dtahc\nfor th* Lal.it Rtport\nand Prospectus of\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nLtd.\nTODAY'S 5 STAR SPECIAL\n!7 Chev. Bel-Air\nV-8   engine,   automatic   transmission,, radio,   two-tons\npaint. Only 3700 miles. New car warranty-\nTODAY AT\nNelson Motor Products Ltd.\nCash\nKootenay and Victoria\nTerms \u2014 Trade\nNelson, B.C. Phones 658-9\nTrans Mtn\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Can Com .,\nTrans Mtn Unit .\nWestcoast Com ,.\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can   48.50\nRov Bank of Can   64.00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonw'lth Int.\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nTrans Can \"C\" ..\nBid\n14.00\n26.50\n42.75\n22.25\n43.00\n45.50\n7.95\n6.52\n3.22\n9.32\n4.51\n4.85,\n42.75\nAsk\n27.00\n44.00\n22.50\n8.72\n7.16\n3.52\n10.08\n4.86\n5.25\nE_\u00a3!!_ra \u00ae _________\n\u25a0   GET THE JUMP ON SPRING!\nCome the first warm-ish day and everybody will start thinking\nabout buying a car ... or a \"second\" car. '\nWhy nit beat the crowd, and get the pick of the best buys . . \u25a0\nthe prize specimens turned in by those who bought the first '58s?\nPRE-\nSPRING\nSPECIALS\nHERE\nARE\nSOME\n'55\nPlymouth\nDeluxe\nFamily  Sedan\nOverdrive  Trans.\nfor Economy.\nPriced 'way down.\nPriced\n'Way Down\nLike Olds.?\n'55 Model\n88 Rocket\nIn lovely shape.\nAutomatic, Radio.\nVery good.\n'56 Olds 88\nRocket\nAutomatic.   12.000\nMiles Guaranteed.\n\/_\u00a3__!.\nStation   -\nWagons\n'55 Meteor\n4-Door\n'56 Dodge V8\nVery Low Mileage\n'57  Plymouth\nOnlv 3000 Miles.\nNew Car\nGuarantee.\nwim-m-tiBsm\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1958\nA Fine Choice and\nRange of Prices\nPhoto Albums          Wedding\nScrap Albums\n$2.45 $3.00              Books\n$1.15\n$3.25 $3.50              $4 15\n$1.75\n$4.15 $6.00         , v       n. .\nAutograph          ^to ,5'\u00b0^\nAlbums                    Z,\"-ic\n$2.35\n5-Year Diary'\n.85                      $1,75\n$1.75                    *3'50\n$3.00\n$4.15\n.69               Address Book\n$3.50\n$1.00                    $1.15\n$3.45\nIN THE STATIONERY\nSECTION\nSEE OUR SPECIALS ON\nHot Water Bottles, School Binders, Candles,\nBooks, etc.   All   this\nweek.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nSPORTS\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nSKATING\nTODAY \u2014 2 to 4\n^hildA&Ju, Skdinq.\n4:05 to 5:55\nI HOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nEdmonton 4, Saskatoon-St. Paul 8\nWinnipeg 2, Calgary 2\nSASKATCHEWAN JUNIOR\nEstevan 2, Regina 1\nRegina leads best-of-seven semifinal 2-1.\nFUn Flon 1, Prince Albert 4\nBest-of-seven semi-final tied 1-1.\nMARITIME SENIOR\n. Shearwater 7, Amherst 13\nAmherst leads best-of-seven final\n3-0.\nOHA-NOHA SENIOR\nSault Ste. Marie 2, Sudbury 9\nKitchener 4, North Bay 8\nONTARIO JUNIOR\nBarrie 1, Hamilton 8\nINTERCOLLEGIATE\nBrandon 2, Saskatchewan 7\nOSHL\nKelowna 6, Penticton 3\nNELSON- CRESTON DISTRICT\nAdvance Warning of\nLoad and Speed Restrictions\nof Highways\nDuring the Spring thaw it will be necessary to\nimpose load and speed restrictions on vehicles using\nhighways and secondary roads in this District.\nThese restrictions may be imposed on short notice\nand trucking and transportation companies should\ngovern themselves accordingly.\nThe restrictions will limit the axle loadings of\ntrucks and buses and will restrict the speed of\nsome vehicles.\nVehicles with solid tires will be prohibited\nfrom using the highways.\nM.-C. K. STRUVE,\nDistrict  Superintendent.\nFernie, B.C.\nFebruary 24, 1958.\nJrk\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN  SHORT\nWhitby Dunlops will return to Canada with the World\nHockey Championship firmly grasped in the sweating hands\nof manager Wren Blair.\nAfter due consideration, that is the firm opinion of\nthis observer. But not under any circumstances could it be\nsaid the tournament at Oslo will be easy. There are too\nmany good teams.\nIn years past, it was almost invariably billed as a\nbattle among Canada, United States and Britain. Then\nBritain faded as a threat and U.S. indicated it would do\nlikewise. In the meantime, the Scandinavian countries rallied\nuntil, eventually, every tournament was scheduled to see\nCanada meet Russia in the\nNOTICE\nRegulations \u2014 Section 35\n\"Highway Act\"\nExtraordinary Traffic\nKASLO-SLOCAN DISTRICT\nThe undersigned, being a person authorized by\nthe Minister of Highways, in writing, to exercise\nthe powers vested in the said Minister in Part II\nof the \"Highway Act\" and being of the opinion\nthat the Monashee section of No, 6 Highway between Needles, B.C., and the North Okanagan\nElectoral District Boundary is liable to damage\nthrough traffic thereon, hereby makes the following Regulation, pursuant to Section 35 of the \"Highway Act,\" effective from 12:01 a.m. on the morning of Feburary 26th, 1958 until further notice;\nNo person shall operate any vehicle over\nthe Monashee Section of No. 6 Highway between\nNeedles, B.C. and the North Okanagan Electoral\nDistrict Boundary, having a single axle weight in\nexcess of 75% of 18,000 pounds or a tandem\naxle weight in excess of 75% of 32,000 pounds\nas allowed under the Regulations made pursuant\nto Section 36 of the \"Highway Act.\" The LX\nfactor will be disregarded in calculating the\nallowable load.\nThe speed limit of trucks and buses is restricted to 30 miles per hour.\nVehicles with solid tires are prohibited.\nG. R. KENT,\nDistrict  Superintendent.\nNew Denver, B.C,\nFebruary 24, 1958.\nfinal.\nFew observers admit the possibility of any team other than Canada or Russia carting off the silverware, but the fact remains the\ngeneral level of comnetition is\nmuch higher than it had been previously. It now is apparent that\nany one team can topple any other\nteam on any given night.\nTwo years ago, the U.S. amateur\nsquad whipped Kitchener-Waterloo\nDutchmen, and their victory came\nbefore Russia's. From all reports,\nthe loss to Russia was less decisive\nthan the loss to the Yanks. It was\nthe American victory that rankled,\nand it still does.\nMost fans are willing to forgive\nKitchener for losing to Moscow,\nbut the defeat at the hands of the\nAmerican team, mostly comprised\nof college youngsters, struck deeply at what must pass as national\npride, although how one can have\npride of any sort and not know\nhow to lose gracefully is a puzzle\ntoo deep for me.\nSweden has been considered no\nbetter than third, with the U.S. and\nNorway tabbed to battle for fourth.\nIt is highly possible, even probable,\nthat one of those three teams will\ntoss an upset at the anticipated\nfirst and second teams.\nA report Monday from Dunlops'\ntouring headquarters echoed the\nfamiliar cry of \"no competition.\"\nI've heard that before. I heard\nthat two years ago when Kitchener\nwhipned Germany 23-0, and every\nfan in Canada and most throughout the world conceded the title\nto the high-scoring Canucks.\nI'm still convinced that if Kitchener's five reinstated pros had\nbeen able to play, the Canucks\nwould have brousht the title home.\nPenticton Vs had that right; Whitby will have it.\nWhitbv should win the crown,\nbut the triumph won't be done with'\nout generous helpings of blood,\nsweat, toil and tears. It will be\nas rugged as anything that team\nhas ever encountered.\n\"Congratulations, Kimberley\"\nDespite the lack of cooperation\nfrom the weather, Kimberley's\nthird annual Snow Fiesta was the\nhuge success it deserved to be. It\nresulted from foresight, energy and\nimagination on behalf of all inhabitants of the city and will' serve\nthrough the rest of this year as\nan example to other parts of the\nprovince. If the rest of British\nColumbia is able to show as well\nin regional celebrations, the success of the Centennial is assured.\nThe snow palace, decorated\nstreets, merchants' windows and\nmany arrays of colored liehts served to nrove that when a city settles\nwholeheartedly behind a project, no\nmatter what size, success follows.\nEverywhere one looked were obvious stens of civic pride, and the\nnroud city made a proud spectacle\nthroughout 10 days of festivities.\nThe parade was a huge success,\nand youthful Patricia Brown is an\nattractive monarch for next year's\naffair. Mammoth floats, seven\nbands and other parade attractions\nfurther indicated the hard work\nfrom various committees in mak\ning the Centennial Fiesta one that\nwill be remembered with pleasure\nin years to come.\nOf course, the winter sports\nwhich were nerhaps the main fea\nture of the Fiesta, added some at'\ntractions that extended bevond the\nsimple realm of visual satisfaction.\nAnyone can enjoy seeing experts,\nwhether in skiing, curling or bas\nketball, but the enjoyment must\nbe at least trebled when one realizes that. Kimberley, with a population of less than 8000. can support\nCanadian championships in any\nfield of athletic endeavor.\nCongratulations are in order, of\ncourse, to all those people who\nthrough recent months have given\nof their time and energy on com\nmittees, to the local governing\nbody and to the hundreds of vol\n\"nteers.\nMINOR HOCKEY\nROUNDUP\nOliver Wins\nTop Money\nHOUSTON, Tex. (API - Ed\n(Porky) Oliver, the 43-year-old\njolly golfer from Canton, Mass.,\nignored the 54-hole leaders and\nslipped in with a final round five-\nunder-par.67 Monday to win $4300\ntop money in the $30,000 Houston\nclassic invitational.\nHalf an hour after Oliver posted\nhis 72-hoie 281\u2014-seven under par-\nhe saw Jay Hebert, Sanford, Fla.,\nmiss an 18th green seven-foot putt\nthat would have forced a playoff\ntoday.\nOliver began the final round five\nstrokes behind Jimmy Demaret,\nthe 54-hole leader and gallery favorite who ran into trouble on the\nback nine and took a two-over 74\nthat dropped him to a fourth place\ntie at 283.\nIn winning his first tournament\nsince White Sulphur Springs, W.\nVa., in 1956, Oliver placed his final\nround 67 beside earlier rounds of\n68, 73 and 73 for the 7200-yard, par-\n72 Memorial Park course.\nHebert shared the runner-up spot\nat 282 with Roberto de Vicenzo,\nMexico City, and each won $2500.\nDemaret's tie at 283 with Marty\nFurgol, Lemont, 111., and Daye\nRagan, Orlando, Fla., was good\nfor $1533.33.\nStan Leonard of Vancouver\npicked up $756 for his 68-77-69-\n74\u2014288 which left him tied with\nfour others. Al Balding of Toronto scored 72-75-72-73\u2014292 and\nwon $66.66.\n\"All I can say is I played good,\"\nsaid the 224-pound Oliver. \"I feel\nI was very lucky. This is the biggest cheque I've received in quite\nsome while.\"\nDefer Action on\nTrimming Team\nMONTREAL (CP)-The British\nEmpire and Commonwealth Games\nAssociation of Canada, hoping for\nmore financial contributions, has\ndecided to defer any action toward\ntrimming the size of Canada's team\nfor the 1958 games.,\nThe association executive met\nSaturday, heard reports that about\n36 per cent of the $100,000 objective has been received or pledged,\nand decided to wait a month to\nsee how the campaign progresses.\nThe association has previously\nfigured on about 100 athletes and\n20 officials.\nBob Adams, a Saskatoon school\nteacher who has held several Canadian records in field events, was\nnamed coach of the track and field\ndivision and Neil Farrell of Hamilton was named team manager.\nJames Parsons of Hamilton and\nDennis White of Montreal were\nnamed coach and manager, respectively, of Canada's boxers.\nThe 1958 games will be held in\nJuly at Cardiff, Wales.\nCanadian bantams rode roughshod over Rangers to a 9-3 triumph\nMonday. It was the Habs' 17th win\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nReBults of matches Monday night\nat Nelson Curling Club in the annual president-vice president competition:\nL. G. Peerless Id, R. Chandler 5;\n.1. Harvey 8, E. Ramsbottom 7;\nA. Ronmark 7, E. S. W. Batty 8;\nW. Tozer 13, J. Young 7;\nN. Lutkiwich 8, J. ThonKlS;\nD. Cathcart 8, J. Sutherland 7;\nW. Duckworth 3, W. Wait 15.\nPASTRANO\nRATED 5-to-l\nLONDON (AP)-WilUe Pastrano\nof the United States, given rave\nnotices by British boxing writers\nfor his last fight here in October,\nMonday was rated 5-to-l favorite\nover Britain's Brian London for\ntheir 10-round heavyweight bout at\nHarringay Arena tonight.\nA capacity crowd of 11,000 is\nexpected.\nPastrano, 22, a fine boxer and\na light hitter, made a big hit here\n\u2014where they idolize clever boxers\n\u2014when he outclassed Dick Richardson of Wales, Oct. 22.\nHockey's Big Seven\nBy The Canadian Press\nGordie Howe, starry right-winger\nof the Detroit Red Wings, put on\nthe scoring pressure during the\nweekend, gathering seven points\nand climbing to fourth place in\nthe list of top NHL poinit-getters.\nHis points inicluded two goals\nand five assists and boosted his\ntotal to 58, one more than Bronco\nHorvath of Boston Bruins, who\npicked up two goals and one assist in weekend games.\nAlso moving upwards at a rapid\nclip was New York Rangers' Andy\nBathgate, who amassed two goals\nand three assists to bring his third\nplace points-total to 62.\nThe leaders:\nG  A Pt\nMoore, Montreal    31  40  71\nH. Richard, Mtl     25   44   69\nBathgate, N Y _    24   38   62\nHowe. Detroit   ,27  31  58\nHorvath, Boston , 25  32   57\nGeoffrion, Mont  !7  S3  50\nStasiuk, Boston _   20  28\nin League play as against six los-i\nses.\nThe winners were paced by Bill\nBurdenie and Gary Higgs with a\nhat trick each, while singletons\nwent to Doug Seaby, Gordy\nSchmidt, and Randy Conne. In assists, Burdenie picked up three,\nSeaby two, Higgs, Schmidt, Spiers,\nPeterson  and  Wallach  one  each.\nAll three Rangers goals were\nscored by their goal getter Kenny\nDewar and all were unassisted.\nBlack Hawk bantams nudged\nRangers in a 7-6 match Wednesday. The win left Hawks two points\nbehind the second-place Rangers.\nJimmy Turner picked up a hat\ntrick. for the Hawks while Mike\nLaughton picked up two goals and\nGlen Wilson and Paul Peters one\neach. Wilson picked up three assists, Laughton two, Turner and\nSjoberg one each.\nFor Rangers Ken Dewar picked\nup his second consecutive hat trrck.\nChick Chapman' scored twice and\nShelly Atwell once. In assists Atwell earned two, Dewar, Bishop\nand McElroy one each.\nBruin Pee Wees and the Black\nHawks battled to a 2-2 tie in their\nfirst of five semi-final playoff Saturday afternoon. Hawks tallied\nboth their goals in the opening\nperiod with Bruins coming baclt in\nthe second with a pair to tie it up.\nRay Leeming and Johnnny Cherenko scored the Hawk goals, both\nbeing unassisted.\nDerek Bennett was th* Bruin\ngoal getter with a brace and on\neach occasion he was assisted by\nLarry Black.\nCanadian Pee Wees had to come\nfrom behind to defeat Rangers 5-3\nin the first game of their best-of-\nfive semi-final Saturday afternoon.\nStu Paterson was tops for the Habs\nwith two goals. Timmy Alan, Donny Wah and Bobby Steed scored\none apiece. Assists went to Preston, Wah, Steed and Joyce.\nChuck Owens was the big gun for\nthe Rangers as he scored all three\nof their goals. Reggie Cherenko\nand Bobby Jeffs picked up an assist each.\nROCK 'N ROLL\nSKATING STEALS\nBUDAPEST SHOW\nBUDAPEST (Reuters) - A\nrock 'n' roll exhibition on ice by\nCanadian skating champions Robert Paul and Barbara Wagner\nstole the show before 8000 Hungarians here Monday night.\nThe Toronto couple was appearing at an exhibition given by Hungarian performers, seven American and six Canadian star skaters\nwho competed at the recent world\nchampionships in Paris.\nThe crowd called the Canadian\npair back and made them give one\nencore after another by chanting\n\"rock, rock, rock.\"\nTheir perfect timing and style\ncaptivated the audience.\nDavid Jenkins of Colorado\nSprings, United States world figure\nskating champion, also received\na great welcome with his tremendous leaps and pirouettes.\nOther skaters included the Toronto dance pair, Geraldine Fenton\nand William McLachlan.\nJockey's Guild\nPost for Johnson\nTORONTO (CP) - Ted Johnson,\none of Canada's leading jockeys\nuntil an accident ended his career\nin 1956, has been appointed business manager and secretary of the\nCanadian division of the Jockeys'\nGuild, it was announced Monday.\nHe succeeds Leonard Stroud who\nhas become manager of the guild\ncentral region.\nJohnson, 32-year-old native \u201e.\nWhitewood, Sask., suffered a badly\nfractured leg in a spill during a\nrace at Fort Erie, Ont., in 1956.\nHe led all Canadian jockeys in 1952\nwhen he rode 153 winners.\nof\nCLASS ADS GET. RESULTS!\nHove The Job Dona Right\nUK GRAVEC\n\u2022        LIMITED       \u2022*\nPHONE 811\nUIRI PLUMBS*\nHUGE PLANT\nThe world's largest fish cold\nstorage plant is at Prince Rupert B.C.\nLife Before Birth\nBabies begin with a fertilized egg about as big as the\ndot on this i. Thirty-one\ndays later a tiny heart begins\nto beat.\nMarch Reader's Digest\nbrings you the step-by-step\nstory of the mysterious miracle which precedes birth \u2014\nthat marvelous process which\nhas, from time immemorial,\nproduced us alL Get your\nMarch Reader's Digest today: 43 articles of lasting\ninterest, including the best\nfrom current books, magazines, condensed to save your\ntime.\nNO EASY TRICK .... By Alan Mover\n\"^MAYER,\n7X\u00a3DgFErtCMe\nCffAMPfWXoZ\n7XyM6\nTo\/HOP HP\nMy,\n\/ISA\/M\n\u25a0 <iij) peeeaip\n~*<y 'MP rr$EEM$\nmPOttlBLE,\nroMAMTAI\/l\nOrfE\"*\nCOMPETiriv'E,\nEP6E OWA\/i\nemf\/p\/r\/o\/f p\/et\/\nSparkler\nSweaters\nBy JANTZEN\nSee these  latest sweaters\nin lambs wool.\nPULLOVERS\nFrost Blue\nCharcoal\nRed\n3 BUTTON VESTS\nRed\nWhite\nat\nEMORY'C\nLTD.    \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nDistributed by Sing FcaUrci Syndicate'\nFielder Increases\nWHL Scoring Lead\nSEATTLE (CP) \u2014 Seattle centre\nGuyle Fielder increased his lead\nin the Western Hockey League\nscoring race by four points to 11\npoints last week.\nStatistics released by league\nheadquarters Monday showed\nFielder picked up eight points \u2014\ntwo goals and six assists \u2014 for a\ntotal of 84. He got one goal and\nfive of the assists in Sunday's\ngame against Victoria Cougars.\nCaptain Phil Maloney of the\nVancouver Canucks, who got a goal\nand three assists during the week,\nretains second place but is being\nhard-pressed by Calgary's Sid\nFinney, who got two goals and\nfour assists to bring him one point\nbehind Maloney.\nFinney, leading goal-getter with\n37, has played only 44 games this\nseason, 13 less than Maloney and\nfive less than Fielder.\nVictoria's Eddie Dorohoy, who\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nDetroit \u2014 Johnny Summerlin,\n191%, Detroit, outpointed Jack Jacobs, 197, New York, 10.\nled the field early in the season,\ngot only two' assists to make his\ntotal 70, 14 points behind Fielder\nand four ahead of fifth-placed Len\nLunde of Edmonton.\nHighest scorer last week was\nColin Kilburn of Edmonton, former Cougar manager and coach,\nwho scored four goals and six\nassists to jump from 16th to ninth\nplace. Chuck Holmes, also of Edmonton, got four goals and four\nassists to move from 18th to loth\nplace.\nOrland Kurtenbach of Vancouver,\nout with a shoulder injury, and\nEarl Ingarfield of Winnipeg, who\ngot only one assist last week,\ndropped out of the top 10 scorers.\nThe top 10:\nGP  G   A Pts\nFielder, Seattle   49   17  67  84\nMaloney, Van.     57   29  44  73\nFinney, Cal    44  37   35  72\nDorohoy, Vic    55   31   39   70\nLunde, Edm    51   32   34   66\nStratton, Wpg    56   15  47  62\nKapusta, Wpg    56   25   35   60\nMelnyk, Edm     47   21   39   60\nKilburn, Edm     55  21  38  59\nHolmes, Edm    54   22   34   56\nHucul, Cal     54   18   38   56\nJim Van Pelt\nJoins Bombers\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Winnipeg\nBlue Bombers of the Canadian\nFootball League's Western Division\nMonday announced the signing of\nJim Van Pelt from the University\nof Michigan, ensuring the club at\nleast two quarterbacks 'when training opens for the 1958 season.\nAlready signed is Eagle Day,\nwho quarterbacked the club in\n1956 after playing college ball at\nMississippi. It still is not certain\nwhether Kenny Ploen of Iowa,\nwho directed the club last season\nwhile Day was sidelined vjith an\ninjury, will return. He may be\ndrafted into the United States\nforces.\nVan Pelt is five feet, 11 inches\ntall and weighs. 185 pounds. The\n21-year-old resident of Evanston,\nIII, last year completed 52.5 per\ncent of his passes and scored 26\npoints in nine games. He plays\ndefensive halfback and handles all\ntypes of kicking chores.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St\nPbone 317\nCHEST CONGESTION?\n\u20ac-\u00a7_) LIQUID\nCHEST RUB\nDeep-penetrating - quickly\nrelieves surface congestion.\nStainless, greaseless. Make-\ninhalant in steam vaporiser.\nYour Rexall fcharmacy\nCity Drug'\nA'omj I'm really saving..'.\nNo more dipping into my Savings Account\nsince I started using the Royal's Personal\nChequing Account for paying bills.\"\nTHE ROYAL BANK \"2-ACCOUNT PLAN\"\nprotects your savings \u2014 lets your balance\ngrow with regular deposits, plus interest.\nThat's because the plan provides a\nsecond, separate account for paying bills.\nThis Personal Chequing Account not only helps\nyou handle your household expenses\non a business-like basis but can save\nyou money on cheques, too.\nAsk your Royal Bank teller to set up a\n\"2-Account Plan\" for you.\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nNelson Branch\nR. L-. Duncan, Manager\nCranbrook   Branch P  VV. Irwin, Manager\nCreston Branch\n-R. G. Fisk, Manager\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}