{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430917":{"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":"1958-02-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430917\/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":" m5\nNelson's  Record\nTraffic  Fatality-Free  Days\nVol. 55\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy and\nmild with intermittent light rain\nexcept in the north Kootenay where\nsnowilurries are likely. Winds light.\nLow-high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 32 and 38.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 19, 1958\nNot More Than 6c Daily,  10c Saturday\nNo. 253\nUnemployment at Highest Since Depression\nArmed Men in\nBorder Area\nAnger Sudanese\nKHARTOUM, Sudan (APJ\u2014A wave of anti-Egyptian\nfeeling erupted in this capital of the Sudan Tuesday following reports Cairo has sent armed men into disputed\nborder territory.\nPhotographs of Egypt's President Nasser suddenly\ndisappeared from shop windows, and the UMMA (Independence) party of Prime Minister Abdullah Khalil issued\na call for volunteers to stand by for any emergency.\nEgypt's ambassador to Khartoum confirmed at a\npress conference that Egyptian \"electoral committees\" with\nbodyguards had entered a disputed area in preparation\nfor Friday's plebiscite on the United Arab Republic of Egypt\nand Syria.\nIn a later diplomatic note,\nEgypt demanded withdrawal of\nail Sudanese troops.\nSudan replied, following a cabinet meeting, with a note asserting Sudanese sovereignty over\nthe area ('for tens of years\" and\ndemanding that Egypt withdraw\n. its election officers and guards\nwho have arrived there.\nAn official Egyptian source in\nCairo denied any Egyptian troops\nhad entered the disputed area.\nThe source said Egyptian frontier police had moved in to protect  polling  booths   during   the\nplebiscite, but asserted they \"are\nnot there to fight anybody.\"\nLater   reports  circulated    here\nthat Sudanese troops were mov-\nin gtoward the northeast frontier\nhut  a government statemnt   denied Egyptian charges the Sudanese forces had entered the   disputed area.\n10,000 SQUARE MILES\nThe area in dispute is about\n10,000 square miles of desert frontier land bordering the Red Sea,\nabout 135 miles southeast of the\nproposed site for Nasser's high\nAswan dam project..\nDespite  the  announcement   of\nthe Egyptian ambassador in\nKhartoum, E g y p t's delegation\nspokesman at the United Nations\nin New York insisted \"ther.e is\nand there was\" no Egyptian armed\ninvasion of the Sudan.\nThe Egyptian spokesman, Abdul Mawgoud Hassan, told reporters Nasser sent Khalil a message denying Sudanese newspaper\nreports that Egyptian forces were\npreparing to invade the area. He\nsaid Nasser urged Khalil to caution the newspapers, and that the\nEgyptian leader edded \"God bless\nyou and direct your steps in the\nright path.\"\nA foreign office spokesman in\nLondon reported the Sudanese government had been in touch with\nthe British diplomatic mission in\nKhartoum with regard to the dispute.\nThe government of this huge,\nhot country of 9,000,000 person \u2014\nmore than two thirds Moslem and\nthe rest primitive black African-\nhas rebuffed Nasser's invitation\nto join a federated Arab republic.\nBut Nasser's entire economy\ndepends upon the Nile River,\nwhich flows through the Sudan,\nStumping With\nThe Leaders\nBIGGAR, Sask. (CP) - CCF\nLeader M. J. Coldwell Tuesday\nnight called for the establishment\nof a national railway subsidy to\nensure both reasonable freight\nrates and fair salaries for railway\nworkers.\n\"I think the people of Canada\nwould support a railway subsidy,\"\nbe said in an election speech in\nthis part of his home constituency\nof Rosetown-Biggar.\nMr. Coldwell said it should be\npaid if necessary to enable the\nrailway to meet salary demands\nof their employees so they could\nlot go requests for \"self - defeating\" freight rate increases.\n' A subsidy should be paid to ensure that Canadian consumers,\nespecially those on the farm, do\nnot have to face the burden of\nfurther freight rate increases and\nso that no section of railway employees will have to take inadequate wages.\n\"Agriculture is in a depressed\ncondition and cannot be expected\nto pay higher freight charges at\nthis time,\" he said.\nSLOT MACHINE APPROACH\nOTTAWA (CP) - Lester B.\nPearson' claimed Tuesday night\nthe Progressive Conservatives\nmade a wrong diagnosis of Canada's economic situation and\ntiien tried to resolve problems\nthrough a \"slot machine\" approach.\nThen wrongly diagnosed econ-\nom> ills last December, figuring\nthat- soon everything would be\nwell again. But when things bo-\ncame worse they moved with \"bits\nftnd pieces\" of legislation instead\nwl launching a frontal attack on\nu ^employment, the Liberal leader\niicded.\nAnd when things became critical and money and \"political tranquillizers\" ran out, the Conser\/a-\n1i es called an election instead of\nfscing a national accounting, Mr.\nPearson said.\nV) ALL POSSIBLE\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker Tuesday\nr:lht promised to do \"everything\nthat can be done\u2014everything with-\n(\"it regard to limit\" to prevent\nCanadians from suffering from un-\nc iployment.   '\nMe made the statement follow\nin;! the government announcement\n. rirlier Tuesday at Ottawa that\nunemployment in mid-January was\nnn officially-estimated 520,000 \u2014\ni nost-war high.\nHe referred to the government's\n\u2014nounced intentions to spend\n270,000,000   in   the   first   three\nmontlis of this year in a $1,185,-\n000,000 public works program for\n1958,\nThis program was \"to ensure\ndevelopment of our country and\nto provide as well help to Cana\ndians, work to Canadians and an\nopportunity for the better things\nof life.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker said he would\nnot place the blame for unemployment on anyone else, and quoted\nLiberal Leader Lester B. Pearson\nas having said Canadians would\nnot swallow attempts to pin the\nblame on the Conservative Government.\nBut he added that the last government \"refused to act\" when\nit was warned a year ago that\nthe \"bloom was off the boom\"\nCanada's economy.\nDOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was down 13-32 at\npremium of 2 per cent in terms\nof U.S. funds: a week ago 1 13-16\nper cent premium. The pound sterling was down 1-16 at $2.\u00ab1 13-16\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U.S\ndollar closed at a discount of 2 per\ncent in terms of Canadian funds,\nup 5-32. Pound sterling, at $2.76 3-16\nwas up 7-16.\nLIFEBOAT\nCAPSIZES\n25 Tossed Into\nHigh Seas After\nFreighter Founders\nNORFOLK, Va. (AP) - Rescue\noperations for the crew of a sinking Italian freighter became a race\nagainst time Tuesday night as a\nlifeboat from the stricken vessel\ncapsized, tossing its 25 occupants\ninto the Atlantic.\nThe American freighter President Adams, which had been trying to take aboard the men from\nthe freighter Bonitas off the North\nCarolina coast for nearly 2'A hours,\nreported the lifeboat capsized as\nit came alongside.\nIn a radio message picked up by\ncoast guard headquarters here, the\nPresident Adams said it had lowered a lifeboat of its own in an\nattempt to pluck the men from\nthe 20-foot seas.\nAt 12:10 a.m. the President\nAdams radioed its lifeboat had\nsucceeded in picking up \"a few\"\nof the freighter's crew.\nIn addition to the heavy seas,\nsnow and fog hampered rescue\noperations.\nAlso on the scene was the destroyer escort Hartley, which had\narrived just before the accident.\nThe President Adams, one of\nnine vessels which rushed to the\naid of the stricken Bonitas, arrived\nabout 9:20 o.m. At that time it\nwas reported the 27 crew members of the Bonitas had put out in\ntwo lifeboats and it was trying to\npick them up.\nApinsl\nPolish Plan\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States rejected for a second time today a Polish plan to\ndeclare a wide area in Central\nEurope off limits to atomic weapons.\nThe rejection was not a brusque \"no,\" however. It was softened by two considerations \u2014 to\ndeal gently with Poland and to\navoid the appearance of a hasty\nreply.\nThe proposal was rejected the\nfirst time Feb. 7. The Poles revised their plan and sent it around\na second time, with a copy being\ndelivered to the state department\nlast Sunday,\nCommenting on this new version, state department spokesman Lincoln White told his press\nconference Tuesday the proposal\nstill has \"serious disadvantages.\"\nPrimarily, White said in a\nstatement the proposal \"depends\nmerely upon the good faith of the\npowers having possession of nuclear weapons and would there-\nlore be unenforceable.\"\nCUT GAS PRICES\nDAWSON CREEK (CP) - A\nfour-cent-a-gallon reduction in gasoline prices,throughout a wide area\nof northeast British Columbia and\nNorthern Alberta was announced\nTuesday by Imperial Oil Ltd.\nR. S. Ritchie, manager of Im\nperial's B. C. marketing division,\nsaid the reductions are the result\nof the company's review of supply\nsources and transportation metlv\nods.\nThe area affected will be supplied with products from Imperial's\nrefineries at Taylor Flats and at\nDawson Creek in northeastern B.C\nAt present, gasoline is transported\nto the area from Edmonton.\nThe reduction will bring the\nwholesale price of regular grade\ngasoline down to 23.4 cents a gal'\nIon.\nEversiield Testifies\nDuring Sommers Hearing\nBy H. L. JONES\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Payments\ntotalling $3,500 in cash and bonds\nwere linked to former B.C. Forests\nMinister R. E. Sommers by the\ncrown Tuesday as it. presented evidence to support bribery-conspiracy charges against him, three\nother individuals and four companies.\nTestimony as to the payments\u2014\n$2,500 in cash and two $500 bonds-\ncame at the fourth day of preliminary hearing of the charges.\nThe crown alleges Mr. Sommers\nand others were involved in bribery\nand conspiracy in connection with\ngranting of lucrative forest management licences entitling holders\nto cut timber onv crown land.\nCity prosecutor Stewart McMorran brought forth his chief witness,\nCharles Eversfield, 46-year-old\nchartered accountant who once\nwas bookkeeper for Pacific Coast\nServices. Limited, one of the companies charged. He worked for\nPacific between 1951 and 1955.\nIn the course of identifying some\n50 documents the crown is introducing, Mr. Eversfield testified\nthat a $13.50 bank debit to Pacific\nCoast Services was the bank\nchajgc in wiring a $2,500 draft to\nVictoria.\nUnder crown questioning he said\nthe draft was sent to \"R. E. Sommers through the Canadian Bank\nof Commerce in Victoria.\" The\ndate was Dec. 1, 1953.\nEarlier the accountant, who quit\nPacific Coast in 1955 and now operates his own accounting firm in\nLos Angeles, testified under questioning by magistrate Oscar Orr\nthat two $500 bonds sent by registered mail to Victoria on May 17,\n1954, were sent to Mr. or Mrs\nSommers in Victoria under instruc-\ntions of H. W. Gray, president of\nPacific Coast.\nMr. Eversfield was not cross-\nexamined. That will come later,\nThe hearing is expected to extend at least through this week.\nAt its end Magistrate Orr will rule\nwhether there is sufficient evidence\nto send the accused for trial in\nhigher court.\nTRYING OUT reclining seats in new rail diesel car of Canadian Pacific Railway\nare Nelson Chamber of Commerce members and company officials. The car arrived\nin Nelsori from Medicine Hat on the regular run at 10:15 p.m. Monday. It had left\nthe Hat at 10:20 a.m. and left Nelson on the return trip Tuesday at 7 a.m. From left\nare I. E. Johnson, assistant superintendent, Penticton; Robert Foxall, C. W. Ramsden,\npresident of the Chamber; A. S. Lockwood, assistant superintendent Kootenay division; J. G. Watson and Austin Moore.\u2014Daily News photo.\nHalf Million Jobless;\nExpect Peak in March\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Unemployment in Canada has hit\nits highest point since the depression of the 1930s, government figures showed Tuesday.\nAnd Canada's top union leader; calling for \"utmost\"\nefforts by governments and employers to find jobs, predicted the situation will get i\t\nworse before it improves.       chiefly on post - Christmas reduc-\n\u201e \u201e      \u25a0 ,       1 tion of activities in the trade and\nSoon after the government es- service industries along with sea-\nlmated o20,000 were jobless and;Sonable slackening in construction,\nlooking for work in mid-January, | agriculture and manufacture of\nPresident Claude Jodion of the; transportation equipment.\n1,000,000-mcmber Canadian Labor Up until Tuesday's figures for\nCongress said unemployment will mid-January came out, the high-\nbe an important item before the I est government estimate of post-\nCLCs executive council meeting war unemployment had been that\nhere next week. j ot 401,000 for March, 1955.\n\"Normally,   the   peak of unem-1 SHARP JUMPS\nployment   is   not   reached   until!   The January estimate, made by\nMarch,\"   Mr.   Jodoin   said   in   a '\u25a0 the bureau of statistics on a month-\nstatement. \"So we can anticipate j Iy sampling of 30,000 households,\nthat conditions will get worse before they get better . . .\n\"The situation calls for the utmost efforts from both governments and employers.\"\nHis executive council, meeting I more than 30 per \"cent,\nhere for three days starting Feb.! Comparison between the totals\n26, is expected to consider reports!of January of this year and of 1957\nfrom a country - wide congress i showed an increase of 217,000 over\nsurvey  of  employment  prospects '\u25a0 last year's  303,000 or  around  70\nshowed sharp jumps over both\nDecember and January of last\nyear.\nBetween mid-December and mid-\nJanuary, it shot up by 134,000  or\nfor the next two months. It may\ndecide on making special representations to the federal cabinet.\nPEARSON COMMENTS\nMeanwhile, Liberal Leader Les-\nper cent.\nApart from the 520,000 figure of\nabsolute unemployment \u2014 those\nwithout jobs and seeking work\nthrough the full week under sur-\nter B   Pearson \u2014 in an elerTinn! ve5' ~  the  government  also  re-\n1 \"\u25a0\"\u25a0\"\"       '\"  '\"'  ,l(llon ported 50,000 persons holding jobs\nhad been laid off for that full week.\nIn a simultaneous  release,  the\n$1 Billion Public\nWorks Program Slated\nOTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minister Diefenbaker announced Tuesday expected expenditures by government departments and agencies\non works projects totalling $280,-\n000,000 during the first quarter of\n1958 and $1,185,000,000 for the full\ncalendar year.\nThe totals include projected expenditures for new construction\nand maintenance, alteration and\nrepair of existing works.\nOnly summaries of expenditures\nwere given. No details about the\nlocation or size of individual projects were included in the prepared\nstatement.\nThe prime minister said a schedule of the larger major works\nwhich will be undertaken by provinces .and territories will be announced soon.   \"\nAn exception was a proposed expenditure of $8,000,000 during the\ncalendar year for Ihe South Sas-\njkatchewan River dam project.\nDuring the last two fiscal years\na nominal amount of $500,000 was\nincluded in the government estim-\n! ates. %\nThe proposed expenditures for\nthe full calendar year, with totals\nfor the  first  quarter  of  1958  in\nPublic' works $145,000,000 ($27,-\n500,000); trans port $244,000,000\n($59,000,000); defence $80,000,000\n($17,000,000); Central Mortgage\nand Housing Corporation $308,000\n000 ($90,000,000); northern affairs\nand national-resources $50,000,000\n($8,500,000); croWn corporations\n$72,000,000 ($23,000,000); Canadian\nNational R a i 1 w a ys $140,000,000\n($15,000,000); support to other\nworks projects such as the Trans-\nCanada Highway, hospital construction, railway grade crossings\nand technical schools $100,000,000\n$35,000,000; other departments and\nagencies $46,000,000 ($5,000,000).\nChurchill Illness\n\"Not Serious\"\nNICE, France (CP)\u2014Sir Winston\nChurchill is ill in bed and his\nohysician, Lord Moran, will fly\nhere from London today to see\nhim.\nThe doctor who attended the\nformer prime minister Tuesday\nsaid Churchill's indisposition is not\nserious and should pass in a day.\nThe doctor gave no details.\nLady Churchill arrived here by\nair earlier and went immediately\nto Churchill's Riviera vacation\nvilla, the Villa La Pausa owned\nby Churchill's literary agent,\nEmery Reeves.\nA spokesman issued a brief bulletin stating Churchill was tired\nand that his condition required a\ncomplete rest.\nUphill Reads Wire...\nNine Works Projects\nFor Fernie Listed\nVICTORIA (CP) - Tom Uphill,\noldest member of the Assembly,\nforsook his usual joshing- manner\nTuesday night to plead for \"immediate action to assist Jlis stricken\ntown of Fernie.\"\nMr. Uphill is the oldest mem-\nben of the House, having served 38\nyears.\nHe said he regretted the four\ntimes Premier Bennett chose to be\nabsent while the plight of Fernie\nwas being presented.\nOnly four cabinet ministers were\nin their seats when Mr. Uphill\nrose to speak.\nHis speech concluded after\nHighways Minister P. A. Gaglardi invited Mr. Uphill to hold a\nmeeting in his office about possible\nwork for Fernie.\nMr. Uphill's first move was to\nread a telegram to the House\nfrom the mayor of Fernie. The\ntelegram listed nine works projects which might be started in\nthe Fernie area.\nIt also asked that an immediate\neconomic, cultural and social sur-\nGM Sales Increase,\nEarnings Decrease\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 General\nMotors Corp., the world's biggest\nindustrial enterprise, Monday reported higher sales but lower earnings for 1957.\nThe company attributed the\npromit dip to higher costs.\nEarnings for 1957 amounted to\n$843,592,000 or $2.99 a share. This\ncompared with $847,396,000 or $3.02\na .share in 1956\u2014a decline of one-\nhalf of one per cent.\nIn-1955\u2014the auto industry's banner year\u2014GM company earned $1,-\n189,477,000 or $4.26 a share.\nvey by the University of B. C. extension department be started to\nhelp plan Fernie's future.\nPAPER SOLD TO\nBRITISH GROUP\nRED DEER, Alfa. (CP) - The\nRed Deer Advocate, one of Alberta's top weekly newspapers, has\nbeen sold to a British newspaper\ngroup. The amount paid was not\ndisclosed.\nFred Turnbull and F. P. Gal-\nbraith, publishers of the Advocate,\nsaid the Advocate has been sold to\nthe Liverpool Daily Post and Echo\nLimited of Liverpool, England.\nWoman Offers for\nSatellite Flight\nPALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) -\nA young woman who studied philosophy in college, plays the harp\nand believes in positive thinking\nhas applied to the U;S. government\nto be the first woman to fly in a\nsatellite. '\nThe offer is from Sue Evans,\nwho asked a reporter Tuesday not\nto make light of her proposal.\n\"I am very small,\" explained\nMrs. Evans, 25. She gave her\nheight as 5 feet, Vi inches and\nher weight as 102 pounds.\nShe confirmed a report that four\ndays ago she wrote a letter to Dr.\nJames R. Killian, Jr., the new\nscience adviser to President Eisenhower, making the offer to go up\nin a satellite.\nAsked why she wants to take\non such a hazardous chore, Mrs.\nEvans said:\n\"The more people expand and\nthe more \u25a0 they want to develop\nthe less wars we are going to have\nand the less petty arguments there\nwill be.\" -\nay 4 Hospital\nBuildings Empty\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Sun\nsaid Tuesday four mental hospital buildings buill near here in\nthe last three years at cost of\n$65,500,000 are empty and unused.\nIt says four others are only\npartially in use.\nThe paper lists the unused buildings as: a nurses training centre\nat Essondale with facilities to\ntrain 300 and house 100 nurses; a\n300-bed hospital for the aged at\nnearby Port Coquitlam; a cut-stone\nrecreation centre and chapel, at\nCoquitlam; and gymnasium and\nswimming pool building at Woodland's school for retarded children.\nThe paper says a 380-bed hospital at Woodlands and other\nsmaller wards with 245 beds between them are in only partial\nuse.\nAlthough these buildings are unused or partly in use, 87 male mental patients are living at Esson-\ndale's Colony Farm, which was\ncondemned as a fire trap last\nyear, the paper says.\nIt describes the farm as having\nantiquated bathroom facilities and\nsagging walls.\nBlames Empty Beds\nOn Staff Shortage\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Empty\nbeds in the Woodlands School for\nRetarded Children are blamed by\nmunicipal affairs minister Wesley\nBlack on lack of trained personnel\nrather than staff cutbacks.\nThe minister, speaking on a television program broadcast from\nVancouver and Victoria Monday\nnight, said the provincial training\nprogram is not equal to the task\nof supplying trained personnel to\nthe mental hospital system.\n\"We have gone overseas to seek\nnew staff,\" he said, \"but we find\nthe problem is quite as acute\nthere.\"\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014B. 'C. govern\nment sources said Tuesday a \"sub'\nslantial number\" of staff will be\nhired at Woodlands School for re\ntarded children as soon as possible. ,\ncampaign pause at Ottawa \u2014 said\nthat perhaps the latest official figures   will stop \"the careless talk ,\u201e,\u201e ,. ,,     ,  ,,   ,\nof government spokesmen attempt- '*orTandePf lZZ   \u2122\u00bbZSri \u2122\ning to minimize the unemployment! at Jan' 16 there were 816'982 pel\nproblem.'\nThe government unemployment\nfigures made public Tuesday in\na monthly survey\u2014for the week\nended Jan. 18\u2014were the highest\nsince the government began collecting unemployment statistics\nafter the Second World War and\ncertainly above those of the full-\nemployment period of the war.\nNo statistics are available for\nunemployment in the depression\nperiod. '\nA joint statement by the labor\ndepartment and statistics bureau\nblamed   the   employment   decline\npersons registered for work at its\nNational Employment Service offices\u2014a record since the service\nwas created in 1940.\nThe unemployment service figures do not represent absolute unemployment. They contain a proportion\u2014never officially estimated\n\u2014 of persons changing from one\njob to another.\nThe employment service registrants compared with 570,674 in\nmid-December .and with 526,$58 in\nJanuary, 1957.\nIn every region, the registrations\nincreased between December and\nJanuary. \t\nRed China Troops to\nPull Out of N. Korea\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Red China Premier Chou En-lai and\nNorth Korean Premier Kim 11 Sung said Tuesday Chinese\ntroops will withdraw from North Korea by the end of this\nyear. \u2022\u2022\u25a0\nThe announcement was made\nin a broadcast from Pyongyang,\nthe North Korean capital. Chou\narrived in North Korea Feb. 14\nfor an official visit.\nThe two premiers said the\nwithdrawal will begin before April\nwithdrawal would begin before\nApril 30.\nThe broadcast said a joint communique declared: .'\u2022\u25a0'.'\n\"The Chinese government, is\ntaking the initiative in-withdrawing its volunteer forces in support of North Korea's demand for\nwithdrawal of all foreign troops\nin Korea.\"\n1 The broadcast contained no\nstipulation that American troops\nbe withdrawn  simultaneously.\nThe South Korean army estimated last, year there were 350,-\n000 Red Chinese soldiers in North\nKorea and \"not less than 1,000,000\nacross the Yalu River in Manchuria.\"\n'The United States has two divisions \u2014 about 30,000 men \u2014 in\nSouth Korea, comprising virtually all the United Nations\ncommand forces in that area.\nSoutli Korea has an estimated\n500,000 men under arms.\nTunisian-French Issue\nWithdrawn From UN\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)-\nThe United Nations Security\nCouncil Tuesday tossed the explosive Tunisian-French dispute\ninto the hands of the United States\nand Britain after hearing the two\ncountries declare they have affirmative proposals for a peaceful solution.\nJames J. Wadsworth of the\nUnited States and Sir Pierson\nDixon of Britain, whose countries'\ngood offices have been accepted\nby France and Tunisia, did not\nspell out. what they had in mind.\nMongi Slim, ambassador of Tunisia, welcomed the Anglo-American\ninitiative but reserved the right\nto call for an urgent meeting of\nthe council if and when it appeared\nthe good offices had failed to\nbring agreement.\nThe council was called to\nhear a Tunisian accusation that\nFrance committed aggression in\nthe bombing of a Tunisian border\nvillage Feb. 8. France accused\nTunisia of harboring Algerian rebels.\nDECISION UNANIMOUS\nThe decision of the 11-member\ncouncil was unanimous. Suspension of the debate was proposed\nby  Swedish  delegate  Claes  Car-\nbonnier and formally moved by\nJapanese delegate Koto Matsu-\ndaira.\nWadsworth told the council the\nU. S. \"hopes to be able to offer\naffirmative suggestions to advance\nthe objective of a peaceful and\nequitable solution of these problems.\"\nSeize Radio Wired\nFor Police Calls\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A stolen\nradio seized by RCMP in a raid\nMonday night had been rigged to\nreceive police calls, detectives\nsaid.\nMore than $10,000 worth of merchandise was seized in the raid\non a home in suburban Burnaby.\nPolice said the merchandise was\nstolen from a Vancouver electrical\nshop.\nA 21-year-old suspect, described\nby detectives as an \"electronic\nwizard\", was held for investigation.\nDetectives said one of the stolen\nradios had been wired to receive\npolice calls, and another radio was\nbeing worked on to monitor Burnaby RCMP.\nAnd in This Corner ....\nNEW YORK  (AP)\u2014Scientists reported  Monday\u2014of all days\u2014\n, that only about two Inches of new snow accumulated at the South\nPole during 1957.\nThe land at the pole ties under 8300 feet of snow and ice-\nshowing what can happen if nobody shovels.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., FEB. 19\u201e 1958\nHelen Morgan-her songs-her sins.\nIto-f ! i       '  \u25a0 7f\nli-i-l.  \u00ab> WARNER BROS. '\ni ig 11   i   ^\/v:.. pkmnt _\n,\u201e CINEMASCOPE   \"fejt\u00bbft\/\nHi \\i i nr i\nHelen\nStan*-\nANN BLYTH\nPAUL NEWMAN\nRICHARD CARLSON\nAdult Entertainment\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 7:00 - 9:08\nCIVIC\narks\n38th Birthday of Club\nThe third annual national Kinsmen Week and 38th birthday of\nthe Kinsman Club inauguration is\nbeing celebrated this week across\nCanada.\nOrganized in the city of Hamilton in February of 1920, by Harold A. Rogers, the club was started to promote and direct fellow-\nI ship  among  young  business  and\n'professional men between the ages\nof 21 and 40 and to serve the community in which each club exists.\nThere-are now 322 regional clubs\nand a membership in excess of 10,-\n000.\nKinsmen efforts since inauguration have been devoted to the provision of medical, educational and\nrecreational facilities for the community. The original purpose of\nthe club was to develop the men\nwithin its ranks while contributing\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"THIS COULD BE THE NIGHT\"\n(Adult)\nJean Simmons, Paul Douglas\nNEWS - SHORT\nWith Stane\nond Besom\nOdds...\n\u00b0\u00bbj Ends\n...by M.D.B.\nRinks for the next Nelson Curling\nCluh competition starting Friday\nnight will be drawn off the board\nhy thirds listed here. The thirds\ncurling rink at 8:45 tonight.\nThirds   are  Chum  Arcuri,  Don\nLENT SERVICES\nBEGIN TODAY\nToday is Ash Wednesday, be- Benedetti, Len Bicknell, R. Boates,\nginning of Lent and of special pre-J- Braybrook, G. Beatty, B. D.\nEaster services in many Nelson Balrlerston, G., Barefoot, C, J.\nchurches. Clarke,  K.  Campbell,  G.  Clarke,\nFor the second year the three R. Denison, A, Dayman, A. Free-\nFairview churches will co-operate:man, M. Gee, J.cGrieve, Bud Hes-\nin special meetings, the first of se, Ben Hans, Ir* Hendrickson, W.\nwhich will be in First Baptist.Kitto, G. Kdiway, f. W. Koehle,\nChurch. A. S. Lockwood,J. Laughton, L.\nCommunion will be served at 7 Maglio, Li Nicholson, R. Nuyens,\nand 10 a.m. in St. Saviour's Pro- R. Nash, A, Pollock, D. Porteous,\nCathedral, At 7:30 p.m., first ln a H. Rounds, E. Robinson, W. Stern,\nseries of instructional films on A, W. Stephenson, J. Taylor, D.\n\"The Eucharist\" will be shown at,Winlaw, F. Wah and E. Mason.\na devotional service. I   Results of Tuesday's games:\nCommunion will be at 9:30 a.m.;   j Milne H  - M Eobinson 9.\nin Church of the Redeemer.\nDecisions, decisions, decisions \u2014\nnothing but decisions! Shall I pay\nsix dollars \"and get one year free\nwill choose their personnel at the.\u2122 \u201em\/   magazine   subscription?\n\u201e,\u201e.iint, -inv ai n.\u00a3. ir,nini.i : Shall I wait until Christmas when\nA service will also be held tonight at St. John's Lutheran.\nFirst of a series of sound strips\nabout the passion, \"The Triumphal\nEntry,\" will be shown Friday afternoon in a children's service at\nthe Pro-Cathedral.\nA. Ferworn 8, D. Marshall 5.\nH. Farenholtz 10, A. Reid 8,\nL. Shockey 14, A. Borodula 6.\nE. Ramsbottom 14, N. Sardich 9.\nA. Ronmark 10, N. Lutkiwich 6.: they? Not on your life. At least\nmy subscription runs out and pay\nthat immense increased price for\nmy favorite reading material? As\nan 'old friend of the family' I get\nin on this special deal, but I must\nDO IT NOW. What will be my\ndecision? Will I succumb to this\nhoney talk now or wait for the\ninevitable honeyed talk that comes\nat Christmas time with the expiry\nof my subscription. For the thrilling answer be sure to read our\nnext column.\n*  \u2022  *\nBut really, I wish they would\njust let me send my little money\norder at the beginning of each\nyear and as I clutch the stub of\nsaid money order I can sigh and\nsay, \"there, that is done with for\nanother twelve months,\" but will\nKitchen Appointed\nTo Labor Board\nTRAIL \u2014 J. L, Kitchen was appointed by the city as representative and the arbitration board of\nthe Labour Relations Branch in\nthe dispute between Local 941 fire\nfighters and the city of Trail concerning wages. i\nMARCH 31st\nVOTE _\nDEWDNEY L*\nR. Chandler 11, R. Boates 5.\nR. F. Wallace 11, J. Leeming II.\nH. Ronmark 10, A. Hamson 9.\nH. Moore 9, W. Triggs 9.\nS. Cameron 9, W. Irvine 9.\nJ. Bailey 7, E. Hunt 4.\nR. F. Wallace 11, A. Hamson 10.\nJ. Harvey 14, W, Triggs 9.\nA. Ronmark 9, D. Cathcart 8.\nR. Maber 6, C, Trkla 7.\nJ. Leeming 8, F. Carmichael t.\nN. Sardich 10, J. Haines 8.\nR. Rocheleau 4, W. A. Manson 10.\nA. Bate 6, D. Marshall 13,\nBRITISH SOCCER\nonce a month and often twice or\nthree times there comes in the\nmail some sort of bargain \"that I\nsimply can't afford to pass up.\"\nThey send me a couple of shiny\nnew coppers which I cannot spend\non anything but a stamp to'return\nmy reply without feeling I am\ncommitting a felony. They send\nme a beautiful card \u2014 a different\none each time with my name and\nnumber on it and somehow I expect to see Oakalla written where\nit says Nelson, B.C.\n* * \u2022\nThis time there is a two cent\nas much as possible to public service. Club activities are directed\nto the teaching and observance of\nparliamentary procedure, upholding constituted authority, business\nand professional ethics, co-operation, tolerance, understanding and\nequality between all races, creeds\nand nationalities,\nThe Association of Kinsmen clubs\nhas assumed national importance\nduring the intervening years since\nits organization. Its motto is \"the\ncommunity's greatest need.\"\nDuring the war, and up until\n1948, almost 50 million quarts of\nmilk in the form of milk powder\nwere shipped to the children of\nBritain. Following this project, a\ncampaign of food parcels for Britain was carried out for nearly\n18 months.\nIn 1949-50 a Cancer Scholarship\nCommittee was set up to provide\nthe opportunity for promising\nyoung doctors from across Canada\nto take post-graduate work in cancer.\nIn the disaster field, Kinsmen\nanswered needs created by three\nmajor flood relief campaigns \u2014-\nWinnipeg, European and Hurricane\nHazel. The Nelson club supported\nthe B. C. Child Care and Polio\nFund, helped the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children and\nassisted in transportation and\nother expenses required by citizens being sent to Vancouver for-)\nmedical treatment.\nOutside these activities, the Nel\nson Kinsmen, with the city, were\nresponsible for construction of the\nbathhouse at Lakeside Park.\nTheir contribution to the Milk\nfor Britain fund passed the $15,000\nmark.\nA new branch of the Kinsmen\nClub is being organized for men\nover 40, the Senators' Club. This\nwill be run similarly to the exist\ning club, and will provide valuable\nassistance to Kinsmen in their fu\nture projects.\nElks Snowed Under\nBy Flour Sacks\nTRAIL \u2014 Report has it that it\nlooked like snow outside the Elks\nClub on Riverside Drive Tuesday\nnight\u2014with not a flake coming out\nof the sky.\nAn unusual accident occurred\nwhen a truck loaded with sacks\nof flour travelling down Riverside,\nswayed on the bend and jettisoned\nabout 20 sacks of the white stuff\non the street.\nSome of the sacks burst open\n(most of them, it appeared to a\nwitness of the accident) and those\nthat were intact were put back on\nthe Iruck, but what was left had\nto be shovelled up. What a mess!\nK of C SOCIAL\n36 Years of .Rotary\nTo Be Celebrated\nBy Nelson Club Friday\nOn the evening of February 21\n1922, 19 Nelsonites gathered at the\nHume Hotel in the first meeting j\nof many which have followed j\nduring the last 36 years.\nOn that vening was born the!\nNelson Rotary club, whose early j\nhistory was reviewed Tuesday at\nthe Hume by Arthur Gilker, one of\nthe original founders, of which only\nfour remain in Nelson.\nThe new club received charter\n1111 in April of that year and has\nprogressed steadily since that time.\nMr. Gilker said the club was organized for community betterment\nand referred to the first project, a'\n100 yard cinder race track at Lakeside Park.\nShortly after, a resolution was\nsent to the provincial government\nurging a treatment centre for drug:\naddicts. Such an institution was\nlater established at the coast.\nThe  club  spent  about  $15,000\nVETERAN ENGINEER John Lundie of Cranbrook\nwas at the controls when the CPR's rail diesel car\narrived in Nelson Monday night with Nelson Chamber\nof Commerce members aboard. Controls in front of\nhim in dayliner cab can be transferred to other end of\ncar in much (he same way as street cars were operated.\nCentre Windshield glass was broken as a result of a\ncollision with a pheasant on the fast prairie run from\nMedicine Hat.\u2014Daily News photo.\nKimberley Crowded as\nis\nns\nKnights of Columbus held a soe  _..    _.._ ...^\nial evening Sunday, a highlight of Miss Sanderson,  16, ,._.\nthe entertainment being vocal sel-: by the Women of the Moose.\nBy   JOHN   SHORT\nKIMBERLEY-The home stretch\nif such it may be called, is beckoning for Barbara Lowes, Patricia\nJones and Shirley Sanderson.\nThe three young ladies, ali contestants for the right to succeed\nFlorence Brown as Snow Fiesta\nqueen for the 1959 celebrations,\nhave agreed to appear at a meeting of Kimberley Rotary Club this\nafternoon where Ihey will speak\nand be spoken to, be given an opportunity to display their poise\nand personality and, incidentally,\nenjoy a meal.\nBiil Campbell, the wheel-horse\naround which the centennial celebration revolves, told me Tuesday\nevening that Miss Lowes leads in\nvote sales with Miss Jones second\nand Miss Sanderson third. Mr.\nCampbell declined to reveal totals\nbut said the race was exceptionally close. Miss Lowes, 15, is sponsored by the Canadian Legion;\nMiss Jones, 16, is sponsored by\nthe E[ks and Royal Purple and\nis sponsored\nLONDON  (Reuters)  \u2014 _Results;starnP cunningly _ flapping on said j ections presented   by the t Lions] |  'skiershave continued to arrive\nHALIBUT\nLIVER OIL\nCAPSULES\nVitamin A 5000 I.U.\nVitamin D   500 I.U.\n250 for $2.59\n500 for $4.29\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\nof soccer matches played Tuesday\nnight in the United Kingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nArsenal 1 Bolton 2\nDivision III, Northern\nCarlisle 5 Gateshead 1\nThe Weather\ni Nelson       32 40 \u2014\nToronto       -8 10 .03\nRegina        6 16 .01\nCalgary     13 18 \u2014\nKimberley     31 39 .12\nKaslo                 32 39 .34\n! Grand Forks    35 51 .08\n: Penticton       39 44 .07\nVancouver          47 58 .49\nSan Francisco    55 57 .81\nSpokane       38 57 .04\nChicago       -2   12    \u2014\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nFor Service\nCall...\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and Heating Service\ncard waiting to be affixed to my\naffirmative reply. Shall I tear it\noff and use it the next time I am\nshort of stamps or shall I leave it\nthere and toss it in my basket\nwhere it will sear neither my\nfingers or my soul?\nYou can have one year of our j Do'n\"Chal'uk\nmagazine free, they say in big\nbold print, and in the small print\nbelow they break it to you gently\nwith underlines on the great advantages,  how you  will  have  to\nquintet of Gordon Olson, Konrad(tor the Canadian ski champion\nSenger, Henry Stevenson, Frank] shi which begin Thursday and\nBeresford and Jack Bagnall. A with high-ranking officials of the\ngeneral knowledge quiz with, mer,I Canadian Amateur Ski Association\nversus women was conducted by d -,    (   . h   ft .\nn?av,d1,i\u201eT g also, der of skiers cannot be far behind.\nConvenors were Mr. DelucrezioJ   T\u00b0 c\u00bbm*a' \",e sht!rla^ \u00b0' \u2122om\nArt Bouchard, Cornelius Groot andisPace' blllels have been arranSed\nHockey Standings\nUndated   Western   International making the third annual Kimber\nin private homes, with many skiers\ncoming to visit friends, and others\nbeing taken in by helpful citizens,\nwho, like most, are interested in\nHockey League Standings includ-\nsend'ITprontri oVlose'out'\"on\"theIing games of Fek 15\noffer. They even threaten you with |\ntheir ne'w price of four dollars a\nyear if you don't do as they sug-'\ngest. This seems like a gentle form\nof blackmail.\nW\nL\nF\nA\nPis\nSpokane .\n26\n17\n18!)\n154\n52\nRossland\n26\n1!)\n170\n153\n50\nNELSON\n20\nzr,\n175\n198\n40\nTrail\n17\n27\n158\n187\n34\nWell, I shall have to decide, but\neven if I do decide there will be\nthe inevitable missive a couple of\nweeks or so hence that will be\noffering me something or another\nto better my position with my \"old\nfriends\" and I'll be faced with\nanother decision. I think I'll just\nwait till next Christmas and hope\nfor the best.\nWomen's Curling\nResults of Business Girls' Curling Club games Monday:\nR. Kuntz 11. M. McGovern 2\nL. Leverington 6, D. Allan 5\nJ. Miller 10, M, McDougall 9\nWednesday draw:   D.  Allan  vs\nM.  McDougall;  M.  McGovern vs\nL.  Leverington;  R.  Kuntz vs P.\nJamieson;  bye\u2014J. Miller.\nFOR\nA Complete Merchandise Warehouse Service\nFURNITURE STORAGE\nPACKING        \u2022        CRATING\nDISTRIBUTING\nContact\nTRUCK\nTERMINUS\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nAgents for\nWILLIAMS\nCOAST TO COAST MOVERS\n701  Front St.\nPhone 77\nMOCK PARLIAMENT HELD\nAT ST. PAUL'S MONDAY\nley Snow Fiesta a roaring success.\nInterest in the jumping which\nwill conclude the ski meet on Sunday is high already and soaring\nhigher almost by the minute, at\nleast 95 skiers are anticipated, a\nbare minimum of them local contestants and to handle the expected influx of hopefuls, post entries\nwill be accommodated.\nFred McKim of Nelson, highly-\nplaced in the CASA echelons as\nSouthern B. C. Regional Director,\nhas agreed to accommodate press\nrepresentatives with background\ninformation of many of the skiers\nand handle a running commentary.\nA running commentary on the international inter-collegiate meet\nhere last weekend brought only\ngood comment from on-lookers.\nInterest is high in the eighth annual B. C. Women's Curling championships, and by the time Ihe\nfinals are , played\u2014either tonight\nor tomorrow, depending on the\npossibility of ties in the six-team\nhigh local appeal is the presence\nof the Ina Hansen rink of Kimber\nley among Uie favorites.\nStill to come is a beard-judging\ncontest, which will take place Saturday, either before or after the\nqueen contest, a basketball tour\nnament and the Snow Fiesta mix^\ned bonspiel, which perhaps more\nthan anything else, points up the\ninterest  throughout  the  region.\nBy Tuesday afternoon, 57 entries\nhad been received and arrange\nments were being considered to\nhold at least a few draws ir\nChapman Camp. It was original\nly planned to restrict- it to 40 en\ntries.\nA room at St. Paul's - Trinity i vote of non-confidence in the gov-\nUnited  Church became a  \"legis-' ernment maved hy Mr. Brandon I round-robin\u2014interest will be even\nlature\" or \"House of Commons\" j and seconded by Mr. Whiteley.   | higher. Contributing greatly to Ihe the Tiger\nMonday night. \"Hon.\" H. H. Hinitt, \"minister\nIt was the Men's Own's \"Mock ! of highways, byways and bridges,\"\nParliament,\" with bills forcefully, introduced the measure saying\npresented by the government of, \"The government's broke. We need\n\"Prime Minister\" R. B. Morris I more money.\"\nand vigorously contested by an I Before deserting the government,\nopposition lead by Malcolm Bran- j Mr. Craig and his assistant, R. S\nYear of Dog for\nChinese the\nWorld Over\nTuesday was the first day of the\nYear of the Dog in the Chinese\ncalendar and celebrations will be\ntaking place in China and all large\nChinese centres in the western\nworld, involving parades, fire\ncrackers and a dragon.\nMonday night being New Year's\nEve, Chinese families in Nelson\nstarted off the 15-day festival witii\nfamily dinners at which only im\nmediate relatives were invited\nFrom Tuesday on, friends will be\nincluded in the festivities. The\nnext two weeks is the time of Open\nYear, the, starting of the New Year\nand festivities will be carried on\nfor the whole time, especially in\nlarger centres.\nGreetings at this time are wish\nes for good health, prosperity, good\nluck and a long life. One of the\ncustoms observed is the response\nof married adults in each household when.greeted by unmarried\nmembers\u2014the adults, in response\nto good wishes, present the well\nwishers with money wrapped in\nred paper, the red being, significantly, good luck.\nA clean house is a necessity be\nfore the New Year sets in. At the\nbeginning of December, the house\ncleaning starts and by the new\nyear, everything is spic-and-span\nAnother good custom connected\nwith the new year is the clearing\nup of old debts, which must be\nsettled by .New Year's.\nThe Chinese calendar goes by\nthe moon. Every full moon is the\n15th of the month. Every year is\nthe year of a different animal. For\n12 years this continues and then\nthe cycle starts again.\nLast year was the Year of the\nChicken. There is also a Year of\nSki Slants\nBy SITZMARK\nWe skiers have certainly been\nlucky this season \u2014 It's not very-\noften you can have spring weather,\ndowntown and good skiing on the\nhill. A week ago we were sure the,\nsnow was rotten to the bottom and;\ndangerous for skiing. However, by\nthe weekend the snow underneath\nhad frozen and six inches had fallen on lop. Since then we've had\nmore snow \u2014 we expect the skiing\nwill be good again this coming\nweek.\nOn the Centennial lift definite\nprogress was made Saturday. A\ncrew .put the cable under tension\nand measured where the splice\nwas to go \u2014 and Sunday morning\nthe cablesplicers got to work on it.\nIt was almost dusk when the\njob was done \u2014 and for the life of\nme I can't figure how they put a\n40-foot splice in two ends of three-\nquarter inch cable and end up with\nit still only three quarters on the\nsplice.\nMonday we were able to run\nthe cable around the lift and watch\nwhere we might have trouble. We\ndid discover that many of the shiv\nassemblies have to again be lined\nup with the cable and number 11\ntower which guides the cable on to\nthe bull wheel at Ihe top end has\nto be made more rigid. Then I\nbelieve we will be able to use the\ncentennial lift. Of course it will\ntake a certain amount of time to\ntest it to be sure of safety.\nWednesday night the small lift\nwill run for night skiing from 7:00\nto 9:00. This weekend skiing is\npopular \u2014 a good crowd has been\non hand the last two weeks. So if\nyou feel like skiing by gas lamp\ntonight is your chance.\nThe weekend coming up should\nalso be O.K. for skiing if the\nweather isn't too soft. And don't\njudge conditions on the hill by\nthose downtown \u2014 it's much cooler\nout there.\nMost of the beginners taking ski\nlessons have finished their course\nup to the stem-turn. Now it's a\nmatter of practise on the turns they\nhave learned before advancing to\nthe faster swings.\nThose who have not had instruction up to the stem turn are asked\nto contact Helmulh.\nKeep those boards greased up for\nthe weekend!\nhelping crippled children before\nother agencies took over. Money\nwas raised through concerts, excursions, minstrel shows, selling\nVictory Bonds on commission,\ntag days and other elforts. Rota*\nry also established a TB clinic\nin the former YMCA, started\nthe Kootenay Musical Festival\nand furnished two rooms In\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nnurses' home.\nIn the \"dirty 30's,\" technical\nclasses were established at local\nschools\nSeated at a special, table were\npast presidents C. B. Garland,\n1930-31; Mr. Gilker, 1933-34 and a\ncharter member; R. A. Peebles,\n1943-44; John Erb, 1946-47; H. D.\nHarrison, 1948-49; L. A. McPhail,\n1949-50; Jack MacDonald, 1950-51;\nR. B. Allen, 1951-52; J. H. Coventry, 1952-53; E. S. Ramsay, 1954-\n55; K. D. McRae, 1955-56; D. P.\nFairbank, 1956-57; C. F. Hunter,\ncharter member who was the\nclub's first and only auditor; L, G.\nNelson, charter member, first sergeant-at-arms.\nMr. Hunter blew but candles on\na birthday cake. First cut was\nmade by Mr. Nelson and pieces\nwere distributed to members.\nPARTY FRIDAY\nIndications are there will be a'\nlarge crowd at the birthday party\nFriday night, J. H. Argyle reported. Mr. Ramsay asked members\nnot requiring tickets to turn them\nover to him. Guests are expected\nfrom Spokane and Salmo, he said.\nW. L. Clark, Dr. C. M. Robinson,\nR. A. Munro, J. H. Argyle, E. T.\nBodard, H. E. ' Doelle, Vincent\nMoore and G. R. Norris were\nelected directors.\nNotice of motion to change meeting days hack to Monday was read\nby secretary C. B. Mutchler. This\nwill be discussed and 'voted on\nnext week. Change from Monday\nto Tuesday was made last summer\nafter stores changed their weekly\nholiday from Wednesday to Monday.\nL. G. Peerless is arranging the\nRotary rink in the March 22 inter-\nclub bonspiel, president R. H. Dill\nannounced. The 'spiel is being organized by Nelson Junior Chamber\nof Commerce.\nA letter from the Canadian Heart\n.Foundation seeking aid in raising\n5850,000 was read by Mr. Erb. Contributions may be made at banks.\nN. A. Allen led and accompanied\nthree old - lime songs. George\nPearsall of Trail was a guest.\nMeeting was in Hume Hotel, home\nof Rotary gatherings since 1931.\nKINSMEN TO AID\nHEALTH CENTRE\nTRAIL \u2014 Kinsmen Club of Trail\ninterested in helping to build the\nhealth centre for Ihe city, suggested that an area in the Esplanade be allocated (pr this purpose.\nThey pointed out that a lot previously allocated in East Trail was\nnot suitable for health centre type\nof building. Kinsmen propose to\nprovide one-third of the cost of\nbuilding, provincial government\none-third and federal government\none-third. The matter was referred\nto council as a committee of the\nwhole for consideration.\nNOTICE\nAnyone knowing of any person,\nstill living, that was in B.C.'\nprior to July 20, 1871 and July\n4th,   1886,  please  contact\nThe Old Timers\nCommittee\nof the '\nNelson\nCentennial Committee\n672 Baker St.\nPHONE 821\nDON'T PITY\nTHE\n.   I POOR GIRL!\nSfl      JUST TELL\nHER TO\nTAKE...\nBUCKLEYS MIXTURE\nShe'll get split-second relief as the powerful\nmedication In Buckley's Mixture instantly\nspreads warming, soothing Ingredients\nthrough throat, chest and tubes - and stops\nthe tickle that makes her cough, Contains no\nsyrup-safe for diabetics. 59* and 85? everywhere. That's why it Is -\nCANADA'S FASTEST-SELLING\nCOUGH\nREMEPY\/J&;,\ndon\nSpeaker Rev. E. D. Jones tried\nvaliantly to keep order amid a\nbarrage of catcalls and applause.\nSergeant-at-arms K. Lotzman col\nNelson, introduced a bill calling\nfor husbands and wives to exchange duties for one week every\nyear. Adoption of this measure\nwould, according to the \"honour-\nlected  fines  for  unparliamentary I able   member   from   Appleton,'\nconduct. I Donald    Appleton.    bring    about\nThere were 15 government and I belter government for one week.\n10 opposition members. These : The bill was passed but an amend-\nfigures changed to 13 and 12 when | ment by the \"honourable member\n\"Hon.\" Lome Craig, \"minister | for McClelland,\" J. W. McClelland\nof health, wealth, happiness and' and seconded by Ihe \"honourable\nforeign affairs,\" and F. A. White-1 member for Laithwaite,\" Leslie\nley, \"honourable member for i Laithwaite. was lost.\nWhiteley,\" crossed the floor to sit I Frank Hawkins, \"minister of\nwith the Opposition. j sparks,  transmissions  and black-\nThe bill which caused Mr. Craig: outs,\" introduced a bill contradic-\nand Mr. Whiteley\" to change colors I tory to that prepared by the gov-\nwould have penalized bachelors \u25a0 ernment. Where the original legis-\ndver 25 to a 10 per cent yearly in-; Irtion would have verified the con-\ncrease in income tax. It was de- j tinuance of capital punishment.\nfeated, resulting in approval of a | Mr. Hawkins' legislation replaced\ncapital punishment with corporal\npunishment for dictatorship and\ninaccurate reporting. This passed\nunanimously.\nA team of brothers was featured,\nDr. H. G. Steed, \"minister of cavities and dentures\" and opposition\nmember Jack Steed, the \"honourable member for Steed.\"\nAfter their attempt to imitate\nVictoria and Ottawa, the men adjourned downstairs for refreshments. Recreation and a short\nbusiness period preceded the\nverbal crossfire.\nHOW TO HELP YOUR\nSore, Painful Piles\nIf you are dlieouragod about getting\nrid of tho itching torenm and burning\npain of your piles a grand surprise await*\nyou when you try Hem-Roid, an Internal\npile treatment.\nGet i package of Hem-Roid at any\ndrug ftore and ute aa directed. You wilt\nbe pleased at how quickly your pile\ntrouble is relieved. If you ere not 100%\npleated after using Hem-Roid 2 of 3\ndays as a test, nsk for your money back.\nReftfid agreement by all drug store*.\nDon't Miss\nTHE HONOURABLE\nGEORGE HEES\nMINISTER OF TRANSPORT\nSpeaking\nCAPITOL THEATRE\nNelson, B. C.\nFebruary 28-8 p.m.\nSupporting\nPeter Dewdney\nYour\nPROGRESSIVE-CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATE\nHousewives and Husbands\nAll Agree\nUfiff\n\\Coal  I f\nGives Home Heating Comfort with\nCleanliness and Economyl\nOrder KUgMaWI^ Cal\n. . . a Load of Heating\nSatisfaction. ..NOW!\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nProduced by Big Horn Coal Co. of Sheridan, Wyo.\nPHONE   889\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\n UO\nMayor, Fiesta Queen Open\nB.C. Women's Curling Play\n;i*B__                                                                                       _Hw*       '^_____B_______\n-M-K'\n__i __________ \\-^fi-P   _B                       IH    '    ;4a_l_f_S__l__-i'\nIf_____              \u25a0__$___?    J9_B                        ___K__^^-____r^\nHliii ^B_ff^ ^!^e_______P'''i ' vr* ^ tj^'-^n-_B\n>:-;?\/::'   \u25a0                \u2022-.'    i^i' \u25a0'.'' ,,:\u25a0.                                                                           1\nt\"'^'2^6*' \u25a0 _3i\nKIMBERLEY SNOW FIESTA events are being described over the airways this week. Here, R. A. Reagh,\npresident and managing director, and Tom Davidson,\nvice-president, of CKEK, Cranbrook, look over broadcasting schedule. Mobile broadcasting unit is housed in\na 10 by 43 foot trailer.\u2014K. M. Reynolds photo.\nDEATHS\nBy THE  CANADIAN PRESS\n- Vancouver\u2014Abraham Goldman\n77, one of the last of the colorful\nfur traders who helped open up\nnorthern Alberta and the Northwest Territories. . .\nEdmonton\u2014Mrs. Jessie McKit-\nrick, 101, pioneer Alberta school\nteacher.\nWashington. \u2014 Colonel Robert\nGants, 52, one of four surgeons\nwho operated on President Eisenhower in 1956.\nLIFE NOT\nWORTH LIVING?\nThen wake up the.liver!\nYou know thai sour, sunk, constipated feeling?\nIt may be caused by [he liver. If your liver\ndoesn't pour out up to two pints of bile a dny\nyour food may not digest properly, gas bloats\nup your stomach and you feel lhat life's just\nnot worth living. That's when the liver needs\nmild gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills. These\nfamous vegetable pills help stimulate the flow\nof liver bile. Soon your digestion starts functioning properly and you feel that happy days are\nhere again! Don't over stay sunk. Always k\u00abF\nCarter's Little Liver Pills on hand.\nPACKIN\nJames Sims of\nCranbrook Dies\nCRANBROOK-Railway carman\nin East Kootenay since 1903, James\nSims died at St. Eugene Hospital\nMonday after a long illness. He\nwas 77 years old.\nBorn in London. England, be\ncame to Canada and this district\n55 years ago. He began railway\nwork here, then transferred to\nCrow's Nest, and then to Lake\nWindermere, and in 1029 returned\nto Cranbrook where he worked\nuntil superannuation in 1945. He\nwas prominent in labor organizations, and in district music affairs\nduring his entire residence. He\nwas a member of Columbia Lodge\nNo. .11). AE and AM, Rocky Mountain Chapter No. 7 RAM. Ho was\na charter member of the Order\nof Foresters and a long-time member of Christ Church parish.\nSurviving him are his wife fn\nCranbrook, two sons. James at\nVancouver and Charles in Cran\nbrook, two daughters, Mrs. James\nDunn and Mrs. Walker Willis.\nCranbrook, six grandchildren and\none great-grandchild.\nKIMBERLEY - Mayor Clifford\nSwan of Kimberley collaborated\nwith Mrs. Ira Hansen, president\nof the B. C. Women's Curling Association and Florence Brown,\nreigning queen of .the third annual Kimberley snow fiesta, to\nopen the eighth annual B. C. Women's Curling championship at\nKimberley Curling Club Tuesday\nmorning.\nMayor Swan extended a welcome\nto everyone and said he was more\nthan pleased to declare open the\nannual playdown, although expressing regret that Prince Rupert\nrink, representing the north B.C.\ncurling zone, could not be on hand\nto make the seven-zone 'family'\ncomplete.\nMayor Swan, who was slightly\nheavy with the ceremonial first\nrock, promised Kimberley would\ntry to be an excellent host city.\nMiss Brown, who will hand over\nher crown to a successor Saturday afternoon, swept the mayor's\nrock slightly, while a representative of the sponsoring organization\u2014the T. Eaton Co.\u2014held the\nbroom.\nLater Tuesday, as competition\nwas in full swing on three of the\nfour ice-sheets at Kimberley Curling Club, curlers told fellow-spectators that they have never encountered better hospitality than\nthat shown here this year.\nMrs. Hansen, at the completion\nof the spiel, will take her place\nwith seven other past presidents,\nas Mrs. B. Wills of Victoria, in\nwhose home-town the spiel will\ntake place next year, replaces her.\nMrs. T. Hensch of Vernon has\nbeen named first vice-president,\nreplacing Mrs. Wills, and will become president in 1960 when the\nspiel is slated for Vernon.\nNamed second vice-president is\nMrs. F. N. Brennen of Trail where\nthe 11th annual B. C. women's\nbonspiel will be held in 1961. Secretary Mrs. G. Watsofl and treasurer Mrs. N. Usher, retain their\noffices.\nBoys' Club Helps\nTo Track Vandals\nSOUTH SLOCAN - South Slocan\nRecreation Club for boys cooper\nated with the RCMP in apprehend\ning boys responsible for recent\nacts of vandalism in the South Slocan area. A number of car aerials\nwere broken recently off cars park\ned outside the Wl hall.\nThe boys' club was recently\nformed under the sponsorship of\nthe school and Community Club in\nan attempt by the community to\nprovide activities for youth.\nThere are 12 boys in the club,\naged 12 years and up. President\nis Stephen Brewster, Mount Sentinel Junior-Senior High student.\nAdults interested in helping wilh\nsupervision of the Wednesday evening meetings are invited to attend.\nOLDTIMER DIES\nAT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Funeral takes\nplace here Tuesday for Oscar\nHagen, who made his home at a\nrest home here for the past several\nyears. He died at the St. Eugene\nHospital Saturday. Born 77 years\nago in Norway, he had lived in\nthis district 40 years, and in Cranbrook 38 years. He worked most\nof that time as logger. He had\nno relatives in this district.\nMoyie Site\nSurveyed\nKASLO\u2014Site for the SS Moyie\nhas been cleared and a survey\nmade, it was reported at a meeting of the Kaslo Centennial Committee at the city hall.\nThe project sub-committee said\nthat it was expected that the plans\nand specifications for berthing the\nboat would be in the committee's\nhands shortly.\nHeadway in solidifying plans of\nthe celebrations branch was shown\nin the report. Various organizations have indicated a desire to\nbe identified with certain branches\nof the work.\nThe publicity committee is to\nerect an information bureau on the\nsite previously occupied by the old\nbandstand on Front Street to aid\nvisitors.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., FEB. 19, 1958 \u2014 S\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount lor prompt payment.\nMayors Slow\nTo Accept\nBeard Challenge\nTRAIL \u2014 All males in Ihe Trail\ndistrict will be urged to grow\nbeards at least until May 16, when\njudging takes place, or pay a fine.\nCity Council passed a motion\nwith only the dissenting aldermen\napproving the request from the\nWarfield Kinsmen Club to encourage citizens to sprout the facial\nadornments.\nMayor L. A. Read and aldermen\nA. Brokeshire and F. E. Devito\nhave already started a growth.\nMayor Read complimented members of press and radio for the\nfine display exhibited by them.\nReplies to his challenge from\nmayors of other cities, however,\nwere not so encouraging. Mayor\nT. S. Shorthouse of Nelson wanted\na classification for moustaches.\nGrand Forks had delegated one representative to assume the honors.\nMayor C. Swan of Kimberley said\nhe had to cut his off during the\nSnow Fiesta contest 2 years ago\nbecause it was a mixture of tan.\nbrown and gray and so did not\nfeel that he could participate.\nMayor H. Elmes of Rosr.land accepted the challenge. Why, then,\ndid he only have a moustache?\nWell, he had commenced growing\na beard but started to pull all the\ngray hairs out with a set of tweezers and when he got finished he\nhad no beard at all. But he is still\ntrying and still in the contest.\nBREATHTAKING JUMPS such as this will feature\nthe Canadian ski championships at Kimberley's Snow\nFiesta this weekend. Here, Arne Larsen of Norway, one\nof three jumpers who flew from Norway for the event,\nmakes a leap on the Alf Johansen training hill. He also\nmade a couple of jumps on the Class A hill around the\n240-foot mark. Alf Johansen is a well known Kimberley\nskier now living at New Westminster.\n\u2014C. Wormington photo.\nNew Directors Named\nBy Cranbrook Union\nCRANBROOK - Assets of the\nCranbrook Savings. Credit Union\nduring 1957 nearly doubled to $96,-\n73(1, treasurer J. T. Sherreth reported to the annual membership\nmeeting which followed a dinner\nat the Canadian Legion hall. Membership increased during the year\nfrom 224 to 329 and personal shares\nvalue from $23, 864 to $46,745. Personal loans during the year totalled\n$64,772, more than doubling, and\nendowment loans totalled $25,767,\ncompared with $21,629 the previous\nyear.\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2:00-4:00 p.m.\nFILM FESTIVAL\nMarch 19-20-21.\nB.C. Centenary Souvenirs\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nWEST\nTRANSFER\nCO.\nVS Baker St.   \u2014   Nelson, B.C\nPhone 33\nBest materials only used on vour\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nST. PAUL'S-TRINITY FEDERA-\nTION meeting tonight, 8:00 p.m.\nFisherman's  Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN\u2014BALFOUR, B.C.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL - 8 P.M.\nHANIC'S RADIO AND T.V.\nREPAIR \u2014 PHONE 1156-R.\nNELSON FUNERAL HOME LTD,\nAMBULANCE SERVICE, PH. 53,\nNelson Women's Institute\nMeeting Friday, 2:30 p.m.\nRegular meeting tonight, 8:00 p.m.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nOn Sale \u2014 Polar Indian type\nsweater wool, 79c; Maple Leaf\nwool,  3-ply,  22c.\nEBERLE'S,  ON  BAKER  ST.\nELECTION OF OFFICERS\nNelson and District Boy Scout\nAssociation, Thursday, Feb. 20,\n8:00 p.m., Nelson Scout Hall.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nSlip-over samples of bark cloth\nand sail  cloth  in small palterns.\ni  STERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nSEBVINO. P. S.l  ,__\nAtMK*; safe1 Standard size doors and frames.\nHAWAII. AwS^      Special sizes made to order.\nT. H.  WATERS & CO.  LTD.\nPUERTO RICO'\nPhone 156      101 Hall St.      Nelson\nHFC has made loans\npromptly for 2 generations\nSince Dad's day HFC has been\nmaking prompt loans, in privacy,\nto people who need money for all\nkinds of good reasons. At Household you can borrow up to $1,000,\nget one-day service and take up\nto 30 months to repay on the\nterms you choose.\nBorrow confidently from HFC\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nE. G. Bernard, Manager\n608 Baker Street Telephone 1890\nNELSON\nL.A. TO F.O.E.\nMeet tonight, 8 p.m. Bake Sale\n9:30-12 at Sterling Furnishers Saturday, February 22nd.\nShoes for girls and boys! A good\nvariety in all sizes at sensible, low\nprices, at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nN. Bellonisky\nPasses at Yahk\nCRANBROOK - Operator of the\nHarper Tourist Cabin at Yahk,\nNicholas Bellonisky died suddenly \\\nthere Friday. He was born in Rus- j\nsia 69 years ago.\nHe came to Ihe eastern United I\nSlates at the age of 17 years. He\nserved in the Canadian Army in |\nthe first World War and after demobilization lived in Alberta for\nseveral years. He came to this\ndistrict about 1927 and worked in\nlogging camps until he bought the\ncabin resort'at Yahk last summer.\nHe was a member'of the Canadian\nLegion.\nRev. Father R. Zubak of Nelson\nofficiated at Rosary service Friday\nevening, and requiem was celebrated at St. Mary's Ukrainian\nCatholic Church Saturday morning.\nSurviving him are his wife,\nCatherine and stepson, John Fod-\nchuk at Yahk.\nCominco\nAppointment\n20% DISCOUNT ON\nPaint grade and varnish grade fir\ndoors. Priced to clear as low as\n$6.96 each.\nASSOCIATED ENTERPRISES\nPatients ln Kootenay Lake General Hospital can have The Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department, Daily News.\nEssondale Staff\nDemands Strike\nMachinery Setup\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The B.C.\nGovernment Employees Association said Tuesday it has receh-H a\nresolution from employees of the\nEssondale Mental Hospital demanding lhat machinery for conducting a strike of all government employees be set up.\nA statement issued by A. C.\nBennetl, the association's assistant general secretary, said the\nresolution was tabled at a meeting of the executive last Friday.\nThe statement added that the\nresolution also advised that all\nbranches of Ihe association were\nbeing contacted with the view to\ngetting their support for the\nstrike  action  demand.\nThe statement added: \"Frustration and genera] dissatisfaction wilh the government's procrastination on a number of matters which have been before it\nfor many months have resulted\nin the above action.\"\nROTARIANS! LAST CHANCE TO\nPICK UP EXTRA TICKETS FOR\nYOUR FRIENDS TO ATTEND\nROTARY BIRTHDAY PARTY.\nFEBRUARY ZlBt.\nJOHN ELG DIES\nAT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK - John Elg, who\nhas lived at a rooming house for\nthe past several years, died Wednesday at St. Eugene Hospital. He\nwas 72 years old and was born at\nMerikarnia.  Finland.\nHe came to Canada in 1907, and\nin 1918 to this district where he\nworked at logging for 39 years before he retired in 1951 because of\nill health: He is survived by one\ndaughter, Mrs, Ida Bjerg at Slocan City.. The funeral, took place\nTuesday at McPherson Funeral\nChapel with Salvation Army Lieutenant Kepty officiating, and burial\nwas in Cranbrook General Cemetery.\nRiondel Man\nNew Chairman\nOf School Board\nKASLO \u2014 Trustees of Kootenay\nLake School District No. 6, school\ninspector H. D. Abbott and secretary-treasurer Alf Watson met to\ndiscuss the school budget.\nKaslo extra-municipal represen\ntative Mrs. J. A. Jardine and\nShulty Bench representative R,\nWallace, were the only area representatives present as Mirror\nLake and Lardeau were unable to\nattend. H. Carlson, chairman ol\nthe finance committee of the city\nof Kaslo was present by invita\ntion.\nDue to the resignation of the\nchairman, E. H. Caldicott, owing\nto his being transferred from Rion\ndel to Trail, M. Graham of Rjondel\nwas elected in his place for the\nbalance of 1958. W. Hendren accepted the chairmanship of the\nbuildings and grounds committee.\nREAD TBE CLASSIFIED DAILY.\nTRAIL \u2014 Appointment of J. F.l\nM. Douglas, above, as Assistant\nManager, Market Research Division of The Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company of Canada\nLimited, has been announced by R.\nHendricks, Vice - President in\nCharge of'Sales.\nMr. Douglas was formerly Administrative Assistant, Montreal, a\nposition he had held since September, 1955, when he was transferred\nfrom Trail, B.C., where he had\nbeen employed in various operating and administrative capacities\nsince joining the Company in 1937.\nHe was born in Camrose, Alberta, and graduated from the University of Alberta in 1937 with the degree of B.Sc. in chemical engineering.\nTotal of $82,967 was loaned to\n267 members, with $43,429 repaid\nduring the year and $90,540 out\nin loans at the end of the year.\nShare payment during the year\nwas $39,078. Operating expenses\nincluding administration, insurance\non loans, League dues and interest\nwere $3,660 and operating profit\nwas $2,492.\nThe membership endorsed its\ndirectors' recommendation of a\nfour per cent dividend on shares.\nand ten per cent patronage refund\non interest on loans.\nSpecial speaker at the meeting\nwas Gary Coulter of Vancouver,\nprovincial field officer of Credit\nUnions and Cooperatives outlining\nIhe health insurance available to\nindividual members of credit\nunions, or to individual credit\nunions who contract for it. Also\naddressing the meeting was Fred\nHumphrey of Vancouver representing the B.C. Credit Union League.\nMembers elected Allan Downey\nfor a three-year term and Zane\nBeam a two-year term on the\nboard of directors whose continu\ning members are Lars Thompson.\nHarold White, Dwayne Boyd,\nJames Gillis and Nelson Smith.\nMr. Downey is past president and\nMr. Thompson secretary.\nNamed to the supervisory committee on membership vote were\nErnest Rowe for two years and\nCharles Cooke for three years,\nwith Bruce Cameron continuing\nhis term through 1958. T. W. Olive\nwas unanimously reelected to the\ncredit committee \u2022 whose other\nmembers are Charles Adams and\nTed Botterill.\nThe Ladies' Auxiliary to the\nCanadian Legion served the dinner\nwith, about 100 persons attending,\nand following the businesss meeting music was provided for dancing.\nTalent Night Show\nPacked at Procter\nPROCTER\u2014For the third year\nin succession the community hall\nat Procter was packed for the\nValentine talent night arranged by\nW. A. Henke and B. J. Fitchett.\nThe hall was bright wilh valentines\nand a row of potted paper daffodils edged the stage.\nMr. Fitchett acted as chairman\nand Mrs. Henke and Mrs. M. D.\nMacKinnon were at the door. Costumes and makeup were supplied\nby the teachers and mothers. The\nPTA sponsored the show and donated $10 to the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nProcter pupils repeated the Alice\nBlue Gown number around a white\narch intertwined with pink clematis, and the junior room again\nperformed their Merry Milkmaids\nDance.\nPiano duets were played by Donald and Grant MacKinnon, and by\nBeth Ogden and Judith Anderson,\nand a violin duet by David May\nand Richard Adam. The last four\nchildren then combined in a quartet of piano and violin.\nHarrop pupils captivated the\naudience with a humorous skit called Heck Says It.\nThe program brought back memories to many when R. L. Stevenson sang, Dawn Iwanik and Peggy\nFerguson recited Little Willie\nverses, Jcannie Munch and Susan\nBonacci sang, and Hallam Mac-:\nKinnon set toes tapping with a\nmouthorgan selection.\nJ. Dvorak gave a medley on his\nconcertina and B. Neufeld a number on his piano accordian. Donald j\nMacKinnon presented a piano solo |\nand Tony Taylor played his trum-{\npet. ,\nSix boys from Procter initiated\ntenderfoot John Laidlaw in their\nplay Jolly Cowboys and the Harrou\nschool brought smiles with their\nsong, Polly Wolly Doodle.\nJanet Anderson, 12-year - old!|\ndaughter of H. B. Anderson, made]\nher debut as an accompanist while]\nher father sang Shubert's Morning 1\nGreeting. Bob Stevenson was a j\nsurprise soloist and he joined Donald Cameron, Hallam MacKinnon j\nand Alec McCulloch in a vocal J\nquartet.\nDonna Kosma and Pauline Row-jj\nley danced the Sailor's HornDlo\" I\nand Mrs. Henke. recited a mirthful\nmonologue in German dialect. Mrs.\nDon Cameron presented a delightful piano medley of Scottish airs.1\nMr. Fitchett at the piano wasj\njoined by Mrs. Bedard, Mrs. Fltch-\nelt, Mrs. M. McMullin and Miss\nGladys Fitchett in a chorus. Thc-j\n\"hill billies\" played washboard.'\ntoy trumpet, mouthorgan and wash\ntub, respectively. Mrs. McMullin\nand her sister, Miss Fitchett, returned to sing a clever duet called\nProcter's Third Annual Talent\nNight, the words having been written by their mother.\nA serious pantomime entitled\nWhere Is My Wandering Boy To\nnight ended the program. Mrs.\nAlec J. Garner, Mrs. Bedard and\nMr. Anderson blended \/voices in the\ntitle song and the hymn the Ninety\nand Nine. The mother was portrayed by Mrs. Brady, and the\nmother in her youth by her daughter, Mrs. Bedard, holding tiny Cleo\nFitchett and singing The Irish Lullaby. The boy was enacted by Mrs.\nBedard's sons, in his schooldays\nby Perry, in his youth by Donnie,\nand in his manhood as worker fhen\nwanderer who finally returns penitent to his mother's knee by James,\nAccompanist was Mrs. Anderson\nand narrator Mr. Henke.\nPeter Green Passes\nCRANBROOK - Peter Green,\nrailway construction worker and\nlogger in this district for 49 years,\ndied Monday at St. Eugene Hospital. He was born 83 years ago\nat Rauca. Sweden, and came here\nin 1909. He has no surviving relatives here.\n\/0{mJ%?\\\nToday's Insurance\nProblems.\nAnswered by\nYour Insurance Advisors\nWhat   Is  \"As-\nin auto insur-\nANSWER: (IN U.S.I-When\na person is unable to obtain\nBodily Injury and Property\nDamage insurance, in states\nrequiring such coverage, his\napplication can be submitted to a local insurance\ncompany as an \"Assigned\nRisk.\"\n(IN CANADA) - When a\nperson is unable to obtain\nBodily Injurv and Property\nDamage insurance through\nregular channels, his application call be submitted to\nthe \"Assigned Risk Plan\"\nby an agent.\nHave you an insurance problem of your own? Come in\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nhelp you without charge or\nobligation of any kind !\nRobertson -\nMilliard, Cattell\n456 Ward St.      Ph. 1912-1913\nNOTICE\nARROW PARK FERRY\nUntil further notice truck traffic on the Arrow\nPark Ferry will be limited to a gross weight of\n5 ton, due to extension work being done on the\nferry \u2022approaches.\nGEO.  KENT,\nDistrict Superintendent.\nNew Denver, B.C.\nFebruary 18, 1958.\nCUNARD'S\nSYLVANIA \u2022 CARINTHIA \u2022 IVERNIA \u2022 SAXONIA\nTHE HALLMARK\nOF OCEAN mm\nM\nEnjoy the luxury of crossing to Europe in one of these _2,()00-(on\nCunarnern! Equipped wilh stabilizers for smooth Bailing, these magnilicent\nliners were especially designed for the St. Lawrence River route and form part\nof th\u00ab greatest passenger fleet on the Atlantic headed by the world's largest\nliners, *QUEEN ELIZABETH\" and \"QUEEN MARY \\\nGo Cunard and arrive related and refreshed for your business or vaca*\ntion. Frequent Bailings from New York and Halifax in Winter and Montreal\nand Quebec in Summer\u2014modern accommodation\u2014traditional service and\ncuisine\u2014round-the-clock sports and entertainment\u2014all the good things of life\nfor your enjoyment.\nWhen you go Cunard ... Getting There Is Half The Funl\nSee Your Local Agent\u2014No One Can Serve You Batter\n(PO Cunard\n550 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B.C. \u2014 Tel.:   TAtlow 4477\n Established April 22, 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Doily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory'\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\n\"LIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Uttawa.\nMEMBER Ot   I'Hfi AUDI-   BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER 01   THE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nWednesday, February 19, 1958\nAlt Brothers Under the Skin\nThis is Brotherhood Week, a time\nset apart and dedicated to the promotion of a spirit of amity between all\nraces and religions throughout the\nworld. How badly this spirit is needed\nhas been seen in many parts of the\nworld during the past year\u2014ln the\nsouth of the United States where desegregation is proceeding, in the Middle East where Jews and Arabs stand\nperpetually on guard against one another, and in North Africa where the\nFrench and Algerians are at war.\nThese are the examples which most\nglaringly reflect the evil spirit of dislike and mistrust. Unseen, the same\nspirit persists in its mischievous work\namong the civilized Individuals of\nmany races. It makes us distrust the\npeople of a different color, dislike\nthose of another political party or religion, and to hate those of a different\nrace. It can spread its evil influence\nfrom one to another until a whole\nnation is swayed by it.\nThe only antidote to the poison\nspread by this spirit is the cultivation\nof a spirit of justice. Justice demands\nthat we recognize In a man of different\ncolor the same human attributes that\nwe possess, that in every religion there\nis- the desire to worship and glorify\nthe God who made us all, and that\nevery political party has as its main\npurpose the good of the country. From\njustice will come understanding, and\nfrom understanding, tolerance, and\nfrom tolerance, brotherhood.\nPress Comment\nSTOP EXPORTING BRAINS\nThe Atlantic provinces have always been\nexporters of brains for two reasons. In the\npast the area could not put to work all the\nbrains it turned out, and, second, industry\nand business made no effort to keep them\nhere.\nIt Is a fact that many top positions in\nbanks, universities and industries across Canada are held by former Maritimers. Many\nwould have returned had they the opportu-'\nnity, and the Maritimes would have been\nbetter off for their return,\nThis is a time of vast economic change\nin the Atlantic provinces. The region is moving toward equality with the rest of Canada.\nThere is no place here for apathy', and employers who allow fine young men and women\nto bypass them for Central American and\nAmerican jobs are not doing their share in\nhastening Atlantic progress.\nThere are good jobs in these provinces.\nLet them be filled by Maritimers who want\nto stay and who will stay if they get the\nchance.\u2014Fredcricton Gleaner.\nAn Urgent Need\nAfter due consideration most\npeople will be ready to accept the\nHon. Wesley Black's explanation of\nthe unused bed accommodation in the\nWoodlands School, that the lack of\ntrained psychiatric nurses is responsible.\nThere are several reasons for this\nshortage, the chief one being that in\na given number of people there are\nonly a few who like or will take this\nkind of work. This, despite everything\nelse, Is the fundamental reason why\nthere are shortages in other professions, Including teaching.\nIt can readily be seen, too, that it\nwould be highly impractical to entrust\nthe care of these children to untrained\npersons and there oan be no stop gaps\nIn this as there may be in other professions.\nThere have been complaints that\nthe government has been trying to\nsave money. This was a criticism\nwhich might have been expected of\na government which is so devoted to\nfinance. It is not true of course, but\nthe criticism has had one good effect\n\u2014it has focussed attention on the number of children in this mental institution and the cost of the school. Both\nare appalling.\nObviously the school is not doing\nall that it can to meet the situation.\nThe school is there, the beds are there\nand there is ample money to support\nil, but there is not sufficient personnel\nto deal with all the children who need\nto be there. What is wanted now is\na province-wide drive to obtain the\nservices of the right kind of persons\nneeded. It may well be that there are\nmany women of mature age who\nwould undertake the necessary training.\nLetters To The Editor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of genuine Interest are welcome II they are brief,\naccurate and fair. No letter-will be inserted In whole* or in part, except over the signature\nand address ol the writer. Unsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nHigh School Driver Training\nDefended By Safety Council\nfacilities such as roads and highways must\nbe shared. Tliis communal sharing is surely\nthe antithesis of delinquency. The automobile\nhas become a way, of life. It can also be a\npublic enemy in the wrong hands. Our young\npeople need assislance in learning to use\nthis modern accessory wisely.\nIt is, in fact, the aim of this committee\nto develop, with the assistance of the College\nof Education, a comprehensive High School\nDriver Training program for the Province of\nBritish Columbia based'on the successful experiences of the Lower Mainland and other\nareas in B.C.\nTo the Editor\nOPEN LETTER TO:\nMrs. Lois Haggen, M.L.A.,\nGrand Forks - Greenwood,\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C.\nDear Mrs. Haggen:\nI have been instructed by the membership of the Traffic Section of the B.C. Safety\nCouncil to express to you our disagreement\nwith your view on High School Driving\nTraining as recently reported in the press.\nI am sure that, had you investigated or\nstudied this program before making these\nstatements, you would have discovered some\nbasic facts about it:\nThe program is not part of the present\ncurriculum as you apparently believe, and\ntherefore can hardly he said to clutter it up.\nSo far as we have been able to determine, graduates oi High School Driver\nTraining programs have better accident records than most adult drivers, and this\nhas been borne out in specialized studies\nconducted in the Stale of Delaware and in\nother areas on the continent.\nHigh School Driver Training develops a\nhigh degree of responsibility by embodying\nln its teaching the basic concept that public\nWe enthusiastically seek the support of\npeople like yourself in this endeavor, and\nwould be very pleased indeed to supply you\nwilh reference material on this subject if\nyou wish.\nT. A. ROSS,\nChairman, Traffic Section\n710 Davie Street,\nVancouver, B.C.\nAIR-CONDITIONING\n-    It is already apparent that Nature's air-\nconditioning system is superior.\nCornwall Standard-Freeholder.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n By Fra-HMMi \u00a9r\u00abk\u00ab\u2014\u2014\u00abJ\nLook in the section in which your better way, or from attempting\nbirthday comes, and find what your something different of worth,\noutlook is, according to the stars,!Steady application pays.\nCommonwealth Meeting\nTo Weld Trading Force\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Commonwealth will begin the giant task\nof remoulding the 11 - country\npartnership into a more powerful world trading force at an historic meeting to open at Mont-\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19  real next Sept. 18\nIt&SW\/Jm \u00bb !Ai!-esil,A[>ua\u2122sl - Whe\" a crisis arisesl\n-Your  fecial   planet '_&\u00bb -wi\"-be ab,e.to handle-it a\"d\nOut of the meeting may come\nplans  for applying Britain's An-\ni- ^   '    '       - \"'\"^'''\u00ablW\"^\n\": ' '\u2022'\u2022\u2022;\"' \/\"\"  '   '\"\" \u2022\"\u25a0'.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u00bb\u25a0\"\u25a0'; . r.,v. ,ii,,-_ ,\u201e\u25a0 an.-.iety. Qim,| humor ~ n^'ve ^Twoid^perhOTs\"^\u2122:\nabo rtydeUiserBute wThaveTucl ihelpS \u00b0\u2122rri,Je pr\u00b0blemS' ! '\"\u2122 allartificial Carriers   to\nZT \u00ab_., I,. ___?\u00bbaV ^! FEBRUARY  20  to  MARCH  201 trade   among   Commonwealth\ndays, they are good for us.        I (PiscesI - Simplicity, kindliness, a] countries.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 'Taurusiigenerous measure of conviviality,! Or there may be such sugges-\n\u2014 Venus' prominently favorable j and being happy about your bios-1 lions, informants said, as the re-\naspect offers some unusual advan- sings will keep you on safe, sure,: st0ration 0, imperial tariff pre-\ntages If \"you are sufficiently eager pleasant road. Sophistication may ferences thet had benn reduced\nand  show  right  initiative.  Don't upset matters. _ or   eliminated   since   the   wider,\nLITERALLY\nThe Dutch seem to be \"in Dutch\" in Indonesia.\u2014Stratford Beacon-Herald.\nCLOTHES-HORSE-SENSE\nWomen are becoming more discriminating in their buying of clothes, says a writer.\nShowing genuine clothes-horse-sense, presumably.\u2014Kingston Whig-Standard.\nCANADIAN MARKETS\nIndependent oil producers in the United\nStates are now asking for direct, rather than\nvoluntary, restrictions on imports of foreign\noil. It is evident now that the time has come\nfor the government of Canada to try definite\naction lo increase the Canadian domestic\nmarket for Canadian oil.\nThe logical place to start Is the Montreal\nmarket, where there is good reason to believe\nthat Western oil can be put down at a competitive price.\u2014Calgary Herald.\nDanger in Cars\nThere should be widespread support for\nWindsor Council's traffic committee seeking\na ban against Ihe hanging of ornaments on\nrear-view mirrors in automobiles. The committee will place the matter before the Ontario Traffic Conference and seek to have\nthis practice outlawed by the Ontario Department of Highways.\nThe desire to have near at hand these\nreminders of loved ones\u2014baby boots and the\nlike\u2014is understandable. But there are more\nappropriate places to put them. They are\nbetter placed on desks, for example. If they\nmust be carried about in aulomobilcs, the\nrear-view mirror is not (he place.\nNot only do these ornamcnls interfere\nwith vision to the rear, they partially block\nthe windshield. There is a growing tendency\nto hang colorful scarves from the mirrors,\nblocking off a substantial portion of the forward view.\nThe practice of cluttering up the driver's\nvision with these ornaments.is dangerous\nand unnecessary. It should be made illegal.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nlet someone else do your work, gain\nyour credits.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21   (Gemini 1\nYOU BORN TODAY are a Cus-, 35.c\u201elinlrv General Agreement\npal, born at the change of Signs.; \u201en -8riffs and Trade came into\nSome characteristics from the on-  force jn 1948\nWith so many planets in aus- j\" \u00ab\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0 PXtsSngS'^\"'i CHANNEL CAPITAL FLOW\npicious  configurations   I yours  In- 3&fiflffl_\u00a3 ability  to loncen-1    Ways of increasing the flow of\neluded) there may well be a rashUrate   w0r|. nart] at a project or1 caP''a' investment into the less-\nof  worthwhile  objective  thinking  \u2022 .'\nand acting, and you will have to\nput in your bids early and ably.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Dancer)\n\u2014 Favorable for true striving.\nThink logically, be not over-excited about results before working\nduty; thoughtfullness, ' paticr.ce.i developed parts of the Common-\ndignity, charity, good reasoning.1 w,eallh a,s\u00b0 wlll.be discussed.\nDevelop your God-given gifts, don't; al(,n* with the impact of the\nlet them sleep. Don't shy from' proposed Eu r o p e an Indus-\ncompetition; you can best it. You trial free trade area which Brit-\nare logical, will cut red tape, get am has stated she plans to join,\nat results swiftly. You are function-; The conference was first pro-\nforThcmlndw^^^^^\naccent all nhilninnhicallv and keen us6 all  faculties well.  Shun ii're- vative  administration   last   year\naccept an pnnosopn cany ana Keep | and a m\u00bbetng of finance min s-\naiming to do better the next round. I g^J,t Sf^tuUouL \u2122* ter\u00bb   al  Mnnt  Trepidant,  Que.,\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 <Leo> date of Joseph Jefferson, American 'as' Sentember acred to recotn-\n\u2014 Don't permit moods to go up i doctor. j mend the nr0p(>sa| to Iheir gov-\nand down or you will have a harm-j King Features\nful effect on return from even'\t\ngood endeavors. Keep that smile\nhandy, but don't wait to use il till i\n\"necessary.\"\nsigned mainly to cement and increase the margin of Commonwealth tariff preferences, a move\nthat caused the United States to\nbolster its own tariff wall.\nNow there may be more caution. Any new Commonwealth\nmoves taken likely will .be within\nthe framework of exisling international agreements such as Ihe\nGeneral Agreement on Tariffs\nand Trade.\nThe GATT,'as it is commonly\ncalled, allows for the restoration\nof imperial tariff preferences reduced since 1948. It also allows\nregional market pacts, such as\nEurope's common market and\nthe proposed industrial free trade\narea.\nIt Is likely within these concepts that the Commonwealth\nmay plot its course.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Though the day may\ndisappoint in some respects, we\nall run into these snags or difficult\nperiods. However, the total turnout\nshould be rewarding and not too\nhard to come by. Attitude is important.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Severe orders, strain,\nover-crowding are likely temptors.\nBut, generally, this is a very auspicious time for you, so do your\nutmost in a patient, easy manner,\nmaintaining faith in your work.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER I days following a delicate heart\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Yours may be the operation,\ntrial of trying to coordinate ob-1 The pacemaker is a device that\nstinate and opposing forces, of. has virtu ally eliminated one\nstriving against harder-than-usualj cause of failure of the intricate\nobstacles. So show that strength,1 operation to mend holes in the\ncourn<w pnd ability you possess.    I human heart.\nBoy With Wire\nIn Hear)\nRecovering\nMONTREAL (CP) - Gilles I\nCamirand, wide-eyed boy of 3'i\nwith a wire leading to his heart,\nis recovering Tuesday in Montreal\nChildren's Hospital.\nGilles owed his life to an \"auto-\nmalic pacemaker\" that kept his\nlieait   beating   normally   lor   11,\nernments. The Can\u00bbdian government announced Monday ni\"ht\nthat the tirr\" and place for the\nconfeepce have been accepted\nby a'l th\" Commonwealth.\nSydnc Pierce, a ope-time deputy l\"ade minister and now deputy Canadian high commissioner\nat London, has been anpointed\nthe conference's general secretary.\nMORE CAUTIOUS\nIn many ways the 1959 meeting will differ from the' Ottawa\n1932    imperial    conference,    de-\nNEW YORK 'API - Bitter\ncold continued to hold much of\nthe United States in an icy grasp\nBusiness Spotlight..\nCanada Spends\n$10-Million\nA Year On Nuts\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian  Press  Business  Editor\nEdible nuts\u2014pedestrian items\nwhen seen on kitchen shelves or\nin living-room bonbon dishes-\nare really colorful travellers from\nmany lands and substantial items\nof commerce.\nThis is brought out in an article\nin Foreign Trade, publication of\nthe department of trade and commerce.\nThe article\u2014headed, Where the\nNuts Come From\u2014says that in'\n1956 Canadians spent more than\n$10,000,090 for nearly 24,090,000\npounds of walnuts, almonds, filberts,- cashews, pecans, Brazil\nnuts, and a few other varieties.\nThe figures\u2014which are exclusive\nof peanuts\u2014were probably higher\nin 1957.\nNuts, says foreign trade,\nranked sixth in value among\nCanadian imports from Italy in\n1956; 10th among purchases from\nBrazil: while cashew nuts alone\nconstituted our fifth largest import from India, and walnuts over\nhalf the value of purchases from\nmainland China. The United\nStates is actually the largest sup-\n'NO- WE H4VE NO >\nRESERVATIONS FOR\n\/Wyeocv from a\nTELEVISION) show-\nYOU MUST BE MI5-\nX4KESI-BESIDES,'\nWE'RE 4LL FULL UP-j\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nControlling, Vandalism\nWe have no doubt that the report on vandalism in our parks, playgrounds, cemetery\nand other public places which appeared in\nour news columns Ihe olher day inspired\nmuch head-shaking indignation. If that was\nall it inspired, it was a waste of good space\nto publish it. This is a situation reflecting\nmost adversely on our standards of public\nmorality and parental discipline. It is a warning lhat if something is not done soon we may\nbe faced not with mere vandalism but with\nthe sort of hooliganistic violence that is presently disrupting schools in New York.\nTwo avenues of attack suggest themselves to us. First, there is the plea of the\ncivic officials concerned for co-operation from\nparents and the general public. This appeal\ncarries a dollars and cents incentive. When\npublic property is destroyed or damaged it\nmust be replaced or repaired at public expense. In their own solf-intercst, members of\nthe public should step in when occasion arises\nto stop vandalism or to report it to the police.\nTo fail to do so is to make oneself a party to\nvandalism.\nPublic co-opcralion will not be enough,\nhowever. The crux of the problem is the irresponsibility of the youngsters who engage in\nvandalism; and that, in most cases, can be\ntraced to the irresponsibility of their parents.\nHere is a good supporting argument for the\ncontention that the names of juvenile offenders\u2014and of their parents\u2014should be publicized, at the discretion of the courts. The\ncommunity has a right lo insist that parents\ncarry out their duty of guiding, supervising\nand disciplining their children's behavior.\nSubjecting parents to legal and social censure\nmay be the only way of seeing that they live\nup to their obligations.\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nTODAY'S  BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nIn all these things we are more\nthan ennquorers through Him that\nloved us.  Romans 8:37.\nTribulations; distress, prosecution, famine, or poverty or peril\ndid not move Paul. He set a glorious example and his testimony is\npriceless.\nNOVEMBER 23 lo DECEMBER1 ,,\n21 (Sagittarius) - Jupiter's config- undergoing the operation there is\nuralion now urges you to muster all a tendency toward complete\ninventive, creative and co-operate heart-block or disruption o the\nforces and put them promptly. pPU'K\" . 'hat keep the heart\nsteadily to work for all good beating in rhythm The pace-\ncauses. Community interests grow.  \u2122'.\\   provides    the   electrical\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20, stimulus until the heart beat falls\n(Capricorn) - Do not permit pastj lnl\u00b0 *\u00ab proper rhythm of its own\nerrors, habits or practices to deter: ac,\u2122rd.\nTuesday, disrupting transportation  pUer. but in Canada's large pur\nIn 10 to ?5 per cent of patients j and stalling a vast snow removal | chases   from   that   country,   nut\nyou from achieving in a new arid\nBeach Convicts\nWhen the rhythm is established\nIhe pacemaker is turned off. Bul\nthe wire is left in the heart and\nhe beat monitored constantly un\njob in Ihe eastern part of the\ncountry.\nForecasts held no hope of early\nhelp for the Atlantic seaboard,\nstill trying to dig out from a\nweekend blizzard which struck\nfrom Mississippi to New England,\nMore than 190 deaths were attributed directly to the storm\nand  cold.\nSnow shovellers dropped dead\nof heart attacks and stranded\nmotorists were killed by carbon\ntil doctors are sure the rhythm i monoxide... Some   children   were\nwill continue. | crushed to death on sleds. Where\nGilles   was   born   with   a   de-1 traffic moved around snow banks\nfective heart.  Early  this  month ;'and   over   icv   roads,   accidents\nhe underwent corrective surgery,\na heart-lung machine replacing\nhis own heart during the operation.\nWhen his own heart was started , workers    had    another\nays\nOn Korean Fiane\nSEOUL (AP) \u2014 South Korean\npi'lea s^ir' Tn^s'lav the1' hav\" evidence that at least seven Communist agents boarded the com\nSAN FRANCISCO <AP)-Early\nlast Saturday 21 desperate South\nAmerican   prisoners   swept  over.       . ,\nihe    California    yacht    Valinda,' again  it  did  no   beat regularly\ncruising   in   Ecuadorian   waters,   and the pacemaker was brought\nand   commandeered   the   110-foot   lnt\u00b0 use-\nvessel skippered by Los Angeles\nlawyer  William   Rhodes  Hervey.\n\"It was terrifying,\" Hervey\ntold the Associated Press by\nship - to - shore phone Monday\nnight. He said he called the AP\nshortly after the convicts were\nput ashore at a beach because\nthey're desperate men.\"\nHervey,  his  wife,  M i 1 d r e d,;\nFrank Olsen of Seattle and four\ncrew   members   were   held   as\nhostages' for three days\u2014from 3\na.m.   Saturday  until  shortly  be- '-\nfore   dark   Monday   night.   The\nfirmed convicts, Hervey said, es-1\ncaped   from  a  prison  camp  on\nIsabella'Island in the Galapagos\ngroup,  650 miles  west of Ecuador.\nHe said the convicts looted the\nship and maltreated his group,\nbul physically harmed no one.    j\nThe 21 prisoners lefl Ihe ship\nat a beach just northeast of\nPoint Ga'era oh the northwest\n.coast of Ecuador.\nHervey said the convicts got to\nhis ship bv stealing two fishing\nboals and holding their owners as\nhost ages. He was told that 40 to\n59 other prisoners had taken o\"er\nthe Isabella prison island.\ntook their loll.\nWASHINGTON HOLIDAY\nWith temperatures near zero In\nsnowbound   Washington,\nimports don't rank high.\nWALNUTS  BIG  ITEM\nWalnuts, mostly shelled, are by\nfar the biggest item of nut import (aside from peanuts).\nBiggest supplier is China. The\nUnited States \u2014 which supplies\nmost of the unshclled Walnuts for\nthe Christmas trade\u2014comes next,\nfollowed by Italy, France and\nIran.\nCanada is China's largest walnut market, taking at least 50 per\ncent and sometimes as much as\n75 per cent of China's walnut exports.\nIn   the   past,   most  purchases\nwere made via Hong Kong, but\nin the last two years sales have\nbeen made direct from China to\nfederal | Canadian  buyers,   including  one\nhoHdcvj shipment direct from Tientsin to\nAll schools wer\u00ab closed in j Vancouver, without trans - ship-\nIhe capital district Monday and j ment.\ntens of thousands of workers '\u25a0 CASHEWS FROM INDIA\nwere absent from their jobs. | Cashews, next largest nut im-\nTrains, planes, subways and, port, come mainly from India,\nbuses struggled lo maintain: which has a virtual monopoly on\nschedules bul almost every pioca' the market, but in smaller quan-\nof transportation eciuipment was tities from the United States-\ndelayed or disabled in the af-! probably re-exports \u2014 and from\nfected areas. | British   East  Africa,   Processing\nAirlines  cancelled hundreds  of   the cashew is a tricky business\nflights. Trains ran up to 12 hours' in which India excels, says For-\nbehind schedule on runs to and I eign Trade.\nI from   Chicago,   New   York   and I    Almonds, third largest nut im-\n. Washington.    Some    trains    and   port,   come   from   Italy\u2014world's\n! buses never left their terminals, i largest  almond producer \u2014 and\nmerclal   airliner   which   flew   to j Many    unhealed    railroad    cars\nRed North  Korea  Sunday. j added lo passengers' woes\nThe police statement came\nafter a North Korean reporter\ncovering a United Nations truce\ncommission meeting at Panmun-\njom hinted a fight took place\naboard the plane before it bypassed Seoul and landed in Communist  territory.\nThe Communist correspondent\ntold South Korean reporters some\nof the 34 persons aboard the\nane were \"wounded and receiv-\ntncdical    treatment.\"    The\nEMERGENCY   IN   DELAWARE\nSchools and factories closed.\nBusinesses suffered. All public\nplaces, industries and schools\nwere ordered to close in the state\nof Delaware as drifting snow\ncaused  an emergency.\nA state of emnrgenev was declared in Huntsville, Ala., site of\nthe army missile centre, wh\/sn\ngas supplies dwindled. In\nMiddtesborn, Ky\u201e 11.000 of Ihe\nawn's is,000 residents wore with-\nfrnm Spain and the United States.\nPecans come from the United\nStates,  with Texas and Georgia\nleading producers.\nPallenl Pupil\nlaved In lime\nOunLdte,\nFind Gold On\nBurrard Inlet\n: VANCOUVER (CP)-Gbld has\nbeen  discovered  across  Burrard\n1 Inlet from Vancouver's north\nshore and Tom Elliott, manager\nof the  B.C.Yukon   Chamber   of\ni Mines says there's a good chance\nof a mine being proved.\nMiner Roy Watson found samples of the gold during blasting\nfor Ihe new Upper Levels Highway between West Vancouver\nand Horseshoe Bay. The find is\nabove Eagle Harbor, about eisht\nplane was piloted by two Ameri- j out healing,\ncars. |    All beats were warred to head\nThe Communists at the Pan- f\u201er sIHIor along the ice-stricken\nmunjom meeting rejected the UN ; Ohio River\ncommand's demand for return of; Meanwhile parkins lots boosted\nthe airliner and the occupants, prices, galosh's sal's bbnmed,\ninsisting on direct negotiations, anr] at Keuka Park. N.Y., 25 col-\nwilh   President  Syngman  Rhee's   leop   lads   who   were   weekend\nsue'ts were   stranded   with   390\nstudents at a college for women.\nSouth Korean government.\nKIDNAPPING   DISCOUNTED\nSouth Korean police said they\nbelieve Uie seven Communist\nagents\u2014including two women-\nseized the Pusan-lo-Seoul plane\nat gunpoint. They discounted\nspeculation that the Communists\nwanted to kidnap any of the passengers, believing that Ihe agenls\nwere seeking to return lo North\nKorea.\nThe police said the plot to seize   ion   S'\"el   and  Coal   Corporation\nWhen Emily has a party she\nwrites it up for Ihe paper herself.\nNobody else would have imagination to call her front room a drawing room.\nIhe plane apparenlly was inasler-\nminded by Kim Hyiing, 34, who\nboarded the plane at Pusan with\nhis 21-year-old wife and their\nbaby, giving a false, address in\nSeoul. Kim's wife worked as a\nhostess   -  entertainer  until   four\nmiles,as the crow flies from the   months ago in an expensive Seoul\nVancouver post office. I restaurant   frequented   by   high\nWatson   took   samples   to   the i government officials and politic-\nchamber of mines after staking ] ians.\nOut the  area.  A  team  of hard- <    In   Pa-mu-iam.   \u00bb   h:\"h   c-\"th\nrock miners i6 trying to locate a ; Korean  foreign  ministry  official\nvein  of ore.  The  samples have   termed   \"impossible\"   the   Reds' |\nshown   a  mixture  of  gold,  iron   demand   for   direct   negotiations\npyrites, and silver-lead. ! wilh the Rhee government for re-\n  ; turn  of the plane.  South - Korea\nFLOODS  THREATEN  AUSTRIA \u25a0 did not sign the armistice agree- | ..\nVIENNA  (Reuters!  _  Austria   ment suspending Ihe Korean War   ing on an \"expected upturn in the I Dagbladet   that   Tunisia,   not\ntodav faced the threat  of coun-1 and has refused to recognize the- general economic climate and an   NATO member, welcomes NATO\nSOUTH FULTON. Tenn. (AP)\nDeborah Lynn Beard was puzzled\nwhen she arrived at school to\nfind Ihe doors locked Monday.\nDeborah, a six-year-old first-\ngrader, waited.\nTemperatures were below zero\nand Deborah's face was blue wilh\ncold. Slill she waited, unaware\nthat the school had been closed\nbecause of the weather.\nShe waited an hour and a half.\nAt 9 o'clock. Herman Roach, a\nbus driver, saw Deborah hunched\non the steps, her head drooping\nalmost to her lap.\np\u201e\u201ev,      ... --.|      h      \"S-,      ,;il,fl\neirl. She tried lo get un and fell\nforward. He carried her to a\nnearby house. A physician was\ncalled.\nDehorah. daughter of Mr. and\nMrs, Chuck Lynn Beard, is re-\n.., covering from a severe case of\nmines will be kept working \"in j exposure. Her falhcr said one of\nIhe. fors\u00b0eable future\" while the, his employees drove Dehorah lo\ncnrn\"ralicn stages an \"aTires-1 school. No one of the family had\nsive\" sales   camnaign   to   lower   heard that the school had closed.\nslockniles of coal. \u2014;\u2014'\t\nThe  announcement  was  made  Rntirniiihn  Welcome.\nMnndav ninht by A. C. MacDon-   \"\"'\"'ilMBfi'   Y7eiCOmej\naid,   chairman  of  Dosco's  man-, NATO's Assistance\nagement   committee,    who   ex- ( ,   _ '\npressed  \"guarded  optimism\"      OSLO, Norway (Reuters)-Pre-\nab\"\"t th\u00bb industry's future ' sident Habib Bourguiba of Tuni-\nMr, MacDonald told a press sia was quoted Tues-Jay as expres-\nconference that existing stock-, sing the hope lhat Ihe whole\npiles of coal would normallv North African problem will be\nwarrant a cutback in manpower | \"kept within the NATO family.'\nbut Dcsco. now owned b\" the I He told the Tunis correspond-\nA. V. Roe Comoanv. was bank- i ent of the liberal Oslo newspaper\nMnj Jin IfAftq\nHALIFAX    (CPl-The   Domin-\nsays   Nova   Scotia's   10.009   coal\nIrv-wide  floods  as   the   Danube   Communist .regime.\nRiver and most of its tributaries' \t\nsteadily rose hour by hour. Some MORE  LAYOFFS\nvillages  already  are  flooded  fol-!     DETROIT    (AP)    \u2014   Chrysler\n'owing h^avy rains and a thaw. : Corporation   sent   7,100   workers\nagTessive sales policv.\"\nMr, MacDonald said the company will trv to get new inarkcls\nin Central Canada \"farther west\nthan existing market\nconsider a t i o n  of  his  government's  dispute  with  France.\nNorway brought up the dispute\nat a NATO permanent council\nmeeting in Paris a week ago. The\nWater three feet deep blocked home Monday from two Detroit He said Ihe aggressive sales | 15 permanent delegates held prl-\nmany ronds. In West Germany. I plants as a production-standards\u25a0! nolicv means \"We are not going | vate discussions on Tunisia's\nwide areas of Ihe Pavarian l\"w- dispute, erupted anew. It was the \u25a0 to. close a mine until we have ! complaint against France for\nlands have been flooded after 16th straight day ot work inter- exhausted every possible avenue I bombing a frontier village Feb.\nheavy, rains. < ' ruption at Chrysler plants. t leading to increased sales.\" 8.\n L\nAbout: the Town\nPHONE  1844\nMerlin Liversidge, well-known in\nNelson and son of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nLiversidge, Granite Road, has returned to the east after spending\na few days visiting his parents.\nMr. Liversidge, who had spent\ntwo weeks holidaying in California,\nstayed with friends in .Vancouver\nand his sister in the Okanagan\nprior to arriving in Nelson. He left\nMonday night by bus for Calgary,\nwhere he will take a plane for\nHamilton, Ont. Mr. Liversidge is\nmanaging director of the' Printo\nTape Company in Hamilton.\n.  .  .\nThe three circles of the Church\nof Redeemer Service Club met\nMonday at the homes of Mrs. E.\nK. Evans, 85 High Street, Mrs. A.\nC. Van Sacker, (124 Sixth Street,\nand Mrs. W. R. Gordon, 509 Fourth\nStreet.\n*   *  +\nA potlnck supper was'attended\nby memoei's of tho Lady Lions\nCiub at the home of Mrs. F. Beresford, Nelson Avenue, last week.\nAbout 70 infants \u25a0 garments made\nby members were presented to\nthe Kootenay Lake General Hospital following  the meeting.\nSilica Street, have as a guest Miss\nBetty Glover of Margaret, Manitoba.\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER \u2014 Mrs. Charles Ferguson has returned from a visit to\nthe coast and brings back news\nof the birth of a son Francis Jay\nto Mr. and Mrs. John Ferguson\nof Vancouver. Mr. Ferguson formerly operated the General Store\nin Procter in partnership with his\nbrother Charles.\ni.       i i j        i in min. ii        ii    i      i      . i       l|II,ll*H#ti^'\"^-CTyy\n(bhSLLL lAp, Wilh,\nWlaMan. Vhxvdin.\nPrinted Pattern\nMr.  and Mrs\nClarkson, 419\nKiddiet |ust love ths wild cherry flavor\n.. . ind it soothBi, rellevei so fast.\nMCK'UU\nTHE CHILDREN'S OWN\nCOUGH SYRUP\nWith Vitamin C ,\nTWO BUCKLEY PRODUCTS\n36-48\nPRINCESS DRESS\nStep into this lovely princess\ndress \u2014 see how it flatters the\nlarger figure! Side-button lines are\nas slimming as a diet; ideal for\nseason-spanning plaid and checked\ncottons. A Printed Pattern \u2014 easy\nsewing!\nPrinied Pattern 9148: Women's\nSizes 3S, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48.\nSize 36 takes 44-lii yards 39-inch.\nPrinted 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.\nMELBOURNE (Reuters) -\nLongshoremen staged a one-day\nwildcat strike Monday parayiyz-\ning shipping after the dismissal\nof 269 stevedores. Thirty - seven\nships were idle.\nWUktLjk FASHIONS\nHALF SIZE DRESSES\nLovely Spring Materials,\nNewest Straight Lines, and 2-Piece Effects.\n-?__- . . .\nHATS\nIn Smartest Styles, Water Repellant\nBengalines or Straws, Nice\nAssortment of Colors.\n\"THE STORE OF COURTEOUS SERVICE\"\nMISS ROSE CLARK Is 103 but for Valentine's day she received\nroses Irom James Manning, 100. At the House of Providence\nln Toronto, where they live, rumors spread there was a romance\nbrewing, but Miss Clark just says: \"Why, we're just good friends,\naren't we, James?\" She Is the oldest woman and he the oldest\nman at the House of Providence.\nOver $1000 Given by\nIODE in Service Cause\nMore than $1000 was expended\non services at home and abroad\nby the Kokanee Chapter IODE, it\nwas reported at the annual meeting at the home of Mrs. W. R.\nSmythe, 623 Carbonate Street,\nTuesday.\nIn addition, a bursary of $100\nwas presented to a student at L.V.\nRogers High School. History prizes\nwere given to junior and senior\nmatriculation; Christmas gifts to\nan adopted school and the Handicapped Children's school and aid\nwas also given to the provincial\neducational fund, calendars given\nto all schools and the provincial\ncentennial bursary supported by a\n$50   donation.\nServices under welfare saw\n$524.64 in milk supplied to needy\nfamilies, Christmas hampers purchased and used clothing provided.\nA special distress appeal was received for a burned out family and\n$50 donated.\nIn hospital work, a chair was\ncovered by a member, Christmas\ngifts went to veterans, magazines\nand flowers donated and Christmas\ngifts sent to Mount St. Francis.\nBirthday and Christmas gifts were\ngiven to Hostel for Aged Men and\nthere were donations to the DVA\nand to books for Canadian troops\noverseas. Food parcels to Britain\ncost $96.\nHighlight of the year was a visit\nfrom the provincial president, Mrs.\nDowdall in September.\nNew members installed at the\nmeeting were Mrs. W. R. Workman and Mrs. William Gunn.\nMilk is still being distributed\nto needy families and $500 was\ngiven for purchase of play materials for Korean children as requested by the provincial headquarters,\nit was reported.\nHospital secretary Mrs. G. B.\nRussell, reported that cost of furnishing a room at the new hospital\nwould.be about $1000.\nMrs. R. Palmer, immigration\nsecretary, reported attending\ncitizenship ceremony at county\ncourt, and said that plans were\nbeing made to have a special out\ndoors reception for new citizens\nearly in June as a special centennial event.\nMrs. Duncan McKenzie and Mrs.\nW. W. Ferguson reported attending a meeting of the John Howard\nSociety. They said the society was\ndoing a worthwhile work.\nA minute's silence was observed\nin memory of the late Mrs. W. J,\nHipperson.\nCo-hostesses were Mrs. Gunn\nand Mrs. McKenzie.\nRecipes . . .\nBAKE OR BROIL\nSALMON STEAKS\nEconomy, more than ever, is the\nby-word in most Canadian households this month, 'and fisheries products offer lots of scope for inexpensive main dishes. At a time\nwhen menu inspiration is apt to be\nat a low ebb, the treasured depths\nof the home or supermarket freezer divulge a wide array of products\nwhich with little effort on our part\nmay be converted into hearty main\ndishes.\nSalmon steaks with characteris-\nNOW . . . LOOK YOUNGER\nPUT COLOR IN YOUR LIFE WITH\nSCOTT'S ANii-cRAv HAIR TONE\nIMPARTS NATURAL LOOKING\nCOLOR AND LUSTRE TO GRAY\nSTREAKED AND FADED HAIR\n\u2022 For both men and women     \u2022 Conditions the Hair\n\u2022 Greaseless white cream for all shades of hair\n\u2022 Money back guarantee\nUse   at   directed\nNOT A TINT  for 2 or S weeks\nthen only as\nWON'T WASH OUT\nrequired\nSMALL SIZE\n$3\nLARGE TRIPLE SIZE\n$6\nAt MANN DRUGS - Nelson   \u2022,\nKIMBERLEY DRUG & BfJoK CO. LTD.-Kimberley\nSCOTT'S DRUG STORE \u2022- Cranbrook\nTurkey Supper\nEnjoyed\nNEW DENVER - Members of\nIhe Knox Presbyterian Ladies' Aid,\ntheir families and friends attended\na turkey supper and social hour\nin Ihe basement of the church.\nEntertainment was presented in\na variety of forms, with a recitation by Mrs. J. R. McGorman, a\nsong by Mrs. F. Heintz, a reading\nselection by J. R. McGorman and\na skit, by Diane Clever and Ivy\nStewart.\nThe entire company of guests\njoined in group singing and square\ndancing to round out the evening.\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Roy Pen-\nniket celebrated his eleventh birthday at his cub pack meeting, Valentine's evening.\nMrs. Penniket and daughter\nPenny, served the pack Valentine\nrefreshments of cake, cookies and\nice cream at the close of their\nsession. '\nW. Baker, Sr. is a paiient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nThe South Slocan Badminton\nClub was host-to the Bonnington\nplayers for a social evening of\nbadminton and bingo, in No. 3\nPlant hall. Hamburgers and do-\nnuts were served at the close.\nTo Sew lor Sale\nNEW DENVER - The Ladies'\nAid of the Knox Presbyterian\nChurch met at the home of Mrs.\nStanley Heslip, Mrs. Harold Witt\npresiding.\nThe Community Club meeting\nwas reported by Mrs. Flint and\nmaterials were distributed to\nmembers for sewing articles for\nthe annual sale.\nThe devotional period was conducted by D. A. MacKellar, and a\nvisitor. Mrs. M. Campbell of Kinnaird was welcomed-1\nAssisting the hostess was Mrs.\nF. Heintz.\nWillow Point\nWl Celebrates\nAnniversary\nWILLOW POINT - A Valentine\nparty celebrated Founder's Day\nand the 44th Anniversary of the\nWillow Point Women's Institute,\nThursday afternoon in Church Hall.\nMrs. B. Heddle, acting president,\nwelcomed the many guests.\nA short business session included\nreading of a letter from Mrs. B.\nTownshend, president, at present\nin Victoria, telling of her visit to\nQueen Alexandra Solarium and\npresenting the WI's two adopted\npatients with Valentines and gifts.\nMrs. John Learmonth reported\nthat six complete layettes were\nforwarded to Vancouver. A collection was taken for \"Pennies For\nFriendship\" fund.\nMrs. A. Jenkins was in charge\nof the entertainment. A contest on\nfamous names was won by Mrs.\nLouis Hanic. The song, by the\nquartette, Mrs. Learmonth, Mrs.\nR. Malcolmson, Mrs. H. Gaskell\nand Mrs. W. Spooner, was judged\nthe best by Mrs. W. S. Ashby.\nThe tea table was gay with large\nred hearts and Valentine napkins\nwith a Valentine and gift for everyone present. The institute colors\nwere depicted in a white, green\nand gold birthday cake centering\nthe table, and yellow tapers.\nThe potluck tea was served by\nthe executive, Mrs. C. B. White,\nMrs. C. Shannon, charter and life\nmember, and Mrs. A. Jenkins, and\nanother charier and life member,\nMrs. H. Middleton of Vancouver,\ncut the cake.\nRobson Notes\nROBSON - Mr. and Mrs. W. T.\nWaldie, accompanied by A. Lundy,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Robert Horswill\nmotored to Nakusp, and were the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Waldie and family.\nHostesses to a progressive supper were Mrs. R. T. Waldie, Mrs.\nD. Magee and Mrs. W. T. Waldie.\nThere were 30 present. The guests j\narrived first at the home of Mrs. j\nR. T. Waldie, then proceeded to:\nMrs. D. Magee's, fininshing at thej\nhome of Mrs. W. T. Waldie. After\nsupper, ping pong, and many other\ngames were enjoyed. The proceeds\nof the supper are for the Women's\nInstitute room in the new Castlegar and district hospital.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., FEB. 19, 1958 \u2014 5\nBEFORE YOU BUY\nInvestigate Our Feature Value In\nHARD-WEARING     \"\nWOOL CARPET\nThis is usually sold at much\nhigher prices.\nOur Feature Special\u2014only\n$?3.95.\u00ab,. Vd.\nWED AT NELSON this month were the former Lucy\nSavinkoff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Savinkoff, and\nFred Labintsoff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Labintsoff at\nthe Legion hall. Miss Helen Novokshonoff was the bride's\nattendant and Alex Katelnikoff was best man. California\nwas their honeymoon destination.\u2014Dcriiy News photo.\nSt. Joseph's Group\nHolds Colorful Tea\nVb&dkjrAagL\n(Bil 3xwm, LVhsskh.\ntic rich color and flavor are one\ngood example. When baked quickly\nin a hot oven so that none of the\nnatural moisture is lost, they're\nflaky and at the same time solid\ngood eating. Some salmon devotees\nprefer them plain, others like salmon steaks with a sauce. We've\nincluded below the cooking method\nfor salmon steaks and a delectable\negg sauce that's just a bit differ\nent. Lemon juice and a little nutmeg add a special character to\ngive appeal to this favored fish ac\ncompaniment.\nOr perhaps you might prefer to\nbroil them and serve with a caper\nsauce.\nBAKED   SALMON   STEAKS\nAllow one steak per serving.\nWipe fish with a damp cloth. Place\non shallow greased baking sheet.\nBrush with melted fat or salad oi\nSeason with salt and pepper. Bake\nin hot oven pre-heated to 450 deg,\nF., allowing about 10 minutes cooking time per inch thickness of fish.\nIf fish is frozen, allow 20 minutes\nper inch thickness. (Do not thaw\nfrozen steaks).\nSpecial Egg Sauce\n2 tablespoons butter or margarine\n2 tablespoons flour\n1 cup chicken consomme, fish\nstock or milk\n1 tablespoon lemon juice\n\u25a0A teaspoon salt\nVi teaspoon pepper\nV\u00bb teaspoon nutmeg\n2 tabiespoons finely chopped parsley\n2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced\nMelt butter or margarine. Blend\nin flour. Gradually blend in con-\nnom-ne or other, liquid, then lemon\njuice. Arid seasonings and parsley.\nCook, stirring until thickened and\nsmooth. Add sliced egg. Serve on\nsalmon steaks. This makes enough\nsauce for 3 or 4 salmon steaks.\nBROILED  SALMON  STEAKS\nWITH CAPER BUTTER\nArrange salmon steaks in preheated broiler pan. Sprinkle with\nsalt and pepper; brush with melted\nbutter. Place pan in broiler 2 inches from heat and broil 3 minutes.\nTurn steaks and broil 3 to 5 minutes longer, or until fish flakes\neasily when tested with fork. Serve\nwith capjr butter.\nCaper  Butter\n1\/3 cup butter\n4 teaspoons cider vinegar\n3 tablespoons drained capers\n2 tablespoons chopped parsley\nMelt butter, remove from heat\nand stir in remaining ingredients.\nSpoon some of the sauce over the\nbroiled salmon steaks; pass remaining sauce. Makes enough for\n6 steaks.\nEVERYONE'S MASCOT\nA floppy, sleepy puppy that\neveryone' loves! Youngsters will\ncuddle him; teenagers welcome\nhim as their newest mascot.\nDo the body in terry cloth \u2014\nvery effective! The cars are scraps\nof yarn. Pattern 605: transfer, directions.\nSend THIRTY FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\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 1957\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!\nCLASS  ADS  GET  RESULTS!\nSTOP\nTHAT\nHEADACHE\nWhin you sulfur from pain of I. 3\nHeadache, Neuralgia or II \u00a3 I\nMuscular aches you want to \\X% II\nslop that pain fast..-. So L \u00b0j\ntake Aspirin! A tablet starts '\u25a0\u2014'\ndisintegrating almost the instant you\ntake it\u2014starts to relieve that pain\nalmost instantly!\nAlways AskFor\nSt. Joseph's School Auxiliary\nheld an extremely successful Valentine tea and bake sale Monday\nin the Cathedral hall. Mrs. J.\nFukala was the convener.\nThe hall was decorated in the\nValentine theme. Mrs. Robert\nSlack, president, met the guests.\nMrs. Alberta Maida was in charge\nof lea tickets, and the door prize,\na hand crocheted chesterfield set.\nThe tea table was set with spring\nflowers and red and white candles.\nPourers were Mrs. Reg Boisson-\neault, Mrs. D. Klein, Mrs. George\nGelinas and Mrs. Waller Palmer.\nA television planter contest was\nconducted by Mrs. Vince Killeen,\nMrs. Louis Maglio and Mrs. M. J.\nBoyes. Contest for a cake, made\nby Mrs. Bragagnola, was taken\ncare of by Mrs. A. J. Beauchamp.\nThe bake table was in charge of\nMrs. B. Buckley, Mrs. Bragagnola\nand Mrs. DeLucrezio.\nServers were Mrs. W. Joyce,\nMrs. R. Porta, Mrs. Frank Smith\nand Mrs. A. R. Kruk.\nOthers helping were Mrs. George\nSuccessful Sales\nA successful bake sale was held\nSaturday' by Redeemer Service\nClub, with No. 3 Circle in charge.\nEverything turned in was reported\nsold.\nThe Salvation Army also had a\nsuccessful rummage sale Saturday.\nBarefoot, Mrs. W. Cavalier, Mrs.\nW. Leahy, Mrs. John DeGirolamo,\nMrs. Kosiancic, and Mrs. Fukala.\nThe cake was won by Mrs.\nJoyce, the door prize by Miss\nPatsy Ann Fukala, the television\nplanter by Lawrence Chaluck, and\nan apron, by Sheryl Hamilton.\nGrade 9 girls acted as baby\nsitters.\nNurses Pick Site\nFor 1960 Meet\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The 1960 biennial meeting of the Canadian\nNurses Association is to be held\nin Halifax, the CNA announced at\nthe end of the association's 35-\nmember executive's meeting Saturday.\nAt final business sessions, the\nexecutive approved estamlishment\nof a committee on nursing research\nand voted to seek affiliation with\nthe Canadian Medical'Association.\nCNA president Trenna Hunter of\nVancouver said the committee on\nnursing research will find out what\nis being done in the field, list research projects suggested by nursing bodies and determine which\nprojects should be undertaken\nfirst.\nMiss Hunter said research to\nfind a formula to estimate nurse\neducation costs and studies of the\nHospital WA Stages\nValentine's Dance\nAt New Denver\nNEW DENVER - The Slocan\nCommunity Hospital Women's Auxiliary sponsored a Valentine's\ndance in the Bosun Hall, proceeds\nto go to the provision of extra comforts for patients and staff of the\nhospital. Master of ceremonies was\nWalter G. Thring.\nDoor prize was won by George\nMarkin of Hills.\nMrs. John Taylor, Mrs. Nelson\nand Miss Butlin were in charge of\nrefreshments; serviteurs were\nMrs. Pedley, Mrs. Thring, Mrs.\nQ. A. Forsythe and Mrs. Buckham;\ncashiers were Seaman Dewis and\nJ. L. Irwin and ticket sellers were\nPete Leontowiez of Hills, Mjss\nGladys L. Reynolds and S. Matsushita of \"The Orchard,\" Miss M.\nH. Butlin and Mrs. J. A. Greer of\nSilverton and Mrs. C. W. Nelson,\nMrs. J. H. McDonough, Mrs. Greer\nand Miss Butlin of New Denver.\nValentine decorations were the'\nwork of Mrs. Stanley Pedley, Mrs.\nW. G. Thring and Mrs. T. R. Buckham.\nFIREMEN'S BODrES FOUND\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014 Weary\nfiremen, after removing mora\nthan 7,000 tons of debris, Monday night recovered the bodiei\nof two fire patrolmen from tha\nremains of a downtown factory.\nThe search continued for two\nother members of the patrol, but\nhope of finding them alive has\nbeen abandoned. The four were\ntrapped Friday night when a factory collapsed during a five-\nalarm blaze. Two city firemen\nalso were killed.\nfunctions of various categories of\nnursing personnel already appear\nas urgent research projects.\nTHIS\nTO\nPAY\nBILLS\nTHIS\nFOR\nSAVING\nOur 2-ACCOUNT PLAN\nis Planned Saving\nUse our Personal Chequing Account and our Regular\nSavings Account together.\n7     Pay all bills by cheque on a Personal Chequing Account. A\nJ-     quarterly statement will help you keep your records straight.\nThe low service charges are prepaid. Your cancelled cheques\nare on file if you need them.\nO    Keep your Savings Accoiint for saving. Add to it from every\n<\"    pay. As your balance grows, you'll gain peace of mind.\n2 Account Plan Booklet\nAsk our nearest branch\nfor your copy of tha\n\"2-Account   Plan\".   It\nwill help you control\nyourpersonal finances.\nStart Planned Saving at our nearest branch now.\nTHE CANADIAN\nBANK OF COMMERCE\n775 BRANCHES ACROSS CANADA READY TO SERVE YOU\nNelson Branch \u2014 K. CAMPBELL, Manager\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., FEB. 19, 1958\nL\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\ny\nu\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\/j.RSWEETPANTS\nISTHENAME!?-\nUNEEDAGUIDE,\n\" TOHUNTE43LE\nEGGStf-HO*\/\nMUCHDOTOU\nCHARGE?\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe  Daily  News does not hold  Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nSingapore Police Test\nNew Crash Kidnap Plan\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  07\nAlgom Uranium     14.50\nAnacon Lead 57\nAtlin Ruff  31\nAubelle   05'_\nAumacho    14\nAunor      2.25\n.46\n.29\n.15\n.06\n.13,\n.54\n.81\nBarnat\t\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBibis Yukon\t\nBoymar \t\nBroulan \t\nBuffalo Ank \t\nCampbell C         4.90\nCarftpbell R. L     7.40\nCan Met      1.67\nCassiar       7.45\nCentral Patricia 76\nChimo    50\nChromium       2.85\nCoin Lake  1514\nCons Denison     12.3714\nCons. Discovery      2.80\nCons Halliwell  3014\nCons Mining & Smelting ..   17.50\nCon Sanorm ; , 07\nCon Sub  72\nConwest      2.70\nCopper Corp  20\nDonalda  : .\u00bb     .1614\nEast Malartic     1.47\nEast Sullivan      06\nElder Gold      <63\nFalconbridge      22.8714\nFaraday,       1.70\nFrobisher      1.58\nGeco      8.65\nGlen Uranium       .12%\nGolden Manitou  30\nGunnar Gold     16.00\nHasaga   1414\nHeadway 66\nHollinger       22.3714\nHudson Bay  :    42.75   .\nInt. Nickel    72.6214\nJoliet Que 28\nR J Jowsey  58\nKenville ., 06\nKerr Addisok '. '...'..,\u25a0 17.6214\nLabrador ' ,X .v;,; .' 15.8714\nLuke Lingman 08\nLakeshore            4.75\nLexindin       0514\nLittle Long Lac      1.94\np___^_i       m ^\n\u2022puty! \u25a0\nome aa\\\n1 While FViil            T__ c.\n\u25a0 cliecte inattte      1   I \"LIM-J_P-^i\nI hotel Tn the remote \u2022-,\n1 mount-in village,     \/\n| \"slows\"Gonijn mates ^=\nI  plans to chert: out \/\u2022.\u25a0;\u25a0:\n1 of his quarters*,,,,   \/_\ni\u00bb.1rm\nVm\n__Jt_f\n(j^Sa\nLorado\nMacassa  r\t\nMacDonald  \t\nMadsen R. L\t\nMalartic G. F\t\nManeast \t\nMaritime Mining\nMart McNeely \t\nMcLeod \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMilliken      \t\n.62\n2.110\n.31\n2.35\n1.10\n.12\n1.02\n.12\n2.40\nMining Corp    10.25\nMogul        42\n'New Delhi  55\nNew Fortune  18\nNew Highridge 14\nNew Jason  0714\nNipissing      1.25\nNisto    06\nNoranda New  3714\nNormetals       2.40\nNorpax    32\nNorth Can      1.10\nNorth Rankin  58\nOpemiska      6.15\nPickle Crow      1.20\nPreston E. D     5.75\nQuebec Metallurgical      1.10\nQuemont      7.65\nRadiore  , 55\nRayrock         1.04\nSan Antonio 50\nSherritt Gordon     4.40\nSilver Miller  ,     .43\nStadacona 24V4\nSteep Rock     8.75\nSullivan Con  '....    2.30\nSylvanile         1.10\nTeck Hughes      1.55\nTemagami      1.26\nThomp-Lund  '    .91\nUnited Keno      3.60\nUpper Canada  66\nVentures     22.8714\nVicour  0614\nViolamac       1,25\nWaite Amulet     6.05\nWiltsey Goglin  2114\nWright Hargreaves      1.40\nYale   1214\nYeliowknife Bear  75\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  19\nBanff Oils         1.65\nBailey Selburn      7.80\nBata Petroleum   \" .0614\nCalgary and Edmonton     19.00\nCdn Atlantic      4.15\nCanadian Devonian      5.75\nCan Decalta    1214\nCon East Crest 35\nCons Peak      .07\nDuvcx   10\nHome A    16.75\nLiberal Pete      1.35\nMidcon    70\nNat. Pete       1.85\nNew Gas Expl     1.15\nOkalta       1.50\nPacific Pete     18.6214\nPetrol. ; 54\nProv Gas      2.66\nSpooner  2014\nStanwell Oil  80\nTriad       4.75\nUnited Oils  :     2.23\nYank Canuck  07\nWestern Pacific 26\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi '       27%\nAlgoma Steel        23Vi\nAluminum              2714\nArgus 2nd pfd       47%\nAtlas St :..      ,16H\nB.A. Oil  .<.        35%\nBell Telephone        41%\nBrazilian              614\nBC. Forest       1114\nB.C. Power A         39%\nCanadian Breweries       27%\nCanadian Canners       1414\nCan. Cement       28\nCan Chem Co           6\nCanadian Dredge        16\nCan. Malting        S114\nCan Oil ..    .,         27\nCanadian Pacific Rly        23%\nCan. Packers A        37%\nCan. Packers B       3414\nCons Gas        33\nDist. Seagram        2714\nDom. Foundries        2514\nDom Magnesium        11\nDom. Steel Ord        21%\nDom. Stores            53%\nDom. Tar & Chemical       10%\nDom. Textiles         7%\nFamous Players        15%\nFanny Farmer       16%\nFord A        73%\nGatineau        3014\nGatineau 5% pfd      106%\nGoodyear        139\n0 Chewing Wrigley's 0\nyy Spearmint Gum ty\nyl      helps to keep      M\n\u201eYourTeet_|\nI Attractive |\nGoodyear pfd\nGypsum Lime \t\nHoward Smith \t\nImperial Oil\t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac .\nMont. Loco \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat. Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey \u25a0\t\nPowell River \t\nRuss. Industries ...\nShawinigan  \t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A\t\nSoutham     \t\nStandard Paving ...\n47\n30y4\n28\n40\n13%\n19%\n23\n23V4\n6%\n52%\n15%\n65%\n21%\n109\n32%\n7%\n24%\n23\n17\n42\n38\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nGood Morning\nSearch For Tomorrow '\nGuiding Light *\nHotel Cosmopolitan\nLove of Life\nAs the World Turns *\nBeat the Clock \u2022\nHouseparty *\nThe Big Payoff *\nThe Verdict Is Yours \u2022\nBrighter Day *\nSecret Storm *\nEdge of Night \u2022\nGarry Moore *\nDan Smoot\nFun At Home\nDotto \u00bb\nEarly Show*\nSong Shop\nNews\nDoug Edwards News \u2022\nI Love Lucy *\nBig Record *\nThe Millionaire \u2666\nI've Got a Secret *\nU.S. Steel Hour \u00bb\nCrusader\nNews\nLate Show\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n10 Color Test Pattern\n13 Test Pattern\n25 NARTB\n26 Bible Reading\n29 Program Previews\n30 Q Toons\n00 Tic Tac Dough \u2666\n30 It Could Be You *\n00 Arlene Francis Show *\n30 Fun To Reduce\n45 Short Subjects\nOO Price Is Right *\n30 Kitty Foyle *\nOO Matinee Theatre (C) *\n00 Queen For a Day *\n45 Modern Romances \u2022\n00 I Married Joan *\n30 Truth or Consequences *\n00, Matinee On Six\n\"Love Crazy\"\n00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"Mighty McGurk\"\n30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n45 NBC News *     *\n00 Truth or Consequences *\n:30 Shirley Temple Storybook ;\n\"Nightingale\"*\n:30 Father Knows Best *\n:00 Harbor Command\n30 Highway Patrol\n00 This Is Your Life \u2022\n30 Late Movie \"Billy The Kid'\nSINGAPORE (Reuters)\u2014Singapore police have successfully\ntested their new \"crash kidnap\"\nplan.\nIn a rec e n t, unannounced,\nweekend alert, they surrounded\nthe city with 1,000 men in five\nminutes.\nThe crash plan is the latest police move in the war against this\nBritish Colony's kidnapping\ngangs. Its object is to beat fleeing kidnappers' cars to Uie city\nexits by moving police there first.\nEvery man on the force knows\nexactly where he has to go when\nthe alert is sounded, and his job\nis to make his way there as fast\nas he can.\nOn duty or off duty, in ceremonial uniform or'pajamas,\narmed or unarmed, he must be\nin constant readiness to answer\nSteel of Canada\t\nTaylor Pearson \t\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel .\n48 \\\n74%\n14\nthe alarm signal that tells him\nthat gangsters seized another victim.\nBIG BUSINESS\nAbduction has become one of\nSingapore's most successful rackets. Six prominent businessmen\nwere whisked off by gangsters in\n1957 and one of them is still missing.\nThe men behind the kidnappings are generally believed to be\nthe bosses of Singapore's all-\npowerful secret societies.\nThe societies, known by numbers or by such fancy titles as\n\"the Immortals,\" have a tight\ngrip on large sections of the colony's 1,000,000 - strong Chinese\npopulation. They are remorseless\nas the Sicilian Mafia in tracking\ndown their enemies. They can\ncommit murder in a crowded\nstreet, pnd no witness will admit\nto  seeing   anything.\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n5:00 Wild Bill Hickok \u2022\n\u25a06:30 Mickey Mouse Club \u2022\n6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 News Beat\n7:00 Wednesday Night Fights '\n7:50 Hank Weaver's Corner *\n8:00 Disneyland \u2022\n9:00 Tombstone Territory '\n9:30 Ozzie and Harriet \u2022\n10:00 Betty White Show \u2022\n10:30 Night Beat\n10:35 Channel 2 Theatre\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAM8\n(PACIFIC\nWEDNESDAY,\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky  \u2022\n7:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sport News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake 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\u2014Tex and Jinx\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Seven-Come-Eleven\nll:30-Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Song Serenade\n11:55\u2014Entertainment World\n12:00\u2014Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nSTANDARD   TIME)\nFEBRUARY 19, 1958\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Report*\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2.30\u2014Trans Canada Matinea\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:40\u2014B.C. Road Report\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boatej\n4:45\u2014Legends of the LonghoUM\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Marked\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014Silent Friends\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Ask Teacher\n10:30\u2014Legislature Report\n10:35-Sign Off.\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC  8TANDARD  TIME)\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1958\n00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n: 30\u2014News\n.35\u2014Musical Minutes\n: 40\u2014Morning Devotions\n: 55\u2014Musical March Past\n00\u2014News and Weather\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Anything Goes\n00-BBC News\n15\u2014Morning Concert\n45\u2014Food Facts\n.00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014The Happy Gang\n: 45\u2014Pages From Life\n: 00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n: 15\u2014Theme and Variation\n: 15\u2014News\n: 25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n: 55\u2014Five to One\n: 00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n: 30\u2014Ottawa Symphony Orch.\n00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n30\u2014Trans-Canada Matine*\n30\u2014Program Resume\n45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n00\u2014Music by McMullin\n: 30\u2014Music From The Sea\n45\u2014The Beacon Mystery\n00\u2014Bands on Parade\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014On the Scene\n30\u2014Sports Desk\n40\u2014Byline\n45\u2014This Man's Music\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30-Recital\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vane. Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00\u2014Mid-night Concert\nU:57-News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n(Programs subject io change by stations without notice.)\nDOWN\nHot-plate\nstand\nHead 25.\ncovering       26.\nMarks as\ncorrect\nMusic note\nFinch (Eur.) 28.\nNorse name\nExcavate      29,\nDrenched       31\nFragments\nPlague\nCovered, as\na ceiling\nHigh cards\nParts of ears\nMan's name\n33,\n30.\nGangs\nCourts\nMetal\nDanger\nOuter\nlayer\nof\nteeth\nYoung\neels\nCouples\nWeb.\nfooted\nbirds\nRadical\n(math.)\nGirl's\nnickname\n_U__   __I_Q\n_____   _\u201e___\n__H_   _I_M___\n__D   HHHHHI-H\nHKiu odd    rm\n______ ____\n__\u25a1____\n[:iHM:'l   ______\nHH     _HH   \u201e__\n_______ _n_\n-D_l-__    [__H_\n_____   _____\n____ __n_\nYesterday's Answer\n37. Indian\nweight\n\u25a0 38. a workroom\n(colloq.)\n40. Buddha\n(Chin.)\nACROSS\nt. God of\nthunder\n5. Covers\nwith turf\n9. Land rail\n10. English\nauthoress\n12. Strikes\n13. Capital\n(Czech.)\n14. Roman four\n15.Letter\n(Arab.)\n16. Samarium\n(sym.)\nIT. State bird\n(La.)\n20. God of\npleasure\n31. Ranges\n22. Walk In\nwater\n23. Fortifies.\ntion\n25. A hammer\nend\n27. Wore away\n30. Half ems\n31. Flagrantly\n32. Sun god\n33. Observed\n34. Veterans\nAdministration\n35. Tinged\ndeeply\n37. Vehicle with\nrunners\n39. Looks\naskance\n40. Doubts\n41. Dip out,\nas liquid\n43. Spheres\nDAILY CR-PTOQUOTE \u2014 Here** how to work ih\nAXYD L B A AXR\nh LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is usee)\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.   Single letters, spoa\u00bb\ntrophes, the length snd formation of ths words are all hint*!\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nMSGLXS    r    VFM    HGIA    AOI,    MSB\nMFKD    IFBB    EGKD    ISDA    CO-    IFBB\nIDHJ    KD-HFVJlf DBF.\nTester-ay's Cryptoquotes TALK  TO HIM OF JACOB*\nLADDER, AND HE WOULD ASK THE MVMBGR OF STEP!\nJERROLD.\nDistribute* kv Kit* FetttfM SvodHst*.\n%\n1\n1\n3\n4\nt\nV\nta\n7\n0\n^\n9\nft\n10\nII\nil\nfA\n13\n14\n%\n%\n15\n^\n16\n17\n18\n19\n%\n20\n11\n.\nf,\n31\n^\nf(<\n23\n14\n%\n%\nIS\nlb\n^\n27\n26\nv>\n30\n|\n31\n31\n|\n33\ny\/\n34\n}s\n3b\nfA\n30\n39\n^\/A\nOO\n^\n44\n%\nAL\n^4\nM\u00bb\n U_fl\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  ~ PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nHELP WANTED\nTRAIN  AS A\nMEDICAL\nASSISTANT\nThere is a steady job with a\nfuture for you in the Royal\nCanadian Army Medical Corps\nas a Medical Assistant.\nExcellent training, good pay and\nother advantages of Army life\nmake this an excellent opportunity for physically fit young\nmen of 17-40 who meet Army\nselection  requirements.\nThe numbers that Can be accepted are limited so apply now! Get\nfull details from your Army Recruiter, at the address shown\nbelow, or mail the coupon to;\nARMY  RECRUITING\nSTATION\nTHE   ARMOURIES\nNelson, B. C.\nPlease send me information,\nwithout obligation, on medical\nassistant career opportunities in\nthe Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps.\nNAME\n(Age)\nADDRESS   \t\nCITY\/TOWN\nPROVINCE   .\n(Telephone)\nWANTED-APPLICATIONS WILL\nbe accepted up to 5:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 26, 1958, for\nthe position of School Bus Driver\nand Maintenance Man for School\nDistrict No. 7 (Nelson). Applicants must have Class A driver's\nlicence, live in the vicinity of\nBalfour and be ready to commence work on March 1, 1958.\nApplicants to state age. education, experience and salary required. Benefits include M.S.A.\nand superannuation. Forward,applications to J. S. Livingstone,\nSecretary-Treasurer, 554 Stanley\nSt'-ct. Nelson. B.C:\t\nPROBATIONER FIREMAN MUST\nbe an experienced truck driver.\nState age, marital status, etc., in\nown writing. Mark application\n\"FIRE\" and have in the hands\nof City Clerk, Rossland, B.C., by\n5 n.m. Februarv ?8th. 1958,\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\u00aba r y\nSchool of Drafting, Dept. G,\nBox 123, Station \"Q\", Toronto.\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE RE-\nccived for city newspaper carrier boys. Apply Circulation Department. Nelson Dailv News.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. .Just show North American Fashion Frocks to friends.\nNo canvassing, investment or\nexperience necessary. North\nAmerican Fashion Frocks, Ltd.,\nS425 Industrial Blvd., Dept. Z-\n382''. -Montreal.  P.O.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT\nting, appliances, oil burners ser-\n-viced. 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\u201e or phone\n186-X-3,\nTIP TOP CHIMNEV SERVICE -\nFor cleaning, repairs, odd jobs,\nladder work, etc., phone 1229-X-l,\nDAY CARE r'OR CHILDREN  IN\nmy home. Near Central School.\nAnnl\" Rox P865: Pail\" News, \u25a0\nTOR  HIRE, TANDEM  TRUCKS.\nDay,  week  or  contract.   Appi)\nBox 3781 or ph, 1757-R.\nWILL LOOK AFTER 2 CHILDREN\nin my home, days only, Mon. to\nSat. Phone 397-R.\nWILL  DO  HOUSEKEEPING\nthe hour. Phone 202-R.\nBY\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND - CHILD'S TRICYCLE,\nvicinity Baker St. Owner may\nclaim by identification and paying for this ad. Ph. eves. 1179-Y.\nLOST - MAN'S WHITE GOLD\nBulova wrist watch. Valued as\nkeepsake. Please phone 1583-R\nor 41.\n5fe hum iathj Sfauis\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     .j.    $ 1.25\nThree months   t 3.50\nSix months ..-   $ 6.50\nOne year     $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month          $ 1.75\nThree months     $ 5.00\nSix months      $ 9.50\nOne year       $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely.\nIn Kimberley, A. W, Brown.\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nIn Rossland, Mrs. Ross Saundry.\n1 MEAN ITI I WONT PAY\nFOR ANY WORK 1 PIPNT\nTEU. YOU TO PO! HERE,\nSHAKE ON THE DEAL\n\/\ni ( 'shaking HAND )\n\/\nc\u00a3r %\n\/\/iK-,vj            j\n!**\u25a0\u00bb\u2014\ntJkl3^\\\ni            i\ni\n\\\n1            {\nJ\n^r\u2014\"i:^'______i_P\nIw9c\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nLtd.\n1956 '88\" Oldsmobiles\n1955 Deluxe Chev.\n1954 Pontiac 2-Door\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1952 Chev. Sedan\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1952 Buick Sedan\n1951 Chev. Sedan\n1951   Consul Sedan\nAll Models and All Prices\nFROM $95 AND UP\nUsed Trucks\n1957 Chev. f Ton\nChassis and Cab\n1956 Chev. | Ton\n1955 G.M.C i Ton\n1954 Chev. J_-Ton\n1953 Ford i Ton\nWeekoEmd\n1952 METEOR TUDOR\nNew Paint. Good Rubber\n$695.00\n1949 FORD SEDAN\nReady To Go.\n$195.00\n1949 CHEV. _ TON\nGood Running Condition.\n$250.00\nFor the Best\nDeal in Town\nSee Your\nChev. -Olds, -dealer\nLTD.\nPhone 35 - 36\n323 Vernon St.,\nNelson,  B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nSUITE TO RENT\nMARCH 1, 1958\nLiving room, dining room, one\nlarge bedroom wilh splendid\ncloset, plus sleeping porch,\nkitchen and good bathroom.\nKitchen range provided. Close\nin. Rent to good tenant J5Q\nper month is only\n912 Silica Street.\nAnother 2-roomed suite. Kitchen-dining room combination:\nfair-sized bedroom, toilet and\nshower. Immediate possession.\n921 Latimer St. $35\nPer month, only  *^\nHerb Peacock\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENCY\nPhone 68\n532 Ward St.\nIDEAL 4 BR. FAMILY HOME,\ncompletely furnished and wonderfully located. A brick house\non stone and concrete foundation, situated on two landscaped\nlots. Price $9500. Terms, P. E.\nPoulin, Real Eslate and Insurance, 582 Ward St\u201e phone 70.\n1'Oli oALE 1W NAKUSP -v- 160\nacres, 40 acres clear. 25.500 ft.\ntimber. $2500. Box 254. Nakuso.\nvMiVTKD-A BUILDING LOT IN\nt,\u2122\u201e- Pajrvlew. Phone 1617-L.\nRENTALS\nMODERN HOUSE WITH GAR\nage and garden plot, low rent.\nGood location. Ph. 208, South\nSlocan or apply I. M. Cunningham, Crescent Valley.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms: furnished and heated.\nRates 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: BED SITTING ROOM\nand kitchenette; suit quiet working couple. Phone 488-R after\n3 n.m.\n-itOOi'i HOUSE. GAS FURNACE,\nwired for TV. Close in. Adults.\nP-v m\u00bb\\ Dai!\" Wws.\nKO.i RENT-SLEEPING ROOM;\nsuit quiet gentleman. \u2014 Phone\n4B8:R after 3 p.m.\n1 MODERN 2 RM. CABIN BY\nthe week. .Parkside Cabins, ph.\n1828.\n5 ROOMED HOUSE, 311 OBSER-\nvatory. Apply 1212 Hall Mines\nRoad.\n2 ROOMED FURNISHED HSKP.\napt., main floor, close in. Phone\n839-R.\n2 BR. HOUSE FOR RENT. PHONE\n77, Salmo.\nFURN. 2 RM\nI4\u00ab9-X.\nSUITE - PHONE\nWANTED  TO  RENT\nFURNISHED HOUSE OR APART-\nment, 2 bedrooms, immediately\nor before May 1st. Apply Box\nkmi. N'olson Daily News.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nvnung gentlemen   Phone 1179-X\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\ntractiontzmg. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins. '49 to '51 Hillmans,\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Slude-\nbaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '53\nAustin. Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 1363-L-2, Box 382,\n24 Ymir Road. Nelson.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman. Phone 284R.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalynluk\nAgencies  at   1777   and   save.\n1956 CUSTOM FORD H-TON. -\nGood condition, $1700. Box 254,\nNakusp. B.C.\n1952 VANGUARD; 1 1950 AUSTIN;\n1 1951 Chev. Phone 1841.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED URGENTLY - USED\nwire netting, any gauge. Sher-\nanne Pheasant Farm, Box 413,\nNelson.\nWANTED-PAINTING MACHINE.\nPrefer tank type, one or two\nguns. Write Box 327. Golden, B.C.\nWANTED-ONE LARGE HEAVY\nduty breaking tractor plow, any\nshape. Box 8858. Dailv News.\nPiSTON,TYPE WATER PUMP,\nsuitable for dwelling. Box 8933,\nNelson Dai!\" News. J'l\nSMALL AMOUNT OF CEDAR OR\nknotty pine panelling. Uri'one\n1761-L-l.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH. S. ELMES.  ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer Chemisl Mire Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nM, C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave,, Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr. Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-8th St.. Nelson. Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\n'   G. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.   Nelson   Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances. Free Estimates.\nPhone. 774\u2014523 Cedar St., Nelson\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd,\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S,LIMITED  '\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593 32* Vernon St\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nUEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas' Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357\n4000' SEAMLESS STEEL PIPE\nin 17'.i' lengths, easily welded\ninto pipeline, like new, 60c per\nft. del'd in 1 trailer load. 6 tons\n% boiler plate at 7c per lb. in\n1 load. Apply Box 8828, Daily\nNews,\n._. SALE-2 CLEAN, V STEEL\nboilers: 4' diam. x 12'; 5' diam.\nx 16'. 350' IVi\" clean copper\ntubing. Phone 378-X-2.\n1'OR\nOiu \u201e_A'1_R WITH PIPES AND\noil pump. Cheap. Also. 1 RCA\nVictor TV set, hardly used. \u2014\nPhono 211-X.\nLARGE FRIGIDAIRE, ALMOST\nnew; also automatic ironer. \u2014\nPhone 1339-L.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\n4 STEEL TANKS; CAPACITY 350\n\"o'lons. $30.00 each. Ph. 378-X-2.\nMACHINERY\nAtom Arc, Arcaloy, CX-\nlOOandNi-Rod Electrodes,\nMiller Welders. ,\nHelmets, Goggles, Gloves, Holders, Wire Brushes, Chipping\nHammers, Cable Hose, Torches\nand Regulators.\nAltem Super Bronze, Hercules\nIron, Aluminum, and Stainless\nGas Rods and Silver Brazing\nAlloys.\nOxygen  and  Acetylene  Gasses.\nMACHINERY   LIMITED\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\n.   PHONE 97\n1 SAWMILL COMPLETE, BALL-\nbearing throughout. No. 2 National carriage, *3-saw edger,\ntrim-saw, Diesel (GM) power\nlibit, like new. Capable of cutting 14,000; 1 single drum jammer mounted on International\ntruck. 1 TD14 International (''actor cat. Tandem logging trailer.\nW. T. Areshenkoff, Box 680,\nGrand Forks.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS\nFridays, ph. 366-R or 483-R,.\nUSE LLOYD'S CORN AND CAL-\nlous Salve and Pads for painful\ncorns and callouses \u2014 prompt\nrelief. Salve 50c. Pads 25c at\nFleury's Pharmacy, Nelson;\nSalmo Drugs, Salmo, and all\ndruggists.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\n.......      .13\n     4.95 '\n 58\nGiant Mascot \t\n 09V4\nGranduc \t\n     1.12\nMighland Bell ...'\n     1.25\nKootenay Base Metals\n 01\nNational Ex   \t\n 21\nPioneer Gold \t\n     1.30\nPremier Border \t\n 0714\nQuatsino \t\n 19\nSheep Creek \t\n 36\n      4.25\n..   ; .0414\nSilver Standard   ..'\t\n 15\nSunshine Lardeau \t\n 10\nTaylor  \t\n 10\nTrojan \t\n 17\nOILS\nAltex  \t\n 15\nA P Consolidated\n 37\nCalgary & Edmonton\n    18.50\n      1.75\nHome           \t\n    16.00\nNew Gas Ex \t\n      1.15\nOkalta Com \t\n      1.40\n,   18.25\n.36\n    12.75\nRoyal Can \t\n 25\nSparmac _\n 15\nUnited  .\n      2.20\nVanalla \t\n.17\n1.22\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberla Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt .\n      1.35\n      1.25\nB C Forests \t\n    11.12V-\nB C Power     1\t\n    39.25\nB C Telephone\n    43.00\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B  \t\n    16.50\n      4.00\nInland Nat Gas \t\n     2.50\nLucky JLager.. .   \t\n     4.35.\nMacM & Bloedel B\t\n    27.25\n     1.40\n    32.50\nTrans Mtn \t\n    46.00\nWestminster Paper ...\n    23.50\nWestern Plywoods \t\n....   13.00\nUNLISTED\nBid   Ask\nAlta Gas Trunk \t\n14.50   14.75\nTrans Can Com \t\n29.25   29.SC\nTrans Mtn Unit \t\n46.00   47.50\nWestcoast Com\t\n24.25   24.75\nWestcoast.Trans. \t\n90.00   92.00\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal \t\n42.50   43.5(\nCan. Bank of Com. ...\n44.00   45.0C\nImp. Bank of Canada\n46.00   48.0(\nRoyal Bank of Can.....\n63.00   64.00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund  \t\n7.96    8.7;\nCommonwealth Int\t\n6.53    7.18\nGrouped Income \t\n3.24    3.54\nInvestors Mutual \t\n9.29   10,05\nLeverage \t\n4.50    4.95\nCollege-For-Fun\nStudents Scored\nBy Keenleyside\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CP) - Canada will soon become \"an educational slum\" unless drastic\nsteps are taken to improve the\ncountry's educational system, Dr.\nHugh L. Keenleyside said Monday night.\nDr. Keenleyside, former Canadian diplomat now director-general of technical assistance administration for the United Nations, spoke at an open meeting\nat Queen's University.\n\"Most of our university students come because they were\ncrafty enough to select solvent\nparents,\" he said.\n\"No student who is capable of\ndoing real university work and\nwho is prepared to work seriously at it should be prevented\nfrom attending college by lack of\nmoney. If Canadian authorities-\nlocal, provincial and federal\u2014are\nnot prepared to do something\nabout it, they should be replaced\nby those who will.\"\nDr. Keenleyside criticized, the\nadmission of \"permanent juveniles\" who go to college for social\npurposes, fun, fame or money\nand who do \"their best to turn\ncolleges into country clubs for\nunderdeveloped  adolescents.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., FEB. 19 1958 \u2014 7\nMARKET TRENDS\nLondoner Wins Over\n$500,000 in Poo!\nLONDON (Reuters) - W. J.\nBrockwell, 29, won more than\n\u00a3?00:009 in Ihe hiWest soccer\npool in England's legalized gambling setup, the pool promoters\naP:\"''uropd Tuesday.\nHis take\u2014all tax-free\u2014totalled\nE2M.028.\nBrockwell, foreman for a London firm of wine dealers, was\nIhe only bettor in the pool- to forecast correctly eight ties in Saturday's professional soccer games.\nHis winning entry cost him only\ntwopence, but he probably had\na series of twopence stakes, using a system of mathematical\nformulae.\nThe previous high for a pool's\nwinner was t^OS.O-TI, won by a\nwidow last November.\nAlthough the coupon was in his\npamA. i|, wg,q ^rockwnll't; 25-vp<tr-\nold wife, Kathleen, who chose the\nmatches that won them the fortune.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFinest direct-drive\nsaw ever built...\nMcCULLOCH'S\nnew\nSUPER 44!\nTrans Canada \"C\"\n4.85   5.25\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\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.\nSee Ihe\nThrifty Mae\np. $189\u00bb\nEASY\nTERMS\nSEE\nH.   \"Fritz\"   Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket nudged ahead slightly\nTuesday and set its second record in two days for the lightest\ntrading of 1958.\nVolume dropped to 1,680,000\nshares compared . with 1,700,000\nMonday and was the smallest\nsince Nov. 11 when 1,540,000\nshares were traded.\nThe Associated Press average\nof '60 stocks rose 10 cents to\n$160.50 with industrials up 30\ncents, rails unchanged and utilities up 10 cents.\nGulf Oil gained 1%.\nIn a generally lower Canadian |\nsection of the New York Stock\nExchange, Walker - Gooderham\nlost 14, Aluminium Ltd. %, International Nickel Vi and Canadian Pacific ',\u00ab. Mclntyre Porcupine lost a gain of 1 to close\nunchanged.\nFargo Oil gained V4 in the Canadian section of the American exchange. Canadian Marconi and\nMolybdenite erased earlier drops\nof ys each.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket closed mixed Tuesday in\nmoderate trading. Golds ended\nwith an advance of more than a\nhalf point on index for a new\n1958 high.\nIndustrials rallied late ln the\nsession and advanced slightly\nhigher. However, base metals\nand western oils were fractional\nlosers.\nFinancial institutions' posted\nthe highest gains during the session.\nAmong pipelines, Trans Can-\n29%, also a 1958 high. Trans-\nada Pipe Line advanced % at\nMountain Pipe Line lost IVi at\n46V4.\nSenior base metals were mixed\nto lower. Among golds Kerr-Addison added % at 17a,i.\nWestern oils eased among sen- j\nior issues. Pacific gained fractionally but Canadian Husky and\nHome B were losers. Fargo Oils\nclimbed 25 cents among junior\nissues.\nIndex changes: Industrials up\n.06 to 414.46; golds up .56 to\n79.42, base metals off .27 to 147.56\nwestern oils off .81 to 129.75.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Prices\nwere mixed Tuesday on the Montreal and Canadian Stock Exchanges. Changes ranged to\nmore than a point. Trading was\nselective and light.\nBanks, utilities and newsprints\nwere higher. B. C. Power gained\nVi at a new high of 40.\nPipelines, refining oils and\nmiscellaneous stocks were lower.\nTrans - Mountain Pipeline at a\nnew low of 47. and Interprovincial Pipeline at 41 dropped a\npoint each. Imperial Oil declined\n3\/4 to 39%.\nInternational Nickel pushed up\nKt to 72% in an otherwise fractionally lower base metal group.\nBeverages and steels were\nmixed.\nProducing mines were mixed.\nPenny issues were mixed in a\nfive-cent range.\nClosing averages: Banks up .34\nat a new high of 47.17, utilities\nup .4 at 137.1, industrials up .2\nat a new high of 238.6, combined\nup .2 at a new high of 204.7, papers up 5.00 at 1,099.32 and golds\noff .25 at 68.72.\nPlesner Family\nSail For Italy\nHALIFAX (CP)-Mr. and Mrs.\nJoseph Plesner and their son David, who disappeared from Toronto last June and spent the last\nseven weeks trying to get back\ninto Canada, sailed from ttiis\ncountry for the last time Monday night.\nThe trio, ordered deported by\nthe immigration department, left\non the liner Saturnia for Italy\nand then Israel.\nKnown as Arthur Morris and\nhis nephew, Len Jacobs, while\nthey operated a $1,000,000 car\nbusiness In Toronto, they mysteriously left that city, their business, two homes and yacht.\nThe Plesners, who entered Canada in 1952' from Britain under\nthe names of Morris and Jacobs\nwere held up by immigration officials here since Dec. 26 when\nthey tried to re-enter Canada under the name of Plesner.\nWhile they were away from\nToronto their business was sold\nto Colonial Finance Company\nwhich held a $159,000 mortgage.\nThe younger Plesner was\nwanted by police in Toronto on a\ncharge of criminal negligence\nand bail jumping.\nWIDE PARKLAND\nThere are four national parkj\nin British Columbia covering 1,-\n000,000 acres and 112 provincial\nparks totalling 8,000,000 acres.\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n514 Railway St.    Nelson, B.C.\nI USE THIS FORM \"j\nTo Order Extra Copies of\nI 23RD ANNUAL\nj PICTORIAL\nj AND\nj INDUSTRIAL\nl EDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER\nCARRIER OR TO THE DAILY NEWS\nCIRCULATION  DEPARTMENT.\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES  PLAINLY  IN\nBLACK  PENCIL\nName .\nAddress ;\t\nCity      _\t\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\n[_n_gS(\u00bb mm\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Spe\ncializing in Plywood. Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect. 3600 E Has\ntings St., Vancouver, B.C., GLen\nhurn 1500\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\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 Mam.\nClean, quiet rooms at $2 to $4.\nRamp parking across the street\nCOMPARE BEFORE BUYING\n'58 PLYMOUTH'S\nAHEAD FOR KEEPS!\nLOOK A' HERE!\nSPECIFICATIONS:\n1\nWindshield\nArea \t\nTotal glass\nArea\nTrunk Area\nSteering Wheel to\nSeat Back . 15.0 cu. ft.\nBrake Lining\nArea   \t\nPlymouth\n1444 sq. in.\n4148 sq. in.\n35.6 cu. ft.\nCarF\n979 sq. in.\n3259 sq. ln.\n29.5 cu. ft.\nCar'C\n1138 sq.\n3491 sq. In.\n25 cu. ft.\n12.5 cu. ft.' 14.7 cu. ft.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nWE WILL DELIVER BY OUR\nown truck pullets of any age.\nDelivery to be' made In July or\nAugust. Orders taken from now\non. No deposit necessary. Sound,\nhealthy stock guaranteed. White\nLeghorns, New Hampshires,\nWhite Rocks and Cross breeds.\nAppleby's Poultry Farm, Mission\nCity. B.C.\nWAiM'l'ED-AN AYRSHIRE DAIRY\ncow recently freshened or about\nto frejhen. Apply Box 8843, Nelson Daily News.\nAGRICULTURAL B.C.\nApproximately 6.500,000 acres\nof British Columbia may be\nclassed as arable and potentially\narable land.\n180 sq. in.     180 sq. in.    158 sq.\n* EXCLUSIVE FOR PLYMOUTH\n* SAFETY RIM WHEELS\n\u2022^r Torsion Bar Suspension\n* PUSH-BUTTON  AUTOMATIC\nif SURE GRIP DIFFERENTIAL\n+ SEPARATE  EMERGENCY\nBRAKE.\nNOTE:  We  can  offer you\ntremendous  savings  on\nBrand New 1957 PLYMOUTHS\nCome in Today - See our big\n\u25a0 displays in the lower - floor\nShowroom.\n(3MH1\nName  ...\nAddress\nCity   __\nName  ...\nAddress\nCity   _\nName  ..\nAddress\nCity   ....\nName  ...\nAddress\nCity    .....\nName  ...\nAddress\nCity    ....\nYour Own Nome ...\nYour Own Address\nCopy j\\)C a^ \/C Postage\nPlus 5% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 390 per copy covers wrapping and mailing\nby us to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain\nor the United States.\nPKCNE   1844\nI\nI\nW.V-    \"S^n   *_::.__    G\u00a3__B\nJ\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., FEB. 19, 1938\nA Common Expression Is\n\"MIND over Matter\"\n\u2022   \u2022\n\/ BUT\nWhat really matters is when you make up your\nMind to use a complete vitamin and mineral\ndiet supplement such as\nPARAMETTES\nIn Liquid or Tablet Form\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nAdult\nSkating\nClub\n8:00 to 10:00\nTODAY\nFERGUS MAKES\nINTERNATIONAL\nBIRD TEAM\nMONTREAL (CP)-Bert Fergus\nof Vancouver was named Tuesday\nto the sixth and final playing position on Canada's 195B Thomas Cup\nteam which will meet the United\nStates in the triennial international\nbadminton competition.\nThe Canada-United States tie,\nNorth American zone final, is to\nbe held at Long Beach, Calif.,\nFeb. 28 and March 1. The winner\nwill go to Malaya in June for the\ncup quarter-final against Thailand.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nNew York \u2014 Gene Armstrong,\n158V4, Elizabeth, N.J., outpointed\nCharley Joseph, 156, New Orleans,\n10.\nProvidence, R.I. \u2014 Chico Vejar,\n159'\/4, Stamford, Conn, outpointed\nBobby Dalton, 156, Chicago, 10.\nSydney, Australia \u2014- Tommy\nRomulo, 134Vi>, Philippines, knocked out Russel Sands, 134'\/4, Australia, 7.\nSPORTS\nFIRST PLACE SKIER in slalom and downhill events\nof Northwest Intercollegiate ski meet at Kimberley was\nDon Bruneski, above, Rossland boy who was an entry\nfrom Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash. Bruneski\nis also entered in the same events in the Canadian ski\nchampionships, a Snow Fiesta event, this weekend.\n\u2014p. Wormingfon phofo.\nWarriors Blank Leafs\nShorten Flyer Lead\nYour\nfirst taste\ntells you\nwhy\nROSSLAND (CP) - Rossland\nWarriors netminder Reno Zanier\nracked up his second consecutive\nshutout on home ice Tuesday night\nas the Warriors blanked the third-\nplace Nelson Maple Leafs 2 - 0\nin a Western International League\ncontest.\nThe victory fanned Rosslands\nhopes of overtaking Spokane\nFlyers in the remaining four games\nleft on their schedule. Rossland\nnow trails the leading Flyers by\ntwo points. Nelson is well back\nin third spot.\nZanier turned aside 22 shots\nwhile Gus Adams at the other end\nof the rink was good on 36.\nDefenceman Don Fletcher and\nYogi Kraiger did the scoring for\nthe Warriors. Taking advantage\nof Nelson's weak clearing Fletcher\nscored on a low screen shot in the\nfirst period.\nKraiger scored on a screened\nslapshot from the blueline while\nLee Hyssop of Nelson was sitting\nout his second penalty of the season for the only goal in the second\nperiod.\nSUMMARY\nNelson\u2014goal:  Adams;  defence:\nSeveryn, Stewart, Parker, McDougald; forwards Malacko, Hyssop, Appleton, Maglio, Shockey,\nMartini,  Koehle,  Haldane.\nRossland \u2014 goal: Zanier; defence: Kraiger. Fletcher, Ferguson, Lofvendahl; Forwards: Andrews, Desrosiers, Lucchini, Lenardon, Demore, Chorney, Mclntyre. Turik, Steliga.\nFirst period\u20141. Rossland, Fletcher 9:42.\nPenalties \u2014 Lenardon, Shockey,\nhigh sticking, 12:39; Koehle, tripping 19:51.\nSecond period -I 2. Rossland,\nKraiger (Lucchini, Mclntyre) 6:22.\nPenalties\u2014Hyssop, slashing 4:40;\nMaglio, holding 16:40.\nThird period \u2014 no scoring.\nPenalty \u2014 Fletcher, hooking\n1:51.\nShots \u2014 Adams 36, Zanier 22.\nCanada's most distinguished\ndecanter\nMellow, light-bodied Calvert\nHouse Canadian Rye WhiBky\n... smooth with water\nor \"on the rocks.\" In a sleek\ndecanter that does it justice\u2014\nand says nice things about\nyour taste,' too. All at a\nvery modest price.   ,\nCALVERT-Created for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published of displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia. \u25a0\nPackers (op\nPlayoff Opener\nBy The Canadian Press\nKelowna Packers, the Becker\nTrophy winners for 1958, got off to\na good start Monday night in the\nOkanagan Senior Hockey League\nplayoffs.\nPackers defeated Penticton Vs\n3-1 in the first game.of their best-\nof-seven semi-final series. Kairv\nloops Chiefs will meet Vernon Can\nadians Wednesday night in the\nlirst game of the other semi-final\nseries.\nThere was no action Monday\nnight in the Western International\nLeague, where regular play continues until March 1.\nMoe Young led Kelowna wilh a\npair of goals Monday night while\nHarry Smith got a single. Joe\nKaiser picked up two assists.\nClare Wakshinski was the lone\nscorer for the Vs. There was no\nscore in the game until Young\ncracked it for the Packers at 4:18\nof the third period.\nOne goal, indicated by the goal\njudge following a scramble in front\nof the Penticton net, was disallowed by referee Gordon Hamilton,\nwho assessed 11 penalties during\nthe game.\nHansen, Hadden Rinks\nOnly Double Winners\nBy  JOHN   SHORT\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Ina Hansen of\nthe host Kimberley Curling Club\nTuesday won easily her first two\nmatches in the eighth annual British Columbia Women's Curling\nchampionship to advance, along\nwith the Lois Haddon rink of Vancouver, to the favorite's role in\nthe six-rink round-robin that is expected to end Thursday.\nOriginally, entries were expected\nfrom each of B. C.'s seven curling\nzones, but the Prince Rupert rink,\nrepresenting the northern B. C.\nzone was forced by lack of finances and the length of the journey to forego the tourney for this\nseason.\nMrs. Hansen, who concludes her\nterm as president with the conclusion of this spiel which is a highlight'of the third annual Kimberley Snow Fiesta, had an easy time\ndefeating the Margaret Ottem ag\ngregation of Kamloops 11-1. In the\nafternoon, she and her mates,\nthird Isabel Leith, second Ada\nCalles and leads Sherry Sander\nson had more difficulty, but not\nmuch, as they stopped the Chilliwack rink of Doreen Burgess\n12-3.\nOnly other double winner, of the\nspiel so far is the Lois Haddon\nquartet of Vancouver which whipped defending. Western Canada\nchamp Marj Fuller of Nanaimo\n12-5 in the first round and Les\nCmolik of Kelowna 10-3 in the afternoon. Mrs. Fuller's rink bowed\nto Ottem in the afternon 9-7 as a\nlate rally failed.\nWith only five matches assured\nof being played, the defending\nchamps are certain to have a difficult time overhauling their rivals. If either Mrs. Hansen or Mrs.\nHaddon runs victorious through\nthe trio pf games today, the spiel,\nto all intents and purposes, will be\nover.\nIn case of ties, games will be\nplayed by way of settlement on\nThursday.'\n\u2022 Unaccustomed to the exceedingly\nkeen ice, the Ottem rink in the\nmorning and the Cmolik squad in\nthe afternoon found going exceptionally tough. Leading 7-2 after\nsix ends, the Haddon quartet played the final four ends in strictly\nknock-out fashion protecting their\nlead.\nSkips drew for position before\nthe early draw Tuesday and fortunately for the competitive aspect of this well-run and supremely\nhospitable affair, Hansen does not\nmeet Haddon until the final round\nwhich should, quite naturally, at\nLorraine Crapp\nFighting for\nPlace on Team\nMELBOURNE (AP) - Lorraine\nCrapp, recognized a year ago as\nqueen of free-style swimmers, was\nstruggling Monday to win a place\non the Australian team for the\nEmpire Games.\nBeaten for the first time in\nfour years last Saturday over her\nspecial distance, 440 yards, the\n20-year-old Olympic title-holder set\nher sights Monday on the 110-\nmetre race in the Australian championships.\nUnless she wins or places well\nin this event in today's finals, she\nmay miss out on the Empire\nGames completely.   '\ntract a large crowd if the situation remains unchanged.\nThe Burgess rink of Chilliwack\ntrampled 11-2 by Cmolik in the\nmorning round, had difficulty making even routine draws and takeouts as they were held off the\nboard until the fifth end, when\nthey tallied one.\nResults: First round\u2014Mrs. L.\nHansen. Kimberley beat Mrs. Margaret Ottem, Kamloops 11-1; Mrs.\nLois Haddon, Vancouver beat Mrs.\nMarj Fuller, Nanaimo, 12-5; Mrs.\nLeslie Cmolik, Kelowna, beat Mrs.\nDoreen Burgess, Chilliwack 11-2.\nSecond round\u2014Mrs. Margaret Ottem, Kamloops, beat Mrs. Marj\nFuller, Nanaimo 9-7; Mrs. Ina\nHansen, Kimberley beat Mrs. Dor\neen Burgess, Chilliwack 12-3; Mrs\nLois Haddon, Vancouver, beat Mrs\nLeslie Cmolik, Kelowna 10-3.\nSpring\nSweaters\nJUST ARRIVED!\nThe New Shades\nof Ban-Ion Sweaters\nRED\nPOWDER\nZIRCON\nCHAMPAGNE\nBy Warren Bros.\n$10.95\nEMORY'C\nLTD.    \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nFour Rinks Still Unbeaten\nCHARLOTTETOWN (CP)-Two\nOntario teams, Alberta and Prince\nEdward Island held unbeaten records after four rounds of curling\nin the Canadian high school championships here Tuesday night.\nOntario dropped Quebec 12-11\nin an extra-end thriller to keep\npace with Northern Ontario\nwhich* topped winless Newfoundland 17-9 in the evening draw. The\nrinks now have a four win-no loss\nrecord. Eleven rounds will be\nplayed in the round-robin tournament.\nPrince Edward Island held off\nNova Scotia 9-6 for its second\nwin of the day and now has three\nwins and no losses. Alberta\nwhich drew a bye in the fourth\nround has a similar record.\nManitoba which had difficulty\ntaking a 9-8 decision from New\nBrunswick in 11 ends had a 1-3\nrecord at the end of four rounds.\nBritish Columbia had little trouble\npiling up an early lead and coasting to a 14-3 victory over Saskatchewan. The west coast province\nhas a 1-2 record.\nPEI SQUEAKED THROUGH\nIn the afternoon round Prince\nEdward Island squeezed Saskatchewan 6-5 while Northern Ontario\ndefeated Manitoba 15-7. Ontario\ndowned Newfoundland 13-8 and\nAlberta gave Quebec its first setback in the bonspiel with a 14-4\nverdict.\nThe fifth round is scheduled for\nthe Charlottetown Arena at 2\np.m. AST 11 p.m. MST today.\nIn. the afternoon tension was on\nevery delivery in the battle between PEI's skip Arthur Burke\nand Skip Fred Hansen of Maple\nCreek, Sask.\nThe islanders trailed 3-1 going\ninto the sixth end but came up\nwith a counter in the sixth and\ncounted two in the seventh when\nHansen had to make a double\ntake-out only to pinch to P.E.I,\nrock back a shade. In the ninth,\nBurke laid a front guard with his\nfinal stone to foil Hansen's attempt to get at two inside.\nP.E.I, vice-skip Allison Saunders and Burke combined with\nsome fine strategy in the 10th end.\nSaskatchewan was forced to eliminate Saunders' stones. Burke's\nwas narrow leaving on his first\nand left Saskatchewan with one.\nHansen was light on his final and\nBurke conceded the single count\nto give his rink the win.\nAlberta's Bernie Sparkes continued with his fine draw game,\npeppering the outside rings to\nrun up a healthy lead as Quebec\ndeliveries tended to be heavy and\nsailed through the house.\nNorthern Ontario and Manitoba\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiimiiiiiiiii\nAdditional Sport\nOn Page Two\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nwaged a cagey battle until ths\nfifth end when Northern Ontario\npicked up five for a 10-2 advantage. The Manitobans picked up\nthree in the seventh end but skip\nTom Tod got four in the next end.\nStandings follow:\nW    _\nOntario   4     0\nNorthern Ontario    4     0\nAlberta      8     O\nPrince Edward Island   3     0\nQuebec   ...'.    1     2\nBritish  Columbia      1     2\nSaskatchewan    1     3\nNew Brunswick     1     3\nNova Scotia  \u201e    1     3\nManitoba     1     3\nNewfoundland    0     4\nSTRIKE CLOSES PORT\nDUBLIN (AP) - The Port of\nDublin was shut down Monday\nby a strike of 1,000 dockers in an\ninter-union dispute.\nREXILLANA\nFor That Tickling Cough\nPleasant to take.\nFor Children and Adults.\nPrice 65e\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nRocket Year's\n' TORONTO (CP) -Maurice\n(Rocket) Richard, most prolific\nscorer in the National Hockey\nLeague, Tuesday was named winner of the Lou Marsh Memorial\nTrophy as 1957's outstanding Canadian athlete.\nThe five-man judging board voted unanimously for the 36-year-old\nMontreal Canadiens right winger.\nThe 16-year NHL veteran has scored 504 goals in regular season play\nand another 70 in playoff games.\nRunner-up was Gerry James,\nwho broke the Canadian professional football scoring record last\nseason as a 'fullback wifh Winni-\noeg Blue Bombers of the Western\nInterprovincial Football Union.\nThird was Al Balding, Toronto\nprofessional golfer who won approximately $30,000 on the North\nAmerican golf circuit last year.\nAlso nominated was Lindy Lind-\nmoser, Vancouver boxer who won\nthe United States amateur light-\nheavyweight championship.\nRichard, who broke in with the\nCanadiens in 1942, reached the\nhigh point of, his career Oct. 19\nlast year when he became the only\nNHL player to score 500 goals.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSaskatchewan Junior\nRegina 4 Estevan 3.\nTrio Edging Up on\nScoring Leaders\nMONTREAL (CPI - A three-\nway challenge to Montreal Canadiens' pace-setters in the National\nHockey League scoring derby\ncame last week from as many\nclubs.\nAndy Bathgate of New York\nRangers, Bronco Horvath. of Boston Bruins and Gordie Howe of\nDetroit Red Wings each collected\nfour points to nibble at the margin\nof leader Dickie Moore and Henri\nHave\nThe Job Done Right\nY\nC GRAVt^\nLIMITED        \u2022*\nPHONE 815\nMA.STKR  PLUMBER\nl^iT\n3fr HAIGH\n-jS        TRU-ART\n.v'\"1\n\" y      Beauty   Salon\nf            576 Baker St.\nV-,\nPhone 317\n(Pocket Rocket) Richard, the runner-up.\nMoore and Richard collected only\nthree points between them\u2014Moore\na single assist and Richard two\ngoals.\nOfficial statistics show Moore\nwith 67 points and Richard with\n65. Moore is the top goal-getter\nwith 30 and the Little Rocket the\nbest assist producer with 41.\nHOWE MOVES UP\nHowe, back in action after an\ninjury, picked up two goals, and\ntwo assists and moved from sixth\nto fifth place with 51 points.\nScoring leaders:\nG A  Pt Pm\nMoore, Mtl     30   37   67   46\nH. Richard,  Mtl .   24   41   65   40\nBathgate,   NY       22   34  56   38\nHorvath,   Bstn       23   31 '54   51\nHowe,  Det   \u00bbU   26   51   28\nGeoffrion, Mtl     27   23   55   51\nBucyk, Bstn     17  29  46   47\nDelvecchio, Det    15' 31   46   18\nStasiuk. Bstn     19   26   45   42\nHenry, N Y      26  17  43    2\nBeliveau,  Mtl     17  26   43   71\nBy every rule...inside or out\nnothing compares with\nChevrolet!\nYES, th* '58 Chevrolet givei you even mere than Hi\nfamous predecessor . . '. more length, width, lowness\nand road clearance too. Over nine Inches more length,\nfor luxurious legroom throughout. More width to give\nyou extra elbow room inside the car and 25% more load-\ntoting trunk space too. -\nAnd Chevrolet offers you a new, glamorously low\nsilhouette, as much as three and a half Inches lower in\nthe superb Impala models, for eye-catching beauty and\na lower, more road-hugging centre of gravity.\nYet this isn't all I Chevrolet gives you a whole big\ninch more road clearance this yearl Here's a feature\nwhich salesmen and rural dwellers will find indispensable in their dally driving, one you'll be thankful for a\ndozen times a day when you're on holiday, travelling tha\ncountry roads In your Chevy.\nYes, any way you look at It, Chevrolet gives you the\nmost for your money. Ih dimensions, in value, in all-'\nround superiority. That's why Chevrolet outsells every\nother car, on the market, year after year. Make sure you\nget this kind of quality when you buy. Get Chevolet, th*\nlow priced leader. It's measurably the best.\nBy every rule...\nBuy Chevrolet!\nSee Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer for Quick Appraisal \u2014 Prompt Delivery\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS Ltd.\n323 VERNON ST.\nPHONE 33\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"}]}}