{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0433301":{"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\/contributor":[{"value":"Gibbon, A. W.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Ramsden, C. W.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-06-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1960-01-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0433301\/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":" WHPIilil!\n^tl^ipmmmm^w   \u25a0    -mm\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ,\n\u00bbPPiv. \u25a0 ^|P\nTfte Inferior's\nLargesf Da\/7y Newspaper\nDecember Daily Average  Press  Run\u20148981\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columhia area\n.\nWEATHER    FORECAST\n-Kootenay: Mostly cloudy. A few\nsnow flurries. Little change in\ntemperature. Winds light. The low\nand high at Cranbrook 5 and 25,\nCrescent Valley 10 and 25.\n63\nVol. S7\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, JANUARY 8, 1960\nNot More Than 7o Dally, lOo Saturday.\nNo. 217\nLabor Minister to Head Quebec Government\nEisenhower Asks\nRich Countries\nShare With Poor\nJells Russia To Use Truth\nIn Coming Negotiations\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP)\u2014President Eisenhower Thursday challenged Russia to use truth rather than political\nopportunism in efforts to reduce the world's arms race and\nprevent a nuclear disaster\u2014\"the ultimate insanity.\"\nAt the same time he called on the wealthier democracies to join in a gigantic free world effort to channel\nmore aid and investment funds into India, Pakistan and\nother less fortunate countries.\n\"Free world decisions in this matter may spell the\ndifference between world disaster and world progress in\nfreedom,\" Eisenhower said in a State of the Union speech\nthat won prolonged applause\nIn an attentive Congress.\nEmphasizing that the West\nfaces \"formidable\" competition\nfrom Russia in gaining the hand\nof uncommitted nations, he proposed that the wealthier democracies willing to increase aid\nform a \"common meeting\nground.\" He also -suggested that\nthe existing 17-country Organization for European Economic Cooperation be used to study how\nthis meeting ground can be prepared.\nWhile warning of Russia's competition Elsenhower observed\nthat East - West tensions have\neased. But whether Russian pronouncements of peaceful intentions can be converted into an era\nDe Gaulle\nAccomplishes\nMuch in Year\nBy HAROLD KING\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Gen. Charles\nde Gaulle Thursday completed\nhis first year as president of the\nFifth Republic with the nation\nprospering and his lofty position\nunchallenged.\nHe can look back with pride at\nthe first year since the war that\nFrance has not been plagued with\ninflation and with recurrent cabi-\nn&t crises\nLast Jan. 8, the 69-year-old lead-; tor deep space probes.\nof lasting promise \"remains to be\ntested by actions.\"^\nEisenhower charged the Russians were using political opportunism in negotiating with the\nWest on a permanent nuclear\nweapons tests ban. He hoped new\nnegotiations to open at Geneva\nnext week will' be conducted in a\nspirit of truth and not politics.\nSEEKS INDUSTRIAL PEACE\nAt home, he proposed increasing use of the conference table\nrather than legislation in attempts to maintain industrial labor peace and prevenl another\ncrisis such as that which hit the\nsteel industry.\nHe will offer legislation in new\nattempts to reduce a huge wheat\nsurplus, protect the voting rights\nof lhe American-.Negro -and increase the present 4V4 per cent\ninterest ceiling on long-term government bonds.\nIn his last year in office Eisenhower also plans to show a surplus of some $200,000,000 in the\ngovernment's 1960-61 fiscal year\nending next June 30 and to plan\nfor a balanced budget for 1961-62.\nDEFENCE BUDGET\nHe indicated the defence budget\nof some $41,000,000,000 will remain unchanged, though prices\nhave risen a bit, cutting into the\npurchasing power of the defence\ndollar.\nSpending on space efforts however will be doubled to about\n$1,000,000,000 a year, with the\nU. S. concentrating on development of powerful rocket engines\ner of wartime Free French forces\ntook over as first president of the\nrepublic he had founded. For the\npreceding eight months, he ruled\nFrance as premier, laying the foundations for a new form of government.\nIn these 20 months, France has\nmoved from the brink of civil war\nt stable government and era of unprecedented prosperity. Exports\nrose to an all-time record in 1959.\nBusinessmen forecast an even better economic outlook this year.\nOne big reason for the improved\neconomy is that Sahara oil now is\nflowing through pipelines across\nAlgeria.\nThe problem of Algeria itself is\nfar from settled. It nearly produced civil war and it still is a major\nheadache for de Gaulle.\nOn missiles, Eisenhower announced the U. S. Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile is fully\noperational, capable of hitting a\ntarget the size of an airport 5,000\nmiles away. A \"growing\" number of U. S. nuclear-powered submarines armed with Polaris missiles also has become \"one of our\nmost effective sentinels for\npeace.\"\n\"America possesses an enormous defence power,\" Eisenhower\nsaid. \"It is my studied conviction\nno nation will ever risk general\nwar against us unless we should\nbe so foolish as to neglect the defence forces we now so'powerfully\nsupport.\"\nEisenhower told Congress that\nincome should exceed outgo in\n1961-62 by $4,200,000,000.\nSbwL C&w&al\nBy PYRAMUS\nSaw a public works sand truck\nwith a tali square box on the back,\nand ladder for the sandman to\nclimb into the box, rolling along\nthe street filled with sand \u2014 a\nshovel sticking upside down\nstraight out of the load.   \u2022\nIt looked for all the world os\nthough they had dumped the sand\nright on top of the poor sandman,\nand all that could be seen was the\nshovel sticking indignantly out of\nthe top.\nGremlins in the linotype machines have been busy again. Mrs.\nW. R. Proctor showed up as Mrs.\nPorter in yesterday's Street Corners. (Now leave that type alone,\nJoe!)\n\"One, two, three, four . . . that's\nfive shoes\". \"Six, seven, eight teapots.\" Have you seen them counting buttons, needles, nails, bolts\nand   inlaid   linoleum   in   various\nCOLD ON PRAIRIES. Most of Western Canada will have\nbelow-normal temperatures in the long-range lorecast of the United\nStates weather office. Eastern Canada is expected to have near-\nnormal and above-normal readings for the month of January.\nMap also details expected precipitation across the country. Tables\ngive normal readings for various centres during the period.\n(CP Newsmap)\nRussia to Test New\nRockets in Pacific\nMOSCOW (AP) _ Russia said\nThursday HgnVit will test a \"powerful new rocket, built to reach other\nplanets, over the central Pacific\nwithin a few weeks. Officials asked\nthat ships and planes keep out of\nthe area where if will fall.\nThe rocket is expected to land\nin a target area roughly 1000 miles\neast of the Marshall Islands U.S.\nnuclear testing grounds.\nThe Russians did not say how\nmany rockets would be fired, but\nOnce Messenger Boy,\nAntonio Barrette To\nBe Sworn in Today\nBy RICHARD DA1GNAULT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014Labor Minister Antonio Barrette, who\nonce earned a few cents a day as a messenger boy, Thursday was named premier-designate of Quebec'\nHe will be sworn in with members of his cabinet this\nmorning.\nHis nomination at a Union Nationale Party caucus\nas party leader culminated intense behind-the-scenes activity that started within 24 hours of the death of the late\nPremier Paul Sauve Jan. 2.\nTop party officials and influential party spokesmen\nsaid early after Mr. Sauve's death that Provincial Secretary\nYves Prevost, 51, was the apparent choice as new leader.\nBut as time went on the name\nof Hydraulic Resources Minister.\nDaniel Johnson, 44-year-old Montreal lawyer, bobbed up more and\nmore often in Montreal and in\nthe provincial capital.\nWednesday, it. became evident\nduring the late afternoon that a\nsubstantial Montreal group supported Mr. Johnson and that Mr.\nPrevost, a Quebec City lawyer,\nwas the favored choice of Quebec\nregion party members.\nThe two men went out to supper together. When they returned,\nMr. Prevost announced he was\nwithdrawing from the race and\nMr. Johnson announced he was\nswinging his support to Mr. Barrette.\nMr. Barrette, 60, a tall blue-\neyed man who with the late Premier Duplessis was one of the\nfounding members of the Union\nNationale Party, announced his\nacceptance of the party's choice\nat a press conference following\nthe 40-minute caucus.\nUNANIMOUS CHOICE\nHe emphasized the provincial\n., ministers and the party\u2014as had\nearth satellites and undertake spaee.\u00ab.been \u201entjcipated \u2014\u25a0 were unanim-\nflights to planets of the solar sys-j am in choosir,g him to follow in\ntem-\" I the steps of Mr. Sauve and Mr.\nWith a view to perfecting this\nrocket with a high accuracy of\nflight, its launcliings without the\nlast stage will be made within the\ncoming months of 1960 into the\ncentral part of Uie Pacific ocean,\nremoved from places of intensive\nshipping, airlines and fisheries,\"\nthe statement said.\nThe announcement said ships of\nDuplessis.\nindicated there will be more than the Soviet fleet will be sent to the\ntarget area to carry out necessary\nmeasurements,   and   the   i i r s t\none.\nThe rockets will be launched\nwithout their final stage \u2014 the\nstage that would become either a\nsatellite or a spaceship reaching\nanother planet.\nTass, official news agency, in a\nstatement said the tests were for\nthe purpose of developing \"a more\npowerful rocket to  launch heavy\nlauncliings would be between Ja>i\n15 and Feb. 15.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) - Canadian\ndollar up 7-64 at $1.04 57-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds; week ago,\n$1.05   1-32.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllltlllll\nBoy Takes\nLaundromat Ride\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Three\nyoungsters looking for; a thrill\nthought up a new pastime Wednesday\u2014riding in a whirling\nlaundry dryer.\nA frantic woman called police to report that the three\nboys, about 10 years old, were\ndropping dimes in a laundromat dryer and going for spins,\n\"Incredible,\" said laundry\nowner Trevor Watt.\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIMIII\nB*C F of L Urges Public\nOwnership of Utilities\nstores around town, Good old Jan\nuary, and stock-taking.\n* *   *\nSEEN IN PASSING . . . Al Wood\nshovelling snow Irom the front\nwalk. . . . Russell Hawes shovelling it off his front steps. . . . Jim\nGrady, the only helicopter pilot\noperating out of Nelson at the present time, striding down the street\nwith hands in pockets. . . . Jim\nDawson having his afternoon tea\nwith members of the regular Tea\nDrinkers Guild or Coffee Sippers\nAssociation ... all oldtimers..\n* \u2022   *\nThe man who didn't own a dog\nwas more than a little annoyed\nwhen a neighbor telephoned at 3\na.m. and complained: \"Your dog\nis barking so loudly that I can't\nsleep.\" The neighbor hung up before he could protest.\nSo the 'following morning at\nexactly 3 a.m. he called his neighbor and said: \"1 don't have a dog.\"\nVICTORIA (CP)-Tlie 120,000-\nmemiber British Columbia Federation of Labor KCLC) in a brief\nto the cabinet Thursday urged\ncomplete public ownership of\npublic utilities, with emphasis on\nelectrical power and natural gas.\nThe brief urged lhat the publicly-owned B.C. Power Commission lake over all existing and\nfuture electrical power and natural   gas   developments.\nThe brief also urged:\nThat the new B.C. energy\nboard plan development of lhe\nPeace River and an experienced\nconservationist and a labor representative should be added to\nthe board;\n\"Gimmicks\" In retail sales\nshould be investigated:\nAmendment of the Equalization\nof Assessments Act to exempt\nold age pensioner homeowners\nfrom its provisions;\nA 30-per-cent increase in social\nassistance payments;\nFree school for all, from kindergarten   through   college   with\nCHRISTMAS TREES\n$7 MILLION INDUSTRY\nWINNIPEG (CP) - The Christmas tree business was worth nearly $7,000,000 to Canadian forest\nowners in 1959.\nJ. Bruce Kelly of Fredericton\ntold the Canadian forestry association's annual meeting Thursday\nthat Christmas trees provide a substantial addition to farmers' incomes in Nova Scotia and New\nBrunswick and are also big business in British Columbia.\nconstruction  of  more   vocational I    A   government\nschools,   especially   in   the   B.C. j scheme;\nInterior to assist native Indians;      '\u2022'\"\t\nChanges in forestry regulations\nto create more public working\ncircles and less tree farm licence\nareas\u2014with opening of private\naccess  road  to  the  public;\ncar   insurance\n13 PGE Cars\nJump Track\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Thirteen\ncars of a southbound 21-cair Pacific\nGreat Eastern Railway freight\nwere derailed Wednesday night\nnear Hixon, between Prince\nGeorge and Quesnel.\nThe railway said precautions are\nbeing taken to prevent explosion of\nbutane gas in one of the derailed\ncars, They said, because of below\nfreezing weather, there is little\ndanger of exlosion.\nAn official of the government-\nowned Line said there were no injuries and the cause of the derailment of the cars in the middle of\nthe train near midnight is not\nknown.\nHe said it also is not known\nwhether the tank car carrying the\nbutane is leaking because of the\naccident.\nRoutine precautions were being\ntaken.\nPassengers are being taken\naround the derailment by bus and\na northbound and southbound\nfreight, scheduled to pass the area\nwill be held up until the lino is\ncleared.\nExclusion of citizens irom coroner's witness duties except for\nthe actual tune required to give\nevidence;\nAssumption by the province of\nthe full cost ol arterial highway\nupkeep within city or municipal\nboundaries;\nMore camp and picnic sites\nand investigation of river pollution problems and more fish\nstocking;\nA more equitable distribution\nof provincial electoral ridings\u2014\nand an easing of limitations on\nthe time in which a tenant-elector may register to vote;\nA drive to obtain more skilled\nmental hospital workers through\npay and working conditions improvements.\nOn matters of concern primarily to organized workers, the\nfederation prefaced its proposals\nwitli an offer to take part in a\nbroad conference of labor, management and government delegates \"to examine all aspects of\nindustrial relations.\"\nThe federation voiced objection\nto the conference called by Labor\nMinister Wicks in 1958, stating\n\"it was designed solely to provide further avenues for management to advocate restrictive\nlabor legislation.\"\nThe brief noted a recent request was made by employers'\ngroups for a royal commission on\nlabor unrest. It proposed, If there\nis such a commission, it should\nstudy also prices, profits and\nwages, unemployment and safety\nin industry.\nHe said he would first deal\nwith the, question of federal aid\nto universities \u2014 a matter which\nis about settled as a result of the\nspade work done by Mr. Sauve\u2014\nand continue in the path set out\nby his predecessor in the complex\nfield of federal - provincial relations.\nPolitical observers said that\nMr. Barrette, who has a reputation as a gentleman and a top-\nnotch labor mediator, would combine unique qualities in dealing\nwith federal authorities on the\nmain issues whtch still separate\nQuebec's views from those of the\nother provinces in Canada.\nSelf-educated and well read--he\nhas a remarkable personal library at his home in Joliette, 40\nmiles northeast of Montreal\u2014Mr.\nBarrette speaks impeccable\nFrench and his English is described as \"good\".\nWELL KNOWN\nHe is well known in Ottawa.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker has\nbeen at his home. Mr. Barrette\nhimself has campaigned actively\nfor the federal Progressive- Conservatives. |\nIt was obvious to veteran observers the party has chosen a\nman who, because of his 15 years\nin the Union Nationale cabinet,\nwould rally warm support from\nold - line elements. On the other\nhand his progressive outlook on\nsocial legislation and in labor\nmatters would win over Uie young\nfactios in the party.\nMr. Barrette broke with the\nlate Mr. Duplessis in 1957 over\nlabor policy matters.\nThis was the year the workers\nof Gaspe Copper Mines, Limited,\nat Murdochville went on strike\nand workers at the huge Aluminum of Canada works at Arvida\nhad walked out.\nMr. Barrette had personally\nmediated a settlement at Arvida\nbut he had not been able to touch\nthe Murdochville conflict apparently because Mr. Duplessis, as\nattorney-general, had sent a detachment of provincial police\nthere.\nOfficial reason given for the\nwithdrawal of Mr. Prevost from\nthe race for the leadership was\nthat he had called on his physician and had been advised his\nhealth would not allow him to\nshoulder the heavy burden of the\npremiership.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nGenera\/ Refreafs After\nSaying BBC \"Ha^-Ridden\"\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The furtive gentleman is a retired lieutenant-\ngeneral, splendid war record, afraid of nothing that comes in\ntrousers.\nHe is Sir Ian Jacob, who gave up his job last week as director-\ngeneral of the BBC.\nHe is furtive because in an unguarded moment of a farewell\nradio. broadcast he made a downright soldierly remark.\nHe 'Said he believed the BBC was somewhat hag-ridden.\nThe reaction among the corporation's women employees was\nexplosive. The general sensed immediately that he had stirred\nup something which couldn't be settled by summoning a few\nregiments from the reserve. So he retreated to. his home in\nSuffolk.\nSome of the girls consulted a dictionary and established that\nanyone being harassed by a hag is \"being ridden by a malicious\nfemale sprite, an evil spirit, a demon or infernal being in female\nform.\"\nTo ascertain whether the government-run TV-radio service is\ntop-heavy with women, a telephone call was made to the BBC\npublic relations department.\nThe department, it appeared, is manned largely by women.\nA lady explained in a frosty voice:\n\"The corporation employs 9199 men and 6273 hags.\"\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllll\nAnthropologist Says\nWoman Is Anastasia\nBy HANS G. FREITAG\nHAMBURG, Germany (AP)-A\nleading German anthropologist\nsaid Thursday he is virtually certain that Anastasia, youngest\ndaughter of the last Russian Czar\nescaped a Bolshevik firing squad\nmore than 40 years ago and is\nalive in West Germany.\nProfessor Otto Reohe said he\nhas informed a Hamburg court of\nhis opinion that Mrs. Anna Anderson is right in contending that\nshe is the sole surviving child of\nCzar Nicholas II.\nReohe also said that anthropological .evidence disproves the\nclaim by the German royal house\nof Hesse which says that Mrs.\nAnderspn is .actually a Polish\nfarm'worker, Franziska Schanz-\nkowsld.'\nPreviously, most medical experts had said there is no evidence of any relation between\nMrs. Anderson and the Czarist\nfamily.\nRECHE GIVES REASONS\nBut, asserted Reche, all these\nresults were wrong. He listed\nthese reasons:\n1. Photographs of the young Anastasia and of Mrs. Anderson\ncould not be accepted as evidence\nagainst her because of the development of photographic techniques.\n2. Previous    expert,    opinions\nwere based on the study of only\na few characteristics while his\nfindings are the result of the\nstudy of about 100 different\npoints.\n3. Previous experts failed to\nconsider the natural changes\ncaused by age in a woman.\n4. No previous expert ever compared the hereditary characteristics of Mrs. Anderson with those\nof the Schanzkowski farming family of which she was alleged to\nbe a member according to the\nHouse of Hesse.\n$14 Million Lost\nIn Forest Fires\nOTTAWA (CP) j- Forest fires in\nCanada gobbled up an estimated\n$14,465,235 of wealth in 1958. It\nwas the worst fire year on record.\nA summary of losses was released Thursday by the department\nof northern affairs and national\nresources. The summary is based\non reports submitted by the provinces and on the department's own\nassessment of losses in the Yukon\nand Hid Northwest Territories.\nThe year 1958 is the latest for\nwhich complete figures are available.\nHighlight of Festival\nTo Be Madam Butterfly\nGREEN AGAINST\nRECOGNITION\nOF RED CHINA\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Recognition of Red China by Canada\nwould 'bei a heavy blow to' Canadian allies in Southeast Asia, External Affairs Minister Green said\nThursday.\nIt likely would do little to inorease trade between Canada and\nRed China, he added.\nThe minister told 600 students\nwho packed the University of B.C.\nauditorium here;\n\"Many Southeast Asian countries\nnow are fighting Communism and\nour recognition of Red China would\nbe a heavy blow to our friends\nand allies there, particular.y Ma\nlaya.\"\nSNOW IDLES\n7000 LOGGERS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Ice and\nsnow conditions have forced 40\nper cent of the logging and sawmill\noperations in the British Columbia\ncoastal area to stop work.\nCompany officials said Wednesday 7000 of the 12,000 usually working in the woods at this time of\nthe year have been laid off.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The Gilbert\nand Sullivan opera HMS Pinafore\nwill be stgaed at Stratford, Ont.\nby Tyrone Guthrie for 24 perfor\nmances.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The opera\n\"Madam Butterfly\" with an all-\nCanadian cast will highlight the\nthird annual Vancouver International Festival next summer.\nNicholas Goldschmidt, festival\nartistic director, told the society's\nannual meeting Wednesday night\nsoprano Teresa Strates, one of the\nnewest stars at Metropolitan\nOpera, will sing the lead.\nRichard Verreau and Louis Quil-\nico of Montreal, Patricia Rideout\nof Toronto and Karl Norman of\nVancouver will also be in the cast.\n\"Madam Butterfly\" will be pros\nduced and directed by Nathaniel\nMerrill who is doing it for Metropolitan Opera this season.\nRetiring president W. C. Main-\nwaring announced Governor-General Vanier will be a patron of the\nfestival this season.\nIndustrialist Sir Ouvry L. Roberts was elected president to succeed Mr. Mainwairing. He is also\nchairman of a committee which\nwill direct a campaign to raise\n$150,000.\nMr. Mainwaring said expenditures have been pruned and the\nfestival is expected to keep within\nits budget this year.\nOther attractions lor the July 22-\nAug. 16 festival include Bolivian\nviolinist Jaime Laredo, the Clare-\nmont quartet from the United\nStates, Vancouver Cantata Society\nchorus under Hugh McLean, Vancouver quartet and the Bach choir.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nOSWEGO, Kan. (AP)\u2014The Democralic majority on the Labette\nCounty commission Wednesday re-elected the lone Republican member-as chairman.\nThe two Democrats couldn't agree which one of them should\nhave the chairmanship. So they settled the matter by re-electing\nDave Westervelt.\nThat's how he got the job last year.\nEIGENBILZEN, Belgium (Reuersi\u2014A gigantic gasoline-pinching\nplan has squirted up in the face of a laborer here.\nThe laborer, identified by police only as J. Claessens, saw a way\nto make his fortune from the pipeline through this area which supplies the Britisli forces in Germany.\nJust tap the line, he thought, and then peddle the gas at cut-rate\nprices.\nHe tapped it all right. But the pressure was so great it sent gas\nsquirting sky high. ....\nClaessens couldn't stop it and 6000 gallons spread itself over the\ncountryside in three days before anyone else could.\nClaessens was charged with attempted theft.\nMONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)\u2014Mrs. Wanda Bush, librarian for\nthe Montgomery Advertiser, says she uses four categories in filing\nphotographs of the state's 67 sheriffs:\n1. Those wearing hats.\n2. Those with bushy hair.\n3. Those with receding hairlines.\n4. The bald ones.\nOAKLAND, Calif. (AP)\u2014A policeman alleges that a pet monkey\nmistook his hand for a bunch of bananas and that it's worth $15,000.\nRolling T. Lewis, lias filed a damage suit for that amount against\nhis neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Labrado, saying he was\npermanently disfigured and crippled when the monkey bit his little\nfinger.\n PlfiPPPPWPiP^l\nipuppiw\n.     PWUJJJ^IU^ W \u00abU.'.L \"'\u25a0\" \"-'JWPI\n-*\u2014\nJRJIIIJIL.L.L. J1I.IHI l.iLJ.tlJ.JII. IU.I LJ1.1.I..LJ.im^\u00abM\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960\nTonight\nShows\nDOLORES      PATRICIA    NEVILLE\n'      MICHAELS OWENS BRAND.\nCincmaScOPE;\nSaturday Matinee\u2014r'TALL MAN RIDING\"\nWith Randolph Scotf\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\n\"THE HANGING TREE\"\n(Color)\nGary Cooper \u2022 Maria Schell\nNEWS - CARTOON\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON     ?3 31\nCalgary     19 26\nKimberley  - 1 27\nPenticton    23 28\nVancouver     34 41\nSpokane       11 26\nGaglardi Alleged To\nHave Defied Court\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Sun\nsays affidavits on file in Supreme\nCourt here allege that Highways\nMinister! Gaglardi helped a man\nborrow money to complete a highway building contract.\nIt says the affidavits were filed\nto a suit seeking to jail the minister for contempt of court for allegedly ignoring a court order.\nK. E. Meredith said Wednesday\nhe filed notice in Supreme Court\nthat he will apply Jan. 15 for\ncommittal of the minister for allegedly disobeying an order of\nMr. Justice T. G. Norrls of Oct.\n29.\nTlli Sun says .the affidavits say\nFUNERAL FOR\nCHILD HELD\nRev. E. A. Hircock of First Presbyterian Church officiated at the\nThompson Funeral Home Thursday, Jan. 7, at the funeral services\nfor Charles Harvey Moir. six-year-\nold son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey\nMoir of Nelson, who died suddenly\nJan. B. ,\nThe hymns, \"Safe In The Arms\nof Jesus\" and \"Abide With Me,\"\nwere sung. Mrs. W. A. Manson was\norganist.\nPallbearers were Walter Hark-\nness. Oscar, Karlson, Walter S.\nBailey and E. S. Hall. Interment\nwas in Nelson Memorial Park.\nOver Eaten?\nAYDS\nVitamin and Mineral\nREDUCING PLAN\nVanilla Flavor or\nChocolate Flavored\n26 Days $3.39\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\nPhone 1203      433 Josephine St.\nNelson, B.C.\nthe minister helped by writing a\nletter to money lenders that the\ndepartment held $160,000 as security for the undertakings under\nthe contract on a highway project near Revelstoke, B. C.\nDISCUSSED LOAN\nThey allege, the paper says,\nthat the minister attended a\nmeeting between the creditors\nand Ihe contractors at which the\nnecessity of an earlier loan of\n$24,000 was discussed.\nThe Sun quotes them as saying\nBurton Lymtmrner, a director of\nL and M Logging Ltd. arranged\nIhe loan; Burton Glazer, a Seattle\nmetal dealer, and Rodney Rosen-\ncrantz, a Portland businessman,\nlent the money; and L and M\nLogging, which later changed its\nname to Union Contractors, borrowed the money.\nThe order referred to in Mr.\nMeredith's notice was obtained\nfor Glazer. It diected that moneys due to Union Contractors Ltd.\nof Vancouver from the highway\ndepartment be paid to the Montreal Trust Company as receiver.\nDEFIED ORDER\nMr. Gaglardi is alleged lo have\npaid the money to the contractor j\nin defiance of the order.\nThe order came after Glazer\nobtained judgment in Supreme\nCourt from Mr. Justice J. G. Rut-\ntan Oct. 26 for $25,516 on a promissory note of Union Contractors and C. W. Thornton of Troy,\nMont.\nThe note was assigned to Glazer by Rosencrantz.\nMr. Gaglardi commented Wednesday night that the funds belonged to a contractor who applied for them and that they were\nreleased to him.\n\"We would have no legal right\nlo withhold funds as far as I\nknow. The funds were released\nby the controller in my department. I don't tell Ihe controller\nwhen to release funds.\"\nMixed Reaction to Leap\nYear From Boys and Qals\nThis ls Leap Year, providing an opportunity for the gals to \"pop\" the question.\nWhat do the single souls think of the Idea? To find the answer Daily News reporter\nMickey Carlton and photographer Ian Brown took a sample of public opinion. Here\nare the answers to the question, as given hy seven of Nelson's young people in that\n\"dangerous age\" group most likely to be efffected by the variations Leap Year brings\nin customs. Not surprisingly, the boys and the girls, don't all see alike on this matter.\nwsm.\nJUNE GRAFFI, 21\nAccountant\n\"Sure I approve. Girls mature\nfaster than boys, who are sometimes too slow ln popping the\nquestion. I think the girls deserve a chance.\"\nMICHAEL PADOWINIKOFF, 20\nLaborer\n\"It's a great Idea ... for tthe\nguys that want to get married.\nAnyway'a fellow can always say\n'No.' I wouldn't mind being asked, just so I could say 'No'.\"\nJANET WEISNER, 17\nUsherette\n\"It's not a good idea. I think\nthe proposing should be left to\nthe boy. I'd never propose to my\nboy friend, but never.\"\n-_JI\nmi*'    '\u25a0   \/ m\ngaff\nM\nw\u00a3m\nsmfafsmm\nRONALD HEDRICK, 18\nBellboy\n\"I'm   ducking  any  proposals,\nLeap Year or not. Do I think it's\na good thing? Sure ... for the\nother fellow.\"\n18\nclearance\nDrapery Dept.\nHAND SCREEN PRINTS. REG. 3.95 YD. 7 to 10    1    QC\nyd. pieces, 48\" wide. Special, yd. I \u2022, J\nREG. 3.95 SATIN  BACK RAYON.  5 to 10 yd. 1    QC\npieces. 48\" width. Special, yd. \u25a0 \u20223' J\nREG. 1.95 COTTON BARKCLOTH. Floral prints,   1    *Q\ngold overlay. 45\" widlh. Special, yd.   I \u2022\"\/\nREG.  1.19 YD.  COTTON  BARKCLOTH. 1    f\\f\\\n36\" widlh. Special, yd.     I .UU\nREG. 4.25 RAYON PANELS.  41\"  X 81\".  Ail J   Q(-\ncolors. Special, pair *~*,J\nREG. 2.95 CAFE SETS. Cotton prints. 1   Qf\"\nSpecial   I \u20223' J\nREG. .55 YD. COTTON PRINTS. JQ\nSpecial   *0,\nBOXED\nPILLOW SLIPS\nV2  PRICE\nDRAPERY\nShort ends, under 5 yards.\n$1.00 Yd.\nERLING\n441   Baker St.\nNelson\nHome\nFurnishers\nPhone 553\nsaMi\nI\nBERNIE MINER, 22\nPipe Welder\n\"I guess it's all right but I\nthink a guy should have.some\nsay In case he isn't ln a position\nto marry. I guess a fellow's got\nto go along with It.\"\nNEW BUILDING PLANNED\nPENTICTON (CP) - A new\nbuilding to accommodate agricultural shows and other civic\nevents is being planned for construction adjacent to Memorial\nArena. Directors of the Penticton\nPeach Festival Association have\ntormed a committee to study the\nproposal.\nBARBARA  WAKEHAM,\nSales Clerk\n\"I think It's a swell Idea. I'm\nsure thinking of asking someone.\nI wish every year were a Leap\nYear.\"\nSTEVEN JAMES, 22\nDoorman\n\"I don't expect any proposals\nand don't want any. Not even on\nLeap Year do I want the girls\nlo ask me. I'll do the asking.\"\n$60,000 Winter\nWorks Program\nSet for Nelson\nWidening of Morgan Street and\nrenewal of water mains and' services form the major share of the\nproposed winter works program\nfor Nelson. The program is designed to alleviate winter unemployment.\nThe program is expected to cost\nbetween $50,000 and $60,000. Provincial and federal governments'\nshare of (his will bo from $18,000\nPromotion Group Outlines Plan\nTo Be Presented to Chamber\nMust See How Much\nCommunity Interest\nPlans of a group of Nelson businessmen seeking to\n\"promote and publicize\" Nelson and district took another\nstep upward Thursday night.\nClose to 40 persons approved a motion asking that\nthe Chamber of Commerce be approached to ask its support in calling another general meeting of interested people\nat a meeting at the Nelson\nriotel.\nAlbert Maida, chairman, and a\ngroup representative of the meeting, will approach the chamber.\nA guest at the meeting was David\nP. Fairbank, president-elect of the\nchamber.\nFirst meeting of the group was\nheld Dec. 21, when Mr. Maida and\nErnest Boulet, organizer for International Woodworkers of America,\noutlined a program designed to\npromote the district.\nJO|NT ACTION\nPurpose of another general meeting in joint action with the chamber will be to determine interest\nof the community in proposals of\nihe group. Mdre ideas and suggestions will be welcomed, Mr. Maida\nsaid.\nAt no time had he suggested\nthat the group proposed a new\norganization for Nelson, Mr. Maida\nsaid in setting out the purpose of\nthe meeting. Whole purpose had\nbeen to bring out ideas and to\nassess the interest of the people in\npublicizing Nelson. To be successful, the plan would require \"a lot\nof interest on a large scale, not\nby just a few.\"\nThen, it was planned to present\nfindings of the group to the Chamber of Commerce for study and\nconsideration. The chamber could\nthen decide what part it might\nplay in the plan.\nBIG PROGRAM\nOutlining the ideqs which had\nbeen presented so far, he said that\na big program designed, to attract\nthe people of Kootenay-Boundary\nas well as tourists might be called\nthe Nelson Rose Festival.\nIt might be operated by an\nexecutive body of a president,\neight vice-presidents, a secretary\nand treasurer, which would have\nits own constitution and be registered under the Societies Act.\nThere would be committees handling finance, publicity, entertainment, advertising, lodgings, facilities, industrial and programs.\nSpecial committees would be in\ncharge of such programs as the\nSummer Bonspiel, in conjunction\nwith the bonspiel or separately; a\nlogging   show,   golf   tournament,\nKaslo Mine\nTONIGHT\n10:15 p.m.\nCKLN\nHEAR\nHon.\nmichcael Starr\nMINISTER OF LABOUR\nin the radio series\n\"The Nation's Business\"\nthe Progressive Conservative Party\nKASLO \u2014 Funeral services for\nGerald Bennett Cumming, killed iri(\na mine accident at Duncan Lake\nJan. 3, were held here Thursday at\nSt. Andrew's United Church. Mr.\nHerman J. Aaftink officiated.\nHymns sung for the 20-year-old\nvictim were \"The Old Rugged\nCross\" and \"Nearer, My God To\nThee,\" Mrs. Irene Bisbee was organist. Thompson Funeral Home\nwas in charge of arrangements.\nPallbearers were A. MacLand-\ners, W. Meers, J. Surina, W. Koz-\nen. C. Jacura and B. Garrett. Interment followed in Kaslo ceme-\nlery.\nArt Classes\nProve Popular\nApproximately 95 per cent of the\nexpected registration in art classes for adult's and children in Nelson has been reached. The remaining registration is expected to be\nin by the weekend.\nTwo classes, including an art\nlecture class for adults and a practical art class for children from\nsix to 12 years of age, will be held\nweekly under the supervision of\nZeljko Kujundzic and Howard\nMeredith.\nMr. Kujundzic. an art teacher\nat the Nelson high school, plans to\nlecture on the philosophy, theory\nand history of art while Mr. Howard, art teacher at the junior high\nschool, will concentrate on practical art for the children.\nChildren's art classes will be held\n:e the old post office building from\n:l 30 to 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for\n15 weeks. Adult lecture classes will\noe held in the high  school  each\nto $20,000. It will get under way\na^ once.\nThe winter works programs are\nencouraged by the federal government, which bears 50 per cent of\nthe direct payroll costs. The provincial and municipal governments\neach absorb 25 per cent of the\npayroll costs. The municipalities\nalso pay for equipment operation\nand material.\nTWO-WAY STREET\nMorgan Street will be converted\nfrom a one-way to a two-way roadway for about 900 feet, or, roughly,\nthree blocks. About 3000 cubic\nyards of rock will be excavated.\nRenewal of water mains and\nabout 50 services is planned on\n12 blocks: four blocks on Behnsen\nStreet, five on Elwyn, two on Cedar, and one on Edgewood Avenue.\nAnother two blocks on Fourth\nStreet will be included if time permits. Total cost is estimated at\n$28,000.\nA half dozen smaller projects\nwill cost in the neighborhood of\n$2000 to $3000 each. They include\nlocal improvements such as sanitary sewer extensions, additions\nto sidewalks, renewal of some\nsteps and sidewalks, particularly\nwooden ones, and building of concrete bridges over Anderson Creek\non Gordon Road and Fell Street.\nThe federal government is still\nstudying an application for assistance in building a new approach\nto the Kootenay Launch Club.\nRejected were plans to carry\nnut drainage work at Nelson Memorial Park and to remove stumps\nand dead trees on boulevards.\nP.O.   Revenue\nSteady Last Month\nNelson post office sold $17,199\nworth of stamps and supplies during December, a slight drop of\nahout $300 from December 1958.\nBox rentals and other revenue\namounted to $339.\nDuring the same period 4483\nmoney orders were issued, and\n4677 paid out. Total transactions\ncame to $200,433 for the month.\nThursday beginning at 7:30 p.m.\nThis will be a 10-week course.\nThe art lectures will be held on\na similar basis as the \"living room\nlearning\" classes held during the\nfall of each year. The children's\nclasses will be art through demonstration. '\n'iiiiiimiHiiiimiiiiiimiiimiin!!!\nNo Sense Waiting\n-Do Ir Now\nSome cribbage players go all\ntheir lives without ever holding\nthat famed \"29-hand\" but 15-\nyear-old George Steed, son of\nDr. and Mrs. H. G. Steed, 911\nJosephine Street, could see no\nfuture in that.\nSo, last night, playing his\nbrother Bob a friendly game\nabout 8 o'clock George started\nUie New Year off right by picking up tile crib player's dream,\nthe top scoring hand possible.\nGeorge, who lias been playing the game only a couple of\nyears, says he usually beats\nbrother Bob but \"not that\nbad.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!\nhockey, a one-day fishing derby encompassing Greenwood, Arrow\nLakes, Kootenay Lake and East\nKootenay; a parade, water show,\nmixed sports for adults and children, trap and target shooting contests, queen contest and a rose\ncontest.\nFund  raising  events  would  be\nthe  queen   contest,   logging  show\nand the tish derby.\n\"NEW  INDUSTRY\"\nThe rose-growing contest would\ndraw interest from the entire area\nand with gardens in every corner\nof the district sprouting roses,\nwe'd probably start another secondary industry.\"\nThe new group could assist by\nsetting up an organization to promote, publicize and stimulate the\nentire community, and to assist\nother groups in putting over their\nprojects.\nBUILD BOOSTERS\nThe promotion would increase\nthe knowledge of local people in\nthe area and encourage than to be\ncome boosters rather than knock\ners, lie said.\nIt would also help to attract\ntourists, by discouraging the attitude of \"grabbing the tourist dollar,\" then displaying no further\ninterest in their welfare.\nAnother purpose of the group\nwould be to \"spread the work\"\nthat'50 rather than 10 people would\nbe available for the various com\nmunity projects.\nThe idea of such a cooperative\norganization had been prompted\nby people who felt that city council\nand the chamber of commerce\ncould not lend assistance to one\nclub or organization and leave out\nothers. Their assistance must be\ndistributed. This had meant many\norganizations either ceased to function or were forced to reduce their\nactivities.\nCOMPLIMENTS GROUP\nGeorge Kaiway was first to com\npliment the group for its actions\nHe suggested a number of district\nareas where parks might be developed, urged six-day store opera\nlion and proposed a number oi\npublicity ideas.\nMr. Boulet outlined plans for a\nlogging show, but said that the op\nerators and employees would stage\na show only 11 a great amount oi\ninterest by the people was indicated.\nA. K. McAdams expressed disappointment at the small representation of businessmen and expressed the hope that \"five times\nas many\" would attend the next\nmeeting. He felt the group's plans\n\"in no way reflects on the work of\nthe chamber of commerce.\" The\nfact was that \"the load in Nelson\nrests on too few people.\"\nMr. McAdams complimented Mr.\nMaida on his community efforts\nand suggested he should be called\n\"Mr. Nelson.\"\nMr. Maida, pointing to new interest in Nelson being developed by\nthe Summer School of Fine Arts\nand Notre Dame College, called on\nR. B. Oliver and Father Aquinas\nto outline their activities. R. Mc-\nKeen, regional director, provincial\nprograms branch, George Latta,\nNelson businessman and M. B. Ryalls were other speakers-.\nLegion\nExecutive\nMrs. E. Elliott and A. P. Jeffery\nin a joint ceremony became presidents of the auxiliary and men's\nbranch of the Canadian Legion,\nbranch 51, at the annual installation of officers Thursday night.\nFriendship will continue to augment the past success of the Nelson branch and to encourage\nstaunch support by Legion members in an effort to create true\ncomradeship among its ranks in\n1960, James Hall, zone commander\nfrom Trail and installation officer,\nremarked prior to the ceremonies.\nThe Nelson branch of the Legion,\nlie said, has done muoh to encourage this idea. Curling, for example,\nhas developed into a very popular\nsport in the West Kootenay zone\ndue to the work ot the organization.\nPresident Jeffery remarked in\nhis president's report that \"team\nwork throughout the past year has\nresulted in accomplishments,\nthrough tireless work, in organizing the zone curling bonspiel, poppy campaign, banquets and other\nprograms.\"\nThe Ladids' Auxiliary of the Legion has climbed from what was\nconsidered a lost cause about one\nyear ago to an able part of the\nbranch.\n\"I believe there has been an excellent renovation due to these efforts,\" he remarked.\nOther officers in the men's\nbranch installed were: B. Mc-\nCreight, first vice-president; A. G.\nHarvey, second vice-president; H.\nA. Moir, trustee; E. S. W. Batty, 0.\nKettleson, L. A. Chase and K.\nFredrickson, newly-elected executive for two years and Fred Castle,\nsergeant-at-arms.\nLadies' Auxiliary officers are:\nMiss E. Forbes, first vice-president; Mrs. B. McCreight, second\nvice-president; Mrs. E. Wickens.\nsecretary; Mrs. B. Grey, secretary.\nAuxiliary executive officers are:\nMrs. A. O. Allen, Mrs. D. Thomp\nson, Miss ClarS Elliott and Mrs.\nF. Day. Scrgeant-at-arms is Mrs\nFred Castle.\nShow  Increase\nBank clearing figures in Nelson\nshow a slight increase in 1959 of\napproximately $2,000,000 above\n1958. Last year's total was $46,-\n503,299 compared with $44,634,463\nthe previous year.\nDecember of 1959 at $3,616,535\nwas down a bit from the 1958 figure Of $3,811,163.\nKI.EENHURN\nWESTERN   MONARCH\nGREENHILL      .   .\nCANMORE   Briquettes\nCoal\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nEATON'S\nSpecial\nJanuary\nClearance\nTeco Gas Hot Water Heater\n22 Imperial Gallon Cap.     77.00\nUsed Washers _. 1 \/3 Off\nSpeed Queen Washer\nI only. Fully automatic trtQQ QC\nas. low as     ZO\/i\/J\n1   only.\nAs  low as\nSpeed Queen  Dryer\n $219.95\nViking Stereophonic Set\n1 only, take advantage of this stock\nreducing price. U rr\\ f\\f\\\nReg. $585.00. Only      4DV.UU\nViking Hi-Fi\n1 Only. Adaptable for stereo. Regular\n$328.00. Reduced to \u00abo\"7n f\\f\\\nclear. Only _ *Z\/y.UU\nFrench  Provincial\nChesterfield   Suite\n1 Only. Milk Choc.\nTrade-in $60.00. ....\n$399.95\nViking\n12.5  Cu.   Ft.   Refrigerator\n1     Only.    Fully    automatic,    slightly\nmarked. Reduced $01Q ftrt\nto clear. Only     \\5IV.UU\nViking  Demonstrator\n21 - Inch  Television\nI Only.\nOnly ....\n$199.95\nUsed Westinghouse\n21 - Inch Television\n1 Only.\nOnly\t\n$99.95\nPHONE\n1860\nrrm EATON C\u00b0\n\u25a0\u2022       CANADA        ^^UUr\nNELSON\nBRANCH\n ,;,:,- -.  \u25a0,\u25a0.-.        .-.-.. ,   -\n1\nCranbrook Looks\nTo Expand Area\n55\nCRANBROOK - Outlining general plans for 1960 following the\noath of office to himself and the\ncity council, Mayor R. E. Eang\nsaid the major effort would be toward amalgamation of some 750\nacres outside city boundaries on\nthe north and east within the city.\nHe looked toward planned future\nhousing area development as recommended by Associated Engineering Services Ltd. for this addition.\nHe also said a major item would\nbe construction of a traffic island\nat the three-way intersection of\nVan Home and Baker Streets and\nEighth Avenue, This corner is presenting an increasing traffic problem, since Van Home is a desig-\nWILLIAM LOCKIE\nWinner of the 1959 Windermere\nDistrict Scholarship, sponsored\njointly by the District Farmers'\nInstitute, the Canadian Legion\nbranch 71, Columbia Lodge AF\nand AM, and Windermere District PTA, is William Lockie,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lockie\nnf Radium. He is a student ot\nUBC. The award is valued at\n$200.\nnated truck route through the city,\nwhile other through traffic diverts\nto Baker and Cranbrook Streets.\nA pedestrian crossing over Baker\nfrom Eighth Avenue adds to the\ncomplexity.\nStreet surfacing program for the\nyear includes 5A Street, Eleventh,\nNinth and Seventh Avenues between Ninth and Tenth Streets,\nNinth and Tenth Streets from Seventh Avenue to Eleventh and Ninth\nStreets respectively, Fifth Avenue\nfrom Seventh to Eighth Streets,\nand Eighth Street from Third to\nFifth Avenue.\nPLAN EXTENSIONS\nWater system extensions are\nplanned for installation on Third\nAvenue from Eighth to Tenth\nStreets, on Ninth Street from Third\nto Fifth Avenue, and on Tenth\nStreet from Third to Seventh Avenue. Sewer extensions for the same\narea are planned and this will provide all utilities for final development of the city residential extension area between Fourth Street\nand Smith Road. Plans for street\nlighting improvements were also\noutlined.\nIn Its current negotiations with\ntho National Union ot Public Employees toward contract renewal\nfor works department employees,\ncity council has counter-ottered\nfive cents Increase ln the wage\nscale which now starts at $1.56.\nThe Union had proposed ten per\ncent increase. Contract expires\nJanuary 31.\nAllowance of four per cent interest on prepaid taxes for 1960, based\non the 1959 tax less $40 if paid before March 31, was approved.\nThe works superintendent was\nauthorized to call tenders for a\ntractor-loader and backhoe, and a\nfront-end loader for his department. Inquiries will be made of\nAssociated Engineering Service\nLtd. concerning services available\non a small annual stipend basis.\nAlso to be investigated is cost of\ngarbage disposal by sanitary landfill method, compared to present\ncost of dumping and incineration.\no\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960 \u2014 3\nKimberley To Get\nUIC Claims Officer\nKIMBERLEY - An agent of ttiel McFarlane, MP for East Kootenay\nUnemployment Insurance Commis- has been negotiating to have a\nsion will be stationed here in the representative stationed at Kimber-\nnear   future.   The   announcement\ncame as the result of a campaign\nby Murray L. McFarlane, MP for\nKootenay East.\nFor over two months, Murray L.\nNoted Calgary\nBusinessman\nTo Be Speaker\nCRANBROOK - H.\"Gordon Love\nof Calgary has accepted the invitation of Uie Cranbrook Chamber of\nCommerce to be guest speaker at\nits annual dinner meeting February 8. He is president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. He is\nalso president of the Voice of the\nPrairie Ltd., Radio CFCN, of the\nFarm and Ranch Review, and of\nWestern Printing and Lithograph\ntag Ltd. at Calgary.\nMr. Love is vice-president ol\nBroadcast News Ltd., the radio\narm of Canadian Press, and also\npast president of the Calgary\nChamber of Commerce, director of\nthe Calgary Exhibition and Calgary Stampede, first vice-president\not the advisory board of the Salvation Army, treasurer of the Alberta\nMotor Association, and director of\nthe Shriners' Hospital for Crippled\nChildren at Winnipeg.\nExecutive meeting of the Cranbrook Chamber this week discussed the proper spheres for production of two tourist brochures now\nbeing prepared, one [or both Koo-\ntenays and one for East Kootenay.\nThey will report on this at the general membership meeting of the\nChamber next week.\nThe nominating committee ol\nHunt Strang. Gordon Dezall and\nArchie Bryden reported their proposed slate of officers for 1960\nstill incomplete.\nCivic Playschool Fun for\nTiny Tots and Mothers, Too\nproximately 55 children enrolled,\nis conducted in three classes which\nrotate every 35 minutes. The arts\nand crafts class and the painting\nand story-telling class are held in\ntwo rooms and the games and\nsongs class in the gym.\nWON THEIR BADGES\nLast week the children had a\nvisit from Fire Chief Elwyn Owens\nof the Nelson Fire Department who\nexplain to them a few simple rules\nof fire safety and handed out \"official fire inspector\" cards and\nalso pamphlets on fire prevention\nfor them to take home to their\nparents.\nley.\nMr. McFarlane announced this\nweek that he had been successful\nand soon a Kimberley man will be\nappointed to look after this area\nAlthough the representative will\nbe under the direct jurisdiction\nof the Cranbrook office, his appointment will have local unemployed a trip to the hub city to\nmake claims.\nKimberley business men recent\nly complained about unemployed\nhaving to make the 40 mile round\ntrip when they could not afford it.\nWhile he was still in office, ex\nmayor Cliff Swan requested that J\nMr. McFarlane look into the matter and see if there was not some\nway the situation could be alleviated.\nThe representative will undergo\ntraining at the Cranbrook office\nbefore he takes over here. Present\nplans call for him to operate rfom\nhis home, if this is not satisfactory,\narrangements may be made to\nopen an office in the city.\nAn official of the UIC office said\nlhe agent would be limited to taking claims and that he would not\nbe accepting employers orders for\nhelp.\nBy IAN BROWN\nA highly successful feature of the\nNelson Recreation Commission's\nwinter program is the playschool\nwhich has become an instantaneous hit with both children and\nparents.\nThe playschool is just what the\nname implies \u2014 children go to\nschool and play.\nConducted three times a week,\ntwo hours in the morning, toddlers\nfour and five years of age come\nfrom all over the city to the Civic\nCentre to do things constructively\nthat give them a sense of purpose\nand help prepare them for Uie\nall-important step of their young\nlives \u2014 Grade One. While doing\nthis, they learn how to get along\nand share things with others and\nat the same time have fun.\nMOTHER HELP\nAlthough part of the recreation\ndepartment's winter program, the\nplayschool is operated by the\nmothers themselves, who enroll\ntheir tots in the school at the\nnominal cost of one dollar a month\nplus half a day of their own time\nper month to assist as \"helpers\"\nin the classes.\nThe playschool is under the direction of Mrs. R. N. Bradshaw\nwho for seven years was special\nevents supervisor for the summer\nplayground program in the city of, . ,, .\nEdmonton. It was in that city that I \"ll\u2122.0\u2122!\"'!; s'\u201e0\":sor.edJby *T\nshe started from bare beginnings\ndiers which achieved singular sue-1   Next week the children will recess, ceive metal badges with a picture\nThe playschool, which has  ap- of Sparky the Dog on them. It will\nKimberley\nPropping for\nSnow Fiesta\nKIMBERLEY - With Kimber\nley's Snow Fiesta only seven weeks\naway the committees in charge\nstill have much to do. It is reported the queen contest tickets are\nselling well.\nThe three contestants are Jean-\nbe during this week that the children will hold \"Indian Week\" where\nthey will be dressed up as Indians,\nact like Indians and play Indian\ngames.\nRecreation director, Ernie Gare\nplaces emphasis on the fact that\nthe playschool is operated by the\nmothers for their children and that\nexpenses of running such a school\nare practically nil, because materials, such as cardboard, greeting cards, silver paper, etc., are\nprovided by Ihe mothers,\nMr, Gare also stressed the fact\nthat the operation of the municipally-owned Civic Centre is provided for by the taxpayers and\nthe building, which would otherwise be empty during morning\nhours, is being put to good use.\nHe takes pride that the playschool\n\"is a service to the taxpayers, especially those who cannot afford\nto send their children to regular\nkindergarten classes.\nFUN LEARNING. Pre-school\nyoungsters and their mothers\njoin hands to learn at the Nelson\nCivic Playschool. In the top\nphoto busily painting under the\ndirection ol Mrs. P. M. Charle-\nbois, are (left to right) Bobby\nVan Feggelen, Ronnie Bourden,\nMarilyn Walker and David Skel-\nton. In the picture at right the\nyoungsters and their mothers\nare Intent on a cutting operation.\nFrom left to right, Danny Gare,\nMrs. E. Gare, Richard Kruk,\nDavid Lambert, Mrs. W. G.\nLambert and Steven Koehle.\n\u2014Daily News photos.\nNOTICE\nPRIVATE BILLS\nNotice is hereby given that, pursuant to\nStanding Orders, no Petition for any\nPrivate Bill shall be received by the House\nin its forthcoming Session after Saturday,\nthe 6th day of February, 1960.\nDated  November 23rd,  1959\nEdwin  K.  DeBeck,\nClerk of the\nLegislative Assembly,\nBritish Columbia.\na  playschool  for  pre-school  tod-\nDR. WRIGHT\nALLOWED NO\nVISITORS YET\nTRAIL - Dr. Charles Wright\nhas suffered a coronary thrombosis and will be hospitalized for at\nleast a month, Mrs. Wright said\nThursday.\nAfter his release from Trail-\nTadanac Hospital, Dr. Wright then\nwill have lo spend at least a month\nin convalescence.\nMrs. Wright said that while the\nCominco consulting chemical engineer was \"making progress\" and\nresponding to treatment, his heart\nattack was lo be regarded as a\n\"very serious\" matter.\nDr Wright. 64, is not permitted\nto receive visitors at present.\nCommittees\nAppointed\nCRANBROOK - Mayor R. E.\nSang, reelected aldermen J. H.\nWard and Mrs. W. O. Green and\nnewly-elected alderman Edward\nLeonard were sworn into office for\n1960 by City Clerk G. M. Robertson in ceremonies at the city's\nstatutory council meeting.\nStanding committees for the\nyear, chairman first in each case\nare: finance, Mrs. Green, Mr. In-\nglis and Mr. Leonard: works and\nwater, Mr. McLeary and Mr.\nJones', electric light, Mr. Ward,\nMr. McLeary and Mrs. Green; fire\ndepartment, Mr. Jones, Mr. McLeary and Mr. Ward; parks and\nrecreation, Mr. Inglish, Mr. Jones\nand Mrs. Green: public relations,\nhealt hand welfare, Mr. Leonard.\nMr. Ward and Mr. Inglis. Mayor\nSang is ex-officio member of each\ncommittee and is city representative in the city-RCMP relationship.\nMr. Inglis is city member of the\nboard of hospital management. Mr.\nLeonard on the East Kootenay\nBoard of Health, and Mrs. Green\non the East Kootenay Employmenl\nCommittee.\nTrail Teacher\nBreaks Back\nIn Accident\nberley Road Cruisers Car Club,\nNancy Ann Patterson, backed by\nthe Ladies' Union Auxiliary 222,\nand Virginia Annetee Patterson,\nMarysville Lions Club entrant.\nBlairmore, Fernie, Creston and\nCranbrook will be invited to send\ntheir queens as guests of the Snow\nFiesta.\nThe snow sculpturing contest will\nonce again be one of the major attractions of the show. The possibility of holding toboggan and\nsleigh-riding races is also being\ninvestigated.\nJohn Rokosh, parade marshal! in\nformer years, attended a recent\nmeeting. He said he would be un\nSTARTS TODAY\nEnds Jan. 30th\nTRAIL (CP)-Junior high school\nteacher Trudy Tenford of Vancou\nver was resting comfortably ir\nTrail-Tadanac hospital Thursday\nwith four fractured vertebrae suffered in an accident on the Hopc-j able to act this year, but that the\nPrinceton highway last weekend\nMiss Tenford's car skidded and\ndropped down a 15-foot bank when\nshe was returning here after spending holidays in Vancouver.\nThe vehicle was put in driving\ncondition and she resumed her\njourney. When she arrived in Trail\nSunday she complained of a sore\nback to Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brett,\nwith whom she stays. They suggested a medical checkup which\nrevealed Uie  fractures.\nMiss Tenford has been placed in\na partial body cast. Medical officials are confident she will be able\nto resume teaching later this\nmonth.\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014Police said\nMrs. Linda Carruthers Jones, 19,\nfound dead in her home early\nWednesday is believed to have\ndied from an overdoes of narcotics. Her husband, Mel, is in hospital recovering from stab\nwounds.\nPrepare for\nMore Phones\nCASTLEGAR - Central office\nequipment that will provide connections for a future 400 new telephones is now being installed in\nthe Castlegar office of the B.C.\nTelephone Company.\nDistrict commercial and traffic\nmanager Tom Brett said installation crews began work this week\nand expect to complete the project in about two months. Castlegar  now has  1396 telephones.\nConstruction crews will begin\noutside cable work in February\nnorth of the office on First Avenue,\nacross the CPR bridge and west\non Columbia Avenue.\nUnderground cable will be placed as the weather permits. This\nincludes new cable leading into\nthe telephone office and removal\nof some aerial cables on Maple\nSlreet between Columbia and First\nAvenues.\nfile on past parades was available,\nand that he would act in a supervisory capacity if required.\nTrail Building\nValue Maintained\nTRAIL \u2014 The final building construction figures for Trail in 1959\nnow have been set at $1,042,960, only $26,737 lower than the 1958 total.\nTotal dollar value of building\npermits issued from the city hall in\n1959-was $1,069,697.\nLOWEST PRICED SEWING\nMACHINES\nIn the Kootenays.\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1510 Bay Ave.   Trail   Phone 2080\nPARSLOWS\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1532 Bay Ave.       Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationerv, Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane St.     Phone 11\nTrail,   B.C.\nMNl\/ARY\nSAVE AS MUCH AS $100.00 ON ONE ITEM\nReflectory Table\nPeriod design (solid walnut), rn   Cf\\\nReg. 79.50. Special J''Jw\nSlightly   Shop-Worn.  \u2014   Sacrifice.\nSAVE $20.00\nDining  Room Suite\nArborite finish, with buffet, 4 chairs and\nextending table. I'TQ   C(\\\nReg. 329.50. Special 4. I 7.J\\J\nSAVE $50.00\nBook Cases\nWalnut. Reg. 76.50.\nSAVE $20. Special .\nBlonde. Reg. 84.50.\nSAVE $20. Special\n59.50\n64.50\n1   Only\n3 Piece Sectional\nIn Red. Airfoam. zipper cushions, hardwood frame of solid\noak. Silimarized material specially designed to easily wash out\notherwise   damaging   stains. \u2014\nS9M-     289.50\nSave $10000\nYour gain is our loss on this\nextra-special.\n1 Only Ranch Style Dinette Suite\n2 extension leafs with smart inlaid design arborite top. Brass and bronze finish.\nRegular 199.50. 165   50\nSpecial\nSAVE $34.00\n2-Piece Chesterfields\nAll hardwood construction, airfoam zipper\ncushions, with 5-year guarantee construction.\nTwo shades brown, 1 chocolate, green,\naqua, blue. \") JJ It   Cf\\\nReg. 289.50. Special iJ\"i^v\nSAVE $55.00\n2-Piece Beige Chesterfield Suite\nTorsion-spring seat construction with 20-\nyear guarantee. *JQQ KC\\\nReg. 349.50. Special           i\/7iJU\nSAVE $50.00\n1  Only\n3 Piece Sectional\nIn green. One-piece wilh open table\nstyle end: one piece wilh mitred corner style; one with standard arm\nstyle. Reg. 448.50. 3\"7Q   Cf|\nSpecial J I 7*J\\J\nSAVE $70.00\n36x60   Dinette  Suite\nWilh 4 chairs, arborite 1 JA Cf\\\ntop.  Reg.   184.50.  Spec.  I JU.JU\nSAVE $54.00\nYour gain, our loss, on this\nbeautiful suite.\n2-Piece Bed Lounges\nSturdy construction. Valuable as seoond\nbed. Choice of colors. 1\"7Q   K(\\\nReg.  219.50.  Special '  l''Jw\nSAVE $40.00\n3-Piece Bedroom Suite Special\n6-drawer, plate glass mirror Mr. and Mrs.\nDresser. 4-drawer chiffonier, radio bed\nwith sliding panels. Choice of color: blonde\nor walnut. | A A   Cf\\\nReg. 199.50. Special IITiJU\nSAVE $55.00\nMATTRESSES\nSealy spring-filled, button- }n QC\nfree. Reg. 59.50. Special j5T.3r J\nSAVE $19.55\nSerta - Lux Mattress\nRestmore, button-free. 10-year guarantee.\nReg. 59.95. A A   C(\\\nSpecial T~T.J\\J\nSAVE $15.45\nScott-Atwater\nOutboard Motors\nBnil-a-Mnlic Ends Hand Bailing\nModern Electric\nBay  Ave. Phone  133\nTrail, B.C.\nCoffee Tables\nReg. 49.50\nVi  Price\nTable Lamps\nBUY ONE\nGet One  Free\nRecord Cabinet\nReg. 34.50. 77   1JA\nSpecial L I ,J\\J\nSave $7.00\nHassocks\nWith leg style.\nReg. from 15.95\n15% OFF\nLarge Selection of Other\nChrome and  Dining\nRoom Suites\nReg. from 69.00\nAt  Similar   Big  Reductions\nLarge  Selection   of\nBedroom  Suites\nat 10% Off\nHOME FURNITURE\n(NELSON) LTD.\n640 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1032\n \u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0  ~\u2014' \"\u25a0 ~\u2014~r-\n\" 'fV-,   ;.-.\u25a0--.  -;-V ,....\u25a0\u25a0    -\u25a0      . I ,      \u25a0.-.-..        :.,    :-..\u25a0       :..        .,,...,:.    .     .    ,      '...    \u25a0.    .      I.   ... .,       .     .,     .........     n;.      .il   I J ^ ;_   I,,, \u201e  ..J.  f L   ...    ..     ,,..,.    ,      ,. i\u201e J, ,..,,,..     .,  ,.,.   ,\n1 \u25a0' \u25a0    '      \" '\u2014\u25a0 7\n?^w?wwwwt$m\nNflamt Uatlj) Nmub\nestablished Apru  !2   IU02 Nelson,  B C.\nPuhllihed by the NEWS PUBUSHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bukei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSunduys and hdltduys in the centre 61 lhe Kootenays with\nthe largest dally circulation in the Interior oi BC.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall.  Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nC. W. RAMSDEN. Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMBlMHEK OP   THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DA1LV NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS' ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press u- exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot sll news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper  and also the local dews published therein.\n~\" Friday, January 8, i960\nCouncil Has Much To Consider This Year\nF. 13. Pearce. ..\n.. .Writes\nThe three major Issues with which\nthe city council will have to deal during the coming year are, according\nto Mayor Shorthouse, the matter of a\ncity hall, the provision oi a home for\nthe aged and the pollution of city\nbeaches.\nThe city hall issue has been a bone\nof contention for some time. The arguments for and against the use of the\nold post office building and the old\nhospital have been gone over so often,\nthat If it is at all possible, council\nmembers should approach the subject\nby forgetting past differences of opinion, discarding all fixed ideas, and\nmake their decision solely on the basic\nprinciples of suitability and economy.\nThere may perhaps be one other\nconsideration which will affect the\ncouncillors' decisions\u2014the desirability\nof using lhe old post office building\nas a city cultural centre. While such\na consideration may be of lesser\nweight, the council should bear in\nmind they are planning for the luture,\nand that year by year there are increases in community activities in regard to art, music and drama. Suitable\nquarters for such activities are becoming hard to find.\nMany of Nelson's difficulties stem\nfrom the lack of suitable sites lor\npublic buildings. This has been particularly the case in regard to the\nproposed villa for senior citizens. The\nmayor suggested the use of the present tourist park for this purpose.\nAt first glance it might appear to\nbe a good site, but among other objectives there is no escaping the fact\nthat our park sites are gradually being\nreduced. The hospital took part of\nGyro Park and now it is proposed to\nalienate the tourist park. If the Council\ndecides lo use the site for the villa\nthen it should be careful to preserve\nas much of its park-like appearance as\npossible. Il should also be prepared to\nalleviate the difficulties of foot access\nto the area and to remove hillside trees\nto allow sunshine to penetrate the\narea in fall and winter months. Council should also be assured that the\naccommodation for tourists provided\nby the park is replaced before closing\nof this municipal tourist park. Campsites and trailer sites outside the fringe\narea of the city cannot be considered\nas substitutes for this park, which has\nbrought hundreds of extra residents\ninto the city during the past few summers.\nThe measures which must be taken\nto free our beaches from pollution are\nlargely a matter for experts to decide.\nIt would be false, however, should\nmoney considerations prevent provision being made for probable city\ngrowth and the need for more and\nlarger outlets. It would be far better\nto have these too large al the present\ntime rather than to have additional\nexpense in the not-too-dislant future.\nThe one most satisfactory feature\nof all our recent municipal undertakings is the premium which has been\nput on the steady improvement of our\ncity streets and sidewalks. In this\nrespect Ihe mayor says there are still\n54 blocks of sidewalks, 21 blocks of\nstorm sewer and fourteen blocks of\nstreet paving to be finished, but the\neffect of the work done to date is\nimpressive. There is still no plan to\nwiden, pave and curb those parts of\nour arterial \"highway-streets\" through\nthe city. In other centres the provincial and municipal governments havfe\ncooperated to do this. Nelson is one\nof the few remaining major centres\nin the soirthern populated area where\nthis joint work has not yet been undertaken. It is time to get at it and to\nbring not only paving, widening and\ncurbing up to date, but also to improve\nthe lighting in these streets.\nEven with these problems before\nthem it should be a rewarding year\nfor the councillors if they preserve a\nhappy spirit of cooperation in working\nfor the common good.\nInterpreting the News\nBy JACK BEST\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe big man with the dignified\nbearing and the towering personality\nwill be projecting the image of a new\nFrance when he comes to Canada next\nApril for a state visit.\nPresident de Gaulle's achievement in almost single-handedly leading France out of the political wilderness is deeply appreciated here\nThere is a reservoir of admiration among top Canadian officials for\nthe tall, austere statesman. It stems\nfrom his wartime services as leader of\nthe Free French ond from his bold assumption of national leadership when\npolitical disintegration and anarchy\nthreatened France nearly two years\nago\nCanadian leaders, always concerned by dangers to the health of Atlantic alliance, feel a sense of gratitude towards de Gaulle for stabilizing\nDiscipli\nmc\nDiscipline is the rejection of the\neasy foi lhe difficult, for repetition ol\nUie difficult a thousand limes over, in\norder lhat an end may be achieved.\nIl is a natural Instinct which merely needs proper nourishing. Even the\nlittle boy disciplines himself when lie\npractices shooting marbtes unlll he\ncan hit the oilier fellow's, Ihe lillle giil\nwhen she skips her rope until she can\ndo it as well as Edna next door.\nDiscipline is not linss from the\nteacher, a detention period, or a touch\nof the principal's strap. It is the business of keeping a child convinced that\nonly by rejection, selection and application can he ever get out of life the\nthings he wants.\n- -Vancouver Province.\nFrance and perhaps preventing\nNATO's principal European bastion\nfrom crumbling.\nBoth Prime Minister Diefenbaker, who met de Gaulle on his world\ntour late in 1958, and External Affairs Minister Green, who conferred\nwith him in Paris last fall, are understood to admire the president's ability and stature.\nWhether they see eye to eye with\nhim on certain crucial problems confronting the alliance is another matter.\nCanada, which has an air division and an army brigade stationed in\nEurope, is a firm advocate of the principle of integrating allies forces. De\nGaulle doesn't like the idea of placing\nthe French army under a unified command \u2014 which would be headed by an\nAmerican general \u2014 and has said\nthat in case of war he would withdraw\nFrench ships stationed in the Mediterranean from NATO jurisdiction.\nCanada generally has tended to\nplay down differences in the Atlantic\nfamily, including the dispute between\nFrance and the United States on the\nsubject of integration.\nOfficials here are inclined to ascribe de Gaulle's present attitude to\nFrench troubles in Algeria and the\ndemands of the pasification campaign there, rather than to his much-\nhallyhooed obsessive desire to restore\nFrance's national glory.\nThe general subject of integration could be one of the main topics\nof the discussions here, which will precede de Gaulle's stale visit lo Washington. Another topic will be co-ordination of Western policy for the East-\nWesl summit conference opening in\nParis May 16.\nEvery now and again one of my\nfriends brings me a bundle of old-\ncountry papers, the Liverpool Echo.\nI'm not a Liverpudlian, and the news\nin them is very stale indeed, but I\nalways enjoy reading them. There are\nso many things in them that amuse\nme, and I have an idea that for all\ntheir sober appearance the English\nare being amusing too.\nTake this for instance: \"No room\nat the inn for roast chickens, say\nbench. Swansea licensing magistrates\nrefused an application yesterday to\nalter the \"men only\" bar to accommodate a kitchen for roasting chickens.\n\"Dismissing the application Col.\nMorgan said, 'Such sale of chickens\nwould certainly be an innovation. It\nwould convert licensed premises into\na kind of chicken Woolworths.' \"\nAnd the man who wrote these\nheadlines certainly enjoyed doing\nthem. \"Sergeant hit me, says recruit.\"\n\"Didn't watch road\u2014killed.\" \"Five\npenny-wise witnesses.\" This last one\nrefers to the fact that five witnesses\nwere colled in juvenile court to prove\nthe theft of a penny by a school boy.\nThey evidently believe that theft is\ntheft in England whether il is of a\npenny or a pound.\nIn parliament a member can ask\nquestions and have them answered at\n\"question time.\" One socialist member asked what was ihe cost of preparing and presenting to Parliament\nan order authorizing the landing of\none wart-hog.\nThe answer was that all told it\ncost fourteen pounds. He then wanted to know if it would not have been\nbetter to have imported severa\nder the same order. The minister then\nreplied that he thought it was a valuable thing to bring before Parliament\nthe notable introduction of this animal to England.\nSince the wart-hog is a very ugly\nanimal indeed with large curving tusks\nand warts all over its face, it is easy\nto understand that a Conservative\nmember would say, \"The wart-hog\nneeds to be treated with great sympathy because it is highly sensitive\nabout being a wart-hog.\" The discussion ended with the minister of agriculture saying that they would all\ntake the greatest interest in the future career of this particular wart-\nhog.\nThe headline to this item? \"The\nwart-hog: a pig with a future.\"\nFor amusing impudence, there is\nnothing like this. Two men employed\nby an aircraft firm took four days off\nfrom work to attend the racing at\nAscot and run a betting book. When\nthey got back they found that they\nhad been dismissed so they sued for\nback wages and the firm counter -\nclaimed for loss of profits. The men\nlost but seem to have no hard feelings\nfor they said the firm had behaved\nvery decently.\nMissing Boy\nSends Card\nKAMLOOPS (CP)-The parents\nof a missing 15-year-old boy have\nreceivea a Christmas card from\nhim alter being told by two Indian mystics that their son is\naead.\nMr. and Mrs. Alfred Claude-\npierre got the card Wedneaaay\nIrom their son Holgard, missing\nsince he left home on a shopping\ntrip to a local supermarket Nov.\n12. The letter, postmarked Boston\nBar, B.C., contained a note saying he was well and looking for\na job.\nRCMP checked the handwriting\nand confirmed it was that of the\nmissing youth, Holgard.\nMr. and Mrs. Claudepierre had\nearlier consulted Indian Chief\nAugust Jack Khantsahlano, 93, of\nNorth Vancouver and another Indian medicine man, Harry White,\n72,, of Lytton. Each meditated on\nthe problem and decided the boy\nhad been drowned.\nThe parents now have appealed\nto their son to return home, saying he will not be punished.\nThe family immigrated to Canada from Germany about 18\nmonths ago.\n\"A great stone has been lifted\nfrom my heart,\" said Mr. Claudepierre Thursday. \"I knew my son\nwould write to me or phone if\nhe was alive. I don't know why\nhe has been so hard, not writing\nbefore.\"\n\"Who's Getting Rich?\" Unions\nDemand of Railway Management\nKorea Demands\nPunishment For\nHead Shaving\nSEOUL (AP) -South Korea will\ndemand punishment of the Americans responsible for shaving the\nheads of two prostitutes caught in\na U.S'. Army barracks, national\npolice director Kee Kang-hak indicated Thursday.\n\"The incident is a matter of\ngreat interest to the Korean people, and we will demand punishment of those responsible, de-\n. pending on a study of the investigation results,\" he told reporters.\nThe army has announced that\ntwo sergeants performed the\nshaving on orders of a company\ncommander who was cracking\ndown on trespassing thieves and\nprostitutes.\nThe army has not yet decided\nwhether to prefer charges.\nThe two shorn women, Kim Ae-\nsoon, 37, and Kim Chung-ja, 21,\nsaid they are thinking of asking\nfor from $10,000 to $20,000 compensation for the indignity they\nsuffered. They admitted slipping\ninto the camp through a hole in\nlhe fence and said they were\nlooking tor soldiers they were acquainted with.\nCharges of featherbedding\nhave become the most explosive\nissue In the dispute between\nrailroad management and unions. Here are the pros and cons\nof the argument, in the last of\nthree articles on the subject.\nBy ROGER GREENE\nWASHINGTON (AP) - \"Who's\ngetting rich?\"\nThat's the challenge raised by\nthe railroad unions when the Industry sets up a howl about engineers and firemen getting four\nor five days' pay for a day's work.\nThe industry, for example, says\na typical case is the 1034-mile run\nbetween Chicago and Denver which\na fast passenger train covers in\n16\\4 hours.\nSince pay is based on a long-\nestablished rule of a day's basic\npay for each 100 miles, the railroad has to pay 10 1-3 days' pay\nfor each engine crew position\nalong the Chicago-Denver trip.\n\"All right,\" says the unions, \"if\nthat's the way you want to play,\nlet's analyze it. Let's see who is\ngetting rich on all this fabulous\npay.\"\nCITE CASE HISTORY\nTiie Brotherhood of Locomotive\nEngineers says it investigated the\nfollowing case history:\nDuring the first half of July 1958,\nengineer M. F. White drove the\nBurlington Zephyr over the 162-\nmile stretch between Lincoln, Neb.,\nand Creston, Iowa, on the Chicago-\nDenver run, averaging two liours,\n51 minutes a trip. For this he received $32.11 a trip on the mileage-\npay basis.\nIn 15 days, White spent 210%\nliours on duty or laying over at the\nfar terminal between trips, and he\nreceived $481.63, or $2.99 an hour\nfor the total elapsed time he spent\nin service.\n\"Is that too much for a highly\nskilled worker?\" the union asks.\nINDUSTRY'S REPLY\n\"Let's take another look at those\nfigures,\" an industry spokesman\nreplies.\n\"What the engineer actually got\npaid was $481.63 for 15 trips totalling 42% liours of work, or $11.26\nan hour. That means he gets paid\nat the rate of $90.08 for an eight-\nhour work day or $450.40 for a\n40-hoiiir week. No wonder the railroads are taking a licking?\"\nUnion: \"What about his lay-over\ntime at the far terminal? And remember, he doesn't get paid for\naway-from-home expenses \u2014 hotel\nroom and meals.\"\nRailroad: \"Are we supposed to\npay yfor the time he's sleeping at\nthe far terminal between runs?\nWhat company pays its employees\nfor sleep time?\"\nThe  industry adds that during\nthe war the train-operating unions\naccepted a special award of five\ncents an hour to compensate them\nfor away-from-home expenses. The\naward remains in the present pay\nstructure.\nWORK RESTRICTED\nCommenting on the unions' ob\nservation that few if any railroad\nemployees are \"getting rich,\" the\nindustry says one reason is the\nunions' own spread-the-work rules\nwhich set a limit on the number of\nmiles train crews may work and\nhence restrict their earnings.\nThe industry says passenger-\ntrain engineers in the United\nSlates received an average 6alary\nof $10,000 a year in 1959, with a\nmaximum of $14,000 a year. Firemen averaged $8687.\nBut the unions, quoting government figures, say American railroad employees \u2014 excluding executives \u2014 averaged only $2.47 an\nhour In mid-1959, compared with\n$3.10 for steel workers. $2.69 for\nauto industry employees and $3.23\nfor soft-coal miners.\nSome union officials concede\nprivately that mileage pay and\nsome   work   rules   are   obsolete,\nbased on conditions which prevailed half a century or so ago,\nand that both need a general overhauling.\nBut they insist that any revision\nmust not result in the  firing of\nthousands of employees.\nHARD JOB\nThe 100-mile formula for a day's\nbasic pay \u2014 or \"unit of work,\"\nas the unions prefer to call it\u2014was\nborn in the days when it took considerable sweat and hustle to drive\na coal-burning locomotive 100\nmiles. It wasn't unusual, in those\ndays, for a brawny fireman to\nshovel 10 to 12 tons of coal in a\nday's run.\nTodayy, powerful oil - burning\ndiesels zip over the tracks and the\nfireman, with no furnace to feed,\nserves chiefly as an extra lookout\nfor possible danger.\nTims the railroads contend they\nare being forced to perpetuate jobs\nin a buggy whip factory. They say\nit costs them $230,000,000 a year to\nprovide \"surplus\" firemen in\nfreight and yard service alone.\nBut Uie unions insist the fireman is Just as important to railroad safety as the co-pilot of an\nairliner.\nHistorical Society Marks\nPrairie Paper Centenary\nWINNIPEG  (CP)  \u2014 Two   pio- the move west expecting that the\nneering newspaper men brought\ntype and printing equipment 450\nmiles over the Crow Wing Trail\nfrom St. Paul to the tiny Red\nRiver settlement 100 years ago\nand published The Nor'Wester,\ntho first newspaper In the Prairie\nprovinces.\nWilliam Buckingham, a 27-\nyear-old Englishman, and William Coldwell, a 25 - year - old\nIrishman, arrived at the settlement\u2014now Winnipeg\u2014on Nov. 1,\n1869, They turned out the first\nedition of lhe Nor'Wester in time\nto catch a mail shipment to the\neast on Dec. 28.\nA recent dinner of the Manitoba Historical Society marked\nUie anniversary of the event.\nBuckingham, a reporter with\nlhe Toronto Globe, and Coldwell,\nwith   the  Toronto  Leader,   made\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nVancouver\u2014Edgar Barclay, 57,\nfather of British Columbia's top-\nranked male and female tennis\n.ilayers.\nMoscow\u2014Prof. Pavel Parenago,\n53, a leading Soviet space expert.\nNew York\u2014Lansing P. Shield,\n63, president of the Grand Union\nCompany.\n\"Featherbedding\" Blamed\nOn Management Abuses\nThis second ol three articles\ndevelops the picture ol feather-\nbedding ln American industries.\ncling to the old handsaw when a\npower saw would do th work\nfive  times  faster.\nPainters demand double wages\nlor. using a spray gun; in some\ncities house painters refuse to\nbrush   wider   than   four\nSome Names\nThe Kremlin is urging Soviet parents to \"please\" stop giving their children fancy names.\nThe new drive precedes the publication of a new \"Dictionary of Soviet\nNames\"- the first of its kind in the\nU.S.S.H.\nThe authorities are particularly annoyed by names based on political,\neconomic, and Marxist words which,\ngiven in all seriousness, are lhe ob;ect\nof general ridicule.\nSo for instance is a man called\n\"Mr. Second Five Year Plan.\" He is\nactually living in Russia.\nA 21-year-old university girl student is called \"Miss Great Worker\" -\nin Russian it is \"Veliki Rubochi.\" She\nwas so unhappy about the name lhat\nshe telescoped it into \"Velira,\" a\nrather nice-sounding name.\nSeveral ordinary men have to go\nthrough life with namos like Differential and Integral. Their parents, it appears, were keen mathematicians.\nBut the all-Soviet record for the all-\nlime funny name is held by a certain\nMr. Lorikerik. This is made up from\nthe initial letters of nine Russian\nwords. They are: Lenin, October Revolution, Industrialization, Colleclivlza-\nlion, Electrification, Radio and (\"and\"\nin Russia is \"i\") Communism.\n\u20142'he London Express News Service.\ni jurisdictional work rules. As a\n| result, a fantastic crazy quilt of\n| regulations  has  grow  up  across\n  j lhe years.\nBy ROGER GREENE !    The   Association   of   American\nWASHINGTON   (AP)-In   New \u25a0 Railroads, leading the industry's\nYork's  Grand Central Station,  a | anti  -   featherbedding  campaign, j use   i\ncommuter train sat on the track | cites the following examples:       I inches.\nfor 23 minutes while passengers i    Engine   crew   members   were I    Similarly,   plumbers   often   re-\nfumed  and  the engineer  waited I registering off duty at Hastings, | fus    to   use   prc-threaded   pipe.\nfor   a  yard   man   to  clean   the j Neb., when they were instructed ; When it comes already threaded\nlocomotive's  dirty windshield.      ; to move their engine to a nearby \\ from the factory, they cut off the\nChided for delaying the train's j track. They claimed \u2014 and re-' threaded  end  and  rethread  Uie\ndeparture,   the   engineer  ex-   ceived\u2014an  extra  day's  pay  for j pipe by hand.\nplained: ; the f w minutes of extra work on I    In the printing industry, union\n\"A couple of days ago I cleaned ; Uie  ground that it constituted a I rules say all local advertising ar-\na dirty windshield myself, but 1 j recall to work. j riving  at   a   newspaper  plant   in\nwon't do it again. It's not my job. i frEIGht \"BONUS\" lh   ll)rm ol P|iUes or ready-to-use\nThe maintenance foreman .should j     The crew on a west CMst pas. I mats   must   be   reset   by   hand,\nI senger train collects a 50-per-cenl\nbonus    for   performing    \"freight\nservice\" on the run between Port-\ni land, Or .,  and Spokane, Wash.,\nbecause the train carries a sealed\nfreight   car   between   those   two\npoints   five   days   a   week\u2014even\nnot  have  put  the engine on  the ;\nline   in   tile   first   place   with\ndirt-fogged shield like that.\"\nEFFICIENCY CRIPPLED ,\nThe railroads, pressed by stiff \u2022\ncompetition from cars, trucks j\nand   airlines,   say   this   \"not   my\njob\"  altitude  is a  key factor  in i though   the   freight   car   is   not\nforces that are crippling railroad ! touched en  rout .\nefficiency and saddling the indus- j    Tt,e  unions   say   Uie   rules   de-\ntry with ruinous costs. They call   veloped  as   labor's   answer  to  a\nit \"featherbedding.\" ' ! long  history  of  management\nThe union's reply, in effect:      I abuses, such as Uie speedup. Guy\n\"Supposing   you   had   just   fin- j '\u25a0\u2022   Brown,   grand   chief   of   the\nislied a hard day's work at a desk I Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi-\njcb and the boss told you to mop\nup the office because the charwoman hadn't showed up. Would\nyou do it?\"\nThe railroads and other industries have always Irod gingerly\naround   the   explosive   issue   of\ndunt 3kL\nill'\nThe gossip merely repeals what\nshe hears, but usually whaL she\nheard was her own voice.\nne rs, says:\n\"Railway employees could\npoint to case after case where\nworkers have been abused beyond the limits of human endurance. That's why we have Iti\nrules.\"\nSome economists, on the other\nhand, say the featherbedding dispute is merely the symptom of a\nfar graver problem\u2014automation.\nAIM TO SAVE JOBS\nUnion leaders cone de that in\nthe current strike - threatening\nAmerican rail dispute, they are\nbattling to save thousands of jobs\nfrom disappearing amid Uie tremendous mid-century upsurge of\nautomation with its labor-saving\ndevices.\nTh railroads are by no means\nalone in their charges of feather-\nbedding practices, which they\nclaim are \"bleeding off\" Uie savings expected from expensive\nnew automatic equipm nt.\nAmong conditions reported in\nsome  areas:\nTn the building industry, carpenters sometimes refuse to handle prefabricated panels, and still\nproof - read and corrected. The\n\"bogus\" or \"dead horse\" type,\nunused, i.s then (lumped into the\nhell-box and melted down.\nThe union reply to managem nt\ncries of featherbedding is generally this: Tiie work rules grew\nfrom management abuses, and\nare calculated to ensure dec nt\nworking conditions, prevent\nspeedups and management arbi-\nsecuritics of workers. Any specific abuses, they contend, ar\nsubject to negotiation.\ndistrict of Rupert's Land might\nsoon be annexed to Canada\u2014or\npossibly  the  United States.\nGOOD OPPORTUNITY\nIn any event, they believed, tho\nsituation was ideal for opening a\nnewspaper in the area.\nThey assembled equipment and\nsupplies at St. Paul, now the capital of Minnesota, bougiit three\nRed River carts and oxen to pull\nhem, and set out on their new\ncareer.\nTheir problems started as\nsoon as they hitched the oxen to\nthe carts. Their account of the\ntrip relates:\n\"Hardly had Uie oxen been\nyoked lo the carls, when they\nkicked up their heels and ran off\nin every direction. Being unused\nto Ihe yoke and fresh from the\npasture, the animals were as\nwild as harnessed buffalo and\nkicked and plunged for nearly an\nhour.\"\nAfter picking up type that had\nbeen scattered through the\nstreets of St. Paul, the young\nmen set out on the long trek.\nThey averaged 15 to 20 miles a\nday on the 35-day trip, arriving\njust ahead of freeze-up in a heavy\nsnowstorm.\nFIRST SUBSCRIPTION\nOne highlight was the sale of\na subscription to their newspaper\nlo Chief Hole-in-the-Day of Uie\nCrow Wing Indian band.\nThe publishers stablished\nthemselves in a small mud and\nplaster building and set about\npreparing their plant and gathering news.\nThe first edition carried an optimistic editorial saying that the\ncountry could not remain unpeopled for long \u2014 \"The printing\npress will hasten the change.\"\nThe newspaper was published\nfortnightly with a four-page, 20-\ncolumn makeup. The subscription\nrate was 12 shillings or three\nAmerican dollars a year:\nThough Buckingham and Cold-\nwell later sold their interest's in\nUie newspaper, the Nor'Wester\nremained a champion of western\ndevelopment during its 10 years\nof life. It strongly urged self government for the settlement and\nthe entry of the West into Confederation.\nIt was seized and suppressed\nby Louis  Riel in 1869.\nS50.000 SETTLEMENT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Colleen\nMcCurdy, 26, of Vancouver will\nreceive $50,896 as compensation\nfor injuries received in an accident while wilh the air force in\nEurope. She was walking on a\nroad near Gros Tenquin, France,\nwhen   struck   by a  car.\nHUBERT\n\"Well, gimme Lhe ticket\u2014I'm in a hurry!\"\n *p-T 1 ..-;,.,,.\t\n\u25a0 .\n\u2014\u25a0 Y\n*\u00ab5\u00ab*(i\u00ab.i*-:!\"^-'---\"-\"77'7r7; \u25a0\u2022\u25a0:\u2022-\u25a0.\u25a0 \"\u2014\u25a0\"t< \u25a0\n51\nGbouL ihsL J own.\nPHONE 1844\nSpending a short time in Nelson\nduring the holiday season, Mrs.\nJohn Farnham of Chatham, N.B.,\nthe former Joan Will of Nelson,\nwas guest of Mr. and Mrs. Trevor\nL. White, 700 Ninth Street. Mrs.\nFarnham has been visiting her\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. J. A. B.\nWill, in Calgary and returned\nthere after her stay in Nelson before leaving for eastern Canada.\n* *   \u2022\n, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. White, 2250\nFalls Street, have as guest Mrs.\nGeorge Newburn of Fort Walton,\nFlorida, who is expecting to leave\nwithin the next few weeks for\nGermany, where her husband is\nstationed with the United States\nAir Force.\n* *   *\nMiss Monica Melling, teacher at\nCentral Elementary School, has\nreturned to her home at 807 Baker\nStreet, after spending the holidays\nwith her mother, Mrs. Melling of\nLondon, England. Miss Melling\nflew to London and return via the\nPolar route.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Rlaph H. Macintosh of the Bevanne Apartments\nrecently attended the wedding of\ntheir daughter, Barabra Mae Macintosh, to Randolph E. Lord of\nNew Westminster, in Oliver. Mr.\nand Mrs. Macintosh spent the Yule\nholiday in Oliver as guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. C. M. Macintosh.\n* *   *\nHoliday guests of Mr. and -Mrs.\nJ. C. Young, 807 Baker Street,\nwere their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. H. Mayer of\nVancouver, also J. A. Ragotte of\nAinsworth.\n* #   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. E. Chambers,\nIT'S HERE!\nOur Annual\nJANUARY\nCLEARANCE SALE\nWe would like to take time\nout here to bring to your attention the quality values which\nare represented in our sale.\nThis sale does not come about\ndue to poor seller lines, it is a\nstock-reducing store-wide sale\nof the best shoes money can\nbuy so as to make room for\nthe Spring shipments.\nFor your convenience, we\nhave classified our various\nprice ranges in Groups 1 to 6\nwhich are listed below and correspond to the group card nurcu\nbers on our store displays. \u2014\nGroup No. 1 includes Women's\nShoes in the Murray line; a\nquality shoe .in values to $16.99,\nsale price $9.99. Group No. 2\nincludes the Women's Natural-\nizer Shoes in values to $15.99,\nsale price $7.99.\nGroup No. 3 features values\nin women's shoes to $12.99, sale\n$5.99. Group No. 4 features\nwomen's top quality shoes in a\nvalue range up to $8.99, now\non sale for only $3.99.\nGroup No. 5, our best quality\ntop line Men's Shoes in values\nas high as $22.00, for as low\nas $12.99.\nGroup No. 6 features another\nlower range of high quality\nmen's shoes in values up to\n$14.99 for as low as $7.99.\nNow we are only able to mention a few of the exceptional\nbuys here so to fully realize the\nrange we are offering on sale,\nyou must- drop in to see them.\nOf course, we do have men's,\nwomen's, children's slippers at\nvery near li price.\nHere is an excellent chance\nfor you to buy men's work\nshoes for spring. Buy ahead\nand save.\nAll shoes in this sale are genuine values and there will be\nno charges, no refunds, or ex-\ncnangcs.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nEst. Since 1902\n904 Silica Strete, had as a holiday\nvisitor Mr. Chamber's cousin, Miss\nBessie Kelly, who teaches in Re-\ngina and spent Christmas and New\nYear's here, leaving for home\nSunday.\n* *   \u2022\nAfter spending the Yule holiday\nin Saanichton, near Victoria,\nwhere she was guest of her aunt,\nMrs. Harold Pope, Mrs. Vera\nSmales of Gibson's, B.C., is visiting her brother-in-law' and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. David B. Renton,\n804 Hoover Street, for a time.\n* *   \u00ab\nDr. and Mrs. W. K. Massey, 608\nThird Street, have had as a holiday visitor Dr. Massey's mother,\nMrs. H. L. Massey of Saskatoon,\nwho returned home Monday.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Fred C. Walton. 920\nLatimer Street, Nelson, B.C., wish\nto announce the engagement of\ntheir eldest daughter Lydia Ann to\nEdward Albert, youngest son of\nMr. and'Mrs. Walter James Chapman, 1753 Victoria Avenue, Rossland, B.C. Wedding to take place\nin Mission Covenant Church, Nelson, B.C. on the 13th day of February, 1960. Rev. Ernest V. Hanson officiating.\n(Dama. Tip. U)iik\nVnwuati MtvditL\n9209\nSLIMMING\nFor 1960's busy days \u2014 a slenderizing casual with a smart,\ndeeper armhole and pocket interest. Choose rayon flannel or wool\ntweed with contrast accent.\nPrinted Pattern 9209: Half Sizes\nWh. 16Mr, 18%, 20'\/4, 22%, 24%\nSize 16% takes 3% yards 39-inoh\nfabric; % yard contrast.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please\nprint plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St. W.\nToronto, Ont.\nJUST OUT! Big, new 1960 Spring\nand Summer Pattern Catalog in\nvivid, full-color. Over 100 smart\nstyles ... all sizes ... all occasions. Send now! Only 25c.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. N.D.N., 60 Front St. W\u201e\nToronto. Ont.\nJanuary Specials\nFABRICS:\nDrip-Dry Broadcloth \u00a3Q\u00ab\n36-inch.   Yd.        V +\nDrip-Dry Corduroy *1 l Q\nReg. 1.69, 36\". Yd.   ' \u2022\" *\nChallis Dress Crepe $1 QQ\nReg. 2.29. 45\". Yd. .._ '        ' \u2022\" *\nWool Felr *2 59\nReg. 2.95. 72\". Yd.     mntj*\nDan River Cottons QQC\nReg. 1.39. 36\". Yd.   * *\nDonegal Tweed $3  \"JO\nReg. 3.95. 54\". Yd.   J \u2022&*?\nWool Dress Crepes *3 JQ\nReg. 3.95. 54\". Yd.   ^*\u00a3m*\nKnitting Yarn Specials:\nBouquet Polar, 4 oz. reg. $1.05 $ .89\nKroy, reg. 59c oz        .39\nHarding, reinforced with nylon       .29\nCarressa, reg. $1.05      .89\nBeehive, reg. 62c oz    _ 57\nBOLT-ENDS, WIDE VARIETY OF FABRICS\nALL GREATLY REDUCED TO CLEAR\nRemnants Half-Price\nCustom Sewing Centre\n580 Baker St.\nPhone 1653\nToronto Furrier Qi ves Tips On\nCare of Fur Coats and Wraps\nBy EDNA BLAKELY\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nTORONTO (OP)-It's better to\nwear a fur coat than to leave it\nhanging in a dry cupboard.\n\"Water and snow won't harm\na fur coat,\" says Toronto furrier\nSvend\u2014he uses only his Christian\nname\u2014who learned about furs in\nhis native city, Copenhagen, and\nwho has been in the fur business\nin Canada for 31 years.\nThe wet coat should be put on\na hanger away from direct heat,\nand left to dry. Long hair can\nbe brushed, or even gently\ncombed.\nDRYNESS FACTOR\nProper storage is essential for\nlongevity of a fur coat, he says.\nA cool basement can turn out to\nbe the worst spot for a coat.\n\"The basement may be damp\nand the dampness will rot the\nleather,\" Mr. Svend explained.\nStoring small bits of fur in the\nrefrigerator can also be injurious\nto the pelts. The extreme coldness of a refrigerator creates\ndampness.\nProper cold storage vaults are\nkept at just below freezing and\nare frequently aired out, he explained.\n\"Women wear their coats now.\nWe don't keep our good things\nfor Sunday now, we live while\nwe're alive,\" he said.\nMink, once worn by a few, now\nis one of the biggest sellers in\nfurs. Fox has become one of the\nfurs for dress occasions.\nERMINE  TOPS\n\"And I must mention ermine\nwhich is one of the loveliest of\nfurs and the most flattering,\"\nMr. Svend said. \"For evening\nwear it makes a beautiful garment but it can still look appropriate in the daytime.\"\nWhen Mr. Svend was establishing his business here, he found\nthat nearly 75 per cent of his\nsales would be of one type of\nfur \u2014 the type that happened to\nbe the fashion for that year.\n\"It's not that way anymore.\nNow it's liable to be anything\nthat a customer asks for,\" he\nsaid.\n\"Age doesn't matter any more\neither. Certain furs, such as\nAlaska seal and black persian\nlamb used to be branded as 'old\nladies furs.' Today, young girls\nare   wearing   high   styled  black\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960\nWoman Pioneer for Right to Sit\nIn Senate To Be 92 Saturday\nALIX, Alta. (CP) - The big\nhouse on Dartmoor ranch will\nwelcome many visitors Saturday,\nas it does each Jan. 9.\nThey'll be paying respects to\nMrs. Irene Parlby, one of the\noriginal group of women who\npressed for, the right of their sex\nto sit in the Canadian Senate, on\nher 92nd birthday.\nDartmoor, with its rolling\nrangeland in central Alberta, has\nbeen  Mrs,  Parlby's  home  since\nNew Naomi\nExecutive\nTakes Office\nA new executive took office at\na meeting of the Naomi Circle of\nFairview United Ohurch at the\nhome of Mrs. R. C. Emory, 313\nNelson Avenue, Wednesday night.\nPresident of the circle is Mrs.\nErie Halliwell; vice-president Mrs.\nLen Cutler; secretary, Mrs. D. F.\nMartin, and treasurer, Mrs. R. W.\nHuestis.\nMrs. Huestis gave a resume of\nanother chapter of \"African Manhunt\" whioh she has been presenting to the group for the past few\nmonths.\nCo-hostesses were Mrs. H. F.\nNeighbor and Mrs. Huestis.\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nFurs that are young, blithe, beautiful and geared to\na budget, suggest gifts. What young lady, for instance,\nwould not be overjoyed with a dashing trench coat in\nbeige-dyed hair seal? The coat has clean, sharply defined lines. Closing with eight leather buttons, it is smart\nwith or without its self belt.\npersian lamb furs and seal coats\nand the older women are wearing coats with more youthful\nstyling.\"\nSimple, good lines are the\nmost important factors of good\nstyling. Although fur on fur has\nbecome  popular,   the   plain   fur\ncoat outsells the fur \u2022 trimmed\ncoats, he said.\nMost stylish coats now have\nflared backs, side fullness and\nlarge collars although all sizes\nof collars are being .used.\n\"The slim look is most important,\" Mr. Svend said.\nPrincipals of Fourt-Campbell\nWedding Making Home in Trail\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 St. Rita's\nChurch in Castlegar was scene of\nIhe recent marriage of Vera Marianne Campbell, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. D. Campbell of Castlegar, and Vincent Richard Fourt.\nson of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Fourt\nof Kinnaird. The marriage service\nwas read by Rev. E. A. Brophy.\nGowned in ballerina-length nylon\nchiffon over net and taffeta, the\nbride was attended by matron of\nhonor Mrs. E. Robinson, her sis\nter; bridesmatron Mrs. D. Shel-\nfontiuk; bridesmaid Miss Rose\nmary Goodwin and flower girls\nMargaret Robinson, niece of the\nbride, and Beverley Fourt, niece of\nthe bridegroom, all in coral taffeta\nThe bride's gown was topped\nwith a white velvet jacket with\nQueen Anne collar and lily point\nsleeves. Her embroidered net veil\nwas held by a Queen Anne cap of\nvelvet trimmed with pearl sequins.\nShe wore a gold pendant and earrings, gift of the bridegroom, and\ncarried a cascade bouquet of\nSweetheart  roses  and ivy.\nCummerbunds and overskirts of\ncoral chiffon were added features\nof the attendants' gowns, which\nalso featured fitted bodices and full\nskirts.\nThey wore matching pillbox hats\nwith net veil, their accessories were\nen tone and they carried shower\nbouquets of pale doral chrysanthemums and ivy. The flower girls\nwere frocked in full-skirted dresses\nwith matching hats and baskets of j\ncoral 'mums and ivy. |\nMr. Bernard Fourt, brother of\nthe bridegroom from Rossland, wasi\nbest man and ushers were Mr. I\nRene Brodman and Mr. Keith \\\nWaldie. I\nMr. Eric Buckley of Nelson.1\ncousin of the bridegroom was solo-j\nist during signing of the register,!\naccompanied by organist Mrs. G.1\nVlanich.\nThe bride's mother chose rose-\nbeige lace for the occasion, with\nmatching accessories and rosebud\ncorsage. The bridegroom's mother\nwore royal blue crepe with matching hat. pink accessories and rosebud corsage.\nAt a reception held in the Canadian Legion Hall, the bride's table\nwas centred by a three-tiered wedding cake embedded in tulle and\nflanked by pink tapers in orystal\ncandelabra.\nMr. Roy Englund was master of\nceremonies, and Mr. Walter Bani-\ngan proposed a toast to the bride.\nFor a honeymoon trip to Spokane, the bride changed into a\ncoral wool dress with coral accessories  and black  coat.\nThe newlyweds will make their\nhome in Trail. The bride is employed by the CM & S Co., and the\nbridegroom is one the staff of the\nBank of Commerce in Salmo.\nOut of town guests included:\nMr. and Mrs. P. E. Buckley, Mr.\nE. Buckley, Mrs. R. Buckley. Miss\nC. Buckley and Mrs. B. Wade of\nNelson; Mr. D. Bacon, Victoria;\nMr. K. Campbell,. Vancouver; Mr.\nand Mrs. D. Hizer and family, Co!\nville, Wash.; Mrs. E. Robinson and\nfamily of Clinton. B.C.; Mr. and\nMrs. A. W, Calder, Mr. and Mrs\nG. M. Thompson. Miss Carol Fir\nkins, all of Trail; Mr. and Mrs\nB. Rella, Mr. and Mrs. D. Zanuzzi.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Fourt and family.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Dyson, Miss Ruth\nHarrod, of Rossland.\nBalfour Notes\nBALFOUR\u2014Mr. and Mrs. eGorge\nRussells of Nelson spent the holiday\nat the Wellwood home.\nMr. and Mrs. McKee and daugh\nter Pat, have returned from a trip\nto the United States where they\nvisited relatives in Cottage Grove\nand Burnt Woods, Oregon, continuing on to Toledo, returning by way\nof Spokane.\nOne of the most enjoyable holiday parties was given by Mr. and\nMrs. Stan Whittaker of the Tillicusn\nfor the teen agers. Refreshments\nwere served by the host and hostess after an evening of dancing.\nMiss Betty Maynard, who is attending Business School in Trail,\nspent the holiday season at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. L. Maynard.\nCHURCH   AFFAIRS\nTOPIC OF MEETING\nWILLOW POINT - Church matters were subject of discussion at\na meeting of the senior Woman's\nAuxiliary of St. Andrew's-by-the-\nLake at Willow Point Thursday afternoon.\nPresident Mrs. V. C. Owen read\nthe Living Message. Organist was\nMrs. N. Denny.\nThe auxiliary voted $225 for the\nchurch warden.\nTea hostess was Mrs. Owen.\nTlmdlecAafL\nBy, 3jxum, UJhssdsA\n\u202250\nshe and her husband began their\nmarried life 62 years ago.\n\"She has had a very good\nyear,\" said Humphrey Parlby, 60,\nher son, in an interview Wednesday. \"She doesn't get out much\nany more but she's still very interested ir. politics. She's right up\non all the news.\"\nWAS CABINET MINISTER\nMrs, Parlby was named minister without portfolio in the United\nFarmers of Alberta government\nin 1921. A few months earlier, the\nlate Mary Ellen Smith had been\nappointed to the British Columbia\ncabinet\u2014the first woman cabinet\nminister in the British Empire.\nMrs.  Parlby spent 14 years in\nthe Alberta legislature. She was\none of five Alberta women who\npressed   for   the   admission   of j\nwomen to the Canadian Senate.\nThe Privy Council ruled women\nthis right in 1929. over-riding a\nSupreme Court of Canada decision\nthat women were not \"persons\" in\nthe sense that Ihey could be admitted to the Senate.\nLAST SURVIVOR\nOther women who pressed for\nthe ruling were Mrs. Louise Mc-\nKinney of Claresholm, Alta., and\nMrs. Nellie McClung, Mrs. 0. C.\nEdwards and Judge Emily Murphy, all of Edmonton. Mrs.\nParlby is the last survivor of the\nfive.\nMrs. Parlby was fitted for a\nnew pair of glasses this week to\nenable her to keep up her read'\ning. She has been deaf in recent\nyears.\nBorn in England, the daughter\nof Lt.-Col. E. L. Marryat, she\nspent three years of her childhood in Punjab, India.\nHer late husband was a pioneer\ncattle rancher in Alberta, settling\nin 1890. Dartmoor ranch now has\n100 Aberdeen-Angus cattle.\nColored Slides\nShow Motor Trip\nAcross Country\nColored slides illustrated a travel\ntalk by Mrs. J. I. Laughton at a\nmeeting of the Alpha Xi Chapter\nof Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held\nat the home of Mrs. Norman Mc-\nLeod, 723 Hendryx Street, Tuesday\nnight.\nPictures taken on a motor trip\nacross Canada were shown to\nmembers by Mrs. Laughton as a\nsupplement to her talk.\nCo-hostess for the evening was\nMrs. D. A. Capper.\nArrangements were made for a\nskating party to which members'\nhusbands will be invited. The outdoor rink at the uphill city park\nwill be used, and refreshments\nwill be served at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. T. E. Cartridge following\nthe skating.\nCOZY TOE-TOASTERS\nRelax in luxury! Match gay boot\nor ballet slippers to your robe.\nQuick V easy to make.\nJust two pattern pieces plus soles\nfor either style. Pattern 950: pattern pieces for small, medium,\nlarge, extra large sizes included,\ntransfer, directions.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this nattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 6* Front St. W., Toronto.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNew! flew! New! Our 1960 Laura\nWheeler Needlecraft Book is ready\nNOW! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular designs to crochet,\nknit, sew. embroider, quilt, weave\n\u2014fashions, home furnishings, toys,\ngifls, bazaar hits. In the book\nFREE - 3 quilt patterns. Hurry,\nsend 25 cents for your copy.\nWmmW\nmm  U\n. iSSL\nmm\nHBKSfr    \"      '  ill\nmm*\nSfcp\ngap! .\n\u25a0\n*?,- .-WfX\nMR. AND MRS. VINCENT RICHARD FOURT OF TRAIL and attendants.\n\u2014Photo by Gordon Petfill of Castlegar.\n\"I'm for shoes lhat\ncan really take it. . \u2022\nand feel good, too\"\nAlways a favorite, the\nMocassin type axford.\nCombines good looks\nwith lots of comfort.\nWonderful value, too.\n7.99\nPhone\n1114\nJayloJtL...\nHalf Price Clearance of\nSEASONABLE FABRICS\nIncluding Prints,  Rayons, and\nBroken Lines of Woollens.\nA WIDE ASSORTMENT\nHALF PRICE\nJayltfiL (bhi^ fjoodA.\nPhone  1485\n645 Baker St.\nFRIDAY NIGHT\n1\/7\/\/       SPECIALS\nWy      On Sale Sharp at 7 p.m.\nPERSONAL SHOPPING ONLY \u2014 Limited Quantities\nReg. 2.49 Men'$ Wool\nScarves \u2014 { Price or less!\nClearance of men's warm\nwoollen scarves. Assorted colors, plains and plaid designs.\nSome fringed. 1    1Q\n7 p.m. Special     I \u2022 \u2022 \u2022?\nLimited Quantity\nCurity Diapers\n1 doz. diapers. 21\" x 40\" fold-\nline, highly absorbent. More\nabsorbent, wash easier, dry\nfaster. 7 p.m. 3   QQ\nSpecial, doz. 3 \u2022 3\u00bb ,\nReg. Values to 3.98.\nBlouses\nAssorted fabrics, styles and\ncolors. Broken i   QQ\nsizes. '\u2022''\nReg. 1.98. Ladies' Wool\nBonnets\u20141  Price!\nLuxuriously soft and warm.\nVarious styles and QQ\ncolors. 7 p.m. Special   \u2022TFTJ\nReg. to 4.98.\nWomen's Ballerinas\nBroken size range in women's\nballerinas. Mostly 1 qq\npatent. 7 p.m. Spec. I .3'3'\nSave $10. Box Springs\n7 Only. Reg. 39.98.   29.98\n7 p.m. Special\n4 Only. Reg. 49.98. 30,93\n7 p.m. Special\nSizes 3' 3\" to 4'.\nSave $10. Mattresses\n4 Only. Reg. 39.98. 29.98\n7 p.m. Special\n5 Only. Reg. 49.98. 30,98\n7 p.m. Special\nSizes 3' 3\", 4' and 4' 6\".\nReg. 4.95.   Hockey Pants\nRed or blue hockey pants in\nsmall, medium or j AQ\nlarge, 7 p.m. Spec. \u00bb>\"'\nReg. 5.50.\nHockey Gloves\nCanadiens or Maple Leafs in\npee wee sizes. 3   CA\n7 p.m. Special ...     3<Jw\nReg.  1.49.\nHockey Socks\nCanadiens   or   Maple Leafs.\nFooted hockey socks in size\n7 only. CQ\n7 p.m. Special \u2022 \u00ab\u00bb ,\nRemnants\nCottons, wools, rayons, etc.\n7 p.m. Special\nl\/3ro!\/2Off\nShop   and   Save   during   the   January   Store - Wide\nClearance  Sale.   Huge  savings  in  all   Departments!\n i }\u25a0 a.^jp...M ^\"'BWI^feSW^^\n'\u25a0'.;-;\u25a0:'--\u25a0\niRRp^piwppppiwp\n!!^W,\\W':'J.f.S\n\u2014\n...   (\nI^U^^W\nyf-Vj'^vy '-^'li.i.'V^.'t'^'JJW;.-:\n^^\"\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960\nU.S. Earth Satellite To\nCarry Canadian Instrument\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - A sensitive\nCanadian instrument \u2014 the only\none of its kind In the Western\nWorld-JWlll be shot Slott in an\nAmerican earth Satellite late ml*\nyear or early In 1\u00bb1 to measure\nthe minute density of gases in\nouter space.'\nDeveloped by the radio and\nelectrical engineering division of\nthe National Research Council, It\nwill give scientists their first op-\nSwiss Chef Says Canadian\nGrocery Stores World's Best\nBy OLt DAUM\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (OP) - Swiss-\nborn William Grauwiler, executive chef of Canadian Pacific\nhotels, says Canadian grocery\nstores are the best in the world.\n\"They're Intriguing,\" he says.\nThe housewife has just to step\ninto them and she can whirl\nthe world around In her market\ncart. Not only is there a wide\nselection of different foods, said\nMr. Grauwiler, but also, a wide\ndifference In the same type of\nfood.\nCHEESE FOR INSTANCE\nTo get just a nibble of the\nvariety he singled out cheese.\n\"When I came to Canada 10\nyears ago Ihere was not such a\nsupply,\" he said in an Interview.\n\"But during the last four or five\nyears cheese has been imported\nfrom almost every country and\nCanada herself manufactures\npractically 'every kind.\"\nHe said Canadians give the\nfoods a rousing welcome, too. A\nlarge department store found its\ncustomers so keen on cheese it\nStarted a Cheese - of \u25a0 the - month\nclub.\nSubscribers, which run into the\nhundreds, receive three different\nkinds of cheese each month. The\nstore carries 81 varieties so there\nIs little chance of duplication\nthroughout the year.\nMr. Grauwiler said that so long\nas a housewife has cheese and\nbread In the cupboard site need\nnever worry about unexpected\ncompany. All she has to do ls\nwhip up a dish called \"fondu\"\nfor special gatherings. It takes\nabout 10 minutes to make.\nFONDU RECIPE\nIt calls for 8 ounces of loose\ngrated cheese; % of a measuring\ncup of dry white wine; 1 teaBpoon\ncornstarch; a little dry sherry;\nnutmeg; pepper.\nRub Ihe inside of a handled\nsaucepan with garlic. Warm\nwine slightly on the stove. Stir\ncontinuously, gradually adding\ncheese. The cheese and wine may\nnot mix immediately. When\ncheese melts add cornstarch\nblended with sherry. Stir continuously nuitl the mixture comes to\nboil and season to taste with a\nlittle more sherry and nutmeg\nand -pepper. This portion is for\none person. For a large gathering simply Increase ingredients\nin proportion to the number of\nguests.\nPlace the treat over some form\nof heat. Guests dip In with One-\ninch cubes of French bread.\nFondu's slcohollc content dis-\nappesrt during the cooking process to the dlih may be served\nwith a dry white wine, said Mr.\nGrauwiler. Tea may' also be\nserved with it.\nportunlty to determine accurately\nthe extent ol the vacuum outside\nthe earth's atmosphere.\nKnown as a cold-cathode gauge,\nthe instrument in laboratory experiment has successfully measured densities or pressures believed to exist on the aurface of\nthe moon. These densities\nthroughout outer space amount to\nalmost a complete vacuum.\nMAKE TOUGHER MODEL\nPaul A. Redhead, head of the\nNRC group which developed the\ngauge, said in an interview that\nthe instrument now is being re-\nengineered in the United Stales\nto withstand the shock and vibration Of the satellites launching.\nThis was not a difficult engineering job.\nUnder present plans, he said,\nthree gauges will be placed\naboard a satellite to be launched\nby the U.S. National Aeronautics\nand Space Administration late\ntills year or early next 'year.\nThe Canadian Instrument was\nselected after careful study by Uie\nAmerican space agency. Mr. Redhead said that as far as he Was\naware there were no other Instruments of a similar design capable\nof such fine measurement.\nOther Canadian instrumenls\nbuilt by ORB scientists will be\nplaced aboard an American satellite scheduled for launching in\nCalifornia In 1961. The Instruments will gather information on\nthe electrically .Charged Ionospheric belt above Ihe earth's surface and relay It back to Canadian receiving stations.\nTV TEACHING\nPEiNTiCTON (CP) -A three-\nmonth experiment with television\nInstruction In classrooms will be\ncarried out at Princess Margaret\nschool. Superintendent C. E. Clay\nsaid CBC will provide instruction\nfor grad S 2-6 inclusive.\nCOMING\nSOON\nPUBLICATION DATE IN FEBRUARY\n\u00a9lie Hflaou lailg Neroa\n25th Annual\nPICTORIAL\nAND\nNDUSTRIAL\nEDITION\nimmmmMmmmmmmsMmm\n......\u00ab\u00ab.t......mmi\t\n\u2022nWNM I\nYour Individual\nHoroscope\nBy Frances Drake\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday cornea and find what\nyour outlook Is, according to the\nstars,\nFor Saturday, January 9, IfiGO\nMARCH 21 to APRIL SO (Ariel)\n- Appreciate those \"little things\"\noften forgotten In the rush to\nachieve the- big ones. Heed \"little\"\nwarnings, and supposedly \"little\"\npeople who often are the better\nguides. Avoid Sharp speech,\nAPRIL Si to MAY 21 (Taunul-\nYou may be tempted to turn away\nfrom regular duties, from obligations that carry over Into free\nhours but which must rightly be\nattended to nonetheless. Avoid this\ntendency.\nMAY SS to JUNE 31 (Gemini >-\nIdle thoughts and doings could\nsway you from activities which\nshould be Firsts. To avoid: plan\nyour program carefully \u2014 and\nCarry It Out I\nJUNE 23 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nDon't dally In taking care of \"Odds\nand ends\" that clutter up a program when neglected. Avoid\n\"moods.\" Be your true self All\nday.\nJULY 24 lo AUGUST 23 (LeOI-\nThere are several wayB, means\nwhich could work well for others\nnow. but might not be .wisest for\nyou. Look to your own Interests;\nattend to them conscientiously.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\niVirgo< - Make detailed plans\nnow. Haphazard methods won't do.\nYon can make fine progress, but\nbe careful in written matters, and\ncommunications generally.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) - More likely than not\nyou will be offered a fresh start at\nsome   work   offering   interesting\nprospect* \u2014 but only If you keep\nup with improvement* yourself.\nOCTOBERS to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) - Don't brood over past\nerrors i go forward with new will,\nhope for the future. That Is only\nway true improvements come\nabout. This day will test \u25a0 your\nmettle.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) - It la no one's\nbusiness to inject themselves into\nothers' personal affairs, so pre\nserve your privacy from busy\nbodies, You are straightforward,\ngood i But don't be too sharp if\nannoyed,\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) - Small matters may\ntend to irk. Don't you ahow irritability. Instead, smile, have\ncheerful word for all. Both work\nand play are under excellent in\nfluences now.\n- JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Be careful that'you\ndo not harm your personal stand\ning with Indiscreet remarks. Pro\nmote your best assets, afod you\nshould have a fine day.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Places) \u2014 There may be some\nwho are not worthy of your com\npany. Be firm about sidestepping\nthem. Day will tempt along these\nlines; be cheerfully strong.\nYOU BORN TODAY have\ngreat number of credits to start\nwith, but It is How Steadily you\napply these assets. Dlscreiion,\namiability, honesty are your gifts\nDon't go against that Intuition, but\ndeve!- It carefully. You are\nespec.ly milted to any career\n\u25a0where you can show artistry. Avoid\nlackadaisical ways or gloomy\nspells. Go forward with faith, con\nstaney.\nBonn Determined To\nWipe Out Hitlerism\nBONN, Germany (AP) - The '\nWest German government\"\nlaunched a double-barrelled campaign Wednesday night to Stamp\nout anti - Semitic demonstrations\nby swift court action against\nhate-mongers and iby stlffer sentences.\nChancellor Adenauer and his\ncabinet called for speedy enactment of a law to increase the\npenallies (or \"stirring up hatred\nagainst groups because of their\nnatural origin.\" The maximum\nsentence now is three months in\njail; the hill to be submitted to.\nthe Bundestag will Set that as Ihe\nminimum.\nThe cabinet also agreed \"that\ncases under investigation should\nbe brought to court as quickly as\npossible and lhat the penalties\nshould correspond to the severity\nof the misdeeds,\" a communique\nsaid.\nTWO CONVICTED '\nTwo Germans already have\nbeen convicted of anti \u2022\" Semitic\nacts. Police say two others being\nheld have a d m ft t e d daubing\nswastikas and anti - Jewish slogans on the new synagogue in\nCologne Christmas Eve, Ihe incident which launched the present\nwave of anti-Semitic acts,\n\u25a0 Four men were arrested Wednesday in West Berlin on suspicion of anti-Semitic activities.\nSveenteen others are being held\nthere after a neo - Nazi youth\ndemonstration.\nA 35-year-old German was arrested and questioned Thursday in\nGiessen after lour large swastika* and symbols of Hitler's SS\nelit corps were found painted\noutside a U.S. Army barracks.\nRussian Scientist Joins\nCanadian In Ottawa Lab\nSUITS, OVERCOATS STOLEN\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Burglars\ncrawled through an air vent in r\nmen's wear store Wednesday to\nsteal suits and overcoats valued\nat $10,000. PrOprieter Sam Lud-\nwig of Better Men's Wear and\nDry Cleaners said thieves took\n120 valuable suits and all the\novercoats in stock.\nThe smear campaign kept up\nsporadically in scattered sections\nof the world for the 15th day.\nActing Prime Minister R. A.\nButler Wednesday night dismissed the anti-Semitic outbreaks\nin England and Scotland as the\nwork of \"a few irresponsible persons,\"\nNOT SERIOUS\nThe Russians agreed. An English - language commentator on\nMoscow1 Radio said the anti-Semitic outbursts in Uie United States\nand Britain are about as danger-\njus as a \"slight cold to a healthy\nperson.\"\n\"But what is just a slight cold\nlo Britain and lhe U.S.A. is a bad\ncase of cancer to West Germany.\"\nNew incidents included:\nDenmark \u2014 Swastikas were\nfound on a house belonging to Ihe\nRoyal Castle at Graasten, close\nto the Danish - German border,\nand others were smeared on\nbuildings of German and Danish\nrowing clubs.\nSouth Africa\u2014Two three - foot\nswastikas were painted ln white\non the streets Of Vryheid.\nUnited States \u2014 Five swastikalike symbols were painted on the\nJewish centre synagogue Wednesday night in Jacksonville, Fla.\nFrance \u2014 Aboul 50 homes of\nJews in the old section of Paris\nwere smeared with swastikas\nearly Thursday. Police scrubbed\nthem off. In Montpellier, a swastika was scratched on a marble\nplaque outside a villa used as\ngestapo headquarters during the\nGerman occupation in the last\nwar. The plaque was put up as a\nreminder that Frenchmen had\nbeen  tortured Inside1 the house.\nBritain\u2014Walls of a synagogue\nn Catford were smeared and a\niwo-foot swastika was painted on\na hank building in Birmingham.\nBelgium \u2014 Swastikas were\ndrawn on the walls of Brussels\nUniversity. Police were stationed\nin front of synagogues in Brussels and Antwerp.\nBy JOHN E. BIRO\nCanadian  Press  Stall Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-A young Russian chemist and a Canadian Scientist with an international reputation are punching new holes in\nscientific barriers separating East\nand West.\nDf. Frederick Eric Dlatehkov-\nsky. 2T-y#ar-old member of a family of Soviet chemists, and Dr. E.\nW. R. steacle, 89-year-old president of the National Research\nCouncil, are engaged In a joint research program in a small cluttered laboratory at NRC headquarters here.\nThe slightly-built Russian, a specialist at Moscow's Institute of\nChemical Physics, Is the first Russian scientist to arrive in Canada\nunder an agreement for an exchange of Canadian and Soviet scientists.\nThe agreement is aimed at establishing closer relationships between Canada and Russia in the\nscientific field.\nGETTING ACQUAINTED\n\"We are getting to know each\nother and how we both think in\nour chosen field of chemistry,\"\nDr. Steacie said.\nThe exchange agreement was\nsigned in Moscow Oct. 28 by Dr.\nSteacie\u2014then in Russia on a visit\n\u2014and by Dr. Alexander Ueamey-\nanov, president'of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, it provides for an\nexchange of three lecturers a year\nfor periods of up to a month and\nfor an annual exchange of seven\nscientists for periods up to nine\nmonths.\nDr. Diatchkovsky and Dr. Steacie\nare working among a maze of\nwinding glass tubes, glass vials\nand Bunsen burners ln a study of\nthe chemical reactions of gases\nTheir work is entirely fundamental\nbut result* later may have practl\ncal application In many fiends, In.\neluding the petroleum industry.\nSTRENGTHEN BONDS\nInterviewed in their laboratory-\nseveral small rooms adjacent to\nthe NRC president's office\u2014the\ntwo chemists said the exchange\narrangement will do much to\nstrengthen scientific bond9 between\nCanada and Russia.\nDr. Steacie said if no agreement\nhad been reached Canadian and\nRussian scientists 6till would know\nof each other's work through the\nincreasing volume of scientific pa\npers published in both countries.\n\"But this is not enough,\" he\nsaid.\n\"Under existing conditions Canadian and Russian scientists know\neach other only in scientific journals. It's a bad thing for scientists\nto be separated in this fashion.\"\nPERSONAL RELATIONSHIP\nScientists from both countries\nalso will have an opportunity to\ndiscuss projects before they are\nundertaken. This is the kind of\npersonal relationship now existing\namong scientists in Canada, the\nUnited States and Britain.\nDr. Diatchkovsky, the first Rus\nslan scientist to establish an inti\nmate personal link with the Canadian scientific community, is a native of Voronezh, about 450 miles\nsouth of Moscow. He was educated\nin Gorki, where he graduated as a\nchemist in 1955.\n\"Chemistry is in the family,\" he\nsaid. \"My father is a professor of\nchemistry at the University in Gorki and my two married BlsterS are\nresearch chemists.\"\nDr. Diatchkovsky has been in\nCanada for about six weeks, and\nplans to remain until next fall.\nDuring his stay he plans to visit\nseveral Canadian universities.\nADMIRED STEACIE\nHe said he welcomed the opportunity to come to Canada as he\nhas long been an admirer of Dr.\nSteacie.\nA book by Dr. Steacie entitled\nAtomic and Free Radical Reactions had become a basic chemistry textbook in many parts of\nRussia.\nDr. Steacie -said the exchange,\narrangement won't be In full op\/'\neratlon until 1961. However, it wto\nexpected additional Russian scientists would come to Canada''f|BI-;\nyear, and that some Canadian!,,,\nwould go to Russia. ^\nA major problem for Canada\nwae that few scientists, except\nsome in Western Canada, know\nsufficient Russian to make a trip\nWorth while. Scientists interested\nin going to Russia could spend a\nyear studying the language and\ntake advantage of the exchange\narrangement in 1961.\nWeyburn Mayor Denies Alderman's\nCharges, Hands In Resignation\nWEYBURN, Sask. (CP)-Mayor\nJan Staveley of this oil-boom\nsoutheastern Saskatchewan city\nhas resigned over accusations of\npolitical dealings made by newly-\nelected Alderman Rev. Shaitn\nHerron.\nLiberal candidate in the provincial election expected in the\nSpring for the city, Mayor Staveley\ntold Council Tuesday night lie had\nbeen irresponsibly accused of using\nhis civic position to further interests of a political party.\nThe whole situation is closely\nconnected with the provincial government arising out of negotiations\nwith the Saskatchewan Power Cor-\nporati6n over the sale of the city's\npower plant, he said.\nThe allegations were made by\nMr. Herron in a surprise statement read to a Dec. 1 council\nmeeting he was attending as an\nobserver. The 50-year-old mayor\nwas not present at the meeting.\nMr. Herron was sworn In Tuesday.\nThe lengthy statement criticized\nthe mayor's negotiations for sale\nof the plant to th* Corporation and\nsaid he was jeopardizing the city's\nwelfare for political purposes,\nChief magistrate of the city,\nMayor Staveley would normally\nend his term of office at tha end\nof this year, Council will deal officially with the resignation Thursday night. A by-election must be\nheld to appoint a new mayor.\nMr. Staveley operates am insurance, real-estate and farm management business left him by his\nfather. He has been mayor since\n1953.\nA number of aldermen expressed\nshock at the mayor's resignation.\n\"I do not. like it.\" said Aid. Mrs.\nLouie Zabel. Aid. Slezak said the\ncity had never had such a capable\nadministrator.\nMayor Staveley said later; \"At\nall times I have kept my personal\nNews Media Said Flaying\nBig Part In Conservation\nWINNIPEG (CP) - President\nB. F. Avery of the Canadian Forestry Association said Thursday\nnews media are playing an import-\nant role in conservation of the nation's natural resources.\nMr. Avery, of ESpanola, Ont.,\nwas re-elected for a second term\nat the association's annual meeting here.\nReporting on publicity given\nthe activities of the national and\nprovincial associations, he said\nthe press, radio and television\nare making \"public service contributions\" to conservation and\nresources renewal programs \"of\ngreat value to the country.\"\n\"The importance lo the economy of Uie country of the preservation, development, and wise use\nof all our renewable natural resources Is becoming so well rec\nognized that these printed, spoken\nand visual programs are provided to us willingly as a public\nservice.\" '\nHe said the main purpose of Ihe\nforestry associations is \"lo disseminate programs of public information on our renewable natural resources.\"\nNORTH KAMLOOPS (CP) -\nVillag chairman Don Ellsay has\nrecommended parts of standing\ncommittee meetings be opened to\nthe public. The meetings were\npreviously closed.\nQuestion T\nOn Future\nrons-Canada Pipe\nCanadian Gas Rate\nBy AftCH MACKENZIE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Trans-Canada\nPipe Lines Limited, one of five\ncompanies seeking natural gas\nexport licences, was questioned\nWednesday about any influence it\nthinks American demand will\nhave on future Canadian gas\nprices.\nThe questioning by Northern\nOntario Natural Gas Company,\nopposing Trans-Canada's export\nbid before the national energy\nboard, ended before much light\nwas shed.\nTrans-Canada said it will call\nwitnesses later to deal with\nprices.\nThe company and the four other\napplicants seek authority to export gas totalling 8.609,750.000,000\ncubic   feet  to  the  Umled  States\nwithin a period ranging from 20\nto 25 years.\nLONG HEARING\nTrans-Canada continued today\nin the role of a witness, leading\noff for the applicants. It is expected to take Several weeks before all five have made their\ncases for export and most of 20\ninterveners are heard.\nNot all the 20 oppose the applications although a number have\nreservations about assured Canadian supplies and just and reasonable price levels within Canada if exports are approved by\nthe board and the federal cabinet, which has overriding authority.\nThe petroleum industry generally feels\" reserves are more than\nample to justify export and that\nsuch shipments would provide the\n-enomic shot in Ihe arm nsces-\nsary to compensate for Ihe depressed oil market.\nPRICE REACTION\nNorthern Ontario Natural Gas\nCompany, supplied solely by\nTrans-Canada, asked sales manager James Saks of Trans-Canada whether future Canadian gas\nirices wouldn't be influenced by\nAmerican demand. Mr. Saks said\nhe couldn't say, although he\nagreed that gas as a commodity\nIs Just as capable of reacting lo\ngeneral market pressures as any\nother.\nHe said under questioning lhat\nNorthern Ontario and Trans Canada had been unable to settle on\nfirm prices for some future Northern Ontario requirements.\nNorthern Ontario has complained lhat in seeking additional\nsupplies after 1963 it was told by\nTrans-Canada that it would have\n*o accept the going market price.\nMusic Comedy\nStar Dies, 61\nLONDON (Reuters) - Peggy\nO'Neil, former musical comedy\nactress who inspired the song\nSweet Peggy O'Neil. died in hos-\n! pital here Thursday. She was 61.\n1    She   was   born  in   Gneevgullia,\nIreland and made her first stage\nj appearance in Chicago as a child\ndancer in 1910.\nDuring the last war she went\nall over the world entertaining\nAllied fighting men.\nLovelorn escorts lined up for\nthe privilege of dating tile girl\nwith the dazzling red hair and\nblue yes. Two of the three men\nwho wrote the song about her\nwere rivals for her love. But she\nrejected hoth \u2014 and, in fact, all\nthe many others who pleaded\nwilh her to marry them\n\"I'm not the marrying kind.\"\nsh\u00a3 said and stayed unwed all her\nlife.\naffairs and my political affiliation\nseparate , . .\n\"But recently others have interjected elements of political consideration beyond my control and\non Dec. l at an open council meeting when I was not present I was\nIrresponsibly accused of using my\ncivic position to further interests\nof a political party.\n\"I, have reason to believe other\nsituations will be concocted during\nthe next six months If I am to be\nmayor of this city.\n\"... I am taking this step In\nprotest of political interference in\ncity matters.\n\". . . Responsibility for that\naction rests with those who are\ninterested in discrediting me as a\npolitical candidate in tiie next provincial election . . .\"\nWeyburn's power plant was sold\nto the CCF government's SPC for\n$1,5*0,000.\nOpen Peace\nRiver Bridge\nJanuary 25\nEDMONTON (CP) - Official\nopening of the $5,000,000 cantilever bridge on the Alaska Highway over the Peace River, near\nTaylor, B.C., Is planned for Jan.\n25, it was announced Thursday.\nJ. Gillies, district manager for\nDefence    Construction    Limited,\nsaid good progress is being made A\non the final stages of the bridge. '\nDecking   and   hand   rails   hawj;.\nbeen placed and welding now l\u00bb;\nbeing completed.\nThe new bridge replaces s suspension bridge, part of which collapsed in October, 1957.\nAIR-COOLED   ROOMS\nHOTEL\nW213 Riverside    W214 Sprague\nSpokane. Wasb.\nRooms with bath $3.50 to $4.50\nWithout bath $2.00 to $3.00\nSuites $7 00\nWELCOME   CANADIANS\nCurrent Premiums Paid\nAAA APPROVED\nLIBERTY   MOTEL\nNorth 6801   Division Sf.\nSpokane, Washington\n\u2022 Ultra Modern\n2 to 6 Person Units.\n\u2022 15 Minutes To Downtown\nShopping.\nMR. and MRS. R. W.\n\"BOB\" WHIPPS\nOwners and Managers\nSEASON'S GREETINGS\nTo Our Many\nCanadian Friends\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Flame\nFOOD and COCKTAILS\nT-Bone Steak\n$1 45\nSmall   Orders   for   Children.\nOut of the High Rent District\nE2401 Sprague\nTurn   at   Altamont   Street\nALWAYS  OPEN\n* Covered parking.\n* Free TV In each room.\n\"DcwnTcwner\nm\n \u25a0\u25a0'.'\u25a0-\u25a0    ' '-'.\u25a0\u25a0,' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0:   '   -     \u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0'.\".\u25a0  ' ^~~:\t\n-i -.;,. ....,..-..\u25a0\u25a0....... :\u25a0.' . .:-\u2014r-^\u2014\u2014 ....... - \/., \u25a0\u2014\u25a0-....'-  \u25a0        .-.,.. .,-.-.,.,\u2014-\u2014   ..-.-. \u2014r\u2014 __ \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 . ~ :\u2014~\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\". ' r- '~''m':^^^v'fi^~''i:-'^:-x'['i'''rr^-:!,>\"^pt!'i\n&\\\nOt   I\nIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIlll|ll|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIII|ll>\nSPORTS\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nBoston Bruins Move\nBack to Fourth Spot\nBOSTON (AP)\u2014Boston Bruins reclaimed fourth place\nln the National Hockey League from Chicago Thursday\nnight, turning back the Black Hawks 5-1.\nIt was Boston's fourth victory in its last six starts and\ngave the Bruins a one-point lead\u201433-32\u2014over Chicago. The\nBlack Hawks had taken over fourth place only the night\nbefore.\nControl of\nHorse Racing\nTo Government\nVICTORIA (CP) - Full control\nof all horse racing in British Columbia has been taken over by the\nprovincial government, Attorney-\nGeneral Bonner announced Thursday night.\nThe cabinet Thursday proclaimed\ninto law 370 regulations resulting\nfrom approval of an act by the\nlegislature last spring that set up\na B.C. racing commission.\nThe regulations provide for a\nthree-member commission and give\nit power over all aspects of horse\nracing, and also provide for a paid\nfull - time racing steward to be\nchosen by the unnamed commis\nsion, who will enforce the regulations.\nThe regulations also list the\nrules of racing laid down in past\nyears by the privately-owned gov\nerning body \u2014 the Vancouver\nThoroughbred Association Limited\n\u2014 and made only a few minor\nchanges.\nBoston's Bronco Horvath contributed a goal\u2014his 26th of the\nseason\u2014and an assist to catch up\nwith the Black Hawks' Bobby Hull\nin the race lor individual scoring\nhonors. Hull, shut out Thursday\nnight, and Horvath each have 49\npoints.\nFourteen penalties were assessed in the rough game, with Chicago's Al Arbour drawing a minor\nand a game misconduct for protesting too long and too loudly\nreferee Frank Udvari's call of a\nminor penally in the first period.\nThe ruling carries an automatic\nfine of at least $75.\nBoston goalie Don Simmons was\nworking on a shutout before the\nBruins' surprisingly tough defence\ngave way and Ed Litzenberger\npopped in Stan Mikita's rebound\nat 11:48 of the last period.\nBy that time, however, Boston\nhad scored four times and was\nout of danger. Bruins added another goal six minutes later.\nIn addition to Horvath, Boston\nscorers were Don McKenney, Flem\nMackell, Vic Staaiuk and Charlie\nBurns.\nEDMONTON (CP) - Service\nstations have been added to the\nlist of Alberta businesses prohibited from issuing trading stamps.\nGaspar Ortega Meets\nHarrington Tonight\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Stan Harrington, a newcomer from\nHonolulu, meets Gaspar Ortega, a Mexican who has earned\nthe nickname of the \"Unlucky Indian,\" in tonight's international boxing bout at Madi\nson Square Garden,\nMatchmaker Teddy Brenner,\nwith a policy of new faces, really\nreached out for this one. Harrington never has fought as a pro outside the city limits of. Honolulu.\nHe came here as an amateur in\n1952 and 1953. In 40 pro fights he\nhas piled up a 34-5-1 record and\nboasts that he never has been\nknocked off his feet.\nOrtega's   career  seems   to   be\njust one split decision after an- j\nother. He was last in the Garden i\nOct. 30 in a bout with FlorenUno i\nFernandez.   Although   the   Mexican's efforts excited wide support\namong the television viewers he\nlost the decision.\nA SPLIT, NATURALLY\nNaturally, it was split. His record is 51-17-2 and he, too, never\nhas been stopped.\nHarrington won and lost to\nTombstone Smith in 1959 and\ndropped a decision to Virgil Ak-\nins, the former welterweight\nchampion. He won five of seven\nfor the year winding up with a\nTKO over Jerry Hunnieut Nov.\n18. He has a wife and five chil\ndren' back home In Kaneone, a\nsuburb of Honolulu.\nTed Kawamura, his manager,\nand Harrington both consider Uie\nGarden fight their big chance to\ncrack the raUngs. Harrington is\nnot ranked and Ortega is No. 8\namong Ihe welters in the National\nBoxing Association ratings.\nSki Slants\nBy SITZMARK\nThis should be a big skiing weekend. The snow on the hill is terrific. Ski classes are starting and\nthere will be a lot of new members\ntaking their first steps on skis.\nWe hope all the \"schussboom-\ners\" will control their skiing to\navoid crashing into beginners. This\nwill be day whhen perhaps you can\nhelp a beginner that may be having harness or waxing troubles or\njust generally tangled up.\nThe ski instructors' job will not\nhe easy as they have to choose a\nspot on the hill that lends the best\nterrain to the particular phase of\nskiing they are teaching. Please\ncooperate and help whenever you\ncan!\nThere is a chance that the big\nlift will operate sometime on Sunday. Our faithful crew of repair\nmen are leaving early Saturday\nmorning to replace the top bull-\nwheel which has beeji repaired. If\nthey get the job done so it can be\nfully tested we may be able to use\nit Sunday.\nThe upper hill will need some\ntramping so please cooperate with\nthe ski patrol and get this done. If\nit. isn't you may be the one the\nt\nELECTRIC MOTOR\nREWINDING\nService and  Repairs\nWe  Rewind  All Size  Motors\nand Armatures\nSee  Us  About  All  Types  ol\nINDUSTRIAL   CONTROLS\nColeman Electric\nLTD.\nNelson, B.C. \/\nI Phone 2055\nREMEMBER\nHi-Fi Long Play\nRecords\nOnly\n$\n1.98\nMcKay & Stretton\nLtd.\nPHONE 155S\nfirst aid patrol has to bring down\non a toboggan.\nThe small lift will be running\nfrom twelve noon on Saturday and\nfrom 10:00 a.m. on Sunday and\nfrom 1:00 p.m. on Monday.\nLast Monday afternoon there\nwas only a handful of skiers using the lift. We are going to try\nand have it riming every Monday\nafternoon but this of course depends on the number of skiers who\nturn out. It is actually the best day\nto be on the hill if you can make\nit. There's no line-up and lots of\nroom to ski \u2014 so try to be there.\nBy now everyone should have\ntheir membership cards and tabs\nshould be sewn on where they can\nbe seen. Anyone failing to have\nthese will pay more than the mem\nbership rate.\nThere seems to be a habit among\nsome skiers to hide their tow tick\nets. These should be out in plain\nsight so Uie lift operator can check\nRemember anyone without a ticket\nand riding the lift will be banned\nfrom skiing on the hill.\nWatch those beginners this week\nend!\nAUTOMEN NUDGE\nWHITELEYS 39-34\nCily Auto Service were able to\nscrape out a win over Whlteley's\nSports Shop Monday night In the\nCity Basketball League, but only\nafter Whiteleys fell from a mid-\ngame six-point lead.\nWhiteley's top scorer, Rudy\nLanki, was called on to referee the\ngame along with Jack Kenzie, but\nhad the former player stayed in the\ngame, things might have been different for Automen.\nAs it was, Whiteleys lagged 12-9\nat tiie half, then pulled ahead 18-12\nbefore Automan Lorne Shockey\nstarted a series of shots that tied\nthe game, then slowly pulled City\nAuto ahead.\nWhiteleys managed to tie things\nup 31-31, then Shockey pulled his\nteam ahead for a final score of\n39-34.\nShockey ended the game with 23\npoints, more than half his team's\ntotal. Jeff Craig, centre for White-\nleys, collected 15.\nCity Auto (39) \u2014 Shockey 23,\nKoehle 6, Strong 4, Borch 2, Smith\n2, M. Renwick 2.\nWhiteley's (34) - Craig 15, Pasa-\ncreta 7, Segur 4, Englesby 3, P.\nRenwick 3, Sjoberg 2.\nOLYMPIC  HOCKEY\n!OT FOR FINLAND\nHELSINKI, Finland (Reuters)\nFinland has decided not to compete in the hockey tournament of\nthe  Winter  Olympic Games  next\nmonth at Squaw Valley, Calif.\nFinland's Olympic Games committee announced Thursday that\nthe hockey team was not strong\nenough to compete in the Games\nand that the costs of sending it to\nCalifornia would have been prohibitive\nLegion Zone\nPlaydowns\nHere on 15th\nNelson will be the site of the\nCanadian Legion Zone playdowns\nit was announced Wednesday.\nThe dates for the 'spiel are Jan.\n15, 16 and 17. Entries are coming\nin from the entire West Kootenay,\nwith nine from Trail, six from\nNelson, six from Rossland and\nthree from Castlegar registered\nOther entries are still arriving,\nand are expected to total 30.\nWinner of the primary event will\nbecome zone champion, and will\ntake part in the B.C. playdowns\ntentatively set for Feb. 12 and 13\nin Penticton. There will also be\ntwo consolation events.\nThe visiting curlers will be\ntreated to a banquet Saturday\nnight, then an informal dance at\nthe curling rink.\nWITH STANE\nAND  BESOM\nThursday night's curling results\nfollow:\nM. B. Ryalls 7, D. Benedetti 6.\nJ. Haines 9, R. Bruce 9.\nG. Barefoot 9, A. Reid 6.\nD. M. Sample 8, D. Cathcart 3.\nJ. Harvey 8, J. Laughton 6.\nA. Hamson 9, W. Tickner 7.\nL. J. Maurer 6, J. Leeming 9.\nS. Jeffreys 9, H. Ronmark 11.\nH. Farenholtz 2, D. Meakins 10.\nL, Bicknell 9, H. Moore 6.\nTROUBLE BRUIN FOR FOES - By Alan Mover\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960 \u2014 7\n&RONCO\nHORVATH,\nSHOULD EASIL\/\nOM H\/Stf OF\n66 PO\/rtTS JZ\ntie tries ro\nErfP rue\nCAMpietfs-\npep wrtss\nTITLE\nMotloPoL>\/'tlo\nOUTZIPe* H*S\nWON 5'ACS I9W-\nDUtribulii by K<\u00ab0 Folium Svniict.lt\nLos Angeles Open\nStarts $244,500\nPurse Golf Tour\nBy BOB MYERS\nLOS ANGELES (AP)\u2014The nation's top golfers hit the\n1960 money trail today and it is a rich one.\nIn California alone, leading off today with the $44,000\nLos Angeles Open, the professionals will shoot for prize\nmoney totalling  $244,500  in\nJapanese Tops in Box\nOffice, Edged 10-9\nSTRIKES 'N' SPARES\nFollowing are results in Mixed\nCommercial league bowling Thursday night:\nBloopers 2, Savoy Hotel 2, Palm\nDairies 0, Queen's Hotel 4, Bank\no.\" Montreal 2, North Shore 2, Hudson's Bay 3, Overwaitea 1, Hume\nHotel 4, Orange Crush 0, Mc and\nMc 1, Beatniks 3.\nLadies high single and aggregate\nwent to Betty Stewart of Queen's\nHotel with 393 and 840. Men's high\nsingle went to Al Cameron of Hud-\nson's Bay with 282 and men's high\naggregate to Bruce Malcolm of\nHume Hotel with 760. Team high\nsingle went to Queen's Hotel with\n1271 and team high aggregate to\nSavoy Hotel with 3300.\nTeam standings at the end of\nthe first half of the schedule:\nHume Hotel 50, Overwaitea 40,\nQueen's Hotel 37, Orange Crush 30,\nPalm Dairies 29, Savoy Hotel 29,\nBloopers 27, Hudson's Bay 27,\nNorth Shore 24, Beatniks 24, Mc\nand Mc 22. Bank of Montreal 21\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A group\nof Japanese hockey players an'\nproving Uie biggest box office attraction to hit the B.C. hockey\ncircuit in many a moon.\nAnd if their narrow 10-9 loss to\nan all-star squad from Uie intermediate Pacific Coast Amateur\nHockey League is any indication,\nthey may soon become a success\non the ice lanes as well.\nThe small but fast-skating team\nthat will represent Japan at the\nWinter Olympics at Squaw Valley, Calif., next month roared\nfrom a 7-1 deficit to almost upset\nthe favored All-Stars.\nIt was the touring team's second loss in as many starts of\ntheir lG-game pre Olympic tour oi\nCanada and Uie United Stales.\nMonday they went down 9-1 to\nVictoria Navy, another intermediate team.\nSECOND SELL-OUT\nBut despite expected deficiencies on the ice, the Japanese attracted Iheir   second   straight\nstanding room crowd. More than\n3,100 fans crammed the 2,600-seat\nKerrisdale Arena here to witness\nthe game.\nIn Victoria 5,600 fans jammed\nthe 5000-seat Memorial Arena to\nget a look at the Japanese repre-\nsentaUves.\nIn both games there was little\ndoubt the tourists had the fans'\nsupport.\nAgainst the all-stars here the\nJapanese showed noticeable improvement as the game progressed. Four of their nine goals\ncame in Uie last period and they\njust missed a fifth which would\nhave tied lhe contest.\nThe tourists were obviously the\nbetter-conditioned team and the\npace they set gradually wore\ndown the heavier and more\nrugged Canadians.\nTonight the Japanese play their\nthird game of the tour against\nNanaimo of Ihe PCAHL and another sell-out crowd is expected.\nFollowing this they will finish\nthe next five weeks.\nSome of the money will come\nfrom pro - amateur competition,\nbut it's money just the same.\nThursday the pros aimed at\n$5,000 for a round of 18 holes\nplayed with a host of Hollywood\ncelebriUes at Fox Hills Golf\nClub.\nToday Uie serious work, spread\nover four rounds winding up Monday, gets underway at the now\nfamiliar site of the event, the\nRancho municipal golf course.\n$25,000 PRIZE\nNext week the pros compete for\n$25,000 at the new Yorba.Linda\nCountry Club, a tournament that\nreplaced Uie Caliente Open in Tijuana, Mex.\nBing Crosby throws his annual\nclambake Jan. 21-24, this one for\na $50,000 purse, at Monterei Peninsula in northern California.\nThe firing switches again to\nsouthern California Jan. 28-31 for\nthe $25,000 San Diego Open at\nMission Valley Country Club.\nThe California phase concludes\nwith a fabulous $100,000 event\nstyled the Palm Springs desert\nclassic. It is set for Feb. 3-7 and\nwill be played at 90 holes.\n34TH BIRTHDAY\nThe Los Angeles Open, the original anchor for Uie winter tour in\nthe west, observes its 34th birthday.\nRancho sprawls out a little over\n7,000 yards and par is 35-36-71.\nYoung Ken Venturl Is Uie defending champion, thanks to an\nalmost incredible 63 he fired in\nUie final round. It gave him a 72-\nhole score of 278, six under par.\nArt Wall Jr., the 1959 masters\nand \"golfer of Uie year,\" is back,\nhoping for no more hot streaks\nfrom Venturi. Wall went into the\nfinal round last year with a one-\nstroke lead over the field and\neight strokes in front of Venturi.\nWall had a respectable 73 but\nit gave him 280 and second place\nmoney.\nthe B.C. tour with games at Ohilliwaek, Powell River and Kamloops.\nThe All-Stars rolled to a 6-1\nfirst-period lead Wednesday night\nand increased the margin to 7-1\nearly in the second. It was 10-5\nat Uie end of 40 minutes.\nToshihio Yamada, a 121-pound\nrightwinger, sparked the Japanese attack with three goals. Shi-\nnichi Homma added two with\nsingletons coming from Isao Ono,\nMasaml Tanabu, Mamoru Ta-\nkashima and Masao Murano.\nPete Eades with three, Bob Dumont and Joe Zubaok with two\neach and Bill Coroluic, Dino Ma-\nniago and Bruno Furlan with one\neach handled the All-Star scoring.\nWarriors No\n\"Pushover\" Says\nCoach Maglio\nThe Rossland Warriors of the\nWIHL are not a \"push over\" anymore. And the Nelson Maple Leafs\nhockey club realize it only too well.\nThe Leafs host the Warriors in\na league scramble tonight and \"it\nwill take everything we have to\nhold them down,\" playing-coach\nMickey Maglio remarked as he\nthumped his hockey stick against\nIhe boards during the last-minute\npractice Thursday night.\n\"There is no use fooling ourselves,\" he admitted, \"the Warriors have really been putting on\nthe pressure.\"\n\"Trail has been losing their grip\non top spot and we are going to\ntake over. . . .and it won't be long\neither.\"\n\"The boys are in the best shape\nthat they have ever been in, our\npassing plays are paying off, wo\nare at full strength and determin-\naUon is our test defence.\"\n\"We have been saying this for\nmonths, and the league standings\nhave proved that it is not just\ntalk. We're breathing down the\nneck of the Smokies and after\nthree more games, Trail will be in\nsecond spot and Rossland in third.\"\nPreaching Sports Editor, Dead\nDucks Sports Oddities of 1959\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CPI-A sports editor in Manitoba exchanged jobs\nwith a preacher for a week. Another, in Alberta, broke his leg\nwhile shooting pool and turf writers in Onlario included a dead\nhorse in lh\u00b0ir race selections.\nTwo dead ducks landed at Uie\nfeet of Uie timer after he fired\nthe gun at half-time in a professional football game in Ontario.\nQuarterback Ronnie Knox quit\nToronto Argonauls of Uie Big I\nFour Football Union lo write a\nbook and goalkeeper Jacques\nPlante of the Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens added a\nface mask to his equipment.\nThese were just a few of the\n1959 Canadian sports uddilie.s recalled by spoils editors and\nbroadcasters in lhe 25th annual\nCanadian Press year-end sports\npoll released Thursday. They also\nvoted Toronto Maple Leafs of Uie\nNational Hockey   League  as the\nTonight-8:30 p.m\nROSSLAND\nWARRIORS\nvs.\nNELSON\nMAPLE LEAFS\nTicket! On Sale:\nToday \u2014 Kootenay Stationers, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nsurprise  and comeback  team  of\nthe year.\nSURPRISE VOTE\nSports editor Jack Matheson of\nthe Winnipeg Tribune received an\noddity and surprise vote from\nHal Walker of the Toronto Telegram for, as Walker termed it,\n\"becoming a preacher.\" Sports\neditor Hal Pawson of the Edmonton Journal tumbled off Uie pool\ntable and Al Eaton of the Flin\nFlon Miner gave Uiis incident his\nvole.\nPaw.son's interest was caught\nwhen a couple of Toronto track\nwriters included a horse in their\ndaily seieclion although the animal had died a week before.\nThat was his oddity.\nVern DeGoer of Uie Montreal\nGazette gave his oddity vote to\nihe fun-loving fan at Ottawa's\nLansdown park who sneaked a\ncouple of dead ducks inlo the\nstadium and tossed them into the\nnir over the timer's head as he\npulled the trigger to end the second quarter.\nA couple of voters said simply\nthat Punch Imlach, manager-\ncoach of Ihe Leafs filled the bill.\nThe Leafs, wilh Imlach calling\nthe shot even to the number of\npoinls they would get over the\n70-game schedule\u201466\u2014made the\nStanley Cup final after floundering around ln last plac for most\nof Ihe season and were runaway\nchoices in the comeback and surprise categories.\nOTTAWA COMES CLOSE\nClosest in Uie comeback voting\nwere Ottawa Rough Riders who\nlost their opening five Big Four\nlames, went on to win 10 of their\nnext ll and bowed to Hamilton\nTiger-Cats by a 26-24 count in the\ntwo-game total-point final series.\nSecond spot in the surprise bal-\nloh'ng went   to   Canadian   heavy\nweight boxing champion George\nChuvalo's victory over favored\nYvon  Durelle.\nDurelle, knocked out in the 12th\nround after taking a bad beaUng,\nretired as Canadian and British\nEmpire light-heavyweight champion. Earlier this week he was\nvoted the disappointment of Uie\nyear in the CP poll.\nGREY CUP GAME SCORED\nA few voters took dead aim on\nvarious aspects of the Winnipeg\nBlue Bomber-Hamilton Tiger-Cat\nGrey Cup final as the year's\noddity.\nJack Koffman of the Oltawa\nCitizen termed the condition of\nthe Canadian National Exhibition\nstadium field in Toronlo \"disgraceful\" and added that \"football people were so busy counting their share of the half-million - dollar melon they forgot\nabout Uie gridiron.\"\n\"The unjustified billing of Uie\nGrey Cup as a sports festival,\"\nsaid Don Soutter of the Kingston\nWhig - Standard. A couple voted\nfor the second-quarter blocked\nkick by Hamilton's Vince Scott\nand Alf Cottrell of the Vancouver\nProvince called the half - time\nscore\u20143-1 for Bombers\u2014as the\nyear's oddity. Bombers won the\ngame 21-7.\nGerry Gosselin of Montreal Le\nDevoir gave his ballot to members of Parliament \"who spent a\nwhole day talking about sports\nand athletics\" and votes went to\nBelleville McFarlands, world\namateur hockey champions who\nwon the title at Prague, Czechoslovakia, on a better goal average over Russia. The two teams\nwere tied in points at the end of\nthe round-robin tournament.\nHamilton Tiger - Cats and lacrosse each received one vote.\nNo reason was given for Uie\nchoice.\nOf course, Ihis crack train isn't likely to pull in at your Imperial Esso jerries station, but\nit, loo, is an important Imperial customer and plays quite a part in your everyday driving.\nWhy competition among oil companies for customers\nlike \"The Canadian\" benefits you\nYou and customers like the railroads want to be sure that\nyou are getting the best products, the best service and\ndie best price.\nIn Canada there are 74 oil companies competing to serve\nyou and your car. Imperial is one of them and has 13,000\npeople working in oil fields, research laboratories, refineries\n(Esso)\n(\u00a3SSO)  IMPERIAL OIL  LIMITED\nand sales forces\u2014all helping to compete for business.\nThe standards of quality, service and price that it takes\nto win railroad business benefit all our customers, large\nand small.\nThat's one reason Canadians have made Esso stations\nthe busiest on Canadian roads.\n..for 79 years a leader In Canada's  growth\n \u25a0    \"   '     .   :\"-.;  \u25a0\nw^^www^p^1^\nMJifj^iw-pispsj^^ -\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dailv News does not hold Usui! responsible Id the event\not an error In the followine lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium ..\nAdvocate  \t\nAlgom Uranium i.\nAnacon Lead \t\nAtlin Ruff \t\nAumacho  \t\nAumaque\t\nAtinor \t\nBarnat  _.\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium .\nBibis Yukon \t\nBoymar   \t\nBrunswick \t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCampbell C     \t\nCampbell R. L. ...\nCan Met \t\nCassiar   \t\nCentral Patricia .\nChimo  \t\nChromium  \t\nConiauruim   \t\n.10\n... 3.00\n...   13.12V4\n.62\n.13\n.09\n_      .07\n_    2.95\n..-     1.55\n 15\n.... 10.50\n_ .09%\n_ .07\n.._ 3.10\n.07\n.._ 6.70\n.... 13.00\n.20\n.... 13.00\n... 1.26\n_ .59\n\u201e    3.30\n 50\nCons Denison     11.25\nCons. Discovery      3.70\nCons Halliwell  71\nCons Howe      2.85\nCons Mining & Smelting .   19.37%\nCons  Regcourt  09%\nCon Sanorm  07\nCon Sub       .47\nConwest           4.00\nCopper Corp  30\nCopper  Man   10\nCraig     3.80\nD'Aragon   33\nDonalda       08\nEast Arnphi     08\nEast Malartic      1.66\nEast Sullivan        1.75\nElder Gold          1.37\nFalconbridge       32.62%\nFaraday  79\nFrobisher     2.00\nGeco         17.75\nGiant Yel    10.25\nGlen Uranium  07%\nGoldale       .17\nGunnar Gold  -    10.37%\nHasaga 18\nHeadway 30%\nHollinger        _    29.50\nHudson Bay     49.75\nInt. Nickel       104.37%\nIron Bay          2.25\nBata Petroleum  04%\nCalgary and F,dmonton ...   20.50\nCanadian Devonian      3.55\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nCon East Crest \t\nCons  Peak  \t\nDuvex  \t\nHome A\nLong Island Pete\nMarigold\nMidcon   \t\nOkalta  \t\nPacific Pete\n.43\n..      .01%\n.05%\n..   12.25\n.15\n..      .09%\n.54\n.60\n...   12.12%\nPetrol        I.U\nPonder\nPlace Oil\n.21\n.94\nProv Gas      2.60\nJonsmith\nR J Jowsey \t\nKerr Addison \t\nLabrador      \t\nLeilch \t\nLexindin        \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLorado   \t\nLouvic't   \t\nMacassa    \t\nMacDonald  \t\nMadsen R. L.  \t\nMalartic G. F\t\nManeast\nMaritime Mining\nMcLeod\nMcKenzie R L \t\nMillikcn       \t\nMulti Mins \t\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Delhi\nNew Harricana ....\nNew Hosco \t\nNew Jason \t\nNipissing        \t\nNoranda New \t\nNorgold        \t\nNormetals  \t\nNorpax \t\nNorth Can     \t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska      \t\nPickle Crow\n.16\n.41%\n21.12%\n27.25\n1.45\n.03%\n1.82\n.32\n.05%\n2.65\n.30\n2.64\n1.00\n.05%\n1.28\n1.01\n.26\n.98\n.54\n.11%\n.13%\n.10\n1.00\n.07%\n1 41\n48.12%\n.05%\n3.70\n.12\n1.31\n1.15-\n8.45\n.87\nPlacer Devel       10.87M\nRoyalite\nSpooner     \t\nStanwell Oil \t\nTriad \t\nUnited Oils     \t\nYank Canuck \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel     \t\nAluminum        -..\nAnalog\t\nArgus 2nd pfd. \t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A. Oil \t\nBell Telephone    \t\nBrazilian\nB.C. Electric 4%s\t\nB.C. Forest      \t\nB.C. Power A \t\nBurns A\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners ...\nCanadian Celanese .\nCan. Cement \t\nCan Chem Co     \t\nCanadian Dredge\n9.00\n.15%\n.50\n3.85\n1.80\n.05\n35%\n39 >\u00bb\n33%\n8%\n35\n27%\n35\n43\n4.55\n81%\n14%\n37%\n13\n35;l\/4\n13%\n22 V4\n33%\n6%\n15%\nCan. Curtis Wright      2.70\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  ...\nBralorne     \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nCraig \t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc\n.11\n5.25\n1.16\n3.85\n.18%\n1.30\nHighland Bell       1.47\nNational Ex  08%\nPend Oreille      2.45\nQuatsino         17\nReeves MacDonald       1.40\nSheep  Creek      93\nSherritt Gordon     2.75\n.19\n.06\n.27\n.11%\n.17\n.07%\n.00%\n.13\nSilbak Premier\nSilver Ridge     \t\nSilver Standard   \t\nSunshine Lardeau \t\nTaylor \t\nTrojan \t\nUtica\nWestern  Exploration\nOILS\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCharter\nHome \t\nOkalta Com   \t\nPacific Pete       \t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite        \t\nRoyal Can \t\nUnited \t\nVantor    \t\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly .\nCan. Packers A \t\nCan. Packers B    \t\nCockshutt \t\n24%\n25\n46\n45%\n21%\nColumbia Cellulose      3.75\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram    \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDom. Foundries   \t\nDom. Stores .   ...\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nDom. Textiles   \t\nEddy Paper     \t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer  _\nFord U.S\t\nGatineau \t\nGatineau 5% pfd \t\nGen. Steel Wares \t\nImperial Oil      \t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInd. Ace.    \t\nLoblaw A    -\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Ferguson \t\nMolson Brewery \t\nMont. Loco   \t\nMoore Corp.    ...\nNat. Steel Car  :....\nPage Hershey  -\t\nPower  Corp\t\nRuss. Industries \t\nShawinigan  \t\nSimpsons A  -\nSoutham \t\nStandard Paving \t\nSteel of Canada    \t\nUnion Gas of Can \t\nUnited Steel    \t\nWoodwards A. \t\nPreston E. D.\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Lithium\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont\t\nRadiore    \t\nRayrock\t\nSan Antonio\n4.95\n.18\n3.10\n.61\n11.25\n.67\n.61\n.61\nSherritt Gordon      2.85\nStadacona  08\nSteep Rock       \t\nSlocan Van Roi \t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite   \t\nTaurcanis      \t\nTeck Hughes \t\nTemagami    \t\nThomp-Lund \t\nTombill \t\nTorbrit \t\nTrans Cont Res \t\nUnited Keno     \t\nUpper Canada  _..\nVentures \t\nViolamac\t\nWaite Amulet \t\nWilroy \t\nWiltsey Goglin\nWright Ilargreaves .\nYale\nYellowknife Bear\nYoung (H.G.) Gold\nYtikeno\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc \t\nBanff Oils\nBailey Selburn\n13.00\n.11\n1.7(1\n.80\n.68\n1.71\n2.05\n.50\n.47\n.30\n.15\n5.75\n1.13\n26.75\n1.48\n6.60\n1.53\n.09%\n1.25\n.20\n1.10\n.79\n.04' \u25a0\n.12\n1.10\n7.45\n37%\n31%\n21\n51\n50%\n15%\n9'i\n60\n19\n16%\n87%\n36%\n96\n16\n36%\n11%\n36%\n25\n25%\n11%\n25\n18\n43\n14%\n27%\n55%\n11%\n30\n33%\n82%\n19\n85%\nlf,%\n8%\n19%\n.43\n20.00\n1.25\n12.00\n.55\n12.00\n.30 V\n850\n 16\n      1.75\n 71\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers        2.75\nAlberta Distillers Vt  2.25\nB C Forests   14.12%\nB C Power   37.12%\nB C Telephone   42.75\nCrown Zeller (Can)     19.25\nInt Brew B ..... 4.00\nInland Nat Gas      1.60\nTrans Mtn    11.75\nWestminster Paper ..._    38.25\nWestern Plywoods     14.50\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk        27.50\nTrans Canada Com        24.50\nTrans Mountain Unit     11.75\nWest Coast Unit     71.00\nWest Coast Vt    16.50\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal . .   54.50\nCan. Bank of Com. .     54.50\nImp. Bank of Can.        60.50\nRoyal Bank of Can.      78.50\nFUNDS\nAll  Can.  Com     7.72\nAll Can. Div     6.15\nCan.  Inv.  Fund       9.02\nCommonwealth Int. ..    8.25\nFirst Oil and Gas ....     4.13\nGrouped Income         3.86\nInvestors Growth      6.24\nInvestors Mutual     11.24\nLeverage ...    6.78\nTrans Canada \"C\" ...    6.10\n55.50\n55.50\n61.50\n80.00\n8.39\n6.69\n9.90\n9.07\n4.51\n4.22\n6.74\n12.15\n7.45\n6.65\nBIG  DECISION AHEAD\nPORT ALBERNI (CP) \u2014Mayor Loran Jordon told the inaugural city council meeting Wednesday two courses are open If\nthe city wants to obtain an adjustment to the assessment on\nMacMillan, Bloedel and Powell\nRiver Co. property. One would\nbe to collect the same amount\nof taxes as last year and the\nother would be for council to resign and leave the city's management to a government-appointed\ncommission.\nItalian Bishops\nTo Control Use\nOf Priests' Cars\nVATICAN CITY (AP)-Italian\nbishops of the Roman Catholic\nChurch are moving to regulate\nthe use of private cars and motorcycles by the Italian clergy.\nVatican sources said many\nItalian dioceses have ordered\npriests with automobiles and motorcycles to obtain permission\nfrom their bishops if they plan to\ncontinue driving after Jan. 31.\nThe bishops, Vatican sources\nsaid, are acting on the basis\nof considerations formulated by\nGiuseppe Cardinal Siri, Archbishop ol Genoa. Among these\nconsiderations are:\nMany people consider the automobile an instrument of the\nwealthy and not in harmony with\na priest's humble life.\nAutomobiles are a temptation\nto \"joy ride, or a temptation for\nworse.\"\nAutomobiles and motorcycles\ncreate a dangerous competition\namong Uie clergy, for they create\nclasses, the privileged ones with\ncars, and the underprivileged\nwithout.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n5:30 Rin Tin Tin *\n6:00 3 Stooges\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Square  Dance  Parly\n7:30 Walt Disney Presents\n8:30 Man  From  Blackhawk *\n9:00 77 Sunset Strip\n10:00 R. Taylor, Detective *\n11:00 Channel Two Theatre\n1:00 Nightcap News\nKBQ \u2014 Channel 6\n6:15 Front Page\n6:45 NBC News *\n7:00 Cavalcade of Sports\n7:45 Decorating Ideas\n8:00 Art Carney Show *\n9:30 M-Squad *\n10:00 People Are Funny '\n10:30 News\n10:40 Late Movie\n\"Firefly\"\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n8:30 University Profile\n8:45 Song Shop\n9:00 Red Rowe *\n9:30 On The Go *\n10:00 1 Love Lucy \u2666\n10:30 December Bride *\n11:00 Love Of Life *\n11:30 Search For Tomorrow '\n11:45 Guiding Light *\n12:00 It's a Great Life\n12:30 Stage 4\n1:00 Take 4\n1:30 As the World Turns *\n2:00 For Better or Worse *\n2:30 Houseparty *\n3:00 Millionaire *\n3:30\n4:00\n4:15\n4:30\n5:00\n5:15\n5:45\n6:15\n6:30\n7:00\n7:30\n8:30\n9:00\n10:00\n10:30\n11:00\nVerdict Is Yours *\nBrighter Day *\nSecret Storm *\nEdge of Night *\nCartoons\nRobin Hood\n4 Star Report\nDoug Edwards, News '\nTime Out for Sports\nMacKenzies Raiders\nRawhide *\nHotel De Paree *\nDesilu Playhouse *\nTwilight Zone *\nPerson to Person *\nMovie 4\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1960\n6:54\u2014Sign On\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports  News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15-Wake  Up Time\n8:30\u2014Opening Markets\n8:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:45\u2014The Archers\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:10\u2014Story Parade\n9:20\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Wheel of Fortune\n10:10\u2014Interlude\n10:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\nU:00A-News\n11:05\u2014Jane Grey Show\n11:10\u2014Album Time\n11:45\u2014Swift Money Man\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014News and Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30-CKLN Concert Corner\n4:00\u2014B.C. Road Report\n4:05\u2014Rocking With Boates\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:20\u2014Ottawa Report\n5:25\u2014Rolling  Home Show\n5:40\u2014Closing Markets\n5:45\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:55\u2014Dee's Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Musicale\n6:25\u2014Tempo Pt. 1\n6:55\u2014Musicale\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Mattresses for\n7:45\u2014This Is Jodrell Bank\n8:00\u2014Cameos\n8:30\u2014Serenade\n9:30\u2014Songs of My People\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports; Weather\n10:15\u2014The Nation's Business\n10:30\u2014Anthology\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Sign Off\nCows\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, JANUARY 9,  1960\n6:00\u2014Bert Nelson\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bert Nelson\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Hobby Club\n9:30\u2014Sports College\n9:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014World Church News\n10:15\u2014CBC News\n10:25\u2014Regional Weather\n12:30\u2014Time for French\n10:45\u2014Chansonettes\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:30\u2014Now I Ask You\n3:00\u2014CBC News\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:30\u2014This Week at the UN\n3:45\u2014Stu Davis\n4:00\u2014Ray's  Record\n4:30-CBC Light Concert Orch.\n5:25\u2014News\n5:30\u2014NHL Hockey\n7:30\u2014CBC News\n7:35\u2014New York Philharmonic\n9:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:30\u2014Drama in Sound\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:15\u2014The First Canadians\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\nDAILY\nACROSS\n1. Furze\n6. Ivy\t\nPriest, U.S.\nTreasurer\n11. Manila\nhemp\n12. Popeye's\ngirl friend\n13. Geographical circle\n14. Extort\nmoney\n(colloq.)\n15. Prophet\n16. Blunders\n17. Limp\n21. Affectionate term\n24. Arab's\ngarment\n27. Labor Act\n29. Still\n30. Enlists\n31. Belonging to\nHelen's city\n32. Cooked\n35. Denomination\n39. Manacles\n41. Seal on\npapal bulls\n42. Minister's\nhouse\n43. A narcotic\n44. Winter\nweather\ncondition\n45. Donkeys\nDOWN\n1. Breaches\n2. Hautboy\n3. Chest sound\n4. Miss O'Hara\nCROSSWORD\n5. Organ of       24. Entire\nhearing 25. Chief\n6. Mr. Hope deity\n7. Bowling lane      (Babyl.)\n8. Bleaching      26. Affirma-\nvat\n9. Always\n10. Primary,\ncolor (pi.)\n18. Additional\n19. Liberace'a\nmedium\n20. Mr. Mason,\nlawyer\n21. Pigpen\n22. Woe (dial.)\n23. Newt\ntive\n\u25a0votes     I\n28. Even\nchanceB\n31. Taut\n32. Obscures\n33. Spoken\n34. Not\nany\n36. High\npriests\n37. Hint\nMLUH  lariHii\nfas   ami mw\nIn\nM\nP\nL\nieitbci\nffl\nM El\nM\nE\nN\nE\nD  B\nUJ\n[D\nij_y\nIB   E\nYeiterdty'f Aniwef\n38. Harry Lau\u00bb\nder's caps\n40.Piace\n41. Feathered\nscarf\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\"\n|\nb\n7\n8\n9\n10\nII\ntf<\nIZ\n13\n^\n14-\nIS-\n%\n^\n^A\nIb\nV\/,\nV\/f\n%\n17\n>a\n19\nJO\n^\/A\n^\n%\n21\n21\n25\n^A\n24\n25\n2b\n17\n18\nV\n%\njo\n%\n%\n%\n31\n^A\n^f\n%\n32\n33\n34\n%\nl\n%\n3S\n3*.\n37\n36\n35\n4\u00b0\n^\nA[\nA%\n^\n*i\n44\n^\nAi\n1-8\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDAILY CRYl'XOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to worlt It:\nAXYDI. BAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoo-\ntrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram quotation\nAXU     GBKQWI    RP    TSJ     BU    X     KBF.\nLPM    MWQ?    WM    FWLP    BU    X    DWFQ\u00ab\nPU    RWGF?\u2014 RFXCP.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote:  HOW DEAR TO THIS  HEART\nARE THE SCENES OF MY CHILDHOOD    WOODWORTH.\nWi 1959, King Features Syndicate. Inc.)\n ^-7- : .       .   , . :\n\u25a0\u25a0 ,    \u25a0\u2022  v\u2014! : \"\u2014... \u25a0\u25a0   .-'-^h\n\"\u2014\"\u2014\u201e.\u2022\u25a0-! \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,-'\u25a0..\u2022\u25a0\u25a0        \u2022\u25a0 - --JiyjyuimHi\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.\nBIRTHS\nROBERTS - To Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Daniel Roberts of Oliver, at St.\nMartin's Hospital in Oliver, Qe-\ncember 27, a son, Guy. Everal.\nMrs. Roberts is the former Shirley\nJohnson of Nelson.\nHELP WANTED\nACCOUNTANT FOR GARAGE\nand service station. Must be ex:\nperienced. Steady employment.\nApply giving references, bonding\nand salary expected. Drawer 220,\nFruitvale,.     \t\nFILER CAPABLE OF HANDLING\ncircular, head rig, gang-saw and\nre-saw. Location Southern Interior. Reply to Box 6978 Nelson\nNews.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nEARN $S3~ WEEKLY\" PLUS A\nFREE WARDROBE IN YOUR\nSPARE TIME. Just show fashion\nfrocks to friends. No investment,\ncanvassing or experience necessary. Write: North American\nFashion Frocks Ltd., 3425 Industrial Blvd., Dept. D-5004, Mont-\nreal 39, Que.\t\nWANTED USHERETTES. APPLY\nCivic Theatre evenings.\n_SITUATIONS WANTED\nFOR THE\" BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, sec Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Road, .or phone\nbus  98, res   1186-Y\nCHESTERFIELD. RUG CLEAN\nIng. invisible mending, moth\nproofing Dutch Cleaning Service.\nphone 2190  '\nOIL STOVES OR FURNACES\nserviced. Norm Bowcock Ph. 385.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO\nGENERAL CONTRACTORS\n\"Stipulated Contract Proposals\"\nare invited for construction of Additions to Kinnaird and Twin Rivers Elementary Schools and will be\nreceived until 4:00 p.m. Standard\nTime, Thursday, February 4th,\n1960, at the office of the Board ol\nSchool Trustees, Castlegar, B.C.\nThe work consists of the following:\n(a) 2 classrooms and staff room,\nKinnaird School, Kinnaird, B.C.\n(b) 2 classrooms, stafftfoom and\nPrincipal's office, Twin Rivers\nSchool, Castlegar, B.C.\nA certified cheque is required\nwith each tender, for the sum of 10\nper cent (10%) of the tender, to be\nreplaced with a performance Bond,\nas specified, within ten days of the\ncontract date.\nDrawings, Specifications, Tendering forms and instructions to\nBidders will be issued to GENERAL CONTRACTORS ONLY, and\nmay be obtained on or after 9:00\na.m. Standard Time, Thursday,\nJanuary 14, 196(1 at the School\nBoard Office in Castlegar, B.C.\nA returnable deposit of ten dollars '$10.00' is required for each\nset of plans.\nThe Board reserves the right to\nreject any or all tenders.\nTenders to be sealed and Plainly\nMarked:\nTWIN RIVERS Addition\nKINNAIRD Addition.\nSeparate Tenders are requested\nfor each job.\nC. H. KING, Secretary-Treasurer,\nBox 820, Castlegar, B.C.\nBoard of Trustees,\nSchool District NO. 9,\n(CASTLEGAR).\nTRUCKS\" FOR\" SALE\nOffers in writing will be received by the undersigned up to 4:00\np.m. Friday the 15th day of January I960, for the following described vehicles:\n1. 1-1951 Mercury Pickup\nModel 3065.\n2. 1-1952 Mercury Pickup\nModel 3095.\n3. 1-1951 Willys Pickup\n4 Wheel Drive - Model 3129.\nTerms of Sale \u2014 Cash.\nThe highest or any offer no( ne-\ncessarily accepted.\nThe vehicles may be seen at Nelson, B.C. and further information\nmay be obtained from the undersigned.\nThomas G. C. Fox,\nCourthouse, Nelson. B.C.\nTrustee', Bennetts Ltd.\n A Bankrupt.\nb usinessTa n~d\nprofessional directory\nMACHINERY\nin u pitmen it\n1957 TD-1'4 ;142 Series)\nCrawler Tractor\nDirect-Lift  Hydraulic  Angledozer,\nLogging Winch,\nOperator's Guard.\nRebuilt.\n1957 TD-9 Crawler Jractor\nDrott  i'\/z-Yd. Front End Loader.\nLike-New Condition.       '\n1952 TD-14A\nCrawler Tractor\nHydraulic Angledozer,\nLogging Winch,\nOperator's Guard.\nRebuilt.\n1956 TD-18 (182 Series)\nCrawler Tractor\nDirect-Lift  Angledozer,\nLogging Winch,\nOperator's Guard.\nRebuilt.\nLID  1091   Diesel Power Uni\n203   H.P.\nExtended Shaft,\nSkid-Base.\nRebuilt.\n1950 TD-14A\nCrawler Tractor\nHydraulic Angledozer,\nLogging Winch.\nOperator's Guard.\n1951   Caterpillar D-4\n7U Series -  Wide Gauge.\nHydraulic Angledozer,\nLogging Winch,\nOperator's Guard.\n1950 TD-24\nCrawler Tractor\nCable Angledozer,\nLogging Winch,\nOperator's Guard.\nCaterpillar RD7\nCrawler Tractor\nHydraulic Angledozer.\nLincoln 300-Amp.\nArc-Welder\nHercules  6-Cylinder  Engine.\nMounted on 2-Wheel Trailer.\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\nand Equipment\n&  Equipment\nCo.  Ltd.\n702 Front St. Ph.   181,0\nONE CANADIAN TO ANOTHER.\nLet us be your host, while visiting in Spokane   Drive up to the\nVolney   Hotel,   W-410   Riverside\nAve., give us your keys and we\ndo the  rest.  $2 single  to  $6.50\ndouble.   Family   rooms  $6.50  to\n$7.50.   Reservations   MA   4-2386\nRay and Anne Lynch\nNELSON rWriGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Service\n205 High SI. Phone 1917\nMcCULLOCH\nCHAIN SAWS\nWith the  Newest\nMcCulloch  Pintail Chain\nJust Cannot Be, Beat\nFOR  LOW  COST  OPERATION\nAND   MAINTENANCE\nBUY ONE NOW\nTO GO LOGGING\nWe Have Some Good Used Saws\nSee   H    \"Fritz\"   Farenholtz\nAlex McDonald. Gordon Coutts  at\nrs\nWELDING   &   EQUIPMENT\nCO   LTD\nPHONE 1402\n514 Railwav St.     Nelson   B C\n\u25a0   ASSAYERS   \\,NT>   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S   EI.MES.  ROSSLAND.  BC\nAssayei     Chemist     Min Rep\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C   Land Surveyor and Engineer\n1015 Eighth SI    Nelson   Ph   144-R\nBOYD C   AFFLECK. MEIC\nBC  Land Surveyor P  Eng   I Civil >\n218 Gore SI      Melson     Phone 1238\nG  VV  BAERG, B C\n373 Raker St -Land Surveyor\nNelson     Phone  1118     Res   550-R\nALEX CHEVELDAVE  . ~~\nB.C. Land Surveyor - Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Ave   Castleaar   BC\nAUCTIONEER AND APPRAISER.\nJim   Gillen.   Phone 692,   1408-L.\n2095-R-l. Trail, BC.\t\nHOOVER CO. SALES AND SER-\nvice. Ph. Ben Sutherland, 258.\nWHITENY DIESEL- DRIVEN\nFork Lift. Four-wheel drive,\npower steering, 9,00 rubber.\nPrice F.O.B. Trail,$3,500. Write\nG. C. Sexsmith, Trail, or Phone\n2566 evenings.\nWISH \"TO PURCHASE' GOOD\nused lumber planer. Box 6767\nNelson News.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nBUILD A BOAT THIS WINTER.\n14' and 16' mahogany pre-cut\nrunabout kits. See completed one\non display. Peebles Motors, Ph.\n1090, Nelson.\nUNIVERSAL 100% MARINE EN-\ngine, 6 cyl, 260 cu. in. complete\nwith marine clutch and matching prop. Peebles Motors, Nelson.\nWANTED TO RENT\nMODERN 1   BDRM.     H O M~E~\nClose In. Ph. 1265-L.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nFAIRVIEW\nEXCELLENT LOCATION\nBungalow, level lot. Full basement, has garage and extra\nbedroom and laundry. Living\nroom has oak floors and a\nfireplace. $ I 1,000\n$3600 and $72.00 Per Month.\n' EASY ACCESS\nSMALL LOT\nCottage On small lot. New ren<K\nvation. Gas furnace. $7^fl(f\nSome terms. *\nTRIANGLE LOT\n3-bedroom home.     $6850\n$2000 Down, Balance $50 and\n6% Monthly.\nSTORE, P.O. and COFFEE BAR\nEstablished.  Big  potential  in\ngrowing area, just outside city.\nOwner's and other suite. Good\nbusiness for family.\n$33,500\nTerms:   $10,000  and   Monthly\nPayments.\nINDUSTRIAL SITE\nLevel, good access, 370 feet for\ntrackage,   360  feet  on  street.\n$31,500\n$10,000 Will Handle.\nFAMILY HOME\nUphill, near slore. Older type\njrr 3 bed\"    $6500\n$1500 Down. Balance Monthly\n$50 Plus 7% Interest.\nNEAR BALFOUR\nOne-bedroom cottage, built in\n1951. Insulated. Fireplace. Includes, stove, fridge and some\nfurniture. Very de- $5500\nsirable property. ^\nTerms:  $1500 and $60 mthly.\nNORTH  SHORE\n1 MILE EAST OF BRIDGE\nBUILDING LOT. 3 acres, some\nlake frontage. $1800\nPrice\n$500 Down.\nCOTTAGE ON NICE LOT\n2.6 acres, 80 feet      <t49ftfl\nlake frontage. \u2022P'^VV\n$1500 Down.\nFOR RENT\nSingle housekeeping rooms \u2014\nBaker Street. Heated. Reasonable.\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nRj..AL  ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 47 Years\nBox 26 Phone 269\n421 Baker St.        Nelson   B.C.\nr   '!.  \"Buck\" Lambert.  Manager\nNEWLY BUILT\nFAIRVIEW, 8TH STREET\nOnly 7 yrsf. old. 2 B.R.s, view\nL-shaped L.R., 2 extra B.R.s\non 1st level. New gas furnace\nand gas range    $10,600\nincluded. ... '\nBalance   Mortgage  at  $37\nPer Month.\nCHOICE LOCATION\n6th St., Fairview. 2-B.R. home.\nConvenient- kitchen and adjoining  L.R.  Auto, oil heat.  Low\ntaxes. Good $57QQ\nbuy at\nTerms.\nDOWNTOWN\nWell-built older home with gracious, roomy interior. 5 B.R.s,\nfamily kitchen and D.R. Full\nbasement, new oil furnace. 3\ncorner lots, landscaped, and\ndrive-in garage. \u00abI O Zftft\nFull price ^ I X,\u00abJUU\nVery Good Terms.\nAnd Only $1500 Down.\n4-B.R. HOME\nNear all schools.  Redecorated\nL.R. and family kitchen.' \u2014 3\ncorner lots. $&800\n\"PHONE 68\nfor REAL ESTATE\"\nSalesmen:\nSylvia   Brashear.,  Res.   182I-L\nRon Monty, Res. 792-R\nRudi   Martin,   Res.   969L-1\nAgencies Ltd.\nINSURANCE -  REAL ESTATE\n554 Ward St Nelson. B C\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR -SALE\n(Continued'\nLISTINGS - HAVE YOU BEEN\nwanting to sell your property?\nWe require properties of every\ndescription. It costs nothing to\nlist. Kindly give us a phone call\nor come in personally. William\nKalyniuk Agencies, 534 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B.C. Phone 1777.\nN. SHORE BEACH PROPERTY\nfor sale. Basement. Fully winterized. Boat with inboard in-\ncluded. Ph. 341 before 5 p.m.\nMODERN 4 BEDROOM HOUSE.\nOil furnace, wired for range,\ngas in. Apply at 612 Fifth St.\nNEW 3 SUITE APT. REVENUE\n$255 per month, $7000 down. Ph.\n1627-H-l.\n2-BDRM. HOUSE\u2014FULLY WIRED\nfor range. Upper -Fairview. Ph.\n1889-L.\nBRAND NEW N.H.A. 3 BDRM.\nhome. For particulars Phone\n1773-Y.\n7-ROOM   HOME   IN   FAIRVIEW\nneai bus. 908 Fourth Street.\nRENTALS\nSPACIOUS 3 RM. SUITE $85.00.\nUpper Triplex, plus wall bed, self\ncontrolled heat, a u t o m a tic\nwasher, dryer, electric stove.\nAvailable Feb. 6th. Ph. 1627-R-l.\nSPACIOUS SELF CONTAINED 4\nroom heated apartment with\nbath. Private entrance. Central.\nWired for electric range. Phone\n1476-Y.\nVERY WARM HOME, L.R. AND\nD.R. comb., 2 large B.Rs, bath,\nnew gas furnace, rent $65 p. mth.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd., Phone\n135.\nFURN. 2 ROOM SUITE PLUS\nhousekeeping rm. Gas cooking,\nlinen and dishes supplied. Phone\n491-X or apply 140 Baker.\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP\ning rooms, weekly, monthly\nrates. Dishes, linen supplied;\nparking, Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.\nCARBONATE ST. FURNSHED\nhouse 1 bedroom. Wired for TV.\nResponsible party only. Ph. 76.\nMODERN, AUTOMATIC 0 I L-\nheated apt., unfurnished Private\nentrance and parking. Ph  2075.\nROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT\nbaths. Low weekly or monthly\nrate. Savoy Hotel\nFOR RENT IN QUIET HOME,\nbdrm. with kitchen facilities.\nCelntral location. Ph. 1267-X.\nSUITE WITHIN BLOCK OF CIV-\nic. Phone 149.\nFOR RENT - HEATED HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 405-L.\nNICE   FAMILY   HOUSE. AVAIL-\nible immediately. Phone 1751-R.\nSUITE    FOR\"    RENTT\n2B9-L.\nPHONE\nSUITE   -   FURN.,   VAC,   RSN,\n_close_in. Ph. 343-Y between 11-2,\nATTRACTIVE\" 2 BDRM. HOUSE\",\nfireplace, garage. Ph. 649-L.\n6-RM. HOUSE-FULL SIZE BASE-\nment. Phone 558-R.\nROOM    WITH     OR     WITHOUT\nboard. Phone 531-Y.\n1-BEDROMM HOUSE. PH. 1954-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. Phone 1564-X.\nFOR   RENT:   3   RM.   HEATED,\nfurn, suite. Ph. 2263-L,\nSELF-CONT. RM. 1 BLOCK FROM\nHigh School. Ph. 1549-L.\nSUITE. 3 RM. FURN;, GAS HEAT.\nDown town. 171 Baker St.\n2'ROOM SUITE AND SLEEPING\nroom. 606 Front St.\nSMALL COTTAGE IN FAIRVIEW.\nPh. 1'287-L.   '\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nLEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR\nsale. Whole or half. 30c lb. -Cut\nand wrapped ready for the\nfreezer. Newdan Farm, Box 570,\nCreston, B.C. Phone EL-6-2435.\nWe deliver.\nSEE OUR BARGAINS IN USED\nrefrigerators. Wcshers, TV's,\nand radios. Also 1 only Youngs-\ntown sink at cost. Jeffery Radio\n& Appliances.\t\nCANADIAN. NEW FOUNDLAND\nCoins. Shinplasters. Buying and\nSelling. Write to P. Polovnikolf.\nBox 2, Nelson, B.C.\nJUKE BOX. IDEAL FOR COUN\ntry  store or  cafe  where  teen-\n. agers congregate. Sentinel Grocery, Thrums. Ph. 581.\nFOR SALE - KITCHEN \"TABLE.\n4 chairs, washing machine, 2 new\nsingle spring filled mattresses,\nred chesterfield. Phone 2197.\nSERVE PALM ICE CREAM\nBrick of the Month, \"full o'\nFruit\".\nR 1 D I N O SADDLE, BROWN\nleather, goorl condition. $38. Ph.\n1393-L.\t\nHJAl.TH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs. Used parts for 1949\nto 'i2 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 VauXhall; '51 Morris\nMinor motor; '52 Vanguard, good\n'50 Pontiac mtr., '49 Monarch, '50\nChev, 1950 Champion, '53 Ford,\n'50 Chev. and '52 Henry J. for\nsale. Cottonwood Wreckage Service, phone 2100, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road, Nelson.\n54 FORD, %-l TON TRUCK FOR\nsale. All steel body! good condition and tires, new rings this\n'year. Special price $1385.00. Also\nbookkeeping machine for sale.\nPh. 2920 Trail.\nFOR SALE - 1956 STUDEBAKER\nV-8 sedan, overdrive, radio, seat\ncovers, hill holder, dual fender\naerials and mirrors, low mileage, 7 tires. Ph. 645 or 687-X\nevenings.\n1958 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE,\npower brakes, overdrive, 15,000\nmiles, like new, 1 driver. To be\nappreciated it must be seen. Ph.\n733-L or 1184-Y.\n1956 THUNDERBIRD- RANCH\nwagon. New rubber, battery, in\ngood shape. Very cheap. Phone\n35-R, Box 62, Nakusp, B.C.\n1-18 TON LOGGING TRAILER,\ncomplete with sub-frame and\nbunk. Ph. 2350 or 5494, Castlegar.\nSOUTH NELSON BODY WORKS.\nTop quality workmanship. Phone\n2324, 49 Ymir Road.\n1953 AUSTIN SEDAN \u2022\n509 Latimer St.\nCALL AT\nWE PAY CASH FOR GOOD USED\ncars. McElroy Motors Ltd.\nMUST SELL 1955 MONARCH LU-\ncern.  Offers phone  1027-R.\n1953 CHEV. FOR SALE. EXCEL-\nlent shape. Phone 2197.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nORDER YOUR ENG. SPRINGER\npup now. Deposit will hold. Ready\nFeb. Bar O, Taghum. Ph. 599-L-2.\nFOR SALE - TWO-MONTH-OLD\npuppies. Phone Mrs. C. Becker.\nNptomt latlij NetuB\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week 35c\nin advance.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month  $ 1.25\nThree months       3.50\nSix months  __      6.50\nOne year     12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or the\nUnited States:\nOne month        $ 1.75\nThree months  __      5.00\nSix months     9 00\nOne year        18.00\nWhere extra postage Is required.\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely;\nIn Trail. Mrs. Syd Spooner:\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nvTa17t_e\"1)7~peeled cedar\npoles loaded on cars. 35 to 75\nfeet long. Dumont, 1164 West\n32nd Ave.. Vancouver. B.C.\nWANTED - SMALL SAWMILL.\nAny shape. Box 6795, Nelson\nNews. \t\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SAllTTOUNGAYRSHmE,\nfirst calf, freshened 5 weeks. Mr.\nE. Overnay, Box 74, Brilliant.\n1 MILK COW JUST FRESHENED.\nApply Bojey, Perry Siding,\n ROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD~~AND~ ROOM FORGONE\nor two young gentlemen. Ph.\nMrs. Truscott 1179-X.\nWicks Statement\n\"Tommyrot\" Say\nWoodworkers\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) - A\nstatement by Labor Minister\nWicks that political manoeuver-\ning has caused a breakdown in\nIhe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica's safety program* was\ndescribed here Thursday as \"utter\ntommyrot.\"\n\"Mr. Wicks certainly does not\nknow what the union safety program consists ot,\" said Jacob\nHoist, president of the 2.000 member local 1-424, \"politics have\nnever entered into our safety\nwork..\"\n\"For a minister, of the crown\nto make such statements is not\nin good keeping with his office.\"\nAnti-Semitism\nSlogans\nDispsf Green\nVANCOUVER (CP)-External\nAffairs Minister Green told a\nconstituency meeting here Wednesday night he is \"disgusted\"\nwith outbreaks of anti-Semitism\nwhich have erupted in man\/\nparts of the world.\nMr. Green, memebr of Parliament for Vancouver-Quadra, said\nserious action may be needed to\ncurb swastika-painting and name-\ncalling  acts.\n\"I am very disturbed about it,\nparticularly in Europe. I think\nthere may be some minor organ-\nI z a t i o n of troublemakers at\nwork,\"  he said.\nMr. Greep also predicted that\nCommunist China will not be admitted to the United Nations in\nthe near future. The Communists\nhad lowere\/l their chances of being admitted to the .UN by their\nactions in Tibet and on the India-\nPakistan border.\nRecognition of Communist\nChina would see an ambassador\nfor the country stationed in Ottawa and a consul -. general in\nVancouver where \"Ihe Chinese\npopulation is almost unanimously\nagainst the Reds.\"\n\"You would have trouble right\non your doorstep\u2014not a very attractive picture for Vancouver,\"\nhe said.\nRegarding development of the\nColumbia Jtiver in southeastern\nBritish Columbia and the United\nStates, he said hydro electricity\ncannot be generated at sites without co-operation from the B. C.\ngovernment.\n\"This the greatest project ever\nto come'over the horizon in B.C.\nThe people of B.C. have to face\nthe fact that it depends on the\nprovincial government whether\nColumbia plans become a reality.\"\n  NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1960 \u2014 9\nCoast Baritone to\nMake London Debut\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A young\nCanadian baritone will make his\ndebut at Royal Albert Hall In\nLondon Saturday, adding another\nof the world's, great music halls\nto a list that grows longer for\nhim every year.\nHe is Donald Bell, 25, the son\nof a magistrate in suburban\nBurnaby.\nAlthough his greatest successes\nhave come in Europe, Bell's is\nnot one of the cases of a Canadian musician having to go elsewhere for recognition. The Vancouver International Festival has\ntried repeatedly to book him for\nits- annual summer series, but\nlias been prevented by his previous commitments in Europe.\nMost of his recent musical\ntraining has been in London and\nBerlin. He is in the third year of\na five-year contract to appear at\nthe famed Wagnerian Festival in\nBayreutti, Germany, and is und r\nBayreuth, Germany, and is under\ncontract   to   the   Berlin   City\nAPPEARS IN  MESSIAH\nAfter Saturday's appearance in\nHandel's Messiah, he goes to Berlin for more engagements and\nstudies, returning to London in\nFebruary for commitments and a\npossible recording session.\nBell's career has been spectacular. Born June 19, 1934, to\nCharles C. and Jessie Bell\u2014his\nfather is a former reeve of Burnaby\u2014Donald Bell made his singing debut ln a Grade 4 production in elementary school.\nAs a boy soprano, he began\nstudying seriously when he was\nnine, capturing junior music festival prizes with regularity until\nhis voice   changed   in   one   six-\nMARKET TRENDS\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket, after an early rise,\nslipped and floundered at lower\nlevels amid moderately, heavy\ntrading Thursday.\nIndustrials were, down nearly\nl'\/i points. Western oils fell several decimal points, while golds\nand base metals each gained\nabout one-half point.\nTh final volume for the day\nwas 2,869,000 shares, heavier than\nthe turnover of 2,688,000 shares\ntraded Wednesday.\nThe one bright feature of the\nmarket was Thursday's 105A point\nadvance of North Star Oil at 33'A\nin the industrial section. The\nstock soared up at the open alter\nit was learned that. Shell Oil\nCompany had purchased controlling interest in the firm. The Shell\nCompany bought out the shares\nheld by the late Fred C. Manning, who as president of' North\nStar had held majority control of\nlhe firm. He died last summer.\nThe Shell Company offered $34.25\nfor common and $19 for class A\nshares. The issue closed Wednesday at $2214. A total of 49,465\nshares were turned over on the\nToronto board Thursday.\nOther winners were Huron and\nErie which advanced 1V4 at 57\nand Moore Corp. which went up\n% at 43.\nOn the losing side, Cookshutt\nand Fraser each lost 1% at 22%\nand 27% respectively. General\nMotors fell Hi at 52%. Trans-\nCanada Pipe Line was off '\/\u00bb at\n24V4 and Consumer's Gas lost %\nat 37%.\nWestern oils wandered aimlessly most of the day before\nclosing out at a slightly lower\nlevel. Royalite was the big winner going up $176 at $9. Calgary\nand Edmonton lost Vi at 20'A,\nand Home Oil A was down Vi at\n12 Vi.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Banks and\ngolds rose and industrials, papers\nand utilities were off at the end\nof fairly active trading on the\nMontreal and Canadian stock exchanges Thursday.\nProvincial was up 1% at 40-14\nin lhe banks section. Montreal\ndropped 1 to 54% while Royal\nrose Vi at '79's.\nIn papers. Consolidated Paper\nlost li at 41 Vi, Fraser dropped 1\nat 27'<i and Great Lakes down IVb\nat 41%. Bathurst rose Vi to 4tV2\nand B. C. Forest increased Vi at\n14V4.\nUnion Gas lost V4 at 15% in utilities while Calgary Power was up\n% at 19 and Canadian International Power up Vi at 14Vi.\nPipelines split even. Interpro-\nvincial closed at SO'ii, down li\nand Consumer Gas was off Vi at\n37% while Trans-Canada .rose Vi\nlo 24Vi and Trans Mountain went\nup Vi at 11%.\nRefining oils had B. A. Oil off\nVi at 34% and Canadian Oil up\nV4 at 241s.\nHome A slipped Vi at 12Vi in\nthe Western oils group. Pacific\nPete was off % at 12'\u00ab and Royalite down 70 cents  at 800;\nVolumes totalled 95,200 industrial vand 433,600 mines and oils.\nClosing averages showed banks\nup .22 at 59.54, utilities .off .1 at\n144.9, industrials off 1.6 at 318.4,\npapers\" off 2.8 at 459.2, combined\noff 1.1 at 260.6 and golds up .82\nat 84.79.\nNEW  YORK  (AP)-LThe stock\nmarket Thursday sustained its\nsecond sharp loss in a row as\nstiffening interest rates and continued profit taking on big gainers of 1959 took their toll again.\nThe AP 60-stock average fell\n$1.10 to $231.00.\nVolume slipped on the decline\nto 3,310,000 shares.\nHupp Corp., for the fifth,\nstraight session, was the most active stock, advancing % to 11%\non 96,900 shares.\nOther, active gainers; General\nDynamics, up %, studebaker-\nPackard 1, U.S. Industries IVi,\nSun Chemical 1V4 and Pacific\nTin, %.\nAmong the Canadian stocks, International Nickel gained % while\nAluminium Ltd. and Canadian Pacific lost Vi each and Hudson Bay\nMining and Walker Gooderham Vi\neach.\nmonth span to that of a baritone\nat' 14.\nHis training stuck. The next\nyear he took top prize in a B.C.\nTeachers Federation competition.\nIn 1952 he won scholarships from\nboth the Toronto Conservatory\nand the Royal College of Music\nin London. He chose London and,\nafter graduating from high\nschool, worked the \"graveyard\"\nshift at a plywood mill to earn\nliving expenses fortius London\nstudies.\nWhile waiting to go to Europe,\nhe made solo appearances in the\nVancouver area \u2014 one critic described his voice as \"phenomenal\"\u2014and was semi - finalist on\nCBC's Singing Stars of Tomorrow\nshow.\nBERLIN STUDY\nHis London studies were mainly\nunder proiessor Gordon Clinton\nand, after two years, he was\nrecommended for study at the\nStaedtische Opera in Berlin,\nIn the last four years Bell has\nlearned classic and modern\nlieder and perfected his voice under the late Hermann Weissen-\noorn, one of Germany's leading\nteachers.\nIn Canada, he has appeared\nwith symphony orchestras\nin Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto\nand Montreal, besides making recitals on CBC radio and television. A 1959 tour also included appearances at Philadelphia and\nNew York.\nHia debut at Carnegie Hall\ncame last month with the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene\nOrmandy in Bach'a Christmas\nOratorio. Ross Parmenter of the\nNew York Times applauded his\n\"beautiful, resonant voice\" and\nhis '\"fine, tall presence.\" Bell's\nsix feet three Inches are topped\nwith a boyish face and cropped\nblond hair.\nHis home town has not forgotten him. Last monfli during a\nshort visit here, Bell was\nawarded Burnaby's \"meritorious\nachievement award\" as an outstanding citizen.\nDIVIDENDS\nCassiar Asbeatoa Corp. Ltd.,\nyear ended Sept. 30: 1969, $8,043,-\n579, 77 cents a share: 1958 $2,-\n897,473, 78 cent!.\nHiram Walker - Gooderham and\nWorta Ltd,, 8 moa. ended Nov.\n30: 1939, $7,948,900, 92 cents a\nshare;  1958, $7,697,595, 89 cents.\nPrairie Pipe Manufacturing Co.\nLtd., year ended Aug. 31: 1959,\n$843,273, 93 cents a share; 1958,\n$803,863, 89 cents a share.\nUnited Keno Hill Mines, year\nended Sept. 30: 1959, $1,324,836, 54\ncents a share; 1958, $586,840, 24\ncents.\nFOR LEASE\nModern, High Gallonage\nCompany Design\nService Station\nin City of Kimberley, B. C,\nfrom major oil company\nAvailable for Tenancy February 1st\nApplicant  will   require  approx.   $5,000  available  cash\nto handle.\nPlease state age, qualifications and financial status\nin first letter.\nAll Applications to be addressed to:\nService Station, Box 1059, Cranbrook, B. C.\nBusiness Is Good\nWe're Trading  Every Day.\nHere's Big Savings for You\nOn  Rebuilt and Guaranteed\nTelevision Sets\nSPARTON 21\" CONSOLE IN WALNUT\nMOTOROLA 21\" CONSOLE IN WALNUT\nMARCONI 21\" CONSOLE IN WALNUT\nVICTOR 21\" CONSOLE IN BLONDE\nFLEETWOOD 21\" CONSOLETTE IN BLONDE\nWESTINGHOUSE 21\" TABLE MODEL IN WALNUT\nMOTOROLA 17\" CONSOLE IN WALNUT\nMany, Many More to Choose From in Used and New Sets\nEvery Set Specially Priced for This\nWEEKEND SALE\nOne Only Used G.E.  Refrigerator\nIn new condition, specially priced for this weekend.\nRadios, Record Players, Tape  Recorders,\nTransistor Sets, New and  Used at\nSpecial Weekend Prices\u2014Sales Starts Thursday.\nSoren's TV and\n108 Baker St.\nlances\nPhone 231\n\u2014-~f\t\n HPP?:'.M        '' '^'^\nmmm^m$^f*~m~~m'^^^W$\n10 \u2014 NELSON CJAILY NEWS, FRlbAY, JAN. 8, 1960 \\'\nBY WATERMAN\ns*\u00ab*w\u00abs\u00ab\u00ab\u00abss\u00ab\u00abaw* THE NEW ****\u00ab*\u00ab*\u00ab*\u00bb*\u00ab*\u00ab**\u00ab*\nPen*Nife\n$2.95\nIN PLASTIC CASE.\nHow many times have you found the use for a\nknife and could not locate one ???...\nNow you have one os handy at your ball point pen.\nConvenient . . . Compact , . . Useful\nPen-Nife by Waterman J. $2.95\nat\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\n*&$&&$?&&&&$$$&&$$&&&$&&$&&\naMfcMa*a&Sft\u00a3MS53fl\u00a35S!iS\u00a3My\n9Q5Q55330\u00abK*^\u00bb3933^VK^vV:\nNews of the Day\nBATES: 34c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Mlnlmnm two lines. 5% discount for prompt payment.\nBalfour Beach Inn open all winter.\nMrs. Taylor, chef.\nTrail Business College new term\nbegins February 1, 1960.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St Ph. 1108, Nelson.\nRegister now for Hobby Classes.\nchildren and adults. HOBBY SHOP\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT.\nBugs or Wall-to-Wail Carpet\nJORDAN'S LTD.\n924 Cedar St., Ph. 2251-L, Nelson\nSleepers, Training Pants,  Cap\nand Glove Sets. % Price.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP\nSpecial Sale ladies' coats, dresses,\nknitting yams.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER STREET\nStandard size doors and frames.\nSpecial sizes made to order.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156    101 Hall St.    Nelson\nHi-Fi and Stereo Records\n\u2022 a large selection of the latest hits!\nPopular \u2014 Classics \u2014 Operas\nCUSTOM CAMERAS, 394 Baker St.\nJanuary Clearance\u2014Rayon Panels 41x81,  all  colors.  Reg.   $4.25\npanel. Now $1.49 panel.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nAT GODFREYS'\nEXTRA PANTS FREE\nWith Your Cambridge\nMade-to-Measure Suit.\nJanuary Far Event\n20% OK on All Coats and Jackets\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\n580 Baker St. Phone 1653\nJanuary Clearance Sale at\nDEE'S LADIES' APPAREL\nTerrific Bargains on\nQuality Merchandise \u2014 Buy Nowl\nICE \u2022 CHASER\nat\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nPHONE 1704\nBOY SCOUT BOTTLE DRIVE\nSATURDAY, JAN. 9-9 A.M.\nPlease leave your bottles, rags,\nflowerpots where they will not be\noverlooked!\nCHILDREN'S Art Classes (15)\nSat. morn. ADULTS Art Lectures\n(10) Thurs. evening. Start Jan. 7\nat,Old Post Office. Fee $12: 2 in\nfamily $18. Register now, classes\nlimited. Nelson School Fine Arts.\nBox 82.\nSwastikas Rouse Coast Germans . ..\nEditor To Organize\nVigilante Committee\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A leader\nof the German-speaking conirmui-\nity here said he will organize a\nvigilante committee to catch a\nperson participating in the recent\noutbreak of-'swastika-painting in\nVancouver.\nBright red swastikas were painted on a CCF club building in the\ncity's west end and on the walls of\nthe Province newspaper pressrooms.\nOthers, painted in a vivid green,\nwere found on homes and garages\nin south Vancouver.\nDr. B. W. Hoefer, editor of the\nGerman - language weekly Der\nNordwestern, said the German\ncommunity is taking the outbreak\nseriously.\nVIGILANTE PLAN\nHe said the vigilante committee\nwill be formed to catch a swastika\npainter and turn him over to the\npolice.\n\"We would like to show what\nkind of a person he is,\" Dr. Hoeter\nsaid.\n\"We came to Canada to get\naway from things like this. To us\nit brings back painful memories.\"\nWednesday night External Affairs Minister Howard Green said\nhe was disgusted with the recent\noutbreaks of anti-semitism.\nHe told a meeting of his Vancouver-Quadra constituency that\nif the outbreaks were not the work\nof troublemakers serious action\nwill have to be taken to curb it.\n\"I am very disturbed ahout it,\nparticularly in Europe. 1 think\nthere may'be some minor organization of troublemakers at work.\"\n\"IMBECILES\"\nPolice Chief George Archer said\nthe swastikas are the handiwork\nof \"illiterate imbeciles.\" The complaints are being turned over to\nRCMP for investigation.\nThe Erst feign of anti-Semitism\nappeared Tuesday night when an\nanonymous telephone caller threat-\nJust what you've been waiting for.\nThe Largest Stock of Unpainted\nFurniture in Nelson. Do your own\npainting and Save!! (Be sure to\nprice our Davenport and Chesterfield Suites)\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPhone 1560 Nelson, B.C.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to extend our heartfelt\nthanks and appreciation to our\nmany friends and neighbors, for\ntheir acts of kindness and messages of sympathy, received during our recent sad bereavement of\na beloved husband and father, Dr.\nWilfrid Laishley.\nRuby Laishley,\nPhyllis and Donald.\nBAN \"CRAZY DANCES\"\nJAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters)\nJakarta garrison commander Lt.-\nCol. Umar today banned \"crazy\ndances like rock 'n' roll, cha cha\ncha, boogie w o o g i e, mambo,\nsamba and the like\" in public\nplaces and at home. Violators of\nthe decree are liable to a year's\nimprisonment or a fine. The garrison commander said the reason\nfor the decision was based on the\ngovernment's campaign to encourage national culture.\nened the life of Abe Arnold, editor\n,of the Jewish Western Bulletin.\n\"You had better watch your\nheders (Jewish schools),\" said a\nman who identified himself as a\nmember of the British Union of\nFascists. A man with a similar\nvoice offered a warning to Jews\nin a telephone call to the newsroom of New Westminster radio\nstation CKNW.\n\"This is an infectious disease,\ncontagious to the lunatic fringe of\nour society,\" said Rabbi Bernard\nGoWenberg of the Schara Tzedeek\ncongregation here.\nOdds...\nEnds\nand\nbyM.D.8.\nCredit Kennedy\nWith Settling\nSteel Strike\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014David McDonald, head of the United Steelworkers, Thursday credited former\nambassador Joseph Kennedy\nwith an important role in settling\nthe steel strike.\nInterviewed on the NBC television program Today, McDonald\nsaid Kennedy, the father of Senator John F. Kennedy (Dem.\nMass.), was one of the \"most influential\" men behind the scenes\nin bringing about a contract\nagreement.\nThe elder Kennedy, McDonald\nsaid, \"did a great deal down in\nWall Street to bring about this\nsettlement. ... He talked with\nthe bankers time and time again,\nand we were in constant touch\nwith one another.\"\nMcDonald said he thinks Vice-\nPresident Richard Nixon deserves\n\"some credit\" for the setltement,\nadding: \"I think Mr. Nixon\nbrought both the industry and the\nunion face to face with the facts\nof life.\"\nWINTER NEEDS\nG.E. Lamp Bulbs\nAll sizes \u2014 Indoor or Outdoor\nFluorescent, Lumiline, Oven, Pilot, etc.\nSnow Shovels\nD Handle: Aluminum $4.65\nD Handle: Aluminum  $4.65\nSnow Pushers\nAluminum: 24 inch  ._ $5.95\nSteel: 18 inch  __ $4.65\nRed Devil Soot Remover\nPowder: 12 oz. 1   $ .60\nLiquid: 16 ox.   $1.45\nLiquid: 32 oz.   $2.35\nBarrel  Pumps\n$6.75\nCocoa Door Mats\n$1.25 \u2014 $1.55 \u2014 $1.95\nFlexoglas Window Material\n36 inch: Yard          $ .99\n48 inch: Yard    $1.35\nCeiling Clothes Driers\n$3.25\nElectric Heaters\nBuilt-in blower and thermostat control\n$19.95 _ $29.95 \u2014 $30.00\nThermos and Aladdin\nVacuum  Bottles\nAll Sizes.\nBurgess Batteries\nRadio Packs, Ignition and Flashlights\nWindow Glass\nAll standard sizes or we cut to\nyour measurements\nDog Owners\nSee Our Stock of\nDog Collars, Chains, Harness, etc.\nSwedish Bow Frame Saws\nBlades and  Files\nGarbage Cans\nMetal Legg'ed with covers.\n$6.98\nOpen Fridays Till 9:00 p.m. \u2014 Closed All Day Mondays\nYour Marshall-Wells Store\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPHONE 497\n(OWNERS)\n395 BAKER ST.\nI am reading a book. called\n\"Wings at My Window\" \u2014 a fascinating tale about a woman who\nfound new life in watching the\ntrials and struggles, courting and\ncavorting of the many birds who\ncame to her bird sanctuary.\n* *   *\nLife had dealt her blow upon\nblow, finally crippling her badly\nwith arthritis and just when her\nspirit was all but broken, a cheery\nchick-a-dee's song in the midst of\nthe winter's blast prompted her to\ntake heart. The crumbs she tossed\nout to the tiny feathered wayfarer\nstarted a parade of birds to her\nwindow sill an deventually to the\nbird feeders her son and husband\nbuilt for her to accommodate the\nneeds of the variety of winged\ntransients.\n* *   *\nI am finding the book difficult to\nput aside and one incident I read\nover twice was about the courting\ndance of the colorful purple\nfinches. The writer had the rare\npleasure of seeing the little jewelled knight woo and win the drab\nlittle lady of his choice.\nThe male, a scintillating gem.\nspread his wings, rose on tip toe,\nhis feather al laquiver. He furled\nand unfurled his wings like exotic\nfans, moving from side to side and\neventually advancing upon his beloved. She, with true feminine\nguile, turned away, pretending no\ninterest and continued to roll a sunflower seed round in her beak.\nThis went on for over ten minutes.\n* *   *\nFinally, when the wee fellow had\ngiven his all and very best, he\nbent his head back till he formed\na perfect crescent. His lady love,\nfinally unable to resist, dropped\nthe silly sunflower seed, rushed\nover to him to throw herself upon\nhis breast and join her beak to\nhis. It was a touching scene which\nset her husband and son to clearing\ntheir throats and her to diving in\nher apron pocket for a handkerchief.\n+   *   *\nLater she took to bird banding\nwhich opened another vista for her\nfor even the birds she had thought\ndrab turned out to have beautiful\nunder markings when 9he had\nthem in her hand to slip on the\nband. The birds seemed to sense\nshe meant them no harm and\nmany showed even a delight when\nshe stroked their heads and around\nthei rears. Through the banding\nshe was able to oheck those who\nreturned year after year. There\nwere the sad moments too when\nshe Sad chased a marauding shrike\nor hawk away with a shotgun only\nto find a tiny heap of crumpled\nfeathers and her'own silver band\non the little leg. Her interest in\nbirds healed not only her spirits.\nSHIFFER-HILLMAN\nMade-To-Meaiure\nSUIT SALE\nOne Week Only\n209b DISCOUNT\nNOW, for one week, is your chance to get one of Canada's\nfinest suits made to your own measure. A wonderful selection of imported materials to choose from.\nEMORY'S LTD.\n' THE MAN'S STORE\nOttawa Orders Navigation\nComputers for Starfighters\nMEN, YOUR PIANS MAY BE AITARED\u2014Nancle Rideout, world\nwater ski champion, reminds you men from Cypress Gardens, Fla., what can be expected ln 1960.      (Central Press)\nCase of the Missing\nUncle Intrigues MP\nLONDON. (AP) - Alan Len-\nnox-Boyd is off to the south\nseas to find out, if he can,\nwhether cannibals ate his uncle\nor just adopted him.\nThe question has long troubled the family of Lennox-Boyd\nwho until last October, was\nBritain's colonial secretary.\nLennox - Boyd and his wife,\nLady Patricia, were seen off\nat London airport Wednesday\nby Julian Amery. the colonial\nundersecretary. Aipery patted\nLennox - Boyd on the shoulder\nand said:\n\"Have you heard abou the\nMaori chief who claimed he\nwas Scottish by absorption:\nwho knows, you may find some\nof your erlalives out there.\"\nThe great uncle wiho is the\ncentre of the mystery was red-\nhaired Benjamin Boyd, born in\n'New South Wales, Australia.\n' Boyd came to London and\namassed a fortune as a stock\nbroker and shipbuilder.\nIn the late 1840s, Boyd got the\nwanderlust. He bought a yacht\ncalled the Wanderer and set\nsail for the south seas.\nOn Oct. 15, 1851, the yacht\nwas lying off the shore of one\nof Ihe Solomon Islands. Benjamin armed himself with a\nhimself with a shotgun, announced he was going to shoot\npigeons and had a boat crew\nrow him ashore.\nThat is the last positively\nknown of Benjamin Boyd.\n\"One report said he was\npopped into a cooking pot by\ncannibals on the island \u2014 a\nsomewhat s t i c k y end,\" remarked Lennox-Boyd. \"At any\nrate, the yacht finally sailed\nwithout him.\"\nBut there is another st ory\nwhich indicates a somewhat\nhappier ending. Some 20 years\nafter Boy vdanished, the crew\nof an Australian ship saw a red-\nhaired white man running along\nthe shore with a party of natives.\n\"Could this have been great\nUncle Ben?\" mused Lennox-\nBoyd.\nIn their attempt to unravel\nthe mystery, the Lennox-Boyds\nwill spend nine weeks touring\nFiji, Tonga, the Gilbert and Elbe \"Islands, the New Hebrides,\nSamoa,  Tahiti   and  The  Solo-\nUNEMPLOYMENT UP\nREG-MA (OP) \u2014 Unemployment in Saskatchewan rose to\n22,120 at the ond of December,\nan increase of 393 over the same\nperiod a year previously, the department of Labor said Wednesday.\nBy DAVE McINTOSII\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-When the Arrow jet interceptor was junked,\nComputing Devices of Canada\nLimited nearly went under with\nit.\nThe Ottawa firm at that time\nheld contracts for production of\ncomponents for the Arrow's armament control system and air-to-\nair missile.\nComputing Devices took a\ngamble and threw nearly all its\nenergies into development ot an\nautomatic dead reckoning navigation system for fighter planes, its\nOwn  invention.\nThe gamble has paid off handsomely and may  be even more\nlucrative in the future.\nANNOUNCE CONTRACT\nCompany President C. F. Hem-\nbery Thursday announced , that\nComputing Devices has been\nawarded a $4,000,000 government\ncontract for production of more\nthan 200 of the navigation computers for the RCAF Starfighter\nsupersonci strike - reconnaissance\nplane. The Starfighter will go into\nservice with the RCAF air division\nin Europe in the next four years.\nComputing Devices had already\nwon a West German contract for\ninstallation of the navigation system in German Starfighters.\nSince then, West Germany has\nannounced plans to build more\nStarfighters.\nMr. Hembery said in a statement: \"We have good reason to\nbe confident that the position homing indicator will be adopted as a\nNATO standard. Two NATO\nmembers\u2014Germany and Canada\n\u2014have already ordered it, and we\nexpect to announce several additional European sales in the near\nfuture.\" ,\nBIG  POSSIBILITIES\nComputing Devices may sell\n$10,000,,000 worth of the computers. With installation, repair and\nservicing, this amount could\ndouble.\nThe position homing indicator\ncomputes continotisly for the pilot\nthe course and distance to any of\n12 pre - selected destinations. It\ncomputes where it is, in fleet,\nby remembering where it started\nand keeping track of all courses\nand speeds flown.\nThe pilot has a choice of 12\ntargets or destinations on a rotary\nswitch like a television channe'\nselector. Selecting any one of\nthem causes the indicator to show\nthe pilot the heading to fly to\nreach that destination and the distance to go in nautical miles.\nTotal weight of the instrument is\nless than 25 pounds.\nFor a Soft, Lasting Permanent\nTry ELIZABETH ARDEN'S\nSpun Cream\nPermanent Wave\nComplete Kit 4.25 - Refills 2.00\nPin Curl 2.50 - Children's 2.75\nGives a Natural, Soft Look.\nEasy To Use.\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nbut seemed also to bring healing\nto her body. It has made me resolve to crumble that bag of dried\nbread and scatter it for the birds\nwho pass this way in dire need now\nthat frost and snow is with us.\nMacmillan Announces . . .\nGhana Ready to Give\nUp Her Sovereignty\nACCRA, Ghana (Reuters) \u2014\nKwame Nkrumah, prime minister of Ghana, said Thursday that\nGhana was prepared to surrender\nher sovereignty completely to fulfill the concept of a union of\nAfrican states.\nNkrumah was addressing a\npress conference of reporters covering the visit of Prime Minister\nMacmillan to Ghana.\nHe was asked how -much sovereignty he thought African\nstates which had just emerged\nfrom colonial rale would be willing to surrender for African\nunity.\nHAIGH\nTRUART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St. .\nHave  the  Job  Done  Right!\nWIC GRAVEC\nU        LIMITED        \u2022*\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI He  answered:   \"I  don't know.\nI But Ghana, according to our pro-\ni gram, is prepared to sacrifice its\n! sovereignty   completely   to   this i\nj union.\"\nI OTHERS WOULD FOLLOW\ni Asked if he thought other Afri-\n! can countries would be prepar d\n; to follow Ghana's lead, Nkrumah\nI said:\n| \"Yes, especially newly-emerg-\nI ing countries\u2014but we don't expect all of them at once.\"\n| He said the union between\n| Ghana and Guinea was going on\nas fast as he had hoped.\nTWO POINTS TO SETTLE\n\"There are one or two points\nwe have to clear up. The whole\nquestion of currency is a very\nimportant aspect.\"\nThey were also discussing the\nwhole question of whether both\nwould surrender complete sovereignty and merge into one.\nMacmillan arrived here Wednesday to begin a six-week tour\nof Africa. He had wide-ranging\ntalks with Nkrumah Wednesday\non African problems and arranged to confer with him again.\nFREE SKI LESSONS\nLEARN TO SKI AT THE\nNelson Daily News\nFREE SKI SCHOOL\nAT THE SILVER KING SKI CLUB\n* *\nStarting\nJanuary\n10th\n\u2022 \u2022\nPLEASE CLIP OUT THIS COUPON\nIt is understood and agreed that I wish to benefit from free ski lessons without\nliability of any nature whatsoever to Nelson Daily News or the Silver King Ski Club.\nName  \t\nAddress\t\nAge  Sex \u00b1  Phone  \t\n(If applicant is under 21 years of age, parent or guardian must sign this application.-\nSIGNATURE   OF  PARENT  OR  GUARDIAN   '\t\nFill in this Coupon and Send to the\nSKI DIRECTOR, NELSON DAILY NEWS\nApplicant Must Be a Member in the Silver King Ski Club\nSilver King Ski Club Membership Fees Are:\nSTUDENTS $1.50 ADULTS $3.50 FAMILY $5.00\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1960_01_08","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0433301","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}