{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0434702":{"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":"2023-08-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1963-02-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434702\/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":" 60\nYears of\nDaily Service\nto Hie Kootenays.\nT\nPublished at Ni\nfen, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Cdlumbia area\nVol. 61\n7^5^ TtS!?*3** *  \"LSON, B. C, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 5, 1963\n*Sr\u00a75\u00a3          ~\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mainly cloudy with\na few showers. Not much change\nin temperature. Winds southerly\n25, gusty in many valleys, decreasing to south 15 by morning.\nLow and high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley, 35 and 45.\n10 Cents\nm\nNo. 241\nTwo Non-Conttocnce Motions Levelled at Govt;\nHarkness Resigns Defence Portfolio\nSCENT5AB1E \u2014 Edith Rosenau demonstrates the latest In\ncold weather protection In Chicago, It's aimed especially at\npersons who have respiratory ailments. The mask Is heated\nby a battery (right hand) which operates for four hours,\nand can be recharged with accompanying unit (left hand).\nMore Rain\nOn Tap for B.C.\nBy The Canadian Press\nSnow fell in much of Ontario and Quebec Monday and occasional snow mixed with freezing drizzle\nwas expected overnight in southern Ontario.\nIn Quebec, present cold wave which kept Quebec\nCity temperatures at a high of nine below Monday, is\nexpected to continue until \u2014\nObvious Your Views\nAnd Mine Differ\nOTTAWA (CP) - Text of letter to Prime Minister Diefenbaker from Douglas Harkness, resigning as Canada's minister of\nnational defence:\nMy Dear Prime Minister:\nFor over two years you have\nbeen aware that I believed your\nnuclear warheads should be supplied to the four weapons systems we have acquired which\nare adapted to their use.\nthroughout this period I believe\ned that they would be authorized at the appropriate time.\nDuring the past two weeks\nparticularly, I have made absolutely clear what I considered the\nminimum position I could accept, and several times have offered to resign unless it was\nagreed to.\nIt has become quite obvious\nduring the last few days that\nyour views and mine as to the\ncourse we should pursue for the\nacquisition of nuclear weapons\nfor our armed forces are not\ncapable of reconciliation, thus\nit is with a great deal of regret\nthat 1 now find I must tender\nmy resignation as minister of\nnational defence.\nLack of Defence Policy,\nBusiness Organization\nBasis of Two Motions\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The 25th Parliament's 71st sitting day ended Monday night\nbefore tense galleries and amid new indications that a defeat of the government\nin the Commons may be in the offing.\nTwo non-confidence motions \u2014 one sponsored by the Social Credit party and\nthe other by the Liberals \u2014 were introduced Monday and will come to a vote at\n8:15 tonight. Either could topple the minority Conservative government.\nA poll of the opposition parties indicated that the Social Credit motion, alleging a failure to \"give a clear statement of policy on national defence,\" is likely to\ndraw support from both Liberals and New Democrats \u2014 enough to overthrow the\ngovernment.\nThursday.\n'Morrraltfts^pecled'tniouth'-\nern British Columbia today when\na disturbance follows in the wake\nof gale force winds that lashed\nthe B.C. coast early Monday.\nTemperatures at Vancouver\nwere 55 Monday and were expected to range from 40 to 50\ndegrees on Vancouver Island\nand the lower mainland today.\nIn western Alberta mild air\nwas' \"edging\" slowly' northeast.\nTemperatures in the area ranged around 40 degrees, while below zero readings were general\nin northeastern Alberta and\nwestern Saskatchewan.\nThe cold weather continued in\nManitoba where Winnipeg had\none above with cloudy skies and\nlight snow.\nNo Let-Up for Europe\nLONDON (CP) -Raging blizzards halted movie making in a\nSpanish mountain range and\nbroke westward toward the Atlantic Monday' to give some\nPortuguese their first sight of\nsnow.\nEurope's cruel winter continued to lash the continent with\nstorm and flood, leaving a mounting toll of sickness and death in\nits wake.\nIn Belgium, the dead piled up\n8t mortuaries with grave digging suspended in many places\nby hard, frozen ground.\nAustria reeled under a 20-mph\nblizzard. Transportation was\nthrown into chaos.\nHerds of cattle . starved in\nmany countries. Wild animals\nwere forced out of the mountains\nto seek food around lonely villages. Wolves were reported on\nthe rampage in Poland, Italy\nand Portugal. In Poland, they\neven prowled into cities along\nwith foxes and lynx.\nACTORS SEEK COVER\nActors Sir Alex Guinness and\nJames Mason were chased out\nof the Spanish Guadarrama.\nMountain Range by a blizzard.\nThey had been making the Fall\nof the Roman Empire.\nThe movie company suspended\nshooting of the mountain scenes\nad assembled more than 1,000 of\nthe film workers in Madrid for\ninterior shots.\nNorthern Portugal was cut off\nfrom the rest of the country by\nheavy snowfalls and further\nsouth, it snowed in many places\nfor the first time this century.\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP) - Canadian\niollar up 5-64 at 92 in terms of\nU.S. funds. Week ago 92 29-32.\nPound sterling down 1-16 at\n52.80 15-32.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014The clos-\nng bid on the U.S. dollar in\nerms of Canadian funds was\n:1.07 27-32, the asked $1.07%.\n''riday the closing bid was\n,1.07 25-32, the asked $l\u00a3p7 13-16.\nExcited Portuguese in the\nthousands ran out of their homes\nfor the first glimpse in their\nlifetime of the phenomenon.\nTlie European death toll rose\nto 541.\nIn Greece, the mountain village of Stranas disappeared under a landslide of mud rock and\nsnow.\nThe only bright spot on the\nweather map was Moscow,\nwhere the thermometer rose to\nthe freezing point for the first\ntime this winter. This comparatively-mild weather was an unusual occurence in mid-winter\nfor the Soviet capital.\nDOUGLAS HARKNESS\nUntil the last few weeks I enjoyed my five and a half years\nas a member of your government and trust I have made\nsome contribution to it and to\nCanada.\nYours, regretfully,\nDouglas S. Harkness.\nResigned on Matter of Principle\nOTTAWA (CP)-Text of the\nstatement in the Commons by\nDouglas Harkness on his resignation as defence minister:\nYesterday I sent to the\nprime minister my resignation as minister; *f.twttonal,\ndefence.\nI believe it is the duty of a\nminister of national defence to\nensure the security of Canada\nto the greatest extent that he\nbelieves to be possible, on the\nbasis of the information and\nadvice he receives. I have always believed, \"in pursuit of\nthis duty as minister, that we\nshould have nuclear weapons.\nIn all defence negotiations\nconcerning nuclear weapons in\nwhich I have had a part, the\nsovereignty of Canada has\nbeen protected fully. We have\nnever lost sight of the dignity\nor independence of this country.\nI believed when I spoke\nhere last Thursday that the\nposition I outlined in a press\nrelease, issued on Monday,\nJan. 28, was the same as that\nstated by the prime minister in\nhis speech of Jan. 25, as\nfound on page 3136 of Hansard. Subsequently it became\napparent to me that the prime\nminister's views on nuclear\narms and my own are irre-\nconciliable. On reflection, I\nbelieve now I made a mistake   in   agreeing   to   what\nSlides Block B.C.\nRails, Highways\nBy The Canadian Press\nMajor highways were cut and\nothers threatened in north and\ncentral B. C. Monday after monumental snowfalls, slides and\nthaw.\nIn Kitimat, on the north coast\ntwo men died of heart attacks\nafter trying to dig their cars\nfrom a 38-inch snowfall that\nclogged the smelter city's 25\nmiles of roads.\nThe trans-Canada highway was\nTHE WEATHER\nCanada high-low:\nVancouver 55 \u2014 Whitehorse -37\nMin Max Pre\nNELSON     32\nToronto   0\nBrandon  -7\nRegina  1\nSaskatoon   -11\nLethbridge  38\nCalgary  0\nEdmonton  -9\nKimberley   37\nPenticton    42\nVancouver   46\nVictoria     46\nWhitehorse    -37\nSpokane    40\ncut by a slide live miles east of\nLytton in the north Fraser Canyon and was not expected to be\nreopened until late Tuesday. The\nslide was 200 feet wide and 15\nleet deep.\nA section of the Canadian National Railways track in the\nsame area was also taken out\nTuesday's incoming passenger\ntrains were expected to be late.\nThe highways department has\nwarned motorists to keep oil\nthe Hart Highway in north-central B.C. Monday night because\nof slide danger. The potential\ndeveloped with 59 inches of snow\nreported in two days in the\nPine Pass area.\nDead in Kitimat were Hubert\nWilliam Kant, 56, and an uniden\ntified 48-year-old man.\nThe snow started there Sunday morning and was still falling Monday night. Main roads\nwere being kept open but plows\ncouldn't keep up with others.\nSnow thawing at the lower\nlevels apparently brought the\nslides elsewhere.\nContinuous rain was falling on\nthe Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island districts.\nwould amount to a four-month\ndelay in obtaining nuclear\nwarheads for our forces in\nEurope. I did so agree in the\nhope of getting the nuclear\narms question definitely set-\nI differ from the prime minster in this way:,That I believe we should have obtained\nnuclear warheads for our weapons carriers as soon as the\nlatter were ready. I thought\nthroughout that by remaining\nin the cabinet I could better\nachieve this purpose than by\ntaking the easier course of resigning.\nHONOR AT STAKE\nI resigned on a matter of\nprinciple. The point was finally reached when I considered that my honor and integrity required that I take this\nstep.\nI shall, of course, remain in\nthe Conservative party and I\nhope to run in my constituency of Calgary North at the\nnext election\u2014that will be in\nthe hands of my supporters in\nCalgary North to whom I hope\nto report shortly.\nI should like to make it\nclear that I absolutely reject\nthe position on nuclear weapons set forth by the Liberal\nleader\u2014that anomalous position is that Canada should\nevade her responsibility by\naccepting nuclear weapons\nnow, and then immediately\nnegotiating out of them.\nI bade farewell to my fellow\nministers in the cabinet on\nterms of warm friendship. I\nthank the House for its kindness in allowing me to make\nthis statement.\nThe motion also charged the\ngovernment with failure to organize the business of the Commons in such a way as to permit introduction of the 1963-64\nspending estimates.\nIt further accused it of failing\nto take effective action on legislation already passed by the\nHouse in the economic field.\nEarlier, the Liberals had moved a motion of non-confidence\nalleging indecision and lack of\nleadership on the part of the\ngovernment.\nMr. Thompson, who earliei\nhad given what many observers\ninterpreted as a definite indication that Social Credit will sup\nport the minority government in\nits test of strength tonight, appeared to reopen the possibility\nhis party will now act to topple\nthe .Diefenbaker administration.\nSAVED GOVERNMENT\nSocial Credit voting support\nhas saved the government from\ndefeat several times in the -past\nfew months.\nMr. Thompson said there has\nbeen \"no explanation whatever\"\nfrom Prime Minister Diefenbaker of government defence policy in the light of Douglas Harkness' resignation as defence minister.\nThe Social Credit leader, who\nearlier said a federal election\nheld at this time and carrying\nanti-American overtones would\nbe a tragedy, said Monday night\nit would be worse not to go to\nthe people. . ,\n\"I believe the people of Canada expect and deserve something better than we are giving\nthem.\"\nIn spite of a \"last-minute appeal\" earlier Monday from So-\nDecision Difficult\nUnderstand\n\u2022>\u2022\u2022>\u25a0 \u00ab;.*\u25a0\ns Socreds\nAnti-Intellectual\nVICTORIA (CP) - A New\nDemocratic Party member of\nthe legislature charged Monday\nthat British Columbia's Social\nCredit government is anti-intellectual.\nDavid Barrett of Dewdney\nsaid during the throne speech\ndebate the government is essentially anti-intellectual and the\nnational Social Credit party had\nbeen anti-intellectual since its\ninception.\nEarlier he renewed his party's\ncharge that the government is\nanti-labor.\nAt one stage during his remarks Health Minister Martin\ngot up and headed out of the\nchamber. \"I'm not going to listen to this . . .\" he said.\nMr. Barrett was discussing\neducation. He said on a per\ncapita basis the University of\nB.C. is starved for funds. The\nprovince had paid $5.44 per\nadult population in 1959-60, while\nAlberta paid $5.60, Saskatchewan $5.99 and Manitoba $5.64. He\nsaid the figures came from a\nbrief of the UBC Faculty Association.\nFREE DRUG CRITICISM\nHe criticized Alex Matthews\n(SC\u2014Vancouver Centre) for advocating free drugs to narcotic\nadcKcts. He said such a plan\nwould mean that addicts from\nthroughout North America would\nflock to-B.C. for free drugsi\nMr. Matthews said the illicit\ndrug traffic will not be destroyed\nuntil the profit is taken out of\nit. The government should try\ngiving free drugs by injection to\naddicts because everything else\nthat had been tried had failed.\nThe drug traffic was getting\nworse. The young people had to\nbe protected.\nMr.- Barrett said the idea of\nfree drugs for addicts was a\n\"myth.\" The government had\ndone nothing about the problem\nexcept for a few grants to the\nNarcotic Addiction Foundation.\nThere was no easy solution to\nthe problem. Some careful research was needed.\nNOT FAIR\nCedric Cox (\u2014NDP\u2014Burnaby)\nsaid the government is not being\nfair to the municipalities by not\nclearing up the June election\npromise of an increase in the\nhome-owner grant.\nDuring the federal election the\npremier said the home-owner\ngrant would be increased to $100\nfrom $50 and grants to municipalities would be replaced by\ngrants in lieu of taxes.\ncial Credit, the government had\nfailed to propose positive action\nto meet the problems  facing\nCanada.\nLIFE UNCERTAIN\nThe uncertain life of Mr. Diefenbaker's minority government\nhas entered its most critical\nstage since the election seven\nmonths ago.\nHit first by the resignation of\nLt.-Col. Douglas Harkness as\ndefence minister, it was confronted next by a Liberal non-\ncqnfidenee motion in the House\nof Commons and thus the risk of\n\u2022being defeated and forced to go\nto the country again.\nIn a motion scheduled to reach\na roll-call vote tonight at 8:15\nEST, Liberal opposition leader\nPearson seized on the festering\nnuclearweapons dispute that\nled to the Harkness resignation\nihtd attacked, the'government\n\u25a0for:'   .        .    ':-' .  .\"*  \"\n\". . , lack of leadership, the\nbreakdown of unity in the cabinet and confusion and indecision in dealing with national and\ninternational problems.\"\n\"There is no confusion,\" Mr.\nDiefenbaker testily interjected\nat one point in the House Monday. He had not yet entered the\ndebate itself, which came as the\ngovernment presented estimates\nfor debate and thus opened the\nhistoric parliamentary grievance\nprocedure.\nThe Commons galleries, even\nthe row reserved for the diplo\nmafic conps, were packed and\nhumming with anticipation as\nthese two riddles arose:\n1. Would the 30-man Social\nCredit group vote to keep the\ngovernment in office?\n2. Would the Conservative\nranks remain united?\nThe first was the most confused conundrum.\nTo\nOTTAWA (CP) - Text of\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker's\nletter, tabled in the Commons\nMonday, replying to the letter\nof resignation from Douglas\nHarkness as minister of defence:\nMy Dear Mr. Harkness:\nI am naturally very much disappointed that you have taken\nthe course of action set out in\nyour letter of the 3rd instant,\nand frankly I find it hard to\nunderstand your decision.\nFollowing lengthy discussions\nwith our colleagues, in which\nyou participated fully, a decision\nwas reached which was embodied in the statement of policy I\nmade as reported at page 3136\nof Hansard for Jan. 25, 1963.\nWhen I concluded my speech\nyou shook my hand and expressed your approval. Since you approved it then, and since you\nlater made it clear in your\nspeech of Jan. 31, as reported in\nHansard at page 3322 and following pages, I am a loss to under-\nOTTAWA (CP) - Former defence minister Harkness said in\na broadcast interview Monday\nnight he believes the great majority of Conservative party\nmembers support his pro-nuclear\nweapons stand and that Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker \"is not an\nexpert in these matters.\"\nMr. Harkness was interviewed\non a special CBC television program press conference.\nFernie MLA\nSays Musi Up\nManufacturing\nVICTORIA (OP) -A government assistance tot: establishment ef secondary industry in\nthe north arid'interior was called \"fln* Monday by a' Liberal\nmember of the Legislature. \u25a0\nH. McKay of Fernie said British Columbia cannot forever rely on\" her great resource \u25a0 industries. The' province must broaden its economic base.\n\"We must extend our manufacturing- capacity. \u25a0 We \u25a0 must\nhave more, secondary industry\nin the province and particularly\nin the northern and interior\nparts.\"\nAn economy based on a resource alone was vulnerable unless it was buttressed and supported by secondary industry.\nAn area would be in serious\ntrouble if markets for resources\ndisappeared.\nThe government could help\nthrough tax incentives and capital, long-term loans with reasonable interest.\nIt could exert the proper pressures on business groups and\ncould' insist on diversification\nand extension of manufacturing\ncapacity.\nHe said the result of the establishment of a small industry is\n\"unbelievable.\" Jobs were created.\nCaught in Military^Political Squeeze\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nOTTAWA (CP)-Hon. Douglas\nHarkness, the man in the middle, has declined to be squeezed\nany more.\nSoon after he became defence\nminister in October, 1960, Mr.\nHarkness blurted out to a reporter that it would be \"foolish\"\nfor Canadian forces not to have\nnuclear weapons.\nEver since then\u2014up to Monday when he made public his\nresignation from the cabinet-\nMr. Harkness had been caught\nbetween military and political\nforces not of his making.\nLong before Mr. Harkness\ntook over the defence portfolio\nthe government announced acquisition of two nuclear weapons\ncarriers\u2014the Bomarc anti-aircraft missile and the CF-104\nlow-level jet bomber\u2014and said\nit was negotiating with the U.S.\nto acquire the nuclear warheads\nfor them.\nMr. Harkness, now 59, had no\nneed to force the nuclear force\nas long as the weapons carriers\nweren't in service.\nPOSITION UNTENABLE\nBut as these carriers\u2014the\nVoodoo jet interceptor and Honest John artillery rocket, besides the Bomarc and CF-104\u2014\ngradually came into use in the\narmed forces and no nuclear\nwarheads were provided for\nthem, his position became more\nand more difficult.\nThe Honest John battery was\nsent to Europe in December,\n1961. The RCAF took over the\nfirst Bomarc squadron at North\nBay, Ont., Feb. 1, 1962. The\nVoodoo came into service last\nspring and the first CF -104\nsquadron was formed in West\nGermany last December.\nMr. Harkness kept advising\u2014\nin the privacy of cabinet\u2014that\na nuclear agreement with the\nU.S. should be signed.\nThe government declined to\naccept this advice. The strain\non the minister began to tell.\nHis voice almost cracked several times in the Commons last\nThursday night as he argued\nthat there was no contradiction\nbetween himself and Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker.\nBut something happened Friday or Saturday\u2014\"I'm afraid I\ncan't tell you,\" he told reporters\nMonday\u2014which caused him to\nwrite out his resignation Sunday.\nThe former school teacher\nand soldier, who represents Calgary North, gave an indication\nof his independent spirit in early\n1961.\nREBUKED BOARD\nHe publicly rebuked the treasury board, a committee of cabinet, for not granting allowances\nto Canadian troops in The\nCongo retroactive to their first\ndate of arrival there. Treasury\nboard changed its mind.\nMr.. Harkness won the George\nMedal July 5, 1943, when he\nhelped save the lives of men\ntrapped in a torpedoed troopship in the Mediterranean. He\nwas an artillery major at the\ntime and later became a lieutenant-colonel.\nMr. Harkness was born\nToronto March 29, 1903, and was\ngraduated from the University\nof Alberta. He joined the militia\nin 1926. He bought a ranch near\nRed Deer, Alta., and taught his\ntory in high school to help keep\nit going.\nHe was nominated Progressive Conservative candidate in\nCalgary East while participating in the final battles west of\nthe Rhine as commander of the\n5th Anti - Tank Regiment. He\nwon election in that seat in 1945\nand 1949 and, after the 1952 seat\nredistribution, in 1953, 1557,1958\nand 1962 in Calgary North.\nHe was appointed northern\naffairs minister when Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker formed\nhis first cabinet in 1957. He was\nlater agriculture minister for\nthree years.\nJOHN DIEFENBAKER\nstand your suggestion now that\nyour views and mine are not lit\nagreement. We were on Jan.- 25.\nand Jan. 31. My views have not\nchanged. Between then and Sunday you must have changed\nyours.\nMuch as I regret your decision,\nI can do no other than accept\nyour resignation.\nI want to thank you most appreciatively for your services in\nthe cabinet which, commencing\nin June, 1957, and including service in three portfolios, was at\nall times most co-operative.\n1- Wish \u2022 you -jwell ih' ttaetfayj\"'\nahead,\nI am,\nYours sincerely,\nJohn Diefenbaker.\nSons Reported\nNeed Welfare\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Provincial welfare officer R. V. MacLeod said Monday some of the\nSons of Freedom Doukhobors\nnow in Vancouver appear to be\nin need of social assistance.\nIt was MacLeod's first day of\nwork in Vancouver after being\nbrought from Nelson to assist\nofficers here in Doukhobor matters. He is on loan to the city\nby the provincial government,\nMacLeod left the interior Friday by bus after Thursday flights\nwere cancelled.\nMore than 40 of the hundreds\nof Freedomites who descended\non the city two weeks ago have\napplied for social assistance.\nPilof Survives\n43-Hour Ordeal\nIDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) -\nA navy lieutenant-commander\nwho said he was prepared in'\ncase of an airplane crash tested\nMonday after spending 43 hours\non a snow-covered mountain in\nwestern Wyoming.\n\"I wasn't worried,\" said Gordon Anderson after he was\ndragged 21 miles in a toboggan-'\ntype stretcher from his crashed\nairplane Sunday.\n\"This winter stuff is nothing\nnew to me. I'm from Stockholm,\nMe., and I carry survival equipment.\"\n.Anderson's single-engine private plane crashed head-on into\na five-foot blanket of snow at\nthe 8800-foot level of 10,864-foot\nHoback Peak at dusk Friday.\nTwenty-one hours later a\nsearch plane spotted Anderson\nleaning against the wrecked\nCessna-140. A 13-man ground\nparty struggled through the snow\nin a storm and reached the injured pilot before dawn Sunday.\nAnderson, 36, of Idaho Falls,\nsuffered a possible head injury,\na broken left ankle, bruises and\ntwo black eyes. The heavy snow\ncushioned the plane's impact\nand probably saved his life.\nOTTAWA (CP)-It will be \"a\nday or two\" before police can\ninterview Donald Watson Fleming, 20-year-old son of the justice minister, who was wounded\nby a shotgun blast early Saturday morning.\nPolice Chief Walter Maheaux\nof nearby South Hull, Que.; was\nto have interviewed Fleming\nMonday after doctors said the\nwounded man had recovered\nenough to speak to the police\nchief. But later they said the\ninterview should be postponed.\nAnd in This Corner . \u2666 \u2666\nSTOCKPORT, England (AP)\u2014A 65-year-old spinster deserted by her terrified Instructor during a driving lesson was\nfined \u00a31 ($3.00) Monday for driving without a qualified supervisor.\nProsecutor Herbert Sidebotham told Stockport magistrates\na policeman saw school teacher Margaret Hunter alone in her\ncar. It carried \"L\" plates, indicating she was a learner driver\nand should be under supervision. She told the constable:\n\"I had an instructor with me. But when I stopped at the\ntown ball traffic signals my instructor jumped out of the car\nshouting 'it's lunacy, It's suicide. I'm not going another inch\nwith you driving.'\n\"Traffic was being held up so I just had to drive on aid\nset back home the best wav I could.\"\n'\n_\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1963\nMothers' March $300\nShort of $2500 Objective\nAdverse weather conditions\nhampered the Mothers' March\nin attaining their quota of $2500\nobjective Saturday.\nD. R, Nuyens, chairman of the\nKinsmen sponsored march believed that $500 was forfeited because of the heavy snowfall.\n\u25a0 Some 100 mothers in the Nelson district raised $2200 only $300\nshort of their objective.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"THE LAST SUNSET\" (Color)\nRock Hudson, Kirk Douglas,\n0orothy Malone\nShows at 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.\nNelson Civic Centre\nand\nRecreation Commission\nSCHEDULE\nTuesday, February 5th\nARENA!\n2:00- 4:00-TINY TOTS'\nSKATING\n4:05- 5:45-CHILDREN'S\nSKATING\n6:30- T:S0-J?igure Skating\nT:30- 8:30\u2014Notre Dame\n8:30- 9:30\u2014Falcons vs Leafs\n9:30-10:30\u2014Notre Dame vs\n'-'A.C.T. Bucks\nRECREATION HALL:\nJ:00- 4:00\u2014Central School\nBoys\n8:30- 8:66-Jiinior Badminton\n8:00-11:00\u2014Senior Badminton\n4:00- 6:00\u2014Notre Dame\nCertain areas throughout the\ndistrict have not been tallied yet\nand Mr. Nuyens felt this might\nbring the total to within $100 of\ntheir quota.\nMany mothers. went, canvassing Monday night to try to\ncover areas missed Saturday.\nMr. Nuyens wished to extend\nspecial thanks to 19 marching\nmothers ahd their captain Mrs\nW.\nvassed between Harrop and\nProcter.\nThose people who were not\ncontacted by the mothers may\nleave donations at the Canadian\nImperial Bank of Commerce.\nD. F. Needham will accept\nany donations and fill out a receipt.\nEnvelopes left at Nelsonites\"\nhomes when mothers called may\nalso be mailed to the bank.\nMr. Nuyens said the returns\nHolubowick who_ canvassed | ^1*'mifch'l^tiall^lCnrt\nthe area from Corra Lynn to Slocan City.\nHe also wished to acknowledge\nMrs. F. Barlow, captain mother\nand her five assistants who can-\nthe same as the previous year.\nThe drive covers all of B.C.\nand funds raised are sent to the\nPoliomyelitis and Rehabilitation\nFoundation of B.C. in Vancouver.\nTrail Aldermen Told\nHold Down Expenses\nTRAIL \u2014 Mayor Joe Palyga\nofficially opened the British Col-\numbia Curling Association Bonspiel a few minutes before proceeding to the regular council\nmeeting Monday evening.\nA delegation from the Victorian\nOrder of Nurses placed before\ncouncil a request for an increase\nof the $150 grant. Increased costs\nare causing difficulties in balancing the budget, they said. The\nrequest was placed before the\nfinance committte for consideration.\nFinance chairman Alderman\nTONIGHT-WED.\u2014Complete shows 7:00 - 9:00\nHELMm\na side of life!\nyou never j\nCODING MONDAY, FEB. 11-\na .CTMNHESTON \u00ab-*-\nina]\nAUIEO MUSIS Beta, n\nI'lHl-lli\nCIVIC\ni mm   m 11 \"**\nInland is keeping\nmore men Employed\nthis winter installing\ngas services.\nNow there are no extra\nfrost charges.\n*    *    *\nApply before your present fuel il uied up\nand you can switch to\nAUTOMATIC\nNATURAL\nGAS\nWITHOUT   WAITING\nFor full details, Phone 352-5566\n\u2666\nG. W. Barnsley also hinted at\nrising costs as he warned the\ncommittees to hold expenditures\nto the minimum at least until the\nmiddle of March and presentation of the new budget. Increased education costs of about $20,-\n000 to $25,000 for Trail's share\nwould mean about a mill and a\nhalf for school purposes, he\npointed out. \"And we must not\nlose sight of the necessity of accumulating an emergency fund.\"\nAlderman P. Landucci reported the winter works program\nprogressing oh schedule with\nWarren Lane about 80 per cent\ncompleted and the wall on Gde-\npel about 25 per cent completed.\nSnow removal, he said, was not\ngoing as well as they had wish- ]\ned. Night crews will continue j\nwith the job.\nThe building inspector's report\nrevealed that building was up i\nfor the first month of the year!\nwith a total of $60,400 for Janu-;\nary as compared tb $25,225 for\nJanuary of 1962.\nCONGRATULATIONS all-round are being extended here. Albert Hamson, centre, beams after\nbeing installed as 1963 president of the Nelson\nKiwanis Club; immediate past president Donald\nAppleton displays plaque honoring him for his out\nstanding leadership in 1962, and Carl van Hardenberg of Colville, Wash., lieutenant-governor for division six, Kiwanis International, relaxes after installing Mr. Hamson and his new slate.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nCommittee System Sparks\nHeated Exchange in Council\nNotre Dame News\nSpruce Sawlog\nTofal Decreases\nSawlog production during January was up slightly from the\nFerry Traffic\nDown Slightly\nKootenay Lake ferry traffic\nduring January showed only a\nslight decrease from the corresponding month last year.\nAutomobiles and drivers were\nup 63 last month, totalling 3672\ncompared to 3618, Jan. 1961.\nOnly noticeable decrease was\nshown in the passenger totals,\nJanuary of last month showing\n6945 compared to 7909 in Jan.,\n1962.\nThere were 810 round trips\nduring last month, and the same\nnumber for January, 1962.\nA breakdown in figures shows\nlast month's figures with the corresponding figures for 1962 in\nbrackets:\nNumber of round trips 310\n(310); automobiles and drivers\n3672 (3619); passengers 6945\n(7909); trucks 1349 (1410); trailers and semi-trailers 532 (507);\nmotor buses 148 (209).\nSLUSH, SNOW\nREMOVAL\nDISCUSSED\nA soggy hangover tormented\nNelson pedestrians and motorists\nand provoked comment in the\ncity council chambers Monday.\nPelted by rain, nine inches of\nsnow which fell Saturday and\nSunday was transformed into\nslush as pedestrians slipped and\nslid along unshovelled sidewalks\nthroughout the city. Many pedestrians vacated the unshovelled\nsidewalks to walk among the\nrippling streams and slush on\nthe roadways, adding to the hazards of. motorists already battling skidding tendencies.\nIn tity council, the familiar\nmatter of snow plowing was\nbroached. Aid. E. T. Bodard was\nconcerned over snow plowing on\nstreets where cars are parked\novernight. He asked council's\nconsideration of a proposal that\nilternate night parking be asked\nif the public tb facilitate snow\n\u25a0Mowing.\nUnder the scheme the cars\nwould be parked overnight on\nme side of the street and then\nin the next night would be parked on the other side of the\nstreets, thereby allowing the\nsnow plow to do a proper jbb\nThe first ruffle in the streamlined council operation appeared Monday as the temperaments of Mayor\nT. S. Shorthouse and Aid. Mrs. W. J. Van Maarion\nclashed over the functioning of the new system.\nAt the crux of the parliamentary-controlled disagreement was the city's new two-committee system\nI which replaced the six-committee operation as of Jan-\n:uary 1, 1963.\ncorresponding period last year, j \u201e        M\u00b1 Van, Maarion opposed the concept that the\nthe Nelson Forest District rc. hnance committee should discuss and make a recom-\nts ! mendation on a subject, without the subject first being\nSpruce   was   down   3,000,000 j re'e\u00abed t0 *\u00ab 9\">\"P by the\"\nFBM last month compared to wh\u00b0!e council.\nJanuary 1962. Salvage showed an     Monday noted the first results\nincrease of 3,000,000 FBM last I of  the  finance  and  executive\nmonth over the same period in ! committees.  Composed of the\n1962 *^K\"'   \u2022')*\u2014-       Mayor and three senior alder-\nJanuary recorded 37M57 more :\"\"\">\u25a0 Albe,rt Maida. J- ?\u2022 M-\nFBM than the same month last ^ and E; \u00a3 .(B\u00b0?ard, the\n| finance group held its first meet-\nt  ii   ,n    ! , it. lnln t t\u201ei\u201e iing Monday afternoon. It result-\nIn the following the 1962 totals , J |n  1R 'rM,\u201emm\u201e\u201erfo(i\t\nare listed first followed by the\n1963 total in brackets.\nyear.\nSAWLOGS\nFir\nCedar\nSpruce\nLodgepole\nPine\nHemlock\nBalsam\nWhite Pine\nYellow Pine\nLarch\nSalvage\nAspen\nBirch\nCottonwood\n12,414,396\n4,538.219\n22,441,982\n1 322,438\n3,503,554\n2,215,079\n1,830,141\n245,655\n7,555,972\n4,480,986\nNil\n1,884\n7,101\n11,273,711\n3,522,735\n19,535,675\n3,177,169\n5,004,124\n2,713,834\n1,661,252\n315,803\n5,886,942\n7,823,081\n630\n9,192\n10,716\nTotal\nto date:   60,557,407  60,934,864\nMINOR PRODUCTS:\nPoles and Piles\n(lineal feet)\nMine Timbers\n(lineal feet)\nMine Props\n(cords)\nFence Posts\n(cords)\nCordwood (cords)\n269,155   229,485\n25,262   149,762\n337\n59\n101\nPOST OFFICE\nBUSINESS UP\nPost office business during\nJanuary was down considerably\nfrom the previous month but up\nover the corresponding period\nlast year.\nTotal business recorded during January was $174,637, an increase of $6601 over January,\n1962 and Bhowed a decrease of\n$10,605 from December of last\nyear.\nThe following figures shbw A\nbreakdown in business transacted with corresponding 1962 figures in brackets:\nSale of postage stamps and\nsupplies $11,990 ($11,497); other\nrevenue $728, ($430); total business transacted $174,637, ($169,-\n036); number of money orders\nissued 3,602 (3,628); number of\nmoney orders paid 4,417 (4,416).\nYour Prescriptions\nDispensed Promptly.\nWHILE YOU WAIT\nOR BY DELIVERY\nTW6 DRUGGISTS t6 SERVE YOU\nSAMPLE'S\n\"YOUR\n639 Boker St.\nNELSON\nPHARMACY LTD.\nFORTRESS--6F--HEALTH\"-\nNELSON Ph. 352-2313\ncouncil, dealing with subjects\nthat had been referred to it by\ncouncil, and some that had not,\nbut came within the scope of\nthe committee under the new\nsystem.\n\"How many of these matters were relerred to the finance committee for recommendation?\" Aid. Van Maarion asked.\nAid. Harts admitted that\nsome had not been before this\ncouncil before.\nAfter these opening remarks,\nthe mayor stated that now was\nthe time to discuss the matters. The committee was prepared to answer any questions or\ngive an explanation of each matter if an alderman so desired.\nAsked if she was opposed to\nthe recommendations, she replied: \"I am quite opposed to\nthat policy.\"\n\"It is not responsible government. Any correspondence to the\nmayor and council is to be open\nin an open meeting like this,\"\nshe asserted.\nThe mayor felt that this was\nnot necessarily.the case, and repeated that it was the aldermen's privilege to ask. questions\non the matters then.\n\"This is not good legislation;\nto ask me to vote on 16 recommendations without knowing the\nquestion or tlie situation,\" Aid.\nVan Maarion continued. \u25a0 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nAt this point the tone bf the-\ndisagreement between the two\nold antagonists grew harsh, but\nthe mayor checked any explosive outburst with the power oi\nthe chair, stating that he was\nnot going to have the same\ntrouble which he said afflicted\ncouncil during the alderman's\nprevious term of office two years\nago.\nTOLD RESPECT CHAIR\n\"If you are going to talk to\nthe chair, you'll respect the chair\nor apologize,\" the Mayor da-\ncreed.\nAid. Van Maarion temporarily\nlapsed Into silence.\nIn a poll, the rest of cbuncil,\nstated they wefb Ih favof bf giving the present system a trial\nrun, with explanations of sub'\njbctS Which had hot been fefef'\nred tb committee by council.\nift. asking Aid. Van Maafioil\nher opinidft, she declared, \"1ft\nrebuttal, I'm quite Willing tb try\nthe twftcbmmittee system plan.\nAl! I'm saying this flight is that\nI am against them (the committees) taking upon themselves a\nquestion without its being referred to them by city council.\"\nThe mayor challenged her re\nmark, stating she had already\nindicated her antagonism to it.\nWhen the vote of approval of\nthe recommendation was taken,\nAid. Van Maarion opposed it on\nthe principle that the committee\nwould be undertaking work\nwhich had not been referred to\nit by council.\nMayor Shorthouse pressed her\nfor a straight yes or no on the\napproval of the recommendations. Because of this principle,\nshe voted negative.\nIn the past the correspondence with council was generally first discussed in open\nmeeting and then referred to\nt h e respective committee\nwhich ln turn would study the\nsituation and recommend a\nsolution to council..\nUnder the new system, the\nsubjects are channeled to the\nrespective committee chairmen to discuss with the department head and city administrator.\nHe then reports his findings to\nthe Works Utilities Services\nCommittee (WUS) of which each\nalderman is a member and\nwhich formulates the recommendation at an \"in committee\nmeeting.\" The recommendation\nis then placed before open council for approval.\nThe finance committee of the\nmayor and three aldermen operates in similar manner, dealing with all matters pertaining\nto financial and executive decision.\nQUICKLY APPROVED\nMonday the WUS recommendations were quickly approved.\nThere was no discussion on the\ntopics and the recommendations\nwere hot' read In open council\nas they had been circulated\nthrough the mail to the councillors.\nAfter the meeting the recommendations were made available to the press.\nThe press has been Invited to\nattend the \"in committee\" WUS\nmeetings but with the understanding that the news reports\nwould.be subject to cbuncil scu-\ntiny and approval.\nBi-Cultural\nConference\nTo Be Held\nOTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minister Diefenbaker promised Monday there will be \"the fullest\nbreadth\" to discussions of a proposed federal-provincial conference on bi-culturalism.\nIn a Commons statement, he\nsaid the scope of the conference\nwill cover employment of\nFrench-speaking Canadians in\npublic service and \"the choice of\na national flag and other symbols\nof our national sovereignty.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker said invitations will be sent at once to the\n10 provincial governments. He\ndid not suggest a date for the\nconference.\nEdited by Brian McCoy\nWe would like to apologize to\nour readers for not having an\narticle in the paper last week.\nWe have been busy with semester break and preparing for the\nSnow Fiesta.\nOn the weekend of the 25th,\n26th and 27th of January, we had\nbur annual Snow Fiesta. The first\nof the planned events was a basketball game Friday night with\nthe Notre Dame Pups vs Trail\nBon Tons. A sock hop followed\nin the Civic gym. Saturday was\nthe main day of the Snow Fiesta.\nIn the afternoon we had a skating\nparty at our outdoor skating rink.\nDuring the party, the faculty\nchallenged the student union to\na broom-ball game. The faculty\nwas victorious, with a 4-3 win\nThe most important event of\nthe Snow Fiesta was the Snow\nBall sponsored by the student\nunion Saturday night. The dance\nhad an \"ice palace\" theme.\nMusic was supplied by the Buddy\nMarr orchestra from Castlegar.\nSunday's hockey game added to\nthe high spirits of the Snow\nFiesta. Our Notre Dame Knights\ngained a tremendous victory\nover the Cranbrook Canucks.\nThe score was a lopsided 11-4 for\nthe Knights. Sunday night we had\na wind-up social at the students'\nlounge in St. Bonaventure Hall.\nThis weekend a few students\ndecided to have a snowball fight.\nSunday afternoon was reserved\nfor this long-awaited event.\nEverybbdy was well soaked and\ntired after they let nff all the\nenergy they had stored up\nthroughout the week. On Sunday\nnight another social was held in\nthe student lounge sponsored by\nthe student union. During the\nevening they welcomed back the\nhockey team. All had a wonderful time.\nSaturday Notre Dame Pups\nplayed two games in an invitational tournament at L. V. Rogers High School, emerging victorious in both to win the tournament.\nThe first game, against Trail\nHawks, was won 58-51 as the\nPups tired in the fourth quarter\nafter holding a 22-point lead.\nDuring the game, Trail Hawks\ncapitalized by 31 points on 27\nfouls incurred by Pups. Les Jensen was top man for Notre Dame\nwith 12 points while S. Zanet\nscored 12 points for Trail.\nIn the evening game against\nthe favored Vernon Panthers,\nPups showed their determination\nand ability by closing the 11-point\ngap of the Vernon lead to go\nahead and swamp Panthers\n63-43.\nSpecial mention should gb to\ntop scorer bf the evening, Pete\nFarm, who contributed 26 points,\nand also to playing coach Doug\nFlynn, who was suffering from\nan injured hand and wrenched\nback.\nIn hockey this weekend, Cranbrook played host to Notre Dame\nKnights in a doubleheader, giving each team a win.\nIn Saturday night's game, the\ntired Knights, leading 7-3 at approximately the ten-minute mark\nof the third period, collapsed,\ngiving Cranbrook the oppprtun-\nity to tie the game and force it\ninto overtime, in which Canucks\nkept up the relentless pace te\nscore twb unanswered goals and\ndefeat the Knights 9-7.\nSunday afternoon, however,\nKnights, coming from behind a\n2-0 deficit, went on to win 4-3\nas Colin Patterson scored the\nwinning goal in the last minute\nof play.\nBoth games were marred by\nmultiple penalties against the\nKnights. Saturday night it was\napparent that Knights were playing against insurmountable odds,\nhaving at one time eight men in\nthe penalty box and for at least\n12 minutes of the game playing\nwith a two-man disadvantage.\nCoach Ernie Gare was thrown\nout of the game when he disputed the fairness of a call.\nNew York Ranger scout Scotty\nMilan, who attended the game,\nwas quoted: \"The game was out\nof control right from the start.\"\nINQUIRY HELD\nIN DEATH OF\nSALMO WOMAN\nSALMO (Staff) - An inquiry\ninto the sudden death here of\nMrs. Marjorie Denholm, is being conducted by Magistrate S.\nT. Dawson.\nThe body of the 43-year-old\nwoman was found in her home\nby a neighbor Friday.\nBorn and educated in Bulwark, Alta., she lived at Stettler'\nfor some time with her parents,\nthen at Aldergrove, B.C., with\nher mother before coming to\nNelson 10 years ago. She was\nmarried here to James Spence\nDenholm in 1955, and the family\nmoved to Salmo last spring.\nMr. Denholm was killed in a\nditch cave-in at Montrose, Jan.\n8.\nBesides her two sons, Billie\nand David, she is survived by\nthree brothers, Eugene Zimmerman of Oliver, William Zimmerman of White Horse, Joseph\nZimmerman In South America;\ntwo sisters, Mrs. Grace Shields\nof Chelan, Wash., and Mrs.\nMary Larsen of Vancouver.\nCanon Silverwood, Retiring\nSoon, Receives High Tribute\nVerbal tribute was paid Rev.\nCanon W. J. Silverwood, who\nwill retire soon, during the annual meeting of parishioners of\nthe Church of The Redeemer\nMonday night.\n\"Canon Silverwood will leave\na gap which is virtually Impossible lo till,\" A. Whiting said of\nthe rector's retirement June 30.\nHe said Canon Silverwood's\nsermons were like a tonic and\nleft people a lot wiser than before.\nMr. Whiting's remarks stemmed from Canon Silverwood's\nstatement that he was convinced\nthat his retirement was for the\ngood ot the parish.\nCanon Silverwood said he had\ni no immediate plans for the fu-\nj lure but he would be staying in\nNelson.\nAnother parishioner, R.\nGrinsted,    observed    on    the\nrector's  good nature, saying,\n\"When he's sick you can send\nhim a humorous get-well card,\nsomething you cannot do with\nmany ministers.\"\nThis statement, Mr. Grinsted\nexplained, summed up Canon\nSilverwood.\nThe financial statement was\nread by E. E. Hopwood, and all\nobligations were met, he reported.\nJ.  P.  Hbrswill urged the 75\nWILLIAMS LAKE (CP) - Police established Monday that a\nyoung mother and hef infant son\nwho perished after spending a\nnight ln the open in freezing\nweither left hbme following a\nfamily quarrel.\nTh* woman, Mrs. Margaret\nMichel, 23, of the Soda Creek\nirtdian Reserve 14 miles ffbm\nhei1*, was dead when found by a\npassing mbtbrist, Norman Essery of 100 Mile House Saturday.\nBut nearby lay her son, Paul,\n2, heavily wrapped in blankets\nand still alive. Essery rushed\nhim tb Hospital iitte but he died\n12 hours later.\n\u00ab\nTRAPPED IN CAVE-IN\nVANCOUVER (CP) - City\nsewer department workman Anthony Ramoglda, 30, was trapped\nby the legs when walls of a sewer\nexcavation collapsed Monday.\nHe Was not injured. Fellow workman Silvio Guezzetto, 34, went\nhome suffering shock after\nwatching the mishap.\nCHOQUETTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352-7535\nThe Finest Stoker Coals\nORDER  NOW!\nOur Specialty \u2014\nStoker mixes\nmembers tb increase money contributions by ten per cent to\nkeep the parish self-supporting.\nSUCCESSFUL YEAR\nThe many church organizations reported their activities\nthroughout the year and the general concensus was that 1962\n\"was a most successful year.\"\nCanon Silverwood stated he\nlearned more from consecrated\nlaymen than the ecclesiastical\nclergy. He said his church was\na people's church ln financial\nmatters.\nE. E. Hopwood was appointed\nrector's warden during the 1963\nelection of officers.\nPeople's wardens for this year\nare T. C. Lambert and Harry\nLake; treasurer, Stan Morris,\nand secretary, J. P. Hbrswill.\nChurch committee members\nnominated were G. Webb, W.\nTurner, W. Defoe, A. Matassh,\nA. Whiting, W. Lambert, C.\nWard, R. Fbxall, T. Baker, D.\nGraham, R. Grinsted, T. Man-\nsell, Insp. F. Joinson and W.\nMelneczuk.\nDelegates appointed to attend\na church seminar in Kelowna\nduring May Were T. Baker and\nE. E. Hopwood, With J. P. HorS-\nwill and W. Defoe as alternates.\nHAIRTEX\nFor Reconditioning\nDamaged Hair\nRenews the Texture\nbf Your Hair\n$2.50 and 75*\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613       Nelson\nDENTAL\nTECHNICIAN'S ACT\nTake Notice that all Dental Laboratory\nTechnicians and Dental Mechanics practising\nin the Province of British Columbia, are under\nthe regulations adopted by Order-in-Council No.\n116 passed on the 17th day of January, 1963\nrequired to register with the Dental Technicians'\nBoard. Such applications are to be received by\nthe Dental Technicians' Board by March 1,\n1963.\nApplication forms and a copy of the\nregulations may be obtained from the undersigned.\nDoted at Vancouver, B.C. this 1st day\nof February, 1963.\nDental Technicians'  Board\nper Executive Secretary,\n828 West 10th Avenue,\nVancouver 9, B.C.\n\u25a0_.\n-- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \" ! : . ! : ___ ! ;\t\n  -   --\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n ro Stand Trial\nOn Breaking,\nEntering Charge\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 \"I have no\ndoubt that there is ample evidence to commit (Richard Harry\nRamsden) for trial at the next\ncourt of competent jurisdiction\"\nwere the words of Magistrate\nParker Williams at the conclusion of a preliminary hearing held in Castlegar.\nRamsden will stand trial at a\nlater date on a charge of breaking and entering.\nThe alleged offence occurred\nNovember 23, when Pitts Prescriptions was broken into and a\nquantity of narcotics and approximately $345 in cash was\nstolen.\nTestifying at the trial were\nCpl. George Sproule of the\nRCMP identification division of\nNelson, Constable Dolter, Jack\nWhite, pharmacist at Pitts' and\nConstable Tony Prokof of the\ncrime detection laboratory in\nRegina. Sgt. Alex Borodula was j\ninterrogator and E. McGauley\nwas defence counsel.\nEvidence rested on matching\nof fibres on screening at the\npharmacy with those of a jacket\nfound at the home of the accused\nand matching of shoes found at\nthe accussed's home with a print\nfound on a cardboard at the\npharmacy.\nNo narcotics or no money\nWere found at his home.\nKaslo Library Meeting Notes ...\nFeWer Members, More\nBooks Circulating\nKASLO \u2014 A decrease in membership of 31 from last year's\ntotal was balanced by an increase in books borrowed from\nthe Kaslo Public Library, the\nannual report indicated.\nThe annual meeting of Kaslo Public Library Association\nwas held at The Lodge, with\npresident Mrs. J. Matthews in\nthe chair.\nA younger children's room\nwas opened ln the library in\n1962, with assistance from the\nvillage   commission  and   the\nKaslo Kinsmen club.\nThere are now 254 juvenile\nmembers and 115 adult members, with 4269 juvenile books\nand 2357 adult books being circulated, an increase of 77 over\nthe 1961 total.\nPolice Seek\nKnife Wielder\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\npressed an investigation Monday\nInto an attack by two youths on\ntwo young girls in which one\nwas cut 24 times with a knife.\nShirley Rayner, 11, and her\neight-year-old sister, Sharon,\nwere collecting empty bottles so\nShirley could go to a Girl Guide\nskating party when they were\nattacked from behind by the\nyouths.\n\"They knocked us down,\" said\nShirley,\" and when I started to\nstruggle the boy on top of me\ntook a knife and made cuts on\nmy hands and leg.\"\nSharon was not harmed.\nShirley said the youths took\n$1.50 from her purse and the\nbottles they were carrying and\nfled.\nShirley has received an offer\nof three months free judo lessons from a YMCA judo instructor.\nSilver King\nBeverages\nNelson \u2014 Phone 352-6737\nIN\nIN\nTRAIL\u2014\nSnappy Service\nPhone 368-5353\nCRANBROOK\u2014\nNational Fruit\nPhone JU-6-2251\nF. M. Barrett\nFuneral Rites\nAt Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE - A retired\nFruitvale man who had participated in activities of, and\nassisted in a practical way,\nmany community organizations,\ndied at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Thursday.\nFrederick M. Barrett died\nfollowing a lengthy illness. Funeral service was held Monday\nat St. John's Anglican Church\nin Fruitvale, with Rev. D. N.\nRobinson officiating. Hymns\nsung were \"Old Rugged Cross\"\nand \"Abide With Me.\" Soloist\nwas Mrs. Rosch.\nSenior Citizens' Association\nattended the funeral as a group.\nPallbearers were Mr. Barrett's\nsix grandsons, Bob and Vern\nBarrett, Bill Wade, Ken McDonald, Bruce and Allan Barrett.\nInterment was in the Memorial Park Cemetery at Fruitvale.\nBorn in Blanchard, Wash., in\n1878, where he learned the\nharness-making trade, Mr. Barrett Came to B.C. and set up a\nbusiness in Golden. There he\nmet and married Lillian Bond,\nwho predeceased him in 1959.\nHe moved to the prairies and\nset up business in Whitewood,\nMoosmin and Rocanville. He\nwas reeve of Rocanville for\nmany years.\nIn 1915 he returned to B.C.\nand settled in Fruitvale. He\nopened a shoe repair business in\nTrail in 1920 and retired in 1936,\nturning his attention to gardening, a favorite hobby.\nIn 1933, Mr. Barrett donated\nland to the district Boy Scouts,\nnow   known   as   Tweedsmuir\nPark. In 1959 he gave a parcel\nof land In the Fruitvale business district to the Fruitvale\nSenior Citizens, to be used as\na site for their 'luture meeting\nhall.  He was active in construction   of   the   community\nhall at Fruitvale.\nA   devoted   member   of   the\nAnglican  Church,  Mr.  Barrett\nhas been senior warden of St.\nJohn's for many years.\nSurviving are four sons, Wilfred of Notch Hill, B.C., Donald\nof Penticton, Melbourne and\nVictor of Fruitvale; four daughters, Evelyn Ryder and Rose\nTannahill of Oravelle, Calif.,\nLottie Wade of Nelson and\nNellie McDonald of Trail; two\nsisters and one brother of\nSeattle; 27 grandchildren and\n20 great grandchildren.\nThe library now owns 2577\nbooks, an increase of 266 over\n1961's figure, not including 380\nbooks from the travelling library\nof the provincial govrenment.\nOfficers for 1963 are Mrs.\nMatthews, president; Mrs. W.\nDrayton, secretary treasurer and\nMrs. E. Booth, Mrs. J. Cochran\nand Mrs. J. Humphries, board\nof directors.\nDecember Output\nFrom Ottawa\nMine $9000\nSLOCAN CITY - During December, Ottawa Silver Mines\nshipped approximately $9,000\nworth of silver from its Springer\nCreek property, near Slocan. T.\nC. Hughes, president reports. He\nexpects shipments to be increased to $12,000 during the current\nmonth.\nUnderground work at the mine\nis continuing. Currently work is\nproceeding in the vein on the No.\n9 level. Results have been promising.\nMr. Hughes indicates that he\nexpects the company's stock to\nbe listed on the Vancouver Stock\nExchange in the near future.\nELK HEAD HELD IN BET \u2014 Mayor George Haddad of Cranbrook, left, has\nchallenged B.C.'s Highways Minister P. A. Gaglardi to complete the Creston-\nSalmo portion of the Trans-Canada Highway southern route by the fall of 1963.\nMayor Haddad, almost a look-alike for the minister, bet Mr. Gaglardi a splendid East Kootenay elk head against whatever wager he wished to name. The\nhighways minister accepted the challenge and wagered a pair of snowshoes\nand a feed of Kamloops trout as his half of the bet. \"I sincerely hope I lose,\"\ndeclared Mayor Haddad.\u2014Photo courfesy Cranbrook Courier.\nEskimo Ruins Found\nNear North Pole\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nOTTAWA (CP)-The ruins fo\nan ancient Eskimo culture dating back 3,000 to 4,000 years\nhave been discovered on one of\nthe Queen Elizabeth Islands\n1,000 miles from the North Pole.\nThe archeological find was\nmade by W. E. S. Henoch of\nthe geographical branch of the\nfederal technical surveys dement while doing research for\nthe Polar Continental Shelf Project on Melville Island, 1,750\nmiles north of Winnipeg.\nMr. Henoch found the ruins\nof an Eskimo dwelling in McCormick Inlet on the northwestern coast of Melville Island. He visited the site after\nit had been brought to his attention by bush pilots.\nAt the site Mr. Henoch found\na number of artifacts believed\nof the Dorset or pre-Dorset cultures. The Dorset culture dates\nto 900 BC while pre-Dorset goes\nback to 2,000 BC.\nMr. Henoch, an expert in the\nfield of geomorphology\u2014the dating of the history of land structures\u2014and officials of the National Museum of Canada say\nthe find has exciting archeological possibilities.\nIf the site was inhabited by\nEskimos of the Dorset era, it\nrepresents new evidence of the\nwestward movement of these\nancient peoples. Dorset cultures\nhave been found in other Arctic\nEuropeans Shiver With\nNo Sign of Wanted Thaw\nareas including Cornwallis Island and the east coast of Bath- i\nurst Island, but no sites have j\nbeen uncovered as far west as\nMelville Isand.\nIf the site is of the pre-Dorset\nera, this is the first evidence\nof the existence of this culture\nin the Queen Elizabeth Islands.\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Europeans\nshivered on Monday with no\nsign of early relief from the\nfreeze.\nEurope's unofficial death toll j\nclimbed to at least 539 as fresh\ners in the Bijelo Polje area of\nMontenegro. More than 50 persons were in hospital, but snowdrifts kept doctors from reaching other victims.\nWest   German   temperatures\nFive Queen\nScouts To\nBe Invested\nKIMBERLEY- Extraordinary\ninvestiture is set for Chapman\nCamp Hall Wednesday when five\nmembers of Chapman Scout\nTroop will revceive their award\nof Queen's Scout, highest rank\nscouting offers.\nThey are Jim Chalmers, Wil-\nlim Calder, Malcolm Blake, John\nBlackwell and Colin Kary. All\nhave passed the necessary examinations by disinterested examiners and have qualified.\nKootenay Executive Scout\nCommissioner J. L. Miller of\nNelson will attend and make the\npresentation.\nScoutmaster of the Troop is\nFred Blackwell and his assistants in guiding the five Scouts\nthrough the program leading to\nthis top award have been Alan\nZaleschuk and Marvin Folsy.\ndisaster struck. And in Spain's | averaged about five degrees. The ,\nCanary Islands, off the north- j Rhine was still blocked to ship- j\nwest coast of Africa, 23 persons I ping.\nwere killed in a panic caused . i\nI    Snow was reported from Mar-\n,     , ,   ., \u201e  \u2022   .,    \u201e, \u201ev,\u201e\u201ei .   \u201e\u201enn\u2122\u201e i seille and along the Mediterran-'\nfound farther south in the Chur- was about to collapse. ; ^ coast  ^ on hjghways\nchill, Man., area. Fresh  blizzards  dumped  15-1 lhl.oughout France was snaried.\nAn official of the National Mu-1 foot snowdrifts in Britain s Kentp\nJohn Salvador\nNamed To Creston\nHospital Board\nCRESTON \u2014 John Salvador,\nJr., was appointed to the board\nof directors of the Creston Valley\nSick Benefit Association at the\nrecent monthly meeting.\nMr. Salvador will replace the\ndirectorship of A. R. Speers, who\nresigned as director to become\nsecretary-treasurer of the Association.\nMr. Salvador has been a\nmember of many community\nassociations and the Board unanimously endorsed his appointment. His brother, E. Salvador,\nwas a charter director of the\nAssociation.\nThe Association passed $3000\nin accounts and brought into\nmembership four new applicants\nand 12 dependents.\n'am\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 5,1963 '$,M\nSt. Mark's Church\nNotes Successful Year\nKASLO \u2014 A successful year\nwas noted at the annual vestry\nmeeting of St. Mark's Church\nheld at the home of Mrs. A. Jardine, with 21 members attending\nand Rev. S. Lee as chairman.\nReports were heard from: the\nvicar's warden, Mr. Warlde, who\nreported on repair work done on\nthe church and plans for spring\nMr. Mossman for the building\ncommittee, reporting plans for\nrepairing the west wall sill in\nthe spring, at an estimated expenditure of $200; Mrs. Tyers for\nthe Woman's Auxiliary, saying\n10 meetings had been held with\naverage attendance of 10 and a\npresent membership of 12; Mrs.\nGuy Browell with the St. Mark's\nGuild report, that the Guild had\nheld nine meetings with an average attendance of eight members; the Altar Guild report by\nMrs. Bildstein, who told of a\nmembership of ten and reported\na successful year; St. Mark's\nSunday School report given by\nMiss Giegerich, indicating an increase in average attendance of\nseum said that if the culture is ] County. Snowplows were unable\npre-Dorset \"we may be on to ; to get through to some villages.\nsomething hot in the field of\narcheology.\" It would be significant documentation that\nthese ancient Eskimos ranged\nfarther  afield  than\nMain British highways began to\ncrack. Officials said this would\nadd millions of dollars to the\nsnow-clearing bill, which stands\npreviously I at \u00a320,000,000.\ni London's water board, contending with thousands of burst\npipes, took up the idea of an\nenterprising private plumber\nand started thawing pipes by\nsending a huge electric charge\nthrough the pipes.\nA typhoid epidemic added to\nthe troubles of Yugoslav villag-\nHungry wolf packs were reported swooping down from the\nApennines of central Italy to\nprey on cattle and sheep.\nGO TO CARIBOO\nBritish Columbia's cattle\ncountry of the Chilcotin plateau\nin the Cariboo will be featured\nin a CBC-TV program Feb. 17.\nHunter, Known\nIn Cranbrook,\nDies In Florida\nCRANBROOK - Known in the\nCranbrook area, where he and\nhis wife have spent much time\non hunting expeditions, Harry\nG. Jones of Deerfield Beach,\nFlorida, died January 23 at Fort\nLauderdale, Florida.\nMr. Jones became ill on one\nof his hunting expeditions at\nCranbrook and in recognition of\nI the kindess shown him at St.\nj Eugene Hospital and to his wife\nby the residents of Cranbrook,\nMr. Jones gave his trailer and j\ntruck, which were raffled, re- \\\nsuiting in a $3000 donation to the i\nDr. Green Memorial Home In ]\nCranbrook and $3000 to C.A.R.S.\nBluebird House in Vancouver.\nBesides his widow, Leota, at\nDeerfield Beach, Florida, he\nleaves three children in Eastern I\n43 over 40 for last year; a teach--\ning staff of seven and class\"heW;\non 35 Sundays; the choir report\nby Mrs. Miller indicating', 13\nchoir members with moreboys\nrequired. :. 4Sh|\nNamed to various posts livere;\nMrs. Wardle, Sunod delegatjj?1\nMr. Mossman, people's warden:;\nMr.   Wardle,  vicar's  warden:.\nMrs.   Booth,   treasurer;    Mist-\nGiegerich,  envelope  secret??-;-!-\ncommittee members, Mrs,'.Tylers, Mrs. Bildstein, Mrs, Rr;.:y-\nell,   Mr.   Tapanilla   and \"lltiL,\nBooth. . \",\"\u25a0:\u00ab?;:\nArnol Heads C\nAOTS Council\nTRAIL - F. R. Arnot of RQSS;'\nland has been elected president :\nof the District Council of West\nKootenay AOTS. ::;-\nAt a meeting in East Trill;\nUnited Church this week, L.:H;\nPeterson of the Knox United\nclub was elected first vice-presi?,\ndent and H. K. Naruse of the\nEast Trail club was elected,\nsecond vice-president.     ..:.';;\nThe district council's first\nactivity for the year is to be a\ncurling bonspiel under the chairmanship of C. J- Mitchell of, the\"\nRossland club.\nArrangements for the bonspiel,.\nto be held in March, were discussed at the meeting, which\nwas chaired by retiring president J. E. Kendrick. ...  ,\nHow To Held\nFALSE TEETH\nMore Firmly in Place\nDo your false teeth annoy and era-\nbarrass by slipping, dropping or wobbling when you eat, laugh or' talk?\nJust sprinkle a little FASTEETH on,.\nyour plates.This alkaline (non-aciu)\npowder holds false teeth more firmly\nand more comfortably. No gummy,\nKooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not\nsour. Checks \"plate odor (denture i\nbreath). Get FASTEETH today a*\ndrug counters everywhere. :\nPLAN NEW EXAMINATAION\nThe museum is so interested\nin the find that it is planning\nto send archeologist W. E. Taylor north with Mr. Henoch next\nsummer to make a more detailed examination of the site.\nMr. Henoch found the remains of a single dwelling with\na flagstone floor. j N0 Injuries in\nNear the centre of the dwel-' k. \u25a0   \u2022 r \u2022 J        \u2022\nling he found a hearth with ajNOKUSp ildeSWipe\nflintstone nearby. Fragments of j NAKUSP (Staff) \u2014 There were\ncharcoal were found on top of, no injuries when two vehicles\nthe hearth stones. Organic mat- i were involved in a sideswipe\nter on the ground at the time j mishap about two miles north\nthe hearth stones were put in ] of Burton Friday,\nplace was found under several [   George  Christian\nKindergartens\nRun At Deficit\nTRAIL - Knox United Church\nKindergartens operated on a\ndeficit in 1962, it was learned al\nthe 67th annual meeting of the\nchurch's congregation. ! two stone spearheads and the\nChairman of the committee of! remains of a stone tray. All of\nstewards, D. M. McKenzie, re-! the artifacts appear to have\nported 1962 as a successful year! been worked.\nof these stones.\nBoth the charcoal and the organic material\u2014believed bits of\nwillow tree wood\u2014will be given\na carbon-14 age test. This will\ngive positive proof of the date\nIhe charcoal was produced in\nthe hearth and the date the\nhearth stones were put in place.\nMr.  Henoch also discovered\nfinancially, in spite of the deficit\nin the kindergarten department.\nHe noted a 12 per cet increase\nin congregation donations to the\nmissionary and maintenance\nfunds.\nDistance\nto the\nMoon\nNow 85 Miles\nAs we all know the distance to the moon is 251,968 miles.\nIf there was no exact method of measuring the distance\nstatements as rash as the above could be made and there\nwould be no means of proving it wrong.\nBy comparison rash circulation claims can be\nmade, but unless they are proven by an exact,\nmeasuring device they hold as much water as a\nbucket with a hole in lt. The Nelson Dally News\nIs a paper which has It's circulation measured by\nthe Audit Bureau of Circulators. Advertisers can't\nbe hoodwinked by ialse circulation claims!\nBefore you advertise ask to see the latest A.B.C.\naudited report and know what you are buying.\nYou'll find that it pays to advertise to a proven\naudience in the Nelson Daily News.\nMr. Henoch described the\nspearheads as the most exciting artifacts found at the site.\nHe said one definitely appears\nto be of the Dorset culture but\nthat both could be pre-Dorset.\nCity Employee\nNegotiations On\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Negotiations\nfor city contract renewal with\nits employees of the works department, due February 1, and\nits electrical and fire departments, over due since January 1,\nare continuing, and will resume\nMonday.\nThe city has agreed to certain\nwage increases for its electrical\nworkers, certain fringe benefits\nfor its fire department employees, and so far has only\nexamined proposals of the National Union of Public Employees\nfor the works department employees.\nof Nakusp\nwas driving north and Norman\nThatcher of Burton was driving\nsouth when they met on the\ncrest of a hill. Total damage was\nestimated at' about $300. There\nwere no injuries.\nOn \"Saturday, a 1958 station\nwagon driven by Jack Grant\nKinnon of 624 7th Street, Nelson\nspun out and overturned in a\nditch on the crest of a hill about\nseven miles south of Nelson on\nHighway 3A.\nEstimate of damage was about\n$500. _ RCMP said that due to\nroad' conditions there were no\ncharges.\nSilver Standard\nWork Progresses\nSLOCAN CITY - Extension of\nthe crosscut in the Slocan property of Silver Standard Mines\nhas commenced and is expected\nto advance at a minimum of 250\nft. monthly. It will extend\nthrough 500 ft. or more of Intrusive and sedimentary rocks eb-\nfore entering the favorable bell,\nat which point drifting will commence.\nThe cost of the work is estimated at $175,000 and is being\nshared equally by Moneta Porcupine Mines and ViolaMac\nMines as well as Silver Standard\nwhich is directing the operation.\nUnion Forbids Teachers\nTo Attend Welcome Rally\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\nTeachers in New South Wales\nhave been advised by their union not to attend a mass rally of\nschool children to welcome\nQueen E 1 i z a b e t h to Sydney\nMarch 4.\nSome 2,000 teachers already\nhave volunteered to look after\nthe 58,000 children expected to\nattend a welcome to be held in\nSydney's showground and adjoining cricket ground.\nA teachers federation official\nsaid: \"This is not an attempt\nto boycott the welcome to the\nQueen.  It Is simply that we\ndon't think this is the way to do\nit.\"\nHe said the federation was\nopposed to the rally because it\nbelieved the \"herding\" of children would cause undue hardship.\nThe Sydney Sun says the federation feared a repetition of an\nincident during the welcome to\nQueen Mother Elizabeth in 1958\nwhen 120,000 children waited\nhours to see her and more than\n600 collapsed.       'jj,   ,.-\nAttendance by children at the\nwelcoming ceremony is voluntary.\nSUPER-VALU I\n4UKv?4 EARLY-WEEK H-wrngmmmmm^\n\u25a0 \u2122    FEATURES 1C\u2122\u2122\u2122nk\nBH^ ^ ^.^^dk''\"^*    Today--Wed.       m\n^^>*,,**NN\u00abttaL J**^^*'^     We Reserve tne R'9ht\n\u00a3    1 ^^\"\"\"\"'^i^' ' \\ijJ^^ to Limit Quantities. HHf'\nI Margarine SL 49e\n| Tomato Soup \u00a3\u00ab\u2022'' 3f\u00b0'29\u00a3 g\n\u25a0 Golden Corn El 3<\u00bb'29c I\n1 Pork and Beans F 10\u00ab\u00ab 99c I\n1Alberta Butter a 2 \u00ab* $1.09 I\nj Fresh Bread g;\u201e 2'\u00b0'33c j\n1 Cauliflowers Hth25c 1\ni Emperor Grapes \u00a3 2 \"\u00bb\u2022 29c \u25a0\nj Potatoes 5\":       20\">m79c|\n| Baby Beef Liver SS- >49e |\n\u25a0 Side Bacon .id  49c 1\n1    Whitefish     VJIMJ.l \u25a0\n\u25a0 Manitoba \u25a0ki   1    I      IJ    J    ifl H\nWhole.   Serve baked with dressing. M^ X       J   Mt       I   k J Ml\nit.29      \u25a0\u25a0!ma I\nmm l\"f 11 I I Hupr\"\n-\n__\n \u25a0 W^W\nIfalsmt latlg Nrut0\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nNelson, B. C.\n?': Published by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n286 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\n3*   Sundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\n;.\u00ab'the largest daily circulation in the Interior of B.C.\n\u2022 Authorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\n:, . v A. W. GIBBON, Editor.\n,...: \"\" MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for tepublication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\nTuesday, February 5, 1363\nAn Impossible Situation\nIndecision, vacillation and delay\nhave marked the Conservative government's policy with regard to nuclear weapons for the armed forces\n\u2014 with most unfortunate results. It\nhas strained our relations with the\nUnited States and apparently\nbrought dissension in the cabinet for\nthe Minister of Defence, Hon. Mr.\nHarkness, who has resigned because\nhe was not in agreement with the\nprime minister's policy;\nIt has been apparent for some\ntime that all was not well in the\ncabinet. Hon. Davie Fulton is leaving what'seemed to be a promising\ncareer in Ottawa to take over the\n\" leadership of a rebuilding Conservative party in British Columbia.\nThough he has made much of his\n:\u25a0 altruistic aims for the revival of the\nparty there will always be a suspicion that he was not too happy as\na cabinet minister.\nWith what seems to be a disunited cabinet behind him, trouble\nwith the nuclear dispute with the\nU.S. and a restive opposition'which\nis in the position of being able to\nforce a dissolution of parliament,\nMr. Diefenbaker has made heavy\ngoing during the present session of\nParliament. The time comes closer\nwhen he should go to the country.\nMr. Harkness' resignation is a blow\nto the government's prestige and\nthe longer it clings to office the more\ndifficult it will be to retain it.\nMr. Harkness commands our admiration. His position was, of course,\nuntenable. He had either to submit\nto the prime minister's decision\nagainst his better judgment or resign. He chose to preserve his integrity and tendered his resignation.\nIt is to be hoped that the services\nof Mr. Harkness are not lost to the\ncountry for we need men oi his high\ncharacter and ability. Canada is\nfortunate, indeed, to have a man of\nthis character who can put honor\nand integrity before his own personal advantage.\nDivorce and tlie Honest MP\nConservative MP Robert Mc-\n,.Cleave's proposed divorce reforms\nhave' behind them hard common\nsense. They have also the virtue that\nthey are backed by the Halifax MP's\n'years as chairman of the Commons\ndivorce committee.\nThis experience shows in his proposal that divorce should no longer\nbe granted on the evidence oi a\nsingle case of adultery. He saw\nenough of the disgrace oi iaked\nadultery in the hundreds of bills\ncropping up yearly from Quebec,\nThis scandal is one result of the\nofficial puritanical attitude to marriage and divorce. It is no longer\nheld strongly in English Canada, but\nit is. perpetuated through religious\nprejudice in Quebec.\nPerhaps the most important part\nof Mr. McCleave's submission to the\nHamilton West Consevrative Association is that divorce should be\nallowed on the simple consent oi the\nparpes, after a three-year separation.\nThere would have to be other\ngrounds. DeSertion is one such,\ncruelty another.\n-There are still some who insist\nthat once a man and woman say\nthe marriage vows they are tied for\nlife \u2014 or should be. This is a folk\nsurvival from an age when it was\nconceived there was no other way\nto safeguard family and society.\nTime gave it religious sanction.\nIt is not meet or necessary in a\nsociety which has other ways to\nsafeguard itself.\nThe sad problem of children in\nbroken marriages remains. But it is\nan open question whether they suffer more from a broken home or\nfrom one preserved in hate or despair.\nAdults have a right to happiness,\ntoo. At least the injured party in a\nmarriage gone wrong should not be\npenalized forever for another's shortcomings.\nThis Parliament will probably recoil in horror and dismay from Mr.\nMcCleave's open and honest approach. Canadian Parliaments always have. To the despairing partners of hopeless marriages, it may\nseem that they always will.\nBut Mr. McCleave deserves\nthanks and honor for stating the\nobvious.\u2014Vancouver Sun.\nEditorial Reaction\nFollowing are excerpts from\neditorials in newspapers on the\ncurrent. Canadian-American government differences on nuclear\npolicy:\nAfianla (Ga.) Journal \u2014 The opposition in Canada to that country's\nobtaining nuclear armament seems\nto lack the cool rationality required\nfor defence ... It is astonishing for\na man of Mr. Diefenbaker's position\nto take such a stand because he\nknows -the elementary fact that the\ndefence in an atomic war is atomic\nweapons. And if Canada does not\npossess them when war erupts, she\nwill not have time then to obtain\nthem from south of the border.\n# * *\nPhiladelphia inquirer\u2014The sharp\ncriticism voiced by the American\nstate department concerning Canada's reluctance lo take up nuclear\narms . . . may well be expected to\narouse a furious chorus of counter-\ncriticism, and that quickly. We hope\nwhen the 'perpetual itch has died\ndown again Ihe result will be better\ndefence arrangements from Hudson\nBay lo the Gulf of Mexico and from\n\"Key Wcsfto VancouvetTTio rfiSlleT\nReport\nFrom\nVictoria\nSenator Keating Said Keeping\nKennedy Administration Hopping\nHonourable W.. Black\nProvincial Secretary\nMinister of Municipal Affairs\nMinister of Social Wellare\nThe fourth Session of our\ntwenty-sixth Parliament is now\none week old. The week has\nbeen taken up with the Members' replies to the Speech Irom\nthe Throne. By this time next\nweek the budget should have\nbeen presented and the real work\nof the session will begin.\nIn view of the fact that the\nMacDonald report on higher education was made public this last\nweek\u2014a report which has mel\nwith favorable reaction\u2014I would\nlike to turn to the reference\nmade to education in the Speech\nfrom the Throne.\nIn our changing world, education has become important and\nwe have become conscious ol\nthis fact. Our Government has\nundertaken (he task of increasing\neducational opportunities within\nour Province over the past several years with a great deal of\nvigor. Reflecting the accomplishments of this policy is the\ngrowth of the University of British Columbia, at which seven\nmore buildings were opened in\n1962. Six more buildings will be\ncompleted during the present\nyear.\nAt Victoria College a great\namount of work has been performed in reconstructing and\nconverting existing buildings on\nthe new campus. One new building was opened during Ihe first\npart of January and two more\nmajor structures will be completed this year.\nThe Speech from the Throne\npointed out the policy of our\ngovernment in that it favors\nestablishment of junior colleges\nat recommended locations within\nthe Province.\nThroughout the province, development of new accommodation to meet the needs of a rapidly expanding school population\nis continuing. During 1962, 167\nnew schools or additions to ex-\nWing schools were built, providing 623 additional classrooms\nand other instructional areas.\nNew facilities for technical and\nvocational education is expected\nto open this year. These are\nsituated at Prince George, Kelowna and our own City ol Nelson. The new Institute of Technology at Burnaby will be opened\nand in full operation in September, 1964.\nOur government has continued\nto provide increasing financial\nassistance to all phases ol the\neducational program. In this respect authorization will be sought\nduring the present session, to\nincrease grants to the University\nof British Columbia, Victoria College and the school districts of\nthe province. It is also expected\nthat additional funds will be asked for to go towards technical\nand vocational education and for\nscholarships and bursaries.\nIn keeping with the recommendations of the Chant Royal Commission on Education, reorganization of secondary education is\nproceeding in a planned and orderly manner. Changes in curriculum content are being implemented gradually and vocational training programs will be\nestablished in a number of secondary schools.\nBy JACK BELL\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Senator\nKenneth B. Keating, a man with\na satchel full of information, is\nkeeping the Kennedy administration hopping overtime with\nhis charges of a Soviet arms\nbuildup in Cuba.\nFor more than six months the\nwhite-haired, ruddy-faced New\nYork Republican has been rising in the Senate to announce\nominous Communist developments in Cuba. Time and\nagain the defence, and state departments have challenged his\ninformation, only to have to concede later that Keating was at\nleast basically right.\nKeating claimed in a television interview Sunday night that\ntotal Soviet military strength-\nsoldiers, weapons and equipment\u2014now is 10 times greater\nthan it was estimated to be last\nJuly, even conceding that Russian offensive missiles have\nbeen removed from the Island.\nAssistant Secretary of State\nEdwin Martin, who appeared\nwith Keating, cautioned that estimates of Soviet troops in Cuba\nlast July were not too accurate\nbut said Keating's claim \"is\nwithin the range of possibility.\"\nLast week Keating told his\nSenate colleagues there is \"continuing, absolutely confirmed\nand undeniable evidence that\nthe Soviets are maintaining\"\nthe missile bases that were involved in last October's quarantine crisis.\nCLAIMS MISSILES READY\nHe said he believes there is\n\"the very real possibility\" that\nthe Russians either hope to return missiles to the island or\nhave missiles left there, \"and\nneed only to wheel them oul of\ncaves,\"\nKeating's charge that the\nbases have not been dismantled\nwas challenged promptly by the\ndefence department and White\nHouse press secretary Pierre\nSalinger.\nKeating won't tell where he\ngets the information. He says\nthat statements he has made\nhave been predicated on facts\nfrom \"official\" sources or facts\nchecked with such sources.\nHe has contended over and\nover again that the government\nhas the same information he\nhas \"and a loi more.\"\nAs a brigadier-general in the\narmy reserve, after service in\ntwo world wars, Keating has\nmany friends in uniform. He declines to put a finger on them.\nKeating began pir. - pricking\nthe Kennedy administration\nwith an Aug. 16. 1962, letter asking the state department to re-\non Nuclear Issue\nwho lives where and pokes his nose\ninto what.\n* *     *\nCalgary Herald \u2014 Let's simmer\ndown. The United States government\nhas got itself involved in Canada's\nnuclear controversy . . . but it is no\ncause for Canadians to go into a\nflap. The United States government\nisn't dictating policy to us. It has only\ntried to give its idea of what our\npartnership undertakings with the\nUnited States actually are. But, in a\nway, Canada asked for it. Our political leadership has displayed an\nextraordinary ineptitude in determining an appropriate role for Canada in the mutual-security alliance\nof NATO and the continental defence alliance of NORAD.\n* *     +\nMontreal Sfar \u2014 Why is it (the\nU.S. statement) so unwarranted?\nCanada years ago agreed with its\nNATO allies to accept certain weap-\n\"ons which require nuclear warheads\nand the defensive plans of the West\ncounted upon that component in the\ncreation of the defensive shield. Canada now reneges and says il will\ndiscuss the matter further next May.\nSurely NATO has the right to speak\nup, and its principal spokesman, the\n\"United States, has done so.\nDue to the heavy traffic on\nhighways in this present age,\nregular police will frequently\nneed assistance. If you are interested, see your Civil Defence\nCo-ordinator about joining an\nauxiliary police class.\nport on rumors. He said he had\nreceived information that Soviet\ntroops  were being  landed  in\nCuba.\nHAD NO INFORMATION\nAlthough it now is generally\naccepted that the Soviet buildup\nbegan in July, the state department replied Aug. 30 it had \"no\ninformation that any Soviet bloc\ntroops have landed in Cuba.\"\nKeating took the Senate floor\nAug. 31 to say he had been \"reliably informed\" that 1,200 men\nin Russian uniforms had landed\nin Cuba in August. He followed\nthis two days later with a proposal that the Organization of\nAmerican States investigate reports that Cuban missile bases\nwere being built.\nOn Sept. 4 President Kennedy\nsaid shbrt-range ground-to-air\nmissiles were in Cuba but the\nbuildup was defensive. Keating\nreplied that Russians had built\nan offensive base.\nBy Oct. 9 Keating was telling\nthe Senate that 5,000 was a\n\"modest number\" for the Soviet\ntroops stationed in Cuba. He\nsaid the next day that construction had begun on \"at least a\nhalf-dozen launching sites for intermediate-range tactical missiles.\"\nBut on Oct. 14, McGeroge\nBundy, special assistant to the\npresident, said on a telecast:\n\"There is no present likelihood\nthat the . . . Cuban government\nand the Soviet government\nwould in any combination attempt to install a major offensive capability. . . .\"\nThis later was identified by\nthe president as the date on\nwhich the first hard information on the missile buildup was\nreceived by him.\nThe Week\nIn the House\nE. II. Walker, president General Motors of Canada Limited, who has been elected president of the Canadian Automobile Chamber of Commerce.\nB.C. Chief Engineer Says More\nModifications Planned For Peace\nVANCOUVER (CP) - John\nSteede, chief engineer for B.C.\nHydro and Power Authority,\nsaid Sunday the authority plans\nfurther modifications of the\nPeace River power project.\nMr. Steede said in an inter\nview on his return from a trip\nto England that B.C. Hydro\nstudies indicate the modifications will make the project more\neconomical. He did not think\nthere would be any increase in\nFractional Losses\nPredominated Market\nTORONTO (CP) -Fractional\nlosses predominated during\nmoderate morning trading on\ntlie stock niarket Monday.\nAll sections but golds declined\non index, with industrials falling more than a point.\nAlgoma Steel, Bell Telephone,\nCanadian Imperial Bank of\nCommerce, Steel Company of\nCanada and Distillers - Seagrams all fell in a Va-to-y4\nrange.\nAtlas Steel, on extremely\nheavy turnover, slipped Vs to 37.\nGainers included B.C. Power,\nup Vs and Canadian Celanese\nand Gatineau Power, both up\n'A.\nOn the exchange index, industrials declined 1.19 to 598.77,\nbase metals .66 to 200.54 and\nWestern oils .22 to 116.45. Golds\nrose .30 to 91.14. The 11 a.m.\nvolume was 1,057,000 shares\ncompared with 1,056,000 at the\nsame time Friday.\nThree Men and an Infant\nDie as Nicaraguans Vote\nBy MORRIS W. ROSENBERG\nMANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)\nThree men and an infant were\nkilled and eight persons were\nwounded as Nicaraguans voted\nSunday to extend the Somoza\nfamily's 31-year rule of their\ncentral American nation.\nThe clash between national\nguardsmen and 300 anli-Somoza\ndemonstrators erupted during\ncut - and - dried balloting which\ngave the presidency to Rene\nSchick Gutierrez, candidate of\nthe Somoza-run Liberal party.\nDr. Fernando Aguero Rocha,\nopposition leader who had\ncalled for a boycott of the national elections, was placed under house arrest charged with\ninciting the demonstrators who\nbattled with police and troops\nfor three hours. Fifteen rioters\nalso were jailed.  .\nTwo men were killed by police\nbullets and an infant died after\nbeing hit by rocks thrown\nthrough a hospital window. A\npoliceman was reported killed\nin a clash in an interior town.\nEight persons were brought to\nManagua hospitals with bullet\nand bayonet wounds.\nHUBERT\nOrder was restored after\nAguero and the authorities declared a truce and the opposition leader agreed to remain under house arrest. Police\ndropped demands that Aguero\ngo to jail after the latter agreed\nlo advise his followers to give\nup the demonstrations.\nSchick, an ex-professor who\ntakes office May 1, was called\na Somoza puppet by the opposition. It claimed the family put\nhim in to hold the seat until one\nof them could run again.\nA new law prevented outgoing president Luis Somoza from\nsucceeding himself or being succeeded by any member of his\nfamily.\nSchick, 53, has insisted he will\nact independently, but he has\nspent most' of his career serving the Somozas. His term as\npresident expires in 1967.\nELECTION ASSURED\nSchick's election was assured\nlast December when Aguero decided his Conservative party\nwould boycott the elections. lie\ncontended there were no guarantees for a genuinely secret\nvote and an honest count.\nSchick served as personal\nsecretary to the late dictator\nGen. Anastasio Somoza, who\nwas assassinated in 1956. When\nSomoza's son Luis succeeded\nhim, Schick was named minister of education and later became foreign minister.\nThe voters also elected three\nvice-presidents, 16 senators, 54\ndeputies and town councils\nthroughout the country.\nAn insignificant opposition group, the Conservative\nParty of Nicaragua, led by Diego Manuel Chamorro, was\ntrailing by a 10-to-l margin. No\nmallei- what the final count, under Nicaraguan law this parly\nwill receive one - third of the\nseats in the Chamber of Deputies.\n\"Boy, am I glad to see\" you\u2014I forgot my key.\"\nBIBLE DIGEST\nH. B. Dean\n\"Hide thy face from my sins,\nand blot out all my iniquities.\"\nPsalms 51:9.\nWe ought to be ashamed of our\nsins, and alarmed if we aren't.\n\"The wages of sin is death but\nthe gift of God is eternal life\nthrough Jesus Christ our Lord.\"\n\\.\nAmong base metals, International Nickel fell Vt, Falconbridge % and Noranda and Rio\nAlgom Vs each. Hudson Bay\nMining and Consolidated Mining and Smelting both advanced\nWestern oils were quiet, with\nHome A and Pacific Petroleum\neach off 14. Home B gained Vs.\nVictoria and Vancouver have\nthe highest proportion of persons over 50 years of age in\nCanada.\nthe estimated $730,000,000 construction cost.\nThe major changes call for\none end of the dam to be built\n1,000 feet downstream from its\noriginal site and to build the\npower plant underground on the\nnorth bank of the river, on the\nopposite side from where it was\nfirst planned.\n\"Those are all the changes\nfor a while,\" he said. \"We've\ngot plans for the most economical dam we can build, and\nsetting the site for the power\nplant means we can get on with\nthe work.\"\nTenders for the main dam\nwere called earlier this month\nbut bidders will be informed of\nthe changes before the tenders\nare returned. Tenders have not\nyet been called for the power\nplant.\nMr. Steede said cutting the\nlength of the penstocks between\nthe dam and the power plant\nby 1,000 feet would result in a\n\"substantial\" reduction in the\namount of power lost through\nfriction.\nU.S. State Committee\nUnder Senate Attack\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Tlie\nstate department has come under sharp attack from the head\nof a Senate subcommittee that\nopened an investigation Monday\non the conduct of the nuclear dispute with Canada.\nSenator George Aiken, who\npresides at the hearing opening\nthis afternoon, released a statement Sunday indirectly accusing the department of clumsiness in handling the controversy.\nAt the same time the Washington Star, an independent\nnewspaper, critically appraised\nthe department's over-all handling of foreign policy.\nAnd the Washington Post, a\nstrong supporter of the Kennedy\nadministration, said the department's public criticism of\nthe Diefenbaker administration\nmay lead to the return of that\nadministration at the polls.\nGeorge McGhee, undersecretary of state for political affairs, will undertake to defend\nthe department in secret session before a Senate foreign affairs subcommittee headed by\nAiken, Vermont Republican and\na warm friend of Canada.\nMAKES VIEW CLEAR\nAiken said he didn't want to\nprejudge the investigation, but\nhe wanted to make clear his\nview that \"overt and clumsy\nefforts on the part of any United\nStates official to influence Canadian policy decisions are likely\nto achieve results opposite to\nthe ones intended.\"\n\"The current public controversy between the U.S. and\nCanada appears to be a case of\ndissension that is unnecessary\nas well as unfortunate.\" he\nsaid in a statement which he\nwill read al the opening of the\nhearing.\nAmerican diplomats were surprised that Aiken would make\npublic a statement scheduled to\nform pari of a secret hearing,\nbut it appeared Aiken was getting his die into the picture because the subcommittee is heavily weighted in favor of Democrats. In fact Aiken may be the\nonly Republican. Others invited\nto sit with him are Senator\nMike Mansfield, Montana Democrat and Senate majority\nleader: Senator J. William Ful-\nbright, Arkansas Democrat and\nchairman of the full Senate foreign relations committee, and\nSenator Wayne Morse, Oregon\nDemocrat and a sharp critic of\nCanadian foreign policy.\nAiken said the investigation\nwill seek information on two\nfronts: Facts on the Canada-\nU.S.  conflict in nuclear weap\nons strategy for North America,\nand the basis for the department's public statement last\nWednesday contradicting Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker's version\nof nuclear negotiations and the\nvalue of Canadian nuclear commitments.\nBLAMES JAN. 25 SPEECH\nThe Washington Star suggests\nthe controversy was rooted\npartly in Diefenbaker's Jan. 25\nspeech in the Commons when\nhe spoke of changes in world\nnuclear strategy and cast\ndoubt on the value of Canada's\nnuclear commitments overseas.\n\"In the heat of debate Diefenbaker blurted out some of the\nprivate information he had gotten from President Kennedy\nand Secretary (of Defence) Mc-\nnamara in Nassau,\" The Star\nsays.\nDiefenbaker had concluded\nthat with the growth of East-\nW e s t intercontinental missile\nstrength, the bomber was becoming less of a threat\u2014a conclusion also conveyed to some\ndegree by McNamara to a congressional committee last week.\nBut The Star says the prime\nminister \"also drew the wrong\nconclusion from the declining\nemphasis on Soviet bombers.\"\nIt quotes U.S. officials as saying\nSoviet bombers will still be a\nsignificant threat for the next\nfive to 10 years.\nToday ,\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nFeb. 5, 1963 . . .\nQueen Victoria instituted\nIhe order of the Victoria\nCross 107 years ago today\u2014\nin 1856 \u2014 toward the end\nof Ihe Crimean War. lt is\nthe highest British decoration for \"conspicuous bravery or devotion to the country in the presence of the\nenemy.\" The decoration is\na bronze Maltese cross\nbearing in the centre the\nroyal crown surmounted by\ns lion, and with the scroll\n\"For Valour.\" The decoration has been awarded to 80\nmembers of the Canadian\nforces and to 23 Canadians\nserving with British forces.\n1862 \u2014 Battle Hymn of the\nRepublic, written by Julia\nWard Howe, was sung for\nthe first time in the American Civil War by Union\ntroops.\n1956 \u2014 A   cold   wave   in\nEurope claimed 147 lives.\nLEO T. NIMSICK, MLA\n(Cranbrook)\nThe debate on the Speech from\nthe Throne was opened by Donald Brothers, MLA, for Rossland\nTrail and he spent much of his\ntime reviewing all the things the\ngovernment had done for the\nKootenays during the last ten\nyears. They stretched from high-   .\nways to bridges, to schools and\/':\nhospitals. He made you believe .'\nthat the government was Santa\nClaus.\nAfter listening to all this, tears\ncame to my eyes, and I felt-\nthat to criticize, or ask for any\nmore, would be biting the hand\nthat fed us in the Kootenays. I\ncame back to earth again with\nthe realization that it was really\nJohn Q. Public who did it ail-\nby generously paying taxes.\nThe second speaker was Mr.\nTisdale, MLA for Saanich, who\nrepeated a similar review for a\ndifferent part of the province.\nMonday was Opposition Day,\nwhen Mr. Strachan, leader of\nthe CCF-New Democrats, held\nforth.\nHe stressed the need for a\ncomprehensive medical plan for\nthe province. He criticized the\ngovernment for their uncertain\npower policy and the mishandling of the development of the\nColumbia River. He also took\nthe government to task for their\nattitude towards labor, wbich is\nthe result of Bill 42.\nMr. Strachan was followed by\nRay Perrault, leader of the Liberals, who promoted the idea of\nan industrial bank, ln order that\nhe could claim to be on the side\nof private enterprise, he said\nthat such a bank should not compete with the chartered banks.\nI took it Irom this that such a\nbank, sponsored by the government, would only take the bad\nrisks, and leave the gravy train\nfor chartered or private banks.\nMr. Perrault criticized the government and Dr. Shrum for their\nshilly-shallying between the Columbia and the Peace. Mr. Perrault advocated the McNaughton plan which was an about-\nturn from last year.\nThursday, Mr. Bonner, the Attorney-General, opened the sitting and he spoke on subjects\nranging from a slashing attack\non the Liberals, to Medicare in\nSaskatchewan\u2014and on to a dramatic story of how well public\npower is going in the province.\nIt is quite amusing to hear them\napplaud public power, today as\nwhen they were so diametrically\nopposed to it a few years ago.\nJim Rhodes, CCF-New Democrat MLA, for Delta, asked for  M\na redistribution and better sys-\/. i.\ntem of enumeration. \u25a0$'&\u25a0*[\nMr. Carnell, Social Credit MIA    ,\nfor South Peace, surprised  4fi\u00bb'   \u2022\nhouse when he advocated ..'flat\nrecipients  of  social  assistance\nshould lose their right to vote. :\nThis sounded something like the \"''\npoor laws, which were in vogue\nmany years ago.\nFrank Calder, MLA for Atlin,\ndevoted part of his speech to\noutlining a policy for our native\nIndians. He covered his subject\nwell, and ended it by stating that\nthe reservation policy was a\nbar to progress, and too much\nemphasis was placed on health,\nwelfare, education and religion,\nand not enough on social and economical problems. I am sure\neveryone in the house benefitted\nfrom his talk\u2014and now knew\nmuch more of the problems of\nour native Indians. Mr. Petersen,\nth elabor minister, told the house\nthat some new legislation was\ncoming in to facilitate bargaining procedure. I will tell you\nof this when the legislation is\nbrought down.\nwhenl  liousthatotn\nMrs. Hobbs, the CCF-NDP\nmember for Revelstoke gave her\nmaiden speech, and she did a\nwonderful job by being both\namusing and practical. She stated that during the by-election the\ngovernment campaigners were\ncalled, \"Robin Hood and Company\"\u2014they were promising all\nsorts of 'goodies' to tlie people\nof Revelstoke. When asked where\nthey were going to get the money\nfrom they told them 'not to worry' because it would come from\nthe millions they saved on contracts. Nevertheless, the people\nof Revelstoke refused to be led\ndown the garden path.\nIn   discussing   tin   Columbia\nRiver development, Mrs. Hobbs\nstated that she had heard the\nfairy tale of the three bears but  | \u25a0\nthis was the first time she hal.;' '\nheard the fairy tale of the three..'\ndams. She stated that the pres-i\nent Columbia River policy of the'\ngovernment was money hungry-\nand dollar thirsty. \" \u00ab ':\u25a0:\nGovernment members have\nkept up a steady attack on the\nLiberals, but all the time you\ncannot help but feel that they are\nlooking behind as if Davie Fulton\nwas shadowing them.\nWe have already commenced\nnight sittings, and with a full\nhead of steam on, 1 will say\n\"thirty\" for this first week.\n\"People wouldn't get divorced\nfor such trivial reasons, if they\ndidn't get married for such triv\u00ab\nial reasons.\"\n_\n______\n___\n ^^^wrmm^mmm\n___\nPLACE OF HONOR is held by the boor's head\nat the Luau (wonderful outdoor party) convened by\nthe North Shore United Church Hall board of man\nagement Friday night. Part of the decor, the be-\nruffled boar is admired in the picture above by\nSandra McDonald, left, and Mary McMaster.\n\u2014DaiJy News photo.\nAt North Shore Hall Entertainment\nBoar's Head, Leis, Polynesian\nDishes Entrance Cabaret Guests\nStraight from the winter's cold\ninto the lush tropical surroundings of Hawaii, guests basked\nin warmth and exotic food at the\nHawaiian Nights entertainment\nof the Norlh Shore United\nChurch Hall Board of Management, held Friday in the hall.\nAs the many guests arrived,\nthey stepped through an \"aircraft\" into the jungle of bamboos and greens that screened\nthe hall, where candlelight glowed on authentic Hawaiian decor.\nf*bjynesian food was served at\nindividual tables lit by candles\nset in grapefruit halves garnished with oyster shells.\nBarefooted, grass-skirted, lei-\nhung young girls served the authentic food, consisting of Hawaiian chicken, Luau pork\nchunks, Waikiki curried shrimp,\nPolynesian salad, banana bread,\ntropical snowballs with gool-\ngoolas and Hala-ai-wai punch,\nMr. and Mrs. G. V. Frederik-\nsen were conveners of this second entertainment project of\nfive the board of management\nplans for the year.\n\"Welcoming guests were Mrs.\nFredericksen, G. Wik. and F. H.\nLowe, who hung leis on the visitors  as  they  stepped  into  the j\nSouth Pacific atmosphere. Mrs. I\nFrederiksen   led   them   to   the\npunch  bowl, where they were [\ngreeted by Mrs. Wik.\nHighlight of the table decor\nwere boar's head, with rugged-\nhewn log in the background, on\nwhich glowed big, fat candles.     '\nHawaiian music was provided\nby the Silvertones. a local orchestra.\nGuesls at Ihe cabaret were en-'\ntertained by songsters Mr. and\nMrs.  Fred Merriman and Mr. .\nand Mrs. G.  F.  Olson singing [\n\"Blue Hawaii\" and \"Little Grass\nShack.\" Mrs. Merriman danced\nthe Hawaiian dance. \"The Little\nBrown Girl.\" R. McKeen and his\nFlying  Tigers   entertained   the\ndiners wilh their athletic prow\ness, including a comedy selec\ntion of The Three Stooges. ] M. Disney, the Hawaiian chick-\nMaster ol ceremonies was D.   en, Mrs. Lowe the pork chunks\nM. Disney. j and Mrs.  William  Rosling the\nResponsible for preparation of j banana bread. Assisting with the\nthe food were Mrs. Austin Fra- \\ preparation were Mrs. Con Cum-\nser.   who   cooked   the   curried j mins and Mrs. M. MacLean.\nshrimp and other items: Mrs. D. i    Artists  who  constructed  the\naircraft at the entrance to the\nhall were Mrs. P. H. Amsden\nand Mrs. Fraser. Miss Dawn\nFredericksen was in charge of\nmakeup.\nThe Luau (wonderful outdoor\nparty) was followed by dancing.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTUES., FEB. S, 1963\u20145\nSainl-Laurenl\nParallels\nDior's Styles\nBy PERRY MASSIN\nPARIS (Reuters) - Yves\nSaint-Laurent's new collection,\nconfirming the unfitted silhouette with, chemise dresses and\nsweater suits, appears likely to\nplace in a photo - finish with\nChristian Dior's collection in\nthe season's fashion race.\nThe Saint-Laurent collection,\nunveiled Monday gives the chemise a high waistline, worked\nwith yokes on horizontal seaming compared with Marc Bo-\nhan's unbroken, tapered shift\nfor Dior.\nWhile neither of the rival creators has launched a 'dynamically new silhouette, both have\nintroduced a beautiful and\nhighly wearable new collection.\nWhile both designers favor\nthe chemise, Bohan's version is\na narrow, tubular shift while\nSaint-Laurent features a more\ncasual shirt effect cut on the\nlines of the Norman fisherman's\nsmock he launched so successfully last season.\nSLIGHTLY TAPERED\nA m a n ni s h theme runs\nthrough the Saint-Laurent collection in the cardigan sweater\ntreatment introduced in suits\nand two-piece dresses, narrow\nulster coats slightly tapered to\nnarrow hemlines to accent the\nwide-shoulder treatment, and in\nmasculine millinery shown in\nsuch feminine fabrics as white\norgandy.\nAQUILAS  HAVE\nBRIDGE  PARTY\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Munro\nwere first prize winners at the\nAquila Club bridge party held\nin St. Saviour's Memorial Hall.\nSecond prize went to Mr. and\nMrs. R. R. Stack. A number ol\nlucky chair prizes were given\nout also.\nROYAL GARDENS\nj London's Kew Gardens, estab-\nj lished by Princess Augusta in\nj 1759, now contain 25,000 plant\n'species over 300 acres.\nDIRECTORS OF THE GIRL GUIDE and Brownie\nmovement in Nelson district attending the annual\nspring lea oi the Nelson Girl Guide Association Saturday at the Hume Hotel were: seated, left lo right,\nMrs. H. E. Ansley, publicity chairman ior the Girl\nGuide Association of Nelson; Mrs. H. F. Hyson of\nRobson, area commissioner; Mrs. J. S. Hamilton,\npresident ol the association; standing, left, Mrs.\nJ. D. McDonald of Nelson, district commissioner;\nMrs. A. M. Rizzulo of Castlegar, area camp adviser.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nGirl Guides, Brownies Serve\nTea at Annual Spring Event\nBlue uniforms of Nelson Girl\nGuides and brown uniforms of\ntheir junior counterparts, the\nBrownies, mingled with colorful\nafternoon all ire of guests at the\nannual spring tea ol tlie Nelson\nGirl Guide Association, held in\nthe Silver Room of the Hume Ho-\nted Saturday afternoon.\nMrs. J. S. Hamilton, association president, received the\nguests, assisted by Miss Greta\nLaymen Prepare To Conduct\nAnglican College Fund Drive\nAnnounce New\nHealing Substance:\nShrinks Piles\nCtelusive healing substance proven to shrink\nhemorrhoids and repair damaged tissue.\nk renowned research institute ha.-\nfound a unique healing substance\nwith the ability to shrink hemorrhoids painlessly. It relieves itching\nand t'discomfort in minutes and\nspeeds up healing of the injured,\nInflamed tissue.\nIn case after case, while gently\nrelieving pain, actual reduction\n(shrinkage) took place.\nMost important of ai]\u2014results!\nwere so thorough that this improve-1\nment was maintained over a period\n*t many months.\nThis was accomplished with a\ntew healing substance (Bio-Dyne)\nwhich quickly helps heal injured\ncells and stimulates growth of neu\ntissue.\nNow Bio-Dyne is offered in oint-\nment and suppository form called\nPreparation H. Ask for it at all drug\nstores\u2014money back guarantee.\nA call to laymen was heard at |\nthe meeting of clergy and laymen of the Kootenay Deanery\nheld in St. Saviour's Pro-Cathe- \u2022\ndral Memorial Hall, attended by I\n80 delegates, Sunday. |\nLaymen were called upon to I\nundertake the forthcoming cam-1\npaign  to  raise   funds  for  the j\nAnglican Theological College in j\nVancouver.\ni\nGuest   speaker   was   M.   G\nThompson. Chairman was Rev\nD. N. Robinson. Rev. Canon G.\nW. Lang welcomed tlie delegates |\nand   Derek   Arnold,   lay   com- j\nmissioner of the Diocese, intro-1\nduced Mr. Thompson. \u25a0\nMr. Thompson is one of the\ngroup of laymen who are assist- i\ning in raising the Anglican j\nTraining College development\nfund. The Kootenay diocesan ob-'\njective is $7500 and the provincial target is $750,000, to be j\ndivided amongst the six dio- j\nceses of B.C. j\nThe campaign to take place\nduring Lent, necessitates visita- i\ntion by laymen. Mr. Thompson\nspoke of members of the church\nwho claim to be Anglican but do\nnothing  for  the  church.   They\nand   other   members   will   be j\nasked by the visiting laymen to j\nmake regular contributions for:\nthe next three years towards the\ndevelopment fund. ;\nSpeaking of the role of laymen, Mr. Thompson said \"more\nAnglicans attend church on a\nSunday morning in Africa than\nin Canada and the United States\ncombined: more than 200.000\nBritish Columbians who told\ncensus lakers they were Anglicans are not members of any\nparish: more than 163.000 people\nin B.C. do not. belong to any\nrecognized major denomination;\na smaller percentage of British\nColumbians are Anglicans today\nthan was the case ten years\nago.\"\nHe suggested therefore, that,\nlaymen invite their friends to\nchurch; seek oul the lost and\nthe strayed; sound out the merchants of their parish on their\nreligious tendencies; pass names\nof \"possibles\" to the rector:\npersuade their fellow men to\njoin them in active parish work.\nHeading the laymen's campaign for the Deanery will be\n.Andrew Soles of Trail, assisted\nby Rev. H. B. Barrett of Trail.\nThe name of one layman from\neach parish was asked, to con\nduct   the   campaign   in   that\nparish. j\nA letter was read from Rt. j\nRev. W. R. Coleman commending the campaign. !\nMr. Arnold conducted a discussion on the financial status\nof Ihe diocese, requesting suggestions as to how the various\ndelegates thought their annual j\nassessments should be made.\nSpecial mention was made of\nthe good work done by Captain\nMarsh, presently of Greenwood,\nof the Church Army.\nMr. Wyatt and J. Bryden spoke\non Camp Galilee work. There\nwill be a meeting in this connection to.be held February 15 and\n16 at Trail.\nDinner was served by the\nAquila Group, followed by Evensong.\nClergy stayed in Nelson to\nattend a meeting Monday.\nWtttlffWwtBW\nWn.|\nYoer Individual!\nHoroscope\n.\u00ab..\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab. By Frances Drake .. .'\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO - A farewell parly\nlor Mr. and Mrs. Les Stilwell ol\nKaslo was attended by approximately 100 friends of the popular couple. They are ending\neight years of residence at Kaslo. where Mr. Stilwell is on the\nstaff of the B.C. Forest Service.\nHe has been transferred to the\nNelson office. Mr. and Mrs. Stilwell were presented with gifts,\nand dancing and refreshments\nwere enjoyed.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"Tough Old Bird\"\nHAMILTON, Ont. (CPI -\nMrs. Marlene Clark, 51, got\nanother chance to practise\nher judo chop Saturday. It\nstill works.\nShe was sitbng in her husband's car when a man opened the door and demanded her\npurse. She chopped him smartly across the throat and rapped him on the head with the\npurse.\nThe man staggered back\nand ran away, shouting to an\naccomplice: \"She's a- tough\nold bird, let's go!\"\nMrs. Clark said she first\nused the chop\u2014taught to her\nby her husband\u2014two years ago\nwhen two men snatched her\npurse. They fled under her\nattack.\n\"The only time I get any\npractise is when someone attacks me,\" she said-\niiiiiiiiiimimiiiimiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiii\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Wednesday, February 6,1963\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries' \u2014 Examine just what your\nfreedom means to you, then\ntreat it with the respect you\nwish others to treat it. So often\nwe take our best assets for granted. All first things FIRST.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus'\n\u2014 Caught in a dilemma? Take\neach item individually, give it\nstudy without becoming fussy or\nover-detailed, and especially do\nNOT be irritated or speak out of\nturn. Then to big gains.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Wait for good sense to exercise its weight \u2014 the rush forward without full knowledge or\npro-and-con evaluating attacks\nthe surest of us. The awkward\nmay rear up: be poised.\nJUNE 2 2to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 In between busy projects and\naffairs we can normally squeeze\nin a few small interests that\nwould otherwise be neglected.\nLook to these now for happy rewards later. Head up!\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 A quick, enthusiastic \"thank\nyou\" for those wee favors or\nkind words will bring equally\nquick, wholesome reaction from\nothers. Do not have too sensitive\nan ear. too fast a pace.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 i Virgo i \u2014 Sit back and think\nsome of your plans out before\nputting them into motion. May\nbe minor details missing, or one\nwrong procedure to upset matters. Don't forfeit this good day.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 'Libra! \u2014 Note Virgo, and examine all hints coming your way.\nA time of conflicting opinions,\nnot - all - sure information. The\ncareful eye and mind shall prevail if the truth is with it.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 A few items may\nbe mixed up. routine a bit out\nof order. These can be rectified\nwith the will, right incentive and\ntools. Attitude plays large role.\nDon't let rifts grow.\nNOVEMBER  23  to DECEM\nBER (Saggitarius) \u2014 Note Scorpio now. Add: tact plus main\ntaining high principles are needs\nfor everyday life as well as the\nextraordinary one. \"Little drops\nof water\" then an ocean grew.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 I Capricorn I \u2014 Aspects conspire to favor especially capably\ndrawn-up plans and sound motivations. The irritable and cantankerous will get their noses\n\"out of joint.\" Promote charity.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Under planet\nconfigurations, most propitious\nare: arduous pursuit of normal\ntasks, wise behaviour, well -\nfounded advice (given, taken), a\nhigh maintenance record. Speculate with care.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 First thoughts often\nbest, but this depends upon past\nstudies, if you have consumed\nknowledge, and learned from\nothers' experiences. Science\nhome matters, religion among\nlop advancers.\nYOU BORN TODAY: Fixed\nSign of the Air Triplicity, Sympathetic philosophical, a nat\nural nurse, happy associates.\nAdapted to many fields, but may\ndo best as mfr. (If you do not\nhave to do most of own selling)\ninvestor, artist, researcher, accountant (do not work too long\nhours; aim for advancement)\nAt whatever you like you can\nsucceed, but success requires\nCONSISTENT effort, not occasional excellent trys. Also confidence and a rather \"tough hide.\"\nThere will be setbacks, unap-\npreciatipn along way. Do not go\nbehind any mask, as you may\nactually-fear others' opinion and\nyour own abilities. You have\ndefinite likes, dislikes. When you\ngo on a spree, it can be an extreme. Pull self up occasionally,\nreview aims, methods. A true\nprogress - maker, necessary\nchanges do not bother you. Sensitive without showing it; sparkle\nwith a word of praise. Correct\ndallying, hurry and indiscriminate use of your talents. Birthdate\nof: Christopher Marlowe, dramatist; Mary Johnson Smith,\npainter; Sir Henry Irving and\nRamon Navarro, actors.\nWALL WAS BOUNDARY\nHadrian's Wall buill by Emperor Hadrian between 122 and\n126 AD in Britain, marked the\nnorthern limit of the Roman\nEmpire.\nCurwen, captain of the Third\nNelson Girl Guide Company.\n; Mrs. J. A. Ludlow was cashier.\n[ The mam serving table was\n| shaped like a cross, with the\n! pourers seated at each point.\nI Tlie centrepiece was of daffo-\nj dils, iris and mimosa, and this\nI was flanked by four navy blue\ncandles. Lace cloths were on the\nj main table.\nThe guests sat in small groups\nj and each group had two Guides\n| or two Brownies to serve them.\nI Presiding at the tea table\n; were: Mrs. T. S. Shorthouse,\n, wife of Nelson's mayor; Mrs. H.\n! B. Horton; Mrs. L. B. Blain.\n'Mrs. H. R. Whitmore, Mrs. H.\nF. Hyson, area commmissioner;\nMrs. J.  D. McDonald, district\n| commissioner; Mrs. T. Maber\n! and Mrs. C. E. Swanson .\nj    In charge of the bake table\nj were Mrs, J. D. Hoople, Mrs. J.\nA. Maber and Mrs. J. A. McMas-\nj ter.\n'\u25a0 In charge of the candy table\nJ was Mrs. J. Paul. Tawny Owl of\n! the Third Nelson Brownie Pack,\nj assisted by the Brownies.\nMany people never seem to get a good\nnight's rest. They toss and turn in\nbed\u2014and then are dull and listless\nthroughout the day.\nAll of which may be\ndue to a temporary\ntoxic condition which\ncalls for the use of\nDodd's Kidney Pills.\nHealthy kidneys filter poisons and\nexcess acids from the blood. If they\nslow down and impurities stay in the\nsystem, disturbed rest, tired feeling\nand backache often follow. If you\ndon't rest well at night\u2014if you\nhaven't that sprightly step of health\nin Ihe daytime\u2014use Dodd's Kidney\nPills. You can depend on Dodd's!\nA WORLD OF READING-A WORLD OF FUN\nSTAR\nWEEKLY\nNOW ON SALE\nI CAAf A\nf '<* one UD ,\u201e ~-:\n\"^stano- or T H y\u00b0>* local\n -        -     ' i-     t-^v     -\u25a0 : \u2014\u2014    ' -..'-'-l-' .:',: I1.\"-\",1   \u25a0\u25a0   '\"   i -I   -I\"., v \u25a0 \"   \u25a0\u2014i\u2014i\u2014.'\u25a0   \u25a0'   \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0  V   f \u25a0  ,.      .\"    '   '   ;        '  \u25a0 . i.\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., ...... .;., 1963\nstolen: lamm\nr Zm mm\ni       ..... j; builds savings. ami i\n<t t&i,.\na owhC&^gQp&.'i'  lori\u00abnr\u00bbuiir(:o':\n&\u00ab&.$\u2022*\u25a0\u00ab* -Wf\u00bb \u2022-   \" 0fi\u00ab%4 Other j\nijtfn\n'\u2022\u25a0\u00bb ort6'\n\u25a0OW.\n;_\u00aba\u00aeft*ii:\n\u25a0HP\n6\nSi^SflE\"\n 4^*\nWe don't know what the missing advertisement was selling.\nIt might have been a $30,000 house or 51 chewing gum.\nThe important thing is, the reader has been able to tear out\nthe advertisement and has retained every word and every\npiece of information the advertiser put in his message. This is\nwhy Canada's leading merchandisers still invest 82% of their\nadvertsing budgets in daily newspapers. They have proven\nthe reliable, day to day results of newspaper advertisements.\nNewspapers also allow local merchants to run their own\nadvertisement or tie-in with national campaigns. In either\ncase, the reader knows exactly where the advertised product\ncan be purchased.\nThe Nelson Daily News is the Kootena\/s best meeting place\nfor advertisers and their customers.\nebon i\nDA IL Y   NEWS PA P t R J \u2014 ^e ^est meeting Place for advertisers and customers\n :\nX&:\nFour Zone Winners Lose\nFirst Games at Trail\nBy DENNIS ORCHARD\nTRAIL (CP) - Tall Buzz McGibney of Trail backed up his\nrank among favorites at the B.C.\nCurling Association bonspiel\nMonday with two impressive victories in the opening rounds.\nThe West Kootenay zone champion, skipping one of the few\nrinks to face three games during\nthe day, took his opening set\ndespite a fight with influenza.\nHe defeated George Menzies of\nCastlegar 9-5 in the first draw\nand Oliver O'Ringhem of Creston\n8-1 in a late-afternoon match\nthat finished in six ends.\nOther double winners, advancing to the 16s of the main event,\nwere G. F. Carmichael of Grand\nForks, Fritz Farenholtz of Nelson and Fred Wendel of Trail.\nMost rinks continued to avoid\na running game in the face of\ntreacherous, swingy ice.\nChain-smoking Reg Stone puffed his way to a pair of uphill\nvictories to stay in line for a defence of his British Columbia\ncurling championship.\nThe Trail curling rink manager\ntook away a couple of one-rock\nwins in the first day of the bonspiel, edging clubmate John\nMerkley 6-5 and Summerland's\nMerrill Birch 8-7.\nStone, who lost this year at the\nzone level, can enter the B.C.\ninterior playoffs later in the\nweek if he wins two more games.\nA pair of losses today or Wednesday will mean elimination.\nFourteen rinks were left undefeated entering today's play\nwith the rest of the field of 57\nhaving lost at least one game.\nThe dangers of the draw game\ncame to a head in an afternoon\nmatch that saw Bev Munroe of\nTrail score a seven-ender on\nclubmate Bill Robertson and go\non to win the game 13-11 in an\nextra end.\nGETTING READY\nAll seven zone winners, sharpening their game for the men's\ninterior playoff starting Thursday, curled once during the first\nthree draws Monday.\nFour of them lost.\nRuss Bowles of Kamloops was\nstopped 9-5 by Jim Feeney of\nRossland; Harry Jordan, taking\nover the young Kimberley rink\nafter skip Lynn Hansen was\ntransferred by his company,\nwas beaten 8-7 in an extra end\nby Nelson's Milt Ryalls; veteran Mickey Brennan of Trail\nwhipped zone winner and\nformer Canadian schoolboy\nchamp Garry Caughlin of Oso-\nyoos 12-5, and Kitimat's Clare\nRobertson fell 7-5 to Lloyd Harper of Quesnel in the first match\nbetween zone winners.\nNOT CRUCIAL\nThe losses mean little to the\nzone champions, since they already have berths in the double-\ndraw playoff, but the bonspiel\ngives the other 50 rinks a\nchance to take one of 16 spots\nthat give entry to the playoff.\nMonday's play was devoted\nchiefly to A event, which yields\nfour rinks to the playoff. Rinks\nreaching the semi-finals of B\nand quarter-finals of C also gain\nentry.\nIn another highlight of Monday's play, Trail's Reg Stone,\na six - time B.C. champion,\nknocked out in zone play this\nyear, stayed in the running with\na shaky 6-5 victory over clubmate, John Merkley.\nThe youngest rink of the bonspiel is the one that came farthest to play. Lionel Stokes of\nWhitehorse, Y.T., a zone winner, took a rink averaging less\nthan 25 years of age to a 7-5\nfirst-round victory over Cres-\nton's H. H. Campbell.\nThe Yukon boys all sport\nbears\u2014one or two of them a\nlittle stringy\u2014for a sourdough\nrendezvous to be staged back\nhome in March.\nResults follow:\n'A' Event\nFred Wendel, Trail, 14, Stan\nHewgill, Rossland, 4; Buzz McGibney, Trail, 9. George Menzies, Castlegar, 5; R. W. Ross,\nTrail, 12, W. P. Robertson, Trail.\n9; Archie McCannel, Trail, 10,\nBill Leaman, Trail, 9; Milt Ry\nalls, Nelson, 8, Harold Jordan,\nKimberley, 7; G. F. Carmichael,\nGrand Forks, 9, Murray Gibson,\nTrail, 8; Jim Feeney, Rossland,\n9, Russ Bowles, Kamloops, 5;\nFritz Farenholtz, Nelson, 11,\nHarry Laing, Invermere, 9.\nWinstanley, Trail, 1Q, Roscoe,\nTrail, 9; Dyson, Rossland, 11,\nHall, Trail, 6; Stone, Trail, 6,\nMerkley, Trail, 5; Wray, Prince\nGeorge, 6, Lemoel, Trail, 5; Forrest, Trail, 13, Toevs, Summer-\nland, 4; Crooks, Kimberley, 9,\nStrandberg, Salmo, 4; Stokes,\nWhitehorse, 7, Campbell, Creston, 5; Birch, Summerland, 11,\nHalquist, Summerland, 7.\nHarper, Quesnel, 7, Robertson,\nKitimat, 5; Johnson, Trail, 9, E.\nE. Perkins, Trail, 7; Brennen,\nTrail, 12, Caughlin, Osoyoos, 5;\nTopping, Greenwood, 11, Mc-\nCaugherty, Kelowna, 3; McKinnon, Kamloops, 13, Lepine, Trail,\n5; Munroe, Trail, 13, Robertson,\nTrail, 11; Huitema, Rossland, 9,\nCuming, Penticton, 6.\nLyon, Trail, 12, Sookochoff,\nGrand Forks, 6; Hill, Trail, 10,\nEdwards, Rossland, 6; Van Yzer-\nloo, Castlegar, 10, Beaudry,\nRossland, 4; Lachance, Prince\nGeorge, 7, Lipsett, Kelowna, 6;\nMcGibney, Trail, 8, O'Ringheim,\nCreston, 1; Carmichael, Grand\nForks, 8, McCannel, Trail, 4; F.\nFarenholtz, Nelson, 8, Feeney,\nRossland, 6; Wendel, Trail, 11,\nRyalls, Nelson, 3.\nStokes, Whitehorse, 8, Ross,\nTrail, 7; Stone, Trail, 8, Birch,\nSummerland, 7; Wray, Prince\nGeorge, 9, Forrest, Trail, 4; Winstanley, Trail, 13, Dyson, Rossland, 8; Huitema, Rossland, 6,\nCrooks, Kimberley, 4; Brennen,\nTrail, 11, Johnson, Trail, 4; McKinnon, Kamloops, 7, Topping,\nGreenwood, 6; Monroe, Trail, 7,\nHarper, Quesnel, 6.\n^  look for\nthelum in\nthetaffia\nWHIlf ORlkRK\nSmoke Eaters Edge\nSaskatoon Quakers\nSchaller To Try for\nSecond Bee Hive Win\nTORONTO - Helmut \"Hell\"\nSchaller, winner of last year's\nBee Hive Giant. Slalom, will race\nin the same event this year in\nan attempt to capture the $2,000\nfirst prize two years in a row.\nSchaller, who is now coaching\nthe Canadian national slalom\nand downhill ski teams in Western Canada and the U.S. has\nadded his name to a growing list\nof contestants from all parts of\nNorth America who will race\ndown the slopes of Devil's Glen\nski resort in Collingwood on Feb.\n10th.\nThe total prize money in this\nthird annual professional Bee\nHive giant slalom is $5,000. Race\nofficials expect a field of some\n30 professional skiers, most of\nthem former world, Olympic or\nEuropean champions. \u25a0\nIn addition to Schallers' entry,\nofficials have also received entries from three other Canadian\nskiers. They are Andreas Rubl, a\nformer Swiss giant slalom champion who is now instructing at\nMont Tremblant, Jean Lessard,\na former Canadian champion\nnow instructing at Mont Sutton in\nQuebec, and David  Jacobs,  a\nSASKATOON (CP) - Trail\nSmoke Eaters, Canadian entry\nin the world hockey tournament\nin Stockholm, Sweden, March 7,\nshaded Saskatoon Quakers of the\nSaskatchewan SHL 8-7 Monday\nnight before 5023 fans.\nIt was Trail's third exhibition\ngame and second victory on a\npre-tournament cross - Canada\ntour.\nQuakers, because of injuries,\ndressed only 12 players, including their sub goalie Frank Kub-\nica. They used only two forward\nlines and actually carried a sufficient edge of the play to win.\nThey outplayed Smokies much of\nthe way.\nHarold Jones paced Trail with\ntwo goals and four assists. Other\nTrail scorers were George Fer\nguson, Addy Tamlbellini, Harry\nSmith, Gerry Penner, Pinoke\nMclntyre and Rock Crawford.\nJerry Esch, Jack McLeod and\nDon Smith each scored twice tor\nSaskatoon. Herb Jeffrey got the\nother goal. Don Smith and Bob\nDawes each had three assists.\nThe clubs were tied 2-2 at\nend of the first period and Trail\nled 5-4 after two. The teams\nsplit six goals in the third.\nSmoke Eaters complained of\nthe officiating in the final pe\nriod and at the end of the game\nTrail coach Bab Kromm went\nonto the ice to express his dis\npleasure. The fans jeered his\naction. Defenceman Harry Smith\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board or\nby the Government of British Columbia.\nNelson Pee Wees\nI Defeat Salmo\nA Nelson Pee Wee hockey\nteam defeated Salmo Pee Weet\n9-5 in an exhibition game at Sal\nmo Saturday.\nT. Wickstrom was big gun for\nthe pickup team from Nelson\nas he notched five goals. Team\nmates C. Jmaeff and W. Kant\ngan scored a brace each to round\nout the team's scoring.\nB. Cox led the Salmo club\nwith two goals while B. Scliimph\nD. Bush and M. Kennedy picked\nup singles for the losers.\nThe game was part of Minor\nHockey Week competition which\ncame to an end across the country Saturday.\nand Ted Maki of the Smokies\nalso had words with the referees.\nKromm was assessed a 10-\nminute misconduct for his post-\ngame march onto the ice. Neither player was given a penalty.\nQuakers finished the game\nplaying two men short due to\npenalties but held Trail from\nscoring. Earlier in the period,\nQuakers scored when Trail was\ntwo men short, one of the infractions a bench penalty.\nLineups:\nTrail\u2014Goal, Zanier. Defence,\nH. Smith, Fletcher, Ferguson,\nPollesel, Maki. Forwards, Rusnell, Crawford, Kowalchuk, Peacosh, Hornby, Jones, Penner,\nTamlbellini, Mclntyre.\nSaskatoon\u2014'goal, Kubica. defence, Kortje, Puddicombe, Mc-\nCrimmon, Dawes, Lynn. Forwards, Jeffrey, McLeod, D.\nSmith, Esch, Goodwin, Lindsay.\nReferees\u2014 Davidson,  Besse.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u20141, Trail, Fergus'\non (Jones) 8:02; 2, Saskatoon,\nEsch (Dawes, Goodwin) 11:48;\n3, Trail, Tambellini (Peacosh)\n14:16; 4, Saskatoon, D. Smith\n(McLeod) 16:28.\nPenalty\u2014Fletcher (minor and\n10-cninute misconduct) 2:50.\nSecond period\u20145, Trail, H\nSmith (Tambellini) 2:15; 6, Saskatoon, D. Smith (Jeffrey) 9:56;\n7, Trail, Penner (Jones, Pollesel) 11:51; 8. Trail, Mclntyre\n(Jones) 18:31; 9, Saskatoon,\nEsch (Goodwin, Dawes) 19:48.\nPenatly-H.  Smith 4:36.\nThird period \u2014 10, Saskatoon,\nJeffrey (D. Smith, McCrimmon)\n:47; 11, Trail, Crawford (Jones)\n4:34; 12, Trail, Jones (Penner,\nCrawford) 5:24; 13, Trail, Jones\n(Mclntyre, H. Smith) 7:35; 14,\nSaskatoon, McLeod (D. Smith.\nDawes) 10:07; 15, Saskatoon,\nMcLeod (D. Smith, Jeffrey)\n15:10.\nPenalties \u2014 Crawford 9:08,\nMaki 13:37, Trail (bench penalty, served by Pollesel) 13:37, D.\nSmith 18:14, Dawes 19:17. and\nKromm (misconduct) 20:00.\nStops:\nZanier 6   15   11\u201432\nKubica 8    9   11\u201428\nBombers Head\nLeague's\nNorthern Loop\nL. V. Rogers Bombers had a\nrough weekend on the basketball\ncourt. The team dropped three\nstraight games, one to Grand\nForks in Grand Forks, one to\nTrail Hawks and one to Vernon\nHigh School in exhibition games\nhere Saturday, but they still head\nthe Northern Division of the West\nKootenay High School Basketball\nLeague with three wins and no\nlosses.\nIn Grand Forks, Bombers lost\n60-49 in a game that saw them\ntrailing 10-9, 25-21 and 37-31 at\nthe quarters.\nAt one point in the final quar- j\nter, Bombers came within three\npoints of tying the Wolves but\nfell back when Mike Laughton,\nHowie Ridge and Phil Konkin\nfouled out of the game leaving\nthe team short on height and\nknocking out one of their top\nscorers.\nLaughton led the Bomber scoring attack by racking up 20\npoints before fouling out while\nB. Hlookoff topped the Grand\nForks team with 15.\nAlex Dergousoff, out for much\nof the season, was back with the\nWolves and although he didn't\npick up many points, his play-\nmaking made a big difference in\nthe final outcome of the game.\nElaine Ramsay netted 12 points\nin the Bomberettes game to give\nthe L. V. Rogers girls a 35-20 victory over the Grand Forks girls.\nWKHSBL STANDINGS\nNorthern Division (Boys)\nW- L\nNelson     3    0\nCastlegar  -.    1\nSalmo     0    2\n(Girls' Teams)\nCastlegar    3\nmember of the Canadian national team until this year and now\nthe director of the Raymond\nLanctot Ski School in Val David,\nQuebec. Jacobs placed fourth in\nlast year's Bee Hive.\nSchaller, who is now 25 years\nof age, has an Impressive record\nin Europe. He became the Austrian junior champion when he\nwas 14 and went on to win,\namongst other things, the Swiss\nalpine and downhill championships and the Norwegian giant\nslalom championship \u2014 all in\n1958. With the Austrian national\nteam in 1961 he consistently placed amongst the top 10 in European events and was particularly proud of his showing in the\nKrippenstein giant slalom \u2014\nwhich is an 80 gate course \u2014\nwhen he finished a close second\nto Karl Schranz.\nAndreas Rubi won the Swiss\ngiant slalom championship in\n1961 after being the Swiss junior\nchampion in 1957, 1958 and 1959.\nHe has been a member of the\nSwiss national team for five\nyears.\nRounding out the field to date\nin this year's Bee Hive giant slalom are such great skiers as\nErnst Hinterseer, the 1960 Olympic slalom Gold Medallist, Stein\nEriksen, another Olympic Gold\nMedallist in giant slalom, and\nwinnner of the 1961 Bee Hive,\nChristian Pravda, nine times\nAustrian champion and a former\nFIS world downhill champion,\nAnderl Molterer who has been\nnamed by the European press\nas the world's best skier and\nwho has been the Austrian champion 11 times, and the former\nFrench national champion Adrian Duvillard.\nWITH  STANE\nAND BESOM\nResults of games played in the\nNelson   Curling   Club   Monday\nnight:\nR. Palmer 10, F. Koehle 7\nRoy Hickey 7, K. White 9\nJ. Stack 16, P. Shukin 8\nJ. Lang 16, F. Eberle 13\nC. Gilbert 4, R. Adderley 11\nPlugs D. Cathcart and F. Carmichael, tied for first place in\nsection \"B\", will playoff at -7\np.m. tonight;  \" *\nG. Barefoot, A. Allen, L. J.\nMaurer and R. Palmer, all tied\nfor first place in section \"A\" of\nthe Plugs will also playoff tonight. Barefoot will play Maurer\nand Allen will play Palmer at\n7 p.m. The winners of these\ngames will play again at 9 p.m.\nIf there is a tie in section \"C\"\nor \"D\" of the-Colts 7 p.m. draw,\nthe tied teams will also play\nagain at 9 p.m.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1963 \u2014M\nBIG CHANCE? Hockey acouts representing teams from Chicago, the Kremlin and Toronto surround Nelson goalie Jess Seaby before the Oldtimers' game\nhere Saturday night. Whether Mickey Maglio (left), George Gelinas or Louis\nMaglio made Seaby the right offer is not known, but the three scouts did provide many laughs for the 650 fans who attended the game which Trail Old-\ntimers won 7-1.\u2014Daily News photo.\nTrail Oldtimers Outlast\nNelson for 7*1 Victory\nAfter Leo Desireau of Nelson\ndropped the first puck, a battle\nof missed checks, stray passes,\nwobbly ankles and remarks such\nas \"oops, sorry\" began between\nNelson and Trail Oldtimers in\nan exhibition hockey game here\nSaturday night.\nAlthough the scoresheet showed Trail as 7-1 winners, after\n45 minutes of hockey!?), who\nactually came out on top is debatable.\nThe game was played to raise\nmoney for the Nelson Minor\nHockey Association and marked,\namong other things, the end of\nMinor Hockey Week in the city.\nIf the former stars can stand the\nstrain, another game will be\nplayed in TraiHater this month-\nto help the Minor Hockey Association in that city.\nThe Smelter City crew, showing signs of their former spark,\nran up a 4-0 first period lead\nand never looked back.\nThe game featured 15-minute,\nstraight time periods and some\nvery questionable calls by the\nofficials.\nKen Stanton and Rico Martin\nnotched two goals each for the\nvisitors while Deacon Wait, John\nRinks Named for Nelson\nCurling Club Competition\nNelson    1\nSalmo   0\nSouthern Division (Boys)\nTrail    2\nGrand Forks   1\nRossland    1     2\n(Girls)\nTrail     3    0\nRossland    1     2\nGrand Forks  0    2\nSwap Prentice\nAnd McKenney\nNEW YORK (AP)-New York\nRangers and Boston Bruins, in\na bold move between clubs going nowhere in the National\nHockey League race, swapped\nstar players Monday. Don McKenney moved to New York and\nDean Prentice to Boston.\nThe trade broke up the Rangers' No. 1 line of Prentice, high-\nscoring Andy Bathgate and Earl\nIngarfield.\nMcKenney, a 28-year-old centre, has scored 20 or more goals\nin each of the last six years. He\nhas 14 goals and 19 assists for\nthe last-place Bruins this season.\nONE UP\nBy Lew Saw\nThe Nelson Curling Clubs'\nPresident-Vice President competition begins Wednesday. Following are the rinks in order of\nskip, third, second and lead.\nPresident\nL. J. Maurer, J. Henderson, R.\nMark, J. Klovance.\nH. Ronmark, Roy Hickey, C.\nGelinas, T. Mykytiue.\nJ. Leeming, O. G. Macintyre,\nR. Phillips, F. Chernenko.\nH. Farenholtz, G. Geddes, K.\nLoewen, A. Helme.\nW. Tozer, I. Hendrickson, L.\nBrewster, S. Zmaeff.\nF. Carmichael, S. Shukin, T.\nBate, W. Currie.\nR. Hesse, A. Heighten, P. Shukin, C. Alexander.\nD. M. Sample, H. Miller, A.\nMcKen, A. Schneider.\nE. Mason, D. Wallin, R. Fraser, G. B. Ward.\nJ. Sutherland, J. Lusk, R.\nWright, B. Jarbeau.\nM. Gee, K. Nixon, R. Rocheleau, W. Anderson.\nF. Wah, N. Jennejohn, A. K.\nMcAdams, M. Maglio.\nJ. Harvey, C. W. Lowther, W.\nTickner, A. Calant.\nM. B. Ryalls, G. Beattie, R.\nAdderley, G. Russell.\nA. Waters, E. Nelson, J. Lang,\nM. Varobioff.\nR. Boates, B. Hanson, P. Godfrey, D. Champion.\nR. Commons, F. J. Bousquet,\nJ. McMillan, J. Schmitz.\nVice President\nE. Leemln, L. Rymal, B. Algar, B. Bradshaw.\nF. Koehle, R. Nuyens, G. Gilbert, B. Force.\nD. Cathcart, A. Acuri, H. Harris, F. H. Doyle.\nG. Barefoot, L. Bicknell, D.\nWiniaw, K. Frederickson.\nR. Koehle, V. Miller, G. Clerihew, J. Erschbaun.\nJ. Braybrook, F. Waters, B.\nWallbridge, C. W. Rough.\nR. D. Hickey, A. Dayman, K.\nWhite, R. Patterson.\nIrcandia and Zeke Clements\nscored singles.\nNeil McClenaghan spoiled Bill\nWaddell's shutout bid in the Trail\nnet when he came through with\nNelson's lone goal.\nTrail's rough, tough style of\nplay netted the club three of the\ngame's four penalties. Joe Palyga, Clint Albright and Clements each picked up two-minute\nminors while Jack Kilpatrick\nwas the Nelson badman with one\ntwo-minute stretch in the sinbin.\nLineups:\nTrail-Goal, Bill Waddell; defence, Joe Palyga, Jim Haight,\nJim Anderson, Chuck Casey;\nforwards: Zeke Clements, Clint\nSalmo Curling\nSALMO \u2014 Winners of the Mine\nMill bonspiel held in Salmo were.\nPrimary event \u2014 D. A. Water-\nstreet first; McConnell second;\nRudychuk third and Parsons\nfourth.\nSecondary event \u2014 Webster\nfirst; Stahl second; W. Bush\nthird and Pete Kwiczak fourth,\nConsolation event \u2014 McPhee\nfirst; Fleming second; Reyden\nthird and J. Johnsen fourth.\nAlbright, Rico Martin, Ken Stanton, Deacon Wait, John Ircandia.\nNelson \u2014 Goal: Jesse Seaby;\ndefence: Al Euerby, George\nBarefoot. Ernie McLachlan,\nFrank Hufty; forwards: Bob\nWeist, Neil McClenaghan, Bill\nVickers, Leo Atwell, Doug Win-\nlaw, Gordie Smith, Al Larson,\nJack Kilpatrick.\nStrikes and Spares\nResults of Monday night bowling:\nMen's Commercial League:\nJokers 4, Central Truck 0; Silver Kings 3, Alley Cats 1; Clarkson 1, Eagles 3; Twisters 3,\nQuality 1\"; Corner Pins \\Vs, Head\nPins 2V4; Tip Top 2, Na'lems 2.\nHigh single, Doug Petterson of\nTip Top, 321. High aggregate,\nWilf Fahlman of Alley Cats, 784.\nTeam high single, Eagles, 1155.\nTeam high aggregate, Tip Top,\n3290.\nOther top scores: Pete Fahlman, 769; Doug Petterson, 740;\nKeith Codling, 732; Red Brochu,\n724; Bruce Malcolm, 700; Ray\nCastle, 306.\nYOU\nCAN'T\nBEAT\nELECTRIC\nHEAT\nFREE ESTIMATES\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nPhone 352-3175\nEXPORT\nPLAIN\nor FILTER TIP\nCIGARETTES\nA. Ronmark, A. Eureby, L. Atwell, R. McKerral.\nA. Reid, R. Benedetti, E. Stew-\nartson, T. Smith.\nL. Maglio, G. Koehle, R. Swanson, A. H. Pidt.\nW. Triggsg, J. Taylor, W. Palmer, R. Stack.\nR. Bruce, D. Lang, C. Arcuri,\nE. Stromme.\nJ. Thorn, A. Relgert, D. Mc-\nQuaig, W. Apostoliuk.\nJ. R. Bailey, S. Benedetti, F.\nEberle, J. Elliott.\nW. Duckworth, J. Seaby, E.\nTrask, J. McCulloch.\nD. Benedetti, A. W. Stephenson, J. Kilpatrick, G. R. Wilson.\nE. C. Hunt, R. Nash, W. J.\nCooper, H. Olafson.\nSchedule\nWednesday, 7 p.m.\u2014L. J. Maurer vs. E. Leeming; H. Ronmark\nvs. F. Koehle; J. Sutherland vs.\nL. Maglio; J. Leeming vs. D.\nCathcart; H. Farenholtz vs. R.\nKoehle.\n9 p.m. \u2014 D. Sample vs. A.\nReid; F. Carmichaels vs. R. D.\nHickey.\nThursday, 7 p.m. \u2014 R. Hesse\nvs. A. Ronmark; W. Tozer vs. J.\nBraybrook; E. Mason vs. W.\nTriggs; M. Gee vs. R. Bruce; F.\nWah vs. J. Thorn.\n9 p.m. \u2014 J. Harvey vs. G.\nBarefoot; M. B. Ryalls vs. W.\nDuckworth; A. Waters vs. E.\nRamsbottom; R. Boates vs. D.\nBenedetti; R. Commons vs. J.\nR. Bailey.\nTotal score of all games played will decide the winner in the\nPresident-Vice President competition.\nRinks will remain the same for\nthe Lambs Trophy competition\nwhich follows the President-Vice\nPresident. Should two rinks be\nunable to play each other because they are in the same section of the Lambs competition,\ngames played against each other\nin President-Vice President will\nbe counted in the Lambs Trophy.\nNorth American Life Reports to Policyholders\nAnother year of significant\nPROGRESS\nThe record of growth of North American Life was further enhanced in\n1962. The protection and savings represented by more than $2.7 billion\nof assurances and annuities in force reflects the continued confidence\nof the holders of more than 243,000 Ordinary policies and 155,000\nGroup certificates in the services which the Company has to offer.\nHIGHLIGHTS OF THE 82ND ANNUAL REPORT\nBeneBt Payments and Provisions $      57,173,686\nIncrease $5,080,170\nNew Assurances and Annuities _.\u201e....$   350,037,727\nIncrease $9,362,039\nAssurances and Annuities in force $2,720,425,853\nIncrease $245,967,048\nTotal Assets - \u201e $    397,713,966\nIncrease $30,874,089\nA copy of the complete Annual Report for the year 1962 is available on request\nNORTH AMERICAN LIFE\nASSURANCE COMPANY\nM. A. MARTYN, Manager\n208 Medical Arts Building.\nR. W. SHEARING,\nRegional Group Supervisor.\n... .-_^. :: '..\n_   '  \u25a0    -\u25a0    i \u25a0'\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\t\n^ -   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-:-'\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1963\n\/CtWCRDODrV   lOUG^ WO^Ea*^INTO\nl\u00bb 76\"w,'r\"    VOUR APOTTMENT WHEN THE\n . ^jjj^pu^HAMMEWCANB LEAVER ,\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeth Cop\nBralorne\nCanani\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold\nCraig\nGiant Mascot\nGranduc\nHighland Bell\nKamloops\nRoot. B M\nMt. Washington\nNational Ex\nPend Oreille\nQuatsino\nSheep Creek\nSilbak Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard\nSkeena\nSunshine Lardeau\nTorwest\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Mines\nOILS\nCharter\nPacific Pete\nPeace River Gas\nRoyal Can\nUnited\nVantor\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\nB C Power\nB C Telephone\nBurrard Mort\nCanadian Collieries\nCrestbrook\nCrestbrook Pfd.\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\n2.52\n8.25\n.13\n.08%\n.88\n18.75\n.68\n3.85\n2.50\n.07\n.17%\n1.03\n1.03\n1.70\n.09\n1.17\n.MVl\n.04%\n.25\n.08\n.11\n.19\n.14\n2.80\n1.05\n12.25\n.26\n.06\n1.42\n.16\n2.15\n14.00\n20.25\n53.25\n6.00 '\n7.25\n22.00\n38.00\n22.00\n5.37%\n5.25\nMacM & Powell River\nTrans Mtn\nWestminster Paper\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Vt . ,\nBANKS (Unavailable)\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.    - 9\nAH Can. Div. 6.\nAmer. Growth 8.\nCan. Inv. Fund 10.\nCommonwealth Int. 8.\nDiversified B 4.\nFirst Oil and Gas 4.\nGrouped Income 3.\nInvestors Growth 6.\nInvestors Mutual 12.\nLeverage 7.\nMutual Accum 3.\nMutual Bond 7.\nMutual Inc. 5.\nTrans Canada \"C\" 6.\nUnited Ace. Funds 6.\nInvestors Mut. 4.\n21.87%\n14.50\n34.12%\n29.12%\n24.37%\n14.50\n13.75\n.05 9.92\n.39 7.00\n19 8.93\n40 11.40\n85 9.70\n4.71\n5.14\n3.95\n7.38\n52 13.61\n48 8.20\n68 4.02\n28 7.62\n29 5.78\n32 6.87\n6.70\n4.72\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nBrack Mills Ltd., class A 30\ncents, March 15, record Feb. 18.\nCalgary and Edmonton Corp.\nLtd., common 10 cents, April\n16, record March 13.\nInternational Nickel Company\nof Canada Ltd., common 50\ncents, (U.S.) March 20, record\nFeb. 18.\nPlacer Development Ltd.,\ncommon 25 cents, March 22,\nrecord March 1.\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1963\n:59-Sign On.\n00\u2014The Morning Show\n40\u2014Farm Fare\n: 45\u2014Chapel In The Sky\n;0O\u2014News\n;05-Wake Up Time\n25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35-Wake Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Wake-Up Time Continues\n; 30\u2014Opening Markets\n; 35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n; 00\u2014News and Report\n10\u2014Count Your Blessings\n15\u2014The Archers\n:30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n: 59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014What's The Song Contest\n10\u2014Baldwin Commentary\n15\u2014The Massey Lectures\n45\u2014Preview Commentary\n: 50\u2014Morning Melodies\n:0O\u2014News\n; 05\u2014Morning Melodies\n; 45\u2014Border Beat\n:00-Let's Sing Along\n: 15\u2014Sports News\n; 25\u2014News\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n; 55\u2014News\n: 00\u2014John Drainie\n: 15\u2014Shirley Harmer Show\n:30-What's On Tapp\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcasts\n2:30\u2014News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Closing Markets\n3:10-Sports Spotlight\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n3:30\u2014Potpourri\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Georges Lafleche Show\n4:30\u2014Tempo\n5:00\u2014The Highway Patrol\n5:30-The Little Show\n5:40\u2014On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Byline\n5:50\u2014Sports News\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Job Finder\n6:15\u2014Here's Health\n6:30\u2014Fleming Presents\n7:00\u2014News\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Assignment\n8:00 Radio International\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n9:00\u2014Business Barometer\n9:30\u2014New Talent Parade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n10:15-Chapel In The Sky\n10:30\u2014Soundings\n11:00\u2014News\nU:01-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY,\n6:00\u2014Morning Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Count Your Blessings\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Musicaie\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15-Music Diary\n10:45\u2014Playroom\nU:00-Off the Record\n11:45\u2014Stu Davis Show\nll:55-Austin Willis\n12:00\u2014Songs from Here and\nThere\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n(2:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\nFEBRUARY 6, 1963\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcasts\n2:30\u2014News and Trans Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Theatre of the Air\n4:00 News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-^Styled by Eleanor\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014Tempo For Teens\n5:30\u2014Tempo\n6:30\u2014Music in G\n7:00\u2014News\n7:20\u2014In The Provinces\n7:30\u2014Assignment\n8:00-CBC Wednesday Nite\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-CBC Wednesday Night\nU:57-News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n6:30 You Asked For It\n7:00 Expedition\n7:30 Combat *\n8:30 Hawaiian Eye *\n9:30 Untouchables '\n10:30 TEA\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:30 Movie\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n00 Quick Draw McGraw\n30 Marshall Dillon *\n00 Lloyd Bridges *\n30 Red Skelton *\n9:30 Jack Benny *\n10:00 Garry Moore *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 ToniteShow*\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Across the Seven Seas\n7:30 Laramie (C) *\n8:30 Empire (CI *\n9:30 Dick Powell *\n10:30 Chet Huntley \u2666\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Late Movie:\n\"Billy the Kid\"\nCBC-TV - Nelson. Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\n2:00 Chez Helene\n2:15 Nursery School Time\n2:30 National Schools Telecast\n3:00 Loretta Young Show\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 Scarlett Hill\n4:30 News\n4:45 Intermezzo\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Supercar\n6:00 Playbill\n8:00 Car 54, Where Are You?\n8:30 Perry Mason\n9:30 Front Page Challenge\n10:00 Inquiry\n10:30 The Lively Arts\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV \u2014 Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY\n12:00 Test Pattern\n12:30 Monitor Seven\nStage Seven:\n\"Sun Valley Serenade\"\n2:30 Sing Ring Around\n2:45 Friendly Giant\n3:00 Loretta Young Show\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 Scarlett Hill\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Kids Bids\n5:30 30 on Teens\n6:00 Nation's Business\n' 6:15 Weather and News\n6:30 Family Theatre:\n\"Cinderella Jones\"\n8:00 My Three Sons\n8:30 Parade\n9:00 Ben Casey\n10:00 Newsmagazine\n10:30 Explorations\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Wrestling\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally Newa does not hold Itself responsible In the oveil\nol an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAunor\nBarnat\nBrunswick\nBuffalo Ank\nCampbell C\nCampbell R L\nCassiar\nCentral Patricia\nChimo\nCoch Will\nCoin Lake\nCons. Discovery\nC G Arrow\nCons Halliwell\nConwest\nCopper Corp.\nCraig\nD'Aragon\nDenison\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nElder\nFaraday\nGeco\nGiant Yel.\nGunnar Gold\nHarminerals\nHeadway\nHollinger\nHudson Bay\nHydra Ex\nIron Bay\nJoliet Que.\nJonsmith\nKenville\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLeitch\nLorado\nMacDonald\nMcLeod\nMadsen\nMalartic\nMarboy\nMaritime Mining\nMcKenzie\nMining Corp\nMulti Mins.\nMurray\nNew Hosco\nNormetals\nNorpax\nNorth Rankin\nOpemiska\nPick Crow\nPine Point\nPlacer\nPreston\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\nSherritt Gordon\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con\nTaurcanis\nTeck Hughes\nTemagami\nThomp-Lund\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nYellowknife Bear\nYoung Gold\nOILS\nBailey S A\nBata\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Delhi\nCanadian Devonian\nHome A\nMidcon\n6.45\n1.20\n3.25\n2.20\n4.35\n15.62%\n11.62%\n1.27\n.48\n4.35\n.26\n.85\n.56\n.30\n4.90\n.16\n19.00\n.25\n11.00\n2.55\n2.05\n1.01\n1.60\n27.12%\n12.37%\n9.25\n.18\n.22%\n22.87%\n55.25\n.34\n1.14\n.21%\n.17\n.05\n6.90\n26.25\n1.35\n1.20\n.18\n1.00\n2.27\n.92\n.13\n.52\n.31\n15.00\n.20%\n1.17\n1.33\n2.95\n.11%\n.38\n7.20\n.61\n10.75\n29.87%\n8.35\n.85\n10.62%\n.42\n12.87%\n.33\n3.05\n1.86\n5.15\n1.75\n.36\n1.61\n.75\n.67\n8.50\n1.60\n1.89\n1.15\n.12%\n9.75\n.05\n20.75\n3.35\n3.55\n12.75\n.24%\nNat. Pete\nPacific Pete\nPetrol\nPlace\nProv Gas\nSpooner\nStanwell Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nAnalog\nArgus 2nd pfd.\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\nBathurst Power\nBeatty Bros.\nBell Telephone\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Power A\nCan. Malting\nCan. Curtis Wright\nCan. Packers B\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners\nCanadian Celanese\nCan Chem Co.\nCanadian Dredge\nCan Oil\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom Magnesium\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chemical\nDom Textiles\nFalconbridge\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFord U.S.\nFord Can\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pi.-*\nGen. Steel Wares\nGoodyear\nGoodyear pfd\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Ace.\nInt. Nickel\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMetro Com\nMolson Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp\nShawinigan\nSimpsons A\nSoutham\nStandard Paving\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\nWeston George\n2.21\n12.37%\n.61\n.60\n1.64\n.10%\n.33\n1.67\n1.47\n.06\n47%\n24'A\n1%\n51\n37\n30\n53\n9;\n54%\n14\n20%\n71\n.85\n52\n10%\n12%\n44%\n9%\n174\n26\n5'A\n23%\n19%\n49\n8%\n14\n18%\n18%\n56%\n17%\n26%\n46\n172\n34\n100%\n9\n140\n48\n43'A\n15%\n26\n71'A\n8'A\n8%\n12%\n7%\n29\n13'4\n52%\n32%\n21%\n8%\n29'A\n32Y4\n34 Vi\n11%\n20\n46%\n18%\n6\n18%\nNET EARNINGS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nAbitibi Power and Paper Co.\nLtd., year ended Dec. 31: 1962,\n$15,495,251, $3.61 a share; 1961\n$13,710,636, $3.18.\nDominion Tar and Chemical\nCo Ltd., year ended Dec. 31\n1962, $20,717,046, $1.40 a share\n1961, $18,799,052, $1.29.\nDonohue Brothers Ltd., year\nended Dec. 31: 1962, $1,446,415,\n$2.41 a share; 1961, $1,165,691,\n$1.94.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n2. Russian\nriver\n3. Nothing\nmore than\n4. In the\nway\n5. Samarium:\naym.\n6. Bracing\n7. Conversant:\nal.    -\n8. Alas\n9. Preceded\nthe Age ot\nBronze\n10. da Vinci's\n Lisa\n14. Dotted, as\nwith stars:\nHer.\n16. Elephant's\nchild\n19.N.Y.C.\ndwelling\nplace\n20. Mo.\nrose\n21. Nocturnal\nInsect\ncatcher\n22. Frightening\n23. Toward\nthe\nfront\n25. Your:\ndlaL\nvar.\n27. Urge\non\n29. Sand\ndune:\nG.B.\n31. Esteemed\n32. Advantage\n34. Church\ncalendar:\nR.C. Ch.\nAlLlifeHHplEblAlill\n1EHIH3  BHBH1\nnniimi aEiaiaa\nqhbi@ aa mats\nHBUBaana\nYeaterdfty'l Answer\n35. Jacob\nAugust\n , social\nreformer\n36. At loose\n(unsettled\ncondition)\n38. Ship's\nrecord\n\u2022book\n39. Japanese\napricot\n42. Pronoun\nACROSS\nLOrganio\npart of\nsoil\n6. An abyss\n11. Theater-\nin-the-\nround\n12. Right hand\npage: print.\n13. Rendered\npig fat\n14. Lab technician's\ntube\n15. Cheats\n17. Natrium:\nsym.\n18. Outbreak\nof violent\nbehavior\n21. Confound\n24. To amuse\noneself\n26. Reserved\nand cool\n27. To\nappraise\n28. Edible\nroot (Tan,)\n29. Type of\nroof window\n80. Withdrawal\n82. Printer's\nmeasure\nSi. More\n(increasingly)\nST. To thin\ndown\n40. Ireland\n41.Elfllke\nbeing\n42. Unfastened\n43. Urged (on)\n44. Facing a\nglacier\nDOWN\n1. Players'\nrest period\n(Basketball) 2.s\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXY D L B AAX R\nb    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la used\nfor the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophles, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nWLE      CBBNCOTH      JI      C      TMQSNH\nLOUCQ      DHMQS      MT      JI      SYHCW\nKJQTHPOHQKH. \u2014 RJLQTJQ\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: ALL THINGS REQUDIE SKILL\nBUT AN APPETITE.\u2014HERBERT\n(\u00a9 1863, King Features Syndicate. Inc.)\n\/\n2\n5\n4\n5\"\nVA\n6\n7\ns\n9\n'0\nII\n%\n\/Z\n15\nVA\na\nf5\"\nIk\n^\n%\nIT\n%\n%\n%\nm\n19\nW\n%\nti\n22\nZ.5\n%\nZ+\nIS\nTin\n%\n27\n28\nV\/A\n29\n'^A\n30\n31\n'^\n^\n%\n5Z\n'^A\n%\n53\n34\n35\"\n5b\n57\n38\n39\n'^\n40\n41\nl\nAt\n45\nV\/A\n44\nB.C. BRIEFS\nPIONEER DIES\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Funeral\nservices will be held Wednesday\nfor M. H. Harry Jones, 90, who\ntrekked into the Yukon over the\nKlondike Trail in 1897 just before the gold rush. He died in\nhospital here. Welsh-born, he\noperated a hardware business\nin Dawson, Y.T. until 1944.\nBOAT SHOW OPENS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - First\nsign ot Spring: The annual\nMarpole Rotary Boat Show\nopened Saturday. Thousands\nflocked in to see everything\nfrom dinghies to yachts and the\nmost modern electronic gear.\nThe show goes on for a week.\naCauUuL iOhssdsh,\n7QZ\nPILLOW LUXURY\nEasy to quilty! Add elegant\ntouch with quilted pillows of\ntaffeta, satin or cotton.\nDecorator news! Quilted pillows \u2014 joint top, batting, lining.\nStitch on reverse side by hand,\nmachine. Pattern 792: transfer;\ndirections.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS In coin\n(no stamps, please) for this patter, Nelson Daily News Pattern\nDept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNEWEST RAGE-SMOCKED\naccessories plus 208 exciting\nneedlecraft designs in our new\n1963 Needlecraft Catalog - just\nout! Fashions, furnishings to\ncrochet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern.\nSend 25c now.\nmnJibiL TJtcudut\nPrinted Pattern\n9469\n\"   SIZES\n12Vi-24!4\nTOP SUIT SHAPES\nLook again \u2014 1963's TWO\ntop suit looks are in this styled-\nto-slim pattern. Two jackets,\ntwo skirts \u2014 wear as shown, or\nmix-match them.\nPrinted Pattern 9469:, Hall\nSizes 12%, 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%,\n22%, 24%. Size 16% takes 2%\nyards 54-inch.\nFIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins\n(no stamps, please! for this pat-\ntern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME.\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to Marian\nMartin, NDN, 60 Front Street\nWest, Toronto. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER and your\nNAME and ADDRESS.\nFREE OFFER! Coupon In\nSpring Pattern Catalog for one\npattern free\u2014any one you choose\nfrom 300 design ideas. Send 50c\nnow for'Catalog.\n \u25a0\u25a0 ->.- \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- > . \u25a0 ^ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'- ; ^ \"\u2014: ^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1953\"\u2014$\nHELP WANTED\nAUTOMOTIVE   PARTS\nSALESMAN   REQUIRED\nConfidential interviews will be\nconducted in this area for an\nexperienced and aggressive\nAutomotive Parts ana Hardware Salesman.\nPreference will be given to a\nman who can prove sales success in these fields. He must\nbe married, under forty-five\nyears of age and own an automobile.\nWe offer a prestige position\ncombined with genuine security and well above average\nearnings. Full training and\nassistance will be provided.\nReply in strict confidence stating full qualifications to Box\n3838, Nelson Daily News.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nSEWERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY. Work at home doing\nsimple sewing. We supply materials and pay shipping both\nways.' Make up to $1.40 an\nhour. Piece work. Apply Dept.\nD-4, Box 7010, Adelaide Post\nOffice, Toronto 1, Ontario.\nSTEADY WOMAN TO LOOK\nafter 2 small children. For interview apply 523 Vernon St.\nRoorri 28. Between 3:30 and 8\np.m.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSEWING  ALTERATIONS AND\nrepairing. Phone 352-7432.\nPERSONAL\nw.\nBring your Jan. Reader's Digest\ncoupon to Bill's Motor-In. If you\nwin a new Studebaker we will\npay you an additional $50 in\ncash. Offer good until Feb. 15th.\nBill's Motor-In, Nelson.\nDRUG SUNDRIES, NOVEL-\nties at tremendous savings.\nFree catalogue. Western Distributors, Box 24DN, Regina,\nSask.\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND  STARVING  NEGLEC-\nted cat. Phone 352-5234.\nNONSENSE\/\nWHAT EVER\nGAVE VOL)\nTHAT\nIPEA?.'\nMARKET TRENDS\nMACHINERY\nSaw\nPM CANADIAN 270\nDIRECT DRIVE\nA Proved Saw for the\nBig Production Logger\nTRY ONE - BUY ONE\nThe Price Is Right\nONLY $239\nWith 24\" Bar\nPHONE 352-5301\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Co.\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.\nPh.\n352-5301\nrrr.riiirrr.\nWELDING  GOGGLES\nAll  Types,  Lenses,  Helmets,\nGloves, Mitts, Face Shields\nStevenson Machinery  Ltd\nPhone 352-3561\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle within approximately 50 miles of Nelson, phone Nelson 352-6874.\nNelson and District A. I.\nCentre, 709 Third St., Nelson.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nOLDER HOUSE WANTED. -\nMust be cheap, or lots to build.\nPhone 352-6963.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable In Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac \u2014 Buick\n.   VauxhaU - GMC\n701 Baker St.        Phone 352-6641\n24 hour Wrecker Service\nFront End Aligning \u2014\nAutomatic Service\nBody and Paint Shop\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St.        Phone 352-3231\nRENAULT SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411        295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 8 a.m.\u20149 p.m.\nAcross Lake        Phone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355\nAustin - Morris \u2022 MGA - Wolseley\nCars \u2014 Parts - Service\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE LTD.\nYmir Rd.    Ph. 352-7421    Nelson\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\nCOLUMBIA\n001 Front St.\nTRADING  CO.\nPh. 352-5571\nZEEBEN LUMBER CO.\nYmir, B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling.  Serving Nelson and Dist.\n1020 Davies St. - Nelsort\nContractors\nFor\nQuality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPE LEAF\nCONSTRUCTION\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD C.  AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S..  P.  Eng.\n!18 Gore Street Nelson\nPhone 352-3341\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\n(Continued)\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St.\nPh. 365-5342\u2014Castlegar, B.C.\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor & Engineer\n369 Baker St. Nelson. Ph. 352-J117\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies  Ph. 352-2525\nJewellers\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nFor fine watches and repairs\nPhone 352-9012       511 Baker St.\nPiano Tuning\nELECTRONIC PIANO TUNING\nG. Stenberg, 311 Carbonate St.\nPhone 352-6892\nPrinting\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPbone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO   ELECTRONIC\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C. - Phone 352-5455\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shpp\n68 Baker Street  Phone 352-7741\nSteam Baths\nNELSON STEAM BATHS.\nExercise Centre \u2014 369 Baker Bt.\nTopso\nLarry's Topsoil, sand & Gravel\nsth and Davies St. Ph. 352-2355\nDays or 352-7576 Evens.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(SECTION 162)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot 821,\nKootenay District.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 82606-1 to the above\nmentioned lands in the name of\nHOLGER AKSEL VfGGO HANSON and bearing date of the\n22nd May, 1950 I HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my intention\nat the expiration of one calendar\nmonth from the first publication\nhereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such\nlost Certificate. Any person having any information with reference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle is requested to communicate with tlie undersigned.\nDATED   AT  NELSON,   B.C.,\nTHIS 15th day of January, 1963.\nL. A. McPHAIL,\ndistrict registrar,\nNelson land registration DISTRICT.\nCOMPANIES ACT\nTHUNDERBIRD MINES\nLIMITED NON PERSONAL\nLIABILITY\n(IN VOLUNTARY\nLIQUIDATION)\nNotice is hereby given that a\nmeeting of the creditors of the\nCompany will be held at the office of Wragge, Hamilton and\nArnesen, 459 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C. on Tuesday the 12th\nday of February, 1963 at eleven\no'clock in the forenoon.\nDated this 28th day of January.\n1963.\nEdmund Carlyon Wragge,\nLiquidator.\nRENTALS\nDELUXE MODERN APT. 1 BR.\nliving room, bath and kitchen,\nelectric stove and fridge, excellent location, heated, $75\nper mo. unfurnished. No small\nchildren. Fleming Apartments,\nphone 352-3815 or 352-7514.\nONE 4 RM. STE. AND TWO 3\nrm. stes. Close in. Private\nentrance, gas heated. Electric\nrange and water heaterB. Very\nreasonable. Ph. 352-3065'after\n6:30 p.m.\t\n3 ROOM \"SUITE, 1 BLOCK\nfrom Baker Street, heating\nand cooking by gas. $35 per\nmonth. Apply Poulin Agencies,\nNelson.\nLOW WINTER RATES\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.\nweekly, monthly rates. Dishes\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker Street.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms in the Annable Block,\nrent $21.00 to $31.00 per month.\nPh. Poulin Agencies Ltd., 352-\n7217.\nSMALL S.C. FURNISHED\nsuite, one block off Baker.\nAuto, heat, private entrance,\nphone 352-2155.\nLOWER 3 RM. DUPLEX, GAS\nrange, heater, fridge. Furnished. Suitable for quiet couple.\n615-A Hall St.\nUNFURN. 1 BDRM. APT. -\nGround flbor, all utilities supplied. Newly decorated. Phone\n352-7433.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Apply 140 Baker. Ph.\n352-3384.\nCOSY, BRIGHT, CENTRAL\nAPT. Apply Box 3629 Dally\nNews.\nROOM FOR RENT, SUITABLE\nfor 2 gentlemen. Board optional. Ph. 852-2564.\n1   BDRM.   SUITE.   HEATED,\nbath, gas stove. Ph. 352-3962.\nAPT.   FURN.   AND  HEATED.\n713 Victoria St.\nMODERN UNFURN. 1 BDRM.\napt. Heated. $68. Ph. 352-3417.\n2  BDRM.   UP-TO-DAfE   DUP-\nlex. Phonfe 352-5402.\nSMALL HEATED FURN. APT.\nPhone 352-3401 eves.\nLT.   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM.\nPhone-352-2796.\n1   BEDROOM    FURN.    APT.\navailable Feb. 16. Ph. 352-6980.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANTI-\nques. Hotte Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531, 413 Hall\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" Sq. 10c lb. Nel-\nson Daily News.\n12 BASS ACCORDION IN GOOD\nshape. Phone 352-6526.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFINAL CLEARANCE OF LAST\nYEARS STOCK\nBELOW Vs PRICE\nLadles car coats. Smart quilted nylon jackets, down proof,\nwater repellant and wind resistant. Nylon lined with hood\nattachment. Button down collar full length zipper with wool\nlined cuffs. In colors of; Grey,\nred, forest green and coca\nbrown. Sizes; small, medium,\nlarge. Regular price; $19.60,\nyour price; $7.98. Finest quality ladies sweaters. Ban-Lon,\norlon and wool puil-bvers. Button to neck. Long Sleeve cardigans. In colors of; rose, pink,\nlight grey, fawn, white. Sizes;\n34 to 38. Regular price; $3.49,\nyour price only $1.79\u00bb-*Men's\njeans. Authentic western style\nslim jeans. Hard wearing, fully sanforized blue denim. 60%\nmore wear. Rivet and bar\ntack reinforced. Sizes; 28 to\n38. Regular price $4.99. Sale\npricfc only $2.68. . . . Boys\nblue jeans. You just can't beat\nthese. Heavy wear blue jeans.\nDouble stitched seams throug-\nout. Bar tacked at points of\nstrain. Sizes 6 to 14 years.\nRegular price $3.29. Sale price\nonly $1.69. . . . NYLON AND\nVISCOSE BLANKETS: Finest\nquality nylon and viscose blended blankets. Satin bound in\nshades of pink, blue green,\nsandlewood and turquoise.\nSizes 72x84 only. Regular price\n$6.98. . . . Your price only\n. . . $3.87. ... All goods\ncarry manufacturers full money back guarantee or money\nrefunded. NO C.O.D.'s. Order\nfrom; WESTERN SURPLUS\nSALES, 13668 GROVENOR\nRD. N. SURREY, B.C.\nANY REASONABLE OFFER\naccepted for a Frigidaire deluxe range, daveno and chair,\nsewing machine and other furnishings all in good condition.\nSee them at 315 Fourth Street.\nSIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c lb.\nSides or grain fed pork, 35c lb.\nBacon and hams. Newdan\nFarms, Creston, Ph. EL 6-9901.\nFree weekly delivery.\nSIDES OF CHOICE BEEF, 49c\nlb. Sides of pork 35c lb. Cut,\nwrapped and frozen. Free delivery to Nelson. Whitford's\nMeats, Ph. 356-2556, Creston.\nUSED TV SETS A-l CONDI-\ntion. Nelson Home Furniture\nand Appliances Ltd., Nelson.\nPhone 352-6432.\nBUILDING 16'X18' INSULATED\nand wired. Toilet, 20 gal. glass\nlined hot water tank, 110 volts.\nPhone 332-6806.\n1 PARKHILL CHESTERFIELD\nand matching chair. Reasonable. Phone 352-2690 after 5:00\np.m. \t\nSINGER 29K70 SHOE SEWING\nmachine, $25. Arno Sommerfeld Shoe Shop, 536 Ward St.\n2 RM. APT., FURN. HOT\nwater, heat supplied. Ph. day\n352-2015, even. 352-6242.\nPORK FOR SALE - % OR\nwhole. Carrots in 50 lb. lots.\nPhone 352-2355.\nCUB'S SWEATER AND CAP.\nComplete Scout uniform. Ph.\n352-3423.\nAPPLES FOR SALE - PHONE\n352-2865. G. Apostoliuk, Granite Rd.\nANDREWS' CLEARANCE SALE\ncontinues \u2014 bargains for all\nthe family.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals.\n339 Baker St. Phone 352-3631.\nDINING ROOM SUITE AT 517\nMcHardy, Phone 352-6586.\nMUSKRAT   JACKET.   PHONE\n352-2827.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n2 LOTS 50X120 ON ROBSON ST.\nclose to Junior High. $2200.\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies.\nPhone 358-2425.\nWs STOREY, 3 BEDROOM\nhouse in Rosemont, remodeled inside and out. Ph. 352-3393.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '54 Ford, '54 Volkswagen pickup, '53 Consul, '52\nChev. pickup, '55 Ford pickup, '53 Zephyr. Plymouth,\nFords, Chevs., PontiaCs, Vs-\nton Fargo. Good motors, 270\nG.M.C, '57 Dodge V-8, '53 Zephyr, '52 Pontiac. Phone 352-\n5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir Road.\n2 DOOR '55 BUICK AUTOMA-\ntic, 6 new tires, fully winterized. This car mechanically\nsound. Must sacrifice. $645.\nPrivate owner. Ph. 352-2564.\n'56 CHEV., '53 MONARCH, NEW\nmotor, '51 Austin, '61 Triumph\nstatiun wagon, '51 Hillman.\nNorth Shore Service, phone\n352-2929.\nHERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO\nget a 1957 Chev. hard top in\ngood condition at a reasonable\nprice. See it at 315 Fourth St.\n'57 FORD 2-TONE, WIDE BOX,\nradio, new paint, must sell.\n$950 or offer. Box 3915, Nelson\nDaily News.\n1952 WILLYS JEEP P.V. GOOD\nshape, good rubber. See it at\n207 Behnsen St.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nCOCKER PUPS $15.00 ALSO\nChihuahas $25.00, Bird's Kennels, Blueberry Creek.\nWANTED TO RENT\nSM. FURN. APT. VICINITY\nMines Rd. pref. Box 3886, Nelson Daily 'News:\nTRAILERS\nPARTS 1 PARTS I PARTS I\nRa Lyn Mobile Home Sales,\nTrail.\nSathj Jfouts\nCirculation Dept., Ph. 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 tents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nIn advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month  _ % 2.00\nThree months     5.00\nSix months  _ -\u2014  10.00\nOne year    18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month   $ 2.00\nThree months _     6.00\nSix months _    1LO0\nOne year    20.00\nBy mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month    $ 2.50\nThree months _     7.00\nSix months    13.00\nOne year   24.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,   phone   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillison;\nIn Trail, Mrs. W. E. Spooner\nIn Kimberley, Mrs. A. W.\nBrown.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntlemen. Phone 352-2657 after 4\np.m.\nBOARD AND ROOM. PHONE\n352-6352.   ,\nPolice Watch\nCar Go\nAl 120 Miles\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nstood and watched at the weekend while a dragster hit 120\nmiles an hour on the city streets\nin his sleek, 600 - horsepower\nauto.\nThe Officers even went so\nfar as to block off the streets\nso Jack Williams, 32, could try\nout his custom car in preparation for the Feb. 15-17 Winter\nNational Drag Races in Pomona, Calif.\nThe trybut Was sponsored by\nthe British Columbia Custom\nCar Association.\nAlthough the dragster has a\nrated standing acceptation Of\n163 miles an hour, its top speed\non the wet road was only 120\nmiles an hour.\nSANDWICH UNION\nProfessional makers of Denmark's  traditional open  sandwich  \u2014  smorrebrod \u2014  have\ntheir own trade union.\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket showed renewed signs of\ntiring from its long advance\nMonday and settled irregularly\nlower on the lightest trading in\na month.\nThe loss was slight but the\nsession had a resemblance to\nlast Wednesday's, when a lower\ntrend was accompanied by dull\ntrading.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average dropped 1.18 to 682.01.\nVolume of 3,670,000 shares\ncompared with Friday's 4,280,-\n000 and was the smallest since\nJan. 2 when 2,540,000 shares\nchanged hands.\nDemand for Chrysler, General\nMotors, and American Telephone highlighted the session,\nbut all of these issues closed\nbeneath their best levels of the\nday. General Motors touched another new historic high and\nChrysler established a fresh\npeak for 1962-1963.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks eased .2 to 256.3.\nOf 1,314 issues traded, 618 declined and 433 advanced.\nChrysler returned to the top\nof the most-active list, rising %\nto 85% n 69,600 shares. Wall\nStreet anticipates that directors\nmay declare a higher dividend\nwhen they meet later this week.\nGeneral Motors was up Vs at\n63Vb.\nBesides International Nickel,\nwhich lost 1%, other losers\namong Canadian issues were\nDistillers Seagrams, which fell\n1 and Mclntyre Porcupine, down\n%. Walker Gooderham rose Vs\nand Hudson Bay Mining, Dome\nMines and Aluminium Ltd. Vi\napiece.\nPrices were mixed on the\nAmerican Exchange. Volume\nwas 1,070,000 shares compared\nwith 1,270,000 Friday. Preston\nwas up Va and Fargo Oil 1-16.\nDropping Vk each were Shawinigan, Jupiter Corp. and Scurry\nRainbow Oil.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock\nmarket\" remained on the downside all day Monday, only once\ngiving any resistance to selling\npressure.\nIndustrials were off l'\/i points.\nGolds showed the only plus\nsign, rising fractionally.\nLossers in a % to 5,i range\nwent to Abitibi, Trans-Canada\nPipe Lines, Canada Cement,\n| Calgary Power and Aluminium.\nAtlas Steel touched a 1962-63\npeak of ZIVs before closing at\n37, off Vs. The stock traded a\nhefty 60,000 shares.\nCanadian Celanese advanced\n% and Leland Publishing %,\nboth to post-1961 high prices.\nOn the exchange index, industrials dropped 1.26 to 598.64,\nbase metals .41 to 200.79 and\nwestern oils .70 at 115.97. Golds\nrose .53 to 91.37. Closing volume was 3,642,000 shares compared with 3,947,000 Friday.\nAmong base metals, International Nickel declined a point.\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting rose %.\nIn western oils, Calgary and\nEdmonton and Pacific Petroleum each dipped Vi. Home B\nj rose Vi.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stocks\nmoved lower on the Montreal\nand Canadian exchanges in\nmoderate trading Monday.\nInternational Nickel was a\nprominent loser, dropping 2V4 to\n71. Central Del Rio fell 25 cents\nto $8.65, Bank of Montreal fell\n% to 67'A in heavy trading and\nQuebec Natural Gas preferred\nlost three points to 88.\nAbitibi lost % to 40% among\npapers and Bell Telephone\ndropped Vt to 54% among utilities.\nHudson's Bay Company eased\nVs to 12%.\nOn index, the composite index\ndropped 0.6 to 120.6. The industrials index fell 0.7 to 121.1, utilities dropped 0.5 to 114.7, banks\nwere off 0.2 to 127.9 and papers lost 0.5 to 103.6.\nKennedy's Order Against\nShipping To Cuba Expected\nRECLAIM SAIND DUNES\nNearly half of Denmark's Jutland was formerly heathland\nand sand dunes but now has\nbeen reclaimed as cultivated\nfields and tree plantations.\nBy LEWIS GULISK\nWASHINGTON (API-Administration sources say they expect President Kennedy's long-\nawaited order against shipping\nto Cuba to be issued Shortly.\nThe order is reported still\nundergoing last - minute revisions. Informants expect a main\nfeature to be a ban on shipments of U.S. government or\ngovernment - financed cargoes\naboard vessels stopping at Cuba\nafter last Jan. 1.\nThe aim is to discourage non-\nCommunist ships from going to\nCuba, thus aiding the U.S. effort to isolate the regime of Fidel Castro. Supporters of the\nplan say it would increase the\nCommunist bloc's cost of supplying Cuba by forcing the\nCommunists to use more of\ntheir own ships.\nThe proposal at this point is\nwatered down from an administration plan advanced last\nfall. Informants said the penalties could be strengthened if the\nfirst order does not produce the\ndesired effect.\nthe shipping Order has been\ndelayed time and again Since\nWashington authorities first unveiled a four-point plan early in\nOctober and said they intended\nto issue detailed regulations\nwithin a matter of days.\nHINT AT REASONS\nU.S. authorities have\nremained close-mouthed on the\nsubject, except for hinting as to\nreasons for delay. One stated\nreason has been the complicated nature of a regulation\nthat could affect ships of many\ncountries. Another was the U.S.Soviet crisis over Cuba. Others\nwere the efforts to get invasion\nprisoners and Americans out of\nCuba. The U.S. longshoremen's\nstrike was another factor.\nIt is known also that there ts\na split opinion within the U.S.\ngovernment as to how effective\na shipping order would be, and\nthat several maritime countries'\nhave been cool to,the idea.     1\nU.S. diplomats have been urg'.\ning maritime allies to divert\ntheir ships from Cuba. State\nSecretary Rusk reported Friday\nthat the number of. non-Communist ships stopping at Cuba in\nJanuary was fewer than l\\\ncompared with 60 last July. The\ndefence department, w h i c h\nkeeps track of shipping to Cuba,\nhas declined on security\ngrounds to list the ships or the\nflags they fly.\nj CLOSE U.S. PORTS \u25a0;-'\nUnder the original four-point\nplan outlined by U.S. authorities last October:\n1. U.S. ports would be closed\nto the ships of any country\nwhose vessels carry arms to\nCuba. (Officials say they know\nof no weapons taken to Cuba\nin non-Communist ships.)\n2. U.S. government cargoes\nwould be denied to the ships of\nany company whose vessels are\nused in the Cuba -' 66viet blob\ntrade.\n3. No U.S. shipowners could\nengage in the Cuban trade.\n4. U.S. ports would be closed\nlo any ships which sought to\ncome to the United States on the\nsame voyage in which it engaged in Cuba-bloc trade.\nVANCOUVER (CP) -funeral\nservices will be held here tuesr\nday for Granville Myall, 57i\nformer president of the Canadian Figure Skating Association\nwho managed Canada's figure\nskating team at the 1960 Winter\nOlympics at Squaw Valley,\nCalif.\nHe died at the weekend in\nhospital where he had been ill\nabout three weeks.\nA native of Vancouver he was\na lawyer whose main outside\ninterest was figure skating. He\nwas leading judge, of sUch competitions for many ylart.\nSurviving are his wife, Myrtle\nand two children, Laurie, 11 and\nBrant, 9.\ni   \u25a0 ir i n- r   -    i\nBuyiBg-Selliiig-Reiitiiii\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n_\n\"WHWGP\nwm\nFIRST LIN!\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH UNI\nEIGHTH UNI\n* Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of number* or letters count as ont word)\n* Pur Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\n* Box Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE RATES, USE THIS TABLE:\nPer Lint\n1 Insertion\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n$ .20\n.33\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge Is hire- lines\n\u2022 Add 15c for Box Number\n\u2022 Take advantage ef the low six time rati\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20* a Line Per Tim*.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified A!\nrOURNAME.\nADDRESS __\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run ,\nBill Me\t\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C-\ni^_\u00bb_\nl^^^___^_____\n\u2014\n \u25a0':'.. ';'-\"\u25a0\n10-iNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1963\n\"It Would Be Disastrous\"\nIf you forgot that special one on\nST. VALENTINE'S  DAY\nRemind yourself to get that\nVALENTINE CARD or BOX OF\nCHOCOLATES   or   VALENTINE\nGIFT\nFrom the COMPLETE STOCK at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nLondon Judge Sentences\nReporters for Contempt\nLONDON (AP)-A high Court\njudge Monday sentenced two reporters- to jail terms for contempt of court in failing to disclose their sources of information.\nJudge Sir William Groman is-\n\u2022ued writs of attachment against\nBrendan Mulholland for six\nflip'.BthB imprisonment and\nagainst Reginald Foster for\nthree .months. Both writs were\nsuspended for five days,\ni The writs of attachment order\n(be court bailiff to take the men\ntoiail to serve their sentences.\nThe judge said that the five-\nday .suspension allowed time for\nthem to appeal, for their\nsources to come forward or for\nthe two men to change their\nminds. If none of this occurs,\nthey go to jail.\nMulholland, 29, is a reporter\n.for The Daily Mail. Foster, 58,\n;J$ 8. Daily Sketch reporter.\nBoth had refused to disclose\n'their, sources of information\nijhen testifying before a tribunal investigating the case of\n..admiralty clerk William John\nVassall, now serving an 18-year\nprison sentence for spying for\nIhe Russians.\nSPIED FOR 6 YEARS\n. The government set up the\ntribunal to investigate whether\nlax security at the admiralty\nallowed Vassall to spy unchecked for six years.\nMulholland refused to disclose\nwho told him the homesexual\nadmiralty clerk was known to\nhis colleagues as \"Aunty,\" that\na girl typist in Vassall's office\nwas convinced he could not\nhave supported his standard of\nliving by honest means, and\nthat two senior officials had\nsponsored Vassall and enabled\nhim to avoid the strictest part\nof g security check.\nFoster refused to disclose his\nsource of information that Vassal! bought women's clothing\nfor himself.\nAsked why he had refused to\ndisclose his source, Foster said:\n\"I am here purely on the stand\nof conscience, honesty and\nethics. . . .\n\"I did nothing more than my\nduty, as I see it, to my profession, and I feel that I also\ndid my duty to my country. . ..\n\"I would conceive it a dere-\nlection of my duty if I did anything to tarnish our long-cherished freedom of the press.\"\nVEES GET ORDERS\nVERNON (CP) \u2014 Penticton\nJunior Vees have been ordered\nby the Okanagan Junior Hockey\nLeague to have at least 12 players on their roster for the semifinal playoff series against\nKamloops Rockets starting\nWednesday. Only six. players\nturned out for a game in Kamloops Saturday night, bringing\nprotests from Kamloops officials.\nOdds... and Ends\nhyM.D.B. \t\nBlue Willow china display\nin 200-year-old Welsh dresser.\nA rather comical story came\nmy way the other day. One of\nNelson's businessmen stepped\nout of his office and noticed a\nred string across his doorway.\nHe thought it was some sort of a\nsurvey marker or \"something\"\nuntil, on looking up the street,\nhe noticed it was trailing from\na man's coat pocket. He tried to\nget the man's attention, to no\navail,' so as the man headed\nacross the intersection he called\nlto two. young fellows to stop him\nand tell him about the thing\nthat was following him down\nthe street. In the meantime, he\npicked it up to investigate and\nbroke it. The other man carried\non unconcernedly, after it was\nbrought to his attention. They\ntraced the string back to a ball\nof wrapping string under a store\n\u25a0counter. The clerks hadn't\nnoticed it either!\nBetween the time I had written the last column about the I\nBlue Willow and the time it got\ninto, the paper 1 received several\nother letters in answer to my\nSOS. It certainly gives one a\nwarm glow to realize people are\nso ready to help. I'm ever so\ngrateful to all who look the lime\nand troiA'c to s^nj in stores -,\\i\npoems. One which I was told\naccompanied a set of damask\nlinen tablecloth and serviettes\ndepicting the willow pattern\nnoted that \"a .gardener who\nlived in the small cottage on the\nleft of the pattern, overshadowed\nby a fir tree, helped the lovers\nescape. The three on the bridge\nare, Koong-shee with her distaff,\nher lover Chang with her jewel\nbox and the mandarin, her\nfather wilh his whip.\n* *   *\nIn the poem the last line in\nsome versions is \"A little fence\nto end my song.\" In the picture\naccompanying this column you\nsee an old \"Welsh dresser\" with\ndishes of the blue willow pattern\nas well as a weeping willow\npattern. The dresser is a family\nheirloom over 200 years old\nbelonging to Mr. and Mrs. H.\nW. Stones at Burton. I am hoping it will reproduce well enough\nthat you can appreciate the\nbeauty of this old piece of furniture, with its display of china.\n* *   *\nSo that finishes off the story\nof the Blue Willow. When I was\na child my grandmother had a\nset of this china and I can still\nin my mind's eye see her putting\nit out in her big old-fashioned\nkitchen, so it holds pleasant\nmemories for me too.\nBritish Representatives Fly\nTo U.S. For New Agreements\niwww\nBy ALAN HARVEY I flew to North America today to\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Two repre-1 flew to North America Monday\nsentatives of British agriculture to press a plan for international\nAccording To Pravda\nCanada Against U.S.\nNuclear Weapons\nMOSCOW (AP)-Pravda said\nMonday the United States request that Canada arm with\nAmerican nuclear weapons has\n\"aroused burning iudignation in\nCanada.\"\nUnder a heading of \"Washington's dictation,\" a Pravda commentary said the American\nmove was \"absolutely undisguised public pressure on a\nneighboring country.\"\nThe Communist party paper\nsaid the United States made the\ndemand Jan. 30 in disregard of\nCanada's national interests.\nTo hush up the ensuing dispute, Pravda said, State Secretary Dean Rusk apologized to\nCanada but he apologized only\nfor the sharp tone of the U.S.\nstatement and not for its content.\n\"Washington continues pushing Ottawa on to a road which\nholds out nothing good,\" Pravda\nsaid.\nOttawa Ready To Stand or\nFall by Commons1 Vote\nHAPPY WINNERS\u2014This Trail foursome, skipped\nby M. Ink (seated), captured the Nelson Cup by defeating E. Page of Trail in tha \"A\" competition finals,\nand also took the Grand Aggregate honors by winning over M. Craig of Nelson at the 25th annual\nKootenay Women's Bonspiel held here over the\nweekend. Other members of the rink are L. Jarrett,\nM. Karliner and N. Kwasney. Trail rinks made a clean\nsweep of the bonspiel by taking the honors in all\nfive competitions as well as Grand Aggregate play.\n\u2014Daily News photo by Bob Blackmore.\nBy JAMES NELSON\nOTTAWA (CP)-The government appears ready to stand or\nfall by a vote of the Commons\nthis week on an opposition challenge to its defence policy.\nIndications that Prime Minister Diefenbaker will dissolve the\n25th Parliament be fore the\nCommons has a chance to vote\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nHaigh Tru Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\nQueen City Rebekahs\nTuesday 8 p.m.\nPythian Sisters Spring Tea\nApril 20th\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts\nRepairs, Engraving\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\nBath mat sets, good color range\nat $4.95.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nAnnual Meeting Red Cross Society in Fort Room, Hume Hotel, Thursday, Feb. 7 at 7:30\np.m. All interested welcome.\nRegular meeting S.P.C.A. will be\nheld at Civic Centre, Wednesday,\nFeb. 6, 8 p.m. Election of officers.\nLADIES OF THE ORDER OF\nTHE ROYAL PURPLE\nThe Auxiliary of the B.P.O. Elks\nLuncheon at the Canadian Legion, Thursday, Feb. 7, 11:30\na.m. \u2014 1:30 p.m. $1.00.\nKILLED AT MILL\nVERNON (CP)\u2014A man killed\nlate last week in a mill accident\nat nearby Lumby was identified\nas Leonard Carl Burley, 47. Witnesses said a plank fell from a\nroller, hit a whirling saw and\nstruck Burley on the head. He\ndied of a fractured skull and\nneck.\nUK'S FORESTS\nTlie Forestry Commission of\nGreat Britain owns more than\n500 forests, totalling 1,600,000\nacres.\nWinner of A.C.T. 100-A-Month\nClub\u2014Nick Osachoff, Passmore.\nMan badly splashed Edgewood\nAve. alleyway, Feb. 4, please\ncall 352-2849 after 5.\nClearance of men's work gloves.\nArno Sommerfeld Shoe Shop\n563 Ward St.\nWEST KOOTENAY BIG GAME\nTROPHY COMPETITION\nAnnual meeting.7:30 p.m. February 7, 1963 in the main lounge\narea of the Cominco Arena at\nTrail, B.C. Anyone interested invited to attend.\nAnniversary Announcement\nMr. and Mrs. W. Shkwarok,\n120 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar,\nwill be \"at home\" to their\nfriends and acquaintances on\nSunday, February 10, from 1\np.m. until 5 p.m. on the occasion\nof their 50th wedding anniversary.\nATTENTION B.C. GOVT.\nEMPLOYEES AND CREDIT\nUNION MEMBERS\nGeneral meeting B.C.G.E.A. will\nbe held at the Canadian Legion\nHall Tues., Feb. 5 at 8 p.m. Arrangements for the annual banquet and dance will be followed\nby the.annual meeting of P.G.E.\nCredit Union. Please attend.\nCARD OF THANKS\nGil, Bonnie, Judy and Bev. Gilbert wish to express their sincere thanks to their many\nfriends and neighbors for their\nacts of kindness, offers of assistance, messages of sympathy\nand the lovely flowers which\nthey received during their recent\nbereavement. A very special\nthanks to Dr. Carpenter, Dr.\nBrummitt, Mrs. J. Seaby, Fire\nChief Owens, Rev. Faris and\npallbearers.\nItalians Solidly\nBehind ECM Plan\nLONDON (AP)-Prime Minister Macmillan has returned\nhome from a three-day visit to\nRome with solid Italian backing\nfor Britain's campaign to join\nthe Common Market despite\nPresident de Gaulle's opposition.\n\"I have been very much encouraged ... by the unanimity\nof the Italian and British points\nof view,\" Macmillan told reporters in Rome. \"A setback is\nnot the end of the journey.\"\nMacmillan and Italian Premier Fanfani in a communique\ndeplored the breakdown in the\nBrussels negotiations, caused\nby the French veto of Britain's\nmembership bid, and agreed\nthat efforts should be made to\nsalvage the drive for European\nunity despite the setback.\n\"Meanwhile, they (Macmil\nIan and Fanfani) will extend\nand strengthen the close consul\ntation which already exists in\nthe political and economic\nfields, both on a bilateral basis\nand with other states which\nshare the common aim of European unity,\" the communique\nsaid.\nThe communique expressed\nsupport for President Kennedy's\nplan for a multi-nation. nuclear\nNATO force which de Gaulle\nhas rejected.\nBritain and Italy have agreed\nto accept Polaris missiles\nfrom the United States under\nKennedy's plan, but de Gaulle\nhas insisted that France will develop its own nuclear striking\npower.\nDe Gaulle came under attack\nfrom Belgian foreign minister\nPaul-Henri Spaak, who told the\nBrussels    socialist   paper   Le\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nOttawa\u2014Chief Justice Patrick\nKerwin, 73, chief justice of the\nSupreme Court of Canada.\nNew York\u2014William Gaxton,\n69, onetime musical comedy\nstar and film actor.\nJacksonville, Fla. \u2014 Charles\nSteinmetz, 38, who weighed 670\npounds.\nOne of the Biggest Scientific\nMeetings Has Opened In Geneva\nGENEVA\u2014One of the biggest\nscientific conferences ever held\nwas formally opened Monday in\nGeneva's Palace of Nations.\nNearly 2,000 scientist and\ntechnicians from 80 countries attended the opening session. The\ntwo-week meeting, sponsored by\nthe United Nations, aims to\nmake modern scientific\nand technological achievements\navailable to the poorer nations\nseeking development.\nConference President Malek-\nlal S. Thacker of India suggested in his formal opening\nspeech that a permanent brains\ntrust of scientists be set up under UN auspices to promote\ntechnical progress ir, the underdeveloped countries.\nThacker is director-general of\nIndia's Council of Scientific and\nIndustrial Research.\nIn a message read at the\nopening session, Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker said Canada is determined to play a full part in\naccelerating economic and social development in the coming\ndecade.\nHe said Canada's efforts to\nassist underdeveloped countries\ndemonstrated the determination\nof the Canadian people to play\ntheir part in the effort to accelerate economic and social development.\nCost of the conference is expected to reach $5,000,000 and\ncopies of- reports and documents\nalready submitted weigh 200\ntons.\nCanada's 19-member delegation has submitted 29 papers, 12\ndocumentary films and other\nmaterial The Canadians are led\nby Dr. J. W. T. Spinks, president of the University of Saskatchewan.\n\u2022WIPE OUT WANT'\nSoviet Premier Khrushchev\nsaid in a'message mankind had\na unique opportunity \"to wipe\nout want and sickness throughout the world.\"\nIn a message quoted by the\nSoviet news agency Tass\nKhrushchev said:\n\"We are living in an era of\ngreat social changes and wonderful new discoveries of science and technology, an era of\nthe conquest of space.\n\"Mankind has today an opportunity as never before to build\nup an abundance of material\nwealth, to develop cultural life,\neducation, to wipe out want and\nsickness throughout the world.\"!\nPeuple \"the increasing nationalist spirit\" in France threatens\nthe future of a unified Europe,\nwhere \"the notion of an imposed leadership is inconceivable.\"\nSpaak said Europe needs\nBritain \"more than ever now\nthat the democratic spirit is\nfading in some countries and\nnationalism\u2014which we thought\ndead\u2014is awakening.\"\non the issue waned over the\nweekend.\nIt was reliably reported that\na number of influential ministers have impressed on their\ncolleagues the danger of the\ngovernment itself calling an\nelection now, both to its own\nProgressive Conservative party\nprestige, and to the state of the\neconomy.\nMr. Diefenbaker, who met\nwith his cabinet Sunday, was\nreported to be in excellent spirits, confident of the outcome of\nthe next two days in Parliament.\nPREFER COMMONS DEFEAT\nThe influential ministers, reportedly including Senator Wallace B. McCutcheon, apparently\nbelieve the government would\nbe in a stronger position on the\nhustings if it were defeated in\nthe Commons on the issue of defence policy, rather than appear\nto run away in the face of a\nthreatened defeat.\nHarold Woolley, president of\nthe National Farmers Union,\nand Asher Winegarten, chief union economist, left London for\nthe U.S. on the first leg of a\njourney that will take in Washington and Ottawa.\nThey will arrive in Ottawa\nWednesday and the next day\nwill confer with H. H. Hannam,\npresident of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture.\nWoolley said one of his main\naims will be to discuss the union's world food program, outlined last August, which stresses\nthe practical aspects of international commodity arguments.\nThe ability of primary producers to continue to buy industrial products is entirely dependent on a reasonable stability of prices,\" said Woolley.\n\"There is no surer way of ending the inhumane and potentially dangerous situation of too\nmuch food in one section of the\nworld and too little in another.\"\nNO  HEADWAY MADE\nWoolley said that up until\nnow the program has been\n\"hamstrung\" by British negotiations at Brussels on entry into\nthe Common Market.\n\"Now they are over, we can\ngo ahead with talks on our commodity plan,\" he said.\nHe said the plan is \"an alternative to the Common Market\"\nand the British government\nshould take the initiative and\ncall for an international agriculture conference.\nWoolley will return to Britain\nin a week's time to prepare for\na crucial confrontation with Agriculture Minister Christopher\nSoames. The occasion will be\nthe annual farm price review,\ntaking place at a time when the\nbreakdown of the Brussels negotiations has left the British government in a quandary on agricultural policy.\nSubsidies to agriculture now\nrun about &350,000,000 a year,\nleading to claims by industry\nand consumers that farmers are\naided too much. Soames has indicated the subsidy system will\nhave to be changed whether or\nnot Britain joins Europe.\nThe farmers union represents\nsome 200,000 members, about 90\nper cent of the farming population in England and Wales.\nNEW\nCARDIGANS\nby\nJANTZEN\nNew STRIPES\nNew STYLES\nNew SHADES\nSEE THEM\n...TODAY!\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nHARKNESS TO\nRUN FOR\nCALGARY NORTH\nCALGARY (CP) - Douglas\nHarkness plans to run again as\nProgressive Conservative candidate in Calgary North.\nDr. John T. Porter, president\nof the Calgary North Federal\nProgressive Conservative Association, said Monday he talked\nto Mr. Harkness minutes after\nhis resignation as defence minister was announced.\n\"There is no doubt whatsoever\nabout him being our candidate,\"\nsaid Dr. Porter.\nHove the Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\n* LIMITED       *\"\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed   While   You   Walt\nFREE DELIVERY\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611 Box 460\nfe:\nI\nI\nw\nv^\/ie cflaLlmark\ndah\nrt       \u00a7    |\nCJnlegnly j\nircmation i\nis\ni. j\nIn the same way that STERLING on silver\nsignifies a standard of known value, so is\nthis A.B.C. emblem a symbol of FACTS\nabout the circulations of newspapers and\nperiodicals. It is the emblem of membership\nin the Audit Bureau of Circulations* and is\nassurance to advertisers that the circulations\nof member publications are measured,\naudited and reported in accordance with\nthe rigid standards that have been mutually approved and adopted by\nadvertisers-and publishers.\nHere's why our membership\niiiii\n*Th\u00ab Audit Bureau of Clreu-\n'\u25a0 -lotions, of which this newspaper\nis a member, is a cooperative,\nnonprofit association of 3,57S advertisers,\nadvertising agencies and publishers. Or*\nganized in 1914, A.B.C. brought order out\nof advertising chaos by establishing: A definition for paid circulation) rvles and\nstandards for auditing and reporting the\ncirculations of newspapers and periodicals.\nin the A.B.C, is important to our advertisers-\nand ourselves: At regular intervals one of the\nBureau's large staff of experienced circulation auditors makes a thorough inspection\nand audit of our circulation records. The\nresults of this exacting audit show: how\nmuch circulation we have; where it goes;\nhow it was obtained; and many other FACTS\nthat advertisers need as a sound basis for\ntheir advertising investments. This audited\ninformation is published by the Bureau in\neasy-to-read A.B.C. reports which are available to our advertisers on request.\nNelson lathj\nmum\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}