 Tourist Influx
At 1950 Proportions
Records Shattered at Radium, Nelway
Border Traffic Exceeds Last Year
' . -    The tourist trade, lucrative Kootenay industry, ij living
up to its reputation this Summer.
, "It's normal," one Nelson auto court operator said
Thursday, and he seemed to sum the situation for most of
Kootenay  Lake,  West Arm
and Nelsbn resorts,
While some of 'the resort owners
queried in a survey expressed the
opinion that business had dropped
off (putting it down to the war),
the others think Americans and
Prairie people are ' travelling as
much as ever.
In 1950, some 165,100 American
and other foreign visitors entered
the Kootenay-Boundary. -    .
In the East Kootenay, this is 'certainly the case. Attendance at Radium Hot Springs on. the weekend
shattered all previous records. In
three days 1247 cars passed through
. Kootenay Park gateway from the
West with 4151 passengers, a traffic
increase of 256 per cent over the
same three days last year, and Monday 493 cars went well,.over the
previous one-day record pf 415. ...
Four hundred holiday-happy pad-
dlers jammed the swimming pools,
and , Suhday's attendance of 1984
was exactly 933 more than the record. AH in all, attendance in the
three days'cxceedcd last year's by
85 per cent.        '    , :   '
Heavy traffic is also expected for
this weekend and next as tourists
and East Kootenay residents pass
through .the park gateway erf route
to the Calgary Stampede and return. Tourist traffic in the Windermere district will be at its peak during the next three weeks.
At Nelway last month, American traffic was way up from the
same month last year. Foreign
- cars travelling Into Canada were
871,' compared with 674 last year,
and foreign cars bound for the
United States were up from 617
to 768. Canada-bound passengers
Increased from 3607. to 4162, and
U.S.-bound passengers rose from
3911 to 4202.
"Not so good," "same as last year
and "better than last year" were
some of the ways district auto court
owners described their business.
Some wondered if Americans are
touring the countryside like they
Used to, others answered in a definite "yes". ;.".■-■
One ventured the idea that the
war may be making Uncle Sam's
people more "stay - at - home -ish".
. "They say 'our boys may be in .it
any day' ", she said. •
But G. M. (Monty) Armstrong of
Kaslo, president of Kootenay Lake
Auto Court and Resort Owners
Association, Vice-President of the
B.C. organization and President of
Kaslo Board of Trade, was pessimistically optimistic: "The're*sorts will
have nobody for a week and then
they'll be filled-to the gunwales',
he said. "It's a normal year; as good
os last." ,
The tourist trade brought an estimated $8Vi million into Kootenay-
Boundary in 1950. ■ . ■
"MOST BEAUTIFUL SPOT"
'Nelson Board of Trade has had
more than 75 visitors so far this
month, and more than 25 on July 4.
In June 400 people from practically
every province of Canada and State
of the Union signed the guest book.
In the rerharks column, they had
a few nice things lo say about Nelson and the Kootenays. A Seattle
man wrote "most beautiful spot ln
the world", a Vancouver couple
jotted down "the most beautiful
spot we have seen since leaving
Vancouver", and other notations included: "very nice place", "everyone .is friendly and helpful", "magnificent city", "very interesting
city" and a plain "thanks for the
maps."
40 Buildings Burn
In Village Fire
CAP CHAT, Que., July 5 fCP)-*-
A raging fire today destroyed about
40 buildings in this Gasne Peninsula village leaving 200 persons
homeless.
Heavy rain about three hours
after the fire started in the Western end of ihe village, came to the
rescue of volunteer fire-fighters.
The great blaze, driven by a
fierce wind sweeping across the
St. Lawrence River from the
Northeast, was brought under control by the 300 volunteer firemen,
just bSfore noon. ,
No deaths or serious injuries
we^re reported.*
No one was sure of the exact
point of origin in the confusion
that resulted as flying embers
rained down among the small
wooden homes bunched at Cap
Chat's Western outskirts.
70 CHILDREN
DIE IN BLAST
Pleasure Craft
Erupts on
East Berlin River
BERLIN, July 5 (Reute.rs) —
More than 70 children were feared killed. In an explosion on a
pleasure steamer on * the East
Berlin Spree River today.
Eyewitnesses said the steamer
was taking a party of 200 East
German children aged betvyeen
10 and 12 to a holiday camp on
the Baltic.
Fifteen children were reported
taken to hospital With severe
burns.
Earlier reports from the West
Berlin police said the steamer's
boiler had exploded.
East Berlin authorities refused
an offer of help from West German police and firemen, the po*
lice said.
Eyewitnesses said: "The children
waved and shouted as they passed
under the bridge we were standing
on. Three minutes later when they
were about 3C0 yards downstream
there was a loud explosion and a
column of black smoke shot up in
the air.
"It was difficult to see what
happened then. Flames broke out
and we saw some of the children
jump in the water.
"The steamer was only 50 yards
from the bank of the Spree but it
seemed ages before any help
arrived."
Most of the victims were drowned. Six were killed in the fire.
"Many of the children could not
swim," the witnesses said. "Eventually the steamer was towed to tho
bank and the remaining children
jumped ashore. The flames were
then put out."
The West German News Agency
DP A said a number of the bystanders jumped into the water and
rescued up to 50 children.
This afternoon two East German
police boats fished witty nets for
bodies.-
The steamer, the Homeland, was
burnt out      v   .
Canada Plans
For Royal Visit
OTTAWA, July 5 (CP) — A
committee of high government officials today embarked on the delicate' task of working out the details
of the visit this Fall of Princess
Elizabeth and her husband, the
Duke of Edinburgh.
The committee opened the first
of what probably will be a long
series of meetings until the Royal
Couple arrive early in October for
a three-week coast-to-coast tour.
Meantime, communications began
to trickle into the capital from
across the country, bringing suggestions as to the route the royal
tour should take.
The route and the stopping-places
will be determined by the committee, subject .to the Princess's approval.
However, the nip is not expected
to be the whistle-stop, state dinner
and parade of pageantry type of
jaunt which marked the 1939 royal
visit of the King and Queen. It is
noted that Princess Elizabeth herself, in accepting Canada's invitation, asked that the visit be kept
as simple as possible.
The committee is headed by
Charles Stein, under-secretary of
state. As his right-hand assistant he-
has Howard Measures, the government's chief of protocol.
The committee will have to decide whether — again subject to the
approval' of the Princess herself —
lhe heiress presumptive to the
tlirone should address a joint session
of parliament. The Fall session is
scheduled to open Oct. 9.
FILE3 $20,000 SUIT
MERIDEN, Conn., July 5 (AP)—
A su.it for $20,000 has been.filed by
Mrs. Mary Lombardo of Meriden
against ftobert Thornton, captain of
the ill-fated fishing vessel, "The
Jack" which sank in Long Island
Sound June 10. Her husband, Antonio, died with 10 others."
"BEST WAY TO TRAVEL" SAYS B. C.'s
HITCH-HIKING HORSEWOMAN
CALGARY, July 5 (CP) -
Take it from Marjorie Childer-
stone of Kelowna, B. C—hitchhiking with a horse is the best
way to travel.
And she should know. She and
her chestnut gelding "Rusty"
have just finished a four-week,
600-mile trip through the Rocky
Mountains.
The hitch-hiking horse and his
pretty rider came through sleet
and snow, hail and rain from Kelowna to Calgary and never parted company.   •
Marj says Rusty wanted to see
the Calgary Stampede so she
thought she'd come along, too.
The 19-year-old horsewoman,
windburned after her trip
through  the  mountains,  arrived
in Calgary during the holiday
weekend with Rusty.
Hitch-hiking with a horse, Miss
Childerstone says, is the best
method of travelling, sight-seeing
and horseback riding all at once.
And it's economical, too.
Rusty's got the best of treatment on the trip, with a liniment
rub down every night to save
wear and tear on his legs and
special care for his shoes.
The two ramblers were saved
' many miles on their trip by truck
drivers and ranchers who stopped to give the hitch-hikers lifts.
Accommodation along the way
was provided by friendly farmers—and instead of losing weight
on the long trip. Rusty landed in
Calgary in fine shape.
w&
WEATHER FORECAST
KOOTENAY:
Cloudy Friday. Showers in the af-.
ternoon and evening. Cooler. Light
Winds. Low and high tomorrow at
Cranbrook 45 and 70, Crescent Valley 45 and 75. .
Vol. SO
'■c*wq£*;.'"w*'*
^ l°roltU
NELSON, B.C., CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 6, 1951
5 Cents a Copy
No. 63
Rii^^^Chine^e Complete j ran Rejects  Plan
Plans for First Peace Talks
By DON HUTH
TOKYO, July 6 (Friday) (AP)
—The Communists and Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway today agreed on
final terms for a preliminary armistice meeting Sunday and
Ridgway promised Red Mason officers Immunity from air attack.
Earlier In the day the' Communists announced they would
guarantee safe conduct for Aliled
liaison officers proceeding to the
meeting site at Kaesong, threo
miles South of parallel 38 and 30
air miles Northwest of Seoul,
The Supreme Allied Commander
in reply to this message, guaranteed immunity for- the. Communist
party from Pyongyang, the North
Korean capital to Kaesong. Ridgway
also said a five-mile radius around
Kaesong would be a neutral zone
from the time the Red emissaries
arrive. .'-.'-, '•'■'.- '.., _ N
This' meeting will lay the groundwork for the : formal conference
starting at Kaesong Tuesday.
The.Chinese in their message had
suggested the Allies travel by jeep
instead of helicopter to "cut down
the possibility of a misunderstanding."
Ridgw"ay's broadcast reply, however, said "my delegates will proceed by helicopter or jeep as dictated by the weather." He addd
that they would cross the Imjin
River on the Seoul, Koesong road at
9 a.m. Tokyo time Sunday regardless of how they travelled.
The Communists said that their
liaison group would leave Pyongyang at 5 a.m. Saturday in five
jeeps and five motor transports
carrying white flags.
Ridgway Thursday requested that
the Communists guarantee the safety of his delegates to the preliminary conference.
Rfc^^adcLtTrPe!?130"5!^' E,a>'li»S Monday.
ping  at 8  a.m.   (6 p.m.  Thursday
EDT.)
AP Correspondent Nate Polowetzky reported from Eighth Army
headquarters that a reliable source
said Ridgway had named three
colonels to the U.N. liaison unit.
These were reported to be a U.S.
:.\;y.::;..[...^::;/..:..:;--.^:r..:—y'
HERE IS A VIEW OF THE WATERFRONT at Kaesong, Korels,
some two miles below the 38th parallel, where the preliminary armistice meeting will be held,—Central Press Canadian,
Curlers Start March
On City This Weekend
From now until Monday, a different kind of tourist
will arrive in Nelson, distinguishable by his clothing and
equipment and maybe a slight burr.
The plaid jackets and brooms will be a dead give-away
for more than 200 curlers who will move in op the town for
Nelson's  annual Midsummer ~
To Keep Oil Flowing
U.S. DIPLOMATS
ORDERED OUT
Hungary Labels
Pair "Unwelcome";
Given 24 Hours
BUDAPEST, July 5 (AP)—Hungary today ordered two United
States diplomats to leave this country within 24 hours, labelling them
"Persona Non Grata" (unwelcome
persons.)
The note was handed' to the U.S.
legation after the United States
rejected Hungary's previous demand that three members of the
legation be recalled as plotters
against Hungary's Communist government.
The two diplomats Involved must
cross the Hungarian border inlo
Austria by Friday at 1 p.m.
The Hungarian note said that
Budapest "considers legation secretary Albert Scherer, Jr., and attache
Ruth Trypn persona non grata and
demands that they leave the territory of the country within 24 hours
upon receipt of the present note."
International Court Proposal for
Interim Solution "Very Welcome" to
Britain; May Seek U. N. Aid
By HENDRIK KERSTING
THE HAGUE, July 5 (AP)—The International Court
of Justice proposed today that Britain and Iran agree on
an interim plan for keeping Iranian oil flowing until the
court can reach a decision in the bitter dispute.
Iran rejected the court proposals.
British officials said the proposals were "very welcome
to us." They said Britain would try to follow the recommendations set down in the 3500-word decision if Iran would
agree. Britain indicated that if Iran refused to agree, Britain
might put the oil case before_the U.N. Security Council.
But  Iran  clung  to
When one considers the' sisters,
cousins and. aunts, the influx will
be terrific. More people are accompanying the curlers than in any
previous bonspiel, and one curler
alone has 18 people in his band,
Saturday and Sunday they'll have
 _ „  „._, a  chance  to  see  Nelson  Garden
marine, a U.S. "air force oficer and' CIuo's rose show. The first rock
a South Korean army officer. Thefwi11 be thrown Monday'at 7 a.m.
source said an army major would by May°r N-  c-  Stibbs and the
aot as co-ordinator but it was not
clear whether he would gc to Koesong, the Reds' chosen meeting
rilace about-35 road 'miles'Northwest of Seoul.
In broadcasts Thursday night and
early Friday, the Peiping radio said
Communist China must continue to
aid Korea, even if a peaceful settlement is possible.     '
It quoted a statement by the China
Peace Committee which called for
increased subscriptions to the Red
campaign to buy warplanes for
Korean fighting.
ATOMIC ENERGY
CONTROLLER QUITS
LONDON, July 5 (API-Resignation of Lord Portal, Britain's atomic
energy controller, was announced in
Ihe House of Lords today as the
government was criticized for allowing its atom-bomb program to
fall behind Russia's.
A spokesman for the Ministry of
Supply said Lord Portal, wartime
commander of the Royal Air Force,
now "has work of his own that he
would like to do."
But Lord Cherwell,* wartime scientific adviser to Winston Churchill, told the Lords that Lord Portal
was displeased by the maze of red
tape and lack of progress under the
government's present atomic energy
organization.
Lord Cherwell asked that the
atomic energy program be taken
out of the hands of the civil service
under the Ministry of Supply and
be put under "a free organization
which could move fast and tighten
up security arrangements." The
House of Lords voted 52 to 31 to
back the motion.
Gets 60 Days for
Wounding Wife
VANCOUVER, July 5 (CP) —
Wilfred L. Marshall, 35-year-old Edmonton laundryman, today was sentenced to 60 days in jail for wounding his estranged wife, Louise, on
May 11.
Marshall pleaded guilty a week
ago when the Crown reduced the
charge against him from wounding
with intent to cause grievous bodily
harm to the lesser charge of wounding.
Marshall stabbed his 33-year-old
wife with a pocketknife after trying to effect a reconciliation.
4-Power Talks Resume
BERLIN, 'July 5 (AP)—Four-
power talks In. Berlin on trade
and .transport questions resumed
today after a two-year lapse.
The Russians sent their occupa
tion economics chief, V. Bashkin,
to  Join   with 'American,   British
and   French   officials   at   British
headquarters.
The core of the proDlem was
West Berlin's -need for an unhampered flow of imports and exports through the Russian zone
which surrounds the city. The
Russian interest in discussing the
whole subject appeared to Allied
officials to be concentrated on
stopping illegal smuggling of
scarce raw materials from the East
Into West Berlin.
Mayor will officially welcome the
curlers at the bonspiel^-ball Monday night.   ■'■ ■. . "...,, ■■-. •
Entertainment this year will be
lighter than last. Feeling of .the
local curlers was that last year's
program left the visitors too little
time to themselves.    •
Last year's Canadian Midsummer
curling champ was Art Simpson of
Bassano, Alta., who won't be along
to defend the crown. Neither will
Garnet Campbell of'Avonlea, Sask.,
winner of the Kootenay challenge,
secondary event, but George Stuart
of Fintry, B.C., who tool/ the
Queen City competition will be In
the running.'Rosebud competition
last year went to Art Waters of
Nelson.
Among the more than 50 skips
are several men who have been to
previous 'spiels, such as E. O. Parry
of Morrin, Alta., Ivan Staples of
Creston and Jim Taylor of Portage,
Wise.
Skips are:
U.S.A.
Jim Taylor, Portage, Wise; Hugh-
ston McBain, Chicago. 111.
MANITOBA ., ■
G. W. Lick" Swan River.
SASKATCHEWAN
Norman Fawcett, Wartime; J. A.
Lawton, Tessier; P. T. Andrews,
North Battleford; W. G. Nesbitt,
Saskatoon; Bert Tlirner, Kyle; S.
Gill, Leader.
ALBERTA.
A. J. Barron, Picture Butte; John
Sande, Eagle Hill; Henry Zak,
Blairmore; G. H. Thompson and J.
C. Aird, Devon; W. A. Seyer, Botha;
Lawrence Yeoman and Howard
Thurber, Blackie; A. W. Shaw,
Vegreville; J: J. Cairns, Mirror;-W.
Munroe, Vulcan;, .Harold Killick,
Jack Stronach and Jack Newsham,
Kocky Mountain House; E. O. Parry,
Morrin; Roger Dion, Edmonton;
Stan Bernard, Conrich; Les Legg,
SteMler; Bert Laing, Carsland; M.
M. Hurl and J. Leslie, Mossleigh;
H. McLevin, Red Deer; W. J. Gut-
owski, Dyasland; Billy Rose, Sedgwick; W. A, McDonald, Calgary; J.
J. Hines, Bow Island; L. C. Mclntyre, Viking; W. W. Permann, Carbon; D. A. Edwards, Ferintosh; W.
S. Robinson, McLaughlin; L. W.
Kidd, Morley; Bob Brown and T.
C. Brown, Gleichen; T. H. Martin,
Lethbridge; A. S. Ellis, High River;
Con Peterson, Milo; R. A. Cameron,
minora; W. A. Lawson, Irma.
BRITISH COLUMBIA
George Turner, Quesnel; T. M.
Towriss, Princeton; Bill Cassidy,
Pioneer Mine; Art Salter, Copper
Mountain; George Stuart, Fintry;
Robert Eccleston, Chapman Camp;
E; J. Avery, Salmo; Ivan Staples,
Creston; Jim Harvey, H. M. Whimster, Dr. L. J. Mauer, Dick Palmer,
Joe Kotch, Art Wallace, E. C. Hunt
and C. H. Parrish, Nelson.
A. L Smith, P.C.
Member, Resigns
OTTAWA, July 5 (CP)—Resignation of A. L. Smith, Progressive
Conservative Member of the Commons for Calgary West, today was
delivered formerly to Speaker Ross
Macdonald. Mr. Smith announced
last January that he planned to re-lFieTd, secretary of the Civil Rights
Millionaire Held
In Contempt of Court
NEW YORK, July 5"(AF) — A
Federal judge held millionaire
Frederick Vanderbilt Field ln contempt 'of court today when he refused to divulge the names of individuals who put up $80,000 bond
for four runaway convicted Communist leaders.
Judge Sylvester J. Ryan acted
after   he   repeatedly   had   ordered
sign because of ill-health.
The resignation was sent to the
Speaker by George Drew, Progressive Conservative Leader. In a
statement, Mr. Drew said that while
Mr. Smith had announced it was
necessary for him to resign "those
of us who had been associated wilh
iiim in the House continued to hope
that it might be possible for him to
return." ,
The statement continued;
"In addition to Mr. Smith's outstanding contribution to debates in
the House and his position of recognized authority in several branches
of parliamentary work, his knowledge of the- immensely important
oil development in Alberta was of
great value so us and to the House."
With Mr. Smith's resignation the
standing in the Commons is:
Liberals 185; Progressive Conservatives 45; C.C.F. 13; Social
Credit 10; Independent four; Independent Liberal four vacant one;
total 262.
Holiday Deaths Low
CHICAGO, July 5 (AP). - The
Unjted States' July 4th t'raflic death
toll was below the National Safety
Council's estimated 130 and one of
the lowest for the holiday in se
eral years.
iVateA. 6&wsh-
Nelson
Wednesday   Thursday
10.85 10.88
(Feet above zero.)
Congress Bail Fund, to produce the
names of the contributors.
Field is a descendant of a family
long prominent in U.S. financial and
social circles.
Something New
TORONTO, July 5 (CP) — A
rare "one-way" formula for a cost-
of-living bonus was proposed today in a conciliation board report.
The board suggested that 44 Toronto electrical contractors grant
their- 1000 employees, members of
Local 353, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (A.F.
of" L.-T.L.C.) a, five-cent-an-hour
wage boost for each five-noint rise
in the cost-of-living—with no deductions if prices drop.
$200 Million in
Exports to U. S.
OTTAWA, July 6 (CP)—Canada's exports to the United
States climbed by almost $200,-
000,000 In the first five months
of 1951, to bring total domestic
shipments to all countries to a
record $1,427,700,000.
Virtually every kind of Canadian commodity normally exported to the U.S. shared In the
boost, the Bureau of Statistics
reported today In a detailed picture of exports In May and In
the first five months of the year.
Appoinlmenls
For Three
Infantry Soldiers
OTTAWA, July 5 (CP) — The
Army today announced new appointment for three of its top infantry soldiers^
Col. F. A. Clift, 43, D.S.O., formerly of Melfort, Sask., will leave
his present post as director of military training here towards the end
of the year to attend the Imperial
Defence College in the United
Kingdom.   ,
Col. Roger Rowley, 37, D.S.6., and
Bar, of Ottawa, will succeed Col.
Clift. He now is director of infantry,
Col. D. F.-Forbes, 44, D.S.O. and
Bar, of Sydney, N.S., now com
mander of the Army's base at Fort
Churchill, Man., will succeed Col.
Rowley as director of infantry.
A successor to Col. Forbes at-Fort
Churchill has not been named.
The three officers have outstanding records as infantry soldiers,
each having commanded a battalion
overseas during the Second World
War. All three won tha D.S.O. for
gallantry and leadership.
18 Forest Fires for
Southwestern B. C.
VANCOUVER, July 4 (CP) -
Eighteen forest fires, three of them
out of control, were burning in
Southwestern British Columbia today.
Broken .terrain was hampering 47
firefighters trying to stop a fire
near the Pacific Great Eastern Railway tracks about 100 miles North
of here.
Also out of control were two 600
acre fires, one near Up-coast Pender
Harbor and the other on Redonda
Island between Vancouver Island
and the mainland.
Despite showers, woodlands were
still dry and the travel ban imposed
last week remained in effect.
Firefighters also kept a close eye
on the 20,000-acre Campbell River
fire on Vancouver Island, under
control bu't still smouldering. A high
wind could send it out of control
again.
its uncompromising determination to seize
full control of the Anglo-Iranian
Oil Company's wells and refineries
on the Persian Gulf.
Britain had asked the court to
propose interim measures as a matter of greatest urgency to stave off
the threatened complete shutdown
of her Iranian oil operations.
Britain also accused Iran of violating international law in nationalizing the British-owned company
and asked for an Injunction against
its seizure by the Iranian Government. The .court apparently will
decide on the charges and the request for an injunction after it determines whether it has Jurisdiction in the case.
The U N.-sponsored court rejected an Iranian request that it
declare outright that lt had no jurisdiction.
The court recommended appointment of a five-man board to supervise continued operations of the
company under its present British
management.
The Board, to be made up of two
representatives from Britain, two
from Iran and one from a neutral
country, would administer all revenues in excess of ihe company's
normal operating expenses. Excess
funds would be deposited in banks
chosen by the board.   '
The court asked that Britain
..-..and. Iran. do nothing- to-- hinder
the company from operating as
It did prior to May 1, 19§1 — the
effective date of Iranian oil nationalization.
Before the court's proposals, Foreign   Secretary  Herbert   Morrison
.told the House of Commons In Lon-
don these conditions "are becoming
intolerable" for Britons in the Iranian oil area.
In Tehran, Nasser Quill Ardalan,
a member of the Iranian Parliament's joint Oil Nationalization
Board, said British technicians
must leave the oilfields unless they
promise "full obedience" to the
Government's Iranian National Oil
Company.
WANT TO LEAVE
He iold Parliament the world'l
largest refineries at Abadan ■ may
be closed within 25 days.'
Dispatches from Abadan said
British workers were pressing to
be withdrawn from Iran.
Officials   expressed   little   hop*
that Iran  would be able to find
elsewhere  the  skilled   technician!
and managers to run the intricate
oil operations if the British cleared
out.
  \
WASHINGTON, July S (Reuters)
—An Iranian Embassy spokesman
today said several American oil-
tanker companies have offered
tankers and other facilities to
transport oil from Iran and replace the British tanker fleet operated by the Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company.
He declined to amplify a state-
merit to Parliament in Tehran made
iby Nasergholi Ai-delan, member oi
the Iranian Oil Company appointed...
to take over the British company,
Ardelan   said   the   Embassy   in .
Washington had received a "serious
offer from the second largest oil-
tanker company in the world."
Music Festivals National Body
To Hold 1952 Conference in Nelson
The 1952 conference of the Federation of Canadian Music Festivals
will be held in Nelson, it has been
learned. ■•
Nelson Music Festival Association
were appointed B.C. representative!.
The first time that there has been
an interior B.C. representative on
the central board.
The  Nelson  conference  will  bo
the   third   since   the  organization
invitation   was   accepted   at   this I of the Federation. From 30 to 40
year's conference at St. John's, N.&j delegates will attend, it is expected,
Ross Fleming of Nelson and Mrs. and   the   meetings   probably   held//
Gertrude E. V. Graham of Kelowna I about the end of June or early July. (I
Pearson Holidaying
In Sweden
STOCKHOLM, July 5 (Reuters)
—L. B. Pearson, Canadian Minister
for External Affairs, arrived today
from Oslo in an R.C.A.F. plane for
a week's holiday in Sweden,
He is to meet informally Foreign
Minister Oesten Unden and other
members of the Swedish cabinet.
ONLY $1000?
SEWARD, Alaska, July 5 (AP)
—Donald Stlckman, an Athabasca
Indian, climbed a 3022-foot moun
tain and returned plus running
an extra two miles In a total of
66 minutes 38 seconds here yes-
terday to win the annual Mt.
Marathon Race and a $1000 cash
prize.
Stlckman's time up the precipitous peak was the fastest In 15
years, when another .runner covered It In 14 seconds less. At that,
he came In only 1 minute 65 seconds ahead of second place runner, Ralph Hatch, who had won
the race for the previous five
years.
The colorful race was run In
anything but optimum conditions
from the participants' standpoint
—the temperature was the highest on record, 84 degrees.
Three special trains carried
1075 spectators from Anchorage
and 600 Army and Navy men
were In the crowd.
The Judges had an easy time of
It—they ascended the mountain In
helicopters.
BORDEAUX, France, July 5
(Reuters)—Two German army officers' stated to be fugitives from
justice were sentenced to death in
their absence today by a military
court for their part ln the hanging
of 99 French Maquis men from
lamp-posts, railings and balconies
in Tulle, France, during the war.
FLASH FIRE KILLS
FOUR CHILDREN  •
NORTH CHICAGO), 111., July 5
(AP)—A left-over Fourth of July
sparkler today touched off a flash
fire that snuffed out the lives of
four youngsters. A fifth was critically burned.
Dead were Billy Brosnan, 9; his
10-year-old sister, Kathleen; Joan
Renarb, 9, and Mary Jean Zorzy,
10.
Police said a sparkler caused the
fire. They found its burned remains
in the bottom of a five gallon can
Which contained kerosene.
Workers Cause
Of Hospice Fire
MONTREAL, July 5 (CP)—Use
of an acetylene torch without
proper precautions caused the disastrous June 15 fire in the Ste.
Cunegonde Hospice which took 33
lives, Fire Commissioner Jean St.
Germain, K.C, said today.      ,
The Commissioner issued a written judgment on the fire, following
a two-day hearing late last week.
Sold His Blood to
Buy Food
SOUTHAMPTON, England, July
5 (Reuters)—Hugh Coles, 42, a Scottish waiter, .charged with stowing
away on the Queen Mary, said ho
had sold a pint of blood for $5 in'
New York to buy fooo>. He was remanded in custody.
And in This Corner...
BLUEFIELD, W. Va., July 5 (AP)—Thieves got rooked In Blue-
field again yesterday,
'  Someone broke Into the car of C. A. Dlggs of Charleston, W. Va,,
and took $100 worth of hose, But not a single one matched.
Last week, someone entered 'a shoe salesman's automobile and
took seven cases of shoes—all 112 of them for the right foot.
LONG BEACH, Calif., July 5 (AP)—The first bathing beauty
contest to be judged by women, at least in these parts, ended just
about the way you'd expect, men. The women just couldn't make up
their minds.
There were five final contestants vying yesterday for the title
of Queen of the forthcoming Long Beach Exposition. And there were
five equally beautiful judges—all professional models.
The ladies took three ballots.- and not one of them would budge.
Each selected a different girl and refused to change her vote.
The deadlock will be resolved at another contest July 21—to be
Judged by men only.
HARTFORD, Conn,, July 5 (AP)—William Wlllett, 7, has saving
ways, but fortunately, so haa St. Francis Hospital,
On two occasions William has swallowed coins. The first time,
a solid thump on the back brought up the money but last night a
quarter slipped down his throat and banked In his esophagus.
William's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. Wlllett, called the nearest
hospital and were told It had no facilities for removing the coin. Tha
parents then took him to St. Francis Hospital here, which has an
esophagoscope  and  the  quarter  was  successfully  removed.
William has promised hereafter to keep his money out of his mouth,
Mrs. Wlllett hopes he will. She remembers the time she thought
he swallowed a penny and when she thumped his back out popped
two  pennies  and  a  nickel.
 |2— NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY/JULY 6, 1951
COMPLETE SHOWING 7:00 AND 9:00
mil     Piutraunl pieseMs
AlanLADD'sblasting-gun «r in niMi n htlTi'
splits the West^*^- i\\M LADD   +p
FREEMAN
Newi
Champagne
for Two
c/wc
A FAMOUS HAYtKS THEAW
BOTTLE-FED
BABIES
■ »3 yonr ^ty ia bottle-fed, fee sure to watch
I wtle. bowels closely. Mother's milk has a
I natural laxative effect whfch helps take enre
I of baby's need. Lacking this, a bottle-fed
I baby often gets frctty, feverish and suffers
I constipation and upset stomach. Let Baby's
I Own Tablets help you keep baby's bowels
Ion Bchefiule-swcetan upset stomachr-rclievc
I'fflveriBhness and teething troubles. No
l."ileepy" stuff - no dulling effect. Kaaily
I eniBhed to n powder, if desired, Don't let
I your baby suffer—get Baby's Own Tablets
I today at your druggist. Only 30c
FINED FOR SPEEDING
Mike N. Sampsonoff of Nelson
pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding and was fined $10 and costs in
Provincial Court Thursday by Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans.
The charge arose when Sampsonoff exceeded the 15 miles per hour
speed limit in the Slocan Park
School zone June 21.
SYDNEY, Australia, July 5 (Reuters)—The 17,486-ton Trans-Pacific
liner Aorangi sailed today for Canada after being delayed a month by
a strike of 69 crew members.
w
com
Olstllled and bottled In bond by
H. CORBY DIITIllllY ITOw
CoAyvllle, Ontario
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the LiquorControl
Board or by the Government of British Columbia'
'-i-w.'.i-ni
Lean Beef and Kidney Stew.
Loin Pork Chops.
Bib End; Lb   ,. 	
Bacon.
Fresh Sliced; Vs lb. -,. „. -_~
Cube Steaks.
Lean, Tender; Lb.  .„„..„____„
69'
73*
35*
95'
m FRUITS and
VEGETABLES
New Potatoes
Celery.
"Crisp, Green; Lb	
Oranges.
288'at „	
Coffee. 92*
Fancy Santos; Lb. -...' .'   W. mm
mom   RASPBERRY JAM
BEST  I Molkin'i Best
24 Oz. Jar 53c
Tuna Fish. 3Q<
Fancy Flaked, %'s; Tin  „  mt O  i
Black Pepper. 33"*
Blue Ribbon; 1J4 oz. tin   mt ml
Bran Flakes. 2      33*
Kellogg's, 8 oz.; .    "for    W W
Cream Style Corn. 3    , f.A*
20 oz.;     «■» tins   U~
Dog Food. 3       5£t
Speak or Rover; _ ,.  mt tins   mt raw
The Corner Store
Phone 1188 1224 Stanley St.
The Sugar Bowl
Phona 1370 ....   902 Josephine St.
Thousands Watch Trail Jubilee
Parade, "Biggest in B,G Interior"
TRAIL, B.C., July 5—Far-flung
across the city the people of Trail
watched the biggest parade ever
witnessed in the Interior of B-C. to.
day,
Well over two miles in length, the
colorful procession could be seen
crossing the bridge while in the distance it was still coming down the
smelter hill.
As It swung down Columbia Avenue, headed for Gyro Park, the
smaller children dropped out,
marching straight to Butler Park,
where they awaited the main group
to complete its course around East
Trail.
Escorted by police cars, the parade swung into 'Butler Park. Mayor
E. S. Topping and his 1901 City
Council were depicted.in the first
float, closely followed by .the pres-
ent- Mayor and Council along with
buses carrying the oldtimers. Several bands and color parties of local
organizations, majorettes, comical
clowns, some representing animals,
old-fashioned costumes, fancy floats,
decorated cars and bicycles all went
to make the finest, most colorful
parade ever seen here.
Thousands and thousands Jammed
the sidewalks, utilizing every available bit of space to view the spectacle of 60 or 60 floats depicting
numerous different scenes, many
portraying historical events in the
theme of Trail's Golden Jubilee.
A moonr-shaped float covered with
flowers and beautiful Chinese girls
and costumes represented the Chinese people of the district. B.P.O.E.
had a modern barn dance in full
swing with the dancers really enjoying themselves. Columbo Lodge
entered a colorful float with Chris,
topher Columbus, in a court spene
in Spain presenting gifts to the
queen and exhibiting two Indians.
Warfield subdivision was represented by a bathing house and beach
with beautieB modelling bathing
suits from 1901 to 1951.
CROCHET ENGINE BEST
CROCKETT ENGINE  BEST
First prize of (1100 for best decorated float went to H. J. Crockett of
Genelle, for his ancient locomotive
complete with bell and whistle.
Second, for $75, was Local 480, I.M.
M.S.U, for its replica of Columbia,
Western, old-time locomotive. A
third $25 prize was won by Bonklfl
and Son for refilica of S.S. Linton,
sternwheeler.
' Best ladies costume was worn by
Mrs. H. E. Dyer, best gentleman's by
Sydney Wilson, best decorated bicycle, Verna Weaver, first; Muriel
Schapansky, second; Barry Weaver,
third. Isidore Muzzin won the old-
time cars exhibit. Best, child's old-
fashioned costume prize went to
Catherine Muzzin.
RAIN GROUNDS PLANES
The model air show again had to
be cancelled after an hour or two of
display. The afternoon showers were
too much for the tiny craft. Gliders,
monoplanes, flying wings, speed and
stunt planes were able- to take off
before the 'Trail Model Airplane
Club decided that things were becoming far too damp.
Past Has Benefits Worth Recalling
Says McKelvie, Trail Fetes Pioneers
TRAIL, B.C., July 5^-A banquet
honoring the old timers was given
at the Legion Hall today by the
Jubilee Committee and was well attended.
Bruce McKelvie of The Vancouver Province was a guest speaker.
He talked mainly about days gone
by. bringing back to memory in picturesque word descriptions the
times of the livery stable and old-
type barber shop.
He emphasized the necessity of
recalling and recording the history
of ages past that posterity might
reap the benefit of experience.
R.  W.  Diamond,  Vice-President
and.General Manager of Cominco,
gave a welcoming address to the
old-timers and urged them to attend
the tea at the ski lift the following
day so that they might have their
pictures taken as a souvenir of the
occasion. He also thanked Mr, McKelvie for hjs talk.
Others speaking* briefly and welcoming the old-tjmers in behalf of
their respective offices were Mayor
Fletcher, Douglas Turnbull, M.L.A.,
and H. W. Herr.idge, M.P. Fred
Plester introduced the old-timers,
each in turn, and read many letters
and telegrams from those who ware
unable to attend Trail's Golden
Jubilee.
Water Main
Project To Finish
Here This Week
The installation of a new water
main starting on Ward Street at
Vernon, continuing down Ward' to
Front and along Front to Chatham
Street is expected to be finished by
the end of this week.
The City will then gravel and
generally prepare these streets for
black topping.
Completion of tha Provincial
Government North Shore Highway
project will see the paving machinery and men at work blaoktopping
these streets as part of the arterial
highway through Nelson.
PHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED
Classified Ads for Quick Results
DIFFERENCE
a, MOVERS!
t /
JAe. (jJstnihsh,
Synopsis: There was considerable
shower activity in the Southern
part of the province, but amount
of rainfall was generally not more
than a tenth of an inch. Temperatures were very warm in far
Northern reaches of the province
where Telegraph Creek reported a
high of 89. Friday will Continue
showery in the Southern Interior
while Northern areas will enjoy
considerable sunshine combined
with continued high temperatures.
NELSON       47     73
St. Johns  -      51     67     .04
Halifax       45    64   2.65
Ottawa      55    71    .07
Winnipeg      51     80
Regina   .v      57    82
Calgary      . 47
Edmonton      55
Vancouver      50
Victoria      48
Kimberley         42
Crescent Valley      44
Kaslo        52
Prince Rupert       46
Prince George  _     50
Grand Forks      48
Spokane       52     69
San Francisco       54    66.
Los Angeles       56    7.2
New York       68    81
Whitehorse       47     82
61     .84
64
73
75
75
53
71
71
.01
.23
Trail Sees
Change of Styles
ELECTED PRE8IDENT of Kl-
wanli International at the 36th
annual convention of the organization at St. Louis was Clauds
B. Hellman, above, prominent
public utilities executive of Baltimore. He succeeded Don H. Murdoch of Winnipeg.
Defence Opens Today...
Davidoff Claims of Inability To Read
Rejected as Court Admits Statements
rang* to a blanket would be absorbed by the blanket.
The Defence will open its case
thjs morning. !t is expected to call
about five witnesses.
Trail Insurance
Man To Go To
Montreal Post
TRAIL, B.C., July 5 — Pe^er S.
Mathewson, Kootenay unit supervisor of tha Sun Life Insurance
Company of Canada, has been appointed inspector of agencies, Canadian division.
In his new appointment, Mr.
Mathewson will assist the superintendent of agencies in the company's head office in Montreal. This
department is in charge of. production for Canada.
Mr. Mathewson, a graduate of
U.B.C, joined the field force of the
company in June of 1946. In March
of 1948 he was appointed service
supervisor in Vancouver and in
December, 1949, he came to Trail
as Kootenay unit supervisor. He
served as a lieutenant in the
RCNVR and has been active in
local affairs.
His wife is the daughter of Mrs.
and the late Dr. C. S. Williams. She
and the two children will move- to
Montreal later in the Fall. Mr.
Mathewson leaves August 1.
Harry A. Shannon, well known
in the Okanagan district has been
appointed to replace Mr. Mathewson as unit supervisor here.
Mr. Shannon joined the company
in May of 1947.
Spirit of 1900
Recaptured as
Hundreds Dance
Household moving rates are
nbout the same with all firms,
But the service tells the story I
We offer fine equipment, expert personnel, thorough tin-
readability — to make your
next move safe and carefree.
Phone for estimate.
AGENT'S   NAME
STREET    ADDRESS
PHONI
WEST
TRANSFER CO.
PHONE S3
Nelson, B. C.
TRAIL, B. C, July 5 — On the
stage left' by the pageant, a historical fashion show got under
way at three o'clock Thursday
afternoon, as part of Trail's Golden
Jubilee celebration.
Under the Jubilee women's committee, the three ladles' organizations, the Soroptimists, the Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority and the business and professional women man
aged a very successful display of
fashions from 1901 to and including
1951 of evening gowns, street
dresses, afternoon gowns and bathing suits.
A three-piece orchestra played
during the showing.
Six usherettes guided over 500
people to their seats.
Commentor was Mrs. Grace
Malnarich. The modelling "was done
by Mrs. H. Bensies, Mrs. I. Hill,
Miss J. Kerr. Mrs. L. Bowers, Mrs.
E. Buckingham, Mrs. N. Grant, Mrs.
B. Miller, Miss B. Morrison. Miss L.
Trono, Miss M. Hill, Miss M. Garvin, Mrs. Dafoe and Mrs. M. Mc
Millan.
TRAIL, B.C., July 5—With the
orchestra sitting on the pageant
stage, tables and chairs j placed
throughout the Cominco Arena floor
space, and hundreds of Trailites in
old time costumes, something of the
spirit of 1900 was recaptured Thursday as the merrymakers danced far
into the night.
A nine-piece dance band alternated with a six-piece orchestra and,
if the engineers who built the arena
had not gone down through the slag
to bedrock, the plape would have
moved on its foundations.
An hour of high class entertainment was provided during the Golden Jubilee event under the management of Gordon V. Murray, Eu
gene Cataldno acting as master of
ceremonies. The I program included
Louis Simonette and his piano ac-
cordian, Bob Fletcher and his group
of versatile tumblers, Lome De-
Paolls with a special trumpet. Will
Maze rendered a vocal spiritual and
also sang "O Susanna", accompanied in the chorus by most of those
present. John Bunn and Jake Hamm
performed violin and guitar specialties, a comic skit sponsored by the
Women's Auxiliary to the Canadian
Legion and vocal skits by Nick Cat-
alano and John Fanini rounded out
the entertainment.
Three statements made to
R.C.M.P. by John Davidoff the day
following the rifle slaying of his
IjO-year-pld son Joe, were entered
as Crown evidence at his Supreme
Court murder trial here Thursday.
The statements were admitted
after a lengthy trial within a trial
in which the accused took the stand
to' deny through an interpreter that
he could teed or write English,
pther than his own name.
Defence Counsel J, H. Gordon
had submitted on the trial of the
first statement that'it was not admissible on the ground that David-
pff had n°' Hnowp, what he signed.
In rebuttal, the Crown produced
J6 agreements and contracts David
off had entered into and Signed
during the last three years. It then
called 'several witnesses involved
Jn deals with the accused, none of
whom could recall Davidoff having
agreements read to hirh before he
signed.
Mrs. Viola Mack of Slocan' City
told of a logging agreement she
had drawn up between her hui
band, Davidoff and, a Sam Ozach-
off in 1948. Before signatures were
added Davidoff had read the document aloud in English to Ozachoff,
she testified.
Mary McKortoff, Brilliant store-
keeper, testified Davidoff was accustomed to buy the Nelson Daily
News from her and to read the
want ads in the store, often asking
her to put through telephone calls
after.
Mr. Justice N. W. Whittaker said
he was satisfied the accused could
read English and that the police
statement was in language simple
enough for him to understand,
He then ruled the statement
could be entered as evidence on
the ground it was exculpatory.
Two additipnai Davidoff states
ments were admitted during: the
day, as the Crown case was all tut
completed..
The three statements were taken
by Constable A'ejf Borodula on
April J7 and were said to be Davidoff's account of his actions during
the latter part of the 16th and
morning of the 17th.
The witness said the first statement, taken during the afternoon
in the Castlegar R.C.M.P. office,
was taken during the course of a
routine investigation. He said he
took it down on the typewriter as
Davidoff dictated, 'rephrasing" it
to improve the grammar, then
asked him to read it and sign it if
he cared to, The accused appeared
to read it and then signed it, the
Witness said.
The second statement was taken
at 7:20 p.m., April 17, and the third
at 8:40, immediately after Davidoff
had been placed under arrest on
suspicion of-'murder, the witness
said.
The three statements closely fol^
lowed the same account, bin*, were
amplified successively ns to detail.
According to the statements,
Davidoff - claimed to have left Ostrow village about 7:15 the night
of th? murder and walked to
Castlegar, spent tne evening in
poolroom, leaving there at Jl p.m.
for the beer parlor where he had
three beers with a friend.
At 11:30, the statements said, he
crossed on the ferry to Robson and
walked tp the home of his sister,
Mrs. Mike Makortoff, where he was
said to have spent the night.
He did not return to Ostrow or
learn of his^son's death until the
following morning, the statement
said.
Davidoff was said to have taken
the trail from his home to the airport road, foilpwed Jt to cross the
Kootenay River, bridge, then walked
along the railway tracks into
Castlegar, He estimated his walk
ing time from an hour and a quarter to an hour and a half.
In his first statement, Davidoff
was quoted as saying he had arrived at.Gastlegap "ahout 8:15" In
the third statement, the time of arrival was said to have been "about
9:90." -   .
In his trial-wilhin-a-trial test!
mony Davidoff claimed- he had told
Constable Bp'roduU during' the taking of. the first statement that he
had arrived at Castlegar at 9:15 and
not 8:15, Borodpla maintained that
Davidoff had told (iim 3:15.
In the final statement, Davidotf
was quoted as saying he had been
passed by $ car on, the approach
to the bridge and by another car
while crossing the bridge.
. Constable. N. H. Elphick testified
to being present when the third
statement was taken. He said Constable Borodula had suggested alterations to the accused, in the wording of the statements to clarify the
English, getting the accused's agreement before writing it down.
When Davidoff was asked to read
the statement over before signing
it he said he hadn't had much
schooling and wasn't very good af
it," the witness testified. The state-]
ment was then read to him by
Constable Borodul? and he signed
it, Constable Elphick said.
S/Sgt.. W. J, McKay told the Court
of a conversation he had with the
accused the day following the'mur-
der. ,
"I asked him if he kpew whether
pr not Joe had any insurance. He
said he didn't know Joe's business.'1
Davidoff was said to have told the
witness Joe once had a policy, but
he thought it had been dropped.
S/Sgt. McKay and Constables P,
W. Howarth and K. J, Ritchie of
the Castlegar detachment told the
Court of two tests said, ta have
been made at the Davidoff house
May 26 and 30.
Const. Howarth said he had fired
two shots into a pile of sacks wjth
the barrel covered t>y * quilt. He
Said he used a -309 calibre rifle
similar tq the one recovered from
the river.
He repeated the test on May 30,
this without any covering over the
barrel and the' doors closed. The
gun was fired twice into the sacks
from close range, he said. Const,
Howarth said he then slammed the
door of the house twice.
Const, Ritchie said he had been
next door when the shots were
fired and heard only a faint "thud.'1
S/Sgt. McKay, standing in tho courtyard outside, also heard faint thuds
which were not recognizable
shots, he said.      > -.  '■'
Both officers testified the two
door slams had sounded louder than
the rifle reports. In earlier testimony, Sgt. A. Mason-Rooke of the
Regina crime laboratory said the
muzzle blast of a gun held at close
NELSON
CIVIC CENTRE GROUNDS
TWICE DAILY AT 3 AND 8 P.M,
THURS. IO
JULY   I"
AMERICA'S
FAVORITE DIG
RAILROAD SHOW
• TERRIFIC NEW EDITION
WITH THE MOST SEIISATIOIIAl HOST IP NEW
CIRCUS WKAHDB AHD PEATUnES FnoM
EVEBY COSHES OF THE CLOSE HEAPED DY
THE ILLUSTRIOUS SCREEN. RADIO AND TELEVISION STAR, "MR. CIRCUS" HIMSELF
CLYDE BEATTY^
WORLD'S FOREMOST WILD ANIMAL
TRAINER In His MOST STUPENDOUS and
BATTLING DISPLAY with Junglt-Brcd Lions
& Tigers & Featurlno His Famous Mammoth
& Vicious Tiger-Killing Lion, "PRINCF,"
ALL AT ONE TIMS IN THE BIS ARENA
SCORES OF INCREDIBLE
NEW   IMPORTATIONS
APPEASING III AMERICA FOR THE FIRST TIME
56 OUTSTANDING NEW FEATURES
BIG CONGRESS OF CLOWNS
HUNDREDS OF MARVELOUSLY-EDUCATED
TRAINED WILD AND DOMESTIC ANIMALS
FROM   THE   WORLD'S   LARGEST   MENAGERIE
RES, SEAT and GEN. ADM.
TICKETS ON SALE
CIRCUS DAY
MANN'8 DRUG STORE
498 Baker Street
Rei, Seats Are Numbered Chairs
NO.GAMBLING
.     'SAME PRICES AS AT SHOWGROUNDS)
SPECIAL
CHROME TABLES
Reg. $49.50. NOW  $385.95
CHROME CHAIRS
Reg. $9.75. NOW  $7.S0 ond $8.4B
Blue or grey tables with red and black chairs.
GUARANTEED SATISFACTION OR MONEY REFUNDED
. THE ROBERT SIMPSON (PACIFIC) LTD.
666 Baker Street ;.* Phone 1490
Fined $10 on
Hour of Work Charge
Fleetline Cabs Limited were
found guilty of failure to keep true
and correct records of hours worked
by employee Albert Grams and
was fined $10 and costs by Magistrate William Brown in City Court
Thursday.
The charge was laid during tha
latter part of May by James C.
.Tames, Inspector for the Department of Labor.
Gordon Ferguson, secretary treasurer, appeared for the company and
pleaded not guilty. H. C, Irving
was counsel for the defence.
PHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED
MANY GROUPS
REPRESENTED AT
McLEAN RITES
Funeral services for the late
William John McLean, a former
Nelsonite, who was killed accidentally in a motorcycle accident in
Oliver on July 1, were held from
the Thompson Funeral Home on
Thursday at 2 p.m. Rev. Allan
Dixon officiated.
Among the large number ln attendance, were representatives of
the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen Local 658, the Ladles Auxiliary of the B. of R.T., the B.C. Telephone Company, the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
Local No. 4, and the Chapter of the
53 Telephone Pioneers of America-
Many beautiful floral tributes
were received.
Two hymns were sung "Rock of
Ages" and "Abide With Me," with
accompaniment by Mrs. W. A.
Manson.
Pallbearers were A. E. Anderson,
R. J. Armstrong, W. A. Duckworth,
James Madden, William Muraro,
and W. H. Towhey. Interment was
in the Nelson Memorial Park.
NEW YORK. July 9 (AP)—Spot
nonferrous metal prices today: Copper, 24 14 cents a pound, Connecticut Valley. Lead. 17 cents a pound.
New York. Zinc, 1714 cents a pound,
East St. Louis. Tin, $1.06 a pound.
New York.
GODFREYS'
"The Home of (guaranteed Work Clothing"
WORKMEN'S CLOTHES
Of Quality, Comfort and Appearance
WORK    PANTS    all pre-shrunk and fully cut.
Benims, 8 oz. and 9 a*, weight in blue; 8 oz. in black. IJider pants, 10 oz. blue denim.
WORK.    bitilR. Lo   olso all pre-shrunk and fully cut,
Made of chambray, covert, drill and khaki drill. .
LIGHT CAPS
SHOP CAPS
SLEEVELETS
CARPENTER'S O'ALLS
CARPENTER'S  APRONS
PAINTER'S O'ALLS
BIB O'ALLS
COVERALLS
SMOCKS
UJNL)£«R\VEAR. Lighter weight garments in bqlbriggan or ribbed cotton,
ankle-length with short sleeves. Also a full range of shorts and shirts.
WORK GLOVES and MITTS All types and sizes, from
cotton gardening gloves to the finest horsehjde ropers.
WORK. 1300To in elk, chrome and oil tons. Panco soles, neolite soles,
or leather soles. Suitable for any job, made by well-known manufacturers
such as Paris, Leckie and Valentine Martin.
We haven't irientionec) prices! AH are high these days, but you
will find ours strictly competitive.
GODFREYS
Phones 270 -«Botf
 r#
Spsdcubt
fiumpAt
By SLATER
Smart Spectator pumps in brown
and white with dress cuban
heels. AA-B.
$12.95
THE SHOE
CENTRE
Phone 895
553 Baker St.
Post Office
Business Soars
Nelson Post Office was busier last
month than in any month in 1950 or
any previous.month this year. Total
transactions "amounted to $165,882.
Business soared to $157,727, which
Is also a record for the last 18
months, but postage revenue was
$7039, a drop from the last three
months but an increase over the
figure for June, 1950,
, The Cathedral of Regensburg in
Bavaria was begun in 1275 and completed in 1534.
Rush Electric
Burn Victim
To Vancouver
FEHNIE, B. C, uly 5 — Strong
warning against interference with
fallen high-tension wires has been
issued by the East Kootenay Power
Company following a woods accident when a green tree fell across
the supply line into Fernie. A volunteer with a team of horses had
removed the tree before the- company repair crew arrived, but fortunately the falling tree had broken
the circuit. Power in Fernie was
interrupted for several minutes by
the accident.
..A few days previously Wilfred
Carrier and Charles Holley of the
bush crew of the Crow's Nest Pass
Coal Company had been trying to
move S jammer with a jeep when it
came in contact with overhead lines
of the Calgary Power Company.
Both were seriously burned. Mr.
Carrier has been taken to Vancouver for emergency treatment for
third degree burns, and both men
will require skin grafts for the
injuries received.
NOW-She Laughs
at age
Springtime In
her heart againl ,«,;
New-found gale- W
ty, peppy cner- 0
By. A new, alive &;'
woman—sparkling V
' eyes, better color, %\
freah, calm youthful-
Hess — has replaced
the worn, tired look.
No' wonder life has
taken on new interests. Yea, thousands
of once faded ,
women, weary «*«<
from blood-iron
poverty, have bloomed anew .with tha
fielp of Dr. Williams Pink PIHfl. Try Dr.
Williams Pink Pills yourself for 80 days!
Enjoy new health, pep and energy. Start
todayl Get back ''In the pink" with
DR. WILLIAMS
PINK PILLS
Wright Bracken
To Attend
Williams Lake Meet
Council of the Associated Boards
of Trade of British Columbia will-
hold its next meeting at Williams
Lake Aug. 1. Dr. C. H. Wright of
Trail, President, and J. A. Bracken
of Nelson, Secretary, will be among
delegates.
MOSAIC PLAQUE TO-
BE MEMORIAL FOR
CHARLES D. ELLIS
INVERMERE, B. C, July 5—Funeral services for Charles D. Ellis
of Windermere, who died In Los
Angeles, were held from St. Peter's
Anglican Church at Windermere.
Following cremation at Los Angeles,
.arrangements were made to hold
the service from the church Mr.
Ellis served during his Residence in
this valley.
Summer flowers decorated the altar, and hymns sung during the
service, were "Nearer My God to
Thee" and "Abide With .Me". Rev.
B. G. Hyde officiated and Mrs. Florence Stewart was organist.
Interment was in the Windermere
Cemetery, where -the grave will be
covered with a Mosaic plaque made
by Mr. Ellis for this purpose. Another plaque made by him of Mosaic
depicting The Good Shepherd will
be placed in St. Peter's Church as a
memorial. Arrangements for this
are being made by the Windermere
Ladies' Social Club.
EPPtsCTlVB    JULY1
SUNDAY
SERVICE
"tool
TU6SPAY
WepNesPAY
reiPAV.
SATUfcPAY
Session af Slocan
Board of Trade
NEW DENVER, B.C. July 5-Main
speaker at the after-supper meeting
of the Slocan District Board of
Trade was Randolph Harding,
M.L.A. for Kaslo-Slocan, who dealt
with the recent session of the Provincial Legislature. He said that this
had proved* to be one of the longest,
toughest and most controversial
sessions in B.C.'s parliamentary history.
The speaker stated that a total.of
112 bills had been passed during the
session, and outlined seven or eight
of the more important ones. As a
member of the C.C.F. Opposition,
Mr. Harding said that he had voted
against many of the more controversial government measures, including the Industrial Development Act,
and the amendments to the Hospital
Insurance and Provincial Election
Acts.
Mr. Harding stated that he had
taken advantage of the opportunities
provided by the debates on the
Throne and Budget Speeches to
speak on his riding's many needs,
including: road problems, social
services, rural electrification, proposed pulp mill, etc. He said that,
apart from special grants, a total of
$350,000 had been spent during the
past year in the Kaslo-Slocan Electoral District, and suggested that
the Board should get a copy of the
"Public Accounts."
A short discussion followed Mr.
Harding's address, led by J. R.
Miller, of Nelson, the Slocan's leading road user. Mr. Harding said that
he was of the opinion that the Ains-
worth-Balfour and Passmore-South
Slocan "tag-ends" of roads, both of
which are in the Nelson-Creston
(eIectoral district, could be more efficiently maintained if they were
placed in the Kaslo-Slocan district
for road maintenance purposes.
Besides Mr. Harding, visitors introduced by the president, J. L. Wilson, included Dr. T. J. Harrop and
j J. Robinson of New Denver, and-J.
Parker of the Sheep Creek Gold
Mines staff. Culminating the Board's
j efforts to obtain a dentist for the
Slocan district, Dr. Harrop's new
I dental practice is now firmly established in New Denver.
A. L, Harris reported that a delegation of ten from the Slocan and
Kaslo Boards had met with officials of the West Kootenay Power
and Light Co. in Trail and that he
felt that some progress was being
made on the power question.
After considerable discussion on
local fishing problems it was decided that the Board should provide
$20 for prizes in a suitable competition to be organized by the Fishery
Committee.
Neil Tattrie, Chairman of the
Transportation Committee, stated
that Public Works officials had pro-
mised him that blacktopping
through Silverton and Slocan City
would be undertaken at an early
date. The Department had also assured him that the Slow sign would
be erected at Slocan City and that
the Mulvey Creek bridge would be
repaired. The need for adequate direction signs at the Three Forks
junction on the Kaslo and Sandon
road was again stressed.
A letter from J. A, Bracken, secretary of the Associated Boards of
Trade of Eastern B.C. was read, outlining the proposed visit August 19
of 28 members of the Vancouver
Board of Trade Transportation. Bureau. The Slocan Board wilf'enter-
tain the visitors at a Meakfast and
then transport them to kaslo.
Kimberley Public
Health Nurse
Transferred
CRANBROOK, B.C., July 5—Miss
Gwen Farquarson, public health
nurse for Kimberley district in the
East Kootenay Health Unit for the
past,three years, has been transferred by the Department of Health
to the same position at Duncan and
has left Kimberley. Appointed as
her successor is Miss Shirley Main
who is transferring from Prince
Rupert district, and will arrive in
August. Meanwhile Miss B. W- Con-
roy of Kimberley, who recently
completed the University of B.C.
public health course is supplying in
the Kimberley' office.
East Kootenay Health Unit plan
to increase its nursing staff to six
members including the supervisor
with the additional nurse to be
stationed at Kimberley has not yet
materialized.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951 —3
FIRST TAXPAYER In,Trail District was Nicholas Wilmes, who
at 87 years Is recalling pioneer day adventures as Trail celebrates
its Golden Jubilee. Pictured with Mr. Wilmes is another oldtimer,
the late At Young, a partner in gold panning ventures who died a
few years ago.
Among Mr. Wilmes' first Jobs in Trail was hauling fresh water
from the Columbia River and selling It at 25 cents a barrel.
Cranbrook School
Staffs Increased
CRANBROOK, B.C, July 5 -
Cranbrook city school staffs will be
increased in September from 21 to
22 members including supervising
principals, with an anticipated increase in school population. So far
there have been two resignations
from Central School staff, Miss
Winanne Glover and Mrs. Audrey
Robillard. One appointment has
been made, that of Miss Marian
Beattie of Cranbrook.
Three temporary appointments in
the Mount Baker Junior-Senior
staff expired in June, those of William Pollington, commercial instructor, Mrs. T. N. Beynon who
has been substituting in French
and English instruction, and Mrs.
Jeanette Avis who has been substituting in the junior high school.
In new appointments the school
■board hopes to secure a staff member qualified for music instruction
in the junior-senior school, and also
an additional instructor for the
heavy commercial enrolment.
Deadline for staff resignation's is
July 31. Four rooms of the former
high school, vacant since April, are
being put in order for primary
grades of children from the South
edge of the city, who will be transferred from Central School where
accommodation for elementary pupils has been exceeded again.
Conciliation Officer
Named for Disputes
The B.C: Labor Relations Board
has granted a certificate to Nelson
and District Mine and Mill Workers, Union Local 901, I.U.M.M.S.W,
for employees of T. Connors Diamond Drilling Company of Vancouver, working at the Pend
d'Oreille dam site at Waneta, The
office staff is excepted.
D. W. Coton has been named conciliation officer in disputes between Trail Federal Union Local
302, T.C.L., and Trail-Tadanac Hospital; Street Electric Railway and
Motor Coach Employees of America Division 1374, A.F.L, and
Interior Stages (Nelson) Ltd, and
Cranbrook Garage Workers Union
Local 244, C.C.L. and East Kootenay Equipment Company, Van
Home Service, Haddad and Gart-
side Motors, Ltd., Wheeler Brothers
and Harry Dorris Motor Company,
all of Cranbrook.
New Look for
Telephone Book
Bearing a completely new type
face, the new Nelson-Trail district
telephone directory of the British
Columbia Telephone Company is off
the press.
A total of 12,900 copies, largest ln
history, was printed. In 20 years,
the number of copies printed by the
Nelson Daily News job printing department has grown from 3400
copies.
The new type face is similar to
that used in larger cities. The book
now comprises two separate sections. The Nelson book leads off
with Nelson numbers, the other
centres this time following in alphabetical order. Similarly, the
Trail edition leads off with Trail.
Both have their own classified or
"yellow page" sections.
The Nelson book has 66 directory
pages and 48 classified, while Trail
also has 66 pages in the front section, but 60 "yellow pages".
Tourist Praises '
Accurate Nelson
Tourist Information
Recently Nelson Board of Trade
almost "hit the ceiling" when it
learned that Coast tourist information offices were'discouraging travel
to the Kootenays by giving incor-
rect.information on road conditions.
Thus lt was somewhat mollifying
to learn that the information given
out by the Nelson Board's own
tourist information office was "accurate in every detail".
Miss Edna Robison, assistant to
Secretary J. A. Bracken, received a
letter from a Lloydminster, Sask.
tourist stating that this was so. It
was a pleasure, the letter said, to
know what the "road ahead would
be like. I had a good trip into Alberta, and hope that all future information I receive will be as.accurate as yours."
It was addressed to "the young
lady" on duty at'6 o'clock on June
23. The information office is now
open nightly, with Board members
assisting.
Nelson Man Buys
Kaslo Resort
Willow Point
Reached in
Paving Project
The North Shore highway is a
wide, smooth ribbon of black from
Nelson ferry to Willow Point.
E. R. Taylor Construction Company of Vancouver has pushed
ahead with its paving more than
five miles, and has also started from
the 10-mile end back. Heavy rains
Wednesday, however, made the
primer coat too wet for paving.
The job should be finished in two
weeks, if weather conditions are
favorable.
Paving East of Erickson to Goat
River, also on the Southern Trans-
Provincial Highway, has been completed, as well as the back road
from Erickson to Creston, over
which fruit shipments travel, and
Marwell Construction will not be
long in finishing paving a six-mile
section between Wynndel and Creston.
Law Construction is going ahead
with reconstruction of work East of
Fruitvale, and Storms Contracting
(Pacific) Ltd, is continuing South
of Nelson.
WATERS
W. J. Waters, liquor vendor lhv
Nelson since 1934, is retiring on,
July 10.
Mr. Waters, an oldtimer ln Nelson, came to Canada from the Old1
Country in 1903, spending two
years in the East before coming to j
Nelson in 1905. He joined the British Columbia Liquor Board in 1921,
and was appointed vendor in 1934 |
after Fred Hume died.     -   -
Mr. Waters is a member of Nelson Lodge A.F. and A.M, and tha [
Scottish Rite branches, while Mrs.
Waters sings in the Church of the
Redeemer and Civic Choirs.
Mr. and Mrs. Waters plan
motoring to the coast to visit their
family after which on July 15, they
will travel by train to Montreal
there to sail on the Empress of
Canada for England to visit relatives. When the Empress sails on.
July 20, they will be on their way
to their native homes for the first
time since coming to this country.
Upon their return on Nov. 6,
they will make their home in
Victoria.
Victor Emmanuel II was the first
king of united Italy. " ■
Information and reservations—any
Canadian Pacific office, or your
travel agent.
Lommmm uaa|ic
AIRLINES
To Consider
Sunningdale Plan
TRAIL, B. C, July 5—The problem of housing for officials who
will be in Trail for the next three
years or so in connection with
Pend d'Oreille dam construction is
under study here. Columbia Parks,
owner of land in Sunningdale, have
asked permission of City Council
to sub-divide property on the East
side of Hillside Drive, and suggested that lots there might be sold
to Cominco or contractors on the
$30,000,000 dam project.
Donald Brothers, representing
the property-owning group, appealed to the Council for permission
to subdivide properties on the East
side of Hillside Drive, Sunningdale.
He said that there had been some
objection to the plan by city officials, and he sought the reason.
Councillors . explained that- the
area in question, at the foot of a
mountain was a problem spot due
to large boulders rolling down the
mountain, df the city allowed construction of houses in the area, it
would be liable to suit in case of
damages caused by rolling rocks.
Council promised to investigate
the matter, and will announce a decision at a special meeting some
time next week.
Special Guests qt
Latter Day Saints
Meet at Cranbrook ,
CRANBROOK, B.C, July 5—New
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints built here last year by
members of the congregation, was
used to capacity for a branch conference attended bjr representatives
of Latter Day Saints churches of
the area. Special guests at the
assembly were President Oscar A,
Kirham, president of the general
authorities of the church with Mrs.
Kirkham and mission president
Glen G. Fisher with Mrs. Fisher, all
of Salt Lake City.
Also attending were 25 missionaries of Latter Day Saints from Columbia district of the Western Canadian Mission,
Theme of the conference, with
all participating in the discussion
was family prayer, speaking well
of one'another, and mission obligations of all members.
Special ceremonies included chartering by Cranbrook Scout Commissioner Herb Andrews of the
West Boy Scout Patrol sponsored
by the Latter Day Saints Church
here, of particular interest to Mr.
Kirkham, long-time worker on behalf of Boy Scouts.
Rosslander Wins
Trail Hobby Priie
TRAIL, B.C, July 5 — Special
award in the Junior Chamber of
Commerce Hobby Show at the Trail
Golden Jubilee was won by Bob
McAllister of Rossland for his astronomical display. The prize provided
that Mr. McAllister's equipment
would be entered in the world's
largest hobby show at British Columbia's P.N.E.
Part of the display consisted of
a large telescope through which vis
itors could see Saturn as it actually
appears, though this was pictured
on a photograph at the other end
of the -room. Another feature was
a large picture of the moon about
three and a half feet in diameter
made up of a number of actual photographs. Several other awards were
made. ,
KASLO, B. C„ July 5 — Kaslo
Marine Service, one of the most
complete marine services on Kootenay Lake, has changed hands.
George (Monty) Armstrong has
sold the business to Fred Jones of
Nelson, who, after three years operating the Ferry Auto Court in
Nelson, has sold to Mrs. M. Armstrong of Vancouver. Mr. Armstrong
had., been in the business for six
years.
Kaslo Marine Service consists of
six modern. cabins, a boat livery
with 20 rowboats and outboards, a
full repair service, fuel and equipment supplies, and . fishing tackle,
New marine ways were installed
this year. /
Business is "going fine",-accord
ing to Mr. Jones, who has as his
business manager Bruce Tate of
Vancouver. The two worked in
ski lodge in Vancouver several
years ago.'
Mr. Jones has been in the resort
business about 15 years. He is married and has two children,
Clear Cape is the most Southerly
point of Ireland.
LONDON (CP) - Two higlv
speed elevators that travel 800 feet
a minute will be installed at Hamp-
stead, the deepest station on the
London underground railway.
NELSON GARDEN CLUB
ROSE SHOW
Hume Silver Room
SATURDAY—2 P.M. TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY—2 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
ROSES ARE NEEDED FOR THIS DISPLAY
All persons wishing to supply roses are asked to
Phone Mr. Cec Jones, 1338-L
Collection will be made on
FRIDAY EVENING
After this show the roses will be used for the  Midsummer
Bonspiel  and  for  patients  In  the  Hospital.
FOUR ESCAPE HURT
WHEN CAR ROLLS
A car, driven by J. Durham of
Kelowna, rolled down a 22-foot
bank at a curve on the Emerald
Mine road, five miles Southwest of
Salmo Wednesday evening.
The driver and three other passengers escaped uninjured. The accident was caused due to the slippery
condition of the road.
First gold discoveries in South
Africa's big Rand fields were made
in 1853.
Trail Studying
Housing Plans
TRAIL, B. C, July 5—Prospects
for development of housing on
Merry's Flats are looking up. City
councillors held an early meeting
with Dominion and Provincial Government representatives to discuss
the project. The Government at
presents holds a two-month option
on some 55 acres of land on the
Flats.
J. E. Brown, B. C. Government
housing cotnmissioner, D. Mc-
Naughton of Central Mortgage and
Housing Corporation and Allan
Crossley, Dominion Government
engineer presented a tentative
proposition to Council with a
promise that, as soon as Council
had chosen one of two plans for
layout of the subdivision, a detailed
proposal for the project would be
submitted.
Mr. Crossley submitted the two
subdivision plans, one of which allows no back lanes, providing 277
lots, and the other, with lanes, 244
lots. Council will discuss the two
plans with members of the Trail
town planning commission prior to
making a decision. A kiddies' playground and. a business section are
included in both plans.
New Denver Woman
Dies at Coast
NEW DENVER, B.C, July 5 -
Mrs. H. Nakamura of New Denver
has died in New Westminster,
where she was visiting her son-in-
law and daughter. Dr. and Mrs.
Paul S. Kumagai.
The 50-year-old woman had been
with her son-in-law. and daughter
for 10 months.
A Limited Number of Tickets
Are available for member's of Nelson Curling Club
and Nelson service clubs for the
Midsummer Bonspiel
BALL
NELSON  CURLING  CLUB—JACK  LONG
GYRO   CLUB—JACK   WATSON
KINSMEN CLUB—JACK STEWART
ROTARY CLUB—JACK COVENTRY
LIONS  CLUB—BOB  PHILLIPS
KIWANIS  CLUB—JACK   ECCLESTON
OR AT THE CIVIC CENTRE OFFICE
Tickets $2.00 per couple
1901-TRAIL-1951
Don't
Miss the Following Events!
TODAY, FRIDAY JULY 6th
10:00 to 12 noon  Cominco Tours
10:00 a.m Free Show for Kiddies at Both Theatres  (Strand 10:00 p.m. and
Odeon 10:30 p.m.)
1:00 p.m Midway, Kiddies' Rides, Old Rink Site.
2:00 p.m Old Timers' Tea at Ski Lift, Rossland. .   ,
2:00 to 4:00 Cominco Tours
5:00 p.m Old Timers' Free Show at Trail-Tadanac High School Auditorium
6:00 p.m Open Softball at Butler Park.
7:30 p.m.  Carnival at Curling Rink.
8:00 p.m .'...Wrestling and Boxing Card at Cominco Arena; Spokane, Kimberley,
Trail.
9:00 p.m. ..: Street Dancing in Front of Williams Clinic.
TOMORROW, SATURDAY JULY 7th
10:00 to 12:00 noon ..Cominco Tours
10:30 a.m. Industrial Parade, Oominco.
11:00 to 1:00 p.m Industrial Exhibition, Cominco.
1:00 p.m Midway. Kiddies' Rides, Old. Rink Site.
■   2:00 to 4:00 Cominco Tours
2:00 to 3:00 Industrial Sports. Rock Drilling, Log Sawing, Fire Wheel Race,
Tug o' War, Pole Climbing, Wheelbarrow Filling and Race, Etc.
3:00 p.m .....Pythian Sisters' Drill Team. Cominco Arena.
4:00 p.m _.. First Aid Competition, St. John Ambulance Association at Cominco
Arena.
7:30 p.m .....Motorcycle Display, Butler Park. Castlegar Motorcycle Club.
7:30 p.m Carnival at Curling Rink.
9:30 p.m Grand Ball at Arena. Announcing of AH Prizes.
9:45 p.m Fireworks Display, Direction of Shell Oil Company of Canada —
River Wall.
 4 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY; JULY 6, 19S1
by. 3buhcL WhsjdsJt
U.K. Kitchen
"Terrible"
OXFORD, England, July 4 (CP)
—American Prof. John Immer says
British kitchens are "terrible —
they couldn't be worse."
What a lot could be done to
lighten and speed up the work of
British housewives," he said. "Most
kitchens need complete replan-
ning."
The professor, an expert on "material-handling" — the science of
speeding up the transport and
handling of goods — is equally
critical of B r i t i s h production
methods.
'Production is primarily a frame
of mind — that is, a philosophy,"
said Immer, here to study for a
degree at Oxford University.
"Good production can never be
obtained where the management
and workers feel they are out to
get the most from each other."
The slightly - built, 35-year-old
professor admits, however, that he
has found many examples of outstandingly good production here.
NEWS FOR LINENS
Be first in your town to have butterfly accessories for the house!
These lovely motifs are for bed-
set, towels or scarf!
Pattern 534; transfer two motifs
BV4Xll% inches and one OtolO^i
Crochet directions,
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 in
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
for this pattern to Nelson Daily
News, Needlecraft Dept., 266 Baker
Street Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and AD
DRESS.
Send Twenty-Five Cents more (in
coins) for our Laura Wheeler
Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of
patterns for crochet, embroidery,
knitting, household accessories,
dolls, toys ... many hobby and gift
ideas. A free pattern is printed in
the book. '
Balfour Minister's
Father Gives Sermon
BALFOUR, B. C, July 5—Rev..P.
■ Snowden of Kaslo conducted services at St. Michael's and All Angels'
Church. He welcomed to the parish
his father, Rev. J. E. W. Snowden
of North Vancouver, whose subject
■was "The Christ-Like Life". Mrs.
Wellwood was organist.
Robson Notes
ROBSON, B. C—Mr. and Mrs. P.
J. Robertson.of Neidpath, Sask., are
holidaying at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. E. Tutt.
A farewell party was held at the
Robson Church Hall in honor of
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Horricks of Castlegar. Guests were entertained with
.various games and contests, and a
presentation of a desk lamp was
made to the guests of honor.
Rae Berry is a patient in Trail-*
Tadanac Hospital.
Mrs. S. M. Wood and daughter
Heather of Vancouver are visiting
Mrs. Wood's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
S. B. Musselman.
George Magwood returned home
from Radisson, Sask., where he was
called by the death of his father.
Mrs. E. S. Martin and daughter
Ginny returned home from Red
Deer, Alta., where they visited the
former's father, S. Blakley, who returned with them.
Mr. and Mrs. B. Crissall and
daughters Dorothy and Mildred of
Nelson spent a few days at the.
home of their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. R. A, Moffat.
The Robson Evening Group held
a social evening at the home of Mrs.
E. Ostrom, with 15 members and
five visitors present. Refreshments
were served by the hostess, assisted
by Mrs. T. Macomb, Mrs. M. Webster and Mrs. K. Adshead.
Nakusp Notes
FIRST GRADUATING CLASS of Notre Dame College, cooperative educational Institution at Nelson, Is shown here. In front, left
to right, are A, L. Cartier, prlnolpal; Miss Yvonne Pattie of Lumby,
Mix Heather Abbey, of Kaslo, Miss Denise LeBlanc of Lumby, Miss
Ann  Poje of Nelson and  Rev. Father L,  R.  McKenzie,  Instruotor.
At back are Michael Kinahan of Trail, students' president; Owen
Brown of Nelson, Joseph Sturgeon of Nelson, James Tinkess of
Koslo, Robert Nicholson of Nelson, Raymond Poulin of Nelson,
Esra Spray of Nelson and Thomas Tanaka of Greenwood.
PHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED
It Pays To Rend the Classified Dally
A Good Host is
a Mind Reader
Tastes differ. Some like dry drinks,
Other, the opposite, .weetdnnks.
Only because Burnett's » an EXTRA
DRY (unsweetened) Gin can you add
or leave o-t the sweetness and meet
every individual preference.
BURNETTS
LONDON    DRY
GIN
Koolaree Echoes..
43 Boys Enroll
For 2lsl Session
t
w
Next time §g|j
I BURNETII!!
JBJM   '. V.'.'i' 1
This advertisement is not published or displayed by
Hm Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
The holiday weekend saw a very
busy work party from Trail and
Nelson headed by Art Van at Koolaree. During the past two months
work parties have been at the camp
each weekend making ready for the
big project installing the new water
system and sanitary arrangements
at* the camp.
These various items are now taking shape, and the weekend party
poured the cement foundation and
erected the new ablution hut, and
roughed in the plumbing. The Herculean task of getting the rocks out
of the cesspit with the aid of a
chain block was performed, and the
lagging put in.   ,
Busy in all, these projects have
been the A.O.T.S. of East Trail, Art
Van, Jack Kendrick, Walter Smythe,
Vic Tye. From Nelson came Floyd
Irwin. Curly Mattice, Murray Harris and son Murray, Bob Proudfoot, Jini Stewart, Jack Wilson.
Others who have had a hand in
the camp project thus far are Charlie Daly, Fraser Mitchell, Stan Hewgill, Mr. Kalhovd, Ab Nichols of
Rossland, and Gil Kay, Charlie
Armstrong, Bill Fish, Ian Potts,
Bob Gray, George Reeves, Mr. Vallance and son Bob, Fred Robins,
and a number of the campers of the
Camp Fraternity.
On July 3 the campers for the
21st opening of Koolaree began to
arrive. The first two were brand
new campers from Burton in the
persons of John Watson and Lome
Marshall. All day boys came from
all directions, Cranbrook in the
East to Salmon Arm in the West,
until 43 boys of Anglican, United
and Presbyterian Churches answered the first supper call.
The. kitchen staff of Mrs. Downie,
Mrs. Van and Bev Lythgoe won
favor, and the way the food disappeared indicates that these people
will be busy for the next 10 days.
The camp is divided into an Intermediate and Senior'section. The
Intermediate section consists of the
following two cabins:
« CABIN 2—Walter Anderson, Jack
Boyes, Alex McClelland, David
Mann, Larry Moorcroft, Norman
Murphy, Ernest Vyse, Alan Young
and Bobby Knowler.
CABIN 3—Edwin Dinner, Terry
Elmes, Ronald Hamson, Robert
Laughton, Lome Marshall, Wesley
Van, Maurice Van Sacker, Ronald
Wade, John Watson and . Wesley
Mclnnes. '.	
The Senior section consists of the
following three cabins:
CABIN 4—Allen Minifie, Wesley
Barrett, .Melvin Brown, Peter
Thatcher, Donald Colmer, Ronald
Erickson,' Neil Horswill and Cecil
Nesmith.
CABIN 5—Ronald Avery, Gerald
Borch, Ian Bryden, Alan Jacobson,
Bob Leonard, Colvln McBurney,
Jonathon Magwood, Don Smith,
CABIN 6—Hugh Anderson, Bob
Davies, Danny Dolphin, Derek Fraser, Dick-McBurney, Bob Rowlands,
Ken Stanley and Sydney Gillies.
Places represented are Burton,
Cranbrook, Creston, Fruitvale, Kinnaird, Nakusp, Robson. Rossland,
Salmo, Salmon Arm, Nelson and
Trail.
Staff: Director, Fred Robins, leaders, Jack Steed and'Ian Potts nurse,
Mrs. I. Potts, canteen, Mrs. F. Robins.
The opening ceremonies were carried out with the Big Chief as master of ceremonies, assisted by Jack
Steed, who led the'boys to the chapel, the focal point for the staft of
all boys' camps. The Chief related
the history of the camp and chapel,
and told of its growing traditions.
At the cairn Ken Stanley of Nakusp
and Don Neville Smith of Creston,
both seven-year campers, were
made custodians of the. camp records taken from the cairn.
The boys pledged their loyalty to
their tribe and to the camp, and
brought their faggot tokens to kindle the great council fire, where
the new campers were welcomed
Into the campfire circle. The custodians of the records opened the
container and read the messages of
greetings.
A sing-song, the reading of an
ancient -soribe report, cocoa and
cookies '/rounded out the evening.
Wynndel Notes
WYNNDEL, B. C—Mr. and Mrs.
R. Millar of Lethbridge were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. . J. Firth, en route
to Prince George.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kludash and
daughter of Kimberley were visitors with Mrs. Kludash's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson.'
Norman Packman and Maurice
Hindley spent a few days fishing at
Tye.
Mrs. H. Mclnnis has left for Calgary to attend the wedding of her
son, .Leading Seaman Lloyd Mclnnis, R.C.N.,, in that city.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson and family
of San Francisco are spending their
holidays with relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Payette and family of Trail were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Payette.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Mouranhams
and family of Grand Valley, Ont.,
were visitors here, guests of Mr.
and Mrs. G. Grayen.
Arnold and'Hugo Hess of Cranbrook visited their parents.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Andestad, Evelyn
and Sheila visited Mr. and Mrs. A.
Mackie in Boswell.
Miss R. Burton, junior room
teacher, left for Vancouver to spend
her vacation with relatives.
DAWSON CREEK, B. C. (CP)—A
fund of about "54000 is being raised
in this Northern district to provide
the kilt imported from Scotland for
all memebrs of the local pipe band.
0AU&. 74/2. With.
Wwuan. TTlwdin
Wynndel W.I.
Plans Layette
WYNNDEL, B. C, July 5 -
Articles for a layette were handed
out at a meeting of Wynndel Women's Institute in the Cooperative
building. Some knitted articles
were turned in.
A letter was read from Creston
Valley Hospital acknowledging a
check from the W.I. for a hospital
bed. The July meeting was cancelled.
Moyie Notes
MOYIE, B. C—Ian Currie, teacher
at North Pine, B. C, called on Mr.
and Mrs. R. A, Smith on his way to
Nelson to spend the Summer holidays with his mother, Mrs. H. H.
Currie.
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Tarbet have
moved back to their home at Creston.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Tait and children
have moved in to Mrs. Guindon's
small cottage at Moyie.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Burch of Trail
are visiting Hay's mother, Mrs. B.
Burch. While in Moyie they have
been calling on their many friends,
James Tarbet,* Postmaster, -was
confined .to his bed for a few days
with a severe cold.
Mrs. L, Palmer of Nelson spent a
night in Moyie on her way to Cranbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton have
moved into W. H. Laird's house.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hartford
will make their home in Moyie.
Mr. and Mrs. George L. Smith of
Kirnberley called on Mr. Smith's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith,
on their way to Lourdes, B. C,
where they took two of their sons,
Paul and Bobbie.
Mrs. George Douglass of Marysville is staying with her aunt, Mrs.
Redford.
Mr. and Mrs. J. ISskog and Richard Stanton of Kimberley spent the
weekend visiting Mrs. Eskog and
Mr. Stanton's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
R. S. Stanton.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Danielson
and sons Peter and Paul of Kimberley spent a few days at their
Summer home at Moyie.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Andrews have
as their house guests Mrs. Andrews'
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Lafington, and child, vfrom Alberta.
Concert to Aid
Willow Point Hall
WILLOW POINT, B. C, July 5—
The concert sponsored. by the
Women's Institute in aid of Crystal
Hall was highly enjoyed. The artists who gave' their performance
free, were the Little Theatre group,
Mrs. Clare, F. W. Chanter, Mrs.
Stevens and C. Carne. Ron Waters
showed scenic pictures of the dis
trict. Musical numbers were by
Mrs. W. S. Ashby,' Mrs. G. Lee, Mrs,
Durwood, Mrs. F. E. Boyce. and
Raymond Thompson, with Miss
Peggy Grimes as accompanist.
Mrs. P. W. Green introduced the
performers and the members of
the W. I. served refreshments.
Willow Point
WILLOW POINT, B. C—Mrs. H.
I. Middleton left by plane for Vancouver. She had been visiting Mrs.
B. Heddle, Mr. and Mrs. C. Shannon and also Mr. and Mrs. G. Hul-
me of Wynndel.
Mrs. R. A. Grimes and Miss
Peggy Grimes left by plane for a
visit to Vancouver.
Miss T. Taylor of Victoria is a
guest of her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Ludgate.
Mrs. Lyall Cruickshank of Nelson was guest of Mr. and Mrs. C.
Shannon.
Mr, and Mrs. N. Mawdsley had
as guests Mr. and Mrs. Joe Benoit
and children of Spokane.
BURY ST. EDMUNDS, England
(CP)—During recent weeks more-
than £100 in cash has been found
in the streets of this Suffolk town
mostly in lost wallets and handbags.
BBBisBas3svBiSBsB5i
NAKUSP, B.C. — Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Laarz of Trail and two
young sons, Gordon and Terry, are
holiday guests of Mrs. Laarz's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Chad-
wick, Sr.
Hugh Bolstad, accompanied by his
young son, Bobby, left for Victoria
where they will be guests of Mr.
Bolstad's father, O. Bolstad. Hugh
Bolstad is taking part in marking
the department exams.
Miss Beth Peterson of Chilliwack
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
S. Cann.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burgoyne of
Nelson are visitors of MrB. Bur-
goyne's mother, Mrs. F. Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Bowes of Camrose,
Alta., are visiting their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Jupp.
Mr. and Mrs. P. McLeod, who are
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. McLeod of
Kamloops are gueBts of Mr. and
Mrs. Jordan Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Harrison
and young son, Michael of Vancouver, are visiting Mr. Harrison's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Harrison and Mrs. Harrison's mother,
Mrs. G. P. Horsley.
Mr. and Mrs. J. DeYeager and
daughter Wendy of Edgewood are
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hopp.
Frank Atherton of Vernon Is
guest of her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Davies.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Davidson, accompanied by their children Penny
and Jimmie of Revelstoke, are visitors in town renewing acquaintances.
Mr. and Mrs. O. Hampton and
baby daughter Carol of Celista are
guests of Mrs. Hampton's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson.
Mr; and Mrs. Larry Ward and
family of Penticton are guests of
Mrs. Ward's mother, Mrs. G. P.
Horsley, and brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Brown,
Miss Bernice Jordan of Vernon is
guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Howell Jordah.
Cameron Hood, accompanied by
his niece, Miss Marion Embree and
two nephews, Sonny and Douglas
of New Westminster, are guests of
Mr. Hood's mother, Mrs. G. Hood.
Mr. and Mrs. Garry Jones of
Castlegar were guests of Mrs. Jones
grandmother, Mrs. G. Hood.
Miss Muren Fowler and her brother, Denny Fowler of Edgewood,
are holidaying with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Fowler at
Pine Lodge.
Miss K. Fowler of Kimberley was
guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Fowler.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Mitchell of Montreal were visitors at Pine Lodge.
Miss Winnifred Keys, H.N., of
Spokane who was guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Keys,
left for her home.    •
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Elder returned from a holiday trip to Kiplin,
Sask., and other points.
Mrs. Herb Couling left for Creston
to visit her mother, Mrs. Frank La
Belle, prior to leaving, for Prince
Rupert to join her husband, who
has been stationed in the Forestry
Department. The Couling house on
Bay Street has been purchased by
Alev Leitch of Vancouver.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ward and
family, who were visitors in Nakusp, left for their home in Penticton.
They were . accompanied by little
Miss Marilyn Horrey and her bro
ther, David Horrey, who will be
their guests for some time.
James Butlin of New Denver was
guest of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. Jupp.
Mrs. A. J. Harrison and Mrs. Fred
Graduates Honor
Guests at
Invermere Dinner
INVERMERE, B. C, July 5—Grad«
11 students of the Invermere school
were hosts at the first annual graduation dance to be held in the auditorium of the new high school.
Guests of honor were the five graduates in Grade 12, Gloria Wannop,
Windermere; Anne Park and Penny
Peatfield, Radium Hot Springs. Mae
Guey, Athalmer, and Christine Weir,
Invermere.
The auditorium was decorated in
the school colors of blue and gold,
with Summer flowers adding an effective background for the pastel
frocks of the young graduates.
Address to the graduates was given by Mrs. Ian Weir, Invermera
Trustee, and Mrs, Chris Madson,
President of the district P.-T.A.,
also spoke briefly. In her few remarks Miss Alice Curtis, Principal
of the school, remarked that Jack ,
Richardson, a member of the graduating class, was absent, as he had
recently joined the R«C.A.F. Penny
Peatfield replied for the graduates.
New Denver
NEW DENVER, B. C,—Thomas R.
Flint, New Denver, has left the Slocan Community Hospital.
Mrs. John Gawryletz has left to
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Facca, at Natal.
Miss Cathrine A. Wilson, High
School teacher at Vernon, visited ■
Mrs. A. D. Kelsall and daughter,
Miss Florence A. Moss. Miss Wilson
was on the teaching staff at New
Denver.
James W. Butlin spent the holidays in Nakusp, guest of his son-in-
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W.
Jupp, and family. '   '   '-.-■'
Quentin A. Forsythe has returned
from a business trip to Vancouver.
Mr. and Mrs, Hope George and
Laurie Croft of Grand Forks visited
the former's mother, Mrs. Hilda
George.
Mr. and Mrs. Alf H. Anderson and
family returned from a visit with
the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
O. J. Anderson, and brother Roald,
at Fusilier, Sask.
Adam   Johnston   of   Goodlands,
Man., was visiting friends iff New
Denver.    Mr.  Johnston previously ■
lived in New Denver, and was on
the teaching staff.
Carl DuMont of Hunter's Siding,
who was a patient in the Slocan
Community Hospital, has been discharged,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hartley Burgess,
their daughter, Miss Thelma Bru-
gess, and Miss Pearl Leurcu of
Campbell River, B. C, are guests of
Mr. Burgess' sister and brother-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Greer.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Humphris of
Nakusp visited their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alf H. Anderson, and family, Karen and
Rickie,-
R. Smith and W. Davis of the Department of Health and Welfare,
Vancouver1, were visitors in town.
Mrs. May Crellin is spending a
week in Trail visiting her son-in-
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh MacLeod, and daughter Linda.
Mr. and Mrs. Irwin J. Butcher
had as their guest their son, Maurice MacArthur of Cranbrook.
Johnson were joint hostesses 'at a
lawn tea at the home of the former
to honor Mrs. Harrison's house
guests, her daughter-in-law, Mrs.
Norman Harrison and Mrs. G. E.
Stubbs of Vancouver and Mrs. L. M.
Barnes, who is visiting her sister,
Mrs. T. W- Harvey from England.
,,,, ,,    12—20
9361    30-12
YOU'LL LIVE IN IT
Cool as a breezel Sew it with
ease! This is the casual you'll depend on for shopping, church, or
even sports, according to the fabric you choose. Deep yoke, big
pockets are new fashion detailsl
Pattern 9381'in Sizes 12, 14, 16,
IS, %: 3p, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, Size
16 takes 4% yards 35-inch.
This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete, illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every step.
This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete .illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every step.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(35c) in coins (stamps canno.t be
accepted) for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER.
Send your order to MARIAN
MARTIN, care of Nelson Daily
News, Pattern Dept,, Nelson, B. C.
Our Marian Martin Summer
Pattern Book is the best everl Send
Twenty-five Cents today for your
copy. You'll sew the smartest most
New Denver
NEW DENVER, B. C. — Miss
RoBe Taylor and Miss Janet Kerr
of Trail were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. C. W. Gorby and son Douglas.
Mr. and Mrs. J, B. Johannson
and son David returned from Trail
where they were visitors.
Miss Joan Howard, Slocan City,
left the Slocan Community Hospital.'
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Donaldson
and their daughter Jean of Rossland were guests of Mrs. Lillian
Bergrene and family.
Mureen and Michael McCrory
•visited Mr. and Mrs. Peter Thorn
bf Nelson. ,- ■
Miss Betty LaCroix of Sandon
has been discharged from the Slocan Community Hospital.
Miss Elian Bergrene is visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Donaldson in
Rossland.
Peter Thorn Jr., of Nelson Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. P. J. McCrory
and family.
Fred B. Tessman, High School
Principal, Is in Victoria.
Rt. Rev. Bishop H. Embling and
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shaw left on
a motor trip to Radium Hot
Springs and Banff, and other way
points.
John A. Clarkson, Principal of
the Elementary School has left to
attend Summer School at Victoria.
Mr. and Mrs. K. Mayeda left for
Toronto, Ont,, where they will re-
- side with -their son.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mann, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry L. Taylor and Miss
Miyo Yokoyama entertained at a
small party at the Taylor home
In honor of Miss Eleanor and Miss
Irene Kondo, who are leaving to
make   their   home   in   Vancouver.
practical wardrobes for your fam-1 Gifts of china were presented to
ily and yourself with patternr cho- • the guests of honor by Mrs. T.
sen from this book. A Free Pattern j Mann.
of a beachrobe for Misses is printed , *	
in b°°k- I CLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULT6
THE PAGE
that is read most thoroughly by young and old alike, every one a prospectiva
buyer or seller of everything from a 10-ton truck to a tricycle, from a houseful of furniture to a tea set, or a herd of cattle to a pair of budgies!
YOU'LL FIND IT IN THE
CLASSIFIED PAGES OF THE
PHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED SERVICE
 m
Two-Tone
Cool Nylon Mesh
Ritchie
Oxfords
The ideal Summer shoe for the
sportsman. Leather soles and
tieels. Sizes 6 to 11.
Price
$13.50
R. ANDREW
& CO.
LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION
Established 1902
Herbert Street Takes
Coast Girl as Bride
SOUTH SLOCAN,. B.C., July-5—Of interest here and
in Nelson, where the groom attended school, was the wedding
in Sixth Avenue United Church in New Westminster of the
former Enid Mary Rowbotham and Herbert Cecil Street.
Rev. B. F. Ennals officiated.
Tartans Seen
For Autumn
TORONTO,  July  5   (CP)
JhsL Wttiliot
WOMEN
The bride, a graduate of St.
Paul's Hospital school of nursing
in Vancouver, is ihe daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. F, J. Rowbotham of
Burquitlam, and the groom's parents are Mrs. F. Street, who went
from South Slocan for the wedding,
and the late Mr. Street.
Mr. Allen Barnes and Mr. Reg
Killam ushered the guests to their
pews. Among them were the
groom's brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. James Street and
daughters Irene and Jean of South
Slocan.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, chose an ankle-length
gown of frosty white nylon' organdie over pale pink taffeta.. The fitted-bodice featured a Peter Pan
collar and cap sleeves, and rows of
tucks accented the bouffant skirt,
suit of corduroy velvet withsepar-1 Her headdress was of velvet ap-
pliqued daisies outlined in rhine-
stones and pearls, and her bouquet
ate "party" skirt for special occa
sions will be found in .milady's
wardrobe ,if' she heeds the Canadian fashion trend this Fall.
The suit, plus coat styled for
"double duty" were among the models displayed at advance showings
of Fall styles by Toronto designers.
They were two of the highlights
the experts have planned in their
effort to provide clothes within
reach of the average office-girl's
budget.
The coat is complete with fur
collar and chamois lining. Both
can be removed, leaving a gently-
tailored number ideal for wearing
either to the office or late-season
football games. It also comes in a
variety of shades although manufacturers claim Canadian girls are
conservative in their color choice,
clinging chiefly to greys and
blacks.
Tartans promise to highlight next
season's sportswear. Several Tar
tan skirt and vestee combinations
will be seen **jn this Fall's market.
Bright spot for a rainy day will
be the full-backed (or belted) raincoat complete with rain-hat with
softly tailored crown. This comes
in a wide range of colors, varying
from bright green to different
■shades of brown.
There's also a frontiersman jack
Ct in red, cinnamon, green, beige
and of fringed English suede. This
is ideal for the outdoor type of girl.
was of white snapdragons and car
nations.
Miss Dorothy Hahn, as brides-[
maid, wore sheer white eyelet organdie over turquoise taffeta. Her
Juliet cap matched, and she carried
pink and white snapdx-agons and
carnations. Mr. Allen Dinsdale was
best man, and Mrs. Laura Barnes
sang during the signing of the register.
Violin and piano selections were
played at the reception at Moody
Park club house, Mr. Carl Rowbotham proposed the toast to his
niece, and Mrs. G. Rowbotham, an
aunt, of the bride, and Mrs. Max
Katz of Haney poured. Telegrams
of congratulation were received
from Regina and Guelph, Ont.
For a motor trip through' the
B. C. Interior, the bride donned an
apple green lin'en suit and camel
hair topcoat.
Vancouver will be the newly-
weds' home.
VfljDVJUL %<)AMp —
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, July 5 CAP) —
You probably never' thought it
would happen, but James Cagney
is muscling.out of the, mob.
"Yes, I'm going straight," grinned
the actor, without an ounce of
menace. He admitted that he'll
probably never do another gangster
picture.
This marks the end of an era.
Cagney was perhaps the screen's
best-known mobster. His pre-eminence in the field dated back to
"Public Enemy," which made him
a star just 20 years ago. Although
he made many non-criminal pictures, he was still firmly identified
as a mug. In two of his-last three
pictures he portrayed a gunman.
"The gangster pictures were representative of an era," he observed.
"But that era is over now. The
Kefauver hearings on television
helped it. Nowadays if you did a
picture about gangsters, you'd have
to show the nation-wide aspects of
the rackets,"
Also, today's crime pictures might
reasonably show the traffic in dope
and its sale to 'teen-agers.
Cagney is making the transition
from gangsterism with a newspaper role in "Come Fill the Cup."
After the film is over, the actor
will return to his farm at Martha's
Vineyard, Mass.
In a hilarious moment of "Here'
Comes the Groom," a character exclaims, "This is better than television." The remark is apt. If Holly'
wood had more pictures like this, it
would have less worries about the
upstart industry. This film is one of
Bing Crosby's best, combining
enough elements of entertainment
to please the most jaded movie goer,
The plot is a romantic mix-up with
the Groaner, Jane Wyman, Alexis
Smith and Franchot Tone. Illogical
Yes, but still lots of fun, A needed
assist to Crosby's film career.
Teacher Addresses
Natal-Michel P.-T.A.
NATAL, B. C„ July 5 — "The
Trend Away From Compulsion"
was the topic of an address given
by W. Murray, Michel-Natal teacher, at the final meeting of Natal-
Michel Parent-Teacher -Association
before Fall.
Members decided to elect a new
slate of officers at the first meeting after the Summer recess. A refund of $20 from the recent B. C.
Parent-Teacher Federation convention was accepted.
Entertainment was provided by
eight choir girls who sang several
selections, accompanied by Mrs.
Murray.
News of the Day
RATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type) larger type rates on
request, Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment
LONDON (CP)—A petitioner in
a divorce court case told the judge
that his wife preferred to polish his
motor-car over the week-end instead of letting him drive it.
DESMOND   T.
LITTLEWOOD
OPTOMETRIST
Successor to J. O. Patenaude
PHONE 293 NELSON, B, C.
More miles per foot on shoe repairs at TONY'S REPAIR SHOP.
All hats greatly reduced at
ADRIAN   MILLINERY
We have a few 2nd hand for sale
SAM BROWN, Repairs, Nelson, B.C
If it's worth owning, it's worth
insuring. See BLACKWOOD AGCY
GOOD   FIREWOOD   FOR   SALE
Mostly tamarac. Ph, 532-Y, Box 367.
Get your fishing license at Jack
Boyce's Men's Shop.
ELECTROLUX SALES .-SERVICE
PHONE NELSON 1108 OR 653
Bring that valuable timepiece to
COLLINSON'S for reliable repairs
at moderate prices,
New stock Majestic Luggage just
received. Smart, new colors and
finishes. — HIPPERSON'S.
NOTICE
Fairview Fuel and Supply will be-
closed from July 9th to 23rd.
Hard-wearing English hand towels in red, green  or blue stripes,
Size 20 by 40 inches.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
Playmor Saturday. Dance on B.C.'s
Finest New Maple Floor.
Just Arrived — Natural Carving
Leather. Shop early.
THE CRAFT CENTRE
Playtogs of every description for
the children, at the
TOT-N-TEEN SHOP.
HOME PLAN BOOKS-To help
you plan your New Home—50c to
$1.00.   BPRNS LUMBER CO. "
David Nystrom—Interior and exterior painting, paperhanging. Free
estimates. Phone 750-R.
Protect your potato crop with
Green Cross Potato Dust. Prevents
blight, destroys insects, simple to
use. — HIPPERSON'S.
Home of Holiday Togs for children of all agesl All your kiddies'
holiday-wear requirements can be
found most reasonably at
THE  CHILDREN'S SHOP.
Chimneys, stoves, furnaces clean
ed; chimneys topped; thimbles ap
plied; hot and cold air ducts cleaned
by vacuum. — Pounder's Chimney
Service; Phone 1541-L.
MR. AND MRS. RICHARD EMERSON POWELL
ST. ANDREW'S-BX-THE-LAKE at Willow Point
was the setting for the wedding of the former Kathleen
Alicia Ludgate, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Ludgate,
and Richard Emerson Powell, son of Mrs. Thomas Powell
and the late Mr. Powell. Very Rev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean
of Kootenay, officiated at the attractive ceremony.
Nelson
Social...
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, T951 — 5
Be sure to visit the Hose and
Flower Show in the Silver Room,
Hume Hotel, this Saturday, 2 p.m.
lo 10 p.m., and Sunday, 2 p.m. to
9 p.m.
... By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX
• Miss Dolores Ward of Victoria
has arrived for her wedding which
takes place in Nelson July 18.
• Mr. and Mrs. J. H. MacMIUan,
415 Falls Street, have returned
from a holiday in California and
Mexico.'
• Mr. and Mrs. J. Harris and son,
Leslie, from Alhambra, Alta., are
holidaying with relatives here, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Harris, 508 First
Street, and Mr. and Mrs. Emile
Heroux, 320 Chatham Street.
• Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Wiginton
have returned from a two-month
trip through Eastern Canada and
the United States. Mrs. Wiginton
stopped in Calgary for a two weeks
visit with her daughters, Mrs. E. R.
Fitz-Patrick arid Mrs. L. E. Dow-
ling..
• Miss Denise Stewart of Trail
has been guest at the Carbonate
Street home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. R. B. Stewart.
• Miss Joan Stromstead, 224
Observatory Street, left by plane
for Kelowna where she went to
attend  an. instructress  course  in
| swimming. ■
• i Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Nelson,
I , Hume Hotel, were recent visitors
*|   in Spokane.
I • Mr. and Mrs. CA. Dayman
Nelson Avenue, Fairview, have as
guests Mrs. Dayman's sister and
brother,    Mrs.    H.   Archibald    of
I Strongfield, Sask., and R. J. Ren
nick of Moncton, Ont.
I o Mrs. Roberts who teaches on
the staff of the Central School has
left to spend her vacation at the
Coast.
• Mrs. W. Graham, formerly of
Nelson and now residing in Vancouver, is in the City to visit her
mother,  Mrs.  Whitehead.
• Mrs. J. H. Argyle, Observatory Street, has returned from a
few weeks at the Coast.
• Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Allan,
Baker Street were visitors in
Spokane.
LAST DAYS
TODAY and TOMORROW
of Our
ADVANTAGE HAYS
SALE
COME IN AND SEE ALL THE ASTOUNDING BARGAINS
This is your opportunity to take advantage of us
Freeman Furniture Co.
Princess May Set Fall
Vogue on Canada Tour
"PLAIN LIVING"
LONGEVITY SECRET
AGINCOURT, Ont., July 5 (CP)
—Mrs. Matthew Elliot today celebrated her 102nd birthday.
She came to Canada from England 95 years ago and spent almost
all her life on a farm in Scarboro
Township just East of Toronto.
Now she lives with a daughter
less than half a mile from the
original homestead.
She has five children living, 15
grandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.
Her secret of longevity: "Plain,
regular living."
AND MRS! PHILIP A. HEAPS
GRADUATES OF University of B.C. are the former
Joan Beverley Nagle, formerly of Nelson, and Philip A.
Heaps, who exchanged nuptial vows in St. Mary's Anglican Church in Vancouver. The bride is the daughter
of Mrs. G. D. Nagle of Vancouver and the late Mr. Nagle,
former residents of Nelson. The groom, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Heaps of Vancouver, has taken up administrative residency work at Toronto Western Hospital.
—Joan Davies photo.
Canadian Qirl Works
18-Hour Day in Films
LONDON, July 5 (CP)-Freckle-faced Lois Maxwell,
a Canadian girl who swapped a long-term Hollywood contract
for an 18-hour day in Italian films, says she still thinks she
made the right -choice.
"I'd do it again if I had to," said the 24-year-old actress
from Kitchener and Fort Erie, Ont., who made a name for
herself in Italian movies without speaking a word of the
language.
Experienced baby sitters of all
ages desirous of registering for paid
baby-sitting for Bonspiel visitors
from July 9th to 14th. contact the
Civic Centre Office before Friday,
July 6th.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
SPECIAL
9 OZ. TUMBLERS
6 FOR 39c
Mc 8. Me (NELSON) LTD.
One 6-piece Dinette Suite; walnut
finish; reg. $110,50, special $74.50.
We buy and sell new and used
furniture and antiques.
HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE
PHONE   1560 413   HALL  8T.
VISITORS
Headquarters for all your smoking, reading and camera needs. If
vou have a sweet tooth, we can'fix
that up for vou too. -.
VALENTINE'S.
Church of The Redeemer
11:00 a.m-
7:30 p.m.-
-Holy Communion
■Evening Prayer
South Slocan—9:00 a.m.
The Vicar.
FUNERAL NOTICE
Funeral services for the late Mrs.
Amy Russel of Riondel will be held
from the Anglican Church at Kaslo
Saturday.at 12 noon. Interment will
be in Kaslo Cemetery.
One June day two years ago Lois
snapped her fingers at Hollywood—
"that place wasn't teaching me anything" — flounced into New York
and caught the first ship. It happened to be headed for Italy, and
ever since her career has "had a
Latin touch.
Now she's taking a kind of busman's holiday. Here to appear in
the British film, "The Woman's
Angle," Lois-finds she has time on
her hands. It wasn't that way in
Italy.
In contrast to the usual conception of Latin languor, the caramel-
blonde says in Italy an IB-hour day
is routine. If it ever got down to
12 hours a day. the cast would think
it was on bankers' hours.
'As far as films are concerned,"
says the quiet-spoken Lois, "doing
what Rome does means that the only
thing you have any energy left for
after shooting is sleep."
Her first Italian film was "Tomorrow Is Too Late." with English
dialogue. Later she made .films with
Italian dialogue dubbed in. Now she
makes her own sound track — in
Italian.
Lois has appeared in  "Amorl
Veleni."  "Queen  Maria  Qhristina"
and "The White Leper," story of a
young cocaine addict.
Despite the grind of long hours,
she is happy working in Italy and
hopes soon to interest Canadian
sponsors in Italian-Canadian productions. She has no regrets about
leaving Hollywood, where she played in such movies as "The Big
Punch," "That Hagen Girl" and "The
Dark Past."
CHARLING, Kent., England (CP).
—A sixpence bearing the likeness
of Queen Elizabeth was found in
a garden here.
Rossland Ndtes
ROSSLAND, B.C. — Mr. and Mrs.
E. D. Brown and Mr. and Mrs,
Claude Brown of Vancouver are
visiting relatives here. Mrs. E. D.
Brown is the sister of J. A. McKenzie.
A. Hubner and children, Eleanor
and Ernest, accompanied by Pat
Quinn left Saturday to spend the
long weekend at Needles. Mrs. A.
Hubner, Mrs. Alice Chesham and T.
Scott joined them Sunday.
Miss Patricia Wishart of Edmonton, sister of, Mrs. H. A. Franklin,
is in Rossland for a short visit.
Mrs. D. G. Chamberlain, Mrs. R.
D. McAllister and Ann Chamberlain
were in Gray Creek for a short
stay.
Mr. and Mrs. I. Hendrickson and
children Larry and Nandine have
left for the Coast. En route they
will visit relatives in Seattle, Vancouver and Island points.
J. E. Gordon has returned to Tel-
sequah on business.
D. G. Chamberlain, principal of
the Rossland high school, is .leaving
on a trip to Vancouver and Victoria.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Bentley
were in Rossland. They are now
living at Phoenix, Ariz., but were
former residents of Rossland.
Peter Terzick of Indianapolis,
Ind., formerly of Rossland, visited
the city.
R. Mundell of the MacLean teaching staff has left for his home in
Haney and will attend Summer
school at Victoria.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Berg and son
Raymond and Mrs. E. Finnas, aunt
of Mr. Berg, were here visiting relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Haynes of
Seattle, Wash., former residents of
Rossland, were Rossland visitors.
Miss Joyce Davidson has left for
Victoria to attend Summer school.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Posey and family, Mrs. M. Posey and Mrs. Hazel
Davidson left for the. Coast Sunday.
Miss Ruth Waldie, a teacher at
MacLean school, left last week for
her home in Trail and will continue
on to Victoria to attend Summer
school
Mr. and Mrs. Fred. White and
children Judy and Clarke spent a
Alarms Guide.
Honoree to Gifts
SLOCAN CITY, B. G, July 5-
Miss Irene Budd, a recent bride-
elect, never thought she would
have to go through what she did
when she was invited to a shower
in her honor at the home 'of Mrs.
Ed Clough.
Gifts were hidden through the
house, and the guest of honor was
guided to them by an arrangement
of alarm clocks which rang at intervals. Court whist was played,
Mrs. Osis winning high score and
Mrs. Tracy Cooper, the consolation.
Mrs. Cooper was co-hostess.
LONDON, July 5 (CP)—The royal dressmaker, Norman Hartnell,
visited Clarence House today to discuss the clothes that Princess
Elizabeth will wear on her visit
to Canada In October.
Britain fashion writers promptly
gossiped that the princess would .
have an "entirely new" wardrobe
for the visit. Official sources at
Clarence House confined themselves to saying that naturally the
princess would require some new
clothes.
London's three main evening
newspapers all made the forthcoming royal tour a leading item in
their gossip columns, a regular
feature in. most British papers.
The Evening News forecast that
the princess's styles would set the
Autumn and Winter fashion for
smartly-dressed women in Canada.
The Star noted' that the royal
visitors would have to be prepared
for rain (on the West Coast), cold
(on the East Coast) and plenty of
snow if they visited the Rocky
Mountains,
So the princess's choice," the
Star said, "is bound to be tweeds,
woollen dresses and small hats."
The Evening News, on the other
hand, recalled that Canada, often is
favored with Indian Summers, particularly in Southern Alberta, and
thus .the princess "may have a
chance to wear the lightweight
coats which suit her so well."
BROWN, GREEN OR GREY
As for color, fashion experts take
the view that Princess Elizabeth
will prove to be partial to brown,
green and grey, shades to which
Hartnell is giving a big play this
year. When Queen Elizabeth toured
Canada in 1939, however, she wore
pinks and sky blues.
Whatever the princess decjdes-to
wear, strict precautions probably
will be taken to keep the designs
from becoming known too soon.
This procedure was followed before the 1939 tour.
Although arrangements for the
trip still are far from settled, it is
expected that at least one of Elizabeth's four ladies-in-waiting will
accompany the princess. The ladies-
in-waiting are Lady Alice Egerton,
Lady Margaret Hay, Lady Palmer
and Mrs. Andrew Elphinstone, wife
of the queen's nephew."
Robson W. I. Plans
Strawberry, Festival
ROBSON, B.C., July 5 — Plans
for a strawberry festival were
made by Robson Women's Institute
at its meeting at the home of Mrs.
S. Humphries. Committees were
named to arrange the event.
Members were asked to bring
discarded woolens for conversion
into two blankets to be added to
an emergency box. Roll call was
answered with a donation of dried
fruit to be sent to England.
Natal Group Meets
NATAL, B.C., July 5 — Ladies'
Pleasant Hour, active group of the
United Church at Natal, met at
the home of Mrs. Doug Lowe.
few days in Spoken over the holiday
weekend...
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. MacKenzie
and his brother Wilbur have left
for Penticton. Mrs. Nellie Ratcliffe,
whose home is in Vancouver, accompanied them as far as Penticton.
Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Palmer had as
their guest for a few days the latter's mother, Mrs. George Johnson
of Kaslo.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Hatfield of Penticton spent the weekend in the
city accompanied by their grandson,
Michael. Michael is the son of Mr
and Mrs. Paddy Topliff of Vancou^
ver, former residents of Rossland.
R. Castle of the High School staff
has left for his home in Vancouver.
Pupils Guests
Of Lister W. I.
LISTER, B.C., July 5 — Lister-
Huscroft Women's Institute treated
school pupils here to ice cream
during end-of-the-term activities.
LOVELY HATS
in
ALL STYLES AND COLORS
MILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE
PHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED
Buy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way
COAL
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Phone 889
TOWLER
Fuel & Transfer
Nelson, B.C.
Procter Notes
Capt. and Mrs. M. MacKinnon
have as guests their daughter. Mrs.
O. G'frnerer and family oi Bal-
carres, sask.
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Brilish Columbia"a
Most Interesting Newspaper '
Published every morning except Sunday by the
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,
266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia
Authorized as Second Class Mail
Post  Office Department,  Ottawa
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Friday, July 6, 1951
Parliament Keeps Tab
On Continent
There are people who sometimes
ask: "Apart from voting money, what
does Parliament do?"'
One good answer came last week,
says the Ottawa Journal.
Without Parliament, without the
vigilance there of an Opposition, the
country might never have known that
, at a time when Canadian troops are
fighting Chinese Communists in Korea
ships of Canadian registry and under
the Canadian flag are being sailed by
Chinese officers and crews into Chi-
|* nese Communist ports, and that such
ships are at least in a position to take
strategic war supplies to Red Chinese
armies.
'." (Prime Minister St. Laurent admits
that, apart altogether from the black-
J, listed port of Macao, such ships have
carried from Hong Kong to Bed China
limited supplies of scrap iron and rubber tires.)
Without Parliament, without the
[vigilance there of an Opposition, the
\ Journal stresses, the country might
never have known that the Cabinet, by
a secret "verbal directive", gave the
Chinese company which operates these
ships of Canadian registry and with
the Canadian flag an exemption from
using Canadian officers and crews and'
permitted them to use Chinese officers
and crews.
These are things the Canadian
people had a right to know, and about
which now, when the facts have been
disclosed, they are in a position to pronounce judgment.
Thus the vindication of Parliament
—not merely a forum for debate but a
place where the executive can be questioned and compelled to answer, where
it must submit its acts to light and
audit.
It is, as the Journal says, the difference between democracy and despotism.
V        More Inflation
Virtual disappearance of the world's
dollar shortage is reported in the annual survey of the United Nations Economic Commission. But since this result has been reached because the
United States has been paying progressively higher prices throughout the
world for essential materials, the Commission says that further inflation -is
now inevitable "even if raw material
prices do not rise above their current
levels." Repercussions of this stockpiling drive have created "new economic
maladjustments and tensions no less
Serious than those which were being
overcome." In the same vein, the survey predicts continuation of "open inflation" in Asia, Africa and Latin
America.
■■ It is against such a background,
.points out the Toronto Globe and Mail,
that Washington announces the removal of price controls "from tanks, planes
Poll Tax
Old Fashioned :,*
The poll tax Is on its way out in the Southern States, Whatever justification there ever
was lor requiring payment to maintain a person's voting privilege has long since, disappeared. No one has been more aware of this
fact than Southerners, despite their vigorous
efforts to defeat Federal legislation that would
force them to drop it from their State laws.
Americans who have been born and
brought up in our Southern States have an
understandable aversion to being pushed
around, a good American trait that is shared—
on other subjects—by citizens who live further
North. They just don't like to be told by tha
Federal Government how to run their own
States.
The poll tax has been passing from the
scene gradually for a great many years. Only
seven States still had it when South Carolina
recently decided that it was time to drop lt.
With Governor Thurmond leading a repeal
movement, voters of the Palmetto State voted
4 to 1 to abolish the 85-year-old Constitutional
provision.
A similar proposal already has passed one
House of the Virginia Legislature.—Spokane
Spokesman-Review.
What's Wronfc With
Domi
?
mion
The word "Dominion" is now to disappear
from the Dominion Elections Act, which will
henceforth be known as the Canada Election
Act. Under the aegis of the Federal Government* this process has been going on ln many
phases. Pretty soon this glorious word, so long
associated with Canadian history, will vanish
and be forgotten, just because a few misguided
purists think it bears connotations of colonialism. How wrong they are, and how descriptive a word lt was for this nation from sea
to sea.—St. Catharines Standard.
Robert's Rules
A little aged widow gave a book to the
Library of Congress; it was a first edition of
"Robert's Rules of Order", written by her
husband, Henry M. Robert. The occasion was
the 75th anniversary of its publication.
A strange book is this! Containing no love
Interest, depicting no murders, preaching no
inspiring message, it is an all-time best seller
nevertheless. It would be difficult to find It
for sale on any newsstand or in bookstores,
because there never is any sizable demand for
it. The record of 1,500,000 copies published has '
been attained by a steady call for copies from
every part of tlie United States, in fact from
all over the world.
Few books have proved Important to more
people and to more diverse types of people.
The Bible and some other religious books, of
course, have been known to more persons; so,
too, has Fanny Farmer's remarkable cook
book, and perhaps a few others. But "Robert's" :
certainly ranks among the 10 non-fiction best
sellers'of all time.
, An indication of Its value to our civilization is that it is quoted or paraphrased, its
contents invoked and its name used ln vain, by
faT more people than ever have seen one of
the brick-red bindings.
We. have it today, along with some less
popular imitations, because a South Carolina
army officer once decided there was need for
such a book. Called upon to preside at meetings, he found no printed guidance available
except for legislative bodies. He realized that
there should be a volume providing rules that
anybody could follow in conducting any kind
of meeting anywhere, that they should be concise, pVactlcal and subject'to yearly Improvement and revision.
He was so sure of his Idea that he paid for
tlie first printings himself when he found no
publisher willing -to agree.
May Mr. Robert, later a General, rest forever ln peace. There is no estimating the extent
of tha contention and disorder he has avoided
in countless gatherings through the years. If
nothing else dl dso, this book must have earned
him eternal bliss.—Tlie Spokesman-Review.
and other strictly military Items."
These things had originally been included in the general price freeze. Tlie
complete removal of controls means
that all war production in the United
States returns, in effect, to a free-cost-
plus basis. With the world's 15 essential
commodities in generally short supply
and stockpiling still progressing, and
with a rising price trend at home unchecked, the control-free defence economy will dictate further price rises for
civilian items.
? Questions?
ANSWERS
Open to any reader. Names of persona
asking questions will  not ba published.
There   lo   no   oharga   for   thin   oorvlco.
Question!  WILL   NOT   BE   ANSWERED
BY MAIL except' where there lo obvloui
necessity for privacy-
Mrs. S., Nelson—On what date did a railway
accident occur in the State of Washington,
year 1910? Believe 80 were killed; would
like the day and month. Also, on what
date should women's entries be ln for the
National Pacific Exhibition, Vancouver?
We believe the railroad wreck you want
Information on was the one which occurred
March 1, 1910, on the Great Northern Cascade
Line. Early that morning a snowbound passenger train at the WeBt portal of the Cascade
tunnel was struck by a massive snow slide.
Durham's History of Spokane and the Inland
Empire states that more than 100 lives were
lost. The Chicago Dally News Almanac (1911)
says that only a score or more were killed, but
many more injured. Entries for the P.N.E.,
other than home-baking, should be in from
Aug. 13 to 14, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Home-
baking exhibits, Sept. 4, up to 11 a.m.
A. M., Kimberley—What is pewter, and what
Is it used for?
Pewter is made by mixing tin and lead and
certain other metals, such as zinc, blsmouth,
antimony and copper. It is used in making
various containers, and articles made of pewter
were highly prized by North American colonists.
Press Comment
BACHELORS
One definition of a bachelor: A man who
can put on his socks at either end.—Stratford
Beacon-Herald.
Almost debt-free Is the Province of Alberta, boasts the Edmonton Journal, which
estimates that "Provincial reserves must be
coming close to equalling the total debt" which
is now less than $100 millions.'
PARKING DOUBLE
Windsor Council has amended its bylaw
to more clearly define double parking. We
understand it doesn't apply as yet to parking
double in Lovers' Lanesl—Windsor Daily Star,
Looking Backward
10 YEARS AGO
From The Dally News of July 6, 1941
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Ferguson, Carbonate
Street, had as their weekend guest, their son
Warren, who is employed at Ross Spur.
Carl Locatelli was named coach of the
Nelson girls softball rep. team, which Is preparing to defend the Province Trophy and
the West Kootenay championship.
25 YEARS AGO
From The Dally News of July 6, 1926
Margery Pendry was* elected leader of the
C.G.I.T. in New Denver Saturday evening at
their regular meeting.
Jimmie Cottrell of Spokane won the referee's decision over Scotty Inkster of Vancouver and Revelstoke ln the main event of
the mining convention boxing card last night.
Mrs. W, R. Thomson, Front Street, entertained recently for Miss M. Bagnall of Auckland, New Zealand.
40 YEARS AGO
From The Dally News of July 6, 1911
Yesterday, W. H. Pearson, Jr., of. Toronto,
W. F. Roberts and C. D. Blackwood, brought
in between them, 25 to 30 fine Rainbow trout
from the big pool at South Slocan.
Mrs. B. Balding was appointed Noble
Grand and Mrs. M. Treves Vice Grand, when
Queen City Rebekah Lodge held their installation Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Seaman left last night
for a six-week visit to the Coast.
It's Been Said
It's far easier to show another man his
proper place ln the world than lt ls to find
your own.—Anonymous.
Your Horoscope
Keep everything under control, and splendid work, long-term ventures and profitable
meetings are in order, so you should step out
and take your place in the world with utmost
confidence. Self-confidence, enterprise and
ambition will probably mark tlie child born
today,
They'll Do it Every Time
From an
Oldtimer* s
Notebook
~ by R.G.JOY If"
HISTORIAN, NELSON AND
DISTRICT  OLTIMERS   ASSN.
(Editor's note: This is the fifth
and concluding Installment pf a
sketch on early days in Nelson,
presumably by Nelson pioneer
Tom Collins.)   ,
' "William Baillle-Grohman brought
ln the first steamboat which ran on
Kootenay Lake. It was known as
the Midge, and was a small screw
steamer, She was brought ln In 1884
In connection with the reclamation
work along Kootenay River, and
eventually fell into the hands pf
T. D. Davis, after which it was generally known as the 'Mud Hen'.
Davis was a Welshman who was
brought out by Colonel Baker to
superintend an experimental farm
which'he was to induce the Government to locate at Cranbrook. This
farm was never started, but Davis
worked for Colonel Baker for some
months. He afterward fell in wllh
Baillle-Grohman and came down to
Kootenay River as a prospective
settler upon the land which the
company was to reclaim, it being a
condition that the reclamation company should not only reclaim but
Bettle these lands before securing
title.
"The next steamer to make its
appearance was the Surprise, which
was put into service some time ln
1885-88 by the Hendryx Company,
operating the Blue Bell mine. Its
chief business was the moving of
supplies to the steamer Idaho in
the Spring of 1888. Following this
came the steamer Idaho. This craft
was brought over from the Coeur
d'Alene Lake by Dick Fry and Captain Thompson, having been purchased from Captain Ainsley and
Nelson Martin. 'Hi' Sweet was the
first engineer upon the Idaho. Three
months after the Idaho came thej
Galena, also owned by the Hendryx
Company. This was the first boat
run by Captain Hayward on Koote- J
nay Lake. i
"Its first trip from Nelson to the
Blue Bell mine was a memorable
one. Dr, Hendryx had loaded the'
boat up with a number of friends,!
who In return for his hospitality|
were   expected   to   admire   thej
steaming qualities of the Galena.
The steamer started  back  from
Nelson and reached the Narrows
about  15  miles  from  the  town.
Here It was" found trwt the boat's
outlines were not powerful enough
to get through, and a layover followed until the Idaho came and
towed the  Galena through, another day being oocupled In reaching the Blue Bell mine.
"After this it was found necessary
to   cut   the   Galena   ln   two   and
lengthen her. The Galena continued
to be the principal boat on the lake
until June, 1881, when the Nelson
was launched. It continued running
regularly until the Fall of 1892.
"The building of the smelter at
Pilot Bay wbb not primarily a part
of the scheme for the development
of the Blue Bell mine. Before the
erection of the Pilot Bay smelter
was decided upon, A. B, Hendryx
and Franklin Farrel had a sort of
TAKING IN all the sights In hor
European tour, Margaret Truman,
daughter of the U, (3. President, Is
seen as she visited the famous
Eiffel Tower In Paris:, a must for
every visitor to the French capital—Central Press Canadian.
Views From the News Fronts
•m-stwtl V. i MM Ots»
By Jimmy Hatlo
His dqj. is nice ahd UJourreREO
HOW, BUT WE'S/GOT OTHER. WORRIES-
HE JUST HEARD FRQH THE W PEPY-.
0/TI DIP PAY
My K}48 TAX-
I'M SURE OF rr~
I MUST HAVE'
ACBXatiG TO VOU**.
RETURN YWmO
IT By IMSX4LU1BMT5-
50 AIL YOjt-L HAVE
ID DO IS SHOW US*
X3UR GAMCELEP
CHECKS'
Today's Bible Thought
We need all three every day. We
must never take hope from humanity, and certainly we must not lose
faith In eternal goodness, and we
heed charity from others at well as
hope for ourselves.—Now abldeth
faith, hope and charity, these three.
—1 Cor. 13:13.
OumL dtsL
I flon't begrudge their costly new
house. It seems wrong to give people
that much money without givin'
'em a little good taste.
PHONE 144 FOR CLA88IFIED
an option on the Silver King group.
They examined the property and
made the owners an offer, but It
was rejected. It was not until after
this offer was rejected that Pilot
Bay was selected as a site for smelting operations.
A REAL ESTATE
SMELTER
"The  location  of the smelter at
Pilot Bay was nothing more or less
than a real estate speculation by
Gedfge Kane, now of Kaslo, as a
site for a sawmill for the Davies
Sayward   Company.   It   was   first
Rnown as Pirate's Bay. Tlie following  Spring  'Josh'  Davies  and  Dr.
Hendryx got up the Pilot Bay town-
site scheme and work was started
upon construction of the smelter.
"Although Dr. Hendryx did not
meet with success In hla operation
In Kootenay, he Is kindly remembered   by  all  the  oldtimers,   He
waa the most accommodating man
who ever cast In hla lot with the
district. Hla company did much to
keep the country moving for the
first two or throe years after Ha
discovery. They were In fact the
only men In the country Who had
any money, Much was Bpent In
the development of the Blue Bell
and In the operating of the small
steamers.  Theae   latter   were   of
great service to the men moving
about the  lake, and there never
wasa man too poor to ride on the
Hendryx boats."
Sproat's Landing was never a
rival of Nelson's. It never amounted
to anything more than a construction enmp during the building of the
Columbia & Kootenay Railway. In
addition to the railway company's
store, the only merchants were R,
E. Lemon and Sam Green, later of
Kaslo. John A. Gibson, ran a hotel
By BILL B08S
Canadian'Press Staff Writer
WITH THE CANADIANS IN KOREA, July 5 (CP) — Picture of a
war: • ;,';':
1. The troops of one side, solidly
dug in along one series of mountain-
tops.
2. Troops of the other side, equally
solidly dug in along another series
of mountain-tops—15, miles North.
3. A 15-mile-wlde "buffer area"
In between — anybody's area if 'he
cares to take the risk of being
shot at.
4. "Patrols" In broad daylight,
bristling , composite groups embracing Infantry, artillery and armor parading forward ln full view
of the enemy, deploying to "check"
objectives he can see clearly, and
perhaps occupies'.
5. "Rotation" with the enemy of
control of the "buffer." He pulls
down into it as the "patrols" withdraw for the night, and in turn
withdraws as they return in the
morning. »■■
What a war,
Yet it goes on'dally over the
North of what may be described
only as "the Chorwon area."-
Seldom ln the course of military
history have patrols ln a theatre
of war gone out for 14- and 15-
mile distances, taken up positions
that far forward of the forward defence lines, and then withdrawn
back into them after a given time.
Yet here It's become so routine as
to be boring.
Today the Korean campaign
amounls to "training with hazard,"
in the Canadians' area at least.
A material advantage of the present phase is that it enables tha
Canadian 25th Infantry Brigade-
now functioning together for tho
first time, to test itself as a team.
Shots from a Chinese machine-
gun are urgent reminders of lessons
learned earlier. Always they have
artillery out with them, dropping
off along the way to set up gun
positions -ready to fire in closa
support
Closest engagement was a patrol
by the Princess Patricias, a compact 10-man sortie, which exchanged grenades with the Chinese and
left six enemy dead at no cost to
the Canadians.
One patrol by the 2nd Battalion,
Royal 2nd Hegiment, saw a company under Capt. Charles Forbes
of Mata.ne Sur Mer, Que., come
under enemy fire as it approached
one hill, clear It, then again coma
under fire as lt left lt to go onto
the next. Another day they might
not'bump a thing.    '
And so It goes. Hard work, climbing hills in 110-degree temperatures
wilh battle kit on.
Main "casualties" have been tha
tanks of the Lord Strathcona Horse,
four of which were knocked out
recently. But the tank men repaired!
them on the spot, right out in that
buffer r.o man's land, and drove
them In by nightfall.
Soldiering in North Korea these
days is duller, harder than ever
and apparently pointless into the
bargain. At least/that's the way tho
man doing it^sees lt.
there and Mrs. Schroeder conducted
a restaurant. When the railway
work was finished, the residents of
Sproat's Landing moved to Nelson,
'one after another. None of the
people doing business in Sproat's
Landing purchased town lots, and
some of them moved off without
paying the owner anything ln the
way of rental for the ground covered by their places of business.
Some settled afterwards, but those
who did not were sued. These Cases
were tried in Nelson, and judgment
was given in favor of Thomas
Sproat ln some of the cases. W. C.
McLean, who was one of the contractors upon the C. & K, Railway,
became entitled to a place in history through being sued by the
owner of Sproat's Landing for compensation for the use of the town-
site as a grazing land for his horses.
W. F. Teetzel was never engaged in
business at Sproat's Landing, and
George A. Bigelow came to Nelson
direct from Manitoba.
The Miner, the first newspaper
established in Nelson, was started
by Messrs. Houston, Ink and Allan,
the plant being packed in by Joe
Wilson's pack train from Sproat's
Landing. The Tribune was started
by John Houston, C. V. Dake, W. J.
MacKay. Mr. Ink having left Nelson
after the sale of The Miner, and
The Tribune was a growing concern
before he returned or acquired any
interest in lt.
There are many theories for the
application of the name of Bogus-
town to the townsite first placed on
the market as "Nelson City". The
name was" first given it by E. R.
Atherton, possibly as an inference
to difficulties that accompanied efforts to secure its registration.
LEMON  CAME  BY
FLAT BOAT
R. E. Lemon Is more of a pioneer
than many think. He made his first
visit to Nelson In May, 1888. "Bob"
had brought a big stock of groceries
down the Columbia River from Revelstoke on a flat boat. He made the
trip down to Sproat's Landing in
14 days, leaving Revelstoke May 4 .
and arriving at Sproat's on the 18th.
Among those who came down the
river in Lemon's flat boat were G.
O. Buchanan. Harry Sheran, Thomas M. Ward, Bob Hall and Thomas
Dow.
Lemon had an idea that the town
for Southern Kootenay would be on
Ihe Columbia River, but before ho
located he decided to take a run
over and see Stanley, as Nelson was
then called. There waj, however, no
trail into Nelson from the Columbia
River. Before Lemon could get his
goods into Nelson he had to build a
trail from Sproat's Toad Mountain
irnil at Forty-Nine Creek to Eagle
Creek, where he picked up the
Poorman trail Into Nelson. During
the construction of the C. & K.
Railway, Lemon carried on stores at
Sproat's Landing and at Nelson, but
In the Spring, following the completion of the road, he closed up hla.
store at Sproat's and gave his attention to the Nelson house,
George Bigelow was not a pioneer
of Nelson, as he did not reach hers
until May 2, 1890, but he made hla
share of history just the same.
Shortly afler his arrival in Nelson,
Bigelow was made a Justice of tha
Peace, and it was upon' the Bench
rather than behind the counter that
he attracted attention.
f
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SUMMER
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SPORTS
JIGGS MAURIELLO OF TRAIL
"TEXAS DAY" AT THE GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS'. . .
Burke Takes 3<Stroke Lead,
Wipes Out Course Record
Jiggs Mauriello, well known Trail
[epeedboat owner, copped second
I place in the Pacific Northwest Gold
I Cup race at Deep Cove, near Van-
| couver, Monday.
Coast newspapers said Mauriello
I almost overtook Jim Hutchinson of
I Vancouver, whose Teaser II flashed
f first across the finish line. The re-
' port6 said that while the Trail
f Racer's Mercury was a more power-
' fill boat, the Teaser got a lead at
| the start that Mauriello Just couldn't
'quite overcome. Speeds up to 90
miles an hour were reached.
WIDE INTEREST
Mauriello plans to race in Nelson's
Water Show August 19 "as well as
racing at Kelowna and Seattle earlier ln the month.
Kiwanis Club race committee
ehairman, Dick Palmer, has been
assured of a good entry of inboards
from Vancouver Power Boat Racing
Association and interest has also
been expressed by American racers.
Victoria has also been invited to
take part.
All outside racers will, be inboard
boats, or hydroplanes, and there is
a possibility that Mauriello will
have another chance to race Hutchinson. L. F, Gilbert of Nelson, who
last year was unable to race
Mauriello when he was injured and
his boat damaged in an accident,
has had his sleek Ladybird burning
up the West Arm waters this
Summer.
Another change in this year's
program will see a variety of water
acts performed between races,
number of which' are being reduced. Exhibition divers and water
skiers from Kelowna and Coeur
d'Alene and district points are being contacted.
Shutout Topples Sox
From Top; Yanks Lead
By W. R. WHEATLEY
Canadian Press Staff Writer
MIS3IS8AUGUA GOLF CLUB,
Toronto, July 5 (CP) — Jaok
Burke, Jr., a cmitlouo little golfer from Houston, Texas, took
over the lead today In the $16,-
000 Canadian Open Golf Championship with a three-stroke margin at the half-way mark.
Curly-haired Jaok fired hli
second successive round of 66, six
under par over the rolling Mils-
Issaugua course for a 36-hole total
of 132,
That was more than enough to
wipe out a course-record '65 shot
Wednesday by J|m Ferrier of 8an
Franclsoo.
The Californlan-Australian took
a par 72 today and fell five strokes
off the pace in a tie for third place.
It was a gala Texas day.
Serious Fred Hawkins of El Paso,
a photogenic youngster, had a 36-
hole score of 135, as the immediate
runner-up. Chuc,k Klein of San Antonio was only one, stroke away
with 136.
Jimmy Demaret, another Texan
from El Paso by way of Ojai, Calif.,
horned into the show for a three-
way tie for the next spot with 137.
That was the 36-hole score for
Ferrier who labored through a second-round misery ,of putting misfortunes.
In the same bracket of 137 came
Stan Leonard of Vancquver Marine
Drive as low Canadian.
Leonard's sensational string of
six birdies in the back nine today
displaced Murray Tucker of London COnt.) Sunningdale as Canada's main threat to the parade of
American winners.
Tucker finished with a one
under-par 71 for a 139 -total. ,
He was tied with Nick Weslock
from Windsor (Ont.) Essex, ,who
maintained his lead as low amateur. Nick shot a 69 today along
with his 70 Wednesday.
From there on the field trained
out hoping" somehow to catch the
high-riding Burke, who is making
his first appearance in the Canadian Open.
Compared with Wednesday's
thunderstorms and hot, muggy
weather, today's play was under
cloudy skies. A bright sun finally
wiped out the chilly temperature.
It began to look as if this were
Texas day in Canada when Fred
Hawkins, from El Paso, came
through with a 69. With his first-
round 66, liawkins hit the halfway mark of the 72-hole tournament with 135, three strokes away
from Burke.
LEONARD CONSISTENT
Stan Leonard of Vancouver, who
can always be counted on for ser-
By The Canadian Press
Chioago's hot and cold White Sox
toppled out of the American League
lead Wednesday as they were shut
oat 8-0 by righthander Freddie Hutchinson of Detroit Tigers.
Meanwhile New York Yankees
bounced back into the lead Thursday night by crushing Washington
Senators 8-3.
The combination of day-night action left the Yanks a half igame in
front of Chicago with the onrush-
tng Boston Red Sox, 8-3 winners
over Philadelphia, only two games
of!f file pace. Cleveland, rained out
of a night game at St. Louis, is only
4^4 games out of first in" the four-
way jam.
K marked the first time this
aeason the White Sox had. been
blanked. Also, it was the first shutout by Hutchinson, who has won
•even and lost three.
Big Don Newcombe boosted
Brooklyn's National League lead to
Vh games over second-place New
York by downing tha Giants 8-4 for
his 12th victory. Gil Hodges' 27th
homer and Andy Pafko's 17th helped chase Larry Jansen in the sixth.
New York staged its only threat
with four in the eighth but the
Brooks oame back with three.
Day action in the American
League was limited to one game.
The Nationals, however, had three
daylight affairs. St. Louis Cardinals
trounced the Cubs in Chicago 10-2,
Cincinnati shut out Pittsburgh 4-0
and Boston won an 11-lnning, 6-5
decision over Philadelphia.
The Tigers nicked starter Lou
Kretlow for a run in the first inning.
They finished off their former teammate in the third with a seven-run
blast. Detroit put together four hits
and four walks with an error and
a passed ball for their rally. Johnny
Lipon's double was the big blow of
the inning.
Hutchinson yielded five hits and
walked only one batter. Only one
Chicago runner reached third.
Howard Fox limited the Pirates,
minus Ralph Kiner, to seven hits as
w Lloyd Mcrriman and Dixie Howell
homered off loser Howie Pollet to
account for three of Cincinnati's
runs. Kiner was sitting out the first
of his three-game suspension meted
out lo him for "pushing" an umpire
Tuesday.
BRAVES WIN
Sid Gordon's bases-loaded single
in the 11th gave lhe Braves their
win over the Phils. The Braves,
however, lost the services of pitch
ers Vern Bickford and Johnny Sain
for an indefinite period.
Bickford, who started, had to retire after the fourth inning with a
pulled muscle in his right shoulder,
Sain injured his pitching hand by
deflecting a grounder by Granny
Hamner and was replaced In .the
ninth.
The Cardinals teed off on three
Cub hurlers for 14 hits including
three each by Red Schoendienst and
Wally Westlake. Hal Rice batted in
three tallies with a single and a
double. In the meantime, Cliff
Chambers breezed to his fifth
triumph with a snappy five-hitter.
The scheduled night game be
tween Cleveland and St. Louis was
postponed because of rain .
SENIOR BALL
TEAM WORKS
OUT FOR VISIT
Seeking) their _third win over
Fruitvale^ JNelson senior ball team
travels to Fruitvale Sunday for a
West'Kootenay League game.
The PeerIess-9 team has a practice
scheduled for Friday evening at the
Civic Recreation grounds in prepar-
ation for the game.
The locals have made a good
showing this season, copping the
$500 second prize at the Dominion
Day tournament at Kimberley and
also winning the May 24 tourney at
Fruitvale. They have yet to lose a
game in league play.
BRITISH CRICKET
LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) —
English first-class cricket results
today.
MCC 262 and 146 for three declared. Oxford University 1£6 for
nine declared and, 133 for [four.
Match drawn. I
Cambridge University; 335 for
seven declared and 143 for three
declared. Army 247 arid 135 for
four. Match drawn.
Somerset 113 and 50. Warwickshire 278. Warwickshire won by
innings and 115 runs.
Derbyshire 276 for six declared.
Middlesex 57 for one wicket. .
Essex 276 for six declared. Middlesex 57 for one wicket.
Essex 199 and 241 for three,
Essex 226*.
Glamorgan 402. Kent 337.
Worcestershire' 199 and 151 for
three. Leicestershire 176.
Yorkshire 286. Hampshire 132 and
131. Yorkshire won by an innings
and 23 runs.
Harwoods Rye
Ihis advertisement is not publishes, ot displayed oy Ihe Liquor Control
Bwrd or by the Government 4 British Columbia.
Mrs. J. DeGirolamo Will Defend
Women's Title at Midsummer 'Spiel
The women are going to get a
look-in again this, year at Nelson's
Midsummer Bonspiel opening Monday.
Last year a women's curling event
was introduced, and was a marked
success with wives of visiting curlers who were at a "loose end" during the week. Twelve rinks are
entered, one from Saskatchewan,
six from Alberta and five from
British Columbia. Skips are;
Miss  Clara B. Paul,  Saskatoon,
Sask.; Mrs. Stan Bernard, Conrich,
Mrs. J. Leslie, Mossleigh, Mrs. G.
H. Thompson, Devon, Mrs. M, Bap-
tie, Cochrane, Mrs. J. C. Newsham,
Rocky Mountain House, and Mrs,
T. <?, Brown, Gleichen,'Alta,; Mrs,
E. Jonner, Vernon, Mrs. F. A. Johnson, Sheep Creek, and Mrs, Joseph
DeGirolamo and Mrs.'W. J. Hipperson, Nelson.'
Mrs: DeGirolamo won the women's championship last year, and
Mrs. E. O. Parry of Morrin, Alta.,
was skip of the runner-up rink.
Round Robin Draw Out for Summer
'Spfel; Wedding Date for Visitors
Nelson Midsummer Bonspiel
draw will be modelled along last
year's lines after all. The committee meeting at the Civic Centre
Wednesday night decided to abandon plans for a round robin draw
because the ice available was insufficient.
Four prizes will be offered for
each competition and two for the
women's competition.
The curling and arena ice will be
used Wednesday and Thursday this
year. Last year the two rinks were
used on the first two days, but
curlers found the heavy, schedule
of 10 games aday too strenuous in
opening rounds.
Wedding of Keith Fawcett, Wartime, Sask., entry, is to be held
here during the week and it was
decided to have curlers form an
arch of brooms and to have the
bride and groom, piped from Trln
ious consideration in Canada's own
big golf show, didn't let his adherents down. . !
The pro from Marine Drive on
the West coast took a wobbly 37,
one over par, on his first nine today but then ran down six birdies
in a row and finished in par.
It was the greatest exhibition
of   consistent   sub-par   golf   the
tournament has seen  up to the
half-way mark. Leonard's 30 on
the back nine eclipsed any previous scores In the home stretch,
Hit 67 today and a first-round
two-under-par 70 yesterday  left
him with 137.
Leonard's great show of power,
and    putting    displaced    Murray
Tucker of London (Ont.) Sunningdale as the leading Canadian.
Tucker, working on a first-round
68, faltered after a three-under-
par start in five holes. He finished
the day with a 71 and a 36-hole
total of 139.
Burke, who has travelled the
pro circuit since 1946, was never
worse than par,
He figured that his putting was
his best game but his drives were
"pretty good." Approach shots, supposed to be his weakness, didn't
bother him despite the high 8nd
gusty wind,
Hawkins had three birdies and
went one over par once on the
opening nine.
WINDERMERE
REVIVES REGATTA
INVERMERE, B.C., July 4
First regatta to be held on Lake
Windermere for a number of years
was slagen by the Lake Windermere
Valley Sports Club, below the David
Thompson Memorial Fort at Invermere.
Cold weather in June prevented
the lake from warming to its usual
pleasant Summer temperature
which deterred a number of would-
be participants in the water sports.
A motor boat race was one of the
events enjoyed by the large crowd,
A sporls day at Athalmer included
horse racing and childrens' races
with ice cream cones for the winners. A midway was run by members of the local branch of the Canadian Legion.
Capilai-fos Expect
Record Attendance
VANCOUVER, B.C., July 5 (CP)
—Bob Brown, general manager of
Vancouver Capilanos, said today his
Western International League club
will probably set an attendance
record here this season.
Brown said that if present gates
continue, the Caps should draw
170,000. Current high for Vancouver
is 146.000 set in 1949.
BALL SCORES
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Toronto 5, Springfield 6.
Baltimore 1, Buffalo 10.
PCL
Hollywood 4, Sacramento 3.
Portland  10. Los Angeles  12.
San Francisco % San Diego 1.
Ity United Church after the ceremony,,
The Bonspiel will open at 7 a.m.
Monday morning, and it ls expected Mayor rf. C. Stibbs will officiate and that pipers of Kootenay
Kiltie Pipe Band will be on hand.
Official opening by the Mayor
will take place at 9:30 at the opening .of  the   Midsummer   Bonspiel
Ball Monday night.
Offer of Nelson Powerboat Association to stage a racing show
was accepted.. This will be held
Tuesday evening. If it is rained out,
it will be held Wednesday evening.
Possibility that Bonspiel news
will be broadcast by Doug Smith,
Toronto commentator for the Dominion network of the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation, was reported., The broadcast would be
Sunday night. Doug Smith ls a
former Trail sports announcer.
Two Nelsoniles
To Cruise Along
Kootenay River
A week's jaunt on Kootenay River
with an attempt to get as far as
Libby Montana, begins Friday for
two Nelsonites.
W. P. Kapak and W. A. Duckworth will set out in a 22-foot
launch owned by Mr. Kapak for as
long a cruise as possible,
Kiwanis Club not overlooking
any bets for spreading the fame of
Nelson's Water Show to be staked
by the club at Lakeside Park in
August, saw to It that the two
travellers' wore yacht caps advertising the event. The caps are being
worn by all Kiwanis members. Mr.
Kapak and Mr, Duckworth plan to
keep an eye open for possible
speedboat entries in Bonners Ferry,
Idaho?
Guest Nemesis
In Henley Semis
HENLEY, England, July 5 (CP)—
Ebbe Larsen of Denmark, conqueror
of Toronto's- Jack Guest yesterday,
reached the semi-finals of the Diamond Sculls today by defeating
John Gaze of Britain.
He will meet another Briton tomorrow—Ronnie Lutz who today
beat Hassain El Alfy of Egypt.   .
The other, semi-final will be between the Cambridge Uriiversity
sculler, Tony Fox—who eliminated
the Belgian veteran Willi Collet—
and Demoulin of Belgium who upset the Dutch champion, Tom Neu-
meir, by one-half length.
The University of Pennsylvania
lightweight oarsmen today swept to
their second straight victory in their
bid for the Thames challenge cup
in- the Henley regatta.
The 150-pound crew won by 1%
lengths over the Peterhouse College
eight of Cambridge University.
Penn was timed in 7:15 for the mile
and 550 yards. " ,
Jocko, Henderson
Lead Fish Derby
NATAL, B.C., July 5 — The
latest leaders in the annual Natal-
Michel Rod and Gun Club fish
derby released by secretary Herbie
Travis Jr. of Natal is as follows:
Kamloops — Veteran fisherman
Steve Jocko of Natal is the present
leader in this species of fish with a
weight of 8 pounds and 12 ounces
followed by Buddy Henderson and
William Stevenson of Michel with
weights of 7 pounds and 6 pounds
and 10 ounces respectively.
In the Grave Lake Special,
youthful Buddy Henderson of
Michel leads the membership with
a weight of 7 pounds. To date no
entries have been received by the
Rod and Gun Club for species such
as Eastern Brook, Cutthroat, Bull
trout dr the whitefish, better knowh
as the grayling. This annual fish
derby sponsored by the Natal-
Michel Rod and Gun Club is for
members only during the fishing
season.
Japan Seeks 1960
Olympic Games
TOKYO, July 5 (Reuters) —
Japan is planning to make an application to stage the 1960 Olympic
Games.
The Amateur Athletic Federation
of Japan stated today that a formal
application would be made to the
International Olympic Committee
after the question of facilities had
been discussed with the Tokyo
municipality.
Cooke Buys Leafs
TORONTO, July 5 (CP) — Jack
Kent. Cooke, 38-year-old publisher
and radio station owner Who "has
always been a fan," today purchased
a controlling interest in the fifth
place Toronto Maple Leafs of the
International Baseball League.
He promised a "new deal" for
the city's long-suffering Leaf supporters.
Copke said the price is not for
publication, but it was "plenty."
VICTORIA, B.C., July S (CP) —
Eric Dowell of Victoria yesterday
was named winner of the total
points ' competition for lightning
class boats in the Pacific International Yachting Association's regatta.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
2-Hour Fight Lands
127/2-Pound
Sturgeon
HATSIC, B.C., July 5 (CP)—
Now here's a fish!
, Fisherman Buddy Alterback
today landed a seven-foot, 127
1/2-pound sturgeon, believed the
largest taken from the Fraser
River this season,
He  landed  the fish  after a
two-hour fight.
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Bill Veeck Takes
Over Browns
Faulkner Takes
2-Sfroke Lead
By GLENN WILLIAMS
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland,
July 5 (AP)—Max Faulkner, a debonair, British Ryder Cup player with
a red-hot putter, beat the chill,
drizzling rain home today to carve
out a two-stroke lead in the British
Open golf championship after 36
holes.
Out early before the drizzle commenced soaking the Royal Portrush
course's rolling dunes, Faulkner
capitalized on his putting to post a
two-under-par 70 for a two-round
total of 141.
Only one other player, Norman
Sutton, of England, was ahead of
par after the first two rounds. The
little former professional soccer
player also got a 70, giving him 143
for second place.
Bobby Locke, the South African
seeking his third straight British
Open title, -bagged a 74 for a 145
total.
Frank Stranahan, the Toledo,
Ohio, golfer who won the British
amateur crown in 1950, and Chuck
Rotor, a Canton, Ohio, pro before
heading for Germany and duty with
the United States Army, were
among 46 players who qualified for
the final 36 holes tomorrow.
Playing In the drizzle, Stranahan
got his second straight 75 for a 150
total, Rotor had 152 with two 76s.
The two first round leaders, Jimmy Adams, the big Scotch pro, and
Australia's Norm Von Nida, both
blew wide open and got 77s. Each
had 68 to lead the field the first
day by two strokes, and today's
effort left them four strokes off
Faulkner's pace.
In third place were Fred Daly,
the curly-haired Irishman who won
the British Open in 1947, and Harry
Weetman, young English pro. Daly
stroked a* two-under-par 70 also, for
a 144 total. Weetman carded a 71
for another 144.
ST. LOUIS, July 5 (AP) — Bill
Veeck formally took over St. Louis
Browns of the American League today and announced he will retain
Zach Taylor as manager—for a time,
at least.
At a Press conference, Veeck also
announced he was out to build a
winning ball team and that Negroes
would be given every opportunity
to qualify.
Neither the Browns nor St. Louis
Cardinals have Negro players.
Veeck attended the conference
after signing the papers putting the
club in his hands. He said a count
showed he had about 220,000 of the
275,000 shares of stock—more than
enough to exercise his option.
Also at the conference were Bill
and Charley Dewitt, who controlled
the club until today, and several of
Veeck's associates in the present
deal.
"We have a couple of dollars to
spend and we're going to spend
them," Veeck said. "Right now the
club couldn't bat its way out of a
paper sack and We're looking for
nnybody who can carry a ball bat
and handle one."
FERNIE 11 WIN
3-0 SHUTOUT
NATAL, B.C., July 4 — The Natal-
Michel Buffaloes football eleven,
playing in a regular Crow's Nest
Pass Football League encounter at
the Natal ball park, suffered their
third straight defeat when hte fast
stepping Fernie United scored a decisive 3-0 shutout. The win kept the
Fernie 11 still on the undefeated
list with the strong Kimberley 11
while the loss sent the once leading
Natal-Michel team skidding to a
weak fourth spot in the six team
league. Kimberley is still leading
the league, having but one draw
game against them while Fernie
United has two draw games against
them. The 3-0 defeat of the highly
touted Lethbridge Legion by the
strong Fernie team sent the Lethbridge team toppling from the undefeated list.
The Spitalfields district of London was named after a hospital
founded there in 1197.
Robinson Denies
Petition Claim
WINDSOR, England, July 5 (AP)
—Middleweight champion Ray Robinson, an outspoken foe of Communism, today denied an Italian
Communist newspaper's claim that
he had signed the Communist
"Berlin Peace Petition."
The newspaper, L'Unita, said
Robinson signed the appeal at
Turin Supday when he was in the
Italian city for his bout with Cyr-
ille Delannolt.
Robinson told newspaper men at
his training quarters here that he
had signed many autographs while
on the continent and remembered
on one occasion, signing a form
thrust at him without knowing what
it was.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951
Tired Old Joe Still No. 2
Man in Fistic World
By ARTHUR ED80N
WASHINGTON, July 5 (API-
Joe Loulo, old and tired though
he may be, still Is rated ai the
only logical contender for Ezzard
Charles' heavyweight title,
The National Boxing Association released Its quarterly ratings
today, and they show,few standouts among the heavyweights.
The 37-year-old Loula was the
only one listed ai a logical contender. The N.B.A. also rated
only two fighters, Rex Layne of
Utah and the apparently Inde-
itructlble Jersey Joe Waicott, as
deserving the description, "outstanding boxen,"
Lee Savold, defeated by Louis,
wound up with the also-rans, with
an honorable mention.
But In the light heavyweight division, the N.B.A. named six boxers as logical contenders for the
championship now held by Joey
Maxim.
Ike Williams, long-time king of
the lightweights who lost his title
lo Jimmy Carter, wasn't listed
among the lightweights, where he
has had trouble making weight.
Listed as a welterweight, Ike rated
no higher than seventh. Fitzie
Pruden of St. Catharines, Ont., was
ranked 10th in the welterweight
class.
Sugar Ray Robinson, considered
by many as the finest fighting
machine in the business today, got
an indirect vote of approval from
the N.B.A. The N.B.A. could find
no logical contender for his middleweight title.
The ratings:
HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion—Ezzard Charles.
Logical contender—Joe Louis.
Outstanding boxers — Hex Layne,
Joe Waicott.
LIGHT-HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion—Joe Maxim.
Logical   contenders — Archie
Moore, Harry Matthews, Bob Murphy,  Don  Cockell,  England,  Bob
Satterfield, Harold Johnson.
Outstanding boxers — Dan Buc-
Florida Girl
Reaches Finals
By BEN PHLEGAR
WIMBLEDON, England, July 5
(CP)—Doris Hart, the tall Florida
girl who has been a perennial runner-up for the top women's- tennis
titles, will have another chance to
hit the jackpot when she faces
youthful Shirley Fry of Akron,
Ohio, in the finals of the Wimble-
don championships Saturday.
Storming the net at every opportunity, Doris gave Beverley Baker
of Santa Monica, Calif., a 6-3, 6-1
shellacking    in    their    semi-final
match today while Shirley, surprise
package of the women's division,
was dethroning Louise Brough of
Beverley Hilts,- Wimbledon champion for the last three years, 6-4, 6-2.
Miss Brough refused to alibi her
defeat,  but the  crowd  of  15,000
In the centre court realized that
her ailing  right elbow—unban-
daged for the first time In a month
—was paining her each time she
hit the ball.'
Miss Hart was runner-up here to
Mrs. Dupont in 1947 and to Miss
Brough in 1948. She also ran second
in the United States championships
at Forest Hills, N.Y., in 1946, '49 and
'50. Her only major grass  courts
triumph  came  in  the  Australian
championships in '49.
Dick Savitt of Orange, N.J., and
Ken McGregor of Australia clash
tomorrow for the men's championship.
Two U.S. teams will appear in
the men's doubles semi-finals. Budge
Patty of Los Angeles and Ham
Richardson of Baton Rouge, LA.,
were given a terrific battle before
they won their quarter-final match
today from Lennart Bergelin and
Sven Davidson of Sweden, 1-6, 8-6,
6-3, 5-7, 71-5.
Tomorrow they face the crack
Australian combination of McGregor and Frank SedgmBn, who advanced by default today over Giani
Cucelll'and Marcello Del Bello of
Italy.
Quakers Sign -
St. Mike's Goalie
SASKATOON, July 5 (CP) —
Saskatoon Quakers, Western Canada Major Hockey League champions, announced today they have
signed Phil Hughes, goalie with
Toronto St. Mikes In the Ontario
Hockey Association major series
last Winter.
Hughes was in the St. Mikes nets
last Spring when his club defeated
Quakers four straight in the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association
major series semi-finals.
In making the announcement,
Quaker officials said several other
St Mikes players may follow
Hughes to Saskatoon.
caroni, Jimmy Slade.
MIDDLEWEIGHT
Champion—Ray RoblnBon.
Logical contender—None listed.
Outstanding boxers'— Randolph
Turpln, England;,Dave Sands, Australia; Laurient Dauthuille, France;
Robert Villemain,, France; Rocky
Graziano, New York.
WELTERWEIGHT
Champion—Kid Gavilan, Cuba.
Lbglcal contenders — Billy Graham,   Charles   Humez,   France;
Johnny   Bratton,   Eddie   Thomas, '
England.
Outstanding    boxers — Charles
Fusari,  Ike  Williams, Joe  Miceli,
Gil   Turner,   Fitzie   Pruden,    St
Catharines, Ont.
LIGHTWEIGHT
Champion — Jimmy Carter.
Logical contenders — Freddla
Dawson, Art Aragon, Joe Brown.
Outstanding boxers — Eddie Chavez,  Virgil Akins, Tommy Campbell,  Del Flanagan, Luther Raw-
lings, Calvin Smith.
FEATHERWEIGHT
Champion—Sandy Saddler.
Logical contenders — Willie Pep,
Connecticut; Ray Famechon, France •
Outstanding boxers — Ray Anka-
hara, Africa; Ronnie Clayton, England; Charles Riley, Percy Bassett,
Eddie Burgin, Gene Smith, Manuel
Ortiz, Lauro Salas.
BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion — Vic Toweel, South
Africa. ,
Logical contenders — Luis Romero, Spain; Peter Keenan, Soot-
land.
Outstanding boxers — Elly Bennett, Australia; Tommy Proffitt,
England; Luis Galvani, Cuba*
Bobby. Boland, Scotland; Alvaro
Nuvoloni, Italy; Gianni Zuddaa,
■Italy.
FLYWEIGHT
Champion—Dado Marino, Hawaii.
Logical contenders — Jean Sney-
ers, Belgium; Terry Allen, England)!
Teddy Gardner, England.
Outstanding boxers — Luis Skena.
France; Vic Herman, Scotland*
Black Pica Cuba.
Two More Leagues Protest Football
Players Coming To Canada
NEW YORK, July 5 (AP)—Two
more National Football League
clubs appealed to the courts today
to keep star players from Jumping to Canada.
In Houston, Tex,, Chicago Cardinals, asked the court to prevent
Bill Blackburn, a centre, from
playing with Calgary Stampeders
of the Western Canada Inter-Pro-
vlnclal Union.
Judge Alfred E. Stein issued a
oourt order in Newark, N.J., directing George Ratterman, New York
Yanks' passing ace, to show cause
why he should not be restrained
from playing with any team but
the Yanks, Ratterman announced
Monday he had signed to play with
Montreal Alouettes of the Big Four.
Judge W. P. Hamblen issued a
temporary restraining order in the
case, of Blackburn, former Rice 'Institute ., star. Tomorrow, Judge Dan
Jackson will rule whether Blackburn will be forbidden from playing with Calgary.
UNFAIR
On Monday at Charleston, W. Va.,
tackle Dick Huffman of the Los Angeles Rams said his contract was
unfair' and obligated him to play
with one club the rest of his professional career. The Hams obtained
a temporary injunction in Kinawha
County circuit court, Charleston,
restraining Huffman — one-time
Tennessee tackle — from playing
with Winnipeg Blue Bombers, also
of the Western Canada conference.
Huffman failed to show up in his
home town, but lawyers said final
court action was expected in two
weeks. John Morrison, Rams' lawyer, said the club had the right to
exercise an option on Huffman for
1951 by May 1, and did so.
The order on Ratterman is returnable next Tuesday. The New York
team has a three-year-contract with
the former Notre Dame player, said
owner Ted Collins. Montreal AIs
said Ratterman was signed as a free
agent. ,
■   Chicago Cardinals claimed they
sent a contract to Blackburn April
2, although the club had an option
with him to sign for an additional
period.
When Bert Bell, National Leagua
Commissioner, was advised of tha
Ratterman action Tuesday, he said?
"It's a club matter, not a league
matter." He added that he had examined Ratterman's contract, and
termed It valid for three years, from
1950.through 1952.
NEW YORK, July 5 (CP)-George
Ratterman's lawyer said tonight he
is not worried about a restraining
order issued today against the National League football star.   '
I. Robert Broder said Ratterman,'
involved in a player dispute between New York Yankees and tha
Montreal Alouettes, will stay in
New York until his reporting data
to the Big-Four club.
England Takes Lead
MANCHESTER, England, July 0
(Reuters) — England . took the
initiative today when the third
cricket test match of the seaBon
opened, dismissing South Africa on
a rain-damaged pitch for 158 and
replying with 50 for one. wicket.
Alex Bedser, burly Surrey medr
ium-fast bowler, achieved one of
the best performances in his test
career, taking seven wickets for 58
runs, bringing his test total to 150
wickets.
Only three bowlers have exceeded this figure in test cricket. They
are Clarrie Grimmett (Australia/)
216, Sidney Barnes (England) 189,
and Maurice Tate (England) 155.
READ   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY
To me**->
Fishing without
GIBBS Tackle*
is like fishing
- without water.':
Yve never heen -p.
skunked when I used GIBBS.
/A
Quality
Tackle
Made In Vancouver, B.C., By
GIBBS TOOL & STAMPING WORKS
 PHONE
1032
HOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.
ODD VANITIES AND CHIFF0NIER8 — SELLING   FOR  HALF-PRICE
Walnut, bleached mahogany and bird's eye maple. Waterfall design, with 4-foot vanity mirrors,
NELSON
B. C.
ONE OF 16 ANIMALS used In surgical research that may end
the use of the Iron lung for polio victims, a monkey lies stretched out
In a Philadelphia hospital. The doctors examining him have reported
their experiments with the monkey have shown that surgery can
often overcome paralysis of the diaphragm resulting from polio attacks.—Central Press Canadian. -.-.-■
A HELICOPTER of the New York Police Department staged a
spectacular rescue from the steel framework of St John the Divine
Cathedral, removing an Injured -steeplejack while hovering above
the framework. The workman, Peter Burn, had fractured his leg In
a fall and could not be carried down from atoo the 100-feet-hlgh
girders. The helicopter Is shown at the top after Its crew had strapped
Burn on one of the pontoons and above as if landed In a nearby park
where an ambulance took Burn to hospital.—Central Press Canadian.
[
MB
ACTION IS MOTTO ... When Miss Barbara East, reporter for
the San Francisco Examiner, Innocently questioned the famous Black-
stone about his stunt of sawing a woman In.half, Blackstone turned
tables on the girl reporter and demonstrated the trick with Miss
East herself ai the "victim". Clad in the regal robes which are part
of the hair-raising stunt Miss East Ib pictured as the 36-Inch lumber
saw, whirlng at 1790 revolutions per minute, "slashed" through her
body.—Central Press Canadian.
L.-CPL,' SMlLEY  DOUGLAS '     CAPT. JOHN MILLS
FIRST AWARDS to Canadian soldiers for bravery and devotion
to duty have been announced by Defence Minister Brooke Claxton.
Capt. John W. Mills of Winnipeg has been awarded the  Military
Cross; L.-Cpl. Smiley Douglas of Delburne, Alta., the Military Medal.
—Central Press Canadian
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS . . . mo on.the dial
7:00—News
7:05—Top of. the Morning
7:30—News
7:35—Top of the Morning
8:00—News
8:10—Sport News
8:15—Breakfast Club
8:45—Towler Serenade
8:55—Meal of the Day
9:00—News
9:01—Betty and Bob
9:15—Western Tunes
9:45—Your Musical Appointment
9:59—Time Signal
10:00—News
10:01—Ladies' Choice
10:15—Sons ot the Pioneers
10:30—Oliver's Choice
10:45—Invitaiton to Waltz
11:00—News
11:05—Piano Prelude
11:15—For You, Madame
11:30—Aunt Mary
11:45—Notice Board
12:00—News
12:01—Notice Board
12:15—News
12:25—Sports News
12:30—Farm Broadcast
12:55—From Parliament Hill
1:00—News
1:01—Friday Serenade
1:59—News
2:00—Easy Listening
2:30—Intermission
FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951
2:45—Women's Programs
2:56—Women's Commentary
3:00—News
3:01—Easy Listening
3:11—Train Time
3:15—Don Messer
3:30—Musical Roundup
3:45—Pacific News
4:00—Sunshine Society
4:30—Sleepy Time Story Teller
4:45—Sacred Heart
5:00—News
,5:01—Superman
5:15—News
5:20—Sports News
5:25—Canadian Golf
5:30—Bill Good Sports .
5:45—Easy Aces
6:00—Christian Science Program
6:15—Report From Parliament Hill
6:30—Cavalcade of Melody
7:00—News
7:15—News Roundup
7:30—Organ Recital
8:00—Here Comes His Band
8:30—Vancouver Theatre
9:00—Symphony of Strings
9:30—Canadian Short Stories
9:45—Life and Times of the
Detective Story
10:00—News
10:15—Let's Find Out
10:30—CKLN Sports Report
10:45—Musicale
10:55—News Nile Cap
CBC PROGRAMS
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1951
:00—News
:10—Bill Good Sporta
:15—Hits and Encores
:30—Program Resume
00—BBC News
:15—Saddle Serenade
:30—Stamp Club
:45—The Answer Man
:00—Bandstand
:15—Minuet
:30—World Church News .
:45—News; Weather
:00—Opera Stars and Stories
:30—Canadian Rhapsody
00—Canadian Open Golf
30—Folk Song Time  I
30—London Studio Melodies
00—Trans-Canada Bandstand
00—This Week
:15—News
3:25—Listening
3:30—Saturday Pop Concert
4:30—Music From the Films
5:00—Saturday Magazine
5:30—Sports College
5:45—For the Record
6:00—News
6:05—Sports Page
6:30—Soiree A Quebec
7:00—Prairie Schooner
7:30—Let's Square Dance
8:00—Holiday With Music'
8:30—Piano Playhouse
9:00—John Sturgess
9:15—Songs by Dudley Farncll
9:30—Concert of Europe
10:00—News
10:15—Trocadero Orchestra
10:30—Dancing Party
11:55—News
AT ABADAN, Iran, Irate nationalists demonstrate against tha
ships waiting to load oil. In the background Is a tanker, either British
or Norwegian-owned, which was being held by the Iranian Government because they refused to give a receipt for the oil they drew
'from the Iranian pipelines. All ships In the harbor have now moved
out except those being loaded under guard. Iran has rescinded the
death penalty clause In the anti-sabotage law In hopes the British
technicians would remain to operate the .'refineries.—Central Press
Canadian.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS     3. Discharge
t. Kind of rook 4. Distant
S. Shove
9. Melodies
1L Division of
a long poem
12. Ward
off
13. Mountains
(So. Am..)
14. Malt
beverage
15. Scold
2*. Age
25, Devowed
5. Kettle 26. Any split
6. Wavy pulse
(Her.> tjlndia.)
7. Boil slowsjy  38. Artificial
8. Stocking hazard
10. Sentence fgolf)
structure      30. A metal
5
A
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IB!
H
O
W
p;
U
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A
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A
B
A
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A
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F.
H
AHA
I
1
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■aIl
L
Kl
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M
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A
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J
32\ Piece of
baked clay
33. Projecting
end of a
church
34. Equipment
ramaun hejh-91'
aunn uan
.71BH   WEsHHHHE
EJH   BUB      HISIJ
13HML1U   HHUHE
mm ii'.rm
TttttMstasjs'si mmsmW
39. God
of
war tG..i
'«<. Anger
4*. Piece
to
ttokt part*
<-Maolt.)
(■Gram.)
TI. Enclosure
16. Sloths
18. Laths
persistently 19. Supporting
17. Female bandage
sheep           20. Hebrew dry 35. Spheres
18. Pig pens measure       37. Eye
20. Marsupials        (var.) 38. Early
(Australia-) 21. Poem inhabitant
23. Guide 12. Girl's name       ♦Seot.Js
27. Antelope ■
(Air.)            . f—|i    £    ||
28. Plant life    ,
of a region
29. Thrash
30. Underground
passage,
31. Prick
painfully
33. Past
36. Writing
fluid
37^Tuber
(So. Am.)
40. Danger
42. Moth
44. Cavalry
aword
(var.)
45. Moon valley
46. Scottish-
Gaelic
•47. Wagers
DOWN
1. Fiber of
mulberry
tree
2. River
(Russ.)
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE—Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
teLONGFELLOW
One tetter simply stands for another. In this example A h Heed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa.
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*.
Each day the code letters are different
A •Cryptogram Quotation
MWLTF     EPN,     I V S OYHT
STMF    III**
"V G    F V
O FRTH    MF
L Y    LE    Y V    EMN:
MS     L!" — P'LUWLFA.
Ynteriftiy'a Crvptoqllote: WHRRB ARE THE B0Y5 OF THB
OLD BRIGADE, WHO FOUGHT WITH US SIDE BY SIDE 7—,
WEATHKitLY.
DUtrtftusld by Klol Filiates srinJicsu
 vm
m QU/CK RESULTS /   ^
Phone 144
Deadline for Classified Ads—5
Pslfls
BIRTHS
FORBES-To Mr. and Mrs. Ken
heth Forbes, 406 Nelson Avenue, at
kootenay Lake General Hospital,
fuly 3, a daughter.
COLE—To Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
flole, 216 Houston Street, at Koot-
nay Lake GeneraHIdspital, July 4,
sop,
FLEMING—To Mr. and Mrs. Gar-
Bon Fleming, 206 Pealby's Road,
July 4, a son.
HELP WANTED
Phone 144
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
Salesman
Furniture and
Appliances *
I This is an opportunity for cap-
, able men to advance with our
'.organization.
APPLY BETWEEN
10:00 AND 12:00 A.M.
Hudson's Bay Co.
Build Better Outside
Walls... Easier., .at
Comparable Cost...
Stomelap
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTQRCYCUS,   AICYGU1
PERMANENT P O SITI ON FOR
j young man as salesman, for city
and country V/Ork; This carries
; .with it hospitalization, insurance
and pension plan, and offers opportunity for advancement. This
is a salaried position, with car
provided, and full training given.
Qualifications: Age about 25--40
years, preferably married and at
present employed, neat businesslike appearance, previous selling
experience desireable but not
essential. Apply in person to the
Singer Sewing Machine Co., 330
Baker Street. !
sunn
1951 Mercury Cqrs
• and Trucks
1951 Meteors,
English Prefects,
PERSONAL
FOR    YOUR    AVON    AGENT
Phone 464-Y2.
VVAWAWJiSA  MUTUAL  FIRE IN-
surance Co., D. L, Kerr, Agent!
CRESS' INGROWN TOE-NAIL
Salve. Your Druggist j sells wme
better.
ALMEH HOTEL, OPPOSITE 'C.F.R.
Depqt, Clean rqqms and moderate
rates. $1.30 to (2.00 single, $2,50 to
$3.00  doubles,   Vancouver,   B_C.
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
ETC, FOR SALE
'(Continued)
HOUSE FOR SALE - FURNISH-
«d. 8  roomed   house,   centrally MMUC.
looated   on   two   lots,   in   down-  MINES
town Kaslo. Three  rooms, large Akauclio
hall,  bath  and  storage  upstairs. Amal Larder
 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951 — 9
TORONTO STOCKS     (Market Trends
...   ..fr.,w,      .»...>**    J   KUll. I   ,15
Five   large   r.ooms   and   pantry American Y. K 11
downstairs,  Two  suites  to  rent Arjon '■■    	
possible.   Furnishings   for  same.' Aumaque 	
Can be financed locally, II de-iAunor        3.15
«i™-(   -Apply:   Gordon   Bowker, 'Bagamac    15
nr 'Base Metals  55
sired.
Kaslo, B.c!
WANTED — STENOGRAPHER,
Nelson Senior High School. Duties
to commence. August 27th, 1051.
Please state age, qualifications,
experience, and salary expected
when applying. All applications
to be in Secretary Treasurer's
office, 812 Ward Street, not later
than 4:00 p.m. July 12th, 1051.
School District No. 7 (Nelson)
J. S. Livingstone,
Secretary Treasurer,
EASERS WANTED — FOR ZION
silver, lead, zinc group 3 miles
from Ymir; 2 miles by road, one
mile by trail. Cabin, blacksmith
shop, some tools, plenty of timber
and water. Box 1352, Daily News.
VANTED IMMEIJIATELY,. CLERK
(male) experienced. Salary $135.00
rising to $160.00 per month plus
cost of living bonus. Apply Forest
Service, Court House, Nelson, B.C.
g
Now available qgafn^the
builders' favorite outside
sheathing. Provides absolutely tight, non-shrinking,
insulating fireproof walls.
For use under wood siding,
shingles, stucco or brick
veneer — simply nailed to
studs, easily and quickly
applied. Saves lumber —
provides weatherfight insulating walls of, great
structural strength.
DISTRIBUTING  AGENTS
NELSON -
IERY
Ltd.
214 Hall St. Phone IS
Mining,   Milling   and   Sawmill
Machinery, Building and Contractors' .Supplies.
194? Ford Sedan
1947 Ford Sedan
1947 Chevrolet Sedqn
1938 Nash Sedan
1946 Plymouth Sedqn
1934 Chevrolet Coach.
1931  Model "A" Sedan
ATTENTION SCHOOL ' BOARD
Secretaries, y/e have a large stock
of newsprint, mlmeo and bond
paper and can fill any'order im-
piedlalely. Daily News Printing
Dept., Nelson, British Columbia.
MEN! PERSONAL DRUG! $UN-
drips: 25 deluxe samples, $1,(10,
Mailed in plain, sealed wrapper
Finest quality, tested, guaranteed.
Bargain Catalog free. Western
Disliibutors, Box 1023N. Vancouver. B. C.
HOUSE AT KINNAIRD FOR SALE
—On 1 acre level land. Kitchen
with sink and cupboards. Wired
for electric range. Front room, 2
bedrooms, small bathroom and
porch. Some finishing needed. 5-
mlnuto walk from highway and
bus stop; 2-minute walk from
school. Prjoe $3000, Write Box
1730, Dally News.
.21
.2014,
1514
2 ACRES WITH 2 'HOUSES," WOQD
shed, big garden, raspberries. Well
■ fenced In. close to Ymir highway.
Good lqcatioi). Full price, $3000;
terms,can be arranged. Apply Box
1763, Daily.News.
FOR SALE-88 ACHES, MOSTLY IDome
timber; house apd barn. Close to|n„„.]rf.
highway.   Patterson,. B.C.   Very'
Bevcourt
Bobjo    	
Brewis R. L.
Brculan     -.<.*
Buffadison  00
Buffalo Ank      1.35
Buff. Can	
Calliman   	
Can. Mal	
Cariboo Gold              ...„
Cons. Beatty   48
Qms. Mining & Smelting ,. 141.75
Conwest ....
Croinor 	
Delnite	
Detta R. L.
uiscovery
.40
.12
.10
1.21
.18
.20
.60
1.10
Eureka          .78
Falconbridge    ,...-, ,'„-,   10-00
Frobisher      3.10
Giant Yel.
7.00
cheap for cash. Enquiries at
Thrums Post Office or at Patterson'
LADIES I DUPREE PILLS, IM-
proved Formula. Dupree Pills to
alleviate pain, nervousness, and
distress associated with monthly
periods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes
Triple:Strength Pills. $5,00 per
box. Western Distributors, Box
1023 AN. Vancouver. B C
1949 Mercury Vi-Ton
Panel
1945 Dodge Vi-Ton' t-
1945 Ford 3-Ton
1938 Ford 2-Ton with dump
body and hoist
1937 International   Vi-Ton
1936 Studebaker 2-Ton
Cab over
1935 Chevrolet '/2-Ton
1950 Vincent HR.D.
Motor Bike
Genuine Ford Parts Depot
Phone 578-9 Nelson, B. C.
BETTER BUYS  AT BEACON
property; houses, farms
etc,, for sale
ACREAGE WITH NEW 4-ROOM
modern house; basement, garage,
large garden, hen-house; adjoining, city limits. $5000; half cash.
Box/1447, Daily News.
2.65
.28
1.27
.15
.33
17.25
.50
 .iu
East Malartic       1.15
East Sullivan      7.20
Elder Gold  50
Eldona '"
FOR SALE—2-BEDROOM HOUSE
on highway at Kinnaird, Very
good improvements. Lot about 1%
acres. Good price for quick sale.
Alex Maitland, Kinnaird, B.C.
64 ACRE FARM ON LAKE NEAR
Riondel. Must sell. $1650. Polzin,
118 Wellington St., Trail.
.0814
38
12
Golden Manitou      6.40
Halcrow ,       .11
Hardrock        .18
Harricana
Hasaga  ...
Heath «
Hedley Mas , 51
Hollinger   ....:    13.00
Hudson Baj    55.25
Int. Nickel  .-...    37^50
Kenville  , ,.,.,.,      .22
Kerr Addison  '..    17.25
Kirkland Lake 80
Labrador  	
Lakeshore  	
Leitch 	
Little Long Lac
Louvicourt   	
Lypx
, 18
MacDonald   80
HIT	
7.10
8.75
1.01
.71
-16 >,z
1544
RENTALS
WILL RENT FOR AUGUST MY
modern home. Refrigerator, garden; at Longbeach; at reasonable
rent for good tenant. J. W. Hobson, R.R, No. 1, Nelson, B.C.
URGENTLY REQUIRED IMMED-
ialely—Three or four room unfurnished hquso or suite for young
couple with 8-vear-old daughter.
Phone 129. Ask for Jack Willi
"If
it's   machinery   you
consult us."
want,
VANTED—EXPERIENCED. STEN-
ographer—office clerk for large
-Nelson wholesale office. Box 1812,
Daily.News.
(JIRL FOR NEWSPAPER OFFICE.
Some knowledge of typing essential. Apply to A. G. Hay,'Daily
' News.
VANTED—ALERT, NEAT YOUNG
i man for front end work at garage.
j Must have driver's licence. Apply
I P.O. Box 420, Nelson, B.C.
CEMAN WANTED. - APPLY
1 Storms Contracting Co. office,
I McNabb Cabins, Ymir Road^
DEAXlRS' "IN" A'i,L TYPES OF
used equipment; mill, mine and
logging supplies; > new and used
wire rope; pipe and fittings;
chain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior
St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.
FOR SALE — CLAM JEWEL
wood ahd coal range; practically
new. Beatty electric washer
Stewart-Warner combination 8-
tube console radio. All in first-
class condition. .Phone 738-R3.
and USED
WALK-IN COOLER, IDEAL FOR
milk, fruit and vegetables; approximately 5' x 6*. Guaranteed.
Reply P.O. Box 460, New Westminster. B.C.   .
VANTED - MAN WITH OUTFIT
to cut, log and haul 2 million feet
of logs. S. P. Pond, Nelson.
VANTED — MAN W.ITH GOOD
truck to haul lumber and load on
cars. S. P. Pond, Nelson.
Wastry  cook   wanted  im-
mediately. — Apply Golden Gate
Cafe.
AGENTS   WANTED
■VANTED — RELIABLE MAN AS
Rawleigh Dealer. Experience not
necessary. A fine opportunity to
step into profitable business
where 'Rawleigh Products have
been sold for vears. Write Raw
leigh's. Dept. WG-G-154-163. Win
nines, Man.
HOME DEEP FREEZE. 7 TO 21
cu. ft., $208.00 and up. 5-year guarantee. Reply P.O. Box 460, New
'Westminster, B.C.
PIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-
cial low prices. Active Trading Co.
035 E  Cordova St,. Vancouver
FOR SALE—SERVEL REFRIGER-
ator, coal-oil 'run, and sanding
machine. Phone 967-L-4.
TYPEWRITER—SNAP, $10. OUT-
board motor, 5.5 h.p., $130. Ready
to go. Phone 304-L.
FOR SALE - ANNEX HEATER
with water front. Used 6 months.
Phone 1321-L.
SITUATIONS WANTED
COMPETENT, RELIABLE WOMAN
wants permanent position as a
housekeeper.    Reply   Box    1815.
Daily News.	
JAPANESE FIRST COOK WANTS
country hotel or camp cooking
job.   Wife   experienced   waitress.
|*Box 1557. Daily News.
'XPERIENCED  BABY -SITTER
prefers job  in   Fairview.  Apply
ONE BATTERY FOR SALE—12-
volt. New. First $20 takes it. Phone
475-R3.
USED BRICKS FOR SALE — 300
red and 200 fire-bricks. Write Box
1680 Daily News.
New Austin Sedan •
New Pontiac Sedan     ^ .:
New Dodge Cqqch,
New Buick Sedan
1951  Anglia Coach
1951   Hillman Sedan
1950 Austin Sedan
1950 Austin Station Wagon
1949 Meteor Coach
■1949 Austin Sedan
'1947 Monarch Sedan
1942 DeSoto Sedan
1941  Chevrolet Sedan
1940 Ford Sedan
1940 Dodge Sedan
1938 Dodge Sedan
1938 Ford Coupe
"1933 Ford "B" Coupe
1937 Ford Sedan
Model "A"'Coupe
Modern bungalow on two beautifully! landscaped corner lots
on Neison Avenue. Three bedrooms on ground floor, with
four-piece bathroom and cabinet
kitchen, breakfast nook, spacious clothes closet. J3uilt-on
garage.- This' house is, in exceptionally good shape, having
been redecorated, including all
floors sanded. Upstairs is a large
extra room. Basement is cement
and full head height. Heating by
automatic • oil furnace. You
should see this one it is really
a buy for either a large or small
family. Liberal terms available.
$10,500
CLOSE IN
5 Minutes- Walk
From the "Bay"
Older type 2-bedroom bungalow
on large Jot in secluded location.
Fully modernized and attractively decorated. This should
appeal to C.P.R. employees. Immediate occupancy. Some terms.
$5500
For these and other City
and suburban properties,
See
THE GILDAY
FARM ;J"OR SALE. - APPLY TO;UNFURNISHED APART
South Slocan Garage, South Slocan, B.C.
Macassa   .
MacLeod Cock
Madsen- R. L. ..
Malartic G. F. ..
Mclntyre    utf.uu
Mining Corp    10.15
Moneta   	
Mylamaque ...
Negus   .. >	
New Calumet
New Goldvue
New Lund 	
Noranda   	
Normetals  	
Norzone  .........
O'Brien 	
Osisko
1.80
2.70
2.17
2.03
50.00
.31
■074j
.61
2.80
* .26
1.35
72.50
4.75
.13
1.12
Pend Oreille  ...ZZZZZ    1
Preston E. D.
Quebec Lab,
FOR SALE - BEACH PROPERTY
on Kootenay Lake. Box 1917 Daily
News.
FOR SALE-45-FT  VIEW LOT IN
Kajrvfpw  Phone 1361
MACHINERY
si
._ -MENT
for rent, suitable for business
couple. Occupancy July 15. Apply
745 Baker Slreet.
2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE WANT-
ed immediately by family of four.
Unfurnished. Apply Box 1567,
Daily News.
FOR RENT - 1 ACRE STRAW-
berries and 1 acre raspberries
Apply Mike Androshak. Canyon.
B C
542 Baker St.   —   Phone 1460
Real Estate and Insurance Agents
FOR SALE—BED-CHESTERFIELD
and chair in good condition. Phope
1582-L.
MICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-
Write PO   Box 33, Nelson. B.C
BUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES
pfrlami Sail.u Nrms
Classified  Advertising  Rates:
15c per line first insertion and
non-consecutive insertions,
lie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.
48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.
$1.56 line per mqnth (26 consecutive Insertions!    Box  numbers , lie  extra.   Covers  any
number of insertions.
PUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.
TENDERS, Etc.—20c per line,
first  insertion.   16c   per  line
each subsequent insertion.
ALL   ABOVE    RATES    LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
Subscription Rates:
Single copy   $   05
By carrier, per week,
in advance   .             25
One year 8.op
United States. United Kingdom:
One  month       .:     1.00
Three   months         3 00
Six months      6.00
One  year     _  12 00
Six monlhs       -     4 50
By carrier, per year 13 00
Mail in Canada, outside Nelson:
One month I 00
Three months 250
Wher* extra postarw Is required,
above rates plus postage.
FOR SALE - (SNAP) $7000. MILK
and snack bar (44 seats) next to
the only theatre in town. All
modern ice cream, and cooking
equipment, living quarters in
roar of building, rental of building reasonable. For information
write the Dari-Del Snack Bar.
Fernie. B.C. or call 140.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
1949 Ford 2 Ton Flat Deck
1935 Ford 2 Ton Flat Deck
1947 Mercury 1  Ton L.D.
1946 Ford Vi Ton L.D.
1941' Ford 1 Ton LP.  '
TERMS AND TRADES
Empire Motors
803 Baker St.     Phone 1135
ASSAYERS AND MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
E. W WiDDOWSON & CO. AS-
saycrs  301 .Josephine St., Nelgpn.
H. S ELiUES. ROSSLAND. KC..
Aaaaygr, Chemist, Mine Rep.
1040 E.S.A. STAR TWIN MOTOR-
cycle, 500 c.c. 1358 miles. Twin
leather saddlebags, with zippers;
goggles, driving gauntlets. All for
$750. Cash or terms. Queen City
Motors Ltd., Phone 43, Nelson.
FOR SALE-42-45 H.D. MOTOR-
cycle. Motor just overhauled, new
battery and paint job, excellent
rubber. Best offer takes lt. R. Burton, Bpx 625, Creston, B.C.
NORTH SHORE
PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Dwelling on one acre of land
facing main highway at Willow
Point. Has full concrete foundation, part basement. Living
room, two large bedrooms,
kitchen with built-in cupboards
and modern equipped bathroom. Fuel shed, level land. Immediate occupancy. Cfinflft
Terips arranged.    «POW"W
Or will add
One more acre and two cottages
with income of $55.00 per month
priced : $10,500
ALSO
We have excellent selection of
lake frontage lots priced from
For Immediate Delivery
TRACTOR, MOWERS,
SELF-DUMP   RAKES,
SIDE DELIVERY RAKES,
LOADER, CHOPPERS, ETC.
and the famous
AUTOMATIC, ONE-MAN
WIRE-TYING PICKUP
HAY BALER
USED EQUIPMENT
1-5 ft. Massey Harris 2-
Horse Mower.
1-Gibson   Tractor,    with
Plow, Disc and Harrows,
at a bargain.
1-Case    automatic    Hay „
Baler. First class. A real
bargain.
GIRL TO SHARE HOME, CLOSE
in. Cooking facilities. $23. Phone
030-X after 5 p.m,	
HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FC
rent. Apnlv 614 Victoria Stref
1.48
20
LOST AND FOUND
LOST — CHILD'S EYE-GLASSES,
on Lakeside Park beach. Reward.
Phone 829-R.
ROOM AND BOARD
1 DOUBLE, . 1 SINGLE ROOM
with board available. Mrs.
Peachey, 812 Carbonate St. Phon-
620- Y.
CLASSIFIER DISPLAY
a     a
1C s
Tractor & Equipment
Co. Ltd.
Phone 930 Box 119
Nelson, B. C.
$1250
T. D. Rosling
Real Estate and Insurance
568 Ward St. Phone 717
FOR SALE — '47 BUICK SUPER
Sedan. Radio, heater, new tires,
and Lifeguard tubes. Upholstery
very good. Motor excellent con
dition. 1005 Front Street.
AUTO WRECKERS
DAVIES TRANSFER  AND  AUTO
Wrecking  Phone Rossland. 171.
ENGINEERS AND  SURVEYOR8
bOVD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.
Nelson. B.C.. Surveyor.. Engineer
INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE
IVicrfAHDV  AGENCIES  LTD.,  IN-
surance. Real Estate—Phone 135
LIVESTOCK   DEALERS
WL BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-
Crnitact H   Harrop; Phone 117.
MACHINISTS
BENNli.TTS LIMITED
Machine   Shop,   acetylene   and
electric welding, motor rewinding
Phone 593 324 Vernon -St.
FOR SALE - 1047 MORRIS. NEW
rings. A-l condition. $800. Apply T.
Nichols, Kinnaird.
1047 CHEV. COACH FOR SALE-
Can be seen at 703 Radio Avenue
after 5:30 p.m.
FOR SALE - 1936 FORD PANEL
4 new tires. $250 cash. Box 37,
Slocan City.
FOR SALE - 1933 FORD ROAD-
ster. Phone 524-X.
'40 CHEV. BUS. COUTE. — GOOD
condition, good tires. Ph. 169-R2.
FOR  SALE - GIRLS'  C.C.M.  BI-
c-rle: good condition. Ph. U17-L.
JOATSjnd ENGINES
FOR SALEf-^LATEST MODEL 5
h.p, Johnson outboard motor.
Slightly used. $185.00. Phone 44-T,
Kaslo, B.C.
FOR SALE
Semi-bungalow, 8 rooms and
bath. Full cement basement,
furnace, wired for electric
range. On 2 corner ((S^ftA
lots Terms   ^DsJUU
Bungalow—4 rooms, bath. Cement basement. 2 corner lots.
Priceen.and.frUlt      $4200
Repair shop—bicycles and mowers, mctors, etc. Good revenue
and location. Sell with or without building.
F. A. WHITFIELD
REAL ESTATE —INSURANCE
302 Baker St. — Phone 312
CONTRACTORS - SAWMILL
LOGGING k MINING
SEND  YOUR ENQUIRIES TO
NATIONAL MACHINERY
EQUIPMENT
CO., LTD.
Granville Island M.A. 1251
 Vancouver, B C.
D7 TRACKS AND REBUILT
rollers, D6 tracks, angledozer for
RD7. 4" portable pump with engine. Bayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook  B.C.
Special Bargain
1950 PLYMOUTH
DELUXE SEDAN
FULL PRICE $1800'
1940 DODGE SEDAN
NEEDS FRONT END WORK
$395
KEBLE1
JM0T0R4.
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHfe
?sa.ij.ri'tf:frrp]/y^iijs,3m
fWJir'Ti'ffW?$riFimV*
 iU
Quebec Man      2.05
Queenston ..
Quemont . .
San Antonio
Sen Rouyn .,
Shawkey         iy
Sherritt-Gordon       2.70
Sjgma
Silvermiller ..
SJadon Mal. ..
Starratt Olsen
Steep Rock ...
Sylvanite
Teck Hughes ..
Toburn  	
Torbrit
Trans Cont Re
United Keno
Upper Canada
Ventures   	
OILS
Anglo Can	
Atlantic Oil	
B.A. Oil     37.25
Calgary and Edmonton    14.25
Calmont       1.00
Central Leduc       1.99
Chemical Research  95
Commonwealth Pete  :....    2.25
Dalhousie     *°
Del Rio   	
Federated Pete
Home
.51
21.00
2.40
19
6.70
1.40
.69
.70
6.75
1.25
2.10
.27
1.77
.50
1100
1.60
10.50
5.80
2.85
NEW YORK, July 5 (AP) r-
Enthusiasm for recovery spread
swiftly and sent prices sharply
higher.
TORONTO, July 5 (CP) — A
spirited rally sent prices clmibing
in the last ..alf-hour.
MONTREAL, July 5 (CP) - Securities firmed slightly from the
opening bell. Trading was sluw,
however. <
Near the close, advances held a
good lead over declines.
MONTREAL, July 5 (CP)—Trad- ■
ing in Government of Canada issues
was at a standstill while provincials were receiving some interest
and tended to be firmer. On the
corporate market, C.P.R., convertibles were higher.
CHICAGO, July 5 (API - ■Soybeans and lard, with the exception
of the July lard contract, had a
weak trend. All 1051 bean contracts
sank lo new seasonal lows.
! LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) - A
warning by lhe Chancellor ot the
Exchequer on a deficit on Britain's
overall balance of payments for the
first half'of 1051 checked active
interest in domestic stocks. Further
responsible comment on the need
for a continuation of rearmament
was responsible for high-level m-
tCi'c.t b-.:s maintained in 'commodity shares.
.38
1.00,
8.10
H
,99
FOR SALE — ONE MAN P.M.
Chain Saw in excellent shape to
highest offer over $150. Apply
Tony Ewasiuk, Beaver Falls, B.C.
(Between Trail and Fruitvale.)
FOR SALE—ONE LARGE ALICE
Chalmers bulldozer. 10-foot blade
and spare parts. Contact Jack
Greenwood, Nelson, B.C.
FOR HIRE OR CONTRACT—D-4
cat, equipped for excavating,
roadbuiiding, etc. C. Ross, phone
15QB Nelson.	
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
NEW HOUSE FOR SALE—STORY
and one-half. Fully insulated. On
two lots. Large living room, dinette in one end. Rambow carpeting. Heatilator fireplace. Bright
kitchen, plenty of cupboards.
Pembroke bath: 3 bedrooms; full
basement; hot-air furnace. Upstairs and porches not quite finished. Close to town and schools.
Apply 517 Observatory St., Cily.
SELLING HERD OF HIGH PRO-
ducing Holstein cattle; 25 head,
11 cows and bull, 0 fresh; 4 yearlings. 9 Spring calves. Some purebred. E. E. Linville, Lardeau. B.C.
Phone 89-R. Kaslo, B.C.
jams
1950 Plymouth
Sedan. Full
Price $1800
1940 Dodge Sedan
$395
1938 Nash Coach
$79
PEEBLE*
MOTOR!
HFARGO'oSWcvxTIP.S'*,
0W1O9O 'Nelson.iS.C. ^
    15.75
Imperial Oil ■:..,-.  ''-""
Inter Pete
Mid Cont.
Nat, Pe'te .
Okalia         2.38
Pacific Pete  '.      8.60
Royalite :  ' *""
Tower Pete 	
United Oils 	
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi 	
Algoma Steel ....
Argus 	
Atlas St.	
Beattie Bros	
Bell Telephone ..
Brazilian	
B.C. Electric pfd
B.C. Electric _..       ui \i
B.C. Forest          8
B.C. Packers A        \&V\
B.C. Packers B         16
B.C. Power B      B.25
Brown Co. ...
tiruck Silk A
Bruck Silk B         llti
Building Products-       si
Burl. Steel
Burns A
35.00
18.75
.15!.i
1.98
14.50
.30
.70
19 Vi
32
13 Vi
17
10 *
30 <,i
2314
80
13--i
2Hi
31
20 li
Burns B ZZZZ       o„
Burrard A ...      	
Can. Malting ]
Can. Packers A
Can. Packers B .
8Vi
51
30
3Bs
Calgary Lsvestcsfc
CALGARY. July 5 (CP)-Trad-
ing was active on the Calgary live-
slock market this morning, though
receipts were heavier. On offer
were 700 cattle and calves. Good
butcher steers were steady to
strong, fair to medium heavy steers
strong to 50 cents higher. Butcher
heifers were steady. Cows held the
week's advance on 50 cents. Bulls
were fully steady Light stocker and
feeder steers were in good demand
at strong prices, heavy stockers
easier.
Hours of trading on the local
market during stampede week will
be:
Monday 8 to 10 Tuesday 9 to 3; '
Wednesday 9 lo 1; Thursday 9 to 3;
Friday 9 to 1 and Saturday 9 to 12
o'clock,
Hogs dropped 50 cents Wednesday, closing at $38.50. Sows were
steady at 24.75.
Good to choice butcher steers 32 50
to 34, common to medium 27 to 32.
Good to choice butcher heifers 31
to 33, common to medium 25 to 30.
Good cows 26.50 to 28, common to
medium, 23 to 26, canners and cutters 19 to 22.50. Good bulls 29.50 to
30.90. Common to. medium 25 to 29.
Good stocker and feeder steers 31.50
to 33.50, common to medium 26 to
31. Good to choice veal calves 35
to 39, common to medium 28 lo 34.
Vancouver Stocks
mines
Bralorne           6,15
Cariboo Gold      1.2Q
Golconda,         25
Hedley Mascot :....      .55
Highland Bell  88
Int C & C 32
Kootenay Belle 80
Pend Oreille       7.50
Pioneer Gold      2.00
Quatcuio 23
Reeves MacDonald      4.70
Sheep Creek              1.53
Silver Standard       2,40'
Vananda  15
12%
14
16 Vt
SOVt
190
WANTED - HIGHEST PRICES
paid for cattle of any kind or age
by Dick Kleef. Phone, wire or
write to Dick Kleef. R.R. 1. Nel-
son. Phone 401-L-4.	
FOR SALE - TWENTY-MONTH
old Jersey bulL Fred Fillipoff,
Winlaw.
BUDGET BLIW
GET A
^1 VwJu^l*^
 -'    :-   11_ ,„ St A AAA LOANS LIFE INSURED
WANTED,   MISCELLANEOUS j "*? flaOOQ at no extra cost
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or Iron. Any quantity. Top prices
paid Active Trading Company
916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.
(Continued in Next Column)
CEDAR POLESf ALL CLASSES
and lengths Larch poles. Glacier
Lumber Co.. Box 450, Nelson. B.C.
SHIP
YOUR   HIDES   TO
Morgan, Nelson, B. C
J.   P
 ,  dl
Canadian Breweries  21
Canadian Canners     31
Canadian Car & Fdy   13»i
Canadian Car & Fdy A  16%
Canadian Marconi   3.40
Canadian Pacific Rly  27(4
.Canadian West Lmbr   8%
Cockshutt  '  27%
Cons. Mining & Smelting .. 141%
Cons. Paper   36%
Dist. Seagram   27*4
Dom. Bridge  6114
Dom. Foundries  _ 52*4
Dom. Stores  _ 12«.
Dom. Textiles ..
Famous Players
Fanny Farmer
Fleet Air 	
Ford A  „ 53W
Gatineau , .-...._.. lB'ri
Gatineau 5% pfd    104%
Goodyear „ _ 94V4
Goodyear pfd _ 48y«
Gypsum Lime -   23%
Imperial Oil -  34W
Int. Nickel _..._ 37 Vs
Int. Pete  1B%
Kelvinator  „ 16%
Lake of Woods „. 31
Laura Secord   _ J314
Loblaw A  "*
Loblaw B  __
Maple Leaf Milling 	
Massey Harris  _„ „
M & O Paper	
Mont. Loco 	
Nat. Steel Car _ _ 11
Page Hershey  _ 51
Powell River	
Russ. Industries
Shawinigan 	
Simpsons pfd ....
Steel of Canada
Wellington
Western Exploration
Western Uranium
OILS
Calmont  07
Dalhousie   37
"?™ „ '-Zzz: is:™
Okalta Com  2 40
Vanalta       -sau,
INDUSTRIALS  "
Coast Breweries   4 15
Capital Estates        19 00
Alberta Dist  [    3M
Van Roi
.0314
.70
1.00
Winnipeg Grain
WINNIPEG, i-ily 5 (CP)
nipeg grain cash prices:
Oats—No. 1 feed 74.
Barley—No. 1 feed 1.08%.
.65
- Win-
30
3H4
14 V.
12'i
2B%
15%
27%
IAGARA
FINANCE COMPANY LTD
SUITE 1
Phone 1095 560 Baker St
78
23%
34
94
31%
31
13%
18
21
29%
        40
United Fuel A „       56
United Steel          9%
52
Steel of Can. pfd I
Standard Paving	
Standard Chemical	
Union Gas of Can	
United Corp A I.
United Corp B
LEAVES NEW CAR
AS PART PAYMENT
ON INCOME TAX
VANCOUVER, July 5 (CP) —
Nick Lucas, Vancouver auto dealer,
drove a new $3,400 car to the tax
offices here today and left lt there
as part payment on his personal income tax.
He said that he hoped that the
Revenue Department will be able
to convert it into cash, which is
more, he says, than he can do.
He explained that the unusual
payment is a protest against credit
restrictions which he claims are
killing the market for aufos.
Income tax officials received the
news calmly. One expressed the
opinion that a car is not legal tender.
Horsemeat in
Victoria? ... They
Wouldn't Dream of It
VICTORIA, B.C.. July 5 (CP)—
Beef-eating Victorians are looking
down their noses at Vancouver's
horsemeat roasts.
Butchers in this.outpost of Em- "
pire declared flatly today that Victorians are "far too fussy" to stomach horsemeat, which has been selling in .Vancouver for a week.
"Wouldn't dream of stocking the
stuff," one dealer said. "It would
drive my clients away."
Another   Victoria   butcher   said
H. Walker  '"        52 "iwlth raised eyebrows: "Horsemeat,
Western Grocers "        tsrj old bo^ In Victoria? I should think
Western Grocers A Z'ZZZ      35   \ we would 5hut ■**? sl*°P first."
Winnipeg Electric com'IL
Winnipeg Electric pfd 	
39%' '
89%  It Pays To Read the Classified Dally
 10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, T951
Your Best Friend
Won't Tell You....
BUT PERMIT US TO SUGGEST THAT FOR THE HOT
SUMMER' DAYS YOU USE ONE OF THESE.
ARRID .
FRESH _____
MUM	
ETIQUET (tube)
530 — 750
470 — 690
530 — 750
    470
Veto — Odorono — Snemist — Nonspi — Neet
Water Lily — Heed — Stopette
MANN'S
DRUG STORE
KILLED  NEAR  LACOMBE
RED DEER, Alta., July 5 (CP)—
Charles Austin, 25, was killed three
miles North of Lacombe last night
when his jeep.crashed into the rear
of a parked truck. Austin was from
Eckville, 20 miles West of Red Deer.
WINNIPEG, July 5 (CP) — Farmers and poultry dealers in the Portage la Prairie, Man., district are
urging more government action to
curb the epidemic of Newcastle
disease, which already had caused
heavy losses to their flocks,
This, You Can
Afford
Men's
Wellington Gore
Oxford
Your choice of ploin, moccasin tor
weave vamps. Wine, all sizes.
Only
$1/Y95
10
411 BAKER YT.
PHONE 1114
Take Things as They Come
Quebec Centenarians Motto
By ADRIEN PATRICE
Canadian Press Correspondent
VALLEYFIELD, Que., July 5
(CP)—The last survivor of a band
of Papal Zouaves who left Canada
81 years ago to help defend the
pope.In.Rome, J. Octave Cossette
celebrated his 101st birthday today.
For Mr. Cossette,  It waa Just
. CUTLERS'S
JEWELLERY
WATCH REPAIRS.
20 Years* Experience
PROMPT   SERVICE
-tfST'
'/
Beautiful
2-PIECE
MATCHINCr
SETS
From $23.50 Up
We also specialize in
open stock patterns of
rich gabardines and Irish
linens.
WADES'
Shoe and Leather Goods
another day spent In his- home
opposite the Valleyfleld Seminary.
Relatives and  friends  read  him
letters and telegrams of congratulation from all over the world
but he refused to get excited.
In good health, although confined
to his home, the centenarian said
he was following his own rule for
longevity:  - "Never    worry   about
things, take them as they come."
Mr. Cossette was a tall youth of
20 when he joined a group of 150
Roman Catholics from Canada who
answered a call for help from Pope
Pius IX.
The Papal Zouaves, volunteer soldiers garbed in billowing trousers
and . brlghtly-colore.d shirts and
tunics, went to defend the pope
against Garibaldi "who wanted to
abolish the papal state. .
Mr. Cossette was born July 4,1850,
in Champ'lain,. Que., near Three
Rivers, the second of 11 children.
At the age of 11 he became a
cabin boy on a St. Lawrence River
schooner and was paid $2 monthly,
a "fabulous" amount for a child
his age at'sthe time.
At -19, his father gave him the
schooner "Sulfrenie," making him
the youngest ship-owner in Canada.
On Aug. 28, 1870, he bbarded a
riverboat at Three Rivers and, with
25 other Zouaves, sailed to Montreal where they joined 124 ether
volunteers. All sailed from New
York for Rome and,the Vatican, but
they never saw action as the fight
was over before they arrived.
Back home, Cossette returned to
the life of a sailor. But, sailing did
not take up all his time. Cossette
built the Valleyfield city hall, the
old cathedral and police deDartment
building and several churches, both
Catholic and Protestant.
He founded the insurance firm of
St. Jean Baptiste in 1878 and the
Valleyfield brass band four years
later.
The father of 11 children, 10 of
them still living, Mr. Cossette lives
a.uietly at the home of one of his
sons here.
LONDCIN, July 5 (AP)—A cold
today forced Princess Margaret to
cancel an engagement to visit the
Royal Agricultural Show at Cambridge.
Haigh
Tru-Art
Beauty
Salon
676 Baker St.
Phone 327
Philco Radio
Soles and Service
Jeffery Radio Service
Phone 1302
446 Ward St.
BUOY-O-BOY
x   FLOATS
*\i
LIFE
VESTS
See Our Displays
For gracious living in this good old summertime ..
,        try these hoi wealher specials.
___*■
BEACH
BALLS
SAFETY
CUSHIONS
See Our Displays
•By-
£
Electric
Fans
From
$10.80
We have a
good selection
of fans to
choose from.
Blade sizes
from 6-Inch to
10-Inch, fixed
and oscillating.
Lawn
Sprinklers
From
$2.50
We have
several   kinds
and types of
sprinklers. See
our  displays
for your
requirements.
Plastic Storage
Dish Covers
95c Set
Set of 4 elastlp top dish covers
—attractive .colors, well made.
Ideal for covering food storage
dishes In refrigerator.
LEONARD and McCLARY
REFRIGERATORS
GAINADAY
ELECTRIC IRONERS
McCLARY and FAWCETT
RANGES
LECTRIC TEA KETTLES
SNAKE IRRIGATORS
A Bargain at $2.25 Each
PLASTIC
GARDEN HOSE
SEE OUR DISPLAYS
Vacuum
Jug
$8.55
Get this smart
new style
vacuum Jug
with pouring
spout for use
at picnics and
'   camping.
Keeps liquid
hot or cold.
Insect
Bomb
$1.47
Get  rid  of
Insects the
easy way.
C^Mrl .
Press  the
\^&y
button, a
lethal spray
kills all  Insect
pests . . .
qulcklyl
Is,
Beverage Sets
From $3.15
Sets of glasses In several sizes,
designs and decorations. Order
early, quantities limited.
Wood, Vallance Hardware
COMPANY LIMITED
Phone 1530 Wholesale-Retail Nelson, B.C.
Reds May Realize Aggression
Does Nol Pay/Says SI. Laurent
MONTREAL, July 3 (CP)—Prime
Minister St. Laurent said today the
Korean cease - fire developments
may indicate the Communists realize that "aggression does not pay?'
He told the Corporation of Agronomists of Quebec Province it is in
the hope of bringing home that idea
that the North Atlantic nations have
been building up their strength.
"It is for that reason that we and
our partners have made so many
sacrifices to show the aggressors in
Korea that aggression does not
pay," he said in an address at a
luncheon. "Events of the last few
days mayp be an indication that they
are already realizing this."
Mr. St. Laurent told his audience
GOV'T WORKERS
TOSNUB
COMMISSIONER
VANCOUVER, July 5 (CP) -
B. C. .Government employees will
snub the Chairman of the Civil
Service Commission when he tours
the province this year because of
his attitude during bargaining for
wage increases.
This was announced last night
at a meeting of the Vancouver-New
Westminster branch of the B. C.
Government. Employees' Association where Government ministers
were criticized for their manner ln
dealing with the request for a pay
boost for 10,000 Provincial civil
servants.
Executive of the Association
passed a motion that Dr. Hugh
Morrison of Victoria, head of the
Civil Service Colhmission, not be
invited to union meetings in his
annual tour, and that no entertain'
ment be provided for him "because
there is nothing he can offer us."
It has 'been customary for the
civil servants to entertain Dr,
Morrison and invite him to speak
at meetings.   ,
Officials of the Association met
with  Cabinet  members  today  ln
Victoria to explain why they turn
ed  down  the  Government's  offer
for a 6.5 per cent wage hike.
. NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)
—City Council has announced that
New Westminster's new fire hall
will be ready for use by the end
of the year.
CAMPBELL, SHANKLAND
&IMRIE
Chartered Accountants
Auditors
576 Baker St. Phone 235
Have the Job Done Right
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
of farming experts that productivity
of the soil—their specialty—is necessary not only to'meet Canada's
needs but also to help prepare a
complete defence against the threat
of Communism. That threat was
social and economic, as well as mil
itary and political.
"So that our defences may be
effective," he said, "we must erect
them on all fronts with the help of
those men everywhere who wish to
remain free. It is for this reason
that the democracies have adopted
their plans , for economic aid, the
Marshall Plan, President Truman's
point-four program and the Colombo Plan.
, "These plans are our best weapon
of defence in this ideological war ...
"We must furnish eloquent proof
of our superior capacity to win the
real peace, that is, to solve better
than they the real economic and
social problems of men.
"To that end, we must not only
produce more and ensure a better
distribution, but we must also do
so with intelligence,"
RADIATORS
CLEANED A REPAIRED
RECORING
Jim's  Radiator Shop
301 Ward St. Phone 63
MAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE
OUR TELEPHONE LINE
WEST  KOOTENAY
STEAM  LAUNDRY
PHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.
J. A. C. LAUGHTON
, , OPTOMETRIST
VISUAL TRAINING
Medical Arts Building
Suite 206 Phone 141
You May Win
$1500
New, Home for Fire
Orphaned Fawns
VANCOUVER, July J (CP)-Six
orphan fawns, rescued from the
Campbell River area forest fire on
Vancouver Island, will make their
home in Vancouver,
Allan Best, director of the Stanley
Park children's zoo, left today to
pick up the black-tailed animals.
Right now, they're living in a
wire enclosure behind a game warden's home in Campbell River. Some
of them are still less than a week
old.
Linen was first manufactured ih
England by Flemish weavers in 1253.
FLEURY'S Pharmacy
Prescriptions
Accurately
Compounded
Med. Arts  Blk.
PHONE 25
WIGINTON
MOTORS LTD.
PONTIAC — BUICK
G.M.C. TRUCKS
Metal and Paint Work Specialty
THOMPSON
,     FUNERAL HOME
"Distinctive Funeral Service"
AMBULANCE SERVICE
515 Kootenay St. Phone 361
HAVE YOUR FURNITURE
EXPERTLY RECOVERED
at the
Nelson Upholstery
.409 Hall Street        .     Phone 146
NELSON, B. C.
DID
YOU
KNOW?
We have the best suit
values in both popular
price and best grade
clothing.
Right now-
FASHION-CRAFT
"afe giving
20% DISCOUNT
Fit is absolutely
guaranteed.
Emory's
LIMITED
The Man's Store
WASHINGTON, July 5 (AP)
Announced United States battle c
ualties in Korea reached 78,110
day, an Increase of 1361 since 1
week.
Our VIJO Has Always Been
A Favorite — But Our
NEW VIJO
Ii Even  Better Than Ever
Available at your grocer's, ol
Ellison Milling & Elevator (
Phone 238 523 Front St
for :
Kodak Snapshot
When getting your film or prints
ask for Rules Folder.
KODAKS — FILMS
Your Rexall 8tor«
City Drug Go.
Nelson's Modern Pharmacy
Box 460
Phone pay 34 Night 807-R
Headquarters For
Aft    Y™r
Vacation
Needs
Ts#*T'
English Style
Health Salts
1 lb. Special 590
Bathing Caps
White - Blue - Green
750 - $1.00 - $1.25
Noxzema
Skin Cream
260 - 650 - 800
$1.69
Sun Glasses
for everyone
290 to $4.95
Gillette
Rocket Razor
and 10 Blades
$2.00 Value $1.29
Shaving Lotion
After Shave Talc
Reg. 75c. Special 390
Band Aid: 150 ■ 350
and 650
Adhesive Bandages
Dettol  Antiseptic
590 - 980 - $1.75
Noxzema
Suntan Oil
Suntan Greaseless
300 and 600
Nylon Bristle
Hair Brushes
Special $1.00
Olive Oil
All-Purpose Cream
1 Ib. jar. Special 980
TANTOO
612
Genuine
Repellent
Insect
THERMOS
BOTTLES
Cream
Repellent
$1.85 and
570
590
$1.95
BEACH
BALLS
Large   Size
$1.00
Tartan Lotion
(as advertised in Life)
Lets you tan without burn
$1.10
Ansco Camera
Ansco Films
Buy the Economy Pack
and save 50 a Roll
NELSON PHARMACY
.   .        Your Fortress ol Health
D. M. SAMPLE,  DRUGGIST *
433 Josephine St.
Phone 1203   —   We Deliver   —   Res. 394-L
AS ADVERTISED IN
LIFE MAGAZINE
These beautiful, steel cabinet sinks make a permanent
installation for years of service without
maintenance costs.
One-piece acid-resisting porcelain-enamel top
No-splash bowls
Beautiful chrome, swinging type, mixing-faucet
Flexible rinse spray
Models from 42" wide to 66" wide
PRICED FROM $129
Start your kitchen alterations with a
YOUNGSTOWN ALL STEEL SINK
McKay & Stretton
LIMITED
532 BAKER ST. PHONE 544
Immediate Delivery
on New    •
Chevrolets
and
Oldsmobiles
USED CARS
'49 Oldsmobile Hydramatic Sedan.        $^/JAA
Low mileage.   _ 4UVV
'48 Oldsmobile 2-Door Sedan. Radio,- heater, hydramatic drive, life-guard . $1QCA
11*2000
_____ *800
_____   *75
tubes
'50 Plymouth.
Radio, air-conditioner
'49 Anglia.
Priced at	
'28 Chevrolet
Priced at	
USED TRUCKS
'50 Mercury Vi-lorx
Priced at  ...
'49 Mercury 1-Ton
Priced at  	
'49 Mercury 1-Ton
Priced at 	
11650
__ $1400
 _*1300
'48 Chevrolet ''4-Ton, Chassis ond Cab. $1 mif\f\
Priced at    l_.UU
'48 Dodge '/.-Ton panel $1
.    Priced at	
'40 Chevrolet '/i-Ton Panel
Priced at	
1150
'350
NELSON TRANSFER
CO. LTD.
Phone 35
Nelson, B. C.
