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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Tourist Influx\nAt 1950 Proportions\nRecords Shattered at Radium, Nelway\nBorder Traffic Exceeds Last Year\n' . -    The tourist trade, lucrative Kootenay industry, ij living\nup to its reputation this Summer.\n, \"It's normal,\" one Nelson auto court operator said\nThursday, and he seemed to sum the situation for most of\nKootenay  Lake,  West Arm\nand Nelsbn resorts,\nWhile some of 'the resort owners\nqueried in a survey expressed the\nopinion that business had dropped\noff (putting it down to the war),\nthe others think Americans and\nPrairie people are ' travelling as\nmuch as ever.\nIn 1950, some 165,100 American\nand other foreign visitors entered\nthe Kootenay-Boundary. -    .\nIn the East Kootenay, this is 'certainly the case. Attendance at Radium Hot Springs on. the weekend\nshattered all previous records. In\nthree days 1247 cars passed through\n. Kootenay Park gateway from the\nWest with 4151 passengers, a traffic\nincrease of 256 per cent over the\nsame three days last year, and Monday 493 cars went well,.over the\nprevious one-day record pf 415. ...\nFour hundred holiday-happy pad-\ndlers jammed the swimming pools,\nand , Suhday's attendance of 1984\nwas exactly 933 more than the record. AH in all, attendance in the\nthree days'cxceedcd last year's by\n85 per cent.        '    , :   '\nHeavy traffic is also expected for\nthis weekend and next as tourists\nand East Kootenay residents pass\nthrough .the park gateway erf route\nto the Calgary Stampede and return. Tourist traffic in the Windermere district will be at its peak during the next three weeks.\nAt Nelway last month, American traffic was way up from the\nsame month last year. Foreign\n- cars travelling Into Canada were\n871,' compared with 674 last year,\nand foreign cars bound for the\nUnited States were up from 617\nto 768. Canada-bound passengers\nIncreased from 3607. to 4162, and\nU.S.-bound passengers rose from\n3911 to 4202.\n\"Not so good,\" \"same as last year\nand \"better than last year\" were\nsome of the ways district auto court\nowners described their business.\nSome wondered if Americans are\ntouring the countryside like they\nUsed to, others answered in a definite \"yes\". ;.\".\u25a0-\u25a0\nOne ventured the idea that the\nwar may be making Uncle Sam's\npeople more \"stay - at - home -ish\".\n. \"They say 'our boys may be in .it\nany day' \", she said. \u2022\nBut G. M. (Monty) Armstrong of\nKaslo, president of Kootenay Lake\nAuto Court and Resort Owners\nAssociation, Vice-President of the\nB.C. organization and President of\nKaslo Board of Trade, was pessimistically optimistic: \"The're*sorts will\nhave nobody for a week and then\nthey'll be filled-to the gunwales',\nhe said. \"It's a normal year; as good\nos last.\" ,\nThe tourist trade brought an estimated $8Vi million into Kootenay-\nBoundary in 1950. \u25a0 . \u25a0\n\"MOST BEAUTIFUL SPOT\"\n'Nelson Board of Trade has had\nmore than 75 visitors so far this\nmonth, and more than 25 on July 4.\nIn June 400 people from practically\nevery province of Canada and State\nof the Union signed the guest book.\nIn the rerharks column, they had\na few nice things lo say about Nelson and the Kootenays. A Seattle\nman wrote \"most beautiful spot ln\nthe world\", a Vancouver couple\njotted down \"the most beautiful\nspot we have seen since leaving\nVancouver\", and other notations included: \"very nice place\", \"everyone .is friendly and helpful\", \"magnificent city\", \"very interesting\ncity\" and a plain \"thanks for the\nmaps.\"\n40 Buildings Burn\nIn Village Fire\nCAP CHAT, Que., July 5 fCP)-*-\nA raging fire today destroyed about\n40 buildings in this Gasne Peninsula village leaving 200 persons\nhomeless.\nHeavy rain about three hours\nafter the fire started in the Western end of ihe village, came to the\nrescue of volunteer fire-fighters.\nThe great blaze, driven by a\nfierce wind sweeping across the\nSt. Lawrence River from the\nNortheast, was brought under control by the 300 volunteer firemen,\njust bSfore noon. ,\nNo deaths or serious injuries\nwe^re reported.*\nNo one was sure of the exact\npoint of origin in the confusion\nthat resulted as flying embers\nrained down among the small\nwooden homes bunched at Cap\nChat's Western outskirts.\n70 CHILDREN\nDIE IN BLAST\nPleasure Craft\nErupts on\nEast Berlin River\nBERLIN, July 5 (Reute.rs) \u2014\nMore than 70 children were feared killed. In an explosion on a\npleasure steamer on * the East\nBerlin Spree River today.\nEyewitnesses said the steamer\nwas taking a party of 200 East\nGerman children aged betvyeen\n10 and 12 to a holiday camp on\nthe Baltic.\nFifteen children were reported\ntaken to hospital With severe\nburns.\nEarlier reports from the West\nBerlin police said the steamer's\nboiler had exploded.\nEast Berlin authorities refused\nan offer of help from West German police and firemen, the po*\nlice said.\nEyewitnesses said: \"The children\nwaved and shouted as they passed\nunder the bridge we were standing\non. Three minutes later when they\nwere about 3C0 yards downstream\nthere was a loud explosion and a\ncolumn of black smoke shot up in\nthe air.\n\"It was difficult to see what\nhappened then. Flames broke out\nand we saw some of the children\njump in the water.\n\"The steamer was only 50 yards\nfrom the bank of the Spree but it\nseemed ages before any help\narrived.\"\nMost of the victims were drowned. Six were killed in the fire.\n\"Many of the children could not\nswim,\" the witnesses said. \"Eventually the steamer was towed to tho\nbank and the remaining children\njumped ashore. The flames were\nthen put out.\"\nThe West German News Agency\nDP A said a number of the bystanders jumped into the water and\nrescued up to 50 children.\nThis afternoon two East German\npolice boats fished witty nets for\nbodies.-\nThe steamer, the Homeland, was\nburnt out      v   .\nCanada Plans\nFor Royal Visit\nOTTAWA, July 5 (CP) \u2014 A\ncommittee of high government officials today embarked on the delicate' task of working out the details\nof the visit this Fall of Princess\nElizabeth and her husband, the\nDuke of Edinburgh.\nThe committee opened the first\nof what probably will be a long\nseries of meetings until the Royal\nCouple arrive early in October for\na three-week coast-to-coast tour.\nMeantime, communications began\nto trickle into the capital from\nacross the country, bringing suggestions as to the route the royal\ntour should take.\nThe route and the stopping-places\nwill be determined by the committee, subject .to the Princess's approval.\nHowever, the nip is not expected\nto be the whistle-stop, state dinner\nand parade of pageantry type of\njaunt which marked the 1939 royal\nvisit of the King and Queen. It is\nnoted that Princess Elizabeth herself, in accepting Canada's invitation, asked that the visit be kept\nas simple as possible.\nThe committee is headed by\nCharles Stein, under-secretary of\nstate. As his right-hand assistant he-\nhas Howard Measures, the government's chief of protocol.\nThe committee will have to decide whether \u2014 again subject to the\napproval' of the Princess herself \u2014\nlhe heiress presumptive to the\ntlirone should address a joint session\nof parliament. The Fall session is\nscheduled to open Oct. 9.\nFILE3 $20,000 SUIT\nMERIDEN, Conn., July 5 (AP)\u2014\nA su.it for $20,000 has been.filed by\nMrs. Mary Lombardo of Meriden\nagainst ftobert Thornton, captain of\nthe ill-fated fishing vessel, \"The\nJack\" which sank in Long Island\nSound June 10. Her husband, Antonio, died with 10 others.\"\n\"BEST WAY TO TRAVEL\" SAYS B. C.'s\nHITCH-HIKING HORSEWOMAN\nCALGARY, July 5 (CP) -\nTake it from Marjorie Childer-\nstone of Kelowna, B. C\u2014hitchhiking with a horse is the best\nway to travel.\nAnd she should know. She and\nher chestnut gelding \"Rusty\"\nhave just finished a four-week,\n600-mile trip through the Rocky\nMountains.\nThe hitch-hiking horse and his\npretty rider came through sleet\nand snow, hail and rain from Kelowna to Calgary and never parted company.   \u2022\nMarj says Rusty wanted to see\nthe Calgary Stampede so she\nthought she'd come along, too.\nThe 19-year-old horsewoman,\nwindburned after her trip\nthrough  the  mountains,  arrived\nin Calgary during the holiday\nweekend with Rusty.\nHitch-hiking with a horse, Miss\nChilderstone says, is the best\nmethod of travelling, sight-seeing\nand horseback riding all at once.\nAnd it's economical, too.\nRusty's got the best of treatment on the trip, with a liniment\nrub down every night to save\nwear and tear on his legs and\nspecial care for his shoes.\nThe two ramblers were saved\n' many miles on their trip by truck\ndrivers and ranchers who stopped to give the hitch-hikers lifts.\nAccommodation along the way\nwas provided by friendly farmers\u2014and instead of losing weight\non the long trip. Rusty landed in\nCalgary in fine shape.\nw&\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY:\nCloudy Friday. Showers in the af-.\nternoon and evening. Cooler. Light\nWinds. Low and high tomorrow at\nCranbrook 45 and 70, Crescent Valley 45 and 75. .\nVol. SO\n'\u25a0c*wq\u00a3*;.'\"w*'*\n^ l\u00b0roltU\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 6, 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 63\nRii^^^Chine^e Complete j ran Rejects  Plan\nPlans for First Peace Talks\nBy DON HUTH\nTOKYO, July 6 (Friday) (AP)\n\u2014The Communists and Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway today agreed on\nfinal terms for a preliminary armistice meeting Sunday and\nRidgway promised Red Mason officers Immunity from air attack.\nEarlier In the day the' Communists announced they would\nguarantee safe conduct for Aliled\nliaison officers proceeding to the\nmeeting site at Kaesong, threo\nmiles South of parallel 38 and 30\nair miles Northwest of Seoul,\nThe Supreme Allied Commander\nin reply to this message, guaranteed immunity for- the. Communist\nparty from Pyongyang, the North\nKorean capital to Kaesong. Ridgway\nalso said a five-mile radius around\nKaesong would be a neutral zone\nfrom the time the Red emissaries\narrive. .'-.'-, '\u2022'\u25a0'.- '.., _ N\nThis' meeting will lay the groundwork for the : formal conference\nstarting at Kaesong Tuesday.\nThe.Chinese in their message had\nsuggested the Allies travel by jeep\ninstead of helicopter to \"cut down\nthe possibility of a misunderstanding.\"\nRidgw\"ay's broadcast reply, however, said \"my delegates will proceed by helicopter or jeep as dictated by the weather.\" He addd\nthat they would cross the Imjin\nRiver on the Seoul, Koesong road at\n9 a.m. Tokyo time Sunday regardless of how they travelled.\nThe Communists said that their\nliaison group would leave Pyongyang at 5 a.m. Saturday in five\njeeps and five motor transports\ncarrying white flags.\nRidgway Thursday requested that\nthe Communists guarantee the safety of his delegates to the preliminary conference.\nRfc^^adcLtTrPe!?130\"5!^' E,a>'li\u00bbS Monday.\nping  at 8  a.m.   (6 p.m.  Thursday\nEDT.)\nAP Correspondent Nate Polowetzky reported from Eighth Army\nheadquarters that a reliable source\nsaid Ridgway had named three\ncolonels to the U.N. liaison unit.\nThese were reported to be a U.S.\n:.\\;y.::;..[...^::;\/..:..:;--.^:r..:\u2014y'\nHERE IS A VIEW OF THE WATERFRONT at Kaesong, Korels,\nsome two miles below the 38th parallel, where the preliminary armistice meeting will be held,\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nCurlers Start March\nOn City This Weekend\nFrom now until Monday, a different kind of tourist\nwill arrive in Nelson, distinguishable by his clothing and\nequipment and maybe a slight burr.\nThe plaid jackets and brooms will be a dead give-away\nfor more than 200 curlers who will move in op the town for\nNelson's  annual Midsummer ~\nTo Keep Oil Flowing\nU.S. DIPLOMATS\nORDERED OUT\nHungary Labels\nPair \"Unwelcome\";\nGiven 24 Hours\nBUDAPEST, July 5 (AP)\u2014Hungary today ordered two United\nStates diplomats to leave this country within 24 hours, labelling them\n\"Persona Non Grata\" (unwelcome\npersons.)\nThe note was handed' to the U.S.\nlegation after the United States\nrejected Hungary's previous demand that three members of the\nlegation be recalled as plotters\nagainst Hungary's Communist government.\nThe two diplomats Involved must\ncross the Hungarian border inlo\nAustria by Friday at 1 p.m.\nThe Hungarian note said that\nBudapest \"considers legation secretary Albert Scherer, Jr., and attache\nRuth Trypn persona non grata and\ndemands that they leave the territory of the country within 24 hours\nupon receipt of the present note.\"\nInternational Court Proposal for\nInterim Solution \"Very Welcome\" to\nBritain; May Seek U. N. Aid\nBy HENDRIK KERSTING\nTHE HAGUE, July 5 (AP)\u2014The International Court\nof Justice proposed today that Britain and Iran agree on\nan interim plan for keeping Iranian oil flowing until the\ncourt can reach a decision in the bitter dispute.\nIran rejected the court proposals.\nBritish officials said the proposals were \"very welcome\nto us.\" They said Britain would try to follow the recommendations set down in the 3500-word decision if Iran would\nagree. Britain indicated that if Iran refused to agree, Britain\nmight put the oil case before_the U.N. Security Council.\nBut  Iran  clung  to\nWhen one considers the' sisters,\ncousins and. aunts, the influx will\nbe terrific. More people are accompanying the curlers than in any\nprevious bonspiel, and one curler\nalone has 18 people in his band,\nSaturday and Sunday they'll have\n _ \u201e  \u201e._, a  chance  to  see  Nelson  Garden\nmarine, a U.S. \"air force oficer and' CIuo's rose show. The first rock\na South Korean army officer. Thefwi11 be thrown Monday'at 7 a.m.\nsource said an army major would by May\u00b0r N-  c-  Stibbs and the\naot as co-ordinator but it was not\nclear whether he would gc to Koesong, the Reds' chosen meeting\nrilace about-35 road 'miles'Northwest of Seoul.\nIn broadcasts Thursday night and\nearly Friday, the Peiping radio said\nCommunist China must continue to\naid Korea, even if a peaceful settlement is possible.     '\nIt quoted a statement by the China\nPeace Committee which called for\nincreased subscriptions to the Red\ncampaign to buy warplanes for\nKorean fighting.\nATOMIC ENERGY\nCONTROLLER QUITS\nLONDON, July 5 (API-Resignation of Lord Portal, Britain's atomic\nenergy controller, was announced in\nIhe House of Lords today as the\ngovernment was criticized for allowing its atom-bomb program to\nfall behind Russia's.\nA spokesman for the Ministry of\nSupply said Lord Portal, wartime\ncommander of the Royal Air Force,\nnow \"has work of his own that he\nwould like to do.\"\nBut Lord Cherwell,* wartime scientific adviser to Winston Churchill, told the Lords that Lord Portal\nwas displeased by the maze of red\ntape and lack of progress under the\ngovernment's present atomic energy\norganization.\nLord Cherwell asked that the\natomic energy program be taken\nout of the hands of the civil service\nunder the Ministry of Supply and\nbe put under \"a free organization\nwhich could move fast and tighten\nup security arrangements.\" The\nHouse of Lords voted 52 to 31 to\nback the motion.\nGets 60 Days for\nWounding Wife\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP) \u2014\nWilfred L. Marshall, 35-year-old Edmonton laundryman, today was sentenced to 60 days in jail for wounding his estranged wife, Louise, on\nMay 11.\nMarshall pleaded guilty a week\nago when the Crown reduced the\ncharge against him from wounding\nwith intent to cause grievous bodily\nharm to the lesser charge of wounding.\nMarshall stabbed his 33-year-old\nwife with a pocketknife after trying to effect a reconciliation.\n4-Power Talks Resume\nBERLIN, 'July 5 (AP)\u2014Four-\npower talks In. Berlin on trade\nand .transport questions resumed\ntoday after a two-year lapse.\nThe Russians sent their occupa\ntion economics chief, V. Bashkin,\nto  Join   with 'American,   British\nand   French   officials   at   British\nheadquarters.\nThe core of the proDlem was\nWest Berlin's -need for an unhampered flow of imports and exports through the Russian zone\nwhich surrounds the city. The\nRussian interest in discussing the\nwhole subject appeared to Allied\nofficials to be concentrated on\nstopping illegal smuggling of\nscarce raw materials from the East\nInto West Berlin.\nMayor will officially welcome the\ncurlers at the bonspiel^-ball Monday night.   \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0. . \"...,, \u25a0\u25a0-. \u2022\nEntertainment this year will be\nlighter than last. Feeling of .the\nlocal curlers was that last year's\nprogram left the visitors too little\ntime to themselves.    \u2022\nLast year's Canadian Midsummer\ncurling champ was Art Simpson of\nBassano, Alta., who won't be along\nto defend the crown. Neither will\nGarnet Campbell of'Avonlea, Sask.,\nwinner of the Kootenay challenge,\nsecondary event, but George Stuart\nof Fintry, B.C., who tool\/ the\nQueen City competition will be In\nthe running.'Rosebud competition\nlast year went to Art Waters of\nNelson.\nAmong the more than 50 skips\nare several men who have been to\nprevious 'spiels, such as E. O. Parry\nof Morrin, Alta., Ivan Staples of\nCreston and Jim Taylor of Portage,\nWise.\nSkips are:\nU.S.A.\nJim Taylor, Portage, Wise; Hugh-\nston McBain, Chicago. 111.\nMANITOBA ., \u25a0\nG. W. Lick\" Swan River.\nSASKATCHEWAN\nNorman Fawcett, Wartime; J. A.\nLawton, Tessier; P. T. Andrews,\nNorth Battleford; W. G. Nesbitt,\nSaskatoon; Bert Tlirner, Kyle; S.\nGill, Leader.\nALBERTA.\nA. J. Barron, Picture Butte; John\nSande, Eagle Hill; Henry Zak,\nBlairmore; G. H. Thompson and J.\nC. Aird, Devon; W. A. Seyer, Botha;\nLawrence Yeoman and Howard\nThurber, Blackie; A. W. Shaw,\nVegreville; J: J. Cairns, Mirror;-W.\nMunroe, Vulcan;, .Harold Killick,\nJack Stronach and Jack Newsham,\nKocky Mountain House; E. O. Parry,\nMorrin; Roger Dion, Edmonton;\nStan Bernard, Conrich; Les Legg,\nSteMler; Bert Laing, Carsland; M.\nM. Hurl and J. Leslie, Mossleigh;\nH. McLevin, Red Deer; W. J. Gut-\nowski, Dyasland; Billy Rose, Sedgwick; W. A, McDonald, Calgary; J.\nJ. Hines, Bow Island; L. C. Mclntyre, Viking; W. W. Permann, Carbon; D. A. Edwards, Ferintosh; W.\nS. Robinson, McLaughlin; L. W.\nKidd, Morley; Bob Brown and T.\nC. Brown, Gleichen; T. H. Martin,\nLethbridge; A. S. Ellis, High River;\nCon Peterson, Milo; R. A. Cameron,\nminora; W. A. Lawson, Irma.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nGeorge Turner, Quesnel; T. M.\nTowriss, Princeton; Bill Cassidy,\nPioneer Mine; Art Salter, Copper\nMountain; George Stuart, Fintry;\nRobert Eccleston, Chapman Camp;\nE; J. Avery, Salmo; Ivan Staples,\nCreston; Jim Harvey, H. M. Whimster, Dr. L. J. Mauer, Dick Palmer,\nJoe Kotch, Art Wallace, E. C. Hunt\nand C. H. Parrish, Nelson.\nA. L Smith, P.C.\nMember, Resigns\nOTTAWA, July 5 (CP)\u2014Resignation of A. L. Smith, Progressive\nConservative Member of the Commons for Calgary West, today was\ndelivered formerly to Speaker Ross\nMacdonald. Mr. Smith announced\nlast January that he planned to re-lFieTd, secretary of the Civil Rights\nMillionaire Held\nIn Contempt of Court\nNEW YORK, July 5\"(AF) \u2014 A\nFederal judge held millionaire\nFrederick Vanderbilt Field ln contempt 'of court today when he refused to divulge the names of individuals who put up $80,000 bond\nfor four runaway convicted Communist leaders.\nJudge Sylvester J. Ryan acted\nafter   he   repeatedly   had   ordered\nsign because of ill-health.\nThe resignation was sent to the\nSpeaker by George Drew, Progressive Conservative Leader. In a\nstatement, Mr. Drew said that while\nMr. Smith had announced it was\nnecessary for him to resign \"those\nof us who had been associated wilh\niiim in the House continued to hope\nthat it might be possible for him to\nreturn.\" ,\nThe statement continued;\n\"In addition to Mr. Smith's outstanding contribution to debates in\nthe House and his position of recognized authority in several branches\nof parliamentary work, his knowledge of the- immensely important\noil development in Alberta was of\ngreat value so us and to the House.\"\nWith Mr. Smith's resignation the\nstanding in the Commons is:\nLiberals 185; Progressive Conservatives 45; C.C.F. 13; Social\nCredit 10; Independent four; Independent Liberal four vacant one;\ntotal 262.\nHoliday Deaths Low\nCHICAGO, July 5 (AP). - The\nUnjted States' July 4th t'raflic death\ntoll was below the National Safety\nCouncil's estimated 130 and one of\nthe lowest for the holiday in se\neral years.\niVateA. 6&wsh-\nNelson\nWednesday   Thursday\n10.85 10.88\n(Feet above zero.)\nCongress Bail Fund, to produce the\nnames of the contributors.\nField is a descendant of a family\nlong prominent in U.S. financial and\nsocial circles.\nSomething New\nTORONTO, July 5 (CP) \u2014 A\nrare \"one-way\" formula for a cost-\nof-living bonus was proposed today in a conciliation board report.\nThe board suggested that 44 Toronto electrical contractors grant\ntheir- 1000 employees, members of\nLocal 353, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (A.F.\nof\" L.-T.L.C.) a, five-cent-an-hour\nwage boost for each five-noint rise\nin the cost-of-living\u2014with no deductions if prices drop.\n$200 Million in\nExports to U. S.\nOTTAWA, July 6 (CP)\u2014Canada's exports to the United\nStates climbed by almost $200,-\n000,000 In the first five months\nof 1951, to bring total domestic\nshipments to all countries to a\nrecord $1,427,700,000.\nVirtually every kind of Canadian commodity normally exported to the U.S. shared In the\nboost, the Bureau of Statistics\nreported today In a detailed picture of exports In May and In\nthe first five months of the year.\nAppoinlmenls\nFor Three\nInfantry Soldiers\nOTTAWA, July 5 (CP) \u2014 The\nArmy today announced new appointment for three of its top infantry soldiers^\nCol. F. A. Clift, 43, D.S.O., formerly of Melfort, Sask., will leave\nhis present post as director of military training here towards the end\nof the year to attend the Imperial\nDefence College in the United\nKingdom.   ,\nCol. Roger Rowley, 37, D.S.6., and\nBar, of Ottawa, will succeed Col.\nClift. He now is director of infantry,\nCol. D. F.-Forbes, 44, D.S.O. and\nBar, of Sydney, N.S., now com\nmander of the Army's base at Fort\nChurchill, Man., will succeed Col.\nRowley as director of infantry.\nA successor to Col. Forbes at-Fort\nChurchill has not been named.\nThe three officers have outstanding records as infantry soldiers,\neach having commanded a battalion\noverseas during the Second World\nWar. All three won tha D.S.O. for\ngallantry and leadership.\n18 Forest Fires for\nSouthwestern B. C.\nVANCOUVER, July 4 (CP) -\nEighteen forest fires, three of them\nout of control, were burning in\nSouthwestern British Columbia today.\nBroken .terrain was hampering 47\nfirefighters trying to stop a fire\nnear the Pacific Great Eastern Railway tracks about 100 miles North\nof here.\nAlso out of control were two 600\nacre fires, one near Up-coast Pender\nHarbor and the other on Redonda\nIsland between Vancouver Island\nand the mainland.\nDespite showers, woodlands were\nstill dry and the travel ban imposed\nlast week remained in effect.\nFirefighters also kept a close eye\non the 20,000-acre Campbell River\nfire on Vancouver Island, under\ncontrol bu't still smouldering. A high\nwind could send it out of control\nagain.\nits uncompromising determination to seize\nfull control of the Anglo-Iranian\nOil Company's wells and refineries\non the Persian Gulf.\nBritain had asked the court to\npropose interim measures as a matter of greatest urgency to stave off\nthe threatened complete shutdown\nof her Iranian oil operations.\nBritain also accused Iran of violating international law in nationalizing the British-owned company\nand asked for an Injunction against\nits seizure by the Iranian Government. The .court apparently will\ndecide on the charges and the request for an injunction after it determines whether it has Jurisdiction in the case.\nThe U N.-sponsored court rejected an Iranian request that it\ndeclare outright that lt had no jurisdiction.\nThe court recommended appointment of a five-man board to supervise continued operations of the\ncompany under its present British\nmanagement.\nThe Board, to be made up of two\nrepresentatives from Britain, two\nfrom Iran and one from a neutral\ncountry, would administer all revenues in excess of ihe company's\nnormal operating expenses. Excess\nfunds would be deposited in banks\nchosen by the board.   '\nThe court asked that Britain\n..-..and. Iran. do nothing- to-- hinder\nthe company from operating as\nIt did prior to May 1, 19\u00a71 \u2014 the\neffective date of Iranian oil nationalization.\nBefore the court's proposals, Foreign   Secretary  Herbert   Morrison\n.told the House of Commons In Lon-\ndon these conditions \"are becoming\nintolerable\" for Britons in the Iranian oil area.\nIn Tehran, Nasser Quill Ardalan,\na member of the Iranian Parliament's joint Oil Nationalization\nBoard, said British technicians\nmust leave the oilfields unless they\npromise \"full obedience\" to the\nGovernment's Iranian National Oil\nCompany.\nWANT TO LEAVE\nHe iold Parliament the world'l\nlargest refineries at Abadan \u25a0 may\nbe closed within 25 days.'\nDispatches from Abadan said\nBritish workers were pressing to\nbe withdrawn from Iran.\nOfficials   expressed   little   hop*\nthat Iran  would be able to find\nelsewhere  the  skilled   technician!\nand managers to run the intricate\noil operations if the British cleared\nout.\n  \\\nWASHINGTON, July S (Reuters)\n\u2014An Iranian Embassy spokesman\ntoday said several American oil-\ntanker companies have offered\ntankers and other facilities to\ntransport oil from Iran and replace the British tanker fleet operated by the Anglo-Iranian Oil\nCompany.\nHe declined to amplify a state-\nmerit to Parliament in Tehran made\niby Nasergholi Ai-delan, member oi\nthe Iranian Oil Company appointed...\nto take over the British company,\nArdelan   said   the   Embassy   in .\nWashington had received a \"serious\noffer from the second largest oil-\ntanker company in the world.\"\nMusic Festivals National Body\nTo Hold 1952 Conference in Nelson\nThe 1952 conference of the Federation of Canadian Music Festivals\nwill be held in Nelson, it has been\nlearned. \u25a0\u2022\nNelson Music Festival Association\nwere appointed B.C. representative!.\nThe first time that there has been\nan interior B.C. representative on\nthe central board.\nThe  Nelson  conference  will  bo\nthe   third   since   the  organization\ninvitation   was   accepted   at   this I of the Federation. From 30 to 40\nyear's conference at St. John's, N.&j delegates will attend, it is expected,\nRoss Fleming of Nelson and Mrs. and   the   meetings   probably   held\/\/\nGertrude E. V. Graham of Kelowna I about the end of June or early July. (I\nPearson Holidaying\nIn Sweden\nSTOCKHOLM, July 5 (Reuters)\n\u2014L. B. Pearson, Canadian Minister\nfor External Affairs, arrived today\nfrom Oslo in an R.C.A.F. plane for\na week's holiday in Sweden,\nHe is to meet informally Foreign\nMinister Oesten Unden and other\nmembers of the Swedish cabinet.\nONLY $1000?\nSEWARD, Alaska, July 5 (AP)\n\u2014Donald Stlckman, an Athabasca\nIndian, climbed a 3022-foot moun\ntain and returned plus running\nan extra two miles In a total of\n66 minutes 38 seconds here yes-\nterday to win the annual Mt.\nMarathon Race and a $1000 cash\nprize.\nStlckman's time up the precipitous peak was the fastest In 15\nyears, when another .runner covered It In 14 seconds less. At that,\nhe came In only 1 minute 65 seconds ahead of second place runner, Ralph Hatch, who had won\nthe race for the previous five\nyears.\nThe colorful race was run In\nanything but optimum conditions\nfrom the participants' standpoint\n\u2014the temperature was the highest on record, 84 degrees.\nThree special trains carried\n1075 spectators from Anchorage\nand 600 Army and Navy men\nwere In the crowd.\nThe Judges had an easy time of\nIt\u2014they ascended the mountain In\nhelicopters.\nBORDEAUX, France, July 5\n(Reuters)\u2014Two German army officers' stated to be fugitives from\njustice were sentenced to death in\ntheir absence today by a military\ncourt for their part ln the hanging\nof 99 French Maquis men from\nlamp-posts, railings and balconies\nin Tulle, France, during the war.\nFLASH FIRE KILLS\nFOUR CHILDREN  \u2022\nNORTH CHICAGO), 111., July 5\n(AP)\u2014A left-over Fourth of July\nsparkler today touched off a flash\nfire that snuffed out the lives of\nfour youngsters. A fifth was critically burned.\nDead were Billy Brosnan, 9; his\n10-year-old sister, Kathleen; Joan\nRenarb, 9, and Mary Jean Zorzy,\n10.\nPolice said a sparkler caused the\nfire. They found its burned remains\nin the bottom of a five gallon can\nWhich contained kerosene.\nWorkers Cause\nOf Hospice Fire\nMONTREAL, July 5 (CP)\u2014Use\nof an acetylene torch without\nproper precautions caused the disastrous June 15 fire in the Ste.\nCunegonde Hospice which took 33\nlives, Fire Commissioner Jean St.\nGermain, K.C, said today.      ,\nThe Commissioner issued a written judgment on the fire, following\na two-day hearing late last week.\nSold His Blood to\nBuy Food\nSOUTHAMPTON, England, July\n5 (Reuters)\u2014Hugh Coles, 42, a Scottish waiter, .charged with stowing\naway on the Queen Mary, said ho\nhad sold a pint of blood for $5 in'\nNew York to buy fooo>. He was remanded in custody.\nAnd in This Corner...\nBLUEFIELD, W. Va., July 5 (AP)\u2014Thieves got rooked In Blue-\nfield again yesterday,\n'  Someone broke Into the car of C. A. Dlggs of Charleston, W. Va,,\nand took $100 worth of hose, But not a single one matched.\nLast week, someone entered 'a shoe salesman's automobile and\ntook seven cases of shoes\u2014all 112 of them for the right foot.\nLONG BEACH, Calif., July 5 (AP)\u2014The first bathing beauty\ncontest to be judged by women, at least in these parts, ended just\nabout the way you'd expect, men. The women just couldn't make up\ntheir minds.\nThere were five final contestants vying yesterday for the title\nof Queen of the forthcoming Long Beach Exposition. And there were\nfive equally beautiful judges\u2014all professional models.\nThe ladies took three ballots.- and not one of them would budge.\nEach selected a different girl and refused to change her vote.\nThe deadlock will be resolved at another contest July 21\u2014to be\nJudged by men only.\nHARTFORD, Conn,, July 5 (AP)\u2014William Wlllett, 7, has saving\nways, but fortunately, so haa St. Francis Hospital,\nOn two occasions William has swallowed coins. The first time,\na solid thump on the back brought up the money but last night a\nquarter slipped down his throat and banked In his esophagus.\nWilliam's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. Wlllett, called the nearest\nhospital and were told It had no facilities for removing the coin. Tha\nparents then took him to St. Francis Hospital here, which has an\nesophagoscope  and  the  quarter  was  successfully  removed.\nWilliam has promised hereafter to keep his money out of his mouth,\nMrs. Wlllett hopes he will. She remembers the time she thought\nhe swallowed a penny and when she thumped his back out popped\ntwo  pennies  and  a  nickel.\n |2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY\/JULY 6, 1951\nCOMPLETE SHOWING 7:00 AND 9:00\nmil     Piutraunl pieseMs\nAlanLADD'sblasting-gun \u00abr in niMi n htlTi'\nsplits the West^*^- i\\\\M LADD   +p\nFREEMAN\nNewi\nChampagne\nfor Two\nc\/wc\nA FAMOUS HAYtKS THEAW\nBOTTLE-FED\nBABIES\n\u25a0 \u00bb3 yonr ^ty ia bottle-fed, fee sure to watch\nI wtle. bowels closely. Mother's milk has a\nI natural laxative effect whfch helps take enre\nI of baby's need. Lacking this, a bottle-fed\nI baby often gets frctty, feverish and suffers\nI constipation and upset stomach. Let Baby's\nI Own Tablets help you keep baby's bowels\nIon Bchefiule-swcetan upset stomachr-rclievc\nI'fflveriBhness and teething troubles. No\nl.\"ileepy\" stuff - no dulling effect. Kaaily\nI eniBhed to n powder, if desired, Don't let\nI your baby suffer\u2014get Baby's Own Tablets\nI today at your druggist. Only 30c\nFINED FOR SPEEDING\nMike N. Sampsonoff of Nelson\npleaded guilty to a charge of speeding and was fined $10 and costs in\nProvincial Court Thursday by Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans.\nThe charge arose when Sampsonoff exceeded the 15 miles per hour\nspeed limit in the Slocan Park\nSchool zone June 21.\nSYDNEY, Australia, July 5 (Reuters)\u2014The 17,486-ton Trans-Pacific\nliner Aorangi sailed today for Canada after being delayed a month by\na strike of 69 crew members.\nw\ncom\nOlstllled and bottled In bond by\nH. CORBY DIITIllllY ITOw\nCoAyvllle, Ontario\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LiquorControl\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia'\n'-i-w.'.i-ni\nLean Beef and Kidney Stew.\nLoin Pork Chops.\nBib End; Lb   ,. \t\nBacon.\nFresh Sliced; Vs lb. -,. \u201e. -_~\nCube Steaks.\nLean, Tender; Lb.  .\u201e\u201e..\u201e____\u201e\n69'\n73*\n35*\n95'\nm FRUITS and\nVEGETABLES\nNew Potatoes\nCelery.\n\"Crisp, Green; Lb\t\nOranges.\n288'at \u201e\t\nCoffee. 92*\nFancy Santos; Lb. -...' .'   W. mm\nmom   RASPBERRY JAM\nBEST  I Molkin'i Best\n24 Oz. Jar 53c\nTuna Fish. 3Q<\nFancy Flaked, %'s; Tin  \u201e  mt O  i\nBlack Pepper. 33\"*\nBlue Ribbon; 1J4 oz. tin   mt ml\nBran Flakes. 2      33*\nKellogg's, 8 oz.; .    \"for    W W\nCream Style Corn. 3    , f.A*\n20 oz.;     \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb tins   U~\nDog Food. 3       5\u00a3t\nSpeak or Rover; _ ,.  mt tins   mt raw\nThe Corner Store\nPhone 1188 1224 Stanley St.\nThe Sugar Bowl\nPhona 1370 ....   902 Josephine St.\nThousands Watch Trail Jubilee\nParade, \"Biggest in B,G Interior\"\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5\u2014Far-flung\nacross the city the people of Trail\nwatched the biggest parade ever\nwitnessed in the Interior of B-C. to.\nday,\nWell over two miles in length, the\ncolorful procession could be seen\ncrossing the bridge while in the distance it was still coming down the\nsmelter hill.\nAs It swung down Columbia Avenue, headed for Gyro Park, the\nsmaller children dropped out,\nmarching straight to Butler Park,\nwhere they awaited the main group\nto complete its course around East\nTrail.\nEscorted by police cars, the parade swung into 'Butler Park. Mayor\nE. S. Topping and his 1901 City\nCouncil were depicted.in the first\nfloat, closely followed by .the pres-\nent- Mayor and Council along with\nbuses carrying the oldtimers. Several bands and color parties of local\norganizations, majorettes, comical\nclowns, some representing animals,\nold-fashioned costumes, fancy floats,\ndecorated cars and bicycles all went\nto make the finest, most colorful\nparade ever seen here.\nThousands and thousands Jammed\nthe sidewalks, utilizing every available bit of space to view the spectacle of 60 or 60 floats depicting\nnumerous different scenes, many\nportraying historical events in the\ntheme of Trail's Golden Jubilee.\nA moonr-shaped float covered with\nflowers and beautiful Chinese girls\nand costumes represented the Chinese people of the district. B.P.O.E.\nhad a modern barn dance in full\nswing with the dancers really enjoying themselves. Columbo Lodge\nentered a colorful float with Chris,\ntopher Columbus, in a court spene\nin Spain presenting gifts to the\nqueen and exhibiting two Indians.\nWarfield subdivision was represented by a bathing house and beach\nwith beautieB modelling bathing\nsuits from 1901 to 1951.\nCROCHET ENGINE BEST\nCROCKETT ENGINE  BEST\nFirst prize of (1100 for best decorated float went to H. J. Crockett of\nGenelle, for his ancient locomotive\ncomplete with bell and whistle.\nSecond, for $75, was Local 480, I.M.\nM.S.U, for its replica of Columbia,\nWestern, old-time locomotive. A\nthird $25 prize was won by Bonklfl\nand Son for refilica of S.S. Linton,\nsternwheeler.\n' Best ladies costume was worn by\nMrs. H. E. Dyer, best gentleman's by\nSydney Wilson, best decorated bicycle, Verna Weaver, first; Muriel\nSchapansky, second; Barry Weaver,\nthird. Isidore Muzzin won the old-\ntime cars exhibit. Best, child's old-\nfashioned costume prize went to\nCatherine Muzzin.\nRAIN GROUNDS PLANES\nThe model air show again had to\nbe cancelled after an hour or two of\ndisplay. The afternoon showers were\ntoo much for the tiny craft. Gliders,\nmonoplanes, flying wings, speed and\nstunt planes were able- to take off\nbefore the 'Trail Model Airplane\nClub decided that things were becoming far too damp.\nPast Has Benefits Worth Recalling\nSays McKelvie, Trail Fetes Pioneers\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5^-A banquet\nhonoring the old timers was given\nat the Legion Hall today by the\nJubilee Committee and was well attended.\nBruce McKelvie of The Vancouver Province was a guest speaker.\nHe talked mainly about days gone\nby. bringing back to memory in picturesque word descriptions the\ntimes of the livery stable and old-\ntype barber shop.\nHe emphasized the necessity of\nrecalling and recording the history\nof ages past that posterity might\nreap the benefit of experience.\nR.  W.  Diamond,  Vice-President\nand.General Manager of Cominco,\ngave a welcoming address to the\nold-timers and urged them to attend\nthe tea at the ski lift the following\nday so that they might have their\npictures taken as a souvenir of the\noccasion. He also thanked Mr, McKelvie for hjs talk.\nOthers speaking* briefly and welcoming the old-tjmers in behalf of\ntheir respective offices were Mayor\nFletcher, Douglas Turnbull, M.L.A.,\nand H. W. Herr.idge, M.P. Fred\nPlester introduced the old-timers,\neach in turn, and read many letters\nand telegrams from those who ware\nunable to attend Trail's Golden\nJubilee.\nWater Main\nProject To Finish\nHere This Week\nThe installation of a new water\nmain starting on Ward Street at\nVernon, continuing down Ward' to\nFront and along Front to Chatham\nStreet is expected to be finished by\nthe end of this week.\nThe City will then gravel and\ngenerally prepare these streets for\nblack topping.\nCompletion of tha Provincial\nGovernment North Shore Highway\nproject will see the paving machinery and men at work blaoktopping\nthese streets as part of the arterial\nhighway through Nelson.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nClassified Ads for Quick Results\nDIFFERENCE\na, MOVERS!\nt \/\nJAe. (jJstnihsh,\nSynopsis: There was considerable\nshower activity in the Southern\npart of the province, but amount\nof rainfall was generally not more\nthan a tenth of an inch. Temperatures were very warm in far\nNorthern reaches of the province\nwhere Telegraph Creek reported a\nhigh of 89. Friday will Continue\nshowery in the Southern Interior\nwhile Northern areas will enjoy\nconsiderable sunshine combined\nwith continued high temperatures.\nNELSON       47     73\nSt. Johns  -      51     67     .04\nHalifax       45    64   2.65\nOttawa      55    71    .07\nWinnipeg      51     80\nRegina   .v      57    82\nCalgary      . 47\nEdmonton      55\nVancouver      50\nVictoria      48\nKimberley         42\nCrescent Valley      44\nKaslo        52\nPrince Rupert       46\nPrince George  _     50\nGrand Forks      48\nSpokane       52     69\nSan Francisco       54    66.\nLos Angeles       56    7.2\nNew York       68    81\nWhitehorse       47     82\n61     .84\n64\n73\n75\n75\n53\n71\n71\n.01\n.23\nTrail Sees\nChange of Styles\nELECTED PRE8IDENT of Kl-\nwanli International at the 36th\nannual convention of the organization at St. Louis was Clauds\nB. Hellman, above, prominent\npublic utilities executive of Baltimore. He succeeded Don H. Murdoch of Winnipeg.\nDefence Opens Today...\nDavidoff Claims of Inability To Read\nRejected as Court Admits Statements\nrang* to a blanket would be absorbed by the blanket.\nThe Defence will open its case\nthjs morning. !t is expected to call\nabout five witnesses.\nTrail Insurance\nMan To Go To\nMontreal Post\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5 \u2014 Pe^er S.\nMathewson, Kootenay unit supervisor of tha Sun Life Insurance\nCompany of Canada, has been appointed inspector of agencies, Canadian division.\nIn his new appointment, Mr.\nMathewson will assist the superintendent of agencies in the company's head office in Montreal. This\ndepartment is in charge of. production for Canada.\nMr. Mathewson, a graduate of\nU.B.C, joined the field force of the\ncompany in June of 1946. In March\nof 1948 he was appointed service\nsupervisor in Vancouver and in\nDecember, 1949, he came to Trail\nas Kootenay unit supervisor. He\nserved as a lieutenant in the\nRCNVR and has been active in\nlocal affairs.\nHis wife is the daughter of Mrs.\nand the late Dr. C. S. Williams. She\nand the two children will move- to\nMontreal later in the Fall. Mr.\nMathewson leaves August 1.\nHarry A. Shannon, well known\nin the Okanagan district has been\nappointed to replace Mr. Mathewson as unit supervisor here.\nMr. Shannon joined the company\nin May of 1947.\nSpirit of 1900\nRecaptured as\nHundreds Dance\nHousehold moving rates are\nnbout the same with all firms,\nBut the service tells the story I\nWe offer fine equipment, expert personnel, thorough tin-\nreadability \u2014 to make your\nnext move safe and carefree.\nPhone for estimate.\nAGENT'S   NAME\nSTREET    ADDRESS\nPHONI\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nPHONE S3\nNelson, B. C.\nTRAIL, B. C, July 5 \u2014 On the\nstage left' by the pageant, a historical fashion show got under\nway at three o'clock Thursday\nafternoon, as part of Trail's Golden\nJubilee celebration.\nUnder the Jubilee women's committee, the three ladles' organizations, the Soroptimists, the Beta\nSigma Phi Sorority and the business and professional women man\naged a very successful display of\nfashions from 1901 to and including\n1951 of evening gowns, street\ndresses, afternoon gowns and bathing suits.\nA three-piece orchestra played\nduring the showing.\nSix usherettes guided over 500\npeople to their seats.\nCommentor was Mrs. Grace\nMalnarich. The modelling \"was done\nby Mrs. H. Bensies, Mrs. I. Hill,\nMiss J. Kerr. Mrs. L. Bowers, Mrs.\nE. Buckingham, Mrs. N. Grant, Mrs.\nB. Miller, Miss B. Morrison. Miss L.\nTrono, Miss M. Hill, Miss M. Garvin, Mrs. Dafoe and Mrs. M. Mc\nMillan.\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5\u2014With the\norchestra sitting on the pageant\nstage, tables and chairs j placed\nthroughout the Cominco Arena floor\nspace, and hundreds of Trailites in\nold time costumes, something of the\nspirit of 1900 was recaptured Thursday as the merrymakers danced far\ninto the night.\nA nine-piece dance band alternated with a six-piece orchestra and,\nif the engineers who built the arena\nhad not gone down through the slag\nto bedrock, the plape would have\nmoved on its foundations.\nAn hour of high class entertainment was provided during the Golden Jubilee event under the management of Gordon V. Murray, Eu\ngene Cataldno acting as master of\nceremonies. The I program included\nLouis Simonette and his piano ac-\ncordian, Bob Fletcher and his group\nof versatile tumblers, Lome De-\nPaolls with a special trumpet. Will\nMaze rendered a vocal spiritual and\nalso sang \"O Susanna\", accompanied in the chorus by most of those\npresent. John Bunn and Jake Hamm\nperformed violin and guitar specialties, a comic skit sponsored by the\nWomen's Auxiliary to the Canadian\nLegion and vocal skits by Nick Cat-\nalano and John Fanini rounded out\nthe entertainment.\nThree statements made to\nR.C.M.P. by John Davidoff the day\nfollowing the rifle slaying of his\nIjO-year-pld son Joe, were entered\nas Crown evidence at his Supreme\nCourt murder trial here Thursday.\nThe statements were admitted\nafter a lengthy trial within a trial\nin which the accused took the stand\nto' deny through an interpreter that\nhe could teed or write English,\npther than his own name.\nDefence Counsel J, H. Gordon\nhad submitted on the trial of the\nfirst statement that'it was not admissible on the ground that David-\npff had n\u00b0' Hnowp, what he signed.\nIn rebuttal, the Crown produced\nJ6 agreements and contracts David\noff had entered into and Signed\nduring the last three years. It then\ncalled 'several witnesses involved\nJn deals with the accused, none of\nwhom could recall Davidoff having\nagreements read to hirh before he\nsigned.\nMrs. Viola Mack of Slocan' City\ntold of a logging agreement she\nhad drawn up between her hui\nband, Davidoff and, a Sam Ozach-\noff in 1948. Before signatures were\nadded Davidoff had read the document aloud in English to Ozachoff,\nshe testified.\nMary McKortoff, Brilliant store-\nkeeper, testified Davidoff was accustomed to buy the Nelson Daily\nNews from her and to read the\nwant ads in the store, often asking\nher to put through telephone calls\nafter.\nMr. Justice N. W. Whittaker said\nhe was satisfied the accused could\nread English and that the police\nstatement was in language simple\nenough for him to understand,\nHe then ruled the statement\ncould be entered as evidence on\nthe ground it was exculpatory.\nTwo additipnai Davidoff states\nments were admitted during: the\nday, as the Crown case was all tut\ncompleted..\nThe three statements were taken\nby Constable A'ejf Borodula on\nApril J7 and were said to be Davidoff's account of his actions during\nthe latter part of the 16th and\nmorning of the 17th.\nThe witness said the first statement, taken during the afternoon\nin the Castlegar R.C.M.P. office,\nwas taken during the course of a\nroutine investigation. He said he\ntook it down on the typewriter as\nDavidoff dictated, 'rephrasing\" it\nto improve the grammar, then\nasked him to read it and sign it if\nhe cared to, The accused appeared\nto read it and then signed it, the\nWitness said.\nThe second statement was taken\nat 7:20 p.m., April 17, and the third\nat 8:40, immediately after Davidoff\nhad been placed under arrest on\nsuspicion of-'murder, the witness\nsaid.\nThe three statements closely fol^\nlowed the same account, bin*, were\namplified successively ns to detail.\nAccording to the statements,\nDavidoff - claimed to have left Ostrow village about 7:15 the night\nof th? murder and walked to\nCastlegar, spent tne evening in\npoolroom, leaving there at Jl p.m.\nfor the beer parlor where he had\nthree beers with a friend.\nAt 11:30, the statements said, he\ncrossed on the ferry to Robson and\nwalked tp the home of his sister,\nMrs. Mike Makortoff, where he was\nsaid to have spent the night.\nHe did not return to Ostrow or\nlearn of his^son's death until the\nfollowing morning, the statement\nsaid.\nDavidoff was said to have taken\nthe trail from his home to the airport road, foilpwed Jt to cross the\nKootenay River, bridge, then walked\nalong the railway tracks into\nCastlegar, He estimated his walk\ning time from an hour and a quarter to an hour and a half.\nIn his first statement, Davidoff\nwas quoted as saying he had arrived at.Gastlegap \"ahout 8:15\" In\nthe third statement, the time of arrival was said to have been \"about\n9:90.\" -   .\nIn his trial-wilhin-a-trial test!\nmony Davidoff claimed- he had told\nConstable Bp'roduU during' the taking of. the first statement that he\nhad arrived at Castlegar at 9:15 and\nnot 8:15, Borodpla maintained that\nDavidoff had told (iim 3:15.\nIn the final statement, Davidotf\nwas quoted as saying he had been\npassed by $ car on, the approach\nto the bridge and by another car\nwhile crossing the bridge.\n. Constable. N. H. Elphick testified\nto being present when the third\nstatement was taken. He said Constable Borodula had suggested alterations to the accused, in the wording of the statements to clarify the\nEnglish, getting the accused's agreement before writing it down.\nWhen Davidoff was asked to read\nthe statement over before signing\nit he said he hadn't had much\nschooling and wasn't very good af\nit,\" the witness testified. The state-]\nment was then read to him by\nConstable Borodul? and he signed\nit, Constable Elphick said.\nS\/Sgt.. W. J, McKay told the Court\nof a conversation he had with the\naccused the day following the'mur-\nder. ,\n\"I asked him if he kpew whether\npr not Joe had any insurance. He\nsaid he didn't know Joe's business.'1\nDavidoff was said to have told the\nwitness Joe once had a policy, but\nhe thought it had been dropped.\nS\/Sgt. McKay and Constables P,\nW. Howarth and K. J, Ritchie of\nthe Castlegar detachment told the\nCourt of two tests said, ta have\nbeen made at the Davidoff house\nMay 26 and 30.\nConst. Howarth said he had fired\ntwo shots into a pile of sacks wjth\nthe barrel covered t>y * quilt. He\nSaid he used a -309 calibre rifle\nsimilar tq the one recovered from\nthe river.\nHe repeated the test on May 30,\nthis without any covering over the\nbarrel and the' doors closed. The\ngun was fired twice into the sacks\nfrom close range, he said. Const,\nHowarth said he then slammed the\ndoor of the house twice.\nConst, Ritchie said he had been\nnext door when the shots were\nfired and heard only a faint \"thud.'1\nS\/Sgt. McKay, standing in tho courtyard outside, also heard faint thuds\nwhich were not recognizable\nshots, he said.      > -.  '\u25a0'\nBoth officers testified the two\ndoor slams had sounded louder than\nthe rifle reports. In earlier testimony, Sgt. A. Mason-Rooke of the\nRegina crime laboratory said the\nmuzzle blast of a gun held at close\nNELSON\nCIVIC CENTRE GROUNDS\nTWICE DAILY AT 3 AND 8 P.M,\nTHURS. IO\nJULY   I\"\nAMERICA'S\nFAVORITE DIG\nRAILROAD SHOW\n\u2022 TERRIFIC NEW EDITION\nWITH THE MOST SEIISATIOIIAl HOST IP NEW\nCIRCUS WKAHDB AHD PEATUnES FnoM\nEVEBY COSHES OF THE CLOSE HEAPED DY\nTHE ILLUSTRIOUS SCREEN. RADIO AND TELEVISION STAR, \"MR. CIRCUS\" HIMSELF\nCLYDE BEATTY^\nWORLD'S FOREMOST WILD ANIMAL\nTRAINER In His MOST STUPENDOUS and\nBATTLING DISPLAY with Junglt-Brcd Lions\n& Tigers & Featurlno His Famous Mammoth\n& Vicious Tiger-Killing Lion, \"PRINCF,\"\nALL AT ONE TIMS IN THE BIS ARENA\nSCORES OF INCREDIBLE\nNEW   IMPORTATIONS\nAPPEASING III AMERICA FOR THE FIRST TIME\n56 OUTSTANDING NEW FEATURES\nBIG CONGRESS OF CLOWNS\nHUNDREDS OF MARVELOUSLY-EDUCATED\nTRAINED WILD AND DOMESTIC ANIMALS\nFROM   THE   WORLD'S   LARGEST   MENAGERIE\nRES, SEAT and GEN. ADM.\nTICKETS ON SALE\nCIRCUS DAY\nMANN'8 DRUG STORE\n498 Baker Street\nRei, Seats Are Numbered Chairs\nNO.GAMBLING\n.     'SAME PRICES AS AT SHOWGROUNDS)\nSPECIAL\nCHROME TABLES\nReg. $49.50. NOW  $385.95\nCHROME CHAIRS\nReg. $9.75. NOW  $7.S0 ond $8.4B\nBlue or grey tables with red and black chairs.\nGUARANTEED SATISFACTION OR MONEY REFUNDED\n. THE ROBERT SIMPSON (PACIFIC) LTD.\n666 Baker Street ;.* Phone 1490\nFined $10 on\nHour of Work Charge\nFleetline Cabs Limited were\nfound guilty of failure to keep true\nand correct records of hours worked\nby employee Albert Grams and\nwas fined $10 and costs by Magistrate William Brown in City Court\nThursday.\nThe charge was laid during tha\nlatter part of May by James C.\n.Tames, Inspector for the Department of Labor.\nGordon Ferguson, secretary treasurer, appeared for the company and\npleaded not guilty. H. C, Irving\nwas counsel for the defence.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nMANY GROUPS\nREPRESENTED AT\nMcLEAN RITES\nFuneral services for the late\nWilliam John McLean, a former\nNelsonite, who was killed accidentally in a motorcycle accident in\nOliver on July 1, were held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home on\nThursday at 2 p.m. Rev. Allan\nDixon officiated.\nAmong the large number ln attendance, were representatives of\nthe Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen Local 658, the Ladles Auxiliary of the B. of R.T., the B.C. Telephone Company, the International\nBrotherhood of Electrical Workers,\nLocal No. 4, and the Chapter of the\n53 Telephone Pioneers of America-\nMany beautiful floral tributes\nwere received.\nTwo hymns were sung \"Rock of\nAges\" and \"Abide With Me,\" with\naccompaniment by Mrs. W. A.\nManson.\nPallbearers were A. E. Anderson,\nR. J. Armstrong, W. A. Duckworth,\nJames Madden, William Muraro,\nand W. H. Towhey. Interment was\nin the Nelson Memorial Park.\nNEW YORK. July 9 (AP)\u2014Spot\nnonferrous metal prices today: Copper, 24 14 cents a pound, Connecticut Valley. Lead. 17 cents a pound.\nNew York. Zinc, 1714 cents a pound,\nEast St. Louis. Tin, $1.06 a pound.\nNew York.\nGODFREYS'\n\"The Home of (guaranteed Work Clothing\"\nWORKMEN'S CLOTHES\nOf Quality, Comfort and Appearance\nWORK    PANTS    all pre-shrunk and fully cut.\nBenims, 8 oz. and 9 a*, weight in blue; 8 oz. in black. IJider pants, 10 oz. blue denim.\nWORK.    bitilR. Lo   olso all pre-shrunk and fully cut,\nMade of chambray, covert, drill and khaki drill. .\nLIGHT CAPS\nSHOP CAPS\nSLEEVELETS\nCARPENTER'S O'ALLS\nCARPENTER'S  APRONS\nPAINTER'S O'ALLS\nBIB O'ALLS\nCOVERALLS\nSMOCKS\nUJNL)\u00a3\u00abR\\VEAR. Lighter weight garments in bqlbriggan or ribbed cotton,\nankle-length with short sleeves. Also a full range of shorts and shirts.\nWORK GLOVES and MITTS All types and sizes, from\ncotton gardening gloves to the finest horsehjde ropers.\nWORK. 1300To in elk, chrome and oil tons. Panco soles, neolite soles,\nor leather soles. Suitable for any job, made by well-known manufacturers\nsuch as Paris, Leckie and Valentine Martin.\nWe haven't irientionec) prices! AH are high these days, but you\nwill find ours strictly competitive.\nGODFREYS\nPhones 270 -\u00abBotf\n r#\nSpsdcubt\nfiumpAt\nBy SLATER\nSmart Spectator pumps in brown\nand white with dress cuban\nheels. AA-B.\n$12.95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n553 Baker St.\nPost Office\nBusiness Soars\nNelson Post Office was busier last\nmonth than in any month in 1950 or\nany previous.month this year. Total\ntransactions \"amounted to $165,882.\nBusiness soared to $157,727, which\nIs also a record for the last 18\nmonths, but postage revenue was\n$7039, a drop from the last three\nmonths but an increase over the\nfigure for June, 1950,\n, The Cathedral of Regensburg in\nBavaria was begun in 1275 and completed in 1534.\nRush Electric\nBurn Victim\nTo Vancouver\nFEHNIE, B. C, uly 5 \u2014 Strong\nwarning against interference with\nfallen high-tension wires has been\nissued by the East Kootenay Power\nCompany following a woods accident when a green tree fell across\nthe supply line into Fernie. A volunteer with a team of horses had\nremoved the tree before the- company repair crew arrived, but fortunately the falling tree had broken\nthe circuit. Power in Fernie was\ninterrupted for several minutes by\nthe accident.\n..A few days previously Wilfred\nCarrier and Charles Holley of the\nbush crew of the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal Company had been trying to\nmove S jammer with a jeep when it\ncame in contact with overhead lines\nof the Calgary Power Company.\nBoth were seriously burned. Mr.\nCarrier has been taken to Vancouver for emergency treatment for\nthird degree burns, and both men\nwill require skin grafts for the\ninjuries received.\nNOW-She Laughs\nat age\nSpringtime In\nher heart againl ,\u00ab,;\nNew-found gale- W\nty, peppy cner- 0\nBy. A new, alive &;'\nwoman\u2014sparkling V\n' eyes, better color, %\\\nfreah, calm youthful-\nHess \u2014 has replaced\nthe worn, tired look.\nNo' wonder life has\ntaken on new interests. Yea, thousands\nof once faded ,\nwomen, weary \u00ab*\u00ab<\nfrom blood-iron\npoverty, have bloomed anew .with tha\nfielp of Dr. Williams Pink PIHfl. Try Dr.\nWilliams Pink Pills yourself for 80 days!\nEnjoy new health, pep and energy. Start\ntodayl Get back ''In the pink\" with\nDR. WILLIAMS\nPINK PILLS\nWright Bracken\nTo Attend\nWilliams Lake Meet\nCouncil of the Associated Boards\nof Trade of British Columbia will-\nhold its next meeting at Williams\nLake Aug. 1. Dr. C. H. Wright of\nTrail, President, and J. A. Bracken\nof Nelson, Secretary, will be among\ndelegates.\nMOSAIC PLAQUE TO-\nBE MEMORIAL FOR\nCHARLES D. ELLIS\nINVERMERE, B. C, July 5\u2014Funeral services for Charles D. Ellis\nof Windermere, who died In Los\nAngeles, were held from St. Peter's\nAnglican Church at Windermere.\nFollowing cremation at Los Angeles,\n.arrangements were made to hold\nthe service from the church Mr.\nEllis served during his Residence in\nthis valley.\nSummer flowers decorated the altar, and hymns sung during the\nservice, were \"Nearer My God to\nThee\" and \"Abide With .Me\". Rev.\nB. G. Hyde officiated and Mrs. Florence Stewart was organist.\nInterment was in the Windermere\nCemetery, where -the grave will be\ncovered with a Mosaic plaque made\nby Mr. Ellis for this purpose. Another plaque made by him of Mosaic\ndepicting The Good Shepherd will\nbe placed in St. Peter's Church as a\nmemorial. Arrangements for this\nare being made by the Windermere\nLadies' Social Club.\nEPPtsCTlVB    JULY1\nSUNDAY\nSERVICE\n\"tool\nTU6SPAY\nWepNesPAY\nreiPAV.\nSATUfcPAY\nSession af Slocan\nBoard of Trade\nNEW DENVER, B.C. July 5-Main\nspeaker at the after-supper meeting\nof the Slocan District Board of\nTrade was Randolph Harding,\nM.L.A. for Kaslo-Slocan, who dealt\nwith the recent session of the Provincial Legislature. He said that this\nhad proved* to be one of the longest,\ntoughest and most controversial\nsessions in B.C.'s parliamentary history.\nThe speaker stated that a total.of\n112 bills had been passed during the\nsession, and outlined seven or eight\nof the more important ones. As a\nmember of the C.C.F. Opposition,\nMr. Harding said that he had voted\nagainst many of the more controversial government measures, including the Industrial Development Act,\nand the amendments to the Hospital\nInsurance and Provincial Election\nActs.\nMr. Harding stated that he had\ntaken advantage of the opportunities\nprovided by the debates on the\nThrone and Budget Speeches to\nspeak on his riding's many needs,\nincluding: road problems, social\nservices, rural electrification, proposed pulp mill, etc. He said that,\napart from special grants, a total of\n$350,000 had been spent during the\npast year in the Kaslo-Slocan Electoral District, and suggested that\nthe Board should get a copy of the\n\"Public Accounts.\"\nA short discussion followed Mr.\nHarding's address, led by J. R.\nMiller, of Nelson, the Slocan's leading road user. Mr. Harding said that\nhe was of the opinion that the Ains-\nworth-Balfour and Passmore-South\nSlocan \"tag-ends\" of roads, both of\nwhich are in the Nelson-Creston\n(eIectoral district, could be more efficiently maintained if they were\nplaced in the Kaslo-Slocan district\nfor road maintenance purposes.\nBesides Mr. Harding, visitors introduced by the president, J. L. Wilson, included Dr. T. J. Harrop and\nj J. Robinson of New Denver, and-J.\nParker of the Sheep Creek Gold\nMines staff. Culminating the Board's\nj efforts to obtain a dentist for the\nSlocan district, Dr. Harrop's new\nI dental practice is now firmly established in New Denver.\nA. L, Harris reported that a delegation of ten from the Slocan and\nKaslo Boards had met with officials of the West Kootenay Power\nand Light Co. in Trail and that he\nfelt that some progress was being\nmade on the power question.\nAfter considerable discussion on\nlocal fishing problems it was decided that the Board should provide\n$20 for prizes in a suitable competition to be organized by the Fishery\nCommittee.\nNeil Tattrie, Chairman of the\nTransportation Committee, stated\nthat Public Works officials had pro-\nmised him that blacktopping\nthrough Silverton and Slocan City\nwould be undertaken at an early\ndate. The Department had also assured him that the Slow sign would\nbe erected at Slocan City and that\nthe Mulvey Creek bridge would be\nrepaired. The need for adequate direction signs at the Three Forks\njunction on the Kaslo and Sandon\nroad was again stressed.\nA letter from J. A, Bracken, secretary of the Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern B.C. was read, outlining the proposed visit August 19\nof 28 members of the Vancouver\nBoard of Trade Transportation. Bureau. The Slocan Board wilf'enter-\ntain the visitors at a Meakfast and\nthen transport them to kaslo.\nKimberley Public\nHealth Nurse\nTransferred\nCRANBROOK, B.C., July 5\u2014Miss\nGwen Farquarson, public health\nnurse for Kimberley district in the\nEast Kootenay Health Unit for the\npast,three years, has been transferred by the Department of Health\nto the same position at Duncan and\nhas left Kimberley. Appointed as\nher successor is Miss Shirley Main\nwho is transferring from Prince\nRupert district, and will arrive in\nAugust. Meanwhile Miss B. W- Con-\nroy of Kimberley, who recently\ncompleted the University of B.C.\npublic health course is supplying in\nthe Kimberley' office.\nEast Kootenay Health Unit plan\nto increase its nursing staff to six\nmembers including the supervisor\nwith the additional nurse to be\nstationed at Kimberley has not yet\nmaterialized.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951 \u20143\nFIRST TAXPAYER In,Trail District was Nicholas Wilmes, who\nat 87 years Is recalling pioneer day adventures as Trail celebrates\nits Golden Jubilee. Pictured with Mr. Wilmes is another oldtimer,\nthe late At Young, a partner in gold panning ventures who died a\nfew years ago.\nAmong Mr. Wilmes' first Jobs in Trail was hauling fresh water\nfrom the Columbia River and selling It at 25 cents a barrel.\nCranbrook School\nStaffs Increased\nCRANBROOK, B.C, July 5 -\nCranbrook city school staffs will be\nincreased in September from 21 to\n22 members including supervising\nprincipals, with an anticipated increase in school population. So far\nthere have been two resignations\nfrom Central School staff, Miss\nWinanne Glover and Mrs. Audrey\nRobillard. One appointment has\nbeen made, that of Miss Marian\nBeattie of Cranbrook.\nThree temporary appointments in\nthe Mount Baker Junior-Senior\nstaff expired in June, those of William Pollington, commercial instructor, Mrs. T. N. Beynon who\nhas been substituting in French\nand English instruction, and Mrs.\nJeanette Avis who has been substituting in the junior high school.\nIn new appointments the school\n\u25a0board hopes to secure a staff member qualified for music instruction\nin the junior-senior school, and also\nan additional instructor for the\nheavy commercial enrolment.\nDeadline for staff resignation's is\nJuly 31. Four rooms of the former\nhigh school, vacant since April, are\nbeing put in order for primary\ngrades of children from the South\nedge of the city, who will be transferred from Central School where\naccommodation for elementary pupils has been exceeded again.\nConciliation Officer\nNamed for Disputes\nThe B.C: Labor Relations Board\nhas granted a certificate to Nelson\nand District Mine and Mill Workers, Union Local 901, I.U.M.M.S.W,\nfor employees of T. Connors Diamond Drilling Company of Vancouver, working at the Pend\nd'Oreille dam site at Waneta, The\noffice staff is excepted.\nD. W. Coton has been named conciliation officer in disputes between Trail Federal Union Local\n302, T.C.L., and Trail-Tadanac Hospital; Street Electric Railway and\nMotor Coach Employees of America Division 1374, A.F.L, and\nInterior Stages (Nelson) Ltd, and\nCranbrook Garage Workers Union\nLocal 244, C.C.L. and East Kootenay Equipment Company, Van\nHome Service, Haddad and Gart-\nside Motors, Ltd., Wheeler Brothers\nand Harry Dorris Motor Company,\nall of Cranbrook.\nNew Look for\nTelephone Book\nBearing a completely new type\nface, the new Nelson-Trail district\ntelephone directory of the British\nColumbia Telephone Company is off\nthe press.\nA total of 12,900 copies, largest ln\nhistory, was printed. In 20 years,\nthe number of copies printed by the\nNelson Daily News job printing department has grown from 3400\ncopies.\nThe new type face is similar to\nthat used in larger cities. The book\nnow comprises two separate sections. The Nelson book leads off\nwith Nelson numbers, the other\ncentres this time following in alphabetical order. Similarly, the\nTrail edition leads off with Trail.\nBoth have their own classified or\n\"yellow page\" sections.\nThe Nelson book has 66 directory\npages and 48 classified, while Trail\nalso has 66 pages in the front section, but 60 \"yellow pages\".\nTourist Praises '\nAccurate Nelson\nTourist Information\nRecently Nelson Board of Trade\nalmost \"hit the ceiling\" when it\nlearned that Coast tourist information offices were'discouraging travel\nto the Kootenays by giving incor-\nrect.information on road conditions.\nThus lt was somewhat mollifying\nto learn that the information given\nout by the Nelson Board's own\ntourist information office was \"accurate in every detail\".\nMiss Edna Robison, assistant to\nSecretary J. A. Bracken, received a\nletter from a Lloydminster, Sask.\ntourist stating that this was so. It\nwas a pleasure, the letter said, to\nknow what the \"road ahead would\nbe like. I had a good trip into Alberta, and hope that all future information I receive will be as.accurate as yours.\"\nIt was addressed to \"the young\nlady\" on duty at'6 o'clock on June\n23. The information office is now\nopen nightly, with Board members\nassisting.\nNelson Man Buys\nKaslo Resort\nWillow Point\nReached in\nPaving Project\nThe North Shore highway is a\nwide, smooth ribbon of black from\nNelson ferry to Willow Point.\nE. R. Taylor Construction Company of Vancouver has pushed\nahead with its paving more than\nfive miles, and has also started from\nthe 10-mile end back. Heavy rains\nWednesday, however, made the\nprimer coat too wet for paving.\nThe job should be finished in two\nweeks, if weather conditions are\nfavorable.\nPaving East of Erickson to Goat\nRiver, also on the Southern Trans-\nProvincial Highway, has been completed, as well as the back road\nfrom Erickson to Creston, over\nwhich fruit shipments travel, and\nMarwell Construction will not be\nlong in finishing paving a six-mile\nsection between Wynndel and Creston.\nLaw Construction is going ahead\nwith reconstruction of work East of\nFruitvale, and Storms Contracting\n(Pacific) Ltd, is continuing South\nof Nelson.\nWATERS\nW. J. Waters, liquor vendor lhv\nNelson since 1934, is retiring on,\nJuly 10.\nMr. Waters, an oldtimer ln Nelson, came to Canada from the Old1\nCountry in 1903, spending two\nyears in the East before coming to j\nNelson in 1905. He joined the British Columbia Liquor Board in 1921,\nand was appointed vendor in 1934 |\nafter Fred Hume died.     -   -\nMr. Waters is a member of Nelson Lodge A.F. and A.M, and tha [\nScottish Rite branches, while Mrs.\nWaters sings in the Church of the\nRedeemer and Civic Choirs.\nMr. and Mrs. Waters plan\nmotoring to the coast to visit their\nfamily after which on July 15, they\nwill travel by train to Montreal\nthere to sail on the Empress of\nCanada for England to visit relatives. When the Empress sails on.\nJuly 20, they will be on their way\nto their native homes for the first\ntime since coming to this country.\nUpon their return on Nov. 6,\nthey will make their home in\nVictoria.\nVictor Emmanuel II was the first\nking of united Italy. \" \u25a0\nInformation and reservations\u2014any\nCanadian Pacific office, or your\ntravel agent.\nLommmm uaa|ic\nAIRLINES\nTo Consider\nSunningdale Plan\nTRAIL, B. C, July 5\u2014The problem of housing for officials who\nwill be in Trail for the next three\nyears or so in connection with\nPend d'Oreille dam construction is\nunder study here. Columbia Parks,\nowner of land in Sunningdale, have\nasked permission of City Council\nto sub-divide property on the East\nside of Hillside Drive, and suggested that lots there might be sold\nto Cominco or contractors on the\n$30,000,000 dam project.\nDonald Brothers, representing\nthe property-owning group, appealed to the Council for permission\nto subdivide properties on the East\nside of Hillside Drive, Sunningdale.\nHe said that there had been some\nobjection to the plan by city officials, and he sought the reason.\nCouncillors . explained that- the\narea in question, at the foot of a\nmountain was a problem spot due\nto large boulders rolling down the\nmountain, df the city allowed construction of houses in the area, it\nwould be liable to suit in case of\ndamages caused by rolling rocks.\nCouncil promised to investigate\nthe matter, and will announce a decision at a special meeting some\ntime next week.\nSpecial Guests qt\nLatter Day Saints\nMeet at Cranbrook ,\nCRANBROOK, B.C, July 5\u2014New\nChurch of Jesus Christ of Latter\nDay Saints built here last year by\nmembers of the congregation, was\nused to capacity for a branch conference attended bjr representatives\nof Latter Day Saints churches of\nthe area. Special guests at the\nassembly were President Oscar A,\nKirham, president of the general\nauthorities of the church with Mrs.\nKirkham and mission president\nGlen G. Fisher with Mrs. Fisher, all\nof Salt Lake City.\nAlso attending were 25 missionaries of Latter Day Saints from Columbia district of the Western Canadian Mission,\nTheme of the conference, with\nall participating in the discussion\nwas family prayer, speaking well\nof one'another, and mission obligations of all members.\nSpecial ceremonies included chartering by Cranbrook Scout Commissioner Herb Andrews of the\nWest Boy Scout Patrol sponsored\nby the Latter Day Saints Church\nhere, of particular interest to Mr.\nKirkham, long-time worker on behalf of Boy Scouts.\nRosslander Wins\nTrail Hobby Priie\nTRAIL, B.C, July 5 \u2014 Special\naward in the Junior Chamber of\nCommerce Hobby Show at the Trail\nGolden Jubilee was won by Bob\nMcAllister of Rossland for his astronomical display. The prize provided\nthat Mr. McAllister's equipment\nwould be entered in the world's\nlargest hobby show at British Columbia's P.N.E.\nPart of the display consisted of\na large telescope through which vis\nitors could see Saturn as it actually\nappears, though this was pictured\non a photograph at the other end\nof the -room. Another feature was\na large picture of the moon about\nthree and a half feet in diameter\nmade up of a number of actual photographs. Several other awards were\nmade. ,\nKASLO, B. C\u201e July 5 \u2014 Kaslo\nMarine Service, one of the most\ncomplete marine services on Kootenay Lake, has changed hands.\nGeorge (Monty) Armstrong has\nsold the business to Fred Jones of\nNelson, who, after three years operating the Ferry Auto Court in\nNelson, has sold to Mrs. M. Armstrong of Vancouver. Mr. Armstrong\nhad., been in the business for six\nyears.\nKaslo Marine Service consists of\nsix modern. cabins, a boat livery\nwith 20 rowboats and outboards, a\nfull repair service, fuel and equipment supplies, and . fishing tackle,\nNew marine ways were installed\nthis year. \/\nBusiness is \"going fine\",-accord\ning to Mr. Jones, who has as his\nbusiness manager Bruce Tate of\nVancouver. The two worked in\nski lodge in Vancouver several\nyears ago.'\nMr. Jones has been in the resort\nbusiness about 15 years. He is married and has two children,\nClear Cape is the most Southerly\npoint of Ireland.\nLONDON (CP) - Two higlv\nspeed elevators that travel 800 feet\na minute will be installed at Hamp-\nstead, the deepest station on the\nLondon underground railway.\nNELSON GARDEN CLUB\nROSE SHOW\nHume Silver Room\nSATURDAY\u20142 P.M. TO 10 P.M.\nSUNDAY\u20142 P.M. TO 9 P.M.\nROSES ARE NEEDED FOR THIS DISPLAY\nAll persons wishing to supply roses are asked to\nPhone Mr. Cec Jones, 1338-L\nCollection will be made on\nFRIDAY EVENING\nAfter this show the roses will be used for the  Midsummer\nBonspiel  and  for  patients  In  the  Hospital.\nFOUR ESCAPE HURT\nWHEN CAR ROLLS\nA car, driven by J. Durham of\nKelowna, rolled down a 22-foot\nbank at a curve on the Emerald\nMine road, five miles Southwest of\nSalmo Wednesday evening.\nThe driver and three other passengers escaped uninjured. The accident was caused due to the slippery\ncondition of the road.\nFirst gold discoveries in South\nAfrica's big Rand fields were made\nin 1853.\nTrail Studying\nHousing Plans\nTRAIL, B. C, July 5\u2014Prospects\nfor development of housing on\nMerry's Flats are looking up. City\ncouncillors held an early meeting\nwith Dominion and Provincial Government representatives to discuss\nthe project. The Government at\npresents holds a two-month option\non some 55 acres of land on the\nFlats.\nJ. E. Brown, B. C. Government\nhousing cotnmissioner, D. Mc-\nNaughton of Central Mortgage and\nHousing Corporation and Allan\nCrossley, Dominion Government\nengineer presented a tentative\nproposition to Council with a\npromise that, as soon as Council\nhad chosen one of two plans for\nlayout of the subdivision, a detailed\nproposal for the project would be\nsubmitted.\nMr. Crossley submitted the two\nsubdivision plans, one of which allows no back lanes, providing 277\nlots, and the other, with lanes, 244\nlots. Council will discuss the two\nplans with members of the Trail\ntown planning commission prior to\nmaking a decision. A kiddies' playground and. a business section are\nincluded in both plans.\nNew Denver Woman\nDies at Coast\nNEW DENVER, B.C, July 5 -\nMrs. H. Nakamura of New Denver\nhas died in New Westminster,\nwhere she was visiting her son-in-\nlaw and daughter. Dr. and Mrs.\nPaul S. Kumagai.\nThe 50-year-old woman had been\nwith her son-in-law. and daughter\nfor 10 months.\nA Limited Number of Tickets\nAre available for member's of Nelson Curling Club\nand Nelson service clubs for the\nMidsummer Bonspiel\nBALL\nNELSON  CURLING  CLUB\u2014JACK  LONG\nGYRO   CLUB\u2014JACK   WATSON\nKINSMEN CLUB\u2014JACK STEWART\nROTARY CLUB\u2014JACK COVENTRY\nLIONS  CLUB\u2014BOB  PHILLIPS\nKIWANIS  CLUB\u2014JACK   ECCLESTON\nOR AT THE CIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nTickets $2.00 per couple\n1901-TRAIL-1951\nDon't\nMiss the Following Events!\nTODAY, FRIDAY JULY 6th\n10:00 to 12 noon  Cominco Tours\n10:00 a.m Free Show for Kiddies at Both Theatres  (Strand 10:00 p.m. and\nOdeon 10:30 p.m.)\n1:00 p.m Midway, Kiddies' Rides, Old Rink Site.\n2:00 p.m Old Timers' Tea at Ski Lift, Rossland. .   ,\n2:00 to 4:00 Cominco Tours\n5:00 p.m Old Timers' Free Show at Trail-Tadanac High School Auditorium\n6:00 p.m Open Softball at Butler Park.\n7:30 p.m.  Carnival at Curling Rink.\n8:00 p.m .'...Wrestling and Boxing Card at Cominco Arena; Spokane, Kimberley,\nTrail.\n9:00 p.m. ..: Street Dancing in Front of Williams Clinic.\nTOMORROW, SATURDAY JULY 7th\n10:00 to 12:00 noon ..Cominco Tours\n10:30 a.m. Industrial Parade, Oominco.\n11:00 to 1:00 p.m Industrial Exhibition, Cominco.\n1:00 p.m Midway. Kiddies' Rides, Old. Rink Site.\n\u25a0   2:00 to 4:00 Cominco Tours\n2:00 to 3:00 Industrial Sports. Rock Drilling, Log Sawing, Fire Wheel Race,\nTug o' War, Pole Climbing, Wheelbarrow Filling and Race, Etc.\n3:00 p.m .....Pythian Sisters' Drill Team. Cominco Arena.\n4:00 p.m _.. First Aid Competition, St. John Ambulance Association at Cominco\nArena.\n7:30 p.m .....Motorcycle Display, Butler Park. Castlegar Motorcycle Club.\n7:30 p.m Carnival at Curling Rink.\n9:30 p.m Grand Ball at Arena. Announcing of AH Prizes.\n9:45 p.m Fireworks Display, Direction of Shell Oil Company of Canada \u2014\nRiver Wall.\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY; JULY 6, 19S1\nby. 3buhcL WhsjdsJt\nU.K. Kitchen\n\"Terrible\"\nOXFORD, England, July 4 (CP)\n\u2014American Prof. John Immer says\nBritish kitchens are \"terrible \u2014\nthey couldn't be worse.\"\nWhat a lot could be done to\nlighten and speed up the work of\nBritish housewives,\" he said. \"Most\nkitchens need complete replan-\nning.\"\nThe professor, an expert on \"material-handling\" \u2014 the science of\nspeeding up the transport and\nhandling of goods \u2014 is equally\ncritical of B r i t i s h production\nmethods.\n'Production is primarily a frame\nof mind \u2014 that is, a philosophy,\"\nsaid Immer, here to study for a\ndegree at Oxford University.\n\"Good production can never be\nobtained where the management\nand workers feel they are out to\nget the most from each other.\"\nThe slightly - built, 35-year-old\nprofessor admits, however, that he\nhas found many examples of outstandingly good production here.\nNEWS FOR LINENS\nBe first in your town to have butterfly accessories for the house!\nThese lovely motifs are for bed-\nset, towels or scarf!\nPattern 534; transfer two motifs\nBV4Xll% inches and one OtolO^i\nCrochet directions,\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., 266 Baker\nStreet Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and AD\nDRESS.\nSend Twenty-Five Cents more (in\ncoins) for our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book. Illustrations of\npatterns for crochet, embroidery,\nknitting, household accessories,\ndolls, toys ... many hobby and gift\nideas. A free pattern is printed in\nthe book. '\nBalfour Minister's\nFather Gives Sermon\nBALFOUR, B. C, July 5\u2014Rev..P.\n\u25a0 Snowden of Kaslo conducted services at St. Michael's and All Angels'\nChurch. He welcomed to the parish\nhis father, Rev. J. E. W. Snowden\nof North Vancouver, whose subject\n\u25a0was \"The Christ-Like Life\". Mrs.\nWellwood was organist.\nRobson Notes\nROBSON, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs. P.\nJ. Robertson.of Neidpath, Sask., are\nholidaying at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. C. E. Tutt.\nA farewell party was held at the\nRobson Church Hall in honor of\nRev. Mr. and Mrs. Horricks of Castlegar. Guests were entertained with\n.various games and contests, and a\npresentation of a desk lamp was\nmade to the guests of honor.\nRae Berry is a patient in Trail-*\nTadanac Hospital.\nMrs. S. M. Wood and daughter\nHeather of Vancouver are visiting\nMrs. Wood's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. B. Musselman.\nGeorge Magwood returned home\nfrom Radisson, Sask., where he was\ncalled by the death of his father.\nMrs. E. S. Martin and daughter\nGinny returned home from Red\nDeer, Alta., where they visited the\nformer's father, S. Blakley, who returned with them.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Crissall and\ndaughters Dorothy and Mildred of\nNelson spent a few days at the.\nhome of their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. R. A, Moffat.\nThe Robson Evening Group held\na social evening at the home of Mrs.\nE. Ostrom, with 15 members and\nfive visitors present. Refreshments\nwere served by the hostess, assisted\nby Mrs. T. Macomb, Mrs. M. Webster and Mrs. K. Adshead.\nNakusp Notes\nFIRST GRADUATING CLASS of Notre Dame College, cooperative educational Institution at Nelson, Is shown here. In front, left\nto right, are A, L. Cartier, prlnolpal; Miss Yvonne Pattie of Lumby,\nMix Heather Abbey, of Kaslo, Miss Denise LeBlanc of Lumby, Miss\nAnn  Poje of Nelson and  Rev. Father L,  R.  McKenzie,  Instruotor.\nAt back are Michael Kinahan of Trail, students' president; Owen\nBrown of Nelson, Joseph Sturgeon of Nelson, James Tinkess of\nKoslo, Robert Nicholson of Nelson, Raymond Poulin of Nelson,\nEsra Spray of Nelson and Thomas Tanaka of Greenwood.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nIt Pays To Rend the Classified Dally\nA Good Host is\na Mind Reader\nTastes differ. Some like dry drinks,\nOther, the opposite, .weetdnnks.\nOnly because Burnett's \u00bb an EXTRA\nDRY (unsweetened) Gin can you add\nor leave o-t the sweetness and meet\nevery individual preference.\nBURNETTS\nLONDON    DRY\nGIN\nKoolaree Echoes..\n43 Boys Enroll\nFor 2lsl Session\nt\nw\nNext time \u00a7g|j\nI BURNETII!!\nJBJM   '. V.'.'i' 1\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nHm Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nThe holiday weekend saw a very\nbusy work party from Trail and\nNelson headed by Art Van at Koolaree. During the past two months\nwork parties have been at the camp\neach weekend making ready for the\nbig project installing the new water\nsystem and sanitary arrangements\nat* the camp.\nThese various items are now taking shape, and the weekend party\npoured the cement foundation and\nerected the new ablution hut, and\nroughed in the plumbing. The Herculean task of getting the rocks out\nof the cesspit with the aid of a\nchain block was performed, and the\nlagging put in.   ,\nBusy in all, these projects have\nbeen the A.O.T.S. of East Trail, Art\nVan, Jack Kendrick, Walter Smythe,\nVic Tye. From Nelson came Floyd\nIrwin. Curly Mattice, Murray Harris and son Murray, Bob Proudfoot, Jini Stewart, Jack Wilson.\nOthers who have had a hand in\nthe camp project thus far are Charlie Daly, Fraser Mitchell, Stan Hewgill, Mr. Kalhovd, Ab Nichols of\nRossland, and Gil Kay, Charlie\nArmstrong, Bill Fish, Ian Potts,\nBob Gray, George Reeves, Mr. Vallance and son Bob, Fred Robins,\nand a number of the campers of the\nCamp Fraternity.\nOn July 3 the campers for the\n21st opening of Koolaree began to\narrive. The first two were brand\nnew campers from Burton in the\npersons of John Watson and Lome\nMarshall. All day boys came from\nall directions, Cranbrook in the\nEast to Salmon Arm in the West,\nuntil 43 boys of Anglican, United\nand Presbyterian Churches answered the first supper call.\nThe. kitchen staff of Mrs. Downie,\nMrs. Van and Bev Lythgoe won\nfavor, and the way the food disappeared indicates that these people\nwill be busy for the next 10 days.\nThe camp is divided into an Intermediate and Senior'section. The\nIntermediate section consists of the\nfollowing two cabins:\n\u00ab CABIN 2\u2014Walter Anderson, Jack\nBoyes, Alex McClelland, David\nMann, Larry Moorcroft, Norman\nMurphy, Ernest Vyse, Alan Young\nand Bobby Knowler.\nCABIN 3\u2014Edwin Dinner, Terry\nElmes, Ronald Hamson, Robert\nLaughton, Lome Marshall, Wesley\nVan, Maurice Van Sacker, Ronald\nWade, John Watson and . Wesley\nMclnnes. '.\t\nThe Senior section consists of the\nfollowing three cabins:\nCABIN 4\u2014Allen Minifie, Wesley\nBarrett, .Melvin Brown, Peter\nThatcher, Donald Colmer, Ronald\nErickson,' Neil Horswill and Cecil\nNesmith.\nCABIN 5\u2014Ronald Avery, Gerald\nBorch, Ian Bryden, Alan Jacobson,\nBob Leonard, Colvln McBurney,\nJonathon Magwood, Don Smith,\nCABIN 6\u2014Hugh Anderson, Bob\nDavies, Danny Dolphin, Derek Fraser, Dick-McBurney, Bob Rowlands,\nKen Stanley and Sydney Gillies.\nPlaces represented are Burton,\nCranbrook, Creston, Fruitvale, Kinnaird, Nakusp, Robson. Rossland,\nSalmo, Salmon Arm, Nelson and\nTrail.\nStaff: Director, Fred Robins, leaders, Jack Steed and'Ian Potts nurse,\nMrs. I. Potts, canteen, Mrs. F. Robins.\nThe opening ceremonies were carried out with the Big Chief as master of ceremonies, assisted by Jack\nSteed, who led the'boys to the chapel, the focal point for the staft of\nall boys' camps. The Chief related\nthe history of the camp and chapel,\nand told of its growing traditions.\nAt the cairn Ken Stanley of Nakusp\nand Don Neville Smith of Creston,\nboth seven-year campers, were\nmade custodians of the. camp records taken from the cairn.\nThe boys pledged their loyalty to\ntheir tribe and to the camp, and\nbrought their faggot tokens to kindle the great council fire, where\nthe new campers were welcomed\nInto the campfire circle. The custodians of the records opened the\ncontainer and read the messages of\ngreetings.\nA sing-song, the reading of an\nancient -soribe report, cocoa and\ncookies '\/rounded out the evening.\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Millar of Lethbridge were guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. . J. Firth, en route\nto Prince George.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Kludash and\ndaughter of Kimberley were visitors with Mrs. Kludash's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Johnson.'\nNorman Packman and Maurice\nHindley spent a few days fishing at\nTye.\nMrs. H. Mclnnis has left for Calgary to attend the wedding of her\nson, .Leading Seaman Lloyd Mclnnis, R.C.N.,, in that city.\nMr. and Mrs. Wilson and family\nof San Francisco are spending their\nholidays with relatives here.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Payette and family of Trail were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. Payette.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Mouranhams\nand family of Grand Valley, Ont.,\nwere visitors here, guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Grayen.\nArnold and'Hugo Hess of Cranbrook visited their parents.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Andestad, Evelyn\nand Sheila visited Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMackie in Boswell.\nMiss R. Burton, junior room\nteacher, left for Vancouver to spend\nher vacation with relatives.\nDAWSON CREEK, B. C. (CP)\u2014A\nfund of about \"54000 is being raised\nin this Northern district to provide\nthe kilt imported from Scotland for\nall memebrs of the local pipe band.\n0AU&. 74\/2. With.\nWwuan. TTlwdin\nWynndel W.I.\nPlans Layette\nWYNNDEL, B. C, July 5 -\nArticles for a layette were handed\nout at a meeting of Wynndel Women's Institute in the Cooperative\nbuilding. Some knitted articles\nwere turned in.\nA letter was read from Creston\nValley Hospital acknowledging a\ncheck from the W.I. for a hospital\nbed. The July meeting was cancelled.\nMoyie Notes\nMOYIE, B. C\u2014Ian Currie, teacher\nat North Pine, B. C, called on Mr.\nand Mrs. R. A, Smith on his way to\nNelson to spend the Summer holidays with his mother, Mrs. H. H.\nCurrie.\nMr. and Mrs. S. M. Tarbet have\nmoved back to their home at Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Tait and children\nhave moved in to Mrs. Guindon's\nsmall cottage at Moyie.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Burch of Trail\nare visiting Hay's mother, Mrs. B.\nBurch. While in Moyie they have\nbeen calling on their many friends,\nJames Tarbet,* Postmaster, -was\nconfined .to his bed for a few days\nwith a severe cold.\nMrs. L, Palmer of Nelson spent a\nnight in Moyie on her way to Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Hamilton have\nmoved into W. H. Laird's house.\nMr. and Mrs. Edward Hartford\nwill make their home in Moyie.\nMr. and Mrs. George L. Smith of\nKirnberley called on Mr. Smith's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith,\non their way to Lourdes, B. C,\nwhere they took two of their sons,\nPaul and Bobbie.\nMrs. George Douglass of Marysville is staying with her aunt, Mrs.\nRedford.\nMr. and Mrs. J. ISskog and Richard Stanton of Kimberley spent the\nweekend visiting Mrs. Eskog and\nMr. Stanton's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. S. Stanton.\nMr. and Mrs. Ernest Danielson\nand sons Peter and Paul of Kimberley spent a few days at their\nSummer home at Moyie.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Andrews have\nas their house guests Mrs. Andrews'\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Lafington, and child, vfrom Alberta.\nConcert to Aid\nWillow Point Hall\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, July 5\u2014\nThe concert sponsored. by the\nWomen's Institute in aid of Crystal\nHall was highly enjoyed. The artists who gave' their performance\nfree, were the Little Theatre group,\nMrs. Clare, F. W. Chanter, Mrs.\nStevens and C. Carne. Ron Waters\nshowed scenic pictures of the dis\ntrict. Musical numbers were by\nMrs. W. S. Ashby,' Mrs. G. Lee, Mrs,\nDurwood, Mrs. F. E. Boyce. and\nRaymond Thompson, with Miss\nPeggy Grimes as accompanist.\nMrs. P. W. Green introduced the\nperformers and the members of\nthe W. I. served refreshments.\nWillow Point\nWILLOW POINT, B. C\u2014Mrs. H.\nI. Middleton left by plane for Vancouver. She had been visiting Mrs.\nB. Heddle, Mr. and Mrs. C. Shannon and also Mr. and Mrs. G. Hul-\nme of Wynndel.\nMrs. R. A. Grimes and Miss\nPeggy Grimes left by plane for a\nvisit to Vancouver.\nMiss T. Taylor of Victoria is a\nguest of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Ludgate.\nMrs. Lyall Cruickshank of Nelson was guest of Mr. and Mrs. C.\nShannon.\nMr, and Mrs. N. Mawdsley had\nas guests Mr. and Mrs. Joe Benoit\nand children of Spokane.\nBURY ST. EDMUNDS, England\n(CP)\u2014During recent weeks more-\nthan \u00a3100 in cash has been found\nin the streets of this Suffolk town\nmostly in lost wallets and handbags.\nBBBisBas3svBiSBsB5i\nNAKUSP, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nGordon Laarz of Trail and two\nyoung sons, Gordon and Terry, are\nholiday guests of Mrs. Laarz's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Chad-\nwick, Sr.\nHugh Bolstad, accompanied by his\nyoung son, Bobby, left for Victoria\nwhere they will be guests of Mr.\nBolstad's father, O. Bolstad. Hugh\nBolstad is taking part in marking\nthe department exams.\nMiss Beth Peterson of Chilliwack\nis the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harold\nS. Cann.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Burgoyne of\nNelson are visitors of MrB. Bur-\ngoyne's mother, Mrs. F. Jordan.\nMr. and Mrs. Bowes of Camrose,\nAlta., are visiting their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford\nJupp.\nMr. and Mrs. P. McLeod, who are\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. J. McLeod of\nKamloops are gueBts of Mr. and\nMrs. Jordan Williams.\nMr. and Mrs. Norman Harrison\nand young son, Michael of Vancouver, are visiting Mr. Harrison's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Harrison and Mrs. Harrison's mother,\nMrs. G. P. Horsley.\nMr. and Mrs. J. DeYeager and\ndaughter Wendy of Edgewood are\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hopp.\nFrank Atherton of Vernon Is\nguest of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Davies.\nMr. and Mrs. Jim Davidson, accompanied by their children Penny\nand Jimmie of Revelstoke, are visitors in town renewing acquaintances.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Hampton and\nbaby daughter Carol of Celista are\nguests of Mrs. Hampton's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. George Johnson.\nMr; and Mrs. Larry Ward and\nfamily of Penticton are guests of\nMrs. Ward's mother, Mrs. G. P.\nHorsley, and brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Brown,\nMiss Bernice Jordan of Vernon is\nguest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nHowell Jordah.\nCameron Hood, accompanied by\nhis niece, Miss Marion Embree and\ntwo nephews, Sonny and Douglas\nof New Westminster, are guests of\nMr. Hood's mother, Mrs. G. Hood.\nMr. and Mrs. Garry Jones of\nCastlegar were guests of Mrs. Jones\ngrandmother, Mrs. G. Hood.\nMiss Muren Fowler and her brother, Denny Fowler of Edgewood,\nare holidaying with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Fowler at\nPine Lodge.\nMiss K. Fowler of Kimberley was\nguest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. E. Fowler.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Mitchell of Montreal were visitors at Pine Lodge.\nMiss Winnifred Keys, H.N., of\nSpokane who was guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Keys,\nleft for her home.    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Graham Elder returned from a holiday trip to Kiplin,\nSask., and other points.\nMrs. Herb Couling left for Creston\nto visit her mother, Mrs. Frank La\nBelle, prior to leaving, for Prince\nRupert to join her husband, who\nhas been stationed in the Forestry\nDepartment. The Couling house on\nBay Street has been purchased by\nAlev Leitch of Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Larry Ward and\nfamily, who were visitors in Nakusp, left for their home in Penticton.\nThey were . accompanied by little\nMiss Marilyn Horrey and her bro\nther, David Horrey, who will be\ntheir guests for some time.\nJames Butlin of New Denver was\nguest of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. Jupp.\nMrs. A. J. Harrison and Mrs. Fred\nGraduates Honor\nGuests at\nInvermere Dinner\nINVERMERE, B. C, July 5\u2014Grad\u00ab\n11 students of the Invermere school\nwere hosts at the first annual graduation dance to be held in the auditorium of the new high school.\nGuests of honor were the five graduates in Grade 12, Gloria Wannop,\nWindermere; Anne Park and Penny\nPeatfield, Radium Hot Springs. Mae\nGuey, Athalmer, and Christine Weir,\nInvermere.\nThe auditorium was decorated in\nthe school colors of blue and gold,\nwith Summer flowers adding an effective background for the pastel\nfrocks of the young graduates.\nAddress to the graduates was given by Mrs. Ian Weir, Invermera\nTrustee, and Mrs, Chris Madson,\nPresident of the district P.-T.A.,\nalso spoke briefly. In her few remarks Miss Alice Curtis, Principal\nof the school, remarked that Jack ,\nRichardson, a member of the graduating class, was absent, as he had\nrecently joined the R\u00abC.A.F. Penny\nPeatfield replied for the graduates.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C,\u2014Thomas R.\nFlint, New Denver, has left the Slocan Community Hospital.\nMrs. John Gawryletz has left to\nvisit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nFacca, at Natal.\nMiss Cathrine A. Wilson, High\nSchool teacher at Vernon, visited \u25a0\nMrs. A. D. Kelsall and daughter,\nMiss Florence A. Moss. Miss Wilson\nwas on the teaching staff at New\nDenver.\nJames W. Butlin spent the holidays in Nakusp, guest of his son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nJupp, and family. '   '   '-.-\u25a0'\nQuentin A. Forsythe has returned\nfrom a business trip to Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs, Hope George and\nLaurie Croft of Grand Forks visited\nthe former's mother, Mrs. Hilda\nGeorge.\nMr. and Mrs. Alf H. Anderson and\nfamily returned from a visit with\nthe former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nO. J. Anderson, and brother Roald,\nat Fusilier, Sask.\nAdam   Johnston   of   Goodlands,\nMan., was visiting friends iff New\nDenver.    Mr.  Johnston previously \u25a0\nlived in New Denver, and was on\nthe teaching staff.\nCarl DuMont of Hunter's Siding,\nwho was a patient in the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital, has been discharged,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hartley Burgess,\ntheir daughter, Miss Thelma Bru-\ngess, and Miss Pearl Leurcu of\nCampbell River, B. C, are guests of\nMr. Burgess' sister and brother-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Greer.\nMr. and Mrs. J. R. Humphris of\nNakusp visited their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alf H. Anderson, and family, Karen and\nRickie,-\nR. Smith and W. Davis of the Department of Health and Welfare,\nVancouver1, were visitors in town.\nMrs. May Crellin is spending a\nweek in Trail visiting her son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh MacLeod, and daughter Linda.\nMr. and Mrs. Irwin J. Butcher\nhad as their guest their son, Maurice MacArthur of Cranbrook.\nJohnson were joint hostesses 'at a\nlawn tea at the home of the former\nto honor Mrs. Harrison's house\nguests, her daughter-in-law, Mrs.\nNorman Harrison and Mrs. G. E.\nStubbs of Vancouver and Mrs. L. M.\nBarnes, who is visiting her sister,\nMrs. T. W- Harvey from England.\n,,,, ,,    12\u201420\n9361    30-12\nYOU'LL LIVE IN IT\nCool as a breezel Sew it with\nease! This is the casual you'll depend on for shopping, church, or\neven sports, according to the fabric you choose. Deep yoke, big\npockets are new fashion detailsl\nPattern 9381'in Sizes 12, 14, 16,\nIS, %: 3p, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, Size\n16 takes 4% yards 35-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete .illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps canno.t be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept,, Nelson, B. C.\nOur Marian Martin Summer\nPattern Book is the best everl Send\nTwenty-five Cents today for your\ncopy. You'll sew the smartest most\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C. \u2014 Miss\nRoBe Taylor and Miss Janet Kerr\nof Trail were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. W. Gorby and son Douglas.\nMr. and Mrs. J, B. Johannson\nand son David returned from Trail\nwhere they were visitors.\nMiss Joan Howard, Slocan City,\nleft the Slocan Community Hospital.'\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Donaldson\nand their daughter Jean of Rossland were guests of Mrs. Lillian\nBergrene and family.\nMureen and Michael McCrory\n\u2022visited Mr. and Mrs. Peter Thorn\nbf Nelson. ,- \u25a0\nMiss Betty LaCroix of Sandon\nhas been discharged from the Slocan Community Hospital.\nMiss Elian Bergrene is visiting\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Donaldson in\nRossland.\nPeter Thorn Jr., of Nelson Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. P. J. McCrory\nand family.\nFred B. Tessman, High School\nPrincipal, Is in Victoria.\nRt. Rev. Bishop H. Embling and\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Shaw left on\na motor trip to Radium Hot\nSprings and Banff, and other way\npoints.\nJohn A. Clarkson, Principal of\nthe Elementary School has left to\nattend Summer School at Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. K. Mayeda left for\nToronto, Ont,, where they will re-\n- side with -their son.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Mann, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry L. Taylor and Miss\nMiyo Yokoyama entertained at a\nsmall party at the Taylor home\nIn honor of Miss Eleanor and Miss\nIrene Kondo, who are leaving to\nmake   their   home   in   Vancouver.\npractical wardrobes for your fam-1 Gifts of china were presented to\nily and yourself with patternr cho- \u2022 the guests of honor by Mrs. T.\nsen from this book. A Free Pattern j Mann.\nof a beachrobe for Misses is printed , *\t\nin b\u00b0\u00b0k- I CLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULT6\nTHE PAGE\nthat is read most thoroughly by young and old alike, every one a prospectiva\nbuyer 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!\nYOU'LL FIND IT IN THE\nCLASSIFIED PAGES OF THE\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED SERVICE\n m\nTwo-Tone\nCool Nylon Mesh\nRitchie\nOxfords\nThe ideal Summer shoe for the\nsportsman. Leather soles and\ntieels. Sizes 6 to 11.\nPrice\n$13.50\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nHerbert Street Takes\nCoast Girl as Bride\nSOUTH SLOCAN,. B.C., July-5\u2014Of interest here and\nin Nelson, where the groom attended school, was the wedding\nin Sixth Avenue United Church in New Westminster of the\nformer Enid Mary Rowbotham and Herbert Cecil Street.\nRev. B. F. Ennals officiated.\nTartans Seen\nFor Autumn\nTORONTO,  July  5   (CP)\nJhsL Wttiliot\nWOMEN\nThe bride, a graduate of St.\nPaul's Hospital school of nursing\nin Vancouver, is ihe daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. F, J. Rowbotham of\nBurquitlam, and the groom's parents are Mrs. F. Street, who went\nfrom South Slocan for the wedding,\nand the late Mr. Street.\nMr. Allen Barnes and Mr. Reg\nKillam ushered the guests to their\npews. Among them were the\ngroom's brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. James Street and\ndaughters Irene and Jean of South\nSlocan.\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher father, chose an ankle-length\ngown of frosty white nylon' organdie over pale pink taffeta.. The fitted-bodice featured a Peter Pan\ncollar and cap sleeves, and rows of\ntucks accented the bouffant skirt,\nsuit of corduroy velvet withsepar-1 Her headdress was of velvet ap-\npliqued daisies outlined in rhine-\nstones and pearls, and her bouquet\nate \"party\" skirt for special occa\nsions will be found in .milady's\nwardrobe ,if' she heeds the Canadian fashion trend this Fall.\nThe suit, plus coat styled for\n\"double duty\" were among the models displayed at advance showings\nof Fall styles by Toronto designers.\nThey were two of the highlights\nthe experts have planned in their\neffort to provide clothes within\nreach of the average office-girl's\nbudget.\nThe coat is complete with fur\ncollar and chamois lining. Both\ncan be removed, leaving a gently-\ntailored number ideal for wearing\neither to the office or late-season\nfootball games. It also comes in a\nvariety of shades although manufacturers claim Canadian girls are\nconservative in their color choice,\nclinging chiefly to greys and\nblacks.\nTartans promise to highlight next\nseason's sportswear. Several Tar\ntan skirt and vestee combinations\nwill be seen **jn this Fall's market.\nBright spot for a rainy day will\nbe the full-backed (or belted) raincoat complete with rain-hat with\nsoftly tailored crown. This comes\nin a wide range of colors, varying\nfrom bright green to different\n\u25a0shades of brown.\nThere's also a frontiersman jack\nCt in red, cinnamon, green, beige\nand of fringed English suede. This\nis ideal for the outdoor type of girl.\nwas of white snapdragons and car\nnations.\nMiss Dorothy Hahn, as brides-[\nmaid, wore sheer white eyelet organdie over turquoise taffeta. Her\nJuliet cap matched, and she carried\npink and white snapdx-agons and\ncarnations. Mr. Allen Dinsdale was\nbest man, and Mrs. Laura Barnes\nsang during the signing of the register.\nViolin and piano selections were\nplayed at the reception at Moody\nPark club house, Mr. Carl Rowbotham proposed the toast to his\nniece, and Mrs. G. Rowbotham, an\naunt, of the bride, and Mrs. Max\nKatz of Haney poured. Telegrams\nof congratulation were received\nfrom Regina and Guelph, Ont.\nFor a motor trip through' the\nB. C. Interior, the bride donned an\napple green lin'en suit and camel\nhair topcoat.\nVancouver will be the newly-\nweds' home.\nVfljDVJUL %<)AMp \u2014\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, July 5 CAP) \u2014\nYou probably never' thought it\nwould happen, but James Cagney\nis muscling.out of the, mob.\n\"Yes, I'm going straight,\" grinned\nthe actor, without an ounce of\nmenace. He admitted that he'll\nprobably never do another gangster\npicture.\nThis marks the end of an era.\nCagney was perhaps the screen's\nbest-known mobster. His pre-eminence in the field dated back to\n\"Public Enemy,\" which made him\na star just 20 years ago. Although\nhe made many non-criminal pictures, he was still firmly identified\nas a mug. In two of his-last three\npictures he portrayed a gunman.\n\"The gangster pictures were representative of an era,\" he observed.\n\"But that era is over now. The\nKefauver hearings on television\nhelped it. Nowadays if you did a\npicture about gangsters, you'd have\nto show the nation-wide aspects of\nthe rackets,\"\nAlso, today's crime pictures might\nreasonably show the traffic in dope\nand its sale to 'teen-agers.\nCagney is making the transition\nfrom gangsterism with a newspaper role in \"Come Fill the Cup.\"\nAfter the film is over, the actor\nwill return to his farm at Martha's\nVineyard, Mass.\nIn a hilarious moment of \"Here'\nComes the Groom,\" a character exclaims, \"This is better than television.\" The remark is apt. If Holly'\nwood had more pictures like this, it\nwould have less worries about the\nupstart industry. This film is one of\nBing Crosby's best, combining\nenough elements of entertainment\nto please the most jaded movie goer,\nThe plot is a romantic mix-up with\nthe Groaner, Jane Wyman, Alexis\nSmith and Franchot Tone. Illogical\nYes, but still lots of fun, A needed\nassist to Crosby's film career.\nTeacher Addresses\nNatal-Michel P.-T.A.\nNATAL, B. C\u201e July 5 \u2014 \"The\nTrend Away From Compulsion\"\nwas the topic of an address given\nby W. Murray, Michel-Natal teacher, at the final meeting of Natal-\nMichel Parent-Teacher -Association\nbefore Fall.\nMembers decided to elect a new\nslate of officers at the first meeting after the Summer recess. A refund of $20 from the recent B. C.\nParent-Teacher Federation convention was accepted.\nEntertainment was provided by\neight choir girls who sang several\nselections, accompanied by Mrs.\nMurray.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type) larger type rates on\nrequest, Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nLONDON (CP)\u2014A petitioner in\na divorce court case told the judge\nthat his wife preferred to polish his\nmotor-car over the week-end instead of letting him drive it.\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NELSON, B, C.\nMore miles per foot on shoe repairs at TONY'S REPAIR SHOP.\nAll hats greatly reduced at\nADRIAN   MILLINERY\nWe have a few 2nd hand for sale\nSAM BROWN, Repairs, Nelson, B.C\nIf it's worth owning, it's worth\ninsuring. See BLACKWOOD AGCY\nGOOD   FIREWOOD   FOR   SALE\nMostly tamarac. Ph, 532-Y, Box 367.\nGet your fishing license at Jack\nBoyce's Men's Shop.\nELECTROLUX SALES .-SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR 653\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices,\nNew stock Majestic Luggage just\nreceived. Smart, new colors and\nfinishes. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nNOTICE\nFairview Fuel and Supply will be-\nclosed from July 9th to 23rd.\nHard-wearing English hand towels in red, green  or blue stripes,\nSize 20 by 40 inches.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nPlaymor Saturday. Dance on B.C.'s\nFinest New Maple Floor.\nJust Arrived \u2014 Natural Carving\nLeather. Shop early.\nTHE CRAFT CENTRE\nPlaytogs of every description for\nthe children, at the\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP.\nHOME PLAN BOOKS-To help\nyou plan your New Home\u201450c to\n$1.00.   BPRNS LUMBER CO. \"\nDavid Nystrom\u2014Interior and exterior painting, paperhanging. Free\nestimates. Phone 750-R.\nProtect your potato crop with\nGreen Cross Potato Dust. Prevents\nblight, destroys insects, simple to\nuse. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nHome of Holiday Togs for children of all agesl All your kiddies'\nholiday-wear requirements can be\nfound most reasonably at\nTHE  CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces clean\ned; chimneys topped; thimbles ap\nplied; hot and cold air ducts cleaned\nby vacuum. \u2014 Pounder's Chimney\nService; Phone 1541-L.\nMR. AND MRS. RICHARD EMERSON POWELL\nST. ANDREW'S-BX-THE-LAKE at Willow Point\nwas the setting for the wedding of the former Kathleen\nAlicia Ludgate, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Ludgate,\nand Richard Emerson Powell, son of Mrs. Thomas Powell\nand the late Mr. Powell. Very Rev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean\nof Kootenay, officiated at the attractive ceremony.\nNelson\nSocial...\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, T951 \u2014 5\nBe sure to visit the Hose and\nFlower Show in the Silver Room,\nHume Hotel, this Saturday, 2 p.m.\nlo 10 p.m., and Sunday, 2 p.m. to\n9 p.m.\n... By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Miss Dolores Ward of Victoria\nhas arrived for her wedding which\ntakes place in Nelson July 18.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. H. MacMIUan,\n415 Falls Street, have returned\nfrom a holiday in California and\nMexico.'\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Harris and son,\nLeslie, from Alhambra, Alta., are\nholidaying with relatives here, Mr.\nand Mrs. Joseph Harris, 508 First\nStreet, and Mr. and Mrs. Emile\nHeroux, 320 Chatham Street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Wiginton\nhave returned from a two-month\ntrip through Eastern Canada and\nthe United States. Mrs. Wiginton\nstopped in Calgary for a two weeks\nvisit with her daughters, Mrs. E. R.\nFitz-Patrick arid Mrs. L. E. Dow-\nling..\n\u2022 Miss Denise Stewart of Trail\nhas been guest at the Carbonate\nStreet home of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. B. Stewart.\n\u2022 Miss Joan Stromstead, 224\nObservatory Street, left by plane\nfor Kelowna where she went to\nattend  an. instructress  course  in\n| swimming. \u25a0\n\u2022 i Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Nelson,\nI , Hume Hotel, were recent visitors\n*|   in Spokane.\nI \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. CA. Dayman\nNelson Avenue, Fairview, have as\nguests Mrs. Dayman's sister and\nbrother,    Mrs.    H.   Archibald    of\nI Strongfield, Sask., and R. J. Ren\nnick of Moncton, Ont.\nI o Mrs. Roberts who teaches on\nthe staff of the Central School has\nleft to spend her vacation at the\nCoast.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Graham, formerly of\nNelson and now residing in Vancouver, is in the City to visit her\nmother,  Mrs.  Whitehead.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. H. Argyle, Observatory Street, has returned from a\nfew weeks at the Coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Allan,\nBaker Street were visitors in\nSpokane.\nLAST DAYS\nTODAY and TOMORROW\nof Our\nADVANTAGE HAYS\nSALE\nCOME IN AND SEE ALL THE ASTOUNDING BARGAINS\nThis is your opportunity to take advantage of us\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPrincess May Set Fall\nVogue on Canada Tour\n\"PLAIN LIVING\"\nLONGEVITY SECRET\nAGINCOURT, Ont., July 5 (CP)\n\u2014Mrs. Matthew Elliot today celebrated her 102nd birthday.\nShe came to Canada from England 95 years ago and spent almost\nall her life on a farm in Scarboro\nTownship just East of Toronto.\nNow she lives with a daughter\nless than half a mile from the\noriginal homestead.\nShe has five children living, 15\ngrandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.\nHer secret of longevity: \"Plain,\nregular living.\"\nAND MRS! PHILIP A. HEAPS\nGRADUATES OF University of B.C. are the former\nJoan Beverley Nagle, formerly of Nelson, and Philip A.\nHeaps, who exchanged nuptial vows in St. Mary's Anglican Church in Vancouver. The bride is the daughter\nof Mrs. G. D. Nagle of Vancouver and the late Mr. Nagle,\nformer residents of Nelson. The groom, son of Mr. and\nMrs. A. R. Heaps of Vancouver, has taken up administrative residency work at Toronto Western Hospital.\n\u2014Joan Davies photo.\nCanadian Qirl Works\n18-Hour Day in Films\nLONDON, July 5 (CP)-Freckle-faced Lois Maxwell,\na Canadian girl who swapped a long-term Hollywood contract\nfor an 18-hour day in Italian films, says she still thinks she\nmade the right -choice.\n\"I'd do it again if I had to,\" said the 24-year-old actress\nfrom Kitchener and Fort Erie, Ont., who made a name for\nherself in Italian movies without speaking a word of the\nlanguage.\nExperienced baby sitters of all\nages desirous of registering for paid\nbaby-sitting for Bonspiel visitors\nfrom July 9th to 14th. contact the\nCivic Centre Office before Friday,\nJuly 6th.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSPECIAL\n9 OZ. TUMBLERS\n6 FOR 39c\nMc 8. Me (NELSON) LTD.\nOne 6-piece Dinette Suite; walnut\nfinish; reg. $110,50, special $74.50.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture and antiques.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE   1560 413   HALL  8T.\nVISITORS\nHeadquarters for all your smoking, reading and camera needs. If\nvou have a sweet tooth, we can'fix\nthat up for vou too. -.\nVALENTINE'S.\nChurch of The Redeemer\n11:00 a.m-\n7:30 p.m.-\n-Holy Communion\n\u25a0Evening Prayer\nSouth Slocan\u20149:00 a.m.\nThe Vicar.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late Mrs.\nAmy Russel of Riondel will be held\nfrom the Anglican Church at Kaslo\nSaturday.at 12 noon. Interment will\nbe in Kaslo Cemetery.\nOne June day two years ago Lois\nsnapped her fingers at Hollywood\u2014\n\"that place wasn't teaching me anything\" \u2014 flounced into New York\nand caught the first ship. It happened to be headed for Italy, and\never since her career has \"had a\nLatin touch.\nNow she's taking a kind of busman's holiday. Here to appear in\nthe British film, \"The Woman's\nAngle,\" Lois-finds she has time on\nher hands. It wasn't that way in\nItaly.\nIn contrast to the usual conception of Latin languor, the caramel-\nblonde says in Italy an IB-hour day\nis routine. If it ever got down to\n12 hours a day. the cast would think\nit was on bankers' hours.\n'As far as films are concerned,\"\nsays the quiet-spoken Lois, \"doing\nwhat Rome does means that the only\nthing you have any energy left for\nafter shooting is sleep.\"\nHer first Italian film was \"Tomorrow Is Too Late.\" with English\ndialogue. Later she made .films with\nItalian dialogue dubbed in. Now she\nmakes her own sound track \u2014 in\nItalian.\nLois has appeared in  \"Amorl\nVeleni.\"  \"Queen  Maria  Qhristina\"\nand \"The White Leper,\" story of a\nyoung cocaine addict.\nDespite the grind of long hours,\nshe is happy working in Italy and\nhopes soon to interest Canadian\nsponsors in Italian-Canadian productions. She has no regrets about\nleaving Hollywood, where she played in such movies as \"The Big\nPunch,\" \"That Hagen Girl\" and \"The\nDark Past.\"\nCHARLING, Kent., England (CP).\n\u2014A sixpence bearing the likeness\nof Queen Elizabeth was found in\na garden here.\nRossland Ndtes\nROSSLAND, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nE. D. Brown and Mr. and Mrs,\nClaude Brown of Vancouver are\nvisiting relatives here. Mrs. E. D.\nBrown is the sister of J. A. McKenzie.\nA. Hubner and children, Eleanor\nand Ernest, accompanied by Pat\nQuinn left Saturday to spend the\nlong weekend at Needles. Mrs. A.\nHubner, Mrs. Alice Chesham and T.\nScott joined them Sunday.\nMiss Patricia Wishart of Edmonton, sister of, Mrs. H. A. Franklin,\nis in Rossland for a short visit.\nMrs. D. G. Chamberlain, Mrs. R.\nD. McAllister and Ann Chamberlain\nwere in Gray Creek for a short\nstay.\nMr. and Mrs. I. Hendrickson and\nchildren Larry and Nandine have\nleft for the Coast. En route they\nwill visit relatives in Seattle, Vancouver and Island points.\nJ. E. Gordon has returned to Tel-\nsequah on business.\nD. G. Chamberlain, principal of\nthe Rossland high school, is .leaving\non a trip to Vancouver and Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank P. Bentley\nwere in Rossland. They are now\nliving at Phoenix, Ariz., but were\nformer residents of Rossland.\nPeter Terzick of Indianapolis,\nInd., formerly of Rossland, visited\nthe city.\nR. Mundell of the MacLean teaching staff has left for his home in\nHaney and will attend Summer\nschool at Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Berg and son\nRaymond and Mrs. E. Finnas, aunt\nof Mr. Berg, were here visiting relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. William L. Haynes of\nSeattle, Wash., former residents of\nRossland, were Rossland visitors.\nMiss Joyce Davidson has left for\nVictoria to attend Summer school.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Posey and family, Mrs. M. Posey and Mrs. Hazel\nDavidson left for the. Coast Sunday.\nMiss Ruth Waldie, a teacher at\nMacLean school, left last week for\nher home in Trail and will continue\non to Victoria to attend Summer\nschool\nMr. and Mrs. Fred. White and\nchildren Judy and Clarke spent a\nAlarms Guide.\nHonoree to Gifts\nSLOCAN CITY, B. G, July 5-\nMiss Irene Budd, a recent bride-\nelect, never thought she would\nhave to go through what she did\nwhen she was invited to a shower\nin her honor at the home 'of Mrs.\nEd Clough.\nGifts were hidden through the\nhouse, and the guest of honor was\nguided to them by an arrangement\nof alarm clocks which rang at intervals. Court whist was played,\nMrs. Osis winning high score and\nMrs. Tracy Cooper, the consolation.\nMrs. Cooper was co-hostess.\nLONDON, July 5 (CP)\u2014The royal dressmaker, Norman Hartnell,\nvisited Clarence House today to discuss the clothes that Princess\nElizabeth will wear on her visit\nto Canada In October.\nBritain fashion writers promptly\ngossiped that the princess would .\nhave an \"entirely new\" wardrobe\nfor the visit. Official sources at\nClarence House confined themselves to saying that naturally the\nprincess would require some new\nclothes.\nLondon's three main evening\nnewspapers all made the forthcoming royal tour a leading item in\ntheir gossip columns, a regular\nfeature in. most British papers.\nThe Evening News forecast that\nthe princess's styles would set the\nAutumn and Winter fashion for\nsmartly-dressed women in Canada.\nThe Star noted' that the royal\nvisitors would have to be prepared\nfor rain (on the West Coast), cold\n(on the East Coast) and plenty of\nsnow if they visited the Rocky\nMountains,\nSo the princess's choice,\" the\nStar said, \"is bound to be tweeds,\nwoollen dresses and small hats.\"\nThe Evening News, on the other\nhand, recalled that Canada, often is\nfavored with Indian Summers, particularly in Southern Alberta, and\nthus .the princess \"may have a\nchance to wear the lightweight\ncoats which suit her so well.\"\nBROWN, GREEN OR GREY\nAs for color, fashion experts take\nthe view that Princess Elizabeth\nwill prove to be partial to brown,\ngreen and grey, shades to which\nHartnell is giving a big play this\nyear. When Queen Elizabeth toured\nCanada in 1939, however, she wore\npinks and sky blues.\nWhatever the princess decjdes-to\nwear, strict precautions probably\nwill be taken to keep the designs\nfrom becoming known too soon.\nThis procedure was followed before the 1939 tour.\nAlthough arrangements for the\ntrip still are far from settled, it is\nexpected that at least one of Elizabeth's four ladies-in-waiting will\naccompany the princess. The ladies-\nin-waiting are Lady Alice Egerton,\nLady Margaret Hay, Lady Palmer\nand Mrs. Andrew Elphinstone, wife\nof the queen's nephew.\"\nRobson W. I. Plans\nStrawberry, Festival\nROBSON, B.C., July 5 \u2014 Plans\nfor a strawberry festival were\nmade by Robson Women's Institute\nat its meeting at the home of Mrs.\nS. Humphries. Committees were\nnamed to arrange the event.\nMembers were asked to bring\ndiscarded woolens for conversion\ninto two blankets to be added to\nan emergency box. Roll call was\nanswered with a donation of dried\nfruit to be sent to England.\nNatal Group Meets\nNATAL, B.C., July 5 \u2014 Ladies'\nPleasant Hour, active group of the\nUnited Church at Natal, met at\nthe home of Mrs. Doug Lowe.\nfew days in Spoken over the holiday\nweekend...\nMr. and Mrs. F. M. MacKenzie\nand his brother Wilbur have left\nfor Penticton. Mrs. Nellie Ratcliffe,\nwhose home is in Vancouver, accompanied them as far as Penticton.\nMr. and Mrs. P. G. Palmer had as\ntheir guest for a few days the latter's mother, Mrs. George Johnson\nof Kaslo.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Hatfield of Penticton spent the weekend in the\ncity accompanied by their grandson,\nMichael. Michael is the son of Mr\nand Mrs. Paddy Topliff of Vancou^\nver, former residents of Rossland.\nR. Castle of the High School staff\nhas left for his home in Vancouver.\nPupils Guests\nOf Lister W. I.\nLISTER, B.C., July 5 \u2014 Lister-\nHuscroft Women's Institute treated\nschool pupils here to ice cream\nduring end-of-the-term activities.\nLOVELY HATS\nin\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nCOAL\n%i TOW\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\nProcter Notes\nCapt. and Mrs. M. MacKinnon\nhave as guests their daughter. Mrs.\nO. G'frnerer and family oi Bal-\ncarres, sask.\n\"Now I Enjoy the Bran\nI Nee~d-7bs\/s\"\n\"At last I Keep-fit bran truly\nGOOD TO EAT! Post's Bran\nFlakes help to keep me regular\nby providing bulk in the diet.\nThaf s fine! But also, Post's Bran\nFlakes flavor makes health-eating, pleasure-eating, too.\"\nProvides Important Roughage\nPost's Bran Flakes aid gentle, natural laxative action. Made with other\nparts of wheat, you also get wholesome\nwheat nourishment.\nEnjoy Post's Bran Flakes tomorrow\nas your breakfast cereal. And try this\nmouth-watering recipe. But, insist on\nPost's \u2014The Better Bran Flakes.\nTa\u00abyi Thrift,!        \t\n\u00b0ATE* BRAN MUFRNS\n* wpsnifk\n'   Of Po**! BrssnfWM\n\u00bb <*f> firwly c, rfohtt*\n\"ipsrhtHllour\n354 *\u00ab*\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb W** ps^h,\nA Product of\n\u25a0SerwraJ Foods\n^s\/5 BRAN FLAKES\n.,, With Other Parts of Wheat\n\"  teaspoon self\n?   h,f,,\u00abP\u00b0\u00b0nsjuBor '\n'   \u202280, woll boots,,\n\"\u25a0otWshortssnino\n|JW &&\u00a3?,\u00a3* 't\u00ab \"8nd \u00ab minuter\nflour once| me \u00b0\"\u00a3\u00b0*\u00b0*\"\"< mixture. Sift\n*\u00bb\" \u00bbugar, and sift again Ad*    S powder' \"\"It.\nwan mixtur. \u201e\u201e., _?ain- A.dd <>\u00ab and h\u201e\u00bb\u201e...\n\u00a3*\u00bb mixture a\u201ed \"^Z\u00a3,aa.e<X \u00bb*>d butter to\n\"\u2022lyenough to dampen allIH       I flour' bating\n\"Jet. Makes 10 mumn% V      F-* 25 \u00ab\u00b0 30 min-\n*B\u00bb'.P'vnMorrq|,,\u201e,\n\"\"\u2022r reploco \u201e\u2022\u201e,\u201e\n Established April 22, 1902\nBrilish Columbia\"a\nMost Interesting Newspaper '\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost  Office Department,  Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nFriday, July 6, 1951\nParliament Keeps Tab\nOn Continent\nThere are people who sometimes\nask: \"Apart from voting money, what\ndoes Parliament do?\"'\nOne good answer came last week,\nsays the Ottawa Journal.\nWithout Parliament, without the\nvigilance there of an Opposition, the\ncountry might never have known that\n, at a time when Canadian troops are\nfighting Chinese Communists in Korea\nships of Canadian registry and under\nthe Canadian flag are being sailed by\nChinese officers and crews into Chi-\n|* nese Communist ports, and that such\nships are at least in a position to take\nstrategic war supplies to Red Chinese\narmies.\n'.\" (Prime Minister St. Laurent admits\nthat, apart altogether from the black-\nJ, listed port of Macao, such ships have\ncarried from Hong Kong to Bed China\nlimited supplies of scrap iron and rubber tires.)\nWithout Parliament, without the\n[vigilance there of an Opposition, the\n\\ Journal stresses, the country might\nnever have known that the Cabinet, by\na secret \"verbal directive\", gave the\nChinese company which operates these\nships of Canadian registry and with\nthe Canadian flag an exemption from\nusing Canadian officers and crews and'\npermitted them to use Chinese officers\nand crews.\nThese are things the Canadian\npeople had a right to know, and about\nwhich now, when the facts have been\ndisclosed, they are in a position to pronounce judgment.\nThus the vindication of Parliament\n\u2014not merely a forum for debate but a\nplace where the executive can be questioned and compelled to answer, where\nit must submit its acts to light and\naudit.\nIt is, as the Journal says, the difference between democracy and despotism.\nV        More Inflation\nVirtual disappearance of the world's\ndollar shortage is reported in the annual survey of the United Nations Economic Commission. But since this result has been reached because the\nUnited States has been paying progressively higher prices throughout the\nworld for essential materials, the Commission says that further inflation -is\nnow inevitable \"even if raw material\nprices do not rise above their current\nlevels.\" Repercussions of this stockpiling drive have created \"new economic\nmaladjustments and tensions no less\nSerious than those which were being\novercome.\" In the same vein, the survey predicts continuation of \"open inflation\" in Asia, Africa and Latin\nAmerica.\n\u25a0\u25a0 It is against such a background,\n.points out the Toronto Globe and Mail,\nthat Washington announces the removal of price controls \"from tanks, planes\nPoll Tax\nOld Fashioned :,*\nThe poll tax Is on its way out in the Southern States, Whatever justification there ever\nwas lor requiring payment to maintain a person's voting privilege has long since, disappeared. No one has been more aware of this\nfact than Southerners, despite their vigorous\nefforts to defeat Federal legislation that would\nforce them to drop it from their State laws.\nAmericans who have been born and\nbrought up in our Southern States have an\nunderstandable aversion to being pushed\naround, a good American trait that is shared\u2014\non other subjects\u2014by citizens who live further\nNorth. They just don't like to be told by tha\nFederal Government how to run their own\nStates.\nThe poll tax has been passing from the\nscene gradually for a great many years. Only\nseven States still had it when South Carolina\nrecently decided that it was time to drop lt.\nWith Governor Thurmond leading a repeal\nmovement, voters of the Palmetto State voted\n4 to 1 to abolish the 85-year-old Constitutional\nprovision.\nA similar proposal already has passed one\nHouse of the Virginia Legislature.\u2014Spokane\nSpokesman-Review.\nWhat's Wronfc With\nDomi\n?\nmion\nThe word \"Dominion\" is now to disappear\nfrom the Dominion Elections Act, which will\nhenceforth be known as the Canada Election\nAct. Under the aegis of the Federal Government* this process has been going on ln many\nphases. Pretty soon this glorious word, so long\nassociated with Canadian history, will vanish\nand be forgotten, just because a few misguided\npurists think it bears connotations of colonialism. How wrong they are, and how descriptive a word lt was for this nation from sea\nto sea.\u2014St. Catharines Standard.\nRobert's Rules\nA little aged widow gave a book to the\nLibrary of Congress; it was a first edition of\n\"Robert's Rules of Order\", written by her\nhusband, Henry M. Robert. The occasion was\nthe 75th anniversary of its publication.\nA strange book is this! Containing no love\nInterest, depicting no murders, preaching no\ninspiring message, it is an all-time best seller\nnevertheless. It would be difficult to find It\nfor sale on any newsstand or in bookstores,\nbecause there never is any sizable demand for\nit. The record of 1,500,000 copies published has '\nbeen attained by a steady call for copies from\nevery part of tlie United States, in fact from\nall over the world.\nFew books have proved Important to more\npeople and to more diverse types of people.\nThe Bible and some other religious books, of\ncourse, have been known to more persons; so,\ntoo, has Fanny Farmer's remarkable cook\nbook, and perhaps a few others. But \"Robert's\" :\ncertainly ranks among the 10 non-fiction best\nsellers'of all time.\n, An indication of Its value to our civilization is that it is quoted or paraphrased, its\ncontents invoked and its name used ln vain, by\nfaT more people than ever have seen one of\nthe brick-red bindings.\nWe. have it today, along with some less\npopular imitations, because a South Carolina\narmy officer once decided there was need for\nsuch a book. Called upon to preside at meetings, he found no printed guidance available\nexcept for legislative bodies. He realized that\nthere should be a volume providing rules that\nanybody could follow in conducting any kind\nof meeting anywhere, that they should be concise, pVactlcal and subject'to yearly Improvement and revision.\nHe was so sure of his Idea that he paid for\ntlie first printings himself when he found no\npublisher willing -to agree.\nMay Mr. Robert, later a General, rest forever ln peace. There is no estimating the extent\nof tha contention and disorder he has avoided\nin countless gatherings through the years. If\nnothing else dl dso, this book must have earned\nhim eternal bliss.\u2014Tlie Spokesman-Review.\nand other strictly military Items.\"\nThese things had originally been included in the general price freeze. Tlie\ncomplete removal of controls means\nthat all war production in the United\nStates returns, in effect, to a free-cost-\nplus basis. With the world's 15 essential\ncommodities in generally short supply\nand stockpiling still progressing, and\nwith a rising price trend at home unchecked, the control-free defence economy will dictate further price rises for\ncivilian items.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persona\nasking questions will  not ba published.\nThere   lo   no   oharga   for   thin   oorvlco.\nQuestion!  WILL   NOT   BE   ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except' where there lo obvloui\nnecessity for privacy-\nMrs. S., Nelson\u2014On what date did a railway\naccident occur in the State of Washington,\nyear 1910? Believe 80 were killed; would\nlike the day and month. Also, on what\ndate should women's entries be ln for the\nNational Pacific Exhibition, Vancouver?\nWe believe the railroad wreck you want\nInformation on was the one which occurred\nMarch 1, 1910, on the Great Northern Cascade\nLine. Early that morning a snowbound passenger train at the WeBt portal of the Cascade\ntunnel was struck by a massive snow slide.\nDurham's History of Spokane and the Inland\nEmpire states that more than 100 lives were\nlost. The Chicago Dally News Almanac (1911)\nsays that only a score or more were killed, but\nmany more injured. Entries for the P.N.E.,\nother than home-baking, should be in from\nAug. 13 to 14, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Home-\nbaking exhibits, Sept. 4, up to 11 a.m.\nA. M., Kimberley\u2014What is pewter, and what\nIs it used for?\nPewter is made by mixing tin and lead and\ncertain other metals, such as zinc, blsmouth,\nantimony and copper. It is used in making\nvarious containers, and articles made of pewter\nwere highly prized by North American colonists.\nPress Comment\nBACHELORS\nOne definition of a bachelor: A man who\ncan put on his socks at either end.\u2014Stratford\nBeacon-Herald.\nAlmost debt-free Is the Province of Alberta, boasts the Edmonton Journal, which\nestimates that \"Provincial reserves must be\ncoming close to equalling the total debt\" which\nis now less than $100 millions.'\nPARKING DOUBLE\nWindsor Council has amended its bylaw\nto more clearly define double parking. We\nunderstand it doesn't apply as yet to parking\ndouble in Lovers' Lanesl\u2014Windsor Daily Star,\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of July 6, 1941\nMr. and Mrs. W. W. Ferguson, Carbonate\nStreet, had as their weekend guest, their son\nWarren, who is employed at Ross Spur.\nCarl Locatelli was named coach of the\nNelson girls softball rep. team, which Is preparing to defend the Province Trophy and\nthe West Kootenay championship.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of July 6, 1926\nMargery Pendry was* elected leader of the\nC.G.I.T. in New Denver Saturday evening at\ntheir regular meeting.\nJimmie Cottrell of Spokane won the referee's decision over Scotty Inkster of Vancouver and Revelstoke ln the main event of\nthe mining convention boxing card last night.\nMrs. W, R. Thomson, Front Street, entertained recently for Miss M. Bagnall of Auckland, New Zealand.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of July 6, 1911\nYesterday, W. H. Pearson, Jr., of. Toronto,\nW. F. Roberts and C. D. Blackwood, brought\nin between them, 25 to 30 fine Rainbow trout\nfrom the big pool at South Slocan.\nMrs. B. Balding was appointed Noble\nGrand and Mrs. M. Treves Vice Grand, when\nQueen City Rebekah Lodge held their installation Tuesday night.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Seaman left last night\nfor a six-week visit to the Coast.\nIt's Been Said\nIt's far easier to show another man his\nproper place ln the world than lt ls to find\nyour own.\u2014Anonymous.\nYour Horoscope\nKeep everything under control, and splendid work, long-term ventures and profitable\nmeetings are in order, so you should step out\nand take your place in the world with utmost\nconfidence. Self-confidence, enterprise and\nambition will probably mark tlie child born\ntoday,\nThey'll Do it Every Time\nFrom an\nOldtimer* s\nNotebook\n~ by R.G.JOY If\"\nHISTORIAN, NELSON AND\nDISTRICT  OLTIMERS   ASSN.\n(Editor's note: This is the fifth\nand concluding Installment pf a\nsketch on early days in Nelson,\npresumably by Nelson pioneer\nTom Collins.)   ,\n' \"William Baillle-Grohman brought\nln the first steamboat which ran on\nKootenay Lake. It was known as\nthe Midge, and was a small screw\nsteamer, She was brought ln In 1884\nIn connection with the reclamation\nwork along Kootenay River, and\neventually fell into the hands pf\nT. D. Davis, after which it was generally known as the 'Mud Hen'.\nDavis was a Welshman who was\nbrought out by Colonel Baker to\nsuperintend an experimental farm\nwhich'he was to induce the Government to locate at Cranbrook. This\nfarm was never started, but Davis\nworked for Colonel Baker for some\nmonths. He afterward fell in wllh\nBaillle-Grohman and came down to\nKootenay River as a prospective\nsettler upon the land which the\ncompany was to reclaim, it being a\ncondition that the reclamation company should not only reclaim but\nBettle these lands before securing\ntitle.\n\"The next steamer to make its\nappearance was the Surprise, which\nwas put into service some time ln\n1885-88 by the Hendryx Company,\noperating the Blue Bell mine. Its\nchief business was the moving of\nsupplies to the steamer Idaho in\nthe Spring of 1888. Following this\ncame the steamer Idaho. This craft\nwas brought over from the Coeur\nd'Alene Lake by Dick Fry and Captain Thompson, having been purchased from Captain Ainsley and\nNelson Martin. 'Hi' Sweet was the\nfirst engineer upon the Idaho. Three\nmonths after the Idaho came thej\nGalena, also owned by the Hendryx\nCompany. This was the first boat\nrun by Captain Hayward on Koote- J\nnay Lake. i\n\"Its first trip from Nelson to the\nBlue Bell mine was a memorable\none. Dr, Hendryx had loaded the'\nboat up with a number of friends,!\nwho In return for his hospitality|\nwere   expected   to   admire   thej\nsteaming qualities of the Galena.\nThe steamer started  back  from\nNelson and reached the Narrows\nabout  15  miles  from  the  town.\nHere It was\" found trwt the boat's\noutlines were not powerful enough\nto get through, and a layover followed until the Idaho came and\ntowed the  Galena through, another day being oocupled In reaching the Blue Bell mine.\n\"After this it was found necessary\nto   cut   the   Galena   ln   two   and\nlengthen her. The Galena continued\nto be the principal boat on the lake\nuntil June, 1881, when the Nelson\nwas launched. It continued running\nregularly until the Fall of 1892.\n\"The building of the smelter at\nPilot Bay wbb not primarily a part\nof the scheme for the development\nof the Blue Bell mine. Before the\nerection of the Pilot Bay smelter\nwas decided upon, A. B, Hendryx\nand Franklin Farrel had a sort of\nTAKING IN all the sights In hor\nEuropean tour, Margaret Truman,\ndaughter of the U, (3. President, Is\nseen as she visited the famous\nEiffel Tower In Paris:, a must for\nevery visitor to the French capital\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nViews From the News Fronts\n\u2022m-stwtl V. i MM Ots\u00bb\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nHis dqj. is nice ahd UJourreREO\nHOW, BUT WE'S\/GOT OTHER. WORRIES-\nHE JUST HEARD FRQH THE W PEPY-.\n0\/TI DIP PAY\nMy K}48 TAX-\nI'M SURE OF rr~\nI MUST HAVE'\nACBXatiG TO VOU**.\nRETURN YWmO\nIT By IMSX4LU1BMT5-\n50 AIL YOjt-L HAVE\nID DO IS SHOW US*\nX3UR GAMCELEP\nCHECKS'\nToday's Bible Thought\nWe need all three every day. We\nmust never take hope from humanity, and certainly we must not lose\nfaith In eternal goodness, and we\nheed charity from others at well as\nhope for ourselves.\u2014Now abldeth\nfaith, hope and charity, these three.\n\u20141 Cor. 13:13.\nOumL dtsL\nI flon't begrudge their costly new\nhouse. It seems wrong to give people\nthat much money without givin'\n'em a little good taste.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLA88IFIED\nan option on the Silver King group.\nThey examined the property and\nmade the owners an offer, but It\nwas rejected. It was not until after\nthis offer was rejected that Pilot\nBay was selected as a site for smelting operations.\nA REAL ESTATE\nSMELTER\n\"The  location  of the smelter at\nPilot Bay was nothing more or less\nthan a real estate speculation by\nGedfge Kane, now of Kaslo, as a\nsite for a sawmill for the Davies\nSayward   Company.   It   was   first\nRnown as Pirate's Bay. Tlie following  Spring  'Josh'  Davies  and  Dr.\nHendryx got up the Pilot Bay town-\nsite scheme and work was started\nupon construction of the smelter.\n\"Although Dr. Hendryx did not\nmeet with success In hla operation\nIn Kootenay, he Is kindly remembered   by  all  the  oldtimers,   He\nwaa the most accommodating man\nwho ever cast In hla lot with the\ndistrict. Hla company did much to\nkeep the country moving for the\nfirst two or throe years after Ha\ndiscovery. They were In fact the\nonly men In the country Who had\nany money, Much was Bpent In\nthe development of the Blue Bell\nand In the operating of the small\nsteamers.  Theae   latter   were   of\ngreat service to the men moving\nabout the  lake, and there never\nwasa man too poor to ride on the\nHendryx boats.\"\nSproat's Landing was never a\nrival of Nelson's. It never amounted\nto anything more than a construction enmp during the building of the\nColumbia & Kootenay Railway. In\naddition to the railway company's\nstore, the only merchants were R,\nE. Lemon and Sam Green, later of\nKaslo. John A. Gibson, ran a hotel\nBy BILL B08S\nCanadian'Press Staff Writer\nWITH THE CANADIANS IN KOREA, July 5 (CP) \u2014 Picture of a\nwar: \u2022 ;,';':\n1. The troops of one side, solidly\ndug in along one series of mountain-\ntops.\n2. Troops of the other side, equally\nsolidly dug in along another series\nof mountain-tops\u201415, miles North.\n3. A 15-mile-wlde \"buffer area\"\nIn between \u2014 anybody's area if 'he\ncares to take the risk of being\nshot at.\n4. \"Patrols\" In broad daylight,\nbristling , composite groups embracing Infantry, artillery and armor parading forward ln full view\nof the enemy, deploying to \"check\"\nobjectives he can see clearly, and\nperhaps occupies'.\n5. \"Rotation\" with the enemy of\ncontrol of the \"buffer.\" He pulls\ndown into it as the \"patrols\" withdraw for the night, and in turn\nwithdraws as they return in the\nmorning. \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\nWhat a war,\nYet it goes on'dally over the\nNorth of what may be described\nonly as \"the Chorwon area.\"-\nSeldom ln the course of military\nhistory have patrols ln a theatre\nof war gone out for 14- and 15-\nmile distances, taken up positions\nthat far forward of the forward defence lines, and then withdrawn\nback into them after a given time.\nYet here It's become so routine as\nto be boring.\nToday the Korean campaign\namounls to \"training with hazard,\"\nin the Canadians' area at least.\nA material advantage of the present phase is that it enables tha\nCanadian 25th Infantry Brigade-\nnow functioning together for tho\nfirst time, to test itself as a team.\nShots from a Chinese machine-\ngun are urgent reminders of lessons\nlearned earlier. Always they have\nartillery out with them, dropping\noff along the way to set up gun\npositions -ready to fire in closa\nsupport\nClosest engagement was a patrol\nby the Princess Patricias, a compact 10-man sortie, which exchanged grenades with the Chinese and\nleft six enemy dead at no cost to\nthe Canadians.\nOne patrol by the 2nd Battalion,\nRoyal 2nd Hegiment, saw a company under Capt. Charles Forbes\nof Mata.ne Sur Mer, Que., come\nunder enemy fire as it approached\none hill, clear It, then again coma\nunder fire as lt left lt to go onto\nthe next. Another day they might\nnot'bump a thing.    '\nAnd so It goes. Hard work, climbing hills in 110-degree temperatures\nwilh battle kit on.\nMain \"casualties\" have been tha\ntanks of the Lord Strathcona Horse,\nfour of which were knocked out\nrecently. But the tank men repaired!\nthem on the spot, right out in that\nbuffer r.o man's land, and drove\nthem In by nightfall.\nSoldiering in North Korea these\ndays is duller, harder than ever\nand apparently pointless into the\nbargain. At least\/that's the way tho\nman doing it^sees lt.\nthere and Mrs. Schroeder conducted\na restaurant. When the railway\nwork was finished, the residents of\nSproat's Landing moved to Nelson,\n'one after another. None of the\npeople doing business in Sproat's\nLanding purchased town lots, and\nsome of them moved off without\npaying the owner anything ln the\nway of rental for the ground covered by their places of business.\nSome settled afterwards, but those\nwho did not were sued. These Cases\nwere tried in Nelson, and judgment\nwas given in favor of Thomas\nSproat ln some of the cases. W. C.\nMcLean, who was one of the contractors upon the C. & K, Railway,\nbecame entitled to a place in history through being sued by the\nowner of Sproat's Landing for compensation for the use of the town-\nsite as a grazing land for his horses.\nW. F. Teetzel was never engaged in\nbusiness at Sproat's Landing, and\nGeorge A. Bigelow came to Nelson\ndirect from Manitoba.\nThe Miner, the first newspaper\nestablished in Nelson, was started\nby Messrs. Houston, Ink and Allan,\nthe plant being packed in by Joe\nWilson's pack train from Sproat's\nLanding. The Tribune was started\nby John Houston, C. V. Dake, W. J.\nMacKay. Mr. Ink having left Nelson\nafter the sale of The Miner, and\nThe Tribune was a growing concern\nbefore he returned or acquired any\ninterest in lt.\nThere are many theories for the\napplication of the name of Bogus-\ntown to the townsite first placed on\nthe market as \"Nelson City\". The\nname was\" first given it by E. R.\nAtherton, possibly as an inference\nto difficulties that accompanied efforts to secure its registration.\nLEMON  CAME  BY\nFLAT BOAT\nR. E. Lemon Is more of a pioneer\nthan many think. He made his first\nvisit to Nelson In May, 1888. \"Bob\"\nhad brought a big stock of groceries\ndown the Columbia River from Revelstoke on a flat boat. He made the\ntrip down to Sproat's Landing in\n14 days, leaving Revelstoke May 4 .\nand arriving at Sproat's on the 18th.\nAmong those who came down the\nriver in Lemon's flat boat were G.\nO. Buchanan. Harry Sheran, Thomas M. Ward, Bob Hall and Thomas\nDow.\nLemon had an idea that the town\nfor Southern Kootenay would be on\nIhe Columbia River, but before ho\nlocated he decided to take a run\nover and see Stanley, as Nelson was\nthen called. There waj, however, no\ntrail into Nelson from the Columbia\nRiver. Before Lemon could get his\ngoods into Nelson he had to build a\ntrail from Sproat's Toad Mountain\nirnil at Forty-Nine Creek to Eagle\nCreek, where he picked up the\nPoorman trail Into Nelson. During\nthe construction of the C. & K.\nRailway, Lemon carried on stores at\nSproat's Landing and at Nelson, but\nIn the Spring, following the completion of the road, he closed up hla.\nstore at Sproat's and gave his attention to the Nelson house,\nGeorge Bigelow was not a pioneer\nof Nelson, as he did not reach hers\nuntil May 2, 1890, but he made hla\nshare of history just the same.\nShortly afler his arrival in Nelson,\nBigelow was made a Justice of tha\nPeace, and it was upon' the Bench\nrather than behind the counter that\nhe attracted attention.\nf\nTHAT\nSUMMER\nVACATION\nEnjoy Your Holiday Completely\nHave Your Daily News Go With You\nIt's So Easy To Arrange!\nJust contact* your agent, postmaster, earner, or\ndrop a card or letter to our Circulation Department\nGO NORTH - EAST * SOUTH < WEST\nA HOLIDAY SUBSCRIPTION WILL \"KEEP YOU IN TOUCH\" WHILE AWAY\nRotci by Moll;   25c per week      $1.00 per month\nHflsmt latig fan\nPHONE 144\n mi\nSPORTS\nJIGGS MAURIELLO OF TRAIL\n\"TEXAS DAY\" AT THE GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS'. . .\nBurke Takes 3<Stroke Lead,\nWipes Out Course Record\nJiggs Mauriello, well known Trail\n[epeedboat owner, copped second\nI place in the Pacific Northwest Gold\nI Cup race at Deep Cove, near Van-\n| couver, Monday.\nCoast newspapers said Mauriello\nI almost overtook Jim Hutchinson of\nI Vancouver, whose Teaser II flashed\nf first across the finish line. The re-\n' port6 said that while the Trail\nf Racer's Mercury was a more power-\n' fill boat, the Teaser got a lead at\n| the start that Mauriello Just couldn't\n'quite overcome. Speeds up to 90\nmiles an hour were reached.\nWIDE INTEREST\nMauriello plans to race in Nelson's\nWater Show August 19 \"as well as\nracing at Kelowna and Seattle earlier ln the month.\nKiwanis Club race committee\nehairman, Dick Palmer, has been\nassured of a good entry of inboards\nfrom Vancouver Power Boat Racing\nAssociation and interest has also\nbeen expressed by American racers.\nVictoria has also been invited to\ntake part.\nAll outside racers will, be inboard\nboats, or hydroplanes, and there is\na possibility that Mauriello will\nhave another chance to race Hutchinson. L. F, Gilbert of Nelson, who\nlast year was unable to race\nMauriello when he was injured and\nhis boat damaged in an accident,\nhas had his sleek Ladybird burning\nup the West Arm waters this\nSummer.\nAnother change in this year's\nprogram will see a variety of water\nacts performed between races,\nnumber of which' are being reduced. Exhibition divers and water\nskiers from Kelowna and Coeur\nd'Alene and district points are being contacted.\nShutout Topples Sox\nFrom Top; Yanks Lead\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMIS3IS8AUGUA GOLF CLUB,\nToronto, July 5 (CP) \u2014 Jaok\nBurke, Jr., a cmitlouo little golfer from Houston, Texas, took\nover the lead today In the $16,-\n000 Canadian Open Golf Championship with a three-stroke margin at the half-way mark.\nCurly-haired Jaok fired hli\nsecond successive round of 66, six\nunder par over the rolling Mils-\nIssaugua course for a 36-hole total\nof 132,\nThat was more than enough to\nwipe out a course-record '65 shot\nWednesday by J|m Ferrier of 8an\nFranclsoo.\nThe Californlan-Australian took\na par 72 today and fell five strokes\noff the pace in a tie for third place.\nIt was a gala Texas day.\nSerious Fred Hawkins of El Paso,\na photogenic youngster, had a 36-\nhole score of 135, as the immediate\nrunner-up. Chuc,k Klein of San Antonio was only one, stroke away\nwith 136.\nJimmy Demaret, another Texan\nfrom El Paso by way of Ojai, Calif.,\nhorned into the show for a three-\nway tie for the next spot with 137.\nThat was the 36-hole score for\nFerrier who labored through a second-round misery ,of putting misfortunes.\nIn the same bracket of 137 came\nStan Leonard of Vancquver Marine\nDrive as low Canadian.\nLeonard's sensational string of\nsix birdies in the back nine today\ndisplaced Murray Tucker of London COnt.) Sunningdale as Canada's main threat to the parade of\nAmerican winners.\nTucker finished with a one\nunder-par 71 for a 139 -total. ,\nHe was tied with Nick Weslock\nfrom Windsor (Ont.) Essex, ,who\nmaintained his lead as low amateur. Nick shot a 69 today along\nwith his 70 Wednesday.\nFrom there on the field trained\nout hoping\" somehow to catch the\nhigh-riding Burke, who is making\nhis first appearance in the Canadian Open.\nCompared with Wednesday's\nthunderstorms and hot, muggy\nweather, today's play was under\ncloudy skies. A bright sun finally\nwiped out the chilly temperature.\nIt began to look as if this were\nTexas day in Canada when Fred\nHawkins, from El Paso, came\nthrough with a 69. With his first-\nround 66, liawkins hit the halfway mark of the 72-hole tournament with 135, three strokes away\nfrom Burke.\nLEONARD CONSISTENT\nStan Leonard of Vancouver, who\ncan always be counted on for ser-\nBy The Canadian Press\nChioago's hot and cold White Sox\ntoppled out of the American League\nlead Wednesday as they were shut\noat 8-0 by righthander Freddie Hutchinson of Detroit Tigers.\nMeanwhile New York Yankees\nbounced back into the lead Thursday night by crushing Washington\nSenators 8-3.\nThe combination of day-night action left the Yanks a half igame in\nfront of Chicago with the onrush-\ntng Boston Red Sox, 8-3 winners\nover Philadelphia, only two games\nof!f file pace. Cleveland, rained out\nof a night game at St. Louis, is only\n4^4 games out of first in\" the four-\nway jam.\nK marked the first time this\naeason the White Sox had. been\nblanked. Also, it was the first shutout by Hutchinson, who has won\n\u2022even and lost three.\nBig Don Newcombe boosted\nBrooklyn's National League lead to\nVh games over second-place New\nYork by downing tha Giants 8-4 for\nhis 12th victory. Gil Hodges' 27th\nhomer and Andy Pafko's 17th helped chase Larry Jansen in the sixth.\nNew York staged its only threat\nwith four in the eighth but the\nBrooks oame back with three.\nDay action in the American\nLeague was limited to one game.\nThe Nationals, however, had three\ndaylight affairs. St. Louis Cardinals\ntrounced the Cubs in Chicago 10-2,\nCincinnati shut out Pittsburgh 4-0\nand Boston won an 11-lnning, 6-5\ndecision over Philadelphia.\nThe Tigers nicked starter Lou\nKretlow for a run in the first inning.\nThey finished off their former teammate in the third with a seven-run\nblast. Detroit put together four hits\nand four walks with an error and\na passed ball for their rally. Johnny\nLipon's double was the big blow of\nthe inning.\nHutchinson yielded five hits and\nwalked only one batter. Only one\nChicago runner reached third.\nHoward Fox limited the Pirates,\nminus Ralph Kiner, to seven hits as\nw Lloyd Mcrriman and Dixie Howell\nhomered off loser Howie Pollet to\naccount for three of Cincinnati's\nruns. Kiner was sitting out the first\nof his three-game suspension meted\nout lo him for \"pushing\" an umpire\nTuesday.\nBRAVES WIN\nSid Gordon's bases-loaded single\nin the 11th gave lhe Braves their\nwin over the Phils. The Braves,\nhowever, lost the services of pitch\ners Vern Bickford and Johnny Sain\nfor an indefinite period.\nBickford, who started, had to retire after the fourth inning with a\npulled muscle in his right shoulder,\nSain injured his pitching hand by\ndeflecting a grounder by Granny\nHamner and was replaced In .the\nninth.\nThe Cardinals teed off on three\nCub hurlers for 14 hits including\nthree each by Red Schoendienst and\nWally Westlake. Hal Rice batted in\nthree tallies with a single and a\ndouble. In the meantime, Cliff\nChambers breezed to his fifth\ntriumph with a snappy five-hitter.\nThe scheduled night game be\ntween Cleveland and St. Louis was\npostponed because of rain .\nSENIOR BALL\nTEAM WORKS\nOUT FOR VISIT\nSeeking) their _third win over\nFruitvale^ JNelson senior ball team\ntravels to Fruitvale Sunday for a\nWest'Kootenay League game.\nThe PeerIess-9 team has a practice\nscheduled for Friday evening at the\nCivic Recreation grounds in prepar-\nation for the game.\nThe locals have made a good\nshowing this season, copping the\n$500 second prize at the Dominion\nDay tournament at Kimberley and\nalso winning the May 24 tourney at\nFruitvale. They have yet to lose a\ngame in league play.\nBRITISH CRICKET\nLONDON, July 5 (Reuters) \u2014\nEnglish first-class cricket results\ntoday.\nMCC 262 and 146 for three declared. Oxford University 1\u00a36 for\nnine declared and, 133 for [four.\nMatch drawn. I\nCambridge University; 335 for\nseven declared and 143 for three\ndeclared. Army 247 arid 135 for\nfour. Match drawn.\nSomerset 113 and 50. Warwickshire 278. Warwickshire won by\ninnings and 115 runs.\nDerbyshire 276 for six declared.\nMiddlesex 57 for one wicket. .\nEssex 276 for six declared. Middlesex 57 for one wicket.\nEssex 199 and 241 for three,\nEssex 226*.\nGlamorgan 402. Kent 337.\nWorcestershire' 199 and 151 for\nthree. Leicestershire 176.\nYorkshire 286. Hampshire 132 and\n131. Yorkshire won by an innings\nand 23 runs.\nHarwoods Rye\nIhis advertisement is not publishes, ot displayed oy Ihe Liquor Control\nBwrd or by the Government 4 British Columbia.\nMrs. J. DeGirolamo Will Defend\nWomen's Title at Midsummer 'Spiel\nThe women are going to get a\nlook-in again this, year at Nelson's\nMidsummer Bonspiel opening Monday.\nLast year a women's curling event\nwas introduced, and was a marked\nsuccess with wives of visiting curlers who were at a \"loose end\" during the week. Twelve rinks are\nentered, one from Saskatchewan,\nsix from Alberta and five from\nBritish Columbia. Skips are;\nMiss  Clara B. Paul,  Saskatoon,\nSask.; Mrs. Stan Bernard, Conrich,\nMrs. J. Leslie, Mossleigh, Mrs. G.\nH. Thompson, Devon, Mrs. M, Bap-\ntie, Cochrane, Mrs. J. C. Newsham,\nRocky Mountain House, and Mrs,\nT. <?, Brown, Gleichen,'Alta,; Mrs,\nE. Jonner, Vernon, Mrs. F. A. Johnson, Sheep Creek, and Mrs, Joseph\nDeGirolamo and Mrs.'W. J. Hipperson, Nelson.'\nMrs: DeGirolamo won the women's championship last year, and\nMrs. E. O. Parry of Morrin, Alta.,\nwas skip of the runner-up rink.\nRound Robin Draw Out for Summer\n'Spfel; Wedding Date for Visitors\nNelson Midsummer Bonspiel\ndraw will be modelled along last\nyear's lines after all. The committee meeting at the Civic Centre\nWednesday night decided to abandon plans for a round robin draw\nbecause the ice available was insufficient.\nFour prizes will be offered for\neach competition and two for the\nwomen's competition.\nThe curling and arena ice will be\nused Wednesday and Thursday this\nyear. Last year the two rinks were\nused on the first two days, but\ncurlers found the heavy, schedule\nof 10 games aday too strenuous in\nopening rounds.\nWedding of Keith Fawcett, Wartime, Sask., entry, is to be held\nhere during the week and it was\ndecided to have curlers form an\narch of brooms and to have the\nbride and groom, piped from Trln\nious consideration in Canada's own\nbig golf show, didn't let his adherents down. . !\nThe pro from Marine Drive on\nthe West coast took a wobbly 37,\none over par, on his first nine today but then ran down six birdies\nin a row and finished in par.\nIt was the greatest exhibition\nof   consistent   sub-par   golf   the\ntournament has seen  up to the\nhalf-way mark. Leonard's 30 on\nthe back nine eclipsed any previous scores In the home stretch,\nHit 67 today and a first-round\ntwo-under-par 70 yesterday  left\nhim with 137.\nLeonard's great show of power,\nand    putting    displaced    Murray\nTucker of London (Ont.) Sunningdale as the leading Canadian.\nTucker, working on a first-round\n68, faltered after a three-under-\npar start in five holes. He finished\nthe day with a 71 and a 36-hole\ntotal of 139.\nBurke, who has travelled the\npro circuit since 1946, was never\nworse than par,\nHe figured that his putting was\nhis best game but his drives were\n\"pretty good.\" Approach shots, supposed to be his weakness, didn't\nbother him despite the high 8nd\ngusty wind,\nHawkins had three birdies and\nwent one over par once on the\nopening nine.\nWINDERMERE\nREVIVES REGATTA\nINVERMERE, B.C., July 4\nFirst regatta to be held on Lake\nWindermere for a number of years\nwas slagen by the Lake Windermere\nValley Sports Club, below the David\nThompson Memorial Fort at Invermere.\nCold weather in June prevented\nthe lake from warming to its usual\npleasant Summer temperature\nwhich deterred a number of would-\nbe participants in the water sports.\nA motor boat race was one of the\nevents enjoyed by the large crowd,\nA sporls day at Athalmer included\nhorse racing and childrens' races\nwith ice cream cones for the winners. A midway was run by members of the local branch of the Canadian Legion.\nCapilai-fos Expect\nRecord Attendance\nVANCOUVER, B.C., July 5 (CP)\n\u2014Bob Brown, general manager of\nVancouver Capilanos, said today his\nWestern International League club\nwill probably set an attendance\nrecord here this season.\nBrown said that if present gates\ncontinue, the Caps should draw\n170,000. Current high for Vancouver\nis 146.000 set in 1949.\nBALL SCORES\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nToronto 5, Springfield 6.\nBaltimore 1, Buffalo 10.\nPCL\nHollywood 4, Sacramento 3.\nPortland  10. Los Angeles  12.\nSan Francisco % San Diego 1.\nIty United Church after the ceremony,,\nThe Bonspiel will open at 7 a.m.\nMonday morning, and it ls expected Mayor rf. C. Stibbs will officiate and that pipers of Kootenay\nKiltie Pipe Band will be on hand.\nOfficial opening by the Mayor\nwill take place at 9:30 at the opening .of  the   Midsummer   Bonspiel\nBall Monday night.\nOffer of Nelson Powerboat Association to stage a racing show\nwas accepted.. This will be held\nTuesday evening. If it is rained out,\nit will be held Wednesday evening.\nPossibility that Bonspiel news\nwill be broadcast by Doug Smith,\nToronto commentator for the Dominion network of the Canadian\nBroadcasting Corporation, was reported., The broadcast would be\nSunday night. Doug Smith ls a\nformer Trail sports announcer.\nTwo Nelsoniles\nTo Cruise Along\nKootenay River\nA week's jaunt on Kootenay River\nwith an attempt to get as far as\nLibby Montana, begins Friday for\ntwo Nelsonites.\nW. P. Kapak and W. A. Duckworth will set out in a 22-foot\nlaunch owned by Mr. Kapak for as\nlong a cruise as possible,\nKiwanis Club not overlooking\nany bets for spreading the fame of\nNelson's Water Show to be staked\nby the club at Lakeside Park in\nAugust, saw to It that the two\ntravellers' wore yacht caps advertising the event. The caps are being\nworn by all Kiwanis members. Mr.\nKapak and Mr, Duckworth plan to\nkeep an eye open for possible\nspeedboat entries in Bonners Ferry,\nIdaho?\nGuest Nemesis\nIn Henley Semis\nHENLEY, England, July 5 (CP)\u2014\nEbbe Larsen of Denmark, conqueror\nof Toronto's- Jack Guest yesterday,\nreached the semi-finals of the Diamond Sculls today by defeating\nJohn Gaze of Britain.\nHe will meet another Briton tomorrow\u2014Ronnie Lutz who today\nbeat Hassain El Alfy of Egypt.   .\nThe other, semi-final will be between the Cambridge Uriiversity\nsculler, Tony Fox\u2014who eliminated\nthe Belgian veteran Willi Collet\u2014\nand Demoulin of Belgium who upset the Dutch champion, Tom Neu-\nmeir, by one-half length.\nThe University of Pennsylvania\nlightweight oarsmen today swept to\ntheir second straight victory in their\nbid for the Thames challenge cup\nin- the Henley regatta.\nThe 150-pound crew won by 1%\nlengths over the Peterhouse College\neight of Cambridge University.\nPenn was timed in 7:15 for the mile\nand 550 yards. \" ,\nJocko, Henderson\nLead Fish Derby\nNATAL, B.C., July 5 \u2014 The\nlatest leaders in the annual Natal-\nMichel Rod and Gun Club fish\nderby released by secretary Herbie\nTravis Jr. of Natal is as follows:\nKamloops \u2014 Veteran fisherman\nSteve Jocko of Natal is the present\nleader in this species of fish with a\nweight of 8 pounds and 12 ounces\nfollowed by Buddy Henderson and\nWilliam Stevenson of Michel with\nweights of 7 pounds and 6 pounds\nand 10 ounces respectively.\nIn the Grave Lake Special,\nyouthful Buddy Henderson of\nMichel leads the membership with\na weight of 7 pounds. To date no\nentries have been received by the\nRod and Gun Club for species such\nas Eastern Brook, Cutthroat, Bull\ntrout dr the whitefish, better knowh\nas the grayling. This annual fish\nderby sponsored by the Natal-\nMichel Rod and Gun Club is for\nmembers only during the fishing\nseason.\nJapan Seeks 1960\nOlympic Games\nTOKYO, July 5 (Reuters) \u2014\nJapan is planning to make an application to stage the 1960 Olympic\nGames.\nThe Amateur Athletic Federation\nof Japan stated today that a formal\napplication would be made to the\nInternational Olympic Committee\nafter the question of facilities had\nbeen discussed with the Tokyo\nmunicipality.\nCooke Buys Leafs\nTORONTO, July 5 (CP) \u2014 Jack\nKent. Cooke, 38-year-old publisher\nand radio station owner Who \"has\nalways been a fan,\" today purchased\na controlling interest in the fifth\nplace Toronto Maple Leafs of the\nInternational Baseball League.\nHe promised a \"new deal\" for\nthe city's long-suffering Leaf supporters.\nCopke said the price is not for\npublication, but it was \"plenty.\"\nVICTORIA, B.C., July S (CP) \u2014\nEric Dowell of Victoria yesterday\nwas named winner of the total\npoints ' competition for lightning\nclass boats in the Pacific International Yachting Association's regatta.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n2-Hour Fight Lands\n127\/2-Pound\nSturgeon\nHATSIC, B.C., July 5 (CP)\u2014\nNow here's a fish!\n, Fisherman Buddy Alterback\ntoday landed a seven-foot, 127\n1\/2-pound sturgeon, believed the\nlargest taken from the Fraser\nRiver this season,\nHe  landed  the fish  after a\ntwo-hour fight.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBill Veeck Takes\nOver Browns\nFaulkner Takes\n2-Sfroke Lead\nBy GLENN WILLIAMS\nPORTRUSH, Northern Ireland,\nJuly 5 (AP)\u2014Max Faulkner, a debonair, British Ryder Cup player with\na red-hot putter, beat the chill,\ndrizzling rain home today to carve\nout a two-stroke lead in the British\nOpen golf championship after 36\nholes.\nOut early before the drizzle commenced soaking the Royal Portrush\ncourse's rolling dunes, Faulkner\ncapitalized on his putting to post a\ntwo-under-par 70 for a two-round\ntotal of 141.\nOnly one other player, Norman\nSutton, of England, was ahead of\npar after the first two rounds. The\nlittle former professional soccer\nplayer also got a 70, giving him 143\nfor second place.\nBobby Locke, the South African\nseeking his third straight British\nOpen title, -bagged a 74 for a 145\ntotal.\nFrank Stranahan, the Toledo,\nOhio, golfer who won the British\namateur crown in 1950, and Chuck\nRotor, a Canton, Ohio, pro before\nheading for Germany and duty with\nthe United States Army, were\namong 46 players who qualified for\nthe final 36 holes tomorrow.\nPlaying In the drizzle, Stranahan\ngot his second straight 75 for a 150\ntotal, Rotor had 152 with two 76s.\nThe two first round leaders, Jimmy Adams, the big Scotch pro, and\nAustralia's Norm Von Nida, both\nblew wide open and got 77s. Each\nhad 68 to lead the field the first\nday by two strokes, and today's\neffort left them four strokes off\nFaulkner's pace.\nIn third place were Fred Daly,\nthe curly-haired Irishman who won\nthe British Open in 1947, and Harry\nWeetman, young English pro. Daly\nstroked a* two-under-par 70 also, for\na 144 total. Weetman carded a 71\nfor another 144.\nST. LOUIS, July 5 (AP) \u2014 Bill\nVeeck formally took over St. Louis\nBrowns of the American League today and announced he will retain\nZach Taylor as manager\u2014for a time,\nat least.\nAt a Press conference, Veeck also\nannounced he was out to build a\nwinning ball team and that Negroes\nwould be given every opportunity\nto qualify.\nNeither the Browns nor St. Louis\nCardinals have Negro players.\nVeeck attended the conference\nafter signing the papers putting the\nclub in his hands. He said a count\nshowed he had about 220,000 of the\n275,000 shares of stock\u2014more than\nenough to exercise his option.\nAlso at the conference were Bill\nand Charley Dewitt, who controlled\nthe club until today, and several of\nVeeck's associates in the present\ndeal.\n\"We have a couple of dollars to\nspend and we're going to spend\nthem,\" Veeck said. \"Right now the\nclub couldn't bat its way out of a\npaper sack and We're looking for\nnnybody who can carry a ball bat\nand handle one.\"\nFERNIE 11 WIN\n3-0 SHUTOUT\nNATAL, B.C., July 4 \u2014 The Natal-\nMichel Buffaloes football eleven,\nplaying in a regular Crow's Nest\nPass Football League encounter at\nthe Natal ball park, suffered their\nthird straight defeat when hte fast\nstepping Fernie United scored a decisive 3-0 shutout. The win kept the\nFernie 11 still on the undefeated\nlist with the strong Kimberley 11\nwhile the loss sent the once leading\nNatal-Michel team skidding to a\nweak fourth spot in the six team\nleague. Kimberley is still leading\nthe league, having but one draw\ngame against them while Fernie\nUnited has two draw games against\nthem. The 3-0 defeat of the highly\ntouted Lethbridge Legion by the\nstrong Fernie team sent the Lethbridge team toppling from the undefeated list.\nThe Spitalfields district of London was named after a hospital\nfounded there in 1197.\nRobinson Denies\nPetition Claim\nWINDSOR, England, July 5 (AP)\n\u2014Middleweight champion Ray Robinson, an outspoken foe of Communism, today denied an Italian\nCommunist newspaper's claim that\nhe had signed the Communist\n\"Berlin Peace Petition.\"\nThe newspaper, L'Unita, said\nRobinson signed the appeal at\nTurin Supday when he was in the\nItalian city for his bout with Cyr-\nille Delannolt.\nRobinson told newspaper men at\nhis training quarters here that he\nhad signed many autographs while\non the continent and remembered\non one occasion, signing a form\nthrust at him without knowing what\nit was.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951\nTired Old Joe Still No. 2\nMan in Fistic World\nBy ARTHUR ED80N\nWASHINGTON, July 5 (API-\nJoe Loulo, old and tired though\nhe may be, still Is rated ai the\nonly logical contender for Ezzard\nCharles' heavyweight title,\nThe National Boxing Association released Its quarterly ratings\ntoday, and they show,few standouts among the heavyweights.\nThe 37-year-old Loula was the\nonly one listed ai a logical contender. The N.B.A. also rated\nonly two fighters, Rex Layne of\nUtah and the apparently Inde-\nitructlble Jersey Joe Waicott, as\ndeserving the description, \"outstanding boxen,\"\nLee Savold, defeated by Louis,\nwound up with the also-rans, with\nan honorable mention.\nBut In the light heavyweight division, the N.B.A. named six boxers as logical contenders for the\nchampionship now held by Joey\nMaxim.\nIke Williams, long-time king of\nthe lightweights who lost his title\nlo Jimmy Carter, wasn't listed\namong the lightweights, where he\nhas had trouble making weight.\nListed as a welterweight, Ike rated\nno higher than seventh. Fitzie\nPruden of St. Catharines, Ont., was\nranked 10th in the welterweight\nclass.\nSugar Ray Robinson, considered\nby many as the finest fighting\nmachine in the business today, got\nan indirect vote of approval from\nthe N.B.A. The N.B.A. could find\nno logical contender for his middleweight title.\nThe ratings:\nHEAVYWEIGHT\nChampion\u2014Ezzard Charles.\nLogical contender\u2014Joe Louis.\nOutstanding boxers \u2014 Hex Layne,\nJoe Waicott.\nLIGHT-HEAVYWEIGHT\nChampion\u2014Joe Maxim.\nLogical   contenders \u2014 Archie\nMoore, Harry Matthews, Bob Murphy,  Don  Cockell,  England,  Bob\nSatterfield, Harold Johnson.\nOutstanding boxers \u2014 Dan Buc-\nFlorida Girl\nReaches Finals\nBy BEN PHLEGAR\nWIMBLEDON, England, July 5\n(CP)\u2014Doris Hart, the tall Florida\ngirl who has been a perennial runner-up for the top women's- tennis\ntitles, will have another chance to\nhit the jackpot when she faces\nyouthful Shirley Fry of Akron,\nOhio, in the finals of the Wimble-\ndon championships Saturday.\nStorming the net at every opportunity, Doris gave Beverley Baker\nof Santa Monica, Calif., a 6-3, 6-1\nshellacking    in    their    semi-final\nmatch today while Shirley, surprise\npackage of the women's division,\nwas dethroning Louise Brough of\nBeverley Hilts,- Wimbledon champion for the last three years, 6-4, 6-2.\nMiss Brough refused to alibi her\ndefeat,  but the  crowd  of  15,000\nIn the centre court realized that\nher ailing  right elbow\u2014unban-\ndaged for the first time In a month\n\u2014was paining her each time she\nhit the ball.'\nMiss Hart was runner-up here to\nMrs. Dupont in 1947 and to Miss\nBrough in 1948. She also ran second\nin the United States championships\nat Forest Hills, N.Y., in 1946, '49 and\n'50. Her only major grass  courts\ntriumph  came  in  the  Australian\nchampionships in '49.\nDick Savitt of Orange, N.J., and\nKen McGregor of Australia clash\ntomorrow for the men's championship.\nTwo U.S. teams will appear in\nthe men's doubles semi-finals. Budge\nPatty of Los Angeles and Ham\nRichardson of Baton Rouge, LA.,\nwere given a terrific battle before\nthey won their quarter-final match\ntoday from Lennart Bergelin and\nSven Davidson of Sweden, 1-6, 8-6,\n6-3, 5-7, 71-5.\nTomorrow they face the crack\nAustralian combination of McGregor and Frank SedgmBn, who advanced by default today over Giani\nCucelll'and Marcello Del Bello of\nItaly.\nQuakers Sign -\nSt. Mike's Goalie\nSASKATOON, July 5 (CP) \u2014\nSaskatoon Quakers, Western Canada Major Hockey League champions, announced today they have\nsigned Phil Hughes, goalie with\nToronto St. Mikes In the Ontario\nHockey Association major series\nlast Winter.\nHughes was in the St. Mikes nets\nlast Spring when his club defeated\nQuakers four straight in the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association\nmajor series semi-finals.\nIn making the announcement,\nQuaker officials said several other\nSt Mikes players may follow\nHughes to Saskatoon.\ncaroni, Jimmy Slade.\nMIDDLEWEIGHT\nChampion\u2014Ray RoblnBon.\nLogical contender\u2014None listed.\nOutstanding boxers'\u2014 Randolph\nTurpln, England;,Dave Sands, Australia; Laurient Dauthuille, France;\nRobert Villemain,, France; Rocky\nGraziano, New York.\nWELTERWEIGHT\nChampion\u2014Kid Gavilan, Cuba.\nLbglcal contenders \u2014 Billy Graham,   Charles   Humez,   France;\nJohnny   Bratton,   Eddie   Thomas, '\nEngland.\nOutstanding    boxers \u2014 Charles\nFusari,  Ike  Williams, Joe  Miceli,\nGil   Turner,   Fitzie   Pruden,    St\nCatharines, Ont.\nLIGHTWEIGHT\nChampion \u2014 Jimmy Carter.\nLogical contenders \u2014 Freddla\nDawson, Art Aragon, Joe Brown.\nOutstanding boxers \u2014 Eddie Chavez,  Virgil Akins, Tommy Campbell,  Del Flanagan, Luther Raw-\nlings, Calvin Smith.\nFEATHERWEIGHT\nChampion\u2014Sandy Saddler.\nLogical contenders \u2014 Willie Pep,\nConnecticut; Ray Famechon, France \u2022\nOutstanding boxers \u2014 Ray Anka-\nhara, Africa; Ronnie Clayton, England; Charles Riley, Percy Bassett,\nEddie Burgin, Gene Smith, Manuel\nOrtiz, Lauro Salas.\nBANTAMWEIGHT\nChampion \u2014 Vic Toweel, South\nAfrica. ,\nLogical contenders \u2014 Luis Romero, Spain; Peter Keenan, Soot-\nland.\nOutstanding boxers \u2014 Elly Bennett, Australia; Tommy Proffitt,\nEngland; Luis Galvani, Cuba*\nBobby. Boland, Scotland; Alvaro\nNuvoloni, Italy; Gianni Zuddaa,\n\u25a0Italy.\nFLYWEIGHT\nChampion\u2014Dado Marino, Hawaii.\nLogical contenders \u2014 Jean Sney-\ners, Belgium; Terry Allen, England)!\nTeddy Gardner, England.\nOutstanding boxers \u2014 Luis Skena.\nFrance; Vic Herman, Scotland*\nBlack Pica Cuba.\nTwo More Leagues Protest Football\nPlayers Coming To Canada\nNEW YORK, July 5 (AP)\u2014Two\nmore National Football League\nclubs appealed to the courts today\nto keep star players from Jumping to Canada.\nIn Houston, Tex,, Chicago Cardinals, asked the court to prevent\nBill Blackburn, a centre, from\nplaying with Calgary Stampeders\nof the Western Canada Inter-Pro-\nvlnclal Union.\nJudge Alfred E. Stein issued a\noourt order in Newark, N.J., directing George Ratterman, New York\nYanks' passing ace, to show cause\nwhy he should not be restrained\nfrom playing with any team but\nthe Yanks, Ratterman announced\nMonday he had signed to play with\nMontreal Alouettes of the Big Four.\nJudge W. P. Hamblen issued a\ntemporary restraining order in the\ncase, of Blackburn, former Rice 'Institute ., star. Tomorrow, Judge Dan\nJackson will rule whether Blackburn will be forbidden from playing with Calgary.\nUNFAIR\nOn Monday at Charleston, W. Va.,\ntackle Dick Huffman of the Los Angeles Rams said his contract was\nunfair' and obligated him to play\nwith one club the rest of his professional career. The Hams obtained\na temporary injunction in Kinawha\nCounty circuit court, Charleston,\nrestraining Huffman \u2014 one-time\nTennessee tackle \u2014 from playing\nwith Winnipeg Blue Bombers, also\nof the Western Canada conference.\nHuffman failed to show up in his\nhome town, but lawyers said final\ncourt action was expected in two\nweeks. John Morrison, Rams' lawyer, said the club had the right to\nexercise an option on Huffman for\n1951 by May 1, and did so.\nThe order on Ratterman is returnable next Tuesday. The New York\nteam has a three-year-contract with\nthe former Notre Dame player, said\nowner Ted Collins. Montreal AIs\nsaid Ratterman was signed as a free\nagent. ,\n\u25a0   Chicago Cardinals claimed they\nsent a contract to Blackburn April\n2, although the club had an option\nwith him to sign for an additional\nperiod.\nWhen Bert Bell, National Leagua\nCommissioner, was advised of tha\nRatterman action Tuesday, he said?\n\"It's a club matter, not a league\nmatter.\" He added that he had examined Ratterman's contract, and\ntermed It valid for three years, from\n1950.through 1952.\nNEW YORK, July 5 (CP)-George\nRatterman's lawyer said tonight he\nis not worried about a restraining\norder issued today against the National League football star.   '\nI. Robert Broder said Ratterman,'\ninvolved in a player dispute between New York Yankees and tha\nMontreal Alouettes, will stay in\nNew York until his reporting data\nto the Big-Four club.\nEngland Takes Lead\nMANCHESTER, England, July 0\n(Reuters) \u2014 England . took the\ninitiative today when the third\ncricket test match of the seaBon\nopened, dismissing South Africa on\na rain-damaged pitch for 158 and\nreplying with 50 for one. wicket.\nAlex Bedser, burly Surrey medr\nium-fast bowler, achieved one of\nthe best performances in his test\ncareer, taking seven wickets for 58\nruns, bringing his test total to 150\nwickets.\nOnly three bowlers have exceeded this figure in test cricket. They\nare Clarrie Grimmett (Australia\/)\n216, Sidney Barnes (England) 189,\nand Maurice Tate (England) 155.\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nTo me**->\nFishing without\nGIBBS Tackle*\nis like fishing\n- without water.':\nYve never heen -p.\nskunked when I used GIBBS.\n\/A\nQuality\nTackle\nMade In Vancouver, B.C., By\nGIBBS TOOL & STAMPING WORKS\n PHONE\n1032\nHOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\nODD VANITIES AND CHIFF0NIER8 \u2014 SELLING   FOR  HALF-PRICE\nWalnut, bleached mahogany and bird's eye maple. Waterfall design, with 4-foot vanity mirrors,\nNELSON\nB. C.\nONE OF 16 ANIMALS used In surgical research that may end\nthe use of the Iron lung for polio victims, a monkey lies stretched out\nIn a Philadelphia hospital. The doctors examining him have reported\ntheir experiments with the monkey have shown that surgery can\noften overcome paralysis of the diaphragm resulting from polio attacks.\u2014Central Press Canadian. -.-.-\u25a0\nA HELICOPTER of the New York Police Department staged a\nspectacular rescue from the steel framework of St John the Divine\nCathedral, removing an Injured -steeplejack while hovering above\nthe framework. The workman, Peter Burn, had fractured his leg In\na fall and could not be carried down from atoo the 100-feet-hlgh\ngirders. The helicopter Is shown at the top after Its crew had strapped\nBurn on one of the pontoons and above as if landed In a nearby park\nwhere an ambulance took Burn to hospital.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n[\nMB\nACTION IS MOTTO ... When Miss Barbara East, reporter for\nthe San Francisco Examiner, Innocently questioned the famous Black-\nstone about his stunt of sawing a woman In.half, Blackstone turned\ntables on the girl reporter and demonstrated the trick with Miss\nEast herself ai the \"victim\". Clad in the regal robes which are part\nof the hair-raising stunt Miss East Ib pictured as the 36-Inch lumber\nsaw, whirlng at 1790 revolutions per minute, \"slashed\" through her\nbody.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nL.-CPL,' SMlLEY  DOUGLAS '     CAPT. JOHN MILLS\nFIRST AWARDS to Canadian soldiers for bravery and devotion\nto duty have been announced by Defence Minister Brooke Claxton.\nCapt. John W. Mills of Winnipeg has been awarded the  Military\nCross; L.-Cpl. Smiley Douglas of Delburne, Alta., the Military Medal.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS . . . mo on.the dial\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of. the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Your Musical Appointment\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n10:15\u2014Sons ot the Pioneers\n10:30\u2014Oliver's Choice\n10:45\u2014Invitaiton to Waltz\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Piano Prelude\n11:15\u2014For You, Madame\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:00\u2014News\n12:01\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Friday Serenade\n1:59\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n2:30\u2014Intermission\nFRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951\n2:45\u2014Women's Programs\n2:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Easy Listening\n3:11\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Don Messer\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Time Story Teller\n4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:00\u2014News\n,5:01\u2014Superman\n5:15\u2014News\n5:20\u2014Sports News\n5:25\u2014Canadian Golf\n5:30\u2014Bill Good Sports .\n5:45\u2014Easy Aces\n6:00\u2014Christian Science Program\n6:15\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Organ Recital\n8:00\u2014Here Comes His Band\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Symphony of Strings\n9:30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n9:45\u2014Life and Times of the\nDetective Story\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:55\u2014News Nile Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nSATURDAY, JULY 7, 1951\n:00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Bill Good Sporta\n:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n:30\u2014Program Resume\n00\u2014BBC News\n:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n:30\u2014Stamp Club\n:45\u2014The Answer Man\n:00\u2014Bandstand\n:15\u2014Minuet\n:30\u2014World Church News .\n:45\u2014News; Weather\n:00\u2014Opera Stars and Stories\n:30\u2014Canadian Rhapsody\n00\u2014Canadian Open Golf\n30\u2014Folk Song Time  I\n30\u2014London Studio Melodies\n00\u2014Trans-Canada Bandstand\n00\u2014This Week\n:15\u2014News\n3:25\u2014Listening\n3:30\u2014Saturday Pop Concert\n4:30\u2014Music From the Films\n5:00\u2014Saturday Magazine\n5:30\u2014Sports College\n5:45\u2014For the Record\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Sports Page\n6:30\u2014Soiree A Quebec\n7:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n7:30\u2014Let's Square Dance\n8:00\u2014Holiday With Music'\n8:30\u2014Piano Playhouse\n9:00\u2014John Sturgess\n9:15\u2014Songs by Dudley Farncll\n9:30\u2014Concert of Europe\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orchestra\n10:30\u2014Dancing Party\n11:55\u2014News\nAT ABADAN, Iran, Irate nationalists demonstrate against tha\nships waiting to load oil. In the background Is a tanker, either British\nor Norwegian-owned, which was being held by the Iranian Government because they refused to give a receipt for the oil they drew\n'from the Iranian pipelines. All ships In the harbor have now moved\nout except those being loaded under guard. Iran has rescinded the\ndeath penalty clause In the anti-sabotage law In hopes the British\ntechnicians would remain to operate the .'refineries.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS     3. Discharge\nt. Kind of rook 4. Distant\nS. Shove\n9. Melodies\n1L Division of\na long poem\n12. Ward\noff\n13. Mountains\n(So. Am..)\n14. Malt\nbeverage\n15. Scold\n2*. Age\n25, Devowed\n5. Kettle 26. Any split\n6. Wavy pulse\n(Her.> tjlndia.)\n7. Boil slowsjy  38. Artificial\n8. Stocking hazard\n10. Sentence fgolf)\nstructure      30. A metal\n5\nA\nG\nIB!\nH\nO\nW\np;\nU\nD\nA\nuHc\nA\nB\nA\nL\n0\nA\nR\nG\nF.\nH\nAHA\nI\n1\nK\nE\n\u25a0aIl\nL\nKl\nE\nM\naIcTe\nA\nc\nJ\n32\\ Piece of\nbaked clay\n33. Projecting\nend of a\nchurch\n34. Equipment\nramaun hejh-91'\naunn uan\n.71BH   WEsHHHHE\nEJH   BUB      HISIJ\n13HML1U   HHUHE\nmm ii'.rm\nTttttMstasjs'si mmsmW\n39. God\nof\nwar tG..i\n'\u00ab<. Anger\n4*. Piece\nto\nttokt part*\n<-Maolt.)\n(\u25a0Gram.)\nTI. Enclosure\n16. Sloths\n18. Laths\npersistently 19. Supporting\n17. Female bandage\nsheep           20. Hebrew dry 35. Spheres\n18. Pig pens measure       37. Eye\n20. Marsupials        (var.) 38. Early\n(Australia-) 21. Poem inhabitant\n23. Guide 12. Girl's name       \u2666Seot.Js\n27. Antelope \u25a0\n(Air.)            . f\u2014|i    \u00a3    ||\n28. Plant life    ,\nof a region\n29. Thrash\n30. Underground\npassage,\n31. Prick\npainfully\n33. Past\n36. Writing\nfluid\n37^Tuber\n(So. Am.)\n40. Danger\n42. Moth\n44. Cavalry\naword\n(var.)\n45. Moon valley\n46. Scottish-\nGaelic\n\u202247. Wagers\nDOWN\n1. Fiber of\nmulberry\ntree\n2. River\n(Russ.)\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nteLONGFELLOW\nOne tetter simply stands for another. In this example A h Heed\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa.\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA \u2022Cryptogram Quotation\nMWLTF     EPN,     I V S OYHT\nSTMF    III**\n\"V G    F V\nO FRTH    MF\nL Y    LE    Y V    EMN:\nMS     L!\" \u2014 P'LUWLFA.\nYnteriftiy'a Crvptoqllote: WHRRB ARE THE B0Y5 OF THB\nOLD BRIGADE, WHO FOUGHT WITH US SIDE BY SIDE 7\u2014,\nWEATHKitLY.\nDUtrtftusld by Klol Filiates srinJicsu\n vm\nm QU\/CK RESULTS \/   ^\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145\nPslfls\nBIRTHS\nFORBES-To Mr. and Mrs. Ken\nheth Forbes, 406 Nelson Avenue, at\nkootenay Lake General Hospital,\nfuly 3, a daughter.\nCOLE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Edwin\nflole, 216 Houston Street, at Koot-\nnay Lake GeneraHIdspital, July 4,\nsop,\nFLEMING\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Gar-\nBon Fleming, 206 Pealby's Road,\nJuly 4, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nPhone 144\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nSalesman\nFurniture and\nAppliances *\nI This is an opportunity for cap-\n, able men to advance with our\n'.organization.\nAPPLY BETWEEN\n10:00 AND 12:00 A.M.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nBuild Better Outside\nWalls... Easier., .at\nComparable Cost...\nStomelap\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTQRCYCUS,   AICYGU1\nPERMANENT P O SITI ON FOR\nj young man as salesman, for city\nand country V\/Ork; This carries\n; .with it hospitalization, insurance\nand pension plan, and offers opportunity for advancement. This\nis a salaried position, with car\nprovided, and full training given.\nQualifications: Age about 25--40\nyears, preferably married and at\npresent employed, neat businesslike appearance, previous selling\nexperience desireable but not\nessential. Apply in person to the\nSinger Sewing Machine Co., 330\nBaker Street. !\nsunn\n1951 Mercury Cqrs\n\u2022 and Trucks\n1951 Meteors,\nEnglish Prefects,\nPERSONAL\nFOR    YOUR    AVON    AGENT\nPhone 464-Y2.\nVVAWAWJiSA  MUTUAL  FIRE IN-\nsurance Co., D. L, Kerr, Agent!\nCRESS' INGROWN TOE-NAIL\nSalve. Your Druggist j sells wme\nbetter.\nALMEH HOTEL, OPPOSITE 'C.F.R.\nDepqt, Clean rqqms and moderate\nrates. $1.30 to (2.00 single, $2,50 to\n$3.00  doubles,   Vancouver,   B_C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC, FOR SALE\n'(Continued)\nHOUSE FOR SALE - FURNISH-\n\u00abd. 8  roomed   house,   centrally MMUC.\nlooated   on   two   lots,   in   down-  MINES\ntown Kaslo. Three  rooms, large Akauclio\nhall,  bath  and  storage  upstairs. Amal Larder\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951 \u2014 9\nTORONTO STOCKS     (Market Trends\n...   ..fr.,w,      .\u00bb...>**    J   KUll. I   ,15\nFive   large   r.ooms   and   pantry American Y. K 11\ndownstairs,  Two  suites  to  rent Arjon '\u25a0\u25a0    \t\npossible.   Furnishings   for  same.' Aumaque \t\nCan be financed locally, II de-iAunor        3.15\n\u00abi\u2122-(   -Apply:   Gordon   Bowker, 'Bagamac    15\nnr 'Base Metals  55\nsired.\nKaslo, B.c!\nWANTED \u2014 STENOGRAPHER,\nNelson Senior High School. Duties\nto commence. August 27th, 1051.\nPlease state age, qualifications,\nexperience, and salary expected\nwhen applying. All applications\nto be in Secretary Treasurer's\noffice, 812 Ward Street, not later\nthan 4:00 p.m. July 12th, 1051.\nSchool District No. 7 (Nelson)\nJ. S. Livingstone,\nSecretary Treasurer,\nEASERS WANTED \u2014 FOR ZION\nsilver, lead, zinc group 3 miles\nfrom Ymir; 2 miles by road, one\nmile by trail. Cabin, blacksmith\nshop, some tools, plenty of timber\nand water. Box 1352, Daily News.\nVANTED IMMEIJIATELY,. CLERK\n(male) experienced. Salary $135.00\nrising to $160.00 per month plus\ncost of living bonus. Apply Forest\nService, Court House, Nelson, B.C.\ng\nNow available qgafn^the\nbuilders' favorite outside\nsheathing. Provides absolutely tight, non-shrinking,\ninsulating fireproof walls.\nFor use under wood siding,\nshingles, stucco or brick\nveneer \u2014 simply nailed to\nstuds, easily and quickly\napplied. Saves lumber \u2014\nprovides weatherfight insulating walls of, great\nstructural strength.\nDISTRIBUTING  AGENTS\nNELSON -\nIERY\nLtd.\n214 Hall St. Phone IS\nMining,   Milling   and   Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and Contractors' .Supplies.\n194? Ford Sedan\n1947 Ford Sedan\n1947 Chevrolet Sedqn\n1938 Nash Sedan\n1946 Plymouth Sedqn\n1934 Chevrolet Coach.\n1931  Model \"A\" Sedan\nATTENTION SCHOOL ' BOARD\nSecretaries, y\/e have a large stock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper and can fill any'order im-\npiedlalely. Daily News Printing\nDept., Nelson, British Columbia.\nMEN! PERSONAL DRUG! $UN-\ndrips: 25 deluxe samples, $1,(10,\nMailed in plain, sealed wrapper\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDisliibutors, Box 1023N. Vancouver. B. C.\nHOUSE AT KINNAIRD FOR SALE\n\u2014On 1 acre level land. Kitchen\nwith sink and cupboards. Wired\nfor electric range. Front room, 2\nbedrooms, small bathroom and\nporch. Some finishing needed. 5-\nmlnuto walk from highway and\nbus stop; 2-minute walk from\nschool. Prjoe $3000, Write Box\n1730, Dally News.\n.21\n.2014,\n1514\n2 ACRES WITH 2 'HOUSES,\" WOQD\nshed, big garden, raspberries. Well\n\u25a0 fenced In. close to Ymir highway.\nGood lqcatioi). Full price, $3000;\nterms,can be arranged. Apply Box\n1763, Daily.News.\nFOR SALE-88 ACHES, MOSTLY IDome\ntimber; house apd barn. Close to|n\u201e\u201e.]rf.\nhighway.   Patterson,. B.C.   Very'\nBevcourt\nBobjo    \t\nBrewis R. L.\nBrculan     -.<.*\nBuffadison  00\nBuffalo Ank      1.35\nBuff. Can\t\nCalliman   \t\nCan. Mal\t\nCariboo Gold              ...\u201e\nCons. Beatty   48\nQms. Mining & Smelting ,. 141.75\nConwest ....\nCroinor \t\nDelnite\t\nDetta R. L.\nuiscovery\n.40\n.12\n.10\n1.21\n.18\n.20\n.60\n1.10\nEureka          .78\nFalconbridge    ,...-, ,'\u201e-,   10-00\nFrobisher      3.10\nGiant Yel.\n7.00\ncheap for cash. Enquiries at\nThrums Post Office or at Patterson'\nLADIES I DUPREE PILLS, IM-\nproved Formula. Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes\nTriple:Strength Pills. $5,00 per\nbox. Western Distributors, Box\n1023 AN. Vancouver. B C\n1949 Mercury Vi-Ton\nPanel\n1945 Dodge Vi-Ton' t-\n1945 Ford 3-Ton\n1938 Ford 2-Ton with dump\nbody and hoist\n1937 International   Vi-Ton\n1936 Studebaker 2-Ton\nCab over\n1935 Chevrolet '\/2-Ton\n1950 Vincent HR.D.\nMotor Bike\nGenuine Ford Parts Depot\nPhone 578-9 Nelson, B. C.\nBETTER BUYS  AT BEACON\nproperty; houses, farms\netc,, for sale\nACREAGE WITH NEW 4-ROOM\nmodern house; basement, garage,\nlarge garden, hen-house; adjoining, city limits. $5000; half cash.\nBox\/1447, Daily News.\n2.65\n.28\n1.27\n.15\n.33\n17.25\n.50\n .iu\nEast Malartic       1.15\nEast Sullivan      7.20\nElder Gold  50\nEldona '\"\nFOR SALE\u20142-BEDROOM HOUSE\non highway at Kinnaird, Very\ngood improvements. Lot about 1%\nacres. Good price for quick sale.\nAlex Maitland, Kinnaird, B.C.\n64 ACRE FARM ON LAKE NEAR\nRiondel. Must sell. $1650. Polzin,\n118 Wellington St., Trail.\n.0814\n38\n12\nGolden Manitou      6.40\nHalcrow ,       .11\nHardrock        .18\nHarricana\nHasaga  ...\nHeath \u00ab\nHedley Mas , 51\nHollinger   ....:    13.00\nHudson Baj    55.25\nInt. Nickel  .-...    37^50\nKenville  , ,.,.,.,      .22\nKerr Addison  '..    17.25\nKirkland Lake 80\nLabrador  \t\nLakeshore  \t\nLeitch \t\nLittle Long Lac\nLouvicourt   \t\nLypx\n, 18\nMacDonald   80\nHIT\t\n7.10\n8.75\n1.01\n.71\n-16 >,z\n1544\nRENTALS\nWILL RENT FOR AUGUST MY\nmodern home. Refrigerator, garden; at Longbeach; at reasonable\nrent for good tenant. J. W. Hobson, R.R, No. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nURGENTLY REQUIRED IMMED-\nialely\u2014Three or four room unfurnished hquso or suite for young\ncouple with 8-vear-old daughter.\nPhone 129. Ask for Jack Willi\n\"If\nit's   machinery   you\nconsult us.\"\nwant,\nVANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED. STEN-\nographer\u2014office clerk for large\n-Nelson wholesale office. Box 1812,\nDaily.News.\n(JIRL FOR NEWSPAPER OFFICE.\nSome knowledge of typing essential. Apply to A. G. Hay,'Daily\n' News.\nVANTED\u2014ALERT, NEAT YOUNG\ni man for front end work at garage.\nj Must have driver's licence. Apply\nI P.O. Box 420, Nelson, B.C.\nCEMAN WANTED. - APPLY\n1 Storms Contracting Co. office,\nI McNabb Cabins, Ymir Road^\nDEAXlRS' \"IN\" A'i,L TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; > new and used\nwire rope; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CLAM JEWEL\nwood ahd coal range; practically\nnew. Beatty electric washer\nStewart-Warner combination 8-\ntube console radio. All in first-\nclass condition. .Phone 738-R3.\nand USED\nWALK-IN COOLER, IDEAL FOR\nmilk, fruit and vegetables; approximately 5' x 6*. Guaranteed.\nReply P.O. Box 460, New Westminster. B.C.   .\nVANTED - MAN WITH OUTFIT\nto cut, log and haul 2 million feet\nof logs. S. P. Pond, Nelson.\nVANTED \u2014 MAN W.ITH GOOD\ntruck to haul lumber and load on\ncars. S. P. Pond, Nelson.\nWastry  cook   wanted  im-\nmediately. \u2014 Apply Golden Gate\nCafe.\nAGENTS   WANTED\n\u25a0VANTED \u2014 RELIABLE MAN AS\nRawleigh Dealer. Experience not\nnecessary. A fine opportunity to\nstep into profitable business\nwhere 'Rawleigh Products have\nbeen sold for vears. Write Raw\nleigh's. Dept. WG-G-154-163. Win\nnines, Man.\nHOME DEEP FREEZE. 7 TO 21\ncu. ft., $208.00 and up. 5-year guarantee. Reply P.O. Box 460, New\n'Westminster, B.C.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co.\n035 E  Cordova St,. Vancouver\nFOR SALE\u2014SERVEL REFRIGER-\nator, coal-oil 'run, and sanding\nmachine. Phone 967-L-4.\nTYPEWRITER\u2014SNAP, $10. OUT-\nboard motor, 5.5 h.p., $130. Ready\nto go. Phone 304-L.\nFOR SALE - ANNEX HEATER\nwith water front. Used 6 months.\nPhone 1321-L.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCOMPETENT, RELIABLE WOMAN\nwants permanent position as a\nhousekeeper.    Reply   Box    1815.\nDaily News.\t\nJAPANESE FIRST COOK WANTS\ncountry hotel or camp cooking\njob.   Wife   experienced   waitress.\n|*Box 1557. Daily News.\n'XPERIENCED  BABY -SITTER\nprefers job  in   Fairview.  Apply\nONE BATTERY FOR SALE\u201412-\nvolt. New. First $20 takes it. Phone\n475-R3.\nUSED BRICKS FOR SALE \u2014 300\nred and 200 fire-bricks. Write Box\n1680 Daily News.\nNew Austin Sedan \u2022\nNew Pontiac Sedan     ^ .:\nNew Dodge Cqqch,\nNew Buick Sedan\n1951  Anglia Coach\n1951   Hillman Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Austin Station Wagon\n1949 Meteor Coach\n\u25a01949 Austin Sedan\n'1947 Monarch Sedan\n1942 DeSoto Sedan\n1941  Chevrolet Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan\n1940 Dodge Sedan\n1938 Dodge Sedan\n1938 Ford Coupe\n\"1933 Ford \"B\" Coupe\n1937 Ford Sedan\nModel \"A\"'Coupe\nModern bungalow on two beautifully! landscaped corner lots\non Neison Avenue. Three bedrooms on ground floor, with\nfour-piece bathroom and cabinet\nkitchen, breakfast nook, spacious clothes closet. J3uilt-on\ngarage.- This' house is, in exceptionally good shape, having\nbeen redecorated, including all\nfloors sanded. Upstairs is a large\nextra room. Basement is cement\nand full head height. Heating by\nautomatic \u2022 oil furnace. You\nshould see this one it is really\na buy for either a large or small\nfamily. Liberal terms available.\n$10,500\nCLOSE IN\n5 Minutes- Walk\nFrom the \"Bay\"\nOlder type 2-bedroom bungalow\non large Jot in secluded location.\nFully modernized and attractively decorated. This should\nappeal to C.P.R. employees. Immediate occupancy. Some terms.\n$5500\nFor these and other City\nand suburban properties,\nSee\nTHE GILDAY\nFARM ;J\"OR SALE. - APPLY TO;UNFURNISHED APART\nSouth Slocan Garage, South Slocan, B.C.\nMacassa   .\nMacLeod Cock\nMadsen- R. L. ..\nMalartic G. F. ..\nMclntyre    utf.uu\nMining Corp    10.15\nMoneta   \t\nMylamaque ...\nNegus   .. >\t\nNew Calumet\nNew Goldvue\nNew Lund \t\nNoranda   \t\nNormetals  \t\nNorzone  .........\nO'Brien \t\nOsisko\n1.80\n2.70\n2.17\n2.03\n50.00\n.31\n\u25a0074j\n.61\n2.80\n* .26\n1.35\n72.50\n4.75\n.13\n1.12\nPend Oreille  ...ZZZZZ    1\nPreston E. D.\nQuebec Lab,\nFOR SALE - BEACH PROPERTY\non Kootenay Lake. Box 1917 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE-45-FT  VIEW LOT IN\nKajrvfpw  Phone 1361\nMACHINERY\nsi\n._ -MENT\nfor rent, suitable for business\ncouple. Occupancy July 15. Apply\n745 Baker Slreet.\n2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE WANT-\ned immediately by family of four.\nUnfurnished. Apply Box 1567,\nDaily News.\nFOR RENT - 1 ACRE STRAW-\nberries and 1 acre raspberries\nApply Mike Androshak. Canyon.\nB C\n542 Baker St.   \u2014   Phone 1460\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nFOR SALE\u2014BED-CHESTERFIELD\nand chair in good condition. Phope\n1582-L.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-\nWrite PO   Box 33, Nelson. B.C\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\npfrlami Sail.u Nrms\nClassified  Advertising  Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per mqnth (26 consecutive Insertions!    Box  numbers , lie  extra.   Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst  insertion.   16c   per  line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy   $   05\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance   .             25\nOne year 8.op\nUnited States. United Kingdom:\nOne  month       .:     1.00\nThree   months         3 00\nSix months      6.00\nOne  year     _  12 00\nSix monlhs       -     4 50\nBy carrier, per year 13 00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month I 00\nThree months 250\nWher* extra postarw Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFOR SALE - (SNAP) $7000. MILK\nand snack bar (44 seats) next to\nthe only theatre in town. All\nmodern ice cream, and cooking\nequipment, living quarters in\nroar of building, rental of building reasonable. For information\nwrite the Dari-Del Snack Bar.\nFernie. B.C. or call 140.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\n1949 Ford 2 Ton Flat Deck\n1935 Ford 2 Ton Flat Deck\n1947 Mercury 1  Ton L.D.\n1946 Ford Vi Ton L.D.\n1941' Ford 1 Ton LP.  '\nTERMS AND TRADES\nEmpire Motors\n803 Baker St.     Phone 1135\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W WiDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsaycrs  301 .Josephine St., Nelgpn.\nH. S ELiUES. ROSSLAND. KC..\nAaaaygr, Chemist, Mine Rep.\n1040 E.S.A. STAR TWIN MOTOR-\ncycle, 500 c.c. 1358 miles. Twin\nleather saddlebags, with zippers;\ngoggles, driving gauntlets. All for\n$750. Cash or terms. Queen City\nMotors Ltd., Phone 43, Nelson.\nFOR SALE-42-45 H.D. MOTOR-\ncycle. Motor just overhauled, new\nbattery and paint job, excellent\nrubber. Best offer takes lt. R. Burton, Bpx 625, Creston, B.C.\nNORTH SHORE\nPROPERTY\nFOR SALE\nDwelling on one acre of land\nfacing main highway at Willow\nPoint. Has full concrete foundation, part basement. Living\nroom, two large bedrooms,\nkitchen with built-in cupboards\nand modern equipped bathroom. Fuel shed, level land. Immediate occupancy. Cfinflft\nTerips arranged.    \u00abPOW\"W\nOr will add\nOne more acre and two cottages\nwith income of $55.00 per month\npriced : $10,500\nALSO\nWe have excellent selection of\nlake frontage lots priced from\nFor Immediate Delivery\nTRACTOR, MOWERS,\nSELF-DUMP   RAKES,\nSIDE DELIVERY RAKES,\nLOADER, CHOPPERS, ETC.\nand the famous\nAUTOMATIC, ONE-MAN\nWIRE-TYING PICKUP\nHAY BALER\nUSED EQUIPMENT\n1-5 ft. Massey Harris 2-\nHorse Mower.\n1-Gibson   Tractor,    with\nPlow, Disc and Harrows,\nat a bargain.\n1-Case    automatic    Hay \u201e\nBaler. First class. A real\nbargain.\nGIRL TO SHARE HOME, CLOSE\nin. Cooking facilities. $23. Phone\n030-X after 5 p.m,\t\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FC\nrent. Apnlv 614 Victoria Stref\n1.48\n20\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 CHILD'S EYE-GLASSES,\non Lakeside Park beach. Reward.\nPhone 829-R.\nROOM AND BOARD\n1 DOUBLE, . 1 SINGLE ROOM\nwith board available. Mrs.\nPeachey, 812 Carbonate St. Phon-\n620- Y.\nCLASSIFIER DISPLAY\na     a\n1C s\nTractor & Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 930 Box 119\nNelson, B. C.\n$1250\nT. D. Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward St. Phone 717\nFOR SALE \u2014 '47 BUICK SUPER\nSedan. Radio, heater, new tires,\nand Lifeguard tubes. Upholstery\nvery good. Motor excellent con\ndition. 1005 Front Street.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER  AND  AUTO\nWrecking  Phone Rossland. 171.\nENGINEERS AND  SURVEYOR8\nbOVD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson. B.C.. Surveyor.. Engineer\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nIVicrfAHDV  AGENCIES  LTD.,  IN-\nsurance. Real Estate\u2014Phone 135\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWL BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nCrnitact H   Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNli.TTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593 324 Vernon -St.\nFOR SALE - 1047 MORRIS. NEW\nrings. A-l condition. $800. Apply T.\nNichols, Kinnaird.\n1047 CHEV. COACH FOR SALE-\nCan be seen at 703 Radio Avenue\nafter 5:30 p.m.\nFOR SALE - 1936 FORD PANEL\n4 new tires. $250 cash. Box 37,\nSlocan City.\nFOR SALE - 1933 FORD ROAD-\nster. Phone 524-X.\n'40 CHEV. BUS. COUTE. \u2014 GOOD\ncondition, good tires. Ph. 169-R2.\nFOR  SALE - GIRLS'  C.C.M.  BI-\nc-rle: good condition. Ph. U17-L.\nJOATSjnd ENGINES\nFOR SALEf-^LATEST MODEL 5\nh.p, Johnson outboard motor.\nSlightly used. $185.00. Phone 44-T,\nKaslo, B.C.\nFOR SALE\nSemi-bungalow, 8 rooms and\nbath. Full cement basement,\nfurnace, wired for electric\nrange. On 2 corner ((S^ftA\nlots Terms   ^DsJUU\nBungalow\u20144 rooms, bath. Cement basement. 2 corner lots.\nPriceen.and.frUlt      $4200\nRepair shop\u2014bicycles and mowers, mctors, etc. Good revenue\nand location. Sell with or without building.\nF. A. WHITFIELD\nREAL ESTATE \u2014INSURANCE\n302 Baker St. \u2014 Phone 312\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING k MINING\nSEND  YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nEQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\n Vancouver, B C.\nD7 TRACKS AND REBUILT\nrollers, D6 tracks, angledozer for\nRD7. 4\" portable pump with engine. Bayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook  B.C.\nSpecial Bargain\n1950 PLYMOUTH\nDELUXE SEDAN\nFULL PRICE $1800'\n1940 DODGE SEDAN\nNEEDS FRONT END WORK\n$395\nKEBLE1\nJM0T0R4.\nCHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHfe\n?sa.ij.ri'tf:frrp]\/y^iijs,3m\nfWJir'Ti'ffW?$riFimV*\n iU\nQuebec Man      2.05\nQueenston ..\nQuemont . .\nSan Antonio\nSen Rouyn .,\nShawkey         iy\nSherritt-Gordon       2.70\nSjgma\nSilvermiller ..\nSJadon Mal. ..\nStarratt Olsen\nSteep Rock ...\nSylvanite\nTeck Hughes ..\nToburn  \t\nTorbrit\nTrans Cont Re\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nVentures   \t\nOILS\nAnglo Can\t\nAtlantic Oil\t\nB.A. Oil     37.25\nCalgary and Edmonton    14.25\nCalmont       1.00\nCentral Leduc       1.99\nChemical Research  95\nCommonwealth Pete  :....    2.25\nDalhousie     *\u00b0\nDel Rio   \t\nFederated Pete\nHome\n.51\n21.00\n2.40\n19\n6.70\n1.40\n.69\n.70\n6.75\n1.25\n2.10\n.27\n1.77\n.50\n1100\n1.60\n10.50\n5.80\n2.85\nNEW YORK, July 5 (AP) r-\nEnthusiasm for recovery spread\nswiftly and sent prices sharply\nhigher.\nTORONTO, July 5 (CP) \u2014 A\nspirited rally sent prices clmibing\nin the last ..alf-hour.\nMONTREAL, July 5 (CP) - Securities firmed slightly from the\nopening bell. Trading was sluw,\nhowever. <\nNear the close, advances held a\ngood lead over declines.\nMONTREAL, July 5 (CP)\u2014Trad- \u25a0\ning in Government of Canada issues\nwas at a standstill while provincials were receiving some interest\nand tended to be firmer. On the\ncorporate market, C.P.R., convertibles were higher.\nCHICAGO, July 5 (API - \u25a0Soybeans and lard, with the exception\nof the July lard contract, had a\nweak trend. All 1051 bean contracts\nsank lo new seasonal lows.\n! LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) - A\nwarning by lhe Chancellor ot the\nExchequer on a deficit on Britain's\noverall balance of payments for the\nfirst half'of 1051 checked active\ninterest in domestic stocks. Further\nresponsible comment on the need\nfor a continuation of rearmament\nwas responsible for high-level m-\ntCi'c.t b-.:s maintained in 'commodity shares.\n.38\n1.00,\n8.10\nH\n,99\nFOR SALE \u2014 ONE MAN P.M.\nChain Saw in excellent shape to\nhighest offer over $150. Apply\nTony Ewasiuk, Beaver Falls, B.C.\n(Between Trail and Fruitvale.)\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE LARGE ALICE\nChalmers bulldozer. 10-foot blade\nand spare parts. Contact Jack\nGreenwood, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT\u2014D-4\ncat, equipped for excavating,\nroadbuiiding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n15QB Nelson.\t\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nNEW HOUSE FOR SALE\u2014STORY\nand one-half. Fully insulated. On\ntwo lots. Large living room, dinette in one end. Rambow carpeting. Heatilator fireplace. Bright\nkitchen, plenty of cupboards.\nPembroke bath: 3 bedrooms; full\nbasement; hot-air furnace. Upstairs and porches not quite finished. Close to town and schools.\nApply 517 Observatory St., Cily.\nSELLING HERD OF HIGH PRO-\nducing Holstein cattle; 25 head,\n11 cows and bull, 0 fresh; 4 yearlings. 9 Spring calves. Some purebred. E. E. Linville, Lardeau. B.C.\nPhone 89-R. Kaslo, B.C.\njams\n1950 Plymouth\nSedan. Full\nPrice $1800\n1940 Dodge Sedan\n$395\n1938 Nash Coach\n$79\nPEEBLE*\nMOTOR!\nHFARGO'oSWcvxTIP.S'*,\n0W1O9O 'Nelson.iS.C. ^\n    15.75\nImperial Oil \u25a0:..,-.  ''-\"\"\nInter Pete\nMid Cont.\nNat, Pe'te .\nOkalia         2.38\nPacific Pete  '.      8.60\nRoyalite :  ' *\"\"\nTower Pete \t\nUnited Oils \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel ....\nArgus \t\nAtlas St.\t\nBeattie Bros\t\nBell Telephone ..\nBrazilian\t\nB.C. Electric pfd\nB.C. Electric _..       ui \\i\nB.C. Forest          8\nB.C. Packers A        \\&V\\\nB.C. Packers B         16\nB.C. Power B      B.25\nBrown Co. ...\ntiruck Silk A\nBruck Silk B         llti\nBuilding Products-       si\nBurl. Steel\nBurns A\n35.00\n18.75\n.15!.i\n1.98\n14.50\n.30\n.70\n19 Vi\n32\n13 Vi\n17\n10 *\n30 <,i\n2314\n80\n13--i\n2Hi\n31\n20 li\nBurns B ZZZZ       o\u201e\nBurrard A ...      \t\nCan. Malting ]\nCan. Packers A\nCan. Packers B .\n8Vi\n51\n30\n3Bs\nCalgary Lsvestcsfc\nCALGARY. July 5 (CP)-Trad-\ning was active on the Calgary live-\nslock market this morning, though\nreceipts were heavier. On offer\nwere 700 cattle and calves. Good\nbutcher steers were steady to\nstrong, fair to medium heavy steers\nstrong to 50 cents higher. Butcher\nheifers were steady. Cows held the\nweek's advance on 50 cents. Bulls\nwere fully steady Light stocker and\nfeeder steers were in good demand\nat strong prices, heavy stockers\neasier.\nHours of trading on the local\nmarket during stampede week will\nbe:\nMonday 8 to 10 Tuesday 9 to 3; '\nWednesday 9 lo 1; Thursday 9 to 3;\nFriday 9 to 1 and Saturday 9 to 12\no'clock,\nHogs dropped 50 cents Wednesday, closing at $38.50. Sows were\nsteady at 24.75.\nGood to choice butcher steers 32 50\nto 34, common to medium 27 to 32.\nGood to choice butcher heifers 31\nto 33, common to medium 25 to 30.\nGood cows 26.50 to 28, common to\nmedium, 23 to 26, canners and cutters 19 to 22.50. Good bulls 29.50 to\n30.90. Common to. medium 25 to 29.\nGood stocker and feeder steers 31.50\nto 33.50, common to medium 26 to\n31. Good to choice veal calves 35\nto 39, common to medium 28 lo 34.\nVancouver Stocks\nmines\nBralorne           6,15\nCariboo Gold      1.2Q\nGolconda,         25\nHedley Mascot :....      .55\nHighland Bell  88\nInt C & C 32\nKootenay Belle 80\nPend Oreille       7.50\nPioneer Gold      2.00\nQuatcuio 23\nReeves MacDonald      4.70\nSheep Creek              1.53\nSilver Standard       2,40'\nVananda  15\n12%\n14\n16 Vt\nSOVt\n190\nWANTED - HIGHEST PRICES\npaid for cattle of any kind or age\nby Dick Kleef. Phone, wire or\nwrite to Dick Kleef. R.R. 1. Nel-\nson. Phone 401-L-4.\t\nFOR SALE - TWENTY-MONTH\nold Jersey bulL Fred Fillipoff,\nWinlaw.\nBUDGET BLIW\nGET A\n^1 VwJu^l*^\n -'    :-   11_ ,\u201e St A AAA LOANS LIFE INSURED\nWANTED,   MISCELLANEOUS j \"*? flaOOQ at no extra cost\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nCEDAR POLESf ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co.. Box 450, Nelson. B.C.\nSHIP\nYOUR   HIDES   TO\nMorgan, Nelson, B. C\nJ.   P\n ,  dl\nCanadian Breweries  21\nCanadian Canners     31\nCanadian Car & Fdy   13\u00bbi\nCanadian Car & Fdy A  16%\nCanadian Marconi   3.40\nCanadian Pacific Rly  27(4\n.Canadian West Lmbr   8%\nCockshutt  '  27%\nCons. Mining & Smelting .. 141%\nCons. Paper   36%\nDist. Seagram   27*4\nDom. Bridge  6114\nDom. Foundries  _ 52*4\nDom. Stores  _ 12\u00ab.\nDom. Textiles ..\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFleet Air \t\nFord A  \u201e 53W\nGatineau , .-...._.. lB'ri\nGatineau 5% pfd    104%\nGoodyear \u201e _ 94V4\nGoodyear pfd _ 48y\u00ab\nGypsum Lime -   23%\nImperial Oil -  34W\nInt. Nickel _..._ 37 Vs\nInt. Pete  1B%\nKelvinator  \u201e 16%\nLake of Woods \u201e. 31\nLaura Secord   _ J314\nLoblaw A  \"*\nLoblaw B  __\nMaple Leaf Milling \t\nMassey Harris  _\u201e \u201e\nM & O Paper\t\nMont. Loco \t\nNat. Steel Car _ _ 11\nPage Hershey  _ 51\nPowell River\t\nRuss. Industries\nShawinigan \t\nSimpsons pfd ....\nSteel of Canada\nWellington\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Uranium\nOILS\nCalmont  07\nDalhousie   37\n\"?\u2122 \u201e '-Zzz: is:\u2122\nOkalta Com  2 40\nVanalta       -sau,\nINDUSTRIALS  \"\nCoast Breweries   4 15\nCapital Estates        19 00\nAlberta Dist  [    3M\nVan Roi\n.0314\n.70\n1.00\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, i-ily 5 (CP)\nnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed 74.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed 1.08%.\n.65\n- Win-\n30\n3H4\n14 V.\n12'i\n2B%\n15%\n27%\nIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LTD\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095 560 Baker St\n78\n23%\n34\n94\n31%\n31\n13%\n18\n21\n29%\n        40\nUnited Fuel A \u201e       56\nUnited Steel          9%\n52\nSteel of Can. pfd I\nStandard Paving\t\nStandard Chemical\t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Corp A I.\nUnited Corp B\nLEAVES NEW CAR\nAS PART PAYMENT\nON INCOME TAX\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP) \u2014\nNick Lucas, Vancouver auto dealer,\ndrove a new $3,400 car to the tax\noffices here today and left lt there\nas part payment on his personal income tax.\nHe said that he hoped that the\nRevenue Department will be able\nto convert it into cash, which is\nmore, he says, than he can do.\nHe explained that the unusual\npayment is a protest against credit\nrestrictions which he claims are\nkilling the market for aufos.\nIncome tax officials received the\nnews calmly. One expressed the\nopinion that a car is not legal tender.\nHorsemeat in\nVictoria? ... They\nWouldn't Dream of It\nVICTORIA, B.C.. July 5 (CP)\u2014\nBeef-eating Victorians are looking\ndown their noses at Vancouver's\nhorsemeat roasts.\nButchers in this.outpost of Em- \"\npire declared flatly today that Victorians are \"far too fussy\" to stomach horsemeat, which has been selling in .Vancouver for a week.\n\"Wouldn't dream of stocking the\nstuff,\" one dealer said. \"It would\ndrive my clients away.\"\nAnother   Victoria   butcher   said\nH. Walker  '\"        52 \"iwlth raised eyebrows: \"Horsemeat,\nWestern Grocers \"        tsrj old bo^ In Victoria? I should think\nWestern Grocers A Z'ZZZ      35   \\ we would 5hut \u25a0**? sl*\u00b0P first.\"\nWinnipeg Electric com'IL\nWinnipeg Electric pfd \t\n39%' '\n89%  It Pays To Read the Classified Dally\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 6, T951\nYour Best Friend\nWon't Tell You....\nBUT PERMIT US TO SUGGEST THAT FOR THE HOT\nSUMMER' DAYS YOU USE ONE OF THESE.\nARRID .\nFRESH _____\nMUM\t\nETIQUET (tube)\n530 \u2014 750\n470 \u2014 690\n530 \u2014 750\n    470\nVeto \u2014 Odorono \u2014 Snemist \u2014 Nonspi \u2014 Neet\nWater Lily \u2014 Heed \u2014 Stopette\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nKILLED  NEAR  LACOMBE\nRED DEER, Alta., July 5 (CP)\u2014\nCharles Austin, 25, was killed three\nmiles North of Lacombe last night\nwhen his jeep.crashed into the rear\nof a parked truck. Austin was from\nEckville, 20 miles West of Red Deer.\nWINNIPEG, July 5 (CP) \u2014 Farmers and poultry dealers in the Portage la Prairie, Man., district are\nurging more government action to\ncurb the epidemic of Newcastle\ndisease, which already had caused\nheavy losses to their flocks,\nThis, You Can\nAfford\nMen's\nWellington Gore\nOxford\nYour choice of ploin, moccasin tor\nweave vamps. Wine, all sizes.\nOnly\n$1\/Y95\n10\n411 BAKER YT.\nPHONE 1114\nTake Things as They Come\nQuebec Centenarians Motto\nBy ADRIEN PATRICE\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nVALLEYFIELD, Que., July 5\n(CP)\u2014The last survivor of a band\nof Papal Zouaves who left Canada\n81 years ago to help defend the\npope.In.Rome, J. Octave Cossette\ncelebrated his 101st birthday today.\nFor Mr. Cossette,  It waa Just\n. CUTLERS'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATCH REPAIRS.\n20 Years* Experience\nPROMPT   SERVICE\n-tfST'\n'\/\nBeautiful\n2-PIECE\nMATCHINCr\nSETS\nFrom $23.50 Up\nWe also specialize in\nopen stock patterns of\nrich gabardines and Irish\nlinens.\nWADES'\nShoe and Leather Goods\nanother day spent In his- home\nopposite the Valleyfleld Seminary.\nRelatives and  friends  read  him\nletters and telegrams of congratulation from all over the world\nbut he refused to get excited.\nIn good health, although confined\nto his home, the centenarian said\nhe was following his own rule for\nlongevity:  - \"Never    worry   about\nthings, take them as they come.\"\nMr. Cossette was a tall youth of\n20 when he joined a group of 150\nRoman Catholics from Canada who\nanswered a call for help from Pope\nPius IX.\nThe Papal Zouaves, volunteer soldiers garbed in billowing trousers\nand . brlghtly-colore.d shirts and\ntunics, went to defend the pope\nagainst Garibaldi \"who wanted to\nabolish the papal state. .\nMr. Cossette was born July 4,1850,\nin Champ'lain,. Que., near Three\nRivers, the second of 11 children.\nAt the age of 11 he became a\ncabin boy on a St. Lawrence River\nschooner and was paid $2 monthly,\na \"fabulous\" amount for a child\nhis age at'sthe time.\nAt -19, his father gave him the\nschooner \"Sulfrenie,\" making him\nthe youngest ship-owner in Canada.\nOn Aug. 28, 1870, he bbarded a\nriverboat at Three Rivers and, with\n25 other Zouaves, sailed to Montreal where they joined 124 ether\nvolunteers. All sailed from New\nYork for Rome and,the Vatican, but\nthey never saw action as the fight\nwas over before they arrived.\nBack home, Cossette returned to\nthe life of a sailor. But, sailing did\nnot take up all his time. Cossette\nbuilt the Valleyfield city hall, the\nold cathedral and police deDartment\nbuilding and several churches, both\nCatholic and Protestant.\nHe founded the insurance firm of\nSt. Jean Baptiste in 1878 and the\nValleyfield brass band four years\nlater.\nThe father of 11 children, 10 of\nthem still living, Mr. Cossette lives\na.uietly at the home of one of his\nsons here.\nLONDCIN, July 5 (AP)\u2014A cold\ntoday forced Princess Margaret to\ncancel an engagement to visit the\nRoyal Agricultural Show at Cambridge.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nPhilco Radio\nSoles and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302\n446 Ward St.\nBUOY-O-BOY\nx   FLOATS\n*\\i\nLIFE\nVESTS\nSee Our Displays\nFor gracious living in this good old summertime ..\n,        try these hoi wealher specials.\n___*\u25a0\nBEACH\nBALLS\nSAFETY\nCUSHIONS\nSee Our Displays\n\u2022By-\n\u00a3\nElectric\nFans\nFrom\n$10.80\nWe have a\ngood selection\nof fans to\nchoose from.\nBlade sizes\nfrom 6-Inch to\n10-Inch, fixed\nand oscillating.\nLawn\nSprinklers\nFrom\n$2.50\nWe have\nseveral   kinds\nand types of\nsprinklers. See\nour  displays\nfor your\nrequirements.\nPlastic Storage\nDish Covers\n95c Set\nSet of 4 elastlp top dish covers\n\u2014attractive .colors, well made.\nIdeal for covering food storage\ndishes In refrigerator.\nLEONARD and McCLARY\nREFRIGERATORS\nGAINADAY\nELECTRIC IRONERS\nMcCLARY and FAWCETT\nRANGES\nLECTRIC TEA KETTLES\nSNAKE IRRIGATORS\nA Bargain at $2.25 Each\nPLASTIC\nGARDEN HOSE\nSEE OUR DISPLAYS\nVacuum\nJug\n$8.55\nGet this smart\nnew style\nvacuum Jug\nwith pouring\nspout for use\nat picnics and\n'   camping.\nKeeps liquid\nhot or cold.\nInsect\nBomb\n$1.47\nGet  rid  of\nInsects the\neasy way.\nC^Mrl .\nPress  the\n\\^&y\nbutton, a\nlethal spray\nkills all  Insect\npests . . .\nqulcklyl\nIs,\nBeverage Sets\nFrom $3.15\nSets of glasses In several sizes,\ndesigns and decorations. Order\nearly, quantities limited.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPhone 1530 Wholesale-Retail Nelson, B.C.\nReds May Realize Aggression\nDoes Nol Pay\/Says SI. Laurent\nMONTREAL, July 3 (CP)\u2014Prime\nMinister St. Laurent said today the\nKorean cease - fire developments\nmay indicate the Communists realize that \"aggression does not pay?'\nHe told the Corporation of Agronomists of Quebec Province it is in\nthe hope of bringing home that idea\nthat the North Atlantic nations have\nbeen building up their strength.\n\"It is for that reason that we and\nour partners have made so many\nsacrifices to show the aggressors in\nKorea that aggression does not\npay,\" he said in an address at a\nluncheon. \"Events of the last few\ndays mayp be an indication that they\nare already realizing this.\"\nMr. St. Laurent told his audience\nGOV'T WORKERS\nTOSNUB\nCOMMISSIONER\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP) -\nB. C. .Government employees will\nsnub the Chairman of the Civil\nService Commission when he tours\nthe province this year because of\nhis attitude during bargaining for\nwage increases.\nThis was announced last night\nat a meeting of the Vancouver-New\nWestminster branch of the B. C.\nGovernment. Employees' Association where Government ministers\nwere criticized for their manner ln\ndealing with the request for a pay\nboost for 10,000 Provincial civil\nservants.\nExecutive of the Association\npassed a motion that Dr. Hugh\nMorrison of Victoria, head of the\nCivil Service Colhmission, not be\ninvited to union meetings in his\nannual tour, and that no entertain'\nment be provided for him \"because\nthere is nothing he can offer us.\"\nIt has 'been customary for the\ncivil servants to entertain Dr,\nMorrison and invite him to speak\nat meetings.   ,\nOfficials of the Association met\nwith  Cabinet  members  today  ln\nVictoria to explain why they turn\ned  down  the  Government's  offer\nfor a 6.5 per cent wage hike.\n. NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014City Council has announced that\nNew Westminster's new fire hall\nwill be ready for use by the end\nof the year.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nof farming experts that productivity\nof the soil\u2014their specialty\u2014is necessary not only to'meet Canada's\nneeds but also to help prepare a\ncomplete defence against the threat\nof Communism. That threat was\nsocial and economic, as well as mil\nitary and political.\n\"So that our defences may be\neffective,\" he said, \"we must erect\nthem on all fronts with the help of\nthose men everywhere who wish to\nremain free. It is for this reason\nthat the democracies have adopted\ntheir plans , for economic aid, the\nMarshall Plan, President Truman's\npoint-four program and the Colombo Plan.\n, \"These plans are our best weapon\nof defence in this ideological war ...\n\"We must furnish eloquent proof\nof our superior capacity to win the\nreal peace, that is, to solve better\nthan they the real economic and\nsocial problems of men.\n\"To that end, we must not only\nproduce more and ensure a better\ndistribution, but we must also do\nso with intelligence,\"\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's  Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST  KOOTENAY\nSTEAM  LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\n, , OPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nYou May Win\n$1500\nNew, Home for Fire\nOrphaned Fawns\nVANCOUVER, July J (CP)-Six\norphan fawns, rescued from the\nCampbell River area forest fire on\nVancouver Island, will make their\nhome in Vancouver,\nAllan Best, director of the Stanley\nPark children's zoo, left today to\npick up the black-tailed animals.\nRight now, they're living in a\nwire enclosure behind a game warden's home in Campbell River. Some\nof them are still less than a week\nold.\nLinen was first manufactured ih\nEngland by Flemish weavers in 1253.\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts  Blk.\nPHONE 25\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nTHOMPSON\n,     FUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St. Phone 361\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n.409 Hall Street        .     Phone 146\nNELSON, B. C.\nDID\nYOU\nKNOW?\nWe have the best suit\nvalues in both popular\nprice and best grade\nclothing.\nRight now-\nFASHION-CRAFT\n\"afe giving\n20% DISCOUNT\nFit is absolutely\nguaranteed.\nEmory's\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nWASHINGTON, July 5 (AP)\nAnnounced United States battle c\nualties in Korea reached 78,110\nday, an Increase of 1361 since 1\nweek.\nOur VIJO Has Always Been\nA Favorite \u2014 But Our\nNEW VIJO\nIi Even  Better Than Ever\nAvailable at your grocer's, ol\nEllison Milling & Elevator (\nPhone 238 523 Front St\nfor :\nKodak Snapshot\nWhen getting your film or prints\nask for Rules Folder.\nKODAKS \u2014 FILMS\nYour Rexall 8tor\u00ab\nCity Drug Go.\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nBox 460\nPhone pay 34 Night 807-R\nHeadquarters For\nAft    Y\u2122r\nVacation\nNeeds\nTs#*T'\nEnglish Style\nHealth Salts\n1 lb. Special 590\nBathing Caps\nWhite - Blue - Green\n750 - $1.00 - $1.25\nNoxzema\nSkin Cream\n260 - 650 - 800\n$1.69\nSun Glasses\nfor everyone\n290 to $4.95\nGillette\nRocket Razor\nand 10 Blades\n$2.00 Value $1.29\nShaving Lotion\nAfter Shave Talc\nReg. 75c. Special 390\nBand Aid: 150 \u25a0 350\nand 650\nAdhesive Bandages\nDettol  Antiseptic\n590 - 980 - $1.75\nNoxzema\nSuntan Oil\nSuntan Greaseless\n300 and 600\nNylon Bristle\nHair Brushes\nSpecial $1.00\nOlive Oil\nAll-Purpose Cream\n1 Ib. jar. Special 980\nTANTOO\n612\nGenuine\nRepellent\nInsect\nTHERMOS\nBOTTLES\nCream\nRepellent\n$1.85 and\n570\n590\n$1.95\nBEACH\nBALLS\nLarge   Size\n$1.00\nTartan Lotion\n(as advertised in Life)\nLets you tan without burn\n$1.10\nAnsco Camera\nAnsco Films\nBuy the Economy Pack\nand save 50 a Roll\nNELSON PHARMACY\n.   .        Your Fortress ol Health\nD. M. SAMPLE,  DRUGGIST *\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203   \u2014   We Deliver   \u2014   Res. 394-L\nAS ADVERTISED IN\nLIFE MAGAZINE\nThese beautiful, steel cabinet sinks make a permanent\ninstallation for years of service without\nmaintenance costs.\nOne-piece acid-resisting porcelain-enamel top\nNo-splash bowls\nBeautiful chrome, swinging type, mixing-faucet\nFlexible rinse spray\nModels from 42\" wide to 66\" wide\nPRICED FROM $129\nStart your kitchen alterations with a\nYOUNGSTOWN ALL STEEL SINK\nMcKay & Stretton\nLIMITED\n532 BAKER ST. PHONE 544\nImmediate Delivery\non New    \u2022\nChevrolets\nand\nOldsmobiles\nUSED CARS\n'49 Oldsmobile Hydramatic Sedan.        $^\/JAA\nLow mileage.   _ 4UVV\n'48 Oldsmobile 2-Door Sedan. Radio,- heater, hydramatic drive, life-guard . $1QCA\n11*2000\n_____ *800\n_____   *75\ntubes\n'50 Plymouth.\nRadio, air-conditioner\n'49 Anglia.\nPriced at\t\n'28 Chevrolet\nPriced at\t\nUSED TRUCKS\n'50 Mercury Vi-lorx\nPriced at  ...\n'49 Mercury 1-Ton\nPriced at  \t\n'49 Mercury 1-Ton\nPriced at \t\n11650\n__ $1400\n _*1300\n'48 Chevrolet ''4-Ton, Chassis ond Cab. $1 mif\\f\\\nPriced at    l_.UU\n'48 Dodge '\/.-Ton panel $1\n.    Priced at\t\n'40 Chevrolet '\/i-Ton Panel\nPriced at\t\n1150\n'350\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 35\nNelson, B. C.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_07_06","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0425444","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1951-07-06 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1951-07-06 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}