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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Freight Rate Increase Brings 50-Cent\nGasoline Here, Stumps Kaslo Dealer\nMost district motorists will be paying aa high as 60 centt per\ngallon for gat.\nNelson service station operators'said yesterday the. new gasoline\nprices, representing a one cent Increase on all grades of motor fuel,\nwould be In effect at all district dealers. Regular grade will go from\n47 to 48 cents while premium will be boosted from 49 to 60 cents.\nOil prices remain unchanged. .\nThe Increases followed oil company hikes announced, earlier\nthis week, said brought about by the 12 per cent freight rate increase\ngranted railways which became effective July 261\nWholesale prices for all grades of gasoline and kerosene Jumped\nseven-tenths of a cent while dle-el fuel, furnace fuel and stove oil\n.were all raised one cent per gallon.\n\u25a0  Increases were the same throughout the West Kootenay, keeping\nprices at the same level In Trail, Rossland and Nelson.\nAt Kaslo, the price reached the \"celling\" and didn't stop. One\ngarage operator felt it necessary to charge 50^ cents per gallon for\npremium but his pump meter registers only-to 60 cents even. The\nincrease will probably cost him the prlccof a new. pump.\nKootenay prices compare to 38.4 cents per gallon for regular\ngasoline and 40.8 cents for premium at Vancouver.\nSabotage Hinted\nIn Plane Crash\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP)~\nThe Vancouver Sun says today\nthat sabotage looms-ar. a possible\nexplanation for the crash of a\nTokyo airlift, plane 13 days ago.\nThe plane with 38 aboard disappeared off Cape Spencer, Alaska,\n.while enroute from Vancouver to\nTokyo. It was operated by the\nCanadian Pacific Air Lines.\nThe Sun said that officials of the\nair -lines had ruled out the possibility of mechanical failure as re-\nsjponsible for its disappearance.\n\"RCMP and FBI agents are standing by to inspect the wreckage, if.\nand when it is found,\" said the\nnewspaper report.\nSpokesman for the CPA said there\nhas never been a crash of a DC-4\u2014\nthe type of plane used on the airlift\u2014as a result of mechanical failure.\nThe Sun said it had learned that\nbaggage of U. S. airmen aboard\nthe plane had not been inspected.\n\"With this in view, officials are\nconsidering  Ihe possibility that\nbomb or other infernal device might\nhave been concealed in the uninspected baggage.\"   i\nRCMP headquarters here and In\nOttawa declined to comment on the\nsabotage report.\nAboard the plane we're seven\nVancouver crew members, two Canadian navy men, three American\ncivilians, three U. S. army officer;\nand 23 American airmen.\nENLISTED GOV'T\nAIDES INTO.\nCOMMUNIST FOLD\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014\nHede Massing, a Viennese who said\nshe worked in Washington as a\nCommunist spy, today told senate\nInvestigators she enlisted two state\ndepartment aides in her organization in 1933 and 1934.\nShe idenitfied the man as Noel\nField and Lawrence Duggan. Field\nhas disappeared ibehind t h e Iron\nCurtain while Duggan plunged to\nhis death from the 16th floor of a\nNew York office building in 1948.\nAt the time Field consented to\nenter her \"apparatus\", Mrs. Massing\ntestified, she believed he was employed in the state department's\nWestern European division, Duggan\nwas connected with the Latin American division, she said.\nMrs. Massing was called before\nthe senate's internal security subcommittee, trying to learn whether\nsubversive influences at home have\naffected United States policy in the\nFar.t-33ast.. \u00a3hairman 4?at McGar-\nran'T'Dem., .Ney.) described the witness as former Communist who \"operated on the higher level and who\nwas in the know.\"    .\nU. S. Committee\nTo Study Canadian\nNewsprint Problems\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014\nA committee of the House of Representatives indicated today that it\nmay send a sub-committee to Canada\/to study newsprint problems.\nRepresentative Lindley Beck-\nworth (Deni. Tex.) chairman of a\nnewsprint subcommittee, said his\ngroup may find it necessary to visti\nCanada later this year.\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP) -\nThe Office of Price Stabilization\ntoday affirmed the legality of a $10\nincrease m the price of newsprint\npaper posted by the Crown Zeller-\nbach Corp., of San \u25a0 Francisco.\nMONTREAL, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 R.\nM. Fowler, President of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association,\ntoday said a United States House\nof Representatives newsprint subcommittee would be welcome in\nCanada. . _ ..\nMe\n'\u25a0p'f   'UTJO^CIT^\n^T1   -BIO'IT\/cJ,.,\n6D3\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay \u2014 Clear With light\nwinds. Little change in temperature.\nWinds light. Low and high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley, 52 and\n90, 45 and 00.\nVol. SO\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 3, 19S1\n5 Cents a Copy\nNO. 87\nIRAN PROTESTS\nBRITISH TROOPS\nBritish Show\nConsideration\nFor Moslem Sabbath\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP) - Britain warmed up a plane today for\nthe cabinet mission assigned to new\ntalks with Iran on the oil crisis,\nthen delayed the departure so the\nmission would not arrive in Tehran\nuntil after the Moslem Sabbath.\nThe Moslems observe Friday as\ntheir holy day and day of rest.\nBritain's quick appreciation of\nsuch a point was considered by\nobservers here as striking a new\nnote In the long dispute over the\nfuture of the billion-dollar Angle-\nIranian Oil Company.\nThe Lord Privy Seal, Richard R.\nStokes,  heads  the  10-man  cabinet\nmission, how expected to leave Friday. It would arrive Saturday.\nW. Averell Harriman, President\nTruman % special envoy in Iran, apparently has succeeded in restoring\nsome broad base of confidence and\ngood feeling between the two countries.\nResentment over a British display\nof armed force off the refinery centre of Abadan, however, was voiced\nat Tehran-in the Majlis, the lower\nhouse of parliament.\nAbolhassan- Haerizader, a deputy\nof Premier Mohammed Mossadegh's\nnrtional front, declared \"the arrival\nof new British warships off Abadan\nAwait Word on\nHousing Projects\nVANCOUVER, Aug.  2   (CP)   \u2014\nFate of two big Vancouver housing\nprojects and prospects for further\ngovernment housing schemes may\nbe known soon.\n\u25a0Tenders for construction of 200\nhomes in the proposed Little Mountain low rental project were open-\n' ed here today.\n'Details of the bids were wired\nto Ottawa and Victoria and a decision is expected shortly from the\ncentral mortgage and housing administration\nFate of the enterprise depends on\nwhether the government thinks the\ntenders are reasonable.\nDecision on the Little Mountain\nplan will affect the 1106-unit Fras-\nerview project, where 600 homes\nremain to be built.\nResources Minister Winters indicated that bids on the Little\nMountain development may decide\nwhether tenders will be called for\ncompletion of the Fraserview project.\n\u201e   ...     -\u2014-< , ,\t\nWill Not Interfere\nWith P.N.E.\nCar Lottery\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014\nChief i Constable Walter Mulligan\nsaid today police will not interfere\nwith the car lottery being conducted\nin connection with the Pacific National Exhibition.\nHe said the lottery ls \"perfectly legal\" as. the lottery section of\nIhe criminal code does not apply to\nagricultural fairs or  exbihitions\nSilver Plane\nFound to be Glacier\nEDMONTON, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014\nR.C.A.F. aircraft Investigating re\nparts of a \"large sliver aircraft1\nlying on the side of a mountain\nnear the Alaska Highway reported back today that the silvery\nobject is a glacier.\nThree planes had left White-\nhor\u00ab\u00bb In the Yukon to Investigate\nafter two transport drivers and a\nparty of tourists reported seeing\nthe \"silver plane\" on a mountainside at mile 1179 of the Alaska\nHighway about five miles East\nof the highway.\nA UUART OF MILK for 10\/2.\ncents is the story of Robert. Co-\nlasco and other shoppers of\nBronx, N.Y. It came about as the\nresult of a price war which started when one grocer started selling milk at 19 cents a quart\u2014a\ncouple of cents under the established price. Other stores cut\ntheir prices still lower and now\nit's down to the point where the\nconsumers are all smiles.\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nHANS ESPIG, 22, of Frankfurt,\nGermany, wanted to be with his\ngirl friend when she was emigrated to Canada. He became a stowaway at Genoa, Italy, on the ship\non which she was travelling, but\nU.S. authorities caught him In\nNew York. So, at Halifax, his girl\nfriend left him, but Mr. Esplg\nwas sent back to Germany.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nFuneral for Bomb\nVictims, Saigon\nReds Believed Ready\nFor Zone Compromise\nSAIGON, Indo-China, Aug. 2\n(AP)\u2014Forty alleged terrorists of\nt h e Communist - led Nationalist\nmovement have been arrested following the assassinations of French\nBrig.-Gen. Charles Chanson and\nGovernor-General Thai Lap Thanh\ncontradicts*\"piedges'\"5' a\"friendly!01 Sou\"\\ yiet  Nan\"'  \"  was  *\"\"\u2022\nBoard lo Handle\nHilliers Affairs\nHILLIERS, B. C, Aug. 2 (CP) -\nThe Hilliers Doukhobor colony,\nfounded by the late Michael Verigin, will have an administration\nboard to handle its affairs.\nNo leader will be selected to replace Verigin, who brought his followers here from the Kootenays\nfive years ago when he broke away\nfrom the radical Sons of Freedom.\nChairman of the Board is Kuzma\nNazaroff with Joseph Podovinikoff\nwho served as adviser to Verigin,\nas secretary and Mary Pereverzoff\nas treasurer.\nIn a statement issued today Russell Verigin, son of the colony founder, said the Doukhobors here have\nno connection with Doukhobors\nelsewhere in B. C.\nEighth Meeting Lasts Over Two\nHours; No Word on Progress\nU.N. ADVANCE HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Aug. 3\n(Friday) (AP)\u2014Allied and Communist negotiators adjourned talks today on the tough issue of a Korean armistice buffer\nzone amid indications the Reds might be ready to compromise\nThe delegates scheduled another meeting tomorrow at\n11 a.m. (9 p.m. EDT Friday).   ;\nToday's session lasted more than two hours and was\nthe longest in several days. This gave hope that some progress might have been made in eight days of deadlock over\nthe issue.\nThe eighth meeting on the deadlocked issue of where to establish\na demilitarized zone opened after\na high United Nations source expressed belief the Communists\nMight be preparing to accept the ! betweWVongvang and\" Wo\"nsan.)\nnounced today.\nFuneral services were held today\nfor the two victims, killed by a\nhuman bomb\" who was wiped out\natmosphere for the oil-talks.\"\nFour destroyers showed  up  off\nAbadan Tuesday, as British engineers shut down the works after the .    . . ,\nlast of the storage tanks were iilled. j by\u201ehla \u00b0\u2122 grenade.\nBritish army planes also were re- L Nguyen   Van   Tarn\nported to have flown over Iranian IPubhc Securit5r'  said\nterritory there.\nMinster   of\nthe  killings\nI two days ago may signal a new out-\nHarriman was notified In Tehran j brp!a!*i \u00b0f ,Sf_\/c.thivity'    \u201e.\n)\u201e\u25a0\u00bb t_\u201e It, \u201eni.rfi\u201en s,\u201etv. t\u201e n-,- '    Police identified the assassin as\nhat Iran is protesting both to Bn-Tj h v     M, h   25 fe\n^n.?.it...r._.'Jw!l0.seo.vr^trs.ua\/lt!ivolunteer \"suicide b^tahon\". supposed to number 10,000 youths. The\nMAY ACT JOINTLY\nTO OFFSET\nOIL SHORTAGE\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014\nThe government approved today a\nplan whereby American oil companies operating abroad may act\njointly to offset world, wide petroleum shortages.\nManly Fleischmann, defence production administrator! announced\nthat-he\". has;;lhyited' 19 ql)\/companies:\nwith overseas operations ' to take\npart The plan authorizes, cooperative action for increasing;' both the\ncrude oil production and the manufacture of refined petroleum products in several countries including\nCanada. \/'\nKnown as \"Plan of Action No. 1,\"\nthe voluntary agreement provides\nimmunity from prosecution under\nthe United States anti-trust laws\nand the Federal Trade Commission\nAct for'the participating companies\nas long'as they stay within the scope\nof the plan.\nThe document sets forth that the\nstoppage of movements of crude oil\nand refined products from Iran has\nresulted in a loss to ,free world\ntrade of about 460,000 barrels a day\nof .refined products and 150,000 barrels'a day of crude oil.\nair bases are -used by British ships\nand planes under a mutual-aid\ntreaty.\n(Reuters News Agency reported\nfrom Tehran that Interior Minister\nGeneral Zahidi resigned and has\nbeen replaced by Amir Alai.)\nTHEY'VE GOT THE ANSWER: Summer's dog days\nmay be getting some folks down, but not Deedee, 3, and\nJerry Foster, 4, of 524 Robson Street. They picked one\nof the cool spots in town, the water trough adjoining the\nJohn Houston monument, Vernon Street, on which to\nrest and finish their ice cream.\nProbe Quebec Mines\nDepartment for Reds\nMONTREAL, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 The\nHerald says in a newspage story\ntoday the Attorney-General's Department is conducting an -investigation into the Quebec Mines Department \"to ferret out at least\ntwo-known Communists ...\"\nThe story says high provincial\ngovernment officials refused to discuss: the matter or to reveal the\nnames pf the persons involved.\nQUEBEC, Aug. i (CP) \u2014 Mines\nMinister French, commenting today\non a Montreal newspaper report of\nan inquiry into the activity of \"at\nleast two known Communists\" in\nhis department,\" said he knew\nnothing about it.\ngroup claims it is anti-French but\nis not Communist.\nPAYROLLS HIT\nALL-TIME PEAK\nOTTAWA, Aug, 2. (CP)- Industrial employment and payrolls hit\nall-time peaks June, 1, the Bureau of\nStatistics fetfort^ftdayV :--\u2022\u2014\u2022- '\nOn-'the basis of preliminary figures, .the ; index of employment\ntouched 179.3 at June. 1, compared\nwith 175.6 for May 1, and 166.0 for\nJune 1,1950. The base is 1939 equals\n100.\nDespite some losses ol working\ntime on the Victoria Day holiday,\nchange in the industrial distribution of employees and reduced\nworking hours in some industries,\nweekly earnings were generally\nhigher.\nThey amounted to $49.24 at June\n1. compared with $49.17 at May 1,\nand $44.51 at June 1, 1950.  .\nThe average weekly earnings in\nmanufacturing were $50.86 at June\n1, $50.84 at May 1 and $45.82 at\nJune 1, 1950.\n$1 Million Damage\nTo Fraser Crops\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Aug.\n2 (CP)\u2014Drought .has caused $1,-\n000,000 damage to Fraser Valley\ncrops, Agricultural authorities estimated today.\nThe berry crop has been cut from\n50 to 60 per cent and the peach crop\nby more than half while all other\ncrops have suffered from lack of\nmoisture, a survey showed.\nBuilding Contracts\nUp $175,783,100\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 Construction contracts in Canada in\nJuly totalled $326,822,900, an increase of $175,783,100 over the figures for July last year.\nThe total for seven months, says\nMacLean Building Reports, Ltd.,\nnow is $1,505,128,700, compared with\n$768,005,300 for the same period of\n1950.\nJuly's gain was accounted for by\nincreases in the West and the Maritimes, with British Columbia's al-\n','minum project accounting for\n$160,000,000 and steel-plant expansion at Sydney, N. S\u201e for $16,000,-\n000. The Maritimes had small gains\nalso in residential and commercial\nconstruction. Quebec and Ontario\nhad over-all losses.\nGIRL DISAPPEARS\nVANCOUVER, Wash., Aug. 2\n(AP)\u2014Disappearance of a 14-year-\nold Canadian girl from a highway\ncampsite near Corbett, Ore., was\nreported today.    i\nPolice said the girl's father, M.\nReginald Wing, told them this:\nHe and his two daughter were en\nroute from Ontario to California,\nThey are migrant fruit pickers.\nThey camped beside the Columbia\nRiver highway near Corbett Sunday night. When he awoke early\nin the morning he discovered the\ngirl was missing.\nHe described the girl as a 5 foot,\n6 inch tall brunette weighing 106\npounds. She was wearing blue\njeans, green shoes and a tan sport\njacket.\nChevrier to Inspect\nPrairie Airports\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014 Transport Minister Chevrier will leave\nhere next Thursday to inspect civil\nairports in the prairie provinces\nand discuss local problems with departmental officials. He will visit\nairports at Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Edmonton and Saskatoon.\nThe Board will continue to Van\ncouver from Edmonton to rrold public hearings on air transport board\nmatters.\nDECERTIFY\nSHIPYARD UNION\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014The\nBritish Columbia Labor Relations\nBoard today decertified the Marine\nWorkers and Boilermakers, Local\nNo.- 1. (C.C.L.) in .live Vancouver\nshipyards because union members\nrefused to worW.QVertime...-. ..\n\"\"The men are employed In Sterling\nShipyards, MacKenz'e Barge and\nDerrick Co. Ltd., Beach Avenue\nShipyards Ltd., Vancouver Ship\nyards Ltd., and Burrard Shipyards\nand Engineering Works Ltd. .'   \u2022\nThe Board found the men's action\nconstituted an illegal strike under\nthe Industrial Conciliation Act. The\nyards employ several hundred men.\nThe Board will hold decertification hearings for about 500 members of the union in seven other\nshipyards here next week on the\nsame issue.     .)\u25a0\u25a0\nAction of the' men in Refusing to\nwork overtime followed refusal of\nthe shipyard owners to grant an interim pay boost to meet the high\ncost of living.\nUnion members then decided to\nadhere to the letter of their con\ntract, which provides for a 40-hour\nweek.   Only   emergency   overtime\nhas been worked.\nUnion officials may challenge the\nruling in the courts. They said if\nthe decision is allowed to stand the\nboard could offer decertification of\nother unions.      '\nPACIFIC STAGE     -\nDRIVERS\nRETURN TO WORK\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP) -\nPacific Stage Lines workers return-\ned to their buses today after a half-\nday walkout to attend a union meeting on contract terms.\nDecision was taken to return lo\nwork pending efforts to resume negotiations with the company.\nEarlier, 15,000 commuters had to\nshift for themselves when the 260\nbus drivers and clerks failed to report for work.\nPacific Stages operate routes to\nSeattle,  Wash., New  Westminster,\nB.C., and to suburban districts in\nthe Fraser Valley and Vancouver\nNorth shore.\nThe Workers originally asked a\n31-ceht-an-hour pay boost and a\ntwo year contract. The company has\noffered 16 cents.. The basic wage\nnow is $1.32yj- an hour.\nUnion officials representatives of\nthe Amalgamated Street Railway\nand-Motor Coach Employees\n(A.F.L.), said they would recommend acceptance of an 18\"\/j-cent-an-\nhour increase. They will insist, however, on a one-year contract. The\ncompany wants a two-year contract.\nyang and Wonsan \u2014 roughly 65 to\n30 miles North of 38.\n(Actually the battle lines wera\nfar South of these points, and there\nwas no official or unofficial word\nthat a line ever had been proposed\nline proposed by the Allies.\nThere was no Immediate Indication of how the talks were progressing.\nThe U.N. source's view was based\nrn Peiping and Pyongyang radio\nbroadcasts which distorted the\nAllied attitude.' These broadcasts\nmade it appear the U.N. was demanding a line deeper in North\nKorea than the present fighting\nfront\nThus, the U.N. source reasoned,\nthe Communists would be able\nto accept the fighting front as the\ncease-fire line and still foster the\nImpression they had wrung concessions from the Allies.\n(The Peiping radio quoted the\nKaesong correspondent of the Tien-\ntsn Progressive Daily as saying that\nUnited States senators, American\nradio announcers .and the Press\nwere \"howling\" for establishment\nof the buffer zone between Pyong-\nU.N. and Communist peace negotiators began their 18th meeting\npromptly at 11 a.m. The Allied\ndelegation flew to the Kaesong\ntalks in helicopters, arriving there\n20 minutes before the starting time\nset for the critical conference.\nThe fact that the talks have not\nbroken down, despite seven fruitless meetings, appeared significant\nto most observers here. Both sides\nstill seemed willing to keep trying\nfor an armistice.\nThe Communist radio at Pelplntj\nThursday night announced that\nLt.-Gen. Nam II, senior Red delegate at Kaesong, had \"rcpudated\"\nthe U.N. buffer \"deep across the\n38th Parallel.\"\nA later Peiping broadcast Friday morning quoted Nam as saying \". . , demands which attempt\nto push the military demarcation\nline deep Into the positions of\nour side . , . are absolutely unacceptable.\"      .-   -\nAthabaskan Sails\nFor Korean Duty\nVICTORIA,, B. C, Aug. 2 (CP)-\nThe tribal-class destroyer Athabaskan sailed from -Esquimalt this afternoon to begin a second tour of\nduty with United NaUons Naval\nforces in Korean waters.\nAccompanying the Athabaskan\nwas the crescent-class destroyer\nCrusader, which will go as far as\nFood Prices Boosted\nCost-of-living 3.5\n.   New Highs Established in Every\nItem, Pork Leads Meat Increases\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP)-Sharp\nIncreases In the price of food\nboosted the cojt'-of-llving Index\nby 8.5 points In June to a new\nhigh of 167.6 from 184.1, the Bureau of Statistics reported today.\nThe 3.5-ppint climb was one point\nbelow the record monthly jump of\n4.5 last February. The Index is based on 1935-39 prices equalling 100.\nPrices rose, for meat, eggs and\nfresh vegetables, the Bureau said.\nPearl Harbor, Hawaii with  Atha-j?\u00b0rae_,w\u00a3Te seasonal advances, but\n! the Bureau noted  that  pork, for\ntook  a  surprisingly   big\nYugoslavia Bids\nFor Tourist Trade\nBELGRADE. Aug. 2 (Reuters) \u2014\nYugoslavia has staretd an all-out\ndrive to attract more foreign tourists to her shores. \"\nSpecial rates giving (hem a 70-\nper cent reduction on lodging and\ntransport prices, courtesy courses\nfrom customs and other Yugoslav\nofficials and regular inspections of\ntourist premises to ensure hygene\nare some of the ways in which the\nauthorities are trying to make holiday conditions here competitive to\nthose in Western Europe.\nConsidering this country's variety\nof scenery, climate and local atmosphere, Yugoslavia has a chance\nof one day becoming a popular holiday spot \u2022 - -  -\nMilan Apih, director of the Federal committee for tourism, said\n1951 is a \"test year.\"\nOttawa Permission Qiven\nTo Survey Big Bend Road\nVICTORIA, B.C.. Aug. 2 (CP) -\nThe Big Bend section of the Trans-\nCanada Highway between Revelstoke and Golden may be rerouted\non a more direct line if a survey\nnow being undertaken on the Federal Government level shows the\nBig Bend area can be utilized as a\nbig water storage basin for production of power.\nThe study is being made in conjunction with Columbia River engineering experts from the United\nStates.\nThe Big Bend Highway follows\nthe Columbia River on a sweeping\ncurve to the North between Revelstoke and Golden.\nWorks Minister Carson said that\nif studies prove the feasibility of\nusing the Big Bend section as a\nstorage reservoir, the present highway would have to be rerouted.\nMr. Carson said there would be\nno big expenditures made on the\nBig Bend Road until it is determined whether the reservoir will be\nbuilt.\nThe Province is a joint partner\nwith the Federal Government in\nregard to the Big Bend Road;\nMr. Carson said he had received\nFederal Government, approval to\nstart surveys of a new route from\nRevelstoke to Golden. He explained,\nhowever, that he did not have sufficient staff to undertake the survey this year.\nThe Minister expressed hope that\nthe survey will be started next\nyear.\nIt Is believed such a survey would\nresult in plans for a considerably\nshorter highway between Revelstoke and Golden than the existing\nBig Bend Road.\nbaskan and carry out training exercises en route.\nRear Admiral Wallace B. Creery.\nPacific Coast Flag officer, went\naboard Athabaskan to say goodbye\nto her commanding officer, Cmdr.\nDudley King, Victoria, and to wish\nthe ship and her men good luck.\nThen as the ships sailed out of Esquimalt harbor, Admiral Creery\ntook their salute from Duntze Head.\nReturn of Athabaskan to the Far\nEast brings together the three original Canadian ships which left for\nKorean service a year ago. Athabaskan will relieve H.M.C.S. Huron,\nand take her place in the U. N. team\nwith H.M.C.S. Sioux and H.M.C.S.\nCayuga.\nexample,\nincrease, much higher than considered a normal advance fro this time\nbf year.\nSmaller Increases were recorded\nfor coal and coke in Ontario and\nQuebec, drugs, newspapers, person\nal care, clothing and home furnishings.\nThe food sub-index Increased 9.9\npoints to a new high 249.7. The sub-\nindex- for fuel and light rose 1.0\npoints, a record 147.2. New highi\nwere.established in all other fields.\n'Small, scattered increases in tha\nclothing group advanced this sub-\nindex 0.4 points to 202.9. Home furnishings and services rose 0.3 points\nto 197.4.   \u2022   .\nThe miscellaneous group climbed\n1.2 points to 142.2. propelled by\nhigher prices for drug and personal\ncare items, hospital costs, tobacco\nand newspapers.\nRents were not surveyed, The sub-\nindex remained at the record 139,8.\nThe Bureau estimated that since\nAugust, 1939. living costs in Canada\nhave risen 86,1 per cent.\nB.C. to Export\nIron Ore fo Japan\nis about\nher first tour of duty.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP)-For\nthe first time in history, iron ore\n,   ,,      .,.   ,    ,       will be exported from British Col-\nComplement of the  Athabaskan(      \u201e    ,   $ wjth      i0000.ton\n       r\u201er,T,t\u201eChanged    \"Ce shipment moving out Aug. 15.\nThe shipment will be from a $3,*\n000,000 development of the Argonaut Co.' Ltd. at Quinsam Lake on\nthe East coast of Vancouver Island.\nThe company expects to send\nabout 80,000 tons of ore a month to\nJapan when the mill and operation\nare in full swing.\nJapanese  steel mills  have  been\nFour Crew Members\nEscape Ship Fire\nPRINCE RUPERT. B.C., Aug. 2\n(CP)\u2014The story ofsT'ship fire off\nAlaska was unfolded today when\nfour crew members of the Vancouver halibut boat Hilsen . reached\nPrince Rupert.\nThey told how their vessel caught\nfire and sank Sunday off Forrester\nIsland, .Alaska, following a short\ncircuit in the Ignition.\nThe blaze spread so quickly that\nthe crew, had less than three\nminutes to take to the dory. They\nleft everything behind. The Hilsen\nwas carrying. 3000 pounds \u2022 of halibut.\nAfter\" three hours afloat, they\nwere picked up by the American\nhalibut boat Denny Joe which\ntransferred them to the fishing boat\nLeading Lady.\nThey went to Ketchikan, Alaska,\nand from there to Prince Rupert.\nAboard the boat were Skipper\nPeter Ivarson of Vancouver; his\nfather, Arne; Einer Hanberg of\nPrince Rupert and Alfred Carlson\nof Digby Island.\nVICTORIA, B. C, Aug. 2 (CP)\nPrince Robert House, the city's\ndowntown building, known to thousands of servicemen as a hostel during the Second World War, has a\n$65,000 price tag today, but its fate\nstill is undecided.\nCivic officials are also considering a proposal of traffic surveyor\nRobert Doble lhat the building be\ntorn down and the site used for a\nparking lot.\nPOLISH SEAMEN\nFORCE WAY OFF\nSHIP IN SWEDEN\nSTOCKHOLM, Sweden, Aug. 8\n(Reuters)\u2014Twelve Polish seamen\nwho stormed the bridge of their\ntiny minesweeper, locked up their\n\"political officers\" and brought the\nchip into port at Ystad, tonight were\nallowed to apply for asylum.\nThe 12 men told port officials\nthat 'they had led a mutiny early\ntoday aboard the ship, the H. G. 11,\ninspired by recent United States\nand British radio broadcasts to seek\nfreedom in Sweden from Commun.\nism.\nMeanwhile, the remainder of the\n33-man crew steamed out to sea\nfacing a slowdown since their trad- [ bound for Poland after the com-\nitional supplies tn Manchuria were; mander had handed in his report\ncut off by the Communists. I of the incident.\nAnd in This Corner. \u2666.\nHULL, England, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014 England's pea-canning plant!\npacked a bumper crop of fat green peas this year.\nThat's good for the packers, but bad for two lively teen-ageri\nhoplnq to put by a,few shillings for the Summer holidays.\nThe tw\u00bb girls scanned peas, at a canning factory. Each pound of\nbad neas brought them four pence.\nBut It was a bad year for bad peas.\nThe girls Invested In a bottle of black shoe dye.\nAfter that, they told a Juvenile court Wednesday, their earnings\nzoomed. Then they started to overdo It. They began painting all tha\npeas black.\n\"We were caugh by the forewoman,\" admitted one of the teenagers. \"We got the sack.\"\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014 British doctors cured a man of his\nsevere stomach ache and hustled him to a mental hospital, the magazine Nursing Mirror says tonight.\n\u25a0    Inside his stomach they had found:\nSix ougces of hay.' four pieces of metal, a razor blade, a piece of\nfiorcelain, a steel file, two stones, a pin, four pennies, three matches, a\nadies' hair clip, a key, two nails, a pen,\nbroken knife blades.\nknife handle, and two\nALBANY, N.Y., Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014They laughed when 74-year-old\nJoe Bolley said he could run up the 77 steps of the State Capital building In 11 seconds. He did it today In 10.\n\"It comes with practice,\" said Bolley, a porter at St. Peter's Hospital. \"I've been doing It for six years.\"\nBolley said he had been raised In Canada on molasses bread and\npea soup. Physical exertion Is his hobby.\n\"I'm no good at running long distances,\" he says. \"Fellows with\nlong legs could always beat me at distances of more than 100 miles.\"\n a \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUQ. 3, 1951\nTONIGHT-SATURDAY \u2014 Complete Shown: \"fiOO - 9*00\ni-.:; ^,\u00bb! '\u2022 !\u00a3y\nDAY\n7kJlf GENE\nMiNFIfslW\nc\/wc\niRlV,*\nm     &&\n*\n\u2022frig Late News\n'i'l     Magnetic   Tides\nmsmm\nKids \u2014 Don't Forget \"CARNIVAL OF FUN\" at the\nMatinee Tomorrow\n'BETTER  8WIMMINQ   MARK\nMARSEILLE, France, Aug. 2\n(AP)\u2014A French four-man relay\nteam tonight bettered the world\nSOO-metre free style swimming\nrecord.\nThe French quartet swam the distance ip eight minutes, 33 seconds.\nThis bettered the mark set by the\nTokyo Swimming Club team April\n3, 1950, at Marialia, Brazil. This\nrecord was 8:40.6.\nSPECIAL\nTODAY\nMen's\nWork Socks\nAll Wool\nPer pair \/\/C\nMen's\nWork Boots\nPanco Sole\nPer pair.... $A.o5\nGODFREYS'\nPhonei*- 2 7 0 -wBox\nBarnum Leads\nTarn O'Shanler\nCHICAGO, Aug. S (AP)\u2014 Little-\nregarded John Barnum, 220-pound\nprofessional from Grand Rapids,\nMich., shot an eight-under-par 64\nwith a record cracking 29 on the\nlast nine to take the first-round\nlead today in Tarn O'Shanter's $15,\n000 All-American Pro Golf Tourna\nment.\nBarnum needed only 25 putts in\nfashioning his 35-29 card against\nTarn's 36-38\u201472 par for 6915 yards.\nHe one-putted every green but\nthe 10th on the back nine in his\nfantastic windup which was a\nstroke better than Byron Nelson's\nrecord 30 set in 1045.\nPutts dropped from three to 20\nfeet for the 39-year-old Barnum as\nhe grabbed a three-stroke lead over\nJimmy Demaret and Fred Hawkins\nin the first lap towards top prize\nof $2250.\nFor four hours Demaret led 116\npros with his 34-33\u201487, only to relinquish it close to nightfall to Barnum, whose biggest victory since\n1947 was winning the Michigan pro-\namateur event several weeks ago.\nHis 64 was one stroke shy of matching the course record set by Lloyd\nMangrum in 1948.\nStan Leonard of Vancouver shot\na one-over-par 37-36\u201473.\nARCTIC PRINCE\nTO BE RETIRED\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014 Irishman Joe McGrath's derby winner,\nArctic Prince, is to be retired to\nstud immediately.\nArctic Prince broke down while\nrunning in the Festival of Britain\nstfkes at Ascot two weeks ago.\nMcNamees Are\nSwim Favorites\nKELOWNA, B. C, Aug., 2 (CP)\u2014\nThe McNamee brother and sister\ncombination from Vancouver, who\nlast week swept the freestyle events\nof the Canadian championships, established themselves today as top\nfavorites for the senior honors in\nthe 45th annual Kelowna Regatta.\nThis became evident during the\npreliminary heats for the Canadian\nNorthwest championships run off\nunder a blazing sun,\nBoth Gerry and Kay McNamee\nturned ln the best times ln the two\nfreestyle events ,each entered. Gerry, who won the junior aggregate\nhere last year, also topped all comers in the 150-yard Medley swim.\nOcean Falls' classy junior boys\nteam made an impressive showing,\nplacing one or more competitors in\nall finals. They grabbed five of\nthe eight qualifying spots in the\n100-yard freestyle and turned in the\nbest three times in the 200-yard\nfreestyle.\nJim Bain paced the paper town\ncrew with the best clocking in both\nthe 100 and 200. Standout in the\njunior girls ranks so far is Beverley\nGraham of Portland Aero Club,\nwho won both preliminaries she\nentered and came second to Kay\nMcNamee in the 50-yard senior\nwomen'6 freestyle.'\nDan Cramer of Trail swam third\nin the 100 yards freestyle, junior\nboys C.N.W. championship.\nVWftd\u00ab_-?lwA__\n_ .h\u00bbj.i.ii.'.\u00bb:li\nYoung Fowl' f.m\\*\nFresh killed. Lb  V\"*\nRoasting Chicken 75*\ni lb. average. Lb.    * w.\nRolled Veal Oven Roast \"JO*\nPork Loin Chops or Roast O C*\nBacon -A?*\nFresh sliced. Vs lb  \"__\u25a0\niiii!i\u00a3l\" mumw'\nitllliP V\u00a3G\u00a3TABl\u00a3S\nOnions J       1C*\nBunch  *\"\" for    *..mf\nCarrots 1.1s}*\nBunch  *\"\u25a0 for     I W\nBananas J      AT*\nGolden ripe  *\"\u25a0 lbs.    \u25a0 '\nCantaloup JQ*\nB.C. Each    *\u25a0\u00bb **\nGROCERIES and STAPLES\nREADY-TO-EAT FOODS ON HOT DAYS\nSpaghetti \u2022 7      -\\-\\*\nCattelli's. 15 oz   <*\u2022 tins  \u25a0* \u2022>   \u2022\nSalisbury Loaf ,        _s42*\nBoston. 12 oz. tin \u00bb   i_s-_\nMeat Spreads 3      4Q*\nSummerside or Puritan   *\u25a0? tins *}\u00a5\u25a0. T::\nPork and Beans J      7Q-*\nMalkins Best. 15 oz   *\u25a0\u25a0 tins \u00bb<^\nShoe String Potatoes 1Q*\nNalloys. 3 oz. tin  ,     I -^\nCohoe Salmon \u00bb\\fi*\nSea Crown. Vz lb. tin   .'j.   mt W\nCornflakes \")      .AQ*\nKelloggs. 12 oz    \u00ab*\u25a0 pkg.    \u25a0 \u00ab*\nThe Corner Store\nPhone 1188 1224 Stanley St.\nThe Sugar Bowl\n* Phone 1370 902 Josephine St.\nVICTORIA TOPS\nLACROSSE\nIDEAL TEAM\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014\nIntercity lacrosse league coaches\ntoday gave their choices for an ideal\nteam, and five of the possible eight\nfirst team positions went to Victoria\nShamrock players.\nThere were only two repeaters in\nthe annual all-star team poll, Victoria's Arnold Ferguson and New\nWestminster Commandos' Alf Wood.\nFerguson, at ease either directing  Shamrocks from the bench\nor floor, again  nailed down the\nfirst team coaching  position, i\nwell as a starting defense spot\nWood,  with  Salmonbellies  last\nseason, drew the other defense spot.\nOther members of the Shamrocks\nto earn positions on the first squad\nare: Whitey Severson, forward; Archie Browning, Centre and Bill An\ndrews, Goal.\nVancouver Combines bagged the!\ntwo remaining first team slots.\nGogie Stewart was named Rover\nand Harry Buchanan was the choice i\nfor forward.\nThe five coaches, Ferugson of\nVictoria; Bill Dickinson of Indians,\nRalph Douglas of Commandos, John\nCavallin of Vancouver and Ted\nMenzies of NBnaimo, were not permitted to pick players from their\nown clubs.\nCombines' Cavallin was chosen\nsecon -team coach. The No. 2 squad\nincludes three Commandos. They\nare Jake Proctor and Lew Landess,\ndefense, and Jackie Northup, centre.\nNorth Shore Indians' Marino Cer-\nvi and Bo Bradford are the two forwards. Vancouvers' Jim Anderson is\nrover.\nGrand Master Here; Jewel Presented\nRev. R. J, Love, Grand Master\nof the I.O.O.F. Lodge for B. C,\nThursday night spoke at a Joint\nmeeting of. the Odd Fellows of\n' Nelson, Kaslo and Slocan City, at\na special meeting In the I.O.O.F,\nHall,\nMr. Love, who came from Wilton Heights United Church, Vancouver, Is on his official .tour\nthroughout the Province. Tha\ntour, which takes up the whole\nyear. coverB North as far as Daw.\nton Creek and East as far at Natal.\nThe Grand Master was accompanied into the Lodge Room by R.\nVoung, P.G.H.P of the encampment; David Proudfoot. P.G.M.; W.\nT. Fisher, D.D.G.M., and R. G. Warner, D.D.G.M. of Slocan Lodge No.\n40.\nF. Llpplngwell was In the chair.\nFollowing his presentation of a 50-\nyear jewel to Mr. Proudfoot, Mr.\nLove spoke of the practical application of Oddfellowship. emphasizing\nespecially work carriedl out under\nthe Lodge's Home Fund for senior\ncitizens, the Bursary Fund for\nneedy students, and the White Rock\nCamp for underprivileged children.\nAt the social gathering at which\nthe Rebekahs served refreshments,\nMr. Love spoke to both the Odd\nFellows and Rebekahs on the \"use\nof common things\", based on the\norder's motto, \"friendship, love and\ntruth.\"\nTO EAST KOOTENAY\nThe Grand Master arrived from\nTrail Wednesday and will continue\non today to Fernie, then to Natal\nwhere   he   will   conduct   morning\n! Kiwanis Club\n| Tour's St. Francis\nMembers of th* Nelson Kiwanis\nClub were taken on a tour of Mount\nSt. Francis Infirmary Thursday\nevening following the regular\nweekly dinner meeting.\nDr. J. J Vingo conducted the\ntour in which Kiwanians saw results of one of their projects, that\nof providing some furnishings for\ntlie hospital.\nPlans were also laid to handle\nthe appearance of the Hollywood\nDaredevils, stockcar stuntmen who\nwill be showing here Saturday. The\nKiwanis Club is sponsoring the\nevent.\nROAD STARTED\nTO WAGNER MINE\nSheep Creek Gold Mines, Ltd., is\nbuilding a 15-mile road to its Wagner property in the Lardeau.\nThe road is being constructed on\nHealy Creek,. South of Gerrard, and\ncarloads of equipment and bulldozers are being used.\nThe work is being carried out\npreparatory to mine development,\nan official of the company said in\nNelson Thursday.\nRenovate Royal\nREV.R. J. LOVE\nservices. He will also visit Cranbrook, Kimberley and Creston before returning to the Coast for the\nweekend He will resume his tour\nby visiting the Okanagan.\nWhile\" here, Mr. Love accompanied by District Deputy Grand Master Fisher, Charlie Watts, Mr. Tap-\nanail of Kaslo, and Mr. Kerr, visited Mr. Rlxen, Mr. McDonald and\nMrs. Watts at Mount St. Francis, as\nwell as Mrs, Lundy of Holtom\nHome All are members of the\nLodges.\nRotary International Committee\nROYALS CONTINUE\nBALL PRACTISING\nThe Nelson Royals fastball team\nis having a bit of difficulty in obtaining sufficient players for their\nteam. However, the girls are not\ngiving up and will continue as before. .'\nThey are carrying out weekly\npractices Wednesday evenings at the\nRecreation Grounds in preparation\nfor a series of games. Coach Chum\nArcure has issued a call to all feminine athletes to turn out.\nCHICAGO, U.S.A., Aug. 2 (Special)\u2014Harry D. Harrison, general\nmanager of Peebles Motors Ltd. in\nNelson, has been appointed a member of the Rotary International Extension Committee for U. S., Canada and Bermuda for the 1051-52\nfiscal year, it was announced today at Rotary headquarters in Chicago.\nWith his 11 fellow committee\nmembers, he will promote the formation of additional Rotary Clubs\nin those countries. During the past\n18 months. 483 Rotary Clubs have\nbeen organized in 40 different\ncountries,\nMr. Harrison has been a member\nof the Rotary Club of Nelson since\n1042, is a Past President of that Club\nand a Past District Governor of Rotary International, In Nelson, he is\nPresdient of the Board of Trade\nand is a Past President of the Retail Merchants Association and of\nthe Socratic Society.\nWith the continuing growth of\nthe Rotary organization in all parts\nof the world, Rotary membership Is\nat an all-time high. Some 350,000\nbusiness and professional executives\nare members of 7366 Rotary Clubs\nin 83 countries.\nStandings\nAMERICAN LEAGUE -\nNew York     60 37 ,610\nBoston     60 39 .606\nCleveland     60 39 .606\nChicago     '56 45 .554\nDetroit       45 51 .469\nWashington     44 55 .444\nPhiladelphia       39 62 .386;\nSt. Louis         31 67 .316\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn       64 33 .660\nNew  York      57 46 v .553\nPhiladelhpia     50 50 .500\nSt. Louis     46 49 .484\n| Boston .-.'.-    46 49\nFINED FOR\nMARKETING\nVIOLATION\nFred Eremenko of Castlegar was\nfined $25 and costs by Stipendiary\nMagistrate William Evans when he\npleaded guilty to a charge of transporting cherries in contravention of\nthe Natural Products Marketing\n(B.C.) Act.\nEremenko had appeared previously on the charge July 26, together\nwith William Saprunoff and Andrew. Klimovich. Saprunoff and\nKlimovich also paid $25 fines while\nEremenko's case was adjourned.\nL. S. Gansner 'appeared for the\nCrown while Warren Ferguson acted for the Defence.\nTheft of 2 Cars\nThe two youths who led RCMP\na merry chase in Nelson last week\nin a stolen car have been sentenced\nto 1? months in jail as a result of\nhearings at Oliver and Penticton.\nWilliam Collins, 18, ahd Lawrence\nBengert, alias Allan Carruthers, 10,\nboth of no fixed address, were given six month terms for theft at Oli\nver of a 1951 model car July 24.\nIn addition, each one was given\none year for theft of a 1939 model\ncar at Penticton, also on July 24.\nPolice said the boys admitted\nstealing a car at Penticton, abandoning it near Oliver and replacing the licence plates on a second\ncar stolen at Oliver.\nThe boys also were committed\nfor trial at Princeton on charges\nof breaking and entering a Princeton billiard hall and stealing a safe\nwhich was broken into. The safe\nwas found hidden In the bush near\nPrinceton.\nTwo girls who were in the company of the boys when they were\narrested eight miles West' of Nelson\nJuly 26, faced vagrancy charges\nhere this week. Susan Grenier, 19,\nwas given suspended sentence and\nturned over to the Social Welfare\nSociety at Penticton while the second,-a juvenile, was transferred to\nPenticton for hearing there.   \u25a0\nThe weather over the major portion of B.C. continues clear hot and j\ndry. Afternoon temperatures in the\nSouthern Interior valleys were in\nthe nineties again. This however has\nbeen a daily occurence for the past\nthree weeks. \u2022\nThe North coast remains cloudy,\nShowers were reported in the\nPrince Rupert region. Another weak\nweather disturbance has- developed\nin the Gulf of Alaska and is expected to give more rain along the\nNorth coast.\nLittle change is expected in the\ngeneral weather situation over the\nprovince.\nNelson       56   93    \u2014\nSt.  Johns       54   76   .08\nHalifax  i    54   74   .00\nMontreal       54   75    \u2014\nOttawa      49   70    \u2014\nToronto     50   83    \u2014\nNorth Bay     48   65   .17\nPort Arthur     55   79   .45\nWinnipeg     57   80   .03\nBrandon       57   76    \u2014\nThe Pas    58   63    \u2014\nRegina     52   79    \u2014\nSaskatoon       49   78    \u2014\nPrince Albert       50   74    \u2014\nNorth Battleford    50   77    \u2014\nMedicine  Hat      53   88    \u2014\nLethbridge    53   87    \u2014\nCalgary       56   80    \u2014\nEdmonton      51   74. \u2014\nKamloops       53   97    \u2014\nVancouver     54   78    \u2014\nVictoria    51   66    \u2014\nKimberley       51   66    \u2014\nKaslo            52   92    \u2014\nPrince Rupert     55   62   .26\nPrince George  .'....   38   85    \u2014\nGrand Forks     46   97    \u2014\nSaettle       51   76    \u2014\nPortland     54   81    \u2014\nChicago     53   84    \u2014\nSpokane     61   97    \u2014\nSan Francisco i    55   64    \u2014\nLos Angeles     62   72    \u2014\nNew York     63   81    \u2014\nKimberley    52   70    \u2014\nAn extensive redecorating of its\noffice interior is being undertaken\nby the Royal Bank in Nelson.\nDesigned to brighten and provide\nmore office space in the Baker\nStreet branch, the streamlining will\ntake about, six weeks in a business-\nas-usual atmosphere.\nDesks and counters are being\ngiven a natural-oak finish and the\nwalls are being done in a pastel\nshade. New flooring and streamlining of the vault to provide additional safety deposit box space will\nalso be included in the renovation\nprogram.\nPenticton Cancels\nHawaiian Free Trip\nPENTICTON, B.C., Aug. 2 (CP).\u2014\nOfficials of the Penticton Peach\nFestival Association have cancelled\nthe draw for a free trip to Hawaii.\nA meeting of the group last night\nalso decided that no more tickets on\nthe draw will be sold.\nThe action was taken on the advice of a lawyer who indicated that\nsale of tickets offering chances on\nthe trip may be illegal.\nEarlier, Festival authorities\nplanned to fight prosecution on the\ngrounds that the Festival is an agricultural fair and entitled to offer\nchances with admission tickets.\nR.C.M.P. officers confiscated rec\nords and correspondence on sale of\ntickets for the Festival recently but\nno charges have yet been laid. Officials say tickets already sold\\ will\nbe good for admission.\nPowell, I.W.A.\n(onlracl Issue \u2022\nW. W. Powell Lumber Company\nrepresented by R. E. Horton an<\nH. B. Horton, met with I.W.A. unior\nofficials Tuesday to open negotia\ntions for a 1951-52 wage and contract due Sept. 1. No agreement wa!\nreached.\nJ. Morris, first vice-president ol\nB. C. District No. 1. I.W.A., and\nG. F. Lieberg, first vice-president\nof local No. 405, Cranbrook, were\nthe union officials.\nUnion spokesmen said the company, offered a basic rate increase\nof 15 cents per hour across the\nboard with no change in the 1950-51\nagreement. I.W.A. was seeking a\nbasic wage increase of 10% cents\nper hour with a iOty cent increase\nto be applied as a cost of living\nbonus, this, they added, would bring\nInterior wage rales in line with the\npresent Coast contract.\nCompany officials said they\nunderstood the union was seeking\na basic rate'boost across the board\nfrom $1.10 to $1.49 for men and from\n75 cents to $1.40 for women and\nthat no mention was made of a cost-\nof-living bonu.s.\nAlso said included in union demands were union shop; increase in\nvacation pay from 2 to Wxk per cent\nand to 5 per cent afler five years'\nemployment; a reduction irv the\nwork week from 44 to 40 hours,\nMonday to Friday, with lost weekday time made up on Saturdays\nbeing paid for at the time-and-a-\nhalf rate.\nTalks ended with the company\nagreeing to abide by decision of a\nconciliation or arbitration board. I.W.A,, in negotiations with the Lumber Manufacturers' Association, has\napplied for the services of a conciliation officer.\nRIO DE JANEIRO (CF) \u2014 Fewer people are dying from tuberculosis in Brazil although death rate\nis still high. The death rate in April this year was 1.7 per 1000 compared with 1.0 per 1000 during tha\nsame month last year.\nMETALS PRICES\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Spot nonferrous metal prices: Copper 24-V.. cents\na pound, Connecticut valley; lead\n17 cents a pound, New York. Zinc\nV\\% cents a pound, East St. Louis.\nTin $1.03 a pound, New York.\nRUMMAGE  SALE\nTo Be Held In\nTHE SALVATION  ARMY\n613 VICTORIA 8T.\nSaturday, August 4\n9:00 to 12100 \u2014 1:00 to 4:00\nPROCEED6  IN   AID OF\nSALVATION ARMY SOCIAL WELFARE AND RELIEF FUND\nSir Richard Burton, British ex\nplorer who died in 18D0, gained\nfame by making the pilgrimage to\nMecca disguised as an Indian.\nPHONE  144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nWilliam Grice\nOf Procter Dies\nWilliam Henry Grice, resident of\nProcter for over 30 years, died at\nIhe Coast on July 26, at the age of\n85;\nMr. Grice who served in the Firs'\nWorld War with the Canadian Forestry Corps was a member of the\nNelson branch of the Canadian Legion. \u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0\".''; I\nHe is survived by one sister, Mrs.\nNola Thomas of Toronto, Ontario.\nCincinnati     45\nChicago     41\nPittsburgh     40   5B   .408\nBASEBALL'S BIG SIX\nBy The Associated Press\nMusial, Cards .... 97 358 79 134 .373\nHobnison, Dodg .. 97 343 71.122 .356\nAshburn,  Phil  .. 100 419 65 148 .353\nMinoso, W Sox .. 99 354 83 121 .342\nKell, Tigers   90 364 61 122 .335\nCoan, Sen   86 337 62 113 .335\nHome runs: American\u2014 Zernial,\nAthletics 24; National \u2014 Hodges\nDodgers 31.\nHuns batted in: American\u2014Williams, Hed Sox 93; National\u2014Irvin,\nGiants 73.\nBALL SCORES\nAMERICAN ASSOC.\nSt. Paul 10, Louisville 2\nKansas City 7. Toledo 2.\nMinneapolis 9, Indianapolis 7.\nMilwuakee 9, Columbus 5.\nWIL\nSalem 2, Tacoma 6.\nYakima 1, Vancouver 0.\nVictoria 0, Tri-City 1.\n' Spokane 2, Wenatchee 7.\nBUQAR RAY RETURNS\nNEW YORK, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014 Sugar Ray Robinson came home from\nEurope today and received a big\ncity hall welcome although he lost\nhis world middleweight title to randy Turpin in Britain.\nRobinson told some 3500 listeners that he \"felt losing my tilte was\nlosing\" your title because I lost the\nrecognition as your champion.\nWelcome, Canadians!\nPEND OREILLE COUNTY\nR. C. A, Approved Professional\nRODEO\nAT FAIRGROUNDS\nCUSICK, Wash.\nSaturday Night at 8\nSunday at 2 p.m.\nAUGUST 4 and 5\nHorse Racing Program 2 p. m. Saturday\nGene Curtis, clown and bullfighter. Birdie Askins ef\nMontana, trick rider. Featuring famous RING BRf\u2122,\nRugged rodeo stock. Cowboy Dances Friday and Saturday nights at Cusick H. S. Gym with Del Cody's famous Western Orchestra. $100 Wild Horse Race at\nSaturday Night Rodeo. Rodeo Gen. Adm. $1.90 plus\ntax. The Pend Oreille County Rodeo has a long reputation as a top quality show. Come and enjoy it!\nwiamiiamm\nthandnypffi?\ndry gin\nBURNETTS\nBURNETT'S &dJUd\nLONDON    DRV   GINS\nDistilled In Canada and distributed by Ths House of Seagram\nThli advertisement is not published or displayed by the Uquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n lODH\nSHOE\nSALE\nSEE OUR SPECIALS IN\nSummxVL\n3>ODJtW\u00a3ML\n10% off all regular lines of\nmen's, women's and\nchildren's shoes.\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n553 Baker St\nTrail Dairy Men\nTo Ponder Prices\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 2\u2014A meeting\nof the Trail and District Milk Producers Association has been scheduled for Fruitvale Tuesday night to\nenable district milk producers to\nexamine their price set-up in an effort to discover some way of meeting the present high cost of production.\nThe dairymen claim that It costs\nthem more to produce and deliver\na quart of milk than the amount pf\nmoney they receive for it.\nThe Association was formed five\nyears ago and at that time had\na membership of 60 milk producers\nfrom Salmo, Fruitvale, Columbia\nGardens, Rossland, Trail, and\nCastlegar. The high cost of production has since forced a good many\nof the original members to go out\nof business and milk supply has subsequently dropped.\nThe Association supplies the local\nmarket and even more producers it\nclaims will be forced out of business unless some solution is reached.\nFive Injured in\nCreston Accident\nCRESTON, B.C., August 2 \u2014Five\npersons were taken to hospital and\nreleased after treatment following\nan automobile accident one mile\nNorth of Creston on the upper\nWynndel road last Saturday night,\nThe accident occurred between\nMedford Sloan who was driving a\ntruck and Henry Dick who was\ndriving a car.\nPassengers injured were Mrs.\nSloan in the truck and three passengers in Mr. Dick's car.\nTotal damage was estimated at\n$550 and the truck was reported to\nbe a total loss.\nModern Food Market\nPlanned in Creston\nCRESTON, B.C., Aug. 2 \u2014 Announcement has been made of the\nopening of a modern food market\nby Harold Langston and Murray\nFisher in the building of the Creston Paint and Wallpaper. Mr.\nRoper will also have a Bection of\nthe building for the handling of\npaints.\nNo definite date has been made\nas to the opening but it is expected\nsometime the latter end of the\nmonth. No major renovations will\nbe made to the building in connection with the new food market.\nClassified Ada for Quick Result!\nThree Contest Creston\nVillage Commissioner Post\nCRESTON, B.C., Aug. 2\u2014Three\ncandidates will -be in the civic election race for the position of Village\nCommissioner next Tuesday. They\nare.as follows:\n1. Roland Rebuck, Non Partisan\nCivic Government Committee candidate; sponsored by A. B. Ness and\nW. Wouters.\nT. Norris Biccum, Independent\ncandidate, sponsored by W. Irvine\nand A. Logan.\n3. Ben P. Wills, Independent\ncandidate, sponsored by Vic Mawson and T. E. Baker.\nDuring the past week civic political activity was at its high with\nvarious groups organizing for the\nby-election. While it was rumored\nfour sets of candidate's papers had\nbeen issued only three,were filed\nby 12 'noon Tuesday closing time\nfor nominations.      '\nThis is the first time in the'past\nthree elections that a \"dark horse\"\nwas not entered into the election at\nthe last minute.\nConentious civic matters seem to\nbe more water and roads in all\nsectons of the village.\nTrail CAR.\nTreats 20\nTJRAIL, B.C., Aug. 2 - Trail\nbranch of the Canadian Arthritis\nand Rheumatism Society gave a total of 85 treatments to 20 patients\nduring July.\nThe Society treated 11 patients in\nTrail, one at the hospital, three at\nthe mobile clinic and seven at the\nSociety clinic, a total of 50 treatments.\nAt Rossland, four patients received 11 treatments through the mobile clinic and in Castlegar, three\nreceived 10 treatments through, the\nmobile clinic and two received five\ntreatments at the Trail clinic.\nCreston Ratepayers\nNominate Candidate\nCRESTON, B.C., Aug. S\u2014A special meeting of the Creston Village\nRatepayers' Association in the\nVillage Hall, considered the advisability of nominating a candidate\nfor the forthcoming by-election,\nAugust 7 for the purpose of electing a commissioner for the balance\nof the term of ex-commissioner W.\nGraves, who recently resigned.\nAfter a resolution \"that the Ratepayers' Association do not sponsor\na candidate\" was defeated, President Ben Wills was nominated and\nnomination approved by the majority of members. Mr. Wills accepted the nomination, stating\nhowever, that he would stand as an\nindependent candidate, representing to best of his ability all parts\nof the Village, and would pay all\nexpenses incurred, himself.\nIt was pointed out that the lower\ntown has at present no representative on the Village Council and this\nportion of the village has been admittedly shamefully neglected.\nCrestonite Appointed\nTo Arbitration Board\nCRESTON, B.C., August 2 - It\nhas been announced that A, W.\nDickinson has been appointed as\nmember to a board of arbitration\nin connection with mechanical-\nmanagement matters in Cranbrook.\nThe government has appointed C.\nB. Garland, K.C, as chairman and\nthe union will have a representative\nto complete the three man board.\nM will be the board's duty to\nhear all sides of case and adjudicate and recommend on its findings.\nNO CARBON\nANY WAY YOU LOOK AT IT\nThe new Triumph Mayflower is designed for\nCanadians. Enjoy its luxurious roominess, its\nefficient, year-round air-conditioning system, its\nall-round picture window visibility.\nik'ewfivityfoamy &% toy\/fin, yey\nOver SCO bedtrt CeoilloCcnt\n\u2666HE STANDARD MOTOR CO. (CANADA! MM\n33 Dundas St. W., Toronto\nT6-S\nStandard   Vanguard  Ca\nStandard  Panel  and  Picl\ns,  Standard   Estate  Cars,\n\u2022up   Trucks,  Triumph   Car\nLocal Delivered Price\n$1675\nPARKVIEW MOTORS,\n924 NELSON AVE., NELSON,  B.C.\n^:::'-;^-::::--\u2014\u25a0;\u25a0;-; '\u25a0'\u25a0::\nPatsy Zigler of Cuslck, shown here on her beautiful palomino-\nhorse, was selected out of 10 other accomplished equestriennes to\nreign over the professional Pend Oreille County rodeo at Cusick,\nWash., Saturday evening arid Sunday afternoon. Queen Patsy practically grew up on a horse on the ranch of her Callspell Valley\nfolks, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Zigler. Rlngl Bros of Wilbur Is again furnishing their rugged rodeo stock for the Pend Oreille County event\nwhich has a high standing among veteran rodeo fans.\nNEW CRESTION .\nCRESTON, B.C., August 2\u2014Work\nis rapidly nearing completion in\npreparation for school opening next\nmonth in the Prince Charles High\nSchool and the former Creston\nHigh School, the latter this year\nwill house the elementary school\nstudents. No date as yet has been\nannounced for the formal opening\nof the new high school.\nThe new elementary school has\nundergone major renovations to\nsuit the needs of the primary\nclasses. The present elementary\nschool will also be, used it is reported.\nOfficials in charge state Creston\nValley has the finest in schools and\nequipment. No effort has been\nspared on the part of the architect\nfirm of Sharp, Thomson, Berwick\nand Pratt to give the valley the\nfinest in every phase of modern\neducation.\nMORE TEACHER8\nIt is reported two more elementary school teachers might be added\nto the staff in order to handle the\nlarge elementary school enrolment,\nMeanwhile it is stated all vacancies\nin the teaching staffs are being-\nfilled and as the deadline for applications was at the end'of July\na full list of new teachers will be\nannounced shortly.\nHigher Fuel Oil\nPrices Announced\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014In\ncreased Imperial Oil Company\nprices, announced yesterday, will\nmean little change in gasoline prices\nbut an increase in fuel oil prices in\nmost key Canadian centres.\nThe price of gasoline is unchanged in Halifax, Toronto, Winnipeg,\nRegina and Edmonton and up .5\ncents in Vancouver.\nFuel oil prices are unchanged in\nEdmonton, Regina and Winnipeg\nbut are up one cent in .Toronto and\nVancouver to 18.1 \u25a0 and 16.2 cents,\nrespectively, in Toronto and Vancouver, .7 cents to 17.8 in Montreal\nand .7 cents to 17.3 cents in Halifax.\n(The Canadian Press yesterday\nreported erroneously that fuel oil\nprices in Winnipeg would rise .7\ncent.)\nThe increases are blamed partly\non the 12-per cent increase ir\nfreight rates which became effective July 26 and partly on an in-\n-creased tendency to import into\nCanada.\nPAG): 31U. K. Movie Workers\nAsk U. S. Investment\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (Reuters)\u2014British motion picture workers have demanded that the American movie\nindustry be forced to invest some\nof its British earnings on productions in Britain. Tom O'Brien, Secretary of the National Association\nof Theatrical and Kine Employees,\nmade the demand at a conference\nwith Sir Hartley Shawcross, Trade\nMinister, to discuss unemployment\nin the movie industry.\nAlberta's Coal Is\nStored Treasure\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nThe Western Coal Federation of\nCanada says that Alberta has, in\nterms of energy, 100 times as -much\nknown coal as it has known oil.\nIn a release on \"coal research and\nindustrialization of the West,\" the\nFederation comments:\n\"Among long-term \u25a0 experiments\nprogressing in the laboratories are\nthose aimed at producing oil from\ncoal. Canada's oil industry is in a\nhealthy condition and its prospects\nare excellent. It is, however, expected that demands made on it\nwill' continue to grow.\n\"At the present time, known oil\nand natural gas reserves of Canada\nare small compared with known reserves of coal. It is reckoned that in\nAlberta present natural oil reserves\namount to 1,400,000,000 barrels. The\nenergy in the Province's coal reserves is equivalent to 140,000,000,000\nbarrels.\n\"To the layman, coal may lack\nthe lustre of 'gold in them thar\nhills' or the excitement of oil bursting from the earth. To the fuel expert, it is treasure stored for millions of years and essential to\nthe solid growth of diversified industry.\"\nPUSH BUTTON COAL\nIncidentally, and still on the subject of coal, the Wall Street Journal\nreports that coal is being sold by\n\"slot machines\" in seven States,\nwith 45 vending machines in use.\nYou put in your coins, and out\ncomes a sack of coal.\nIzvestia, Red Star,\nTrud Also Publish\nMorrison's Article\nMOSCOW, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014Three\nmore Soviet newspapers\u2014Izvestia,\nRed Star and Trud\u2014today published Pravda's full text of British Foreign Secretary Herbert Morrison's\nstatement telling the Russian people\nthat'if they were free they would\nknow the West wants peace. They\nalso published Pravda's full ansyrer\nto Morrison.\nThe four papers have the largest\ncirculations of any in the Soviet\nUnion and are read by millions.\nROUGH TAXI-RIDE CURES\nBAD CASE OF LOCK-JAW\nPORTLAND, Me., Aug. 2 (API-\nMrs. Faustena Alley, 27, had to be\ntaken to a hospital last night because she yawned and her jaws\nlocked wide open\u2014but she never\ngot there because the ambulance\njounced so mucfc.\nThe jouncing snapped Mrs. Alley's jaws into place and she was\nreturned home.\nBetween 1820 and 1949, a total of\n39,000,000 alien immigrants landed\nin the United Stales.\nBigger Pay Envelopes\nFor Civil Servants\nThis Month\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 1 (CP) \u2014\nBigger pay envelopes will be handed British Columbia's 8000 civil\nservants Aug. 29 when the 10-percent pay boost awarded last month\nis paid. f\nPay envelopes will include 10\nper cent of wages for April, May,\nJune and July, as well as heavier\nAugust checks, since the wage\nboost was made retroactive to\nApril 1.\nIt is believed the addition to the\nprovince's payroll will amount to\nnearly $1,000,000 for the five-month\nperiod.\nCabinet sources estimated the\nwage increase for the entire year\nwould result in an extra charge\nof just over $2,000,000 for the fiscal\nyear ending March 31, 1952.\nKoolaree-Echoes...\nTalent Show\nTops Campfire\nTuesday the 7th day of camp was\nawakened by the clang of the rising\nbell. After a wash in the lake, and\na hearty breakfast, the campers continued their daily routine of chapel,\nhousekeeping, discovery group and\nswimming.\u25a0\nMrs. Dunne or \"First-Aida\", the\nnew camp nurse has been kept quite\nbusy with the usual cuts and bruises\nand the odd cola here and there.\nAnother very busy person in camp\nis camp-mother \"Tops\" who supervises the dishwashing and house-\ncleaning and is head of thu worship\ncommittee. Directrix \"Taddy\" is the\nbusiest of the busy. First up in the\nmorning, and l_st in bed with never\na minute to spare. ,\nCampfire was of course the highlight of the day with an extra spec-\nail feature-jtt the form of a talent\nshow presented by the evening pro-'\ngram committee. Each cabin was re^\nquested to have two or three items\nto present on the show and they\ncame up with really worthwhile talent. The various acts are grouped\nas follows:\nSongs\u2014Judy Bisson, Pamela Roberts, Sharon Murphy, Joanne Thiel,\nDorothy Negus.\nDuets\u2014Gail Graves and Irene Wyatt; Ethel Lefevre and Dianne arm-\nstrong.\nTrios\u2014Donna Mtrtin, Dianne Pud-\ndy, Lynn Hendry; Jo-Ellen Kary,\nMarilyn Ure, Gloria Cooke.\nDances\u2014Lorna Hagen, Ruth Abfalter; Marride Simonson, Vyvyon\nIshinware.\nRecitations, stories, anecdotes \u2014\nEleanor White, Jill Roger, Christina\nStephenson, Carol Ryalls, Celia Pe-\nrin, Danae Williams, Lois Hewgill.\nAs well as the above were a charade put on by Cabin 8, a song, \"Be\nKind To Your,Web-Footed Friend\"\nby Cabin I and Baton twirling by\nNorma Joy Bentley.\nTops and Jay put on a skit, \"The\nLine\" which involved the counsellors, who when line trouble occurred found that they were suckers.\nAbout half-way- through the program Mr.\" Potts played some selections on his harmonica.\nThe next performer of the evening was the sandman who had\neveryone to sleep as he went on\nthrough the night with his act\nThe campers tumbled out of bed\nat the sound of the rising bell as the\neighth day of camp began. The\neighth day already! In two days it\nwill be time to go home. How quickly the time has sped by and there\nare still so many things to do.\nThe other day the girls celebrated four birthdays. These1 birthdays\nall took place sometime during\ncamp and were all celebrated at\nthe same time. The celebrants were\nRonnie Lawton, Vyvyan Ishinware,\nMrs. Van and Marjjorie Murray.\nMrs. Downie and Bev made two\ngreat big birthday cakes for the occasion.\nMost camps have some kind of\nmascot and the 1951 Junior Girls is\nno exception. They seem to have\nadopted Skippy's pony-tail as camp\nmascot and were quite alarmed\nwhen it disappeared Saturday afternoon but quite relieved when it.\nreappeared on Sunday afternoon.\nThe campers made two very important decisions at camp-fire. The\nfirst was as to how the Sunday collection was to be used and it was\ndecided that half be put toward the\ncamp and -the other to be sent to\nan Indian mission.\nThe other important decision was\nto elect a new chief camper. The\npresent one was Ann Fawcett who\ndid a very good job indeed. The\nChief Camper for 1952 will be Eleanor White from (believe it or not)\nCabin 2, \"The Chatter Box\". Eleanor is from Creston and is a first\nyear camper.\nAfter campfire the girls went off\nto bed and fell asleep to the strains\nof music from gramophone records.\nFour Basic Bombs\nAgreed Upon\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP)-\nThe United States, Canada and\nBritain have agreed in general upon\nthe specifications of a \"new farn-\nily\" of four basic-sized bombs.\nCol. V. F. Fairfax of the U. S. Air\nForce Supply Division told a Military Appropriations Sub-Committee of the House of Representatives\nthat the bombs were of the same\ngeneral type and sizes so as to be\ninterchangeable among the three\ncountries.\nHis testimony, made public yesterday, said the four basic bombs\nare; (1) The 10,000-pound high-performance bomb, (2) the 3000-pound\nhigh-performance bomb, (3) 750-\npound general-purpose bomb and\n(4) 1000-pound special low-drag\nbomb, to be carried externally by\nhigh-speed jet fighter bombers.\nWashington Orders\nAliens Re-Arrested\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014\nThe government today ordered the\nre-arrest of 39 aliens who are fighting deportation and riow are free\non bonds furnished by the Civil\nRights Congress.\nIn a statement, Attorney General\nJ. Howard McGrath made it clear\nthe Justice Department no longer\nregards bonds offered by the Congress as acceptable.\nThe deportation proceedings\nagainst all of the aliens in question\nwere brought on charges relating\nto alleged subversive activity or\nmembership in the Communist\nParty.\nChinese Announce\nReds' Movements\nTAIPEH, Formosa, Aug. 2 (AP).\u2014\nThe Nationalist defence ministry today said elements of four Red Chinese armies (corps) are moving toward Yunnan Province, recently invaded from Burma by Nationalist\nGeneral Li Mi.\nThe armies' total strength is estimated here at 100,000 men, but\nhow many men are being sent to\nYunnan-is not known.\nChina Union Press, a small Nationalist news agency, said the Reds'\n13th, 14th and 15th armies had been'\ntransferred suddenly from the Yun-\nnan-Indo China border area. The\n16th, it said,. was en route from\nKweichow Province, which flanks\nYunnan on the northeast.\nNATIONALISTS OFFER\nARMED FORCES TO U.N.\nTAIPEH, Formosa, Aug. 2 (AP).\n\u25a0Nationalist China offered today to\nmake available to the United Nations as many men from her armed\nforces as military requirements permit.\nT. F. Tsiang, chief Nationalist delegate to the U.N., delivered a note\nto that effect to U.N. headquarters\ntoday, an official statement said.\nThe note was in reply to the General Assembly's recommendation of\nNov, 3, 1950, that each U.N. member maintain within its armed\nforces elements to be made available for future service as United\nNations units.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 3, 1951 \u2014J\nThrills of Cusick Rodeo fo Draw\nHundreds to Pend Oreille Country\nPend Oreille county is getting all\nset to welcome rodeo fans from all\nover the Inland Empire and Canada\nto another professional rodeo at the\ncounty fairgrounds at Cusick Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon. For the past several years\nthe show has drawn capacity crowds\nthat went away well satisfied that\nthey had their money's worth. Ring\nBros, famous string of stock will\nagain be on hand with its wild\nbroncs, steers and Brahma bulls.\nLast year the rodeo drew scores\nfrom Nelson and District. As a goodwill gesture, 20 carloads of Pend\nOreille county folk made the trip to\nNelson in June to attend the first\nKin Stampede here.\nPatsy Zigler of Cusick, who was\npractically raised in the saddle, will\nreign over the two day show as\nqueen accompanied by her nine\nprincesses, all of them accomplished riders. Birdie Askins of Ismay,\nMontana, daughter of one time\nbronc riding champion Bob Askins,\nwill put on the trick riding act and\nGene Curtis will- be the clown and\nbullfighter.\nA feature of the Saturday evening show starting at 8 o'clock, will\nbe a wild horse race for a $100\npurse. At 2 p.m. Saturday a racing\nprogram will be staged and cowboy\ndances will be held at the Cusick\nhigh school gym on Friday and Saturday nights. Playing will be Del\nCody's well known Western orchestra of radio fame.\nCanadian Air Cadets\nArrive in London\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 A\ngroup of 26 Canadian air cadets arrived by air today for a three-week\ntour of the United Kingdom.\nThe boys, representing every\nProvince, were chosen for the trip\nafter a test of proficiency, character and leadership, among more\nthan 20,000 members of the Air Cadet League of Canada.\nThey were greeted at the airport\nby Air Marshal Sir Robert Foster\nof the RAF Home Command and\nAir Commodore Martin Costello, senior RCAF representative in the\nUnited Kingdom.\nLoyd Resigns From\nTree Fruits Board\nPetsche Insists\nOn French Lead\nPARIS, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014 Maurice\nPetsche pleaded today wit. France's\nquarreling political parties to bury\ntheir   differences   so   that   France\nGermany Signs\nPad With Japan\nT&KYO, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014 A ne\u00abv\ntrade and services agreement between West Germany and Japan\nwas signed here today. It boosts tha\nprevious agreement by 15 per cent\nand calls for a yearly exchange of\ngoods and services valued at $30,-\n000,000. Japan will export textiles,\nwhale oil, raw tobacco, agricultural\nand marine products. Germany will\nexport potash, steel products, dye-\nstuffS and machinery.\nNIXON APPOINTED TO\nTRANSPORT DEPARTMENT\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 Frederick Gordon Nixon ,39, of Summer-\nland, B. C, and Ottawa, has been\nappointed assistant controller of telecommunications in the Transport\nDepartment, it was announced today. He succeeds E. G. Bennett of\nOttawa, recently retired.\nMr. Nixon has been connected\nwith the transport department since\ncould get a government to cooperate 11937 and has  represented  Canada\nKELOWNA, B.C., Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014\nA. K. Loyd has resigned as chairman of the British Columbia Tree\nFruits Ltd. Board of Governors, it\nwas announced here today.\nHe will retain his post as general\nmanager of B.C. Tree Fruits Ltd.,\nsales agency for the Fruit Growers'\nAssociation.\nFor some time, it was learned, the last to take up the \"coal-steel-\nwith the United States and Britain\nin building up the defence of the\nWest.\nEurope is \"hesitant, uncertain on\nhow to unite, and worried about the\nparticularism of Britain,\" Petsche\nsaid. \"Europe can only be rebuilt if\nFrance takes the leadership.\"\nParliamentary predictions were\nthat Petsche would get the formal\nvote of confirmation but might fail\nto get pledges of support from the\nparties to enable him actually to\nform a cabinet.\n\"Is it conceivable that France,\nwhich initiated the move for European economic community, may be\non several international conferences\non radio.\nthere has been a policy dispute pool?\" asked Petsche, referring to;\namong growers and a demand that,tlie fact the parliament hasn't even\ngeneral manager and chairman's j begun steps to ratify the pool, j\npositions be made separate. i  Petsche insisted that unless France I\nTemporarily, Arthur Garrish, the j shows a strong leaderhsip \"Our Bri-1\nPresident of the Growers' Associa- tish friends will be tempted to sep-\ntion, will take over the post of arat'e themselves from the contin-\nchairman of the board. Two other ent.\"\nmembers of the board resigned early \u2014\u2014 \u25a0 .\n>n July. I READ,THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY I\nNOW-Sbe Laughs\nat age\nSpringtime in, I\nher heart again! a\nNew-found gaic- I\nty, peppy energy. A new, alive l\nwoman-sparkling ,\ncyea, better color, '-.'\u25a0\nfresh, calm youthful- '\nness \u2014 has replaced\nthe worn, tired look.\nNo wonder life lias\ntaken on new inter*\ncuts. Yea, thousands\nof once faded j\nwomen, weary *&i\nfrom blood-iron\npoverty, have bloomed anew with the\nhelp of Dr. Williams Pink Pills. Try Dr.\nWilliams Pink Pills yourself for 80 days!\nEnjoy new health, pop and energy. Start\ntoday! Get back ''in tha pink\" with\nDR. WILLIAMS\nPINK PILLS\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Pres\u00bb\nMontreal\u2014Paul Fleetford Sise, 71,\nChairman of the Board of Northern Electric Co. Ltd,, and son of\nthe founder of the Bell Telephone\nCompany of Canada.\nMadison, Wis.\u2014William H. (Wild\nBill) Keikhofer, 68, colorful University of Wisconsin professor and\nnationally known economist,\nTokyo\u2014Toyotaro Yuki,,74, governor of the Bank of Japan'from 1937\nto 1944. ii\nTipping Permitted\nBy Defence Dept.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 The\nDefence Department recognizes the\nneed\u2014and the cost\u2014of tipping.'Bt\nleast for tipping sleeping car or\nparlor car attendants aboard trains.\nThe Navy magazine Crowsnest\nsaid\" today \"officers and men travelling by rail at government expense are entitled to claim reimbursement for actual and reasonable expenses in respect of gratuities paid to sleeping car or parlor\ncar attendants.\"\nThe rates are 25 cents a night\nand 25 cents a day for each day\nor half day in a sleeping car; 25\ncents for each complete 24 hours\nin a tourist class sleeping car and\na parlor car.\nThe Crowsnest said, too, that servicemen now are entitled to spend\nup to $1.65 for breakfast, $2 for\nlunch and $2.35 for dinner aboard\ntrains, from 15 to 25 cents higher\nthan the old rates.\nCIVIC CENTRE GROUNDS\nSAT. AUG. 4 f\n:30\nM.\nAUSPICES:\nKiwanis Club\nof Nelson\nPOPULAR PRICES\nM^HHHMMHM\n 4\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 3, 1951\nAUSSIE GROUPS SEEK TO\nCREATE NATIONAL DRAMA\nWritten for The Canadian Preii\nBy MARGARET ECKER FRANCI8\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) - Enthusiastic and hard-working Little\nTheatre groups are keeping alive\nthe spoken drama in Australia.\nUnlike'Canada which draws United States road companies to'the Dominion, few American or British\ncompanies will attempt the long\nhaul to Australia.\nMore frequently, a British or American play is brought to the Commonwealth with three or four stars.\nFilling in are Australia's own professional players, products of the\ncountry's numerous Little Theatres,\nThe blending of native and Imported players often produces \"a finished product in which a critic can\nsee more than a touch of the amateur But in the larger cities these\nproductions play to packed houses\nand the visitor to the country will\ndraw stern disagreement by suggesting that they may not quite hit\nthe standard of Broadway or London's West End.\nWith the Little Theatres and the\ncommunity Operetta Societies as\ntheir workshops, playwrights and\nmusicians are struggling to create\nan art that is Australian.\nPlaying In Sydney now Is \"The\nHighwayman,\" a musical with the\ngold rush days of Australia ai\nsetting, The show ii lumbering In\nspots, with definite Indebtedness\nthroughout  for  lines  and   lyrics\nto several Broadway musicale,\nBut'Its,'creators! hnve attempted\nto dramatizes a stirring chapter of\ntheir country's history and to re-\nTuna Voyage\nFulfilling\nProphecy\nVANCOUVER   (CP)\u2014Pari of  a\nlegend left here for Mexican waters  last  week  when  the  fishing\nvlve folk songs and dances of thO| trawler  Lady  Royal,  owned  and\nClearance\nof\nSummer\nFurniture\nChairs\nTables\nSun\nUmbrellas\nPicnic\nOutfits\netc. v\nROBERT SIMPSON\n(PACIFIC) LTD.\n866 Baker Phone 1490\nperiod.\nLaurels are due'to the Australian\npublic too who have turned out in\nlarge and enthusiastic crowds to\napplaud the show wherever it has\nplayed.\nLike John Antill's ballet, \"Cor-\nrobores'' currently touring Austra\nHa \"The Highwayman\" has Incorporated in one of its most stirring\nmoments, the dances of Australia's\nnative aborigines.\nNATIVE ART FORM\nSuch aspirations towards .a native\nart form 'have been kindled by amateurs of the Australian theatre\nmovement which specializes in Australian plays and revues and the\nNational Theatre, which each year\nproduces along with Shakespeare,\none Australian play and presentations of original Australian ballet.\nThe latter group is urging the\nGovernment to build a National\nTheatre in Canberra whose director\nwould have funds to organize touring theatrical companies. These\ncompanies would have professional\nleads with supporting players\ndrawn from students at a National\nTheatre school.\nWhile this project remains in the\nform of a recommendation to the\nGovernment,'\"Little Theatres are\nproviding for Australians in remote\nareas productions of classics of the\npast and modern American and\nEnglish plays.\nTheatre-hungry people in every\npart of the state of Victoria are\nbeing brought such plays by the\ntravelling theatre, first Australian\nState-subsidized theatre. This is a\nsemi-professional, non-profit making project, and plays are transported by a huge, semi-trailer van\nwhich can carry a company of 12\nwith scenery, properties, lighting\nand generator plant.\nThe travelling theatre was established in 1946 with a Government\ngrant of approximately $75,000, under the sponsorship of the Council\nof Adult Education ln Victoria,\nAustralia's six universities all\nhave  strong  drama  groups  and\nthey combine annually In a University Drama Festival In  Melbourne which draws Its audiences\nfrom all over the country. The\nnon-competitive festival Is sponsored by the National Union of\nAustralian   University   Students\nand shows a sizable profit after\nall expenses have been paid,\nMelboune   University   has   also\nestablished a drama school which\nthis  year produced  T.  S.  Eliot's\n\"Murder In the Cathedral.\"\nCHAMP DISQUALIFIED\nLIVERPOOL, Aug. 2 (AP)-Rolly\nBlyce of Trinidad, featherweight\nchampion of the West Indies, was\ndisqualified tonight for a low blow\nin the fourth round of a scheduled\n10-round contest against Gus Foran\nOf Liverpool.       ,\nworked by two Vancouverites, sailed off to Southern tuna grounds.\nThe owners, Jack Noble and his\nwife, are tho only Canadians making the long trip this year to join\nMexican and American fleets in\nthe albacore runs off San Pedro,\nAnd, in a strange roundabout\nway, their voyage fulfills a prophecy once made by a fabulous character who called himself Brother\nTwelve.\nIn Victoria's Dominion Express\noffice in 1901, Edward Arthur Wilson was a pale, ascetic-looking\nclerk. Only his dark, burning eyes\nhinted at his strange dqstlny.\nBorn in India and reputed to have\nprincely blood in his veins, Wilson\nshed his commonplace name and\nemerged as Amiel de Valdes,, taking his surname from an island near\nNanaimo, B. C, where he established his cult, the Acquarian Foundation.\nHis fervent mysticism took him to\nGenoa, Italy, where he studied\nOriental magic with the \"Eleven\nMasters of Wisdom\", and graduated\nas \"Brother Twelve.\"\nIn  England  later,  his  hypnotic\neyes induced a wealthy woman to\nbuy him a 70-foot Brixham trawler,\nthe Lady Royal.\nLONELY VOYAGE .   .\nThen, with only a map, a compass, and the stars, the mystic with\nthe fascinating eyes and dagger\nbeard sailed the Lady Royal single-\nhanded across the Atlantic, through\nthe Panama Canal, up the Pacific\ncoast and home to his island,     ,\nThree years later, 600 persons all\nover North America were sending\nmoney to the Chela of the Great\nWhite Circle at the house of mystery on Amiel Island.\nAmounts ranged up to $1000 a\nweek, Provincial Police reported\nlater. All In all, he took half a million dollars from his followers by\nno other magic than his silken\ntongue.\nBy 1930, Brother . Twelve had\nslipped to using a whip on his followers and they finally sought police intervention.\nPolice arrived too late. The madman and his \"secretary,\" a Madame\nZee, escaped to sea on a powerful,\nsea-going tug called the Kheunaten,\nafter an Egyptian god.\nBrother Twelve\u2014Edward Arthur\nf0^0^mtmMiM\nVINCENT SORRENTE of Windsor, Ont, It safe In hit fathtr'i\narms after being the object of the biggest search Bruce Peninsula\nhas ever experienced. He wandered away from hit. grandfather's\nhome at Tobermory, heard searchers but thought \"they were abasing me.\" Rattlesnakes and bears are common in the bush where\nthe boy was lost. Mosqultoas and hunger were hit greatest danger,\n-however, and searched who found him tald he could not have lasted\nanother night after 26 hourt in the bruth.\u2014Central Pratt Canadian.\nTruman Wants to\nKeep Eisenhower\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (Reuters)\n\u2014President Truman said today that\nhe would like Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, North Atlantic supreme commander in Europe, to continue in\nhis present job.\nBut Truman told his weekly press\nconference that he does not believe this would interfere with-any\npossible political aspirations of the\nGeneral in 1952\u2014U. S. presidential\nelection year\u2014if, he was in that\nframe of mind.\nU. S. Ships Radio\nIsotopes Abroad\nOAK RIDGE, Tenn., Aug. _ (AP)\n\u2014The Atomic Energy Commission\nsaid today that since August 1940\nmore than 18,900 radioactive isotopes have been shpiped to institutions in the United States and\nabroad.\n-Radioactive isotopes .are ray-\nemitting forms of common ale-\nments, made radioactive in We nuclear-energy reactor here.\nThe Commission said the radioisotopes have contributed important\nbenefits to medical science, agriculture and industry.\nfluv. Sell, Trade the Clattlfled Way\nToronto Stocks\nMINE8\nAkaitcho   \t\nAmerican Y.K.\nArjon\t\nAt|aa  Y.K.\nAubelle\nAumaque   ..\nAuhor, \t\n,\u201e,. . ,   ,'3ase Metals  ...\nWilson\u2014was never seen here again. ^0hi0 15\nPARTING PROPHECY '\"\n1.23\n.11\n.19\n.19\n.10\n.20\n3.25\n,65\nJust before he fled to sea, the\nmadman dynamited and sunk the\nLady Royal and in a kind of weird\nBonetal\nBoymar  Gold\nBrewis R. L.\nthrenody,  predicted  that whoever jBuffadison\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 When a man\nappeared in court charged with\nstealing scarce bananas from the\nSpitalflelds Market, the magistrate\nasked if there was much pilfering.\nA market seller replied \"I am\nafraid it is an accepted part of\nmarket life.\"\nOut in front\nThere is more and more applauee\nfor \"Black & 'White'' and its ever\nincreasing popularity is proof that\nthis fine Scotch which is blended\nin the special \"Black & White\"\nway has maintained the regard of\ngeneration after generation.\n26% OZ. BOTTIES\nBUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITE\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nVhe Secket ii In the Blending\nBy Appoint mrnt\nto M.M. King GtorB* VI\nScotch Whitby Di.lillor..\nJomfii Cuchonon & Co. ltd\nDistilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nsailed the Lady Royal a;\nfind Spanish gold.\nA succession of mariners tried\nunsuccessfully to restore the hulk.\nTreasure seekers chipped away cement blocks wedged along her keel,\nvainly seeking a fortune in coin reported hidden on one of the fanatic's ships.   \u2022\nFisherman Noble finally bought\n.60\n13\n19*.\nBroulan          1.22\n.10\n.25\n.19\n34%\n2.60\n1.10\n2.44\n.56\n.12\n.33\nn would Buffalo Ank\t\nBuff. Can\t\nCalliman   \t\nCampbell R. L. ..\nCariboo  Gold\nCastle Treth.    ..,\nCentral Patricia\nCcntremaque    ....\nChesterville  \t\nCochenour         1,54\nand rebuilt the Lady Royal, andjConiaurum          6314\nlast   week,   rigged   for   tuna,   the I Cons, Beatty\nfabled ship began a life far more j Cons. Mining & Smelting .\nprosaic than her old one.\nStill, if all goes well, she'll return with 25 or 30 tons of fish in I\nher hold, and the fish is worth $300 j\na ton.\nAnd then there'll be gold in herj\nhold at last, just as Brother Twelve]\npredicted on the night he vanished, |\n20 years ago.\nCrestaurum\nDiscovery\nDome   \t\nDonalda\nEast Malartic\n.43\n100\n.11\n.31\n7.65\n491.\n1.09\nEast Sullivan        8.65\nFour Pilots\nIn Family\nElder Gold\nEldona   \t\nEstella\t\nFalconbridge\nFrancoeur \t\nFrobisher   \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGod's Lake .\nGoldale\t\nHalcrow   \t\nHardrock   \t\nHasaga  \t\nHeath  \t\nHeva :.'.....\t\nHollinger   \t\nHudson  Bay\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Kent\nfamily here are usually \"up in the\nair,\" Four of them are pilots, and\nthree others are just waiting -until\nthey're old enough.\nOf the present pilots, two fly commercially. When the next three get\ntheir wings, there will be two more\ncommercial licences. Only Mrs.\nKent, the mother, doesn't fly.\nMr. A. M. Kent, affiliated. with\nan engineering company, got his\nprivate pilot's licence back in 1929.\nThe next year he bought his first\nplane, the first of a series until he\nsold his last in 1946.\nBetween 1941 and 1945, while he\nwas attached to the air observer\nschool flying student navigators, he\nlogged over 3000 hours. Yet he, still\nflew privately.\nMr. Kent finds lt hard to realize\nsome persons regard flying as dangerous. His children don't get automobile driver's licences until they\nare 21, but they have their private\npilot's licences by the time they're\n17.\n\"They   might   bump   somebody\nwith a car,\" said Mr. Kent, who has\na dry sense of. humor.\nMOTHER APPROVES\nMrs. Kent is a good-natured\nsport with a great love for .flying.\nThe fact she doesn't hold a pilot's\nlicence is probably self-sacrifice.\nBetty and Gerry both work for 0,L   rv\nCanadian Pacific Airlines on the n\u00abi.iTn\nMn-tl,   D\u201e\u201e\u00ab!\u201e     D-H..   I-   -   -'\u2014 \u25a0      US'BK0\n..50\n.19\n1.52\n10.75\nm\n3.95\n9.50\n.32*.\n.16\n13%\n.14\n.35\n12\n13%\n13.25\n60\nIpt. Nickel     39.50\nNorth Pacific run. Betty is a stew-\nJacknife            11%\nJoliet Que _ 52\nKelore    10\nKenville          .26\nKerr Addison    18.00\nKirkland Lake       .76\nKirk. Townsite  12\nLabrador      8.00\nLakeshore       8.90\nLake Wasa  37\nLeitch      1.04\nLexindin          .10\nLingman  (new)         .19\nLittle Long Lac  72\nLynx  18\nMacDonald     90\nMacassa         1.86\nMacLeod Cock      2.76\nMadsen R. L     2.15\nMalartic G. F      2.00\nMining  Corp    17.25\nMoneta  .'. 32\nNegus   80\nNew Calumet      3.10\nNew Jason  12\nNew Lund      1.40\nNib    \u201e         4%\nNipissing     _    1.50\nNoranda       74.25\nNormetals      5.20\nNorzone           15%\nO'Brien        1.25\n17*.\n.84\nPamour\nB0\nardess and Gerry is a second officer, j paylHasi-,        o\u00bb\nGerry has his commercial and Bett'y | pent[ Oreille         7 40\nher private pilot's licence. Ipickle Crow  '\"''ZZZZZ'.    1.55\nKen, 18, private pilot,, practically pre!t0n E. D      1.46\nswoons when he thinks of the things Quebec  Lab        24\nto c\u00b0ni\u00ab- j Quebec Man  \"...     3.35\nEnviously and impatiently, Edith,\n16, Donald, 15, and 10-year-o'ld Joyce\nwait for their chance to fly. The\ngirls plan to take nursing courses iSa\u201e\" Antonio\nand -then becomejtewardesses like: Sannorm\nQueenston       \u25a0 .64\nQuemont    24.00\nReeves Mac      4.60\n2.55\n514\nbig-sister Betty. Donald Intends to Shawkey       .15\nbe a commercial pilot. -   j Sherritt Gordon     3.20\n1  There are no juvenile delinquents\nor zoot-suiters in the Kent family.\nSilvermiller\nSilanco\nSiscoe\nThe abbey of Bury St. Edmunds Sladon Mal\t\nin England was built to hold thejStadacona\nshrine of the martyred St. Edmund, Starratt  Olsen\nslain in 870 A.I). |Steep Rock  \t\n1.45\n2614\n.85\n.65\n.35\n.65'\n8.20\n3ylvonite    '.  1.30\nTeek Hughes   2.10\nTombill   25\nTorbrit   2,05\nTrans Cont'Res  55\nUnited Keno   14.35\nUpper Canada ,  1.65\nVentures     12.00\nWaite Amulet   11.85\nOILS\nAnglo  Can.     6,10\nAtlantic Oil   39.00\nCalgary ajid Edmonton  15.00\nCalmont    l',22\nCentral Leduc  2.10\nChemical Research  1.20\nCommonwealth Pete   2.35\nDalhousie    '  - .37'\nDavies Pete  2314\nDecalta   '. 28\nDel Rio   1.18\nEastcrest    1314\nFederated Pete  7.88\nHome     16.15\nImperial Oil   38.00\nInter Pete    18.50\nNat. Pete  2.22\nNew Pacalta  \/ 9%\nOkalta      2.43\nPacific Pete   8.60\nRoyalite  14.85\nRoxana     1814\nUnited Oils  .\" 72  :\nINDUSTRIALS  -\nAbitibi    19*.\nAlgoma Steel   3414\nAluminum     9714'\nBeattie Bros  10\nBell Telephone   3914\nBrazilian  24\nB C Electric ...'.  \"'jl\nB C Packers A  17%\nB C Packers B  17\nB C Power A  2914\nBrown Co \u201e. J6\nBrown Co pfd    119\nBurns B  40%\nCanadian Breweries  2114\nCanadian Canners _ 32\nCdn Car & J*d;- A  17\nCan- Oil   2214\nCanadian Marconi   3.25\nCdn Pac Rly  :.  29%\nCdn West Lumber   854\nCockshutt   35%\nCons Min & Smelt  160\nCons Paper  38\nDist Seagrams  28\nDom Bridge   60\nDom Foundries ,  13%\nDom Magnesium   13%\nDom Steel & Coa' B  18%\nDom Stores   13 .\nDom Tar & Chem  45\nDom Textiles  18\nFamous Players  16%\nFanny Farmer  29\nFleet Air  2.50\nFord A  51\nGatineau   18%\nGatineau 5% pfd  101%\nGen Steel Wares  20\nGoodyear .,     95\nGoodyear pfd   7%\nGreat Lakes  17%\nGypsum Lime  25%\nImperial Oil  38\nImp Tobacco ,  38\nImp. Tobacco  10%\nInt Nickel  39%\nInt Pete   18%\nLake of the Woods  81%\nLoblaw A  31%\nLobla. B ....  32%\nMaple Leaf Mill'ng  27%\nMassey Harris  14%\nM & ~> Paper  30%\nMont Loco  \u201e  18\nMcColl Frontenae   33\nNat Steel Car ...:  - 30\nPage Hershey  53\nPowell River ;  81\nRuss Industrie:  25-54\nShawinigan _ 37%\nSiSks Brew  26%\nSlrtipStaB A  35%\nSimpsons pfd  96\nSteel of Can  32%\nSteel of Can pfd t  3214\nUniot Gas of can  21%\nUnited Corp 1    42\nUnited Steel  10%\nH. Walter     52%\nJimmy Durante, Back From Lyola\n- Unjvoisity, Discusses Video\nHOLLYWOOD, Aug. 1 (AP) \u2014\nLeave it to Jimmy Duranto to make\nan entrance.\nWhen I arrived at hit Bovericiy\nHills home, thi great Schnoz wos\nnot home. He would be back soon,\naald hit two writers. While I oat\nahd waited, they pounded on the\npiano and sung \u00bb mod tuno designed for Durante and Helen Traubel\n\u00abn his first TV thow this Fall.\nA half-hour later, Jimmy Duranto\u2014in person \u2014 arrived amid a\ndin. He takes off hla coat, he takes\noff his prints, he takes off hli shirt.\nHe lite On hit patio in his shorts\nond undershirt, unaware of the possible stares of neighbors. Jimmy,\nthe woll-undrcssed mon!\n\"I just been over .to the unlvoit-\nity,\" he explained.\nWhet\u2014Is Durante going to Sum\nmor tehooi?\nCHANGED THE NAME\n\"NO,\" he corrected. \"I been over\nto Loyola, making a short for them\nto play on TV before their football\ngemes. A wolthy cause, They Had a\nlot of trouble wit me because I\ncouldn't pronounce the name bf the\nschool. They kept telllh1 me it's\n'Loyola' but I- kept tayin' 'Lyola'.\nHow about thet?\u2014I changed the\nneme of the unlvolslty.\"\nWhat doe- I think of TV?\n\"It'l the most amnzln' thing that\never happened to me,\" he said, \"You\nknow,* when you're in radio or the\nmovies, you get the usual kind of\nLister Notes\nLISTER, B.C. \u2014 Mr. end Mrs.\nChorion Montgomery and daughter Shirley, have arrived from\nMontreal and will be the guests of\nMri. Irene WeilSpring. Mr. Montgomery It with the RCAF.\nMr. and, Mrs. S. Flegel and children of Kimberley were weekend\nguests of Mr. end Mrt. Seb Xapp.\nBillie Merzke was a visitor to\nKelowna with hit uncle and aunt,\nMr. and Mrt. 6. Shaw. He was accompanied on his return home by\nhit cousip Audrey Ball of Kelowna.\nMr. end Mrs. Arthur Sommerfeld and children were weekend\nvisitor! to Kimberley and Skookumchuck.\nManford Ulbrich of Summerland\nis visiting his grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. Paul Meyer.\nAfter residing in Lister for the\npast tix years, Mrt. R, Domke and\ndtughtcrt left to live ln Libby,\nMont.\nMr. and Mrt. Alvin Gorrill and\ndaughters, returned to their home\nin Wardner after visiting Mr. and\nMr\u00ab. G. Gorrill.\nMr. and Mrs, Gordon Speirs of\nYmir viBited the latter'! brother-\nin-law and lister, Mr. and Mrs.\nAdolph Marzke. They were accompanied on their return home by\ntheir daughter Ruby who had been\nholidaying ih Lister.\nAfter spending the past month\nat the home of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. T, Millner, Mrt. John\nRobertson left for Vancouver end\nVictoria.\nStuart Sinclair of Vancouver it\nvisiting hit grandparentt, Mr. and\nMrt. A. W. Sinclair\nRiondel Notes\n...RIONDEL, B.C,-Mr. end Mrs.\nIt. Armstrong end two small children spent the .weekend at Silver\nFalls, visiting Mr. Armstrong's\nlather, W. Armstrong.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Cllnging-Smlth\nvisited Riondel for the day Sunday.\nA party wat. held for Patricia\nDahlquist July 30, the oocation being her 9th birthday. Guests were\nVelerie and Linny Pietzche, Jill\nFltchen, Valda Downing, Lenny and\nPhilip Armstrong end Gayle Sutcllffe.\nfen mall\u2014'you're my favorite? Will\nyou send me an autographed pic-\nhuh?*\u2014end that's all, But the mail I\nget from TV.ts different. The people\ntreat you like you was one of their\nfamily. I guest it makes a lot of\ndifference when you're comin' right\ninto their livin' rooms;\"\nHe admitted that TV was a lot\nof work. Memorizing is a painful\nchore for him; he takes a week to\nput an hour's script to memory.\n''And I'm on most of the time,\" ho\nadded,\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrt.\nJ. Rollag of Lethbridge are visiting\ntheir son' and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. Rollag.\nTerry Davidge, RCN, Esquimalt\nis spending his leave with his mother, Mrs,-H. Davidge.\nOS. Lorne Mclnnis, RCN, left Saturday for Halifax where he will\njoin HMCS Magnificent. His brothers Lloyd and Ronald both serve\non this ship.\nMrs.. C. Towson and Miss F. and\nG. Towson , are visiting relatives\nhere, house guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Andestad.\nO. Steiner's sister and her son\nhove arrived from Germany to reside here.\nWestern Grocers A .\n34\nI Weston George    ?,       23%\nWinnipeg Elec Com .......'. _.      38%\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWi-Wf., B.C.-Mr, and Mrs.\nH, Parker of Vancouver are the\nguesta of Mr. end Mrt. C. Wiklund.\nMr. end Mrt. Joe BorysOwich end\nfamily ot Trail are visiting with\nMrs. % Johnstone,\nEd Wiklund and Boyd Wallace\nare home for a. few days from\nMarysville.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Holiday-Smith\nand Jack of Robson were the guests\nof Mitt Jl, Holiday-Smith.\nSea-Serpent Just1\nAnother Old Idea\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 The remains\nof a gigantic marine reptile that\nswam in a Manitoba sea about 75,-\n000,000 years ago were discovered\nrecently near MOrden, Man., 65\nmiles Southwest of here.\nL. T. S. Norrls-Elye, director of\nthe Manitoba, Museum, said the prehistoric monster is known as a Mos-\nataur, a \"sea lizard\" that lived beneath the sens of Cretaceoul times.\n\"It dwarfs anything that hat been\nfound in Manitoba to date,\" the director' said,\nThe discovery was made by Walter Stephenson during mining operations in bentnnite clay deposits\nabout 10 miles Northwest of Mor-\nden. \/\nThe jaw bone, which hat been\nbrought\" to the museum, is mdre\nthan 40 inches long. The stubby\nteeth average more than two inches\nin length.\nIt is possible the minster may\neventually be identified as e tylo-\nsaurus, the largest type bf Mosas-\neur, museum officlMt said. These\nlong, sinuous tea serpents were as\nlarge at medium sized whales end\nequal In bulk totmnrty 6f tne dinosaurs.\nDistant relatives of the Mosasaurs,\nthe \"Monitor\" lizards of the old\nworld, still exist.\nThe first Mosasaur remaine were\ndiscovered in a sandstone quarry in\nHolland on the Meute River in 1780.\nSince then a number have been unearthed in other parts of the world.\n<*to\u00a3 fa tywu\nwtlkuictme\nodwM\n,*v.\nAeudAdtetutif\n<*4iMftl\u00a3ttg\nCUtdltwilCtone\n\u25a0MreiiSaiwj\nTH? BUJ.K tea, raisins and crackers in the old*\nfime grocery store have been superseded by\nsanitary packaged goods backed by the good'name\nof their maker. The sliced, wrapped loaf of bread\nand the can of soup or fruit have eliminated hours of\nkitchen drudgery. Modern bathrooms, furnaces, and\nelectric appliances, have swept away inefficient,\nlaborious methods. The motor car has revolutionized our way of life.\nAdvertising has played a part in these advances,\nbecause advertising has made mass production possible, and mass production has brought the can of\nsoup, the electric washer and the motor car within\nevery family's reach.\nThis newspaper looks on its display and classified\nadvertising as an important part of its service to\nthe community.\nNelson Daily J^ews\n ;|\u00a7\u00a7\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nWatch for\nOUR\n49TH\nANNIVERSARY\nSALE\nCOMING SOON\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION.\nEstablished 1902\nThe Doctor.. . .\nPoison Ivy\nCured With\nSoap, Water\nBy HERMANN N. BUNOESEN M.D.\nDuring the outdoor months, ivy\npoisoning continues to be a major\nproblem so far as those sensitive\nto it are concerned.\nThere are many who can come\nin contact with this wild plant with\nperfect safety, but others are so\neasily affected as to develop the\ncharacteristic skin inflammation on\ndirect contact or even from others\nhaving ivy poisoning.\nWhen ivy poisoning is suspected\nthe exposed area of the skin should\nbe washed immediately with warm\nsoap and water. This washing should\nbe prolonged and may well be followed with an application of alcohbl\nor sodium perborate cream, which\nwill remove any of the oily substances that cause irritation. If this\nis done immediately after contact\nwith the ivy plant, the effects of\nthe poisoning will be greatly lessened.\n, Once the disease Is contracted,\nsolutions of lead salts or aluminum\nacetate should be used on the skin.\nEither of these will slowly neutralize the ivy poison. However, such\ntreatment is not totally effective.\nAfter about four days, when the\nskin becomes fry or scaly, a lotion\nto prevent itching may be applied.\nCare should be taken not to get soap\nor water on parts affected until\nthey are fully healed, for this may\ncause the occurrence of a localized\nskin infection.\nRecently, two chemical substances\nknown as ammonium sulfamate and\ndichlorophenoxyacetic acid have\nbeen shown to destroy ivy plants.\nH these substances were used in\nparks, forest preserves and woods\nto eliminate the ivy plant, lt is\nprobable that there would be much\nless hf poisoning.\nLOWLY HATS\n. in\nMX. STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\ntw\\\ncosts so little\nis so easy to serve\nJ\/uLtttMofc\nWOMEN\nPair Pledge Vows Amid\nProfusion of Flowers\nBaskets of gladioli, roses and snapdragons flanked the\naltar of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral for the Wednesday evening wedding of Charlotte Mary Leslie and William Jerome\n(Jerry) McAvin.\nVery Rev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean\nof Kootenay, performed the 7:30\np.m. ceremony for the youngest\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A.\nLeslie and the only son of Mr. and\nMrs. F. J. McAvin.\nAs she entered the church on her\nfather's arm, the bride was wearing\na white satin gown featuring a lace\nyoke trimmed with seed pearls, long\nlily-point sleeves and a coronet of\nseed pearls to which the net lace-\ntrimmed veil was fastened. Her\npearl earrings and necklace were\ngifts from the groom, and she carried a bouquet of red roses.\nSISTER ATTENDANT\nHer sister, Mrs. Ronald Hamilton, was matron of honor. She wore\na blue sheer gown styled with a\nbustle back. Her pink headdress\nand accessories were in striking\ncontrast to her gown, and she held\na bouquet of pink carnations'.\nMr. Donald Marshall was best\nman,   and   ushers   were   Mr.   Roy\nLindblad, the bride's brother, and\nMr. A. B. Clark of Trail, who with\nMr. and Mrs. A. Carlbeck of Trail,\ncousins pf the \"groom, were out-of-\ntown guests.\nSpecial guests were the groom'\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William\nPorter, who Will celebrate their\n60th year of marriage later this\nmonth.\nA reception for 35 guests was\nheld at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. Marshall was master of\nceremonies and Dean Leadbeater\nproposed the toast to the bride.\nThe bride's mother was attired in\na navy blue sheer dress with- a gray\nhat and accessories and a corsage\nof white roses, and a turquoise\nsheer dress' with white hat and accessories *and a corsage of tea roses\nwere chosen by the groom's mother.\nLater the bride changed to a fawn\ncolored suit with a corsage of red\nroses.\nMr. and Mrs. McAvin will live in\nNelson.\nGarden Party Popular\nEvent at New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B.C., August 2\u2014Annual garden party\nand dance, sponsored by New Denver Slocan Community\nHospital Ladies! Auxiliary on lawns at the home of' Mr. and\nMrs. G. A. MacMillan, again proved one of the season's most\npopular events.\nThe guests were welcomed by Mr.\nand Mrs. MacMillan. Tables were\nplaced throughout the grounds and\ncentered by vases and low bowls of\nflowers.\nAfter tea and supper, a program\nwas presented with Mrs. T. W.\nClarke at the. piano, which featured\ncommunity singing, solos by Dennis Clarke, Miss Catherine Worth\nand Miss Nancy Harris, Highland\nfling by Miss Shirley Cave and a\nsaxophone duet by F. H. Angrignon\nand Dennis Clarke. A dance followed.\nCommittees were: Mrs. J. A.\nGreer, Mrs. W. W. Maybank, Mrs.\nJohn Taylor, Mrs. James Draper,\nMrs. T. W. Clarke, Mrs. C. W.-Nelson and Miss M. H. Butlin. kitchen;\nMrs. S. C. Robinson, Mrs. W. G. Mc-\nLauchlin, Mrs. M. R. Evans, Mrs,\nW. G. Thring, Miss Margaret Anne\nMaybank and Miss Ruth Huggard,\nServiteurs; Miss Dora Clever, Miss\nRuth Huggard and Miss Viola Huggard, contest; Mrs. N. O'Reilly, Miss\nLena Meinardus and Miss Erna\nMeinardus, flowers; Mrs. A. L,\nLevy, posters; Mrs. E. DeRose, Mrs,\nW. H. Clever, Mrs. L. Dwyer and\nMiss Beverley DeRosa, evening refreshments; Mrs. F. H. Angrignon,\nMrs. E. F. Angrignon and Mrs.\nLevy, dishes; Mrs. John Taylor and\nMiss Ethel Graham, afternoon gate;\nJames Butlin, Mrs. Arthur Ham and\nhospital board members, evening\ngate; Mr. Greer, transportation,\nMrs. MacMillan, program, and Mr,\nand Mrs. Clarke, dancing,\nAt\u00a3m#i\u00a5@\n***\u00ab\u2022\u00ab -as Ass*** mt *\u00ab, rf \u201e_,,\n\u2022mm tarlslsKl..^^ ,\u201e_,\n\u00ab*. mmM*** *\u00bb\u2022>\u00bb\u00bb* \u00ab_\u00bb_,\nmJ \u00ab-*\u00ab__, \u00abf YW *\u201e.-   j^ ,\n\u00bb>*mm^mmssm\\mmimMmmm\nBOX 307\nOAl.aA.RY, ALBERTA\nFreshly grated lemon peel added\nto lemonade or fruit punch gives it\na certain zip that will keep your\nguests guessing.\n%isdls\u00a3ha!$L\nbif. dcui\/ia. bJhmkk.\nTROUSSEAU LOVELIES\nLacy frames of simple crochet set\noff these flower motifs* so beautifully. Use them on pillowcases,\ntowels, or scarfs!\nMake a flower-coordinated set of\nlinens for a trousseau! Pattern C810;\ntransfer 6 motifs 5x11% to 5x14\ninches; crochet directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS hi\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNeedlecraft Dept., 26S Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nSend twenty-five Cents more in\ncoins, for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of patterns for crochet, embroidery, knitting, household accessories, dolls,\ntoys ... many hobby and gift ideas.\nA free pattern is printed in the\nbook.\nWOMEN LEADERS\nTO SEE MAYORESS\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP) -*\u25a0 Every\nCanadian woman in civic office and\nmany in agriculture are getting an\ninvitation to meet Lady Lowson,\nwife of the Lord Mayor of London,\nwhen she and her husband visit the\nCanadian National Exhibition\u00bbhere\nnext month.\nWomen mayors, revees, councillors and wardens are being invited\nto meet Lady Lowson at the C.N.E.\nluncheon for women on Sept. 8,\nwhich is citizens and Cadet day at\nthe big fair.\nWomen widely known in farm\ncircles for successful operation of\ntheir own farms are also, being invited as guests of the C.N.E. Women's Division at the agricultural\nand livestock day luncheon on Sept.\nFirst Dance Held\n' WYNNDEL, B.C., Aug, 2 - First\ndance in the new Wynndel memorial hall was an outstanding success.\nTwo orchestras played.\nBreakfast menus can be just as\nmuch fun to plan as other meals of\nthe day. Jot down your ideas on a\nhandy pad and you'll fin,d interesting variety is easy.\n(Djimjl lip. With.\nVftcudm. TJtaAiot\nON-THE-GO OUTFIT\nThis ensemble will do such a\nbeautiful job for you! All day, it's\na cool town outfit,, later\u2014a smart\ndater. Scallops, yoke, tabs \u2014 all\nsmartest new fashion.\nPattern 9182 in sizes 12, 14, 16,\n18, 20. Size 16 frock and revers,\n3% yards 35-inch; bolero, 1 yard\ncontrast..\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUM-\n\u25a0BER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., 268 Baker St,\nNelson, B. C.\nOur Marian Martin Summer Pattern Book is the best ever! Send\nTwenty-Five Cents today for your\ncopy. You'll sew the smartest most\npractical Wardrobes for your family\nand yourself with patterns' chosen\nfrom this book. A Free Pattern of a\nbeachrobe for Misses is printed in\nbook.\n* *''    -s*j9_i $3S    3\n\u2022\u25a0MtfJS**   4\nYardley Lavender\nBy PRUNELLA WOOD\nENGLISH LAVENDER Is\na color as well as a scent,\nand this season the hue is\nas popular as the perfume.\nHere we have a leisure\nfrock of needlepoint pique\nin sweet English lavender\ncolor, frosted with a white\npique blouse which is just\ntoo short to tuck into the\nbelt, and which is. studded\nwith rhinestone buttons in\nthe front.'.   !\nNelson Social\n\u2022 Mis. H. H. Pitts, Nelson Avenue, Fairview, has as guest her son,\nDr. Harry Pitts of Vancouver, who\narrived yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Pearl' Cribben of Slocan\nPark is visiting for a few days at\nthe home on Cherry Street of Mrs.\nL. Longden and Mrs. Peter Winstan-\nley.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harkiris\nof Upper Bnnnington and their two\ndaughters, Jean Marie and Joyce,\nwere in the city en route home from\na motor trjp to High River, Edmonton and Calgary.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Fink\nhave had as guests at their Summer\nhome at Willow Point Mr.' Fink's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr, and\nMrs. Joseph LeFec of North Vancouver, and their two children.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. B. M. Barnum, 722\nCarbonate Street, who has been tn\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nhas returned, home.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Chaluck, Silica\nStreet, has returned from Vancouver, where she has been guest of\nMrs. Saare, former Nelsonite. Mrs.\nChaluck was accompanied there by\nher niece, who is on a year's visit\nfrom Norway and who plans on\nspending the remainder of her holiday at the Coast.\n\u2022 R. B. (Jack) Morris, Fair-\nview, is a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital. i\n\u2022 Mrs. C. V. Gaghon, Johnstone\nApartments, will have as guest her\ndaughter, Mrs. A. D. C. Parnell of\nNorth Vancouver, who arrives today.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Ham-\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs,\nC. A. Brady, celebrated their 34th\nwedding anniversary recently.\nMr. and Mrs. Barber had as their\nguests, Richard Barber, J. M. Woods\nand Laurie Sariri, all of Trail.\nJohn Payne, Penticton, B. C, and\nC. W. Gallecaro, also of Penticton,\nspent a few days here.\nMrs. C. S. Kilsby and family of\nLardeau spent a few days here.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Brown of Nelson spent the weekend here.\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Brady had as\ntheir guest, their son J. W. Brady,\nwho was en route to his new home\nin Regina, Sask.\nMiss Lynn Butler who has been\nvisiting her grandmother, Mrs. Butler, of Kaslo, has returned home.\nMrs. S. Bonacci, who has been a\npatient in the Kootenay Lake General Hospital, has returned home.\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Brady had\nas visitors, Mr. and Mrs. Court\nBlair and family of Corragana. Sask.\nJohn Craig of Trail is spending\na few days here. '*'\nPrincess Answers\nMother's Plea\nBREDBURY, England, Aug. 2\n(Reuters) \u2014 An 11-month-old baby,\ndangerously ill with bronchial pneumonia, will be treate'd by a London\nspecialist, thanks to a princess' response to a \"heartbroken\" mother's\nplea.\nThe infant's mother, Mrs. Winifred Ball, told nothing couid be\ndone by local doctors for the child,\ntold today how she wrote in desperation to Princess Elizabeth, whose\ndaughter, Princess Anne, Is the\nsame age as her own girl.\nA letter from the princess' lady-\nin-waiting expressed the princess'\nregret at the mother's plight and\nsaid arrangements were being made\nfor the stricken child to be seen by\na London physician.\nTrail Man\nMarried at\nPouce Coupe\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Aug. 2 \u2014 Gimli\nMan., where the groom is stationed\nwith the Royal Canadian Air Force,\nwill be the home of Robert Gordon\nRedgrave and his bride, the former\nBarbara Ruth Harper, who were\nprincipals in a wedding at Pouce\nCoupe.\nThe bride is the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Harper of\nPouce Coupe, and the groom is the\neldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon\nRedgrave of Trail.\nthe ceremony was, performed in\nPouce Coupe United Church by Rev.\nE. Miller. Out-of-town guests for the\nwedding were Mrs. Fred Riches, the\nbride's grandmother, and Mrs. I, R,\nLindsay, both of Vancouver. The\ngroom's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. C. Atherton of Vancouver were\nunable to attend the wedding.\nThe bride's gown was of nylon\nand net. Her shoulder-length veil\nwas gathered to a coronet of white\nrosebuds and she carried a bouquet\nof red and white carnations.\nMrs. Alan McMillan was her sister's matron of honor in a gown of\npink sheer, while the bridesmaid,\nMiss Christina Lorenz, wore primrose yellow.\nMr. Alan McMillan was best man,\nand ushers were Mr. Jack Gilmore\nand Mr. James Chilton.\nA reception at the home of the\nbride's parents followed' the\nceremony.\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nilton,   Hobson   Street,   visited   in\nPrince George.\nt Mrs. E. O. Miller' of Dawson\nCreek is with her sister, Mrs. A. E.\nDalgas, 319 Cedar Street\n\u2022 George Steele, formerly of\nNelson, now residing with his son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. ahd Mrs.\nFred Steele in Grand Forks, was a\ncity visitor Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Orlando and her three\nchildren of Trail, who have spent\nthe past couple of weeks in Nelson\nat the home of Mrs. Orlando's moth-\nMrs.   M.   DeGirolamo,   Innes\nStreet, returned home Wednesday\nevening.\n\u2022 Miss Rosemarie (MiMi) Sturgeon, Miss Betty Ann Hufty of Nelson and Miss Marianne Gagnon of\nTrail returned yesterday from Proc\nter, where they have been berry\npicking, the latter named having\ngone straight through to Trail.\n\u2022 Mel Sinnerud, brother of Sev-\nerud Sinnerud of Nelson, flew from\nGull Lake, Sask., to visit his step\nson, J. F. Jamieson, and family at\ntheir Bealby's Point camp.\nt Mrs. E. W. Kuhn, 512 Innes\nStreet, and her sons Norman and\nKenny, have returned from\nmonth's visit to Vancouver and\nIsland points.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. E. Johnson and daughter Lyndell have returned to' Edmonton, Alta., after spending three\nweeks with relatives in Nelson and\nTrail. Mrs. Johnson attended the\nfuneral of her grandmother, Mrs. J.\nW. Smiley, North Shore.\n\u2022 Mrs Anna Wickstrom, 919\nStanley Street, has had as guests\nMr and MrS Carl Wicksty-om of\nCabri, Sask., Mr. and Mrs. Orville\nAos of Lethbridge and Mr. and Mrs.\nEarl Sherarts of Sacramento, Calif.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hicks and\ndaughter Joan, who have been\nvisiting Mrs. Hick's mother, Mrs. G.\nForbes, Robson Street, have returned to their home in Victoria.\n\u2022 Out-of-town residents attending the funeral of Mrs. J. W. Smiley\nwere C. E. Smiley-and his family,\nand Mrs. E. A. Halliday, all of Vancouver; Clarence- Smiley of Calgary, Alta; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert\nSmiley of Trail and Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Wilson, also of Trail.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas Carter,\nPenticton, B.C., wish to announce\nthe engagement of their eldest\ndaughter, Kathleen Anne to Richard John Hood, eldest son of Mr,\nand Mrs. George Hood, Creston,\nB.C. The wedding will take place\nMonday, August 20th, at three\no'clock in the afternoon at the Penticton United Church. Rev. D. M.\nPerley of Kelowna officiating.\nW. B. A. Rossland,\nMakes Plans for Fall\n\u2022 ROSSLAND, B. C. Aug. 2-Plans\nwere made for a tea and sale of\nwork to be held in the future at the\nmonthly meeting of the Women's\nBenefit Association. President Mrs.\nW. Torry conducted the business\nsession and was winner of the contest. At the close of the evening refreshments were served, the hostess\nbeing Mrs. Marie Lucas land Mrs,\nAlfred Woodward Sr.       '\n. News of the Day\nRATES: 30e line,'40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\n:   Revising your insurance? Let us\nhelp you. BLACKWOOD AGENCY.\nSpecial\u2014Ladies' Blouses, sizes 14-20\nTOT-'N'-TEEN SHOP\nTop-flight shoe repairs, at\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP\nDANCE THIS SAT. AT PROCTER,\nFERR*ATO 2 A.M.\nGet your fishing license at Jack\nBoyce's Men's Shop.\nVISITORS'  DAY  FOR  SENIOR .?\u00b0?D   FIREWOOD   FOR  SALE\nGIRLS'   CAMP   AT   KOOLAREE I Mo,tl*\/ **\"\">\"\">. Ph. 924-X, Box 367.\nWILL BE SUNDAY, AUGUST 1-, I _,_-,'.,_,,., ,.    \u201e._.\u201e,..\nONLY. ELECTROLUX 8ALES - SERVICE\nHay   Forks   and   Rakes,   Scythe\nBlades and Snaths,.Scythe Stones.\netc. Get your requirements from \u2014\nHIPPERSON'S\nHandwrought copper work; B.C.\nNut Novelties; Abilone Pearl Jewelry. Take home a gift that is unusual. THE  CRAFT  CENTRE.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces cleaned; chimneys topped; thimbles applied; hot and cold air ducts cleaned\nby vacuum. \u2014 Pounder's Chimney\nService; Phone 1541-L.\nExceptional value in rifles. B.S.A.\n.30-06 calibre at $78.00 and $99.50;\nB.S.A.,   .270   calibre,   $113.95.   Hus-\nquarna .30-06 calibre $136.00.\nHIPPERSON'S\n6 Piece Dinette Suite. Like new.\n$54.50. We buy and sell new and\nused furniture and antiques.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560 413 HALL ST.\nSPECIAL\nBUY YOURSELF A NEW\nLAWN MOWER.\n$2.00 ALLOWED ON YOUR\nOLD ONE, IRRESPECTIVE OF\nTHE CONDITION IT IS IN.\nMe & Me (NELSON) LTD.\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR 553\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable reoairs\nat moderate prices.\nplums,\nWanted \u2014 Raspberries,\nDamsons and Greengages.\nMcDonald Jam Co. Ltd., Nelson\nUse  \"Flexotite\"  door insulation.\nSet $2.50.-\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nMOTORCYCLES\nTroubles? We may be able to help\nSAM BROWN, Repairs, Nelson, B.C\nFor ice-cold Cokes, the \"Pause\nThat Refreshes,\" stop at VALENTINE'S.\nPeach nylon net. 48\" wide,\n$1.95 per yd.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\n.Neptune' Moss or air fern just\narrived\u2014MAC'S FLOWER SHOP,\n717 Vernon St.\nSWANS STORE\nOpen till 9 p.m. evenings\nCorner Cedar and Observatory\nSt.\nCORRECTION\n' Fresh picked raspberries every\nday and black currants. Phone Mrs.\"\nC. Becker, 364-R-l.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 3, 1951 \u2014 5.\nWillow Point\nWILLOW POINT, B. C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. A. T. Townshend have for the\nSummer their daughter, Mrs. F.\nAmantia and baby Terry of Fernie. i\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. MacDonell\nhave had as their guests their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nArchie MacDonell of Kellogg, Ida\nThey leave for Vermont, N.Y., at\nthe end of the month.\nE. Blunt of Michel has been the\nweek end guest of his mother, Mrs.\nJ. N. Blunt,, while visiting his father, who is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Lincoln have\nas their guests their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. F. McCath-\nern and two daughters of Spokane.\nMrs. J. Benoit and two sons of\nSpokane are visiting Mrs. Benoit's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Mawdsley,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Shannon have as\nguests Mrs. Shannon's mother, Mrs.\nE. H. MacPhee and brother Eric of\nRobson.\nFUR COAT SALES\nRISE TENFOLD\nMONTREAL, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 Ten\ntimes more women wear fur coats\ntoday than 2 years ago, a leading\nMontreal furrier said yesterday.\nFelix Alexander, addressing a\nservice club, said the reason why\nmore women wear fur coals is they\nare a lot cheaper than in grandma's\ntime.\n\"Twenty years ago mink coats\nwere in the $10,000-and-up bracket,\"\nhe said. \"Modern production methods, improved breeding and modern\nmerchandising have ended the fantastic prices on furs, he added.\nBUY\nON.OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\n\"The House of Furniture  Values\"\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 - NELSON\nBalfour Notes\nBALFOUR, B.C.\u2014Mrs. R. Ram-\nsay is residing in the V. Hoit'hs,'\nhome at Sunshine Bay.\nChristie Gold has returned from\nVancouver where he was a p3tit\"K\u00ab|\nin Children's Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Emilson of Ymir I\nvisited the H. Franklin home.\nDawn Breeze of Nelson is eiiot\nof her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. H. Saunders.\nMrs. W. McKay has returned\nhome from Kaslo Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs.. J. McFarlane of 8\nKimberley visited Mr. and Mrs. A. .\nCarlson.\nMr. and Mrs. Fritz Hansen and\ndaughter, Marie, have returned to j\nNelson following a two-weeks' holiday at their Summer home here.\nMr. and Mrs. Gene Hird of Slocan\nCity were guests at the C. Noakes\nhome.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBeauty Salons Cure\nDishwashing Hands\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 London\nbeauty parlors are doing good business with new courses designed to\ncure what thSy call \"housewife's\nhand.\"\nA leading beauty parlor in Bond\nStreet gives expert guidance on\nhow to combat \"washing-up dryness' and avoid work-broken nails.\n\"Nearly all women do housework\nnowadays,\" says Bridget Rowland,\nchief assistant at htis parlor, \"and\nmany women are worried about the\neffect on their hands.\"\nDESMOND- T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NELSON, B. C.\nCOAL\n^        TOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nPhone 889 Nelson, B.C.\nIF BABY\nIS CROSS\nFIND OUT WHY\nHEALTHY BABIESare not cross. Your baby\nshould not be croBs. If he Is, then something\nin his little system is \"out of order.\" Probably\nBaby's Own Tablets can promptly \"put it\nright,\" One Quebec Mother had the experience. She writes: \"My little girl was irritable,\nfeverish and sometimes sick at her stomach\u2014\nwhat a relief it was, after giving her Baby**\nOwn Tablets, to see how much better she was.\"\nSweet-tasting-no \"sleepy\" stuff\u2014no dulling effect. Promptly effective In simple fevers,\nconstipation, teething troubles, upset stomach and other minor ills. Never be without a\nfull box of Baby's Own Ablets. Sickness\nbo often strikes in the night Get a package\ntoday at your druggist. Only soc Money back\nIf you are not satisfied.\nMM\nBeautifully Rebuilt\nComplete with\n7 NEW\nATTACHMENTS\nManufactured by STATE\nGUARANTEED\nFOR 12 MONTHS\nLiberal\nAllowance on\nOld Cleaner\nOur  Local  Representative  Demonstrates\nright In your own homel\nis? 17-95\n==========___ Jff FULL.\n[    |   1 m price\nFor FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION\nWRITE\nBox SVS, Nelson Daily News\n\u25a0        l_______SS_SS.)SS1J s\nai!iiiiiiiiiimiHiiitifflimiiiiHntnmmm*nnnmi*f\nI COMPLETE   AND  MAH.  TODAY  TO \u00a7\nSTATE VACUUM STORES'\n\u00a7    Box S.V.S., Nelion Daily New*\n\u00a3 I would like t tteo home Demonstration  \u00a3\n= of a . . .\n\u00a3        rj   Fully Guaranteed Elecfeohw\n1 NAME    _.\nPHONE\t\nniiiiiiiiinmiifHHiiHii'iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiimn\nVACUUM STORES LTD.\nBOX S.V.S.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nBranches Coast to Coast, U. S. A. and England\n ?\u00a3-.! S$i\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBritish CoJumbta's\nMost \/nteresfiiig Newspaper\nI Published every morning except Sunday by the\n] NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n1266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost Office Department,  Ottawa\nI MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PBESS AND\nI THE AUDIT BUBEAU OF CIBCULATIONS\nFriday, August 3,1951\nPeace of Reconciliation\nEarly in September representatives\nI of some 50 nations will gather in San\nFrancisco. Purpose is the ceremonial\nI signing of the treaty which restores\nJapan, minus its empire, to its place\n, as an equal and sovereign member of.\nI the free world.\nTo a generation in which there has\nI been so much war, and which, hence,\n| should be well experienced in such\nmatters, the Jap treaty is indeed a\nI novelty, points out The Financial Post.\nAt Versailles we made a peace of vengeance and of punishment. We found\n| the economic consequences were disaster for ourselves and the political\n| consequences Hitler.\nOn our second round of peace mak-\nI Ing with Germany we find .ourselves\nI deep in difficulties because we didn't\nthink about the peace when the war\nwas still going on. So we let a mess\ndevelop where Russia partitions the\n! Reich.\nSo it is to be hoped this third major\ntffort will prove better and wiser.\nIt is interesting because its architect\n\u2014almost alone\u2014has been John Foster\nDulles. In his peace policy, not of vengeance, but of reconciliation, Dulles\nis practicing in a bold way the Christian gospel of which he is personally\nsuch an exponent.\nIn his peace, Dulles demonstrates\nthat he has learned a lot of economic\ntruths since Versailles in which he\nassisted President Wilson.\nThe Jap treaty is interesting too,'\n| says the Post, because of the way it\nhas been handled. To observers of the\nI fantastic, terrifying game of politics\n\u2022 which the Americans call government,\nthe fact that Republican Dulles has\n'. managed the Jap treaty and that he\nhas carried with him the confidence\n. and support of the great weight of\nAmerican opinion is notable.\nNot everybody is happy about It.\nAustralia complains about no restrictions on Japan's right to re-arm. The\nPhilippines aren't satisfied with the\nreparations clauses. .\n. Shawcross, Britain's Board of Trade\nPresident, doesn't like the trade\nclauses. Under the treaty, Japan is to\ngive most favored nation treatment to\nall signatories who will reciprocate.\nShawcross talks about pre-war Jap\ncompetition, especially in textiles, says\n\"we feel that we must for the present\nretain our freedom to protect our eeon-\n\"\u2022orny If neeesssry against, abnormal or\nInjurious competition.\"\nTo which Th\u00ab Koonomist (London)\nberks:\nThis seems to be a euphemistic\nway ot say-tag that the Board of Trade\nwhich \u25a0reeentiy founded a resounding\nMart agatast restrictive practices in the\nBritish \u00bbaa*ket is now openly advocating re-tricttre practices in world trade,\nSir Hartley in effect adjured British\nindustry, and notably the textile industry, to combine with Japanese and\nother competitors ln order to make the\nenport markets ot the world, espec\nially those of the Colonial territories,\nsafe for relatively high cost and inefficient producers. That is as good a\nformula as could be devised for undermining and losing what is left of the\nCommonwealth.\"\nThe treaty itself is in the main an\nAmerican peace. Dulles has listened to\nthe objections but stands firm on the\nground that America did most of the\nfighting in the Orient, that she has\nsince paid $2 billions to sustain the\nJap economy, that America is the only\nnation powerful enough to .meet aggression in the Pacific,\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a noni\nde plume, but the actual name of the\nwriter must be given to ths Editor as\nevidence of good faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In the waste paper basket.\nHow to Dislodge\nA Gov't That Levies\nUnwanted Taxes?\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014It seems to me that our democratic form\nof government has run Into a snag.\nAccording to Magna Carta a free man\ncannot be forced to pay taxes without his\nconsent. Nowadays, however, we are not only\nforced to pay'them without our consent, but\nare fined and imprisoned if we refuse. But\nwhen one mentions this to the political experts ln our midst, we are told that wa do\nconsent to pay all the taxes that are levied\nbecause we have elected the representatives\nto the House of Parliament and the Legislative Assemblies which impose them. That\nof course sounds very well and is probably\nmost satisfying to the legal mind\u2014but the\nquestions is: Did the voter know when he\ncast his vote, what taxes his representative\nwould be asked to help impose? Did he know\nhow his representative would vote when asked to do so,\nMoreover, how many free men (or free\nwomen for that matter) vote for someone\nother than the elected' member who represents them? So how can the electorate be\nsaid to ba consenting to the taxes which are\nImposed?\nI defy anyone to say whether, before\ntha last election day, they, or those for whom\nthey voted, knew, that:\n(1) Motorists were going to be'forced to\nbuy a $5 driver's licence?\n(2) Hospital insurance premiums would\nalmost double themselves ln three years with\nco-Insurance added?\n(3) Private income taxes would soar?\n(4) A large portion of badly needed money\nwould be used to raise the salaries of already\nhighly paid officials, while the public was\nbeing told to retrench,\nAll right, we are told in a democratic\ncountry, if we don't approve of a government\nwe are free to turn it out and elect another.\nQuite so\u2014but not until the present one has\nrun its course, during which time it can do\nIrreparible damage, impose all kinds of new\ntaxes, wreck the country by squandering its\nnatural resources, and bring the people to\nthe verge of starvation. '     ,\nShould there not be some better method\nby which we can tax ourselves and also guarantee that the money be used for the purposes\nfor which lt was levied?\n. True, the B.C. Government has lately Introduced a new voting system for future\nelections\u2014an ingenious juggling trick, called\nthe \"single transferable vote\". No one, of\ncourse, knows how it works, but the \"transferable\" has an ominous sound when applied\nto a free and secret ballot, especially, too,\nwhen we know it is intended to ensure that,\nwhen the two parties that make up the present\ncoalition government part company, as they\nintend to do soon, one of them, either Con-\naervative or Liberal, will be returned to\npower and so prevent any real change in\ngovernment.\nA stable government, of course, is a good\nthing to have, but only so long as that stable\ngovernment is working for the good of everyone. Hitler's dictatorship government was\nstable, so stable in fact that the only power\nthat was able to dislodge it was an Invading\nforeign army. This seems to be the case with\nall dictatorships. But how is ona to diBlodge\na democratic government which has lost the\nconfidence of the people and ls determined\nto stay in office, through thick and thin?\nThere- must be something very worthwhile\nIn staying in offiqe, if people are so anxious\nto remain there.\nM. C TAWSE.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not bo published.\nThere Is no charge for this services\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBV MAIL oxcopt whero thoro Ii obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nMrs. H, A, Kimberley\u2014Could you tell me\nthe   approximate   value   of, a   genuine\nStradivarius violin? Where could I sell\nit7 I would also like history of it, if\npossible.\nA \"Strad\" can be worth anything from a\nfew hundred dollars to many thousands,\nThose made by the master himself are all\nlisted and their whereabouts known by dealers. You could send a copy of the label, including date and accompanying mark, to\nMessrs. Hills, Musical Instrument Makers,\nLondon, England, who will know if your\nmodel ls a genuine Stradivarius. Antonio\nStradivari waa born in 1644 and died 1737. He\nwas a pupil of Nicolas Amatl and in 1684 began to produce larger models, using a deeper\ncolored varnish. The Habemeck and Muntz\nmodelj were both made by him in 1636. The\nsecret of his varnish, shading from orange to\nred, has never been discovered, A monograph\non his life was written by, W. H. Hill. A. F.\nHill, and Alfred Hill of the above firm, in\nLondon.\nM. H., Nelson\u2014Please print recipe for cherry\nwine.\nGather cherries when ripe, wipe carefully, remove stalks, Put them Into crock or\ntub, mash without breaking stones, cover and\nleave 24 hours, then drain well, pressing out\nall the juice. Measure this and add sugar,\nallowing half-pound to each quart of juice,\nCover and leave again till next day, stirring\noccasionally until sugar it dissolved. Pour\ninto cask that will just hold mixture, covering hole lightly. When lt has finished working and no hissing is heard, close tightly and\nleave three months. Then bottle and keep\nanother three months before using.\nRural, Nelson\u2014How do we go about applying\nfor increased old aga pension?\nGet in touch with the Welfare Department, Ward Street, Nelson.\nHousewife, Creston\u2014How much bicarbonate\nshould one put ln milk to keep it sweet\nand fresh\nA pinch stirred into each pint of milk is\nsaid to keep lt fresh even in the hottest\nweather.\nLooking Backward *\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally Newt of August 3, 1941\nJ. S. Robertson of Rossland took the British Columbia skeet shooting championship and\nLieutenant-Governor'i Trophy ln Victoria today in a shoot-off with Dr. W. Leonard of\nTrail at the two-day provincial shoot.\nCorporal Gordon Lennox, formerly of\nEossland, now of the Provincial Police at\nNanaimo, has been notified of his transfer\nto Abbotsford.\nMrs. Gaily of Rossland visited town yesterday.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of August 3, 1926\nRev. A. L. Mclntyre will be in Nelson for\nthe next week to take the place of Father\nMcKenzie during his absence at the Coast.\nA white robin has made its home ln tha\norchard of the E. Ottrenski ranch, 3 miles\nEast of Creston. These birds are very rare,\nthe last ones being seen at least 10 years ago\nat the _>. G. Lyon ranch near Camp Lister.\nPremier Meighen Will epeak in Fernie\nin the middle of August. This is the only\nKootenay point in his speaking tour of B.C.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally Newt of August 3, 1911 \u2022\nA. Perrier brought the Nelson team even\nwith the Rossland nine in the third inning,\nmaking the ocoro 2-2, which wat how the\ngame finished up.\nThe financial meeting of the West Kootenay District of the Methodist Church in Ratio\ntoday it being attended by J. H. Wallace and\nH. Iven of Trinity Methodist Church.\nG. E. Robinson, manager of the Summit\nLake Lumber Company, arrived last night\non the Coast train.\nCanadian Navy Orders\n'Copters for Arctic\nOTTAWA, Aui. 2 (CP) \u2014 Canada's Navy Is getting a hew set of\nwings \u2014 helicopter wings \u2014 which\ncould prove en anti-sub weapon\nln time of war. ,\ntfhe Navy announced that it will\ntake delivery sdoh of three HTL-4\nBell helicopters, the first in its history. It ls expected these will be the,\nnucleus for a new branch ln the\nair arm of the tea service.\nThe 'copters, now being -given\nacceptance trials by naval officers\nat the Bell Aircraft Corporation\nplant at Niagara Falls, N.Y., are primarily for use aboard the navy's\nnew Arctic patrol ship, The vessel,\nnow under construction at Sorel,\nQue., is expected to be delivered\nearly next year.\nMeantime, the helicopters will be\nbased at the naval air station. H.M.\nC.S,   Shearwater,   at   Dartmouth,\nYour Horoscope\nPaying close attention to details is apt to\npay off in a fair measure of good fortune.\nBorn today a child ia likely to develop into\nan energetic, witty and optimistic character.\nM  \u2014              ' - ,\n\u25a0 It's Been Said\nBetter a steadfast enemy than an uncertain friend.\u2014George Eliot\niissssn i imu   M-.-.ITT-- i- -   sat\nDo It Every Time\nisJiBiHsjir,\nirmm\nVCUR TO4ST1MSTCR- VlATAln *\nesreciAu.*\/ whem m T ww\/*,,.\nGIVEN THE OPPORJVrllT\/J ffidSAME\ny'A   IKE TO |t*.i=o\"\"<-=\nwad pal,\u2122....,\nr\\X3LgOOM'^WH\nPI*_<\/\u00ab\u00bb\nONE 19 A UTTLE STUFFY\nanc ihe other ays a\nUTTLE LCWPED\/Wpt\nNEITHER ONE OF tVA\nKNOWS THE (5UEST Or m\nHONOR' J '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nBy Timmy Hatlo I Today's Bible Thought\nj   J        mti  '\u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0 n       Most spots can be cleansed  In\nBvB&BOWS 4M MC\nTHESE \u25a0\"WS-NJOBOPy\nWAtiTS TO .JUST SIT\n\/\u25a0IMP LISTENlwWP WHO\nCAN BLAVlE-EfVl?\nMott spot! can be cleansed In\nwhole oi1 In part, but It Is a glorious\nfeeling to be eenseleut of moral\ncleanllneit.\u2014Blessed are the unde-\nfiled in the way, who walk in the\nlaw of the Lord,\u2014Psa. 119:1.\n(font dbL\nViews\nFrom the\nNews Fronts\nBy J, M, ROBERTS, JR.\nAssociated Press Newt Analyst\nThe question now seems to be not\nwhether Britain will get the supreme Allied naval command in the\nAtlantic but whether lt will .go to\nU. S. Admiral Lynde D. McCormick\nor to no one at all.\nThe North Atlantic Pact Organization agreed, a long time ago, that\nthere should be a joint naval c.m-\nmand just like Gen. Dwlght Eisenhower's supreme land command. It\nwas agreed with .full approval by\nthe British Admiralty-that the command should go to the commander\nof the United States Atlantic fleet.\nThat .Wi\/s Admiral William M.\nFechteler, who has now been promoted to chief of naval operations\nsucceeding the late Admiral Sherman. McCormick ls the new commander.\nBritain's top officials knew that\nby getting an American command-\ner they were also getting assurance'that the United States would\nprovide him with the strength to\ndo,the Job, of vital Importance] te\nthe defence of Britain, Silt traditional pride of tea power stirred\nup a political hotbed In Britain\n-and tha business hat been rooking\nalong without action.\nFirBt reaction to President Tru\nman's promotion of Fechteler was\nthat the President was permitting\nthe reopening of the Atlantic command pact,\nBut by reopening the matter of\nthe commander the whole matter of\nwhether there should be a supreme\ncommand is also reopened.\nAdmiral Sherman, who went to\nBritain In the early dayt of the\nsquabble   In   an   effort  to   help\nsmooth thlngt over It reported to\nhave considered a unified command unwelldy. Tha second world\nwar which 'taw mora tea fights\nIng than a war. with Russia might\nbe expected to produce, wat eon\nducted without tuoh unification.\nThe delay in formal appointment\nof the Atlantic'commander wat ac-\ncorapanled by a  similar halt in\nplans for an overall command ln\nthe Mediterranean to be headed by\na Briton.   \u00ab   \u25a0\nAt any rate, the Atlantic matter\nhardly seems to be very pressing\nnow, and may be permitte.. just to\nrock along. Commands can be worked out when one has a clearer Idea\ndf the'type of war to be fought.\nN.S.,   at   the   \"R.CN.   helicopter\nflight.\".\nThe helicopters are of a type\nwhich have proved invaluable in\nnaval work from carriers in Korea,\nNaval spokesmen here said it was\nplanned to use them to train hell-\ncopter pilots and maintenance\ncrews for the navy. In the event\nof an emergency it was conceivable\nthat more would be acquired and\nthat some probably would be placed aboard Canada's aircraft carrier, H.M.C.S. Magnificent.\nIt was pointed out that helicopters, besides being Invaluable ln\nNorthern patrol and search and\nrescue work, also would fit in closely with the main operational task\nof Canada's Navy, that of hunting\nsubmarines. . ,\nTwo Canadian naval officers, Lt.-\nCmdr. John D. Lowe of Red Deer,\nAlta., and Lieut. George H. Marlowe of Saskatoon, are testing the\nones at tha Bell plant. Both officers\nhave completed courses at the U.S.\nNavy's helicopter unit at Peniacola,\nFlorida.\nLt.-Cmdr. Dennis L. Foley, Winnipeg, hat. been designated by the\nnavy as engineer officer In charge\nof servicing the new helicopters\nWhen delivered. He and a crew of\nsix air maintenance men from\nShearwater now are taking a course\nin helicopter maintenance at the\nBell plant at. Fort Worth, Texas.\nMrs. Rodd Denies\nRed Broadcasfs\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP) - Mrs.\nNorah K. Rodd, Windsor grandmother who recently visited Kprea\nand Russia, last night denied making the broadcasts from Korea for\nwhich Canadian members of Parliament wanted her tried for trea\nson.\nHer apeech, given under the\nauspices of the Communist Toronto\nPeace Council, was the \"first in a\ncross-country series.\nMrs. Rpdd, a wo.rker in left-wing\ngroups for many'years, said last\nnight she had seen Koreans tortured with fire, and the bodies of\nothert who had been systematically\nmurdered by U. N. soldiers. In an\ninterview later, she admitted that\nthe atrocities seen by her party had\nnot been attributed to any Bpeciflc\ngroup of aoldlert.\nSeveral membert of Parliament,\nspeaking in the House of Commons\nrecently, said that Mrs, Rodd had\nbroadcast a similar speeoh from\nKorea and that the remarks she had\nmade there were treasonous,\nBritish Cars Free\nOf Dumping Law\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 , (CP*-Brltlsh\nmotor car manufacturers have met\nthe requirements of Canada's ant!\ndumping laws and none are affected\nby these regulations.\nGovernment officials said today\nthat imported British cart are free\nof any duty under the anti-dumping laws, which were put back into\nforce Mayv 31 last after a two-year\nsuspension designed to . alleviate\nBritain's dollar shortage.\nManufacturers of the one or two\nhigher-priced Brilish cars wpich\nmight have been liable for dumping duties have feadjusted . their\nexport prices and thus avoided the\nadditional levy.\n\"Voice ol Heaven\" Broadcasts lo\nListening Hindus Over Network\nBy ADRIENNB FARRELL\nNEW DELHI, Aug. 2 (Reuters)-\nIndian radio listeners tuning in to\nHindu broadcasts will in future be\nlistening to \"The Voice of Heaven.\"\nA parliamentary committee after\nlong deliberation chose the name\nAkash Vanl,\" meaning Voice of\nHeaven or of the GodS, oracle of\nancient Sanskrit Mythology, as the\nHindu title for the nation's broadcasting system.\nFor the past 15 years the network\nhas been generally known by its\nEnglish name, the All-India Radio,\nand the English title will continue\nln some programs and for general\nbusiness purposes.\nSome have criticized the new\ntitle as too fanciful but for many\nIndians the radio certainly has the\ntask of being the voice, if not of\nthe Soda, at least of the demi-gods\nof wisdom and learning. It is one\nof the main sources of eduoation\nfor the millions of illiterates. .\nNO COMMERCIALS\nIt Is a common tight in the evening, particularly in Southern India, to see groups of villagers squatting Intent below a leafy tree, listening to the day's news broadcast\nfrom the village loudspeaker set in\nthe tree's branches.\nThere are also dally programs\non rural subjects, on new ways of\ngrowiitg wheat, rice or potatoes, on\nirrigation, drainage or farm cooperatives.\nBroadcasting in India ls a government monopoly. All commercial\nbroadcasting is banned. Newi\nbroadcasting is necessarily a complicated item ln a network caterinj\nfor a multl-langual audience. All- '\nIndia Radio News Service is ona\nof the largest in the world, putting\nout news daily in India's 15 main\nlanguage's, as well as in eight foreign' languages.\nPolish Crew Seeks\nRefuge in Sweden\n' STOCKHOLM, Aug. 2 (CP'-Six-\nteen crew members of a Polish\nminesweeper today sought asylum\nin Sweden after'seizing the crafl\nfrom their officers and taking it to\nSwedish waters.\nThe Communist vessel was taken\nby a Swedish cutter into the port\nof Ystad, where everyone aboard\nwas placed in voluntary custody by\npolice. The vessel carried 30 officer,\nand men\nThe cutter went out to Investigate the erratic course of the mine,\nsweeper, and found seamen ln\ncharge of It.\nAnders Skotte, master pilot who\nsteered the Swedish cutter, said\nthe men cheerfully admitted they\nhad locked their officers below.\nSkotte said the mutineers \"looked\nvery relieved\" to find themselvel\nln Swedish waters.\nNEXT TIME YOU ENTERTAIN ... SERVE\nCANADIAN WHISKY\nYou and your guests\" will\nenjoy the distinctive, different flavour of Coronation...\na fine Canadian Whisky of\nDellow (.moodiness!\n800DERHAM t WORTS LTD.\n;   Established 1132\nCanada's Oldest Distillery\nThis advertisement Is not published of displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n 1 1 ,\u2014_\u2014,\u2014: 1\u2014: ,\u2014^__ _.\nami aaattmBgSf \/ e-3 _Tr\nirons, issi, sin w-isim iiiiis-sn l\u00bb. sroius \u00bbicntT\"\u00bbiacrsT\u00bb\nPa never tayt how be likes c\nnew dress unlets I ask him. I reckon\nhe's trying to be tactful, but his\nsilence seems worse than anything\nhe might tay.\nRSAD THS CLA88IFISD DAILY\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nfWML MSa\u00ae TO) KSffiW WW\u00ae\nST CLASS MAIL\nRD CLASS MAIL\nPERSONAL LETTERS AND BUSINESS\nCORRESPONDENCE: 3 cents local\ndelivery (first ounce), 4 cents out-of-\ntown delivery (first ounce), 7 cents\nair mall (first ounce). -\nPRINTED MATTER (INCLUDING\nGREETING CARDS). Addreited to In-\nilMrlualsi 2 cenls for first 2 ounces,\n1 cent each additional 2 ounces.\nAddressed \"To Householder\"! 1!_\ncenls first 2 ounces, 1 cent each additional ounce.\nNO CLASS MAIL\nTH CLASS MAIL\nNEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS\nMAILED BY INDIVIDUALS! 1 cent for\nfirst 2 ounces, 1 cent next 2 ounces,\n1 cent (or each additional 4 ounces.\nPARCEL POST AND AIR PARCEL\nPOBTl Visit your nearest Post Office\nfor accurate weighing and correct\npostage for parcels.\nREGISTERED MAIL\u201420 cents tor Indemnity fo tiS    30 conls lor Indemnity lo $ SO\n13 cents for indemnity to $75   .40 cenls lor Indemnity to $100\nCANADA POST OFFICE\nHon. Q. Edouard Rinfret, K.C., M.P., Postmaster General\nW. J, Turnbull, Deputy Postmaster General\n-St\n imp\nALL THE WAY FROM SEATTLE, Wash., came the three Mclntyre brother! to the.Royal Canadian Henley Regatta, now under way\nat Port Dalhousie, Ont. After driving the 3800 miles to the big event,\nwhich 23 clubs are competing In, they were well rewarded for their\neffortt when brother Joe won the quarter-mile dash after Toronto\nDons' Jack Guest, Jr., toppled out of his shell. Joe Is seen showing\nhis medal to brothers Charlie and Dick. He had previously won the\nhigh school singles at Henley In 1946 and the Association singles In\n1947. By winning the Association he Is qualified to meet Guest\nagain on final day of four-day meet In the championship singles, in\nwhich Hamilton's Bobby Williams, now U.8. singles champ, is expected to add to the thrills of the event.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n(\nDescribes How Canadian Hockey\nRepresentatives fo Olympics Chosen\nMIDLAND, Ont, Aug. J (CP) -\nGeorge S. Dudley, secretary-manager of tne Canadian * Amateur\nHockey Association, told today how\nCanada's hockey representative to\nthe 1952 Olympic Games was\ntelected.\nEdmonton Waterloo Mercuries\nwere picked at a meeting\/ of the\nAssociation in Toronto July 28 to\nOntario Suspends\n3 More Jockeys\nTORT \"SJME, On*., Aug. 1 (CP*\u2014\nThi*ea more Jockeys and an apprentice rider have been suspended in\nlhe snowballing investigation of suspected race - fixing on Ontario\ntracks.\nThe Ontario Racing Commission\nyesterday baered from racing pending fterHier investigation: Jockeys\nGeorge Thompson of Hamilton,\nCharfie Bright of Muncle, Ind.,\nRobert Mefahant of Toronto and\nApprentice Jockey John Bromby,\nalso of Toronto.\nTheir suspension brought to six\ntto number of riders set down since\nHie investigation began last week\namid widespread rumors of a major\nbetfag coup pulled at Fort Erie\ntracks by gamblers and racketeers.\n, Previously Bobby Keane, widely-\nknown Toronto jockey, and Phil\nMarehese, a newcomer to Ontario\n. from Pawtucket, Rhode Island, were\nruled off track in the Province for\nMfe \"for conduct prejudicial to the\nbeet interests of racing.\"\nAlong, with yesterday's suspensions came a hint that criminal\ncharges might be laid after completion of the investigation.\nSUMNER\nSKATING\nTONIGHT\nAND  EVERY\nMONDAY \u2014 Adults\nWEDNESDAY \u2014 Children\nand Adults\nFRIDAY \u2014 Adults\n8:30 p.m.\nAdults 3Sc Children 10c\ngo to Oslo, Norway, next February.\nIn a Press release, Dudley said\nthe deciding factor for the Edmonton club was its showing in the 1950\nworld championship games.\nReminding that Canada has failed\nto win the world title only twice-\nin 1936 and 1949 \u2014 since it entered\nthe competition, he said: \"It is\nessential that a strong club be provided to assure Canada supremacy\nin its own Winter game.\"\nBut certain other factors had to\nbe considered.\nAH players on an Olympic team\nmust be able to subscribe to the\nOlympic oath, which requires that\nno club use reinstated professionals\nor players who have competed for\nmoney or \"any substantial reward.\"\nThe club must go on an exhibition tour through Europe for almost\nfou-r months to cover the major part\nof the expenses of the trip.\n\u25a0The number of married players\non a club, therefore, must be taken\ninto consideration, for the support\nof their families during their absence\" \"presents a'serious problem.\"\nSaid Dudley: \"The (Association)\nofficers feel that the Edmonton\nclub knows*just the kind of competition in which It will be engaged\nand that it will be able to select\nthe players of a calibre sufficient\nto meet such competition.\"\nMe said applications had been re\nceived from St. Francis Xavier\nUniversity, Antlgonlsh, N.S.; the\nBuffalo Club, Winnipeg; Trail\nSmoke Eaters; Noranda Copper\nKings; Cornwall Falcons; Smiths\nFalls RideaUs, and the Edmonton\nteam.\nEnglish Cricket\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (Reuters)\u2014Results of first-class English cricket\nmatches today:\nSouth Africans 35 and 180, Som\nerset 305 and 46 for two.\n.Lancashire 279 and 211 for one\ndeclared,   Gloucestershire  143   and\n24 for none.\nEssex first 314,  Sussex  312 for\neight-\nMiddlesex 277, Glamorgan 382 for\nfour.\nWarwickshire 375, Leicestershire\n207 and 12 for none,\none, Northamptonshire 235 for eight\ndeclared.\nKent 462 for nine wickets declared, Nottinghamshire 363 for two.\nDerbyshire 339 and 16 for one.\nYorkshire 389.\nMain To Be Greatest Ever?\nCongress Warned Against\nTampering With Baseball\nBy ARTHUR EDSON\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014\nRepresentative Kenneth B. Keating (Rep.\u2014N.Y.) tald today that\n\"Congress had better bo darned\ncareful before It starts tampering with baseball.\"\nKeatin'g Is a member of a Judiciary subco imlttee studying\nwhether baseball violates antitrust laws,\nThe committee had an open date\ntoday. But it goes back into action\ntomorrow \u25a0 with George Trautman,\nboss of the minors, again on the\nstand. Trautman will finish reading\na 31-page statement ne started yesterday.\nSome committee members, notably chairman Emanuel Celler\n(Dem.-N.Y.), have suggested that\nbaseball needs a rather complete\noverhauling. Celler suggested that\nthe future may bring four major\nleagues, and said baseball should\n.start right now reorienting Its\nthinking,\nKeating told a reporter that he\ntakes a different view.\n\"I have been impressed with how\ncomplicated baseball is,\" he said.\n\"And I've also been Impressed by\nthe testimony of the men who have\nstudied .the game for years.\n' \"We can't possibly become experts\non baseball in a week or a month.\nI think we will have to pay a lot\nof attention to what they have to\nsay.\nWhat they have had to Say, so far,\nadds up to about this:\n\"If you don't want to destroy\nbaseball, you had better leave it\npretty much alone.\"\nKeating said he doesn't think the\ncommittee had any business looking into baseball in the first place\n\"when the world is on fire\" and with\nmore important things for it to do.\n\"But a majority of the committee\nI thought otherwise. Having gotten\n'into lt, I think we must find out\nwhat it's all about.\"   ,\n$2500 al Stake When Eight Teams\nIn Weekend Clash for B. C. Title\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 2 \u2014 Eight\nball teams, including three American aggregations, will move into\naction this wekend with an eye to\nthe $2500 prize money that goes\nwith the B.C. Baseball Championship.\nFirst game will get under way\nat Butler Park at 2 p.m. Saturday\nwith Rossland Cubs and Spokane\nBuilders crossing bats. Nelson\nPeerless-9 will swing Into action\nat 6 p.m. against a strong Oliver\nclub.\nSunday, Fruitvale All-Stars will\nclash with Troy, Mont., in a 10 a.m.\nfixture while Trail Smoke Eaters\ntake 6n Tekoa, Wash., at 2 p.m.\nSaturdny'o   winners   will   meet\nIn one bracket of the semi-final\nat 6 p.m. Sunday while'Sunday's\nwinners   will   tangle   at   6   p.m.\nMonday In the other half.\nThe final  Is  slated  for 6 p.m.\nTuesday.\nFirst money of $1000 will go to\nthe winner while the runner-up\nwill collect $500. Third and fourth-\nplace teams will get $300 each while\nthe other four teams competing will\ndivide $400.\nDistilled ond bolllod In bond by\nII. CORBY DISTILLERY ITD\u201e\nCorbyvills, Onlaiio\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed By tho Liquor Control\nBoard orjlpy the Government of British Columbia.\nTigers Entertain\nColville Sunday\nNelson baseball fans will get\ntheir first opportunity of seeing an\nAmerican club in action on' the\nlocal diamond Sunday when the\nNelson Tigers take on the Colville,\nWash. nine.\nThe Tigers, becoming stronger at\nthe plate every time out, are holding daily workouts in preparation\nfor the Colville team which trimmed the Feerless-9 Seniors 8-3 in a\ngame across the line three weeks\nago.\nRon Brown will likely be given\nthe task of throttling the American\nsluggers with Stan Grill, Johnny\nMisuraca, Lorne Irwin and1 Denny\nKraft all ready for relief chores.\nThe rest of the Nelson lineup will\ncome from Dune Kennedy, Reg\nWatson, Yo Hamakawa, Don Porteous, Alex Abrosimo. John Bach.vn-\nski, Ken White, Keith Loewen and\nmanager Ron Nash.\nBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Prest\nNATIONAL\nNew York  110 000 001\u20143 4 0\nChicago      200 000 40x\u20146 9 1\nJones, Spencer (7) and Westrum;\nRush and Burgess.\nBrooklyn    202 301 020\u201410 14 1\nPittsburgh     002 100 020\u2014 5   9 2\nErskine and Campanella; Friend\nOwen, Queen (5), Walsh (8) and\nGaragiola.\nPhiladelphia   ... 000 100 051\u20147 14 1\nCincinnati   ..     '100 301 000\u20145   9 0\nThompson,, Miller (5), Konstanty\n(8),  Heintzelman   (0)   and  Seminick; Wehmeier,  Raffensberger  (8),\nSmith (91 and Howell.\nAMERICAN\nDetroit    020 000 040-6 10 0\nNew York      000 000 000\u20140   3 3\nWhite. Cain (7) and Swift, Robinson (8); Schallock, Shea (8),\nKramer (9) and Silvera, Berra (8).\nFirst\nSt. Louis     000 000 010\u2014 1    8 2\nBoston   .,.;        023 230 20x\u201412 14 2\nWidmar, Mahoney (5) and 'Batts;\nScarborough and Rosar.\nSecond\nSt. Louis     000 000 600\u2014 8 10 1\nBoston       .        300 040 40x\u201411 14 2\nSanford. Mahoney (5). Paige (7)\nand Lollar: Stobbs. Taylor (7),\nWight (7), Kinder (8) and Moss,\nRosar (8).\nCleveland     302 000 000\u20145 8 1\nWashington       .   000 001 001\u20142 4 0\nGromek and Hegan; Porterfield,\nFerrick (7), Harris (9) and Guerra.\nChicago          000 002 001 0\u20144 8'2\nPhiladelphia   .  000 010 002 0\u20143 9 1\n(10 innings)\nGumpert, Dorish (10) and Sheely;\nHooper,  Shantz   (8),  Coleman   (9)\nand Tipton.\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 0, Ottawa 1.\nMontreal 7, Toronto 2.\nSyracuse 6, Springfield 2.\nBaltimore 4, Rochester 3.      - '\nARRESTED AT TRACK\nFORT ERIE, Ont., Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014\nHenry Dunne, 48, of (Lennox Road)\nChicago was arrested at the Fort\nErie race track today on a charge\nof conspiracy to defraud the public,\nOntario Provincial Police said tonight.\nBy VIC MORRIS, JR.\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nMONTREAL, Aug. 2 (CP>) - It\ntwo-fisted Lome Main of Vancouver, fast-lmprovlnd 21-year-old\nmember of Canada's Davis Cup\nteam, destined to become the No.\n1 player of the squad and the\ngreatest tennis player ever developed In the country?\nThe concensus It the popular\nyouth will be elevated to the top\napot In national rankings In 1952,\nand he It the cornerstone which\nCanada might produce a winning\ncombination In future Davis Cup\nplay.\nThe husky youngster, who uses a\ntwo-handed grip styled after that\nof Australia's Jack Bromwich, Is\npitted against court-wise Jose,\n(Pepe) Aguero of Cuba tomorrow.\nBrendan Macken of. Montreal meets\nDr. Juan Weiss of Havana in the\nsecond singles match.\n\"Just look at him,\" said Captain Gordon MacNeil of Montreal\nas Main moved about the court\nlike a cat on springs. The West\ncoast ace had Just whipped one\nof his specialties, a double grip,\ncross-court drive, past teammate\nMacken.\n\"Main gets better each outing,\"\nsaid MocNell. \"If he maintains\nhis present rate of Improvement,\nthere won't be a player In Canada that will be able to touch\nhim soon.\"\nA doubles match will be played\nSaturday and two more singles on\nSunday. Assignments for these\nmatches will not be announced\nuntil after tomorrow's play.\nRYE, N.Y., Aug. 2 (API-Lefty\nArt Larsen, the new stormy petrel\nof American tennis, makes his bid\nfor .Davis Cup recognition tomorrow when he meets Mexico's Armando Vega to open the second\nround of the American zone competition.\nThen Herbie Flam, 22-year-old\nretrieving artist from Los Angeles,\nwill square off against Mario\nLlamas, the champion of all Mexico\nThe doubles match will be staged\nSaturday with the final two singles,\nreversing tomorrow's lineup, ' on\nSunday. The United States is favored to clinch the victory on Saturday.\nBILL PARNELL\nCanada's king of the milers \u2014\nBill Parnell of Vancouver \u2014 set\ntwo new reoordt In Canadian\ntrack and field championships\nheld recently at University of\nBritish Columbia In Vancouver.\nCompeting In half-mile event his\ntime wat 1 minute, 52.7 seconds\u2014\nwhich set a Canadian open and\nnative record. Following up this\nvictory was 800-metre race which\nParnell 'executed In 1:52 to chalk\nup a native Canadian and native\nopen B.C. record.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\nU.S-Yachts Win\nInternational (up\n'COWES, Isle of Wight, Aug. 2\n(AP)\u2014The United States completed a brilliant recovery yesterday\nto defeat Great Britain, four races\nto three, and win the British-Amer\nican Cup for six-metre interna\ntional class yachts.\nTrailing three races to one in the\nbest-of-seven series', the American\nentries swept to victory Monday\nond Tuesday to even the contest\nand then scored a decisive 14Vi-to-7\npoint triumph yesterday to carry\noff the trophy presented by the\nSeawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club\nof New York.\nThe American yacht Llanoria\nwon three of the seven races.\nSugar Ray Accepts\nMovie Offer\nPARIS, Aug. 2 (Reuters)\u2014Sugar\nRay Robinson has accepted an offer\nto play a lead role in a French\nmovie to be adapted from the Jean\nPaul Sartre play \"The Respectful\nProstitute,\" it was learned today.\nThe offer was made to hln\naboard the trans-Atlantic liner Lib\nerte taking him home from Europe\nafter losing his world middleweight\ntitle to Randolph Turpln of Britain.\nA contract is expected to be signed\nthis month.\nThe play deals with racialism,\npersonified in the two main roles\u2014\nthose of a white woman and her\nNegro friend, to be played by\nRobinson.\nProtest Mantle\nClassification\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014\nThe White House disclosed today\nthat it received three letters pro\ntesting the 4-F classification - of\nbaseball player Mickey Mantle,\nprize properly of the New York\nYankees.\nThe White House said in response\nto an inquiry that the letters were\nhandled in routine fashion; they\nwere sent on to the agency involved. Selective Service.\nHe has been: examined twice be\nfore and put in 4-F each time.\nGiacomelli Leads\nLansdowne Jockeys\nVANCOUVER, Au\u00a3. 2 (CP)\u2014Bud\nGiacomelli, the red haired hardboot,\ntoday won in the eighth rice to take\nleading jockey honors at Lansdowne\nPark with 39 victories.\nHis victory aboard Ethel Valley\nbrought to a close the 35-day meet\nat the outlying track and boosted\nhis total one above that of Art\nMartinez, who departed last week\nfor Del Mar. \\\nTake Me Out lo\nThe Ball Game\nBy DON  PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP.) \u2014 \"Take\nMe Out to the Ball Game,\" she\nsaid. So he did.\nThey found traffic jammed in\nfront ofMhe stadium and motorists\ncraning their necks for a glimpse\nof the young man in his little cottage atop the flag pole. (He'll come\ndown when the home'team makes\nthe first division, he says.)\nInside, the usher gave them paper seat covers on which were printed lucky numbers. Soft music\nsoothed'them over the Soud-speak-\ning system.\nPromptly on schedule the master\nof ceremonies set the stage for a\nhalf-hour rally by the visiting night\ndub entertainers.\nDusk began to fall, peanuts to\npall. She grew restless.\n\"Are those the umpires- coming\nout of the dugout?\" she inquired\nhopefully as the field lights came\non.\nNo. It was the singing trio taking their cue in tuxedos.\nThey sang a piece from Faust.\nThen a hypnotist took over, put\nthe home team manager under his\npower and only then revealed that\nhe was really the visiting team\nnewly-acquired Negro short-stop in\ndisguise.\nHer eyes wandered.\n\"Who   are those   men   leaning\nagainst the fence, In   the baggy\nunlformi and the funny shoes?\"\n\"I'm not sure. Maybe they're\u2014\nthey  must  be\u2014they're  the   ball\nplayers, Say, I believe the game's\ngoing to start.\"\nThe field was cleared. The players began to warm up. The an\nnouncer's Voice crackled:\n\"The new president and board of\ndirectors welcomes you to YOUR\npark. We'd like you to feel at home,\nRemember this is YOUR park.\"\nThe first batter surreptitiously\ncrept to the plate. Swung and missed.\n\"And we'd \"like to. remind you of\nthe suggestion -boxes in the lobbies.\nRemember, the person submitting\nthe best suggestion of the' week\nwins $25.\nThe first batter knocked the second pitch over the centrefleld wall.\nYou can win it, yes you can! And\nso easy! Estimate the attendance\nat YOUR next home game correctly and it's yours. There'll be 37 other\nprizes too, so attend the next home\ngame of YOUR team and win one-\nyou can!\"\n\"It's getting late,\" she said.\n\"But what about the free flowers\nafter the game?\"\nToo late, she was on her way,\nHe could only follow.\nToronto lost to Montreal 10-4.\nTrail Swimmers\nEnter Regatta\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 2 \u2014 Trail\nSwimming Club has seven members entered in events at the annual\nKelowna Regatta.\nThe team, coached by Johnny\nMacDonald, comprises BUI Trus-\nwell, John Laueher, Bill Catalano,\nReg Mitchell, Tommy McVie, Miss\nPaddy Angus and Dan Cramer.\nTrail Athletic Association sponsors the swimming club.\nSETS WORLD RECORD\nWestbury, N. Y., Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014\nA world, record of 4:13 2\/5 for two\nmiles in the $50,000 Nassau race was\nset, tonight by Scottish Pence who\neasily outdistanced 11 opponents.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 3, 1951 \u2014 7\n\u25a0\u25a0 PHIL LEDERHOUSE of Prince\nAlbert Sask., Is seenyposlhg with\ntrophy he won after successfully\ndefending hit Canadian Blind\nGolfers' title In Toronto. In shooting a 56-56 for a 112 score, Lederhouse beat out Nick Genovese of\nDundas, Ont., who ahot a 63 going out and a 56 coming home for\n119, to take the runner-up spot\nfor the second time in two years,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nSouth Slocan\nOvercomes\nLead to Beat Kings\nThe luckless Nelson Kings, wallowing in the cellar of the Nelson\nDistrict Fastball League with only\none win in eight starts, took it on\nthe chin again Thursday night after\nblowing a lead big enough to win\nseveral ball games.\nThe Kings were leading South\nSlocan 14-3 going into the sixth Inning and seemed well on their way\nto their second win when the roof\nfell in. The Playmors pushed across\nseven runs'ln the sixth, scored four\nin the seventh and three more in\nthe eighth while holding the Kings\nto one run the rest of the way to\nwin 17-15.\nThe Playmors collected 19 safeties, including a triple by Doug\nJames, off two Kings pitchers. Buzz\nMcDonald, Mike Vecchio and Arvin\nSchneider homered for the losers.\nSouth Slocan .. 300 007 43\u201417 19 2\nKings   235 310 01\u201415 15   3\nBodiak, Taylor (3) and Dunsmore;\nKelsch, Coleman (6) and McClelland.\nSPORTS\nCain Preserves\nShutout; Dody\nBlasts Whopper\nBy The Canadian Press\nA brilliant relief pitching effort by Bob Cain preserved\na shutout for Detroit and starter Hal White Thursday as the\nTigers defeated New York Yankees 6-0. The loss cut the\nYanks' first-place edge over Boston to one game as the Red\nSox moved into the runner-up spot in the American League\nby sweeping a doubleheader from St. Louis Browns.\nDetroit led 2-0 when Cain entered the game with the\nbases full in the seventh, none out and a two balls and no\nstrike count on pinch'-hitter Johnny Hopp. His first pitch\nwas a ball.\nCain then fired three curves past\nHopp for a called -strike out' and\nfanned both Billy Martin and Gene\nWoodling on sweeping hooks to retire th? side. The slim lefthander\nretired the side in order in the final\npair of innings, whiffing two more\nin the process..\nWhite permitted only three\nsingles.\nThe Tigers banged starter Art\nwhich had the 11,622 fans gasping.\nDoby blasted a Bob Porterfield\npitch atop the centrefleld fence\nand the ball bounded out of the\npark. Babe Ruth smashed a homer out of the stadium at that\npoint In 1923, his ball clearing the\nfence and landing In a tree some\n50 feet back of the wall.\nDoby's drive, smashed against a\nstrong wind, is believed to be the\nSch'aNock'a'nd \"Fra\u00b0n\"k s\"he_\"for\"io only olhor homer to Ieave the Park\nhit,, scoring twice In the second: ?\u2122r,te oentrefield wall, which Is\nInning and four times In the; J08 'c.et ,rom home Plate \u00ab**\u25a0<\u2022 35\neighth. Three of the tallies In the]'0!,*, h'Bh' _ , \u25a0 ,'.:\nlatter frame were unearned be-i,.Fleet J,m Busb''' inserted ln the\ncause of errors by shortstop Mar-1' !>ne'<\"P '*\" the eIShth inning as a de-\nt|ni | fensive measure, cracked his fourth\ne'_-_ii\u201e i.    ... s. -  -  home rur> o' *he season in the 10th\n^T^lL\u201eTri?r^lii '\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab* to give the rebounding White\nSox a 4-3 American League victory\nMontreal Woman\nLeads Golfers\nBy W. Ft. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLAVAL-SUR-LE-LAC, Que., Aug,\n2 (CP) \u2014 Mrs. A. B. Darling, Montreal Whltlock veteran, back in\ncompetitive golf for the first time\nsince before the war, led the field\ntoday in the opening round of the\nCanadian Ladies Close Golf Cham\npionship with an 18-hole score of\n78 including an eagle fhree.\nThe former Canadian Ladies Open\nChampion missed Laval's tough par\n77 by one-stroke Dut behind her the\nfeild of 86 was strung out with\n6cores reaching from 79 to well over\n100.\n' Mrs. Darling's fine play was a\nmajor factor putting the Quebec\nfour-player team in front in the\ninter-provincial team matches.\nFor the,close leadership and the\npace.setting by Quebec among the\nseven provincial teams, the coinciding play took on something of a\nfamily affair.\nNIECE   RUNNERUP\nMiss Daintry Chisholm of Royal\nMontreal, a niece of Mrs. Darling,\nand present Quebec Ladies Champion, fired a 79 and was runnerup\nafter the first 18 holes of the 54-\nhole championship.\nBracketed at 80 were Mrs. Helen\nJ. Carlson of Toronto Rosedale and\nMrs. Peter Patch of Montreal Whit-\nlock who is also a resident of Barks-\nley, C-lif.\nMrs. J. H. Todd of Victoria- was\nalone at 82, four strokes off the\nleader.\nThe team competition, which ends\nwith tomorrow's 18 holes, Quebec\nheld a five-stroke lead over Ontario\nwith an aggregate score of 332,\nLow scorer-on the title-defending\nOntario team was Mrs. Carlson with\nher 80 and next with an 83 was. 17\nyear-old Marlene Stewart from the\nLookout Point Club.\nIn third place among the teams\ncame British Columbia's four with\n339, seven strokes away from Quebec's lead. Then, in order, came\nAlberta with 356, the Maritime\nprovinces, playing as a single team,\nwith 364, Saskatchewan with 367\nand Manitoba with 373.\nfrom the Hollywood Club of. the\nPacific Coast League July 12 for\n$50,000, was charged with his first\nloss.\nCharlie Maxwell's pinch-hit grand\nslam homer in the seventh inning\nof the nightcap gave Boston Hed\nSox an 11-6 victory over St. Louis\nBrowns today to sweep a dpuble-\nheader. Ray Scarborough scattered\neight hits as the Red Sox took the\nopener 12-1. ,\nBLAST PIRATE8 10-5\nBrooklyn Dodgers went on another hitting spree and walloped\nPittsburgh Pirates 10-5 for their\n11th victory in their last 12 National\nLeague starts.\nWIN SERIES\nBob Rush checked 'New York\nGiants with four hits as Chicago\nCubs pounded out a 6-3 triumph.\nThe victory gave the Cubs the\nseries, three games to two, and\ndrppped the second-place New\nYorkers 10 full games behind\nBrooklyn Dodgers.     '\nPhiladelphia unloaded today on\nHerman Wehmeier and Ken Raffensberger in the eighth inning to\ndefeat Cincinnati Beds 7-5.\nINDIANS MOVE UP\nSteve Gromek's four-hit pitching 11\nand long-range blows by Larry\nDoby and Luke Easter gave Cleveland a 5-2 victory over Washington.\nThe victory moved the Indians into\na second-place tie in the American\nLeague with Boston, one game back\nof New York,\nGromek was forced to weather\na ninth-inning rally which produced one run and filled the bases\nwith two out. He ended the threat\nby inducing Eddie Yost to pop to\nshortstop Ray Boone.\nEaster's two-run triple in the first\ninning featured a 'three-run uprising, but it was a terrific home run\nby Doby in the third inning, scoring Dale  Mitchell  ahead  of him,\nover Philadelphia Athletics.\nGus Zernial smashed his 24th homer of the campaign off winner\nRandy Gumpert in the fifth for the\nA's,\nGumpert   recorded   his   eighth\nvictory against four losses as he\nhurled the fourth-plaoe\"Sox within six games of the League-leading Yankees. The tall righthander needed help from reliefer Harry Dorish  In the 10th when the\nAthletics   placed  the  tying   and\nwinning runs on the bases,\nBusby's     game-winning     circuit\nclout  sent  one  game  winner  Joe\nColeman down to his fifth defeat of\nthe season.\nThe National contest between\nBoston Braves and the St. Louis\nCardinals was called in the last of\nlhe ninth with the Braves loading\n7-3 to permit the Braves to catch a\ntrain for Chicago. The game will\nbe played dut later in the season.\nBob Elliott had driven in four runs\nwith two homers and a single. Sid\nGordon and Sam Jethroe also\nhomered for Boston.\nGives Up Attempt\nAt Channel Swim\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (Reuters) \u2014\nMiss Elna Andersen, 39, Danish\nschool-teacher gave up her fifth\nBritain-to-France channel swim attempt today within five or six\nmiles of the French coast.\nShe had been swimming a little\nmore than 12 hours.\n.At Folkestone tonight Miss Andersen said she would have another\ntry at the channel this Summer\nIt's Open How\/\nthe most complete\nAUTOMOBILE\nEXHIBITION\never presented anywhere in the world by\n*606&kfAfQ>   OF ENGLAND\nEntertainment for the entire family!\ntflfS \u2022 \u2022. all the exciting new AUSTIN models\ndisplayed in the colorful setting of an English\nvillage.\nMUSIC \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 You'll enjoy music played by the)\nKilsllano Boys' Band and the Avison String\nEnsemble.\nFashions... all the latest In a comploto\nsummer fashion show.\nGay DanceS... nightly by pupils of the\nIsdale School of Highland Dancing.\nIraaillOn... in the age-old ceremony of\n\"Beating Retreat\" (8:00 p.m.)\nMat\nTHE SEAFORTH ARMOURIES\nJust ever lhe Burrard Slreet Bridge, VANCOUVER, B.C.\n2 p.m. \u2014 11 p.m. Daily\nAugust 2 \u2014 August 11\n\\\nsTi\u00bb exhibition Is under Hi* sponsorship of tho\nWomen'i Auxiliary of the Seaforth Highlanderi\nWilli all proceeds being used for Scaforlh welfare\npurposes. Admission Is 25c for adults and 1 Oc tor\nchildren.\n rvCV\nh  I r\nH\nE\nN\n>WjW''  t\nR\nY\nJ\n             '.;..'.        1\ni\nv i\/pp\nrep. iiril,\u00bb;.., to'-m i]-.i..t.\nCARt-\nANDEf\nGvs_\n<^*\n\"\"It?' ^V-i?\"\"\"\nJ\n1-\n|\"T\/I\ni^t\/5\niffc\ns\u00ab\u2014V j\/^\n|W\nfW\n\u2022rr-W'\n''SS\"\nS-3\nG\nG\nS\nI'VE TOLD THE SS5VANTS My1\nBSOTWEU SIMMY AND  HIS\nt=IVE CHILDREN ACE COMING\nTO VISIT US-AUD TO HAVE\nTHE HOUSE IM OBDEtt\/\nBBBBEBS\nVOU13E NOT\nLEAVIN'-\nAEE VOU?\nWE'CE WOT\nTAkM ANV\nCHAKICE5-\nWE QUIT \/\/\nIHAVENTGOTMV\nHEALTH BACK\nSINCE THE LAST\nTIME THOSE KIPS\nftsf-gt.xtfs-f^S\n.. r-. w~u^fj.i\n.    ..!.'   --.-;. .,, .,';\u2022-. ^   .:.\/;:..\t\nTHE FUNERAL PROCESSION of Marshal Henri Philippe Petain\nmoves to a cemetery on the lie d'Yeu, where for six years he has\nbeen an exiled prisoner of France. The coffin Is carried by World\nWar I veterans, who served under the 95-year-old hero of Verdun.\nPetaln, one of the most controversial figures In French history, was\nconvicted of treason for heading the Vichy regime.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\n5?\nTHE ONLY WESTERN world reporters in Kaesong on the Communist side are shown chatting with U.N.-side reporters during a\ntruce talk meeting. At left Is Wilfred Burchett, Australia-born Peking correspondent for the leftist Paris Ce Solr. At right Is Alan\nWlnnlngton, Peking correspondent for London Dally Worker.\u2014Central Press Canadian, -  \u2022 .\nOFF DUTY, Constable Reginald Wilson suddenly found himself\non duty when he stepped Into the middle of a hold-up of a bank at\nBradford, Ont. Seeing suspiciously dressed characters outside the\nbank, he went home to get his revolver, stepped out on the street\ninto a hall of bullets from four gunmen who escaped with $4200.\nWilson Is shown beside the stolen bandit car abandoned by the\nrobbers after Wilson had hit it four times.\nLEDGER-KEEPER Grace Mor-\niarty has a special dislike of the\nBradford bank bandits. They\nmade her lie on the dirty floor In\nher \"clean white dress.\" Police\nthrew up road-blocks, searched\nall Summer residences In the area\nafter the bandit car eluded police\nroad-blocks.\u2014Central Press Canadian photos.\nJUNE CATANIA, teller in the\nBradford bank, snapped the lock\non her cage when the robbers\nentered the bank, but one of them\nreached in and grasped her by\nthe throat, warned her to try \"no\nfunny tricks.\"\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS . . . mo oh wb dial\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1951\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\n:59\u2014Time Signal\n:00\u2014News\n01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n15\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n30\u2014Oliver's Choice\n;45\u2014Invitaiton to Waltz\n:00\u2014News\n,05\u2014Piano Prelude\n15\u2014For You, Madame\n30\u2014Aunt Mary\n:45\u2014Notice Board\n:00\u2014News\n::01\u2014Notice Board\n15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Sports News\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n:00\u2014News\n01\u2014Carnival of Fun\n30\u2014Friday Serenade\n59\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n2:30\u2014Intermission\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's Islanders\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Paciiic News\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society'\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Time Story Teller\nv4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:00\u2014News >\n5:01\u2014Superman .\n5:15\u2014News\n5:25\u2014Sports News\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\u2014String Quartet\n8:00\u2014Here Comes the Band\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Symphony of Strings\n9:30\u2014Forgotten Books\n9:45\"\u2014American Drama\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:55\u2014News Nite Cap\nFIGHTING THIS $150,000 fire in a downtown Toronto building\nwhere sheets of plastic were stored, firemen were overcome with\nfumes one after another, until 30 were unable to continue and another 40 had to receive oxygen treatment, Tons of water were poured\nInto the building Central rPess Canadian.\nBarbara's Fourth Appeals Divorce\nCUERNAVACA, Mexico, Aug. 2\n(RP) \u2014 Prince Igor Troubetzkoy\u2014'\u25a0\nBarbara Hutton's fourth husband-\nasked a Federal court here yesterday to nullify her Mexican divorce,\nclaiming it is illegal,.\nThe Prince's plea was filed by his\nlawyers here. It alleges the Cuern-\navaca divorce court lacked jurisdiction over Troubetzkoy, who lives in\nFrance. R also contends the dime*\nstore heiress was not a resident of\nMexico under Federal law. The appeal challenges the mental cruelty\ncharge on which the divorce was\ngranted 19 days ago.\nDistrict Judge \"Alfredo Giullett\nsaid he would decide by Saturday\nwhether to accept the appeal for\ntrial.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS     8. Narrow 22. Place\n1. Robust roadway 23. Chum\n5. A spur 4. Old times 25. Vivacloiu-\n9. Verbal. (archaic) ness\n10. Ostrich-like   5. Nature 26. Bird\nbird                 spirits 27. A shallow\n11. Mild (myth.) lake\n12. Bird's bed*    6. Foreboding 28. Middle\n14. River (Ger.) 7. Roman- 29. Inclined\n15. Alcoholic money to\n8. Obligations      stand aloof\n11. Wagers (colloq.)\n13. Fish 3J). Unit\n15. Fuel of\n18. Egyptian powet4\ngod (Physics)\n19. A deep dish 32. Extinct,\n21. Sacred flightless\npicture birds\n(Gr. Ch.) 35. Talkative\n;r;\u00bbiiA!i!\nWAG ONBH UIO\nA T 0 N EHA X\n1 OM\nBG.EI   KIHB1   Idim\nLlHUiHH   nUI|..UllJ\nU0UH   HBJIJUUH\nBHLIEIH\nBit-El   EIHH   EBB\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 4,. 1951\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sports\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Program Resume\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014The Answer Man\n10:00\u2014Bandstand      *   \u2022\".;\u25a0'.\n10:15\u2014Minuet\n10:30\u2014World  Church News\n10:45\u2014News; Weather\n11:00\u2014Opera Stars and Stories\n11:30\u2014Canadian Rhapsody\n12:00\u2014Folk Songs\n12:30\u2014Folk Song Time\n1:30\u2014London Studio Melodies\n2:00\u2014Trans-Canada Bandstand\n3:00\u2014This Week v\n3:15\u2014News\n3:25\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:30\u2014Saturday Pop Concert\n4:30\u2014Music From the Films\n5:00\u2014Saturday Magazine\n5:30\u2014Sports College\n5:45\u2014Your United Nation\n6:00\u2014News        ,\n6:05\u2014Sports Page\n6:30\u2014Soiree A Quebec\n7:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n7:30\u2014Let's Square Dance\n8:00\u2014Canadian Girls Tour U. K.\n8:30\u2014Saludos -Amigos\n9:00\u2014John Sturgess\n9:15\u2014Audrey Fornell Sings\n9:30\u2014Concert of Europe\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orchestra\n10:30\u2014Dancing Party\n'11:57\u2014News\nliquor 8. Obligations       stand aloof \u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\n16. American    11. Wagers (colloq.) \u00bbe\u00abterd\u00ab>\/ _ Atuswt\nmoth\n17. Toward       15. Fuel of 36. Rational\n18. Cebine 18. Egyptian powet4 37. Wading\nmonkey           god                  (Physics) bird\n19. Chief god     19. A deep dish 32. Extinct, 39. Greek\n(Babyl.)      21. Sacred             flightless ' letter\n20. Pilfers picture. birds 40. A son of\n(slang)             (Gr.Ch.)      35. Talkative Noah\n23. AttitudinlM\n24. Young bear\n25. Animal's\nfoot\n26. Coagulate \u2022\n28. Ripe\n31. Moved\nswiftly\n32. Slope\n33. Music not\u00a9\n34. King of\nBashan\n(Bib.)\n35. Deity\n36. Examine\ncritically\n38. The univera\n40. Custom\n41. A state\n42. Keel-billed\ncuckoos\n43. Heads\n(slang)\n44. Not-like\nfabric\nDOWN\n1. Empty\n2. Native of\nArabia-\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how *\u00ab work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR-\nls 1 O N G F E J, L O W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.  Single letters, apos.\ntrophies,'the length and formation of the words are all hints.\n\u2022 Each day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nPPTE   LOR   FJTE   JY   OMPBPLOP,   PPTB\nOJtr   BJTKWJIP   VMWLO   fTK    VRMTE\u2014\n'    HJTEYRHHJB.\nYesterday's Cryptonuotoi   tONG SHE JfLOTOISHED, GREWj\nSWEET TO SENSE. ANi? I.QVMJ TO Ti0 BHtesW-Kt*''\n 1001\n1 PFRSON-fd'PfflOHWANrAK\n\\    FOR QU\/CK RESULTS \/\nW\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nBAILLIE\u2014To Mr. end Mrs. Carl\nH. Baillie, Victoria, B.C., at Royal\nJubilee Hospital Aug. 2, a Bon. (Mrs.\nBaillie is the former Miss Sibyl\nMcLean of Nelson.)\nCQATES\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nCoates,'Silverton, at Slocan Com\nmunity Hospital, New Denver, July\n29, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nINVOICING CLERK FOR\nLUMBER SALES. PREVIOUS\nEXPERIENCE IN LUMBER\nOFFICE DESIRABLE BUT\nNOT ESSENTIAL. LARGE\nPORTION OF WORK INVOLVES TYPING OF FIGURES AND OPERATION\nOF CALCULATOR, ALTHOUGH EXPERIENCE ON\nLATTER.NOT NECESSARY.\nATTRACTIVE WORKING\nCONDITIONS AND GOOD\nSALARY. AD PUBLISHED\nBY COMPANY BUT\nPLEASE CONTACT NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT\nOFFICE FOR FURTHER\nPARTICULARS.\nby Nelson's\nLeading Garage\nCapable of taking complete\ncharge of large parts department. Box 2092 Daily\nNews.\nCOFFEE BAR COUNTER GIRL,\nwaitresses, general kitchen helper\nare required for Prince Charles\nHotel. Excellent working conditions, pay increases depending on\nservice, time and effciency. Apply Box 150. Penticton, B.C.\nWANTED \u2014 TIMEKEEPER, TYP-\nist, mine, Invermere, B.C. No\nmarried accommodation. Apply\nRoom 15, K.W.C. Block, 490 Baker\nSt., Nelson.\nGENERAL MINE ELECTRICIAN,\nconstruction and maintenance,\nsteady employment, wages. $10.92.\nReeves MacDonald Mines Ltd,,\nRemac, B.C.\nALERT YOUNG MAN FOR\nfront-end work at garage. Must\nnot be going to school. Apply P.O.\nBox 420.\nbOY OR GIRL TO LEARN EDI-\ntorial work. Night hours. Apply\nto R. H. Procter, Nelson Daily\nNews, after 5 p.m.\nWanted \u2014 woman for af-\nternoons assisting in care of invalid. Phone 1424.\nWanted \u2014 female clerk.\n$110 starting salary. Apply Bank\nof Montreal.\nWanted \u2014 experienced\nwaitress. Apply New Star Cafe.\n6lRL    DESIRING    FULL    TIME\nwork. Apply C.P.R. Lunch  Ctr.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWE DO* CARPENTER WORK,\nsmall and big. Contract and by\nthe hour. Free estimate, Apply\nBox 1765 Daily News.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\n.\"OP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St.. Vancouver, B.C, Phone Pacific 6357.\nShip us your scrap metals\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nCEDAR POLES. ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 450, Nelson. B.C.\nWanted \u2014 scale, platform.\nwith scoop, to 240 pounds. Phone.\n490-L.\nSHIP\nYOUR   HIDES   TO   J.    P\nMorgan. Nelson. B C\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nassayers and mine\n'    '    representatives\nfe   W.  WIDDOWSON* & CO.  AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH.  S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND.   B.C..\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN. LAND SURVEY-\nor, Mining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nBOYD\n_    C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson. B.C.. Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\ndcHARDY AGENCIES  LTD..   IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALER8\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H. Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   arsstylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593 324 Vernon SL\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nNOTICE OF CLOSURE\nUNDER\nSECTION 120, SUBSECTION 1,\n\"FOREST ACT\"\nIn view of the hazardous condi\ntion of the forest cover and pursuant to the provisions of Section 120\nof the \"Forest Act,\" the area here-\ninbelow described is hereby declared to be a closed district as\nfrom midnight, Tuesday, July 31st,\n1951, and that no person shall enter\nor be in .lhe closed district for the\npurpose of recreation, camping,\nfishing, hunting, berry-picking,\nprospecting for minerals, or any\nolher 'like purpose, without first\nobtaining from an Officer of the\nForest Service a written permit\ntherefor, until further notice.\nDESCRIPTION OF\nCLOSED AREA\nAll lands situate within the\nwalershed of Crawford Creek lying\nEast of the. East boundaries of Lot\n6937 and Sub-lot 14 of Lot 4595,\nKootenay Land District.\nC.   D.   ORCHARD,\nDeputy  Mnister\nof Forests.\n\"GOVERNMENT LIGUJOR ACT\"\n(SECTION 28)    \u25a0\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNotice Is hereby givensthat on the\n13th day of August next, the undersigned Intends lo apply 'to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto transfer of Beer Licence No.\n0203, issued in respect of premises\nbeing part of a building known as\nthe Occidental Hotel, at 705 Vernon\nSt., Nelson, B. C. upon the lands\ndescribed as.Lots 21, 22, 23 and 24\nin Block 68,' Official Plan, Nelson\nCity, Nelson Land Registration District, in the Province of British Columbia, from Annie Mary Wassick,\nExecutrix of the Estate of Harry\nWassick. Deceased, to George Herbrik and Augustina Herbrik, the\ntransferees.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 13th\nday of July, A.D. 1951.\nGeorge Herbrik,\nAugustina  Herbrik.\nApplicants and Transferees.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nMcLARY'S REGINA STOVE, SOL-\nid oak dining suite, 2 arm chairs,\neiderdown, table, chairs, hanging\nbaskets and pots,, garden pruners\nand tools, carpet sweeper, single\nbed, mattress, books, folding bed,\npictures and other articles. After\n5 p.m. F. A. Baker, 624 Third St.\nPhone 1050-L or 46.\nFOR SALE \u2014 DINING ROOM\nsuite. Bedroom suite, spring\nfilled mattress and box springs,\noccasional chairs, rug, treadle\nsewing machine, dishes, etc. 313\nSilica St.\nFOR SALE \u2014 LARGE OAK Extension table, roll top desk and\nlockers, treadle Singer sewing\nmachine, mahogany wardrobe\nand a large chest of drawers.\nPhone 202-x:\nFOR SALE \u2014 CHESTERFIELD\nchair, new cover..Also set of six\nkitchen chairs. No. 3 View St.\nPhone 1333-Y.\nGOOD LAMBERT CHERRIES,\npick your own at 10c a lb., bring\ncontainers. C. Healey, R.R. No. 1.\nCRESS    WART   REMOVER\nLeaves no scars.  Your Druggist\nsells CRESS.\nFOR SALE \u2014 ONE WALNUT\ndouble bed complete. Phon?\nI204-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CAR RADIO, GOOD\ncondition, reasonable. Phone\n841-Y.\nPICK YOUR OWl4 RASPBERRIES\n10c a lb. buy containers. Mrs.\nYvonne Andrews, Harrop, B.C\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncia] low prices. Active Trading Co\n935 E  Cordova St.. Vancouver.\nJUNIOR'S BED FOR $15. VALUE\n$30. Phone J. B, .Miller 1007-R,\nM I C R O N I C HEARING AIDS.-\nWrite P.O.  Box 39. Nelson. B.C\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA  MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co.. D. L. Kerr. Agent.\nALMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $8.00 single, $2.50 to\n$3 00 douhles.  Vancouver.  B   C\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept.. Nelson. British Columbia.\nMEN! PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries: 25 deluxe samples, $1.00\nMailed in plain, sealed wrapper\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDistiibutors, Box 1023N. Vancouver. B. C.\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.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nONE 'TEAM WELL-BROKEN\nhorses and harness for farm or\nlogging. L. Bourgeois, Crescent\nValley.\nPOLE ANGUS BULL FOR SALE.\n18 months old. D. C. Waterfield,\nNakusp, B.C.\nFOR SALE *\u25a0 ONE MILK COW.\nA. K. Fereverzoff, i Appledale,\nB.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nA very tidy 4 roomed bungalow, with full basement and\noil heated. Close to bus stop.\nSituated on 2 developed lots.\nSome terms may CAfKilsfl\n.be had. Price     \u2022POOUU\nA duplex house on 2 corner\nlots In Fairview. This is an\nolder type house, but has good\nlocation. May.be handled with\n$2500 down payment. t\/tSnA\nTotal price       -JJIOUU\nClose in semi-duplexed house\non 2 corner lots. This is a good\nfamily home, or living space\nfor owner plus revenue. Does\nnot require all cash. \u00abSfi firtA\nPriced at       $DOUU\nIf you are looking for a good\n6 roomed bungalow wired for\nelectric range, furnace heated,\nwash tubs in high ceilinged\nbasement, double garage plus\none of Nelson's best residential\nproperties on the level\u2014be sure\nto see this one. Does not have\nto be all cash.  , CQQgft\nTotal Price *    <P\u00bb\u00bbOU\nRobertson, Hilliard,\nCattell Realty Co, Ltd.\nPhone 68\n532 Ward St.\n\u25a0 r,.' a rir . r  it,\nr ij \u25a0 i  i r \u25a0 j r r\nCOME AND SEE\nTHIS HOUSE\n2 blocks from Baker St. business centre. Living room with\nfireplace. Large dining room.\nOak floors. Two bedrooms, sun\nporch, white bathroom, modern\nkitchen, downstairs. Two bedrooms upstairs. Full cement\nbasement, hot water heating\nsystem, garage. $975,3\nCASH $4500-\nBALANCE EASY TERMS\nPossession early in September.\nPHONE 779-X\nOR WRITE P.O. BOX 284\nNORTH SHORE OPPOSITE NEL-\nson, over 5 acres, 400 ft. lake\nfrontage, 2 good houses, building\nlot, boathouses, chicken houses,\ngood water supply, light and telephone. Will sell as one or will\nsubdivide. Apply Mra,- G, -'\u25a0 M.\nWilliscroft, Gen. Delivery; Nelson, B.C.\nWILL ACCEPT CLEAR TITLE\nsmall home in Nelson as part payment on large revenue property\nin \u25a0 Vancouver. Write Mr. W.\nFergen, 720 Robson St., Vancouver, B.C. W. E. Sherlock Co. Ltd.\n720 Robson St. Ma. 9252.\t\nFOR SALE \u2014 FIVE ROOM BUN-\ngalow, close ln, excellent condition. Insulated, part cement\nbasement, ahd furnace. Phone\n803-X.\t\nFOR SALE - NORTH SHORE AT\n9 mile, lovely home. 3 bedrooms,\nfully modern rooms, large fireplace, furnace, oak floors and out\nbuildings, about 4 acres. Box 2039\nDaily Nbws.\nFOR SALE \u2014 ON KOOTENAY\nLake, Procter, B.C. Store Building with living quarters. Light\n,and water. Apply F. Bonacci,\nProcter, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TWO CLEARED\nlots on Behnsen St., Nelson. Reasonable. For further information\ninquire at No. 8 Burns Blk.,\nNelson.\nFOR SALE - COMFORTABLE\nhome with land. 2 miles from Nelson on Granite Rd. Write P.O.\nBox 212 or phone 186-R-3.\nWILL PAY UP TO $4000 CASH\nfor a good 2 bedroom house\nwithin 1 mile of Post Office. Ap-\nply P.O. Box 132 City.\t\n3 ROOM HOUSE, BATH, 6 LOTS\nfenced. Shop, chicken house.\nYmir. Phone 1538.\t\nFOR SALE - UNFINISHED\nhouse. Near Fairview. Terms.\nPhone 161-L-3 after 6:00 p.m.\nFOR SALE\u20148-ROOM HOUSE 130\nacres, beside main highway. Ap-\nply Box 18, Slocan City.\nA FEW LOTS FOR SALE\u2014PHONE\n808-L.\nHplamt Satlij ^tms\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n4Bc line for 6 consecutive Insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (56 consecutive  insertions).  Box numbers   lie  extra.   Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst  insertion.   16c  per  Une\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   ...   .!       8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne  month     \u201e    1,00\nThree  months . ;    3.00\nSix months   ......   fl.0'0\nOne year      12.00\nSix months    4.50\nBy carrier, per year    13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month 1.00\nThree months     2.50\nWher\u00bb extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nJust Arrived!\nAnother Carload of\nand still at the\nOld Price of $1785\nTHE BEST\nin\nUSED CARS\nNEW 1951 Buick Sedan\n1951  Ford Sedan\n1951   Hillman Sedan\n1951 Anglia Coach\n1950 Chevrolet Sedans!\n1950 Chevrolet 5-Pass.!\n1950 Monarch Sedan\n1950 Ford 1-Ton Flat Deck\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1949 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Pontiac Sedan\n1940 Chevrolet Coach\n1938 Plymouth Coupe\n1937 Chevrolet Coupe\n1936 Ford Coach\n1931 Chevrolet Sedan\n'\u2022'SPECIAL\"\n1938 Ford Sedan \u2014 $300\nTERMS - TRADES\nEMPIRE\nMOTORS\nPh. 1135      803 Baker St\nAUSTIN AND PACKARD\nSALES AND SERVICE\nDELIVERY\n1951 Mercury Cars\nand Trucks\n1951 Meteors,\nEnglish Prefects\nand\nEnglish Consuls\nUsed Cars\n1948 Ford Coupe\n1948 Dodge Coach\n1947 Ford Sedan\n1939 Ford Sedan '\n1934 Chevrolet Coach\nUsed Trucks\n1949 Mercury V_-Ton\n1949 Mercury Vi-Ton\nPanel\n1945 Ford 3-Ton\n1938 Ford 2-Ton with dump\nbody and hoist\n1937 International  Vi-Ton\n1950 Vincent H.R.D.\nMotor Bike\nVictors\nGenuine Ford Parts Depot\nPhone 578-9 Nelson, B. C\nBETTER BUYS AT BEACON\n[otorcycle\n5e service\nOpen Under New\nManagement\nGuaranteed repalri and the best\nIn machine values. 1949 S.S.A. Gold\nStar, a beautiful machine in showroom condition, Onljf fone 1400\nmiles, $650. \u20141942 Harley \"45\", reconditioned motor, only $350. \u20141941\nIndian \"45\", going as ia for only\n$175.\nPH. CASTLEGAR 2601\nBOX 350\nFOR SALE\u20141947 %-TON FORD\npanel truck. A-l shape. 4 new\ntires, best offer takes it Ph. 401Y5\n(Continued In Next Column)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n'(Continued)\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nNew\n'International'\nEquipment\n1\u2014TD-6 Crawler tractor\nwith bull dozer\nand winch\n1\u2014LC-182    Cab forward\ntruck\n1\u2014LC-162    Cab forward\ntruck\n1\u2014 L-182 Standard truck\n1\u2014 L-162 Standard truck\n1\u2014 L-110 V_-Ton truck\n1\u2014 L-120 V4-Ton truck\n1\u2014 L-130    1-Ton truck,\ndual wheels\nSEE THESE UNITS AT\nCentral Track\n& Equipment Co.\nPhone 1400   \u2014   Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 '36 FORD REBUILT\nengine, Can be seen running in\ncar. $95. Apply Box 2925 Dally\nNews.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1947 MONARCH\nsedan. Low mileage. A-l throughout. Or trade for older car and\ncash difference. Phone 161-L-2.\n1950 HUDSON SEDAN - RADIO,\nheater, etc. Apply Lind's Super\nService, Kaslo, B.C..\nFOR SALE - 7' BY 12' VAN. Apply: G. J. Gipman, Box 1318 or\nphone . 196-Y, Rossland.\nFOR SALE - 1930 CHEV. SEDAN.\nCheap. Phone 508-R-3.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1942 FORD DELUXE\nsedan. Good condition. Ph. 596-Y.\nRENTALS\nWANTED \u2014 FURNISHED OR\npartly furnished 2 or 3 room\nhouse or apartment by C.P.R.\nemployee. No children. Apply\nBox 3319 Daiiy News.\nWANTED \u2014 BY SEPT. 1st. UN-\nfurnlshed apartment or house\nsuitable for business couple. Must\nbe close ip. Box 2080 Daily News.\nFOB RENT \u2014 3 ROOM UNFUR-\nnished suite. Phone 597-L-2 between 10 a.m. and 12 noon.\nCaterpillar\nEquipment Available\n\u2022 for\nImmediate Delivery\nDiesel engines\nDiesel electric sets\nMotor Graders\nD4 with overhead loader\nHydraulic and cable dozers\nfor all sizes of tractors and\npll makes\nScrapers\nP\n1\u2014D4 with hydraulic angle\ndozer, and hyster winch,\ngood condition.\n1\u2014No. 11 Caterpillar motor\ngrader, first class condition.\n1\u2014D4400 Power Unit with\npulley, overhauled. Like\nnew.\nTractor & Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 930 Box 119\nNelson, B. C.     ,\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING Ss MINING\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nEQUIPMENT\nCO.. LTD.\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver, B C.\nCATERPILLAR 7 \u2014 REBUILT,\nnew track chains, rollers, etc.\nComplete with angledozer and\nHyster, double drum logging\nwinch. Bayes Equipment, Cranbrook, B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT\u2014D-4\ncat, equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc. C, Ross, phone\n1506  Nelson.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFOR SALE \u2014 BRIGGS Sr. STRAT-\ntdn gasoline engine, \\Vi H.P. as\nnew, $45. Apply 915 Observatory\nSt. Phone 763-R.\nFOR RENT\u2014FURNISHED ROOM.\ning . house. , Cential,.. Box 2061\nDailyNews.\nFOR RENT \u2014 BEDROOM FOR\ngentleman; downtown. 224 Baker\nSt. Phone 821-X or'940.\n3 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT ON\nBlewett Rd. Phone 1596-R after\n5 p.m.\nWANTED^SMALL UNFURNISH-\ned apartment. No children. Phone\n800.\nWANTED \u2014 3 OR 4 ROOM HOUSE\nor apt. Phone 369-L-2.\nLARGE   BEDROOM   FOR   RENT\nApply-210 Vernon, after 5 p.m.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE\u2014VERY PROFITABLE\nbakery business. also ice- cream\nand confectionery. Very good\nproposition to responsible party.\nBox 3140 Daily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 GENERAL STORE,\nwith living quarters and garage.\nPrice $3300 cash, stock at invoice.\nApply 24 Ymir Rd.\nMACHINERY\nSIMONDS'\nInserted Tooth\nInserted 'Tooth Circular\nSaws are ideal for use In\nany mill where the\namount of production or\nconditions of operating\ndo not justify a filing\nroom. They are particularly suitable for use in\nsmall portable saw mills.\nSome of the advantaaes\nof SIMONS  CIRCULAR\nSAW are:\n\u2022fc Repairs are inexpensive\n-k Easy to keep up\n-fr Very economical on\npower\nir Guaranteed long life\nic Stands heavy feed\nALSO SIMONBS WIDE BAND\nSAWS GANG SAWS,\nDRAG SAWS.\nSUPPLIED AND SERVICED BY\nNelson Machinery\nEauiomentCo. Ltd.\n214 Hall St.\nPhone 18\nMining, Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and Contractors' Supplies,\n\"If it's machinery you want,\n1   consult us.\"\nFOR SALE \u2014 16 FT. ROWBOAT\nsuitable for both inboard and outboard motors. Phone 909-X.\n(Continued In next column)\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014\nSteels and motors led a revolving\nrecovery movement.\nPrices made substantial progress\nwith gains running to as much as\n$2 to $3 a share among more-active\nissues.\nCanadian issues gained, with Canadian Pacific, 'Dome Mines and\nDistillers Seagrams up Us, and International Nickel and Mclntyre\nup Vi. Hiram Walker was off %.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Base metala\nstood out for the second \u2022successive\nday. Heavy trading in selected issues pushed prices slightly higher.\nTrading opened mixed, brightened In late forenoon trading and\nthen settled a little lower toward\nthe close. Volume was about 2,-\n100,000 shares.\nIndustrials were generally firm\nwith changes ranging from fractions to more than, a point\nMONTREAL (CP) - Securities\ncontinued to climb into higher\nground at the close, following Wednesday's closing firmness. Trading\ncontinued moderate.\nAdvances outnumbered declines\nand changes were limited to fractions, with some issues moving\nabout a point.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A more\nconfdent tone developed throughout as a result of the complete\ncessation of the recent \"forced\"\nselling brought about by the dividend freeze.\nThe slow but steady improvement resulted in some hasty short-\ncovering, tifie net result being that\nmost sections showed some quite\nsubstantial gains on the day.\nNoteworthy changes were recorded in coppers. Oils showed good\nimprovements. South African gold\nshares made a small general advance and diamonds were quietly\nfirm.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP).-Oils\nand base metals gave a good account of themselves. Golds were\nquiet.\nMetala showed some good gains\nincluding Estella up .13 at 1.65 and\nWestern Uranium up .50 at 3.75.\nDRILLS CUT\nVALUES BELOW STH\nAT PROVINCE\nFavorable ore indications below\nthe fifth level at the Cork-Province mine of Base Metals Mining\nCorporation, near Kaslo, B. C, have\nbeen obtained in two diamond drill\nholes, a report from the company\nshows. Hole No. 62 cut ore assaying\n16.1 per cent zinc, 1.6 per cent lead\nand 2.1 ounces silver across 20 feet,\nat 138 feet below the level. Hole No.\n61 cut a 7.J foot section assaying\n12.1 per cent zinc. 4.6 per cent lead\nand 3.2 ounces silver at 89 feet below the fifth level.\nOn the basis of results in the,two\nholes the management expects that\nfurther drilling will add ore to the\npresent estimated reserve totalling\n50,720 tons averaging 8.3 per cent\nzinc, 5.4 per cent lead and 4.0\u00bbunces\nsilver.\nDevelopment work is continuing.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. % 1951 \u2014 9\nJersey 3-Montlis Production Returns\n$802,000; To Step Up Ouipul\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 1 \u2014\nDuring the three months ended\nJune 30. Canadian Exploration Ltd.\nwholly-owned subsidiary of Placer\nDevelopment Ltd., obtained net\nsmelter returns of approximately\n$802,000 after production of 5394 tons\nof lead and zinc concentrates from\n44.176 tons of ore grading 1.93 per\ncent lead and 5.73 per cent zinc. The\nore was taken from the Jersey lead-\nzinc mine, adjoining the Emerald\ntungsten mine, at Salmo.\nThe mill is now treating 15,000\ntons of ore a month but this will\nbe increased, as a result of enlargement of facilities, to 21,000 tons by\nthe end of August of this year. Favorable results are reported from\ndrilling on extensions of the lead-\nzinc deposits.\nFor some months Canadian Ex.\nploration has been conducting exploratory diamond drilling for\ntungsten ore outside the area sold\nto the Canadian Government, but\nstill within the Emerald property\nResults are reported as \"most encouraging\" by C, W. Clark, Secretary.\nSEE PAGE 4\nFOR TORONTO STOCKS\nOn the No. 1 zone, originally developed by the Consolidated Min\ning & Smelting Co. of Canada Ltd.,\nold assay plans showed an ore shoot\n250 feet long, grading 0.30 per cent\nW03 across 27 feet.\nFurther stripping by the present\nowners has extended the length to\n420 feet with disseminated wolfram\nite occurring throughout the newly\nopened section. In addition to the\ntungsten, the zone carries good silver and low tin values.\nFour other ore zones remain to be\ninvestigated by trenching and sampling. One of these was partly opened by .underground work by Cominco.\nU. K. Ends Ban on\nStrikes, Lockouts\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP),\u2014The\nBritish Government ordered an\nend today to its ban on industrial\nstrikes and lockouts\u2014a wartime\nmeasure-carried over for the last\nsix years.\nVoluntary bargaining between\nunions and employers federations\nwill continue with a new Industrial disputes tribunal to settle the\nIssue If the bargainers cannot\nagree.\nThe new order becomes effective\nAugust 14.\nConservatives in Parliament supported the change.\nUnder the old order Etrlkes could\nnot legally take place and unofficial\nstrikers could be brought into court.\nTwo or three recent prosecutions\nhad led to unrest among the unions\nand they have been pressing for\nseveral months to have the order set\naside.\nThe new system is meant to \"develop and strengthen voluntary systems of negotiation,\" to prevent violation of voluntary agreements,\nand to provide ways of settling disputes, said Labor Minister Alfred\nRobens.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Winnipeg grain cash prices;\nOats, No. 1 feed, 78V4.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.16=4.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nCariboo Gold       1,18\nGolconda 23\nGrandvlew        .40\nHUhlans Bell 83\nInt C St. C   36\nKootenay Belle 77\nPend Ori'lle     7.50\nQuatsino _ 4H4\nReeves MacDonald     4,65\nSheep Creek      1.70\nVan Roi \u201e      ,75\nVananda ;:....     ,15\nWellington           .03\nWestern Exploration, _      ,70\nWestern Uranium     S.75\nWoodbury   _      .30\nOILS\nAnaconda        ,14\nAnglo Canadian      6.15\nA P ConB         .48\nCalmont       1.20\nHome      16.00\nNational Pete      2.22\nOkalta Com _      2,45\nPacific Pete _ _    8.30\nRoyalite     15.00\nCoast Brew      4.23\nAlta Dist      3.20\nAlta Dist VT        3.10\nPram Bord      3214\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Trad*\ncontinued slow on the Calgary\nlivestock market today, though offerings were only 332 cattle and\ncalves and butcher cattle were\nscarce. A generally weaker tone\nwas evident,\nButcher steers and helfere were\nmeeting an indifferent demand at\nabout steady prices. Cows were\nunder pressure, bulls steady. Good\nstocker and feeder steers were in\nfair demand at about steady prices,\nbut common to medium kinds were\n50 cents or more lower. Veal calves\nwere steady to weak. ' \u2022\nSales Wednesday were 534 cattle,\n35 calves, 292 hogs and 12 sheep,\nHogs closed steady Wednesday at\n$37.50 but sows dropped 50 cents\nto close at $21.50. Good lamb-\nbrought $32 .and good ewes $17.50-\n19.50. .\nGood butcher ateerj 32.00-33.00j\ncommon to medium 27.00-31.00.\nGood to near-choice butcher heifers\n30.00-32.00; common to medium\n25.00-29.00. Good cows 24.50-25.50;\ncommon to medium 22.00-24.00, canners and cutteri 17.00-21.50. Good\nbuls 27.00-28,00; common to medium\n25.00-26.50. Good stocker and feeder\nsteers 31.50-33.50; common to medium 24.00-31.00. Good to choice veal\ncalves 32.00-34.00; common to medium 26.00-31.00. *\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n50 Indus. 26.89, up 3.00 or 1.15 per\ncent\n20 rails, 81.68, up 43 or S3 per cent.\nIS utilities, 45.45, up 51 or 1.13 per\ncent\n65 stocks, 9S.3S, up 91 or 98 per\ncent\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nIt Pays To Read the Classified Dally\n*v0-*y\u00ab *\n\u2666*<_w\nROYAL NAVY\nDEMERARA    RUM\nThis advertisement is nol published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of Brilish Columbia\n 10 \u2014 NELSON BAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 3, 1951\nThe useless music of a wasp\nor a mosquitoi...\ncan be borne with great fortitude\nif.\n\u25a0 you are well annointed .\nwith\n6-12\nthe effective insect repellent\n59c\nItIANN s\ndrug store\nPsychialrisf Will\nDecide for Claire\nMILAN. Italy, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014 Italian  authorities  said  today  Claire\nYoung of Chicago will be permitted\nto marry Luciano Negrini, an un-\n| frocked and excommunicated priest,\nif psychiatrists declare her rational.'\nj   A Vatican spokesman said if Miss\n| Young, a Roman Catholic, marries\nI Negrini, she too will be excommun-\njicated.\nI   The   20-year-old   American   girl\nI has been held in jail here since Sat-\n| urday when she slapped a policeman after being refused an extension of her visitor's permit.\nI    A police official said the girl's\nj mother, Mrs. Eileen Brtdy Young,\n| had asked American authorities, to\nf refuse clearance for the marriage\nion the grounds Claire is Irrational.\n|    Police Chief Gabriel Mundo  of\nMilan  said   he. didn't  think   the\nmother could prove her cSse.\nHe told reporters today that \"If\nthe psychiatrist finds Claire ration'\nal, the girl is free to do what she\nlikes. She will be Immediately re\nleased .from jail. Her permission to\nstay in Italy will be renewed and\nshe could marry without further\ndelay.\"\nMiss Young had been scheduled\nto be deported to the United States\nAug. 6.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nCUTLERS'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 Years' Experience\nPROMPT   SERVICE\nOur Ellison's Best Flour\nIs Available In Tea Towel Bags\nSizes 24s and 49s\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 238\nSEND U3 YOUR\nOUT-OF-TOWN\nMAIL ORDERS\nWe Ship Out Same Day\nAs Received\nYour Rexall 8tore\nCity Drug Co.\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone. Day 34, Night 807-R\nBOX 460\nAustralia Limits\nAmount of Capital\nCANBERRA, Australia, Aug. 2\u2014\n(Reuters)\u2014The Government today\nannounced new capital issues regulations limiting the amount of\ncapital a company may raise without the consent of the Federal\nTreasurer.\nTreasurer Sir Arthur Fadden said\nthe regulations were made under\nthe Defence Preparations Act to\nensure private investments are\nchannelled to projects of high de\nfence value.\nThe regulations limit the amount\nof capita] a company can raise in\ntwo years without consent to the\nequivalent of $22,400, compared with\nthe previous figure of $56,000.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n576 Baker 8t\nPhone 327\nPhilco Radio\nSoles and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302\n446 Ward St,\nJack-Knife Accepted\nFor Car Trade-In\nVANCOUVER,  Aug. 2   (CP)\nSales of new cars are so slow for\none Vancouver dealer that he offered to give a $500 trade-in on a\njackknife.\nThe dealer, who* asked that his\nname not be used, said he did not\nregister   one   new   car\nmonth.\n-\"We are actually giving a S500\ndiscount on the purchase price,\" he\nexplained. \"But we can't show this\nas part of the down payment because it's against the law. The jack-\nknife trade makes it legal.\" '.\nFederal Credit restrictions require half the price of a car as down\npayment, with the remainder to be\npaid in 12 months.\nWill Harriman\nReplace Acheson!\nNEW YORK, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014The\nNew York Post said today that\nambassador - at - large W. Averell\nHarriman is likely to be appointed\nsecretary of state to replace Dean\nAcheson before Oct. I,\nIn a Washington dispatch, the\nPost said its information came from\na highly-placed source close to the\nWhite House.\nHarriman now Is on a special\nmission to Iran.\nIn Washington, Roger Tubby, assistant presidential Press secretary\nsaid:\n\"There is no plan whatever to\nrelieve Mr. Acheson as secretary\nof state.\"\nTAKING PART In Detroit's 350th anniversary\ncelebrations, these R.C.M.P. took part In the giant\nparade of 20,000 persons down the city's main\nstreets. Also In the procession, largest In Detroit's\nhistory, were 100 R.CN. sailors, an R.C.A.F. band,\nand the Elgin regimental band from St. Thomas,\nOnt\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nSenior Officers Leave to Conduct\nMurder Case Against 3 Canadians\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP) \u2014 The\narmy today announced that general\ncourts-martial have been ordered\nfor three Canadian soldiers charged\nwith murder in Korea.\nThe soldiers, members of the 2nd\nBattalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, will be tried\nB i\"\" ,\"\"J! Separately this month in Korea.\nsale   lasi     The accused were not identified.\nthough the army said next-of-kin\nhave been notified.\nThe charges arise out of the murder of a Korean named Ee Chong\nArmstronq Student\nDies Fire-Fighting\nSALMON ARM, B. C\u201e Aug. 2 \u2014\n(CP)\u2014Thomas Thompson, 17-year-\nold High School student, was killed\nwhile fighting a forest fire In the\nShuswap Lake country, 50 miles\nNortheast of here.\nThompson, second victim of B. C.\nforest fires this year, was killed\nTuesday when a falling tree struck\nhim.\nFirefighters were preparing to\nflee their flame-surrounded camp\nwhen the youth was killed. The\ncamp was abandoned and now has\nbeen set up on a beach at the lakeside.\nThompson's home Is at Armstrong, 300 miles Northeast of Vancouver. ,\nnow commandant at Calgary, and\nThird Child-Murder\nHorrifies Britain\nBIRMINGHAM, England, Aug. 2\n(Reuters)\u2014British police today began their third child-murder inves-\ntgiation in three weeks after finding the body of Sheila Attwood,\nCol.   A.   G.  Chubb, formerly  of 11, in a back garden near her home\nRossland, B. C, now director of\nthe Royal Canadian armored corps\nstationed at army headquarters,\nOttawa.\nA general court-martial is composed of five officers. Aside from\nthe three cglonels being dispatched\nfrom Canada, the other members\nwill be provided by the 25th Cahad-\nain Infantry Brigade group in Korea.\nIn addition to the five members\nyer.\nSun on the night of March17 in the \u201e, the court|  .\u201e t from th(J\nvillage: of Clring Woon Myon, 3o|judge \u00a3dvocate-general's office will\nmUes South of the 38th parallel.     , be there ,\u201e advise y,. court on tech.\nThe army said each has also been nical matter. o{ law> He ,( Maj j\ncharged with criminal assault and A Crowe| d , jud advocate.\ncommon assault. Normally these are .., and \u25a0  tonnel Que\u201ee|, ,,w.\ncivilian offences but the army act\ngives the army power to try troops\non such charges where civil courts\nunder Canadian judges are not\navailable.\nLt.-Col. John A. Hutchins, former Montreal lawyer and now assistant adjutant and quartermaster-\ngeneral at Regina. has(been assigned\nto conduct the defence. He will\nleave by air for Korea within the\nnext few days.'\nProsecutor will be Capt. Lawrence M. Hanway of Amherst, N. S.,\nformer lawyer and the Patricia's legal officer.\nThree senior officers will     be\nsent  to   Korea  from  Canada  to\npreside In turn as presidents of\nthe courts. They are Col. W. Clement Dick, formerly of Toronto,\nnow chief of Staff at headquarters,\nQuebec Command, Montreal; Col.\nC. B. Ware, formerly of London,\nNeither of the other two killings\nhas been solved. '.\nBritain Opposed\nTo Int. Court\nD\nI\nS\nP\nL\nA\nY\nS\nTake the trouble out of canning with these efficient canning aids.\nSee us for complete supplies at lowest prices!-\nSEE\nOUR\nD\nI\nS\nP\nX\nA\nY\nS\nCold Pack\nCANNER\nSAM\nNational Canners\nDo your canning the EASY WAY with better results!\nPRESTO COOKER CANNER: No. 4x8 qt\u2014$23.95\nNATIONAL CANNER: No. SxlO qt. \u2014$27.50\nNATIONAL CANNER: No. 7x13 qt.... \u2014$31.95\nUse either cans or glass jars\nDrug Addiction Up\nIn Coast Cities\nGENEVA, Switzerland, Aug.\n(Reuters)\u2014Britain opposes setting\nup an international criminal couVt,\nSir Frank Soskice, British attorney general, told a United Nations\ngroup here today.\nHe declared to the 16-country committee for founding such a court\nthat it would become merely an\narena of political turmoil and passion instead of a forum of justice.\n\"The considered view of the United Kingdom is that the nations of\nthe wqrld are not ,'ct ready for what\nis a most .important and ultimately\nhighly desirable development in\nworld affairs,\" he stated.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP) -\nThere are 1300 drug addicts in Vancouver, Police Chief Walter Mulligan said in a special report prepared\nfor City Council. There are some\n4000 in Canada.\nChief Mulligan said he was unable to explain why Vancouver\nshould have such a large proportion\nof the known addicts in Canada.\nThe survey showed 124 persons\nfaced narcotics charges here between Jan. 1 and July 11 this year.\nOf these, three were under 20 and\n62 others were in the 20-29 age\ngroup.\n\"It ls undeniable that the age of\ncitizens forming the drug habit is\n] steadily moving into the lower age\n1 brackets,\" the report said.\n|    Practically all narcotics sold here\nj came from Eastern Canada, prin-\nJ clpally Toronto and Montreal,\ni    Another police officer suggested\n, the climate might haveaomething to\nj do with drug addiction here.\nI    \"The temperate climate of.Van-\nI couver attracts many good people\nI but it also has an attraction for the\ninadequate   and   irresponsible\ngroups,\" he said,\nU.K., Eire, Carry\nOr Wilhouf E.P.A.\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP) -\nThe economic cooperation administration said today that Western Europe is expected to double it's production of military goods in the\nyear ahead.\nIt's already been doubled once\n\"in the two years since the North\nAtlantic Treaty was signed,\" E.C.A,\nadded in its quarterly report for\nthe January-March -o51 period.\nPresident Truman sent the report\nto Congress today.\nECA said most Western European\ncountries now are spending far mor-\nfor defence and far less for non military purposes than before the Ko\nrean outbreak.\nBut it warned that raw materials\nshortages and rising prices threaten\nboth military output and the area s\neconomy.\nECA authorization's foi the quarter\namounted to $430,100,000 bringing\nto $10,700,000,000 the authorizations\napproved since the start of the Marshall plan program three years ago.\nWestern Germany received the\nlargest amount, or $105,100,000.\nFrance received $77,900,000. Italy\n$48,100,000 and Australia $35,800,000.\nBritain and the Republic of Ireland already are operating without\nMarshal! Plan aid, and ECA Administrator William C. Foster said in\nParis yesterday that Sweden and\nPortugal have decided to get along\nwithout further dollar help.\nWhite\nShirts\nby FORSYTH\nand ARROW\nWhites are still the\nmost popular shirt\nfor Summer wear.\nNew collar styles in\nall sizes and sleeve\nlengths.\n$J_.50      $*V.50\nEmory's\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nCosta Rica, an Independent republic of centra] America, was part\nof the Spanish dominions until 1821.\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR'TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST  KOOTENAY\nSTEAM   LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER 8T.\nGreek king Releases\nImprisoned Romeo\nATHENS, Aug. 2 (AP).\u2014A court\nsourcesaid today that Crete's imprisoned modern Romeo may be reunited with his Juliet within a few\ndays through the Intercession of\nKing Paul.\nThe source said the King has instructed the ministry of justice to\nprepare papers commuting the two-\nyear ' sentence of dashing Costa\nKephalowannis. Costa was sentenced last February on charges of\nillegal possession of weapons after\nhe carried off 19-year-old Tassoula\n\u2014daughter of a rival family\u2014and\nmarried her in the rugged Cretan\nmountains. He has been in jail since\nlast August and his dark-eyed wife\nhas had a miscarriage because of\nworry over the Case,\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Police found\ntwo men hiding behind some gar\nbage cans. Bound over on a charge\nof loitering with intent to break\nin, they told the magistrate they\nwere only playing \"follow the leader.\"\nHarwooifs Rye\nthis advertisement Is not publishes, or displayed by the Liquor Control\n1 Board or by die Government oi British Columbia.\nDARTMOUTH, England (CP) \u2014\nThe bridegroom was just about to\nslip the ring on his bride's finger\nat a wedding ceremony here when\na rabbit raced Into the church pursued by a dog. The rabbit was\ncaught before the ceremony resumed.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\" \u2022\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St Phone 361\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescription!)\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed.  Arts  Blk.\nPHONE 25\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors '\n576 Baker St\nPhone 23J\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street     '\"       Phone 146\n\u2022  NELSON, B. C. i\nYlMSI*\nDancing\nEVERY\nSaturday\nNight\nMICKEY MeEWEN\nAND HIS\n\"MELODY MAKERS\"\nCome and Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir\nDANCING 9 TO 1\nADMISSION 75o\n7-quart capacity canner. Has\ndouble.tinned, non-rusting lift-\nout rack. Double coated porcelain kettle,\nWood Spoons\nWire Strainers\nCan Openers\nRoller Masher\nLadles\nCans and Lids\nPlain\nCans:\n2 Ib.\u20147c ea.\n2'\/_ lb\u20147\u00bb4< ea.\nLids:\n2 Ib. $1.26 per 100\n2<\/2 lb.\u2014$1.87 per 100\nInside Lacquered\nCans:\n2 lb\u20147'\/ie ea.\n2'\/_ lb\u20149c ea.\nLids:\n2 Ib\u2014$1.32 per 100\n2Vi Ib\u2014$1.96 per 100\nNo. 508 x 8 oz.\nLiquid\n33<i\nPYREX\nFOLEY\nFood Mills\nbaby size\n$2.55\nHousehold\nSize\n52.95\nMashes\nStrains\nFOLEY\nFood Mills\ncanning size\n$4.30\nMaster Mill\n$8.93\nPurees     Rices\nPreserving\nKETTLES\n16-quart. Blue brilliant enamel.\nHas pouring lip. Will last for\nyears. A home canning necessity!   .\nFruit Funnels\nJelly Strainers\nCan Sealers\nGraters V\nCanning Racks\nFOOD\nCHOPPER\nfrom _? .\nHousehold\nsize  chopper\nwith 4 cutters\n-.-very fine to\nvery   coarse.\nCuts   everything.    Non-\nrusting   finish.\nWay\n2$\n%\nwiiii\n8$\nm\n3 <m\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPhone  1530 Wholesale-Retail Nelson, B.C.\nThe great new G-E Floor Polisher! You\nguide it, two counter rotating brushes do\nall the work. You will be amazed at the long-\nlasting lustre on allhardwood floors, linoleum\nand tile.\nGENERALtfjpELECTRIC\nFloor Polisher\nImmediate Delivery\n\u2022 on New\nChevrolets\nand\nOldsmobiles\nUSED CARS\n1949 OLLDSMOBILE SEDAN. Very low mileage. Hydramatic drive, conditionnaire.      $^4_C(ftrt\n11*2000\nPriced at .\n1950 PLYMOUTH SEDAN.\nRadio, conditionnaire\n69so\nComplete with\ntwo polishing brushes\nand two tomb's wool buffers\nTERMS ARRANGED\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized (Kp) Dealer\n574 Belcer St.        Nelson, B. C.        Phone 260\nUSED TRUCKS\n1949 DODGE '\/.-TON PICK-UP. $|,d-7fi\nGood shape    IT1,?U\n1949 MERCURY 1-TON PICKUP. $l*)Art\nPriced at     I _t UU\n1949 MERCURY 1-TON PICK-UP.     \u2022   ?I*J\/\\A\nPriced at   I3UU\n1942 DODGE 1\/2-TON PANEL $\"7AA\nPriced at  .'.        \/ UU\n1940 CHEVROLET'\/.-TON PANEL. $*JFA\nPriced at         di*>U\n1939 INTERNATIONAL '\/.-TON PICKUP. $\/**_-ft\/**\u2022*,\nPriced at OUU\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 35\nNebon, B. C.\nrr.\u2014^\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_08_03","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\/1.0425730","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":"1951-08-03 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":"1951-08-03 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":""}]}