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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" teds Set Back\nIn West Germany\nWin Only 5.74% of Vote; Author,\nPolitician May Head Republic\n-\u201e.\u2022 \u25a0  gy RDAri^ CURRY: \u25a0\nFRANKFURT, Germany, Aug. 15(AP) r- A scholarly Jol-\nItlcian and an author Were in lirie today to head the- West Ger--\nman Republic as a result of the Sunday\"election victory of antlr\nSocialist,parties.: \u25a0'.- -.\u2022*\"\"\u25a0.\u25a0\n(See page 10 for further details); \u25a0\nTqll, lean Konrad Adenauer, 73-ye9r-bld Chairman of the\nConservative Christian Democrats, loomed as ihe natural\nchoice for Chancellor, q position equivalent tp Prime Mlhisfer.\nTheodor- Heuss, 65, author pf more ~~\nPftOVJNCflAL. i\n> fl LIBRASY    fepfe \u2666 If\ncUotviJaiU)\n:tl 4\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Variable cloudiness\nTuesday. Little change, in temper-\u2022\nature. Winds light. High Tuesday at\nCranbrook 78. Crescent Valley 78.\nICgNTSACOPV NSLSgN, BRITI8H COLUMBIA. CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING. AUG. 16. 1949*\nthan 20 books, whose father, took\npart in the abortive German Revolution 011848, was widely:mentioned\nfor President, a Job, with a bigger\ntitle but less power. He is head of\n-\u25a0the right-wing Free Democrats.\nChristian democrats and Free\nDemocrats- moved quickly toward a\ncoalition to govern 4^,000,000 Germans following a complete-count\nof the.Sunday vpte In which 402\ndeputies werO chosen for West\nGermany's first Parliament\nThis, election proved a decisive\nsetback for the \"Communists, who\ngathered but 5.74 per' cent of the\nvote, and 'pro', extreme Nationalist\npartlaa'-the German Party and the\nGerman Right Party, who together\ngot only 5.83 per cent.\nAlthough the Social Democrats,\nwho favored a program similar to\nthe British XSbor Party, ran second\nwith 29.4: petf rceiit,, they had no\nsocialistic allies to whom they\ncould'turn!to organize a coalition.\n' Together, the Christian Demo\ncrats and Free Democrats lacked\nonly 11 seats of having a majority.\nIt appeared they could easily pick\nthese up by linking with one of\nthe small right-wing parties also\nopposed to'Socialism;    \"''\"\"    '\n.Germany's   first; freely - ejected\nGovernment since pre-Hitler days:\nthus appeared likely to set a.course\nagainst   Socialism,   favor -a   free\neconomy, align with the -Western\npowers in international politics, ahd\nseek   entry   into   the  family   of\nEuropean nations at Strasbourg.\nMax Reimann, West -.German\nCommunist leader, defeated in his\nown district but elected as a member at large under proportional\nrepresentation, called the election\n\"a revival of the forces of reaction.\"\n.' In Berlin, the United States High\nCommissioner, John J. McOloy, congratulated the1 German people \"on\nthe evidence of good citizenship\" in\nthe election-lh which neatly 80-per\ncent of the 31,000,000 eligible voters\ncast ballots.  \u25a0.> : .'\u25a0-.-  I ..':\u25a0\nFire Destroys\nPioneer South\nSlocan Home\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C., Aug. 15\u2014\nFire, destroyed ohe of. the oldest\nSouth Slocan homeS here today,\nwith only part of the contents being\nsaved.' \"\u25a0 '\"['\u25a0'[ X '\" '\n. \"Built about 40 years ago, the one-\natOry house was Owned by lifts. C.\nFenwick and .was rented to a Mr.\nFedosoff. The fire was believed to\n: have started in some! manner from\na'stoye, about S p.m. \u2022'\u25a0 \"\u25a0;\nWest Kootenay Power and Light\nCompany Ltd. equipment was used\nto save neighboring buildings,1 although the roof of one caught fire\nat ohe stage.\nCanada's Parks\nDrawing Record :\u2022\nNumber of Visitors\n\" 6-frrlwA, Aug 15 v(CP)\u2014Canada's, national parks pre attracting\nvisitors in greater numbers than\never before, figures released by the\nMines and Resources Department\nshowed today.\nWith attendance this year already\nover the 1,000,000 mark,'It is likely\nthat last year's record attendance\nfigure will be doubled. There was\na Increase of 40,5 per cent during\nthe first four months of this year\nover the same period ln 1948,\n. Banff'National Park is the major\nattraction. So far this year 246,789\npersons have visited the park. There\nare 15 national parks and. eight\nnational historic parks in Canada.\nHong Kong To Expel\n\"Undesirables\"\nHONG.KONG, Aug. 15 (Reuters)\n\u2014A step to strengthen Hong Kong's\ninternal\" security will' be . taken\nWednesday when Attprney-General\nJ. B; Griffin moves first reading in\nthe Legislative Council of a bill for\nexpulsion of \"undesirables,\"\nAny persons suspected of being\nlikely to promote sedition. or cause\na disturbance of the public peace\nIs defined, as an \"undesirable,\".;as\nwell as' the diseased, unemployed,'\nand :prostilutes or persons llvlngon\nprostitutes'earnings..\nThe bill will not apply to British\nsubjects or residents for more than\n10 years in.the colony. The'\"undesirables\" may be expelled after an\nInquiry by a competent authority\nThe Government said that Hong\nappointed by the Governor.'\nKong traditionally had allowed' free\nmovement of Chinese into the colony, but that with the unrest in\nChina the colony'faced the problem\not its population exceeding its capacity of absorption;\nP.O. UNSHAKEN\nBY ONSLAUGHT\nO^ERBOWTiES    -\n\u25a0' OTTAW' Aug. 15 (CP) - The\npost office was. unshaken today by\na facetious onslaught from the\nLondon Times. Its latest Sartorial\nStandard; the made-up bow tie,\nstays put.  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nThe Time's editorially described\nas a \"questionable refonh\" the decision to have Canadian postmen\nwear ties. It predicted that the next\nstep might be a decree that the\nMounties\u2014the Times persists in colling them the Northwest Mounted-'\nmust wear false shirt fronts. '\n: The post office chuckled and said\nthere 'hasn't -been a complaint yet\nfromthe men wearing the ties and\nthat's good enough for them. .\n\\ An official said they were born\npf a desire to.modify the effects of\na regulation that postmen must\nwear ties. Neckties were too hot Si\nSummer so somebody hit oh a bow-\ntie .that fastens to tlie collar:flaps\nand somebody else said they should\nbe black, fcr uniformity, and there\nthey were,\nAsks Congress to\nPrepare Backlog of\nPublic Works Projects\ni TORONTO, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014 The\nAmerican Federation of Labor's\nExecutive Council today called pn\nthe United States Congress to prepare a backlog of public works pro*-\njects for use in stemming regional\ndepressions.\nThe Coupe!!, holding its quarterly\nmeeting in this Ontario capital, also\nurged that Congress at its present\nsitting approve pending legislation\nto encourage building Of \"moderate-\nrental\" apartments tor families Just\nabove, the low-income group.\nWhile urging that Congress, take\naclton to combat a depression, the\nexecutive of the 8,000,000-member\nA.F.L. emphasized lt did not consider that a depression was at hand\nat this time, even though unemployment had risen above the 4,000,000\nmark. for. the first time since before\nthe war.\nButter Trading\nResumed on\nCommodity Exchange\nMONTREAL, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nButter trading resumed on the Car\nnadian commodity exchange here\ntoday, after a lapse of nearly a year.\nTrading, was fairly brisk and\nprices showed an upward slant.\nClosing quotations were about one\ncent a pound higher than* previous\nbids. A total of 3000 boxes of\nQuebec 92 score spot butter changed\nhands. \u25a0 ;\nThere were no futures dealings\nbut August contracts were up one-\nhalf cent a pound.   '\n-*..   !*>, \"iCBN\n'* '\u20223&&A  'Mft Qas Plant for Nelson\nNUMBER 9'\n. Installation* of an alr-mlx gas' plant similar\nto this one at Bremerton, Wash., Is to be made In\nNelson shortly by C..H. Smith, Manager of Kootenay Propane Gas Company. Cost will: be over\n$20,000. Instead of -the, two smaller, storage tanks\nshown, one 30,000 gallon tank will be set up at-the.\nplant, to be. located at the site of the present gas\nplant' which It will replace, Liquid gas will come\nby rail from Turner. Valley, and will be vaporized.\nCity of Nelson will operate the plant, expeoted to\nbe completed by the end of September.    '.'.'\nlODRAW\nCOKSTITUTION\n' GoV't to FpllaWj\nU. N. Gharter,      -\nIhterndtiohal Law-\nPROVISION^.\nDAMASCUS, Aug ill* (fleuters)-\nThp ne* Syrian Cabtoet, formed\nSunday after a mAituy. coup d'etat,\ntonight announced it would \"prepare a hew constitution, follow the\nUnited Nations Charter and- Observe\ninternational law.\"       >\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\nThe Cabinet's policy was announced by Premier Hashem Atassi\na few \"hours after Col. Sami Hen-\nntwl handed him the power ne\nseized Sunday :follpwlng.thp military trial and execution of president Hushi Zayim '\u25a0 and ; Premier\nMuhsin Barazi. \u25a0 \"  ' , \\ \" '.\"..''\u2022\nAtassi said tonight:,'   \u2022 :.'\n\"We are a provisional'gpvern-\nment. Our main task is to pave the\nWay for the early el^ctipti, of a\nconstituent assembly to prepare' a\nnew'wins' utioh in.ful} freedom,\"\nj Hennawi promised that the Army\n'would not Jnterierp any ipjore ln\nSyria's political,. life.\" At,;jjPress\nconference'he fiectareff that he \"had\nno ambitions except to serve. Syria.\nARABS SATISFIED\n: AMMAN, Hashemiie Jordan, Aug.\n15 (AP)\u2014Thp whole Arab world\nexcept'Egypt, today- expressed satisfaction with the new Syrian Government which replaced the. regime\npf Marshal-President Husni Zayim.\nZayim was executed in a military\ncoup along with his premier-Sunday\nmorning.\nSyria's neighbors hung back more\nthan a day-wondering whether' one\nmilitary-dictator Would be merely\nreplaced by another.\n: Broadcasts and dispatches from\nthe Arab capitals tonight indicated\nthe swift turnover to a civilian cabinet headed bjf lormer president\nHashem Atassi reassured the Arab\nstates. A promise' to erase the police\nstate trapping)! of the Zayim regime\nals - was reported to please .Syria's\nneighbors,    j .\nSee West German\nMembership in\nCouncil of Europe\nSTRASBOURG, France, Aug. 15\n(AP)\u2014The Right-wing victory In\nyesterday's West German elections\nhas boosted that country's chances\nof Joining the Council of Europe,\nobservers-here believer '\nIntimates of Winston Churchill\nsaid Britain's Wartime Prime Min:\niste, now would throw the full\nweight of his enormous personal\npresetlge behind the battle for German membership.\n26 Fatalities\nOver Weekend\nIn Eastern Canada\nTORONTO, Aug. 16 (CP)\u2014Twen'r\nty-six fatalities' were reported iii-\nEastern' Canada during tbe week**-\nend. - \",.-''\nA Canadian Press summary today\nlisted ] 1!> - deatha from drowning,\neight traffic fatalities,, two deaths\nfrbrp falls and one from a flrefight-\nliig mishap,., .-'.; ..':-:. \\        .,- \"\"\u25a0\nSixteen of the fatalities were in\nOntario, nine from Quebec and pne\nfrom Nova Scotia.\nU.S. Ambassador\nMeets Stalin\nMOSCOW, is\\ug. 15 (AP) r- Alar.\nG. Kirk, United States Ambassador\nto \"Russia, met for about 45 minutes\nin the Kremlin tonight with Prime\nMinister Stalin. An informed source\nsaid JCirk hadV reviewed United\nStates, and .Soviet relations Jn general terms. ..,:.'.\n* The Ambassador told \"newspaper\nmep after the conference: \"I don't\nthink I will have anything to Say\nabout my visit tonight, but I may\nhave something to say tomorrow.\"\nThe United States Embassy described the call as a \"courtesy visit,''\nIt was learned that Kirk had, re--\nquestedthe ititeetiiigi-theiflrst'-trfne\nany high American official lias seen\nStalin In almost a year.\nI (The Moscow radio said Foreign\nMinister Andrei Vishinsky of Russia also was present at the meeting.)\nFishermen Plan\nCase Against\nAluminum Project\nVANCOUVER, Aug: 15* (CP) -\nWorried members of B.C.'a fishing\nindustry met today to dispuss ways\nof presenting their case against the\nproposed aluminum plant site , on\nthe Chilco River.\nDelegates said the Chllco River\nsystem-is responsible for half of the\nProvince's Sockeye salmon spawning, and any damage to the system\nWould endanger the spawning,\n! According to word froth Victoria,\nthe Aluminum Company of Canada\nhas filed application for water\nrights on the Chilco and Nechako\nRivers.'\n. Fishermen will. present their\nviews in Victoria this month when\na public hearing, announced by the\nProvincial Government, will be\nheld.\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Aug. 15\n(CP) \u2014 Special instructions from\nAttorney-General Gordon Wismer\ntoday cancelled the Inquest into thp\ndeath of Vic Johnson, seineboat\nskipper who was shot to death on\nhis boat Saturday night.     .'\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\nEvidence will be.heard at preliminary trial Wednesday of Earl Johnson, brother of the dead man, who\nhas been charged with the murder.\n$10 Million in Aid\nMines\nREVISION OF\nCRIMINAL\nTRADE UNION\nMEMBERSHIP\nAT PEAK IN 48\npearly 1,000,000\njnQrganizotioh\n*At End of Year\nBVC. HIGH\n, OTtAWA,: Aug. j 15 (CP) -\nTrade union memoprship In Can-\n] ada reached ap all-time.high In\n1948 when It crowded close to\nthe 1,000,000 niark, Labor Minister\nMitchejl announced today.   ...\"\nIn a'statement based on his de-\npartmWjijji 'lth annual review of\nlabor prjfnlaatloh in Canada, Mr\nMltchel Isa'RI there were 977,694\ntrade union members In Canada\nat the end of .1948.,..\nThe Trades and Labor Congress\not Canada, with 2779 locals, had a\ncombined membership of 439,029.\nThe Canadian Congress of Labor,\nwith 1187 locals, had a membership\nof: 338,627. The Unions ijja king 'up\nthe Canadian and CathOUp Confederation of Labor, reported 428\nbranches with a membership of 93;-\n370; The four independent railway\nbrotherhoods.-, had '41,126 members\nbelonging loWlbcals.' \u2022 *\u2022*\u25a0;\"'\n. The membefahipv has \"increased\nmore than 214 times since the out\nbireak';6f the Second World *Vfar '\n1939 when* If stood at 359,000; In only\none year was the upward trend\nbroken. In 1944 the membership\nwas 724;000 but by the \"dhd of 1945 It\nhad dropped to 711,000. However, It\nwas 912jOQO'in-1947.\n\u25a0 Most union headquarters' do not\nreport their membership J>\"y Provinces, said Mr; Mitchell; From'p separate survey, however,\" which included over 85 per cent of the local\nbranches in Canada, information\nwas obtained on the Provincial distribution of the membership.\nThose reporting from'Ontario\nshowed a total of 301,000 members;\nBritish: Columbia 107,000; Manitoba\n40,000; Alberta 38,000; Saskatchewan\n25,000. : ;-:.'\nA partial survey of the\/'cltles\nshowed that Montreal led with an\nestimated membership of 111,000.\nToronto followed with 96,000 and\nin third place was Vancouver with\n59,000.   ,\nOpen Fire on\nDemonstrators\nKARACHI, Pakistan, Aug. 15\n(Reuters)\u2014Pollbe today opened fire\non thousands of Moslems demonstrating outside the headquarters of\nthe Indian High Commissioner to\nPakistan, Dr. Sita Ram. One\ndemonstrator was killed and several\nothers were severely Injured. The\ncrowd demonstrated against the\nraising of the Indian Union flag.\nToday Is the second anniversary of\nIndia's independence.\nReady to Test Ocean Pressure\n\"Curious English Mail\"\nBeseiges Sultan of Johore\nBy NORMAN CRIBBEN8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug, 15 (CP) \u2014 Next\ntime the 75-year-old Sultan of Johore makes a gift he will \"do lt on\nthe quiet.\"\n'\u2022 Tile Sultan, recuperating in London from three operations in eight\nweeks, gave \u00a3500' ($2000) to Mrs.'\nMeryl McCarthy to help her regain possession of her 10-year-old\ndaughter Violet, left in Trinidad\nafter Mrs. McCarthy won a divorce\nsuit.\nHe was perturbed by the \"curious\nEnglish-mail\" which followed,\nA retired brigadier wanted financial help to provide a honie for\n\"a woman in an unfortunate plight\n\u2014a girl who is married but miserably unhappy, with whoiii I have\nfallen deeply in love.\"\nA man feeling the pinch because\nhe bought a car in Ireland' \"and,\nunfortunately, the. customs duty\nwas very heavy,\" asked financial\naid.\nA woman offered to sell the\nSultan \"three old masters\" because\nshe was threatened with eviction\nfor non-payment of rates and rent.\nA man in Gibraltar asked the\nSultan to buy him a greengrocer's\nstore' so that he would no longer\nhave to try to keep his family on\nunemployment benefit.\nA woman begged the Sultan to\nfind her an Indian hypnotist to \"de-\nhypnotize\" a man who, she said,\nwas the victim of a; hypnotist in,\nIndia eight years ago.\n\"I get letters and telephone calls\nat all hours of the day and night,''\nthe Sultan said. \"1 wanted to help,\nthat one case\u2014Mrs. McCarthy's\/\nThese others I think I must leave\nto someone else.\" \u25a0'.\n- Capt.\" A. Wadir, the Sultan's\nsecretary, said, his days were fully\ntaken up answering letters.\n\"The < Sultan . has helped: many\npeople but never before have v\/e\nhad appeals like these.\"\nAttempt to conquer thevorushlng pressure: of .\nthe ocean water more than a mile deep-la being\nmade: at Smuggler's Cove, Calif., by Otis Barton,\nmarine' explorer. Barton' (left) receives Instructions from Dr. Maurice Nelles: before Being sealed\nInto the Benthoscope, the University of Southern\nCalifornia's diving bell,'during test at Long Beach,\nCalif. .The Benthoscope (right) Is shown as It was,\nlowered Into the water on Its Initial test, Thebell\nIs 67 and one-half Inches In diameter, weighs 7000\npounds and Is lowered by a %-lnch steel cable.\nMechanical trouble thwarted Barton's descent\nMonday.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto,)\nCommittee Sitting\nIn Calgary to\nBring in Report\nPRELIMINARY\nCAtOfRY, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014\nRevision Committee of the Federal Commission appointed to revise the Criminal Code of Canada\nbegan -two weeks \"f .discussion\nhere today. The Committee will\nend Its meeting Aug. 27.\nCommittee members said their\nduty was to report their recommendations for changes in the Criminal Code to the Commission whose\nthree\"-members will .carry cut what\nwill \"be,-, in effect,: a re-writing Of\nthe code by which thousands of\npersons have been tried foi crimes\nranging from false pretences to\nmurder. ,' -.-\u25a0-' \u25a0  \u25a0,\nDiscussions still are preliminary\nCommittee members said. They declined td comment on the progress\nof their talks but said the Committee meeting-is being held in Calgary\nso joint discussions can be held next\nweek with the commissioners oq\nUniformity ot legislation in Canada.\nThe Committee has met three\ntimes previously! but always in Ottawa. Meetings were held, in February, April and June, Following next\nweek's talks with the uniformity\nccmmissibhers, who will attend the\nCanadian' Car Association' convention at Banff, the Committee will\nadjourn until a later date,\nHon. Jfte , Juatlci^ Gerald Fautex\npf Montreal, one of three members\nof the Commission, is attending the\nCommittee meeting in a liaison capacity. Judge .Robert FOrsyth, K.C..\ndf Toronto, is Committee Chairman.\nOther members of the Commission\naTer Chief*'Justice \"W\".' ii'. Mar-tla'^I\nSaskatchewan .and- Fv P.~' Va\u00a5cde,\n(i.M.G.,':I!!:C.,: of Ottawa,' Depiity\nMinister of Justice. - -\n>. Attending the Committee, meeting\nMere are; JUdge Forsyth; ;Mr., Justice Fauteux; Magistrate J... C. .Mar\ntin .'of Ottawa, consulting research\nCcilnsel; Wi .C. Dunlop,* K.C., Halifax; H. P. Carter, K.C.I St. John's,\nNewfouhdiand; H. J. Wilson, K.C.\nfldmonton, Deputy . Attorney-General of Alberta; Fernand Choquette,\nK.C., Quebec City; Thomas D. Mac;\nDonald, K.C., Ottawa, Federal Department of Justice; Joseph Sedgwick, K.C., Toronto; and Leonard\nJ. Ryan, Ottawa,. Secretary.\nCharged With Murder\nOf three-Year-Old\nLONDON, Augi 15 (CP) '-r- Mrs,\nNora Tlerney, 29, today was charged\nwith .the murder of three-year-old\nMarion Ward, whose bloody and\nbattered body was found id a bombed-out house Saturday.\nMarion was the daughter of Basil\nWard;and his Vancouver-born wife,\nMrs. Tierhey formerly lived next\ndoor to the slain child. Marlon had\nbeen missing for. 30 hours before\nhe^mutilated body whs discovered.\nThere Was no evidence that the\nchild., had beeh sexually, attacked\nbut her head was bashed in.\nIn the derelict mansion, situated\nin a once-fashionable section bt\nLondon; police also found the body\n,of a.man. There.was no clue as to\nhis identity, nor how he met his\ndejth.     , .\nNew Identification\nCards for Troops\nOTTAWA, Aug. 15 (CP) - The\nforces are issuihg new identification cards to their roughly 44,000\nregular troops and to thousands Of\ncivilians, working for the Defence\nDepartment ....   ,    \u25a0-,\nThe Armed Forces Identification\nBureaU said today it expects to have\nthe 7000 people at Defence Headquarters completed this week. The\ncards Include photographs and\nfingerprints' and certain personal\ninformation.*\nMobile units Under Lt G. A. Kyle\nwill tour'the country finishing the\njob. They have a streamlined procedure that averages 100 persons an\nhour. The Bureau IS under Flt.-Lt,\nEi';L. Bqwer.- -' -\nMarket Lack New\nBlow to Valley Farms\n' CiObLlWACK, B.C., Aug. \" (CP)\nrr-Fraser Valley ffuit growers, al\nready hit hard by heavy rains, to-,\nday face additional heavy losses\nthrough lack of markets.  . ,,\nPlum growers claimed today harvesting, jvlll be drastically limited\nbecause of the loss of United Kingdom markets.\nThe lack of markets, they said, is\na -bitter blew to fruit producers,\nwho missed the lucrative' Prairies\nraspberry market when heavy rains\nstruck the valley.\nFirst Year's Subsidy Expected to\nBoost Production 15 Per Cent\n' .     By; HAROLD MORRISO'\nCanadian Press Staff* Writer\nOTTAWA,. Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014 The Federal Government's;\nfilan to help Cdnoda's gold mining industry through subsidy\nis expected tp cost $1!0,0Q0,000 for the first year of operation,\nit Was learned today.  ;*\nFinance Minister Abbott will releasethe final figure when\nhe:makes his report to Parliament some time after the next'\nsession opens Sept. 15. *\"\nBy law he will have to mako his\nreport within 15 days after commencement of the session. His report is expected to show that the\nGovernment paid out ah average\nof $3.20 for each of the 3,100,000\nounces of gold Canada produced\nIn 1048.\nThe subsidy plan, known as the\nEmergency Gold Mining Assistance\nAct, went into, effect in June a\nyear.ago as a \"result ef mine, complaints that current high production\ncosts were hampering output.\nGold, when purchased i by the\nUplted States,- brings $35 an ounce;\nSome new mines showed that it\ncosts closer to $5\u00bb an ounce to mine\ngold In the first year of operation;\nThe expectancy-is that aided by\nthe subsidy and through their own}\nefforts, mines will produce 15 per-:\ncen more gold in 1049 than ln 1048.\nThat will, mean- that at the rat*'.;'\nof $35 an ouhce, Canada Will be\nproducing about $120,000,000 worth '\nof gold this year, compared with:\n$100,000,000, a year. ago.     '   ,\nThat adds to Canada's dollar reserves, since the Foreign Exchange\nControl   Board   purchases   almost\neyery Ounce nf gold produced in!;\nthe Dominion to bolster her dollar |\n8tatus.      :\nThere Is no indication just how\nlong the 'Government's gold subsidy :\nplan will run.. If the United States\ndecides to jack lip'the, price of gold\nto $50 an ounce, it is expected the\nGovernment will drop the plan.\nU. S. Holds Former\nSlovak Official   ,\nAs Suspected Red\nNEW YORK, AUg. 15 (AP) A\nformer high-ranking Slovakian official, seized' as he arrived in the\nUnited States as a displaced persons,\nwas detained today by Immigration\nofficials as a suspected Communist.\n; The ex-official, Gen. Mikulas Fer-\njencik, 44, was taken into custody\nyesterday along with bis Wife, Mil-\nada, 32, . .     \u25a0\nThe General and his. wife were\namong 822 passengers listed as displaced persons who arrived from\nBremerhaven; Germany, on the\nU; Si'* army transport, General\nHelntzelman.\nHe remained in Czechoslovakia\naftpr the Communists^ completed\ntheir \"Seizure, \"of pPircr. But lh' July'\n1948, he* escaped over the border\nwith another'Czech General, An-\ntonin Hasal, and.both men made\ncontact with U. S. Army authorities\nin the Western zone of Germany.\nj When the Ferjehciks were escort-\ned^by armed guards frpm the ship\nto Ellis Island, the Immigration.Inspector said \"the General is being\nheld, as a suspected Communist,\"\nand declined further comment\nCoast Machinists\nChoose Union\nVICTORIA, Aug. 15 (CP)-By a\n34r2 vote, maclfinists at Yarrows'\nshipyard today chose the C.C.L*.\nMachinists, Fitters and Helpers Union as their bargaining agent.\nThe men since 1947 have been\nrepresented by the A.F.L. International Association of Machinists,\nThe new setup provides for free\nInterchange of membership within\nthe C.I.O.-C.C;L. structure, permitting a machinists, belonging to the\nInternational Woodworkers of America, a transfer to the shipyard\nunion without paying another initia\ntion fee.    \"\nSays Europe\nShould\nIncrease Exports\nPARIS, Aug. 15 (AP) -r Paul O.\nHoffman, Marshall-Plan Administrator, told a press conference today'\nthat drastic cutting pf imports from\nthe United States was \"precisely\nthe wrong way\" for Europe to cure\nher dollar shortage.\nHe also declared automobiles are -\nnot the kind of export that can-:\nbe Increased to the United States;\nHoffman, President of the Studebaker Corporation before he be- .\ncame Administrator of. ,thp Eurpr;\n.pean'Recov^'Prpgiam; avoided;\nanswering questions which invited\"\ndirect comment, on economic policies of the British Government,\nHowever, the British- Government \\\nhas announced plans, to reduce buying in the United States. It also has\npushed automobile exports to the;\nUnited States; Hoffman Is on a tour\nof inspection' of Marshall-Plan'\ncountries. -..   -' \u25a0\u2022';\nInstead of Import cuts Hoffman:\nurged Europeans tp double or\"\ntriple their exports to thp United J\nStates;\nUrges Less Talk\nOf Recession\nIn Canada\nEDMONTON, Aug. 15 (CP) - tt,\"\nL. Schade, of Windsor, Ont., President of Sterling Drug (Canadian),\nLtd.,  today  said in an  interview,-:'\nthere should be less talk of recession In Canada.\n\"T think we should all atop talk\u00ab i\ntor ourselves into a recession, and:\nspend more time trying to Improve..\nour products, search for wider mar-^\nkets and more efficient methods of\nproduction,\" he said.\nAnd in This Corner\u2014\nDETROIT, Aug? 15 (AP)\u2014Mr. Rhea, a male bird who Uvea at the\",:\nDetroit Zoo, is a badly-henpecked husband these days.\n'        He's getting thin and haggard, Zbo Curator Arthur Greenholl\nreported today, because four Mrs. Rheaa are making him hatch all.\ntheir eggs. ,y\nAlready the overworked father has hatched out 40 little Rheas,\nbut still the nest is so full that he can hardly leave In search of food.\nAnd when he does, one of his wives is sure to deposit another egg there.\nMr. Rhea got himself stuck with his unnatural baby sitting duties;\nGreenhall said. .        \u25a0\n,'    As the oldest male Rhea, he gallantly took over hatching a few '\neggs for one of the females. The others apparently noticed what a good-\njob he was .doing, and gave him more work. Greenhall helped out a\nbit by putting some eggs in an incubator. ' ^ ::',*;\n. '   * \u2022\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 15 (AP)\u2014First names were out at a picnic\nhere yesterday.\nThe occasion\u2014an outlnd of amateur radio enthusiasts from New\nYork, Ohio, Pennsylvania dnd West Virginia. .,.','\u25a0'-.\n\"(ALVI'll be darned,\" said one \"ham!' in greeting. \"LFM,\" returned\nthe other. \"Talked to'you a dozen times\u2014so that's what you look like'.\"\nThat's the way It went through the day\u2014radio call letters, not.;.';\nnames. And the main picnic course? Why, ham\u2014of course.\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 15 (Ap)\u2014A. F. Bergman is the kind of guy\nwho walks out on hiS-wife\u2014literally.\nBergman yesterday began his annual vacation, And, as usual, he\nstarted hoofing out of the Pittsburgh district. He says his wife objects\nto his walkathons, but adds,that hiking Ib bis pleasure, he.has been\ndoing it for years,'and'that's that. \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\n\"I have 260,000 miles of footprints behind me,\" said Bergman. -\n; \"MUSt be a record I guess.\"\nThis year his destination is Atlantic City. By clocking around 50\nmiles a day-he hopes to get there next Saturday night.\nAnd what will he do when he gets to Atlantic City?. '\n\"Well, i may walk up and down the boardwalk a few times,\"\nBergman replied.\nALMOND, N.S., Aug. 15 (AP)\u2014\"Thero ain't no such thing as a\ndishonest boss trader.\"   -.-... ,\n\u2022 That Was the word today from genial George Kame, President\nand founder.of .the Annual Horse Traders Convention. Kame spoke\nwith the voice of 63 years' experience. ^\n\"Even now at evory convention',\" said Kame, \"I spend most of my\ntime gettln' some city slicker backed Into a fence corner Just to show,\nhim and convince him that hoss traders are the most honest people.\n\"As I said, I've been In the game now for over 60 years and I've\nyet to meet a swapper who is dishonest. Just, to prove my point, I've1\nfound that every time a swapper says he's got something to swap, he\nalways produces'a hoss\u2014standln', If possible\u2014and that's alt there Is\nto It\" '\n i \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 16, 1949\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT-\n- Affl GiKfnir in BOD Tsylofs irmsl\nI tlllhimutmcttlnitovtmilctiilnM\nb GibtirntiTumtdAtmlinintwhltl\nCmplete Shows 7:00-8:38\n:iftflnrdWiwm<i\t\nik^Sfc***^\n\"SOME\nof\nthe\nBEST\"\n1\n]     -D\u2014\"ADVENTURES OF DON JUAN\" with Erroll Flynn\nlelson, Wynndel and Beaver Falls\n.eterans Win Small Holdings\ntevelopmenl Prizes; In B.C. test\nNames of prize winners ln the\n'eterans' Land Act Small Holdings\nlevelopment Competition for the\nIootenay area were announced on\nionday by Dave Doddlng, V.L.A.\neglonal Supervisor at Nelson.\nFinal assessment of the Veterans'\nI holdings in this area was\nimpleted early in August by a B.C.\nudglng team consisting ot Mr.\noddlng, chairman; Ted Swales,\nrovincial District Horticulturist,\nelSon, B.C.; and C. & Hardwick,\n.L.A, district office official from\nancouver. The competition was\ntarted early last year by V.L.A. ln\neffort to stimulate Interest ln\nidscaplng, agricultural develop-\nlent and building maintenance. All\nall holders were entered auto-\nlatically; 189 veterans are estab-\nshed on V.L.A. small holdings in\ni\u00ab Kootenays. .\nThree veterans have.had their\nill holdings entered, ln the pro-\nclal competition'for Government\nzes awarded to the best property\nlevelopment through individual ef-\nrti, They are M. Ewasuilc, Beaver\n'alls P.O., whose small holding\n-anked first in the Trall-Castlegar\n\"fcia; J.' Hulme, Wynndel, B.C.,\n'hose property came first ln the\nIrestop-Cranbrook area; and H. R.\n!ole, Nelson, whose small holding\nilaced first In the Nelson-Kaslo\nirea.   \u25a0      '\" \u2022 .-*'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'\n\"In addition, several prizes were\niut up by local business firms for\n\u2022unners-up, and these will be pres-\nihted to the winners by the V.L.A.\nettlement supervisors Immediate\nly,\" Mr. Sodding explained.  '\nFrank Barber, well-known V.L.A.\nsettlement supervisor who retires\nfrom Government service on August\n18. will present prizes to the Trall-\nCastlegar area as follows:\nE. J. Ross\u2014awarded the D. B,\nMerry Lumber Company Cup for\ntbe best holding in, the Fruitvale.\narea. -\nV. H. Quldlng\u2014awarded the Trail\nMercantile Cup for the best small\nholding in the Blueberry Creek area.\nH. Bechthold\u2014awarded the. CM.\n& S. Cup for the best small holding\nIn the Kinnaird area.\nR. J. Smales\u2014awarded the Waldie\nLumber Company Cup for the second best small, holding in the Kinnaird area.       t      ,\nE. N. Johnson \u2014 awarded the\nCrelghton-Horswill Construction\nCompany Cup. for the third best\"\nholding in the Kinnaird area.\nW. P. F. Green, V.LA. settlement\nsupervisor ln the Nelson-Kaslo area,\nwill present prizes donated by business firms to the following:\nG. Armstrong, Kaslo\u2014for the second best development ln the Nelson-\nKaslo area..\nB. B. Clark, 1405 Hall Mines Road,\nNelson\u2014for the best kept and landscaped small holding.\nA. C. Morton,' 1623 Falls Street,\nIfelson\u2014for the aecond best kept\nand landscaped small holding.\nL. G. Atwell, R.R. No. 1, Nelson\u2014\nfor the third best kept- and landscaped small holding.\nPrize winners' in the provincial\ncompetition will be announced In\nSeptember.  .\nKelowna Fruit\nMay Roi if\nStrike (ailed\nKELOWNA, B.C., Aug. 15 (CP)-\nThe f25,000,000 fruit crop in this\nOkanagan alley may rot on the trees\nif a strike, threatened by the pick*\ners and cannery workers, Is called\nduring the next, week.\nThis possibility loomed tonight,\nwith the announcement by W.\nSands, Secretary of the Federation\not Fruit and Vegetable Workers,,\nthat a strike may be called \"on a\nfew hours notice.\".\nThe Federation is the certified\nunion for packinghouse workers in\nBritish Columbia's fruit, industry.\nA strike vote, supervised, by thi;\nProvincial Labor Relations Board,\nwas taken last week. The Union\nclaimed tonight 79 per cent of votes\ncast favor a strike.\nParamount Issue between the\nworkers and the' fruit industry: is\nthe matter ot a union shop. A recent\nconciliation board granted the union\nthis concession but the Industry\nrefused to accept It       \u2022\nKelowna businessmen said today\nthe soft fruit area would suffer most\nin the event of a strike. Apples, they\nsaid, could be held in cold storage\nbut peaches, plums and pears, ripening fast, would be too perishable.\nUnion Secretary Sands indicated\nthat should a strike be called, the\nUnion would seek the cooperation\nof teamsters and railway unions to\nprevent movement of the fruit out\nof the Valley. '\u2022'!\u25a0\u25a0: \u25a0''..\nAlbania Protests\nAlleged Invasions\nLONDON, Aug. 15 (AP)-Albania\nlas protested to the United Nations\niver alleged Invasions of her\niorders by Greek Government\nroops, the Albanian radio announced today.\nThe broadcast, monitored in Lon-\nlon, said the Tirana Government\niad sent a telegram to Secretary-\nJeneral Trygve Lie \"protesting\nigalnst repeated acts of provoca-\nion perpetrated by Greek Royalist\nfascists against our country.\"\nNew Building for\nDaily Colonist\nVICTORIA, Aug. 15 (CP) - The\nEaily Colonist, oldest newspaper on\n,e Pacific Coast, has completed\nplans for a new building to be\noccupied by mid 1050.\n' Flans already call for a three-\ni\\prey structure, 270 by 80 feet.\nBusiness, advertising, executive of-\ntices and the mechanical departments will occupy *the ground floor;\neditorial departments the second,\nInd the Colonist's Radio Station\nCJVI will be housed on the third\nDoor.\nAccident Victim\nImproving\nRobert Kirk, Ymlr Road, is still\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital fololwing a truck accident Saturday lust West of Nelson on Granite Road. Mr. Kirk sustained back\ninjuries and his condition was reported tb be satisfactory. Ho .will\nremain in hospital a few more days.\nGeorge W. Lypn, Nelson, also in?\nvolved In the accident, who suffered\nfrom sever* cuts about the head\nand'hands, was released from Hospital Monday.\nFirst Canadian for\nHigh Eagles Post\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014\nJames Washington, Parksvlllc Town\nCommissioner and Past Provincial\nPresident of B.C. Fraternal Order\nof Eagles, was elected by acclamation Saturday as Grand Worthy\nNorthwest Regional Vice-President\nof the order at the Grand Aerie\nconvention in Detroit. He Is the first\nCanadian to hold such office In the\n51-year-old history of the order. Mr.\nWashington also is former president\nof Vahcouver Aerie 2075.\nKELLOGG'S\nDenies Greeks\nInvaded Albania\nLaUCE SUCCESS, N.Y., Aug. US-\nCAP) \u2014 Greece tonight denied Albanian charges that Greek troops\nhad invaded Albanian territory. In\na letter to the U. N, the Greek Gov.\nernment offered to permit the U.N.\nspecial committee on the Balkans to\ninvestigate the charges on the spot.\nRETIRED  MASTER  DIES\nVICTORIA, Aug, 15 (CP)-Cap-\ntaln Robert Alexander Hunter, 88,\nwidely known retired Master of\nB.C. Coast Steamships until his re\ntirement, died here Sunday. \u25a0\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ.C.MUtR\nPhones:   Nelson 77; 'Rossland 171;  Troll 1001\nConnections for:\nSALMO -  KASLO \u2014  CRESTON   -   NAKUSP\nNelson Business College\nTHE COLLEGE WITH A PROVINCIAL REPUTATION\nComplete Commercial Course   *\nShorthand,   typewriting,   accountancy,   commercial   English,\ncommercial spelling, commercial arithmetic, filing and\ngeneral office procedure.\nIndividual Tuition. Commence Ahy Time\nNew Term, Day School, Commences\nThursday, September 1st. .\n. Night School Commences Monday, October 3rd.\n107 BAKER SREET, NELSON, B.C.\nDefence Committee\nFormed for British\nEast Africa\nNAIROBI, Kenya, Aug, 16 <CP)-\nA special Defence Committee has\nbeen established tor British East\nAfrica, strategic territory expected\nto play an Important role in,Commonwealth defence. .\nThe Committee was set up at.\u00ab\nrecent meeting between- the last\nAfrican High Commission and Vice-\nAdmiral Sir Charles Woodhouse,\nCommander-in-Chief of the Royal\nNavy's East Indies station at Mombasa, Kenya.   . \u25a0 .      ,       .\nthe talks consisted mainly of an\nexamination of draft legislation to\nestablish a East African Naval\nforce. The force would be maintain-\ned:at a cost of more, than \u00a350,000\n($200,000) yearly and would be paid\nfor by the East African Territories.\nThe High Commission is made up\nof the Governors of Kenya, Uganda\nand Tanganyika and the British res-\nideht of Zanzibar.\nJAa. diiqkwai^\nNelson - Cranbrook \u2014 Nelson to\nBalfour short sections under repair:\nSpeed limit 10 m.p.h. on fresh oil.\nConstruction at Wynndel,; Erickson\nEast tor 3 miles and at M 18 id 20\nEast of Creston.\nNelson-Kaslo\u2014N.elson to Balfour\nshort sections under- repair. Remain*\nder good.  ,\nNelson-Monashee \u2014 Some rough\nsections first-8 miles North of junction. Remainder fair to good.\nNelsoo-Nelway, \u2014 Som* short\nrough''sections. - , '\u25a0\u2022 >'\u25a0,,.:,\nNelson - Trail - Patterson \u2014 Short\nsections of construction.M 0 to 27\nand no delay. Speed limit 30 m.p.h.\nPaving M 8 to 5. Sj>eed limit 10\nm.p.h. and traffic controlled, Speed\nlimit on fresh oil 16 m.p.h.\nBossland-Cascade-HFalr.\nEnglish Cricket\nLONDON, Aug. 15 (SeuUrs) \u2014\nClose-Of-play scpres In county\ncricket tonight:      \u2022 '\nAt Lords\u2014Worcester 160 and 117\nfor four; Middlesex. 288.\nAt Southend\u2014Sussex 184 and 148\nfor three; Essex 483.\nAt Cheltenham\u2014Gloucestershire\n340 and 124 for four; Glamorgan 170.\n, At Manchester\u2014Lancashire 280\nand 243 for eight; Surrey 128.\nAt Leicester\u2014Hampshire 219 and\n358 for seven declared; Leicestershire 145 and 16 for one. :\nAt- Northampton\u2014Northamptonshire-351; Nottinghamshire 161 and\n138 for two.\nAt Weston-Super-Mare\u2014Somerset\n400 for nine declared' and' 106 for\nfive; Kent 274.  , -\nAt Bradford\u2014Derbyshire 84 ahd\ndeclared. ,'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n276 for four; Yorkshire 401 for four\nAt Birmingham -Warwickshire\n18 for nine declared and 137 for\nfive; combined services 284. -,\nMitchells Win\nSoftball Series\nOver Zenkeys\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Aug. 15 :\nAllie Hughes', last-Inning homu\nwith two out gave Mitchells their\nthird straight win over Zenkeys 9-7\nto win the softball series and the\nright to continue to the finish,\n' Zenkeys got a two-run lead ln\nthe fifth which they held tb the\n-final. Mitchells scored 24 runs In\nthe series and Zenkeys 16 runs. Eur-\nirg the league season Zenkeys failed\nto beat Mitchells ln any game, Byng,\ntwo games up, in the best-of-five,\nmeet Bombers ln their third Tuesday night for the other final spot,\nBatteries\u2014Atkhison, Dooling and\nSavarle. Stevely and Hughes.\nUmpire\u2014Ed Staples.\nFined for Failing to\nHalt at Stop Street.\nA $10 fine was paid by Peter\nJmaeff of Nelson Monday, on *1\ncharge ot falling to stop at the\nintersection of Cedar and Vernon\nStreets Saturday.\nMr. Jmaeff pleaded guilty before\nMagistrate William Brown ln Nelson City Police Court.\"\nDieppe Veterans\nArrive in London\nLONDON, Aug. 15 (CP)-Thlrty\none Canadian veterans arrived today by R.C.A.F. North Star plane\non an anniversary pilgrimage to Dieppe, scene of the epic raid of Aug,\n19, 1942.\nThe contingent, all of whose\nmembers fought at Dieppe, arrived\ntired and hungry after a 10-hour, delay at Goose Bay, Labrador. They\nwill have only a few hours' rest before going on to Paris early Tuesday where they will mount a guard\nof honor at the Arc de Trlomphe.\nApart from being official representatives-of the Canadian Army\nunits which fought in the raid, the\nveterana--drawn from across Canada\u2014have personal reasons for visiting Dieppe where many have\nfriends and relatives buried.\nShoots Wife, Then\nTakes Own Life\nSASKATOON, Aug. 15 (CP) ..\nmiddle-aged woman estranged from\nher husband was killed tonight by a\nshot-gun blast and police said that\nthe husband, Jeremiah Janzen, then\ntook his own life. A young girl also\nwas Injured by shot-gun pellets.\"\nPolice said that the first victim\nwas Rose Janzen. She was shot\nthrough the right Bide. Fourteen-\nyear-old Edna Lachuk, daughter of\nthe proprietor of the rooming house\nwhere Mrs. Janzen was staying, was\ninjured slightly In a second blast\nHOOVER IN N.Y.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (AP)-Her\nbert Hoover, who suffered a gall\nbladder disturbance en route from\nCalifornia, arrived here today,\nHoover, 75, said on a stopover in\nChicago yesterday that the concern\naroused by the attack was \"much\nado about nothing.\" -\nThe former President ot the United States said he expects to spend\n\"a good part of the yesr\" ln New\nYork.\n'Hoover, who> suffered, the attack\naboard . the train, Saturday, was\nlooked over by physicians at Ogden,\nUtah, and Cheyenne, Wyo, When he\nstopped over between trains at Chicago, he said he would not fee a\ndoctor there.\nPromoted\nCALGARY, Aug. 15 (CP)-Ap\npointment of W. O. Twalts of, Toronto as management assistant in the\nproducing department of Imperial\nOil Ltd. at Calgary was announced\nby the company today. He formerly\nwas manager of the coordination\nand economics department of the\ncompany at Toronto.; Mr. Twalfs Is\nrecognized as one of Canada's foremost authorities on petroleum economics.        ,.\nOf Trade\nFetes Rushton\nNAKUSP, B,C, Aug.-15 - The\nNakusp- Board of Trade' extended\nto. F. Rushton on the evening' of\nAug. 11, a surprise party at his\nhome, Mr. Rushton has In former\nyears given a great deal of his time\naa President of the Board and has\ntaken much interest in. its work\nsince that time. , '\n'\u25a0 In,vie* of.his leaving for Chilliwack, the Board mat. at. his' home,\narriving before he returned -from a\nsupper invitation. Awaiting hla return the members of the -Board\nmade themselves at home on packing cases and what not; entering\nthe house Mr. Rushton wss considerably surprised to find the\nplace full of- members, who presented him with a, \"Fisherman's\nPlaque\" at the hand of their President, A, J. Butt, and on which had\nbeen neatly Inscribed, \"Best Wishes\nfrom the Nakusp Board of Trade,\"\nwhile pn tha back the members\nsighed their names, '\nBoth Mr. and Mrs. Rushton spoke\nln reply to the presentation in\nwhich they expressed their pleasure\nin the original gift. The group drank\nto the health of the Rushton family\nand to their happiness in their now\nhome.\nNELSON COUPLE\nCELEBRATE\nGOLDEN WEDDING\nMr. and Mrs. J. Highfield, 916\nGore Street, who have lived in\nCanada tor the past 39 years, 24 of\nthem in the Kootenays, celebrated\ntheir golden Wedding Sunday. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nThey were married in the Gulls-\nfield Parish Church, Montgomeryshire, England.  ',.. \u25a0\u2022\u2022..\/'.'..\n.They spent'Sunday visiting Kootenay Bay and Balfour.      '\nAustralian Miners\nWork at Old Terms\nSYDNEY, Australia, Aug. 15 (CP)\n-Australia's 24,000 coal miners today went back tb the pits, on their\nold terms after a sevon-woek strike,\nThe general coal strike was called June 27, at the height of the\nWinter season in down-under Australia. The miners were demanding\na 35 shilling ($4,85) weekly wage\nIncrease, reduction of the work\nweek from 40 hours to 35 and long-\nservice leave.,\nNone of their demands were met\nand'the case now reverts to arbitration by the National Coal Board.\nFathers To Whip Sons\nWHITBY, Ont., Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014\nPercy Cross and Nicholas Ouletta,\nthe two fathers who announced Saturday they would refuse to. carry\nout a magistrate's order to whip\ntheir sons, changed their minds today. The boys pleaded, guilty Friday to stealing 22 bottles of gyser.\nFollowing a visit from Police\nChief John Irvine of Pickering,\nboth fathers said they were inclined to look at, the Whippings in a\ndifferent light, Neither wanted to\nuse the laths but neither wanted\nmore trouble with the law.\nSaturday the Chief visited the\nOuletta home to see that Magistrate\nRussell P. Locke's order that each\nboy received 10 strokes of the lath\nwas carried to out. Ouletta's 14-\nyear-old son was net.at home, however.\nAt the Cross home he found 17-\nyear-iold Ronald was hbme but as\nSunday\/visitors were present the\nwhipping was postponed.\nTwo Hurt in Crash\nNear Salmo\nStill in Hospital\nTwo ot the five occupants of the\nCalifornia oar which turned over\noh its side after a tire blowout Saturday afternoon South of Salmo\nwere still in Kootenay Lake General Hospital Monday.    \u2022 ,x'\nRaymond Tldd of Berkley, Calif.,\ndriver o{ the vehicle, sustained severe lacerations on the left side oi\nhis face and several stitches Were1\nrequired, while Wallace Anderson,\nOakland, Calif., suffered a fractured shoulder blade.       '.'\u25a0\nThree other persons In the car at\nthe time who escaped without injuries were Robert Hayes, Oakland,\nowner of the car, George Inerbick-\nIer, Berkely, and Kenneth Dobble,\nVlctofla, B.C.   . \u25a0   \"    \u2022\nDenazification in\nU. S. Zone\nNearly Complete\nFRANKFURT. Aug. 15 (AP) -\nThe denazification program in the\nUnited States occupation zone of\nGermany has been 99.8 per cent\ncompleted, the American Military\nGovernment said today. Of 18,199,-\n778 persons registered under the\nlaw, 26.1 per cent were found to be\nchargeable cases under the denazification laws.   '\nExrLithuanian\nChess Champ Leading\nARVIDA, Que., Aug, 15* (CP) \u2014\nPovllas Vaitonls of Hamilton, Ont.,\nformer Lithuanian chess champion,\ntoday took the lead in the 1949\nCanadian Chess Championships at\nthe end of the third round..\nVaitonfs defeated Philippe Brunet\nand Dr. J. Rauch of Montreal ln today's matches.\nStandings at tha end of the third\nround wefe; Povllas Vaitonls 3-0;\nFrank Anderson, Toronto, Vh-V,;\nMaurice Fox, Montreal, Wt-Vi; Dr.\nFedorBohatirch.uk, Ottawa, 2-1; Dr.\nJ.'Rauch, U4-l%;'.Abe' Yanofsky,\nWinnipeg, IH-IH; Philippe Brunet;\n1-2; Jules\" Therien, Quebec, 1-2; R.\nDrummond, Hamilton, 0-3; and\nErich Hoehn, 0-3.\nDirector of Salmon\nCommission Dies\nNEW WESTMINSTER,' B. C,\nAug. 15( CP)\u2014B: M. Brennan,.Director of the Canadian-United States\nInternational Sockeye Salmon Commission, died Sunday at his home\nhere, He was 59.\nWidely known ln the fishing in\ndustry of the Pacific Northwest,\nMr. Brennan was one of the original members of the Salmon Commission. It has been under, his executive direction that all the big construction Work tor rehabilitation ot\nthe Fraser River sockeye runs, fish-\nways, has been carried out,\n1 Nineteen members of the Kootenay Kilties Band returned fromthe\nKlmberley Highland Games held at\nChapman Camp Saturday highly\nenthusiastic over the grand hospitality they enjoyed in East Kootenay.   \u2022   '', .. |; .\u2022\u25a0\".,\nMany favorable comments fell\nthe- way of the Band, .especially\ntowards the .younger members. The\nBand's general smartness and size\ndrew nkrch praise.\nThe. Kilties played for 15 minutes\nat Creston on their way by train to\nKlmberley. In tha East Kootenay\nCity they paraded in the morning\nahd during the day, Sometimes joining with the Klmberley Pipe Band.\nThere were lota ot refreshments,\nthe youngster receiving all the ice\ncream* they could eat.'\nNelsonites brought ijack 16 medals\nand-one .cup.\nTouring Toronto\nSchool Boys\nInvade Calgary     \u2022\nCALGARYj Aug. 15 (CP) - If\ntravelling Is on education, then 18\nToronto school boys, who arrived\nhere Saturday, ere going to be well-\neducated.\nThe boys are winners of 1949\ntravelling scholarships offered' in 18\nToronto secondary schools by the\nToronto Board' ot\u00bbEducation to give\n16 youths a two-week, all-expense\neducational holiday through western Canada.\nSince' leaving Toronto Aug. 2,\nthey have-visited Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Edmonton,- Jasper, Vancouver, Victoria, Field, Lake Louise and\nBanff. Leaving here'tonight they\nwill stop ln Regina and return home\nWednesday.'\nToday, they paid an official call\non Mayor J. C, Wctson to present\na letter from Mayor H. E. (Buck)\nMcCallum of Toronto.\nAt Leduc, an oil well was blown\nin for the special benefit of the\nboys. At Winnipeg, they toured the\ncity and saw the C.P.R. yards. At\nVancouver,, they packad a busy\nschedule of sight-seeing and motor\nlaunch trips into their two-day stay,\nThe students were chosen by boys\nat. their own schools on the basis\nof scholastic and leadership ability,\npersonality and appearance.\nTwo English Girl Cyclists Enjoy\nKootenay Trek; Off to Coast\n\u25a0 There are many ways to see the\nWild and woolly West, but the\nsimple and most economical way\nto two English girls Is by cycling.\nThe two girls, Elizabeth Stephenson, 25, from Kent, England\/and\nJoan Dllnat, 25, from London, .'England, began their cross country trek\nfrom Calgary on July 10, and arrived in Nelson Sunday night Up to\nMonday afternoon, they had travelled 580 miles on their bicycles.\nElizabeth and Joan left England\nfor Canada nearly .two years ago,\napd were employed in Toronto ior\nabout one year.        '\nThe girls left Toronto for Calgary\nby train to avoid the long hot trek\nacross the Prairies'.\n, On tbelr trip to. Nelson from Cal-.\ngory they visited Banff, Lake Louise\nand many- other scenic points. They\nspent from 10 to' 11 dsys on tha jour,\nney to Nelson.\nTlte two cyclists left; Nelson Monday afternoon for Trail and points\non the way.'They plan to go over\nthe Cascades and on to Vancouyer,\nthen to Victoria.'\n1 Returning again to Vancouver, the\ntourlsta'will sail aboard the Aorangi\nOct. 20 for New Zealand, where they\nwill spend 2V, months.\nMiss Stephenson also visited; hei?\nsister, Mrs. Kathleen Smith, in Ontario.\nCARRY 100 POUNDS\nThe girls take with them a large\npack sack, sleeping bag, and a smaller pack of miscellaneous articles.\nAltogether they carry about 100\npounds of food, sleeping equipment\nand Other articles,   .\nWhile cycling, the girls clad them-'\nselves in shorts or slacks, simple\nshirts and blouses and have only\none dress each with them in case\nthey find employment in a town\nalong the way, ln order to' stretch\ntheir finances.-In an interview Monday the girls said the clothing they\nwear, out the most is shoes.   <\nOn' some dsys they average about\n40 to 50. miles and ara on tht road\nfrom about 6 a.m. until the heat of\nthe day. They, then rest for about\ntwo hours and aro on their way\nagain until eight or nine ln the\nevening.   .    (\nThey do all their own cooking\nand enjoy sleeping out In the open.\nThe trip, the? said, will cost them\nabout $100.   '\n., Upon coming into British Columbia, the girls were overwhelmed at\nthe \"Western hospitality\" and said\nthat tha phrase \"really stands up\nto Its meaning.\" Many people along\nthe way gave them lodging for .the\nnight or for many nights. They also\nspoke highly of the Scenery.\nFollowing their stay ln New Zealand, the girls plan to go.back to\nEngland where they will live permanently; i.':\u25a0:[\u2022\"' i\nPays $4,500,000\nFor Washington Paper\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (AP)\nThe Chicago Tribune paid $4,500,000\nfor the Washington Times-Herald,\npapers tiled in United States District- - Court showed Moday.. The\npapers. were filed by. \u2022 the three\nexecutors of the estate of the.late\nMrs. Eleanor M., Patterson\" who\n\u25a0Willed the Times-Herald to Seven\nof Us executives. Mrs. Patterson\ndied last year.\nClaims New Record'\nFor Sailplane\nARNPRIOR, Ont, Aug. 15 (C^)\u2014\n.Barrle Jeffery of Vancouver, employed by the. National Research\nCouncil at its experimental air field\nhere, today claimed a new 90-mlle\ndistance record for motorless flight\ntn Canada.\nTowed aloft yesterday from Carp,\nOnt, air field, about 20 miles West\nof Ottawa, by a Tiger Moth.aircraft, Jeffery, Secretary of the\nSoaring Association of Canada, was\nreleased at 200Q feet.\nHe landed his Grunau baby sailplane near Coteau Landing, Que.\nfive hours and 20 minutes later. Coteau Landing is just 90 miles dUe\nEast from Carp,\nPrevious distance record of 79\nmiles from London, Ont, to Dunn-\nvllle, was set early-this year by'Al\nPow of London, Ont.\nSays Finnish Gov't'\nCrushing Reds\nHELSINKI, Finland, Aug. 15 (AP)\n\u2014A member of the governing Social\nDemocratic tarty has discio^eu the\nGovernment is set on inflicting a\n\"crushing defeat\" on Communists\n\"bent on paralyzing the nation.\"\nUnto Vurjonen said in a-speech\nSunday that the Government had\ntakan all necessary steps to safeguard the normal functioning ot the\ncommunity while strike movements\ncontinue..\n(Finland,* bound by her peace\ntreaty with Russia, has beeh steering a cautious course between the\nEast and West In elections in July,\n1948, the Communists lost one-\nfourth of their seats in Parliament\nto Social Democrats'and Conservatives, Subsequently that month the\nCabinet was reshuffled to include\nSocial Democrats, the; one Communist member being dropped,\nMoscow has 'been extremely critical\nof the Social, Democrat regime,)\nNamed Air Plans\nDivision Director\nOTTAWA, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014 Group\nCapt, K. L. B, Hodson, 39, ot London, Ont, has been appointed director in the Air Flans Division of Air\nFore* Headquarters, it was announced today.\nBLACKHEADS\nDot \u00abnwM llMkhtadt-dluolM than. Ott\nhr\u00bb nnM of jwroxlnt wwdir from but\nint iloro ud appl? gtatty *Hh wat hot\n\u2022loth enr Mienwui. Thtr dlnoWa and\ndisappear br Ull al* almjila method.\nFinal Tribute\nPaid A. Slater\nOf Edgewood\nNAKUSP, B.C.Aug. 15-FUneral\nservice for Alfred; Slater, whodied\nhere suddenly Aug. 8, was held at\nSt. Agnes' Church, Edgewood, Saturday, the Vicar, Rev. Thomas\nMitchell officiating, assisted by\nRev. M. A. Mark of the Western\nMission Board of the Presbyterian\nChurch, and 'J. Farris, Student\nmissionary at Deer Park, who gaye\nthe address1 by special request.\nHymns sung were \"Rock of Ages\"\n\"Sate in the Arms of Jesus,\"\n\"Abide With Me,\" and \"Saviour Thy\nDying LoVe,\"\nTha .Vicar gave a brief address\nby request ln which he spoke ot\nMr. Slater's connection with the\nchurch and\" the good Influence of\n\u25a0his life. .;.*:''. ,'\u201e\u2022:.;\nBesides his widow, Martha Suzanne, survivors are one son, William Duncan ot Spokane, two\ndaughters, Ruth May Chisholm and\nDorothy Cella Morrison, six grand-\nohiidren and one sister, Mrs. Rhoda\nHllborn'of Preston, Ont    \u2022\nPallbearers we're Wilfred Jowett,\nJaok McLeod, W. Schiller, L. J.\nDeGans, K. S. EdgeU and- John\nPender. The body Was taken to\nNew Denver for cremation after\nwhich tha- ashes were shipped to\nEdmonton, Alta., for burial''\nMarine Explorer\nDelayed in Attempt\nAt Deepest Dive\nSMUGGLER'S COVE, Calif., Aug.\n15 (AP)\u2014Marine.explorer Otis Barton, on the verge of, attempting\nman'S* deepest descent Into the\nocean depths, had a false start today.;\nThe 46-year-old scientist was\nbolted Inside his steel, diving bell,\nthe Benthoscope, and the apparatus\nwas lowered' from, a barge a tew\nfeet under the ocean surface.\nThere laSt-minuto tests ot.power,\ntelephone and. sound equipment\nwere made before he.gave the word\ntor his proposed descent to 6000\nfeet\u2014deeper than man has ever\ngone before.  -\nBut a short circuit inside, the\nBenthoscope in tha sound, equipment caused the.sphere tb be raised\nback onto tha barge, Barton climbed out.-to await repairs,\nTwo days of mechanical difficulties and rough water' have delayed\ntha dive, originally planned lor\nSaturday.\nCalgary Creosote\nWorkers on Strike\nCALGARY, Aug. 15 (CP) -More\nthan 100 members of the Creosote\nWorkers' Union (TLC) -went on\nstrike today and immediately began picketing the creosoting.plant\nof the Dominion Tar and Chemical\nCompany.   . .'\nThe strike was the4atest development ln a wage dispute which\nreached its climax when the union\nunanimously rejected an Arbitration\nBoard award which refused wage\nIncreases for the creosote workers,\nCompany officials said'the picketing had been peaceful and there\nhad been no incidents,; Nearly every\nmember of tha union had joined the\npicket by noon today but had not\nInterfered with the passage tit company clerical personnel or trucks.\nThe strike follows action of-the\nworkers last week in voting 28-10\nln favor of a strike'after rejecting\nan Arbitration Board award which\nhad recommended that no changes\nbe made ln the man's working conditions.\ni The union began negotiating for a\n15-cents-an-hour - wage boost last\nMarch and included requests tor\nnine paid statutory holidays instead\nof the present six.\nWages currently paid at tha plant\nvary from 80 cents an hour for beginners to $1.15 an hour.\nBLOUSE\nSPECIAL\nMany lovely styles\nTo Clear   $1.95\nFINK'S\n, READY-TO-WEAR-\nThe Weather\nCool- showery weather persisted\nIn all sections ot British Columbia\nwith the exception of the Southern\nInterior where it has been sunny\nand comparatively warm. The temperature ..reached 85 at Penticton\nand 82 at Kimberley in sharp contrast to the value of 52 reported at\nPrince George. It will be cooler in\nthe Southern Interior Tuesday with\nsome increase in cloud but elsewhere little chango is expected from -\nthe conditions that, occurred Monday.\nNelson  .. \u201e...\u201e\u2122  35   79   \u2014\nSt. Johns ..\u201e,...:.  :  48  811.89\nMontreal ...... ;,\u201e__  Bl   78   \u2014.\nRegina  \u2014 ,59   89  .12\nMedicine Hat    48   81   ~\nEdmonton    '_.    43   78   \u2014\nPrince Rupert -_\u2122_~.  48 58 ,\u2014\nSeattle \u201e...;..\u201e.....-.  52 78   -\nHalifax :... _. .  52  67   -\nWinnipeg i\u2122.   68  77   '-\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\n' CALGARY, Aug. 15 **(CP)\u2014The\nlivestock market opened with a\ndraggy tone at Calgary today. Early\nsales were few, but prices were gen.\nerally steady. Very few good kinds\nware on offer. '\nCanners,. cutters and fair cotos\nwere fully steady.\" Stackers and\nfeeders, were In good' defnand at\nsteady to strong prices. Some pressure was evident on other classes,\nEarly receipts today: Cattle 150.\nWeekend' receipts: Cattle 478,\ncalves. 127, hogs eight;\nHogs closed last week at $35.40\nfor A's at-yards and plants. Sows\nbrought 18.25 live weight\nGood' butcher steers 20.25r21.25;\ncommon to medium 16.00-20.00.\nGood to choice butcher heifers 18.00-\n19.00; common to medium 15.50-\n17.00.\nGood cows 12.50-13.00; common to\nmedium 11.50-12.00; canner and cutters 9.00-11.00.\nGood to choice veal calves 18.00-1\n19.50; common to medium 14.00-\n17.00. ,\nPenticton    \u201e ,.\n43   85\n_\nVancouver _._;\n85   70\n.02\nVictoria ..: ...\u201e_..._\n52   68\n.04\nKlmberley' ...\u00ab\u00ab.\u00bb.\n36   82\n\u2014\nCrescent Valley ...\u201e-.\n34   82\n-r\n42\" 77\n\u2014\nGrand Forks . -._\n38   87\n\u2014\nSpokane  -..\u201e,,,.,\u201e,\n52   83\n\u2014;\nLos Angeles _.\t\n89   78\n\u2014\n67   80\n-\u25a0\nExceeding 50-Mile\nSpeed Limit\nBrings $25 Fine\nWilliam Saprikln of Crescent Valley Was fined $25 ln Nelson Provincial Police Court Monday when\nhe pleaded guilty before Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine to a\ncharge of exceeding the 60-mile\nper-hour speed limit near South\nSlocan Saturday. Mr. Saprikln was\nalso issued a blue driver's licence.'%\nFined $10 Each\nFor Overloads\nSALMO, B.C., Aug. 18 - Two-\nmen paid fines of $10 and costs\neach' when they pleaded guilty before Stipendiary Magistrate Henry\nJohn in Provincial Police Court to\ncharges of overloading their freight\ntrucks, used to haul ore to Trail.\nConvicted were L. E. Porter of\nBeaver Falls and M. F. Flctln of\nSalmo.       ;.',\nPenalized for   \"\nSpeeding\nSALMO, B.C., Aug. 15 - John\nLahsise of Nelson was fined $10\nand\/ costs for speeding on the\nNelson-Nelway Highway, when he\nappeared before Stipendiary Magistrate Henry John in Provincial\nPolice Court He pleaded guilty to\nexceeding the 60-miles-per-hour\nspeed limit Aug. 6.\nYour choice of two great trains;\nthe Empire Builder or the\nOriental Limited, offers restful\novernight travel from Spokane to\nSeattle, with convenient \"connections at Seattle or Everett with\nthe Puget Sounder for Vancouver.\nRailroad tickets are honored on\nconnecting bus leaving Nelson -\n11:35 A.M. daily fbr Spokane. Tha\nEmpire Builder leaves Spokane\nat 11:59 P.M., the Oriental Limited at 9:35 P.M. The Morning\nPuget Sounder leaves Seattle at\n8:16 A.M., leaves Everett at 9:17\nA.M., arrives Vancouver at 12:45\nP.M.\nFor information or reservation,\nW.O.HAROLD,\nCity Frtight and PoKsnsar Agent\n667 Ward Street, Phone 67\nNelson, B. O.\nGREAT NORTHERN\nS1000 IN PRIZES\nFor form, garden and field products,\nflowers, cooking, canning, sewing,\nhandicrafts, poultry, pets,' etc.\nat the\nWEST KOOTENAY EXHIBITION\nNELSON, B.C.\u2014 SEPT. 15-16-17\nENTRIE8 CL9SE 8EPT. 10th\nPrize Lis! and Entrv Forms From   .\nExhibition Secretary \u2014 302 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\n toi5\nOUR 1c SHOE\nSALE\nCONTINUES\nTil Tuesday Night\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nSet World Rates\nFor Press Cables\n\" NEW YORK, Aug. 15 (CP) - The\nrecent International Telephone and\nTelegraph Conference' at Paris -decided wat the rates charged on\npress cables and radiograms through\nthe world should be one-third the\nrates for Ordinary private messages.\nThis was disclosed today by Fred\nE. Melnholtz, Director of Communl-\nCatloria for -the New York Times\nand an adviser to the United States\ndelegation. \u25a0 :\nThe one-third ratio Is higher, than\nmost current ratios, which vary\ngreatly. But Meinholtz said it Is impossible to estimate what effect it\nwill have on costs to the press..\nAny country is free to make bilateral agreements,\" he said in an\nInterview. (Tor instance, if the British Commonwealth wants to keep\nthe Empire press rate of a penyn\n(two cents) a word, it apparenly is\nto* to do so.\n\"Decisions of last week's Commonwealth-United States communications in London can supersede the\nterms of. the Paris agreement, because the London agreement is bilateral.\" ii\"\"':'.':.\n(Full details Pf the London meeting have not been made public, but\nlt if known that delegates raised the\ncelling, on Commonwealth-United\nStates commercial messages frpm 30\nto 40 cents a word and the ceiling\npress rate from 6ft to 10 cents a\nwbrd.)\nThe Paris regulations go Into effect July 1,1950, Melnholtz: said. The\ndecision on press rates is the first\ntime a definite ratio of press rates to\nprivate - message rates has been\nadopted in the international field.\nLIST SUGGESTIONS\nEditor and Publisher, newspaper\nand advertising weekly, quoted\nMelnholtz as listing these other rate\nrecommendations:\n1. Combined words should be\nCharged separately. This means the\nabolition of the use of \"cablese\" in\npress messages. .<\n2. There should be a 10-word minimum tor both ordinary press and\nurgent press cables and radiograms.\nThere now Is no minimum. .-,\n>. The urgent press rate, now\nequal to the ordinary private-message rate; should be reduced to two-\nthirds the ordinary rate\u2014or. double\nthe ordinary press rate at the new\njatio.    -\n4. The ordinary private-message\nrata should ba reduced by one-\nquarter. (However, some of the 60\ncountries at the Paris meeting indicated their Intention of Increasing existing rates before the cut\ngees Into effect next July.)\n5. The reduced rate for code telegrams and half-rate, deferred telegrams should be abolished.\nt, The minimum wordage for night\nletters should be.reduced from 25\nto 32 words; but night letters of\n\"mot* than-22 words will'incur a\nrate increase ot 12ft per cent.\n7. A minimum. charge of five\nwords should be adopted for ordinary and urgent private messages,\nInstead'of the present minimum nf\nthree words.\n\"The: atmosphere (at Paris) was\njpot conducive to anything that\nwould make communications cheaper,\" said Melnholtz. He said that the\nUnited States tried unsuccessfully to\nget adoption of a regulation to include newspaper service (.telegrams,\npress orders and press queries in\nthe press-rate classification. Under\nthe Paris regulations, these would be\ncharged at the same rate as private\nmessages. .\nDollar Shortage\nHinders Plans lo\nLower Tariffs\nOTTAWA, Aug. 15 (CP) - The\nInternational dollar shortage- has\ntemporarily blocked the world's latest attempt to expand1 world trade\nthrough tariff reductions, en Informed source said today. '\nThe source said the four-month\ntariff' talks at Annecy,; Frarice,\nshowed that most of < the - world\nwanted to expand multilateral trade\nbut that the shortage of dollars was\nhindering efforts.'    ,\nHowever, the Annecy. Conference\nhad one beneficial effect, the source\nadded. It paved the road pver which\nexpanded trade could travel once\nthe dollar hurdles Were leaped.\nThe conference specifically undertook-the task of getting an additional 11 countries to join the 1947\nGeneva International Tariff Agreement towards the elimination of\ndiscriminatory tariffs. Canada is one\nof the 23 nations that have already\nsighed the agreement.\n' All of the 11 countries are expected to Join, the source said. These\nare Italy, Sweden, Finland, Greece,\nColombia, Nicaragua, Dominican\nRepublic, Haiti, Denmark, Uruguay\nand Liberia,\nSeek Increased\nConsumption\nFor Fish Market\nBy The Canadian; Press\nThe fishing industry is a vital\npart of the economies of six of.Can-\nada's 10 provinces\u2014British Columbia, Quebec and the four Maritime\nProvinces.\nFishing Is the chief industry in\nNewfoundland and it ranks high in\nthe other five provinces, British\nColumbia does the biggest business\nln fish, with Nova Scotia second and\nNewfoundland third. All told; saltwater fisheries bring ln around\n$100,000,000 a year.'\nHova Scotia provides as good'as\nexample as any of the current picture ln the fishing Industry:\nSome 20,000 Nova Scotians depend\non the fishing Industry for their\nlivelihood. If the demand for sea\nproducts remains high, they enjoy\ncomparative prosperity; if the markets drop their standard of living\nis carried down in the slump,\nThe Dominion Atlantic Fisheries\nExperimental Station at Halifax\nhas completed a survey into actual,\nand potential markets for, Nova\nScotia fish products. The potential\nmarket, running as far West as\nChicago, embraces, about 60,000,000\npeople.\nPeople in-this area consume an\naverage of seven pounds of fish per\nperson;per yeais-in Halifax the average consumption is 35 pounds per\nperson per year.\nEach year, Nova Scotia fishermen\nland between 75,000,000 and 100,-\n000,000 pounds of fresh fish.\nIf the average consumption of\nthe potential market area could\nbe raised,by only one pound of\nfillets a year, It would mean an\nIncreased market for approxl\nmately 182,000,000 pounds of\nround fish every year, or more\nthan the current annual yield In\nthe province, it takes about three\npounds Of fish as they, are caught\nto producp one pound of table\nfish.\nFisheries experts say that ono of\nthe chief reasons for low fish consumption lies* in quality.\nThe Nova Scotia.housewife, with\nthe sea practically at her back door\nis used to high,quality fish products. But Inland, at Montreal, Toronto or Windsor, putting fresh fish\nWOULD KEEP CLOSER\nCHECK ON IMMIGRATION\nOTTAWA Aug. 15 (CP)-E. S.\nEvans of Toronto, Ontario. Command President ot the Canadian Legion, said* today the Government\nshould a closer check on Ideologies\nef displaced persons in Canada.\nAddressing the 16th biennial convention of the Ontario Command,\nMr. Evsins Bald there have been Instances of D.P.'s not living up to the\nimmigration agreement after entering Canada.\nNelsdn Wholesale District\n,   This view of a little-photographed section of Nelson was submitted to the Dally News Picture Contest by Mr. Baragan'of Box 245, Nelson. W   '\u2022\nChurchill Visibly Affected by\nWarmth of Strasbourg Honor\nSTRASBOURG, France, Aug. 15\n(P.eu'tera) \u2014 Winston Churchill\nbrushed tears from his eyes today\nwhen he replied to the Mayor of.\nStrasbourg after receiving the Honorary Citizenship of this picturesque\nage-old city -of many wars. '      ',- \u25a0\nHis voice trembled with emotion\nas he recalled his long association\nwith France and emphasized that\nAnglo-French cooperation would\nopen up a great prospect for the\nwhole of Europe.    .      *\nChurchill, here as one of thp main\narchitects of the new Council of\nEurope, spoke in the beautiful 18th-\ncentury City'Hall where the Mayor\nand the Councillors had met to\nhonor Britain's wartime Prime Minister for, the part he played in freeing Strasbourg from the Nazis.\nHe was visibly affected: by the\nwarmth of the welcome he received\nthroughout the ceremony.\nAfter receiving the scroll, Churchill spoke in French from a City\nHaU balcony to thousands of cheering people.\n\"You have.paid me an Incomparable compliment that I shall-value\nfor the rest of my life,\" he said. \"Let\nus march together. Vive La France.\"\nEarlier, to city offcials at the ceremony, he said: ,:\n\"If we1 stand together and work\nand think together lh the future as\nwe have in the past, a great, prospect will open not only for Britain\nand.France but to all Europe.\n\"Here In Strasbourg, on the frontier, is the seed and centre from1\nwhich will be developed that, European society which will embody the\nwisdom, culture and civilization of\nthe great nations of Europe, and-the\ngreat nations of the West.\n\"For oyer 40 years  I  have\nmarched  shoulder   to   shoulder\n- with the:French people and the\nFrench armyi Many of thoep years\nHave been war years. Nothing has\never occurred at any time that\nDeparted    my   sympathies    and\naccord from  thp   French  people\nand tho French nation,\"\nAfter Inspecting a Guard, of Honor\ncBurchill   delighted   the   waiting\ncrowd outside., by turning towards\nthem-and giving the\"V\" sigh.\n\"ROYAL CITY\" TITLE CAUSES RIFT\nBETWEEN GUELPH, NEW WESTMINSTER\nGUELPH,- Ont., Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014\nTwo more Canadian cities are a-\nfeudlng, and again Her Late Majesty Queen \"Victoria has been\ndragged into the act, but by only\none of the municipalities.\nThe argument' this time is over\nthe right to the title \"tap Royal\nCity\" arid' neither \"Guelph nor New\nEyiclioitlor\nOttawa's Pioneer\nVel-Squatlers\nBy DOUGLAS HOW\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Aug, 15 (CP) \u2014 After\nthree years, the Government has\ngiven eviction notices to the\npioneers ih Canada's most prolonged\nuprising of homeless veterans.\nThe Justice Department, through\na lawyer, has told the 34 families\nliving in twp great eld homes on\nSandy Hill they must get out by\nthe end of the month. The Defence\nDepartment needs the space,1 they\nsay.\nThe-  families,   many   of   them\npeople who were in on the original\n,   . ,      , ,.,     ,    seizure in September 1046 or who\non the market has been difficult, moved ln ,hortiy afteiy said today\nWe Specialize in\nWedding Bouquets\nand\nArrangements\ntmS     Jjorn,\n\/MACS\nJy  T&ytiiJ^i\\GnuKkau ''i\nVHQN\u00a3:9IO~NtLSON.B.C.\nmostly due to transportation problems.   .\nPLAN WASHERS\nExperiments: show that nearly all\nbacteria which spoil fish are Imbedded In the fish slime. If that\nslime can be removed, toe bacteria\ncount is^cut sharply.\nA washing machine has been designed to do this job and it Is expected to be in commercial use soon.\nImproved refrigeration cars are being designed so that fish products\n.may be moved long distances without spoilage.\nWith this new equipment, Nova\nScotia\u2014and tha ether fishing provinces\u2014hopes to make a serious bid\nfor \"the big inland market\nRetired Province\nColumnist Pies\nVICTORIA,. Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014Percy\nC. Bawling, 72, well known retired\ncolumnist of the Vancnuver Daily\nProvince, died here today-\nMr. Rawling, native of England,\nhad been in British Columbia fpr\nmore than .85 years. He worked for\nseveral years on the Victoria Colonist before going, to Vancnuver\nabout 25 years ago.\nRetiring three years ago, he came\nto Vancouver Island. :':'\u25a0\u25a0;.S\n!^&*&*s\nyiCKEHS\n\u2022>^GW\n* vickers' is iimiimi ii cimti it Calvert iihiueh'mmmi hi.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\nby the Government of British Columbia.\nTO RESIST WAGE\nINCREASE IF\ncosts affected;\nOAKLAND, Calif..' AUg. 15 (AP)\n\u2014An employer spokesman warned\nthe International Typographical\nUnion today that any demands that\nwill increase costs will be resisted\nfirmly. - \/\nSpeaking at the'opening session\nof the -. IJT.Tr, annual convention,\nThomas P. Henry, Jr., of Detroit,\nsaid: \u25a0'}.\n\"You are going, to meet resistance\nthla year to any demand that will\nincrease costs. -:   \u25a0\u25a0'.:\n: \"And there Is going to be a gopd\neconomic report for the firm stand\nthat employers will take. We suggest that you* analyze this situation\nyourselves -arid^tnat you:-temper\nybur demands nut uf an-apprecla-\nUnn of the'situation1 which our\nindustry faces.\" '-    - ,i \u2022; \u25a0   . (\nReds Attack\nApprove Truman\nTerms for\nEurope Arms Aid\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (AP)-\nThe House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee today approved the full amount asked by\nPresident Truman for Western Europe arms aid. The Committee, however, split it up between cash and\ncontract authority.\nTbe Committee also refused to include any authorization for an\narms-aid program for non-Communist China.\nThe President had requested $1,-\n160,990,000 to help Atlantic Pact\ncountries arm against .aggression.\nHe wanted lt all in cash.\nThe Committee decided to give it\nthis way:   :\nCash: $498,130,000 to, be used up\nto next March 31, and $157,710,009\nto be used between March 31 and\nJune 30.\nContract, authorization: $428,100,-\n000 up to March 31 and $77,050,000\nfrom March 31 to June 30.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG\/16, 1949 \u2014 3\nNew B.C. Labor\nthey're going to fight back. One\ntenant-spokesman said they'll appeal right to Prime Minister St.\nLaurent\nHe said they have never paid\nrent\u2014the Government apparently\nfigured that would be tantamount\nto recognition\u2014but have heated the\nhemes and kept the hot water pipes\nand water heating units in repair.\nA Government official said the\nhouses are needed for the Provost\nCorps that now is scattered throughout the city and for administrative\noffices. He said the Department of\nNational -Defence which took them\nover during the war. for C.WA.C,\nbarracks has never recognized the\nsquatters as legal tenants. That, he\nsaid, did away with the need for a\nsix-month eviction notice.\nThe', notice Was served Aug. 8\nThe deadline is Sept. 1.\nThey call the houses Kildare Barracks and annex. The former la at\nthe corner of Laurler and.Chapel\nStreets, not far from the Laurler\nHouse that is the home of former\nprime minister Mackenzie King. The\nother Is pn Chapel-Street\nIn the eld days, when Sandy Hill\nwas the No. 1 residential district of\nthe capital, they were well-known\nhomes of well-knoyn families.\nFirst Tangible Lead\nIn Slaying of Coast\nDivorcee Reported\nSAN DIEGO, Calif., Aug. 15 \"(AP)\n\u2014The \"first tangible lead\" - in the\ntwo-year-old slaying of a Vancouver, B. C\u201e divorcee here was report-\ned. today.\nDistrict Attorney Don Keller added the lead points to a definite\nsuspect. The garrotted body of Mrs.\nMarian Davidson Newton, 36, was\nfound ln brush above an ocean cliff\nJuly 1*7, 1049. Keller said if would\nbe some days before he could make\nany fuller announcement\nThe Alps hospice founded by St\nBernard, and famous for its lifesav-\ning dogs, has been lh existence since\nabout 1081. \u25a0 I   .\nWestminster, B.C., will give Up the\ncoveted cognomen.\nThe'question 'came,;abbuj\"-when\nthe New Westminster Juhier Chairi-\nber of Commerce decided \"Guelph\nhad no right to the title: arid asked\nits Civic Affairs Cemriiittee tp write\nthe Ontario city tc that effect\nGuelph'a claim is based on:-the\nfact that, when the community was\nfounded in l827i*pyaIoliri,'Galtstho\nname of the reigning Royal.'Family\nwas Guelph. John Gait thought that\nwas a fine name for thp municipality. He  noted  It  hr.d   apparently\nnever been used in the Empire before. So Guelph was born and with\nit the claim to the title.    , :.,\u25a0-\nMayor Louis Sangster of   New\nWestminster felt his city had prior\nclaim.     ; '\u25a0\u25a0 --'\u25a0\u25a0-.-\n\"Wp received, our name  from\nQueen Victoria   herself  and' wo\nwere Incorporated as a city In 1860\n\u201417 years before Guelph.    ...\nMayor Gordon Rife'- Of Guelph\nsaid he hadn't received any word on\nthe subject from the West coast as\nyet but he intimated he wouldn't\nback down.'Other citizens, proud of\ntheir city's title, are prepared to line\nup behind the mayor to defend'the\nRoyal City's right to' be called that\n\"The two cities previously fpuding\nare London arid Peterborough, Ont,\nscrapping over the right to' a'statue\nof. Queen Victoria. Both are scornful\nOf an unidentified city which is trying to get into the scrap.\nCANTON, Aug. 15 (AP)-Chinese\nCoimmunist forces have. bypassed\nbesieged Kanhsien and attacked\nNankang. 195 miles Northeast of\nCanton, the Nationalist, refugee capital, i.        '\u25a0\u25a0'' '\"':   \u25a0\u25a0.:- \"\u25a0 '\u25a0\nThe Nationalist military, admitted\nthis.serious development today* ln\nthe Kiangsi Province fighting but\nsaid KahhMenV itself '.still' was in\nGovernment hands\nIn coaatal ridden, Province,\nNortheast of Kwangtung arid'East\nbf .Kiangsi,' Other Red forces \"are\nhamnSering: closer to.Foochow, the\njp'roiflnclal\" dhpltaly '**\nAh' amy spokesman disclosed\nmeanwhile that 50,000 to 60,000 Nationalist troops hadv'beeri removed\nfrom the Hepgyang front for tear\nthey would desert to the Reds.\n' CANTON, China, Aug.,15 <AP\")-\nA Nationalist Army spokesman told\na Press conference today that Mao\nTze-tung, top'.Chinese' Communist\nleader, had died in Pelplng July 17\nof tuberculosis.      ...'\u2022     -  .'\nOfficial Resigns\nFrom Red Parly\nCHICAGO, Aug. 15 (AP) -Maur;\nIce Travis, Secretary-Treasurer of\nthe Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers\nUnion (C.I.O.) today announced his\nresignation from the Communist\nParty \"with a great sense of indignation.\"\n- Travis, a storm-centre in a stormy\nunion, said that as a result of his\nresignation he has, signed a non-\nCommunist affidavit and that the\nunion now is \u25a0 in full compliance\nwith the Federal Labor Law.\n\u25a0 The reslgatlori troth\" the pommuri\nity party membership \"was not an\neasy step for me to take,\" Travis\nsaid. \"I believe under our Bill pf\nBights .,. that an American has\naa much right to ba a Cbmmunlst\nas he has to be a Republican er a\nJ Democrat a'Jew or a Catholic, or\nan Elk or a Mason .. .,-\"\nTravis' union was ordered by the\nC.I.O. to merge itself with the United Steel Workers (C.I.O.) and\nTravis, who will retain his post,-has\nbeen in tho forefront of the fight\nagainst merger.\nCanadian Veterans\nOf Dieppe in London\n- LONDON,'- Aug. -15 - (CP) \u2014 A\nNorth Star aircraft bearing 32 Canadian veterans of'the Dieppe commando rald'arrlved here today; ,-\u25a0\nThp men are returning tn the\nscene of the historic raid which\npreceded the Allied invasion, of\nEurope during the Second World\nWar. ,  , ,',,  ,. .,';.\u25a0, >-.:'\u25a0:  ..:'.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nFancy Paints\nJohn F. Lubben III, I years, 3 months,- whose picture was submitted to the;Dally News Plctura Contest by Mrs.: <?. H. MDoo\" '\nParrlsh of R.R. 1, Nelson, B. C. \u2022' \u25a0    '   '.    .\nPHONE 144 for CLASSIFIED ADS\nEngland\nfurniture manufacturer, fells Senate Investigating Committee how\nhe sought. Government contracts.\n'He said he had help of.James V.\nHunt, self-styled business counsellor. Grlndls! told the Committee Hunt'professed Influence\nat the White House.. He was the\nsecond witness In full dress probe\nof so-called \"five-percenters.\"\n-   -r(AP Wirephoto.)\nWiU Not Export\nAlberta Gas Until\nReserve Adequate     >\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nPremier- E, C Manning:of Alberta\nsaid' today his province is doing\neverything possible to facilitate the\nexport of crude oil; but hTrelterat-\ned that no natural gas will leave\nthe province until Atbertaria-have\nan adequate reserve. .'-.\"\nIn a telephone - interview from\nQuallcum - Beach - on Vancouver Island, Mr. Manning said surveys ate\nalmost complete for a crude . oil\npipeline from Edmonton to Heglna,\narid,on to the head of the Great\nLake;. '        -\u25a0:\n\"Wejve got a surplus of oil now,\"\nhe said. \"Our problem is to get rid\nof it\" '-,- \"...  \u25a0\u2022;.-'.'\nBut with natural gas, he said,\n'our first responsibility is to the\npeople of Alberta. We won't export\nuntil our own requirements are\n\u25a0met\"   ..\nVICTORIAv Aug, 15 (CP)-Capt\nJohn Cates, British Columbia's nev\nLabor Minister, took over temper-\njary offices;iri-toe Speaker's Chambers: at.the Legislative Buildirigi\ntoday and: began > work immediatelj\ndelivlng Into the many branches pi\nhis department to familiarize himself with his new position.;\nHe arrived here on the morniti;\nboat from Vancouver and has rid:\ndecided yet if he will bring hij\nfamily to lfve-.ln .Victoria from., tfi\nNorth Vancbiiver. home. -,...    '\u25a0\u2022   '.\n\"I- would like to say,\" the nr -.\nMinister stated. In a. brief Inter;\nview, \"that I hope to bring abpH\nbetter understanding betw*pf\nlabor arid management .\n; \"Better relations in B.C. industrj\nwould be to the advantage :of.: thi\npe0ple\u00abof the province generally. -\n\"I proriilse cooperation to al\nparties. I;ani here to help tri'eWrj\nway-possible to bring about bettei\nrelations in B.C. industry.\" , '\n- One of Labor Minister Cafes' \"firs\njobs will be to deal with labdr'i\ndemands for revamping of Itlij\nWorkmen's Condensation Act*\nThe average depth of the ocean\nbelow sea level is 12,450 feet\nSENTENCED ON CHARGES\nOF BREAKING, ENTERING 4\n: VANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP)\"r4\nHerbert Wyatt, 28, and Clareric]\nReblnson,. 28, were each senteiicej\nin police court today to two yearl\nin penitentiary ori charges of break}\ning and entering. They pleadei\nguilty to stealing a safe containing\n$1700 frpm a soft drink plant here\n\"Suffered Much\nWith Constipation\"\n\"I tried many remedies but could not\nend this old trouble.\nOne day I waa told\nto try KELLOGG'S\nALL-BRAN.Ibagan\nto eat this cereal\nregularly. It works\nwonderal\" M. Mason, 6727 9tn'\nAvenue, Rosemoiint. Montreal.\nJust one of many unsolicited letters.\nYon too may find lasting relief;\nirom constipation due to lack of\nbulk in the diet! Eat a daily ounce'\nof criap, tasty ALL-BRAN, drink;\nplenty of water! If \"not comi|\npletely satisfied after 10 days,\nlend empty carton to Kellog: '\nLondon, Ont. GET DOUB\nyOUR MONEY BACK.\n\u25a0P\nEvery day\n\\;8\nsatisfiedcustomers      i\n7 Amazing results with my\nDaily News ^\nAfter housecleaning sell\nelephants\" through FOR\nMISCELLANEOUS Columns\u2014\n\"white\nSALE\nteach MOKE BUYERS\nThrough the\n \t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESbAY, AUG. U, 1949\npFasty\n680\nXewbtvV v Uv&cut.\nPRAYER FOR A CHILD\nNew setting for the old beloved\nirayer of childhoodl Children love\no look at it you'll love to em-\nnolder this happy little picturel\nFor a New Arrival,' this favorite\nirayer!. Perfect nursery gift. Pat-\nern 680: transfer 14%xl8 inches.\nLaura Wheeler's improved patent makes needlework so simple\nvith Its charts, photos and concise\nlirections.\nSend .TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\nolns (stamps cannot be accepted)\npi this pattern to Nelson Dally\nlews, Needlecraft Dept, 266 Baker\nIt, Nelson,-1B.C. Print plainly PAT.\n''ERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\ni9389\n\u25a0'.SIZES\n12\u201420,\n9029\nWAIST\n24\"\u201432\"\nWIoauul WlcuduL\n''  .     YOU NEED BOTH     .\nTI^O separate \u25a0 patterns to give\n'ou a smart start on Fall! yoked\n>louse;new slim skirt with hipflaps;\nIbth sew-easy. Each pattern is- 25c.\nlend nowj\nPattei-h 9389 in size 12, 14, 16, 18,\nOi 30, 82, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16\nIkes 2 yards 39-inch.\n-Pattern 9029 comes in waist sizes\n4, 26, 28, 30, 32. Size 26 takes IH\n\u2022ards 64-lnch fabric.\n\u25a0Send TWENTY - FIVE CENTS\n280 In coins (stamps cannot be\nccepted) for this pattern. Print\nlainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRE8S,\nTTYLE HUMBER,\nSend your order to MARIAN\nIARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nfews, Pattern Dept, 266 Baker St.\n[Bison, B.C.        ,\nByJDA.BAILEY ALLEN\n<\u25a0    . TOMORROW'8 DINNER\nQuartered Lettuce\nCreamy French Dressing '.'\u25a0'\n*... FlakedFlsh.Loaf    \" ,    \u2022\nCaper or Fickle Sauce\nWhipped Potato Swlsschard\nBlueberry-Bread and\n.   Butter Pudding\nHot or Iced Coffee or Tea\nMilk (Children)\nCREAMY FRENCH DRESSING\nPecl-1 small section garlic and cut\nfine. Place lh a cup; add 1 tsp. salt,\nand crush and mash together with\nthe back of a spoon. When the garlic\nis completely blended with the salt\nstir In 1\/3 c, salad oil, 2% tbsp. vinegar and 2 tbsp, heavy sweet or sour\ncream. Mix well. Then add % tsp.\npepper or 3 drops tabasco. Let stand\n2 or 3 hrs. Stir again before using.\nDelicious with any green salad or\nwith sliced tomatoes or cucumbers.\nFLAKED FI8H LOAF\nIn a deep kettle place IH lbs. halibut, cod or haddock, or any light\nfleshed fish. Add 1 small bayleaf\nand IH' tsp.' salt. Cover with boiling\nwater; Put oh the lid and simmer\nuntil the fish is tender, .about 25\nmin. Remove from the liquid and\ncool. Then remove the skin and\nbones, and flake the fish into bits\nwith a fork. Meantime combine IH\nc. soft white bread, crumbs with\n1 1\/3 c. milk, and pook together to\nform a paste. Add to the fish. Separate 2 eggs; beat the whites stiff and\nthe ydlks ' until creamy. Add the\nyolks to the (fish. Stir in the grhted\nrind and juice. H lemon, 1% tsp,\nsalt, Vt tsp. pepper, H tbsp. melted\nbhtter or margarine, and fold in the\nbeaten egg whites. Oil a loaf pan\nwith butter or margarine and line\nthe bottom with; a small sheet, of\nwaxed paper. Pack in the fish mixture. Stantt in an pan and surround\nwith boiling water. Bake 45-50 min.\nin a moderate oven, 350 F. Cover the\nloaf the first 15 min. with'a piece of\nwaxed paper so it will not become\ntoo dry on top. Serve hot with caper\nor pickle sauce, or cold with sauce\nBLUEBERRY BREAD AND\nBUTTER PUDDING\nButter or margarine 4 slices white\nbread* and cut in 1-lnch squares.\nBeat 3 eggs foamy;, add H c. sugar,\nVt tsp.. salt and; Vt tsp. nutmeg, and\nbeat until mixed. Then stir in 2H c.\nmilk. Arrange for baking Ih a qt-\nslzed casserole or baking dish as follows;\u2014Put 1\/3 of the bread in the\nbottom; envoi with a layer nf % c.\nfresh or ' frozen blueberries,*1*' Then\nrepeat using the bread and H c.\nblueberries. Pour in the milk sind\negg mixture. Top with the remaining squares of bread and bake in a\nmoderate oven, 350 F. until puffy,\nfirm and brown, about 40 min. Serve\nwhile still warm with or without\ncream.\nTRICK OF THE CHEF\nTo give a nice glaze and rich color\ntoi the stuffed pork tenderloin,-brush\nthe top .lightly \"with-liquid'gravy\nseasoning when half roasted. '\nVera Lynn Payne expresses wordless disapproval on her first visit to the barber. This character study was submitted to the Dally News\n-    Picture Contest by her father, J. R. Payne of Castlegar. \u2022\nBeauty Hints\nBy IDA IEAN KATO\nBaths, Massage, Rollers, Vibrators\nHelp But Not Unless You Eat Less\nFears for Future\nOf Prairie Lily\nREGINA (CP)\u2014A one-woman\ncampaign to save Saskatchewan's\nfloral emblem has been launched by\nMrs. Dorothy Morrison- of Regina.\nHer attractive booklet \"The Prairie\nLily,\" written for Saskatchewan\nschool children, Is Just oft the press.\n\"The prairie lily used to grow in\nprofusion,\" Mrs, Morrison writes in\nher preface. \"Now the lily population has decreased* so much that\nflower lovers are alarmed.\"      '\nThe booklet contains a collection\nof stories, poems, essays and photographs concerned with the lily, all\nslanted toward preserving this fast-\ndisappearing flower.\n' Saskatchewan chose the lily as Its\nfloral emblem in 1941, Mrs. Morrison recalls,1 when the Legislature\npassed an act making the \"flower\nknown botanically as 'Iilii^ri phila-\ndelphicum andlnum'\u2014and popularly called 'the prairie lily'\u2014the emblem of the province.\"\nDespite dry years\u2014drought is the\nnatural enemy of the lily\u2014the flower has made a comeback ot sorts\nwithin recent years only to be faced\nby another mortal enemy\u2014man.\nThe flaunting beauty of the Illy\nimpels the thoughtless flower-picker to raid lily stands. It is vTith, the\nidea of educating children, and\nthrough them the grown-ups, to the\nneed tor conserving the lily that\nMrs. Morrison has written her booklet.\nBruges, at one time chief among\nEuropean seaports, list its place\nwhen the channel of the Belgian\nriver connecting with the North Sea\nbecame; silted up. Antwerp is now\nBelgium's chief port.      \u25a0\nWhen- milady finally decides that\nshe must do SOMETHING about\nher* weight; her thoughts turn to\ndiet, but only momentarily. Then\nshe reasons that wlih all the modern\nmiracles, surely there must be some\nway out besides diet So she looks\ninto the reducing methods so dear\n\u25a0to the feminine heart\u2014 cabinet\nbaths, massage, vibrators, rollers\nand machines that stimulate the\ncirculation, the well-known fountain of youth,\nAll of these deluxe methods are\n\u25a0flne\/yani}'* streamlining \u2014 provided\nthe daily calories .are trimmed just\nunder your' personal requirements.\nReducing- begins and ends with\nWhat.you eat But there-are a couple of advantages in paying to reduce. Having taken this step to\nstreamline, you Immediately feel\npounds lighter. Then having paid\nout good cash, you're determined to\nget 'your money's worth ... . and\nthat's what it takes to reduce,\" determination. It may 'cheer those on\na budget, to know that with the\nsame determination they too can\nlook like their old sylph again.\nHowever, if the pleasure In seeing the scales down after a steam\nbath encourages you to eat lightly,\nfine\u2014you'll lose. But if a two-pound\nloss in water from the tissues, lulls\nyou Into overeating at dinner,-,*, j\nyou're right back where you started.'\n' What about the mechanical devices\u2014rollers, squeezers and machines that stimulate circulation?\nThey are all to the good; and with\ncalories cut1 below requirements\nyou'll lose weight and, happily, in\nthe right places. When the calories\nused for energy are balanced by\nthose eaten, weight stays steady.\nEat more, and the excess is scored\nas body fat That's a law of nature\nand it can't be \"fixed.\"-\nAs for body massage, It's .wonderful too. Massage Is soothing, gently prods the circulation into action,\nremoves kinks and Induces a feeling of well-being generally. But\nunabetted'by diet, massage is no.\nreducer either.\nIt all bolls down to food intake\nversus energy output Clip the calories Whare they will be least missed, keep circulation up and doing\nwith musclar exercise or mechanical stimulation, and soon friends\nwill be asking tor your reducing\nsystem.\nJLov\u00a9 Problems\n',...* By JANE ATKINSON\nSecret of Happy Marriages May Lie\nIn Giving and Taking When Arguing\nDr.iL-Mi:,'. Atkinson: . | now I'm beginning to doubt it.\nI am engaged to be married in\nFor Parents\nBy GARRY CLEVELAND MYERS. Ph.D.\nMany Mothers Know What Child Must\nEat But Not What Makes Him Like It   ',\nIn recent years there has been\ngreat progress ln the selection and\npreparation of proper foods for\nbabies and young children. The\nmodern pediatrician guides the\nmother in these matters. Manufacturers of foods have made available a wonderful array of foods'\nthat, are adequate, palatable, and\neasily and safely served to babies\nand young children. Books, magazines and lectures give many reliable facts and procedures relating\nto correct foods' for \u25a0 youngsters*\nNever was there a time when so\nmany mothers have had so much\nuseful Information about selection, and preparation of wholesome\nfoods for their children, or a time\nwhen so many mothers in our country could afford so well to buy\nthese,foods. -     ,\nNOW READY!\nAN ENTIRELY \"NEW STYLE\" WOODWARD'S MAIL\nORDER CATALOGUE FOR FALL and WINTER (1949)\nDesigned to Simplify Mail\nA More Convenient Size\nNew Perfect Binding\nBetter Illustrations\nOrder Buying\n\u2022 Heavier Cover\n\u2022 Easier to Read\nCOPIES ARE BEING'MAILED TO OUR CUSTOMERS IN THE NEXT\nFEW DAYS. IF YOU DON'T RECEIVE ONE, WRITE\nWOODWARD'S (MAIL ORDER)\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n\"WE SERVE THE WEST \u2014 BEST\"\nEATING  PROBLEMS    .\nYet it is chiefly among these\nmore highly Intelligent and Informed mothers that most eating\nproblems ln children arise. As a\nrule, these mothers know far more\nabout the foods that little children\nshould have than of how to cause\nthese children to enjoy eating.\nMothers, who know little about\nproper diets for their children\ndon't Incline to worr^ over the\nyoungster's appelate. For them ignorance seems almost to be bliss.\nBut how can knowledge about\nthe: proper quality, quantity and\npreparation of food for the baby\nand young child be harmful? Isn't\nsuch knowledge very essential? Of\ncourse, it's essential. But with this\nknowledge needs also to go knowledge of how to cause the child to\nenjoy the proper foods and the art\nof putting this knowledge Into practice. Such knowledge and art imply\nunderstanding'by the mother of\nthe child's emotions and her own\nand the art of managing her own\nemotions so as to cultivate favorable emotions in him concerning\neating.\nAs you can see, a mother can\nhave so much anxiety and stirrings\nln her insldes when the youngster\ndoes not choose to eat what she is\nsure he should and as much of It\nas he should, as to cause the child\nto choose less Instead of more, ot\nWhat she Is so eager to have him\neat. When such happens her knowledge of htf food needs can do'her\nchild harm Instead of good.\nLIMIT CHOICE\nOn the other hand ,see how much\ngood her Wisdom' about the choice\nand preparation can mean to her\nand him if she can. use this wisdom\nwisely. But let's not be too hard.on\nthe mother for letting her emotions\nget the better of her intelligence.\nPerhaps we should shift the blame\ndeservedly to all those experts who\nput so much emphasis on proper\nselection and preparation of foods\nwithout considering the child and\nhis emotions and the \"mother ..and\nher emotions. The - average pedia-\nSeptember, and ihy fiance and I are\ndisagreeing over extending an invitation to tbe wedding of my brother\nand his wife. My family and I have\nnot been talking to my brother for\nthe past three years, hut my fiance\nwas best man at his wedding and\ngodfather to his child.\nWe love each other tremendously,\nbut this issue has caused us to postpone our wedding. We are both\nstrong believers in our point I don't\nwant my brother there. He does,\n>' \u2022.\u25a0 \u25a0'.   \u25a0' ' '*..\u2022\u2022 c. c.\nDear C. C:\nIf you and. this man you expect\nto marry are both such strong believers in holding to your own opinions and desires, I wouldn't bet a\nnickel on the chances of your marriage being a happy one. Married\nlife calls for constant adjustment\nto another's point of view and much\nyielding of one's own, on each side,\nif it is not to be a cat-and-dog affair all the time. Each of you had\nbetter promptly, . and radically,\noverhaul your Ideas on this subject\nof stubbornly, holding out for your\nown way, and realize that sometimes one must give in, sometimes\nthe other, according to whose wishes have the most right and reason\non their side. If you can't do this,\nyou had better call off your en.\ngagement\nYour letter makes me suspect that\nstubbornness may be a family char.\nacterlstic that keeps you all from\nmaking peace with your brother\nand it would seem to me your wedding should be an .excellent opportunity for burying the hatchet.   '\nLOST INTEREST\nBear Miss Atkinson:\n' I am 19, and have been goin|:\nwith a boy for quite a while. About\na month ago, he just quit coming to\nsee me. I haven't any idea what\nhappened, but I would like to know.\nHe often told me he loved me, but\nI would like to find out what's\nwrong, but I don't have any Idea\nhow to go about it. Please give me\nyour advice.\nIa.\nDear L: \u25a0\nAll right, here's my advice but\nyou're not going to like lt: Drop\nthe whole thing.\nAny young man who \"Just quits\"\ncoming to See a girl, does so for the\nsimple reason that he's lost interest. Do you.want to be humiliated\nby forcing him to tell you:\nplainly?,   a'.;,-.        '\\ - j\nIFlie Doctor\n'By tfERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\nRoad to Health Sometimes, Long\nArid Wearisome After Illness\nAS a rule, we do not recover all\nat once from a serious illness. The\nroad back to health Is sometimes\nlong and often tedious, but it can-\nusually be shortened by good care.\nMoreover, obeying the doctor's orders at this time prevents relapses\nand Insures against permanaent\ndamage..\nDoctors know that the convalescent patient is often.irritable, lacks\nInterest and has a poor appetite, yet\ngood nourishing food during this\ntime is extremely Important so that\nmaterial may be supplied for repair\nof the body tissues.\nWATCH PATIENT\nThe food must be prepared and\nserved ln an appetizing way. It does\nno good to overload the patient's\nplate, because this may only servo\nto lessen his desire for food. Be-\ntween-meal snacks may be valuable\nin helping to supply the necessary\nnourishment ,\nThe patient must be watched for\nsigns of overtiredness, such as restlessness and loss of interest yawning,, increased pulse rate, slight\nfever, sleeplessness and loss of appetite.\nOften the patitat may recover\nmore rapidly ln new surroundings,\nif he can be freed from worry and\ncare. A change ot clitaate may often\nprove of great benefit particularly\nto those, who have had a prolonged\nIllness. '. '    \u2022'\nThe patient shoujd get back to his\nnormal activities and duties as soon\nas possible, including such things as\ndressing in his usual clothes and\neating his meals with the family.\nIt is also helpful to get the patient\nout ot doors as soon as .possible\nwhen, the weather permits.\nCAREFUL VISITORS\nAs a rule, visitors to the convalescent patient are welcome. However\nanyone with a cold, sore throat or\nother Infection should be kept away\nand visitors should not prolong their\nstay until the patient is tired. Fur\nthermore, they should be thoughtful   -\nIn their conversation and should be\ncautioned   against   discussing   illnesses and morbid subjects.\nOf- course, good nursing cara provides a great deal of comfort A\nproper chair should be selected for\nhim, pillows should be arranged\ncomfortably, and the bed-clothing\nshould be warm and not too heavy.\nThe patient must be watched\nclosely so that if any symptoms develop which indicate a. recurrence\nof Illness they may be promptly de-\ntected and reported to the physician.\nQUESTIONS AND AN8WER3\n.H.: Will you please tell me something about Bell's palsy\nAnswer: Bell's palsy is due to\nsome injury to the facial nerve,\nsuch as might take place as a result of infection or a tumor pressing on it   <\nExposure to cold, which causes\nneuritis of the nerve, may be responsible. In - such cases, all the\nmuscles of the face on one side arc\nparalyzed. The eye cannot be closed\nnor the forehead wrinkled, tha'\nlower lid droops, the eye waters,\nand the angle of the mouth Is lowered on the side affected.\nIn most cases the condition Is duo\nto cold. Hot applications, electrical\ntreatments and massage of the muscles of the face are all helpful in\ntreating this condition. It usually\nclears up completely after five or\nsix weeks.\nDeaths\nBy The Canadian Press\nNEW YORK\u2014Edward. Caldwell,\n88, President ot the McGrawhlll\nBook Company.\nWINDERMERE, Ont. \u2014 Albert\nMatthewson, 78, former Lieutenant-\nGovernor of Ontario.\nPRAGUE\u2014Dr. Joseph Bata, 61,\nrenowned Professor of Surgery at\nPrague's Charles University.\nLONDON\u2014Sir Edward Gerald\nHawkesworth, 52, former Governor\nof tbe British Honduras.\nNORMAN, Okla.-Dr. Charles\nNewton Gould, 81, founder of the\nUniversity of Oklahoma School ot\nGeology.\n.TORONTO\u2014Reuben Bannister, 69\nmasseur for the Toronto Maple\nLeafs Hockey team for SO years.\nVICKERS* IS DISTRIBUTED IN CANADA\nBY CALVERT DISTILLERS (CANADA) LTD.1\nThis advertisement Is not published or diu\nplayed by the liquor Control Board or\nby the Government of British Columbia!\nCornish Jungle\nBoasts Bamboo\nBODMIN? England (Reuters)\u2014A\n25-acre bamboo jungle, centre of\none of Corwall's strangest industries, is preparing for a bumper harvest in the next few years.\nThe Jungle*, It is claimed, will provide 10,000,000 canes a year.\nThe industry began when F. Net-\ntleinghame, who ran a roadhouse\nhere, found takings slumped, at the\noutbreak of the war. He turned his\nattention to ah overgrown plantation of bamboo canes planted by a\nprevious occupier after returning\nfrom India.   .   \\\nNow,' the plantation contains 35\nvarieties, many 'as high as 30 feet.\nNearly $80,000 has been Invested in\nthe industry.\nThese canes are used in gardens,\nI lollipop sticks, feather-broom\nhandles and fishing rods. This jungle is supplying hot only Britain,\nbut also Switzerland, Holland, Denmark, Finland and Australia.\ntrlcian may deserve some of the\nblame. Too often he only tells the\nmother whajato feed the Child and\nhow much and even may scold her\nwhen she doesn't get such quantity\nand quality of, food into him.\nThe mother can force the child to\neat only in an indirect way by\nlimiting his choices, provided she\ncan do so with perfect self-cohtrbl.\nTo this end she should serve only\none food at a time, as a rule, and\nin very, very small portions; letting\nhim choose between this and nothing, while she keeps her own In-'\nsides serene, her head- clear and\nher lips closed.\nTEA BAGS\nLESS FUSS\nFULL FLAVOR\nNO WASTE\nThrifty too!\n28 oz. tin\nTOMATOES\nAlouette Standard\n2 for 35c\nSunny Down, Fey.,\n20 oz. cans; 2 for.\nUnsweetened;\n48 oz. can\t\ni\nAIRWAY COFFEE\n* Mild mellow blend.\n16 oz. pkg.   T'VC\nPEACHES\n3V's for preserving\nPeanUt  Butter Beverly; lo oz.jar\nTomato Juice\nGrapefruit Juice\nSalmOn   Fancy Keta; 15M> oz. can -\nf J   11*11   All Brands;\nCanned Milk i6 oz. cans, * f0r\nRinSO Medium pkg. _\t\n42*\n25*\n36*\n34*\n29*\n34*\nApproximately\n14 lb. crate \t\n$2.39\nPOTATOES\nNew, clean.\n10 lbs, in shopping bag.\n49c\nField Tomatoes Ripe, Firm; Lb.\nPickling Onions SIS; ^\u2014\nCelery   Crisp, Green Stalks; Lb.\t\nBananas Yeiiow, Ripe;ib. _\u2014\n16*\n20*\n14*\n23*\nShort Ribs\nBlue Brand, for\nBraising;   \u201e__LB;\nft'    n Piece or\naide Bacon sum- .\u25a0\u2014.% i-\nVz\nib.\".'\nMeat & Cheese Loaf\nTasty for Sandwiches\nv\nChicken Halibut Lb..\nDelicious for Baking\n33*\n35'\n26*\n34*\nFRYING\nCHICKEN\nSpilt free\non request. Lb.\n55c\n\u2022 Sliced Bologna Lb. 47'\nPRICES\nEFFECTIVE\nAUGUST\n16th -17th\n GREAT\nContinues\nBOYS' OXFORDS\nLugo sole. Regular $8,95\nSALE      $6.77\nMEN'S OXFORDS\nLugg sole. Regular $10,50\nSALE     $7.77\nBOYS' ELK BOOTS\n.    For school,  Neollte soles.\nRegular $5.95\nSALE     $4.77\nYou'll  find many other values\nwhen you >hop*at\nR. ANDREW\n.      &CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASH10N\nTourist Money\nTravels Widely\nEDMONTON (CP) - What happens to that $5 bill you just spent?\nWhere does it go and who handles\nlt before it gets salted away in a\nbank'.'or an old'sock? -    \u25a0   \u25a0\nThese questions have been puzzling the experts for some time and\nthe Pacific Northwest Travel: Association thinks it has some,of the\nanswers.  *\nThe Association tagged 30 United\nStates $5 bills here on June 4, in\nstructing anyone who handled them\nto write the-organization and say\nwhat happened to the money.      .\nThe nbiect u? ihe experiment h\njust wheic iouust dollars u wcl\nand their'effect Jon: the 'West's\neconomy.\nAlfred Blyth, Alberta President\nof the P.N.T.A., says letters have\ncome in telling of the- bills' travels\nas, far West as Vancouver, and as\nfar East as Mendham, Sask.\n\"Within a few weeks we expect\nto *get hundreds of- letters from\"\nholders of the 30 bills, ahd it wilj\ngive a good idea just what, each\nUnited States dollar means , to\nCanadian economy.\"\n'One letter, from a lunch counter\noperator In DeBolt, Alta., said, \"I\nhave a lunch counter here and today received bill No. 22.1 passed the\nbill on to our postmaster, in payment for a money order.\" The bill\nhas been traced through several\nother transactions ln DeBolt.\nBill No. 7 took a long trip to Vancouver after being picked up in\nMacleod, Alta. Only one of the 30\nbills still is- known \"to ibe in\nEdmonton. :\u25a0\u25a0'..'\nFor crow shooting, the best decoy\nIs a stuffed great horned owl, the\ncrow's natural enemy.\nTailored BLOUSES\nBy Philmac. Sizes 12 to 20.\nAssorted Colors 5.95\nFashion First Ltd.\nPASTEURIZED\nm-vr \"\" MILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nK\nootenay Valley Uaiky\nNew Shipment of\nCotton Dresses\nAll sizes\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nNelson Social\nt In compliment of Mrs. C. V.\nGagnon, who celebrated her 82nd\nbirthday, Monday, also- honoring\nMrs. B. Madden of St. Catharines,\nOnt., Mrs. W. J. Sturgeon and Mrs,\nM. J. VigneUx entertained at 618\nSilica Street at Mrsi: ^turge-li's\nhome that evening \"at a buffet\nsupper when' 14 guests-were present,'\n\u2022 Miss* Ellen- Anweiler, Silica\nStreet, spent the -weekend in Ainsworth at the home- of'Mrs. McCallum.\n\u2022 Miss Maude, Dolphin .of the\nstaff.of the Royal Victorian Hospital, Montreal, has arrived to visit\nher family in Nelson,',\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Ling arid her daughter,\nMiss Doreen Ling, Josephine Street,\nhave, returned from a few.days\nvisit in Spokane. ',-.''   '\".'\u25a0\u25a0:\n\u2022 Mf'. and Mrs. W.'R. Baird and\ndaughter \"Evelyn and Mary have\nreturned - to their home at Port\nMoody after visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nE.'W. Kuhn, 512 Innes Street.\n\u2022 Joseph DeLucrezio, 1004 Hoover\nStreet, has left for Calgary where\nhis marriage to Miss Ruth Fath of\nNelson takes place this week.'\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Marsden,\nSilica Street, have had as weekend\nguest Mrs.M. Jernberg of Procter.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. H. Ferguson and son\nBill of Vancouver, ex-residents of\nNelson, are guests qf Mr. and Mrs.\nR. J. Patterson, 1421 Ward Street.\nThey Were. accompanied to' Nelson\nby Mrs. Ferguson's son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. H. P.\nPatterson, also ,o{ Vancouver,' who\nare spending a few, days at' their\nLongbeach home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John Peachy Jr.,\nwho are holidaying at Balfour,\nhome, of Mr. Peachy's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. j. Peachy, are,spending\na couple pf'days in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. C. Potts,,who spent the\npast month at the home bf her son-\nin-laW and'daughter, *Mr.-and Mrs.\nS. E. Briard, Josephine Street, and\nalso spent  a few days at Maple\n\u2022  By MRS. M. J. VIGNEflXf\nCreek, Sask;,-returned to'her home\nin Vancouver,at:the weekend.\",\n\u2022 Rev, Sister Lois, who \u25a0 spent\nsome time visiting her sister;-Mrs.\nW. G. C. Lanskail, 1515 Ward Street,\nhas returned to her home in\nToronto        \u25a0\n' \u2022 A .'miscellaneous shower was\nheld at the home of Miss Dorothy\nTerry; Elwyh* Street,' In honor-\" of\nMiss Alice Middleton, August bride-\nelect, guests being entertained, by\ngames and a musical evening after\nwhich a decorated . basket filled\nWith useful gifts was presented to\nthe honored guest,- \". -,    \u25a0 r *;,.\"\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J? Gelette and\nfamily of Vancouver; who formerly,\nresided in Nelson, have, returned\nto this city and are staying with\nMrs, Gelette's sister, Mrs. Marie\nKelly.   '.\u25a0;   ' r   '\u25a0'.;.'\n\u2022 Mrs. Gordon. Maclean, and\ndaughter Kathy, have left for their\nhome in Chisholm, Alberta., after1!\nvisiting-'Mrt. Maclean's, brother-in-\nlaw and Bister, Mr. and. Mrs.'Walter\nFife, 326 High Street. \"   V\n\u2022 Arthur'Fife has left for Pheba\nBeach,' Alberta,' to spend a. few\nweeks, holidaying with relatives,\nHosiery Makers\nWoo Women Away\nFrom Bare (egs\niqilp\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. 0, Walker of Castlei.\ngar wish to announce the engagement of their daughter Mary Kathleen to Mr.' Roland Gorsline, son of\nMr. and Mrs. A. Gorsllnej Vegreville,\nAlta. The wedding to take' place\nOctober 1st in the Castlegar United\nChurch.\nMr. and Mrs. C. R. McLanders,\n206 Innes Street, Nelson, wish to\nannounce the engagement of their\nyoungest daughter, Muriel Elbra to\nMelvifi James Ball, only son ot Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Ball, 713 Railway Street,\nNelson. The wedding to take place\nat the First Presbyterian Church.\nVictoria Street, Wednesday, Sept,\n7th.\nYpirtkfid Redhead\nIs Top Executive\nFor Jet Company\nFly MARIENNE IZSAK\nCanadian Press Staff:. Writer\nNEW -YORK (CPi\u2014\"Cynthia Hoi-\nloway, \"General Manager,\" is the imposing title on the door. If you\nwalked into her office in London\nyou would find a vivaciaus 27-year-\nold:redhead seated behind the desk.\nShe Ib General*-Manager of. Power\nJets; a 'British concern responsible\nfor many war-time developments in\njet- propulsion: and -gas-turbine engines,*:\n'I was rather a dunce at mathematics and science in school and yet\nhere I am with a job like,this,\" she\nlaughs.\nThe \"job like this\" is one Qiat requires her to travel all' over the\nworld, acting as liaison officer for\nher company, talking with engineers and urging cooperation between Britain and other countries\ndeveloping1 gas-turbine engines. She,\nwas interviewed in New York.    ,\nThe secret of her rapid climb to\nsuccess?\n\"I was lucky,\" she cofriesses. \"My\nemployer was in the Air Force and\nI had been in the W; A. A. F\u201e so\ntht gave 'us something in common.\nHe was very helpful\u2014instead of\nsimply telling me what to do. he'd\nexplain how it should be done and\nwhy.\"\nRAPID PROMOTION\nAfter-her discharge from the Air\nForce, Mrs. Holloway got a -job with\nPower Jets as secretary.-Being a\nyoung company with lots of room\nfor advancement for those with ambition, it promoted her'rapidly.\nMrs. Holloway manages to combine successfully \u25a0 her career with\nher home-making; Her husbanor, a\nwater-transport engineer, helps\nwith the cooking, marketing and\nhousekeeping in their apartment In\nChelsea.\n\"He's really a better cook than I\nam,\" she acknowledges, \"although\nI'm better at making soups.\"\nShe is. amused at people's reaction in the United States when they\nfind the General Manager of Power\nJets is a personable, young woman.\n\"They exbect to find a portly\ngentleman along the lines of Colonel Bliftip, I guess,\" she smiles, \"But\nI did make this hat\u2014the frame came\n|;irpm< iParis and. I sewed the ribbon-\non it.\" The hat was made entirely of\nlavender ribbons ano) she wore i\npale lavender dress to match.\n\"I'm afraid I'm just not the domestic type\u2014I love my' work too\nmuch\/' ..-..-\nMuseum treasures\nOld Indian Lore\nPioneer Weaving\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Most people\nreadily admit that the Royal Ontario Museum is an Interesting\nplace. But to Dr. Marlus Barbeau\nit is a treasure house full of the\nthings he knows and loves.\nDr. Barbeau, now retired, was a\nresearch anthropologist for the\nNational Museum at Ottawa. His\nknowledge of Canadian history includes Indian music, totem poles,\nearly Ontario textiles and pioneer\nQuebec silverware.    \u2022;\"'\u25a0\u2022'.\"'\nOn a recent, visit to the Ontario\nMuseum, Dr. Barbeau waxed enthusiastic over the early relics It\ncontained.\n\"Ah, the Dweller of thevRim of\nthe World,\" he said as he picked\nup a grotesque scarlet Indian mask\ntopped with white horsehair.' \"His\nface is red because he comes up to\nmeet the morning sun. In the afternoon his, face Is black because the\nsun is behind him. He is an evil\nspirit but does good work, helping\nto fight diseases.\"\nIn a workroom he fingered a\nwoven* blanket made on a pioneer\nOntario farm-early In the 10th\ncentury.\n'It's, lovely,\" he said. \"Look at\nthat color. Almost a century old\nand lt hasn't faded at all. In those\ndays they made things to last.\n\"Perhaps we shall know more\nabout these Jacquard weavers some\nday. The story Is that there were\ntwo of them .who came to Virginia,\nescaping from France at the time\nof the Huguenot wars. Their descendants increased and spread out,\nweaving in their distinctive style\nwherever they went.\"\nBlack powder, the first explosive\ndeveloped In the Western' world,\nwas originated 1000 years ago.\nBy CYNTHIA LO'RY .'.'.'<\nNEW YORK (AP)-The men who\nmake women's stockings are engaged ln a subtle campaign to persuade women, away from bare legs.\nI- It has resulted in new styles and\ngreater variety, It is the answer,of\na $760,000,000 Industry to the,fact\nthat millions of women discovered\nthe joys of bare-leggedness during\nthe( wa,r years.;\n-\u25a0 \"The bars are. down,\" .said ..Earl\nCoristantihe,' President- of, the' Na-'\ntional Association of Hosiery Manufacturers, \"because bare legs have\nbeen accepted and nothing in the\nworld could make women; believe\nthey must wear long hose at 'all\ntimes.\"     . ,   \u2022 .\u201e.-..'\nThe Industry does not admit this\nwas anything but a fashion whim-\nit was almost impossible, to \"paint\nlegs black or navy blue'. The result\nwas that lots of bare-legged women\nwho had relidd on cosmetics for leg\ncovering, climbed back into their\nnylons. Now the color trend is toward lighter stockings. \"'\u25a0\n-\"Stocking colors will always be\ndose to flesh-colored,\" Constantino\nexplains..-  .\n\"The reason Is that men like to\nlook at a; good looking pair of legs\nin natural colors. Flesh - colored\ntones are the.bread of stockings;\nblack and very dark shades are the\ncocktails. A little is fun and goes a\nlong way.\" v\nWhat about the oft-heard complaint that postwar nylons don't\nwear-as well as the prewar hose?\n\"Very simple,\" answers Constan-\ntine.[\"Before the war the,industry\nvery rarely manufactured anything\nmore \"sheer than 30-denier. Now one\nof the most popular weights is 15-\ndenler\u2014much sheerer.\"\nAs a matter of fact, the hosiery\nmanufacturers of the nation would\nappreciate it very much If women\nwould stop insisting on gossamer-\nsheer l(S-denier for. every day wear.\n\"Women should buy and wear\nstockings.with some relation to the\ntasks they are going to perform,\"\nConstantine says.  '      \u2022;\nOf course the N. A. H. M. hopes\nthat women will pull on a pair .of\nanklets (which they also manufacture) with their slacks and shorts'\nor house dresses if they must bare\ntheir nether extremities.'\nIn spite of the vogue for bare legs,\na sizable number.of t pairs\u00bb of, sfull\nlength are shipped* by N. A. H. M.\nmembers\u2014more than 600,000,000\npairs last year, and about 87 per\ncent of-th^em nylon.\nThat includes full-fashioned\n(which means a^real seam up the\nback) and seamless, rayon, silk,\ncotton and wpol, but very few of\ntbe last four categories.\nConstantine cites as examples of\nthe persuasion campaign the revival\nbf clocks (\"they certainly make I\nwoman's ankles look' more, -attractive\"), lace Inserts and insets, heel\nreinforcements with double points,\nflares, square ends, and stockings\nwithout heel or toe reinforcements\nor. lacking one of them for use with\nsling-back and open-toed shoes.\nWHIM OF FASHION\nLast year, when hosiery production was getting back toward normal (which meant there wasn't, i\nshortage) women suddenly discovered the smartest thing In. the.stocking field was very dark colors\u2014and\nbrightly hued stockings to match\ngay dresses.\nThe dark colors went over big,\nbut the colored stocking fad didn't\ntake.\nllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimillllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNews of the D#\nRATES: 300'llne, 40o line black face .type; larger typo rates on\n-.request Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\niiiiiiiiiii' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiii'iiidiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iii\nTURTliS JUI3T ARRIVED\nMAC'8 FLOWER 8HOP\nWanted\u2014Plums, apricots and blackberries. McDonald Jam Co.\nDon't wait until after Ihe tlte,\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency\nBring that valuable ,tlmepelce to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nEgg Prices Drop\nVICTORIA, Aug.' 15 (CP)\u2014Eggs\ndropped five cents a do*zen today,\nmarking the first price decline in\nseveral months.\nGrade \"A\" eggs, which have been\nselling during the last Week for as\nhigh as.77 cents a dozen, will now\nbe available at 70 cents in some\nstores, and 72 in others.\n8LIMNE88 HAS IT8 P0INT8   .\nClNDERFORD, Gloucester, Eng.\n(CP).\u2014Sam Gazzard, \"thin man\" of\nthe local firefighters, was just the\nboyneeded when fire broke out inside a locked meat market. Slender\nSam squeezed through a ventilator\nand let the others in,\n\\ ; ^__\nThe highest suspension bridge in\nthe world spans the canyon of the\nArkansas River in Colorado. It is\n1053 feet above the bed of the river,\nand its total length Is 1260 feet.\nNo kidding!\nhealth comes first...\nevery nickel counts!\n\"Just can't afford easing off... money simply metis dteay these\ndays... got to lose this let-down feeling... get back my old sip.\"\nYou, too, must be on your toes to safeguard your earnings. YOU\nCAN'T if you are \"irregular\",\u2014 often caused by lack of bulk food\nin the diet. ,     \u25a0''\u2022.- .\u2666\u25a0 \\\nPost's Bran Flakes supply the natural bulk, you need to help\nkeep food wastea moving promptly \u2014 help you retain vim and vigor.-,\nEnjoy wholesome wheat nourishment too \u2014Post's Bran Flakes\nare made with other parts of wheat!   .\nAppetizing as a cereal. Just as tastily effective\nwhen made into light, lender bran muffins. Follow\nrecipe on package. Two sizes: large or\n. ,  regular. Insist on PoBt's Bran.\nSure\u2014she needs,\nBRAN FLAKES\nWITH   OIHIR   PARTS   OF  WHEAT\n\u25a0and likes them!\nIf BUTTEHFJELD ?an't fix- it,\nthrow It away; Prompt service on\nwatch work; fully: guaranteed,\nREMEMBER 1177 AND 1178\nTHAT'S OUR PHONE NUMBER\n>   FAIRWAY-MEAT MARKET\n10'48, Chev. Sedan. $250 worth of\naccessories. 'A-l \u25a0 Shape. -Apply - Box\ni860 -Daily Newjs.;,    , ;    , ,-, .\nI - \u25a0    ;.- ,,'       ' '   '    |        . *7.\nWAtaH REPAIRING;.(\nIS A \"JOB FOR,SXPERTS\nOur Work Assures Your Satisfaction\n.   H. Hi SUTHERLAND\n|   '401 Baker Street -\nEARTHENWARE CROCKS'\nIn.1,-3, 5 and 10 gal, sizes. We also\nhave lids for same. Crocks priced\ntrom 80c 'tip. .-     . ,\nWOOD VAiLANCE HABDWARB\n-Electrical   contracting*\u2014 wiring\nalterations \u2014 hot water heaters.\"' \"\n'MpKAY A.STRSTTON-Phone 554\nSEE OUR  WOOL SPECIAL\n\".'   THIS'WEEK.\n'THE CHILOREN'8 SHOP\n' Baby Cribs and Crib Mattresses-\nSizes 18\"x36\", 20*:'x40\", 27\"x52\" at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nUnpleasant odor in your refrigerator? Then get Pure-Kold Air Conditioner. Neutralizes food odors. Retards . foofl. spoilage, -and . reduces\ndehydration.- $5.00 each.\n,',.-;   -HIPPERSON'S.\nGYPROC WOOL Insulation \u2014 2\"\nThick \u2014 Paper Backed\u20147%c sq. ft;\nBURNS' LUMBER A COAL CO.\n' Mrs. K.\" -Carpenter, Registered\nPhysiotherapist, wllLbe out of tpiVn\ntill Sept, ,6.: '-' .'-'\n\", Large selection of new gifts, including toys for Infants ahd children. -\" TOT-N-TEEN SHOP..    '\nWhy not list your.house with C.\nW Appleyard today. We can often\narrange' a .cash deal through our\nmortgage facilities,    '   j,.   ,\nOnly freslvquality films antf expert developing produce exhibition\nmaterial in photography. Be sure\nof these at VALENTINE'S.    '!\nSee and choose youf pew Coleman\nOil Heater now. 1,040 models how\non hand for immediate delivery at\nHIPPERSON'S.\nSpecial \u2014 Colonial Bed Sheets.\nSeconds \u25a0  90x104.  Regular $12.95.\nSpecial, $8.95.\nMo & Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nMargaret Truman\nPlans No Wedding\nKeeps on Singing\nCanadian Presi Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP)-Everybody\nfigures that blase-Washington society would herald a 'White House\nwedding\" as the big event of.the\nsocial century.\nBut there is no sign that the capital -will be putting any such date\non its party calendar for a while\nyet. Margaret Trumah, the.young\nlady in question, is concentrating\nright now on becoming a concert\nsinger, \/ r\nlienying \u25a0 engagement rumors Is\nstill one 6f her chief -occupations,\nhowever. She .does it neatly and\ngood-naturedly.\nThe President's 2 5;y e a r-o I d\ndaughter once told reporters that If\nthey didn't stop saying she was ber\ntrothed she'd soon be having a\ntough time getting a date. Another\ntime she.said of the marriage rum's;     ...'.', * '\".\n\"All right, you bring them to me\nIn batches and I'll (Jeny them one\nby one.\"\nThe whoop-te-do over the marriage of a President's daughter!\nwould riot, of course, be confined to\nWashington. It would be.the United\nStates counterpart of the wedding\nof Britain's Princess Elizabeth. The\nbreathless attention that wedding\ngot in this country showed how\nmuch the United States would like\nto have a similar, big occasion of its\nown.\nBUSY WITH FALL TOUR\nBut it will have to wait. She Is in\nNew York now, working hard, at\nher singing in preparation for a\nFall -concert tour.      ,\nBeing Truman's daughter is probably a handicap as she sets, out tn a\nprofessional career. Critics seem extra critical of her voice. At least\none Broadway musical contains i\n\"Margaret Truman .wisecrack\" after a female singer deliberately hits\na sour high note. One segment of\npublic opinion holds that Miss Truman is trying to \"cash in\" on hpr\nfather's position;\nBut friends say her ambition to\nbe a concert singer\u2014simply that,\nmind you, not a Metropolitan Opera\nperformer\u2014started long before she\nbecame \"First Daughter of the\nLand.\" Therefore, they ask, tvhy\nshould she give up that dream just\nbecause fate thrust her into the national spotlight? *\u25a0\"\nHer. coach, the. Dutch piaplst\nCoenraad V. Bos, is enthusiastic\nabout her chances.\n\"Of course, she is only beginning,\"\nhe said recently, ''but she has a\nlovely voice . . . It's uncertain how\nsoon she will [sing in .public but\nwhat experiences she already has\nhad will stand her In good stead.''\n- Two correspondents spotted her\nrecently waiting tor a Washington\ntraffic light, She looked the average American glrlV all right\u2014except that a uniformed policeman\nwas nearby. The lights changed.\nStraight ahead was. a chain drug\nstore. Said one, correspondent jokingly: \"Just dropping in for a coke\nor a pack of cigarets, I suppose,\"\nMargaret Truman did go Into }he\nstore. Except for that cop, she might\nwell have been another of the many\nGovernment stenographers and secretaries who drop in there every\nafternoon.        -^\nConvert your garden weeds- arid\nvegetable .tops Into valuable humous\nwith' the chemical preparation Rot:\nIt; available how at NELSON FAR-.\nMERS* SUPPLY .LIMITED, 524\nRailway Street'\u25a0    :\nIf you heed a typewriter, see me.\nWe have all standard makes rebuilt\nand can sell you either for-cash or\noh convenient payments D; W. Mc-\nDerby,. \"The Typewriter and Adding\nMachine Man,'-' 554. Stanley Street,\nNelson. .':\nARBORITE'AND WESTRLAK- \u25a0\n.    decorative Wallboard\n.,FOr wall panels,- doors, sink and-\n,, !_ counter, tops,\n;  'Strong, .'Permanent\nEasy to keep clean. -     ',\",\nJTELSON . WOODWORKING. CO.,;\nOpp; Daily News, \u00bb'.Phone 1150\nFARMERS-RANCHERS - WHEN\nYOU ARE IN ,TOWN \\ TODAY,\nVI8IT OUR PLANT AND LET U8\nSHOW YOU HOW YOU' CAN\n8AVE, AND 8AVE PLENTY,\"BY\nRENTING LOCKER SPACE. \u2014\nPHONE 1218 \u2014 FARMERS' QUICK\nFREEZE  MARKET.   ;\n:  FUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral . services' for- the \u2022 late\nJames H. Odell will be held from\ntho Thompson funeral Home Wednesday at 2 p.m. Rev. G. G. McL.\nBoothroyd of Trinity United Church\nwill officiate, and Interment will be\nin Nelson Memorial Park.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late\nJames Hunter will be held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home Wednesday at 1 p.m. \"The Rev. G. G.\nMcL. Boothroyd.of Trinity United\nChurch will-officiate and in'te'rnienf\nwill be in Nelson Memorial Park:\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 16, 1949 \u2014 5 *j\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER; B.', C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. George A. MacMillan and Miss\nJoan Hiiggard and Miss Ruth Hug-\ngard returned from Nelson where\nthey were visitors.- -\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mlkita have\nreturned from a holiday at the\nCoast. :'\"'\u25a0 ' . '-\n'tes.,'A. E.: Swedenborg and her\ndaughter, Miss Barbara Swedenborg, of Chicago, 111., are guests of\nthe former's Bisters,. Mr. and Mrs.l\nHarry T.. Butler of New Denver and\nMrs. Mervto; Shannon of SUverton.\n. Cecil Nesmith, who was visiting\nhis uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs*.\nL.'R. Campbell, returned to Trail,\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Yamazaki of\nRaymond, j Alta., were guests of\nMrs. M. Nakagawa ond family. ;\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Rodall, returned from Nelson: where they\nvisited friends.\n> Mr. ahd 'Mrs. Ernest Doney, Sr.,\nand their sod and daughters-in-law,\nMr.- and Mrs. Ernest Doney, Jr.,\nwere visiting friends In Kaslo.\n\"Mrs,-\" Mary Stephenson and her\nsister, Mrs, H. H. Headings, were\nNakusp. visitors.\nMrs.-E. M>. Kirkwood Is guest ol\nMrs. Christina Johnson in Silver-\nton. '\nMiss Susie Nakagawa and her\nbrother, Yoshio Nakagawa, have\nreturned, from a holiday in Kamloops with, friends,\nDonald..Campbell left for Trail\nwhere he-wlll be guest of his uncle\nand- aunt,- Mr. and Mrs. Arnold W.\nNesmith'and family. .'\nMr.. and -Mrs. > Ernest Doney, Sr.,\nand two daughters, Judith and Karen) returned tb Cranbrook after holidays, with their parents and relatives.\nMiss Adela Mlkita bf New Westminster, is visiting her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J.'Mlkita and brother, Joe\nMlkita.   \\, , .-\nMr,, and .Mrs. Alberta Angrignon\npf .Sajnioh Arm visited the former's brother, Fred JI. Angrignon,\nen route to Slocan City where they\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 -  NELSON,  B.C.\nThe House of Furlnture Values\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nYourl tt Buy More at Froeman'i\nwill visit Mrs. Angrignon's parents.' Nelson*\nBonnington * \\..   1\nBONNINGTON, i.C. \u2014 Mr. and i\nMrs.   Gordon _ L.   Thompson,  are 1\nspending a vacation in Spokane. \\y\nMrs. J. Spain of Corra Linn has\nreturned from a visit' to Vancouver. -\nMrs. A. Patey and Miss Janet.-;)\nPatey,ot Hollywood, Calif., aijdim\nformer pioneer residents of SputliS\nSlocan were guests ol Mr. .and.MrSiSl\n,G, Noel Brown at Corra-Linn. Mrspj\nand Miss Patey are on a motoring'}-*\ntrip, and have, visited.iand..made)'\nstop . overs at, Klmberley, Banff)*\nLake Louise and at Kaslo and Net-- j\nson. So far they have travelled-4000 I\nmiles and now are leaving on their-,-1\nreturn trip tb Hollywood.\nSouth Slocan...   I\n. SOUTH SLOCAN, B.C. - Mr. and 1\nMrs.  C.  H.  Bland   and  daughter\nJoyce are .leaving on Monday to.'s\nspend a vacation in Penticton.       '!\u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John'R. Todd, nea'i|\nDixie Kennedy, have left to make |j\ntheir   home   in   Cranbrook   after\nspending a honeymoon in Spokane, m\nMrs.   A.   Budden,   whose   baby |\ndaughter was born here Saturday, 1\nleft later for Nelaon where they '^J\nare patients in the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nMrs. Joe Dowes is visiting herM\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Hopkins 1\nof the North Shore, Kootenay Lake;' 'M\u00a7\nI Til\nMake tea double strength and\nwhile still hot pour Into glasses\nfilled with cracked ice...\nAdd sugar ahd lemon to taste.\none-room\nNothing transforms a room ds quickly and at\nso  little expense \u2014 as a smart  Congoleum\nRug! Bright, pretty, easy-to-cdre-for... it stays\nbeautiful dnd new looking an amazingly long\ni time! For Congoleum has a wear-layer of heat-toughened point dnd\nbaked enamel equal in thickness to 8 cqats of the best floor paint\napplied by hdnd. And it's the only endmel surfoce floor covering with\nthe famous money-bdek guarantee;\nGold Seal Congoleum Rugs... product\nof Congoleum Canada Limited, Montreal.\n r\n$tf etemt Bailij wwte\n-  Established April 22, 1002.\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nEWished every morning except Sunday by the\nIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,   -\nI'Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia,\nAuthorized as Second Class Mali,\nPost OtUce Department, Ottawa\n-\\MEMBER Or THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nllHE AUDIT BUREAU OF'circulations.\nTUESDAY, AUGUST 16,1949\nLlbyd'spf London,\nMatthew W. Drysdale, Chairman of\n;;Lloyd' London, told listeners to the\nIbBC's Overseas Service about-the' be-;\njiginnings of this great concein, known.'\n^throughout the world in connection\n'-With British shipping and British.in-\n\"Isurance. Lloyd's is one of the most\ni famous of British Institutions,\" the oldest place of insurance in the world and\n?the centre which receives all shipping\nnews and distributes it all over the\n'\u25a0globe. It has more than 2600 underwriting members, each with the right\npf signing a Lloyd's insurance policy.\nA great deal of Lloyd's business is insurance against fire and accident, but\n\/this has only been contracted within\nthe last 60 years, whereas the marine\nInsurance is very old.\nIt begfln in 1688 and owes its birth,\nby a freak of chance, to the introduction of coffee into Britain.  Coffee, '\nbrought in about the middle of the 17th\n\u2022entury, yery quickly became extremely popular. Little shops were opened in\nmany parts of London, and people\n-dropped in to the first cafes to sample\nthe new and attractive drink. One of\n:the peiJple who launched out in this\n;lucrative business was Edward Lloyd,\n.'who lived in the Eastern party of the\nCity of London, near the Tower and\nSocks. Now London in the 17th centui \u2022\/\n- was nbt very big, wl Lloyd's shop on ,\nits Eastern-boundai-\/ w;\\r, conveniently\"-\nclose to Ihe\"shipping thai cdine-np tho*-''\nThames lo unload ii.s merchandise and\n#11 up with new cargoes. Captains com-'\ning ashore passed Lloyd's coffee house.;\non their way into London and naturally\ncalled1 in for a drink. \u2022  \u2022\n..In this way Lloyd collected his clientele;, his coffee house was thick with\n.talk of shipB and shipping, of wrecks,\nadventures, strange cargoes and foreign markets; before.long there was\nmore hews of the sea and ships in\nLloyd's than anywhere else in London,\npossibly any other place in the world\nwith the exception of Holland. A place\nso full of up-to-date news of ships and\nforeign trade was 'a good meeting\nground for shipowners, merchants and\nmarine underwriters. H was additionally convenient for an owner who went\nto Lloyd's for news of his ships if some-,\nbody there could insure him against all\nseagoing perils.\nUnderwriters who formarly did\ntheir business in the Exchange began\nto go to Lloyd's. It was greatly to their;\nadvantage, for they goth news that was\nof, great value in their business, and\nalways found there men with ships and\ncargoes to insure.-Brokers given insurance to place had to go around the city\nto find merj prepared to underwrite\nthe' risk on appropriate terms and at\nappropriate rates; There was no recognized place to find the underwriters\nand the brokers spent the greater part\nof their day in scurrying from one coffee house to another in search of underwriters who would take par^t of the\nilsk, Wlien underwriters began to con*,\ngregate at Lloyd's ;the broker?' task\nbecame progressively easier. Mr. Lloyd,\nby opening his shop where he did, collected, and centralized there the marine insiiranSe market of .London; his\ncoffee ho.use was destined, though.he\ndid riot know it, to become'the greatest\nmarine insurance market inijiieworld**\nLloyd's grew, developed and moved\nseveral'times until it settled;'in- thei\nRoyal Exchange for some 150 ye^rs.\nTwenty'years ago it-haoved again.to a\nmagnificent building in'; Leadenhall,\nStreet. \"But the thing, that, more than\nanything else, makes; Lloyd's - men\n.proud to be members' of the Society,\"\nsaid Mr. Drysdale, \"is that the? whole\nhistory of the place is the history of\nhonorable dealing, private adventurer\nand private enterprise. Nobody\nplannedus or directed us or told us\nwhat to do. We took our fate in our\nhands, risked our own money, bore our\nown losses and achieved our own-site-\n?Ques tidies?\nBelieves Communism Will Turn fo\nRacial Haired lo% in Power\nLooking Backwards -\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Aug. 16, 1939 6\nNelson's $14,400 bond issuehas been over-\nsubscribed $100, and all but one. of the 24 subscribers,are city residents. \u2022,\nA large attendance, including visitors from\nCranbrook ahd-Trail, participated. In the an;\nnual Joint Clonic of the .Ladies' Auxiliary: ot'\nRallrpad Trainmen, and. Trainmen, at Lakeside Park. The occasion was also the c^lebra-.\ntion of the,13th anniversary-of the organization\nof the fiadies* Auxiliary, ahd a large .birthday\ncake was\" presented by members* and oi\\t lay\nMrs. Percy Jeffrey.\n25 YEARS AQO\nFrom The Dally News of Aug. 18,198*\nSince Aug. 1, Nelson has had plenty: of\nrain, 1.97 inches being recorded here.\nMr. \"and Mrs. W. Harper have left for Eey-\nelstoke, whene.Mr. Harper has been appointed\nManager of the theatre.  \u25a0;:\n-Capt, Douglas Brown, Superintendent -of.\nthe Canadian Pacific Hallway Lake and River\n'\u2022Service, left on the afternoon boat for Kaslo.\n40 YEARS AGO\n.* *' .FronvTher-Dally News of Auij. 10, 1901.-. ,.\n,\" Thin \".day of last week was \"Rossland Day'\"-,\nit ihe Seattle Exposition, and a large number\n.if visitors were In attendance frqm the Golden;\nCity.\nBush fires near' the Kootenay Belle, and\nQueen Mines at Salmo have been extinguished,\nthe only damage done being the burning ot a\npart of the Kootenay Bella flume.\n. E. Lupton, Secretary of the Nelson Cricket,\nClub, has received a letter.from E. F. -Daniel,,\nSecretary of the Calgary Club,, stating that his.\neleven WiU 'be unable to. play Nelson this\nmonth, \u25a0 . , \",: - '. \u25a0\u2022>\nPress Comment\nHARDY NEWGPMERS\n\u25a0 Another party of Estonians, 23 innumber,\nhas reached Halifax after a hard ocean crossing in their tiny refugee ship. This almost\nwould seem to be a preferred form of travel\nfor people'from the former Baltic states..So \u25a0\nmany have made the joutaey under those difficulties, but most of them.have little choice\nin the matter. They are fugitives from the'Red -\n\u25a0 terror. ;\nThis latest group appears to have com-,\npiled   with   Canadian' immigration   requirements before.sailing, but could not wait' for.y\northodox means of transportation. The courage,'\nand resourcefulness of these newcomers command respect, and there never can be a time\nwhep Canada'should shut Its gates to hardy '\nImmigrants of thelr.type.\u2014Wlndsor.Star.\nTHEY TOOK PAINS\nWe; protest against the notion that our\nancestors had less to do-than ourselves. Their\ndays Were Just as full- as ours and they lived\n\u25a0 in stirring times,'as we do. The notion that they\nwrote elegantly because they had no other way\nof passing the time Is nonsense. They.wrote\nwell because they took pains to do so, knowing that handwriting and speech are both highly characteristic of the individual. They did*\nnot wish to be, looked upon a slack-witted\nmuddlers, and so they wrote neatly. We sug- \u25a0'\ngfst that they might be copied with advantage\nin that respect\u2014Peterborough Examiner.\n-\". * Open to any reader. Names of persons\nasking  questions  will  not be. published.\nThere la no charge for this- service. Quel- >\n..; -tlehi. WILL   NOT   Bfr ArJSWEREP\" J|V,\nMAIL exoept where there Ib obvious necks-\nV    elty for privacy. , \"'*..':\nL. Ia\u201e Nelson\u2014Are there any -books p,ubllsh<?d.\non sign language!.' ...' V|\nWe are uncertain whether yqu niepri the\n.' sign language used'by the North Ariicrlcan In-\n\u2022 dlan in trade, or the deaf and iluihb alphabet.\nErnest Thompson Seton's \"Sign Language\", issued by Doubleday, Doran, New Vork\/ijeals\n.   with: both, and has Instructive illustrations. In\nany good reference .library you should be able\n- ,to obtalha copy pf* Captain W.:?. Clark's* \"In-*\n\u25a0' dlan Sign. Language*, .tip longer obtainable\n-through book store's; '\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0) .'\nBride, Trail\u2014Will you please tell me how to\nV render fat down? \u25a0,:-'.     -'\nChop fat Into'fine.pieces, allowing a half--\ncup water for each pound. Heat to boiling, and\n. when the pah is nearly dry pnd. last spattering\nbegins* remove from range, and strain through\nseveral thicknesses of cheese cloth' into clean\nJars. \u25a0    . ,'..,'\nK. G. H-. Klmberley\u2014Can you tell\" me anything about .Donald M. Fleming,. Meipber\n,-     for Egllnton, Toronto? - -.\nDonald, Methuen Fleming;\" B.A.,IaIa.B.,K.C.;\n.-. bom' 1905-'    Exeter, Ont., son of Louis Charles.\nFleming and Maud Margaret-Wright, Irish on\n. mother's -Bide,' French, English and Scots on\nfathers. Educated-at Gait Fubljc Schools'ond\n-\u2022'; Collegiate,, University of Toronto. Married,\n1933, Al^e Mildred,, daughter'of W. G. Watson, Toronto: three children. Created K.C.1M4,\n1 member Toronto City Council 1,039-194''; member- of Senate I, University of Toronto; .first\nelected,, to ;Houie of'Commons June, 1945, reelected June\/1949.\nCook, Nelson\u2014I am having a'little trouble\n: :.wlth.wold on the top of preserves. Is, there\nany way to prevent thfB?   \u2022\nAll Jars, rubbers, spoons and utensils used'\n.  In placing preserves In the hot sterilized Jars\nshould also be sterilized. After filling. Jars; and\nsealing them, it is a good plan to put them in\n'. a steamer over boiling water for 10 or 15 minutes as an,extra precaution against molds.\n-'Newcomer, Cranbrook\u2014What Is meant by \"the\nbooks, of ilifi Edda\"?\n'I In book, .i' SraiicHnnvUn mythology.\nTimekeeper, Nelson\u2014To settle an argument,\n-'.;\"\u25a0''' when it is noon at Greenwich what is the\ntime (standard) in Montreal?     \u25a0-,'.'\u2022''\n7:04 a.m.\n.Mrs. F. F\u201e Nelson\u2014How many American Presidents have served more than one term?\n\u25a0'   Please give names,\n;l': Washington Jefferson, Madison, Monroe\nJackson, Lincoln, Grant, Cleveland. (1885-1889;\n, reelected 1893-18(|7), McKinley; Theodore. Roosevelt, Wpodrow Wilson, and I*anklin D. Rao^\nseyelt, who. was the only one to serve three\nfuii terms and part of a fourth.\nBy JAMBS D. WHITE\nAssociated Press Newi Analyst\nFor Dewitt fdaokeiizle),\nOne of the more thoughtful men\n-' l.know Is a Chinese, born nnd educated among Americans.\n,A man like that never quite bo-\nlongs to either, world. Life has put\n,   him on a fence between the two\n- peoples he \\ springs from.' And1\nfrom that fence he may see things\noomlng before either world does.\n- This man was talking, recently.\nabout the way Communism is\nsweeping over the land of hit ancestors, China. Ho said; -\n,' \"Perhaps without knowing it,\nCommunism has climbed on- the\ntiger of latent race hatred in Asia.\nThat is it's real threat to 'the world\n1 n,>t'ItcClong.vlewr'', . . ,-that it\nmay-be tempted to try what Japan\ntried and failed to do\u2014plunge the\nworld.into a racial war;'\u25a0\n'Janan failed because China saw\nthrough her flimsy promises of an\nAsia for the Asiatics, and cast her\nlot with the West. But in this cold\nwar China Is falling on the other\nside, and as a colored people fighting for freedom from Western don*\ntroll she will affect all other coldred\npeoples fighting for the same thing.\n\"The thing is,\" my friend went on,\n\"Communism flows .into this patt'of\nthe World because nothing has replaced the once-great prestige of .the\nwhiteman,\" '.-\u25a0.\ni \"Communism's h e a da ehe will\ncome when the problem of retaining\nthis vast new area ot power becomes\nparamount. It has to satisfy Asia's\nhighly varied peoples who today are\nbuying Its, promises -for , a better\nworjd. .-      '  v\"\n\"I. think Communism is too inflexible a doctrine ever to deliver\non these promises. When its time\ncomes to put up or shut up, Com*\nraunism will answer \/In Asia 'by\npreaching hatred of tho white man,\nRegardless of Moscow's pose of racial harmony, the local boys will\nbeat the drums of race' hatred Just\nto.stay ln power; People will.listen\nthen as they H(ten now-r because\nthey are poor ind know there must\nbe something better than what-they\nhave,, \u2022' \"\u25a0' * -\"\u25a0 ''\u2022:,*'.'.\n\"The- danger will be all the greatr\ner unless the white, man: figures out\nsome way to do abetter Job lit Asia\nthan Communism,\" my friend said.\nVIEWPOINT BACKED   \" ,    .',;\nThis talk took place some months\nago, but recently Its viewpoint has\nbeen backed up by Field Marshal\nSmuts of South.Africa.Here is another man who Has lived-with-tHe'\nracial problem all his life, He sees\nthe world as being in the middle of\na century of revolution'by. the \"col\"\nored\" raoes of inaiikind.   '*':;'\nAll'of Asia, Smuts recently told\nErnie Hill of tbe Chicago Daily\nNews, ,is throwinjl off' white ddiil-\nlhatioh,-.':':.',\n\" \"AslSj' ,ls Africa's neighbor,\" said\nSmuts'. \"We (nust rise to'vlslpn' and\nmagnamlnity or we shall be wiped\nout with -the marc)i' of world\nevents.\" * . ':\nSmuts believes that If the richer\nbut outnumbered Western* half ot\n' the world faces tho \"facts of world\nehapge\" ahd guides and helps'the\ncolored peoples to a better life,\nsomething more stable than Communism will result and the two\n; Worlds can live In peace..\nRailways In Britain were first\ncflnstracted to mbvescoal from col\nUerlee to the water.  '.      . ''\nShongHoi Typhoon\nTakes 15,000 Lives\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 15 (AP) -Belated reports, mostly, from Roman\nCatholic missions, indicated today\ndose to 15,000 persons within a 60-\nmile tadius of Shanghai lost then-\nlives in'the July 25 typhopn,\n.The Nanhwel Section; 30 ' miles.\nsouthwest of Shanghai, reported\nseveral. thousand wefe drowned\nand 180,000, were made homeless.\nSixty per cent of the residents of\nthe village of Lohten were drowned.\nLosses Were heavy on the, Island '\npf- Wanghsha' below the mouth of\ntho Yangtze.\nSdbchow reported more than 1000\nwere drowned there. Missions near\nNingpo reported the villages of Lan-\ntang, Tsaowo and Sihai wore razed,\nWith heavy loss ot life.\nJohn Maragon (above), former\nKansas City bootblack with an\nentree to the White House, poses\nat the Washington, D.C, office of\nMyron Ehrllch, attorney. 8en.\nKarl Mundt (R-S.D.) said officials\nof a Detroit auto parts firm\ntestified they received quick\nclearance on a $280,000 Army contract after Maragon get them a\nWhite House appolntment.--(AP\nWlrephoto.)\nTO BE DEPORTED\nBUFFALO, N..Y-, AUg. 15 (AP)-\nCharles' Doyle, former International\nVice-feresldent,pf the United Chemical Workers (C;I.O.>; was sentenced today to one year in-Jail, fineS\n$500 and ordered deported tor Illegal entry from Canada.\nRead the Classified\u2014It Pays\nVICKERS' IS DISTRIBUTED IN CANADA\nBY CAIVERT DISTILLERS (CANADA) tTD,\nThis sdvertisenwnt is not published or dV\nplayed by the. Liquor Control Board ot\nby the Government bf British Columbia\nGems of Thought\nI     SUCCESS\nThe talent of success'ls nothing more than\ndoing what you can do well; .and'doing well\nwhatever you do, without a thought of fame,\n.* \u2014Longfellew.\n-:\u25a0\u25a0'. Failure is often that early morning hour\nof darkness which precedes the dawning of the\nday of success.\u2014Leigh Mitchell Hodges.\nSuccess ln life.depends upon persistent effort, upon the improvement of moments more\n.than -upon any. other one thing.\u2014Mary Baker\nEddy.- - ' - \\,'\nYour Horoscope\n. Progress may seem a'little slow during\n.your next year, but it should be certain. Born\non this date, a child should lead a fairly successful life.\nIt's Been Said\nWe know, and, what is better, we feel Inwardly, that religion is the basis of civil society, and the source ef all good and 'of all\ncomfort.\u2014Edmund Burke.\nI\nThey'll Do It Every Tttqe\nhthtwd a. i km mU\nBy Jimmy Hado\nHUH? I-WAS\nJUST SONNA\nCLIP THIS ITEM\nABOUT 1&E OFFICE\nSHUFFLE6QARDy\nTEAM-\nDONT yW W.RE\nCtST ANyiHlNGOGT\nof that paper till\niVe read it.' tell\nme What rr is you\nWANT ANO I'LL SAVE\n'     IT FDR yOJ\nYOHDEAR MEM CLEAN\nFOR(SOTAB<?OTTHAT\nt ARTICLE VdJ WANTED.\n\u00a7fik J WRAPPED UP THE\ntl\u00ab> OARBASE \"THE\nPAPER -Mi. THREW\nIT AVIAyI I'M\nvSORR^ HENRyf-\nIt Happened Today,\n1854\u2014Duncan Phyfe, American\nfurniture designer, died. 1945\u2014Henri PhillippePetain found guilty of\n\u25a0treason; death sentence* commuted\nto life imprisonment.\nOhnLfaL\n'\u25a0' I figured Joe.would get even In\nhis will. If you henpeck a man top\nmuch while he's alive, he'll usually\nhit back when, he's out o\" reach.    :\nFortune telling in early times was\n; highly esteemed and Ib mentioned\nWith respect by Pliny, Aristotle, and\n-other ancient writers.\nH\nave you for^btteh soniethmg'?\nHeve you forgOHen fo order your, new\nsupply of office stationery? If your stock\nneeds replenishing we con supply you with:   ;\n\u2022\nSpecial Ruled Forms\n-'\u25a0\"',\u2022\nStatements\n\u2022\nLedger Leaves\n'':<:';\u00bb:\nBill Heads\n\u2022\nBinders\n\u2022\nInvplee Forms\n\u2022\nSynoptic Sheets\n.\u2022--:\nShipping; Bills\n<\u2022\nLetterheads      .    \"\n\u2022\nShipping Tags\n\u2022\nPayrolls            , -\n:      \u00bb\nEnvelopes\n\u2022\nIndexes\n\u2022\nLabels\nContact C. D. Pearson\nPhone 144\nCommercial Printing Dept.\n 1    'I' \u25a0    I\n1OI-7\nfFoii ir --;U ildiis.ir -: Pii.t;\";. -SS\/\nGives Paliiier Tourney\nBy CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN\nCHICAGO, Aug. 15 (APWohnny\nPalmer, belting phenomenal recovery shots, plucked a four-under-par\n68 to Jimmy Demaret's 70 today to\nbag the $10,000 top money in a playoff for the Tam O'Shanter \"world\"\ngolf championship,\n\/The flashy Demaret gleefully accepting bets on nearly every green\nfrom promoter George May while\nPalmer ignored them, won $7000 as\nrunner-up, '.;-)'\u25a0'..\nIn grabbing-.lis first major title\nsince taking the f947 Western Open,\nthe 81-year-old Palmer needed only\n27'putts compared to a regulation 88;\nJDemaret, the OJai, Calif., fashion\nplate who '. willingly snapped; up\nMay's $100-to'-$20 wager on snaring\na birdie on the 18th and then lost,\nwas never ahead.,\nU.S. Picks Davis Cup Team lo\nDefend International Net trophy\nBy GAYLB TALBOT\nRYE, N.Y., Aug. 15 (AP)-The\nnited States today picked a four-\nnan Davis CUp team to defend the\nnternational tennis trophy against\nin Australian squad which showed\nis muscles by. completing a 5-0\niweep over the Italians in the inter-\n:one final,\nEven as the Australians were\nrinding up their rout'at the West-\nihester Country Club here, the\nifnlted States Lawn Tennis As'soc-\natlon announced in New York that\nbis would be the American line-up\nd the challenge round at Forest\nAlls, Aug, 26-28:\nRichard (Panchd) Gonzales of\njos Angeles, United States singles\nshampion; Ted Schroeder, of La\nIrescenta, Calif., Wimbledon title-\niolder; Bill Talbert of New York\nind Gardnar Mulloy of Coral\nSables, Fla., United States doubles\nChampions.\nAustralia's Billy Sidwell probably\nflinched a singles berth in the pay-\n>ff struggle against the Americans\nby the'brilliant manner in which he\n\u2022wept aside Italy's Marcello Del\nBello, 6-1, 6-1, 6-0, today. He needed\nonly 50 minutes to wrap lt up.\nFrank Sedgman, the 22-year-old\nAustralian champion, started off indifferently and then turned on the\nfull fury of his big game to drive\nGianni Cucelli, the Italian ace, from\nthe court under a hurricane of\nplacements 1-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2.\nThe four members of the Austral-\nIan squad are Sedgman, Sidwell,\nJohn Bromwlch and George Worth-\nIngton.\nThe veteran Bromwlch, despite\nbis excellent play In the doubles\nagainst Italy Sunday, implied\nstrongly today that he still has little\ninterest in playing singles in the\nchallenge round. He is tired and\nOff his game.\nAUSSIES POWERFUL\nWhere both Schroeder and Barker\nknocked Sidwell down In straight\nsets in last year's challenge round,\neither Schroeder or Gonzales might\nexperience great difficulty in beating him at all this -time. Some of\nhis play against Del Bello, a better\nthan fair' player, bordered- on the\nsensational.\nSedgman also is certain- to prove\na tough customer ln the challenge\nround, apd he easily could win one\nof his singles matches\u2014something\nno Australian has done since the\nAussies won the cup in 1930 at\nPhiladelphia.\nBaseball Scores\nBy The Canadian Pren\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt Louis 002 120 000-5 12   3\nChicago ..........' 000 100 010\u20142   6   1\nBrecheen and Rice; Chipman, Ad-\nkins <5) Muncrief (8) and Owen.\nPittsburgh     210 004 002r-9 13 -0\nCincinnati  000 140 101\u20147 13   2\nWerle,  Sewell   (5)   and  McCullough; Wehmeler, Lively (7) Black-\nwell (8) Erautt (0) and Cooper.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDetroit  000 100 002 0\u20143   9   2\nCleveland .... 100 000 101 1-4 II   1\nNewhouser and Robinson; Feller\nand Tresh.    '\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\".;\nNew York ...--i.', 100 103 000\u20145 10 0\nPhiladelphia .. 001 025 OOx\u20149 11   1\nLopat Pillette (5) Buxton (6) and\nSilvera, Nlarhos (6); Scheib and\nGuerra.\nWashington 000 000 001 01\u20142 7 1\nBoston  000 100 000 02\u20143   7   0\nHudson and Early; Dobson and\nTebbetts.\nChicago  000 005 003\u20148   9   3\nSt. Louis   000 000 000\u20140   2   0\nWight and Malone; Fannin, Embree (6) Papal (0) and Moss.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBaltimore 5-2, Montreal 3-7.\nJersey City 6, Buffalo 4.\nMOVING\nWITH CARE\nEVERYWHERE\nFrequent service in every direction. Specialized household\ngoods moving by von, house to house or to storage where\nbest suited to shipper. Your complete information, phone\n1106.    \u2022\nNow serving all United States ai agents for\nUnited Van Lines, Ine.\nWilliams Van Line Ltd.\n613 Ward St.\nPhone 1106\nNELSON, B.C.\nTfie good-natured whisky*\nSeagram*\n' Kutq's Plate\nCANADIAN   WHISKY\nThe price is \"footf\/fatt\/rec\/* too!\nNet*;Kootenay Lake Speedboat Queen\nHere Is \"Miss Mercury,\" powerful speedboat\nowned by Jlggs Mauriello of Trail,'which wrested\nthe Kootenay Lake championship from L. F. Gil\nbert's Ladybird of Nelson at the annual regatta\nat Nelson Sunday. Mauriello ran the 10-nille race\nIn 11 minutes seven seconds.\nWalcott Trims\nChallenger\nList for Charles\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (AP)\u2014It\nappeared today that Ezzard Charlea\nwhose hope for universal \u25a0recognition as heavyweight champion'rests\non his ability to eliminate all possible challengers, could do worse\nthan hire Jersey Joe Walcott as an\nassistant eliminator.\nThe venerable Jersey Joe effectively put Sweden's OUe Tandberg\ninto the also-ran ranks with a five-\nround knockout In Stockholm last\nnight, thus making one less chore\nfor Ezzard.      .\u25a0\u25a0'<\u25a0.;\u25a0\nWalcott's Victory over the so-so\nSwedish fighter really did little to\nalter the heavyweight picture, except possibly to strengthen his hope\nthat he might qualify for a return\nbout with the partly - crowned\nCharles.\nThe International Boxing Club\nadmits its plans, if any, are vague\nat present, and that Walcott's\ntriumph failed to change the situation one. way or another,\n\"However,\" Harry Markson, Director of the organization, said, \"if\nWalcott goes around knocking out\nheavyweights he'll eventually have\nto be considered.\"\nTandberg was slightly less than a\nbargain in his lone appearance in\nNew York, so' the critics are inclined to view Jersey Joe's victory\nwithout excitement. The large Olle\nlost to Joey Maxim on that occasion,\nand showed nothing which might\nrate him even an .outside' threat.\nWalcott, his pockets lined with an\nestimate'd 15,000 Swedish kroner, or\n$41,670, as \u25a0 a. result of the fight,\nexpressed his willingness to meet\nany heavyweight, including the\nwinner of the Lee Savold-Bruce\nWoodcock encounter when, or if, it\nis held in London;  \u2022   .   .'    '\nBall Standings\nBy The Canadian Pren\nAMERICAN\nNew York ,69 41 .627\nCleveland   65 45 .591\nBoston  67 45 .591\nDetroit   62 51 .549\nPhiladelphia  61 51 .545\nChicago    47 64 ,423\nWashington    :. 38 71 ,349\nSt. Louis  35 76...315\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn - 68 40 .630\nSt. Louis  \u201e,....\u201e  68 41 .519\nNew York ...'.  56 52 .519\nBoston  55 ,54 .505\nPhiladelphia  54 57 .\nPittsburgh   51 58 .468\nCincinnati   45 66 .405\nChicago  42 71 .372\nIn 1948 Denmark harvested about\n3,500,000 tons of grain, 10 per cent\nmore than in 1947.   '\ntrack meet\ntoday for\nstay-homers\n\u2022Nelson stay-at-hoihe camp, which\nhas had a. record attendance this\nSummer, will hold a large scale\ntrade meet today ; at the Civic\ngrounds.\nRaces of all sorts will be held for\nchildren of all ages attending the\ncamp.\nWednesday night, when the camp\nwinds up, there will be a pow wow\nat which the children* will present\ntheir own program. Parents, and\nchildren will attend, A display of\nhandiwork done by the campers will\nalso be exhibited in the badminton\nhall during the pqw wow. Projects\nsuch as cork work, woodwork, carving and many :thers will be viewed.\nAfter the pow wow the children\nwill enjoy a skating party In the\nCivic arena.\nRain Stalls\nB.C. Net Play\nVANCOUVER, Aug; 15 (CP) -\nThat long-standing jinx of tennis\ntournaments\u2014Old Man Rain\u2014stayed around long enough today to\nwash out most of, the first day's\nplay In the B.C, Junior Clay Courts\nChampionships here.;'\nDespite the downpour, however,\ntop-seeded Paul WUley, of Vancouver, managed to win his match\nagainst New Westminster's Al\nWiesner 6-1, 6-0, before rain\nstopped play.\nThree, other junior men's singles\ntilts were played off.\nIn the boy's singles, under-15\nclass, Portland's Jimmy Flynn scored an easy win over N. Creighton,\nVancouver, winning 6-0, 6-0.\nTop-seeded Patsy Heard, of Portland, was given a bye into the second round of the junior ladles'\nsingles, as was Vancouver's secondr\nseeded Barbara Wood.\nTed Williams\nLeads A. L. Hitters\nCHICAGO, Aug. 15 (AP) \u2014 Ted\nWilliams of Boston leads the American ' League in batting for the\nsecond straight week with an average of .352. .\nWilliams moved up seven points\nduring the last week to outdistance\nGeorge Kell fit Detroit, who rose\nfrom fourth place to second with a\n.351.\nBob Dillinger of St. Louis, who\nwas tied with Wlliams for the No.\n1 spot last week, dropped to a tie\nfor third place, with Dom DiMaggio with .342.\nVern Stephens, Boston shortstop,\nled in runs batted in with1130 and\nalso took honors for the most homers with 31.\nAllle Reynolds of New York led\nthe pitchers with an average of .766\nfor 11 victories and three defeats.\nHockey Playoff\nRales Discussed\nBy JACK 8ULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO, Aug. 16 (CP)\u2014The\nCanadian Amateur Hockey Association, probably the largest and weal\nthiest amateur sports organization\nIn the Dominion, knows no bounds.\nIt has a finger In. a few pies, ranging\nfrom summer sports to drama, mu<\nsic and painting.\nOn separate fronts during the\nweekend\u2014Toronto and Ottawa\u2014the\nAssociation came up with four or\nfive announcements. Three of them\ndealt ,with $9000 of the Association's\nmoney for projects whose relation\nship to hockey is incidental.\nThe Toronto meeting dealt with\nthe, subject of Memorial and Allan\nCup final dates. It was decided that\nit a Quebec team wins the Eastern\nCanada Junior title, all games in the\nBest-of-Seven Memorial Cup series\nwill be played ln Montreal and If\nan Ontario Hockey Association club\nwins the Eastern title, all games will\nbe played on Toronto ice. The series\nstarts no later than April 22.\nPickard will decide venue If an\nOttawa or Marltlmes Junior Club\nqualifies to represent the East In\nthe final series.  All   Allan   Cup\nfinal games will be played In the\nWest and will start no later than\nApril 29.\nThe officers also decided that the\nAssociation's semi-annual meeting\nwill be held in.Montreal next Jan.\n6-7..\nOn non-hockey subjects, the Tor.\nonto meeting recommended to the\nexecutive that $5000 should be donated to the Canadian British Empire\nGames Association' to help send\ntrack and field men, swimmers,\nboxers, wrestlers, weight-lifters,\nfencers to the Aukland Games next\nFeb. 4-11..\nFrom Ottawa it was announced\nthat Toronto musician Harry Somers, and Edmonton actress Milwyn\nDavies had won the newly-insti.\ntuted C. A. H. A. scholarships, each\nworth $2000, for study abroad. In\nboth cases, the recipients' interest\nln hockey Is purely academic.\nSomers, 23-year-old six-foot-one\nmusician and composer, plans to\nstudy musical theory and composition in Paris.\nMiss Davies, who can't skate but\nis an ardent hockey fan, plans to use\nthe scholarship to further her studies at the Academy of Dramatic Arts\nin London. She hopes to sail for\nEngland Aug. 26.\nKings Paste\nMonarchs;\nEnter Finals\nThe Kings decided that the best\ndefence was an offence and bombarded the Monarchs for\" 17 runs in\nthe first four.innings while holding\nthem scoreless after which Ernie\nColman coasted to his second successive win ln the Kings' pitching\nbox, by a score of 20-7, Monday\nnight.\nThe Kings garnered a 5-0 edge ln\nthe first Inning by virtue of five\nhits and a Monarch error, and from\nthen on they .never looked back,\ncollecting three more in the second, four more in the third, five\nln the fourth and finishing off with\nthree in the seventh, Monarchs'\nscoring was confined to five tn the\nfourth Inning and two ln the fifth,\nKeith Loewen and Jack Brown\nwho shared the pitching chores for\nthe Monarchs, allowed a grand total of 25 hits and two walks, while\nErnie Colman, on the mound for\nthe victors allowed seven hits and\n4 walks.\nHeavy hitters for the Kings, were\nJim Ball with five hits, Including a\nhome run, and Mike Vecchio, with\nfour hits, including a triple. For\nthe Monarchs it was strictly a Mik-\nkleson show, with big Mel collecting three of the Monarchs seven\nhits, -'j..\nKings how enter the finals\nagainst Pucksters.\nKings 534 500 3-20 25 3\nMonarchs  000 520 0\u2014 7   7 3\n:   Batteries: Colman and Ball; Loewen, J. Brown arid Clinton.\nHurls 42 Innings \\\nKENOSHA, Wis., Aug. 15 (AP)-\nSpeaklng of \"Iron man\" pitchers,\nwhat about I. A. (Corky) Coraeini?\nCorky went the route yesterday\nas his Italian-American softball\nteaip won a 1-0, 42-Jnirig game. The\ncontest, decided by Coraeini's single\niri the 42nd frame, took four hours\nand 10 minutes.\nThe Little Professor's Form\nTliii advertliement li not published or displayed by tha liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia.\nPom DiMaggio, Boston Red Sox outfielder,\ntakes a few swings at Boston's Fenway Park to\ndisplay the form that-has enabled him' to. hit\nsaiely in the  last .34 games to give  hit seasi.'\naverage a boost to .343. At left he follows through\npn a warmup swing. In oloseups are the Little\nProfessor's grip (top) and twinging form (bottom).\n\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nTigers, Beavers\nClash tonight\nNelson, Tigers will be playing the\nFruitvale Beavers tonight at Civic\nRecreation Grounds in their last\nhome game of the league before\nplayoffs.\nAlthough Nelson is now in last\nplace, the team has a chance to gain\nsecond place by winning this game\nand also the twin games scheduled\nfor Sunday In Rossland and Fruit\nvale.\nRon Brown, youthful hurler, is\nslated to start against the Beavers\ntonight. Bscking him up will be\nFred Townsend and tireless Les\nHufty, who has shouldered most of\nthe pitching duties this year,.,\nEnglish Batsmen\nPound Bowlers\nFrom Down Under\n' LONDON, Aug. 15 (CP) - England's batsmen took a commanding\nlead in the. fourth cricket test match\nwith New. Zealand during a day of\nplay which saw several records established. The first three tests were\ndrawn.\nThe English batsmen pounded the\nbowlers from down under for 432.\nruns with six wickets yet to call\nin answer to the New Zealanders'\n345.\nLes Hutton and Reg Simpson\npa \"red to score 147 in the best\nopening stand in any test match\nbetween England and New Zealand,\nHutton then teamed with Bill Ed-\nrich to bat ln 218 tallies for the\nlargest total ever amassed by England against New Zealand.\nHutton also starred with 206 runs\nfor the highest individual innings\nagainst New Zealand ever made ln\nBritain and equalled. Martin Don.\nnelly's score for the best by either\nteam In England. '\n-Sell the Sure Way\u2014CLASSIFIED\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 16, 1949 \u2014 7\nRed Sox Only three\nGames Behind Yankees\nBy STEVE ROBERTSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBoston Red 8ox gained a full\ngame on New York Yankees Monday and now are only three games\nbehind the American League lead-\nera. In the National St. Louis Cardinals whittled the Idle Brooklyn\nDodgers' lead to a half game.\nWhile the Rec\" Sox were edging\nWashington Senators 3-2 In 11\nInnings, the Philadelphia Athletics\nwere trouncing the Yankees 9-5,\nThe Cardinals beat Chicago Cubs\n5-2 and ln the only other National\ngame Pittsburgh Pirates outscored\nCincinnati Reds 0-7.\nIn other American games Cleveland Indians and Bob Feller chalked up a 4-3 win in 10 innings over\nDetroit Tigers and Chicago White\nSox shut out St. Louis Browns 8-0.\nHard-hitting Ted Williams was\nthe hero of the Boston victory. He\nsingled in Dom DiMaggio with two\nout In the 11th. For the luckless\nSenators, it was the 20th loss in\ntheir last 33 starts.\nThe teams were tied 1-1 at the\nend of the ninth. Washington got\none ln the top half of the 11th.\nIn the Boston turn at bat, Billy\nGoodman opened the Inning with\na double. He tied the count at 2-2\nwhen Dom DiMaggio, who has hit\nsafely ln all but one of bis last 43\ngames, smashed a two-bagger.\nThen Williams, hitless ori his four\nprevious, tries, came through with\nthe game-winning blow into short\nright fitjld.\nAt Philadelphia a five-run sixth-\ninning was the winning margin for\nPhiladelphia over the . Yankees.\nRighthander Carl Scheib of the Athletics picked up his fourth straight\npitching decision.\nAt Cleveland Feller was handed\na victory when pinch-hitter Hal\nPeck socked a bases-loaded single\nfor the Indians in the 10th. Hurling\nagainst Hal Newhouser. before 44,-\n510, Feller entered the ninth inning\nwith a 2-1 margin. But then Feller\nwalked Dick Wakefield ahd Vic\nWertz put the Tigers in front with\nhis 13th homer bt the year.\nIn Cleveland's half Bob Kenned-\nhomered to tie up the game.\nlt was the 14th overtime victor.-,\nfor the Tribe in 15 extra-innlni\ngames this season.\nIt was Feller's 12th victory against'\neight losses. Newhouser has 11 win>\nand eight defeats.\nAs the Cardinals trimmed Brook\nlyn's lead from one game to a hah'\ngame, Harry (The Cat) Brecheen\nthrottled the Cubs by scattering\nsix hits for his 10th triumph and\ncontributed a double and a pair ol\nsafe bunts to the St. Louis cause.\n.The Cardinals collected a dozen'\nblows Including Stan Muslal's 20th\nhomer. But the hitting of the St\nLoulsans was far from timely and\na dozen Cardinals were left stranded on the bases.\nAt Cincinnati Rip Sewell of the\nPirates, who took over from starter\nBill Werle, gained credit for his\nsixth victory of the season against\none defeat. \u25a0\nAUSTRALIA TAKES\nLEAD IN TENNIS\nRYE, N.Y., Aug. 15 (AP)\u2014Billy\nSidwell of Australia overwhelmed\nMarcello Del Bello of Italy, 6-1, 6-1,\n9-0, to give his team a 4-0 lead in\nthe Davis Cup inter-zone final being concluded at the Westchester\nCountry Club today.\nWEATHER DELAYS\nCHANNEL SWIM\nDOVER, England, Aug. 15 (AP)\u2014\nShirley May France's advisers decided not to send her to France tonight for her attempt to swim tho\nEnglish Channel because weather\nconditions were not right. There wai\na Westerly breeze.\nHer coach, Harry Boudaklan,. believes Shirley May is in top condition to try to conquer the treacherous 21 miles of water separating\nEngland from the Continent.\nSell the Sure Way\u2014CLA8SIFIEH.\nSenior Baseball\nFruitvale vs.   Nelson\nBEAVERS\nTIGERS\nTONIGHT -\n6:15 P.M.\nLast League game in Nelaon before playoffs\nNELSON\nTIGERS\nvs.\nNELSON\nAll Star\nOLD TIMERS\nWednesday\nat 6:00 P.N.\nA lovely big ham will be given fo a lucky ticker '\nholder at each game\nAdults\u2014SOc1      Students\u20142S#     Children\u201410#\nYOU LL BE GUD T\nYOU SMOKED\nMore and more smokers\nare discovering how truly\ndelightful a cigarette can\nbe \u2014 so mild - so smooth\n\u2014 so satisfying. Try a pack\nand you foo will be glad\ntomorrow, you smoked\nPhilip Morris today.\nEB-7?\nWORE CANADIANS 9$**wff\nPHIL'P MORRIS THAN fVfii BEFORE\n u\nI\n\u2022L\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\n1\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\n(-'he stzns ruAvc: rwiiosr\n'PERFECT CHARACTER AH EWI\nSEEN ON A HOOMINBEIN'r.'\nt&ir he par oa\u00ab fault-\nTHASS WWTHEVGJUS HIM\nWET.'-AH AIMS TTFINO OUT\nl-lgrn\n\/V  SUSIE'S TAflSINa THAT\nf   *HlP*ENT0F^RA15.\u201elFHE\n\u2022 PHONES IN BEFORE I RETURN,\nTEU. HIM NOT TO 16T THOSE\niTRUCKS OUT\n\\ OF SISHTi\nPHIL DRIVES -RAPlDW-TO ASUBURBAN\nSTREET\" AND POUSES THE CAR U6HTS \"\nSOMEONE'S GETTIN&\nINTO THE CAR PARKED\nIN THE DRNBi MAN\nANB TWO WOMEN\u2014 \u2022\u00ab\n'AiUSlC\", HIS SISTER\nANO- ANB Wl LP Al\n-WITH LUSSA6E.\n\\<*i*sa            ' i\n\u00a7\nElS^\n*.j M'\npggfes*\u00bbU\nX,\n^T^r-\u25a0\n* i,r\nCop., \u00bb\u00bb, WA tHaMjfwAxHoMi\nWwURIthuHnend^             1\n'.)\n1\n\u2022IP\n'<$Yt\n1\nARMS\n\u2022j) X i\nI       \u00a3\u00a3\u00a7\u00a3    C','\nn^ft P*\n^v^?y>p%ig\n-\u2014T^^OO:\nbwHWll N Kmf ftaWtei (r\u00abAtit*.\nOn the Air\nTUESDAY, AUG. 16,1949\n\/ CKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign On\n7:05\u2014TOp of the Morning     ',.-'.\n8:00-CB;d News :\n8:15\u2014Breaklast Club\n8:45\u2014For you, Madame\n9:00\u2014BBC News\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\n9:15^Western Tunes\nOdS-'-Coffee Time   \u25a0'.'.'\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Old Favorites\nll:00-Strlke Up the Band\n11:15-Waltz Invitation\n11:30\u2014Mejodia\n12:00\u2014Thp Nptlce Beard\n12:15\u2014Stirling News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcaat\n1:00\u2014Summer Symphony\n2:00\u2014In a Lighter Mood '\n2:15\u2014The Little Show\n2:45\u2014Commentary\n3:0(MDdds and Ends\n3:15\u2014Serenade ...\n3:30\u2014Divertimento      . \\\n4:00\u2014Bernie Braden\n4:15\u2014Meet Glzelle  \u25a0'-'\u25a0'.\n4:30\u2014The Marsens\n4:45\u2014Patsy and Patches '\n5:00\u2014Songs Froni The Shows\n5:30r-Feerless\" News\n5:45\u2014Sacred Heart .\n6:00\u2014Fishing Forecast\n8:02\u2014'Teenage Requests\n6:36\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7d)0-CBC News\n7:15\u2014Science Reporter\n7:39\u2014Leicester Sq. to Broadway\n8:00\u2014Alberta Ranch Houso\n8:30^-Local Talent\n9:00\u2014Eric Wilde\n9:30\u2014Conductor's Choice\n10:00\u2014Peebles News\n10:15\u2014Points of View\n10:30\u2014Drama\nll:00-Sign Off \u2022.'   \u25a0\nCJAT ',.\\\n810 ON THE DIAL'\n6:30\u2014Newa\n6:35\u2014Tom's Inn '\u25a0\n7:00\u2014News \/       '   '\n7:05\u2014Tom's Inn\n7:30\u2014News >\n7:35\u2014Tom's Inn\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast, Club\n8:45\u2014Music. Workshop\n' 9:15\u2014Lucy Linton\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Morning Meditations\n:00\u2014Hememaker's Club\n15-rMuslcaIly Yours\n45\u2014Songs by Stu Davis\n:00\u2014Strike up the Band\n15\u2014Mid-Morning Melodies\n:45\u2014Wakely Trio\n:00\u2014Luncheon Concert      \"j\n30\u2014News \\.\n:45\u2014Afternoon Recess\n:00\u2014Afternoon Recess\n:30\u2014Afternoon Recess\n00\u2014In a Lighter Mood\nI\u2014Waltz Time   .        s\n:45\u2014Co'mm: A, Grant\n;00\u2014Brave Voyage\n15-CJAT Goes Calling\n00\u2014Bernie Braden\n:15\u2014Club Calendar\n:30\u2014Platter Party\n:00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Supper Serenada\n:30^-The King's Men\n00\u2014CBC News\n': 15\u2014Science Reporter\n:30\u2014Leicester Square1 tp\" Broad-\n-   way '    '\n:00\u2014Alberta Ranch House\niSO-^Mystery Theatre\n:00\u2014Music by Eric Wild\n:30\u2014Holiday from Home\n00\u2014News\n:15-\u2014Sports Cavalcade\n25\u2014Memorable Moment       :\n30\u2014Drama\n00\u2014Dance Date       .-''\u25a0'-\n30\u2014Dance Orchestra\n:55-CBC News\n^S News Pictures\nVictor\n' \u2014AP Wlrephoto\nHis eyes battered and his face\nshowing signs of pain, challenger\nGus Lesnevich walks,to his corner at the end of- the seventh\nround of his N.B.A. championship\nbout with Ezzard Charles. Lesnevich failed to answer the bell for\nthe eighth round, and Charles was\ndeclared the winner. The fight\ntook place before 15,000 fans In\nNew York's Yankee Stadium.\nApproved\n\u25a0 \u25a0   .    . \u2014AP Wlrephoto\nEzzard Charles grins through perspiration Iri his dressing room\nafter defeating challenger Gus Lesnevich to successfully defend hla\nN.B.A. heavyweight-crown. Charles gave a savage exhibition as he\ncut the challenger to shreds, forcing him to surrender at the end of\nseven rounds.\nEller and Fiance Reunited\nWEDNESDAY, AUG 17,1949\nCKLN\n, 1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign On\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00- CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madame\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014 Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Coffee Time\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit :'.;\"\n10:15\u2014Old  Favourites\n11:00\u2014Strike Up The Band\n11:15\u2014Waltz Invitation\n11:30\u2014Famous Voices\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Stirling Newa\n12:30\u2014Fat-m Broadcast\nl:00-r-Summer Symphony\n2:00\u2014In a Lighter Mood\n2:30-The Little Show\n2:45\u2014Commentary\n3:00\u2014Odds and Enda\n3:15-What's New?    :\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n4:00\u2014Bernie Braden\n4:15\u2014Spotlight\n4:30\u2014Ed   Hockridge\n. 4:45\u2014Sleepy Hollow Farm\n5:00\u2014Pops on Parade\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n5:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n8:00\u2014Fishing forecast     \u2022 .-    :'\u25a0\u25a0*\n6:01\u2014Fire Fighters  \\\n6:15\u2014Musical Program\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014Footloose ln Europe\n7:30\u2014CBC   Wednesday   Presentations\n10:00\u2014Peebles News\n10:15\u2014Book Shelf:\n10:30\u2014London Studio Concert\nU:00-Sign Off\nOutposts Alerted\nFor Tug Believed\nIn Robbery\nQUEEN CHARLOTTE CITY, B.C.\nAug. 15 \u2022 (CP)-Brltish Columbia\nPolice outposts along the \"mainland\ncoast have been alerted for the\nappearance of an- unidentified\nsouthbound tug, believed connected\nwith a $400 robbery, here.\nThe robbery involved theft of\n$400 worth of men's and women's\nclothing from a logging company\noperating on the Queen Charlotte\nIslands.\nThe towboat Is believed heading\ntor Vancouver.\nSell by Classified\u2014Be Satisfied\n\u2014AP^Wlrephoto\nPat. Williams, 18, a large-eyed\nblonde from Tacoma, Wash., appeared In a Los Angeles court to\nget her contract approved for\nmovies, radio, television and the\nstage. Her stage appearances will\nbe as replacement for Marie Wilson In Ken Murray's \"Blackouts\".\nRescued\n\u2014AP Wirephoto\nCharles Eller,- ex-G.I. master sergeant from Fresno, Calif., and\nLy Elyse Broeckmann, former dentist for the U. 8. Army- In Germany, are reunited In New York during a television broadcast They\nplan to wed In a few days. Eller first met Miss Broeckmann when\nshe examined his teeth during World War II. They became engaged,\nand he returned to the United States. Eller offered to spll one of his\neyes to pay for his fiancee's plane passage tp the U. S., but the fare;\nwas paid by a radio program sponsor.\nDAILY CRXDSSWORD mm\n\u25a0 2. Fencing;\nsword\n3. River (SE.\nYukon\nTerr.)\n4. Particle of\naddition\n5. Music note\n6. Hindu\nteacher\n7. Portion of\na curved\nline\n8. Trees\n9. Tibetan\npriest\n10. Pieced out\n14. Rage\n16. Fall in\ndrops .\n19. Public    .\nordinance\n20. Brief    ;,\n21. Copper coin.\n(Afghan.)\n22. Sayings\n25.3rd king\nof Judah\n(Bib.)\n26. Enclosure\n28. Per. to\nlaughter\n20. Bucket\n31. Young deer\n34.Lift\n35. Foot\n36. Eager\n37. Theater\nseat\n40. Girl'j name\nUMML-JIJ\nannan tiauHU\nanaarn aannn\nann na nan\nnannna nacin\naannn naann\nanan nnannu\nnnanaa\nana an oaa\nanann annau\n\u25a1aaaa naaaa\nanaaa manna\nYtiterdsy'i Aaiwf'\n41,Antlered ;\nanimal\n43. Diminutive       .\nof Leall*\n44. Russian\n' measure\n46. Tramp\n(slang)\n\u2014AP Wirephoto\nClarence Blair, Jr., 7, grimy\nfrpm smoke, hugs his thankful 10-\nmonth-old brother, John, whom he\nrescued from the flaming kitchen\nof the converted gasoline station\nBlair homo In Whitesboro, N. Y.\nFlames enveloped the structure tn*\na matter of seconds. The house\nburned to the ground.\nWood Buffalo Park, situated on\nthe border between Alberta and-the\nNorthwest Territories, is the largest\nbig game reserve on the North American Continent, j with an area of\n17,300 square miles.\nSell  the  8ure  Way\u2014CLASSIFIED\nACROSS\n1. A speech.\nsound\n6. Valuable\n.   fur\n11. Think\n12. Extract, aa\nvengeance\n13. Guide\n14. Centripetal\nflower\ncluster\n15. Thrice\n. (Mus.)\ntO.Millpond\n17. Bounder\n18. A fakir\n21. Father\n23. Perish\n24. Pile\n27. Cut open\n29. Armed\ncivilian\nbody\n, ti. Secular\n31. Distant\n32. Indefinite\narticle\n33. Narrows\n36. Fourth\nArabian\ncalif\n33. Hole-\npiercing\ntool\n39. Tablet    -\n42. Sprite\n44. Solitary\n45. Eyes\n46: American .\nfrontiersman\n47. Web-footed\nbirds\n48. Bid\nDOWN\n1. Circular\ntread\n.   DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\n, \" Is LONGFELLOW ,'ji\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-j'\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different :'\n. A Cryptogram Quotation\nUCUJZ    WNI    dUSIT    CUJZ    PSTOQ*';\nWSIAUA     li I A     FN JU PULL     B *Y      QOU\nYMQM JU-QNFS QML.     *     \"-\nYesterday'a Cryptoquote:   GOOD LAWS ARE PRODUCED BY;.\nBAD MANNERS (OR CUSTOMSj-MACROBIUS. \"\"\n| PlalHhuted bv Vlnf S-aaturw syndleats'*'.\n WM\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nHELP WANTED-^FEMALE. A\npermanent position with opportunity for advancement.\nPleasant working conditions.\nGood salary,1 group insurance and hospital benefits.\nRetirement plan. Successful\napplicant will be glven'thbr-\nough training in every department. Qualifications:\nSingle, age 23 to 35, Grade\nX Education or better. Must\nhave good basic knowledge\nof sewing. Neat appearance\nand pleasing personality.\nApply in person or -phone\nSinger Sewing Machine Co.,\nNelson, B. C.\nMRS.   IRVING  OF  VICTORIA -\nPlease call Mrs. button, 1392-X.\nANYONE KNOWING THE ,I*ES-\nent address of Mrs. Polly Eckford,\nnee, Isaouloff, please advice the\nSocial Welfare Bjanch, Box 470,\n\u25a0Nelson, B.C.\nfOUNG-MAN FOR PERMAN-\nent position with opportunity for advancement. Must\nhave fair education, neat in\nappearance and pleasing\npersonality. A man who\nwants to become a salesman,\nto grow with a large comr\npany. After training period\nhe, will be furnished a car\nond will work out of Nelson\nshop. Apply in person only\nto C. Field, Mgr., Singer\nSewing Machine Co., Nelson\nHYGIENIC SURPLUS (RUBBER\ngoods) twelve samples tor 60c,\npostpaid ln plain, sealed wrapper,\nCatalogue included lilting books\non marriage and modern methods\not feminine hygiene. General Novelty Co, Dept 'N\\- 71 Major St,\nToronto, Ont\nBOY WANTED\nTo handle compact Daily\nNews paper route in Uphill\nsection of the City, This\n'route Is for a regular carrieri\nnot a  substitute,  to   lulx\nover Aug. 20th.\n\u25a0 Apply to Circulation Dept. \u25a0\nNelson Daily N- ws\nwB*i**0*i*f*f*+r+*\u00bb>*\n%ANTED IMMEDIATELY: TWO\ngraduate nurses for 27-bed hospital. Gross salary $175.00 per month\nless , room, board and laundry,\n$26.00 Eight-hour day; six-day\nweek. 28 days' holiday after year's\nservice; sick leave IU days per\nmonth.. Wire, phone, or write, Matron, Slocan Community Hospital,\n:New Denver, B, C.\n-WaNTED-PARTS AND SERVICE\nmanager.\"Must be able to take\nfull charge bf shop and parts dept.\nSteady employment for right\nparty. State references. Apply\nBox 170 or phone 258, Kimberley, B.C.\nWanted \u2014 assistant book-\nkeeper and Invoice clerk for Jaw-\nmill office. Apply Box 1363. Nelson Daily News,\nlOY OR GlftL WANTED-APPLY\nComposing Room, Nelson Dailj)\nNews after 5 p.m.\nWANTED\u20142 LICENCED SCAL-\ners. Apply Glacier Lumber Com-\npany. Nelson.\nIXPERIENCED WAITRESSES\nwanted. Apply Standard Cafe.\ntSTANTED-EXPERIENCED\nresses, New Star Cafe.\nmsr-\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nJapanese-Canadian auto\nmechanic with papers wants job,\nConscientious and willing worker.\nBox 1007 Daily News.\nYQUNG LADY DESIRES POSI-\ntion in camp or with railroad\nextra or bridge crew. Box 1274\nDaily News.\nrem coats relined, men's\nshirts made to order; also ladies'1\nskirts; children's sewing and\nmakeovers. Phone 211-L.\nODD JOB MAN. PH. 256-R. Carpen-\nter, pipe fitting, kalsomlnlng,    j\nBOATS and ENGINES\nWill care for child up to\nsix years in my home by day,\nweek or month.* Phone 183-R.\nBUSINESS  AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nCHIROPRACTORS\n. COLIN McLAREN, D.C, CHIRO-\npractic X-Ray, Spinography,\nStrand theatre Bldg. Trail, Ph.328,\nA8SAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W.  WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsayers, 801 Josephine St, Nelson.\nH. S. EI,MES, ROSSLAND, E C.\nAssayer. Chemist, Mme Represnt\nDIAMONO   DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCo.. Ltd., Drilling and Bit Service. Box 508, Rossland. Ph. 420.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\n-^GGEN AND CURRIE, B.C.\nLand Surveyors, Mining an i Civil\nEngineers, Rossland, Kelowna,\nGrand Forks. Ph. Rossland 348\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B. C, Surveyor, Engineer.\nNSURANCE AND REAL E8TATE\nilcHARDY   AGENCIES   LTD   IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone lfe\nPERSONAL\nwawanesa mutual rati lN-\nsurance, Co D L Kerr,' Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.H\"\nDepot Clean rooms and modern\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single,' $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles   Vancouver, B.C.\nis tam^\" BihTH' eoNTftoL-!^\nformation ahd catalogue ot hygienic supplies Write. Western\nDistributors. 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nHYGIENIC PRODUCTS (RUBBER\nGoods), Best Service, High Quality, Low.Prices. Send tor our free\ncatalogue. I.X.L. Specialties,\n'G.P.O, Box 57, Toronto, Ont\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG SUN\ndries, '10 Deluxe assorted $1.00,\nmailed In plain sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain -catalogue free. Western\nDistributors. Box 24RN, Regina\nFully. Insured and Guaranteed\nSADDLE HORSES\nFOR HIRE\nPACK HORSES     -\nFree Instruction\nKOOTENAY   ?\nRIDING STABLES*\nPHONE 273-L-l\nFor Your Fall\nSewing Needs\nWe now have in stock   -\nA number of   . \u25a0 ,   ;\nUsed Machines\nlinger\nSewing Machine Co,\n339 Baker St.\nGetting the children ready\nfor school?\nRent\nAn Electric\n' SEWING\nMACHINE\nCall 41 and have a machine;\n- ...-,. delivered.\nSinger\nSewing Machine Co.\nEVERYDAY LOANS\nTO\nEveryday People\nFOR\nEVERYDAY NEEDS\nAt Niagara you'll appreciate the\nfriendly, quick way you get a\nloan. No other company has as\nwide a range of plans to choose\nfrom. Almost anyone can get\nthe cash they need the way they\nwant lt at Niagara. Your life is\ninsured at no extra cost\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LIMITED\nEst'd. 1030\nSuite 1. 560 Baker St, Nelson\nPhone 1005 '\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED   \u2022    \u00bb\nMachine  Shop,   ecetylens  and\nilectrlc welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nilEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\n: Specialists in mine and mill work\n708 Vernon St. Nelson. Phone 08.\nMachine work, light and heavy,\nSALES AGENTS ~\nuller Brush Sales - J. C. McKim\nWrite Box 123 - ?hone 703-R\nNf tam latfg i&tai\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n13c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive' insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive Inser-\n\u2022 tions.\n$1.56 line per month  (28 consecutive insertions). Box numbers   lie extra. Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c oer line,\nfirst  insertion,   16c  per  line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATE? LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle Copy   ...$   .05\nBy Carrier, per week,\nin advance       .25\nBy Carrier, per year  13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month       1.00\nThree months ...    2.50\nSix months     4.50\nOne year    8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    1.00\nThree months ._ .:    3.00\nSix months     6.00\nOne  year      12.00\nWhere extra postage Is required:\nAbove rates plus pottage.\nAUTOMOTIVt\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNEW AUSTIN\nDEVON SEDAN\nImmediate beliyery\nNew A40 Austin Pickup\nNew A40 Austin Panel\nUSEE)  ,\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1946.'Chevrolet Sedpn\n1942 Ford Sedan'\n1940 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Chevrolet Coach\n1937 Olds Convertible\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1930 Nash Sedan\n1941 Pontiac Sedan\n1947 Dodge 3-ton\n1941  International KB5\n1939 Ford Lt. Delivery '\n1948 Jeep Lt. Delivery\n1947 Chevrolet Pickup\n1941  Ford Vt ton\nTerms and Trades\nEmpire' Motors\nPhone 1135       803 Baker St.\nNelson\nt Miss\n.  These\n1\u20141949 Two tone Austin\nDevon Sedan\n1\u20141939 Pontiac Sedan       -\ni-1948 3-ton GMC Truck\nA-l condition.\nAniiplete with hydraulic hoist-\nand   box.   Ready   for   serviCL-. *\n' '   . _   Bi-ammnbk- price.\nBill DeFoe's\n-Super Service\"\nMACHINERY\nHornet Power\n. Ch'ain Saws\nMuffled for\nQuiet Operation\nMODEL DJ       v\nONE AND TWO MAN SAWS\nLight, powerful, compact,\nrugged weight, 3Q lbs. with\n16 Inch' cutting length.\n$261   l0   $336\nPius tax.\nMODEL D\nTHE HIGHER POWERED\n2 MAN SAW\nModel D'is made to handle\nthe bigger jobs\u2014combines\npower and dependability\nwith ease of operation. Cut-,\nting attachments up to 72\"\nweight 60 lbs.\n$384  t0  $451\nPlus tax.\nNelson Machinery\nEquip ment Co.\n2.4 Hall St Phone 18\nWining,   Milling   and   Sawmill\nMachinery, BuUdlng and Con-\ntractors' Supplies.\n\"Vf\nit's\nmachinery\nconsult Us.\nyou\nwant,\ni J a j\na , j\nfROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMSI\n7'Room-House\n-on-Bus-Route\nDwelling on two level lots\nhas living room,; through\nhall,-: kitchen, one bedroom\nand bath'on main flooi and\nfour bedrooms Up. Cement\nfoundation,,' furnace, wired\n'for range.\nExcellent buy at.\n$3850 .        ;\nFor information phone\nMISS FRISBY-717\n\"ivk' Rosling\neSS Ward St. Box 283\nReal Estate and Insurance\nDuplex in excellent condition. 3\n, modern apartments and 3 rooms\nwith gas, hot water heating.\nPartly furnished. Centre of City.\nRevenue $140 monthly. Living\nquarters for owner. Occupancy.\n$13,500.00.    -\nRanch\u2014-8 acres, 1W miles from\nCity. Electric light and Irrigation. New House. $7700.00.\nSummer, Camp on-1 acre. 3-room\nCabin; 100-ft. lake frontage.\n$1650.00..*\n:    F. A. WHITFIELD     ..\nReal Estate. -!\u25a0' 'Insurance\n.....302 BAKER ST.\nUSED TRUCK\n-.; SPECIAL\none'only\nInternational KS-8\nLong wheelbbse with freight\nVan. In good condition.\nSee this truck at\nCentral Truck\"\n& Equipment Co.\n'702 Front St.\u2014Nelson. '\n'46 FARGO, 3-TON,\u2022 2-SPEED\naxle, S'xl4' deck and rack, heater,\nchains, governor, sew. Zero rings,\nvalve grind, body and motor A-l\ncondition: Good tires, new spare.\nReasonable. 745 Rossland Ave..\nTrail, B.C.-\n1943 FLEETMASTER CHFV. SE-\ndan, Custom radio, under-seat\nheater, defrosters, undercoating,\nseat covers. Excellent condition.\n$2163 complete. Apply 124 High' St,\n1936 2-TON DIAMOND T FLAT-\ndeck truck. Overhauled; ln first\nclass shape, Price $400.00. Phone\n827-L,-' or write 1303 Robertson\nAve., Nelson.\nPRIVATE    PARTY    WILL    PAY\ncash for late model low mileage\ncar. State price. Apply Box 1261\n. Daily News.   .\nFOR SALE - 1948 CHEV. 2 DOOR\nsedan. Radio, underscat heater,\nseat covers. Recently overhauled.\nGood tires. Box 1271 Dally News.\n1939 FORD PANEL - GOOD CON\nditlon $750.00. Terms available.\nPhone 189-X-l or Box 1376 Daily\nNews.\nFOR   SALE - 1937   PLYMOUTH\n, Sedan.- Good shape,  new   tires,\nheater,   paint job.  Phone  735-L\nafter, 2 p.m,\n1947 DODGE Vt-l TON EXPRESS\nin new condition, good tires, only\n12,000  miles.   Nelson  Machinery\n'.Equipment Co. Ph. 18, 214 Hall St.\nTRAILER FOR SALE - GOOD\ncondition. Apply North Shore\nMotel.\nRENTALS\nTO RENT\u2014PARTLY FURNISHED\ncabin. Hot and cold water, toilet,\nshower, bath and sink; other furniture. R.R. 1, 3 minutes walk\nfrom ferry. Apply 206 Union St.\nWANTED FOR IMMEDIATE. OC-\ncupancy, house in or near Nelson\nby business man with family of\nfour. Box 1241, Dally News.\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 HOUSE,\nfurnished or unfurnished, close to\ncity, by Government employee\nand wife. Box 1602 Daily News,\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED COT-\ntage, 2 bedrooms, at 6-Mile. Phone\nT., D. Rosling, 717.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, CLOSE TO\nBaker St. Box 1240, Dally News.\nGARAGE FOR RENT - $5 PER\nmonth. Phone 183-R.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE -\nDay classes commence September\n1st. Night classes commence October 3rd   107 Baker Street.\n, Used\n\u2022 CAT '\nBargains\n1*-New Model D7 Caterpillar\nTractor\nHydraulic Angle Dozer and\nHyster, Towing Winch, Operator's Guard and Winter Tracks.\n1\u2014RD6 Caterpillar Tractor\nWith straight cable dozer and\n;\u2022 -logging, donkey. .| u. t i ivei -\n' hauled.\nL\u2014Model 30 gas 'Caterpillar\nI\u2014Model 20 gas Caterpillar\nSee the*latest\nSKAGIT Model BulB two-drum ;i\nWe carry  a complete line of \u25a0 *\nlogging   hooks,   tongs,   blocks,\nwedges, etc .,-\nFOR SALE\u20141 DAIRY FARM, 120\nacres, full farm, 448 acres; 100\nacres cleared, can be sold together\nor separately. Plenty of timber.\nApply Alex Toth, Park Siding,\nor write Box 34,' Trail, B.C.\nFOR SALE, $4500 CASH, 10 ACRES,\nrunning water, plumbing; electric\nlighting, orchard, garden,' small\nfruits, own irrigation. E. M. Hawthorn, Frultvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u20142-STOREY HOUSE, 3\nbedrooms, 3 lots, with good garden\nand fruit trees, Garage newly\npainted   and   new   shingles   on\n\"house. Michelson, 200 Gore St.\n\/ \u2022' \u2022' Tractor\n& Equipment? Co. Ltd.\nNELSON CRANBROOK\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL \u2014\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nCO. LTD.\nGranville Island MA 1251\nVancouver, B.C.\nCMW5M MACHINE WORK AND\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for field work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop. 708 Vernon St.,\nNelson, B.\"C\nfrbit SAlA-i pLAitab* Jb. Skkt-\ntor with Plow and Cultivator and\n1 Cordwood Power Saw. Apply to\nWm. Ramsbottom, Appledale.\nFOR SALE\u2014ELECTRIC GENER-\nator. IV, K.W., D.C. Inquire for\ndetails P. K. Relbin, 661 Baker St,\nNelson, B.C.\n1 D7 CATERPILLAR; 1 D6 CATER-\nplllar; 1 D4 Caterpillar, all ln top\nshape. Equipped for your job.\nBayei Equipment Co., Cranbrook.\nD4 CAT. FOR RENT OR CON-\ntract Equipped for excavating,\nroad 'building, land oleartng, etc\nC. Ross, Phone 588-R, Nelson.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nTHIS FALL AND WINTER PRO\nduce your own eggs. We offer\nraised New Hampshire, Leghorn.\nHampshire Cross or Leghorn pullets. All stock over two months\nold and older. All pullets raised\nfrom our finest R. O. P. sired\nchicks. All birds.are running out\non our free range, Apply our\nagent, Nelson Farmer's Supply\nLtd., Nelson, or write direct to\nNew Siberia Farms; N. Balakshln,\nR. R. 2, Chilliwack, B.C.\nLOVEL'V STANDARD BRED SAD-\ndle mare for sale, with or without saddle and bridle. Dick Kleef,\nR. R. 1, Nelson,\nFOR SALE-1 FRESH COW AND\n2 weeks old calf; good milker,\n1 heavy logging horse with harness. R.R. 1, Nelson; Phone 462-Y2.\nMILK COWS FOR SALE - MRS.\nM. Lepitzkl, Harrop, B.C.'\nOtJE JEliSEY BULL FOR SALE.\n-   Apply Nick Verigln, Ymir, B.C,\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - BROWN WALLET WltH\ncowboy colorings, containing $75\nln cash, time slips from G. Goloff\nLumber Co., and receipt from\nLand Settlement Mike Rilkoff,\nCrescent Valley. Reward.\nLOST-IIT VICINITY OF DOUG-\nlas Road and Hume School, pair\nof pink plastic glasses, Reward.\nPhone 252-L1.\nLOST - BLACK WALLET WITH\nzipper containing $5 and silver\nbetween Silica and Ward Streets.\nReward. Box 1503 Daily News.\nIn 1773, Dr. Stephen Hales, an\nEnglishman, discovered that the\nblood had a pressure, and was the\nfirst to measure it.\nFOR QUICK SALE-192 ACRES\nof land, 18 acres under cultivation\nwith Buildings and irrigation; remainder under tdriber. Must sell,\nCash or Terms. Apply L. Katelni-\nkoff, Blewett, B.C.\nIMMEDIATE. POSSESSION\nFour room bungalow with bathroom, two; bedrooms. Cash or\nterms. Apply 210 Park St. (near\nhospital). ,''    '   \u2022.-.'\u25a0\nHOUSE ON 3 CORNERLOTS ALL\nin garden. New addition partly\nfinished. Phohe 618-Y. ,\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES f\nAmal Larder  ...      .23\nAriglo-Huronlan-     8.75:\nArmistice .   ............,...\u201e...;..-..      .10\nAumaque :..;.....i.\u201e       .18\nAunor    ..-.\".\u201e\u25a0 .;...............    3.65\nBase Metals Mining ............     .35\nBevcourt  \u2022   .28\nBralofne ................    10.28\nBroulan       ~ 38\nBuffalo Ankerlte  ._.........\nBufadison ...    ...\u201e_,...\u2014......,\nCastle-Trethewey \t\nCentral Patricia   .\u2122\t\nChesterVille Mines ,\nCochenour          ......\nCbniaurum Mines \t\nConsolidated M & S ...\t\nCpnwest \u2014\nCrolnor ... \t\nDolnito\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 16, 1949 \u2014 9\nDiscovery ................\nDome Mines ,......._.-.\u2014...;.\nDonalda   .'. ....\nDuquesne ...i.....\nEast Malartio\t\nEast Sullivan\t\nElder\t\nEldona  ....    \t\nFalconbrldge Nickel\t\nFroblsher    ..    \t\nGiant Yellowknife ......\nGod's Lake Gold :..\t\nGolden Manltou \t\nHard Rock Gold\t\nHeva Cadillac ,\nHollinger\t\nHudson Bay M & S\t\nInter Nickel\t\nInt Uranium ....1\t\nJack Waite\t\nJoliet Quebec ....................\nKerr-Addison ....\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLabrador.. ......\nLake Shore Mines . .......\nLamaque Gold\t\nLlngman Lake,  ......\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLouvicourt \t\nMacassa \t\nMacDonald   !\t\nMacLeod-Cockshutt....\nMadsen Red Lake .'.\t\nMalartlc Gold F\t\nMclntyre-Porcuplne ..\nMcKenzie Red Lake\nMcMarmac \t\nNegus .-.\t\nNicholson    _\nNoranda\t\nNormetal   ;.\u201e.\nPaymaster  \u201e\t\nPerron Gold \t\nPickle .Crow Gold........\nPowell Rouyn Gold ....\nPreston East Dome ..\u201e\u25a0\nQueenston\t\nSan Antonio Gold ......\nQuemont ..;....\nSen Rouyn        .\nSherrltt Gordon \t\nSllanco\t\nSladen Malartlc ....\u201e.\u201ei\nStadacona ...\u201e\u201e\u00bb...\nSteep Rock .\nPHONE 1041-L IF YOU ARE\nlooking for a 6-room Modern\nHome.\nFURNISHED 6-ROOM MODERN\nhouse for sale on two lots, in Rose-\nmont Phone 1028-Y.\nT C Resources\t\nTaku River Gold Mines ...\nTeck Hughes Gold Mines .\nToburn Gold Mines\t\nUpper Canada\t\nVentures  .......      ..- ........:\nWaite Amulet ..............\nWright Hargreaves  ......\n^ILS-\"*-             ' .*\u25a0\nBritish American\t\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE-MAROON CHESTER-\nfield with 1 chair, walnut dining\nsuite, both nearly new. Also\nBeatty washing machine, good\ncondition; 7 dozen fruit jars, 85c\nin. 605 Cedar St, Ph. 623-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1 PAIR HEAVY\nblankets, cost $10.20. Also' 1 pair\nheavy -work boots, cost $15.00.\nMake an offer to Li-A.. GUI; Rm. 2,\nClub Hotel after 7 p.m.\nfor sALi - itetSLksi 6-H6LS\nrange, $65; dining room suite, $55;\nleather upholstered chair, $10, and\nsundry articles. 923 Edgewood\nAvenue.\nFOR SALE \u2014 ELECTRIC SINGER\nsewing machine as new, with\nmatching. stool and table. Phone\n1356-X.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2 LADY'S GRAY\nsuits, 2 pee. ballerina outfit and\nblack summer coat, all about size\n14. Nice-length. 618 Victoria St.\nSBRVEL ELECTFOLUX REFRK?.\nerator. Perfect condition. Apply\nMrs. A. H. Newton, Blueberry\nCreek, B.C.\nGOOD WOOD LOT NEAR YMIR.\nSmall battery radio, $15; electric\nwashing machine, lumber sawed\nto order. S. P.. Pond,- Nelson, B.C.\n2.25:\n-  .18%\n1.55\n.85\n140\n2.78\n: 1.04\n99.80\n1.11\n.53\n' 1.65\n.30\n19.25\n.58\n.57\n2.40\n2.40\n.41\n.87.\n8.70\n.20\n6.85\n.48\n1.88\n.22\n.11\n10.25\n46.25\n33.00\n.25'W\n.12\n.48\n17.65\n1.46\n3.95\n16,00\nS.65\n.45\n.60\n.14\n2.55\n.46\n1.06\n3.05\n2.74\n63.65\n'..M.%\n. .13\n: 2.40\n.61\n.58\n2.45\n.33\n\" .60\n2.20\n.75\n.   ,55\n4.40\n'LBS\n* - .40\n* 2.47\n3.98\nIK .51 !\n\u25a0 .46'\n1.74\n\/- m\n23\n3.45\n.63.\n-i'.l'iO'\n5.15\n'   9.25\n. :2.45\u201e\n24.00\n18.33\n8.50\n6.80\n.. . 31\n. 1414\n. 67\n. 4214\n. 20W\nIBV,\n. 21.%\n. 26%\n.. 2%\n.\"\"' 2%\nBritish Dom \t\nImperial\nInter Petroleum ...\nRoyalite ,\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAluminum     \t\nAbttibi Power\t\nArgus Corp     ........\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian Traction\nBrew St Dlst '   \t\nB C Elec Pfd  \t\nB C Power A  \t\nB, C Power B\nB C Forest Prod ...\nBCPulp   \t\nBuilding Prod   31\nBurns and Co Class A  .\u201e 15\nBurns'and Co Class B  13%\nCan Brew       '.  26%\nCan Canners     1714\nCan Celanese   ,         21%\nCan Car and Found  12\nCan Cement    25%\nCan Ind Alcohol ..,   '9%\nCan Malting : ;.... 4814\nCan Packers A  32%\nCan Pac Railway   1514\nCan Steamships ; \u201e- 14%\nCoast Copper             1.10\nCanadian .West Lumber  3%\nCockshutt Plow  12%\nCons Paper i\"    1614\nDlst Seagrams  24\nDominion Bridge   37\nDom Tar & Chem: ;. 23\nDominion Stores : .    27%\nDom Textile ;  1114\nFanny Farmer   ...,....., 34%\nFord of Canada A  23\nGatineau  .\u201e....,  vt%\nGen Steclwares:  ...... 14%\nGeorge Weston   .... 23\nGoodyear  89\nGypsum Lime ,.i...  15%\nHiram Walker  \u2022\u201e\u201e. 39%\nImperial Oil  1814\nImperial Tobacco   14\nInter Nickel ..\u201e....!.....\u201e. 38\nLoblaw A   29%\nH. R. MacMillan A u  9%\nMassey Harris   it)\nH. R. MacMillan B  '. 6%\nMcColl Front  .... 12%\nMinn & Ont Paper  14%\nMoore Corp ...............:..;...\u201e.:;.....,S. 70\nNew Jason   .........\u201e..\u201e\u201e\u201e._. 60\nPage Hershey   44%\nPpwell River\t\nPower Corp yyyy^\nShawlnigan \u201e..\u201e..;\u201e;\u201e.\u201e.\nSicks Brew\t\nSteel of Can\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES -\nBralorne   ... .........;\nCariboo Gold\t\nHedley Mascot .'. ,v:\nHighland Bell\t\nInt C & C-\t\nKootenay Belle  _\t\nPioneer Gold     ,..\nReeves MacDonald \t\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian\t\nA P Consolidated ....:\t\nCalagry & Edmonton \t\nCalmont '\nCommonwealth \t\nDalhousle   \t\nEast Leduc \t\nGlobe    \u201e\t\nHome ' .'..\nNational Pete  \u201e\t\nOkalta Com   \t\nPacific Pete   .\t\nRoyalite \t\nSouthwest Pete \t\nVanalta\t\nVulcan   : \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries\t\nNeon Products     \t\nUNLISTED MINES     .\nCuyuni   \u201e..:.....\t\nVananda\t\n  14%\n  23%\n  18\n  84\nUnited Steel  t,i\/,\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINIPEG,; Aug.   15 \u2014 Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 Feed 69%;     '\u25a0 ' \"\n;: Barley\u2014No. 1 Feed 1.20%.t  ;, -j\nCanadian Bonds\nDominion of Canada:\nBid Ask\nVL 1   3 1951 101.65 102.65\nVL 5  3 1959 101% 102%\nVL8     3   1963    101- 102\nProvincial\nBritish Columbia    3   1060   90\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n,30 industrials^l78.9S off .36.\n20 rails\u201446.68. off .37.\n15 utilities\u201463.89 oft .24.\n1.01\n1.13\n.54 ll\n1.12\n.17\n3.45 '\n2:45\n3.40\n.17\n5.20\n.31\n.66\n.36,\n.20'\n.46\n10.00\n.35\n1.43 *\n2.41\n6.60\n.16\n.19\n.17'\n3.35\n13.60\n.40\n.15\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO, Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014A\nslightly firmer trend appeared In\ncomparatively dull dealings. Selected industrial. Issues climbed\nfractions for the fourth successive\nsession and golds turned stronger in\nmid-session after slipping slightly ln\nearly dealings.- Base metalB continued under selling pressure. Western\noils were balanced.:\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 < A P) \u2014\nLosses of fractions to around a point\nwere general throughout the stock\nmarket, but trading was dull,\nMONTREAL, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014\nNarrow- irregularity continued to\nprevail during dull dealings, Mines\ntended' to firm slightly near tha\nclose, although so few shares\nchanged hands earlier that it was\nimpossible to establish a definite\ntrend.'\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 13 (CP)-\nOils slipped in otherwise quiet\ntrade.\nIn mines, Reeves McDonald\ndropped 10 at 2.40. Industrials and\nunlisted mines ,were inactive.\nLONDON, Aug. 15' (Reuters) \u2014\nThe strength of British Government\nsecurities were the feature,of trading.    ;\nNOVELIST IMPROVES\nATLANTA, Ga., Aug. 15 (AP)-\nNovelist Margaret Mitchell appeared to be \"somewhat better,\nthough still ln critical condition,\" a\nmember of the family reported.\nThe spokesman said the author ot\n\"Gone With the Wind\" had been\ngiven a blood transfusion and was\nbeing fed through a tube. He said\nher color appeared better .than previously. '.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -. \u25a0\u25a0\nX-rays yesterday, showed the 43-\nyear-old writer received a fractured\nskull \u00aband fractured pelvis when\nstruck, down by- an automobile\nThursday night\nFOR SALE-BIRCH AND TAMA\nrae cordwood. $12 per cord, delivered. Apply Box 1097, Dally News.\nFOR SALE\u2014KITCHEN SET, $25\nStove. $15, Bedstead $12, Apply\n1004 third St\nFOR SALE - CREAM- ENAMEL\nstove with water jacket; 2 burner\ncoat oil stove. Phone 1053rY.\nJACK BOYCE GUN EXCHANGE\nGuns for sate and exchange and\nexpert gun repairing.\nFOR SALE-MAN'S BICYCLE, $35.\nApply 107 Chatham St., or Phone\n1084-R.\nPlPE-FiWltfGS-ltim &Ph-\ncial low prices. Activo Trading\nCo. 916 Powell St. Vancouver,\n5-PCE.    KITCHEN    SUITE,    NA-\ntural color. 604 Sixth. Ph. 936-L.\nFOR'SALE-COAL-WOOD RANGE\nand high chair. Ph. 238-L.\t\nFOR   SAl^E-14-FT.  CANOE,   PH.\n\u25a0 548-R.     *.:;.:\u25a0';\u2022,       .  \u25a0        \/\u25a0\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\n' or iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid.' Active Trading Company.\n916-Ppyell St., Vancouver, B. C,\nWANTED - CJ5DAR AND LARCH\npoles, fence posts, piling and R.R.\nties. P. J, Hlpokoff, 542 Baker St\nWANTED\u2014DINING ROOM SUITE.\nPhone 211-L.\nSHifrVOifeHatfSTdJ.fc.MOft.\ngan. Nelson. B. C\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC\nMORRHILL KENNELS REG'D\nBox 518, Greenwood. B.C American Cocker Spaniels. Scotch Terriers. Dogs boarded.\nMan\nin the\nDark\nThis Is the man who must sit back irr silence .while others discuss affairs of\nlocal and world.interest. This is the man who has not enough knowledge of\nlocal affairs to form an opinion on matters which concern him most\u2014local\nmatters. This is the man who isn't a regular subscrbier to the Nelson Daily\nNews.        ''      '       .'       ' '  '.. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nIn addition to complete local coverage subscribers\nto Nelson Daily News are served by the complete world\nwidenews facilities of\n..-,\u2022.\" Canadian Press\n\u2022 Associated Press\n\u2022 Reuters\n\u2022 Associated Press Wire Photo Service\n\u2022 Central Press Pictures and Feature Service\nTo be informed Be a subscriber to\nMaott fmlg Nfius\nPHONE 144\n=i-\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY, AUG. 1.6,1949\nThe Time Has Come the Walrus said\nTo speak of manyXthings-. - . \u25a0\u25a0\n.Of shoes and ships and sealing! wax\n*       Of Cabbages and Kings.  .\nThere Is no place In your home that needs more constant\nattention than your\nMedicine Cabinet\nCheck now to make sure you have\u2014\nCascara.\nCamphorated  Oil'\nEss. Peppermint\nFriars Balsam\nGlyceflne\"\nPeroxide\nLinseed Meal\nSoda  Bicarbonate\n\u2022 Bandalds\nAbsorbent Cotton\nBandages'\nAdhesive    ,\nOil   of   Eucalyptus\nRubbing Alcohol\nSpts. Camphor\ntr. Iodine\nBoracic Acid\nEpspm Salt\nAND CASTOR OIL\n\"Work-in's of a\nWatch\" Explained\nMiANN &\nix'tmym\nUses Carbolic Acid '\nFor Shampoo; Dies\nTALLAHASSEE, Fla!, Aug. 15\n(AP)\u2014Miles L. Lambert, Jr., 21, today apparently mistook a bottle of\ncarbolic acid for a shampoo mixture,\nemptied lt over his head and died a\nfew minutes later en route to\nhospital. ,    ;\nPHONE 144 for CLASSIFIED ADS\nJ.A.C. LAUGHTON\nOptometrist\nMEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDINQ\nSuite203\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed Arts Bit\nPHONE 25\nHave the Jab Dane Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\n'.-i^i*'^.**1^*'^^'*-\"'^'^'^ *\u2022*\u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0*'\u00ab\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and paint work specialty\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\u2022Distinctive funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n815 Kootenay St Phone all\nflllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllll\nCleaned and Recored\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301 Ward St Phone 83\namiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliniiiiiiiiiiiliiii\nLet George Do It\nelectrical wiring\nAnd repairs\ngeo. g. boyes\nPhone 768-R\u2014420  Houston\nSt.\nNOW SHOWING\nFur felts, velvet feather trimmed\nALSO,\nNice selection  of Fall\nDRESSES and COATS\ntowing\nSERVICE\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nKoolaree Echoes\nMasquerade\nIs\nCAMP KOOLAHEE, B. C, Aug.\n15_We had a visit from Miss Francis Moran.\nInstead of having games today we\nhad a cleanup. The girls wprked\nhard during handicrafts to finish\ntheir projects.\nToday was masquerade. The leaders put on a mock wedding with\nMiss Moran as the minister. Jo\nCoventry was the bride and Frances Boyes the groom.. '\nGib Gibson was the bride's \"father\" and Phyllis Cooper the \"mother.\" Muriel Stuart and Georgy Barry were bridesmaids, and Dot Smith\nand Dee Dee Delong were page\nboys. Kit German ran oft with the\n\"bride\" near the. end of the ceremony. .-''\u25a0'\nMasquerade prize winners were\nHillary. Lee, a proghet; Hazel Young\nand Bernice Pollock, negroes; Ann-\nShirley Gordon and Paddy Angus\nas Nellie; Peggy Pollock, a pirate;\nthe most beautiful, Margaret Cat-\nley; and a special prize was given\nto \"Frankie\" Moran as a minister.\nAround the camp fire some of\nAndy's, doughnuts and cocoa were\nserved. Then to end another perfect day, \"Frankie\" Moran sang,\n\"When You Come to the End of a\nPerfect Day.\" -  .-.'.-\nThe \"P^p Smillte\" brought over\nvisitors Dr. and Mrs. Daly, with\nDonald, Elizabeth Jane, Mrs. Cum-\nmlng and Glenda. The visitors stayed to hear a few songs'by the campers.\nToday was the first rainy day, so\nbetween showers we had a land-\nsports day. Winners of, the races,\nwhich included novelty relay races\nwere:\nStraight relay\u2014Cabin 7: Orange\nrelay, Cabin 5; Man and Monkey,\nCabin 5; Motor cal: relay, Cabin 4;\nLost shoe relay, Cabin 1; Potato\nand spoon, Cabin 7; Three-legged,\nCabin 7; Softball pass over and\nunder, Cabin 1; Sack race, Cabin 7,\nThe winning cabin was Cabin 7,\nwhile Cabins 5 and 1 were second\nand third, respectively.\nBelieves Redism\nWill Crumble in .\nEconomic Strength\nLAKE COUCHICHING, .Ont.,\nAug. 15 (CP) \u2014J. King Gordon of\nNew York,' CBC correspondent at\nthe United Nations, said today that\nif the \\ Western world works out its\neconomic salvation, the foundations\nof Communism will crumble.\nIn ah address to the Canadian Institute on Public Affair's, he said the\nrole of the Soviet Union is directed\ntoward weakening the capitalist\ndemocracies, sowing economic, social and political confusion within\nnations and. attempting to prevent\ninternational cooperation among the\nWestern states.   .\n\"I sep dangers of economic crisis,\"\nhe said,'\"but I think that the social,\npolitical and technical resources of\nthe Western nations are capable of\nmeeting, it.\"\n\"And if the West can work out its\neconomic salvation, the very foundation of the Soviet thesis crumbles\ninto dust\"     , !\"*' -,i',\n. The North Atlantic Security Pact,\nfpr Canada, represents \"a chance\n. . . or at least a development in\npolicy.'*\nCanada has resisted efforts to\nmerge its national policy in a united\ncommonwealth policy and \"has\nfought for, won, and Jealously\nguarded - an Independent foreign\npolicy.\"\nThe development of the modern\nwatch from toe primitive sun-dials,\nsand glasses,: etc. was traced in an\neducational talk by H. H. Sutherland before Nelson Rotary Club in\nthe Hume Monday.\nThe sun-dial, developed 3000 years\nbefore the clock, was the first\nknown -timekeeper. Frpm ;there,\ntime - keeping \" d 1 d not advance\nquickly and until 1360 there was\nnn major development.\nIn 1360 the first clock was built\nfpr Charles Fifth, then King of\nFrance. This clock, Which took eight\nyears to build; was still running\n250 years afterward.\nIt was not until the fifteenth\ncentury that clocks were to be\nfound In most homes, ,..';,\u25a0'.:.\nDuring the sixteenth century'the\nwatches first appeared. The watches\nIn those, days were far frpm the\ntapdern tlme-pleces of today.\n: In the\" elder watches there were\nnn Jewels..Many manufacturers are\ndivided as to the-actual amount of\nbenefit experienced from jewels. In\nmost - watches there Are 15. pplnts\nwhere a great deal of friction is\nproduced. It is at these pointsthat\nJewels are desirable, aa\" they . are\nmuch more durable than metal.\nAfter these fifteen main points are\nprovided with jewels, the number\nof jewels above are not absolutely\nnecessary.\nThe main point to remember in\nlooking after a watch is the oiling,\nMr. Sutherland said, watches should\nbe cleaned and oiled regularly\nabout once every two years by a\nJeweller. Many people thought they\ncould take any, oil and squirt it on\nthe workings. This: did not work,\nas'there.is a special light oil which\nis the only type of oil to make,a\nwatch function property.\nSix visiters to the meeting were\nReg Jarvis, Edmonton Hotarian; Jim\nCreech, Nelson; Mickey. Moran,\nNelson; A. Glen Smith, Oak Harbor,\nWash.; Cecil Cosper, Walla Walla,\nWash.; Harold Timmins, Calgary\nRotarian.   ..,.-.-\u25a0-. \u25a0;\u201e\u25a0.-'\nTwo British Ships\nReach Hong Kong\nHONG KONG, Aug. 15 (Reuters)\n\u2014Two British ships today reached\nHong Kong after breaking through\nthe Nationalist blookade around the\nports of Shanghai and Tientsin.\nOne was the 800-ton Edith Moller,\nfirst ship to enter Shanghai arid\nsafely get awax again since the Nationalist blockade was imposed. The\nother vessel, from Tientsin, was the\n1883-ton Lady Wblmer.\nThe Edith Moller was under charter to Hong Kong Chinese merchants. Her three European officers\ndeclined to say how they ran the\nblockade but did say that shots\nwere fired across their bows as they\napproached Woosung at the mouth\nof the Whangpoo before they entered port under cover of darkness\nAug. 2.\nOfficers of the Edith Moller were\nnot permitted ashore but the Chinese crew came and went as they\nwished. There was no foreign shipping in the port.\nOfficers of the Lady Wolmer were\npermitted ashore, at Tientsin,\nSon Sought After\nShoe Repair\nMan's Body Found\nST. CATHARINES,.Ont., Aug. 15\n(CP)\u2014-The body'of John Samborskl,\n54, was found - today under the cement basement floor of his shoe-\nrepair shop and police -aid they are\nseeking his son, Bill Adams, a patent-medicine dealer, for questioning\nin connection with his death.\nSamborskl disappeared July 18,\nand the son has not been seen since\nAug. 6. Neighbors, whose curiosity\nhad been aroused by closure of\nSamborski's shop, called police.\nA police guard was stationed\naround the building which housed\nSamborski's shoe shop and his son's\nmedicine store.\n\"M.V. Anscomb'*\nThe modern lines of the Arttcomb and the rug-\npod beauty of.the snow-capped mountains form a\ndelightful scene In this Springtime photo. This.\npicture was taken at Balfour, and submitted ta\nthp Nelson Dally News Picture Contest by John\nDeJong, Box 15, Nelson. i\nCoalition\nWv Qermctwy Expected\nBy RICHARD LOWENTHAL\n\u2022 FRANKFURT, Aug;. 15 (Reuters)\u2014Observers here said today\n' that as. a result of yesterday's\nelection for'the first West-German Parliament, the new Republic will have a Federal Government , similar to that of Italy\u2014a\nCoalition led by the Christian\nDemocrats.\n.Dr. Konrad Adenauer, the Christian Democrat; leader, announced\nbefore the election he intended to\nform a Coalition > based on a free\nenterprise  policy. .'..,,\nHe has indicated to Allied officials that he hopes to include in\nsuch a Government the Free Democrats (standing third strongest in\nthe election), the near'Separatist\nBavarian Party and the strongly-\nNationalist German party of the\nBritish zone.\nWith the Free Democrats alone,\nthe. Christian Democrats would\nonly be able to muster some 191\n- of the 402 votes In the new Parliament. Tho German Partyfs > 17\nseats of the Bavarian party's 17\nwould give him the majority he\n\u2022\u2022needs.   .<\u25a0\u25a0' \u2022'\u00ab\nObservers said it was important\nthat-the Christian Democrats would\nnot have to rely on the support of\nboth of these Right-Wing parties at\nonce on any given issue;  '\nExtreme .Right-Wing and Nationalist groups have emerged,from the\nelection strong enough to exercise\npressure pn the coming Government\nbut nbt strong \"enough to keep lt\nin dependence on them, observers\nadded.\nBy his Cabinet, it-was -expected\nthat  Dr.   Adenauer- would  retain,\nProfessor   Ludwlg   Erhard\u2014about\nwhose politics as bizonal director pf\neconomics top electlcn was largely\nfought\u2014as Economics Minister, and\nwith him most of his colleagues in\nthe present bizonal administration.\nHe was also expected to Invite\nthe Free Democrat's leader In the\nEconomic    Council,    Dr.    Franz\nBluePher, to become his Minister\n' of Flanance and possibly to offer\nthe Federal Presidency to Professor Theodor Hcusa, Free Democratic Party leader and German\nelder statesman.\nIf a ministry or state secretariat\nfor International Relations' is created\u2014and there Is a wide-spread belief \"that somebody should bo responsible for co-ordinating relations\nwith the occupying powers\u2014it was\nexpected to go to Dr. Carl Spiecker,\na member of toe Nerth Rhine West-\nphalian Government who left.the\nLeft-Wing  Catholic  Centre  Party\na few months ago to join Dr. Adenauer's 'party.\nExpect C.S.U. Ejection From\nTrades and Labor Congress in Sept.\nFirst'49 Death\nFor Alta. Polio\nEDMONTON, Aug. 15 (CP)- Alberta's first death from poliomyelitis this year, that of a 12-year-old\ngirl from Berwyn, was reported today by the Provincial Health Department. She had been ill for about\ntwo- weeks. Berwyn is about 350\nmiles Northeast of hen and in the\nPeace River District.\nReport of two new cases of polio,\nboth ln the High River District\nSouth of Calgary, brought the Provincial total to 22 so far this year.\nRead the Classified\u2014It Pays\nOntario's 57 Bush\nFires Controlled\nTORONTO, Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014Fifty-\nseven fires are burning in Ontario\nbushland, tinder-dry after days of\nlate-Summer heat. All the blazes\nare under control.\n8ELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nBy JOHN LEBLANC ,\nCanadian Press Staff Wdttt---'\nTORONTO, Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014The\nCommunist-run Canadian Seamen's Union will be kicked completely out of the Trades < and\nLabor Congress of: Canada next\nmonth, according to Indications\nshaping up today within the\nT.L.C.\nThe C.S.U., storm centre of a\nship strike that has had repercussions in ports around the globe,\nhas been under suspension from\nthe 400-OM-member Congress\nsince-June 3 following a yearlong internal battle In the T.L.C.\nover Communism In that organization's affiliated unions:'\nNext development In the fight,\nit was learned here, Is that the\nCongress  executive  will  recommend to the T.L.C. annual convention opening at Calgary Sept,\n15 that the C.S.U. be ejected altogether. .     .',\nThe executive,  while anti-Corn-\nmunlst,  has  been  supporting  the\nC.S.U. as a matter of union solidarity until pressure from the American Federation of Labor and within its own ranks forced lt to throw\nthe union overboard;\nA last-ditch fight over the C.S.U.\neviction proposal is a certainty for\nthe convention but the line-up of\nunions on the issue indicates that\nthe convention:.' will back' up the\nresolution for booting out the Red-\nrun union, which has dropped membership, contracts and  prestige  in\nTO CALL TENDERS\nFOR VANCOUVER\nPARKING LOT\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nThe Vancouver Sun says in a news-\npage story today tenders for development and operation of a city-\nowned downtown parking lot will\nlikely be called for by City Council\nthis week. .  \u25a0  ,., '        \".\nThe story says motorists will\nprobably pay 15 cents fqr two hours\nparking In the lot, which compares\nwith an average, privately-owned\noff-street parking rate of 35 cents\nfor two hours. '\nNine Killed In\nIreland (rash\nSHANNON, Ireland, Aug. 15 (AP)\n\u2014Its fuel exhausted, an American\nfour-englned air liner bellied Into\nthe Atlantic off the West Coast ef\ntoe Republic of Ireland in darkness\nearly today. Nine ot its 58 occupants\nwere killed and the rest were saved-\nin a dramatic sea-air rescue.\nNine of the Americans aboard\nwere crew members and two were\nemployees of TransoCean Airlines,\nowners of the plane.\nTeh hours after the plane dropped through a' cloudbank into the\nsea, the British trawler Stalberg\npulled into Galway Harbor with\n49 survivors. The Irish steamer\nLanahrone had helped her in the\n'rescue work,\/:\nOne crew member was killed. The\nother eight dead were passengers,\naccording to Otis Nelson, President\nof Transocean Airlines.\nNelson Identified the dead crew\n. member as radio officer Herbert\nAsbeTof Brooklyn, N. Y. Survl\nvors said he was killed while he\nwas trying to  leave the  plane.\nApparently he .was struck by a\npiece of the plane's broken tall.\nThe only woman passenger, an\nItalian, was reported to be among\nthe dead. .\nThere' was no panic among toe\npassengers. They, buckled their lifebelts calmly' and strapped themselves into their .seats for an expected crash, \u2022\nSWEATERS\nFor Fall\nWith cooler nights coming on a sweater gives\nyou that added warmth.\nCardigans\nZipper Coats\nPullovers\nSleeveless\nWool Vests'\nEmory's Ltd;\nTHE MAN'S STORE   \u2022\nits losing strike.\nAt toe convention, the C.S.U. can\nexpect support from about a half-\ndozen leftist-led unions. According\nto well-informed labbr sources, it\nalso may gather some backing from\nunions that are rightist but whose\noffipers are Inclined to resent inter\nference by the A.F.L. in Canadian\nlabor affairs.. -\nAgainst these will be arrayed the\nprestige of the executive\u2014which at\nlast year's Victoria convention\nswung the delegates behind the\nC.S.U.\u2014and the AF.L.-T.L.C. international unions that make up more\nthan half the Congress membership.\nBetween them, T.L.C. informants\nsay, they will muster'plenty of\nstrength to expel the C.S.U. without\neven a close vote, though not without a iong verbal struggle on the\nconvention floor.\nTriangle in\nToronto Slayings!\nTORONTO, Aug. 15 (CP) - Possibility of a triangle situation in\nthe slaying of Robert and Gloria\nMcKay Is-being Investigated.\nPolice said their investigation into\nthe shooting of the McKays, found\ndead here two weeks' ago, showed\nthe couple, at first described by\nfriends as happily married, had\nquarrelled on numerous occasions\nand might have been contemplating\ndivorce.\nInvestigators say this new angle\non the case leads them- to believe\nthe slayer was known to toe\nMcKays and that Jealousy, or possibly revenge, was the motive,\nNeither body was robbed and the\ngirl had hot been attacked. Friends\ninsisted that Bobert McKay would\nnever pick up a strange man on the\nroad while his wife was in the,car.\nThe McKays were slain Willie\ndriving'from the Barrle area to their\nhome in Toronto after a civic holiday weekend trip to a farm pwned\nby McKay's Uricle.\nMeanwhile, investigation is continuing' into the shooting July 30 of\nAlfred Layng, killed while trying\nto stop a holdup man fleeing from\nan East-Central groceteria. Police\nbelieve this gunman may have been\nthe man who held up two down\ntown theatres earlier this year.  .\nFind Body of Third\nCape Breton\nDrowning Victim\nINVERNESS, N.S., Aug. 15 (CP)\n\u2014The body bf 14-year-old Gerald\nMaCNeil of Inverness,'one, of the\nfour persons drowned off this Cape\nBreton town Aug. 9, was recovered\ntoday by R.C.M.P. The bodies of\nMalcolm Gillis, 16, and Melvin\nWhite, 27, were recovered,Thursday\nand the search for the body of\nSimon White, 59, continues.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nVancouver Reports\n2 New Polio Cases\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nTwo new cases of polio were reported in Vancouver today\", bringing to 88 the total treated in General Hospital since this year's outbreak began.\nThe first case this year from New\nWestminster\u2014a 27-year-old woman\nMs one of the new victims. The,\nsecond is a 24-year-old Lulu'Island\nman,\nSell  the  Sure  Way\u2014CLASSIFIED\nYoung Explorers\nHenry-Clausen, 8, and Denny DeJong 5, taking\na trip up Beaver Greek at Fruitvale, B.C. This pic-.\nture was submitted to the Nelson News Picture\nContest by John DeJong, Box 15, Nelsons       '   i\nELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT\nPASTRY FLOUR\nBEST FOR CAKES ANP.\nPASTRY\nGUARANTEED TO 8ATISFY\nYour Grocer Has It\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\n' Auditors\n560 Baker St      '      pRone 235\nFor Dependable\nPAINTING ond*\nPAPERHANGING\nSee\nMurphy Brothers\nPhone 656  ,        745 Baker St\n'Electronic tubes weighing only\nseven-hUndredths ot an ounce noiv\nare being made in quantity,\nBRAND NEW TOGS,\nFor Boys and Girls\nTo Go Back to School\n'    i      'At ...\nThe Children's Shop\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHfes LlNI\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175-182 BAKER ST.\nKA1\nIDR1\nFORSALE   :\nP.M. CHAIN SAW\n6 chains, 2 cutting bars\nWi  H.P. Gas Engine\nVALVES GROUND\nOVERHAULING\nTUNE-UP8\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nMANN'S REPAIR SHOP\nPHONE 392-L\n2021 Stanley Street\niiMiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'ii-\nHAVE YQUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n'at toe\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n418 Hall St \"  , Phone 146\niiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>ws\n\u00ab\u00bbww\u00bbwi\nYES.\u2014 Your New Wave\nIs bound to be MORE STYLISH,\nLAST  LONGER and\nLOOK  LOVELIER\n'   ,     ai the\nHAIGH TRU-ART\n|f.aa \u2014.* \u2014\u2014 ^-a\u00bb\u00bb**\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\nGeneral\nElectric\nAutomatic\nHOT WATER\nTANKS\n$149.50\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized GE Dealer\nPhone 260 674 Baker St.\nWAFFLE\nIRONS\n$15.95\nSANDWICH\nTOASTERS\n$10.95\nSmith\nElectric\n645 BAKER ST.\nPhone 258    .\nDON'T\nWISH FOR\nBETTER\nLIVING\n\u25a0 \u2666 \u2666' *\nHAVE IT\nmOFFST Soia\u00ab MM 5740\nMOFFAT \"Bottled Gas\" RANGES\nARE DEPENDABLE - ECONOMICAL\nCONVENIENT AND CLEAN\nWE HAVE THEM  IN STOCK\nYou may not live near a-gas main, but you can\nHAVE GAS IN YOUR HOME\nMcKAY & STRETTON LTD.\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\nREGULAR INSPECTIONS\nSAVE YOU MONEY\nNelson Transfer provides LOW-COST\nPreventive Maintenance Service for all\nmakes of cars and trucks.\nGet the monthly habit and save*, money\non operating costs.\nPhone our Service Department now.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35   PHONE  35\n\u2014.\n\u25a0'\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_1949_08_16","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\/1.0425953","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":"1949-08-16 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":"1949-08-16 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]. 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