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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" RAIN FALLS ON LOWER MAINLAND,\nFIRST TIME IN 58 DAYS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 12 (CP)\n\u2014 It rained on the British Columbia lower mainland today \u2014\nthe flrit time in 68 days.\nA thower at _:30 a.m. officially ended the record dry spell,\nthe first measurably rainfall\nsince June 13. Had It come an\nhour later It would have been\nInto the 69th day.\nLater In the day, some sections\nhad rain for an hour, but nowhere was It sufficient for\nparched farmlands and fire-\nstricken forests,\nA \"rain rally\" was held In a\ndowntown auditorium during\nthe afternoon as bright sunshine\nflooded the city, and In many\nchurches prayers for- rain were\nheard at morning services.\nAmateur rainmakers iplnkled\ndry ice from a plane over some\nsections o, greater Vancouver\nyesterday afternoon, seeding\ncloud areas, but the \"test\" didn't\nproduce any downpour as hoped\nfor by Its' sponsors.\nCooler weather aided nearly\n4000 firefighters In the tinder-\ndry forests.\nAlready, 8000 acres of timber-\nlands have been fire ruined, but\nthe flames have been blocked\nfrom new areas by man-made\nfireguards.\nBritish-Iranian\nSession Cancelled\nBy ROBERT B.  HEWETT\nTEHRAN, Iran, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014\nBritish-Iranian oil talks got a setback today.\nThe negotiators cancelled a ses-.\nsion at which Britain had planned\nto submit a new proposal tor Settlement of the dispute over nationalization of the rich Anglo-Iranian Oil\nCompany, more than half owned by\nthe British Government.\nA source close to the negotiations\nsaid the meeting was called off\nbecause Iranian officials had expressed privately their coolness to\nthe proposals prepared, but not yet\nsubmitted officially, by Lord Privy\nSeal Richard Stokes.\nIt was believed that Britain,\nwarned in advance of Iranian op\nposition, would revise Its proposals\nin hope of reaching an agreement.\nStokes, it was reliably reported,\nhad rearty a plan to eliminate the\nname of the Anglo-Iranian OH Company from Iran, but keep British\nmanagerial control of the oil fields\nand refinery.\nThis apparently was the key point\nin the negotiations. If this point\nwere accepted by Premier Mohammed Mossadegh he would be backing down from his nationalization\nlaw which throws A.I.O.C. out of\nIran and turns operations over to\nthe new National Iranian Oil Company.\n, An informed source said Stokes'\nproposal had been communicated\nto Mossadegh privately and he had\nturned thumbs down.\nKaesong Talks\nFail Again on\nBuffer Zone\nBy .DON HUTH\nMUNSAN,     Korea,     Aug.    13\n(Monday)     (AP) \u2014 Allied    and\nCommunist truce delegates failed\ntoday for the  13th  straight session to  unlock the thorny Issue\nof a \u25a0 buffer -one for  Korea.       i\nAn  Allied spokesman  said to-'\nday's'meeting was \"an unproductive session.\" j\nThe meeting at the truce city of\nKaesong lasted  one  hour  and  20\nminutes. Delegates called another,\nround at 11 a.m. Tuesday,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nMotorists, Here's\nFood for Thoyght\nGeorge Turner, Chairman of\nthe Kootenay Lake Hospital\nBoard, coined a safety slogan\nSaturday that might well be put\ninto service on district highways.\nHe was outlining conditions\nat the Nelson hospital before\nthe Legislature's eight-man inquiry board, in the course of\nwhich he mentioned that occupancy was very high at present. So high lhat at that moment there was not one bed\navailable.\n\"I dont know what we'd do\nif there's an acci_ent this\nweekend,\" said- George. \"It\nmightn't be a bad idea if we put\nsigns out on the highway saying 'Drive Carefully\u2014There Are\nNo Beds in the Hospital.' \"\n-nX^T*-^^ \u00ab!'\"\u00ab'\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab iiiiii\"i\u00abMiiniMiiiii,i>i\u201ei.\nother's  stand., .on. a  demilitarized !\u25a0\u201e\u2022_ _^ sijjfo, ft \u25a0_\u25a0 I'uitr!\n\u25a0 konc'None' was apparent.\nAllied observers thotfght they de\ntected a niore conciliatory attitude\nwhen the Reds charted the con\nflicting demands on a map.\nThe meetings had teetered for\nthree days on the brink of collapse [   ORLEANS, France, Aug. 12 (AP)\n-A promising young French poll\nCRESTON, B.C., Aug. 12 \u2014 A\nnoted hydraulic engineer, Thomas\nClyde Gibbons, 36, of Montreal died\nwhen his car rolled off the highway\nat Sanca bridge, 25 miles North of\nCreston, Saturday night. His wife,\nMrs. Alice Mary Gibbons, was unhurt.\n. The car left \" the road about\n10:45 p.m. on a- curve: just before\nreaching the bridge, it was reported. It went down, the bank\nabout 25 feet.. Door on the driver's\nside was found open and Mr.\nGibbon's body was found about 15\nfeet away.\nThree other cars were in the vicinity, all four cars having come\nfrom Kootenay Bay after crossing\nKootenay Lake. It was reported\nthat the' car driven by Mr. Gibbons attempted to pass the car\nahead, then fell back again. On\npulling back into, the right, lane,\nthe car apparently struck the soft\nShot by Wife\nuntil Sunday's session. Then North\nKorean   Lt.-Gen.   Nam   II,   senior\ntician who only 24 hours earlier won\nM!?M__^\u00b1ttf _&___\u25a0> a m in the niy, French, cabinet\nUnited Nations request for a man.\nwas shot to death'by his pretty bru-\nJJ1-6. 3!J\",bry;f'i_'Ch   W_S JCl0SCl.y ne\u00abe wife today'after he told her\nstudied at U. N advance headquart- ne wanted a. divorce.\ners Sunday night. For the first time     ,. _.  mii   \u201e,\nthe Reds had put on paper their    .He   was   Ple\"e   Chevallier,   42,\nconcept of- w \u00b0 was name\" secretary of state\n1. The present battle lines. lor #*#\u00bb} ed\u00bb\"\"\u00b0n' *\u2122th and\n2. The 83th parallel  which the ^3rta 'n  lhe _f*inet \u00b0f \u201e?rem'cr\nReds insist be the buffer demarca- yT^ZZJlF^li ?'. \"r*'\nftm iine i Yvonne,  confessed  to  firing five\n3. The U. N. Command's \"cttginal l^Ji'ZJtnTn\" ii. \/'\"\u25a0?\u201e\nmlfitlrlT \u00a3\u00a3 Pr0P\u00b0Sal '\" a ^ \" ^U^ CharSed Wth\nmilitarized zone. I    _,.      ...\nHowever,   Peiping  \"--\"-  \u2014'-      ue'*-\")''\nRadio maintained a stiff attitude. An English-\nlanguage broadcast quoting its Kae-\nvas. mayor of war-\ndevastated Orleans and a hero of the\nFrench resistance movement during\nthe Second World War. In private\n\u2122g\"s p\u2122^n,t,nL^ ,h\u00b0 An0!' Ii,e he was a P^i-\"*\" She-was a\nress can be made unless the Allies ,\u201e,._,.,. \u201e,,,,,,\u201e\u00a3\n\"give up their absurd and arrogant\nproposal and give serious consideration to the just and reasonable\nproposal of our side.\"\nIt said Kam sternly reproached\nthe U. N delegation Sunday for\npersisting in the demand for a buffer zone inside Communist positions.\nformer midwife,\nChevallier was a close co-worker\nof Premier Pleven.\nKoreans Celebrate\nLiberation  *\nThis Week\nPUSAN, Korea, Aug. 12 (AP) -\nVandalS Invade The church bells and air raid sirens\ni_>l_.   \u201ej_i_ \/\u00bbr        L of this provisional of the Republic\nWlOvemole Church of Korea will ring out at noon Aug.\nCLOVERDALE. B.C., Aug. 12 15\u2014the sixth anniversary of the\n(CP)\u2014Vandals\"left a scene of havoc liberation of Korea from the Japa-\nand destruction today in the'Latti- nese and the third birthday of the\nmer Road Anglican Church. republic.\nChurch records were torn from' The , war-racked infant republic\na locker: the pulpit Bible was ripped will mark Its anniversary of free-\napart; pictures were snatched from dom after 40 years of Japanese rule\nthe walls and smashed, and hymn with a review with tanks, planes\nbooks ruined. and other weapons combined with\nRev. J. Dalton, the pastor, said he mass prayers for the war dead, kill-\ncould not give an estimate of the ac- ed in the bitter war with the Reds,\ntual financial loss, but he said:        |   The Ncrth Koreans on the other\n\"The terrible thing is that some- hand, plan \u00abn celebration Aug. 18\none should do a thing like this. It keyed to the theme that. Russia\ncould be the work of a fanatic.\"      liberated Korea from the Japanese.\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRARY\nH ,    Victoria. '\u2022'\u2022\u2022'*%-r*i*l -        ^   i!\nt'Wf\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY\nCloudy. A few scattered showers\nand the occasional thunderstorm\nduring afternoon. Little change in-\ntemperature. Wind light, Low and\nhigh Cranbrook 45 75. Crescent\nValley 48 75.\nNELSON. B.C., CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1951\nFRED ROSE, REUNITED WITH WIFE, DAUGHTER LAURA\n\u2014Central figure in Canada's sensational spy probe of 1946, Polish-\nborn Fred Rose has been released from St. Vincent de Paul penitentiary, near Montreal, to which he was sent In 1946 for conspiring\nto give war secrets to Russia. Since recent amendment to Canada's\nCitizenship act, allowing for deportation of accused spies Is not\nretroactive, Rose, once Canada's first Communist M.P., Is free to\nresume his life as Canadian citizen and could even run for parliament\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nMontreal Engineer, T. C. Gibbons,\nDies as Car Leaves Road al Sanca\nshoulder of the road and.rolled\ndown the bank. ,\nOne of the four vehicles in the\ngroup was an ambulance driven by\nVincent Carborry of Trail, and another was driven by P. Heasman of\nVancouver. Mr. Gibbons died as he\nwas being placed in'Ihe ambulance,\nTwo nurses from Creston Valley\nHosnital, Miss .loan' Smith, R.N.,\nand Miss Emily Valisser. were also\nat the scene, and took Mrs. Gibbons\nto Creston. She remained at the\nhome of Miss Smith Saturday\nnight.\nMr. and.Mrs. Gibbons were-returning to their home in Montreal\nfrom Whatshan power plant near\nNeedles, B.C., where Mr. Gibbons\nhad been doing some work for the\nB.C. Power Commission. Former\nresidents of Australia, they have\nbeen In Canada only six months.\nAn inquiry will be held and\nand the body will be forwarded to\nMontreal.\nftRE HAZARD\nSTILL HIGH\nNo One Killed in\nStreamliner Wreck\nFOUR OAKS, N.C, Aug. 12 (AP)\n\u2014 A fast JMiami-to-Nsjw York\nstreamlined train carrying more\nthan 500  passengers was wrecked\nLinhtnina Couspt; \"-if) today wilh three cars \"\"''\"S down\nLignimng *-uui.eb ou a 20.foot embankment, But nobody\nSmall Fires; Re-Open waskuied.\nCnr-^nA^ D_._._! T_._l-..,'   \"The most miraculaus thing I've\n\u2022-.aSCqae KOaa   I Oaay ever seen,\" said Dr. Watson Wharton.    \"The    steel  cars  saved  the\nOnly six large fires were still passengers,\"                    %\nburning this .we^end,. all, of Jhem|   Nine   ersons. weM taken t   $ .\nat least partially under control but, pital and scores were treated for\nfire fighers are still busy quelling [Cuts and bml      but man     .\na rash of lightning fires started by 25 ambuiances which converged on\nelectrical storms late Saturday and lhe scene went a       e    t  s\nearly Sunday. j ;\t\nForest Service officials described\nthe hazard as still, \"moderately\nhigh\" throughout the area ^nd forest closure restrictions still hold.\nRains were not general in the\nforest district Saturday although .2\ninches fell in the Nelson local area.\nOnly light, scattered showers were i\nfelt in the Grand Forks and Ross-,\nland districts while none was re-\nported in- other parts of Boundary\ndistrict. \u2022 j\nThe critical fires of last week,\nB.C. Liquor\nCommissioner,\nKennedy, Dies\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014\nthose at McRae Creek and Santa Liquor Commissioner W. F. Ken-\nRosa Creek, are now completely nedy, 63, died in hospital here, following a severe paralytic stroke Friday,\nMr. Kennedy was born In Ontario\nand went to the Okanagan as a child\nre opened some time this morning of three with his parents. He grew\nunder control as are others at In\nvermere and Canal Flats.\nForestry   officials   expected the\nCascade-Rbssland   road   would be\nfollowing closure of almost a week.\nBiggest blaze, at present Is in the\nYahk River.area where, almost 300\nmen were still working on a fire\nguard in an effort to confine it. It\nwas hoped this would be accomplished some time today.        '\nThe lightning fires, estimated at\nover 30 in number,. were causing\ntransfer of fighters from the Grand\nForks area to Castlegar and Nelson\ndistricts. Isolated and small, the attention of about five men is re-\nup in Vernon and in his late teens\nwas a cowhand on the famous Coldstream ranch.\nLater he entered the lumbering\nbusiness in the firm of Neil, Cry-\nderman and Kennedy. He was prominent in Vernon as a school trustee, Alderman, President of the\nBoard of Trade and the Athletic\nAssociation.\nIn 1927, Mr. Kennedy became Conservative M.L.A. for North Okanagan in a by-election caused by Ihe\nquired to cope with each of the death of Dr. E. J. Rothwell, of 192R.\nblazes. None were yet-serious and He was reelect in the general elec-\na general rain would douse all of\nthem, forestry officials ventured,\nSteamer Aground\nBOSTON, Aug. 12 (AP)-The excursion   steamer   Nantasket   went\ntion of 1928 in the Tolmie Conservative landslide.\nIn 1930 Mr. Kennedy resigned his\nlegislative seat and later was appointed to the Liquor Control Board,\nthen composed of three men. In 1932\n, _  ,,    , .    , ,     ,   .   | the three-man board was discontin-\naground   on  Peddocks  Island   in ued and he became sole commission-\ndense fog today with 827 passengers\naboard.\nAll passengers were removed by\nCoast Guard boats shortly after the\ncraft's plight was discovered by a\nsearching Coast. Guard vessel.\nThe boat was\"reported in no immediate danger. The Coast Guard\nexpected to float her with the assistance of a commercial tug.\nIS. Methods\nProblems for B.\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 95\nSAVING. BONDS\nINTEREST UPPED\nSeek to Encourage\nSavings to Beat-\nInflation in Canada\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12 (OP)\u2014 The\nGovernment announced tonight that\nthe interest rate on its Fall issue of\nCanada Savings Bonds is being increased to 3V'z per cent.\nIn  the five previous  Issues of\nsavings bonds, the interest rate has\nbeen 2% per cent.\nThe announcement also said the\nlimit on individual holdings Is\nbeing boosted to $5000. The limit\nwas $2000 for the first Issue, following the Second World War and\n$1000 for subsequent Issues.\nBoth moves obviously were aimed\nat encouraging personal savings as\npart of the government's anti-inflationary program.\nHowever, it was not immediately\nclear what effect the higher interest\nrate would have on rates on other,\nand particularly non-governmental,\nsecurities.\nOne economist said the fact there\nwas a limit on the amount of bonds\nan individual might buy erased any\npossibility that the move might\nhave widespread implications.\nThe bonds, the sixth of the series,\nwill go on sale Oct. .15. They will\nbe dated Nov. 1, 1951, and will ma-\nlure 10 years and nine months from\ndate of issue. Previous issues have\nmatured in 10 years, with a straight\ninterest rate of 2% per cent a year.\nThe new issue will carry 10 interest coupons of 3'\/2 per cent. The\nfirst coupon will be payable Aug.\n1, 1953.\nIf the new bond is cashed before\nthe, first coupon becomes due, interest will be paid at the rate of two\nper cent a year calculated to the\nlast full month. After Aug. 1, 1953,\ninterest will be paid at the coupon\nrate\" of 3l_ per cent a year for each\nfull month which has elapsed since\nthat date.\nThe Finance Department, announcing the changes, said Finance\nMinister Abbott could be quoted as\nsaying the new features \"make the\nnew bond the most attractive security of its kind ever offered.\n\"They.reflect,\" the statement went\non,' \"the government's determination to encourage personal savings\nas an important and constructive influence in helping stabilize the Canadian economy at this time.\"\nOne effect of the new features, it\nsaid, \"is to offer increased yield to\nthose who hold their bonds for longer periods, while still,giving a good\nreturn to those who may need to\ncash them early to meel emergencies.\"\nFlying Officer Carl Frlberg,\nwho is well known in the Kootenays, has been promoted to (he\ncommissioned ranks and transferred from Edmonton to Air\nForce Headquarters, to lead the\nCentral Band of the Royal Canadian Air Force.\nFlying Officer Friberg enlisted\nin the R.C.A.F. in 1941 as an Aircraftsman. 2nd class, and now\nholds Canada's top Bandmaster,\nposition.\nHis 55-piece band was heard in\nRossland, Trail and Nelson on\nJuly 1, in a special broadcast with\nthe Marine Band of Washington,\nD.C., over the CBC and NBC networks,\nFlying Officer Friberg led\nRossland's Golden City Band for\nfour years, and the Maple Leaf\nBand for one.\n$19,256 Slash in Estimates Poses        '..\nDifficulties in Unforeseen\nExpenditures; Wages a Problem\nWidely-divergent problems were i pressed surprise at the high oc-\nreviewed . by two Nelson district' cupancy figure of 96 beds, having\nhospitals Saturday but bcHh were!been informed the hospital would\ntraced to the same cause \u2014 financial J accommodate only 79.\nadministration by the B.C. Hospital j Inadequacy of the hospital In\nInsurance Service. |view of the present over-occupancy\n\"The Legislature's eight-man select;and the fire marshal's report, was\nstanding committee, drawing near | referred to by Mr. Turner. Already\nthe close of a three-week inquiry fax?d to the limit, bed space would\ntour of the province, sat at a two-\nhour public session here to hear rep-\nrepresentations from the Kootenay\nLake General and Kaslo Victorian\nhospital boards, together with three\nindividuals airing special problems.\nGeorge Turner, chairman of the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nboard, told the committee the Nelson board approved of the hospital\ninsurance theory \"in the main\" and\nbelieved it could be made to work,\nbut that so far, not enough consideration for local hospital problems had been taken into account.\nHe said the $19,256 cut ln the 1951\noperating estimates had \"unduly\npenalized\" the board, which had\nIways \"made every effort to play\nball\" with B.C.H.I.S. by refraining\nfrom \"padding\" its estimates.\nbe further reduced if extensive revamping ordered by the fire marshal\nwere carried out.\nAsked by Mr. Winch if the hospital was beyond repair, he replied\nthat for the purposes of modern, efr\nficicnt hospital operation it would\nbe. \u25a0'   -i  '\nTold of the hopes for a new hospital and. the anticipated battle on\na money-bylaw plebiscite, Mr.\nWinch told hospital board members\nhe was confident that \"you can call\non any member of this (inquiry)\nboard for help on that plebiscite.\"\nLOW OCCUPANCY\nThe Kaslo Victorian hospital faded a very different problem from\nthat of the Nelson hospital, Charl.e.\nLind, board chairman, revealed. A.\n30-bed hospital, it was faced with\n\"Our estimates were not prepared'a mounting deficit because of lack !\nto stand a slash of that nature which | of occupancy,\nmakes it very difficult to handle\normer U. S.\nD.\nFought Shooting\nBattle With Police\nLAMASTRE, France, Aug. 12 TCP)\n\u2014 A 50-year-old farmer who held\n50 policemen at bay for two days\nwhile he barricaded himself in the\nattic of a farmhouse, surrendered\nquietly Saturday night.\nAfter police, crouching behind\nheavy steel shields, fired tear gas\nshells into the house, Charles Seig-\nnol quietly walked down the attic\nstairs and was led away singing the\nFirst World War marching song\n\"Madelon.\"\nHe and his wife held the law at\nbay since Thursday when he\nfought a shotgun battle with his\nbrother. Camille, over the ownership of the house.\nBoth were wounded, but Charles,\nthe elder,  crawled  back into the\n. WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (AP)\nStephen T. Early, who served\npress secretary to Franklin\nRoosevelt all the 12 years of the\nnew deal, died Saturday of a heart\nattack at the age of 61.\nPresident Truman, in a statement,\nsaid Early gave the best years o\u00a3\nhis life to public service.\nIn recent years . Early, had been\nvice-president of the Pullman Standard Car Manufacturing Company.\nIn   the   days   before   the   First\nunforeseen expenditures. Requests\nfor salary increases, for example,\ncannot be dealth with this year because ot the restrictions placed on\nus by the budget.\"\nIncreases were due for many of\nthe hospital staff at the present\ntime and it was difficult to get new\nstaff at the present rates, he added.\nTrained nurses here were paid\n$180 a month while those in adjacent hospitals received $200 and\nthe board would be faced with the\nquestion of an in-line revision within a week or two, Superintendent\nMarjorie Whitmore pointed out.\nAsked by Opposition leader\nHarold Winch if it could be' said\nthat the staff' in a sense was thus\nsubsidizing the operation Of the hospital, Mr. Turner answered there\nwas \"some merit\" in that suggestion.\nNO DECLINE IN\nHOSPITAL  OCCUPANCY\ncent occupancy, but the average\nhad risen to 87 per cent and had\nexceeded the 70 per cent figure\nevery month this year except one,\nMr. Turner said. At present, there\nwas no vacancy, he added.\nThis had meant higher operating\ncosts than had been anticipated, especially at this time of the year,\nusually slack when the staff could\nnormally take holidays without be\nWorld War, Early was one of the\nAssociaied Press men who covered;ing'VepTace\"d7wi\"th\"peak'occupancy\nthe State-war-navy  beat. [a jul! staf\u00a3 was needed at all times\nIt was then  that Early became; :he chairman said.      '\u25a0\nacquainted with Roosevelt, who was\nassistent secretary of the navy.\nIn the First World  War, Early\nSecretary-treasurer Lyall Cruickshank told the inquiry board the\nB.C.H.I.S.  had  owed   the  hospital\nbecame machine gunner and was a,about po.000 at the end of 1950 be-\ncaiptain when the war ended.        j cause 0f slow payment of accounts.\nLater after he had rejoined the|The bulk had sin,e been paid but\nAssociated   Press   Early   scored   a the   hospital   had   been   left   with\nnotable beat on the death of President Harding at San .Francisco.\nHe went to the-White House in\n1933 and it fell to him to announce\nthe bank closings of the early\nRoosevelt days, various big new deal\nprojects, '.he attack on Pearl Harbor\nWinston Churchill's visit to America\nin 1941 and Roosevelt's death.\nHe stayed on for a while at President Truman's request, to smooth\nthe  way - for Truman.\n2 Drown at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Aug.  12   (CP)  \u2014\nTwo persons were drowned today\nwhen an 13-foot power cruiser suddenly filled with water and sank.\nDead are Mrs. Lillian C. O'Neill.\n52. of Hillside, B.C., and a 24-year-\nold youth, whose name was wilh\nhouse and barricaded the doors and!held pending notification of next\nwindows. lof-kin living in Newfoundland.\n$,2,912,000 in Retail Sales . . .\nSurvey Stamps Nelson as Rich\nMarket; Better Earnings Factor\n(Special  to the  News)\nNEW YORK, August 8 \u2014 On the\nbasis of money earned in Nelson\nin 1950 and the amount spent In the\nlocal retail stores, the city takes its\nplace as one of the richer markets\nof Canada. This is shown' in the\nnew. copyrighted survey of buying,\npower, prepared by Sales Management, covering every section of\nCanada and the United States,\nThe high scale of business activity in Nelson is indicated by the\n$12,912,000 chalked up in the local\nstores in sales. This figure, an in-\nbusiness of the previous year, was\nwell over the citys quota. It represents .1430 per cent of the Dominion's business\u2014more than the .0643\nper cent that should be produced\nlocally on the basis of population.\nThe chief factor in the bigger\nspending locally was the better\nearnings of Nelson families. The\ndata shows that the 3000 families in\nthe city had a net disposable .income, afler taxes, of $9,639,000. It\nrepresented an average Income, obtained by straight division, of $3213\nper family.\nThis was higher than the $3190\ncrease from the $11,664,000  retail earnings per family in British Col\numbia as a whole. The figure ls an\narithmetical average, it is pointed\nout.\nTlie fact that the volume of Sflles\nlocally is greater than the total income indicates that Nelson is the\ncenter of a large trading area.\nA guide to the relative economic\nposition of each community is given ih the survey by a \"quality of\nmarket\" index. This compares the\nindividual city's potential, based on\npopulation, income, sales and other\nfactors, to that of the rest of the\ncountry. Nelson's index is placed\nat 146, or 46 per cent above the\ngeneral average.\nMINIATURE LEAGUE of Nations Is located\nat the Aylmer, Ont., R.C.A.F. station, where flying cadets from seven European countries, under\nauspices of NATO, are stationed. Though In\nCanada only two week3 these cadets from Norway,\nHolland and Denmark Join In an old-fashioned\nsing-song wth their Canadian and Brlt3h buddies\nto the piano accompaniment of Joyce Follick, a\ncivilian employee on the air station.\u2014Central\nPress Canadian.\nabout $3000 for which  the  H.I.S.\nwaived  responsibility, he  said.\nHe cited several cases where the\nhospital had been left with large\naccounts because H.I.S. refused to\npay them. The Nelson hospital had\nreceived- much better service\nwhen the H.I.S. had a branch office here, he said.\nMr. Cruickshank,told the board the\nhospital had taken in 83 non-registered patients (those not covered by\nB.C.H.I.S.) this year, representing\neight per cent occupancy and accounts of $5400.\nSome inquiry board members ex-\nThe occupancy was 25 per cent)\nbelow the estimates average and\nthe B.C.H.I.S. had recently Informed them they would be paid\non a patient-day rate of $9.45\nrather than the monthly budget\nfigure. With sub-normal occupancy, fixed costs raised the actual,\nper diem cost for the hospital to\nalmost $12, Secretary-Treasurer\nW. H. Tonkin pointed out. Th\u00bb\ndeficit to the end of July stood at\n$3900.\nMr. Lind was puzzled to know#\nwhy the H.I.S. should be paying on\"\na patient-day rate because the hospital was down in occupancy,\nSTUDY PROMISED\n\u25a0Further 'study of the Kaslo problem was promised , by committee)\nchairman Sydney Smith, M.L.A, for\nKamloop3, when the inquiry board\nstops off at Kaslo on its way to\nNakusp on Wednesday.\nIndividuals making representations were Sydney Hutchinson of\nHarrop and three Nelsonites, Harry\nHill, W. H. Foster and George Pease,\nMr. Pease agreed.to make his submission in writing.   .\nThe board, which will sit in Cranbrook and Fernie today, is comprised of Mr. Smith, Mr. Winch,\nCapt. p. J. Proudfoot, M.L.A. for\nVictoria, Don Brown, M.L.A. for\nVancouver-Burrard; H. J. Welch,\nM.L.A. for Comox; Walter Hendricks, M.L.A. for Nelson-Creston\nArvid Lundell, M.L.A. for Revelstoke, and R. C. Steele, M.L.A. for\nOmineca. Secretary of the committee is Maurice Hesford, chartered\naccountant.\nCanadian Scouts\nIn Austria See\nTorrential Rains\nBAD ISCHL, Austria, Aug. 12\n(Reuters)\u2014Thirty-two of Canada's\nKing's Scouts, experts in the forests\nand on rivers are fast becoming\nspecialists in a new field\u2014\"mud-\nscouting\".\nTorrential rains for the last three\ndays have turned the seventh world\nBoy Scouts jamboree camp into a\nsea of ooze, with the Canadian contingent getting the dirty end of the\nstick every lime.\nAnd in This Corner...\nMOSCOW, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014 Victor Suslov, evidently a man with '\u25a0\npassionate love for fragrant blooms, was called to account today for\nputting his pansle3, forget-me-notB and roses ahead of tractor production, i\nSuslov, director of a new tractor factory at Minsk, was taken to\ntask by Izvestia. the government newspaper.\nIzvestia objected not only to Suslov's gardening activities, but\nstaid He alsn took most unorthodox measures for cleaning windows In\nthe plant. He 'solved the problem by having the plant's fire brigade\nkno-k out the. dirty panes.\nThis Is the way Irvestla P\"t It:\nComrade Suslov. all In a dither over nr'eoaratlons for receivings the\nmlnlite* of the auto and tractor Industry. Comrade Khlamov, ordered\nhundreds of workers awav from their lathes and assemblv lines.\nt He out them .to work nlantlhg pansies, roses and other flowers and\ndecorating the factory Itself. The men built sanded paths and splashed\nsllvc nalnt over watfe cans,\nRut while th's faetorv wai being transformed Into \"a living -garden.\" praetor production dronned.\nThe roof went unrenalrerl over valuable machine tools. Tools\nrusted In th\" shops, where workmen were busy putting flowers In\nbases and pots.\nGALESBTJRG. 111.. Aug. 12 (AP) - George Goff of Farmington\nnear Galesburg sn\"s that so far as he is concerned, the grass on his\nlawn oan grow and grow.\nWhile mowng the lawn S^'irdav he niooed off the end of the\nfirst fuller on his right hand. He had It treated by a doc*or and returned tn his mowing. The dressing nn Ihe finger got in Goff's way,\nand ''n attetnDtine to remos-e it he fainted.\nThe doctor told Goff the fall broke his arm.\nVANCOUVER.  B.C.,  Aug.  12  (CP)  _ Gerald  H.  Qarlv of San\nFrancisco, wanted to hear some Scottish bagpipe skirling and bought\n, a ticket to the concert and not Into oulte a Jam.\nHe didn't know that he'd boi'nht the on|v ticket sold because jiales\nstopped when the Seaforth Pioe Band cancelled the concert and sailed\nfor an appearance at the Festival of Britain.\nWhen   he  was  reen trying doors at the concert hall, suspicious\nnelphhors nhoned police. Two prowler c?rs aooear-H suddenly.\n, \"This sure Is a queer country,\" \"aid Carlv after produ^no satis\nfactory identification and satisfying the constables that his Intentions\nwere good.\n,      His money was returned with apologies.\nAnother pipe band concert Is coming up, but he said he Isn't\nInterested.\n 2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1951\nTQNIGliT\u2014TLIESpAY: Cp.MPI.ETE SH0WS 7;pp . 0:32\n\/T__\n7KUE\\\nmm\n-^KKSSIuV\nSee it for yourself'\u2014 the bomb that stalks\n; prey\u2014revealed on the screen for the first time.\nSUrrlng plenn Ford \u2014 V|yeca Unfjfprflj\n'COMPANION HIT-\nGASOLINE ALLEY\"\nwith\n\u201e Scotty Beckett \u2014 Jimmy Lyndon \u2014 Suipn Mprrow\nAt last America's beloved family ljpw pn the screen.\nc\/m\nMANY GROUPS\nREPRESENTED AT\nELLIOTT RITES\nFuneral services for the late Ed-\n'ward Albert Elliott, retired postal\n' Employee at Nelson, were held oh\nSaturday from the Thompson Funeral Home. Very Rev. T.L. Lead-\n;b'eater officiated.\n-\u25a0\u2022' Among those present were representatives of.the Ancient Order of\nForesters Court, Nelson No. 9612;\nthe Post Office staff; entertainment\ncommittee of the Canadian Legion\nand tfie Ladies' Auxiliary to ihe\nCanadian Legion.\nT'wo hymns were sung, \"There Is\nNo Night in Heaven\" and \"Abide\nWith Me\". Organist was' Mrs. J, A.\nfraser.\n\u2014 Pallbearers were Reuben Buerge,\n-W. J. Burgess, Clarence Firth, W.\n-J. Gold, S. Hall and Aid. Stanley\nSmith. Interment was in the Nelson\ns Memorial Park.\nMr. Elliott died Thursday at the\n.tge of 73. Born in London, England,\n\u25a0he game to Canada about 42 years\nago- He was later employed in the\n\u25a0 Post Office here until his retirement\nto 1948.\nCQL. P. McSUGAN\nMAY HEAD\nLIQUOR BOARD\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014\nIt was reported in government\ncircles tonight that Col. Don' McGugan will be appointed to head\nthp British Columbia Liquor Con-\ntrpl Board.\nThp commissioner, William F.\nKennedy, died Friday night. He\ny\/as l;pad of the board for 19 years.\nCol. McGugan is superintendent\npf the Law \"Enforcement Division\nof the Board. He has been a member of the Liquor Board since 1923.\nFor Sale\nBUILDING SITE\n\\H\nNEW SUB-DIVISION\nAT SALMO\nAPPLY\nR. H. Street\nSalmo, B. C.\nIMPROVEMENT SOCIETY\nFOR MONTROSE\nBECOMES INCORPORATED\nThe Montrose Improvement Association has beeti incorporated as\na society under t|ie Societies Act.\nThp society was ipcorporpted to\nprovide recreational facilijips, special amenjiips, improvement to roads\nan ft genprat spr vices to tt)p community.\nJhsi dxtyfWWtA-\n. Nelson\u2014Cranbrook: Nelson to\nBa]f<|ur mile 0 fo mile 10 good; mile\n10 to Balfour fair wilh some rough\nsections; Kootenay Bay tp Kujska-\nhopk good; Kuskanook to Wynpdel\nfair; Wynndel to. dreston good\nCrestpn to Cloatfell gopd.\nNelson\u2014Kaslo:' Balfpur tp Coffee\nCreek fair; Coffee Creek to Kaslo\nfair to good. \u25a0'. -.\nNelsoh \u2014 Monashee: Nelson to\nSlocan Junction good; Slocan Junction to Needles fair tp good..\n\u25a0 Nelson-Nelway: Mile 0 to mile\n6 road under construction; mile 6\nto mile 42 gpod; mile'42 To JJpited\nStates bprder : fair- tp gpod vith\nthree-mjie section under -.construe\ntion and dusty.      - ',.\nNelspn-Trail-Patterspp: Nelson to\nCastlegar gpod: Cpstlpgar to Trail\ngood; Trail tp Rossland good; Rossland to Patterson fair. 4_i miles\nundpr construction, still i)slng de-\ntpur pf approximately two miles.\nRossland\u2014Cascade: Closed due tp\nforest fires.\nVoufh Pirade\nSurpasses\nKiller's Shows\nBERLIN, Aug. 12 '(AP) \u2014 More\n(hap l,00p,Q9D h'lUp-sWrtefi girls'and!\nboys, chanting loyally lo Sialin and\nhate Ior the West, staged a giant\niiarpdp in JSpst Bpr(|ri todpy jn a\npropaganda show that outdid Hitler's biggest spectacles.\nThe high point ot the 14-day communist world youth peace festival\ncame to an end alter nine hours pi\nsteady marpbing past the reviewing\nstand.\nWestern precautions against vio-\nlpnt inpidpms werp unnecessary. Not,\na stopp was thrpwn iij ppggr ,|11\nday.\nTppight in a windM of oratory,\nWalter! U)b-!c'ht,' jjasl Gpr'rriany's\nspade-beirdep; viittlp Stalin\" threat-\neppd sa^clage, strides ppd'-\"ultirnjle\nruip! It Western Gprrpapy rparms\nfor typstprp detenpp.\n\"Lpf t*a# imBefi|listip West Ger-\nrpap rpgjmp leprP fjopi. tljp past,\"\n.shouted lhe little communist' deputy ' premier from Sjxphy, '.'Let\nl))em lparn from Hitler's disaster\npnd also from the jferean War.\"\nGA(.'L5 FOR 8A*30TAfi-J\nHp called pp Communist youth of\nWpst dertppny. to sabotage Western\nojefence by inciting \"tilt mappes of\nstrikes.'^ .    '\n' The Russipp-controllpd East German News Agency said 2,ppp,()00\nyoufhs pprtipjpated ip the gip'nt\ndprpepstrption ' \u2014 l,5Pp,00P who\nijiprpbed in the paradp pnd SQQ.q'OQ\nwho acted as the cheering section.\nWestern, observers thought tbe figures' werp sbmewhaf exaggerated.\nHigh German cornmunists apd\ntbpir Spyipt guests hpd. seirts of\nbpnor for the revlpv,.\"\n' Thp marchers and cheeripg sections (tept lip a steady din of'shouting \"Long Live Stalin,\"'\"Ami, Go\n}lome\" and \"Ami,' Get 'Out ol\nKorea.\"\nComing in sepm|ngly endless\nwaves many abreast the paradprs\ncarried floats, 'banners and caricatures lambasting President Truman,\nGen. Dwlght D. Eisenhower and the\nWest German leaders, Chancellor\nKonrad Adenauer and Socialist\nKurt Schumacher.\nHeads Ukrainian\nCatholic Council\nEDMONTON, Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014\nOrest Demeo pf Edmonton was\nelected President of the Ukrainian\nCatholic Council of Western Canada\nat the two-day conference which\nended today.\nTwo Dje of Pojjo\nTORONTO, Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014 Joan\nMcCauley, 18, and Raymond Horner, 14, both of Toronto, died during\nthe weekend of polipmyelitis. Their\ndeaths brought the Ontario polio\ndeath tpll so' far this year tp 10.\nFrederick Burnaby, English traveller who died in 1885, achieved\nfame by crossing Russian Asia on\nhorseback.\nBumper Crop fpr\nRenata Growers\nRENATA, B. C, Aug. 12-Renata\nhad a bumper cherry crop, exceeding 1940 all time high of 7070 crates.\nTo date 7131 cratps of Bings, Lamberts and other varieties have been\nshipped. Tlie total figure will reach\nthe 7200 mark, the largest number\ngrown here-\nApricots are gopd and are being\npicked now. Owing to extreme heat\nthe ppaches arp slow tp size up but\npicking time is three! weeks away,\nFpr the three Vs, Vedpttes, Valiants and Veterans the peach crcp\nwill be large.\nMETALS\nNEW YORK, Aug. 12 (AP) -\nSppt non-ferrous metal prices:\nCopper 24<_ cents a pound, Connecticut Valley. Lead 17 cents a\npound, New York. Zinc '17*4 cents\na pound, ]Sast St. Louis. Tin $1.03\na pound, New York.\n.....a......\n\u2022 \u2022 t\n.........\nTHE MOST POPULAR\nCANADIAN WHISKY\nATA POPULAR PRICE\nf t. \u25a0.?, .. T J\nNELSON SOCIAL CU-B\nIS INCORPORATED\nNotice that the \"Nelson Social\nClub\"'has\"been incorporated, as a\nsociety under the Societies Act is\nreported'iri the' B.C. Gazette.'\nThe sopiety will oper'pte chiefly\nin Nelson to develop and promote\nsocial pnter'tajnmept and recreptton-\nal and literary activities.\nLoses Four Teeth\nBOSTON, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014 Irv\nNorep,' Washington Senator's outfielder, lost four teeth and suffered\na possible Jaw fracture'Saturday as\nhe stole second base-'agaihst Boston\nRed Sox in the third inning.\nNoren was hit by a throw from\nSox catcher Aaron Robinson as he\ndived for the bag.'\nSettle Dispute\nDSTRQIT, Aug. p (AP) \u2014 The\ntlfprqy \"speedup' dispute that has\nhampered pperptipns at fhe Hudson\n%tpr Car Cc\/mpahy fpr 45 days\napd made 10,000 workers idle was\nrpportp'd' settled Saturday \"nfght.\nMETHODIC PREACHfR PIPS\nEDMONTON. Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014\nilfe'v. C. fi. *flluesfis, ,88, widely-\nknown Methodist preacher wbo>held\ncbprges ih Novp'Spptia Bermuda\n: and \" Alberta, died in hospital\n' Saturday. -,.\"'\nIts genial, rjch flayour\nmaie? G&W Bonded Stpck\nas delightful to the taste ss\nit is easy on th? entertain-\ntnent-budget!\nGOODERHAM & WORTS LTD.\nEstablished 1832 '\nCanada's Oldest Dlsilllory\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nCqftrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCHARGED W|TH MURp(ifl\nSAULT. STE. MARIE,'Ont.. Aug.\n12 (CP)\u2014Wasyl Krawlec, 22-year-\nold railway septiop hand, was committed fpr trial on a cbargp bf mur-\ndp'r ip thp f^tal slabbipg pf a' fel-\nlpw-emplpyep. aft'pr p tfay-long\npreliminary hearing thpt ended at I\nmidnight Spt'prday. '    I\nKrawipc is charged ip the death |\nof Jonnps Norkus,- 25. whose b\u00b0vly\nn fpp'nd July 21 at the remote1\nAlgpma Central Railway section i\npoint of Agawa^ 110 mile's North o(\nhertj.\nLobor Prcpaied\nfp Bflftlf\nHollinger Strike\nTIMJlINIs, Qnt, Aug. 12' (CP)-rA\nunion leader said Saturday that Canadian labor stands ready to battle\nthe hard\" rock mining industry over\nthe Hollinger Gold strike, called to\nenforce demands for wage increases\nand union dues checkoff.\nThe strike of so'rhe 1600 wprkers\nin the'world's biggest, gold mjne\ngoes into its sixth sfpek topjprrpw,\nThere has been'no indication of either side weakening on the key\nissue\u2014whplher the mine will dppjuct\nunion dues from pay checks of pnjbn\nrpembprs.'\nThe hint of a wjder battle came\nfroni Leo A. JSphip, Jntprnati^pai\nrepresentative of the striking United\nSteelworkers of America (C.I.O,).\n\"We are of tire opinion that this\nfight is not beaded by Hollinger but\nby J. Y. Murdoch, Prpsiiippt pf Noranda Mines, Limited, and also a director of the flpllinger,\" hp said-\n\"If they want lo rijalf.e it an industry\nfight we'll rpake' il a fight bpfwepn\nthe'rnining indus(ry%ahd the whole\ntrade union moveipent in Canada.\"\nBALL SCORES\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia 4, New York 0.\nPittsburgh 3, 2; Chicago 4, 1.\nBoston V, 8; Brooklyn 8, 4.\nCincinnati 0, St. Louis 2.\nAMERICAN LEA.GjJ-i\nWashington 7, Boston 1.\nSL Louis' 4, Detroit 7.\nNew York 7, philadelphip 4.\nChjcago 1, Cleveland 2.\nINTEp^ATjON\/Jl- LE\/JGUp\nPaltjmore ii, Torontp 2.\nMfjntreal 7, Buffalo 3.\nSpringfield 8, Ottawa 2.\n- Rochester 8, Syracuse 7.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nToledo 8, Minneapolis 1.\nColumbus 3, St. Paul 8.\nIndianapolis 8, Milwaukee 0.\nLouisville at Kansas City postponed (wet grounds.)\nPCL\nOakland   3, San Francisco 1,\nLos Angeles 3. Hollywood 6.\nSacramento 2, Portland 7.\nSan Diego 4, Seattle 5.\nWIL\nVancouver 24-6. Victoria 6-2. .\nSalem 5-3, Tri-City 6-7\"\nTacoma 11, Wenatchee 8.\nSpokane 5, Yakima 3.   ,\nSunday\nAMERICAN\nF|r5t\nNew York     000 000 500\u20145   9 C,\nPhiladelphia .,. 2q4 P01 20x\u20149 17 0\nMorgan, Schpllock  <3>  Shea  '7>\nand Berra; Hboner, Schieb (7) Kellner (j) an'd Tipfon.\nSecond\nNew York      032 000 0\u20144   7 2\nPhiladelphia 022 201 0-7 11 1\n(Called end of 7 innings because\nof Sunday curfew)\nWlesler,   Kramer   (31   Qstrowskl\n(4) Overmire (6) and Berra; Shantz\nand Astroth.\nF|r\u00abt\nWashington  ..     001 001 000\u20142\nBoston       001 003 20x\u20146 10 0\nJohnson and Kluttz; Scarborough\nand Rosar.'\t\nSecond\nWashington    010 000 010\u20142   8 1\nBoston  .'.'.  101 022 01x-6 11 0\nHudson, Fcrrick (8) and Grasso:\nWight and Robinson.\nSt. Louis    010 000 000-1 3 2\nDetroit  .    ;   .     .0(10 000 002\u20142 8 1\nMcDonald' and Batts; Gray, Cain\n(91 and Ginsberg.\nChicago         100 000 000\u20141   4 0\nCleveland 210 030 lOx\u20147 14 2\nPierce. Kretlow  (61  Judson  (7)\nDorish   (8)  and Masi;  Garcia and\nTebbetts.\nNAYlONAL\nFirst\nPhiladelphia    101 000 000-2 7 0\nNew York      .     003 000 OOx\u20143 6 0\nMeyer, Thprnpson   U)   Heintzelman (8i and Seminick; Megilp ppd\nWestrpm-\nSecond\nPhiladelphia   .... 010 000 000\u20141 4 2\nNew York qpp p02 OOx-2 4 0\nJphnspn, Konstanty (fi) and Wilber: Corwin and Westrum-\nFirst\nPittsburgh    000 010 1)00-1 4 0\nCbicagp 000 000 000-0 5 1\nDickson and McCullough; fatten,\nKlippstein (0) and Burgess.\nSecond\nPittsburgh   ..     000 000 000-0   8 1\nChicago' 000 003 03x-6 14 0\nWerle and Garagiola; Minner and\nOwen.\nBoston     100 000 100-2 8 2\nBrooklyn        000 200 14x\u20147 9 2\nSain, Chinman (7) Estock (8) anoj\nSt. Claire; Newcombe and Campanella. '\"\nCincinnati     003 000 000-3 8 0\nSt. Louis       .      000 000 211\u20144 8 1\nWehmeier and Howell; Boyer,\nBrazle (31 Pph'piskv (7) Prepheen\nfill and Hicei'Scheffing (8).\nWrNATIMA.\n' Spripgfield 2, 0; M\u2122tre?l 10, 6.\nBaltimore '6. Toropfp 5.\nOttawa 14, 1: Buffalp 6. 5.\nRochester 6, 4; Syracuse 5, 3.'.\nAMERICAN A^SpClAtlPN\ntolpdo 5, 13; Minneapolis 4, 1.\nColumbus 0, 1; St. j'aui 5, 7.\nintjianaoolis 1, 3; Milwaukee 6, 4.\ntbulsyille 0, 9; Kansas City 7, 5.\nPpr-\nSapramenfo 3, Portland 5.\nOakland 5, 8. Sari Francisco 1,11*\nJ-os Angeles 3. 10. fjollywood 2, 5;\nSan Diego 10. 1. Seattle 6, 4.\nSacrprnpnto 6. Portland 7.\nLos Angeles 10, Hollywood 5.\nwji.\nTacoma 3. Wenatchee 0.\nSfalfn \"Stood Up\"\nWei tarn Uader;\nNEW YORK, Adg. 12 (AP) -\nWilliam Hillman, Mutual Broadcasting System pews c^pmmeptatpr,\nrppprtppl tpday thpt Prprpipr Sfjjih\n\"ptppd up\" tyinstpn Churchjll end\nPfpsldpht Rppsg'vplt at 13 Bif( T|ir'pp\nmpptipg in 1(|43.\nBppsevelt rpyppled tbis In epp-\nfifjppcp tp 'a smai. gfoiid of' npws:\npaper men, including Hillman, pt pn\noff-tbp-rp'pprd cpnfprpnce 'at tbp\nWpjfp rlpiisp, tbf cpium'pntatpr spid\nin a broadcast.\nBpFfli'ieypit,* \"Cburcbll! anpl Stpllp\nmpt'twicp (lurlpg [flp sgffflfj Wprld\nWar, in 1943 at Tehran ppd at Yalta\nin \"1945.   ,\"  '\nBpGIMNIf'G  OF SU?PICION\nTbP full story pt the Russian leader's snub wps npt tpld jri'the brbpd-\ncpsf.'\nHillman said, however, that it\nmprked the beginning of suspicion\nin Roosevelt's mind that \"the Russians wprj hpt'pn'ly i<0f tp bp\ndi(f(pult, but thaf tbpy would become offensive and hostile. -\nHillman's story of the Stalin snub\nsaid Roosevelt pnd Phurcljill bad\nbeen trying for mppthp to prrppge\na meeting bt th.p Big Three to dis;\ncuss common war problems.\nA datp was fixed 'or a rendpz-\nVPUS.\nTwo weeks before the conference\ndate, Rppsevplt and Chqrchill askpd\nwhere Stalin would mee^ them.'\nMoscow, dfdn't reply.' ' (\n\"The day of thp rendezvous came\n\u2014but no Stalip,\" llillman said\n''Rpospvelt and Churchill' fumpd\nand \"got rriaddpr\n\" \"tljp'n suc|den|y 24 hours after the\ndpy 'sejectpd for tfie B'g Thrpp to\nrpeet, Stpiin- rpturnpd to Mpscpw\nand explaippd hp had been busy\naf thp front.\"\nS^\u00b0-?TL1f ^hTh^c Calgary's First Allempl lo Rival\nHollywood Becomet Historic Kern\nflOME, A,ug. 12 (AP)-U. S. Sem\npfqr Blp|r Mopfly (RP|p.\u2014Mich.)\nsaid tonight thai Yugoslavia Premier Marshal Tito ls considering de-\nportlng Archbishop Alojzjjp Step-\nenic as one of three possible ways\nof settling thp case of Ihe imprisoned Roman Catholic prejatp. \\\nThe SeRptbr bpd a twa-liqiir cpn-\nypfsptipp wifh T't'p tpday |J b'S\nSlimmer   home   on 'the  island   of\nBriphj, oil PpI?, Yugoslavia. During they rode away together tp {hp Cal-\nfh'e tpljfs Titp wprhed tftpt'tbe next 6<*\u00a3y Pxhibifion Cfo*inds,\nyear will be \"thP period of greatest\ndanger\" to wqrld peace.\n' Ajphbishpp St'eppnip was spptpn-\ncee] ip 1946 to 1$ ypprs' Impr'ispn-\nmpnt for a|legpd wartime collaboration with the Nazis.\nWelcome Signs\nThrep smart new welcome signs\nwjll ' go up on Nelson's highway\napprppchps this aftprnbbn.\nA project of .the Nelson Junior\nChamber of Cpmrperce, the twp^by-\ntwo metpl signs will be set up at\ntfie Lajjpside^ Park iprry appfpaph\nand at vantage points'on the South\npnd WPSf City )|m|ts.\nTbe signs arp shpppd into a map\nof'the Sou'therh half of British Columbia and are painted white with\n'\u2022Nelson! In ' luminous-type black\nlettering and also bearing .elsya-\ntion and population figures'. Mileage\ntp tbp pe?V centre is contained on\nthe reverse side.\n\" Mayor N. C. Stibbs wjll officiate\nat erection ceremonies this' aflef:\nnoon.       \" '\" \u25a0   ' *''\nSYNOPSIS:\nCool cloudy weather was general\nover B.C. and the Prairie provinces\nwith maximum temperatures ranging from the mid sixties to the mid\nseventies. The warmest spot in\nWestern Canada was in the Far\nNorth with most stations in the\nYukon Territories reporting afternoon temperatures in the mid eighties.\nTemperatures Mondpy afternoon\nwill be a little higher in the Southern spctipns pf thp province, Little\nchange is expected in the Northern\ndistricts.\n' A storni centre now in the Gplf\npf Alaska will bring rain to  thp\n'North Coast.\nNELSON       50\nSaturday      48\nSI.  Johns      59\nHalifax  !\u25a0    65\nMontreal     57\nOttawa .,    57\nToronto    56\nNorth Bay    57\nPort Arthur  42\nKenora     38\nWinnipeg  '.    42\nBrandon  '.    43\nThe Pas     43\nRegina   .,    48\nSaskatoon    45\nPrince Albert    31\nN. Battleford     42\nSwift Cprrpnt    51\nMedicine! Hat    55\nLethbridge      51\nCalgary       49\nEdmontpn     52\nKamloops ..!    58\nPenticton     58\nVapcpuvpr    50\nVictoria    54\n{Cimberlpy    48\nCrpsppnt VaUey  ;   54\nPrince' Rupert     52\nPrincp Cjeorge     53\nSeattle . <...'.'.'.,... '..   55\nPortland    59\nSpokane ..,' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.   4S|\nChicago .:.:..:   ,64\nSan Francisco  ..\u201e   41}\nLos Angeles     $1\nNew tfJFk*' !    75   86   .26\nWhitphorsp  :..:    48  76   \"\u2014\nAuthorize Strike\nLONG BEACH, Calif, Aug. 12\n(AP) \u2014 Tbe United; Auto Wprkers\n(C.I.Q.) said Its meihbers today\nauthorized a stride pt Douglas Air-\nc'r'pft' C'ompppy's tong Beach' plant\nafter falling'to reacb agreement\nwith (he\" company on seven basic\nunion demands. '  ','-\n79\n_\n79\n.22\n71\n_\n76\n._-,\n84\nmm.\n80\n\u2014\n83\n_\n72\n-_\n70\n_\n68\n__\n71\n\u2014\n69\n\u2014\n69\n\u2014\n69\n_-,\n71\n_-.\n70\n\u2014\n70\n\u2014\n60\n.02\n63\n.18\n64\n.38\n56\n.12\n68\n\u2014\nB8\n\u2014\n77\n\u2014\n70\n.02\n68\n\u2014\n72\n.la\n76\n.81\n63\n.01\n68\n.23\n73\n\u2014\n?!\n\u2014\n\u2014\n75\n\u2014\n79\n\u2014\n72\n\u2014\n,CALG;AftY (C?)\u2014 T^e (lapdsome wild horse stampedp.\nhprp'lppned over pnd kissed the In the hpbkjet,' fiart is pictured\nhpFOlr|e as php pasually 'prpdpeed wearing a wide-brimmed hat, pparl-\nher trpsty guitar and played a tune butlp'ped\" .hjrt pnd fanpy riding\nto the' wir'e-smjppFted rnpon over pants, lie is alsp shpwn ih a dark\nLake Louisp. , su)t w|th a black tie wearing the\nTjjs|). ps thp sup  sank slowly, wprripd look pf1 a d;reptpr.'\nHOME TOWN STARS\nThe \"scene   was   Calgary's   first    Tne rest oi 'be cast was home\nmpvie set. The datP: Wl* 'own !aien'- Joe Big Plume, 'chief\n'.It w^s Calgary's lpri'e entry Into \u00b0l, the Sarcee tribe, played an In-\nthe    motion   'picture    business\u2014a \u00b0'an ebief.\nroolin'-tootin' epic called \"His Des-     Inspector James Spaulding of the\ntiny.\" i B-C-M-P- was a Mpuntpd Ppiicp ip-\nAU that remains of lt now is a spector. Arid somehow. Viscount\nbrilliantly-colored booklet describ- Willipgdon. then Governor-General\ning the \"stupendous story of the of Canada, appearpd in pub|icity'as\nfoothills of Albaj-(a'' that was' \"sin- the Governor-General of Cpnada.\ncere and convincing, abopnding in Mary Crpss, \"Queen of the Saddle\nthrilling surprises.*1 -a 'native  of Calgary'\"  was' the\nNpal   Hart,   tpe  cowboy   glamor heroine\nmap of the '20s, was the star. He   ' 0ne of her accomplishments in\nwas a|so tbp djrpplor and in the the film was riding a dempcrat-i\nmoyie was cpl|pd upon tp stop a the wagon, not the political adher-\nent\u2014down the streets of Calgary to\na rappb-\nThe 'sun  porch  of Ihe  Palllser\nHotel wps one pf thp spreen ranch\nhpusps. jhp City Court' p|ouse was\nanother.\nBuf as the bopjtlet put, it, \"His\npfistlny was mpre' than a picfure;\nit wjs prim reality that arouses ev-\nhc School Board has.been formed in ery   hpmap   eniqtjpn   and   cpuses\nSeparate School\nFERNIE, B.C., Aug. 12\u2014A Catho-\nSQPAL CREPIT  .\nMEMBIR\nTQ SPEAK MERE\nJ. H. Blackmore M.P. for Lpth-\nbridge will be In Nelson tpdpy as\ngjjpst speajipr fpr a special meeting\nat' which 'be w}l! oufljpe tbe rpppfp\nbf Sppial Crpdlt gbverriment ip\nAlbprta. '\nMother of Former\nNelsonite\nDies jri Ontario\nWord of the depth |n thp Bethpl\nNursing Home at Brpntford, Ont.,\nof Mrs. Annie Ellen AUoway, aged\n93, has been received here.'\nA daughter, Mrs. C. F. McHprdy\nof Victoria, is a former Nelson resident, and three granddaughters\nalso res|de in this district. They are\nMrs. U M. (Su'ance pnd Mrs; John\nDolphin nf. Nelson and M?s- \u00a5\u25a0 *y\nMapLpap pf Trail.\nMrs. Allow'ay was born in Warwickshire, England in 1859, the\ndaughter of Willipm and Elizabeth\nLariib. She came to Canada with\nher parents when 16. In 1879 she\nwas married in Brantford to John\nAlloway, who predecpased her in\n1912. During her married life, she\nlived in Medina, N.Y., St. Geprge,\nToronto', and Brantford. She was a\nmember of Park Baptist Church in\nBrantford.\nShe' is also survived by another\ndaughter, Mrs. R. Storie of Brantford; one son, Arthur R. Allpwey\nof Oshawa; 12 grandchildren and\n22 great grandchildren..\nKing Htmk \u00a3prr\u00bbbte s\nCANNES, France. Aug. 12 (Reuters)\u2014 \u00a3ing Fprouk pf Egypt stayed\nup all Sptitrdpy agpin gapiblipg in\na RlvJera pasinp.\nNp great sums appeared tp have\nchanged bands at thp sessipn\u2014Far-\npuk was reported dpwn $500 or so.\nThf Rreviqus two nights |}P l\u00b0st\n*H57,7f)p.\nFernie  .froni   the   parishioners ' of jmpzomerj't'pt''t'h'p'startling Vitua-\nHoly Family Parish; , tions lhat follow in rapid pucces-\nAt the initial meeting the purpose sion.\"\nof the Board was described as five- \u25a0    Tlie only trouble was lhat it was\nfold: to conduct a vigorous campaign  too grimly  rear and  amazing for\naiming to secure the enrolloment of lhe patrons,\nall Catholic children for whom the\nschool offers facilities to care for the\nproper maintenance of real estate\nbelonging to the school; tp act as a\nWays and Means Committee as re-.\nguards financing the school: to represent the school in relations with\nthe Provincial and  Municipal authorises: ip  cpoperatjpp with  the\nteaching staff;   tp   take   whatever\naction niay terid;  to'enhance the\nreputatipn of the school in the community.'\n^t present the board Is busily engaged V'th a program pf rppair and\nredepprafipn of tlje\" jiqly Family\nSpboql.\n$oard mernbprs are IJarry E. Miard. chairman; Mrs. A. Galloway,\nsecretpry; Henry OTjeill, Alfred Le-\nrpy, Mrs. M. Amantea, Joseph' Zak\nand Rev. Father Chepvers, ex officio.\n$700 Damage in\nN. Shore Collision\nSix persons escaped without serious injury early Suriday morning\nwhen two cars collided near Longbeach.\nDrivers of the vehicles Involved\nwere Louis Kosmo of Harrop and\nLloyd Meyer of Kaslo. Passengers\nescaped with a shaking up and rni-\npor bruises whjlp damage tp the\ncars was estimated at $359' each.\n. H.C.JfP. said a. charge would\nlikely be laidj but declined to give\nacfcidpnt details.\nYour Dealers in Nelson are\nTO HAND|.|5   .?\nCO-INSURANCE ON\nGROUP BASIS\nConsolidated Co-Insurance Society of Trail has been incorporated\nas a society under the Societies Act.\nThe object of .the society is to\npay for its members in return for a\nmonthly fee, the portion of the hospital charges payable by them under\nunder the PP-insurapce prpvisipp of\ntbe B.p. HPSRital Ipsiiraopp Act.   I\nBURKS\n'LUMBER   COiylPAr,Y\n\"Everything   for  tile' Builder\"\n60-\"BA'j-\"I.R'ST.     \"\u25a0}   NELSON\nHudson Ray Co.\n402 Baker St.      Phone 456\nWistful Wins\nCHICAGO, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014 Calumet Farm's five-year-old mare,\nWistful, Saturday duplicated the\nfeat of her two stablemates in winning the $27,600 Whirlaway Stakes\nat Washington Park.\nNPBWfp|A|S BOAT '\nIN TRpMRt-P\nLONDON, Aug. * 13 (Mopday)\n(Reuters)\u2014 The Norwegian stpamer\nBess radioed an S.O.S. today and\nsaid its'c'rpw\/ Vps taking to the life-\nbp'pts. in the rhi4plie of the Nprth\nSea. It S|jd it had a 30-dpgrep .lisf Marj Forrester of Edmonton\nlb starboard.    '\"\u2022'\nWarn? PsKistpn\nNEW J3SLJJI, . Ipdia, Aug. 12\n(AP) \u2014 Afghanistan joined tbe-lp-\ndia-Ppk|stan war o( v\/orpip today by\nwarning Pp^jstpn agpipst psipg\nPathap   tribesmen   agaipst   Kpsh-\nmir -'ps it did ip 19*7.''\nThe Afghan ambassador (p Ipdip,\nSardar Najib Hhhal jihan, sajd\n\"Afghaps cpiWPt pllPV tbe bjopd\nof their Pathan brothers tp bs shpd\nfpr tbe benefit of otber nptipns.\"\nRpjek Injured\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014\nShortsfop Stan pojpk wil) bg put pf\naction at least a month with a broken shoulder, St. Lqu|s Cardinals\nannounced Saturday.\nRpjek was injured Wednesday\nduring batting practice when he\nIried to dodge a pitch by Gpprge\nMunger. Thp ball struck ihe in-\nfj'eldpr on the left shoulder.\nWINS ALBERT TITLE\nCALGARY. Aug. 12 (CP) -\nTwenty-one-year-old Chris Duns-\nmore of Calgary won the Alberta\nWomen's singles tennis title Saturday with a  6-3, 6-4,  victory over\nON WH-HNQDON TEfM\nWINNIPEG, Aug. ii (CP) \u2014 Veteran's Allan' jmf arid\"Mikji *?id-\nlaslti and newcomers Bob' CSray jpd\nRoy Keprpn\u2014all ffRm'Witipipeg\u2014\ntpday gaiped berth? on Manitoba's\n1951 Wiilingdpn Cpp gplt (earn.\"\"\nBR|T|\u00abH WIN CRICKET\nTORONTO, Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014 Britain's touring Marylbone Cricket\nclub defeated a Toronto and district\neleven by 188. runs Saturday. The\nM.C.C. scored 291 for eight wickets\ndeclared to Toronto's 93.\nBEATS. SPEERBQAT REPPPp\nSEATTLE. Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014Lop\nFagpol drove the Slo-Mp-Sbun' IV\ntp tw\u00b0 world's Speedboat records to-\ndey in the second beat of the Spafa|r\nTrpphy race.\nHe went the second lap at an pv-\npragp speed of f|2SW mil'ps pp\nhour and averaged 111.742 for thp\n10 -nautical miles pf the twp-|ap\nrace.\n. The old records, both held by the\nDetroit-owned Miss Pepsi, werp\n167.564 and 107.394 respectively.\"'\n(-0 ARRESTED\nBUENOS AIRES, Argpptina, Aug.\n12 ''API\u2014 The prrest of pp raUway'-\nrnen ip \u25a0 Cprdobp Province' on\nchprgps of plotting to sabotage train\nseryjpp wps disc|pspd tpday.\nSixty of tbp Cprdoba fsilwaymen\nwill' bP court-mprtialled under\nPresident Juan pprpn's cjppree' militarizing the railroads nnd ail their\nperspnppl. Tb'e'other J\" V\"!\" be\ntrifd linger a lasy for thp security\npt thp suu.\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\n\"sincereTHJlJfks\nREGULAR NOW!\nr     ._s_m\u00bb-\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\njVC)lJl!|(SSTpR'S UPDY FOUND\nI    L4I?SING.''Mcb.. Apg: 12 iffi)\u2014\nThe crumpjed body   of   tiopglas\nDavis, 'jyps fpurip|   late   Spturday.\nI deep under the pile'of   sphd   in\n1 which he wap buried Friday.\nI    Discovery   erided   a ' search   of\nI nearly 28 hours in a huge gravel\n! pit by mpre than lpq volunteers'.\nI' The boy was trapped b'y a cave in\nthere Friday, tralle tunnelgng with\ntwo young companions. j\n\"For years I Buffered from chronic\nconstipation that\nmade me feel miserable, iipw' I eat\nALL-miAK daily and\nfpe.wonijerfulT\"\nMrs. f. ph'oux,' q_22\nPpVk <Vve:, Jjifonlrepl, Qpe. Jusi\npngpf iffdhy (iftsbh'citpoj letters (riirn\nAi.L-miAN users! If you Qepd help\nfor constipation due to lack oflnilk,\noimply pat nn ounce of crispy\nAI.I,-nilAN daily, drink plenty of\nsvaterl If not eprnpletely satisfied\nsifter 10 days, return prppty cfrtpp\nto   Kellogg's,   London,   Ontario.\nGET   DOUBLE   TOUR   HONEY   BACK]\nA GLORIOUS\nTRADITION!\nWhen yoa travel by Cunard you do more than just\n'trayei'\u2014yqu enjoy gracious living at its best. .. relaxed\nirj cpipp|etp cpmfort, secure ip the knowledge that ttye\nservice bound up in the most glorious tradition of Ocean\nTravel is novy anticipating your eyery wish.\nSpfroppflpd by conjfort, pttracted by a tasteful variety of\nactivities, your every moment with Cunard will be flattered\nby the generpps attentions qf the sep's fin>$t, most grpcipps\nhost\u2014that glorious traditiop of travel thpf is Cupard.\nIfeekfy service through the historic St Lawrence route via\n\u2022'FRANCOI.iA'. \"SAMARIA\", \"SCYTHIA\", \"MWWi\nFrcqvonl doporluros tram Nov\/ .Yosk, Includlnn lhe World's laiggll\no(id Faslosl ifossmcri, \"Quocn Elizabeth\" nnd \"Queen Mary\".\nFffft flass Fores from $210. \u2014 Twist Clan Fqtes ffpni $147.\nSep your Lsxol Travel Agent \"No onp can serve you beller\"\ntil\"PIMM STEAMSHIP Q0MPAHY\nLIMITED\n626 WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER, B. C.\n {&\u00a3\nSHOE\nSALE\nSEE OUR RACKS\nfor\nSPECIALS\nIn\nWOMEN'S\nSUMMER FOOTWEAR\n10% off all regular lines of\nmen's, women's and\nchildren's shoes.\nTHE SHOE i\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\nNelson, B.C.\nFores) Research\nOutlined, Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B.C., Aug. 12\u2014There\nwere 11 visitors at Nakusp Rotary\nmeeting. They were:. Mr. Worth\nChapman and Cyril Edgington\nof Nanaimo; Ronald Jordan, H.\nJeal, J. Parent; G. H, Gardner,\nBert Gardner, Dr. Joe Gardner and\nHunter Gardner of Vancouver; Willard J. Keys; Mr. Mazril, Dept. of\nMines and Technical Surveys.\nDr. Gardner of the Vancouver Research Branch of the Dominion Forest Branch, was guest speaker. His subject was \"Forest Products and Forest Research.\"\nHe said it was not necessary to\nstress the importance of Forest\nproducts in this area, where the\nwhole economy depended on it. B.C.\nforests were crops which if carefully managed, would last indefinitely.\nBy adequate research the Dominion Government made sure forest products were used. \"This was\nthe day of integration,\" the speaker\nsaid. The idea was to use the maximum amount of that tree, use what\nis now wasted. Burners are seldom\nseen in sawmills today. Every bit\nof the product is used.\nThe Government research is a\nlong range, basic one. One must\nfind out what wood is; the characteristics of the various species. Two\nlaboratories are maintained, one in\nVancouver and one in Ottawa. They\nare divided into four sections.\nDr. Gardner urged his audience\nto support forest products research.\nIt is important to have people aware\nhow important natural resources\nare; to know that something is being done to utilize it.\neca\nin-.PI   MARK UtG.\nat the Ball Game\nAlbertans Dominate Highland Games\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Aug. 12 \u2014 Out-of-town dancers displayed top\nform to place first In almost all events at Kimberley's third annual\nHighland Games held here on Saturday. Kathleen MacKle of Calgary\nwas grand aggregate winner for the dancing with Donna May Maxwell of Red Deer runner up. Grand aggregate for the day, Including\ntrack and field went to Jim Sommen of Kimberley with 13 points.\nExcellent crowds were on hand all day to applaud the various\nevents, with young Paddy Skelly, five year old dancer from Calgary,\ncompletely stealing the show. Music by the Nelson Kiltie band and\nKimberley pipe band as well as the Kimberley brass band, was greatly\nenjoyed. Rain at 4- p.m. forced the final dancing event Into nearby\nOughtred Hall where- prizes and cups were presented by Allan Graham of Cranbrook, Chieftain of the day, and Mrs. Ellen Harris of the\nCBC. Judges for the dancing\nwere Miss Jean Gauld, of Cal-.\ngary and Mrs. Paul Richardson\nof Kimberley.\nDANCING\nGrand Aggregate: '\n1, Kathleen MacKie, Calgary; 2,\nDonna May Maxwell, Hed Deer.\nHighland Fling Novice (under 10):\n1,  Edie Roberts, Slocan;  2,  Pat\nQually, Lethbridge; 3, Jim Smith,\nCastlegar.\nHighland Fling Novice (under 14):\n1, B. J. Oliver, Kimberley; 2, N.\nJohnson,  Kimberley;  3, A.   Fair-\nclupgh, Kimberley.\nHighland Fling (under 10):\n1, Connie Maxwell, Hed Deer; 2,\nPaddy Skelly, Calgary; -3, Shirley\nCook, Trail; 4, Margaret Erics, Vancouver.\nSword Dance (under 10):\n1, S. Skelly, Calgary; 2, M. Erics,\nVancouver; 3, S. A. Cook, Trail; 4,\nPaddy Skelly, Calgary.\nIrish Jig, (under 10):\n1, S. Skelly, Calgary; 2, C. Maxwell, Hed Deer; 3, S. A. Cook, Trail;\n4, J. King, Castlegar.\nSean Trulbhls (under 12):\n1, D. Maxwell, M. McHessui, Kel-\nlog; 2, L. Hogarth, Cochrane, Alta.;\n3, Donnie Adams,. Kimberley.\nSailors Hornpipe (under 12):\nD. M. Maxwell, Hed Deer; 2, L.\nHogarth, Cochrane, Alta. 3, A. Mc-\nHessuie of Kellog; 4, S. J. Beatty,\nTrail.\nHighland Fling (under 12):\n1, D. M. Maxwell Red Deer; 2,\nL. Hogarth, Cochrane; 3, S. J. Beatty\nTrail; 4, B. McHessui, Kelleg.\nSean Trulbhls (under 14):\n1, K. MacKie, Calgary; 2, M. Clay,\nHed Deer; 3, C. Haley, Ressland; 4,\nG. Burns, Trail\nHighland Fling (under 14):\n1, M. Clay, Red Deer; 2, K. Mackie,\nCalgary; 3, C. Haley Rossland; 4,\nB. A. Graham, Trail.\nIrish Jig (under 14):\n1, K. MacKie, Calgary; 2, C. Haley\nRossland; 3, B. Graham Trail; 4, M.\nClay, Red Deer. i ,\nReel O'Tulloch (under 14):\n1. M. Clay, Red Deer; 2, K. MacKie, Calgary; 3, M. Cook, Kimberley; 4, D. M. Maxwell, Red Deer.\nSean Truibhis (under 16):\n1. M. Cook, Kimberley; 2, H. Shaw\nTrail; 3, M. Cruickshanks, Rossland.\nSailors Hornpipe (under 16):\nNo  first.  Second  and   third,  M.\nCook of Kimberley and H. Shaw of\nTrail.\nHighland Fling (under 16):\n1, H. Shaw, Trail; 2 M. Graham,\nTrail; 3, M. Cook, Kimberley.\nSword Dance Open:'\n1, M.  Neilson, Edmonton; 2, M.\nOliphant, Kimberley; 3, N. N. Wads-\nworth, Calgary.\nIrish Jig Open:\n1. M. Heatheringten, Calgary; .2,\nM Neilsnn, Edmonton; 3, N. Wads-\nworth, Calgary.\nSailor's Hornpipe Open:\nNo first; Heatherington, Calgary,\nM. Neilson, Edmonton, second and\nthird.\nReel O'Tulloch Open\n1, M. Neilson, Edmonton; 2, M.\nHeatherington, Calgary; 3, N. Wads-\nworth, Calgary.\nPiping, Grand Aggregate:\n1, B. Adams, Kimberley; 2 E. Williams, Kimberley.\nStrathstey Reel:\nB. Adams; E. Williams, Kimberley;\nL. Cairns, Nelson.\nNovice (under 16.):\nSandy Jones, Spokane; M. Morrison, Kimberley.\nTRACK AND FIELD\nGirl's Under 8:\nM. Sullivan, L. Boetger.\nBoys Under 8:\nS. Calles, D. Calles.\nGirls Under 12:\nC. Heatherington, Pat Jones.\nBoys Under 12:\nH. Parkinson, G. Battistella.\n(Note: Because of few entries in\ntrack, many, junior events under 15\nand under 18 were combined).\n100 yd. dash, Junior:\n1, L. Benson; 2, J. Sommen; 3, G.\nSahlin.\nRunning High Jump junior:\n\u2022  1, J. Sommen; 2, B. Harrison; 3,\nB. Stone.\nRunning Broad Jump junior:\n1. L. Benson; 2, Sommen,\nSahlin.\nRunning High Jump junior:\nSahlin, Benson, Sammen.\nMEN'S EVENTS\n100 yds.\n1, Wassick, 2, Harrison, 3,\nmen.\n220 yds:\n1, Wassick, 2, Harrison, 3,\nmen.\n16-Pound Hammer:\n1, Johnson, 2, Cole, 3, Publicover.\nRunning Broad Jump:\n1, Wassick, 2, Kershaw, 3, Layton.\nRunning High Jump:\nKershaw, Coles, Publicover.\nHop-Step and Jump:\nWassick, Kershaw, Layton.\n8-Pound Shot Put:\nPublicover, Layton, Kershaw.\n16-Pound Shot Put:   \u25a0\nPublicover, Layton, Kershaw.\nTossing the Cabre:\nJohnson, Leighton.\nTug-o-War:\nPolice won from the pipe band\ntwo pulls to one.\nLADIES EVENTS\n50 yds:\nD. Cox, C. Jones, L, Oliver.\n76 yds:\nC. Cox, H. Moore, L. Oliver.\nRunning Broad Jump:\nH. Moore, C. Cox, C. Jones.\nRunning High Jump:\nC. Jones, H. Moore, C. Cox.\nAggregate Winners:\nBoys Under.18;'.\nJ. Sommen\nUnder 16:   .\nL. Benson.\nMen:\nWassick, Nelson.\nLadles:\nC% Cox, Kimberley.\n3,  G.\nSam-\nSam-\nFor smooth power\nI switched fo\nCSSO -Gasolines\nFill your tank with \"up-to-date\"? Esso or Esso Extra\nGasolines. Take your car out on the road.   See\nfor yourself ks better all-round performance;\nEsso and Esso Extra Gasolines are continually\nbeing improved to give the best balanced\ncombination of smooth flowing power, lively\nacceleration and protection against engine ping\nand vapor-lock. For more happy motoring, switch\nto Esso Gasolines and you're always ahead!\nIMPERIAL\n\u20acsso\nDEALEf\nthe sign that says\nEflflfl to stop for\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 guaranteed are life with\n\u25a0..ft]?. J th<* f,mous At>\" Writ-\nBUMstt3 ten    Guarantee   that's\n; honored by over 38,000\ndealers in Canada and the US.\nRffn engine protection with\nMllWjms Marvel-he - the pte-\nMUUi mium motor oil that\nmeets all car manufacturers' specifications for correct lubrication. A detergent motor oil that not\nonly lubricates but cleans!\nhappy motoring wWi\n[lI.'JS Imperial Esso Road\n'' Maps, and Imperial Esse\nTouring Service thai\nroutes you anywhere. Both are yours\nfor the asking.\nof the services you wani\nawait you at' youi\nImperial Esso dealers\nDrop in at the Esso sign\nany time to have radiator and tire pressure checked or for any of the other\nservices your car may need.\n\u25a0OT3\nAppointed lo\nKimberley School\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Aug. 12 -\nHarry Runer has been appointed\nby the school board to Kimberley\nschool staff as industrial arts metal\nwork instructor. He succeeds longtime staff member Jack Corbett,\nwell-known hockey and baseball\nplayer for many years, who has\naccepted an appointment in this\nwork at Powell River.\nMrs. W. J. Beynon and Miss Olga\nHusack have been appointed tq the\nelementary school staff, and Miss\nWendy Clark to the Wasa rural\nschool staff. An assistant household\neconomics staff member and two\nelementary teachers are still required.\nFinal resignations from the staff\nwere accepted from A. F. Bella-\nmore who will be acting principal\nat Sardis School, Miss N. McKay,\nwho has accepted a position at\nEnderby, and Miss Maria Mathieu\nwho is enrolling at the University\nthis Fall.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1951 \u2014 3\nJayceeslo\nGeorge Rossr\n48 Years Wilh\nC.P.R.,lo Retire\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 12 \u2014 Retiring\nfrom Canadian Pacific Railway service this month will be George M.\nRoss,, agent at Tadanac since October, 1945. His retirement will\nmark the end of 48 years service\nwith the railway company.\nBorn in Winnipeg, Mr. Ross entered C.P.R. service July 8, 1903, at\nNelson, and since that time he has\ngained extensive experience in\nNelson, and since that time he has\ngained extensive experience in\ntransportation and agency work at\nmany centres, principally in British\no\/hTdassMcalion'wU^tte\"^''     \" * 8 616 SeCond Street' recently picture of the \u00ab\u00ab to *\u2022 oonsumer\n\u00b0nvtn ir-   i \"     \u25a0-    ,        \u2022\u25a0    .received the highest mark among public.\ntemv\u2122_jTw\u00ab^^lwS2iaa mUSic Students writing HoyalI    Members of the Milk Producers\nE^M^^Y^ ^tVerllaT\" \"' \"i Ass\u00b0tiati\u00b0'* - <*sl*\u00ab dis'\u00bbb*\"\nCranbrook District Crops\nReported in Qood Condition\nConsumers Side\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 12\u2014Members\nCRANBROOK, B. C., Aug. 12 \u2014\nThough harvest in this part of East\nKootenay will be later than usual,\nwheat has headed well after above-\nnormal June precipitation and five\nweeks of steady' hot sunshine. Cold\nwet June weather has reduced the\nlength of straw in grain crops but\notherwise fields are in good condition. This district has had no hail\ndamage this season.\nRaspberries, believed a total loss\nof the Trail Junior Chamber of for several weeks after the sharp\nCommerce are launching an investi- late May frost, recovered better\ngation into the plight of milk pro-, than was expected, and though also\nducers in the Trail District | later than usual are yielding fairly\nThe Jaycees, acting as a public well in the Cranbrook District. The\nbody, plan to study the whole prob-, May frost appears to have badly\nlem in an effort to present a clear\nyardmaster.\nMr. Ross comes of a railroading\nfamily and his service, together\nwith that of his father, the late\nD. G. Ross of Winnipeg, forms an\nunbroken line dating back to 1885.\nHis brother, Donald Ross, now with\nthe passenger department- in Vancouver, will continue that line of\nservice.\nThe day of his retirement will see\na dream come true for Mr. and\nMrs. Ross. They will move to a\nnew home, overlooking the Pacific\nOcean, at White Rock, B.C., where\nthey will be closer 1o their family\nand where Mr. Ross will have more\ntime for his hobbies, rock collecting\nand polishing, and woodworking.\n. Kootenay Coal\nOutput Higher\nNATAL, B.C., Aug. 12\u2014Taking\nthe province of British Columbia as\na whole during the month of June,\nas compared with the same month\na year ago, there was a slight increase in coal production, a little\nmore than 1000 tons having been\nmined in June 1951 than was taken\nfrom the coal seams in June 1950.\nJune.this>year production totalled\n156,698 tons, while June last year\nit was reported as 155,628 tons.\nThe East Kootenay district showed an increase of nearly 4000 tons\ntion for a $1.45 increase per nun-\nA  conservatory silver medal  is! dredweight   of    milk   and    have\nawarded in each of the four Western'threatened non-delivery after Aug.\nprovinces, Ontario, Quebec and the 21 if their demands aren't granted.    ,,    .\nMaritimes to the student who re-i   The Jaycees will likely appoint \u00b0tny harvest appears unlikely. Hay\nceives   the   highest   mark   in   his a   committee   at   this   weekend's ?leld\" were ,airIy \u00abood in the \u00a3irst\ndamaged the wild huckleberries\nwhich are sought after in hills in\nthe district at this time of year. It\nalso ended any prospect of an apple\nharvest.\nSECOND CROP UNLIKELY\nSecond alfalfa crops appear to be\ndoing fairly well, but second tim-\ngrade.\nSouth Africa Has\nPeace-Time Army\nVogue Photo, meeting  to  investigate  the   problems and are considering a public\nmeeting to discuss the situation.\nIf the demand is granted to the\nharvest which was two to three\nweeks later than usual. Most hay\nin Cranbrook vicinity was harvested  mechanically  this  year,   with\nproducers it will amount to about ei\"'P\"if**t   raking,   pressing   and\na four-cent-a-quart increase in the ?alin\u00ab '\" ? ?\u2122<Sl* \u00b0Perati\u00b0n' tu\u2122'\nprice of milk. The Jaycees are primarily concerned with finding ways\nand means of keeping the retail\nprice down.\nPRETORIA (CP) \u2014 With the return of Defence Minister F. C. Eras-' l\/nr,\\\u201eraQ Er-bnac\nmus from the recent defence talks rVOUiaret LLTIUtJ\nin London, South Africa for the\nfirst time in its history has peacetime military commitments outside\nits borders.\nThe extent of South Africa's commitments and the contributions she\nwill make to the general defence of\nthe Middle East are of course military secrets. But observers believe\nSouth Africa should be able to make\ninitial contribution to Middle East, ^ve^ll toelaY'mTVlndybZi\ndefence at least as large as that it!n6t wet\nwas making at the end of the' Sec-j   0,^ directed By Frankie, was\nond World War.\n*The\nThree Birthdays\nCelebrated\n*\nThe seventh day of camp began\nearly but not so bright as there were\na few drops of rain in the morning.\n! held in the lodge.\nUnion now has the largest During rest hour the campers had\nand best-equipped armed forces it an extra speciaI treat f,om j^y;\nhas ever had in peace-time. The Na- n;ce' big juicy cherries,\ntionalist Government led by Dr. At dinner, tne campers celebrated\nDaniel Malan, with the co-operation three birthdays which occur in camp\nof the opposition has maintained Mrs. Downie's, Joyce Larson's and\nand expanded the efficient war ma- Frankie Magwood's. There were two\nchine that the late General Jan big birthday cakes and everyone ex-\nthis^ June, total tonnage .mined Smuts created in the teeth of Na- changed gifts. These gifts were all\nbeing 108,338 tons as against 104,199 tionalist opposition in the war years, made from things around camp and\ntons in June 1950.\nA breakdown shows that the big\nproducer, Michael Collier, produced\n71,882 tons, Elk River Colliery 24,-\n706 tons of coal and the Hillcrest\nMohawk Collieries (which is mining in this area) 11,740 tons.\nMichel also produced 13,696 tons\nof coke.\nT. B. Survey Chest\nUnit to Revisit\nWindermere-Golden\nINVERMERE, B. C, Aug. 12-The\nTuberculosis Chest survey will pay\na second visit to the Windermere\nand Golden Districts following up\nthe preventive plan which is showing such excellent results. It is several years since the unit visited\nthis area.\nThe unit will stay long enough in\nthe district to give every person\nover 15 an opportunity to have the\nfree chestX-ray examination. The\nservice is financed by the sale of\nChristmas Seals.\nDates for the visit of the chest\nsurvey unit to this district are August 24 Canal Flat, all day; Invermere, August 27 all day; and August\n28 in the morning; August 29, Edge-\nwater in the morning; August 30,\nGolden in the afternoon and August\n31 Golden all day. A date will be\narrange for Field.\nBigger Checks Go\nOut to B. C. Loggers\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014\nBigger pay checks covering an 11-\ncent hourly increase for the 30,000\nemployees of B.C's lumber1 industry,\nretroactive to July 1, have already\nbeen received by a large number\nof woodworkers, an official of the\nInternational Woodworkers of America (CIO-CCL) said today.\nPassing Car Hits\nNatal Oldtimer\nNATAL, B. C, Aug. 12-An acci-\ndent occurred just West of Natal on! British Territorials. Part-time train\nthe main highway when Joe Bilek, | mg in it is compulsory for every\nMr. Erasmus himself has no will be displayed on visitors' day.\ndoubts- about the ability of South j In the softball and volleyball\nAfrica to meet its new commitments, games, Cabin 5 was defeated by Ca-\nand he has stated that the union's bin 4, and Cabin 3 was defeated by\nplans have commended themselves Cabin 6 respectively. Incidentally\nto the two powers most closely con-' this was Cabin 4's first sweeping\ncerned,. Britain   and   the   United victory.\nStates. At campfire Cabin B put on an\nARMY SET-UP I amusing skit \"The Ticket Agent\"\nm.n tt \u2022     _ .       a       ,       , i and a few \"revised\" nursery rhymes.\nThe Union defence force is made,    Each o\u00a3 the cabins then      g aei.\nup of a permanent force, with an I cabin songs\narmored brigade group as its hard: As an extra birthday treat Faythe\ncore, an active citizen force and a Toog0od of Cabin 4, passed around\nRifle Commando organization. | mar5hmallows.\nThe action citizen force has no ex-' \t\nact equivalent ip other parts of the\nCommonwealth, but resembles the\nfit white youth from the age of\n17 to 25. Active citizen force units\nalso train in the air force and the\nnavy.\nGRSAT EXPANSION\nRaces, Rodeo at\nPeach Festival\nPenticton and district Peach Festival Association is planning its an-\nThe South African Air Force and! nual festival for Aug. 20, 21, 22 and\nnavy provide the two most striking 23.\nexamples of the Union's present: The festival gets away the eve-\npreparedness, compared with 1939.' ning of Aug. 20 with the crpwning\nAt the outbreak of the Second of Peach Queen Miss Mary McKay,\nWorld War, the air force consisted who will be attended by Princesses\nof a bomber squadron flying obso- Miss Helen Estabrook and . Miss\nlete machines. The Union now has Sheila Colquhoun in the open band\n15 squadrons with modern aircraft j shell. There will be queens and\nand men who have learned the! princesses from various points in\nlatest techniques of air warfare in.l B. C, in attendance. The crowning\nKorea. \"  | ceremony will be accompanied by a\nIn 1939, South Africa's\" naval j concert and followed by the annual\nforces mustered three officers, 13 queen's ball to be held at the Penmen and no ships. j ticton armories. On Wednesday a\nThe South African Navy now has j queen's banquet will be held for all\n16 ships, including a destroyer re-' of the visiting queens and dignitar-\ncently bought from Britain, 70 offi- ies.\ncers and more .than 700 men. j   The main show get*- away Tuesday\nWith white South Africa united evening with a night rodeo, under\nage 78 and one of the districts old\ntimers; was struck by a passing car\nwith the result that he sustained a\ncompound fracture of. the right leg.\nThe scene of the accident was on\nthe gravel stretch just below the\nhard top West of Natal. The driver\nof the car was from Natal. Latest\nreports indicate that the injured\nman is resting satisfactorily in the\"\nMichel hospital.\nInvermere Phone\nService Expands\nINVERMERE, B. C, Aug. 12-Ex-\npansion of the telephone service at\nthe Invermere exchange while not\nmeeting the full rquest of the subscribers is marching along in that\ndirection. Twenty-four hour service\nwas asked a year ago by the District\nBoard of Trade and whle that has\nnot yet been granted the hours of\nservice have been extended half\nan hour in the morning and half an\nhour at night, making the telephone\navailable from 7:30 a.m. to 11:30\np.m.\nFurther expansion is shown in\nthe present installation of four new\ncircuits. Wilmer is also asking for\nnew circuits to accommodate a\nnumber of prospective subscribers.\nIn 1947, 110 subscibers were listed\nfor this exchange; in 1949 this had\nincreasedto 152 and now 211 exclusive of toll stations are listed.\nThere are two full time and two\npart time operators with Miss Isabel\nKimm of Invermere as local agent.\nWindermere Ready\nFor 40th Fall Fair\nINVERMERE,  B.C., Aug.  12 \u2014\nGroundwork  for   the 40th   annual\nFall Fair to be held at the Athalmer\nfairgrounds is now well laid. Pro-   .        ,.,     \u201e      \u201e      ,   \u201e    , ....... iuuusv.-, ,.\u201e.., \u201et\u201ei\u201e \u201e,\ngram plans are completed and thelfl'om Mrs' yern Marshall who three 1 Kin ,    eeks ag0\n\u2022      ,       ,    .    . .. ... _    . _ Vs-at'.   o0n   inoniii'ifnH    th\u00ab   rossss nn   Ism I _.-__.. _r*\nbehind the defence policy of the\nGovernment, the potential manpower of the land forces is greater\nthan it was in either of the two\nworld wars.\nWindermere, Golden\nDist., Awaits New\nPublic Health Nurse\nINVERMERE, B. C, Aug. 12\u2014The\nnew Public Health Nurse for the\nWindermere and Golden school dis-\nstriets will arrive in the valley near\nthe end of August. She is Miss Frances Hewgill, a graduate of the Winnipeg General Hospital and the\nUniversity of Toronto. She worked\nlights, in the arena with Joe Kelsey as arena director.\nWednesday's parade promises to\nbe bigger and better than ever with\nbands, decorated floats, clowns.\nTrotting races with pari-mutuel betting, will be followed that evening\nby another rodeo.\nThursday there will be more trotting races in the afternoon and in\nthe evening a big variety show with\nimported and 'local talent. A fireworks display will wind up the program.\ning out brickshaped fodder for\neconomical storage. Yield, of hay\nin this district will continue to be\ninsufficient for Winter local needs.\nJuly heat without any precipitation finally dried up the most luxuriant range of many years, but not\nuntil the end of the month and beef\ncattle utilizing it are in top shape.\nWaldo Stockbreeders Association\nhas named October 12 for its annual feeder cattle auction at Elko\nfor which they are prepared to\nhandle up to 1000 head.\nCompletes Survey\nJob on Cranbrook\nWafer System\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u201e Aug. 12 -\nEngaged last Fall to check the-pity\nwater distribution system and make\nrecommendations to improve pressure, Andrew Hunter, New Westminster civil engineer completed\nthe practical part of the survey this 1\nweek testing pressure in mains in\nvarious parts of the city. Water wis\nshut off overnight in a large section of the city Thursday in connection with this work. \u2022\nSurface inspection was done last\nFall on the system from the reservoir the two miles-to the city an_\nmeasurement of grades taken at\nthat time. 1\nDetailed report is expected in a\nfew weeks for city council consideration. Water supply at the city\nreservoir on Joseph's Creek remains\nconsistently high, but low pressure\nproblem has arisen in elevated parts\nof the city. Suggestion has been\nmade that large increase in the\nnumber of city water services.during the past decade is beyond capacity of a single main to satisfy.\nMr. Hunter's report will indicate\ncorrective measures for the situation. ,'-.;.\u25a0;\nECUADOR FORCES CLASH\nWITH PERUVIANS, ARMY\nQUITO, Ecuador, Aug. 12 (AP)\u2014\nThe Defence Ministry said Saturday two Ecuadorian Army garrisons\nat the Peru-Ecuador border were attacked by Peruvian forces three\ntimes in the last-48 hours. The two\ncountries are at present engaged in\na border dispute.\nThe Ministry said the attacks occurred Thursday night, Friday\nmorning and Friday night at Gual-\ningo and Moreno, Santiago Zamora\nProvince.\nIt Pays To Read the Chsitlfled Dally\nAnglican Camp\nIn Slocan Opened\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Aug. B \u2014\nThe first group of young people\nwere at the Anglican Camp last\nweek on the Slocan Lake, Rev. T.\nMitchell in charge. Mrs. Mitchell ia\ncamp mother and Archdeacon B.\nA. Resker of Castlegar supervised\nsports and assisted generally. Rev.\nM. Percivall took a religious period,\nand Mrs. M. Percivall a handicraft\nsession.\nThis week Very Rev. T. Lead-beat-\ner of the Pro-Cathedral, Nelson, will\nbe in charge of a group of older\nboys assisted by S. P. Snowden of\nKaslo.\nASK FOt  -COTIAMD** FAVOORITI  SON\nJOHNNIE\nWALKER\nSCOTCH WHISKY\n\u2022 O.N   18-0 \u2014\n-mil  GOING  STROHO\nreal good\nScotch\nDistilled, Blended and\nBottled in Scotland\nContents -6J. oe.\nJOHN WALKER \u00ab SONS LTD., SCOTCH WHISKY DISTILLERS\nKILMARNOCK, SCOTLAND\n\u2022This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTourist Court Sold\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 12 \u2014\nAlmo Tourist Court, converted from\n,\u201e,. .... ...   ,,    ... \u201e\u201e   .    the  former  Provenzano  store  on\nwll7nJ    \u201e ,W      'he V\u00b0^\\i.\"  Van Keren Street, highway route\n?'nnJW \u2122\" 'wo years w.th the th       h t b   M   s.nd 'Mrs  p\nSn \u201e\u201e    ^^n^'n    u       A. McKinnon and A. E. Hines of\nonStrpZ^:a^l^ofh?Llo'llKimte^ W\u00abh additi0n \u00b0f Cabi\"\nquitlam-Ioco-Moodie district.\nunits several years ago, has been\nsold to Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Tiller,\nS Si\" M^mMifa wm continue its operations!\nPublic  Health  work  in  this area\nindustrial section is being laid out\nfor the many East Kootenay business firms and industries which intend to use this opportunity to display their products.\nThe Fair. Queen contest is getting\nunderway with four pretty local\ngirl representing Edgewater, Inver-\nmere-Athalmer, Windermere and\nWilmer competing for the honor.\nA special feature this year will be\na folk dancing contest which is open\nnot only to square dancing groups\nbut to any type of folk dance. This\nshould be a colorful and gay addition to the program.\nThe fair will be open to the public Friday\" evening as in the past\n-two years, with Saturday's festivities culminating in a dance at the\n.Community Centre at Invermere.\nSale follows the death of Mrs. Mc-\nyears ago inagurated the service in     Ml,  _\u201e,,  Mrs   Tille). ,,.lmc  ,,_,._\nil7;\u00ab    re,'erd?ndenS-Ch00i from  Lethbridge  eight years  ago\ndistricts.   Mrs.   Marshall   resigned when he stai-te*l a contracting bus-\niness which he will continue to\noperate along with their new business interests.\nearly last year but as no new nurse\nwas available she continued her\nduties to a limited extent.\nMAIN LINE REOPENED\nCARTIER, Ont., Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014\nThe prehistoric Picts of Britain\nare said to have been called \"Picti\"\nThe   Canadian   Pacifjc   Railway's by the Romans because they painted\nmain transcontinental line, blocked their bodies.\nsince Thursday night when a freight\t\ntrain was derailed at Benny, was f^-.,\u2014 - W}\u2014.~aflMfet\nreopened today. ITflD.^lTPII BlteS-\nTwo giant C.P.R. cranes cleared Jlvl* 11 ||||\/_fatffat\/i\nthe 200-yard strttch of track, nine cicki stop itchin, ot _,\u00ab\u00ab bite,, hot n_,h,\nmiles West of here, where 28 cars tctema.Mvti,pimples.scaia,-cables,athlete,\nof a 60-car freight train left the ^^S^fSa^&^Si\ntrack, shortly after midnight. By PREtCRIPTIt-N. Gmseie,,, shinies'.stow\n4:30 a.m. new track had been laid J*** &\"$?'(], ^frSatci^i^f d,Y5\nand cleared. ' * \"'     l\nYour Kitchen Stays\nC-O-O-L\nIn Summer\nWhen You\nCook With\nRocketgas!\n\u25a0   1\n_\nRocketgas\ngives you every\n_>'\"    . City convenience\n* in cooking and water heating\nIT'S CLEAN\nIT'S FAST\nIT'S ROCKETGAS\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd\nNelson Leading Appliance Firm\nPHONE 1555\nM^^^HH|HM|\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1951\nGuerrljlafr at Present, Net\nPRINCE PHILIP ENJOYS A FA8T RUN ON\nWATER SKIS\u2014A lieutenant commander of the\nRoyal Navy, ths Duke of Edinburgh participated\nIn the Mediterranean fleet's 8ummer erulse before returning to Britain to prepare for the coming\nCanadian tour. These Informal photographs, released for the first time, were taken as he was\nattached to H.M.8. Magpie. \u2014 Central Press\nCanadian.\nBy FRED HAMPSON\nHONG KONG, Aug. 12 (AP) -\nEvery day reports come out of Red\nChina that guerrillas are punching\nthe Communists groggy, especially\nln the South,\nIn the last 60 days enough confirmation has come through to establish the truth of many raids,\n. Wishful thinkers may make much\nof the rash of outbreaks, but dispassionate evaluation shows the\nguerrlllaB, at present are no more\nthan an annbyance to the Reds.\nThey may become more than that,\ndepending on several factors, including the Korean war, but it is\na mistake to view them now as >a\nserious threat to the Communists.\nI have talked to a number of persons from Red China, and not one\ntakes the guerrilla movement seriously as yet,\nThe buildup of a resistance area\nby old nationalist regular troops un-\n, der Gen. LI Mi in the Southwestern\nprovince of Yunnan is the only real-'\nly sizable operation that is positively known to exist.\nEven this may be more In the\n| wilds of North Burma than on Chl-\n'nese soil.\nA good yardstick for the extent\nof guerrilla work la the Chinese\nrailroad system. China hai poor\ncommunications, 10 that a out rail\nroad It a serious thing to a provincial government or even to the\nPeiping national Red regime.\nGuerrillas have Indeed blown up\na few locomotives and robbed a few\nmunitions cars, but all indications\nare that the trains in Red China\nstill run close to schedule.\nIt will be time to sit up and take\nnotice when raiders start smashing\nrailroads and keeping them smashed\u2014as the Reds used to do when\nthey were guerrillas.\nSPECIAL BUDGET\nIS GOV'T PLAN\nNeeded in Financing\nOf $40-a-Month\nOld Age Pensions\nOTTAWA,  Aug.   12   (CP)   - \"A\nfederal budget Canada's second of sujts.\nSearch Expanded for\nMissing Fisherman\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014 Two\nflying American anglers still were\nmissing in the rugged bushland of\nNorthern Saskatchewan tonight\ndespite an expanded R.C.A.F.\nsearch.\nFive R.C.A.F. Dakotas and one\nNorseman, Joined by a second\nNorseman from Lamb Airways of\nThe Pas, Man., hunted ln good\nweather today and reported no re-\nthe current fiscal year, will be\nbrought down by Finance Minister\nAbbott in the Fall session of Parliament.\nGovermr\na speolal b\nThe search for Dr. John Tasche of\nSheboygan, Wis., and Miles Elken-\nburger of Plymouth, Wis,, mlSBlng\nsince Aug. 2 on a 296-mile flight\n! source say It will be'fl.omx-ac La Ronge to Stony Rap-\njet, as opposed to the idSp now has covered almost 28,000\nA quiet moment on the bridge of H.M.8. Magpie,\nChinese Reds Jail 17 Catholic\n. Priests in Renewed Attacks\nBy STANLEY RICH\nanother unidentified professor; the \u2022\t\nGerman Bishop Constans Kramer, c     l_   *   L D\nof Luanfu diocese; the Belgian Fa- dOSKatCheWan  DCHIS\nther Van Vooli, head of the Legion pr\\v\u201es.0 Cnl- nf flnc\nof Mary in North China; A French- r\"m lu* ''\"\"\u25a0'' \"\" * Mb\nman and 13 other Germans,\ngovernment regular annual \u00abnan-js_uare miies of the rolling, lake\ncial accounting, in the same sense jotted region.\nas  the  \"baby\"  budget introduced,  .\t\nat the special session last September.\nThat budget was required because\nof the outbreak of the Korean war\nand the stepped-up tempo of Canada's defence preparations.\nThis one will be necessitated by\nthe arrangements for financing the\nuniversal $40-a-month old-age pensions which go into effect Jan. 1\nnext for Canadians of 70 and over.\nThe government hasn't said yet\nhow it plans to finance the pensions, which will add $230,000,000 a\nyear to federal expenditures. The\nFinance Department still is studying the problem and is expected lo\nrecommend weekly or monthly deductions from the pay envelopes of\nCanada's wage-earners.\nThis would put the pension plan\nen a contributory basis and, in a\nstrict sense, couldn't be called taxation. It would be similar to the deductions made from pay checks to\nfinance the unemployment insurance fund.\nWhile the deduction thus wouldn't\nbe called a tax, one high government official said that Mr. Abbott\nnaturally would want to give parliament an- account of the country's\nfinancial standing as a background\nto the proposals to meet the costs\nof the pensions plan. He would do\nthis   by   bringing   down   another\nREGINA, Aug.  12  (CP)  - The \u00a3*-* \u00a3\nMeanwhile, the Reds themselves C.C.F.   Government  of  Saskatche-     Tt ,  '       ,.     . j_\u201eh(f\u201ei t\u201e t .\u201e\u201e\ndisclosed   their   campaign   against wan made plain Saturday-that^no ,Fan ^S^^mSSSrX\n_3T?_\u00a3E \"Vi?\"T ?JaieS\" ?\u201e ^,Vate\u201e\",1Pf\"y Z1  %_\u00bb___ -t-ntl-l tax changes in other .ields.\nHONG KONG, Aug. 12 (AP) \u00ab\u25a0?\nCommunist police Jailed 19 Roman\nCatholic priests, closed 12 of Pelping's 17 Paris centres and put all\nthe rest of the city's 80 forefgn\nmissionaries under house arrest\nIn   simultaneous   raids   July   25,\nchurch sources reported today.        , ,    .,  -        , ,     ,     ,, t.     \u201e    ,,      ,, .. .\t\nx, , \/,;. ; ed to Hainan Island, ott the South sell   consumer,,   the   natural   gas rhn\u2122 m,aM h* c\u00ab\u2122_. m4\u00ab^,^\nDescribing   thi.   as   'the   most china coast. wnicn be Jound.,n substantial 2$ 2!^S'__&____S____SS*2__{\nfrontal attack ye \" made against     The\u201epro-red newspaper Ta Kung quantity in the province. i-__,(_^^^_^\"^l,^taS\nthe church n China, the sources :pa0 said Hainan authorilics were ProvinciaI Treasurer c. M. Fln-S ^TriM s^hSl 1\npredicted similar action aga ftst investigating charges that 2293 or- said the Government will handle \u201e0ditv sales and \u00abL_LS _T\u201e\"\nCatholics and other Christians, phans had died of iu treatment at distribution on its own or keep con- ffl&K^St&S\nthroughout Red China. the St. Paul's orphanage on Hainan municipalities. SffiSS^.sJ\nThe Reds have been conducting [since 1940. It said the French nuns trol by granting franchises to the sonai income taxes\ncampaign for  an  \"independent\" Joanne   Lace   and   Connie   Rosari     Pipelines   to   deliver   gas   from     Evon the remote nnsnslhilitv that\nwere m charge. The reds accused would be built and owned by the , \u00a3orean aZTticl^ might be reach\nsimilar wells to various  cities and towns ed by Fall isn't expected to change\nGovernment. Hhe  government's   current  budget-\nA widespread search to natural. ary policies and bring down, taxes.\nThat conflict is  costing  Canada\nGermany Plans\nRoyal Wedding\nHANOVER, Germany, Aug. 12\n(Reuters)\u2014Citizens of this lower\nSaxon capital today began preparations for a grand old-style Royal\nwedding Sept. 4.        .   '\nQueen Frederica of Greece, a\nmember of Britain's Royal Family,\nprobably the Duchess of Kent, and\nother members of present and past\nruling houses are expected to attend the marriage of Prince' Ernst\nAugust of Hanover, 37, to lovely\nyoung Princess Ortrud of Schles-\nwlg-Solstein-Gluecksburg.\nPrince Ernst is a great grandson\nof the last king of Hanover, George\nV, and brother of Queen Frederica,\nThis weekend the Royal colors of\nthe Hanoverian House, the Guelfs,\nflew here for the first time in public since Sept. 25, 1866, when King\nGeorge renounced his throne and\nhis kingdom became a province of\nvictorious Prussia.\nHanoverians have never forgotten their Royal House, closely connected with Britain's Royal Family.\nOne wall in the organization committee rooms is covered with an old\nUnion Jack,with Hanover's coat of\narms, a souvenir of the time when\nBritain and Hanover were linked\nby persorial union or, as people say\nhere, \"when our kings (the first\nfour Georges) ruled Britain too.\"\nLOOKING FORWARD to the day when they\nwill aecompany Princess Elizabeth and Prince\nPhilip on their month-long Canadian tour, three\nmembers of the royal household discuss details of\nthe approaching tour, In grounds of Clarence\nHouse, London. Left to right are: Lieut. Mlohael\nParker, R.N., equerry-ln-waltlng to the Duke of\nEdinburgh; Llout.-Gcnoral Sir Frederick Browning, comptroller and treasurer of Princess Elizabeth's household; and Major the Hon. Martin Charteris,  Princess Elizabeth's  private secretary.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nBB-Gun Bandit\nFaces Examination\nCatholic church, having no connection with the Vatican.\nThe new direct drive apparently\nis intended to force the people to\naccept this red \"church\" or none.\nThe information of the latest arrests came from. Catholics arriving\nthis British colony from Peoping.\nThese sources said those arrested in\nPeiping July 25 included Father\nHarold Rigney, former rector of the\nCatholic Fujen University and the\nonly American missionary still in\nPeiping,\nOther reported seized included\nFather Joseph Miners, a German\nprofessor    at    Fujen    University;\nfive  Canadian   nuns  of\ncharge a few months ago,\nThe   establishments   accused\ntually  are  not orphanages in the gas now is\" under way in the prov.\nusual sense but receiving stations ince. Small quantities have already\nwhich take in dying waifs from the been found, and natural gas is be\nstreets.\nFROST HITS GARDENS\nSASKATOON, Aug. 12v'(CP) \u2014\nFrost struck many .communities in\nNorth-Eastern   and   North-Central\ning used in some communities.\nSOUTHERNERS FAVOR\nNEGRO LEAGUE PLAYER\nDANVILLE, Va., Aug. 12 (API-\nVICTORIA, B.C., A'ug. 12 (CP)-\n60-year-old John Hughes, alleged\n\"BB-gun bandit\" who attempted a\nfantastic bank; holdup here Thursday, was further remanded to Aug,\n18 in City police court. A report on\nhis mental condition is awaited..\nHughes was arrested a few hours\nafter a man entered the main branch\nof the Royal Bank of Canada, and\nthreatened Miss Marie Beale, a taller, with an air rifle in an attempt to\ncash a $15,000 check made out to\nThursday Island, 1400 miles from [the \"King of Kings\". She refused\nrelatively little and most of the\nextra money being raised by taxation is being funnelled into preparations for defence abainst. the overall threat of communist aggression.\nSaskatchewan overnight. Damage y\u00b0unK Danville Negro, believed to Australia, wilh a population of Just and the would-be bandit fled firing\nwas reported to gardens, but it was be the first to play in organized over 1000 is headquarters of a big' the gun in her direction before leav\nnot  known  if   grain  fields   were baseball in the South, made his de-! pearl-shell industry. I ing the bank\naffected. | but last night. He got a single and\ndrove in two runs in three times at\nRussia (racks\nDown on Poland\nBy WILLIAM  L.  RYAN\nNEW YORK, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014\nThere now seems little doubt that\nthe astonishing show put on In Warsaw recently by Moscow big shots\nwas a mighty crackdown on Poland,\nwhere the threat of Titoism must\nhave been too great for the Soviet\nUnion to risk.\nA reading of Soviet Vice Premier V. M. Molotov's Warsaw speech\nas printed in Moscow's Pravda indicates this. The threatening words\nMolotov flung at Yugoslavia's Communist maverick were not, in reality, directed at Tito at all but at\nthe Polish United Workers (Communist) Party.\nSome manifastation of an independent attitude by the Polish Communist leaders must have annoyed\nand frightened Moscow's polltburo.\nThis now seems to be the only explanation why a parade of Soviet\nleaders, headed by Molotov, descended upon Warsaw no the pretext of celebrating a seventh anniversary of the puppet Communist\ngovernment.\nLifted out of context the words\nof Molotov's July 21 Warsaw speech\nabout Tito looked like an ominous\nthreat to take direct action against\nthe Yugoslavia, regime. But the text\nof Molotov's speech indicates this\nwas not the point.\nThis Is what Molotov said of\nTito: \"Realizing that the Yugoslav people hate the hired gang\nof criminals which stole Its way\nto power, It (the Tito regime)\nholds the power by bloody terror\nand Fascist rule. This cannot long\ncontinue. The people of Yugoslavia will find a way to freedom\nand liquidation of the Tltolst Fascist regime.\"\nBut this paragraph must be considered in the light of the preceding one and the one which followed\nit.     .\nIn the preceding paragraph Molotov told the Poles their relations\nwith the Soviet Union were based\nupon the principle of equality of\nbig and small peoples. Inequality\nof relationships was Tito's complaint j\nwhen the cominform expelled him.\nIn the paragraph which followed the Tito remark, Molotov declared \"It follows from this that we\nmust be alert in unmasking the\nenemies of proletarian internationalism\" and must adhere strictly to\nprinciples of Leninism-Stalinism\"\nin the \"brotherly collaboration of\npeoples.\"\nU. S. Price-Ceiling\nViolations Probed\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (AP) -\nPrice Enforcement Director Edward\nP. Morgan said today he is investigating 50 major cases of alleged\nprice-celling violations that could\nresult in the return of $10,000,000\nto the government and consumers.\nMorgan said details on the 50\ncases could not be disclosed at\npresent, but he said many involve\nsome of the largest business concerns in the country. He said one\ncase \"has possible International\nramifications and involves about $5,-\n000,00 in Illegal profits.\"\nIn many cases. Morgan said, the\nprice agency is forcing firms found\nguilty of violations to make restitution to customers. In others, where\nthere is no clear method for repayment to customers money from settlements is paid to the U.S.\nTreasury.\nTo Try Falls Again\nNIAGARA FALLS, N. Y\u201e Aug. 12\n(AP)\u2014The only living survivor of\na trip over the falls said today that\nhe plans to try it again next year-\nonly this time over the more treacherous American falls.\nJean Lussier, now 60, made it\nover the Canadian falls in 1928 in\na giant rubber ball. He is the only\nperson still alive among the three\nwho made successful trips. Three\nothers have died in the attempt.\nOne\u2014William (Red) HilH-was killed in an attempt last Sunday,\nLussier, said he is designing a\nsimilar rubber ball fbr the trip. He\nsaid he wants to go over the Anier-\nican falls because it has never been\ntried before.\nThere are large rocks at the foot\nof the American falls and they extend out far. This isn't true of the\nHorseshoe Falls where it's possible\nfor the barrel to shoot out beyond\nthe rocks.\nDrugs Cure\nDiseased Crops\nEDMONTON, Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014 A\nUniversity of Alberta scientist has\ndiscovered that antibiotics \u2014 the\nwonder drugs which cure a host of\nhuman diseases\u2014also cure diseased\ncrops.\nThe scientist\u2014Dr. A. W. Henry-\ntold farmers attending the annual\nUniversity Plant Science Department visitors day Saturday that act-\nidione will cure smut in grains.\nActldione is produced from tha\nsame organism which produces\nstreptomycin, an antibiotic used in\ncuring many human diseases.\nDr. Henry said he soaked smut-\ndlseased oats In a solution of 10\nparts of actidlone to 1,000,000 parts\nof water.\nNone of the treated oats showed\nsmut Saturday.\nDr. Henry used farmer's seed\ndrill samples of oats collected by\ndistrict agriculturists. He said 90\nper cent of several hundred samples collected were diseased with\nsmut.\n\"The project still is in an experimental stage,\" Dr. Henry said, \"but\nit shows complete control of oat\nsmut\u2014one of the most difficult of\nplant diseases to control by seed\ntreatment.\"\nHe said antibiotics would be\nmuch safer to use than mercury\ncompounds which may farmers\nnow use.\nMOTHERS DIE IN CRASH\nSEATTLE, Aug. 12 (AP)\u2014 Tw\u00bb\nwomen, each' the mother of three\nchildren, were killed in a two-automobile collision in South Seattle to-\ndr\". Four men were injured.\nDead are Mrs, Mae L. Smith,\nabout 35. and Mrs. Delle Marie Patterson, 27.  \u2022\nREASONS\nWHY\nits your best\nGIN BUY\nbat as Danville Leafs beat Durham\nBulls 5-4 in a Class B Carolina\nLeague game.\nPercy Miller, Jr., 20, was well received by a crowd of more than\n1700.\nClub officials said they had received some adverse comment from\nDanville fans but the public reaction had ben more favorable than\nunfavorable.\nH I RAM      _ S^^,\nWALKERS DRYGIN\nQISTIltEP   AND   BOTTtiP   IN   CANADA ELECTED ai Liberal candidate\n-rmmmm^mmTmmmmmmmmm^mm^^^mm\\mwmmTmmm\u2122^mmmmmmm^ml^ In the Ontario riding of Huron-\n\u2022 i his advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Bruce is Elmer J. Farrlsh, a farm-\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia. er \u00b0*_Howick township.\u2014Central\n\u2014f ,  PresslrCanadian,\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nHOT,TIRED\nFEET?\nSoothe them\nquickly and effectively.\nGet fast-drying Minard't\nLiniment\u2014rub it-on. Feel\ncoolness\u2014get relief, quick\nWARD'S\n\"KINO OF PAIN\"\nNIMENT\nGOING!     GOING!     GONE!!\nSelling? Buying?\n\/ Column's Bring Prompt. Results\nGet more pulling power from\nyour ads . . . Include the name\nof.tha brandl\nDon't say radio or baby grand\nr\nDon't tay washer,  range er\n\u2022weeper. \u2022\nIn your Ad, TELL THE BRAND;\nWall-known  names  pull faster,\neheiperl\n \"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nOur Gigantic\n49th\nAnniversary\nSale\nStill Continues\nR. ANDREW\nEstablished 1902\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nJfaLWtfMofc\nWomen\nQueen's Bay Quild Holds\nBazaar on Balfour Lawn\nQUEEN'S BAY, B.C., Aug. 12 \u2014\nThe-Queen's Bay Guild held their\nannual church bazaar in tl;e lovely\ngrounds of the Balfour Beach Inn\nloaned for the afternoon by the\ncourtesy- of Mrs. Lequime. The sale\nwas opened by Rev. Canon W. J.\nSilverwood of Nelson.\nMembers presiding at the various\nstalls were:\nHome cooking\u2014Mrs. Krattee and\nMrs. Q. G. Wishaw;\nPig in the Poke\u2014Mrs. D. Crozier-\nSmith;\nWhite elephant stall\u2014Mrs. H. E.\nMahood;\nCandy\u2014Mrs. J. S. Hirst;\nWork stall\u2014Hon Mrs. K. A. Aylmer and. Miss J. E. Hirst;\nIce cream\u2014Pat Mahood and Ian\nWhishawf\nGate\u2014H. E. Mahood.\nTeas were served in the dining-\nroom.\nConvenor for tea was Mrs. F. M.\nI Hughes, who was ably assisted by\nher daughter, Mrs. N. R. German\nof Vancouver, B.C. Four young Balfour girls volunteered to serve the\nteas. Misses Betty Bowles, Penny\nGold, Carol -Anderson and Sylvia\nKrane.\nMrs. Q. G. Whishaw provided\ntransportation.\nReceipts amounted to $115.\non\nCOMPANY BEST\nCompany coming? Dress up the\nhouse with these doilies to show off\nall   your   vases!   Combination   of\npineapple design and shell stitch-\nit's quick easy crochet.\nLarge doily 19 inches ln No. 30\ncotton; small doily 13 inches. Pattern 818; crochet directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor each pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft. Dept,, Nelson.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyour NAME and ADDRESS.\nSend Twenty-fire Cents more (in\ncoins) for our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book. Illustrations of\npatterns for crochet, embroidery,\nknitting, household accessories,\ndolls, toys . . . many hobby and\ngift ideas. A free pattern i6 'printed\nin the book.\nIn spite of the fact that women\nhave not the right to vote in Switzerland several have lately been appointed to government commissions, including one on housing and\none on the revision of labor laws.\nCOAL\n^ TOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nPhone 889 Nelson, B.C.\nNew Denver  s\nNEW DENVER,. B. C. \u2014 Ernest\nCox of Silverton is a patient in-the\nSlocan  Community Hospital,\nJohn McLeod of Rosebery has\nbeen discharged from the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital,\nMr. and Mrs. M. M. Gunderson of\nVancouver are visiting New Denver. Mr. Gunderson is of the Surfacing Department for Department\nof Public Works, Vancouver, and\nwork is going ahead on New Denver\nand Silverton main streets.\nMrs. W. H, Clever, New Denver,\nhas left the Slocan Community Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Don' Sutherland of\nVallican visited Mr. and Mrs. Art\nStack and family.\nDouglas Bailey of Revelstoke is\nvisiting his aunt and uncle, Mr.- add\nMrs. Alex D. Trickett.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Clarkson arid\nfamily, Yvonne and Karen returned\nfrom Victpria where Mr. Clarkson\natended Summer School.\nS. Tarbet of Creston is a patient\nin the Slocan Community Hospital.\nGeorge Deslaurier of Zincton is 1a\npatient in the Slocan Community\nHospital.\nRev. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hansen\nhave left for Vancouver, where they\nwill visit realtives. Mr. Hansen has\nbeen in charge of the Knox United\nPresbyerian Church for eight years!\nand Mrs. Hansen has-been here four\nyears, coming as a bride.\nC, Crowe-Swords of Vancouver,\nManaging Director of Santiago\nMines' Ltd, and Bosun Mines was\na visitor in New Denver for a\nfew days. '\n| T. Hayashida of Slocan City is a\n| patient in the Slocan Commnity\n! Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. L. P.. Angrignon and\nfamily Jacqueline and Terry of\nFruitvale are visiting the former's\nmother, Mrs. E, F. Angrignon.\nMrs. A. Donaldson of Calgary,\nAlta., is the guest of her sister, Mrs.\nLillian Bergeren.\nS. Bisso of Silverton who was a\npatient in the Slocan Community\nHospital, has been discharged.\nMr. and Mrs. George A. MacMillan and two nieces, Misses Ruth\nand Viola Huggard left by car for\nToronto,\nRaymond and Gordon Irwin, who\nwere visiting their uncle J. L. Irwin\nfor two weeks,-returned to their\nhome in Creston.\nRL M. Evans returned from Nelson where se spent .a brief holiday.\nRev.' Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Watney\nand daughter Muriel, who were holidaying at Mrs. Walfneys old home\nfor three weeks, liave returned to\nVancouver, '&\u25a0\nNatal Notes\nNATAL, B.C., Aug. 12\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. W. Constable of Creston, B. C.\nare spending a short holiday at Natal at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T.\nLemachuk.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Chala and family\nleft Natal for a week's holiday at\nKalispell, Mont.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Krall of Natal\nwere recent visitors to Lethbridge,\nguests of Mr. .and Mrs. J. Kometz.\nThey were accompanied on the trip\nby Mr. and Mrs. J. Hovan of Bell-\ningham, Wash., who had previously\nspent one week visiting relatives at\nNatal.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Cimolinl and sons,\nJohny and Jimmy, returned to their\nhome in Kelowna, B. C. after spending two weeks in Natal-Michel.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Heyes returned\nto Natal after spending two weeks\nvisiting friends and relatives in the\nStates of Utah and Wyoming.\nMiss Elea DePaoli, who had been\nteaching the last term at Creston,\nB.C. is spending the remained of\nher holidays with her parents at\nNatal.\nMrs. Mary Lant, accompanied by\nMrs, J. Lant and daughter, returned\nto their homes at Michel after\nspending their holidays at Princeton. B.C. with her daughter.\nMiss Mary Fornasier returned to\nher home at Natal after spending\nthe past year teaching at Nanoose\nBay. B.C.\nMiss Emma Dzubln, who has been\nin training at the St. Paul's Hospital at Vancouver, is spending a\nthree week holiday at Natal at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. Dzubin.\nMrs. Jennie Jassup of Vancouver,\nB.C., is spending an extended visit\nat Natal at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. F. Qualtieri.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Montemurro of\nPincher Creek were recent Natal\nvisitors.\nNels\nSocial. . .\n\u25a0 ... By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022- Mrs. R. J. Hewitt of Vancouver is visiting at the Summer\nhome of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack McDonald,\nHoover Street.\n\u2022 Mrs.-J. V. Meyer, Hall Mines\nRoad, has as guests her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nKelly and their two young sons\nTimmy and Jimmy of Spokane.\n\u2022 Donald Kay who teaches in\nKaslo, has returned from spending\na few weeks in Chicago where he\nvisited his uncle and a-.nt.\n\u2022 Miss Joan Hunter, who recently graduated from St. Paul's\nHospital, Vancouver, is guest at the\nhome on Nelson Avenue of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Hunter.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Massart\nand their son George of Moses Lake,\nWash.; who have been guests of\nMrs. Massart's cousins, W. J. Sturgeon and Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, Silica\nStreet, returned home yesterday.\nThey were accompanied by Mrs.\nMassart's brother, Edward Grant of\nSeattle. ...\n. \u2022 Mrs. J. H. Wallace, Mill!\nStreet, is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital. J\n\u2022 Mrs. J. 'Worrall and her infant |\nson have left Kootenay LaKe Gen-j\neral Hospital for their home on!\nPark Street\n\u2022 Mrs. John McPhaii, 423 Silica\nStreet, left by plane Saturday' to\nspend a holiday with her son-in-law\nand daughter,' Mr. and Mrs. Don\nMcNab of Vancouver, who will be\nvisiting Seattle and Campbell River.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. H. Mawdsley. Jr. of\n2000 Topping St., Trail, B.C., wish\nto announce the engagement of\ntheir daughter Vida Leona to\nJames William Gold, eldest son of\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Gold, Nelson,\nB.C. Wedding to take place Saturday, Sept. 1st at 2 p.m. at St. Andrews by the Lake, Willow Point,\nB.C.\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Bouey, 620\nVictoria Street, announce the engagement of their eldest daughter,\nAudrey Ellen, to James Allan, son\nof Mrs. M. Lucas of Rossland. The\nwedding will take place Sept. 22 at\n2 p.m. in St. Paul's Church, Rev. A.\nL. Anderson officiating.\nVftoVJUL ^DaAcU\/lr^\nJosephine Baker, Toast of\nParis, Conquers Hollywood\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014\nJosephine Baker, longtime toast of\nFrance, made a triumphant debut\nin Hollywood this week netting\n$24,000 in a one-night performance.\nThe American Negro singer's performance contributed a considerable\namount to the Damon Runyon Memorial Cancer Fund, which is show\nbusiness' principal charity. The sepia performer displayed her songs\nand talents in a one-night performance before the cream of Hollywood\nsociety at the Showcase Night Club,\nMocambo.\nVIDEO PLANS\nThe television networks are mak\ning big plans for their prize comics of 'Desert Song.'\nto do their shows from this end of\nthe continent starting this Fall. But\nno decision has been announced yet\non a pesky problem: the time differential.\nFor instance, if Jimmy Durante\ndoes this show to be seen by the\nEastern audience at 8 p.m. Saturday,\nit would be 5 p.m., here. That's not a\ngood' viewing time for Pacific coasters.\nSince the larger Eastern audience\nis always favored, \"it appears that\nthe shows'will have tp be filmed\nand shown at a later hour for Westerners.\nNEWS ITEM\nWarners preparing third version\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40o lino black face type; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nClaude Thornhlll famous recording orchestra Playmqr Friday.\nHot buttered popcorn at WAIT'S\nany hour of the day.\nGet your fishing license at Jack\nBoyce's Men's Shop.\nELECTROLUX SALES \u2022 SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR 553\nWhy not give us a call to increase\nyour fire insurance protection today?\u2014C. W. APPLEYARD.\nSmart pipes and variety tobacco\npacks make a hit with any smoker.\nShop at VALENTINE'S.\nAdd   brightness   to   your   home\nwith the new Pyrex Hostess Ware.\nMC & MC (Nelson) Ltd.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nLots of ideas for hot I weather\nhobbies and unusual gifts. THE\nCRAFT CENTRE, 407 Hall Street.\nSWANS STORE\nOpen till 9 p.m. evenings\nCorner Cedar and Observatory .St.\nTO EVERYONE  INTERESTED\n. IN SOCIAL CREDIT\nJ. H. Blackmore, M.P. for Lethbridge will address a public meting in the Legion Hall, 8 p.m. Tonight, Aug. 13.\nCome and hear what Social\nCredit can do for B.C. as w-ul as\nAlberta.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1951 \u2014 5\nLister Notes\nLISTER, B.C. \u2014 Miss Shirley Gorrill of Vancouver is visiting her\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Gorrill. Vernon Gorrill of Cranbrook\nwas also a visitor with his parents.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Siebert left to\nvisit relatives in Millet and Edmonton. 'Alta.\nMiss Ida Donike of Libby, Mont.,\nvisited in Lister.\nMiss Irene Yerbury left for hWite\nRock and will be guest of her grandparents, Mr. and -Mrs. Herbert Yerbury.\nMrs. E. Krise and infant son arrived' home from the hospital. Mrs.\nFred Huscroft was a patient in Creston Valley Hospital.\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER, B.C. \u2014 Henry Jem-\nberg, of Carcross, Yukon, is visiting\nhis brother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Magnus Jernberg. Mr.\nJernberg has been employed for the\nlast 29 months in the Carcross Anglican Mission School for Indians.\nOFFICE SAFES\u2014We can open,\nrepair and reset the combinations\u2014-\nSAM BROWN, Locksmith, Nelson\nRed, blue and green checked tea\ntowels at 4 for $1.00.\nSTERLING   HOME   FURNISHERS\nLauxtint\u2014Decorative   wall   coating \u2014 9 colors \u2014 5 lb. pkg. 90c.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\n0jiral lAp. With.\nHave   you   investigated   Floater\nPolicy Insurance? See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. Murdie Campbell and daughter,\nHeather, who were visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Les\nR,, Campbell and brother Donald,\nalso his brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. Walter G. Thring and\nson, Douglas, returned to their home\nin Barrie, Ont.\nT. Cooper of Slocan City is a patient in Slocan Community Hospital, i\nRev. M. C. T. Percivall returned\nfrom Nelson where he wasyvisiting. |\nMrs. A. L. Harris returned froih\na fishing trip up the Arrow Lakes\nwith her two sisters of Nakusp,]\nMrs.*Mufry Cameron and Mrs. O.j\nDunn, also Mrs. H. Gran of Nakusp.\nMrs. James Latto of Rosebery has\nbeen discharged from Slocan Com-'\nmunity Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Jones and family\nof Winlaw were visitors of Mr.\nand Mrs. Irwin J. Butcher.\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. Harris and\nfamily had as guests Mrs. Harris'\nsister, Mr. and Ms. Jack Hall of\nVancouver.\nSho Inose of Toronto, Ont., is visiting friends in New Denver.\nMr. and Mrs. George Nordblpm'\nof Oyen, Alta., are guests of their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. C. W. Gorby and son Donald.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Buck-]\nham returned from Nelson were\nthey visited friends.\nMrs. Stewart Hamilton of North\nBattleford ts guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nStanley E, Thomlinson and family.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Gorby with\ntheir weekend guests, Miss Margaret\nJamieson, Miss Rose Taylor, Miss\nJanet Kerr of Trail, Miss Maryi\nKing of Nelson, Miss Brenda Myson;\nof Vancouver and Miss Ruby Dunn\nP.H.N., New Denver, made the trip\nto the Idaho Lookout on Sunday.\nMr.  and Mrs.  Les R.  Campbell\nROBSON, B.C.- Mrs. Don Dun-1 ThHn^f^'n^,' Wa\"e1' _.'\ncan and daughters returned home! Jnh.rmS f\u00ab \u00b0\";P\u00b0\"gla,s WJ* w\u2122k'\\\nalter spending six weeks holiday [\u00a3\u00b11%- WK.^M \"'\"_ iH\nin Chilliwack. Her mother w\/s.iC^h\"llsm^hoth^,\u00bb; and\u201e JJrs.\nTerrece of,Chilliwack accompanied'^ Jj \"e \u2122th and, fpmlij' and.f\"'\nher and will visit here for a month. I ^h\"\"f sMfath\u201ee'-'n-Ja*an,d \u2122\u00b0*he*-\nMrs. R. Bro and infant son re-i m;ia\/j,^f\"d ^rs; *;harIes ^\"ng-\nturned home from Kootenay Lake! J^^ovisited relatives in Castle-\nGeneral Hospital. ..      ^\"-TL,    m\nMrs. W. Waldie and children re- \u201e,,\u00ab.\u201e, m, \u201e ^\"n &% V*\nturned home after spending a wee4*_\u00a3t\u00b0^na_-i ^PJ' \u2022Gorby*1\nin Calgary visiting her son-in-law r^*1     ' \u00a3r no\u2122em Vancouver.\nand   daughter.   Mr.   and   Mrs.   M. , J?r' and **fn E; C' ?*\"* hav=\nm left on a motor trip to the East\nKootenays.\nMrs. Larry Dwyer and two sons,\nDennis and Micheil, who were\nguests of the former's father, John\nCechelero and her sister, Mr. and\nMrs. Ernest De'Rose, and two\ndaughters, Beverley and Mary, also\nher sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Harding and family at Silverton and a\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Marshall\nand two daughters at South Slocan\nfor two months returned to their\nhome at Rouyan, Que.\nRight Rev. F. P. Clark, D.D.,\nBishop of Kootenay, spent the weekend at the Vicarage during his visit\nto the Parish of Slocan.\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\n\"The House of Furniture  Values\"\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 \u2014 NELSON\nTo vary baking powder biscuits,\nadd a quarter cup of diced pimento to the sifted dry ingredients of\nyour favorite biscuit recipes.\nONE\nTABLESraONFUL\nRobson Notes\nMrs. Charles Calvert, distinguish-      Margaret,   Queen   of   Denmark,\ned English actress who-died-in 1921,  Norway and  Sweden in the  14th\nappeared on the stage at the age of j century, was married to Haakon VI\nor Norway at the age of 10.\nMOVING\nIS OUR\nUSINESS!\n\u2022 Across the Holl\n\u2022 Across the\nStreet\n\u2022 Across the\nContinent\nWIST TRANSFER has been solving the moving problem\nfor Nelson and District Citizens for over half a century.\nWIST TRANSFER is equipped to handle your moving,\nwhether it be local or long distance, promptly, carefully\nand at a minimum charge.\nCALL 33 and Have West Transfer Handle Your Move\nToday.'\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33\n\"Nelson's Oldest) Movers\"\nNELSdN, B.C.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces cleaned; chimneys topped; thimbles applied; hot and cold air ducts cleaned by vacuum. \u2014 Pounder's Chimney Service; Phone 1541-L.\nEverything for preserving.  Canning machines and cans, pressure\n(cookers,   enamelled    canners with\nI racks, preserving kettles, etc,\nHIPPERSON'S\nHugo Smecher returned home after a two weeks holiday at R.C.A.F.\nCamp at Abbotsford. He also spent\na few days in Victoria and Vancouver.\nDr. and Mrs. Evans and son Keith\nof Brandon Man., are spending the\nSummer months in Robson.\nMrs. Walter McKee and baby\ndaughter from Edmonton are visiting the former's mother, Mrs.\nCoughlin of Robson.\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. Bunyo'n of\nWinnipeg are spending a few days\nat the home of the latters' sister\nand brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Foxlee. Mr. and. Mrs. Bunyon\nwill motor to Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. Dave Adshead and\nfamily visited relatives at Makin-\nson, B.C.\nFrances Magwood and Muriel\nScott left last Friday for Camp\nKoolaree.\nClassified Ads for Quick Results   --\nCanada's most used\nBLEACHING\/WASHING\nCLEANSING Fluid\nAT YOUR GROCER'S-\nIN 4 CONVENIENT SIZES\nTO EVERYONE INTERESTED\nIN SOCIAL. CREDIT J. H. Black-\nmore M.P. for Lgthbrldge will address a public meeting in the Legon\nHall 8 p.m. Tonight, Aug, 13, Come\nand hear what Social Credit can do\nfor B.C. as well'as Alberta.\nChildren's nylon dresses up to 4\nI years, only $5.00, and nylon slips\n'$1.25. Beautiful patterns and colors,\nTICKNER TAILORS\n461  JOSEPHINE ST. \u2014 PH.  107\nOne Only \u2014 Bell Cabinet Grand\nPiano in'A-l  condition. Real bargain. We buy and sell new and used\nfurniture and antiques.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560       413 HALL ST.\nUse Garden Guard .extra-\nstrength Derris Dust) on cabbages,\ncauliflower, beans, cucumbers, etc.\nThe ideal protection against sucking and chewing insects. In. handy\npump-gun container.\nHIPPERSON'S\nIsland Milk Men\nSeek Revenue Boost\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014\nApplication by Vancouver Island\nmilk producers for a boost in their\nshare of revenue from fluid milk\nsales will be heard.by the B.C.\nMilk Board here Monday.\nOutcome of the hearing here and\nelsewhere on the Island could mean\nan increase in prices for the consumer, if producers win an increase\nand distributors refuse to take any\ncut in their share.\nProducers reportedly are asking\nfor a boost of from 13 cents per\nquart to about 151\/.- cents, Retail\nprice of milk here is 21 cents a\nquart.\nWOMAN SURRENDERS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014\nMrs. Gladys Hiliand, 36-year-old\nformer financial secretary of International Woodworkers of America,\nhas surrendered in response to a\ncourt order.\nOn May 12, 1949, Mr. Justcie Man-\nson found her guilty of contempt of\ncourt for failure to hand over $11,500\nof the union's funds.\nTHIS  18 YOUR  DATER\nDatetime! Daytime! ANY time\nyou wear this you'll be the best\ndressed woman in the crowd! That\ncollar stands up so smartly, so do\nthose wing cuffs. Peg-pockets drape\nbeautifully on the skirt!\nPattern 9279 comes in sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 takes 3%\nyards 39-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern giVes\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY - FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN), care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson.    .\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD   '\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NEL80N, B, C.\nLOVELY HATS\nIn\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY.S FASHION SHOPPE\nMATDOesTHESUN\nBrings out their        *\nsweetness and natural,\njuicy goodness\nThat's how Sugaroasting\nmakes Post's Grape-Nuts\nFlakes extra rich and sweet \u2014\nextra crisp and appetizing.\nGrape-Nuts Flakes supply\nnourishment for quick\nenergy. Economical, too.'\nTry them today.\n$\\imoAm$ makes\nGRAPe-WUrSFiAKE^\ntklBOmSGBmi\nbonus* ,swirer-As-*-(iur flavor.-\nBONUSsW EXTKA OUICXeNtROYt\n6F-IBI  A Product o( G\u00abn\u00abrol Foods\nS\u00bb\nSTORE WIDE\nClearance\nSale\nPrices Slashed\nWE MUST MAKE ROOM FOR\nFALL MERCHANDISE NOW ARRIVING\nDRESSES $13 CA\nReg. $18.95. SALE    ltU.iJ\\J\nDRESSES ?\u00a9 en\nReg. $11.95. SALE        0\u00bbJ\\J\nPEASANT BLOUSES QO*\nReg. $1.98. SALE ..:  ^O\nBLOUSES ?2 79\nWhite and colors. Reg. $3.95. SALE       mm. I W\nSKIRTS 9o CA\n(Shop for back to school) Reg. $12.95. SALE        OtJSJ\nBLAZERS $0 rA\nReg. $10.95. SALE        O.JV\nEVENING GOWNS SlA QC\nReg. $24.95. SALE     * \u2122\u00bb W J\nHOSIERY QO*\n42 gauge. Reg. $1.50. SALE        WO\nHOSIERY $1 IA\n45 gauge. Reg. $1.75. SALE      I \u2022 I _>*\nHOSIERY 51 J Q\n51 gauge. Reg. $1.95. SALE  I \u00bb\u25a0**' *\nTARTAN SKIRTS 51A AC\nReg. $21.50. SALE      \u25a0   \u25a0 \u2022 W <?\u25a0\nSuits and Coats Greatly Reduced\nJLs%Z%Z S Ladies' Apparel\nTHE FASHION CENTRE\nPHONE 775\n fcliiim iatlg 53> MB    Press Comment\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBrilish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\nBaker\" Street, Nelson,  British  Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost Office Department,  Ottawa\nEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nMonday, August 13, 1951\nMenticide\nSome form of protection should be\nprovided among nations to shield individuals from the kind of concen-\ntratedmental manipulation that seems\nto go hand-in-hand with modern forms\nof tyranny, thinks the Ottawa Journal.\nGenocide is now recognized as a crime,\nbut \"menticide\" or \"brainwashing,\" as\nthe process of 'mentally \"softening up\"\na victim has been called, should also\nbe recognized, for what it is\u2014a criminal act as evil as any other.\nMany of those who have been subjected to such mental malpractice have\ntestified that they received no physical\nmistreatment beyond hours of questioning, no sleep, glaring -lights, and\nthe overpowering suggestion that they\nwere utterly at the mercy of their\ninterrogators. Under such conditions\neven the strongest human will has\nbeen broken, confessions, of guilt obtained where there was no guilt, and\nthe victim made to doubt his own\ninbred moral and intellectual convictions.\nA group of psychiatrists guided by\nDr. Joost Meerloo of New York City\nsuggests that training in autohypnosis\nwould afford a measure of protection\nl.against such, criminal action, claiming\nI that in the state of hypnosis there can\n\";ba immunity to  pain,  hunger, -and\nmental intrusion.\nYet, says the Journal, here the rem-\ndy partakes dangerously of the nature\nof the crime. It was said of Jesus: \"This\nfellow doth not cast out devils, but\nby Beezlebub the prince of the devils.\"\nHe Himself, however, drew a sharp\nline between the mental manipulations\nof the exorcists of that day and His\nown spiritual practice when He said:\n\"Ye shall know the truth, and the\ntruth shall make you free.\"\nThe truth cannot hypnotise anyone,\nmaintains the Journal, including the\none who knows it. Truth itself is God,\nthe source of strength and freedom of\nmind beyond human conceiving \u2014 or\ndestroying. Throughout Christian history men have been able to demonstrate this in some degree under agonizing extremities of mind and body.\nUltimately they will have to turn radically from the frail human will to a\nscientifically understood higher power\nif they would find themselves invulnerable to every form of humanly\nwilled \"menticide.\"\nTown for $14,000\nAn Edmonton firm, Adby Construction\nand Demolition Company, has purchased the\nentire \"ghost town\" of Mountain Park for\n$14,000.\nThe Adby firm obtains the townsite and\nall buildings situated thereon. Included are\n80 dwellings and 30 business buildings.\nAmong the latter buildings are a hotel, hospital, library, stores and mine company structures.\nAll fixtures are included in the purchase.\nAll* buildings will be demolished on the\nspot and materials shipped in carload lots.\nOriginal value of the buildings is estimated as running to \"hundreds of thousands of\ndollars.\u2014Edmonton Bulletin.\nSTOCKPILING?\nGlancing over a list of defence contracts\nissued by Canadian 'Commercial Corporation,\nwe were momentarily puzzled by one for $13,-\n135 awarded to the Department of Finance. It\n. was for medals and clasps. Quiet contemplation provided what we think must be the\nanswer. The Mint comes under the Department of Finance. And the Mint stamps out the\nmetal from which medals and clasps are made.\nWhether or not Mr. Abbott's department is\nstockpiling we don't know.\u2014Napier Moore's\nScratch Pad.\nLEFT ALOf-E\nFar too manj children, left alone, are losing their lives in fires, declares the Hanover\n(Ont.) Post \"There will always be fires,\nwhich are definitely accidents, and there may\nbe children who lose their lives in such fires\nthrough no fault or neglect of. anyone. But\nthere are too many cases when children are\nreported as alone in homes where fire breaks\nout, arid who lose their lives by being burned\nto death. The law can be strict in such an\ninstance. But it does not go far enough.\"\nTIME FOR \"HANDS OFF CANADA\"\nThe Commie line for Canada, as laid down\nby front man Tim Buck, is precisely what one\nwould expect the Red'fifth column to advocate. Hands off Korea, it says in effect, meanwhile committing the farce of denying that\nRussia is involved ln the coup attempted there.\nIt's about time Tim Buck and his crowd got\na counter-warning, \"Hands off Canada!\"\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nCONFUSING WORDS\nThe English language becomes more confusing every day. Noticed in one of our coming\nevent adlets where a local dance band was\nannouncing \"mello\" music. Possibly this meant\n\"melodious\". Surely it wasn't intended for\n\"mellow\", which is defined as \"soft, tender, or\nwell-matured\".\u2014Barrie (Ont.) Examiner.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally'News August 13, 1941\nIvor Ruppel of Calgary is visiting his parents Mr and Mrs. Fred Ruppel of Granite\nRoad.\nJack Carpenter, a constable on the Nelson\nPolice Force, and one of the few B.C. boys\nwho have made professional baseball, plans\nto leaye this morning for Vancouver to join\nthe. CapilanoS'Of the Western'International\nLeague.\nDoug Norrs, ex-Smoke Eater and prominent in Trail sports circles, will play for the\nTulsa Oilers of the American Association next\nWinter.\"\n26 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News August 13, 1925\nThree elephants have been free for a week\nat Cranbrook. \"Cheerful\" Gardner, experienced animal trainer for the Hagerman circus interests, will arrive tomorrow and efforts will be redoubled to locate them. .\nMrs. David Laughton and daughter, Irene\nof Edgewood Avenue, who have been spending a few weeks holiday at Procter, have\n\u25a0returned to the city.\n. , 40 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News August 13, 1911\nThe. mines of the Granby Company at\nPhoenix closed down last night. The Grand\nFork's smelter has a sufficient supply of coke,\non hand to last the four furnaces at present\nin blast until about Tuesday\nH. S. Stevenson 'of the Highlands Mine\nat Ainsworth came to Nelson. He plans to\nleave the Kootenays to take up residence in\nSpokane.\nN. H. Johns was appointed last night as\nnew secretary for the local Y.M.C.A.\nSKaye and a Haircut?-\nAmerica's barbers, nettled a bit by public criticism of increases in the\" prices of hair-'\ncuts and. shaves, explain they are affected by\ninflation the same as everybody else.\nlnr New York City haircuts have been\nraised from $1 to $1.25. Charles Lewis, head\nof a barbers' supply house, says a barber's expense's have more than doubled in the last\ndecade and tha\\ Increases in costs have averaged 35- per cent in the last year. Taxes,\nrents, union dues and other costs have increased in addition to supplies.\nOne Gotham barber says his net profit on\nan investment of $125,000 was only $2,000 in\nthe first nine months of this year.\nThe public is irritated by price increases\nof any kind but is vexed most when long established charges for services are increased.\nBut there is no commodity or service that\nis proof against the irrestistible impact of inflation. \u2014 A Reid.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where thtro Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nMrs. F., Kaslo\u2014Have you a recipe for tennis\nlemonade?\nTo three lemons allow one quart of boiling water and from four to six ounces of\nsugar. Wipe lemons and peel rind very thinly\ntaking only yellow part. Put this into a jug,\nwith the sugar and strained Juice, pour the\nboiling water over, cover and stand until\ncold. Strain and use as required.\nWorried, Salmo\u2014Is fire-damp caused by water? Our cellar is wet and damp and we\nwonder if it might catch fire.\nFire-damp has nothing to do with humidity or moisture, the term \"damp\" being derived from the  German  \"dampf\",  meaning\nvapor. Fire-damp consists of a poisonous vapor met in mines and often the cause of explosions.\n'Student, Nelson\u2014What are the Seven Wonders\nof the World?\nPyramids of Egypt; Tomb of Mausolus,\nKing of Caria; Temple of Diana at Ephesus;\nWalls and Hangihg Gardens of Babylon; Colossus of Rhodes; Ivory and gold statue of\nJupiter Olympus; the Pharos, or watch-tower,\nbuilt at Alexandria by Ptolemy Philadelphus,\nKing of Egypt.\nL.H., Grand Forks\u2014What is the Toronto address of the Prudential Insurance Company.\n80 King Street, W., Toronto.\nMrs. -\\, Trail\u2014To settle an argument, can\nyou tell me the salary of the Chief Justice\nof Canada?\n,     $20,000.00.\nSeeking Causes\nAlthough medical science has made tremendous strides ln the past twenty years it\nhas not been able to keep pace with the terrific increase in mental and nervous disorders, a meeting was told in Guelph, Ont, by Dr.\nF. Baugh, medical superintendent of Home-\nwood Sanitarium-\nHe said that in comparison with the 30,000\npatients in Canadian mental hospitals twenty\nyears ago when he began his careei; ln medicine, this figure has doubled despite Improvements in hospital equipment and knowledge.\n\"Instead of crying for more hospitals,\" he\nsaid, \"we should be driving toward finding\ntha causes. We are too inclined to pay too\nmuch attention to symptoms instead of getting at the root of the trouble.\"\nHe added that there wa,s definitely some\nsignificance In breast-feeding infants and the\neffect on the infant's later life. By experiment\nand investigation it was proved that breastfed infants generally grow up with a clear\noutlook on life, are cheerful and courageous,\nOn the other hand, those with little or no\nbreast-feeding generally developed psycho-\nneurosis.\nFrom this, Dr. Baugh said, It woujd appear\nthat persons who had not been bre,ast-fed babies generally had a frustrated attitude toward\nlife. They felt themselves to be inadequate\nand not able to cope with their environment.\nUsually they sought for a physical cause to\nexplain this inadequacy.\nIn some cases they sought a refuge in\nalcohol.\n\"In general, breast-feeding is a good personality builder,\" he added. \"If mothers listened to the dictates of nature fewer child\npsychologists would be needed. Obedience to\nthe natural laws of the Creator is essential to\nphysical, mental and moral health.\"\n\"BRANFERD\" PROTESTS\nA contemporary of scholarly Inclination\nnotes that some authorities derive the name\nof Ottawa from the Indian word atawa. Maybe that's why so many radio commentators\nand others pronounce it that way. But from\nwhat corresponding word is Tronna derived?\nOr Branferd, for that matter? Oh, and about\natawa, it means \"extinguish\", so let the residents of the Capital make of that what they\ncan.\u2014Brantford Expositor.\nPOTHOLES  IN  ENGLISH\nThe English language ls full of potholes\nfor the young, so perhaps there is some excuse for the 9-year-old Wirral schoolgirl who\nmade a gallant attempt at a new past tense.\n\"Mum sprang-clean the kitchen yesterday,\"\nsaid she. \"because we're getting a new carpet\nfor it on Saturday.\"\u2014Manchester Guardian.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\\\\wmt W, 1 Mmi Mto\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nBVKDlCATt. Iftfr. WM-U) MCBtl IttEtVtn.\nToday's Bible Thought\nWars and turmoils Incited by evil\nmen and nations must not confuse\nus. God has handled that kind before, God's plans may be hardly\nwon, but they are sure.\u2014Do ye not\nknow their tokens, that the wicked\nis reserved to the day of destruction?\u2014Job 21:29, 30.\ndunL dfaal\nWarned Hubby She\nWas Still Around\nTORONTO, Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014 Mrs.\nAmada Boucher admitted firing a\nshotgun through a window of a\nneighbor's house where her husband,\nJoseph Alphonse Boucher, was visiting. But a charge against her. of\nshooting with intent was dismissed\ntoday.\n\"She just wanted to let her husband know she was still around,\"\nsaid Crown Counsel David\nHumphreys.\nThe kitchen door ls fettln' loose\non the hinges. It's the one Pa slams\nwhile I'm finlshin' the argument.\nClassified Ads for Speedy Results\nProbe Syndicates\nIn Brewery Plan\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e Aug. 12 (CP)\n\u2014Operators of three syndicates concerned with a plan to establish a\nbrewery in the Yukon are being\ninvestigated by the Attorney-General's Department, it was disclosed\ntoday.\nJ. Stewart Smith, Superintendent of Brokers, revealed the investigation, when he announced that\na newly-formed company,' B. C.\nYukon ' Breweries Ltd., has been\ngranted a limited registration to\nissue shares. \u25a0    :\nPurpose of the registration Is to\nprotect the Interests of people who\ninvested in the syndicates, Mr.\nSmith said, and does not permit the\nsale of stock to the public.\nThe company will be allowed to\nissue 143,000 shares in trust to Raymond J. Casson. The shares are to\nbe held in escrow.\nThe three syndicates under Investigation are the B. C. Yukon (Lake\nof the Woods) Brewery Syndicates\nNo. 1 and \u25a0 No. 2, and the Yukon\n(Vancouver) Brewery Syndicate.\nSS \/_\u00a7\nGENEVA, Aug. 12 (Reuters)\u2014the\nWorld Council of Churches has decided it would no longer be a practicable policy to invite the Vatican\nand the patriarch of Moscow to Join\nin a world appeal for peace, it was\nannounced today.\nThe Council had seriously considered seeking the support of\n\"churches outside its membership in\nissuing a general appeal for peace,\"\nGeneral Secretary Dr. Villem Vis-\n! cr 'T Hooft said.\n| But the Council \"will not fail to\nwatch for opportunities of cooperation on concrete issues, where there\nis some promise of a frnitful intervention on just grounds,\" he said.\nPolio Mother Dies\nAfter Childbirth\nTORONTO, Aug. 12 (CP)-Mrs.\nWilliam Miller, 25, of Peterborough,\nOnt., who gave birth to a six-pound\ngirl while in an iron lung Thursday\nnight, died Saturday of poliomyelitis.\nMrs. Miller, brought from Peterborough Tuesday, died of an \"ascending\" paralysis.\nThe child, born as Mrs. Miller\nwas removed from the lung for less\nthan a minute, died shortly after\nbirth.\nAuthorities at Toronto Isolation\nHospital reported that Mr. Miller\nwas on his way to Toronto when\nhis wife died. I\nThis advertisement is not publishes, or displayed by the liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nToday there are\nimmediate openings\nin the R.CA.F.\nfor young men to\ntrain ast\nNCE0F\nFREEDOM\nwith the\nRCAF\nIf you have Junior Matriculation, or equivalent\n\u2014are physically fit\u2014between 18 and 24 yearj\nof age\u2014and keen to fly, there is a job for you\nin the RCAF.\nThe young man who has just finished school\nor college may be appointed in the Royal\nCanadian Air Force now to train as Pilot,\nRadio Officer or Navigation Officer.\nThe R.C.A.F. gives the most complete and\nthorough training you can get anywhere\u2014on\nthe most modern aircraft and equipment\u2014a\ntraining that will equip you for a progressive\ncareer in the field of aviation.\nWhen accepted for training, you smter as a\nFlight Cadet\u2014at regular Officer's pay.\nEarn the Wings that have won World \u2022 wide\nadmiration, and take this opportunity to serve\nyour country in the cause of freedom. Join\nthe Air Force nowt\nNAVIGATION OFFICERS\nRADIO OFFICERS\nPILOTS\nAPPLICANTS ARE REQUESTED TO BRINO\nWITH THEM TO RECRUITING OFFICES\n1. Birth Certificate 2. Certificate of Education\nR.C.A.F, Recruiting Unit,\n646 8eymour Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nPhone: Pacific 6736 or Tatlow 2822\n\/~\"\u00absss_|*-\u00bb\"      pieae mi;i j\u201e mti ^lout obligation, full pmticttUrs reiarrSitg\nenrolment requirements and openings now available in theR.CAS.\nNAME (Please Print) \u25a0 \u25a0\nSTREET ADDRESS \u201e\u201e  ... \u25a0\nOW..\nEDUCATION (by grade and province).\n..PROVINCE.\nSEE THE CAREER COUNSELLOR AT YOUR NEAREST\nR.C.A.F. RECRUITING UNIT OR MAIL THIS COUPON\n__-GE__\n tOHl\nSPORTS\nNHLSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1951 \u2014 J\nMarlene Stewart Golf Champion\nWEARING a championship smile despite his loss of the world's\nmiddleweight title to Randy Turpin of England, Sugar Ray Robrnson\nIs ihown aboard the S.S. Llberto with Mrs, Robinson (left) and his\n\u2022later, Evle Roblnaon, upon their arrival In New York from European tour. Later the ex-champ waa welcomed by Mayor Vincent Im-\nEelllterl, who said Robinson has earned the city's honors \"because he\naa been a goodwill ambassador to Europe.\" \u2014 Central Press\nCanadian.\nNelson, Trail Duos\nIn Chesser Cup Final\nYankees Lose Two,\nIndians in Top Spot\nBY THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Pennsylvariia curfew that prevents Sunday games\nfrom continuing after 5.59 p.m. erased a five-run New York\nYankee rally in the eighth inning allowed Philadelphia Athletics to score a 7-4\" win in the second game of a twin bill.\nThe lowly Athletics also won the opener 9-5 as they sent without a loss and ousting Mr. and\nthe Yankees reeling into second place 1% games behind Mrs' claude F\u2122z-*-L\u2122z of Trail,\nCleveland.\nwSS^'Americans Sweep North\nBY W, B. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff. Writer\nLAVAL-SUR-LE-LAC, Que., Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014 Marlene\nStewart, Canada's grim little golfing sensation of the year,\nwon the Canadian Ladies Open golf championship Saturday\nwith a hair-raising one-up victory over Grace Lenczyk of\nHartford, Conn.  \u2022\nUnder terrific pressure and her three-hole lead all but\nwiped out by a thrilling last-stand comeback of the former\nchampion, Marlene refused to.\t\ncrack. It was the second national cham-\nTho Fonthlll,  Ont,  girl  calmly pionship  in  seven  days   for  the\nAmerican Tennis Final\nrapped down a 10-foot putt at the young5ter from the Lookout Point\n35th to halve the hole and preserve\na shaky one-up lead.\nThen came the 422-yard par-five\n36th, last chance for the one-time\nClub in Fonthlll, near Niagara Falls.\nA week ago she marched off with\nthe .Canadian ladles closed championship.\nSeventeen-year-old Marlene is the\nfirst double winner since 1933 when\nAda Mackenzie of Toronto turned\nthe trick. Marlene is also the first\nCanadian to win the open title since\nthe war, and since 1847 the top\nfrom the cup. Tho 23-year-old I golfing talent in the United States\nConnecticut girl carefully lined has made the Canadian open a must,\nup her putt that turned out to be MIbs Lenczyk won the open In\na heartbreaker. The ball stopped a 1947 and 1948. The following year\nacant Inch short, Marlene putted'the,champion was Grace DeMoss of\nout and threw up her hands Jub-!Portland, Ore. In 1950 at Wlnni-\nllantly. Grace walked serosa the peg Miss DeMoss was runner-up\ngreen and congratulated the new to Dorothy Kielty of Los Angeles,\nchampion. 'who did not enter this year.\nV. S. national women's champion\nto keep the match alive,\nBoth girls were short wllh their\nseconds, just below a hill that leads\nup to the green. Marlene pitched 15\nfeet from the pin, Grace 10 feet.\nMarlene putted less than a foot\nNed Rhodes and Mrs,\nYerex of Trail gave notice they\nmean to keep the West Kootenay\nClosed Doubles championship, by\nsweeping through all opposition for\nstraight set victories here Sunday.\nMeanwhile, Bob and Pat Cornwall of Nelson kept abreast by\nsweeping through round-robin play\nJenny | beat Ted Vanderfleet, Shirley Ingham 6-0, 6-1; A. K. McAdams, K.\nThompson beat G. Taylor, B. Elliot 6-1, 6-4.\nRhodes-Yerex beat McAdams-\nThompson 6-2, 6-1; Vanderfleet-\nIngham beat Taylor-Elliot 6-4, 6-5.\nRhodes-Yerex beat Taylor-Elliot\n0-2, 6-2; McAdams-Thompson beat\nVanderflcet-Ingham 6-2, 6-5.\n8ECTION C\nland by 10 games.\nI Boston's third-place Boston\nRed\n7-9, 6-2, 6-4 in a hard-fought semi\nfinal. The Rhodes-Yerex duo\ndowned Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Ma-\npltchers,\nSeven Yankee pitchers saw action during tha long afternoon with\nMorgan and righthander Jack\nKramer being charged with the\ncostly defeats.\nMeanwhile, Cleveland Indiana\ntook undisputed lead of the American League by beating Chicago\nThe final clash between the\nCornwalls and the defending\nchamps is scheduled for the Nelson courts next Sunday afternoon,\nwith the A. M. Chesser Trophy going to the winner.\nSeventeen pairs, including nine\nfrom Nelson and eight from Trail\nand Rossland, competed in four\nround-robin sections to decide semi\nThe nightcap ended in rain and\ndarkness and amid a welter of con-.  ' \"\"\"\"\"\"-J  uu.u-\u00a3\u00abBB _.u_kssi aep jor of N_,son 6.2  _\u201e4 ,    th_ otner\nfusion as the Athletics appeared to Sox remained within five games of seml.final bracket,\nbe  stalling and the Yankees ap- \"rst  _?*c?,b1\"*\" *i-nn'n* bo* \u00aba.mes\npeared to be trying to hurry the'0' *> doubleheader from Washing-\ngame along. The top of the eighth Iton Senaters by 6-2 scores,\ninning took 22  minutes with  the     Bill Wight pitched an eight-hitter\n'Bronx Bombers sending nine men''0 winning the second game after\nto the plate and the As using four Ray  Scarborough  had  performed\na   similar   pitching   chore   in   the\nopener. \/\nHoot Evers punched a bases-\nloaded single in the ninth inning to\nbreak up a tie game and give De-  \u201e\ntroit Tigers a 2-1 victory over St   finalists. Darkness prevented com-\nLouis Browns. \" pletion of the tourney yesterday.\njitj mtu unsico i    Courts were In good condition fol-\n'\u201e     \u201e      H0MER 'lowing  Saturday's  rain   and   play\nRoy Campanella blasted his 23rd was of good calibre.\nWhite Sox 7-1 for the 10th straight a\"d 24th home runs and drove In j    Round robin results are as fol-\nvlctory. | five    runs    to    spark    Brooklyn lows:\nThe triumph waa the 16th for Dodgers to a 7-2 National League'SECTION A\nMike   Garcia,   who   was   backed victory  over  Boston  Braves. I    Peter   . Busfleld,    Alice   Maryka\nwith  a  14-hlt Cleveland  attack,1    Big Don Newcombe limited the beat Mr. and Mrs. Jim Greene 5-6,\nIncluding homers by Bob Avila, Braves to eight hits to post his 16th 6-3, 6-1; Mr. and Mrs. Claude Fung-\nLarry Doby and Ray Boone.        I victory. I A-Ling beat Mr. and Mrs. D. Bai-\nTh\u00bb   .vi,Miw   ma.   ,nv   \u201e,\u201eJ    His victira was J\u00b0h\"\"y Sain, who ley 6-5, 3-6, 1-6.\nwere  pushedfrom  first  pl'aj a WaS Sab\u00b0taged b\u00bb po0r supp0rt in'    ^\"B-A-Ling-Fung-A-Ling     beat\nS2-y.SS\u00a3s;i**l  hls   13th  defeat  against Busfeld-Maryka 6-3, 6-5;    Greene-\nmonth ago today, now trail Cleve-;four victori(.Si ;0r__n_ biat Bailcy.BaiIev 6.3r 6.5.\nj    Pittsburgh  Pirates  and   Chicago     Fung-A-Ling-Fung-A-Ling     beat\nCubs traded shutouts. Murry Dick-, Greene-Greene 6-3, 3-6, 6-4;  Bus-\nson    recorded    his    16th    victory i field-Maryka    beat    Bailey-Bailey\nagainst  10 defeats as the Pirates 6-5, 3-6, 6-1.\nwon the opener 1-0. I SECTION B\nPaul Minner slopped the Pirates!    Ned Rhodes.  Mrs.  Jenny Yerex\n6-0 with eight hits in the nightcap.!\nIt was his sixth  win  against  11   LOMBARDO WINS\nlosses m j NATIONAL SWEEPSTAKES\nSWEEP DOUBLEHEADER I    RED BANK, N.J., Aug. 12 (AP)-\nBobby Thomson and Monte Irvin! Orchestra leader Guy Lombardo\ndrove home all the runs as New raced Tempo VI to his third Na-\nYork Giants swept a doubleheader tional Sweepstakes title today, win-\nfrom Philadelphia Phils 3-2 and ning the second of two 10-mile\n2-1. i heats almost as easily as he captur-\n\u25a0 Irvin belted a three-run  homer ,ed Saturday's initial heat.\nin   the  third   inning  to  win   thel \u25a0-   \u2014\u2022 \u2014\t\nopener and Thomson doubled home\nHogan, Zaharias\nWin World Golf\nBy VIC  MORRI8, JR.\nCanadian Preaa Staff Writer   \"\nMONTREAL, Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014The\nUnited States today made a clean\nsweep of the North American final\nDayls Cup tie to move into inter-\nzone competition against Sweden.\nThe U. S. team had an easy 5-0\nCHICAGO, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014 In victory over Canada, taking two\na typical aeorehlng finish, Ben singles matchea Friday and a dou-\nHogan alammed a pair of 33a for bias on Saturday. Two more singles\na 66 today'to win golf's biggett today ware considered exhibition\nJackpot\u2014$12,600\u2014w|th   a,   16-un-! matches.\nder-par 273 In the Tam O'Shanter,    Winner of the U. S.-Sweden toui-\n\"world\" champlonahlp. |ney will challenge Australia at Syd-\nHogan, who boosted hla win- ney next December for the Davis\nnlnge In five official tournaments Cup.\nthis season to $20,400, trailed Jlm-j   Canada moved Into the zone final\nmy Demaret, the 54-hole leader, by defeating Cuba last weekend in\nby five strokes entering the laat a similar sweep, while the U, S.\nround. j team ousted Japan and Mexico, also\n.   But his brilliant 33 wiped out four! by 6'\u00b0 vlctorles-\nof the debits at 63 holes when De-!\nmaret wilted to a 37 on the first j\nnine.\nLittle Ben never eased off on the\npressure-packed back side and\nmethodically shot another 33. |\nDemaret required another 37 to\nget home for a 74 and a 276' total.:\nThe Ojal, Calif., pro who had been\nIn the lead through the first three\nrounds, wound up second to collect j   Saturday, the American team of\n*5\u2122,'   - .       __.'.;   \u201e,.      Patty and Tony Trabert slammed\nPete Cooper, from White Plains, through Brendan Macken and Ro-\nN. Y\u201e banged a final 69 while Bob-; chon 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 to win the clinch-\nby Locke of South Africa and his ing m,tch of the best of three ser-\nnewly-found putting touch added les. Last Friday, Trabert defeated\neach to finish at 277 and win Main In straight sets and Dick Sav-\nThe U. S. acea put the finishing\ntouches to their top heavy victory\ntoday aa Art Laraen, U. S. national champ, sailed through Henri\nRochon of Montreal g-2, 6-1, 6-3\n\u2022nd Lanky Budge Patty of Loa\nAngelei coasted through Vancouver's Lorne Main 6-3, 6-3, 6-2 in\nthe fourth singles match of the\nthroe-d\u00aby competition.\n$2750.\nLawson Little, Pebble Beach,\nCalif., making one of his best title\nbids In years, fashioned his third\nstraight 70 for 278 to be locked in\nthat bracket with Clayton Heafner\nof Charlotte, N. C. who soared to 73.\nEach earned S2100. i\nI itt did the same trick against Mac-\nEnglish Cricket\nem\nNOTHING TO PREPARE..\nNOTHING TO CLEAN UP\nLONDON, Aug. 12 (Reuters) \u2014\n! Rain restricted play in English first\nCary Middleeoff of Memphis, who class cricket matches,\nwon the Tam all-American crown Matches postponed were:\nMaurice Major, Kay Major beat last week, reeled off a respectable t Nottinghamshire vs Derbyshire;\nLaurie Lefeaux, Nat Maryka 6-2,, pair of 35s for' 279 and seventh Hampshire va Leicestershire; Som-\n6-4; Peter Dewdney, Mrs. Rodgers piaCe' His swag was $1800 Ierset vs Glamorgan; Yorkshire va\nbeat B. Weldon. S. Thompson 6-1, j    Grouped at 26*0, worth $1650 for Esaex; Sussex vs South Africans.\n6-4;   Major-Major   beat   Mr. and j each, were Sam Snead and Lloyd\nMangrum. Both took closing 73s.\nStan Leonard', Vancouver pro,\nfinished three strokes over par with\na fourth-round 75 for a 72-hole total\nken. It was a disappointing show\nfor about 10,000 fans that attended\nthe three day matches as Canada's\ncolor bearers failed to come through\nwith a set victory.\nThe defeat was expected but Can,\nada was favored to cop a. least one\nmatch after zipping through Cuba\nin straight matches.\nToday's victory was just another\nworkout for the Americans.\nThe biggett treat of the compe\ntltlon came In the Larsen-Rochon\nmatch.\nLarsen, 20-year-old self-styled\nclown of American tennis, made\nhla flrat ahowlng in the aeries after being left out oold In previous\nmatchea.\nHis performance was superlative\nas he worked the little French-Ca\nnadiah into a dizzy lather wilh his\ncross-court placements and tricky\npin-point shots. He broke the Cana\ndlan'a service eight times and\nflashed over six service acea against\ntwo by Rochon.\nThe second match between Patty and Main was. dull. The 21-year,\nold No. 2 Canadian player was lack\ning in all departments as the lanky\nPatty scored with his he'avy fore\nhand smashes. Main was caught\nrepeatedly into mistakes on his own\nbackhand. He appeared to be sacrificing too much with his two-handed grip and was slow in retrieving.\nHis play was stubborn sometimes\nbrilliant but always losing.\nHe drove his two-hand crosscourt\nplacements shot for most of his 21\nplacements. He recorded one ace,\nthe same as his opponent.\nStandings\nBy the Canadian Preaa\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn   71 36\nNew York    61 51\nPhiladelphia   67 54\nSt. Louis   52 52\nBoston   50 56\nCincinnati   49 59\nChicago  47 59\nPittsburgh   45 65\nAMERICAN\nCleveland     69 39\nNew York   68 41\nBoston    65 45\nChicago  60 50\nDetroit  51 56\nWashington   47 62\nPhiladelphia   43 69\nSt. Louis  34 75\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMilwaukee \u2022  81 41\nRochester   66 54\nBuffalo   65 57\nSyracuse   59 59\nToronto  58 64\nBaltimore   56 66\nOttawa    54 71\nSpringfield   49 75\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12 (CP) - Ottawa's 1951 Rough Rider football\nteam came up against new rules and\na new league at Lansdowne Park\nSaturday and bowed out 41-18 to\nNew York Giants of the National\nFootball League.\nSome 10,000 spectators viewed the\nconfusing contest in shirtsleeve\nweaiher, watching the first half un-\nder Canadian rules and the second\nunder United States conventions.\n.664\n.545\n.514\n.600\n.472\n.454\n.443\n.409\n.639\n.624\n.591\n.545\n.477\n.4,11\n.384\n.312\n.550\n.533\n.500\n.472\n.459\n.432\n.395\nSUMMER\nSKATING\nTONIGHT\nAND  EVERY\nMONDAY \u2014 Adult.\nWEDNESDAY \u2014 Children\nand Adults\nFRIDAY \u2014 Adults\n8:30 p.m.\nAdults 35c Children 10c\nMrs. B. Barwls 6-2, 6-0.\nLefeaux-Maryka beat Weldon-\nThompson 6-1, 6-3; Dewdney-Rodg-\ners ' beat    Barwis-Barwls  6-2,  6-3;\nMajor-Major beat Weldon-Thomp\nson 6-0, 6-1.\nDewdney-Rodgers beat, Lefeaux-\nMaryka 6-2, 6-1; Barwls-Barws\nbeat Weldon-Thompson 6-0, 6-2;\nMajor-Major beat Dewdney-Rodgers 6-1, 6-4..  .\nLefeaux-Maryka    beat    Barwis-\nBarwis 6-5, 6-1; Dewdney-Rodgers\nbeat Weldon-Thompson 6-0, 6-0.\nSECTION D\nBob Cornwall, Pat Cornwall beat\nMr. and Mrs. Brian Rennison 6-2,\n6-3; Bob Thompson, Mrs. Hazel\nMarsden beat .Colin Major, Mrs.\nTausse 6-4; 6-4.\nof 297.\nLeonard's 36-39\u201475, three oven\npar, was his poorest round of the;\ntournament.\nCHICAGO, Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014 Mildred (Babe) Zaharias turned on\nlast-round pressure for a closing\nthree-under-par 73 and a six-stroke,\nvictory in the $6000 women's\n\"world\" golf tournament today. I\nThe Babe, who now has won all\nfour \"world\" tests staged at Tam\ni O'Shanter courses since 1948, col-\nI Iected $2100 for her 298 effort over\nOther matches restricted by rain:\nMiddlesex 50 for one, Surrey to\nbat; Northamptonshire 25 for one,\nWarwickshire to bat; Gloucestershire 115 for three, Kent to ba:;\nLancashire 209 for four, Worcester-1\nshire to bat. \"\nHarwoofs Rye\nts* \u00abs_vcrtliement li not publlahe. or diiplayed by the Liquor Control\nCoord or by the Government oS British Columbia.\nJ.   Richardson,   B.   DeLong  beat jthe 72-hole route.\nThompson-Marsden 6-0, 6-4; Corn-\t\nwall-Cornwall beat   Major Tausse jj, S. MARKSMEN\no-z, 6-1.\nRennison-Rennison beat Thomp-'\nson-Marsden 6-2, 6-3; Cornwall-\nCornwall beat Richardson-DeLong\n6-1, 6-3; Rennison-Rennison beat\nMajor-Tausse 6-2, 6-3.\nCornwall-Cornwall beat Thompson-Marsden 6-0, 6-1; Rennison-\nRennison beat Richardson-DeLong\n2-6, 6-0, 6-4; Richardson-DeLong\nwon by default from Major-Tausse.\nsome\nextra\nspecial\ntwo runs in the sixth inning to\nbreak up the nightcap.\nA walk to Bob Scheffing forced\nin Wally Westlike with the winning run in the last of the ninth\nand gave St. Louis Cardinals a 4-3\nvictory over Cincinnati Reds.\nChannel Swim\nPostponed\nWin-Helps Both\nLouis, Bivins\nBALTIMORE. Aug.' 12 (AP) \u2014\nA 10-round fight here Wednesday\nnight between Joe Louis and Jimmy\nBivins Is a story of today's heavyweight situation.\nThey nevei1 fought except an ex\nFOYKESTONE, England, Aug. 12 hibition during their prime when\n(Reuters) \u2014 A Brisk cold wind and Louis was busy 25 times defending\nheavy seas today forced postpone- his title and Bivins frequently rank-\nment of a mass international swim-\nmlng race across the English Channel.\ned as a contender.\nNow in the twilight of their careers they meet in what is consid-\nCLIAN AND FISM\nW1TM AN IXTRA WIDE\nBAND OS SATIN SMOOTH\nMNUINf IMFORTEO COIIC \\\nMM r,.i lu.S\nTwenty swimmers \u2014 13 men and ered an important encounter,\nseven women \u2014 from 10 countries Important for 37-year-old  Louis\nwere   due   to   wade  in  from   the who has to go on winning if he's\nFrench side early tomorrow morn- to get that comeback shot at the\ning. Among them was Winnie Fran- C1.0wn held by Jersey Joe Waicott.\nces Leuzler of Toronto.                   | important for Bivins, too, because\nBut   the   weatherman's   outlook an upset might catapult him into\nprompted officials to call it off for iine for the same chance. He has\na day.\nbeaten Ezzard Charles.    .-',':\u2022\nLouis admits Bivins is the best\nof the eight fighters he's taken on\nso far In his comeback try.\nThe   promoters   of   Wednesday's\nfight expect to draw a gate of $100,-\n000 into the Baltimore Stadium.\nThe   31-yesr-old   Bivins   figures\nhe's \"got a better chance now than\n1 would have had when I was\nyounger. 'You know, when you're\nyoung you get wild ideas.\"\nBivins la going to give away a\ntremendous   advantage   in   size.\nHe's only flve-feet-nlne and when\nhe arrived last week weighed 176.\nLouis weighed 207 the last'tlme\nout againat Cesar Brion and hopes\nto come In Wednesday at 210.\n'  The fjght frMcrnity is spreading\nthe word lhat Louis balked plenty\nbefore signing with Bivins, holding\nout for one of the less dangerous\nheavier\nLouis will make 42^ per cent of\nthe gate and Bivins YlVs. .\nScottish Football\nSeason Reopens\nLONDON,'Aug. 12 (AP) \u2014 Motherwell, holders of the Scottish League cup, started the new Scottish\nfootball season Saturday with a 6-4\nwin over Stirling Albion, which last\nseason moved into the upper bracket of the football league.\nQueen of the South, also promoted, was nipped by Aberdeen 5-4.\nHibernian, Scottish'League champions, was whipped by Partick Thistle 4-2.\nScottish soccer clubs are scheduled to play league cup games until\nSept. 8. Then they start their normal\nleague program. England's 1951-52\nfootball season starts next Saturday.\nLONDON, Aug. 12 (Reuters) \u2014\nResults of soccer matches played in\nthe United Kingdom Saturday:\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE CUP\nDIVISION \"A\"\nAberdeen 5, Queen of the South 4\nCeltic 1, Third Lanark 1\nEast Fife 0, Rangers 0\n1 Hearts 1, Raith Rovers 0.\nMorton 2, Airdrieonians 1\nMotherwell 6, Stirling Albion 4\nPartick Thistle 4, Hibernian 2\nSaint Mirren 2, Dundee 2\nSCOTTISH LEAUUECUP\nDIVISION \"B\"\nAlbion Rovers 3, Saint Johnstone\n4.\nArbroath 2, Clyde 3\nDumbarton 3, Forfar Athletic 4\nDundee United 1, Cowdenbeath 1\nDunfermline   Athletic   4,   Alloa\nletic 1.\nFalkirk 3, Stenhousemulr 1\nKilmarnock 3, Ayr United 0\nQueens Park 1, Hamilton Academicals 2.\nSWEEP SHOOT\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12 (CP) \u2014 United\nStates marksmen made a sweep of\nmajor events in the closing two aays'\nshooting in the national small-bore\nrifle matcnes that wound up today\nat nearby Connaught ranges.\nW. K Bailey of Williamsport, Pa.,\nretained the Canadian Open championship, posting a score of 1984 to\nbeat out two other Americans \u2014\nR. Triggs of Madison, N.J., with 1983\nand A. E. Cook of Mount Clemens,\nMich., with 1981.\nLieut. Qilmour Boa of Toronto,\nthis year's winner of the King's\nprize at Bisley was top Canadian\nin the master class, taking the\nclosed championship away from'his\nbrother, James Boa, Jr., Gilmour,\nwho finished sixth in the master\nclass, had a score of 1981 against 1967\nfor his brother.\nMrs. W. S. MacNab of Calgary,\nshooting in her second small-bore\ntournament, won the women's\nclosed championship, posting 1973\nto place third in the expert class\nof the championship event.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULT8\nfeanemfcl - ONLY YOU CAN\n\u25a0PREVENT\nFOREST FIRES\nKEEP B. C. FORESTS\nGREEN\nFASTEST SPRINTER\nWATERBURY, Conn., Aug. 12\n(AP) \u2014 Mary McNabb, 17-year-old\nfrom Tuskegee Institute, established herself today as the country's\nfastest woman sprinter by winning\nthe 50 and' 100-metre dashes in the\nUnited States A.A.U. senior women's track and field championships.\nj    Her liyje for the 50 was :06.6 She\ni won the 100 in :12.2.\nBREAK IT!\nBURNS\nLUMBER COMPANY\n\"Everything for the Builder\"\n602  BAKER  ST. NELSON\n(Will,\nW&x....\nlife'\nMaybsi you don't think that money\ncan harm you. But nowadays, unless you\nhniidlo it with care, it can make things\ntougher for. you \u2014 and other..\nIf you spend it on things you think\nmay soon be scarce or may cost more\nlater, you will help drive prices still\nhigher. And that will hit you where it\nhurts \u2014 Jn your own waiiet.\nBut every dollar you tare now-in\nlife insurance, bank deposits, or savings\nbonds \u2014helps keep prices down. And\nit can work for you in other important\npersonal ways.\nFor instance, you may need money\nsomeday for an unexpected emergency.\nOr, perhaps, for starting a new business\n... buying a new home... sending your\nboy or girl to college. These and countless other plana may remain just dreams\n\u2014 unless you have more money saved.\nIn your savings plan, lila insurance\nmeetf a special need. For you can use\nIt to combine savings with financial\nprotection for your loved ones.\nSo, to help keep prices down ... to\nprovide for your tomorrows... SAVE I\nLIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA\nattd~dc^AepuJci\u00a3&\u00a3vc4-\nV\n L\nr\nL\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nK\nI\nN\nG\n$AV\u00a3M\u00a3D0CroR.7\nAH GOT TH' MOST DISQRACEFUL\nSICKNESS ANY EX-CONFEDERATE\nDRUMMER BOY COULD HAVE\u2014   ',\nTM'*^fc'\u00abYj-l\u00abfiE CHILIS'\nTHET-fHFF\nffViJP-'N\nNEAR_,y\nKit? ME-\nYO'\nQUACK.'\/\nlBur??-T CACWLlJ?\nIT'S A Y.f-'EVM, TIME\nWELL-\\\u00abeGIVES\nKNOWN  jAmWEAW\nMODERN \\ MODERN I\nMmCMEl!) MEDICINE, '\nAtVUGIvE\nWA OLD-\nFASHIONED,,\nVOODOO JAB!\nAH'LLRQON\n\\HIMf.'-)\nUPSIDE\nDOWN\nCAKE\nAA >^v?_vi ot^A^-\nvJ\n\/     c\nr^ofe^-lk1\nfl\n\"*\"-->L 9-13\nA MERE AGE difference of 64 years does not prevent Vladimir\nSchulz, 66, and his two-year-o'ld granddaughter Tamara, both German\nimmigrants, from having much in common aB they catch their first\nsight of New York City from U.S. navy ship which transported\nthem from Germany to U.S\u2014Central  Press Canadian.\nWEST POINT Cadet Harold Loehlein, 24, (left), captain-elect\nof the football team arid president-elect of the senior class, is shown\nwith Cadet-Sergt. Harrison Travis, member of the football, lacrosse\nand swimming teams, as they appeared at the U.S. military academy\nrecently. They are two of the ninety West Point cadets charged with\nviolation of the honor system and facing expulsion from the academy.\nEighty of the cadets who confessed to \"cribbing\" on exams will be\npermitted to resign and become ^officers later by rising through\nenlisted ranks, according to \"softened policy\" of West Point officials.\n\\  . \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHARD-PRESSED to make a living, small shop owners In East\nBerlin are foi-ced to decorate their places of business with pictures\nof top Communist leaders, in order to make a good impression on\nCommunist party control committees who check preparations being\nmade for opening of the World Festival of Youth and Students for\nPeace.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nTHREE THOUSAND British Boy Scouts have now arrived in\nBad Ischl, Austria, to set up camp near the Austrian Alps for tha\nopening of the Seventh World Scout Jamboree. The boys, after a\n29-hour trip by train, disembarked and Immediately pitched Into\ntheir chores. Here Geofrey Cox, aged 16, Birmingham, lopka on while\nNell Hart, aged 16, cleanB his oil lamp,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHEADING A 10-MAN British Cabinet committee sent to negotiate with Iran in oil nationalization dispute, Richard Stokes, Britain's\nLord Privy Seal, is seen, centre, at London airport accompanied by\nSir F. Shepherd, British minister to Persia, left, and Sir D. Ferguson,\nprior to, embarking by plane for Iran. Now In Iran, Stokes stated\nthat oil experts at giant refinery at Abadan will work only for a\npredominantly  British  organization.\u2014Central  Press  Canadian.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... im on the dial\nMONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1951\n1:59\u2014News\n1:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Top of the Morning , \u25a0\n10\u2014News . \u25a0\n1:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n5:00\u2014News ^\n1:10\u2014Sport News\n1:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n1:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n1:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n):00\u2014News ' .   .\n):01\u2014Betty and Bob\n1:15\u2014Western Tunes\n):45\u2014Your Musical Appointment\n):59\u2014Time Signal\n):00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Ladies Choice\n): 15\u2014Sons .of the Pioneers\n):30\u2014Oliver's Choice\n):45\u2014Invitation to the Wallz\nl:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Piano Prelude\n1:15\u2014For You Madame\n1:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n1:45\u2014Notice Board\n!:00\u2014News\n!:01\u2014Notice Board\n!:15\u2014News\n!:25\u2014Sports News\n2:30\u2014B. C. Farm Broadcast\n!:55\u2014From Parliament Hill 7   .\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Carnival of Fun\n1:30\u2014Monday Serenade\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n2:30\u2014Intermission\n2:45\u2014Art Every Day\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Easy Listening.\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Don Messer's Islanders\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific News\n3:59\u2014News    '\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:30\u2014Dick Trimble andjhe Sea\n4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:00\u2014News\n5:01\u2014Superman\n5:15\u2014News\n5:25\u2014Sports News\n5:30\u2014Songs and Singers\n5:45\u2014Easy Aces\n6:00\u2014Family Theatre\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte\n8:00\u2014Philmister's Orchestra\n8:30\u2014Overture Please\n9:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014Musicale\n10:00\u2014N-'WS\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:55\u2014News Nite Cap\nLONGSHOREMEN at Staten Island, N.Y., turned down fancy\novertime pay In'their displeasure at loading a cargo, which they\nclaimed was ammunition, on a Yugoslavian freighter. The stevedores,\nabove, flatly refused to load the ship which was due'to leave New\nYork harbor shortly, claiming that aboard ship they found Stalin's\nphoto and Soviet insignia in the smoking room. As a result, the sailing of the shjp was delayed indefinitely.\u2014Central Press Canadian.'\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Birds\n6. Haul, as art \u25a0\nanchor\n(naut.)\n11. Monetary\nunit (India)\n12. Turkish\nmoney of\naccount\n13. Deputy\n14. Dogger\n15. Gang-\n16. Not working\n17. Vapor\n21. Luzon\nnative\n24. Compel\n28. Of the sun\n30. Biblical\n6. Possesses\n7. People of\nthe Arctic\n8. Mimicked\n9. Flesh of\na calf\n10. Sea eagle\n18. Concise\n26. A tin\n27. Shield\n29. Astraddle,\n32. Engineman\n(abbr.)\n35. Wiping\ncloth\n36. Hastened\nAWI\u00b01LIKB\nLBTrT IM\neWgl I His\nDID  HQH   -.-.HO\nHHH   DUD     QB\nUl.-JUWUU\nIJEIC.I1UU   HUJMi\nma   hub huh\nH00BI   CIHEI   HE\n19. Half an em   37. Narrative\n20. On fire 38. Seed\n21. Viper\n22. High,\ncraggy hill\n23. Malt\nbeverage\n25. Tattered\n. cloth\ncovering\n40. Whip-mark\non skin\n41. River\n(Afr.)\n42. Let it stand\n(print.)\nCJUHU   UIL'IUU\nULHIU   UUOiJ\nYoFitcrdfiy,f! Answer\n44. Compass di*\nrection (abbr.J\n45. Hebrew\nmonth\n(poss.)\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTUESDAY, AUGUST'14, 1951\n:00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n15\u2014Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Anything Goes.\n00\u2014BBC News\n15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n30\u2014Laura Limited\n:45\u2014Your Music Appointment\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n:15\u2014Strike It Rich\n45\u2014Invitation to Waltz\n00\u2014A Man and His Music\n:15\u2014News    ,\n25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014BC Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014The Concert Hour\n:00\u2014Easy Listening\n:30\u2014Program Resume\n:45\u2014Allison Grant\n:56\u2014International   Commentary\n:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n:15\u2014Western Five\n:30\u2014Listener's Choice*\n:00\u2014Sunsliine Society\n4:30\u2014Tall Tales\n4:45\u2014Music lor Juwniors\n5:00\u2014International Commentary\n5:10\u2014Bill Marton Sings\n5:25\u2014What Do You Think?\n5:30\u2014Intimate Revue\n5:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\n5:55\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Piano Playhouse.\n6:30\u2014Korean Report\n7:00-r-News'\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014Club Date\n8^15\u2014Fish, Flesh and Fowl\n8:30\u2014Tzigane\n9:00\u2014Fiddle-Joe's  Yarns\n0:30\u2014C.W.N.A. Convention\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n10:30\u2014Rick Hannay Adventures\n11:00\u2014UN Today\n11:15\u2014Nocturne\n11:45\u2014Nightcap\n11:517\u2014Mews\nname\n31. Compacting\nmachine\n33. Antelope\n(Afr.)    ,\n34. Doctrine\n36. Asterisk\n39. Has\n43. Capital\n(Fr.)\n45. Abide\n46. Ignore\n47. Reigning1\nbeauty\n48. Takes out\n(Print.)\n49. Icy rain\nDOWN\n1. Kind o\u00a3\napple\n2. Wrinkle\n(anat.)\n3. Not shut\n4. Travels\n5. Clique\nl-ll \u25a0\nDAILY CRYtlOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:,\nA X Y I) J, B A A X R\nis LONGFELLOW\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, apoa\u00ab\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.'\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nFQUC   IZXRH   YO   VRCCRL   VROCZFRA\nCQUX   CQUC   ZM   U   OPQZZTVZH'O   CYKT\n-CQUFWRLUB.\nSaturday's Cr.vptoquoto! LOUD WORDS AND LONGING\nARE SO LITTLE WORTH: AND THE ENfa IS HARD TO\nREACH\u2014SWINBURNE.\n'\u25a0    T>i_trU)sitol by King Ecaturs SjsSic\u00bb_>\u201e\n mi\nj Pmowo*m$M wANfApr\nS  m.QtMMstJim\/\nliyHf IttWTsHWB^RCTfiff'Tl*\nPhone 144\nl|ec*|(|linp for Classified Ac's\u20145 p.ir|.\nw **\"\"*P\u2122    *fls7r_r\nHELP WANTI-P\nWANTED - RECEPTIONIST FOR\ndental office. Some knowledge of\ntyping and bookkeeping necessary. \u2022 Apply ' Box 2973 Nelson\nDally News.\nWANTED-EXPERIENCEB \" MINE\npipe fiftcr, inexperienced need\nnof apply.' Caijadian Exploration\nLtd.' Tpngslon, Salmo, B.C.\nPROOFREADER FOR NEWSPA-\nper editorial department. Night\nwork. Apply' R. H. Procter,- Nelson Daily News after 5 p.m.\nBOY qR GJRL Tp LEARN EDI-\ntorial work.'Nigbt hours. Apply\nto R. H. Procter, Nelson Daily\nNews   after 5vp,m,\n, WANTED - MAN WITH HEAVY\ntruck to contract hauling lumber.\nS. P. Pond\nWANTED-EXPERIE^CED STEN-\nographer fpr law office. Apply\nin writing to P.O. Box 219 Nelson.\nWANTED  - EXPE R I E N C E D\n\"waitress. Apply New Star Cafe.\nSITUATIONS WANTEP\nMIDDLE-AGED WIDOW WISHES\nposition as housekeeper in motherless   home.   Have   references.\n. Box 3394 Daily News.\n3 A B Y SITTER WANTS JOB.\nAfternoons ' or evenings. Phone\n1117-L.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nNOTICE TP CREDITORS\nMARIE  PAPAZIAN, DECEASED\nI NOTICE IS HEREBY GfVEtf that\nall. persons having claims against\nMarie Papazian, deceased, late  of\nth,e   City of Los Angeles,   in the\n; State of California, who died there-\n1 at on the 18th day of October, A.D.\n1950, are required fo file'particulars' thereof with the undersigned\ni solicitors for the executrix on or\n1 before the 10th day of September,\nA.D. 1951, after which date the executrix wjll procped to distribute\nthe   assets   of   the   said   deceased\namong the persons entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims\nwhich shall then have been filed as\nabove required.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C. ths 2nd day\nof August, A.D. 1951.\nO'SHEA, GARLAND & GANSNER,\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.,\nSolictors for the executor.\n\u25a0JUSIhfESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nMILK BAR\nFOR  SALE  IN\nSbOfh'ern Okanagan\nSteady and Increasing clientele.\nLocated on Main Highway.- For\nparticulars apply to P.O. Box\nS*5, Pentlctoh; B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 GENERAL STORE,\nwith' living quarters and garage.\nPrice $3300 cash, stock at invoice.\nApply 24 Ymir Rd.\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\n\"    ASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n, fl.  Iff.  WIDDOWSON & CO.  AS-\nsayprs! 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nB.  S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND,   B.C.,\nAssayer. Chemist Mine Rep.\n AUTQ WRECKERS\t\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTq\nWrecking. Phone Rosslapij, .171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN. LAND SURVEY-\nor, Mimng' ahd Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST..\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE Af^D REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY AGENCIES LTD.,  IN-\nsurance, Reaj Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK\u2014\nContact H Harrop; Phone 117.\n| MACHINISTS\t\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 693 324 Vernon St.\nI\njNplfimi iatlij -Nf?tus\nClassified  Advertising  Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie line per consecutiyp Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Povers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst' insertion. 16c per line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week,'\n'in advance   ..     25\nBy.carrier, per year  13.00\nUnited States! United Kingdom:\nOne  month    _    1.00\n'.   Three  months      3.00\nSix months   ..-    6.00\nOne year     12,00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     100\nThree months _    2.50\nSix months         4.50\nOne year  '.'. '.    800\nWhern extra postage Is required,\nabove rates pli|> postage-\nCLASSIFIED ADS GftT RESULTS\nPROPERTY,\nETC.,\nMOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFOR SALE New\nCity Dwellings,\nSmall dwelling on two corner\nlots in Fairview. Living-room,\ntwo bedrooms, kitchen with\npantry and bathrobm. Also cabin, chickenhouse and fuel shed.\nPriced for quick sale\u2014\n$4300\n$2300 down will handlp\nFive-rpoiTf dwelling on,one lot,\nSjlica Street has entrance ball,\nlivingroom with electric Jjre-\npla'ce, diningrQom, kitchen with\npantry, on'e bedroom, arid bathroom down and one bedroom\nup. Attractive, plpah ancj brjght.\nPrictd reasonably af,\u2014\n$5250\nWe can place mortgage lo assist\n!_,ong beach\nNEW LISTING '\nfteaspnably priced for quick\nside, seven acres at Longbeach,\ntwo and one-half cleared,' fruit\ntrees and small fruits for home\nuse. Dwelling has ver_ind^h,\nlivingroom, ki|chen, two bedrooms, ; bathroprp. Small' ban}.\n. chickenhouse,' wood Shed- ana\ngarage: \"The value will surprise you\u2014\n$3500\nSEE IT TODAY.\nT. D. Rosling\nREAL ESTATE & INSURANCE\n568 Ward Street \u2014 Phone 717\nFOR SALE \u2014 LESS THAN %\nprice, 160 acres, farm, loghouse\nbarn and chicken house. 8 acres\ncleared, fire wood roughly 1000\ncords, poles, and saw logs 75,000\nfeet 2 IS miies from Nakusp.\nPrice $25 per acre, or $3500 cash.\nWrite Paul Gensick, Nakusp, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TWO MILES FROM\nNelson 20 acres, 5 cleared, 15\nfruit trees, 4 roomed house, barn,\nchicken house. $3500. Box 3425\nDaily News.\n4 ROOM HqUSE FQR SALE AT\nProcter, B.C. on l1,. lots, garden\nand fruit trees. Also 5 acres land\nin timber. W. Andrusiak, Procter,\nB.C. \t\nFOR SALE \u2014 5 ROOM BUNGA-\nIow, close in. Excellent condition.\nIncludes a Bendix washer. Insulated. Part cement basement,\nand furnace. Phone 893-X.\nFOR SALE \u2014. SEVEN . ACRES\nwith four houses*, work shop, tool\nhouse and hen house. City water\nand light. Price $6000. Write P.O.\nBox 93, Nelson.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TWO CLEARED\nlots on Behnsen St., Nelson. Reasonable. For further information\ninquire at No. , 8 Burns Blk.,\nNelson,.\nFOR'SALE \u2014 MODERN HOUSE,\nsmall fruit farm. Close to Castlegar. Apply John Gall, Robson,\nB.C.\nFOR SALE-CHOICE 'BRASH\nproperty. .' Apply, Townshend,\nNorth   Shore\u20147-Mile. \" '\nCORNER   LOT   75x75.\ndistrict. Phone 285-X.\nUPHILL\nTWO HOUSES FpR SALE. \u25a0\nply 125 SHica St.\n\u2022 AP-\nPERSONAL\nwawanesa Mutual fire in-\nsurance Co!, D. L. Kerr. Agept.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates, $|,50 to $2.00'single, $2,50 to\nM00 doubles.   Vancouver,  B   C\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill'any order im*\nmediately. Daily News Printing\nDept.. Nelson, British Columbia.\n\u25a0*   THE BEST\nIN\nUSED CARS\n1951   Ford Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Spoon\n1951 Anglig Coach,\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Ford 1-Ton Fiat Deck\n1949 Austin Sedqn\n1949 Austin Panel\n1949 Mercury Sedpn\n1947 Pontiac Sedan\n1947 Willys Station Wagon\n1947 MerGury l-tpp      '\n1946 Ford 2-Ton Truck    '\n\" 1939 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1937 Graham Sedan\n1936' FqrdCppch\n,1934 Ford CouRe\n1933 Model B Coupe\nTERMS and TRADES\nEn-jp.re Motors\nPhone 1135   803 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nMIDSUMMER\nUSED TRUCK SALE\n1-1848 Fargo 3-Ton Special with\nBrantford Anthony 5 yd. heavy\nduty box aqd hoist. Excellent\ncondition through- (flltA\nout.' Price           _P-SOO-l\n1-1947 Fargo 3-Ton Special with\nflat oJeck.'Has been kept in first\nclass condition. 'tlTCrt\nPriced at  ...   fltpy\n1-19^7 Studebaker 2-Ton chassis\nand cab. Low mileage. JWotor\nand tires excellent,   Cf 9Q?\nPriced at- :.. -::.;-,:.'-\"?*-*i'9\nSPECIAL\n1 - Chrysler Industrial Power\nUnit has been used a very short\ntime. Complete'with pulley and\nskids ready to Cl Otj'?\nHacj-Jqd & Gprtside\nMotors Ltd.\nCrapbrook, 6. C.\nSALVAGED CARS\n1935 Hudson Sedan. Reconditioned motor, suitable for installation in boat. Can be seen at Nelson Transfer, Nelson. 1950 Chev.\nCoach. This car is rebuildable.\nCan be seen at Dominion Garage\n& Sales, Trail. License 167-928.\nBids will be accepted' by General\nExchange Insurance Corp., 370-7\nAve. West,' Calgary.\nMONARCH, 1951 FOUR-DOOR gE-\ndari, 3300 miles. This libit could\nbe financed and is-1 not subject'to\np re & ft Restrictions. Complete\nwith overdrive, radio, Yf.S. tires,\nchrome wheel rings, like new at\n$330Q. Call 1566 after 4:30'p.m\nFOR SALE\u2014FRANCIS BARNETT\nPowerbike. Extra seat, licence,\niised only 3 months. Perfect condition. Phone 509-L,\nMACHINERY\nEqyipmisn? Avqjlpble\nfpr\nImmediate Pelivpry\nDiesel engines\n.Diesel plectrjc sets\nMotor Grqpjers\nD4 with overhead loader    ,\nHyfjrqujic oria) cable dozers\nfor all size? of trpctp'rs.'gpd\nall makes\nSpraRers\n- \\ . \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   -\nU\u00a7ed\n1\u2014D4 with hydraulic angle\ndozer, and hyster winch,\ngood condition.\n1\u2014Rjq. 11 Cqferpillqr rnqtqr\ngrader, f irsf c|ass condition. '\u25a0\u25a0*\/:\u25a0\u25a0'\n1\u2014D440Q Power Unit with\npulley, overhaujed. Like\nnew.\nTractor & Equipment\nCq. Ltci.'\nPhone 930 Bqx 119\nNelson, B C\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING '\nSEND  YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nEQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nGranvijle Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver, R C.\nCATERPILLAR 7 - REBUILT,\npew track, chains, rollers, etc.\nComplete with angledozer and\nHyster, double drum logging\nwinch. Bayes Equipment, Cran-'\nbrook. B.C,\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT-D-4\ncat, ' equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding! etc. C. Ross, phone\n1506 Nelson.\nCHARLESTON\nPLANS pRILLJHG\nSlocan Charleston ' Mining Co.,\nL,\\d\u201e is planping a diijrflqnfj.dnliin'g\nprogjqm .0 increase respryps in the\nKpy^lqnp W'hpfai claim and to de-1\nvelep further tpiinagp in tliiesj;\nknown preshoots ip' tl^e No. 5 adu\nof ihe piiarleston claim.\nConsiderable wpi'lt was cjone pn\nthe Keystone cla|m last year with\nthe expectation of arranging for\ncustoms milling of pre. ft was' subsequently founc impossible to make\nsatisfactory arrangements. Mr. j_c-\nDonald says approximately '50,000\ntons of ore have been indicated in\nthe Keystone.'Extension of the ore\nzone and development of the' high\ngrade oreshoot's in the Charleston\nare hoped to provide both tonnage\nand grade to warrant the construction of a mill. '\nThp company is hopeful'regarding\npossibilities of thp Cqlqradq claini.i\nThe Charleston grqup which adjoins,\nthe Whitewater mine, two miles\nNorth'pi Itetallacjt, B.C.', also in-|\neludes the Kirigstpn and Cqreap\nclaims.\nCharles Lind, pf JCaslo a direplof.\nqf th'e cqmpany, Is \"ip charge of;\nppprafipps.\nEstella Concludes       j\nMarketing Agreement\nA marketing arrangement covering th)e sale of zinc apd lea() con-\ncentrqtps for tl)p portjop of the cqr-j\nrent calendar year during which it|\nis in production has been concluded\nby Estella Mines' at Wasa, whjch is\nexpected to reach the production\nstage in the Fall, reports the North\nern Miner.\nStope preparation is well advanced jn thp Rover tunnpl. Company\nstatement says slashing of drifts has\nindicalpd widths to hp fully as great\nas anticipated apd jn somp places\ngreater. Grade has been found to bp\ncqnsistent with previous estimates\nRaisps are being driven to connect\nthe Estella and Rover tunnels and\nsub-levels' will be established in\nthe interval between. The company\nreports a full engineering staff and\nample underground tabor.\nConstruction of mill buildings is\nalmost complete; all foundations\n(lavp been poured and somp of ihe\nmachinery installed. The engines\nare being installed in the ppwer-\nhoilsp. Sheds have been erected (0\ncover ore dumps, bins and storage\npiles.\nWmn'meai Grain  \u2022\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 12 (CP)-Win-\nhipeg grain cash prices Saturday: '\npats. No. 1 feed, 81^.\nBarley, No. i feed. 1.19*4.\nThe pornesday Book made by\norder of William the Conqueror in\n1085 is kept in the Public Record\nOffice in London.\nNjpahl BAJ1.Y NEWS, MQNOAY, AUG. 13, 1951 \u2014 9\nSHORTLY AFTER HIS ARRIVAL In Ottawa,\nGepersl Phigr Bradley, the U.S. chairman of the\nJoint chiefs of staff, paid a visit to Hon. Brooke\nClaxton, Canada's Minister of Rational Ppfe'rjpe,\nand'presented the official Prpslderitlal Citation,\nwhich was awarded tp the 2na\\ pat(a||on H.-Bfffl\"\neest Rgjt; w(ie'p they werp repeptly c'itpcl *by Pres-\nIdsnt TrHiTi^n fflr e!<rrR<\"r<nni*ry heroism and out-\n\u00aban(j|ng pel-formancp of conibat dHtlesih'aet|p'n\nagainst the armed pnerpy near' Kapyong, Kore?.'\nTr|f appve photp shows' General Bradley present-\ninfl .the elation on hchalf qf PrpBttent Trupia'n\ntp Mr. Claxipn-\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nFQR SAI.E, MISCELLANEOUS\nKROEHLER\" CHESTERFIELD\nsuite, bedroom suite, dining room\nsuite, beds, bed-cqucb, kitchen\ncabinets, sealer?, garden t001?-\nbudgy, cage and stand, etc. Complete home furniture. No reasonable offer refused. 18Q7 Stanley\nSt. Phone 767-R.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies;' new apd nsed\nwire rppe; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Jrbn & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6557.\nFOR SALE ~ McLARY REGINA\nstove. Solid oak diping room\nsuite. 2 arm chairs. Table. Books.\nPictures and other articles. F. A.\nBaker, 624 Third St. Phone 1050-L\nor 46.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nWHEEL,\nPARKS CHAMPION\nATTENDS HEARING\nYJCTpftlA. B.C., Aug. 12 (CR1-\nppwerfpi reinforcement for conservationists ip the Battle of Buttle\nLake, Fred M. Packard, executive,\nsecretary of the Notional Parks Association of the United States, will\nappear at the public hearing to be\ncontinued here on Monday on the\nB.C. Power Commission's plan to\ndam Buttle Lake.\nThe vetej-an of many similar battles in the U.S. was invited' to testify before Water Comptroller E. H.\nTredcrqft by the B.C. Natural Resources Conservation Leagu?.\nThe National Parks Association,\nMr. Packard said, is an independent\nI organization of Conservationists established over 50 years ago,\n\"We've had terrific contests in our\ndetermination to keep the parks\ninviolate.\" he said, \"and there are\neight different national parks and\nmonuments under attack right now.\nWe've had a remarkable success so\nfar. We have yet to lose a battle.\"\nGlacier, Yellowstone, and Grand\nCanyon Parks, and the Dinosaur\nPar|t in.Utah are under fire, he said.\n\"I'm here to help conserve the\nbeauty of Strathcona Park because\nof the tremendous and rapidly\ngrowing interest in Canadian parks\nbeing expressed by U.S. tourists,\"\nhe said. \"People here find it hard\nto realize what a valuable asset\nthey have in the parks. Strathcona\nPark is a jewel of Pristine Forest,\nsomething already lost in thp East.\"\nAltoona Shapes Up as Bountiful\nAltoona silvef-lpad-zinc mtae is\nresponding fpyoraply 'to development by Kootenay Belle Gold Mines\nLtd., reports i. L. Trumbull, president. ' \u2022'\nThe Altoona group of 12 claims is\nlocated along both sides of Carpenter Creek valley, Northwest of Sandon. This is one of seven Slocan\nproperties under development by\nKootenay-Belle in the Slocan district. In a recent visit to the company's operations, Mr. Trumbull\nwas accompanied by two Seattle\ndirectors, A. J. Theis and J. E. Fox.\nResults on two levels drifted on\nthe Altoona vein indicate that it\nwill be a substantial source of feed\nTRUCKS\nGLASGOW, Scotland (CP)\u2014Men\nand women of many nationalities\nare learning the fine points of hotel\noperation at a mansion on the outskirts of Glasgow: The two-year\ncourse is followed by practical\ntraining in approved hotels.\nThe first steam plowing tackle\ndesigned to replace the hand plow\non- British farms was shown at the\nLondon Exhibition of 1851.\nJersey Mills\n15,000 Tons Month\nPlacer Development Ltd., reports\nthat in ihe three months ended\nJune 30th, 1951, the Emerald mill at\nthe Jersey lead-zinc mine of Canadian Exploration Ltd. at Salmo,\nhandled 44,176 tons averaging 1,93%\nlead and 5.73% zinc and produced\n539,4 tons of concentrates for net\nsmelter returns of approximately\n$802,000. In the first quarter of the\nyear 5046 tons of concentrates were\nproduced for net smelter returns of\nabout $706,000.\nThe mill is now handling around\n15,000 tons a mojitfi and it is planned that this will be Increased to\n21,000 tons monthly by the end 1 of\nAugust this year.\nFor some months Canadian Exploration Ltd,, has been carrying out\ndiamond\" drilling exploration for\ntungsten ore ijufside the arpa sold\nto the Canadian government bui\nstill within the Emerald property^\nResults have been encouraging and\ndrilling is being coptipued.\nfor Kootenay Belle's sink float plante\nand mill. On No. 2 level the vein has\nbeen followed for 140 feet with assays available on the first 70 feet.\nThis length averages 2.54 feet wide\nand carries average values of 1.6\nounces silver per torn 1.2 per cent\nlead and 19.25 per cent -inc. A raise\nto No. 1 level showed oonttppity of\nthe vein and on No. 1 level assays\nare available on two lengths, One\nlength of 70 feet ayerages 3.82 feet\nwide and carries 0.9 ounces silver\nper ton; 0.4 per cant lead and 10.1\nper cent zinc. Two hundred feet beyond this 70 foot length, sampling\nof twenty feet for a width of 3 feet\naveraged 0,5 ounces silver per ton;\n0.1 per cent lead and 10.7 per cent\nzinc, with face of the drift In orp.\nThe 200 feet of intervening drift remains to be sampled and in some\nsections have shown good zinc mineralization. '\nKootenay Belle's other operations\ninclude tha Whitewater Mine,\nwhere work is being intensified for\nWinter supply, pt ore to the mill;\nRichmond-Eureka which has a new\nsink float plant In full operation and\nhas found indications of excellent\ngrade mill feed in old workings;\nMonitor, where indications are reported favorable for substantial production; and the Ruth-Hope, Payne\nand Elkhorn, all under exploration.\nSPORTSMAN WOUNDED\nST. JOVITE, Que, Aug. 12 (CP)\n\u2014Rupert T. Ziclcle, described as a\nwealtW New York sportsman, was\ncritically wounded today by tha\naccidental discharge of bis gun and\ntwo doctors were being flown to\nperform an emergency operation 00\nthe spot.\nBuy. Sell, Trade tho Classified Wty\nFOR SALE \u2014 156 LAWRENCE\nhoist, double drum, 1000 ft. of\nW cable and 40D ft. of %\" cable.\nPhone 1136-L.\nFOR SALE \u2014 \u201eSMALL IVORY\nenamel Beach range. Good' condition, $30. Phone 766-R.\nI>fEW' GIBSON ELECTRIC SPAN-\nish Guitar and amplifier complete,   $295.   Phone   301-L.\nB.F. GOODRICH CAR RADIO\nwith telescopic aerial. Will fit\nany car or truck.'Phone 841-Y.\nMEN! ' PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries: 25 deluxe samples, $1.00.\nMailpd in plain, sealed wrapper\nFinest quality, iested, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free Western\nDistiibutors. Box 1023N. Vancouver. B. C'\nLADIES ! DUPREE PILLS. IM-\nproved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 per\nbox. Western Distributors, Box\n1023 AN. Vancouver. B C\nFOR SALE \u2014 1950 2-DOOR DE-\nluxe' Pontiac sedan. Radio, air\nconditioning, low mileage. Apply\nP.O. Box 243, Nelson. '\nFpR SALE - 19,47 MONARCH\nsedan. Low piileage. A-l thropgh-\nopi. Or trade for olejer car and\ncash difference. Phpnp lfll-L-2.\n'41 MERCURY BUSINESS COUPfE\nAeroplane tires and accessories.\nA fepl buy. Phone 161-R-3,\nFpp SALE \u2014 J950 \"_-TON FQRD\nGood condition. Low mileage.\nApply Mr. L. Bouillet, Harrop.\nFOR SALE \u2014 '29 CHEV. SEDAN.\nApply Room 15. Nobie Hotel.\nFOR   SALE '\u25a0\u2014 1048   PLYMOUTH\nCoupe. Phone 153-R.\nWANTED,   MISCELLANEOUS\n1931 '   CHEV.    ROADSTER     FOR\nsale. A-l shape $350.\"Ph'ori'e 284-R.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP IkJETALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n918 Powell St., Vapcouver. B: C.\nCEDAH POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co.. Box 450. Nelson. B.C.\nWANTED\u2014USED HUDSON SEAL\ncoat. Phone 65-L.\nELECTRIC    FAN.     \"NO    JUNK'\nplease. Phene 237.\nSHIP   YOUR   HIDES   TO   J    P\nMorgan. Nelson. B C\nSUMMER RESORTS\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO COURT\noh No. 3 Highway 10 miles East\nof Nelson. Fully furnished cabins, toilets and showers. Boats.\nSand beach. Swimming and fishing. The ideal holiday spot. 3-Star\nand'A.A.A. rating. Phone 471-Y1\nor write R.R. No. 1 Nclsgn, B.C.\nfor reservations.\n1937 FpANCIS BARNETT MOTOR-\ncycle- Cheap ' Phone 132-Y.\nRENTALS\nRELIABLE COUPLE, ONE TEEN-\n' aged daughter would rept your\nhome, furnished or unfurnished,\nfor six tp pight mqnths, all or part\nrent in advance if desired. Prefer\nunfurnished. P b one 490-L or\nwrite Box 2206. Daily tiews.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E  Cordova St., Vancouver.\nCRESS COPN SALVE-FQR SURE\nrelief your Druggist sells Cress.\nBUPPEE  7  QUART    PRESSURE\ncooker, $20. Phone 27.\nFOR SALE \u2014 FAWCETT OIL\nheater.  A-I   condition.  Ph. (*5-L.\nELEPTRpLUK FOR SAJ-E $12.50.\nApply  Bqx  2991   Daily  News.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-\nWrlte P.O. Box 39. Nelson, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETp.\nSCOTCH COLLI)-* PUPS FOR\nsali. 1 3-year-old reg. Yorkshire\nBoar. Very quiet. $125i 1 Reg.\nJersey Bull. 2 good milk cows.\nH. Harrop, Nelson, B.C.\n3 PUREBRED SAAMEN BUCK\ngqats for sale. Charmpny and\nEchoherd stock. Henry Knowles,\nCrescent Valley, B.C.\nIf yqur hauling jobs are too\n.tough for conventional vehicles, or if you need a\ntruck that's built from the\nground up for rugged on\nand off-fhe-roqd service, it\nwill pay you to finrj out\nabout the new 4-wheel-drive\nWILLYS -TRUCKS Now\n: powered by Wi|iys' sensa-\n1 tional new Hurricane En-\n, gine, these trucks thrive on\nhard work\u2014yet give years\nof dependable low-cost\noperation.\nSOLE DISTRIBUTORS FOR EAST\nAND WEST KOOTENAY\nMILKING COW FOR SALE. \u2014 Apply to: Fred L- Perepolkin,\nGlade, B.C.\nCompany Ltd,\nPHONE 18\n214 Hall St.,   Nelson, B.C.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nWANTEp \u2014 TWO BEDROOM UN-\nfurri. house or spite urgently required' by cpuple'with 8 year old\ndaughter, Reliable tenants.' Will\nconsider renting with option to\nbuy. Phone John Willie, 129.'\nFOR SALE: OpTBOARD MOTOR\n13 h.p Johnson Sea Horse Heavy'\nTwin'. Good condition. Apply Orchard Motors. Creston, B.C.\nWILL DO ALTERATIONS OF\nany type of work in'or'around\nhouse for, rent of'same for year*.\nBox 3350 Daily News.\nSMALL'   LAUNCH.     GOOD     IN\n'ffityfjbu X<>**>\n\"shallow vaterr6_r-Iocks7\"pbonp Up \u00bb0 C 1.QAQ Isjiiio E?n_-f^\n773-L-3.\nWANTED - BY SEPT. 1st. UN-\nfurnished apartment or house\nsuitable for business couple. Must\nbe close in. Box 2080 Dally News.\nLAHGE BEDROOM FOR RENT\nApply 210 Vernon, after 5 p.m.\nSTOCKHOLM fCP)\u2014Sweden is\ngetting orders for $2,000,000 worth\nof hydro-electrip equipment to be\nused in building a giant power station on the Sao Francisco River in\nBrazil. An order for 1560 miles of\nsteel-aluminum cable has already\nbeen shipped.\nSUJTE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nthat is read mott thoroughly by young and old alike, eyery one a prospective\nbuyer or seller of everything from 9 10-ton truck to a tric\/elo, from P houseful of furniture to a tea set, or a herd of cattle to 0 pair pf budgiesl\nYOU'LL FIND IT IN THE\n'   CLASSIFIED PAGES OF THE\nBMstm latig MfuiB\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED SERVICE\n1\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. T3, t\u00ab_t:\nDoes Mother Need\nRoller Skates?\n\\\u00a3< When Mother goes shopping for Baby\nJ-\\ it.is not necessary to  flit\n\"\" from store to store,\".'.  \u25a0    \"\nOUR BABY NOOK SUPPLIES:\nBaby Foods, Lotions, Powders, Oils,\nR em e d i e s, Diet Supplements,\nFeeders, Nipples, Panties, Diaper\nLiners, Twin Tips, Play Toys ahd\nBooks on the care and feeding of\ninfants.\nMANNS\nDRUG STORE\n\"Hospilal\" Near Seoul Packed\nWilh .cared, Stricken Koreans\nBy  BILL  BOSS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSEOUL, Korea, Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014\n\"Typhus,\" said the Korean doctor,\nStanding in the middle of the tent\nind its 40 or 50 wretched patients-\nNorth Koreans all.\nConducting a tour of the hospital\nImprovised in the gigantic evacuee\ncamp at Kunchon-Myong.fivemiles\nEast of Seoul, he had shown the\n\"reception room,\" the hosiptal \"office\" and the \"operating theatre\"\u2014\nI various applications of the ordin\nary packing case draped with soiled\nwhite cotton\u2014and then gone smack\ninto the \"wards,\"\nThe more than 800 patients in the\nhospital were but a fraction of the\ncamp's 61,536 occupants. A further\n500 were treated the same morning\n\u2014until medicines and bandages ran\nout\u2014at the clinic in another part of\nthe centre.\n300 CASES\nThe doctor had said earlier that\nalmost 300 of the cases were Infectious diseases, but that they were in\n\"isolation.\"\nThey were. They were in separate tents, slam-bang up against the\n.   others. .\n\"Typhus,\" he said, having led the\nvisitor into the middle of the first\ntent, after the. barn housing the\nsurgical patients had been visited.-.\nWith decent haste the visitor led\nthe way outside.\nThe party was at the far end of\nthe next tent before the doctor\nturned and explained:\n\"Smallpox.\"\nThe interpreter was asked at the\nnext tent's entrance what its patients had. The answer came: \"typhoid.\"\nVISIT ENDED   ,\nThere was a smile, a nod, the\nvisit ended.\nSince the beginning of June more\n*'  than 23,000 patients have been treated in this hospital, 80CO of them\nwith communicable diseases.  Amazingly, only 360 have died.\nDuring the same period 320,000\nevacuees have passed through the\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompbunded\nMed.  Arts   Blk.\nPHONE 25\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nmilllllllllillllllllilllllillllllllililillilli\nDONALD E. HUNTER\nOPTOMETRIST\nGilker Block\n542 Baker St.       Ph. 1527\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nBISMAREX.\nAids Stomach, Heartburn\nand Indigestion.-\n90-. and $2.00 pkg.\nOn Sale Only at Your\nRexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\n\"Nelson's  Modern  Pharmacy\"\nPhone, Day 34, Night 807-R\nBOX 460\ncamp\u2014turned out of their homes in\nthe areas adjacent to the front\/both\nNorth and South of the parallel,\nand told to make their way into\nSouth Korea.,\nAs .many as 8000 a day have been\ndusted with DDT.\nThe medicos sit in their offices at\nheadquarters and \"advise\"; experienced disaster workers here say\nthe Koreans must first be shown,\nthen \"advised\".      .\nOnly one ,a Norwegian surgeon\nnamed Meyes,' concerned himself\nwith the plight of the Koreans to\nthe point of going out and doing\nsomething personally about it. He\nperformed as many as five operations a day in Seoul city relief\nhospital besides doing his paper\nwork, finally .working himself Into\nnervous exhaustion.\nAt Kurichbn the five Korean doctors and 11 Korean nurses\u2014several\njust high-school girls pressed into\nservice\u2014do the best they can.\nNinety per-cent of the evacuees\nare malnutrition cases to varying\ndegrees.   .\nSays the colonel commanding the\nU.N.C.A.C. team in-SeouL province:\n\"They are really starved and in bed\nshape. These evacuees are in the\nworst condition I have ever seen.\nEither they were terribly treated\nby the Chinese or else they were\ntoo scared to go out and look for\nfood. They even ate poisonous\ngrasses. And between the heat and\nflies they suffer badly from dysentery.\"\nThere are 11 permanent-type\n.camps like Kunchon throughout\nSeoul province, each with an est!\nmated 19,000 inhabitants.\nWeight and Wallop Cause\nAllied Rifle Differences\nBy DOUQLA8-HOW\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12 (CP)-Canada\nis caught in the middle of a battle\nbetween weight and' wallop in the\nnow-celebrated split over a common rifle for the Atlantic Pact\npowers.\nShe's not championing any rifle\nof her own but she's vitally interested in trying to get the U. S. and\nV. K. to agree on a common bullet\nif not a common rifle to fire it\nThe U. S. and U. K. so far are sincerely and fundamentally split.\nLast week's four-power meeting\nof Defence Ministers in Washington\nlaunched the first major effort to\nbridge that gap by putting the\navailable rifles to the test under the\ndirection of the Standing Group,\nthe Anglo-American-French Committee of Generals which is the top\nfull-time military body in the pact\norganization, ' .\nThe hope is that within the next\nfew months the Standing -Group\nwill be ready to report some success to another meeting pf Ministers.\nThis, briefly, is the nature of the\nsplit:\nThe U; S. believes\u2014even more\"\nfirmly because of the infantryman's\n\"war in Korea\u2014that the rifle of the\nfuture must pack wallop and to\nhave wallop you must have weight\nIt is developing a new rifle but it\nwon't be any lighter than the existing ,300-calibre Garand which British authorities already consider too\nheavy and which is about one\npound heavier than the .303 Lee-\nEnfield Canada and Britain now\nuse.\nBritain has announced plans to\nproduce a new .280 automatic rifle\nand to discard the .303. The .280 is\nrelatively light. It sacrifices weight\nand hitting power for lots of firepower of a type the British consider\nample to kill lots of the enemy.\nCanada, has announced she's Stop-\npeditaking U. S. Garands and that\nshe won't ship any more .303s to Europe until she can see her way clear\nto chart her future rifle course.\nHer delegates to Washington came\nback highly praising the .28,0 and\nmuch of Canada's Bren-gun-maklng\ncapacity could be turned to making\nit. But shes' willing to accept whichever rifle on which-there is agreement. If there Is no agreement,\nshe'll have to choose one or the\nother, probably the- American, or\nsh*e may rebore the Lee-Enfields to\na new calibre:\nCheese Ration (uf\nin Great Britain\nLONDON, Aug. 12 (Reuters) \u2014\nBritons will get more meat on their\nweekly ration from next week but\nthey will have a cut in the cheese\nration, the Food Ministry announced Saturday. The meat ration will\ngo up by twopence worth a week\nto one shilling and seven pence. This\nwill buy about two lamb chops or\nhalf a pound of steak.\nCheese will drop Sept. 9 from\ntwo ounces to \\lk ounces a week.\nLast time the cheese allocation was\nat this level was in 1948.\nThe Food Ministry blamed \"disappointing heme and foreign deliveries.\nLONDON,   Aug.   12v (Reuters)\nPotato-eating   Britons   had   to   go\nshort this weekend.\nMany housewives had to go home\ntoday with empty baskets. The\nshortage developed when potato\ndiggers broke off work for last\nweek's bank holiday.\nGrowers say the Ministry of Food\ncaused the shortage by imposing\nprice control on potatoes Aug. 1.\nMay Find Cause of\nHigh Blood Pressure\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 12 CAP)-Pef-\nsons with high blood pressure have\na. chemical in their blood n.o.t.fouhd\nin blood of normal pressure, . .,\nIt is the first time such a chemical\ndifference has been found. \u2022 The\nchemical Is named pherentasin,\nfrom the Greek meaning to hold up\npressure.\nIt is one of the bright new hopes\nfor controlling high blood pressure,\nthe cause of much heart trouble,\napoplexy and perhaps, kidney\ntroubles^ .   , \"\nA next step is to fhid a drug\nthat will neutralize pherentasin. It\ncould be given to people'to keep\ntheir blood pressure normal. 'A\ncouple of drugs that may do this\nare already being' studied.\nPherentasin was found in the\nblood of almost all nersons with\nhigh blood pressure. Only one person with normal pressure had any\npherentasin in his blood.\nWild Orchid Bed-\nFound in Ontario\nilie, Age 7Qr\nBy GERCY GHENT\nA fascinating bog many acres in\nextent was discovered by a party of\nnaturalists recently In the wilderness not far from Ahmic Lake in\nthe Magnetawan River region of\nOntario.\nThis bog was the site of an ancient lake that long agd lost its shining waters; Sphagnum .moss now\nstretches over the site, a carpet into\nwhich the exploring naturalists\nsank, sometimes to knee depth, on\ntheir way to reach a tree-covered\nisland left by the departed water.\nBut the chief charm of the bo<*\nwas orchids\u2014literally thousands of\nnative Canadian orch'ds, the calo-\npogan species, and of a beautiful,\ndeen-rOse color. It is an event exceedingly rare to find this species\nin such opulent growth and. the' observers were thrilled. Another lovely species, the pogonia orchids of\npale pink, were also growing there\nin hundreds rather than thousands.| PARIS, Aug. 12 (AP)\u2014Premier\nbut the pogonias are rarely found | Bene Pleven and his new strongly-\n\u2022By JACK QUIGG\nHOLLYWOOD. Aug. 12 (API-\nMr. Hollywood is 70 years pld today, but bustling Cecil Blount DeMille has no intention of slowing\ndown.\nAs he has for 37 years, \"C. B.\"\nplans to' keep on showing Hollywood how to spend millions to\nmake more millions.\n\"I would like to start on page one\nof American history and go right\ndown to the latest dispatch from\nKorea,\" he says.\nDeMille is the descendant of\nDutch immigrants who settled in\nthe United States in 1658.\nC. B.'s first stage experience was\nas an actor. Later he turned to writing.\nHe wasn't enthusiastic when a\nfriend brought him- together with\nSamuel- Goldwyn, a glove salesman,\nand Jesse L. Lasky, a cornet player,\nto discuss entering the infant motion picture industry. He soon\nwarmed to the idea and the trio\nformed the Jesse L. Lasky Play\nCompany; capitalized at $20,000.\nThe firm acquired rights to the\nplay \"The Squaw Man\" and sent\nCecil West to film it. His destination was Flagstaff, Ariz., but it was\nraining when the train arrived and\nDeMille rode to the end of the line\n\u2014Los Angeles.\nIn 1914, his second year In Hollywood, DeMille produced and directed 13 pictures. The Lasky Company\nexpanded, combined with the\nAdolph Zukor Company and\nmoved to the present site of Paramount Studio.\nHe did as much as anyone to create the impression that Hollywood\nis a fabulous place full of fabulous\npeople.\nMAURICE \"THE ROCKET\" RICHARD, one of\nhockey's all-time greats, Is seen here as he took\ntime from crowning lobster queens at Lobster\nFestival held recently\" at .Shediac, N.B., lo try his\nsea legs on the Atlantic fishing grounds. As honorary master of ceremonies, the famous Montreal\nPOSTAL ZONING\nSYSTEM PLANNED\nFOR VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Aug, 12 (CP) \u2014\nStepping into line with Montreal,\nToronto and Ottawa, metropolitan\nVancouver will commence a postal\nzoning system Monday.\nLeaflets describing the city's zoning system will be delivered to every\nhouseholder next week. The leaflet\nwill also give the zone number of\nthe district the addressee lives in.\nPostal authorities will ask cooperation of citizens to mark the proper zone number when writing out-\nof-town friends. They said the new\nsystem will make for quicker and\neasier handling of all incoming mail.\nCanadlens' flash waa kept bu.y \"crowning\" pretty\ngirls, autographing and handshaking In resort town\nwhich featured three days of fun and frolic, climaxed by arrival from the sea of \"King Neptune\"\nand hir mermaids and coronation' of the queen\nof the festival.\u2014Central Press Canadian-\nAssembly Vote\nBy CECIL HARTMAN\njor\nMetals industry\nNEW YORK, Aug. 12 (AP)-A\nmajor segment of the union labor in\nthe non-ferrous metals industry last\nweek set Aug. 20 as the starting\ndate for widespread strikes which\ncould cripple United States copper\nproduction.\nJoining in the threat to strike\nfor higher wages and broadened\ninsurance and welfare programs\nwere the Independent International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers, which claims 80,000 members, and the Metals Trade's Council\nrepresenting all 11 A.F.L. unions in\nthe copper industry.\nMajor nonferrous metals prices:\nCopper\u201424.50 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign, 27.50 cents, New\nYork.\nI Lead\u201417 cents a pound, New\nYork: 16.80 cents, St. Louis. Foreign\n21.50-22.50 cents, nominal, Gulf of\nMexico ports.\nZinc\u201417.50 cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis: 18.25 cents, New York.\nForeign, 29 cents up,'nominal, Gulf\nof Mexico ports.\nAluminum\u201419 cents a pound, ingots, shipping point. Pigs, 18 cents.\nNickel\u201456.5 cents a pound, electrolytic cathodes, Port Colborne,\nOntario, U.S. duty included.\nSilver\u201490.16 cents an ounce, New\nYork; 78.5 pence, London.\nTin\u2014$1.03 a pound, New York.\nin such numbers.\nPitcher plants were .plentiful on\nthe bog borders,. So, on many a\nmoss-covered, rotting log Tind\nstump, were sundew plants. Both\nspecies are of the carnivorous kind,\ntrapping insects by W;Iy ways, en\nConservative Cabinet Saturday won\nwhat amounted to a vote of confidence. The National Assembly bal-\nlotied 390-222 to postpone indefinitely an opposition reiuest to debate\nthe make-up of the Cabient.\nPleven had presented his Cabinet\nTito Thanks U. S. for\nAid in Hour of Need\nBRIONI, Yugoilavla, Aug, 12\u2014\n(AP) \u2014 Premier Tito formally\nthanked the United States Friday\nfor It, aid In Yugoslavia's \"hour\nof need,\"\nAt -ceremonies here marking\nthe end of the $100,000,000 American anti-starvation food assistance\nprogram, Tito also warned that\nYugoslavia \"must be cautious\"\nagainst an Invasion by the Russian-led Comlnform this year.\nNOTICE\nNakusp Laundry & Dry Cleaners\nwill be closed from the 15th to 31st of August for\nSTAFF HOLIDAYS\n\u2014Ellen ond Ken Highland\ntangling them beyond escape, and to President Vincent Auriol earlier\nin due course absorbing them for j after an all-night pquabble over who\n'\" ' would get what job, *\nThe Cabinet:\nPremier: Bene Pleven; 'Vice-Premier and Minister of Defence and\ninternational conferences, Georges\nBidault; Vice-Prenver and Finance\nMinister \u2014 Rene Mayer; Foreign\nMinister\u2014Robert Schuman; Minister of State\u2014Henri Queuille; Interior\u2014Charles 'Brune; Justice\u2014Edgar\nFaure; Armed Forces \u2014 Maurice\nBourge-Aunoury; Education \u2014 Andre Marie; Foreign Trade\u2014Pierre\nFlimlin; Argiculture\u2014Paul Antier;\nBudget\u2014Pierre Courant; Veterans\n\u2014Emmanuel Temple; Health-Paul\nRibeyre- Posts, Telegraphs and\nTelephones\u2014Joseph Laniel; Overseas France\u2014Louis Jacquinot; Public Works\u2014An toine Pinay; Reconstruction\u2014Eugene Claudius-Petit.\nnourishment,\nThe professionally-led amateur\nnaturalists were students at the annual Summer Nature School sponsored by the Federation of Ontario\nNaturalists, and their trip was once\nagain an outstanding success thoroughly appreciated by the more\nthan 50 students.\nAt the time the writer vi?ited the\nnature camp, nearly 100 bird spe-\nt cies  had been  identif'ed,  and  no\nJ less than 250 species of flowering\nplants and graceful ferns. Included\n'in the teaching staff..were Professors A. F. Coventry and T, F\". Mc-\nIlwraith for birds; Dr. J. H. \"Sop'er\nfor advanced botany, and Dr. Helen\nSawyer Hog^, for astronomy. All\nwere from the-University of Toronto: ...\ngypf lo Cancel\nTreaty, Aug. 25\nCAIRO, Egypt, Aug. 12 (AP)\nThe newspaper Al. Ahram said\nSaturday Egypt will cancel Its\nmust disputed treaty with Britain\nAug. 25. The treaty was signed\nAug. 26, 1936.\nAl Ahram said Egyptian Foreign\nMinister Mohammed Salah El Din\nnow la preparing a statement for\nthe Parliament denouncing 'the\ntreaty.\nThe paper said Nationalist\ngroups are preparing celebrations\nfor the cancellation of the treaty\nwhich Britain garrisons the Suez\nCanal.\nNaval Engineer Says Raindrops\nBy ROBERT E. GEIGER I\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 A navy j\nengineer says raindrops pack the\npunch of an atomic bomb., |\nDrop by drop, he says, they arc\nblasting North America into the sea. |\nW. D. Ellison says floods occur\nand farm land is damaged by rain\nbecause most soil conservation is\naimed at preventing damage from |\nrunning water, with dams, terraces\nand contour plowing. ..'.,.,\nEllison says the emph__sis should\nbe placed on preventing rain from\nstriking earth with full force.\nEven in a gentle rain, he said, the\nmillions of drops in one storm\nstrike earth with the combined force\nof a bomb.\nThe remedy, according to Ellison, \u25a0\nis a simple one. It is to keep the |\nland covered heavily with grass,\ncrops, brush, trees, evpn weeds.      J\nHe has close-up, Slow-motion mov-j\ning pictures showing how blades of i\nplant life break rain's full force.!\nEach drop is scattered into many |\ntiny droplets. They trickle gently\ndownward t_fthe roots of plants and\nthence into the soil. Eventually they\nreach nature's great underground\nstorage reservoirs and may be held :\nthere for use in a day of drought,\nEllison says. , ,\nHe estimates that in the great\nplains country it takes from 2000\nto 3C00 pounds of grass on each acre\nto protect range lands from raindrop damage. A great deal of this\nland has less than 1000 pounds of\ngrass per acre today.\nHis experiments indicate that after land is covered with from 2000\nto 3000 pounds of grass per acre it\nhas reached almost maximum protection from rain.\nEllison believes the grass cover\non pastures could be increased sufficiently if fewer livestock were allowed on them for a season or .two,\nproviding moisture conditions-, in\nthe meanwhile were good.\nOn other lands, where crops are\nraised, Ellison says if more care\nwere taken to keep the ground covered at all times of the year it\nwould make a .great difference in\nwater run-off during storms.\nIf crops can't be kept on land at\nall times of the year he says the\ntrash from previous crops, such1 as\nstubble from wheat and stalks from\ncorn, should be left on the surface\nand.not plowed under.\nCoast Teacher Conquers Pupils'\nSlow Reading of Printed Words\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 \"Word\nblindness,\" or the inability to read\nintelligently, is being conquered by\na Vancouver high school teacher.\nThe strange affliction long has\nbeen a secret enemy of education,\nentirely distinct from the capacity\nto read and write. J.\" H. Sutherland's special course in English at\nthe McGee High School has given\nhundreds of pupils, mostly about\n15 years old, the ability to read\neffectively for the first', time in\ntheir lives.\nIntelligence quotients have been\nknown to leap 30 points after the\ncourse. Wilh their new ability to\nlearn, formerly \"stupid\" students\noften become class leaders.\n\"Word blindness\" is such -an incredible, disorder that Mr. Sutherland has difficulty convincing many\nparents that it actually exists. They\nask why intelligent children who\nhave gone to school 10 ears cannot\nlearn to read, and, if (hey cant'\nread, how they ever get into high\nschool. -\nMr. Sutherland explains that the\nterm \"word-blindness\" is a misnomer. About 30 per cent of all\nchildren are \"sound-learners.\"\nTheir memory of the printed word\nis associated in their minds with\nthe sound instead of the picture.\nMEMORY IS KEY\nj They cannot recognize words of\n'any complicated structure and can-\ninot learn the difference between\n\u25a0words of similar structure. Thus\n(ihe entire meaning of most sentences is lost to then).\nI Instruction is comparatively\nsimple compared to the startling\nresults. Mr. Sutherland usually\nenlists aid of advanced,pupils who\ni sit with new class members and\nhelp them concentrate on breaking\ndown difficult words into syllables.\nI Words are repeated with increasing speed until they form a sound\nI picture in the pupils' minds. They\n'take dictation with every difficult\nword carefully sounded.\nLater they gather in small groups\nand read to each other or write\nsentences on the blackboard, explaining the meaning of sentences.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive-Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St. Phone 361\nHungarian Family\nTHANKSGIVING, OCT. 8\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12 (CP)\u2014Mon\nday, Oct. 8, waa designated as\nThanksgiving Day In an official\nproclamation published today In\nthe Canada Gazette.\n\u00abct-\nMOISTS ONLY'\nv\nIi*\nsT\/-^:;-'\nGOLF ENTHUSIASTS can't be .topped no\nmatter where they go. Three member, of 408\nPhotographic Squudron, R.C.A.F, on detachment\nat Yellowknlfe, N.W.T., are \u00abhown at the entrance\nto the Yellowknlfe Golf Club. A nine-hole course\ncarved from the rock, .and and eerub bush and\nusing a crashed Dakota for a clubhouse, It at least\n3^M\ngives the golfer a chance to try out his' swing.\nF.O. Dave Munroe, left, of Vancouver; F.O. Freddy\nTuplihg, right, of Toronto, and P.O. Jim Fitzsimmons of Lindsay, Ont,, are three who recommended the course for the next \"Canadian Open\" tournament\u2014Central  Press Canadian.\nCUTLER'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 Years' Experience\nPROMPT   SERVICE\nBTJDAPEST, Aug. 12 rArt-Geza\nand Josef Szucs, 56-year-old twins\nand prominent leaders in the Hungarian Jewish community, clasped\nhands and leaped to their deaths\nSaturday. Several hours earlier an\n84-year-old aunt who was living\nwith the committed suicide by taking poison.\nThe broihers threw themselves\nfrom the third floor of their Budapest apartment. Reason for the three\nsuicides could not be ascertained\nBoth men had served as lawyers\nfor the Anglo-Hungarian bank.\nGeza resigned a short time ago as\nHungarian chairman of the Joint\nAmerican-Jewish Relief Organization and became director of the social services seel lon of the Budapest Jewish community. Josef was\ndirector of ihe National Bureau of\nHungarian Israelites.\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nThe Communist regime in Hungary has been renorted evicting\nthousands of alleged\" undesirables\"\nfrom their homes in Budapest presumably to detention camps elsewhere in the country. Most are from\nthe once influential upper and\nmiddle classes. Many were reported\nJews.\n\"fry Our\nRoyal Pat.\nPastry Flour\nFor  Better  Baking  results\nPHONE 238\nELLISON MILLING &\nELEVATOR COMPANY LTD.\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nLONDON (CP)-In an address to\na convention of the Association for\nMaternity and Child Welfare. Princess Elfzabeth noted that at the beginning of the century 154 babies\nof every 1036 died during\" their\nfirst year. This year the rate is less\nthan 30 per 1006.\nYOUR DOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nIS SAFE IN OUR HANDS\nGRADUATE  PHARMACIST\n,   PURE CHEMICALS\nPRICES MODERATE\nCity Drug Co.\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34, Day\u2014807-R, Night\nBOX 460\n25<?q\nOff\nT SHIRTS\nSWIM\nTRUNKS\nSTRAW\nHATS\nThe balance of our\nstock of T-Shirts,\nSwim Trunks ond\nStraw Hats at a saving of 25%.\nEmory's\nTHE MAN'S .STORE\nOSLO   (CP)   \u2014 Prime  Minister\nGerhardsen   has   invited   Britain'.* !\nPrime Minister and Mrs. Attlee to\nvisit Norway in August. If the International   situation   permits,   Mr. '\nand Mrs. Attlee will sail  o.i a British frigate to Bergen nnd then journey to Oslo through the fjords and I\nby  road.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's  Radiator Shop\n361 Ward St. Phone 63\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service)\nPhone 1302\n446 Ward St\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR'TELEPHONE  LINE\nWEST  KOOTENAY\nSTEAM  LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St,\nPhone 327\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n\u2022 VISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 141\nNELSON, 8. C.\nStarting\nToday\nOur Plant Will Be\nClosed\nfor\n2 Weeks\nDuring Staff\nHolidays\nOFFICE\nWill Remain\nOPEN\nto accommodate those\nwishing to pick up\ncleaning or to leave\nclothes for cleaning\nafter our holiday\nperiod.\nPLANT OPENS\nMONDAY, AUG. 27\nPHONE288\nEmpire\nDry\nCleaners\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_08_13","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\/1.0426035","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1951-08-13 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1951-08-13 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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