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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":" W^^WW^i\nV '\u25a0-.   '\u25a0<.,\/\u25a0 \u25a0-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022' \u25a0      i \/.-;..        .'-,.-      . \u25a0    .   - \u25a0\nWindermere-Lartleau\nSurvey Sought for\nTrans-Canada Route\nWould Give Revelstokc-Calgary    ,\nLink Avoiding Big Bend, Rogers Pass\nSnow, Advocates Tell Joint Meet\n(By Siqtf Reporter),.      \u2022 '\n* TROUT iAKE CITY--A Tfisoluton calling for ah im-\n\u25a0firietiiate .survey pf-.a route*' between the Windermere aiid\n; Lardesii valley- as; part of the Ti_ns-Caiu-da; Highway?, was\n, gidopted here Sitntiay., .,-     \u25a0'-.''  . -;\nIt was endorsed by about 40 representatives of North\nLardeau Chamber, of Cbmmerce, the Lardeau arid Distriot\nfBoard of Tr,ade,;,\"Sai8lo -Board ;of :Ti?ade. and' Nelson Chamber\n,of Commerce, at a' meeting in\nthe Trouf Lake Hotel here.\nSee also story on page 3.7 ,\nSevelstoke was to have sent rep-\nIresentatlves, but rehegej in favor of\nthe Rogers Pass route, for the .Big\nBend portion of the-Trans-Canada\nhighway!in the event of flooding\n,\u00abf a Western portion of that route.\nthrough. construction of \u25a0 a storage\nllam. 7      \\     .\"\u25a0'    -\nThe\" resolution'dratted here-Sunday is backed, by a: raft of points\nIn its fayor.    . \u25a0'.-!\n\u25a0 The district Board Of Trade and\n(Chamber'of Commerce' men and\nwomen pointed but that relocation\nefvthe highway via, Revelstoke, the\nLardfeau and the Windermere\nthrough the Earl Grey Pass, would\nbe firstly, economical, A , .',-,\nThere would- be'few bottlenecks\nsuch as ferries, and not .the excessive snowfall, of the Rogers Pass.\nCross Canada.motorists'would have\nmagnificent' scenery?     7     .7\nAnd: above all, such a relocation\nof the Trans'-Cfmada highway would\nbe of great.commercial benefit to\nthe .Kootenay Lake and Lardeau\ndistricts for marketing goods? in\n'Calgary. ', \"\",- \u25a0 -\u25a0\nA network of roads -and trails already-exists forauch a rpute.\nTreeing the propoied route from\nEast to Welti It would follow the\nBanff-Windermere highway from\nthe Alberta herder (Mount Eiien-\nhower) to Radium, wind up: Toby\nCreek to theEarl Gcey summit,-*,\ndlitaneo of SO twites \u2022 .'already In\nroad.  From the summit to the\nmouth  of -Hamll   Creek are 26\nmllei Df pack'trail, the lost three\nofwhloh are mlnlno roadi, Then1\nIt would go along the new- road,.\n1? to Beaton on the exlrtlng country rolid, then a lond connection\nbetween beaten. and. Revelstoke\nfwould he.required. '  ?.-,\u25a0:   ,'-'?.-,\n'\u25a0'Jt tnlght have to go via: Glacier\n'- Jreefc ihstki-M- Ha'mll' Cieet;\u00ab\n#i|J' wioiild- be -for the' enillsie-fiflk'.ii*.'\nidecide,\"' Frank, Abey,,:presiderit: of\n^tardeau DistrictrBoanl-ef Tr^de\nand chaifman,. feld?the, meeting. \u2022\n^i^'-AaMit^it^^ti y\nThe delegates made it quite clear\nthst local boards acquainted with,\nUie: terrain for the route, want a\nvoice if and when -a survey is made.\n'.They told of the strange case of\nIhe' Argenta to Johnson's Landing\niote road currently under cohstruc-\n!jbn. Government engineers ' had\naid it could n6t .be built for less\nhim ?135,00O-a cost- that public\nvorks minister Gaglardi thought\nlid hot warrant. construction.: The\n.ardeau board got,busy and found\ni Kaslo contractor who could do\nhe'job for-$3I,b0b,;?\nilins contractor? with a crew\" of\nhree, had pushed through four\nniles of the road from Argenta\nJnce early June, Snd' expected to\nidmplete the remaining 2V4 - miles\nna month.\nIts surface, J. A. Cochrane of Kas-,.\no said,, is as good as. that of thii\niardeau. td Gerrard road, built on\nhe Md railway bed, arid speeds of\nletween 30 and 35 miles an Hour\nin he attained. ... -,- \" ;,, \/''.?' -\nDelegates also called the govern-\nnent's Muff on a- government resort that nine miles of rock bluff\nletween Comaplix and Arrowhead\nvould be a barrier to f-oad con-\ntruction between Beaton and Rev-\nslstoke. People who had seen the\n:ountry told the meeting there was\nniy a half mile stretch of bluff.\nMr. Cochrane said he had spoken\nIdth men who were thoroughly ac-\nluainted with the Earl Grey, Pass\nountry and whoTwere convinced it\nrould not be difficult to drive a\noadthrough.\nRAN8-CANADA\nIONNECTION\nJohn Learmonth of the Nelson\n!hamber of Commerce said he'd\nike to see the boards, work ior im.\nCanada   highway   would   benefit\nSoutheastern Rs C. greatly? A:\n\u25a0'..A: -letter from- the Revelitoke\n.   Board advised the Joint meeting\n\u25a0 that It expected word at any time\n'\u25a0 oij- whither or-not the  Rouen\nPan route for the Trans-Canada\nhighway' was feasible.  It stated\nthat hoard was\"fed up with delay\noh? settling a route, and would,\nsupport any proposal, even the\nroute south through the Lardeau,\nIf It could be gotten qul9kiy.\nThe boards and chambers which\nbacked the move, for the preliminary survey, and 'Windermere Board\nof Trade, which? Is also behind the\nproposal, 'may get publicity, in Alberta for their plan.\nKen Llddell, Calgary Herald stift\nwriter, is 'expected to visit Kaslo:\nat diamond jubilee time in August\nand is interested in boosting, the\nroute, E. J. Harris, former'district\nmining mah now living in Calgary,\nhas written to the Lardeau board, .,\nIn the.meantime, the resolutions\n-will, have, gone to provincial and\nfederal works ministers, ML,As and\nMPS of ridings involved, and- provincial government public works\nengineers. The Lardeau board will\nact as a clearing house tor corres;\nponderice. -\u25a0:'\u25a0'.    '-a ,    ..\nHost to the meeting was the 30:\nmember North Lardesu Chamber of\nCommerce, .Whose membership is\nfrom Beatjh, Trout Lake City and\nCamborne.     .\nNelsdn representatives were John\nLearmonth; P. H. Hdskins; J.' A.\nBracken, H, D. Harrison and Dr.\nG. B.' Barrett.   .      .-':..-.,\nResuscifalor for\nNebonHospifal\n\u25a0itjcroRiA <eP)-r-*he;B. e. gov-\nemtaent, has 'gVanted' $16,300.: ip? '21\nhospitals to.-help, defray gosbi-iot\n'^ft^WoW'-dfiequipmen^\npartment qf. Health arid Welfare announced\", today.   \u25a0'\u2022:'\u25a0 '\n-. Thi grants, with the Monday purchase price in brackets, included:\n.. Seritlcton Hospitals new?hdspi)al'\nequipment J30pp,^ ($1000) i Vernon\nJubilee Hospitaii oxygen tent,- type-,\nwrlteri, fracturi bed 42250 ($730),\nKoOtenay 'Lake...General-'\" Hospital,\nNelson, resuseitator $800 ($300)7',..'\nColumbia Second\nRise Over Peak\nThe giblumbia-iRlver is,dropping\nagaln^acco'rding; |*o West Kootenay\nPower and Light? comparty Monday.\nIt reached a' peak of 32.31 feet at\nTrail Saturday,? ,fell to 32.08 feet\nSunday and was 31.86 feet Monday.\nLevel Friday was 32.20 feet, a :23\nfoot risp from Thursday's reading\nqf 31.97 feet.  '   :* \u25a0 .   '\nPeak this year was 36.58 feet, recorded in. Trail June 18. The river\n-then dropped until July 11, when\nit began its second rise of the\nseason.'. -       ?\u2022..'\u25a0\nRECOUNT DENIEP\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Judge\nl*uce Boyd Monday .rejected\napplication for a judicial recount jn\nNorth. Vancouver riding arising\nfrom the June 9 British Columbia\nelection..\nApplication for the recount was\nmade by Liberal Vf'. R. MacDougall,\nwho- lost, to Social Crediter George\nTomllnson.,\nJudge Boyd based his decision on\nthe ground that 'provisions of the\nElection Act had not been observed,\nHe ruled a recount could not be\nhild because in some cases ballots\n01\/\n$m\u00a7\n\"lYUTHBRcfORKAST\n..Kootenay: Sunny and warm, Tuesday. Winds: light. JLow and high af\nCranbrook ahd Crescent Valley 45\nand 80. , - - - \u25a0.;\u25a0'\u25a0,?   ':,->\u25a0\";\u25a0'''-\nVol.'52\n?jtoSON,;B.-C.,7CANA_AYT*J)BSDAY M6BNING,?JULY 21i-:|953\nNo. 75\n\u25a0Tuckers' Strike in Ontario\nSlows Transport of Goods\nA French fashion model, Christiana Mortol, stands besldo the'\ntrophy she won at Long Beach, Calif., when the was named the\nmost beautiful of all the- glrli competing for the title of  Mill\nUniverse. She wears her mantle and orown and holds the scopfer\nsymbolic of hor regal reign.\u2014(*-P Wlrephoto) 7.7\nKremlitx i^titUcfe to;\nIdvement of theVroadi south from had npt been returned to their\ntevelstoke through the Lardeau. original envelopes after- they were\nL'direct connection with the Trans-1 tallied election night.\n\u25a0 Eddy .Gilmore bl-The Associat-:\ned: press staff has spent 11 years\nln the Soviet? Urtion. He has? had\n. ample opportunity to observe the\nstatus of religion there  Here is\n.. :'hia ..'report, 7-; .\/.nv7A,,vv;-V\n'#ABiS?\"(Af-):'\u2014\"-Since ~:\u00a7ISln's\ndeath there has been' no, nqtioeabie\nchange in the Soviet governments\nattitude toward tfifT church, 'or ih\nihe church's., attitude toward, the\ngovernment. . . . 7 7 V ;. A\n, .There-may be some-chance of the:\nformer, - but? it'9 highly unlike1* that\nthe; Russian Orthodox .Church \u2014 in\nRussia \u2014 is. going to rebel* or, presis\nits case for independence..?    ,\nReligion is: deep in the hearts of\nmillldns? of goylet- citizens and\n\u25a0Stalin, during;, the' V#i discovered\nthis. More important te Vhim, he\nlearned how te control it. \u25a0 . \u25a0\u25a0.\n., He set up-a government agency,\nfunctioning under the Council of\nMinisters, of? which: he, was chairman, to supervise - the, church.\nSome call it the Commissariat, of\nGod.' , '.7,7.. .'\u25a0\u25a0.?:.-,\u25a0 f. -'['ti..\n\u25a0 Large numbers of;-,priests,..1and\nprelates of the Russian Orthodox\nChurch, as everyone knows^.lost\ntheir - lives during' and after the\nrevolution. Thousands-, of ethers\nwere sent-;to prison,-.or to exile.\n-There were churches, everywhere.\nThere still \"are, This-'does not. mean\nthey are operating-today,, ...\nTO MANY USES Y f,i.fj\n. Sbme haye beeri converted into\nliving quarters? some into \"movie\nhouses and.some.into grain storage\nplaces, or buildings connected,-with-\ntractor stations.', -'-   -A:'\nIn Moscow not far from the two\napartments which tpecupied \u2014 ope\nfor several years, the other for;\nyear and a Half \u2014 stood ancient,\ndilapidated churches. A sort- of\nmachine shop is located in one. The\nother, a magnificent cathedral once,\nis: a great, gaunt-lnilk, vacant and\nsagging at ?the, sidesi .windows\nknocked out and holes in the root\nIt's,.difficult to,:,say., what made\nStalin decide te let the churches\nopenly operate, It couldfhave been\nthe success which the Germans, had\niri this field, particularly in the\nUkraine-and in'Syelorussia. That's\none thing, the.-invaders' seemeH te\ndo-right in-RussiS. \u25a0 '\",\"'7,-:.,:,\nIn any case, Stalin set -UP? the\nCommissariat for: God. Tho church\nleaders -t-Such as flpuld.be.scraped\ntogether, -4 .went into a- meeting\n*nd-before loiig'W6:ha3^a Patriarch,-\nmetropolitans, deacons -and' priests,\nCHU0tirtejo open, tju**'..;\u2022.;,,' ;f\n<3)U?thek lit. up. apd; operated; The\naccord was pretty solid The\nPatriarch praised Stalin- publicly,\nobndemned Hitler, muster th'i'party\nline about the: absence of .a'secorfd\n\u25a0iroftt and- 'pretty s'dbh - won?- thi\n\"Oi-derof Lenin.\" : ' 7 7.7\n'i But the bulk of the congrekation\nWas, and still is today made up of\nwomen, middle-aged ahd the , old\nones. The Young Conutiunist League\nfrowns severly on religlon7A black\nmark goei'up against*;any,member\nfound having anything? to do with\nit,-,-    -   -       .'\" .;-,.<-\n\u2022Kit $e^^\nTEACHER 8HORTA6E-    -%';l\nSYDNEYy- N.S,: (CP) - itany fit\nNova:Scotia's. 2a00.?rural'arid village\nschools, will hot bpen'lh September\nbecause of .the -teacher.' shortage;, i.;\nFrank \\3Iasgow, presiden|. of - the\nNova Scotia Teachers .Unlon.;,said\nMonday.\" He reported vacancies-'in\nnon-urban -schooIaVrang Jiip-'to, 'a\nhigh of *I7 per cent in-Guysbdro\ncounty.\/-     .- ''.'i-.-'.'-.-..' 'h'ti<: ':.'.'\u25a0\u2022'\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIM\nKsfllOWNA LAIS\nMiiss Canada *S3\n: Z BJraLTOGibN,fQhtf.;(c^)''--\nHazel - eyed    Ka'thieeh \" -A h n'\nArchibald, 19, of Kelo)\u00abmai'B?C.i7,\n.Mohdsy night.was chosen Miss\n, ^Canada of 1953 from among 15 .\n.'eiitriesin the'b'eaufy'ahd'taleht! '\ncontest Held at a .-night club in\n'.(this suburban: Hamiltiih''town? .\nKathleen,   whose   sparkling\npersonality woli unanimous?ap-\n,proval of music critic Deems\n;:Taylpr and bis fellow judges,-\nbrolte into- happy tears' whenv\n' -the:' shimmering crbjvnf .was1\nplaced on'heir dark brown'hair\nby last year's winneri Marilyn\n'Reddiokof-Agihcburl'fpnl'' ,i'.,\niiiiuiiiiuiliiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniliiiiiuiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n^ife^Jjf \u25a0 titi'yZ\nOnly o Seal    '\/\nKAMLOOPS,. B> C: (CP) '\u2014\n'Residents- of, nearby, Shuswap.\n-lake are disappointed today.\n.Just when it looked like they\nhid :a'\"niqhs.ter!' to lure visitors '\u25a0\nto the mountain lake some 220\nmiles, northeast of Vancouver,\n4: csfupleoi disbelieving fishermen have identified the .beast,\na fcommbn brown-haired,\n; seal7','   ,  \u201e, .\/   :   \u2022\u25a0;\nThe, fishermen,; Don. Leady '\n. and Bert Hailnis, both of Kam-\ni loops said the- ,ShUsivap lake\n\/monster- Sunday. Its head was\nabpve   fy\/iter   and   the   body\nV plainly, vlilbie; They -identified\nit as a seal, and said it had a\nfish in its mouth.\n.:','-,,Tlsheriei,:,offi<ii,als .said! today .\nthe presence .of a seal in the\nlake would ixplain the reports\n- of mutilated'fish!'They are Urt-\n\u25a0-.able:to,explain .how a,seal-got\n'irito the lake \"unless somebody\n.dumped.a pet seal these.'.'...  .\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nlojIBojFouiid\nIn Wheal Field\nVMapGREGOR, then, \u2022 (CP)-Search\nparties-early Monday found avfour,-\nyear-pld' MacGr'egpr-.'d'^trict.vbi'y\nalive in a wheat field,, about 12\nhours after he had been reported\nmiSsingih. this jib'uth'-'cehtral Man-\nitoba.region 60. miles west of Winnipeg..-    y.y;.\\y. a...; y,^y.:.,\n'...\"rheV.childiV.lidwin\/.MacDonald,\nmi-^t Mr,[^^tim^.aeetoc>illa&r\n\"Donald, Vw.ahdc.re.d.finto .jfie, dense\nhu^:'area'?iin'!i-playingTlnVaischooi\nyard; ty wasilast.seen around 7 p..m,\nSunday\n- \u25a0RCMP.said-(he-b6y was found in\nlair ..condition' althpiigh'.' siitfering\nffom mosquito bites and co;d,\n\"They, Said he wandered so^ie distance before settling-down-to sleep\nin. the wheat field s mije. north .ot\nthe school. '-*,-\u2022' Y\nHe apparently wis awakened,by\na iearih' plane, piloted by Jack\nbanipbell .'of VEiiraris,'. Man,,;,|lying.\nlh'w:6i'er?thie?dlstrict.'The7bqy,.stobd\nup. arid .was. sighted .by'a search\nparty? he'aded by police and: his,\nfatheiAA police dog picked up' the\nscerit\" earlier? and led the party of\nsome\"'MO .volunteers in-the right\n\u25a0direction. A- '?\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0 , \/\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'{,\n\u25a0'. The,search had been quickly or-,\ngahlzcd as. district presidents' recalled that only last Week five-year-\nild Geraidine, Hiiggah7of Winnipeg\nhad'' been fbUftd dead, after \"being\nLONDON: (ReUteW)\u2014 Ten reso*\nlutions demanding 'that -Britain\nbreak laway . from U.S. \"domination\"1 in foreign policy have been\nsent in for debate at the Labor-party's' annual. Conference. :\u2022'.,! V \u25a0. -\u25a0\u25a0\nThe, conference, which threatens\nto -a produce bitter clashes1 between\nrival' factions,' begins Sept,.28 at\n.the seaside \"state' 'of Margate.;?\nThe' resolutions,, published. Monday,- ! hiciude \u2022' one. from a London\ndistrict labpr hrapd) which claims;\n''We. are isat becomihg' a satellite\nstate-of \"America?' -' [\u25a0.'\nProposals on foreign' policy range\n.frbm'ettong, ppppsltipn to the re-\narmameht of 'Germany :to calls tor\nan immediate'\u201emeetlng of die,: five\nbig. Royiiers,, including. Communist\nChina, arid admission of Red China\nto the united-Nations, X\nResolutions also express concern\nat.-\"racial discrimination\" in Africa apd urge: that, self-government\nfor-Brltish-colonies be speeded up.\nSey'er'al resolutions ask ''the .withr\ndraiyal of7U.,S..forces from air\nbases'In Britain?        ; ','.'   -.;'\u2022\nEarly Relurns-\nShow lEveryone\nFavors Bridge\nEverybody wants a bridge. In a\none-man iiiryey conducted, hy\nLo^iiji Hanic of.;Nelson, 89 rephes\nhave heen reported to date. Of\nthese only nine are opposed to a\n; toil f bridge hut' riot'- aj(aih\u00bbt,,a\nbridge, yitere |t Government' con-'\n'ltructedi'7..7 Y A.- , \"Z   '.\u25a0.\"''''\nthis ii the second Survey -made\n;i\u00bbeeii.8ry. to .p.^sejit;: tSifjsaie.iio\ntHe\" goyernment-' ,A 'prBVloUi\niuevey   m*de r' In ? Nelion'\u25a0\u201e' tlle-\n7trlo't;.ih'oWed; overwhelming public 'support'in favor of a bridge\nacroai. the,, on'e-quortei-;mile span\nof Kootepay  Lake'i West; Arm.\n' Earlier? thii' :ye'aij, Toronto \"bridge\n(ililldiri eltlitiatdd'the cost at ap-\nprbxlmately,$1.5 trillion. Cob'ponii\n.frorii the'0\u00bbHy N|wii asking \"Are\n'Ydti'Jn ? Fkyijpf ofV'a Bridge!\" are\ncontinuing-to pour-In.\n500 Drivers Idle; Pickets Set Up\nRoad Blocks; Turn Back 200 Trucks     a\n\" ByiThe Canadian Press\n, Plybg squsiils of strikihg<(Jriverfi:-patrolled:some;highi.\nways in- southwestern Ontario Monday as the wage walkout\nof some 1500 truckers got into full swing. Thousands of\ndollars in. goods w(\u00bbe temporarily tied u^.\nfi The flying5siiua(ii-^--'picket^bperating in,a fjeet 4\u00bb\u00a3\ncars '.!-*- 'dashed back and f 6nth in the Hamilton area 'to turn\npVck more; than.200 trucks entering and leaving; the,'cityivlij\nother areai,: pickets^set up? smajl road blocks and flagged\n;d4)wn.trucl(3;to'<:()ax drivers to brake their -trucks ahd'-leave\ntheir loads. \u25a0 7 Y'\nThe striking men are members ot\nthe-:-International .'Brotherhood of\nTeamstersA(AFL>TLC).. They, quit\nmidnight Sunday'despite alest-min-:\nUte.request by Labor, Mioiiterof\nOntario Daley to stall the walkout,\n(3nly companies that carry, freight\nbetween.cities are affected., - -\nThere' are about 3500 transport\n\"drivers in the southwestern section\nofithe, province.' However, many, of\nthem,are not affiliated .with the\nTeamsters' Union. Others arevnon-1\nunion.workers. A\nThe striking drivers turned out\nin the hundreds to picket transport\ncompanies arid main highways.\n' One iHcldentoccurred. A big truck ,\ndriver took a swing at a' plcketer as\nhe' leaped: on the transport's running board. No one was injured.\nAbout 980 memberi of the union's\nHamilton local? which ' takes in\ntruckers in liondoh? Kitchener, Gait,\nBraritfbrdf'.and Woodstock, and 860\nworkers, at, Windsor are involved in\nthe strike, The7 Windsor' local in-'\neludes drivers at Sarnia and Chatham?'-' \u25a0     \u25a0  ' '\u2022\"     , i ,',''\"\nThe Ontario strike';ooincided with\na-walkout of 2200 truck drivers in\nthe Buffalo, N, Y., area.\" That.walk-\nput tied up .freight shipments In a\n50-mile radius.-About 150. companies\nwere closed.   .  ,?.'\nPOLICE E8CORT\u25a0'. \u201e.:,..-     ,.,'..\n. At  Hamilton,  picket  line  boss\n\u25a0fJoward\u25a0'\u25a0 Bigsoni jaid most of. the\ntrucks- which .attempted to enter \u2022\n^amiltori :_^ei;e .\u201e ?tpj)ped\u00bb \u25a0 without \u25a0\ntroUfite Twenty-tWo transports were\nallowed-'itbV'p'aSs' thrbilgh the' lines'\nwheripolibecrulser'siwere called in\nto escort them. The vehicles were\ntarrying bonded loads, perishable '\ngoods. pr liquor. A       '\nU. S. RENEWS\nF00D0EEER\nWXSHINGTON (API:-President\nEisenhower Monday renewed' his\nofiet;toVend food:directly to' Soviet-\noccupied Eastern Germany if the\nSoviets will reconsider their refusal-\nlO'dilj's ago.to permit .it. \u25a0',\u25a0\"\u25a0'.    '\n_her. White House made public\na letter trbmithe; president to?ChW\ncellor Konrad Adenauer of Western\n.GeTmdny\/'dater. Monday?'in-which\nEisenhower said the United States\nwilj continue to make clear-to the\nSoviet government that the 'offer\nof foodvyas' motivated solely vby.\nhumanitarian impulses and that the\nfood lis available if that government\nWishes; to permit'its entry Into the\nSovleti-spne 'of .occupation.\"\nBBR)W(Ai>)-. West Berlin expanded M, food .relief ior' hungry\nBast Berliners .Monday,,.. \u2022\n; lie.spite-.MoscbwJs 'refusal .'to ad;\nmit.$15,000,000?Worth.of A*erican\naid into, restive East-Gemnany, West\nBerliners found several ways to\nslip {food1, past the; Jrori - Curtain\" ib\n^rielr neighbors under Soviet rule.\n-: Commteiist officials;;,embarrassted\nbyfthe.-'eMerne'ss -with which tljeit\npeople'apoaifedjijharity frbm.\"Wesj$'>\nCeHS.isaPW^-'r^lfwW.^^iooJ'\nsupplies\"jw;..r8p|enish the- empty\nshelves1 of'state owned''.stores^ -. '\nMi$$^f||ien$\nScoiiHamboree\n\".SOUTH -MARCH, tOnt. (CP)...-\nThe' second Canadian-Scout .jamboree was .officially opened' Monday\nby Governor-General Massey, :Can-\nada'scHief; scout., i:i??'\n\u2022Under?' threatening , skies,, 2500\niosf-lO da,y?.in, the wilds of north- Scouts, from Vevery province, the\nwestern Ontario?:?,' ?7 United States, Cuba, Italy arid Aus\ntralia .heard Mr.?.W(assey describe\nJob Striither, v      7\nAuthor, Poet Ores\nNE^-YORK ('A^)7\u2014 Jan Struth-\ner, poet andauthorwho was best\n'known -.for .\"her whimsical..novel,\n'Mrs, 'Mlhivef;'1 died Monday of\ncancer\n\" The-52-year-oIdBritlsh'-borhwrit-\n,er Ma'd'been-in ihospital -for -tWo\nweeki. She had undeilgohe an op\n'eration 'two ieari- earlier,'\n\"Iri private life lihe-was Mils. A.K.\nSlaciek, wife of the'.'librarian ,-of\nA-i\u00bbery library at'-Eblumbia Uriiver-\nsityt      \u25a0 f  '     ti    '\nGAPREOL, Oiitv (CP)\u2014Two men\nwcto killed . Mojiday- .when ,'the\ntender andvlocojn'otive of a Canadian National Railways work'train\n-overturned at: IjSilriet,! Seven miles\n.west of,'here,. ^ead are.F. W.. Hm-:\nstead, engineer,! and S. E. Kelly,\nconductor, both t)f-Caprebi: Railway\nofficials :were: unable to. 'give a\nreason,for.tite accident?     '\nscouting arid the jambpree as\nadventureihliyirig.\" ,7.7\n,MaJ:-Gen. D. C. Spry, retiring in\nNovember,as chief executive commissioner, was presented by Mr.\nMassey with the Silver? Wolf .decoration\u2014highest scouting award y\nfor his services, to .scouting.', Gen.\nSpry'. joined the movement: as a\nWolf .Cub in Calgary arid'in turn\nbecame a Scout, King's Scout,\nSquire, Rover Mate and Rover S^a\nScbut.?\"\" -':-'-\u2022 \"\u2022''-' - - \u25a0 '--\nINTEffNAflONAL\nDIRECTOR\nIn Noverhber, he becomes director of-tha^Internatlonal Scout bur-,\neau in London. ;\nAfter: ohoning'the .wCek-long jamboree,^ Mr., Massey, toured four,sub-\ncamps on foot,?ylsitihg the Scouts\nat their campsites;?, .7\n.In.the evening, they',took part in\ncommunity singing and heard an\naddress by Sir. Ian Bolton, president\nof the Scpttish Scout Council? who\nis representing Lord Rbwallan chief\nScout.of. toe.Commbpwealth?\nNew West Kootetiay Open Speedboat Cha^jn^ ^ Wateti,\nf-\\r, V*4\nHereviniiU their finery Md'high^\nfrom top to bottom, arSf'RearDeal-, \"Shrlrnp JBos?t\",and \"8 -BalfYAt.pne stage in thtiracej ,\"3^aU\" p^ei its driyjer-(3Utton';Ms;eari Ik-th'etiientrevaref.showRlwo.of Me^^ la^er craiEt in\nthri 266 cubic inch inbotird cls\u00bbs who Me-hotly pursuing a str^lik of W\u201e^\nflie buoy which shows up as a sittall dark object, centre righl:Tle.'iAfater-_hQW'^-w5fl(W7toW '.- 7- \"'      ;' 1'\" ;;: y-' '\u25a0;\u25a0,'\u25a0;\u25a0\u201e\nJ*MLO\u00a9K^TO\nCANADIAN ENVOY\nTO'VATICAN\n; By richard' diagnaijLJr,-,\nCanadlan.^resi 8taff Writer\nTHE-TFORD MINES, We? (CP)\u2014\nPrime Minister St. Laurent says,\nthe? day will come when' Canada\n'will have an ambassador te the Vatican.  -       ? ,Y,va ',- '\u25a0', '\u25a0\u25a0: '. j:,\n, Speaking In French-in the town\nschool yard to an audience of about\n1500'in this1 asbestos mining,centre\nMonday, Mr, St. Laurent said appointment of an ambassador to the\nVatican cannot be' made' at this\ntime \"because there are still honest\nCanadians who would, interpret this\ngesture, as an insult against their\nreligion.\" A ',\"   ,-\u25a0.-?'\n\"They.are wrong, .and.! might\nadd that if the matter rested only\nwith my- colleagues the appointment! could' be made.' 7'\n:\"But what would be the gbbSVof\narousing a, reltgioUB qltatrel?,\"-    ,:'\nMr. St.. Laurent said:he= feels, the\nday will:come when- the question\nof an ambassador-to'the Vatican\nwill be acceptable to all Canadians.\nThe question of bilingual government checks'was another teat wll\neventually be settled. . .\"\u25a0''        - \u2022\u00bb\nMr., St: Larirent said his gbyernt\t\nrrient is Striving to make ' Canada fjjjjS\nfully autonomous, .Snd so far: many\nsteps had -been taken without causing :quarrels.,' ,     7-;,,;  . .. i,\n' Nelson: \u25a0 Saturdayh-9.82;:, Monday\n^9.40., \u25a0\u25a0i:,.- -'   . \u2022 ? '.--:*\u25a0-\u2022? -\u25a0  .:\nDonald Oordon\nRumored lor\nU.Kl Coni|niss!on\n'lO,NI*ON-,*(CP) \u2014 Published reports- suggested Monday that the\nBrltishrgOWdrnment may invife. Canada's, Donald .Qprdon, to ' succeed\nViscount'Hurcomb as chairman of\nthe Commission, which runs the nationalized inland transport system.'\n: The Daily'Telegraph said Transport-, Minister Alan Lennox-^pyd\nmay invite'a Canadian to head the\ncommission, and' the Daily Express\nsaid it is believed the man in question may' be, Gordon,- Scottish-born\npresident qf the,Canadian National\nRailways7, - - \u25a0 r- 7 .* -;V. !\u2022\n' A, CNR spokesman, here, however,, said today the whole i&ea:\nseemed unlikely. :\ni Lord Hurcomb' retires next,\nmonth. The Commission, comprising-\na 'chalrrna'n arid' fpur Mother mem-:\nhers,' is the -central executive body\nfor Britain's inland transport system, publicly owned since Jain. 1,\nThe Daily Telegraph usually well\ninformed, is the first to say a Canadian' may. be.under consideration.\n; A.transpoft ministry spokesman\ncommented-thatiall-his department\ncprild, say .'was . that' new, appoint-\nriients.are definitely 'under fconsid-\ner'atioh.    ?   77 ,:-'r ;-.'..     '   ' \u2022-.\nAnd jn Tfi^ jp^H^:i->v*\n'LONDON (pe'uten)\u2014Fred Archer li a man who likes to take\nthlngt easy io for the last 20 yean he.hai worked as a live tailor's\n\u2022 dummy; lazing Willfully In itore wlnd$wi, . >:\u25a0 .\nf rod Just stares back at ihe crowds. \"They tickle my sense of\nhumor. I can lip read and know what they are talking about,\" he save.\n\"If'there's a pretty girl around I give her a big wink. That really\nshocks them;\"' .'-   \u25a0-     ','\u25a0,\u25a0':'    ti t    -\nMort of-Fred's Work li-ln furniture stores, lying .In bed or sitting\nin on armchair. He was fined recently for causing an obstruction,\ncrowds blocked the sidewalk. V       ,\nHow,much,does a live dummy earn.? \"A satisfactory amount,\" says '\nFred. \"After all, I'm ,on artist and get'oh artist's salary.\"\n\"   NEW YORK ''(APy\u2014Executive orijer H-587 had good news for\nperspiring city letter carriers:      \u00bb; :  i-.A\nWhen the thermometer -rises; past-'flO it's officially okay for them\nto, take off-their neck ties.        . i -\nGLYNDE, England (Routers)\u2014Bill Freeman, the .local milkman,\nhated the light of farthings, Britain's sltiallost coin worth four to the\npenny;',';, \"V ''\u25a0:\u25a0  : \u25a0' - \u2022:\u2022\u25a0   \u25a0\".>-. .-   ,-. -\nCounting; hli takings every day, BUI: would put the'tiny farthlndii\n, on one tide. They filled a milk bottle,\"then a milk churn and finally\ntwo milk churns. A* ;    A ,.\n\u2022 'When Bill died at 84 ho left his fdrth'lngs'tb the council of this\nSussex village, all 10,963 of them, worth $31.90, The council put.the\nfarthings on show and atked villagers to take pirt In a competition\nto guest how many were,In the pile- \u00ab?      . '   ; . ,   -\nThanks to the farthings BUI hated, Glynde Is going to erect new\ndressing rooms at the local swimming pool with money taken In the\n.competition,' ;.\n-KOGA. Ja^ian (AP)--Pireman' Kojcbi Hirario', 31, Confessed to\npolice Monday how he won those seveh prizes during the past two\nyears for. arriving at the scene first -\u2014'.-He set 'em.:\nJUNEAU, Alaska (AP)'\u2014A Si-pouhd? lO.ounce salmon won top\nprize Sunday In the annual Golden North salmon derby here.\nJack Meiien, the machinist who landed It, also landed a new\near,ai top-prise, The-No, 2 flihwai afH\/a pound .'smaller than the\nwinner,       -: .VA ' '\u2022\u25a0 - -v \u25a0.\u25a0-..\u25a0   ! - - - '.,,\ni\n\u25a0    'ti'-' \u25a0\n  -\u2014\u2014t\u2014 \u2014\nA        ,    , -\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1953\nLast Tlmos Tonight \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00 - 8:27\nTteJ^fni-ilin\nStarts Wednesday at 2:00 p.m.\nA MOTION PlCtlJRE EVENT\nOF THE EIRST MAGNITUDE!\nPrices this engagement\nOnly\nMatinee:   Adults 50*5 Children 3Sti\nEvenings:   Adults 75*i     Children 35ii   (Tax Included)\nDpt-W\nComplete Performance!\nStart 9:00 p.m. and 0:30 p.m.\nShowing Tonight end Wednesday\n\"OUTPOST IN MALAYA\"\nClaudotto Colbert\nCARTOON AND SHORT*\nCOMING THURSDAY AND  FRIDAY'\n\"HAPPY GO LOVELY\"\n' Taohnl(\u00bblor\n10 MILI8 IAST. OF NELSON\nSI\n1\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nD\u00bblvo-Iti Theatre\nCRANBROOK, BA\nLast Time Tonight\n\"Prlhei of PlratM\"\n\u25a0      - John. Derek '\nOne Shew Only \u2014 Approx.\n8:50 p.m.\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCASTi-ECSAR, BiC.       7\nLait Time Tonight\nBarbara Stanwyck-Paul Douglas\nMarilyn' Monroe -.- \u2022\n\"Clash By NlghtV. 8howt at\n7 a>id 9 p.m. ;\nComing Wed., Thursday.,   \"Appointment With \u25a0 Venloe\".    Plui\n\"Craiy Over Honei\" ,\nDAY'S\nCollege\n.  Ideal for Summer Wear\n!  \"Cone\" Corduroy with\nNylon '\nCream - Grey\nBeige -Faded Blue\nPer Pair $10.95\nGODFREYS'\nPHONE \u2014  270 \u2014  BOX\nGet Couricil Support\nVernon Ordered\nTo Non-Resident\nVernon's City Council wai order,\ned recently to lujiply water to a\nresident outside the city limlti. The\norder- wai issued by the Public\nUtilitiesCommission.\nAt a Nelson City Council meeting\nMonday, Vernon sought mpport in\na resolution seeking a change in\nthe Act. \"This is a very serious\nmatter,\" Mayor Joseph Kary said,\nexpressing full support ot the Ver.\nnoh resolution, The water will have\nto be supplied at a \"terrific cost to\nthe city,\" the improvement district\nbeing situated some two miles from\nits? limit-.-\n?'Heferring to the North Shore,\ncouncil felt \"we are in a vulnerable\nposition.\" The resolution will be\npresented to the Union of B.C.\nMunicipalities for endorsation.\nVernon council in-the letter itated\n\"this not only amount! to infringement of our rlghta but could-place\nus in a serioui position from the\npoint of view of water mpply\nihould a large number of such Orders be issued.\" '\n: The :He8lthtJnIt Bylaw whichwillmakrNeisoniypart\nof the Selkirk Health Unit, was giveh-final reading at a City\nCouncil meeting Moncto '        '    ~~ ~\nt>t. H. T, -Lowe, medical health\ndirector told council the unit' is\n!stlll in thO organization stages.\"\nHo also pointed- dtit: that this is,a\n\"local health unit\" and not a provincial clement.\nPermission was granted the ladles' Auxiliary' to the Brotherhood\nof Railway trainmen to hold a picnic et Lakeside ' Park July 28.i-v'V\n\u25a0   --'-.;..-.   '[,-. *    *.:('* \u25a0 \u25a0\n0. AV McpOriald,, Nelson's' fire\nchief will attend a forum on provincial civil? defence fire tactics,\nThe forum will be held at Vancouver August 31 to September 3. A\nletter to council froth, the Deputy.\nCivil Defence Co-Ordlnator stated\nthat a' syndicate bf fire chief! will\nstudy problems Involved in fire\nfighting in relation to civil defence.\n...     *  * *\nCouncil has no money- to repair\na sidewalk on the north side Of the\n800 .block on Victoria Street A, letter from Spencer J. Newell asked\nthat the walk be repaired. \"If It\nbecomei dangerous, we'll close lt,\"\ncouncil has advised Mr. Newell.\n.  .-- ,\u2022; *   .\u2022 ,-7-V.-.-      .   .-\nA request from the Cathedral of\nMary Immapulate. to extend Catholic cemetery boundaries, wes referred to the Parks Department end\nQty Engineer, G. Q. take-for-a report,        y ,:.--;.;   . .'.;,   ' .-\u25a0 ' i\n;     \u2022     \u00bb    -\u00bb,-   \u2022  -   ..... ' ....   ..\nA'licence to operate a sheet metal\nbusineil wes granted Frederick W.\nend FredQ. Koehle of Nelion. The\nlicence is supjeet to approval-by\nthe.Fire Chief.    '\n* 7*   *\nCouncil also granted a fuel veh-\n<Iro'S licence ,to Anton Hanson of\nNelaon. .-\u2022''.'.\n>- \u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nTwo readings wera given bylaw 1196, allowing for the filling\nof two eaiements over the Hay\nMetcalf and D. Cathcart properties\non Union street. The eaiements are\nfor the purpose of laying, con-\nstruction and maintaining of sewer\npipelines.\nMayor Joseph   Kary,  Aldermari\nA.. Foster, and one other delegate\nWill':att\u00abSnd Jlje .Union'of British\nColumbia Municipalities convention in Vancouver October 26, 2(1\nand 80.\n'\"-.\u2022 \u25a0*. \u25a0 *, ' i\nG. Q. Lakes,'. city engineer, was\nauthorized- to-, attend the? convention of Municipal -Engineers Sept.'\nember 24, 2S(.and\"26. .,   - -.\n\u2022'.,.' ,,'-'-'?\u2022 '\u25a0.,..-\u00bb>:\u2666 .\u2022''.. 7-V\/.,--'\nCouncil acted'to accept a letter\nof resignation Wpm Dr.VR. B. Brummitt as medical health officer.: Tho\nresignation will be effective the- end\nof July' and was tendered because\nof fhe organization 'of the Selkirk\nHealth Unit which will incorporate all district- areas and municipalities under one health set-up.\n. .;- y. -ii *..7 ?7 \u2022\u25a0-' .,\n. Tenders for renovation of council chambers were submitted and\ncontract was awarded to David Ny\nstrom at $142. Other bids were\nmade by KoOtehay Decorators,\n\u25a0$32G; A. J. Rlngrole,j$2S5; A. Math-\nlien, $Jl5; ,H. J. Miirphy, $178; Of\nL? Sutherland, $171; and Max Falkner, $147.75. ; ''-.'    ?-.\n\"-\u25a0\u2022   _\u2022.-. ,'\u25a0:  .'\nDr. Lowe put In an-lnformal bid\nfori rustic cupboard that had graced one corner of .the chambers for\nsome time. He explained. that it\nmight, be.put to use in the new\nHealth Unit for protection ot maps.\nCouncil gave it to the Health Unit\nfor the. asking snd it was suggested .that City Hall employees might\nbe commadeered to help get it\ndownitairs . \"\n, '*- \u2022 f*   \u25a0\nAlderman Elizabeth Wallach reported oh Cltyowned apartments\nabove the gas works. Council felt\nthere wai ho need of replacements\nto apartment fixtures as-yet; City\nengineer Will look into the possibility of making two bathrooms out\n'of the Oho under discussion,\n:\u25a0\u25a0.:\u25a0: i   +\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0*.   -\u2022-,-\u25a0  '   ?\u25a0-\nAlderman Wallach alio mentioned a complaint brought to her attention .regarding the rock on Hall\nStreet where the sewer line Wai\nput in? ?\"\n2f Volunteers\nAdvance Effort for\n\u00ab*f-*AD   THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nRifes at Trail\nFor H. Jackson\n- TRAIL \u2014 Requiem mail will be\nsung at St. Francis Xavier Cfourch\ntoday for Herbert Lawrence Jackson who died in Trall-Tadanac hospital,  Sunday night.\nIn his 72nd year he was born .in\nEngland but lived.in ~$. C. for -the\npast S3, years. He .worked a's a\nplumber at CM&S but retired ln\n1948.- \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0? '      *\nHe .was an active member of-the\nCanadian Legion. He served ln the\nBritish Navy for 11 yean and took\npart In the Boxer Rebellion In\nChina In 1000 and ln World War I.\nHouse flies are one of the world's\nmost potent disease carriers,\nTwentyiono community workers\nput all but the finishing touches to\nthe compilation of property descriptions, for hospital improvement\ndistrict petitions forms Tuesday\nnight. The volunteers worked at\n;tha provincial court house here\nfrom 7 p.m. to past 10:30 completing\nthe lists begun by 25 workers last\nThursday evening.\n, In all the two-night 'job, which\nla preliminary to preparation of\npetition forms, has taken 160 man\nhour of detailed work- Prior to that\na week of secretarial work by two\nperioni readled'the forms on which\ntha property descriptions were\nwritten.\nThe approval of 70 per cent of\nthe 3300 landowners in the area\nproposed for ah improvement district must be obtained before the\ndistrict can be organized. Formation\nof an Improvement district would\nmake it possible for rural and village property ownen to join Nelion\nclttaeni in comtructlon of a new\ndistrict hospital. Present Kootenay\nLake General Hospital < has been\nordered closed by June, 1056.\nThe teams doing TJivirsday'i and\nMopday'i community service were\nmembers bf the TWomen'i Hospital\nAuxiliary,;Junior Chamber of Commerce and other volunteers.\nCouncil Irked\nAt CBC Excuse\nCity Council wsi disappointed at\n<*~BC attitude toward ah e'rronloui\nannouncement \u2014 that Calgary, this\nyear, feature*} the first summer,\nbonspiel in Canada. Nelson has just\ncompleted the ninth annual mid-\nsummer boniplel. \"\n\"The letter from the. (iBC News\nRoundup Editor is merely sidestepping the issue,!' aldermen said. They\nhad expected :a correction. Council\nfelt nothing would be gained by\nasking for a correction. The following letter wai received and filed.\n\"I am wrry to hear the Nelson\nCity Council feels that a passing\nmention of July bonspiel to Calgary\non CBC News Roundup may have\nconveyed ah impression derogatory\nto Nelson's enterprise ln carrying\non such a contest ior many'years,\nI am lure our reporter hsd no\nsuch intention when ha used the\nword, \"an inovatlon,\" he-was referring only to the fact that sis' an\ninwation at the Calgary Stampede.\nThe title, \"Flrit International Bonspiel\" had, 1 presume, been chosen\nby officials In Calgary, and perhaps\nit could be argued that a more\ndefinite reference to Calgary Or the\nstampede should have been included in this title.- This, however, appears to be a little beyond our\nfunctions. May I assure you again\nthat there was no intention on .our\npart to Slight Kelson. \/\u25a0\u25a0\/-\nOur reporter had to compress a-\ngreat many facts Into a very small\ncompass, and could .confine himself\nonly to .giving the title of the context, plui the fact that lt wai something new to this year's stampede.\nIt wai signed Norman DePoe, CBC\nNews Roundup.Editor..\nRECORD REVENUE\nANKARA \u00abn>) \u2014 Government\ntax,revenue from-March 1 to May 31\nthii year totalled $160,532,000,\nrecord in Turkey's financial history.\nThe Weather\nNelson  ...,..,\t\nCalgary,..,\t\nEdmonton ..\u201e:....-....\nKimberley ..: ,\nCrescent Valley .\nKaslo7.Y\u00bbv..:..;..\u201e\nKamloops  7-._......\nPenticton .;.. ......\nVancouver..\t\nVictoria \t\nNew York ........-.;.\n-40\n48\n48\n48\n48\n48\n48\n53\n53\n52\n72\n82\n62\n67\n67\n73\n7!\n79\n79\n70\n.18\n88     .01\n\u2022 Rotarlahs had a glimpse Into, the\nglamor city of the United States-\nHollywood\u2014when Rev. C. H. Perry\naddressed the club at a Monday\nluncheon, meeting in the ;Hume Silver Room.'-;. ,. ' ;77.;,.. ';\nMr. Perry has exchanged pulpits\nfor the Summer Vith.Vejy R0v. T.\nL. Leadbeater, Dean' of * Kootenay\nand rector of St. Saviour's Pro Cathedral.,- ,.'\nHollywood residents are Just\n\"like you and I\", Mr. l*erry said.\nInflux of families Into Los Angeles\n(of which Hollywood ll a suburb)\nis .great, and some 400 new families\nhave made their way to the area\nduring the past feiv years.-\nThey have similar problems to\nthole. of other cities, -one of the\nmajor ones being an acute' housing\nshortage. Many live in trailers and\nother temporary modes of accommodation, A \"young family\" can't\nafford to live there, he said. Apart,\nments (three-room)  cost $86 and\nup while food is from five to ieven\nper cent more costly in Los Angeles\nthan in other place),\n', .He told of the tremendoiii Influence the motion picture Industry hai on the llvei of 400 million\nnWlo ooen, and Hid atari are\nbasically fine-people? The television Is taking hold throughout\nthe continent as a \"new Industry,\"\nhe laid, and  iti  people are \"a\nwonderful, elncero and: dedicated\n. group,'!   .<':?*\u25a0'.\nThere Is \"superficiality\" in Hollywood, Mr. Perry sqld, pointing out\nthat. stan live under emotional\nstrain ... their'-whole existence\nar\/d fame based on publicity. \"The\naverage-Hollywood penon Is the\nmost, maligned,- Individual lh the\ncountry,\" Jie said. \u25a0-.-.\" -' ? . \u25a0'\u2022 , \u2022\nMr;? Perry Once advocated a rei\nIigious program on television, but\nwas told a program of this nature\nis \"hot dramatic enough nor sufficiently conflicting.\" He disagreed\nwith thii, pointing out that each individual has within himself religious conflict. '\u2022\u25a0 '.\nMr. Perry's address was bright\nwith humorous anecdotes that kept\nNelion Rotarians and guests laughing throughout the meeting.\nGuests included Fred (Sampbell\nof Kelowna, Fred White of Rossland, B. Buchanan of Trail, T. Ferguson of Lethbridge, P. G. McLean\nof Winnipeg, W. Doddi of Rossland\nand Rev. Frank Payne bt Nelson.\nDEATH TAKES MOTHift\nOF DISTRICT PEOPLE\nFuneral-, services were held Monday in New Weitmlniter for Mabel\nKalmakoff, mother of John Kal-\nmakoff snd Mrs. Vera COauseicu\nof Trail.     \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0     .\nMrs. Kalmakoff died July 16 ln\nNew Westminster at the age of 73,\nBesides Mr. Kalmakoff and Mri,\nCeausescu of Trail, She is survived by her huiband; two sons, Jacob\nof New Westminster snd Louie of\nSaskatoon! one daughter, Mrs.\nMary Tough of Stevenson, B. C, 14\ngrandchildren,' three great-grandchildren.\na, Holding trophies.presented by the Notion\nPower Boat Auoplotlon after tho ipray had Settled\nInit Sunday oro left to right; Noll MacLenn, tecond\n6laee winner In the A hydros on -\"Half Pint\"; Al\nWion, flrit- place In-tho M hydros on'\"Real\nDeal\"; Ivan Laughton, tecond plaoa In the' ?M\nhydros on \"It\"; Bill Valentine, thlr.d-place In the\nM hydroi on \"Weery Willy\"; and\/Irwin Hobden,\nthird place In the A hydros on \"Shrimp, Boat\". All\naro Nelaon boys.\u2014Art Stoven6 photo,.      -\nffy \u25a0 lilies\nTwo Given NISI\nMoiifhsfor\nBreaking, Theft\nGerald McTague and Robert Donald Klllam of no fixed abode were\nsentenced to nine months in Oakalla -\nprison after pleading guilty to\ncharges of breaking, entering, and\ntheft.- They appeared ' before His\nHonor Judge Eric P, Dawson in-\nCouhty Court hera?Mon*Iay,''\u25a0 ?-....,;\nThe two men broke into the\nBurton Trading Company at Burton .\nJn the early hours of the morning\nof Juno 20, .and stole some $300 of.\ngroceries, clothing end other dry\ngoods. Most of the goods were recovered-by RCMP. W. W. Ferguion\nappeared 'for the crown.  '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;       * '\nLast- week, they were convicted\nhv Stipendiary Magistrate A. P.\nBedard at Nakusp of attempted\ntheft Of gas and were sentenced to\nsix months hard labor at Oakalla. ,\nA few hours after' the theft,\nRCMP, in.the course of Investigating an assault complaint, discovered\nan out-of-dlstrlct auto parked at the\nside of the highway near Nakusp.\nAfter .investigating, the Officer\nfound the Stolen goods insldo be-\nfore -report had been made of the\ntheft. Tho constable waited until the\ntwo men. appeared and arrested -\nthem.?    -'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 -.. \"'\u2022'-, \u25a0\"'- '- ''\nCommodore Jack Morrli of the Nelson Power\nBoat Association shakes the hand of Bill McCormick, the happy \/warrior from Spokane who\npiloted \"8uq Rlg'ito a triumph In Sunday'i Koo-\ntenay take Open, Holding the Kiwanls Trophy Is\nWalt Gurnis who owns the boat and accepted the\nTrophy from Morrli.\u2014Art Stevens photo,\nJAMES WOODALL\nLAID AT REST\nFuneral services for .James Alexander Woodall were held Monday\nafternoon from the Thompson Funeral Home.. Rev. G- W. Payne officiated :fbr the service at which one\nhymn,,\"What a.'JMend -Wo Have In\nJeiui\" was sung. Organist was Mrs.\nW. A. Manson. , V     ;\u25a0  -,.,ir:\nAmong those asesmbled to pay\nUnit tribute to, Mr.? Woodall'. retired CPR lineman, were representatives of the CPR Telegraph and\nWomen's Association of to Trinity United rjhurch?\nPallbearers were B. A. Dawes, J.\nW? Watson (CP Telegraph representatives), D. B. DeGraaf, Rv L.\nBruce, George Anderson, W, Walm'-\nsley. Interment was to the family\nplot at: the Nelson Memorial Park.\nMr. Woodall,- resident \"of Nel-\nson for the past '32 years,, died, at\nthe Kootenay Lake General Hospital July 17 after a lengthy Illness.\nStudy Closure pf\nWhether to close the Salmo school\nor let it remain open carneVin for\nmuch discussion Monday evening'\nwhen the Nelson School Bbard\"\"met\nin the Boardroom of Central School.\nIt was'reported by-p.Larson.that\nthere nvere only\"12 children.ln the\nares, but that seyeral bf thern were\nalready going to Junior and Senior\nHigh School. \u25a0   -7  ;'-'.\u2022..-.\nIt was deolded that-before\"a|j\nthing was done in the Way of cli\ning'up the school that a survey\nwould have to take place to determine how many children would he\nattending the schoo|. It was also\npointed but that in order to close\nthe School there would, have to be\nless then six children, to attend.\nO. Larson also reported that he\nbelieved there were eight children\nattending the Remac .school with\nfive othen in the '.district already\nbeing transported' into.Salmo.\nHe said three or four Ohildren ln\nthat district are past the elementary\ngrade. -\nIt wai suggeited that Jt might be\nbetter to bring them in by car\nrath'er.than by bus. George Mermet,\nchairman of 7 the board, said he\n-thought they ihould be brought\nInto Salmo for their education\nWhich they deserve, rather than\ngetting It H| correspondence.  \u2022\nMr. LariaPwas instructed to look\ninto the transportation end of it,\nalthough it was reported that lt may\nnot be os serious as, anticipated\nsince several families in that area\n(haye srddttoy hOpe'to-move into\n%almo before the next school, term.\nMr. A, I. Common reported that\nthe maintenance and repair pro\ngram on the Harrop school was\nprogressing favourably, and. ihould\nbe completeil this week. 7\nSyd JRogen wat appointed vice\nprincipal otto Nelion Junior High\nSchool wh4itt It yas recommended\nby a, committee headed by W. S.\nRaioiey. One Other teacher Mr. H,\nLoewon aiked for and received per-\nmillion tor a transfer to the Hume\nf-lchool. 7?      '.'-  7\nFifty new desks are to be ordered\nimmediately from Vancouver.\nTRAIL \u2014 -City Council Monday\nevening gave! preliminary -approval\nior Inland Natural\"Gas Co. to make\na survey of potential consumption\nof natural gas In the city and to\nprepare plans for an adequate gas\ndistribution pipeline system. If satisfactory to the Public Utilities\nCommission-as well as city council\nsteps . will be taken to .prepare a\nbylaw for the submitting of a franchise to\/the company. Inland Natural Gas has entered into an agreement with West Coast Transmission\nCo. for purchase and resale of\nnatural gas to communities along\nroute of Westcoast line including\nTrail-Rossland area. West Coast\nTransmission is only applicant appearing, before the Federal Bower\nCommission of -the United States\nproposing to take gas from Peace\nRiver area in Alberta and B.C. to\nPacific Northwest area of Canada\nand thO United States.\nComplaints were registered with\nCity* Council by West Kootenay\nHealth Unit regarding the downtown swimming pool and the sanitary facilities at Butler Park.. It\nwas stated that water entering pool\nshows a bacterial count and an-inefficient chlorination system. Decking and plumbing needs replacement and dressing room facilities\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET?RESULT8\nFor Gas Market; Franchise Sought\nBus Mileage,\nRevenue Up\n'A transportation report to the\nCity of Nelson on the .bus service\nshowed mileage, passengers and\nrevenue was up- but gas consumption was down compared to June\n1052. Increases are slight. Following\nis a tabulation of the report:-\n1953      1952\nPassengers   40,832   39.620\nMileage      6,798    5,a55\nRevenue $33,459 $32,796\nFuel- ...,.; V    1)415'   1,607\nlourdes Girls\nCamp Begins\n7 CAMP LOURPESf,- The Girls'\nCamp for the West Kootenay District got under way. during the\nweekend when 90 girls arrived to\ntake over the camp site until July\n27. The girls come from Trail,,\nRossland, Castlegar, Klnnalrd,\nFruitvale, Nelson, South Slocen, .\nNew. Denver, Nakusp, Grand Forks,\nKerenieoi, Vancouver, Penticton,\nLumby and Natal. About ten are\nIplanhlng to remain for the,iecond\ngirls session. '7\n. The catnp tire saw all of the glrli\nready to onter into the fun of camp\nlife and campers were highly entertained by a'rollicking skit which\nfeatured the Misses Hromek, Harold\nand Kalko, three of the leaden,\n, The 'veteran camperi-were pleai- \u25a0\ned to find the cbok was Mrs. V.\nMason, who provided wonderful\nmeals last year.\nare in wrong place. As Trail Recreational Projects Society plans include, a. new swimming'pobl witliln\nthe next three years It was hoped\nto be able to keep present facilities\noperating for the time being. Council will consider expense of installing proper cHlbrihation systems.\nTwo delegates '^tfom Local 480\nwith Al King president,; acting as\nspokesman, requested that their organization be allowed to use its public address system,on. c''y streets.\nThe right had beeh.grant'edto Technocracy Incorporated. Alderman\nSindell pointed ouXthat no discrimination was intended,in the city's\nmeasure but it w.iis employed as a\nnuisance control,, 'permission was\nextended to the union to use iti PA\nsystem providing request was.made\n24 hours in advance.\nA petition bearing 34 names of\nresidents from Glenmerry Subdivision was presented-to council protesting the unsanitary arid's'mokey\ncondition of the,,ciiy dump close\nby. Mayor E. G. Fletcher agreed the\ncondition was bad. \"It's a question\nof smoke or smell,\" he said, \"if it's\nnot burning the- files get busy.\"\nHe gave assurance that the health\nahd relief committee will try, to\nwork out a satisfactory solution. -\nFATHER OF NELSONITE\nBURIED AT VANCOUVER\n' Funeral services for George\nThomas Kldd of Vancouver were\nheld Friday in Vancouver. Mr. Kldd\nis the father of Edward Kldd of\nNelson. He died July 16 in his SBth\nyear.\nHe is survived by.his wife, Margaret Jane; one son, Edward of\nNelson; three- -daughetrs, Mrs. D.\nWalker, Mr?. M. Winterbotham an$\nMiss Evelyn Kldd, all Of Vancou\nver; bIx grandchildren and three\ngreat-grandchildren.\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel A Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\nn\\0^\n\/  _fifSa_     ' * COMHSTI4340IO 01\n\"   MftSSstSa.    \\NEtl-APP0INIID AND\nor I\nWeu-appointcd ANO '\nFUUY SEHVIHO    -,\nAPAHIMENIS AND   .\nHOtEl DOOMS AT - '\nHODERAI6 HATES\nM.H. Cwm, kmiei\nVANCOUVER   B.C,\niladM**\n^m\n\\Setiti\n7!   -''' ::   -    HIED IN LONDON, ENG   FOR OVI\nUERAY, GORDON &  CO    Hi\nI his advertisement is not published oi displayed by tho LiqupJ\nC<xitrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCLEAROUTSALE\n|      CONTINUES...\n50% OFF\nSALE PRICES CERTAINLY ARE\nMOVING. THE MERCHANDISE\nDELAY IS DANGEROUS\n-       \u25a0_-------___S__SSISSMSSSMSSa_____SSSMSSSIMSIMSIS>SSSMiSiSilSSSSMS___i\nCHAS. MORRIS\n.':.'\u25a0 ,...\n<p6-_tttt!-niC-A>-HsKl\n V%3\nMisses' and Children's'\u25a0\nSANDALS\n.-..! -..     . ..and . . ? u\nRUNNING SHOES\nJust thr thing'for.,\nsummer wear.'.\nSee our selection at\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nSB3 Baker 8t\nPhone 895\nNew Comlnco Post\nTo J. M.Buchanan\nTRAIL \u2014 J. M. Buchanan has\nkeen appointed special assistant td\nthe superintendent, zinc department,\nof the Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd.,,\nhet\u00ab. R. R. McNaughton. manager\nof Cominco's metallurgical division',\nmade the announcement,,\nMr. Buchanan Is a native of-Trail.\nBe obtained the degree bt B.Sc. Hu\nmetallurgical engineering at University of Washington in 1941 and\nwas employed by Comlnco the same\nyear as a technical assistant in the\nsine department Later in 1941 he\njoined the army and received his\ndischarge in 1045 holding the rank\nof captain in the Royal Canadian\nEngineers. He returned to Cominco\nas an assistant testing engineer.- In\n1047 Mr. Buchanan was appointed\nassistant plant superintendent, electrolytic and melting, zinc depart,\nment After holding several other\nposts in the zinc department he was\nappointed a method study engineer\nln 1951. The new appointment became effective June 22 of this year.\nMr .Buchanan is a member of the\nCanadian Institute of. Mining and\nMetallurgy.\nA keen golfer, he Is on the house\ncommittee of the Rossland-Trall\nCountry Club. He is also well known\nln curling circles. He is deputy.coordinator of' civil defence ln the\nTrail area.\nMr. Buchanan is married and has\ntwo children.\nNew Era Dawns on\nLardeau With Roads\nThe riy river in Papua on,the\nisland of New Guinea is navigable\nBy launch for over 500;miles..\nPHONE 71 l-Y-3,\nFor Year Flooring Needs,\nSanding and Finishing.\nFlooring Supplied and Laid,\nA. H. RONMARK\n'  Upper Granite Road\nFor Friendly and  Efficient\nPlumbing and\nHeating Service\nCall\nFRED WELSH\n-SON LTD.\nPhone 174* 321 Baker St\nARf YOU\nWOVIMC?\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nIT'S COVERED\u2014\nWHEN IT MOVES\nWITH OS . ...\n\u2022or the greatest protection,\nwe cover all pieces separately? put special padding on\nsensitive areas, secure them\nfirmly. \u2022CaN for full information.\nPhone 889\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\n1   By STAFF REPORTER\nRoads, are all they talk about in\nthe Lardeau country, these days.\nThe ndyclty of the opening last\nyear' of the country with' the driving through of pilot roads between\nKaslo ahd Lardeau and Qerrard\nand Trout Lake City is as fresl) now\nas then. And'as crews drill into the\nrock bluffs.edging these roads and\nImprove - their surfaces, - speculation as to the role the new roads\nwill play ln the future of the rich\nLardeau country, mounts.\nTlils fact was brought home forcibly' to the Nelson Chamber of\nCommerce party which attended\nSunday's meeting at Trout Lake\nCity and supported -the'Lardeau's\nbid tor relocation of the Trans-Canada Highway via the Lardeau and\nWindermere. * ':.- -,-\nThey felt like Lardeau people,\nas- road pioneers of that country.\nTheir drive by private car to Garrard and.then by panel truck from\nGarrard to Trout Lake City albng\nwith Kaslo and lower Lardeau valley residents, was somewhat of an\nofficial opening for the Gerrard-\nTrout Lake City road, as last year's\nChamber ff Commerce caravan\nover the Kaslo-Lardeau road had\nbeen. \/,\nThe 118-mile trip, to Trout Lake\nCity took six hours, but two of\nthosehours had been spent In Inching over the 18 miles from Gerrard\nto Trout Lake City.\nAnd from Nelson to the Journey's\nend at Trout Lake City, they saw\nevery kind' of road imaginable.\nThey drove over the new worth\nShore pavement They snaked\nalbng 'the Shutty peach-, switchbacks and saw Uie clearing where\nthe new cut-off is being built\nFrom Ihe .Shutty-Bench to Lardeau road, vastly improved from\nlast year, they could see the faint\nline of the to be road Bert Bed-\nwell, Kaslo contractor, is building\nwith astounding speed from Argenta to Johnson's Landing.\nThey drove oyer the old railway\nbed. road with its one to two-mile\ntangent stretched between Lardeau\nand Gerrard,-a road that's an anomaly for an area where roads am\nbeing pushed through virgin country,    'fl     \u25a0\"'\u2022 ,7\nAt Gerrard the Nelson party,\nconsisting of Chamber, of Commerce members John Learmonth, J.\nA. Bracken and P. H. Hoskins and\ntheir .wives, and the Kaslo and\nlower Lardeau delegates, were\ntransported over the 18 miles to\nTrout.Lake-City by panel truck.\nCars have been over it, but jeeps\nand trucks are better, able to ford\nstreams, crawl up steep grades, and\nsqueeze .by rock bluffs.\nThe drivers for the Nelson sroup,\nFrank Abey and Jim Payette, are\nveterans of such roads, and while\nthe eyes of their passengers were\nroving over the tmcrald blue of th\nlake and the towering glaciers on\nits West shore, theirs were glued to\nthe road. Mr, Abey was one of the\nfirst, persons to risk the road last\nyear, outside of construction men,\nand Mr. Payette, although making\nthe trip for the lust time, ia experienced- with trails through his\nwork as Kootenay Forest Products\nchief ih the Lardeau.\nCrews are working from the\nNorth-end of the road, and have\nsmoothed the humps on the first\nfive miles from Trout Lake City,\nand have made to date a vast improvement over, the unretouched\nportion.\nAccording to local story, the government is spending $100,000 this\nyear on the- Trout Lake City to\nGerrard' section, $25,000 on the\nKaslo to Lardeau 'road and the\nsame amount on the Shutty Bench\ncutoff.\nThe Lardeau, like other parts of\nSoutheastern B. C, is feeling tbe\npinch ot mine' closures. Mining ac-\n\u2022\u00ab\u00bb\u2022 \u2022 t. . . . . . *r. m. it.,\n^VA havea\nfor your money\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the, Government ot\nBritish Cplumbia.\nHELP WANTED-MALE\nFirst Cjass Body and Paint Man\nFirst' class' body and paint man. Top wages and\nemployee benefits te quaWfied person. State age\nand experience. APPLY BOX 4337 DAILY NEWS.\ntlvlty Is at a near standstill, where\nas at this time year 'before the big\nslump Jn base metal prices? it waa\nflourishing.     ':\u25a0'\u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0       -\nBut the valley's hospitable residents are falling back, as they have\ndone in years gone by, on. lumbering, farming and the tourist business, ond are confident of a.bright\nfuture for these industries as a result of the roads.\nIf the new roads South can. be\nimproved, and should.the Trans-\nCanada highway veer! into their\ncountry, they will have a ready access to markets for' their goods.\nThis faith is found right up the\nvalley, up to Trout Lake City,\nwhich has gone from boom town to\nghost town, from a population, of\nbetween 1500 and 2000 to about 30\nsouls, whose streets and weatherworn houses are being crowded by\nlush undergrowth. Only the face of\nthe Lucky Boy glacier, smiling\ndown on the town, and its magnificent beach, are unchanged from the\ngold rush;\nOld and new stand cheek by jowl\nin Trout Lake City,.as in the'jease\nof the old Windsor Hotel, now the\nTrout Lake. Hotel. An enterprising\ncouple from Calgary and Toronto,\nMT, and Mrs. Earl Hatfield,. arc\nrenovating the building, long the\ndomain of Mrs. Alice Jowett; the\nLardeau's - celebrated woman prospector. Tha job they're doing! would\ndo justice to a community ten times\nthe size of Trout Lake City;\nThe lobby has been finished with\n.smart knotted blond wood and com\n'pletely modernized: and the tra\nveller would go'far to find bedrooms as comfortable or as modern\nas those on the second floor, with\ntheir trllights, carpets and -gay curtaining. . \u25a0 , \u25a0 -   .  .\nIn the dining room you can get-a\nmeal as delicious aha] as appetizing\nly served as in posh eating places\nin Vancouver or Calgary. The chef\nis a young artist from Vancouver\nwhose modernistic paintings are\nhung throughout the hotel.\nThird floor bedrooms smack of\nthe early days, like the' faded ex-\nterlor, but the Hatflelds will get\naround to them. \"We've only been\nhere two and a half years, you see,\"\nMrs: Hatfield explains.\nThe Hatflelds speak with pride of\nthe antiquity of their hotel. It's the\nlone survivor of four hotels of the\ndays before the turn ofthe-century.\nThe register dates to 1896.' y\nThe hotel and the Peaks' combined post office, store and resort business, a B.C. Forest Service station,\nand public works headquarters, are\nTrout Lake City's places of business.\nThe resorts' operators are as sure\nof solid success for. their, business\nas the Hatflelds. Their five cabins\ndotted, along the shores of Trout\nLake and cabin accommodation at\nthe City itself and a fleet of boats\nare attracting American fishermen\nand hunters from near and tar.\nPeaks feel that by starting in a\nsmall way .with a few horses like\nBerwster of Banff, they eould duplicate his trail rides. .    ' \/\nT&a Lardeau's residents are as\nloud in praise of'their wildlife as\nthey are of their scenery. The\nglacial slides abound'with grizzlies,\nand other big game animals thrive\nparticularly well in the Lardeau,,.\nThree years ago 17 elk were introduced Into the Lardeau. There\nare 100 now, it is estimated. Forty\nflye have been seen in.one herd.\nLardeau people are their own best\nambassadors. They make the visitor\nfeel at home, tell him of all the\nhistorical and present-day interest\npoints, and are quick to dispel any\nrumors to the detriment ot their\narea. The Lardeau, tbey point out\nin all truth, is no more mosquito\nridden than any othec part of B.C.\nfor thia- wet early Summer,    -f ,\nThey know that once explored,\nthe Lardeau holds a- perennial\nappeal. <.'_\u25a0\nDanger Eases at\nGold Creek Fire\nCRANBROOK\u2014A two-hour thunderstorm has relieved danger at\nthe 1000-acre Gold Creek fire, B.C.'s\nworst, forest tire. . ' \u2022 :-..\nThe storm reversed the wind from\na strong south breeze to a strong\nNortherly wind, and eased pressure\noh the south end guard. Some ofthe\n300 men engaged at the fire for the\npast week, were released Monday.\nThe storm cooled the air and raised humidity at the fire, which has\ncircumference of about eight\nmiles. It was declared controlled on\nFriday afternoen. \u2022\nWhile it changed conditions for\nthe better at Gold Creek: Ihe storm\ntouched off two new bush fires,\none on each bank ot St Mary's\nriver \"near Marysvllle. Both were\nbeing handled by small crews Monday after quick action by suppression crews, a\nKASLO'S DIAMOND JUBILEE planning is in hands of this committee, consisting'of left to right back E. G. Augustine,; W. J. Hendren, Ralph 'Patterson,\nC. R. Fahrni, G. J. Dickson and Mrs. W..F.\nTyert,vand front row, Mrs. S. H. Green, a\nresident of Kaslo since 1893; Mrs. E. G.\nRingheim, j. W. Hand; MayorR. E. Green,\nMrsvF. W. Speih>,-'Mrs. H. E. Dahlqiiist\nand Mrs. N. S. Miller. Mr. Dickson is general- manager for the big (\u2022elejtfation\nAugust 14-16.\u2014Orrell photo.\nLONDON 4CP) \u2014 The British\nschool broadcasting council will\nask the government to establish\ntelevision education in British\nschools.. The first subjects to be\ntaught experimentally by TV would\nba current, affairs, geography and\nscience. ..\u2022\u25a0\u25a0:?\nHelps You Overcome\nItching of Piles\nOr Money Back\nVou do not hsve to bt tortured tnd\neaurmted by the itching soreness tnd\nI'urnme  pain  ol  pile*  till-  lonjer.     Hera\n. retl help for you.\nGet \u2022 package ol Hem-Roid, tn Internal\ntie treatment, tt tny drug store tnd use\nas directed. You will be pleased tt how\nquickly your pile trouble, is relieved. Only\ntl.59 for tbe big 60 tablet package. If you\ntra 'not 100% pleased tfter using Hem-\nKold 1 or i days, as a test, ask for your\nmoney back. Refund agreement fcy til\ndrug .tores.     \u25a0 -,   .;\u25a0-',.\"-',        .\"'-V--,\nCranbrook Camp\nReceipts Down\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Average water\npressure In; city pipes' during the\npast month was erratic in regular\nmeasurements ranging from daytime minimum of 60 pounds to peak\n100 pounds at night, and average\ndropped-trom May's 99 pounds to\n81 pounds, Supply conditions continued: far above normal' in the\nmoist June and only explanation\nottered for the- pressure variation\nis use for filling tbe huge swimming\npool, -and garden purposes.\nCity tourist camp receipts so tar\nin 1953 total $4362.30, compared with\n$4599.14 for the period last year. The\ncamp is operating at capacity daily\nand-the drop ia i\\te to fewer winter rentals early in the yean.\nCivil Engineer Andrew Hunter ol\nNew Westminster has been consulted there about city proposals to extend its limits in the southwest section with reference to estimated\ncost of extending city utilities, but\nhas made no formal report yet.\nThe city building inspector issued\nconstruction permits during the\nmonth to an estimated value of Sll,-\n190. Much larger volume of construction Is under way, but much of\nlt Is outside city limits and outside\nthe building inspectors' jurisdiction.\nThere was no fire damage during\nthe month in the two alarms to\nwhich .the City fire department responded. Both were chimney Urea\nREAP THE .CLASSIFIED.' DAILY.\nMinisters Decide\nTo Release Nazis,\nLONDON (AP)\" - Ah official\nsource said Monday scores-of Nazi\nwar Criminals may bo released\ntrom jail toon in accord with a decision taken- St the Big Three tor\neign ministers' session in Washington. -..\nAmong imprisoned one-time\nNazis is Maj.-Gen. Kurt Meyer, former German SS stortntrooper commander- who is serving a life sen;\nfence for the murder of Canadian\nprisoners of war by his troops. He\nwas moved from Canada to a British prison ln the British zone of\nGermany last year.\nREVIEWED SENTENCES\nThe informant said the ministers\nagreed to review the sentences of\nseveral hundred war criminals, with\nthe West German government taking part. American-Gorman, British-German and French-German\ncommissions will be -set up. There\nare 350 Nazi war criminals still\njailed in the U.S. occupation-zone,\n98 In the British and' about 100 In\nthe French zone. Most are deemed\nsmalltime criminals.\n. The top German war criminals\nheld in Spandau prison under tour-\npower guard. Including Russia, will\nnot be affected. \u2022   '   \u2022\nA. MATHISEN\nPAINTING AND\nDECORATING\n607 Kokanea Street\nPHONE 103S-L\ncandidates\u2122\naddress forum\nat cranbrook\n\u25a0 CRANBROOK - All four candidates in the Aug. 10 federal election\nhave been invited to address a forum meeting at the Star Theatre here\nthe afternoon of July 26. The forum\nwill be sponsored by the Woodworkers' Industrial Union of Canada.   -:\nCandidates who have accepted\nare J. A, Byrne, MP, Liberal; Donald\nC. MacDonald,,CCF, add Sam English, LPP. Lome McLean as Social\nCredit nominee Is expected to accept \u25a0 '\nAll four recently shared the platform, under Windermere Board ot\nTrade sponsorship at Invermere and\ntook part in an Interesting debate\non election issues. The meeting\nwas held on a very hot day? ahd attendance was considerably below\nexpectations but those who attended' reported' thoroughly interesting\ndiscussion of Issues and policies both\nlocal and federal.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21,1953 \u2014 3\nNmgoitfs Qordon Earl\nBest Canadian Cowboy\nCRANBROOK - East Kootenay\nnow has the top all-round Canadian cowboy, champion, following\nparticipation ot Gordon Earl In the\nCalgary Stampede,. > ,.-\n.He received the A. E. CroBs Memorial-trophy.-and a. cash award\nfrom Prime Minister St Laurent at\nthe Ctampcde closing, along with\naward as top entrant in Brahma bull\nridlpg. \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0;\nHe operates a ranch at Newgate,\nWoodworkers Ask\nFor Conciliator\nKELOWNA, B.C. 4CP) - South-\nern interior.woodworkers have asked for a. government conciliation\nofficer in their wage dispute.with\noperators, Walter Allen said here\nMonday.\nAllen Is secretary of International Woodworkers of America (CIO)\nwage policy committee.\nThe workers are seeking an 18-\ncent hourly pay boost. In a similar\npay dispute, IWA members ih the\nnorthern interior last week requested a government conciliator.   \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\nAbout'8000 workera are Involved\nin the two disputes.\nPower Extended to\nCranbrook Project\nCRANBROOK\u2014The city -electrical department extended its facilities for now building project southward on 14th and 11th Avenues and\nbeyond city limits on the Fernie\nroad last month. Electrical Superintendent G. W. Burch reports.\nNet gain of services for the first\nhalf of 1953 Is 50, the report continues, 10 of them being added last\nmonth? Electrical consumption continued its heavy increase under way\nfor more than 10 years now, to-total\n573,240 kw hours for the past month\nup. 20 per cent .compared with the\nsame, month last year.\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND WALL\n7       ALL HEWLY DECORATED\nAn ideal family hotel right down town.\nReasonable rotes.\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\n\" \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   .-\u2022 \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022:Y^YvY;Y \"?-\nsotith of Elko, and was born and\ngrew'up there. His parents, Mr, and\nMrs. Wesley Earl, ranched in that\narea for many years, and now. make\ntheir, home in Cranbrook. Gordon\nEarl has participated In many Calgary -stampedes but this was his\nmost successful. V ti\nHe is also! top contender ln the\ncircuit rodeos through western'\nCanada as a Cowboys' Urotectlve\nAssociation member in which points,\nare amassed on a collective basis,\nfor substantial prizes at the end of\nth,e season.\nAsk for\nSTAR BAKERY\n\"YOU KNOW THEY ARE\nFRESH\"   :\n- Star Bakery Products Are\nDelivered Every Tuesday.\nThursday and Saturday to Your\nLocal Nelson Merchants.\nNew Equipment and Out,\nBenovated Premises Are .Your\nGuarantees of Quality   .\nStAR\nBAKERY\n476 Rossland Aye.   Ph. 58\nTrail, B. C.\nONE DAY ONLY\nSpecials for the\nMan\nWe dove reduced for ONE DAY ONLY, branded lines of work clothes that you usually buy at regular prices. This is a stock-reducing sale and will not be repeated.\nMen's Regular Denim Overall Pants Reg; 3.95\nBlack denim and blue denim work pants at one low price. Both son- ?f%  ** \\\nforiz.ed and double stitched for extra strength. Regular cut. Sizes 3D     \u25a0%\u2022'*'*\n. to 44Y- ______ _.\u201e_\u201e_. \u25a0 _______ ______ \u25a0     fmf '\u2022\nMens Khaki Drill Shifts Reg\/m\nSanforized cotton drill, ideal weight for summer. Extra roomy cut,\nstrongly stitched. Buy several at thi^'big saving! Sizes 15 to-17\t\nMen's Khaki Drill Pants Reg. 4.95\nPants with all those wanted features! King-size belt loops, sturdy zipper fly, extra heavy boat sail drill'pbckets, sanforized for permanent\nfit. Sizes 30 to 40.__.__._\u2022    \u201e.._.\u201e...\u201e. , _ '   .\nMen's 10 oz. .Rider Pants Reg.M5\nFamous brand rider pants made from extra strong 10-ounce-sanforized blue denim. Double stitched, all points of strain rivetted. Sizes\n30.to 36 \u201e.. _______ ......   _\u201e\u201e.;.:.; _\u201e        \u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0'\nMen's Olive Drab Shirts Reg.3.50\n;Lighfweigbt sanforized work shirts with flap pockets, strain-proof\nyoke, dress type collars and cuffs. \\AVi to 17V4\n, . .1 \u25a0   \u00bb\nMens Work Socles Reg 79c\nAspecial in wool:and nylon work socks \u2014wool forcomfprt, nylon for\nextra wear! Medium 2]*i Ib. weight in grey only. Buy several pairs at\nthis low price -  '    - - ... . '   *    ti     'f'y.f '-  \":.?\n3\n4\n4\n' .' *  '\n2\n39\n39\n49\n99\n49\nON\nSALE\nTUESDAY\nONLY\nM\n ..\"\t\n\u00ab-*--*\nwww\nS^------_----_-__________H\n___-_-_-\u25a0\nif^\nIWmjtt latlH -ST m\u00bb\nBstabliihed April JJ. IN) '\u25a0'\nBritish Columbia's .\nMost Jnleresfln** Newspaper\n.'. Publllhed every morning except Sunday by the\n'  KIWI PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n,,- Ml Baker Strsst. Nelson, British Columbia,\n,'ti    Authorised ss Second Class Mali,\n\u25a0 tii'ti\"fett Office Department, Ottawa.'\ni  MBMBiBR OP THB CANADIAN PR5SS AND\n-' w \u00abvpwtlavwAu or cmcviwATioys,\nl   Pointers for Camp Owners\nInsurance men who watch accident\nreports corning into their offices have\ncompiled a list 0\/ 12 safety precautions\naimed at reducing the high toll of accidents in and around summer cottages.\nThe lilt was published by the All\nCanada Iniurlince Federation, which\nrepresents more than 200 fire, auto and\ncasualty insurance companies.\nRecommendations ere:\n1. Keep brush around cottage cut\ndown.\n2. Arrange for adequate disposal of\ngarbage.\n3. Protect  stovepipes  which' run\n;   through partitions with metal thimbles.\n\u2022\u2022..,\u25a0 i. Use brick and stone chimneys,\nv   built to the ground and part of the\ncottage wall, when possible.\n5. Keep matches in metal containers\n'away from children and mice,\n6. Have electrical and gas repairs\n:   done by qualified persons. Repair leaks\nImmediately.\n7. Do not carry oil lamps about\n?   more than necessary, and make sure\nthey are turned off when not needed.\nA      8; Keep small children away from\n:' stoves and lamps.\n- , .it. Cneck: mOtorbbat wiring for leakages. Always have fire extinguishers\non boats.\nI.'     10. Use BX Wiring ln cottage.\n.11. Keep gasoline, naphtha and\nother Inflammables In plainly marked\nA safety,cans. 7 '\u2022  <\u2022\n12. Do not leave tools, garden implements, etc., lying around.\na. Birds and Beams\n, As the Holland-America liner Veen-\ndam left Southampton recently a flock\nof nine English homing pigeons which\nhad been following it settled, on the\ndecks. First Officer Dirk Bak surmised\nthe birds somehow had lost their homing instinct by crossing the'beams of\n.powerful radar stations.   .\nA landsman's guess might be that\nthe pigeons knew exactly what they\nwere doing, since out of it .they got a\nfree all-expense tour to New York\nand back with meals of beans and rice.\n'However, ornithologists are sufficiently puzzled about an explanation\nof the homing instinct in birds, notes\nthe Christian Science Monitor, td make\nMr. Bak's theory as, plausible as 'the\nnext one. Dr. H. I. Yeagley of Pennsyl-.\nvania State College believes birds can\ndetect the earth's magnetic field and\nthe so-called coriolis force created by\nthe_ earth's revolution \u2014 two set's of\nlines roughly resembling longitude and\nlatitude.   1\nSkeptics doubt whether these forces\nare strong enough to register even on\nsensitive appendages found in a bird's'\nears.. But proponents pf the theory say\nbirds can increase the strength of the\nforces by, wagging their heads from'\nside to side and. that this accounts for\nthe head-wagging of many birds in\nflight.       \u2022'      ''[\"\nLo! Poorlndisn\nGalls .the Turri ':[.\n(From the Cleveland Plain Pester)\nIt |s difficult t\u00ab Improve on a Chsrulioe\nIndian's observations cancei-iilng ths inanities-\nof-be white man ss foilowii\n\"White msn crazy. Make big tepee, Wow\n' hill, Water wash, Wind blow, Bl'nss all HPne,\nSquaw gone. Papoose gone. No pig, no corn, no\nhay, no cow, nn pony. Indian no plow-land.\nKeep gran. Buffalo cat grass. Indian est buf-,\nfalo. Hldp make tepee, mobosilni, Indian no .\nbuild, dam, No'give a dam; AU time sst'No'\nItUQt Job, No usk relief. Whlto men cwzy.\"\nIndeed, as ono considers the apundnoBi-of\nthese1 observations he becomes Intrigued with\non advertisement whloh has been sppssrlng In\npapers in ths mountain states ot ths country,\nslong thess llnsil A .[\u25a0'...\nHjSLp WANTBD-Hesrty mesls sua* a\nplace to live provided; (300-1980 s month'\nfor six months; sll expenses paid; healthy\n'conditions;   boautlful   sconery;   friendly\ncompony; solitude for reading, a radio,\nlistening, contemplation; no spools! training or experience necessary. .:\u25a0:\u25a0\nThs Job is that of a sheep herder, Accord\"\ning to the NaUonsl Humane Review, they are''\nIn short supply, One would think thst iome\nexpsrlenos would bs necessary, but ths sd\nssys no, Possibly a smart sheep dog would\n. know all ths answers, snd the shepherd could\nspend his time in contemplation of the infinite, or, porhspi, write sonnets.\nAs wa consider man's frantic efforts te\nget ahead, ta put one over on ths Joneiee, to .\nachieve membership in an elegant country\nclub, to drive in an oversize automobile, to\nknow the Important people, the grester Is th*\n. attractlvonoM of life as a Umpie-shepherd,\ntfhere is one.obvious dipadvantage. After\nassociating with imall Iambi we .will concede\nthst It jn'sht be extremely difficult to eat one.\nBut there Sre moments when we would ba\nwilling to give up eating lamb chops In order\n\"to get sway from the crazy white man. Verily,\nths Indtsn is' right, .'..\nCanada 0ay Tafc\n(Latter In Toronto Globe and Mall)\nI got a Jolt when I heard In.the news\nbroadcast that the Canadian troops in Korea\nwere going to celebrate tha \"First of July\" as'\n\"CsnsSs Dsy\" initesd of \"Dominion psy\".\nMsybe I h^ve been asleep on the job, but\nI had not caught on to the Idea that euch a\nmove was under consideration, and I want to\nregister a strong disapproval.   ,-;'\u2022-'.\nTha term \"Dominion of Canada\" was not\nfoiited on us, but was specially chosen by tha\nFathera.of Confederation for its religious significance\u2014namely, the scriptural quotation\nfrom the 9th chsp; Zach*-*'^ls dominion shall\nbe from sea to sea, snd from the river to. the\nends of the earth.\" And In.ah abridged form it\nii lhcorporated lti our national ooat-of-irmi.\nTo drop the term \"Dominion\" well, at its\nbest is merely a sigh of an inferiority complex for wHlch there ll ho reason whatsoever;\nand at its worst, It Is -flouting the Almighty,\nand saying that though the Fathers of Confederation wanted Him to have Dominion, we\nno longer consider it necessary.\nW. G. PALMER.\n. Saanichton. B. C. '\u2022' .\nIt Is surprising how often a gentle pat on\nthe back will knock the chip off a Shoulder.\n\u25a0, \u2014EdmOnton Journal.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nopen to any rssder, Names of psnoni\nasking .questions Will hot bs published.\nThem li no chart** fpr (his service,\nQueitloni WILL NOT II ANIWIRIP\n\u2022V MAIL swept whirs thire li obvloui\nneconlty for privacy.\nT. K\u201e Boswell\u2014Csn ypu. tell me the dsts.on\n-Which the first Queen Elisabeth II stamp\n(Oroat Britain) was cancelled? I hsvs a\nHook ot six hplf-penpy stamps, dated 11th\nOctober, lona, snrt would like to knew U\nthoy jre flo'yv worth collectlngV\nWs are indebted to Hagen'i Stamp Service, Trail, for tha following information!\"!\nwrote to a'-'firm thst deals exclualVsly in\nEmpire\" damps, including new issues, ind\nthii Is tholr reply: 'Te the best of our knowl-\nedge there hss been no half-penny Elizabeth\nII stump ior Great Britain as yet.' .The stsmp\nwin bo issued next month.\"    .\nJ. K. B., Trail\u2014Are there any companies in\n. British; Columbia th^t sell cut granite and\nmarble in sheets for building purpoiei?\nWe must apologize tor delay in answering\nthis question, Write to the following addresses:\nContinental Marble Company, Ltd;, Vancouver; Vancouver _Granlto Company, Ltd.,\nVancouver; Art Monumental Company, Ltd,,\nVancouver; Gilley Brothers, Ltd., Now West'\nminster. '.:,,.'\n' 8, B\u201e Nelson\u2014Please give some addresses\nwhore I can buy goose feathers ond auch?\nCan another reader Kelp?\nJ. X. C, Riondel\u2014To what address does a\nperion born In Salkstehswsn apply to\nobtain a birth certificate? Csn you tell\nmo where Harvey Murphy was born ahd\n\\vhat-hiB real name isi A... \u2022'\u2022\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\nFor birth certiftoata. Write to tha Vital\nStatistics Dopt,, Govornmont Building, Reglna,\nSilk. Begirding second question, -Wstch this\n\u25a0colurnm  . '    ' -.-':\nCurious, Nelsons-Con you give me the headquarters address of the' Stanley Products?\nStst|ley  pome  Products,'Canada,   Ltd..\nLondon, Ontario. ,, .   ?:?YY     f \"'     ,,* .\n\"Clancy\", Famle\u2014Would you klhtlly sdviss\n.   ' the number of bin hits Jeokle Rohlnson\nof Brooklyn Dodgers hadrio the HM'Wdrld\nSerlei? Alio \"please give nsnie'of plsyer\nwho had the highest betting aversge ln the\nsame:serles? \\ \u2022'..-\u2022., '  '\nJackie Robinson of .Brooklyh'Dodsere had\na total of four base hits ln 1952. Gene Wood.\nling of Now York'SfsBHsesW,*hs, highest\nbatting average in the same series..'\nLuck\nLife in this modern world li becoming\nmore and more organized. And it constantly\nis being dinned into our ears that we'should\nbe industrious, thrifty, zealous and\" ambitious.\nIn that way?we are to become luccessful, or\nrich, or esteemed.    .\nYet as we review the llvei of those around\nus\u2014or even of our own\u2014we rhust be Impressed\nby the element of luck\u2014good or bad luck. By\nchance we happened to meet, the girl with\nwhom we were to fall In love and to wed; by\nchance we lost one job and got a better one;\nby chance we came upon an, opportunity\nwhich, being seized, led on to success. These;\nor similar, incidents occur to most of ui,\nOne man stubs his toe against a rock lh\nNorthern Ontario and becomera multi-millionaire from the resultant gold mine, An\n: equ\u00bbHy. or perhaps even more, conscientious\n'prospector may spend- a lifetime searching the\nterrain and never have more than a precarious\ngrubstake. ~\nLady Luck Is a fickle, feminine. As for\nexample, up at The Pas, in Northern Manitoba. There an unidentified prospector once\nchucked a chunk of ore into an old tobacco,\ncan and used it for a doorstop:. Years later the\npiece was assayed, and similar uranium ore\nwas estimated to be worth $1000 a tori.\nPossibly this prospector found the ore long\nbefore uranium became a precious metal, or\nbefore atomic energy was more than a dream.\nIn any case, he had no geiger counter td tell\n, him It was uranium he found.        \u25a0\n?.A few years may have made the difference for this prospector between wealth.and\npoverty.. Luck was against him?\u2014Windsor\nDaily Star. -\nCapital Memo\n\u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb*\u25a0\nLooking Backward\nfZf\": 10V\u00abAR\u00bbAOO . I. *K)\nFrerW-tHi NelionDaily.VsWi.-Jui*- Jl,,flwav\nGuy S. Meyo of Nelson now holds fifth\npiece' Ip the Nelson' Gyro Club's Kootenay\nLake Rainbow Trdut Dsrby.On Siuidsy ha\nlanded a Kamloops weighing 16 pounda, 10\nounces, -.     \u25a0 .?,-' .     -,.-\nDavid Pearce, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. B.\nPearce ot Nelsoh, hai been advised thst hs\nwas a successful candidate in the junior matriculation examinations. David has been attending North Shore College in North\" Vancouver. -\u25a0\u25a0 A7 ' A .'\u2022\ndancing with pretty glrle.\nfrank Milligan, who hss olsctri-\ntlsd North.Amsrlcs's educationists\nby his scholastic brilliance, was\nborn In Cumberland, on Vancouver\nisland, Oet at, loai. He earns with\nhli parents to live In Victoria whan\nhs wss an Want, H'i father, a Scot\nfrom Glasgow, li a newspaper Linotype operator; his mother WSS born\nAmy Dsllos In Cumberland, daughter ot a pioneer family-\nHe first went te school to.tho Sisters of St. Ann at their primary\nichool here, then transferred to the\nChristian Brothers of Ireland st Rt.\nLouli College. The Brother! wsrs\nearly astonished ot hll brainlness,\nmade application for him to Uni.\nvarsity ot Portland for s scholarship. Easily he won one\u2014at 8300 1\nyear. But hard times \"came to the\nUniversity, and the scholarship win\nnsri had to go to work. Milligan\nlabored in the lab's, marked examination paperi, bettered tho sohol-\nsrihip by ssming $400 a yssr.\nWhen hs graduated in May. with\nhis B.Hc, It' wss with Juit ono-hun-\ndredth ot a.polnt below perfect. Ho\nwai graduated maxim cum lauds\u2014\nwith .the hlgheit possible prsiss.\nNow he faces four years ot medicine study at.the famous Johns Hop\nkins University in Baltimore, so ox.\nelusive that lt tskss only 7S medical\nstudents a year, ths cream of sll the\nworld, tt will oost Milligan about\n$3500 s yssr to gat through the\nmtdlesl ooune-AshOut 110,000 ln all,\nHe doetn't know yet where ths\nmoney Is coming from.\n\"I'll work and. pray,\" he says,\nwith a grin. He'll earn all hs csn,\ndoing anything he cam he'll bbrrOw\niome, hts peronti will help, \"They're\nths belt, in the world,\" he ssys of\nhis proud mother snd fstbsr.   7\nUntU he left for Portland in 1040,\nMilligan wss -an altar boy st St-\nAndrew'! Cathedral. Parishioners\nWS'o so Impressed by hli devout-\nneii, bli handiomeneii in esasook\nsnd surplice, that they wars euro hs\nwould be a pMeit.  \u25a0     ,; \u25a0\nHe's not surs whst decided him\non a esreer ln medicine; msybe, he\nsoys, bscsuie he always lived close.\nto. St, Joseph'l Hospital, saw the\ndoctors rushing In and out, gazed In\ntaicination at the operating room\nwlndowi, wondered what wss going on InildS)-'    \u25a0 y \u25a0      ;\".\nHe applied to five medical schools\n-UBC, McOill, University of Min-\nneaota, University ot St. Louis, and\nIY JAMSS K. N|(\u00a7BITT\",W\nVICTORIA - The Associated fmt mii* him Frank \"The\nB\u00bbln\" MUllM*,'?'\n. JHHl CBUmIMI at University of Portland called .him\n\"Brfllnwssh\". \u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\n*. But hll neighbors In Victoria sny he's just an ordinary\n21-yesp.pld, a bundle of energy, good-loqking, always smiling and whistling, cheerful, polite. He's tall, dark-haired,\nred-cheeked, pug-noBed. He doesn't appear to be the high-\nbrow study type. He seems more Interested in tennis and\nswimming, football and basketball, singing MaoNamara's\nBind \u00bbwf The OU SheUligh, ?'\u25a0 f1^\"   ' \u25a0 \"-\u25a0'-\" .\"\nJohns Hopkins. Hs wss acosptsd by\nall; ho aooented the most fsmnii*.\nPortland Univenlty- Is the Pacific\nCoast branch of the groat University\nof Notre Dame, and, like Notre\nDame, Is run by the Father! of the\nHoly Crosi. .\nMnilgan continued his athletic\ncareer at Portland, He spsolallsss In\nswimming, He'd study for hours,\nthen plunge Into ths pool snd swim\nfor sn hour, Henco ths nsma \"Brain-\n\u2022fash\".\nAt Portlend he wos a \"Cream-\nSuf f\", Now this sounds vary strange.\nis snd ths fallows living in tne\nsome hall got together, called them-\nselvoi \".The Creampuffi\", snd took\nen all corner! in ell iports. They,\nwon Intra.mural ehsmplonshlpi In\nfootball Snd softball, but were taken\ndown a peg when.they couldn't do\nany btttsr than third In basketball.\nWhen he's through his four yesri\nof medicine st Baltimore  snd S\nScar's Internship, hs hopes to come\nsok to Victoria to practise.\n: ', ^w^w. 1  ,1\nl Escape When\n(ar Leaps 150 Feel\nSPENCES BHipaE, B. C. (CP)-\nFour persons escaped serious injury Sunday when their ear made a\nspectacular filings 160 feet from the\nTrim-Cineda hlghwsy Into ths\nThemppoii Hlv\u00abr.' '\nThe first ItCMP officer st the\nscene laid; \"They wars lucky te get\n0\u00abt alive:\" 7     -'    '.'.'-     '.;*-.\nThe'occupants of tho car\u2014two\nmen snd two women in their lite\n40sT-were taken to hoipltal In Lyt-\nton. Nona is In serious condition.\n' RCMP said the accident was sight\nmiles weit of hero on s wide earner\n\"which ii clearly marked.\" ,\nTho car went 00 feet slong the\nshoulder end then ISO feet down\ntrom the \"highway.:\n\"It rolled and spun down ths\n60-degree rock til] and ended up in\nthe river.- When I 'got thtre the\nback end was submerged and the\nfront Juitout of ths'wstar;\"\n\"All tour personi were out of the\ncir by then,\" he Ssld.  .\nNames of the four persons Involved hsvs not been released by\npolice, AV-    -'-\n\u00bbY\u00abAR\u00bbA-0\nProm the Nelion Dally Newi, July 21,1928\nRegistrations of J. R. Fournier and S. J.\nPonaldson, teachers at the Nelson High School,\nwere accepted by the ichool board. The application of-Miss J. Carrie was accepted to till\none df the vacancies. > * \u25a0 \u25a0\nPrison Sentences Disclose Riofs\nIn Polish-German Town on June 17\nBERLIN (API \u2014 f lateen workers\nwere condQltinert to prison by a\nCommunist court in Dresden Monday m tha IsrgMt show trial of East\nOerman raholi yet hold,\nA freerlence photographer repelv-\nsd tha stiff est isntenoi \u2014 life lm-\nprlionment \u2014 for loading an up.\nrising June 17 In the llttlo Polish.\nOermsn border town of Nissky,\nwhere sstrst police headnuertori\nwas burned and Rod otflolals beaten. Fifteen- alleged aceomplicss\nwsrs given terms ranging .from 13\nyears to six months,\nIt'was the first disclosure thst\ntte June IT rioting hsd erupted alio\nin Nleiky. Tha town li nssr Ooer-\nUU on the Nlesse river where striking workers we\u00bbs saluted by Polish'\ntank Uoopi on the \u25a0 sme day.\nPIECK'8 ANNDUNCEMENT\nOn-tho polIIleal front, Wllhelm\nPleck, East (toman president whoj\nil ailing in a 'Soviet sanitarium,\nIssued s statement declaring that\nthe 'West  German   republic   must\nnegotiate with tho Communist East'\nQermsn  regime before Germany\ncan bo unlfiort. .  \u25a0 , :   \u25a0\"\nIn a statement designed to keep\nthe  propaganda  campaign   rolling\nfor \"sil.Oormen talk!,\" Pleck said-\nreunification is \"first of aU ah af.\nfair of ,tho German people them- -\nMlvei.\"      *. ,. 'H\n\u00bbes\u00ab\u00ab..,Ks\ntups* quality '\n\u25a0Hlies little\nbest buy en the\nmsrfcal\n5%\n?,*l>*.^rf\u00ab-'_-.A^\"\ny \u00ab\u00ab*_**,\n\u2022*>5\nluy. Bell,' Trade the Claaalfled Way\nAiao DOTiuiiW oy\nROCK MOUNT LONDON DRV,GIN\n','.-Aam'tou AbsNts ro*'-\nOATTO'S Gold Label and Estra Special\nFlneit Imported Scotch Whliklei\nALBIRTA DISTILLERS, UMITED\nCALSASr. C*N\u00abA\nThll \u00ab*\/irtiltin\u00bbnt ,li sol published or displayed by tke Liquor Cerrtro*\nB-tsro) or by the Government of Britiih Columbl*        \"*   '\n'  .       BO YBAR8 AGO\nProm the Nelson Dolly Newi, July 21,1903 '\nf Pipe Leo XIII died at-Rome at 4:04 yesterday afternoon.       .'; ,),\n. Drs. Hall and Rose are dissolving partnership et thO end ofthe current .month;\nMiss Quepny McCoy and Miss Isabel Ken-\ngave one of their most enjoyable entertainments in the Presbyterian Church last night.\nThey are said to bj\u00bb yOry talented young ladlei\n\u2014one in the'realm, of song, and the other in\nhumorous and dramatic readings. ?\"-,',- '\u2022\u25a0 7'\nV       It's Been Said\n. -He that plahta,thorni must never expect to\ngather roses.\u2014Pilpey. \"'\"       ,\nTour Horoscope\n\u201e Make plani forthe future and you should\nreap some gains, but do not be extravagant er\nover-generdui. As to3ayJi child -JdvSldpi; expect a kind, wjtty, optimistic individual to\nemerge.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n4V.t\\Pettt.\\0*m\nIW4HT.TO\nota-rais $Z ,\nNCktSf ORPBIt-f\nUERES\/tiyeiRlU,\nCERTIFICArE.\nDiPLOH4,B4SS-,\nF_RT4NDC_E0\nID MV Mouse,\nFORIDBffl'\nRCATI43I4-\na\n,    WH4t\u00bbA\n\/yME4N,IDBmpy\nAtrSOFPIWalDlTr\nW4VETI-!l_SK\u00bb\nAIC3ie\/C)Rt\u00abRIF\ntrWdSMYAIINE,\ntctsstfAmxxxM\n110BTM\/8X)A\\.\nSEaJRrTy&WD->\nDCSNYXJO\nTRUST Mt?\n \u25a0','.'       \u25a0        ' .     '  ' r ' ct  ..-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022.',.' -r\n%J\u00ab^^H^lo    Tbda\/s Bible fought\nBUrHISCDNSRESS\/lMM\nlTOVOXH rss-hw\"'\n\u25a0\"V4ND TVIE OTHER\n&M boeaiT\nD\u00abMHAV_\n4siwyE-\nSjy Die up wuR wmsmi..\nWITNESSES BERORESHE fiftBS J\n.HIM Arl AimiHltlM, OWE-\nPWBABLY^\nTHE DEUCE \\\nWIULBOUMCE]\nAND THE. EOS\n, OMEWlLLBEl\n8T05.\nTHE FATGO\nOFFERS TOSHCW\niHlSTATTOOINS\n> TO PMML HES\nOMS\/4ND1HE\nSAME.-*\nEven the Dead Sea contaft_ fabu\nldus weetlh, but infinitely?grester\nis the greatest men who -lived and\nlabored there.. That Is '\u25a0the real\nwealth of any land.\n. A land flowing with milk and\nhoney,\u2014Exodui 3:8.      A..\nOMXel\n'   THE HOI*t. JAMES SINCLAIR\n\"f-MklWsr 0' FUherlei\nRT. HON.-LOUIS S. ST.LAURENT\n. ' PRIME MINISTER OF CANADA\nTHE HON. R. O. CAMPNEY, Q.C.\nSolicitor General ol Cinidi .\nAwoclile Minister ol National Delaoit\niJi^\u00a3\n^,4K1N\u00a9TMECH_CK-\nWSHERS SWEAT ITOUT\nBBWRB-rH-yeeTTHE\nDOO0M-\"\nm\nBltMWHAHl.ALA.\nvMaybe I wasn't a smart parent,\nbut I didn't spoil life for my yo'ung-\nUnsby* glvinf 'eni everything before they even had the fun Of wish-\nIn' tor It.\nCtiwtidtilias never Jmown such\n.,.-:.\"   ''\"'','   \u25a0   -..''''    ']   r-Z \u25a0\"''\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   '   > ,'..>'- '\u25a0'\"\u25a0-   \u25a0 i- -\"' ',\u25a0'\u25a0'''   :  \u25a0'*   '.\"\u25a0\u2022'$\u25a0'\u25a0. '':,'\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0   '   .' \u25a0 \u25a0-:\u25a0'-\u25a0 '\u25a0 y ' *'    \u25a0    :\nProgress and Prosperity-*-\n'\u25a0'\u25a0'.'\u25a0       '\"'\u25a0''-',\"\u2022 >'\u25a0'.- '\u25a0.--'. .'\u25a0*'* '\"'\"**\u25a0'0:'-    ,f   '.-.'. .''     \u25a0      -\u00ab.*'.,    Y1 \\ \u25a0\u25a0'.' y y;  '\u25a0\u25a0 '\u2022\u2022\u25a0- \"v' -\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 ..   '.i'.'v\nFederally if's Liberal!\nVOTE LIBERAL\n\"Thll:advoitisomont Is published by thl B,C, Fedolol-Llboral Camfiaign Committee\"\nrmmi\n mm\n\"It Pays To Buy Quality\"\nQuality\nWork Boots\nCompetitive Prices\n\u2022 Williams   \u2022\"\u25a0;.\u2022 Lkkles\n\u2022 vPdria;. 4s:Heads\n\u2022 Canada West\nR. ANDREW\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n<    Establlihod-1902\nRelatives Attend\nJohnsen Funeral   *f\nNEW YORK (AP)^-F\u00abtsen rels-\ntlves ol Letter Johnsen, 25-year-old\nex-soldier who committed suicide\nlast, week alter slaying a Canadian-\nborn Broadway actress,. gathered\nquietly at a local funeral home Mon-\n, \"lay. ti. fy\n.-' Employees ol tho home said they\nhad been Instructed to give out no\nInformation: Only j Johnsen's relatives were admitted, but his name\n-did not appear on tbe customary\nnotice board. '-..-'\u2022..   \u25a0'\u25a0 ..\nfills mother arrived with two\nother women. She waste a state ol\nnear-collapse and was virtually car-'\nrted Into tbe building.\nJohnsen shot himself at his home\nThursday morning and lett a note\nconfessing tne killing ol 25-year-old\n.Florence Forsberg of Fort Frances,\nOni Police found ber nude body,\nbeaten and stabbed, In the bedroom\nol an apartment ahe shared with\ntwo other women.\nGIANT TUNNEL\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) \u2014 A 21-\nloot-diameter 'tunnel through 14\nmiles of mountain is part ol a power\nand irrigation scheme, planned ior\nSoutheastern Australia.\nNELSOH DAILY NlWS, TUESDAY; JUL* 21\/1>\u00bb \u2014 3\nAMONG SEASON'S -BRIDES In\nCreston was the former Maria Euphemia\nBurns, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. L.\nBurns, who exchange, vows with David\nRandall Macdonald. eldest son, of Mrs.\nEugene Macdonald arid the late Mr. Macdonald, at the home of her parents. Left\nto right are Miss Eleanor Macdonald, the\ngfooin's sister, who was bridesmaid; 'the\nbride and, groojn,. and Lester Burns, the\npride's brother, who was best man. Mr.\nand Mrs, Ma'cdbriald will, reside it Cr*ih*\nbrodk where the 'groom is assistant forest;\nranger.\u2014H. M. Buckna photo.    \u2022 \u25a0>\nAH flavors.\n1 pint carton\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\nLakemead, fancy.\n15 oz. can v.\t\nCampbell's.\n10 oi. can .\nTaste Tells,\nor. bottle\nICE CREAM\nAPPLESAUCE\nTOMATO SOUP\nTOMATO CATSUP!!\nAIRWAY COiEE^S-\nVANILLA WAFERS S^\u2014\nMARSHMALLOWS\nLUNCHEON MEAT\nPORK and BEANS\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE in\nAngelns.\n1 Ib. cello\nCanadian Perk.\n12 oz. can .\nTaste Tells.\n16 oz. can .\nTownhouse, natural,\noz. can . _\n25\n17\n13\n22\n93\n__-39\n-,-39\n-~ 29\n6 for 69\n35\n SMdaL-J\/isth. fi\/toduce.\nFIELD TOMATOES\"S!*-8**-\n* CORN on COB --\n*\ni oz. tube\nfield\nCUCUMBERS \"*\u2022\"'\"\ncrisp, tender\n_32\nlb. 19\nlb. 17\nIf\n*\nQwlittf. Wbati.\nGROUND BEEF,s'\"\"\nRed Brand\nBOLOGNA \u25a0\u25a0\u2022' \u00abid piet..,.- ;\u25a0\u25a0   '!,\nBreakfast Sausagei04&\nPrises Effective July 21 end M\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\n11*39\nlb. 35\nlb. 39\n% i SAFEWAY\nNelson\nSocial\n.  PHONPJ 14'\nFORMER RESIDENTS '..-.\u25a0 Mr.\nand'Mrs .W. H. Love and son James\nof Seattle, former residents of-Nelson, were rece-.t vis-tors. -\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nFROM ONTAUIO . . . Mrs. C.\nJone^, Eagle River, Ont., was visiting relaUves in Nelson. -\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nWHEAT PROVINCE.'.'. . Mr. and\nMrs. R. Halliwell .and family of\nArdath, Sask:, are visiting Mr.\nHalllwell's parents, Mr.,and Mrs. J.\nHalliwell, Morgan Street.\n'\u2022'\u2022\u2022'     \\\nFROM -HAT ... Mr. qnd Mrs.\nDave Francis of Medicine: Hat are\nvisiting ln Nr' -i.\n\u2022 \u2022\u25a0 *\nNEW HOME ... Mr., and Hrs,\nHerbert Day and family, 130 Chatham Street, have left for Vancouver to make their home there.\n\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u2022   \u00ab.;       '.--.- 4\nTO VANCOUVER . . . Doughs!\nHoltom has returned to Vancouver\nafter spending a'few days with his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Holtom, 1521 Ward Street. Mr. Holtom\nspent .part ot his vacation in San\nFrancisco before coming to Nelson.\n..\/'\u2022 \u201e\u25a0', *   \u2022   \u2022\n'.RETURN . . .. Mr. and Mrs.\nti orge -Courts, Stanley Street, have\nreturned from a holiday at the\nCoast. 7\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. L. DelPuppo. Innes\nStreet? announce the - engagement\nof,their, youngest daughter, Inez,\nto James P, Gift of Spokanei.son\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. JIT. Clift, Otis\nOrchards, Wash. Tho wedding will\ntake' place August 22nd in Spokane.\n'SIGNING THE BBGISTER after\ntheir- marriage' in Creston aire Walter Max\n> Rother- ahd: his bride, a iprnis*;;Creston\ngirl, Margot Carmen Foerster, while Rev.\nK. F. Sfc^nBe^T' n|*i$ii4i^^^\/\/&_|4te'\\'^z_f'j^a^\nLutheran Church, looks at,. The bride* tt\nthe daughter of Mr? ahd-Mrs. FrankFder-\nster of Victoria, ahd the grqom's parents\nare Mr. and. Mrs. Max Rother of Chicago.\nThfeli honeymoon destin atibn yfks Banff,\nand they -will live:In Two Harbours,.\"\nMlnn.-~H. M. Buckna \"photo.-  -    ?  ,\nCouple Charged With\n3-Year-Old Murder\n: VANCOUVER (CP)-RCJH* officers ere In Washington State Mon-\n'day seeking hew clues into the murder three years ago of a Duncan,\nB.'C,'Chlntse, 7 \u2022 , \u2022 - 7 7 ''\"\u25a0-\nPolice expect to question several\nB.C. Indians who were In the\nDUncan area when . .81-year-old\nChew Deb was .murdered .in : His\ncabin beside the Cowichah River\non June 30,1050. The Indians are\npicking fruit.In Washington State.\nLast Friday an Indian- couple,\nCecil Christopher Sampson, 30, of\nLyttohi B.C,,-and Ms. wife, Edith,\n26, appeared In suburban-Burnaby\npolicev.court charged, with. Chew\npen's, murdeh The couple, parents\nof. three small children, were remanded uptll July. 24,,\n. The 'SampSons were arrested at\nCampbell, Calif., 80 mlies south of\nSan. Francisco,-: a' vteek ago and\nbrought back here to etanU trlsU.v\nTRAINING RECRUITS\nCAPETOWN (CP) -> About 9000\nmeh will be posted, next January\nto army, air force, navy and marine\nactive citizen force units throughout \u00abhe Union of South Africa to\nbegin a new training plan. Recruits\nwill spend an Initial continuous\ntraining period of three months in\ncamp. \u25a0' ,\nREADY CASH li '\u25a0.\nCAPETOWN (OP) - As a result\nOf relaxation' of exchange-control\nregulations, travellers, from \u2022South\nAfrica going overseas will be allowed to obtain up to \u00a3400-worth\nof foreign exchange avery year Instead of a similar amount every\nthree years.\n\"\u2022ff    MR? and lilRS.. FRANK RADELJA?\n\u25a0 ' Y?--Y -ti'ti-; \u25a0'..''\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\"ti. '\u25a0. \u2014Maekle photo.\nKimfcerley Man W^s\nCcdgaridntf Bx^0)$er\nthe\nsure way\nwith\nCERTO\nKIMBERLEY ~Ot interest here\nwas the. marriage in Crescent\nHeights United ChurchVln Calgary\nof the former, Shirley Aiiin Clements,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs.'Frank\nClements ' o^- .Calgary,I add -Frank\nRadelja, son of Mr. and Mrs. Franlc\nRadeljaofKtmberleyv - ,Y-'\nThe wedding vows were exchanged before Rev.; Raymond Ashford\nin a twilight, ceremony held amid a\nfloral setting of lilacs and ferns.\nThe-bride, given in marrlage.'by\nher father, wore'a dregs'1 of. White\nnylon tulle poised over lace and\nslipper satin. It was designed with\na fitted, bodice, featuring frills of\nlace dotted with opalescent sequins?\nwhich framed the tulle' yoke, and'\ntrimmed the Illy point sleeves. Her\nskirt of-tulle and lace over satin\nwas hooped at the hemline. A sweetheart headdress held her fingertip\nveil,' and she carried a Bible over-'\nlaid with satin'and lace'and mounted with lilies of the valley and\n\u25a0carnations'.- \u25a0\nFIVE ATTEND BRIDE\nThe bride was attended by her\ni sister,-\" Mrs.   Doreen -Meyers,, ai\nmatron of honor, .and tour brides\n1 r.aids, Miss.Gloria Jean Clements,\nsis'ter of the bride; Miss Lois Starke,\n! Miss June; Blair and Miss. Marna\n: Rogerson, All attendants wore iden\n; tical gowns i)l nylon net styled with,\n'Jackets,   tiered   skirts, in   waltz\nlongtlv halo headdresses and tulle\nmittens. The matron of honor's dress\n. was in shrimp shade and the bridesmaids' frocks were in Spring green.\nI They .carried nosegays-of earns--\nItlons and  Talisman roses.\nMr. Walter Jackson attended the\n'h egroom, and ushers were Mr.\nNicholas. Radelja, brother of the\n:room, Mr.. Brenton Clements,\nirother'olT tb\u00bb bride; Mr. Michael\nMeyers, ttother.ln-1-iw \"of the\nbride, ond Mr. Ralph Starke.\nThe wedding music was provided\nby Mrs. Edna Steele, who sang at\nthe, church and during a reception\n';('.- the Harris Sky.Rooms for 100\n_^ii puests.   Mr,'.-. Courtney -.' Scott' was\n^_ | toastmaster, and the toast to the\nbride was proposed by Mr. Leslie\nGainorV Mrs. Steele was. accompanied.' by Mrs? i Harold Rogerson,\nand Gloria Jean, sister of the bride,\nentertained with'tap .dancing.\nMr., and Mrs. Radelja are honeymooning at Radium and Kimberley\nand .will reside in' Calgary. '-The'\nbride's travelling costumes was a\ngrey suit .lined in 'yellow, with\nmaiuve ae'eessories.: .\nMiss Irma Patterson,-' Miss Joan\nAikcns, Mr. Paul 'Hadosevick, Mr.\nPeter Cifer? Mr. Nicholas \u2022 Radelja,\nand the groom's' parents, all, of\nKimberley were among\" the put.ot!-\ntown guests? '\n8TUDIES 8YNTHETIC8\n- SYDNEY,' Australia f<CP)7\u2014 ,_f.\nfeet of; synthetics on -the wool Industry will be studied in the United\nStates by 0, Falkiner, president; of\nthe New South Wales Sheep-\nbreeders' Association. Mr..Falkiner\nsaid he is convinced the big synthetics'manufacturers, hope to displace Wool. ,       ,7   ' .'.,-\u25a0\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\n**\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\nwuhmsssm\nAUTOMATIC DiFROST\nMODlt RBI I IT\n$549.50\nHere's automatfe define*\nIng at its beet! No bum\u2014\nno bother\u2014no Worries. It'i\nso-faBt and completely\nsanitary.\nSee this and all &ect_s\u00bb\nconvenienoe-packed Ooojl\nerator models at jriwi\nd4*iitler>B todijrt\n_ fc~i*>eiiiisiettt,tmei\\\nH^BX^VfWSWttWV' 7\nf';\\S_^_pW-\nJ'JmjEhjo^\nfl\nif\nSALADA\nTEA BAGS\nWant a\nShort-Cut Uf\nSmartness?'\nCAREER GIRLS FIKD\nOUR SERVICE TOPS!\nOur modem cleaning methods\nkeep office dresses and date\nfrocks swfeet, c|ean and like-\nnew.at a moderater.cost.' Smart\ngols depend on our- prompt*\nefficient.service!-,\n\u25a0PHON11175\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nW&Wiffi&*W?Z%\n182 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 1175\n. ^:m.M^ti^m^&\nP.S.F. MUSTARD FROM ENGLAND\n:   And Be Sure Of   if-\nFall strength, unsurpassed in quality,, that's Colman's\ngenuine D S F Mustard. That is why re^pes calling for dry\nmustard sre usually based on the uniform strength of\nCaiman's.   ,; ' '      ..\nSend 10^ for new edition of \"Culinary Art\" cook book to\nReckitt & Caiman (Canada) Ltd., Station 'T', Montreal:\ntOLMAHS -Foi,<Genernlions The STANDARD TOR STRENGTH\n'^L\n __ I\t\nmmmmmmmmmmm.\nm\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1953\nDuke of Westminster, B. (. (oast\nPromoter.- Dies in Scottish Home\n| EOCH MORE, ScoUanct (AP)'\u2014\nThe Duke of Westminster, one of\nthe world's richest Men, died Sunday night at his estate here. He was\n>M.\\'\nf- The peer, .four times married and\nthree times divorced, owned vast\nestates in Scotland, Wales ond England, ss well as about'600 acres ot\nLondon's expensive Mayfalr and\nChtisea neighborhoods,\n\u25a0\u25a0 Only this year he bought on island in the Fraser river in British\nColumbia, and launched an industrial development project estimated to cost \u00a368,009,000 ($176,400,-\n\"(jtJO).\nBUTTLE  AMERICA\" ,\n'.His London holdings alone were\nvalued at \u00a320,000,000  ($56,000,000)\nMEW DEAL\nFOI\nLABOUR\nA (faanrwthre govimminl t\u00bbW\n. sevlew Immedlitely ell niHoiu)\n.labs* leslsUtUm 4\u00bb Improve\neoHedlw bargaining and con-\ndlliUon procedure, Conservi!) vts\n?'\u00abrifl nswaJilt employnint\npractice*, sad egual pay hi\naqatl weik. A ConsitviHve\nlovimmint will aho entind Iht\nprevisions ol (he Unemployment\nlesarinee Actio provide benefit\npeyntnttfermimployment dee\ntsdlsibllngsleknmorKeldiftl,\nThe issue\nYOUR MONEY!\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0   :\u2022\nWTE\nPROGRESSIVE\nCONSERVATIVE\nJnurtod by die Progressive\nContirvillve Party of Canada\nbefore the Second World;War and\nland values have. Increased greatly\nsince then. . 7\nOne of his biggest real estate\ndeals was the lotting of a long lease\non part ot Grosvenor ' Square-\nLondon's \"Little America\"\u2014to the\nU.S. government.\nIn the square are the. embassy\nand other U.S. government buildings. The price of this deal never\nv>as modep ubllc, but one I report\nestimated it at not less'than \u00a31,-\n000,000 ($2,000,000).\nThough he wai married four\ntimes, he left no son to inherit hi!\ntitles and vast fortunes. They pass\nto a bachelor cousin, William-Grosvenor, 59.\nThe stocky, good-looking Duke\nHugh Richard Arthur Grosvenor inherited his London property,, but\nhe acquired the rest ot his vast land\nempire by himself,        '\nLAND EMPIRE ,.-  '\nThe duke was an earnest collector of lands and property\u2014160,000\nacres--sprawling -across England,\nScotland, Wales, Ireland, Canada\nand Australia.        :---\nIn Scotland he specialized in reforestation. In Wales he concentrated on sheep-forming ond in England his dairy farms were models.\nOne of bis last acts was to, \"improve\" Annacis Island in the mouth\nof British- Columbia's Fraser river.\nHe bought It;Jn May. -.-\u2022'\nThe duke's collection of wives\nbegan in 1001 when he married Constance Cornwallis-Westv who -after\nIB years of marriage and two\ndaughters divorced him.\nThe. following year he married\nViolet Rowley who divorced him\nsix years later.1 There were no children.\nHis third wife^was Loelje Sys-\nonby, daughter of a baron. That\nmarriage was dissolved in 1941V\nHis last wife was Anne Sullivan,\ndaughter of Brig.-Gen.. Edward\nSullivan of County Cork, Ireland.\nShe was 33 when they married in\n1947. -       ,\u25a0'\u25a0\nVANCOUVER (CP) - -Gilbert\nHardman, representative of the\nDuke of Westminster in British Co\nlumbia, said Monday he' expected\nthe; proposed multi-million dollar\nAnnacis Island, project at New\nWestminster would proceed according to schedule despite the peer's\ndeath.       ' \t\nMr. Hardman said it might be\nnecessary for him to return to England? .-for .conferences' concerning\ncontinuation ' of ^he development\nproject, but .added:.\nIt is unlikely the project will be\nshelved.\"     ...... \u2022      1\n5 FIRRY TRIPS DAILY\nBETWEEN HORSESHOE BAY\n(m$t Vantouver)-NANAMO\nVIo Deluxe MV. Kahlolco    \u2022   No Reservations. Required\nPASSENGERS \u2022 AUTOS \u2022 TRUCKS\n\u2022 Connecting Bus Service \u2022\nHolders of passenger ticket! aboard th* MV. Kahloko on-\nprovided but service to and from Vancouver\nCity without additional cost.\nVICTORIA-PORT ANGELES SERVICE:\n4 TRIPS DAILY VIA MV. CHINOOK\n\u00a9\nBLACK BALL UNE, LTD,\nVANCOUVES CITY, B.C.Motor\nTfaruporiottofi, ISO Dumrrtirir,\nMo.hu 2421\nHORSESHOE IAY, Fmy WM,\nWhyladiH 3581\nJUDGE8 (foreoround) mark their choices as\n10\/ne of the candidates for the title Miss United\n8tatei stand before them In competition ot Lono\nBeach, Calif. Ten unnamed winneri were (elected\nfor the Mln U.S. finals, Trie eventual winner\ncompeted with glrli from 22 nations for the Mlas\nUnlvene title. Left to right: Miss Rhode Island,\nBarbara Delgnon; South Carolina, Susan Day;\nSouth Dakota, Kathleen Herman; Texas, Joan Gall\nBradshaw; Utah, Shauna Wood; Vermont,.Kathleen\nSurrel; Virginia, Dorothy Bailey) Washington,\nNahoy. PetraoOrg; and West Virginia, Fay Hlgley.\n;     \u2014AP Wlrephoto\nWorld's Doctor Retires.. . .\nBrock OroholnTj Work for UN\nShown in Deeds More Than Words\nBy ADELAIDE KERR\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 4AP>-\nThe doctor with the biggest practice in the world, two billion people,\nIs going to -retire  .7\nTuesday Dr. Brock Chisholm\nsteps down as director-general dt\nthe UN'S world health organization,\nending a flve-eyar stint of guiding\nmail's firit round-the-world battle\nagainst disease.. It's a job that\nbrought him the unofficial Title:\n\"First doctor to the human race.\"\nDr. Ctoisholm's work has affected\nmillions, many of whom, never\nheard his name. In fact' he wOuld\nbe even more of an unknown were\nIt not for a couple-of speeches, he\nonce made. He had the .temerity in\none to take a poke at Santa Claus.\nIn the other, he swUhgon the whole\nhuman race, declaring that a cause\nof wars is society's morality, its\nconcept of right and wrbng;\nBoth were delivered while he was\nCanadian deplity minister of health\nand brought a flood .of headlines\nand protests? Then he stepped ln\nas die first director of the world\nhealth organization. His accomplishments there have been deeds,\nmore than words.\nINTERNATIONAL FAME\nHis role brought Dr. Chisholm international fame and, last year, one\nof tlie annual Laslter awards of the\nAmerican public Health Association.. .''\u25a0 \/'\nBut he sitll is remembered by\nthousands of Canadians for his\nSanta Claus speech. Dr. Chisholm\nisn't against Santa Claus. Tor years\nhe hung- up his stocking each\nChristmas, along with his. two\nchildren, a son and a daughter, now\nteen-ageA . '.\/'      .\" .-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\nWhat he did was chide parents for\nteaching children to believe in the\nold gent. His argument was that\nSanta Claus-should be taught as a\nmyth, that children should be rear,\ned to regard him as part of a pleasant holiday, game, lest tbey confuse\nfantasy and reality. It made -headlines round the world.'.\nSo did his speech on morality.\nHe called the necessity to fight\nwars a \"psychiatric symptom as is\n.the anti-social behavior of a\ncriminal.\" He said the whole human race had failed to-reach emotional   maturity.   He   described   a\nCalvert\nYou'll find that members of Canada's most distinguished\nclubs call for Canada's most distinguished whisky 7..       .\nLord Calvert. For superb quality... and the: smoothest\nhighball you've ever tasted... always call for Lord Calvert!\nLordCaivert\nCALVERT  DISTILLERS LIMITED,  AMHERSTBURG,  ONT.\nforce which \"precents the rational\nuse of intelligence\" and said:    ...\n' \"The only psychological fjree\ncapable of producing these perversions is morality, vthe .concept of\nright and wrong. ,:,,   v      7\nHe -voiced conclusions formed\nduring years as a psychiatrist in\nToronto. \"\".-        .    \u2022 \u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0'\nktiEpa tidy desk a>     ,\nThe fire with which he attacked\nthe subject of human behavior is\nin sharp contrast with the quiet\nway he handled the gloal problems\nof W.H.O. In the office, his self.\ncontrol is .famous. He? works, with\nsuch efficiency that within 15 minutes after he reaches his desk at\n8:30, his' in-bosket Is empty, every\ndocument routed\u2014and he keeps His\ndesk clear with the same brisk delegation of authority through the day.\nFor fun, he gathers friends.at his\nhouse for a sing fest, - pumping\naway himself at a portable organ\nand leading rousing hymns.\nRecognition.of human dignity Is\none of his 95 creeds. In the tropics,\nhe and other 'officials were once\ntaken out in a fleet of cars to see\nsome tribesmen. Bain had' fallen\nsteadily for several days and the\nnatives, lined up along the road,\nwere spattered with mud form the\n-passing cars. f\n\"This can't be very comfortable\nfor tbe people out there,\" remarked\nDr. Chisholm to a minister of the\ngovernment. \u25a0\n.\"Oh, they don't mind,\" said the;\nminister.\n\"Perhaps not,\" said Dr. Chisholm.\n\"But  I  dO;\"\nBrock Chisholm wos born 57\nyears ago in Oakville, Ont., the\nson of Jl coal .dealer. From the\ntime he was.a youngster, he dreamed of being a doctor and practised\non his sisters' dolls, dosing them\nwith syrup and water.\nBY BOAT TO B.C. 1\nHe won- his M.D. ot the University of Toronto' in- 1924, married\nGrace Ryrle of Toronto and went\nback to his home town' to practise.\nA few years convinced him many\nof his patients, were suffering emotional troubols. He went to England for further -.st^dy and later\npractised psychological medltine .in\nToronto. .-, ?.   '\u25a0'\u25a0'-.      ;\nDuring the'Second World Wer\nhe served Canada vag 'director-general -of medical, services and, later,\nas deputy' minister, of health. He\nbecame.. W.H.O.- s director-general\nJuly 21, 1948.    ...    a yti\nDr, Ch|jholm ; starts his retire\nment with* a leisurely boat trip to\nBritish Columbia, where he ex-\npects to build a house. After that\nhe plans a long period of rest and\nfishing which he may interrupt\noccasionally later with some lecturing and writing. .\nHe will be' succeeded by Dr. Mar-\ncolino Candau of Brazil.\nCave-In Sends LO\nTo Miami Hospital\nMIAMI BEACH 4AP)\u2014A sectioh\nof a multi-million dollar ocean-\nfront under construction collapsed,\nsending 10 workmen to hospital. The\nmen fell 25 feet to the ground when\na framework of concrete, steel and\nplanking caved ln under their feet.\nTHIS ADVERTISWlNT IS NOT PUBLISHED OR DISPUTED Sr THE IIQUOR CONTttOl IOARO OS IV IH[ OOVEHNMENT'OfSRITISH COIUMBIA\nThree Reach top\nOf Mt. McKinley\nANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP) -\nWord was received here Sunday\nthat a Californian and two Seattle\nmen had reached the 20,269-foot\nsummit of Mt. McKinley,, North\nAmerica's highest peak.     \"   .   .   .\nFritz Lippman of San Francisco\nwas the leader. The other!, were\nThomas W.' Stelnburn and David A.\nCollins of Seattle: -   .\nThe ascent took from'June 19 to\nJuly 9.\nA fourth member of the. party, an\nAlaskan, failed to make the. top\nafter-suffering sunstroke.\nPolio Closes'Peg\nHealth Centres\nWINNIPEG -4CP) \u2014 Manitoba's\n1953 poliomyelitis total climbed to\n198 cases Monday as health officials\nreported 33 new cases, 21 of which\ns owed paralysis. There have been\nfive deaths.\nMeantime, authorities moved to\nmake more nurses available to combat the epidemic.\n. Dr. Roper Cadham, .Winnipeg's\nacting medical health officer; fan.\nbounced the city, will close'its 12\nchild health centres to make more\nnurses available for polio coses at\nKing George hospital.' '\u25a0''.\n\u25a0 Dr R. M. Elliott, deputy minister\nof health for -Manitoba,-'said the\nprovincial health\" service had released four public nurses to do.pollo\n'work. \u25a0''.'.,\nTraffic Couacir\nFor Chilliwack\n' VANCOUVER 4CP)-Krst of tbe\ntraffic and safety councils to be\norganized throughout British Co\nlumbia will be set up at Chllliwack.\nHarry;Duker, president ot the\nB. C Automobile Association. \u00a3\nMonday it Will be a model for. other\ncouncils to -bo organized in tho principal cities and towns..\n- Mr. Duker said the Scheme has\nbeen approved' by tte. provincial\ngovernment and the automobile association will work with George\nLindsay, head ot the motor vehicle\nbranch, in setting up the councils.\nService clubs and other organiza\ntlons Interested in traffic safety will\nbe invite dto participate in the\nscheme.\nBusiness Spotlights .i.\nBooming Fishing Industry Opens\nUp in Great Slave Lake District\n\u2022fEO-OWKNIFE, .N.W.T,: (CP) 7-\nGreat-Slave Lake in the Northwest\nTerritories is the centre bf a boom.\nIng fisheries Industry which last\nyear.', .-marketed some $1,5110,000\nworth ot whltcfish and lake bout\nin Chicago,- Detroit and New. Ypr)\u00a3\nTlie cju-rent'issue of Trade-News\npublished by the fisheries department describes the growth and activities of the Great. Slave fisheries\ndurin;: the past summer and.winter\n18'ons. :\u2022'.'-..:\nTwo new. freight boats were\nlaunched , In the lake, .500 miles\nnorth of Edmonton, Snd two ice.\nhouses and packing-plants were\ncompleted, one at Ptarmigan -Point\non the north shore near ?Yellow.\nknife and the other at Dawson\nLanding on the southeast shore.\nSome 500 licensed commercial\nfishermen . netted 7,224,000 - pounds\nof fish in the 250-mile-Iopg lake.\nWbitefish at 4,006,000 pounds accounted, for the bulk of the catch.\nThere wei-e 2,999,000 pounds Of lake\ntrout and 210,000 pounds of other\nspecies which included pike arid\npickerel,\nTotal   marketed   value   of   all\nspecies exceeded :$1,750,000 Of which\nthe fishermen received some $557.\n000.    .      ?    .' '   f   ;-\".;..  7\nNEW FISHING GROUND8\nTwo \u25a0 fisheries\nlaunches equipped with radio-telephones patrolled the lake, Trade\nNews says, giving.assistance when\nnecessary to fishing-boats. Tbe patrol boats .-discovered several new\nfishing grounds.7\n:\u25a0 Several rfew lakes in the vicinity\nof Great Slave were opened for\ncommercial fishing last winter and\nfrom these 13 licensed fishermen\nproddced 57,400 pounds of pickerel,\nWhitefish and lal^e trout.\nThe publication says there is a\n\"distinct.possibility\" 'that more of\nthe thousands of small lakes which\nlie in the vicinity of. Great Slave\nmay be opened soon for'commorclol\nfishing.        \"fyi-yy'.\nTrade News describes the rebirth\nof another fishing industry in northern Canada, the qjiest by Eskimos\nand Indians and some white hunters\nfor beluga or white whale ln Hudson's Bay-and in the Churchill\nriver pear Churchill, Man. \u2014\nWHALE INDUSTRY\nThe beluga, a milky-white creature which may reach 17 feet in\nlength and 4000 pounds in weight,\nroams in herds near the mouths of\nrivers. Fishermen trap the animal\nby driving it on shore or into nets\npreylbusly set up.  7\nThe fishermen, the Eskimos often\n: -ekyaks, drive^hc whales by,beat-\nftig on the water with paddles' and\nsticks. When grounded or enfagled\nIn nets, the wholes are killed and\ntowed owa;- for rendering Into oil\nand meal.\nThe publication says that between\n194) and 1048, some 50 beluga were\ncaptured annually. With the establishment of a rendering plant at\nC.iurchlll in 1949, .the fishery\nboomed. Some'500.were taken In\n1951 and a total of 699 In the summer of 1952.. ;.'.,'. s\nThe hunters received some $7000\nlast year for that part of the catch\nwhloh was rendered Into'oil 'and\nmeal. -Much of the meat was eaten\nlh the region.\nInvent New Sicjn\nLanguage fop Deaf\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A new deaf ,\nmute, sign; language with a 4000-\nword vocabulary has been worked\n.but by Sil- Richard Paget, president of the Brltlrh Deaf and Dumb\nLeague. The league wonts the ministry of education to help teach the .\nnew language to the deaf mute it\nwas announced. i\nIran Lung to Oliver\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An RCAF-\nDakota equipped with any Iron lung\nmade an emergency flight to Oliver\nMonday to evacuate a 3o>year-old\nman -suffering ifrom polio.\nThe plane, flown by Fit. Lt. Jim\nFitzsimmons, carrieu an RCAF doctor and nursing sister. The man\n\u2022Was  tov be  flown; to -Vancouver\n-.      ,      . General .Hospital   for   emergency\ndepartment-treatment; \\f.ti .\nThe 8tay In SPOKANE\nYou'll Enjoy-r :\nThe Coeur d'Alene'i hoipl-\ntallty provldei newly modernized   surroundings    In j\nlobby, In roomi, In halls.\nYou're   In  the  center  oft\nSpokane'i  shopping  and I\n,.theatre   aree:   Wonderful!\ni-dlhlBO, TV for your room.l\nI recreation In the  Donkeys\nRoom Ond nightly dancing*\nI In the Pioneer Room\u2014all atf\nthe CordinI\nCOEUR D'ALENE\nHOTEL  _\n'~rr=\"- s;.z. sv:\u2014\u25a0\u201e\n228 N.Howard at Trent Avp.\nTONIGHT\nMrs. Mo k- Shipfey\nLIBERAL CANDIDATE FOR TEMISKAMING\nlack Peterarti\nLIBERAL CANDIDATE FOR ELGIN\nCKLN-8:00-\nM.\nPDST\nAND TRANS-CANADA NETWORK\nPublllhed by the\nNATIONAL LIBERAL FEDERATION QF CANADA\n'\u25a0FOR;-'   vY\nPERFORMANCE\nX0A&3&7E&\nFOR\nMILEAGE\nby THOUSANDS of B.C. Motorists\nii\nfsso EXTRA\ngives me...\nGREATER POWER!\"\nIf you use a premium grade gasoline, you\ncan't buy better premium grade gasoline pi\nB.C than improved Esso Extra! Esso Extra\ngives more surging power, more flashing\nacceleration,)^ overall performance;than\never before! 7   '>\n\"ECONOMICAL\ntssi\ngives me\nMONEY-SAVING MILEAGE!\"\nMore and more B.C. motorists are finding\nthat Esso gives mileage, economy, easy\nstarting, lively power. If you use a regular\ngrade gasoline, you can't make a better buy\nin B.C than economical Esso! '\n-    I.       . .\u2022\u25a0\u2022.\/.-.,..--. - \u25a0 . '\u2022.'.. . ,.   Y'        .        . \/;  1\nMORI CANADIANS USE C$SO AND \u20acSSO EXTRA THAN  ANY OTHER GASOLINES\nIm. ll        I   I      III!\nl\n'        -\n\t\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0        '-   -\n jMan. Town Has Leartjed\nTo Live WitK Snakes\n', CflATFlELD, Man. (CP) - The\nChatfield area, 75 miles north bf\nWinnipeg, lays claim td the. most\nprolific snakes in the world\u2014and\nUie healthiest. .',-\u2022\"\u25a0'\nEvery   spring,,  harmless   garter\n' snakes turn the town in to something between a hangover and a\nnightmare but It doesn't seem to\n;worry Chalfielders.7 ,. ..',..'\nA tew.snakes were reported In\ntowp this year but nothing tq what\nIt was three years ago. First signs\nol the Invasion was reported on\nthe highway where numerous\nsnakes, apparently sunning themselves on the gravel, were killed\nby cars.- ,.-'.''\nThree -years ago .an attempt was\nmade' to wipe out the reptiles with\nchemicals but lt had no noticeable\neffect.'-    '.'\u25a0-' '\n. \"Wa Just had to learn to; live\nwith them,\" said A. B. Martin, municipal clerk at Inwood,' a nearby,\nvillage. .     . '\" ti:,'-.'\nChatfield postmaster Ed Hobor-\nough is something of\u2022,*.\u2022 local authority on snakes. He said it is a poor\nyear for shakes due to the lack .of\nsunshine\nBock clefts and blasting holes in,\nthe area tend literally to become\nsnake pi ta. Mr.- Hoborough visited\none of .these, about three miles\nnorth of Chatfield. He' reported tt\nwas a mass of writhing reptiles.\nRUSS SEIZES 29 BOATS   ,\nTOKYO '(Reuters) -RusslanB\nseized 20 Japanese fishing, boats\nand more than 80 fishermen in the\nfirst 18 days of this month, Japan\nese coastguard authorities announced. They said the fishing boats\nWere captured in Japanese waters\naround Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost Island, and arount1 the Kur-\nlies, the Soviet islands off Siberia.\nLONDON (CP) - The British\nand Foreign Bible Society with an\nestimated .pre-war deficit of 40,\n000,000 Bibles throughout the'world\nreports It now has' supplied 38,000,\n000 of them. Ten new languages\nhave been introduced, providing\nScriptures in.818 languages.-\n.   . t-tW HOME OR *-.\nBe right in style,\ncolor 6nd pricei\nNorth Vancouver Boy Risks life\nTo Save Dog, Wins Highest Award\nw^\nCOtORfUl    -    ECONOMIC\"!\nJohns-Maitvilb\nASPHALT SHINGLES\nBefore you build or remodel It will pay you to get full details\non J-M Asphalt Shingles. These famous roofing, shingles offer\nfull value for your dollar. They are made to rigid standards\nof quality ... they're bacled by J-M's 90 years of roofing\nknowledge and they are available in a wide choice of colors\nand styles. For complete roofing satisfaction at low cost make\nyour choice Johns-Manville Asphalt Shingles!\nHr fi\u201elo!dir.kow!ni styles ond colon of J-MAiprioll\nShlngUs write Conodlon Jonnt-Monvlllo, Dopt. N-S,\nIW Say SI., Toronto,\n-7-*>OS,\n''\"''\"\u25a0\u2022I BUUOING M-UKI''^1\"\nNelson Machinery Co. Ltd.\n214 Holl St. Nelson, B.C.* Phone 139\nLazareff & Co. Ltd.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nRossland, B. C.\nNEWSPAPER FILES contain such photos as this oVLavrentl\nBeria, left, and Georgia Malenkov, when bath were-vlelng for ihe\nfavor of Stalin and when both appeared secure In their- positions In\nthe Soviet oligarchy. Now Beria, No.'Two man In the triumvirate\n' of Molotov, Malenkov and Beria that succeeded Stalin, Is In prison,,\naeouced of being a traitor and enemy of the.state. Malenkov's post-.,\ntlon \u2014 Gubject to change at any moment \u2014 Is that of nominal head\nof the state. '. -.v.    \u25a0\u25a0.-;\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Martin Nicholson? a 14-year-old North Vancouver\nboy who rescued-a trapped dog from\na 300-foot deep canyon, has-been\nvoted the, 1953 National HUmane\nAct Award, the American Veterinary Medical Association said' Monday.\nHe' was given the award on the\nrecommendation of a special committee of the AVMA, which presented a report on his heroic act\nlast year at the association's annual meeting here.\nThe report said the boy saw the\ndog on a foot-wide ledge above the\nboiling rapids of a canyon in -British. Columbia. The dog had been\nstranded on the ledge for-four days\nafter being swept dowpstream.\n\"Clinging to roots of shrubs, forcing his toes into the. cracks of\nrocks, sliding over smooth surfaces,\nthe boy descended to the ledge tb\naid the trapped animal,\" the report\nsaid.    -. -'   ..\nMartin made the first trip with\nfood tor the dog. The next morning\nsome men accompanied him to the\ncanyon where he was lowered to\nthe ledge by. a rope. Martin fashioned a.sling for the dog and both\nwere pulled to safety.\nSaid the boy:.  \u2022  ' '.\n\"I have a dog myself at home\nand I thought of her when I- saw\nHail Batters Alta.\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Weekend hailstorms in southern and central Alberta are expected to add 500 to 600\ndamage claims to the 800 received\nafter Thursday's>'norlh'erh-^storms.-\nthe Alberta hail insurance board\nreported Sunday night.  7\nCutting a 12-mile swath, a hail\nstorm severely damaged crops Saturday in a line running southeast\nfrom Balzac, about 15 miles north\nof Colgary, to Irvine and the Saskatchewan border.   ,\nQuartz is the most.abundant mineral in the crust of the earth.\nIn 1908, the New Westminster la-roiu tcom\u2014Inter tho famous      ,\n'.\"Solmonbelllei\"\u2014become tho first leom to win tho Conodlon\nLoerojso Championship^ 7 *\nIn,1904, William Braid founded B.C.'s first\n- distillery, and established the standard of quality\nthat distinguishes B.C. Double Distilled Rye.\nDiscover f<4r yourself why B.C. Double Distilled\nis preferred by British Columbians for its superb \\\nflavour... its light-body and-mellow sjnoothness.\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY CO. LTD.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, I.C.\nThe Distinguished Products qf British Columbia's First Distillery,\nS.C BOUSLI DISTILLED \u25a0 .   B.C. IXPORT ?\u2022 . S.C. RESERVE   .   B.C. SPECIAL   <   B.C. STERLING LONDON DRY SIN\nThis advertisement'is' not published or displayed by the Liquor. Control Board\n-.'\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0'[\u25a0'. erby the Government, of British Columbia. \u25a0'   ' :\nthat dog down there! I couldn't rest\nuntil-1 fed him.''-' 7. 7 .\nThe award is made annually tor\n.the year's most outstanding' act. of\nkindness to animals by a' boy. or a\ngirl. ' '\u25a0 \u2022 -7??' 'V -;- '\u2022';\nRed China Starts on\nAutomobile Plant\nHONG KDNO '(APy\u2014The Communist, newspaper Ta Kung Pao reported . Monday construction bail\nstarted on the first automobile manufacturing plant in Red China. The\nplant, is being built, at'.Mukden in\nManchuria.. -.-\u25a0\u25a0 .- \"--\u25a0 \u25a0.-.\nRussia, Turkey\nEnd Differences\nISTANBUL (AP)\u2014Russia, 'in an\nexchange of notes with Turkey,\nsays she hos \"renounced\" previous\nterritorial claims against her 'Balkan-, neighbor and- '\"reconsidered''\nearlier; demands to share controlof\nthe strategic Dardanelels'. . '-\n. The.Turkish government replied'\nSaturday that it. \"notecT with satis,\nfaction\" the official.Soviet declaration The Soviet note was sent May\n30 but not rtlade public until Sunday.\n- The.Soviets in 1042 demanded.a\nhand in running the. Dardanelles,\nwhich-links the Mediterranean and\nSlack seas. Russia'al6o laid claim\nto the Turkish border areas of Kars,\nArdahan and Artvin. Turkey ' re.\njected the demands. 7.7' '-.V'V---'\n' Observers 'here pointed out that\nthe Soviets didn't exactly; specify\njust how for they had changed their\nmind about control of tbe Dardanelles..        ' \u25a0'\u25a0  \u25a0'-''\nUnder the 1936 Montreux convention\u2014signed by Turkey, Russia, Romania, Bulgaria, Britain, France,\nGermany, Greece, Yugoslavia and\nJapan\u2014Turkish sovereignty \"over\nthe key waterway is recognized but\nfree passage is guaranteed merchant ships of all nations in peace or\nwar. \"   '   '.   -'\u25a0\u25a0-. ,.-\u2022,.'7\nFor Hog Cholera\nTORONTO .(CP)\u2014Early and',ef.\nfectivc Immunization against -hog\ncholera greatly-reduces the.'loss of\nswine .through; intestinal diseases,\nthe American -Veterinary- Medical\nAssociation was told Monday     *'\nA report.by Drs. L..M. Hutchings\nand L.:Pi.Doyle of Perdue University, Lafayette, Ind., said hog cholera, swln dysentery and transmissible gastro-entcritis are V the\nmost common causes of intestinal\nproblems, but bog cholera should )e\nsuspected,.,_and 'treated'first?\n'SCATTER'WIDELY -        ';\n7 The .b'est way of' cqnjbatting swine\ndysepttes' .. and. gastro-eriteritis\namong,young; pigs was to scatter\nthemv.afwldeljr 'as. possible'to-re*'\nduce,iosses. .; -J    .'  Y?:\" 7-'!\nDr. LVC, Swan of rSL\"Catharines,\nOnt., told the association's convention good housing and heat lamps\nwill' eliminate intestinal trouble\ncaused by chillingVand damp pens.\nHe also recommended reduced feeding of. the sow after farrowing.\nIn his presidential address to the\nweek-long convention, which open\ned Monday, pr: W. L. .Boyd of\nSt Paul, Minn'.,'urged greater farm'\nacreage and f improved livestock\nmethods as measures to provide for\npopulation gains of the future.\nDr. Boyd said, the need for an expanded research program is emphasized by the recent- spread of\nvesicular exanthema and anthrax in\nthe United States.   '\nWilliam John Rankine, a Scottish\nengineer and physicist born in 1820,\nis considered one of the- founders\nof thermodynamics.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 19SS\n1-3-7-\nLETHBRIDGE,-Alta. (CP) -This\ndistrict has \u2022 received- its heaviest\nJune rains since records were first\nkept   In   1902.   Tbe   precipitation\n:sed. the' 1008 record of 7.01\ninches with plenty to**spare. <?\u2022, Y\n' STOCKHOLM (CP) - A paratyphoid epidemic In Sweden abated\nearly in July after raging almost\na month. Almost 4000 people, became victims, about SO of whom\ndied. ?!    7\nGoing Maces?\nGo by air and arrive sooner, feeling freih.and\nrested,  Flying time from Castlegar to -\nCalgary.- VA hrs. $ 24,75\nVancouver 2 hrs. $ 28.05\nPortland _4 hrs. $ 45.35\nHonolulu .\"-\u201e 12   hrs. $196.05\nLet the Canadian Paclfio Alrllnea agent help\nyeu plan your entire trip. He will gladly make\nall arrangements, provide complete through ticket service no matter where you want to go.\nPhone 204, Nelson, for Information and reservations.. \\ ' \u25a0    ..' '  \"A- '\u25a0?'\u25a0\nCtuuuJJuQeM (PacUic\nAIRLINES\nI\n4\n:>\nMAKE THE SUPREME TEST\nSMOOTH ACCELERATION\nEBBBB!\nIt'sthefeffett^ofafleightqualitiesthatmakes\na great gasoline. And that's where Chevron\nSupreme is truly SUPREME. Nothing haa\nbeen  spared  to  give  British  Columbia,\nmotorists a highway-proven motor fueL\nThere's only one way to be eertein .yotfre\ngetting the finest in motoring pleasure.\nMake your own SUPREME, test Fill up '\nat any Standard Station or Chevron Gas\nStation* then let performance convince you:\n; Here's an ..open mvita-\ntipn. Ask-at Standard\nStations or Chevron Gas\nStations for your free\ncopy of the Gasoline\nMileage Record. Make\nyour own road-test for\neconomy.\n;\nget the gasoline usifSs all 8 high performanee\nIT'S THE TOTAL OF ALL EIOHT\nTHAT MAKES CHEVRON SUPREME\n.       ... Jl\nMileage\nPower\nAnti-Knock quality\nVapor-lock prevenlleh\nQuick Starting\nFast warm-up\nAccoloratlqn\nAreaBlomllnn\nThrill to the eager restlessness of the thoroughbred in every horsepower of ybiirf inotof\nwhen you use Chevron Supreme Gasoline.\nLet city traffic and open hjgbway driving\nconvince you that here, is the perfectly\nbalanced fuel. NOW! MAKE THE TEST\nFOR SMOOTH ACCELERATION! Call\nat any Standard Station or Chevron Gas\nStation and fill up with Chevron Supreme.\nSee for yourself how Standard of B.C.\ntechnicians have refined a gasoline with\nALL EIGHT High Performance Qualities,\na truly SUPREME gasoiine. Make the\nSUPREME test today for smooth acceleration.\naf Standinl Statics and Chevron Gas Sfati\n\t\n ti:\":;\nm^^wi\u00a7W^^iW^^^\n\u2014'\u2014!\u2014.\ni \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY, JULY 21; 1953\nBritain Agrees\nTo Release\nIndia's Sterling >\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) \u2014 India\nand Britain Monday signed a for-,\nmol agreement consolidating arrangements 'for the- release of India's sterling balances with Britain.\nIt consolidates all provisions ot\nprevious agreements for the release\nof sterling held by Britain on In*\ndio's account. Latest figures showed\nBritain holding \u00a3934,000,000 ($1,-,\n409,200,000), less than half the balance in' August,. 1947, when. India\nattained independence.     \u2022 ', 7\nUnder present terms Britain has\nagreed to release \u00a339,000,000 (08,-\n000,000) a year for six years ending\n. June 3, 1957. An additional \u00a3310,-\n000,000 ($363,000,000) has been transferred, to current account os a currency reserve, to be drawn on only\nin   an   emergency, '\u25a0 '\nAlpinists Missing   ft\nCHAMONIX,- France (Reuters)\u2014\nFour Spanish Alpinists have been\nmissing on Mont Blanc since Saturday, it was reported. A party of\nguides left at dawn Monday to\nsearch for them?   -        -    \u2022 \u25a0\nA naturalist worlclog In ths\njungles of Africa uses a portable\naluminum elevator to get'to tho\ntop of 150-foot, treei to lecuro\nsamples of plant and animal life.\nHe simply shoois a line from a\nrifle over a sturdy limb, attache!\nit to the elevator cage and hauls\nhimself up by working a-hand\nwinch fixed to the case's floor.\nHis tankman elevatot li almost\ncertainly made of Canadian aluminum. For by putting untamed\n\"wbito water\" lo work creating\nelectrical power, Canada has made\nitself the largest exporter of aluminum In .the world; Aluminum\nCompany of Canada, Ltd. (Alcan)\nAfrica Postpones\nVoting Measure\nCAPETOWN (Reuters) \u2014,A joint\nsession of the South African Parliament Mondsy - agreed to postpone\ntill Aug. 18 further action ori a\ncontroversial, measure dealing with\nvoting rights and'the? powers of the\ncourts.:.-'   ',  '\nTbe legislation Is designed to curb\nthe' right of the courts io nils on\nthe validity of laws passed by\nParliament. and to, place colored\n(mixed blood) voters in Cape\nProvince on a separate IrOll.\n' The measure failed last week to\nget the two-thirds majority required for changes In the constitution\nalthough the joint session voted 117\no't 79 to approve the Bill's principle?\nHurdles Face\nWouW-Be\nCandidate\n' OTTAWA (CP> \u2014 Many hurdles\nmust be leaped before the Canadian who wants to be a candidate\nln Uie federal election can, contest\none of the 205 Commons scats..\nBesides   possessing ' vote-getting\nability\u2014theoretically, anyway\u2014 he\nmust be 21 and an eligible voter\nand have at least 10 voting friends\nand $200 to bet -on himself.\nThere is also the general cost of\nrunning a-campaign, which can be\nhigh.\nBy and large, most Canadians can\nget into the fight, but there are\nexception!.\nLI8T OP INELIGIBLE8\nThose Ineligible Include prlion inmates, federal civil servants, Souk-\nhobers snd most Indians on reservations.  - .   \u2022-'\nThe Insane are disqualified and io\nire judgei and electoral officers,\nclerhs of the peace, county crown\nattorneys, government contractors,\nmemberi -of provincial legislature\nan dot the Northwest Territories\nCouncil. .,-   7 \u2022 *':.;7,\nMembers of the active forcei can\nrun for office in wartime. However,\nthe Korea police action does not\ncouijt as a war for election purposes. \u25a0\nSUPPORT PROBLEM\n' Shareholderi of companies with\ngovernment contracts are eligible,\nexcept where the contract is for\nbuilding a public work.\nApart from eligibility, there alio\nis tho problem- of support. A can-,\ndidate does not necessarily have to\nlive lh a riding ho plans to contest\nbut he muit be nominated by at\nleast' 10 qualified voters in that riding.\nHe must put up. $200 as an election deposit and,-he prepared to\nlose it if he docs not get .enough:\nvotes. The money is forfeited to\nthe federal treasury If ho does not\nobtain half the votes polled by the\nwinning candidate.'\nHILLARY HONEY BOOM\n' AUCKLAND, N.Z.'HCP) - There\nmty be nothing In;the idea'that\nhoney from the hives of beekeeper\nSir' Edmund Hillary gave him\nstamina to reach the top of Mount\nEverett, but New Zealand housewives' think lt li worth trying.\nShops havo been Inundated with\ndemand! for Hillary's product.\nEos your engine\nlost its new car pep? Y\nHe-power with... ;\nThe Greatest\nGasoline    \u2022\nDevelopment\ninM^ears\n'.' TCP*, a Shell-discovered additive\nnow blended into Shell Premiutn\nGasoline, actually re-powers j\/bur\nengine by stopping short\"\ncircuiting of spark plugs ond\ncontrolling pre-ignition. Gives\nup to 15% more power . .'. increases spark plug life up to150%.   ,\nToday's driving\u2014often at low speeds In traffic and\naround town\u2014Increases the amount of combustion\ndeposits, which actually short-circuit spark plugs\nand cause pre-ignition of the fuel-air mixture.\nBecause these doposlts accumulate In all engines\n\u2014both old and new\u2014Shell Premium Gasoline with\nTCP is essential tb keep your engine delivering full\npower\u2014because the TCP additive actually stops the\npower-crippling effect of these deposits.\nToday, Shell Premium with TCP is available in\nthis area, but only from your Shell Dealer.\n'Patent applied Jbr\nSHELL PREMIUM GASOLINE\nWITH TCP\nThe most powerful gasoline\n.   your car can use \u2022\nJets, Transports Reaidy\nFor Longest Air Race\nBy J. O. GRAHAM  '\nCanadian Preii.Corrospondent\nCHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (CP>-\nMen and machines ln six countries\nare tuning up for tho longest air\nrace ever held. \u25a0 '   - 7     .-\nThe race begins in England and\nends st the opposite Bide of tho\n'world- iri New Zealand? a distance\nof. about 12,000 miles. It is due to\nstart Oct. 8, but already, preparations for the event are Intense.\nThere are two sections In tbe\ncontest. Tho speed eeoUon.'-an Outright test of speed, has 12 entries.\nThe transport section, tb be decided on handicaps calculated by a\ncomplicated formula, may prove\neven more significant in giving new\nIdeas of long-distance passenger\nflying   schedules.\nGreat Britain, tho United States,\nHolland, Denmark, Australia and\nNew Zealand have entries,.but favorites in the speed section are official entries of the Royal Air Force\nand the Royal .Danish Air Force.\nTOP  CONTENDER\nBarring mishaps, Britain's still-\nsecret Vlckers Valient four-jet\nbomber will be the leading contender. Performance of tho big swept-\nwlng plane has not been revealed,\nbut it la* believed to havo a speed\nwell ln excess of (00 m.p.h.\nIt will be up against five Canberra two-jet bombers\u2014three en-\ntried by-the RAtf and two by the\nAustralian.Air Force.7 ;-\n' The British entries are the photo-\nreconnaissance verslonrof the Canberra, stripped ot armor and carrying less -Weight, One of the Aus\ntralian entries is tho first Australian-made Canberra.\nThe only modern United States\nmilitary plane to try out With these\nsix Brltllh jets ll a Republic F8443\nThunderjet .entered, by tho Danish'\nAir Force. It hos not tho range of\nihe tht bombers, but It can refuel\nIn the;alr.\nThe other five entries lh tho\nspeed section como from private\ncompetitors flying propeller-type\nplanes, but most of them have Introduced modifications of their\nOwn to give their planes greater\nrange and speed, .One pilot plans\nto freeze hli plane's gasoline with\ndry ice to increase carrying -capacity. .Another plamf hos small\nram-jet engines-fitted to the wing-\ntips to increase acceleration.\n8EC6NO TRY\nBritish European Airways will bo\ncompeting in the transport section\nWith its new Vlckers Viscount 701\nturbq-prop airliner. ,.-   ?\nCompetition: will come from\nRoyal Dutch Airlines, famous line\nwhich juit > mined victory in the\ngreat London-to-Melbourne air race\nheld before the war. It has entered\nan American Douglas DC-6A {.lit-\nmaster which will corry S9 Dutch\nimmigrants going to settle in New,\nZealand.\nOne of the most publicized entries is on almost all-woman crew\nentered by Mra. Gertrude McKenzle of Melbourne, Australia. The\nonly man. aboard the Douglas DCS\nwill be Capt. J. R. Kemp, a senior\nAustralian National Airways pilot.\nMrs. McKenzie will act as first of\nficer, snd two co-pllots will be Mrs,\nEvelyn Koren of Australia and Miss\nBetty Haas of New Ifork..Flight\nengineer will be Miss Constance\nJordan, Australia's, only woman\naeronautical engineer. Mrs; KOren's\nsister, 'Mill Margaret. Gunnesen, n\npainter and farmer, has signed on\nss cook and \"general roustabout,\"\nNew Zealand is pinning it's hop'es\non a Hastings four-engine military\ntransport entered by ths Royal\nNew, Zealand Air Force, Two full\ncrews aro in rigorous training under the watchful eyo of a doctor\nwho will fly as a crew member,\nand, the: Mane' has already mode\na return flight .over .the course to\ncheck every detail Of the route, refuelling technique and equipment\nROUTS OPTIONAL\n-No fixed check points exist for'\nthe race, so thot competitors will\nbo free, to choose any route they\nwith on the easterly course round\nthe world to New Zealand. - The\nonly requirement! is that log booki\nbe stamped by authorities at one\nInvite All Parties\nTo IWA Giant Rally\nVANCOUVER'.-(CP) \u2014 The International Woodworkers of America\n(CIO) Monday mado plohs for e\ngiant political rally here July 30 ox-\npected to, be attended by 5000 persons, \".ti,!.\nCandidates of Sll'five parties in\nthe federal election race hove been\nInvited to attend and debate.elec-\nCLA83IPIED AQ8 PET\/B8ULT3\n\".\"*v\u00abljihg point -on - the eaiterlyi\nroute.    :\u25a0'-,\u2022ti-titi '\u2022\u2022''.. '''\u2022\n..iimy, competitors, have hot announced their route. Socrot examination is going on of the weather,\naltitude arid; wind currents to\nchoose a channel mdit suited to the\ntime at year arid type of machine.\n. The- planes will leave London at\ntwo-minute Intervals, The- flrit Is\nexpected here ?earty Oct 10, New'\nZealand tlmo.\nPrize money totals $00,000, di-\n\"Ided into four prizes ln each .section,\nM\\<^\n7^ h\nrhis advertisement is not published or dlsployed by the Llquoi\nControl Bpardor by the Government,-)' British Columbia.\n.-- - -\ntlon Israel. Invitation! have gone\nout to all candidates ln Greater .\nVancouver,, ..' - -,' \u25a0'.'.'\u2022' .'...'\u25a0'\nti. Si M. Hodsom secretarV of Vancouver Local 1-217 of the IWA, laid\nMonday Invitations have also gone\ntfi$\nout to 300 trade organizations one\nservice clnbs to send represehta.\n\u2022Uvea, to the meeting in Exhibition\nForum..     ...    .'.--..\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nREA.'THE  CLASSIFIED  OAIL\\\nWW\/M\/WJT\/MS&\nr__ 1     'ffy'Z'ti   HITCH'iZZ '\u25a0\u25a0\"'\u2022      %tiZ\nYDURWAlGibN\nTO A STAR\nI\nI\ni\nI\nDuring tho loit fifteen yean, money hat\nbeen poured Into Canadian builneii to a de-'\niree previously unparalleled, Inveitori, both\norelgn and Canadian, have shown an active\nIntereit In sharing in Canada's future.''  7  7\n-You, too, may ihore In that future\u2014and do\nie at very, little risk, Canadian Investment .\n.Fund:Ltd;'iharei represent nn Interest In'\never CO of Canada's strongest companies. Thll\nInterest l\u00ab constantly supervised .by experti\nIn tho'field of Canadian Investments. Under\ntheir guidance, the portfolio of atocko owned\nby CI. F. li kept'attuned to the trends and\n-   outlook ef the market and corporate earning!.\nAi Canada goes ahead, to doei Canadian Investment Fund, Why. don't you go with It?\nWhy don't you hitch YOUR wagon to a \u00bbtar?\nMail this ' coupoit 'today for' particulars\nMcMAHON & BURNS\nSit Wtst Ponder St.\nNAMf...!......'..... ..........\nADDIESS .....r-.,\n:eirV.......?...._;.-. ...\nLTD.\nVancouver 1, B.C.\n1\n_5\n| CHEVROLET\ntr-     A OENER\/U MOTORS VAlUE\ntlltittnrttl\u2014atwKltt \"Oni-Hfty\" S-Ooor Sidae\nMORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETS THAN AMY OTHER CAR!\nPOWERGLIDE and POWER STEERINOI\nChevrolet's new Powerglide, optional at extra cost on tho Bel Air and\nTwo-Ten series, U the newest, most\nadvanced automatic transmission in\nits field. A new automatic starting\nand passing range gives you flash-\nins getaway from s itsndlfll start,\nor for passing In olty driving. Power\nSteering \u2014 optional at extra cost\nwith Powerglide\u2014lots you steer and\npark with finger-tip case, and drivo\nwith greater Safety everywhere.   \u25a0'\nHIGH-COMPRESSION POWERI\nThe new 115-hp. \"Blue-Plsme\"\"\nvalvc-ln-licod engine Msifled with\nths sew Powerglide automatic transmission as on option st extra colt\non \"Two-Ten\" snd Del Air model's\nhas an extra high compression ratio\nof 7.5 to 1. In gearshift models, you,\nget the new lOS-h.p. high-compression \"Thrift-King\" engine. Both,\nbring you tar finer performance on\ntar less gasoline!\nALL THE NEW THINGS YOU WANTI\nMore weight, more stability, more\nroad-steadiness, with Centre-Point\nrear suspension and the softer,\nsmoother Knee-Action Ride. A\nwider choice of body types and\ncolour harmonies. And, optional at\nextra cost, GM Shade-Lite Tinted\nGlasi with exclusive, graduated\nwindshield tinting, and the amazing\nGM Autronic Eye which automatically dims and brightens headlights.\nCOLOUR-STYLED INTERIORS,\nA whole flashing panorama of\nsparkling colours and colour com-'\nbinatlons are yours, to choose from\nin' your new Chevrolet, There's sn\nalmost endless variety of handsome -\ninterior shades, exterior shades and\ntwo-tone combinations to stir your\nfancy and set your Imagination to\nwork, This year's Chevrolet boasts\ninteriors colour-matched to exterior!, a true fine-car feature that's\nonly one of the many extras you'll\nfind In Chevrolet\nDELIVERED IN NELSON ,\nRetail Price  - - $2007\nDominion\nSales and Excite Tax - -   $337\nDelivered Price\n$2344\nPrice quoted above Is the suggested delivered price for a\nTwo-Door Sedan in the \"One-Fifty\" Series but does not\n-   Include license fee, gasoline, provincial or municipal taxes\nwhere they apply.    -\"\u2022\nECONOMY AND VALUEI\nthis year's Chevrolet bring! you tho\nmoJt'important gain In economy in\nChevrolet's entire tb-yitr history!\nYou go much farther on every gallon of gas (regular gas, at that), You\nlave on over-all costs of operation\nand upkeep. You lave every mllo you\ndrive with this great new '53 Chevrolet. Yes, with sll lti hi(her quality\nand new features, Chevrolet is still\nCanada's finest low-priced car.\nSjgaL\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\nCorner Stanley and Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 35\n PSPPpiPiiil\nONE REASON that tha umpire Is almost\nalways right It ahown In-the thot above. The\ntelescopic camera \"froze\" the action before a oloud\nof dust and several hotly protesting player, obscured everything from view.     -\nHank Klbota, centre fielder for the Fairchild\nFlyer, of Spokane I. out off from-the plate by\nSwede Larsen, Maple Leaf catcher. The jjpokana\nmanager, Who was watching the scene at a point\ncon.lderably removed from the position of-\n- Umplre-ln-chlef Red 'Wasslck, charged ! silt and\nraised all sorts of Cain Insisting hit man wat safe.\nWasslck taw no reason tor changing hit decision\nthen and probably sees even less now, Nelson\nwon 6-4\u2014Dick Mulloy photo.   .       .-'\nPower Boaters\nto Kelowna for\nRegalia Tips\nThe. Kelowna Regatta will probably- have representatives from\nNelson; but merely as onlookers.\nHenry Stevenson, Bert Walton,\n-.and Bill Valentine, all of the Nelson\nPower Boat Association, plan to\nattend Kelowna's \"Sanctioned Regatta'-' on July 30 and' pick up a few\nfiner points of the game.\n' The. Kelowna show has the official approval of the Canadian Boating Federation and differs from the\nNelson show in that the officials are\npal. and the times, etc., of the different competitors are officially recorded.\nThe boats entering at Kelowna\ncompete fpr prize money, nationally\nrated points and trophies whereas'\nthe boats in the Nelson races were\nall given expense 'money and trophies.   ..-..*\u2022' \u2022 . :\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 .:\nSome thought has been given to\nhaving next year's regatta at Nelson\nofficially sanctioned.\nMary Rose Thacker, Jeane Mathews. . .   *\nChampion Bladesters To Take\nPart in Performance Here\nA galaxy of famous'bladesters\nwill' bring to. Notion a never-to-\nbe forgotten . tea performance.\nFeatured for the first tlnfe In\nNelson will be Mary Rosa Thacker, former North American fig;\nure skating champion; and .starring In the show will be Jeane\nMathews, a whizz on blades; MJtt\nMathews Is a former star of lea\nCycles and was a runnerup to\n' Barbara Ann Seott of International skating fame..\nFrom Seattle comes Bill Thomas\nYacht Race\nHONOLULU f. CP)-r *fce \u00ab-*\u00bbt\nke.tch Dragoon ;of Vancouver, skipped by W. B. Holm of'Victoria, was\nthe 19th ship to cross the finish\nline hx the 2225-mile \/California to\nHawaii yacht race.   - - ' -,.\"\nThe Dragoon crossed the Diamond\nHead finish line at 7:58 a.m\u201e Monday. '..,'- -\n\u25a0 Winner was the 39-foot ketch\nStaghound, skippered by ownei Ira\nP. Fulmor of Pasadena. Tlie Stag;\nbound was 18th.across the.finish\nline after -covering the \u25a0 distance in\n15 days, 11 hours, onrr m|n\u00abtei.ajnd\n25 seconds.''r*?'v Yv   \" '. .:'.*\u2022\u25a0';\nA four-day handicap: gave the\nStaghound tha ^Winning,' corrected\ntime of 10 days? ?3 hours, 42'min--\nutes and 49 seconds.\nFive more yachts'were expected\nln Monday night. \u2014 .7\nFISHING TACKLE\nAND LICENSES\n\"EVERYTHING FOR? THE\n\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0   SPORTSfclAN\"\nx   _DEY?S\nSPORTSHOP\n. 787,BAK?R ST..\n^   PHONE.1MS '\u25a0'\nand Karen Howland, Pacific coast\npairs champions, to thrill the audience with precision skating and\ndaring ice feats. Famed Coast skaters Carol and Dot Mittun will also\nbe here for the Saturday1 performance.\nTaking part in the production\nwill, be 50 skaters now1 attending\ntha Summer Figure Skating School\ndirected by Miss Thacker at Nelson!\nThe entire show is under the direction of Miss Evelyn Olson and Miss\nShirley Ingham, assistants to Miss\nThacker. .\" : -'\u25a0.' \\\nEach day, skaters are busy practising for the event at the Civic\nCentre Arena. The arena is a hive\nof activity almost every-hojir of the\nday and boys and girls ot all ages\njump and dancei about the ice rehearsing for the show and practising figures and lessons.\nCOUNTY CRICKET\nLONDON 4Reiiters) \u2014 Australia's\ntouring cricketers finished their\nsecond day of an exhibition match\nwith Middlesex at Lords here in a\nstrong position;1 four runs ahead\nwith . seven< wickets to fall.\nQueen Elizabeth and the Duke of\nEdinburgh were among the special\ntoi* ..- '\u2022-.--\n-7 Close, of play scores in Monday's\n#rtf.>cta,mat4!lwsi......,,.-rf\u201e\u201eYi.\n- Middlesex 150, Australian tourists\ni54,fdr>.three..'.7v\n. Leicestershire 107 and 12 for no\nwickeVSurrejr,!?!!. ,\nSussex 221? and 175 for nine declared, Hampshire 85 and 12 for\ntwo,\"\u2022. . 7,7- ti'>\u201e4    ' v\nNorthamptonshire 327 and eight\nfor. no. wicket, Somerset 328 for\neight declared.     *\u00ab ...\nLancashire 113 for two vs Essex, no play Monday,* wicket, saturated by heavy rains. -\nDerbyshire 300 for nine declared.\nYorkshire 121 and 145 for. five.\nGlamorgan .368,7Qloucestersh!re\n212 and 38foi;no wicket\nKent 358 for nine declared, Worcestershire 96 and 162, for six.    '\nWarwickshire 124 and 97 for two;\nNottinghamshire 183.\n.. Agriculture is the most important\nindustry Jn lndia,?3wlth rice the\nlargest crop.   ... k...\ni the mostJopuijr i\n\u2022   CANADIAN>HISKY   i\nATi, POPULAR PRICE\n!*s genial, '.tteh flavoa*\nG&W Bonded Stock.\nMiWi-iJitfirfto-ietasteas\nit is easy on the entertain-\nbadget!    '\nSOOTERHAMiWORTHTO.\nEstablished 1832\nCMtadi's Oldest Distillery\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Llquoi\nControl Board o^by the Government of British Columbia.\nBattle Rages Over Possible\nNew Sites for Major Clubs\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A blttar;be-\nhlnd-the-scenes battle is brewing\nbetween the National and American\nLeagues for Los'Angeles and San\nFrancisco as possible new sites for\nmajor league baseball clubs.\nThe rlvSl circuits, convinced the\nmajor league map is duo for an\nextensive revision in the \u25a0 near\nfuture, are casting covetous eyes\nat the two mainstays ot the Pacific\nCoast league with their.combined\npopulation of 8,000,000.\nTThe American League,; through\nDel Webb, co-owner of New York\nYankees, already has sent.out feelers tb the coast with a suggestion\nthat St. Louis Browns and Philadelphia Athletics be moved to Los Angeles and San Francisco.\nThe National League has been\ndiscussing the possibility bf moving\nPhiladelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Reds ho those California, cities.\nThe American League already\nknows of the National's intentions\nand is going to make a determined\ntry to get there first. A committee\nmade up of Webb, Tom Yawkey\nof Boston, Spike Briggs of Detroit\nanil Chuck Comisky of Chicago already has been appointed\" to explore\nthe Pacific Coast \"situation.\nEach league feels that the addition of Los Angeles and San Francisco would make it the \"superior\"\nleague,     ,-j. ..- : \u25a0- - -7 - '.#\u25a0\u25a0\nThe American, its pride hurt because Boston Braves beat St Louis\nBrowns to Milwaukee last March,\nfeels it can get back its lost prestige\nb ygrabblng off Los Angeles and\nSail Francisco. All agree that the\nc|ties cannot be separated, one going tb the National'and the other\nto the American. That would; create\nserious transportation problems.  '\nThere is no question that the addition of two such populous-, citiles\nwould. strengthen either major\nleague tremendously \u2014 at least\nfrom an attendance standpoint.\nCONTROLPAYS OFF\nBASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis '........\u2022 01Q.3P0 (JOO- 4  7   1\nPittsburgh .... 300 210 00x\u2014 8 12   2\nMizell,- Brazle (5),- White (7) and\nRice; Face, Lapalme (5) and Atwell. W-Lapalme, L-Mizell.    :\nCompletion of Sunday's- suspan\nded game.'- ' '\u2022'\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0  '\u2022\" -,ti.\nSt Louis ..?'.... 100 103.202\u2014 \u00bb IS. 0\nPittsburgh .... 400 000:000r- .4 12   ?\n-Miller, (Chambers .42) Brazle (6)\nand. Rice; Friend, Hetki (7) HSU\n(9)..: and: Atwell. W-Chambers,' L-\nFriend.\nChicago .......... 000 000 000\u20140   5   1\nBrooklyn .;..'., 020 4)00 10x^-3   5  0\nRush, - Lown - (8),. and Garaglola;\nMeyer, .Hughes (9) and Campanella.\nW-Meyer; L.'Rush.. 7,        .-,,:.\nBaseball Standings\nAMERICAN LEAQUE\nStanding unchanged.     ( Y\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\n,    - ti- .,,.?    L  Pet.\nBrooklyn .....:... i...\u00ab -58   32   .636\nMilwaukee'; \u201e-.....,...:;   52   39   .598\nPhUadelphia   \u201e \u201e\u25a0 48- 37   .585\nNew'York ...: :-....;...  48   38  .548\nSt L\u00ablJs ..;.........:........-   48   40   .545\nCincinnati .................., 400' M   .449\nChicago - V..;..;.:...:. SI   54 \".!\nPittsburgh    .\u25a0?.......:,.. -29 '65   .\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE     7\n\"V    '' '\u25a0 W'   L  Pet\nBuffalo':...... _...;.;.....',. .52 \u2022 36 7;591\nMontreal  . 51   38   ,573\nRochester -...,....-..,.\u201e    80, 39' -.562\nBaltimore' ...751'  40 -.560\nToronto  48 ; 45 ..505\nSyracuse ....\u201e.:\u201e.._\u25a0  41   50: .451\nOttawa, .,..;....:.   .40   53  ?\nSpringfiel'd - .,.\u00bb   59> .\n\u2022--:..-\u25a0\u2022  By Alan Mover\nRose, Main Lose\nOnly Two Games\nBy JACK SULLIVAN'\u2022'}\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTfORONTO (CP) - Play went? ac*\ncording to the script in the opening\nround of the Canadian tennis championship Monday. There wasn't a\nhint of an upset , -';\nl A small crowd of about 200 turned out ln 80-degree weather to wach\nthe cream of Canadian players .and\nwell known foreign stars from Mexico, Japan, Australia and the United States tangle in first round men's\nand' women's singles. Included in\nthe list were Davis Cup natters and\ncomparative unknowns.\nThe trend of tlie day's play was\nset in the opening.match when Rex\nHartwig of Australia, seeded No. 2\nin the foreign section? whipped Syd\nHermant of Toronto 6-3, 6-1. From\nthere in it was a matter of simply\nmaking an appearance, for the seeded stars against the field of more\nthan 100 in the singles divisions.\nThe pattern continued until evening, when Mervyn Rose, the Australian southpaw, and Lorner'Main\nof Vancouver and Toronto, the No.\n1 seeded players' in the foreign and\nCanadian sections ' respectively,\nbreezed to easy decisions. Both lost\nonly two games in their matches.\n. Rose! on Australia's?Davis- Cup\nteam and seeded sixth in the world,\neliminated Toronto's Jim Duff 6-0,\n6-2, in less than 30.minutes and!\nMain, star of Canada's victory over!\nMexico.' in the first-round bf the'\nitforth American Davis Cup tier, galloped over Hugh Murray of Hamilton,. 6-1,6-1.\nGeorge Worthington, 19-year-old\nNew Zealander who is on the come-\nback.traU in big-time tennis after\na selge ot polio, didn't show for his\nfirst found, match.' He is in the\ndoubles, finals of the U. S. clay\nchampionships af Chicago. and Is\nscheduled to appear today.\nos-eino.\n\/iiiorHBPt\none op\/lie'  .\nfA$r efARtsi\n6\u00a3\/jtRy\/\/oPe&\nTO KEEP'\ntfUP THIS.\nT\/ME Aflt>,\nREACtl-THB\n20-W\/\/I\nMiAPMC.,\ntop ths wer\nme-HE}\nMzotttf\nt M\/f\nAW*,\n^z'\net**Y\nSTMEX\ny<ft&af\/\/to Ace\n0F7ME'\n$r,iows\nCAffetMMS.\n53**\u00ab  StPEAftM\n. ii\/flSER \/S\ni   ons op me\nsetrgR comtpol\nAPPZ7S-LA6T'\nfieA6eri,s>\/e\netteis&r writ\n240 m>l6* PTKH&,\nMe\/vePA6spi\u00a3ss\n\u25a0fflA\/l 2 WALK4\npen 0AMb.\nBilko Goes Hit-Happy\nAfter Warming Bench\nm?\nBy The Canadian Press\nBig  Steve  Bllko,  benched   for\nweak hitting .returned to the St.\nLouis Cardinal line-up Monday .and\ndrove in fgur runs with two homers\nj\u00a34MttHlttlit.ti Shf\nWARM WEATHER\nFine selection of\nSPORTJACKETS\nand MATCHING TROUSERS\nSPORT SHIRTS\nV        ,    to harmonize with both\nHughes-Stuart Men's Wear\nJ. '   \"A ranENDLY PLACE TO SHOP\" '.-\".\n459 Ward st. ,    phone 425\nand a pair of .singles as the Cards\ndowned tbe Pirates 9-4 at Pitts,\nburgh..\nThe rest of the visiting St. Louis\nclub, was hitting too, os three\nPirate hurlers gave up 15 hits to\noffset Pittsburgh's tour-run first Inning.       '     \u2022\nBefore the gome \u2014 only day action ln the major leagues \u2014 the\nPirates came out with a 64 victory\nin the completion-of a game suspended Sunday . by Pittsburgh's\ncurfew law.\nSouthpaw Paul Lapalme stopped\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1953\nthe Cards on two hits in five innings to cop the suspended contest.\nIn Monday's only other ina|or\nleague action, the Dodgers survived\na hectic' ninth inning in a night\ngame at Brooklyn to whip Chicago\nCubs 3-0. Tho victory stretched\ntheir National League lead to 3Vt\ngames over Milwaukee?\nThe Dodgers got the shutout although the first four Chicago batters   reached  base  safely, in' the\nAinsworth Hotsprings\nSwimming Pool\nOpen 9 a.m. to 10 p.m, Dally\nClosed  on Mondays,'\nExcept on a IJoliday\nninth. But they all died on tha\nsacks \u2014 ono was ticked by a batted\nbaU \u2014 to tha delight of the Ebbetta\nField crowd.      '        .,\nPHONE 75\nFirestone Tires\n,$1 Down, $1 o Week\nFair Allowance On Your\nOld Tlws\nSuperior Motors\nDodge \u2022 DeSoto Dealer\nOpp. Post Office, Vernon 8t.\nMARINE ANNIVERSARY\n, ANKARA (CP).\u2014-Turkey thii\nmonth observed the 27th anniversary of recognition under-the terms\nof the Lausanne Treaty to conduct\nher own coast-wise trade. In the\n27-year period tonnage increased\nfrom 34,000 to 552,989.\n^cV-Young Men's Strides\nNew Cloths-New Patterns\nSHARPLY STYLED IN PIC 'N' PIC\n\u2022 NYLON BLENDED FOR EXTRA WEAR\n\u2022 \"JIGGER\" B|LT LOOPS\n\u2022 GUN FLAPS ON REAR POCKETS\no TRIPLE LAP SEAMS\n\u2022 \"LIGHTNING\" ZIPPER CLOSURE\n\u2022 DRAPED FROM 26\" KNEE T016\" CUFF\n\u2022 COLORS BLUE, BROWN, GREY\n\u2022 SIZES 30 TO 36\n^m^^^\nBALFOUR FERRY SERVICE\nKEN CHANDLER\nBALFOUR, B.C.\niu\n I. \u25a0      \" .--,.-\n,11   M I Mill. III!\n,-!*\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NSWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 19S3\n\"   ,      \"-''\"*'.\"~*~\"T \"*\u25a0\u00bb\u2022- .   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    ; \u2014*\u25a0     *^.*;.-**h*U\u00ab- \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0;_\u25a0>.-----\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u00bb\u25a0,---*._.17^ \u25a0\nj^D\ni\nIffl'IIA HIS\nRESULT!,\nPhont 144\nDeadline f\u00abr Classified Ads\u2014S *s*\u00bb.m.\nPhone 144\nHEW WANTED\nOPERATOR FOR REFRIQKRA-\ntion pltnt rseulrSd Immedlstely.\nMust be capable of Supervising\narena and curling rink operations,\nIncluding staff,, Duties to commence Aug. oth. Applications to\nhs In writing, stating experience,\naas, marital status, tq the Nelaon\nClvlo Centre Commission, 710\nVernon Street, Nelioi\nfrom \\t yesr! and up to learn\nhetrdresulng, Classes starting Immediately, writs for particular!\nto O. K. Valley HairdresalpB\nSohool, SM Lawrence Ave.,\nKelofrna, B.C., ot'phono MIS.\nfm mome&GHqFpi\nCASHIER,\n<i   BOOKKEEPER\nRequired Immediately, young\nlady with office experience, typing essential; ai cashier- bookkeeper. Excellent working condition! \u2014 pleaiant mrvoundlngi.\n:.   AWIY '\nPEEBUgS MQTOH5 LTD.\nin baker wrmft. -\n*4mef*mit)i*+m&t?m\nYQVNCJ WOMBK ARE NEBDBD\nby ths Royal Cansdlan Air Fores\n- If you ore between tho ages-of\n- is. and 80,-ar\u00ab: physically fit and\nhave   Grade   IX   education   er\naqulwalsnt tha RCAF will provide\na career sf prestige, opportunity\nand adventure, Mail the coupon\nwithout obligation for complete\n\" liileimstlon.\nWWII    ----\u2022!tt*-|-i-t\u00bb-.m*-*-i--*---i\u00ab---rt\"-1HtM\n. \/.ddreis .....; \u201e .,.\u201e,\u201e\u201e\u201e\nAge ,  Sducatlon ..r.\u201e\u201e\u201e\nTo:     Commanding Ofticsr,\nHCAP Recruiting Unit,\n.    fait Office Building,\n\\       - ijethbridgs, Alberts.\nor woman as*raspberry pickers\nabout July 25th far season psrt\ntime, Mr. MfConnsll, Harrop.:\nSITUATION!''WANTID\naSrovpiSStS-lv3_!^iOT\nJo|| as Soon as poailble. See M,\nPoinlkaff. Appledale, ftft\nWm MAKER AMwmOWK\n, specialty. Reasonable rites, Phone\nixfiMKeiB \u25a0\u25a0 a>ftfl\u00abiY\nclerk - desires work. Box Hit\n\u25a0USINMS OPPORTUNITIIS\nGoing conoern. Prloe gJBOD.OO, Includes equipment and tin and\n' . tube stock, no charge for gppdwlll\nrental  lease  |50.00  B4ff*ffl4rntt,\ntiaoo.oo   will, handle,   balance\nterms. Owner-retiring,  .', '\n\"StAl'Glftntffl\" dRbCEttV m\nsale, including living quarters. 112\nSilles'St,  -.\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'\u25a0\nPAOHRTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nf ITC, mlfMM\n\u2022TOR 8 At-E-PROPJ$RtV KNOWN\nai Bosun Cottsge, situated shove\nhighway hotween NSw Denver\nand SllvOrton. Beautiful views.\nFlvs roomi, complete bathroom.\nAlso two-roOmed shack In good\nrepair. Own wattr right, Eleven\naorSi, mora or leSi. Borne good\nlevel land. Alio about thirty-three\nacres at lead timber, Prloe: 18000.\nApply to Js-, W. drier, Box 61,\nmmwiW\nIH SALI MISCELLANEOUS\n-OVSLV a.ROOMKO HOU8B ON\nons block et land, uphill section\nbetween Stanley and Ward, Barn,\nate, Can bs used as (trover-subdivided lota. Lights, pity- water,\ntelephone, ate. $6000- Half cash\nwill handle, Ph, oos.r.3 or IMl\nWvlNtft ?^<JWRiry On t iMn\nuphill. 5 rooms downstairs with\nbath, small 3 room suit's upstairs,\nnice grounds with fruit trees.\nPrice $5800, reasonable .terms.\nThis is a good buy. Phone; Wl-X,\n*_#\nROOM\nNEW 5 ROOM HOUSE, -4H ACRJiS\nUrtd fbr sale, or will esobsnge fer\nhouse in Rowland, Write Box JM,\n6r phone 3487 Fruitvale. B.C\nmm\"'\nmm\nJohnstone Rlook,. suitable for\noffice or one room apartment-Or\none lady, T. D, Rosling, KH Ward\nStreet,  \t\nF\u00abR\"i'XLj^at4 MJttiON mi\nprivately owned timber, located\nono mile north of Camborne, B.C,\n. Apply owner, Frank Bsrrsjh, (It\nq-anvlUe It,, Vancouver, B.C,\nlooking Columbia River, Wmlted\nnumber, lie Ouv Quids, lower\nsmell eettsge, 9 cabins, Full prise\nI87Q0.00. 1198 Beetty Avenue,\n\"Y*ff0S-\n*rm\n...... w\t\nseem houss, Apply Jt, lelmttir,\nHouse 88, Canadian Exploration,\nSslmo,Be\nHMBH. \u00ab\u25a0'\nrmrnm\nsores, IfflNW down, the- rest\nmonth'-   \\m\\y P. Sofonoff, 81\n\u25a0  Ymir *'     '\"alien.'. A--   \"--.v -.-\ntbrta   -1-4 Rfl-M wm\nfully: modern; 1*5 room house,\nfully modern, Apply \\Wm, A,\n, Henke, Proetsr, ..\u2022;,\ntte Road, Phono 38B-B-J.\nALUMINUM RQOFINCJ - RIB-\nhid ih'sti \u00ab-io fast long, cap,\n-starHr, 30\" flat and mill. Im*\nmediate delivery. Prloed.to most\nall oompstttlon, Writs or phone\ntor quotation, Ji D, quail Hard,\nwarp, Fernie, \"Bast Kootenay rep-\nresentatlye Of Aluminum Rolling\nMills -tH, \"f'\u25a0\u25a0-:..'\u25a0''. .'\n8UNJtAMP''A8 N\u00bbW, U8ID 8\nttmM, * Thor washing machine,\nuseh Ws then year, good buy;\nFlnlsy 4-burner closed element,\nolsotrlo stove, porfect condition;\npop-up teaiter ai new, No dealer!.\nCall bs sjon Thursday. Phone\nlWbatwsen s and 7 pm.\nWtMMKIf-.'W AWi\"tVP*S8 OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new snd used\n'wir- rope; pipe and - fittings;\nchain, stoal plgts nad shapes. .At,\nlas Iren \u00ab* Msteli Wd\u201e 290 Prior\nSt,. Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pa\nelf Is 8MT.\nFOR SAI4!-,TSrOE MOFFAT\n.  ejectrlo range, also articles of\nfurniture suitable for summer\nv horns, or boarding home, See at\n314 Hart at, or Phons W8-X-1.\nFOR - IAt* -' WHITIl\"iFAME\n- eosl and wood rings, praotiaally\npew. Alio quart and 2-n.t, sealers\n-and churn. Apply P. It- Bartlett,\nRox 41 Fruitvale. Phone 2408.\nmm am \u25a0'i'\"4. ^'\u2014i ij Iwyeje     \u25a0\u25a0\" ei wmTt\nBMPlRiVMOTPRS CRBPIT NOTK\nfor said at a sacrifice, $1130, 16%\ndiscount. Phona 7JJ-R or apply\n\u25a0ng-Vortiewtt.\nW88TINOHQUM \"PORTABIB\naleetrio ifoastar oven, tt)% new\ncondition. Cheap for cssh, Phone\n?1W6.\nBOAT? AND CNQINIS\nFOR 8AM -* 8-FT. HOWIOAT,\nIdeal for camp or play host, with\nor without outboard motor; boyi'\nWcyole in good condition, lit\nBaker 8t\u201e or .phono 888,\ncpmmodatlpni. H Xersspewsr outboard powered, Sacrifice far essh,\n.  Apply W Kail Mines Ri Phono\nfflHlAlWR.CA. VtBOH 78\nr.p.m. record player, sao.oo, Phpna\n480.*, after 8189. er apply st 80I\nAouston 8t\u201e Nelson, B.C.\ni - tmm - mm -\nIng Co, ih i Cordova 81, Van.\n-\u25a0-,eou\u00bbW,'- ,-\u25a0'':     .:\u25a0.-\u25a0'       -\n\u2022t*-\u00ab_a,.\u00ab'Wsfl\u00bb\u00abe\u00abw-*\ndeluxe refrigerator. \u00bb350,oo, ean\nbs seen st Wait Transter,,   ,\nVjaeknlfe extension\"tabla, four\nehalrs, WB,00. Phono 1087fY,\nLeavos- no scars, Vour orugglst\n\u25a0Bill CREBH,.\t\nOTtfR'4W)ftf,WiWAWtt',AB^^^\nWrlte:P.O Ban IH Walsoit. IO,\n\u00abW|HM-l-Blt!r\u00bb..|PAlBIWB\n-v-tenli rascmat, l\u00bbono 80T.X,\n  I\u00bbl\u00abl HirM*\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AH6\nPARM SUPPLIBS, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS?\nyear from ths Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, 9.0. Wa kava\never 7(W0 extremoly healthy aid\nproperly condttloned Broaden on\nour own farm, Our baby chicks\naro produced only from our own\nitock in White fisihoms, White\n'Rooks, Nsw Hampahiroi and\nCrnsiei Cslelnguo on roquet*.\nFOR BAMS CHEAP -3 YOUNG\nhorBes, 1400 to 1000 lbs. Csn bo\naeon at Psngburn'a Ranch in Lar-7\ndeau District, Will trade, or what'\noffer havo youf A, H. McKInley,\nO\/n Vlolamao Mine, New Denver.' |\nFOR SAW) -** 3 OOW8 ONE JUST\nfreshened 8 months. One to fresh\n1-8 month bull calf. Apply F.v\nSolovaoff, Blewett,\nWANTED' - MJtK    COWS   TOS\nfreihen late Fall'or Winter, lake*\nview Dairy, Robson, B.C.    -.\n1 MII,K COW FOR SAU5. RE-\"'\u25a0\ncently freshened,, Apply Asn.j\nVerigin, Ymir, B.C.\nenssssuj^nmni  Miin ' iishc=\nMprnttiw-?..;\nWA?\u00bbTIIP TO RENTP-3 OR 3-BFD.'\nrobm home; furnished or untur-.\nnlshcd, Apply  BOX  8788, Daily\nNews,-    ?   *'\"'\u2022'?\nforsMi^^irMrTPrrH^\nmotor? long shank, in perfect\ncondition, H85.00. Mrs? Knospfli,\nR,R,N0.1, '\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n*\u25a0_\u2022__.,\"\nwershlp\nIftHelt .\ndiemeten\nliwus\nis. aa .\ni4.Evenlnc\n\u25a0    *M'i';\n\u00ab,Osrdintool\n\u00bb8,F(misiirult\nIT.Plrturss\n(Wete.)\n30, Split\n3|,Am\u00bbrlcan\nIndian\nX,jPMMef\nthickets\n4. Land.\nmeasure ,\n(\u2022Saluti\nmeRth\n8-B\u00bbHeiJ\nP(\u00abe\nof Plsy\n\u2022.Witt,\nU.,I1U\u00bb\nH,Sharpen\neraior\ni|,Ashslte\u00bb\nrerbsie.\nW,T*ttirs\ntitlmt*\nl|,cpak\n_ l-nwa \u25a0 *\niu \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\n,- femals\nMty .\n(Hindu,)\nM, Sultanate\n(Arab,)\nf-turtsjr'i *\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\n..   lt>\u00abeNe\n\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0.ifm.' \u25a0\n\u2022 :\u25a0  kemi\n7'  \u00ab8.Toht 7.\nIndsH\n4t),\u00abptleii,\n4l,OhlnMistli\nW.TeliiirHim\n(sym,*\nIT.sTwnw,'..\n_laZ!Ji(*\ny\/yZ\/Mwmmmwmm\n-Rrart. ~v\nw*apn'\n(NftHt,)\n41, Jn that pits\n*\u00ab. Writinr\nSHIM\n\u00b0'\u00ab\nLTewirt\ntheles\n*afe\ncattle\nDAILV CRVPIOQCOTi>_H\u00bbr\u00ab*l M to wot* It:\n\u25a0^-r9,VS-f;A*\u00ab'.\n<\u2022 $ 9 KI f B lii>?* w\nOns letter simp** stands for (jnotHer- In thll wwwfe A i* used\n. tar \u00bbs ttpsWrflw pmmM.-M'Wm \u00bb?>**\ntwphtii. the lipgth ep| formation st tha \u00ab\u00bbr*i wt tfl \u25a0*\u00bb\"\u2666\n. esch diy the sods isttiri in different, - \"ti\nAmtr-dseMM __E_is__i___l\n\u2022tlWAt   WWTAWKftAtJA   Bttt\nUv'bws-i,  rUWAf illtfW*V,   MKXUI-\nitw>ao .xhva-iaiih,*.\nfeit\u00abr<|ay's fJryptoanotei OOB. WW!'tWs*W*' *iP\u00bbi|_\u00abrill',\n\" *wVwm fwrpw myhw*** or dawn -\nyvuk, - \u25a0 , -\n\"7 .^rttmmus tws kM*-i reattisas s-^ssis?\nator. Apply 80^1447^0111\nSUMMER RESORTS\nJBP01SW0OP7 .1\nCasa Vista-Cabins (3 Star)\nViestlewer evarnl*fhti\nYfa______ji______j\nfor cabins 'and boats,' Fisher's\nParadise, Balfour, B, P., Mrs,\nMartha Bjjjjjii ;\nJtXt'' WlffliWIWit- 'L 0 o 4J e\napd cabins, .Safe, sandy beach,\nwarm wiitofe, T, JJIcWnsop, In*\nyormere, 8-0,7    A .   \"\u2022\" \" '\nWANTJD \u2022- 9 .UNFURNI8HKD-\nrooms. preferably in Falrview\ndlatrlct, Write Box 4339, DeUy\n* News,  ';\u25a0\u25a0      .,:\nwanwp to mwn- \u2022*-- 8 OR *\nroom' apartment or small house.\n, Phone 1700-L,. .-\nBJlpP \"WAN \"WfJUW UKB\nhouse to rent. Apply Hume Hotel\noffice, Mr. Brook.\ntimtmVm WArU-H-Utlb\nspaee  tor  rent.   Apply   Central\nTruck and tqulprrtent Co,'\nWANTED   TO   RRNT \"\u25a0*-\u25a0 \"* 'WP-'\nroom housa or apartment, Phons\n_i___________________\nment, modem but not furnished.\n913 Oth St. \u25a0 '-..\" j\n\u25a0nWHSN*\"\"-^ RQOM'BtlSINlISB '\u25a0\nsuite,  607 Baker St. Apply 304.\nMedlcar Arts.\nto rent. By permanent telephona\nemployee, Phone 1774-t,.'        a\nSLEEPING ROOM - DAY. WEEK\nor monthlyi Alien Hof-3,' W?\n- ygik'sr. \u25a0'\u25a0'\nb\u00bbdrc*qM fob mm. *\n,cteste\n;Jhi?,~*~hoho'l8J!'R. '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0'''\n\u25a0: area, phone 1047'R, -i'\nfimb'W.-mt^**m\n____________________L_Ji\nBlliHOQM FQB'IffiNT - PHONE\nSEWING MACHINES\nS l N GIR CAN  RBfcAm YOUR\nV present machine at roassnsble\ncost. For free tftt4matoaj*bone,4t.\nsingfr snwiNa ejNraK ,\n839 'BAKBR ST. ^jmfcgON. B.(5.\n~ ~   'CHINJi'W\nperftpt condition. No case \u00bboo. M.\nO'Keefe, Btaep Creak, B.C.\niifc\ndNTHEAIH\nCKiN PROGRAMS - -. mm w \u00ab\"\u2022\n7:oi)---Naw\u00bb Y\n7:05-Ya\u00abm;-Wi\u00bbl\u00bb Yeusf. , -\n7-is-s-rtrt News\n7:30r-Y|wB With Voting  -\n7:30\u2014NeWS      A\n7:35-Yawp W\u00bbb YOlffll\nWiiT-Bisc W Shlpi   ,,'  \u201e,-;'.\n8:0O-NeWS' 7'   '     '\n8;io-SD8rti News '\".-.'\u25a0\n8:i5^-BreaWast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Sereneder\n8:55\u2014Sports Corner\n0:0O-^Morning Devotions\n9:18\u2014Bert Young Show\nOiBCte-Harl Warren 4\\ltV\nio:oo^Rideri of the Purple g\u00bbge\n10:13-\u00bb-Hews- .V      . s'- -.7  ,\n10:20\u2014Morning-Visit\n10:30-Story Parida\nio:45-rinvitatlen To tha Wsltj ,\nii:04HMmieil .Minu'ii    ';?-.-\u2022 \u25a0\nii:i5^Hemimelwr UHmtmiM, 7\nii:45r\u00bb-\u00a7iniumsr'i eentei-'\ni2:8o-=44b\u00ab-t5> Spcellil\nUslB-s-Sltj* fin-lpiiti,     .    ,,\n12:30-^faWI  tii\n13;30n*f aim: BroidCMl\ni2:55-=(3hatt ng With the \"4\u00abtsn\u00ab\u00ab\ni:oo--gp8t}Tte on Melody\nl:18-4fp.HywP0\u00ab'Biimwt 7 ,'\ni:304rf)iirvlew Shopping fiulds \u2022\nIPaoiflo DayUght Time) '   '\nTUiSpAY, JULY 2|, .1.953_\u25a0\u2022 . , .^fy\n- siao^Trans-Canads Matinee\n' \"tili^awiiri Heirt\n8:80\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4|}5=-Hawalian Moods..\ni iiiiMocret Valley Ranch- .\n4i45--Psci'l(|News-..,.- '\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill I\nlllKh-At Homo With tho Lennickis|\nSiao^Int, Commentary    \u2022\nB:3!N8eh|nd the News\n5:35-^8potllght On a Star\n5:5(Hfews- \"    '       -\n6:00**\u2122' Me Doctor \"\n8:ig\u2014Musical Prograpi.' ,    ;\n8:38\u00bb\u00a98|lsrs and Sense\n\u25a08:Sg?=egVSlcade of Melody\n7:0lh>*Nsws      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0!,\n7:15\u2014Newa Roundup\n7:30\u2014Report From Perliament Hlltl\n7i4iM3sn-Uelightand Silver\n\u00ab|-*-PoI!tlcsl Talk. ',\n8'!io>eiB8Si\u00bbne\nliBiVOhimpioiii of Sport\nBl89**-\u00a7SP|s From the Showi\n18l88--*N\u00bbWS   yti\nions-Way Back Whon\n10:80-rBtBrllght pallroom\nJ0:4B\u2014Sports goundup  \u25a0-.'.-:\nniOflr-rArownd the Town \u25a0\u2022\u2022:\nWiOd-NBWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain standard Time)\nWPBME5PAY, JULY 22,, 1993\n7:oo-rFlshsrmsnls Hreidcast\n7:15-,MHltSl\" MlnUtlBJ   titi\n7:30-News\n7:38\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014M'ornint Devotion j\n7:55r-Mujis-4 March Put\n8:00r-Nlw\u00bb\n8:ior--aiu am;'\ns^s-BreaWlit eiUtJ\n8:45-Anythlni QOM\n9:c\u00ab>-Bjiis,Naws romm|iitsry\n9;1&\u2014Aunt Luey a   \u25a0\n9^38\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014iFamous Voices\nio:oor-Mop)ing visit:\nlOiiB-jfipn**. Ogng\n10:45-Invltat|tm to thl Wl'tM\nii:oo-.A Men snd His Music\n12:15-N|WS      ' \u25a0-'\u25a0 7\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast       ' ti\nHiRihrFivs to One\ni|B9-=Afta'nPon Ooncirl\nHiUVTrans'Csnsda Matinse\n8:ib^8fsv( voyage\n3:30\u2014Program Resumo\n3:45\u2014B,C. Roundup  '.- ,\n4:15\u2014pther Voices, Other Places\n4:30\u2014oamp Wilderness   .\n4:45\u2014Mus|o fof Children\n5:0(HThs,Movie ScSne\n5:25-rinternitional Commentary\n5:3D-*-UN Tfldiy'    ...   '     .\n5:4!p-News ind Weather \u2022   \u2022 '\n3:5|^-Hiva Vou Heard -\n8;0M\u00bbeigltl\"9\u00bbrlF News\n84#=H8tan from *\"m'\u00bb   \u25a0\nei(IS**Jntrei to Wed, N'sh*\n7|0f|-tN|WI   '\n7:}5-^Npvs RnundHP     '\n' 7i8(M3pn Oarrard In Recital\n7i487^(*epFge Wttjp Singers\n8:0Or-ThO \u00bb8C0 Of Violence\n9:30\u2014Polltlflol Talk'.      7     .   ?'\n10;00\u2014News   A   . '    \u00bb\nlOiiR^Muslo From Swops -----\nlOiSiKTha World and the West\n'\n \u25a0iplpiplif^f^lii\nMinn m\nPERSON-TO-PERSON WANT ADS\nFOR QU\/CK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline tor Classified Ads- -5 p.m.\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVE       Y\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nY     IMMEDIATE i&\n-       DELIVER^.\/;\nNEW MONARCH SEDAN\nNEW FORD SEDAN Y\n\u2022\u25a0'     N|W FORD TUDOR   f,'\n'NEW TRUCKS\nIMMEDIATE   '\n.DELIVERY\nNEW FORD PICKUPS\n\u2022 Tan, Grey, Blue\"?.\nNEW FORD SEDAN DEL'Y\n~ NEWfORD 3-TONf\nLATE MODELS!\n.    LOW MILEAGE!\nPRICED RIGHT'\n1953 Monarch Tudor\n2000 Miles) Radio. Whitewalls.\nNaw Car Warranty.\n-     Real Saving nt $3300.00.\n1953 Chevrolet Belle Air\n5000 Miles. Radio, Power Glide,\n' Guaranteed.\nReal Saving at $3000.00.\n1953 Ford Sedan,\nOverdrive. Immaculate Condition.\nGuaranteed. Reduced to $2600.00.\n1952 Monarch Monterey\nRadio, One Owner, Low Mileage.\n1952 \"Chevrolet Sedon\nLovely Condition. Priced Right.\nUSED CAR CLEARANCE.\non following:\n1953 CONSUL SEDAN\n1991 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1951 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n1980 PLYMOUTH1 TUDOR\n1990 PREFECT SEDAN   .\n1940 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1949 HILLMAN SEDAN\n1948 PLVMQUTH SEDAN    - *'\n.    194$ CHEVROLET COACH\n.1947 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n-   1648 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE\n1946 MERCURY 8EDAN\n1940 PHEVROLET COUPE\n1B40 FORD COACH\n1988-BODGp \u20acOACH\nUSED TRUCK\nBARGAINS     f\n1950 AUSTIN PANEL\n1949 THAMES PANEL\n1948 FORD 1-TON\n1948 FORD PICKUP\n1938 CHEVROLET PICKUP\nel Buerge\niptors \"\nVernon St.       Phone 1745\n,. SPECIALS!    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\n1950 Ford Fordor $14957\n1950 Austin Devon $87-5\n1951 Ford Prefect $995    7\n1.941  Dodge Coupe $39.5\n1951 Studebaker Sedan'\n$1795,\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\nl        --, $-1595 ti' \u25a0\n1950 PorttlacSedap $1495 \u2022\n1936 Pontlae Sedan $250\n1950 Austin Pickup $875\n1949 Austin Paoel $845\n1952 Austin Somerset\n':\u2022\u2022'' .,$1595  ' yyyf\nMany. Other Units to Choose From\nTERMS and TRADES\nAustin Service and Sales \"\nEMPIRE MOTORS\nPHOIJE 1138       .7\n803 Baker St, Nelson, B.C,\nA, Real Selection of\nCars & Trucks\n1950 Fort Vi-Tof-i '   ''-''\"'\n1950 Austin Panel ..'\u25a0;.''\u2022\n1949 Dodge 1-Ton Dump\n1946 Chevrolet Vi-Ton\n1952 Austin-Somerset\n\\ 1950 Austin Devon        .-> .\n1.949''Ford Fordor\"   '\u25a0'\"\"\u25a0\n1946 Pontiac Sedan\n1937 Ford Fordor\n1934 Dodge Sedan  ' .      \"\n'    TERMS and TRADES\nVernon Street\nMotors\nPhone 1661, 5.18 y*rnen St.,\nNel?on, B. C.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\n(Continued.' -\nIT'S HEREl THE NORTON \"FEA-\ntherbed\" Dominator Come In snd\nttt this famous motorcycle, the\nholder of the Isle of Man TT at\nKootenay Motorcycle Sale\/and\n, Service, Box 390, Ca6tlegar;'(Shone\n2601. \"The Shop pf friendly Sar.\nvice,\" : \"-, -    \u25a0\u25a0-.':.'-     ,., '\u2022'.'.\nFOR SALE \u2014.1949 CadTVCT-TON.\nLow mileage All new tires. No\nreasonable offer refused. Phone\n1623-L-2. evenings, or can see Con\nCummins at Post Office before\n9:00 a.m. -.'>.*:\nFORSALE --.1950 FORD.SDObR\nsedan. Will accept any reasonable cash offer, Must sail. Apply\nG. M. Kennedy, Queen's Hotel,\n\u202253 AUSTIN CONVERTIBLE. -.\u2014\nCompletely equipped. Can be\nfinanced, Apply Box 4187, Daily\nNews, \u25a0\".'\n(Contlnuedk'n Next Column)\nNelson.\n\u25a0JL\n1950JDODGE.SPECIAL DEIAIJO).\nRadio, super air conditioner,, absolutely perfect condition. Must\n-be seen to be appreciated. $1695.\n' 921 Davies St.. or phone 820.\n2 ENGLISH REPOSSESSIONS. '50\nPrefect Sedan and '49 Austin\nPanel. Contact Trader's Finance,\n525 Vernon St.   -\nSACRIFICE '47 FORD FORDOR-\n$200.00 below going price. Can be\nfinanced. Phone 161-L-2.\nFOR SALE- 1942 HAl&EY\nDavidson motorcycle ln good\ncondition. Phohe 199-L-l.  .  -\nFOR SALE-'38 CHEV. COUPE\nNo reasonable offer refused: \u2014\nPhone 181-L-8.\nPUBLIC-NOTICES\n\"POUND DISTRICT ACT\"\nWHEREAS notice has been duly\ngiven of the Intention to constitute\nas a Pound District? certain land\nln the vicinity, of Taghum, which\nmay be more particularly described\nas follows: Commencing at the\nsouthwest corner of Lot 10272, kootenay Land District, heing a point\non the northerly bank of Kootenay\nRiver; thence northerly, easterly\nand northerly along the boundaries\nof said Lot 10272 to the southwest\ncorner of Lot 10260; thence northerly along the westerly boundaries\nof Lota 10280 and 12484 to the northwest corner of the south V, of said\nLot 12484; thence due east tp the\nwesterly boundary of Lot 10426;\nthence southerly along; the westerly\nboundary of said Lot 10428 to the\nmost southerly corner thereof, bclnn\na point on the. aforesaid northerly\nbank of Kootenay River; thence in\na general westerly direction alonn\nsaid northerly bank of Kootenay\nRivar-to the.point of commencement: . \u2022' \u25a0 yi    \u25a0\nAND WHEREAS objection to ths\nconstitution of such proposed Pound\nDistrict has been received from\neight proprietor? of land within\nsuch proposed Pound District:\nTHEREFORE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the majority of the\nproprietors of lsnd within the above\ndescribed   district   must,   within\nthirty days: from the -posting and\npublishing of. this notice, forward\nto the undersigned their petition\nip the form required by Section 5\nof  the  ''Pound District, Act\",   or\notherwise such proposed Pound District will not-be,constituted.\nW.\"K. KiernSn,  -\nMinister of .Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture, \u25a0:\u25a0. \u25a0\nVictoria, B.C.\nJuly 7? 1953.       '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-\u2022 -... \u2022'\u25a0     :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nNOTE: .7 ' r*f\nThe word\" \"proprietor\" in tha\n\"Pound District Act\" -meanss any\nholder or occupier of land under\nwhatever tenure, or. any superintendent, overseer, servant, or, other\nperson acting for snd oh behalf of\nsuch holder or occupier.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nJAMES GORDON BENNETT,\n.   Formerly of Nelson, British\n7, Columbia, Deceased.\nNOTICE is hereby' given that\ncreditors and others having claimi\nagainst the Estate of JAMES GORDON BENNETT, Deceased, are\nhereby required to send them to\nthe Toronto General Trusts Corporation, 580 West Pender Street, Vancouver? British Columbia, before\nthe 1st day of September, 1953, after\nwhich date the said Toronto General Trusts Corporation as Executor\nand Sybil Irene Bennett as Executrix ot the Will of the said James\nGordon Bennett will distribute the\nsaid' Estate among .the- parties entitled thereto having regard only\nto'the clalmB-of which they then\nhave notice.\nTORONTO GENERAL TRUSTS\nCORPORATION,\nIxeouttn-;\nSYBIL IRENE BENNETT,    7,\n-   Executrix; '  \u25a0-\u2022 -\nBy: WRAGGE & HAMILTON,\n1    Their Solioltors, ..\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts occurred in my name other\nthan my own7 \/\n-...',.- 7 \u2022 J.L. LARRIMORE..\nINSTRUCTION\n\u25a0 LEARN RAILWAY\n.TELEGRAPHY Y\n.    AT HOME?\nA few hours a day train you\n\u2022    for a high-paid position.\nRAILWAYS 6FFE&:  ]\n-,'   security -: -,,    \u25a0\u25a0\nPa|\u00bb Pf lvlltgSS      -  7 .   .    \\i\nHospital and Sickness Plan\n\u25a0  Lifetime EfnpUyment\nPension 7\n,   DO Nl\u00bb DELAY\n, MfHITE NOW TO:\nColumbia Business Institute,\nBOX 4428, NELSON DAILY NEWS\nPHONE   144. FOJ*   CLASSIFIED\nMACHINERY\nRqmp Body brid\nFtnder\/Works'\n.  '  -      Nelson.'B.C. \u2022'\u2022\n,   Jbfibtjrk for-'-\n;\u2022''\u25a0\u25a0 spicer?\/\nNeedle 'ieatlha. .Power'\nTdkeoffs-oiid-Universal \u2022'\u2022\n-ff: 7 Joints .'\u25a0'.\n558 Josephine St.-   Phone 198.\nFOR SALE-r-1 ELECTRIC SBPAR-\nator, .400 lbs.' per hour; 1 electric\nor hand-operated .separator, 500\nlbs. ser hour. Call or write and\nmake us. an offer. Kootenay Valley, Qtybp. Dairy, 609 Railway\nStreet, Phone 116.   -.-\u25a0\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED '\nDISTRIBUTORS  FOR: MINING.\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1. B.C\nFOR SALE -..HQOVER TWIN\ncylinder hoist1 heavy duty sub\nframe Phone \u25a0 15*1-Y.  .     ,     '\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nUSED FURNITURE BOUGHT AND\nsold at J. P. Morgan Store, 801\nBaker St.. Phone 47.\nCEDAR POLES,- AH. CLASSES\nand lengths Kootenay Forest\nPrrirlncts l.'td', >'.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA  MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurance Co. f D L -Kerr Agent\n\"iLMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Glean rooms-and reason.\nable rotes   Vancouver   B.C\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD, - PHONE\n1665-R-l.   .    ,77':\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAVER8 AND MINE\nREPR6SENTATIVE3,\n\u00a3   W .' WIDDOWSON. * CO, AS-\nsayers 801 Josephine St.. Nelson\nH   S>   BLMES. ROSSLAND. B   C\nAisayer Chemist 'Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nS..H, COAXES,  STE.  NO 6r-973\nBaiter St,  Nelson.   Phone .1116\n'- BC Lands Surveyor. -\nBOV D C, AFFLECK..2I8 GORE ST.\nNelson.-.B'C Surveyor? Engineer\n\u25a0  MACHINISTS I\nBENNETTS LIMITED .\nMachine   Shop    Acotylone   snd\nelectric welding, motor rewind.\nIng   Phone 593   324' Vernon St\nnooyiNapB wooi-gRe?\nBETTER-JOB, FOR LESS MONE?\nPhone H. Pedersen,: >761'R-1\nNplanrviattii Stoma\nClassified Advertising Rates!\n15c per IMa first' Insertion and\nnon-consecutive Insertions\nlie line per consecutive Inser- 7\ntlon after.first. Insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions .,y   v 77  -   \u201e\n$1.56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions)  Slox,num.\nbers  lie. extra   Covers any\nnumber Of insertions '.\"\u2022'.,\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)\" NOTICES,\nTENDERS., etoi\u201420o per?line,\nfirst insertion.' 16c per Una\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES \u25a0 LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates? 7\n.(Net More Thon Listed Here) ,\nBy carrier, per week, 7 '\nIn adviiice ,,'\u25a0.\u25a0' .80\nBy carrier; pet year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    .................. t 1.25\nThree months .7. .  3.75\nSix months  -. \u25a0 .^^.^ .,   7,50\nOne yesr        '.'.,7 ,'       I5i00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     :.,.:...\u00bb.........   1.00\n' Three months  _; \u201e.'   2.75\nSix tnonths - '.u____J..   s.W '\nOne year ....   !   10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\n;\" above rates plus postage.  .\nNEWYORK (AP) rr Losses'61-\nSbout a point were frequent in moderate's' lower trading.   ..\nCanadian issues were mostly\nlower. Mclntyre was off one, Canadian Pacific tall V, and International Nickel slipped H. Dome Minos\nadded Vi. . ...       .    ' \u25a0\nTORONTO (CP)'\u2014 Prices mixed\ntoward the closa of a dull session.\n'\u25a0 Industrial's and gojtls prbgressed\nsloyrly within\" a narrow range, but\nwestern'olli and base metals wsrs\nlower?    ~    f   V.' '        '\u25a0'\u25a0-.'\u25a0-\u25a0\"\n\u2022tMO'NTRE'AC (CP) -Prices die-\nplayed little' change in.slow after-\nnoon deillngs Gains' Snd losses\nwars limited J6 fractions.   \u2022. \u25a0 < 7 7\nLOND6N (Rsutwsi\u2014iir'adln* was\nirregular but doftiest|c issues re-\n\u2022nslnid stssdy to, firm.?\nN Gilt-edged were firm-on the carryover Of. .leit.week's investment\nsupport,'- -. \"\u2022?'\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG 4CP) - Winnipeg\n,graln cash,prices: ..:\u25a0\u25a0\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, .66$.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed* 1.12V-. '-\u25a0\u25a0..*'.'\u25a0\".\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINIS.\nAcadia Uranium I    - SO\nAkaitcho '\u25a0 ;,' .....\u201e,..,.._ - LOO\nAmerican Y K .. ~.\u201e...... .:     3g\nAnglo Huronlon'    13.00\nAtlas Y K-  ,._..-\" iAVA\nAunbr    .........>, \u201e,.V \u201e.'.....    2.80\nBsgsniao, ..,.._... ,..'_..'   ,24 '\u25a0','.\nBasyinln  ..,.....\u201e...- '.-.'...-.,-;   1,40\nBase. Metals. ....._..?.\u201e.-..      .58\nBevco'urt. J.~,\u201e ..._,?\u2022\u2022     ;.40?\nBoymsr Gold .I...:......-\u2014.. \"* Vll?*,'\nBrsloma  ......:\u201e_'..-_   4.00 ;\nBre^s R1 ..\u2122u-........^..   V .12V\u00bb\nBroulan  \u201e.^._..\u00bb,.._:\u201e\u2014'   2.85\nBuffalo Ank .:,....,\u2014..\".  7, .70 '\nCampbell'R L _.... -A... 78.30 -\nOto.Mai'    ':.,...;. ...\u201e:\u00bb\u201e. ..40 '\nCastle Treth .?..?._,-. -.. 2.30-\nCentral Pom  ....- ^....   \u2022 V19H\nCons Golden Arrow .,.-....-   '1.00 .\nChestervlUa '..'...... i.'^.^- - .58\nChlmo G  ..-.:...\u201e.    1162\nCochenoiir _     1.15\nCons Mlt'S - 7.   27.16\nConwest    4.45\nCrestaurum  .......;......-., '....    .10\nDomei   \u2022 ; \u2022-.'\u2022 \u2022    17.18   '\nDonalds    .:       ,73\nDuvay   .,: - :.   . .35\nEast Malartic    '2.00....\nEast Sullivan ......... ..::. ' 8.10 ;\nElder. Gold \u2022 - .-...--..      .53\nEstella   ..-    : _ -..*.    .80''\nFalconbrldge ;_'.'.-\u00bb...  16.90.'\nFrobisher .....\u201e....._..-  - B.80\nGod's Lake   *.._...      .90,'\nGoldara    .. -\u25a0        .88\nEastern Metals  \u201e.^, \u201e--    1.21\nOoldcrast.-,;..  :?7.     .80?\nGold ESgle -.:..,.\u2022- .,.u~.;- . \u2022 .12-\nHardrock   ~7....i' \\..lsy\u00ab\nHarricana   ...-'-  , it,Vb\nHeath       ?12V4\nHollinger .-. _.-\u2014;...\u2014.-.  14.35.\nHomer Y K .'-..    \"30\nHudson Bay  .'.. ~:...:   46.25 .\nInspiration   2.23\nInt Nickel    :41.28\nJacknife -      .  .14\nKelore     .     .........:...:..._.. '   .20\nKerr AddlBon .-    19.78\nKirk-Hudson Bay        .82\nKirklahd Lake  _ -     -68H'\nLabrador -^    8.43 \u25a0\nLake Dufault   88.\nLakeshore-  : .?>     6-70   :\nLarder TJ :.- -\u2014^.--    133\nLeitch     '.;.: ' .-      .70\nLexlndin     - .U\nLingman (new)       SB\nLouvicourt  -,..^.._      .16\nLynx     \u201e...\u201e....._     .U\nMaoDensld ,..:...:...       .82 .\nMaossss  ....    1.78\"\nMacLeod Cock \u2014\u2014    2.20\nMadsen R L    .    1.81\nMagnet         -..- 18'\nMalartlc 0 F     1.78\nMarcus G _   '  .10%\nMclntyre .....:... :\u00bb.-.  87.00\n\u25a0Mlnlng\"Corp '^:ti...Z titi..: 11.78\nMylomaquo ............ ..........      .61\nNew Alger  ;.....'..-.     :Wt\nNew Bidlamaque -      .10\nNew Calumet       .80\nNib ' .'.v. \u2014     .10%\nNipissing  ;      1.55\nNoranda  x.iir. \u2022   63.85\nNormetals ..?.....-._,..,     2.95\nNew Laguerre ....\u2014-....      :11%\nNOrth' Inca -..-     .24.\nO'Brien  ?.... i v.v...     .81  \u25a0\nO'Leaify   .'., .'.      .17\nOsislco       .51\nPaymaster- -;       .46\nPickle CrOw :  .-..    1.28\nPowell Rouyn .,...-       .99\nPreston ? D  \u2014    2.75\nQuebec -Lab :...., .....-....:\u2014'     ,16%\nQueehston \u2014      .31\nReeves .Mac  .'..... 7 2.15.\nRoche L L .. V.....;      .13%\nSherritt- Gordon \u25a0 .:....\u2022\u2022..     4.35\nSigma   -        .-,...... .-    7.35\nSilvermillsr ..'. ......:.    .70\nSilanco . ......\u2022\u2022 .'.\u2022\u2022.\u2022 >'    .23-\nRsdlore Uranium :-....-      .50\nStsdacoha.,. .'.:::'. I       .35 \u25a0\nStarratt Olssn 15\nSteep Rock \u2022 ... ._    6.40\nSudbury Cont       .757\nSylvanlte. .  * 1.32\nTeck Hughes.:     7.98\nTombill  .'  -  V .25.\nTorbrit        .'.     LH\nUnion Mining      -23 \u2022\nUpper, Canada :     1-25\nVentures ..-\u2022   17.50\nViolamae      :     2.60\nWalja Amulet .\u201e>    10.75\nOILS'?\"\nAn^lo'Can ?.    5.75\nBA Oil   titi' 18.50\nCentral Leduc ...:..... -    2.85\nChemical Research ...;.:     1.49\nCentral Explorers'- .-.    4.50\nDel Rio 7     2.30\nFederated Pete  ., 5.10\nHome '\\ : i.'   8.0S\nMid Cont :...\u201e.     - .18\nNat Pete    2.00\nOkalta\u2022\"! ..-.!     2.70\nPac Pete .....: ...J.   10.25\nRoxana ?....:.'.      .**2V\u00bb\nUnited Oils'-,\u201e:\u25a0      -.91.-'\nINPU8TRIAL8\nAluminum:,?\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- a\u2014~~   48%\nBeattie Bros   '.    6%\nBell Telephone ..... .....   39%\nBtii'lian      :.  10\nB C Power A .....\u2014 3?4%\nCan Breweries .. \u25a0.-.\u2122.  20%\nCan Canners ...V\u2014.'....._...-...  28\nCan fao Riy 7. '..  27%\nDist Seagram   27%\nDom Steal & Coal B ..\u201e\u201e...\u201e.  12\nFartious Players '..V.v    21%\nFofd  A, ,..-. -.!.., 62\nGatlnetlU    ,.....-...   21%\nGrost Lakes    16%\nint Nickel ...:.  41%\nMfisSey Harris \u2014\u00bb..    8%'\nNat Stssl Car ...._ \u2014 j25V\u00ab\nPage Hershey \u201e^_..... ,.>.'.- '68 .\n?oy-eU River; i..:,.....^..\u2014.....  23%\nRuss Industries  ....  19%\nShawinigan  ^. .'_\u2014..   87%\nSicks Biew  ... ,\u2014ui.   25  .\nSiniptons !A  \u2122~.\u00bb. ,14%-\nSouthern :  \u2014\u2022..... 34%\nSteel fit CSn: \u2014\u2014  31%\nStesl of Can pfd  :....., 35,\nTSylor Pearson ?.  \u2014..    9%\nUnion \"Gas of Can  .... ' 30%\nUnited Corp A .: , ....   25\nUnited Corp B  ...\u201e\u2014' 11%\nUnlt?d Fuel A .,..-'    58 ?\nUnitad Steel   ..\u201e..\u201e\u201e.\u201e.. ..;\u201e.   14%\nH.Wslkef        .......i..  48%:\nWesterrt Grocers \u201e.\u201e...: .'.' 55%\nWeston George ..,    31%'\n\u2014\t\nVancouver Stocks\n.     (Closing Prlees)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge ^_\u201e...,...'; 1.00\nBralorne.      .  v..,...:\u2122...... 7 \"4.08\nCariboo Gold :.-.,..-\u201e \u201e 1.05\nEstella V.. ,.58\nGiant MsscOt >..:.....^...'....^...:. .flO  \u2022\nHighland Bell  ..,-\u201e..... .88\nPend Orelllti ..........,\u201e;..  4.40\nPioneer Gold  , _... 1.88 :\nQustalno       .'...i..S,\u201e... ,82\nReeves MacDonald ............. T.96\nSl^eep Creek..! ........\u201e..\u201e;' '.60\nSilver Ridge  _.. .18\nSilver Standard  ,92\nSurf. Inlet .-.-., .,.  .10\nWestern Exploration .......... .   .50\nWSsttrn Uranium ...\u201e:.\u201e.,' 2.23\nYale ',..\u201e;,. ;'....\u201e..?... ,19 .\n011.8 \u2022 ' .     '' \"\\'V\nAnaconda-  ,.. -\u25a0.,         .17\nAnglo Can ..,...,:     8;86'\nA P-Con- :.:.?........\u201e\u201e\u201e..:. ~     .24\nCal &' Edmonton ....z;,.....:...  10.25\nCalmoftt ......... ...^\u201e._..\u201e..'\u201e'.    1.20 .\nHoma v.... .\".......\u201e.....\u201e.\u201e......,\u2022...   8,00\nNational Pete....... .....;   . f90 \u25a0\nOkalte. Com __     2.50\nVanalta   .   ,-   .26-\nINDUSTRIALS\nCspitSl Estates .,.\u201e.:\u201e.\u201e\u2022.,.\u201e\u201e..' 20.00 '\nInt :Brew B .'.     4.Q6;\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) -r The Calgary\nlivestock market was active at generally-steady prices. On offer were\n075.'cattle and calves, mostly good\nand choice butcher steers, with an\nincreased percentage of grass cattle.\nHogs closed steady last week at $30,\nsows at $15.50;. good spring lambs\nbrought $24.60.\nGood to choice butcher steers, $18\nto, $19.50; common to medium, $12\nto $17.56.\n' Good butcher heifers, $16,50 to\n$17; common to medium, $11 to $16.\nGood to choice fed calves, $18 to\n$19.50; common to medium, $16.50\nto $17.80; .- -f.   -    \u25a0'\u25a0\nGood cows, $11.25 to $12.25; common to medium, $10.50; canners and\ncutters, $6 to $8,50.\nGood bulls, $11.50 to $12.75; common to medium, $11.\n'Good stacker,and feeder steers,;\n$18 to $17; common to medium, $12\nto $19.50.      ti ', ^\n'. Good to chol.ee veal Calves, $19 to\n$22; common to medium, $18 to\n$18.50.   7\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nLumber Exports\nIo Japan Good\nVANCOUVER (CP)- A marked\nincrease in the---export of Pacific\nCoast lumber and logs to Japan was\nforecast Monday by J.:Vj Christenson, .assistant to the president - of\nEast Asiatic Co. (B.C.)..Ltd.-\n' Mr^Chrlstensenreturned-recently\nfrom a market-survey trip to the\nfar east  ;v  ,-'\n. The Vancouver businessman estimated export to Japan might increase '\u25a0< by about 75,000,000: board\nfeet In -10S2 about 25,000,000 board\nfeet were shipped to Japah.\n\"Prospects tor building the greatest trade ever with Japan In' B, C.\nlumber and grain shipped through\nB. C. ports are extreniely good.\"\nsaid-Mr. Chrlstenaen.       -    '\nm\/\nCrude Oil Production\nAt All-Time High\n\u25a0 (^LOARY, (pP) \u2014; Production of\nAlberta crude oil. Jumj|*ed to sn all-\ntime high of 265,465' barrels daily\nin th .eweck ended July 18, the petroleum and'-natural gas conservation board announced Monday.\nThis production from 4104 wells\nwas 26,365 barrels a dajr greater\nthan'the previous record-of 239,100\nbarrels dally from 4043 wells, set\nin the, week ended June 22. It was\nalso a Jump of 73,708 barrels daily\nover output for the week of July 8.\nTwo of Alberta's most prolific\nproducing areas accounted tat. more\nthan 80 per cent of the total output\nin the last.Week. Redwater led with:\nan average of 81,186:\"barrels: dally\nfrom 926, wells while Leduc-Wood-\nbend followed with 79,134 barrels\nfrom 1182. \u25a0\".\nNIMON DAILY N-WS, TUESDAY, JULY 31,1933 -. 11\nJapanese tb Build .\nPulp Mill, Sitka\n\u25a0 TOKYO (AP) \u2014 T\\jenty'-two Japanese, promoters Monday approved\na plan to build a lurhber and pulp\nmill at Sitka, Alaska, capable- of\nturning, out 8,000,000,000 cubic feet\nof lumber annually.     \".,-.\"'.'\nThejf formed an Investmerit company to establish an American cor-\nportion to be called.the Sitka Lumber and Pulp, Co.   ;-.\u25a0\u25a0 \"\nThe.mills will be capable of producing 100,000 tons of pulp annhally\nby the fourth year, the council said.\n' The new cdmpany will start with\ncapital of 1,500,000,000 yen (about\nJM.187.000) oi which 80 per cent will\nbe financed by 'Japanese and the\nrest by Americans. '7\nJet Fighters Stage\nMock Fight, Greece\n' LARISa, Greece (AP)\u2014Jet fight-.\ner-bom>ers of fouir countries\nswarmed over Greece In tactical\nsupport to the first Greek national\narmy whloh \"fought\"'a holding action along the Olympus mountain\nUna against a simulated Invader.\nFor the .first time since NATO's\nsouth Europe command was.formed\nGreek field commanders were able\nto call on' F84 Thunder-Jets based\nin Turkey and Italy.\n400 TO JEWISH MEET\nTORONTO \u2014 A\" general survey\nof all tbe problems of the 'Jewish\ncommunity of Canada will be made\nat the biennial, convention of Canadian Jewry when the Canadian\nJewish Congress meets in 10th\nPlenary Session in Toronto on Oct.\n10-12, according to Samuel Bronfman of Montreal, national head: of\nJ'.., Congress. Some,400 delegates\nwill represent the 200,000. Jews who\na. e scattered from British.Columbia\nto Newfoundland.     .'.\nLATEST REPORT\nAsk your Investment Peeler\nlor the Latest Report ,\n;  i   'and Prospeclui of 7\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nlist.\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y,; .18%.\nZinc, East St. Louis, .11.\nTin, N. Y, .80%. -.\nSPECIAL\nCLEARANCE\nSALE\nGLIDDEN PAINTS\nPAINT BRUSHES\nROOFING\nSHINGLES\nROLLED ROOFING\nSIDING SHINGLES\nMASON ITE\nChain Saws\n$95.00\nionlyi.e.l;5h.i\u00bb.\n1 only disston 11 h.p,\n.   ';*.':'**'\nPHONE 18\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd,\n\"If It's Mochinery' Y4M Nasi\nConsult Vt First\"   yti\n214 Hall St     Nelson, I.C.\nMOO \"BIO JOV-\na mighty giant of tha\nFord Truck line . \u2022 '\u2022\nG.VrW. ratings to\n23,000 lbs...G.C.W.\nratings to 48,000 lbs, .\ntakes bodies from 7H\nto 19 feet. . . combines big power snd\nbig strength with big\neconomy of op4i*atlon.\ntot every.kind of load, every kind of hauling job, you'll find\nthe ons right truck in the greatest Ford Truck line of all\ntime.. .over 100 ail-now models thst sre making trucking\nhistory on every road in Canada! Drivers everywhere ere\nacclaiming the roominess, convenience and comfort of\nDriterizcd cabs. . .the mighty -muscle-power of Ford's\nfamous V-8 engines . ..the swcctcst-cvcr handling ease that\nFord's advanced engineering has built Into every truck,\nfrom pickup to \"big job\" .. . the biggest choice of jrans-\nmisslons Ford hss ever offered in any year I Contact your\nFord Truck dealer ... he has the truck to do your job more\nefficiently and economically than it's ever been done before I\nCANADA'S MOST VERSATILE AIL-PURPOSE TRUCK UNE\nWITH MORE ALL-KEW FEATURES THAN EVER BEFORU\nAll-rM>W CAR COMPORT with 19% moro nil-round visibility.\nfull' 3-foot wide seat with built-in shock Sflubbsrs. bow\ninsulation and ventilation,-comfort-positioned controls. '\nAU-NSW HANDLING BASE with wider front tread, shorter\nwheelbase snd sst-bsck front axle to make turning circle\nup to 12 feet shorter for grester manoeuvrability, easier\nSteering, mote road-hugging stability.\nAII-N6W TRANSMISSION CHOICE-smooth-shifting Synchro-,\nSilfnt transmission on all, models, completely automatic\nFordomatic* Drive and Overdrive* available on all half-ton\nmodels. .' yt*Opthti,l *t sxtrs.cttt)\nALL-NEW RANGE OF MODELS-8 series ::: over 100 models\n... 17 wheelbase j ... 4 great V-8 engines... 9 transmissions\n... 24 rear axles... 1(5 brakes... 43.wheel and tire sizes...\nnew light-duty units, new expresses, new \"big jobs\" . . \u25a0\nnew parcel delivery, new'cab forwards, new bus chassis!\nTRyQfft\nI  \u2022'I'M:\nSEE YOUR FORD TRUCK DEALER\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS\n608 Vernon St.\nPhont 1744, 174S\nLOOK FOk THE,J\nSIGN Of VALUL WHEN YOU BUY A USED TRUCK   SEE YOUR FORD TRUCK DEALER\n-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ti-titititi-ti-.\n 11.\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 21,19M_\nl^a\n-Uneasy\nLies the Stomach\n- That Is Subject to Motion-Sickness, fv\n:,   7 Car Sickness -Air Sickness - Train Sickness\nii ..       and Bus Sickness can all-bo controlled\nby the proper use of   \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0.\nI   GRAVOL\n| MBLEvTS\n?7.7:'Y ^\u00bb.00>'7 7V V,\nM A MM\nDRUGS LTD.\nViews\nfrom-.the\nNews Fronts\nCanada Warns U;S. oii\nImport Restrictions Score\nOTTAWA . (CP) \u2014 Canada has\nwarned the United States Of possible\n\"serious-implications\" if the U.S.\nimposes Import restrictions against\nCanadian- oats and ground fish fillets.\nAh official Canadian.government\nnote of .protest and appeal against\nArAerican trade proposals was\nhanded, to the .U.S. state department\nMonday by the Canadian embassy\nin .Washington. \u2022 ' .\nyiThe' new note followed-by just\nthree .weeks a previous note of protest egiinst'new American dairy\nImport- curbs. Officials here said\nShe previous protest received nothing more than a routine reply?\n- The Canadian government now\nhais becomed \"concerned over the\npossibility that .the U.S. may slash\nimports of Canadian oats and fish\nllillets. The. American tariff commission   has  held hearings   on  a\nU.S. agriculture department pro\nposal to cut imports of Canadian\n.oats to about 23,000,000 .bushels a\nyear from 75,000,000 bushels in 1952.\nThe two commodities are of\nmajor -concern to Canada, the Canadian government said in its note.\n\"A decision by the U.S. government to limit the imports of cither\nbf these commodities would haye\nserious implications, not Only for\ntrade, but' for other aspects or relationships between our two countries.\"- .-.';.      y .{ .\nThe note referred to \"great harm\"\nthat would result \"both countries\"\nif the proposed restrictions became\neffective and added:.\n\"It greatly hopes that ths U.S.\ngovernment will be' able to avoid\naction!; Milch *6uld Irtipair the\nharmonious and mutually-*dvanr\ntageous trade relationships which\nhave.beeri-dsvijoped.\". :\nMoscow, Israel\nResume Relations\nJERUSALEM (CP)-The Soviet\nUnion and Israel agreed Monday to\nresume diplomatic relations, broken\noff five months ago after a bomb\nexoldded at the Russian embassy in\nTel Aviv, mjuring three persons.\nAnnouncements of the agreement\nwere made simultaneously here and\nin Moscow.\nA Moscow radio broadcast heard\nIn London said Israel had requested\nthe resumption of relations in a\nnote submitted through Bulgarian\ndiplomatic channels May 28.\n\"*\"+* '\t\nHaigh\nIru-Art\nBeauty'\n'Salon\n'\u25a0'.    Phone 827\n678 Baker St.\nw\nIGINTQN\nMOTORS LTD.\n_\u25a0   PONTIAC- BUICK\nO.M.C. TRUCKS\nPody and Paint Work a Specialty\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n^j'r    MASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n803 Baker St\nMed. Arts BUS.\nphone as.\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nPhone 28\nLeading Coast Men\nAt Smith Funeral\nVANCOUVER 4CP) - Final tribute was paid Monday to J. Fyfe\nSmith, 84-year-old civic leader,\nwhose funeral service was held in\nKerrlsdale Presbyterian church.\nLieutenant-Governor Clarence\nWallace and scores of friends and\nbusiness associates attended the\nservice conducted by-Rev. Harry\nLennox.\nHonorary pallbearers included\nthe lieutenant-governor, M. E. Nichols, W. H. Malkin, P. A. Woodward, and Mr. Justice J. V. Clyne.\nMargaret Said\nIn Happy Mood\nLONDON 4AP) \u2014 Princess Margaret may yet win official permission to marry handsome Peter\n-Townsend despite his divorce, a\nsource close to Buckingham Palace\nsays? -\u2022.\"'\u2022\n' The informant, who- cannot be\nidentified further, said Monday the\nPrincess has been told of government efforts to overcome constitutional objections to such a marriage.\n\"Princess Margaret obviously how\nis in a happier frame of mind,\" he\nadded. \"Every evening since her\narrival home, from an African tour\nlast Friday she has spent at least\nan hour writing letters1 \u2014 and she\nis not ordinarily overfond of letter\nwriting.\" .    ,   '-\nRAF Group Capt. Townsend,\nformer equerry to the Royal household, was transferred, to Brussels\nas air atta- e and left for tbe Belgian capital just 48 hours -before\nMargaret's return. Some 'British\nnewspapers charged he had been\n\"exiled.\" :  ,..'.'.....\nPrincess Margaret and the' 38-\nyear-old Townsend had been close\nfriends for many months although\nthere never bas been any official\n.confirmation of a rornance.\nJihn's Radiator Shop\n610 Front Street Phone 63\nis CLOSED for,HOLIDAYS\nuntil July 31\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Streot Phone 140\nSeattle Extending\nTV Broadcasting\nVANCOUVER 4CP) - Seattle's\nKOMO-TV will be broadcasting on-\nChannel 4 by Dec. 11, W. V. War\nreq, vice-president and general man\nager ot the station announced Monday.\nThe National Broadcasting Com\npany affiliate will .transmit a 100,\n000 watt signal from a tower on\nQueen Anne HIU-in Seattle. Test\npattern will go on tbe air in'November. .\nBy FORREST EDWARDS\nIN KORfeA (AP)'-'-.. The- Chinese\nCommunists last week? lost-their\ngreatest opportunity in more then\ntwo years to drive deep Ihto.Allied\nterritory and cripple the South Korean army's entire 2nd Corps,\nFor 36 hours Republic of Korea\nsoldiers,, tanks;   guns   and   jeeps\nbreamed south in retreat over roads\n, shunted Into muddy goo by two\ndays.of pelting rains.\nHad the Chinese Reds made their\n\u2022.'.ove then, the Communists might\nhave been able to .reach the Hwa-\ntithbh reservoir, file- hydro-electric\n.rize, miles to the south: If they had\naerial observation and an armada\nof fighter-bombers, they'could have\nturned miles of road' into rivers of\noloodV '. \"   . :';-.       7\"7';\nBut the Reds were* \"without air\nsupport. Instead, of pursuing- then-\nadvantage, the Chinese- main force\nstopped north of the Kumsong river\non this RoK 2nd Corps front. The\nSouth Koreans rallied, regrouped,\nreinforced and began'moving north\nagain, pushing ahead of .them, Chinese who had crossed the river.\ni Now that the RoK 2nd Corps\nfront has stabilized, last week's\nstory can- be ,told in further detail, f\n\u2022 Four to six' Red divisions struck\nthe throe-division 2nd corps front\nMonday. night July 13. The RoKs\nsuffered tremendous losses but.the\nReds were hit-even harder. 7 7 -.!.\",'.'.\nThe RoKs broke on both the east\nand west flanks. The centre division-was left in an untenable \u25a0position with both its flanks-exposed.\nIt, too, began to fallback:     \u25a0\nUteri came'the .order to withdraw\nto the high -ground south of the\nKumsong, about, three, miles south\nof the, Allied main line which had\nformed a bulge In the Red line.\nOnce ' across the! Kumsong, i the\nRoKs were supposed to'blow then-\nbridges across it and take up defensive positions on the high ground\nsouth.   ' ,r '\u25a0\u25a0:.:\nThere they would have overlook*\ned the river,and the low ground\non each side\u2014a spot where allied\nguns could have caught the Reds in\nthe open had they tried to move\nfarther south.. ,-Y-Y \"\"-\u2022    ' - -\nBut instead of blowing their\nbridges and stopping just south of\nthe Kumsong, the RoKs left many\nbridges standing and kept heading\nsouth. Some units went as far as\n8 miles south ofthe Kumsong before they halted, despite the fact\nthat the Chinese -. applied no real\npressure south of the river.\nFor 36 hours the RoKs retreated.\nInterspersed among them were\nAmerican guns and tanks, forced to\nmove southward because the RoK\ninfantry withdrawal had left them\nAs the RoKs evacuated the. area\nsouth of the Kumsong,' Chinese infiltrations and small units occupied\nit without, opposition with small\nforces.' .   '    \u2022\nTwo days after the initial withdrawal by the bulk of the RoKs in\nthe corps sector, two RoK regiments\nof the eastern flank, already south\nof the Kumsong,, suddenly pulled\nback another three miles, although\nnot under pressure. The commander\nof that division was replaced..\nThen redeployed, regrouped, and\nreinforced, the RoKs southward\ntide, switched. They began pressing\nnorth toward the defence line where\nthey were supposed to have stopped\non their initial withdrawal. As the\nsituation stands today, the Chinese-\nhave wiped out that bulge that once\nstuck into their territory? The ROKS\nhave regained the territory south of\nthe Kumsong which they temporarily, gave up by default The Chin-\n. 7. Part of !the\n^tioh-annual WaterfShdw is pictu^-5 d htSi-fe? In the.cenirejbr'egrourid, orie*bf tfj&log rollers has just gbhe in and is reaching up?gleefuUy7tO'pullin his paftftfe'r.f A portion'o. thfc-aevy bathhouse being ^constructed at the. Park is shown tbp\nright.\u2014Art Stevensphdto;    'ti \u2022-\u25a0\u25a0'- \"y   ' ,\"- '\u25a0   '\nThird ol Child\nPatientsFrom\nOutside City\nVANCOUVER;- A major step to-\nward the development in ,Ysncou-\nver of a children's medical centre\nis being taken ..this year,'with the\ndevelopment of pediatric facilities\nat the Vancouver General Hospital.\nThe development represents the\nfirst phase of a program designed to\nremed:- the serious shortage of beds\navailable for child core in Vancouver, where the number of such beds\nis considerably less than in cities .of\ncomparable size elsewhere,\nThe current move in the realm\nof child care concerns the Infants\nand Children's-Department Of the\nVancouver General' Hospital, arid\nthe Health Centre for Children at\nthe hospital, which since Its estab\nlishment, has functioned as an out\npatient department for -children of\nparents ln low income groups.\nEffective July.!, the role of the\nHealth Centre for Children, has been\nireatly expanded. Now, Instead of\nserving only as' a children's outpatient department, the Health\nCentre for Children is being developed -as a complete. pediatrics\nhospital, to provide both inpatient\nand outpatient facilities- and. ser-.\nvices. \u25a0 .-. \u25a0-.-      - .\u25a0\u2022?...;\nThe Health Centre for Children\nwas fir 1st opened in June, .1948, for\nthe care. of outpatients. Consultations have increased steadily. In the\nfirst few months of its operation,\noutpatient. consultations averaged\nless than 100 monthly. Iri 1852 con\nsulfations totalled 14,887, an average of nearly 1250 monthly, with\nupwards of 1700 consultations hav-\nip. been recorded in a single month.\n\\jt the. 1852 total, about 30 percent\nof the consultations were with\nchildren from outside Vancouver.\nLONDON 4CP)\u2014More than- 28,\n000 permanent houses were completed in the United Kingdomdur-\ning May, compared with 19,000 for\ntye same month last year.\nese apparently are stopped at the\nKumsong. - - , :','\nHut the situation might have been\ndifferent ifv the Reds had pressed'\ntheir advantage they had early in\nthe.battler '\u25a0\nNews of the Defy\nRATE8: 80c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines; 10% discount for prompt payment\nU.K. lb Trade With Rfect China\n-J -      \u25a0     ftiititi'titi'.:''\u25a0   tiy.    ',. ,- ..^ , 7-V- tti,, |\nDespite Criticism From Congress\nVacation\nClxrikes\nThe BIGHT CLOTHES\nWill Help You\niTo fnjoy Your '\u25a0'\u25a0\"-\nVACATION ...  , ..\nDON'T be short a\nSport\" Coot, ; extra\nSlacks, Shirts, ,S*Jx\n\u25a0or ih fact, anything'\n\u2022that will helj>>you\nto look right _hd\nfeel comfortable.\nEmory'S\nY-7 LIMITED\n,    THE MAN'S STORE\nPHONE 31      . SOX 100\nThe Mississippi-Missouri river\nsystem is'iporbximately SW^miles\nlong.-, .'...< ?\nNounfie Rescues\nAmateur Climber\nBANFF, Alts. . (CP) - Ajpateur\nmountain climber H. Phifer of Riverside, nl., was rescued Sunday\nafter .being trapped in a cul de sac\non nearby Mount Riindle' for almost\n24 hours..'.. - '...'\nHis rescue ended a short, hunt\nby four experienced climbers and\nan aerial search.by RCHJP constable\nHbwttd . Srlgley.- Const Srlgley\nspoted . Mr. Phifer from - the- air,\n2000 feet.aboye the' town at the\npeak's WPQ-Joftt? point.    ' . .\nMr. \u2022 Phifer had climbed down\nInto the hole arid became trapped\nthere when unable to climb opt. A\nrescue party of four, headed by\nRCMP Cpl. R. Morris, pulled him\nout, weary .but unhurt.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nKentvilel, N.S. \u2014 Dr. Waldo C.\nMachum, 07, for the last 10 years\nsecretary of the Baptist-Federation\nof Canada and general secretary of\nthe. United Baptist Maritime Convention.\nPrinceton, N. J.\u2014Henry W. Jef-\nfers, 82, inventor of a rotary milking machine and president of the\nWalker-Gordon Laboratory Company. .'\u25a0'-\u2022'\u2022    ,\nLONDON (AP) \u2014'The Foreign\nOffice said Monday Britain will go\non doing business with Red China\nin non-strategic. goods, despite\nAmerican congressional criticism.\nBritain's posit (pn was restated at\na press conference .when a spokesman was asked to comment on the\nreport of the U.S. Senate permanent\nInvestigations sub-committee measuring, Western trading with Communist China. The .sub-committee\nsaid U.S. allies have permitted trade\nof more than 52,000,000,000 worth\nof goods with Red China at the cost\nof the lives of United Nations\ntroops. \u2022?-.\u25a0\n-Britain, the spokesman sold, has\nyet to receive a copy bf the subcommittee's report.\nMeantime, he added, the British\nattitude toward trade with Red\nChina remains as defined by the\nparliamentary undersecretary tor\nforeign affairs, Anthony Nutting,\nwho on June 17 made these two\nmain points:\n1 .Britain stands by the UN r*i6\nlu'lo- of MSy 18, 1951, which embargoed the Supply of strategic\ngoods to; China arid will continue\nto do so while the resolution re-\nSmoking Banned\nJOHANNESBURG?: (CP)\u2014A law\nIs being drawn up forbidding smoking in any Johannesburg store\nWhere food is handled. Health officials said the law will prevent cigaret ashes being dropped into food\nmains in force. Britain has nit off\na much wider range of war-potential goods than-that embargoed by\nthe United Nations. As far as non-\nstrateglc goods are concerned, Britain's policy is to develop trade\nwith China.and other nations iri the\nCommunist orbit This country :cori-\nsldered non-strategic trade with the\nCommunists to be \"to the advantage\nof the free world.\"\nBOARD OF TRADE FIGURE8\nFigures released by the Board of\nTrade Monday showed the Volume\nof British- business with Red Chine\nll. the first five months of 1953,al-\nm'ost trebelled the amount of bus!\nness done in the same period last\nyear.\nImports \"end exports between the\ntwo countries were valued at $15..\n880,000 to the1 end of May, 1953, compared with $5,900,000 for the Same\nperiod in 1952. \u2022.\nUp to the end of May, 1953, Bri\ntain bSugh tabout $8,400,000 Worth\nof Chinese goods compared with\nabout $3,000,000 for the same period\nlast year.\nThe value of British sales to Red\nChina over'thi same periods was\nset at about $7,280,000 and $900,000.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n-Distinctive Funeral Service*\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nSIS Kootenay St       Phone 861\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n.   VISUAL TRAiMMS    _\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone Ml\nMoke your own Home Made Breed\nwlfh ELLISON'S \u25a0:\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX  .\n\"ulf Instructions on every package-\nPhone 238 or call\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO? LTD.\nFILM, KODAK\nAND BROWNIE CAMERAS\nFor Beit Results Frorn Your\n.'.;\u25a0 Exposed Film \u2014\n..      MaM,or Leave With\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern .Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34, Day \u2014 807-R, Night\nBOX4S0        V   -\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE.WAY.\nLucky Weekend Outlaws! Booster\nButton numbers, 131-288. \u2022 '\u2022'\nSheer white nylon hose 98c pair\nto clear. \u2014 ADRIAN MILLINERY.\nHand knit baby sets at\nTOT.'N'-TEEN.SHOP\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop.\nHousehold Sandpaper \u2014 20. Assorted sheets \u2014 pkg. 20c.\nBURNS LUMBER'CO.\nWILLOW, POINT W.A. Tea and\nsale. Mrs. R. A. Grimes, July 22nd\nfront. 2:30 p.m.'       V\nFor Sale\u20146 rm. house on best 3\ncorner lots Nelson Ave. commercial\nzone. Ph. 404-X or 323 Nelson Ave.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix It\nthrow it away Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices. -\nHAVING TROUBLE WITH MOSQUITOES \u2014 USE CITRONELLA\nCANDLE8.   >\u25a0-'\u2022\" '<',-\u25a0'\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER 8H0P\nProgressive Conservative\nNominating Convention\nThursday, July 23 \u2014 Canadian Logion Hall\nNELSON, 7:30 p.m.\n,    OPEN CONVENTION\nDon't thro* away your old tires\nftade them at      '\nSUPERIOR   MOTORS\nTire Department\nLittle, girls corolaine skirts, plain\ncolors, pleated, shoulder straps.\nSizes 2 to 6x.S2.95.\nTHE. CHILDREN'S SHOP\nWicker chairs, string, sturdy, and\nlight'in weight. Ideal for camp or\nlawn. Priced from $9.25 at '\u25a0:\u25a0\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nJust  arrived, new  shipment of\nchrome suites, beautiful new styles.\nTrade in your old one now, at\nSTERLING'HOME FURNISHERS\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save their soles.!\nTONY'S REPAIR 8H0P\nFor pure sweet-tooth magic\u2014take\nhome a box of our delicious fresh\ncandies today.x \u2014 GRAY'S, 534\nJosephine St. Phone 1347.   .\nKeep Cool with Eskimo Electric\nFans from $9.60 up. Electric Hot\nPlates from $5.25. See Our Displays\nBefore'You Buyl '\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nKeep  your lawns  and  gardens\ngreen and healthy through this hot\nweather. Sprinklers of all kinds,\nrubber and plastic garden hose.\nHIPPERSON'S\nOne Astral Frlsj. and three all-\nenamel kitchen ranges.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture. .   ,   \u25a0\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 Hall St.\nWe are prepared to take on any\nbuilt-up or .asphalt roofing Jab\nSide wail shingles and shakos All\ninquiries promptly attended to.\nU. B Merry Lumber- Co- TraE1\nAPPLICATORS\nSee the new English deep-colored breakfast and luncheon sets. In\nfour attractive, gay colors, and modern shape, these are priced at only\n$6.95 per 20-piece set, or as open\nstock. - HIPPERSON'S.-     V.\nCARD pF THANKSf'',..\"\u00ab!'ti\n. The Seldel Family.wlsh to convey\ntheir sincere thanks for the'Kindness and sympathy.- shown Mr.\nFredrich Seldel by the Sisters and\nnursing 'staff of the Mfrunt' St.\nFrancis Infirmary.\nThe. Seldel Family. \u2022\n7     FUNEflAL .\"NOTICE!.\nFuneral services for the late Lim\nChong will be . held \"from the\nThompson \u25a0 Funeral- Home- Wednesday at II a.m.\nParty lineService Smoother!\niJ^nh-for^k^ing' your calls short\nWatching tbe length of your telephone calls Is just one of the little\ncourtesies that is making party line service smoother. It's thoughtful,\ntop, to space your calls fairly, and hang up gently when others are\non the line. An4l, of course, everyone knows hoW important it is to\nrelease the line immediately .in an emergency,,\nBRITISH   COIVJUBIA\nTEltiPUOm   COMPANY\n\\\n-__\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_1953_07_21","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\/1.0427448","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":"1953-07-21 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":"1953-07-21 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}