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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":" \u25a0*v ,\u00ab\"\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 .,\nMoscow Sends\nProtest to US.\nNote Soys Bomber Violated Soviet\n,   Frontier; Fired on Soviet Planes\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014The Soylpt government has\nvgtrongly ?protested to (the United States against the alleged\nviolation bf the Soviet frontier by an American B-50 military\njilane in the region of Vladivostock,   '\"' '7\nThe violation is alleged tohave taken place-July\nA Soviet note delivered to the\nPROVINCIAL\n'_',IBRA\nVICTO^IA.Q\n**%&**\u25a0\nm***\nzniviinwmmvmBvmimmim\n*-^-__*-i\no3*S?\n\u25a0VSffi\nU.S. embassy in Moscow Thursday\n(aid an American B-90 four-englned\nbomber violated the Soviet frontier\nIn the. region of Vladivostock. It\nsaid that two Soviet fighters rose\nto intercept the American p'tne,\nwhich opened fire, seriously damaging one of the Soviet fighters.\n- Then the Soviet fightera .opened\n' return fire on the American plane,\nwhich disappeared in the direction\n. of' the sea.\nThe note said the Soviet govern\nment protested vigorously, to the\nU.S. about this \"gross violation\" of\nthe Soviet frontier.\nIt demanded that the guilty fliers\nbe called to account the damage\ndone to the Soviet plane be compensated and steps taken by the\nU.S. government to s-\u00bb *'-at such\nviolations are not repeated. \u2022\nCIVI-L SERVANTS\nADVISED TO REJECT\nGOV'T PROPOSAL\nVICTORIA (CP) - British Col-\ntimbla government civil servants\nhave been advised by their association to reject any government\nproposal to compress a 44-hour\nweek into five days.\nA letter to institutional and out-\nSide members of the Provincial Government Employees' Association\nfrom association officials said any\n\"approach' by the government in\nthis regard is. . . inimical to the\nInterests of the Workers in general.\"\nStaffs in most government offices start the five day, 36';i hour week\nSaturday. An order passed July 24\ngives cabinet ministers power to\niqueeze 44 hours Into five days for\nthe outside and institutional workers.\nCLAIM 24 MILLION\nREDS IN WORLD ,\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Moscow radio\nelaimed .Thursday .that .there?.are\n24,000,000 Communists in the world.\nIt gave figures for only one country, saying there are more than\n(,000,000 members of the Chinese\nCommunist party..\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nRed China Thanks\nSoviet for War Aid\n\u2022 LONDON 4AP) \u2014 Moscow\nradio said Thursday that North-\nKorea had expressed thanks to\nPremier Georgi Malenkov for\nSoviet aid in the Korean war.\nAppreciation was expressed for\nthe \"enormous and selfless, assistance and support\" in the\n\"sanguinary war provoked by\nthe American imperialists\nagainst the Korean people,\" the\nradio said.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllll\n5 Scale Highest\nPeak in Rockies\nJASPER, Alta. (CP) - The first\nsuccessful climb in 14 years to the\nsummit of Mount Robson, the highest peak in the Canadian Rockies,\nwas reported Thursday,\n: Five young men from 'the United\nStates scaled the summit of the\n12.072-foot . peak Tuesday, The\nmountain is near the Alberta-B.C.\nboundary 250 miles west of Edmonton. ,\nThe five were Don Claunch, Seattle; Jon Gardey, Studio City, Calif:,\nJack Lanser, Brooklyn, N, Y.; Der-\nritt Bratt, Inglewoo'd, Calif., and\nNorman Sanders, Glendale, Calif.\nFour camps were made, the highest at 11,800 feet The final climb:\nof nearly 1500 feet was made in six\nhours despite toft snow fields on\nglaciers. This forced them to climb\nin knee-deep snow.\nThe previous successful climb\nwas made in 1939 by Miss Kate\nGardner, Christian Hesler and Edward Fuel.\nWEATHER FORECAST       .,\nKootenay: Sunny with cloudy\nperiods. Widely scattered showers\nor'thunderstorms this afternoon\nand evening. Cooler. Light winds.\n, Low and high at Cranbrook, Crescent Valley and Revelltoke 45 and\n.80.\nifofSON, B. C., C^LNAPA^-FHIPAY MOBNINQ. JULY 31,1953\nRed\nNo. 84\nf Aircraft Swarm Into\nKorea Violating Truce\nCOLIN LE8LIE FOX, 31-year-old bookmaker from Ostcrly,\nEngland, works on his 23-foot sailboat at New York oity after an 87-\nday trip across the-Atlantie alone from North Africa. Fox set out\nfor the United States two years ago, spent a year in Casablanca\nand Tangier to earn money, and then eontlnued hit Voyage, The\n\u2022un-tanned adventurer plant to tell hit boat, buy ah automobile,\nand tour the North' Amerloan continent\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nMAILED ELECTION\nLITERATURE\nTAMPERED WITH\nWINNIPEG'(AP) - A Winnipeg\npostal official said Thursday that\nan-investigation has been launched\nInto the alleged tampering with mall\ncontaining election literature of a\nfederal election .candidate in - Win-\nInipeg, South;- - -*-:-<\u00ab-:\u25a0-\u2022'\u25a0-- \u25a0\"- *?'-,.'\nThe official said the investigation\nfollowed, a report from supporters\nof C. R. Simonite, Liberal,candidate\nttnt etaption literature sent from\ntheir office reached lta.destination\nwith Progressive Conservative literature enclosed as Well. The sup.\nporters.said.-that when envelopes\nWere delivered they also contained\na pamphlet urging support of Dr.\nO. C. \"Jftainor.'Progresive Conservative candidate.,- \"\".-'..\",.,\n: Dr. Trainer said he knew nothing\nof' the incident. \"Certainly it is no\naction of mine.Br my committee,\"\nhe said. ., .\nUnions to Boycott Meet\nIf Mine, Mill Included\n- VANCOUVER \u2014' (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia's two largest labor organizations joined forces today in a\nthreat to boycott a government\nsponsored conference of B.C: labor\nleaders.\n. The provincial council of the\nTrades and Labor Congress of\nCanada today announced that it\nwould join the Canadian Congress\nof Labor ln boycotting the conference if an expelled organization\nof.the CCL is permitted to attend.\"\nLabor Minister Lyle Wicks announced calling* of the conference\nyesterday. It ia slated to meet\nAug. 28 to discuss amendments\nto the industrial- conciliation and\narbitration act,    '\nThe'CCL immediately- protested\nagainst the government's announced intention to invite the Interna\ntional Union of Mine, Mill and\nSmelter- Wdrkers' Union. to 'send\ndelegates. The 18,000-member mine-\nmill union was expelled from the\nCCL in 1948 on charges that its\nleadership was Communist-dominated.\nThursday R. K. Gervui\/secretary\nof both the Vancouver and New\nWestminster Trades and Labor\nCouncil and the B.C. Trade Union\nCongress, provincial body of the\nTLCC announced his organization\nwould join the CCL in boycotting\nthe meeting if the mine-mill union\ndelegates attended.   V'\nThe Vancouver Province in **\nnewspage story today said lab.br\nminister Wicks had indicated he\nwould stick by his invitation to\nthe mine-mill union despite the\nboycott thre*ti,\u201e.._.v_vo-7.J.-. f:\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nGov't Silence Is\nRail Men's Anfwer\nVICTORIA - (CP),- Gov-\nernment officials Thursday declined to comment on-demands\nby Doukhobor community railway workers for quick action\nto end terrorism blamed on\n.   Sons of Freedom .radicals.\nBoth Premier W? A. C. Bennett and Attorney General Robert Bonner are away'irom the\ncapital supporting Social Credit candidates in the Aug. 10 federal election and arc not expected back this week.* The officials would make no comment\nduring their absence. ,'\u25a0\nThe Railwayman's Running\nTrades Union issued a state-\nment Thursday threatening\n\"drastic measures\" unless the\ngovernment took \"immediate\naction\" to. end the wave of terrorism that has included dynamiting of railway tracks.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n16 CANADIANS\nBACK FROM KOREA\nVANCOUVER (CP) if- A draft\n. af 16 Canadian soldiers returning\n'. on leivis;'arrived \u2022 It*-'Vancouver\nThursday aboard a Carfadlan Paclfio Airlines flight from* Tokyo.\nThe coldlers, the first;- tb return since the signing of the\nKorean truce, were to leave here\nThursday- night for thelrhomes.\nWesterners In the group were\n8. Sgt; :A.. t, Aldrldge,: ?Waln-\nwr.loht, Alta...and Pte. W. K,\nChomo, Winnipeg.   ...\nCritically III\nMR8. DORIS 8LEEMAN\nDR. W. O. BIGELOW\nFer the first time In Canada\n\"deep freeze\" anaesthesia \u2014 or\nlow body temperature refrigeration \u2014 wai used successfully In\n\u25a0li operation performed at Toronto General hospital. Operated\noh.by Dr. W. G..BIgelow, of. the\n\u2022urgloal department of the Toronto. General hospital, for rhe.d-\nmatlc heart disease and mitral\neteno^Js \u2014 a narrowing of the\nheart valve\u2014Mrs. Doris Sleeman\nof Vancouver, B.C., It reported\nIn a \"satisfactory condition\" following th* five-hour event In\nthll heart surdory Mn. Sleeman's\nbod)* wai chilled In opocial cool-\nIng blanket* for about tw\u00bb. hours' \\\nand her temperature dropped\nfrom 98.6 degrees to 81. After\nthe operation she was rewarmed\nto normal body temperature by.\n\u25a0 radio frequency rewirming\ndevice.\u2014Central Praa Canadian\nPhotos.\nPolice to Probe\nTeen-Age Drinking\nNANABMd-fl3P) - An investigation into British Columbia's beer\ndelivery syshrp'was ordered today\nby Liquor Control Board chairman\nD.McGUgan-.following reports of\na teenagers drinking spree.\nMr. McGugan said he would give\nhis personal attention to the probe\nordered after a 17-year-old boy was\nfound in a drunken condition' in\ndowntown Nanaimo,\nPolice said the boy had become\ndrunk at a party of teenagers.\nThey said beer for the party was\ndelivered to a city home after being ordered over the phone by a\n14-year-old girl?\nRCMP' said other incidents of\nteenage drinking here have been\nbrought to their attention recently.\nCRASH KILLS TWO\nPenhold, Aita. - (CP) - Two\nmen were killed Thursday in the\ncrash of a Harvard, training plane\nnear this town 100 miles south of\nEdmonton.   \u2022\nAn' RCAF .instructor and an\nRAF. student were killed when\ntheir plane from the RCAF station\nat Penhold crashed on . the farm\nof Bruce McGee,.19 miles south,\nwest of the.station, while on :\nroutine flight ,    ,\nNames of the victims were withheld -pending notification of next-\nof-kin.\nThe crash is being  investigated.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n.How Not to Spend\nA Vacation\nCHEBOYGAN, Mich., (AP>-\nA log of the Mr. and Mrs. Eirl\nBoyeas'1 \"Vacation\" would read\nlike this:,\nPontiac\u2014Son    drank    some\nwashing, compound. Recovered\nafter'hospital treatment.\nFlint\u2014Car    wrecked.   Parents\nCut and bruised.\nCheboygan\u2014Continuing trip\nhere with relatives, son David\nfell on bunting knife in car.\nTen stitches taken ln leg at\nlocal hospital.\nIronwbod\u2014David left in Cheboygan .with relatives. Mrs.\nBoyea fell down hill near here\nand broke ankle.\nCh\u00bbbwg\u00bbn\u2014Mrs. Boyes back\nin Cheboygan I to recuperate.\nSon David, ituck hand in *lec-\ntric fan.'\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nsix d!e ik\n'COPTERCRASH\nO'NEILL, Neb\".. (AP) \u2014 Six-per.\nsons, one of them a noted German\nscientist, died Thursday when a big\nUnited States Air Force helicopter\nplunged to earth and burned near\nhere, i\nThe scientist Was Dr. Guenter\nLoeser, 40, one of the directors of\nthe air force's lower-atmosphere\nresearch project. The others were\nmilitary personnel.\nWitnesses said'one blade of the\ncentral rotor came off in flight and\nstruck the, rear balancing rotor.\nThe big craft crashed'hear the site\nof an air force weather research\nproject-\nDuck Causes\nWiVe Trouble\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 A wild\nduck disrupetd telegraph service\nbetween Calgary, and Edmonton\nThursday.\nCanadian Pacific communications\nat Edmonton reported the duck be.\ncame tangled in wires 85 miles\nsouth of Edmonton near Ponoka.\nThe duck caused about one hour's\ntrouble before it was untangled. It\nwas not known in Edmonton what\nhappened to the duck.\nDied of Asphyxiation\nCHILLIWACK (CP) - An inquest into the death of a. woman\nand her three children in a fir* st\nthe Vedder Crossing army camp\nJune 23, has-revealed that the wife\nof Sgt John Lecuyer died of asphyxiation.\nLost in the fire which swept their\nbarracks home near here were Mrs.\nEileen Lecuyer, her daughter, Diane, and her two sons, Robert and\nGary. Sgt. Lecuyer was en route to\nCalgary when the tragedy occurred.\nIlie verdict by the six-man coroner's jury, was reached Wednesday after an autopsy was performed\non the exhumed body of Mrs. Le-:\ncuyer. Earlier, a coroner's jury declined to establish tho cause ot\ndeath pending an autopsy.\nRCMF Ruled Outside\nCivil Jurisdiction\nVANCOUVER - (CP) - Civil\ncourts have no administrative jurisdiction over the RCMP, Mr. Justice\nH. S. Wood raid in a British Soli\numbia Supreme Court ruling Thursday.   .-.;'\"'\" .:\u25a0.-.   :\"';'.?\nHe made the ruling in dismissing\nan application by former, acting\nCpl. J. R. C. White of Frince\nRupert to have the court review\npolice disciplinary measures against\nhim. . '\nCpl. White was fined $50 and'\nreduced in rank early this year by\nthe RCMP after he wes convicted\non four charges of conduct? unbecoming a police officer. He **was\ndismissed from the RCMP a. short\ntime later.\nHe is believed to be the first!\nmember of the force to. appeal to\nthe civil courts against RCMP disciplinary measures.\nLegal counsel for the RCMP successfully contended in court that\nthe RCMP ia set up on a military\nbasis and as a result is outside\nthe jurisdiction of civil courts-\nMr. Justice Wood upheld the\nRCMP contention but warned \"it\ndoes not follow that there should\nnot be a first time.\"\nThen he added: \"I am not con.\nvinced that I should break this\nnew ground.\"\nTWO MORE\nSAWMILL FIRES\nOwners Warned\nDouble Watch as\nProbe Continues;-\nVANCOUVER ~ (CP) - Provincial Fire Marshal William A. Walker Thursday warned sawmill owners to \"double night watches\" after\ntwo new sawmill blazes added\n$105,000 damaged to the record\ntoil of sawmill fires losses In B.C.\nduring July. \u2022\nHis warning will stay' in effect\nuntil his heavily-taxed investigation staff determines whether the\nsudden wave of fires is coincidence\nor otherwise.\nAs he issued the warning, . lit\nvestigators who' had been pulled\naway from other investigations\nwere working on a blaze which\nearly Thursday levelled the $100,-\n000 Chilliwack Mills* Ltd,, three\nmiles west of Chilliwack, and a\nsecqnd early morning blaze\nwhich caused 88000 to the Corbett\nLumber Co., at Hope.\nInvestigation is still not complete\non. the two fires which caused\n$150,000 to the Fraser View Sawmills Ltd. sawmill and' planer on\nMitchell Island on July 8 and 24.\nA fire on July 21 at the Mission\nhome of Naranjan Grewall, president of the Mitchell island company, has already been1 labelled as\n\"a definite arson attempt\" by the\nfire marshal's office.\n\"It 11 take time to get all these\nfires sorted out,\" said Mr. Walker.\n\"1 believe it would be In the\ninterest of sawmill owners if they\ndoubled night watches until investigations are completed\u2014just as\nprecaution.\" .,     ,  ' ..y.yti'<:.-.\nrjthsr SaJBjk sawrtSJ-flrii':..jfiee,\n'\"JHRMIM \"'Hazr'af Spoke take|\nsawmill Ju ii, and * 88000 blaze\nat Hammer :nills at Stave fall*\njifiuly', a*t-'.. \u2022 .\"\u2022' \\ . '\u2022\u25a0 , \"\u25a0\n' In Vancouver, -iargeit recent\nIndustrial   fire   was,the   $100,000\nblaze at the Canadian Creosoting tional.\"\nplant in North Vancouver July 23.     In the first meeting.of the Red\nAlHes File No Protest; Airfields j\nSaid Bombed Shortly Before Truce\nBy SAM SVM'MERUN.'\u25a0'.;'\".     :,\nMUNSAN (AP) '--\u2022\u25a0 3*he United States 5th' air fot|e \u2022\nspotted large numbers bf.Red planes flying into North Kbrjea\nMonday night in violtttibti; of the armistice, but no J^Uied\nprotest was .on record today J \"\nThe Communists, on the other hand, have-filed'pita--\ntests charging 10 Allied violations of the now-deserted buffer\nzone? which separates, the United Nations command. Red\narmies.  .,,\nIt was possible that the matter\nof the mass flight of planes\u2014presumably MiO jets which never\ndared to base 4n North Korea during the war\u2014might come up today\nbefore the joint military armistice\ncommission, which enforces the\ntruce... . '      ,....-\nUN and _ Commijn|it7 officers\nwere to meet' in the battle-seared\ndemilitarized strip this afternoon in\nthe first contact of. joint observer\nteams which will patrol to see that\nboth sides observe armistice terms\nalong the 150-mile front\nRed Cross wprkers from the\nNorth Korea .and. Red China, planned to hold their second session\ntoday in preparation' for the pris-,\noners-of-war exchange which begins Aug, 8., .\".'.'    ','..!\nIn * report delayed by censors,\nthe air force Bald a radar station\non. Cho Island,.secret Allied base\noff northwest Korea, spotted Urge\nnumber*- of. Red planes speeding\nsouthward from Manchuria Mondsy after th* 10 p.m. truce deadline for' such- military movement\ninto Korea. The planes presumably\nwere MiG jets, the report said.\nUnder the truce terms, thd movement of 'all arms and war equipment should hav* stopped at the\nMonday \"night except for replacement purposes. Even replacement\noperations must proceed under supervision.  \"''\"-'. \u25a0'    '\u25a0' f,       : ,\nANTICIPATED MOVE      I,.\nAaaititorce officer said \"wis had\nsuspected *the:*fted8 might do .something like this\" and sb. the Allies\nh\u00bbd plastered North Korea airfields with bomb* In the last hours\nof^the jighting..',-',.-.-     i-,\n\"We did a lot of bombing,\" the\nofficer said, \"but apparently we,\ndidn't leave the' fieldB non-opera-\nCross representatives Thursday, the\nAllied spokesman urged that 'fiS\nmercy, teams start, moving toward\nprisoner stockades on both sides\nbjt .Sunday, the. Communists, did\nhot reply then to this proposal.;\n86,000. T07Be-MOVED :  '.   ffi. j\n, Moris'Jthart' 8(6,000 'nieh' will be\nmoved in the prisoner operation. \u2022\n'flie.Reds -will,return^yitfiK ^1-\nlied men, including 3313 Americano\nand 14 Canadians, and the-Allies\nwill send to Red territory' about\n741000. captivesi; ,-.'?'' :' f.,\nThe Allies moved up 2400 North\nKorean and Chinese Red prisoners\nThursday from camps.at Koje and\nCheju ' Islands' off   south   Kore*.\n\u25a0The captives landed-,at Inchon,\nport city of Seoul,, then 600 Chinese were put 'aboard trains' bound\nfor a stockade'north of)Munssn.\non the TOSS-. *>; Panmunjom. \"ft*\nNorth -K9w*h* rW\u00abre ^4>dged to detention csmps at, Yongdonpovjust\noutside Seoul.\nThe Reds hhtf-TsSld the'moy*.\nment of Allied-prisoners'south from\nBtockades near the, Manchurian\nborder will begiri soon..        .    i\n(iiaisJL Ssush,\nNelson\n>Wed.\n.' 8.25\nThur*.\n5.85\nETNA GARGLING\nCATANIA, Sicily (CP) - A-team\not observers reported Thursday\nthat lava is rising in the volcanic\nthroat of Mount Etna. They added,\nhowever, that there is no danger\nof the lava spilling,over the crater\nof the old volcano, whose history\nof destruction dates back more\nthan 2000 years:\nMILAN (AP) - -Thieves -broke\ninto a big dental laboratory here\nWednesday night and made ort\nwith 30,000 false teeth. '\nSENATOR ROBiRT'TAFT\nNEW YORK (AP) -V Senator\nRobert Taft is in a coma ahd is\nfailing rapidly, New York Hospital\nreported late Thursday night\nThe bulletin gave no further details but earlier reports on the\nOhio Republican had said His condition was \"critical.\"\nThe Senate leader had taken a\nturn for the worse late in the day.\nAn Arizona newspaper publisher\nsaid then that Taft \"is dying of\ncancer of the blood.\"\nThe hospital insistently has rer\nfused to disclose the nature of\nTaft's illness. It first became apparent weeks ago with a lesion of\nthe hip.\nPublisher William R. Mathews\nof the Arizona.Daily Star of Tus-\ncon, writing from Washington, said\nin a dispatch to his paper: '\nWhereas originally he was expected to live for six months to a\nyear, he - is not expected to liVe\nmore than weeks at the most, and\npossibly days. ,'\n\"The fact is generally known in\nWashington.\" ;   '\nPresident Eisenhower, ,concerhed,|\nabout Taft's condition, sent his personal physician to the bedside of\nthe ailing senator.\nCb^retiiH Back in\nHatiiess End August\nTies\nOn B.C. Resfflrch Qowwil\nVANCOUVER (CP)-rActivities of\nthe B. C. Research Council during\nthe last nine years were \"outlined\nThursday at the annual meeting:\nof the Board of Management\nE. G. Rowebottom, deputy minister of trade anol industry, referred\nto the valuable contribution to industry made by the council and\nstressed the growth of it* work in\nthe last year..\nThe council bas grown from a\nstaff of four in 1944 to a staff df\n38, including 28 professional men,\nsix technician* and six clerical\nworker*, Mr. Rowebottom said. Or.\nG. M. Shrum, directer*-e-f the council, told tha meeting of two de-,\nvelopments of most importance in\nth* last year, the \u2666\u00ab*ro\u00ablon Research\nFellowship: suJj^rHittch on the\nnJKtlcularly' in\n'ollowshi]\ntorpedo\nlog boomk\n\u2022 'Two\neers to\nhe said,\ncorroi\nIndus*\nAS\ntigatk\na larii\nsion engin-\nour staff,\"\nmet on the\n7*1 will save\nfollars* '\ntorpedo inves-\nfirn_,\"one\nwill copy\nthe program set up here by the\ncouncil. 7'7l .\nDr. Shrum said the new wing\nof the, research building just completed on:fhe campus, of the University of B. C, at.'a cost of $108,650\nwas built with'money contributed\nby industry to payment for research\ndone by the:-;council.\nIn 18^4-53, the] council handled 18\nInge projects and 185 smaller projects, tlie' latter representing the\nsmaller industries which are beginning io rely more and more on the\nfacilities .of tho council for research\nprograms, '\nBy FRASER WIGHTON\nLONDON -^-, (Reuters) \u2014 Sir\nWinston Churchill, chafing under\nthe imposition of an enforced rest\ncur*, expects' to be back at the\nhelm ot Britain's ship of state by\nlate August.\nSources close to the prime min-\nister said Thursday he is rapidly\napproaching his old form, calling\nfor more work, and going ahead\nwith definite plans to return to\nduty? ,   ,'- \u25a0    .      .    \u25a0   .\njust three months short ot 78;\nhis present activity stoutly belles\nvarious newspaper rumors that he\nmight retire soon. The sources ih\nclosest touch with him say they\nhave seen no basis for such reports whattver.     , .   .\nMeanwhile, political sources say\nthey can find no signs of the major\ngovernment reshuffle which accompanies his impending retirement \u25a0'\"  '\nThey believe that though a\nI'swltch of cabinet office* will probably take place some time in the\nautumn, it will not be before Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden returns to, work. \u2022\n. Eden, now making a satisfactory\nrecovery after three operations for\ngall-bladder trouble, will, to abroad\nin' August to complete his convalescence, and his own guess is that\nhe will be back: ','op the job\" to\nSeptember,\nFrom Chequers, the prime minister's ' official country: residence,\nChurchill is keeping ip close touch\nwith affairs now handled by the\nchancellor of the exchequer, R. A,\nButler. His office there has direct |\ntelephone lines to 10 Downing\nStreet, and officials can reach him\nby car to less than 80, minutes.\nTruck OWners Halt\nPaving Program\n, VANCOUVER (CP)-Work-stopped on a $66,000 municipal paving\nproject to suburban Richmond today when .truck owners refused to\ncontinue hauling until a clause that\ngives work preference to local\ntrucks' and labor is struck from the\ncontract   \" :\nThe B. C. Truck and Construction\nEquipment Operators ordered\nmember trucks, off ths. job until\nthe municipality removes the contentious clause: The work stoppage\ncame as a \"test case\" for local preference clauses in lower mainland\ncontracts.   ; '    ti ' \u25a0'\u25a0'\nInformed of the action, Reeve Ray\nParsons today said: The contract\nis let and -cannot- be reopehed. The\nclause only calls'for'Weal prefer-\"\nence when Richmond trucks come\nup to standard-\"\n- PROVOCATED BY THE HEAT\nof the day? Roland Sawyer, a\nChristian Science' reporter' In\nWashington, scored custom by appearing at President Elsenhower's,\nweekly press conference1 at the\nWhite House attired In a pair of\nBritish-style walking shorts and\nknee-lertfjth white stockings. The\nchief executive apparently did\nnot see Sawyer's shorts, but did\nadmit It was rather'hot In tha\nconference room; \u2014 Central Press\nCanadian,\nMAN DECAPITATED   '\n- NEW WESTMINSTER (CP) -r- A\nmiddle-aged man was killed here\nThursday when he threw himself\nund^r the wheels of a slow-moving\nB, C. Electric freight car, police said.\nTho man, whose identity was\nwithheld pending notification bt\nnext-of-kin, was decapitated.\n.    ,-.;.;    DOLLAR   HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) -. The Canadian dollar was up 1-32 of a cent at\na' premium,of 1 per cent in terms\nof U. S. funds. Pound sterling down\n1-16 of a, cent at $2.81 8-16.\nMONTREAL '(CP) - The U. S.\ndollar closed at a discount of one\nper cent in terms of- Canadian funds\noff 1-32, Pound sterling $2.78%, up\nI-*.-    \u25a0'       ' I\nAnd in This Corner...\nPHILADELPHIA (AP)\u2014Whole Tonl, the talking Hynah hl-d,\nwent, and why, Is nobody's business, perhaps, but.Tonl's. But he's\nhome now, hla feathers illghtly ruffled and air he will say of his\n36-hour absence Is: *\n\"My heart's on fire,\"      \\ v\nTonl wandered away from h|i home at Mrs. Ada H. Latham's\nMonday morning. Mrs. Latham, sad and worried, advertised In a\nnewspaper for hii return.' >\nMrs. Mildred: Martin who used to watch Mynaha flying wild In\nMexico spoted- his shiny black feathers and yellow neckpiece,\nAnd Tonl, hla heart \"on fire\" by hit own admission, ended hli\nInterlude of freedom. .\"      \u00bb\u25a0'\nNEW- YORK (AP)\u2014There's something about a subway turnstile\nthat often brings out a spark of dishonesty in the human race. Such a\nstreak'was brought out 4346 times Monday. ,\nThat was the first business day under the new 15-cent subway\nfare. The transit .authority made a final count today and said 4346\n. fake tokens were dropped into the turnstiles,\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Adlai Stevenson told Brltohi he might have had\nbetter luck running for office here than he did In the United States.\nThanking the \"countlesB Britons\" who sent him messages of regret\nafter hli defeat In the 1962 presidential elections, Stevenson said:\n\"I sometimes think I ran for office In the wrong country.\"\nStevenson was appearing oh * BBC press conference .telecast\nBRIGHTON, England' (Reuters)  \u2014 George Jones figures that-\nBritain's nationalized railroads- belong to the people ought to.be able\nto travel free. -*\nHe was in court. Wednesday \"for the 134th time on a charge of\nriding a train without paying his fare.\nS   Jones, 77, was fined \u00a35 with the alternative of a.month if jail.\n.KANSAS CITY (AP)\u2014A man walked Into a shop Tuesday night\nand ordered two dozen doughnuts. '\n\"I haven't any money to pay for them,\" he told Mrs. Elsie Webb,\nthe clerk,    '  ,\n\"That's all right,\" ahe said. \"Take them on credit.\"\n\"W^lt a minute,\" he said. \"I'll be right back.\"\nA minute later he wai back \u2014 with a sawed-off shotgun.\n\"I'm wrry,\" he said. \"Thii Is a itlokup,\" and fled with $57 from\nthe caah register.\n -c^gfeSTcoFH\n\u2014^^^^\n:8V\nw\nI -*\u25a0 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRISAY, JU'.Y 31. 19531\nTONICHT - SATURDAY \u2014Complete Shov.* 7:60 - 9:00\n4*M*. At*-*-****)*      ;\nCartoon\nNew* -\n*-weia\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\n10  MILES   .:..\nEAST OF NELSON\npEADLIEST KILLERS\nOF THI 010 WUTI\ngADMEN\n-   \u25a0w\u00bbf*n*\u00bb\u00bbM**r >j _\nROBERT RYAN\n.CUIRETRIWR\nJACK BUETEL\nI ROBERT PRESTON\ni, Miitittittiiiiii -\n'iiuiiiii-ufiiiiimiin.\nPLUS CARTOON\n.- fAND'JHOJlT\u00bb::V;\nShowing Lilt Tlm* Tonight\nTwo Showi Stirling 8:48 p.m.\nComing Saturday Only\n\"SLUE LA4J00N\".\n(Teohnlcolor)   *\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCAStLE-afAR, B.C.\nShowing Tonight and Saturday\nJuly 81 \u2014 Aug, 1\n(vlarg* and Qower Champion\nDennis O'Keefe, Dun Miller\n\"EVERYTHIN6 I HAVE\ni      IS YOURS\" \u201e\n\u2022     WCHNieOLOB \u2022 \u2022\n\u2022hew* it 7 and 9 p.m.\nWant High School\nDriving Revived\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Vanacouver\nTraffic ind Safety Council hsve\nsent * recommendation to Attorney-\nGeneral Robert Bonner asking him\nto re-Instate 'and extend the high\nichool driving -plan, fy    f.;.':'\":'\nThey are the'third organization\nto- jump =0n the- bandwagon to try\nand convince th* Social Credit government that tfelnlng teen igers\ntodiy will t\u00bbv*-llv*itomorrow.\nB. C, Automobile Association and\nJunior Chamber of Comerce have\nalso put forward proposed training\nplan*,.-       *\u2022>*  \u00abJ'7yti '\"\u25a0\nThe provincial government wiped\nout the plan last year.\nSafety Council's plan li. to hsve\nthe B. C. government operate and\nadminister the - program through\ntiwir department of education or\nth* Motor Veblel* Branch.\nThey also ask th* government to\nlecure suitable dual control Vehicles, similar to ones used by prl-\nvite driver training companies,\nfrom the B. C. Motor Dealer*' Association, with operating ind maintenance costs born* by dealers In\nthe communities concerned.\nCanada's production of synthetic\nrubbar. amounted to ibout.70,000\ntons to1851. ;'\"-\u2022..\u25a0'i'lti' (\u2022',\nT-r,1, ii _iB-=\n(kdo-Oua.\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nS Mlln From Troll Centre\nOn FrijItvOU Reoj\nShowi Stort ot Sundown\nPRIOAY AND SATURDAY\n\"RID! THI MAN OOVVN\"\nBryiir JD\u00bbni\u00bbvy, R*d.?C\u00bbtn\u00bbron\nElli Rtlnei, Forreit Tuoker\n\"qAWlNl -WlLUAMI\"\nJ*mn Stewart, Jean H\u00abg*r\n,i     W*nd*l Corrl*   \u25a0*-'.\n>> \u00bbviiiDAy.-\u00bb'R,M,. v.\n\"*' '' *THfc BULLFI\u00abHTi\u00ab?\n,ANO TI-Te C,AOVr'\nSponsored by Knights of Pythlis\n' '- ' tllv*r C\u00bbll**tl*n'-.\nMONBAV AND TOEODAY\n\"JAILOR IIWAM'?'\nDun Martin, Jerry Lewis\n\"** SHORTS AND NEWS\nWsdnesdiy ind Thursdiy\n*     ^'LONISTAR'r\nei*rk Oible, Av* Qirdner\n8HORT8, CARTOON, NEWS\nBBSS\nREX\nDrive-to Theatr*\nCRANBROOK, B.C.    .\nLAST TIM.W TONIOHT\nnhrHoppyTttrt^\n\"\"effiife^\nPlu*\nCARTOON AND SHORT*\nOn* Show Only\n-  Approx. 8:60 p.m.\nII.I.PI i, I     \u201e 1    I. in\nPolitical Posters\nRegulated Here\nPolitical posters on Nelson power\nor telephone poles are taboo. Chief\nof Police Robert Harshaw said a\nbyUW ot the City of Nelson prohibits- the postiitg of political\nmitter on public buildings or power\nand. telephone polo*, although- it'i\npossible thiy may be erected on\nprivate buildings with the owner's\npermljilon.\n\u25a0 Chief Constable Welter Mulligan\nh*i bun cricking down In Vancouver over * rash of, political\nsign* end slogans thit hav* ap-\npelted in th* Coast city contrary\nto regulttlew. 7\nNo word hss been received et\narrests from Vsncouver but the\nVwcouver byl*w'c***rltt a tine of\n$100 ind posters h\u00bbv* b\u00ab*n torn\ndown.       .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nChief Hsrehsw hu not had iny\ntrouble in Nelion y*t. Should *ny\non* be arrested for Infraction of\nthe Nelson byliw. fine may be\nassessed at the Magistrate's diicre-\ntion from $1 to $100.\nWoedin \"clga*r-ttor* Indlwit\" ln\nth* United :States have dwindled\nto about 8000 from 100,000 in 1800.\nJACKETS\n$O750\n-  Mm I IACH\nSATURDAY and\nMONDAY\nThan ir* from our ragulir $38.00\n\u2022took af Pit Reform Jioketi, all\npur*' wool ind \u2022 perfectly tailored.\nSliei 84 to 48, Tall models Included,\nGODFREYS1\nPHONE \u2014J70\n\u25a0OX\nCommotion Neglect Losing\nMillions j CCF Chief Tells Nelson\n\u2022 M. J. ColdwoU, CCF leader, wld\nher* Thursday night that th* federal government's \u25a0 \"apathy and\nshort-sightedness\" has caused .the\nwaste of forest resources lndtspen\nsible to the prosperity of Canada's\neconomy. -\nIn a 6peech In thl* centre, of \u2022\nvast lumber area he said-that selfish exploitation ot forests by prl-\nvat* enterprise had denuded vast\ntracts of timber.\nThere had been excessive cutting of valuable trees, and flood\ndamage amounting to millions of\ndollars, he told a capacity audience\nln the Capitol Theatre,\n- He uld th* country needs \u00ab\nnational aeni*ry*tlen polloy, un\nder which th* federal and pr*\nvlncial gevernmenti would work\ntogether in ensuring that extraction did not exceed regrowth, Ths\npublic Interest would have to replace the profit rule.'\nMr. Coldwell outlined what htd\nbean don* In Saskatchewan.\nPublic control had bten retained\nby setting up a timber board, which\nensured that tha province had it*\nfair share of profits from Oown\nlands by letting out contracts for\nonly the' cutting and sawing of\nlumber,    77    '      ,    '\u25a0 '\nBy orderly marketing through\nthe board th* pricei to producers\nwu stabilized tnd tht products directed into socially-useful channels.  '\nFart of th* wotk was den*, he\nHid, by cooperative groups'whose\nmSmbors shared the net income. In\nthat w\u00bby; ownership Ind control\nof the enterprise was ln the hands\nof those who were iiolnt th* work.\niA CCF : f \u00ab'der*l government\nwould do everything possible to\npromote such development* on *\nnational scale.\nColdwell, speaking in support of\nH.'W. Herridge, MP f or Koot\u00abn\u00bby-\nWest and candidate fer re-election\nAugust 10 on the CCF ticket, said\n\"NO MP *tt*nd\u00bb jnor*. fiithfuliy\nor assiduously to his duties and the\n\u00abffeir* of hli conitltuency than the\nmimber for K^tf-Miy-Wiit.\" ,\nECONOMISTS' THUMBS DOWN\nIn referring to the Social Credit\nP*rty, Coldwell paid- tholr pollci**\nb\u00abv\u00bb beeft'. ex*min\u00bbd by th* naoit\nbrflUint ecdnomliti \u2022 in the v world\nand \"they have been turned down\nas spurious and deceptive,\"\nHe uld \"I *m frankly disturbed\nand frightened at the rise of this\nstrange emotional movement\", and\nsaid the Social Credit views were\nbssed on the same emotion as Mussolini's Fascists in Italy ind Hitler's\nNazis in G\u00bbrm\u00bbny. \u25a0' , .\nHe   accused   the   Social   Credit\nphilosophers of attempting to con\nvince people ther* wss no naed for\nelections or the secret ballot.\n: Of the Social Credit philosophy\nh* said, \"I hive never read anything in my lift couched in more\nblasphemous terms\" and accused\nth* party of \"misusing the'Scrlp\ntures and the concept of Christian\nity.\" \u25a0     i\nHe told hi* audience thlt \"Every\ngood piece of legislation lntroduc\n\u2022d ln tbi* country wds propoied\nfirst by our movement\" and claimed that old age pensions, unemployment Insurance, family allowances,\nand legislation pertaining to labor\nrelations were flrit advocated in,\nthe House of Commons by the CCF\nparty. ,\nHe said Solon Low claims family\nallowances as a Social Credit idea\nbut nid it was first brpught up in\n1829 and ths Social Credit Ptrty\nwos unheord pt before 1834.\nHEALTH PLAN\n\"Th* piece of legislation nearest\nmy heort\", he went on, \"Is * National Health Plan to give every\nman, woman, and child tht best pf\nscientific health care regardless of\nmeans.\"\n\"W* *re on* of thr\u00ab\u00ab democratic\ncountries without such * p|on, and\nIT* W* not commanded 'to bear one\nanother's buifdwi?\"!-\nMr. St. Laurent told a Vancouver audience tint the Libertl party\n\"i* committed'? to iuoh a pl\u00bbn,Cold-\nwell said, but drew laughter from\nhis audience when he pointed out\nth*,Liberal party b\u00abd. been \"committed to it sinoe 1911 ind every\nelection iltic*\".,v ?''\u25a0'    \u25a0 -\u25a0'\u25a0t'-i: :\nReferring to Mr, Prew, ha gave a\nlong list of the, things thit the Conservative leader promised, plus \u00bb\n$800,000,000' tax cut and said be\n^wished^Mr. Drew \u00bbnd his \"fantastle\narithmetic\" every success.'   .\nStriking at Hon. Douglas Abbott\nand his budget, he said tix reductions were given to the higher income bracket* ind maintained that\na min earning $24001 yeu was saving-ortly^l. He hit at the exemption cliuse that \"\u00abllowed the coupon clipper*\" , exemptions ov\u00abr\n$6000 while a working man would\nbe taxed over $1600 if he earned\nthe same amount,\n'   H* eh\u00bbrg*d that the twe  P*iv\ncant tax for old age pensions with\na maximum tax of $00 cost * man\n'  earning   $3600   a  yetr  th*  full\namount but thai*  whs  earned\n$100,000 were asked to pay th?\n\u2022am*, , \u25a0\nMr? Coldwell said the fr*a enter'\nprise parties war* financed by big\nbusiness interests and thtt Canada's\nresources were exploits'!! \"because\nother politic*! porties\" ore owned\nsnd controlled by the financial Interests of this country. -\nHe pointed to th* Government of\nSaskatchewan who \"put neighbor,\nlhg governments ^nd tlje govern-\nment of Canada on th* spot\" with\nher health plan, He ssld tht pedplt\not that province Diva eyery hospital facility with no charge to the\nindividual except th* compulsory\npayment it the beginning of eaoh\nyear. Th* plan is financed by \u00ab\nsal** tax that does hot \u00bbpply<\\to\nntcessltiel and what Isn't paid for\nia ttken out ot tha general budget.\nCANCER TREATMENT\nSaskatchewan was first with *\nplan for treatment of tuberculosis,\nand lt is the only province where\ncomplete treatment of cancer Is\ngiven free af chsrge whether the\ncast li curable or not, he-said.\nFree enterprise . has periods of\nhigh production followed by t\nslump ind unemployment, tnd *1\nthough the CCF leader said he was\nnot forecasting a depression, he\nspoke of overproduction and layoffs\nin cities Buch as Sydney and Detroit, 'if\n\"It Industry constitutes a men*\nopoly or maltreats th* workers,\nwe believe the time I* rip* for\npubllo ownenhlp,\" he declared,\nbut uld it wm copisoiloyto lot\nIndustries alone that wore carrying on .for the benefit qf til nnd\nwere doing well, Industries such\nas hydro and natural gai would\nbenefit the people If government\nowned-\"but who wants to take\ntho farms from tho farmers\".\n.  \"How* tnd the Liberals hove lat\nour trade dwindle and they Save\npull \u00bbU their eggs, (p one basket\u2014\nthe basket, pf the United States\", he\nsaid, and claimed the government\nwas making a mistake In trading ip\nmuch with the United States who\nproduce the same goods as Canada\n'does,' 7-\nWhen it \u00abutt\u00abd tit* U.S., they\nstopped importing our cheese, our\ncoarse grains,'and our cattle, he\nwent, on, and spoke strongly for\ntrade with Britain who eould take\nCanada's excess goods.\n'He was disturbed by Canadian\nraw materials going to tha United\nStates and Japan and finished products coming back. He felt it was\nunfortunate that the iron from Labrador and the West Coast should be\nexported. \"We should be planning\nto build Canadian industries\".\nThree Bi\nSidewalk superintendents ihould\nhivt their hinds full this* days\nwith thre* construction Jobs within\neasy walking distance of the City\ncentr*.-    . '7; - -, s\nCity 'bf Nelson Public Works\ncrews are excavating ardund the\nNelion Auto Wrecking and Garage\nCompany on V Vernon Street in\npreparation for the extension ot\nthe huge retaining wall ln the 800\nblock *nd prellmln\u00bbry work for a\nsimilsr wall is going on ot the\nWest entnnce of the Civic (ran*\nbehind th* Sterling Hotel.' '\n: Work on * new ildtwtlk is alio\nprogressing in the 000 Hook on\nFront  Street  Front  Street  con-\nDynamite to\nBoost Slunlman\nFrom Casket\nFins, who attend the Joie Chit-\nwood Gold,Star Daredevil show it\nth* Recreation Ground* Mondty\nwill gtt motorcyclt thrills os well\n\u2022s itock car stunts.\nHirry Woolman of Hollywood\nwill perform many of the most\ndangerous motorcycle feats. Among\nth* cycle stunts will be a crash\nthrough two bitting beard walls\nsnd ramp to ramp cycle leap over\nseveral ntw cars.\nWoodman also will attempt a\nhe\u00abd-stand   Whll*   piloting   hi*\noyclo \u00abt * high *p**d, H* alio Is\n\u2022Ittid fer a ipiplilty numbir \u2014\nthit af bilng blown up  In  *\n*Mk*t with n itleki of dyn\u00abmlto.\nDiredevlls and their usletants\nwill bring together a tremendous\narray oi talent for the 90 event program sponsored by Nalion Junior\nChimber of Commerc*. ,\nTwenty-three drivers will be,\npreient, inoludtog Bill Ward of\nVancouver; Fett Llhdemitui of\nNew Ulm, Minn.! Woolmtn, and\nJimmy Williams of Houston, Texts,\nill of whom ari holden of the Gold\nStir Medal. The medal la earned\nby winning first place for throe\nconsecutive yean to at least one\n*v*nt sanctioned by the Inter-\nnationil Stuntmen'i Association;\n'Other drivers will Include Jimmy\nWilllimi, \"Jumping Jack\" Bob\nNiles, Bob Grable, Harry 'Hoff,\nRalph M**d*. Sandy McNaughton,\n\"Lucky\"- W*n)*r, and \"Siileid*\"\nSexton, who *U h\u00bbVe won individual chimpionship tltlss to the\nI.S.A. sanctioned competition \u00bbt\nlesst once.\nThirty events tre scheduled, Including broadjumping n*w cars\nfrom on* ramp to \u00bbnother Whll*\nothtr n\u00abw car* speed underneath;\nprecision driving On two wheels;\ncrash-rolling , itock ' cars fof distance ind consecutive rolls; hiimip\nbattering-ram, crashing hoad-first\nthrough .\u25a0 i flaming barrier while\nlying.on the hood of a speeding\nstock;.sedsn; and a-flying he*d-on\ncrash, . .\nitltutai a portion ot th* No, $ high*\nway as lt passes through, Nelson,\nTh* sidewalk being replaced extends East from Cedar -Street,\nthrpugh Cherry and Willow Streets,\nand will meet a concrete sidewalk\nleading ln from Falrview at Poplar\nStreet. - -';\nTh* naw portion of sidewalk will\nreplace a wooden walk that cretks\nrather ominously in places and hss\non. unsubstantial looking wooden\nhand rill. 7 '.'...    '\"'-\u25a0\u25a0''.'\nIn building , the new concreto\nwalk, small retaining walls must be\nbuilt under it for support of the\nroodbed or street as well as the\nwalk since tho terrain slopes\nsteeply in places towards the lak*,\nStone wells' now lupoprting th*\nwooden wolk must be replaced.\nTha work is a portion of in overall progrim of sidewalk improvement scheduled for the City.\nTbe retaining wall being built at\nth* West tnd ot th* Civic Arena\nwill replace a portion of a 20 toot\nhigh rock wall, Tha rock wall his\ndeterlonted over the yean end wu\nbeginning to crumble in spots, .\nCANTILEVER WAL!-\nThe wall will b* of the \"cantilever\" design and ia the same style\nas tha major part of tht Vernon\nStr\u00ab*t: comtructlon. ' V .\nA cantilever will looks like on\ninverted T. On* arm of th* T is\nlmbtddtd undtr the portion of\nearth b\u00ablng retained ind the other\narm, somewhat Bhorter, extends out\nth* oth*r wiy and Is also burltd.\nTil* ill* of the' footing, er irmk of\nThe Weather\nNslton ' ,.4..;.,.;.-.?.l\nMontre*} ......l...,.*,.\nNorth B*y ....i,...,,\nWinnipeg  ;\t\nRegina   ;;..,...*.........\nSaskatoon ~\t\nCalgary ........\nEdmonton  \u201e...\nKimberley  \t\nCrescent Valley .\nKamloops\t\nPenticton\t\nVancouver \t\nVictorta\t\nSeattle \u2014-.\nPArtlind\t\nSpokane\t\nChicago\t\nNew York\t\n81-. 87 7\n67 80\ntti 7(\n4$ 7T\n87'77\n.84 80\n'80 7$\n52 76\n48 90\n42 88\n84 84 .01\n84 88\n82 71\n88 68\n63 87\n49 74\n69 88\n71 84   .83\n71 98   .91\nthe T, depend in Size and length\non the height ofthe wall.\nTh* Vernon Str\u00abet wall li reinforced with' ipeciil iteel.the position of the steel being designed to\ncounter stresses on the concrete\nretaining face.\nAnother feature ol th* construction are drainage pipes built into\nthe foot of the wall tnd running\nSarsllel to it. When the concrete is\neing poured, these re-iniorced\npipes or tubing ar* put in and\nopenings' are; provided io thit\ndrainage . water seeping in from\nstreet level or underground sources\nWill run into * central pip* leading\nto the sewer system. The 7000 bag*\not cement which are being invested\nln the will- irt protected against\nundermining from the w*t*r.\nThe retaining wall, which Is\nabout 30 teet at lti deepest point,\nalso has pipes running through it\nat right angles and at different\nlevels. Thew \"weep holes\" also\ne*rry off water that might; seep ln\nbehind the wall.\nKOEHLE .i SON\nPhone 1630\nFr\u00a7* Estimates en Installing\n\u2022 Hand Fired Furnaces\n\u2022 Forced Air Furnaces ,\n\u2022 Combustioneer Stokers\n\u2022 Oi) Furnaces 1    I\n...   General Repair* on Furnace Plpei \u00abn<j     jfflieei\nWt Make Anything In 3T\n'ZZkZ    QUALITY,IS PUB SPECI:\n410 KOOTENAY STR'\nFred Koehle-:':. ' 1 Fri\nWest Arm\nBridge Poll\nHere are the statistics on\nsurvey forms returned to\n. th\u00ab West Arm Bridge Committee:\nTotal m\nIti favor of bridge .'.. 964\n\u2022 \u2022 *\u2022\nIn favor of toll i' 899\nFrom Nelson 711\nFrom District  188\n-'.;     \u25a0;   \u2022   \u2022;  \u2022    '   ('\nAgainst toll ...,:\u201e...:,Z...  58\nFpom Nelson  37\nFrom pistrtct   21\nRiding Problem!\nGel Ottawa\nHeed -Herridge\nHerbert W. Herridge. MP-koote-\nnay West, told a capacity entjience\nin Capitol Theatr* Thursday night\nthat he had worked for ill, regardless of party or status ln the community in the eight years he has\nrepresented this district in Ottawa.\nSpeaking on the same, platform\nas JI. J. Coldwell, national leader\nof the CCF, Mr. Herridge said ih\ndealing with the government .he\nhas been given whatever he asked\nas long as it represented the pd!l of\nhla constituents,\nHe pointed out thtt he had gained\nassistance from Ottawa in the matter of public buildings, Increase in\nthe post office service, improvements to the West Kooten\u00bby primary airport at Castlegar, and in the\nmatter of maintenance of lakes and\nrivers facilities.'. :.\n\"Whenever^ personal 'represent*.\ntion* have been made to me, I hav*\ndon* my betft,'' h* ssld.\nHe said * strong opposition wis\nnecessary if Canadians were,to\npreserve their democratic wty of\ngovernment, and cited numerous instances where opposition hid resulted ln favorable legislation or had.\nstopped parliamentary action -that\nplght prove detrimental to public\nwelfar*. * .'\nA citizen's responsibility does not\ntnd after h* cast* his ballot, he\npointed out, and he thanked those\nwho had assisted him while in Ottawa by keeping him informed of\nlocal needs. 7\nHe hit at th* \"government practice of utilizing the order-in-council\nwhich he said was an effective device but had bten abused, An or-\nder-ln-councll constitutes a device\nfor passing a law that1 does-not have\ntha assent or even the knowledge\nof p*u-U(U3^e*q,i.. ? '7,7\nThe Emergency; Powsr* Act. w*i\nespecially' lrttolel:*bl* to Mr, H\u00abr-\nridge since it led-' tb orders-in-dounr\ncil rather than giving a problem tho\npublicity ha felt it deserved ln\np*rli*m*nt-'\nHe said the CCP was the friend\not labor and mentioned Instances\nwhen his party had assisted labor\nleaders in presenting their wishes\nto parliament In the proper fashion.\nNo other party has \"our record ot\npresenting and voting for labor legislation either In the House of\nCommons or in Victoria,'' he\nclaimed,\nAmendments' favorable to the\nworking man and pertaining to the\nLabor Relations Act, Unemployment\nInsurance, national low cost housing, and the rtvlslon of tht Crim-j\nlnal Cod* all got valuable -study\nand support from his party, Herridge declared,\nRandolph Harding, MIA for\nKaslo-Slocan, Introduced Mr. Cold-\nwell and Mr. Herridge, .. \\\n(See also story on this page.)\nThe only known speolei of freshwater shark* art found In Lake\nNicaragua, in Central America.\nMotorist* making the run between Nelson and Trsil now have\na choice of two fine highways with\nthe completion Wednesday of about\nnine and one h\u00bblf miles of paving\nfrom Sttaw to Rot* Spur.- ' ]'\u25a0\nThe distance to Trail via Castlegar is 48 miles and the iplleoge via\nSalmo is roughly U miles. Tho road\nthrough Salmo is faster, however,\nsine*'the only Blow-up occurs In\ntravelling through the SO mile tone\nat Montrose, Just at the top of the\nFrultval* cutoff andvfli* portion ot\nTrill formerly known as Merry's\nTTItt*, now \u00bb community. 7 .\n; Motorists travelling via Castlegar\nhav* to contend with several miles\nof twitting read outside of Nelson,\nmore of th* same at Genolle bluffs,\nthe Castlegar ferry, and a lengthy\n30 mile zone at Kinnaird.     .    .\nPublic Works officials feel thai\nthe new section from Salmo to Ross\nSpur 1* on* ot tho finest roads tc\nbe put in In Kootenay-Boundary\nbecouse of Its width and good\ncorners. '.'.:'\nEquipment from th* Solmo-Ross\nSpur Job 1* now south ot Salmo on\nth* Nelway road where eleven snd\none'-half mile* will be paved.\nAbout three and one-quarter\nmiles ire already paved but will\nbe re-covered (long with the paving of over eight miles of gravel\nrood. This will leave about four and.\none-half miles ot gravel road between Salmo and th* border.\nHon|iWesley D. Black,\nre\n\"It Is of .paramount importance\nthat th* people |\u00abt behind the\nBridge Committee,\" Hon, W, D.\nBlack commented at Nelson Thursday. \"The petition for a West Arm\nbridge will be - presented to the\nLegislature at. the Sept. 15 session,\nh* told Bridge Committee members,\nand if all the people are behind\nthe petition, it is almost certain\nthat, the bridge .'construction , will\nbe started,next yeM.\" \u25a0\u25a0'\"\u2022'.-\nThree more petition forms were\nsent out Thursday by popular request. \u2022    '    .\nStatistics on survey form* returned to the West Arm Bridge\nCommittee so,far art:   .\nTotal .;.., ;.-., ,.,.,.\u201e\t\nIn favor of bridge -\t\nIn fivor of toll \u201e\t\n?rom Nelion ..._.....\u201e\u201e.\u201e,....\nrbm. .District \u201e.._.\u201e\u201e\nAgsinst toll \u201e..\nProm Nelson  \u201e \u201e,,....\nProm District;....'. \u201e_\t\n964\n964\n711\n188\n(3\n37\n21\nSfl.600 Plant\n, The Improvement program fer\nthe Trinity United Church ln Nelson was the main topic of discussion at the official Trinity\nBoard meeting Wednesday night.\nA local contractor appeared before\ntha Board to, explain a four-circuit\nsteam system devised \u00bbto give the\nvarious.departments of the Church\nindividual service. In conjunction\nwith, heating, an arrangement of\nfans would conduct air' according\nto tha season. The purchase of the\nheating system was authorized tt\nI cost of approximately $11,600.  '\nThe members of the board examined tha water-proofing job now\nin progress..Volunteers \u00abr\u00bb \u00ab*a(st.\ning in this and other alterations In\nthe basement of th* Charch. The\nBbird of TrusUe* w\u00bb\u00bb smpowurtd\nto execute the business authorized\nby the o\u00abic|\u00bbl Bo*rd,v. of which\nRoss Fleming l* ehtlrmin,'\n. Oiorge A, Hoover actet bs chairman ln th* absence of Rev. A. B.\nT. Dixon, who is on holidays.\n-Th*: improvemwj*, program, In\nwhich th* ChurclCis being made\nmore conyenlent WU commodious\nfor it* variousvacKyities, bas been\nIn progress two- n***lt\u00bb, Tht work\nwill be concentrated in the b*sa-\nmont for the timo\\belng, but aome\nimprovements witl.be made to the\nexterior of the.Kfllldlpg \u00abnd the.\nauditorium of thtfcChurch,\n\u2014.;'    '  **! \u2022  .;'\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\nEGGPRiqEiUP ;\u25a0\u2022\/\nA-large ind A-mgdlum wholesale\negg prices hove climbed three cents\nIn .two d*ys. The. new prices which\nwent lnto.tffect JhHrsd*y ihowed\nA.l\u00abrge priced a^4 cent* ind A-\nmedium it 71 cents. A-small and A-\npeewees remained the same at 60\nand 35 cents, respectively.\nCl AtWlFI**!} *p| Q|T HB8UI.T0\nCRANBROOK MAN LOSES\nKIN AT VANCOUVER    .\nFuneral services are to be held\nFriday ln Vancouver far the late\nAnnie Jane Roberts, sister pf Jack\nPrice of Cranbrook. Mrt. Roberts\ndied In Vancouver July 25 at the'\nage ot 39.\nShe Is sutvlved by her husband;\none daughter, Mrs. S. J. Tonick\n(Owan) of CUoverdale, B.C.; three\ngrandchildren; seven brothers, Will\nPrice of Ponoka, Alberta; Jack of\nCranbrook; Hugh ot New Westminster; Evan, Owen, Tom and Richard\nPrice, all in Wales, Great Britain.\n.......................... i.... \u25a0\nhave*\n(OOD RUM\n' for your money\nLEMON\nHART\nRUM\n3rftote&8&te4i;&y>(>t&&\\\nttltllAtlllllll***-*'!!*****'\n(bis advertisement It not publisher!\n\u2022r displayed by Ih* Liquor Controf\nBoard or by  the Government\nBritish Columbia      ' ,-\nI lavod on my HOLIDAY LUGGAGE\nfti'tiiffZ '\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0 \u00ab*\nJ. P; MORGAN STORE\nLadies' Twin. Sets. Special \u201e.\u201e. $27.50\n2 Piece Set\nLeather bound *flbro. Set ,..,\n2 Piece Set     ?\nLeather corners^ Set ..............\n16M\n13\"\nTraveJpok fv\n^egulif W6,6t).' Hew ..,,\u201e..,\nAuto Pale\nRegular $10.28. NOW ...,'....\n32\"\n\\6M\nGLADSTONES\nGenuine Leather. Regular 26.95.\nNow :... $21.75\n.109\n22^\nTOURING CASES\nR\u00abgul*r Hm NOW .,.:. ,?..\u201e\u2122..;:^..,.\u201e.\nTrtuMks\nLsrge sir*. Regultr $20,60. NOW ....7\u2122\u2122\nSee thoie vocation luggage ipeelal*\non dltploy* In our window*\nIP, MORGAN Store\n\u2022 JV* Buy Used Furnltur*\n305 BAKER ST. PHONE 4?\n CHILDREN*\n\u2022 SANDALS\n\u2022 SADDLES\n\u25a0\u2022^M0'tiC'i\\\n\u00bb#*i -y- \u25a0\nALL'COLORO AND 8IZES\n\u25a0'I   -' 'AT; .7\nT?HE SHOE\nCENTRE\n553 Baker St\nPhone 895\ntSREAT WELCOME\nFOR MISS CANADA\n\u25a0 KELOWNA, B. C. \u25a0' (CT)? -.: The\ngreatest homecoming occorded- on*\nindividual in thd history of Kelowna was given.Wednesday night:to\nKathy Archibald. 19-year-old Miss\nCanada of 1958, ,.-.'.-';' ...'.\nTeeming; with, thousands of visitors on the eve of a three-day1 international regatta, Kelowna welcomed Miss Archibald home with? a\nnew car and an engraved> silver\ntray at a civic ceremony before\nbetween 4000 and 5000 persons,'\n\"This is the .most exciting; moment of my life,\" said she, almost\novercome with emotion as Charles\nGaddes, head,of the citizens' committee that raised the money for\nthe convertible, presented her the\nkeys.\nAbsent from the city since sho\nleft two week* ago to compete in\nthe Miss Canada-contest at Burlington, Ont, Mln Archibald arrived\njust in time to carry out her regal\nduties as Lady of the Lalce.\nShe will: officially, open the regatta Thursday evening,1 along with\nDon Mackay, mayor of Calgary.\n\u2022 y        i :\nKARACHI^ (CP) \u2014.Five Holly-\nwood expert* have been engaged\nto help raise the technical and artistic standards of 'the Pakistan\nmovie. industry. They will supervise a six-month. training.' plan .'under a United Nation* .technical-aid\nprogram.  - \u25a0 \u25a0 :.       \u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0'.'ti. \u25a0\nINVERMERE\u2014The lookout stop Swansea Mountain\noffers a superb-dew of the Wlndfermere District. . ' .'\"[.\n.The view stretches on the South past Wasa where:the\nmetallic roofs Of the Estella Mine concentrator gleam in ihe\nsunlight to Harrogate, 50 miles to?the North..  .\nIt's a view that is well worth the effort involved;;arid\nthe effort involved is not drastic, fdr a well-worn patn leads\nup the shoulder of the \"mountain from the back to the 5676-\nfoot summit. The path is only occasionally steep arid is well\nshaded.      \u2022 ' '7 .'\u25a0:\n\"It's .a', view .that cuts you down to size,\" says 'Ns. Vernon-Wood, the genial lookout nian who haa spent three? or\nfojir monthseach Summer season of the past five years scanning that same view for wisps of smoke that might spell fire\nin.the vest forested areas pf\t\nthe surrounding mountains.\nCivic Centre\nGrounds\nMonday Night\nReward of 5676'Foot Swansea Is\nView to 'Cut You Down to Size'\n(Editor's note: Thl* Is tho first of two artlclea on B.C. Forest\nService lookout itatlonB, en* In Etit Kootenay by Dally. News' Windermere correspondent, the second about a Woit Kootonay station by a\nttatt mlUirS ti - . ...tif.. \" -7.7,\nThe trip up. the mountain takes\nan average of two hours, depending on ihe youth, and speed of the\nclimbers and those who claim nel-'\nthor youth nor speed can still make\nthe climb in under three hours with\nplanty of unhurried rests en route.\n.Mr. Wood's,best time up the trail\nwithout a pack Is one hour, 20 minutes, and 1% hours with a pack,\nbut he is a veteran woodsman and\nfew would, wish, to emulate his\npace. >'\u2022:' \u2022'  \u25a0 \u25a0    , '\nThe distance measured from the\nsummit is two and seven-eightHs\nmiles; is marked in half-mile divisions chained by MT. Wood and ah\nassistant last year.\nFLOWER-8TREWN\nIt is worthwhile to take the trip\nslowly enough to enjoy the great\nvariety of wild flowers which grow\nbeside tho trail; columbine and clematis,'tiny violets snd dainty lady-\nslippers, vivid Indian paint-brush\nand pale yellow honeysuckle and\ndaisies of many varieties. Wild\nstrawberries grow in profusion and\nbushes drooping with choke' cherries are beginning to ripen.\nThe, last 100 feet or so. of the\nclimb.are fairly steep, but the trail\nswitchbacks and suddenly you emerge from the trees and the summit\nia -at your feet and the great expanse of wide valley, brimmed by\ntwo mountain ranges lies before\nyou.\nThe geography of the Windermere Valley lies like a map before\nyou. Hie two lakes, Windermere and\nUpper. Columbia, stretch to the\nsouthland Steamboat Mountain divides the'valley into two distinct portions to the, north, through one of\nwhich the Columbia River winds its\nway to Golden. The Purcell Range\nis.clearly marked by its river passes, looking noHhWest, first Toby\nCreek, then Horsethief, No. 2 Creek,\nthe Bugaboo and the Spillimachine\nvalleys each clearly defined.\nPREFAB HUT\nThe lookout itself is a prefabri\ncated one-roomShut with a pyrimld\nshaped roof and windows on all\nfodr sides, It was carried up the\ntrail by pack horse last year to replace the first lookout, which was\nbuilt ln 1924.   . I.\nThe small room is -Ml equipped\nfor its purpose. Domestic equipment\nis completely, utilitarian, leaving\nthe entire centre bt the building for\nthe Osborne fireflnder, an instrument invented.by the U.7S. Forest\nService for locating accurately the\nposition of a suspected fire. This\ninstrument is' set' astronomically\n'north and south and sighted like*\nrifle to give hearings.\nThe lookout man's equipment also\nincludes strong binoculars and a set\nof hazard sticks. These are four\nsticks of Douglas fir about 18 inches long which \u25a0weigh exactly 100\ngrams when dry. They are weighed\nfive times dally in the fir* season\nand the amount of moisture absorbed by the dry fir and measured\nby weight ia recorded to Indicate\ntho moisture in small fuels which\nwould suggest the- expected rats of.\nspread'dl fire.\"?:. 7-7 \u25a0? \u25a0>>..., .\n: In addition records are kept four\ntime* dally of - sky conditions, Wind\ndirection ' and velocity and fuel\nmoisture, and humidity. The lookout\nman Is in constant contact With the\nlocal forest service both by tele-.\nphone and radio. His telephone Is\nconnected through the local exchange so he is not isolated: from\nfamily and friends.- \"7\nLIGHTNING THREAT .\nRadio reception at the top pf the\nmountain is excellent except when\nelectric storms .are a menace. These\ncan be an ordeal. When it is necessary to transmit during such a storm\nMr. Wood sits in' a wooden choir\nwhich has Its legs sitting lii glass\ninsulators? Lightning is a real hazard on top of the mountain and\nmust -be' closely watched as every\nstrike in the surrounding country\nmust be- recorded fdr further observation of the area. Only recently\nwas a lightning arrestor placed on\nthe hut,\nOnce, Mr. Wood recalls, he was\nknocked Insensible by a strike-\nhe thinks he was \"out\" only a\nfew moments, but It la ah, experience he does not care to have\n'\u25a0 repeated. .','\nLookout men are the eyes of the\nforest service. Their hours are long\nand. tedious and they must be reliable to. a degree. The necessary\nloneliness Is part of the job. Mr.\nWood-, finds he hos little time, to\nworry about being lonely? When\nhis long hours of observation and\nrecording are finished, he turns to'\nwriting and drawing. He is a teller\nof tales of woodsmen like himself,\nand has published a number of short\nstories. * His drawings show an- apt\nsense of humor. if.\nDuring the evenings his gas lamp\nshines like a solitary immobile Star\non top of the .mountain and all the\nsurrounding country j knows when\nth!* lookout man leaves his writing\nor drawing and takes to his bed.\nVisitors are frequent during the\nsummer.'East year, Mr.,Wood recorded 88 names ln bis visitors book\nand has about the.same proportion\nto date this year. Speaking of visit\nors, recalled to Mr. Wood a story\nhe told With relish but.whieh he\nvehemently protested wsb. not for\npublication, but .as: one 'writer to\nanother he knew it w.as-too good to.\nresist.     ?'.' .'\u25a0-\u25a0'   , ;\u25a0:..; ?:; 7 ' , f 77.\nIt concerned a summer day when\nhe had seen no human, being for a\nstr,etch.of 30' days. It Was.a pferfect\nwashday and Mr. Wood, being in a\ndomestic, frame of mind, washed\neverything in sight, Including .the\n'shorts'.he had on. He hung-the-entire washing op the line a short\ndistance from the hut and proceed,\ned with other work.     \u25a0:._-.*   7\nSome time after, to bis consternation he saw just topping the sum.\nmit a group of visitors' and female\nvisitors at that Mr. Wood is noted\nfor his hospitality and knew they\nwould head straight for him. There\nwas just one thing handy\u2014a dish-\ntowel. So it was as a mountain\nGhandi thqt Mr. Wood greeted his\ncallers '     \u2022 \u2022    \u2022 '.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS; FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1951 %#\nNorthern Quebec\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Far up In\nQuebec's northland, in the uninhabited region around Clearwater\nLake, an enthusiastic party is busy\nat prospecting, exploration, Scientific study and sport \u25a0\u25a0''\u2022\u25a0\u2022<\n\u25a0 Clearwater Lake, the centre of\noperations, is about 44) miles long.\nIt is roughly BOO miles north of\nMontreal, 130 miles north -of Great\nWhale river and is due east df Richmond Gulf on the eastern aide of\nHudson B4y.           * ,'\nSome of the principals in the\nparty are from the. United'States,\ninterested in the possibility of iron\nore locations. When, the .expedition\nreturns in V month or six ''weeks\nthere may be Important information\nfor Quebec as a result of the-scientific research. There likely will.olso\nbe information about, giant; lake\ntrout speckled trout, the Arctic char\nand the little-known golden-colored\ntrout. - :,\nMembers of the party; all .have\nprospectors' licence's And the necessary paraphernalia for staking of\nclaims. They have formed themselves Into a company, Clearwater\nExploration Ltd., which has been\nincorporated under provincial charter. '     . .',..,.* ' .\",\nTom Wheeler of Montreal, president of Wheeler Airlines, Ltd., is\nchairman, Directors are. R. D. Cow-\nen, Alexander T. Wood and Morris\nBradley, Cleveland, and J. V. Raw-\nson, Plainfield, N. J. 7\nThe nearest neighbors- < to the\nClearwater Lake expedition are a\nband of Eskimos at Richmond Gulf,\nwhere there is also an oblate mission. Communication with the outside is through FreddJe.Woddroe,,\nradio operator at Great Whale and\nNottingham Isldnd. '.,'-.' \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022', '.'   . _7,\nMost of the party, went north\nfrom Montreal ite three ' airplam\nflights\/One or tuy will go ln by\nwater, and some may return before\nthe main party.     \u2022),.\nIN DENMARK TOO\nCOPENHAGEN (Reuters) \u2014 A\nformer chief of the Danish army's\npress information service was jailed for a year Tuesday for charging\nup Imaginary- parties for newspaper meii. Lt. Col. Juel Wibolt\npocketed'Urge sums from the state\ntreasury, the prosecution said. He\nwas also' ordered1 to: i*ep\u00bby. the\nequivalent: of S700;\nLYNNE HENDRY\nQUEEN CANDIDATE\nGREENWOOD-Girl Guides have\nchosen' Lynne Hendry as Greenwood's candidate for the title of\nQiieen of the Rock Creek and District Fall ,Fair, big annual event in\nthe Boundary country. It will be\nheld ln September.\nAs the Greenwood Women's Institute sponsors the Guides, it will\nalso back Miss Hendry.\nIn Alberta\nEDMONTON (CP)'\u2014 Two cases\nOf polio: reported in Calgary, thunr*\nday brought to, 78 the number of\nknown cases reported to the Alberta . health department There\nhave been three deaths,\nTho \"southern part of the province reports the majority ot the polio cases. Calgary and the surrounding area account for 32 and the\nLethbridge area 11.\nEdmonton city has recorded a\nknown 12 cases so tar ln 1053.\nThere have been two cases in the\nFeacie River Block? one at Fort\nVermilion and another at Fort\nChipewyan.\nCanada Appeals\nTo Immigrants\nEDMONTON (CP) - Tear of the\nfuture prompts Europeans to look\nib Canada-for new homos and security, a top union official said on\nThursday.\nCarl Berg .of Edmonton, vlce-pre\nsident and international represen\ntative of the Trades and Labor-Congress of Canada, said he found a\ndesire to come to Canada in all\ncountries he visited while, touring\nEurope;\nMr. Berg was the union's representative at the Coronation and a\ndelegate, to the International Labor\nOrganization conference at Geneva\nand the International Conference of\nFree Trade Unions at Stockholm.\n\"The conditions are good and im.\nproving in most Of. the countries,\"\nhe said. \"But the main reason they\nwant to leave is the constant fear\nof what might happen next in-Europe. They feel Canada is not only\na land of opportunity but a place of\nsecurity for them and their children.- .'\u25a0.'.,...\nGirls fo Lourdes\nHecate Straits Open\nTo Halibut Fishers\n, VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Hecate\nStraits were opened to hallbtu fishermen from midnight Thursday\nuntil August 0, the International\nPacific Fisheries Commission announced\nReopening of the area will give\nhalibut boats a second i chance to\nfish the strait this season.\nThe scaup, a wild duck popular\nwith hunters, is found in northern\nEurope, Asia and America,\nS33\" TRIPLE HI-SKISII\n. omatist exHismoN or prkiiion\nomviwo wm ngmnm\n' STUNTII\"\" TIG NEW S3 TO.\nSponsored by\nlunlor Chamber of Commerce\nUdmicsion, $1.60 \u2014 Children EOo\nTax Included\nPROVINCE OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nBOARD OF;\nINDUSTRIAL  RELATIONS\nNOTICE 18 HEREBY 4JIVEN that\nthe Board of Industrial Relatione\nwill hold * publlo hearing In Room\n237, Court House,' Vancouver, B.C.\non Wednesday, August 19th, 1033\nat 10:00 a.m, for the purpose of\nreceiving representations pertaining to the making of a minimum\nwig* order to apply to all employees In the mining Industry.\nAll parties eoneerned are Invited\nto   attend.   Written   submissions\nmay bev addressed to the Chairman,   Board   of   Industrial   Relations, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C,\n. W, H. Sands, Chairman,\nVictoria, B.C.\nJuly 14th, 1963.\nSeventy-nine: girls from: 10 cities\nand towns- in the East and West\nKootenay, Okanagan and Arrow\nLakes districts, arrived at Camp\nLourdes for a nine-day camping\nsession. -Girls from Nelson, Natal,\nTrail, Rossland, Kimberley,. Cranbrook, Erickson, Creston, 'Sunshine\nBay, Harrop, Nakusp, New Denver,\nSilverton, Bennington, .Penticton\nand West Summerland are ih 'attendance,  ...,-\u25a0\" \u2022\nThe campers, listed ' by i their\ncabins and^tents, are:     ' \u25a0 \u25a0'\nCabin 1:. Elaine Dosenburger\n(Kim berley), Lorraine Sicotte\n(Sunshine Bay), Germajne Slcotte\n(Sunshine Bay), Renee Fontaine\n(Sunshine Bay), Patsy Bohah (New\nDenver), Shirley Bohan (New Denver), Gail Bohan (New Denver),\nVerna Fr|e (Kaslo), Roberta' Ma'c-\nIntyre (Kaslo), Catherine Cullin-\nane (Nelson), Susan Ryan (Nelson),\nMarcella Boulllet (Harrop), Judy\nRledel (Kimberley),. Florence Ru-\nbeftic (Natal).    \u25a0'    '    '       ''\"\u2022'\nTent 1; Mildred Fulko (Nakusp)\nJanet. Fidek (Browse), Grace Mac-\nDopald'(Salmo), .,-'.,.'...\nTent 2:,Colleen Bell, Bernadette\nBell,' Jeanine Couture (all of Ross\nliiid).''-. i'.\u25a0'\u2022-...\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0;,-._:\u25a0\u25a0 .'-.;'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 . \u25a0\nTent 3: Pauline Dufresne, Lucia\nAnne Werritznig, Faith- Jeffery,\nMyrna Frieer, Margaret, Ann Riedel\n(all of Kimberley), '-     c    \u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nTent 5: Mary Gordop, Marje Hilton, Jeari Harrison, Maurltie Harrison (all of Cranbrookh,\nTent 6: Marion Provenzaro, Joan\nProvenzoro, Nina; Kosovlch (all of\nCranbrook).\nTent 7: Rosle Lang, Patricia Be\nkar, Diane* Bekar, Joan. Trainer\n(all of Creston).\nCabin 2: Patsy 'Woolsey'(Creston),\nBetty Ann Watson (Nelson), Violet\nZahn. (Trail), Judy Jerome (Trail),\nElaine Bens (Creston), Kathleen\nWoolsey (Creston), Sheila Murphy\n(Trail), Maureen Murphy (Trail).\n' Cabin 3: Ina Stiles, Rita. Gelinas,\nFlorence Nutter,' Sharon Langan,\nJoanne . Hood,7. Duane Bourgeois,\nDonna Dingwall?' Corinne Nadeau,\nPhyllis De Ferro, Margaret Ts<*au-,\nner (all of Nelson), Elaine Bailey\n(Rossland), Frances-Daniels (Summerland);      '. '   \"'\nCabin 4: Lorraine Bens, Maripn\nBens, Nancy McDonald, Coreeh\nMcDonald, Anita Nelligan, Shirley\nChadWick (all of - Creston), Janet\nBeugart (Penticton); Catherine Ne>\ntherton (Penticton), Mary Gaines\n(Cranbrook), Carolyn Deshornais\n(Cranbrook).\nCabin 8: Ruth Evans, Joan Evans,\nMyrii* Skapple, Louise De VFerro,\nRochelle Arnot, Colleen Arnot,\nGall Jerome, Kertha Dion (all of\nNelson), Ruth Cary; (Silverton),\nJuanlta CoOper (Silverton). Barbara\nHoMage (Kimberiey). -';\u25a0\n',,',i,, -,;  1M .' ,ii    ..  \u25a0'\u25a0\nJustices of Peace\nPinch Hit at Court\n. INVERMERE\u2014.{Police court\ncases in the Windermere district\nhave been heard. .under William\nWeir, JP, or Frank Richardson JP,\nowing to the Illness of Magistrate\nAV, M'Chisholm, recuperating in\nhospital from a broken hip.\nJuly cases to date included a\ncharge against Lucien Jimmy for\nentering a liquor store while interdicted. He wai found, guilty and\nfined $50 and costs. Leigh Nixon\nwas charged with; creating a disturbance in the Coronation Hotel\nwhile drunk and was fined $10 and\ncosts.,\nSinclair Canyon Motors at Radium Hot Spring* were convicted of\nan irregularity in the us* of dealer's\nlicence plates and fined $15 and\ncosts. Mrs. Hazel. Barbour of Wilmer was charged with illegally selling liquor and was fined $300 and\ncosts. A purchase in this case was\nmade by a constable ln plain\nclothes.    .\nCLASSIFY ADS GET RESULTS\nFERNIE\u2014A man and his guitar\nwer*' reunited after 11 year* in'\nFernie recently, when Led Frank\nHeoley received a; parcel from England. \u2022;.'.\". -    \u25a0'-?\"\"':,  '..    'iti.'   \u25a0'\u25a0 '. '   -'\nTo get th* complete story one\nmust go back to the early days of\ntlie Second World War. On June\n20, 1040, -Leo Frank Heatey of\nBriercrest, Sask,? enlisted' at Regi-\nnai Sask: He was posted to the RCA\nwith reg. \\o. 10208. From Reglna\nhe was sent to Berryfleld (Vimmy\nBarracks) at Kingston, Ont.\nIn October, 104^,.Mr. Healey, who\nis quite an amateur entertainer, noticed - guitar in a second hand store,\nwindow in Kingston, He, well remembers the occasion because when\nhe went inside two old ladles were\nhaggling with the proprietor over\nthe purchase of an old coal oil lamp.\nThe venerable ladies, wanted the\n50-cent lamp for a quarter. Mr,\nHealey stated that there was no\nbargaining for the guitar'which he\npurchased at the seller's asking\nprice of $4, Upon returning to camp\nMr. Healey sandpapered the instrument, cleaned it up, varnished it\nand put it into'good condition, Then\nusing Indian ink, he prominently in.\nscribed his name and address ai\nowner of the guitar just below the\n^bridge.-. ..-..\u25a0\nSTRUMMED FOR TROOP8\nIn November of that year hi\nwent to Winnipeg. On this trip he\nused th*. instrument in sing-songs\nand hastily organized concerts for\nentertainment of .troops on the\ntrain. In December he was posted\noverseas. On the troop train trip\nfrom Winnipeg to Halifax the instrument led many an informal en.\ntertainment and sing-song. On the\n25,000-ton troop ship, the Capetown\nCastle,. Healey, his guitar and his\ncompanions entertained all and\nsundry. They arrived in Scotland on\nChristmas Day, .1840, and the happy\ntroops boarded trains for Southern\nEngland. ,,\nDuring all this time Healey was\nobtaining autographs of the various\npersons in the services whom he\nhad known or been acquainted with\nfor a^Derlod Of three to siif months.\nThe names were printed or letter\non tbe face or: Bide of the instrument ih Indian ink and then' covered j with vatnish or shellac.\nAU through 1941 Healey continued ' gathering. names and . addresses-and throughout the year entertainment ahd sing-song accompaniment were provided by the instrument. Late in 1941 or early 1942,\nthe guitar was lost and Mr. Healey\nwas vunsiblerto'tr'ace'ifc. \u25a0Hi' '' 7 \u25a0\nMeantime the war continued, and\nMr. Healey returned to Canada\nwhere he received his-discharge at\nRegina in December,, 1044. Deciding on a career in watchmaking ho\nattended the Training and Re-establishment Institute at Toronto, taking a course arranged With the\nCanadian Vocational Training by\nthe Department,of Veterans Affairs.\nHe received his - certificate in\nhorology and spent a year in the\nemployment of the jewelry firm of\nHarry Wheeler Stjiisnsat Leth-\nbridge. In.June? l\u00ab7,\"*he came to\nFernie wheire,''_e?7'<Sfreri_d hla owp\njewelry store arid ? witch repair\nbusiness,.\nOUT OF BLUE       .;    f   .\nLate that year he received a letter from A. Eric Casselden, of 126\nPreston Drive, Brighton,, Sussex,\nEngland, informing Healey of the\ndiscovery of the guitar iri the basement of the home of a Brighton\njeweller.- :.    -' 7\nIn his letter Mr. Casselden wrote\nas follows: \"You will not know my\nname, tor we have never met Some\nfew weeks ago, I happened to discover in the basement of the home\nof a local jeweller, a.four stringed\nmandolin bearing hundred* .of\nnames, with yours prominently In.\nscribed as owiier:.' I realized that\n\u25a0you would probably be glad to recover this as a prized souvenir of\nyour days over this side and so\nmade, arrangements with the jeweller to let me have it should I be\nable to trace you\"\nCasselden had obtained Healey's\naddress through the good services\nof the RAFA 4Royal Air Force As-\nLONG-LOST GUITAk, w_i**h; Wghtetaeti \u25a0 apt\/hi'\nhours of many a serviceman at sing-songis on land and\nsea during early days of the Second World War, is back In\nhanjls of L. F. flealey of Fernie? He pioked it up to a\nsecond-hand shop in Kingstoh'in ,1940, played it foe his;.\nbuddies when he was posted overseas, and had scopes\nof service men autograph it, before losing it in l'941-<tt.-\nIn 1947 he got a letter from a stranger in England- wfeo\nhad fouijd it in basement of a Brighton jeweler's home,\nand after six years', delay, Healey hss bis guitar back.\nHere he shows;names on the instrument to his son,,\nBarry. '7,        ' ,.,...     \u2022\nJenny Lind gave her first concert in New York in 1860, at the\nage of 29. 7.,;.;'.'-.,\u2022;'.\nBring the\nChildren...\nOn your vlsftsto\nSpokane, stop ot the\nFriendly Hotei Spokane. '\nTo better serve bur\nguests, children under14\nstay free with' their    f\nparents. 7 \u25a0'\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire . . .\nthey're welcome; too!\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoorl\n\u2022 r Air Conditioned\nSilver Grill\nsociatlon) and the Canadian Department of Veterans ?Affairs. Healey answered Casselden's letter but\ngot rio reply. After a lengthy wait\nHealey tried to write again' but had\nmisplaced Casselden's letter' And\naddress. '\nEarly in 1953, Mrs. Healey found\nthe misplaced letter. Leo sent a\nregistered letter to England and received,a reply from Casselden who\nhad changed his address? Excerpts\nfrom Casselden's second letter follow: \"However I had a lot of trouble\nfinding away of getting the instrument ori its way to you^ Forms to be\nfilled in and all sorts of snags not to'\nmention very high charges for carriage. . Finally I contacted your\n(Canadian) government offices in\nLondon and they have undertaken\nto send it on to you.\"- And -further\nIn the letter, he writes: \"I dont\nknow-if I told you how I came Ipy\nthe mandolin, but it was a chance\nin * life time, and .if I had not had\nan inquisitive nature this letter,\nwould certainly never have been\nwritten. I had,to call at the private\nresidence of a gentleman of your\nown profession and he had a workshop in'the basement of .the house,\nwhere, there was a lathe and a polishing motor (I am an electric engineer) arid I was inspecting these\nmachines.\nHe had a big collection, of old\nclocks, cases and a heap qf junk and\njust showing in the midst of it all\nwas your instrument. It Was the\nsignatures'that caught my eye and\nI asked'if I could see it. He literally dug it out and I saw your name\non it and I tfco-jght it would be'' a\ngood idea if I could trace you and\nget it back to you. The rest of the\nstory you know, and I hope you will\nenjoy the memories K will bring\nback to you?\"* ,,-*. .\nPATCHBD WI*\nMr, Heoley'sent an order for tour\npounds ten shillings to cover tho\ncost of shipping the guitar to Canada. Upon its arrival the guitar was !\u25a0\nfound to be cracked, some of tho\nglued sectlons.had sprung apart, ono\nstring was missing and mould covered the instrument.    ?' ' -\nMr. Healey bad oleoned up the\nguitar and haa copied trom it ths\nnames of about 130 service men. .\nTheir addresses show that they\ncome from all part* of Canada, several from different sections of the\nUnited State*, one from Jamaica, *\nfew from England and three wer*\nmembers of the Capetown CaeHe,\nthe troopship on which Heatep travelled overseas. \u25a0 ;,\nFormer district servicemen whose\nname: are inscribed on tho guitar,\nRed Morgan of Nelson, R. Rankin\nof Rossland, John Scotty Thomson\nof Nelson, Gnr? R. Fuckey of Fernie, George Watson of Rossland, 7.\nE. Wood'of Cranbrook and Cmr. P..\nWellman of Golden. >\nMr. Healey 1* married, his-wed-\nding taking place on November M,\n1940, while he wea on'leave. He\nhad a one-day honeymoon. He has\ntwo children, a son, Barry, and- a\ndaughter, Carol. He would appreciate any servicemen remembering\nautographing the guitar contacting\nhim at Fernie. .... \u25a0'-.\nREAD THB CLASSIFIED DAILY\nAre Specialists\nat Their Trade\nIN PARTICULAR:\nElectrical\nV t\nContracting\nBoth Commercial\nPrivate Residence\nSmith\nElectric\nPhone 258   645 Baker St.\nJlllllllllllllllllllllllllKlMllllllllllllllC\nDear Voter\nI'll work for you in Ottawa\nwith all my heart and Soul '\n\u2014for continuation of Good -\nGovernment \u2014 Sound Mono- -\ntaiy. Policial \u2014 Prestige.\nSincerely\nIAN \"CURLY1?\nSOMERVILLE\nLiberal Candidate\n'iiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiliiiiiiiiiini\n IS*f??^^\n^m^w^w^ti^^\nJtofltt lailtt N*itW F^y Special   '\n'  .  *\u25a0\u2022* .' \" .   1 Bui    BAM    nruitAM\nEitabllshed April 22. 1901\nBritish CoJumbia's\n'-.'.\"; Most \/nleresfing Newspaper\n.Publllhed every morning except Sundey by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n356 Baker Street,   Nelson,   Brltllh. Columbl*.\nAuthorised \u00ab* S*oond Class Mall,\nPost Offlc* Depirtmint, Ottawa,\n:' umouut or the Canadian press and\nTOl AUDIT BMtlAU Of OttOUtATIONg,\nFtfday, fitly 31,19$3\nV i ,1 i.n '    i   .        \"i        i \u201e\u25a0 i\t\n31.-6 Million Refugees\n. ^Jus't how restrictive U.S. immigration policy has become li not generally\nrecognised. Sine* the end of World\nWit II to the end of June, 1951, total\nU.S.. Immigration woa 1,080,804, only a\nfew thousand more than Canada, with\na tenth the U.S. population, has admitted since the war.\nThe refugee problem remains enormous. A U.S, Senate committee recently reported that there are 20 million\nuprooted unsettled unfortunates in\nWestern Europe whose plight \"right*\nfully demands the attention of the free\nworld.\".Ih West Germany alone there\nare 10 million refugees\u2014people who\nhave been shifted from their homes In\nterritories that were previously German or German-occupied. Another 1.6\nmillion are refugees from the Soviet\nwin* of (Jwmany. Nearly every epuh-\ntry of Western Europe has'its refugee\n\u2022problem, and some of them, lllce Italy\nslid The Netherlands, in addition, an\nurgeftt overpopulation problem.\n\u25a0 Easy Does It\nf 'After people Have reached 40 they\ni should be careful when swimming, on\n,'how they get Into the water. If the\nwater,Is cold, it Is better to go in\ngradually. In that way the blood gets\naccustomed to the sudden* drop in\ntemperature and no extra strain is put\non the operations of the heart.\nBut, if the Water is cold, if an older\nperson goes Jn 4jUlckly, there is apt to\nbe e sudden rush of blood that Will be\ntoo much for the heart to take. Heart\nfailure, and death follow even before\nanyone around is aware there is any\nttouble. Z,\n7 It does not matter how old the per-\n, son Js, getting ln the cooling water on\na hfit day is fun and pleasant. As long\nas.older persons take it easy and edge\nftheir^ Wfty in, there should be no\ndanger. The body accustoms itself to\nthe cold and everything Is all right.\n,    .-$00,000 Fathers Dead\n.;Whte the balance sheet of Korea\nis being toted up, there must be a\ncolurhn for the'600,000 fatherless children tad the 100,000 homeless orphans.\nTh* people of that unhappy land have\ngiveh ;up much in what, it is earnestly\nto be hoped, is the cause of eventual\npeace, and their suffering must not be\nftrgotten by those more fortunate, In\nCanada we have not felt the weight of'\nbombs, the .hopelessness of hunger or\nthe terror of being parentless and\nalone. We must Open Our hearts and\nour wialth to those who have suffered.'\nLine Them Up\nIf all the drivers who block the\n'alleys with their parked cars were laid\nend to end it would at least give more\nconsiderate .motorists a crack at them.\nBy  BOB  DENI80N\nVANCOUVER\u2014Moving from Slocsn City,\nthe smallest Incorporated city In the world,\nto Canada's third largest City has left me with\n\u00ab bid 6*1* of nostalgia. I'm strictly a country\nboy trom* Uttla country town;, this metropolis Is leaving me as cold as the stare of the\nw\u00bbltr,eis that serves me coffee every morning.\nIt U in tht) city of around 350,000 souls thtt\none can walk or rid* for miles and see no on*\nwho remotely resembles your little country\ngrocer, th* girl next door or the fellow you\nloaned ten buck* at the list Saturday dance.\nThey tell me If you wait long enough under\n\"th* big clock\" you arc sure to meet someone\nyou know; but, \u00abfter all,,who want* to grow\neld that way?\n* - .'\u25a0\" *     *\nYou hear a lot about Vancouver smog,\nVou dont, notice It, tnd you wondor why til\nth* holler, until you try wearing \u00ab white shirt\nth* second time.\n' *    '*' \u25a0\u25a0 *'\nSomething muit b* done about these four-\nengine transport and passenger plant* that\ntake off from Sea Island Airport. The*\/ aro\n\u2022low to gain altitude, and ihe other morning I\nawoke with a start feeling thit on* hid flown\nbetween the mattress and the bottom sheet.\n-I. ;?.. '7'; , . * ,:   *      *,f. ;\nA very joyous Sunday to oil, especially\n, those who haven't quite got over Tuesday.\nv    New Grus-ade\n.. Oen. Maxwell Taylor, who succeeded Gen-\n\u00abr*l:V\u00bbn?Fl\u00abet as commander ot tl-\u00ab fighth,\nArmy, had' an interesting comment to make\ntha other day on soldiers as.men of faith.\nImpressed by the number of chapels he\nsaw along the Korean front, he declared thtt\npeople at home might be surprised to tea th*\nextent of tho soldiers' interest in things spiritual,     f.: -\nMen of the sword, he continued, had\npropagated much of tha Christian faith, particularly during the Crusades; many cathedrals wtr* built by feudal baron* who wir*\nleaders ot soldiers. And today, he concluded,\nthe United Nations forces are in Korea \"be-\nceuse we believe there 1* * bettor world w*'\nc*n construct through our efforts,** soldiers.\"\nTo thla high-minded evaluation ot the Allied soldiers and their purpose In Korea we\nW6uld add a further distinction. There 1* one\ngreat difference between the .\"oriuada\" of\ntoday and the \"holy war\" of earlier centuries.\nWar Itself is now' generally regarded as essentially un-Chrlstlan, as (at best) a necessary\nexpedient In the defence of freedom rather\nthan * glorious virtu* In and of itself.\nTo th* pacifist who condemns war under\nany and all circumstances this mty stem a\nsmall distinction; but to the Christian soldier\nin the front lints lt may represent the difference between accepting the hideous destruc-\ntlon around him as part ot Ood'* plan for the\nworld and seeing it as th\u00ab-n\u00bbc\u00bbsS\u00bbry cost of\nhumanity'* failure to avail itself, collectively\nII individually, of the higher law of God,\nThe guns with which he resists the enemy's aggression-are not ths instrument* of\nChristianity.'BUt tha courags and faith he\nmay find in a bunker chapel-r-or in his own\nheart\u2014these are the Christian weapons with'\nwhich the good soldier may help to wipe war\nfrom the earth.\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nBLOWING BUBBLES\n\u25a0'   When youngsters grow up they should\nget ovee th* habit df blowing'bubbles and\nwaiting for briiks.\u2014Kitchener-Waterloo Hic-\netd.\n?Questibns?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Name* et persons\n\u25a0thing questions will net be published.\n. There li no chirg*. for thii \u00abervlee.\nQueitloni WILL NOT BE ANSWIRKD\nBV MAIL exoept where there I* obvloui\nneosiilty fer privacy,\nReader, Nolson\u2014Does on* h*ve to hav* a\npermit te make wines at home?  .\n, Yes. Apply at Customs Office, Post Office\nBuilding, Ward Streot. '\nF. P. W\u201e Cranbrook\u2014Believe you htvt a\nrecipe for miking raspberry vintgtr.\nWould you please repeat it?\n'To four pound* raspberries allow one\n'quirt good malt er whltt vintgtr, Choose\nrlpt, will colored and dry raspberries. Put\nthem into crock, mash, ind pour en the vinegar, then cover tnd leave tpr five or six d\u00bbys,\nstirring every day with sterling spoon. Strain\nthrough scalded Jelly bog er fine hair sieve\nand leave io drip without pressure. Mow measure liquid and allow on* pound of preserving\nsugar for each pint. Add sugar to juice, put\ninto preserving pan, dissolve over slow h*lt,\nbring to the bell ind simmer for ,10 minutes,\nRemove all scum, leave to cool, pour into\nwarm bottles end cork lightly,\nInterested, Troll-When did the first D* Hav-\nHand ,jtt-prep*ll*d passenger plane go\nInto r\u00abgul*r. *\u00abrvic\u00abt\nTlie World Almanac, published by the\nNew York World-telegram, states: \"Airplane\nhistory was mado ln 10B2 when tho De Havl-\nland Corporation of Britain placed jet-propelled transports into tho regular passenger\nservice, thui getting ahead ot American designer* by about tour yeiri.'TH* test flight in\nj\u00abt airliners wis made April 91,1952, when *\nCdmat carrying Sir Miles Thomas (chairman,\nBOAC) and 34 Official* \u00abnd newspaper men\nmade a flight to Rome and back ln tour hours,\n46 minutes. One way was two houn, IT minute*, tnd return, against held wind* wt* 13\nminute* longer, Tlie piths wu projected to *\nheight of eight mile* at 8000 f**t per Minute,\nThe'first regular jtt airline service to the\nworld begin May 2,1952, to South Africa. The\nplanes cruise at 36,000 to 40,000 fett it a spied\nof from 450 to BOO m.p.h,, and will carry 30.\nTo increase safety from fire, these Comets uie\nkerosene instead of gasoline!\"\nGeir^s of Thpu^lit\nENJOYMENT        ZZ'yy;\nWeeping' may endure for * night, but' joy '\ncometh ln thi morning.\u2014Psalms iOr-B.J^.'.:\n\u25a0  .'* . *   * .'\"\u25a0 .ZM'Z'\nPleasure is nought but virtue's' gayer\nn*me.\u2014YOung,\n. *     *     * \u25a0\u25a0 -\nWe have nothing to fear when Love Is at\nthe helm ot thought, but everything to enjoy\non earth and to heaven.\u2014Mary Biktr Bddy.\n* *  tit\nVic* poisons pleasure, passion falsifies it,\ntemperance sharpens it, InhocSrice purifies lt,\nbeneficence doubles lt, friendship multiplies it\n\u2014Chinese Ptoverb.\n*: - . *     *       .   f   .\nPleasure tasteth well aftir Sirvice.\n\u2014Thomas Fuller.\n* *      *.:':'  '\u25a0',\n, A man is the happier for lit* from having\nmade once an agreeable tour, or lived for any\"\nlength of time with pleasant people, or, enjoyed any considerable interval of Innocent\npleasure.-rSydney Smith,     ,      ' . ,.\n\u00ab     Your Horoscope\n'. .Work well and a fair measur* of sucoiss\nsnd good fortune is forecast. An energetic,\ncourageous, optimistic and witty personality\nIs suggested as likely for the child born today.\nIt's Been Said\nNo Star Is ivir lo**i We Once have, step;\nwe always may be what we might hav* bein.\n-Adelaide A. Pricttr. .\nWhere on Earth\nIt Item*-Ml\n?   Looking Backward\n10 Veam AOO\nFrom tht Nelion Dilly News, July 11,1943\n7 Hubert Radcliffe, manager Of the. Nilson\nbranch of the Bank of Montreal, tl leaving to\ntake over, the managership of tbi bank'*\nbranch at Trail, and his successor will be\nHtughton A, Doak of Winnipeg.'\n.. Mr. nnd, Mrs. J. Hopwood ana family pf\nVancouver b*V* arrived to tike up riUdihce\nit Nelson., Mr. Hopwood is th* CPR telegraph\ninspector here,  , ..'\nACt ' Warren Firguaon, RCAF, arrived\nhorn* from Edmonton to visit his parents.\n. 26YSAM AQO , ':\nFrom tht Nelson Dally Newi, July 81,1928\nGrading of th* Trafalgar School grounds\nand Construction of a terrace on the grounds\nwill ba undertaken by the City Department\nof Public.Worlu.in a month's time.\nBoyd ti, Affleck and K, A. Murphy, niw\nmembers ot the Nilson Gyro Club, wire welcomed into the' club by Gyro Jack Mortis.\nB0YEAR8 A60\nFrom the Nelson Dolly Ntw*) July 81,1908\nW. Brown of Nelson, who hts biin at\nVictoria ripresinting thi Nelson Aerie oi\nEagles, Is expected back to the city todiy.\nj. J. Malone hai bten chosen to attand tha\n\"meeting of thi Gr*nd Aerle ,*t Niw. York\nSept. H, .\"\u25a0\u25a0..-\u25a0\u25a0''\nGeirge Nurin tnd H. Amis, whll* rowing\nin from their Sumrtier cimp it Six-Mile;\ncaught, a handsome three-pound trout On a\ntroU. ;\u25a0 V?      ti'iy-ti,ti\nCats\n. A: est- doesn't bother -with pspir* thd\ndeeds, The alley cat pay be a sneak and l\nthief, according to human notions, but thit li\nIn sheer instinct for selfrpreservitjbn. Thi\nwell-fed cat, with i regular ratlin ot flih and\nmilk ind meat;-doesn't need papers because hi\njust takes it fof granted it is hit Hobs*, his\nfood, and the humans of the household ari\nthere to wilt upon him. He takes as 6 matter\nof right the ioftist chalf, the cintri of the\nbid, and If a meal ts lite he helps hlmsilf\u2014\nahd no senSi of guilt, but casting me*rtwhi|e *\nreproving eye dn his Slaves.\u2014Ottiw* Jourhil.\nIKJkUn'< garden, wea*Md, thai*\n\u25a0mrv tn, et htti, n* only draw-\ntalk wia tte* ite *_M pii-u*\nwere awnwuir. dl*b*m-l trom eo-\nJoying lta trult* Hut in Booth Af-\n, ilea today there uiata anothn kin*\net \u00abNt whlot*. -flliht *-*U qualify tor\nthe iMtebt titi*.-    ,\nThlt pr\u00abWt-4*7 bsoefaetor -\n**n*d th* baobab. It grow* d\u00abp\nlean, but hu stubby, abhMTUted\nWtMhat whleh an bairn of Mme\n\u2022sat of tM teat *M leek Ilk* toota,\nttu\u00bb gttlni rue to the n\u00abUtt m-\npentltlon thst IB aai*T i d**tt\nplanted tbt bMbtb* upslds down.\nThs timber Mb the bsobab It so\n\u2022oft that it Is timed attum. Ttt\nthe natlne ean uta the tree for\ntlrtuslly all tha neeeseltles et uni\nwater, toed, elothlng, iheltsr, and\nwen for pliea* of burial, in tM\nMnka of the baobib tn\u00aby gouge\nhoUowi wnere thiy eoiltct *nd\nMet* a ooplous water nipply. tM\ntrait M tM tm, which to essIM\nrw-boo-yu\", grow* in an elongatid,\ntough-laeketM pod thtpea roughly\nuse \u00bb modem ilqn-ti* bomb. Whin\nthe pod (till to the ground, tt\nbuitrta and acattora lta atiedt. The\ntrlbMmsn then gather tbtrn to\nmaki what they consider an tp-\npetWng gruel. TM leate* of tM\nteen they boll Into \u00bb green ttfittbit\nweembllng splnaeb or b**t 1**tm.\n\u2022Ih twrtt easily lendi ltwll to the\nmanufacture of strong, coarse cord\nind ftbrle*. But if the nstitt* ean\ncloths themuites from th* btobkb,\nthey can also lit* to it simply by\no*r\u00bblng cnambaa eat M Its tfufik\n_j*r\u00bb enough to aeoomodate a whole\nfamllr. Other eut-outi to other\ntn* an used for tempom-y **\u2022*\u00ab\u2022\npending lata* eswmonlM burial. .\nOo-mUtV UN, 14. T. RSIlU TllMU IM.\nTHANKS) ll.lniTr.ey, Chl-aso, III.\nUni t, n ftsrti H -Wlm* ft*!*!**,1!\nam M Mh r\t\nMichael O'Brien\n(AP) - MlCh\u00bb*l\nfinally  made  lt\nDo It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nToday's Bible Thowflht\nPaul did not favor wot-ith speaking in the churches, but hundreds df\ncolleges open to them ind a wialth\nof books and club* have raised the\nwisdom of women In modern tlmis\nto a degree that would astonish the\nancient saint.\nAnd If they Will learn anythlnj\nlet them- \u00bblk their hulbindi it\nhome,\u2014I Cor. 14*84, \u25a0\ndtuii dist\nIt ain't her bereavement that\nmakes men sorry for a good-looltln'\nwidow, Each one thinks it's a sham*\nshe ain't got a wonder like him.\nHONG KONG\nPatrick ,0'Brien\nashore. -\nAfter 10 months and 1! days, the\n57-year-61d mtn without a country\nThursday lefty the six-foot brig of\ntht Portuguese Macau-Hong Kong\nferry tee Hong. He travelled at\nleast 12,500 irtlleB\u2014the equivalent\nof i trip half-way round thi world\n\u2014sailing between the two ports.\n\u2022TILL NOT Flttl ':\u2022\u25a0::.\nBut the ex-bartinder and marine\nengineer wasn't going anywhere,\nyet. Pilic* took him in custody\nind refused to reveal their plans\nfor O'Brlin, . ,\nHis tflendi Said thty were trying\nto get him cleared for an unnamed\nSouth American country whir* his\nRusSiin wife and child are reported\nti hivi gone frOm Shanghai.\nAt yit thir* his been no ixptoft-\n*Uon as to how O'Brlin finally lift\nthi firry. ,'\u25a0 ,\nO'Brien boarded th* Ui .Hong\nin Macau Sipt. 18, 1852, aftir leaving Red China, At Ho'ng Kong. 40\nmiles away, authorities refused to\naccept his Red Cross travel papers\nand would net lit him debii-k.- So\nh* rod* and rod*.\nO'Brien Says he's an American.\nHe claim* hi didn't nether to get\n* passport whan hi went to Chin*\n25 years igo.\nThi U.S. state department denies\nhe's a cltiren. Apd th* U.S. justice\ndepartment said he was deported\nby the U.S. betaUsi of assault, robbery *nd burglw convictions, Th*\njuStici department Says his true\nhlihila Steve Ragin,\nA Utitted Nations official attempted to determine O'Brien's hi-\ntionality: His findings,' if any, were\nnevet made public.\nThere hive bein reports thit\nO'Brien wis born in Hungary and\nthit he took thi name of O'Brlin\nfrom twi brothers With whom he\nlived for a tlrni In the stati if\nWashington.\nSlippery Vletmlnhs .\nRemain at Large\nBAIGON (Iliutirs)-Two elusive\nVietminh bittiliihs operlttoi in\ntKi east Ciist ire* if Hue hive es-\ncapod their French pursuers again,\nmilitary observers said today, 7\n'- The French high command had\nliuntihid \"Operation Camargui\" ih\ntheir attempt to wipe Out ths 8000\nskilled Communist rebels northwest\nof Hue, Ten thousand French\ntroops encircled the aria tnd Converged on the centre.\nBut as the squeeze was put on,\ntho Communists just melted away,\nInfiltrating through thi French\nlines or literally going underground\nln a network Of secret hideouts.\nThe French high command announced thit th* operation hid\nended with inly some 800 Vietminh\ncasualties, t(K) killed and 400\nwoundid prisoners.\nNo Frtftih casualties htvi been\nannounced, but usually reliable\nsourcii isllmiti thtm at tftiut 100\nklllid jftd wbundid.    '.\nYonofsky Beaten in\nSecond Round\nGLASGOW 4CP)-Abe Yinoftky\npf Winnipeg lilt hi* Second-round\ngame ln ths Glasgow chess tournament Tuesday, He was beaten by\nyoung Jonathan Penrose of Britain,   -.\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0' '.\"'\u25a0'\u25a0 ,:\nThe loss, after hi*' opening-\nround victory in the seven-round\ntournament, dropped him Into a\nthree-way tie for second place with\none point. Penrose Is tied with two\nothers for the first place with XVt\npoints. \"\nSenate Beats All\nEfforts le Slash\nForeign Aid Bill\nWASHINGTON (AW-Th* Unit-\ned States Senate early today voted\n88,745,818,202 In foreign kid fundi\nto climax a- lBtt-hour session in\nwhich *11 efforts to slash the total\nwera rejected. But th* btli faced a\nnew fight with th* House of Representatives.\nSentta repristntttlvts must work\neut t compromlie settlement with\nthose ot the House, whleh pruned\nmor* than 81,000,000,000 from President Elsenhower's request for\nfundi to help th* trt* world combat communtim,\nA Sen*te-House conference committee will b* named to seek a compromise.\nBy .a' thumping 60-to-lO margin,\nafter bitting off six attempts to\ncut it down, the Senate stamped\napproval en i big money bill containing lomt $548,000,000 mort thin\nvoted by tht House.\nTht totil wu still $300,000,000 less\nthan requested by Elsenhower and\nsome $3,000,000,000 below what former president Truman asked lilt\nJanuary,      '...,'\nCircuses Have\nTroubles Too\nMOJ\u00bbCTpN, N.B. (CP)-A circus\nlouring the Marltlmes thiB week is\nhiving mor* trouble thin i thrower\nwith hiccups, though only an elephant h*l been hurt,\nA section of bleachers collapsed\nit th* climax of the show here recently, Twenty-five screaming patrons tumbled dowp amid spllntor-\ning boards. No one was hurt.\nEsrller in the d*y, two trucks\nof the King Brothers and CriiV\nHani Circus plummeted 88' feet to *\nmuddy river bottom \u00bbt Isgonlsh,\nnear Ituro, NiS.; when on* of the\nvehicles tldciwiptd tnd collapsed\nthe bridge.  ' \"\nThe tide wtl-out tnd both drivers esoped injury. :.,\nA polar bear, hippo ind tapir\nnearly escaped their cages nitr\nTruro Sunday wh*n \u00bb truck r\u00abm.\nmed into thi Kemptown bridge ind\nbounced off is th* bridge collapsed\ninto t river. No injuries.\nFour eltphint* cavor ted In\nspindly alder* *n hour later neir\n\u2022r&ubtmcidi*,\" N,' S\u201e \u00bbtt\u00abr their\ntrailer broke loose on a downgrade\nind crashed into the woods.   .\nA tough old elephant scraped its\nlii>- 7 ... , :][-  -' , ., ' f.'.-. \u2022'\nNewspapers Praised\nBy Hoalth Officer\nVANCOUVER 4Ci?>\u2014 Medlcil\nHeilth Officer Dr. Stewtrt Mumy\nThursdiy disagreed with t Vtncouver doctor who' llld Tuesday that\nB, C. newspapers and thtlr \"scare\nheadlines\" give the impression \"we\nart infested with polio.\" ' > \u2022'. \u25a0\nDp. Murr\u00bby,i\u00abld h* f\u00ablt ntw*.\npapers havo'been \"conservative In\ntheir handling of polio atorlei this\nyeir.\"\nH* added: \"Much good judgment\nhi* bein' shown, and I don't think\nthe position has bien overplayed.\nPeiple, demand information on\npolio, as there is * lot,of interna-\ntlinal discussion on toe dlsesse,\nand thiy want to know tha local\nposition;\" ~\nDr. Donald H. Paterson, pediatrician at General Hospital's heilth\ncentre tor children, Claimed polio\ngits,more unfavorable publicity ln\nB. C. thin anywhere else.\n\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0 - ti ' :' >,    '\nCanadian Soldiers\nUrged to Vote\n''\u25a0\u25a0' By_|U.;B<H|.-- ..\n.   C\u00abn\u00abdl\u00abn Priis Staff Writer\nOf tmtK\u2014^tth \u2014 Slgni \u00bbp-\npeored throughout the Commonwealth division ai'ea todiy urging\nCanadian soldiers to vote next\nweek in Canada's general election,;.   .,\n' The Korean armistice his greatly Simplified the problems of collecting the soldlir vote Aug. 8 by\npifmittlttg tht consolidation ot\nunit* in tidy arias, Originally lt\nwas planned to take thi vote it\nnight IA forward areas to ivold\nmovements by daylight' in sight Of\nthe Chinese, less than 1000 yards\niwiy.--7\nCoincideritally with the appearance ot the foad Signs, the first\nparty scrutineers reached the 25th\nCanadian Infantry brigade area.\nGen. Mark Clark, supreme UN Commander In tht Far Eait,\nsigns the Armlitloe dooumenli tt hli baie.eamp at Munian after\nthoy had bttn brought te him from Panmunjom. The chief negotiators flrat Initialed the dooumenti it Panmunjom, Others In picture\nunidentified,\u2014(AP Wlrephoto vli r*dle from Wtul ind Tokyo,) _,\nJohannesburg Stops\nTuli Reception\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\n(AP)\u2014Authorities cancelled a reception to be held at the city hall\nby. non-Europeans for Jake lull,\nJohanesburg native holder et the\nEmpire flyweight boxing championship. Police cold the city council In toll race-conscious city that\nthere m|ght be difficulty ln maintaining ordtr.\nStorms Set Back\nHALIFAX (CP)\u2014A m\u00bbjor recon.\nstructlon program will be required,\nto get the Maritime lobster fishing\nindustry back on its feet after de.\nttructiv* storms to lit* M*y^\nDescribed by many veteran fishermen as the worst they eould. ri\nmimber, gait* pounded the coast\nthroughout one weekend, wiping\nout. thousands of dollars worth of\ntraps, weirs, boats and other equip,\nment, ;...-:\nOperations practically ceased ind\nas a result prrcel rosi to their\nhighest level In years. \u2022 About tht\nmiddle, of June fishermen were\ngetting up to twice is much for\ntheir lobsters as they received last\nyear.\nThi federal fisheries department\nsent survey tifrns to assess the\ndsmage, and 'their Investigations\ncontinued for wejks. Fisheries Minister Sinclair promised Prlnci Ed.\nward Island fishermen that Ottawa would pay .thrte-quirtirt W\u00a3^\u00bba:\"j7A*;,V\u201e\u201ej\u201eP\/,'Vr,,7\"; tiinti,\ntheir reh*pllit\u00abtl.Sh bill. Fishermen ^S ^>.i ^v,'   '   ''*$ A\nAbove Balmoral\nPEKISKO, Alt*. (CP)-The Duk*\nof Windsor's EP ranch ln the Alberta foothills, 65 miles southwest ,\nof Cllgary, his gone back to com-,;\nmerclal cattle raising.\nFor 81 year* itter to* then Prince\nof Wales bougKt the 4000-acre ranch\nto 1018,. It w*s * purebred stock\nfirm, producing Shorthorn cattle,\nShropshire .and Hampshire sheep,\nCiydesdil* horses and thoroughbred running horses.\nAfter the Duke visited the EP\nranch ln 1050 with the Duchess hV\nWindsor, the property reverted to\ncommercial, cattle-raising, 'its. func4\ntlom before toe, Prince bought itj\nfrom Frank Beddlngfleld..\nFor years the ranch was managed 1\nbyJ>rof. W. L. CUlyle. After hill\nresignation is was-in charge of Pat]\nBurns agencies ind later Canadian]\nPacific Hallway's lind department,J\n' \"When.the Prince' of Wales vfcltedf\nCanada In 1919? he asked to sea\nsomething, of every type of lndue-J\ntry. It fill to Prof.; Carlyle, m\u00bbh,J\nager of the adjoining Bar V rand\nto play host as the-Bar U was conl\nSldered a worthy example of ;large|\nscale? well-organized ranching.\nA BEAUTIPUI. SCEN*       '\nDuring the long' walk, there wai\nmuch talk of stock.'raising aha\nrinch methods. It was Sept. U and]\na perfect tall day. The Prince anal\nprofess'or topped a high hill whlctj\nOnly 774,807 pourtd* Of weiner'*\nwere produced,'in Canada in 1952\ncompared with 1,887,072 pound* ln\n1082,     ,;.77\nin the other provinces sought simi\nl\u00bbr \u00bbsslst*\u00abce.\"\nAt one point on the P.E.I. coast\nfour lobster, btfftts were carried to\nsea and smashid by the Churning\ncitoberi.     ' \u25a0'\u25a0'\n8TAQ-ERINQ UOSSI8\nFrom Gabarous tp Glace Bay, oh\nCape Breton Islind, it wis estimated that more then 13,000 trap*\nWir* destroyed, Estimates of damage ranged from $25,000 to $60,000\nand almilar losses were reported\nfrom other sections ot the, Cape\nBreton coast. Some fishermen lost\n80 pit cent of their gear,\nAlso hard hit wis thi Northumberland Strait short, both in New\nBrunswick ind Nova Scotli. A fish'\nerlei protection Officer predicted a\n\"sharp decline\" ln New Brunswick\nlandings,\nUntil th* storm hit fishermen\nwiri hiving 1 good yiat, displti in\nupward revision in minimum size\nregulation! miklnt lt illegal to\nland lobster* -whose hbif shells\nmeasured less thin 2U  inches.\nthe increase, one-eighth of ah\ninch, was expected to' riduce\ncatches somewhat the first year but\nraise them; md make for bettor\ncatches in succeeding years,\npresent royal ranch? ,.\n\"Well,\" sild.th* Prince, Th\u00abv|\nalways considered Balmoral,\nprettiest spot on, earth but I neve,\nhope to see anything better tha:\ntoll.\"\nFurther conversation led to\nPrince's decision to buy the fan\nPrOf.  Carlyle  resigned   from  thl\nBar U to manage thi tlP.,, '    J\nIn the spring of 1050 the Du\nand Duchess of Windsor visited i\nproperty and It was decided tbi\nbark oh1 a commercial cattle vinl\nture rather thin stock lt again wltj\npurebred livestock,\nThe ranch now is partly stockel\nwith cattle of Hereford bteedinf\nSome puribrid sheep and iwtnf\nare also bilng raised.\nFAMILY REUNION\nOSSIN1NO, N.Y.  (AP)-An'*\u00bb\nconvict fitoir left Sing Sing prlScf\nafter saying goodbye to his t\njust arrivid as i prisoner In\ndeath house. John Martin, Sr, I\ncompleted  his  attempted  larceii\nterm. John Martin, jr., 18, arrivoj\nSOnie days before, under sentenj\nof death for taking part in the i\nbery snd'murder of a Brookljj\ngrocer.\n.J    -v.  ;'.' '\u25a0i:\\ '\".:> \u25a0' >\n-fc&dtm\n(\u25a0\u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb\nTHI8 Is one of the U,\u00bb, \t\nInflatable roconnnlssnnco boats, which Ii deiloi\nfor propulsion by outboard motori or by pnddltn\nIt li t nlne-min, 2460-pound oapaolt;        '     \"\nMarine Corps'.'\nIs oeili\nt \"\n - japioity\nlapsed, It weight 88 pounds; Inflated, 142 poundi.\nmd\n. .     -. .)\u25a0\u25a0\nmodel, Cof-\nShown In manotuvrei here. Its complement of. Mo J\nrlnoi, camouflaged and orouohed low, offer a small\ntarget to enemy marksmen as they travel at At\nkneti. '\u2022   ' 77\n\u2014C*intr\u00bbl Prais Canadian1\n W\/\nf\n\"li Payt To Buy Qualify\"\nWoman'* White Shoe\nCLEARANCE\nBetter 6r\u00abd* \u2014 Reg. to 113,95\n8ALer\u00ab9.B0\nWhit*  Buck  Pump end  Black\nend Wh||* Nylon Strep.\nReg. \u00bbM\u00bb. 8ALE $6.09   V\nSendeli, Strep*, and Pumps\nRen. *?..e. sale $9,98\nR. ANDREW\n& GO-\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1602\nTO EMPIRE 43AME8\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) - Aus\ntrails plan* to lend tt least -38 ath\nletes to tbe British Empire Games\nIn Canada next yeu. A preliminary\nbudget hit been mode for 10 track\nmen, Seven swimmer*, five cyclists,\nthree boxers, three wrestlers, three\nfencers, three weight litter* tnd\ntour rowers. .'.'.'\nCAL1FORNIANS . . . Mr. and\nMr\u00bb. H. W. ftose ant) Michael bt\nFresno, Calif., arq spending * holiday In Nelson, ind distriot.   >.'\n.1 ,,,\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0\nHOLIDAY .tif. Mr. and Mrs. W.\nWtlmsley, Vietorik Street, left on\nThursday fdr Vancouver and are\nplanning a trip from thoro to Hono-\n\u25a0''.\u2022' '\u25a0',i'\\* \u25a0'\u2022',\nFROM SPOKANE . . . Mr. llld\nMrs. Melvl_.0*rn*r tnd ftmlly tnd\n\u2022Mr. and Mrs. Fair-ton Wis* snd family of Spokane are holidaying on\nOi* North-Short. \u25a0\u2022     -\n\u2022\u2022'.\u25a0\u00bb  \u2666 ' \u2022    ..\nRETTON .. .Dr. *nd Mrs. E. S.\nSutherland and tholr niece, .Miss\nK*y Johnioii left- T>Hr*d\u00bby ' for\ntheir home In Peace River, Alt*.,\nafter visiting for the' put month\nfflktswtfofL\n\u25a0 f -.#-\u25a0\u2022-'\nPeanut Brittle ono*\nCocoonut Taffy Fan*!\nThis\n\"WEEK-END\nSPECIAL\"\nEspecially Concern* YOU\nCacoanut Taffy\n-..]\u25a0 'pri'ti: ;\u25a0\u25a0\nPeanut Brittle\n29ctheV.lbi\nA Delicious Candy for' Munch,\ning at the Show er Baseball\nComes,\n'\u2022    \u2022\u2022\u25a0.\n\u2022\"        '\u25a0*.'\u2022'\nMeet Veur Friend* it Rannljer's\nWhara Candy la * Speolalty,\nNet a Sideline    .\nRANNIGER'S\n. Candles Ltd.\n4\u00ab4\u00bb JAKIR ST.\nNelson, B. C.\nNelson Social\nin i \u25a0\u25a0' '\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\n.\"WONf 144\nVisitors from far and near are enjoying Nelson's sum-!\nmer weather.        \"   ,\nwith thtlr son and daughter-in-law\nMr. and Mrs. F. E. Sutherland, Willow Point. ,:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u201e.\n'.\u25a0,\u2022\u2022\u2022\n* IO SPOKANE ... Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Arcuro and. Stn Bernard *nd\nMl** Ida Cttenaco! are planning to\nspend the weekend in Spokane.\n\u2022 . \u2022 *\nBUTTONS.HOME'.. \u25a0\u25a0% H. 3tr-.\nv|\u00bb, Kerr Aptrtments, bas returned\nto hi* hom* from Kootenay Lake\nGen**-*! Hospital,' \"..'; 7\nHOME AOAIN ... Mr. and Mrs.\nF. E. Bradley and family have returned from t holiday In Edmonton.\n, \" ......    .'  \u2022\nrROM VANCOUVUll ... Mr.\nand Mr*. Robert Q. Gray ef Vancouver spent'list weekend with\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr,\nend Mrs, M. Isenor, Willow Point.\nDouble Ring Rites for\nFwtwMichet Couple\nNATAL \u2014 In a pretty wodding\nceremony tt Michel, Mary Bath of\nMichel, entered St Paul's Anglican\nChurch oh her father's arm to exchange vows with William James\nEokersley of Fernie. Rev. R.E.M.\nYcrburgh officiated at th* double-\nrlnl ceremony. ;. ,   .\u25a0\nThe bride wore a full-length gown\nAf lace and net over- satin. The\nlace bodice hod lily point sleeves,\nand seed pearls trimmed the heck-\nline and collar.- nit. full skirt hid\nalternating panels of lace tnd net\nA three-quarter length veil of.nylon net fell from her French style\nsatin bonnet. Tho bride carried a\nwhit* prayer book topp*d with b\u00bbby\nrosebuds, centred by * .whit* 'gardenia, with rosebuds tnd ribbons\ncascading from ths arnngtmant.\nShe wore th* groom'* gift Ot match-,\ning gold cross tarring* and neck,\nlaee.    ! .    \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\nMaid Of honor, Miss Ad* Btth,\nsister of the bride, wore a gown of\nyellow taffeta with t short Jacket\nand bustle-effect skirt, Her ohtpel\nveil fall from a heart-sh\u00bbped, pearl\nstudded net headpiece. She carried\na colonial bouquet of mauve-tint-\ned.carnations. Mrs. Evelyn Tennant\nbrfdt't-mttron, oho** * gown of orchid nylon'marquisette tnd lace\nwith matching net halo. She carried\na colonial bouquet of yellow roses;\nJunior bridesmaid, 'MisB Audrey\nMarkland, of Fernie, was attired in\ns pink mtrquiaett* gown with a\ntiered skirt ind wore a htlo of pink\nntt. Sha carried a colonial bouquet\nof red roses. Little Carrie Zuffa ot\nFernie, a cousin bt the groom, acted\nas flower girl. She looked charming\nin a full length pink organdie dress\nwith tiered skirt trimmed with pink\nand blu* satin bows. Sh* wore**\nquaint; wlde-brlmmed frilled bpn-\nnet Of organdie ind lac*. Her nosegay waa of red baby'rosw. Billy\nMorey of Calgary, waa chosen as\nring-bearer. He orrled a.white satin: cushion with tht ring* tied ln\nihe centre of * satin bow.\nThe groom's brother, Mr. Roy\nEckersley of Fernie, waa best-man\nand groomsmen were Mr. JoeYeto-\nvich tnd Mr.tRonald Bath. Mr. Harry Bath Jr., acted as usher.\nI The brldo sm'othe'r wore * navy\ncrepe dress with Pink accessories\nand tht mother of the groom chose\na nylon dress of patterned whit* and\ngrey \"wit hyallow accessories,\nDuring the signing et the register, Miss v\u00ab*n'Markland of Far.\nnie.*\u00bbng and\/Mrs, Florence Laurie\nwas it the organ. ,    ,.\nReception was held. in the St.\nPaul's church hall for 120 r*l\u00bbtlves\n\u2022nd friends. Mr, Roy Bckersloy, .is\nmaster ot ceremonies, colled upon\ntb* bride's uncle, Mr, John Cannon\nto propose the tout to his niece.\n' Mis* Markland' sang \u2022 two selec\ntions, accompanied on the piano by\nMr, Bernard Keeling of Natal. After\nth* wedding supper dancing wa*\n\u2022nJoy\u00abd.    \\\nTha couple motored to Greot Falls\ntnd othtr points for their honey\nmoon. On their return, they will\ntike up residence In Fernie wHere\nthe groom Is 'employed.\n. Out-of-town guests, Included Mr,\nand Mrs, Le* Smith and family of\nNew Westminster, Mrs, W. Morey\nof Calgary, MrsvS. Crowe *nd Miss\nL. Arthur ot Fort Mscleod, Mr. ind\nMrs, J. Galloway of Galloway,,Mr.\nand Mrs. J. W\u00ab|r of Crow'* Nest,\nMrs. W. Pleton of V\u00bbnoouv\u00abr, Mr.\nAngus T*pp\u00bby.0f Bellevue, Alta,,\n*(r. and Mrs. R. Bath, Mr. and Mrs.\n.. Markland, Mr. and Mrs. J. Pal-\nlone, Mr, and Mrs? J. Eckersloy, Mr,\nand Mrs: J. Tavern*, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Hartlty, Mr, and Mrs. A. Whal-\nley, Mrs. S. Hartley, Rev. and Mrs.\nYerburgh, Mrs. Gray and daughter\nP*t, Mr. *nd Mrs. R. H\u00abrtlty, Mr.\nand Mrs. J; Anderson, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Cannon and Mr. and Mr*. W.\nLaurie, all of Fernie. t\nIn * ceremony held recently In\nGutrdlen Angeles Church In Van-\ncouver, Jane Dirrtll. Chambers,\ntwin daughtor of Mr, ind Mrs. A,\nCh*mbers ot 469 5th Avenue, Kim-\nberley, became the brld* of John\nHenry Lee of Vencouvor. Th* nup-\ntiil mass wu stld by Rev. Father\nF. Clinton.   titi.\nTbe brld* wore white eyelet organdy over gleaming satin in *\nballerina length gown, with fingertip veil, bordered with French Itce\nand a lilac headdress holding the\nveil. She carried.a bouquet of red\nroses.\nMrs. L. E. Johnson, elder sister\nof the bride, was matron of honor;\nwearing a ballorlna gown of embossed organdy in mauve, with a\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 31. 1913 \u2014 I\nFamilies Joined\npicture hit. Sh* carried mauve Iris.\nShevanne Johnson tnd Donna Wood,\nacted as flower, girls, wearing\nmatching dresses of embossed organdy in yellow end green.\nMr, Lewis Wood attended th*\ngroom and MT, Lawrence Johnson\nwas usher.\nA wedding breakfest was held at\nth* homt of tht bride's sister ind\nan afternoon reception followed.\nTh* brld* wore * grey baud'*\nmatching stole with white accessories and a red rose corsage for\nthe honeymoon to b* spent in\nBanff.\nThe couple will reside in Vancouver where the groom 1* employed tn the office of the Canadian\nI ?aclflc Freight Department\nBattle of the Hemline\nAgain in Full Swing\nLISTER\u2014Lister and Blooming.\nStsk., f\u00abmi'lles were linked with the.\nmarrlege In Trinity United Church\nIn Creston of Eleanor Loretta Gorrill and Leroy W, Tompke.\nTha bride Is the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.' G. Gorrill of\nLister, and th* groom la th* \u00abln**it\nson of Mr. tnd Mrs. E. Tompke of\nBlooming. The couple repeated\nwedding vows before Rev. A. 0,\nMcNeil ...  \u2022\nGiven to marriage by her father,\nth* brld* looked lovely in * str\u00abp.\nlea* frosted nylon tulle with matching jicket, Peter P\u00bbn cellar, \u00bbnd\nIlly point sleeves. Th* skirt' was\nbouffant style. Her full-length veil\nwas held ln place by a lice coronet,\nind she carried * bouquet 6t red\nrosea.\nTh* matron of honor, Mr*. ,A\nGorrill, sister of tha bride, wore *\nstrapless gown ot yellow net ahd\ntaffeta, with * matching bolero.\nHer rhlnestona necklace and earring set was a gift of the groom,\nund various summer bloom* were\nln her Colonial bouquet. Bridesmaids were Miss Doris Gorrill ind\nMiss Shirley Gorrill, cousins ofthe\nbride, who wore strapless (own* of\npink' and blu* net over taffeta,\nwith matching bolero*; They car-\nrlad Colonial bouquets. The flower girls, Joan Ann and Susan Gorrill. oouslns of th* bride, were\ncharming in eyelet embroidery over\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR \u2014 Mrs, Henry Stobrle\nand two small daughters have left\ntor * two-week vacation, to vl*lt\nrelatives at Saskatoon and Drum-\nheller.\nMr. and Mrs. Sacco and baby of\nCrow's Nest are visiting friends\nhere.\nMr. ind Mrs. B. Kiernan of Creston, Mr. G. Olson of Spokane, R\nHookw and Mr. ahd Mrs, W. P*vl*\ndoff and daughter bf Edmonton\nwere weekend visitors\" to\" Mr. and\nMm, R. Help.  *\u2022-. '\u25a0'\nMiss Gertrude Rehmann, was'the\nSaest of Mil* Joan M'cGregor it\nrawford Bay for a few days.\nSunday School Goes\nOn Beach Picnic\nNEW DENVER-Knox Presbytor-\nian Sunday School held a successful picnio at the sanatorium beach.\nSwimming, games md softball\nwere ongaged in by the children,\nand ibout 40 children and parents\nJoined ln \u2022 wiener roast at which\nmarshmallows tnd lea cream were\ndistributed. The picnic was under\nthe supervision of Rev. A, D, Mc-\nKellar and Mrs, J, A. Greer.\n. NEW.DELHI (CP. - A fisheries\ntraining school snd cold-storage\nplant art being-established at Cochin at part of a fisheries development progrim on India's west coast.\nThe school will train fisherman\nIn modi ) methods md hindllng of\n'vessels.    \u25a0'\u25a0 '\nNews of the Day\n* RATES: SOe line, 40c lint black faoo type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two Unas. 10% discount fer prompt payment\nDANCING NINE TO ONE\nPLAYMOR SATURDAY\nSheffield Bronte Powder\u2014J0c tub*.\nBURNS LUMBER CO,\nEAGLES SOCIAL MEMBERSHIP\nOLUB MEETS TONIGHT.\nTop-flight sho* repairs, at\nTONY'S REPAIR. SHOP.\nlee our fine selection ef\nSILVER DEPOSIT\nGLASSWARE\n0   Bonbon*        %  Vases\n\u2022  Bowls\n%  Sandwich Plate*\n\"NELSON'S\nDIAMOND\nHEADQUARTERS\"\nCollinson's\nJEWELLERY\n561 Baker St.\nPhone 120\nDR, BROCK 4Chlropractor). 32 yrs.\npractice) experience. Phone 644-R.\nHunting md Fishing Llconce*.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop.\nBaby budgies juit off th* nest,\nSpecial $8.03 each.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nNew ladle*'. housednsses,  good\nvariety, including half sites, $2.06.\n' CHILDREN'S SHOP\nI only all wool bathing suits.\nSins 2 and 4. Regular $3.98 for 4Jc.\n. \u2022'\u25a0TOTN'-TIIN WOP\nFurnace* and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\nPhene 1541-L. ,\nCtn* for your ctnnlng. 2 tnd IH\npound *ltt, inside *ntm*ll*d and\nplain. Burpee em sealing machines.\n. f.     HIPpBRSON'S\n! i Tt\" YOU HAVE SCRAP JdETAL\nTO SELL, COLUMBIA TRADING\nCO. IS THB PLACE, 802 FRONT\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix It\nthrow it \u00ab*\u00ab-*y ffttch work promptly done ond fully, guaranteed  at\nreasonable price*\nDon't throw away your, old Urea\nTrade thtm at \"*\u25a0-\nSUPERIOR   MOTORS\nTire Department\nCover  your  kitchen  and  bathroom walls with th* new Quaker\nwall cover.,0 colors to choose from.\nEisy to lnstsll yourself. ;\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nPARIS 4AP)-Elsa Schiaparelli.\none of tht top Ptris tsshion designers, defied Wednesday the Dior\nedict for short skirts md lengthened her dresses to tbout IS inches\nfrom th* floor, even longer thon\nlist year.      7\nChristian Dior, who startled th*\nfashion- world in 1947 with the\n\"N*w';'Lopk\" \u00bbnd long dresses,\npulled another surpris* Tiusdiy by\nshortening skirts tp just below the\nknee, or about 16 Inches from ths\nfloor.       > \"       '\u25a0'-,\nDefiant of Dior, too, was ona of\nLondon's top fashion-setters, Norman Hartnell,-dressmaker to the\nQueen. Ho told newspaper men that\n\u00ab* far is he's concerned. Madam'*\nhem Is going to stay where- it .Is,\n\u2022bout calf length.\n''Celt length la the moat graceful\ntor. * woraan'e skirt*; anything\nshorter 1* ugly,\" add Hartnell,\nBritish .fashion writer* also took\nDior to task and advlatd, on the\nfront pages of several newspapers,\nJust to Ignore the whole thing.\nParis took \/Dior's Innovation\ncalmly, but ona French fashion\nwriter observed that \"the war of\nlength Is being fought on V8 fi-nti-\nmeters ii the Korean was fought\non tha 38th parallel.\" '\"'\n\"A ntw Parisian girl is born at\nChristian Dior,\" added the Writer.\n\"She is small, sort of chubby, and\nshow? her calves.\"\nWhile ho other Paris hpuse has\ny\u00abt gons to the Dior extrem*,\nshorter skirt* seem to be the Coming thing.\nJacquea Foth has shortened his\n0Jim. 14fL OJlik\nWkJiian, Wsudbh\nhemlines by nearly two inches to\na level of 14 Inches.\nJean Desses has followed th*\nsame trend. But Jacques Helm and\nSchiaparelli have put out new\ndresses that show no mor* leg than\nthose; of; laat y*'*r. '.>-,.-\nSoma edii: touches In Schlapa-\nrelli's clothes included hats like\nlacquered Japipes* lialrdos,* ahdi\nmultiple - string necklaces worn\nhanging down th* back. She also\nhad chromium pocket flap* and\nlizard skin collars,, and a Jacket\ntail folded and pointed like an\numbrella, and cat fur for collars,\ncuffs and linings,\nNEW YORK: APPAUEP\nNEW YORK (CP) >- Parisian de-\nsigner Christian Dior's new knee-\nlength skirts brought sounds.of\nhotter from most New York designers Wednesdsy. \u25a0 . ' :. 7...\n-United -State* tlress tntnufwtur'\ners, caught with their skirts down\nand fall collections already in, the\nworks, intend to keep them that\nWay, \u00bb survey of representative\nspokesmen for the fashion Industry\nshowed. 7.\nTypical comment came from Emily Wllkens, designer of Junior\nclothes: \"If American womeri' \u2022*\u25a0\ncept knee-length aklrt* again they\nar* ora*y..', ....       .. ',\n\"Th* fl*pp*r illhouett* cant ba\nflattering to iny womin, no matter\nIf she has legs like Marlene Dietrich.\" ' 7 . ' .'\nHink satin, with their Colonial bou-\n\u00ab*t\u00bb. \u25a0\nMr. Ptvt Powell of Vancouver attended th* groom, md Mr. Vernon\nGorrill ond Mr. Nolson Foas u*h-\n\u2022red. Mi** Leona Roebuck sang\nduring the aligning of the register,\nwith Mrs. W. Fraser-as organiit.\nTh* bride's mother was attired In\na navy sheer dress with white dots\nond white accessories, md \u25a0 corsage of whit* roses,\nA hundred pod thirty guests. attended the reception In Legion hall,\nwhere Mr. J. Bird, proposed tht\ntollt to tht brld*. The bride's table\nwas centred with i three-tier wedding cake, embedded in pink full*\nand flanked by. whit* taper* . in\ncrystal holders. Later, a reception\ntor' 200 persons wss htld In Deer\nLodge hell.\n..'Fer travelling the brld* chose *\nshrimp red dressmaker suit of\nrtyon md orlon, with white accessories and a corsage of whit* carnations.' ,:\"\nAttar a; honeymoon ln Saskatche\nwan and the United States, the\ncouple will take up residence in\nVmcouver.\nOut-of-town guest* were Mr. md\nMrs. Wilbur Gorrill and two daughters, Hans Heydabreck, Dave Powell and C, Parker, all bf Vancouver, Shirley, Stewart \u25a0 and Wilbur\nGorrill, Mr. ond Mrs. Bob Boln and\nMr, and Mrs. V, Gorrill and daughters, all of Cranbrook, Mr, and Mr*.\nNelson Fobs of Winnipeg and MT.\nand Mrs. Alvin Gorrill of Wardner.\nChilian's\nWADING\nPOOLS\n8l*ea 42\" to 78\"\nPriced from $3.98\nHour* of fun tor your youngster*\nmn mm \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u00bb *'\n%iadlwia$L\nLove .Problems\nDrihjking Mother Problem\n\u25a0    . V \u2022\u2022;\u25a0.''-\"'.        '$' ' ' . *-  *\nFor Teen-Age Daughter\n\u2022V JANE A*tXIN86ff,\nDear Miss Atkinson:\nI am a girl of high school age, md\nmy mother his. beep divorced from\nmy father for several years. I hay*\ngot used to being Without my father,\nbut what I can't get used to is the\nway my mother is acting now. Sha\nis going with * man who work* out\nof the city md Just corns* her*\nj -ery. two or thre* -yreek*, When\nhe comes to see my mother, they\nboth l*t drunk, it'i* bid enough\nwhen they just stay Jn the house\nmd drink together, but when tbey\ngo out and other people sea them\nI om ao .ashamed, I think everybody\nIn town talks about thtm, I'm Mured to. say anything about it to tty\nmother, eo perhaps you could tell me\nwhat to do about them.       P.J.\nDearf. J.i '     *\u2022 i     *    v -    ,\nThis is too big a problem tor' *\nteen-ager to h'andl* all alont, and*'I\nthink you ahould discuss it with\nsom* older person you like md\ntrust.\n, Since you ny that you think\neveryone hi town know* about this,\ntt seems to me' you would not need\nto feel yoo would be betraying any\nconfidence if you did talk lt over\nwith someone. Perhaps one of your\ngirl friends has * mother whom you\nlike and who you think Is just the\nsort of mother a girl should have.\nIf so, then I suggest that you ask\nher. if you eould talk to.'her \u25a0 about\nyopr home problem. Think oyer\nall the:mothers you khow andsee\nif there isn't one you. feel you could\ngo to for advice without feeling'toilDBESS.\nself-conscious.about It,\nTry the plan, I have suggested,\nand I think through It you may get\nsome help. I'm sure that you'll feef\nbetter, at least, if you have talked\nabout your problem with'some kino?\nond understanding older person.\n. OAY FRUIT CROP\nAll your favorite fruits tp embroider on kitchen towelsl   'Your\nfavorite* easy' stitches too, .you'll\nhave these done in no timet\nJiffy motifs are such fun, so gay!\nThey add color and beauty to your\nkftchen. Pattern 774: trmafer; \u00ab\nmotifs 4H x tVt Inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needrecratt Dept, 288 Baker'\n9t? Nelson. Print plainly PATTfiRN\nNUMBER, your NAME  and,.AD-\nEXGITING VALUEI TenVyes TEN\npopular, new designs to crochet,\ns*w, embroider, knit\u2014printed, right\niii the Laura Wheeler Needlecraft\nBook,. Plus many mor* patterns to\nsend for \u2014.Ideas tor gifts., bazaar\nmoney-makers, fashions! Send 25\ncents (or your copyl\nPOR ELECTION INFORMATION\nPHONE 1898 -,\nLIBERAL HEADQUARTERS\n42S BAKER ST;? NELSON   -\nVOTE.FOR CURLY 80MERVILLB\nW* *r* preptred to tike on any\nbuilt-up  or  asphalt  roofing . Job\nSid* wall shingle* md thakoa All\nInquiries .promptly attended to.\nD   B   Merry Lumber Co., TraU\nAPPLICATOR!\nGreen Cross Livestock Bomb,\n(Concentrated Spray). On* bomb\nsufficient to ipray 200 cows. Effective against, housefliu, horn\ntilt*, stable flies tnd mosquitoes.\nHIPPERSON'S\nNine piece walnut bedroom suite,\nwith swing back mirrors. Sacrifice\nat $174.95.\nWo buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -, \u2022*>'\u2022 Wst-    '\nJ Corner, provincial apiarist will\ngivt -; m apiary demonstration tt\nTeagu*'* Apiary *t J3J4 Houston St.\n.it 6:30 tonight Lacture and picture*\nat Women's Institute room, Civic\nCentre, 8 p.m. All Interested\nhetrtlly welcomt.\nCARD QP THANKS\nMr. Lou Jennings and Family\nwish to thank their friend* and\nrelatives tor the many beautiful\nfloral tribute* In our recent bereavement. Also, Mrs. Garrett of\nKaslo, Doctor Berera, and nurses\nof the Kaslo Victorian Hospital,\nPHONE' 144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nWEEK'S 8EWINQ BUY\nSo pretty \u2014. S\u00abw-E*syl For sun\nV tain, whip' up thl*. wondkr back-\nwrap ln an afternoon, Add the au-\ngar-and-splca embroidery in Jiffy\ntime. Daughter will lev* lti Make\nthe shorte. version In denim\u2014It's\na smock for flnger-p\u00bblntlng hours.\nEasy to iron, too. v\nPattern 0155: Children'* slses J,\n4. 8, 8,10. Site 8 dr\u00abM SH yards 85-\nInch. Embroidery transfer.\nThla easy to-use pattern gives\nprrfect tit' Complete, Illustrated\nSaw Chart snow* you every Step\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS <85o)\nin Coihi (stamps cannot b* accepted) for thla pattern, Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADttRESS. STYLE\nNUMBER,\n''Said your \u25a0 order to IBERIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson News. Pat-\nmn Dept, Nelson\nReduce and Eaf\nNourishing Food\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\ncountless dverwdghts writ* thtt\nthey get so disqpurtgid and disgusted. Thty hive tried again and\nagain to diet, only fo ba forced to\ngo back to regular eating bocau'se\not thit all-gone feeling.\nIf you are on* Bt those overweights who roally want to reduce\nbut are never able to stick with th*\ndiet, lot's talk lt over. Flrat oft, stop\nblaming yourself for lack ot will\npower and get at.the.root of tht\ntrouble. What kind of diets have\nyou tried? Th* majority of popular\nreducing diets era woefully inadequate on the nutrition score and\nresult in lessened energy. Nothing\nweakens will power like t ptrals-\n\u2022tent hunger. And in a sense, thll it\nfortunate, for if you were (bit to\nStay on a faddy diet for my length\nbi, tlmt, you could do irrepinble\nharm to your health.\nThere ia an insidious w*> in\nwhich faddy diet* do harm and thit\nIs . , . repeated failure with dieting\ntend* to fix the thought In your\nmind that you (Imply, cinnot reduce, tnd thert 1* no use trying.\nThl* time, instead' of dieting, tat\nto lose weight Tha science of nutrition makes It possible to hiv*\ngood food without going hungry\nwhile turning the stored fit bick\nInto energy, Scientifically planned,\nlow-calorlo f\u00abre seems almos't maglo\nin its results, You lose weight without feeling we\u00abk or depressed , . ,\nand gain in entirely new \u00abnd optimistic outlook on reducing,\nThl* li not the ssme as promising\nthat you won't hav* hungry moments. But let me uk you one question: Could you. (tick with * ntt\nand slimming way of eating for flvt\ndays It you knew for sure thtt by\nthtn you would bt tatlsfitd tnd\nhappy with thl* scientific pith?\nYou will be! Th\u00bbt 1* a promls*.\nWhtn ^ou first cut down on the\namount of food normrtly consum*d\n*t a mail, th*r* will be empty\nspsces, for hunger I* \u00bbppeased whtn\npressure Is exerted igilnst th* w*lls\nof th* stomach, but ar less food 1*\neaten, th* stomach slowly contracts,\nand glory be, appetite shrinks with\nit.; \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   :.;\u25a0\u25a0:.-,\u25a0\u25a0,   \u25a0  \u2022'\u25a0.;\u25a0 \u25a0\nWhen you eat to lose weight on a\nprotective diet, not t slngle-nutrlcnt\nla missing. Therefore, you. do not\nfeel weak or get the dieter's blues.\nYou will power strengthens, and\nwith success comes a wonderfully\nrewarding sense of achievement,\nNew Denver,\nNSW DENVER - Miss Phyllis\nDover ot Vancouver 1* guest of Mr,\nahd Mra, Gprdon B. MacLean.\nMrs. William D, Stephen .has returned to her horn* from Whitehorse\nYukon,, where she visited her husband, W, D. Stephen tnd went trom\nthere by plm* to Vmcouver to be\nit tha bedside of her mother, Mrs.\nW. J. Roberta, ef'.Ktilo In Vmcou-\nver General Hosplttl, before her*\ndtith.   :  .77\nMr. and Mrs. J. Westley Coulter of\nToronto \u00bbre guests ot Mrs. Coulter's\nsister, Mrs. S. C. Robinson md fam-\nlly. - ..''\u2022\u2022. :\u25a0\u25a0 :\u25a0 ..,\nMis* Elisabeth Donald who Waa\nvlaitlna her sister, Mrs- M\u00bbr|-\u00abr*t\".\nDoyle to; twd^monthi, h*s r*turn*d\nto Vsncouver,     '-,.\nI \" \u2014 isn's'l '_,-_--\nWOMEN'S WHITE DUTY\nOXFORDS\nMad* of soft smooth elk uppers\nwith medium wedge heels and\nneolita soles for added wear. Perforated vamps for coolness.\n,    Sliea 4-10 - Widths  AA-B-E\n\u2022\"    $5^95\n411 Boker St.\nPhone 1114\nIT GRILLS-IT RAKES\n.     IT BARBECUES\nIT'S A SMART NEW\nMoffat Gas Range\n\u2022 PAST, ECONOMICAL\n\u2022 EXACT HEAT CONTROL\n\u2022 EASY CLEANING\n\u2022 SMOKELESS BROILING\n\u2022 COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC\n\u2022 X-RAY OVEN WINDOW\n\u00ab OVEN LIGHT\n\u2022 MINUTE-MINDER\nBarbtcutd m\u00abat\u00bb cooked by the low tamperaturo radiant\nheat method, preserves all the natural, delicious juices -\ndon't shrink nearly so mueh either 'have a wonderful,\nfull flavored, greaseless goodness that's hard to beat.\nYeu Can Have One of Theje Modern Beauties for as Low as.\n$47*50 down\nS32 BAKER ST.\nYPUR HOME PLANNING CENTRE\nPHONE 1S5S\nv\n 6 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NlWS, FRIDAY, JULY 31,19S)\nFamous Three StoogesPredictiRun\nOf OldrFdshioned Slapstick Films\n'\u25a0A.. By BOB THOMAS\n... HOLLYWOOD 4AP)-The last of\n'(he short - subjicta comedians has\npredicted a return to the brief comedies that used to be on every\nmovie program.\n'The sole remaining, practitioners\nof a noble craft\u2014the one-reel and\ntwo-reel comedies\u2014are the Three\nStooges They still are playing the\nfield that gave stardom.to Charlie\nChaplin, Harold Lloyd, Buster Kea-\nLavish Fees for\nliberal Lawyers\nLibertl   Prim*   Minister   St\n. Uuttmt protests he cinnot eat\n.; taxes, but sllll his parly paid\nIn legal feeii    ...\" -\n$174,000.00 4o W.C. Thomson,\n(S4f0.00t DAY For fourtc-n\n, I monthi).0 Mr. Thomson It ex-\n'\u25a0\u25a0'. Itad.r ol the 'Ontario Liberal\nPer\"*.\nJ53.859.00 to Norman\nMatthews, ($17,953.00 a y*r\n-for (hrei years). Mr. Matthews\nti.k President ol, Ihe Ontario\nLiberal Assoelallon.\nConsarvatlves can eut YOUR\n\u2022  \u00abax\u00ab by $S66,0b0,000.00 without Impairing defenee, pensions\not social security.\n\u2022 The issue is\nYOUR MONEY!\nWE\nMcRAE\nThos. Alexander\n' --'V     , f. \u2022\ntruerled by Ihe Progressive\nConservative Party of Canada\nPC-18\nC. Fields, Fatty Arbuckle,\nand   Hardy   and   ether\nton, W.\nLaurel\ngreat*.\nSince to* deaths of Edgar Kennedy and Leon Errol, the Stooges\nare the only comics left in shorts\nseries. They now are celebrating\ntheir 20th year in shorts by making\nsome 3D subjects.\nCOMING  BACK\n('Comedy shorts are coming back,\"\nobserves Moe- Howard, the guy in\nthe middle who deals out the\nknocks to .toe ether two.'\"They've\ngot to. Tito studios are going in tor\nbig productions. That means they'll\nhaye to round out the theatre pro.\ngram with a news, cartoon and-com-\nedy.\n\"And line* so. many of toe big\npictures are -, dramas, .that means\nthey'll need some comedy relief to\nbalance the bill.\"\n. .The Stooges' comedy Is * relief\nto everyone but themselves, ^hey\ntake a terrific beating. Although\nMoe generally bop* hi* partners, he\nis the one who usually gets hurt to\nthe fiVming. Since he plays the\nbully, he generally get* his just\ndeserts in some violent manner.\nATTACK DIGNITY\n\"I cracked up three of my rib* In\none scene,\" says Moe.\n'\"Another time I nearly broke my\nfoot I was nearly blinded three\ntimes\u2014once with' lampblack,, ohce\ngranite dust and another time yrito\nmud.\"\nMoe says one of the reasons .their\ncomedies have succeeded over the\nyears: \"It's the downfall'of dignity.\nThe \u25a0 thing* \"we do to dignified\npeople i\u00bb something awful. I think\neverybody flkeVtc-laugh at that\"\nTemplar Of fers Land\nFor Dead Guerrillas\n' KUANTAH, Malaya lAK-HijJj\nCommissioner Gen. Sir Gerald\nTempler Thursday offered villagers\nin' Jabor VMley.'.one of Malaya's\nrichest rubber areas to South Tren-\ngannu State, one 'tore, of land for\nevery Communist guerrilla killed\nas a result of information coming\nfrom .tbenV\nHe made thcotfer during a tour\nof the state. Templer told the villagers of Jabor Valley \"it is not an\noffence to itnS' fptjd Jpver to a\nCommunist if he sticks a gun into\nyou. But it is an offence not to tell\nthe police about It,\"? 7\nft*4*lMit**fo*pH*?00e6\ni\nlliiii:*\nBlonde Bedroom Suite\nMr. and Mrs. Dresser \u2014 Chiffonier \u2014 $| QQ\nBed4' 6\" _____\u2014______ * * * *yy\n,90\n2-piece Chesterfield Suite\n\u2022 Airfoam Rubber     \u2022 Excellent Frieze (itaA  fa\n\u2666 Modernistic Styling. Reg. $279.50. 8ALE.^_i*t7.VW\nFEED-N-PLAY TABLES. Babee Tenda       $nQ.50\n$tyie. '-Hours'of rest for mother.\" _J_ _t3f.\nFully Upholstered ROCKER\nSpecial - $49.50\nJj REFRIGERATOR, 7.4 Cg. Ft. 5 Yr.    $\") \u00a3Q-SO\nS3guararitee.; SPECIAL _^ -. _' -LQ7\n. .,, .    Plui 1 Kitchen Utility 8et FREE\nSl-ULLY AUTOMATIC REFRIGERATOR. 10.7 out ft\n( .fiRegular $496. August Speolal .......,..,.,\u201e.. :........::..ti\n$395\n\"REGLOR\" CALIFORNIA POTTERY\nLAMPS \"TRES ARTISTIQUE\"\nBABY STROLLER Special $10.50\nSun-Lite\nFOLDING LAWN AND PATIO FURNITURE\nCLEARANCE SPECIALS!\nLino Remnants-Reduced Prices\n9x1b*\/-: RAYMOrf RUG.\nReg. $119.69. SPECIAL\t\n$94.50\nHome Furniture Ltd.\n640 BAKER ST\nPHONE 1032\nCobalt 60 From Chalk River Keeps\nFood Fresh for Years; Germs Die\n\u2022\u2022\/'\u2022\" By AL EA8TMAN\nCentral,Preii Canadian\n\u2022 '..-','   Correspondent\nANN ARBOR!, Mich.-Scientists\nat .the University of Michigan are\nexperimenting with \\yhat they,\ncall the. \"icebox\" Qf the future.The\nprototype 1* made of concrete, holds\nhundreds of gallons of water' and\nweighs several tons.  '\nIts heir, perhaps some dey to be\ngold on the mark* to homeowners,\nmight be * steel or aluminum box,\nlined with lead fil and \"powered\"\nsimply by a slender rod of radioactive cobalt.\n\" The \"icebox\" of the future will\nnot be cold. But it will be more efficient, run sllent|y without an outside source of power, will require\nno maihtenance, and food* taken\nfrom it will be fresh-tastiftg and\nmore beaiithful. \"\u25a0*',-   s\nIn tact, they will be Irradiated,\nchock-full of vitamin* and absolutely free of germ* which cause\nthem to spoil. -,\nDr. Lloyd E. Brownell, chief of\nMichigan's fission products laboratory, ha* eaten \"atomic\" foods for\nmore than a year, and, bale and\nhearty despite large doses'of radiation in the food, ia supervising construction of the world's first atomic\nicebox.    ' \u2022    ,       I\n'Hardly suitable for a modest\nbungalow in the suburbs, the test\nmachine is a cube of concrete 11\nfeet long, eight feet square and contains a 16-foot pit filled with water\nto enable researchers to control it.\n'The principle behind Dr. Brow-\nnell's experiments is the knowledge\nthat large.doses of gamma rays will\nsterilize organic materials of the\norganisms Which cause them'.to rot\nWhy not foods?\nA variety of fresh fruits .and\nvegetables, packaged meat* and unprocessed cereals were subjected to\ngamma ray* given off by cobalt-60,\nari artificially produced element,\nmanufactured by the Canadian government at Chalk River, Ont.\nThe result:'Test food* remained\nfresh for months; -some treated\nmore than a year ago are edible to.\nday, (fid,'.witness Dr. Brownell, ap.\npatently con be eaten without danger.\nThis test box is being prepared to\nstudy more widely the effects ot\nradiation on food and the effects ot\npersons and animals subjected to an\n\"atomic\", diet.\nThe tests herald a day when pineapples, oranges, lemons, grapefruit\nand oth*r tropical fruits or vegetables may be picked fresh, treated\nwith gamma rays and delivered the\nyear-round to ' northern climates,\nunspoiled and with true picked-ripe\nflavor.\n\"In fact,\" says Dr. Brownell,\n\"treated foods actually taste better\nthan they do when picked freih\":\/\nNylon Fur Coals\nFor Canadians\nOTTAWA (GPl-Canada, traditional centre ,of the fur trade,.is\nImporting nylon fur garments\nmade in Britain, the. United Kingdom information office said Thursday. ->:'\nThirty c*ses, containing 400 .nylon fur garments, left Britain recently for Canada.\nThe office said the furs are almost indistinguishable from the\nreal thing. Thoy are-vlrtually mothproof, and fire-resistant The nylon\n'counterpart\" ol a Canadian beaver\ncoat sells for about $125 compared\nwith about $600 for the real thing.\nOne way to tell the difference\nbetween nylon fur and real fur. is\nthat the former doesn't weigh as\nmuch. It also isn't as warm as real\ntiui '\u25a0\u25a0    '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: \u201e *>'\nWORT-GEY. England 4CP)- Robert Edwards, general secretary of\nthe Chemical Workers Union, told\nthe annual conference at thi* Yorkshire town that he would like to see\na legalized national minimum wages\nin Britain, but j did' not suggest a\nfigure. The average industrial wage\nnow is nearly \u00a39 a week. '\nWorld's first \"atomic Icebox\" under comtructlon on the campus\nof the University of Michigan.\u2014Central. Preii Canadian.   .\nChalk River-Official Says f.ff'f;\nAtomic Power Economical\nPossiWity for Canada\nOTTAWA 4CP) \u2022 \u2014., Power from\natomic energy is an economical possibility in Capada,;Bays a member\nof the chemistry and engineering\ndivision of .Atomic Energy ot Can-\nad* Ltd., at Chalk River, Ont\nNot only that, adds I. N. Mac-\nKey, but Canada \"soon should be\nin an excellent position to carry\nput its development.\" '- -\nWriting in Professional. Public\nService, published monthly by the\nProfessional Institute of the Public Service of Canada, Mr. MacKay\n(iiy* present-day reactors cost* lot\nof money but. the price can be\nbrought down with suitable development. The new reactor at Chalk\nRiver probably will cost $30,000,-\n000.   ..-.- \u25a0 .'.-;.\u2022 -'..,\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0\n. \"If definite requirements for\natomic power could be developed\nln five years with a full-scale effort, costs might be comparable\nto, steam pbwer,'\u25a0'\u25a0': -.\u25a0\u25a0'.\n\"Taking various factors into consideration, it seems reasonable,to\nassume that an atomic-powered\nsteam generator capable of producing 500,000 kilowatts of heat could\nbe designed and built a few years\n-from''jitnir tbi $20,4(00,000.\"   :\nTOTAL4508T\nTotal .capital cost for such a project would m_ean the equivalent ot\n$200 a kilowatt compared to $215\nfor hydro-electric stations in Ontario and; $160 tor. modern steam\nplants in the United States    ,\n\"Obviously, based on these figures, no one is going to build atomic power stations if, hydro'power,\nwith no fuel costs, is available.\nHowever, the hydro-electric'p6wer;\ncommission ot Ontario will have\nnearly run' out of useful hydro\nsites when the St. Lawrence power\ndevelopment is completed, at\nwhich time tbey. expert: the demand\nto just about equal the new supply.\nTheir new steam stations, designed\nas peak load stations, are soon expected, to carry a good deal of the\nbase load, so at least ..competition\nwith steam and not hydro power\nshould be. considered.\"      7 ,. 7 '\nMr. MacKay says', it's reasonable\nto assume that in the years ahead\nmore rich deposits ot uranium will\nprobably be found in Canada. If\nnot, means will htve to be found\nto work. the. lower-grade deposits\nto compete with the steadily rising\ncosts of coal. Steam power plants\nrequire fuel of one kind or another.\n\"It should be borne in mind that\nthe demand for power is expected\nto exceed the possible surplus on\nthis continent some time between\n1075 and 2600, unless entirely new\nsources of power are developed.\"\nWomen Hold Women Back. Replies\nBPWC President lo Own Inquiry\n\" NEW YORK (AP) - What holds\nwomen bock? .   -\nThis ii the subject of research by\nmembers Ot the National Federation\nof business and Professional Wom-\nen's: clubs, as voiced recently by\ntheir president, Helen G. Irwin of\nDes Moines, Iowa.\nAnd .the answer, after all- those\ngenerations ot suffragettes and of\nequal rights crusaders, is just the\nsame as it always has been:\nWhat holds women back is\u2014women. '  \\Z; .\nIt is a basic fact of human nature that few women consider a career' more important than husband,\ntHiidren and a home. Hiejr'h\u00bbve\ncareers, yes, because of economic\nnecessity >f or the most part But in a\npinch, faced with a choice, the home\nusually wins in a walk.\nJOB SECONDARY\nThere are more working women\ntoday than ever before. For in-\nOWIMarfboHtotaboo-llir \"\n..-,\u00ab; COMV \u2022UflUW* M*K\u00bb'\ntetyvVt* OsSsss*\nMs advertisement it not published or displayed by, the Liquor\n'.- Control Board or by the'G-werttmeht' of 'British'Colombia.\nstance, about one-third of the U.S.\nworking force are women. Many,of\nthem are highly successful, too, in\nevery field from banking to bricklaying. But the normal woman considers even a top brass job In business or industry secondary to her-\nmain job as successful human being\nln the- multiple role of wife, mother\nand. homemaker. \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0 i\nThat's why most Women dont go\nall; out to.be president of the'company or boss of the shop, even when\nthey spend eight hours as clay helping .earn the family income.\nSuch ambition requires a singleness of purpose that leaves no room\nfor'all the other feminine duties \u2014'\nand joys     \u25a0 1 '.;\u25a0 ; ,' ''\nOf course, a few. women have\nmade the choice In favor of personal ambition, have shut the door\non family responsibilities and devoted aU their efforts to reaching\nthe top of their chosen careen. But\nmost of them find.it'* rather lonely\nat the top.\nRARE CASKS\nWith men, it's different. A man\ncan devote all his energies toward\ngetting ahead' in his business, can\ncome home too tired tor.'conversation or social activity, and still be\nconsidered a devoted husband and\nfather. His concentration on business, everybody realizes, is a mark\nof his devotion. He ia working tti\nprovide security for his wife Aid\nchildren and they shine in the reflected light of his success.\n, But; a woman who thinks only of\nher job',, who outshines her'husband\nIn < the business 'world, who has no\ntime to give,to her children's problems, is considered selfish and unnatural. She usually winds up\ntreading the. road to success alone,\nThere are some cases where the\nhusband and wife have been' able\nto follow separate careers in complete amity, dividing family responsibilities fairly, denying their children nothing of affection or care. But\nthese are. few and, far between. '\nAMATEUR. FROGMEN FIND 1\n18th CENTURY WRECK '..'.\u25a0\nMOlfTKEAL 4CP) .-'Montreal,\namateur .frogmen have found..'*:\nwreck on the bottom-., of nearby\nLake St. Louis which they believe\nto be an early Fronch-Canadian\nmilitary transport.   , . '.'.,.\u2022?\nThe wreck, fillod with granite, is\nthought to be the remains of a. boat\nused by?:early Quebec settlers, to\ncarry, stones for ttt*' building of\nforts at isolated .outposts and trading 'stations. 'Near it was a stone\nanchor dated 1750.\n\"The frogmen are members of. the\nnewly-formed Canadian. Frogmen's\nClub of Montreal. '\u25a0'-.\u25a0   -\nBig Crop May Be\nStorage Problem*\n' .WINNIPEGetCP)\u2014Fbr th*, third\nsuccessive year, Western farmers\nvce   a   possible storage problem\n\u25a0s fall duo to the prospect ot an-\n.ier good crop and an estimated\n.'...iry-over    of    about' 485,004),000\nJshels of all grains as thd 1952-\njjjp, crop year comes to an. end I to-\n',ay.\u25a0\nThis is 80,000,000 more than for\n,.ie 11)51-52 carry-over and could\n.ause a major storage tie-up when\n,,ie new grain starts moving to\nlevators. The 10 \u2022 year' average\n,d41-50 for the .Canadian carry-\njver is around 370,000,000 bushels.\n; No estimate- has yet been'made\njt the size bf the new crop. Acreage was eut sharply in' some\n.reoa due to excessive rains\u2014but\nue same rain has caused lush\n..Vowth in other regions.\nThe crop now is entering' its crit\n.cal stage when rust, bail,' frost\nexcessive rain, high wind, can\nai'.astically change the .picture. But\nirom this, point officials are agreed\n\u2014the crop looks good.\nThe 1953-54 crop year follows two\nphenomenal crops. Never before\nwere there two successive, wheat\ncrops of more than 500,000,000\nbushels. Production in 1051 totalled\no20,000,000 bushel*. The 1952 crop\nwas estimated at 664,000.000.\nI . D. G. McKenzle,. chief commls\ndoner of Uie board ol grain commissioners, said Thursday \u25a0 that ln\nview of the possible large carryover, there could be a \"tight situation\" wh*n the new. crop, start*\nmoving.\n, Transport controller: Boy Milner\nagreed the situation could be tight,\nbut said there would be \"no transportation tie-up.\"      , -  7\n'There'll be rio shortage of\ntransportation,\" he said. \"The rail,\nroads can carry tha grain away\nas fast as the elevators can un,\nload, clean and ship it.\"\nMr. Milner said each railway has\nabout 25,000 boxcars in the West,\nand each is loading about 1600\ncar*' daily.\n. Country elevators already have\nreceived and shipped.more than\n800,000,000 bushels,: an all - time\nhigh, A week ago, elevator stocks\ntotalled 178,000,000 bushels. Total\ncountry elevator capacity is about\n205,000,000 bushels. .\n7 Officials say the key to the grain\nmovement is export;\nThe- United Kingdom, which was\nCanada's biggest customer under\ntbe old International Wheat Agreement has not ratified the new\nagreement going into effect Aug.\n1. However, officials say the mar\nket still looks good.\nThe board of grain commissioners reports that reports to June\n30 were running eight per cent\nabove the,previous year. Exports\nof wheat.and wheat flour totalled\n310,400,000 bushels compared with\n312,800,000 in the corresponding\nperiod the previous year.\nA> major feature of tbe season to\ndate has been the volume of grain\nhandled by elevators and. shipping\norganizations, the board said. Hoc\nords are expected \u25a0 to fall in all\npositions.\n\"Operating for the major portion\nof the year under difficult storage\nconditions Canadian elevators mov\ne forward and shipped a volume\nof grain which when totalled in\nthe form of actual loadings and\nre'iandlings represents approximately 2,000,000,000 bushel* ot\ngrain,\" the board reported.\nMore than 116,000,000 bushels\nwent through Pacific ports, 504,\n000,000 through the Lakehead. Last\nyear's figures were 111,000,000 and\n430,000,000 respectively.\nMr. Milner said about 26 ships\nare expected 'to haul, grain this\nyear from Churchill, Man., pos\nsibly bettering last year's record\nshipment of 8,500,000 bushels.\n3M\nAttlee Takes Issue With\niBultes* Korean Policies\nL4JNDON - 4tP)...- tabor leader Clement Attlee Thursday accused the United States secretary of\nstate John Foster Dulles of laying\ndown 0 pollcy'llne on the forthcoming Korean peace 'conference with';\nout taking into account 'the views\nof U.S. :allles.' \u25a0-;\u25a0\nAttlee mado the statement in'the\nHouse of Commons shortly.'after\nthe Marquess of Salisbury, acting\nforeign secretary, told the House\nof Lords the government .believes\nCommunist China should receive\nUnited Nations membership \"when\nthe time 1* right.'.-.   .\nSalisbury added' that.it would be\n\"improper and impossible\" for him\nt> say now, three, days after the\narmistice' in Korea, .that the\n\"right\" time had arrived.\nUN MU8T DECIDE f ,\nRichard Butler, acting prime\nminister, said Britain* believes Russia as well at -Communist China\nshould bo represented? at peace\ntalks, on Korea. But he-told the\nCommons the problem of Chinese\nrepresentation in the United Na-\nt'ons could only be decided by the\nUN itself,\n\"Our ' conception of the UN. is\nthat of a family of nations and hot\nan anti-Communist alliance,\" he\nsaid.\nAttlee, referring to. Dulles' state\nment that the U.S. reserves the\nright to walk out of the Korean\npeace conference If it felt the Reds\nwere stalling after 90 days, said:\n\"The  statement   seemed   to be\nBug Boy Retires\nFrom Business\n, BALTIMORE (AP) \u2014The world's\nchampion lightning bug catcher is\nhanging up his net and retiring\nfrom active competition.. '\nNow maybe the guys will \"quit\ncalling him \"the bug boy.\"\n' Johns, Hopkins University scientists concede they have.a sufficient\nsupply of the posterior of the pho-\ntinus (lightning bug) and Jimmy\nTracy,. IS, figures he's outgrown\nhis- specialty.\nLIQUIDATES FIRM\nJimmy's decision means the break\nup of quite a corporation. He formed it When Dr. William McElroy\nand his Hopkins associates got interested in what makes lightning\nbugs glow. The scientists offered\n25 cents for each 100 lightning bugs\nand a grand prize of $10' at the end\nof the season for the. champion catcher. -       .-,   ''\u2022\nJimmy hired his brother, Donald,\nand a bunch of the boys. lie figured\nwith all of them contributing to one\nbig'catch in his name, they'd have\na good chance of knocking oft that\nchampionship prize money.\nBANNER .YEAR        \u2022\u25a0'    \u2022\nV-Thi* jc**b. the. flrm,lnetted .78,04)0.\nbugs,. 12,000.of them personal trollies of the. champ, Jimmy Tracy. All\ntold,' Hopkins collected '410,000 in\nthis year's roundup.\nNaturally, -they won the prize.\nThey did last year, too. Jimmy\nkept five bucks and let- the gang\nsplit the other five.     'bo\".\nBut it's all over nowilT \u25a0'\u2022''V,\n\"I'll be 16 Aug. 12,i and I ean\nwork,\" Jimmy said: \"And I guess\n111 have a tough times:: With the\npublicity and all, they>-call me 'the\nbug boy' and'the firefly kid,' and\nnames like that But I can take it\"\nDREDQtmO MODEL   f\\  7 -\nVANCOUVER (CP).-^* A large-\nscale -model of Vancouver harbor\nwill be constructed at tf*S!Universlty\nof B. C, to study effents-of dredging of the first narrows,.tidal fluctuations and navigatiorial.'conditions.\nPresent plans call for removal of\n8,560,000 cubic yards of piit from the\nbottom of the first narrows.      \u25a0\nlaying down conditions by the U.S.\ngovernment,V the;, taking of a line' -\nby   the U.S. government  iti  regard, ot the political conference on\nthe affairs of Korea without taking',\ninto account the views bf their coi- -\nleagues,     . \",.-       .\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0-.\"\nADM IT8 U.S. BURDEN\n\"The whole of this.affair In Korea has been undertaken by the\nUN. We gladly recognize that the\ngreater part of the heat and burden of the day have be*en borne by\n'.merlca,. -.      '\u25a0 \u2022\n\"We have also taken our' share\nof it,. and it does seem a peculiar\nthing.that just when the assembly\n1* to meet and when we are looking forward to these discussions\nthere should be this unilateral dec-'\nlaration of policy.\"\nAttlee said the statement on the ?\nvssible U.S. walkout, \"really does\nSeem to me quite contrary toth*\nwhole-spirit of the;UN.\"\n'-There is a general underlying\nsuggestion that it everything does\nnot go exactly ai Mr. Dulles wants\nIt. then the U.S. may, go on? .Us\nown. I think that la a very dangerous* suggestion.\n\"Wo are concerned in this matter not merely from the point of\nview of Korean unity but from the\npoint of securing peace in the Far\nEast.\n\"We are out to get a peaceful\nsettlement throughout the Far\nEast of which this should be *\nbeginning, but unless it is taken\nir a statesmanlike way, it would\nnbi be the beginning of a new era\nof peace.\nNARROW .OUTLOOK\n\"I hope it will be made plain\nthat we cannot subscribe to these\nnarrow policies, but that we shall\nput forward our point ot view and\nclaim that it should have full consideration and that we should htr\na'r-t that this is a UN matter and\nnot a matter'Of purely American\nconcern.\" \u2022        7. '\nSUPPORT\nSocial Credit.\nSocial Credit\nRepresentation in\nOttawa Mean* Progress\nfor B.C.\n' because only Soolal Credit\nrepresentatives, who havt ns\nworrltt ibout treading on\noutside   political   toat,   ean\n\"work In harmony with a\nSoolal Credit provincial government Progress, as exemplified by development of\nnatural resources, completion\nof transportation facilities\n\u2022nd expansion of present\narea*, ean be speeded up by\nsending Social Credit members to the. House of Com-,\nmons.     :\nFor Your\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nCANDIDATE\nLet Ottawa Know That.\nB.C. It Tired ofv s\nOld Pary Rule!\nThlt advertisement Issued by\ntht B.C. Soolal Crtdlt\nCampaign Committee\nStorewide Clearance\n\u2022   SALE   \u2022\nDrastic Reductions i*\n\u2022 BOYS' SWIM TRUNKS\n\u2022 SWIM SUITS\n\u2022 SHORTS        # SHORT PANTS\n\u2022 BEACH TOYS\n# BOYS1 SHIRTS     # T-SHIRTS\n(\nSHORT PANT SUITS\n)\n\u2022 MIDRIFFS\n# SHOES # SANDALS\nMANY OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS\nTO MENTION\nChildren's Shop\n652 BAKER ST.\nNILSON, B. C.\n ;\t\n ' LEONARD CLOUD, 28, i Sioux City, Iowa, army veteran, took*\nat a picture of his attractive Czech wife, Llbuie, 30, who esoaped\nfrom her Communist-dominated 1 homeland with seven others In a\nhome-mkde armored oar. Mrs, Cloud has one wish, \"te get to the\nUnited States as fast as possible\" fer a reunion with the husband she\nhas not seen since 1948.\u2014AP Wlrephoto. 'ti '\u25a0'\nB. (. Road Safely\nAim lor Drivers\nVICTORIA- (CP) -Brjtiih4\u00bbl-\numbli'sf new plan for dialing with\nmotdrlstt with bad'driving records\nnow is being put into general operation.      - ...\nWhile idea ot the plan la to make\ngood driven out ot bad, before they\ncause serious damage, personal to'\njury or. death. '\nOfficials of the motor vehicle\nbranch, in charge of this work refer\nto their plan u an educational\n\u2022progrim, and stress that every\ncase is to be considered individually.\nTor the time being, at least, they\nore shying away from* the point\nsystem now in effect in Manitoba,\nwhleh sets out so many blade\nmirk* for? every Infraction ot highway rules and brings about automatic suspension whtn a certain\ntotal has been reached. '\n,..,\"It is not our intention to rule\n\u2022people off the road,\" George Lindsay,'superintendent ot motor vehicles,'made clear Thursday. \"What\nwe want- to do is make people\nsat* while they tre on th* road.\"\nMOST EFFECTIVE\n\"Suspension of a tenon'* driving'\nlicence in certain cases 1* acknowledged, however, as being the most\neffective way of bringing them into\nline? In other instances, though,.\na serious talk I* all thot is needed\nto make a careless driver realize\nthe need tor exercising greater\ncare.\nSine* May 1, when the new program was Introduced, 58 persons\nhive hid thsir licences suspended.\nTh*, suspensions miy be as short\nas 30 days orifcp to. one year:\nNineteen persons1 have been summoned to conferences to discus*\nbad records and J&2 have been sent\nwarning letters.\"\nOnly five women were Included\namong the 352 persons sent warning letters. There were no women\namong the 58 persons whoso llc-\n. N.v\u00abr ut. a bnrth on lh.ml Your dee-   ences were suspended.\ns-ft^r^^aws >e unoer fort'88\nto they get loose.                            \u2022 j   Driver* under -40  ire  the onei\nt N.v.r us. soop or toothpast-1 They ?,,J?in*  the.m'o\u00ab; trouble on ..th*\nin leive aim which collects bacterii highway*.. They .Recounted for.92.2\nad food particles, a major cause of -ier' ceht dl thOSt*.' receiving warn\nIke May Extend Lend\nLease to Far East\nWASHINGTON 4AP)-the Sen-\n\u2022te passed and sent to President\nElsenhower a bill authorizing him\nto give or lend 28' small navy vessel* \"to any. friendly nation in tha\nFar-Eastern area.\" It also would\npermit the chief executive to lend\ntwo submarines tb Italy and a\n\u2022mall aircraft carrier to France.\nJail for Taking\nThree Cigarettes\n- BERLIN (AP) - A sales girl in a\ngovernment-owned East German\n\u2022tor* has been sentenced to two\nyean' imprisonment at hard labor\nfor stealing three cigarets;      '\u25a0.-\u2022*,\nThis was disclosed Thursday by a\nspeaker in the East zone's, parliament who discussed .the vagaries of\ncommunist justice.    .,\u25a0'' v.\nThe speaker condemned Ousted\nminister of justice Max Fechner for\nhaving released some of. the striken\nblamed for the June ahtl-Commun-\nist workers rebellion...-,-,\n\"And while these provocateurs\nwsrs freed-,\" he complained, \"we had\nan old woman sent to prison for a\nyear for gathering'firewood In a\n\u2022tat* forest and a sales girl in a\n'state store given two yean at.hard\nlabor for damaging state property\nby stealing three cigarets.\"\nTwo eggs will provide nearly all\nef a person's,dally requirements of\nvitamin D.\nFalse Teeth Need\nli Special Cleanser\nPont Brush Your Platesl\nSoak Them, in Polldent\nA* Dentist* Suggest\nPolident is the recommended way to\nlean denture*, banish Denture Breath.\nInst follow these eaay rules. i\niflentive \"Denture Breath''.\nL lit, a sonldng-typ*. dionwr mode for\nalso tooth only . . . Polldonrl Polident\nteanser is recommended by more den-\njsts dun any other. No brushing, no\nisadUag of soapy plates. Polldent gets,\nthen a brash cant reach.\nlest of aH, Polident always leaves false\neeth odor free. Oct the world's largest\nelites denture cleanser, Polident, it\nrour drag counter. ,   O-ia\ntogs.\nYoungsters frbffl 18 to 21 were\nresponsible for 32.6 per.cent of ths\ntotal; young adults from 22 to SO,\n41.8 per cent;? persons 31 to 40,\n1V.8, per. cent\nPersons aged between 41 and 80\naccounted for only 5.4 per cent of\nthe total an*l persons SI to 80, 2.5\n^er cent. \"Kiere were no' driven\nover 60 on the warning list\nLet AYLMER\nbrighten up meals!\ntoys Mr. Sunshine, tte Aylmer find man.\n\"LS Try the cataup that's Bam ef\nSunMxefor Rioter Flavor,'\" ismtee\nMr. Sunshine. \"I .port wonderful\nflavor and lots of vitamins into\nred-ripe tomatoes on the vino. Then\n\"\" Aylmar makoa thom into, pan\nosteup within 24 houn after picking. That'* why Aybner Cat&up\ntastes io good. 43hildren louse it\"\nVOUR FAMILY DESERVES AYLMER QtMUTT\nCanadians Take\nAction Against\nBritish Railway\nLONDON (CP) - The Canadfcn\nArmy accused the British railways\nof not being able to pay Its rent\u2014\nsnd that solved a confusing situation.\n' The episode occurred ln Piccadilly Circus where the Canadian Army\nhas sel\u00ab up a balloting office for\ntroops, But, because of an obsolete\nBritish railway sign beside the Canadian premises marker, dozens of\npersons' arrived' to ask the Canadians for tickets, reservations and'\ntrain times.\nARMY SIGN WORKS\n' The staff finally.took unofficial\naction. They drew up the following\nsign, which was hung on the door.\n\"Owing to the absolute inability\nand utter incapability of British\nrailways to remove their sign from\nthis building, we wish to inform\nyOu that they, could no longer pay\nrent and were forced to move to 21\nLower Regent street on. June 24,\n1983. Plesse do hot bother Ui about\ntickets as we ire billy.\"\nCrowds gathered to read the notice and chuckle. Finally a police-'\nman arrived to see what was holding dp sidewalk traffic and the Canadians told him the story.\nA little later British railways\ntelephoned to say their sign would\ncome down, and a workman showed up loon to. remove it,\nThe Mississippi River is navigable\nby ocean-going ships for 238 miles\nupstream to Baton Rouge, La.\nCLASSIFIED AOS GET RESULTS\nHappy Measles Cases\nReach Vancouver\nVANCOUVER 443*) .\u00bb-- Eighteen\nmeasl\u00ab.B victims arrived ln Vancouver today aboard .art \"Isolation\nhospital\" railway coach as 163 lower mainland and Vancouver Island\nboy* returned from tho National\nScout. Jamboree in Ottawa.\nAlthough the 18 boys - spent put\nof their time in Ottawa In hospital,\nthey were In high spirits when they\narrived here. The measles-spotted\nyouths wece attended en route\nhome on the CPR boy Scout Spe-\ncla' by Dr. N. H..Jones,  \u2022 '\u25a0',.-' v\nPolice Unravel\nWeek-Old Puzile\nVANCOUVER ,-(CP) \u2014 jH week-\nlong puzzle was unravelled Thursday when police announced thit the\nmysterious, head, injuries suffered\nby rooming-house operator John\nWarman were sustained while he\nwas sleep-walking. 7' .,.'\n. After.Warman was found in His\nbed. unconscious July 22, with hi*\nface covered . with blood, police\nwera ot the opinion that he had\nbeen the victim of assault. '    '\nHowever, officers said they now\nbelieve Warman slipped on carpeted\nstairs while sleep-walking and hit\nhis head, but returned to his bed\nwithout knowing that he had been\nInjured.'    '\u2022'  '\nWarman is reported in \"satisfactory\" condition in hospital.,\nFingernail biters may endanger\ntheir, health because germs frequently lie under the nails.\nFBI Swoops Down\nOn Red Suspects\nBy TOM BRADSHAW\nPHILADELPHIA' 4AP) - Six\ntight-lipped men were scoopedxtip\nin a Federal Bureau ot Investigation dragnet early . Thursday on\ncharges toey conspired \"to overthrow the United States, government by force ahd violence'\" . .\n\u00b0- FBI agents swooped down on the\nhomes of four and ths summer cottage of another. The sixth was\nnabbed, agent* said, aB he emerged\nfrom a Communist cell meeting.\nHours later, the. six were held\non * total of $175,000 ball ahd led\naway to jail colls, manacled two-\nby-two. ,f'.'    :,\"\nBAIL 8ET AT DAWN\nBall was sot ln the o'tflce of U.S.\nCommissioner Henry P. 'Carr at\ndawn.?\n''Joseph. Kusma, .41, Identified by\nthe FBI as a Communist party\ntrade -union secretary In eastern\nPennsylvania .and Delaware, was\nseized, the FBI agents said, as he\nwalked.; away trom a Communist\nparty meeting in northern Philai\nhelphla. He was held on $50,000\nbail for a further hearing Aug, 6.\n. Held for a further hearing on\nthe same date on $28,000 bail each\nwere:   . .-,',-.    \u25a0\u25a0:\u2022 \u2022    ,.-.'\u25a0.;\nDavid Dubensky, also, known, as\nDavid Davis. 46; Sherman Labov'itz,\n29; Walter Lowenfels, 56; Thomas\nNebrled, 81, and Benjamin Weiss,\n89, all of Philadelphia\".'\" , V\nUNDER SMITH ACT\nThe six were charged specifically\nunder the Smith Act with conspiring to overthrow the government.\nTheir arrests  brought to 87  toe\nRuss Arrest Naked l\nFinnish Writers\nHELSINKI (Reuters)-Two Finnish sports writers, arrested Saturday by a Soveit patrol boat, while\nswimming off Porkkala, Russia's\nnaval bass outside 'Helsinki, were\nhanded over to Finnish frontier\nguards. Before, handing tha men\nover, the Russians asked the Finns\nto fuld clothes.for them, as- they\nwere naked when arrested.\nPolio Families\nUp in Manitoba\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Manitoba's\nseventh ind eighth poliomyelitis\nfatalities of 1883 were reported today by health officials a's the province's polio case total tor the year\nrose to 364.\n. Tho two latest deaths were slght-\n-year-old penni* Gendron of St.\nBoniface and 56-year-old James\nGroom of Winnipeg.\nTeh other cases were reported\ntoday, five with paralysis. light\n'were trom Winnipeg, one trom\nBrandon and one trom the Baldur\ndlitrlct.     ,-'\u2022\u25a0:\nOt the 884 total cases, 188 hive\nbeen from Winnipeg, 75 trom the\nauburbs, snd 104 from to* balance\nof ths province.\nnumber of Communist party offl-\nclals seized under the act since 1848,\ntoe U.S. justice department said.\nFBI director J. Edgar Hoover\nsaid the alx either hold or hav*\nheld ranking positions in toe Communist party in eastern Pennsylvania or ln th* national operation*\nof the party.     -\u25a0,.,'\u25a0..\nWWm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 31, T953 \u2014 7\nBee Sting Kills Man\nSPOLETO, Italy (AP) - Mario\nMarchottl, 34, opened his mouth'to\ntake a bit* of bread,' fell to .the\nground and died in a \"few minutes.\nDoctor* who examined him said a\nbt* Had flown Into his mouth and\nStung him ln the throat. Hs died of\nsuffocation. '.'\"\"\nLETHBRIDGE JCP) \u2014, Clarence\nDouglaa Purdy, 89,- retired Thursday as assistant manager of the T.\nEaton Co., Ltd.; store here. He started as a clerk with the company in\nWinnipeg.'\nU. S. Sergeant Last\nKorean Casualty  -\n* .SEOUL (AP)--An American sergeant was the last Allied soldier\nkilled In the Korean War, the 8th\nArmy said Hiursday'.\n\u2022 He died ln the blast of a Communist mortar shell on thb Eastern\nfront at 8:04 p.m. Monday. Eighty\nminutes, later the guns stopped?\ntiring. ,...-.-' ,,:'*.'' '\u25a0\u2022'\nThe sergeant's name was withheld.       \u25a0 ,  \u201e;, v.?..\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nTONIGHT!\nA P.C TEAMWORK BROADCAST\nGEORGE DREW* GORDON GRAYDON\n\u2022 GEORGE HEES \u2022 DAVIE FULTON \u2022\nGEORGE NOWLAN\nTHE 16 POINT PLEDGE\nCKLN 1240 on your dial 10:15p.m.\nPublished by the Pro-p***tv* <om*rv*tiv* Party of Canada\nGREENWOOD'S\nSTARTS TOMORROW\nSATURDAY, AUG. 1\nCONEYS\nDYED AUSTRALIAN     t\nRABBIT #\/j|\/\nSizes 12 to 20 #\n\u00a719\nBla<k PERSIAN PAWS\nDYfD\n'Sizes 1*2 to 20\n$22.90 Down -__ .\t\n$229\nJAP. CONEY\nDYED JAPANESE      &m ** 4*\nRABBIT $1 JQ\n$13.90 Ddwn\nNATURAL AND BLENDED\nSHEARED RACCOON\n$589\nThe newer eootr In tho fur\nworld      \u25a0\nSizes 12 to 20\nmKmmm\nRICH MINK DYED\nMuskrat Back Coats\nSizes 12 to 20 ^JX,  #\nLIGHTWEIGHT\nMOUTONLAMB\nDYED PROCESSED\nSHEEPSKIN. Sixes\n20\t\n12 h J\n169\n.50\nNORTH CENTRE BACK\nMUSKRATS\nBLENDED RANCH MINK\nSHADE. Site* 12 te 20 ._..\n$\n360\nGOOD. LOOKING\nDYED MUSKRAT\nExquisitely trimmed with wild\nor silver _lue mink\nSizes 12 to 20 _.\u2014.....\nV\n569\nREENWOOD T URS\nHALF PRICE\nCHINESE LAMB\n%* T.tU\u00bb .$9-9.00\n_REY FLANK MUSKRAT   .\n(Dyed). '. V      - \u00a3\nl\" $395.00 $197.50\nBACKMUSKR'AT ,\n(Mink      Size   Re\u00a3      it'll')   FA\nDyed).       .14  $423Do   $Z I A. 3 U\nRUSSIAN SQUIRREL PLANK\n(Dyed   . Size .Reg.\nBlock).       18   $139.00\nSWEDISH SQUIRREL,.      _-'.\n(Hired).,    1?\u00ab695.()0   $347.50\n(Dyed   . Gfe   ROB,.        $5950\nNATURAL AMERICAN OPPOSUM   ,\nJACKET.\n\u2022  ho?,.   $57.50\n14   $115.00\n580 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 272\n  \u2014\nWB\nI -*\u2022 NILSON DAILY NlWS. FRIDAY, JULY 31,1991\nTrial on Mail Bag\nTheft Charge Aug. 7\nTOAtt \u2014 Robert W.O*rrl\u00bb,'\u00bbr.\nrested Wednesday morning in RCMP court on t charge of theft of' a\nmall bag, will appear for, trial\nhere August 7, according to police.\n* The charge against Gerrle w*>\nheard Thursday and the case was\nadjourned until the August date,\npolice s*ld.\nFor Wall* or Ceiling* . . .\nLow Coil*\nSQUARE-TEX\n\u2022 Scored In 16*'x1\u00ab\" 8qutrei\n0 Applied In 4'x4' Sheet!   '\n\u2022 Concealed Joints\n94 Ideal Painting Surface   -\n,  v ONLY\n12c sq.ft.\nLaw Cost\nPLANK\nBOARD\n.   *      For Will*\n\u2022 Scored In 8\"x16\" Width*\n\u2022 Applied In 4'xt' Sheets\n\u2022 Concealed Joints        .     7\n\u2022 Luxury   Look   at   Economy\nPrice\nONLY\n12c sq. ft.\nD.B. MERRY\nLUMBER CO.\n1080 Spokane St - Ph. 444-2040\nTRAIL, B. C.\nTAYLOR BR08. \u2022 Salmo Agents\nlotoomt\nSll fHIS\ntl*!*) \u2022*>\n3&-Sffi\nNorse Callers\nAre Among\nTrail's 1\nTRAIL\u2014The Trail tourist bureau\noperated by the Chimber ot Commerce hu played \"host\" to people\nfrom ! Australia, Sweden,. and all\nparts of North America.\nMore than 1000 tourists hav* registered ot the bureau. These tourist* have come from overseas is\nwell as every state in the United\nStates. They ill received friendly,\ncourteous service from the well\nequipped tourist bureau htre.\nAl each tourist register* tbey ire\ngiven a folder of Trail and \u00bb sticker for their car. If they wish any\ninformation about the district, the\nemployees of the bureau answer\nquestion*, i '..*\nIi th*y wish to stay at a motel\nthi bureau has cards from most\nmotels in the dlitrlct which thty\npas* out, an*? if a tourist wishes,\nthey will mike reservations for\nhim er htr at one of the motels.\nNot only does, th* bureau distribute Information about this district, but they have folder* contain-\nIng maps, lists of motels, 'etc., for\nmost states in the United State* as\nwell as other parts of Canads.\nv Also on hind it the bureau are\nschedule* for the MV' Anicomb\nterry and. most.coastal ferries.\nTha burelu register doe* not, of\ncourse, present the complete picture on the number of tourists vis-\nlting TraU. Many tourists do not\na. ail themselves of tbe services pro-\nvlded by the bureau and ire thus\nmissed out in the count,\nMeinwhll* in Victoria Trad* and\nIndustry Minister Chttwynd, dls\ncounting the \"recent rash of pessimistic reports,'1 declared thit auto-\nmobile tourist traffic from the\nUnited States to B.C. \"Is still on\nth* increase.\"\nTh* minister said 103,7113 American cars entered the province on\ntravellers' vehicle permit* to the\nend of June, compared with 98,583\nin the first half of 1952.\n\"Thi* 1* an Increase of 7.4 per\ncent over list year's figure which\nwis Itself arecord total.\"\nPLINAMMS\n,;\u25a0 SHEWING\nAT THI\nSTRAND\nA F\u00abmoui Ptiytr* Theatre\nI     TRAIL, t.C.\nMWffNNKf\nAMY\nJVH**!*\nSufflel*ney\"    ,\nIt atctssory (oi vigorous htalllf-;\n-Amino .to'ai\u00ab*t tli* fait poe*'ol\n\u00abiod*-*ll\u00bblnp.PtENAMINSsu|>ply\n8   iMinrlol   vitamins\u2014plus  Iht\nasMtdvoletolLlvifondlror*.\n2Wi 6.00\nRegistered\nPharmacist\nin Attendance at\nAll Times.\nHazlewood\n\u2022\u2014~ Drug\n943 Spokone St.Jrall, B.C.\n\u25a0    _-___:\nMIDNIGHT PREVIEW\n\u2022   Sunday, August J\nMon.-Tuei.-Wed. f\nAu-j. 3-4-4\nBATTLE CIRCUS\nHumphrey Bogert, Jun* Allyion\nThurt.-Frl.-Sat.\n''Something For\ntho Birds\"\nVlotor Mitur*, Pitrlsl* Neil\n\"Rogue's March\"\nPiter Liwford, Jinle* Rut*\nM ATI Nil\nEvtry Siturdiy\nShowi Contlnuoui From'2 P.M.\nTrail's Super Service Station\niPIiiii\nLIMITED\n1608 BAY AVE., TRAIL, B.C.\n-'\"\u2022 , '\u25a0 *.   .\nRepair* To All Mak*\u00bb of Car*. ?\nSee U* For BeHer Uied Cart.\nSee and Drive the terrific NEW 1933 DODGE '\nnow on display at our premise*.\n8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM\nPhone 899   . Trait, B.C.\nINSURANCE\nPROTECTION\nOWS SO LITTLE!\nCurriers\nALL RISK\nINSURANCE AGENCIES\nInsurance      Real Estate\nFire Casualty\nInland Marine\nAutomobile\n1460 Bay Ave.   TRAIL, B. C.   Ph. 1589\nCASTLEGAR - PHONE 3281\n'I'M\". .Ml     I III       I HU . Ill\nJoint effort has solved transportation\nproblems for a number of Warfield reui-\ndentg employed in Cominco's plants\" it\nTrail. Ijtere members (if the\"W&rfielcl Co-\nOp Society prepare' t4> embark on their\nnew b-ds.\u2014Louis Fryling pboto?', . ?\"?\nDiesels Take\nOver In\nTadanac Yards\nTADANAC\u2014Tht steam engine has\nbecome extinct In Trill and Tadanac with dlesel-elcctrlc locomotives\nnow making regular yird run* be-\ntween Trail ind Wirfleld.\nTrail and Tadanac boast tour\n41*1*1 engines, whleh were first Introduced Into thll area ln April.\nThl am is now almost 100 per cent\ndieselized, according to A. J. den-\nton, Tadanac station agent.\nElsewhere In British Columbia\nthe twitch from steam engines to\ndiesels is gaining headway.\nThe Canadian Pad tic Railway announced thit 80 of it* oil-burning\nsteam engines will bt reassigned to\nother territory before the end of\nthe summer, with most going to the\nprairies.\nTheir are'to be replaced by dieiel-\nelectric locomotives and their delivery 1* to be completed early thi*\nUO.    -     '   '.,:\nTh* diesels were introduced on\nth* Canadian Pacific's passenger\nrun from Medicine Bit to Nelson\nto Vancouver ind on freight runs\nfrom Crow's Nest to Vancouver.\n17-Year-0ld Saves\nGenellethlld\nQXNEX.LE W Stvtn-y\u00aba~r-old\nIrene \/ Crockett \u25a0' ot. Genelle was\nsaved - irom drowning Wednesday\nafternoon In .the Columbl* -river at\nGenelle by? ijf-year-old Ken Crocker, also of Genelle.\nThe young girl wit swimming\nwith * group ot children when she\nweqit under. She was teen by\nCrocker as ah* started going, down\nfdr a third time. The quick-thinking youth dived Into the water and\npulled her out. She Is said to be in\ngood condition today.\nIrene li th* daughter ot H. J.\nCrockett of Genelle. She has \u2022 twin\nsister ahd two brothers. '\nTWO TRAILITES\nINJURED WHEN\nAUTO WRECKED\nOLIVER \u2014 Dmitri Goloubef and\nA. J. Northoy of Trail, Injured in\nan auto accident Wednesday night\nnear Oliver,-arc reported to be In\nfair condition, according to th*\nOliver hospital today.\nMr. Goloubef Is said to have\nundergone an'operation to his leg\nand Mr. Nor they wai reported to\nhave lost consciousness following\n(he accident.\nTh* car in which they were driving to the' Kelowna regatta rolled\nover twice on* the Okanagan highway about eight miles north of\nOliver.; It is uld tb be \u00bb total\nwreck. * \u00bb\nFALLING MAN HITS\nNEAR AMBULANCE\nTRAIL, B. C. ICP) \u2014 Jtobert Si\nUrua fell 28 feet out ot. hospltil\nhere Wednesday, and almost landed on a passing ambulance, which\ntook him back again.\nLarue, of Nakusp, il ln \"fair condition,\" Thursday after ' falling\nfront ( second-floor window ot the\nTreil-Tadanac Hospital to the concrete ildewalk.\nHe injured hll lag*, held, ind\nshoulders. An ambulance wai driving p\u00bbst as he fell. The attendant\nstopped, and attended to Larue at\nonce.\nRCMP have given no reason for\nthe fall. .'-7\nas\nNine-Mill Her\nTo Victoria\nLabor Act Parley\nTRAIL \u2014 The International Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers Is one of the unions invited by\nLabor Minister Lyla Wicks to attend a round table conference.Aug.\n28 to discuss amendments to the\nIndustrial Conciliation and Arbitration Aet. Representative! of about\n118,000' Brltllh Columbl* workers\nare expected to attend the conference.     -   .    . \u25a0 .      .-,.:   ..     .',...,\nPresident of local 480 ot th* Mine\nMill and Smelter Worker*. Al King;\nstld e} T*hiirid\u00bby th*t th*y , would\nsend a representative ,or representative? to the conference. The local\nis now preparing a brief on'\u00abt'4tld-\nment? the? would \"Ilk* \"t* 'le*>te-\ncorporated in the Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act Is\nLabor Minister Wick* according\nto a Canadian .Press reler-.se from\nVictoria: aald the Native I Brotherhood of' B. C.,-the International\nUnion.of Mine Mill. and' SmeNjr\ncouncil bf the Canadian Congress\nWorker* (Ind.) < and each local\nof Labor and Trades and Labor\nCongress of Canada have been\nasked to lend representative*;\nThe representatives will be asked\nto submit written briefs.\nNew Merchant Marine\nAssociation Formed\nNEW.VORK <AP)-A greup of\nship captains ind officer engineers\nhas formed a new. union, United\nMerchant Marine Officers' Association tlnd.).\nIn a statement issued recently,\nthe enw union charged thit seafaring labor groups were being controlled by \"dictators who' ar* not\nmsn of the sea or ships.\"\nA spokesman for the CIO Mi-\nrine Engineers' Beneficial Assn.\ncontended th* naw group wti\n\"company sponsored\".\nTh* schlpperke, a small tall-less\ndog,, was originally used oh Belgian\nbarges as a guard and vermin killer.\nJOIN THp TRAIL BUYERS LEAQUE\nVote for VALUES-\nWI OUARANTII. U\n1\u2014-Only Blu* Ribbon Beef, T-B Free (Inspected by government)\nZ\u2014Only Dtlnsr or Name Brand Pood* In Vour Cocker I\nt\u2014-Continued Service Through the .Ufa of the Plan.\nPhono 133 For Penonol Servlea or Information\nWHV NOT HAVE A  \"SUPER  MARKET\n'     RIGHT IN YOUR HOME?\n'   DEEP  FREEZE  FREEZEH8  AND\nINTERNATIONAL   HARVESTER   FREEZER8\n1837 BAY AVENUE\nFrank Johnson\nTRAIL, B.C.\nPHONI 131\nChuck Wyatt\nCINDER BLOCKS\n\u2022 Concrete Blocks\n\u2022 Chimney Block*\nSTEAM CURED\nGovernment felted products. Steam cured. Production\n4000 unit* per -tight hour shift. We deliver anywhere.\nKORPAK Cement Products\n154 Wellington Street     Trail, B.C.     Phone 991-L-1\nDistributor! for Our Produott In  Nelson\nK. W. DIXON CO.-701 Front St., Ntlion, B.C,\nT-\nSALMO \u2014 The Salmo Rep team\ncame up with a big upset Thursday night when they captured the\nflrat game of the but of three soft-\nball playoff against Nelion Royal*\n12-8, v\nThe two?, clubs Will meet again\ntonight in Nelson for the. second\ngame of this round' in the West\nKooteniy pllyoff*. .,'\nSalmo touched two Royal chucker* for 16 hits and took a'command-\nIng laid from the start bt the game.\nMary McGinn >\u25a0 last only five\nframes as Salmb got to her for 10\nhits and eight'runs. Verdi Pratt\nthen finished the gam*. giving up\nsix more hits tnd tour run*. Pratt\nstruck out thrqe and walked thre*\nwhile McGinn walked', none -ind\n\u2022truck out two,-\nElvina Kraft went the distance\nfdr Salmo and gav eup 12 hits but\nitruck out four ind walked fly*.\nkept   them* well   scattered. ' She\nMarian Hanson w*ii the Salmo\nheavy bitter with four for five In\neluding a double, while Elsie Appel\nhit four for^iix ind ilso had * double.  \u25a0''\"'   '\nIt is expected that Mary Taylor\nwill be on the mound for Salmo tonight facing Verda Pratt for Nelson.\nNAKUSP HANDS\nEDGEWOOD 24-5\nBALL TROUNCING\nEDGEWOOD\u2014The Nakusp baseball nine putslugged and outscored\nEdgewood for \u00bb 24-57vlctory Tin a\ncontest that waa a hitters' garfie all\nth* v*y. _\u2022\nNakusp took a six-run lead ln the\nfirst three,Innings, but Edgewood\nmade a five-run rally In the bottom of the third and the ball gain*\nbegan to look interesting. However\nNakusp with base hits scattering\nall over the field picked up 18 runs\nin the remaining ilx frames whll*\nholding Edgewood scoreless.\n.Robert Hale,' who worked the\nfirst three frames for Nakusp, gave\nup six hits. He itruck out one and\nwalked two, Ed Desrochers took\n'over en the mound and give up ilx\nhits. He struck out six and walked\ntwo.\n. Edgawood's starting chucker H.\nKlein struck out four batten In\nseven frames. He..walked four, but\ngav* up 14 hits, including five doubles. J. Oldi pitched, the next two\ninnings ind gav* up aix hits and\ntwo walks whll* striking out two.\nK. Adshead finished the game giving up two h|ta and ope walk.\n- O. Yanigitawa was the big gun\nfor Nakuip getting four hits in four\nappearances at the pitta, F, Desrochers hid three hits for Edgewood.\nLineups:\nEdgewood-H. Olds, J. Olds, C.\nLummerdlng,    W.    Forslund,    H,\nUJokomsL\nAwaits Your\nVisit To Trail\nAt Tha    .\nA\nS\nT\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0;#:\u25a0.\nR\nI\nA\nHOTEL\nPhona 1865\nTurn Left At Funnel.\n1S6HAIGST.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nti Mile From City Centre\n . _. ; .Ju   \u201e\nTrail Bears Hand\nLeafs Another\nSetback K-10\n. TRAIL \u2014 Trail Golden Bears\ndotVhed Nelson Mapla Leafs 16-10\nln a hard fought boxla gome In\nTr\u00abil Thursday night;       ' \\V\nNelion battled gamely to even\nthe lead gained early in- thb second\nquarter by the.home turn.  7\nTrail went out front by notting\nthe ball in th*' flrat 30 seconds. The\nquarter ended with both club* even\nwith two goalij? :.'.\nIn the aecond Trail forged ahead\nwith seven goals while holding Nil\n\u25a0on off th* score sheet. In the third\neach club marked up five counters.\nIn the final both clubs again broke\nev\u00bbn7-.\"'\u25a0,,'\"\u2022''\nAbout half way thrpugh the final\nstanza th* game saw Its only fight\nwhen Ken Robertson and Ewan\nWillie* tangled. Robertson was\nfelven i misconduct and Wallace *\nmatch .penalty. -.\u25a0].   \u25a0\nThe gamt wai' fait throughout\nand.Nelaon fought hud but they\nwere handicapped by the lack; of\nplayer*. Only a few Rossland men\nwere able to aid them.\nLineups:\n\"Trill-- Boliv^rt, Jloon, Lyons,\nBairnes, Bellsky, Jerome, Smith,\nKilt, Exner, Moffat Mitchell, Mc\nCabe, Kendall, Mailey, Ford,\nNelson\u2014Graves, Dox?, Dominici,\nAppelle, Armstrong, Graves, Mol-\nlnl, Mason, Poogy, Jacobsbn, Gallicano, Koenig, Mayo.        7\nSummary:\nFirst? quarter\u2014I,, TraU, Kendall\n(Coupland), 30 seconds; 2, Nelson,\nPoogy, 4:55; 3, Nelsoh, Mayo (Gallicano) 6:14; 4, Trail, Mitchell (Bellsky) 12:65,\nPenalties\u2014McCabe.\nSecond qu*rter\u20148, Trail, Moon\n(Klit) 3:41;-8, Tr_l, Smith,- 8;01j7,\nTrail, Robertson, (Boisvert) 7:38;\n8? Trail, Moffat (Robertson) 8:41;\n9, Trail,   Bairnes,   (Smith)   10:25;\n10, Trail, Kendall (Ford). 10:56; 11,\nTraU, Moffat (Exner) 13145.\nPenalties\u2014Coupland, Koenig.\nThird quirttr--12, Trail, Jerome\n1:22; 13, Trail, Robertson, 3:42; J.4,\nTrait McC\u00bbb\u00ab : (Boisvert) 4:36; IB,\nNelson, Poogy (Gallicano) 8:08;\n16, TraU, Moffat (Robertson, Jerome) 6:45; 17? Nelson, Dominici\n(Graves) 7:30; 18, Nelsoh, Koenig\n(Spring) 7:40; 19, Trail, Smith, 10:40\n20, Nelson, Gallicano (Poogy) 10:89;\nNelson, Mollhi, 18*01.\nFourth quarter\u201421, Nelson, Martini (Cox) 1:05; 22, Nelson, Cox\n(Spring) 5:15; 23, Mayo (Gallicano,\nAppelle) 12:18.\nTory Convention TV\nBarred by Labor\nLOflDQN (Reuteri) \u2014 The BBC'l\nplan to give two'weeks of Ijlgh-\npowered jpolitlcal television froih\nth)* year's .Labor and Conservative\nparty .national convention! \"hW\nAided out.\nThe Labor party executlv* Wednesday voted 11 to 10 against the\nBBC's proposal, to televise an annual political convention tor. th*\nfirst time. )'\"\"\"\u25a0\n'\u25a0 On: grounds of Impartiality, the\nBtatt-run corporation now cannot\nihow the Conservative convention,\nwhich follows the Labor meeting\nat the south ^east resort of Margate.\n, But the Labor party executive\ncommittee promised, to ask delegates at ..the Margate, conference,\nwhich bpeni Sept. 28, how they feel\nabout becoming television attri\nnext,,yetr;    .    \u25a0\nKlein,;K. Adshead,. D. doGans, E,\nCraft and R. Shields?\nNakusp\u2014Kaz, Hoshizakl, Al Short\nB, Yoshlda, F. Desrochers, A. Henderson, E. 'Desrochers,' M. Weit,. R.\nFaulkiner, R, Hale, O. Yanlgisawa,\nB, Hempseed, w. Highland and Bud\nAalten.\nBLONDE BELIEVED\nYANKS'SECRET\nWEAPON\nNEW YORK (CP)-An unidentified blone. bombshell I* thought\nby lorn* highly Interested observers to be New York Yankees'\nsecret weapon for taking core ol\nthe Invading 'Cleveland Indian*.\nThe Indiana, fighting to head the'\nYank* off from thtlr. fifth ttralght\npennant, were leading ,3-0 in th*\nsecond inning Wednesday when .tha\ncharmer, wearing i low-cut pink\ndress ind described by ont eyewitness as making Marl|yn Monro*\nlook' undernourished, got up ind\npranced, up the aisle from*\nprominently-located box seat.     7\nThere wis i .round of wolf-\nwhistles and the. Indian bench\nturned to gawk. Even the playeri\non the field got * good look.        '\nBob Ltmtfa walked two batters,\ngave up \u25a0 single and a run was in.\nTwice more the lady went, into\nher act,, juit u Lemon was set; to\npitch, to tha accompaniment of\ncheera and wolf-whistles, Her final\nperformance was followed by four\nYankee run* In th* sixth. Thtn\nth* vision In pink got up and left.\nThe Y*nk* won 7-8.;\nShe didn't, come back Thursday.\nThe Indlam won 4-3.\nKayc^es Down\nLegion 9-1\nTha Koycees of the Pony. League\nran roughshod over the Legion\ntetm Thursday eveniiig when ihey\ntook a 0-1 win In a regular league\ng\u00abme.-. \u25a0 v'  '\nThe game was blasted wide open\nin. the fourth when the. Koycees\ncounted five run* bli th^'*tr*ngth\nof two juccesslv* homen? by K\u00abn\nBlakeman and Vern Eckstrom.\nBlakeman also hit a double. Danny\nRail wai the Legion big gun at the\nplate'with three hits including a\ndouble, . \u2022   7   f;     .- '\nBlakeman, went all the way and\nallowed the Legion seven hits. Th,e\nKaycees got 10 < hlta oft tha offerings of three Legion chucken, Mike\nBourque, Gordon Wood and Danny\nBall. They Walked five ind itruck\nnot flv\u00ab. \u25a0'.' .,' \u2022>\u25a0<. .'\u25a0'..  .'*-.-.-:.\"\u25a0\u25a0:-\nLiberal Candidate t\nUrges Coast Guard  \u25a0 f\nVANCOUVBtt \u25a0 (CP) - Forawtloi*\";\nof a Canadian coast guard wii advocated Wednesday by VoncouveiV\nKingway Liberal candidate Arthur\nHelpa.\n. \"It ihould be similar to that ol\nthe United States,\" he said ln a\npolitical speech. \"Such i service\ncould start with i small beginning\nbut it would be Invaluable In pence.\nor wir. It li needed on both coasts.'\nHelps suggested the coast guard\nbe operated ai a branch ot th* Roy.\nll Canadian Navy.\ndckfati\n... tbe letters stttt. Then from\ntil over Ik* free world tome ta&\ncomments ti these {rem rtMtn\nef TBE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE\nMONITOR, in internilionil d_ty\nnewipspert\n\u2022   TA* Honltor tt matt rttti\ntut   let    uroishiMHklai\npeople. . ,.*    \u25a0\n\"f relumed le tAeel after *\u25a0\ntaps* ol It rears. I tctll |M\nmy de-ret from tht tollt$t,\nbut  my  education  me\nfrom tht Monitor,.. .\"\n\"The Monitor fives nt Mem\nfor tny work .,' ?\u25a0 ,\n'    \"l  truly  enjoy   kt   turn\n,:' pa*y-'\u2022*\n\"You, too, wni find Iht M\u00ab**k*r\niafennitive, vdth complete world\nmwi..Yea will discover i eou>\nttrncllve viewpoint In every n*wi\n*te\u00bby.. *\"\u25a0  7 .\nUse. iht eeapbn lelow fer * i**\u00bb\nelil Iniroductory luhicrlptfon \u2014\nI months for oruy $3. '\nTh* ChtliHiD Stltfts Henltes\n0\u00bb, Nmnr <U Isstn li. >lsi>\u00ab D.I.*.\n, Ftotl'MM.sr.-. u inlr\u00abJue1o*y nitalf.\nlin   I.  Ih.  ChrlHUn  lilMH   \u00ab\u00bbll\u00bb-\n\u00bb Inns, I mini II.\n\u2022.\u25a0\u25a0'.' turn).      7   .     '\n\u25a0>-,      _________\ni^r\nussr\n\"^u\nm\nKEiPINGUP\nWlfH THE MARKET\nProptr (j**'liieni' iboqt -lnv*itm*nt*. depend\nliroely upon up-to-dite Informttlon. fluoh\n- informitlon, how*y*r, ripidly btoomtt eut-\n- ef-dit* In many Inittncei, What wai \u25a0 oood-\nInvestment lilt y\u00bb*r .mlBht.b* *,p\u00ab*r en*\nthis y**r.sProp*r *up\u00bbrylilon of lpy*rt-\nmenti lnvolv*i oenitint keeping up with\nthi mirket F*w p**pl* *r* \u00bbbl\u00ab yonitintly\nto kttp up with tht tvtnti whloh iffto*\nitock prleti ind earning\". The men who\nsupervise the portfolio of.Investments re-\npreiented by Ciiadlan Investment Fund\nLtd, are abl* te obtain ind nieii eurrent\ndilif It li their d\u00ablly buslnesi to do so.    \\.q\nThii expert ind oenitint attention It work-\nntEto your benefit whtn you Invert In C.I.F.\n\u2022vSnet tak* idvantatjo of It and know you ,\nire keeping up with the.market?\ni'Meil this eoupoti today for particulars\nMcMAHON & BURNS\n-TO.\ntit Wwl Nader\u00ab.\n-\u25a0HMtf.........,..-..*\t\nADD1E9J....................\nCITY I....:.. ;.,..\nVonteuvir I, I.C,\nOur Social Credit\nCandidate\nBy electing Social Credit members to represent\nB.C. in Ottawa, we will ensure action ond cooperation in Dominion-Provincial matters in\nthe House of Commons.\nIN KOOTENAY WIST RIDING\niri ivuwici*<hi weal muinu - \u00b0Vi\\   aew\nBATES. John 0. X\nSocial Credit is the answer to excessive taxation-,, extravagant government spending, and\nthe fears of boom-bust economy. Social Credit\n. will abolish waste in Ottawa as it has In B.C.!\n' \"'\u25a0*' ' ' Y \u25a0      \u25a0\u25a0  ''\u25a0 ' *.\u25a0\nVOTE-FOR THE PEOPLE'S GOVERNMENT\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nThii advertisement Issued by the B.C. Social Credit Campaign Committee v~\nmamamKasa^^atsmiimmmmmmtem^ememm>mmetimmmmeiemamtaemamammmmm\u00bbaemmtmam\n Gois*'.\n(hDimd. iksb\nKOOTENAY * SfW\/dL\nBy...UstN;'WAIr.^IR',.VV', '\u25a0'\u25a0-.\nThe remark I* commonly, heard\nwhen \u00bb citizen- of value leave*, a\nconwnunity thet \"oilrclty'i >ios* i\u00bb\nthe other's? 01$.\"   '.Vf.?;.\".'7\"   \u25a0\nThat was the word among: curlers\nof. Nelson about tou ChaBe, who\nleave* this weekend to. make,- hi*\nhome In.Vancouver. .,\"\nIt, was the same word that circulated among; participants in. the\nroaring game four years ago'.when\nhe left. Gilbert. Plains, MahitobaVto\ncomd'tdithe-beauUMjclty onfth*\n\"West.-Arm.\",. i\".,--'-) tiitiyti]\nV. Lou has been curling, since high\nschool days.in.Gilbert. Plains, and\nlor many years was.a-member, of\nthat centre club and a participant\nlit many bonspiels there:and;in -the\ndistrict .Lou wis also a.baseball\nplayer who enjoyed the .game.for\nthe sport and exercise. For many\nyear* he played with theseniors of\nGilbert Plains \"and playedVih tournament'ball throughput Manitoba.'\nGncoml^ to'Nelson in \u2022 tHe\nfall of 1840, he immediately Joined\ntheVcurlhlg';club where he'\u25a0\u25a0yraa a\nconstant worker for tho betterment\nof the. organization.' .;    . v. \"\nHis 'first year of curling-here saw\nhuri;te*ihedi''with\"':W*l!ter' Duckworth going to the fljijdi'iof th*\nclub thampionslilp where they were\nbeaten by Fred Hnlln**-^iian Lou\ncredits with teaching him a great\ndeal about cinfilhg!\" \"'\"\nBONSPIEtER ?\nTwice since living her*.;Lou his\ngone to provincial bonspidls' at\nKimberley and Vernon,-as well i as\ntaking in two.'bonspiel* in Seattle\nand at Vancouver, He\/has.also at\nKEYS CUT\nLOCKS REPAIRED\ni^#s\nLOCK AND CYCLE SHOP\nn? Baker 8t'.        ; Phon* IMS\ntended the Creston \/Butterfly 'spiel\noh! three or four occasions.\nFor the past two seasons h*. has\nbeen on the executive ot tho Nelson- Curling Club and hod done\ntouch\u25a0' work on varloui committees\ndealing with the curling end ot the\nSummer Bonspiel. -\n, Lbu expressed the hope he would\nbe able to join the Vancouver club\nand possibly- hook up with a '-rink\ngood enough to attend the provincial'spiel in Trail next season. He\nalso has high hftpes of coming back\nto Nelson next summer ' for the\nCanadian Summer 'spiel,\nr Since! arriving in Nelson Lou hai\nhot only been active in curling but\nin .fastball, and baseball. Last season he was on ths executive of the\n.Outlaw baseball club as.well a* being second-term coach for the Nelson Royal*. LOU in his two years\nas pilot of tha women'* nine won\nthe; \"(Vest Kootenay crown once and\nwas in the. finals the other time.\n< He has been a constant worker\nfor the Royals again this year and\nalthough he will be; gone before\nthey ore finished in their playoffs\nhe fells confident that they will\nsuccessfully , defend their crown.\nThe.club;is stronger this year in\nalmost .'every department.\nTalking about the Royals, Lou has\nnothing but'praise for the girls on\ntho,team.,He rates them as wonderful sports \"w.in, lose or draw.\"\n; -Lou, who' it seems will try anything once, took up golf this summer and enjoys tho game. \"Not as\neasy to play as one would think,\"\nhe soys. '\u25a0--'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0.\u25a0\n\/ Lou In his short time here seldom\nmissed, a hoqkey game and was an\nardent: rooter for the Leafs, and\neven yet he hope* to keep in touch\nwith Nelson so he can follow this\nyear's-team along what he hopes\nwill be the Allan Cup trail. He lw\ncame a boxla fan here,       ,\ntSlbert, Plains' loss wa* our gain,\nand now our loss. will be Vancouver's galn.; GBod luck, Lou.\nFights\nNew York\u2014Carmine Flore, 146,\nBrooklyn, outpointed Danny Glo-\nVuidll, 145)4, Brooklyn, li0jV\"\nIPAiRlJRQUSERS FREE!\nf With tho purchase of each made-to-order *uit.'\nA complete lelection of cloth* to ehooie from\niff fMymtatfen Sale [\u25a0'    ?~-f;;\nHughes-Stuart Men's Wear\n7^->RiENf^>I^CETO.H0P''..' tiy'Z\n459 WARD ST. PHONE 425\nThey Got If All Mixed Upr Outlaws\nWin Mushballr Humes af Baseball\niSOFlAKT\u00a9 VERNON\noutlaws and Hurries may not\nrealize It, but 300 fans, went home\nThursday night convinced that'they\nhay* ployed through this season on\nthe wrong diamonds.\nWith the teams playing the first\nfive innings, of baseball, the fast-\nballing Humes -squeezed .out a 5-4\nwin. Hut when lt came io the five\ninnings of fastball it was a different\nstory. The baseballlng Outlaws\n!wer* victorsby a 6-8 cotittt.\nBoth games were .well played\naffair* giving the crowd ;'\u2022 their\nmoney's worth many' times,.over.\nIncidentally, tho money will be\nturned over, to injured player*.\nIn the' baseball encounter; the\nHume trotted put Boomer' Rodzlnyak, as the dark horse chucker and\nfor two and a third frames ho\nshowed up well,        -       ':\nThe Humes took \u00ab twb-ftin lefad\nin the first when Bob Koehle was\nput on base by a hit pitch. Brother\nRed then singled and Bob scored\nwhen Isaacson tried to get Red at\nsecond. Red then scored on BOb\nMorton's double. They added\nanother in the secohd when BOb\nKoehle was safe on an' error and\ncame home on brother Red's double.\nThe Outlaw* finally hit their\nstride -In.the fourth when- Boomer\nweakened giving up three I bite *no>\nhitting John Cone with a pitch.\nGerry Koehle came in to relieve,\nbut the damage was done for the\nOutlaws collected four runs.\nThe Hume* tied the game up in\nthe fourth with a .untamed run\nand; then -in ,t^e 'ilitth With Lee\nHyssop;'; parked on third Gllhooly\nwa* hit.':' by 'the? ball 'rind Hyssop\ncame home on the play. After a\ngood deal of discussion1 Umpire\nWalt Tozer called' the batter, out,\nbut allowed the run to count giy-\nIng'theiHuiheiithe[win:\"-' '    ,\nJohn1 Mlsm'aca went the distance\ntor the .Outlaws glvln gup jflye hits.\nThe Outlaws . collected six off-of\nRodilhyiik ahd itbehle. 7\nHAMAlCAyA TIE? 'EM?U*>\n; The,;f<|Sth\u00bbU ,'game saw, little\/Yo\nHamdkawa' throw everything from\nblooper balls,to spit balls, at ..the\nHum*1 giving 7them but \"four hiti\nwhile., his mates, blasted George\nBatefobtftor slxsafeties?\nHamakawa after walking in the\nfirst frame scored the Outlaws first\nrun but the Humes came back in\nthe second.to count thre* runs. '.\n: The fighting band of Outlaws\nevened up the game when Lloyd\nSwenson' homered in 'the fourth\nwith one on. Swenson besides being\nthe hero at bat played spectacular\nat third base. He wos responsible\nfor eight of the 15 putouts in the\ng\u00bbnie.'.   '\u25a0:\u25a0';\u25a0:        \u25a0        \u2022 \u25a0 \"'..''\nThe winning rally came ln the\ntop of the fifth when. Hamakawa\nwas safe on an error and John\nCone, who couldn't hit the baseball,\ncollected, hla third.straight single\n\u2022frith- 'the larger 4>all., T\\vd more\nsingles by Swenson and Donaldson\nsewed up the game.\nLADIES' FASTBALL\nHOMI-PR0VBIONER ROYALS   \u00ab\n\"\u25a0 '\"' - ' \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0 j-*-   .'; \u25a0' -yi;-;\n7i SAlitOREPS. 7 \"\u25a0 \"'\u2022' \"v'\"' ?\n6:15 TONIGHT      ^\nCiyiC CENTRE GROUNDS7     V\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian. Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn ............ 000 li|0.(itttr-2 7 0\nChicago 300 000 OOx\u20143 9 3\nMickehs, Hughes   (1)   Milliken\n(5) Wade (7) and Campanella; Rush\nand Garaglola    L\u2014Mickens\nNew York ........_ 000 000 000-0 6 2\nMilwaukee ........ 300 000 02x-5 8 0\nMaglie, drissom (1) Corwin (81\nand Noble; Burdette and Crandall?\nL-Maglie. \"V* \"\u25a0   ;'\u25a0'\u25a0,-\nPhiladelphia .. 000 330 200-17 18 2\nCincinhati .....7SU, 100, 020-,$ M 1\nSimmons, Ridzlk (4) and Burgess;\nBaczewski, Smith (5) King (6)\nNuxhall (6) Wehmeier (7) Kelly\n(9) and Landrith. W-Hidzlk, 1\nSmith.\nPittsburgh 201 100 000r- 4 11 0\nSt. Louis 100 005 22X-10 12 1\nFace, Hetki (8) Hall (7) Bowman\n(8) and Jinowicz;  Mizell, Erautt\n4?4).\u00abhd Yvar*.  Ir-H*Ud.\nAMERICAN LEAQUI\nCleveland ......... 300 000 010-4 9 2\nNew- York  000 008.000\u20148 4 i 1\nGarcia, Wight (6) Wynn (7) and\nHegan; Lopat, Gorman (7) Kuzava\n(9) and Bern. W\u2014Wynn, L\u2014Gor-\nmin.'. \u25a0' .'.iti   .';\nChicago ... 102 504 023-17 21 J\nBoston vi.....?...:.:; oMloo' ooo-Tii:'l\nFornleles, Consuegra (5) \u25a0 Kegan\n(t) ind Lollar, Wilson (8); Parnell,\nDelock (4) Flowers (8) and White,\nNiarhos: (7), W\u2014Consuegra, tr^\nParnell, '* \u2022.\".\nDetroit 010 000 008-4  \u00ab 0\nWashington. 011 040 OJx-7 11 0\nHoeft,   Miller   (8)'- and   Batts;\nStobbs and Fitzgerald.   L\u2014Hoeft.\nSt. Louis ...\u201e..._ 001 200 000-8 8 2\nPhiladelphia 050 000 OOx\u20145 0 0\nBlyzka, Littlefield (2) Larsen (8)\nand .Courtney; Fricano and Murray.\nL\u2014Blyzka. -.\u25a0-.',\u25a0'..*',   -\nCastlegar Kah\nTake First Game\nFrom Rossland\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The Caitlegar\nKats with Joy Saunders leading the\nway took a one-game lead in their\nbest of three series in-the first round\nof the .West Kootenay-title games\nThursday when they edged the\nRossland Royals 19-18,\nSaunders who previously had hit\na homer in the second with one, a\ntrlpi* with, one on, and? two singles\ncame to bat in the ninth with two\non and her team behind by two\nruns. She blasted her second homer, giving her team the close win.\nAnn Kastrukoff went the distance\nfor the Kats allowing 12 hits while\nstriking out' one ind issuing two'\nfree, passe*. '.', \u25a0      ,'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0.-\nS. Veysey for Rossland give up\n18 hit*, walked five and struck out\none.\nThe same two clubs'will square\noff again Monday; in Rossland in\nthe second game of the series,'-    -\nRossland ..v.i.-..-,|...:.- 802 0W 070r-18\nc\u00ab*aeg*r' -.-....v...:.::... W'ObO 073^-19\nf -JOHNNY -aoflAK .*.>:>*:'\n. ... 25-year-old Saskatoon- goalie,\nhas been signed,to guard nets fbr\nVernon Canadians of. the Oknagan\nSenior Hockey League In-1953-54,\nclub officials announced today.   V\nSbfiak played for Trail 'Smoke\nEaters of the Western International\nLeague.the last three seasons following two years in the old Western Canada senior league with\nSaskatoon Quakers     .\nSdfiak- is the.second injection of\nnew blood in the Canadians rebuilding plans which started \u2022 last\nmonth with the 'signing of ex-pro.\nGeorge Agar as playing coach.     .\nVernon finished in third, place iri\nthe Okanagan loop last season.\nWellxJCnown Bowler\nDies in Via neouver: ?\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014,Funeral\nservices' fot John E. 'Baxter, 83,\npromin*n^?Van'cOuver lawn-poWler,\nwere held here today.   ' '\nMr. Baxter, who came to Vancouver from Scotland in 1912, died\nMonday after a brief illness.\nBesides being a former secretary\nof .the B.C, Lawn Bowling As\ntlon, 'Mr. Baxter waa one (Of'.the\noriginators. of B.C. Lawn , Bowling\nWeik.     :.-??\u25a0'. \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022-.',:,\nNelson Little,\nPony Leaguers to\nPlay Kimberley\nNelson. Little and Pony Leaguers\nWill get their .first chance, at outside competition Saturday and Sundiy when the teams from Kimberley appear in Nelson for exhibition\ntllts?:^.;7;- \"7 ;,\u2022''.' ';'.,' '\n,, Kimberley's Little League team\nwill meet Nelson in the first game\nSaturday with the Pony league fixture on tap in the early evening.\nSecond .games will, be. played Sunday. ?.7:. .;\u25a0 .,\u25a0...- ' -., .'-,,' \"\u25a0\n1 In picking the Nelson Little\nLeague'team four players were taken? from- each'of the Kinsmen,\nKiwanis arid Llphs with .two Play-\n,ers from the Gyros and two. frorn\nthe Rotarlans. ' , ,. \u2022 . v\n; Those playing on the \u25a0 rep, team\nwill be Tom Balfour,' Ducks Mc\nLean, Dave Grundy,'Jorgenson, Mc-\nClahdish, Hughie Hooker, Dennis\nDemmon,- Ken Moffat, Ernie Wab,\nJflnmie 'Carter,. Toniiiny Hufty,\npal* Skapple, Herb Rodgers, Keith\nFredrlckson, Goldsbury V and Ken\nHancock. :\n. The most likely chuckers. forthe\nteam will be Tdm Hufty, Goldsbury.\nand Ducks McLean.\nIn the Pony league game Nelson\nwill' stage - a. parade of chuckers.\nThree will' be used in each game\nin. an effort to give each lad a\nchance to show his stuff.   \\\nThose on the pitching staff are\nPeter.Thom, Ken Blakeman, Blair\nOlspri,' Wayjie ,W\u00bbters,'' Gordon Wood\nand Don Ball? \"Others players making up the team are Carls Swan,\nPickle Eckstrom, Lloyd Atwell,\nBurnie Monteleone, C h a p m a n,\nJohnny Cherneko, Drew, Don\nHolmes, Fred Nudd'and Fraser. ;\nBob Phillips said.Thursday that\nthe Kimberley boys would likely be\nbilleted with ihe .Nelson players.\nHe expressed the hope that the fans\nwould turn out strong for tha aeries. The boys have <come along in\nleaps and bounds this year and have\ni shown some fine games. '\nI  -\u25a0;\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022-\".\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0 '   ' ..  \u25a0-.    '   .if\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1953 \u2014 ?\nWhite Sox Shellac Reds 17-1\n,   By the ,rC\u00bbn\u00abdl*n Preii; 7\nT he second - place contenders\ngained ground Thursday is. the\nmajor leagues ran through a card\nof seven daylight games,\nChicago White Sox bloomed in\nthe \u00abun ai- they overwhelmed Boston Red Sox 17-1 With a 21-hit\nbarra'ge at Fenway Park that gav*\nthem a Bweep of - the three-game\nAmerican League series in Boston.\nChicago's-victory,?^^ coupled -with\nCleveland'* 4-3 decision over' New\nYork Yankees, boosted the second-\nplace'Sox to tVs games behind\nNew-York.---\".'':\"'.\u25a0'..'-.\nThe picture was the same;In the\nNational League as the' second-\nplace ; Milwaukee Braves * chased\nmighty Sal Maglie from the mound\nand coasted to a S-0 victory in the\nbeer capital. At the same time,.the\nleading Brooklyn Dodgers dropped\na 8-2 : decision to the Cubs in\nChicago,-cutting the Brooklyn lead\nto seven games.\nAt Boston, Minnie Minoso, Ferris\nFain 'and Tom Wright' all got\nhomers as Chicago unleashed its\nmightiest attack of the season,\nThey drove Mel Parnell to the\nshowers in the fourth after running the, score: to 5-0, and kept the\npace against the reliefers the rest\nof the way.     ,\nBill Glynn, Cleveland'* substitute first-baseman, poled a triple\nto score. Wally, Westlake with the\nrun that beat ihe Yankee*. Early\nWynn, who relieved Mike Garcia\nfpr'.Cleveland, became -the first\npitcher to beat the Yank* three\ntimes this season,\nRalph- Klner's three-run homer\nin the first heat the Dodgers at\nChicago. It snapped the Brooklyn\nfive-game winning,' streak and\nmarked the first Cub triumph in\nseven .games with Brooklyn: \"\n- \"At Milwaukee, Maglie was nicked\nfor three runs before Marv Grissom took over with one out In the\nopening \u25a0 inning. The Braves got\ntwo more off Al Corwin in the\neighth. ',7 ;;\n1 In other day action,: Del Ennls\ndrove.ih'six runs on two homers\nand two singles to lead Philadelphia Phillies to a smashing. 17-8\nvictory, over tha Rediegs at Cincinnati;;\nEnos Slaughter went on a hiding\nspree as St. Louis Cardinals beat -\nPittsburgh Pirates 10-4.; He, was\nhelped by a clutch double by Red\nSchoendlenst, back for the first\ntime since he wa* hit by'a throfarh\nball nine day* ago, , .'\"?.-:   . >\nWashington Senators took a 6-4 '\ndecision \u25a0 from Detroit  Tiger* 'a*\nChuck Stobbs held the visitors to\nsix hits,      7   \u25a0' , \u2022\u25a0' \"\u25a0'?,\nLittle Marion Fricano pitched a\nsmooth elght-hltter< and bis Philadelphia. team-mates  banged   St,\nLouis ,'hurlers for five 'ri&'s Ih the\nsecond toning \u2014 including  ,.G ti s '\nZernlal's 23rd homer of the year \u2014\nas:  the   Athletics   defeated   the.v\nBrown* 8-3 In an American, League \u25a0\ntilght ;game at Phlladelphis(.'   '     , '\nThs mainland of Scotland is 285*\nmiles long but varies in width between 50 and ,160 nilles?  *' v \u25a0\"\u25a0'& '\u25a0 V\nThe first English schools for professional artists: were founded by\nSir 'Godfrey Kneller in 1711.\nGLAND RESEARCH\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) -, EndocrL\nho logical research in Sweden has\nbeen advanced by a grant ot about\n$200,000 from the Wallenburg Institute, to the Carolinian Institute,\nforemost medical centre Here. The\nsum will be devoted to study and\ntreatment of hormone disturbances,\nNew car?) (NoICarnu! |\nCOBB SAYS CAMPY\nA GREAT CATCHER\n. CHICAGt) (AP) \u00ab- Ty Cphb, one\nof baseball's immortals, says that\nBrooklyn's Rby Campanella poteh'\ntlally is' one' of the great catchers\nof aU tltoe, .   '\nThe Georgia Peach said Wednesday, after watching 'the Dodgers\nwhip the Cubs 8-5: \"He's got to\nwatch his Weight snd be the all-\nstar catcher fdr the next few years.\nHe's great; now but yoUVe got to\ngo over a long period of time to\nprove it'to anybody.\" '7\nCobb, 438, was a surprise guest at\nWrlgley Field en route from Cop\nperstown, Nv Y., to California. He\nleads all baseball with a lifetime\nbatting average of .387. He said of\nCampanella:, \"Look .how close he Is\nto the plate. .That's the sign of a\ngreat, catcher. He catches a lot of\nballs before they, curve or . drift\naway from .the plate and gets\nstrikes on a lot that aro called balls\non other pitchers.\"\nHOLE-IN-NCiTHINQ   -      <\u2022\u2022\u00ab!\nBUFFAL6, N: Y. (AP) -*\u25a0 You\ncan mark Mrs. Jack: Gustln down\nfor a hole-ln-nothlng.\nMrs. Gustln used; * 4-lron to hole\nout. her tee shot on the 144-yard\n12th 'hole at Brookfield country\nclub, Wednesday. She was playing\nin a handicap golf tduniunent and\nwas entitled to one stroke on the\nhole. . ' ' ,: ..? ;.'('\u25a0'\u2022\nNew fast-safe-easy way to\nmake your car look new again\nin jutt one application!\nfSSgr\n:<gsm\nRUB ON! Carnu loosens rctad film and haze, stubborn\ntree sap, bug juice, etc    '\nWIPI OFF! The finish sparkles with a brilliant gloss.'\n\u25a0Color is ridh-^s-new!     \u2022\nGat a big 20 oz. can ef Johnion's new Carnu today.\n. \"Johnloft'l\" ond \"Carnu\" or. tfadamoi*a-ttl J.-*. Jollnlon ISon, tfi*\u201e BrantfOftl, Ontorto \u25a0      ;.'  '\n\u25a0-\u25a0' !    7-'''.'-'   '       , ''.'?\"- ?\u25a0; ''-ti  \u25a0' -i '\u25a0 ---\u25a0.,- nt,\nOUR BRIGGS\n4&STRATT6N\nENGINE TUNE-UP\nGive* Ypur Engine   ' >'\n# Brstter Performance\n# Greater; Go* - Economy.\nSelkirk's\nEQUIPMENT AND SUPPLY\nCO. LTD.\n620 LAKE ST.        PHONE 16S0\n'    MORT E1ROWNE; Manager\nDAV0S,?Sji-\u00bb*ei!lfind \u2014...(AF)..,r*\n'nie.'international' Skating Federation announced Wednesday that the\n1654 world speed skating championships will be held at Sapporo,\n^apani Jan.'18-17.\"\nAinsworth Holtpring* 7\nSwlmmlnu Pool     *\nOpen 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dally\nClosed  on  MondS;\nExcept on a? Holii\nam\nday\nAdult SKATING\n\u2022s>\nm\nTONI-SHT\n8;30 y\n\u25a0[,   p.m.   ..'\nAdmiition\nmy\nFor QuaranVeed'   '\nMarfak   Lubrication   ,\nPHONE 75\nMechanical Repair! by   ?\nFactory Trained- Mechanic!\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nOpp. Post Office on Vernon.\nBudget Plan Available pn All\n7V ' -1 Salrt' ahd Bwvic* \u2022 \u2022 f.v ?\nPHONE  IM  FOR QI.AteljI'lBD\nSGh\/ingCahacIa\nArfilhiry b ona of the proudest and most highly trained Regiment*\nin our Army. From the accurate gun sights of tho \"25 Pounder\",\npictured above, to complex elocltonle aiming devices, \"The\n. (Junners\" work with a wide rango of Instruments and weapons.\nA career In \"The Gunners\" offers many challe*igr\u00bbs and aaVemfog***\nf the chance* for specialized training end promotion for a bright\n'\u25a0 young man can hardly bo matched in any other field. You build a\nsound career for yourself inthe Army, today\/wllhihaiices to travel,\n,; free medical and dental care; a fdll month's holiday every year,\nd fulure made financially secure thrbudh'excellent pensions.      ,\n'   To fee eligible you mW b\u00bb 17 lo 40 ywri of agt\/sHlhd'trad.sm\u00abn to.45.\n;   Whtn applylnj bring birth c.rtlrlcol! oroide* proof of og\u00bb.\n.   Apply rl'H bway-mll, orvliH Iht Amy Rtatilllnatoritr, ntonrf yourkou*\n' Zyj:M.'i\\l-Pertoimelpe^;i;,i.tiititiffti'::\n-, . 42M W^3i^Awhu\u00bb;Vw*4HiV(ir,!B.&\n',\u25a0\u25a0 ArmyInformation Cenlje,\n119 AA Bly\u201e RtA, WoricvPoihl:.Barracln, Viciorla,,B.C.\n\u25a0':\u25a0?' ... ; 7 '  ?- ..'   ':.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ',  -\"iti;.     . .A|*J\u00bb.*c\n\u25a0ti    titi \u25a0'   m ti., ,?;.'., ;'        '      ti v\nTh, toyal Canadian Altllllry Is bull'\naround teltnllOc tklllt and Itadai. Stir,\nvcylnn<>li on. of III. Inttresting end\n\u2022xbcflng fobs yet con horn in Artillery.\nAnolhir lob It th, Hthnlcal'aultlanl,\nplaning accural, Hr..Htro htttami tip\nwith a Drivtr Opsralor and Gun Poll-\nWon Officr In a Troop Command Post.\n 4-WYS WHO\nJUMP WPf\n.sfsS-IBS\n2*jj2jjj2^j|232___:\n\u25a0\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 31,1953\n\u25a0'\u25a0S$9.\n\\wm uis\n^w\/\/^\n^    \/<?\/? QUICK RESULT.\nPhone 144\nDeadline tar Clai\u00bbifled Ad*\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELPWANTED\nLife Insurante Corrtftany\nhas on openlnfl in Nelson\nfor\nAN UNDERWRITER\n?..-'\u25a0 Between the oae$ of\nThe man Wt want lAuit be\nenthusiastic, good appearance\n\u2022nd preferably rti\u00bbrried. Previous . silts experience hat\nessential. He will bl thorough^\ntr\u00bbln\u00aba \u00bbnd necessary financial\n\u2022unpBrt provided. \u25a0 \u25a0?\u2022'\nStMeage, present occupation,\nMarital statin),  education  md\nlength bt residence in community.\n'     BOX 4888 -DAILY'MBWS\nMAN   WANTED   -TOR   WASH\nnek eutomitic equipment. Interesting work. Peeble* Motor*\nLtd.\nHILP WANTID\u2014PIMAH\n'Application* Invited up to 5 p.tn,\nMonday, August 3rd for th* position of Secretary-Stenographer ot\nNelson Junior High School.\nDuties to commence September\n1st State experience and salary\nrequired, Forward applications to:\nJ. S. LIVINGSTONE,\nSecretary-Treasurer, S.D. No, 7,\n813 W\u00abrd Street.\nAGENTS WANTED\nA WAY TO MAKE MONEY!\nThit's whit yon are looking for?\nJutt Mil our g80 gu*r*nteed\nnecessities in your lurroundtngs.\nWrit* for full partleuliri Md w*\nwill tell you how. FAMILEX,\nP*pi 8,1800 Delorlmler, Montr**!\nSITUATIONS WANTID\nROCK WORK, CEMENT WORK.\nexcavating cellars. R. Row*, 118\nHouston St.\nI re. P6W81 mms fiys.im\nor acre. Phone 482-L-2.\nPUBLIC NOTICIS\nAUCTION SALE     ' '\nTimber 8*1* X607M\nThen will be offered for sale it\nPublic Auction, at 11:00 a.m., on\nFriday, August 28th, 1053, in the\noffice of tho ForeBt Ranger, Nelson,\nac, the Licence. X807B8, to cut\n1,010,000 cubic feet of Cedar, Hemlock, Spruce, Balsam, White Fin*\nand Larch oa an \u00abre\u00bb covering part\nof Sub Lot* S end 7 of Lot 1841,\nsituated on Clear Creek, Kooteniy\nLind DIjtrlct   \u2022\nllv* (5) yesr* will be \u00abllowed\ntor removal at timber-\n\"Provided anyone unable to attend th* auction ln person miy\nsubmit tender to be opened at th*\nhour of auction tnd treated, as on*\nbid.\",;.- '\u25a0..:\u25a0        .\nFurther particular* may be obtained trom the Deputy Mlnliter of\nForests, Victoria, B.C., or th* Dlitrlct Forester, Nelion, B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n(qo^uhuedt\nnorm on* tmM'.\nStaled tender* addressed to the\nuftflerslgrtisd md endorsed \"Ttnder\nfor Construction of \u00bb Customs\nReiidene* Building at paterson,\nB.C.,.Will bit received until mid.\nnight, August 22, 1053.\nPlans, specifications and forms of\nUnder (Aly be obtained upon request from th* Chief of Accommodation Brinch, Customs tnd Excite\nDivisions, Department ot National\nRevenue, Ottawa. , -.\nTenders will not be considered\nunits* madt on these forms and in\naccordance with th* condition* set\nforth therein.\nEach ttnder must be accompanied by (certified cheo.ua on *\nchartered bink in Canada payable\nto th* Receiver General et Cinida\nti specified In the form of tender\ntor 10% of th* \u00abmount of tha\nUndtr.\nThe Department, through the\nChief of Accommodation, will supply blueprints and specifications of\nth* work on a deposit of the sum\nof $10.00 In th* form of a certified\ncheque payable .to ths order of the\nReceiver General of Canada. Th*\ndeposit .will be released on return\nof the blueprints ind specifications\nwithin * month from tha date of\nreception of.tenders. It plans ond\nspecifications are hot returned\nwithin th*t period, the deposit will\nbe forfeited.\nD. SIM,\n\u25a0* * :\u2022 -r- Deputy  Minister.\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sals X6102B\nThere will be offered tor ssle it\nPublic Auction, it 0:30 a.m., on\nSiturdiy, September 12,1088, In th*\noffice of th* Forest Ranger, Nelson, B.C., the Licence X81020, to\nout 1)010,000 Cubic Feet ot Hem-\nloek, Cedar, Fir and Larch, Sprue*,\nBalsam and White Pine; 300 Lineal\nFeet Cedar, Pole* and Piling; 3000\nCedar Fane* Posts and 200 cords ot\nCordwood situated on ' S.T.L.'i\n12217p and 12218p and part of S.T.L.\n12215p situated on Garrlty and\nSmallwood Creeks, Kootenay Land\nDlitrlct    7\nSeven 17) year* will be allowed\nfor removal of timber. \u00a3\u2022,'\u2022.\u25a0\n\"Provided anyone unable Jo attend th* auction ln person may\nsubmit Under to he opened at the\nhour of suction and treated as one\n\\Mtti; titi'. -titi\"\nFurther particular* may ba obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forciti, Victor!*, B.C., or the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C. ;\nv \u2022 TO CLOSE ESTATE.\nOffers will be received until\nAugust 15th, 1953 for the purchase\nOt Lot 3, Block \u00bb, Plan 2405, Village\nof Klnniird, Ths. highest or any\notter not necessarily accepted.\nWrite or phone A. R. Dahlstrom,\nSolicitor, 1412 Biy Avenue, Trail,\nB.C. Phone 870.\nfContlmud la Next Column)\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n*_\u2022* tl\nAm\"\nI. MMW\n\u2022.Drsmch    '\n10. A ellmMng\np-ant\nU.F-mlnln*\n! Unit of M.Robtut\nweight 20. Finnish\nI.Hani mum export\n4,N*on <\u00ab*-m.) ;1\u00bb.A\"-ti\n\u2022.On-Nd pmaiU\n6. Trouble jcolloq.)\nT.Club HA\nt-mita tlr atool\n*udd*nly\nJ3.He*ltate thanose\nl_D**ont*d      \u00bb.Cr**y\nUtter it       lLHelmeU\n-   beginning of     with\na paragraph     mov\u00bbbl*\ntS.Cr*x* plate* t-Btmboo-\n1\u00ab.T\u00bb*7       ItQuiek like\nmeasure       15. To make fun      grass\nIT. Subject tar 18. Con tatoing;    85. Noble-\nLinr\nJ1-1  Kiai-iH  1\nuu:\nm   HH0H\nHISHQIVll-j   HIl'-lN\nI'l'.' 1\ni'.Hin i-uiti\n\\i n\nHBaaRiiig\n\u25a0\u2022in\u2122\n!  r.vir.i\nhuhi\nI'-iHsaagji\n*an maiSB\n''Y'W\nUliMH   B3S\n'A flBI\nHHBIH  UH\nnuidi\n1 wfji*i*Hi.*;\n<-1'A\\\nas anna\n\\m\n1U   MHHU\n\u25a0HOIHL\n2fy Frown\nwater\n\/ItAIm     .....       ...\n28. Asterisk H-atitat'a \u00ab*\u2022-\u00ab.\nJl. River 88.Melalli*\n';    (l>.)V.'-\" .7 7 .itoekv\n82.43ommand\nubject te\n(view\nan\nU.Weg\nSi. High\n(mitt.)\nJimeito\nt-Qout\nS&ntgrtnl\nIT. Afit-tn-iMK\n28. Turf\nao.Comply\nS0.U. B. president\n$4.N*gatlv*\ntapir\nIB. Chum\n$8.M*tallle\nrock\nt7.Flr\u00abt nam*\n\u2022v.ef'a.U.I,  \u2022'\npresident\n46. To. haras*\n(*l*nfli 7\n41. Weird\n42. Ventilated\n43. Rip\n44. River*\nttftiM\nDOWN .\n1 Book of Old\nTestament I\nnit\n30; By .way et\n40,Free\n42.Trlba ot\nNag*  .\nHills\n(Iiidl*)\n*T*\u00ab\nDAILY CBYPTOQUOTB--Here,s how to work ttt\nAX-.DIBA.AXS    ;,.'.'.'\nbLONOFILLOn\n\u2022One letter *Imply stands for another. In this example A Is u*ed\nfor the thre* Va, X for the two O'a, otc Single letter*, spot-\ntrophies, the length and fonnitlon ot the word* are all hint*.\nBach day the code letter* ar* different,       - ,\nA Cryptogram Qootatlon    .,\nTPTT     QPOYM     IKK     NKTD     JIB\nv-R;P?V'1f^A,X flT'C^TAi  .XT'C Yp'tT    UIH ':'\nTOTA   QlltU   CIIKA   UTICPA-M\u00bbKoa\nYesterday's Oryptoquota: ACCORDING TO THB LAw'op *\nTHB MBDBS AND PERSIANS, WHICH ALTBRETH NOT-\nPANIBL.   ':\u25a0' '-.-.-'titi,\nts-splWU- tt tint ratal-- fqmiluu     .\nPOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Ot\nused equlprfttnt, mill, mm* and\nlogging supplies; ntw *nd ut\u00abd\nwlro rope; pip* tnd fittings;\nchain, steel plat* nad shapes. Atlas UAn - Metals Ltd., 250 Prlbr\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phon* Pi-\n\u2022111*8857.'\nFOR d'ALB -ir 18 AW 25 FT.\nhouse trllleri, completely equipped. Apply 2 mile* south on\nYmir Ret. .Grey trailer right hand\nside. Before 2 p.m. '\nBEDS, DRESSERS, CAST IRON\nDink with drain board, on* sink\ncomplete with UP*. 1 tnd 2 Inch\npiptl, Ph*))* >84)-Y:      : 7      .\nEMPIRE MOTORS CREDIT NOTE\n. tor sale tt * sacrifice, 81150, 16%\ndiscount Phone 712-R or apply\n118 Vernon fa\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES -\nSpecial low pries*.. Active Trading Co., 035 E. Cordov* St, Vm-\nCRESS   WART   REMOVER\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS.\nTHREE ROOM SCHULT TRAILER\nlike new, fully furnished. Hilltop\nCoffee; Shop, Taghum.\nl til PAiy-jiM), i a-iwAAiio.oo,\nchrome canopy table 84.00. Apply 821 Second St.\n\u2022BBAWV \"dbWHA' W\u00ab *ASH-\nlng machine, good, condition, $33.\n824 Chatham St\nFOR SALE - SBSBBSECf 120\nbass piano accordian, 7 switches\ntreblt, 2 but, Phon* 1727-R.\nG06D ^R->*iRS 55c A p6uWd*-\nMr*. M. Blumer, formerly Him.\nm\u00abrer Nunerle*.     .     \u25a0'-'\".\nFOR SALE - MESSltt) UMXk\n2x4s ind other sizes. S. P. Pond,\nBox 364, Nelson.\n3 pce. CHroggB-aro sphi\nPhone 1005-L.\nmoftortic atAHWft abm,-\nWrlte P.0 Boxaa. Ntlsoa B.C\nb6tfci& Mb, IpTOfsRBWRIte\n, Phone 888-U\t\nSUMMIR RESORTS\nCRESCENT BEACH\nAUTO COURTS\nAll ideal holiday resort. Modern\nfurnished cabins. Sand beach,\nboats, fishing. Tent and trailer\naccommodation. On Kootenay\nLake 10 miles East ot Nelion on\nHighway 8. Write R.R. 1 or phone\n471-Y-i. v.-., _fy_ :..-\nEDGEW.OOD\nCasa Vista Cabins 43 Star)\nVacation or overnight\n\"ihtyr* Piawtnt\"\nUKE WIltoERMERE LObGE\nand Cabins. Safe, **ndy beach,\nwarm water. nT. Dickinson, Invermere, B.C. i'1'    'V\nLOST AND POUND\nLOST - FROM? 800 FRONT ST.,\ngirl's bicycle, \"No. V4308, License\n334. Color, naV'y blue and white.\nReward. For information -phone\n1102.\n16s* - flH&mV \u25a0l4i,' '-VftSfl*..\nity'' of Longbeich terry,- black\nscottie namf\u00a3 \"Jiggs.\" Attn*,\nQueen's Bay. Hume 2-F- Balfour,\nRewart.   .'\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0 ,  ,'\u2022\u25a0 . -\".'.\nRENTALS\nLEASS FOR ONJ Y_AR - 8 BED-\nroom homt, North 8hora: Modern.\n$106.00 dojposit required. (Rtturn-\nable). References, please. Bos\n42M mUy News.      >    '\u25a0\u2022<\nFOR RENT-2 BEDROOM HOUSB\nNorth Shore, Nlc* location, modern, prefer no children, $50.00\nipth. for permanent tenant Box\nm\nally News.\nm to Hi0 \u2014 i VduUo\nbusiness girls deslro furnished\nlight housekeeping suite. Box\n4540 D*Uy News,\nwJuo?Eb li6 RE*J!r - * OR I\nroom housa out ot town eloi* to\nsohool. Any condition. Apply Box\n4288 Dally News\nrob. miro ~ waDtRt* ijonajr\n. apartment. Vacant Aug. 15. Box\n4666 Dally News.\nr'MMT APAAtMlNT  *WM!H '\nbath, unfurnished. Apply 012 6th\nSt.\naffiei 'XM6 WAnmawstt\n\u2022pte* tor  rent  Apply  Central\nTruck and Equipment Co.\nsuite, suitable for 2 business girl*.\n204 Behnsen St.\nmonth*  only,  Apply  Box  1285\nDally News.\none  bedroom  for  rent  Phon*\n388-Y.   .\nmrnrn warn - _av, wbk\nor  monthly.   All\u00abn   Hotel,   171\nBaker.\na\". I,I0HT HOUSEKEEHR3\nrooms. 140 Baker St .' .5\nFOR RENT \u2014 2 ROOM SUITE. 614\nVictoria St\nfpr rew - etaRE Harass;\n104 Baker St. Phone 862.     '\nmbkdmtittti. tcm. am\nin. Phone 663-R. -\nN, Iflon latlg Wms\nClassified Advertising Rites:\n18* per lis* flnt Insertion ind\nnon-consecutive insertions\n11* line per consecutive Insertion after tint Iniertion\n48* Un* tor 8 consecutive Iniertion*\n$1.88 line tor month 426 conie-\ncutlve insertions). Bos numbers lie extra: Coven my\nnumber of insertion*.\nPUBLIC  (LEGAL)  NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc.\u201420o per line, u.\ntint Insertion. 18o per line\ne*ch lubsequent Insertion.' ,v-\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\nIO* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT*\nV    Subscription Rates:\n(Net Mor* Thin Listed Here)\nBy curler, par week,\n7 In advane* ,\u2014_-,..,,,;\u201e ,\u201e\u201e    JO\nBy carrier, per year .......... $15.60\nUnited SUte-s, United Kingdom:\n? One month _ $ 1.28\nThree month*       ,,   - $.71\nSix month* '\" , \",.'- 7.80\nOn*y*\u00bbr. _..\u201e__.\u201e\u2014;\u2014 15.00\nMail ln Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month:.._____.    1.0$\n..Three montha - -   2.78\nSix months \u25a0 $.8$\nOn* y*\u00bbr ...\u2014~\u2014 ii. 10.00\n. Where extra postage Is required,\n'\u25a0 above ratea plus postag*.\nBuy, 8*11. Trad* th* Classified Way I\nf ON THE AIR\nCKXN PROGRAMS ... \u00bb\u00ab oh the wal\n7:(\u00bb-N*w\u00bb-7 ,\n7:05\u2014Wake Up Nelsdn\n7:15-Bport* N\u00abws   , '\n7:20\u2014Wake Up Nelson\n7:30-N*w* \u25a0*-'\n7:85-W*ke Up Nelson\n7:45-Rise N'' Shin*\nfcOOr'N^w* ',-..\",'.'\u25a0\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Sereaid*\n0:00\u2014Morning Devotions '\n0:18\u2014E\u00bbrl 0W\u00bbrren Show\n10:00\u2014Saddle Serenade\n10:18-N*w*'-,.:' '\".\"..'..\u25a0-.\u2022\n10:20-rMor_Ing Visit ''.\n10:80r_tdryP\u00bbr*d*\n10:45\u2014Invitation To The Walt*\nU:00-Shut-In Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nll:45r-Decoratlvely Speaking\n11:50\u2014Consumer*' Corner   .\n12:00\u2014Liberty Special  \u2022-:\u25a0*.*\nI2:15-Clty' Tire Sport*\n12:2!J-New\u00ab  --iti\n12:30\u2014Form Broadcast     '\n12:55-Chatting With the Listeners\n1:00\u2014Spotlight on Meloifcr\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Fairview Shopping Quids\n(Faelft* Daylight Tlmt)       .\nFRIDAY, J'ULY,31, 1933\n2:00\u2014Family Theatre\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:80\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4:15\u2014A Trip tc the Moon\n4:80-Sleepy Tim* Story Telle\n4:45-Paclfie New*      -\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament H1H|\n5:00\u2014Settler's Choice\n5:25\u2014Intl. Commentary\n5:30\u2014Behind the News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight On a Star\n5:45\u2014Sporti Ntw*.'\n,8:IHM*few* \u25a0\n8:00-Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Christian Scienco\n6:30\u2014A Man and Hla Magic\n6:35\u2014Cavalcado of Melody\n7:00\u2014New* \u25a0....'\u25a0'\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Waltzei\n8:00\u2014Bob McMullin Show\n8:30\u2014La Boito a Chanson\nO.OO\u2014International Concert\n10:00-N*w*7..v?':'\nI0:15-Politlcal Talk\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n10:45\u2014Sports Roundup .-'\u2022\n11:00\u2014Around theTown\n13:0O-NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n4Mountaln\nSaturday;\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:)8-Muslcal Minutes   -\n7:80-New* -     > i\n7:88-Mu6lcal Mlnute-\n7.40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55-Musical March  Past\n8:0i>-N\u00ab'w*V. -'ti\"\n\u00ab:10-B1U Good Sporta\n; 8:15\u2014HIU *hd Encores * .,\nSatV-Ldc*l Fill*\n0:06-tBBC N\u00abw\u00ab ;,'...'.',..\n0:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n0:30\u2014Stamp Club\n0:45\u2014Songs of the Welt\n10:00\u2014Stories by Eleanor Stuart\n10:80-World Church New*\n10:45--New\u00bb\n11:00\u2014Story of Music \u2022,\n12:00\u2014Folk 'Song Tlmt\n12:30\u2014Music Profiles\ni:00\u2014Roll Back the Year-)\n1:80\u2014BBC Bandstand.\nStandard Time)   .\nAUGUST 1, 1953   f   '...'\n2:00\u2014Trana-Canadt Bandstand\n8:0->\"rN*w\u00bb 'A.\n3:10-Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014This Week    \"\n3:30\u2014Piano Playhouse\n4:00\u2014John Fisher\n4:16\u2014Sports College'\n4:30-Roy Rogers Show    ' :    >\n5:00\u2014Western Roundup\n\u00ab:00-N*w* \u25a0'\n6105\u2014Saludo3 Amlgos   .\n6:30\u2014Soirio a Quebec\n7:00\u2014Hit Parade\n7:30\u2014Roy Norris Quintet\n8:00\u2014Vancouver Theatro\n8:30\u2014Talent Scouta    -\ng:00-t-Ths Homesteaders\n0:30\u2014Hill Billy Hit-Parade ,\n10:00-N\u00abw* ,\n10:18\u2014Lloyd Arntzen Sing*\n10:30\u2014Th* Music Box'\n <WRf\nluvtra ids\nPERSON-TO-PERSON WANT ADS\nTOR QUICK RESULTS f\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nPhone 144\nDeadline fpr Clauified Ad*- -3 p.m.\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n$$$'  SAVE   $$$\n'USED CAR\nClearance!\nLOOK AT TjHESE CARS!\n1953 Monarch.\nSport Tudor\nRadio,  white  tlrei  ind  only\n8000 miles.\n1952 Chevrolet\nSedan\nA reolly clean ear at t\ngiveaway price. I\n1953 Ford Custom\nFordor\nOverdrive. Only 6000 mile*.\n1951 Chevrolet\n,.-'  .Sedan  '\nOnly $1695\n1950 Ford Sedan\n'    Radio, heater.\n1951 Austin Sedan\n1949 Monarch\nSedan,\n1948 Pontiac Sedan\n1948 Chevrolet\nCoach\n1946 Pontiac Coupe\n1940 Chevrolet\n\u2022 ?*Sedan\n1939 Plymouth\n Sea\/an\n1939 Model A\nSedan-$100\nTERMS AND TRADES.\nMel Biierge\nMotors Ltd.\n($08 Vernon St.    Ph. 1744\nFORD - MONARCH\n: Specials -\n1952 Ford Fordor $2245\nWith radio\n1951 Studebaker Sedan\n$1795\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n$1800\n1950 Austin Devon $875\n1951 Ford Prefect $995\nLow Mileage. Like New.\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n$1595\n,1948 Angliq Tudor $545\n1949 Austin Panel$845\n1952 Studebgker Pickup\n$1695\n1951 Fargo Piekup $1395\nPRICES THAT CAN'T BE BEAT\nMANY TO CHOOSE FROM\nAUSTIN SERVICE AND SALES\n;   EMPIRE \u2022 -\nmotors;\nPhond'1135   ,803 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTOR-CYCLES.   BICYCLES\n(Continued:\nDrop In and Have a Look \u2022\nat Our Selection of Good\nCars & Trucks\n195 l-'ChevVolet' Sedan    '.\n1951 Plymouth Sedan\n1949 Ford Fordor\n1947 Pontlae Sedan\n1938 Oldmoblle Sedan\n1933 White 1 Ton Panel\n$75\n1950 Ford Pickup  \u25a0\"\n1949. GMC Plekup\n1948, Mercury Plekup\n1946 .Chevrolet Plekup\nTERMS AND TRADES\nVernon Street\nMotors\nPhone 1661', 518' Vernon St.\n'  j-   NelsotyB. C.-\nPROPERTY, HOUSED, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nFor Sale\n1\u2014Older typ* home, 3 bedroomi '.\"\nind room in hall for child'*\ncot. Dining and living room.\nCement foundation, z excellent lota, at preient ln garden,\ncorn, spuds, etc. Cdtd'Tt\nGood term*.  ....    \u00bb\u2122uu\n2\u2014New, almost completed 8-bc'd-'\nroom Bungalow, fully modern first clam residence. Auto,\noil heat, insulated,,large llv-\n\u25a0' Ing room With fireplace. 2\nlot* newly landscaped corner.\nQuit* liveable now, can be\nfinished at your leisure Sac-\nSS* $10,500\n3\u2014Smart 2 - Bedroom Cottag*\n' \"*    '    \" :\u2022 and\u2022\"\"'\"\"'\n2 lots, approx:\nwith fireplace and plumbing,\n\"*        \u2014   \"lots, approx).\nX 120', 3 minutes\nat Balfour,\nmate!;\n._..  iy 80      ..\nfrom the. Like ind <t9Q^n\ngood flihlng. Prle*'\"''**'*'\"\n4\u20142-Bedroom Cottage it Procter.\nSecluded street, 10 S*>_i~|ftn\nralnutei-from Lake^\"M\"'\n5\u2014Lake Frontage Horn*. Good\nbeach,  %tc.   une   hall   nuur\n-.from town.\nTerms, fiice\n$6300\nITS HEREI THE \"NORTON 'TEA.\ntherbed\" Dominator. Come In and\nsee this- famous motorcycle, the\nholder of the Isle of Man TT tt\nKootenay Motorcycle SalM *nd\nService, Box 890. Castlegar; phont\n2001 \"The Shop ef friendly Service,\" -'\u25a0'.,-\nrttt\"HBAVV fitfK* 5 tt-rl G.M.C.\nModel 308 and 1&41 14-ton Inter-\n' national. Will sell to first reasonable offer, or trade tor ear. Phone\n1227-L.   .\u25a0\u25a0'.-    ....\nrSSStiHWSi Wttl lAUtt Xm\nChev. coupe in good condition.\nPhont: 181-t-l,:      K\nIBft SALM - 'iilmfi *WBS.\nenger coup*, Rebuilt motor, good\nrubber. Mmy tccessorlei, 17T4-L,\npickup,  \u00ab x c \u00ab11 * n t  condition.\nPhone 063-Ii.\t\nSACRIFICE '47 PORD FORDOR\n,$200.4)0 below going price Cdn he\nfinanced. Phone 14)1 -L-2\n(Continued In Next Column)\n8\u20142 Bedroom Stucco Bung\u00abIow.\nWired for ring*, hot air furnace. Good loft     CRA7t\n- 60 x lSOTfeet, VOOIQ\n\u2022    Spme, Terms.\n7\u2014Beich Frontag* dot* to ferry,\nKooteniy Bay. Parcels from\n200 feet to '.ISM teet\n8\u2014Falrview location. Modern 2-\nBcdroom Bungalow, built in\n1849. Full concrete basement,\nforced air furnace; dak floors\nIn living room,1 Wired for\nelectriq range. Good garden\n\u2022ndfrult trees. This is a very\ngootlbuy 59550\n8\u2014Six SUITES. Best bargain in\nmonths. Cooking facilities, gas\nOl electric. 700 Block. Clear\nyeerly profit of approximately \u00ab2000. Soth* if 2 ftftn\nterm*  Price      ?l-\u00ab.\u00bbOUU.\n1    Owner wild icctpt i suitable\n. small home In part payment\nof the above,   j \u25a0'.,'\u2022\nC.W.Appleyard\n& CO-* tytci.\nR**l Estate\nEstablished 40 Vein\n892 Baktr St. Phone 269\nFire, Car and General Insurance\nPROPERTY; HOUSES, FARMS\n\u2022     ETC., FOR SALS\n\u2022Contlriuedi \"  *\n\u25a0       SPECIAL\n1. A 4 roomed bungalow, plui\nutility r6om and bathroom. 2\/3\nbasement. -Only 6 yeara old.\nFully Insulated, wired for electric range. Hardwood flooring.\nBus'(top *t corner. THI* house\nmay be purchased on exceptionally reasonable term*. Requires low down payment but\nmonthly payment* muit be\ngood, well located on 80 foot\n1ffiJ\u00a3.      '$6500\nCASH PAYMENT ONLY J1500\n- Term* ln balance.\n2. A splendid value in * 6\nroomed house, cIobo In Full'\nbasement, hot air furnace, and\nwash tub*. Housa ln A-l condition throughout, Ownar leaving end will sacrifice C7*WW)\nfo?bnly   J\/OUV.\n,    Som* term* available.\n3. For a revenue property\u2014see\nus. We hove \u00ab 3 suite apt: housa\nfully rented, plus small 2\nroomed slate for owner, or\ncould be rented. PresentJncome\n$133.00' per month.' A good\nrentable location on bus lip*.\nHouse in first class condition.\nSgSK\u00a3  W$>\u00b0\n4. Your choice of two bungalows wonderfully located In\nFalrview, Two or three bedrooms. Hot air -furnaces and\nbasements in each. Properties\ndeveloped and level. Garages on\nboth properties. One immediate\noccuoancy, other Sept. li 1968.\n&A* ...\u201e....: $8500\nNo, 2, . \u25a0' ' \u25a0\nPriced at ...\nWe   could  help  you   finance\n'the**.;..\nTourist   camps,   and   several\n'other good businesses fdr sale.\nAlso  jome  very good  North\nShore property. ' <\nSee m-before you BUY!\nRobertsoriy Hilliard,\nCaftell Rfealty\nV    Co. Ltd.   ?  -\n$7500\n832 Ward St\nPhona H\n\u25a0   \u25a0 - - \u25a0\nSelection of\nPRICED RIGHT\nPROPERTIES\n$10,000'\nSm*ll ultr* modern BUNGALOW  on. two Vlbts. -Falrview,\nImmedUt*\npossession;\nSt* thl* value\nSmall ultra modern BUNGALOW on North Shot* within*\none. mile of ferry.    tftafM\nLake frontage. .;'    WW\nOLDER STYLE DWELLING on\nNorth Shore with lake frontage.\nExcellent water \u00abystenf? only\nhalf mile from ferry. '*L79flfl\nPrlccfd at   . fP'*vv\nFAIRLY NEW FAMILY HOME'\non North Short ibout one mile\nfrom ferry, like frontage, Six\nrooms, hot <RIfi 7Sfl\nwater h\u00ab\u00abt *IV\u00bb'IJW\nOR\nwin sou with       taonn\nless land at     . ,     *\u00bb\u00bb\"\"\nNORTH SHORE LOTS without\nlak* frontage from\n$787.50 \u201e   $2000\nFive to select from and all clos*\nto ferry. s .     >\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES:\nAuto. Courts, Lodge*, Resort*,\nBakery, Cafe. Novelty Shop \u00bbnd \u2022\n.other*.\nFor priced right properties\nT. D. Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward Street        Phond 71T\nFOR SALE,- 2 HOUSES ON 2\nacrair 1 mil* on Ymir Rd. Good\nplace for tourist camp. J. Posnlkoff, Ymir Rd.\nYOURS. AT   $1325.00 - t   BED-\n, room houn. Apply R. Schuster,\nHouse 23, Canadian Exploration.\ngalmo, B.C\nREVENUE WlOraRTY, ON 3 LOTS\nuphill, 6 rooms downstairs with\nbath, small 8 room suit* upstair*,\nnice ground* with fruit tree*.\nPrice   $6800,   reasonable   term*\n. 'Possessions Aug. 1. This is i good\nbuy. Phon* M8-X.,\nFOR SALE r\"'-t ROOM UNFIN-\n' isbed house with approx. ten\nacres' of lind, 200 yards. from\nschool, sacrifice. Will accept lit*\nmodel c*f. W. L? Fitchett, Harrop,\n'B.C.   ',      .;\u25a0 ; ?   :-\u25a0\u25a0-,,', '\nWtSAUI,WveA8HAaAJi-i\nroomed modern- house, garage;\nfull basement, furnace, Apply\nafter 6 p.m. Miry Curren, Castle-\nt*r.       \"\"\u25a0 -j   \u25a0 \"\u25a0   \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0   -   '\u25a0'-\u25a0\nftmmrm\nSktk -\n,rl4Hldlng. Oood\n49\n\u00bbcr*\u00bbofl\u00abnd\u00bbtP\u00bbH._. ......\ntimber. Please phone 1577-L, Trail,\nor call at 1450 Part St, Trail, after\n4*00 J>.W?- _,    \u25a0 7.\nhem*, btt Vi Acre of lind, 1 (nil*\n. from Nelson, Phon* ,471-R-l or\naply 60 Ymir Road, Pric* $4800.\nfor saLe; cMcbTots OVER-\nloinklng Columbl* River Limited\nnumber. See Guy Guido. lower\nDumont subdivision, Klnnalrd, '\"'\n(Continued in Next Column)\nFOR SALE - GENERAL? STORE\nand rooming. houi*. No opposition. For further particulars writ*\nBox 4258 Dally News,\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFirm, Mission City. B.C Ifektve\nover 7000 extremely herJthy *nd\nproperly conditioned Breederi on\nour own f\u00bbrm. Our b*by chicks\nar* produced only from our own\n\u2022took ln Whit* Leghorn*. White\nRocks, New H*mpshlr\u00abi tni\nCrone*. Catalogue on request\n\u25a0lodSi\". mlm 6U>'.' WHAMta\npig* at 112,60 each. These are\nreally choice and can be seen at\nCrawford Bay, H. Harrop, 814\nVictoria St.\nf_r 'SAU-;i'KAM (366b\nfarm horses. Cheap for cash or\nwhat offers? Apply to D. W.\nSutherland. Vallican, B.C.    \u25a0'\u25a0\nWANTED - HKUfcHMti- AYft-\nahire bull calf. Alio good milk\ncow* for sale, or will trade for\nh\u00aby. P, Bloodoff, Passmore, B.C.\ni VfeftV 6666 taLkiNd cows\nfor sale. Wm,\nCity; B.C.\nL. Verigin, Slocan\nINSTRUCTION\nLEARN RAILWAY\nTELEGRAPHY\nAT HOME''\nA few hours a day train you\nfor a high-paid position.\nRAILWAYS OFFER:   ' '\n. Seeurity .'.-\n>; Pasl Privilege*\nHospital and Sickness Plm\n\u2022 Lifetime Employment  '\nPension\nDO NOT DELAY\nWRITE NOW TO:\nColumbia  Business Institute\nBOX 4428,-NELSON DAILY NEWS\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\n. 388-R-2.\nUSED BED. \"PHONE\nWAlfTED -  uT'OHnS\". TfoYS'\nbike for euh. Phone 1645-R,\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSTANGHBRLIN GROCERY. FOR\nsale, Including living quarter*. 112\nSilica St'.\nCABIN BOAT? SLEEPING AC\ncommodltfoni, 14 hor jepower out-,\nboard powered. Sacrifice for cash.\nApply 320 Hill Mines Rd. Phone\n1642.\nMb \"MUS - m.' *aW16At,\nideal for cimp or play holt, with\nor without outboard motor: boya'\nbicycle in good condition. 351\nBtker St.. er phone 886. '      ' S\nUnder Plymouth motor,\nBox 4532 Daily News\n$200.00.\nFOR? SALB - J-\u00abA' 200 AMP.\nLincoln welder with F162 Con-\ntontlil engine, cables, helmets,\netc. and approx. 100 lb*, mile,\nrod*, 1\u2014No. 15 Marquette, acetylene generator. Some other tools,\nand a quantity of stock. All priced\nto Mil. Slim Halftes, Wynndel,\nBC'    \u25a0\nMAfl-iNALMAeffitffRV'CO\"\nLIMITBD\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL. LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries invited\nOrtnvllle Isltnd, Vancouver 1, B.C\n*\/6r SAL* r* M<JdVlffli WIN\ncylinder  hoist,  heavy duty sub\nframe Phon* 1541.Y.\n\u2022'\u2022\u25a0',   BUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nTORONTO STOCKS   '\n(Closing Prices)\nMINI*\nAcidii Urinium .._.'..\nAmerican Y K _V-.._.\nArmistice ,\t\nBigimio  ,.\u201e.,\u2014_,\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb\nBtrymin ...,\u201e_._   ...\nB*se Met*l* ___.\t\nBevcourt : .\u201e_._\nBobjo   ..., ->,_,>-._\u201e\u25a0\nBr\u00bblorne ..^,.i,,,\u201e....\nBroulin\t\nBuff Can .,_.__\nCampbell R L -.v\u2014.\nCariboo Gold' 7_\nCentral Pore   .,'.\t\nCon* Golden Arrow\nChestervllle \u201e.\t\n<3ilmo G  .:\t\nCon* M ft 8 ,..-,,.\u2014\u25a0\nConwest   -S-...-.,..:..   \u25a0\u2022\nDome    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0 ,-j ;...\nDomtldt ,....\u201e\t\nDuviy\nA88AYER8 AND MINE\nWBPRMtNTATIVgt\ni ?W Wi6D6M6H ft H6., AS.\nsayers 50) Josephine St.. Ntlion\nROSSLAND, B\nff'S   ELMES.\nAswyer Chemist\nMine Rep\n'       BOOKS    '---'\u2022 \u2014\nu'-a-MiNiflw n(>Qrt\"\"mtM\nHouse, Toronto, Books by thill\n; order, for religious and non rt'\nliglous  people,   reference  book*\nfor office, church, home. Contact\n? Mr. George Elsey, 1312 Robertson\nAv*..Phone 2I0-R-1 after 6.p.m,\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nk \"ii ,66A*te, 6tB  U6 i.m\nBaker  St.,- Nelson,  Phone 1118\n_______________________\nboydc AFFt_:6k?-ii&_tMtE3T..\nNelsnrt, BC -Surveyor.'Engineer\nMACHINISTS\n\".Bith.iifeW'S LiMrtto'\nMachine   Shop    Acetylene   and\ni electric, welding,  motor rewind-\nIn*   Phop* 583. M4- Vernon St\nROOf-INO OR ROOFERS\ntsffimiwmrmsrmm\n7 Phone H. Pedersen. 1761-R-l .\nThe Windward islands In tha\nBritish West Indies He ln the path\nof the cooling northeast trade\nwinds.\nCUSSIFIED DISPLAY\nNO\nTO\nTHUMB\nCHUM\nwhmomcaxsare'\nmTjTCHWTOBmQyot\/\n*W&*M>M& WBRMMeWASUSt*\n\u25a0 These Lovely Jobs Will More Than ?\n? Please You! f.\n, LOW PRICE GROUP\n'35 Ford Sedon $149       '   '37 Plymouth Sedan $216\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 31, T953 \u2014 11\nEast Mllsrtic ...........\nEast Sullivan ..\nElder Gold\t\nEstella \u201e\t\nFalconbrldge  ;.\u201e__,\nFrobliher \u2122.'-^.\nGod's Lak* .........\nGdldal* _,\nEastern Metals \u201e\u201e,\nGolderest      \u201e\u201e....,\nHolllhger   \u201e.\nHomer Y K  \t\nHudson Bay ..-_.-,\nInspiration  \u201e._._.\u201e.\u2122\nInt Nickel\t\nJollet Que\t\nKelore .\u201e...\nKerr Addison .........\nKlrk^Hudson B\u00aby ....\nKlrkland Vake\t\nLabrador   .    ...... .\nLake Dufauit ...\u2122..._\nLakeshore\t\nNew Larder U _.\nLeitch   V    ti...:....,\nMacDonald .  .....-.\u201e\nMacLeod Cock ........\nMadsen R L \u201e..\nMal*rUc OF\u25a0.\u201e..__\u201e\nMclntyre\nMcKenzle' R L ...._.\u2014..\nMonet* . .?...;.,......_.\nMylamaqu*    .'-.......\nNew.Alger    \u201e..\nNew Calumet _....\nNew Goldvu* .__?...\u201e\nN\u00abw Lund ..:  ...\nNlplssing   , \t\nNoranda ..' ,,.,,'.,,.,.?\u201e.\nNormetals ...,..., _.\nNew Laguerre     ~\nNorth  Inca   .7.............\nOsisko .....\t\nPaymaster  _....\nPickl* Crow \t\nPlacer Develop \t\nPreston Z D     \u201e....,\nQuebec Man     _     1.00\n\u202210H\n#\u25a0\n1.40\nX  -\\\n.48\n.32\n4.15\n2.89 .\nn\n8.60\n1.08\n.20;\n1.06  .\n. ,82\n1.347\n2l.85\n.4.'\u00ab9\n17.35\n.84\n.33\n1.07\n4.80\n.60\n.60\n15.85\n8.40\n.85%\n.85\n1.11\n.27\n...14.00\n.20\n45.66\n2.08\n41.00\n.20\n.20%\n20.28\n*    .75\n*  .85''\n8.15\n.'-'.88\n8.78\n1.20\n\"'\u2022\u25a0.737,.\n.80\n2.00\n1.88 .\n, l;88\n85.00'\n.33 ,\n.41\n.72\n.42\n.82\n'    .33' .\n.26\n1.55\n68.00\n2.68\n,10\n,22%'\n.50\n.46\n1.30\n33.50\n2,\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)-Th* livestock\nmarket wu moderately active, with\n1050 cattle md calve* on offer, Including; 638 held over.  \u25a0\nThere wts kaen demand for good\nto choice strictly dry fed butcher\niteers ind heifers it itttdy to\natrong prices. Plain quality .grist\niteers and heifers wer* hard to\nmove at sharply lower price*.\nGood to choice dry fed butcher\nsteers, $18.25 to $18.50; common to\nmedium, $10 fo $17.50,       >^V\nGood to choice butcher .heifers,\n$18 to $17.80: common to medium,\n$10 to $16.80.\nGood to choice fed calves. $16.50\nto $10.50; common to medium, $16.60\nto $18.\nGood cow*. $9.28 to $10; common\nto medium, $7.25 to $9;.canners and\ncutters, $3 to $7.   .\nGood bulls, $10.50 td $11; common\nto medium, $8 to $10.\nGood atocker and feeder steers,\n$10.80 to>14.80.\n\u2022Good to choice'veil calves. $17.20;\ncommon to njedtum, $14 to $16.50.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prloes)\nMINIS.\"'-- \/\u25a0'\nBeaver Lodge ,...,..      .88\nBralorn*        _,..\u201e......   4.00\nCariboo Gold ..... .......       1.08\nEstella   .',.'  \u201e_      .89\n|.Glant Mascot  ......     48\nPioneer Gold ..\u201e\u201e\u2022; .......    1.80\nQuatsino . ..:...:..........\u2122      .27\n[Reevei Mae   ...:.     1.70\nSheep Creek       ,65\nSilver Standard''  ' ;\u201e-.\u201e     .98\nWestern Exploration ..._.     .41\nWestern Uranium  i.l     1.98\nYal*   v..'...., a ....      .35\nOILS    -., \u25a0\u25a0     '7.'?   i\nAnglo C*n .;... ..,' \u201e\u201e.    8,50\nA P Cons '.\u201e\u25a0 ..^_   \u201e.\u201e\u201e..'      .30\nCalmont \u25a0*,;..; _\u201e..._-...     1.35\nHome   .?,' :.\u201e.i. .\u201e....'. 7,86\nMercury     ,\u201e\u201e\u201e..\u201e...\u201e  -   ,18\nNational Pete  -    2.88\nOkalta Com ...\u201e......-\u201ei..i-..    2.60\nRoyalite  \u2122. .14.00 .\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates  ..,.\u201e....'... 718,50\n'38 Ford Sedan $129\n'38 Plymouth Sedan $101\n'39 Plymouth Sedon $196\n'38 Buick Sedon $189\niWsiEr^nrSooTOBusf.\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfully modem. Apply * Wpv A\nHenke, Procter, V\ntwo^uiiBRRnSTffWirsiMa!\n50x150. Apply J. B. Gagne, North\nShore, or phone 177$:L.   .'\nFOR SALE - HOUS-flSTTLOTS.\nApply 4416 Vancouver St. after\n5'p.in,\nFOR SALE-FOUR ROOM HOUfeE,\nlights and water, in Salmo. $1200,\nR,.Knife, Salmo, B.C.\nppopita W' f6r SkLt *6N 4S*ftANr\nIte Road. Phorr* 36B-R-2:\n3 BteDft-OOlf :!W514SS~CE3'SII'TN.\n84830.4H)vT\u00abnn*,' .Phone 1790 er 138\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER CAN REPAIR YOUR\npreient machine *t reasonable\ncojt' Fer fr\u00ab\u00ab *|tim*t\u00ab\u00bb Phone 41\nSINGER SEWING-CENTRE-\nMMAKBR.ST -NBLBON  B.C\npersOnaI\nVvAWA'fJESA  MUTUAiL  Flttf IN\nsin-once Co   D  L  Kerr  Agent\n.   Depot Clean rooms and reasonable rates   Vancouver  B.C\nROOM AND\nWILL GIVE ROOM-AND BOARD\nto 2 or 3 young gentlemen. Phone\n809-Y.\nMEDIUM PRICED TOP VALUES -f:\"\n'47 Plymouth Sedan $899    '46 Bulek Deluxe Sedan\n-.Radio, \u00abte,: $1269\n'48 Dodgs Sedan $966       .'49jtor(* Sedan $1067.\n[48 Plymouth $1099 '50 Ford Coupe $1279 ,\n:   S^ALl. CAR.SPECIALS    ;\"\u25a0''\u25a0 .'\u2022'.?\nSherritt Gordon\nSllverirtlller  .\nSllanco\nSlscoe .    ..,..\nRadlore Uranium \u201e\nStadacona    \t\nSteep.Rock \t\nSudhury; Cont\t\nSylvanlte  \u25a0    ......i...\nTeck. Hughes \t\nTombill\t\nTrans. Cont. Res \t\nUh|0n Mining\u2022\u2022 ',?;.\nUpper Canad* \t\nVentures\nViolamae'        ;\t\nWalte Amulet \t\nOILS\nAnslo Can    :...\nAtlantic Oil7\t\nCalmont     '\nCentral L\u00abduc\nChemical Research\nCentral Explorers ..\nDel Rio   '      \t\nImperii! Oil   \t\nInter Pete' ,.,.\u201e,..\nKroy.  ',. ti:..Z......\nMid Cont  :.\u201e..\u201e..\u201e.\nNat Pete     .\u201e..'..\u201e.\nOkalta :     ..._.,..\nPacific Pete   ....\u201e\nRoyalite ' .     ,-.\u201e\nUnited Olli -    i,\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbl  i\t\nAluminum .. ,....j....\nArgut_ \t\nBell Telephono \t\nB C Forest\nB C Packers A .....\nB C Packer* B ......\nB C Pow*r A ......\nCan Breweries \t\nCan Canners ...........\nCockshutt      ,\u201e.,......\u00bb\nCons M _ S \t\nDist' Seagram   \t\nDom Foundrlei\t\nFord A i-    i\t\nGypsum Lime _.....,\nImperial Oil\t\nImp Tobacco .....v...\u201e\nIht Pete     \t\nKelvlnator   ..:\t\nLoblaw A \t\nM*ssey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontanie\nPowell River ..     ,..\nSimpsons A . .   .'...\n'48 Austin 8 Sedan $616\nLATE MODEL SUPER DEALS\n'52. Austin StatloVi Wogon\nlow mileage $1496\n'49 Chrysler Windsor\nBeautiful black.\nOne owner Job,\n'50 Plymouth 4-Door\nSedan $1626\nOn* owher. '\n'50. Plymouth Club Coupe\n'    Fully riconditloned.    '\n\".'     $1599    'ti.Z    .\n'51 Chevrolet Sedan , '\u2022\n\"    Privately owned,.'        '\na Can be financed,\ntiti $1679   ,.'.,\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022    '\"\u25a0'\nTRUCKS AT SACRIFICE PRICES     \u2022\nWt have a number of used light dellvtrlei, *nd h*ivier trucks, all\n\u2022t specitl prices, it will pay you to look these over.       '\n'45.7Chevrolet Lt. Del'y \/\"'v'47 Fargo Panel Del'y ;\n'47 Chevrolet 34rTon;\n'50 Mercury- Piekup $966\n'50 Ford lO-V\/heelerr\n'Tondiim\nChoie* of wh\u00abelb*)pe.\nide in aUowincn, lubstintlil reductions\nton, throe quarter ton, three ton ond 3^\nor immediate delivery.\n'48 Dodge Lt, Del'y\n'48 CheVrol** \u2022-*\u25a0 P'f'V\n'51, Mertiury Pidkup \u25a0\nLik* ij\u00abw.   -\nNew trucks, spectai tr\u00bbde\nfer no-trade .Mall, h\u00ablf to\n',. ten in\nm.^mm,*;\u00bb'4mmmmm^;m0m.mtmm\u00bb,mmm ,\n4.!\n.68\n.21\n.$\u00bb\u2022\n.' w*\n.34.\n6.60\n:' .57   '\n.1.28\n2.08 '\n'.21.\n.22\n1.25.\n16,78\n2.50\n11.25\n5.75\n5.10 .\n1.30\n2.86\n1.2B ..\n4.40\n.2.28\n.30%\n.  .24%\n1.55\n.17'\n,.2.65 .\n2.78\n,  9.40\n.14V\u00ab\n.98\n... 18Si\n.... 4834\n.... IW\n...' 39>i\n- t%\n.... 121.4\n....   tv,\n..., 84\u00ab\n...   20'.i\n... ,'nsi\n....' 13*4\n.... 26%\n.... 27*4\n.... 14%\n.... 62\n... 35W\n.... 30%\n 10?i\n.... 24V4\n.... 21\n.... 40\n.... 8%\n.... 28%\n.... 25\n.... 13%\nDON CARLSON \"'\u25a0\u25a0]\nA veteran western Canadian\nnewspaperman, Don Carlson, hit\nleft .hli pott is business editor of\nth* Vancouver Sun to direct expansion of the publlo relations\nservice of James Levlek 4 Company Ltd,\nCarlson will supervise expansion of the firm's public relation!\nservices through Its offices In ,\nVancouver, Calgary, Edmonton,\nReglna, Winnipeg, Toronto and\nMontr\u00ab\u00bbl.\nCarlson, * geld medalist graduate of University of Alberta,\nstarted his newspapoV career with\nThe Toronto Star as a reporter,\nand was on assistant olty editor\n\u2022whan he left for the West tn 194$\nto Join The Vancouver Sun.\nIn hit role of business editor,\nhe covered the groat post-war Industrial and' business expansion\nof British Columbia, Including\nsiieh' prejeoti is Alt)*h? Celgir,\nand (he dll and gas pipelines of\nWestern Canada.\nComment Leads to\nHusband's Arrest\nDUNCAN, B. C. (CP)-An American police officer has testified he\nheard Edna Sampson accuse her\nhusband, Cecil, of murdering Chew\nDeb here'three year* ago.\nOfficer jerry O'Connell of Campbell, Calif, also .testified it the preliminary hearing of the Indian\ncouple, charged with the fatal beating of the elderly Chinese June 29.\n1952, that Cecil Sampson laid h*\nbeat Chew with * beer .bottle-after,\nhe refused to sell him beer on\n.credit;*,, ,,'?'\u25a0 7    \u2022\n, Adam\"Jimmy.-.Bdn*- Sampson's\nunci*, testified that Edna told him\nof the slaying while ln the United\nStates last year, and said If her\nhUsbatid d*id'\"ndt quit mlstre'atlftg\nher sh\u00ab would tell, of it.      -. '- ;\"\u2022>\nThe hearing was adjourned to\nAug. 19 at the* requait of defence\ncounsel Tim\u25a0.Hurjty, who sild.he\nwonted time to examine tha transcript of evidence by the California\nconstable.    '\nWinnipeq Grain\nWINNIPEG 4CP)-Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No.. 1 feed, .67'\/>. \u2022'\n- Barley^-ffo. '1 feed, 1.13.   ':\n'. The\" Japanese have specialized\nfor centuries in production of fancy\ntypes of goldfish.\nPHONE   144   FOB   CI.ARSIFIBD\nMarket Trends\nNEW TOHK \u25a0 (AP) --- Tht; itoclt\nmarket made its best advance in a\nmonth and * na\" with strong buying support evident in many major\nsections of the list.\nLeading Canadian itocki ph the\nupside, Mclntyre gained 1 point. It\nwa* followed by Canadian Pacific,\nup %, and International Nickel and\nDistillers Seasrim,'mi Dome tone*\nlost Vs, and Hiram Walker wis unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP)';..-- Western oil*\nlid to. higher ground In an extension of the rally that began Wednesday.  7 \u2022 \u25a0.- :\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0 *  r ;'\u2022\nBase metals war* led higher by.\na group of senior stocks.\n\u25a0>i MODiTHEAI. (45P.)-Pricei' edgsd\nhigher in light afternoon dealings,\nJtfea,\\ffll!v9Utnuml)ered.deelines,.but\nwere limited to a narrow, range.\nSenior metals, steels, senior olli,\ncarrier* and miscellaneous Industrials shared, the strength, Papers,\nbanks and beverasei held fairly\nsteady, while utilities were, mixed,\n! LONDON (Reuters)\u2014The firmer\ntrend of Wall Street induced 1\nslightly harder undertone to'.the\nLondon, though business remained\nthin.\nMining shares were prominent,'\nparticularly coppers.\nMET AtPRICES\nNSW VORK (CP)-Metal prices:\nLoad-rNew York. .14.\nZinc\u2014East St. Louis, .11.\nTin-New York, .70%\n8-foot Frost & Wood horse drawn by hoy rake, very\ngood condition \u2014 $75.00.\n4-Vi feet Moiiey Harrlt hone drawft mower w\/'raetor\nhitch, very, feed condition \u2014\u25a0 $75.00\n5-foot Oliver hone drawn mower w\/traetor hitch, good\ncondition\u2014\u25a0 $125.00\nBuhl Compressor 210 CFM, steel wheel*, mechanically\ngood,$1,800.00\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT C. LTD.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhene 930;\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nALLUrtlTS\ntRIClD\nTo Clear!\n1 \u2014 1\u00bb50 Plymouth\n4-Door Sedan r- $1750\n1 \u2014 1940 Dodge 4-Doir\nSedan \u2014*1300\n' 1 \u2014, 1f4f Chevrolet    '\n2-Door Sedan \u2014 $1010\nf -- 1946 Chevrolit\n4-Door Sedan\u2014-$990\nEVERY UNIT MUST GO\n1 ONLY\n1951 DODGE\nBuilneis Coupe\n$1750\nThl* Is Just en* ef th* many\nbargains we offer you.\n1 \u2014 1949 Codge Panel\n-Vi-Ton \u2014$995\n1 \u2014 1948 G.M.C. Express\nVi-Ton \u2014 $1200\nWith etnopy. ,\n1_1947MeregiyVi-Ten>\n1939 Ford Sedan \u2014 $300\nAs i*;\n1939 Willy* Coupe\u2014$200\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\nYOUR   DODQE,   DESOTO   DEALER\nOpposite Pott Offiee on Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C.\n \u25a0 ti   ...\n, li\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS), \u25a0^ff\u00bb'^; jpVt Si, IMS\nI\ny miM^\nfor BEACH TOYS\nBeoch Ball* _?;___\nRubber Fire Boot\nSwiihy V,    ' -\u2022\u201e-,   ,.\nSail Beat* _____\n';'    ,   -;. \u25a0 f ';\u00ab*f.-- 08*\n['titi'        \u25a0'\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0', \u25a0'.   <*LVftft\n' -       :' <\u25a0       ''.'\u25a0'\u25a0'.f-.M\n\u2014i_^_____'fi\u00abi \u2014 **.\u00ab?\nRubber Aqua Mat      - .        . ,f '.,_: $7.95\nBearji Bag* _uf 1.21 \u2014 $1.59 \u2014 $1.39 ond $4.57\nBothing Caps ....,,.;\u25a0,_.\u2014. 78* \u2014 $1.18 and $|.S8\nChildr-in's'Bbthlnfl.Caps \u25a0 \u25a0  ',     , ,-\".'.   -....,- \u25a0 f- 96<t.\nPlim W Ml\n.01% IJ G si \u00a3jXD\u00ab\nBusiness Spptlfght,.... v: ',\nWrong Synthetic Siifc SSranrfs\nEmerge From Alla\/s Natural Gas\nUnited State* industrial output\n: rose 05 per cent botween 1037-1951\nt while that of the rest of the world\n; rose 02 per cent.  \u25a0\",\nAsk Veur .Qr-seer for .\nEllison's U-Bake Breed Mix\n\u2022 . Whole Wheat or Whit*    .\n.    It makes excellent\n?     . heme mad* bread\n;.'   PHOtftSSfc.\n-   ELLISON MILLING\n.   - ELEV. CO, LTD.\nThe scherzo, a musical movement\nof Jight or humorous character, wa*\nestablished mainly by Beethoven\nand'.Sehubert;:\nTHOMPSON\n.    FUNERAL HOME\n-Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n518 kootenay St        Phono Ml\nV EDMONTON 4CP) - The first\nsilken strands, of synthetic yarn\nwere' produced this week from the\nmiles of pipe and tubing at the\n$55,000,000 plant of ihe Canadian\nChemical Co., east of Edmonton.\nIt Was the birth of a new and potentially great Industry for the oil\nbOOm capital. But it was carried out\nwithout fanfare* as. two' of the 10\ngiant yarn-spinning machines began producing spools ot fibre, v\nTli* plant ln three months is expected to be producing 300,000\npounds of filament and staple fibre\na week. Production Will'. Increase\nas oeprators are trained to handle\nthe complicated . machines and as\nengineers iron out wrinkle*. \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nUSE Bl C, CEU.UJ.OBE\nPartial operation of tha'1 plant's\npetro-chemlcal department, which\nmakes the first use of Albert* natural gas to manufacture chemicals,\nis expected to start any moment.\nThe employees now number\nabout 400. They will be. increased\nto between 700 and 800. They work\nin* buildings sprawling, over .430\nacres. ,\n' One   of .the   largest   building*\nhouses machinery tp process cellulose from Prince Rupert, B. C. Cellulose and acetone are- the twd\nmain ingredients of the synthetic\nyarn.. 7 : ,:, \u2022 \"..,\u2022.... . ' i. - '\n\/.A liquid solution forced through\ntiny jet* become, filaments which\nare; wound on spools. After twisting! and packing' on cones, tha* yarn\n1* ready for. shipment,'\"\nFIR8T IN CANADA\n' In petro-chemlcal units, the province's natural ga* is piped through\na mat* of, processing equipment\nto emerge as chemicals. Som*'have\nnever before been produced in Canada. '..'      '.\".''\u25a0'      ' \u2022'?.'    .   v\nSome of these lire: synthetic\nmethanol, used as an anti-freeze;\npropono, used* for automobile brake\nfluids; propylene glycol, a, perman-\nen type ami-freeze; formaldehyde,\n*n ingredient of plywood glue, and\ndiprophlene, used-in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals.\nThe self-contained plant has .its\nown .powerhouse and pumping station to take water-from the North\nSaskatchewan river. There'.!* a fire\nStation and a 25-man safety crew\nto prevent accidents. .. \u25a0}\u25a0'\u25a0\nEast Germans Keep Up Stampede Id\nFree \"Come-and-GeMI\" Cafeteria\n?)\"-' By DAN de LUtE\nBERLIN (AP) - The West burr\nrifdly. boosted its gigantic food relief program' to a round-the-clock\noperation Thursday as the stampede\nof hungry East German* to collect\nmercy parcels hit record proportions.    -  \u25a0. -fi-;' \u25a0\nDefying Communist police terrbr\nand threat* of reprisal,: th* stream\nof needy coming through the.Iron\nFollowing\nSixes Oi*\nOur Floor\nNow!\n7.1CU.FT.\n\u25a0'\u2022\u2666CU- \u00a3f -\u25a011.2 CU. FT.\n12.1 CU. FT. WITH DOUBLE DOORS\nIT THINKS FOR ITSELF\nPHILCO\nAutomatic'\nAUTOMATICALLY\nAchieves 38 degrees to 40 degrees Tru\nZone Cold for Ideal preservation of foods,\nAUTOMATICALLY\n. Provides zero frozen food storage In Its\nhuge built-in freezer.    ,.        -\nAUTOMATICALLY\nDefrosts Itself without clocks, counters,\nheaters or attention of any kind from th*\nuser.\nAUTOMATICALLY\nMaintain* balanced humidity, never too\nmoist or dry.\nY*s For the Clni Time\n\u2022 COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC\nREFRIGERATION\nJEFFERY Radio and Appliances\n-44C WARD ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1302\nTennis Rackets\n$JL50up\nTENNIS BALLS\n3 for $1.95\nC.C.M. BICYCLES in ell sires $59.98 to $76.50\nPlus accessories Including tlrei; (tubes, standi,\nTENTS \u2014 Prospector.\nSize 6x7. Priced at\t\nWALL TENT.\nSize 9' x 9' x Z\/J. Priced at.\n$12.00\n$33.95\nEverything in\nREELS\nFor Fly Fishing, Trolling, and\nSpinning .  '\n73e Up\nAlleock's English tied\nflies, gut hooks, leaders\nEVERYTHING IN.   , ,\nLURES\nSpinning Rods\nTroll Rods\nFly Rods, Casting Rods\n$4.50 and Up\nNett for Fly Fishing and Trolling\n.22 Rifles and\nAmmunition\nSingle Shot Cooey ,Z    $13.50\nCooey Repeater : $23.55\nPlu* gun ilahto. gun slings, cleaning\n' kits, recoil pads.\nF\nBASEBALL GLOVES\nBeginner or Professional   '\n$2J5 to $14.00\nMARSHALL WELLS STORES\n(HIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.)\n395 Boker St. (OWNERS) '\u2022  Phone 497\nCurtain became a' day and sight\nflood. , -;'\u2022\nWednesday night 'for the first\n,time, some relief stations worked\nall through the night and still\ncould: not. handle -the crowds.\nSome 200,000 parcels w*r\u00ab* distributed Wednesday to top the\nprevious day's mark by 50 per cent.\nOPSN MORE STATIONS'\n'Authorities estimated the distribution today will bit 290,000. That\nwould mean more than 700,000 easterners receiving food since the\nhandouts began Monday1 morning.\nTo cope. with- the throngs, West\nBerlin authorities opened 10 more\nrelief stations. This raised the'total\nto 60\u2014double i the number \"with\nwhich the program started.\nHundreds ..stood through the\nnight Packaging and distribution\nwent round the clock.  .    ,   v     V\n\"We never know when* we can\ncall it a day,\" said one' weary official at dawn, \"because there are\nalways people still there waiting.\"\nExtra crews were hired to help\ncatch up.with the'demand. The food\nis taken from West Berlin's anti-\nblockade reserves.    >    \u25a0.'...\u2022\nA baby airlift Is helping deliver\nthe U. S. shipments from the port\nof Hamburg. .'?, '\u25a0   '7\nEVEN FARMERS WAIT\n^be distribution procedure wis\nchanged to give priority to residents of the Russian occupation\nzone outside Berlin. Many travelled hundreds of miles. East Berliners, who nee*l only come across\nawn, had to wait.\nIti some lines which stood all\nnight were farmers who said they\ncouldn't feed themselves in the Russian zone, because of high quota demands of the Communist crop collections.\nDOUBT PROMISES\nThe,, defiant Germans dismissed\nas propaganda the repeated promises by Communist authorities that\nthe party's \"new course\" would\njoon improve the eastern living\nstandard. v\nThey reported? on the contrary,\nthat many sections of the east zone\nwere hit by new electric power'\ncuts, and consumer goods were as\nscare as ever. 7 7\nDame Mary Ann Scharlieb was\nhe first woman to be graduated\nfrom London University a* a doctor ot medicine.\nfood Parcels\nWithout Lateis\nWASHINGTON (Ap)-The state-\ndepartment, said Thursday U. S. food\nhanded out to hungry East .Germans in Berlin is distributed without American labels to avoid Communist reprisals against thoso who\nlake the packages.\nIn a statement' the department\nalso said the arrival of the food\nshipments In Berlin assures \"the\ncontinuing flaw of food to the\npeople of Eost Germany.\"\nIhe statement was Issued ln response to inquiries about whether\nthe United States was getting credit\nfor Its part In the food assistance\nprogram.\nPresident Elsenhower look* itralght ahead as he ipf-akl to th*\nnation by radio and tslevliion from the White Houie. He declared\nthat in the Korean war.juit halted by an armistice the United Nations had met th* challenge of aggression \"with deeds of deolilon.\"\n.   .; \u25a0 .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:... \u25a0\u25a0   \"    .'       ' \u25a0 \u2014(AP Wlr\u00bbphote.)\nRuss lo Pay Own\nOccupation Costs\nVIENNA: 44JP)\u25a0\u25a0**\u2014 .-\u2022 Tlie Soviet*\nThursday made their greatest' concession . yet to occupied Austria.\nThey, agreed to ip*y their own occupation costs\u2014a stop the United\nStates took six years ago.\nAnnouncement' of the change-\nbeginning Aug. 1\u2014was delivered to\nAustrian officials by A. M. Timo-\nshchenko, counsellor of the Soviet\nembassy in Vienna.' .'.-.\u2022\nPreviously the,-Austrian government has paid the costs of Russia's\n44,000 troops in Austria. Unless similar concession* ore forthcoming\nfrom France and Britain, their occupying forces still-will be paid for\nby. th* Austrlans.,  7\nAustrian government circles indicated the latest Soviet concession\nprobably, will have the desired effect of getting Chancellor Julius\nHash's regime to drop its support of\nthe \"short draft?-treaty.\nBesides making Austria, pay the\ncosts of Russian occupation, the\nSoviet* have been plundering their\nzone ot Austria tor eight years.\nAmerican authorities say the Beds\nhav* robbed the Austrlans ot at\nleast $1,000,000,000, including millions ot dollars-worth of industrial\nequipment and the output of 300\nfactories and all the country's big\noil wells.      titi\"''    \u25a0\nGeneral Wolfe, the victor of Quebec, entered ths British Army at\nage 13. ,7\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\n. Chartered Accountant*\n.',\u2022'\u25a0 Auditors .\n676 Baker St ' Phono 288\nJim's Radiator Shop\n610 Troiit Street   '     Phone 63\nis CLOSED for HOLIDAYS\nuntil July 31\nPaul Leads General\nPastiras' Funeral\nATHENS (AP)-King'Paul led\nGreece in paying final respects.to\nGen. Nicholas Plastiras, former soldier and premier - who exiled Uie\nking's father, lyng Constantino, ln\n1923. A state funeral was held for\nPlastiras, 69, who died Sunday.\nU.J. All CadeU\nArrive Edmonton\nEDMOWirOIT (CP)-Twenty-five\nteen-aged air cadets df the United\nStates civil air patrol arrived in Edmonton Wednesday night aboard an\nRCAF plan* in the course of t 32-\nday Canadian tour. '\nAfter \u2022 tour of Edmonton's industrial area today, they will leave\nFrftUy for Vancouver.\nThe tour is part of an air cadet\nexchange' visit program launched\nin 1947 by Canada, Britain and the\nUnited States.\n' Attempts to introduce the north-\nem salmon into Australian waters\nhave been unsuccessful.\nTar on Woollens\nAnnoys Laborile\nLONDON 4Reuters) \u2014 Laborlte\nHarvey Rhodes urged the government Thursday to discourage the\n\"troublesome and widespread practice\" \"of marking Commonwealth\nwoollen fleece with tar, pitch and\npaint-  , v   Vt\nRhodes said woollen manufacturer* first petitioned the House of\nCommons in 1952 on this problem\u2014\nbut Without success.\n. He told the' House during a session that lasted until the early hours\nofthe morning that much of Britain's high quality woollen exports\ngo to tile dollar markets of the\nUnited States and .Canada.   \u2022\nOna small dash of paint applied\nto wool on the hoot means scores\nof damaged threads in the manufacturing process, he said. Rhodes appealed to wool producers not to\nwork against their own Interests.\nSir Arthur Salter, minister of materials, replied thlt the remedy* is\nlargely In the hands pf the governments of the wool producing countries. If specific proposals for action\nare mad* to him by British manufacturers, the government will consider ihem, he said.\nOne out ot every three persons\nliving on U. S. farms' in 1949; had a\nnon-farming Job.   \u2022\nJ. A- C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n, .   VISUAL 1-RAsNINQ\nMedical Alia Building\nSuite 206 .Phone 141\nHAVE rOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED,\n'-.  \u00bbt the  : '\nNelson Upholstery\n409. H*ll Street Phone 146\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n603 Baker St\nMed. Art! Blk,\nPHONE 2*\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescription*\nPhone 25\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER        '\nPHONE SIS\nBuy 8*11. Trad* tha Claulfled. Way\nsM\nFor Vacation\n\u25a0 \" fiti.be. '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\n' comfortable\nIn\nCOTTON\nSLACKS\n\u2022 FADED BLUES\n*   $4.95 to $6.95\ne SUNTAN  DRILLS\n$4.25 to $6.50\n\u2022 LIGHT GREYS\n-fMf'.   '\n\u2022 COOL LINENS\n$11.95\n\"\u2022   ?AT :\":\nEmory's\nLIMITED\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPHONE 31 BOX 100\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nHaigh\n' Tru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n\u2022    Phone SB\n676 Baker St\n9\nW\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nDont Let Your Feet\nGet You Down    .\nSANIPED f\nFOOT BALM\nFor Foot Comfort\nAlio Sanlped  Foot Powder\nind. Sanlped Foot Cream\nSold Only St Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's*  Modern Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34,  Day - 807-R  Night\nwoviD rov seuem \/r~\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY i\n\u2022THE LARGEST SUM OF MONEV\nON A HORSE RACE WAS \u2666\nEVER WON\n>,O00.\n900,\nGENERAL \u00bb ELECTRIC\n$12500\nTRADE-IN\nAllowance\ni f-M'tot';.''-'\u25a0\nYowOW\nRefrigerator\n*\u201e\u2022   on the \u25a0\nSpace-maker\nDELUXE REFftKERATOR\nThis is one of tho' finest refrigerators mode, Wi eu. ft. with all the deluxe features.\nNelson Electric Co. M\n574 Boker St.\nGENERAL@ ELECTRIC\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\nPhone 260\n.AVE S S S\nby dealing with a reputable dealer.\nOur cars arid trucks are priced to sell.\n... CHECK THESE BARGAINS-\nUSED CARS\n1952 Dodge 2 Door Sedan\n1952 Vanguard Sedan N\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Packard Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Coupe\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1951 Studebaker Commander\n1948 Plymouth Sedan1\n1949 Hillman Sedan\nUSED TRUCKS\n1947 Dodge Vt Ton Pickup\n1946 Mercury Vt Ton Pickup\n1942 Dodge Vt Ton Panel\n1941 Chevrolet Vt Ton Pickup\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY  LIMiTED\n*phone3s ^5\nLOCATED AT 923 VERNON ST.\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_31","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\/1.0427469","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":"1953-07-31 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":"1953-07-31 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":""}]}