{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2023-03-01","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1953-07-28","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427918\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" FIRST INSTALMENT . >:v f   \u25a0:;\u25a0 -    '\u2022\nIke Taps Congress\nFor $200 Million\nAictfor Korea\nDollar Aid to South Korea Only if\nTruce Provisions Honored Ike Warns\n.,;\u25a0':'\u25a0;'\",.? By ROGERD. GREENE\nWASHINGTON (AP) Z'.'.pfeslfoni Eisenhower has\nfirmly pegged United States relief for Korea to fulfillmerit\nof the truce terms by Scmth Korea's presiderit'Syngman Rhee.\nIn a special message to Congress Monday, Eisenhower\nformally requested $200,000,000 as'a first instalment to help\nrehabilitate the war-ravaged .Republic of Korea.; 7     \u25a0 .-\u25a0'.\u2022\nBut the president emphasized that iri providing dollar\naid to rebuild Korea's shattered- economy? tne U,S?-, expects\nthe South Koreans to, live up to the newly--\u00a7igned truce\nprovisions. , i       -'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nEisenhower said thit implementation of the program\nwill depend \"on the continued CQ-operitipn Of the government of the Republic of Korea with the United States-and\nthe   United   Nations\ncommand:\"    '   .\nIn those words, the president gave\nRhee an implicit warning not to disrupt the armistice. Rhee has bitterly denounced the truce terms, but\nhas agreed to collaborate, at least\nfor the time being.\nEisenhower indicated plainly, that\nhis request for $200,000,000 will be\nfollowed later, by requests for additional funds to carry out a long-\nrange program of rehabilitation.\nMeanwhile, the armistice touched\noff a round of general debate among\nsenators.\nSenator Lyndon- B. Johnson of\nTexas, Democratic leader, said the\nU. S. must be alert-and vigilant\nagainst any move by the communists to use troops freed from Korea\nfor aggression elsewhere in Asia.\nSenator William Knowland of\nCalifornia, Republican leader, said\nthe U. S. must bar neutrals who\nsat out three -years of war\" from\nhaving a decisive voice In the Korean peace talks. His statement appeared to.be aimed particularly at\nIndia, which described itself as neutral in the war, (?''.-.\nSenator-Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin, chairman of the foreign relations committee,' took issue with\nSenator Paul Douglas, Illinois Democrat, who said he believes U. S.\nand British diplomats have found\na way to admit Red China to the\nUN. Wiley said-there has been no\n- commitment and that the U. S. has\n\"definitely stated again and again\"\nthat the Chinese cannot \"shoot, their\nway into the UN.'1   \u2022\u25a0':.', ' ':\u25a0 yti\nSocreds Contest\n22 B.C. Seals\nVANCOUVER' (CP) \u2014 The Social\nCredit party, flushed by victory in\nthe provincial field; is contesting\neach of the-' 22 seats in British Columbia in the Aug. 10 federal election.\nPremier !W. A. C. Bennett, who\nled Social Credit to victory in the\nJune 9 election, heads the campaigners in his party's first major\nbid in a federal election in B. C.\nHe has scheduled a number of\nSpeaking engagements at key points'\nduring the next two weeks:\nThe Liberals and the CCF, too,\nare contesting all B. C. seats.\nNinety-nine candidates are in the\nfield, the Progressive Conservatives\nnominating 15, Labor-Progressive\nCommunist party 17, and one Independent Social Crediter.\nIn Victoria riding there are two\nSocial Credit candidates. Aid. Waldo Shillings was nominated by the\ndominant B. C. Social Credit\nLeague, and Maj. A. H. jukes is the\nIndependent Social. Credit candidate. He represents the. Social Credit Association of Canada, a group\nwhich does not recognise toe'So-\ncial Credit League, which supports\nthe Social Credit administration in\nVictoria. \u25a0-.,--,. ...    _., -..\nNANAIMO? (CP) \u2014 Nahainio was\nsupplied with . water' for. several\nhours Monday by. nnly a 12-inch\nmain leading from the city reservoir.\nAn 18-inch main went but shortly\nbefore noon when a collar and portion of pipe broke.lt waS hoped repairs would - be-completed during\nthe night. Most\".. of j the 'upper sec-\ntions ot the city have been without\nwater since about .6 p.m. Monday.\nThere have bfjettseveral breaks in\nthe old lino in tile last six months.\nThwarted tSver\nBlasts Girl's House\nISTANBUL. (Reuters) \u2014 Because\n, Zehra Demir, the girl he loved turned him down, Muharrem Alan, of\nthe village of Keltcde, near Zong-\nuldak, on the Black $ea Coast of\nTurkey, dynamited her house.\nThe house was badly damaged but\nthe girl escaped uninjured. Alan\n| has been arrested.    \u2022\n8EEK 8U8PECT\nSASKATOON (CP) - RCMP\nare continuing the search-.for the\nman who stabbed 25-year-old Tony\n).;Marcjnkiw at the exhibition\n-grounds here Thursday night; A'\nsuspect picked up Friday near\nQu'Appelle, Sask., in connection\nwith the stabbing was released following. questioning.\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRARY\no$;\n^yEATHEI^ICAST'1''^'-\nKOotenw^-A. fe& ..clouds. Winner. Light? winds. Low high at Cranbrook and' Crescent Valley, 45 and\n85;-Revelstoke 45 and 80.     \u25a0-,\nNELSON, B. C.-, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 28, 1953\nNo. 8I-!\nrts in Election\nFOUR NEW 8EAT8     f\nThere, we four new seats In the\nprovince 'flat.\"flection. In -the, 1849.   _,. \u201e_..\nelection'the Liberals took U of toe LJl*N2,V\nTwo cabinet ministers seek reelection\u2014the associate defence min-,\nister,. Ralph Campney, -and Fisheries Minister James Sinclair, Both\nare candidates in Vancouver ridings. ? :...',: :j\nDeane.Finlayson, provincial leader-of the Progressive Conservative\nparr\/, i seeks election in Nanaimo.\nHe was defeated in the provincial\nelection in his first bid-for office.\nHarold Winch, former CCF leader\nin B. C, is a candidate in Vancouver East.. \\ \u25a0\nMaj.-Gen.G.R. Pearkes, VC, military critic ih the House for the\nProgressive ConservativeSj is a candidate in Esquimalt-Saanich. He\nrepresented Nanaimo in the last\nHoUse.\n8WOMSN\nThere are eight women candidates, Including Mrs. Mona Morgan. Labor-Progressive, in Vancou-\nver-Klngsway. Her husband, Nigel\nMorgan, is \"provincial leader of Uie\nparty in B. C.\nMammoth Tusk\nFound at Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A mammoth tusk thousands of years\nold was dug up by gravel pit\nworkers seven miles from-Prince\nGeorge Monday.\nA U BC archeologlit Identified\nIt as that of a prehistoric elephant\nwhich died not lest than \"several\nthousands of years ago.\"\nThe specimen, foUnd Imbedded\n100 feet in grav.el, was four feet\n' long, five inches In diameter and\nweighed 25 pounds.   -\nDEFENCE COSTS\nMM DROP\nKorea Truce May \u25a0 \u25a0''\nLessen Spending\nFor Arniriunifion Zf\n. VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Korean trues may eventually Jead to a\nreduction in Canada's defence expenditures, Trade Minister Howe\nsaid Monday?  .\nThe only immediate saving,' he\ntold a press conference, \"will be a\nlessening of expenditures for ammunition.\" It might be possible '.o\nreduce defence expenditures \"by\nthe time the next budget is brought\ndown In the spring.\"\nThe minister, here for a series of\ncampaign speeches in support of\nLiberal candidates ip the Aug. 10\nfederal election, said the Korean\ntruce is only an agreement to stop\nfighting. i .7\n\"We hope they can work out an\nagreement to ene the war, but In\nthe meantime I doubt very much\nif we can take our troops out of\nKorea although I hope that before\nlong we can bring,them home.\"\"\n\"I see no possibility of a depres*j\nsion in Canada. Someone is always\nforecasting depressions but Canada\nis enjoying the best year she ever\nhad.\"': .   \u25a0 \" v\nOn taxes: 7\n\"There will probably be an opportunity to reduce taxes next year\nbut it is not safe to make any hard-\nand-fast promise;. It is too dependent on. the international Situation.\n\"However, I think I can promise\nthat taxes won't go any higher.\" *\nOn trade:\nTrade relations with the United\nStates,are \"excellent\" and negotiations for a trade treaty with Japan\n\"are proceeding very satisfactorily.\"\nIndo-China New\nHot-War Front\nBj* LARRY ALUEN\nH A v'i^Ml^h^My^P}-,-.\nthemselves against1 \":Bnf?__\u00ab\u201e\u00a3 of\nincreased Red Chinese aid to the\nVietminh rebels in. Indo-China now\nthat the fighting has stopped in\nKorea? -\nWith the silencing of the guns in\nKorea Monday, this vital gateway\nto all; southeast Asia became toe\nNo? 1 hot-war front between the\nCommunist: and non-Communist\nworld. Loss of Indo-China would\npave the way for Communist drives\nthrough Thailand, Burma' and Malaya.        . \" , ;'?.\nAlthough there was no evidence\nof increased activity along the\ncountry's northern border with Red\nChina, French and Viet Nam officials expressed deep concern- over\nthe possibility that\" the Chinese\nnow would ,turn more attention\nsouthward to boost the quantities of\nwar .materials they have been send-,\ning in to the Communist-led Vietminh. '\nThe.French were generally firm\nin the belief-there would be no direct intervention in the Indo-Chinese war by Chinese \"volunteers\",:\nor other Chinese forces, such as\nhappened in Korea.\nThe French Union troops pulled\nout of a number of small posts they\nconsidered \"useless\" in the vital\nRed river delta area and reinforced\ntheir holds in the ring of 1200 concrete fortresses set up to keep the\nterritory out of Red hands. They\nalso continued to pound away at\nthe estimated 40,000 to 50,000 Vietminh still scattered throughout the\ndelta area\nExpect Red China\nBid for UM Seat\nUNITED NATIONS, N? Y. (AF)-\nA stubborn bid by Red China for\na UN seat as a condition for a final\nKorean settlement Is expected to\nbe made at an early stage: of the\ncoming Korean political .conference. \"'        -\u25a0'\u25a0-.\u25a0      7-7 .     .;\nSome delegates say such a. move\nby Peiping and Moscow would con-!\nBtitute a major threat to the sue;\ncess of the conference.      ,    7\nThe U. S. and a number of other\nUN members are standing firm\nagainst such a move on the ground\nthat the issue has no place'in the\nKorean peace conference.       !.,'.\"-\nPlanning.tor the.conference ber\ngan-here slowly Monday as the\nfighting ehded in Korea. The UN\npeople' are thankful the guns art\nsilent but they assert they see no\nprospects fpr a break to the. political stalemsite.' \u2022.\u2022',' '\nThe general assembly, now in\nrecess, will reconvene Aug. 17 to\ndiscuss the composition and site of\nthe- political conference. '\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nHonest Thief\nLeaves iOtl\nVANCOUVER-(CP)-.- A thief ^\nwho raided the till in -a service\nstation Saturday was.an honest\n-' one.'-. ... .,  -7\n\u25a0 The proprietor, told police an\nIOU was, left in place of the .\nmoney; .',\u25a0.. 7. ' \u2022\u2022;>\u2022\u25a0; '\n' Police left it .up to the station\noperator to decide whether to\ntake any action against the thief,\na former employee.\niiiiilimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nLost Mustang\nWreckage Sighted\n7 A 94-year-old Etit Berlin woman flndttlit gift of food.too mtteh\nfor her at the breaks out Into tears at a special relief cohter In\nBerlin. West Berlin Borough Mayor Willy .Kressman tries to comfort\nher. The woman, Whose name was not revelled, wts one-of the\noldest.applicants allowed to cross the Iron Curtain border In accordance with the relief policy. Mayor Kressman Organized the new West..\nBerlin food give-away program and. hungry; Jobless persons from\nthe Soviet seotor.flooked to the center for the food gifts\u2014-(AP Wire'\nphoto.)   \u25a0 :,-. titi:-\"::\u25a0 \u25a0':.'\u25a0\nBald Men More Likely to\nSUDBURY, Oni (CP) ^-7 RCAF\npara-rescue and ground search\nparties will converge at dawn on\nthe Adobe lake area, 35 miles northeast... of here,? where the wreckage\nof an RCAF Mustang fighter, missing since July 18, was sighted\nMonday. . \"'!\nThe wreckage was spotted by FO.\nAlan Weekes of Edson, Alta., while\non routine search patrol in a Beech-\ncraft Expediter from the North Bay\nRCAF base. He was co-pilot in the\nplane piloted by FO. Roger Smith of.\n.Montreal.\nThe wreckage, a pinpoint in the\ndense wilderness, -was kept under\nsurveillance by search planes while\na hydro' commission helicopter was\nflown in. However, the helicopter\ncouldn't laiid at the crash scene because of the tall trees. \"\n, It set-down on Adobe lake, about\ni mile from the crash site, but the\nbush' waa judged too dense to cut\nthrough before dark. At dawn, the\nground 'search party, is to hea'd toward the wreckage after being\nlanded on the lake, while the para,\nrescue group bales out at the crash\nscene, weather .permitting.\nRCAF officials at North Bay, centre of the search, said there was no\nSign of life at the crash; alte,\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The British\nmedical profession has offered some\nconsolation to men who'-, tre losing\ntoeir.htir. ,There\".is rie,w.-evidtineeJ\nthat baldness and- virility go hand]\n>;;j^*#-*-|^^^^\n\" published..bV'Vthe British Medical\nAssociation, stepped into t Ourrept\n.London newspaper- controversy oh\nMonday over what makes men bald\nand what they should do about it.\nIt made these points\n1. There 'is no cure for ordinary\nbaldness. .'-.-'\n2. There is little hope there ever\nwill be7a.cure,\n3. There is reason to believe that\nbald men are more likely to be virile than, those who keep, their hair.\n- The magazine article told -of research carried out in the anatomy\ndepartment of the Stuart medical\ncentre in New York where thick-\nthatched men known to be'lacking\nin male sex. hormones immediately\ndevelop first Signs, of baldness'after\ngland treatments. \"\u25a0\nIt also said that of two men sharing, the same hereditary tendency\ntoward baldness, the more mascu\nline would almost invariably lose\nhievhair.\ni On'thematter ofrcuring. baldness,\nfflBi|||Ver,   the  doctors offered no\nWjm'^r( 'Ji Bv-?iijaii^>l'-ScdW*fl|i\n.\u25a0^JSr*ll*\u2122-i madelitue .pro-'\nliairiW tht days when hopefut|\n[airless men 'swabbed'their' pates\nwith frog's and snails mixed, with\nleeches and onion's? f '    '#'\n. An article in the London Evening\nStandard-, set off i the 'discussion of\nbaldness When a woman writer cited\nNerO,- Caesar and Napoleon; os great\nbald-headedrnien of history.:\n-\u2022 She mentioned inheritance, ten-\nslon.lack.of fresh air Snd lack oi\nhormones:as possible factors |n baldness, titi ,7\n' A 70-year-old iflanjirqmptly wrote\nin to say that .'the ability to move\nthe scalp-over .the skull was the\nsecret key. to keeping hair, and' advocated.-\"natural\" movement?\nHit views iveret rejected by another reader who told how he used\nto delight-his friends by \"wiggling\nmy fringeup tnd down.\" .\n\"Alas,\" he' concluded, \"now I\nhave no'fring(B;\" ..\nTwo Killed in 'V,\nHighway Mishap\nLETHBRIDGE (CPlff-- 'Gordon\nCowie of Coaldale, Alta.^and a man\nbelieved to be Horst- Lander, 25, of\nLethbridge? were killed early Monday when Mr. Cowie|s car rolled\ninto, a ditch on a highway four miles\nnorth of Milk River, Alta. ' ;;i\nThe man believed to be Lander\ndied Instantly. Mr. Coiyie died en\nroute -to hospital here.\nTwo passengers in the baek seat\nof the car, Mrs. Lucille 'Dalke and\nJ. C. Nelles, both of Lethbridge, escaped with minor.in juries.' Mrs.\nDalke is in St. Michael's hospital\nhere? Mrs. Nelles Was released.\nMr.-Cpwie .Was owner of Cptl-\ndale- Motors Mr .Lander Is believed -to have resided at Dawson\nCity before moving here to Lethbridge; '. .'?.?\nLiberals Name 264; PCs\n250; CCF 172; Sotreds 71\n?   By The Gdnciiion Pressf 7\n'- ^ittatja.'\"? poljiticall-parties have, nanieji1902 candidates\nto battle it out for the-265 House of Commons seats in thi\nAug:r 10 federal electicin. -.v;'' '\"7'\ntip; 'itwasfnot a-recitfd nbmination list, diwpite the larger.\nHouse representation under the latest redistribution, but it\nwas well-head of-the 849'total of candidates in the election\nof four'years ago. The 1945 number of 954 is still the top.\nif \/ LilMnrals jand Progressive Goiiserivatives rmyirtiiaily-\nfuUslatesatarofflvtiiecountey^\nFIRStU-SvfOOD      y-'Z\nARRIVES IN GERMANY\nHAMBUSG; (Reuters)... :'*-k\u201e The\nUnited States freighter American\nInventor docked hert Monday with\n.the first load of American gift food\njlor E8|6t (jermanyfTwo'Qther ships\nare orivthe Way-to fulfil, the V. 5.\noffer of ,$15,OO0;0OO: worth of -tood\nfor East Germany; ,'\nCAPRI, Italy; (CP) \u2014 A' ceirtur-,\nies-old problem, which made it necessary for drinking water to be\nbrought to Capri from the Italian\nmainland, may have tieen solved.\nAfter five nioiiths of drilling, Em-\nilio Doningo de Mistura struck\nfresh water Monday on' this Mediterranean island. .\n4^W\u00abW\"i!.':teVi\nA '<_?) S? .ItolftfcsKar*\npretty hot in Carleton riding, Where\nHoh. ' George Drew, Progressive\nConservative leader, is seeking reelection against Liberal, CCF and\nSocial Credit opposition.\nThey got so torrid Monday at toe\nriding's traditional free-for-all nominating convention that John McDonald, Liberal candidate, drew a\n10-inch knife from his briefcase\nand- preferred-it to Mr, Drew to\n-'Cut taxes,1'; ',   \u2022\u25a0\u25a0 - :.' ., '\nThe opposition leader at first declined the^ knife but later accepted\nit as a symbol of the job needed to\nbe done in cutting government\nwaste and extravagance.\nThe episode highlighted the nominating convention at Which all candidates running tor office appeared\non the same platform and voters'\nsupport appealed for.\n.Mr. Drew, as last member of Par-\niliam^ht'.for'the riding, which ex-\ntendtVliito the OWawa area, was the\nfirst Speaker: He was followed by\n'Htr. '\u25a0 McDonald, Stewart -Crawford?\nCCF candidate; and Eric Pallls, Social Credit standard-bearer,\n7,The audience of about 600 was in\nI'a fighting mood while Mr, Drew\nj'and Mr. McDonald spoke. They\nwere frequently interrupted by catcalls and hoots and Dr. F. F. Kemp,\nchairman, at times was forced to\ncall .for .order.\n\"Give the man a chance to be\nheard,\" he shouted when the din all\nbut drowned out the speaker's\nwords. \" .   .\nThe. CCF and Social Credit candidates^ got off easy. They com.\npleted 'their 15-mlnute speeches\nwithout serious Interruptions.\nThe Liberals named 264 candidates, Progressive Conservatives 250,\nCCF 172 and Social Credit 71. The\nCommunist Labor-Progressive party came up with the strong turnout of an even 100\u2014against 10 in\nthe last election\u2014mainly .in.pntarlo,\nQuebec.and the West > \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nAfter some earlier Indications they\nwould inove strongly into' the EaSt\non the basis Of their showing of\npower in the British Columbia provincial election' June 9, the Social\nCrediters centred their fire heavily\non the four Western provinces. They\nnominated only nine east of the\n|*Lakehead.\nI- The two largest,parties\u2014and the\nCCF and-the Communists to a lesser extent\u2014went after toe thick\nconcentration of, stats in Ontario\nand Quebec that were largely Liberal to the last Parliament\nAll three-of the parties with toe-\nheaviest Commons representation\u2014-;|\nLiberal,, Conservative and CCF-\nput candidates into the fight in ev*.\nery province. The fourth party wlthf\nHouse members, Social Credit put\nonly one candidate into toe field\neast of Ontario. That was in New\nBrunswick,\n43 WOMEvN\nNotable among toe nomination?\nthlt tune was the number of Women\nln the running. There were 437\nSpread through six provinces, Ontario had, the .largest nUmBer in the\nfield with23f?7\" 7.,, .,?-,. T\n. Mrt. BUen'FaJri>Jough,ionl$r *o-\nsJtojn.'toehiber, '^toeUtsb Gfiti\u2014'- -\nLOfltlON 'Reuters) .\u2014 Mts. Eleanor Roosevelt rounded, off her\nEuropean tour here Monday by\ncalling on the Queen at Buckingham Palace.\nNelson\u2014Saturday, 7,60; Monday,\n8.M.-    - * ;'-'   ,\nS^0rsMps for Nelson High Students\nTHIS'7-M0NTH8-0UD tcrewttll\" r..\nquite what to make of it when he found'this hudtf\nBullfrog In his.\ntldn'tflnd*\nupi. 77.. 7        ,yi    :y    7.   .\nStoddard of Liberal, can't figure out where the frog came from or\nbackyard. Tht frog wat probably puffed up because he could\"\na pool In this droujiht-rldden Kansas town. The,dog's owner, E, E.\nhow It got In hit yard since the lawn It surrounded by a closely\nspaced picket fence too fine to accommodate tht fat frog,\u2014(A,p Wlrephoto.) .v..\nTOT DROWN8\nBURNS LAKE, B. $. (CP)\u2014\u25a0 A\ndrowning accident during tot\nweekend took the life herp of four,\nyear-old David'Gallpeau.  ' .     -\nThe boy's body, was recovered\nfrom toe lake arid his ; rescuers\nworked for an hour in Unsuccessful\nattempts to revive him by artificial\nrespiration.\nMichael Jo'^^rl&iifsi. ]\nsoft \"Senior i High   Stshobl;\ngraduate, is, winner of the ^\nChris Spencer iFoundatibn f\nAward of $225 and a, General Proficiency scholarship -\nof $175. He is the-son of Mr,!\nand Mrs. J. A, .Fraser,,914\nThird Strtet,    ' f\n\"?.':*';'V , - -7 , [ .\nRUTH KRANB\n. ROBERTA STEVENSON\ni ' Winners of $200 district Senior Matriculation awards-\nare Ruth Julia Krane of Balfour and Roberta Cunningham Stevenson of Harrop. Both are Students-of theNel-\nson Senior High School. Miss Krane is the daughter of\nMr.'and Mrs.Olaf Krane of Balfour, and Miss Stevenson\nis the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Stevenson of\n],'\n1ni.-k-|irogressive, Ci)nserviative.'\nElectors next pionth, will be electing three more members to the\nCommons than1' they did in 1040.\nThat House had .262 seats,, and the\nnew one will have 266 under a redistributed set-up.    \u25a0      .        .   ..\nWhen the last Parliament-closed\nopt, it had, 181 Liberals, 48 Progressive Conservatives, 13 CCF and 10\nSocial Credit, Independent members and vacancies made up toe rest\nofthe total. The number of Liberals\nwas down from the record-breaking\n100 that Prime Minister Louis St\nLaurent led to victory in W40, The\ngovernment? party had lost some\nby-elections in the foUr years between thegeneral ballotting.\n4 OPPOSE P M\nThe 171-yeariotd prime, minister\nwas renominated in Quebec East\nwhere he had a majority of almost\n18,000 to 1049\u2014and will be; opposed\nby four candidates. Against him are\na Progressive Conservative, a communist and two Independents, one\nof them a,former Communist.\nGeorge Drew, Progressive Conservative leader, was renominated to\nOntario's Carleton riding, where lie\nwill be opposed by Liberal; CCF and\nSocial Credit candidates,\nCCF leader M. J, Coldwell came\nout again. in Rosetown-Biggar, in\nSaskatchewan. There, *where he had\na plurality of about 3500 in the\nlast election; he will be tussling\nwith a .Liberal, a Progressive Conservative, a Social Credit aspirant\nand a Communist.      ,\nEarlier, Social Credit leader Solon\nLow was renominated to His frontier riding of Peace River straddling the northern Alberta-British\nColumbia border. This Is one of the\nsprawling constituencies that had\ntheir nomination day a fortnight\nago.,,'\nTIM  BUCK TRYING\nAnother party leader who has\nnever been to the Commons but\nwho Is making a try for it this time\nis Tim Buck, leader of toe Communist    Labor-Progressive, party,\nwho was nominated, to Toronto\nTrinity, He will.be up. against Lio- ,\nnel Conacher, former star athlete\nand sitting member; along with CCF\nand Progressive Conservative opposition.\nAll members of the cabinet in-\nthe last House were renominated\nexcept State Secretary F. Gordon\nBradley, who recently went to the\nSenate, and Works Minister Alphonse Fournier, who went to .tht\nExchequer Court of Canada.\n- J. G. Pinkersgill, 47, recently, appointed to the cabinet to succeed\nMr. Bradley as Newfoundland's\nminister, was nominated a fortnight\nago in Bonavista-Twillingate. He is\nopposed by a Progressive Conservative. ;,';.-\"; ? ... :; \u2022;\u25a0:,.\n, Conunuhist'Jeader Buck's Labor-\nProgressive , party is - running its\nbiggest slate of candidates on record. It has around 100 shooting for\nsetts, trying to get representation\nfbr? the first time, since Fred-Rose\nof Mohtreal-Ccfrtler was sent to:\nprison to 1946 for conspiracy in\nCanada's Russian spy ring:\nThe Communists are after 20 seats\nin Ontario and 25 In Quebec, with\nlesser numbers but a bigger proportion of. candidates to the seat totals\nto toe Western provinces.\n100 in b;c.\nBritish Columbia party members\ncame through ,w|th ,an even. 100\nnominations lor that province's 22\n\u25a0sests- \u2014- a. nito^M^.ic*. candidates.\nSecond only to Ontario1 and Quebec.\nno'totoated in every riding, apd?the .\nProgressive, Conservatives went out\nfor   16.   The   labor-Progressives\nnominated 17. ? ,\nHAIL LASHES\nMlDlClKlH^T\nMEDICINE HAT (CP)-A five-\nm|nute cloudburst -with marble-\n\u2022lie hall blankettlng the ground\nlashed Medicine Hat at the supper hour Monday night. '\n- .The rain and hall, [worst In the\nsoutheastern Alberta olty In many\nyears, was driven by 40-mlle-an-\nhour .winds, which snapped tree\nbranches and levelled many'gar-\ndons,--'.,\".'\nIt is anticipated the \"all caused\nconsiderable damage to district\ncrops now In prime condition,.  -\nAfter   the   hall   and' electric\n' storm, during whleh the temperature dropped 15 degrees, the sun\n.came out again?\nSANDERS' RELEASE\nTO BE CONSIDERED\nLONDON (AP) - Hungary has\npromised to consider a British request for the release of Edgar Sanders, State Minister Selwyn Lloyd\nannounced Monday. Lloyd told\nParliament the British mission in\nBudapest officially asked the new\nHungarian government July 17 to\nfree Sanders, British business man\nwho was jailed to 1049 on espionage charges,\nCONSTABLE   DISMISSED -\nHAMILTON (CP) - Police constable George Brewster was dismissed Monday from toe Hamilton\npolice force for beating a prisoner\nIn a cell corridor July 14. <3ilef\nLeonard Lawrence announced the\npenalty at a press conference and\nsaid' it went .into effect immediately. An inquiry before the chief\nlast Wednesday found, Brewster\nguilty of using unnecessary violence.        -  -' \u25a0..:.\nftn&m This Cornerg,i*z\nRAWULPINDI, Pakistan (CP)\u2014Chain-smokers here have organ-\n- lied themselves Into a trade union, known as the Smokers Welfare\nSociety, to fight the continued rise In-the price of tobacco. -\nA resolution calls on \"smokers of all brands to unite against the\nconspiracy of purltanlitt who have joined hands with black marketeers to destroy a great source of human happiness.\"\nThe society says It will \"jealously guard the professional Interests\nof all cigaret lovers.\" '\u25a0.-.    -7   ?\n, . LONDON (Reuters)\u2014The\" night express from Scotland roared Jnto\na tunnel in London's suburbs with 12 coaches \u2014 and emerged with\n\u25a0even? .. .   ' \" '   'V. \u25a0\nBewildered castaways, in toe rear five coaches were later rescued\nby another locomotive. *',  '\n', A coupling1 had Snapped. . .       .':,\nCLINTON, Iowa (CP)\u2014The wife of 92-year-Oid.Dr. John-J.-Hull-\nInger give birth Sunday to an 11-pound boy at the family home here.\nDr. Hulllnger announced that he had delivered the baby, born to his\n32-year-old wife. He aald the baby \u2014 3178th delivered In his time\u2014anil\nthe mother are doing nicely. . '\n' -, \u25a0 v \u2014\u25a0 ' 1 ,,\nMEMPHIS (AP) -^ Manuel Clay.'29, lost his driver's licence after\nhe told a,judge he didn't know how to read a speedometer.\nClay appeared before judge Albert Carrutoers on a charge of\nspeeding 60 miles ah hour in a 30-mile zone.\nWhen Clay pleaded that he \"couldn't read\" his speedometer, the\njudge fined him $50 and ordered his licence picked up.\nSOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP).- Timothy Llsek, 6, and a playmate\nagreed that a ntw football helmet ought to be tested.\nThe playmate whacked the helmet with a croquet mallet and\nTimothy went to a doctor for a stitching Job. A sharp ridge of leather\n Mm'coPY*\n  Sll.\n#0.\n2 \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1933 .\nLett Timet Tonight \u2014 Complete Showt 7i00 \u2022 9i00\n''NW*'.'\nCartoon '\nWednesday Only \u2014 Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell in\n\"MACAO\"\nTHI TOU\u00abHE\u00abT WOT ON IARTH. -\nplete \u25a0Pirforminott' - ll\nStart 0:00 p.m. tnd 9:30 p.m,\nShowing Topigl\nFlight to Mars\nShowing Tonight ond Wedneiday\nwi_i>   i ..   J  . i'gZti   n\nl\ni\nI\n\u25a0\ni\n^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0sl\n(CINECOLOR)\nCARTOON AND SHORTS\n10 MILES IAST OF NELSON\nREX\nD\u00bblv\u00ab>In Theatre\n^ANBROOK. B.C.\nShowing Tonight,: Wtdntidty\nJuly 28-.D\n\"RIO GRANDE\"\n(SUPER WESTERN)    .\nJohn Wayne, Miurttn O'Hara\nOnt Show Only   '\nApprox, 8iB0 p.m,\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCA8TLIOAR. B.O,\n8howlnn Lait Time Tonloht\ns'^HETURNlfta'POINT1 .':'\u25a0\"\u25a0\nWilliam Holden,, Alexis 8mlth\nCornW^-S^'sd,\n\"BON^O Q0E8 tO COLLEC\n1\n\u25a0\nI\nI\nlOnt' hundred tnd forty-five\nentnges wero made ln tht Voters'\nlist during the three diy session .of\nthe court ot revision In Nelion ac-\n' dor-ling to O. H. Xirby, official ln\ndharge.\n; The majority of tht changes were\ncorrections, Kirbysald. Ftw people\nmisted getting on toe list when\nenumerators ctUed earlier in toe\nyetr.\nTrail revision officer Donald Mc-,\nDonald reported 32 ntw names in\nthat district, with 10 corrections\n|nd the removal of ono ntmt. Court\nof revision was held July 23, 24, tnd\nis.    . \u25a0 .\nBrewery Sales\nDown From Peak\n- An additional director, A. 0,\nSwlnerton of Fort Mtcleod, wai\nvoted Into office Mondty at tht in*\nnutl meeting of interior Breweries\nLtd, held In the Huftt Silver Room.\nIf wti tot first time tos yearly\nmeeting' of directors and shareholders has been held in NelsOn.\nThe flntncitl statement wu approved tnd tot action of the Board\nof Directors wts endorsed.1 Besides\nthe new director; all other directors\nwere returned to office.\nIt was reported thtt business wis\ndown from last yetr but It wu the\nopinion oi tht meeting thtt toll\nwit general In ill othtr linos of\nbusiness also.      ' .   ,\nList yetr was a. peak year, tor\nInterior Brewtrlts when sales passed the ?2 million mark, in all-time\nhigh,;,    ..... :, ;.\nAbout 35 attended': the meeting\ntnd a number of tot shareholders\nvottt were handled by tht customary proxy tyattin.\nDlrectort returned were R. S,\nBarnes of Nelson, president ind\ngeneral manager; J. L. Rlngland of\nLethbridge, vice-president; E. T.\nDicks tnd Joseph Aiello of remit;\nB. L. Hawkey of Creston; J. P.\nMualn Of Trill; W, 8. Qrty of\nCtlgiry; end C. B. - Delbrldge of\nVancouver.\nA C9M-UTI CHOU Ot\nWIU-AWINTIO and\nI4JUY IHWCtP\n'   *FA\u00abI*!INU ANP\nHOm SOOMI AT\n.    MODUATI SATIS\nVANCOUVER   B.C.\n1       |\nI    il\nSWEATERS\n\u25a0'\u25a0'\"\u25a0 \"py\t\nMoGREGOR\nshrink-resistqnt finish.\n100% Botany Wool, with\nColors of Silver Cherry, '\nLight Green ond Powder.\nSizes 36 to 44\n$9.05\nGODFREYS'\nPhone   -\u2014  .270   \u2014   Box\nAshes\" tele\n409,000 Cars in'52.\nBridge Petitions Go\nTo Kaslo, Ainsworth\nPhpne calls, petitions, tnd letters\nfrom Nelion and district residents\n\u2014all favoring a .bridge across tot\nArm at Nelson, ere continuing to\n_toiur In.'\nI. Chairman of too Bridge commit-\ntoo, Loull Hinle said Mondty petitioners don't havo to fill out a\nspecial coupon; Anyone wanting to\ngo op record ts favoring a bridge\nshould write their names on note-\npaper or postctrd, signify whether\nthey are in fovor or\" against a toll\nbridge and mtll It to Box 7.5, Nelson.\nPetitions htve been^sent to AIhb-\nworto, Ktslo, Procter |iip4:.N0rtli\nShort. Almost 100 names have been\nsigned to the North Shore petition.\nNo reports htvt bttn received from\nthe other centres,\n\u00ab8,585 VEHICLES    .\nHon, X>. A. Qaglardi, Minister of\nPublic Works, told the (Spring sitting of tot leglsltture the Nelson-\nNorth Short ferry operated tt a\ncost at $'2,489,61 during 1652. During thtt period, ht said, tbe terry\ntransported 313,480 passenger automobiles, 65,125 other vehicles and\n843,268 passengers.\nTht Nelson Bridge Committee hts\nreceived a total pf 382 forms ln\nfavor ot tot bridge, 300 of tone\ncunt from Ntlson tnd 93 from the\ndlitrlct Nlnty percent ot these persons trt In favor ot a toll spin.\nThirty-eight persons ire against t\ntoll brldgt, 11 of them residing outside af Nelson. None oppose \u2022 toilless brldgt.\nReturned Heme\nLEEDS, England (Routers) \u2014England wis in t precirlous position\ntt tot close ot toe fourth day's pity\nin toe fourth test match here, only\n78 runs ahead of Australia with\nflvt second inning wickets down,\nIt the Australians win today, they\nkeep tot mythical Ashes, symbol of\nworld cricket supremacy.\n. Tht English eleven's close ot pity\nscore wos 177 for five second-inning\nwicket t\\\nHighlight ot Monday's pity Wu\nthe spirited third wicket stand of\ntoe Middlesex \"twit*\" IBM Wrlch\ntnd Denis Compton. They scored 77\nvaluable runt for -England tfter\nan early Australian success.\nClose of play scores ln county\ncricket Mondiy;\nDerbyshire . 130, Lancashire H4\nfor 2, rain restricted play.\nNorthamptonshire 356 for 8 declared, Hampshire 110 tor two.\nEssex 187, Warwickshire 78 for 1\n(rein.)\n, Middlesex 207 vt Glamorgan to\nbit (riin.) \u25a0?\nGloucestershire fer 7.\nNottinghamshire 287 tor .9 declared, .yorkshlre 114 tnd 41 for no\nwicket.\nSussex 287 tnd 42 for 2, Kent 269.\nWorcestershire JOB tor, 8 deoltred\ntnd 52 for J.8. \u2022\nLeicestershire 27) for 6 declared.\nSprinter Turn- Pro\nLONDON (Reuters) -- _. Macdonald Bailey, 82-year-old runner\nfrom Trinidad who holds toe Joint\nworld record for the 100 metres,\nhis turned professional.\nBailey, who ran for Britain in the\n1648 and 1952 Olympic games, has\nsigned a contract with Leigh Rug.\nby. League Club, In Lancashire, as\nsprinting adviser and .player', the\nSunday Pictorial reported..\nThe long-legged Negro covered\ntoe 100 metres in 10:01 in Belgrade\ntwo years ago to equal tht .world\nIrtcord. '-'\u25a0'. -   -   ,   '\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND WALL\nALL NEWLY DECORATEP\nAn ideal family hotel right down town*\nReasonable rates.\n,     UNDER  NEW MANAGEMENT\nBy SAM SUMMERLAND\nMUNSAN (AP) - The generals\ntodiy take up the.tough task of\nluirdini tot Kprew. truce',, arid\nspeeding homt more than 88,000\nprisoners to their homeltnds.\nDuring tot night, mort thin 1,-\n700,000 soldiers on opposing, sides\net tht 150-mile long bottle lint llld\ndown,their arms amid a final convulsive shudder ot toaBsed artillery\ntin,.,. \u25a0 , '.\"\u25a0'. '   '.?.     ?,-77,  .,\nThe ponderous armistice machinery, two years and 17- days In the\nmaking, at list btganr to function,\nTha military armistice commission,\ncharged with supervising the truce,\ncalled iti opening session in Panmunjom, tpr u, tip. Mondty. *.\n, Bjt:Wp^jTliijtrtdty,,7glioUrs?tf:\nter toe fruits became'effective it\n10 p.m. Monday night and 86 hours\nalter the armistice was signed, tt\nPanmunjom, ill troops tnd their\nequipment were to be,withdrawn\nto.create a 2 }4-mile-wide demllltar-\nlied tone,.\nThe newly recoiled record\nshowed thit tot Communists will\nreturn the, disappointing total of\nonly 12,762 Allied prisoners,' The\nUnited Stttti tlone by litest estimates hit 13,625 mtn missing in\nteflon.'i \u2022  '   -v \u25a0\nBesides tot 38)3 American Red\nstockades will bt emptied of 8188\nKoreanB, 622 Britons, 12 French,,.228\nTurks, IS Australians, '40 Filipinos,\n14 Canadians, 22 Colombians', '\u00ab\nSouth Africans, 1 Greek, i .Belgian\n3 Japanese.   .\nThe. Communists tald .they will\nreturn the captives at the rate of\n3001 diy Including sick tnd wounded.    .,..\u2022' .:...'\u2022\nThe .United Nations, command tot\nformed tot Reds the ,proppsed..rate\nof 300 dilly wu 'Hiwluly'imtll.\"...-,\nTht. Chinese Red staff officer\nhandling repatriation, Col, .Waurig\nChttn thtn stld tht Communists\nwere \"willing to complete, repatriation at tot earliest date\" and\npromised t ttudy ol trtniportttlon\nftcllltlii.   : \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0',.\n-,i i hi, , - .       ' i ' ' 7     | ''-\"V.\nThe Weather\nVANCOUVER. <CI?> -r .'Tor tot\nfirst time in nearly, a:week temperatures in toe western.sector of\nSouthern B.C. climbed Into the 80s\nand with continued, drying of the\nair over the province expected to\ncontinue, temperature! throughout\nmost of southern B.C. should show\na further increase todiy.-\nConsiderable cloudiness with.occasional showers marked Monday's\nweather in the'central interior but\nIn this region iliovt-dtcretst to\ncloudiness tnd an increase, tn afternoon temperature* It - looked tor\ntodiy.   \u2022\nNtlson  \u2014   84  78   -\nSt Johnt -..\u2014.-..'\u00ab H  .01\nHllilix-.......?.,.  -67  63  .07\nMontrttl ...........\t\nQtttwt ^\t\nToronto  -..\u201e..?\nNorth Biy\t\nPort Arthur\t\nKtnort .\u00bb.., .........\nBrandon \u201e'....\nTht Pll   ...\nRtglnt\t\nPrince Albert \u201e .\nN. Btttltford ....I\t\nSwift Current\t\nCalgtry  \u201e-_..\nEdmonton  _.-.\nKimberley   \u2014\nCrescent VtUey \u2014\nGrind Forki .\u2014,\u2014\nKamloops   .\nPenticton ...... _-\nVtneouvtr ...\t\nVicterit  :. :\nPrince Georgt'.\u201e..\u201e~\nWhitthorit .....\u201e..%._..\nSeattle    .....\u201e...,\nPortland ;....\u2122._~\nSan Francisco ..:....-...\ntos Angeles, \t\nSpokane .?.\u201e\u201e\u201e...\nChieigp  ...\nNtw York _\u201eu_\nCity Electric\nWorkeii Sign\nAgreement\nWest Arm\nBridge Poll\nHere aw the statistics on\nsurvey forms.- wtiimed to\nthe .West Arm Bridge Committee;... \u25a0 -.\u2022'?-\nTojil ...,.............\u201e.; 882\nIn favor of bridge ........ 343\nIn favor, of, toll .,.?..,..;..\u201e 843\nAgainst toll .....v..............  38\ntheir Spirit Has\nPlace With Every\nRace, Rotary Told\nOver .60 NeUon Rotarlans tnd\nguests heard toe accounts of A.B.\nGtlker tnd C. B- Gtrland, Ntlson\nclub's delegates to tht Paris Rotary jpternatlonal Convention.\nMondiy at a luncheon to the Hume.\n\"We shall never again set such\na Rotary Internttlonal Convention\ntilth ts was held In Psrls,\" Mr. Gllker said, \"It wis truly International\nit 76 ot t]>e 87 countries which htvt\nRotary clubs wtrt represented.\"\nMr. Gllker told of hll Impressions ot\ntome of the delegates from such\ncountries as India, China, England\nand France, and ot the surroundings\nof toe convention held In \"such a\nland ot color.\"\nHt emphasised that during the\nlilt year 188 ntw clubt were formed\nIn Paris and five ntw districts wtrt\ncreated. \"Rotary had iti birth In\nthe western hemisphere,\" he stld,\n\"and It Is bound tp spread here,\nbut we wondered'ibout toe rest\nof the world,which didn't know tot\nmodern modes of ou'r civilization\ntndft'ich countries aB India where\nUrge cftitres are scattered through-.\nOut. But the spirit of Rottry crept\ninto their social lives regardless'; of\ntheir -tradiUdni.;\"Adt|ly;bu\u00abetin\nteBing,-of\"the \".colorful \u2022 testient\"\nand Itinerary -of the day- wai distributed to' toe 8000 delegates etch\nmorning. Mr.. Gllker told ,of some'\nof toe enactments tnd resolutions\nintroduced by delegates from. India\nand England at what he described\nat \u00abie \"most Important meeting \u201eof\ntoe.^hlire. conVeniUpn.'', S0mer Ot;\nthese., same enactments and resolutions are to be again discussed it\nthe International Convention' to'- be\nheld In Seattle, With., next yeir..\n! Among the business of (he convention,, toe 'single...transferable\nVbtoiWit :de\u00abld<)d'up'p_ tor the elecv\ntlon\" of directors, tnd mmy resolu.\ntions were introduced whlcH'quoS-\ntloned, \"which Is first, :the lndtv-\nldutl Rottrlttj or Rotary,\" '-(Jr; OU-\nker expressed his belief that \"Rot\ntry must be kept young in spirit\ntnd must welcome hew members.\"\n\"French Rotarlans went to bound-\nless Inconveniences and expense to\nmike the pageant t success,\" stld,\nMi\". Gtrland. He told of toe'.tplin'di'r\nof the shoW\/which- they saw to tot\nPtltls.de -Sports, which seats over\n10,000, In Paris,.There toey witnessed \u2022 dtpbtrt,,, mounted horsemeh,\ncharacterizations of Napoleon tnd\nJosephine, drumtoe\u00bb, knights bearing lances .on colorful tteeds,. 800\nmtn arid boys depicting monks in\nsong? gymnasts, military drills by\nhorsemen and motorcycles, tnd-tot\n\"Parade of the Nations,\" the .finale.\nMr. Garland'expressed hla appreciation to Mr. Gllker' for hit \"kindness, consideration tnd? wonderful\ntfompany\" as a Companion delegate.\n\"Rotary'li not what Rottry hit\ngiven to men, but what men like\nArt Gllker havt glvtn to Rotary,\"\nMr: Garland said.\nGuests at toe luncheon win-Phil\nHoskins, of Nelson, Clarence Dreiser\nof Rossland; Fred White ot Rossland, Ray Temple of Victoria, Glenn\nSmith of Oak Harbor, Wish., Ken\nMcMurchy of Winnipeg, end E.T.\nDicks Of Fernie. 7 '\n'A 1853. agreement between    >iv  imi(|ii> \u201e\u201e..u\u201e,\nth\u00bb \u25a0 Cit'y^ Of Nelson and the [  wt'have nt*t7 htd'eiith. irprb\nBlOiitt'lcar*Workers' Un,ion; *pttiil,I\"iLii\u00ab.Mr. \u2022*\u00bb\"\u2022\u2022\nHowe Atks firm\nBridge Propoial\nVANCOUVER (CP) _ Con-\n. structlon of t now Marpolt bridge\nspinning tht Prater \\ river Ir a\nprovincial not federal problem,\nTradt Minister Hbwt stld,Mondty.\n\"It you people bring t firm\npropoul and tik ill If wa ctn\nhelp, we might oo'nilder It, but\nwas signed here, it.was.reported Monday. . \u2022-\u25a0\u00ab.\"'\nMajor clause in the agreement is a 40-hour week for\nall, employees except those\nemployed in power and sub\nstations. Workers will get the\nsame take-home pay and substation and power plant employees get a 10 cent wage\nboost -but continue working\nthe current: 42-hour week.\nThe-agreement is retroactive\nto January 1\u201e\nGov't Takes CCF\nPlanks for Own,\nSays Herridge\nTRAIL \u2014 A national' health\nscheme for tot people of Ctntdt\nwis predicted by H. W. Herridie,\nMP tor West Kootenay, in art-address at Gyro Park Mondty; Hi stld\nthtt it would bt toe outcome of a\nsmall, but hardworking opposition.\ntht Liberal government in toe\nput ti will it the present htd stolen pltnks from the CCF platform\nprior- to election and t national\nhealth pith wit receiving favorable\nconsideration.\nSpeiklng ot old igt pensions, Mr.\nHerridge stld thtt tot government\nhtd finally abolished tht' means\ntest which the CCF had (tdvocnted\nsince 1045. Thlt wis a step in the\nright direction, but payment-?\nshould bt Increased commenserote\nwith tht, cost of living tnd the\neligible age reduced to 88,\nFAIRMT TAX?\n. He said Income tax wit tot fairest form of taxation If properly applied and based on ability of pay.\nHe strongly criticised toe suggestion\nof Conservative leader Drew to reduce 5tajapM.8600,000,000 which\njy.ouldf.relieve big corporations.\n.V',c6,F'.offered the Ctntdlah people\nan\" alternate. policy,. Slid Mr. Herridge. Op, one hind It rejects Communism and on the other it rejects\ncapitalism tnd lis inevitable monopolistic development. To protect lti\nInvestments there Is still plenty of\n\u2022opportunity for private, ownerihtp\nwhere ,C9ijipetitipp exists. \"The next\nstep in our economy is a mixed\neconomy.\"  :' '   ' \"\u25a0'\n'.^Ainyfeompthy. developing nttur-\nal, resources should do so with full\nresponsibility to pre'sent-and future\ngenerations, Every child is entitled\nto't full, education and every adult\nto full employment, Adequate housing health Insurance and security\nfor toe aged with a measure of\ncomfort should be within,'toe retch\nof tllv CCF will continue to wprk\nind strive tor these'benefits tor\nCtntdltns.\",        .        'r\ni-Mr. Herridge,was introduced by\nPercy Berry of Rossland, who slid\nLiberal; Leader at Greiton ...\nGo-Ahead on Libby Expected Soon\nByrne Tells Meet; \"Labor Champion\"\nthtt j|h taie of toe times now faced\nIt WIS Imperative to elect a CCF\ngovernment and.Sttid back to Ot-\nttwt t .min who .understood tot\nWest Kooteniy snd Its people.\nSmall Fire Quelled\nNelion firemen were celled to extinguish t small fire beheath toe\nstain leading up to apartments' over\ntoe City gaa works building Monday\nnight. There was no damage. The\nalarm was turned ln at 10:50. It Is\nbelieved a cigarette mty htvt caused the fire which started In a pile\nof rubbish* :      ;   ,    v\nLayers of salt ibout 1000 feet\nthick hive been found in northeastern Alberta.\nHowe.\nThi' mlnlitir also uld the fed-\ntrtl   government   wti   ittltfltd\n. with  the  preient status of the\ncltybwned    Sea    Island   airport\nwhloh the bridge leads to,\n\"It appears to be well managed\nand U operating at t profit.\"   !\nDog Hurt In\nFight With\nHungry Cougar\nIt wit some battle! '-And it ill\nstarted when t hungry mountain\nctt come to Taghum in search of\nfood. A motorist saw tot three-\nyear-old cougar oross tot highway\nond informed Game Warden R. A.\nITtd) Rutoerglen. The gamt warden tnd hit two bloodhounds\nfound tht cougar a few yards shove l|\ntoe railroad track. It wu near midnight tnd dtnst brush made toe\nhunt difficult. Ttd tired tnd hit tht\nwild.ctt. Thinking tht cat dead,\nthe warden and dogs made tor tot\ntrie on which It hung. The cougar\nfell from lta perch ond landed\nlighting on one of the dogs. The\ndog was badly mauled and clawed\nby the Injured boast. Unable to\nshoot tor fear ot hitting tot dog,\nTtd booted tot cougar away to tree\nthe- dog which .rolled down a 40-\nfoot hill, The other bloodhound\nheld toe cougar until it died while\ntoe warden went after the Injured\n\"dog. It is the second time toe dog\nhae been injured in a cougar'hunt.\n$250 Fine for\nImpaired Driving\nFor driving while hit abllUy wat\nimpaired, John Postalkptf of\nThrums was fined $300 ln Provincial Court here Mondty, He pleaded not guilty'before Stipendiary\nMagistrate William Evans.   '\nRCMP-officers tutitttd Postnl-\nkoff almost forced a highway patrol\ncar off. toe highway at Bonnlngton.\nWhen apprehended by. police, ht\nwas in an \"intoxicated\" state, of -\nficert'.tiid,,  \u25a0'.'\";        \u25a0' ,; ,7..-; \u25a0\nPostnikoff claimed he ,was not\nintoxicated, but colled no witnesses,\n-  '.- ',   .j - .      ,i i .\nTwo and Five Cent\nDrop in Egg Prices\n. .The price of eggs will be illghtly\nlower as'the new price list goes, into effect Tuesday. A Medlums-'have\ndropped two cents, wholesale, tnd\nA Small will bt flvt cents chetper\nwhile A Large ano?-A Peewees remain -the same. The new wholestle\nprice list shows A Large at 11 cents,\nA Medium at 68 cents, A Small at\n80 cents tnd A Peewees at 83 cents.\nJail for Issuing\nWorthless Cheque\nSALMO \u2014Arraigned one charge\not failing to pay a room bill and a\nseoond of obtaining money under\nfalsa pretenses, Guy Taron of Trill\nwas.fined ?25 on the tint tnd |100\no   the second count.\nHe paid tho>.$25 flnt hut iccepted\nthi three-month jail term \"In lieu\nof the $100 fine. Taron pleidid\nguilty .befOre Stipendiary Magistrate Henry John. He obtained tot\nmoney by issuing-1 worthless check\nhere. \u2022 \u2022\u25a0 .. -  7\nCRESTON \u2014 Numbers of Creston\nVolley citizens attended a reception\nbanquet ln Legion Hill In honor ft\nArthur Laing, provincial Libertl\nleader, ind Liberal candidate\nJames Byrne,' MP tor Kooteniy\nEast, Mondty night,\nDr. W. Fraser, Creston Libertl\nAssociation president, Introduced\nthe speakers,        _ \u25a0--?'.\nLargest attendance to dote to tola\nFederal election campaign ln Creston Valley wos if Prince Charles\nHigh School cafeteria to hear the\ntwo. The speakers . predicted t\nLiberal government under Rt. Hon.\nLoull St, Laurent. They reviewed\ntot accomplishments ot tot Libertl\nadministration since 1088 beginning\nwith the encouragement to Industrial activity, Improving tot employment situation to overcome tot\ndepression, tnd \"energetic and sane\nhandling of Canada's part to World\nWtr II\", tot successful re-estobllsh-\nmont'ot 1.28 million soldiers tnd\ntoe prosperous times, especially of\ntoe put -tour years under the St\nLaurent letdershlp. Ctntdt toad\nenjoyed toe greatest progress oi\ntny country in the world.   .\n88   83   .10\n87   82\n89\n80\nsi:\n84   .75\n78\n77\n82'\n80 70\n88 82\n49 ?4\n88 88\n80 83\n48 88\n50 88\n88 77\n88 78\n48 82\n88 80\n88 82\n53 78\n88 87\n38, 72\n88 74\n82 71\n48 78\n48 72\n83 77'\n58 80\n72 87\n88 90\n.18\n.01\nThe fishing village of Aldeburgh\nIn Suffolk was toe setting for Benjamin Britten's opera \"Peter\nGrimes.\" .. \\\nr    NOW!\n\u25a0Ami your owns\n'j> wealhtu   As-\nin 11\nIN IPOKANI-nl thi sp.clow-\nlor Houl tldpolh you.tan diol\nyour awn wulktr tad bi tool\nen Ihe hollas! of sumimr doys.' V\nAn\u00abillralyalr-ctndrllonidliaM\nwild Individual w\u00abolhtr-tonlrals\nIn oath mils |lvt piifMt ^\ncomfort.\nmn privi-ih wmv in thi wbt\n-^ II U  ,  i   I\n* pQahaln\nBalloon Lands\nOn Slocan Lake\nNb*w DINYIR-A Urge whltt\nbtlloon, btlltvtd to bt from t\nwtttotr ttttlon, Itnded on Slocin\nLake near ROstbtrry ibout light\nmilts north of htn.\nTHi btlloon wat first sun by\nS. M. Wettor-trom, It bon thl In\nitlalt MINN, belloved to signify\nMinnesota, tht ont pissing over\nNtlson July 18 bort red mark\nIngs. The btlloon tt Rostbtry wu\nwhltt.\n\"Surely,\"   Mr.   Lalrtg   uld,   Ut .\nwould bt unwise for toe Canadian\nVOteTi to change from experienced\nmanagers who htvt led our nation '\nto Its enviable poiltion to managers\not little or no experience tnd with\nnothing In their records to warrant\nbelief thit toey could or WOuld\nfulfill the.many promises thty art',\nmaking to win support on August\nIO\"\nWITH McNAUGHTON\nMr. Byrne gave an outline of\nwhtt he htd done tnd tried to do\nfor Kootenay But, tnd particularly\ntor Creston Valloy. He told ot t\nrecent Interview with Oen. A. G.\nMcNaughton of the International\nJoint Commission regarding tot\nLibby dim. Tho general stated his\nbelief thit tot present delaying\nsituation would bt overcome shortly, thd authority would bo given\nfor construction.\nThe member told of continuing\nefforts toward \u25a0 satisfactory Irrigation installation for ill the valley's\nnttdt. He htd pressed tor tot power\nlint to Creston Valloy, now installed by Wait Kooteniy Power &\nLight Company.    .,\nMr. Laing. Bald Mr. Byrne was..\nknown, tor, his energetic ind effective presentation! fir Kootenay East\nand British Columbia. He strongly\nrecommended Mr. Byrne is an\neffective' champion of labor it\nOttawa. It was regrettable, he slid,\nthtt tot CCF htd sun fit to send\ntheir trained exponent ot CCF-Ism\nto oppose ont of tot but tnd In-\nfluentlal advocates fer labor In\nParliament.\nDriving Infractions\nCost Nelsonite. $130\nStanley Skinner ot Nelion ww\nfound guilty ef speeding on Nelson\nAvenue July, IB and wii fined 880\nIn City Pollet Court Mondiy, The\ncue wis adjourned from .July 23;\nSkinner-had pleaded not guilty to\ntoe offense but wis found guilty.\nT. J. Allen, of Nelson, was fined\n8100 tor driving while hit ability\nWat Impaired by alcohol. 0. B, Ar-\nnts'on appeared for toe defendant\ntnd entered ,t plet of guilty, Tht\noffence occurred early Sundiy morning.'    .ti'ti-. \u25a0     '\u25a0 \u25a0\";\u25a0\u25a0. \u25a0\nST.V,BETTER'S. PORT,. Guernsey\n(CP) \u2014 Residents tnd visitors to\nthlt holiday isle stood shoulder to\nShoulder btUtog mackerel out of\n,toe sea! after they ran close to. Shore\nwhile chasing smaller fish..\nPhont 889\nTOWLfiR\nFuel A Trinsfer \u25a0\nNtlsoHi B.O.\n' For Friendly end  Efficient\nPlumbing and\nHeating Service\ncm\nFRED WELSH\n* SON LTD.\nPhone 1748\n811 Biktr St\nAll* for\nSTAR BAKERY\n\"YOU KNOW THEY .ARE.\nFRESH\"\n,   Stir Bakery Products Art\nDelivered .Every Tueiday,\nThursday tnd Saturday to Your\nLocal Nelsoh Merchants, ;\n. ' Nqw Equipment and Our\nRenovatsd Premises Are' Your\nOtltn\nantees of Quality\n!    '        \u25a0 ' I -v.\nBAKERY\n476 Rossland Ave.   Ph. 58\n. TH\" HAGtlS (Rtuttri):-- Holland is going to export 1004) tent of\nbutter to? Russia, lt was learned\nhere. The price is reported to be\nconsiderably lower than tht standard Russian price for Dtnilh butter,\nbut slightly higher thin toe price\nBritain, one of tot Netherlands\"\nbest butter customers, it willing to\npty. \u2022\nPHONE  W FOR  CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nN\u00abfict\nSincerity\n'GPT jet  Kootenqy  W\u00abt\n'^n \u00bbt<\u00bbp\" with tht Ftdvol\nGovernment.\nVOTE FOR\nIAN (GURtY)\nWt sjndw one bellicose dog who\nwon't welcome tht litest thing in\naluminum: an electric,dog-prod.\nNext time Towser rushes Into\nbattle, you can nonchalantly\nproduct this two-foot aluminum\nrod and apply it to' tho handiest\nput of the dog's anatomy. Tht.\nresulting shock is 41UU harmless,\nbut thty say a few \"treatments\"\ncure tho pugnacity Of even the\ntougiit*tyktv,7:7...\nSpeaking 6f electricity. Canadians can take prido thit toe\nlargest sttapded electrical cab-\never made for an Overhead transmission lino hat been delivered by.\nAlcan's Shawlnigta Falls plant to\ntht West Coast, to carry power to\nou( new smelter now t-buildlng\nit Kitiniot. Aluminum Company\nof Canada, Ltd. (Alcan).\nwith\nCANNING FRUITS\nFROM LIBERTY\nRASPBERRIES\nCrate\nCanning,\nAPRICOTS\nNow ot their peak week. Lug,\napprox. 13 lbs. _?_\". ___.\u2014\nWATERMELON\nSweet. Lb.\nDon't Forgot DR  BALLARD'S\nMUTT SHOW\nWEDNESDAY, 2:30\u2014CIVIC CENTRE BALL PARK\nDR. BALLARD'S\n- DOG FOOD 2 lor\nLIBERT\nFOOD STORE\ntmtmmmmm\ntmsstsm\n_______\n '^SSM\nDRESSY\" WHITE.\nFmrtys z\n, ,;      \u25a0 .ondf :   .\nScMWJ&S\nin smart styles\n-    Priced at\n%\"l .95\nto\nm\n98\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n653 Baker 8t.\nPhone 895\nNominations\nPicture Same\nClose of nominations in the three\nfederal constituencies in the Kootenay-Boundary ' country Monday\nmade no change lb the pre-election\npicture. 'fy\nBy the deadline, three candidates\nhad filed papers in Okanagan-\nBnundary, a new seat which takes\nIn the Boundary district; four in\nKootenay East, and five in Kootenay West.\nThe official list follows:  \u25a0'-,\nKobteney West \u2014 H. W. Herridge,\nMP, CCF; John 0. Betes, Social\nCredit; Mrs. M. Belanger, Labor\nProgressive; TV A. McRajs, Pro.\ngressive Conservative; Ian Somer-\nville,' Liberal.\n, Kootenay East \u2014 James Byrne,\nMP, Liberal; Sam English, Labor\nProgressive; - Donald ' MacDonald,\nCCF; Lome McLean, Social Credit\nOkanagan-Bouttdary \u2014 O. L.\nJones, MP, CCF; Ivor Newman,\nSocial Credit; W. A; Rathbun,\nLiberal. -\nCONCILIATION        .\nOFFICER NAMED\nThe Labor. Relations Board\\'hts\nappointed G. A.C!armlchel to act tt\nconciliation officer in agreement\ndisputes between ' two KOotenay\ncompanies and their employees.\nThe disputes are between Trail\nand district Civic Workers Federal\n'Union and the Corporation of.the\nVillage of Castlegar and-the? Columbia Cohtractnig. Company, at\nCranbrook and members of the\nWoodworkers Industrial Union.\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nMEETING\nTwin Riven Hall\nWei? July 29\nN. I. TANNER\nDirector of Dominion Bank,\nPrat. Merrill Petroleums and\nformer minister of Alta. Gov.\nHON. W. D. BLACK\nProvincial Secretary and\nMinister of Municloal Affairs\nSocial Cr\nPer'JKi\n-.   ;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0',;'\u25a0;:*\u25a0\nPublished by Kooteniy .West\n'   Social Credit Association\n:\nSPECIAL\nCLEARANCE\nSALE\nGLIDDEN PAINTS\nPAINT BRUSHES\nROOFING\nSHINGLES\nROLLED ROOFING\nSIDING SHINGLES\nMASONITE\n| '\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\/PZ-' Z-.\nChain Saws\n$95.00\n1 ONLY I.E.L. 5 H.P.\n1 ONLY DISSTON 11 H.P,\n.-\u2022',# ;\nPhone 18\nNebon\nFast-V^rking Grew on\nSalimo^Creston Survey\nSAlJMO\u2014A, road between Creston an- Salmo may be\na long way off,' but at, least provincial-government crews Are\nwasting ho time in their but-\nReigning as queen of\nKaslo's diamond jubilee\ncelebrations August 14 to 16\nwill be Miss Janet Cousins,\nabove, chosen hi a high'\nschool election. Her attendants will be. Miss Betty\nNomland and Miss Mary\nAnn Murphy.'   ,,  :,\nRiles Held for\nCANYON \u2014 Funeral service waa\nheld at the Canyon United Church\nfor Richard Armstrong, 76, fruit\nrancher here.\nBorn in Ballycreen, Northern\nIreland, Hr?vArinstrong came to\nthe Canyon area in 1937..    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 j,....\nHe la survived by his wife, two\ndaughters, Mrs. A. Dodd in Calgary\nand Mrs. Leith Thornton in Haney,\na son, Gordon, in Cr.eston, two sisters and one brother.\nPallbearers were H. Young, W.\nKolthamer, H. Moore, W. Ridd, L.\nJ.ittlejohn and H. Langston.\nFUNERAL HELD FOR\nC. A. HENDERSON\nCRESTON \u2014 List rites tor\nCharles Allan Henderson, 32, were\nheld at Trinity United Church here,\nand burial was ln \u2022 Forest - Lawn\ncemetery\/\nBorn in Moosomln, Sask., he waa\nmanied in 1944 and went to Grand\nForks. In 1950 he came here where\nhe was employed by the Legion\nbrnrich? He served in the Canadian\nArmy ln the Second World War.\nSurviving are his wife\/ his' eight-\nyear-old daughter, his parents, Mr.\nand, Mrs. W. Henderson in Grand\nForks, George in Reglna and Harold\nin Brandon, Man,, and a sister, Mra.\nDave Turton in Perdue, Sask,\nSeveral Convicted\nAfter Traffic Check\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 A close check on\ntraffic by Kimberley RCMP detachment during the past week has\nled to eight court appearances lead.\ning to convictions and fines.\nTwo persons pleaded guilty to\ndriving while their ability was impaired in separate incidents. James\nPearson, Jr., was fined $75 and\ncosts of $6.50 in one hearing, and.\nAndrew P.- Andersen $50 and costs\nof $8.50 in the other. Speeding on\nthe: arterial, highway through Kimberley, on which tourist traffic la\nat its peak,.was.the offence of six\npersons appearing during the week,\ncharged under the Motor Vehicle\nAct, Most of the offenders were\ntourists, though two were local, and\nfines of $15 or $10 were levied in\neach case on plea of guilty and costs\nranged from $3 to $5.\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If It's Machinery Vou Need:\nConsult Ut First\"\n214 Hall St.     Ntlion, B.C.\nBEAD  THE CLA88IFIE0  DAILY\n\u00a3mg\u00a3\nIT'S NO\nPROBLEM, WHEN\nWE DO IT.\" .7\nStop worrying about the\nbig move \u2014 wo know\njutt how to organize to\ntave , your time, money\nand furnishings. Call today for our rates.\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel & Trantfer\nvey of a route.\nSince beginning the'survoy this\nyear, the 12-man crew has completed Its location across the Creston\nflats from; tbe mouth of Summit\nCreekfto Creston.\nNov1* they're working in both,\nSalmo and Creston directions from\nthe sunyn|t itself.\nFrom Salmo tb Creston it about 50\nmiles, but of that'tota\" nine miles\nare or the existing Salmo to Nel-\nway road, ao the actual, distance for\nroad construction of a Salmo-Cres-\ntou Kootenay Lake bypass would be\n41 rfliles.\nTOTE vROAD\n.'Six miles-.ot private road exists\nfrom the confluence of Lost Crtek\nand the South' Fork of the -Salmo\nRiver, to Stanmore's Camp,\nFrom this point, government bulldozers have pushed through a six-\nmile tote road extending to within\nhalf a mile bf Summit Lake; where\nth. survey camp will be built.\n\u25a0    Public works officials, anxious\nto. deter fishermen and hunters\n-.from  using the road, point out\nthat It li not for tho public yet\nWorkmen are' obliged- to uie a\npower wagon to get ovor It.\nThe tote road is in the neighborhood of where the Salmo-Creston\nroad will some day be built, and is\nfor tbe sole purpose of getting but.\nvey equipment in and out\n\"It may be extended from Summit . Lake, to Creston,\" a public\nworks official says.\nSales Tax Share\nCRANBROOK - The city's semiannual share of the three per cent,\nsocial service and municipal assistance tales tax has-been paid, $25,-\n876.68, bringing the whole* year's\npayment to $46,477.88 which was\nabout $880 more than the amount\nfor the previous year and close to\nthe estimated receipt    ';      -    '\nCity share ot mOtor licence: vehicle revenue, $10,107.68, also received was appreciably higher\nthan was estimated pn the basis\nof last year's receipts. 7\nAt its meeting Thursday night\nCity Council approved and authorized the Imperial. Oil . Coinpany\nplan to increase its gasoline tank\nstorage space for fueling planes at\nthe city airpof t to 2000 gallons.\nAlso authorized was extension ot\na city Water connection to a clubhouse now under construction' by\nmembers at the new Golf and\n.Country JSlub course- ,'\nAt Zincton Mine\nSheep Creek Gold Mines Limited\nhas suspended mining at Its Zincton\nunit It Is understood that a part of\nthe mining plant is being moved to\nthe Mineral King'property near Invermere. Indicated ore there it estimated three times the quantity of\nZincton reserves and the grade is 50\nper cent higher. If the Zincton mill\nis moved to the Mineral King, it\nWill be within eight miles of the\nParadise mine and the ore from the\nlatter'could then be treated at the\nMineral King.\nnie Zincton mine, known as-the\nLucky Jim; was acquired by Sheep\nCreek in 1940 and has been.in continuous production since that time\nMill capacity has been at' close to\n400 tons 'daily and despite the low\ngrade character of the ore, the operation has been the source'of virtually all dividend since 1941. Prior to\nthat time, Sheep Creek gold mine\nnear Salmo had been the only property owned and lt earned handsome\nreturns, ttiiy\nCRESTON VALLEY\nHAS 2929 VOTERS\nCRESTON \u25a0- The Creston Valley\nhas 2939 persons eligible to vote In\nthe August 10 dominion election, 15\nper cent more then it had in tbe\nlast federal election.\nIn six polling stations in Creston,\nthe total number of eligible voters\nis 1819. .\nAt Valley points the count ia:\nKitchener 64, Arrow Creew 54i\nCanyon 178, Lister 137, Erickson 290,\nWynndel 298, Sirdar 48 and Sanca\n41.      '\nCRESTON* \u2014 Three life member,\nships were awarded by Creston\nbranch of the' Canadian Legion at\nits annual picnic.\nThey went to J. A. Ryckman and\nS.'S. Watson of Creston and.R. T.\nMlllner of Lister.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, jyLY 28, IMS\u2014 l\n\u25a0if' STREET] IN MARYSVILLE, thriving community\nnear Kimberley, is shown in this picture. Like a number\n' of towns7in' East an<l;W4\u00bbt Kootenay, Marysville has\ncome into its own in recent years, and boasts a population '\nof 800 and about a score of business places, which serve\na heavy tourist trade during Summer months.\u2014Charles\nWorniington photo;      , .\nYale Lead-Zinc\nProlihUp\nVale Lead and Zinc Mines expect\nthe boost in the price of lead will\nmean a $2000-per-month increase\n(at current production rate) in its\noperating profits, it was stated at\nthe annual meeting.\nThe company estimates that to. the\nend of May a net profit of $50,877\nKtd been chalked up by the Kootenay Lake Ainsworth area producer.\nIn June, operating profit ran about\n$ 17,000, A Robertson, president and\ngeneral manager said.. With the\ncompany's.first mortgage debt now\ncleared up, more funds will be available for development work.\nMention waa also made of the fact\nthat Yale, with! about 18 neighboring companies having been forced\nto close down due to low prices,\nwas still bucking the trend and\nturhing in improving profits. Mine-\nwise, reported Mine Manager H. D.\nForman, the picture was good.\nThe new North 2150 shoot on the\nmain Highlander-Banker vein had\nbeen opened up for 400 feet with,the\nNorth- drift face still in ore, The\nzone, said Mr. Forman, has a potential of 3000 fett in length and\nthe two raises which have already\nbeep completed on it (a third, is\nstarting).have shown that grade'is\nabove mine average.       \u25a0 '?'\u25a0\u25a0..\nThe two raises, one 140 feet in\nlength and the other 122 feet, have\nreturned a'grade of nine percent\nlead and 2.3 percent zinc over a\nwidth of 5:3 feet\nKaslo Jufeilee Plans\nCherry tbnndge to Decrease . . , .\nUsed at\n- \/' -,.' '\u25a0-. y.-,-, ' ; .. '\u25a0 \u25a0\n. Tonnage of cherries picked in Uie\nKootenay and Arrow Lakea district\nwill' be considerably smaller than\nthat of former years at only white\ncherries are being received by the\nHarrop processing plant,\nTherefore, all dark cherries must\ncome up to size ior crating or be\nleft on the trees, the department of\nagriculture notes in its fortnightly\nhorticultural news letter.\nRing cherries, size of which is\ngenerally good, are beginning to\nmove ln volume from early sections,\nLamberts appear to be slow in sizing in some orchards. V.\n? About 27,000'' crates of strawberries have been shipped to the\nPrairie market, and the harvest Is\ncomplete. Raspberries and black\ncurrants are moving, and a normal\ncrop of each is expected.\n' It appears that the drought of last\nFall bad an adverse effect on some\n'raspberry patches. In fields where\nwater was applied after the harvest\nlast-Summer, tie plants ere .carrying a good crop. In some fields\nwhere no Irrigation was, carried out,\nthe plants aro not as thrifty-and\nthere will be a decided reduction\nin the crop in such fields. . ' \u25a0\n.Otter, tree fruits beside*'cherries\naire developing' saiiifactorily, ';\" *\nTomatoes ond. vine crops . are\nlodking better after the turn <to\nwarmer weather, and seed peas ere\n.developing satisfactorily.     : ,\nIn the Grand Forks area, potatoes,\nseed crops and other vegetables are\ndoing-well with heavy demands for\nirrigation. Apple scab; haa been\nquite serious, and estimates are now\nonly half of June -estimates.\n* KA8LO \u2014 The Kaslo Diamond\nJubilee committee hit made arrangements to feed hundreds of\npersons expected to attend the\ngill calibration Ih August.\n: Accounts amounting to $64.04\nwere' passed for payment\nG. J. Dickson reported W. Fisher\nhas agreed to supply tlie necessary\nmeals for the August 14 commitments and T. Heatherington has\ngranted the use of his theatre for\nserving the, meals. The same arrangement will probably be made\nfor Saturday. \u25a0 .       \u25a0'\"\nDick Magami reported further on\ncafe seating. Mra. Whittaker has\ngranted the Use of her vacant lota\nnext to Vimy Pork, if needed.- 7.\nMr. Dickson reported that posters\nhave been mailed to all points in\nEast and West Kootenay and* tentative prize list for old time sports\nJtiis. been drew^i';Up,? .   '\u25a0->\nW. Smith agreed to take over the\nchairmanship of the gate committee.\nJubilee tickets have been, put on.\nsale in all of the stores of the City.\nFinal, arrangements for the baseball\ntournament are nearly completed,\nand the committee is reasonably\ncertain-of obtaining a fourth team,\nA circular letter to the fire chiefs\nof the surrounding area' Outlines\nthe* \"Old Time Sports\" program ond\nasks specifically for entries in the'\nhose reel race; Noel Bacchus offered the top of the stage? which\nhe acquired from C. C. Halleran.\nA letter from a music club of\nTrail stated they will, take part in\nthe Saturday evening porgram. The\nCity gave permission to the committee to do a certain amount of\nfencing at the Park with toll gates.\nMr. Dickson stated that lie had gone\ncarefully over the budget, giving the\nminimum amount necessary to sue.\ncessfully carry out the celebration.\nIt was decided to take out a rain\ninsurance for Augst 15 from nine\najn, to five pm. Mrs. C. Cameron\nreported on housing in the absence\nof Mrs. N. S. Miller, Dances, and\nthe possibility of a street dance\nwere also discussed. The purchase\nof baseballs for the'? tournament\nwas approved. The question of admission fees for students was put\nbefore the meeting, and decided\nthat high schopl students, would be\nadmitted at half price. Elementary\nchildren to be admitted free.\nHew Store Opened\nBy Torks Co-op\nGRAND FORKS-Sunshine Valley Co-operative Society, one bf\nthlt area's fastest growing businesses, Saturday opened its new\nstore in' premises formerly occupied by Bill's Dry Goods.\nStock of the store wit bought\nby the Co-op, tnd a three-year lease\nhat; been given on tlie building.\nTerms .were not announced.\nBill Arishenkoff, proprietor and\nmanager of Bill's Dry Goods, has\nretired from hit dry goods business\nfor health reasons. He will begin\nlogging operations with Alee Pop-\noff on a timber limit they purchased recently, He came here from\nPelley, Sask., in 1047, tnd opened\nthe store upon his arrival.\nPurchase of the store.marks another step in the Co-op's expansion.\nLilt yetr it opened a service station and hardware department itore\non Main Street Store and Society\nhave been in existence since 1047,\nand the only serious set-back they\nhave had was in 1947 when' the\nstore was blown up on New Year's\nlive.    7- \u25a0' -*?\u25a0'\u25a0 -   ,\nThe need for additional floor\nspace was a main reason for the\npurchase, Fred Popoff, Co-op manager, has stated.\nWater Sports, Hike\nCamp Features\nKOOLAREE \u2014 Big event for the ' \u2022;\nintermediate girls camping at Camp  i\nKoolaree was the hike to Russell's   \u25a0\nwhere many went in for a dip, and\neveryone enjoyed, hot dogs, watermelon, .'cake -end, milk. A shower  ;\non the return trip didn't dampen'\ntho spirits of the girls and they  |\nheld their- campfire .indoors. Cabin, ;\n3 presented a skit. Cabin 1 won ?\nthe housekeeping shield tnd Cabin\nt the totem pole.;,:. ? ' ,-.'. I\nInstead of the usual morning j\nroutine Sunday aervice was held.|n 1\nthe outdoor chapel. Ritchie (Mrs. >\nA. Welloch) led the service, and 7\nJoan McRory read the scripture, j\nZip was organist while Fudge con- j\nducted the choir, Muriel Smith and j\nRoberta Duckworth tang a duet,?;\nA part of the'*at*r tports weref\nrun off in the afternoon and results\nwill be announced later. ffc\nFudge conducted a lovely vesper\nservice'in the evening, .'\u2022?$')\n?At campfire Cabin 4 presented???\ntheir skit. Cabin 1 again captured..,\ntbe housekeeping shield and Cabin\n3 the totem pole?'- 7. 7  *\u2022*'\n!\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0;\nA. MATHISEN\nPAINTING AND\nDECORATING   .\n607 Kokante Street\nPHONE H)3\u00ab-L\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\nAll hats reduced to dear\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nSt.    Michael's    Tee-Shirts    and\nPyjamas. \u2014 TOT-'N'-TEEN 8HOR.\nPeak post-war production year\nfor Canadian refrigerators was 1948,\nwhen 54,043 were manufactured.   .\nKIDS!! Tomorrow Is\nDr. Ballard's\nMUTT SHOW\n7 6R0UKT0ENT-R '-'\u25a0\nCivic Centre Groundi\nWednesday\/July 29 \u2014 2:30 p.m.\nBRING MOM AND DAD\nTHEY WILL ENJOY THE FUN, TOO\nIT'S ALL FREE\n^F\nTrinity official board meet tonight 8. p.m., in parlor,\nOrder your fire wood now. 4 ft\nslab or cut to order. Phone 330-L.\n-'\u2022.*. \u25a0 -\nHunting tnd Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyce Men't Shop.\nNew   skirts,   dresses   for   girls,\nsmart summery styles.\nCHILDREN'S SHOP\nBaby budgies just off the nest.\nSpecial $6.05 etch.\nMA^'S FLOWER SHOP\nFor Freshness and Goodneas, try\nORAW8 Chocolates. Phone 1347, 534\nJosephine Street\/\nATTENTION\nChild Health Centre and Preschool Immunization Clinic,-Memorial Hall today,. 2 to 4 p.m.\nTHANK YOUR HOLIDAY HOSTESS    WITH    FLOWERS    OR    A\n\u25a0SMART PLANT FROM\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nH BUTTERFIELD cent fix R,\nthrow it away. Watch wtrk treaspt-\nly dont and fully ftert-ttod at\nreisonable price*\nHostess Rockers with arms, upholstered   in   tapestry   or   frieze.\nOnly $34.95.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nHeir Mrs. Belanger, Labor Progressive federal candidate for Kootenay West over CKLN at 41:15 thit\nevening.\nDon't throw away yoar tM Mn*\nTrade them tt\nSUPERIOR   MOTORS\n,. Tire Deptrtaieot\n\"Kitchen Handy\" Mil tnd acces-\nsbrles\u2014space and time savers. See\nthe different sires  and types at\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nKeep your lawns free of weeds\nwith Green Cross \"Weed-NO-More,\";\nthe magic weed killer. Easily applied to the weeded area with a\nWeed-No-More Automatic Sprayer.\n-    HIPPERSON'S\nBeat materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S 8HOE REPAIRS.\nFOR ELECTION INFORMATION\nPHONE 1698\nLIBERAL HEADQUARTERS\n426 BAKER ST., NELSON\nVOTE FOR CURLY SOMERVILLE\nHear M. E. Tanner, director of\nDominion Bank, Hon. W. D. Black\nand J. O, Bates, Social Credit candidate for Kootehay .West tonight in\nthe Eagles hall.\n.8 used Winnipeg Couches, like\nnew. Ideal for summer cottage.\nWe buy and tall ntw tnd uted\nfurniture. \u2022\nHOME FURNITURE EXOHANQE\ntllHallSt\nWe tee prepared te Wai ta tar\nbuilt-up   er   asphalt  >oo_*\u00ab   J\u00bb4\u00bb\nSide wall t-Mttt and tha-M. Al\ninquiries prowpHf aWmslid te,\nD. B. Marry Lt-iker 0\u00bb. aVtt.\nAPPLICATORS\nFeint with Satin Glo Latex. For\nloveliest walls the easiest way.\nWin a trip for two to Honolulu (all\nexpenses paid). Entry blank at\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\n\"   -CO. -LTD.'\nKOOTENAY WEST\nDESERVES THE BE8T    N\nH. W. HERRIDGE, M.P.\nSpeaks at  . .\\\nFruitvale-- Today. '\nSalmo \u2014 Wednesday.\nNolson \u2014 Thursday.\nFor the fishermen \u2014 Uie new\nWhirlaway rod and reel All combined in one unit thit makes the\nsmartest Outfit available for spinning, fly-casting or trolling. $29.05\nfor rod, reel and line.\nHIPPERSON'S\nIN MEMORIAM\nIn loving memory of a Dear Husband and Father, Albert Clarence\nMusfelt, who drowned near Riondel\nJuly 28th, 1952.\nThere is (Link\nDeath cannot sever\nLove and Remembrance\n-IdVe on forever.\n.Ever Remembered by hit Loving\nWife ahd children.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nJENNINGS\u2014FUneral services for\nthe late Annie Bates Jennings will\nbe held from the Thompson Funeral\nHome Wednesday at 2 p.m. ReV. Allan Dixon will officiate and Inter-\nment will be in the Nelson Memorial Park.\nMiss Thi\nM.J.    '\n;\u25a0;.'   .    M.P.., 7-'\"\nOustondlng   Canadian   Statu-\nman and CCF National Lttdtr.\nM.P.\nCapital\nTheatre\nNELSON\nThurs., July 30\n8 p. iti.\nFriends   tnd   supporters -tre\ncordially Invited to\nSUPPER at tht MEMORIAL\nHALL at 6 P.M. \u2014 75c\n'.'DU I tm MiMtotV rath AM.)-)!\nGet money fast with a\nNIAGARA\nAUJ0 LOAN\nHow much de yon need?\n$100... $500... time...\nMore? You can get a Niagara\nauto loan ln n matter of\nminutes. Bring in ownership papers and choose tho\nKyment plan that suits you\nst. Loans to $1000 carry\nHfe-inBurance for your\nfamily protection... at no\netna cost to yon.\nVOU FAY till   *\nFOR MANY FRIENDLY LOANS\nVou\nraym.nl\n' Ht.-t\n$911.10\n$80.00\n't*\n607.20\n. 40.00\nte\nsas.4i\nt\u00bbM\nis\n11131\n20.00\ni*  .\nVI EVEN Ot ODD AMOUNTS\n-  ^m          *                       f\niMlACARAj\nnil! \u2014 i\n56\n1 Baker\n\u25a0 ut.\nSt.\n. Phone 1650\nAwtp_\u00bbiQtfiwtss-tf_r>iawrtOcWlw\nBEMWMMtiS tMtt WENDIYIOWIS (im:\nTONIGHT\nHON. BROOKE\nMINISTER OF NATIONAL DEFENCE\nP<M.\nP.P.S.T.\nAND TRANS-CANADA NETWORK\nPublished By Tho\nNATIONAL LIBERAL FEDERATION OF CANADA\n m^mmmi\n\u25a0\nw^m.\neemaem^m^\nw\nEstabiisncd April 32.. 11102\nBritish Columbla't\nMost \/nferesllng Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sundty by tht\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANV  LIMITED,\n204 Biker Street   Nchon,   British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Moil,\nPost Office Deportment. Ottawa\nMEMBER OP THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTuesday, luly 28, 1953 \u25a0\nGood Policies\n-.   From Good Parties\nThe parliamentary system, as invented in the early days qf England\nand slowly perfected through more\nthan a thousand years, depends on the\nexistence of parties' and cannot successfully operate without theitt. For,,\nlatticing stable parties, agreeing on, certain principles and policies, Parliament\nbecomes a mob and stable government\nImpossible.\nThe party, in fact, is the supreme.\nInvention of the British parliamentary\nsystem,  and wherever that system:\nworks successfully it operates through,\nstrong natidnal-parties.    They have?\ntheir, abuses, like every other? humaji\nInstitution, but'they are essentialif\nparliament is to ap anything more than\na mob.       .  -   \"  '\nIf anyone doubts that let him observe the contrast between the gov-,\nernment of Britain, where there are\nonly'two major parties, and the political chaos of France, where many minor\nparties successively construct and destroy temporary governments, which\ncan never be strong enough to solve\nany of the nation's basic problems.\nLet every . Canadian, consider\nFrance's experience when any would-\nbef leader expounds a theory de'aling\nwith an end to political parties.\nSuccess to Vedden Rowing\nVedder Canal has won the bid for\nthe  British  Empire  Games  rowing\ncompetitions, yet the. communities of .\nKootenay have gained much merely\nthrough their support of the move to\nobtain the water events for this district,. Theenergy that went lnt6 the invitation to use the West'AnUifwon vast'\npublicity for the waterfront Jacil't'es \u25a0\nat Nelsoh, and enhanced the reputation;\nfor enterprise of the entire area. The\nability of this district to handle giaht-\nsized host events was made kijowh far\nand wide, \u25a0-...:   ...\u25a0';'. j f' \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nThe Chilliwackarea was clipsen because it was closer to central j scene of\nthe 1954 Games to be heldf at'.Vancouver. The gains, goodwill and ^ood sport;\nthat might have been qwfs I willL be'\ntheirs. We wish them total suiicess.\nTrailite^ Story     ,\nFascinating Reading\nTHE CHRONICLES OF CAMILLEi By\nCamille Laurlonte.\nHere li tfit'tutoblogrtphy' of a mm who\nrefused to be beaten by anything. No matter\nbow high the odds were stacked against him,\nCamille Lauriente managed to make every\nhardship become a personal success. Thla is t\nbook thtt will teach a lesson ln living to\neveryone\u2014no matter how young or Old.\nBetweon the pages of .this fascinating book\nreaders will meit t man who.hds lived in\nItaly, Argentina, Canada tnd tht United\nStates. Born in Italy, ho left for .Argentina tt\nthe age of 14, and returned to hit native country vJhen he was 20. It wti thtn thit ha was\nmarried\u2014to a girl chosen for him by hit\nftmily.\nDuring the.35 yean which hli spent ln the\ncity of Trail, Brltllh Columbia, Canada, Mr.\nLauriente became a successlul merchant, tnd ,\nhit grocery store was one of the moBt frequented in the area, When Lauriente and a\ncompetitor entered into a plica wtr, the feud\nbecome the talk of the region, tnd the rivalry\nraged, until-Lauriente emerged victorious. .\n'.,? 'Lift \"In Trail tpptaled'to tW-> mtrdhint,:f\nand he became active in civic affairs there.\nAmong the public offices which he held were\nthoSe of alderman, chairman ot the civic finance.committee and'justice of the peace.\nAt present the author, resides In Spokane,\nI Washington? where he wrote this book. After\n?\u00ab long and eiolting life, he can look back .\nand consider himself a success. .'\u25a0 \u25a0,\nft 7 An^ohg Mr. ;Lturlente's clubs 'are the\nEngles, the Elks and.tho Socleta Cristofor Colombo, in Trail, He is a former president ond\n' was one of the founders of the latter organization. Proof Of the fact that he can excel In\nanything to which he puts hla mind is his\nSuccess in I|is main hobby, gardening. He wat\ngranted on award one year for having the\nbest garden In the city of Spokane-\n\u25a0    '    ' '      '    \u2022\n- Art of Compromise\nCompromise is a word which has fallen\nsomewhat Into disrepute, It has come to be\nInterpreted all too generally in line with ona '\nof lti specific interpretations\u2014something degrading. As when t woman allows her reputation to be compromised.\n? Tlie ability.-, to compromise, however, is\nsomething of prime importance In the lift of\nan Individual, a nation or the'world. We all\nmust compromise in our private lives, in our\nhome lives, else we would be living constantly\nin t bickering bedlam. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022,..\nAs Rt. Hon, C. D, Howe told a Cleveland\naudience, Canadians have had to live by com-\n- promise;' botween our two major races, languages: and religions; between the economic\nand other Interests of our geographical divisions! Our nation hts been built on compromise .Otherwise it never could have been built\nor maintained.\n- | What Is wrong with the world today is,\nessentially, t lack of ability ot nations to compromise their differences. Compromise doesnl\nimply,appeasement, in the.unfortunate7tense\nof the iatttr-word. It implies '\u2022\u2022 desire to get\nalong with each apd to succeed in ft.-f#lnd-\nl tor Daily' Star.\n. Where Too Muth\nPrice Supporf CapiLead f\n\u25a0Just, what is going.to face Canadian\ntraders on the.U.S. market; qnd what\nC<%da\u2022\u25a0 can expect if it gfw too far\nalong the trail of price maintenance, is\noutlined by Family Herald\"a\u00a3_: Weekly\nStar of Montreal, which pbihtti out: ?\nUnder existing legislation; ^discriminatory orders can be made only,\nafter- study and recommendation by\ntheTariff Commission..,Th-^Senate,\nhowever,'now seeks to give.the President power to do so if his Secretary of\nAgriculture finds any. situation \"requiring emergency treatrnent\" to\"\nprotect government-supported farm\nprices. '.,.'.' 7\nThis is, of course, the nftb of the\nquestion. Is it possible tb combine un-\nVerse   -tiiZf\nWealth and Judgment *Z$\nWhat is man?\nCreated by, Almighty, God\nTo toil a lifetime, then to be set free, for an\n, f'eternity.\nWhy.lt man,     ,\"-.\u25a0?,\nCreated with a mind,\nA heart and soul, and able to be kind,\nSo heartless, greedy.\nJust to gairi\"  '':\u25a0\", \u25a0.\nA worldly wealth: In valnf       '\" \u2022     ,\n'Main! Can't ybueee     |     ,-    ...\nWorld wealth, has little power v\n, When Cornea the Judgment hour? i\n'Tis tijen we feel\nThe weight of steel ' ,\nUpon our soul.'or joyous pride\nBy God's side\u2014man's goal. ...-.,?   \"\u25a0\n7''f? ' NATUEE BOY.. .\n-limited imports with a farm program\nsuch as that which exists in the United\nStates? Is it practical? The price support program tjiere guarantees the\nfarmer a high, percentage of \"parity\".\nIf .that parity remains high, and if farm\nprices are pushed down by .imports,\nthe cost to the U.S. treasury rises, and,\ntheoretically anyway,'could rise astronomically. The logic of the price support * program; therefore leads inavl-\ntably to the exclusion of imports.'   .\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpon to any reader. Nimea of persona\nilklhg questions will not be publllhed.\nThtrt It no ohirgt for thla service.\nQuestions' WILL NOT, Bit AN4W\"IBBD\n\u2022V1 MAIL except where thtre Is obvious\nntceislty for privity. \u25a0?,...'*\nA.M., Nelson\u2014Wo have a HlUe debate on, and\nI bellevo w* ore all wrong. Can you please\ntell ut, how high above lake level tbe\nreservoir it near Observatory Street?\nApproximately oio feet    v\nW. F. E., Rossland\u2014Could you tell me where\n. I might procure Octt Gain Igos saver)? ,\nWe hove been unable to get Information\nabout thla brand of gas'saver. WIglnton Motori, Baker Street, Nelson, sell a British prod-\nuot known ti \"Oil Master\".\n7 Interested,' Trtil\u2014cS|in yduZ-feli ui tiiything\n' about tht Toronto Museum of Geology and\n.   Mlntrtlogy??   ? ' .   ,   t\nThe exhibits are partly arranged bit an\neconomic basis, sections being devoted to ores,\n' fuels, ceramics, building Btones, abrasives, refractories, etc. Especial attention has been\ndirected to building and ornamental, stones;\ncopper, nickel, radium and gold Ptes? Canadian cools,'etc. Thert tre models of an oil\nfield tnd.oil well with working.pump. Glaolal\ngeology has received much attention; striated\nsurfaces, striated stones, and tlllltcs are represented from all the known Ice Ages and'\nfrom all parts .of the world. Dynamic and.\nstructural geology are well represented by\nlarge collections of water color paintings of\nglacial features, These galleries' are currently.\nbeing irrangtd, 'V' 4;'-,.\nThe, south gallery contains an unusually\ncomplete series of minerals from-all parts of\nthe world.as well aa a special collection of\n. Canadian minerals; collections of cut gems,\ncrystals, meteorites, rocks; and a special series\nto illustrate -the mineral' association found in\ndeposits of gold; silver, load, zinc, radium and\nnickel, as well as a certain non-metallic series.-\nAmong popular exhibits tre a reconstructed\ncrystal cave tnd a collection to show the. flu-\n' orese'ence of minerals'. A large part of these\n. collections \u2022have been presented by5 persons\n- - connected with the mining Industry. \u25a0*\u2022 .\nLooking Back-ward\n10 years Ago\nFrom the Nelaon Dolly News; July 28,1)43\nMiss Jean Coles ot Nelson lg president -of\nthe newly-organized interior branch of the\nTelephone Operators' Organization-of British\nColumbia,    ,v-.y -';'-...'      ,\"\u25a0\u2022 :r~y.ti!:\u00b1.-: y\nMils Winnifred A. Kinahan. who holidayed at Syringa Creek as guest of ner brother\ntnd sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Kinahan, has returned to Nelson,   ti'i\n\"fc*,C. F. Sitidel. QB Hi-fh-Street, Is v)||f-\n. ijig. Trail ftp a tew days. She is accompanied\n'by her'daughters, Corrlnne-tnd Helen!\n\u2022\u2014s****-*\u2014-*\u2014\"*\"*.\nCapita! Mptno\n;        BYJAMga K. N-3_|Tr\nVICTORIA\u2014The annual midsummer tourist rush to this\ncapital is in full flood, and the Legislative Buildings are alive\nwith visitors,.mostly from the Urilted States. . .\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0>.*'\nThis, year there are conducted tours of the Buildings\u2014-a\nsplendid idea. Each hour, on the hour, a uniformed Commissionaire .takes the visitors around. About* 300 people a day\nmake tht; conducted tours; at\nleast as many more wander\naround by. thernselyes.\nThe Commissionaire -shows. the\nvisitors the legislative chamber, the\nLibrary and the Archives, end other\npoints.pf interest, .telling thom\nSomewihg of B. Ca history, and\n_iat*tth<t Queen doesn't live In Vic\ntorla, but tn London, and that British Columbia is a province of Canada, not a county of England.\n. Hundreds of visitors; too, pour\nthrough the Museum end historic\nHelmcken House. It would be Interesting to know how many pictures are Snapped each, summer on\nthe lawns of tho Buildings; cameras'\nare clicking all day. long,\nKOrl YQUT.OO,\n; British Columbians can get in on\nthese tours, top. ft?would be t good\nIdea next time you're in the capital\nto get in One one of them. You'll\nthroughly enjoy it, if you've never\nbeeri iri the Buildings. The-way it's\ngoing now, even per capita, more\nAmericans than British Columbians\nhtve; heen in our Buildings. It's the\nold story of distant pastures looking\ngreener.7 ' . ,.i-.'  '\u25a0 '-.*\nThe other day I sat on a white\nbench on the terrace of ..the Building!, The two vast lawns were being cut. My curiosity got the .better\nof me, to I asked the mtn with the\npower mower. how long it takes\nhim. A full'eight hours, he aald; arid\nwould I like to know something?\nWell,.he walks 17 miles every time\nhe ciits the lawns, each Friday. That\nIncludes frequent trips with grass\ncuttings to a central heap! I said to\nthe grass-cutting \/man it appeared\nto me avery pleasant way of working? what with scenery and flowers.\nHe grunted end kept on cutting.\n'  .-\u25a0**'\"*\"*'        '     '\nWell, that's the outside ot the\nBuildings tor this Week, Inside,\nplans Were stirring for the opening\nof the session In .mid-September.\nThe five' Greater Victoria Social\nCrediters\u2014Mrs. Ariens, Mr. Wright\ntnd. Mr. Chanfc.of-Victoria-City; Mr.\nBruch ol Esquimalt and Mr. John\nDouglas Tidball TIsdalie ot Saanich\n\u2014were sworn into office by Clerk\n61 the House Ned'deBeck. They ctn!\nnow put the Initials MLA after their\nntmea\u2014and everybody?loves to Be?\nable to do thtt; It's: almost as im\nportant as the $8000 a year, (hough\nthat'i important, too.\nMEMBERS BUSY\nCCF Mr, Strachan of Cowichon-\nNcwcastlo, ceme calling, too,. on\nbusiness for hla constituents. He\nStld he wit going tO sco Publlo\n.Works Minister Qaglardi, and be\nprobably, howled about the state of\ntht rotdl In Cowichln-NtWcastle,\nEvery MLA, especially an oppositionist, sayt the roads In his riding\nare terrible, Just terrible,   'i'l\nMr, Thomas-Irwin of Delta hat\nboen bustling about the Buildings,\ntoo, He's not the Speaker, but he\nuses the Speaker's suite, os he plans'\nfor the (session. It's up to the Legislature- to elect a Speaker on opening day, but everyone knows Mr.\nIrwin will be the mtn,-because-the\nPremier has picked him out, Election of a Speaker. Is ont ibt thost\ncurious, quite harmless bits of\nmake-believe that, have fastened.\nthemselves to our parliamentary\nsystem,     ... . 7,7,\nThere's already argument about\nwhether MLAs will get. \u2022 full\n$3000 Indemnity for tht Autumn\nsession, There's no reason why\nthey shouldn't, Whan i session Is\nonly three or four days, and Is\ncalled fer ont specific purpose,\n.the full Indemnity Isn't taken\u2014\n- MLAs vote themselves about $50\nt diy, But thl ont coming up will\nbe a full session In every sense of\nthe Word, so the full Indemnity\nwill doubtless be paid, unless tho\ngovernment doesn't like tho Idea\nof so much extravagance, and so\n-   persuades Its supporters to vote\nagainst It,\nOf those who sat In the last\n1 Legislature,   tnd   attended ,'tht,\nspring session, 31 have boon reelected, tnd so thty mty well-get\n\/, $8000 thll year-not badl\n- Payment from the taxet to elected\nrepresentatives it always a touchy\nSubject The. representatives say\nthey don't get enough; the public\nfrowns oh whtt lt Insists on-calling\nsalary-grabs from those it elects to\nrun Its business.      .\nAjrnwtd Cor Faolt\nCmcIH Border Guards\nMUNICH (AP)-A home-made\narmored ctr, so cleverly, built thtt\nIt tooled Czech border\" guards,\ncrashed through the Iron Curtain\nSaturday bringing eight people to\nsafety in the West.\nBavarian border pollco stld t 31-\nyear-old Czech mechanic, his wife\nend their two small children, two\nCzech soldiers and'a civilian tnd\na woman roared across to freedom\nnear Wald-Muenchen in southern\nBnvarla. They asked asylum.\nThey first reported the vehicle\ntb be t tank, but aald later It was\na - bcautlfully-bullt armored . ctr\nwith tank treads, so well done thot\nthey bad assumed it was a Czech\narmy tank. ' ':?\nIt wat docked with foliage ts\ncamouflage and as it rammed\nthrough the barbed wlte barrier\nnear Wald-Muenchen, a Czech\narmy patrol, heavily-armed, watched it open-mouthed. They apparently believed It a Czech armored\nreconnaissance cor and hold their\nfife.   .7 \u25a0 ,7\nSEEK RARE: fish ' '. '.-,\n: OAPtlTOWN, -~.(tiP)-A Din-\nIsh scientist, Dr. E. Neilspn, has\nasked to Join an expedition organized .by Dr. J. Lv B; Smith, South\nAfrican Ichthyologist, .to search fof\na specimen of coeiacanth, a rare\nIfsh until recently,thought to bo\nextinct. Dr. Nellsen has led expeditions to arctic regions in search\nbf lOSSllS.   \\.ti.   ,   ' ':;. ?.:...  .,;;,     ' .{..\nNo Dollars, No\nApples, Says\nFood Minister\nLONDON  (Reuteri) - Gwllym\nLloyd George, mlnliter of food, said\nMonday that he Could not at pros- i\nent buy applet from Ctntdt because of Britain's dollar ah.or.tage.\nHe hod been asked ln the House\nOf Commons whtt arrangements he\nwai making to import Canadian\napples during.the winter.    .   .\n82-YEAR-OLD DOCTOR\nDELIVERS OWN SON -\nCLINTON,Iowa tC?) -Thewife\nof 62-year-old Dr. John J. Hull-\nInger gave birth Sunday to an 11-\npound boy at Uie family home here.\nDr. Hulllnger announced that he\nhad delivered the. baby, born to his-\n32-year-old wife. He said the baby\n\u2014' 3,178th delivered in his time \u2014\nand tht mother are doing nicely.\nIn the last two years about 116 per\ncent of all crude, oil produced In\nCanada came from Alberta fields.\nNORTHAMPTON, Englsnd (CP)\n\u2014A motorist, noticing his car afire,\nstopped;and called on the services\nof the fire' engine directly behind\n'hlni. He\" drove' Off a few minutes\nlater with the fire out.\n,THt Stay in SPOKANE\n\u2022     You'll Enjoy\u2014\nThe Cotur d'Alent's Hospitality provides newly modernized .surroundings   In\nlobby, In rooms, In halls. I\nYou're  In the center of I\nSpoktnt's shopping  tnd\n-tjitttrt.-iret. vWi   '   * '\nVonderfiili\ndining, TV, for your room.l\nreoreatlon. In tha Donkeyl\nI Room ond nightly dariolngE\nI In the Pionttr Room\u2014til ttr\nthe Cordinl\nCOEUR D'ALENE\nHOTEL\n228 N. Howard a\nhave a\n\u2022300DRBM\nfor your monsy\nffsUtetotlA- SZitetf &yxH&4\\\nThiB advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by tho Government of\nBritish Columbia.       , -\n-  ..:,     ' -'   \u00bb,YEAR\u00ab'A_0 \"' ,  ;;.;,' i\nProm tht Ntlion Dally News, July 28V 19S8\nMargaret C. Lutes, Nelson Central School?\nwas winner of the governor-general's medal\nIn district. No. 9. She had 430 marks, to \"rank\nthird in.-Brltlah Columblt.-f- -.'--::: \u201e-.vf-\n.'\".\" Tie'ilrieup forthe Nelson Oldtlmer soccer\nsquad this year is: W.'(Scotty) Man, goal;\nJames Brown and Jack Ward, backs; Jake\nHothery, S. Gftrr and L, Pickard, halves; M. N.\nGallpen, P.'%,. Horton, AH Gijrr, B; Bowley\nand R.-Moffat, forwards. Jack Ward will be\n.captain. .'\"'\"\u25a0;,; .        :.:, ti'ti,:..\nMr. tnd Mi1!. S. C. Clirk irrlved in town\nytlterdtyj 'tn4,htvt ttktp up residence-In, tiie\nKtrr-ARtlttmtnts. 7.:. y: '\u25a0'\u25a0\n-V   U\u00a7        M YEARS AOO .- .' \"\nf\u00bbronj:-tK\u00bb'.Ntlion Dally News, July Z8,194H,\nThe Shamrock lacrosse team of Montreal\nwill be here for a series of games during the\nfall fair'df the kelson Agricultural Society,\n-i;,W,-Greenwood BrOwn,- general mariager\n\"of the Equity Fire,Insurance Conipihyi tptnt\nthe weekend in the- city. looking *after ;the\n\u2022Interests of hit comptnyv\nThe Knights of the Golden Horseshoe trt\nirnnging another excurtlon to Jykertt,  -.'\n*\"\";     '   . .        , :\nYour Horoscope\nWork and romance should go wall for. you\nand benefits' Should accrue fin the months\n\u25a0head. Today'a child may not be too robust,\nand bright,, cheerful'surroundings would be\nhelpful tb make the success Indicated come\neasier? '. * ','       -'...-.' V -.'\u25a0'' '\nIt's Been Said    '\n\"lis liberty alone that gives the tlower of\nfleeting life Its, lustre and perfume; and we are\nweeds without It.\u2014William Cowper.  v\n'THE HON. JAMES SINCLAIR\nMlalittioi Flihiilis\nRT. HON. LOUIS S. ST. LAURENT\nPRIME MINISTER OF CANADA\nTHE HON. R. 0, CAMPNEY, O.C\nSolicitor Gtntralol Canada\nAatoclite Minister ol National Dilinct\nJheylTDp It Eyery_,Time\nTodqy's Bible Thought\nGod's' \"word'Hii tcc'ojripltshed mi-\nrtcles. It hit made good neighbors\ntnd good neighborhoods. Banished\nslavery from every Blble-reiding\nland.' It has raised humanity from\nan animal existence to a lofty civilization, ithu a mighty task still\nto do. ^\nMy word eha|l not return unto me\nvoid, bi|t It shall tcobmpllsh thtt\nwhich I please, ond It shall prosper\nIn tho-thing whereunto I lent It.\n'  ^Iktlth. B8i61,':\nam Mil\n\"Mflii,\"\" \"\" -hUBBB BbE-S-B- Mi tSBSk KJB6*Jffl\u00a3RSi\nft-iS^t9SSS*\nA woman's vanity always overcomes her brains? Her brains may\ntell her she's ugly, but.she still believes a man when he tells her she's\npretty. ,, ''\nNatkmal Security\ntiffy-titi Strong Mm\n' '   -    * *   V ' f    \",  '\u25a0 ti - -   c     '\n\"''\u25a0'.\"'' \u25a0'     .\",'--\u25a0       '; \" '''\u2022*      Z '   * \u25a0'.'       '.\u25a0    .'.''\"        \u25a0''^'V!-  \u25a0\u25a0'.;':    ,-i     -'\u25a0.'\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0'.:\n,,:'    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.:.''''ti     v?. '\u25a0;-; >..*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \\,.\u201e-,\" z ''.';.'-'.\u25a0':   r^.' '.\\-. -     ..   ''.\"?'.''''\u25a0'' ' l \u25a0\" ''\u25a0''\u25a0 f \u25a0 ?\"'--   \u25a0    -zzzy\nfederally it's liberal!\nVOTE LlBERAL\n\"Thto \u00bb4verUi6m'ent'lB puWlBhed by 'the 8.C. FedMiI-LlbtrM Campaign Committed'\nYOTI FOR IAN (CURLY) SOMERVILLE\nLiberal Candidate for Kootenjay West\n\u25a0\n 'o\u00a7If\nmH PaHa to Buy, Quality\"\nWhite nylon mesh, high\nhool pump, closed toe,\nclosed heel\nWldthi AA and B\nSlMt4'\/ito9\n$1195\nR. AINITMEW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nRecipes\nBc^ecueRendezvous\nWreckage ol\n? EDMONTON (CP) - nie RCAF\nreported Monday night that aircraft\nwreckage in the Yukon has been\nidentified as an BCAF Mitchell\nbomber missing almost 13 months.'\n; The bomber from the City of Edmonton 418 auxiliary squadron wos\ncarrying a crew ol lojir when it\ndisappeared June 30, 1852, while on\na routine flight from the reserve-\nforce summer camp at Whitehorse,\nY. T.\nThe bodies of the four men have\nbeen taken to Whitehorse ahd will\nbe shipped to next-of-kin.'.\n> The wreckage was reported July\n11 by two \"prospectors. The plane\ncrashed on a barren rocky ridge\n168 miles north ot Whitehorse at the\n6500-foot level A ground search\nparty, held up by weather, went to\nthe scene via helicopter July 21.\nCleopatra  ruled  Egypt for 21\nyears.\nBy ALICE DENHOFF\nBarbecues are ln full bloom \u2014\nIn backyards, on picnic grounds,\njust-every where in tht open when\ngood fellows and amateurs chefs-\nget together. .: 77   . '\nAs for the job itself, there are\ntwo kinds. One is the classic type\nredolent ot the west, with a deep\npit dug in the ground and a large\ncut ot meat roasting slowly on a\nrevolving spit. Then, for most of\nus, there is the small-scale barbecue\nto suit those sites where\" the great\nopen spaces are, not so wide. These\nsmall scale barbecues feature hamburgers, steaks and franks broiled\nacross, a charcoal grill.\nRUMP ROAST OF BEEF\nA truly; traditional barbecue is a\ntime taking task, but It's all part of\nthe fun. A rump-roast Of beet about\n12 pounds makes.a royal barbecue.\nShoulder of lamb is delicious tod.\nMarinate the meat ahead of time in\na barbecue sauce consisting of ketchup, chili sauce, water and seasonings.\n,For an excellent sauce, combine\n% cup tomato ketchup, % cup water, 2 tbsp. Vinegar, 2 tbsp, Worcestershire, tbsp. salt, dash of cayenne,\ntsp. paprika, Vt tsp black pepper\nand tsp. chili?\nFor good barbecued hamburgers,\nform ground beet, chopped onion,\nand seasonings to suit into \"large,\nthick patties. Arrange on charcoal\ngrill. Grill for 23 minutes, basting\nwith barbecue sauce, and turning\nafter 15 minutes. Serve on toasted\nrolls. - '\u25a0       \u25a0     \" y\nBarbecued Fnnki\nVA special recipe fpr barbecued\nfranks calls for a tangy sauce.\nFor six servings, brown 1-3 cup\nchopped .onion- in 2 tbsp salad oil.\nAdd 1-3 cup lemon juice, tbsp vinegar, Vt cup ketchup, tsp, each mustard and celery salt, Vt cup honey,\n% cup water and tbsp Worcestershire sauce; simmer 30 minutes.\nArrange 2 pounds frankfurters\non long metal skewers. Place 6 inches- above glowing coals of barbecue pit and broil for 45 minutes,\nbrushing with barbecue sauce and\nturning every 15 mln.\nVeal chops with Savory Butter\nla a somewhat different barbecue\nrecipe when a change from franks\nand hamburgers is in order.\nVEAL SHOULDER CHOPS\n. To serve 6, have 6 veal shoulder\nchops cut one inch thick\/Thoroughly blend 4 tsp dry mustard, tbsp,\nfinely' chopped onion, tbsp finely\nchopped parsley and % cup soft\nbutter; shape Into a roll and chill\nuntil hard. Combine Vt cup- chill\nsauce, Vt cup lemon juice and tsp\nsalt Arrange chops for barbecuing\n12 to 14 inches above glowing coals.'\nBrol] for 45 minutes, brushing with\nchili sauce mixture every 15 minutes. Turn chops once 20 minutes\nbefore they are done. Slice butter\nroll into 6 pieces. Place one slice\non top of each hot chop and serve\nimmediately.\nMethodist Pastors\nNamed to Posts    :\nSEATTLE (AP) \u2014 Bishop J. Paul\nTaylor announced appointments bf\npastors for Methodist churches on\nMonday after the 68th session of the\nWashington Conference of Free Methodist Churches',\nAppointments included New Westminster, B. C, Rev. C. P. Stewart\nand Rev. Arthur Champion, assistant; Vancouver, Rev. Leslie Whitehead,, and Victoria, Rev. James E.\nCampbell. ' \u2022J.'.-\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\n'\u2022- HERE'SA'HAT that ?is as appropriate at liin'eTieon\nas it.is at dinner~Aiid.it also is.pertectl'for'every climate\nand\"'season. Marie vWlndsor,.fbeautiful Hollywood star,\nmodels-this topper which is made of white velours felt.\nThe \u2022 side- applique trim is oi[ -white; rhiriestones, bugle\nbeads and tiny pearls. A white veil, studded with rhine-\nstones, covers the front of -the upturned brim!\nMelson Social\n______        yy.A,titif.y \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-   m\nValley Gold, halves.\n\"~ \u00ab. can\t\n* CHOICE APRICOTS \u00bb\n* FRUIT COCKTAIL W2ti\n* TOMATO JUICE S\n* APPLE JUICE\nSunny Dawn, fancy.\n\"\" oz. can\t\nWestfair choice\n20. ei. can\t\nSugar Belle, sieve 4.\n\"~ ot. ean\t\nCountry Home, fancy.\n\"\" ox, can\t\n* FANCY \u2022 PEAS S\n* GOLDEN CORNS\n* SALAD DRESSING 5\n* SPICED BEEF LOAF *\n* CORNED BEEF LOAF\nJr; Orange Marmalade\n* FRESH BREAD\n* PORK and BEANS\nKraft's Miracle Whip.\n\" ox. jar L.\nMayfair (Auit.)\n\"\" ox. can\t\nBoiton (Auit.)\n12 oz. can\t\nEmpress Pure,\nSeville. 48 ox. can ___\nPolly Ann, tliced.\nFull 16 oz. loaf ...\nTaste Tells.\n12 oz. can ..\n23c\n24c\n15t\n14c\n17c\n16c\n79c\n25c,\n31c\n69c\n2 for 27c\n6 for 69c\n*\n*\n*\nCrisp,\nsweet melons\nCool\nand talady.\nORANGES JuTcfveleneiot\nlb. 7c\nlb. 14c\nlb. 11c\nSliced\n*\n\u2022 BOILING BEEF\n* RIB VEAL CHOPS\nBrisket.\nRed Brand\nChoice\nlb. 29c\nIb. 18c\nlb. 79c\nPRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 28 . 29\nAFEWAY\nWe Reserve the Right ta Limit Quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\nALASKAN CRUISE\nMra. C- D. Fetrtpn have\n- from an Alaskan cruise,\nroute visited Mrs.-F.'P.:\nVancouver. Mr.i and Mrs\nsailed on the SS Prince\nMr. and\nreturned\nand en-\nPayne in\n';, Pearson\nGeorge.   ,\nFAMILY VISIT ... Mr. and Mrs\nWltvricuLZfllwduL\n'PHONE 144\nJohn Paul, 915 Stanley Street, have\nas their guests for the month ot\nJuly, Mrs. Paul's brother, and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. Ross\nand family of Taylorton, Sask., and\nMrs. J. H; Creighton, of Fictou, N.S.,\naunt of Mrs. Paul and Mr. Ross.\n'\u25a0-.. :*,' \u00bb' - \u25a0 .   \u25a0\nAT SUMMER HOME . .\". Mr.\napd Mrs. F. H. Dewdney and family of Trail are holidaying at their\nsummer home on the North Shore.\n\u2022 ' \u2022'.'-,' \"\nTO' KAMLOOPS . ., i Mr. and\nMrs. F. H. Dewdney ahd family of\nTrail are holidaying at their summer home on the North Shore.\n'\u2022yti: .*\u25a0;'..-\u00ab,\u2022 ,ti\nTO KAMLOOPS ... Mr. and\nMrs. P. -G- Richards left Tuesday\nmorning for Kamloops*\n.-\u2022'\u25a0\u2022*\nFROM ALSBRTA ... Mrs. E. W.\nWeiss of Medicine Hat is visiting\nher sister, Mrs, C. E. Jorgenson, 815\nCedar Street  '\n-, . *.|.   *.,.'.\u2022 ,* .      . .-\u2022- -.   -\u2022\nREUNION... A. Tregillus,.Elwyn\nStreet, has as guests hit brothers\nSidney Tregilliis' of Calgary ' and\nFred \u25a0 Tregillus and- son and two\nnieces from Barkerville.\n.; \". \u2022.-. *..'.\u2022.\nEN. ROUTE .... Miss Janet Caple\n9225\n1454\u2014345.\n\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0-'HALF-SIZE.OUTFIT\nCity-smart and country-cool \u2014\nthis versatile sun fashion gives you\na teller, moire slender look, half-\nslzeral'Fashion note\u2014the capelet is\nreversible.. Sized: for short, fuller\nfigures\u2014no alteration worries. Easier-sewing! .    1\nPattern 9225: Half sizes 14%, 18%,\n18%, 20%\\ 22%, 24%. Size\n16% requires'4%.yards 35-inch; %\nyard contrast.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect; fit\" Completes illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\n] Send THIKfYiFIVE CENTS'435c)\nJn coiris 4stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern, Print plainly\nsize, name, address, style\nNumber.    ',\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson News.'Pat-\ntern Dept, Nelson.\nEden, Churchill\nMeet for Talks\nLONDON IAP>-Prlme Mlnlater\nChurchill- and Foreign Secretary\nEden- Monday began' mapping the\nfuture' leadership of the government. \u25a0:'''\u25a0\u25a0\nBritain's - Big. Two met for the\nfirst; time since illnesses separated\nIhern hetrly eight weeks ago.\"The*\/\nlunched together in seclusion at\nChequers, the prime minister's official country residence, near Lon-\ndon.^ \u25a0-. -.-\"..!, ;'.\u25a0.; :\nHigh up on their list of talking\npoints, government informants ttid,\nwere these questions: \" .\n1. Just.how long can 78-year-old\nChurchill go on shouldering the\nwearing burdens of British leadership?\n2. Should 58-year-old 'Eden, recovering from three gall bladder\noperations, quit1 the foreign office\nto take some of the load off\nChurchill?;\n3. Just how should Britain and\nthe Western allies seek to fellow up\nthe Korean armistice with the possibilities lt implies of relaxing East-\nWest tensions?\nThe Churchill-Eden meeting came\namid British newspaper speculation\nthat there may be some differences\nin the cabinet about next-steps ln\nthe prime minister's program- of\nseeking early top-level talks with\nRussia '\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0!\nThe two men have been pictured\nas favoring such a parley more\nstrongly than do' the chancellor of\nthe exchequer, R. A. Butler, and\nthe acting foreign secretary, the\nMarquess bf Salisbury.     -\nButler has acted as. prime, mlnlater since Churchill was ordered\nby his doctor to quit work.for a\nspell June 27.\nof Vancouver Is visiting Mrs. G. C.\nArnesen and Miss Molly Arnesen\nat their summer home on the North\nShore, cn route home from eastern\nCanada.\n* * . *\nRETURN ... Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stevenson of Kamloops, who\nhave I'een guests, at the Hume Hotel while here visiting Mr. Stevenson's aunt Mrs. C. V. Gagnon,\nJohnstone Apartments, and other relatives, have returned to their home.\nMr.- Stevenson Is principal of Kamloops public school.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 .\nFROM VANCOUVER ... Jim\nHazelwood of Vancouver, formerly\nof Nelson, is holidaying here.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrt. William Fraser ot\nKootenay Bay announce the en-\nengagement of their daughter, June\nElizabeth, to Mr. George Cook,' only\nson ot the late Mr. and Mrs. George\nCook of North Vancouver, nie\nwedding will take place ln Crawford Bay. Church on August 15th at\n3 p.tn.'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1953-r-S\ni% etaivia. WhssdsK\nIron-oil Designs\nitVibrant Colors\nThe Isle of Mon administers Its\nAwn laws by tbe ancient court of\nTynwald, or legislative assembly.\nLADY, WHAT YOU NEED IS A\nPHONE1175\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nAND CLEANERS\n182 BAKER STREET PHONE 1175\nNo embroidery! A stroke of\nypur lron\\ \u2014 ,presto] You? linens\nbloom with pansies ln -Night Blue\nand, gunny Yellow with.leaves of\nGarden Green! In seconds, match\na luncheon cloth to a serving apron! Or treat guest towels, sheets,\npillowcases, scarves with color\nmagic. .. * 7 \u2022\nIRON-ON pansies look hand-\npainted! Washable, too. Pattern\ni transfer of 12, I%x2% to 4x7\nInches.       \u25a0 -\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0-'\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\nco|ns (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, 268 Baker\nSt, Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS -. '\nEXCITING VALUE! Ten, yes TEN\npopular, new designs to crochet\nsew. embroider, knit-printed right\nIn the Laura Wheeler Needlecraft\nBook. Plus many more patterns to\ntend for \u2014 ideas for gifts, bazaar\nmoney-makers, fashions! Send 25\ncents for your copyl\ni\nMONCTON, N.B. (CP) \u2014 Bears\nare scarcer 'than they uied to be\nbut just as bold, says Louis Bannister. He shot a bruin which wandered into a nearby farm clearing.\nIt -weighed 150 pounds.\nChildren'i\nWADING\nPOOLS\nSizes 42\" to 78\"\nPriced from $3.98\nHours of fun for your youngsters\nSanca Notes\nSANCA \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. T. Greig\nand children and Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMalcolm and daughter, all of Calgary, were visitors to Mr, and Mri\nC.Koch,,;\nRev, and Mrs. E. Hope and their '\ndaughter Ann. of Creston, are spending their vacation here as guests of !\nMr. and Mrs. F. Holmes.\nMr. arid Mrs. J. Manalescue and\nMr. and Mrs. S. Mitchell and daughter Mareen, all of Calgary, were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Sandy-\nHawkins. 7- ';-. ,\nScarborough Entry\nWins $500 Prize\nWinnersfin the ninth Blue Bonnet Margarine \"Happy Holiday\"\nContest which ended July 11 were\nannounced today with the first\nprize ot $500,00 cash being awarded to Mrs. Edna Tyrrell, Scarborough Junction P.O. St. Clair\nAve.' E., Toronto, Ont. Other\nprizes and winners in the last of\nnine weekly contests are: $100.00\nOaih to Mrs. Berrilce Pearce,\nDelta, Man. $50,00 Cash to Mrs.\nOzzle Bouchier, Vancouver, B.C.\nNorthern Electric \"Sportsman\"\nPortable Radios to Mrs. H. Booth,\nKirkland Lake, Ont; Mrs. A.\nBaer, Gait Ont; Mrs. M. Cameron, Mission City? B.C.; Mrs. I.\nN. Johnson, Edmonton, Alta.;\nMrs. John C. Ayer, Saint John,\nN.B. MoBrlne \"Comet\" Aeropaoki\nto Elsa A. Cams, Wingham, Ont,;\nMrs. T. Murtha, Lansing, Ont;\nMrs. Jessie M. Grant Victoria,\nB.C.; Mrs. R. S. Black, Vancouver,\nB.C.; Mrs. P. Swanee, Portage La\nPrairie, Man.; Mrs. R. A. Lohlge-\nmuth, Shackleton, Sask.; Mrs.\nRusell Rathwell, Moose Jaw,\nSasE.; Mrs. Clarence Godwin,\nFrederlcton, N.B.; Miss J. R.\nMacLeod, Halifax,- N.S.I Mrs.\nMarjorie Walton. Dartmouth,\nN.S. $10.00 Caah to Mrs. H. Gray,\nWallaceburg, Ont; Mr. Bert Peck,\nWindsor, Ont; Mrs. Gertrude\nTychsen, Raymond, Alta.; Mrs.\nFred pobbs, St. Stephen,' N.B.;\nMrs. G. Froom, Dartmouth, N.S.\nAll prize winners have been\nnotified.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nWITH THAT\nHere'*\" the way...\nVA.lbs. ground chuck beef,'\n1% temp, salt, 2 tblsp. minced\nonion, 2 tblsp. French's Mustard, 1 egg, V, lamp, pepper.\nKnead Ingredients together\nthoroughly, put Into cakes, pan\nfry. Serves 5.\nCreamy, smooth French's\nblends better, and' its rich\nmustard goodness doesn't\nfade ont in cooking. .   \u25a0 j\nGOI0EN APPEARANCE-GOLDEN FLAVOUR-GOLDEN QUAUJY\n ^www^mm:\nPiPPii^Pi\n(BE \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 29, \"1953 -\nIke Presses lor\nKorean Relief\n-liWASHINGTON (API-President\nElsenhower today formally asked\nI Congress to provide an Initial $200,-\n000,000 for Korean relief, He said\nsecurity Interests ot the United\n\u25a0States \"clearly indicate the need\nto aot promptly.''\nActing less thon 24 hours tfter.\nalgning of tht armistice tt Panmunjom, the president said;\n,. \"The extent ot devastation tut-\nfered by tht people tnd the economy of Korea Is staggering.\"\nPeron Unveils Model\nOf Eva's Monument\nBUENOS AIRES (AP)-Presldent\nJuan Peron has unveiled the model\nof a monument tb his late Wife, Eva.\nIt Is designed to be one ot the tallest structures of lti kind in the\nworld. The huge mausoleum, will\nrise 400 feet, taller thtn the pyramids or the Statue of Liberty in\nNew York harbor,    '.,--. \u25a0\u25a0,;\nQUEBEC (CP' -City council his\n-fussed t by-law with 20 regulations\ng-wCrnlng massage parlors. Among\nthem Is a stipulation thit Operators\nP'tctlse' \"only on persons of, their\nown tex.\" \u2022\"'\nFURNACE OIL\nImperial Oil controls every stop In the production\nef (no Furnoco Oil to gvoraafM you top quality\nIn h fuol espet\/ol\/y developed fer automatic ell\nburners. And an Imperial \"Evergreen Contract\"\u2014\nguoronlood by Imperial Oil limited\u2014means\nou'seialle weather-controlled delivery and sure,\neccHthikal heet.\nwrite or phom the nearest office of\nIMPIRIALOILLIMITID\nAccidents, 1952\nOTTAWA (CP) -i Mort,Ctntd-\nIons wtrt killed tnd injured iri\ntraffic accidents' In' 1959 thin tht\nprevious year, the burttU oi statistics reported Mondty.\n' The bureau estimated thtt more\nthtn 2500 Were killed md 60,000 injured in about 216,000 motor vehicle\naccidents, compared with 1411 killed tnd 54,405 injured In 199,091 tit\nolddAtt in 1851.\nPlliji'M ALL PAATS\nTht bureau's estimate Is based 6A\naccidents and deaths reported from\non parts of Ctntdt except Quint*\npnvlnce and those parts ot JfeW-\nfounuiond outside tht city ot St.\nJohn's. Reports trt not available\nfrom these sections.  7    ,\nIn tht rtlt of Ctntdt, 1842 persons died-in trttfic accidents In\n1952, an lncreite pt 0.2 per tent Over\nthe 1751 killed in 1991. The number\nof persons injured rose to 48,031\nfrom 41,099 ln 1051, a Jump of 9,6\nptr nettt.\nDeaths trom motor vehicle tool.\ndents iri Alberta dropped trom 162\nln 1951 to 139 in 1952, tnd from 11\nto 2 in St. John's. However, ill\nothtr reporting areas htd higher\ndtath1 tollf. \u25a0 ,i\nMn tht othtr provinces, tht number ot dtttht wire, with 1991 figures in brackets: Ontario 1010 (049);\nBritish Columblt 209 (206); Nova\nDcotlt 108; Ntw Brunswick 117\n(107); Manitoba 107 (92); Saskatchewan 106 479); Prinet Edwtrd island\n18 (22); md the Yukon and Northwest Territories 4 (2)?\nGerman Admits\nSpying on Canadians\nDUESSELDORF   (ReiiteM) *-*-A\n-year-old Germtn hll tdniltttd\nspying on Canadian army forctt\nln the Hennover area of Germany.\n\u25a0 '..'. y .\nEberhard Donotlk, 'one of five\nGermans tecustd of espionage for\nRussia, admitted In t signed statement thlt Russia hid given him\ntht job of spying on the Cintdlin\n27th brigldt it Hmnover.\nWhtt informttion he givt tht So-\nvleti wis not disclosed.\nDonczlk tnd thrtt others wtrt\nremanded Monday for trial'bef ore a\nBritish high court in Germtny.\nTht.fifth previously waa remanded for trill\nAll face sentences up ts tight\nyears lt convicted of conspiracy\nto commit tsplontgt. Court officials said tht trltl would probably\nbegin ln late August in Bielefeld\nor Duesseldorf,\nIn their signed statements, tht\nGermtns said thty tgreed to bt\nspin for teir of reprisals agtlnit\ntheir relatives In Soviet-occupied\nEast Germany.\nThey said they rectlvtd t total of\n$1300 for their services.\nBritish Ship First\nAt Fort Churchill\nCHURCHILL, Mm. (CP)-Ctpt\nNorman Thompson of tht R. S.\nDalglelsh Line docked the S.S.\nWtrworth at 8 p.m. Sunday, marking the third time' lie md his ship\nhtve opentd the port of Churchill.\nHe sailed from New castle, Eng.\nlind, July 13 and arrived with t\ncargo of liquor, glass tnd automobiles. -\nOn July 21,1104, Ilr Hsnry Inly da Istttnlare c-pir.nl the Fraser\nRiver Brldoa\u2014thi first brldo* to span tht mania ol tha from\nest provide e direct rail ond ntt link ta tha United States.\nikCaWBtmm\u00a7\nIn 1904, William Brtld founded BiQ't flnt\n. distillery, and established the standard of qutlity\nthtt distinguishes B.C. Double Distilled Rye.\nDiscover for yourself why B.C. Double Distilled\nit preferred by British Columbiana for its superb\nflavour... its light body thd mellow smoothness.\nTHI BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY CO. LTD.\n\u25a0 The Distinguished Products of British Columbia's First Distillery\nO.C 00UDU6 DISTILLED   \u25a0   l-C. IXPORT   \u2022   IC. M1HVI  \u2022   B.C. SPECIAL   .   B.C. STEBLINO LONDON DRY OIH\nffli\nThis advertisement is not published .or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbi-7\nIrishmen Caught\nKATHLEEN ANN AROHIBALD, right, 19-year-old brunette\nfrom Kelowna, I.e., wlpi tht Mln Ointtfi tltlt tt tht beauty con-\nteat it Burlington, Oni, tnd receives t klaa of tpprovtl from Marilyn\nRoddick, who won the contaat laat year, Kathloin Is flvt ft.lt tight\nInohn tall. Her prize la $1,000 and in opportunity to appear In tht\nMist Amtrlet oontiat.\u2014Control Mil Canadian. -    '.- . .\u25a0    .-\nPacific Astronomers\nSee Lunar Eclipse\nLOS ANOEUiS (API'\u2022\"\u25a0*-' Ptclfic\nCoast astronomers trofct early Sundiy ind got t tint vltw ot t total\neclipse ot the moon. ,\nScientists st Griffith Observatory\nhere said the lunar blackout, not\nvisible In the eastern United States,\nwts \"extremely dark''\/ btctuae tht\nmoon passed through the precise\ncentre of the etrtn't shadow. It\nthus avoided molt ot the light\nbeams bent Into tht shadow by the\nearth's atmosphere.\nThe eclipse started at 3:38 a.m.\nIPDT) when the moon Hipped Into\nthe cone-like shadow the earth\ncasts in sptct. It lasted 3tt hours,\ntnd the blackout was complete from\n4:30 to 8:117 the period during Which\nthe earth was bttwttn tht tun tnd\ntht moon. 7\nBerliners Flock\nAcross Frontier\nBERLIN (AP)-At ltist 100,000\nEtst Germans came across the Soviet zone frontier Monday to get\nfood.offered them by a sympathetic\nWist. Tht crowdl got ltrger is tht\nday advanced.\nThe Easterners, whoso zone is to\nShort ot food thtt many of them\ntrt going hungry, picked up the\nfood parcels it special stations. All\nthit wti necessary was proper\nIdenUfleitlon is an Etst German.\nA list was kept to avoid repeaters.\nCLASSIFIED AD8 Q8T RESULTS\nMalenkov Lauds\nRed \"Victory\"\nLONDON (AP)-\"?rtmItr (Jeorgi\nMalenkov of the Soviet Union seht\nt message ot good wishes to the\nNorth Korean .government Mondty\non the tjecaslon ot the Korean armistice, Moscow radio announced.\nMilenkov's message to \"Comrade Kim II Sung, chairman of tht\nNorth Korean council of ministers,\"\nstld ln ptrt:\n\"Tht report of tht signing of tht\ntrmistice hat given rise to great\nsatisfaction imong ill Sovltt people,\nwho consider the successful ending of the armistice negotiations t\ngreat victory for the Korean and\ntile Chinese people's volunteers. .\nWhere on Earth\nas Ttt Meet WstatH-iMi Dt\u00bbt\nIMMM4\n*_ft WO--D4G (ky et tha mammoth, trat ftatlt tad aM-taoMl\nSaint Bemud la aet. yat over., tan\n' It It dtr-MUg ia the Nt Ia\nAlptM tattai-et, thtt ttae-\nhenond mena worter tt eoneatr\/\nbeing Mpttoed by tht aminer\nCMnma Shepherd doc.\nBran new that modem communication ead transport itoiltttea\nhave reached tha Alps, doga an\ns\u00b1Dl muoh In demand \u00abb<a tt\ncornea to tee\u2014enti ar aaar-\ntngedlaa. A dug can climb to remote mountain sriss when mechanical transport la Inoperative.\nnan too, lta unerrlnj canine ae\u2014aa\nof direction can safely guide human raacuan through Minding\ntad mlelea\/Ung anosratonna.\nSince \u00bb. Bernard da Methon\nfounded hla famous Alpine hoaploe\nnearly t thonaand yaoia ago, hla\nBunlta hart trained Bt. Bernard\nteet to cany on '\u00abUi work _\nmerey. But within the laat fifteen\nyeara, tejta have proven Hut,\nthough tht massive \u2022 St. Bernard\naa ia efficient snow deg, tha German Shepherd haa mora talent fee\nniout work.\nIB England the Onrman Ship-\nherd hu been dubbed tha Alaatlaa\nwelt hound, and In tha Alps, th*\navalanche dog, It poaseaaea an excellent'.Boat, exceptional Intel) Igenoe\ntad persistence. More than 100\nAlsatians aro already poated all\nstar the Alps, while only fifteen BL\nBernard era stabled ta- tha kaaaali\nef thtlr namesake's monastery.\nThe AlMtlaa It tern than half\ntha lite of tha ttblad (K. Bernard,\nwhich uauany tlpa thi acalea at IM\n- te 110 pounda. But tht Alaatlan'e\nstamina mon this cetapenattta tor\ntta'amaller al\u00bb tad, though tht.\nwarm tongue that licks future\nAlpine wande-en tato coaadoua-\nneu may not ba ao hlg aa lt used to\nbe, lt wm auraly bt Juat aa comforting and Juat aa certain a alga\nthat reaoue la close at hand. '.\nannual, utt, x. r. emu titma tea.\nTHANKSi Joan Swonion, Montclolr,\nM.J..    .\nlaat ts raw lotte la \"Where an lorik,*\n. am at aaas taire\u00bb\u00abf\u00ab-'\nAside from farming, about one-\nthird of salaried- workers in the\nUnited States are employed In man-\nBISHOPS STOBTFOHD, England\n(ReuterS) \u2014 Three Irishmen wtrt\nordered held ln custody here Mondty tfter Ming ctught with t\ntruckload of weapons and ammunition early Monday In thii twiet\nlittle market, town near London.\nWhan'charged with being in possession of property \"reasonably suspected oi having been stolen,\" they\nShOuted out an unlntelllgle weird\nbelieved to be Gaelic.\nThe men were found with t truck\ncontaining 08 rifles, eight Brtn\nguns, IS Bren gun rriagazlnes, 10\nSten gum, one Plat anti-tank mortar, One Browning machine gun,\none two-Inch mortar and six two*\ninch mortar bombs.\nA policeman told the court thtt\nht ttw tht red trutk containing tht\nguns past him at 3:15 a.m.. and ht\nnoticed that tht back window wll\nblacked out\u2014t traffic offence. Police cars chased the truck and\nstepped it.-\nWhen they ' asked the driver\nwhere the rifles came from he stld:\n\"Thtt'i your Job to find out.\"\nAll Forest Fires\nUnder Control\nVANCOUVER (CP)-All of Brltllh Columblt'I 48 forest fires wtrt\nreported tinker control by Forest\nService officials Monday.\npiggeat blue of the yeir, at Teepee Cretk, 28 miles southeast of\nCranbrook, Is undtr control tf\nabout 40 men.\nThll fire, which -resulted from\ntht ctrelessness of t camper or\nfisherman, flared Into life July 12\nand- twept over 1200 icrti pt tlm-\nberltnd snd logged-off ground before lt wti brought under control.\nSix ne wfires broke out in'the\nvtst Vancouver Forest District, Including Vtncouver Island and tht\nLower Mainland, Friday night, but\nwere all undtr control or extinguished by Mondty.\nA fire in the Ltkt Cowlchtn area\ntnd mother it Esquimalt were both\nput out without difficulty.\n.There hive been 524 fires re\nported so far this year in B. C.\nMissing Fisherman\nSafe and Sound\nVANCOUVER (Cl-)-A M-yttr-\noid fiihtrintn, Winiun fitnkliAn?\nof Ltdner, B, C\u201e wis- found ?afe\nduring' the weekend tfter being\nmissing In hIS fishing b6ot for 24\nhoun,- \u25a0,\nAn RCAF. Cinso flying boat\nsearched the Strait of Georgia for\nDennison Saturday, He turned up\nlater the same day it Saturna\nIsland and reported the engine of\nhit small bOat had b.een disabled.\nIdle Indians in\nTwo-Hour Riot\nJ>RINClS RUPERT, $._.''<\u00bb>-\nIndian fishermen staged whtt pallet caned t two-hour riot here\netrly Sundiy. When it ended, \u00ab4\nmen were under arrest.\nPolice believe the disorder wu\ntht first result ot tht closure of\nfishing on tho Skeena rlvtr, which\nmade-8.00 boats idle.\nA riot call wts sounded at midnight tnd tor two hours there Were\nfist tights thd brawling on downtown streets. The battlers, however\nesctptd serious injury.\nThe Indians, herded to .police\ncells, were charged with disorderly\nconduct, obstructing policemen,\nbretches ot the Indian Aet and\ndrunkenntss. \u2022\nVIOLBNT OlSTURBANOI\n\"It wis one of the most violent\ndisturbances on record here,\" slid\na police spokesman.\n\"It the Indians could htvt tithtd,\nthty would htvt bten busy gtttlng\nready,\" he said. \"As lt Wll, thty\nhtd nothing to do tnd money to\nspend. So they had i brawl.\"\nThe closure wis ordered list wttk\ntnd brought immediate protest\nfrom fishermen.. Authorities said\nlt wts necessary to allow sockeye\nsalmon to escape to tht sptwnlng\ngrounds. Tho run on tht Skeena\nwat \"very low\" this yetr, tuthorl-\nties reported.\nLONDON (CP) - Arthur Page,\n78-year-old clerk, hu 38 inns but\n\"not t drop to drink.\" They trt\nmodels of English inns Page hai\nsketched and liter reproduced tn\nplywood, cardboard, felt tnd cement.\nliberal Absence\nRouses Comment\nVANCOUVER (CP) -The lower\nmainland's 600 postal employees\nwant to know why no Llbefal representative ihowed up tt thtlr mm\nmeeting Sunday tfthough the thrtt\nother major parties wire represent-\n*<_L      '    \"--'  '\u25a0     -\u25a0'\nThe matting pissed resolutions\nprotesting \"the abnormally low\nstandard of salaries being paid federal civil servants\" tnd tsking\nWtgt bargaining rights equal to\nthott held by workers In private Industry. \u25a0'\nALL PARTUS fNVITID\nJack Waddtll, secretary of Am-\nalgamated Civil Servants ot Canada, said invitations to tit oh the\nplatform it tht meeting were ttnt\nto representatives of tht four major\npolitical parties in the federal election race. -\n\"They were til there but thi Lib-\narils, who by their conspicuous absence displayed their deplorable\nlick of Interest ln the problems of\ngovernment employees,\" Widdtll\nstld. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.;\u2022\nWtddlll said t full report of tht\nmelting is well as copies of the resolution were being forwarded to\nPrime Minister Louis St. Laurent\nimmedittely.\nPolio al Coast\nVICTORIA (CP) - Provlneltl\nhetlth officials said Mondty Britiih\nCoiumblt'i polio total so fur thit\nyear wts 184), with five deaths. Tht\nnumber of polio cuts tt thlt tlmt\nlast year was 40.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two ntw\ncutl of polio wtrt confirmed' here\nduring the weekend, bringing\nGreater Vancouver's total for tht\nyetr to 87.\nThe ntw viotlmi trt t nlnt-yetr*\nold bey tnd ui 11-year-old girt\n\u2022both of Lulu blind.\nIn tht flrit qutrter of this yeu\nrefill instalment sales in Ctntdt\nwtrt 88.1 ptr ctnt higher thtn ia\ntht stmt period lut yeu-\nSB'\nYou gave him this job to do\ni.    I .WW\nRBUIISI\n>\nPromoting employment and prosperity\nDeveloping our trade\n\u25a0.' ,-\/.\"\/'\u25a0\n\u2022 * * i ' .  * -   \u25a0 \u25a0 .  ..\nExpanding our Industry\nStrengthening our dollar\nSupporting farming and fishing\nFostering good labour conditions\nWorking for National Security\nIn 1949 tht Ctntdltn people expressed\ntheir confidence in Si. Laurent and tho\nLiberal program. Thit glance at the record\nreveali tome of Ctntdt't tremendous\naccomplishments under St. Laurent's .\n, letdership. No other country hit fought\nn war, balanced Its budget, reduced its\ndebt, cut taxes\u2014allot the time time.\nNow there\"* another big job ahead.\nAnd Louis St. Laurent has proved\nthtt he, more thin ever,\nis the Canadian best\nfitted to do the job.\ngajii\n1\n\u2022\n1\nMort Ctntdlins working, for hither pty. thin A\never before... New records established in '\nnttiontl production, national income every yetf\nsince 1949.\nOld mtrkett exeinded, ntw thtrkets opened op\ni t; Ctntdt third largest trading nttion in world\nl: i Externtl trtdt tt ill-time high... Negotiated\nmutu-!lttri\u00a3fconcessl6ni*-lth3<eo*i*itrTes-\u2014\na pracdctl way of freeing internttiontltrtde; -\nLiberal policies htvt encouraged rtpid economic\ngrowth... Unprecedented development oi* -\nresources.;. Consumer purchises doubled slnco\nthe wit... Investment in new plants and\nequipment running over #5 billion t year;\nBudgets btltnced i i: National debt reduced 11 i\nInflation brought under control... Ttxet\nlowered.;; Canadian dollar strong. _\nThese basic industries tided by tnd* agreement!-\nfloor pricei... New low-cost insurance pltn\ntssistt owners ol\" smaller fishing vessels... Barm\nproduction tnd income at record levelt.\nNew federal legislation prohibit! diicrlmlnatloii\nSn groundi of net, colour or religion;; i\n-employment Insurance extended to cover\nseasonal lay-off of workers... Special efforts to\nhelp disabled workers to find useful tnd\nsitisfying employment; i; Time lott from\nstrikes tt low point,\nTo prevent tggresslon, Ctntdt't forcet serving\nIn Far Bttt MdEurope... Canada miking mtjof\ncontribution to NATO defence build-up...\nLargest p eicetime defence progrim In our his tot;\ni. .Full support to UnitedNations i 11 all to\npreserve petce.\nA Qnztit back*,\nVOTE\nST* LAUREii I\nuttcturing.\nVOTE FOR I AN (CURLY) SOMERVILLE\nLiberal Candidate for Kootenay West\n  t-\u2014: \u2014\nTT-\n\u25a0V ';\":.'' v .7' ''\u2022'\n.tif \u2022 ,       **   - *   \u25a0\nPass Football Trophy\nTo fernie United\nU    FERNIE - Fernie United clinched first place in. the Crows Nest\nPass. Football .League  when  they\n.   defeated Michel-Natal Buffaloes 8-1\nin a thrill packed game played before' 1000 Fernie tin;, The game\nwas tht most: exciting here thlt\nyear as both clubs played hard for\n.. the league title,'       V\n' . Fernie with its schedule completed has 15 points, Kimberley Is second with 1'4 olid no games to play.\n7 Michel Is third with 11 polntf tnd\n'.'- \u2022 gamt to play,.\nThe   goal   scorers   were   Mike\n.    Cairns,  John  Ewanluck  and  Tlo\nLauman  for  Fernie  and  Harvey\nj    Travlt for Michel, .'','\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022'..\n\u2022 Play opened fast witli. United\npressing. They were rewarded as\n- Mike- Cairns got the first goal at\nthe two'minute mark. Five minutes\nlater White in the Fernie net had a.\nclose call when a Michel forward\nbounced the ball off the goal post\nfollowing an indirect free kick. End\nto end pity followed with both defences standing firm with Fernie\n,    having a slight advantage. .\nTotfi Lockhart,  inside  left,  and\nStanley Oleshkp, outside left, com-\n. bintd welMor Fenile.to give Kotek\nIri the Michel goal a lot of work.\nLockhart twice missed glorious op\nportunities with only tht goalie to\nbeat. - | . '\u25a0' 'ti\nHEADS  IN QOAL\nFive minutes after the halt Harry\nRobertson of Michel just missed as\nht shot peat the corner of the goal.\nPlay moved rapidly from end to end\nwith Fernie coming close on sever,\nal occasions, while Kotek was* playing a brilliant game |n this Michel\nnets. Harry Robertson was display.\nIng fine form on the Michel right\nwing and waa dangerous repeatedly. With eight muiutts'to go Harvey\nTravis headed in the equalizer off\na betuitful goal mouth cross from\nthe right wing.\n' Fernie come back with a terrific\ndrive, swarming about tht Michel\nnet in a wild scramble for over a\nmlnuti before Michel cleared. Fernie continued the pressure and with\nthree','minutes to go Cairns picked\nup a Sneddon throw-In, passed to\nEwanluck who booted homo whtt\nproved to be the winning goal, With\nless than.a minute left to ploy Tlo\nLauman snared a pass, from\nEwanluck. tnd gavt tht Michel\ngotlle.no chance whatever.\nFollowing the game Crows Nest\nPass Football League President,\nTed Hardy of Fernie presented the\nleague trophy to. Mike Cairns,, captain of the Fernie team.   I      .   '\nBob Richardson Stars in Redmen Net\nAs Rowland Downs Golden Bears 11-3\nROSSLAND \u2014 Rossland Redmen\ncontinued on their merry Way. as\nkings, of the West Kootenay Lacrosse League with their 22nd\natralght win Monday night Tbey\noutscored Trail'Golden Bears 11-3\nbefore 487 paid customers at Rossland. .']-.:.\nAlthough 'checking was .close,\nTrail many times.tested Bob Richardson in the .Rossland net but he\nrose to the occasion with sparkling\nlaves that had the fans screaming.\nWith the, Redmen taking command from the start little excitement was shown by the fans over\nthe scoring but they roared near the\nend of the first quarter when Ira\n?age of Rossland and Ray Lyons of\nrail came to blows. Referees let\nthe boys whale away at each other\nuntil Herb Moon came on the'floor\n' end apparently'Interfered: with the\nreferees and the fighters. When the\nsmoke of \u25a0 battle cleared Page and'\nLyons each received tiVe minutes\nwhile Moon cooled, his heals for 10\nminutes,,. ,    ,   .,!  \u25a0 .     .7  -     -\nPIE HJSJttsJjAN A*, \u2022-,    ,    Z\nRossland, with Fie Laface scoring\nfor the first time' in lour, or live\nj games, took, a five-goal lead in the\nfirst quarter. Each scored one til\n-the second, then Redmen  added\nI three more In the third while holding Trail to a single counter. Again\nIn the final Rossland outscored the\nBears three to one.\nPie Lafice wit high scorer of\nthe  night with  thrtt goals and\none .assist. Julia Bilesky alto picked up four points with one goal\nand three assist*. Joe Laface, who\nOnly the evenlngfbefore was discharged from tha hospital after\nsuffering a chest Injury, garnered\nOne goal and collected two assists,\nSummary;     yti'\nFirst quarter,\u2014 1? Rossland, J.\n( Bilesky (Pie Laface) 4:30; 2, Rossland, Joe Laface, (J. Bilesky) 8:30;\n3, Rossland, Pie Laface (Don Davis)\n10:21; 4, Rossland, Bertoia 10:50;,5,\nRossland, Dominici (Bertoia) 12:02:\nPenalties \u2014 J. Bilesky 2, Mitchell,\nPage (5 mln.), Lyons (5 mln), Moon\n(10 min.).  \"   .\n'-. Secopd quarter \u2014 6, Trail, M6f-\n-fat (McCabe) 2:32; 7,' Rossland, K.\nDavis (J. Bilesky) 0:50.\nPenalties \u2014 Bertoia, J. Bilesky,\nExner.  .'      \"\u25a0.\nThird quarter \u2014 8, Rossland, Pie\nLaface (Joe Laface), ,8:25; 9, Rossland, Pie Laface, (J. Bilesky) 9:07;\n10, Rossland, Dominici (Thorstinson) 9:45; 11, Trail, Kendall (McCabe) -12:44. 7:, .-. -.\u201e \u25a0;..=\nPenalties \u2014 D. Davis, Dominici\n(2), Moon'<\u00bb.'.,\nFourth quarter \u2014 12, Rossland,\nBertoia (Joe Laface) 0:45; 13, Rossland, Dominici (Cox) 10:34; 14, Rossland, K. Davis (Dominici) 13:50, 14,\nTrail Smith; 14:26\nPenalty \u2014 Copland , -    . 7\nIn lillle League\nThe.Kinsmen beat the LiorA 7-6\nin a Little League fixture at the\nFairview grounds Monday night.\nDon MacLean of the Lions gave up\nfour hits, six Walks, and be struck\nout seven. He hit two. batters.\nTom Hufty of the Kinsmen gave\neight hits, one walk, and he whiffed\nsix. 7 \u25a0' '\u2022\u2022\"'\u2022\"\nKinsmen won with a rally In the\nsixth frame. They were behind 6-1\nbut collected .six runs to take the\ngame 7-6,. -\nLITTLE  LEAGUE STANDINGS:\nWLPct.\nKinsmen   .....; .  10 3 .769\nKiwanis ...;...;..,....;;...;.. \u25a0 7 4 .636\nLions   ,...:    7 6 .538\nGyros V..... ....: ,'.   2 7 .222\nRotarlans 'l   -2'8 JOO\nPlenty af mom to play and entertain. Build\nit out of waste space qujckly, easily and at\n. low cost with Johns-Manville Gluecott\nWall Flank. Gomes already decorated? Nd\nnails ihow. Pastel colors. Get fee estimate.\nFor complete facts, write Canadian Johns-\n. Manville, 156 McPhillips St, Winnipeg, or\nsee your nearest J-M dealer.\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\nWALL PLANK\nFlam-Rtstttanl finish at No txtry Cost\nNelson Machinery Co Ltd.\nc^aST\n$;Mjfair:^\nFOR THOSE WITH A WEAKNKSS for outdoor sport, but not prepared to $'.'%\u2022,'\nwhole way with such strenuous exercise as baseball entails, have their answer, at Lakeside Park. Lawn bowling greens started this.Spring will, be rejidy for. use. bef ore the\nSummer is over City Gardener Frank-Holfc Says. Big'enough for .four, courts, the, lawn\nis shown as it gets a going over with fertilizer to ensur^ its rapid growth. A sturdy grass?\nis used to make the-lawn stand upuhd^f coratint-wear.\u2014DaUy NeWs photo?        --ifff\nNick Hucal has a secret. A secret fishing spot and a\nSecret lure, His secrets have netted hint 39 fish ta eight tries-\ndownstream from Cqrra Lynn\npower plant.\nAnyone who can come home with\nfive fish,, tippUig the scales at up\nlo four and a half pounds, is a\npretty- good fisherman. The 414-\npounder took:him 20 minutes to\nland.- -7v\nHep Harris, who haunts the Slocin Pool in his oft.houri deserves\nhonorable mention. Although Hap\nhasn't come up with atij[: 4M-\npounders from. the. pool, he..... has\ncaught some 50 fish this season.\nHe's oft for the Okanagan where\nhe- will try- hla luck with rod and\nreel.\nCottonwood Lakes and Creek\nseem to be the focal point for fishermen* and although reports from\nanglers \u00abre that fish are small, they\nare nevertheless plentiful thd full\nof fight   \"\n' \u25a0 .' *       \u2022.. \u2022'\u25a0 \u2022':.-\nWe wondered at the 20 cars parked near the new Fruitvale-Salmo\nhighway a few miles east of Fruitvale, so stbpitea'iw \"'l&v*% sailer'\nAll were fishermen angling in\nMarsh Creek, outlet of Champion\n.Lakes. Fishing gear of ail types and\ndescription were in use there that\nday and one chap, whose whole\nequipments consisted of a homemade pole, 50-cent line and a\ncouple of flies had a nice string of\ntroiit. He landed the fish by' flipping them on the shore after bringing tl)em In.\n\u2022 ';'.\u2022' '\u2022',..',.\nFishing is fair'for this time of\nyear, Balfour resort owner Charlie\nSuitor tells us. Average fisherman\nis copping four or -five nice ones\nper day. An Edmonton holidayer,\nPeter Hereon, came in with a,couple\nof beau's on. his last day otiBalfour\nretort '\u25a0\u25a0.':\u25a0   .    ' ti\",,' \u25a0'-'*'.\n':    > \u25a0   '      '1- '*,\u25a0''. * \u25a0\"'\u25a0\u25a0'-?,'\n. How to* uie i. spinning outfit In\nont eisy lessonl )7,7'\nWe've had many queries about\nspinning. It has just recently become popular in Canada and: the\nUnited States. This method of fishing ii known, ts spin- casting, Or\nthreid'-linlhg in Europe's whert\/lt\noriginates? One of the pet peeves\nabout spinning reels is how to Md\nthe line III'-pitce.yhen,-you put\nav.ty your? reeli? Simply take -t\nwide rubber band and-tie an overhand knot In it to that it will leave\na protruding piece. to ?tt$? as a\nhBndle.'-Be sure- tofttvii\/'tbe suggested knot In the rubber band or\nypu will <flrid it very difficult to\nremove.' 7 \u2022-\u25a0- *-: \u25a0\nCORRECT ORIP, .\nThe first and Second fingers are\njplaced ahead of the reel shank with\nthe.line resting ovtjt,the flrat finger ready itobtreleased tt the correct instant1 of' the'1 cast .Th making the cast, point your rod ln a\n9:00 o'clock position with plug or\nspoon six or eight Inches from the\ntip\" of your rod. Bring the rod baOs.\nwith a wrist movement, keeping\nyour eyes on tha.target and as soon\nas the rod reaches the 1:00 o'clock\nposition, just behind .you, bring lt\nforward sharply withdUt ptuSe to\nabout 10:00 position ond straighten\nout your forefinger to release the\nline, The line wilt apUl out in loops\nwithout turning the reel and with\nno danger of e backltth snarl.\nStop your Une, with your forefinger\njust before the spoon reaches the\ntarget.?'' . ;*\nThere's no pause et the back 1\no'clock position- at In flyfishing?\nRoyals, Salmo\nAll Set\nForPIaiyoffs\n.{Tlie Nelson Royals, fresh from\ntheir 17-6 win over Troll rep team\nSaturday, will start their playoff\ngrind, tor the West Kootenay title\nIn earnest Thursday. They will meet\nin Salmo. in the first game oft best\not three first round.\nThe Second game of the series\nwill be played in Nelson- on Friday\nwith. the third game it necessary,\ngoing back to Salmo probably Sunday\". -, \u25a0: ;. ''\u25a0\u25a0'-. .'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\n'\u25a0ti. All told there are six teams out\nfor the crown won last season by\nthe Royals from Castlegar Kats.\nIt is expected Trail and Rossland,\nend Castlegar tnd Klnnalrd.,will\nalso, start thtlr first round of play\non the same night, i'\u25a0'   ,-..-.,-\nEnthusiasts of the game are already going out on the limb and\npicking the Kinnaird girls and the\nRoyals, for tHe finals, Kinnaird Fly-\nera'have been going strong in their\nTrail league and in the past five\ngames have piled up, 'tremendous\nscores in downing their Opponents.\nMeanwhile,,the Royals in their few\nexhibition tilts have also won handily with plenty of power at the plate\nas well as stellar pitching by Verda\nPratt Who Is having her best.sea-,\naon In (iome years.\nHumes Chance lor\nFlnt Place Good\nThe Humes kept themselves In\nthe running for first place In .tlie\nNelson,.District Fastball .Leigue\nMonday by downing Transfer nine\n10-4.\n' Jimmy Lbwe, playing his first\ngarne ;in live weeks, worked the\nfirst seven frames and was credited\nwith the win. With his fastball hopping he gave the Garagement, little\nto hit allowing six hits apd, three\nruns. He struck put two and Walked none as his mates played air\ntight ball behind him. George Barefoot came in to finish giving up one\nrun- on one hit, a single to Martin.\nThe Humes in winning, their 12th\nvictory as agaihst four losses touched Alex Ferworn for 11 h)ls that\nIncluded a homer to Bob- Morton\nIn' the fourth and three triples, one\nto Mickey Magllo and two to Red\nKothlt.     '\nThe Humes with four games remaining on their schedule trail Pass-\nmore for the league lead by two\ngames!\n! Trantfer, fighting It out With\nSouth Sloctn lor third spot, managed to get a run In the first two, in\nthe sixth and one In the eighth.\nFerworn went the distance fbr the\nTransfer giving up six free passes\nand striking out nine.\nThe . speed, of meteors averages\nbetween 10 and 45 miles per second.' - \u25a0'\u25a0...'-'\u25a0     ' \u2022\nBASEBALL SCORES\nNational League ri\nNew York ... 1000 (#000-4 7 1\nMilwaukee .... 001 803 Olx\u201413 14 0\nHearn, prlssejn (4); Corwin' 44)\nKennedy (6) and Westrum, Calder-\none (5); Spahn and Crandall, St,\nClaire 47). L-^Heern.\nMEDICINE HAT.(CP) - The\nWestern Junior Hockey League,\nwhich opened a two-day annual\nmeeting here Saturday, hai reaffirmed its support ot senior amateur governing bodies despite, criticisms, of the jurisdictional value\nof the CAHA by Ed BrUchet, manager of Lethbridge Native Sons,\n- League directors, on a split vote,\nalso decided to peek deletion of the\nImport rule between Alberta \u25a0 and\nSaskatchewan,- This would apply,\nif granted by the JWo provincial\nbodies, to both the WJHL and the\nSJHL. '-\u25a0 ,\";     \u25a0'-..,\"\u25a0\nMedicine Hat Lethbridge, Crow's\nNest and Calgary voted for the\nproposal, with Edmonton, Moose\nJaw and Regina voting against it\nBill Hunter, manager of the.Medi-\ndne Hat Tigers, had; sought, tn import quota, j of four playiers td\nstrengthen both his club':, and\nCrow's Nest: Coalers. However,\nhe failed to get support after the\npslsslrig bf the no-import rule between the two provinces.\nIf the1 rule is endorsed by the\ntwo' provincial. b.od!es, .each club\nwould he allowed the standard two\nImports from other provinces.\nSix Games in\nBoxla Schedule\n: Schedule of games still to be\nplayed In the West Kootenay Lacrosse League follows: (All Nelson\nhome games will.be played irt Ross\nland):: \/\nMonday, Trail vs. Rpssland.\n, Thursday, Nelson vs..Tral|.\nAug. 3, NelsOn vs. Rossland,\nAug. 8, Rossland-vs,. Trail.\nAug. 8, Trail vs. Nelson, i\nAug. 11, Rossland vs. Nelson.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Canadian Preii\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAB R H   Pet.\nChinese Soccer Team\nDefeats Australia\nSTONEYf Australia74AF) \u2022'\u2022*-- A\nChinese soccer team defeated \"Australia 4-1 Saturday inthe first of a\nseries of international matches. 7\n' The Chinese outplayed the home\nteam throughout arid, enjoyed a' 2<1\neltd at halftlme, the only Australian goal'coming on a free kick\nNelson Trumps\nVs Proles.\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP);'- An\nIncrease in rink rates may force\nWestern Canada's senior -hockey\nchampions from the hockey wars\nthis winter.\u25a0>\nOfficials ot Penticton Vs, who\nlost out to Eastern Canada ln the\nAllan Cup finals last spring, announced Monday that the club will\ndisband unless the Penticton parks\nboard reconsiders its demands for\nIncreased' rental of .the Memorial\nArena.'\nThe, cltib has given the board\nuntil today to reconsider the rent\nquestion.   , .:' .- \u25a0 '\u25a0\nBaseball Standings\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\n\u2022 W.LPct.\nHollywood    ;.... 76 48 .813\nSeattle    .'. 71 52 .577\nLos Angeles 64- 80 .516\nPortland   .-.'. .,r\/. : 59 6? .488\nSan  Francisco  ...!::  BT'66 .463\nOakland     55'66.456\nSan Plego 84-68 .433\nSacramento .-. 54-88 .443\n214 Holl St.\nPhene 18\nLazareff & Co. Ltd.\n\"\u25a0'-\" BUILDING SUPPLKS-\n* Rossland, B. C.\nW\nDay's College Cods\nFor the Summer Camp\nThose odd jobs or Just on extra trousor\nfor1 leisure hours .-.[.;'   All sixes and\n* '      good color range, of   *\niitibi :\/.\u25a0\u25a0;\nHughes-Stuart Men's Wear\n1 \"A FRIENDLY PUCE TO SHOP\"'\n459 WARD ST. ,. PHONI 425\nSALMO \u2014. .The;Nelson Tramps\nwith three big innihgs that produced\n17 runs literally walked to an 18-3\nwin over the Salmo Rockettes here.\nKjelson nine amassed a total ot 13\nhits and were aided by 12 free pass\ngiven up by Kraft, the Salmo chuci\ner. \u2022 \u25a0'-\u2022' \u2022 \"\"'    -\u25a0      \"  \u25a0   -\"-v.\nVerda Pratt with a strong team\nbehind her, coasted to the will, glv-<\ning up five hits, Her: control, wes\nperfect ,She struck out 10. ind,Issued no WtlkS. \u25a0\"\u25a0..\u25a0   ,\nNelsdn took the lead ln the second\nframe when, they scored four times\non two hltii and two Salmo errors.\nIn.the third, Nelson with the aid of\ntwo hits, two errors and live walks,\nscored eight runs. After picking up a\nlone run in the fourth they finished\noff with five in the fifth on seven\nhits \"and tWo walks and the help ot\nanother trror. --\u25a0-.--:'   \u2022\nSalmo after scoring one run in\nthe second on a hit and Nelson's\nOnly error ln the game, were held\nscoreless until the ninth Inning\nwhen they scored their remaining\nruns on two hits. Verda Pratt, going\nInto the ninth bad allowed but three\nhits.\nKraft on the mound tor the Rockettes besides giving up 18 hits, walked 12 batters. She picked up two\nstrike-outs.\nIrvln,' NY-...:...-.;-..\nSchoendlenst, Stl\nFurillo, Bkn ...\nRobinson, Bkn ..\nThompson. NY ...\nBatting: Irvln,\n338 56 114 .337\n. 361 70 121 .335\n. 321 53 104 .324\n, 314 70 101 .322'\n281 87   74 .320\n.837-\nRuns: Snider, Brooklyn, 78\nRuns   bitted   In:   Ctmptnelli,\nBrooklyn, 90 .\nHits:\" Schoendlenst, 121 ,\nDoubles: Snider and Musial, St.\nLoilis, 27.   ' \u25a0    ,       ytiti.\nTriples: Bruton, Milwaukee. 9\nHome runs: Mathews, Milwaukee\n30 t.titi-M\nStolen bases: Bruton, 18\nPitching:  Smith, Cincinnati  5-0,\n1.000        *      '   '\nStrikeouts, Roberts, Philadelphia\n116 .-. .\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nKell,'Bos  2ST 44   04 -32B\nVernon, Was ............ 382 61 124 .325\nGoodman; Bos.. 294 43   95.323\nS,Oii,..:.7 *J\u00bb-2 }\u00bb\u25a0???\nRosan, cie..-'.' titit 59 Ui.\nBatting: Kell, .328\nRuns: Minoso, 75 -\n\u2022 Runs batted in; Rosen, 88\n-Hits: Kueiin, Detroit, 127\nDoubles: Ktll, 30   ,\nTriples: Fox and Hlvera, 43hleego\nand Vernon, Washington,7 \u2022\nHome runs: Rosen, 28 .\nStolen bases: Rlvert, 18 : v   ,\nPitching: Shea,. Washington, ,8*1,\nStrikeouts:\nPierce,  Chicago,   109\n. i . r '   '\u2014rt\nWINS BIKE RACE ?\n,PARIS ICP). \u2014 Louis Bpbet of\nFrance, \u25a0 28-year-old former baker,\nSunday won the 30th anniversary\nrunning'of the Classic Tour de\nFrance bicycle race; Jean Mallejac\nof \"France was second and, Italy's\naianctrlo Astruithlrd.?\nNELSON DAILY NlWS, TUMDAY, JULY 28,1953 \u2014 7\nNelson Cricketers Drop Game lo\nTrail; Show Vast Improvement\nMore than 60 spectators In the\nbleachers and In cart saw a closely\ncontested j match between the Nelson and TraU Cricket Clubs on the\nCivic Recreation \"Grounds Saturday\nafternoon. Following grind preparations Thursday ovenlngand again\n%i two hours. Saturday morning\ntdth clubs, expressed pleasure at\nthe condition of. the pitch for the'\nfirst home gtme -i- In t long while.\nTrilly\/ba out rt-64.'\u25a0\u2022'?.\nTrail batted first. With the,tup-\nport from, the fins, the home.teem\nattacked with vigor end htd Trail\nin trouble early In the game with\nthree batsmen out for only' 11 runs\non the board, Gleeson claiming one\nwicket and Young two. Trail rallied\nwith Evans and Lambert forming\na strong, partnership thd when Butllng claimed a valuable'wicket oft\nLaipbert, 27 runs'had-been added.\nCrooll then joined Evans tt, the\nwicket fpr a second strong stand\nyielding 36 runs before Croall wai\nunfortunately run out oh t miscalled running play. \"\u2022' '\n, In ope and a half hours Trail were\nall but for- a'total of 79 runs of\nWhich- Evans  scored  24 hot' put,\nInducted Info\nCbOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP)\nDltzy Dean and AlSimmons, two\nof baseball's former greats, were\nInducted formally into the hall of\nfame Monday When their plaques\nwere dedicated by George Traut-\nman, president of the National As.\nsociation of Minor League, in cere,\nmonies held In front ,of the National Baseball Hall \"ot Fame and\nMuseum.?'.\"     . ,?,\"'' v    -.7\nThey'were the 63rd and 64th to\nbe so honored. '\nDean, colorful, -ace of the St.\nLoull.Cardinal gas house gong in\nthe early. 1930s, beamed good-will\nit he. took his' accustomed place at\na microphone to aOknowledge the\nhonors.;?\/',-'''1''      '.-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -\".:,?\n-\"it's the'greatest honor I ever received,\" he said in his Texas Arkansas drawl, \"I want to'thank the good\nLord for -giving me a good right\narm\": a strong back and a weak\nniliid.\" .-;\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0?'.\u25a0' ;'v\" '   '\u25a0%.. ,\nLooking' at, other hall of fame\nmen sitting on the platform,' Ty\nCobb, Connie Mack, Cy Young, Ed\nWalsh and Rogers Hornsby, he said!\n\"Them's the kind of';ball piayers\nI'd like to have.had behind me all\nthe time.\"?        '.\nThen he paid t glowing tribute\nto hla former Cardinal'tnd Chicago\nCub mates who \"stopped them line\ndrives and got some runt for me.\"\nSimmons, at -248 about 45 poundi\nover hit Did pitying weight, like\nwise spoke about \"the greatest\nhonor ever paid me\" and then turn\nto heap pralst on hla old, boss,\nMr. Mack.\nLambert 20, ond Croall- 16. Lambert's Innings wii ont' ot crowd-\npleasing hard hitting with thret\nboundary hits nnd one for six; Hal\"-\ndine also, bit. one six into the\nbleachers early in the game. Highlight ot Nelson fielding was a ve#\ntine high catch taken, by Jim\nChristie.. Z    '\n8LIDINQ BALL.   7 > **     ',\nAfter a short interval\" for refresh*-\nments Nolson Went In to bat and -\nin the second over Croall claimed\na wloket With. only flour; runs dh\nthe Board, .Then -came the rain\nwhich soon forced players to tajee >\nshelter tnd proved disastrous for '\nthe local team. On resuming play\nthe surface of the grass was such\nthtt it gave tho bowlers every advantage of a sliding ball (one which\nhlta the surface and shoots along at\nground level and la, very difficult\nto anticipate end play). It was the\nsecond.such ball after -resuming\nplay that took thb wicket off Adcock still with only four runs to\nNelson's credit: Middleton and Butllng were now at partnership' at a\ntough time in the gome and again\npleased the crowd with careful play,\ntnd both made. some very good\nstrokes to direct the ball past the\nfielders. Middleton received a hard\nblow from a. rising ball which hit\nhla chest, but insisted on continuing ploy after a few minutes. This\n.palr: added 27 runa before Middle-\nton came out to a good catch ln\nthe slip position (ironically taken\nby Nelson's Taylor who was siibstl- '\ntutlrtg for 4 Trail fielder). Exactly\non the stroke of 8 p.m.\" Nelson were\nall- out for a total ot 84 runs ot\nWhich Middleton had scored 19 Including two boundaries ahd one six\nover tbe fence, and Butling eleven,\nThe record book shows that NelsOn were beaten by 15 runs, \"a very\nclose result and a very good game.\",',I\nCaptain Young stated afterwards\nthat with the rain giving Trail's\nbowlers t|ie advantage he was very\nPleased .with: the team's showing *\nand the manner In which each player met the challenge on a difficult,\nWicket.\nThe next game will be In Trail\nAugust 9.\nWilliams Back\nTo Red Sox\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Ted. Williams' will be released from ,the\nmarine corps today and \u00ab> right to\nBoston to rejoin, the Red Sox, but\nhe's a bit afraid, that he might hurt\nthe club If he gets back Into the\nline-up too soon.     ',..\/-?        -\nThere's4 TOund. reason for Ted'\nalarm, Whether.It's genuine or not.\nHe hasn't swung a bat In more thah\na year.\nBut, Williams said, he's eager to\ni as soon as posslt'\nThat could be tonight when Bos-\nplay, ball, and as.soon as possible.\nton opens t home stand against\nChicago White Sox. Chances are,\nhowever, Williams Won't be used\nfor a while even ss t- pinch hitter.\nHe isn't exactly In top playing condition.. ..  '\nThe marine corps reported Monday that Williams'- formal separation from-active duty.will lake\nplace at the naval gun factory here.\nA couple of signatures on the dotted line and one of the greatest hitters' in modern times will be free\nfor active duty on the baseball diamond. \" \"? \u2022\u25a0\u25a0      7'\nFISHING TACKLE\nAND LICENSES\n\"EVERYTHING FOR. .THB\n.SPORTSMAN\"\nEDEYfS\nSPORT SHOP\n737 BAKER 8f.     ,\nPHONB 1045   ' ,\nStands SuflUmt\nTANQUIRAY, OORDON  t CO. IT*.\n...IMareiitglnditUUnlnilii-miM\nThii advertisement la not published\nor displayed by tho Liquor Control\nBoard or by tho Government of\nBritish Columbia,      ,     -'\nAinsworth Hotiprlrigi\nSwimming Pool -\nOpen 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dilly'\n7   Cloud on  Mondays,\nExcept on a Holiday\nFor Guaranteed\nMarftk   Lubrication\nPHONE 75\n.   Mechanical Repairs by\nFactory Trained Mechanic!\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nOpp. Post Office on Vernon,\nBudget Plan Available on All.\nSales and Service\nRos your engine\n-' lost its tte6> car pep?\nHie-powerwith...  ,\n^he Greatest\n\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\"\".. '   \u25a0'    -\"'    . -\u2022 .:\nGasoline\ndevelopment\nin il Years\ny,       y ZTCPiqSHett-disw\n'-ff'     [mw\nGasoline, actually re-powers your\n,.;\u2022        engine by stopping short-\nyyif  circuiting of spark plugs and\n.'fy   controlling pre-ignition. Gives\n'fy up>iolS<& more power .'-, . in-\nZ   creases spark plug life up to 150%.   '\nToday's dH\u00bb_4T<jften \"Mow^p\u00ab\"d\u00bb In traffic and\naround town\u2014Increases the amount of combustion\n: - deposits, which actually short-circuit spark plugs\nI and cause pre-lgnition of the fuel-air mixture.\nBecause these deposits accumulate in all engines\n\u2014both old and new\u2014Shell Premium Gasoline with\nTCP-is essential to keep your engine delivering full\npower\u2014because the TCP additive actually stops the\npower-crlppllnij effect of these deposits.\nToday, Shell Premium with TCP Is available ln\nthis area, but only from your Shell Dealer.\n'iPsHenteppHtd^r.:''' : -y-\nSHELL PREMIUM GASOLINE\nWITH TCP\n-\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022'   The most powerful gasoline'\nyour car can use\nmmm\n AH'LL CONJURE UP A VISION\nCCLl'LABNER.WHAREVBtHe ?\nIS\u2014AM'SIT HIM TO STOP PAISV '\nMAE'S WEPDIN!TOM0R*<0Wff7\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nnt\u00abT-AH GOTTA MARK A J* Iri\n'X'fWWW.'BWW'WIFA .^Mh\nDROP\u00abl&CW\u00ab'MA f 1'\nINNOOCNTLAMB-??-   )      [J\n8W--   j \" *       It\n-\u2014^ |I\nTHAR'-SNOWMOCENT ..\nLAMB AKOUND-OECT A ,\nBOATlf\u2014\nH\nE\nN\n\u2022R\nY\nC\nR\n- - eAviwia\/iN. ^\ni&in-njHReStED\nONW IN FI$HINS\n--ANDHN Hl&\nPREDBV WIFE!\nRELAX, DOPOi,.\n^15* \/M6r\nJ?\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1953\n5&\n3\"\n1 PtRSOHO-PERSON WM ADS\n\\    FOR QUICK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Adt\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\n- BEAWIBU*^\" Mr.; and: Mfs.\nGeorge Beauli'eu of Ymir, at Kootenay' Lake General Hospital, July\n25, a daughter, '-'fr'\nREES\u2014Tp Mr. add Mrs. Ivor Rees\nof Riondel? at KootenayifisSke Gen-\neral Hospital, July 26, a Sjln.\nBACON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Roger\nBacon, 815 Fifth Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Jury\n26, a daughter.\nSIMMON_---To7 ..Mr.   and   Mrs,\nNicholas Simmons of Passmore, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJuly 26, a dau'gKter. .\\7,<\nJRFFERY\u2014TO - Mr., and Mrs, Albert Jeffery, 404 Elwyn Street, at\nKootenay ' Lake General Hospital,\nJuly 27, a son. i v\nHELP WANTED\nWAMEED-^-MAN WITH HORSES,\nto skid poles, by contract. Hartes\nLumber, Fruitvale.\nFOR SALE - 8 ROOiyi UNFIN-\nished   house   with   approx.   ten\n-acres bf land, 200 yards from\nschool, sacrifice. Will accept late\nmodel car, W. L, Fitchett, Harrop,\n'   B.C, \u25a0'...\"    '\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nApplications invited up to 5 p.m.\nMonday, August 3rd for the position of Secretary-Stenographer ot\nNels on Junior\" High School.\nDuties to commence September\nIst. State experience and salary\nrequired. Forward applications to:\nj. S. LIVINGSTONE, 7 \u2022v\nSecretary-Treasurer;'S.p, No, 7,\n,    812'Ward Street. : 7--j-   '?\nLARGE. TRANSPORTATION\ncompany has an Immediate vacancy in their sales staff for one\nfemale ticket clerk1 Applicants\nmust be between the ages lot 22\nto 35 atad'must apply in their own\n'.; handwriting stating full qualifications.  Apply  Box  4618  Dally\nNews.' ' -. ]';\u25a0'   :\u25a0-':\nLEARN HO^ TO, MAKE MONEY\nat  home  addressing, envelopes.\nTypewiter, longhand. Good full,\nspare .time earnings. Mail $1.00\n. for Instruction Manual. Money-\nback guarantee, Lincoln? Box 300,\n\u25a0   Pcikin 8, Illinois. \u25a0'-7,g-' '.\u25a0  ,'\"-?'-'\nV\u00abNTEP \u2014 HOUSEKEEPER M-\nmediately. 612 Carbonate St? '\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED , FEMALE: GRO-\nccry. clerk desires work. Box 4412,\nDaily News..\" .'        -,'\u25a0\",.\nEXPERIENCED .FEMALE.   GRO-\ni   eery clerk desires work, Box 4412\n., Daily- News..- 7. :'-';\u2022 ''\u25a0'''\nBABY SITTER -, DAYS ,OREVE-\nntogs. Phone 10183-.   V  \u2022-,\n6 FT. iPOWER\u00abMOWER BY HOUR\n. or acre, Phone 462-L-2.-   - ;,\nINSTRUCTION;\nLEARN RAILWAY^\n\u25baTELEGRAPHY   '\n\u25a0rH'W^lfivv''\nA few hours a day-train you\ntor a'high-paid position.\nt   RAILWAYS OFFER;   7   .\nSecurity? ..\nPass Privileges  \"'-\u25a0'\u2022 \"\u25a0-'-'\nHospital and Sickness Plan\nLifetime'Employment\nPension   v.7:     \u25a0'\u25a0 . >\u2022\u2022\u2022\n.--*\"':     DO N4DT DELAY   .\nWRITE NOW TO:'....-\nColumbia Business Institute\nBOX-4425? NELSON-DAILY NEWS\n............i-,....^.-\u2014.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n'\u25a0'\u25a0\"-'\u25a0'   ITC. FOR SALE   '[. .-\nFOR SALE - NORTH SHORE\n- location, one mile west of Nelson\nterry, 850 foot water frontage,\ntwo bedroom home- *lth bath,\npantry with refrigerator, kitchen\nand', dining room with built-in\ncabinets, living room with fire-\nplace, front windows; large plate\nglass, stone foundation, basement\nwith furnace, garden with fruit\ntrees; a cottage with three rooms,\nprivate dock and boathouse. Price\n$10,0410.; PhOhe Fred Irvine.; 85\nmorhlngs br phone ! 716-R. Box\n.4458 Daily'NftwsV      '-':    7\"\nFOR SALE ON KOOTENAY LAKE,\nstore building With living quarters, light, and water. Good opportunity tor butcher shop and\nstore. Apply F. Bonaccl, Rrocter,\nBC.\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE   \u2014   40\n,   acres of land at Park Siding. Good\ntimber. Please phone 1577-L, Trail,\nor caU at 1450 Park St. Trail, after\n\u25a0 ^4:00 pto.   '*   ..-'.     '.-.., ?\u25a0' '- '    .\nFOR,. SALE \u2014 MODERN HOUSE\nat Kaslo, 1 acre good soil, im-\nmediate possession.- Bargain price\n-for quick tale..Details Mrs. Brett,\nKaslo, B.C.\nFOR SALE: CHOICE LOTS OVER-\nlooking Columbia River. Limited\nnumber, See Guy Guido, lower\nDumont subdivision, Kinnaird. \"\nyOJfflS AT $1825.00 \u2014 2 BED-\nroom -house Apply R Schuster\nHouse 23, Canadian Exploration,\nSalmo, B.C. \"\u25a0''\nFOR SALE \u2014, GENERAL STORE\nand rooming house. No opposition. For further particulars write\nBox 4255 Dally News.\n.FARM..-FOR. SALE \u2014 80 ACRES\n-   with buildings. Lots of wood. Hay\nand garden. Henry Knowles, Crescent Valley, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 1-4 ROOM HOUSE,\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfttljy modern., Apply Wm. A:\nHenke, Procter.   .\nFOR SALE \u2014 HOUSE AND LOTS.\nApply71416 Vancouver St. after\n8:p.mV--': .     . e    ti\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\u2022  NOTICE TO  ,\nV GENERAL CONTRACTORS\nStipulated Sum Contract proposals are-invited for the construction\nof Addition to Jr.-Sr. High School,\nSlamo, B.C.,- and will be received\nuntil, 5:00 p.m., Daylight Saving\nTime, Tuesday, August. 11th., 1953 at\nthe Office of toe Secretary, School\nDistrict No. 7, Nelson, B.C.\nThe work consists of Home Eco-.\nnomiCs Unit, Industrial Arts Unit,\nLibrary, Three Classrooms, Audl-\ntorium,Gymnasium, Administration\nSection, complete new low pressure\nSteam Heating System, etc\n. .A certified cheque is requlered\nwith each Tender tor 5% ot toe\nContract Amount to be replaced\nwith a performance bond, as' specified, within thirty days 430) of toe\nContract Date.   ,\nDrawings, specifications, Tendering Forms, and Instructions to Bidders will be Issued to General Contractors only, and may be obtained\nafter 1:00 p,m\u201e Daylight Saving\nTime, Monday, July 27th, 1953, at\ntoe Architect's office, at 1563 Robson Street, Vancouver 6, B.C. and\nthe, office Of the Secretary of toe\nSchool Bpard in Nelson, B.C.\nA returnable deposit of Fifty\nDollars ($50.00) is required for each\ncomplete or partial set \u25a0:\nSharp & Thompson,' Berwick,\nPratt Architects,\n1553, Robson St,\nVancouver 5,'B.C. '\n' July 28, .1053.\nFor: \u25a0'..\";    .\nBoard of School Trustees,\nSchool District No. 7,'.\nNELSON, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 3 ROOM HOUSE,\ntoilet and- small utility, room.\nPhone 510-X.evenings.\n6rRM, HOUSE ON BEST 3 COR-\nner lots Nelson Ave. commercial\nzone. Ph. 404-X or 323 Nelsoh Aye.\n350' -'FT. LAKE FRONTAGE AT\nQueen's, Bay. Tor quick sale,\ncheap. Phone 91.\nFOR-ALE-FOUR ROOM HOUSE,\nlights and water, in Salmo. $1200.\nR. Knife, Salmo, B.C.\nTHREE ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE,\n, $8500. Apply 81 Cottonwood City.\nFOR SALE-2 BEDROOM HOUSE.\n702 Houston St Phone 436-L-2.\nPROPERTY FOR SALE ON GRAN-\n' ite-Road. Phorie 369-R-2; V. titi'\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED \u2014 USED BED. PHONE\n369-R-* ' '\nWANTED \u2014 W\" OR  18\" BOYS'\nhike for cash. Phone 1645-R.\nDAILY CROSSWORD ppmilFfflil\n'   ACROSS\n1. Roman\n' statesman\n5. Scorch\n. \u00bb. Arabic letter\nW. Own'\n11, Jog'\n12. Public\nproceaalon\n14. Shaped like\n7a'betr\n16. Mulberry\n17. Seine    \u2022'..\n18. Horns   '-''.\nof a deer*'\n20. Elevated .\n'   train .\n21.0ffer \u25a0'.     '\n22. Sea eagle\n23. A play\non words\n24. Greek letter\n-25, Let It stand\n(print.)\n,27. Property   \"\n(I*)\n20. Columblum\n(sym.)\n30. Movable'\narticle of\nproperty'\n32. Greek letter\n33. Land-\nmeasure\n34. Native of\nEritrea\n36. Raised\n38. Among-\n39. Toward\n' thelte \u25a0,.'\n40. Culture -\nmedium    -:\u25a0,\n41. F.athers\n42. Female fowl\n\"'OOWNV. ';\n1. Cubicle\n. -nearataok\nin a library\ni   *tvar.)\n2. City in\nBelgium\n3. Monkey\n4VFrOm\n: 5. Map 7\n6. Without\npower to-\nharm -\n7. Polynesian\ndrink   '\n8. To darn   \"\nagain   :\nll,Meloajr:   , .\n12VSmall      .\nbodyi-\nV water\n13. Otherwise \u2022\n15. Glad\n19. Assam\nsilkworm\n73.. Fi\u00bbt-\n. tered -V\ngrossly\n(colloq.)\n23. A size\n' ofcoal  '\n24. Animal's\nhide'\n29. Clca-\ntrix\n26.Flne\ncprd\nof flax\n27. who\ndesigned\nthe U.S.\nfl-*T  '\n28,Seats\n2B.Llnk     ti\n\u25a0] @aanai:\nHEHBi   HE1\naHBHia anaHB\nQKtail   l*JtB5JBiai*\nas raaaB krii\nauianan idbeh\naaaaia aniHas\n**\u00abM\u00abrdaKi 'Aniwcr\n31. Woody\nperennials\n32. Rcequlp\nwlthmen\n35. Storm\n37. A wing\n40. Exclamation\nm\n35*\nm\n2\nii\n1\nfrjs\nTT\ni\ni\nI\na\nJ\nDAILY CEYPXOQUOXE\u2014Here's how to ww_ It:\n'   \\    \u2022 AXYDLBAAX*   \u2022'\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply atanda for another? In this example A te used .\nfor the three L's; X for the two O's, etc,  Single letters, apos-\ntrophles, the length and formation of the words are aU hinta.\nEach day the code letters are different    \u25a0',, (\nA Cryptogram IjMotattoe   ,..:.'.\n. \u25a0  Z \u25bc K . fi P 0,-E-V\" -N:B 6 6 'tiR L V J.L -   \u25a0 P-\u00ab._-f '\nLKVY43    NL66    CVKCMfi    IHCr-HPtM.\nVs-stcrday's Cryutoeuote;   KV-RVONB S^OWB glUsTUTT\nBEFQ8S HIS OWN DOOR\u2014PROVERBS.\n-*-at__-wi\n\u2022     NOTICE TO CREDITORS\nJAMES GORDON BENNETT,\nFormerly of.Nelson, British\n.Columbia, Deceased.\n-NOTICE is hereby given thtt\ncreditors and - others having claims\nagainst the Estate of JAMES .GORDON BENNETT, Deceased, are\nhereby required to send them to\nthe Toronto-General Trusts Corporation,590 West Pender Street Van-'\ncouver, British Columbia, before\nthe 1st day of September, 1953, after\nwhich date toe said Toronto General Trusts Corporation as Executor\nand Sybil Irene Bennett as Executrix of the'Will of the said James\nGordon Bennett will distribute toe\nsaid Estate among; toe parties entitled thereto having regard only\nto the claims of which they theh\nhave notice,  . \u2022\u2022.'';.'\u2022,.-\nTORONTO GENERAL\/TRUSTS\nCORPORATION,\n\u2022-       Executor-.  ...   \"ij,.  \u25a0'.,,\nSYBIL IRENE BENNETf,   f-\nExecutrix;  '\u25a0'.' '. ti';  \u25a0\n:    By: WRAGGE _ HAMILTON,\n,, Their Solicitors. - .\u25a0 . .-i\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014'AT- TAGHUM BALL\npark a pair: of old blue jeans containing Wallet with driver's license and -10 K gold signet ring.\nPhone 23UYf2. -Reward,\nLOST \u2014 SINCE JULY 21, VICIN-\nity \u25a0 ot Longbeach ferry, black\nscottle named \"Jiggs.\" Attree,\nQueen's Bay. Phone 2-F Balfour.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR-SALE      :\nStore fixtures, show cases,'\ncash register, Dayton meat\nslicer, refrigerator, Sherei\ncounter, display ' fixtures,\nshelving, furnace, heater,\ngrocery scale, candy scale,\ncheese cutter, price tickets\nand moulding, etc.   -\nFleming's Store\n224 BEHNSEN ST.   ,\nDEALERS   IN   ALL   TYPES   OF\n* used equipment mill, mine tnd\nlogging supplies; new tnd used\nwire   rope;' pipe   and   fittings;\n' -chain, steel plate nad shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250. Prior\ni St, Vancouver, B.C. Phone Paclfio 6357.\n1 1939 MERCURY SEDAN, 1 CAR\nradio, 1 car heater, 1 8 in. bench\nsaw, 1 automatic rangette, almost\nhew; 1 cabinet Marconi radio.\nApply to M. Piquard, Upper\nBench, Kinnaird, B.C.\nPRACTICALLY NEW ELECTRO-\n; lux. and treadle Singer sewing\nmachine, cheap. Room 20 Strath-\ncont Hotel from 4-10 p.m.\n1\u2014SMALL CREAM SEPARATOR,\n$20.00; 1\u201425-20 Winchester, $35.00;\n1\u2014hot water jacket heater, $7.00;\n1\u2014trombone, $20.00. Phqne 1242-R\nEMPIRE MOTORS CREDIT NOT&\nfor sale at a sacrifice, $1150,. 10%\ndiscount. Phone 712-R or apply\n116'Verpon St\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES \u2014\nSpecial low prices. Active Trading Co, 935 E. Cordova St. Vancouver.\nFOR    SALE - SCANDALLI    20\n- - bast piano accordion, 7 swltchet\ntreble, 2 bass. Phone 1727-R.\nLARGE NORGE GAS RANGE. I\npropane tanks and pressure regulator. Phone 1353-L.\nCRESS WART( REMOVER \u2014\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells' CRESS.\nBED-QHESTERFJELD, NEW CO*\ndltloh. Phone 1456-X.     '  .     ).\n1 BOYS' 18 INCH BICYCLE, JUS.\nlike, hew. Phone 1758-L.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-*\n;*' Write PO Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\n=r=\nSUMMER RESORTS\nL . i CmESRENT. BEACH\nf AUTO COURTS '\nAll ideal holiday resoi*t7'Modern\nfurnished cabins. Sand beach.\nboats, fishing. Tent and trailer.,\naccommodation. On Kootenay\nLake 10 miles East of Nelson on\nHighway 3. Write R.R. 1 or phont\n471rY-L.\nEDGEWOOD\nCast Vista Cabins 48 Star)\n.Vacation or overnight\ni ''They're Different\"\nLAKE WINDERMERE LOD(Ji\n(tod Cabins. Sate, sandy beach,\nwarm water. \"P. Dickinson. Invermere, B.C.\non the air;\u25a0:\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... \"\u00ab on Tim Pi**\n4Pacifio Daylight: Time)\n.    TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1953\n7:00\u2014News .\n7:05\u2014Wako Up Nelson\n7:15-rSport. News\n7:20\u2014Wake Up Nelson\n7:30\u2014NeWs   '\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Nelson\n7:45-r-Rlsc IT Shide\n8i00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45->-Towler Serepader,\n8:55\u2014Sports Corner\n9:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:15\u2014Earl Warren Show        '\n10:00\u2014Riders ol the Purple Sage\n10:15\u2014News-    j\n10:20\u2014Morning Visit \u2022\n10:25\u2014Political Talk\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Invitation.To the Waltz     \u25a0;\n11:00\u2014Musical Minutes\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nIl^S^-Consumer's COrher\n12:00rr-Llberty Special\n12:15\u2014City Tire Sports t\n12:20\u2014News        ...   ...\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast      '-..-.   ?\n12:55\u2014jChatting With the Listeners\n1:00\u2014Spotlite on Melody   \u25a0\n1:15\u2014Holly wood *Calling    V\n1:30\u2014Fairview Shopping Guide \".'\n2:00\u2014Family Theatre\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n8:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4:15\u2014Club Date\n4:30\u2014Secret Valley Ranch\n4:45\u2014Pacific News\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament Kill\n.5:00\u2014At Home With toft Lennlcht\n5:25\u2014Int Commentary \u00a3j\n5:30\u2014Behind toe News\n5:85\u2014Spotlight On. a Star\n'8:50\u2014News-\n6:00-rTeIl Me Doctor''.\n6:15\u2014Musical Program\n6:30\u2014Dollars and Sense\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody   -\n7:00\u2014News    7     \u2022'\u25a0'\n7:15\u2014News Roundup   \"'\n7:30\u2014Report From Parliament Hi!\n7:45\u2014Candlelight,and Silver'\n8:00\u2014Political Talfe';\n8:^5\u2014Preacher's Diary 7 ?\n9:00\u2014Champions of Sport\nO^O^-Songs From; tlie Showi'\n10:00\u2014News,\n10:15\u2014The Mad Metallurgist\n10:80\u2014Starlight Ballroom     '-\n10:45\u2014Sports Roundup\n11KW\u2014Afcound the ToWn ;\n12:0(K-NEWS Night Cap;\n.CBC PROGRAMS\niMountaln Standard Time)\nWEDNEStlAY; JULY 29, 1953\n00\u2014Fishermen!s Broadcast\n;15^-Musical Minutes\n80\u2014NeWs\n35\u2014Musical Minutes  ,\n:40\u2014Mbrnlnt Devotions'\n55\u2014Musical March Fast       ,\n:00r*News\n:10\u2014Bill Good\n:16\u2014Breakfast Club.\n;'45\u2014Anything Goes \u201e\n:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n.30\u2014Laura Limited\n:45\u2014Famous Voices\n:00-~Morntog Visit -' '\n15r-Ht\n:45\u2014Invitation to too Waltzs\n:00\u2014A Man and His Muslo\n18\u2014News, \u25a0'\n:25\u2014Showcase ' , '\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n85\u2014Five to; One       v  .\n00\u2014Alto: noon Concert\n2:30\u2014TraWcanada. Matinee\n3:15\u2014Brave Voyage    .    ,\n3:30\u2014program Resume\n3:45H3.C. Roundup , titi'-\n4:15\u2014Other Voices, Other Plaetl\n4:30\u2014Ctmp Wilderness  .\n4:45\u2014Music for CJilldren  i:\n5:00\u2014The Movie Scene ,\n5:25\u2014International Commentarr\n5:30\u2014UN Today    '?\n5:45\u2014News and Weather\n5:55\u2014Have V Ypu Heard-\n6:00;-Nelghhourly Newi *  7\n6:15\u2014Stars from.Paris ,\nb:45-Intro. to Wed. Night- \"\nTiOO-^Newt\n7:15\u2014News  Roundup .\n7:30\u2014Don Garrard to Recital\n.7:45\u2014George Little Singers\n8:00\u2014The Constant Wife\n9:30^-Polltlcal TWki ?!\n10:00\u2014News :\n10:15\u2014Music From Europe\n10:30\u2014Tho World and toe West\n -^^mm\n<m&\ntCLASSIFliD\nPHONE 144\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n.'. 1952 Ford Fordor $2245   ,\n\u2022\u201e\u25a0' 'Only 5000 miles?\n1?S2 Austin Sorhfrset 7   -\n'\".'-, $15957 ?' 7\n195) Cheviolet? Sedan\n$18.00  '\n1950 Austin Devon $875\n1951 Ford Prefect $995\nLow? mileage, like- new.\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n..: .     $1595   \u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0':\".: .\n1941 Chevrolet Sedan $595\n. 1949 Austin Panel $845   '\u2022\u25a0\n1950 Morris Mjnor $t}45\n; 1947 \u2022 Pontioc Sedan $945\n'\u25a0 TERMS and TRADES'\n' Many More Low Priced Units \u25a0\n. ,...;.     To Choose From\n': AUSTIN SERVICE and SALES\n'RENTALS\nEMPIRE\nMOTORS\n103 Baker St.\nPhont 1188\nNtlson\n,-.-.-,.\nNew Henry J Corsair\n\u25a0\"  and:. .-,\n'.,   Selectiort bf     7\nCars & Trucks\nf 1950 Ford '\/.-Ton\nI 1950 Austin Panel 7  '-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\n1949 Dodge 1-Ton Dump\n1946 Chevrolet V_-Ton\n1952'Austin Somerset\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949'Ford Fordor\n1946 Pontlac Sedan\n1937 Ford Fordor...\n1934 Dodge Sedan\n,   TERMS and TRADES\nVerjqonStreet\n\u25a0^\"..'Mcttori1 tz\n7'Phorte16i51,5i8YernonSt.\nNelson, B.C.\nUsed Tire Sale ,-\nSCOTT'S TIRE SHOP\n809 LAKE ST. .    PHONE 1122\nUsed 650\/18 4 Ply tires less 30%\nUsed 600\/16 4 Ply tires-less 20%\nUsedfl70\/18 4 Ply-tires less 20%\nAUother sizes less 25%\nNew 800\/16 4 Ply. tires $15.95\nNtw 610\/15- 4 t>ly tires $22.95\nwith libertl trade-in allowance\nK on your old tires. *\nSALE ENDS MON., AUG. 3RD\nrSHEREI THE NORTON \"FEA-\ntherbed\" Domlnator. Come in and\ntee this famous motorcycle, the\nholder of the Isle of Mtn TT. at\nKootenay Motorcycle Sales and\nService, Box 850, Castlegar; phone\n2601. \"The Shop of Friendly Service.'\n*4j\u201em_-'4l6 K)M) 4\"8NVbrt-\nIble. Reconditioned motor, very\ngood tlret. Can be seen at 808\nSilica St.. or phone 784-R.\nFOR SALE - 1950 FORD CUSTOM\nsedan. New engine, reconditioned\nthroughout. Excellent condition.\nTermi can be arranged. 608 Silica\nSt Phone 1562-R'. 7    \u25a0\n1841 ^4 TON INTERNATIONAL -\ndood shape. Cheap for dutck sale.\nPhone 1227-L.\nriRST $250.00 WILL  TAKE  1938\n' Chev. coupe In goodv. condition.\nPhone 161-L-S.\nSACRIFICE '47 FORD FORD6R\n$200.00 below going price. Can be\nfinanced. Phone 161-L-2.\nMACHINERY\nRamp Body and\nFender Works'\nNelson, B.C.\nJobbers for\n,   SPICER\nNeedle Bearing, Power\nTakeoffs and Universal\n'\"',      Joints   . ''\n-188 Josephine St   - Phone 198\nTOR SALE..- 1-SA  200 AMP.\n- Lincoln welder with F162 Con-\ntOfttlal engine, cables, helmets,\netc. and tDOrox. 100 lbs. misc.\nrods, 1\u2014No. 1( Marquette, acety.\n\u25a0 lene generator..Some othtr tools,\nanda quantity of Stock; All priced\nto sell. Pox 4604 Daily NeWs.\n\"hATOaI* iJiA,fat_Mt aa;\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING.\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND '\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries invited    .\nGranville Island. Vtncouver 1, B.C\nFOR SALE.- HOOVER TWIN\ncylinder hoist, Iwavy duty sub\nframe. Phone'1541-Y.\nFOR RENT \u2014'F.URWSHED, 1\nUrge apt, private bath. Small 2\nroomed. apt,   1 ' housekt,tp|n\u00a3\n, 7 room. No Children. Phone 107-X\n' ' ifttr\u201e< #m.     .'\u25a0\u25a0-,  7-\n4 JJtJtfiMto' vb-AftTtofW 'ANb'\nprivate   bathroom,   partly. fur-\n. nished. Available lata Aiig. Refer-,\n' encet,? NO children, 818 Silica St,\nwanted.' tfo vhiStfT' W^mtT'i'\nroom house out of town close tb\nschool. Any condition. Apply Ijox\n4288 Dilly News\nOn Forest licences\nbWltik'' AN ti' \"WAHMHbW\nntw for, ftnt Apply Central\nTnlck and Equipment Co,\nraft\" tmrZ -sip.\" msaiii\n' Very close In, to respectable ladles\nor gentlemen.'Phont 865-Y?\n,S6tJM*\u00ab^W6Mr_\":,VMt\nboard tnd room sharing. Phone\n820-L.\nFOR RENT -r HOUSEKEEPING\nsuite, suitable for 2 business girls.\n204 Bthnten St,\nSEEPIP H6M :**\u25a0 b AY, WS_K\nor monthly.   Allen  Hotel.   171\n.Biker.  -\nBEDROOM FOR RENT - PHONE\n. 306-Y,^     ,.      y,,,.,       ''\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\n7   'ARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOU^ BABY CHICKS THJ8\nyeir from the,Appleby Poultry\nFirm, Mission City. B.C We hive\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders Oh\nour own farm Our. baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\n\u2022tock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks, New Hampshires and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request.\nMILK .GOATS FOR SALB, GOOD\nstock, Henry Knowles, Crescent\nValley,\nONE MILK COW HQR SALE. -\nRecently freshened. G. Rebalkin,\nThrums, B.C.\nWANTED - MltK CbVte TO\nfreshen lite Fall or Winter. Lake-\nview Dairy. RobBOn, B.C.,\n80ats,and1ngines\nFOR SALE- 6-IT-, ROWBOAT,\nIdeal for camp or play boit with\nor without outboard motor; boys'\nbicycle tn good condition. 351\nBaker-8t\u201e Or phOne flSU,\n8 M' eABlR.tiituteiift.'.i cY-\nUnder Plymouth.motor, $200,00,\nBox 4532? Dally News,\nFOR SALE \u2014 fibATHOUSE ANft\n1982 Evinrude,, 25 H.P. motor.\nPhone 652-X or 125.. \"7\nPETS, CANARIES, DEES, ETC.\nTHREE COCKER SPANIEL PUPS,\n8 weeka old. Golden arid blonde\nfemales, $10 each. Red and \"white\nmale, $18, All thoroughbreds.'Ap-\nply L. Bradshaw, Box 838, Kaslo,\nB.a.-    \u25a0\u25a0'   v -\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022 <\";;:\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR-SA_E,-,-CRESTON SECOND\nhand' store on main business sec-'\ntlon. with or without stock. Apply\nBox 638, Creston, B.C.\nSTANGHERLIN GROCERY FOR\nsale, Including living quarters.. 112\nSilica St\nSEWING MACHINES\nSIN G ER  CAN   REPAIR   YOUR\npresent   machine   at   reasonable\ncost For free estimates Phone 41\nSINGER SEWING CENTRE\nSHi RAKER ST \u2022- NliLS4)N  B.C\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurance Co.. D L Kerr Agent\nALMER HOTEL, QPPOSITE C.PJl\nDepot Clean rooms and reasonable\" rates  Vancouver. B.C\nROOM AND BOARD\nWILL GIVE ROOM AND BOARD\nto 2 or 3 young gentlemen. Phone\n608-Y. -     -\n' . BUSINESS ANID|      ,\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA8SAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.  W   WIDOOWSON\u25a0& CO., AS-\ntayers -301 Josephine St.. Nelson\na S. ELMES. ROSSLAND, B  C\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Rep.\nEngineers ano survexprs\nR K COATES. STE. NO 8. 373\nBaker St., Nelson. Phono 1118\nB.C Lands Surveyor.\nBOYD 6 AFFLECK, 218 fljSRE St..\nNelson, B.C Surveyor. Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 893   824  Vernon. St\nROOFING OB ROOFERS'\n__Ti'_ft J6B Vb'B, LfeSS MONEY\nPhone H. Pedersen, 1781-R-l\nMan Who Jumped\nFrom Bridge Identified\nVANCOUVER IQP) - A man\nwho plunged to hit death Sunday\nfrom Lions Gate Bridge has, been\nidentified by police as -44-year-old\nJohn Ball, The body,hat not been\nrecovered.        .'.., v-.     \u25a0'\"'\npolice found .identification on a\ncoat and a letter In the victim's\nboarding house room addressed to\nhit parents. The letter indicated\nBall was despondent.\nBridge tender George Kelly-ttid\nhe saw the tntn'cllrnbing over the\nparapet ti ' ';;\u25a0>< <-,\u25a0\u25a0'- \u25a0' 7\n. \"I thought he wai ont of the\nworkmen who have been here all\n,week,\" Kelly, stld. \".When I looked\nagain he wis climbing over an\nouter rail, and I said'to him: \"It's\nnot as bad as all that, Is it?\"\n\"He didn't gay a thing,\" the bridge\ntender added. \"Just started lowering himself a- foot at a time until\nhe hung by his hands. Then he let\nI go.\" \".-...'.\nVICTORIA\u2014 The government it\nready to do husiness again on forest\nmanagement? licence:1 Land tnd\nForest Minister R. E. Sommers has\nannounced, .  ;\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0   \\ ,:\u25a0>\u25a0\/ '\nNo .action has heen tiken Oft\nlicences during the political up-\nt avals ot the put year exoept in\nthe case of Celgtr,       -,    '\u201e\nDuring that period the government considered a royal commission\ntp e-iqulfe into the whole-achem*\nbut-dropped It In favor of a review\nof the scheme' by the mlhiatM himself. -' ti'-:.-     \u25a0'  '    '   '\u25a0,-.:\nMr. Sommers outlined chang*\u00bb in\npolicy.   ,. i, *\u25a0\u2022\u2022..\nPUBLIC TO USE ROAD8 f\nThe public Is to htve access to'\nthe: roads built by logging;., companies on their licence areas on\nholidays or tt ttmis whtn thit dott\nhot cause undue: tire hazard or undue Inconvenience ln the llcencee's\noperations, f.' '\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 \u2022;.-*.'\u25a0.'\n. 'Tht llitnett must put.Into tht\nmanagement pltn til tho timber\nwhloh ho owns or mty buy In the\nfuture. ?\u25a0\n'  A pertain proportion of the timber to be cut from any licence tret\nby. any big company must. be contracted to small independent logging operators. The exact percentage will be specified in etch contract and will dtpend on economic\ncircumstances.  Where there  is  a\nlarge cnnetntrttlon i of small operators whose, future. livelihood may\nbe endangered by the granting of\nI big licence, the percentage will bt\nhigh. In remote areas where there\nire no'established operators it will\nut' trntll.-:-.?-'--1' -..'\u2022' \u25a0'-.\nPIRMANINT SgTTHMENTS\n, This scheme mty go t long yey\nto remove one o< tho bitterest. ob<\nitctions to tht mtntgement licence\npltn since III Inception.- the clilm\nof hundreds of small optratora that\nIt would eventually rob them of\nai_ nwihfiedv 77. f \u25a0, -\u25a0\u25a0*i'i;.:..-\n111 remote trtts, the UcanceeS\nmust undertike tt set up permanent\ne\u00abtiMunititl,, .-\nWithin a \"reaso*nahie time\" tfter\ngating t Uctnce tny company mutt\ntti up \"modern conversion unit\u00bb\"\nfor the utilization of waste Whert\nthis is economically possible. Thlt\nmeans the government holds i\nwhlphand over tny operator Indulging In wasteful cutting.   .\u2022\u2022'\u25a0?\u25a0\nMining companies are to be permitted   to   use   logging' company\nroads either by mutual arrangement\nor .with resort to arbltratfbn. -\nThirty-two applications for li-\ncencas.have accumulated diirlng the\n?*ttt year, both large and, amtll,\nhey htve; bten advertising and\nawait government action, Mr. SCm-\nmers' announcement means the\ngovernment will now start ruling on\nthem-v.'- ' '-...  '?..\u25a0'      .-.-'.'''\u2022\nAnother 10 licences, have;been,\ngranted but \"reserved\", that i? held\nup pending 7 submission ;bt final\nworking pltn, 7\nTORONTO STOCKS\n'-     (Closlhq Prleit)\nMINES\nAcadia .Uranium .\". 19K\nAkaltcho  ,        \u201e \u201e... 1,10\nAmerican Y K  .....,..'......_.,.,;, . 3i' a\nAnglo Huronitn '.... ' 12.80 j\nArjon     ,...-. ,.....\u201e\u201e..\u00bb ,\u201e.., ,10\nArmiatlce ... ,  ,17\nAumajue ..,\u201ek, y...\u201e ti 'lity\nAunor' ., -...'.,,\u201e\u201e...?.i ;^  J.49 '\nBagamac   ^....._..._ ,23%\nBarymln  \u201e _.\u201e!. 1.40\nBase Metsils  , \u201e\u201e...;.. >',  ,28\nBevcourt \u25a0 \u201e\u201e\u201e. ii- .47\nBobjo.  ......_,;,...,;.\u201e\u201e..  ,  .33\nBralorne  TV..;.\u201e\u201e.,. ........... 4,08 :\nBrewls R L r.,..;  ' .12\nBroulan       _ _ 2,35\nBuffalo Ank .,.' 7... .68\nBuff Can      '   .21\nCampbell R L  8.40 '\nCentral Patricia \u2014.... \".98 ;\nCentral Pore       \u201e ,.21\nCons Gold Arrow  1.00.\nChesterville <  : ,58\nChlmo G ,-: ..:..,... _ 1.48\nCochenour    .\u201e..  i 1.12\nCons M- It S ;..; ,- 26.75\nConwest    < ,. ,  4.45\nDome   v....  ,.  17.85,\nDonalda  ,\u201e..-.\u201e - \u25a0 ,84%\nDuvty   , ,?... ..\u201e .32\nEast Malartlo .J. ... '2.02\nEtst SuIUvtn?......-..\u201e.\u201e.......;,,< -' 4.D.:\nEstella ::...:. ;....:\u201e...?.....- 88.\nEureka.,     .'. Ji... .72\nFalconbridge  .....?.....\u201e.. i 16.25?\nFrobisher    5.50\nHollinger :....  14.00\nHomer YK  .23\nHudson Bay ..; ..\u2014 48.50\nInspiration ...,.,.__.. : ... 2.05\nInt Nickel   ... 41.00\nJacknife, ,...-. - .12\nJollet Que 33,\nKelore   ^6;\nKerr Addison ' 19.75-\nKlrk-Hudson Bay , .75-\nKlfkland Lake .....:  .85 '\nLabrador  8.18\nLake Dufault  ,87\nLakeshore _\u201e '.  6.63\nLeitch '...'. ... .73\nLexindin     .:.......  .12\nMacDonald ....:..... - J8\nMacassf . ,.;\u25a0, ._ 1.80\nMacLeod Cockshutt.'_;.'.  2.05\nMadsen R L v..?.....,.,:.,' - 1.70\nMalarUc'G F 1 -.-.. 1.58\nMclntyre' :..\".....  56.00\nMoneta 7, ....'. ......i^~-  .43,\nMylamaqiSe -...\".  .60\nNew Algery,....:..,..-...^-. .12%.\nNew Bidlamaque ..\u2014\u201e\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  .16\nNew Calmnet ....^....?..;\u201e ..- .82\nNbranda ':'.   .;.....,.....i ~~,. 68.50\nNormetala   ..\u2014 2.95\nNew Laguerre  Jf>\nNorth Inca .. ..-  .SiVi\nO'Brien .....:..;?..,...........  .82\nOsisko     .?...... .\u201e      .50\nPaymaster    ......1.      .4J\nPioneer   .'-,: _    1.85\nPlacer Develop ..\u201e';.;.: .,   85.00\nPreston E D      2.62\nQuebec Lab     .16V4\nQueenston .,       .33\nQuemont -,   17.25\nReeves Mac  ti.     1.00\nRoche L L j. - 11\nSherritt Gordon  .....-.'\u25a0   4.88\nSigma      7.35\nSllvermiller -:i.      .67\nSiscoe  \u201e -\u25a0    .39\nRadiore Uranium \u2022       .57\nStadacona       .35\nStarratt Olsen 18\nNrlann BatUj tft?ma\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n\u2022 180 per lint flrat insertion tnd\nnon-consecutivo insertions\n,   lie line -per consecutive insertion titer first insertion\n46c line for g c6nstcutlV4| Insertions\n$1.56 lino, for month 126 consecutive insertions)  Box numbers  lie > extra   Coven -arty\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC .(LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc.-20c ptr Une,\nfirst. insertion,  tti) ptr  line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% POR PROM?*1 PAYMENT\n-,,->.-'\u25a0 Subscription Raton      ' \u2022\n(Not, More Thin Listed Hero)\nBy carrier, per week.\nin advance ,     .20\nBy carrier, ear year-    $13.60\n\u25a0   United States. United Kingdom:\nOne month !      ,,.....,...   $1.85\nThree.montht  .'.:..' .8.75\nSix. thonthi   _>__-..^ ;i 7.50\nOne year. U.00\nMail ip Canada, outside Nelsoh:\nOne month       ,1.00\nThree monthi ,. -...-   2,76\nSti monthi _:,.    6.50\nOne year lO.oO\ntVhert extra postage It required,\nabove rates plut postage.\nOil Workers Take\n4% Wage Increase\n' PBNVER (APKTh*e Oil Workers' Internatlonolj Union (CIO) announced Monday it hat retched\nagreementi with almost all major\nUnited Stttot'oll compihlts with\n.which it hu .contracts for.t four\nner cent general wage Increase.\nThe only exception li: tht Sinclair Oil Corp. and its subsidiaries,\nthe union said. Negotiations with\nSinclair are scheduled for July 29\nin New York City.\nTht four ptr cent increase will\ntvertgt ibout hjht centi an hour\n-per employee, a union spokesman\nMid..  \u25a0'.-.\u2022- .-..   \u2022\u2022i-taiJi,\u2122;;\nAmong the compihlts\/Involved\ntrt Socony-Vtcuu'hi1,' 'Giil^'^Sh'tll,\nTexas Co, Richfield, Pure, several\nStandard companies' and subsidiaries, Phillips, Union OU, Tide Water\nAssociated, Continental, Atlantic,\nand some smaller firms..\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW .-YORK ,4CP);--Spot prices:\nLetd, N.Y.,\".4r.-'-:.v\u2014   7.\nZinc; East St. Louis, .11. '-.-,\n.Tin, n. y., ,8oy\u00ab. .;,\"\u2022       .   ^\nWinnipeg Grain    %.\n.WINNIPEG tCP*\"-Winnipeg\ncash prices:,'       > .    -\nOata-No. 1 feed, ,68\u00ab. '.\nBarley-No, 1 feed, 1.13%.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES .\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne  .7' .*.;.\nCariboo Gold .........~\u2122\nEsteUt        ;... w;,..:s.\nGlint Mascot -..-....\nPend Oreille:. ;.. \u201e\t\nPioneer Gold  .;..... \u00a3\nQuatsino f;; .....\nSheep Creek\t\nSilver. Ridge\t\nSliver Standard\t\nWestern Uranium ...i......-\u2122.\u201e\nOILS\nAnglo Can \u2014\nA P Cons \u2014- ,\t\nCal_Ed..r ,......\u201e fi.\nCalmont  .  -,..'.,-:\u2014i~.\nINDUSTRIALS\n.85\n3.95\n1.05..\n.56\n.46\n-4.20\n1.80\n..   27\n..   65,\n.14\n..   05\n2.08\n5.60\n..29\n10.00\n1.20\nsteep Rock -...-.....\nSudbury Cont .\t\nSylvanite    -  ....-....\u201e\nTeck Hughes \t\nTomblU :\nUnited Keno\t\nUpper Canada  -\u25a0\nVentures   ;....\t\nViolamae \t\nOILS\nB A C-ll .......\nCentral Leduc ...........\nCentral Explorers ......\nChemical Research ....\nDel Rio ............' -\t\nHome\t\nimperial Oil\t\nMacDqiigal Segur ,\t\nMid 'C0nt ._...-.\nNat Pete  \t\nRoxana \u2014.\nUnited OUt 7 \t\nINDUSTRIALS   7\nAbltlbl \u201e ,..   \t\nAlgoma Steel :\u2014..*,.\nAluminum  ....._..-\u201e.\nArgus ......I..........\nAtltiJSt \u25a0:...\u25a0\u25a0, .-....\u2022-\nBell .Telephone .....\u2014\nBrazilian   ,\t\nEC Power.A\t\nB C Power B\t\nBuri SteW  \u2122\t\nCan Cement: .:\u00bb. ~.\nCan BreWerlet ..\u201e.\u201e.,..\nCtn Canners ....._-.._..\nCm Pte Riy .......\nCons M & S -.\nDiit Satgrtm  .;...,,\t\nDOm Stttl. It Coal B\nFanny Firmer \t\nCord A- ..;\t\nGatlneau     ...,\u201e-.,\u201e..-..,\nWparitLdu\u2014\u201e_,\u201e,\nWdp Tobttco .:.\u2122\u201e\u2122.\nIht NiOkel  \u2122\u201e...w\nkllvinatir  ..'. ?-;..-.\nLOblaw A -..-._..\nLOblaw b ;..;.; ,..\u201e\u201e,.\nMatsty Harris ......-.._..\nNat Steel Ctr ,- '...\nShea Brew  ?\u2122..^.\u201e\nSicks Brew  .........\nSimpsons A:...........\t\nSouthana^\u2022\t\nSteel of-Canada .\n6.80\n.88.\n1.32\n2.10\n.22\n.8.45?\n1 125V\n17.28\n2.48\n18.78\n2.75\n4.45\n1.35\n2.15\n8.08 '\u2022\n30.50\n.19\n.19\n2.50\n.20%\n.90\nStandard* Paving \u201e.i\nUnion Gas of Csn .\n13%\n86\n47%\n12\n16%\n39%\n9%\n34%\n8%\n19%\n78\n20%\n'27%\n25%\n26%\n27%\n11%\n217\n627\n21%\n80%\nn'.\n\u00ab;.(\n22\n42%\n43%\n8%\n25%\n30%\n25\n18%\n24%\n32\n20%\ni   30%\nPOUICE OFFICER ROBERT- HULTLAND of Pasadena, Calif.,\nholds back trafflo for several long minutes ai Richard, a wtndtring\nturtle who's In no hurry, tlnblti across the street. Richard, tn Itinerant, arrived In-tht neighborhood only, recently. His name Is stuck\non hit back with adhesive tape,\u2014(AP Wlrephoto)     -       '\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (Apj-A hesitant decline greeted the truce In Korea.\nThe fall extended to between one\ntnd two points in key sections; with\nmott declines in sintU fractions.\nCanadian Issues were mixed,\nCanadian Pacific lost %, Dome\nMinis \"dropped %, aiidiHiram Walker advanced %.-McIhiyr\u00abr Interna-\ntionaliNlckel.and Distillers Seagram\nwere unchanged.\nTORONTO tCP)-Pricas tended\nlower toward .the close. The range\nof fluctuation waa well within t\nhalf index point. V\nMONTREAL (CP)-Prlces greeted the Korean armistice news. With\na steady to mixed trend in dull afternoon dealings.\nSenior.metalsV senior oils, steels,\nutilities, paper's- and miscellaneous\nindustrials were Irregular, while\ncarriers, beverages and banks were\nunchanged, i. .\nL,ONDONyS(iijtir\"'\"-'\u2014 A certain\namount of caution\" wis evident, with\na general inclination to await a lead\nfrom. Wall Street, Conditions wire\nvety quiet with a tendency to test\nsmaU amounts here and there. Gilt-\nedged i issues rose a small fraction\nin 'early dealings. Bank shares Were\nfirm. 7\na*:\nHope UJ. Will\nUnrest Grows in\nU.S. Business\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C. (CP)\u2014\nRenewed efforts to i bolster sales of\nB. '0.' salmon to Britain, a? once\nheavy-buyer, wUl be launched this\nfall by Canada's Department of\nFisheries.' ' '\u25a0 .'. 7 '\u25a0\u25a0 '\\.     '    ,   7\nFISh company operators and fishermen, representatives here gOt this,\nassurance Saturday from Fisheries\nMinister James Sinclair'When he\naddressed themat a spac!at?\"ilon*\npolitical\" luncheon in-the midst Of\nhis election campaign visit to the\nfar north riding of Skeerta.\nHe said Fisheries Department officials, possibly - accompanied -by\nhimself if he is still a cabinet minister, will go to Britain,in the fall\nin ari attempt to rejuvenate B. C.'s\nsurplus-ridden fishing industry.\nRecent sale of. 205,00 cases of\ncanned salmon to Britain\u2014the first\nBritish order in two years\u2014is re-!\nminding Britons that Canadian varieties are \"much better\" than the\n''soft\" Russian salmon they have\nbeen giving preference, Mr. Sinclair Stated.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 The cattle\nmarket was only moderately active,\nwith good choice dry-fed butoher\nstiers under 100 pounds barely\nsteady. Heavy butcher steers were\nunder pressure .and being discounted $1 per cwt Butcher, helf ers\nwere iteady to weak.\nHogs closed last week 25 cents\nhigher at $32, while cows were -30\ncents higher at $15.50 to $16.' -\nGoodVto choice light .dry'fed\nbatcher steers, $18 to $19,507 -\nGood to choice heivy butcher\nsteers,- $17 to $18.50; common to medium, $18 to $17.80,   -V7.7    ,-V '-'\u25a0'\nGood to choice butcher heifers,\n$16.50 to $17.50: common lo medium,\n$11 to $15.50.\nGood cows, $8.75 to $9,60; common\nto medium, $7,28 to $8\u00a30; ctnntrs\ntnd cutters, $5 to $7. .ti'..'.:-\nGood' buUs, $12 to. $12.50; common\nto medium, $9 to'$11.50?\nGood stocker and feeder' steers,\n$16 to $17; common to medium,\n$10.50 to $15,50.\nWestcoast Witness\nPredicts B. C. Sales\nWASHINGTON <_P) \u2014'A'Witt-\ncoiit Transmission Company engineer testified Monday his company\nexpects to s*U nearly. 7,060,060,000\ncubic feet of natural gas In lta first\nyttr of o'peration.in British Columbia mtrkets. ..,\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\":[-\nFulman Sample, consulting engineer, told the U.S. Power Commission examipfer, Glen Law, that company sales are expected to cl|mb to\n16,000,600,000 cubic feet lii lti fifth\nyear of-operation. ' v\nWestcoasfs gat. would be obtained ln Alberto and be delivered\nto Canadian cities tn route to iht\nPacific-coast\nSample said It Is proposed to\nbring gaS to Prince George, Quesnel, Williams Lake, Kamloops and\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 28; 1953 ^ ft\n.: .\".'     By 8AM DAWSON\nNEW-YORK (APl-Tht uneaiy\ntruce lust launched -in Korea is\nmatched .by uneasy business sentiment in the United States.    '-,\nTrue, almost all phases of U.S,\nbusiness and? industry art booming.\nAnd business men ore- becoming\nmore confident thtt good times will\ncontinue if nothing upsets the applecart \u25a0 . : ...\n'Both..U.S. government and industry leaders are assuring the pubUc\nthat this cease-fire won't change defence or:ttx plans on the,one\nhand,, or business production tnd\nexpansion, plana On iht other.    . i ,\nUnetslntss, however, comes from\ntwo sources; 1. Widely-held belief\nthat the boom must be near or- tt\nits peak;-. 2. eFar that a psychological let-down after a cease-fire\ncoupled with jubilation over Russia's internal troublta wii). ilow\ndown, government spending is't\nsupport of prospirtiy and also make\nconsumers tnd busitnss men alike\nmore cautious in their buying.\nThis could start tht rtcession so\nmany U. S. business men anticipate.\nAnd lt could make the recession\nsharper and deeper than commonly\nexpected. :  \u2022\u2022 -      i-\nMany business leaders, however,\npublicly pooh-pooh this,\nGeneral Motors president H, H,\nCurtice, says a cease-fire in Korea\nwill have little effect on the rate\nof military spending for the rest of\nthis year. He notes that 20 per cent\nof U.S.-industrlal output now goes\ntor defence, tnd doubts if any cutback would affect more than four\nper cent of over-aU industrial out-,\n\u25a0put-\" - ''?..''    -\nOther business estimates on the\ncut-back range from two to five\npet cent of total gross national\nproduct, the sum of all tht goods\nand servants produced, ..;\nThe U. S. National Association ot\nManufacturers' president Charles\nR. Slight, emphasizes that the American economy is t peacetime\neconomy, not ohe based. on.,war.\nHe* thinks the. trpce will lead to\ngains in merchandizing and design\nahd to reduction of. production\ncosts.? ,;:- a ;,.- '\u25a0\n\u25a0\"Ui 7 S.--government \u2022 economists\necho1 the \"'.belief that the business\noutlook Is good with the truce playing a minor part. Tbey warn against\n\"unjustified psychological reaotlon.\"\nAs the guns cool off ln Korea,\nhire is the U. S. business picture:\nThe cost of living has just hit an\nall-time peak.\nJobs, are plentiful most places\nand Wages, as a whole, have been\nclimbing. ..; ,'\nThe totaCyaiue-of goods and services is running at an annual rate\nof $3,880,000,000,000, compared with\n$284,000,000,000 in 1850, the year the\nKorea fighting broke out\nPersonal incomes\u2014wages,, salaries, dividends, rents\u2014Is running at\nan annual rateof around $286,000;-\n000,000, compared with $226,000,000,-\nOOOin'1850. :'.-''\"'\u25a0.:   '\nOut of thla*^\"Consumers now are\nspending at-an .annual rate of m.ort\nthan $226,000,000,000, compared with\npersonal consumption expenditures\nof $194,000,000,000 in 1050.\nConsumer spending, therefore,\nfaro overshadows the some $45,000,-\n000,000 military Spending rite, and\nis the real bulwark of business\nprosperity.'\"\nBut\" U. S, business has some worries?       ' -    \" ', -' ,..\nCommodity prices in general\nhave tended to b* weak for-:more\nthan i yttr-pow. Surpluses havt re-\nreplaced shortages. Steel tnd t few:\nother metals are about all that's\nhtrd to get these days.\nTotal business inventories tre\naround $78,000,000,0vil, i record.\nhigh. When the wtr started :th\u00aby\nwere only $1)4,000,000,000. True, to-\nday's inventories trt not out ef line\n.now with lnoetstd silts.. Tht\nworryVcOmei if sales should turn\ndownward with tht truce. Thtn.\nhigh'Invtntorits could fluiekly bt-\neomi i bvirditt. 7 '7   *i\nChurchMarks\nHistoric Sli*\nESTERHAZy, Sask.- (CP)7- Ah\nold stone church a few miles south\nof this village in southeast Saskatchewan, overlooking the \u2022 VroUing'\nhills and banks of the Qu'Appelle\nriver valley, marks the site of tilt\nfirst Hungarian settlement in Canada\nThe? Kaposvar church . stands\nWhere a:group bf 35 Hungarian families under the direction' of Count\nPaul .d'Estej-hasy, a member of the\nUsterhazy family, one of the oldest\nand richest lh; Hungary, established\nan agricultural, settlement in 1886,-\nThe- couht .Who conceived\", the\nidea of forming Such a colony shortly after, arriving' in the United\nStates from his native land, obtained permission Of the federal\ngovernment in Canada and the help\nof tho CPR, and from his New York\npity ' headquarters,' conducted ,' t\ncampaign to arouse interest ln the\nfroleet ? '   \u25a0\nHe gaUiered 35 families and.left\nthe U.S. The CPR made farm-machinery available to.the settlers on\nlong-term ptyments.\nWINtstR too SlVERI\nTh.e colony did not flourish, however. Most ot the settlers found the\nfirst winter too. severe, and two-\nthirds of thtm lift the next summer. 0 .  \u25a0 \u25a0- ,\nBut Count- d'Esterhary remedied\nthe situation lh the spring of 1868\nwhen he arrived from Hungary\nwith 20 new enthusiastic lamilies.\nThe community grew steadily and\nfinally in 1902, a railway branch\nline was built through the district.\nThe first Kaposvar church, a\nmodest log structure, was erected\nin 1802. A rectory of native stone\nwaa added shortly tfter the turn\nof tho century, and in 1907, work\nOh the present building began.- .\n' The PiHth Priest Rev. J.-Plrot?\nwent to hli native Belgium - 'and\nbrought back working plans and\nhis town brothers who.wart stone\nmtsohs       .  '   1\nOOLORFUU 8TONE\nThe structure required 1800 loads\nof stone hauled, by sleigh in the\nwinter. The stones, in' their natur-,\nal briUiint rtdtttte, were cut and\nput up with mortar madt from\nsand and chalk. '\u2022\nWhen the. golden jubilee of the\nfounding of tht Colony wis celebrated in 1036, p Stone cairn, wis\nerected honoring tbe. original, settlers? ''s^Uly . . '\u25a0'\u25a0 ' \u25a0'\" ... -f\nA One of'the original pioneers, tie\nIds Gyuricska, still lives in the district, Man? children, grandchildren\nand even great-grandchildren of\nthost settlers also live in the area,\nseveral of them farming the same\nhomesteads os their ancestors,\n,. \u25a0 .  - \u25a0      ',. \u25a0\nEvidence Confirms\nGaspe Murders\nGASPE, 'Que '(CP) r-Bi; Jean*\nMarie Roussel of\u2022 Montreal, provincial medico-legal expert, testified\nMonday at .a coroner's inquest that\ntwo of ,the. three Pennsylvania\nbear-hunters whose remains were\nfound in the Gaspe wilderness; were\nshot ,\nDr..Roussell said\"examination of\nthe remains ot Richard Llndsey, 17,\nand; Fred Ctaar, 20, showed 'evidence they had been shot ind thilr\ndeaths due to \"external violence\ncaused byvfirearms.\"     7    \" .'\u25a0\"\u25a0 7\nThere- were no slgns; of.'-violence\non the remains of Eugeno Llndsey, 45, said.Dr. RousJel.-He added\nthat tha older man's skull and chest\nare missing,,    . ,,..,?\nThe deaths of Uie hunters, all\nfrom Hollldays burg, Pe, have already been described by a leading\nlaw enforcement official as \"murder, cold-blooded and planned.\"\n\u25a0- Dr. Roussel said he agrees that\nthe men were murdered because\ntheir deaths \"necessitated the intervention of a fourth person's.\"' - !;\nHli eye Is badly battered but\nRtd Schoendlenst, 8t LoulS\nCardinals'- second baseman, hit 1\nsmile In hit New York hotel room.\nRed wu put over the eye whon he\nwas hit by a thrown bill ai he\nwas running out on Infield hit\nagainst the New York Giants In\ntecond, Inning bf the previous\nnight's gtme at the Polo Grounds.\nTen stitohti were needed to clou\ntlie 'wound.\u2014(AP-Wlrtnhoto.)      -1\nDrifting Yacht\nArrives Liscomb\n\u2022MSCOMB, N. S. (<;P)-The mItt-*;\ning Nova Scotia yacht Gwenman\nSailed into Liscomb harbor early\nMoh'day With four tired and hungry\u2022:\npersons aboard, ending a week-long\nsea and air search.\nThe two women, t 14-yetr-old\nyOuth, ind veteran captain, who\nmade'up her crew, had; been three\ndays -without food or water. Thty\nhad drifted helplessly since list\nThursday,-not knowing where they\nwore. Despite the hardships, ill\nwere In good condition. A United\nStates vessel finally put them on\ncourse.\n. The Gwenmah's skipper,'SO-yeir-\nold Mrs. \u25a0 Gwen' Cameron 61, Spring-:\nhill, N. S\u201e. said; \"I never stw the\nwaves so big nor the tog so thick.' ti\ni'.y'There's.no'wordJo txpre\u00ab how\nhappy we are to reach port.\"\n'The 42-foot yacht, on a maiden\n'cruise in the Gulf of St. Ltwrence\nand adjacent waters, \u25a0 disappeared\nafter leaving Coso Blanche, Nfld.,\nlast Tuesday for Sydney. -, j\nLiscomb, about 100 miles northeast el-Halifax and 200 milts south-\nwast of Sydney?\" is far off her-\nplanned course and well south of\nthe;area where two planet and\"six,\nships,-'including the-cruistr 45'ue^\nbee, searched for her, \u25a0; '   ', -.\nIATEST REPORT     ?\nAsk your.lnvsslmenl Dsoler\n. lor lh\u00bb loWsl Oopdrt\nond Prosptclui ol\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nlid.\nX\nMerrltt, all In Brltllh Columbia, by\n\u2022tit to tht inland Git Company, a\nnowly-organlzed utility.\n- In'addition to tho Canadian service, Westcoast slSo proposed to deliver Its along the coastal area of\nWashington and Oregon south to\nPortland;?\nSample .predicted a large gas use\nIn the. Inland B. C. communities\n\"very quickly\" after It becomes\navailable because of the high cost\nof other'forms of fueL\ng=Si\nS   Good\nPRINTING\nIs Good\nBUSINESS\n*      _a \" \\ I\nGoo(d looking letterheads\nand envelopes,\ncombined'y\/ilfi ths latest\ntype-fgeesf\nand modei'n designs,\nbuilds prestige\nfor your business  . .;'.'.?\nLpoktous for the finest'\nprinting work, ALWAYS!\nCALL 144\nOur representative will bt\n. on tho spot to ottltt you.\n[ommER[i||\nPRmnnf\nNELSON\nDAILY\n t*jjlfp\u00a7j8l^\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1953\n\"Someone Lonely\nHas: Just B&seel hy-* *.M\nNo other phrase has aver expressed so weH\n\u2022',';   what a woman seeks in a fragrance,\n'\u25a0\u25a0-'\":    '\"'.   \u25a0 ' '*\u00ab <.\"\u25a0\u2022'     ',' ,'' *,   \"'.'\nYeu hay* ih'af fragranci liv\nff^7?rcoTvT|:7?f\n;    * ' 40POR8\n$1.50 Each\nM A MM\nBy BILL B088\nCtntdltn Press Staff Writer\nIN KOREA (CP) - Thanks to\ntheir Katcoms, Canadians here noW\nappreciate better that old saying\nabout the \"patience ot an Oriental\".\nThey also have learned that it' has\nits limits. 7\nThere are 300 RoK Army soldiers attached to the Canadian brigade, distributed among its infantry sections. They are called \"Kat-\neomSj\" short \u2022\u25a0for- Korean 7 Army\ntroops attached to the Commonwealth division: '\u25a0;-..\nAs)' 'fighting men the Koreans\nhave- won full mirks from their\nCanadian comrades, whose uniforms they wear and whose rations\nthey-share.\nTOPNOTCH SOLDIER\nOne Patricia platoon leader, Lt.\nChris Snider of Toronto, told The.\nCanadian Press: ' \" ... -..-\n\"As soiaiers theyre on a par with\nanything we^ave here at Uie same\nlevel. Our Trial know that and .inspect them. They're as hard as\nnails.*\nSnider said when the RoKs Were\nintroduced to their Canadian rifles,\nSten guns and Bren guns, they\ncaught on quickly. &i|\n\"They excel in practical weapon\nhandling, Alter watching an.NCp\nstrip and reassemble a Bren twice\nthey were able to do it' themselves.\"\nInvariably i Katcom's weapon\nis .better maintained than a Canadian's.\nPte. Ronald Hlckt of Ottawa\nsays: \"I've never seen a Canadian\n\u2014I don't ctre who he is \u2014 take\ncare ot hla rifle the way. they do.\"\nAs tor parade-square drill, long\nconsidered a criterion of soldiering\nand discipline, the Katcoms love it.\nRSM \"Silver\" Lee ol the Pa-\ntrlclts, whose stick has whipped\ninto shape every ceremonial guard\nIn the brigade since\" he arrived\nhere, iay'sv,' v.\/.\n- \"Tliey'' go for drill In t big way.\nThey, letrn It Just like that, .Explain the command, show the movement, and they've got it. -.., .\nPATIENCE ON DUTY\nIf the Koreans exhibited patience\nunder instruction before being Com\nmitted to the,'line, they've-used lt\naplenty since.\ntaapt,,iArt. Kemsley of Calgary,\nsecond-in-command of- a-Patricia\ncompany, said: \u25a0\u25a0 \"On operational\nduties, once they know what they're\nsupposed to do they're marvellous,\n; \"They'll stand or He down absolutely motionless for hours, Then\nthey'll see or hear movement, and\ngrunt. Alwaysvthey produce something our fellows haven't detected.\nAnd they've an uncanny ability for\ndistinguishing between friendly end\nenemy movement out in no- man's\nland.\"       '-\"\u2022     ...\nBut Oriental patience has its limits, too, as one regiment discovered.-\nThe Katcoms, as well as the Canadians, know that they're supposed to get equal treatment.\nThit regiment was in reserve and\nusltife the chance to hold smokers\nfor, its companies in turn. One occurred at the time President Syngman Rhee released the non-Com-\nmunifjt Korean prisoners of war.\nMI8TAKEN FOR MUTINY\nIrate Canadians of the partying\ncompany, allowed politics to intrude\nand, cut down the festive free beer\nissued from two to one for the\nKatcoms.\nTo \u25a0 mart the offended Katcoftls\nwithdrew from the Smokerv\nThe, now-dlscomfltted Canadians\ntried to cajole thert back. No dice.\nThen they ordered thert back.\nStillnodlct. . '\n. Mistaking the: men's collective\npride for mutiny the regiment even\nsought a \"ringleader,\" had trucks\nbrought up and transported the\nKoreans back to its rear headquarters for questioning.\nBrigade headquarters, however,\nunofficially intervened and the\nword was passed down that equal\ntreatment meant just that. When\ntwo free beers are issued Katcoms\nqualify top. .        7\nUsually the beer department Is\nexactly Where the, Canadians show\ntheir good fellowship. The Koreans\nearn the equivalent of 50 cents a\nmonth\u2014enough for two beers. Invariable a. Katcom's beer Is bought\nfor him b ysome Canadian in his\nsection out of his own pocket.\nScriptwriters Scan\nChristie Synopsis\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Holiywood\nmiy. make f movie about John\nChristie, the London mass murderer\nwho strangled at least seven Women. .Ronald Maxwell, 22-year-old\nnewspaper -num; said two scriptwriters' are lh town preparing a\nsynopsis of Christie's life of crime,\nbased on - Maxwell's book, The\nChristie Case, .7'\nSOMEf(AP)\u2014Italy opened a huge\nInternational agricultural exposition\n! On the outskirts ot Rofne in buildings started-by Benito Mussolini\nfor a 1842 World's fair. The modern, marble buildings, .covering\nhundreds of acres, were. only recently finished.        -    - >.-   '\u25a0;-:'\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n\/-MASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone W\n676 Bakor St\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nQ.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody end Paint Work e Specialty\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\n'    OPTOMETRIST\n, VISUAL TRAININB\nModloal Arta Building\n206 Phont 141\nMonthly Deficit\n<JTTAWA (CP)-The federal joy\nernment went into the red by $15,-\n009,000 in June ts expenditures outpaced an increased flow of revenues, the finance department reported today.\n.First monthly deficit in three\nmonths and the first June deficit\nin four yeara, it cut the surplus in\nthe first quarter of the 1053-54 fiscal year, to $185,000,000, down from\n$262,475,000 in the smaller 1052-53\nperiod. .   7\nRevenues during June rose. to\n$371,932,000, up $43,065,000 from\n$323,867,000 last year. But expenditures jumped to $337,141,000' a rise\nof $70,620,000 from $307,521,000.\nBig jumps in spending were recorded tor the air force and in federal payments to provinces under\nfederal-provincial tax agreements.\nAir force . expenditures rose' to\n$77,287,000 from $48,008,000 last\nyetr, more thin double thtt spent\nfor the. army and more than quadruple the $18,603,000 for the navy,\nAmy spending was down slightly\nfrom $38,709,000 last year, while\nnival expenditures were slightly\nhigher thin list year's $17,208,000.\nPayments to provinces .tripled to\n$78,881,000 from $23,705,00.. Higher\npayments and the entry bf Ontario\ninto the tax pacts caused the rite,\ntn official said. \u25a0 t   .        .\nOther major expenditures showed\nfamily allowance payments rising\nto $28,750,000 from 327,470,000 last\nyear end the interest on the public\ndebt increase to $38,512,000\" from\n$34,581,000. \"V       '\u2022'-..-\nRevenue from personal Income\ntaxes rote to $95,613,000 from $72,-\n087,000, Corporation income - tax\nyields Increased to $109,047,000 from\n$105,813,000. In tht indirect- tax\nfield, the yield from excise taxes\nyielded $81,488,000, up from.$71,128,-\n000.   \u25a0: .;   it,\nTht Mlcmtc ntrat tor Prince Edwtrd blind wis Abtgwtlt, meaning \"homt on the wive.\"\nAllies Must Not Relax\nPress in Agreement ori\n''\u25a0.-\u25a0 ',..'-\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'\"   7^^'    '.,<\u25a0.' '\u25a0'''''.,\nI^son of Arinistice\nBy The Canadian Prew\nFollowing are excerpts from-editorials ln representative Canadian\nnewspapers on the Korean truce;  \u00b0\nToronto Globe and. Mail. \u2014 The\nmain: thing- to be said about- this\narmistice . is that it -accomplishes\nnothing' whatever except a cessation of tht shooting on one Far\nEastern front.    \"\nMerely to stop the war , . . wat\na desirable end in Itself; bat the\ntnice. leaves unsolved not only the\nquestion of Korea's political future\nbut ail the other issues in dispute\nbetween etst and West,'-. . . '\u2022--\u2022\nMontreal Gazette \u2014 Nothing can\never diminish the glory of the. United NatiohB struggle in Korea, It;\nwas a true instance of a collective\neffort .to stop 'aggression. It succeeded.  \u25a0 '.:;';\u2022'.\nBut communism has still to learn\nthtt any other paVt, of the world\ncould become another Korea. In\nother words, communism is-still to\nbe convinced that collective action\nagainst aggression will \"oppose its\naggressions wherever they may be\nmade?.'. .,, -'_ \u25a0 .\n. Ottawa Citizen\u2014Conclusion, of a\nKorean armistice, which the World\nhrfs awaited'for two years, npw presents humanity with fresh opportunities for.tht'attainment of a pta-\nble7peace.-?-.'.- -.-,..' \". -.. -y\nKorea today .offers'.twd.-.majbr\nchallenges, These are the country's\nrehabilitation and a political settlement. \u25a0 \u25a0 ,-.'\u2022.. .--\n(Vancouver Province \u2014 Wey have\nhoped and welted so long for a\nKorean, armistice that there is -danger we confuse it-with peace-j.-.\nThe United Natlona has-,Wibn7arni-\nIstice on a single battleground \u2014\nnot peace in the world; Many,difficult chapters lie before- us: before\nwe achieve real peace. Wa must loot\nrelax. We.miist riot let,. -dowivdtfr\nguard., \u25a0        v-..?'*.,v*!-   '\nVancouver Sun\u2014 The tlgriing Of\nthe Korean armistice means the end\nof the fighting but if-doesn't necessarily mean the end-of thewf- ... V\nJust the same, the feeling is one of\nintense relief , .. The principal\nlesson, ot Korea is that the democratic nations of the West; must\nremain united and strong to prevent worse things than Korea.'\nVancouver News-Herald' \u2014 Unfortunately, the armistice in Korea\ndoes not mean an immediate slash\nin the defence budget On the contrary, it is our sober task to continue Our state ot readiness at ail times.\nLet us hope the stand ot tht United\nNations has not been in yalh.\nToronto-Telegram \u2014 The truce\ndoes shot mean an end of trouble.\nIt leaves a treacherous enemy entrenched in strong positions from\nwhich he may resume aggression\nwhen opportunity serves. In the political conference which Is' to begin within three months, he will\nseek to win by negotiation what he\nWas unable to win by war and will,\nstrive especially to divide the Allies.. '\nMontreal-Star\u2014It is an occasion\nfor rejoicing but also an occasion\nfor sober thought. If We have won\nno spectacular military victory, we\nhave . nevertheless brought about\nthe triumph of the rule of law and\nMONTREAL DOCTOR .... Dr.\nCharles F. Martin, 85-year-old\nmedical pioneer of Montreal; In,\n1953 received the Starr award,\nhighest honor of the Canadian\nMedical Association.'The award,\nIn honor of the late Dr. Frederic\nN. C. Starr of Toronto, goes to\nthe Canadian physician or surgeon whose achievement Is so\noutstanding thlt It serves ai an\nInspiration io the medical profession. Dr, Martin Is dean of\nMcGill University medical school,\n\u25a0M0ntreal<7-(Cp photo,) '.\njustified the. c6ncept of7 Collective\nsecurity by collective action\nWinnipeg Tribune \u2014 Quiet relief\nrathef than boisterous celebration\nis the reaction that musthaVe greeted the cease fire ih. Korea in United'\nNauOnSicountrieS. Coupled with that\nquiet.rellef willht>some anger and\nsorrow that; more than two years\nwere required to reach an uneasy\narmistice with -all the. loss of life,\nthe. maiming: and the .destruction\nand misery these two .years qf bickering, of jockeying to save \"face,-\nmeant to all, concerned. All. Wes^,\nern nations should-heed well the\nwarning from President Eisenhower: We must not relax pur guard.\"\nWinnipeg Free Press: The one\nImportant consideration about the\nKorean armistice is this: Fof the\nfirst time in the history of this\nwotjd, the principle dt collective\nsecurity has been applied and has\nproved to be effective.. For the first\ntime the peace-loving natlona have\nbanded together to defend an inhO-.\ncent nation criminally attacked, The\nvictim has been defended..\"'\nVictoria Times \u2014\u2022; The salient event hi the Koreah' conflict which\nnow has-reverted to \"cold war\" status, is that for the first time in history a global organization tor peace\ntook uie field against an aggressor.\nThe'fact that the step,was taken\nat all supersedes even-the fact-that?\nthe effort to repulse aggression was\nsuccess'ful: What further problems\nremain\u2014and'they are many--c4h^\nnot obscure that glowlngVreallrV.-7 ,\nCalgary Herald: It la, we. th|rik,\npeace with honor. But it is riot victory. There has been'no surrender?\nunconditional or. otherwise, no territory has-been ceded;:noransbm\npaid. It is a .reasonable ending. .. i\nindeed the only possible endlng.that\nwe can see to a frustrating and Unsatisfactory war. .'V\nEDDY GILMORE, former Associated Press ehlef of bureau 'In\nMosoiw, and his Russian-born wlft, Tamara, view display af German optical .products In lobby of Hotel'Atlantic In Hamburg, Germany. They era enroute from Moscow to the United States.\n7-7 '   \u25a0';'\u25a0-\/   .. ' '.. v., ...  ' _(AP Wlrephoto).\n53 New Cases of\nPolio, Manitoba\nWINNIPEG (CP)- Fifty-three:\nnew cases of poliomyelitis, largest\nfigure recorded .for. any week-end\nthis year, were reported Monday by\nManitoba's department of health\nahd public welfare. The previous\nweekend, 33 cases were reported\nManitoba now has had 301 Cases\nsince Jan. 1, corhapred with 68\nfor the same period last year.\nOf the total, 100 have paralysis.\nThere have been six- deaths?\"?\u25a0''\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\n; Dr. M, R. Elliott, deputy provincial health ministry, Monday tald\nthe province-is trying to purchase\nan \"exsuff later,\" or artificial coughing machine, to assist in polio treatment at Princess Elizabeth hospital\nin Winnipeg;     \u25a0 \"\nThe one such machine in operation here now is on loan froii Dr.\nAJvan Barach of Columbia University. It is used to treat patients Who\nhave recovered their breathing\nmuscle functions but are handicapped by diminished elasticity of\nthe chest cage which prevents deep\nbreathing.'.    *-    : \"\u25a0>,\"  -'.-'\u2022\u25a0\nThis is the. first time the machine\nhas been used in Canada.\nShigerua Yoshida\nRevives Cartels\nTOKYO (Reuters)\u2014The Lower\nHouse of the Japanese Diet (Parliament), have.passed a bill to allow\na revival of cartels in Japan, v\n\u25a0Japan's \"big three\" pre-war cartels of Mitsui, Mitsubishi and Sumitomo, end about seven-others were\nsplit up into smaller firms under\nthe Allied occupation. An anti-monopoly law, was passed to prevent\nthem from setting themselves. up\nagain. >\nBut. Shigerua Yoshida's government won the approval of the\nLower House to alter this law and\nallow the big firms.to join again-\nsubject to certain government controls. '...- ',' 7\nThe government claims that cartels are more efficient than a mass\nof small firms and that controls will\nprotect the public against abuses.\nThe bill is expected to pass without much trouble through the Upper House within a week,     '\nROAD HOG >\nCORNER BROOK? Nfld. (CP>-\n-Two motorists crawled along in low\ngear for more thah half an hour on\nthe Stephenville highway when a\nyoung bull moose strolled leisurely\nahead of their car. The moose clung\nsteadfastly to his halt of the road-*\nright ip the middle.\nTrouble Rrews Behind\n1J ne_tsyl^c^\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\n. WASHINGTON <AP)-*Dlplomato\ntook over the bottle for Korea\nMonday and with the lifting of the\npressures, of open war a new sot of\nproblems and dangers' arose to\nplague Allied and Communist governments alike. -\u2022\nForemost among these on the-Allied side is the threat ot an eventual\nangry struggle between the United\nStates and Britain over, admission\ntit Red China to the United Nations. .,\nAs for tht' Communists, thore is\nspeculation already about the impact of the armistice on relations\namong Russia? Red China -arid\nNorth Korea \u2014 a situation about\nwhich Western governments know\nlittle but hope tor much.\nPRIMARY TASK\nIt is too early to toll whether the\nUneasy truce that settled over Korea's shell-churned battlefront\nmeans the beginning of. a new and\nriiorO peaceful era in the worldwide Conflict between the Communist and free nations. But officials\nhere have no doubt that it poses\nmany problems which were-beyond\naction-while Uie fighting raged.\nThe first arena of the diplomatic\nstruggle over these problems is due\ntp be the United'Nations general assembly, at a Special Session in New\nYork. The assembly's primary task\nwill be to set the stage for a political\nconference on Korean issues. That\nconference, under the truce terms,\nmust convene by late October.\nIn these sessions the' major ob\njective of the United States, arid\npresumably on other friendly notions, will bo to seek the Korean\nunification which both sides failed\nto win-In'the.war.\nThe Western allies conceive of\nthis as unification Under a non-\nCommunist government. \u2014 which\nmeans they want the Reds to' i|ive\nup North Korea; and it raises the\ncritical question: If the Reds ere\nwilling to consider this it til, what\nprice will they isk? '\nANSWER DOUBTFUL\nAuthorities here do not kriow the\nanswer. But they think the Reds\nmay ask a seat for Red China in\nthe United Nations, displacing Nationalist China; an end to trade embargoes against Red China, and satisfaction of Red Chinal claims on\nFormosa,\nThlt prospect effectively kills oft:\nany optimism in Official quarters\nabout the chances of early unification ot Korea. For while the Brit-\nish have seemed to favor a UN\nseat, for Red China once the Korean fighting ended, there is such\noverwhelming opposition to it In the\nU.S'. Congress that the Eisenhower\nadministration appears to have no\nchoice but to fight any deal along\nthat line.\n7,The issue of Formosa Iran even\nmore> bitter one for the United\nStates which recognizes the Chinese Nationalist governrnent established there and also considers that\nFormosa in hostile hands would-be\na threat to1 tht U. S. defence system\nin the western Pacific.\nBusiness Spotlight\nBetween Washington and Canada\nBy HAROLD MORRI80N\n-Canadian Press Staff Wrltir\nOTTAWA (CP).\u2014In a-scrappy\nmood, -'Canada has shipped one\ntrtde \"protest note after another to\nthe United States, but the bickering\nis far from ended.\nIt likely will be taken up with\nrenewed vigor when representatives\nof the two countries and 33 others\nmeet in Geneva Sept 17 to discuss\nthe future of the world tariff pact,\nthe Geheral Agreement and whether it can function if countries continue to break trade- promises.\nWhat has nettled Canada and\nsome other exporting countries particularly are the steps taken by the\nU.S. to restrict imports Of dairy\nproducts. Now there are proposals\nto place curbs against imports of\nCanadian oats and ground fish fillets.   .. ,\nCanada banks heavily on exports\nto maintain domestic propserity and\nannually, ships theU . S. about half\nher world exports. Last year, for example, exports to the U.S. totalled\nabout $2,300,000,000 more than half\nthe $4,300,000,000 worth of goods\nCanada shipped to all countries,\nCURBS \"8EVERE\"\nWhen new UrS. dairy curbs went\ninto effect July 1, the Canadian\ngovernment, in a note of protest,\n'THE MATSONr PREIGHTE'R; Hnwillin Pilot,\n25 feat cf lta bow crushed In, moves slowly through\na murky fog toward San Francisco harbor after It\nhad collided with the freighter Jacob Luckenbach.\nThe Luckenbach sank In S00 feet of water, IS miles I\noff tht Golden Gate. The orew of '9 aboard the\nLuckenbach Wtrt taken aboard by the Hawaiian :\nPilot. No ont wti InJuredr^-AP Wlrephoto.\nmade clear it did not consider the\nnew restrictions iny more iri con.\nformity. with International trade\npacts than the previous dairy curbs\nwhich had existed In the U. S. for\nthe last two years. , '7\nIt said the new curbs were \"severe\" and were, bound \"to raise\n\"grave problems\" not only for -International trade but also for the\nwhole structure of international cooperation. ..,  v,\nOn July 20 Canada lodged a new\nnote with the American' government,, warning of possible \"serious\nimplications\" if the U.S. imposes\ncurbs against Canadian oats and\nground fish fillets. This note was a\nlittle stlffer than the previous one\nbut-judging from the results of previous protests, the latest complaint\nmay have little impact on American\ntrade planning.\nCOULD RETALIATE\nOf course, Canada and other\ncountries affected could retaliate\nagainst the U.S. by imposing barriers against American goods. Canada has decided against this course,\nIt might jutt lead to ,more American barriers and more International trade channel blocks, officials\nsaid.\nBut'.they're not really to' throw\nin the-sponge, and some hefty verbal punching'can be expected in\nGeneva.\n..OTTAWA 4CP>-t-TIi'! irrriy Mon.\nday; issued t list of 45 personnel it\nhas reported missing or prisoner-of-\nwar In Korea. . : '' ,-.\u2022,,\nIri addition the. air force has reported one missing.   7 7,',\nSome hope \u2014 although slim in\nsome coses\u2014has beeri held that persons in the missing-category might\n-prove \"to have been captured. This\ndwindled Monday with reports\nfrom the Communists, that they will\nreturn 14 Canadians held as pris-\ntinera-0f-war,\nThe'ttmy list\"\u2014 a f-oilridup of\nnames which have all -been made\npublic in previous casualty lists-\nIncluded one officer and, 26 men\nmissirig and One officer and 17 men\nprisotters-ot-war- \u00ab'\nAmong those, missing -in - action\nwas the name of Lieut. Charles\nGordon Owen, .VartCOUver, B. C. -\nRUSMNVOY. TO IRAN   ?\n- TEHRAN (Reuters) \u2014The new\nRussian ambassador to'Iran, Ani-\ntoly LavrehtitV, has, arrived.' He replaces Ivan Sadchlkov,; Who returned to Moscow recently for reassignment jV\nFormer Nelson\nRailway Man\nDiesaf Coast\n.7 VANCOUVER  \u2014  J., M.   (Jim)\nMacArthur, well-knowr railroad Official who retired in 1050 after 48\nyears of service with the Canadian\nPacific Railway and the Northern\nAlberta Railways, died here at St.\nVincent's hospital Sunday night following a brief Illness .\nHe Ib survived by his wife, the\nfOrmer! Vivian Ross Bennett, of\nPeterborough, Ont,; two daughters,\nMrs. Warren Newcombe of Los Ap-\ngeles, Calif.; Mrs. Frank N. Watklns,\nof Trenton,. Ont, and four grandchildren; ,\ni Mr, MacArthur's last position\nwith the Canadian Pacific Hallway\nwas as superintendent at Vancouver, arid he' jointA the Northern\nAlberta Railways in July 1938, as\ngeneral manager following his retirement frort the CPR after 36\nyears\u25a0of service.\nHis practical early training and\nnatural abilities earned him the post\nof assistant superintendent in 1012.\nIn this capiclty he saw service at\nMedicine. Hat Calgary, Cranbrook,\nLethbridge end Nelson, and in 1918,\nbe went, to'- Keriora as superintendent ln charge ot the important\nLake of the Woods division.\nMr. MacArthur wa- well-known\nln Medicine Hat Alta., where he\nspent 12 years as Superintendent\nIn 1930, he left Alberta to take over\nsupervision of the CPR's Reglna\ndi-'lslon, and was there until the\nend of June, 1932, when he left\nto come to Vancouver to take over\nthe westcrmost of his company's\nmainline divisions, '\n.$&$\nArizona Splits\nPolygamy Cull\n-SHORT CREEK, Aril. (AP)-THe\nmultiple families of .polygamous\nShort Creek were split asunder today by the wrath of Arizona.\nThe state hurled a task force of\n102 officers at the little settlement\nbefore, dawn Sunday arid took into\ncustody 38 men, SO women and 283\nchildren. y:\n. It thus launched a supreme effort\nto wipe out a deep-rooted colony\nof polygamists that has operated\nnear the Utah border for 20 years.'\nGovernor Howard Pyle called the\ncult .\"the? foulest conspiracy you\ncouldk possibly imagine.\" He said\ngirls under 15- years Of age were\nforced Into marriages With men ot\nall ages, 7\nPIGTAILED BRIDES\nSix pigtailed brides were arrested\nalong with the older mates of the\nShort Creek patriarchs,\nThe adults were charged with almost a dozen different offenses,\nincluding statutory,,-rape, bigamy,\nopen and notorious,.-, cohabitation,\ncontributing to the delinquency of\nminors, and marrying the spouse' of\nanother,   *\nTwo men were accused of having\nsix Wives, two of having five, one\nof having four, and numerous others\nwith having two or three.\n, Four of the wives Wert only 13\nyears Old, two were 14 and two 15.\nLeroy Johnson, 85, a purported\nleader of the cult spoke for the\ncolony. \"\n\"We have done no wrong,\" he\nasserted. \"We just practice pur religion according to our beliefs. We\nbelieve in the original tenets of\nthe Mormon'Church.:1 :   ,\nBatista Imposes\nMartial Law\nHAVANA\/ (AP) -President Ful-\ngencio Batista slapped stern martial'law over Cuba Monday after\ncrushing an attack by some 230\narmed rebels on two army posts in\neastern Qiba. Fifty-four persons\nwere reported killed, Included 35\nof the attackers,, 18 soldiers arid a\npolice sergeant\n-The government accused former\npresident Carlos Prlo Socarras,\nousted by Batista's coup in March,\n1952, of responsibility for the attacks early Sunday on an army barracks at Santiago de Cuba and a\nrural guard post In the nearby\ntownof Bayamo. The barracks commander, Col. Alebrto del Rio Chav-\niano, said Uie rebels hoped to launch\na rtyolutlon to oust Batista.\nArmy officials said that \"great\nquantities\" ot \/'ammunition seized\nfrom the attackers Was marked\n\"Montreal, Canada.\" '\nA government statement said the\nInsurgents Were \"mercenaries ln\nthe services of persons who had\nbecome wealthy during the Prlo\nregime, along with Communist elements.\" .   i\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Presi\nAthens\u2014Gen, Nicholas Plastiras,\ni, three times premier of Greece\nand dictator for a day.\n. Cincinnati\u2014Carl D? Groat 88, editor of the Cincinnati Post alnce\n1933.\nToronto\u2014Leen Lee, 73, past president ot the Chinese Times Publishing Company and chairman -ahd\nfounder of. the Lee Association of\nOntario.\nWoltori, Eng,\u2014Sqdn.. Ldr. J, D.\nDickson, 32, thrice-decorated RCAF\npilot in the Second World War and\none of the, first Canadians to fly\nthe RCAF's new Comet jetliner.\nMake your own Home Madt Bread\nwith ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\ncull Instructions on tvtry package.\nPhone 238 or call      .'*.>\nELLISON MILLING\n* ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nREAD THI CLASSIFIED DAILV\nRefresh Your\n'   Wardrobe\nwith a new\nSummer\nSUIT\nA really fine selection\n\u2022 of new patterns in light\n\u2022colors for summer\nwear. 7\n$59.50\nEmory's\n-'.'\"'.''LTD.'\nThe Man's Store\nPhone 31   .      Pox 100\nMalanfo Fight\nJOHANNESBURG!!   (Reuters)-?\nRemoval  of: natives trom  illegal\"\n\"tenements In the sky\" rooftops and\nservants quarters In \"white\" apartment bulldings-4s the latest pro-?\nposal ol the Nationalist government\nof Prime Minister Daniel F. Malan\nfor implementing its racial segregation policy:\nThe overcrowded \"tenements\" era,\none of the results of the enormous ,\nmigration of rural Africans to Johannesburg during the last 2D years,\na migration brought about by t';'\u25a0.\ncontinuing boom in industry.\nHostels and servants' rooms art\njammed to overflowing and estafa- i\nlished African townships spill over\ncontinually -into   illegal-and   unhygienic  squatters', official policy\nIs ona of segregation, It is. safe to\nsay that the number of domestci\nservants, thtlr families, and. lodgers\nalmost  equals 'the  whites  in  allI\nareas? even in the most exclusive\nwhite suburbs.\nILLEGAL BOARDERS\nThii   total   of   Illegal. African\nVbOarder\"   throughout   the   dty'si?\nwhite areas is believed to be about:\n150,000. ',        M\nDomestic servants take In \"lodgers\" who sleep oii the floor and I\npay $2.80 a month. Tlie- racket is\nknown to most householders, whol\nkeep quiet for fear, ot losing their J\nservants, -77,\nAt intervals the'police raid thai\nservants' , quarters. The illegall\nlodgers are marched off to the!\npolice station, .where they pay al\nfine., which mounts with each conviction. Tlien' they return to thel\nsame illegal quarters'and hope fprl\nthe best.-They have-nowhere else]\nto go..\nMeanwhile little progress is madtl\nwith grandiose piths for establish-]\ning new African suburbs separated\nfrom the white suburbs by a buffer]\nzone. The wrangle continues as td\nwho shall pay tnd the,minister ofj\nnative affairs, Hermanus Verwoerd\nhas announced he plans to clear thl\n\"black spots\" with or without ths)\ncitys' cooperation.\nLANCASTER HOUSE RESTORE*!\nLONDON (API-Flush, old Lnnl\ncaster House, scone ot governmentar\nsocial functions until damaged b|\na war-time bomb! has been restore]\nto Its former splendbr, the ministrj\not works said. The mlnistery sale]\nthe House has been \"tronsforme*J\ninto one of the most magniticeh\n-period houses in London.\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE I\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall 8t-eet Phone 14* I\nFLEURY'S  fharmad\n59\nSOS Btker St.\nMed. Arte Blk.\nPHONE\u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescription! j\n7 Phone 25I\nI\nJim's Radiator Shopl\n516 Ppont Street    -Phone 63|\nii CLOSED for HOLIDAYS\nuntil July 31\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service* I\n^AMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St        Phone 3511\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLANDl\n4IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\n\u25a0:'['\u25a0:     Auditors    >.\n575 Baker 8L    >       Phone till\nBISMA-REX\nAids Stomach. Heartburn\n, and Indigestion.    -\n\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0*\u2022 $1.00 and $2.23\ntablets 38*  -'..[.\n..At Your Rtxall Store ( M\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern  Pharmacy\"\nPHONI 34\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_28","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\/1.0427918","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":"1953-07-28 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":"1953-07-28 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":""}]}