{"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":"2023-03-27","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":"1955-07-30","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\/1.0429066\/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":" ~     -, .;.\u25a0'.:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\u2022'\n\u2014\n\u25a0''''\u25a0' ' \u25a0'''\/\u25a0\u25a0\nr^ ; ^7\nU. S. To Launch\nlite bv 1958\nScheme for Scientific Purposes Only;\nAll Countries To Receive Information\n,i\u00b0ro\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy and cool.\nShoweri in afternoon. Light\nwinds. Low-high at Cranbrook\n\u25a0nd Crescent Valley 85 and 65.\nSunday outlook: Afternoon showers.\nPose Mysfeiy^^S* - * <-,-\nf>'\" jrgaret Richardson\nNELSON,, B.C., ^ANADA^SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 30, 1955\naiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii\nNo. 84\nOTTAWA',  (CP)   \u2014 . Officials      J\nhere were mystified Friday by an\nannoumfeihent In London and Wa-\nBy DOUGLAS B.^ORNELL\nWASHINGTON (AP)^-President Eisenhower disclosed Friday that the United States plans to launch the-\nfirst man-mpde, earth-circlihg satellites by the end of 1958.\nStill not perfected, the satellites are envisaged by\ngovernment scientists as small globes, about' the size of\nbasketballs. They would be launched by rockets and circle I ^tpn  aPF\"\u2122'1? \u25a0c\u00b0Pc'\u2122'n*\nthe\u00abarth once every 90 minutes at a speed of !8,000 miles iSSSKJSTlST?\nan hour and a height of 200 or 300 miles. j Can*da<\nThev are expected to remain aloft for days and per-1    .     ' ..   . .    ., ..  .\niwjon.^ \u00ab.*wm   w j r       p    A ^ashington report said that\nhaps weeks, then spiral back down and disintegrate asiabout m F.86 g^ Jets are to\nthey hit heavier atmosphere,\n& Glory\nj Victim\nIn announcing that President\nEisenhower has approved the satellite project, presidential press\nsecretary James C. Hagerty emphasized- that it is for \"entirely\nicientific purposes.\"\nHe - said scientists of all\n4countries, including Russia, will\nbe able to observe the space objects and will receive all the scientific facts developed from . the\nprogram.' t\nHELP FORECASTERS\nThe satellites won't be in the\nnature of much-discussed space\nplatforms that might be- used for\nboth scientific and military purposes. But they are expected to\nprovide information of practical\nvalue to mankind \u2014 information,\nfor example, that might lead to\nimproved weather forecasting and\nimproved radio transmission.\n' Scientists taking part in the\nprogram said that little is known\nabout the regions beyond the\nearth's cloBe-down, denser atmosphere layers, which act as a partial   shield   against   light,   ultra-\nlead to corrective measures.\nThe big experiment may supply\nfacts that will be helpful eventually in turning into reality the\nspace travel yarns of science fiction. That might fead to improved\nweather forecasting and improved\nradio transmission.\nKEY TO SPACE TRAVEL?\nThe sponsors of the project, the\nU.S. Science Foundation and the\nU.S. Academy of Sciences, said in\na joint statement that observations of the satellites will \"indicate the conditions that would\nhave to be met. and the difficulties that would have to be overcome \"if the day comes when man\ngoes beyond the earth's atmosphere in his travels.\"\nHOWE MADE\nINDIAN CHIEF\nbe \"returned\" by Britain to the\nU, S. Air Force for reallocation\nto some other country or countries\nin the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.\nUnder its mutual aid program\nfor NATO, Canada supplied about\n400 Sabres to Britain. They were\nbuilt by Canadair Ltd., at Montreal and Canada paid about 75 per\ncent of their cost, or about $90,-\n000,000.\nThe U. S. paid the remaining 25\nper cent which took in the cost of\nsupplying plane parts such as engines and electronic gear.\nA competent source here said\nthat as far as the Canadian Defence department knows, the RAF\nis still using the 400 Sabres. As\nfar as could be learned, Ottawa\nwas not advised of the London\nand   Washington   announcement.\nI\nBy TED MOSER\nCanadian   Press Staff Writer\nLETHBRIDGE (CP) \u2014Canada's\nminister of trade and commerce\nbecame an Indian chief Friday.\nRt. Hon. C. D. Howe, also de-\nviolet rays and cosmic rays from'] fence production minister, was in-\nouter space, as well as meteorites.! itiated into the Kainai, the honor-\nIf they can get a better under- :.ary chieftain of the Blood Indians.\nItanding   of   splar   radiation,   by j    Chief Pe-Ta-Pu-Tah, or Flying\nuse of the satellites, they may be} Eagle,  was the  name  that  head\nable to relate it to weather and I chief Shot Both Sides conferred\nclimate.  Radiations from the sun I upon Mr. Howe. Indian braves in\ndisturb radio communications, and\ngreater knowledge  of them  may\nMedical Insurance\nRates Slashed\nTORONTO (CP) - TheTruden-\ntlal Insurance Co. of America has\nslashed rates by 30 pqr cent on its\ngroup major medical-insurance\nplans, it announced Friday.\nPlans cover costs of prolonged\nIllness of Injury, whiRh,. fpjild\nleave an 'employed etit '\"of v. 6tR\nfor long periods. The special plans\ncover all costs over and above a\nbasic group plan, such as therapy\nand around-the-clock nursing.\nWhile the cuts art not expected\nto have much Impact on such\nplans as Blue Cross and Physicians' Services Incorporated, it is\nexpected other Canadian companies dealing in catastrophe-\ntype hospital plans may be forced\nto cut rates. >\u2022'\nA Dominion Life official said\nhis firm is almost sure to decrease\nrates. Confederation Life said that\nrate slashes are a \"matter of\nstudy.\"\nfighting dress of their ancestors\ndanced to the beat of ancient i\ndrums as Mr. Howe became a\nchief.\nChief Shot Both Sides, an 82-\nyear-old warrior who only this\nyear adopted Christianity, placed\na full-feathered headdress upon-\nMr. Howe to make the honorary\nchieftainship official.\nAt the same time, the Bloods, a\nbranch of the Blackfoot tribe,\nmade G. H. Gooderham a member\nt)f ay*\"Kainai. Mr. {k>oderham-.re-Jr America.\ncently retired as supervisor of\nIndian affairs in Alberta and the\nNorthwAt Territories.\nSoviet Aids DEW\nLine Construction\nBy dave Mcintosh\nCanadian Preii Staff Writer\n6TTAWA (CP)\u2014The Russians\nare helping\u2014indirectly of course\n\u2014in construction of the DEW\n(Distant Early Warning) line in\nCanada's Arctic.\nOfficials said Friday weather\ndata supplied by the Russians, including information from Soviet\nice Islands in the central Arctic\nbasin and other northern stations,\nis put to good use in forecasting\nweather in the Canadian North.\nAccurate forecasts of weather\nare important in DEW line construction because so far nearly all\nmen and material for the radar\nsystem have been airlifted. into\nthe north. Bad forecasts could\nresult in loss of airlift planes.\nThe DEW.line is designed to\nwarn of a>W air attack on North\nHope for Good Run\nOf Pink Salmon\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The B.C.\nsalmon-fishing fleet has found the\npickings slim this year.\nWilliam Rigby. research director of the United Fishermen and\nAllied Workers' Union (Ind.) said\nFriday the only hope of making up I \"\"' '\nlosses from a severe drop in the\nsockeye catch this year is a good\nrun of pink salmon.\nOfficials said Canada receives\nup to 1000 weather reports from\nRussia every 24 hours. In return.\nCanada. broadcasts about 800 a\nday for Russia and every other\ncountry\u2014200 every six hours.\nPartial Payment for\nAirliner Promised\nBy TED R. LUR1E   .\nJERUSALEM (AP) \u2014 Communist Bulgaria has promised at\nleast partial payment for the Israeli airliner its gunners shot\ndown Wednesday, a foreign office\nspokesman said Friday.\nThe plane, which carried 58\npersons\u2014including four Canadians\n\u2014to a flaming death on Bulgarian\nsoil, was a four-%igine Constellation valued at libout $1,000,000.\nWhat Bulgaria intends to do\nabout compensation for the lives\nlost .was not expressly stated.\nThe dead included Mrs. Sarah\nMaydeck, 44. her daughters, Yaf-\nfa, 10, and Ann, 15, and Max Alt-\nman, all of Montreal.\nAn external affairs department\nBritain Gives\nShow of Strength\nADEN (Reuters) \u2014 The British\nhigh command here claimed Friday night its colonial troops had\nimpressive display of\nforce in foreign legion-style operations against blue-painted Arab\ntribesmen near Aden's Yemen bor\nder.\nReinforcements were flown it\nto the protectorate early this\nmonth to help stage an all-out offensive to end 18 months of attacks by Rabizi tribesmen on convoys sent to relieve Fort Robaato.\nThe British fort is in the desert\nspokesman in Ottawa said Friday ] hills just across from the Yemen\nCanada probably will lodge a pro-; kingdom.\nAir Vice Marshall S. O. Buf-\nton announced Friday that several\npunitive expeditions this month\nhad resulted in a \"display of\nforce and of potential striking\npower.\"\ntest with -Bulgaria after further\ninformation is received on the\ncrash.\nSouth Africa, which also lost\nfour citizens in the crash, lodged\na complaint Friday. Israel sent a\nprotest Thursday, denouncing the\nshooting as \"shocking recklessness\" and a grave international\noffence.\nReuters news agency reported\nthat in addition to demanding full\ncompensation, Israel had called\nfor punishment of the persons re--\nsponsible for shooting down the\nairliner.\nCLOVERLEAF TO BE\nWIDENED \u2014 GAGLARDI\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Highways\nMinister Gaglardi has announced\nthat the cloverleaf at the north\nend of Lions Gate bridge in Van\ncouver will be widened to four\nlanes, and that a six-lane road\nwill be constructed frorfi 'the\nbridge into  West Vancouver,\nwell her teachers\nurgetR.>yto enter a picture In\nthe Royal Drawing Society's.\nInternational competition.\nThe '18-year-old girl looked\nover her many paintings and\nselected one ohe called \"The \u2022\nBride\" and sent It along to\nthe competition which was \u00ab\nopen to children all over the\nworld.\nThe society gave Margaret's\npainting an award and put It\non view Friday In Iti diamond\nJubilee celebration.\nBut Margaret never, saw her\npicture In Its winning place.\nShe didn't even know she'd\nwon\u2014for Margaret died of\npolio last week.\nimiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiimmi.iiiiiMiiiin\nU.S. CANNONS\nSTIR DEBATE-IN\nJAPAN HOUSE\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014The, arrival of\nsix United States Army atomic\ncannon at Okinawa roused political fire Friday in Japan's Diet\n(parliament).\nUnder critical opposition ctues-\ntioning. Prime Minister Ichiro\nHatdyama said' the U.S. had not\ninformed Japan the atomiq guns\n?md rockets were being sent to\nthe Far East for the first time.,\n\"Since this Isgue is very important,\" said Foreign Minister\nMamoru Shigemitsu, \"we have\nimmediately asked for official\nconfirmation.\"\n\"The government's attitude will\nbe decided by the reply.\"\n* t This It an Israeli national airlines Constellation plane *pf the type reported by Greek\nauthorities to have been shot down by Bulgar\nian anti-aircraft gunners near the Greek-Bulgarian border. Fifty-eight persons aboard Including 4 Americans perished.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nPair Get 5 Years\nFor Arm\u00bb<1 Robbery\nVANCOUVER (CP)--Two men\nwere sentenced here Friday on\ncharges of armed robbery.\n\"You'should be lashed for this.\"\nMagistrate Oscar Orr told 23-year-\nold Victor Lum, \"but because of\nyour unfortunate background I am\nsentencing you to five years.\"\nHis accomplice, 22-year-old\nRichard | .^umj^9Tr,^)atJionw: i,dniy,\nsix y<5\u00ab8. '\"\"fiiis was a \"very Bad\ncase,\" the magistrate said.\nThe pair pleaded guilty to attacking Won* Sam Tien and Wong\nYew July 19 in a Chinatown\nstore.\nThey fled empty-handed demanding money.\nSays Gun-Toting\nMunro Offered Three Choices\n^usoended Union\nOfficers Fined\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The District Council of Carpenters (AFL-\nTLC) has confirmed the $100 fines\nimposed on eight suspended officers of local 452 of the United\nBrotherhood of Carpenters and\nJoners of America.\nA spokesman for the eight men\nsaid another had been re-instated\nto ordinary membership and fined\na nominal $10.\nThe suspended officers were\ncharged with spending Union\nfunds .on leftist publications.\n6 B.C. SCOUTS WIN\nTRIP TO JAMBOREE\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Wayne\nStilling. 15. of Nanaimo, B.C., and\nfive other British Columbia Boy\nScouts have won an all-expenses-\npaid trip to the Boy Scout eighth\nworld jamboree at Niagara-on-\ntbe-Lake, Ont.\nThey are among 50 Canadian\nScouts named winners in a nationwide essay contest sponsored by\nthe Bank of Nova Scotia. Other\nB.C, winenrs were Harvey Borden,\n17; Malcolm Wilkinson, 15; Donald\nMichael Sinclair, 18; and Eddie\nJackson, 14, all of the Vancouver\ndistrict; and Robert Vincent Cal-\nderoni,  16, of Hedley, B.C.\nDIES FROM INJURIES\nKELOWNA, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Mrs.\nJoseph Lanfranco, 09, of Kelowna\ndied from injuries sustained in a\nhighway accident here Friday.\nMrs. Lanfranco was walking\nalong a highway on the outskirts\nof the city when she was struck\nby a car.\nRCMP have not released the\nname of the driver.\nAn inquest will be held Saturday.\nMY8TERIE8 OF the \"sunmoblle\" are explained In Detroit to\nMrs. Rose Macintosh, by Thomas L*. Pond, assistant director of\nthe General Motors Previews of Progress. The squares on top\nof the 15-Inch model are photoelectric cells, whose function Is\nto convert light Into electric current to propel the vehicle, believed to be the first of Its kind ever built. The cells are made\nof selenium, an element which has the property of converting\nlight Into electric power.\u2014Centra) Press Canadian.\n$67 Million Budget\nDeficit Reported\nDOLLAR  HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014The Cana.\ndian dollar closed Friday 1\/16\nhigher at a premium of 1% per\ncent in terms of U.S. funds.\nPound sterling 5\/32 lower at\n$2.78 27\/32.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\ndollar closed at a discount of\n1 9\/16 per cent in terms of Canadian funds, down 8\/32. It took\n98% cents Canadian to btly $1\nAmerican. Pound sterling $2.74%,\ndown 7\/16.\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014 Federal government expenditures, particularly on defence, rose sharply in\nJune, producing a budget deficit\nof $67,100,000 first recorded in the\n1955-56 -fiscal year,    ,\nThe deficit compared with surpluses of $32,519,000 in April and\n$104,'10},000. in May. ',\u2022'\u2022.\n,... RgSfjjSSJ IffiJteS. ro.se-. to JJgJi-\n\"SOoioOt. from *$3i9,5B5,0o6 in' (he\nsame month in 1954. But expenditures also rose to $418,000,000\nfrom $384,742,000, Finance Minister Harris reported Friday in his\nmonthly treasury statement.\nThe budgetary deficit of $67,-\n000,000 in June compared with a\ndeficit of $65,200,000 a year ago.\nFor the first quarter of the current fjscal year budgetary revenues were $962,200,000 and outlays $892,700,000, leaving a surplus of $69,500,000. In the same\nperiod in 1954-55, revenues were\n$955,100,000 and expenditures\n$846,100,000 for a surplus of $109,-\n000.000.\nIn his April 5 budget, Mr. Harris forecast an over-all deficit for\n1955-56 of $160,000,000. compared\nwith a $194,251,000 deficit last\nyear.\nSpending on defence during the\nmonth increased to $162,343,000\nfrom $136,945,000 last year. This\nbrought the three-month total to\n$343,010,000 compared with $305,-\n597,000 in 1954-55.\nCOAST WORKERS\nVOTE FOR STRIKE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An overwhelming majority of workers at\nMcLennan, McFeeley and Prior\nLtd., retail-wholesale hardware\nfirm, have voted for strike action\nto back up pay demands, it was\nannounced   here   Friday.\nThe vote, hy some 400 members\nof Vancouver local of Retail,\nWholesale and Department Store\nUnion (CIO-CCL) follows rejection of a conciliation board award\nfavoring the company.\nPRESS SMASHES STREET\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A rigger\nwas killed Friday when an 11-ton\npress plunged four storeys to the\nstreet as it was being removed\nfrom the Daily News building.\nThe press smashed into Second\nAvenue and sank two feet below\nthe street, killing Edward Walsh.\n45. Walsh was riding the press\ndown when a 75-foot crane boom\nsuddenly buckled.\nSAYS OKANAGAN FINE\nFOR 'COPTER TRAINING\nPENTICTON (CP)\u2014Col. Andre\nDeperrois, military attache at the\nFrench embassy ifl \"Ottawa, says\nthis Okanagan valley centre is \"an\nideal location fpr helicopter training.\" During a visit here this\nweek, Col. Deperrois learned\nRCAF and USAF crews were\ntraining with helicopters and said,\n\"If my government approves tho\nplan, we would likely send eight\nFrench airmen- here for the first\ncourse with the possibility of an\nexpanded program later.\"\nBARBARA ANN\nTO MARRY\nCHICAGO (CP)-Barbara Ann\nScott is going to be married.\nThe' Hollywood ice revue an:\nnouncod Friday that the 27-year-\nold' petite former Olympic, world\nfmd.'VjBjEJPfan champion figure\nskater will''marry'Tommy King,\npublicity director for Chicago\nStadium Sports Enterprises.\nThe couple are already on their\nway to Toronto, where a formal\nannouncement is expected short-\nly.\nNames Top Officer, Other Inspector.\nWho Wanted To Be Cut in on Payoffs\nBy. BRUCE LEVETT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer       , \u2022\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A tale of payoffs and pistols,\ngraft,and gamblers, unfolded here Friday before a royal\ncommission inquiring into charges of corruption within\nthe Vancouver police force.\nFor the second day, until the hearings adjourned to\nMonday, Det.-Sgt. Len Cuthbert continued to confess him-,\nself to a packed, silent gallery in the courthouse.\nCothbert told of events which culminated in a tiny\ninterrogation room at the police station June 24 when he\nfired a -bullet through his chest in an attempt to take his\nown life. He named a top officer who he said wanted a\npiece of the gambling pay\noffs   for   himself   and   a\nbrother inspector.-\nCuthbert, knuckling his brow as\nhe strained for past names, places\nand dates, told of \"three choices\"\nhe said were given him by Flash\nLack of Vaccine\nDelays Polio Shots\nVANCOUVER (CP) Next step\nin rBitish Columbia's program for\nimmunizing youngsters with Salk\npolio vaccine will be delayed four\nto five months, Dr. George Elliot,\ndeputy provincial health officer\nsaid Thursday.\nThe program, expected to get\nunderway in September, will not\nbegin until January or February\nof 1956.\n\"The delay is caused at the manufacturers' level.\" Dr. Eliot said.\n\"There isn't sufficient vaccine to\nstart the program any earlier.\n\"Pre-school age children and the\nGrade one students who got three\ndoses in the spring will get a\nbooster shot,\" he said.\n\"I expect the main program will\nconcentrate on Grade three and\nup, depending on the amount ol\nvaccine and on pre-schoolers,\" he\nsaid. \"The Grade one and two students will already have been\ndone.\"\nBYRNE BABY BORN ON\nPROROGATION DAY\nCRANBROOK\u2014Thursday was a\nparticularly big day for James\nByrne of Kimberley, MP for Kootenay East. The stork and the\nparliamentary session broke even\nwhen his third daughter and\nfourth child was born at Kimberley.\nIn spite of gratuitous advice\nfrom friends, they are not even\nconsidering the name Phyllis\nBuster.\nPINNED UNDER CAR,\nDIES OF INJURIES\nRICHMOND (CP)\u2014Real estate\nsalesman Haroldur Njall Sigurd-\nson, 30, died of multiple injuries\nand suffocation Friday night when\nhe was pinned under his car in a\nditch near the Marpole bridge\nhere. RCMP said Sigurdson was\nhurled through the windshield\nafter the car slildded off the road\nand piled into a stump in the\nditch.\nNATURAL GAS IN\nINTERIOR BY '57      -\nVERNON (CP)\u2014H. N. Walters,\n'president of the Vancouver Board\nof Trade, told the fourth annual\nconference of the Electrical Contractors' Association' of B.C here\nFriday that \"natural gas could be\nin the interior in the spring of\n1957.\"\nreporter   Ray\nwhich was to \"blow your bloody\nbrains' out.\"\nIt was Cuthbert's attempted suicide and Munro's articles in the\nToronto weekly which touched off\nthe investigation. Munro and Flash\nhave been sued for libel by police\nchief Walter Mulligan, named in\nCuthbert's Thursday testimony as\none of the men with whom the\nformer gambling squad boss shared payoffs.\nThe suit is pending, phief Mulligan is on leave of absence until\nthe Inquiry is completed.\n\"YOU'RE STUCK\"\nDramatic moment of the Friday\ntestimony\u2014Cuthbert was the only\nwitness at the abbreviated session\n\u2014was his recollection of the meeting with Munro at the officer's\nhome.\n\"You're stuck, Len; you're Jn\nbad trouble,\" he tald Munro toid\nhim.\n\"... He said 'You een either\n, blow your bloody brains out or\nyou can go to Jail or you can-tee\nthe right party now.' \"\nCuthbert said Munro held depositions concerning Cuthbert and\ngraft in one hand and balanced a\nblack, .38 automatic pistol in the\nother.\n\"It was the real McCoy,\" the\n54-year-old sergeant said.\n\"He didn't make any move and\nI didn't. Anyway, he knew I had\na gun of my own.\"\nBRANDISHED PAPERS\nCuthbert said Munro suggested\nhe see the reporter's lawyer, Neil\nFleishman, and \"make out an affidavit if you wish.\"\nCuthbert said Munro held the\npistol in one hand and \"waved\"\nthe papers at him with the other.\nHe could see the headings, but not\nwhat was written.\n\"I recognized them af some\nform of affidavit or deposition.\nRay said these depositions were\nall about me and I was in trouble.\nHe didn't have to mention that.\n\"I knew I was in trouble.\"\nThe next day he said he was\ncalled into Supt. Harry Whelan's\noffice. Whelan, former deputy\nchief and now head of the uniform\nbranch, showed him two typewritten sheets of foolscap, Cuthbert said, and represented them\nto be his recollections of a previous meeting with the sergeant.\nCuthbert signed them, deleting\none paragraph: \"That was about\nthe men on my squad.\"\n* \"I went back to the detective\noffice and sent the man who was\nlooking after the telephones out\nfor coffee.\" he' said.\n\"Then I waited until the parade\nroom was clear.\n\"Then I shot myself.\" ~\n80UGHT SHARE\nCuthbert then swung back to\ndescribe a meeting he said he had\nin 1949\u2014during the six weeks he\nadmits he took bribes\u2014with ln-\nMunro  \u2014  one  of | spector John Horton.\nHorton said he had heard that'\nI was doing well on gambling and\na\u00bb he was my inspector and in a\nposition to help somewhat, he felt.\nhe should get a share of the take\nof monies I was getting.\n\"He thought both he and Det.-\nInsp. Ambrose should receive a\nshare. I could see a lot of sense\nin what he was saying in one\nway\u2014a lot of danger in another\nway.\"\nThe   witness,   in  answer  to  a\nquestion by hii counsel, H. A. D.\nOliver, said he talked the situation\nover with the police chief.\n\"OUT OF MY SHARE\"\n\"There was discussion\u2014I don't\nthink the chief was too much in\nfavor ... The chief said if I really\nthought it was a good idea, it\ncould be doney-but additional expenses of that nature must be\ntaken out of my share.\"\nMr. Oliver asked if Cuthbert h\u00abd\never spoken of the subject to Injp,\n\u25a0Ambrose \u25a0\u00bbi'*'he>*air-*(^f?'\u00bbiid*;. \u25a0\nHorton any money. Cuthbert said\nhe had never spoken to Insp. 'Ambrose and neither had received a\ncent from him.\n\"It was indicated $100 a month\nwas a fair amount,\" Cuthbert said,\nbut was unable to recall who mentioned the amount. .\n\"Was the $100 ! . . to cover both\nofficers, or was it $100 apiece?\"\nMr. Oliver asked.\nCuthbert replied: \"That wai $100\neach.\"\nThe witness told of a meeting\nwith Supt. Whelan earlier this\nyear.\n\"Whelan closed the door, shut\noff the lnter-c9mmupleatl.on.\u00bbet\n\u2014they have them In all thote\noffices\u2014and said, \"We now have\nenough evidence on thli monkey.\"\n\"Which monkey wai that?\"\naiked'Mr. Oliver.\n\"He waved.hii thumb.toward*\n>the corner office. I can't lay\nwhether he meant the chief eon-\nitable'i office. I know It but I\ncan't lay It.\"\n\"Well, did he maen you?\"\n\"No, \u00bbir.\"\n\"Then what- happened?\"\n\"He said: 'We can put him ln\njail without your help.' He said-\nhe made other disparaging remarks and he said\u2014'Imagine him\nmaking you pay your own boys\nout of your share.'\n\"But he said 'we now have\nenough evidence to put him in\njail.' I said I was quite upset about\nit. I didn't want to be in his office\nor anybody's office. I didn't want\nto be partisan on any side in any\nconflict.\"\nAnd In This Corner .. *\nMISSION CITY, B.C. (CP)\u2014Racoom In Mission district can\nhave music with their meals when raiding a resident's chicken\ncoot>\u2014but It must be 10ft music.\nA poultry farmer In the district, annoyed by marauding coons\ndepleting his. flock, hit on the novel Idea of piping music from his\nradio Into the chicken coop to drive them nway.\n'\u2022A  neighbor, unsympathetic with the farmer's plight, notified\nthe municipal police chief at 3 a.m. complaining of the noise.\nThe chief suggested the radio be turned down and a more\nmuted program might please the neighbors and still keep the coons\naway,\nSTOCKHOLM (AP)\u2014Anybody want to buy a castle for five\ncents?\nThe BergvikAla Co., a huge wood pulp firm, today offered to\nsell the big castle at.Axmarbruk, in central Sweden, for that.price.\nThe gimmick: The purchaser must renovate it completely\u2014at an\nestimated cost of $150,000.\nEDMONTON (CP)-i-A man, known to police to have had\nalcohol-produced delusions In the past, said he saw a seven-foot\nmake Thursday.  But police believe his story.\nThe Investigating officer reported: \"The man certainly must\nhave teen something to' icare him -because, he threw a bottle of\nwine In the river and ran away.\"  He wa\u00bb also sober.\nPolice believe the make may have escaped from a carnival\nthow.\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014Tipsy chickens were a tipoff that Ivan Vincent's henhouse contained something besides poultry.\nWhen police raided Vincent's poultry farm in Nankin township\nthey found a  275-gallon still in  the henhouse.   Police  said 200\nchickeps were staggering around the henhouse.\n'-\" \"Vincent, 38, was held on charges of violating federal liquor\nlaws.\n ^'-..I\"-L'-- \u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 >\u25a0 :\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \". TT! :\u2014; '\u2014m '.      ^ujuijum.^iij.,.^   . . ,i ..,._ ,,i.   i^ifW1 | i\n\"\"A'.'frT.\ni.^v^n:,:^-^:\/;\n.      i.-J-i.JJJJ!!#WlIIU^li,J.^\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1955\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Complete Shows 2:00-7:00-9:00\n\"CinemaStope    ww\"\"\"\nALAN X ADD\nbBLMtR OAVES'\nDRUM BEAT\n\u2022WARHEaCoioR __. Stereophonic Sound\n, a-AUDREYM1I0N MAJISAPAVAII mmm\nPrices: 50c, 25c. Eve. 75c, 50c, 25c\nNewi\nCartoon\nGiuric\nNEXT ATTRACTION\nCIRCULATE PETITIONS-', j.\nCitizens\/ Businessmen\nAsk Adequate\nOne petition ia at city hyll and\na second ls being circulated asking city council to install additional catch basins and enlarge\nstorm sewers to help combat the\nflooding and storm damage lrt\nNelson.\nTwenty-two residents along the\nwest side of Kootenay Street have\nsigned a petition asking cbilticll\nto put catch basins at Innes and\nRobson Streets 'to catch heavy\nrunoff that is flooding their basements, ruining gardens and piling\nup gravel and debris in their\nproperties. There are no catch\nbasins on the west side of Kootenay ^Street, a resident said Friday\nnight. They want the catch basins\nto connect to a storm sewer_ flowing into Cottonwood Creek.\nThe petition was turned in at\nCity   Hall   Friday,   the   resident\nsaid.\nA second petition is being circulated among Baker Street business\nmen who, ior the past four years\nhave suffered considerable damage from flooding and seepage in\nbasements of business premises\nafter each, severe storm. The petition ia asking.enlargement Of the\nstorm sewers to accommodate the\nrunoff as it pours onto Baker and\nother Streets from uphill points.\n\u2022 Twenty-four have signed the\npetition to date.\nOne store otoner, Louis Hanic,\nestimates (2000 damage was done\nin his basement last year and it\nhas already been flooded twice\nthis summer.\nHe named at least six other Baker\nStreet < premises that he said\nhad been damaged from runoff,\none of them the Round-Up Room\nat 696 Baker Street.\n__. -   *\nAuto Financing Heavy,\nBusiness Tempo Up\nCASTLEGAR. B.C\nLAST TIME TONIGHT\nGate* Open 8:45 p.m.\nShow 9:15 p.m.\nJack Hawkins \u2022 Donald Olnden\nTHI CRUA. SEA\"\nA magnificent motion picture\n-M Hghting \u00abi\u00bbn\u2014on the day\ntho World held its breath.\nPLUS    \u25a0\u25a0'\n\"PROWLERS Of THI\nEVERGLADES\"\n(TechnioOior)\nKfog of nations' most mysterious inramp\u2014the land that\ntime torgot.\nSTARLIGHT\nDrive-In Theatre\nLAST TIMK  TONIGHT\nCartoon\u20149:00  p.m.\nFeature\u20149:10   p.m.\nShorts \u201410:40  p.m,\n\"CAPTAIN LIGHTFOOT\"\nCinemascope\nRook Hudson - Barbara Rush\nREGULAR ADMISSION PRICES.\nEgg Prices Increase\nFive Cents a Dozen\n1 Wholesale prices for the two top\ngrades Of eggs have Increased five\ncents hi the past ten days. Effective July 28, A-large and A-\n-medlum prioes were 68 and 65\ncents per dozen as against 63 and\n60 ten days ago. A-smail eggs were\nup two cents at 50, and A-peewees\nwere up four cents at 34. Prices,\nsupplied by Kootenay Poultry Cooperative Association of Fruitvale\nare f.o.b. Nelson, Trail and Rossland.\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST  TIME  TONIOHT\nApprox. 8:45 p.m.\n\"GIRL WHO HAD\nEVERYTHING\"\nElizabeth Taylor\nFernando Lamas\nO.K. Nero\nAlio CARTOON\nFishnet Firm To\nBuild, Steveston\nVANCOUVER   (CP)-Dominlon\nTextiles, one of Canada's largest\nfishnet   producers,   will   build\nplant in Steveston to process raw\nnet,\nMembers of the Greater Vaneou\nver metropolitan industrial development commission were told\nThursday that the Steveston plant\nwill be built on a three acre site\nand will turn raw net, shipped\nfrom the east, into finished fish\ning nets.\nThe plant will employ about 60\nworkmen.\nThe Commission was also told\nthat four or five Norwegian concerns may construct factories in\nthe Vancouver area within, the\nneJrt six months to manufacture\nfurniture, steel and machinery.\nHeaviest month in three years\nIn auto flriancing was reported in\nNelson'ln July. It was ln keeping\nwith a general upward trend in\nbusiness activity noted By wholesalers, department, clothing and\nappliance retail stores.\nIncreased activity in the lumbering industry generally offset the\neffect of late run-off and flood\nconditions. Logging operations\nwere in full swing except in the\nWoodbury Creek area where road\nand bridge washouts had hampered work. \u25a0     i- \u2022 *'\nA shortage of qualified construction and finish carpenters developed with the increased tempo in\nbuilding, while the demand for\nskilled young miners grew with\nthe new activity created by better\nbase metals prices.\nA number of mining companies\nare busily engaged in surface\nwork, road-building, etc., in prep\naration for eventual underground\ndevelopment.\nDemand for construction work\ners may increase with the start\nin the $2 million sub-structure\nwork for the West Arm bridge.\nThis entire project is estimated to\ntake two years.\nTRACK LAYING\n.During July, 28 men were employed by the Great Northern\nRailway at Nelson for track laying\nwork in the area. i\nCrewi are engaged repairing'\nBig Parly Moves\nOn Lardeau Toda]\nThe fourth annual excursion of\ndistrict Board of Trade and\nChamber 6f Commerce member!!\ninto the Lardeau country, is on\ntoday.\nChief objective of the midsummer expeditions, started when\nthe Lferdeau was first connected\nwith the South by road, is Support for the'Lardeau in its fight\nfor better road links. Last year,\nwith Revelstoke participating, a\nresolution waa unanimously endorsed calling for a direct road\nlink North to South from the\nTrans-Canada highway at Revelstoke to the Southern trans-provincial highway at Balfour via\nTrout Lake.\nThe delegation, expected to\nnumber more than 125 persons,\nwill converge on the Trout Lake\nHotel for a dinner, meeting and\ndance. The West Kootenay party,\ncomplete with a Nelson orchestra,\nwill leave at noon.\nThe event is sponsored by Lardeau and Kaslo Boards of Trade\nand Nelson Chamber of Commerce.\n' restored, as an entire 2'\/2 miles\nof raMroid will have to be re\nplaced In addition to bridges on\nother sections of the line.\nDuring July, $13,600  was paid\nin\" unemployment insurance benefits, 300 being registered for work\nFriday. Of these 186 were receiving benefits as compared to 350\nIn the same week last year. Some\n462 were registered for w6rk at\nthe   end   of * July,   1954,   George\nBevis, manager of the UIC branch,\nropprted.\nWrt number of women applicants for employment remained\nhigh during the month, largely\ndue to the number of school students seeking summer employment.\nThere was a marked increase in\nthe demand for sales clerks in\ngrocery and drygoods establishments. It was possible to supply\ngeneral-sales clerks readily from\nstudents seekipg summer employment, but experienced clerks for\nlarger departmental establishments were not available. Several\npositions for stenographers existed, but these were filled by graduating students.\nTruck, Car Crash\nOn Granite Road\nA truck apd private sedan were\nin a collision at the Shirley Hall\ncorner on Granite Road Friday\nafternoon.\nNo one was injured, but the\nsedan was damaged extensively,\nIt was sent off the road, and had\nthe left front fender damaged,\nand the left front door torn off-\nDrivers' names are not known.\nThe truck was proceeding toward\nNelson, and the car was travelling\nWest.\nTWILIGHT CLUB\nHOLDS ANNUAL\nPICNIC IN HALL\nRain drove members of the Twilight Club indoors for their annual picnic but it didn't dampen\ntheir spirits.\nAbout 30 attended the picnic\nMemorial Hall and enjoyed\ngames of whist. Prize winners\nwere Mrs. E. Eberle and Harry\nHarrison Sr. A. Wood was\ncharge  of the  cards.\nMr. Harrison was guest speaker\nat a banouet in the evening arid\nhe extended his best wishes to the\nclub. The banquet tables were\ndecorated with summer flowers\nMrs. Marv Wilson, president and\nMrs.  A.  Wood,  were  conveners.\nThe Weather\nLAD CRASHES WINDOW\nWindow of a Baker Street store\nwas broken Friday afternoon, in\nan unusual Incident involving a\nyoung bicyclist\nAs the boy was getting off his\nbicycle on the sidewalk, the gears\nslipped and he tumbled through\nthe plate glass store window. A\nslight cut to his face was the only\nInjury he sustained. The window\nwas repaired soon after.\nLOAN   GRANTED\nThe International Bank for Reconstruction and Development has\ngranted a loan of $12,000,000 to\nFinland for the development of\nthe timber industry and construction of hydro-electric power stations.\nNEW ARRIVALS!\nTURTLE WAX\u2014Contains brillium .\ndiscovery in car polish.\nNo rubbing \t\n.. a new miracle\n_$2.00\nCAR TOP CARRIERS\u201442\", straps,,      %< QC\"\nhooks and cups for carriers. Each   \\teir W*\nVISORED HEADLIGHT CHROME\nRINGS. For that 1955'look. Set...\nDIRECTIONAL SIGNAL KITS.\nComplete  . _.    _   \t\nPERMA BRONZE FILTER ELEMENTS. Guaranteed\n10 years     O.95to     111.95\n$9.95\n$12.95\nAN ADDED SERVICE\nWe have installed the equipment te duplicate any\nkey\u2014while you wait.... A spare set of keys may\nsave a lot of inconvenience\u2014Drop in before you\nforget.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n\"FRIENDLY  SERVICE\nPhone 21\n446 Baker St\nThe weather was dull and cool\nparTef\" t'h.\" KMro\".\"tJ.ku.7\"ranj!\" mf ,a\u00bbas \u00ab \"\u2022 C- Friday  al-\nllne   of   th.   Canadian   Pacmo!'h\u2122f he sun broke through at\n\u25a0 Kamloops long enough to raise the\nafternoon temperature to 80\u2014the\nw.Vhouta  auVed   ^ j warmest  in   the  province,  How-\nflood,   recently.   It   I.   .,  fver-  \" ral\"ed  \"\"\u00bb' \u00b0f *>*  ^\nin  Revelstoke,  where  the  maxi-\nRailway In order to recover\nequipment that was isolated by\nnumerous\nflash\nas i\nnot!\nyet  undecided  whether\nthli    line,   which   services   the\nSlocan  mining  district, will  be\nPhoenix Miner Back\nIn Boundary Area\nGRAND FORKS-W. A.'E. Wall'\nmum was 60.\nA disturbance was moving\ndown the coast from Alaska Friday night and occasional rfiln was\nexpected in southern B. C. today.\nHowever, northern sections of\nthe province will be showing an\nimprovement  and  gradual  clear\nof Ocean Park, visited early day\ning from the north\nwas predicted\nfriends here.\nthrough Sunday.\nHe is a former resident of the\ndistrict, having worked in Phoe\nNelson  \t\n...   54\nIB\n33\nnix some 50 years ago.   He was\nSt. John's \t\n52\n65\n\t\none of the last men to work at\n...   55\nB5\n_\nthe  Brooklyn  mine  in  Phoenix.\nKenora   \t\n...   64\nHi\n\t\nMr. Wall is now in tht insurance\nThe Pas   \t\n...   53\n77\nbusiness at Ocean Park.\nRegina \t\nMedicine   Hat  \t\n58\n...   46\n77\n75\n-\n\u2014\nKonkin Death\n...   46\n72\n\u2014\nDue to Drowning\nKimberley\nCrescent Valley \t\n54\n...   50\n64\n59\n.21\nPENTICTON (CP)\u2014A coroner's\nKaslo  \t\n...    52\n61\n.05\ninquest here Friday ruled that 29-\nKamloops \t\n...    57\n80\n\u2014\nyear-old   Peter  Konkin  of  Trail,\nVancouver   \t\n...    55\n67\n.62\nwhose body was found In Okan\nPrince  Rupert \t\n...    51\n54\n.42\nagan Lake Tuesday night, died of\nSeattle             \t\n...    55\n66\n.13\ndrowning. A rider to the verdict\nPortland         \t\n...   57\n70\n.02\nrecommended   that  danger   spots\nSan Francisco .......\n...   52\n75\n\u2014\nin   the   lake   be   publicized   for\nSpokane      \t\n...   51\n72\n.01\ntouiists.\nNew York \t\n68\n81\n\u2014\nAllempl lo Honor Great Chief\nMeets Opposition In Calgary\nCALGARY (CP)-Protests are\nblocking plans to name a new Calgary school in honor of an Indian\nchief whose Influence over his\nwarrior people hastened peaceful\ndevelopment of the West.\nSchool board chairman Lou\nGoodwin defended the Blackfoot\nChief Crowfoot as a great Canadian but said the protests may\nforce the board to look for another\nname.\n\"At tl)e momenj, the matter is\nbeing reconsidered by our committee,\" he said.\n\"It's too bad. White or red, in\nmy Opinion, Chief Crowfoot stands\nout as oh* ot the glut Canadians.\"\nObjections frdm a number of\nresidents of tht St. Andrew's\nHelghti district, where the school\nit located, were made public at \u2022\nschdol board meeting here this\nweek.\nThe board approved naming another new school after Crowfoot's\nfriend, Lt.-Col. J. T. Macleod of\nthe Northwest Mounted Police, but\ndelayed action on tht Crowfoot\nrecommendation.\nCrowfoot welcomed the mounted\npolice to the western plains\u2014\n\"They have protected us as the\nfeathers of a bird protect it from\nthe frosts of venter,\" he said.\nTo his death in 1890 he counsel\nled his people to respect the white\nman, imitating His virtues and\nshunning his vices. He was the\nmost influential signer of the\nBlackfoot Treaty in 1877, by which\nthe tribes surrendered 50,000\nsquare miUs of their land' for\"the\nwhite man's us*.\nIn later years, when th* Cana-\ndian Pacific Railway Wai built, h*\nw\u00bbs *_ Ideal protector \u00abf its \u00a3rtp-\nerty and wat given \u2022 life piss by\nthe company in recojrfiIttftn.\nRefusal Af the Blackfoot confederacy to Jdih the Rial Rebellion\nof 1885 shortened the conflict and\nonly Crowfoot's great Influence\nheld back tht most warlike of th*\nwestern tribes.\nAt a critical hour during the\nrebellion days, ho telegraphed Sir\nJohn R. Macdonald tn Ottawa:\n\"We will be loyal to the Queen\nwhatever  happens.\"\nHeavy Rains Slow\nCity Public Works\nif\nHeavy rains, have put the city\npublic works department behind\na month in Nelson's 1955 program,\nCrews, scheduled to excavtrt,\nSnd renew streets, build sidewalk*\nand lay asphalt, have had to be\nW,  J.  ATKINSON\nChristian Jew, Walter J. Atkinson, STM, of Seattle, will be guest\nspeaker at two services in Nelson\nSunday and will hold a meeting\nat the Salvation Army Saturday\nnight at 8 p.m.\nWorld traveller before and after his conversion to Christianity\nin 1929, Mr. Atkinson was educated at schools and universities\nof Germany and at Princeton in\nthe U. S. For the Christian ministry he prepared at the Moody\nBible Institute,of Chicago and several seminaries, receiving the degrees of Bachelor and Master of\nSacred Theology.\nMr. Atkinson ls well known in\nWestern Canada, having spoken\nin Vancouver on.many occasions,\nalso in Victoria and in the Okanagan.\nSponsored by the American\nBoard of Mission to the Jews, a\nfilm to be shown at the, Saturday\nnight meeting, entitled \"I Have\nFound My Messiah,\" Is the story\nof a Jewish soldier returning to\nhis home and business after the\nwar. A young Christian hands him\none of Dr. Cohn's tracts, \"What Is\na Christian?\" and this leads to the\nyoung man's conversion.\nKaslo Health Nurse\nTo Attend McGill\nPublic Health Nurse in the Kaslo\ndistrict, Miss Joanne Brasher, has\nended 15 months service with Selkirk Health Unit to attend McGill\nUniversity this Fall. She will attend university to obtain her public'health nursing certificate. No\nreplacement has been named as\nyet for Kaslo district.\nMiss Brasher came to Nelson\nfrom Victoria.\nNo Appointments Yet\nTo Doukhobor\nCommittee\nAppointments to fill vacancies\nin the local Doukhobor Co-ordin\nating Committee have not been\nmade yet. Secretary Emmett Gul-\nley said Friday.\nVacancies will be created when\nSchool Inspectors J. J. McKenzie\nand Dr. D. C. Smith of Nelson are\ntransferred the end of August.\nOthers on the committee are\nsocial welfare representatives Jack\nSmith and W. H. Crossley* public\nhealth representative Dr. H. T\nLowe, RCMP Inspector H. E.\nBloxham, Ralph Macintosh, School\nInspector Michael Clay and Secretary Emmett Gulley.    \u2022\nDoukhobors to\nMark Declaration\nGRAND FORKS - Doukhobbrs\nfrom the prairie provinces, California and all sections of the Kootenays will gather at Grand Forks\nthis weekend for the anniversary\ncelebrations of the Declaration,\nwhich established the Doukhobor\nbelief against war and killing,\nfollowing the burning of arms.\nHighlight of the day will be\nthe mass meeting and picnic on\nSunday morning and afternoon at\nHilltop Divide, halfway between\nOutlook and Frultova. This was\nthe site Peter \"the lordly\" Veri-\ngan liked so well, and where he\nheld many of his meetings.\nA meeting at 10 a.m. at which\nspeeches will be made, psalms\nsung, and prayers held will open\nthe. ceremonies. Featured performers will be the Ambassador\nchoir of Nelson, the Brilliant choir\nand both the Junior and Senior\nUSCC choirs of Grand Forks.\nJha  MiqhwayA.\nTrans-Canada Kamloops West\nRood, clearing off slide near\nSpences bridge.\nNorthern trans-provincial very\nmuddy sections Prince George to\nSmithers.\nOther .B.C. highways generally\nunchanged.\n4 (oast Men Hurt\nIn Explosion\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Four men\nsuffered serious burns Friday in\nan \u25a0 underground explosion that\nsent a blast of searing flame\nthrough a 75-foot culvert at the\nsuburban Burnaby terminal of\nthe Trans-Mountain oil pipeline\nhere.\nReported in fair condition are\nJames Reil, 31. Angus Wilson, 27,\nand Albert Avison, 43, all of Mission,'B.C.; and Kenneth Dickie.\n20, of Vancouver.\nThe men were cleaning and\npainting pipes running through\nthe culvert to an oil dock on the\n^shore of Burrard Inlet. The explosion was touched off when one\nof the crew dropped a light and\nthe shattered bulb caused a short\ncircuit. The emulsion used for\ncleaning the pipes exploded.\nOfficials said ther* was no oil\nin the pipes and no danger of fire.\nA fifth man working at the entrance to the culvert pulled his\ndazed and burned companions\nfrom the tunnel. Reil and Wilson\nunderwent surgery and the other\ntwo were given intravenous treatment.\ndiverted to cleaning . sewers >nrt  \u25a0\netch basins and repairing damage\ndone by the heavy storms,' Public\nWorks Superintendent G. Q.rl.ake\nsaid Friday. \u00a7\u00a3:'\nAll public works crews-'Aofept\ntwto, have been wording <U(SjS<v repairing rain damage.        ;\"-\/.;\"\noif tKe other two crews ori* has\nbeen forming sidewalk for f block\non Robson Street In prepaiarftirt to\npouring concrete' when ' weather\npermits and the second has. been\ndoing excavation and road work\non Delbruck and Stanley Streets\nCity tennis courts at Lakeside\nPark are ready for asphalting, Mr\nLake said, and a portion of. the\nasphalt has been mixed but the\nwet weather has kept it from being laid. . \u25a0.'. \u25a0\nLarge quantities of gravel are\nbeing carried down from residen-\nbeing carried down from- residences, streets outside the city\ndrains, Mr. Lake explained. Ho\ncouldn't estimate the number ot,\ntruck loads of grave! that have\nbeen removed from curb's- and\ncatch basins nor the amount that\nhas had to be replaced on city\nstreets after being washed away\nThe problem arises from the\ngovernment permitting urban development without supplying the\nfacilities necessary to it, Mr. Lake\nexplained, and added there is little\nthe city can do to curb the runoff\nwhich naturally goes downhill into\ncity catch basins and sewers.\nThe sewers are adequate for city\nrunoff, Mr. Lake pointed out. \"It\nis the outside runoff from these\nsuburban areas that are Uxlng\ncity sewers.\"\nf    ft\n41 West Vancouver High School\nAfter 12 years in Nelson on the\nteaching staffs of the Nelson High\nSchool and Junior High School,\nC. R. Mattice is leaving to accept\nthe position as chief librarian at\nWest Vancouver Senior High\nSchool.\nSenior matriculation English,\nSocial Studies and History teacher\nas well as school librarian for nine |\nyears at Nelson High School. Mr. I\nMattice will also do some subject [\nteaching in the field of history I\nin his new position. |\nWith history as his major subject. Mr. Mattice has earned 15\npost-graduate credits in the field. |\nHe recently completed his degree ,\nOf Bachelor of Education at UBC.\nfor three years.\nMrs. Mattice, former Dorothy\nHillam of a Nelson pioneer family,\nis a native daughter of Nelson,\nwas born here and attended Central and Nelson High Schools.\nAlso a church worker, Mrs. Mattice has been a Sunday School\nteacher, memher of the Junior\nAuxiliary and Martha-Mary WA\nof St. Saviour's for many years.\nShe has been an active member\njf the Nelson Parent-Teacher\nAssociation and for many years\nhas served as substitute teacher in\nthe Nelson Junior High and Senior\nHigh Schools, having Substituted\nin every subject from French to\nMetal Work.\nTheir son, Ted, will enter grade\nRae Milligan\nRecaptures Title\nEDMONTQN (Cf) \u2014 Rae Milligan, 21-year-old shotrnaker from\nJasper, Alta., Friday won the Alberta women's golf championship\nwith a 10 and 8 victory over Betty\nStanhope   of   Edmonton.\nEarlier this year Miss Milligan\nwon the Ontario women's title. It\nwas her third straight Alberta\nchampionship and fourth in five\nyears.\nOLDTIMERS GO\nMODERN WITH TV\nOldtimers at Nelson Hostel for\nthe Aged went modern Friday'\nnight when they took in their\nfirst television program.\nThe television set was presented to them by Nelson Jaycettes.\nNine Jaycettes, headed by\nPresident Mrs. Irwin Black, were\nwith the oldtimers when they\nturned the set on. They brought\nrefreshments and Spent a social\nevening. Mrs. D. Truscott and\nMrs. Earl Wilson were in charge\nof arrangements.\nThe Jaycettes are buying the\ntelevision set on the installment\nplan and will be organizing further fund-raising projects,\nJaycettes noticed the oldtimers\nlacked floor lamps or TV lamps\nthat could be turned on during\nTV programs. There is only one\nbright light hanging from the\nceiling which glares when the set\nis on, they noted. They believed\nsuitable lighting might be a project  for other  interested  groups.\nTrue High Fidelity\nBegini With a\nRhonograph\nNeedle\nThey're precision made by\nskilled craftsmen to the finest\nIn reproduction and the best\ncare for your records.\nSpecial\n1 only JENSEN 2-point genuine diamond needle for Gtt\ntone arm. Reg. $30.00 each.\nNow for\nonly \t\n$15\nWELLS\nSERVICE SHOP\n405 Hall St.\nPhone 1115\nwhere he  received  his Bachelor ,\u201e ...                _,...\u00ab\u00bb\na.  a..   j\u00bb- \u2022- i-  ,.,.       .    , 10 this year and daughter Myrna-\nof Ark degree in 1928. and also ,* a   , .        -\nk\u00ab \u2122*.i\u201e._i . \u201e\u25a0.\u201e\u00bb.\u201e\u201e\u201e. \u201e\u00ab\u00bb.^_ w,n i\u00b0 >nt\u00b0 \u00a3\u00ab<*<> seven.              |\nhas received a permanent second\nary advanced instructor's certlf-\ncate.\nAn active member of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral, he is chair-\nmarf of the parish council, junior\nwarden and member of the church\ncommittee. He Is a past president\nof the Nelson Teachers' Association, having held the post for the\n1945-46 term,, and Is a member of\nthe Nelson Curling Club. Mr. Mattice was appointed to the Nelson\nLibrary Board in June.\nHaving lived almost all his life\nin British Columbia, he graduated\nfrom Keremeos High School and\ntaught for 14 years in Princeton\nbefore coming to the Nelson Jun-\ni6r High Schobl where he taught\n\"Films Under\nT!*e Stars\"\nSUNDAY NIGHT 8:45 p.m.\nLalceiide Park\n\"SHADOW ON THE PRAIRIE\"\n(Canadian Ballet)\nand Other Shorts.\nWEATHER PERMITTING\n-wwwwwww*\nARE YOU\nMOVING?\nIT'S SMOOTH\nGOING WHEN IT\nGOES WITH US .. .\nTOWLER\nFUEL AND TRANSFER\nPHONE 889\nWE NEED\nYOUR USED ,f\nREFRIGERATOR\nHIGHEST TRADE-INS\nIN TOWN!\nSee the 10.5 Cu. Ft.\nLeonard Refrigerator at a\nNEW LOW PRICE\nColeman Electric\n327 Baker St.\nPhone 1752\n \u2014   .    \u00bb '\n-_,\t\n\u2014\u2014\n^^^*\n111 MM   '\nPICKING BERRIES In Creiton area, where\nagriculture It queen, Is another queen, Carolyn\nMulholland, comely Wynndel girl, who wai\nchosen to reign over the 1955 Blossom Festival\nand  plans  to  be  a  contestant  for the   Pacific\nNational Exhibition queen crown. 'In Creston\nValley crops are three weeks behind schedule\nthis season, and berry pickers are scarce, so\nCarolyn here does her bit toward harvesting of\nthe raspberry acreage.\u2014Art Stevens photo.\nIn Church To Steal\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Thelma Scuffle, 22, whom police said had been\nliving entirely from handbags she\n*tole in London Roman Catholic\nchurches while people prayed,\nwas sentenced to eight months in\njail.\nIIIIIIIIMIIIIMMMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIII\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS\nOPEN DAILY\n10 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nCLOSED  MONDAYS\ng iiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiuiiiiuiiinii\nGreenwood United Church Bids\nFarewell lo Rev. J. A. Ba Adams\nGREENWOOD \u2014 In St. Colum- three   years,   and   many   friends\nba's United Church, Greenwood,\na farewell gathering was held ln\nhonor of Rev. and Mrs. J.A.B.\nAdams and son Donald who will\nbe leaving shortly to take over\na new field at Vanderhoof.\nMr. Adams has been the minister of the \u2022 United Church for\nGreenwood-and district the past\nAMERICAN KITCHEN\nSTEEL CABINET\nSINKS\nIn Gleaming White Double  Baked Enamel\nYou Cannot Build Them As Cheaply.\n42\" right or left drain-board\nsink and cabinet. \t\n$(\n(High Quality Swing Faucet)\n99.95\n54\" double drain-board sink and\ncabinet with drawers and shelves.\n(High Quality Swing Faucet)\n66\" double drain-board, double\nsink, 2 doors, 2 drawers.  \t\n(High Quality Faucet)\n*129.50\ncet.\n'169.50\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING\nCo,\n902 Front St.\nPhone 1511\nfrom as far West as Beaverdell to\nGrand Forks on the east, gathered,\nto bid them farewell. I\nW. E. McArthur Jr., was the\nchairman, and a short musical\nprogram was presented by the\nGreenwood choir, also a solo, a\nduet and a choir from Grand\nForks, as well as some musical\nnumbers were heard from friends\nfrom Bridesville. These were all\nsacred numbers, many of them\nexpressing their feelings towards\nMr. and Mrs. Adams.\nThen ,on behalf of the various\npoints of the field, various numbers spoke of the loss to the community of Mr. and Mrs. Adams,\nand expressed sincere wishes for\ntheir future happiness and success\nin their new work. Mrs. McMynn\nspoke on behalf of Midway, Mrs.\nS. Bubar for Kettle Valley, Mr,\nAckerman for Beaverdell, Rev.\nA. Beagle for Bridesville, Mrs. Joe\nFufcui on behalf of the Canadians\nand Mrs. J. Puddy'for the Board\nand Greenwood,\nMrs. W. E. McArthur, the senior member of the Board, presented them with a gift from Greenwood and district. Mrs. J. Kiernan brought young Ricky Johnson up, who presented a gift' to\nDonald Adams from the Sunday\nSchool. The.gift to the family was\na chest of silver and to Donald,\nseveral story books.\nMr, Adams said he would always remember friends they had\nmade during their stay here, and\nhoped to meet again in the future.\nWhile refreshments were being\nprepared, Mr. Adams lead the\nchildren in a sing-song. Mrs. W.\nE. McArthur and Mrs. McMynn\npoured and the women of the\nchurch served.\nCranbrook Extends Services . . .\nSelkirk Subdivision\nBlending With City\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Metamorphosis of Selkirk Subdivision, South-\nwest coriier of the city brought lp-\n'to city limits by plebiscite a year\nago and authorized debentures for\nextension of city utilities', is well\nunder way now that actual extension work has started. Approximately 200 city properties are expected to benefit through connection of water \"and sewer to the\nextension. Until now most of the\nsmall homes there have been 'dependent on the goodwill of adjoining neighbors already served with\nwater, a single well and a single\nstandpipe for their water. With\nassurance the service will be\navailable flurry of improvements\nand new building in the 28-block\nsection between Sixth and Third\nAvenues from Fourth Street south\nto  Seventh   are   proceeding..\nBoth city ditchers, most of the\ncity's mobile equipment and a\ncity crew have the main almost to\nSeventh Street this week. It is\nsix-inch pipe from the large main\nat Second Street and Sixth Avenue, lies south to Third Street\nwhere it branches to Fifth and\nSeventh Avenues. Trunk sewefr Is\nbeing laid on Fifth Avenue lane\nfrom Second Street trunk sewer.\nSTREET 8URVEY\nProfessional surveyors party ls\nalso on the subdivision laying out\nthe proper course for the gravel\nstreets and the lanes which were\nalso authorized by the debentures,\nand correcting property lines.\nWhen the water main is complete\nproperty-owners whose applications for service ara accepted by\nthe city will be required to dig\nthe pijje-ditch from their homes\nto property lines, with a fee.of\n$85 (or the conectlon. Accepted\napplications for sewer c.onections\nwill be. effected through licenced\nplumber who will Include the $10\nconnection fee in hisi charge.\nPresent city objective is to'have\nall ditching, pipe installation and\nfilling completed by Fall, along\nwith gravelling of streets for the\narea East of Seventh to Eleventh\nAvenue will be similarly, esrved\nunder the same $110,000 bylaw approved for this purpose in late\nWinter.\nKimberley RCMP\nChange About\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Kimberley's\neight-man detachment of the\nRCMP has had a 50 per cent turnover with Summer transfers of\npersonnel. Sergeant W, H. Davidson continues in the post of offi-\ncer-in-charge. j\n'Kimberley detachment members\ntransferred elsewhere are Con-'\nstable Ted Gangdal to Nelson,\nConstable B. Massine to C&eston,1\nand Constable Ross Rachardson to\nHazelton. i\nCorporal D. Pye of Prince\nGeorge detachment has been posted here &nd with his wife and\nthree children has established his\nnew home. His duties will include first aid classes for East\nKootenay RCMP personnel for\nwhich he is an experienced and\nqualified  instructor.\nOthers transferred here this\nsummer are Constable A..N. Davis\nfrom Nelson', Constable Paul\nCederberg from Creston and Constable A. A. Guy from Vernon.\nMinister Speaks\nStrongly on\nChiang's Control\nVICTORIA (CP).\u2014 Under the\n\"police state\" of Chiang Kai-shek\nthe people of Fdrmosa are just as\nbadly off as when the island was\nconquered by the Japanese, a Former moderator of the Presbyterian church in Canada said here.\nRev. J. Lewis McLean of St.\nAndrew's Presbyterian church\ntold the Victoria Rotary Club his\nimpressions of a six-week visit\nto Formosa earlier this year.\n\"The nationalists are not there\nat the Invitation of the Formosa\npeople, ft is a police state.\"\n\"Theje is no government- by the\npeople in Formosa today. It con-\nPioneer Boat\nIdentified as\nThe Crombie\nThe riddle of the old lake boat,\nits decks crowded with early-day\npassengers, which was published\non this page of yesterday's Nelson\nDaily News, hag been solved.\n. Lee Hall, 313 Latimer Street, has\nidenitified the vessel as The\nCrombie, a woodlburning stern-\nwheeler, built like a scow and owned by the Adams River Lumber\nCompany of Chase, B.C.\nTo prove It, he said: \"That's me,\"\npointing to a man standing beside\nthe gangplank.\nThe picture was taken by Monty\nMontgomery of Chase and the East\nKootenay, on a plcipic up Shu-\nswap Lake during the summer of\n1911.\nThe late H. A. McCarthy, captain,, was in the wheelhouse, not\non the lower deck as had been\nsupposed, and the man in bowler\nhat astride the guy rope was Wes\n(Red) Loyst, whose' sister was\nstanding by the gangplank next to\nMr. Hall.\nResidents of Sunshine Bay,\nwhence the photograph comes,\nwere curious to know the name\nof the vessel, Susequently it wqs\nforwarded to The Daily News by\nthis paper's correspondent at\nProcter, Mrs. Alec Maclean.\ntrasts strongly with the life we\nenjoy here,\" said Mr. McLean.\n\"Everyone, visitors and residents alike, must register with the\npolice and passes are necessary\neven for a trip out of town overnight,\" he said.\nChurchill Shows Interest In\nGeneva Big Four Conference\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Sir Win-1 called \"the'last prize\" he sought\nstem Churchill went back Friday I from life^-the chance to make one\nto hi^ old official home, 10 Down-  more   personal   contribution   to\ning Street, to lunch with Sir An- world peace,\nthony Eden and hear from him thej MAY TALK W|TH Ru8g\nBut events may give him one\nmore opportunity.\nWhen Marshal Nikolai Bulganin\nSoviet prime minister and Nikita\nKhrushchev, Communist party\nsecretary, visit Britain next spring\nChurchill hopes to revive memories of- his war-leadership days in\npersonal contact with the Soviet\nleaders.\nSince his resignation, the veteran statesman has not broken\nsilence in the House of Commons\nwith a speech as an ordinary back\nbencher. But parliamentarians believe that when they return from\ntheir summer vacations they will\nsee and hear more of him.\ninside story of the Geneva Big\nFour conference.\nThe biggest crowd in Whitehall\nand the approaches to Downing\nStreet since last May's general\nelection cheered him on his arrival.\nOne of the new prime minister's last acts before he left for\nthe four-power talks was to call on\nChurchill and listen for an hour\nto the impressions and guidance\nof the man who so long had\nurged the desirability of a top-\nlevel meeting of East and West.\nChurchill's retirement from the\npremiership April 5 in deference\nto his age cheated him of what he\nSTOP AT KOOTENAY'S YOUTH HOSTEL . . .\nAussie Girls Here an World Jaunt\nLARGEST STOCK\nHarvard University libraries\ncontain nearly 6,000,000 volumes,\nthe largest stock of any university\nin the United States,\nA SPECIAL RCAF OFFICER\n\u00ab\u00a3# if,'.\n':.__:\u25a0;_?      W i     y\nwill bt* in\nNELSON\nCANADIAN LEGION OFFICE\nWednesday\nAugust 3rd\n10 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nWHILE HE'S HERE SEE HIM ABOUT  THE TRADES  TRAINING AND\nCAREER OPPORTUNITIES OPEN TO YOU IN CANADA'S AIR FORCE\nThe RCAF Recruiting Unit Will Be in Trail August 1 st and 2nd\n\\ 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Canadian Legion\nI    and Creston, Aug. 4th, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Canadian Legion\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 Mabs Yaxley\nand Peggy Newton stepped off the\nblue bus carrying their neat bags\nand asked for the Canadian Youth\nHostel in Gray Creek. They are\ncircling the world absorbing every\nexperience, enriching their store\nof knowledge both in old countries and new.\nIn April, 1953. Mabs and Peggy\nleft their homes in Australia, having saved up for a world tour.\nMabs, faintly greyed with dark\nbrown eyes, was a clerk, in Australia, or a stenographer, here.\nPeggy, rosy-cheeked, eager grey\neyes, is a nurse who trained at\nMooroopua Base Hospital, Victoria, Australia.\nThe first leg of the expedition\ntook them by boat to England with\nglani?ts of a few hours at Bombay and Ceylon, through the Suez,\nthe Mediterranean by Gibraltar.\nThey arrived in time for the Coronation. In London they worked.\nAt Christtnas time, Peggy refuse*!\nnight duty, preferring to work\nin a store selling scarves so that\nshe did nof miss parties. Mabs\nhad clerical work In a department\nstore.\nChristmas over, a little more\nmoney to spend and they joined\nwith three other fellow countrymen in buying an old London taxi\nand crossed the Channel. They\nwent to Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Western Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Italy, France and\nSpain, stopping at Youth Hostels\nand soaking up every scrap of\nInterest.\nAustrian villages made a great\nimpression on the party with their\ngaily painted walls and patterned\ntimber and plaster dominated by\nthe churches. These contained\nlovely guilded and marble ornamentation showing delicate crafts\nmanship. Viennese woods were\nbudding. In Vienna itself, the Four\nPowers were then policing the\ncity. Americans drove in white\nCadillacs, British ,and French in\nNELSON COMMERCIAL\nTRAINING SCHOOL\nDAY AND EVENING\nCLASSES\n701 Front St. Phone 1794\nRca. 1836-L\nordinary cars, Russians in trucks.\n(This arrangement has now terminated with Austria regaining\nindependence.) The old taxi had\nto drive out through the Russian\nzone, which was an unpleasant\nexperience.\nSpring had come tp Italy and\nthis was perfection. Venice, Florence, Rome with the breath-taking beauty of the Sistine Chapel\nand magnificence of St. Peters.\nThen the Isle of Capri. The Blue\nGrotto was a story in itself. The\ntwo girls were taken in a boat\nrowed by an Italian singing \"Back\nto Sorrento\" it could only just\nedge through the rocky entrance\nby their lying flat in the boat.\nThen the enchanted pool, drops\nof water from raised oars were\nsapphires, it was fairyland, but\nno! The oarsman stopped singing\nand demanded tips, and would not\ntake them out until they com'\nplied. They saw Axel Munthe's\nAna Capri where St. Michele was\ncomposed.\nTO SCOTLAND\nBack in London, the taxi sold,\nMabs and Peggy worked until\nSeptember when they set off for\nScotland. Edinburgh, Aberdeen,\nthe Isle of Skye were visited until in October they crossed the Atlantic on the Empress of France.\nLiverpool to Montreal, where they\nmet Mab's brother who is attached\nto the RCAF. Together they walked to see the sights. For six\nmonths they worked in Toronto.\nA bus tour through the United\nStates came next. New Jersey,\nNew York, Washington, D. C,\nwhich reminded them of Paris ajnd\nthen they were told it was designed by a French man. Virginia,\nTennessee, Mississippi, Texas,\nMexico. Alas, here Peggy suffered\nfrom a pick-pocket. Arizona, Ne\nvada, Utah, Montana, up to Cal\ngary for the Stampede. Canadian\nYouth Hostels, now through the\nparks; Banff, Yoho, Jasper, Kootenay to Mount Eisenhower, and so\nthis week t0 Gray Creek.\nTwo days' rest and on agaih\nby bus to Oliver the next Youth\nHostel, a month at the Coast and\non Vancouver Island, down the\nPacific Coast to San Francisco\nwhere this adventurous pair will\nboard SS Orcades in September.\nThey will call at Honolulu, Fiji\nand Auckland before they reach\ntheir homes; Mabs' at Shepparton,\nVictoria, Peggy at Echuca, Victoria, in Australia.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY JULY 30, 1955\u20143\ni\nMartin Brings Glad\ntidings on Hospital\nINVERMERE \u2014 Hon. Eric Martin, minister of health and welfare, addressing a public meeting\nat Invermere, told the gathering\nexactly what it wanted to hear.\n\"You have to have a new hospital . . . lt should go into construction Immediately.\"\nMr .Martin promised that as\nsoon as kf returns to Victoria he\nwill, check reasons for delay and\nhasten the go-ahead signal, If\npossible.\nMr. Martin said: \"Your hospital\nmust get under construction as\nrapidly as \u25a0 possible. The shell\nshould be' ready by freeze-up to\nthat the interior work can continue all winter. I would like to\nsee two or three, shifts a day to\nspeed construction.\"\nHe went on to say: \"You have\nreached the last hurdle. Your hospital board has worried through\nthe years and got by with inadequacies.\" He congratulated the\npeople of the area, in having a\nboard of directors so interested\nln the hospital and paid tribute to\nadministrator Walter Zet who,\nwith\" the .co-ordinated efforts of\nthe dirdiJ.ors was steering it\nthrough difficult times.\nMr. Martin also praised the Ladies' Hospital Aid organizations,\nthroughout the province which he\nsaid are working ,fbetter than\never.\"\nCOST8 WAY UP\nCommenting on the constantly\nincreasing costs of running a hospital, Mr. Martin said since 1948\nwages ln hospitals have increased\n150 per cent; drugs are up 40 per\ncent; supplies 61 per cent. He explained that it costs $4000 a year to\nmaintain one acute care bed.\nAsked if it would not be advisable to have the government\ntake over complete running of the\nhospitals, Mr. Martin replied the\ngovernment would consider that a\nform of Socialism. \"Local people\nknew the problems of the com-\nTo Finish PGE\nExtension 'Si\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C. (CP)\u2014\nConstruction of the first 57 miles\nof the Pacific Great Eastern rail\nway's Peace River extension is on\nschedule and will be completed\nnext year as planned if weather\nremains favorable.\nA spokesman for General Con\nstruction Co. Ltd., holder bf two\ncontracts covering clearing, piling,\nburning, minor bridging and grading for a distance of 38 miles, said\nwork is progressing well despite\nsome difficulty near Mile 2 where\nmachines encountered a rain-\nsoaked clay formation.\nAim of the contractor's to complete the first 38 miles ready for\ntrack-laying by June 30, 1956.\niRIENDLY\nlAMILY\nINANCE\nF\nPersonal Loans\nFor Bills, Fuel, Repairs, Cart,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arti Bldg,\nPHONE 178S\nmunity best,\" he said, and contln^\nued: \"It would be impossible fog\nthe government to run the 81 hosi\npitals in the province. It would'\nrequire another department.\" f\nGOOD IDEA I\nDr. George Duthie asked abou|i\ncare of the aged members of thai\ncommunity.' Mr. Martin admitted\nthat this was a serious problem]\nnot yet, solved satisfactorily. He}\nsaid 16 per cent of the population\nof B. C. is over 65 years of age. j\nTold   of  the  tuggeitlon   that\nthe    present    Lady    Elizabeth;\nBruce   Memorial   Hospital   bo\n.   used as a home for elderly chronic cases after the new hospital\nIs built, .Mr. Martin thought It\na good idea and explained what\nhelp might be forthcoming front)\nthe government.\nMr. Martin had Inspected th^'\nlocal hospital before the meeting;.\nIntroduced by Mrs. Chris Madsonj,\npresident of the Windermere Disf\ntrict Hospital Association, Mri\nMartin drew applause and laugh-? .\nter as he described his trip Into\nthe Interior, Inspecting everjl\nhospital en route. \"I'm fed up with\ndust and gravel and holes,\" i\\t\nsaid, \"I am a blacktop enthusiast\nand I'm going back to tell Mr.\nGaglardi to double his equipment}\ndouble his men, double everything\nbefore I drive 3500 miles again.\"\nThe meeting was called Jointly\nby the Windermere District Board,\nof Trade, and the Windermere\nDistrict Hospital Association, and\nwas open to the public. W .Roy\nLake, trade board president, waa\nin the chair. T\n.S3\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nLet ear trained, Xmrt*f\u00bb\nprofessional moVert ''tmkt th*\nload off your'mlndr tew\nfinest furniture, ditto an*\nother possessions win bo\nscientifically packed and\nhandled with the utmwt ten.\nPhono for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nGo.\n719 Baker St.   Nolion, B.C.\nPhone 33\nA TREAT FOR YOU\nAND YOUR FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Frpnt St.       Nelson\nComplete\nheating\nsatisfaction\n\u2022 Guaranteed supply with\n\"Evergreen Contract\"\n\u2022 Highest heat value\n\u2022 Reliable supply and delivery\nFURNACE OIL\nBudget Payments Available '\nphone or write\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED\nALWAYS LOOK TO IMPERIAL FOR THE BEST\n\u00a3sso\n IPWWMI\nlip^ \u25a0   \"^^^HWP^HIIIP\nNflaon latly JNnoa\nEstablished  April  22,   1U02 \"\u00bb '\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER  OF THE CANADIAN  PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDI!   BUREAU   OF   CIRpULATIONS.\t\nSaturday, July 30, 1955\nNow Is Time To Begin reparations\nFor Civic Nominations Day\noutlbok. However, such other service\nis. by ho means a requirement for\ncandidacy.\nCertain relaxations in property\nownership requirements for Council\ncandidates this year should have\nbroadened the field from which'\nlikely men and women can be chosen.\nHowever, it is hardly enough to\nrely upon such a change to meet the\ncall for community leaders who\nwould have the support of the citizens. It has been urged in this column\nthat various groups \"begin studies, of\nthose procedures essential to orderly\ngovernment. In this way, it was believed, various members would be interested in candidacy and advance\nthefr studies of civic matters to the\npoint where they would be worthwhile contributors.\nAt any rate, it is not too soon for\ninterested citizens to begin now to\nconsider those they would submit\nand support as candidates. Civic government is a serious business, and\nthe choosing of candidates demands\nmore than spur-of-the-moment grasping in the few days before nominations day.\nTwo members of Nelson City\nCouncil, it is said, plan\" to \u00a3nd their\nservice with completion of terms this\nyear. There is, of_ course, nothing\nunusual about such reports. And such\nthings are never certain until nomination day deadline is passed.\nHowever, the question that it does\nraise is: \"Who would be successors?\"\nThere is always room\u2014in fact,\nneed\u2014for new figures in the various\nphases of civic government and community service, on school and hospital boards, in police, civic centre and\nparks commissions, and in the Council. The more who have participated\nin these fields of service the greater\nis the knowledge of our democratic\nforms of government and action\nspread through the community, and,\nconsequently, the higher and more\nexpert is interest in community\naffairs.\nGenerally, it. is best if Council\ncandidates are those who have qualified themselves by the studies necessary in service on the other bodies.\nExperience in these fields is a real\nasset to Councillors, and gives the\nbenefit of broader  knowledge  and\nThe Typical\nMotor Accident\nWhat\u2014and where\u2014ls the typical motor\nvehicle accident? Statistics for the first nine\nmonths of 1954 throw some light on the\nanswer.\nThe accident'takes place in daylight\n(25,484 In daylight to 14,530 in dark, and\n1018 in the dusk). It takes place on a dry\nsurface (25,416 dry to 8497 wet, 6712 icy and\n4198 snowy).\nThe driver is from 25 to 40 years of age\n(32,997, compared with 21.159 of 24 and\nunder and 13,656 of 41-54 years). The place\nis an urban street (22,103) or a rural road\n(22,858). Queen's highways, only 12,583.\nThe driver is going faster than conditions justify (4563. compared with 2852 when\nhe hadn't the right of way, 2483 when the\ncar had been driven off the roadway, and\n1872 when lt was on the wrong side of the\nstreet). The typical car in an accident is\ngoing straight (49,179 to 8204 parked or\nstanding still, 7794 skidding and 6685 turning left). The driver is a male (70,504 to\n4790).\nThe day is Saturday (9146) or Friday\n(6871) or Sunday (6773); least likely Wednesday (5319). The most frequent hour of\noccurrence is 5 to 6 p.m. (3989). It's safest\nat 5 to 6 a.m. (309).\nStreet intersections are dangerous (11,-\n931), just ahead of the cross roads (11.229).\nThe driver is in normal condition (74,170)\nto 595 intoxicated, 354 extremely fatigued\nand 175 with a physical defect). \u2014 Toronto\nStar.\nTke Vanishing, Hoe\n' Time was, a generation ago, when hoeing was a definite season of the year, and a\nfourteen-year-old was expected to put in\nmonotonous hours, in the cornfield, potato\npatch and bean field. Most of today's crops\nare grown without hand hoeing, and we are\nnot certain of the results on the younggr\ngeneration.\nIt should be understood that there are\ndegrees of desirability in hoeing. In stony, .\nclod-filled soil it can be a frustrating chore;\nbut the countryman still clings to his belief\nthat uhder the right conditions hoeing not\nonly strengthens youthful character but is a\npleasant task.\nIn mellow soil, and if the weeds are\nsmall enough to offer only minor opposition,\na man can work slowly along without expending undue energy, enjoy the warm sun\non the back of his neck, and use his muscular strength just enough to give a comfortable glow of physical well-being.\nNaturally a man should hoe with a\nsharply-filed edge; he should have a narrow-\nbladed tool so that he is not lifting unnecessary weight. One end of the blade should be\nrazor sharp so he can cut weeds close to a\nplant.\nToo much down - bending and up -\nstraightening of the vertebral column saps\nthe pleasure from hoeing. And finally, one\nshould give special attention to the handle;\nit should be lightweight but strong. A man\nwith a hoe needs to pause frequently and to\nlean on the handle while he Idoks across the\nfields, studies the woodland, and lifts his\neyes to the blue-green mountains across the\nvalley.\u2014The Ottawa Journal,\nPress Comment\nThere is one sure thing about economic\nlaws, warns the Calgary Herald. \"They cannot be altered, and any tinkering with them\nis dangerous. It would be, if economic disaster were imminent, in the interests of the\nCanadian people to take emergency and\ntemporary steps to prevent the farm community from being seriously disrupted. But\nonly as a temporary measure, for price supports, for farm or any other products, are\nuneconomic and certain to hinder natural\nreadjustment.\"\nAt the age of three, Hubert Blaine Wol-\nfeschlegelsteinhausenbergderoff, Jr., of Philadelphia, can say his name. This makes him\neven more remarkable than Davy Crockett,\nwho merely killed a bear at the same age;\nso how about some alert manufacturer\nbringing out a T-shirt with Hubert Wol-\nfeschlegelsteinhausenbergderoff across the\nfront?\nIt's Been Said\nMan himself is the crowning wonder of\ncreation; the study of his nature thje noblest\nstudy the world affords.\u2014William Ewart\nGladstone.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to .any reader. Namei of\nperiont asking questions will not be\npublished. There Is no charge for this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\nthere Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nF. H. H. S-, Trail\u2014Would like to know if\nHalcyon Hot Springs are still operating?\nWho .would I contact for treatments, and\nif available, what would they cost?\nHalcyon Hot Springs are closed to the\npublic. Estate'of the late Brigadier-General\nF. W. Burnham is being settled.\nMrs. W., Kimberley\u2014Could you please, give\nme name and address of the Monitor\nvacuum cleaner?\nT. Eaton Co.. Canada, Ltd., are agents\nfor Monitor products.\nC.,W, H-, Salmo\u2014I have a philodendron, the\nlarge split-leaf type, putting out large\nleaves at the rate of one every three\nweeks. There are also long air-roots\nspringing out from the main trunk of\nthe plant. Could you tell me if it would\nbe safe to remove theSe air roots? I\nwould not like to damage plant, as it\" is\nthe type that grows to a height of six\nfeet or more. At present it has seven\nleaves and stands just under three feet.\nThe air roots can  be removed  safely\nwith a sharp knife.\nK. S.,   Kaslo\u2014Would   you   again   tell   me\nwhere I might obtain aptitude tests to\nbe filled out at home? Also, would you\ntell me where I may send for pamphlets'\non   the   following   vocations:   Chemist,\nchemical engineer, physicist, engineering physicist, pharmacist, chartered accountant, actuary, statistician?\nWrite to  the  Institute of Technology,\nCalgary, Alta.; UBC Extension Department,\nVancouver, B. C; High School Correspondence   Division,   Weiler   Building,   Victoria,\nB. C; aijd Sprott-Shaw Schools, Vancouver,\nB. C. Apply to each of these centres for information on aptitude tests, and also literature on the subjects you list. They may not\ncover all of them, but will be able to give\nyou further advice. They certainly include a\ngood number of them in their courses.\nS. D., Nelson\u2014What does a closed or union\nshop constitute as required by Canadian\n'   labor unions?\nClosed  to   anything   other  than   union\nlabor. ,\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of\ngenuine interest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whale, or In part, except over\nthe signature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be\nreturned.\ni\n* Complains Sewage\nFlows Into Uphill\nHomes After Rains\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014A lot of thought, attention and a\nlot of work has been done to guard the\nhealth of our citizens by Dr. H. T. Lowe,\nwho is doing a really worthwhile job.\nNow we would like to know when Dr.\nLowe will have .sufficient powers to have\nrectified the awful condition from sewage\ndisposal in some localities.\nWe suggest that he Investigate the damage caused by sewerage waste surging\nthrough living quarters of several homes on\nRobson Street caused by recent heavy rains.\nHow long is this menacing condition\ngoing to be tolerated?       ;\nG. A. FORBES.\n314 Robson Street.\nThe Vine Grows\nNew Forest\n- a Motel\nF. B. Pearce\ntion\nYour Horoscope\nI'ady, even progress is the prognostica-\nor those whose birthday is today.  A\nmerry nature is promised for today's child.\nThcyll Do It Every Time\n\u2014       By Jimmy Hatlo\nFOR SUNDAY, JULY 31: Your prospects remain fairly favorable, especially if\nyou are guided by your own intuitions. Today's child will be active and practical.\nToday's Bible\nThought\nPaul was the most amazing man\nthat ever lived. The greatest missionary of all history who yet\nearned his own bread by his own\ntoil. He was inspired by a vision\n, of th& risen living Christ.\nThe poor man had nothing but\none little ewe lamb.\u20142 83m. 12:3t\n' (hint dlsL\n7.30\nHumility is a virtue but don't\nlet the family hear you belittle\nyourself. They might think it's the\ntruth an* not modesty.\nIt is surprising how the English,\nwith their gift for compromise,\ncan adopt ideas from bther countries, blend them with their own\nand retain the best of both.\nMotels are not common in England. This is partly because of the\nmany restrictions which were in\nforce during and shortly after the\nwar1. Even now one cannot just go\nout and pick out a site and start\nbuilding. The site itself may be\nin a residential area or in a \"green\nbelt\" and if it is no. the building\nhas to be approved by the town\nplanning committee for that particular area. There U no indiscriminate building anywhere and persons with only a small capital cannot build and operate motels.\nThere is however one motel which\nhas been in operation since 1953\nand the second of the series is to\nbe opened shortly.\nThe old coaching inns were the\nhotels of their day. They provided\nbed and breakfast for travellers\nand stabling for their horses. They\nstill provide bed and breakfast\nfor travellers but the stables have\nbeen turned into garages for their\npatrons' cars,\nBEING AT HOME\nBut the old coaching inns are\ndifficult to modernize and they\nlack amenities which Americans\nconsider essential. They want bed\nand bath in preference to bed and\nbreakfast. The old coaching inn\ncannot give them this but they\ncan g^ve him something, which his\nown country cannot provide\u2014the\nfeeling of being at home and not\na stranger in a foreign country,\nfor the English can be servants\nwithout being servile, they can be\nfriendly without being familiar\nthey are unobtrusive rather than\naggressive and they are mindful\nof the comfort of the guests. They\ndo much to give the traveller a\nfeeling of restfulness.\nThe American motel is not like\nthat. It gives antiseptic and sterile\ncomfort, no tea in bed nor breakfast, only the feeling that one is\nalone on a continent. One leaves\nit with no regrets and no fond\nmemories.\nBut if it is not difficult to build\na new building it is easy to add\nto existing premises.\nBrewers own and maintain most\nof the public houses of Great Britain. Whether or not this is a good\nthing does not matter but it is to\ntheir credit that their inns are invariably sparkling outside with\npaint and are immaculate within.\nQuite apart for the English idea\nthat shelter, food and drink all go\ntogether it was to be expected that\nbrewers would be interested in\nmotels. Nor is it surprising that\nthey joined forces with the promotion of the idea The first one\nwas built, in 1933' near Dover and\nthe second is to be opened shortly\nIt is to be called the New Forest\nMotel an dis built on to and attached to \"The Vine\", an old well\nknown inn owned by Watneys.\nPONIES COME TO FEED\nThe New Forest was new in the\ntime of William the Conqueror but\nit is still a forest and a holiday\nspot for many, especially on Sundays and holidays. Then the traffic\nis so thick that care bumper to\nbumper and the wild forest ponies\ncongregate by the road looking\nfor handouts. North American\nbears in national parks may be\njust as time, but everyone likes a\npony. So it is quite likely that the\nnew motel will be a success.\nThe motel itself forms three\nsides of a square around what is\nto be a grassy court. It is built in\nthe modern style with a restaurant\nconnecting it to the inn. Thejjooms\nare as well furnished and as attractive as any American motel.\nThey have iced water flasks and\na tea making set and they have a\nvaleting service. Coats,, suits and\nshoes are placed in a cupboard in\nthe door and removed by the porter overnight. In the morning they\nare returned before the guest is\nawake. This Is something all travellers will appreciate in this land!\nwhere cleaning establishments are\nfew and far between.\n$15  PER  COUPLE ,\nAll this, a well fitted room, a'\nprivate bathroom and garage and\ntea in bed with a continental\nbreakfast costs 27 shillings and 6\npence per person; so that a couple\nstaying overnight will pay five\nguineas which in Canadian money\nis about $15. If that is beyond the\nmeans of many people there is\nstill no doubt that the motel will\nenjoy a large clientele.\n, From an\nOldtimer's\nNotebook\n\u2014BY R. G. JOY\u2014\nR. G. JOY, Historian\nNelson District Oldtlmero Ass'n.\nFrank Burton was good to the\nkids. When the children in any\ncommunity, like or love an individual, you can't go far wrong on\nhim.\nFrank Burton was born In the\ncounty of Norfolk, England, which\nis North of Kent, the mouth of the\nriver Thames and the waterway\nto London where \"ships pass in\nthe night.\" He worked as a farm\nlaborer near Winnipeg, and\neventually arrived at Cranbrook-\nto be employed at a garage there\nSoon he was hired as chauneur by\nDoctors Green and King, and many\nlong hours he served the doctors\nwhen visiting the sick. He often\nspoke of driving to St. Mary's flats\nand waiting up to 16 hours to take\nthem back to Cranbroqk.\nHe eventually arrived in Nelson\nabout 35 years ago, thus he was\none of our young oldtimers: Frank\nwas a gardener by profession, having been eritployed by a large nursery in Norfolk. He was first employed by William Hampshire at\nhis dairy at Anderson Creek. He\nwas very fond of animals and endeavored to give them a square\ndeal. Mr. Hampshire said, \"We had\nan old cow which had to be shot.\nI told Frank to take the carcass to\nthe bush and let the coyotes have\na feed. Frank said, Til dig a grave'\nand bury her decently.' If we\ndestroyed a calf that npbody wanted, Frank would sulk for days.\"\nWhen the snow was deep he\nwould rise early in the morning\nand clean the pathways to the\nneighbors doors. If a new arrival\ncame to make a home ln the community, he would present him\nwith root vegetables from his own\ngarden. He Was generous with\nflowers; he also had an aviary\nof birds.\nHe at times went by ferry to the\nNorth side of the lake working at\na variety of jobs. One evening\nwhile coming to the ferry landing,\nhe saw that the ferry was disabled on the other side. So Frank\nswam the river to the South side*j\nwith his lunch bucket. Those who\nknew Frank said he could swim\nlike a fish. He landed on the South\nshore and placing his lunch bucket\nunder his arm, walked to his cabin\non Morgan Street.\nHe was employed by Jack Burns\nto build a foundation near Stanley\nStreet, Frank said, \"How deep?\"\n\"Keep on digging,\" said Jack. \"I'll\ntell you when to stop.' When Mr-\nBurns came back to see if he was\ndeep enough, Burns was surprised\nto see him below the surface.\n\"Why did you go so deep?\" \"Well,\"\nsaid Frank, \"It was nothing but\nsand so I kept on digging.\" Hei\nwas also employed by Mr. Burns:\nrai^da Evidence Act Ho Longer\nProtects B. C. Court Witnesses\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Legal\nauthorities Friday explained why\nwitnesses appearing before the police probe \"testify at their peril\"\nand will not be protected by the\nCanadian or B.C. Evidence Acts.\nThis means that any self-lncrim-\nInating statements made at the\nprobe could be used against the\nwitness should court action be\ntaken.\n\"Until recently the B. C. Evidence Act contained a clause pur-\np: rtlng to give immunity to those\ntestifying,\" one authority stated.\n\"But it was ruled by court as\nbeyond the B. C. government's\nlegislating power as it attempted\nto give immunity in cases in which\nat Ymir later, also Mr. Brenolson.\nFrank seemed to be quite versatile, He could lay stone, build and\nrepair * chimneys and also stucco\nhouses. It seemed he did not value\nmoney and he was generous to a\nfault\nThere Is a story that he repaired\na chimney In the winter and to\nprevent it from falling in a very\nheavy frost during the night he\nbundled up his blankets to cover\nthe chimney and save 11\nSome 25 years ago, I organized\na carrolling team for St. Saviour's church and we went carrolling at Christmas time. We moved\nthe organ on a two-wheeled hand\ntruck and we Serenaded J. Holmes,\nE. W. Widdowson, the Occidental\nhotel and others. Norman Bradley\nwas our organist and I was violinist for five carrollers. The* late Mr\nBlakeman was collector. Frank\nBurton was among listeners and\nliberal with his offering. We surmised the carolling brought back\nmemories of Christmas at his home\nin England.\n\u2022 TELEVISION\n\u2022 RADIO\n\u2022 ELECTRONICS\nI am here to interview men\nwho would like to train for\na real job with a real\nfuture. Those showing aptitude will get full facts\nabout remarkable training\nopportunity. Men taken\ninto program from this area\ncan earn good money before long. No need to quit\npresent job while training\nAlso ideal for high school\ngrads. Write at once for\nappointment.\nJ. p. COLLINS,\nDe-Vcy Technical Institute,\nc\/o General Delivery,\nNelson, B. C.\nonly the federal government haa\nJurisdiction.\"\nFOR FEDERAL CASES\nThe Canada Evidence Act has\nan \"immunity\" clause, but it was\nexplained the CEA applies only to\nfederal proceedings.\nLack of protection under the\nacts was dramatically pointed out\nThursday as the police Inquiry resumed after a 14-day adjournment.\nBefore wounded Det. Sgt. Len\nCuthbert took the Btand his counsel, H. A. D. Oliver, stated that\nhis client \"will accuse himself and\nothers\" in testimony before the\nRoyal Commission.\nBut he stated that he had advised Cuthebrt he had the right\nto refuse to\" answer any question\nif the answer might incriminate\nhim.\nAMERA\nNEWS\nBy: Bill Ramsay\nThis is the time of year when\nmost of our activities are out-of-\ndoors, so let's take a quick look\nat some of the common stumbling\nblocks posed by outdoor shooting.\nOne of the oldest bromides tells\nus to \"let the sun come over your\nshoulder and shoot.\" This is a\nnice 'simple approach, but tough\non the subject. Generally, the\nsubject squints through the ordeal\nand the printed result looks like\nsomeone peering into the working end of a blast furnace.\nA far more pleasant effect Is'\nusually produced when you turn\nthe subject so\nthat you get a\nside - lighted pic-\nt u r e. Women,\nparticularly, take\nkindly to the halo\neffect which side\nlighting creates\naround the hair. However, a\nproblem posed by side lighting\nis the tendency of the shadowy\nside of the subject's face to become an unsightly blob on very\nbright days. A simple way to\navoid this is to place the subject\nin such a way that his shadow\nside is near a bright surface, such\nas a light wall or your new\ncream-colored convertible.\nIncidentally, a simple way to\nstay abreast of the latest and the\nbest in the photographic field Ia\nto make RAMSAY'S CAMERAS\nyour headquarters. We might\nmention, too, that if you want full\njustice done to yqur shooting\nefforts, bring your film to us for\nexpert finishing. We're on tha\nbus stop at 497 Baker St. Phone\nlp6.\nFOR VACATIONS OR Mf TRIP GO\nGREYHOUND\nMarilyn Held Back\nBy Bad Weather\nFOLKESTONE, England (CD-\nPoor weather conditions Friday\ncontinued to thwart Marilyn Bell's\nhopes pf swimming the English\nchannel.\nIn London a i meteorological official at the air ministry said\nstrong winds and rough,seas virtually rule out any chance of the\n17-year-old Toronto swimmer\nmaking her bid before Sunday\nCROWN   LANDS\nThere are more than  1,000,000\nsquare  miles  of  crown  land  in\nCanada.\nGreyhound offers so much more in travel service! Now\nyou can see mere at less cost ... go one route, return\nanother at the same low fare . . . enjoy convenient\nstop-overs for holiday fun. Enjoy the comfort of new\nStainless Steel deluxe Highway Courier buses for an\naround luxury highway travel. Fast Super express\nservice saves time and money . . . provides travel with\na minimum of stops.\n\"New Low Bargain\nFairs\"\"\nFrom NELSON to\n. 9                                      Hours\nOne Way\nReturn\nPenticton  _,       8!4\n$ 7.35\n$13.25\nVancouver .     15Vi\n12.50\n22.50\nPrince George  -    25\n22.70\n40.90\nCalgary                    12'\/a\n11.65\n21.00\nEdmonton 17'\/2\n17.00\n30.60\nRegina ...                23\n20.90\n37;6S\nWinnipeg     333\/i\n29.10\n52.40\nToronto . 77\n49.85\n89.75\nFor further Information and colorful travel folders call\nor visit GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT, 686 Baker St,\nTelephone 800, or contact your local Greyhound Agent\nGREYHOUND V^^\/~^;W\n__\n ^^^^^^w^^w^^^^^^^^fpp\n' '.\",\u25a0  .'   '\u25a0    ,:  '_';.\n.  \u25a0., \u25a0,..  \u25a0 -..,'\u25a0\u25a0.       .    '. .  \u25a0   '.\u2014'\u2014.\"\u25a0  '   \u25a0'\n :\t\nI\n\\C\\%)\nOur 53rd Anniversary\nSHOE SALE\nCONTINUES\nSelections of Women's Shoes\nPriced at\n$2.95 *3.95 *4.95\nBe sure to see these exceptional buys.\nAlso many outstanding values In Men's Shoes.\nRe Andrew & Co*\nLeaden In Footfashlon.\nEstablished 1902\nNelson Social\nPHONE 1844\nMrs.   Janet   Coates   and ^Miss by Mrs. Campbell's mother, Mrs.\nNDUSTRY SPECIALTY\nAgricultural machinery ls a spe-\nlalty of Danish industry.\nMushrooms feed on the remains\nof other organisms such as decaying plants and animals.\nQiitKBwrrth'\nof (ttanafca\n.Ste PauVs\u2014Trinity\n11:00\u2014Combined Service, St. Paul's and Trinity\nCongregations-\u2014at Trinity Church. Minister\nfor August, Rev. Frank Johnson of Courtenay, B. C.\nNO EVENING SERVICE\nfirst Prwbgftrian QUyurrly\nVictoria and Kootenay Streets\nRev. Charlei E. Bny, Minister\nDURING JULY AND AUGUST\nJoint Services: Presbyterian and Baptist\nJuly 31, 7:30 p.m.: First Presbyterian.\nRev. K. Imayoshi.\nfull \u25a0<fo*p*i (Mparrif\nPASTOR: E. V. YOUNG\nSunday School  10:00 a.m.\nMorning WorShip 11:00 a.m.\nNo Service Sunday Evening\nSaturday, 7:30 p.m.\nFeaturing \"That Kid Buck\"\nA film especially for young people\nBETHEL TABERNACLE\nBaker Street\nPentecostal Assemblies of Canada\n9:45\u2014SUNDAY  SCHOOL\u2014(Film  Strips, Songs)\n11:00 a.m.\u2014REV. W. J. FRIESEN, Principal of\nBritish Columbia Bible'Institute, Guest\nSpeaker.\nEVENING SERVICE WILL BE HELD AT THE\nKOOTENAY  PENTECOSTAL CAMP AT HARROP\nANGLICAN\nSt. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral\n(Ward and Silica)\n8:30 a.m.: Holy Communion.\n111:00 a.m.:   Morning  Service.\n7:30 p.m.:   Evening  Service.\nDEAN  WILL CONDUCT\nSERVICES\nWillow Point at 9:30 a.m.\nJEHOVAH'S WITNESSES\nI Eagles'  Lodge  Hall,  Baker  St.\nSUNDAY AT 7 P.M.:\nBible  Study Topic:\n\"The Reassuring History of\nDedication\"\nTUESDAY AT 7:30 P.M.:\nService  Meeting  and\nTheocratic Ministry\nIPUBLIC MEETING AT 2 P.M\nISUNDAY, JULY 31st. IN THE\nCRYSTAL HALL,\n.  WILLOW POINT.\nNo Collections\nConnie Smith have left for Windsor, Ont., where they will visit\nMrs. Coates' daughter, Mrs. Norman O'Neil.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. J. C. Bradshaw, 405 Falls\nStreet, has as her guests, Mrs. M.\nE. Bradshaw and two children of\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Winnie Ridge of Vancouver, formerly of Nelson, is visiting here.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mi's. J. M. McFadden\nleft for their home in Dauphin,\nMan., after visiting their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nJack Taylor, 810 Elwyn Street.\nMrs. R. Waldie has returned to\nher home at 820 Cottonwood Street\nafter visiting relatives in Rochester, New York.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Tom Waterston and infant\ndaughter,, Nancy, were accompanied to Calgary by Mrs. Waterston's\nmother, Mrs. Guy Davis and sister,\nMiss Ann Dayis, 1118 Stanley\nStreet. Mrs. Waterston and Nancy\nwill fly to their home in Montreal\nand will leave later to reside in\nEngland, temporarily.\nMr.\" and Mrs. Earle Hooker and\nfamily, 823 Davies Street, ^ill\nleave over the weekend for Spokane and Kamloops, where they\nwill visit Mrs. Hooker's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Lane.\n'*. *   *\nMrs. Violet E. Graves and children, Gordon and Gail, 921 Davies\nStreet, have returned from San\nJose, Calif., where they visited\nMrs. Graves' sisler, Mrs. J. Riley.\nMrs. A. D. Tulloch, 302 Ward\nStreet, has returned from Calgary\nwhere she visited relatives.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. Syd Robinson of\nthe North Shore have left for\nMichel to attend the wedding of\nMr. Robinson's sister, Miss Lillian\nRobinson, and Robert Bennett ofj\nNelson.\nMiss Anita Burton entertained\nat a social evening at the home\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. R.\nBurton, North Shore.\nRev. and Mrs, W. Crocker and\nihree children and Miss Rhoda\nFraser were weekend visitors at\nthe Summer cottage of Mrs. A.\nT. Rowe. Mr. Crocker is principal at the Old Sun Indian Residential school at Gleichen, Alta.\nHe left on en route to the Coast.\nMrs. Maud Gallpen of Chapman\nCamp is visiting her brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph\nHolland, 316 Second Street.\nMrs. S. Medwid, 1602 Vancouver\nStreeti was hostess to the senior\ncircle of the CWL of the Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate. Prizes were\nwon by Mrs. A. Kelsall and Mrs.\nF. Boyd.\nt \u2022    \u2022   *\nMr, and Mrs. A, H. Smith, 101\nUnion Street, will leave over the\nweekend for a holiday in Kamloops, Coquitlam and Victoria,\naccompanied by Charles Howarth,\n310 Union Street.\n\u2022    \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. Campbell and\nson Jimmy, 807 Gordon Road, have\nreturned from a holiday in Kamloops  and  Spokane, accompanied\nE. J. Pearse of Vancouver.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr .and Mrs. Gordon Bowker\nof Mirror Lake visited in Nelson\nFriday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Kay Harris, 916 Edgewood\nAvenue, returned Thursday from\nPowell River, where she visited\nher father, W. G. Harris, and her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr, and\nMrs. V. Z. Missio.\n\u2022 *    *\nMiss Marguerite Buhman and\nEthyle Meldrum have left for Kelowna where they will visit, their\nmother, who is a patient in Kelowna General Hospital.\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER\u2014Mr. and Mrs. G. A\nPhillips have returned from s\nmotor trip to Vancouver via\nRevelstoke and brought Mrs. Phil\nlips' father, A. R. Fernstrom of\nKettle Valley to spend a few\nweeks at Procter. During Mr.\nPhillips, absence Vic Webber of\nMidway has been relieving as\nstation agent. Mr. and Mrs. \u25a0 A\nNomland of South Slocan motored to Procter to pay him a visit,\nMr. Webber is Mrs. Nomland's\nbrother-in-law.\nRecent visitors at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Grant were\nMrs. Grant's niece, Mrs. T. Bird\nand her husband of Youngstown,\nOhio, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hanks\nand family of Lewiston, Idaho,\nand Mr. and Mrs. E. McCoy of\nSouthwich, Idaho. Mrs. Hanks\nand Mr. McCoy are Mrs. Grant's\nsister and brother. Also visiting\nlately were the Grant's daughters,\nMrs. Patty Olmgren of Michel.\nand Mrs. F. W. Whybarki and\nfamily from Corvallis, Ore,\nMr. and Mrs. S. Bryan have as\ntheir guests, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nCampbell and Roy Campbell of\nNew Westminster and Mrs. M.\nFinter and her children James\nand Christine of Kamloops.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Cronlund and\nfamily of Spokane spent a weekend at the home of Mrs. Cron-\nlund's parents. Mr. and Mrs. A\nJ. Garner at Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. V. Bratseth are\nvisiting Mrs. Bratseth's parents.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Riley, who wl\naccompany them back to Calgary\nfor a visit.\nOasaa. lift U)iik\nWlwii\u2122. TTlwdtuv\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1955\u20143\nON JOB'S DAUGHTERS TOUR ...\nGirls Have Happy Memories of Trip\nTwo girls who will be the 'envy\nof their classmates when they return to high school in September,\nMari-Lou Harrison, 16, and Carol\nRyalls, 15, have storehouses of\nmemories of their wonderful trip\nto Great Britain and Europe this\nSummer.\nMarl-Lou and Carol, along with\nCarmen Johnstone of Chilliwack,\nwere B.C. representatives on 'a\nJob's Daughter's goodwill trip\nabroad, the organization's first. In\nNew York they joined 27 American girls belonging to the order,\nand the party's eight adult supervisors.\nTheir mission was to tell Masonic groups in Britain and on the\nContinent of the work Job's\nDaughters perform in North\nAmerica, and to help organize\nbethels there. They were successful in forming one bethel in Stutt-\nSart, Germany, of 10 daughters of\nAmerican service men stationed\nnearby. The new members in turn\nplanned to interest German girls\nin the movement.\nAfter crossing the Atlantic by\nplane, the girls spent four days\nin Scotland, and an equal number\nin England, where they went\nsight-seeihg in London, Oxford\nand and Stratford-on-Avon. They\ndemonstrated their ork to Masonic\nand Eastern Star members in London.\nUpon making the Stuttgart visit,\nthey went by train to Switzerland\nwhere they had two days to enjoy\nthe scenery around Lucerne. From\nthere they went on by train to\nVenice. Florence. Rome and by\nbus from Rome to Nice for a plane\ntrip to Paris.\nLIKED   PARIS\nThe five days in Paris, where\nthey toured Montmartre. the Latin\nQuarter, took in the Fo'lltes, visited the Louvre, left a great impression on the two Nelson girls.\n\"Of the cities, we liked Paris\nbest,\" they said. \"But for the\ncountry \u2014 Swizerland.\"\n. The weather was \"cold and\nrainy\", especially in England and\nScotland, but Italy was basking\nunder a warm summer sun.\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PUN\n10% DOWN\nBalance 18 Months\nPICTURED AT RECEPTION which followed their marriage\nIn St. George'i Anglican Church In Rossland are Stanley Thomai\nFisher and his bride, the former Elizabeth Gael Glbjon, only\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Murray Gibson of Rossland! Rev.\nDudley Ritchie officiated. The groom, only son of the late. Mr.\nand Mrs. Ellas Fisher of Nelson, Is on the teaching staff of the\nRossland High School. Couple will make their home In the\nGolden City.\u2014Brothers Studio.\nRecipes . ..\nLight Desserts\nPopular With All\nBy  ALICE   DENHOFF\nHere are some light and lovely\nCarol is all for going back some J desSerts   in   keeping   with   sum-\nday \u2014 \"to visit the places I missed; mer's mood, Sweet aml iight in_\non   this   trip,   the   Scandinavian deed, is angel food, but have you\ncountries, for instance.\" ! tried nutmeg angel food cake?\nJust make a regulation recipe\nusing IV4 cups egg whites and\nmix teaspoon of ground nutmeg\nin with the flour before folding\nsame into the whites It's delicious\nwith   crushed  strawberry\n3Ftrst (Eljurrl? of\n(Eljnat Srirntiat\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m,\nSermon Subject:\n\"LOVE\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily from 3 to 5 p.m..\nAll Cordially Welcome\n(ftljurrfj of\n, tljr lebcrmpr\nAnglican  (Fairview)\nCANON   W.  J.  SILVERWOOD\nMiss Barbara Lea, Organist\n8:00 AND 11:00 A.M.:\nHOLY COMMUNION\nSOUTH SLOCArt:\nSERVICE AT 9:00 A.M.\nThis will probably not be the\nonly Job's Daughters goodwill trip\noverseas. The girls learned that\nanother will likely be made in a\ncouple of years to other countries.\nThe two were away from Nelson j served\na little more than a month. Mari-j5aUce.\nLou had been to New York before,     or for  a change,  serve angel\nfarthest Carol had been was to the, f00d with this tempting sauce.\nManitoba border. '    Make  an  instant vanilla   pud-\nIn Nelson bethel .Mari-Lou. ding from one package of pud-\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. D ding mix but using only 1 Vi cups\nHarrison, has been outer guard, j mj]k, Fold in 1 cUp whipped cream\nfirst messenger, record, marshal j and crushed peppermint candy,\nnnd junior princess. Carol has! gp0on the peppermint pudding\nserved as senior custodian and in-j sauce over generous slices of an-\nner guard. She is the daughter ofj gel food cake.\nMr. and Mrs. M. B. Ryalls.\nGLASS-BLOWER\nSPECIALIZES IN\nNEON TUBES\nMONTREAL (CP) - Annettt\nArsenault of Montreal Is one of\nthe four or five women glass\nblowers in Canada.\nShe started her career 25 years\nago in a neon sign plant here\nGlass-blowers are jealous of their\nknowledge and few are willing to\npass along their trade secrets.\nBut Mrs. Arsenault was lucky\nenough to encqunter in the plant a\nEuropean glass-blower who was\nplanning to return to his native\ncountry. He agreed to be her\nteacher, and taught all he knew\nbefore he left.\nNow she teaches the trade to\nothers. Several years ago she went,\nto Winnipeg to teach her specialty\n\u2014neon tube blowing\u2014to employees of sign companies JJiere.\nThe National Research Council\nIn Ottawa bid for her services to\nmake laboratory glassware, but\nshe had married by the time the\nFashion Woman\nLooks Healthier\nBy  PEGGY   MASSIN\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Paris fashion shows opened Thursday on\nthe revolutionary theme that the\nanemic \"French\" look of the last\nthree seasons ls on the way out.\nLeading the trend for a healthier, more rounded woman of fashion is the house of Jean Patol}\nPatou's designer, Marc Bohan,\ngave the house an entirely new\nand youthful approach to French\nhaute couture.\nShoulders are wider again.\nWithout being obviously padded,\nthey now have a rounded look.\nThe skinny appearance of ceats\nand suits is definitely passe for\nPatou at least.\nDIAGONAL  DRAPING\nA second top idea with Patou is\nthe scrapping of the empire high\nwaistline for diagonal draping\nthrough the midriff. The wan empire style is replaced by a still-\nhigh waistline but the diagonal\nenvelope folds, capitalize on high\nbosoms.\nThe envelope folds across the\nmidriff are repeated on many\noverlayed pleted skirts with deep\n\"v\" points marked with stitching.\nThe waist is nipped but generally\nunbelted.\nDespite Patou's youthful effects,\nthe styles are easy to wear for\nwomen of any age.\nThis was the first of three or\nfour major fashion presentations\ndaily   until   Aug.   2.\nElect Alta. Girl\nDirector, Red Cross\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Kathleen\nHerman has been appointed national director, of the Junior Red\nCross, the Canadian Red Cross\nSociety announced Thursday.\nMiss Herman is a former director of the Junior Red Cross in\nAlberta and joined the national\nstaff in 1952 as assistant national\ndirector. She succeeds Dr. Muriel\nUprichard, who has been named\nassistant director of education and\nresearch for the University of Toronto school of nursing.\nMiss Herman graduated from\nthe University of Alberta in nursing and served as a public health\nnurse in northern Alberta. She\nhas served the Canadian Red\nCross in Canada and abroad. Her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Herman, live in Camrose, Alta.\nIf you are at a loss for a quick,  offer came Md she did not wan(\nsweet  snack  that isn't rich,  try\nthis one.\nCut 6 frankfurter buns in horizontal halves. Combine 2 tbsps\nlemonade concentrate and 2 tbsp.\nsoft butter. Spread mixture on\ncut sides of bun halves. Place\nbuns on shallow pan, spread side\nup, and toast at 4O0 F. for 5 minutes.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWelcome Canadians\nFRIENDLY\nvtf>\\\nCO**\nHOTEL\nfirst lapttat\n(Eljurrl)\nMinister:  REV,  K. IMAYOSHi\n716 Stanley St,     Phone 1420-L\n9:45 a.m.: Church School.\n11:00 a.m.: \"If God Were Baal\"\n(Norm Gibson, guest speaker)\n7:30 p.m.: Worship at Presbyterian Church,\nRobson  Community Church:\n11:00 a.m.: Memorial Service.\nRev. K. Imayoshi.\nThurs., 8:0(1 p.m: Bible Study\nand Prayer Meeting.\n&aluattott Army\n613 Vernon St.\nLieut, and Mrs. H. P. ThornWII\nSATURDAY, 8:00.PM..:\nLecture: \"I Found My Messiah\"\nand\nPictures \"Palestine\"\nby  Walter  J.  Atkinson,  A.B..\nTH.B.,   S.T.M..   Messianic   Hebrew of Seattle, Wash.\nAlso SUNDAY,  11:00 and 7:30\np.m.\nSunday School\u201410:00 a.m.\n\u00a7t. IiiIju'h\ntCitiljeran (Eljitrrij\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts\nREV,  CARL J,  HENNIG\nRes. 317 Silica St., Phone 729-X\nNO SERVICE\nJULY 31\nWEEK'S SEWING  BUY\nMost flattering princess lines\nfashion this lovely summer dress\n\u2014 perfectly proportioned for the\nshorter.fuller figure! A joy to sew\n\u2014diagram shows how EASY it is!\nYou'll want to make several for\nday and evening occasions \u2014 in\nshantung, linen, gay cottons!\nPattern 9280: Half Sizes 14^,\n16M-. 18^, 20^, 22M-, 24%. Size\n16% takes 4% yards 39-inch fabric\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\nSTYLE NUMBER.\n- Send your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. NDN, 60 Front St., W\nToronto Ont.\nRooms  with   Bath  $3.00,  $3.50\nWithout   Bath  $2.00,  $2.50\nSpokane W. 213 Riverside\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiniinniiiiiiiiH\nThirsty Thieves\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Thieves\nwho ransacked the home of\nVancouver man were content to\nleave with $3 in cash after drink\ning a dozen bottles of Ijeer from\na basement cooler. J. W. R. Jones\nsaid the thieves left behind a cash\nbox containing $6000 in bonds plus\nother valuable papers.\nSKY  SCRAPER\nThe antenna of the new CBC\ntelevision building in Ottawa is\n488 ieet above ground level.\nSpecial!\nOur Entire Stock of\nWallpaper\nCLEARING  AT\nto leave 'Montreal and her husband.\nHer trade has also become her\nhobby. She is looking forward to\nhaving her own home so she .can\nestablish a workshop in the basement and make glass objects\nd'art.\nG. H. JONG\nChinese Herb Remedies\nFor All Allmonfc.\n40 YEARS' E\nSNCE IN CAN,\nCorner 6th Ave. md lit 8t S,\nCalgary\nQueen's Bay\nQUEEN'S BAY\u2014 Doctor C. G.\nGirdlestone of St. Gabriel, Calif.,\nand his sister Mrs. M. G. Wilt of\nSierra Madre, Calif., and her\ndaughter Marjory, spent a week at\nDr. Girdlestone's home here.\nMr. and Mrs. D. W. Davis of\nVancouver and their son were\nhere for a few days, the guests\nof Mr. and'Mrs. Norval German.\nMrs. J. S. Hirst has returned\nfrom a visit to Victoria where\nshe was the guest of Ifx. and Mrs.\nAlec Attree.\nMrs. Alan C. Harkness of Trail\nand two daughters, are staying\nwith her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Norval German.\nMiss Joyce Hirst has flown to\nVictoria to stay for a couple of\nweeks with Mr. and Mrs. Alec\nAttree.\n\u25a0 It'i SMART \u25a0\nU        TO BE THRIFTY        ,\nri * \u25a0\n\"      When You Get the\n0 BEST FOR LESS\n1 \u2022\ni        EMPIRE\nI        DRY CLEANERS\n321 Baker Phone 288   n\nI   Highest Quality\u2014\n\u25a0 Lowest Prices   I\nUaai \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<\n30% OFF\nCHOOSE EARLY\nFROM OVER 300 PATTERNS\nWESTERN\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nI 745 Baker St. Phone 1122\nYou'll enjoy\nevery minute\nof your\nHolland-America\nLine crossing to\nIreland, England,\nFrance or\nHolland\nTHE AVtNUE OF SHOPS\nON THE FLAGSHIP\nNIEUW AMSTERDAM\nRegular sailings from N\u00abw York to S0U1HAMPT0N-\nLE HAVRE - ROTTERDAM by NIEUW AMSTERDAM,\nMAASDAM and RYNDAM. Or sail direct to ROTTERDAM\nby deluxe one-class motor-twins WESTER0AM and\nN0ORDAM. Monthly service by MAASDAM or RVNDAM\nto C08H, IRELAND.\nSPECIAL SAILING\nFROM HALIFAX \u2014\nMAASDAM NOV. 25-\nMlnlmum fare $160 Tourist Class, with virtual\nrun-of-shlp privileges.\nSEE YODR TRAVEL AGENT\n591 Burrard Street, Vancouver 1, B.C.. Pacific $431\nOffices also in Montreal, Toronto and Winnipeg\ni\nTo EUROPE by Netherlands Government Vessels\n\/\nLow fares. High standards of\nDutch seamanship, cleanliness and traditional friendliness. Ample room for recreation and fun. Good, plentiful menu.\nSAILINGS to Southampton, Le Havre and Rotterdam.\nFrom QUEBEC: Groote Beer Aug, 18 ... From MONT-\nREALi Zulderkruls Sept. 30; Groote Beer Oct. 31 ...\nFrom NEW YORK: Slbajak Aug. 30; Zulderkruls Sept.\n6*i Groote Beer Sept. 12*, Oct. 8; Johan van Olden*\nbarnevelt Sept. 17*.\n\u2022Direct to Rotterdam.\nDirectorate-General of Shipping (Mlnlstrle van Verkeer en Waterstaat)\nThe Hague, The Netherlands. Holland-America Line, Agents.\n ;---,---      \u20147-\u2014   ;      : y^mm\n\u00bbu!F;.^W\u00bbS\u00bb\u00abF.! .\u25a0: \u25a0 .j. m >:r<!.y? \".y,     .\u25a0...\u25a0.\u2014:\u2014r-r r- 1  ,  .      -   .    . -.'i-.. \u25a0.',\n6\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 30 ,1955\nPackaging\nIs Important\nSatisfactory; storage of foods In\nhome freezers and quick-freeze\nlockers requires proper packaging\nfo preserve the quality of foods\nand prevent excessive frosting of\nthe cabinet or plates. Most frozen\nfoods have a high moisture content and unless they are stored in\npackages which are completely\nmoisture-proof, some of the moisture will escape and be deposited\nas fmst on the cold surfaces of the\nrefrigerator. Such deposits cause\nInefficient machine operation and\nthe Inconvenience of frequent defrost in?. The loss of ninisture\ngives the surface of the products a\ndried appearance and is often\ncalled freezer burn,\nSurface-drying of foods detracts\nfrom their appearance but does\nnot greatly affect texture and\nflavor. Usually, however, the loss\nof moisture Indicates that the pro-\ndutt is not being sufficiently pro-\n\u2022tected against oxidation by the air.\nThis oxidation can take place at\nthe storage temperature of zero\nT.. causing a dull unnatural color,\ntough texture, and rancid flavor. I\nSince quality reduction continues!\nduring freezer storage, products:\nto be stored for 10 or 12 month?1\nshould be much better packaged i\nthan those to be stored for only\na few weeks. Fruits are least effected because their acidity acts\nu a natural preservative.\nA number of frozen food pack-1\naging materials have been tested |\nin Hie Fruit and Vegetable Prod-,\nucts Laboratory. Experimental i\nstation, Canada Department of |\nAgriculture, Morden. Manitoba.\nIt Is noted th^t cartons for fruits\nand vegetables should be heavily\nwaxed or else have a moisture\nand vapor-proof liner. Glass containers give adequate protection\nbut are not always permitted in\npublic storage because of possible\nbreakage. Metal containers are\noften used to good advantage.\nHeadspace in containers should\nbe kept to a minimum, allowing\nonly enough for expansion in\nfreezing.\nMeats and irregular-shaped\nproducts should not only be wrapped with good quality wraps but\nshould also be*wrapped tightly to\nexclude air. Aluminum foil (not\nless  than  0.001   gauge)   is highly\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nNHA SMALL HOUSE DESIGNS-Arcfo-\nttcti Wllsort'ond Newton of Toronto have used\na wide, lull-length living room window and ,\ntrellis ft the protected front entrance to enhance\nthe appearance of this ilmply-stylcd two-bedroom bungalow. Tht vortical wood tiding\non tht g able tnd alio adds to tht tittrlor of\ntht house which It soluble for a narrow lot.\nCareful planning el tht Interior layout has\nreduced hall space to < minimum tnd has provided amplc-sl. ed rooms. There Is no dining\nroom but spact has been provided In the kitchen for eating, Tht side tntranct Is convenient both to tht kitchen and tht bittmtnt.\nThe total floor area ol tht house Is 727\nsquare feci whllt the cubic measurement is\n14,360 cubic fett Tht exterior dimensions\nart 31 fett ont Inch by 14 fett six Inches.\nWorking drawings for this house, known as\nDesign 112, may be obtained from Central\nMortgage and Housing Corporation at minimum cost.\nKXLYTV  -  Channel 4\n10:80\u2014Dizzy Dean\n11:00\u2014Baseball Game of the Week\n1:30\u2014Baaeball Re-Cap\n1:45\u2014Chicago Wrestling\n2:45\u2014Western Roundup\n6:30\u2014Beulah\n7:00\u2014Pantomime Quiz\n7:30\u2014Starlit Stairway\n8:00\u2014America's Great Bands\n9:00\u2014Two [or the Money\n9:30\u2014Mr. District Attorney\n10:00\u2014Down You Go\n10:30\u2014Abbott and Costello\n11:00\u2014 Your Television Theatre\n11:30\u2014Chicago  Wrestling\nSUNDAY\n4:00\u2014Sign On\n4:30\u2014Oral Roberts\n5:00\u2014The Sunday Lucy Show\n:530\u2014This  Is  the  Life\n6:00\u2014You Are There\n6:30\u2014Let's Take a Trip\n7:00\u2014\"Private   Secretary\"\n7:30\u2014Annie Oakley\n8:00\u2014Toast of the Town\n9:00\u2014 G.E. Theatre\n9:30\u2014Stage Seven\n10:00\u2014Appointment Wfth\nAdventure\n10:30\u2014Beat the Clock\n11:00\u2014Theatre\n11:30\u2014Late Show\nKHQ-TV r CHtnnol Q\n9:25\u2014Test Pattern\n9:40\u2014Color Test Pattern\n9:55\u2014Bible  Reading\n10:00\u2014Pjnky Lee\n10:30\u2014Paul  Winchtll\n11:00\u2014\"Commando Cody\"\n11:30\u2014Mr. Wizard\n12:00\u2014Western Theatre\n12:30\u2014Western  Theatre\n5:00\u2014Cartoon  Carnival\n6:0O\u2014Svengali and the Blonde\n7:30\u2014Horace   Htidt\n8:00\u2014The Soldiers\n8:30\u2014The Dunninger Show\n9:00\u2014Curtain Time\n9:30\u2014Eddie Cantor\n10:00\u2014Famous Playhouse\n10:30\u2014Your Play Time\n11:00\u2014Big  Town\n11:30\u2014Lady and the Monster\n1:10\u2014 News Headlines\nSUNDAY\n2:15\u2014Test   Pattern\n2:55\u2014Color  Test Program\n3:10\u2014Bible   Reading\n5:15\u2014What's Your Trouble\n3:30\u2014Amer.  Rel.  Town  Hall\n4:00\u2014Christopher Program\n5:00\u2014Pailo Casals\n5:30\u2014Answers for Americans\n6:00\u2014Girl Must Live\n7:30\u2014 Do It Yourself\n8:00\u2014Variety Hour\n9:00\u2014TV Playhouse\n10:00\u2014Cameo Theatre\n10:30\u2014Bob  Cummings\n11:00\u2014TV  Theatre\n12:00\u2014Racket  Squad\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\nMany Homes\nNeed Re-Wiring\nIt has been said that more than\nhalf the homes in this country are\nsuffering from inadequate wiring.\nHow can you tell when your\nhome's wiring is inadequate? Here\nare a few danger signals:\nFrequent blowing of fuses, or\ntripping of circuit breakers; dimming of lights when'appliances\nare plugged into general purpose\ncircuits, or when the refrigerator\nmotor starts; laboring of refriger\nator motor In first few momenta od\noperation; failure of toaster, hand\niron, etc., to heat quickly.\nOne .roaster, drawing 1,650 watts\nuses almost all of the current available through wall outlets in th\u00ab\nmajority of older homes.\nIf yours is a house built before\n1940, it probably has two general\npurpose circuits, is wired \\vith No\n14 wire, uses 15 ampere branch\ncircuit fuses (if properly fused)\nand 3 Oampere main fuses.\nThe 15 ampere fuses will protect\ngeneral purpose branch circui^\ncarrying up to    1,800    watts\npower, and no more.\nKBEM-TV - Channel J\nSATURDAY\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014Eastslde Kids\n5:15\u2014\"The Clue\"\n5:30\u2014Wild  West Theatre\n6:30\u2014Cartoon Time\n7:00\u2014Western Movietime\n8:00\u2014 Roller Derby\n8:30\u2014 Big Picture\n9:00\u2014Lawrence Walk\n10:00\u2014Charlie  Chan\u2014In  Reno\n11:00\u2014\"Long Voyage Home\"\n12:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\nSUNDAY\n:45\u2014Test  Pattern\n:00\u2014Counter-Punch\n:00\u2014Super Circus\n:30\u2014Faith for Today\n1:00\u2014Krem Adventure \\\n:00\u2014Western Movietime\n:00\u2014You Asked for It\n:30\u2014Pantomime Quiz\n:00-TBA\n:30\u2014Life Begins at \"80\"\n:0O\u2014Break the Bank\n:30\u2014\"Impact\"\n:30\u2014\"Of Mica and Men\"\n:15\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\nI  7 Reasons\nWhy Readi-Mix Concrete is the most\n-     economical way to place concrete.\n1. Fast Prompt Service\n2. Clean and Tidy\n3. No Waste\n4. Properly Mixed\n5. Only Clean Graded Material Used\n6. No   Guesswork   \u2014   Correct   Amounts   of\nWater and Fresh Cement Used\n7. Saves Time \u2014 Complete Basement Can Be\nPoured in a Few Hours\nI\nI Save Time! Save Money!\n(Programs lubleet to change by stations without notice )\nPhone 871\nsatisfactory if carefully handled.\nA number of other paper and plastic wrappings are also suitable.\nWaxed paper *\\ a protective wrapper rates only fair.\nREMOVES STAIN\nSometimes, when you take off\nthe old finish from a piece of furniture with paint and varnish remover, the wood is still dark from\nthe original stain. If you wish the\nwood to be lighter still\u2014so. it will\nharmonize with newly - bought\nlight wood pieces\u2014you can use a\nbleach .obtainable from your paint\ndealer-\nSurvey Shows . .\nWomen Start 79 px*\nDolt-Yourself Jobs\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nFLINTKOTE\nStatic Asphalt Coatings\nFIVE   IMPORTANT  FEATURES:\n1. No Danger of Fire\n2. No Special Equipment\n3. Won't Flow in Hot Weather\n4. Won't Crack or Carbonize\n5. Long Life\nWill outlast any other form of bituminous coating\nexposed to the weo+her.\nTheK.W.DIXONCo.Ltd.\n301 Baker St.\nPhone 1704\nPLAN SERVICE\nWelcomes Your Enquiries on\nHouse Plans\nor\nBuilding Problems\nWe have a complete building service\nyou can count on, with over 5000 stock\nplans to choose from.\nYou are under no obligation on your enquiries\nand free consultation is given on request.\nWrite for our free, complimentary copy of our\n-PRACTICAL HOUSE PLAN BOOK\nShowing Varioui Horns Layouti\nFor further information write to\nPLAN SERVICE\n571 West Broadway\nVancouver, B.C.\nThe hand that rocks the cradle\nnow runs a lot of power tools.\nAccording to one recent survey.\n79 per cent of the do-it-yourself\nprojects are initiated by women.\nMen of the house are credited with\nthinking up only 21 per cent of\nsuch activities.\nWomen also are shown to be\ndoing 41 per cent of the work; men\n37 per cent, while 22 per cent of\nthese household projects are cooperative family ventures with\neven the kids pitching in.\nA man might say that those figures seem to be a pretty good tri-\nouta to the little woman's executive ability, too \u2014 if she instigates\n79 per cent of these jobs and does\nilly 41 per cent of the work.\nWomen were expected to make\na big showing at interior decorating, painting and other lightweight\n'.asks.\nSHINGLE  ROOFS\nBut the survey which turned up\nthese percentages was conducted\nby a U.S. plywood manufacturer\nto find out who was sawing, nailing and otherwise manhandling\nhis output. He found that women's\nactivities Include installing wall\npanels, shingling roofs, insulating\nhomes, cementing down floor tile;,\npainting houses, etc.\nFairly comfortable homes were\nqueried \u2014 families living in homes\nvalued at $10,000 to $25,000. More\nthan two-thirds of them were\nfound to be engaged in do-it-yourself home improvements. The\nhighest score for this activity was\n172 per cent    among    families    In\n| $16,000 to $20,000 homes.\nFamily teamwork apparently is\nj quite a factor in the do-it-your-\nt self movement. One project that\n1 figured prominently in each of the\nthree classes of that plywood sur-\n; vey  was  enlarging  the  home  \u2014\nadding more family living space.\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n1:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300\nEvenlngi\u2014Phona 1033-R\nDally Except 8und\u00abyt\nand  Holidays\nMc & Mc\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nIt's time to raise the cut on the\n' lawnmowec.    Higher   cutting    in\nhot dry weather will mean a\n; greener, more thrifty lawn. Use no\n'fertilizer on lawns at this season\n1 Most garden herbs will prove\n. lo be more spicy if they are cut\n'and dried just before the flowers\n; open.   Dry   them   in   a   cool   and\nshady place.\ni    Severe  cutting   back   of  violas,\ncandytufts and forget-me-nots\n1 now  will   encourage  new   growth\nend another crop of flowers later\nDon't let seed pods form on\npeonies. Work in a little complete\nfertilizer, cultivate around the\nplants and water to help form the\n\"eyes\"  for  next year's  blooming.\nFruits of eggplant do not set\nunless the plants are kept growing\nsteadily. Pinching off the ends of\nthe branches and leaving only two\nor three blossoms on a branch\nhelps  the#fruits to set.\nIn many sections of the country,\nleaf lettuce will mature if seeded\neven up to the first week in August.\nWind Tunnel\nBuilt Cheaply\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A group of defence research board aerodynam-\nicists, in the manner of the mythical Prairie farmer who could fix\nanything with haywire, have improvised an intricate wind tunnel\nnear Quebec City.\nDescribing the improvisations of\nthe aerodynamisists\u2014specialists in\nthe devious problems of  flight\u2014\nthe board said the tunnel has provided the Canadian Armament Re-\ni search and Development EsUblish-\n, ment \"with an increasingly-useful\n\\ r.nd inexpensive researcK\"facility.\"\nI    The wind tunnel cost an estimated $6000\u2014\"nr at least a third of\na norma! similar supersonic facility.\"  It took about six  \\keeks to\nbuild. |\nSTRESSED   ECONOMY i\n| Dr. G. V. Bull, head of the arm-\n1 ament establishment's aerodynam-\n; ics section, worked out the over-\nt all design and directed the project. He was assisted by three\nj other CARDE employees.\nA'complicated research tool that\n; permits prediction of the flight\nperformance of various things,\n'such as missiles, shells and so on.\nthe \"haywire\" tunnel can simulate\nspeeds up to 3000 miles an hour.\nBuilding it called for special ma\n,rhining of small and large com-\nI\nI\nJ Nelson\nj Readi-Mix Concrete Ltd.\nTired of Spending\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 George\nHayes, 49, Montreal accountant\nwanted in connection with the\ntheft of $12,000 from the Royal\nTrust Company, arrived here\nThursday under police escort from\ni Toronto. Police said Hayes walked\n! into Toronto police headquarters\ni Wednesday night and said he de-\n| cided to end \u2022 lix-year spending\n,spree.\n$7500 Bail for\nWatch Suspect\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Bail was\nset at $7500 Friday for John Martin, 31, charged with possession of\nstolen goods involving $26,000\nworth of watches.\nThe watches, police report, were\npart of the loot taken in a, Victoria jewelry store robbery May\n17.\nMartin was arrested Thursday\nwhen police raided his Howe\nstreet home. -\nHe made no plea in court Fri-\nd*dy and was remanded to Aug. 5.\nponent parts in CARDE's machine\nshop. The board said many suggestions offered by the machine\nshop staff were incorporated in tha\nproject as \"economy was stresstd\nthroughout.\"\n.^SASHLESS\nW      WINDOW\nJhsi (psfifod. Oudon. Window\nin a\nCedar  Frame\nComes in many sizes\nCall In at\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\n101 Hall St.\nPhone 156\nROOFING\nEXTRA\nSPECIAL\nWHILE IT LASTS\nIf You Intend To Repair Your Roof This Year\nNOW!!   IS  THE  TIME   TO   BUY!\n165 Ib. Hexagon:\nPer 100 sq. ft \t\n210 Ib. Square Butts:\nPer 100 sq. ft  .\n $1050\n *12.69\nLimited Quantity... Don't Miss It.\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\n902 FRONT ST.\nPHONE 1511\n[Bualle\noil heating is\nso easy\nbecause\nNo watching, no worrying,\nno work when you Install\na \"La Salle\", Simply set\nit and forget it.\nLa Salle offers 3 major\nadvantages: low purchase\nprice; low installation cost\nbecause of factory prewiring; low fuel costs\nbecause of carbon-free\nfuel consumption.\nthe\nmodel \"80\"\nhiboy is\nso inexpensive\ncall today tor Information or free heating survey\nKootenay Plumbing\nand Heating Co.\n351 BAKER ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 666\nit will always\nbe right if it's...\nArborite\n1\nFOR THI KITCHEN\nFOR THI BATHROOM\nWalla.. . counter and tahla\ntops . . . Bplashbacks. Permanent, easy to clean, beautiful.\nTwenty years from now yout j\nbathroom and shower walla I\nwill atill be aa beautiful\u2014if |\nthey're genuine Arborite.\nFOR THI PLAYROOM\nArborlte ia available in more\nthan 40 colours and patterna.\nIt'a cigarette-proof. . . heat\nreeiatant...WIPES CLEAN\nWITH A DAMP CLOTH!\nWalla . . . bar-topa and fao 1\ninga ... permanently beautiful when they're Aiborita.\ni\nINSIST  ON  GENUINE  ARBORITE\nCome in and Choose!\nYour Samples\nBURNS\nLumber Company\niV.eryUi'iniji ioi ihe B.uiictoi-\n602 Baker St.    Nel.on, B. C,\n ^^^^^!W^^^^^^^\u2122 .. -.  ' .. ._\u25a0 \u201e\u25a0., .\u2022 'J'vf.<pllpllpp\n:-,y.;::y:.>\u25a0>.\u00ab\u00ab>' \u25a0\u25a0 . ,\nHUPP\n'\u2014'\u25a0 *mtmm\n^\u25a0\nm3\n(hound, ihsi.\nm\nSpoil\nFastball  Player  Honored:\nSunday, July 10, Vancouver\nsoftballers watched veteran pitcher Harry Broverman hurl the\nlast game of his long career. Harry\nwas injured on a play at third\nbase, an injury that has drawn to\na close his softball career of a\nquarter of a century.\nThough it was the last game he\nwill appear in the Vancouver\nSchool Board uniform, it will not\nbe the final appearance of the\neasy-going right-hander.\nFans will see him Monday night\nat Prince Edward Park when the\nFirefighters  meet  School   Board\nHe will be sitting on the stands\u2014!\nbecause Monday is Harry's night.\nThe 42-year-old fath&r or four,\nhas pitched six no-hit, no-run\ngames in his career. Two in Win\nnipeg, one in Trail and three here\nln Vancouver.\nAt the peak of his career, Harry has struck out 28 in an 11-in-\nning game, had 85 strike outs in\nseven playoff games in Winnipeg\nin 1935 to lead teammates to the\nManitoba championship and for\nthat season held a record of 225\nstrikeouts in 125 innings.\nSo, Monday night, major men's\nsoftball players, coaches, and executives of the league, along with\nfans who have watched Harry\nBroverman pitch for the School\nBoard, Girodays, and scores of\nother teams across Canada, will\nhonor him on Harry Broverman\nnight.\nA number of Nelson and Trail\nplayers will remember games\nwith or against Broverman.\nHE CAN PITCH\nDeadeye Ted Allen, Boulder,\nColo., set a world record Tuesday night by pitching 36 consecutive doubles, 72 straight ringers\n\u2014 in the world championship\nhorseshoe tournament.\nIT'S  NOT  EASY\nQuebec City distance swimmer\nJacques Amyot battled for 11\nhours and 48 minutes Saturday\nthrough storm-mossed Lake St.\nJohn to become the first person\never to swim across the 21-mile\nstretch of northern Quebec water.\nAmyot was the only swimmer\nof five who started, to complete\nthe first attempt ever made on\nthe lake. He took to the water at\n5:15 a.m., at Peribonka and swam\nashore at Roberval, still comparatively fresh at 5:03 p.m.\nHeavy winds and four separate\nrain storms whipped the water\ninto 5-foot waves. At one point\nAmyot spent three quarters of an\nhour circling aimlessly when the\ncompass in his pilot boat went\nawry. A patrol boat put the swimmer back on course.\nHE CAN CATCH\nMike   Camilli,   of\nFernie,   and\nformerly of Hosmer, is probably\nthe happiest fisherman here-a*\nbouts.\nThe well known' hunter-anglei;\nrecently hooked and landed a\nDolly Varden or Bull Trout, that\nweighed' 8V< pounds. He hooked\nthe near-record-breaking trout in\nthe Elk River near Hosmer and it\nis thought to be the largest of this\nspecies over caught in the river\nfrom the Elko dam to Michel in\nthe past 25 years or so.\nCamilli said He hooked the big\none that didn't get away three\ntimes and lost him each time. On\nthe fourth strike he hooked him\ngood but had to take to the river\nwhen he ran out of line and the\ntrout kept heading downstream.\nHe finally landed it, without the\nuse of a landing net or gaff.\nCamilli used a \"Frogner Sluk'\nwobbler or spoon to catch the\nprize trout and landed him on a\nlight action fly rod.\nThe only bigger bull trout on\nrecord in this district is a 14-pound\nbeauty caught by Mr. Camilli's\nfather, J. V. Camilli, in 1920, near\nOlson.\nJohn Norris\nConsidering\n20-Mile Swim\nA Nelson school teacher, O, J.\nJohn Norris, said Friday he was\nconsidering entering the 20-mile\nswiim from .'Procter to Nelson\nshould the event come off.\nMr. Norris, an ex-navy man,\nstated he had done a great deal\nof swimming and several times has\nswam across the lake, but has\nnever attempted such a long swim.\nIf able to get ln enough training before the end of August he\nwill compete with four others.\nMr. Norris at present' holds the\nrecord for 50 yards at the University of British Columbia. Most\nof his swimming has been over\nshort distances.\nKokanees Meet\nLions Tonight\nThe Nelson Kokanees, after\ndropping a close contest to Trail\nlast Saturday and then taking\nwhipping from the league leading\nRossland Redmen Tuesday, will\nbe out to redeem themselves tonight when they meet the Spokane\nLions at the Civic Arena.\nCoach Ev Kuhn will have a full\nteam out with all players ready\nto give their best for a win for\ntheir home fans.\nThe line of Harold Mayo, Mickey\nMaglio and Jack Gallicano will\nb\u00a3 going aft\u00a3r those much needed\nscoring points in order to overhaul Bert Bertoia of the Redmen,\nwho leads the league.\nGONZALES IN\nSINGLES FINAL\nSCARBOROUGH, Eng. (AP)-\nRichard Pancho Gonzales ot Los\nAngeles Friday defeated Ken McGregor of Australia 6-2, 8-7, 6-3\nto reach the singles final of the\nprofessional lawn tennis tournament. In the second set, McGregor, leading 7-6, stood within two\npoints of gaining it in the 14th\ngame. But three tremendous service aces thundered past the Australian to give Gonzales the game,\nand he went on to win the set\nPancho Segura, 34, of Ecuador,\nthe No. 2 seed, defeated reigning\nchampion Peter Cawthorn, 24-\nyear-old Australian, 6-0, 6-1, 6-4\nin the other semi-final.\nCALL US\nior\nREPAIRS\nLet Our Experts\nTake Care of All\nYour Electrical\nRepairs. Quick\nService, Low\nRates.\nSMITH ELECTRIC\nRED KOEHLE \u2014 Proprietor\n645 Baker St. PHONE 258 .       Nights 544-R\nBaseball Standings\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW   L    Pet. GBL\nChicago     60   38   .612\nNew York     61   39   .610\nCleveland     60   40   .600     1'\nBoston     ...    58   42   .580     8\nDetroit       54   45   .545    614\nKansas City ..   41   59   .410   20\nWashington  ...    34   65   .343   26'\/z\nBaltimore 29   69   .296   31\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nW   L    Pet. GBL\nBrooklyn       69   32   .683\nMilwaukee...   56   44   .560.12V4\nNew York     53   49   .520   18V4\nPhiladelphia  ..   52   52   .500   1814\nChicago          48   55   .466    22\nSt. Louis _     45   52   .464   22\nCincinnati       43   56   .434   25\nPittsurghb       38   64   .372   3114\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia     100 000 014\u20146   6 0\nChicago 101 000 110\u20144 10 0\nRogovin, Meyer (7); Roberts (9)\nand Seminick; Jones, Tremel (9)\nand McCullough. W\u2014Meyer.L \u2014\nJones. HRs: Phi\u2014W. Jones. Chi-\nBanks.\nBrooklyn   ...     000 000 410\u20145 11 0\nSt.   Louis   .      101 001 100\u20144   8 0\nSpooner, Meyer (7) Labine (8)\nand Campanella: Jackson, La-\nPalme (7) Wooldridge (8) Wright\n(9) and Burbrink, Sarni (9) W \u2014\nLabine: L\u2014Wooldridge. HRs: Bkn\n- Hoak; St.L. \u2014 Virdon.\nPittsburgh ,. 030 001 001- 5 11 1\nCincinnati       211 705 OOx\u201416 20 2\nLaw, Surkont (3) Pepper (4)\nand Peterson; Nuxhall and Burgess. L\u2014Law. Hrs: Pgh \u2014 Thomas:\nCin \u2014 Burgess (3), Thurman,\nSmith!\nNew York   ..   002 000 000\u20142   9 1\nMilwaukee  .    300 010 lOx\u20145 11 2\nAntonelli, Wilhelm (7) Grissom\n(8) and Katt, Hofman (6); Crone\nand Crandall.  L\u2014Antonelli.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nChicago       010 001 003\u20145 9 0\nWashington        001 001 000\u20142 6 1\nTrucks and Lollar; Ramos, Pas-\ncuel (9) and Courtney. L\u2014Ramos.\nCleveland . 020 002 201\u20147 15 0\nBaltimore   .      000 010 000\u20141   4 3\nGarcia and Hegan; Wight, Gray\n(8) and Smith. L-Wight. HR:\nCle\u2014Wertz.\nKansas City   .   000 100 010\u20142 5 0\nNew York   ...   010 000 llx\u20143 8 1\nRaschi, Gorman (8) and Astroth, W Shantz (81; Ford and\nBerra. L\u2014Gorman. HRs: KC \u2014\nSlaughter; NY \u2014 Ford.\nDetroit       000 000 000\u20140 4 2\nBoston         100 030 Olx\u20145 9 0\nBunning,    Foytack     (6),    and\nHouse    Nixon  and Whit\u00ab. L  \u2014\nBunning. HR: Bos \u2014 Williams.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nW   L    Pet. GBL\nSeattle     71   48   .597\nSan Diego 69   53   .566     314\nHollywood     64   55   .538    7\nPortland      58   57   .504   11\nLos Angeles   ..   58   62   .483   1314\nOakland      52   57   .437   19\nSacramento 52   67   .437   19\nSan Francisco    52   67   .437   19'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1955\u20147\nTHE SECOND PLAYER In the thirty-ieven year history of\nthe PGA Tournament to win the title on his first attempt, Doug\nFord of Klamesha Lake, Ny\u201e lifts the lid of the cup emblematic\nof the championship. Ford, not qul^e 33 years old, has been a pro\nless than six years and only became eligible for the PQA tournament this year.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nAussies Take 2-Match\nLead in Zone Finals\nMONTREAL (CP) - Australia's slafnmed  in  sideline drives that\nManitoba Team Hopes fo Better\nPosition in Willingdon Play\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Manitoba's\n1955 Willingdon Cup team has\none aim at the championships\nopening today at Calgary, and that\nis to better its fourth pla'ce position of last year.\n\"If we can move up one slot,\nI'll consider that a feather in our\nBaseball and\nFastball on Tap\nHere Sunday\nWeather permitting, baseball\nand girls' fastball will take over\nthe sport scene in Nelson Sunday\nwith two doubleheaders scheduled.\nThe Nelson Maple Leafs will\nresume battle with the Fruitvale\nAll-Stars and will be striving to\ngain revenge for the two losses\nhanded them by the All-Stars in\ntheir last two meetings.\nIt is expected Marsh Severyn\nand Jim Todd will share mound\nduties as star chucker Les Hufty\nis out with a sprained ankle received in a game to give the Babe\nRuth All-Stars practice before going to the coast.\nOn the fastball front, the league-\nleading Nelson Royals will play\nhost to Rossland Royals in a\ndoubleheader at the Recreation\nGrounds.\nIt is likely that Verda Pratt and\nRuth Bambrick will do pitching\nchores for the Nelson Royals, who\nhold first place in the West Kootenay Ladies' Fastball League.\nDavis Cup singles players came\nthrough as predicted Friday to\ntake a two-match lead over Canada in the North American zone\ntennis, classic final.\nRex Hartwig downed Lorne\nMain, Toronto in straight sets, 6-3,\n6-3, 6-2, after Ken Rosewall. first-\nseeded in Australia, took four sets\nto dispose of Bob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que., 6-(T, 6-1, 4-6, 6-2.\nBedard dfdn't have a chance to\nreach.\nMain, former Vancouver player,\ncouldn't break Hartwig's service\nonce in the second match. Main\nslipped one or two past Hartwig\nas the Aussie ran to the net after\nbaseline volleying but he couldn't\ncover the court like Hartwig.\nA few times, Main tried to an-' middleweight title match, propos-\nticipate Hartwig's returns but in-jed for CMcago, Friday, Nov. 4.\nBedard got off to a nervous start j variably picked the wrong side of! ha* run Into a snag and Charles\nin the first match but put on steam'the court and ended up out of; Humez of France may get the shot\nin the third set.behind the cheer-! reach 0f the ball. '.at Olson's crown.\nHumez May\nChallenge Olson\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The Carl\n| CB6bo) Olson-Sugar Ray Robinson\nweight\nChicaj\ning of an enthusiastic crowd. He Hartwig had some difficulty\nthrew a scare into Rosewall by i with his service and needed to use\ncracking his serve in the first .two balls frequently. When his\ngame and regained enough con-(heavy first serve did come in. he\nfidence to win the set. [generally had Main trapped with-\nHarry Hopman, captain of thej cut any volleying.\nAustralian  squad,   said  after the\nmatches that neither Hartwig or\nRosewall played their best tennis.\n\"I've seen 'em play better,\" he\nsaid.\nPLAYED TO  BACKHAND\nRosewall, tagged by Hopman as\nthe player with the best backhand\nshot in tennis in the world today,\nlived up to tjis label. He played to\nBedard's    weak    backhand    and\n15 Set for\nNiaaara Stakes\nFORT ERIE (CP) \u2014 The $10,-\n000 Niagara Stages, richest purse\never offered for a turf race in\nCanada, has drawn 15 entries, it\nwas announced Friday. The 1 1\/16\nmile test will be at Fort Erie\nJockey Club today.\nFavored are McMacken Stable's\nCanadian champion King Maple\nand Mrs. D. J. Kennedy's Marked\nGame, flown here from Hollywood Park in California last Monday. Marked Game will run as a\nMrs. Kennedy entry with Enjoy\nYourself.\nTENNIS TOURNEY\nCALLED OFF DUE\nTO BAD WEATHER\nThe tennis tournament between\nTrail and Nelson players for the\nChesser Cup scheduled for Sunday\nhas been postponed due to bad\nweather.\nMrs. Doug Male, match chairman, said Friday the event will\nlikely be run off next Sunday,\nweather permitting.\nThe event, an annual affair in\npast years, has drawn a large\nentry and it is expected many will\nvie for honorg next week should\nthe courts be in condition for play.\nHarry Markson, managing director of the International Boxing\nClub, sent a cable Friday to Humez to see if he would be available for the November date at\nChicago. Humez Is the No. 1 contender.\nNegotiations 'for the Olson-\nRobinson match ran into difficulties in a disagreement over percentages. It was understood Robinson, the ex-champ, was holding\nout for a 30-30 deal, while Olson's\nmanager, Sid Flaherty, insisted on\na 35-25 division of the percentages,\nwith Olson on the long end.\nI;\nBargain Buys\nin\nUsed\nOutboards\nALL IN TOP CONDITION\n1953 25 H.P. JOHNSON: ^^ij^\nLong or short shaft      9*,^\n1950 5 H.P. JOHNSON: **7<\\\nPriced at          I J\n1951 3.3 H.P. EVINRUDE: *<*\u00bb\nPriced at       O.J\n2.5 H.P. LAWSON: $1 \/\\ A\nIdeal trolling motor.       Iwv\n9 H.P. JOHNSON: .    $CA\nHeavy duty.  . _   .      mt\\J\n5 H.P. JOHNSON: $3JT\nHeavy duty.      J mt\nSEE THEM AT '\nNelson Marine Service\nCity Wharf (Foot of Hall St.)\nPHONE 1459\ni\nU.S. Loses\nGround at Henley\nPORT DALHOUSIE, Ont. (CP)\n\u2014 United States domination of the\nhistoric Royal Canadian Henley\nappeared at an end Friday night.\nBuffalo Westsides, winners of\nNorth America's premier regatta\nIhe last four years and favorites\nto take this 73rd annual Henley,\nwere far behind with only one\niay of the four-day water classic\n-till to go.\nRead to Inscribe its name on\n'he Maple Leaf shield, emblamatic\nof supremacy in the Henley, is the\nSt. Catherines Rowing Club which\nlast won the trophy in 1950. Only\na powerful final-day splurge by\nWestsides and an almost complete\ncollapse by St. Catharines oarsmen\nand scullers will give the American club its fifth straight title.\nGirls Paying Way to\nHockey Tourney\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Fifteen\nVancouver girls are hoping to pay.\ntheir way to Australia for an international grass hockey tournament next year by collecting\nempty beer bottles and waste paper.\nSo far the Greater Vancouver\nWomen's Grass Hockey Association has raised $2500 in three\nmonths\u2014one-third  of  me  return\nTo Honor Memory of\nJ. Murray Gibbon\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A plaque commemorating Dr. John Murray Gibbon, former publicity director forjfare for the team and a manager,\nthe CPR will be unveiled at the The championship doesn't start\nBanff School of Fine Arts August jn Sydney until May 20 but the\n7, the Northern Affairs Depart- \\ g\\r\\s are confident of raising the\nment announced .Friday. ! money to become the first Cana-\nDr.   Gibbon,   born   in   Ceylon dian team to enter the interna-\nwhere his father, an Aberdonian, I tional tournament.\nowned a large tea plantation, won\nthe Governor-General's Medal for\nnon-fiction in 1938 for his book\n\"Canadian Mosaic\", describing\nthe music of 15 nationalities comprising the-bulk of Canada's population. He also made Canadian\nfolk-songs known to all music\nlovers across the world, phonographic recordings of his collections being now available at the\nNational Museum of Canada, Ottawa.\nDr. Gibbon, a graduate of Oxford University, died in 1552. He\nvisited Nelson on several occasions.\nScotland's favourite Son\nJOHNNIE WALKER\nFine Old Scotch Whisky\nAvailable in 26M ot. and 13K os. bottles.\nI This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Li-\ni quor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nPOfeT LAUREATE\nThe poet Alfred Lord Tennyson\nwas born in 1809 in a rectory at\nSomersby, Lincolnshire, England.\nHe died ln 1892.\nCHARTER\nFlying\n2 PASSENGERS\n$30 PER HOUR\n\u2022\nTIMBER CRUISING\nAMBULANCE\nAERIAL PROSPECTING\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFISHING AND HUNTING\nTRIPS\n\u2022\nPhone\nArrow\nLakes\nAirways\nNakusp, B.C.\nSIX-MILE\nSERVICE\n'   (Across the Lake)\nTop Rated 88 and 98 Gasoline\nPEERLESS OILS and GREASES\nOPEN EVERY DAY\n7 CK.m. to 11 p.m..\n1954 Austin Seats in New Condition\nWt Also Stock Outboard Motor Oil and Grewet\nPHONE 1668-L-l\nFirst Aid Station\ncaps,\" aaid BUI Budd of the Elm-\nhurst Club before the team left\nhere. \"I'd like to crack that big\nthree (Ontario, Quebec and B.C.)\njust once.\"\nAnd if experience means anything, the Manitoba contingent\nhas a good chance this year.\nHeading the squad as captain is\nthe veteran Mike Pidlaski of St.\nBoniface, who grabbed off the\nNo. 1 position In the 72-hole test\nwith a total score of 298, four\nbetter than Budd and Bob Gray\nof Pine Ridge, Jack Gardner, also\nof Pine Ridge, took the last spot\nfollowing a three-man elimlna\ntion contest with Wally Keep of\nSt. Boniface and Ron Fiddler of\nSouthwood, all tied at 304.\nPidlaski, 39, has been on eight\nof the last nine Manitoba teams,\nmissing only the 1953 champion,\nships. The strong-armed swinger\nwas Manitoba's amateur cham\npion In 1949 and 1950.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 County\ncricket results Friday:\nEssex 302 and 174, Yorkshire 446\nfor 7 declared and 34 for 0. Yorkshire won by 10 wicketa.\nGlamorgan 104 and 168, Middlesex 128 and 148 for 9. Middlesex\nwon by 1 wicket\nGloucestershire 130 and 302,\nLancashire 176 and 260 for 4. Lancashire won by 8 wickets,\nNottinghamshire 275 and 279 for\n6 declared, Somerset 146 and 143.\nNottinghamshire won by 261 runs.\nWarwickshire 210 and 250, Surrey 154 and 175. Warwickshire won\nby 131 runs.\nWorcestershire 105 and 330, Sussex 336 for 9 declared and 100 for\n4. Sussex won by 6 wickets.\nHampshire 377 and 71 for 0, Leicestershire 96 and 351, Hampshire\nwon by 10 wickets.\nDerbyshire 212 and 231, Northamptonshire 190 and 254 for 4.\nNorthamptonshire won by \u00bbix\nwickets.\nThere are four person! to each\nmotor vehicle in Canada.\nTUNE-UPS AT\n15% DISCOUNT\nONE WEEK ONLY!\nFrom Monday, Aug. 1st to Saturday, Aug. 6th\nBe Sure to Join tho\nSTAR GAS CARD SYSTEM\nPrlxes of Credit From SOc to $25.00\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE\nYmir Road\nNelson B.C.\nPhono 1\u00ab48\n\u00a5$&MMM8&^\nMlckoy Maglio\nNelson Forward\nSENIOR\nLacrosse\nTONIGHT\n8 poin*\nCIVIC ARENA\nSpokane\nvs.\nNelson\nADULTS SOe\nStudents and\nChildren 28*\nSTART TRAINING NOWI\nMODERN WORK\nFOR\nMODERN WOMEN\nTHE RCAF Will. TRAIN YOU FOR WORK\nTO FIT YOUR SPECIAL  APTITUDES\nFIGHTER CONTROL\nTELECOMMUNICATIONS\nMEDICAL\nRECREATION\nMETEOROLOGY\nSUPPLY\nCLERICAL AND\nSTENOGRAPHIC\nThere's a wide vorloty of Interesting and important\nwork for woman In the RCAF. Tho Air Force will\nfjivo you Iho boil in training and you will receive the\ntame pay, rank and advancement opportunities\nat for airmen.\nMedical and dental care, clothing, food ond supervised lodging are provided. There are other benefit*\nyou'll be Interetted in too, which the RCAF Career\nCountollor will tell you about.\nIf you are between 18 and 29, tingle, and have\nGrade 9, the equivalent or better, now it the time\nlo get Into Hilt interetllng field of modem work\nfor modem women.\nSee the RCAF Career Counsellor ai\nR.C.A.F. Recruiting Unit,\n422 7th St. S., Lethbridge, Alta.\nPhone 6146 ... ,.\n IT\nI \u2022       \u25a0 . \u25a0 ! \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0:!',-.\nP|pt!J-       | .   \u25a0   I  ' \u2022    \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0    .   . \u25a0    .\/\u25a0.'\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0.'-\"\u25a0 \u25a0\"\u2022y.py^.y\n8\u2014NELSON DAIL YNEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1953\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL\n9\nN\nE\nft\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nC*A\u00ab|    (*\ni\n.|Q\n&<.**%\ni\ni\n!\n1   J&'h^r-\n5c?   -\nA^j\/   '\n5^\n\/\u2022JO\nWhile the lone rangbr makes\nA SECRET AliPTOACH TO THE\n 1 FEPRIS PANCH HOUSB- t-\n- STACEY aJMTINUS? TO POSE\nAs Ferris   j |ga\nflBBW YOU MtSREP&ESENTfD\nTHIS RANCH HtWrV \\QU W\/POTE\n'Jl\nl!_\n\"C\np\u00a7\u00a3\nf\n6k<\n\"1 PtMON-TO-PmON WANT ADS\n1    \/W QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 1844\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 1844\nBIRTHS\nSTRUKOFF-To Mr. and Mrs.\nMike W. Strukoff of Grand Forks,\nat the 6rand Forks Community\nHospital, July 25, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\n-SERVICE MAN\nWANTED\nThe Corporation of the City of\nNelson desires to hire one man\nfor afternoon shift \u25a0 (4 p.m.-12\np.m.), for the purpose of fueling\nheavy equipment and greasing\nand servicing trucks both at the\nCity Garage and around the\narea of the City of Nelson.\nApplications for the position\nshould be in letter form with\nenvelope marked \"Service Man'\nApplication.\" \u2014 Accompanying\nthe application should be the\nnames of two character references, and two written references from previous employers\nstating experience and abilities.\nThe whole to be addressed to\n\"The Engineering Office, City\nHall,\" and received not .later\nthan 12 noon, August 1, 1955.\nInterviews will be arranged\nafter this date.\nWONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY \u2014\nFor a druggist apprentice, \u2014\nSenior Matriculation preferred\nhowever would accept enquiries\nfrom persons with Junior Ma\ntriculation. Apply at once: Na\ntional Employment Office, Nel\nson, B.C.\n$35.00 WEEKLY GUARANTEED\nto start. Rapid advancement if\nyou are free to travel and under\n23 years of age. Ne experience\nnecessary. Transportation pro\nvided. Apply Miss Irwin, Hume\nHotel Sat. 9 to 4.\nWE NEED A LOGGING CON-\ntractor to haul logs about 7\nmiles. Must have full equipment for tree to mil] operation.\nApply L. D. Moore Lumber Co\nLtd., Ymir, B.C. Phone IB, Ymir.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nOFFERS\nPlainly marked on the envelope \"Offer for House No. 2\"\nwill be received by the Aider-\nsigned up to 12 o'clock noon, 8th\nAugust 1955 for House No. 2\nbeing situated on Lots I and 2\nBlock 47, Nelson City, Plan 228\nand known as 904 Nelson Ave.,\nNelson,  B.C.\nThe dwelling may be inspected between the hours of 10 a.m.\nto 4 p.m. on the 28th, 29th, 30th\nof July and 1st of August, 1955\ninclusive and further information obtainable upon application\nto the Office ofthe Government\nAgent, Court House, Nelson, B.C.\nThe structure is to be sold on\nan \"as is and where is\" basis and-\nit is a condition of sale that it\nis to be removed from site within' 15 days of notification of\nacceptance of a successful bid.\nThe site shall be left free from\ndebris, and earth disturbed in\nconnection with the removal\nshall be backfilled.\nOffers should be accompanied\nby a certified deposit cheque or\nmoney order, made payable to\nthe Minister of Finance for 10%\nof the amount offered. The successful offer will be subject to\nSocial Services Tax and the\nhighest or any offer will not\nnecessarily be accepted.\nCHAIRMAN,\nPURCHASING COMMISSION\nPARLIAMENT   BUILDINGS,\nVICTORIA, B.C.\nJuly 25th, 1955.\nWANTED: SALES CLERK, AGE\n25 to 35. Experienced in hardware and general lines. Steady\nemployment. M.S.A. and other\nbenefits. Apply Box 6404 Daily\nNews.\nACTUAL JOBS IN CANADA, US,\nSo. Am., Europe. To $15,000. Travel paid. Write Employment\nInfo. Center, Room C-48, 4\nGreen St., Boston 14.\nMAN TO CUT WOOD ON\nNorth Shore in return for free\nwood supply or other suitable\narrangements. Phone 401-R-4.\nWANTED-THREE  BLASTHOLE\ndiamond drillers. Apply at once:\nNational    Employment    Office,\n1     Nelson.\nJUNIOR PARTSMAN. PREFER-\nably with some experience in\nfront end work. Beacon Motors,\n701 Baker St.\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nNOTICE-COME AND LEARN\na good profession that you\ncan become independent the\nrest of your life. Our new\nclasses are starting immediately and we want men or\nwomen from the ages of 17\nto 60. We' teach Hairdressing\nand all lines of Beauty Culture. Write, wire or phone\nfor information to the O.K.\nValley Hairdressing School,\n453   Lawrence   Ave..   Kelowna\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING\nWoman wanted, greater opportunity.    Better    pay.    Pleasant\nwork. Catalogue free. \u2014 Write:\nMANUEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n326 8th Avenue, Calgary.'\nBranches: Winnipeg, Regina,\nSaskatoon   and   Edmonton.\nCanada's National   System,\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT-DISTRICT\nschool inspector needs warm,\nunfurnished   3   or   4   bedroom\n\u25a0sjiome from Aug. 20 to June 30.\n3 daughters attending school,\nReferences.   >Box    8424,    Daily\n1 News.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice. Day. week, or monthly. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker St;\nFOR RENT: NEWLY MODERN-\nized large office space, convenient entrance, good parking facilities  Call 77 for details.\nMODERN FOtnt BEDROOM\nsemi bungalow, centrally located. Box 10198 Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED TO RENT - TWO OR\nthree bedroom home, Fairview,\nbridge engineer. Box 10185 Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED TO RENT - ONE OR\ntwo bedroom house, preferably\nFairview. Box 10188 Nelson\nDaily News.\nFOR RENT - TWO FLOORS 50'\nby  100' each; suitable for storage,   warehouse,   or   cars.   Apply\nMcDonald Jam Co., 301 Vernon\nMODERN THREE ROOM APT.,\ncentral heat and hot water, private entrance. Phone 713-Y. 922\nKootenay St.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and-\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Ph.\nPAcific 6357.\nBUILDERS SPECIAL LUMBER\nliquidation sale. 2x4, 2x6, 2x8,\n1x6, 1x8, 1x10 boards. All dress-\ned ^tock. $30 thousand'' B.M,\nOver 4000 board feet free delivery Write S. Kudra, Pass-\nmore, B.C. for appointments to\nsee lumber. Phone 1702-R city.\nFOR SALE - CULL LUMBER.\nThis is all reject lumber. Makes\napproximately four cords of\nwood.  Good  for small  repairs.\n% Phone 1702-R. Immediate delivery.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals. copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment. Active Trading, 935 E.\nCordova, Vancouver.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement, 301 Baker\nSt Phone 47. \"We buy used furniture.\"\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE AND\ngarden tools; small Quebec\nheater. Owner leaving town. 806\nSecond St., Phone 421-R.   .\nWANTED TO RENT - 3 BED-\nroom house, long term rental.\nPhone 1761-R2.\nNOTICE OF TENDER ,\nSealed tenders addressed to the\nundersigned and endorsed \"Tender\nfor the Construction of an Immi\ngration Res i.dence Building\nKingsgate, B.C. will be received\nuntil 3:00 P.M. August 22, 1955.\nPlans, specifications and forms\nof tender may be obtained upon\nrequest from the Chief of Accom\nmodation Branch, Customs and\nExcise Divisions, Department of\nNational Revenue, Ottawa.\nTenders will not be considered\nunless made on these forms and in\naccordance with the conditions set\nforth therein.\nEach tender must be accompanied by a certified cheque on a\nchartered bank in Canada payable\nto the Receiver General of Canad\nas specified in the form of tender\nfor 10% of the amount of the tender.\nThe Department, through the\nChief ot Accommodation, will supply blueprints and specifications\nof the work on a deposit of the\nsum of $10.00 in the form of a certified cheque payable to the order\nto the Receiver General of Canada\nada. The deposit will be released\non return of the blueprints and\nspecifications within a month from\nthe date of reception of tenders,\nIf plans and specifications are not\nreturned within that period, the\ndeposit will be forfeited.\nD. Sim\nDeputy   Minister\nBOMBER HOISTS, 1500 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45. while they last. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova,\nVancouver.\n36~CU. FT. HOME FREEZER AND\nrefrigerator cabinet, operated by\none Unit. Price: $250. Ph. 1007-L.\nMcCLARY CHARM WOOD AND\ncoal ran*e with oil burner sep-\n __       arate.  Like  new.  Phone 544-L.\n20'x20' SPACE AT 521 VERNON h  HORSE  HAY  BAILER GOOD\nFOR RENT - MODERN 3-\nrjDom apartment. Available Aug.\n1. Phone 583-R.\nFURNISHED THREE - ROOMED\nsuite, vacant August 20th. Phone\n653-R.\nsuitable for office and\/or whse.\nPhone 1466.\n3 ROOMED FURNISHED SELF\ncontained apartment, private\nentrance. Phone 7JJ4-R.\nFOR RENT - BEDROOM WITH\nor without board. Phone 1035-R\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brasa\naluminum, copper. Used parts\nfor cars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n1^2. Granite Rd., Nelson, B.C.\nCOW HIDES, SHEEP PELTS,\nhorse hair (mane and tail) old\nbatteries, copper, brass, aluminum, radiators, beer and pop\nbottles. Phone 882-Y. Warehouse\n415^ Latimer St., City. Independent Trader.\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products, Box 450, Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News.\nWANTED - 2 GAS PUMPS. AP\nply Box 10181 Daily News.\ncondition.    Box    10351    Nelson\nDaily News.\nCHILD'S TRICYCLE, SMALL\nfridge, both in good condition.\nPhone 1882.\nWATER TANK; HOLDS 900\ngals., and walking plow. \u2014 O.\nNichols, Slocan City.\nBURPEE CAN SEALER, USED\nonlv once, and 20 new cans. Mrs.\nC. S. Price. R.R, No. 1. Nelson.\nGOOD   COAL   AND WOOD\nrange  with  reservoir. Ph. 1752.\nLARGE HARDWOOD CRIB AND\nBabee Tenda. Phone 489-L.\n9X12  AXMINSTER RUG, GOOD\ncondition. Ph. 957-Y.\nCREAM   ENAMEL   WOOD AND\ncoal stove. $40.00. Phone 96-L-l.\nLOST AND FOUND\nREWARD FOR RETURN OF A\nfemale Welsh Terrier. Phone\nTrail 1234-L collect. Resembles\na small Airedale In color and\nstyle.\n\"1 ROLL BARBED WIRE LOST\nfrom Wood Vallanee delivery\ntruck. Finder please phone 1530.\nLOST - RED SCHOOL BLAZER\nwith crest and lapel pins. Phona\n230-R.  Reward.\nAMAZING EXTRA - MONEY\nplan gives you gorgeous dress\nwithout penny cost. Rush name\ntodav with dress size. HARFORD FROCKS. Dept. PD-236.\n2241 Lavriviere St., Montreal 24.\nP.Q.\nSEW OUR READy-CHT APRONS\nspare-time. E\/sy. profitable. \u2014\nFree details. A & B Enterprises,\nFort Smith, Arkansas.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nA DRESS-LINGERIE SHOP IN\nyour home. Fifth Avenue, New\nYork fashions. Good commissions. No investment. Write\nModern Manner Dept. 128, Hanover, Penna.\nOLD AGE PENSION LADY WITH\ngirl, 8, wants position minding\nyoung baby Monday to Friday,\nliving in, $10.00 weekly. Box\n6421, Nelson Daily News.\nWOMAN WILL CARE FOR\nchildren while mother works.\nPhone 306-R.\nFOR ALL ODD JOBS PHONE\n256-R.\nBUSINESS OPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE\u2014CAFE IN DISTRICT\ncentre. Must sell because of ill\nhealth. Revenue from rooms will\ncover payments. Price reason\nable; interest 4 per cent. Addi\ntional lot for expansion; only\nvacant lot in business section\nApply 1615 Ward Street.\nBUSINESS FOR SALE: MEAT\nand grocery, Excellent location.\nAnnual turnover $90,000. Fixtures, equipment, refrigeration\nand stock. Low price. Apply Box\nNo. 10563 Daily News.\nGARAGE BUSINESS, STOCK\nand equipment. Also house and\nproperty. Apply Box 138, Sal^gio.\nTIMBER SALE X67821\nThere will be offered for sale\nat Public Auction, at 1:00 p.mt\n(local time), on Monday, 'August\n22nd, 1955, in the office of the\nForest Ranger, Kaslo, B.C., the\nLicence X67821, situated near\nDago Creek, South Fork Kaslo\nCreek. Kootenay District, to \"cut\n123,000 cubic feet of sawlogs and\n25.000 lineal feet of cedar poles\nand piling.\nTwo (2) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\n'Further particulars may be obtained from the District Forester.\nNelson. B.C., or the Forest Ranger,\nKaslo. B.C.\nuaily   CROSSWORD\n3. Thin\n4 Scarcity\n5 Coin\ni Swcd I\n6 Those who\ncare for\ngardens\n7 Among\n8 Boy\nservants\n9 Appearing\nas if eaten\n10 Flits\n16 Sash (Jap )\n18 Capital\n(Neth l\n21 Northeast\niabbr t\n22 Poem\n23. A\nlong-\n16 Small-\nest\nstate\nlabbr I\n27. Native\nof\n.Ithaca\n28. Without\neyes\n30 Remnant\n31. Garment\n32 To let again\n33 With the\nmouth\nwide open\nQOBBE   HfflHHH\nEH   HmSIHlsB\nHQEi aaaa\nHE1E1B1HH mHQCI\nHEHHB. HflHHB\nEJHHH ESHHEiefc\nHHEH UHE\nHHHHHB HH\nEHtSHH aHIIian\nHHHIIH   HMHBB\nqsebh aaiauiB\nYesterday'! Annver\n37 Biblical\nname (D.J\n38. Walking\nstick\n30. At ont\ntime\n41 Slope\nTIMBER SALE X68393 \\\nThere will be offered for sale j\nat Public Auction, at 1:30 p.m.,\n(local time) on Monday, August:\n22nd, 1955. in the office of the |\nForest Ranger. Kaslo, B.C.. thej\nLicence X68393. to cut 172.100\ncubic feet of sawlogs situated near\nLa France Creek, Kootenay District.\nThree (3) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in nerson\nmay submit a sealed tender, to\nbe opened at the hour of auction\nand  treated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the District Forester.\nNelson, B.C., or the Forest Ranger.\nKaslo. B.C.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nBOAT. 16' LONG SITS 6 AND 5\nh.p. motor. Next to new condition. Aonly 2024 Topping Street.\nTrail, BX.\t\nm>. JOHNSON OUTBOARD\nmotor, new condition and guarantee. $175. and terms. Coleman\nElectric.\n10-FOOT PLYWOOD HYDRO-\nplane. A, little dandy. What\noffers? Ph. 544-L. 623 Latimer St.\nFOR SALE\u201414-FT. RUNABOUT.\n51V beam, for outboard motor.\nT   Allan, phone 58-W. Nakusp.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\nPhone 1494-Y.\nROOM   AND  BOARD   FOR  ONE\nyoung gentleman. Phone 1179-X.\nACROSS\nL Musical\nInstrument\n6. Gazed, open\nmouthed\n11 Near (poet.)\n12 Beetle\n13. Set\n14. Hardship\n15. An armored\nvehicle\n(Mil I\n16. Strangest\n17. Land-\nmeasure\n18 Man s\nnickname\n19 Southeast\nby south\n(abbr )\n20. Disgrace\n24. Requires\n15. Weird\n19 An endless\nperiod\nof time\n31. Same as\n\"pik*' (var.'\n34. Half ems\n35. Masculine\npronoun\n36. Consider\n38. Fuel\n40. Antelope\n11. A ball\n42. A dark\nbrown\n43. Indians\n(Peru)\n14 Vapor\n15. Ends of\nhammdr\nends\nDOWN\n1. A military\nofficer    *\n2 Make bigger 7J0\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\n.la    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A fo'used\nfor the three L's X for the two O's etc Single letters, apos-\ntrophies the length and formation of the words are all hir.U.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nNO.     ZU     EISTOQL     BY     QOU     DUI!\nWNZ     OB1BMJ     GU     ZBMJ     LOSUPA,     NIA\nQJMQO     QSD    ZBMJ     PNIFUL'\u2014QONFB\nU J N Z\nYesterday's Cryploquote: AND HUMAN LOVt NEEDS HU-\nMAN MERITING' HOW HAST THOU MERITED? - THOMPSON\n1\nX\n3\nA\nS\n^\nb\n7\na\nT\"\nlO\n11\nV4\nIX\n13\n^\n14\nlb\n^\n16\n17\n^\n%\n18\n^A\nw\nlo\nit\nIX\n23\n%\nd\n^\nIt\nVA\n25\nlb\nIT\n28\n^\n%\n^A\n2<>\n30\nJl\n31\n33\n^\nj4\n'\/A\n^\n35\n3U\n37\n^f\n36\n59\nAO\nm\nAl\nAX\n%\nA3\na4\n%\n45\n'\n \u2022\u25a0^\u2022r.- '\n-\/v;-. '\n';;\u25a0'-\",,;\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_\n^\nRff\n-**M\u00abMiMMMta\u00bb\nSMALL INVESTMENT - LARGE\nThat's the Want Ad Story \u2014 PHONE 1844\nMACHINERY\n(Continued\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\nSTOP\nLOOK\nLISTEN\nJ\u2014BEAUTIFUL NEW BUNGA-\ntow, 2 bedrooms, oak floors,\nmahogany trim. Fully modern.  Uaragein JI3Q00\nbasement     .     ^      '\nTerms.\n\u00bb-40 ACRES AND BEACH\nFRONT and attraclive 3 bedroom bungalow. Garage, outbuildings, lawn, llowers.\nLake view. Appurtenant to\nhighway and good lake frontage and many lovely home-\niites; some with highway\ntrontage and lake views.\nGood creek divides property.\nApproximately 16 miles from\nNels\u00b0n        $10,500\nSome terms.\nI\u2014VIEW LOT, SilOSfl\n50X130,  Fairview   \u00ab!\"*\u00ab\"'\n4\u20142 GOOD CORNER LOTS, 50\nX120, Uphill, level C I Trtn\n\u2022lie.  Price *i*Vy\n$300 Down.\n8\u2014VERY   CENTRAL   4   BEDROOM   HOME.    Cement\nfoundation,   A-l   basement\nfurnace. $7250\nTerms.\nB.C.\nPrice\n6\u20143.90 ACRES, all cleared and\ngood ground, and older\nhouse,  needs  repairs.   Good\n\u25a0 stone foundation. Barn. Close\nto   town,   10   minutes   from\n.  Baker Street. $4750\nA real buy this ... *\" ' OU\n1\u2014ATTRACTIVE Vt ACRE at\n6 Mile and new 3 bedroom\nbungalow, needs a little finishing. Let us show you this.\nRESORT PROPERTY\nI\u2014ONE OF THE 'MOST ATTRACTIVE ON KOOTENAY\nLAKE\u2014Eleven cottages and\nLodge on busy highway: 1500\nfeet   lake   frontage.   Needs\n$25,000\";;\u2122\nquest.\ndetails   on   re-\n9\u20145 LOTS, valuable corner 120\nxl25 feet. Look it. over and\nmake an offer. Old Strathcona site.\n10-BRIGHT NEW RESIDENCE\non one acre. Two gas pumps,\na few miles from Nelson. This\nis a busy spot and capable\nof a lot of      c 19 cnn\nbusiness. Price * ' *>WV\nSome terms.\n11\u2014BRAND NEW 2 BEDROOM\nBUNGALOW $8500\nFairview.  Price .. <c\u00bb\"\"\"\u00bb\n\u26661,900 will' handle.\n12\u2014ELEVEN ACRES, about 8\nhave been cultivated. Eight\nmiles from Nelson, apprcjxi-\nmately 2000 feet on paved\nhighway. Good 4 room log\nhouse. Cement foundation.\nBarn, etc.  School bus passes\n\u00a3\u00a3 ... $4400\nSome terms.\n13\u20142% ACRES AND NICE\nCOMFORTABLE FARM\nHOME. Three bedrooms.\nLots of small fruit trees. Approximately 225 feet secluded lake frontage and beach.\nAbove is on Harrop side, well\nknown  as  McConnell prop\nerty.\nPrice\nAnd well worth it. Terms.\n$6400\nPrice\n$6300\n$8900\n14\u2014THREE BEDROOM HOME,\nfurnace. Clean and bright.\nClose in.. 35500\nTerms.\n15\u2014THREE BEDROOM OLDER\nTYPE BUNGALOW. 3 garden lots. Excellent residential corner.\nPrice\n$1500 might handle.\n16\u2014MOST ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM HOME. Hall, dining\nroom and living room, oak\nfloors. Bright kitchen. Immaculate wash room downstairs and beautifully tiled\nbathroom upstairs. Good\nstone foundation. A really\nbeautiful garden. Front and\nback lawns, fruit trees and\n\u25a0   small fruits. 900 block, Silica\nStreet.\n, Price\nSome terms.\n17\u2014NORTH SHORE, opposite\nNelson.'Excellent viey site.\nTwo bedroom bungalow: fully modern. Built SLQ^ftA\n1950.  Price $\u00bb<>\"\"\n$3000 down and terms.\nLISTINGS WANTED\nOur Mortgage Facilities get the\ndeals through quickly.\nSPECIALLY REQUIRED\nHOMES\n$5500 to $8500\nBUYERS WAITING!\nDONT FORGET!\nA PACKAGE POLICY SAVES\n20%.\nc. w.\nAppleyard\n& Co., Ltd.\nT. C. LAMBERT, Office Manager\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nEstablished 1912\nReal Estate and Insurance\nAgents   .\nP'O Box 26 Nelson, B.C.\n,  PROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\n(Continued-\n1\u2014A well-built 3 B.R. HOUSE\n\u20149 years old, Has h.w. flooring in Lil., one tB.R. downstairs and 2 B.Rs. upstairs.\nK, and bathroom have inlaid\nlinoleum. Full basement and\nfurnace. Located on '2 lots.\nMust have $4000 or nearly\ncash and balance on easy\nmonthly pay- SftOOfl\nmetits. Full price \u2022Pou\u00ab\u00ab\n- This house is well located as\nto schools.',\n2\u2014A CUTE LITTLE 2 B.R.\nHOME \u2014close in on 3 lots.\nNeeds some finishing. Has a\nbeautiful large L.R. (also\ntelevised). Modern K. and\nbathroom. Full basement and\nhot air furnace. tCftRfl .\nFull price JOQOU\nWe could help finance.\nDUPLEX\n3-A GOOD INVESTMENT\nBUY \u2014Can he purchased on\nvery easy terms, $2000 cash\nand balance on monthly payments. Lower suite, rented\nfor $40 per mo. and upper\ncould be rented for $85. Two\noil heaters go with the house.\nYou should see this one.-Full\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SAL!\n(Continued\nprice\nonly\n$5000\n4-A SPLENDID BUY IN\nROSEMONT \u20143 B.Rs., L.R.,\nK. and bathroom. Full basement. Located on 5 develop-\nedlots-.   .    , $7500\nFull price is only ^\n$3000 cash will handle.\n5-A CLOSE IN 2 B.R. BUNGALOW for quick sale. L.R.,\nnice kitchen, bathroom and\nlaundry room, all on on*\nfloor. 2 lots. Full basement\nand furnace. $5250\nFull price v\nWe could help.\n6\u2014A SPLENDID BUY IN A 2\nB.R. BUNGALOW on 8th St.\nNearly new. Large K., L.R.,\ntwo porches and wonderful\nK. Full basement and hot\nwater furnace. Located on\nthree -3O'xl20' lots. Good\nbuilding in rear of property\nfor shop or could be m&de\ninto another house by handy-\n\u2122a\"   , $9500\nFull price   *      T\n$3500 cash will handle. *\n7-A BRAND NEW UNLIVED\nIN 3 B.R. HOME\u2014L.R. with\nfireplace, D.R., good K. and\nbatnroom.     Full    basement,\n*  automatic oil heat. This is a\nSM.... *'3'000\n$3638 cash, bal. $51 per mo.\n8\u20142 OLDER TYPES-3 B.R.\nhomes In Fairview. Ekch located on two corner lots;\ndeveloped.   Ask about these.\n9-A LARGE FAMILY HOME\nen 5 lots. Splendid view.\nFruit trees and good garden.\nIf you need lots of accommodation this could be it, as\nhouse actually has 5 B.Rs., including lovely one in basement. Full price on this one\n\" $11,500\nonly\nSome terms.\nHerb Peacock\nReal Estate and Insurance\nAgency\n532 Ward St. Phone 68\nYMIR ROAD\nClose in. 3 B.Rs.., L.R., O.R.,\nnice kitchen, bathroom. Full\nbasement, hot air furnace.  At-\nTerm? gara86' $8000\nOBSERVATORY ST.\n3 B.Rs., L.R., D.R., large kitchen, utility room and bathroom\u2014all one floor. Two lots\nand garage.   Basement and hot\n^Z.        $6300\nCHAT.HAM STREET\n3 B.Rs., L.R., kitchen and bath.\nFull basement.   Two lots, very\nTerms8\"\"\u2122' $6500\nFAIRVIEW\nBridgeworkers! Here's a large\nhouse easily rnade into two 4-\nroomed S.C. apartments. Hot air\nfurnace and garage. Close to\nbridge and your tQ^flft\nwork. Terms WOW\nWAREHOUSE with trackage\nand co\\d storage.  Front Street.\nBUSINESS BLOCK, VERNON\nST.\nBUSINESS LOTS, VERNON\nST.\nAPARTMENT HOUSE, close\nin.  Good revenue.\n8 ACRE FARM, near Balfour.\n50X60 CORNER, Latimer and\nHall.\nSlocan City\u20144 BEDROOM\nHOUSE and 4 lots. J2500\nFull price . \u2022k\u2014\"\"\"'\nAgencies Ltd.\nPHONE 135 OR EVES. 1065-X\nFOR SALE\u20143-BEDROOM HOME\nFairview. Box . 10490 Nelson\nDaily News.\nEXCLUSIVE LISTING\nNELSON'S BEST BUY.\nVICTORIA STREET\n3 LOTS -\n6-7 room dwelling on three lots\nin lawn and rock garden. A\nprivate spot with excellent view.\nDwelling has full basement,\nstone foundation and piped hot\nair to all rooms. LR, DR, kitchen with pantry and one bedroom and bathroom down.' 2-3\nbedroom upi Plenty of cupboard and closet space. Age\nabout 20 years. Garage to\nmatch. Priced for quick sale at\nless than value of buildings.\nYour chance of a ^70^0\nlifetime. Cash , .. $'**>\"\nAnd- we can assist the right\nparty with $4000 mortgage. .\nALSO\nAnother exceptional buy \u2014 fl\nrooms, part of three lots convenient to business $fif)00\narea,   i^asn\nOr $6300 on terms with $2500\ndown.\nFOR THE BEST BUYS, SEE\nT.D.' Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward- St. Phone 717\nFOR SALE\n3 BEDROOM HOME\nlust south Nelson city limits\u2014\n6 acres level land in hay and\ngarden \u2014 some fruit trees \u2014\nnew barn \u2014 with a large\nwood-lot, some farm equipment \u2014 just what you are\nlooking for -\n$10,500\n$3500 Down\nPHONE 662 bus. hrs. or apply\nSuite 1 \u2014 373 Baker Street,\nNelson.\nLOWL*;\"FAIRVIEW, A LOVELY\n3 bedroom family home in excellent condition, 2 bedrooms\ndown, one up. 15x20 living room\nwith brick fireplace. Wired for\nrange, full basement with garage doors. Coal furnace, lovely\ngarden. Half block to bus, near\nschools and park. $8000. Phone\n1338-R.\nFOR SALE - SUVEYED LOTS\n60x120 V, mile north of Salmo,\nalso acre lots and acreage Vt\nmile south of Salmo. Apply E.\nNystrom, Salmo.\nSMALL HOME 6 LOTS, 15 BART-\nlett pear trees, cherry and apple\ntrees. Nice location. Cheap for\ncash. Apply J. Shutty, Kaslo,\nB.C.\nFARM, 37 ACRES. RUNNING\"\nwater, and 4-roomed house.\nHorse and chickens. Complete:\n$3600 cash. O. Nichols, Slocan\nCity.\nFOR SALE - 20 ACRE FARM\nrunning water, electricity, large\nbuildings, 10 miles west of Nelson. M. Aben, General Delivery\nNelson. '\n10 ACRES OF FARM LAND FOfi\nsale. Apply Pete Rezansoff,\nTarrys, B.C.\n3-B.R. FAMILY HOME IN FAIR-\nview. Terms. Discount for cash.\nPhone 914-L.\nFOR SALE: 2 CORNER LOTS,\ncorner, of Kootenay and Innes.\nPhone 314-Y after 5:30 p.m.\nTWO HOUSES ON 2 ACRES'\nYmir Road. John Posnekoff,\nGen.Del,, Nelson, B.C. Mile out.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nNebon Eatlg 5fawH\nClassified Advertising Rates\nPer line, 1 time .   .        .20\n2 consecutive times         .35\n3 consecutive times     45\n4,-5 and 6 consecutive\ntimes .60\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions     .20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS,  etc.\u201420e  per  line\nfirst insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion,\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10*\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance _ .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nUnited Slates, United Kingdom\nOne  month $ 1.25\nThree months _,..,.       $ 2.75\nSix months            $ 5.00\nOne year $15.00\nMail in Canada outside Neison\nOne month _ $ 1.00\nThree months      .. $ 3.75\nSix months        .$ 7.50\nOne year     _ $1000\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\na. w', MDbdwsoto & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH.  S.  ELMES,'ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERB AND 8URVEYORS\nQ. W. BAEriQ\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34, Frutvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L. Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C.\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n.218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFebruary & March hitched pullets \u2014 Hampshires, Leghom-\nHampshiri Cross, White Leg.\nhorns and other breeds. .Get\nthese for early layers. Write for\nPrice List.\nRUMP & SENDALL LIMITED\nLangley, B. C.\nFOR SALE: ONE FARM HORSE\nGentle. M. L. Postnikoff. Apple-\ndale. BC.\nS. V. SHAYLER, P.C., BOX 252\nKimberley, Phon,e 54.\nB.C. Land Surveyor, Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nTIMBER CRUI8ER\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan City, B.C. Timber cruising,\nmineral claim inspection,\nAnywhere in B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFRESHENED \"CoWTOR SALE\nApply Sam Makortoff. Hills.\nB.C.\nNEW FORDS!\nNEWMONARCHS!\nNEW CONSULS!\nNEW ZEPHYRS!\nat\nMel Buerge Motors\nplus\nNEW FORD PICKUPS '\nNEW FORD TRACTORS\nBest in Used Cars!\nBest in Deals!\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Ford Tudor\n1953 Buick Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedans\n1951  Monarch Coupe\n1951 Mercury Coupe\n1950 StudebakerSedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1947 Chevrolet Coupe\nLicensed - Running\nCLEAR-OUT SPECIALS ON\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n$450.\n1947 Monarch Sedan\n$350.\n1940 Ford Sedan, $100\n1937 Dodge Sedan, $50\n1935 Nash Sedan, $40\nENGLISH UNITS\n1954 Consul\n1953 Consul\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Austin A-30\n1952 Prefect Sedan\n1951 Consul Sedan\n1951 Austin Sedans\n1950 Prefect Sedan\n1949 Austin Panel\nUSED TRUCK\nBARGAINS\n1954 Ford 1\/2-Ton\n1953 Ford Vi-Ton\n1953 Ford 1-Ton Exp. ess\n1952 Mercury 1-Ton\nExpress\n1952 Ford 1\/2-Ton\n1951 Dodge 1\/2-Ton\n1951   Ford 3-Ton\nDump and hoist.\n1950 Chevrolet \/2-Ton\nMEL   \u2022\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\nPh. 1744'   608 Vernon St.\nFORD-MONARCH\n\u25a0 Sales and Service\n, AUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n(Continued\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n(Continued\n22 FT. HOUSE TRAILER, tVti-\nnlsheA wishing machine, rang-\nette, beds, electric brakes. Apply\n1653  Kootenay Ave.,  Rossland.\nWr &'kli'- b&K 'MtftoR-\ncycle, low mileage, good condition. Phone 765-Y.\nA  1953   FORD  PICKUP,  CHEA?\ntor cash. Phone 1808-R-3.\nSEE\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS\nLTD.\nTODAY FOR THE LARGEST\nAND MOST  COMPLETE\nNEW AND USED\nCAR SELECTION\nIN THE INTERIOR OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\n1954 Austin A70\n1953 Consul\n1953 Austin A40\n1952 Morris 4 Door\n1952 Hillman\n1950 Austin\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nBuick Special Hardtop\nFully equipped.\nBuick Century 4 Door\nFord Fairlane 4 Door\nPontiac 4 Door\nChevrolet 4 Door\nPlymouth 4 Door\nChevrolet 4 Door\nPontiac 4 Door\nChevrolet Hardtop\nChevrolet 2 Door\nFord 2 Door     Jj$....\nPontiac 4 Door\"\nChevrolet 2 Door\n\u2022Chevrolet 4 Door\nFord 4 Door\nChevrolet 4 Door\n1955\n1955\n1955\n1955\n1955\n1954\n1954\n1953\n\u20221953\n1953\n1953\n1952\n1952\n1950\n1949\n1948\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\n1955 Chevrolet Pickup\n1955 G.M.C. Pickup\n1955 Chev Sedan Delivery\n1955 Chev Station Wagon\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\nRadio.\n.1954 Austin Pickup\n1953 Chev Sedan Delivery\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1952 Dodge Pickup\n1952 G.M.C. Pickup\n1951 Austin Pickup\n1951  Meteor Bandwagon\n1951  Austin Countryman\n1951  Chev Pickup\n1950 Ford 2 Ton\nGood rubber.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nWE PAYCASH FOR\nLATE MODEL CARS'\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\nRUEBEN\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1135    803 Baker St.\nMACHINERY\nMORE\n(Continued In. Next Columni\n(kEAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nWith-Dependable\nUsed Equipment From\nFinning   Tractor!\n\"CAT\" D4, 7J series, \"Cat\" angledozer, Hyster winch and\nguards. C o m p 1 e t e4 y over-\nhauled In our shop. Top valuel\nCertified Buy. 15-day warranty, f.o.b. Vancou- <t7ftftA\nvcr. FT-2219. 9IVW\n\"CAT\" D4, 2T series, La Plante\nChoate angledoser. Hyster\nwinch, guards. Fair condition,\nminor repairs completed. Buy\nand try, 3-day trial, f.o.b.\nPrin^George.        $450()\nGM model. 871 power unit complete with radiator, steel base\nand Y-type clutch, develops\n150 H.P. at' 1600 rpm er 160\nHP at 1800. Fair condition.\nBuy #nd tfy, 3-day trial, f.o.b.\n. JmST1      $2750\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT CO., LTD,\n\"Where Used Equipment Is A\nBusiness-^-Not A Sideline!\"\nPhone 61 \u2014 Cranbrook\nPhnne'930 \u2014 Nelson\n(Continued In Next Column)\nLogging and\nConstruction\nEquipment\n1\u2014Al\\is-Chalmers, Model HD-5,\nequipped for logging, Carco\nhydraulic Angle Dozer, Carco single drum winch, excel-\n^.tion $4950\n[NELSON f.t.'l. YNC'.'S, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 19S5\u20149\nMACHINERY\n(Continued\n1\u2014Allls - Chalmers, Model\nHD-7, equipped for logging, Baker Angle Dozer,\nCarco single drum winch,\nlights. In excel- $5950\nlent   condition   \u2022k*'wwv\n1\u2014Cletrac. Model BD, serial\n180B-110, equipped with 2\/3\nyard overhead loader; engine\ncompletely re-built. Excellent\ncondition <t1G^fi\nthroughout $*>UOU\n1\u2014Caterpillar RD4 with hydraulic angle dozer, as\ntaken from service.   Fair\nZf;....    $2000\n1\u2014Oliver, Model OC3-42, serial\n2-WH-894. equipped \\yith\nWare   Loader,   Model   3-H1.\nUSSL $2950\n1\u2014Hough Payloader, Model\n^LA, serial 15456, % yard\nbucket. 825x20 ttfe* front,\n1200x24 dual tires rear,\nfront end steering. This\nmachine   is   in   excellent\nJj\u00b0nndi; $3950\nAll above prices are FOB Nelson, B.C.. subject to 5% SS St\nMA Tax if applicable.\nCall or\nPHONE 18\nPhone 792-Y Evenings.\nNELSON\n,v MACHINERY\nv '      Company Ltd.\n\"If It's Machinery You Need,\nConsult Us First\"\n214 Hall St. Nelson, B.C.\nPumps\nand Water\nSystems\n1. Gear Pumps from %\" to 1H\"\nln size.\nI We are also able to tupply\nFire Pumps, both portable\nand stationary.\n3. Deep and Shallow Well Systems for house, farm or industrial use.\n4. We are also distributors for\nBriggs St Stratton 4 cycle air-\ncooled engines and Wisconsin\nlight and heavy - duty air-\nCooled engines.\nThe\nSELKIRKS\nEquipment &\nSupply Co.Ltd.\nPhone 1590\nBox 61, Nelson\nMachinery Repairs\nA FULLY EQUIPPED MACHINE\nSHOP TO SERVE YOU.\nMACHINERY SALES\nAND SERVICE.\nWelding,\nSteel Fabricating.\nSTEVENSON'S\nMACHINE SHOP LTD.\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPhone 98\nFOR SALE \u2014 1952 SMALL\ncrawler tractor in very good\ncondition, Hydraulic angle tilt\ning blade and good winch..Price\n$2500. L. Davis, Ferguson, B.C\n(Continued in Next Column)\nEquipment\n1\u2014TD9 INTERNATIONAL\nCrawler Tractor, equipped\nwith Dozer, Winch and\npriver's Guard \u2014 completely\noverhauled.\nI-MODEL 371 - 75 HP GM.\nDIESEL POWER UNIT-like\nnew\n1\u2014MODEL 471 - 100 HP G.M.\nDIESEL POWER UNIT-like\nnew.\n1\u2014HERCULES GASOLINE\nPOWER UNIT with Transmission and Pulley.\n1\u20141948 PONTIAC 2-DOOR SEDAN, in good running order.\n1-LAND ROVER.\n1\u2014105 SCHRAMM PORTABLE\nCOMPRESSOR.\nV\\\n& TRACTOR LTD.\nNelson, B.C.    Phone 1030\nUSED\nI-BYRES BEARCAT SHOVEL\n% yd. with backhoe. A-l.\n1-INGERSOLL RAND\nPORTABLE  COMPRESSOR\n105 CFM Like new.\n1\u20143-TON SPECIAL CHEV.\nTRUCK\nwith hyd. dump box.\n1-SKAGIT HEAVY DUTY\nLOGGING JAMMER\non 4-ton G.M.C. truck. Ready\nto go with all rigging.\n1\u2014SKAGIT HOIST\nwith 2 main drums and 2\nswing drums.\n1\u2014USED ANGLE DOZER\nfor wide gauge D4, TD9 or\nHD5.\n1\u2014CARCO WINCH\nfor D4, TIM or HD5.\nSee H \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n814 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONB 1402\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nRASPS. FOR SALE. YOU PICK\nand bring container. 10c lb.\nFisher (Upper Road) Longbeach.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 368. Ph. 181-LS or 866-R.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nREADY-MIX\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered in Nelson\nSAVE TIME - SAVE MONEY\n\"Do It the Easy Way\"\nKRAFT'S EXCAVATING\nDITCHING, LOADING\nAND ERECTING\nBy Contract or Hour.\nBox 354 or Phone 1291-Y.\nB.C. Power Corp.\nElects Dr. Purdy\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Dr. H. L.\nPurdy, executive vice-president of\nthe B.C. Electric Co., has been\nnamed to the board of directors of\nBritish Columbia Power Corporation Ltd., of which the BCE is a\nsubsidiary.\nA native of Vancouver, Dr.\nPurdy succeeds P. A. Thomson,\nwho is retiring after serving as a\ndirector for  27 years.\n\u2022 FORK LIFTS\n\u2022 BACK HOES\n\u2022 LOADERS\n\u2022 DOZERS\nHeadquarters for\nWorld-Champion\nTWMTRAC\nCrawler Tractors & Equipment\nSALES    \u2022    SERVICE    \u2022    PARTS\nBENNETTS\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593\nNelson\nRegistration^\nLEAD   ALL   OTHERS\nIN    NELSON    AREA.\nPEEBLES\nMOTOR*\n1953 Chrysler\nHard Top Coupon\nOne owner. Beautiful 2-fOhe\nblack and sterling grey. Air ffln-\nditlnner. Custom radio. Guafcdji-\nteed. ' _\n1951 Chrysler Y\n4-Door Sedan\nCustom radio. One owner. Metallic green. A-l condition.\n1953 Plymouth Sedan\nOne owner. Custom radio; two-\ntone paint; 13,000 miles. - \u25a0\n'52 Dodge Kingswoy\nTwo tone green, air conditionS:.\na\n1951 Dodge Crusadpr\n4-Door\nOne owner. Air conditioner.\nSt\nJ949 Dodge   O\n4-Door Sedan 3\nTwo tone paint.  Ait condltidSter.\n1946 Dodge 4-Door\nColor grey,  Bargain.\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS\n1953 Ford Tudo^\nOne owner; 21,000 mllee.        J\nI\n1949 Ford Sedan-\nTwo tone green. Clean Inside aad\nout.\n1940 Ford 2 Door\nIn good condition.\n1930 Model A FofJ\nReady to go.\n3\n1952 Pontiac 2-Dtibr\nOne owner.  Air conditioner. 3\nT\n'52 Chevrolet Coach\nTwo tone paint.  Good eondraon.\n1951 Chevrolet Sedpn\nColor grey. Good body and rubber.\n1953 Buick Sedan\nOne owner. Beautiful shape.\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS\n1953 Vauxhall Sedan\nOne owner.   Beautiful shaper]\n1952 Vanguard 4-Dr.\nColor green. One owner.      j\n1953 Austin Sedajn\nLow mileage.  Good condition.\n1951 Hillman Sedan\nOne owner.  Very clean.\n1949 Austin Sedqp\n1951 Austin 4-D^r\nPEEBLES\nTORS\n1952 Fargo  n\n1-Ton Flat Deck?\nGood condition.   Good rubber.\n1952 Fargo Express\nColor blue; heater and defroster.\nNew\n1955 Fargo Eicpress\nJust arrived.        ,\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS\nER. PLYMOUTH'\n\u2022mis on $ %m ,\nmzgz\n ^r. \u2014^- :  .    , ,.,,\u201e..\n-^ :\u2014~ \u25a0-.\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u2022^mmfii^mmm^\" - \u25a0\u2022 ^^,jyipppiP'1        w,!\u00ab\u00bb..*\u00abii-\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1955\nA Personal Message From the Manager\nMany people are agreeably surprised to discover a modern,\nfully equipped\nPRESCRIPTION PHARMACY\nlocated downstairs in the Medical Associate Clinic Building.\nWe bffer you the convenience of having your Prescription\n^dispensed quickly while you wait in cool, pleasant surrounding.\nOne of our Pharmacists, Mr. Zacharias, -Mr. DeYoung, Mr\nMann, Mrs. DeYoung or myself will be on duty to serve you\n;and your doctor.\nWe also maintain a speedy delivery service.\nA. E. BURKE, MANAGER\nMann's Clinic Pharmacy\nMedical Associate Clinic Bldg. Phone 1505\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS   Market Trends\nThe Dally Newt dons not. hold  Itself responsible In th* event\net on error In the following lists.\nFleet Air  S'.IO\nFord A  40\nGatineau   - .'. 30.4\nHiram-Walker   ISVt\nIi?p  Oil  39%\nImp Tob         12%\nInt Pete '_....1 -  26V4\nLaura Secord  21 Vi\nLoblaw A   43%\nMassey Harris ...._.  11 Vi\nMont Loco ,.  18V4\nNat Steel Car  35\nPowell River   58W\nRuss Ind     16%\nShawinigan     72Vi\nSicks Brew :.. 20\nSimpsons A  19\nStandard Paving   45\nSteel of Canada      52\nUnion Gas of Can   49 V,\n\u2022United Steel  16V4\nWeston George   10914\nBusiness Spotlight ...\nRich Copper Orebody Linked\nto Markets by New Railroad\n\u00a3& By JIM BASTABLE\n? Canadian Press Staff Writer\nV -MANITOUwXdGE, Ont (CP) \u2014\nShe of Canada's richest copper\nembodies, cradled for centuries in\nifej wild bush country of'north-\nHgBten Ontario, was linked this\nwfek with railway lines leading\nMlworld markets.\n^Canadian National Railways officially opened its new 24-mile\nbranch line from Manitouwadge to\nHfllsport. a route that in a few\nyears will carry a fortune in minerals to industrial centres and pro-\nK&Ae transportation for what may\nj\u00bb the most prosperous mining\njjj&ftimunity the country has seen\n;- At a ceremony attended by fed-\njftfl land provincial government\ntjtfnistefs. mining magnates and\nft-|f\\vspaper and news reel men,\nBbnald Gordon. CNR president,\nsild the new line \"is one more\nsolid step in the development of\nan important mineral discovery.\"\nGECO  CHIEF  PRODUCER\nChief among the producers will\nbe Geco Mines, which took up options in the territory two years\nago and so far has outlined 15,-\n000,000 tons of high grade copper,\nzinc and silver. The branch line\ngoes right to the Geco property,\nabout three miles around Lake\nManitouwadge from the $15,000,000\nplanned  townsite.\nSpeakers included Production\nMinister Howe and Ontario Mines\nMinister  Kelly.\n\u2022 Everybody paid, tribute to the\nthree Geraldton men \u2014 Jack Forster, Roy Barker and Bill Dawido-\nwich \u2014 who discovered the deposits in 1953. The men, who did\nprospecting only on weekends, became millionaires overnight and\nstarted a fantastic staking rush.\nForster, Barker and Dawido-\nwich were here for the event and\nmounted the platform for a round\nof handshaking,\nManitouwadge soon will be\nserved by two railroads. Before\nGeco goes into production in April\nnf 1957, the Canadian Pacific Railway will have a branch line. It is\nscheduled to be finished this fall-\nrunning about 30 miles in a northerly direction from Hemlo. Eventually the CNR and CPR will have\na spur line to connect their\nbranches.\nSahara Sirocco\nHits Record Peak\nTUNIS, Tunisia CAP) - That\nscorching Sahara wind, the sirocco,\nfired up temperatures in Tunisia\nFriday, rare even for North Africa.\nA peak of .122 degrees was registered at Ghardimaou, a railway\nvillage of 1400 inhabitants in the\nnorth near the Algerian frontier.\nIn Tunis, water consumption\nreached a near-record volume as\nresidents alike tried to'fight off a\nhumid 113 degrees.\nTbRONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prleei)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  ,12W\nAlgom   Uranium,    21.65\nAmal Larder 18\nAnacon Lead     3.30\nAnglo Rouen _  , 1.85\nAtlin Ruff  , 25\nAubelle  \/ 10\nAunor         2.20\nBarnat    _      1.06\nBaska Uranium  52   \u25a0\nBase Metals  60\nBibis  Yukon 12%\nBobjo        -64\nBrilund       2.05\nBroulan          152\nBrunswick     13.50\nBuffalo Ank 85\nBuff Can 18\nBuff Red Lake  10\nCampbell C         13.60\nCampbell R L      7.40\nCan   Met         3.05\nCentral Patricia  95\nChimo        193\nCoin Lake 13\nCons Denison     13.50\nCons M St S     38.50\nCons Orlac  15\nConwest         6.35\nCon Sub           4.65\nCons Discovery       4.05   .\nCons Howe       5.20\nDetta M  32\nDonalda   ....'. 44\nDyno         140\nEast Amphi  11\nEast Malartic       2.40\nEast Sullivan       6.70\nElder Gold   61\nFalconbridge     29.00\nFaraday         2.85\nFrobisher      4.80\nGec\u201e     19.00\nGiant  Yel         6.55\nGod's Lake  80\nGoldale     43.'\nGoldcrest    30\nGolden Manitou       3.35\nGold   Hawk     41\nGunnar Gold  ,    17.65\nHeadway.'       1.14\nHollinger          23.75\nHomer Y K  20\nHudson Bay  :.    65.00\nInspiration      1-57\nInt   Nickel       77.00\nJacule,t      49\nJoliet   Que    -       .55\nJonsmith 66\nKerr  Addison       17.50\nLabrador        18.00\nLakeshore         5.75\nLeitch      64V4\nLexindin     43\nLittle Long aLc       I'\/SO\nLorado         2.90\nMacassa             1-56\nMacDonald     97\nMackeno        63\nMadsen R L          2.12.\nMalartic G F         185\nManeast  61\nMackenzie R L 38\nMcMarmac    33\nMining Corp     24.50\nNew Alger              .40\nNew Harricana   30\nNew   Thurbois    47',4\nNoranda           58.00\nNorgold        60\nNormetals          6.35\n'North Can  60\nOsisko    51\nPardee       2.15\nPickle Crow       1.25\nPlacer Devel     33.25\nPurdy  M        50\nPreston E D         9.55\nQue  Copner           4.15\nOuebec Nickel       2.75\nQuemont          26.50\nRadiore           2.60\nRayrock\nSan Antonio\nSherritt  Gordon\nStadacona\nSteep Rock   \t\nSilver Miller \t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\n\u2022 Among the Pines\nWhere It's Cool\nSummer time is out-of-town\ndance time. Enjoy a drive\nout to the Playmor and\nonncE\nOn the Finest Maple Floor\n\u25a0Mb Ever.\n'\u00a7\u25a0\n.\u00a3d Music by the\nI MELODY PALS\nFROM 9 TO 1\nTONIGHT\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and  REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St. Phone 63\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone   327\n576  Baker  Street\n\u25a0f ^W \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 '\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 YEARS EXPERIENCE\nNELSON, B.C.\nCITY OF NELSON\nTENDERS\nWANTED\nThe City of Nelson is offering for Sale the\nBUILDING ONLY, known as the \"Old Car Bam\"\nsituated on Lots 17-19, Block 2, Plan 349, Nelson, B.C. The building to be pulled down and\ngrounds cleared by October 31, 1955 to the\nsatisfaction of the Superintendent of Works.\nTenders must be submitted by August 15, 1955.\nThe highest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nCity Clerk.\nDated Nelson, B.C.,\nJuly 20, 1955.\n3.05\n1.65\n9.70\n.30\n14.25\n1.01\n6.85\n1.15\nTeck Hughes       3.05\nTombill       31\nTorbrit       1.27\nUnited  Keno         9.00\nUpper Canada       101\nVentures          39J30\nVicour        48\nViolamar       3.40\nWright Hargreaves       2.00\nYale     50\nOILS\nAnglo Can         6.05\nB A Oil  :     32.75\nCdn Atlantic       fl.15\nCan  Decalta   68\nCentral Leduc        1.95\nChem   Research          5.00\nCommonwealth Pete       6.50\nFed Pete       5.70\nGreat   Sweetgrass         3.15\nHome      -   11-12\nImp  Oil       39.75\n1.26\nKroy\nLiberal Pete       3.15\n.33\n.91\n1.43\nMarigold\nMid Cont\nOkalta\nPacific Pete     11.50\nPathfinder   75\nRoyalite       1562\nTriad       7.00\nUnited   Oils         1-60\nYank   C  21\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     36%\nAlgoma Steel     75\nAluminum   104\nAmer Tel St Tel  186%\nArgus     24M.\nAtlas St     19%\nBathurst   Power       63%\nBeattie Bros       :....     VA\nBell Telephone     51 \"\u00ab\nBrazilian          7'i\nB C Elec 4s        95%\nB C Wee 4\u00bb,is  :  105\nB C Forest    14\nB C Packers B     16%\nB C Power A     37\nBurns A    \u2022'..   13%\nBurrard A      10\nCan Cement     39%\nCan Malting     81\nCdn  Canners        36%\n\u00b0dn Car & Fdy     29\nCdn Celanese     22M,\nCan Chem Co     12%\nCdn Dredge       26\nCdn Pac Rly     34%\nCockshutt         9%\nCons Min St Smelt     38%\nDist Seagram     39%\nDom Foundries     28%\nDom Mag     21%\nDom Steel St Coal B    61\nDom Stores .     40\nDom Tar & Chem  -    13%\nDom Tex      8\nDom Mag    21%\nEddy Paper ,    75%\nFamous Players     23%\nFanny Farmer ..-.    2VA\nOUR ELLISON BEST\nVITA B. FLOUR\nGives Your Home-Made Baking\nthe Flavor You Like.\nAsk Your Grocer or Phone 231\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\n.MINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBeta Gamma \t\nBralorne\t\nGiant Mascot ...*\t\nGranduc\t\nGrandview   \t\nHighland Bell  .......\t\nJackson Basin \t\nNat Ex           \t\nPac Eastern Gold\n.78\n.19%\n2.90\n.77\n6.20\n.26\n.58\n.45\n1.53\n13\nPend Oreille       4.50\nPioneer   Gold         2.00\nQuatsino       _.26%\nRexspar      \".70.\nRix-Athabaska  Uran      1.45\nSheep Creek        1.23\nSherritt Gordon       9.60\nSilbak Prem       16%\nSilver Standard  42\nSunshine Lardeau  -...       -36%\nTaylor    23\nWestern Exp  60\nYale      : 48\nOILS\nAltex  27%\nAnglo Cdn       5.90\nCalg St Edm     16.50\nCharter       1.73\nCommonwealth   ;      6.20\nDel Rio         1.45\nGas Exp  75\nHome     10.50\nOkalta'Com       1.40\nPacific Pete          11.00\nPeace River Gas       8.60\nRoyalite       15.00\nSparmac   '.        .35\nUnited        155\nVanalta  '.....       -22\nVantor  72\nVulcan      46\nYankee Princess  62%\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlia Distillers        2.15\nAlta Dist Vt  :      1.90\nB C Forests  .'.      .13%\nB C Power     36.25\nB C Telephone  '.   49.00\nInland Nat Gas           2.94\nLucky Lager         5.15\nMacM & Bloedel B    45.50\nMid Western       4.80\nPowell River       57.75\nTrans  Mtn     41.00\nWestern Plywoods     20.00\nWestminster Paper     28.00\nUBC Man To Attend\nA-for Peace Meet\nVANCOUVER, B.C. (CD-Professor Douglas H. Copp, head of\nthe University of B. C. physiology\ndepartment, has been appointed as\nan advisor on the 28-man Canadian\ndelegation to the 80-nation Atoms\nfor Peace conference Aug. 8 to 20\nin Geneva.\nThe conference on technical as\npects of peacetime uses of atomic\nenergy is sponsored by the United\nNations ai)d is a direct result of\nU. S. president Dwight D. Eisen\nhower's Atoms for Peace Pro\nposal.\nDr. Copp and Professor Frank\nNEW YORK (AP)-The \/rtock\nmarket fell back Friday'in a\nquiet way while trading excitement centred on a few stocks.\nCanadian issues were mixed.\nDome Mines added y* and Canadian Pacific gained tt. Hiram\nWalker fell %, International Nickel and Mclntyre both slipped Va\nand Distillers Seagram lost Va.\nTORONTO (qP)\u2014Stock market\nprices made a moderate but steady\nadvance on a broad front. Buying\ninterest' was directed largely to\nmining issues, 'with the emphasis\non uraniums and coppers.\nThe upward movement of uraniums began early. Uraniums made\nmostly moderate gains and closed\nthe session a little off their best.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Industrials\nwere irregularly higher at *the\nclose of a moderately active session on the stock market Friday.\nSteels, papers and miscellaneous\nindustrials showed several strong\nspots, bub were irregular. Utilities and papers were shaded.\nMines followed the general Industrial trend.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A marked\ncontraction in the volume of business before Monday's August bank\nholiday and a little profittaking\nbrought a general irregular appearance in the markets.\nGilts generally showed little\nchange.\nFeature of dollar stocks was the\nsharp decline in Bethlehem Steel\nfollowing Thursday's setback on\nWall-Street.\nCalaary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014The bulk of\nFriday's offerings at the stockyards comprised medium to good\nbutcher steers and heifers. On\noffer up to 11 a.m, were 287 cat\ntie and nine calves. Trade was\nstrong and active.\nAll classes of butcher steers and\nheifers were being cleaned up in\nline with the week's advance and\nclosing with a strong undertone\nall classes of cows met good de>\nmand with prices steady at the\nweek's higher levels; bulls steady\ninsufficient stocker and feeder\nsteers on offer to establish reliable quotations; last sales were:\ngood feeder steers 16.50-17.50; good\nstock steers 15.50-17; common to\nmedium 12-15; very light offerings of veal calves sold at steady\nrates, good and choice 22-26; common to medium 12-20.\nChoice dry fed steers 20-20.75\ngood 18.75-19.75; medium 17-18.50;\nchoice dry fed heifers 18.25-19;\ngood 17-18; medium 15.50-16.50;\ncommon 10-15: good cows 12.50-13;\nmedium 11.25-12.25; common 10-\n11; canners and cutters 4,50-9.50;\ngood bulls 12-13; common to medium 9-11,50.\nHogs sold Thursday 23.75 for A\ngrade; sows 13 liveweight.\nGood lambs 20-21.25.\nA. Forward, head of the UBC rain\ning and metallurgy department,\nare the two B. C. men on the Cana\ndian delegation.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest.   Minimum two lines.  10% discount for prompt payment\nGoll Club Dance tonight, July 30.    For your canning needs\u20147-quart\nMembers and guests  only.\nCCF.   picnic\nfurther notice.\npostponed   until\nFuller Brush Representative\nDon E. Sargent \u2014 Phone 1335\n4  room  house for rent,\noff's, Slocan Park.\nMark-\nPackage insurance can save you\n20%. See McHardy Agencies Ltd\nPanelyte, superior counter topping\nfor   kitchen   cabinets   and   tables.\nT. H. WATERS St CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 101 Hall St.. Nelson\nFull line of milk shakes, ice cream\nand cold drinks, at\nWAIT'S NEWS.\n8MALL CAR. Good running\norder. Must sacrifice. HIGHE8T\nOFFER OVER $50, Phone 1076-L.\nKnitters\u2014For all yarn knitting\nneeds, we invite you to visit our\nwool department.\nEBERLE'S on Baker Street.\n\"Do It Yourself\"\nCushion your home with\nPllofoam from\nSTERLING  HOME FURNISHERS\nFLOWER8 FOR EVERY\nOCCASION,\nPHONE  187.\nGRIZZEL'LE'8   FLORISTS.\nOwing to wet weather, the\nChesser Cup Tennis Tournament\nwill be postponed until next Sunday, August 7th.\nHot weather special \u2014 cotton\njnet T shirts in all sires for ages\n2 to 18. White and assorted colors.\n69c, EBERLE'S on Baker St.\nQueen's Bafr Church Guild garden party and sale at the Balfour\nBeach Inn on Wednesday, August\n17th, at. 2:30 p.m.\nSheer Printed Nylons for the\nwarm weather. Formal, 42\" wider\nSeveral designs. Yd.'|1.49.\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\ncold pack canners in aluminum\nand enamel. Also No. 1 and No. 2\ncans and lids. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nElna Sewing Machines are real\nly 5 sewing machines in one. See\nthem at Jeffery Radio and Ap.\npliances, 446 Ward St., Nelson\nB.C.\nFor far-away relatives and\nfriends, send samples of a Nelson\nproduct \u2014 Gray's luscious chocolates. That's GRAY'S, 534 Jose\nphlne St., Phone 1347.\nUse Septonic to keep your septic\ntank healthy. Septonic is formuiat\ned to create new bacteria and eat\nvInto the solids and grease. Reconv\nmended for outside and chemical\ntoilfjts. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nAnnouncing \u2014 Plywood cut to\nany size \u2014 no extra charge. Now\nin stock, beautiful Ten-Test tiles.\n16 x 16 or 16 x 32.\nNELSON WOODWORKING CO.\nPHONE 1150 273 BAKER ST.\nATTENTION\nWoodworkers Industrial Union\nwill hold meeting at Canadian\nLegion Hall. July 31, 2 p.m. Re\nIWA raiding, WIUC certification\nEverybody welcome.\nSEE AND HEAR WALTER J.\nATKINSON OF 8EATTLE,\nWASH. THROUGH LECTURES\nAND PICTURES, SATURDA\"\/\n8:00 P.M., SUNDAY 11:00 A.M\nAND 7:30 P.M. AT THE SALVATION ARMY.\n8AVE MONEY\nINSURE THE MODERN WAY\nall your homfe, household\nfurniture.\nONE PACKAGE POLICY\nAPPLEYARD  &  CO.\nBox 26, Phone 269.\nBeautiful, solid walnut dining\nroom suite by Gibbard. $175.00:\nalso one dining room table with\ntour chairs, $25.00.\nWE   BUY   AND   SELL   NEW\nAND U8ED FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nCambridge Dean\nIf kal of\nAncient Views\nOXFORD, England (Reuters)-\nThe traditional picture of hell is\noffensive and that of Heaven boring, a clergyman told a conference\nof churchmen here Friday.\nCanon J. S. Bezzant, dean ot\nSaint Johns College, Cambridge,\ndeclared the hideous pictures of\nhell must have Issued from diseased minds. And much of the traditional imagery descriptive of\nHeaven no longer seemed desirable.    ^  \u25a0\n\"If hell offends, Heaven bores,\"\nhe told the Conference of Modern\nChurchmen.\nCanon Bezzant declared it would\nbe better to say nothing of \"Spiritual geography and topography.\"\n\"There is no reason to suppose\nwe know more about life after\ndeath than a caterpillar on a leaf\nknows what it is like to fly in the\nair,\" he said.\nBennett To Attend\nSoered Anniversary\nSUMMERLAND, B,C. (CP) \u2014\nPremier Bennett will be in Summerland next Wednesday to attend\nthe third birthday party of the\nSocial Credit league. Roy Owen,\npresident of the South Okanagan\nleague and Kelowna branch president, will be chairman.\nLloyd A. Miller, Summerland\npresident, and vice-president of\nthe South Okanagan organization\nsaid the premier probably will cut\na monster birthday cake being\nprovided.\nSome 600 persons are expected\nfrom all centres in the area.\nPNE Entries Reach\nSaturation Point\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Accommodation for entries for the 45th\nPacific National Exhibition has already reached the saturation point.\nHeads of the livestock, ptpultry.\ndog and cat, manufacturers and\nfur breeders committees said they\nare afraid they may have to turn\nentries away.\nPNE officials said they expect\n900,000 persons at the show, Aug.\n24\u2014Sept. 5.\nManufacturer's Clearance\nOf Famous\nFasftion-Crajft\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\nReg. to $71.50   Reg. to $78.30   Reg. to $91.00\n54.50 59.50 67.50\n1 EXTRA PANTS AND SPORT COATS\nAT 20% OFF\nDon't Pass Up This\nGreat Half-Yearly Money Saving Event.\nFIT and SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.\nEMORY'S LTD.\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\n,.os\nJapanese Says\nWorld Gelling\nHoller Yearly\nTOKYO (AP) - A sweltering\nworld got a bad news prediction\nFriday irom a Japanese scientist.\nDr. Hideo Nishioka, science instructor at Tokyo's Kei University,\nsaid world temperatures will get\nhotter every year for the next 250\nyears.\nWeather men at Tokyols central\nmeteorological observatory said it\nwas too hot Friday\u2014a near-record\n93.5 degrees\u2014to comment on Nish-\nioka's theory.\nMan Steals Own Car\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 For breaking into a garage to steal his own\ncar, Erving Boozer, 45, was sentenced to 1^ to 15 years in prison.\nHe was convicted March 26 of\nbreaking into a garage, where he\nhad left his car for repairs, taking\nhis car and also going through the\nfileS and destroying a $362 bill for\nthe work.\nWRITING  MEDIUM\nEgypians used papyrus as a practical medium tor writing about\n4000 years before Christ.\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nAuditors\nHove-the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nLET  US DISPENSE YOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\n8av\u00bb With 8afety at Your\nRexall Store\n'Try Ua tor Lower Prices\"\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nCity Drug\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34 Box.460\nin QUALITY USED CARS\n1951 Pontiac\n4 Door Sedan\nNew   tires,   air   conditioner,\nseat    covers.   , Very    clean.\nSALE PRICE\nonly \t\n$1195\n1951 Chevrolet\nDeluxe Sedan\nGood   tires,   custom   heater,\nseat covers.  Imaculate.\nSALE PRICE\nonly \t\n$1195\n1952 Plymouth\n4 Door Deluxe Sedan\nLike new, only 24,000 miles.\nAll. new tires, battery, etc.\nCustom heater.\n-.\"\"\"\"  *I495\nPHONE\nwrite\n\"wire\"\nCASH\nTERMS\nTRADES\nEXTRA \u2022**\u2022\u2022 SPECIAL\n1953 Monarch\n)2 Dr. Deluxe Streamliner\nI Custom radio, custom heater.\nI Only 18,000 miles.  Like new.\nlOur 8ALE\nIPRICE only .\n>2100\n1952\nMercury\n4 Door Deluxe Sedan\nAutomatic. Custom rad 1 o,\ncustom healer; two tone. Seat\ncovers. Many extras.\" Lovely\ncondition. Our C* t^CMT\nSALE PRICE ... *IOjO\n1950 Chevrolet\n4 Door Custom Sedan\nI Custom heater, custom radio,\nI Good rubber, clean.\ntek $1095\n1949 Pontiac\n2 Dr. Deluxe Streamliner\nCustom heater, custom radio.\nLow' mileage. Beautiful condition. 8QQC\nsale price . *yyj\n1952 Austin A40\nDeluxe Sedan\nCustom heater. Low mileage..\nLovely condition. Our SALfi\nSTL *995\nWiginton Motors Ltd.\nYOUR PONTIAC \u2014 BUICK \u2014 GMC DEALER\n281 Baker St.\n238 Baker St.\n_-*.\n'   \u2022\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_1955_07_30","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\/1.0429066","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":"1955-07-30 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":"1955-07-30 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":""}]}