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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" ._\"     iplppfppp^\ni~\u00bbm\"T-.-.?.--\nirimi|i.(..-.!jiT'.5.i.:!\u00bb \u25a0,-.\u25a0\u25a0   .. \u25a0>.;.? 1..1 .u . i..m. iiiiffT^w^K^iwfBBB^iBPippipi\nnw\nConspiracy Out To\nlari\nNorris Charges\nSays Cuthbert Was Ready Tool of\nOfficers With Grudge Against Chief\nBy GRAHAM McMULLIN   \/\nCanadian Press Stajf Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Det. Sgt. Len Cuthbert's testimony before a royal commission was labelled a tissue of\nlies here Monday \u2014 part of a conspiracy to destroy police\nchief Walter Mulligan, \"the man most feared by the underworld.\"\nThe charge was made by T. ,G. Norris, counsel for Mulligan, as commissioner R. H. Tupper reconvened the hearing into charges of corruption in the 750-man Vancouver\npolice force.\nMr. Norris said he wquld show\nthat a conspiracy existed among\nsenior police officers \"to destroy\"\nchief Mulligan, the \"one man most\nfeared by the Vancouver underworld.\"\nCuthbert, 54-year-old veteran\npolice officer who admitted an attempt to shoot himself in the police station more than a month\nago, testified for two successive\ndays to the commission last week.\nMr. Norris, outlfning the direction of his cross-examination of\nCuthbert, said he would prove\nthat Cuthbert had \"improper associations with underworld characters\" for the greater,part of his\npolice life prior to March 1, 1949.\nFEARED EXPOSURE\n\"You accepted their favors,\"\nNorris told the witness, \"and like\nt little boy saying 'he made me\ndo it,' you sought immunity by\nshifting the burden of guilt to the\n\u25a0 shoulders of chief Mulligan.\n\"You  feared  exposure.  And . I\nwill show that you were guilty of\nother breaches of duty as a police\n\u2022 officer and that your life has been\na fraud and a lie.\"\nCuthbert smiled slightly, leaned\nforward in the witness^ stand, and\nin a low, steady voice said: \"That\nwill take some proving.\"\nIn testimony last week, Cuthbert disclosed his dealings with j\nthe undemvorld while head of the\ngambling squad for a six-weeks\nperiod.\nHe said that for the balance of\n. his 26 years on the force he had\nbeen loyal.\nHe  said  he  had   shared   with\nMulligan in payoffs from the underworld.\n'We shared,\" he said. \"It was a\nl::,M-50._\u00abpUt.\" -*\t\n\u2022frofs W AMOUNT\nMr.  Norris  for  the  first  time\nadded up the amounts Cuthbert\n8aid he had received after dividing the  take  with  the  chief, \\t\nv came to $1,100.\nTar. Norris charged Cuthbert\nhad been the ready tool of officers who had a grudge against the\nchief.\n\"There is a conspiracy to destroy thli man . . . You thought\nthese other officers would give\nyou protection If you told these\nstories about the chief.\n\"I propose to show you,\nthrough your different itatements you have made, that It Is\nall a tissue of falsehoods.\"\nMr. Norris asked how often the\nwitness violated his oath as an officer.\n\"Well, I accepted bribes, said\nCuthbert, and added he had made\n\"tentative arangements\" while on\nthe gambling squad in 1949.\nMr. Norris talked about the\ntime 'Cuthbert spent on the liquor\ndetail and asked him if he'd taken\nany bribes then.\n\"I accepted bottles of liquor\nfrom bootleggers,\" said the sergent.\n\"But I made It clear that the\nreceipt of whisky would not deter\nme from enforcing the liquor act.\nI made it clear to the bootlegger\nthat if I could get evidence\nagainst him, he would be locked\nup, whisky or no whisky.\"\nCuthbert said he had also accepted Christmas presents from\nbootleggers \u2014 like a tie or \"the\nodd pair of socks\" \u2014 but no cash.\nMacKenzie Plans\nieun'm With 4\nOTTAWA (CP) - Sqdn. Ldr.\nAndy MacKenzie, DFC, of Montreal is planning a reunion with\nthe four United States jet pilots\nwho were imprisoned with him\n(in Communist China.\nHe has corresponded regularly\ni with the four Americans since\nI they were released by the Chinese\nj in May but the problem of leave\n[so far has interfered with reunion\n| plans.\ntike MacKenzie, 35-year-old\nl.flghter ace who was held captive\nIby the Communists for two years,\nIthe U.S fliers signed false con-\nIfessions that they had violated the\n\u2022 Chinese .border while flying over\n[North Korea and had been order-\nled \\o do s0-\nMacKenzie, held in solitary confinement for 16 months, won the\nladmiration of Canadian officials\n\u25a0 for his long hold-out against men-\nItaL torture by the Communists. He\nIwas returned to full duty by the\n\u25a0RCAF and now is working at air\n\u25a0defence command headquarters at\n1st. Hubert, Que.\n[Okanogan Faces\n\u2022arket Problem\nI  KELOWNA,. B.C.   (CP)\u2014Okan-\nligan fruit and vegetable growers\nire facing a crisis in marketing\nheir 1955 crops.\nMembers of the interior\/ vege-\nable marketing board have been\nlummoned by Agriculture Mln>\nIster Kleman to meet with him\nInd members of the coast board\nVictoria Friday to try to find\nlorne solution to potato industry\nIr.oblems.\nNew Bishop\nConsecrafed\nLONDON, Ont. fCP) \u2014 Mon-\nsignor Thomas Joseph McCarthy\nof London was consecrated a\nbishop of the Roman Catholic\nChurch at services Monday morning at St. Peter's cathedral.\nHe will be installed as bishop of\nNelson, B.C., Aug. 24.\nThe consecrating prelate was\nMost Rev. Giovanni Panico, apos\ntolic delegate to Canada.\nBishop McCarthy, born in God-\nerich, Ont., has been vice-rector\nof St. Peter's seminary at the\nUniversity of Western Ontairo,\nsince  1950.\nAmong church dignitaries participating was Most Rev. Martin\nM. Johnson, DD, former Bishop of\nNelson and now Coadjutor Archbishop of VahcGuver.\nB.C. HAD RECORD\nTIMBER CUT '54\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia's timber cut for 1954\nwas a record.\nThe B.C. Forest Service's annual report released Monday\nshowed the harvest, valued at\nmore than $528,000,000 totalled\nabout 5,570,000.000 board feet over\n1953 and was worth $16,000,000\nmore than in that year.\nThe report attributed th(e increased value to higher production of pulp and paper \u2014 to 536.658\ntons last year from 501,083 tons\n^953.\nExport markets took 1,580,000.-\n000 board feet of total output, an\nincrease of 188,000,000 over the\nprevious year.\nBRIDGE WASHOUT\nDELAYS TRAINS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Canadian\nNational Railways officials report\ntrains on their main line have\nbeen delayed by the washout of a\nbridge approach 25 miles east of\nBlue River. A mountain stream,\nswollen by heavy rains, cut a 40-\nfoot deep gorge in the approach\nTrain No. 4, which was east-\nbound from Vancouver, is being\nreturned to Kamloops were it will\nb'e detoured over Canadian Pacific Railway lines to Calgary, arriving in Edmonton about 12 hours\nbehind schedule.\nTrains number two and four,\nleaving Vancouver late Monday\nwill also be detoured and will be\nabout eight hours late.\nA similar delay will be caused\nto westbound trains due to arrive\nin Vancouver Tuesday.\nNormal service is expected to\nbe resumed Tuesday night.\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP) \u2014 A\ndragonfly caused a traffic accident\nnear her^ Monday. The insect sent\nthe car of Robert F. Derry of\nHalifax out of control when it flew\nthrough the no-draft window into\nhis face. Police said the car crash\ned into a hydro pole, -causing $200\ndamage to the car, and $75 damage\nto the pole. No one was hurt.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canadian\ndollar closed Monday up 1-32 of a\ncent at a premium of 1 1-82 per\ncent in terms of U.S. funds. *The\npound sterling was 1-16 higher\nat $2.78' 29-32.\n. MONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S,\ndollar closed at a discount of 1%\nper cent in terms of- Canadian\nfunds, unchanged. It took 98%\ncents Canadian to buy $1, Amerl\ncan. Pound sterling $2.74 5-18, up\n1-16.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with a few\ncloudy periods. Scattered showers\nalong the mountains. Little change\nIn temperature. Winds light, Low\nand high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 45 and 80.\nVol 5\/     \u00abt\nNELSON, B.Q.y CANADA\u2014TUESbAT MORNING. AUGUST 2, 1955\nNo. 86.\nFlees 11 U.S. Airmen\nTALBOTT\nRESIGNS\nU.S. Air Force\nSec'ty Sure Was\nWithin Ethics\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Harold\nE. Talbott resigned Monday as\nsecretary of the United States Air\nForce and President Eisenhower,\naccepting \"the resignation, told\nTalbott \"your decision was the\nright one.\"\nThe president also told Talbott,\nwhose outside business activities\ncame under Senate investigation,\n\"there has been no intimation that\nyour official duties have not been\neffectively and loyally performed.\"\nTalbott offered his resignation,\neffective Aug. 13, because, as he\ntold the president, \"I would not\nin any circumstances wish to be\na source of enbarrassment to you\nor to your splendid administration.\"\nThe secretary said \"the recent\nunfortunate and, I believe, distorted publicity given to my continued association with a management-engineering firm has been a\nmatter of deep concern to me . . .\nI am clear in my mind and conscience that my actions have been\nwithin the bounds of ethics.\"\nTalbott received $132,032 in\nprofits from the New York firm\nof Paul B. Mulligan and Co., in\nwhich he is a partner, in the two\nyears \u25a0 following his becoming\nsecretary.\nILL-FATFD CRAFT\nTOWED TO PORT\nSYDNEY, N.S. (CP) \u2014 Reports\nreaching here Monday said the\nramshackle raft I'Egare (Lost\nOne) has been towed into a cove\nnear Port aux Basques, Nfld.. after several days cf aimless drifting\nin Cabot strait.\nL'Egare was said to have been\ncame across the two \u2022 remaining\ncrew members in the waters between Newfoundland and Nova\nScotia. The other two members of\nthe quartet that set out from Montreal six weeks ago were landed\nSunday at Sydney by the ore carrier Wabana.\nThey had left the raft in a dory\nto row ashore for radio parts but\nwere doggedly rowing into the\nopen sea instead of toward land\nwhen the Wabana found them.\nThe latest report on I'Egare\ncame from a fisherman who\nphoned the Sydney Post-Record\nfrom Port aux Basques. The fish.,\nerman quoted the adventurers\nlanded there assaying they would\nwait two days for'their companions and then set out on their\nown.\nTHIS ARTIST'8 DRAWING Ii a cutaway\nview of one Idea for an earth satellite as advanced by a University of Maryland physicist,\nProf. 8. F. Slnser, whoeohcelved-ofi.j\u00abn*lu\nweight consisting of equipment and Instruments\nto measure cosmic rays, solar ultraviolet and x-\nraya.iOr,-8li)gtr' now'|i. In. Copenhagen for a\nmeetjng-of-the International AeroriairtiMl Fed-\n_.___\u00bb\u25a0_.._        a n    ,._!__.___._.._    _.__._._     _.____.., _lk_r__3Mi\nmlnum. sphere, about; tw\u00bb.\u2022 fMt* In-itftsmetW,   -j-erfrtisncrAP..Wirepin- Irom,,Ro'pular-$<s'l\u00abheil .--\n\u25a0\u25a0 vwlBhMg.'ifgtfpiiinW^wf W IffirniMt T>f fte    ^ttagajlhe.\".\"\"     ,*...\u25a0\u2022 '\u2022\" '    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0   '\u25a0%\" \u25a0 \u2022'\";.\u00bb\u25a0..\nArmy Expert Says Defences\nPossible Against A-Weapons\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Partial de- occupying a well - constructed\nfence at least is possible, against trench. \u25a0 ;.\nbattlefield atomic blasts, says Lt- \"u \\yas found entirely feasible\nCol. R. A. Klaehn of the army's to obtain quickly the information\ndirectorate of weapon? and devel- required concerning the areas of\nopment. | residual   contamination.   By   the\nCol. Klaehn was. director of employment of proper techniques\nExcercise Sapling.in Nevada in this information can be obtained\nMay in. which Canadian troops, without casualties to the recon-\nparticipated for the first time in naisaI,ce parties.\nUS-Red China Talks\nOff to a Good Start\nBy'LYNN MINZERL1NG\nGENEVA (AP) \u2014Communist China informed the United States Monday she has released 11 American airmen\nheld more than two years as spies. The fliers left Peiping\nSunday on their way home and will arrive in Hong Kong\nThursday, the Chinese s^id.\nThe announcement opened prir\nvate talks between the United\nStates and Red China on ways to\nease tensions in the Far East.\nThe news first was broadcast by\nPeiping radio and then announced\nhere formally by Wang Ping-Nan,\nRed Chinese ambassador to Poland. The American representative in the talks, U. Alexis Johnson, ambassador to Czecho-Slova-\nkla, expressed gratification at the\nnews.\nJohnson and Wang also reached\nquick agreement on an agenda for\ntheir talks. The two items, proposed by Wang, cover the returh\nof civilians of China and the United States to. their respective countries and \"other practical matters\nat issue.\" The first Item involves\nsome 40 Americans still held in\nRed China and an indefinite number of Chinese students the Communists say are prevented by the\nUnited States from returning to\nthe, China mainland. The United\nStates says the Chinese students\nare free to go.\nNO MENTION OF TWO\nThe Red Chinese announcement\non the release of the airmen made\nno mention of the two men given\nthe stiffest sentences by the Red\ncourt. Both are U.S. Army civilian\nemployees. One was given a We\nterm, the other 20 years. The 11\nairmen had been sentenced to\nterms of four to. 10 years .on spy\ncharges after being shot down on\natomic test.\nWriting in the current issue of\nthe Canadian Army Journal, Col.\nKlaehn says:\n\"While appreciating the awful\neffects of atomic explosions, all\nparticipating personnel nevertheless are of the opinion that a great\ndeal can be done to defend oneself against these weapons.\n\"It was found, for example, that\ntroops could survive the effects of\nblast, heat and radiation if at the\ntime of the explosion they were\n11111II1111IIIII I II1111 1 III I\nToronto Sizzles In\n98-Degree Heat\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The temperature In Toronto hit 98 degrees Monday, the hottest this\nyear and a full four degrees\nabove the previous record for\nAug. 1.\nThe city's record for heat, 1\u00b0B|\"f\u00ab An 1 C ri\ndegrees, was set July 9 and 10,1 I WO ADOOrd 30lignt\n1936. !    TOFINO, B.C.  (CP)  \u2014 An air\nThe picture had a bright side: j and water search was continuing\nNo deaths due to the heat were [off the west coast of Vancouver\nisland late Monday for a fishing\nboat, the Maidie H, missing since\n\"Under the conditions of ihe test\nit was learned that it is entirely\nfeasible to carry out field decontamination of the personnel and\ntheir equipment.\" -\nFishinq Boat,\nreported by the coroner's office,\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGET8  PRISON TERM\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 John\nLewis Burris. 22, was sentenced in\npolice court here Monday to one\nyear imprisonment on a charge of\nrobbery.. Alec Gillespie, 20,\ncharged jointly with Burris, will\nbe sentenced next Monday. The\ntwo were charged with having\nbeaten William E. Barr of Vancouver on July 17, and robbing\nhim of $20.\nINJURED IN FALL\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Vancouver truck driver Bruno Schone\nsuffered Injuries to both legs\nwhen he fell 15 feet from the Vancouver Barge Transportation Ltd.\ndock Monday. A companion climbed down a ladder and held the\nInjured man until he was rescued\nby a boat.\nREPORT GUN  BATTLE\nTAIPEIi Formosa (Reuters) ' \u2014\nChinese Nationalist naval gunboats crippled two small Chinese\nCommunist gunboat* Mdhday' in\na 30-mlnute battle with a \"large\nCorhmunist fleet\" In the Formosa\nstraits area, the Nationalist ministry of defence announced. The\nministry claimed the Nationalists\nsuffered no loss in the encounter\noff.the northern Fukien coast\nSaturday afternoon with two men\naboard. They are Ian Charles MacLeod and an unidentified companion.\n'rtcthA Shvch.\nNelson:   Monday\n7.00, Saturday 7.25.\n6:80,   Sunday\nNO ACTION\nAGAINST FLYER\nCALAIS, France (Reuters) \u2014\nJohn de la Bruyere, 27-year-old\narnateur flier from Edmonton,\nlearned with relief Monday that\nFrench authorities plan to take no\nlegal action against him for'defying them by making a Channel\nflight without permission.\nThe tousle-haired Canadian flew\nfrom Calais to Dover and back\nnon-stop Sunday in a replica of\nthe monoplane Louis Bleriot of\nFrance used in the first such flight\n48 years ago.\n34TH  GA8 VICTIM\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Fred\nDobber, 40-year-old barber, died\nMonday from domestic gas fumes\nin the living quarters at the rear\nof his South Burnaby shop. He\nwas Vancouver's 34th gas victuh\nthis year.\nPlane Believed Riddled\nBy Machine Gun Fire\nJERUSALEM (Reuters) \u2014 The\nIsraeli foreign ministry asserted\nMonday that parts of an Israeli\nairliner shot down by Bulgarian\nanti-aircraft guns last Wednesday\n\"had obviously been tampered\nwith in an effort to remove incriminating evidence.\"\nFirst, reports received here from\na,n Israeli commission making an\non-the-spot investigation of the\ndlsaatenjn which all 56 passengers\nand crew,were killed, were said to\nadd, \"gravity, to .the barbarous\ncharacter of, the outrage.\" The\nwife and two (laughters of a Montreal businessman were aboard the\nplane. ...   (\nA spokesman at the Israeli foreign ministry aaldthe Israeli lega\ntion in Sofia has been instructed\nto demand full and immediate in\nformation on the findings, of i\nBulgarian government commission appointed to investigate the\nshooting down of the airliner.\n\"Israel investigators gained the\ndefinite impression that the El Al\nairliner had been attacked by a\nmachine-gun,\" the ministry statement said.\n\"Numerous bullet holes could be\ndistinguished In parts.of the plane\nscattered over a wide area In Bulgarian territory, ln the vicinity of\nthe Greek border,\" it added,\n\"Thi* became; -Bleat despite the\nfact that parts had oBviously been\ntempered iWth te. intftffort to-re-\nmove-toejrinanatlug evidence.'\nlllllltllMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIMIIIIIIII\nBrazil Frost May\nUp Coffee Price\nRIO DE JANEIRO (AP) \u2014\nThey've got an awful lot of\nfrost In Brazil, \u25a0so your coffee\nmay cost more next year.\nReports from Parana state\nsaid heavy frosts during the\nweekend and early Monday may\nhave damaged half the coffee\ntrees In the state.\n. Parana la one of Brazil's four\nprincipal coffee growing districts. The cold wave \u2014 bringing temperatures as low as 14\ndegrees In the south \u2014 also hit\nthe  other  areas.\nIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIUIIIII\nWEATHER BRINGS\nNO RELIEF TO\nONTARIO FIRES\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The battle\nagainst northern Ontario's forest\nfires continued Monday under the\nworst possible conditions\u201490-degree temperatures, lightning and\na lack of rainfall.\nAs a result firefighters* made\nlittle or no progress. New outbreaks were reported as fast as\nold  fires  were   extinguished.\nThe count Monday was 123 fires,\nwith 28 out of control.\nThe Cochrane-Kapuskaslng district had the worst fires to handle\nand were getting the toughest\nbreaks. Sunday night heavy rain\nfell around Timmins but missed\nthe scene of Major blazes 50 miles\nnorth of Cochrane and in Bradley\nand Agate townships north of\nKapuskasing.\nBy noon Monday-the flames had\nblackened 54,000 acre's^.ri tjiis area\nand the hazard rating was\ntreme. Regional forester Quimby\nHess described the bifth as \"bone\ndry.\"\nThe picture was a little brighter\naround Sault Ste. Marie. Although\nlightning started two more fires\nMonday to bring the district's total to 21\u201efour of the uncontrolled\noutbreaks were claimed as comparatively small.        \u2022'...'\nBLA8T TAKES  CIFE\nSAULT S3TE. MARIE, Orit. ,(CP)\n\u2014\u2022Bruce Delijle, 15 months, was\nburned to .death late Sunday night\nin a fire .'which, destroyed his family's summer cottage 20 miles\nnorth, of here, His parents, Mr.\nand' Mrs. Lionel Delisle, suffered\nsevere burns:. They were admitted\nto'hospital.' Police said a kerosene\nrefrigerator explodedas the father\nwas refuelling it.\n. \u2022 '' \u25a0    \u2022   - \u25a0 \u25a0     I\nHurled al Police\nwhat the United States called a\nroutine leaflet mission over North\nKorea Jan. 12, 1953.\nThe two civilians unmentioned\nby the Chinese announcethent.\nwere John T. Downey, 24, of New\nBritain, Conn., sentenced to life\nImprisonment, and Richard G.\nFecteau, 27, of Lynn, Mass., sentenced to 20 years. Both were\naboard the plane shot down Nov.\n29, 1952.\nThe Chinese claimed Lt. Col.\nJohn Knox Arnold, commander of\nthe plane, testified his wing was\nattached to the American intelligence service.\nOfficials in Washington said in\nadvance of 'this Geneva meeting\nthat the attitude -of Red China on\nthe detained American fliers\nwould determine the scope of the\ntalks.\nST. NAZATRE, France (AP)\nPolice. grenades and steel nuts\nhurled from strikers' slingshots\nresulted in 110 Injured Monday in\na fight at the Penhoet shipyard,\nbiggest in France. ....\nOne striker had a hand blown\noff by a grenade and a policeman\nhad an eye gouged out. But most\nof the injuries were minor.\nThirty of the strikers were arrested, but the mayor ordered all\nof them released.\nA building that houses the Shipbuilders'. Trade Association was\nburned, telephone lines cut and\nmany windows broken during the\ndisturbance. Police estimated the\ndamage at several million francs.\nA million francs is $2,857.\nSome 12,000 workers in Communist, Socialist and Catholic unions\nwalked out in mid-morning demanding the same wage levels as\nin Paris. This would mean a general incrase of about seven cents\nan hour. The wage dispute has\nbeen on for six months and already had resulted in serious' violence in June.\nFiremen were called in Monday's fight, but were prevented\nfrom reaching the scene by strikers who lay down in the path of\nthe engines.\nAll cafes ln the town of 38,000\nwere ordered closed Monday night\nand police reinforcements were\nsummoned from* outside the city.\nFinlayson Gels\nConfidence Vole\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Deane\nFinlayson, controversial leader of\nthe B.C. Progressive Conservative\nparty, has been given a vote of\nconfidence by executive officers\nof the party's provincial association.\nA statement issued Monday\nfrom the association's headquarters here said the vote was passed\nat an executive meeting held In\nVancouver Sunday.\n, _\u25a0$\u2022'. .stptement-paid .MjvMnlajt-;.\nson gave'* detailed report;cut the\nrecent conference in Ottawa of \"the\nnational officers of the Progressive Conservative party.\nMr. Finlayson was ejected frorn\nthe Ottawa meeting after outlining B.C.'s position in regard to a\ndispute between provincial and\nnational party leaders over administration of Progressive Conservative business in B.C.\nMr. Finlayson has been a strong\ncritic of George Drew, national\nleader of the party. The B.C. association approved a motion offc\nnon-confidence in Mr. Drew at an\nexecutive meeting held at Vernon,\nB.C., about a year ago.\nThe Sunday' meeting also discussed plans-for the provincial\nconvention to be held here this\nfall, probably in October.\nWOMAN CALLED\nTO B.C. BAR\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A former\nlegal stenographer, Mrs. .Winni-\nfred Murphy, culminated five\nyears of study In a law office\nMonday when she was called to\nthe British Columbia bar before\nMr. Justice Coady.\nMrs. Murphy was a student in\nthe office of Angelo E. Branco,\nQC. Her two teen-age daughters\nsaw their mother launched on her\nlegal career.\nAlso called to the bar were\nDavid Stewart Owen, James\nHenry Edwards and Allan Cart-\nshore Graham. Mr. Graham was\ncalled to ,the Nova Scotia bar 15\nmonths ago.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nWIND80R, England (AP) \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thurgood\nMonday night were named the.happiest married couple In England\nIn a competition. *\nHere are the qualifications they cited In winning:\nThey have been married 34 years and have a grown-up family of\nthree. They have never quarrelled.\nMrs. Thurgood said she was a good cook, thrifty but not mean\nand had never feund fault with her husband, .,\nThurgoo* said he took his wife a cup of tea In bed every\nmorning, sewed on his buttons, and was a teetotaller.\ngreat\nRARITAN, N.J.  (AP) \u2014 Pigeons have been having\ntime dropping nails on Daniel Franchino.\nSome of the nails hit him on the head, and one came point\ndown and stuck in his arm as he sat in the yard of his home. Other\nnails landed in the driveway, a threat to his car tires.\nAt first Farnchino didn't know the source of the aerial attacks,\nbut he soon found out.\nThursday, the pigeons' ammuhlkfian dump was sealed off. The\nbirds had found a box of nails left in the tower of Raritan borough\nhall by a carpenter. The tower has been screened.\nDETROIT, (At!\\ \u2014 H[Y,. Marlam Vorrusch was nranted a divorce from her husband George by circuit Judge Thomas Maher\nwhen she testified!\n1. George removed a rnaln tube In their television set so she\ncould not watch^t while he was at work.\n\"2. George tfould nptrpermlt friends to visit, or allow furniture\nto be moved, because he did not want the rugs worn out.\nBEACON{_FIELD, Eng, (Renters) \u2014 A 17-year-old motorcyclist\nwho bowled over a man later told the police that the man told him:\n\"I'm not hurt. Carry on.\"\nBut tne youth, Dennis^\"age did not know the man was deaf and\ndumh.\nHe fouhd that out in court when he was fined \u00a32 for driving\nwithout care and attention.\n' -\u00a5..-\nm\n\u25a0___\u25a0\n 11  \" \u25a0 !\n^\"\"\n'.!\u25a0     '-J-        !'\u25a0\" '\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, 1955\nTHE DAY AU HELL BROKE LOOSE,..\nComplete Shows 7:00-9rQS\nSTEPHEN McHALLY\nLate News\nCartoon\nSelected Short\nPrices:\n75c, 50c, 25e\n\"starlight\"!\nDrive-In Theatre\nLA8TTIMI TONIGHT\nCartoon \u2014 9:00 p.m,\nFeature \u2014 9:10 p.m.\nShorts \u2014 10:40 p.m.\n\"6 BRIDGES\nTO CROSS\"\nTony Curtis \u2014 Julie Adamt\nWinner of weekend at the\nRidpath Hotel in Spokane was\nI Kiapatn Hotel in bpoKane was\nI   W.  D, Matthews, Longbeach    I \\l|*AffAM\nGuidance Assurance\nIn Understanding\n' How spiritual understanding of\nGod as divine Love assures man\nof wise guidance and unlimited\ninspiration was brought out at\nChristian Science services Sunday.\nThe Lesson-Sermon entitled\n\"Love\" included the following\npassage from the Biblical account\nof the guidance the children of\nIsrael received in their flight from\nEgypt: \"And the Lord went before\nthem by day in a pillar of a cloud\nto lead them by the way; and by\nnight in a pillar of fire, to give\nthem light; to go by day and night:\nHe took not away the pillar of the\ncloud by day, nor the pillar of\nfire by night, from before the\npeople.\"   (Exodus  13:21, 22.)\nAmong the correlative passages\nread from \"Science and Health\nWith Key to the Scriptures\" by\nMary Baker Eddy was the following: \"Love inspires, illumines,\ndesignates, and leads the way.\nRight motives give pinions to\nthought, and strength and freedom to speech and action.\"\nThe Golden Text Is from I John\n(4:8): \"He that loveth not knoweth\nnot God; for God ls love.\"\n3 Big Circus Days\nIn Kootenay Valley\nNELSON\nCivic Centre Grounds\nONE DAY ONLY\nAFT. & NITE\nThurs., Aug.\nMEMD\nciomicimhiuioko,\n2:30 and 8 p.m.\nDoors Open 1:30 and 7 p.m.\n2000   UNRESERVEO   8EAT8\nEACH PERFORMANCE\"\nChildren 75c, Adults $1.35\nIncludes Provincial Tax\nCity Tax Extra \u2014 If Any\nTRAIL\nNite Only\nTues., Aug,\nBUTLER PARK.\nAft. and Nite\nWed., Aug.\n10\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTONIGHT and WED.\nShow Time 8:40 p.m.\n\"Lure of Silo\"\nWith   Sllvana   Mangano\nAlso\u2014\"LAST (HOLIDAY\nPlus NEWS\nRotary History\nThe history of Rotary can be an\ninspiration to new members, a\ncharter member of Nelson Rotary\nClub, A. B. Gilker, told fellow Rotarians Monday.\nAs chairman of the Rotary Information Committee, he reminded them that the key to Rotary\nwas service. The.organization had\ngrown because it fills a need, he\nsaid. \"It is based on service and\nthere is plenty of need for service.'*\nHe spoke of the four-way test,\nthe questions a Rotarian must\nask himself before acting, the\nchance for service the organization offers and the basis on which\nnew members are accented.\nRotary keeps growing, Mr. Gilker said. It has expanded into the\nBelgian Congo and Ethiopia and\nthere are now clubs in 92 countries. There are 419,000 Rotarians\nand 8809 clubs.\nRotary history is valuable to\nnew members, because it makes\nthem aware of its ideals and aims\nand inspires them to become outstanding members, he went on.\nFive new honorary club members were announced. They are\nEric P. Dawson, Dr. L. E. Borden, Hugh W. Robertson, I. G.\nNelson and James A. McDonald.\nVisitors at the luncheon were\nGeorge Bateman of Calgary,\nGeorge.Baerg of Fruitvale, H. D.\nDawson of Victoria, formerly of\nNelson, John Viggers of Victoria\nand W. G. Dawson of Hereford,\nEngland.\nLAST RITES HELD\nFOR T.WHITE\nMany South Slocan and New\nDenver friends paid tribute to\nTom White Monday afternoon at\nthe funeral service conducted at\nthe Church of the Redeemer.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood\nofficiated at the service, assisted\nby organist Miss Margaret Thompson, who played two hymns, \"The\nKing of Love My Shepherd Is\"\nand \"Rock of Ages\".\nPallbearers included B, Davis,\nT. Jones, J. Sturt, H. MacDougall,\nJ. Hendron and R. Kennedy.\nMr. White was found dead in\nhis home at South Slocan Thursday, He was 78 years of age.\nTWO PAY $25 FINES\nFines of $25 each were imposed\non two persons in city court Monday by Magistrate William Brown.\nJ. Wetmore of Bonnington pleaded guilty to driving without a\ndriver's licence on Baker Street\non July 5. M. McDonald of Nelson\npleaded guilty to speeding on\nNelson Avenue on July 30.\nMAPLE LEAF BAND\nCONCERT\nFriday, August 5\nCIVIC CENTRE ARENA - 8 P.M.\nDANCE\nTRAIL SERENADERS\n10:00 p.m. to 1 a.m.\nADMISSION\nCONCERT \u2014Adults Me; Children SSe\nDANCE \u201476c Per Person\nCombination Ticket \u2014 Dance and Concert 76e\nFREE PARKING IN BALL GROUNDS\nTickets May Be Purchased at the Ball Doors\nSupermarket\nBuilding\nSecond Store\nAlterations have commenced at\nLiberty Food Centre to provide\nfor a 25 by 110-foot Hall Street-\nlevel store carrying household\nneeds and school supplies. Plans\nas announced by President George\nKaiway are to have the store in\noperation by September 1.\nThis store was not included in\nthe firms plan when the 6000-\nsquare-foot supermarket at Vernon and Hall Streets opened last\nDecember. However, \"we are trying to advance all the time,\" said\nMr. Kaiway, and the new store is\n\"a further advancement\".\nThe store will be completely\nself-serve, with service clerks on\nthe floor to assist customers. Small\nshopping hand baskets to help\ncustomers group their buying will\nalso be supplied in the modern\nunit.\nAccess to the new store will be\nprovided from three directions\u2014\nfrom inside the present store, from\nHall Street, where the City is\nbuilding a new sidewalk, and from\nthe all-weather parking lot below\nthe store.\nWith the two stores, \"all household needs will be available under\none roof.\" The present store,\nwhere 500 feet of new shelving\nspace has been installed and other\nalterations made, will be exclusively a food floor. Changing of\nthe lighting system in the meat\nsection and air conditioning of the\ncutting and wrapping room have\nbeen carried out recently. The\nmeat section has also been enlarged.\nSchool supplies, including a full\nline of workbooks, will be a fea'!\nture of the lower store. A toyland\nof nearly 1000 items, 'a novelty\nsection and an appliance section\nwill he other departments. By a\nfranchise agreement, appliances\nwill be carried.\nChanging   of   the   stairway   to\nHit Jackpot\nBOURNEMOUTH, England\n(AP)\u2014Nineteen fish caught\non the same hook at the same\ntime is the claim of Edward\nKnott.\nBut there's a technicality involved.\nHe was fishing with two\nfriends four miles off Bournemouth when he pulled in a 40-\nt>ound tope which showed\npractically no  fight.\nA few minutes after hauling\nin the\" fish, Knott saw a tope\nbeing born. In rapid succession, 17 more fish were born,\neach about 14 inches long,and\nweighing a  pound.\nThe newbbrn tope were in\ngood condition and the three\nanglers placed them all gently\nin the water and watched\nthem swim away.\nBelow Average\nNelson senior and junior matri\nculation results were \"below\naverage,\" Nelson High School\nprincipal G. H. Lee said Monday.\nMr. Lee said that more students\nwere required to write supplemental examinations than usual.\nSupplemental will be held at\nNelson High School August 25.\nTop marks in senior matricula-l\ntion were received by Ron Gra-j\nham and Barbara Leslie with 84.7\n2500 Attend\nKonkin Funeral\nTRAIL \u2014 Some 2500 persons\nfrom various parts of the Kootenays, the Okanagan and coastal\npoints attended funeral services\nat Tarrys Sunday afternoon for\nPeter P. Konkin, 29, of Trail, who\ndrowned at Penticton July 26*\nPallbearers at the Russian funeral rites were Sam Konkin,\nThrums, Frank Konkin, Grand\nForks; Fred Hadlken, Kinnaird;\nSam Hershenin, Vancouver; Alex\nPlotnikoff, Robson; Walter Wlisiff,\nGrand Forks, and Peter Relcoff,\nCastlegar.\nMr. Konkin, his wife and two\nchildren were enjoying a week-\n'end holiday outing at Penticton\nat the time of the accident, which\noccurred when Mr. Konkin tried\nto swim across to a point of land\nrather than walk around.\nHe is survived by his wife and\nTwo children, Evelyn and Ijtonold,\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nKonkin of Tarrys; two brothers,\nSam in Trail and Ed in Tarrys;\na sister, Mrs. Winnie Hadikrn of\nKinnaird. and grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Sam Konkin, Tarrys, and\nMr. K. Pereversoff.\nHe was a partner In the Trail\nfirm of P. Konkin and Sons,\nBuilding Supplies, and a resident\nof Trail for the past nine years.\nThe 2500 people present walked\nl to   the   Tarry's   cemetery   jvhere\nper cent averages. Rikki Murrell. flmd bur-al rRes were administer.\nreceived  an  average  of  84.3  peri ^ flnd lfiter retlirnfid to ^ Kon.\nkin   residence   where   traditional\ncent.\nJunior matriculation marks\nwere topped by Mary McRae who\nreceived an 84.4 per cent average,\nfollowed by Shawn Harold with\nan 82 per cent average.\nExercise Bitjlifl\nAt Ferry Delayed\ndinner was served.\nServices were held for Mr. Konkin in Penticton before the body\nwas forwarded to Tarry's Thursday night. Approximately a thousand met the ambulance upon its\narrival at Tarry's and customary\nprayers and choral singing followed.\nExercise Biglift of more than 75\nmilitary vehicles of all types\nprovide\" access to the I6wer store! f.topPed at Ko\u00b0tenay Bay and\nis being done by contractor Louis\nMaglio. tThe new store area was\npreviously planned for offices.\n33 Relatives at\nTrail Reunion\nTRAIL \u2014 A family reunion,\ntheir first since 1949. was enjoyed\nby everyone recently at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Fred N. Redding.\nThere, were 35 members of their\nfamily present. 14 grandchildren\nand one great grandchild.\nAttending were Mr. and Mrs\nLeo Bourdon and family of Salmo,\nMr. and Mrs. Hubert Redding and\nfamily of Frurtvale, Mr. and Mrs,\nClarence Redding and family of\nWilliams Lake, B.C.. Mr. and Mrs.\nHerbert Green and family of\nTrail, LAC and Mrs. Fred M. Red\nding of RCAF, stationed at Camp\nBorden, Ont.; Const, and Mrs\nWendell Dempsey and family of\nCloverdale, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph\nRedding of Trail, Miss Doreen\nRedding of Trail, and Mr. and Mrs.\nHerb Thompson and son of Fernie.\nKokanee Landing Monday night\nApproximately 15 of the vehicles\ncrossed the main lake ferry to\nspend the night at Kokanee Land-: Hamilton died July 28 at the age\nSister of Nelson\nMan Dies at Coast\nFuneral services were held- In\nVancouver Saturday for Jean Elizabeth Hamilton, sister of Nelson\nresident Thomas A. Hamilton. Miss\ning. Because of heavy traffic, the,\nother    vehicles    could    not\ncarried across until today.\nThe No. 7 Column Royal Cana-|\ndian Army unit, which is makingj\nof 59.\nbe I    She   is   also   survived  by  four\nI brothers. Ernest B. and John W.\nH. Hamilton of Vancouver; Archie\nW. and Campbell E. Hamilton of\na  mass movement by  road from! Penticton.\nCalgary to Chilliwack and return.\nwill pass through Nelson today i QUEER COINCIDENCE?\nand continue to'Trail. The move is | LONDON (CP) - A burglar\na novel plan for Summer training alarm was out of action for one\ncamp and involves companies day in a West End store. On that\nfrom Calgary. Red Deer, Drum- day smash-and-grab raiders stole\nheller. High River and Edmonton   \u00a3500 worth of cameras.\nMissing Boy Found\nA Nelosn boy missing for several hours turned up safely Monday night.\nHe was Tommy Pederson, seven-\nyear-old son of Mr. and Mrs, H.\nN. Pedersen, 1020 Gore Street. He\nhad been last seen at Lakeside\nPark Monday afternoon when an\nappeal for assistance in locating\nhim was broadcast by CKLN. He\nwas reported safe at home just\nbefore 10 p.m.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nSUNDAY\nPACIFIC COAST  LEAGUE\nSeattle 4-5 San Diego 5-0\nSan Francisco 2-4 Los Angele.\n3-5\nHollywood 3-2 Oakland 2-0\nPortland 9-8 Sacramento 3-3\nTrail Wafer, Road Projects\nPushed; \"Holding Bag\" on Housing\nCity Stand on Fairview Heights\nAmalgamation Given Delegation\nCity council Monday night answered 19 questions submitted to\nthem by a sub-committee pf Fair-\nview Heights ratepayers concerning what the city could offer to\nthe area in the event of amalgamation with Nelson.\n\u25a0 Questions with answers follow:\n1. What would the city offer in\na program for an amalgamated\narea?\nThe city is prepared to and will\nbe setting up a town planning\ncommission and a new zoning bylaw is now being prepared.\n2. When could street lighting be\navailable following amalgamation?\nIt could be installed as soon as\nmoney was available. Cost would\ndepend on the lighting system desired by the residents, Council\nexplained. If an Improvement district or other form pf organization is completed the matter of\nsupplying lighting to it would be\na matter to be discussed with its\nofficials and the city. (Amalgamation is only one of five possibilities being studied by the committee).\nPLOW-B\/CK\n3. Would taxation revenues from\na new area and any government\ngrants be plowed l)ack into the\narea?\nDirect government grants for\nthe area would be plowed back,\nbut council finance chairman Aid.\nArthur Foster pointed out that\ntaxation revenues from the new\narea would be a part of general\nannual revenue in the same manner as taxation revenues of an\nolder area within the city. There\nis no segregation of allotment from\ngeneral revenue to any particular\narea within its limits.\nIncluded in general revenue\nwould be the per capita grants\nreceived from the provincial government. Aid. Foster said In reply\nto a question from committee\nmember R. H. Procter.\nIn dealing with this question.\nAid, J. H. Coventry noted that\nthere \"are precedents.\"\n4. Would there be assurance of\n250 Movie Fans\nAt Park Showing\nA crowd of 250 movie-goers enjoyed Monday night's presentation\nof \"Films Under the Stars\" at\nLakeside Park, twice weekly Nelson Film Council offering.\n\"Films shown were \"Break\nThrough\", a documentary on Kitimat; \"Sunshine Valley\", produced by the Grand Forks Film Council and dealing with the Grand\nForks seed industry; \"Finnish\nGlass\", \"Rustic Delights\", an East\nIndian film for children, and a\nfilm on the Bavarian Alps.\nTRAIL \u2014 City Engineer J. D.\nReid reported on the Gorge Creek\nwater supply and the Fifth\nAvenue road construction at City\nCouncil meeting Monday night\nTwelve men have been employed\nfor the past two weeks on replacement of pipe for the watei\nsupply and to date some 1800\nlineal feet of pipe has been replaced. Work is progressing\nfavorably and a substantial saving\nin funds is anticipated.\nEight'men are employed on the\nFifth Avenue hill road constructing installing forms for the curb\ngutter and sidewalk. First concrete is to be poured this week.\nSeven hundred feet of new concrete sidewalk was reported to be\ncompleted on Oak Street.\nReporting on the board of works\nmeeting. Alderman G. E. Sanborn, chairman, said that considerable discussion took n'nce as\nto the central location of the pew\nstreet   lighting   electrical   service.\nThe Weather\n  54\n'.  54\n  73\nWinnipeg     59\nRegina          - 61\nLethbridge   54\nCalgary  52\nEdmonton      59\nKimberley     50\nPenticton             57\n82    -\nbus service to the new area coming into the city?\nYes, but as in areas of the present city it would only b,e continued if revenue warranted.\nThe fifth question dealing with\nsewer service the new area could\nexpect was discussed to considerable extent. Public Works chairman Aid. George Eckmier explained the city extends its sewer\nsystem to all parts within Its area\nas' quickly \"as the city's finance:?\npermit and circumstances warrant.\nThe city's program for sewer\nextension is the responsibility of\nmembers of councils elected annually, Aid. Eckmier and Mayor\nJoseph Kary stated. Construction\nof sewer systems of the city were\nexpensive undertakings which\nwould likely necessitate a money\nbylaw to finance, council explain-\nCity ratepayers would decide\non bylaws. There was still considerable work to be done on\nsewers in the present city to make\nthem \"adequate,\" council and\npublic works superintendent G.\nQ. Lake said. Sewer extensions\nwere one of the points in which\nUpper Fairview people were most\n\"vitally interested'* sub-committee\nchairman Ronald Grinsted stated.\nUP TO COUNCILS\n6. What would be the streets or\nsidewalks program for a new\narea?\nThis is the responsibility of an\nis no priority within city boundaries, one section over the other\nPOLICE   PATROL\n12. Police patrols would be pro>\nvided the- new area immediately\nby adding to the present staff\nwhich is based roughly on one\npoliceman per 1000 population\nNelson police force now consist*\nof seven men.\n13. The porch light privilege\nwould be extended to the area\nHouseholder must install the Ugh-\nand separate switch and only a\n60-watt bulb is allowed. Cosi\nvaries with different houses.\nH. Would improvements be\ncarried out in conformity with\nmodern community planning\nmethods, such as underground\npower lines or in lanes instead\nof down front streets?\nNo. Costs would be prohibitive\nWhere a partial power system\nnow exists it is more practical to\nextend it than develop a new one\n15. Existing business and in\ndustry would not be affected by\nzoning regulations.\n16. How far has the city advanced toward equalization of assessment and what effect would this\nprogram have in a new district?\nResidential assessment will be\ncompleted this year and business\nana\" industrial reassessment is\nplanned next year. A new district\nwould  be  assessed  by  the  same\nnual councils which would, doubt- manJUa1' reassessment or n\u00b0t de\nless, consider the requirements of\nthe entire city. Mayor Kary ex-*\nplained that a streets and sidewalks program had been started\na few years ago, but there was a\nlot of \"catching up\" to do before\nthe plan could be carried out in\nan orderly manner.\npending on progress made to date\nin reassessment of presently unorganized areas.\n17. Reassessment of the city will\nmeet the provincial requirements\nof being completed within three\nyears.\n18. What money bylaws are eon-\n7. Would  the city be prepared! templated to the cit^ in the ne\u00ab\nparkers.**\nJoe  Biagoni  of  1120  Columbia\nAvenue complained of an 18-inch i Nelson\ndrop adjoining  his  property  fol-'St. John':\nlowing   the  grading  of the  lane Ottawa\nand   requested   immediate   action\nas  it presented  a  hazard  to  his\nchildren.      Alderman      Sanborn,\nchairman    of    board    of    works,\npromised to investigate with city\nengineer the following morning.\nAlderman    Sanborn    said    that\napplications   for   the   position   of i\nengineer to be vacated by J. Reid I    LUTON. England (CP)-A tee\nwere being considered and would; total worker in a brewery won \\Vi  of\nmost likely be filled within two! gallons of beer at a fete in\nweeks. 'Bedfordshire town.\nto set  aside land for parks and\nneighborhood  playgrounds?\nYes, any suitable land donated\nfor such purposes.\n8. Has the city, through its\namalgamation committee a general program for amalgamation of\nperimeter areas?\nThese areas must make application through a petition of property owners requesting amalgamation. Council \"considers it beneficial to expand its boundaries,\"\nMayor Kary stated. It was noted\nby council that the provincial\ngovernment stipulates that an areaj\ntaken into the city be a particular\nblock In \"straight lines.\"\n9. Regarding garbage collection,\nthe city stated that with additional\nequipment and manpower it could\nhandle efficiently increased garbage collections immediately after\namalgamation.\n10. How much time would-be\ngiven to residents building or\nimproving property to complete\npresent plans and would such\nbuilding be required to conform\nwith city building code and zoning regulations?\nBuildings, etc. under construc-\n\u2014 tion iat the time of amalgamation\nwould be given adequate time to\nbe completed before zoning regulations would be applicable. New\nindustries and businesses would\nhave to conform to all city bylaw.\n11. In regard to fire protection,\nthe council replied that fire\nhydrants would be installed at\nsuch time as the overall fire prevention and fire fighting resources\nthe    city   will   permit.    The\nfuture'\nUnder consideration are city\nhall, civic centre and equipment\nreplacement bylaws. The city's\nsinking fund is in a healthy state,\nsaid Aid. Foster, with a $140,000\nsurplus. The city's borrowing\npower is \"adequate.\"\n19. If a proposal for amalgamation was developed and approved\nby council, council would put it\nto the people to win their approval\nin a referendum or plebiscite. This\nvote, since it would not be on a\nmoney bylaw, would not be binding on future councils but would\nserve only as a guide.\nCommittee which met council\nconsisted of Mr. Grinstpd, Mr.\nProcter, William Hampshire arrd\nR. M. MacKenzie.\nThe committee will take back to\nUpper Fairview residents answers\nfeiven  them  by  council.\nthis\nf chool Conversion To Take Place\nWhen (lasses Move to New Building\nConversion of the present senior\nhigh school into an elementary\nschool   will   probably  not   begin\nThe   building   occupied   by   the now unti,  clasfes move into the\nChamber of Commerce seemed to nfw high school under constrUc-\nbe a logical and most inexpensive; Uon  ,n rairv|ew.\nlocation   for   this   service.   The , .\nChamber will be approached with! li had been h\u00b0Ped \u00b0rigionally\nthe possibility of its finding spacelthat teftders could be caIled for\nelsewhere. f conversion work during this sum-\nWith regard to replacing equip-imer\"\nReasons\nfor the delay were\ndrawn to the attention of board\nof trustees of Nelson school dist-\nment. the engineer asked that the\ncommission give consideration to\nthe purchase of a new asphalt\nimpactor and salt spreader. Therict at its meeting Monday night\ncommittee was advised that an jn a letter from Sharp and Thomp-\naerial ladder had been purchased son, Berwick, Pratt, firm of Van-\nfor the electrical department and: COUver architects. It pointed out\ntenders were being called from that approval of preliminary\nlocal dealers covering a truck to  drawings  was given  by ,the fire\nNEW  JOB   FOR   MO\n\u2014 Maureen Connolly, 20, re-\ntired tennis queen, olta at her\nleak in office of the San Diego\nUnion as she starts new Job u\nwomen's sports editor.\nmount the ladder on\nAldermen felt that the city is\n\"holding the bag\" in regard to the\n175 units of the Sunningdale Vet- i\nerans Rental Housing Project. A\nletter from Central Mortgage and\nHousing Corporation explained\nthat a fair market price for the\nhouses had been set and tenants\ncould purchase or continue t6 rent\nas desired. CMHC set the sale\nprices at $7050 and $8200 for the 2\nand 3 bedroom houses with a $ld00\nrebate to be paid over a five-year\nperiod. The city would be in a\nposition to receive a fuller tax\nreturn if houses were purchased\noutright.\nRequests for free parking stickers prompted some discussion\nfrom aldermen. Approval was\ngiven for \u2022 sticker for the sanitary\ninspector. Alderman G. E. Sanborn, dissenting, said \"we are\ngetting    overloaded    with    free\nmarshal only a month ago.\n\"As the bylaw for the work was\npassed some time ago, and costs\nhave risen considerably in the\nmeantime, we have spent considerably time in attacking the\nproblem with a view to leaving\nas much money as possibe for\nactual interior conversibn and\nmodernization,\" the firm stated.\nOrigional propdsal called for\nremoval of the roof and erectidn\nof two n\u00abw concrete Stairwells as\n_\u00bbn initial stage. It was found, however, that the existing brick stairwells at each end of the building\ncould remain, fire proofed and\nmodernized.\n\"This materially reduced the\ncost of the initial stage but posed\na further problem as to relative\ncosts, as considerable temporary\nexpediences   would   have   to   be\nundertaken between the two\nstages.\"\nThe firm, therefore, after thoroughly investigating costs, now\ndefinitely recommends awarding\nof the entire conversion ia one\nlump sum contract, work to start |\nafter removal to the new high\nschool.\nThere would not be any hard:\nship as the new high school will\nnot be available until commencement of the spring term, and this\nwould allow for completion of the\nconversion well before the September opening In 1956.\nRESIGNATIONS   '\nAmong other business, the board\naccepted with regret resignations\nfrom H. E. Grant, who has been\nteaching at Nelson iunior high\nschool, and from B. Kelleher and\nC. R. Mattice of the senior high\nschool staff.\nBennett and White Construction\nCompany, contractor for the new\nhigh school, informed the board\nthat a complaint from E. Ferraro.\n416 Sixth Street, concerning runoff from the school site into his\nproperty, had been referred to insurance companies for investigation.\n, Several applications for stenographer-bookkeeper for the school\nboard office were received.1 The\nmanagement committee was empowered to make the appointment\nA request from Salmo Women's\nInstitute for permission to hold\nhome nursing classes in the Fall\nand Winter In the Salmo high\nschool library, was approved subject to word from the principal.\ncouncil is now considering ^the\nconstruction of a sii\\) Fire Hall in'\nthe Fairview district, but it cannot be stated at this time when\nthis will be undertaken. The purchase of a new fire truck is planned in the nearsfuture. If an Improvement district were set up.\nthe council would be pleased to\ndiscuss fire protection with its\nofficials.\nPriority on fire calls is the city\nof Nelson with out of town calls\ncharged at cost with a minimum\nof $25 at the present time. There!\nARE YOU\nMOVING?\nIT'S SMOOTH\nGOING WHEN IT\nGOES WITH US . . .\nTOWLER\nFUEL AND TRANSFER\nPHONE 889\nPERSONAL\narticles are always valuable and expensive to'replace. Our low priced'\n\"all risks\" \"floater is the insurance\nyou need against Fire and Theft, and \"\nother losses.\nACT TODAY...\nTOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE!\nft06\u20acftTSOa HILLIflftD.\nMM I (3*1\nifaili\nHffl\nL\nFJRE &  GENERAL   INSURANCE\nPHONES 1912-1913\n456 Ward St Nelson, B.C.\nR. A.\nConsult Your\nPHILLIP8\nnsurance Advisor.\nA. K. McADAMS\n -\u2014\u2014\nPh\nl0!0^\nail Cuts Down\ne\nOwing to hail damage, apple\nestimates in the Grand Forks area\n\u00abre now cut to 30,000 boxes from\nthe July 12 estimate of 55,800\nboxes;\nPrunes were less seriously af,\nfected, and pears escaped serious\nInjury, according to the horticultural news letter from the B.C\ndepartment of agriculture. Sizing\nhas been very satisfactory, and\nscab infection light\nElsewhere rln Grand Forks valley, small fruits are in full harvest with strawberries tapering\noff after an exceptionally good\ncrop, and raspberries beginning to\nbear heavily. Currants and gooseberries are also being picked.\nField crops are doing well\nthough rather late in west bound-\ntry district. Fall wheats are\nripening fast at the low elevations.\nHaying ls ln full swing through\nthe dry-farming areas but suffering serious effects from the frequent showers.\nPotatoes show an exceptionally\ngood .crop to date. Spraying for\nearly blight is starting. No earlies\nare as yet moving because of poor\nmarket prices. Vegetables of all\nkinds are in abuffdant supply for\nlocal use. Inafect pests are relatively non-existent this year except slugs In home gardens and\nmaggots on onions. Onion sets and\nmultipliers are rea3y for harvest\nto begin. Some mildew has shown\nrecently in onion bulb crops.\nSeed crops continue to develop\nwell. Hail did no damage but\nstrong winds twisted carrot crops\nconsiderably. Peas are beginning\nto ripen. Lettuce crops are still\nsomewhat late ln \u25a0\u2022development.\nOnions show no mildew to date\nbut weather ls now ideal for its\nstart.\nIn i the Kootenay, Lower Arrow\nLake  and  Creston  districts,  the\n'strawberry, harvest has been much\nbetter than was expected earlier.\nMould, which showed up i at the\ntime picking began, was checked\nby the hot dry weather. Likewise,\npowdery  mildew  did  not  cause\nsuch heavy loss as expected although the disease was responsible\nfor a reduced yield in some fields.\nAlthough    there    was    some\ntrouble with mould fn the early\nshipments,    Creston    Valley\nstrawberries have been arriving\nat ihe various prairie markets In\nvery   good   condition.   At   the\npresent time the berries are being affected by the hot weather\nand a great deal of scalded frlilt\nIs being encountered, To date,\napproximately 20,000 crates have\nbeen shipped, A substantial tonnage of fruit Is being frozen this\nyear.    Raspberry   picking    has\nnow begun.\nCHERRIES START\nBing cherries should be ready\nfor picking this week. If the dry\nweather persists throughout the\ncherry picking season, brown rot\nshould not be such a serious\nproblem as It has been in past\nyears in some sections o'f the West\nKootenay. Apple scab develop\nment has been checked by the\nhot dry weather and, if this\nweather continues through August,\nthe apple crop may turn out\nbetter than expected. Neverthe\nless, there are some orchards\nwhich are so heavily infected with\nscab that it is doubtful that much\nfruit other than C grade and culls\ncan be salvaged. The green apple\naphid and black cherry aphid are\nquite general throughout the dis\ntrict.\nElks Open National\nConvention In Sask.\nSAS|CA*O.Otl .CP),~Mayqr J.\nMcAslljlll presented the key to the\ncity\u2014it weighs seven pounds\u2014to\nC: C. Howard of; Victoria, .B. C,\ngrand exalted ruler of the Benevolent . and 'Protective ' Orders of\nthe Elks, which opened its national convention here Monday.\nAbout 450 lodgd' brothers and\nnearly 500 members of the sister\nlodge, the Order of the Royal\nPurple, are attending the three-\nday meeting.\nJackson Basin Going Underground\nOn Lemon Creek Uranium Showings\nJackson Basin Mining Company\nhas decided to go underground on\nmain showings at its large block\nof uranium claims in the Lemon\nCreek area of the Slocan. A contract for tha work has been let.\nAt last report,the tunnel had\n'been pushed for a total of 70 feet.\nDetailed scintillometer readings\nfrom the first 20 feet only have\nbeen received, and aa excellent\n-tverege of high radioactivity was\nreported.\nMeanwhile, diamond drilling to\nprove the downward extension of\nthe high grade l<_ad-silyer vein\nfrom the Sunset-Trade Dollar\ngroup, located a short distance\nnorth of the main Slocan mine,\nwas to start this week.. This ore\nis shown on old maps to persist\nstrongly in old workings about\n250 feet above the level where\n'the drill is now starting. If ore ls\nfound in this drilling it could\nquickly provide the beginning of\nan important mining operation.\nThe company has entered into,\na new agreement for a copper\n. property located in the Kamloops\n\u2022 area of B. C. From reports covering work already completed, this\nproperty appears to be one with\nmajor possibilities. At the present\ntime Jackson Basin has acquired\nunder option a 50 per cent interest\nplus management contract. The\nproperties were explored to some\ndegree many years ago when the\nprice of copper was less than 10\ncents per pound (now around 36\nto 40 cents). A shaft has been *unk\nto a depth of 200 feet and a number of tunnels completed. Fifty to\n100 large open cuts of an average\ndepth of eight feet by 10 to 30\nfeet ln length have been made.\nAt a special meeting of'shareholders last month, a resolution\nto increase the company's author\nized capital by 1,000,000 shares to\n5,000.000 shares was unanimously\napproved..\nKimberley Taxes\nFar in Arrears\nKIMBEHLEY \u2014 Ten per cent\npenalty on unpaid city tax levy\nfor 1955 came into effect Monday,\napplying on a large volume of the\ntotal $196,870 to be collected from\nproperty owners for the year. Up\nto July payments had totalled\n$47,866 of the total, but payments\nby those avoiding the penalty\nwere heavy through July.\n'Other revenue sources for the\ncity's 1955 budget of $580,60.\nhave materialized almost exactly\nas receipts were estimated by the\nCity Council for the year. Actual\nreceipts for the first half of the\nyear from' light, water and sewer\nare slightly more than half the\ntotal estimated .for the year.\nMark Creek, upsetting factor in\nthe 1954 budget 'when it threatened to run wild again and required costly emergency bulwarks\nand new permanent installations,\nran off in perfect order this year\nand has required only half its 1955\nallotment.\nSUSAN BRYAN, 21, and Andrew W, Lerlos, both of San\nFrancisco, pose happily at San Francisco's International Airport\nafter both arrived July 30 on gfobe-clrcling flights that shattered\nprevious record for flying around the world In commercial airliners. Susan, flying eastward, arrived at noon, 107 hours and 20\nminutes after she left the airport In San Francisco.at 12:40 a.m.\n'Tuesday. Lerlos,'flying In opposite direction, came In four hours\nand four minutes later than Miss Bryan. Susan shaved eight\nhours and eight minutes off the record set by Jean-Marie Audl-\nbert In 1962, and Lerlos trimmed four hours and 14 minutes off\nthe same record\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nTaghum Club\nHas First Picnic\nTAGHUM\u2014The first annual picnic of the Taghum Ladies' Neighborly Club, held at the Taghum\nbpll ground, made a hit with everyone attending.\nHot dogs, ice cream, lemonade\nand coffee were served. Winners\nof races were as follows;\nStraight race: Girls 9 and 10,\nGinger Chernenkow, Christine\nHrytzak; girls if and 12, Elaine\nChernenko, Frances Hrytzak;\ngirls 6 and 7, Merilyn Chernenko,\nTeresa Chernenko.\nSack races: 9 and 10, Christine\nHrytzak, ~G i n g er Chernenkow;\ngirls 11 and 12, Elaine Chernenko,\nChristine Hrytzak.\nThree-legged race, 9 and 10\u2014\nJudith Bruggengate and Silvia\nBruggengate; Elaine Chernenko\nand Frances Hrytzak; girls 11 and\n12, Christine Hrytzak and Elaine\nChernenko; Sharon Chernenko\nand Kathleen Verigin.\nHand and foot race: Christine\nHrytzak, Frances Hrytzak.\nWheelbarrow races: Girls 9 and\n10, Christine Hrytzak and Ginger\nChernenkow; Judith Bruggengate\nand Sylvia Bruggengate; girls 11\nand 12, Elaine Chernenko and\nChristine Hrytzak; Sharon Chernenko and Frances Hrytzak. %\nRaces: Boys 9 and 10, Fred\nStrookoff, Kenneth Wapples. Boys\n11 ancj 12, Arthur Lang, Geerge\nStrookoff. Boys 13 and 14, Danny\nHome From\nVANCOUVER (CF.-Det.-Sgt\nLen. Cuthbert,, . self - professed\nbribe-taker, Monday admitted before the Tupper rtyal commission\nhe' had purchased . his home in\n1942 from a woman bootlegger.'\nT, G. Norris, counsel for police\nchief Walter Mulligan, brought\nthe admission at the opening of\nthe afternoon. session of the com\nmission investigating charges of\ncorruption in the police force;\nty the time Cuthbert was a\nmember of the liquor squad.\n\"Can you explain why a bootlegger should be selling you a new\nhouse with a down payment of\n$350 and payments of $35 a\nmonth?\" asked Mr. Norris.\nThe witness went into a lengthy\nexplanation of the house financing,\nskying he first lived in it on a\nrental basis.\n\"I remember now that the\nmoney that I paid as rent for two\nyears was to count : toward the\ndown payment.\"\n\"Then in effect you lived rent\nfree for two years,\" said Mr.\nNorris.\n\"Yes sir, I sure did, and it was\nthe best deal I ever made.\"\nLang, George Strookoff; boys 10\nand 11, Walter Chernenko, Kenneth Wapples. Boys 11 and 12,\nGeorge Strookoff, Niqk Bubus.\nThree-legged race, boys,,9 and 10,\nKenneth Wapples and Walter\nChernenko; Allen Hadikin and\nHarvey Bruggengate. Boys-11 and\n12, Danny Lang and George Strookoff; Walter Chernenko and Allen\nSwetlikoff. Boys 9 and 10, Kenneth Wapples and Allen Hadikin;\nAllen Swetlikoff and Walter Cher-\nnenkoff.\nHand and foot race: Walter\nChernenko, Allen Swetlikoff.\nWheelbarrow races, boys 9 and\n10; Walter Chernenko arjd. Kenneth Wapples; Nick Bubus and\nHarvey Bruggengate.\nSafely Steps Suggested by Jury\nAf Inquest Into Marshall Death\nSOUTH SLOCAN \u2014 A recommendation for drafting of a set of\nsafety regulations for workers\ncoming into contact with high\nvoltage, was made by a coroner's\njury Monday when it returned a\nverdict at South Slocan ln the\ndeath July 21 of Albert Ernest\nMarshall.\nMr. Marshall, employee of the\nWest Kootenay Power arid Light\nCompany at South Slocan for 16\nyears, died in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital a few hours\nafter being Injured while engaged\non maintenance work as electrical\nutility man.\nThe jury iound he came to his\ndeath after coming into contact\nwith a live line leading into oil\nbushing on the first bay of the\nswitching station, and being\nthrown 19 feet, four inches, to the\nfloor of the main switching deck\nInjuries caused by the electric\nshock were burns and a compound fracture of the skull\nThe statement went on; \"The\njury finds no blame attached to\ncompany officers or employees,\nbut does recommend that representatives qf the company and the\nemployees Jointly draft a set of\nsafety regulations and that all\nemployees whose work would require them to come into contact\nwith high voltage be required to\nfamiliarize themselves;with such\nsafety regulations, Juch regula\ntions to be posted if^conspicuous\nplaces.\" rA\nDr. F. M. Auld, district coroner,\npresided, and witnesses were Norman Roberts, Ivor Jones and Dal\nYost, fellow workers; James\nStreet, first aid man, and Dr. John\nMcCabe of Nelson.\nThe jury consisted of George\nTurner, foreman; R. W. Koehle.\nG. W. Clerihew, F. H. Lipping-\nwell, A. B. Mann-and R. T. Rlddell\nfain Exports Hit Doldrums;\n12 Million Bushels Jam Elevators\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Grain exports through the port of Montreal\nare becalmed ln serious midsummer doldrums, shipping officials\nreported Monday.\nA large scale tie-up seems imminent,\" said one official.\nOne source compared the port\nto a funnel \u2014 \"a funnel with an\nenormous mouth but with Its exit\npractically  plugged.\"\nHarbor chiefs reported elevators\njammed with 12,000,000 bushels of\ngrain. Twenty-six'lake ^hips were\nwaiting to unload, compared to a\nnormal number of 12 to 16. Only\ntwo tramp steamers were expected\nto load grain for the overseas market this week.\nEXPORTS INCREASED\nTotal grain exports so far this\nyear, however, have been greater\nthan during the corresponding\nperiod of 1954, the officials said.\nThe mid-summer season is traditionally a slow period as European crops are being reaped, it\nwas explained. In addition, the\nport of Churchill now takes some\nshipments which otherwise would\ncome through here.\n\"But while, taking these things\ninto consideration the situation\nstill is very serious and obscuVe,\"\nsaid one shipping company re'pre-*\nsentative. \"A large scale tie-up\nseems imminent.\"\n\"Current orders amounted to\nonly 752.000 bushels compared tov\n1.267,000 bushels on this date last\nyear, when elevators here c6n-\ntained 1.000.000 less bushels than\nat oresent.\nBut grain  exports so far this\nyear 'were 56.193.000 bushels,compared'with   48,634.000   until  this\ndate last year.       ^\nMAY LAY OFF SEAMEN\nEarlier steamship sources said\n1000 seamen may be lajd off if\nthe slack period continues. It was\nestimated that-from 20 to 30 per\ncent of the-150 vessels plying between Montreal and Prescott, Ont.,\nmay be tied up.\nCompany sources indicated today some layoffs have occurred,\nbut did not give figures.\nH. C.-Sanks, president of the\nsituation \"hasn't assumed serious\n(AFL-TLC) said, however, the\nsituatio n\"hasn't asumed serious\nproportions as yet.\"\nNational harbors board officials\nsaid grain export conditions at\nother St. Lawrence river ports are\nsimilar to Montreal.     ,\nENVOY \u2014 Georgi Zhukov.\nSoviet Defense Minister, at-\ntends a meeting In Warsaw '\nPoland, to draft treaty of\nmutual security between Russia,\nand East Europe allies;\nSw&idscm Boy Tried\nTaStiiveTwo Children\nBALFOUR-^Tbe story of a boy\nwith presence of mind and\ncourage unfolded Monday as more\ninformation was made known on\nthe drowning at Balfour Sunday\nof Diane Kline, 11, and her brother, Bill* Klin*. 4. of Salmo.\nBernard Swen won, 11, son of\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Swendson, who\nare holidaying at the Coast, was\none of about eight other children\nwho were playing on the wharf\nwhen young Billy Kline fell into\nthe water. Diane jumped In to try\nto save her brother, and died in\nthe. attempt,\nAccording to tea Forbes, who\nwas later 10 take part in recovery\nof Billy Kline's body, young\nSwendson went' in after both.\nHe grabbed the girl, who was\nln turn hanging on to her brother,\nand called to the watching chilren\non the wharf to throw out a tire\ntube.\nHe also shouted to them to run\nfor help to the house of Mr. and\nMrs. William Kline, grandparents,\nwhom' the' children were, .visiting.\nDiane, however, slipped from\nhis grasp, and Billy from hers.\n-Mr. Forbes and Fred Graves,\nanswering cal^s for help, saw only\nyoung Swendson struggling in the\nwater when they got to the scene.\nMr. Graves dived into the water\nafter the exhausted boy and held\nhim up until Mr. Forbes and Geoff\nGold got to them ln lylr. Forbes'\nboat. Water gushed from his\nmouth as they pulled him into the\nboat. Mr, Graves hung orj to the\nboat as they rowed ashore.\nMeanwhile, the Kline children's\nfather, Ray, and grandfather, William Kline, had set out in another\nboat. They sighted Diane floating\nat a considerable depth in the\nwater and the girl's father plunged\nin and got her out.\nOn the wharf, a first a,id man\nCULTURAL LINK\nOSLO (CP) \u2014 Norway and the\nUnited Stateshave extended their\nFulbright cultural exchange agreement until 1960. Since 1949, a\ntotal of 233 American professors,\nresearchers and university teachers have spent a year in Norway,\nand 631 Norwegians have studied\nin the United States.\nDULWICH, England (CP)-\nDoctors at the hospital In this\nKent* town now use dictaphones\nto speed up clerical work. -\nNEISON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY AUG. % 1955 \u2014 3\nKoolaree Echoes\nKobjsree campers were treated\ntb a boat ride in the \"Kokanee\"\nby Dick Spurway Friday.\nfrom Trail applied artificial res-\npiration immediately. Later, Nelson Fire Department inhalator\nworked on her and revival efforts\nwere carried,on between four and\nfive hours. Cpl. Alex Bprodula of\nthe RCMP, holidaying In the vicinity, took a leading part in first\naid work.\nSeven hours later Mr. Forbes\nand Mr. Graves located the boy's\nbody by' dragging from a, boat.\nBlondie Johnson, member of Ed\nKelter's party which dived constantly ,in the search, brought the\nbody to the surface.\nDr. F. M. Auld, district coroner,\nwill conduct an inquiry Into the Mrs. Mildred Sivty K, of Kitimat,\ndouble drowning. Date >has not Martha at home; 13 grandchildren\nbeen set. .  . land brothers and sisters.\nTrailite's Father\nDies at Vancouver   ,\nFuneral services wil| be heldTln\nVancouver Tuesday for John Peter Dyck, father of Mrs. Dora\nWalker of Trail. Mr. Dyck died\nJuly 28 at the age of 64.\nMr. Dyck ls survived by his\nwife, Selma; four sons, Theodore\nof Saskatchewan, David of Victoria, Joseph of June Landing,\nB. C, Elmer of Vancouver; four\ndaughters, Mrs. Walker of Trail,\nMrs. Linda Richmond of Victoria.\nHUNGARY'S 8ANDHOR IHAROS, left, 22-year-old army\nlieutenant, Is embraced by runner-up Istvan RozsAvoelgyl after\nbreaking world record for 1500-meter run In Helsinki's Olympic\nStadium. Iharos was timed In 3:40.8, a full second under world\nmark set last year by Australia's John Landy.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto via radio from  London,\nThe weather being too cold foif\nswimming, the water group hiked\ndo\\vn the railway tracks and rel\nturned with many wild flowers. I\nChapel was held in the lodge-\nFriday night as leader \"Ritchie']\ntold the campers the story of \"th\u00ab\npine tree that wanted to servl\nman\". .\nAt Campfire,' also held Indoors]\nCabin One presented a skit enj\ntitled \"The Romance of Mar*\nSmith and John Jones\". After a\nfew rounds of Koolaree songs, cocoa was served in the cabinsj\nCabin Four waa rewarded for\ntheir hard work as they received\nboth the shield and the totem\npole.\nCastlegar School\nPrincipal Named1\ni\nCASTLEGAR\u2014W. R. Brown qi\nRobson has been appointed to the\nprinclpalshlp at the Stanley HumJ\nphries Junior-Senior High School\nat Castlegar.\nHe succeeds J. A. Thomas.\nMr. Brown, formerly vice-principal at Keremeos High School,\ncame to the Castlegar district\ntw0 years ago to take over tbf\nvlce-prlncipalshlp on the resignation of G. Magwood.\nThe new principal will be R. E.\nCall. Mr. Call was for several\nyears the councillor at the high\nschool, but resigned, together\nwith Mrs. Call, to take a post at\nthe West Vancouver High School.\nDuring the past year he has been\ncompleting research work on.,a\nthesis for a master of arts degree\nin history. .   .\nBoth Mr. and Mrs. Call are well\nknown and liked here.\nHURT?\n\u25a01\nNo matter how bad.\nyour feet hav* boon -\ntorturing you, you'll\ndanco with |oy when\nyou apply doop, penetrating BUCKLEY'S,\nWHITE RUB. Scalding,\ntore, perspiring, odor-'\n, ouj font become naallhy\n\u25a0feet to fait that you'll\nbe really grateful. For Happy Feet aneh\nRelief of Bunion Pain get BUCKLEY'S.\nStalnteu WHITE RUB now- .-\nFREE - GENEROUS SIZE V'.AL JAR\nSend I5# fo cover poifage and ^(.tx.ng fo\nW. K. BUCKLEY LIMITED, TORONTO\n>     f\nmyoirtpTCP\ngets the full power\nfrom High Octane Gasoline\nlou might expect that aU you need to get\nthe full power out of a high compression\nengine is high octane gasoline. Actually you\nneed more than just high octanes\u2014you need\na gasoline with a special kind of additive.\nThat's because the way most of us drive\nmoit of the time\u2014short trips here and there\n.\u2014 creates a power-wasting problem that\nneither engine design nor highest octane\ngasoline can solve by themselves.-\nThis problem is the increased build-up of certain deposits within the combustion chambers\n... the principal cause of power waste.\nWhat happens is this i\nAs your engine warms up, these deposits\nwarm up, too\u2014glow red hot. And these glowing particles act like hot coals\u2014ignite the\ngasoline mixture ahead of time... before the\npistons reach proper firing position.'-This is\ncalled pre-firing and means that power works\nagainst you instead of for you. n\n\\\nIn addition, these same deposits have another power-wasting effect: They foul spark\nplugs, causing your engine to miss.\nEngineers will tell you there's nothing more\nwasteful of power and gasoline than pre-firing\nand spark plug \"miss.\"\nBut there is an answer\u2014there's one high\noctane gasoline that gives you all the advantages of high octane without the power-crip-\npllng effects of these deposits\u2014Shell Premium\nGasoline with TCP*.\nTCP, the Shell-developed additive, fire-\nproofs the deposits so that they no longer\ncause pre-firing. No longer can they glow red hot\nand ignite the gasoline mixture. And TCP\nstops spark plug \"miss,\" too. Your spark plugs\ndo the jobthey are supposed to do.'\nStart getting the full power built into your\nengine. Get Shell Premium with TCP. It's the\nmost powerful gasoline your car can use!\n\u2022Shell's Trademark for this unlquo gasoline additive\ndeveloped by Shell Research. Patent applied for.\ni .\n(My Shell Premium Gasoline\nlias toth TCP^Jfigb. Octane]\n\u25a0_____\u25a0\n..-.';-.,..:>-.--.,i -.\u25a0>\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   -...- \u25a0 -.<_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\n\u25a0B_^___H\n y'^yT^^l^^^^^^^^^T \u25a0'\u25a0'' -'' '-\u2022\"'\"\"'\n     . .... IISSSBS^\u2014\nVy  '::\"\u00bb!','!\nM  \",!      \u25a0- '      .      '\u25a0-    yyy   yy-:r-:y-y.^--;-:y\n'\u25a0' i   :\"-~\u2014~r~i \u2122hb\n...:  \u25a0  \u25a0 -\u2022        \u25a0' '--m\n._\nS.V-- *\nft\nEstablished April 11 11)02\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\n\u2022  holidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail Mat Office Department. Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF TUB CANADIAN  PRESS AND\n\u2022    THE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nTuesday, August 2,1955\nProvince, City Must (jet Together\nOn Sewage, Runoff Problem Here\nNature's unpredictable ways and\n\u25a0-the petitions of citizens are calling\nCity Council's attention anew to'a\nneed that has been pointed out\ncountless times already. It is the\nneed for a far-sighted program and\n.policy regarding the municipal sewerage system. It's to be hoped that\nthe damaging force of recent storms\nand the pleas of businessmen and\nhome owners this time will be able to\nmove the city to remedial action.\nNelson's sewerage system may be\nadequate for the city's needs\u2014but\nthat we doubt, too. It is a simple <act\nthat it is not adequate for the loads\nthrown upon it, whether these loads\noriginate from within the city or not.\n' Regardless of origin, it is a certainty\nthat the ultimate damage is within\nthe city. Gouged roads, flooded basements, clogged storm sewers and\nflowing filth are testimonial enough.\nThere are some who call recent\n*torms abnormal. The truth is\nweather records show that not yet\nhave we had a storm in which rain-\n\u25a0 fall has equalled the usual annual\nmaximum for a single downpour.\nThe provincial  government has\nescaped its resp.onsibility for sewer\nconditions outside the municipal\nboundaries for years. It shquld not be\npermitted an easy, moment henceforth until some action is taken. The\nprovincial authorities permit growth\nand construction in its territories.\nEvery time a roof is raised it means\nadded flow during a' stotnu every\ntime a tree is cut it means there is\nless ability for absorption of run-off\nmoisture. The normal course for such\nflow is downhill. And Nelson sits\nwhere that flew must naturally come,\nThese being the facts, neither the\nCity Council nor provincial authorities can sidestep responsibility. It is\ntime there was a real effort made to\nbring the two bodies together so a\nsolution can be arrived at. It m{iy bft\nthat the province would send in engineers to work with the City staffs to\ndevelop a system that would handle\nthe situation. Once that is done financial arrangements can be worked\nout. Until the method is arrived\nit, financial need cannot even be\nguessed.\nLet's have a start.\nA Policeman's Lot in\n. CHateau-Neuf-du-Pope\nSome day a flying saueer or a flying\ncigar may subside among tha vineyards that\naurround and support Chateau-neuf-du-\nPapc, a village in the South of France. If one\nof them does, the rural constable will know\njust what to do about It. He haa his instructions. He is to approach the vehicle and on\nbehalf of the French Republic inform the\noccupants that they are under arrest and\nwill they kindly disembark so that he can\nimpound their saucer or cigar as the case\n\"may be. '\nUp to this point his duty is quite clear.\nThe precise steps he is. to follow are set\nforth In a decree issued a few days ago by\nthe Mayor of Chateau-neuf-du-Pape. In that\ndecree the Mayor has notified all pilots of\nsaucers and cigars that landings upon, take-\n- offs from and flights across the village and\nIts fertile fields are expressly forbidden by\n.. law. and that the duty of enforcing these\nprohibitions has been delegated to the constable, The pilots presumably now know the\nwelcome that awaits them.\nWhat is not so clear ls the sort of recep-\n** tion the constable will get when, should the\nMayor's warning be ignored, the lid comes\noff a sitting saucer or cigar. No doubt the\nMayor is well acquainted with his constable\nand knows the kind of metal he is made of.\nAll the same, it could ba a pretty lonely\n..walk across those vineyards to that fantastic and. foreboding craft.\u2014Winnipeg Free\nPress.\nGems of Tkou^ht\nThe falling drops at last will wear the\nStone.\u2014Lucretius.\nPatient waiting is often the highest way\nof doing God's will.\u2014Jejemy Collier.\n*       *       *\nPatience is symbolized  by the tireless\nworm, creeping over lofty summits, perrs-\nvering in its intent.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\nGenius is eternal patience.\n\u2014Michelangelo.\nNever Poor\nThere Is a lovely verse that reads:\n\"A kiss of the sun for pardon,\nA song of the birds for mirth;\nOne ls nearer Gdd\"s heart in the garden\n'Than anywhere else on earth.\"   ,.\nIt is soil that makes a garden, as it\nmakes a farm. Writes Professor L. H. Bailey\nln The Holy Earth: \"The earth is good. It is\nkindly. It is holy. To every bird the air is\ngood; and a man knows it is good if he is\nworth being a man, To every fish the water\nis good. To every beast its food is good, and\nits time to sleep is good. Every man in his\nheart knows there is goodness and wholeness in the rain, In the wind, the soil, the\nfcsea, Ihe glory of sunrise, in the trees, and\nin the sustenance we derive from the\nplanet.\"\nA garden is like a mine full of treasures,\nout of which, to use a Bible phrase, a man\ncan bring forth treasures new and old. To\nmine this treasure requires work and skill,\ngood management and perspiration. But the\nproduct is worth it all, for it adds to the\nstrength and health of one's life. Like all\nother good earth, the garden needs its soil\nreplenished. There is always the danger of\nits being mined out unless care is taken to\nrenew it with potash and nitrogen.\nIn a garden one works in partnership\nwith God. It is a co-operative enterprise.\nThe sun, the soil, the'rains and the winds\nare of God's supplying. The work of care\nand cultivation are our responsibility. We\nare, in a sense, trustees under God for the\ncare of our soil.\nThe joy of a garden is the satisfaction\nwe have in'a good product and in the bea.ut.y\na garden can create. It ls in this joy that a\ngarden's b^st wealth resides, This is the kind\nof wealth no one can take away from us.\n\u2014Owen Sound Sun-Times.\nTheyll Do It Every Time\n\u25a0W SUE tit\nYour Horoscope\nIf you exercise caution in all your affairs and be on your guard against those\nwho might profit by your good nature, some\ngood fortune should be realized by you in\nthe year ahead. Today's child is likely to\nbe generous and genial, but* may be somewhat erratic where strong affections ara\nconcerned.\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any render, Names of\npersons asking questions will not ba\npublished. Thoro Is no oharge for this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL, NOT BE\nANSWERED BV MAIL except whora\nthere Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nSteady Reader, Creston\u2014Could ybii tell me\nif female bank employees receive pay\nfor   overtime?   Ara   bank   employaes'\nhours to be a 40-hour week? _\nThe answer to both questions Is yes.\nN. A. N.. Trail\u2014Could you tell me where 1\ncou|d find a market for an old-fashioned\ndiamond ring?\nSend by registered post to either Henry\nBirks and Sons (B. C). Ltd., 710 Granville\nStreet, Vancouver, or to O. B. Allan, 480\nGranville Street, Vancouver.\nT.  H.,  Ainsworth\u2014How would  one  figure\nout what to charge for a crocheted article   made   for   sale?   When   canning\ncooked meat or fowl, is lt necessary to\nprocess it the full three hours?\nRegarding the crocheted article: Charge\nwould depend on cost of wool, amount of\nwool used, and time spent in making garment. There can be no set rate because of\nthese reasons. When canning cooked meats,\ngame or fowl, it is safer to process for the\nfull three hours.   .\nTeenager, Slocan City\u2014Are there any jewellers in Nelson who will pierce ears?\nNo; you must go to a doctor to have this\ndone.\nMrs. E. H\".. Nelson\u2014Could you please give\nme the address of the Layriti. Nursery\nat the coast, or have they a local representative?      \u00ab\nThe Layritz Nurseries' address is 2220\nKingsway. Vancouver. Their local representative is H. C. Carne. c \/o Andrew Scott.\nR.R. 1, Nelson.\nB. A. C. H. O.. Nelson\u2014Will you please tell\nme what kind of a fenca is needed to\nkeep in a bull? If he ls running in a\npasture with other cattle, how high has\nthe fence to 6e? Is there a herd law in\nHarrop, Sunshine Bay or. Procter?\nNo n^rson can allow any bull over six\nmonths old to run at large. The legalized\nfence allowed to enclose  bull consists of\nwire, No. 9 gauge, secured to posts not more\nthan 24 feet apart, lowest wire- being at any\npoint not lower than. 14 inches from ground.\nWires must not be more than nine inches\napart up to height of 32 Inches from ground,\nand not more than  11 inches above that,\nheight, being interlaced with cross-wiring\nor fastened to wooden droppers or poles,\nplaced at regular intervals of not more than\nfour feet. A lawful fence means a fence1 substantially   constructed   from   ground  to  at,\nleast four feet six inches. There Is no herd\nlaw in the area you mention, just a pound\nlaw.\nSkk for\nThe Sight\nOf London\nF. B. Pearce\nPoW on Trial\nFor Murder\nNEW YORK (AP) - An army,\nsergeant went on trial before a\ngeneral court-martial today, accused of aHlng the enemy while\na war prisoner In Korea and of\nmurdering three fellow American\nprisoners.\nSgt. James Gallagher, 24. of\nBrooklyn is the first American\nsoldier tried for a prison camp\ndeath hy his own hands. The\ndeaths In North'Korean camp No.\n5 were termed \"unpremeditated\nmurder,\"\nSERIOU8 CHARGES   #\nGallagher allegedly \"forcibly\nejected\" three sick fellow prisoners from their shelters, exposing\nthem to \"extremely cold temper-\n7, T.. .,    ,    ,., ,,     .       ,    .ature.\" All three were weak from\nIt was KipUngs Onthors whoi,       . ,  ,,     \u00b1.     \u25a0  ..\n... ,_ .It. -i   u \\ *u A dysentery at the time,  the array\nsaid he wasn t homesick but that j ^^\u201ertD\/1\nhe was sick for the sight of Lon-1\ndon and the smell of gas and or-!\nange   peel   going   over   Waterloo!\nBridge. The Waterloo Bridge he |\nknew   has   been   replaced  by   a]\nnew and wider one, and if there i\nis no smell of gas and orange peel\nthe   tubes  still   have   their   own\npeculiar smell,\nIt is pleasant to meet it again,'\nthough it is the kind that no per- j\nson of refinement should like. It i\nis   like   meeting   an   old   friend.]\nthough I can't say my old friends'\nsmell. But I like the tubes. I like \\\nthe escalators, which are so long \\\nLondon is full to^ the brim.\nThere are crowds of pedestrians\nand a maelstrom of traffic. But\ntrfiffic control is good, and drivers are superb. Buses, trucks and\ncars pass through such narrow\nopenings that it almost seems that\nthey have collapsible sides. The\nnoise is deafening, but no one\nseems to be anything but goMd-\ntempered. Indeed, London^crowds\nalways seem to have an air of\ngaiety.\ncharged.\nGallagher also is accused of\nsigning a message to American\ntroops designed \"to promote disloyalty.\" He allegedly tried to\ncurry favor with Chinese captors\nby telling them that a^ fellow prisoner was \"sabotaging the Communist   indoctrination   program.'\nA.T. and T. Plans\nCdble To Alaska\nNEW YORK  (AP)\u2014A  location\nnear   Port   Angeles,   Wash.,   has\nbeen selected as the U. S. landing\nsite for the American Telephone\nthat one might be going up a skl;and   Telegraph   Co,.s  underwater\nlift. I like to see the people slid- ^phone cable to Alaska, the A\nT and T Long Lines Department\nannounced Monday.\nThe department, which will construct the cable said it was applying to the State of Washington\nMonday for a permit to place the\ncable in the Strait of Juan de\nFuca, off Port Angeles.\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 whole, or In part, except over\nthe signature and address of tha writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be\nreturned.\nApplied To Be\nRelieved of Duties\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014With reference to article in your\npaper of July 19 referring to the appointment of Miss P. M. Curtis of Invermere as\nStipendiary Magistrate, I feel that a wrong\nimpression was given (or left) regarding\nthe rescinding of my position as Magistrate\nin Kimberley,\nThis step only became necessary because\nI 'applied, after eight years in office, to be\nrelieved of my. duties. \u2022\nI have a letter from the Attorney-General at that time, thanking me for my cooperation and services.\nFLORENCE M. PHILLIPS.\nBox 812,\nKimberley, B. C.\ning by as I go up, and I particularly like to see the hurrier stepping down on the other side. The\nillusion is complete. He seems to\nbe leaning back so far that at any\nmoment he will bump his head on\nthe steps. I like the trains with\ntheir rattle and roar, and I like\nthe people.\nChivalry  Is  not dead  In  Britain,  A  16-year-old  boy, seeing\nmy grey  hairs,  offered  me  his\nseat, and twice younger women\noffered my wife theirs.\nROUNDERS IN UNDIES\nThe zoo was crowded with parties of school children conducted\nby their teachers. Most of them\ncome hy motor coach from out of\ntown, but on the way through Regents Park we stopped to watch\ntwo classes of 10-11-year-old girls\nplay rounders. (The London parks\nare playgrounds for children.)\nThey wriggled out of their dresses\nand hung them on the iron fence,\nand none of them seemed the least\nconcerned at being in their underwear, even though the weather\nwas cool and spats of rain were\nfalling. They played with vim, if\nnot with much skill.\nBounders is a.veijy ancient ball\ngame, but only recently has tt\nhad a universal code of rules. As\nwe played it the ball was thrown\nat a runneigbetween bases, and if\nhe was hlf%e was out. Now they\ntag him as in softball. There are\nfour bases with lines marked in\nwhite, so that instead of a diamond they have a pentagon. The'\nball is a tennis ball, and the bat\nlooks like a baby cricket bat. This\nis used with one hand, which ls\nby no means easy. The g^rls\nmissed quite often and the catching was not good, but tennis balls\nare hard to throw fast and they! ment.\nrebound at odd angles. 1    Only three ministers will be left\nTO HYDE PARK \u2022 I in Victoria\u2014Highways Minister P.\nWe visited Hyde Park next day, A. Gaglardi. Trade Minister Ralph\nand saw the Serpentine. Boys' Chetwynd and Education Minis-\nwere fishing for coarse fish, but j ter Ray Williston.\ndid not seem to be catching any.' ~\" ~~~\nThey were using floats and baited  CoHOClo's  pQMS\nhooks, but the wind made ripples! n   \u25a0 . D   ,\nwhich    disturbed ..the    bobbers   Delegation   KCTUmS\nHowever, the boys enjoyed their1    OTTAWA  (CP)\u2014Canada's dele-\nsandwiches. The Serpentine is for Ration- to a NATO Parliamentary\nSALT   DIGGERS \u2014 Workers at Araure. Venezuela, harvest salt from 550-acre \"salt lake,\" level pf which ts controlled\nby canals. Area produces .71,000 (ons a year.\nBusiness Spotlight . . .\nEasier Currency Laws Bring\nU.K. Companies Into Canada\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Easing of\nBritain's currency controls is paving the way for British industries\nto open branches in Canada.\n\"United Kingdom authorities\nplace virtually no obstacle in the\npath of bona fide British firms\nwho wish to extend their interests\n. DEATHS\nBy The Canadian Preii\nChicago: Dr. Hubert Meacham.\n65, *physlcian for Chicago (Black\nHawks of the National Hockey\nLeague until his retirement nine\nyears ago.\nNewmarket. Ont.:' Dr. William\nCreighton Graham, 67. principal\nemeritus of'United College, Winnipeg.        \u00bb\nLas Vegas: Anthony Cornero\nStralla, 54, one of tte West's most\ncolorful gambling figures.\nToronto: Brig. Robert McBain.j\n7(1, a Salvation Army officer for 42 i\nyears. j\nToronto: Ernest W. Banting, 75,\nretired mining professor at the\nUniversity of Toronto and a cousin\nof Sir Frederick Banting.\nToronto: William Henry Clarke.\n52, president of Clarke Irwin\nand Company; Publishers.\nB. C. Cabinet\nHeads for Home\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The majority\nof British Columbia's Cabinet\nministers have headed for the\nhome ridings to take part in the\ncelebrations of the third anniversary of the Social Credit govern-\nProperty Lines\nAll Wrong at\nPrince George\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP)\u2014Hundreds of Prince George householders who think they know where\ntheir property lines run may be\nwrong by as much as several feet,\na report by the city engineer has\ndisposed.\nEngineer George Harford's report said the general survey control fpr the entire City of Prince\nGeorge was \"in a deplorable\nstate\".\nLocations of the boundaries of\npublic streets and lanes can not\nbe determined by the city.\n\"This is due to the fact that\npins and posts of various descriptions have been placed in the\nground but there are no plans to\nindicate what points are represented or marked by them.\"\nHe estimated a new survey\nwould take two to three years to\ncomplete and might cost ,as much\nas $50,000.\nCopper Strikes\nClose Plants\nIt's Been Said\nWe never know how much one loves\ntill We know how much he is willing to\nendure and suffer for us; and it ls the suffering element that measures love.\u2014Henry\nWard Beecher.\nboating,  and  there\nenjoying that sport.\nwere  plenty\nUNIFORM BARGAIN '\u2022\nMAIDSTONE. England (CP)\nAssociation meeting in Paris last\nmonth returned to Ottawa today\nby RCAF plane.\nThe  group,  which  also  visited\nCanadian military bases in France\nMunicipal officials in this Kent and Germany, was headed by Sen\ntown sold 560 pounds of bus driv- ator Wishart Robertson. Senate\ners' uniforms for \u00a39, I Speaker.\nBy Jimmy Hado\nWHV DIDN'T SHE\nTURN HER BACK\n1DTOEU6HT?0R\nISTH\/ATC50-C\/.RT\nOP HERS STUCK\nIM THE CEMBJT?,\n*5.\nk\nI\nS\nTodoy's Bible\nThought\nEven unto th Is present hour we\n. . . labour with own hands, \u2014 I\nCod. 4:11, 12.\nQiwL 2isL\n, Ne.u- blame a man for his funny\nIdeas. You can't expect a pint\nmeasure to hold ^anything bigger\nthan a pint\nSKYSCRAPER   IN   M I L \\N-ThiS30.5tor>b\u00abiid.\nbig In Milan. Italy, is made entirely of concrete. Including an\nttomlo bomb shelter. Shops and offices occupy first nine stories\nV     and other 21 are devoted to private apartments.\nNEW YORK (AP)-Strikes in\nthe U. S. copper industry brought\nthe closing of a number of major\nfabricating plants last week and\nthe curtailment \"of operations, at\nothers.\nRevere Copper and Brass Inc.,\nthe largest independent brass mill,\nclosed plants, laying off 5300 men.\nChase Brass and Copper Co-, subsidiary of strikebound Kennecott\nCopper Corporation, announced it\nwould shut down- three of Its copper product mills, affecting the\njobs of 2000 men.\nFiguring it was preferable to\nshutting down, some fabricators\nreported, paying as much as 50\ncents for copper, compared with\nthe 36-cent price posted by the major producers.\nThe trade estimates that the\nstrikes against Kenecott, Phelps\nDodge and American Smelting and\nRefining have caused the loss of\n60.000 tons of copper so far.\nThe situation sent the price of\nNo. 2 copper wire scrap' up to 37\ncents a pound, the equivalent of\nmore than 42 cents a pound for the\nrefined copper which will be made\nfrom it.\nMajor metal prices:\nCopper\u201436 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign 36-46 cents, Nominal, New York.\nLead\u201413 cents a pound, New\nYork; 14.80 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc\u201412.50 cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis; 13 cents, New York.\nAluminum\u201423.20 cents a pound.\ningots, shipping,, point. Pigs 21.30\ncents.\nNickel\u201464.50 cents a pound,\nelectrolytic cathodes,' Port Col-\nborne, Ont, U. S. duty included.\nSilver\u201490.75 cents an ounce-\nNew York; 79 pence, London.\nTin\u201497.89 cents a pound, New\nYork.\nCanada by acquiring branch\nplants or subsidiaries,\" write R.\nP. Bower, London commercial\ncounsellor', in the .current issue of\nthe trade department's publication\n\"Foreign   Trade,\"\nBritish firms frequently establish Canadian plants to facilitate\nentry of their products to the market here.\n\"British Industries derive the\nidea of a Canadian branch factory\nfrom a number of sources,\" Mr,\nBower writes. \"Frequently it\nsprings from problems encountered in trying to export . . . Others\nare attracted by the opportunities\nwhich they see in Canada to use\nthe skills which they possess. . . .\nStill others may go to Canada to\nensure the supply of an essential\nraw material.\"\nAn exporter of weighing scales\nwas an example of the first group.\nExport of the complete scale to\nCanada proved uneconomical because of cost of shipping heavjr\nbalance castings.\nMAKES THEM  IN CANADA\nThe firm entered its product\ncompetitively on the Canadian\nmarket by opening s Canadian\nfoundry to make the castings and\nan assembly plant to instal Ithem\nin the balances made in England.\nEngineering and construction\ncomparies are in the group moving\nto Canada to use their skills. British- publishers have established\nnewsprint mills ln Canada ot ensure supply of raw material, and\nBritish asbestos users have developed asbestos properties here for\nthe same reasqn.\nBut British firms must study Canadian conditions carefully. Occasionally they overlook \"some\n.apparently trivial but frequently\nvital detail.\"    ,\n'\"The classic example is the British ffrm that approved plans for\na Canadian factory which provided bicycle storage but no parking\nlot.\" Mr. Bower adds.\n\"In some cases difficulties arise\nbecause management is recruited\nentirely from the United Kingdom\nand lacks experience in Canadian\nmethods and principles. . . . The\nemployment of qualified Canadians to run an essentially Cana-'\ndian. operation has generally proved the most successful.\"\nMi1. Bower estimated British Investment in Canada during 1954\nwas $133,000,000 about half of all\ninvestment, outside the United\nKingdom by British residents.\nj This was about twice the 1933\nBritish investment in Canada.\nAUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP)-Hear-\ning a fire engine go past, the referee at a boys' football match\nlooked around, for signs of fire.\nWhen he.turned back the football\nmatch was over. Both teams were\nrunning eargerly after the fire\ntruck.\n? MOVING?\nYou wouldn't trust your car to\nan inexperienced mechanic. \u2022\nWhy Trim\nYour Valuable. Furniture\nTo Inexperienced Mover*?\nYou.can move with confidence\nby entrusting your valuable,\nto our proven reliability and\nmahy year, of experience.\nPHONE 110.6\nUNITED\nTRUCKING\n& STORAGE LTD.\nAgent, for Allied Van Line,\n\"Canada's Master Movers\"\nNELSON, B.C.      .\nI\n ^^^^sp*\n^\u2014i\n^^ff\nIPP -        i    . \u25a0    pip M^pi^M^wip\n,:.\"U\u00ab!\n,,,,\u25a0\u25a0-.\u2022\u25a0.;\n5oo\\\nAt Our 53rd\nBirthday\nSHOE\nSALE\nSelections of\nWomen's Shoes\nPriced at\n$2.95,    $3-95\nand $4.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLeaden In Footfashion\nESTABLISHED 1902\nNEW SENATOR\nIS \"LEADER\" OF\nP.E.I. WOMEN\nCHARLOTTETOWN (CP)\u2014 Mrs\nFlorence Elsie Inman, whose personality is trademarked by her\nwinning smile, has become Canada's sixth woman senator.\nSenator Inman, who ooerates a\nhotel m Montague, P.E.I., was\nappointed to Canada's Upper\nHouse last Thursday but said she\n\"didn't think her new job will\nforce her to curtail any of her\npresent activities.\nNewlyweds fo\nMake Their Home\nIn Castlegar\nKINNAIRD - The Castlegar\nUnited Church was the scene of\na charming Summer wedding recently when Carol, daughter of\ntVIr, and Mrs. V.'Sorensen of Kinnaird, became the bride of Paul\nGergely, son of Mrs. H. Gergely\nand the late Mr. S. Gergely,\nThe church was beautifully decorated for the ceremony,, it which\nRev. L. C. Johnson of Castlegar\nofficiated.     .\nThe bride, who was given in\nmarriage by her father, wtjre a\nfloor-length gown of white embroidered net over satin, with lily\npoint sleeves and a dainty Peter\nPan collar, Her embroidered Ju\nliet cap held 'her fingertip\nlength veil. Her bouquet was of\nred roses and white carnations,\nand her single piece of jewelry\nwas a gold cross given to her by\nher bridegroom.\nMrs. J. Sorensen. sister-in-law\nof the bride, wore a teal blue net\nover taffeta gown with matching\njacket. She carried a bouquet of\npink and white carnations. Miss\nCaroline Hardie, the bridesmaid,\nwore a pink net dress with jacket.\nHer bouquet was of blue and\nwhite carnations.\nMrs. J. E. Wallace was organist and Miss Sherril Riley was\nsoloist, singing, \"I'll Walk Beside\nYou\"  during  the  signing  of the\nNelson Social\nPHONE 1844\nMagistrate   and   Mrs.   William General Hospital.\nBrown have as their guest at their\nSummer home on the North Shore,\nthe   grandson,   Ian   Isbister   of\nCampbell Hlver.\nJoseph McMullin at Procter left\nSunday to visit his old home ln T\nSydney, Nova Scotia. This will be\nhis first visit to his native province in 4*7 years.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. H. C. Danckaa of\nAuberry, Calif., have been the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hesse\n224 Baker Street.\n\u2022 *       \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. H. Bradley have\nreturned *o their 'home at 419\nMaple Street from High River and\nCalgary where they visited relatives.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Enid Prime, 418 Gore St.,\nand Miss Kay Maras, Granite\nRoad, are holidaying in San Francisco and other California points.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. L. Gustafson,\n54 Douglas Road, have returned\nfrom a holiday at Vancouver and\nPortland where they visited\nfriends and relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Day and family,\n812 Ward Street, are spending\ntheir holidays with Mrs. Day's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. A. Wood of Regina.\nG. S. Inman of the Prince county\ncourt in 1910 and has four sons\nPOLITICAL  DEBUT\nA fourth-generation Canadian,\nSenator Inman made her first appearance in politics in 1917 when\nshe spearheaded a drive for wo'\nmen to vote,\nShe wasn't eligible to vote her\nself but women who had sons or\nhusbands serving in the armed\nforces were given a vote She\nurged them to go to the polls.\nIn 1922 she carried her campaign Ted  Gergely  responding.\nto the Prince Edward Island legislature   and   convinced   it   of  the\nwomen's right.\nDuring the Second World War\nFor her going away costume\nMrs. Gergely changed to a tailored\ngrey suit with red and white ac\ncessories   and   a   corsage   of   red\nher   sons   served   in   the   armed roses and white carnations.\nMrs. W. Bay, 924 Ward Street,\nhas as her guests her son Leonard\nBay of Riondel, and Miss Lillian\nMr .and Mrs. C. Fraser, daugh\nter Vivian, 808 Vernon Street, are\nholidaying in the Okanagan.\nToday at 63 her black hair show\nIng only a trace of grey, Senator, register.\nInman is the recognized leader of | \u2022 Mr, Ted Gergely was his broth-\nPrince   Edward   Island's   women, j Gr-S best man, and Mr. Bob and\nShe is the provincial president nfjMr   j0hn   Sorensen,   the   bride's i Chahley of Grand Forks,\nthe  Women's Liberal  Association; brothers,   were   ushers.   Mr.   Bill \"    *    '\nand   a. vice-president  of  the  na- Easton was the escort.\ntional association. j    a   reception   was   held   at   the\nBorn in West River, in Queen's: Twin Rivers Hall for 80 guests,\ncounty, she married the late judge The young couple were assisted\nin receiving the guests by the\nbride's mother and the groom's\nmother. Mrs. Sorensen wore a\ndress of pink lace over taffeta\ni with white accessories and a cor-\nj sage of , blue carnations. The\nj groom's mother wore black lace\nover pink taffeta with pink ac-\nI cessories and corsage 0f P'n^ caf\"\n' nations.\nMr. George Santano proposed\nthe toast to the bride. Mr. Jolyi\nSherbiko proposed the toast to\nthe   bride's  attendants,   with   Mr\nMr. and Mrs. E. Swanson, 822\nVictoria Street, have as their\nguests the former's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nSwanson and family of Nanaimo.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, 1955 \u2014 5\nAmong the Nelson guests who\nattended the Chamber of Commerce and Board of Trade trip to\nTrout Lake over the weekend\nwere Harry Burns, Mr. and Mrs\nV. C. Owen. Mr. and Mrs. P. H.\nHoskins, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd C.\nAffleck, H. D. Harrison and sons\nBill and Bob, Mr. and Mrs. V.\nKilleen, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. McEwen, Mr. and Mrs. A. Anderson.\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Coleman, Mr.\nand Mrs. John Learmonth, W.\nRoy Hunter, Fraser Tees, J. G.\nWatson, Miss Barbara Lang. Miss\nLeona Boss and R. J. Wood.\nforces and she took an active part\nin Canadian Legion, Red Cross\nand blood-donor work.\nUpon their return from their\nhoneymoon Mr. a\/id Mrs. Gergely\nwill live in Castlegar.\nMr.  and  Mrs.   Lorne  Kennedy,\n217 Beasley Street, are holidaying\nin Calgary.\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nD. E. Sweet, 614 Fourth Street,\nis   a   patient   in   Kootenay   Lake\nMrs. M. Colman, 823 Vernon\nStreet, is spending a month holidaying in Vancouver and Campbell River.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. R. Dunwoody, 806 Second Street, is a patient in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. Norah Martin and son Eddie, 305 Beasley Street, have left\nfor Nanaimo where Eddie will\nattend vocational school. Mrs.\nMartin will visit friends in Victoria and Vancouver before returning. !\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. F. H. Smith, 711\nCottonwood Street, have as their\nguests their daughter, Mrs. Jack\nKyle and her children Nancy and\nSheila of Vancouver.\n\u2022      .   .    -\nMr. and Mrs. G. F. Wood, 913\nThird Street, have as their guests\ntheir- daughter, Mrs. R. J. Neville\nand her son Drewe of Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Dyke. 207\nHigh Street, have returned from\nVancouver and Southern Oregon\nwhere they vHted relatives.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. Canon and Mrs. W. J. Silverwood, 521 Fourth Street, are\nholidaying in Vancouver, where\nthey are visiting friends and relatives.\n* *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. S. Ramsay have\nas guests Mrs. Ramsay's father;\nH. D. Dawson of Victoria, and\nuncle, W. G. Dawson of Hereford,\nEngland.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Milligan and\nson Jim, 814 Kootenay Street,\nhave returned from Nakusp where\nthey visited Mr. Million's brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs.\nR. E. West.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. W. V. Joyce and\nfamily, have returned to their\nhome at 717 Hall Street from a\ntwo week vacation at Christina\nLake.\n* \u2022   \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. M.  E. Bradshaw and  two\nJUST ARRIVED!\nTOAST OF CANADA ii 17-year-old Marilyn\nBell .above, who Sunday became the youngest\nswimmer to.conquer the English Channel, The\nToronto school girl, swimming strongly against\nswift currents and strong tides, made it In 14\nhours ano 38 minutes. Her bunt of speed for tha\nlast 200 yards amazed spectators on Dover\nbeach.'\nRecipes...\nQov't Has Answers to\nQueries About Cheese\nTROPICANA\nDresses\nBy   MARGARET CARR\nAmong   the   foods   which   men\nhave   created    for    their   dining\npleasure, cheese is unique in many\nways.\nNo other family of foods is so\nvaried or so numerous. None is\nmore universally known and en-\n! joyed. None is'so old, except but-\n| ter, a sister dairy product which\nmade its appearance at about the\nsame time.\nFor more than 80 years Ched-\nchildren, who have been visiting-dar cheese made in Canada has\nMrs. J. C. Bradshaw, 405 Falls i been world ^^0^ for its quality.\nStreet, left Sunday for their homej Vet we Canadians eat very little\nin Vancouver. {cheese   in   comparison   with   the\n. \u2022   \u2022   * j people   of  some   other  countries.\nG. A. Brown, 924 Silica Street,] The home economists of. the con-\nis a patient in Kootenay Lake,turner section, Canada Depart-\nGeneral Hospital. merit   of   Agriculture,   are   often\n\u2022   *   \u2022 | asked questions about cheese, and\nGeorge Truscott of Vancouver,'they  thought  you  mighj  like  to\n'jrmer  Nelson  city  employee,  is | know some of the answers too. So\nin   Nelson   and i here are the questions most fre-\n' quently asked, and the answers.\nFormer Nelson\nGirl Married\n41 Vancouver\nisiting   friends\n:\" strict\nMr.   and   Mrs.  A.   B.  Marshall.\n\"?orth Shore, have as their guest\nV. and Mrs. A. Mason of Noble-\nord, Alta.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Council of\n'.he federation of chambers of commerce of the British Empire has\nconfirmed the change in its name\nto the federation of Commonwealth and British Empire chambers of commerce.\n18 CHEESE GRADED?\nUnder the Dairy Products Act,\nthe Department of Agriculture is\nresponsible for the standard of\ncomposition and grades of cheese.\nInspections are continually being\nmade by departmental inspectors\nwherever cheese is sold. Cheddar\nis the only cheese which is graded,\nand the grades are Canada first,\nsecond, third, a,nd below third. In\ngrading cheese, it is scored on the\nfollowing points: Flavor, texture,\nMILLINERY CLEARANCE\nGROUP  1\nReg.  5.95  and  6.95.  Smart summer  straws,\nwhite and pastel shades, n   QO\nSPECIAL.   Each     S*V^\nLarge\n1.99\nGROUP 2\nReg.  2.99 and 4.95  Summer straws\nvariety of styles and colors.\nSPECIAL, Each  .   .\nSUMMER SKIRTS\nReg. 3.98. Cotton Skirts, wide variety of\npatterns and colors. Sizes 12 to 18. | QQ\nSpecial Each     I . >>\nA repeat shipment of the all\nyear round, ever popular\nTropicanas. Over 200'\ndresses to choose from in\nyour favorite shades, styles\nand fabric. Sizes 12 to 20\nand 16\/2 to 24Vi. '\nSUMMER DRESS\nCLEARANCE\n1\/3 Off Regular Price\nDresses priced at 6.95, 9.95. 12.95 now Offered at great savings. Shop and save. Sizes\n12 to \\B in a variety of styles and colors.\nSUMMER CAPS\nReg. '1.89. Women's Sport Caps with peak,\nplain colors and fancy patterrts. QQ\nSpecial .......     .7\/\nDENIM SHORTS\nWbnten's denim shorts, assorted plain shades.\n1.99\nSizes 12 to 20.\nSpecial\n-By TRACY ADaiAN\nHERE'8 A COOL and comfortable outfit for a day on the\ninks, and It's one that is designed for plenty of freedom of move-\nnent as well as for getting a nice tan. Ppt Blake, pretty Hollywood starlet, selected this cqstumc for her own personal wardrobe. It consists of a cotton, sleeveless shirt trimmed down the\nfront with a clan tartan Imported from England. The little collar\nand the short shorts are In the tartan. On the bgTk 6f her head,\nnot quite visible, is a white hat trimmed with the plaid,\ncloseness, color and finish, with\nflavor being considered the most\nimportant. Although as yet very\nlittle Canadian Cheddar cheese is\nsold according, to grade in the\nstores, consumers' can rest assured\nthat they are buying cheese of\ngood quality, for most of it comes\nup to the Canada first standard.\nHOW DOE8 CHEESE\nACQUIRE ITS COLOR?\nThe natural color of cheese is a\ndeep rich cream, but under Cana-\nfian  food  and  drugs regulations\ncertain edible vegetable colorings\nmay be added. The amount of coloring is not stipulated, but if the\ncheese were too brightly colored\nit would not be as appealing.\nTo mahy of us Cheddar cheese\nIt   known   simply  as   Canadian\ncheese. Why Is this?\nCheddar  has  always  been  the\nprincipal cheese made in Canada,\nand   was   probably   called   Canadian cheese by way of distinction\nfrom  the  cheese   of  other  countries,\nIs all Cheddar cheese aged?\nAnd why Is \"old\" Cheddar\ncheese' more expensive than\neither \"medium\" or \"mild\"\nCheddar?\nCanadian f<*>d and drugs regulations stipulate that cheese made\nfrorn^ unpasteurized milk must be\nstored for a minimum of 60' days\nbefore it is sold. To eliminate\nthe necessity for holding the\ncheese this length of time, a considerable amount of Cheddar is\nnow being made from pasteurized\nmilk. It is used in making prooess\ncheese and is also sold as \"mild\"\nCheddar. \"Medium\" and \"old\" or\n\"nippy\" cheese are made from un\npasteurized milk and are aged to\ndevelop the desired flavor. \"Medium\" cheese is aged for several\nmonths and \"old\" cheese for\nyear or more. The care required\nin aging cheese, the cost of storing it and the natural shrinkage,\nthat is, loss of weight during stor\nage, are reasons for the higher\nprice of \"old\" cheese.\nCream cheese is a snowy-white,\nsoft-textured, delicately flavored\ncheese which contains more moisture and more fat than other\ncheese. The moisture content cannot be more than 60 per cent. It\nIs an unripened cheese, that Is,\nsold as soon as it is made. In\nmaking it, the milk is enriched\nby adding cream. Cream cheese is\npasteurized but it is perishable\nand must be kept refrigerated the\nsame as milk and cream.\nWHAT IS PROCE88 CHEESE?\nThere are two types of process\ncheese. The one that is most commonly known as process is made j\nfrom Cheddar or other hard,\ncheese. It may contain not more j\nthan 43 per cent moisture, which j\nis about 10 per cent more than j\nCheddar cheese. To make this'\ncheese, Cheddar or other hard!\ncheese is ground, blended and pasteurized, then poured into'the\npackage to harden. This cheese is\nsofter in texture than Cheddar\ncheese and can be either sliced \u2022\nor spread. The other type of\nprocess cheese -is made from a\ncream cheese _base and has the\nsame moisture and fat composition as cream cheese.\nSome process- cheese sold in\nglass or plastic containers spreads\nvery easily. This softer cheese,\nsometimes called spread, has the\nsame amount of water and fat in\nit as firmer process cheese. The\nlabel tells whether it is a process\nCheddar or process cream cheese.\nSUMMER\nFURNITURE\n20% OFF\njMsmcinJ&\\\nFor Parents .  . .\nTeasing Child\nMay Feel Inferior\nBy Garry Cleveland Myers, Ph.D\nMost of us constantly strive to\nfeel worthwhile and to cause\nothers \"to think that we are. Of j\ncourse, it may not be our conscious purpose to do so. Human\nnature prompts us to seek proof\nof our self-importance.\nOne way we have, when we\nare not watching ourselves, of\ngaining a feeling of self-importance, is by annoying others with\nteasing. When we tease another\nperson, we consider him less Important than we are, or try to kid\nourselves and others that he is.\nThe more annoyed or embarrassed\nhe becomes, the more sure we are\nof our own superiority.\nAccordingly, a husband takes .\n\"dig\" at his wife ln the presence\nof others, under the guise of\nhumor. Or his wife may be the\nteaser. Next time you attend a\nsmall, informal social gathering,\nwhere there are numerous marked couples, notice how often this J\nhappens.\nYou should also prohibit children from teasing one another\nexcessively if you can. But this is\nnot easy. Punishment is only a\ntemporary measure. You should\ntry to discover the real cause of\nthe teasing.\nUsually, the teaser Is the eldest\nchild or the one next to the baby.\nTeasing gives him a feeling of\nself-importance. The more the\nchild who is teased is annoyed,\nthe   greater   the   satisfaction   the\nPink, white and blue Summer\nblossoms adorned St. Nichols\nChurch in- Vancouver Heights for\nthe marriage of Carolyn Grace\nCavill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. P. Cavill, and Roger Charles\nMorrisey, son of Mrs. J. T. Mor-\nrisey and the late Mr, Mnrrisey\nThe bride and her family are\nformerly of Nelson.\nThe white bridal gown cut on,\nclassic, simple  lines  was  in  bal-iteaser SBins- Punishment is a way\n1 of   getting   attention,   which   he\nlerina style. It featured \" embroidered lace flowers on the\nfrosted bodice and skirt. A jacket\nhad long lily-pointed sleeves. Her\nFrench illusion veil was held in\nplace by a Jeweled fairy princess j\ncrown. I\nRev. J. Davis performed thej\nceremony. Miss Marguerite Cavill\nyas maid of honor, Miss Jeani\nMorrisey, bridesmaid, and little I\nJoanne Cavill was flower girl.\nMr. John Morrisey was best\nman, and ushers were Mr. William\nSeabrook and Mr. Stanley Carlyle.\nSoloist was Mr. Charles Cavill of\nHaney.\nCOLOR  SCHEME\nThe bridal attendants were\ndressed alike in blue crystallette\nsilk, princess styled gowns with\npush-up sleeves coming down\nfrolm the off-the-shoulder necklines. They wore blue flower headdresses. The flower girl completed the white, pink and blue\ntheme. Her short pink embroidered nylon dress was lace trimmed,\nand she wore a band of pink\nflowers in her hair.\nMr. C. H. Bland of South Slocan\nproposed the toast to the bride at\na reception in Lochdale hall,\namong out-of-town guests were\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley Carlyle,\nVancouver Island; Mr, and Mrs. C\nCavill, Haney; Miss Gwen Cavill\nLytton; Mrs. M. Croll, Nelson, and\nMr. and Mrs. Bland and Miss\nJoyce Bland from South Slocan\nThe bride and groom will make\ntheir home in Vancouver after\nwedding trip to the Interior,\nmay    consider    far\nlittle or none at all.\nbetter   than\nDior's Woman\nSimply Dressed\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Christian\nDior, high priest of Paris fashion\nwho exploded the New Look, the\nA- and H-lines on the world's bewildered womanhood, has decided\nto peacefully co-exist with the female anatomy with his latest creation \u2014 the \"Y\" line.\nIn an Interview prior to the\nshowing of his Winter collection\nlater today, he plumped for the\ncurvy woman \"unhidden by layers\nof cloth.\"\nMiss Y-Girl of 1955 wiH have\nthe males 'stopping in the street\nto admire her full, round shoulders\n\u2014\"the shoulders of a happy woman,\" said Dior \u2014 and her curvet\naccentuated by a high waist just\nbelow the bosom.\nBut no more A- and H-line* A*\nDior. That's passe. The accent now1\nwill be on the \"simply dressed\"\nwoman who looks like a woman\nand not a human string bean, he\nsaid.\n~m - \u25a0 - - - * I\nPAKISTAN  WOOLLENS\nKARACHI (CP) \u2014 Woollen textile mills, in Pakistan produced\n7,500,000 pounds of yarn last year,\ncompared with 1,140,000, pounds in\n1951. Officials said that when several new mills begin production\nPakistan will be self-sufficient in\nwoollen and worsted goods.\nWHAT A GREAT        I\nDIFFERENCE (\nIN   A  PERSON'*\nAPPEARANCE I\nAN EXPERTLY PRESSED |\nOUTFIT CAN MAKE!     \u25a0\n321\nEMPIRE\nDRY CLEANERS\nBakef- Phont\nHIGHEST QUALITY\nLOWEST PRICES\nYour Future Heating Comfort\nCon Be Assured!\nIf you are planning, building or buying your home,\nconsider your future comfort and install o\nROCKETGAS\nAutomatic Forced Air Furnace\nEconomical, yet luxurious forced air heating will\ngive you years of satisfaction . . . available in a\nwide range of sizes, they are easily installed in\nbasement, attic, utility room or under the floor.\nCompletely automatic. \u25a0\nROCKETGAS HEATING\nIS CLEAN, EFFICIENT, SAFE, ECONOMICAL\nGET THE FACTS BEFORE YOU BUY!\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n\"Your Home Planning Center\"\n532 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 1555\n '.\u25a0,;\u25a0\" .' -' i\"\n.': .>;\u25a0,!;'\u25a0\nS^f^ff\n\u25a0 \u25a0* \u25a0   . \"\"\"\"\" ' \"\u2014:\u2014' :\u2014  : '\u25a0',  \u25a0_ .\nV.     .' .\u25a0'\u25a0'    ' t     \" . '\"\u25a0 . , \"\u25a0     \\v. *    '*i\",.'fc'    \u25a0 \u25a0'\u2022\\ \"V .\u25a0'.'\u25a0\u25a0 ... .   ...      \u25a0:\u25a0\":'\nmk\n.NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, 1955\nUr\nSeattle Girl\nfins Osoyoos\n(eaufy Contest\nsOSOYOOS, B.C. CCP.-Jackle\nLeo McDonald ol Seattle, Wash.,\nwaa named winner of the Oroville.\nLak,, Osoyoos-Apple Valley beau-\ncontest held in conjunction\nWith the fourth annual regatta.\nMiss McDonald will receive an\nall-expenses paid trip to Hawaii\nind then go to Atlanta City,\nGeorgia, to compete in the Miss\nUniverse contest  '\nInns Handberg, winner of the\nOaoyoos Cherry carnival title July\nwas runner-up.\n'Jfigh winds postponed the regatta for two hours.\n^fogpld Coelho won the Orovllle-\nApple Valley trophy for the third\ndbnsecutive time in his 266 cubic-\ntoch hydro inboard, Cherokee.\nK. p. Gllber of Alhambra,-Calif,\nwas second and Jimmy- McGuire of\nNorth Vancouver was third in his\nMercury VII.\nNorm Christiansen of Seattle\nstfoa. the Harwood trophy with his\nB\u00a7\u00bbf Checkmate. Chuck Hickling,\ndefending trophy holder, was sec-\nond.-\nAluminum Pig and\nIngot Prices Up\nPITTSBURGH (AP)\u2014Tlie Aluminum Company of America\nMonday Increased its prices for\naluminum pig and aluminum ingot.\nThe Increase follows an average\n16-cent hourly wage Increase\ngranted 25,000 workers last week\nThe company increased 99-per\ncent\u2014minimum average pig one\ncent a pound and aluminum ingot\n1.2 cents per pound. This bring,\nthe base price for standard 99-percent aluminum pig to 22.5 cents a\npound and the price of 99-perv-cent\ningot to 24.4 cents.\nEarth Satellites\nInterest Russia\n..\" MOSCOW (AP)\u2014Soviet Oom-\nmunlst chief Nlklta Khrushchev\neald Monday night that If President  Elsenhower's  earth  sate!\n; Mtes program Is \"In the Interests\n'-ef mankind, then the 8ovlet government Is always prepared to\nsupport It\"\nThe  party chieftain  told  re-\n\u00ab porters at a 8wlu legation reception, however, that he did not\nhave details of Elsenhower's\nprogramr ond could not be more\nSpeolflo.\nTha American announcement\nhaa not yet been reported In\neither the Soviet press or radio.\nCanadian Envoy\nTo Argentina\nI BUENOS AIRES (CP)\u2014The Argentine government has approved the appointment of Louis-\nPhilippe Picard as Canada's ambassador here, the Canadian embassy announced Monday.\nPicard, 56-year-old Liberal member of Parliament from Belle-\nchasse, Que., replaces Maj.-Gen.\nL. R. LaFleche who left here June\n18 for Canada after serving as ambassador for three ^ears. LaFleche\nplans to retire.\nEmbassy sources here said they\nhave no information as to when\nPicard will arrive to take up his\nduties. Until his arrival C. S. Bls-\nsett, Canada's Charge d'Affaires.\nis ln temporary charge of the embassy.\nVACANT 8EATS\nAppointment of Mr. Picard as\nambassador to Argentina raises\nto five the number of vacant seats\nin the House of Commons.\nThree Liberal, members\u2014Dave\nCroll, Toronto Spadina, Hon. C. G,\nPower, Quebec South, and Jean\nFrancois Pouliot, Temiscouata\nwere elevated to the Senate last\nweek.\nAnother Liebral, J. G. Boucher,\nmember for Restigouche-Mada-\nwaska,  died  last spring.\nBy-elections to fill at least\nthree vacancies\u2014ln Quebec South\nTemiscouata and Restigouche\nMadawaska\u2014are expected to be\nJield Sept. 26.\nPlanning to move? Call ire\nfirst Our modern vans and\n\u25a0killed movers assure a SAFE\nmove wherever you go. We\nere agents for North American Van Lines, America's\nleading long distance moving\norganization. It costs no more\nto enjoy this finer servlcel\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.\nNelson. B.C.\nPhona 3?\nRemand Yesny\nCase to 10th\nLETHBRIDGE (CP) \u2014 FeWr\nMorrison, charged with the mm*'\nder last May 7 of Norman Yesny\njust outside of Calgary, was remanded until Aug. 10 when he\napepared before Magistrate E. D\nFryett in RCMP court here today\nMorrison was arrested July 14 in\nStockton, Calif., where he was\ncharged with illegal entry into the\nUnited States and was deported\nto Canada.\nYesny's body was found bound\nad gagged and thrown into a ditch\non the old Banff coach road. He\nhad been shot twice in the head,\nThe reason for the remand, the\nRCMP said, is because authorities\nare not ready for the trial in Calgary. When the case is prepared\nMorrison will be tried in Calgary.\nMisses Shots But\nCor Piles Up\nVANCOUVER (CP)An autolst\nwho ignored three shots fired by\na Vancouver police officer early\nMonday piled his car up in Burnaby a short time later.\nConstable R. H. Irving said he\nstopped the speeding auto twice,\nbut that each time his quarry\nraced away when he got out of\nhis patrol car.\nRCMP in Burnaby said a 20\nyear-old youth who ran his car\ninto a ditch first reported the\nvehicle had been stolen, but later\nadmitted he was the driver chased\nby the Vancouver officer. \u25a0\nJohns-Manvil\ntSsGxaatt\nRotproof, wearproof, weatherproof.\nFor free booklet tee your J-M dealer,\nor write Canadian Johns-Manville,\nDept. N-54, 565 Lalceihore Rd. E.,\nPort Credit, Ont.\nMfifeptoofl\nSEE YOUR NEAREST J-M DEALER\nT. H. Waters Co. Ltd.\n101 Hall St.\nPhone 156\nat\nWe Are Featuring\nPrices Effective Tues., Aug. 2 to Sat., Aug. 6th Inclusive.\nFIN EST QUALITY GRADE \"A\" BEEF for tender eating. Its satisfying tenderness will convince you that LIBERTY, is THE place\nfor the finest Meat that money can buy. Cut in precooled room wrapped in sanitary cello for your persoriel buying.'Why not\n\u2022join the thousands of customers today and every day Shop and Save at LIBERTY... Now, complete food floor. Our 5c to $1\nwill be open soon. Deposit accounts over $50 carries a 1 % bonus. Delivery 20c - Phone service and delivery 30c.\nPOT\nROASTS\nx RED LABEL, GRADE \"A.\"\nGuaranteed to satisfy.\nlb 3 5'\nBeef Front\nShoulders\nWrapped. Cut for home freezers.\nRED LABEL, GRADE \"A.\" .\t\nlb. 32c\nRoiled Brisket\nRED LABEL.\nFor extra goodness.\t\nlb.39e\nCROSS\nRIB ROAST\n1 RED LABEL, GRADE \"A.\nFinest money can buy....\nIb.49\nUnion Regular\nWhole\nor Half.\nIb. 59\nThe tenderness and flavor will win his heart.\nDelecated Steak Jui\u00aby, tender,\u00ab\u00bbwith a fork.   lb. 69c\nRound Steak\nlb. 69c\nRED LABEL,\nGRADE \"A.'\nOnce Tried ... You'll Agree\nIt's LIBERTY For All Your Meats.\nWEINERS\nSWIFT'S Finest.\t\nBOLOGNA\nBy the Piece. ______\u2014\nGOLD MEATS\nVak Pak. Maple Leaf Quality. V_ lb. pkg.\nJ lbs. only ft 5\u00b0\n\u2014lb. 27'\n35'\nCanadian Cheese \u2014 Mild \u2014 lb. 50\nFRESH DILL PICKLES, PICKLED PIGS FEET, POTATO SALAD, ROASTED CHICKEN AT ALL TIMES.\t\nThe Best Place To Go, Wise Shoppers Say... \"For Meats You Know That's Good V Tender... Shop at LIBERTY\"\n10 Special Reasons To Come To Liberty For Your Shopping.\nPerJt Up Your Salads and Savings With These 10 Perky-Fresh Produce at Prices\nYou Can Afford. LIBERTY ... The Place For,Freshness.'\nO.K. Field\nCUCUMBERS\nlb. 14c\n10 Ib. lots for pickling, $1.29\nGREEN PEPPER HTSS-,\nLasaksit Cherriest\nTasty Okanagan\nFIELD\nTOMATOES\nlb.23\njib. 25c\n29*\nNo. 1 O.K. Luscious and flavorful. Lb.\n20 Ib. lug, $5.29\nRed Raspberries: >y      _tQ*\nLocal. For your freezer, jam, tarts. \u2122  for  *** ^\nCase of 24 Baskets, $3.95\nElbert a Freestone Peaches: S^'28\nFor canning. Approx. 18 lb. lug     mm\n. For Slicing: 3 Ib. Basket, Each 59c\nCanning Apricots; $1.98\nFresh for eating, preserving. Ap. 14 lb. case       \u25a0\nDelicious Apples:        3      _)_)*\nor Cooking Apples.   ***  lbs. ^m^\nOkanagan ... Full Flavor.\n!   Corn ..... Doz. 95c\nBoneIeSj(hicKe\",J\nJellied Chicken\n7 oz. tin\nSandwich Spread\n3 oz.\n2 tins 27c\nChicken Stew\nBlnus; 1 whole chicken\nwing with dumpling, vegetables, broth.  15 oz. tin\nSALMON SALAD\n37'\n60'\nChicken a la King\nHeat 'n' serve on toast.\n15 oz. tin\n49c\nV,  lb.   sockeye   salmon, 1 teaspoon minecd\nflaked green onion\n1 teaspoon lemon juice V* cup chopepd ripe olivi\n1 cup diced celery 4 pineapple rings.\nCombine 'all ingredients evcept pineapple, season with\nsalt. Just before serving, toss lightly with mayonnaise to\nmoisten. Place pineapple ring on crisp greens, top with\nmound of salmon. Garnish with tomato sections, slice of\nlemon and hard-cooked egg. Makes 4 servings.\nRED SOCKEYE SALMON:\nRiverdale. 7% oz. tin\t\nSOUR CREAM:      33*\nGlenburn's. Pt. ctn  \"\u25a0?. \u25a0* '     Qt. en.\nCOTTAGE CHEESE: JQ*\nGlenburn's. Large curd. Serve with fresh fruits. ..\u25a0\u25a0'*\nGRISCO: 2     69*\nShortening. .: \u2022 *\"  lbs. ** *\nMIRACLE WHIP:       \u2022 77*\nSalad dressing. 32 oz .- -\u25a0\u2022\u2022 \u00bb\t\nSALAD OIL: \u00bb2'M\nPlanter's. Gallon '.. ,      \u2022\nFRIED CHICKEN\nSwanson's Complete Dinner:\nWith;vegetables and potatoes.  . \t\nSHRIMP:\nGulf Pearl, 5 oz. tin  \u2014  ,\u2014\nCRABMEAT:\nReddi-Whip:\nCream in a jiffy. Tin .\nCherry or Apple Pies:\nSwansdh's. Jl in a pkg\t\n95*\n39'\n65'\n57'\n39*\n m\n.:             -mum^\npit ^m\n\u2122^\u2122\n-I l   \u2022      ..v.\nrfSPjgEfif'\u25a0 ',   \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022\n\u25a0S8&3\nfspimall Divers Working af\nTwenty Below Lauded by Navy\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Some of the\nhazards encountered by navy divers were described Monday in an\nannouncement of their commendation by navy headquarters tor\n''excellent work under adverse\nconditions\".\nDivers were commended tor\nraising airplanes which had\ncrashed in lakes near Gimli, Man.,\nUnd Brooks, Alta., and for surveying a lighthouse foundation near\nthe mouth of Quebec's Sagudhay\nRiver.\nA crew led by Cpo. William E.\nCubitt, 39, of Chauvin, Alta., and\nVictoria, dealt with below-z^ro1\nweather, four feet of ice and seven\nfeet of mud in an April search for\nthe wreckage of a T-33 jet trainer\nwhich disintegrated when it\ncrashed into Lake Winnipeg, 13\nmiles from shore, near Gimli.\nLargest fragment they found\nwas only two feet square. Sharp\nmetal \u00abpieces tore the rubberized\ndiving suits, which were patched\n13 times during the operation. The\nmen spent 60 hours under-water.\nThe foilr-man team made 24 dives,\naveraging 2^ hours each.\nSurface temperatures ranged\ndown tp 20 below during the operation, halted after two weeks'\nsearch when weather broke up the\ngurface ice. More than 2000 pounds\nof aircraft fragments were raked\nup and hoisted to the surface in\nwire baskets\nHARVARD CRASH LAST MAY\nA Harvard trainer crashed into\nLake Newell, near Brooks, in May,\nand divers under Lt.-Cmdr. Philip\nHenry, 33, of Calgary and Victoria,\nrecovered it. Mud, ice and Chinook winds complicated the task.\nThey spent 117 hours under water, making 58 individual dives.\nBoth teams were from the navy's\ndiving and explosive training\ncentre at Esquimalt, B. C.   '\nDenies Plane\nShot Down\nJet\nby\nFighters\nModel\nFM-2-LM\n_J329\u00b0\u00b0\nHere's the electric range\nwith everything you've ever\nwanted; huge oven, 4 super-\nspeed elements with pushbutton controls, completely\nautomatic oven, fluorescent\nlight. Best value ever in 30'\nelectric Tauge with automatic cooking. See it soon at\nBENNETTS LTD.\n324 Vernon St.\nNelton, B.C.\nATHENS (AP)\u2014Israel's diplonv\natic representative in Greece has\ndenied reports that the Israeli airliner shot down in Bulgaria was\ndowned by jet fighters.\nBulgaria previously admitted\nthat her anti-aircraft gunners\ndowned the Constellation of the El\nA.* Israel Airlines Wednesday.\nFifty-eight persons, including four\nCanadians, died when the plane\ncrashed in flames near the Greek\nborder.\nJoel Balki, an El Al executive,\nwas quoted in reports from Salonika Sunday as saying \"the downing of the airliner obviously was\nthe outcome of a murderous attack\nperpetrated with beastly coldbloodedness by two Bulgarian\nMiGKype fighters.\" Balki, who\nhad just returned from an inspection of the wreckage, was reported\nto have said he noted machine-\ngun-riddled fragments of the\nplane.\nThe Israeli diplomat heVe, Ben\nJacov, said the Calonika report\nwas \"completely unfounded.\"\nBalki was a member of an Israeli\ncommission that investigated the\nincident. Other members who returned to Athens declined to comment on his remarks.\nStorms Subdue\nVolcanoes\nCanada's Machinery\nOn Way To Karachi\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014A consignment of $2,500,000 worth of heavy\nconstruction equipment was loaded Monday on ty\/O freighters\nbound for Karachi, Pakistan.\nThe equipment, a Colombo plan\ngift fyom -Canada, will be used in\nthe construction of a hydro-power\nand irVigation project on the Ka\nbul River, near the entrance,, to\nthe .Khyber pass tn northwest Pakistan. \u2022\nThe irrigation project will cover\n93,000 acres of land to' be used to\ngrt>w crops.\nN.Z. OVERSEAS SALES\nSHOW OVER-ALL DROP\nWELLINGTON, N. Z. (Reuters)\n\u2014New Zealand had an over-a\ndeficit of \u00a342,300,000 in overseas\nexchange* transactions for the year\nended June, 1955, compared with\na surplus of \u00a325,200,000 in the pre\nvious year.\nBy comparison with May, the\nJune receipts this year fell by\n\u00a35,800,000, mainly due to decreases in cheese and wool. Total pay>\nments, on the other hand, rose\nslightly by \u00a32,200,000. The New\nZealand pound is at par with sterling, worth $2.80,   \u25a0\nVALDIVIA, Chile (AP)\u2014Public\nWorks Minister Alejandro Schwar-\nter said today rain and strong\nwinds have improved conditions\nnear Valdivia, where three erupting volcanoes have caused hun-\ndr.es _to flee their homes.\nReturning to Sanitago from an\ninspection of the area, Schwerter-j niversary of anything in Canada,\ndenied unofficial reports that two\npersons had been asphyxiated by\npoisonous fumes from the volcanoes. The gases were dispersed by\nwinds, he said, and there have\nbeen no earth tremors for two\ndays.\nSome refugees now want to return to the homes they fled, the\nminister safd. But the volcanoes\nstill are erupting. Mt. Choshuenco,\nMt. Nilahue and Mt. Rinihue are\nspewing lava and ash over* a wide\nstretch of farmland, 470 miles\nsouth of Santiago.\nMassey Urges\nCanada to\nSave Monuments\nTwo Men Escape\nDeath in\nRunaway Truck\nLYTTON, B.C. (CP)-The story\nof a miraculous escape from serious injury was told here Monday\nafter two men survived an 80-mile-\nan-^iour crash on the mountainous\nCariboo highway and came to rest\nin their truck on the brink of a\n400-foot drop.\nIn good condition in hospital\nhere with lacerations is James\nWard, 52, of Vancouver.\nHis companion, 'Harry Siemsen,\n26, only slightly bruised described\ntheir hair-raising ride in a runaway truck along the Fraser river\ncanyon near here.\nOUT OF CONTROL\nSeimens said they started down\na steep hill at about 10 miles an\nhour.\n\"When I tried to gear down,\nthe differential gave out,\" said\nSiemens.\n\"Then the brake pedal broke,\nthe emergency brake failed and\nthe truck ran out of control down\nthe hill.\n\"When it came to the curve at\nthe bottom, we were going 8(\nmiles an hour.\"\nThe truck, loaded with tele\nphone equipment bound for White\nhorse, plunged down a bank, turned over end for end, and came to\nrest against a tree overlooking a\n400-foot drop into the Fraser.\nANNAPOLIS ROYAL, N.S. (CP)\n\u2014Canadians should give more attention to preserving their historical .monuments, Governor-General\nMassey said Monday.\n\"We are indebted\u2014and we acknowledge the debt with cordial\ngratitude\u2014to American generosity for much of the work that has\nbeen done,\" he said at celebrations\nmarking the 350th anniversity of\nAnnapolis Royal.\n\"But now, in the days of our\nprosperity, does not this debt be'\ncome almost embarrassing?\" h(\nsaid. \"Could we, might we, do t\nlittle more for ourselves?\"\nNATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE\n\"Every Canadian must admire\nthe reverence of the American for\nhis own monuments, and enlightened interest in their preservation\nCould we not, by assuming more\nof such reverence, follow their ex\ncellent example ourselves?\"\nMr. Massey said the anniversary\nof the founding of Port Royal, first\nFrench settlement in Canada, was\nan occasion of \"national significance.\"\n\"It is not often that one has the\nprivilege of attending a 350th an\nBandit.. Break Into\nPauline's Milk Bar\nVICTORIA (CP)-Three bandits\nheld up the proprietor pi Pauline's\nMilk Bar here Sunday night and\nescaped with $J082.\nTheo Angell told police he was\ngetting ready to deposit the money\nin the firm's safe when the three\nmen entered, threw an apron over\nhis head and tied him to a chair.\n\"Let's kill him.\" he quoted one\nof the trio as saying.\n\"We don't need to kill him,\" replied another. \"Let's just take his\nmoney and scram.\"\nMr. Angell was found a short\ntime later by Mrs. Pauline Boyd,\nco-owner of the milk bar.\nNATO Begins \u2022\nDefence Moves\nNAPLES (AP)\u2014Air, l?nd \"and\nsea forces of the Atlantic allies\nbegan lai-ge-scale exercises Monday to test tlie defences of northern Greece, and adjacent sea areas.\nNATO headquarters for southern Europe here announced that\nat dawn the defence test began\nagainst \"enemy\" forces from^the\nnorth.\nNorthern Greece is a strategically important area in southern\nEurope, since it border Communist\nBulgaria and Albania.\nOpposing the defensive units are\nBritish -submarines and bombers\nof the HAF. Over Greece, fighter-\nbombers of the Greek air force\nare participating.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nVeteran Pilot\nTakes Risks\nIn Bush Rescue\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C. (CP) \u2014\nVeteran bush pilot Jack Moule of\nPacific Western Airways ignored\npoor visibility and a. low ceiling\nMonday to fly ' an injured man\nfrom McClure lake to hospital at\nPort Alberni.\nIdentity of the accident victim\nand extent of his injuries are-be-\ning withheld by RCMP until relatives have been notified.\nA helicopter took over from Victoria and Moule left Sproat lake\nwith a PWA Beechcraft plane\nearly Monday when word was received that a member of a McMillan and Bloedel limited timber\ncruising party had been injured at\nMcClure Lake, south of Port Alberni.\nFORCED  TO   LAND\nLow ceiling forced Moule to land\nhis float plane .at Nahmint Lake\nwhere he waited \"for a slight improvement in the weather before\nagain taking off. He landed on\none-mile-long McClure lake and\npicked up the injured man, flying\nhim back to Sproat lake.\nFrom there the man was taken\n10 miles to hospital at Port Alberni by ambulance. The victim is\nbelieved to be suffering from a\ndeep cut and loss W blood.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, 1935 \u2014 7\nSherwood Lell\nBack in Canada\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Brig.\nSherwood Lett, newly-appointed\nchief justice of the British Columbia Supreme Court, has retuni&l\nhere after a year as senior Canadian representative on the Indo-\nChina Truce Commission.        *r-\nBrig. Lett, celebrating his 60th\nbirthday Monday, left almost immediately on holiday to California.\nHis appointment as chief justice,\nannounced July 13, becomes effective Sept. 1.\nThe outstanding soldier-lawyer\nbegan his military career as a private in the First World War.\nHe is chancellor of the University of British Columbia and a\nQueen's Council. His decorations\ninclude,the CBE. DSO and MC.\nStrikers Injure\nFrench Police\nST. UAZAIRE, France (Reuters>\n\u2014Twenty policemen were injured,\nMonday ln violent clashes with\nstriking shipyard workers.   >\u25a0\nSteel-helmeted, heavily-armed\npolice charged demonstrators after they, set fire to the headquarters of the Shipyard Employers' Association.\nEarlier Monday, the striking\nmetalworkers smashed down an\niron gate at France's biggest shipyard here after rejecting their employers reply to wage demands.\nThey then set fire to a heap\nof notices announcing a shortened'\nwork week. The fire, spread\nquickly to neighboring buildings\nHold Witness in\nKinna Assault\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Police are\nholding a drug addict, arrested last\nThursday, as a material witness\nin the attempted murder charge\nagainst five men following a gangland beating last month.\n, The five are scheduled to appear for preliminary hearing Aug.\n4, after several remands. They are\ncharged with the brutal beating of\n39-year-old Thomas Kinna who\nsuffered two broken legs and other\nInjuries.\nPolice have linked the incident\nwith gangland warfare by opposing  narcotic-distributing  factions.\nIN VANCOUVER\nIT'S the RITZ\nWHEN THEY ASK YOU\u2014\"WHEM DIO VOU\nSTAY IN VANCOUVER r-YOU UN ANSWER\nWTTH PRIM--AT rue WTT--AND KNOW\nTHAT YOU CHOSE WISELY. THE RrTZ MOTEL\nHAS AN IDEAL LOCATION CLOSE TO STANLEY\nPARK. THE ART GALLERY. THEATRES AMD\nLEADING STORES.\nCA\u00abA\u00ab_ JMO SEAVMf SMTWH\nRITZ HOTEL\nM\u00abWE_T CEOR6U SWEET\nVANCOUVER I, B.G\nhe said.\nHandicapped Scouts\nOn Way To'Jamboree\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Forty-eight\nscouts, some of them blind, others\ndeaf and several with crippling\nhandicaps, arrived here during the\nweekend en route to the world\nScout jamboree at Niagara-on-the\nLake, Ont.\nThe handicapped scouts will\nform part of a contingent of 1000\nthat France is sending to jamboree.\nMORE   PEOPLE   DRINK\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nIM REMOVES W01IEB!\nHew 1955 INI Gasolines BURN CLEAN\"\nto protect your engine!\n4H\u00abMMM>MH\u00bb\u00abMMMH\u00abM\u00ab\u00bbMM\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00abt\u00abMMM\u00abMM\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb>M\u00bbt\u00abMMH\u00bbIHMMtMM^\nB-A PLEDGE\nWE AT B-A MAKE THIS PROMISE TO THE MOTORING PUBLIC.\nWE WILL NOT PERMIT A SINGLE COMPETITOR\u2014NO, NOT A\nSINGLE ONE\u2014TO OFFER GASOLINES-SUPERIOR TO OUR NEW\n1955 B-A 88 AND 98.\nIT IS OUR SINCERE BELIEF THAT NEW 1955 B-A 88 AND 98\nARE THE FINEST GASOLINES IN CANADA TODAY, AND, NO\nMATTER WHAT OTHERS DO OR SAY WE WILL KEEP THEM\nTHE FINEST\u2014IN POWER, IN PERFORMANCE, IN ENGINE\nPROTECTION.\nIT IS ALSO OUR BELIEF THAT YOU CANT BUY A BETTER\nMOTOR OIL THAN OUR OWN PEERLESS HEAVY DUTY\nMOTOR OIL\nTHIS IS NOT A BOAST, NOT A CLAIM. IT IS A PLEDGE\nTO YOU, THE CANADIAN MOTORIST\u2014A PLEDGE BACKED\nBY THE RESOURCES\u2014AND THE INTEGRITY\u2014OF THE BRITISH\nAMERICAN OIL COMPANY LIMITED.\nYour engine will have more \"get-up-and-go\" when you use NEW 1955 B-A\nGasolines. B-A has refined out the deposits that harm your engine. This tar-like\ngummy residue is part of the \"dirty-burning tail-end'' of the gasoline. It is taken\nout at the refinery by B-A.. ,_to give you clean burning gasolines that really\nwork for you mile after mile. Next time your car needs gasoline\u2014fill up at the\n; sign of the Big B-A with NEW 1955 B-A 88 or 98 gasoline.\nYou'll feel the difference under your foot.\nfinest Gasolines-Bar None!\nfCQ4L\\fX\\... \u25a0 j_H\nPRESIDENT\n-nilMMMMIMMIItltlMMI \u00abMMM.IIM.MH\u00bbH\u00bb MlltllHIttllMMIIIIIMtIM-\nmssm\nTHE BRITISH  AMERICAN  OIL  COMPANY LIMITED\n jpw??\"\"*^^\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, ,!?55\nSUfrAR BELLE\nGRL.nI peas\nFey., Sieve 3. Hew Pack. 15 oz. tin\n20'\nSUNNY DAWN\nTomato Juice\nFancy. 48 oz. tin\n11.73'\nLALANI\nCrushed Pineapple\nFancy. 20 oz. tin\n31'\n15 0,   3   for99*\nWeins 4 Beans Buns\nCKili Con Carney 3 lor99(t\nCampfire Sausage f5u\u2122 490\nMeat Balls *\u25a0\u00a3\"\u25a0\u201e_. 2for75*\nChuck Wagon Dinner\nBurns. \u2022\u00bb _-^\n15 oz. .  .. L  for \/ J?\nMargarine  f^\"pkg.  3 tor g5<t\n_,..   \/\/\/\/\/,\/i f,h i,. L'\\\\w\\\nHQRRyONMWHl\n\/   \/\/\/ \/\/\/ u n ii ii in   in ill \\\\\\ \\\\\\  ..\nHOTTEST VALUES to TOWS!\n1\/ \/    \/\/\/     II U    11   ll    111       111     111 \u2022 W V    IV\\    \\U \\\\    u   vvN\nGEISHA\nTUNA FISH\nLight meat. 7 oz. tin\n2*. 39'\nCLOVER LEAF\nSALMON\nFancy Pink. 73A oz. tin\n2 _ 47'\nNO. 1 GRANULATED\nSUGAR\nStock up for home canning.\n25 Ib. bag\n$\"\u00bb 4 J\n2\nSOLO\nMARGARINE\nEconomically priced. 1 Ib. pkg.\n2 - 59'\nFULL 0' GOLD\nOrange Juice\n48 oz. tin\n39'\nDavid's Biscuits\nSweet Assorted Varieties    ,\n1 lb. pkg.\n2-75\nCorn Flakes I\u21225  2\nCnilnc  Lipton's Tom. and     ^\n-Wlips Vegj chicken Noodle dm\nOrange Base \u2122T\nCreamettes \u201e oz pkg   4\nWk\u00ab\u00bb_l\u00bb.   Tne Breakfast  of\nWheOtieS  champions. 12 oz.\nSundae Sauces \u00ab\u00a3\u00a3 2\nfor 47*\n*_or25*\n20*\nfor 49*\n28*\nfor 33*\nWide Mouth Lids PKkr0,i229*\nJar-Rings. \u2122V\u00a3    2 for 17*\nFruifJars^\u2122^^^! 95\nKaro Syrup 5 ,b tIn 850\nPerfex Bleach- 64 oz botth   546\n22*\nBudgie Food   B ocks\n10 oz.  pkg.\nPrices Effective August 3rd to 6th\nFRUIT COCKTAILfc.-2'\u00ab47c\nSweet Mixed Pickles k.. 49c\n15 oz. tin   \t\nParty Pride.\nQuarts,   each\n10\nDog Food Tops\nIce Cream\nTuna Flakes\\clr,inUa,e\t\nSockeye Salmon ^\/ST'\nStrawberry Jam S_TS_T\nJelly Powders JJ'TW 6\nPurex Tissue\n8 oz. roll\nfor 95*\n45*\n29*\n39*\n$1.09\nfor 49*\nfor 49*\nUNK j. WACNAI I\nATTENTION ENCYCLOPEDIA OWNERS\nAll volumes from 1 to 25 have now been offered\nfor sale. Please check your set for improperly\nprinted volumes. If you have paid for and reserved\nany volumes please pick them up as they are now\navailable. Do lt now.\nEdwards Coffee        \"'\u2022\u00ab,*__,        , CANTERBURY\nFRESH BREAD     .\u201e    XP1\nTEA\nNo finer coffee\npacked _ , .\ntOLURRDS\nCOFFEE\nDrip or Reg.  Gring1.\ntin\nInstant Coffee\nWrapped.\n16 oz. loaf\nWhite or Brown . . .\n2 \u00ab., 27'\nOKANAGAN TREE-RIPENED\nEDWARDS 100% PURE.\nCoffee in art instant. $'\n4 oz. jar  ...\n1.14\nWrapped.\n24 oz. loaf\nJ 1T       llbpk9\t\ndm  for 3 \/ TEA BAGS:\n\"        Pkg. of 120\n$1.29\n$1.39\nUNION-. - mmgmk\nkHAHISri;\nFully Cooked ... Just Slice and Serve ... II       _L_I II\nWhole, Half or Quartered    ID. ^ ^ W W\nGRADE      ^umP Roast Beef\nC\n1st or 2nd Cuts. GRADE \"A.'\nlb. 63c\nFnwl   Veal s'10U,t'er Roast\nLl      V    ft    I Blade Bone Remoyed       11%       \/| M_f\nCut Up\nin Trays.\nlb. 49c\nSmoked Pork Shoulders\nPicnic Style. Whole or Shank Half.\nb. 41c\nCold Cuts for Quick To Prepare Summer Meals\nBologna _Ty quaIity\n27* Head Cheese Lb       49*\n35* Jellied Qx Tongue ^ .    79*\n99* Pickjeand Piihento Loaf Lb 59*\nMock Chicken Loaf Lb 590 Chesse Loaf Lb _ '550\n\u00bbi\/_'   _\u201e_   No. 1. Children love 'em.\nvveiners Lb\t\nBoiled Ham  [dbeal \u00a3or sandwkhe5'\nApricots\nGolden Yellow at Their\n' Peak of Preserving Goodness\nApprox. 14 lb. case\n$2.19\nFIELD TOMATOES *\"*\nIdeal for slicing.\nib 29c\nSEEDLESS GRAPES Kn__ i 32c\nLocal,   well   trimmed.\nLb.\nCantaloupe\nElberta Peaches Weal for slicing\nSanta Rosa Plums Sweet juicy Lb.35*      Cucumbers okanagan m&                Lb  19*\nSunkist Oranges   Valencias 252s 2ibs29*      New Cabbage Cris_ green heads         Lb, 70\nServ with ice cream  Lb.\nLb.\n16*      Lettuce\n33*     ,Celery\nTender, green stalks Lb.\n15*\n16*\nBananas\nGolden,  yellow  Lb.\n23*      Corn on Cob\nCalifornia, tender ears.\n2>bs 29*\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n Nelson All-Stars Lose\nOut in Semi-Finals\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Vancouver's Moose American tedm\nMonday won the B.C. Babe Ruth\nbaieball championships here by\ndefeating Mooia National of\nVancouvor 4-2,\nVictoria and Nelson were\neliminated In the leml-flnals,\nVictoria 8-2 by the Nationals and\nNelson  15-4 by the Americans.\nMoose American plays teams\nfrom Washington,\" Oregon and\nMontana In the northwest regional games Friday and Saturday with the winner going to\nAustin, Tex,, for the Babe Ruth\nworld series.\nRoyals Play at\nSalmo Tonight\nNelson Royals will be striving\nto increase their lead in the West\nKootenay Women's Fastball\nLeague in q game at Salmo tonight. Royals now hold a one-\ngame margin o,ver the Trail entry.\nVerda Pratt will handle pitching duties for the Royals with\nMyrna Kain'catching.\nBritish Team\nBeats Germany\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Britain's track\nand field team defeated Germany\nfor the first time since 1937 in a\ntwo-day dual meet which ended\nMonday before 40,000* at London's\nWhite City stadium. \u25a0   '\nThe British men's squad scored\n111 points to Germany's 95 while\n\"the British women also bested\nGermany 53-40,\nThe meet saw one world record\nand four British men's standards\nbroken. Chris Chataway Saturday\nran the three miles in 13:23.2 to\nbetter the listed world mark, of\n13:26.4 established by Vladimir\nKuc of Russia at Prague' Oct. 23,\n1954. .\nB. (., Ont. Win\nCricket Openers\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia and Ontario won opening games here Monday in the\nCanadian cricket championship\ntournament.\nB. C. defeated Alberta by four\nwickets and Ontario had nine\nwickets in hand in their match\nagainst Manitoba.\nAlberta totalled 94 runs, to\nwhich British Columbia replied\nwith 95 for six wickets.\nManitoba's total was 81.,Ontario\nran up 84 runs with the loss of\nonly one wicket.\nExcept for Ontario's L.. J. H.\nGunn, who was 46 not out, scoring\nwas generally low.'\nTHERE'S A GREAT FUTURE IN AVIATION\n*\"^BUik\nTO TRAIN IN THESE IMPORTANT\nAVIATION\nTRADES\nELECTRONIC\nINSTRUMENT\nAERONAUTICAL\nRADIO \u2022 RADAR\nAIRFRAME\nARMAMENT\nAND MANY OTHERS\nHere's your opportunity to get into the\nprogressive field of aviation!\nThere'i a great future for aviation \u2014 and a\ngreat opportunity for men who are trained\nto progress with it.\nThe Air Force will train you.\nAnd you'll earn while you learn.\nThere's permanent employment, good pay,\npension, medical care, travel, comradeship\nPIUS   TOP   SPECIALIST   TRAINING\nSee the RCAF Career Counsellor at\nR.C.A.F.   Recruiting   Unit\n422 7th 8t S\u201e\nLethbridge, Alta. \u2014 Ph, 6145\nTRAVEL AHEAD - WITH THE RCAF\nMarilyn's Short\nDip lo Ward OH\nllllffech Mi\nFOLKESTONE, England (CP)-\nYou would think thatanybntwho\nhad just spent ny>re than 14 hours\nswimming the ' English channel\nwould want a holiday from the\nwater. , \".'\u2022\u25a0*\u2022\nBut not Marilyn, Bell, The 17-\nyear-old Toronto swimmer who\nSunday became the youngest person ever to conquer the channel\ntook a busman's holiday* while\nresting up from her feat and went\nfor a dip Monday, less than 24\nhours  after  scrambling ashore.\nThere was a reason for the 10-\nminute swim, however. Marilyn's\nrrtother explained: \"It is the best\nway to prevent sickness and\ncramp after a long swim.\"\nUnlike Her channel crossing,\nMonday's swim was without fanfare as she slipped quietly away\nfrom the Folkestone hotel and\nwent to Dover to bathe in the sea\nand have a talk with her channel\npilot, John  (Pop) Burwell.\nThe young swimmer, .who last\nyear became the first person to\nswim Lake Ontario, was the toast\nof the south coast. Bank holiday\nseaside visitors talked of little\nelse, marvelling at how fresh she\nlooked Sunday night after swimming 14 hours and 38 minutes from\nCape Gris Nez to Abbotscliff, between Doijer and Folkestone.\nCongratulatory messages by the\nhundreds flooded into Marilyn's\nhotel \u2014 including cables from\nPrime Minister St. Laurent, the\nmayors of Toronto and Montreal\nand British swimmer Brenda\nFisher who holds the women's\nrecord of 12 hours, 42 minutes for\nthe swim.\nTRABERT MALADY\nNOTHING SERIOUS\n' NEW YORK (AP)\u2014Tony Tra-\nbert's back miseries were diagnosed Monday, as nothing more than\na pulled muscle and th\u00bb fluctuating United States Davis Cup stock\ntook an upward turn.\nTrabert, America's No. 1 star,\nwas taken to the hospital by cup\ncaptain Bill Talbert and the top\northopedic surgeons on the staff\nwent over him.\n\"Nothing serious,\" was the announcement. \"Just a pulled\nmuscle. He'll need some rest.\"\nSince the injury is not serious,\nTrabert doubtless will be ready\nfor action in the challenge round,\nscheduled for Aug. 26-28 \u2014 less\nthan a month away \u2014 at Forest\nHills, N.Y.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy  The   Associated   Preti\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nAb R H Pet\nKaline, Detroit ..... 40,1 91 141 .352\nKuenn, Detroit .... 395 67 129 .327\nKell,   Chicago     285 31   90 .816\nSmith, Cleveland .. 416 79 130 .313\nPower, Kan. City .. 380 61 121 .311\nRns\u2014Kaline, 91.\nRuns batted in\u2014Boone^.Detroit,\nHits\u2014Kaline, 141.\nDoubles\u2014Goodman, Boston, 26.\nTriples-^Mantle, N^w York, 9.\n, Home runs\u2014Kaline andtMantle,\n23.\nStolen bases\u2014Rivera, Chicago,\n17.\nPitching\u2014Byrne, New York, 9-\n2, .8.18.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Score, Cleveland,\n164.\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nAb R   H   Pet\nCampanella, Bkn.   292 56   99 .339\nAshburn, Pha  369 61 120 .325\nSnider, Brooklyn .. 361 89 116 .321\nBurgess, Cin  277 44   88 .318\nKluszewski, Cin. .. 397 74 126 .317\nRns\u2014Snider, 89. ,\nRuns batted in\u2014Snider, 104.\nHits\u2014Kluszewski and Post, Cincinnati, and Logan and Aaron,\nMilwaukee, 126.\nDoubles\u2014Logan, Milwaukee, 30.\nTriples\u2014Bruton, Milwaukee, and\nLong, Pittsburgh. 9.\nHome runs \u2014 Kluszewski and\nSnider, 35.\nStolen bases-'-Boyer, St. Louis,\n18.\nPitching\u2014Newcombe, Brooklyn,\n18-1, ,947. ''\nStrikeouts\u2014Jones, Chicago, 133.\nA SPECIAL RCAF OFFICER\nThe RCAF Recruiting Unit Will Be in Trail August 1 st and 2nd\n10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Canadian Legion\nand Creston, Aug. 4th, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Canadian Legion\nMarlene Readies\nFor Tourney V.\nVICTORIA (CP) -Marlene,\nStewart of. Fohthill, Ont':, defending Canadian women's dose and\n\u2022open golf champion, Monday rated\nthe Royal Colwood course here \u2014\nwhere the 1955 title>s will be de-\ndecided\u2014a tight course with little\nroom for error.-\nIn a weekend round, Miss' Stewart toured the links |n par- 77,\nShe was two over par going, out\nin 39, and 38, two under,, coming\nhome. ....:\"\u2022\u2022\u25a0:'\nNo official record is kept but\nclub officers said it beat, the best\ncompetitive score in recent years\nset by Victoria's Marg Todd.in a\nlocal medal, play competition\n\"some time afco.\" \u00bb   .\nMarlene arrived here along.with\nthe vanguard of more than. 109\nplayers from across th* continent,\nincluding six from the United\nStates, who will take part in the\nclose, open and senior and junior\ninter-provincial championships\nwhich begin Thursday.\n _* -   \u25a0 \u25a0\nTom Park Wins\n2( Nile Swim\nATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) \u2014\nTom Park won the second annual\n26-mile swim around this Island\nresort Monday night In nine\nhours 49 'minutes and 30 seconds.\nPark, a native of Hamilton, Ont.\nwho now lives in Lakewood, Calif.,\nfinished 10 minutes ahead.of sec\ncond-place Cliff Lumsden, 24, of\nToronto.\nIt was Park's second victory in\nthe annual event in as many years\nand the second time he has led\nLumsden to the finish line.\nLast year Park's winning time\nwas nine hours, _ll minutes, 42.2\nseconds. Lumsden, well-known for\nhis winning performances at Toronto's Canadian National Exhibition, finished about 300 yards back\nin second place,\nBy his victory Park, 31, took\nprize money of $5700. He gained\n$5000 of the sum for being first\nacross the finish line, the rest for\nleading at othej: points, in the race.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nPittsburgh ..   002 002001\u20145   9   0\nChicago   .        000 200 002-r4   9   1\nHall and Shepard; Minner, Tremel (9) and Chiti. L \u2014 Mimier.\nHRs: PGH \u2014 Long. Chi\u2014Jackson.\nNew York .. 002 120 301\u20149 9 Q\nSt. Louis ....   000 100 000\u20141   5   4\nLiddle and Katt; Haddix, Lapalme (5) 'Lawrence (6), Wooldridge ,(9) and Burbrink. L \u2014\nHaddix. HB: NY-Mays.\nPhiladelphia Oil MO 001\u20143 9-1\nCincinnati ..   120 000.Olx\u20144 10   1\nDickson and Seminick; Fowler,\nFowler, Freeman,(9) and Burgess. W-^Fowler.\nBrooklyn     000 000 300 1\u20144 11   0\nMilwaukee  000 201 000 0\u20143   4   1\nLoes, Labine (7) Spooner (8)\nBessent (10) and Campanella;\nBurdette, Nichols (7) Johnson (7)\nahd Crandall. W \u2014 Spooner; L \u2014\nJohnson. HR: Mil\u2014Mathews.\n1000 See 'Forks,.\nPassmore Game\nPassmore eifed Grand Forks\nSawmill fastball team 5-4 in a\ntense 10.innihg<;exh_bltton thriller\nplayed in Grand Forks Sunday,\n.The game, played before about\n1000 'fans, was part of the Doukhobor Declaration Day celebra\ntion. ...\nThe sawmill nine held, a 3-1\nlead by the end of the third frame\nwhich they kept till the top of the\nfifth when Passmore counted\nthree runs otv-two hits, one error\nand an overthrow. This slim lead\nwas shortlived, however, ris the\nForks, team tied the game with a\nrun in the ninth. S. Maloff made\nit home after' getting on base on\nan error.\nThe next three innings developed into a pitchers' duel as both\n.Willie Chernoff of Grand Forks\nand Bill Konkin of Passmore\nallowed only one hit to keep the\ngame tied going Into the tepth.\nIn the top of the fatal tenth Bill\nOsachoff of Passmore came\nthrough with a single and wps\nfollowed by, Shukin who slammed\nanother single 'to right field to\nadvance Osachoff to third. Osachoff then came home to sew up\nthe game for Passmore on an\noverthrow. from right field to\nhome plate....\n' Pete Stoochnoff pitched the\nfirst three innings for Passmore,\ngiving up three hits and two\nwalks and striking out two. -Bill\nKonkin followed by whiffing\neighty and giving up only one hit.\nWillie Chernoff of Grand Forks\nallowed eight hits and struck out\nthree.\nKINSMEN GIVE\nklWANIS BATTLE\nW L Pet. Gbl\nKiwanis    9   4   .692   \u2014\nLions    8   5   .615   1\nKinsmen    7   8   .466   3\nRotary     5   8   .384   4 _\nGyro         4   8   .333   AV,\nKinsmen team acted as giant\nkillers in the Nelson Little League\nthis week behind some top notch\npitching.\nThey lost' a tough battle to the\nleague-leading Kiwanis by a score\nof 7-6 after holding a 6-0 lead\nat one point in the game. In the\nsecond meeting of the two clubs,\nthe Kinsmen came up with a 9-0\nwin behind the fine pitching oi\n10-year-old Kenny Dewar, who\nallowed only one single.\nThe Lions continued their climb\nfor firstjplace by notching,two\nwins. In the first contest 'ji|hey\nswamped the Rotarians 14-6, with\nArt Miner' handling pitching\nduties. They later went on to de-\nfeat the Gyros 12-2. In this en:\ncounter Lions pitchers Jimmy\nCain and Tommy Ramsay pitched\nthe first no-hit game in the Nelson Little League this season.\nBritish Cricket\nVANCOUVER (CP)- The Mar-\nylebone Cricket Club,will be asked to send an English test team to\nCanada in 1957.\nDecision to invite the English\nteam was, taken at the annual\nmeeting of the Canadian Cricket\nAssociation, here Monday.\nDelegates suggested that at least\nthree test matches be plpyed dur,\nIng the English team's Canadian\ntour.\nDelegates also voted to hold a\nCanadian Junior cricket tournament tit Winnipeg In' 1958.. Players\ntaking part in the tournament\nwould form the nucleus of a Canadian junior team expected to tour\nEngland in 1962.\nX. J. H.'Gunn of Toronto was\nre-elected chairman of the Cana\ndian board of control for another\ntwo-year-term.\nThe meeting was held In con-\nJunction with the lnter-provinclal\ncricket championships under way\nhere.\nCrawford One of\nMen fo Beal\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 The draw\nran true to form Monday as most\nof the choppers were weeded out\nin the first round of the week-\nilortg Canadian amateur golf championships at the Calgary Country\nClub.\nWith few exceptions, the favorites iln the starting field of 107\u2014\ncut from 122 by late scratches \u2014\nrolled to easy victories. Second 18-\nhole match play round will go today.\nLyle Crawford, cocksure Vancouver sharpshooter tabbed as-one\nof the men to beat after his\nsparkling performance in the Willingdon Cup, was extended to the\n18th green by unknown Roy Bainbridge of Edmonton before winning two-up.\nCrawford played erratically and\nwas way off Saturday's form when\nhe fired a pair of 67s over the\ntricky par-70 course for a low individual record in the team matches.\nMoe Norman of Kitchener, Ont.,\nrunner-up to Crawford for Individual honors Saturday, moved into the second round with an easy\n5 and 4 win over Ken Jennings,\nEdmonton.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nMOORE STARTS TRAINING\nNORTH ADAMS, Mass. (AP) \u2014\nArchie Moore, light heavyweight\nboxing champion, came to his\nKenwood training camp Monday\nto prepare for his Sept. 20 heavyweight title bout with champion\nRocky Marciano.\nHANDSOME  REWARD\n- WESTON-SUPER-MARE, England (CP)\u2014Wilfred Harold Barber, postman in this Somerset\ntown, received a \u00a320 reward fori\nreturning a lost watch to a holi-i\nday-maker. '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2,1955 \u2014 9'\nAmerican League Sees\nCrucial Play Today\nNEW YORK (A_P) \u2014 The tautpennants and one world champion*\nAmerican  League   pennant  race ship will be in an Indian unlfornjj\ntonight for the first game of th\u00ab\nYankee series.\nhits another of its crucial junctures today when the four closely-\nbunched contenders collide in\nhead-to-head .series.\nChicago White Sox, holding a\nsingle game lead over New York\nand Cleveland, invade Boston for\nthree games with the sizzling Red\nSox. The Yankees and Indians\ntangle at Yankee Stadium, also in\nthe first of three games.\nHere's how the race looks at a\nglance:\nW   L   Pet.   Gbl\nChicago     62   39   .614    \u2014\nNew York     62   41   .602     1\nCleveland     62   41   .602     1\nBoston       60   43   .583    8\nTwo weekend developments intensified interest in the knockdown drag-out battles of the\nleague's upper crust.\"\nThe White Sox lost the services\nof their ace righthander, Dick\nDonovan, who underwent an ap\npendicitis operation which will\nkeep him out of action possibly\nfor the rest of the Reason.\nCleveland moves into New York\nwith a new bit of pitching insurance \u2014 38-year-old Sal Maglie,\nthe old \"Barber\" of New York\nGiants.\nSHOCK8 FAN8\nMaglle's shift to the American\nLeague champions for a reported\n$25,000 after being Waived out of\nthe National League provided a\nshock for baseball followers.\nThe man who helped pitch the\nGiants  to  two  National   League\nMaglie is anxious to prqve he's\nnot over the hill, predicting \"I can.\nstill win'\u2014 and I'll prove It.1'\nAl Lope^, Cleveland managerj\nsaid he didn't know yet how Maglie would be used. He would have\nto crash one of the best pitching\nlineups, ln the. majors, although\nBob Lemon now ls on the injury\nlist. r\nChicago probably will send Connie Johnson (3-1) to the mound to'*,\nnight against the'Red Sox, facing\nTommy Brewer, who has an 8-1)\nrecord. ,\nIn the Yankee-Indian seriel\nCleveland has nominated its win*\nningest pitcher, Early Wynn (13-5J\nto face the Yankees' Tommy ByrnB\n(9-2). Wednesday it will be fasti\nbailer Billy Turley (11-9) of th|\nYankees against Mike Garcia fl*\n10).\nTo Plan Program\nFor Chicago Boys\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Rogers\nHornsby, who had a long career\nas player and manager in the\nmajor baseball leagues, got a new\njob Monday.\nHe was hired, at $15,000 a year,\nto set up and supervise a city-:\nwide athletic training program for i\nChicago boys between the ages of\n8 and 18.\nThe program ls expected to\nreach 150,000 or more youngsters\nand it will be conducted in co-operation with the park system, the\nboard of education and the city.\nROYAL RESERVE\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Uquor Control Board\nor by the Government of Brititb\nColumbia.\nGUARANTEED QUALITY\nAND FRESHNESS\nPiitsanew\/i^tiniJsowmseyBS...\nthe all-new\nBRIGHTEST VALUE\nIN THE LOW-PRICE FIELD\nSee the reasons yourself in the sparkle of motion-design styling...in the\nglow of colour-keyed interiors....!! the flash of thrifty 6 and V-8 power\nTake in-the glamour of Plymouth's\nsmart interior. You'll find more\n\"lining\" room than in any car\nin its field.\nTo try the. car that puts a gleam in\nthe eye\u2014simply phone your Chrysler-\nPlymouth-Fargo dealer. He'll bring a\nnew Plymouth right to your door!\nYou'll find thrilling beauty in the\nmotion-design styling of this long, low\nPlymouth. In the trim, taut lines that\nstress its Forward Look.\nOr turn the key and let Plymouth's\nengine whisper soft and low. Then\nstep on the throttle. Surely, this lively\npower is for you.\nPLYMOUTH... NOW BEING SELECTED BY MORE CAR BUYERS THAN EVER BEFORE IN  PLYMOUTH'S HIST0\nPEEBLES MOTORS Ltd.\nRYI\n155 BAITER ST.\nPHONE 1090\n jppwfifppl^^\n______________________\nIPPPHP^T \"PW\n\u2022 vis,;\n-10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, IMS\ns\nE\nC\nft\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nd\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nqh -nit rmm, \u2022nwates a sot o* wow.\n^i,.,.\u2014\u2014y\u201e_.,._.-,.,_n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb, I.,.\u25a0.,,,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ...,.r\npL\nry AekO\nVOU AND VOU FJ HUSBAND ARH\nCOMING OVERTANPVOU'SE   ,\nBWNSINfi LITn. _E 6HEMLIN Ty|\nJ16<93, MV'BI6TER AMP H6f?\nFAMILY ARE COMINS TO VISIT J\nUS.' I'M SO ANXIOUS TO SEE.\nM\/JJTTIE NEPHEW\u2022\/_-fj^,g--\nANXIOUS '\nTO SEH HIM\nUSAVB\/\\\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTho Dally Newt does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof on error In the following Hit*.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing PrloM)\nOILS\nAnglo Can     5.90\nB A Oil     -     32.75\nCal St Ed    16.50\nCdn Atlantic     8.20\nCan Collieries    12,87\nImperial Oil :    30.75\nLiberal Pete      3.16\nOkalta      1.45\nPounder        1.14\nRoyalite       15.50 .\nTriad        -     7.15\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     S8H\nAlgoma Steel     75\nAluminum  102W\nAmer Tel Jt Tel     WV,\nArgus    _    24\nAtjae St ..       20\nBathurst Power'    WA\nBell Telephone     11%\nBrazilian       7*4\nB C Forett     13'\/,\nCan  Cement        S9\u00bb4\nCan   Steamships       38\nCan. Breweries    29t^\nCan Canners  _i    88H\nCan Steamships ....\u2022....'.    35\nCan'Breweries     29^\nCanadian Canners     96H\nCanadian Car & Fdy    29\nCanadian Car St Fdy A     29\nCanadian Celanese ..      22%\nCan Chem Co   ,.           12V<\nCanadian Pacific Rly     83*4\nCons Mining it Smelt     38%\nDist Seagram  \u201e   39%\nDom Foundries  _   28%\nDom Steel St Coal B        19%\nDom. Stores\nDom Tar St Chemical\nDom Textiles \t\nEddy Paper\n40\n13%\n7%\n74\nFamous Players  -    23?4\n33\n10%\n61\n75 V,\n39%\nGatineau\nGen Steel Wares\nGypsum  Lime   .\nHiram Walker ...\nImperial Oil \t\n.Imp Tobacco \u2014   12%\nInt Nickel   _    78\nInt Pete      26%\nMcColl Frontenae     45\nMont Loco\nNat Steel Car ...\nPowell River  \t\nPower Corp\nRuss Industries\nShawinigan   .   ...\nSicks- Brew\nSimpsons A \u25a0\nSteel of Canada\nUnited Steel      .\n19\n35\n58\n65%\n16\n\"4\n\u2022'\u25a0%\n\".\/,\n:%\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\nBeta Gamma ..\nBralorne\nCariboo Gold\n.76\n.19%\n3.00\n.73\nThe\nsmooth  m\n.chewing j\n'soothes \/-   l\nyour feelings\nready to hit\nGiant Mascot .^_ __......    .77\nGranduc   _._    6.05\nGrandvlew         ,26\nHighland Bell _.     .58\nJackson  Basin 44\nKootenay Base Metals ..'....     .03\nNational Ex     1,65\nPac Eastern Gold  13\nPioneer  Gold    :    1.95\nPremier Border  -   .08%\nOuatslno       .26\nReeves MacDonald .\".    1.75\nRexapar   .  _     .67\nRix-Athabaska  Uran       1.45\nSheep Creek          1.25\nSherritt Gordon      9.40\nSlibaek   Premier    16%\nSilver .Ridge      .30\nSilver Standard  ..'. 41\nSunshine Lardeau  36\nSurf Inlet  _ 10\nTaylor  ,  22\nWestern  Exploration    60\nOILS'\nAltex  _..     .27\nAnglo Canadian          5.90\nA P Consolidated      38\nCalgary St Edmonton ........ 18.35\nCanadian Anaconda  17\nCharter     1.75\nChamberlain  29\nCommonwealth       6.20\nDel Rio    1.45\nGas   Exp    75\nMercury   06%\nOkalta Com    1.40\nPacific Pete   11 00\nPeace River Gas  ,   8.25\nRoyalite          15.00\nRoyal Cam  __..     07\nSparmac  - 36\nUnited  A    153\nVanalta 22\nVantor  - - 74%\nVulcan         46\nYankee Princess' 69%\nINDUSTRIALS\n'Alberta Distillers      .'..   2.10\nAlberta Distillers Vt     1.90\nB C Telephone   39.00 -\nInland Nat Gas    2.90\nLucky  Lager     5.20\nMacM St Bloedel B  44.75\nMid Western  -    4.80\nTrans   Mtn      40.50\nWestern Plywoods   21.00\nWestminster Paper   28.00\nMarket Trends\nToronto Stock Exchange, London Stock Exchange and Winnipeg Grain Exchange were closed\nMonday for public holiday.\nNEW XORK (AP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket drifted moderately lower.\nCanadian stocks were mixed. International Nickel gained *i, Canadian Pacific advanced % and\nDome Mines and Distillers Seagram fell Vs.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Activity\nslowed to a near standstill as industrials slipped Irregularly easier\non the stock market. Price movements were narrowly confined.\nInternational Paper fell a point\nto 107, while General Dynamics,\nIndustrial Acceptance, MacMillan\nB, Hudson Bay and Royal Bank\ndipped Vt. Consolidated Smelters\neased 44.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)-On offer at\nthe Calgary stockyards up to 11\na.m. Monday: 700 cattle, 25 calves.\nLast week's sales, 8239 cattle, 130\ncalves, 2164 hogs, 231 sheep.\nThe bulk of offerings were medium to good ibutcher steers and\nheifers, the balance mostly cowi.\nTrading wai strong and active on\nall classes, and butcher steers met\nstrong demand. Medium to good\nbutcher steers were 25 to 50 cents\nhigher. All classes of dry-fed\nbutcher heifers met keen demand\nat firm prices.\nMedium to good grass heifers a\nshade higher. Choice cows 25 to 50\ncents higher, with odd choice half-\nery kinds $14. Fair to medium\ncows and canners generally steady\nas were bulls.\nChoice dry-fed butcher steers\nJ20 to S20.75; good $18.75 to $19.73;\nmedium $17.50 to $18.50; common\n$15 to $17.\nChoice dry-fed biucher heifers\n$18.25 to $19; good $17 to $18; medium $18 to $17; common $11 to\n$19.50. '   i\nGood cowa $13.50 to $13.50; me- j\ndium $11.28 to $13,29; common $10\nto $11; canners and cutters $4.90 to\n$9.50.\nGood bulls $12 to $18; common\nto medium $9 to $11.50.\nGood stock steers $15.90 to $17,\nwith odd sales to $17.90; common\nto medium $12 to $15.\nCall classes of veal and butcher\nweight ealves sold at firm prices;\ngood to choice $22 to $25, with odd\nsales higher.\nHogs closed 23 cents lower last\nweek at $23.90 for grade A; lows\n$13 liveweight last week. Lamb\nmarket closed last week with a\nweak undertone.\n8TRANGE   FREIGHT\nCLYDE, Scotland (CP) \u2014 A\nmidget submarine was sent here\nby train from .B.arrow-in-FurneM,\nLancashire, for sea trials.\n,when you're\nthe ceiling!\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV  - Channel 4\n11:00\u2014Sign On\n9:25\u2014Test Pattern\n11:15\u2014Secret Storm\n9:40\u2014Color Test Program\n11:30\u2014House Party\n9:55\u2014Bible Reading\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n12:30\u2014Bob Crqsby\n10:30\u2014Parents Time\n12:45\u2014Bob Crosby\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n1:00\u2014Welcome, Traveler\nll:00-Home\n1:30\u2014This World of Ours\n12:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n1:45\u2014Musical  Interlude\n12:30\u2014Feather  Your Nest\n2:0Or-On Your Account\n1:00\u2014According to Mrs. Hoyle\n2:30^Valiant Lady\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n2:45\u2014Brighter Day\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:00\u2014Variety Hour\n3:30\u2014lt Pays To Be Married\n3:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n4:00\u2014Q's Kaleidoscope\n3:45\u2014Guiding-Light\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:00\u2014Love of Life\n4:45\u2014Modern Romances\n4:15\u2014Armchair Adventure\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n4:30\u2014Robert Q. Lewii\n5:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n8:00\u2014What's Cookln'\n6:00\u2014Howdy Doody\n9:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n6:30\u2014\"Mr. Engineer\n6:00\u2014Rick Meyers Show\n7:00\u2014Rin Tin Tin\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n7:30\u2014The Front Page\n8:49\u2014Sports on Parade\n7140\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014TBA\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n7:15\u2014News\n8:00\u2014\"Place the Face\"\n7:25\u2014Weather Vane\n8:30\u2014Arthur Murray\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\n9:00\u2014Summer Theatre\n8:00-Badge 714\n9:30\u2014Dollar a Second\n8:30\u2014Music '55\n10:00\u2014Truth or Consequences\n9:00\u2014Meet Millie\n10:30\u2014Studio  57\n9:30\u2014\"Spollight Playhouse\"\n11:00\u2014It's a Great Life\n10:00\u2014The   $64,000   Question\n11:30\u2014Mr. and Mrs. North\n10:30\u2014Hollywood  Half  Hour\n12:00\u2014Racket  Squad\n11:00\u2014Yours For the Asking\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\n11:30\u20141 Am the Law\n12:00\u2014Safeco News\n13:30\u2014Women Wreatllng\nKHQ-TV - Channel 8\nKREM.TV \u2014 Channel 2.\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014\"I Am a Stranger\"\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n5:15\u2014\"Man Behind the Mask\"\n8:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n6:59\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n7:00\u2014Western Movietime\n7:59\u2014What'i the Weather?\n8:00\u2014James Mason\n8:15\u2014The Passerby\n8:30\u2014The Ruggles\n9:00\u2014Town and Country Time\n9:30\u2014Make Room for Daddy\n10:00\u2014Paris  Precinct\n10:30\u2014\"Names the Same\"\n11:00\u2014\"Avenging Hand\"\n12:49\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice!)\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300,\nEvenings\u2014Phone 1033R\nDally Except Sundays\nand  Holidays\nMc & Me\n\u2022 READ AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... \u00bb\u00ab on the dial\n(Paciflo Daylight Time)\nTUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1955\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15-Chapel ln tht Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014March of Truth\n7:40\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014Newt\ni.10\u2014Sporta News\n8:19\u2014Breakfast Club\n845\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9:00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:00\u2014CKLN Entertains\n10:10\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call  One-Nine\n^OO-^Prairie News\n12:05\u2014Sportsman's' Corner\n12:10\u2014Spotlight Star\n12:19\u2014Spdrts  Newt\n12:20\u2014Newt\n12:80\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Tex Williams Show\n1.00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n30\u2014Radio Featuraa\n45\u2014Matlnae\n00\u2014Pacific  Newi\n15\u2014Classic Corner\n,30\u2014Trans-Canada Matineo\n30\u2014Miscellany\n45\u2014Today's^ Mude\n30\u2014Jubilee* Road\n45\u2014Sleepytime- Story Teller\n00\u2014Sacred Heart\n15\u2014Tops and Pop!\n30\u2014Sport Newi\n:35\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n:45\u2014Tex Williama Show\n50\u2014Newa\n:00\u2014-Musical*\n:19-Here's Health\n30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n00\u2014Newt and Roundup\n:30\u2014Leicester Squara\n:00\u2014Ukrainian and Wester-\nMusic\n:30\u2014The Rhythm Pall\n;00\u2014The Spietacla\n\u202200\u2014Newt\n1:19\u2014Robert McKenzie Talk\ni:30\u2014Canadian Synvphonlei\n:00-NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1955\n:00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical  Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n55\u2014Musical March Past\n:00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Bill Good\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n1:45\u2014Anything Goes\n00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n30\u2014Laura Limited\n45\u2014Composer's Corner\n:00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n45\u2014Musical Program\n00\u2014Man and His Music\n15\u2014CBC Newt\n25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014Tram-Canada Matinea\n- 3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Music on Two Pianoi\n4:45\u2014Time for a Story\n5:00\u2014Ragtime Rhythm\n5:30\u2014Neighborly Newi\n5:45\u2014Newi\n5:55\u2014Int Commentary\n6:00\u2014Gargola and Beadechi\n8:19\u2014Folk Themei\n6:49\u2014Introduction to Wedneaday\nNight\n7:00\u2014Newi\n7:30\u2014Short Story\n8:00\u2014Who Ha\u00ab Seen the Wind\n9:00\u2014Stratford Festival\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014Recital\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n1. Contend for\n4. Man's\nnickname -\n9. A beautiful\ngirl in      .    .\nParadise\n(Moh.)\n8. River\n(W Pa.)\n7. Sesame\n8. Flew aloft\nU. Affected\nmanners\n12. Ponder\n13. Long-eared\nrodent\n15. Sheltered\nbay\n18. Vigorous\npromotion\nof an idea\n19. Pen\npoints\n21 Dry\n24. Cover-\ninga\nof\nfalse,\nhair\n25. Mimicked\nJ6. Dimtn.\nIshei\ngradu-\nally\n(used\nwith\n\"out\")\n27. Capital (It.)\n28. Uvea\n19. Lustrous\nfabric\nfellSHM HliiHir-:\ntelHHHH BHIflat\n-SHEM  HHHp\naaaia   as\nara itiigwaaHci\nhcihqlu laaana\nMBHUHHH   HSt\nDO      HHSli\n3EH@  EBEH3E&\naUHHB   BHHIIE\naHHEJH   MEJBHE\n\"EEana bqess\nYe. terday'd Answer\n*S1. Beetowa\n\u00bb6. River (Afr.)\n37. Singular of\n\"Warua\"\n38. The parson\nbird\n(Maori I\n40. Land\nmoasura\nACROSS\n1. Switch\nplaces\n5. Head\ncoverings\n9. Greedy\n10. Medley\n11. Awry (dial.)\n12. One learned\ntnthe\nsacred law\n(Moh.)\n14. Tavern\n15. Heal\n16. Sun god\n17. Music nott\n18. One who\nsigns with\nanother\n20. Die of\nhunger\n22. Conceal\n23. Regret\n24. Spider's net\n25. Sacred bull\n(Egypt)\n27. Cleansea\nof soap\n30. Teaching,\n32. Greek letter\n33. And (Latin)\n34. Becomes\nless bright\n88. Sesame\n36. To trace,\nas a source\n38. Job'\n39. Germanic\ncharacter\n40. A.relaUve\n41. Droops in\nthe middle\n42. Narrow   .\nInlets\n(geol.)\nDOWN,\n1 Loadstone\n2. Baking\nchamber\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work Itt    \"\nAXYDLBAAXR\nll LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply standi for another. In thli example: A .10 met)\nfor the \u00abhree L'a, X for tha two O's, etc. .Single letten, \u00bbpo\u00bb.\ntrophies, the length and- formation of the wordl W\u00ab Oil hint*\nEach day the coda letten ara different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nMTZOHL NUHFV DLL 00 VU BRIO\nMTZOHL BUHFV YC R L Z UB* ZIVT-\nISO  FT E R O \u2014 A T T O V S.\nYesterday's Cryptoquotel  LOVB IS A SPIRIT, ALL COM.\n'     PACT OF FIR-. NOT GROSS TO SINK, BUT LIGHT, AN1\nWILL ASPIRE\u2014SHAKESPEARE.\nDistributed by Kla( Features Syndicoto\n1\nT+\n1\nT\"\n\\\n1\nr~\nb\n7\na\n1\n\u00a7\n4 '\n%\n_\u00bb'\n%\nll\nVA\n11\nii\n1*\n%\nIS\"\n'^\nIi\"\na\n'^\nis\"\n19\n2\u00b0\n1J\n'\/\/)\n31\n%\n^\nii.\n%\n24'\n%\n%\n15\nib\n%\n\u00bb7\n28\n29\na\nV\n\u25a0\n|\nit\nn\n%\n34\n^\/A\n35-\na.\nH\n^A\n30\n1\n39\nl\n40\nl\n%\n\u00ab\\\n%\nAi\nfA\n\u25a0\u2022\nVi\n \u00ab^---^-^-\"\n\"   \u25a0   ; TT. \u2014\n\u25a0 '^'.''.y \u25a0\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014.\u2014:\u2014...   .,-,-.,   ....\n: \"     \u2014~        ; ; \u2014       \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'\u2022yyyyyyyyyyyyy - ryf. yyy\n(9061\nSMALL INVESTMENT -\nThat's the Want\nAd Story - PHONE 1844\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2,1953 \u2014 11\nBIRTHS\nKEI\/IPEKMAN \u2014 To Mr. and\nMrs. Herman Kemperman, Kinnaird, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, July 31, a daughter,.\nNIVEN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nJoseph Niven, 414,Third Street,,at,\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nAugust 1, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nWONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY -\"-\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, Nelson, B.C.\nWE NEED A LOGGING CON-\ntractor to haul logs about 7\nmiles. Must have full equipment for tree to mill operation.\nApply L. D. Moore Lumber Co.\nLtd., Ymir, B.C. Phone IB, Ymir.\nWANTED: SALES CLERK, AGE\n25 to 35. Experienced in hardware and general lines. Steady\nemployment. M.S.A.' and other\nbenefits. Apply Box 6404 Dally\nNews.\nMAN.TO CUT WOOD ON\nNorth Shore ln return for free\nwood supply or other suitable\narrangements. Phone 401-R-4.\nWANTED\u2014THREE BLASTHOLE\ndiamond drillers. Apply at once:\nNational Employment Office,\n\u2022 Nelson.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nSTENOGRAPHER GRADE 2 .\nB. C. CIVIL SERVICE\nDIVISIONAL ENGINEER'S\nOFFICE\nDEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nNELSCJJ\nSalary: 8165 rising to $203 per\nmonth. Typing speed 50, shorthand 100 words per minufe. Two\nyears'    experience.    Applicants\nmust be British Subjects, preference given ex-Service women\nApplication    forms    obtainable\nfrom   the   Government   Agent.\nNelson, to be completed and returned to the Government Agent\nNOT LATER THAN AUGUST\n10th, 1955.\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\nQUALIFIED STENOGRAPHER\nshorthand essential, also good\nknowledge bookkeeping. Apply\nNational^Employme'nt Service.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nA DRESS-LINGERIE SHOPIn\nyour home. Fifth Avenue. New\nYork fashions. Good commissions. No investment. Write\nModern Manner Dept. 128. Hanover, Penna. ,   .\nFOR ALL ODD JOBS PHONE\n256-R.\n.: AUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice. Day. week, or monthly Allen Hotel. 171 Baker St.\nMODERN FOUR BEDROOM\nsemi bungalow, centrally located. Box 10198 Nelson Daily\nNews.\nTOR 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 RENT - TWO ROOMED\nfurnished suite, self contained.\nSuite 3, 711 Victoria Street.\nFURNISHED 3-ROOM APART-\nment vacant Aug 20th. Phone\n653-R.\nCENTRALLY LOCATED. WIRED\nfor electric range. 4-roomed\nhouse 311 Observatory St.\nJUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL TEACH-\ner requires 3 bedroom home by\nSept. 1st or earlier. Ph. 738-Y-l\nJ0'x20' SPACE AT 526 VERNON\nsuitable for office and\/or whse.\nPhone 1466.\nLARGE BEDROOM. CENTRAL.\nGentleman preferred. 410 Victoria Street.\nFOR RENT - MODERN 3-\nroom apartment. Available Aug.\n1. Phone 583-R.\n: ROOMED FURNISHED SELF\ncontained apartment, private\nentrance. Phone 734-R.\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 405-L.\nSMALL FURNISHED 2-ROOM\napartment. Phone 337-Y.\t\nfTO RENT - BEDROOM WITH\nor without board. Phone 1035-R.\nBUSINESS OPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE-CAFE IN DISTRICT\ncentre. Must sell because of ill\nhealth. Revenue from rooms will\ncover payments. Price reason\nable: interest 4 per cent. Additional lot for expansion; only\nvacant lot in business section.\nApply 1615 Ward Street.\nSEE   \".\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS\nLTD.\nTODAY FOR THE LARGEST\nAND MOST COMPLETE\nNEW ANP'.USED.\nCAR SELECTION\nIN THE INTERIOR OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\n954 Austin A70\n953 Consul\n953 Austin A40\n952 Morris'4 Door\n952 Hillman\n950 Austin\n\u2022 \u2022    *\n955 Buick Special Hardtop\nFully equipped.\n955 Buick Century 4 Door\n955 Ford Fairlape 4 Door\n955 Pontiac 4 Door\n955 Chevrolet 4 Door\n954 Plymouth 4 Door\n954 Chevrolet 4 Door\n953 Pontiac 4 Door\n953 Chevrolet Hardtop\n953 Chevrolet 2 Door\n953 Ford 2 Door\n952 Pontiac 4 Door\n952 Chevrolet 2 Door\n950 Chevrolet 4 Door\n949 Ford 4 Door\n948 Chevrolet 4 Door\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n955 Chevrolet Pickup\n955 G.M.C. Pickup\n955 Chev Sedan Delivery\n955 Chev Station Wagon\n954 Ford Sedan Delivery\nRadio.\n954\/ Austin Pickup\n953 Ch,ev Sedan Delivery\n953 Ford Pickup\n952 Dodge Pickup\n952 G.M.C. Pickup\n951 Austin Pickup\n951 Meteor Bandwagon\n951 Austin Countryman\n951 Chev Pickup\n950 Ford 2 Ton\nGood rubber.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nWE PAY CASfH FOR\nLATE MODEL CARS\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\nBUSINESS FOR SALE: MEAT\nand grocery. Excellent location.\nAnnual turnover $90,000, Fixtures, equipment, refrigeration\nand stock. Low price. Apply Box\nNo. 10363 Daily News\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson, B C.\nPhone I 135    803 Baker St.\nFOR SALE - 1940 INDIAN 74\nmotorcycle, excellent condition,\ncheap. Apply Room 15, Vernon\nRooms 523 Vernon-St., Nelson.\nB.C.\nFOR SALE - 23-FT. FACTORY-\nbuilt house trailer complete. Apply Oscar Hansen Shell Station.\nSalmo Rd.\nFOR SALE - 1942 PLYMOUTH\nsedan. Price reasonable. Phone\n326-X-2.\nFOR SALE- BSA MOTOR\ncycle, low mileage, good condi\ntion. Phone 765-Y.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nPROPERTY; HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\n1-10 ACRES AND TWO OLD\nCOTTAGES South Slocan\n(Humphrey ppty.)\n,       $2500\nMight Take it.\n2\u2014R O O M I N G HOUSE ON\nSTANLEY ST- Yields about\n10%. If you would like to get\ninto something like this and\nhave a house to sell \u2014 see us\nat once.\n3-3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Close\n'Terms    $5500\n4-MOST ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM HOME. Hall, dining\nroom and living room, oak\nfloors. Bright kitchen. Im-\nmacolate wash room downstairs and beautifully tiled\n' bathroom upstairs. Good\nstone foundation. A really\nbeautiful garden. Front and\nback lawns, fruit trees and\nsmall fruits, 900 block Silica\n%\u00a3\u25a0 $8900\nSome 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.\nFARM, 37 ACRES. RUNNING\nwater, and 4-roomed house.\nHorse and chickens. Complete:\n$3600 cash. O. Nichols, Slocan\nCity.\nCABIN 12 x 14. FULLY LINED\nwith gyproc and decorated. Inlaid linoleum. Built-in cupboards. Fully wired. Movable.\nPrice $300. Phone 7384-L.\nFOR SALE - 20 ACRE FARM\nrunning water, electricity, large\nbuildings, 10 miles west of Nelson. M. Abeh, General Delivery\nNelson.\nFOR SALE, 5 ROOM HOUSE \u2014\n3 piece bathroom, 2 lots, 4 fruit\ntrees. All in splendid condition.\nApoly J. Cadden. Kaslo, B. C.\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 St Metals Ltd., 350\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Ph.\nPAcific 6357.\nBUILDERS SPECIAL LUMBER\nliquidation sale. 2x4, 2x8, 2x8\n1x6. 1x8, 1x10 boards. All dresB-\ned stock. $30 thousand BJM.\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 lumbeV. Makes\napproximately four cords of\nwood. Good for small repairs.\nPhone 1702-R. Immediate delivery.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2 FRIGIDAIRES\nalmost new, also 1 Beatty washing machine very good. See J.\nBrashera at Stewart Apartment,\nGranite Road or Western Auto\nWrecking Co.\n10 ACRES OF FARM LAND FOR\nsale. Apply Pete Rezansoff,\nTarrys, B.C.\n3-B.R. FAMILY HOME IN FAIR-\nvlew. 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.\nMACHINERY\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass,\naluminum, copper. Used parts\nfor cars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132, 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 ln vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News.\nWANTED - BABY CARRIAGE\nin good condition. Phone Mr.\nHayles, 133.\nWANTED - 2 GAS PUMPS. AP-\nply Box 10181 Dal\nNews.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nGARAGE BUSINESS. STOCK\nand equipment. Also house and\nproperty. Apply Box 138, Salmo.\n2 GOOD MILKING COWS FOR\nsale. Phone 1-J, Appledale, or\nMr. W. Stoopnlkoff, Slocan City\nFOR SALE - THREE MILKING\ncows just freshened. Bill Cher-\nnenkoff,  Crescent  Valley,  B.C.\nCapacity  from \u00a5t   yd. to m\nyds. Front end loading, rubber\ntired. Torqmatic transmission;\nno clutch wear.\nOPTIONAL ACCESSORIES:\n'  4 WHEEL DRIVE.\nPALLET    FORKS.     BULLDOZER     BLADE.     SNOW\nPLOW, CRANE HOOK.\nWrite or Phone\nBENNETTS\nLtd.\nMACHINE SHOP   .\nPhone 593 Nelson, B.C.\nSAWMILL\nMachinery Repairs\nMachinery Sales\nand Service\nElectric ond Acetylene\nWelding\nSTEVENSON'S\nMACHINE SHOP LTD.\n708  Vernon  St. Nelson\nPhone 98\nROOM AND BOARD\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals, copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment. Active Trading. 935 E.\nCordova. Vancouver. ,\nGEIGER COUNTERS, SCINTTL-\nlators, prices slashed. Write today! Gamma Radiation Instruments, '620 Eighth Ave. W..\nCalgary. \u2022\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement. 301 Baker\nSt. Phone 47. \"We buy used furniture.\"\nOAK 'BELL' PIANO. BENCH\nperfect condition. Lovely tone.\nLike new. $350. Tom Heise.\nProcter.\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE AND\ngarden 'tools; small Quebec\nheater. Owner leaving town. 806\nSecond St., Phone 45T1-R.\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45, while they last. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova\nVancouver.\nMcCLARY CHARM WOOD AND\ncoal range with oil burner separate.  Like  new.   Phone 544-L\n1ST GRADE TOPSOIL. WHILE\nit lasts. Delivered in city, $16.00\nper load. Call 1454 days.\nCOLLAPSIBLE WHEELCHAIR,\nlike new. $75.00 or what offers.\nPhone 1742-R.\n1 HORSE HAY BAILER GOOD\nconditiop. Box 10351 Nelson\nDaily News. \t\nA FEW CHERRIES 12c PER LB.\nBring containers. Gainey, Harrop, B.C\nBLACKCURRENTS FOR SALE\n20c per pound. W. H. Bainbridge\nR.R.I.   Phone   1655-Y-l.\nBOATSAND ENGINES\n5 H.P. JOHNSON OUTBOARD\nmotor, new condition and guarantee. $175, and terms. Coleman\nElectric.\t\n10-FOOT PLYWOOD HYDRO-\nplane. A little dandy. What\noffers? Ph. 544-L. 623 Latimer St.\n14 FT. HYDROPLANE, 5 FT.\nbeam; also 9.5 h.p. Johnson K40\nmotor, new oars, $175.\nFOR SALE-\nSVt' beam.\n14-FT. RUNABOUT,\nfor outboard motor.\nT. Allan, phone 58-W, Nakusp.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - CAR-TOP\nKaslo road. Phone\nVictoria St.\nLOST\nCARRIER,\n563-X.   306\nRED SCHOOL BLAZER\nwith crest and lapel pins. Phone\n230-R.  Reward.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 368   Ph   161-LS or 366-R.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nJelsoe\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.\nTRADE  BALANCE\nCANBERRA (CP1 - The Australian government does not intend to increase present restrictions on imports from the nondollar area, but the position calls\nfor extreme caution, said Trade\nMinister Neil O'Sullivan. Imports\nfrom the dollar area are already\nrestricted to essential goods.\nWhen building a home it ls a\ngood idea -to include kitchen\nequipment designed to the height\nof the housewife who will use it\nNew Star\nin any\nLegging Show\n1\nWould Like New\nTitle For Princess\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Wert Indians\nwould like Frlneem Margaret to\nbe named \"Princess of the Carib-\nbeans\".\nThis was the report brought\nback by Ted Leather, member of\na parliamentary delegation which\ntoured British possessions in the\nCaribbean.\nLeather, formerly of Hamilton,\nOnt., said the West Indians idolized Princess Margaret, who paic\na royal visit there early this year.\nSee H. \"Fritz\" rarennoltz,\nC. Rosb or Alex McDonald\nSeek lo Outlaw\nLaburnum Tree\nVICTORIA (CP) - A Victoria\nalderman is seeking to have the\nornamental and poisonous laburnum tree outlawed (lere.\nAid. Robert MacMillan says he\nis acting on complaints that no\nefforts have been made to curb\nthe growth of the golden-blossomed tree despite the 'fact thai\nfour youngsters have been rushed\nto hospital for stomach pump\ntreatments after-.eating the poisonous pealike seeds this summer\".\nThe trees grow in city parks.\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St.      Nelson. B. C.\nPHONE 1402\nTuna Fishers Vote\nTo Stop Fishing\nSAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)-Pro-\nWildcat Strike    .\nEnds, Algoma -\nSAULTE STE. MARIE, OnJ. \u2014\n<CP)\u2014 About 2230 men retunrtd to\nwork today at Algoma Steel Corp;\nending a week-long wildcat \"strike\nat the big basic steel plant.\nMembers of Local 2251, United\nSteelworkers of America (CIO-\nCCL), voted to ask the strikers to\ngo back to work pending negotiation of grievances.\nThe walkouts started last Tuesday over penatlies imposed by the\ncompany on maintenance men who\ndid not report for work Dominion\nDay, a statutory holiday. They\nspread later \"from the maintenance\ndepartment to other sections of\nthe plant, which employs a total.\nof 6700 men. _..;\nAt a meeting Friday night, Richard W. Johns, president oi the\nunion local, vainly sought aj) immediate back-to-work decision.\nHe said the company refused ,to\nenter into contract talks while an\nillegal strike was in progress. The\nmeeting agreed to the \"Saturday\nvote.\nMr. Johns, 44, was found dead\nat his home Saturday a few hours\nbefore the vote was taken.\nBird Downs Plane\nMALMOE, Sweden (Reuters)\u2014\nA twin-engined Finnish plane with\neight passenegrs aboard made\nforced landing at Bullofta airfield\nnear here Sunday after a'- bird\nsmashed the window in the pilot's\ncabin. The pilot, cut about the face\nand temporarily blinded by splintered glass, made a perfect land-\ntesting 'a price cut by canners al- jthe teievision set and $60 from a\nbacore tuna fishermen have voted man *\u00ab* met in a ni\u00abhtclub earl-\nler ana accompanied to his home.\n\"We gave them a ride after all,\"\nsaid Legace.\nNot What They Hope\nMONTI&AL (CP) \u2014 Police on\nnight patrol see many strange\nsights bqt constables Rene Legace\nand J. Gerez were mildly sur*\nprised when they were hailed by\na trio in the wee hours,\nThe three\u2014a man and two girls,\n-lugged a televisiqn set. the con-|inS before 40,000'persons watching\nstables reported. They thought the: an air <*isPlay at the field.\npolice car was a taxi. I '     ~~ \"\nThe three confessed to stealing1 pHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nto join in a stop-fishing movement\nthey said would tie up 3000 to 3500\nboats off Southern California and\nlower California, Mexico.\nSpokeman said Co-operative\ngroups from San Diego. San Pedro,\nFort Bragg and Seattle approved\nthe tie-up.\nSotuhern California canneries\nrecently reduced the price paid\nfishermen by $40 a ton to $310.\nFishermen contend the latter price\nis $10 under the price paid by\ncanners for imported Japanese al-\nbacore.\nSpokesmen said the fishermen\n.will demand $350 a ton.\nREAD THE.CLASSIFIED DAILY\nNEHRU FACES PROBLEM\n'NEW DELHI (Reutersl-Thirty\nHindus paraded Monday\" before\nthe. Indian Parliament blowing\nshell horns and shouting \"Tell\nNehru to stop killing cows\"\nThen, following three cows and\na calf in yellow saddle cloths, they\ntried to force their way Into the\ngrounds. They were driven back\nby police and seven of their leaders, including a half-naked holy\nman, were arrested.\nThe Hindus were protesting the\nslaughter of cows which they consider sacred.\nLATEST REPORT\nAsk your Invotlmon! Doalsr\ntor tho Lotoil tloport\nand ProipDctu- of\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nltd.\nCHILD'S TRICYCLE, SMALL\nfridge, both in good condition.\nPhone 1882.\nWATER TANK; HOLDS 900\ngals., and walking plow. \u2014 O.\nNichols. Slocan City.\nGOOD   COAL' AND WOOD\nrange  with reservoir.  Ph.  1752.\nSMALL FRIDGE $60. IN GOOD\nconditio;,. Phone 1882.\t\nFOR SALE - BABEE TENDA.\nPhone 469-L.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\nPhone 1494-Y.\t\nROOM AND BOARD FOR ONE\nyoung gentleman Phone 1179-X\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nFRESH    RASPBERRIES.     PICK\nyour   own.   Ifi   cents   per   lb.\nSefres,   Harrop,\nClassified Advertising Ratei\nPer line. 1 time '       .20\n2 consecutive times        .35\n3 consecutive times     45\n4, 5 and 6 consecutive\ntimes \u25a0       -6\u00b0\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions     ,20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS,  etc.\u201420c   per   line\nfirst insertion 16c per Une 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 Siates, United Kingdom\nOne  month             $ 1.25\nThree months __     $ 2.75\nSix months           $ 5.00\nOne year $15.00\nMail In Canada outside Nelson\nOne month       \u2014     $ 100\nThree months      $ 3.75\nSix months    -    $ 7.50\nOne year     _             $10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove  rates plus  postage.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nft    S.   ELMES. ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nG. W. BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\n.   and Box 34. Frutvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L. Purdy\n\" BOYt) C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C.\"\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\ng.  V. srtAYLER. P.C., BOX 252\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB.C Land Surveyor, Engineer\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Rentinj\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n%'\u25a0\u25a0        - I. \u25a0!.\u25a0! \u25a0\u25a0 -\u2014\n. \u25a0\nFIRST LIN!\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH  LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word )\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1 Insertion\t\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions  .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n\u00bb .20\n.33\n.45\n.60\n1.82\no  Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add lie for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates if payment is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\n MACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\"\nMachine   Shop,   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593. 324 Vernon St\nTIMBER CRUISER\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan City. B.C Timber cruising.\nmineral claim inspection.\nAnywhere in B.C. I\nNon Consecutive Insertions 200 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run\t\nYOUR   \u00bbJAME  :  \u201e ,,  ..\nBill Me   . .\nADDRESS      Payment Enclosed    \u25a0\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n if- \u2022.-\u25a0,\u25a0 M^\nRQfJPPPP!\nIP^ -*\u2014^~ \u00abWUi*^t\"^lUJ\u00abWft4J_|H*\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 2, 1955\nHOPE\nsprings eternal in the human breast and it seems\nto spring higher on the announcement of the dis-\n_ a covery of a new drug. But all too often newspaper\nand magazine articles are premature and tend to\nraise hopes that are ill-founded. \u2022.\nYou may be certain that when a new drug is\nready for use and suitable for your ailment\nyour doctor will know about it and\nWE WILL HAVE IT\nMANN'S    MANN'S\nCLINIC PHARMACY DRUG STORE\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nHoliday-Makers on South Caasl\n^pressed by Marilyns Feat\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n.    VACATION OFFER\nHelene Curtis\n8pray  Net   $1.75\nEgg Shampoo       ,75\nRegular Price $2.60\nSPECIAL $1.75\nFLEURYS\nPHARMACY\nFree Delivery Phone 26\nPolo Player Killed\nLONDON (AE)\u2014 Lt.-Col. Alistair M. Glbb, 54, brother-in-law\not Lord Cowdray, was fatally injured Friday during a polo match\nat Cowdray Park. The Duke ot\nEdinburgh played in an earlier\nmatch, with the Queen looking on.\nbut both had left the ground an\nhour before the accident. Gibb\nwas galloping' toward the goalmouth when his pony collided\nwith one ridden by Major Hugh\nBrassey. One of the animals appeared, to roll on Glbb's head,\nwitnesses said.\nFOLKESTONE, Ehgland (CP)\u2014\nMarilyn Bell was the toast of the\nsouth coast today.   ..       ..\nSwarms of Bank Holiday seaside\nvisitors made her channel conquest their conversation;, .piece.!\nThey didn't even, talk about the'\nunusual weather \u2014 brilliant sunshine.\n\"Did you sie her,\" the elderly\nlady in a white hat asked hef\nneighbor in the-beach chair rows\nalong the water. \"We just missed\nher.\"\n\"Fancy swimming all that way\nilone,\" said another.\nThev talked about her age (17),\nher height (five-feet-two), her\nweight (122 pounds), the color of\nher hair (dark blonde) and her\ncourage.\nWhat go me,\" said a weekender\nstaying at the same hotel, \"was\nthe way she came back from the\nswim. She and her coach came\ninto the lobby about 10 o'clock\nalone. Her hair was wet and she\nlooked as if she had just finished\na swim across a pool rather than\nthe channel.\n\"A woman came up to congratulate her and she hugged her and\nsaid how happy she was and that\nwas that\"\nWATCHED  FROM  SHORE\nMany persons had watcher her\nslow progress less than three miles\noff the coast, when she was swept\nfive miles westward by tide current without gaining ground. \u2022\n\"Some were going to help her\nwhen she got near the shore,\" said\none vacationer holding the centre\nof the stage 'in a small knot of\neager listeners. \"The crowd shout-,\ned to leave her alone or the swim\nwould be void. They cheered when\nshe had really finished.\"\nWord got around that Marilyn\nleft her hotel shortly at 10'a.m.\nMonday with the idea of paying\nsome thank-you calls and having\na short dip in the ocean.\n\"Remarkable;,\" said the middle-\naged man to his wife.. \"Remarkable.\" . .''\u25a0\u2022\nDOUGLAS, Art*.', (AP)-P)ielps\nDodge Corporation and the Inter\nnational Union of Mine, Mill and\nSmelter. Workers (Ind.) reached\nagreement; on a new contract to\nday after a month.long strike.\nThe agreement was the first\nbreak in a strike which has made\nidle 35,000 members of the union\nemployed by Phelps Dodge, Ken-\nnecott Copper Company and Inter-\nnational Smelting and Refining\nCompany.\nThe contract, subject to ratification by union locals Wednesday,\nprovides for wage increases of\n11% to- 1TA cents an hour and\nexpanded health and welfare\nbenefits. The wages will go up\nirom $13.12-$19.04 a day to $14.04\n$20.44. -\nThe union originally demanded\na wage increase of 20 cents an\nhour,. plus health and welfare\nbenefits.\nGirl Trapped lit\nGrinder Loses Arm\nVICTORIA (Cprtt-ynn; Wright,\n11-year-old daughter of'Mr. and\nMrs, Les Wright of'Saanichton, ls\nrecovering in hospital hero after\nher arm was amputated Saturday.\nQoptpn. were forced'.to amputate\nthe girl's left arni near the shoulder after it became caught in a\nmeat grinder. The girl was feed'\nJng meat .Into the hopper of; the\npower grinder In her father's\nbutcher shop Saturday when her\nhand, was caught. Her arm was\ndragged In almost to the shoulder\nbefore the machine could be\nstopped.\nMechanics had \"to be called to\ndismantle the machine to release\nher arm. '       ,'.*''\nLeacock's Home Jo\nBe Literary Shrine\nORILLIA, Ont. (CP)\u2014The home\nof the late Stephen Leacock-was\nput up for sale Friday. A national\nappeal may be launched to estab\nlish the local landmark as a lit\nerary shrine. A price of $50,000\nis being asked for the cottage and\n29 acres of shore property at the\nsouth end of Lake Couchiching,\nwhere Prof. Stephen Leacock, re\nnowned Canadian humorist and\neconomist, did most of his writing while on vacation from McGill University.\nDelay Gillnel\nSalmon Fishing\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The de\npartment' of fisheries announced\nMonday opening of the Canadian\nsection of Juan de Fuca Strait and\nthe Fraser River below the Pat\ntullo bridge for, gillnet salmon\nfishing will be delayed 18 hours\nthis week and next as a conservation measure.\nUnder the new schedule, open\ning is delayed from 2 p.m. today\nuntil 8 a.m. Tuesday. Closure for\ngillnetters begins at 8 a.m. Fri\ndays.      tt\nThe new regulations apply from\nJuly 29 until Aug. 10.\nAbdve the Pattullo. Bridge, a\nnew closure schedule prohibits\ngillnet salmon fishing from 8 a.m.\nFriday, until noon Tuesday between the same dates.        i\nPurse-seines will be faced with\na closure in the Juan de Fuca area\nfrom 12:01 a.m. Aug. 5, to 12:01\na.m. Aug. 9 and in the lower Fraser from 12:01 a.m. Fridays to 12:01\na.m. Tuesdays to Aug. 10.\nPHONE '1844   FOR   CLA88IFIED\nFrench Africa\nReady (or\nPARIS (AP)\u2014Troops In French\nNorth Africa braced Ivlonday for\npossible new Natlotj'aftst violence\non a major Moslem holiday.\nThe National Assembly, In a 382-\nto-233 vote early today, gave Premiere \" Edgar- Faure 'tfuthprlty to\nextend the state of -emergency In\nAlgeria, where more than a dozen\nNationalist rebels and- suspects,\nwere reported slain in new violence Friday.\nLanderyou, Lee    ' -\nSettle For\nUndisclosed Amount\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014The two So\nci^J Credit MLAs held liable for\na penalty of $12,500 for sitting 11-\nlegally in the Alberta legislature\nhave settled with Calgary lawyer\nJames D. Macdonald for an undisclosed amount, it was learned\nMonday.\nJohn C. Landeryou, Lethbridge,\nand .Roy S. Lee, Taber, j_ach was\npenalized $6200 and costs by Mr.\nJustice Neil Primrose for renting\na building to the government contrary to the Legislative Assembly\nAct. Both resigned their seats but\nwere re-elected ln the June election.\nManufacturer's Clearance\nOf Famous\nFashi%i'Crp,ft\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\nUnitarians Launch\nAppeal For Funds\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The Unitarian\nServices Committee will launch a\nCanada-wide appeal for $125,000\nstarting Sept. 12, executive director Dr. Lotta Hitschmanova announced here Monday.\nIt will be a- tri-country appeal\nfor relief project* in India, Korea\nand Greece. Aim will be to raise\nthe required amount before\nChristmas.\nMOO STAKE\nGel gas-saving short-stroke\nV-8 power al not one cent of\nextra cost I When you buy a new\ntruck, look under the hood-\nmake sure you're getting true\nshort-stroke power\u2014then you'll\nget up to 33% less engine-\ndamaging friction\u2014up to 53%\nlonger ring life\u2014and big gas\nsavings! That's exactly what you\nget in every series of the great\nFord Triple-Economy Truck\nline\u2014a mighty overhead-valve\nV-8 engine of the most advanced\nshort-stroke design\u2014and you\nget it without paying one cent\nextra! That means better value\nwhen you buy, lower upkeep\nwhile you haul and a better deal\nwhen you sell Go true short-\nstroke V-8\u2014go Ford!\nFORr TRUCKS\noffer you short-stroke\nO.H.V. V-8 engines in every series\nAS STANDARD EQUIPMENT!\nC-750 CAB FORWARD\nt ^^   |\nReg. to $7f..d  Reg. to $78.50  Reg. to $91.00\n54.50 59.50 67.50\nEXTRA PANTS AND SPORT COATS\nAT 20% OFF\n, Don't Pass Dp This\nGreat Half-Yearly Money Saving Event.\nFIT and SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.\nEMORY'S LTD.\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nDetective Quits\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Detective\nC. W. MacKay Monday resigned\nIrom the special Vancouver police\nsquad named to- assist the royal\ncommission investigation Into\ncharges of corruption in the Vancouver police department.\nThe veteran officer gave -no\nreason for his resignation. He said\nhe had been transferred back to\nthe sudden death detail at his own\nrequest.\nMacKay was named head ol the\nfour-man squad last week after\ncommissioner Reginald H. Tupper\nhad requested the assistance of\nsuch a detail for his, inquiry,\nwhich now is underway.\nThe city police squad was to\nwork with an RCMP detail $ow\nassisting commissioner Tupper.\nThe RCMP squad was appointed\nby Attorney-General Robert Bonner to Investigate allegations of\ncriminal activity arising out of\ntestimony before the inquiry.\nIt was not immediately known\nif the city squad's other members,\nDetectives Doug Grant, Ray Me-\nHroy and William Morphett, planned to continue with the assignment or would also ask to return\nto their normal duties.\nNews of the^Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face typo; larger type rate* en\nrequest. Minimum two linoo. 10% discount for prompt payment\nFuller Brush Representative\nDon E. Sargent \u2014 Phone 133S\n4 room house for rent. Msrk-\noff's. Slocan Park.\nPackage Insurance can save you\n20%. See McHardy Agency Ltd.\nBINGO,\nLEGION   HALL TONIGHT\nKNIGHT8 OF COLUMBUS\nRegular monthly meeting tonight\nat 8 p.m.\nFull line of milk shakes, ice cream\nand cold drinks, at\nWAITS NEWS.\nBricks, lime, cement, flue-lining.\nT. H. WATERS _ CO. LTD.\n,101 Hall St. \u2014 Nelson \u2014 Phone 156\nWe doctor stipes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save their soles!\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP\nChild Health Conference to be\nheld today at the Selkirk Health\nUnit offices at 303 Baker Street.\nKnitters\u2014For all yarn knitting\nneeds, we invite you to visit our\nwool deDartment.\nEBERLE'S on- Baker Streit\nNew Fall Suiting and Skirting\nNew colors, new fabrics, 57\" wide.\n$1 95 yd. \u2022\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nFor Sale \u2014 23 ft. factory-built\nhouse trailer, complete. Apply\nOscar Hansen, Shell Station, Salmo road.\nGift wrapping ribbons, seals,\nCards. Note Paper and Envelopes.\nKOOTENAY  STATIONERS\n_  SPORTS  8H0P\nSEE YOUR FORD-MONARCH DEALER\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS Ltd.\nTrade in now on a new Ford\nTruck\u2014and watch your haulage costs drop I Call in and see\nfor yourself the tQp truck values\nyour Ford Dealer is offering\nright now. They really are sensational! Get him to show you\nthe Ford Truck that's been\ndesigned to do your particular\nhauling job. You'll be amazed\nwhen he explains how it will do\nyour work faster, more efficiently, more economically ...\nsaving you money every mile!\nFord's short-stroke V-8 power\n(at\"\u00abo extra cost!), Driverized\ncab convenience and extra-high\npayload capacities all add up to\nmoney-saving, money-making\nTriple Economy!\n608 Vernon St.\nPhone 1744\nCOUNT ON THESE SIGNS 'Uf^MSr   FOR THE BEST VALUES IN USED CARS AND TRUCKS\nYoung budgie birds and  gold\nfish always in stock.\nMAC'S FLOWER 8HOf\"\nPHONE   910\n\"Do It Yourself\"\nCushion your home with\nPllofoam from\nSTERLING HOME FURNI3HER8\nFLOWERS   FOR   EVERY\nOCCASION\nPHONE 187\nGRIZZELLES'   FLORIST8\nHot weather special \u2014 cotton\nmet T shirts in all sizes for ages\n2 to 18 White and assorted colors.\n69c. EBERLE'S on Baker St.\nPottery  \u2014   20%   Discount   this\nweek onlv at\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER   SHOP\nPHONE  962.\nFor the hiker \u2014 young or old.\nComplete set of cooking utensils\ncompactly fitted together in handy\ncarrying bag. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nGeneral meeting 'of Loeal 1003\nI.B. of E.W, Thursday 7:30 t>._n.\nHume Hotel, executive meeting\n7:00 p.m.    ',\nCAMPJELL,  SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n676 Baker St Phone 236\nAuditors\n* i\u2014\u2014\nHova the Job- Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nORDER YOUR SLABWOOO\nNOW  AND  SAVE.  ONLY $11.00\nCORD.   DELIVERED   BY   DUMP\nTRUCK. PHONE 984, FAIRVIEW\nFUEL.\nFun for the kids around the bonfire at camp with a popcorn popper. Sliding cover, made of copper screen. $1.15. each.\nHIPPERSON'S\nSlazenger golf equipment, golf\nclubs, ladies and mens, golf bags,\ntees,  balls,  covers,  etc.  See our\ndisplays.   \u2022\nWOOD VALLANCE.HARDWARE\n8AVE MONEY\nINSURE THE MODERN WAY\nall your home, household furniture\nONE   PACKAGE   POLICY\nAPPLEYARD A CO.\nBox 26, Phone 269,\nBeautiful, solid* walnut dining\nroom suite by Gibbard, $178.00;\nalso one dining room table with\nfour chairs, $25.00.\nWE BUY AND 8ELL NEW\nAND U8ED FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nTOURISTS '\nCabins, trailers, and tents, good\nsand beach, boats, fishing and\nswimming. On Highway 3, 10\nmiles east of Nelson and 9 miles\nwest of Balfour Ferry. R.R.I. Nelson, B.C. Operator Mrs. A. Sand-'\nberg phone 471-Y-l.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nKLINE \u2014 Funeral services for\nDiane Dorothy Kline and William\nRay Kline will be held Wednesday\nat 2 p.m. at Trinity United Church.\nRev. Allan Dixon will officiate\nand interment will take place in\nNelson Memorial Park.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical  Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 Front St.\nPhone 63\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone  327\n676  Bjikor 8tre\u00bbt\nMake your own Home  Made\nBread with  ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on every package\nPhone 238 or call\nELLISON MILLING\n_ ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nLET US DI8PENSE YOUR\n... DOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nSave With Safety at Yeur\nRexall Store\n\"Try Us For Lower Prices\"\nRELIABLE   8ERVICE\nCity Drug\n\"Your Bexall Pharmacy\"\nPhono\" 34 Box 460\n\u25a0. \u25a0-. \u2022\n\u25a0 .;\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0:\n__________________\u25a0\n____________\u25a0__\u25a0\n.mMmMmm^m^mm.\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_08_02","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\/1.0429261","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":"1955-08-02 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":"1955-08-02 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":""}]}