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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":" *~ \u2014*\nI'M I ii  ' \u25a0'\u2022\u2022  \u25a0\n^mmmmmmmfii\nNelson's  Reco\n2178\n5&\nrf \\  ''\nVol. 56\nTraffic  Fatality-Ftfr >% *,\\\nW%W*\n75i3>7\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Clear today. Not\nmuch change in temperature. Light\nwinds. Low-high at Cranbrook 50\nand 85, Crescent Valley 50 and 90.\n\u00bb,\n'ft. *    :\nNELSON, B. C. CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 21, 1958\nNot  More Than 6c  Dally,  Uo Saturday\nNo. 103\nArab Agreement\nRaises UN Hopes\nJordan, Lebanon Acceptance\nWill Send U.S., U.K. Troops Home\nBy LLOYD McDONALD\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)\u2014An apparent unanimous agreement among the Arab states on a Middle East\nsettlement plan bringing the United Nations into the picture\naroused immediate hope Wednesday night that the UN\nemergency assembly session may wind up by Friday with\na definite accomplishment.\nThe chief point being hailed on\nvirtually all sides was an understanding that all the Arab states\nwould subscribe, in a resolution\nbacked by all 81 members of the\nUN assembly to a renewed pledge\nof mutual non-aggression in the\ntroubled area.\nShould Jordan and Lebanon accept this assurance it was felt\nWednesday night, there would be\nno further block to a withdrawal\nof the British and American forces\nfrom those countries within the\nnext month.\nLebanon apparently was willing\nat the outset to accept such assurances if and when they are put into formal wording for voting in the\nassembly. The reaction of King\nHussein's Jordan government was\nstill not known, but it was felt\npressure by Britain might bring\nthe monarch around to accepting\nthe solution.\nLLOYD SATISFIED\nBritain's Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd was understood to feel\nthat the proposed Arab plan would\nprovide a satisfactory basis for\nending the current tension in the\nMiddle East.\nAnd it was understood that Canada and Norway, who led in sponsoring a middle-power compromise\nproposal tabled in the assembly\nTuesday, would be willing to with-\nReport U.S.\nTo Suspend\nNuclear Tests\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States was reported Wednesday night to be about ready\nto announce a temporary suspension of nuclear tests.\nAn informed source said the\ngovernment hopes the contemplated temporary halt will lead\nto permanent suspension under\nan adequately safeguarded international agreement.\nThe source, who asked not to\nbe named, indicated a U.S. announcement of temporary end of\nnuclear weapons tests will stem\nfrom East-West talks which have\nbeen going on at Geneva since\nearly July.\nThe White House declined to\nconfirm or deny the report.\nFather Forced\nTo Part With\nYoungsters\nOTTAWA (CP)-Alexander Crete\njays he will turn his seven children\nover to the Children's Aid Society\nafter a fire in his home Tuesday\nnight.\nAlthough the fire caused only\nslight damage, it was \"almost too\nmuch to bear.\"\nCrete's first wife was killed in a\ngas explosion in 1949.\nHis second wife entered hospital\nlast week with bronchitis and a\nheart condition.\nCrete, 41, unable to work because\nof illness, left hospital himself last\nThursday.\nElectricity in his home was cut\noff two weeks ago when he was\nunable to pay his bill.\nThe family was down to its last\ncandle and had just eaten its last\nfood before the fire broke out.\nThe children range in age from\n19 months to 15 years.\ndraw it should the , Arab plan\nprove acceptable to most of the\nassembly members.\nExternal Affairs Minister Smith\nwas reported feeling that the\nwhole atmosphere at the UN had\nchanged for the better in the 24\nhours since he backed the Norwegian-Canadian proposal in the assembly late Tuesday.\nTHE ARAB PLAN\nThese were understood to be the\n1. Reaffirmation of Arab league\nmain points in the Arab plan:\npledges   against   non-interference\nin the affairs of other Arab countries.\n2. A request to Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold to set up\nthe necessary arrangements to\nmake possible the early withdrawal of U.S. troops from Lebanon and\nBritish forces from Jordan.\n3. A ban on inflammatory broadcasts beamed from one Arab capital to another.\n4. An economic development\nplan along lines proposed by President Eisenhower in his broad\nMiddle East program, and also\nsuggested by Hammarskjold.\n5. A request for Hammarskjold\nto report back by Sept. 30 to the\nassembly, which will then be in its\nregular fall session.\nInformed sources said Ham\nmarskjold was expected to consult quickly with the Arab countries on the question of establishing a \"UN presence\" in Jordan\nand expanding the observer group\nin Lebanon.\nIt was understood the \"presence\" would be a prominent person who would act as a UN ambassador and reporter.\nJordan had objected to either\nUN observers or armed forces\non its territory, although this at-\n! titude wat modified to some extent Monday.\nThe Arab proposal made no provision for the establishment of a\nstandby UN peace force, as recommended by Eisenhower. But\nthis was expected to be dealt with\nin a separate resolution.\nADM. H. G. RICKOVER, left, poses with a\nmodel of the atomic submarine Nautilus during\na television interview In Washington with Sen.\nGeorge Smothers (D\u2014Fla.). The admiral, who\ndidn't get a bid to the White House ceremony\nhonoring the Nautilus last week, said that nu-\nclear submarines, hiding under the polar ice\ncap, could destroy any nation that attacked the\nUnited States even if the country was devastated, He said the atomic subs \"may herald for\nus a perfect deterrent for war,\"\n\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nWill Use Troops Again If\nIntegration Opposed\u2014Ike\n'58 May Reduce\nWheat Supplies\nBy HAROLD MORRISON '\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Rising sales\nand-prospects of a below-average\ncrop may reduce Canada's total\nwheat supplies this year to a four-\nyear low of about 950,000,000 bushels.\nSupplies of these dimensions,\nbased on unofficial estimates,\nwould be about six times Canada's\ndomestic needs and about double\nher over-all average Canadian and\nworld sales, but they would be\ndown from previous peaks.\nIn contrast Canada had total\nsupplies of 1,100 100,000 bushels\nlast year and a record 1,152,600,-\n000 the year before. An indication\nof the decline was Wednesday's\nbureau of statistics estimate that\nthe July 31 wheat carryover had\ndropped to 614,764,000 bushels from\n-last year's record 729,546 000.\nFactors included in this decline,\nit was indicated, were rising sales\nand a smaller crop which last year\ndropped to 370,500,000 bushel from\n573,100,000 the year previous.\nMay Confine\nSommers' Jury\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mr. Justice J. O. Wilson indicated Wednesday he may order the Sommers\nbribery-conspiracy trial jurors confined to quarters when they return\nnext Monday from a two-week holiday.\nThe justice said he would discuss\nit with the nine men and three\nwomen members of the. panel but\nadded: \"Since\"the jury's deliberations may be lengthy, it might be\nbetter if we provided quarters for\nthem.\"\nCounsel assured his lordship\nthere was nothing in law to prevent a jury from getting sleep\nwhen deliberations on its verdict\nwere lengthy.\nThe jury trying former lands\nand forests minister Robert Sommers, three other individuals and\nfour companies, has been at liberty since the trial began May 1.\nThey have sat in court 58 days up\nto now \u2014 a record for the B.C.\ncriminal assizes \u2014 and the trial is\nexpected to take another three\nweeks. Addresses to the jury are\n-due to begin Monday.\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) -\nBootleggers here are demanding\n$20 for a 24-pint case of beer as a\nresult of the province-wide beer\nstrike. Iti s reported that bootleggers here are doing a thriving business between sunset and dawn.\nTHETDRESTS' PRIME EVIL\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe Commons approved the $50,-\n000,000 spending estimates of the\nmines  department.\nDouglas Fisher (CCF \u2014 Port\nArthur) said some gold mines purposely low-grade ore to qualify for\nfederal subsidies.\nMr. Camtois said his department has received no proof of\nthis.\nThe Commons defeated by\nvote of 141 to 41 a last-ditch CCF\nmove to block higher Canadian\ntariffs on British wool cloth.\nIt passed a bill allowing a gift\nexemption up to $10,000 on real\nestate transfers between husband\nand wife.\nTHURSDAY\nThe Commons meets at 11 a.m,\nto consider government spending\nestimates. The Senate meets at 3\np.m.\nDuplessis Announces\nTwo Resignations\nQUEBEC (CP) - Premier Duplessis today announced the resignations of Health Minister Al-\nbiny Paquette and Paul Spence,\nmember of the legislative assembly for Roberval, and said by-\nelections will be held Oct. 15 in\nRoberval and Labelle to fill the\nvacancies.\nThe premier said both the 68-\nyear-old health minister, who\nrepresents Labelle constituency,\nand Mr. Spence were resigning\nfor reasons of health.\nNo further appointments for\nthe men were announced.\nIn making the announcement,\nMr. Duplessis also scotched speculation of an impending, general\nprovincial election.\n\"These are merely well-fed rumors,\" the premier told reporters at a hastily-convened press\nconference.\nRussian Subs\nDown Channel\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Five Russian submarines passed down the\nEnglish Channel Wednesday, the\nadmiralty said.\nThey were on the surface, heading west, and were sighted by\nfreighters in mid-channel.\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014President Eisenhower indicated\nWednesday he would again call out troops if he felt a\nstate failed to suppress unlawful opposition to school integration ordered by the courts.\nAnarchy will result if persons, communities or states\ncontinue  to  defy  court  de\n' sas national guard into federal service.\nEisenhower quoted his own words\nthen:\n\"The very basis of our individual\nrights and freedoms rests upon the\ncertainty that the president and.the\nerxecutiye , branch of government\nEMS support and hnsuis.the.carry,\ning out of the1 decisions of the federal courts.\"\nSince that action a year ago,\nEisenhower has been criticized by\nSome Negro groups and others on\nthe ground that he has done little\nto prepare the way for compliance\nwith integration ordered by the\ncourts,\nTO PETITION\nLITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -\nThe Little Rock school board announced Wednesday night it has\npetitioned the U.S. Appeals Court\nto stay its order which would\ncontinue integration of Negro\nstudents at Central High School,\nSchool Superintendent Virgil\nBlossom made the announcement\nafter a meeting with Governor\nOrval Faubus which lasted\nnearly two hours.\ncrees, he said.\n\"My feelings are exactly as they\nwere a year ago.\"\nLast September Eisenhower ordered federal paratroopers into\nLittle Rock, Ark., saying the state\nadministration of Governor Orval\nFaubus was, obstructing courtcor-\nders for. racial integration.\nSAYS LUSTRE GONE\nFaubus replied Wednesday that\nEisenhower and those who agree\nwith him are engaging in a futile\ncampaign to \"obtain peaceable\ncompliance with illegal court orders.\" Faubus said they are attempting to do so \"simply by invoking the sacred name of the\nconstitution and the once magic\nname of Eisenhower,\" and he\nadded:\n\"The latter lost its lustre and\nappeal -months and months ago.\"\nEisenhower did not mention Faubus, but he pinpointed his statement by.-saying at the outset of a\npress conference that he had prepared some remarks about a recent decision of the U.S. 8th circuit Court of Appeals.\nThat court, at St. Louis, this\nweek reversed a lower court ruling\nthat integration at Little Rock\nshould be delayed for 2*4 years.\nWithout saying what he thinks of\nsegregation as a social practice,\nEisenhower said all Americans\nmust comply with final orders of\nthe courts and that all states must\nmake sure such compliance - is\npossible.\nRECALLS OWN WORDS\nEisenhower recalled a statement\nhe made in a radio - television\nspeech last Sept. 24\u2014a few hours\nafter he ordered U.S. troops into\nLittle Rock and called the Arkan-\nSets New Record\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Cana\ndian Pacific Airlines Bristol Bri\ntannia aircraft set a new record\nfor non-stop flying on a Tokyo-\nVancouver flight this week, a\ncompany spokesman said Wednesday.\nThe jet-prop aircraft was in the\nair for 13 hours', 33 minutes Monday on the return leg of a proving\nflight between the two cities.\nPassenger and cargo services\non the route using the new planes\nwill be inaugurated Sunday.\nMP Urges Tighter\nRein on Explosives\nOTTAWA (CP) - Some gold\nmines are purposely low-grading\ntheir ore to qualify for emergency\ngold mining assistance subsidies,\nDouglas Fisher (CCF \u2014 Port Arthur) said Wednesday in the Commons.\nHe said such charges have come\nto him and he mentioned one company\u2014Little Long Lac Mines\u2014as\none of the firms involved.\nSpeaking during study of' mines\ndepartment estimates he asked\nMines Minister Comtois what assurances there are that govern,\nment inspectors keep a close check\non low-grading practices to ensure\nthat only those mines that deserve\nfederal assistance get it.\nMr. Fisher said he has heard\nstories from miners in the Timmins, Ont., and Port Arthur areas\nthat certain mines close off high\ncontent ore bodies, thus produdircg\nonly low-grade ore which qualifies\nthem for emergency gold mining\nassistance.\nHe said Little Long Lac Mines,\nthrough share purchases, acquires\ncontrol of low-grade mines giving\nthe company a large share of the\nfederal, subsidies.\nMr. Comtois said his department has received no \"proof\" that\nmines low-grade ore to qualify for\nsubsidies but that if such complaints came to his desk he would\nhave them investigated.\nGovernment inspectors not only\nexamined company books but went\nunderground as well to examine\nthe ore bodies.\nWANTS NATIONAL DST\nAt another point H. W. Herridge, Deputy CCF House leader,\nsaid an attempt should be made\nto establish daylight saving time in\nsummer on a national basis. This\nwould avoid the \"unnecessary inconvenience' 'of having some areas\non standard time while others\nwere on daylight.\nMr. Herridge, whose Kootenay\nWest constituency is ln the heart\nof the Sons of Freedom Doukho\nbors' field of operations, also\ncalled for closer enforcement of\nregulations covering use of explosives.\nHe had heard complaints in his\narea, and knew from his own experience and observations, that\nsometimes lumber workers or road\nconstruction crews left blasting\npowder and dynamite lying around,\ncovered only with canvas or under\na log, during weekends.\nThere was little difficulty in buying such explosives at stores and\n\u25a0he felt there was a need for \"much\nstricter enforcement\" of regulations intended to ensure safe use\nof these materials.\nThis was especially important,\nhe said, in view of the \"particular\ncircumstances\" in his area.\nScreaming \"Murder\",\nSons Scurrying Home\niimiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii\nSaintly Soviets\nServe Sentence\nWARSAW (Reuters) - Russian authorities have cracked\ndown on two self-styled 'saints'\nin Soviet Turkmenia who fleeced villagers in return for \"supernatural services,\" a Warsaw\nnewspaper reported Wednesday.\nJanar Bajdzanow and Oraz-\ndurd Turryjew were regarded\nas \"God's representatives on\nearth\" by Turkmenians living\nin the heart of the Communist\nfatherland.\nThey gave lectures warning\nof the approaching end of the\nworld and assured villagers\nthey would be in power after\ndoomsday.\nBajdzanow was jailed for 20\nyears and Turryjew for 12\nyears when authorities caught\nup with them and took them\nto court.\nA villager who borrowed\n43,000 rubles (about $1000)\nfrom state farm funds to pay\nfor the supernatural services\nof the saints was jailed for\n15 years, the newspaper said.\nA railroad worker paid to.\nhave his parents brought back-;:\nto life and other villagers gave\nup valuables on the promise\nthat the saints would intervene\nfor them.\nAt their trial, the prosecution said the saints.spent their\nearnings on strong drink and\ndrugs.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLandslide\nEngulfs Town\nDOMODOSSOLA, Italy (Reuters)\nA huge landslide tumbled into the\nSimplon Pass Wednesday cutting\nthe vital transportation link, engulfing a. village and sweeping 12\npersons away.\nLoosened by eight hours of rain,\nthousands of tons of rock and earth\nbroke loose from a mountain in\nthe Valdossola area near the Swiss\nfrontier and roared into San Giovanni, crushing 10 of its-15 houses.\nViolent rain' storms also did extensive damage in the western arc\nof the Italian Alps as freak midsummer weather .swept across\nEurope.\nAcross the Swiss border, hail\nstorms cut vineyards to pieces near\nLausanne and caused smaller ava-\nlanches. Hail shattered 20,000 windows at Portes-les-Valence in. eastern France.\nThree persons were killed and\ntwo injured in a storm at Han-\nnoversch-Muenden, West Germany,\nwhile fires started by lightning\ncaused heavy damage to Stade,\nnear Hamburg. .\nIn southwestern England, extra\npolice were sent to seaside vacation spots to help clear wreckage\ndone by floods. Property was swept\nout to sea and several rural villages were cut off.\nPRINCE PHILIP\nTO VISIT OTTAWA\nPORT HOPE, Ont. (CP) -\nPrince Philip wjll be in Ottawa\nfrom Wednesday, Oct. 29, to Friday, Oct. 31.\nThe announcement was made\ntoday from the Port Hope home\nof  Governor-General  Massey.\nThe husband of the Queen, president of the English-Speaking\nUnion of the Commonwealth, will\nattend a world branches conference of the union being held in\nOttawa..\nHe will be Mr. Massey's guest\nat Government House in Ottawa\nduring his stay.\nOn Thursday, ,Oct. 30, Prince\nPhilip will be in the chair at a\ndinner of the conference at which\nMr. Massey is the principal speaker and guest of honor.\nPrince Philip will fly from London to Ottawa, arriving during the\nmorning of Oct. 29. He will return\nby air, leaving Ottawa during the\nafternoon of October 31.\nSay:\nSy\ns Canada's Parole\nstem \"Backward\"\nOTTAWA (CP) - Senator David\nCroll Wednesday said Canada's\nparole system is one of the most\nbackward in the world.\nHe told the upper house the prob\nlem could be solved over the years\nby implementation of recommenda.\ntions in the Fauteux committee report on penal reform.\nAdoption of the recommendations\nin the report would give Canada\na penal system that would,not penalize but would reform.\nThe Toronto Liheral spoke shortly before the upper house gave\nfinal approval to a government bill\nto establish a five-member national\nparole board.\nThe Senate also gave final approval to a government bill to boost\nsubsidies to gold mines by 25 per\ncent for the three-year period from\n1958 to 1960. -\nMass Return Started as\nLeaders Meet in Secret\nIn order to protect sectarians from \"further murderous attacks\". Sons of Freedom couriers have been despatched to the Okanagan Valley with orders to recall all\nsect members to their West Kootenay stronghold.\nThe mass return has already started and in the\nprocess, Freedomite workers have left cannery managers\nwithout warning right in the middle of their busy season.\nIn one cannery 14 young Freedomite women asked for\nimmediate leave of absence; when this was refused, they\nwalked off the job.\nAnd the Freedomite nerve-\ncentre is vibrating with secret\nactivity as leaders are running\nhelter-skelter conducting secret\nmeetings amongst the \"chief of\nstaff\" and delivering instructions\nto all members.\nAnd Wednesday night William\nMoojelsky, the man who received\nhis leadership initiation from\nS. S. Sorokin, was returning to\nKrestova from Vancouver, where\nhe has been in communication\nwith Joseph Podovinikoff, the Hilliers group commander. He was\naccompanied by one henchman,\nJoseph Gevatkow.\nThe feverish activity follows\ntwo things \u2014 Federal and Provincial offers to assist the sect\nto return to Russia and the explosion of a bomb near Kelowna\nwhich killed 20-year-old Philip\nPereveresoff and critically\nwounded another Freedomite,\nHarry Bojey, who has been\ncharged with making an explosive.\nDENIALS, BUT . . .\nAfter repeated denials that the\nSect is involved in the spate of\nterrorist activities which have\nplagued West Kootenay for many\nyears and have recently switched\nto the Okanagan, Sons of Freedom members claim that bombs\nwere thrown at Pereveresoff and\nBojey \"by police or vigilantes,\"\nwhile police records, show that\nnearly' 2000 convictions for arson,\ndynamiting and nudism, have been\nseeured-against seet- rank and file\nand leaders alike.\nBut in most cases, reprieves\nwere granted by a lenient government after Sorokin, a displaced\nperson from Europe, promised\nauthorities the sect would be \"law\nabiding\" if put under his control.\nThis led to the releases, subsequent outbreaks of terrorism and\nnudist demonstrations and Soro-\nkin's eventual departure for South\nAmerica with more than $96,000\nof the sect's funds.\nFollowing announcement of Federal and Provincial government\noffers to assist the sect to return\nto Siberia, Freedomite leaders\nhave been busy looking for loopholes through which, to squeeze\nout of the- offer's \"get out or behave\"   terms,   while  police  and\nother qualified observers do not\nbelieve the sect really intend to\nreturn to Russia.\nIn the search for a way out of\ntheir compromise, Freedomite\nleaders are saying the offer \"is\ndesigned to defeat us\" and \"we\ndisagree with the counter proposal on some points\" and \"we\nrefuse to accept the offer as a\ncooked-up deal or as an ultimatum\" and \"it is a deadline we\ncan't meet.\"\nAnother tack in the Freedomites' preparation for rejection of\nthe offer is contained in a remark\nmade by Moojelsky, who recently said \"The people say we'll never\nleave, they should add \u2014 we\nhope. Many people don't want us\nto leave Canada\", though he refrained from saying why Canadians would wish the radical sectarians to remain.\nOn Wednesday funeral services\nfor Pereveresoff were being conducted at Krestova, where many\ncars massed as mourners converged on the Freedomite stronghold.\nBut all was quiet in Nelson and\ndistrict up to press time last\nnight, despite fears that renewed\noutbreaks of violence may shatter the false peace of the area\nln the not too distant future.\nTUTS SEEKS NEW\nOUTDOOR FACILITIES\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver's Theatre Under The Stars\nplans tn ask -city \u2022 council for a\n$1,000,000 money bylaw to finance\ncompletely new outdoor threatre\nfacilities in Stanley Park.   '\nIf approved the bylaw would\ngo to the voters in the December\ncivic elections.\nTUTS president Dorwain Baird\nsaid plans include tearing down\npresent Malkin Bowl and building\nan entirely new stage, Concrete\nseating, retractable roof, dressing\nrooms and storage facilities.\nYOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK,\nCalif, (AP)\u2014Rangers late Wednesday pulled a youth to safety up\nthe face of a 3000-foot cliff where\nhe was trapped for 18 hours on a\none-foot-wide ledge.\nThe perch was 600 feet from the\nvalley floor.\nJet Interceptor Program\nWould Cost $2 Billion\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - The supersonic CF-105 jet interceptor program will cost in the neighborhood\nof $2,000,000,000 in the next three\nyears if the government orders\nthe plane into full production, informants said Wednesday.\nSuch outlays would mean defence\nbudgets of more than $2,000,000,000\nin each of the next three fiscal\nyears and, the informants added,\na possible consequent increase in\ntaxes. The defence budget in the\ncurrent fiscal year ending next\nMarch 31 is $1,686,000,000.\nOne authoritative source said\nthe government deeision whether\nto order the CF-105 into full production is one of the most crucial\never faced by a Canadian administration in peacetime. \"J -'   '\nThis source said the\" time is\ndrawing close when the cabinet\nwill have to make its decision \u2014'\ncertainly within the next four\nmonths and probably sooner.\nOn the decision might hinge not\nonly the future of Canada's entire\ndefence effort but availablity of\nfunds for expenditures in non-\nmilitary fields.\nHeavy expenditures on the CF-\n105 likely would' delay purchase\nof other needed equipment for the\nnavy and army.\nIt is known that the government\ndreads the prospect of causing unemployment in the military aircraft industry.\nOn the other hand, a decision\nto go ahead with CF-105 production might eventually lead to unemployment in the shipbuilding\nindustry, as the government\ncouldn't afford to carry out its full\ndestroyer construction program.\nThe government has done its\nbest to interest United States authorities in buying the CF-105 but\nhas been unsuccessful.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nHARTFORD, Conn. (AP)\u2014Mrs. James V. Fearon has seven\nchildren. But the eldest is only three years old.\nThe chronology runs like this:\nFive years ago\u2014married. Three years ago\u2014a daughter born.\nTwo years ago\u2014a son born. Last Aug. 29\u2014triplets.\nAnd Monday night\u2014twins.\nLONDON (AP)\u2014A hunting dog froze to a point aboard a London\nsubway train Wednesday\u2014his nose rigidly aimed at a flustered\npassenger.\nThe dog's owner looked embarrassed. \"I'm sorry my dog Is\npointing you,\" he said, \"Are you, perhaps, carrying some game in\nyour shopping bag?\"\n\"No,\" tbe passenger answered.\nThen, as an afterthought, he added: \"But my name does happen\nto be Partridge.\"\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Shnooks, a cocker spaniel, was barking loudly\nin the. back yard of her north side home Tuesday night and her\nowner thought she was in danger of being attacked by Another\nanimal.\nThe dog's owner, Mrs. Irene Griffith, telephoned police and\ntold them a fierce looking, 25-pound beast with a long nose and tail,\nperched on a fence, was threatening Shnooks.\nPolice investigated. They caught a frightened five-pound op-\nposum that Shnooks had treed.\nHULL, Eng. (Reuters)\u2014A young farmhand Wednesday told a\nsurprised court he \"wants to wed a woman who was arrested for\nher violent efforts to woo a married man.\nGeorge Collins, 22, said 31-year-old Joan Croft Is really \"a decent girl\" am* his good friend.\nMiss Croft then was fined \u00a33 and placed on a year's probation\nfor pestering salesman David Shardlaw.\nThe salesman testified she regularly circled his house on a\nmotor scooter, trailed him from town to town, threw stones at his\nbedroom window and once hit him on the head with her crash helmet.\n \u25a0 ' . \u25a0\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1958\nTONIGHT\u2014ONE PERFORMANCE AT 8:00 P.M.\nALLTH-v D#Y\u00bb\nAND NIGHTS.OF\nIRWIN SHAW'S\nMARLON BRANDO\nMONTGOMERY CLIFT\nDEAN MARTIN\n\"\"WiMMMRUSli'MAi\"!\nPrices 85c-fi0c-25c\nCIVIC\nCourthouse, Bridge Promised\nTrail by B.C. Cabinet Ministers\nTRAIL \u2014 Two B.C. cabinet ministers said Wednesday that Trail\nwill soon have its first provincial\ncourthouse and office buildings and\na second Columbia River crossing.\nThe promise of the court house\nwas made by Public Works.Minister W. N. Chant, who accompanied Premier Bennett and his government at a cabinet meeting\nhere,\nMr. Chant, Mayor L. A. Read\nand city aldermen were to make\ni\nDOOR PRIZE TONIGHT \u2014 DRAW AT INTERMISSION\n\u2022 WEEKEND for 2 at the Ridpath Hotel, Spokane\n\u2022 $5.00 Worth of FREE RIDES at Nat Park.\n\u2022 10 GALLONS OF GAS from North Shore Service\nFREE\nAuto -Viie Drive - In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"HAPPY ROAD\"\nGene Kelly, Barbara Laage\nSHORT\nShowtime approi. 111!\nn in\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\n\"RED MOUNTAIN\" (Color)\nAlan Ladd - Llzbeth Scott\nPlus \"TIMBER JACK\"  (Color)\nOne Showing: 8:30 p.m,\nCASTLE THEATRE\n. CASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight \u2022 Friday - Saturday\n\"BERNARDINE\"   (Cine.-Color)\nJ. Gaynor - P. Boone - T. Moore\nNEWS and CARTOON\nCabinet Asks Detailed Road\nPlan of Slocan   Board Group\nTRAIL\u2014The provincial cabinet Wednesday asked a\nSlocan delegation pressing for completion of 180 miles of\nhighway to present a letter setting out a detailed plan for\nthe Work.\nDelegates from Nakusp Chamber of Commerce, Slocan District Board of Trade and Kaslo Board of Trade met\nthe cabinet. 'fi   ..\nThe 180-mile section includes 25 miles between Kaslo\nand Three Forks, Nakusp to Cherryville on the Monashee,\nNakusp to Slocan and uncompleted portions between Kaslo\nI and Balfour.\nThe cabinet asked that the letter set out which portions of the road the boards felt should be done first, how\nmuch should be done each year, and what work was required,\nRecalling that the B.C. govern'\nment had financed the Canadian\nPacific Railway construction of\n\u2022the line between Kaslo and Three\nForks, the cabinet also suggested\nEnter Our\nShaeffer Pen\nSchool Supplies\nFREE  DRAW\nFor Particulars\nEnquire From Clerks\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine Ph. 1203\nthe boards should try to enlist federal aid.\nThe delegation's brief had pointed out* that ihe CPR had been per\nmitted to remove its rails from\nthis stretch last year on the understanding that the provincial\ngovernment would undertake to\nbuild a highway utilizing the railway right-of-way \"where considered expedient.\"\n\"They took issue with us on this\npoint,\" delegates said after the\nmeeting. However, letters were\nproduced which indicated such action would be taken.\nTOO MANY CHANGES\nThe delegation . also criticized\nconstant changes in highways department personnel in the Nelson\nregion. In the absence of a clearly blueprinted long term policy,\neach new engineer had to start\nfrom scratch, the brief said.\n\"If it is going to be policy to\nwmek\n[IMPORTED FROM LONDON, ENGLAND\nTiii* advertisement it not published or displayed by Ihe\nliquor Control Hoard or by fhe Government of British Columbia\nmove these key men to Victoria or\nto Vanderhoof just as soon as they\nhave learned enough \u2022 about the\nKootenays to make them useful\nhere, then why not ;lay down a\nlong term program that the new\nmen can follow? In this way, old\npromises would not be forgotten\nwhen the annual estimates were\nmade.\" ....\nASK FOR PLAN\nThey also asked that the government lay out a comprehensive\nplan calling for standardization of\nthe 180-mile section to be completed within \"a reasonable period,\nsay five years,\" with a good start!\nwhere feasible, being made this\nwinter. Certain types of road work\ncould be done to advantage in\nWest Kootenay in winter .months\nthe season when the unemploy\nment situation reaches its peak.\nDealing with the Kaslo-Three\nForks road, an excerpt from the\nwritten judgment of the Board ot\nTransport Commissioners was\nread. It stated \"the province, having given its assurance that should\nthis line be abandoned, the highways department will reconstruct\nto keep open the area under dis\ncussion,, asked that the Canadian\nPacific Railway Company turn\nover to the province, their right-of-\nway, including bridges, for any\nnew alignment of their existing\nhighway.\"\nA letter from E. S. Jones, then\ndeputy minister of highways, In\n1956, Informed the Slocan board\nthat the government \"ls prepared to standardize the highway\nbetween Kaslo and New Denver,\nutilizing where expedient portions of the existing railway\nright-of-way.\"\nRUN AROUND\nThe delegation suggested \"we\nare getting the run around,\" and\nquoted Mr. Jones again in a letter of September 1957. He said\nthen, \"I very much regret that at\nthe present time I am unable to\nadvise you as to the legal status\nOf the transfer of the railway property to the government as the\nmatter is in the hands of the legal\ndepartment.\"\nHe also said that it was the\nminister's intention that as soon as\nsurvey personnel was available, a\nsurvey would be made of the\nroute \"to ascertain what advantages can be obtained by utilizing\nthe railway right-of-way. I am taking this matter up with the Attor-\nan inspection of various sites today.\nHighways Minister Gaglardi\nsaid there were many problems in\nconnection with a second bridge\nhere.\n\"We have not got, any clearance\n3300 Tourists\nHerein July\nAlbertans were the most frequent visitors to Nelson during\nJuly.\nDuring the month 1146 tourists\nfrom that province, or almost half\nthe total, number of Canadian visitors to this city, registered at\nthe Chamber of Commerce tourist information centre.\nMore than 750 tourists came\nfrom the United States and 28\nmore from other foreign countries.\nA breakdown of statistics compiled by Chamber of Commerce\nsecretary Mrs. E. Christiansen\nshowed B.C. tourists were the\nsecond largest body to visit Nelson. There were 868 B.C, visitors,\n216 Saskatchewan tourists, 198 Ontario people, with 94 from Manitoba, 14 from Quebec, five from\nNova Scotia and six from Northwest Territories.\nMany of the signatures in the\nbureau's guest register included\nonly the driver of cars passing\nthrough the city. And the total\nnumber of Canadian visitors \u2014\n2547 \u2014 was only a proportion of\nall travellers in Nelson.\nA total, of 766 American tourists\nstopped at the information bureau\nduring July, most of them from\nWashington state. But there were\n195 from California and others\nirom 27 American states.\nTwenty-eight travellers from\nforeign countries were in the city.\nSeven came from England, five\nfrom Scotland, four from Hawaii,\nthree from South America, three\nfrom Australia,, two from New\nZealand, two from Switzerland\nand one each from Germany and\nHolland.\nIn all, more than 3300 tourists\nstopped here for information.\nKLGH Finances\n\"In the Black\"\nFinancial operations of Kootenay Lake General Hospital were\non the profit side of the ledger during July, finance chairman A. K.\nMcAdams reported to a meeting\nof the board of directors Tuesday\nnight.\nIn June the hospital's operating\ndeficit was $10,988 for the year to\ndate, and the month's operation\nwas $B010 in the red following inventory calculations, Mr. McAdams explained. The deficit at\nthe close of July was shown as\n$4917, putting the month's operation \"in the black.\"\nThe contrast in the deficit was\ndue to a budget adjustment .cheque\nfor $11,870 received during July,\nbringing the revenue figure to $41,-\n318. Revenue figure in June was\n$28,132.\nDeficit of $4917 was almost totally accountable for by \"necessary\" write-offs, Mr. McAdams\nsaid. The writeoff under the provision for doubtful accounts was\n$4590, for July.\nWorking capital was $38,582,\ncompared to $48,651 for the 'same\nperiod in 1957.\nI'llllllllllllMII'lllllllll'llllllll'lllllll\nNO DIRECT EFFORT\nMADE BY SONS\nTO LEAVE CANADA\nTRAIL (CPl-Attorney'Gen-\neral Robert Bonner said here\nWednesday some Sons of Freedom Doukhobors have inquired\nabout moving to Russia.\nIn an interview, Mr. Bonner\nsaid reports of the inquiries\nwere conveyed to him by a\nfederal government official.\n\"But,\" he said, \"apart from\nthese inquiries, no direct effort\nhas been made by the Sons of\nFreedom to take advantage of\nthe joint federal-provincial\noffer to finance the return to\nRussia.\"\nAsked what the government ,\nfuture stand will be if the Free-\n. domites decline the offer, the\nattorney-general said: \"Then\nthey'll be expected to live as\nCanadians and respect Canadian laws.\"\n\u25a0 111 -tn 11111 tit i jiiii i in 11 iii 11111111\nney-General's department today in\norder to try and expedite a final\ndecision in this matter.\"\nALL IN THICK FILE\nHighways miniter P. A. Gaglardi told the delegation that \"everything was in the thick file\" in Hon.\nRobert Bonner's hands on the\ntable. The delegation stated that\nwhile Mr. Bonner looked through\nthe file all during the interview\nand made a few comments to Premier W. A. C. Bennett, he did not\nread anything from it to the meeting.\nHon. W. D. Black, provincial\nsecretary, and Mr. Gaglardi both\nsaid they had not heard that paving promised this year, on 10 miles\nof reconstructed highway between\nQueen's Bay and Kaslo would not\nbe done this year because of short-\nago of funds. They said they would\ninvestigate.\nDelegates were Don Waterfield,\npresident, Mike Fraitzl and Peter\nHurry, Nakusp; L. R. Campbell,\npresident, James Draper, A. L.\nHarris and J. L. Wilson,. Slocan\nBoard; J. A .Cochran, president,\nJack Morris Alf Watson Charles\nLind and N. F, Brookes, Kaslo; M.\nB, Ryalls, Nelson and J. D. McMynn, Trail.\nfrom the Federal government yet,\"\nhe said, \"and we don't know exactly where we are with the\nbridge as yet.\"\n\"We want to. build a low level\nbridge without a swing span but\nthey may stop us. But I said before that we will build a bridge\nand It will be built.\"\nKootenay and Boundary Citizens\nCommittee on Doukhobor-Cana-\ndian affairs laid before the cabi\nnet a review of Sons of Freedom\nbehavior and desires and discussed the possibility of putting a deadline on land sales to Doukhobors\ngenerally.\nAt a civic banquet, Premier W,\nA. C. Bennett said the bridge\nacross the Columbia was next in\nImportance to completion of the\nSouthern Transprovincial Highway. The third was the provincial\ngovernment building.\nDealing with the Paulson\nBlueberry cutoff highway, he\nsaid that of 20 miles to be constructed tenders would be called for three and a half \"very\ndifficult miles\" this month, and\ntenders for the remaining 17\nmiles would be called later,\nTenders for highway connections\nto Rossland would be called ih the\nnext fiscal year.  ,\nA lltlte delay was being expert'\nenced in determining the right\nheight for the bridge at Trail, but\nit was hoped and expected to be\nable to place contracts in the next\nfiscal year.\nThe Salmo-Creston cut-off was\nimportant as its completion would\ncut driving time from two different points from 10V4 hours to 5V4\nhours.\n\"We are building that highway\nnow and will call for tenders next\nmonth. In the next fiscal year we\nwill call for tenders for the rest\nof the highways.\" ,\nHe said there had been more\nroad work in the past six years\nthan in the previous 94 years. The\namount of money spent on the\nSouthern Transprovincial highways\nwas $23,892,950. He said that no\nhighway Was more important although other highways were of\nequal importance. People want to\ngo one way and return by another\nroute, so the Southern Transprovincial was as important as the\nTrans-Canada Highway.\n\"That is the best way to build\nup our tourist business. We hope\nwe are never guilty of playing one\nsection against another. We are\npart of one great partnership.\" \u25a0\nMayor Li A. Read expressed appreciation of organizations and industry of the cabinet's visit here.\nIt had been \"a signal honor.\"\nAt a Rossland-Trail Social Credit\nLeague meeting later, it was predicted that the party would be\nreturned at the next provincial\nelection \"with* a bigger majority\nthan ever in this riding.\nIn six years, B.C. would have\nthe highest standard of \"any other\nplace in the world.\"\nPREMIER  BLAMES\nOTTAWA FOR\nCOLUMBIA DELAYS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Premier\nBennett blamed the federal government Tuesday for delay in developing the Columbia River for\npower.\nHe told a press conference if\nOttawa would settle the question\nof downstream benefits with the\nUnited States, the B.C. government \"would let the contracts for\nColumbia power within months.\"\nTne B.C. government was\nready to discuss the Columbia\npower development \"any time,\nanywhere,\" he said. But he sidestepped a question as to whether\nhe would be willing to have the\nfederal government settle for a\n50-50 split with the U.S. on development benefits.\n\"J .won't say now what we\nwould accept,\" the premier said.\n\"I don't want to hinder the federal negotiations; I want to help\nthem.\"\nHe said he expected a report\nin two months from the engineering firm employed by the province to make an engineering survey of the Columbia. This would\nbe compared with federal and\nU.S. engineering reports and out\nof that would come the plan for\nthe best way to do the job.\nFOUR DIE ON\nB.C.  ROADS\nA total of 220 traffic accidents\nwere reported in the province during the week ended August 17\u201424\nof them in the Nelson RCMP subdivision.\nRCMP at Nelson said Wednesday four of the accidents were\nfatal and claimed the lives of four\npeople.\nBut carelessness on B.C. highways played a major role in the\nmishaps.\nRCMP said prosecutions were\nstarted against 89 of the drivers\ninvolved in the highway accidents.\nNine drivers involved in the Nelson subdivision accidents have\nbeen prosecuted.\nNew CD Officers\nAppointed in Area\nCivil Defence co-ordinator J. A.\nWilson has announced the appointment of Robert Dunsmore as\nCivil Defence officer for the South\nSlocan district.\nMr. Dunsmore replaces Jack\nHendren who resigned for reasons\nof health.\nA second appointment announced\nby Mr. Wilson was that of Robert\nM. Noakes, who has been appointed Civil Defence officer for\nthe Balfour district.\nISLAND STATE\nTasmania, island state of Australia, was discovered by the\nDutch explorer Abel Tarsman in\n1642. \u25ba\nPremier Bennett is greeted on his arrival Wednesday at the plants of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company at Trail by R. D. Perry, vice-president and\ngeneral manager. The premier, accompanied by the Hon. Robert Bonner and the\nHon. Lyle Wicks, presented Centennial safety awards earned by company operations. Left to right are: Hon. Robert Bonner, Attorney-General; Hon. W. A. C. Bennett, R.' D. Perry, A. J. Warrington, vice-president, Local 480, IUMMSW, and Hon. Lyle\nWicks, the minister of labor.\u2014Cominco photo.\nFire Burns\nIn City\nWatershed\nAn uncontrolled forest fire\nnear Five-Mile Creek in the\ncity watershed is burning\nthrough thick timber about\none mile above the city's\nmain water intake.\nBut Forest Service officials\nsaid Wednesday niqht the\neight-acre fire is burning\naway from the intake and 22\nmen will be on the scene\nearly this morning.\nTwo air tankers will spray\nthe blaze with water starting\nat dawn today.\nOfficials were confident the\nfire could be controlled today.\nThe firefighters were walking into the fire Wednesday\nnight.\nThe two aircraft that had\nbeen dropping water on a\nsmall fire on Rover Creek 10\nmiles west of here were directed to the Five-Mile Creek\nfire Wednesday night. The\nplanes dropped almost 200\ngallons of water every 14 min-\n'ufes.\nThe fire could endanger the\nalready critical water supply\nin Nelson if it is carried\nthrough a large area on the\nhillside. The entire watershed\nis covered with thick timber.\nThe latest fire is the second\nthreat to the watershed.\nMore than 15 years ago a\nhuge fire swept over timber-\nland above the Great Northern Railway tracks and all\navailable men in the city were\ncalled to fight the blaze.\nThe costly scar can still be\nseen on the mountainside.\nTHIEVES STEAL\nFROM CHURCH\nBrazen thieves have taken a $200\ntape recorder from St. Paul's-\nTrinity Church on Silica Street.\nCity police said Wednseday the\nrecorder could have been taken as\nlong as one month ago.\nRev. E. Donovan Jones, who reported the theft, said the machine\nwas taken from the church office.\nin iiiEiiiui i iiiiir it iiiiiiiimi\nSpace Object\nWatches Over\nCrawford Bay\nCrawford Bay residents who\nhave admired Sputnik's fiery\nrace across the night sky have\nfound another mysierious\nspace object in the northern\nEd Davidson and Cliff Derbyshire telephoned the Daily\nNews Wednesday night to describe what appears as \"an\nunusual light of varying brilliance.\"\nThey said they have watched\nthe light for several nights in\nthe sky north of Crawford Bay\nand added it has even been\nseen by Invermere residents. .\n\"It appears to move in a definite pattern, mostly . up' and\ndown, about 15 degrees above\nthe horizon and about 10 degrees east of the North Star,\"\nthey said.\nThe men added its movements are visible to the naked\neye and it appears to move\n, from northwest to southeast.\nOnly reports received by the\nDaily News which might answer the mystery is a Seattle\nstory that says the rocket carrier of Russia's Sputnik III will\nbe visible over the Pacific'\nNorthwest for the next three\n* days.\nThe Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Cambridge,\nMass., said the rocket will be\ntravelling northwest to southeast at a height of 670 miles.\nThe rocket should pass over\nthe Kootenays at these times:\nThursday: 9:26 to 9:36 p.m.\nFriday:   9:09  to  9:19  p.m.\nSaturday: 8:53 to 9:03 p.m.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nCONVENTION\nCRESTON SEPT. 20\nAnnual constituency convention\nwill be held at Creston September\n20, it was decided at a meeting of\nthe Nelson-Creston Social Credit\nAssociation executive.\nThe meeting was held recently\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. D.\nSerrcs of Harrop.\nAccredited delegates will attend\nthe one-day convention, at which\ndistrict and provincial resolutions\nwill be discussed. Hon. W. D.\nBlack, provincial secretary, and\nMLA for Nelson-Creston, is expected to attend.\nTHE WEATHER\nMin Max Pre\nNELSON     58 92\nMontreal     60 78\nToronto      58 77    .05\nRegina   56 76    .14\nEdmonton     48 76\nCrescent Valley     46 94     \u2014\nPolice Warn\nStrict Action\nCity police will clamp down on\nviolators who disregard speed\nzones at playgrounds.\nA senior police official said\nWednesday the department will\nnot tolerate dangerous driving,\nparticularly at playing areas\nwhere youngsters are involved.\nPolice action followed complaints from several worried parents in the Uphill Playground area\nthat motorists were ignoring recently posted speed signs.\nFirst person charged with speeding through the zone on Kootenay\nStreet was Fred W. Chernenkoff.\nHe was fined $10 and costs Wednesday when he appeared in city\npolice court before Magistrate\nR. S. Nelson.\nChernenkoff pleaded guilty to\nthe charge, laid following the offence Tuesday.\nI ATT IBM'\nThis advertisement is not published u\/ displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ot British Columbia\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY  LTD.\nNELSON DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\nBusiness Established Since 1897\nPHONE 120 561 BAKER ST.\n \t\n\t\n&m\nMail Says Canada Hopes Queen\nWill Spend Two Monlhs Here\nLONDON (Reuters)-The length\not the Queen's visit to Canada to\nPENTICTON GIRL\nWINS INLAND\nSCHOLARSHIP\n\u2022 First winner of the annual Inland\nNatural Gas Co. Ltd. Scholarship\nin Home Economics is Miss Mable\nBernice Anderson, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Carl Anderson, Penticton.\nAn annual award, the Inland Natural Gas Scholarship is open to\nany Grade 12 or 13 student from\nthe Cariboo, Okanagan or Kootenays entering the University of\nBritish Columbia to take courses\nleading to the degree Bachelor of\nHome Economics.\nMis* Anderson is a graduate of\nfentkton High School and has lived\nin the Okanagan city for the past\n12 years.\nApplicants for the scholarship\nwere considered on the basis of\nacademic standing and personal\nqualities, character and promise\nand interest in the field of home\neconomics. Selection of the winner\nwas made by the University.\nIn addition to her scholarship,\nMiss Anderson will receive an ali\nexpense paid trip to Vancouver to\nreceive the award. She will also\nvisit the university campus on her\ntrip.\nopen the St. Lawrence Seaway next\nyear has not yet been decided, a\nBuckingham Palace spokesman\nsaid Wednesday.\n\"But the visit is likely to be a\nsubstantial one, of two or three\nweeks,\" he added.\nHe was commenting on a report\nby The Daily Mail that Canadian\nauthorities had ' asked the Queen\nand Prince Philip to stay for two\nmonths,\n\"I don't think it would be feasible for the Queen to spend two\nmonths in Canada,\" the spokesman said.\nA final decision will not be made\nuntil after the Royal Family returns from a holiday at Balmoral,\nScotland, in mid-October.\nThe feeling in Buckingham Palace circles is that it will be a cross-\nCanada tour rather than one largely confined to the seaway project.\nSpeculation here on possible\ndates for the start of the tour\nranges from April to September,\nwith June and July the months\nmost frequently mentioned.\nCIRCUS STOPPER\nAngus McAskill, the Cape Breton giant, was among P. T. Bar-\nnum's circus attractions.\nTYPES OF COAL\nCoal is classified as hard, oi\nanthracite; soft, or bituminous;\nsub-bituminou and lignite.\nHorses Wise\nTo Round Up\nCALGARY (CP) - Chester\n(Chug) Utter, the Nevada horse-\ncatcher, circled and swooped low\nover the Bow River forest in his\nlight plane for three hours Tuesday. Then he admitted defeat.\nChug Utter is\u2014and has been,\nfor 25 years\u2014an expert on rounding up wild horses by aircraft.\nHe has some 40,000 nags to his\ncredit, He left here early Tuesday to see what he could collect\nfrom the forested foothills northwest of this city of 180,000.\nWith partner Lorin Moore, he\nhad herds of up to 125 horses\nrunning before his low - flying\nplane. But each time the horses\ngot to within a mile and a half\nof his corral, they would veer off\ninto the trees where Utter would\nlose them.\n\"The whole place is a wild\nhorse kingdom, he said on his\nreturn. \"But the way things are\nnow it's almost an impossibility\nto get the horses.\"\nHe estimated that in about 10\nyears, there would be about 20,-\n000 wild horses in the area unless\ndrastic steps are taken to reduce\nthe herds. As a big game haven,\nthe region would be left nearly\nbarren by the foraging horses.\nHe said that any successful\nroundup would have to be done\nin the fall, when the herds had\niess tree cover, and should include not only planes but mounted\nhorsemen and a herd of gentle\ndomesticated horses.\nIf (tftvWs\nmmm 11\nIk LONDON DRY GIN\nll                      TRIPLE DISTILLED\n*^Y        FOR SUPERLATIVE FLAVOUR\nKsf \u2022;5**i-^Ss\u2122\u00bb      IB\n&     m  Jm\nThis advertisement is not published oi displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia.\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\nQjrflJDUL\nFilter-Flo Washer\nAT A NEW LOW PRICE\nSpecial\nAug. Sale\nNext\n8\nDays\nOnly\nRWA650\nCompletely Automatic 2-Cycle Washer\nwith Exclusive \"Filter-Flo\"\nHow G.E.'s Fabulous Filter-Flo Works\nDirt disappears as clothes are cleaned and recleaned all through the washing cycle.\nLint and soap scum are carried out of the Wash-Basket as wash water continuously\noverflows Into the outer tub.\nHeavy sand and silt are forced out at the bottom of the Wash-Basket.\nPump continuously circulates water up and through the filter.\nCleansed sudsy water flows back into the Wash-Basket.\nNow \/ No More\nThan the Price of\nModels Minus\nG.E.'s Wonderful\nFeatures\nRegularly Priced $399\nNOW ONLY\n$\n349\nFamous General Electric 5-Year Written Warranty.\nTerms to Suit Your Budget.\nNelson Electric Co. Ltd.\nauthorized GENERAL ifii ELECTRIC dealer\n574 Baker St.\nPhone 260\nClergy Suggests Intnl.\nGeo-Theological Year\nBy TOM HBNSHAW\nNEW YORK (AP) - Don't be\nsurprised if religion tears a leaf\nfrom science's notebook pretty\nsoon and comes up with an international geo-spiritual year.\nAt least two prominent clergymen have suggested it in recent\nmonths. And a newly formed\nCommittee on Religion and Science is showing a keen interest\nin getting it off the ground.\nRev. Louis A. Gales of St. Paul,\nMinn., editor of the Catholic Digest, Drought the subject up late\nlast year at a meeting of religious education groups.\n1960 RECOMMENDED\nFather Gales recommended\nthat 1960 be set aside as a period when \"each religious group\nwould present the moral and\nspiritual resources it felt was necessary for the religious development of mankind.\"\nAnd Rev. Edwin T. Dahlberg,\npresident of the National Council\nof Churches, suggests an international geo - theological year to\ncarry the geophysical year a step\nbeyond its material limits.\nDr. Dahlberg, writing in the\nmonthly National Council Outlook, notes that President Eisenhower's advisory committee has\nEdgewood Plans\nBig Program\nFor Labor Day\nEDGEWOOD\u2014The local Centennial Committee and the Inonoaklin\nFarmers' Institute Agricultural\nFair Board are working hand in\nhand to make Sept. 1 a day to remember.\nThe day will begin at 9 a.m. with\na parade that will form in front\nof .the centennial building and\nmarch around the sports ground.\nCash prizes are being offered in\nmany classes and as this is the\nfirst time a parade has been held\non fair day it is hoped that the\ncommunity will co-operate and\nmake it a big one.\nW. T. Baverstock, district horticulturist of Vernon, and A. J. Al\nlan, district agriculturist of Nelson, will judge the garden produce,\nMeld crops, dairy, poultry and\nfloriculture sections. Mrs. R. Hopp\nof Nakusp will judge the needlework, Mrs. H. Doyle of Nakusp and\nMrs. Baverstock of Vernon, baking\nand canning, and Mrs. G. Walton\nof Nakusp the school children and\nhandicraft sections.\nW. McGillvery, deputy minister\nof agriculture, will officially open\nthe fair and dedicate the centennial project for which Mrs. M.\nWilliams has made a copper plague\nto be placed on the outside of the\nbuilding.\nVernon, Burton and Edgewood\njunior baseball teams will play. A\nfew men are still sporting beards\nand these will be judged and a\ni\u00bbood cash prize is offered for the\nbest beard.\nAt the oldtimers' banquet, which\nwill be held the previous evening,\nH. W. Herridge, MP, will be guest\nspeaker.\nlisted four motivations for an enlarged space program\u2014curiosity,\ndefence, prestige and knowledge.\nTo this, Dr. Dahlberg would\nadd a fifth motivation, one that\nwould set the tone for the geo-\ntheological year \u2014 \"the desire to\nknow the nature of God and the\nultimate purpose behind -the universe.\"\nThose taking part in the program   would   seek   answers  to\nthese questions:\nLEADING QUESTIONS\n\"Do we live and move and\nhave our being in God, or simply\nin a kind of electric plasma?\n\"What is the authority of\nChrist? If there are other inhabited worlds, is he the Lord and\nsaviour of those worlds as well\nas our own?\n\"What is the goal of human history? In the thunder of sound\nbarriers breaking, the roar of\nrockets rushing through space,\nand the shock of hard landings\non the moon, how shall we think\nof time, and timelessness, and\neternity?\n\"What is the central idea of\ncreation? One translator of John\n1:1 gives this version of the introduction to the Fourth Gospel:\n'In the beginning was the idea.'\nWhat was that idea?\"\nDr. Dahlberg would invite participation by the best religious\nthinkers, Christian and non-Christian; nuclear scientists, philosophers.\n\"Such an experiment,\" concludes Dr. Dahlberg, \"might contribute more to the peace of the\nworld and the intelligent control\nof outer space than all the high-\nlevel conferences of political and\nmilitary leaders.\"\nCOMMITTEE  ORGANIZED\nThe committee on religion and\nscience, which is showing signs\nof picking up the cudgel for the\ninternational geo - spiritual year,\nwas organized last spring because, in its own words:\n\"Man does not always put new\npower to work for the best use\nof mankind. The purpose of this\ncommittee is to emphasize the\nneed for spiritual and moral\ngrowth along with scientific\nachievements.\"\nThe committee is co-ordinated\nby Edward L. Wertheim, a New\nYork advertising executive, and\nis financed by a temporary grant\nfrom the Swedenborg Foundation.\nThe aim of the committee is to\nbring together scientists and religious leaders to seek a proper\nrelationship between religion and\nscience.\nAnd, feels Wertheim, what better way than through an international geo-spiritual year?\nIndonesia To Have\nU.K., and U.S. Aid\nLONDON (AP) - The United\nStates and Britain have shifted to\na policy of giving the Indonesian\ngovernment limited military aid\nin an effort to offset increasing\nCommunist - bloc influence, diplomatic informants in London\nsay.\nIndonesia has accepted a British offer to provide specialized\ntraining for. some army officers,\nthe sources reported Tuesday\nnight. The United States signed\nan agreement in Jakarta last\nWednesday to sell light arms to\nthe southeast Asian island republic.\nIndonesia turned to Czechoslovakia and other Communist nations for arms last December\nwhen Washington for six months\ndid not answer Jakarta's requests\nto buy weapons.\nTHE\nI\nPRESERVING]\nKETTLE\nby   tna^sttsa IsSajJa^\nOF GENERAL FOODS KITCHENS\nWhat's autumn without grapes?\nAnd what jelly cupboard is complete without Grape Jelly? Why\nnot make your own, using this\nsuccessful recipe?\nGRAPE JELLY\n4 cups juice (about 3 quarts\nripe Concord grapes)\n7 cups (3 lbs.) sugar\nV! bottle Certo fruit pectin\nFirst, prepare the juice. Stem\nabout 3 quarts fully ripe grapes.\nCrush thoroughly. Add Vt cup\nwater; bring to a boil. Simmer,\ncovered, 10 minutes. Place in jelly\ncloth or bag and squeeze out juice.\nMeasure 4 cups into a very large\nsaucepan.\nNow make the Jelly. Add sugar to\njuice in saucepan, and mix well,\nPlace over high heat. Bring to a\nboil, stirring constantly. Stir in\nCerto ot once. Then bring to a tull\nrolling boil. Boil hard 1 minute,\nstirring constantly. Remove from\nheat, skim oil foam with metal\nspoon. Pour quickly into glasses.\nCover at once with V* inch hot\nparaffin. Makes about 10 medium\nglasses.      -\nWhat is pectin? Ifs the jelling\nsubstance found in oil fruits in\nvarying amounts. Certo is pectin\nextracted from fruits rich in this\nnatural substance, then refined,\nconcentrated and performance-\ncontrolled. Your jam and jelly\nset exactly right when you use\nCerto and follow the tested Certo\nrecipes.     \t\nPreserving Pointer. Never open a\njar after sealing, to fill the space\nwhich may appear at the top. If\nthe sealer is completely air-tight\nand has been properly and sufficiently processed, the food will\nkeep perfectly. Breaking the seal\nand adding more fruit may easily\n. cause spoilage and waste the\nwhole jar!\nThis is my last column for the\nyear. What fun it's been sisittng\nwith you! I know that you and\n1\/our family will truly enjoy all\nthe good things you've been able\nto preserve so successfully by\nfollowing these tested Certo\nrecipes.\nU.K. Trawlers\nSail lo Iceland\nHULL, England (Reuters)\u2014British trawlers sailed with secret orders for Iceland's fishing grounds\nWednesday.\nIceland will extend her territorial fishing limits to 12 from four\nmiles Sept. 1.\nThe trawlers are expected to fish\nunder supervision of British Navy\nships. Departing skippers refused\nto disclose their orders but said\nthey intended to fish as usual.\nThe main question is whether\nIcelandic ships will try to arrest\nBritish trawler crews operating\nwithin the new limits.\nBritain considers the extension of\nthe fishing barrier unjustifiable\nunder international law.\nWorld's Largest\nFair Draws Crowd\nBy KEITH KINCAID\nCanadian Press  Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The world's\nlargest annual fair opened for\nthe 80th time today at the 350-\nacre Canadian National Exhibition grounds on the Toronto lake-\nshore.\nThis year's CNE has two days\nadded to the previous 14 - day\nstand in an attempt to set a new\nattendance mark of 3,000,000 before the gates close Sept. 6. The\ntotal has fallen several hundred\nthousand short of that mark in\nrecent years.\nVisitors strolled through miles\nof exhibits after the gates opened\nat 7 a.m., inspecting United\nStates Explorer satellites and\nchuckling at a replica of Old\nMacDonald's Farm. Exhibitors\nwere still busy setting up booths\nand all space will not be filled\nuntil the end of the week.\nMANY FOREIGN DISPLAYS\nThe Governments and International buildings contain the largest group of foreign exhibitors in\nCNE history. Australia, Denmark, France, West Germany,\nHolland, India, Italy, Japan, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Jamaica, Great Britain and United\nStates governments and private\nfirms are showing off their manufactured  and  natural  products.\nThe largest display of U.S.\nmilitary mieht ever shown outside the U.S. took the attention\nof many early visitors. The Corporal and Snark, two intermediate range missiles, were pointed\nskyward on heavily guarded\nlaunching pads.\nA gigantic Thor, sister missile\nto the one that exploded over\nCape Canaveral Sunday during\nan attempt to launch a moon\nsatellite, is to arrive Thursday\nni\u00bbht after the gates close.\nThe Canadian international air\nshow will be held along the water\nfront during the final two davs.\nCanada's new jet fighter, the\nCF-105 Arrow, the U.S. Navy\nBlue Angel aerobatic team and\nplanes from other NATO countries will take part in a flynast.\nAUo expected are planes of the\nU.S. Strategic Air Command.\nBrewing Firm\nPlans B.C.\nDevelopment\nVANCOUVER \u2014 The general\nmanagement of Calgary Brewing\nand Malting Co. Ltd. announced\nWednesday a plan of cautious development for the brewery concerns it has recently acquired in\nBritish Columbia.\nIn outlining the plans for the immediate future, James Kerr, general manager of the parent company, emphasized that the shareholders should look forward to a\nprogram of sound market development and gradual expansion as the\nbest security for their investment.\n\"We feel,\", Mr. Kerr stated, \"that\nthe shareholders will fully support\nthe new organization's schedule of\nsteady growth and firm entrenchment in the B.C. market, rather\nthan in seeking a quick gain.\"\nClimaxing nearly 70 years in\nWestern Canadian brewing, the\nhorseshoe - and - buffalo insignias\nloom behind recent announcements\nof a change of control of both Caribou Brewing and Princeton Brewing to the western company.\nIn addition to its heavy cash\ncommitment in the transaction,\nCalgary's entire brewing resources\nand key personnel have been at\nwork for some weeks in both plants\npreparing for the changeover.\nSchool Activity\nRoom Okayed for\nCastlegar Fair\nCASTLEGAR - Use of the activity room of Stanley Humphries\nHigh School has been granted\nCastlegar's Fall Fair Board. Word\ncame in a letter from the school\nboard read at the regular board\nmeeting.\nIt was reported that 2000 entry\ntags have been received for exhibits.\nMrs. E. A. McDonald has compiled a history of the fair for publication.\nChairman J. Webster reported\nthat he had received a letter from.\nCastlegar village commission suggesting that the Fair would provide\na suitable occasion for presentation of two bravery awards. It was\ndecided presentations would be\nheld opening night.\nAny .person having entries in the\nFair may donate them to the hos>\npital, such as fruit, vegetables,\njams, jellies, pickles, etc. The sec\/\nrectary was instructed to write to\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary *to the hospital, and ask that two members\nlook after the donations Saturday\nnight, when the Fair ends.\nH. Hughes, chairman of the entertainment committee, reported\nthere were several ideas for a floor\nshow, and a program will be ready\nsoon. There were still some entertainers to contact. It was decided\nthat the committee be given a\nminimum of $50 to set aside for\nthe floor show.\nAll trophy holders will be notified to have the trophies returned\nsoon to Herb Pitts.\nNELSON \u00bbA!LY NEWS THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1958 \u2014 3\nCredit Newspaper Artist\nWith First Film Cartoon\nOTTAWA (CP) - The world's\nfirst animated cartoon was produced 50 years ago by a newspaper cartoonist who got into the\nmotion picture field because he\nthought a film company had stolen one of his ideas.\nEmile Courtet, who adopted the\nnom de plume of Emile Cohl,\nscreened his first cartoon, Fan-\ntasmagorie, Aug. 17, 1908, at the\nTheatre du Gymnase in Paris,.\nThe story is told in a bulletin\nof the French information service issued here.\nThe cartoon, predecessor to\nMickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and\nthousands of television commercials, was 36 metres long, about\n118 feet, and consisted of 3,000\ndrawings. It took 10 months to\nmake and cost Gaumont Studios\nof Paris 800 francs.\nANGRY VISIT\nCohl first visited Gaumont\nstudios to protest what he thought\nwas plagiarism. He was angered\nby a Gaumont film with a scenario which he considered a development of one of his cartoons.\nBut the studio offered Cohl a\ncontract as scenario writer and\nidea man. He accepted.\nOne day he got the idea that by\nphotographing successive drawings motion pictures could enter\nthe world of fantasy. As he put\nit, \"an artist could create phantom pictures with a pencil.\"\nHe himself was both artist and\nphotographer of the first animated cartoon, photographing each\nsuccessive drawing individually\nwith the crude equipment of the\ntime.\nIn Ihe following two years Cohl\ncomposed 60 films. His imagination was inexhaustible and was\nalways watching for new ideas.\nAnother studio, the Eclair Company, wooed him away from Gau-\nmont's and sent him to manage\ntheir United States branch.\nIn New York, he .continued to\nwork with the same' energy and\nenthusiasm as in his native Paris.\nEvery week he composed a short\nfilm commenting humorously on\nthe news. He worked out new\ntechniques, including the use of\njointed cut-outs to replace long\nseries of drawings.\nCohl returned to France early\nin the First World War. He died\nin a Paris hospital in 1938 at\nage 81.\nLord Chief Justice\nResigns In Britain\nLONDON (Reuters)-Lord Goddard, 81-year-old lord chief justice\nof England, resigned Wednesday.\nHe made his last official appearance in court Wednesday morning.\nIt then was announced that the\nQueen has accepted his resignation.\nLord Goddard was appointed lord\nchief justice in 1946 on the recommendation bf the Labor government. He has survived to a greater\nage in the post than any of his\nbredecessors.\nCCF Fails To Cut\nTariff On Wool\nOTTAWA (CP) - A last-ditch\nattempt by the CCF to eliminate\nhigher Canadian tariffs on imports of British wool cloth\nfailed in the Commons today\nas the Progressive Conservatives\ndefeated the combined Liberal-\nCCF opposition forces 141 to 41.\nIt was the third attempt by the\nopposition\u2014twice by the Liberals\n\u2014to strike out boosts of five and\n10 cents on the present tariff of\n50 cents a pound.\nAfter the vote the bill received\nthird and final reading and now\ngoes to the Senate for its approval.\nHazen Argue, CCF House\nleader, called the higher tariff\n\"an anti - Commonwealth move\n... a move directed against the\nUnited Kingdom.\"\nHe said the higher tariff applies only to Commonwealth wool\ncloth imports, not to imports\nfrom other countries whose sales\nin Canada are increasing steadily.\nCITE OLD POLICIES\nBoth Mr. Argue and Erhart\nRegier (CCF \u2014 Burnaby-Coquit-\nlam) said the higher tariff indicates a return to old Conservative policies of high tariff barriers.\nOpposition Leader Pearson said\nthe increase will raise resentment on the part of the U.K. on\nthe eve of the Commonwealth\ntrade and economic conference in\nMontreal next month.\nFinance Minister Fleming, who\nproposed the increase in his\nbudget two months 'ago, said\nthere is no foundation for the\ncharge that the government is\napplying high tariff policies.\n \t\n \u201e\nNflann lailt} News\nBttabUsntd April 32, 1002.\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 26B Baker Street, Nelson. British Columbia.\nAuthorized ie Second Class Mall, Post Utiles Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OK   ''Hli AUUt'l BUREAU OI' CIRCULATIONS.\nM1SMBER Oh   1'HE CANADIAN PRESS.\nTbe Canadian Press U exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all newt\ndispatches credited to it 01 to 1'he Associated Prstt or Reuters In this paper,\nand alto the loetl newt published therein.\nThurSdtiy, August 21,1358\nCity Sewage Pollution of the\nWest Arm Requires Quick Action\nConfirmation that sewage is poi-    of an effective sewage disposal sys-\nF. B. Pearce...\n.. .Writes\nluting Nelson's swimming beaches\n.comes as a shock\u2014but not too much\n: of a surprise. For some months rumor\nhas been active on the matter and\nmany city residents have speculated\nthat beaches were contaminated by\nthe city's sewage.\nWith this confirmation comes the\nCity Council's duty to act on the matter without further delay and no doubt\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse Is already\npreparing an inquiry into the problem.\nThis is the time to safeguard this\ncity's health and to ensure that Nelson\ndoes not have Vancouver's pollution\nproblems in future years\u2014when the\ncity has grown beyond its' present\nstage and when correction of the\nsystem will prove far more costly.\nNaturally, correction of the con-\n\"termination can only be achieved by\none means. The quick establishment\ntem and, though this matter will be\ncostly to the city's taxpayers, it ls\nessential ior the well-being of all Nelsonites.\nGrand Forks, with a population of\nonly 2000, installed a lagoon treatment\narea when the sewage problem first\nbecame felt. We in Nelson can do well\nto copy that city's progressive example.\nWhile this pollution of the West\nArm is an obvious menace to health,\nit Is even more distasteful to think that\na large proportion of the city's adults\nand \u2022 children have been swimming\nthrough this deleterious substance, A\ndisgusting thought!\nNow the city has been warned, is\nthe time for fast action- The health of\nNelsonites is important and must be\nsafeguarded.\nInterpreting, the News\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe potential opened up by the Western\nI slash in trade restrictions with the Communists must be viewed against a background\nI of an Iron Curtain market comprising about\none-third of the world's population.\nBut just because Canada and her allies\nhave agreed to allow the Reds to buy a lot\nof goods previously banned does not mean\nj the Reds will swarm into the West with\nI huge contracts.\nNo one in official quarters expects that\nto happen. Like any other customer, the\nj.Communist, be he Chinese or Russian, must\n\u25a0 be cultivated. There will have to be more\nvisits to Peiping, Moscow and other Com-\nI munist centres by Canadian businessmen and\nI government officials.\nIn the battle for world markets there\nI likely will be play and counterplay even\namong the Western powers as each tries to\nincrease its share of Communist purchases.\nVerse\n\/When the Rain Came\nDid you smell the ,wet earth\nWhen the rain came at last?\nIt was Uke a new birth\nTo the trees and the grass.-\nAll the neighbors came out\nWith excitement and awe;\nIt would^elear up, no doubt,\nBut they hoped it would pour.\nThe rainfall was God-sent;\nPray send a repeat.\nThe moisture is all spent;\nIn this heat I'm just beat,\n-ANON.\nThere may be enticements such as special\nbarter deals, in which Canadian businessmen remain at a distinct disadvantage.\nThe Communists may attempt to exploit\nthe Western desire and need for markets for\npolitical propaganda. Differences among the\nallies might be emphasized. A supplier from\none country which recognizes Red China, for\nexample, may be favored against one whose\ncountry does not.\nThat is not to say' that Canada could\nhope for orders from Chinese Reds if she\ngranted recognition. It is doubted in official\nquarters whether the Chinese have any large\nquantities of dollars available for Canadian\npurchases, though the officials say it is possible that some boost In Chinese trade could\nbe expected to emerge from recognition.\nWeighed against this possibility is strong\nUnited States opposition to recognition.\nThough some Canadian authorities privately\nquestion the Canadian and American positions, Canada has gone along with the U.S.\non this issue, probably to demonstrate strong\nNorth American solidarity in defence cooperation.\nIt is difficult to see the Canadian government breaking away from this policy\nsimply because of the possibility of getting\na few more dollars in trade.\nNevertheless it is known that the Canadian administration will lose no opportunity\nto explore the Communist market, particularly for primary resources exports, such,\nas wheat \"and other grains and metals, The\nCommunists have shown particular Interest\nin getting more metals, such as nickel, aluminum and copper. Both Russia and the Chinese mainland have purchased Canadian\nwheat for cash.\nTh\" Canadian Wheat Board feels there\nshould be a vigorous drive,, to expand that\nmarket for grain.\nI met a friend down the street, and when\nI asked him where he was going for his\nholiday, he said, \"Nelson.\" 1 remarked that\na visitor had said that it was a very pretty\nplace, and that I could understand that he\nwanted his holiday here. This made him say\nthat we often took Nelson's beauty for\ngranted.\nI think that we take a great many other\nthings for granted, including our wives and\nhusbands, and that is perhaps why there are\nso many divorces, There are very few people\nwho want to be taken for granted even by\nthose who love them, and .ne husband who\nthought his wife the most beautiful woman\nin the world when he was courting her often\ntakes it (or granted that having told her that\nten years ago, she can take it for granted\nthat he still thinks the same thing. Which is\njust too bad, because she doesn't. She is still\nthe same person who before she was married\nliked all his extravagant compliments, but\nshe seldom gets, enough to take them for\ngranted,\nOf course the present generation of young\npeople will no doubt think they are better.\nThey start going steady around 16, and there\ndoesn't seem too much excitement in their\ncourtships, not if you remember your own\ncourtships, when the man was never sure of\nthe girl until the marriage vows were said,\nand lived in fear that someone else would\nsupplant him, But these youngsters seem to\nhave a vastly different technique. At 14 the\ngirls go around sorting over the bunch of\nboys and deciding which they will have, and\nby the time they have passed out of high\nschool thev have settled down to a routine\nwhich would do credit to old married couples.\nAll this points to the fact that by the time\nthey reach the mid-marriage poriod they will\nbe rlne for taking each other for granted.\nOf course this business of taking things\nfor granted is found everywhere, even in the\nhighest quarters. The Americans have been\ntaking us for granted; as one senator said,\nthey have been treating us as one of the\nfamily. That is very nice of them, but not\ncarried to the point when they no longer think\nto please us.\nBut when my friend said that* we look\nour city for granted, he said something which\nwe should be quick to chanee. We can't take\nour city for granted\u2014not if we wish lt to\ncompete with other cities. We can't take it\nfor granted, for if we do it cannot posslbl\"\nkeep abreast of the times. Nothing stands\nstill on this continent, and cities which do not\nprogress are apt to fall behind. For thin\nreason-1 think that our Councillors should\nmake a point of visiting other cities for the\npurpose of seeing what good things they have.\nAt the same time I think Councils shou'd\nthink in terms of human beings rather than\nanything else. Then th\u00bbv would think more of\nfinding places where they can put seats for\ntired old men and women, and of providing\nso-called rest rooms for the convenience of\nout-of-town visitors\u2014vou will note how alert\nthe garages, are to this. Th?.v advertise theirs,\nthough I must say that the words \"rest\nrooms\" are not very descriotive of what the\nBritish cal] Dublic c\"nveni\"wes. That the\nCouncil can do a good job at times is shown\nby the favorable reaction of visitors to the\nhot water and other conveniences of the Tourist Park. We need something of the sort in\nthe centre of town whwe mothers can take\ntheir children to wash their dirty faces.\nI am not too im*\"*e*\"\u20141 bv th^ belief in\nthe beauty of our citv. The French have a\nsavin? that aver\" cock will crow on his own\ni*\"*.\". hill, and oft\u00bbn we are content to leave\nthings as they are because we take it for\nHranted that th\u00bb\" are sMH as unod as thev\none wpre. Raker S'reet is a cas? in noinr,. In\nIts heyday It. was ore nf tH\u00ab most pHrac'lve\ns'rents in the pnnvlno\". T\"dav it. is nut of\ndate alongside o'h\u00abr cities' streets. As for\nN\u00ab'\u00ab\u00bbn Av-no. it b-v grass growing in the\ncracks in the sidewalks.\nTheyli Do It Every Time\nIf. D\u201e\u201en C\u201e;j\nThe \u00ab\u00abil nf wan is infinite in what it\nc..v\u00bb*.s\u2014 Ben Jonson.\nNOT LIKE YOU 4ND ME, QUINCY\nREMEMBERS EVERY ,4NMIVERS4l3y\n4NDTHEN SOME\u2014-\n-~      By Jimmy Hatlo\n&OT 4NYTHIN(3 PR4CTIC4L LIKE\n*P4Y ON OR BEFORE? HE'S STRICTLY\nNON COMPOSETIC\"\"\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nHe steadfastly set his face to go\nto  Jerusalem,\u2014Luke  9:51.\nIt takes sublime courage to go\nahead when we know death awaits\nus. We must be steadfast always\nwhen we know what is right to do.\n(hmL d(si\nYou read a lot about mother-in-\nlaw trouble, but no mOther-in-law\ncan spoil a home unless the one\nshe is mother of is a spoiled and\nsilly brat.\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\ni\nDenies Papers\nCancelled by\nRussian Order\nBy DAVE OANCIA\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) - Russian\nscientists today denied that the\nSoviet government had anything\nto do with the cancellation of a\nnumber of scientific papers\nscheduled for delivery to the lOth\ninternational congress of genetics,\n\"The government minds its\nown business and the Academy ol\nScientists, which guides scientific\nwork ln the Soviet Union, minds\nits own business and does what\nconcerns it,\" said Professor V. N.\nStoletov of the Temirjazov Agricultural Academy in Moscow,\nleader of the seven-man Russian\ndelegation to the congress.\nProf. Stoletov, who is also deputy minister of education in Russia, was commenting on speculation that the cancellation of the\npapers may be a sign that freedom for geneticists in the Soviet\nUnion may be disappearing.\nThe speculation by Western\nscientists was sparked by the\nlast-minute cancellation of some\nof the papers to be given by Russian experts In the fields of plant\nand animal genetics,\nCOULD NOT ATTEND\nSpeaking through an interpreter\nProf. Stoletov said papers were\ncancelled because some of the\nSoviet scientists Could not attend\nthe congress.\n\"The attendance of a Soviet\nscientist at the congress depends\nonly on himself and on the institution to which he belongs.\"\n\"Our scientists have all the conditions needed to carry on creative scientific work. I think this\nhas-been proved by a number of\nrecent concrete results,\" Prof,\nStoletov said,\n'\"'   WSmSBSSfiSBmmVBSSSmms\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nl      -By Vrmmaaa Dr\u00bbk\u00ab\u00ab\nLook in the section in which\nyour  birthday  comes and  find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Friday, August 22, 1058\nMARCH ill to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Artistic professions, purely personal affairt, and dealings with\nthe feminine sex outstandingly\nfavored now. Make the- most of\nthese influences.\nAPRIL 31 to MAY 21 (Tauru\u00bb>~\nAll your fine talents encouraged\nnow. You can really make this\na \"big day\" if you don't miscalculate in making plans.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nYour Mercury's position now stimulates your natural artistry and\nfinesse; also sponsors family and\nhome interests. Avoid extravagance, however.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nGrapd Moon and Venus rays -\nboth important to you people,\nAvoid a tendency toward hyper-\nsentitiveness, however, You could\nImprove family and personal situations now,\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leol-\nMlxed Influences. Choose\na middle-of-the-road course. Direct energies to fit requirements.\nAn optimistic outlook can help\nothers to enjoy the day, Heed\nsound advice.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Rays parallel those\nof Leoftes. Progress is possible\nthrough proper direction of effort*. You yourself may have lo\nprovide the necessary impetus to\novercome obstacles, competitive\nor otherwise, Don't over-exert\nyourself, however.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23  (Libra)  \u2014 Excellent indlcat-\nmm 1 'i1 \u25a0mtiiii1' \u25a0 inaaswsag\nions. Remember, however, that\nthe results you attain will be in\ndirect proportion to the efforts\nyou put forth.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Finish incompleted\ntasks before starting new ones.\nStand firmly by promises, good\nprinciples, all sound and honorable agreements. Think. conscientiously before making changes.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) - Be cautious in\nspending, investing, handling all\nmoney. Day can Be soundly productive if you manage your affairs in your usual capable way.\nDon't  force issues,  however.\nDECEMBER 'i'i to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Some restrictive influences. Personal affairs\nand family Interests are strongly\nfavored but other matters may\nrequire delicate handling.\nJANUARY 31 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aauarlus) \u2014 A good Uranus\naspect! Be quick, enthusiastic,\nambitious. All days are not so\nfavorable so get in there and\npitch. Have faith ln yourself and\nin your abilities.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Your Neptune's position now warns against overdoing or forcing issues. You will\ngain much more If you persuade\ngently and reasonably \u2014 but\n'irmly.   Don't   sidestep   difficult\nYOU BORN TODAY are active-\nminded, independent, persistent.\nYou seem at times to get along\nwell with less sleep and rest than\nmost people. You like comfort,\nluxuries; could become indolent\nunless you watch yourself, You\nhave unusual leadership qualities\nFloods Sweep\nNSW States\nMELBOURNE (Reuters)-Hun-\ndreds of homes were isolated today and highways damaged as\nthe flood-swollen Murray River\ncontinued to rise on the border\nbetween Victoria and New South\nWales states.\nWater flooding -in from other\nrivers swept away crops and\nlivestock.\nMost rivers were falling slowly\nin the north of Victoria but farmers on the lower reaches of the\nswollen rivers were still working to throw up protective earth\nbarriers around their homes end\nfarm buildings.\nand like to exercise them. Remember, however, that one whe\ngives orders must also be willing\nto take them. You have talent\nfor entertaining, agriculture,\nsalesmanship, a military career.\nYou like, maybe will be actively\nInterested in, sports, outdoor past-\ntimes. Birthdate; Claude Debussy,\nFrench composer; Samuel P.\nLangley, pioneer airplane construction engineer,\t\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nTIRED\nFEET\nfrj\nrnEEPra\n[mug of m^Si\nWf... New Fall Togs for Boys and Girls\nm mt.\nBoys' Suntan Jeans\nHeavy khaki drill jeans; tapered legs. Bar-tacked at points of\nstrain  for longer  wear. Sizes\n6  to  16. as.   f.Q\nTan only tta. WO\nWash V Wear Slacks\nSizes 6-12.      Sizes 13-16.\n7.95    9.95\n75% Orion and 25% Viscose.\nSelf belt, cuffs, pockets. All-\nnylon trim. Grey, Blue, Beige.\nFlannelette Shirts\nWarm brushed cotton. Guaranteed washable. Red, Blue, Gtey\nchecks in sizes 1   3 f>\n6 to 16  I . 3 7\nBoys' Lined Jeans\nFirst choice for Fall! Sturdy\njeans with warm flannelette\nlinings. Made for } qa\nwear. Sizes 6-16.  ....  3.70\nCorduroy Slacks\nImported Crompton corduroy.\nIvy Leaguer with backstrap, or\nplain. In colors. C OC\nSizes: 6 tO 16.       J.afj\nV-Neck Pullovers\nLambswobl and Orion\u2014machine\nwashable. Long c  Afi\nsleeves. S M, 1  J.70\nLittle Boys' Shirts\nSoftly napped doeskin. Double\nelbows. Checks, \u00ab a?Q\nstripes. Sizes 3-6X.  ... I .07\nCorduroy Boxer Longs\nWarm for cool weather. Choice\n2.98\nof colors. Sizes\n3 to 6X,\nLined Corduroy Longs\nSanforized checked lining. Boys'\nhave zipper. Sizes: 3 no\n3 to 6X   3.70\nNylon Pullovers\nV-neck, long sleeves. Red, Blue.\nNavy. Sizes: 3   f*tO\n4 to 6X  Z.7Q\nBoys' Campus Coats\n9,95\nWool Melton cloth with warm\nquilted lining. Drax water repellent. Raglan sleeves, warm\nknitted cuffs. Piping on pockets,\ncentre stripe. In popular colors.\nCampus length. Sizes: 6 to 18.\nOPEN A BUDGET\nCombine your pack-to-school\npurchases and put them on a\n30-60-90 budget plan. \u2014 Pay\nonly 1\/3 down, balance In\n3 equal payments, with no\ncarrying charge.\nBoys' Lined Jeans\nBlue denim jeans with full flannelette lining. Double seat and\nknees, suspenders, 3 QQ\nzipper. Sizes: 3-6X.  Z..\/0\nGirls' Lined Jeans\nKhaki drill with checked or\nstriped flannelette lining. Boxer\nwaist, pockets. 3  na\nSizOs: 3 to 6X  Z.\/O\nOrion Pullovers\nOrlOn in classic style. Pastels.\nGirls' sizes:\n4 to 6X\t\n2.79\nGirls' Pleated Skirts\nViyella flannel skirts in authentic tartans: Black Watch, Margaret Rose, others. 3 ng\nSizes: 2 to 6X  3.70\nGirls' Pullovers\nInterlock Orion in classic styles,\nnovelties. Sizes: 3  fto\n8 to 14  3.70\nGirls' Cardigans\n(Match the pullovers above.)\nLovely colors. Sizes: A ne\n8 to 14  *r.7o\nGirls' Fall Skirts\nCorduroy, tweed, plaid. Reversible, kilt, plain styles. Sizes:\n7 to 12.\n5.98 and 6.95\nGirls' Car Coats\nPoplin. Collar converts to hood.\nRed, Beige, Turq. \"T QC\nSizes: 7 to 14   I .7 J\nGirls' Jeans\nSuntan sanforized denim, frontier style tapered leg. 3 QQ\nSizes: 8 to 14  A.70\nGirls' Car Coots\nSheen. Fuf fabric collar, cuffs.\nRed, Blue. Sizes: 1 C OC\n7 to 14   Ij.afj\nGirls' Slim Jims\nCorduroy plaids,        \u25a0\u00bb   qq\nplains. Sizes: 8-14. . 3.7O\n1 ofrtttf* I*! (tflttpftitg.\nINCORPORATED   tVf HAY 167ft\n \u2022Sffi!\nptmrnrnj^^afm-mmftrnt\nAbout the Town\nPHONE 1844\nMr, and Mrs, J. H. Coventry\nhave as guests on the North Shore\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr\nand Mrs. M. Arikado anti children,\nMarilyn Beverley and Richard of\nKindersfey, Sask,\n*  *  *\nAfter visiting at the Coast for\nthree months, Mrs. J. B. Green\n. wood, 556 Ward Street, has return\ned to Nelson, accompanied by her\ng r a n d d aughter, Miss Denise\nGreenwood, who has since return-\nlid to Vancouver. Mrs. Greenwood\nipent two months with her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nA. D. Greenwood in Vancouver\nand one month with her son-in-\nla\\* \u2022\u25a0nd daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nE. 1   Davis in Seattle,\nNew  Delhi Woman\nAttending PNE\nOnce in Purdah\nTORONTO (CP) - More than\nanything else, Shobba Kanwar of\nNew Delhi likes meeting people.\nThe reason, she said in an interview at the Canadian National\nExhibition where she is' working\non the Indian government stand,\nis that she spent nine years of\nher life \"in purdah\".\nFrom Ihe age of 18 ot 27 she\nlived on the second floor of her\nfather's home in Jodhpur state,\nThe only men she met were in her\nimmediate family. When she went\nout, curtains in the car hid her\nfrom' view, and guards surrounded\nher.\n\"I didn't meet many people,\"\nsaid sari-clad Miss Kanwar, now\n39, \"But I'm making up for it now.\"\nEducated in Switzerland and\nEngland \u2014 \"my family were severely criticized for sending a girl\nto school\"\u2014she returned to India\nat 18, only to be popped into purdah.\nA social revolution followed India's independence in 1948 and Miss\nKanwar's purdah ended.\nShe worked for the Indian high\ncommissioner to the United iKng-\ndom and returned to India in 1958\nto become private secretary to\nMrs. Pandit Nehru. She now works\nfor the ministry of commerce and\nindustries.\nBaby's Hot\nLittle Head\nWhen your btbv's head feels hot it nay\nbe because of simple fever common to some\nminor baby ailment. If so, Baby's Own\nTablets will promptly help reduce this\naimple fever by clearing harmful wastes out\nof the system. Ii babyl fever persists, consult your physician.\nOne Midland, Ontario Mother has this to\nsay: \"My little baby was fevetish and hot.\nI gave her Baby's Own Tablets and by nighttime she was up and around again.\"\nBaby's Own Tablets ate mild, sweet-\neasting, easy to take \u2014 and have been used\nby millions of mothers. No \"sleepy\" stuff\n\u2014 no dulling effect. Especially good, too, at\nteething time for restlessness, peevishness,\nconstipation, digestive upsets, colic and\nother minor infant troubles resulting from\nneed of a corrective. Ask your doctot about\nBaby's Own Tablets. Get a package today\nat your druggist.\n\u2022 Mother! For irregularity and minor digestive, upsets of olaer child, 3 to 15, give\nclinically-tested Children's Own Tabula   '\nMr, and Mrs, R, C. Dahl of Edmonton, who are vacationing In\nBritish Columbia, are visiting their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Clifford Holland of McQuarrle\nAvenue.\n* * .\nA banquet in the Lord Nelson\nDining Room followed by a drive\nto View Point and a swimming\nparty at Taghum Beach markeu\nthe annual cutting of the women\nof the Cottonwood Whist Club.\nThose attending the event were\nivirs. C. W. McConnell, Mrs. V. F.\nCarpenter, Mrs. T. Buttnor Mrs,\nT. bunce, Mrs. H Campbell, Mrs,\nD. Hofmann, Mrs, A, Strom,\nivirs. C. A. Strom, Miss L.\nStrom, Mrs, h. H, Welbourn,\nMrs. George Poulin, Mrs, R. Van\nRuyskenveiae, Mrs. Bill Strom,\nMrs. G. Oison, Mrs. T. Sitelton\nMrs. G. Bail and Mrs. H. Peder-\nsen.\n* * ..\nFrom Chapman Camp, Mrs. M,\nGanpen is visiting her orother and\nsisier-in-iaw,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   J,\nHolland, 31b Second Street.\n* *  *\nA Coast visitor at the home of\nMr. anu Mrs. H. J. White, 31\/ Second Street, is Uieir daughter, Mrs.\nFranv. Kiseuer and their grand-\ndaugnter, Patricia, of Vancouver.\na   a   a\nMr. and Mrs. Alan R. Ramsden,\n81b Nuitn street, have returneu\nnome alter spending two weens at\ntheir camp and a lew days in Spokane, accompanied by Mr. and\nMrs. A. H. oievens, 715 Neison\nAvenue.\na   a   *\nFrom Calgary, Mrs. H. M. Forster is visiting ner parents, Mr. and\nMrs. N. CaruK, 12i Richard Street,\nana her sister Mrs. A. MacUon-\nald, 703 Seventh Street.\na   *   .\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Scarborough\noi the North Shore have had as\nguests their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Feener of\nRedwater, Alta. and children\nRosemary and Barbara of Red-\nwater, Alta.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. George Jackson of\nthe North Shore have had as guests\nfor the past three weeks their\ngrandchildren, Helen and George\nTheasey of Mannviile, Alta.\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. George Paxton oi\nthe North Shore have as guests\nMrs. Paxton's brotherand sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Pollard\nof Winnipeg, also Mr. and Mrs.\nAndre Trahan of Vancouver and\nMr. and Mrs. Roy McLaury and\nfamily of Everett, Wash.\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 Overnight visitors\nat the home of- Mr. and Mrs. K.\nWallace were Mr. and Mrs. R.\nMoore and family of Calgary and\nMr. and Mrs. A. Macleod and family of Edmonton.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Mackie have had\nas visitors Mr. and Mrs. Percy\nMackie and family of Kimberley\nwho stopped off en route home\nfrom Penticton where they visited\nMr. Mackie's parents.\nMOVIE STARS OF THE FUTURE? We don't know-\nyet, but these two little gills dresser} up in their mothers'\nold clothes and pretended to be Hollywood stars. Left\nis Susan Norris, 8 (Marilyn Monroe) of 719 Carbonate\nStreet, and Shelagh Morey, 7Vi years old, of 519 Cedar\nStreet, is Doris Day. The Daily News photographer\nhelped them on their way to stardom by putting them\non film.\u2014Daiiy News phofo.\nFish for a Change on Either\nBarbecue or Kitchen Stove\nWlUadijX. FASHIONS\nArrivals   For\nFALL and WINTER\nCAR COATS\nBunny-lined  in Corduroy,  Poplin or Wool   Plush.\nNewest collar and stripe effects. $*|\nUp from    \t\nCOATS\n15.95\nFull Length with New Empress Styling.\nExtra small and regular sizes.\nUSE OUR  LAY AWAY PLAN\nNEW ARRIVAL\nSweater Treasures\nFOR FALL\nNever before have\nsweaters caused\nsuch a stir of excitement, beautifully toned colors\nfor Fall that match\nor contrast with\nyour skirt.\nBe Sure To See the New\nFALL SUITS\nIn All the Fall Shades and Fabrics.\n\u00aeMLL LADIES'APPAREL\nTHE   FASHION  CENTRE\n535 Boker St. Phone 775\nBy MARGARET CARR\nOutdoor eating has come a long\nway in the last few years. The\nbackyard grill is fast becoming\nstandard equipment, as is portable\ncooking gear that goes along on\nfamily outings and holidays. And\nthe range of menu items for outdoor cookery is increasing too as\nwe experiment with many fords\npreviously considered strictly for\nindoor cooking. Pish fillets and\nsteaks don't demand any particularly fussy treatment and they take\non appetizing appeal when cooked\non a grill over glowing coals.\nBecause of its fatty nature, salmon is one of the best varieties\nfor outdoor cooking. Halibut, haddock and other fillets may be\nused, although they must be basted\nfrequently, and' it is best to use\nmore oil in the marinade.\nMexican Fish Buns have a full\npeppy flavor, best appreciated\nwhen they're served hot, which can\nbe achieved easily over the outdoor grill as well as in the kitchen.\nTeenagers, particularly, go for\n-uch \"spectaculars\" at their bar-\njecue parties.\nGRILLED SALMON STEAKS\n4-5 salmon steaks, at least tench thick; juice of t lemon; 3\nablespoons salad oil; V4 teaspoon\nsalt; Vs teaspoon pepper; Vt teaspoon dry mustard,\nArrange salmon steaks in refrigerator dish. Combine remain-\n.ng ingredients and pour over tftle\nsteaks. Cover dish and let marinate in refrigerator about four\ntours. Place on greased grill over\n'.ow glowing coals. Grill 10 minutes, turn and grill another 10 minutes or until salmon flakes easily\nwhen tested with a fork. Baste\nduring grilling with marinade.\nMakes four to six servings.\nSUGGESTED MENU\nIf grill is large enough, grill\nwhole tomatoes along with the salmon. Medium sized tomatoes take\nabout the same length of time as\nsalmon steaks. Cut off stem ends\nof tomatoes. Scoop out a little of\nthe tomato and add a pat of butter,\nsalt and pepper. Frozen French\nfries also take same length of time\nlo cook in oven. Follow directions\non package. If picnic is away from\nhome, serve with potato chips instead of French fries.\nMEXICAN FISH BUNS\n6 hotdog rolls; IVi cups ilaked\ncooked or canned fish; 3 tablespoons chopped green pepper; 1\ntablespoon minced onion; bit of\nminced garlic; 1 tablespoon chop-\noed pimiento; Vt cup maponnaise;\n3 tablespoons chili sauce; Vt teaspoon salt; dash pepper; dash cayenne pepper; 3 tablespoons grated\nprocessed cheese.\nCombine all ingredients except\nhotdog rolls. Scoop out centre of\neach roll with fork, fill with fish\nmixture. Wrap each roll in aluminum foil. Refrigerate until time to\nbe heated. Heat wrapped rolls in\nhot oven pre-heated to 400 degrees\nFahrenheit for eight minutes or\nheat in double thickness of foil on\noutdoor grill over glowing coals, allowing about 10 minutes to heat\nthrough. Makes six rolls.\nHot Weather\nHealth for\nBusiness Girls\nRomanticists invariably portray\n\"Girl in Summer\" as a languid\ncreature in a hammock sipping\niced lemonade. Actually, she is\nmore likely behind an office desk\ntrying to look crisp while the tern\nperature hovers at 90.\nThe chief medical officer of one\nlarge company, Dr. L. C. Haslam\nof Canadian Industries Limited,\nhas some advice for this white-collar gal in the dog-days.\nHe advises her to wear loose\nclothing to allow air to circulate.\nFor example, full skirts are cooler than straight ones when sitting\nat a typewriter. Leave the heavy\njewellery at home\u2014it's bothersome\nin hot weather.\nSummer shoes should be comfortable. Hot pavement is a sore\ntrail to a business girl's feet. Shoes\ntherefore, should give good support even if they are light, according to Dr. Haslam. Open sandals\nare tiring to walk in and when the\nbody is weary the heat ' seems\nmore intense.\nAt lunch hour on a hot day, she\nshould avoid a heavy meal and\nfried foods, he recommends. Fruit,\nvegetables and salad meals are\npreferable.\nThe smart woman keeps her\nbody's cooling mechanism functioning properly. The pores of the\nskin should be kept clean with frequent baths and perspiration\nshould be allowed to evaporate\nthrough light-weight clothing.\nAbove all, the business girl must\nkeep her work as orderly as possible. Shuttling through papers to\nfind a misplaced letter is energy\nconsuming and getting \"steamed\nup\" is futi's, Rummer heat is hard\non even the swe?t?st disposition,\nsays Dr. Haslam, so the rnost valuable quality on a hot day is serenity!\nRIVAL SHOW\nMEXICO CITY (AP) - Art\nlovers who do not get their fill\nat the inter \u2022 American show of\npainting and engraving at the\nPalace of Fine Arts here can also\nsee a rival exhibition. A dozen\nMexican artists whose works were\nrejected, have set up a show at a\nprivate gallery.\nKeep Your Eye im Classified)\nJayfoih...\nNew Prints in Rich Washable Toffajfl\nFor the new Fall Style Dresses SI  Qf\nPrinted Corduroy\nn beautiful Paisley Jn \"fF\n48\"\nPrints\nA Full Range ef Imported Tweeds\nYard $2.50 to $3.75\nEvery Wanted Shade in New Velveteen\nYard $2.50\nPhone 1485\n624 Baker St.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1958 \u2014 5\nOntario Couple Qive Love and\nCare to 32 Retarded Children\nBy ROY EVANS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nPLAINFIELD, Ont.  (CPl-Tlie\nmessage from the Hollywood cowboy to the Dutch-Canadian couple\nhere was encouraging.\nMovie star Roy Rogers wired\nfrom his  Beverly Hills,  Calif.,\nNo Medicine\nNo Doctor\nNo Worries\nST. THOMAS, Ont. (CP) - Mrs,\nWilliam Rlnkey celebrates her\n107th birthday today with \"no\nworry no medicine and no doctor\"\nto interfere.\nAlthough confined to bed Mrs.\nRlnkey still maintains a lively interest ln world events. Her favorite hobby in recent years is collecting congratulatory birthday\nmessages from the Queen and the\nprime minister of Canada.\nFOUR DAY GUIDE\nCAMP HELD AT\nWHATSHAN LAKE\nEDGEWOOD - Edgewood Girl\nGuides under the leadership of Captain M. Watts and Lieut. S. Underwood spent a successful four days\ncamping at Whatshan' Lake. On\nvisitors' night, the girls dressed up\nand put on a \"Fashion Show\".\nLater songs were sung and Ellen\nHopp led the girls and visitors in\naction songs.\nGuides attending the camp were\nAnnette Hopp, Sharon Bakker, Ellen Hopp, Sharon Pender, Elaine\nBateman, Connie Ewings, Sheila\nMilne and Terryle Milne.\nBoswell Notes\nMr. an Mrs. G. Taylor and family of Vancouver were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. A. Mackie during the\nweek.\nhome: \"May God bless you and\nMrs. Velleman for your efforts\nand grant spiritual rewards to\nthose who are inspired to help\nyou.\"\nFor Leonard Velleman, 67, and\nhis wife Lenora, 62, it's a heartening token of the help they seek,\nIn order to care for 32 mentally-\nretarded toddlers.\nBRIGHT HAVEN\nFor seven years now they've\ntended helpless youngsters in\ntheir big, bright brick house near\nthis c u m m u n i t y, seven miles\nnorth of Belleville.\nThey started alone with love.\nToday they're supported by a\nchartered, non - profit citizens'\ncorporation\u2014Ontario Homes for\nMentally Retarded Infants Inc.\u2014\nand aided by 12 to 17 employees\nIn the Babies Convalescent\nHome.\nBut they've acquired a $70,000\ncapital debt and their operating\nlosses run to almost $2,000 a\nmonth in nursing children whose\nparents just can't afford such expensive care.\nThe Vellemans, who emigrated\nfrom Holland 34 years ago,\npoured $30,000 of their own savings into the 13 - room nursing\nhome before the OHMRI was\nformed two years ago to take\nover the financial load.\nDEDICATED COUPLE\nWhat prompted them\u2014parents\nof three healthy, now - mature\nchildren of their own\u2014to take on\nothers' troubles?\nSays Mrs. Velleman, a dedicated registered nursS;\n\"A healthy child can always\nfind a home. These others need\nlove and care as much. Who is\nto give it to them?\"\nThe Ontario government has\n1,600 retarded children awaiting\nentry to its hospital schools in\nSmiths Falls and Orillia. But the\nofficial entry age is six years old.\nThere is no provision for the\nmentally handicapped from birth\ntill Ihe age of six,\nIt is these children the Vellemans accommodate. They now\ncare for 32 and would like to\nhave 50. That, however, requires\nenlarged facilities.\nThey now have three nurseries,\na diet kitchen and a general\nkitchen. They need, says Mr.\nVelleman, a larger building and\na laundry to handle the 3,000\npounds of linen a month now taking the facilities of the Belleville\nGeneral Hospital's laundry.\nThe Vellemans ask $100 a\nmonth to care for the handicapped children, The Ontario government estimates the cost of\nkeeping one such child at $140\na month. Many parents can't afford even the $100 a month and\nchildren are often admitted for\n$65 or $75 and the home absorbs\nthe loss.\nMany local service groups, including the Kinette Club of Belleville and T o r o n t o' s Armour\nHeights Lodge of B'nal Brlth,\nhave contributed to the home,\nbut the debt piles up. This year\nthe OHMRI has launched a campaign for $250,000 to clear the\ndebt and meet expenses.\nMrs. Velleman told an interviewer;\n\"Many people ask us why these\nchildren have to suffer.\n\"We cannot play God. Our job\nIs to care. for them and give\nthem our love.\"\nBeautiful New\nDINETTE SUITES\nArriving Daily,\nSee these show Items from the\nWestern Furniture Market\nPriced To Fit Your Budget\nJ\/uuunanl.\n639 Baker St.\nPh. 115\nGuide L.A. Meeting\nHeld, Edgewood\nMrs. P. Watts will be convener\nfor the Old Timers' Banquet for\nwhich the Local Association and\nGirl Guides are catering. Plans for\nthe catering were made at the LA\nmeeting held at the home of Mrs.\nW. Slyter.\nMrs. R. Bryan, division commissioner of Robson, Miss R. M. Kirkman, district commissioner, and\nMrs. J. Ewings, LA president, have\nbeen named trustees of the Guide\nHall.\nA letter of condolence is to be\nsent to Mrs. Mary Metts whose husband was killed in a car accident.\nMrs. Watts reported that all the\nGuides had signed a card and sent\nlt to Guide Andria Metts.\nJUST ARRIVED. . .\nEARLY FALL\nBubble crowns, eye-level brims, the\nwide-swinging trapeze and curl-covering caps, are all the \"newsmakers\"\nthis fall. See the collection today at\nIRENE'S\nPhone 50\nMILLINERY AND\nDRESS  SHOP\nNelson, B. C.\npijojfL Ja&hmt JImL\n. . . and they're all straight from the college issues\nof mademoiselle, glamour and seventeen magazines ... all the basic requirements, plus high fashion \"fun things\" for \"hi-school\", the \"college campus\" or \"career woman\" . . . you'll\nwant them all... come see our crackling new collections.\ncoed jumpers\ncareer and college women alike will love the fashion-excitement in our vivid collection of campus\njumpers . . . they're charmers, every one ... tbe\nstunning chemise or smartly-fitted models, made of\nexcellent all-wool materials . . . and oh! the shades\n. . . gorgeous red . . . blue-berry-blue or the tangy\npumpkin shades, classic black $11   QC\nof course, from        I I ear J\n\u2022 skirts\n\"an absolute must\" ... for the college or career\nwoman ... so versatile and always smart. . . pastel\nplaid or solid tone \"reversibles\" . . . authentic tartan plaids . . . sheath or slim types with pleated\nhems , . . superior all-wool materials, and shades\nthat are the rage of the fall season . , . all designed\nond proportioned to\nflatter your lovely figure\n'10.95 .'25\n\u2022 sweaters\nfrom glamour\nmagazine\nall those wonderful \"soft touch\"\nsweaters for campus living ... to\nskim off to school or float on to\nimportant dates . . . \"bulky\" or\n\"smooth\" . . . cardigans, pullovers\nwith short, long or 34 length sleeves\n. , . designed in orlon, botany wools\nand ayrloom ... by such famous\ndesigners as helen harper, lansea\nand grandmere. In all those gay\nyoung, dashing colors. %y\nfrom\t\n'4.95\nchemise-line:\n\u2022 blouses\nbe first on the campus with one of\nthese adorable blouses . ... the very\n\"new-new\" sailor blouse with large\ncollar. . . and so many other blouse\nstyles, or tuck-ins and shirtwaists\nin dacrons, nylon, terrylene, wool\njersey or fine cottons. 9\"m\nfrom  \u25a0\u2014\t\n'3.95\n* Open a Charge Account\nor Coiiv:'\u00bbicn( 'i   ins\nMay Be Arranged.\n596 BAKER ST.\n7Zdrf~\nPHONE 942\natlipiJMtUii^PW^^WM'JJIIlBI\n \u00bb^\u2014.\n\u2022m*\n\t\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1958\nNova Sfotia Busy Picking\nBlueberries Fori Market\nBy SANDY CAMPBELL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX (CP) - It's blueberry-picking time in Nova Scotia.\nDespite a slow start due to bad\nweather this year's crop is expected to be almost as good as\n\u25a0last year when -'4,800,000 pounds\nwere harvested.\nThe slight decline is blamed on\nspring frosts that hampered pollination. Acreage is up this year\nbut no accurate estimate is available.\nPrices vary with supply and demand. Dealers say (lie market\nfor Maritime berries may hot be\nas good this year as in 1957 because of good crops in Quebec\nand the United States. The United\nStates harvest is expected to be\n25 per cent below last year's record high but still better than\n1956.\nBIG BERRY PLANT\nThe biggest blueberry processing plant in Nova Scotia is Canada Foods Limited at Kentville.\nThey recently installed a freezing\nunit capable of handling up to\n60,000 pounds a day. Managing\nDirector Ladislav Koldinsky said\nTuesday the plant can turn out\nabout 75,000 cans a day.\nBorn in Czechoslovakia, Mr.\nKoldinsky came here in 19r>0 to\nre-open the plant, close.i after\ntl',t Second World War Besides\nblueberries the factory handles\napples and claims to be the biggest producer of appl-J concentrate in the world. Special evap\norating equipment reduces seven\ngallons of app.tjuice to one gallon of concentrate.    .\nThe process cuts shipping costs\n\u2122d Koldinsky' says the firm did\na $2,000,000 business last year.\n.j.Main Nova .Scotia blueberry-\ngrowing areas are,..Cape Breton,\nYarmouth, Digby - and Cumberland Counties, Mr. Koldinsky estimates acreages have increased\nbetween 10 and 25 per rant in the\nlast few years.\nThe berries are harvested late\nin the summer. The standard\nharvesting eauipment i.< a special rake tha' combs the berries\nfiom the bush. Cleaned in Ihe\nfield, they bring the grower about\n12 cents a pound. Distributors\nwho handle them between field\narid factory get about 14 cents\na pound.\nMost bf th Kentville plant's\nproduction is for export. Berries\nare canned under labels of firms\nin,.the United States and South\nAmerica.\nBALMORAL, Scotland (API-\nPrincess Margaret arrived at the\nRoyal Family's castle in the highlands today to celebrate her 28th\nbirthday.\nShe plans to spend the birthday Thursday quietly with the\nQueen and Prince Philip, who\nare vacationing at Balmoral\nCastle.\nIt was the sisters' first meeting since before Margaret left\nfor her Canadian trip six weeks\nago.\nCLC Scorns\nGov't Action\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Canadian\nLabor Congress today described\nthe government's compulsory arbitration move in.the.west coast\nCPR steamship strike as \"an invasion of civil liberties.\"\nUrging the administration to\nrepeal the \u25a0 legislation which\nforced workers to get back on the\njob, the congress said the legislation \"created dangerous precedents for arbitrary government\nactions on future occasions.\"\n\"Workers engaged in legitimate\nstrike action have been forced to\nrefrain from such, action. Unions\nhave been required to negotiate\nwith the knowledge that failure\nto reach agreement would result\nin compulsory arbitration with\nthe government reserving the\nright to determine which issues\nshould be arbitrated.\n\"The whole fabric of voluntarism which is characteristic of\nlabor-management relations in a\nfree society has thus been seriously endangered.\"\nThe congress said in a statement it \"seeks a commitment\n. . . that the government will not,\non any similar occasion, set aside\nthe normal processes of labor disputes settlement in order to impose settlement by government\ndecree.\"\n\"Anything less will cause the\ncongress seriously to ouestion the\ngovernment's good faith in its attitude to organized labor.\"\nFrance Thrpws Weight\nBehind Western Plans\nFIRST STEAMSHIP\nThe Frontenac, a 700-ton side-\nwheeler, was the first Canadian\nsteamship on the Great Lakes.\nUNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (CPI\nForeign Minister Maurice Couvc\nde Murville today threw France's\nfull support behind a Western\nplan to hand the Middle East\nproblem over to Dag Hammarskjold.\nThe French diplomat, who arrived here Tuesday, urged the\nemergency UN General Assembly to place its confidence in the\nsecretary-general and leave it to\nhim to find ways to ease tension,\nCouve de Murville addressed\nthe 81-nation body as intense:behind-the-scenes activities continued on behalf of rival Middle\nEast plans.\nThe Western resolution, backed\nby Norway and six other countries including Canada, apparently had enough support to give\nit the required two-thirds majority but its sponsors were trying to roll up an impressive vote,\nIndia, Ceylon and several other\nAsian countries were pressing a\nrival plan calling for the early\nwithdrawal of U.S. troops, from\nLebanon and British forces from\nJordan. They were reported hav-\ninging difficulties in the Asian-\nAfrican group itself.\nDIFFERENCE OF  APPROACH\nSir Claude Corea of Ceylon,\ntoday's opening speaker, said\nthat the difference between the\ntwo resolutions appeared to be\none of approach.\nSir Claude said the gulf was\n\"so narrow, goodwill and a little\ningenuity should enable us to de\nvise a formula which will meet\nboth points of view,-allaying on\nthe one hand the fears of many\nwith regard to Ihe intervention\nand the maintenance of these\ntroops, and oh the other hand\nrecommending that the withdrawal be related to United Nations action and not carried out\nunder compulsion by the assembly.\".\nArkady Sobolev, Soviet resident representative, hinted lhat\nhis delegation would \"support any\nAfro-Asian compromise resolution expressing the hope that\nAnglo-American forces withdraw\nfrom Jordan and Lebanon \"at an\nearly date.\"\nTalking to correspondents before the assembly resumed its\ndebate, he would not commit\nhimself to full endorsement of\nthe group's draft resolution.\n\"The Soviet Union cannot formulate policy until it has something official to consider,\" Sobolev said.\n\"But I will tell you this: the\nAfro-Asians are on the, right\nlines.\"\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nWindsor, Ont.\u2014Pat Drouillard,\nformer lightweight boxing champion of Canada.\nLondon\u2014L. A. G. .Strong, 62,\nprolific writer of novels, short\nstories and poems.\nSays World\nExpanding\nVIENNA. (Reuters' - A Budapest scientist has outlined a revolutionary theory that the earth\nis expanding and not\u2014as has been\ngenerally accepted \u2014 slowly contracting.\nProfessor Laszlo Egyed of\nBudapest University gave his\nviews, in an interview published\nin this month's Hungarian Review.\n\"I have computed on the basis\nof paleogeographic maps that the\nradius of the earth is increasing\nby half a millimetre (.0197\n\u2022inches) every year,\" he said.\nHe said that proof of his theory\nwas that the oceans of the world\nare getting proportionately\nsmaller compared with the land\nsurface\u2014but if the earth were\ncontracting they would tend to\ncover a proportionately larger\narea.\n\u25a0\nireev, McKitts ,.\nUBDY OF CANADA LIMITED\nCHATHAM, OIITARIO\nCanada Awaits\nAlaskan Trade\nBy EDNA ATKINSON\nANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters)\u2014If next Tuesday's referendum confirms statehood for\nthis territory, it automatically\nwill abolish the Jones Act and\ndo a good turn for Alaska and\nneighboring Canada at the same\ntime.\nAbolition of the Jones Act,\nwhich restricts foreign shipping\nin Alaskan waters, is included in\nthe statehood bill which thus will\nopen the far-northwest sea lanes\nto Canadian ships. Provisional\nmeasures have in the past allowed a limited sea service between some Canadian and southeast Alaskan ports, but now the\nway will be cleared for Canadian\nships to carry goods to the whole\nof Alaska.\nLower freight rates are expected to be one of the benefits\nreaped from more competition\namong the shipping lines and also\nfrom a shortening of the water\nhaul owing to the geographical\nproximity of Canadian ports.\nOPEN TALKS\nKenneth Burbridge, Canadian\nconsul - general at Seattle, already has had preliminary talks\nwith Alaskan business leaders\nat Fairbanks and Anchorage with\na view to discovering potential\ntrade openings with the new\nstate.\nFoodstuffs are among the commodities that Alaska could buy\nmore cheaply from Canada as a\nresult of lower transport costs.\nCanadian prime beef, wheat\nand fresh vegetables were specifically mentioned by the Canadian consul-general as items that\ncould be offered for export to\nAlaska by sea.\nSince Alaska imports about 95\nper cent of its foodstuffs, it could\nbecome an Important outlet for\nCanadian producers by the new\ntrade route.\nPLAN FERRY SERVICE\nSeen as another stimulus to\npromote Alaskan-Canadian trade\nis a plan to link Prince Rupert,\nB.C., and six major southeast\nAlaskan ports by a ferry service.\nAccording to a New York engineering firm that was asked to\nreport to the Alaskan highway\nand public works department,\noperation of such a ferry system\nis practical and feasible.\nTwo or three ferry boats large\nenough to carry 60 automobiles\nand trucks and 300 passengers\nwould operate three round trips\na week between Prince Rupert\nand Juneau. Feeder services to\nother ports probably would be\nestablished. Apart from an increase in the number of tourists\nusing this route, the ferry service\nwould provide an alternative\nroute for trucks which now carry\nfreight to the north via the land\nroute.\nTrucks could embark from\nPrince Rupert, sail up the \"inside passage\" to Haines, and\nthere take the access road which\nlinks up with the Alaska Highway\nat Haines Junction.\nIt is estimated that the ferry\nsystem could be inaugurated with\na bond issue of $16,500,000 plus\n$2,000,000 operating expenses for\nthe first two years. Revenue\nfrom the service would make it\nself-supporting.\nBitter Fight\nOn Bitters\nNot Yet Over\nPORT of SPAIN, Trinidad (CP)\nThe Trinidad government Tuesday increased its offer to buy an\nold Trinidad company and apparently ended a bitters controversy.\nThe flap blew up over a Bermuda company's offer to purchase the Angostura Bitters Company, established on this Caribbean island in 1875.\nNatives of Trinidad and Bermuda have long-rooted suspicions\nof each other and when the Bermuda company offered, to buy\nAngostura, the Trinidad government countered with a new and\nhigher bid.\nMonday the company increased\nits offer to a penny per share\nmore than that of the government. A company announcement\nsaid that if the Trinidad government outbid it, the company\nwould make no further bids.\nThe government did make another bid today, topping1 the Bermuda company by one penny.\nThe government's latest bid\nmeans an additional expenditure\nof $25,000 more than its original\noffer. The first time round, the\ngovernment had offered $2.52\nfor each preferred share and\n$6.12' for each common share.\nSTILL WRITING\nRobert W. Service the bard of\nthe Yukon, now 84 and living in\nEurope, hopes to keep writing\npoetry until he's 90.\nPolice Suspect Vendetta Slaying . ..\nBomb Placed In Ont.\nCar Kills Immigrant\nAMHERSTBURG, Ont. (CP>-\nAntonio DiPasquali, 31-year-old\nItalian immigrant, was killed\nearly Wednesday when a dynamite bomb wired to the ignition\nof. a car exploded at the touch of\nthe starter in-what is believed to\nbe a vendetta murder.\nDiPasquali was killed when he\nwent to his car on the Brunner\nMond factory parking lot and\nturned the ignition key.\n\"There was a shattering roar,\"\nsaid 20-year-old Bill Wilson, who\nwas walking towards another car.\n''I was hit in the arm and thrown\nover by the impact. I didn't know\nwhat had happened.\n\"I looked up in the air and\nsaw huge pieces of metal coming down. I ran away as fast as\nI could.\"\nCAR MANGLED\nWhen the smoke settled the\n1950 auto which DiPasquali had\nentered the minute before was a\nbeen called into the investigation.\nThe possibility the victim was\nexpecting trouble from some\nsource was indicated by the presence of a shattered .22 rifle found\nunder tile front seat of the car.\nRelatives and close friends of\nDiPasquali intimated they knew\nwho was responsible for the slaying but they would not say anything definitely.\nThe silence of the slain man's\nfamily and friends and their indication they knew who had caused\nhis death led police to believe it\nwas a vendetta-type slaying involving a family feud.\nA factory watchman said DiPasquali usually took friends\nhome but this time \"fortunately,\nhe was by himself.\"\nPieces of the car were thrown\nin all directions. One door was\nfound 500 feet from the explosion\nand the wreckage littered a\nwide area.\n\"The metal was coming down\nlike rain,\" said Paul Meloche, a\ntruck driver at the factory. \"I\nrushed over and found this pile of\nwreckage with the body.\nI didn't know what it could\nbe at first. Then I smelled dynamite. I know it from the time I\nused to drive the stuff about for\nmanagled pile of wreckage. His\nbody\u2014mutilated beyond recognition\u2014lay draped over the rear of\nthe car.\nPolice Chief Eric Hooper of An-\nderdon township said \"The person who did this is an expert.\"\nHe said provincial police and\nRCMP laboratory experts have\nthe company. It was an acrid,\nsour smell. And it was here, coming from Uie pile of debris that\nwas left. You couldn't mistake\nit.\"\nThe centre of the explosion was\nthought by Chief Hooper to be\nnear the clutch housing.\nThe dead man leaves a wife!\nPalma, and five children aged\nfrom two to 12. The family came\nfrom Pescara, Italy, seven years\nago and lived in Amherstburg,\nwhich is on the Detroit River 15\nmiles south of Windsor.\nMP Calls For\nInquiry Into\nSearch Delay\nLONDON (AP)-A member of\nParliament called today for an\ninquiry into the delay in the start\nof Ihe search for the Dutch airliner that crashed in th.e Atlantic\nlast week.\nAll 99 persons aboard the KLM\nplane died in the crash about 100\nmiles off Ihe Irish coast. Only 84\nbodies were recovered.\nR, Gresham Cooke, Conservative, said in a letter to the London Daily Telegraph that the last\nradio contact with the plane was\nat 4:40 a.m. but no search plane\ntook off until 12:20p.m. and the\nwreckage was not sighted unlil\n2:45 p.m., some 10 hours after\nthe crash.\nPart of the delay was due to\nemergency rescue operations\nbeing called off after the airport\nat Gander, Nfld., thought it heard\na broadcast from the missing\nplane.\n\"Even allowing 2Vt hours for\nthe mistake . made by Gander,\"\nCooke said, \"this (10 hours)\nseems an unconscionable time to\nfind wreckage only 100 miles\nfrom our coast. . . I hope there\nwill be a full inquiry into the\nreasons for the delay in getting\nrescue operations moving.\"\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nCONFIDENTIALLY  YOURS\n\u2014by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, Aug. 21st \u2014 Remember the old\nfable about the grasshopper and the ant? While\nthe foolish grasshopper spent the summer chirping merrily, the industrious ant stored up provisions for the winter. Then when the first icy\nblasts swept the landscape, you know who was\nin a pretty pickle! I apply the moral to many\nthings . . . yes, even to fashions. For instance,\n*m providing for my new winter suit now ... in my \"Fashion\nAccount\" at the BANK OF MONTREAL. It takes just a little\ndetermination to set aside a few dollars each pay-day. It's\nsurprising how quickly regular deposits mount up. Why not open\nyour \"Fashion Account\" at the B of M this pay-day?\nTHE REASON I enjoy making jam is because my family enjoyi\neating itl So\u2014soon I'll be having a jam session\nwith peaches, plums and pears. My jam (and\njelly too!) always turns out right without guesswork because I follow the CERTO method. Certo\nis pectin, the natural jelling substance found in\nfruit. The Certo people select the finest pectin- I\nrich fruit, then extract, refine and concentrate it I\nto give you perfect performance. With Certo, you\nget up to 50% more glasses because you don't\nboil the juice away. You keep the true color and flavor too. 'This\nfailure-proof method is explained in the booklet that comes with\nCerto. All the recipes are tested and approved in General Foods\nKitchens.  You can't go wrong!\nTHE DEEP DEVOTION OUR DOGS GIVE US deserves the best\ncare, in return. And that, to my way of- thinking, means DR. BALLARD'S CHAMPION DOG\n| FOOD . . . because it's a veterinary diet \u2014\n'. including all the nutrients any dog needs. Every\n\\ tin has a constant uniformity and quality, which\nSmeans a balanced nourishment, always. You'll\n[find your pet shows new interest in his food\nwhen it's Dr. Ballard's ... and you can vary\nthe flavor with Chicken, Liver and Regular.\nDo get Dr. Ballard's for your devoted friend, this week \u2014 and\nwatch him thrive on it, with a shiny coat, bright eyes, good\ndigestion and an-abounding zest for fun!\n6JC3S\n. *   cream   *\n'your coffee\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .\u25a0   . \u2022   .:,\u2014^\n \u2014\u2014\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21, 1958 \u2014 7\nSAFEWAY INVITES COMPARISON!\nNot just on advertised \"specials\"   ...but on ALL prices\nBlue Mountain, sliced.\n15 oz. tin\t\n2 for 43c\n2 for 79c\nFROZEN GREEN PEAS <-~ 4fo,57c\nPINEAPPLE\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nTown House. Sweet\nor Natural. 48 oz. tin\nAPRICOT JAM\nEmpress Pure. Delicious on\ntoast. 48 fluid oz. tin\t\n95c\nSODA    BISCUITS    Oven   Glo. Salted. 16 oz. pkg. _\nFIG   BARS   Melrose.  2  Ib.  package \t\nJELLY    RINGS    Paulin's.   16 oz. pkg.\t\nCOls    rlLLCTtJ    Captain's Choice, frozen. 16 oz, pkg. .\nTINNED SOFT DRINKS in***.*-*..\n 29*\n 67*\n_ 39*\n\u2014 39*\n6 for 79*\nLUCERNE\nLarge Curd or\nFarmer Style.\n16 oz. carton\nCHEESE\n-25c\nCANTERBURY    TEA    Orange Pekoe and Pekoe. 1 Ib. pkg.  *J.J2\nEDWARDS    COFFEE    Fine or regular grind. 2 Ib. tin  $1.65\nCAKE    MIXES    Monarch. White or Chocolate. 20 oz. pkt. 2 for 451\nDILL PICKLES n*w. *\u00ab \u00ab\u2022 i\u00ab \u2014- 75*\nLucerne Bonus Quality\nFRESH MILK\n- 26c\nMinimum 3.8% Butterfat.\nStandard or Homogenized.\nQuart carton \t\nMake your own comparisons and discover how\nyou can save on your total food bili at Safeway\nEvery week you see food ads shouting low prices. Each store\nclaims that its prices are lowest and advertises a few items to support the claim.\nBut you can't judge food savings on advertised \"specials'* alone.\nThey represent only a small percentage of the hundreds of items\nyou buy over a period of time. Savings on \"specials\" mean little if\nyou pay higher prices on other food purchases.\nIt's on the \"seldom-advertised\" items where differences really\nshow up.\nThat's why Safeway says: Compare ALL prices. When you do,\nyou'll discover your total food bill is much lower at Safeway.\nIn making your comparisons, differences in prices may seem small\nitem by item, but remember-it's the total that emnts.\nPrices Effective: August 21, 22, 23\nWHITE   VINEGAR   Heinz. 160 oz. jug     _____ *j\\09\nFRUIT   JARS   Wide Mouth Mason. Quart size. Doz  $2.49\nPICKLING SPICE 8 oz 29*\nJAR   LIDS  Wide Mouth Kerr. Doz 33*\nLIQUID CERTO 8 oz. .\u00ab* 33*\nPAROWAX   1   lb. carta  19*\nTOMATO CATSUP ^te Ten., n oz. boM. __ 21*\nMAZOLA OIL 2 .b. bottle 89*\nFRUIT  CORDIALS  Nutty Club. 24 oz. bottle 49*\nSAFEWAY\nInstant Coffee\n2 oz. jar\nHearty Outdoor Flavor\n44\u00ab\nMEDIUM CHEESE\n_63<\nBerkshire Canadian\nCheddar.  Lb \t\nHEINZ RELISH\nHot Dog, Hamburger or      QC\u00ab!\nBarbecue;  12 oz. jar  jjr\nPink Liquid VEL\nSp. offer. Af\\si    24 oz. TCV\n12 oz. tin TV      tin   '.,..  iy\nBreakfast Gem\nLARGE EGGS\nFarm Fresh . .. Grade \"A\"\nIn cartons.\nDozen 59'\nSAFEWAY SELECT QUALITY\nFryers\nPlump, tender and meaty . . . Delicious barbecued\nCur Up\non trays\nIb.\nLamb in Basket\nCantaloupe\nGrapes\nHearts o' Gold\nbrand\t\nThompson Seedless.\nLuscious green clusters\nGreen Peppers\nCooking Onions\nLarge,\nBell Type\n-  ibllf.\n2\"*39(\n\u25a0-. ibl9c\nChops, Roast\nand Stew \t\nHalf or Whole\nlb.\nib 43c\nShoulder Chops a, 69c\nLiver \u2014^ib49c\naSES*\ni\u00a3m.\nNew Crop.   B. C. Grown\n3 lbs. 19'\nSAFEWAY\nCANADA     SAFEWAY     LIMITED\nSliced BACON\nBurns Campfire\n1 lb. pkg. 79e\nfcU\n \"'\u25a0\n\t\n\t\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1958\nA Great Name in Western Brewing\nComes to British Columbia\nFor two-thirds of a century the quality products\nof the Calgary Brewing &\nMalting Company Limited\nhave been among the most\npopular symbols of West*\nern hospitality. And during this same period\nour Company has been privileged to contribute in many other ways to the life and\nprosperity of Western Canada.\nWe are proud, therefore, to announce that\ntwo well-known British Columbia firms -\nthe Caribou Brewing Company and\nPrinceton Brewing Company together with\nsome seven hundred British Columbia shareholders - have now amalgamated under our\ncontrol.\nThis amalgamation means that Caribou and\nPrinceton beers will henceforth be guaranteed by the entire brewing resources and\nexperience of Calgary Brewing.\nThe reputation enjoyed by our products is\nbased upon two-thirds of a century of brewing experience and upon an exacting system\nof quality control carried out in the most\nadvanced testing laboratories operated by\nany Canadian brewery.\nThe benefits resulting from this meticulous\nstandard of production are now available\n,to. purchasers of \"High Life\", \"Cariboo\",\n\"Royal Export\" and \"Old -Dublin Ale\"\nthroughout British Columbia.\nToday, the common interests of British\nColumbia and Alberta are rapidly multiply\ning. The personal and business bonds\nbetween our two great Provinces grow\nsteadily stronger.\nAs a major Western industry, the Calgary\nBrewing t& Malting Company Ltd. will strive\nto play its own full part in this consolidation\nof the Western Canadian economy. In particular, through our purchases and payrolls,\nwe now look forward to making a worthwhile contribution to the prosperity and\nprogress of British Columbia.\nGood neighborliness and hospitality are the\ncharacteristics of Western living. It is in\nthis spirit that we introduce to British\nColumbia our well-known trademark and\nall that it signifies.\nCALGARY   BREWING   &   MALTING   CO\nand its British Columbia associate\nCARIIdU JREIINfi M?4N:YLTf.\nBreweries \u2014 Prince George and Princeton\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by; the Government of British Columbia.\nLTD.\n Texas, Yonkers Golfers\nTake Lead in Canada Open\nBy. JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014Don January, lanky: Texan from\nEastland and rugged Mike Fetchik of Yonkers, N.Y., posted\ni 'ive-under-par 65s Wednesday to share the first-round lead\nin the $25,000 Canadian open golf championship over the\nposh Mayfair course.\nBoth returned home at the tail-\nend of an entry list of 106 pros\nand amateurs who gave this' southwest Edmonton layout a terrific\nlacing in one of the greatest one-\nday mass assaults on par in the\nhistory of the open. More than\n80 clobbered the course for sub-par\nrounds and another 12 hit par-70\non the nose.\nThe parade of par-busters began\nlate in the day when the big boys\ntook dead aim at the 6657-yard\nlayout. It continued until the last\nputt went down.\nThe final tally showed seven pros\nbracketed at 66, one stroke behind\nthe pace-setters; another 10 with\n67; five with 68 and 12 with 69.\nCanadians got in their sub-par\n8   1\nAlkens Scores\nTechnical KO\nlicks. Just two strokes off the pace\nwere Bud Loftus, 27-year-old from\nCalgary; Moe Norman, Toronto,\nand Vancouver's Stan Leonard, \u00a3\npre-tournament favorite.\nWinnipeg - born George Knudson,\nnow an assistant pro at a Toronto\nclub, returned a 68 and four others\nwere tied with 69 each. They were\nAl Balding, Toronto; Jack Kay,\nMontreal; Danny Stack, Winnipeg,\nand Doug Silverberg, Calgary amateur.\nForecast \"Good\"\nFor Crossing\nMARGATE, Eng. (AP) - Thirty-\none swimmers from 16 countries\nwere told Wednesday the English\nChannel weather would be good\nfor the.scheduled start of the mass\nrace from France to England early\nFriday,\nAlfredo Camarero, 27-year-old\nswimmer from Buenos Aires, and\ndefending champion Greta Anderson, a 30-year-old housewife from\nLong Beach, Calif., are the favorites for the tricky 22-rnile crossing.\nRoy Stone Captures\nNew Denver Tourney\nNEW DENVER - Roy Stone of\nTrail retained the Wood, Vallance\nCup for low gross score in the annual Slocan Lake Golf Club's men's\nopen tournament Sunday. Forty-\nthree competed.\nThe Eddy Graham Cup for low\nnet score was taken by G. S. Sands\nof Kaslo.\nOther low gross prize winners:\nReg. Stone, Trail, second; Arnold Sherwood, Nelson, third; Walter Apostoliuk, Nelson, fourth;\nStan Angus, Trail, fifth.\nNet scores \u2014 B. Higashi, Kaslo,\nsecond; G. Adams, Nelson, third;\nG. Pearson, Trail, fourth; H. A.\nThorpe, Trail, fifth.\nNeil Tattrie of New Denver won\nfirst prize in a flight for- seni\n\u00ab9'i'HS|\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG- 21,1958 \u2014 9\n60 years and over. W. F. Tyers of\nKaslo was second and J. W. Butlin\nOf New Denver third.\nSpecial prizes went to Bill McLeod of Silverton and Ed Kennett\nof New Denver.\nA nine-hole medal play women's\nevent was captured by Ruby Stone\nof Trail, low gross, and Elsie Bavington of Kaslo, low net. Nancy\nAnderson of New Denver was runner-up and consolation went to\nMrs. Burnett of Trail. There were\n15 entries.\nArt Ham, president of the local\nclub, assisted by Mrs. Mollie Harris, women's club president, presented the Graham Cup and other\nprizes to the various winners, then\ncalled on A. H. Allan of Nelson to\npresent the Wood, Vallahce Cup to\nRoy Stone. Mr. Allan noted that\nRoy Stone's name appears seven\ntimes on the cup and that of Reg\nStone, three times. He indicated\nthat a three-time winner would\nprobably receive a permanent\nmemento.\nRefreshments were served by the\nNew Denver ladies.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nCleveland    000 000 100\u20141  8  1\nNew York  000 102 04x\u20147  8  1\nBell, Ferrarese (7), Martin. (8)\nand Nixon; Ditmar and Howard.\nL: Bell. HRs: New York, Berra 2\n(19).\nChicago  500 200 210\u201410 16\nBoston  010 034 000\u2014 8 13\nWilson, Shaw (5), Lown (6),\nHenry (9), Staley (9) and Lollar;\nBowsfield, Wall (1), Fornieles (3),\nByerly (7), Kiely (8) and White.\nW: Lown; L: Byerly. HRs: Chi\ncago, Landis (15); Boston, Williams (21).\nKansas City  . 000 000 030\u20143  5  0\nBaltimore   202 000 OOx\u20144\nCraddock, Herbert (3), Grim (8)\nand Chiti; Harshman and Triandos. L; Craddock. HRs: Nieman\n(13).\nDetroit    310 030 000\u20147 10\nWashington .... 001 000 000-1\nLary and Wilson; Ramos, Ro-\nmonosky (6) and Courtney. L: Ramos. HR: Detroit, Kaline, 2 (13).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh  000 200 101-4  9  0\nChicago  '.. 000 001 100\u20142  9  0\nKline, Gross (8), Face (9) and\nHall, Foiles (9); Hillman, Elston\n(8) and S. Taylor, Neeman (9),\nLong (9). W: Kline; L: Hillman.\nHRs: Pittsburgh, Stuart (11); Chicago, S. Taylor (6).\nPittsburgh  000 01-1   2  0\nChicago    001 22\u2014S 11  0\nCalled end of 5th, rain.\nFriend and Kravitz; Drott and\nS. Taylor. HR: Pittsburgh, Mazer-\noski (16).\nCincinnati    001 110 000-8  T  2\nSan Franqiscp 000 022 00Xt4  8U 2\nHaddix, Lawrence1 (5), Jeffcoat\n(3) and Bailey; Miller, Worthington (6), Grissom (7) and Thomas.\nW: Worthington; L: Lawrence.\nHRs: Cincinnati, Robinson (25),\nTemple (3).\nPhiladelphia   404 101 002-12 17  1\nSt. Louis 100 001 000\u2014 2 10  0\nRoberts and Sawatski; Muffett,\nChittum (1), Stobbs (4), Paine (8)\nand Landrith. L: Muffett. HRs:\nPhiladelphia, Jones 2 (13), Anderson (16).\nMilwaukee  100 000 000-1  6  2\nLos Angeles    000 020 OOx\u20142  4' 0\nSpahn, McMahon (8) and Rice;\nWilliams, Klippstein (9) and Pignatano. W: Williams; L: Spahn.\nHRs: Los Angeles, Pignatano (7).\n66 LOOKED GOOD\nA 66 fired by George Bernardin,\n29-year-old native of Lawrence,\nMass., appeared to be good enough\nto stand up late in the day. But\nthings were just getting warm.\nJanuary, recovering from a dose\nof the grippe that sidelined him\nafter the third round in the St.\nPaul Open last weekend, took the\nlead with his. 65 and Fetchik, a\nhusky 200-pounder who hasn't won\na tournament in two years, followed with his 65.\nIt was sweet music to Fetchik\nwho had been moaning that his\nputts wouldn't drop. The 35-year-\nold former pro basketball player\npopped them in from eight, 10, 15\nand 25 feet.\n\"That's the best putting I've done\nin two years,\" he said. He needed\nonly 29 putts on his round. \"I didn't\ndrive too well but I'm playing a\nlot better than I have been.\"\nJanuary's putter also behaved\nHe sank a 12-footer on the fourth\nfor a birdie, a 10-footer on the 13th\nfor another birdie and followed\nwith a 12-foot birdie putt on the\n16th. January also posted an eagle\n\u2014on the par-five fifth when his\nfour-wood second shot stopped\nthree feet from the pin and he got\nhome with 'his putt.\nOne of the biggest galleries of\nthe day followed Norman J. C\nGoosie of Knoxville, Tenn., and\nJohn Cleary of Brooklyn, and they\nweren't disappointed.\nThe irrepressible Norman, capable of sub-par golf on practically\nany given day he sticks to his\ngame, posted five birdies and could\nhave tied for the lead at 66 but\nhis putter went sour on the 18th\ngreen. He had a one-over-par five,\nmissing a four-footer.\nSPEEDS AROUND COURSE\nNorman breezed around the layout at his usual fast pace and his\nben'-for-leather style was made to\norder for Goosie, an easy-going\nsoutjjerner^ but it was. a-bit.disconcerting to Cleary.\n\"It's invigorating playing with\nthat guy Norman,\" Cleary said.\n\"He could have been eight under\npar if his putter had been working\na little better.\"\nGoosie hit par-70 and Cleary returned a 74.\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Welterweight\nchampion Virgil Akins, his face a\nmask of red from bleeding gashes\naround both eyes, Wednesday night\ncame alive in the last round with\nsmashing rights and lefts to score\na technical knockout over Charlie\n(Tombstone) Smith.\nUntil the decisive 10th in the\nnon-title scrap, Akins was far behind in points as Smith, a 4-to-l\nunderdog, kept popping him with\nlong lefts that made his face gory.\nNeeding a knockout to win, Akins\ncame out in the 10th like a tiger\nand rushed to his 25-year-old Los\nAngeles opponent with fists churning. He caught him with a steaming left hook and followed with a\nright that sent Smith sprawling for\nan eight couut.\nSmith arose in a daze and Akins\nbored in. He slammed him into a\ncorner and hammered Smith at\nwill.\nReferee Frank Sikora finally\nstopped it at 1:18.\nBritish Cricket\nWarwickshire 142; Yorkshire 129\nfor 3.\nDerbyshire 281 for 8 declared.\nWorcestershire one for no wicket.\nMiddlesex 311;  vs Kent.\nSomerset 146; Essex 121 for 4.\nSlater Sets\nSwim Record\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Bill Slater of Vancouver, Canada's 18-\nyear-old, long distance swimming\nchampion churned through the\nwaters of Empire Pool Wednesday\nnight to set a Canadian record for\nthe 1650-yard men's freestyle.\nSlater swam the distance in\n19:21.6, bettering his own previous\nrecord by nearly 25 seconds.\nThe time, however, was not his\nbest. He swam the distance in\n18:51.4 at last month's British Empire Games at Cardiff where he\nfinished fourth.\nSlater met strong competition in\nWednesday night's race from a\n16-year-old American Hal Coul-\nston of Fresno, Calif., who finished only a few yards behind him\nat 19:30.7.\nThe former Canadian record for\nthe event, set by Slater at the Canadian championships here last\nyear, was 19:46.1.\nA group of speedy youngsters\nfrom Portland, Ore., grabbed earlier honors in heats of the B.C.\nage group swimming championships.\nGrade \"A\"\nLarge Eggs\nGuaranteed Fresh. In Cartons.\ndoz. 55c\n2 Dozen SI.09\nEXCEPT *t..\nLIBERTY\nIt doesn't pay to monkey around\nwhen you know that yon can save\n. . . and save . . , and save . . .\nwhen you shop at LIBERTY. Yon\nwill get a bonus too . . , our super\nquality foods are selling at the\nlowest prices in town . . . and your\ndollars boldly work for local advancement when you shop Liberty.\nFRESH SAUSAGES\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Wednes;\nday's close\"-dt-play cricket scflresf\nRoyal Navy 65 and 5 for no\nwicket;  RAF 205 for 6 declared.\nSussex 148 for 8; vs Hampshire.\nNorthamptonshire 24 for no\nwicket;  vs Surrey.   .\nGlamorgan 286; vs Lancashire.\nNottinghamshire 305; vs Leicestershire.\nRoger's Syrup      77#*\n5 lb. tin  \/ \/ V\n49c\nFels Naptha Soap\n4 bars 47c\nFlour\nFive Roses;\nJavex\nSpokane Club Ordered\nTo Rent Coliseum\nSPOKANE (AP) - The Spokane\nAmateur Club must be allowed to\nrent the city-owned Coliseum on\navailable dates next fall and winter, Judge. Thomas G. Jordan ruled\nTuesday.\nThe visiting Asotin County judge\ngranted a writ of mandamus to\nsponsors of the amateur team. Dr.\nFrancis Jurdy and Clarence Tubbs\nJack Morgan Arena\nManager of the Year\nCivic Centre secretary-manager\nJack B. Morgan is this year's \"outstanding arena manager of the\nyear.\"\nHe has returned from the ninth\nannual B.C. Arena Association\nmeeting at Seattle with the Bob\nMuir Trophy, presented to him at\nthe meeting by the new president,\nReg Stone of Cominco Arena, Trail.\nJudging is based on the manner\nIn which arena managers carry\nout promotion, administrate their\nbuildings, keep the buildings and\nperform services to the community.\nJudges were Ben Moore, Spokane\nColiseum; Buzz Evans, Pacific\nNational Exhibition; Dave Morris,\nSpectacular Productions, and Vic\nCulpin, Nicholson Printing Company, Vancouver.\nThe trophy was presented to the\nhusband was killed in the crash of\na TCA North Star airliner on Mount\nSlesse in December, 1956. Mr. Muir\nwas builder of an arena at Powell\nRiver and was active in the association.\nThere are 21 arenas in the association from throughout British\nColumbia and Washington, and 14\nassociate members include refrigeration, concession supply and\nlighting and sound equipment companies.\nOther officers elected at the\nmeeting were Buzz Evans, vice-\npresident; Harry Whipper, Nanaimo, Island representative; Jack\nElliott, Vancouver, mainland; Les\nEdwards, Penticton, Okanagan;\nBill Ysiuk, Prince George, northern\nzone; Bert DeArmond, Cranbrook,\nEast Kootenay, and Jack Morgan.\nassociation by Mrs. Muir, whose Nelson, West Kootenay.\nJack Morgan receives cup irom Reg Stone.\nhad asked the court order to force\nthe city council to open the doors\nof the big- building to a second\nhockey team.\nThey claimed the city had acted\nwrongly in granting exclusive playing dates to the Spokane Flyers\nof the Western professional league.\nWhen the Flyers turned professional recently, backers of amateur hockey obtained the old Western International Hockey League\nfranchise and began pressing for\ndates in the Coliseum, where the\nsport has been drawing big crowds.\nThe Coliseum advisory committee scheduled playing dates only\nfor the professional team and the\ncity council backed the decision\nby a 4 to 1 vote. The amateur\ngroup then went to court.\nSince other members of the\nWIHL are in Canada, a number\nof representatives of British Co\nlumbia cities appeared at the\ncouncil hearing to plead for Coliseum dates for the amateurs.\nMayor F. Gaines Sutherlin, only\ncommissioner to vote against giving the professionals exclusive\nColiseum rights, said he was \"very\npleased that my judgment has been\nvindicated.\"\nHe said \"since the Coliseum is\na public institution, we had no\nright to say any legitimate, morally sound and adequately financed\ngroup should be refused.\"\nThe mayor said .the other commissioners believed it was not good\nto tie the Coliseum up for 50-odd\nnights with one sport and he\nagreed, but voted against the\nothers in spite of this.\nCommissioners testified during\nthe court hearing that no formal\ncontract had been signed with any\nhockey group. Only tentative dates\nhad been given the Flyers, they\nsaid.\nLarge Family; 128 oz.\nNescafe\nInstant coffee;\nTea\nLeaves B.C. Lions\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Import\nquarterback - halfback Pete Neft\npacked his bags and departed from\nthe B.C. Lions -Wednesday, leaving\nthe Western Interprovincial Football Union team with just 17 imports on the roster.\nThe number will be back to 18\nFriday when Ed Vereb, starry\nback who has just got out of the\nU.S. Army, reports. Vereb will\nstart at left half Monday when\nLions meet Calgary Stampeders\nhere.\nPaul Cameron and Don Vicic,\nwho missed Monday's slaughter of\nLions in Calgary, will be back in\naction Monday, along with kicking\nace Vic Chapman.\n\"A FAVORITE\"\n3 Ibs. '1.00\nSliced Bacon\nGainers; lb\t\n65*\nFrying Chicken\nIn trays; lb\t\n59*\nSliced Cold Meats\nCal Pak brand; 6 oz. pkt. each \t\n29*\nBarbecued Chicken\nEach\t\n$1.65\nSalad\n12 oz. trays; each \t\n30*\nBologna\nBy the piece; lb\t\n39*\nCompare Liberty's Feature Values\nPink    SalmOn   Paramount; 7{ oz\t\nOR TUNA.\nCloverleaf; 2i az.\nCoffee\nLiberty's Freshly Roasted.\nGrind fresh when you buy. Lb.\nSockeye Spread\nPineapple Juke \u00ab* \u00ab\n4 tins $1\n2 for 33c\n2 for 59c\nLOOK .....Where your savings will start....\nCheck LIBERTY'S Every-day-LOW-Prices!\nFbrt Garry's\nOrange Pekoe; 100s\nWestland;\nVt gallon\nICE CREAM\nMAZOLA OIL\nRICE\n32 OZ.\nglass jar .\nVANILLA FLAVOR\nVan-Six;\n8 oz\t\n79$\n790\nMonarch family\npack\t\n5lbs 790\nTOMATO CATSUP\nCal-Linda;\n11 oz\t\n2,\u00ab 390\nAPPLE DRINK\nHappy Henry;\n48 oz\t\n3 tins 950\nPANCAKE FLOUR\nPEANUT BUTTER\nLARD\nPure, Maple Leaf\nCHEESE\nIngersoll, spreading glass; 16 oz,\nGRATED CHEESE\nKraft; 4 oz. cheddar\nCOTTAGE CHEESE\nPalm; 12 oz. special \t\nVijo; family size .\n5 lbs. 550\nSquirrel;\n48 pz. tin\n99*\nPOTATOES\n49\nU.S. No. 1; Gems, ideal for chips\nor for baking   \t\nand. Jamj&l Sufifilk^\n16cu.ft. FREEZER *3\u00a7900\nReg. $399.00; special this week ** \"^\nFairbanks Morse Gibson 10-Year Warranty\nCome to Liberty for the best deal In freezers, refrigerators.\nFreezer Master Eze Refill Bags\n\u201e59*\nlbs.\nCRISP CELERY\nLb\t\nFIELD TOMATOES\nRed ripe.\t\nlbs.\n79*\n25 qt,\nSize .\nLEMONADE\nBroder's concentrate\nTURKEY PIES\nSwift's;  8 oz :.\t\nBEEF PIES\nLibby's; 8 oz\t\nPEAS\nBroder's fancy; 10 oz.\n25 pt.\nSize \t\nWATERMELON\nNew carload,\nSweet striped;\nlb.\n12*\n25*\n40\nFRESH CORN ON COB\nLocal, dozen\nLEMONS\nFresh Sunkist,\nlemonade feature; lb.\n490\n190\n6 oz.\n2\n3\n2\n2\ntins\nfor\nfor\npkg.\n29'\n.00\n1\n67*\n35*\nLIBERTY\nPrices Effective All This Week\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities.\n 10\u2014NftSbN DAILY NfcWS, THURSPAY, AUfi. 11,1W\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newt does apt hold Itself responsible In tho event\n*   \"\u25a0- * \"\u2014\"n* lis*\nVANCOUVfR STOCKS\nol an error ln the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium i......     .07\nAlgom Uranium    17.50\nAmal Larder _      .15\nAnacon Lead 52\nAtlin Ruff       .32\nAumacho 15\nAumaque\nAunor \t\nBarnat\n.09\"4\n2.40\n2.88\n.23\n.19\n.09\n.06\n.90\n.08\n5.65\n8.65\n1.23\nCentral Patricia  94\nChlmo   i      .53\nChromium       2.90\nCons Denison    15.6214\nCons. Denison Wts    5.40\nCons. Discovery      3.80\nBase Metals\t\nBaska Uranium\nBoymar \t\nBrunhurst   \t\nBuffalo Ank  \t\nBuff Red Lake\nCampbell C ,\t\nCampbell ft. L.\nCan Met\nCons Halliwell\nCons Howe\nCons Mining & Smelting .\nCon Sanorm\t\nConwest\nYeliowknife Bea*\t\nOILS\nBanff Oils \t\nBailey Selburn \t\nCalgary and Edmonton ...\nCdn Atlantic  ....    ,\nCanadian Devonian  ....\nCentral IJxplorBra .....\nDuvex\t\nHome A\t\nLong Island Pete ...... ,\nMarigold .....;.\t\nMidcon \t\nNat. Petft    \t\nNftw Continental\ni.6i\n1.95\n9.35\n27.12V*\n645\n5,50\n2,51\n,14\n20.87H\nmv,\n.10\n.78\n2.05\n.41\nPacific Pete \u201e   19,12''\n.53\n2.35\n20.00\n.07V4\n3.45\nCopper Man  12%\nD'Aragon 46\nDonalda 13\nEast Amphl  19\nEast Malartic     1.60\nEast Sullivan      1.95\nElder Gold 83\nFalconbridge    25.00\nFrobisher      1.60\nGeco    14.50\nGiant Yel     5.30\nGold Eagle 19*i\nGunnar Gold'    17.25\nHarmlnerals   12\nHeadway  64\nHollinger         24.00\nHudson Bay     49.25\nInspiration  46\nInt. Nickel   79.00\nIron Bay  \u201e     1.65\nPetrol\nPOndef \t\nProv Gai \t\nRoyalite \t\nSpOOner \t\nTriad\t\nUnited Oils'\t\nY40k Canuck ....\nWestern Pacific\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  \t\nAlgoma Steel ....\nAluminum\n.60\n.28\n2.85\n11.25\n.17\n4.40\n2.18\n.11\n.19\n, (Clotfmr ttitfa)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge       .?3\nBralorne    6.99\nCanusa        .04W\nCariboo Gold       ,75\nFarwest Tungsten       .11\nGiant Mascot        .10\nGranduc     1.65\nHighland Bell  1.20\nKootenay Base Metals .....     .01\nNational Ex       ,16\nPioneer Gold   1.35\nPremier Border       .18*4\nQuatslno       .24\nSheep Creek 46\nSherritt Gordon\nSllback Premier ...\nSilver Standard ....\nSunshine Lardeau\nTaylor\t\nTrojan \t\nOILS\nAltex\n4.05\n.08V4\n\u25a0m\n41\n,17V*\n.15\nLucky Lager    5.00\nMacM & Bloedel B  84.50\nMid Western    1.65.\nPbwell River   34.00\nTrans Mtn    56.00\nWestminster Paper   28.50\nWestern Plywoods   15.50\nUNLISTED\nMidwest Copper    .11\nTrans Canada Com   29.50\nWestcoast Com,  23.00\nWestcoast Trans :.... 82.00\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal ....   47.00\nCan. Bank of Com  49.50\nImperial Bank of Canada .. 81.00\nRoyal Bank of Canada  68.00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund  8.08\n28.50\n1.70\n  81%\n  80\n  28*4\nArgus 2nd pfd _  46\nAtias st  2m\nB.A. Oil .    4m\nBathurst Power  40\nBeatty Bros.     4.40\nJoliet Que.\nJonsmith \t\nKenville      \t\nKerr Addison\t\nLabrador\nLake Llngman ....\nLakeshore\nLittle Long Lac\nLorado\t\nMacassa\nMalartic G. F     1.05\n.28\n2.81\n.08\n18.87%\n19.50\n.10%\n5.00\n1.95\n.58\n2.95\nBoll Telephone\nBrazilian\t\nB.C. Electric 4**s .\nB,C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A \t\nB.C. Packers B \t\nB.C. Power A    ....\nCanadian Canners.\nCanadian Celanese\nCan. Cement\nCanadian Dredge\nCan. Malting \t\nCan Oil   \t\nCan. Packers A ....\nCan. Packers B      46%\nCockshutt       12%\nCons Gas      3Wt,\nDist. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium\t\nDom. Steel Ord\t\nDom. Stores     \t\nDom. Tar k Chemical\nDom. Textiles\t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord A'\t\nGatineau\nManeast .\nMaritime Mining .\nMcMarmac\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMi|liken\t\nMining Corp\t\nMulti Mins \t\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Harricana ...\nNew Hosco\t\nNew Jason \t\nNew Lund \t\nNipissing \t\nNisto.\n.09V4\n.90\n.17\n.35\n2.67\n12.50\n.61\n.36\n.13\n1.75\n;io%\n.19%\n1.70\n.07\n42\n8%\n94%\nm\n16\n13%\n40*i\n14\n14%\nS3\n22%\n83\n30\n47\n33%\n9%\n2IV*\n69%\n13*\n8%\n50\n20%\n17\nA P Consolidated \t\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCharter\t\nOkalta oom    l-os\nPacific Pet\u00ab    18.82%\nPeace fttver ftas so\nRoyalite   10.75\nRoyal Can 60\nUnited    2.15\nVanalta  18\nVantor  ' 1.28\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers Vt    1,40\nB C Forests    12,50\nB C Power   40.50\nB C Telephone     4i.fto\nCrown Zeller (Can)    20.86\nInt Brew B ;    4.1ft\nInland Nat Gas    6.00\nNoranda New    45.25\nNormetals     2.72\nNorth Rankin  .': ._'    140\nOpemiska       8.65\nPickle Crow     1.00\nPlacer Devel    10.00\nPreston E. D     8.05\nQuebec Lithium         4.20\nQuebec Metallurgical      1.00\nQuemont     10,25\nRadiore  50\nRainville  28\nRayrock    84\nSherritt Gordon  _     4.15\nSilver Miller 63\nSteep Rock        11.00\nSlocan Van Roi 19\nSullivan Con      2.30\n     1.04\n     1.70\n 82\n :..      .32\nGatineau 5% pfd .\t\nGen. Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear\t\nGypsum Lime \t\nHoward Smith \t\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInt. Pete ..-.,:\t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B\t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMont. Loco \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat. Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp \t\nRuss. Industries \t\nShawinigan\t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A\t\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can ....\nWestern Grocers A\nSylvanite\nTeck Hughes ....\nTemagami  \t\nTorbrit  \t\nUpper Canada ..\nVentures \t\nViolamac   \t\nWiltsey Goglin\nYale\n28.87%\n1.19\n.22\n38*\"\n8\n160\n34\n34%\n45\n13%\n50%\n31%\n31%\n58\n17\n75%\n21%\n31*4\n34%\n68\n9%\n29%\n81\n25%\n64\n17%\n31%\nCommonwealth int.\nGrouped Income ..\nInvestors Mutual ..\nLeverage \t\nTrans Canada \"C\"\n7.J1\n3.63\n10.31\n5.39\n5.45\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Prasi\nAshdown, J. H. Hardware Company Ltd, class A 15 cents, class\nB 18 cents, Oct, 1, record Sept. 10.\nOntario Loan and Debenture\nCompany, 25 cents Oct. 1, record\nSept. 15.\nToronto General Trusts Corp.\n37% cents, Oct. 1, record Sept. 5.\nJOhns-Manville Corp., Ltd. 50\ncents Sept. 12, record Sept. 2,\nGatineau Power Company, five\nper cent cumulative pfd. $1.26; 8%\nper cent cumulative pfd. $1.37:\ncommon 35 cents Oct. 1, record\nSept. 1.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1890 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1958\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n\u00bb:00-News\n6:05-Wake Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35-Wake Up Time\n7:00\u2014Chapel in tha Sky\n7il5-Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sport! NOW!\n7i 80\u2014News\n7:85-Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Market!\n8:20-Breakfast Varieties\n8130\u2014All the Weather\n8:35-Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n0:0\u00bb\u2014Nows\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n9:25\u2014Women Today\n9:30-Woman's World\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05-Muslcale\n10:15\u2014Summertime\n10:45\u2014Bin Bands\n10:55\u2014Newi\n11:00\u2014Morning Musie\nll:15-Figbttng Word!\n11:45\u2014Song Serenade\n12:15\u2014Sporti News\n12:25-NEWS\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie Newt\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\nl:45-Sacred Heart\n2:00-Drawlng Room Concert\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:3ft\u2014Pacific News\n3:45-Rocking With Boates\n5:00-NEWS\n5:03\u2014Rolling! Home Show\n5:30\u2014Parliamentary Roundup\n5:85\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n5:50\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014UN Program\n6:80\u2014Old Favorites\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Hoedown\n8:0ft\u2014Couchiching Conference\n9:00-Vancouver Chamber Oreh.\n10:00\u2014New!\n10:10\u2014Sports Newi\n10:15\u2014Tall Talei\n10:30-Even tide\nll:00-News\nU:05-Sign Off\nShips Formally\nTransferred\nMONTREAL (CP) - The eight\nships of the Canadian National\nSteamships have been formally\ntransferred to their new Cuban\nowners, it was learned Wednesday.\nAn agreement of aale and supporting documents were signed\nhere Monday by CNS and Cuban\nrepresentatives, thus officially ending Canadian ownership of the\neight vessels, strikebound by the\nSeafarers' International Union\n(CLC) since July, 1957.\nThe Cuban group made a down\npayment of $560,000 as initial payment of the $2,800,000 deal.\nThe vessels will be operated un>\nder Cuban registry by Flota Maritime Browning de Cuba, a Havana\nshipping firm which already has a\ncontract to operate six other ships\nnow being constructed for Carlb\nbean service.\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1958\n6:0ft\u2014Sharpe at Six\n9:00\u2014Newi\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00-Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Summertime\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014One Man'i Family\n11:15\u2014Strictly for String!\n11:45-Theme and Variation\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:80\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014Mystery of Edwin Drood\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:45\u2014B.C. Fishermen'! Broadcast\n00\u2014Band! en Parade\n5:30\u2014CBC Newi\n6:40\u2014On The Scene\n5:45\u2014Sporti Desk\n5:55\u2014Byline\n6:00\u2014Point! Wert\n6:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:40\u2014Mostly Music\n7:00\u2014National Newi\n7:S0VEvening Concert\n8:00\u2014Couchiching Conference\n9:00\u2014Song! of My People\n9:30\u2014Who li the Composer\n10100\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Crime and Criminal!\n10:30\u2014Footloose in Zanzibar\nU:00-The Pattern of Musie\nU:57-CBC News \"\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n45 Good Morning\n00 For Love or Money \u2022\n30 Play Your Hunch \u2022\n00 Arthur Godfrey *\n30 Dotto *\n00 Love of Life\n30 Search For Tomorrow *\n45 Guiding Light *\n00 Compass\n30 As The World Turns \u2666\n00 Beat The Clock *\n30 Houseparty *\n00 Big Payoff *\n30 Verdict Is Yours *\n00 Brighter Day *\n15 Secret Storm * '\n30 Edge of Night *\n00 Bingo\n00 Early Show\n15 Doug Edwards *\n30 Big Picture\n00 News\n10 A Greater Spokane\n15 Industry On Parade\n:30 Kingdom of the Sea\n00 I Search For Adventure\nSO Playhouse 90 \u2022\n00 Verdict Is Yours\n:O0 Mr. District Attorney\n:S0 Night Edition\n;33 Post Time\n40 Late Show\nKHQ-TV - Channel 8\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n7:43 Test Pattern\n7:56 Bible Reading\n7:59 Program Previews\n8:00 Dough Re Mi \u2022\n8:30 Treasure Hunt \u2022\n9:00 Price Is Right \u2022\n9:30 Truth or Consequences '\n10:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n10:30 It Could Be You (C) \u2022\n11:00 Lucky Partner! \u2022\n11:30 Haggis Baggis (C) \u2022\n12:00 Today Is Ours \u2666\n12; 30 From These Roots \u2022\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\n1:45 Modern Romances *\n2:00 Your TV Theatre\n2:30 Your TV Theatre\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n\"Trouble For Two\"\n4:80 Four Thirty Movie\n\"Gallant Soni\"\n5:45 NBC News *\n6:00 If You Had a Million\n6:30 Front Page\n6:45 Viewpoint ' '\u25a0',\n7:00 Best of Groucho *\n7: SO Dragnet \u2022\n8:00 Sea Hunt\n8:30 Buckskin \u2666\n9:00 Price Ii Right (C) \u2666\n9:30 Music Bingo *\n10:00 Target\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Bombshell\"\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n6:00 Flash Gordon\n6:30 Newsbeat   .\n7:00 Janet Dean, R.N.\n7:30 Circus Boy *\n8:00 Zorro *\n8:30 Real McCoys *\n9:00 Chevy Showroom \u2022\n9:30 Navy Log \u2022\n10:00 Meet Your Candidate\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:35 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject lo change by stations without notice.)\n3. Anger\n\u2666.Mr.\nMack,\nemcee\nI. Baseball\ncatcher*\n6. White ant\n(var.)\nT. Vends\n8. Greeting\n9. French\nmoney\n11.Grate\nIS. The sun\n17. Vipers\n18. Aram's,\nAthos or\nPorthos\n21, Sodium\n(lym.)\n22. Fin\ntor\nmeat\n25. Over*\nhead\ntrain\n28. Stirrers.\n\u00abP\n27. Af-\n\"inn\n29. Exclamation of\nderision\n80, Mine\nentrance\n31 sand ridges\n82, Sat\nnoisily\n(dial)\nMiaisu hhecs\nu'-imw-i  li;'.'iu!>ji\"\nram mora bbhSb\nHOB      B&ffl   .\"IH\n\u25a0moth:'!'.-'  ran:-)\nHHEI   HHKlia\nEJOHHG raniaaa\nilUlifl   WUU\naiiia huuhishis\nHta   HHU      UCSKI\ni-iamm'' -\"\"\"j*\nB@EP>i\nT\u00abrtar4\u00bbjr's Asiwtr\n88. One of Oio\nBeen\n(astron.)\nST. Russian\nriver\n89. Sack\n40.Open (poet)\nACROSS\nISend\nforth\n6. Smash\n(slang)\n9. Blue\n10. Near\n(poet)\n12. Gathered,\nas leaves\nIS. Kind of Illy\n14. Consumed\n18. Arts\n18. Nickel\n(sym.)\nIT. and\nAndy\n19. Soak up\n20. Confers\nS3. Thin, brltUe\ncookies\n24, Musical\ndrama\n28. Chaplain\n(army\nslang)\n80. Public\nannouncement* \u2022\n88. Compass\npoint '\n84. Guide's note\n85. City (Minn.)\n87. Employ\n88. Harden\n89. Drills\n(1. Concise\n42. Aside\n43. Mast\nt4.JtUylUc*\nmaterials\nDOWN\nlExalta- .\ntion\n\u2022.Manufacture\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Itt\nAXIDlBAin\n\u2022ilOHdlllLIiOW\nOne letter simply stands for another.  In this sample A \u00ab\u00a7\nused for the three Va, X for the two Of a, etc. Single latter*,\n\u2022postrophie*, th* length and formation of the word* ar* all\nhint*. Each day th* cod* letter* ar* different.\nA Cryptogram quotation\nUSD    IIIiDBSVlI    BFDV    NJD    GTMDA\nMOBH    FA    VFBDABD\u2014VMDPDAVOA.\nYesterday* CryptoeuotoJ NIGHT WITH HER TRAIN Of\nSTARS AND HER GREAT GIFT OF SLEEP\u2014HBNLET.\nO 1058. kins Features Syndicate, Ine,\n \"^^^^\u2122\na,Ln-\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story \"\u2014 PHONE  1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nREITER - To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Belter, 509 Latimer Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, August 19.JI son.\t\nHELP WANTED\nMen possessing Gr. 10, Gr. 11, or\nGr. 12 education are required by\nthe Royal Canadian Air Force,\nIn today's electronic age, the\nRCAF requires people to train as:\n\u2014Radar Technicians\n\u2014Communications Technicians\n\u2014Armament Systems Technicians\n\u2014Aero-Engine Technicians\ntf you are interested In learning\na trade which offers rapid advancement along with exceptional trade\nproficiency pay, investigate t h e\npossibilities of joining the RCAF.\nYou must be a Canadian citizen\nor British subject, single, 17-29\nyears of age, minimum of Gr, 8\neducation (Gr. 10 for electronics\ntraining), and meet RCAF aptitude\nand medical standards.\nOut of town applicants may complete the coupon below and mall it\nto:\nRCAF RECRUITING UNIT\n206-Bth AVE, E\u201e\nCALGARY, ALTA.\nNAME  \t\nAddress\t\nAge  Education\nRequests for lnformatoln do not\nobligate you In any way,\nWANTED - SECOND CLASS\nsteam engineer for shift work.\nApply Master Mechanic, Michel\nColliery, Crow's Nest Pass Coal\nCompany, Michel, B.C,\t\nwANtlb - teTeSrAph\" Mfts-\nsenger boy with bicycle. Steady\nday work. Do not apply if returning to school. C.P.R. Telegraphy\nWANTED - MARRIED COUPLE1\nto keep house for father and 2\nchildren in return for free rent\nplus board agreed on. Ph. 1077-X\nafter 5.\t\nWANTED - MILLWRIGHT. AP-\nply Cooke Lumber Co. Ltd.,\nGreenwood, B.C.\nWanted - trucks to haul\nlogs. 713 Victoria St\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nSEAMSTRESS    FOR   GENERAL\nrepair work. Jonejla Cleaners.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDANGEROUS TREES FELLED,\nCarpenter work, roofing, digging,\netc. By the hour or contract, Ph.\n1672-X-l before 8 a.m. or after\n7 p.m.\t\nFREIGHT WANTED-1-TON VAN\nwith frig, dolly returning to Vancouver approx. Aug. 25. For details nhone Classified 1844.\nflOR EXPERT MECHANICAL,\nbody and paint, tune-ups, call\n1808-Y-3, 6 mile North Shore -\nJohn's Motors,\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint Work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus 98, res   U86-Y\nbriCKLaying, MflPCACEB,\nblock work and repairs A-l workmanship Ph 633-JL\t\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n8-PCE. CHESTERFIELD SUITE;\n3-pce. bedroom suite; spring-\nfilled mattress; Hoover vacuum\ncleaner; treadle sewing machine;\ntreadle leather stitching machine*, coffee tables: small coal\nheater; chairs; elec. heater; elec.\nhot plate; etc., etc., on sale Friday, 2 to 5 p.m, and 6:30 to 8\np.m. at 319 Union St,\nDEALERS IN ALL' TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mint and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlat Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C. Pbone\nPAcific 6357\nWE rlAVE A GOOD STOCK OF\nused cash registers, priced from\n$19 up. Each machine guaranteed. J. T. Wowatt and Co., ph.\n200.\nUSED1 OUTBOARDS, REFRIGER-\natori, washing machines. Make\nus an offer, Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phona 1802, 446\nWard St., Nelson, BC\nT mc'cXarV C6AL 'AND W66b\nrange, all enamel oven; 1 used\ntrumpet, good condition; 1 Singer\nsewing machine. Phone 1881.\niwtng n\nrate\n$675 CREDIT NbtE 6n vMCLE'\nworth $1450 or better at Motor-In\nTrail, B.C. No trade-In. Send offer! to Box 285, Salmo, B.C\nELE'C-MIC- WATER* TANK\" WJIft\nthermostat. Singer sewing ma-\nchina. Phone 872-L\nFOWL' FOR YOUR FREEZER\n40c lb.  delivered. Ph. 1627-R-l.\nHEINTZMANN PIANO\ncondition. Phone 1391-Y.\nGOOD\n31   HOUSE   WlNb6\\V(3 - $29.00.\n914 Stanley Street.\t\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday .and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\nS\nMACHINERY\nEquipment\nSpecial\nINTERNATIONAL TD9\nCRAWLER TRACTOR\nSmith   Hydraulic   Angledozer\nLogging Winch\nOperator's Guard\nThis Machine In Almost\nNew Condition..\nUsed Only One Season.\nOnly 1100 Hours.\n1955 INTERNATIONAL\nTD14A'\nFront Mounted Direct Lift\nHydraulic Angledozer\nLogging Winch.\nOperator's Guard\n1953 INTERNATIONAL\nTD14A\nSmith Hydraulic Angledozer\nLogging Winch\nOperator'a Guard\n1951  INTERNATIONAL\nTD14A\nBucyrus-Erie Angledozer\nLogging Winch\n1950 CATERPILLAR D4\n6U Series\nHydraulic Angledozer\nLogging Winch\nOperator's Guard\n1950 CATERPILLAR D4\n6U Series\nHydraulic Angledozer\n1949 INTERNATIONAL\nTD9\nBucyrus-Erie Front-End Shovel\nBulldozer Blade Attachment\nJOHN DEERE CRAWLER\nMC Model\nVery Good Condition\n& Equipment Co; Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhones  1810 \u2022   100\nEARN MORE THE\nA D44 DIRECT DRIVE SAW\nwith\nA P65-PINTAIL CHAIN\nand genuine\nMcCulloch Engineered\nChain Saw Oil\nIs the Answer\nDo It Now!\nACS\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO   LTD.\nPHONE   1402\nATTENTION. FARMERS - COM-\npletely reconditioned 4-year-old\nAllls Chalmers W.D. three-plow\ntractor for sale, for price of labor and parts, $800. No duty on\nsecond hand farm tractor. Ben\nMelby, Bx. A12, Northport, Wash.\nMny,\nEWl\n1 NEW1 STEEL STORAGE TANK,\nvertical 9' 8\" dia. by 9' high,\n3\/16\" plate, 3000 gal. capacity,\nwith inlet and outlet, 1 vent, man\nhole and steel ladder. Price fob\nNelson, B.C., $780. Nelson Ma-\nchlnery, phone 18, Nelson, B.C.\nPOkfABLH SAWMILL M SALfc\n\u2014 Andrew Popoff, Perry Siding,\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED - 2 BEDROOM HOUSE\nto rent, in city or N.S., for two\nadults. Box 20, Kelson, or phone\n1104, 9-5.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - GIRLS' LIGHT BLUE\nframed glasses; believed lost in\nGyro vicinity. Phone 1463-L.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNew OLDSMOBILES\nNew CHEVROLET\nCARS\nNew CHEVROLET\nTRUCKS\n1957 Chev. Hardtop V8\n1957 Ford Sedan\n1956 Mercury,  automatic\n1956 Monarch Sedan\n1956 Meteor Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Coach* ....\n1955 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1955 Oldsmobile Coach\n1953 Dodge Sedart\n1953 Plymouth Convertible\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1952 6.M.C. Vi-Ton\n1953 Jeep Station WageSn\n1956 Chevrolet Vi-Ton\n1954 Vanguard\n1952 Dodge Vi-Ton\n1956 Ford Vi-Ton\nSPECIAL\n1951 Mercury $295\n1941  Dodge $75\n1951 Chevrolet  $575\n1939 Chevrolet $50\n1950 Fargo %-Ton $350\n1953 Chevrolet $375\n1952 Plymouth $195\nReuben\nEmerge\nMotors Ltd.\nChevrolet - Oldsmobile\nCadillac\nPhona 38-38        823 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C,\nUNFURN., CLEAN, BRIGHT 5-\nrm. upper duplex, heat and hot\nwater. Adults only. Phone 335-X\nATTENTION CAR OWNERS -\nAdd Sharp's MolyOil to your\ncrankcase. The action of your\nengine lets MolyOil plate every\nfriction surface with a coating of\nMolybdenum (MoS2); the most\nslippery metal known to science,\ntoday. With Sharp's MolyOil In\nyour crankcase, you will notice\nthese engine Improvements after\n50 miles of driving: Reduced en.\ngine vibration\u2014Less gas and oil\nconsumed\u2014Greater power output\u2014Increased RPM - Instant,\nlubricated starts\u2014Safe braak-ln\nof new engines at high speeds-\nsmoother, better all round performance. Get it today at your\nfavorite gas station. Olson MolyOil Sales, 724 Baker St., Phone\ni-X.\nSPECIALIZING  IN   ENGLISH\ncar repairs Used parts for 1949\nto '62 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to 'tl Morris Minor,\n'47 Studebaker, '47 Ponttao, '62\nVanguard, '47 Oldsmobile 6 For\nsale, '88 Austin, '47 Olds motor\nCottonwood Wreckage Service,\nph 1363-L-2, Box 382, 24 Vtftlr\nRoad, Nelson\n'53 CHEV. H.T. RECONDITIONED\nthroughout. Will accept trade.\nRoom 19, Stirling Hotel, after\n6 p.m,\n, smt i a .\nFOR SALE OR TRADE \"5 1955\nMeteor Rideau, three tone, radio,\nheater, 8 new tires, Al condition.\nPhone 1874-R or 140-R.\n1957 PLYMOUTH V8, 2-DOOR. -\nExcellent condition. Phone 2170.\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance,\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month .,    $ 1.2b\nThree months    8 8 to\nSix months   ..\u201e\u201e-.._.\u201e...\u201e   16,80\nOne year $12 00\nBy Maii to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month      $ 1.75\nThree months        $ 5 00\nSix months      .......    I 8 80\nOne vear   $18 no\nWhere extra  postage is required\nanove rates plus postage\nFor delivery by carrlei in Cran\nornok   \"hone Mrs   Wm   Stevely\nIn Kimberley. A   W   Rrown\nIn Trail. Mrs  Syd Spooner.\nRENTALS\nFORRENT-aSoOM SUITE' 2V,\nmiles from bridge, North Shore.\nPrivate bath and entrance, hot\nwater and heat supplied. $50.\nPhone 878-L-2.\nS-BEDROOM DWELLING PARK\nSt. Immediate occupancy, $78.\nAlso 4-room apartment, $48, Silica St, T. D. Rosling and Son\nLtd,, 568 Ward St,\noVKR bttR mm,' fiRICk\nbuilding 2 bedroom apartment\nwith bath, also 3 large housekeeping rooms, Gas available.\nAppleyard, 421 Baker St,\nApple;\nBEDR\ni-BEMdoM MM-EX Ai\u00bbT. -\nheated, gas range, driveway, central. Available \"Sept. 1.,\" Phone\n1760.X,\nWrS HAVE A NtCE, ftftlCSftf,\nspaoious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars\nhone 77.\ni-BBt)R66M H6WB S VvtRgti\n(or rangt and; hot water, North\nShore, 2V, miles from bridge,\n$37.80. Ph. 186 days, 773-R-3 eves.\nNEW 8-RM, APT, WITH BATH.\nPrivate entrance, wired for electric stove. Electric heating. Ph.\n687-L-l.\nD'ETOb CfMfAitoHiD '3-ROOiy}\nsuite, unfurn., heated, el, stove,\nfrig,, $89^0. Ph. lSOtfter 5,\nSMALL APT,. ULTRA MODERN,\nfully furn,, gas stove and frig,\nAir conditioned, 171 Baker St.\n8-R66M M66ERN AM-i SELF-\ncontained, unfurn. Heat and hot\nwater supplied. Adults. Ph. 2079.\nmUi M&bflftN a-BEBRooM\nhouse, garage, fireplace, at Willow Point. Phone 649-L.\n4-&66M PAftf. 'HrtUC-'-'-sKEr-\ncontained suite, close In. 819 Sll-\nloaj phone 303-L.\nHftUflEKEfPtNo1 RooM for\nyoung: man, 876 Baker, Apt. B,\nn-ftooH sdTO foR RENT., PH\n491-X or apply. 140 Baker\nCONTAINED 1  ROOM\nsuite. Phone 1231-V.    '\\\nPAMiiy HOME CLOSE IN, BEfE\n1 lease, Box 3097, Dally News,\nflLEEEfflft ROOM BV tyftBK Oft\nmonth. Apply Stirling Hotel;\nONE ROOK tOft -tEfnTpHOira!\n847-L.\niMtt mm\u00bb\u2022 room\nsuite. Phone 897-X.\n2 rm: mrn. mm, heated,\n828 Vernon St, Adults.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nmmrmmS.a*mt<m\u00bbl*0**-.0*+>-a.\n\"Nelson Ready-Mix\nCONCRETE.\nFOR ALL PURPOSES\nPHONE 871\nPREMIER SAND & GRAVEL\nFor\nSand, Gravel, Crushed Rock,\nFill. Cement and\nPea Gravel for Roofing\nPHONE 1368 or 871\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Specializing In Plywood Contractors enquiries solicited Pbone or\nwire orders collect 8800 E Hastings St., Vancouver, B C. GLen-\nburn 1800.\nSANB'coilc'RBTB MIX, crush-\ned rock, pea gravel and fill. Reasonable prices, Hampshire Gravel Bins, corner of Davies and\nNinth St,\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED - 6 BLACK MINORCA\nlaying hens, 1 year or less. Write\nT. Dowker, Taghum, B.C,    S\nFOR SALE - 2 COWS DUE TO\nfreshen end of August. Apply to\nJack Gelese, Box 126, Rossland.\nSELL 1 GOOD HEREFORD BULL\n2Mb years. Apply A. Phelps, Deer\nPark.\nH6r?e for SALE-flOOn FOR\nfarm or logging. John W. Poznekoff. Winlaw, B.C.\nPERSONAL\nUSE A HERBAL LAXATIVE FOR\nquick relief of constipation, Ml\niousness, indigestion.' Klpp's Herb\nTablets, 35c and $1.00 at all dura-\nsts.\ngist\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts other than those\nmade bv myself, A. Tedesco.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentleman  Apply 411 Silica St.\nor phone 101 IR\nROOlSl AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentleman or sharing. Close in\nF\"i\"ne 277-R, _^\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman. 210 Vernon St.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPRICE REDUCED TO $3500.00\ndown at $70.00 a month on a\nbrand-new 8-bedroom NHA home\njn Lakeview Crescent. Apply to\nMaple Leaf Construction Co.,\nPhone 2107 or 1914 Kootenay 8t,\n8-beM66m SOUSE, Jn cSc-od\ncondition. Piped for gas, wired\nfor range, New oil furnace, one\nblock from Bay, Apply 314 Vic\ntorla St.\nMObEttN litjpLslk, VERY Goob\ncondition, $250 revenue monthly.\nCentral, $18,000. Terms. Write\nfor details Bx, 3649, Nelson News.\nLOT 80 x 200 FM SALE, NOftfH\nShore. Overlooks city. Water,\npower, TV to property. Phone\n1662-X,\nf6rsale'-&6USeoN\"3l6ts,\nin Rosemont, Apply E. Slako,\nYmir.\nFOR SALE-4-BEDROOM HOUSE\nin Uphill district, Apply Box 3384,\nNelson News,   '\n4-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE IN\nYmir, Boxj69, Nelson, B.C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE OR RENT - MONT-\nrose, B.C., small well equipped\ngrocery and confectionery store\nwith living quarters attached, In\ngrowing community on No. 3A\nhighway, B.C., 8 miles from Trail\nStock $2800. Immediate possession. Box 43, Montrose, B.C., ph.\n2343.\nLlFfB CHOKE -WRHBALtH\nreasons being sold for the best\noffer. A profitable poultry farm\nwith ready market for eggs and\npoulrty. Apply Box 8346, Nelson\nNews.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nCANADIAN FRIENDS - WHEN\nin Spokane stop at the Colonial\nHotel, 124% Post St., one block\nfrom stores and parking. Phone\nRl-79484,\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS WANTED\nby the Daily News, 10c per lb.\nmm Mtmm m gas\nstove, Phone 885,\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n18 FT. CLINKER BOAT, 14 HP\ninboard, for $278. Moored at Cummings Resort, Boswell, or phone\nEL8-4171, Creston\nTRAILERS\nBARRETT TRAILER SALES\nfor Terry and Aljo Travel Trail-\ners Sleep 8, $1250 up,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nft. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS  AND SURVEYORS\nJOHNSON AND McCORQUODALE\nB.C, Land Surveyors.\nMine and Topographic Surveys.\nNelson, lOlMth St, Ph. I44-R.\nTrail, 1234 Bay Ave., Ph 2752,\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St. \u2022  Nelson   Phone 1288\n'fl, W BAERG7B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO,\nAgent, 554 Ward St,\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nCruising and Road Location,\nForest Reconnalssanoe,\nNew Denver, Phone 67-Y.\nTnTHIrT\nRail, air, steamship tickets.\nSee Jim or Betty Vipond.\nGLOBE AGENCIES LIMITED\n1146 Cedar Ave     Trail    Ph  2345\nSpecial Squad\nWorks on\nBudde Slaying\nPENTICTON, B. C, (CP)-The\nRCMP said Tuesday the special\nsquad assigned to investigate the\nslaying of Anita Budde, 28, In a\nfruit picker's cabin near here Aug,\n3, attll is checking leads through-\nOut the Okanagan,\nDonald Stevens, 64, shot down\nby a police posse near Tonasket,\nWash,, Saturday, had been sought\nfor* questioning in the slaying and\nfo'r the attempted murder of RCMP\nCpl. Ralph Brown, shot twice at\nnearby West Summerland Aug. 6,\nCpl, Brown was shot while attempting to question a man ln\nconnection with the slaying.\nThough RCMP have questioned\nStevens in hospital at Tonasket, a\nspokesman for the force said Tuesday: \"We are still Investigating\nthe murder in various other places.\nThere is a lot of Investigation to\ndo yet.\"\nThe B. C, attorney-general's department in Victoria has launched\nproceedings to have Stevens extradited on the attempted murder\ncharge.\nNew Lamps Rival\nReal Sunlight\n' TORONTO (CP) - Man's progress in matching the lighting\npower of the sun was demon-\nonstrated dramatical ly here\nTuesday night by a barrage of\nfloodlights.\nThe floodlights matched the\nsun's Illumination with 10,000\nfootcandles of direct .light in the\nannual technical conference of\nthe Society of Illuminating En-\nsiflBcrei\nThe new fluomerlc lamp which\napproximates natural sunlight is\nsaid to combine in one unit the\nbest features of incandescent,\nfluorescent and mercury-vapor\nlighting. It has a life of 6,000 to\n12,000 hours.\nThe lamp screws Into an ordinary electric socket.\nDr. H. Richard Blackwell, director of the vision research laboratories at the University of\nMichigan, earlier told 850 delegates to the conference that present lighting standards are Inadequate for ordinary needs,\nHe said the human eye needs\ntwo to three times the light that\nnormal lighting provides.\nAUSTRALIAN NATIVE\nOUSTED BY WHITES\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\nAn   Australian   aboriginal  family\nWednesday lost its fight to settle\namong whites at a coastal resort.\nA group of 28 white residents at\nthe Nambucca resort petitioned the\nlocal authorities to stop aborigine\nGregg Davis and his family'from\nbuying a house there, saying lt\nwould damage the tourist trade and\nlower land values.\nWednesday, one of Davis' opponents bought the house Davis\nwanted.\nDavis said he has been trying to\nmove from a shack ln a swampy\naboriginal reserve where his wife's\nparents have raised his family of\nfour.\n\"I don't know what they have\nagainst me,\" he said, \"My wife\nwas educated at high school with\nwhite children and her sister was\na trainee nurse with whites.\"\nN.Z. Health Dept.\nExpensive Item\nBy J, C. GRAHAM\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nAUCKLAND-, N.Z. (CP) - All\ndrugs and medicines prescribed\nby a doctor are supplied \"free\"\nunder the welfare state program\nin New Zealand. But the annual\naccounts of the health department show this service costs\nplenty.\nLast year, by strenuous efforts,\nthe steady increase that has continued for years was somewhat\nchecked, Even so, pharmaceutical   benefit   payments   totalled\n$14,000,000.\nTh? department believes that\nthe slight drop in cost last year\nis only temporary and that* further increases^ ln coming years\nare inevitable.\nWARMLY DEBATED\nThe service ls one of the most\ncontroversial aspects of the New\nZealand welfare state system. It\nworks this way:\nA patient goes to any doctor.\nPart of the doctor's fee Is paid\nby the social security system,\nvarying from the whole fee to\nonly about half of it, according\nto the scale of charges the doctor\nin question makes.\nIf he decides that some remedy\nis necessary, he writes out a prescription which the patient takes\nto a drugstore, The medicine, except for a few proprietary lines,\nls entirely free to the patient. The\ndrugstore recovers the cost from\nthe government.\nThe system has been bitterly\ncriticised ln some quarters, Opponents claim It has made New\nZealand a nation of hypochondriacs and that bathroom cupboards\nare crammed with scores of\nscarcely-used bottles of medicine.\nCritics say New Zealanders run\nto a doctor every time they feel\noff color and demand a bottle of\nmedicine.\nDefenders of the system maintain that in spite of tbe cost, it\nsaves money, They say that early\nattention to minor symptoms\nsaves more serious complaints\ndeveloping, and that the savings\nln suffering, hospital treatment\nand loss of working time through\nIllness make the system an economy In the,long run.\nEven so, soaring costs have\nbrought demands for a check on\nthe use made of this system.\nFavorite remedy suggested is to\nimpose a small charge on each\nprescription, to be paid by the\npatient. This, it is claimed, would\nprevent the pouring of medicines\ndown kitchen sinks.\nHealth authorities have been\nurging doctors to be more\nsparing in prescribing expensive\nremedies, particularly the new\n\"miracle\" drugs. Some doctors,\nthey say, cheerfully prescribe expensive drugs when less costly\nones would do just as well.\nThe average cost of each prescription last year was about $1,\nbut it was higher in Auckland,\nthe largest city, than in most of\nthe towns. Also, far more medicines were prescribed in Auckland than anywhere else, On\naverage six prescriptions were\nsupplied during the year to every\nman, woman and child in the\ncity. In Wellington, the capital\ncity. 4.8 prescriptions were supplied per head.        '    -\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21, 1958\u201411\nEx-Spanish Envoy Speaks\nPlainly on World Affairs\nLONDON (AP) - \"All the\nWest's diplomats are chasing a\nkind of power that is as extinct\nas the dodo.\"\nFrom a past era of diplomacy\ncomes this judgment on the world\nOf 1958.\nSalvador de Madarlaga, former Oxford professor, ex-Spanish ambassador., ahd ex - delegate to the League'of Nations, Is\nmuch too interested ln today's\nnews to spend time reminiscing\nabout the days when he was'one\nof the world's leading diplomats.\n\"Since the Second World War\nthe phrase 'the military defence\nof a country' has lost all meaning,\" he said, slapping his desk.\n\"No nation has the power to protect itself\u2014why do England and\nthe United States act as if they\ndid?\n\"Since they are grasping for\npower for its own sake, now can\nthey   criticize Nasser  for   doing\nthe-same thing?\"\nBUSTLES ALONG\nVigorous and bouncy, his face\nconstantly changing expressions,\nDon Salvador's manner gives no\nhint of his 72 years, nor the fact\nthat he ls a distinguished liter'\nary scholar. He bustles today\nalong London's Pall Mall wearing a bright plaid vest.\nHe was the Spanish republic's\nforeign Legion\nNo Hideout\nBy HENRY BUCKLEY\nSIDI BEL ABBES, Algeria\n(Reuters) \u2014 Here ln the home\nof the French Foreign Legion is\nfound a very different typ'e of soldier from the Legionnaire of\nother days.\nThe min \"who wanted to forget\" or \"to be forgotten\" and the\ncriminal hiding from his crimes\ncan no longer find shelter under\nthe red, white and blue flag of\nthe Legion. The romance of the\nLegion told ln many novels and\nportrayed so often on the screen\nis past history.\nToday the Legion is composed\nof adventurous young men to.\nwhom the life of a professional\nsoidier under the African sun appears to offer an attractive career. They are well paid\u2014a sergeant of five years' service\ndraws between 80,000 and 80,000\nfrancs ($140 to $185) a month, In\naddition to being ted and clothed\nand Legionnaires who remain in\nthe service, and survive for 16\nyears, can look forward to a substantial pension.\nIRON DISCIPLINE\nIt ls all very different from\nthose romantic but grim days\nwhen the Iron discipline of the\nLegion forged soldiers out of men\nwho had fled their homelands to\nseek forgetfulness among the sun-\nbaked mountains and desert\nsands of Africa.\nToday, French Intelligence officers, In co-operation with the International police organisation\nknown as Interpol, carefully\ncheck on the antecedents of all\nrecruits.\nThe Legion does not, of course,\nturn down an otherwise suitable\nrecruit because of a minor offence in the past, but ft ls almost\nImpossible for a man trying\nescape arrest for a serious crime\nto find, shelter in the Legion,\nMen still come from* all over\nthe world to this neatly laid out\ntown of Sidi Bel Abbes, 80 miles\nsoutheast of the Algerian port of\nOran. Here in Sidi Bel Abbes the\nFrench have built a modern town\nround the headquarters of the Legion. In the midst of a fertile\narea, the recruits to the Legion\nget their taste of the not-so-happy\nAfrica of our day, after having\nfirst gone through a three-month\npreparatory training course in\nFrance.\nGermans form the majority of\nthe recruits, with Spaniards,\nSwiss and Belgians following.\nFEWER GERMANB\nToday, the flow of suitable recruits is not brisk. In the postwar years, when Germany was\nstruggling through the depression following her defeat. Germans flocked to enlist, But now.\nwith a prosperous West Germany\noffering work and careers to her\nyoung men, far fewer Germans\nhead south for Sidi Bel Abbes.\nOn the contrary, quite a number of Germans having done\ntheir first five years of service\nwith the Legion, Instead of re-\nenlisting for a further five years,\nnow return to West Germany and\njoin the new army of federal Ger-\n.mary. where their training and\nexperience ensures them rapid\nadvancement.\nSpain, too, was a land that provided many recruits in the years\nfollowing the defeat of the republic in the civil war of, 1936-1930,\nBut she is sending fewer youths\ntoday\n. The Improved economic stability of Europe and also the heavy\nlosses of the Foreign Legion In\nfighting in Indo-China, Tunis and\nMorocco in recent years have operated against recruiting for the\nLegion.\n20.000 MEN\nOf a normal strength of about\ntoday is believed to be not much\nmore than 20,000.\nAl! over North Africa today, you\ncan find veterans of the Legion\nln civilian work, Manv of .the em-\nnloyees in the oil fields now being developed by the French in\nthe Sahara Desert are ex-Legionnaires. Some former Legionnaires set up garages or run\ntransport enterprises.\nIt Is al! very different from the\nold days. But even if the Legion\nIs less romantic than it was in\nother davs. the Legionnaire of to-\nduv is ne'haDs a more'useful and\nbonnier citi'i-n than was his pre-\ndwptsnr. \\>*i\" went to the desert\nsands \"to forget.\"\nfirst ambassador to the United\nStates. Later he was Spanish.\ndelegate to the League of Nations until he resigned in 1036.\nHe is still an active opponent of\nSpain's Franco regime.\n\"Too many people today think\nln terms of an old-style hot wa\u00a5,\"\nhe said. \"Today a war of wea-,,\npons is only one possible part of\nthe much more significant Cold\nWar\u2014today ideas and principles\nare really more Important than '\nguns, '\n\"America's military agree'\nment with Spain is an example\nof what I mean. Here the West,\ngains some adyaritage for hot\nwar strategy, but loses much\nmore in the CMd War by its apparent support of an undemocratic  oppressive, government.\n\"We must accept as allies all\ncountries which satisfy the minimum conditions of free government \u2014 regardless of their previous alignments In the power\nstruggle. -\n\"These minimum conditions\nare: Government by popular consent, a free judiciary and a free\npress.\nFEDERATED UN\n\"Such an alliance of the free\nnations\u2014perhaps In a federated\nUnited Nations\u2014would have real\nstrength when it confronted the\nCommunist world. -\n\"But until England the United\nStates are willing to relinquish\ntheir struggle for sheer power,\nthey will be weak where ft really\nmatters.\n\"There ls an unbrldgable abyss\nbetween the ideal of the free\nworld and the Communist ideal,\nand the Cold War will go on until one Ideal or the other becomes worldwide.\"\n\"I have two grandchildren,\"\nsays Don Salvador. \"I am an optimist. First, because I know\nhuman nature is very adaptable,\nand second, because I know the\nCommunist world ls a very shaky\nstructure,\n\"The Western ideal of freedom\nwill win, but we must give the\nCommunist structure a push for\nit to topple over.\n\"Above all we need confidence\nand trust In our own Ideal\u2014it Is\nthat which will defeat world\ncommunism.\"\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket made another modest\nrise Wednesday.\nThe market was preoccupied by\nexpectations of a lower short Interest which was announced after the close. The drop was from\"\nthe record figure of a month ago\nand was the first decline in this\ntotal since last January, Short\nsales of borrowed stock that\nmust be replaced by a future\npurchase. A lower total ls a bearish omen for the Immediate future.\nAluminium Ltd. dropped Vt,\namong Canadian Issues. Canadian Pacific gained Vi, Dome\nMines lost vi, Hudson Bay Mining advanced Vi, International\nNickel was up Vi and Mclntyre\nPorcupine lost ivi.\n- American Stock Exchange\nprices were generally higher.\nAmong Canadian stocks, Brazil-\nIan Traction.gained Vi, Shawini-.\ngan was up 1%, Molybdenite-advanced 1-16 and Preston East\nDome was down Vt. Fargo Oil,\nRlchwell and Scurry Rainbow all\ndropped fractions.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The market was mixed at the close of\nmodest trading on the Montreal\nand Canadian stock exchanges\nWednesday.\nMost changes were fractional\nbut the utilities included some\nbig gainers,\nStrong spots were McColl, up\n1,. at 59, and Dow Brewery up\na point at a new high of 41, BA\nOil lost V, at $11.\nUp Vt cadi wer Canadian Oil\nat 90 and Imperial Oil at 48.\nPenny Issues were mixed In a\ngenerally narrow range, New\nHosno at 1,78 was off 18 cents.\nClosing averages; Banks off\n001 at 83.14, utilities up 0.4 at\n148.6, Industrials up 2.0 at 276.0,\ncombined up 1,8 at 282.9, papers\nup 1.0 at 403,4 and golds up 0.28\nat 72,96,\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket rallied In the final hour\nWednesday for its best advance\nin four sessions. -\nIndustrials were the pace-set\nters. ahead almost three-quarters\nof a point on index. Western oils\nwere up one-third, the first time\nIn seven straight sessions they\nshowed a gain.\nGolds were ahead a few decimal points and base metals, the\nonly losers, were down less than\none-quarter point.\nBarnat dipped 32 cents at $1.88\non a turnover of 278,000 shares.\nNew Hosco was the most active\nspeculative most of the day, rising to $2.04 ln early trading before settling at $1.75 and a 15-\ncent toss,\nAmong Industrials gains were\nwell scattered and among the index Issues usually ln a V4-point\nrange.\nWestern oils made their gain\nas Royalite added Vt at HVi and\nCalgary and Edmonton, Vi at\n2714. Several ..junior oils aided\nthe rise with gains in a 10-ceht\nrange.\nU.S. MILITARY\nSUPPLIES TO IRAQ\nBAGHDAD, Iraq (Reuters) \u2014\nThe first shipment of American\nmilitary supplies to reach Iraq,\nsince the July 14 revolution ar-.\nrived in the south port of Basra\"\nWednesday, a U.S. military spokesman announced. '\u2022\n  mm\n\u2014\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21, 1958\nBegin This Fall School Term\nWith a New\nf\nBinder\nWe have a splendid assortment of\nThe Best Constructed Binders\nwe have ever shoVn.\n\u25a0'''\"\u25a0   :.'-\u25a0 \"\" .'\u25a0-:\u25a0'\u25a0 .\nPrices range from    J,\/J to    lO.\/z\nMANN\nBritish Peer Gives\nUp SPCA Presidency\nLONDON (AP)-The Duke of\nDevonshire has resigned from the\nRoyal Society for the Prevention\nof Cruelty to Animals because at\nheart he's for hunting, shooting\nand fishing.   ,,.\nThe 38-year-old duke quit the\npresidency of the RSPCA's Chesterfield branch when he learned\nof the society's campaign now\ntinder way to outlaw stag-hunting\n\u25a0--a sport of which he approves.\nj Devonshire was not at his family's home at Edensor House near-\nChesterfield today. He had gone\nto Yorkshire with his uncle,\nPrime Minister Macmillan, for\nsome grouse shooting.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nS76 Baker St.\nHave The Job Dane R'ght\nUK GRAVES\na        LIMITED        \u2022*\"\u00bb\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nAdvises B.C.\nOwnership of\nB.C. Electric\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Provincial\ngoverrirnent ownership of B. C.\nElectric, and other public utilities\nshould be studied as a way to stop\nspiralling costs, Alderman Bill Orr\nsaid Tuesday.\nHe spoke as City Council asked\nits committee studying the company's application for bus fare increases to consider also a Public\nUtilities . Commission suggestion\nthat the time is near when municipalities may have1 to subsidize\nurban transit.\nCommittee Chairman Alderman\nReg Atherton reported the study is\nprogressing, but the committee is\nnot. yet ready to recommend\nwhether the application should be\nopposed.\n\"I.fear the company will .use\nany suggestion we make in the\nmatter of subsidies as a lever to\nget another power rate increase\nbased'on high* construction costs\"\nAid. Orr said.\n\"If this goes on,\" he added, \"it\nwill be better if the government\nconsiders taking over the power\ncompany and other public utilities\nto offset continued rising costs.''\nFrance Sees Freedom From\nMid-East In Sahara Oil\nBy ANDREW BOROWEIC\nHASSI MESSAOUD, Algeria\n(AP)\u2014A daring oil venture into\nthe heart of the sun-scorched Sahara has given France new hope\nof becoming independent of the\nturbulent Middle East, her present major fuel supplier.\nTwo years ago, a dilapidated,\nsand-covered water well drilled\nby 19th-century French explorers\nmarked this spot, some GO miles\nsouth of the oasis of Ouargla in\nthe eastern Sahara!\nToday, 11 completed oil wells\nring an area of about 120 square\nmiles. Ten humming derricks\ntower over the sand and the\nflame of burning gas from the\nproducing wells blazes against\nthe cloudless sky.\nDREAM OF EMPIRE\nIn air-conditioned huts, 3,000\nmen live and work to realize\nFrance's dream of becoming an\noil empire.\nForeign oil experts are wondering, however, whether. economic\nfactors have not been overshadowed by French optimism,\nnational pride and political considerations.\nThe French have disregarded'\nthe explosive political situation\nin the rebellion-torn country and\nthe possibility the rebels may one\ndf.y gain control.of the country.\nMoney continues to pour into the\n(insert oil installations\u2014at a cost\n10 times more than a comparable\nfield in North America.\nAccording to the present and\nconstantly changing French estimates, the Hassi Messaoun field\n(so far only about 120 square,\nmiles) contains' some' 300;000,OOTI\nto 100,000,000 tons of recoverable\noil France's annual fuel needs\nare about 30,000,000 tons. And it\nis not the only Sahara region\nwhere oil has been struck.\nThe Hassi Messaoud oil 'exploitation has been undertaken by\ntwo French firms \u2014 SNREPAL\nand CFPA\u2014both heavily financed\nby the government.\nThe two oil companies claim\nthat by 1963, the Hassi. Messaoun\nsite alone will supply some 15,-\n000,000 tons of oil a year\u2014or half\nol France's needs. They claim\nthat this oil will be much cheaper\nthan* Middle East, oil because it\nWill have to travel only about\n1.000 | miles to Marseille\u2014instead\nof the 4,896-mile route travelled\nby the Abadan crude.\ni But: there is still the problem of\ntransportation. So far the Hassi\nMessaoud crude is shipped by a\nmakeshift six-inch pipeline to the\noasis of Touggourt, some ISO\nmiles north.\nFrom Touggourt'to the coast,\nthe etude is transported by train\nthrough the northern part of the\ndesert and the rebel \u2022 infested\nAures mountains.\nDespite strong military security\nmeasures\u2014an armored car preceding the oil train, an. air cover\nand a network of military posts\nalong the route\u2014the- rebels periodically succeed in blowing up\nthese trains.\nNo one has* dared to estimate\nthe cost of this oil\u2014including the\nenormous security effort.\nThe hope of France's Sahara\noil industry lies in the planned\nconstruction of a 24-inch pipeline\nstraight from Hassi Messaoud to\nthe port of Bougie. Construction\nis scheduled to start this fall.\nOnce this pipeline is built\u2014and\nit should be finished by the end\nof 1959\u2014the Hassi Messaoud field\nwill be able to produce full blast,\nThe pipeline's capacity is 12,-\n000,000 to 15,000,000 tons a year\u2014\nor the estimated .Hassi Messaoud\nproduction by 1963. i\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum, two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nMarquetry and Basket Sets.\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nClear sheet plastic, several thicknesses. T. H. Waters & Co. Ltd,\nPhone 156,  101 Hall St.,  Nelson.\nCorduroy foam rubber throw\ncushions, various colors, at.$1.9\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\n6310 Grey with Blue,\nRed or Green trim complete wilh 10 or. bottle.\nMo.' 6510 $3.50\n*$9  Plaid design with\nmatching  10 oz. bottle.\n\u25a0No, 497 $3.79\nPLUS\nir C.C.M. Bicycles\nir Tennis Rackets\n# Wrist and Pocket Watches\nif Carrier Baskets\nir Bicycle Accessories\nir Pocket Knives\nir Padlocks\nDROP IN AND LOOK AROUND\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCo. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE-RETAIL\nPhone 1530\nNelson, B.C.\nG. R. (Bob) Pickering\nPainting and Decorating\nR.R. No. 2 Phone 294\nInsulate now for that cold weather\nahead .with ZONOLITE.\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nSmart Service Uniforms for ladies\n\u2014all sizes, values from $2.95-$15.95.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nHEY, KIDS!\nEnter your favorite models in the\n'958 Fall Fair and win, one'of the\nvaluable prizes. \u2022\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents, try the Charm\nBeauty.Salon, Medical .Arts Bldg,\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nSAMOCA EM with color corrected\n\"3.5 lens, built-in exposure meter,\ncomplete with leather case \u2014 SPECIAL $29.95;  \u25a0   \u25a0       ....\nCUSTOM CAMERAS\nStanley St. opposite \"The,Bay\"\nColor or B&W Film Developed.\nW. E. (Bill) Sommers, barber,\nnow employed at Fashion Barber\nShop, 334 Baker St,\nSee our new lines of imported\np'ottery.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 962\nSpecial meeUng L.A. to Canadian\nLegion, Friday, August 22, 8 p.m.\nAll members urgently requested to\nattend. Uniform dress not required.\nAn Important meeting of Civil\nDefence will be held tonight at CD\nheadquarters, old Post Office build\ning, 8 p.m. sharp. Please make an\neffort to attend.\nSensible, low prices at Eberle's on\nback-to-school wear, good variety\nin all sizes for girls and boys,\nThat's at\u2014\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe are deeply grateful to our\nmany friehds who were so kind to\nus during our recent bereavement,\nthe\" death of our son Stuart. We\nspecially wish to thank Rev. R,\nSwanson of Bethel Tabernacle for\nhis words of comfort at the grave-\n.side. Thanks to all those who sent\ncards of sympathy and floral tributes. These are much appreciated.\n.  The Sandercock family.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBREEZE \u2014 Funeral service for\nthe late Howard Clifford Breeze,\nbeloved husband of Lillin Maudie\nof.Salmo,.will be held Friday, August 22, 1958 at 2 p.m. from; the\nK of P Hall at Salmo.'Rev. George\nMartyn of St.: Andrew's. Anglican\nChurch of Trail will officiate. In-\nferment will be in the family section, Nelson Memorial Park.\nClark's Funeral Chapel in charge\nat Trail.\nLONG LASTING\nThe pyramids of Egypt are the\noldest of the Seven Wonders of\nthe world, and only surviving wonder. .\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nCanada Council\nid Ambiguous\nSays Sellar\nOTTAWA (CP) - Auditor-Gert-\neral Watson,Sellar has suggested\nthat limits on Canada Council\ngrants to universities be more\nclearly defined.\nHe made the suggestion in his\naudit of the council's first year\nof operations, tabled in the Commons today. The council was established March 28, 1957, and the\naudit covers operations from then\nto last March. 81.\nHe said the Canada Council\nAct \"is not free from ambiguity.\"\nIt required that council grants be\nmade only \"in the furtherance of\nits objects.\"\nThese, as outlined in legislation whereby Parliament established the council, are: \"To foster\nand promote the study and enjoyment of, and the production of\nWorks in, the arts, humanities\nand social sciences.\"'    \u25a0\nThere is no problem, when a\ngrant is made toward construction of a university building directly associated with courses of\nstudy related to those council objects, Mr. Sellar said.   \u25a0\nBut last year the council had\nprovided grants toward construction of student residences at four\nuniversities..   \u2022\nPOSITION  UNCERTAIN\nWhat was the council's legal\nposition when the association of\nsuch projects with council aims\n\"might be regarded as indirect\nor remote?\"\nThe council wound up its first\nyear of operations with a surplus\nfor grants and awards to individuals of $771,871. It earned $2,368,-\n891 on its $50,000,000 endowment\nfund provided for that purpose\nby the .federal government.\nEarnings on the fund totalled\n$2,368,819 while administrative\nexpenses were $180,316 and\ngrants and awards totalled $1,-\n416,632.\nThe second $50,000,000 fund provided by the government \u2014 for\nuniversity assistance\u2014had been\ndepleted to $48,250,685 during the\nyear.\nInterest earned on investments\nof this fund amounted to $2,151,-\n393 and net profit on disposal of\nsecurities was $183,592 while\ncharges to the fund for authorized\ngrants amounted to $4,084,300.\nTHjDvfc^oMJqL\n\u2022 **\u00bb\nItalian-American Boy Turns From\nDelinquents To Noble Red Man\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - It took\nIVi years away from Hollywood\nfor Sal Mineo to escape playing\nmixed-up delinquents. Look at\nhim now\u2014an  Indian boy!\nThe prospect of an Italian-\nAmerican from the Bronx playing\na Redskin may seem odd to\nsome. Including his buddies.  \u25a0\n\"I talked to them on the phone\nand told them I was .playing an\nIndian,\" says Sal. \"They couldn't\ntalk for a minute or two. They\nwere laughing too hard.\"\nBut Sal took his role in Tonka\nseriously. So much so that he\nbroke his kneecap.\n\"It was on location in Oregon,\"\nhe related. \"I was doing pretty\ngood for a guy who had never\nridden a horse before. Oh, a\nbunch of us used to rent some\nthat was all.\nBelize Asks\nSelf-Gov't.\nBELIZE, British Honduras\n(Reuters) ,\u2014 The majority People's United party today renewed\nits demands that this British\nCentral American colony should\nbe given the right of \"self-determination.\"\nThe text of a memorandum to\n'Colonial Secretary Alan Lenhox-\nBoyd, published in the party\nnewspaper Belize Times, calls\nfor self-government and self-determination \"in order that we\nmay decide our future and the\nfuture of our country, of which\nwe and we alone are the rightful\nowners.\"\nIf Lennox-Boyd doubts that the\nparty's stand is supported by a\nmajority of the people, the memorandum said, he should order\nthe dissolution of the legislature\nand free elections.\n\"And if we again obtain a majority in the legislative assembly,\nwe expect the United Kingdom to\nmeet our demands for self-government and self - determination\nnow,\" the party said.\nOpposition to the United party\ncharges that the party really\nwants integration of British Honduras with neighboring Guatemala.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPopular Writer\nJoins Ottawa\nUniversity Staff\nOTTAWA (CP) - Gerard William (Bill) Boss is leaving journalism to fill the newly established post of director of public\nrelations and publicity for the\nUniversity of Ottawa.\nThe appointment, effective\nSept. 1, was announced by the\nuniversity today. He will combine\npublicity work with lecturing in\npolitical science.\nBill Boss, 41, joined The Canadian Press 14 years ago as a war\ncorrespondent in Italy, after\nthree years in the army. He subsequently covered Canadian participation in the Korean War, and\nreported for CP from several European countries, including Soviet\nRussia, much of the Far East,\nand Southeast Asia. His reporting\nfrom Korea and Russia won national newspaper awards in 1951\nand-1954. Since early 1957 he has\nbeen a CP reporter in the Parliamentary Press Gallery.\nEarlier he had worked for the\nLondon Times and the Ottawa\nCitizen.' He graduated from the\nUniversity of Ottawa in 1941.\nAs a correspondent in the Second World War he covered campaigns in Italy and Germany, entering Berlin with the Allied\nforces. He also covered post-war\nevents including the Potsdam\nconference and the Kurt Meyer\ntrial.\nHe is a founder and one-time\nconductor of the Ottawa Concert\nOrchestra. A \"confirmed bachelor,\" he speaks six languages\nand wears a red beard.\n\"I worked with the horse for\ntwo weeks before we started\nshooting, riding him three hours\nevery morning. I got through\nmost of the scenes all right, and\nthe director had confidence in\nme. More than I did, in [act.\n\"We had a scene in which a\nwhole band of cavalry was to\nchase me down a hill. I could tell\nthe horse was nervous from all\nthe shouting, but I tried to keep\ncontrol, After I rode past the\nCamera, the horse stopped and\nI kept going.\"\nSal explained his 18 - months\nabsence:\n. \"I was doing all right in pictures, but all the producers would\noffer me were pictures about delinquents. I knew that was the\nquickest way to kill my career,\nso I just went back east.\n\"Fortunately, I kept busy I got\nstarted in the recording field and\nthat led to guest shots on Ed\nSullivan's show, Perry Como's,\nSteve Allen's, etc. I did 12 TV\nappearances in a year, including\nthree dramatic shows for Kraft\nTheatre.\"\nTO  PORTRAY KRUPA\nSal apparently has beaten the\ndelinquency rap now that he has\nreturned. After he finishes the\nRedskin rumble, he launches into\nThe Gene  Krupa  Story.\nAfter that, Sal goes right into\nThe Pagan, from the old Ramon\nNavarro silent film. Yes, the lad\nwill be playing a Polynesian in\nthat one.\nAnd that's about as far from\nthe Bronx as you can get.\nHeikkila In\nNews Again\nSAN VRANCISCO (AP) - William Heikkila, draftsman whose\nsudden deportation to Finland\ncaused a brief international furore last April, has been ordered\nto face a formal deportation\nhearing.\nThe hearing was ordered Tuesday after a three-minute procedural formality to identify\nHeikkila as an alien.\nThe U.S. immigration service\nreturned the 53-year-old former\nCommunist to San Francisco last\nApril a few days after he was\nseized on the streets and flown\nout of the country.\nDefence lawyer Lloyd E. McMurray said he will take steps\nin court to block the new special\ninquiry. He said a federal restraining order forbids deportation of -Heikkila while an appeal\nis pending in court.\nOn Warpath\nCORNWALL, Ont. (CP) - A\nmajor dredging contract halted today when Mike Boot, a Cornwall\nIndian, threw up a barricade across\na road to woodsite at the end of\nthe island across from Cornwall.\nBoot, who stood guard beside\nthe barricade with a double-\nbladed axe, said he has tried unsuccessfully in the last 18 months\nto get paid for use of the road\nacross his property.\nThe road leads to the site of\ndredging operations for the St.\nLawrence seaway in the channel\nopposite Cornwall. Boot, seeking\n$2,500 for the use of his land,\nallowed workers to leave the construction site today but refused\naccess to another 30 coming to\nwork.\nLeisure ..\nbegins with\nDAKS\nThe famous English com-\nfort-in-action trousers.\n. \u25a0\/:..'\nIn a wide variety\nOf English fabrics\n$27.50\nEMORY'Q\nLTD.     3\n\"THE  MAN'S STORE\"\nBritain's Prison\nPopulation Soars\nLONDON (Reuters) - Britain's\nprison commissioners Wednesday\nreported a record prison population.\nDuring the first four months of\n1958, they said, the average number of men and women in prisons\nrose to more than 24,700.\nThe commissioners' report for\n1957 said that because of overcrowding:\nMore than 4000 men were sleeping three in a cell during a month;\nboys waiting to be transferred to\ninstitutions for young criminals had\nto wait up to six weeks in prison\ninstead of usual reception centres;\nnnd prospects of improving training and classifications had become\n\"increasingly dimmed\".\n4 oi. $1.29\n16 ox. $2.95\nCITY DRUG\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nI iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nI It's New,,, I\nI It's Beautiful\u2666 \u2666 \u2666 |\n|  It's Turquoise   1\n\"\"\" iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii i nn iiiiinimS\nBig, juicy B.C. Freestone Peaches are here again... ripe and\nready for you to make lots of flavourful jams and preserves.\nJust think how handy and economical they'll be next winter for\nquick, tasty desserts and mouth-watering fruit salads... and\njust think of that family praise when you brighten up winter\nmeals with your own delicious home preserved Peaches!\nThe whole family will love lots of fresh Peaches too, during\nthe season... with their breakfast cereal... for lunch... in\nsalads-and of course Peaches and Cream ahd Peach Shortcake\nare favourite desserts with everyone!\nIt's Preserving Time!\nB.C. Bartlett Pears, Prune Plums, and\nCrabapples are also at their best right\nnow \u2014 so plan to round out your\npreserving program without delay.\nFor -Hie best,always use\nfamous 8.C. Preserving Fruife\n-    .:..__..     -\u2022-.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1958_08_21","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0430960","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":"1958-08-21 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1958-08-21 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}