{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-07-16","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1952-06-24","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426245\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Missionary Missing\nIn Slocan Valley\nA ehell-ahoclt vlotlm ef World\nWar II, Richard England has\nbeen missing In the Slocan Valley forZl. days'\nThe SS-year-old student pastor\nwas last seen In Slocan City May\npjThiri ha told of sleeping\novernight In the woods after\nmissing t. bus. He was known to\nhave suffered amnesia and to be\nsubject to blackouts and dizzy\nspells.\nR.C.M.P. have had their service dog Wolf out In a widespread hunt In the possibility\nthat he Is again In the woods. It\nwas theorized that he may have\nfallen   Into   Sloean   Lake   and\ndrowned.. .\nThe young man who has been\ndoing missionary work for two\nlor three monthi at Silverton, had\npreviously   been   at   Vancouver\n. and Toronto. There was the possibility, It was felt, that he may\nhave obtained a ride by private\ncar leaving the area, but the fact\nthat colleagues In the ministry\nhad not heard from him, limit\nthla possibility.\nHe was wearing, when at 8lo-\ncan City, dark brown trousers,\na light, checked coat and was\nwithout a hat. He Is dark haired\nand dark complexioned and has\na slight limp.      '\nf#Pkii\u00ab\nf^^^^^TOf tp tlie tCogtenay^Boundary   -   1952,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Sunny today. A little\nwarmer. Light winds. Low and high\nat Cranbrook, Crescent Valley, 42\nahd OS; Revelstoke 42 and 72,\nII-II....IIII.I1III.I.IIIIIIIIIII.IIII.IIIIIIIII\nQueen to Scotland\nFor Five-Day Visit\nBy KEN BOTWRIGHT\n. \u2022    EDINBURGH, June 23 (Reuters) \u2014 The Queen this week\nWill hold court in Edinburgh's\n..-' palace of Holyroodhouse,  an-\n,'. cient home of Scottish  kings\n.' once razed by invading English\ntroops.\n- She and the Duke of Edinburgh leave London for Scotland tomorrow. They will be in\nresidence at Holyroodhouse\nfrom June 25-30.\nWith the Queen in residence\nhere, this city will once more\ncome into its own as the tradi-\n\u2022 fional capital of Scotland. Pipers will play in  the  palace's\n\/great quadrangle just as they\nused to in the days of the Scottish kings.\nEach evening thousands of\nlocal people will gather outside\nthe palace to serenade the\nqueen with traditional Scottish\nsongs.\nBy holding court here the\nQueen will be following a custom of her father, who with his\nScots-born queen usually paid a\nvisit to Holyroodhouse every\nSummer.\ntllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nIKALU STRIKE PART\nOF GET-TOUGH\n{KOREA POLICY\nWASHINGTON, .una 23 (AP)\n\u2014A defence official tald today\nthat the great air strike at power\n. installations on the Yalu River Is\ntti outgrowth of the stalling of\nKorean truce talks at Panmunjom.\nThe Official, who declined to be\nnamed, told a reporter that the\nbig blow was In line with the get-\ntough policy followed In the military as well as the diplomatic\nfield since tha truce talks bogged\ndown.\n- '-'Hfr.-witriiliMd' thSt\"\u25a0 as' long ai'1\nAllied negotiators held out reasonable hopes of an early truce It\nwas thought advisable to refrain\nfrom so.dramatlo a blow.\nBut he added:\n\u2022\"We now realize that the best\nI   chance of breaking-the deadlock\n\u00bbt Panmunjom Is to hit the enemy\nwith the force at our command.\"\n[Widow Accepts\n[$28,000 proposal\nELKHART,' lnd\u201e June 23 (AP)\n\u2014An Elkhart widow said today\nI that-she had accepted a proposal\nfrom Jesse Garrett, a West Vlr.\nglnian seeking a wife to care for\nhis two sons and $28,000.\n8he Is Mri. Bette R. Crosblet\nwho works In the classified ad\ndepartment of the Elkhart Truth.\nGarrett made a final stop In\nElkhart Frld.y on his brlde-ln-\ntervlewlng tour. Mrs. Crosble said\nhe left the same day for hli home\nIn Scott Depot, W. Va.\n8lender and attractive, Mrt.\nCrosble didnt tell her age. She\nwaa described as in her early\n80s. She did say that Garrett, at\n49, It \"comlderably older.\"\nMrt. Crotbie It a widow with\ntwo children, a boy 10 and a\ngirl 6.\nHALIFAX, June 23 (CP) - A\nSlight civilian plane, piloted by an\nlAmerican who took 6\/f Sunday to\n\u25a0keep a rendezvous with a fisher-\n\u25a0rttan in a backwoods lake, is miss-\nling ln New Brunswick's wild tim-\n|ber country,\ni The plane, a two-place Aeronca\npiloted by Reno Cormier of Van\nBuren, Me., left St. Leonard to pick\nMP an angler at Moose Lake, about\np miles Southeast of Chatham, N.B.\nIt was last seen flying over\nUount Carleton, West of Chatham,\nLB.\nRailway Onions\n$el New Wages\nAf Secret Meet\nMONTREAL,  June  23   (CP)\nRepresentatives of 18 non-operating\nrailway unions agreed today on new\nwage proposals for presentation to\nthe Canadian railways next week. .\nMeeting behind closed doors, representatives of railway workers not\nactually engaged in operation of\ntrains heard chairman Frank Hall\noutline pay rates drafted by an\nexecutive meeting of union officers.\nMr. Hall declined to make public\nthe amount of increase sought by\nthe 125,000 workers. However, it\nwas reported the' unions will ask a\n25-cent-an-hour boost.\nPresent contracts, made effective\nin 1950 by the compulsory arbitration award by the Supreme Court,\nexpires Sept 1.\nSTORM SENDS\nHOUSE PLUNGING\nDOWN HILLSIDE\nVALPARAISO, Chile, June 23\n(AP) \u2014\/Valparaiso's h e a v I e 11\nttorm In 15 year\u00bb today loosened\na houie from Itt foundation! and\nsent It hurtling down a tteep.\nhilled flooded ttreet with a woman and two children still Inside.\nThe woman and children were\nrescued but were terlously hurt\nWater, rushing down the hill-\ntldei on which Valparaiso It part,\nly built, caused landslides, flooded ttreet., burst sewert, and Interrupted traffic.\nCOLD WAR\nCHARGES FLY\nFRANKFURT, Germany, June 23\n(CM. - WesternAmem&^t^t\nCommunists swapped raro^Sfirg_i\ntoday in the continuing struggle\nover permany. Each accused the\nother of violating treaties and\nagreements regarding this divided\ncountry.\nHigh commissioners of the Western. Big Three - Britain, France\nand the United States \u2014 sent identi-\ncal notes to East Germany's Soviet\ncommander, Gen. Vasily Chuikov\naccusing the Russians of violating\nfour-power agreements by banning\nAmerican and British military patrols from the International Highway\nto Berlin.\nThe notes demanded that the\nmonth-long ban be lifted at. once\nand rejected as groundless a\" note\nfrom Gen. Chuikov that such patrols were armed and acted to encroach on Russian authority in the\nSoviet zone through which the 110-\nmile Autobahn leads to West Germany.\nEast Germany's official Communist Press countered with a\ncharge that the Western powers\nviolated the 1945 Potsdam Treaty\nby letting West Germany manufacture war weapons, including\npoison gas. Allied and West German officials dismissed the charge\nas \"not worthy of denial.\"\nSALES STILL CLIMB\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP) \u2014 Even\nwith restrictions, credit sales in Canada made gains during the first\nthree months of the year,\" the Bureau of Statistics reported today.\nRetail charge and instalment sales\nclimbed to $695,800,000 in the first\nquarter from $660,600,000 in the\nsamei period last year.\nCash sales jumped to $1,618,400,-\n000 from $1,589,000,000. pushing total value of retail sales to $2,314-\n200,000 from $2,249,600,000.\nAll consumer credit restrictions\nwere lifted May 6 last.\nEDMONTON\nAWAITS FLOOD\nDamage at Sundre,\nCadomin in\nHundred Thousands\nEDMONTON, June 23 (OP)\u2014Alberta's capital city tonight was'\nthreatened by one of the biggest\nfloods ln recent years due to heavy\nrainfall in the last few days. !\nMayor William Hawrelak announced that evacuation of some\npeople in the city's low-lying areas\nwas to begin toftight. A flood crest\non the North Saskatchewan River\nwas expected to reach here to-\nn-oifow morning, he said.\nThe mayor estimated that some\n200 homes along both .banks of the\nriver in the city could be affected\nby the flood crest. The city has sent\npersonal messages to all these residents, asking them to be prepared\nfor evacuation and to get their\nhousehold effects, la-higher ground.\nEXPECT FIVE FOOT RISE\nMr. Hawrelak said the.river tb-\nmorrow is expected to rise five or\nsix feet higher than its 1944 level,\nwhen there was minor .flooding. But\nit will still be probably eight 'to 10\nfeet below the level in 1915, the\nyear of Edmonton's biggest flood.\nThe flood warning came from\nRocky Mountain House, on the\nEastern slopes of tbe Rockies in\nCentral Alberta, where the North\nSaskatchewan Starts its long journey\nthrough Edmonton and Prince Albert, Sask., jto empty into Northern\nManitoba lakes.\nRain-caused floods already plague\ntwo widely-separated Alberta\npoints. Highway traffic has been\nslowed and some side roads are impassable.\nCOAL MINE TOWN FLOODED\nFlooding is reported at the coalmining centre of Cadomin 200 miles\nWest of Edmonton and at Sundre in\nCentral Alberta. -\nAt Cadomin, the rampaging McLeod River has washed out the approaches to the Jown's three bridges\nand whisked away three river-bank\nhouses. The bridges were reported\nholding firm tonight Washing out\nof the road approaches has halted\nmining operations.\n\"It's the worst flood we've had\nhere for a long time,\" a coal mine\nofficial said.1 Damage' is reported in\nthe hundreds \"of ,ih'e\u00bbianit-.et;tlql-\nmSOSsKC., CMAPA^TUgSDAY MORNING, JUNE 24, 1952\nNo. 54\nM.'?S1PMP^*\u00ab Minister of Australia, li,'teen on\n.i _v!i?_ _n Washington exchanging a warm smile and a hand-\n\u2022hake with Australia'! ambassador to the U.S., Sir Percy Spender, at\ni&^hwJ-*1 Mu' 8pfs!*d\" (i,,?c_?d from J\u00bb\u00ab) and Mn.Men.let, al-\nmost hidden, thare the spotlight with their famout husbands.\n .  : \u2014Central Prets Canadian.\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIHIIIMI\n\"BLUE MONDAY\"\nDEATH SONG\nCOOS BAY, Ore., 'June 23\n(AP)\u2014\"If that song is played\nagain, I'm going to jump out the\nwindow,\" said James.Lee :Mof-\nfatt, 25, a mill worker, at a\nresort North of here last night.\nThe juke box song was \"Blue\nMonday,\" which sojnebne\npromptly played again.\nMoffatt jumped into a lake\n20, feet below and drowned before rescuers could reach him.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII\nUnion President\n(alls Truce\nProposal Absurd\non\nVANCOUVER, June 23 \u00ab.P) -\nStewart Alsbury, president of the\nInternational' Woodworkers of\nAmerica (CI.O.-C.C.L.) called\n\"absurd\" a B. C. Labor. Board truce\nproposal to.halt thestrike,-f. 32,000\nIart,-Nojjsji^.. hgyebe^mte^^\nv-.{\u2022\u25a0Sundre, 79 -mmTtsmmm *?\"^*^d**^aW^W^PSils1-1\nCalgary, ita* 'Red Deer River today\nforced evacuation of some residents,\nThe number was not known.   .\nb^-Th MN,r.IR,E n*?0^ PVJ ,n the apartment of seven-year-old\ntam^tM'f-W 0nt\" \u25a0\"* Pick\u00ab\u00ab \"P hit Infant brother\nt\u00bb T.f..v tH'.?\"** c.hal'2 hl_ ,w\u00b0 youn0er 'lrter\u00ab d\u00b0w\" th\u00ab ataire\nUamIaZ .!.' \"\"* , -\"'\u2022l!.d, when the ''\"\"\"a\" \"hlldren dropped a\n!_\u2666\u00ab.. Iltfh. \".\" ' \".'' \"' '\u2022\"\"\"\"\"\u2022'\"aked paper.. The mother* had\nIM IZrA^AyWitc'.n'.d.an.\"\"\"' Chr,8tln* N\"\"y'\nWants Deductions\nTo Be Compulsory\nVANCOUVER. June 23 (CP) \u2014\nA resolution ask'-? the Provincial\nGovernment Ho.pital Insurance\nService to make compulsory premium deductions necessary for all\ntransient workers in B. C, was\npassed at a- weekend meeting here\nof the B. C. Hospital Association.\nThe resolution said that all\nworkers with six months residence\nin the province would be eligible\nfor hospital-. insurance benefits if\nthe deduction were made compulsory.\nMany persons in this category\nare not eligible at present because\nneither they nor their employers\npay the premiums.\n$25 Million Goes fo\nDefence Department\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP)\u2014Finance\nMinister Abbott today tabled supplementary estimates totalling .$82,-\n732,188. They brought the Federal\nGovernment's estimated expenditures for 1952-53 to $4,418,528,997.\nLargest item in the supplement-\naries was $25,000,000 for the Defence\nProduction Department. It will be\nused to provide assistance* to private\nor public-owned corporations which\nneed to expand to fill defence contracts.\nSome $7,250,000 was earmarked\nfor federal aid to universities. A\nsimilar grant was made last year\nfollowing a recommendation of thi\nMassey Commission on Arts and\nScience.\nProvision was made for.a $2,000,.\n000 loan to the publicly-owned CBC\nfor use in the\" development of television, in this country.\nThe Veterans Department asked\nfor $2,500,000, to purchase land\nwhich later will be sold to veterans\nunder provisions of the Veterans'\nLand Act,\nfrom the Labor Board\u2014.which haVe\nbeen rejected by the.I.W.A. policy\ncommittee\u2014were ;,feS\u00bbctly the\nsame terms that the operators tried\nto force on us prior.to the June 15\nstrike deadline.'''    \u25a0.  ;; '     '-\u2022\n\"We are asked-to go back to\nwork without any assurance that\nby so doing, the operators will\nundertake bargaining in a better\nspirit than they (have been shown\nto the present.\"\nAlsbury added that \"strikes are\nusually settled when strikes are\nIn progress and all the cards are\non the table.\" ,\nThe Labor Board, apparently,\nplanned no immediate move following rejection of their proposal\nfor a back-to-work movement.\nCzech Scienfisf\nVANCOUVER, June 23 (CP).\n\u2014Dr. Karel Hujer, Czech scientist! is Convinced 20th century\ncivilization is on-the skids.\n. \"Our culture has become purposeless,\" he said in an interview here. \"The yardstick of\nsuccess Is money and power.''\nDr.,Hujer; a noted astronomer.\nand confidante of Einstein and'\nNehru, now lives in the United\nStates. He Is en route to Victoria\nto attend the American Astronomy, Society convention opening June 25. .\nHe believes it is too late to\nprevent civilization from committing suicide. \u25a0\nDr. Hujer said the scientist\nof today \"has nothing ,tij give',\nto mankind. If .we-eoiild suspend scientific research for 50\nyears and let culture catch up\nto knqwledge wejinlght survive,\nbut that cannot'.!^, done.'\",-;,  -,\nCalled in\nSpy Investigation\nWASHINGTON, June 23 (AP)-\nA former government lawyer, mentioned by Elizabeth Bentley in testimony about a wartime Soviet spy\nring, refused today to tell the\nHouse of Representatives Un-American Activities Committee' the\nnames of a number of his associates or to answer questions pertaining to Communism. -\nThe witness was Allan R. Rosenberg, 43, now- a lawyer at Water\ntown, Mass., and for some years a\nlawyer with the National Labor\nRelations Board, and later the\nwartime office of economic war-\nDeath Blow Dealt to\nKorean Power Plants\nMenzies Confers\nWilli Premier,\nCabinet Members\nOTTAWA, June ,23 (CP)\nPrime Mlnltter. Menzlet of Aut\ntralla conferred with four Cabinet ministers today after telling\na prett conference he favort a\nCommonwealth conference - o n\ntrade and financial mattert at\ntoon at possible. \u2022\nLeader of the Llberal-Country\nParty Coalition, he put In a buty\nday calling on Prime Mlnltter 8t.\nLaurent Defenqe1 Mlnltter Claxton, Finance Mlnltter Abbott and\nExternal Affairs1 Minister Pear-\nion.\nAt  hit  prett conference,  Mr.\nMenzlet parried or dodged any\ndelicate question!.\nHe  did  say.  however,  that, he\nthinks the time has ' come for . a\nCommonwealth trade-financial conference. His. statement' came only\na short time after the federal government rejected an opposition call\nfor Canada to take''the lead In\nadvocating such a step.\nTO DI8CUS8 DEFENCE\nMr. Menzies indicated that he\nwould discuss the broad question\nof defence pacts while\/ here. He\nsaid he feels there shoffld be some\nclose arrangement* between his\ncountry and the Atlantic Pact; some\nway in which Australia can make\nher voice heard in any matters involving herself.\n500 Allied Bombers Strike at\nHeart of Industry; Policy Change\nMay Mean Truce Hope Abandoned\n\"We have no comment on the fare,\nsituation  until  we hear  officially |   The committee called Rosenberg\nMATCH IN MANHOLE\nCAUSES BUST\nLINDSAY, Ont, June 23 (CP)\n\u2014William Gunn, 15, lifted the\nmanhole cover off a tewer and\nlighted a match to tee what was\ndown below. The blatt that followed tent the Iron manhole cover\n16 feet Into the air and Gunn to\nhotpltal with eye Injuries, the\nexplosion It believed caused by.\ngat fumes from nearby service\nstations.\nTO HONOR PftTBON SAINT <>\nMONTREAL, -Ju(l'- 23 (CP) \u2014\nSome 20 colorful. floats deputing\nFrench-Canadian life, heritage: and\nhistory   will   travel   the   five-mile\nroute In the St Jean.-Baptiste Day\nparade tomorrow, main event in the\nthree-day celebrations in honor of i'^ig'rTti.n actVS \u2122Mr\"es\nFrench-nssn-H.... n...--   _-,\u201e. \\bem%t mm egSjgg. -Old-.-.\nfrom the I.W.A.\nCol. D'Arcy Baldwin, chairman\nof the Labor Relations Board, had\nno comment other than to say:\n*'I have had no official word\nfrom .the I.W.A. regarding accept,\nance or rejection of the proposal,'\nhe said. Thei. board asked that an\nanswer be given by 4 p.m. today.\nC. N. System Notes\nOperating Revenue\nMONTREAL, June 23 (CP)\nOperating revenues in May for the\nCanadian National system, all-inclusive, were announced today as\n$58,358,000. Operating expenses were\n$53,695,000, w|th net operating revenue of $4,663,000.\nIn May, 1951, revenues were $52,-\n960,000, expense; $47,832,000 and net\noperating revenue $5,128,000.\nThe figures,do hot include such\nitems as taxes, equipment rentals\nand fixed charges.\nAggregate net revenue for 1952 to\nthe end of May waa $11,890,000 as\ncompared with $14,716,000 for the\nperiod in'.951, a decrease of $2,826.-\n000.\n$14,000 A DAY IN SMUGS\nTORQUAY. Devon,' England,\nJune 23 (Reuters)\u2014Illicit trafficking in American cigarettes in Britain probahly amounts to about\n$14,000 a day, General Secretary A.\nB. Featherstone told the'\u2022 National\nUnion of Retail Tobacconists here\ntoday. He said police headquarters\nand customs officers are collaborating In a campaign against fhe cigarette runners.\nin an investigation of Communist\ninfiltration of government\nSeek Four-Year-Old\nBoy Lost in Bush\nEVANSBURG, Alta., June 23 (CP)\nt-A four-year-old boy, who went\nto hide Saturday during a hide-and-\nseek game and did not return, today was the object of a large-scale\nsearch by 40 volunteers, R.C.M.P.\nand police dogs.\nThe lost youngster Is Edward\nYarbrough, whose parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Leslie A. Yarbrough, farm 12\nmil.s South of here in heavy bush\ncountry. Evansburg is 59 miles\nWest of Edmonton.\nR.C.M.P. were called in Saturday\nnight after the parents and several\nneighbors had searched in vain. The\nhunt continued all day yestedray in\nan area more than five miles square\naround the Yarbrough home. The\nsearchers went back out at. daybreak today.\nThe Pembina River flows about\na mile from the boy's farm home\nWorkers Refuse to\nCross Picket Line\nVANCOUVER. B. C, June 23\n(CP)\u2014About 200 British Columbia\nElectric employees today refused to\ncross a picket line set up by striking painters.\n\"The men were gas and electrical\nshop workers of a downtown B. C.\nElectric plant. Six employees already working ln the plant when\nthe pickets arrived left their jobs.\n$15;000 FIRE\nips lo\nfliree Designers\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP) - Three\ntalented Canadian- industrial des\nsigners; f r.om 'British Columbia,\nManitoba -and Quebec today were\n'^rt^ff^Mtisst\nujs,.to'B__5Tthe\u00a5\n:hoTSr9iips ,.to' H-ifr \"theHi-'g.t'ad-\nvanced training in the United States\nand the United Kingdom. \u25a0\nThey were awarded to: \\\nJames Y. Johnstone of New Westminster, B.C., 82, a graduate of the\nUniversity of British Columbia's\nschool of architecture; Charles H\nBlais of Winnipeg, 32, a graduate of\nthe University of Manitoba school\nof architecture; and Pierre Gauvin\nof Quebec City, 27, former student\nat the Ontario College of art, Toronto, and holder of a certificate In\nindustrial design from the Pratt\nInstitute, Brooklyn, N.Y.\nbulce Drives Queen\nTo London Palace\n\u25a0 LONDON, June 23 (AP) \u2014 The\nQueen and the Duke of Edinburgh\nreturned to' Buckingham Palace today after spending a week at the\nRoyal Lodge at Windsor.\nThe Duke, confined to his room\nyesterday by a feverish cold, had\nrecovered sufficiently to drive his\nwife back to London. Tomorrow\nthey-leave for a visit in Scotland.\nBy Stan Carter\n\u00bb     ,   ,S?SULVJune 24 (T^aky)  (AP)-Allied plan_3\ncrippled Manchunan industry Monday with the first smash-\n_ ing blow of the war at North Korea's huge hydro-electric\npower complex.\n' In the biggest bombing of the Korean war, the huge\nSuiho dam plants, on the Korean side of the Yalu River\nboundary of Red Manchuria, and four other key power\ncentres, were left in flaming rubble. The plants had been\njmil,ll(II\u201e,limniim(IIIimmml||||n JgJ\u00abJ ^ Wgh policy de-\nGARAGE FLOOR\nSWALLOWS CAR\nAUCKLAND, New Zealand,\nJune 23 (Reuters) \u2014 When H.\nW. Mcteod opened his garage\nat Mangaklno, Wlkato, New\nZealand, recently, he found himself staring at Just the radiator\ncap sticking out of the.ground.\nThe rest of the car had sunk\nunderground overnight after\ntorrential rain had softened the\nvoleanlo pumice ori which.the\ncity Is built\nmilllllllllllHIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII\nII. St Super liner\nTo Make Maiden\nTrip Next Week\nNEW YORK, June 23 (j_P)\u2014New\nYork harbor roared a record welcome today to the spanking new\nliner \u25a0 United \u2022 States which may\nsoon become queen o* the seas.\nThe 53,500-ton _h_pt-bigg-_t ever\nbuilt in'the-U. S.-and third largest\npassenger, vessel in the world \u2014\nmoved, in'.majesty up the North\nriver to.her West .nth jStrtet pier.\nHarbor craft, let,loose..a. throaf\ni-rTst* *jmffl*mm; <wm\nStates ended;. ap500-nille shakedown\ncrqise from' Newjibi-t News, Va.,\nwhere she was built, ;\nShe -is given a good chance of\nbreaking the Transatlantic speed\nrecord, perhaps on her' maiden\nvoyage next week.\nBlimps, planes and helicopters\ndipped and zoomed in tribute to\nthe super-liner. Fire boats arched\nplumes vt water toward the sleek,\nblack-hulled United States\u2014 whosa\n$73,000,0.0 cost is already a subject of controversy in Washington.\nThe United States is the, American candidate for the' mythical\nblue ribbon of the North \"Atlantic,\nthe speed record held since 1938\nby the British Cunard Lines' Queen\nMary.\nMONTREAL, June 23 (CP)\u2014The\nBrotherhood of Maintenance-of-\nWay Employees today adopted a\nresolution voicing strong disapproval of the St. Lawrence Seaway\nproject\nNo Color Bar in Canada, Harris\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP) \u2014 Negroes are not barred from immigrating to Canada and becoming Cana-\n;d*ian citizen's! iraih.g'l'^on''minister\nHarris said todajs\" In an' interview.\nHe was \u25a0 commenting on a report\nof the Toronto CbmnSittee\"' on Negro,\ncitizenship, Issued Saturday, saying\nbarriers were erected against Negroes entering Canada and becoming citizens. The report said the\nFrench-Canada's patron saint\nand South Africa bom becoming\nCanadian citizen..\nMsV1Htsrs'l\u00bb*ald there'ls 'ho*pVo'.*\nhlbltlon against Negroes becoming\ncitizens. He said Negroes are being admitted to Canada, though In\nsmall numbers. Each case wai\ntreate.d..oh Its own merits. . ;.\nLast year, the-mlnlster said, 91\nNegroes were admitted to Canada\n,. for permanent residence. These*\nwere In addition to etudents and\nother visitors.\nMore than 500 fighter-bombers of\nthe United States Air Force, Navy\nand Marin.es pressed home the assault against fierce ground fire at\nthe cost of one plane. The, Air Force'\nsaid not a single plane was lost in\nthe surprise attacks but the Navy\nreported one of its planes shot down\nand four others hit, no pilots wer\u00ab\nlost.\nMore.than 200 Communist Jets\nwere spotted on the ground at An,-\ntung, only.SO miles. Southwest of\nthe great Suiho plant, but they did\nnot rise to defend it.\n.s^v r\u201ea-d Ieft Pyonss-yang, the\nNorth Korean capital, without\npower.   \u2022\nThe plants supplied all Communist North Korea and part of Manchuria, Industrial heart of China.\nSuiho was thought to furnish some\npower for the Russian naval base\nat Port sirthur. Other Korean plants\nmay have aupplied the-big Soviet\nbase Of Vladlvostok.\nREPRI.8s.NT RADICAL\nDECISION\n(General, opinion in Tokyo waa\nthat the-bombings represented a\nradical political decision made probably in Washington or In the United Nations. There was no official\ncomment.\n(The blow eoUld mean the UJM.\nhad despaired of achieving\"ar.tatW\nin the Korean war, or is applj\nmilitary pressure 'to \"\nMILLARD E. WRIGHT, 42, the\nhabitual thief who submitted to\nbrain surgery to rid himself of\ncriminal tendencies, Is shown under arrest In Pittsburgh, as he\nadmitted that the \"operation was\na failure,\" Wright was paroled\nfrom penitentiary three years ago\nfollowing the operation, arid he\nwas picked up on a- burglary\ncharge, He now faces '.a , long\nprison term as a-\"repeater.\"-His\noperation, a pre-frontal lobotomy,\nattracted .wide attention. In the\nmedical profession and among\ncrime prevention authorities. Be--\nfore the operation\/ Wright had\n\u25a0\u25a0spent 15 of his 38 years under\narrest Police officers aald that\nwhen they arrested Wright they\nfound thousands of dollars.worth\nof loot stored In his apartment\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nAlberta to Have\nBigger Say in\nForest Conservation\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CPJ \u2014 Alberta will be.given a greater voice\non the Eastern Rocky Mountain\nForest Conservation Board under\nlegislation debated today in the\nSenate.\nResources Minister Winters\", making his first appearance in the Senate to explain the legislation, said\nAlberta will have two members on\nthe three-man board and the federal government one. Formerly the\nboard was composed of two federal\nand one Alberta appointee.\nSenator Thomas Crerar (L\u2014Manitoba) said the legislation Is one of\nthe .'most useful ever passed by\nParliament. If the forests of the\nEastern Rocky Mountains were denuded the result would be more\nrapid melting of snow in Spring'and\na consequent flooding' over Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.\nWal&h, .<&vcJa.\nNelson\n1952\n9.30\n1951\n11.40\n1948\n14.00\nNEW YORK, June 23 (CP)\u2014The\nCanadian dollar was up 5-32 of a\ncent at a premium of 2 5-18 per oent\nin terms of United States funds in\nclosing foreign exchange dealings\ntoday.\naganda.\n(Vice-Admiral C. Turtief'\u25a0 Jo*\nwho formerly headed the U.N. arpt-\nistlce team, said in San Diego he\n1-jew that some stroke such aj the\nraids on the power plants Had'heen '\npWnned unless a truce was reached,\nRISKING ALL-OUT WAR\n(One Japanese news editor said:\n\"The U.N. has played a trump card\nand perhaps risked an all-out war\nwith Communist China.\" Most Japanese editors took a grave view of\nthe bombings.)\nOther squadrons smashed four\nhydro-electric plants on the Chang-\nJin reservoir and the Sohgchon River in Northeastern Korea.\nWithin  90  minutes,   the   plants\nwere left with towering pillars of\nsmoke and flame shooting up from\nthe debris.     ''\nPROTECTED BY JET8\nFormations striking at Suiho\nwere within sight of.the control\ntower of the big Communist MIC.\nbase at Antung but no Red jets ventured across the river. U.S. F-88\nSabre jets and Navy Panther Jets\nprovided protective cover for the\nfighter-bombers.\nCol. John Nottinghan, Fifth Air\nForce public information officer,\ntold correspondents at a special\nbriefing that Suiho provided power\nfor the industrial centres at Pyongyang and Chinnampo, in North\nKorea, and a considerable area of\nManchuria.\nMeanwhile, reports said the 155-\nmile battlefront was relatively quiet\nMonday, after strong Allied tank-\ninfantry raids deep in Communist\nterritory on the Western sector.\nFIRST COBAtT BOMB\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP) \u2014 The\ngovernment's uranium-r e f i n I n g\ncompany expects to produce this\nyear six more radio-active cobalt\nbombs for treatment of cancer, it\nwas reported today to the Commons.\nThe first bomb produced by Eldorado Mining and Refining Company\u2014a $48,000 unit that does the\njob of $45,000,000 worth of radium\n\u25a0has been installed at Victoria Hospital in London, Ont.\nA second bomb has been installed,\nin the University of Saskatchewan\nat Saskatoon.\nAnd in This Corner...\nBAN DIEGO, Calif., June 23 (AP)-Pollce were looking for a\nooriet with a $100 bulge here today. Mrs. Elva May Schlmmel, 63,\na visitor from Miuwaka, Ind., reported she had that much sewed\ninside her corset when It was lost or stolen.\n_ .,_*,0;N?f,N' June a <AP>\u2014The fashionable bird about town is\nBuilding her-nest in aircraft .this year, and engineers at London air.\nport.,S_w hav? *? board UP Planes taken to the hangars for overhaul.\nThere.are plenty of trees around the airport, but birds 'of all kinds\nseem to prefer planes,\" one engineer said.\nThe birds are even .choosy about the type of plane they settle-in.\nAll around the rudder of B.O.A.C.'s four-englned Hermes airliners\nIs the most fashionable spot of all.\n\"Normally the planes are in for only'a week, so the birds don't\nget very far, the engineer said. But one airliner spent three weeks\nin the hangar, and an enterprising feathered friend completed her\nnest In it and populated it with eggs.\nSAN ANTONIO, Tex., June 23 (AP)\u2014Police answered a call\nyesterday, after someone complained of a disturbance, and found\ntwo women arguing. One was accusing the other of drinking and\nkeeping company with strange men. One woman was 82. The other\n'\n-      \u2022     \u2022\n 2 ._. NF' *-*>N DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952\nLAST TIMES\nTONIGHT\nSftows at\n7:00 - 8:36\n\"Purple  Hear!\nDiary\"\nCMC\nWEDNESDAY ONLY\n\"ON THE LOOSE\"\n\"JUNGLE OF CHANG\"\nBRIDGE PAINTING\nTENDERS TO BE\nOPENED FRIDAY\nTenders for cleaning and painting\nvarious bridges in the Trail area received, by the Minister of Public\nWorks will be opened on June 27.\nThe B.C. Gazette reports that\nBruce Clarkson, a social worker in\ntha Department of Health and Welfare at Nelson, is to be a Special\nCommissioner for taking affidavits\nwithin British Columbia for such a\ntime as ha remains in his present\nposition.\nBest-in-B. C. Award\nGoes to Fishermen\nNANAIMO, B.C., June 2? (CP)\u2014\nThe best-in-British Columbia award\nwas presented here to the Gulf and\nFraser Fishermen's Credit Union\nduring the weekend.\nThe presentation was made by\nThomas Switzer, inspector of the\ncredit unions, at the end of a three-\nday convention of credit union\norganizations and tha health services branch here.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nFIREWOOD\nFOR SALE \u2014$15 A CORD\nFir and Tamarac\nImmediate Delivery\nORDER EARLY FOR FALL DELIVERY\nBox 367 Nelton Phono 924-X\nCORRECTION\nFresh Local\nStrawberries\n2 baskets\n59c\nNOT 2 LBS. AS STATED IN\nMONDAY'S ADVERTISEMENT\nFace Action Here\nContractors and. private builders who are failing to observe requirements of Nelson's building\nbylaw are going to feel the teeth\nIn the bylaw unless they cooperate.\nCity Council Monday night instructed O. Q. Lake, city public\nworks superintendent, and A. G.\nBoas, building inspector, to send\nletters to a number of builders who\nhave begun construction without\npermits warning that summonses\nwill be Issued unless they take immediate steps to comply with the\nlaw. ,\nSome Jobs were well under way,\ncouncil was \u2022 told, and no attempt\nhad been made to take out permits, which were required iri order\nto give the City a record of new\nconstruction, In other cases, there\nhad been flagrant contravention of\nthe bylaw as it applied to construction requirements.\nCouncil felt Mr. take and Mr.\nBoas. should not have to \"chase\"\nbuilders, all \u2022 of whom knew that\nthe bylaw existed.\nFive Divorces\nGranted Here\nrive divorces were granted by\nMr. Juatice A. D. MacFarlane in\nSupreme Court here. Divorces were\ngranted to Isabella Breckenrldge\nfrom Herbert Harry Breckenrldge,\nValda Stoner Clark from Gordon\nHoward Clark, Florence Louise Elder from Austin Elder, Harold Kenneth Moon from Molly Genevieve\nMoon, and Alexander Sutherland\nfrom Lillian Jane Sutherland.'\niLDING   CR   REMODELLING?\ntfes fireproof asbestos roof\nkto&iofyst a 40yeas pte\/\nSalmo Woman\nDies af Trail\nTRAIL, B. C\u2014A resident of Salmo for 11 years, Mrs. Annie Poz-\nenikoff died Monday at Trail-Tadanac Hoipltal after two days illness.\nBorn in Russia May 20, 1888, she\nhad lived in British Columbia for\n39 years, and in Canada 57 years.\nSurvivors are four sons, Alex and\nSam Gleboff, both at Robson, Mike\nat Brilliant and Pete at Salmo.\nFuneral is to be held at Salmo.\nCost-of-Living May\nAffect Wage Offer\nVICTORIA, June 23 (CP) - A\nwage offer of $1.90 made to Victor-\nla carpenters prior to their strike\nnpay be rescinded by contractors if\nthe cost of living Index drops appreciably.\n\"When the union rejected the offer they more or less cancelled it\"\nsaid W. J. Hamilton, president of\nVictoria Builders' Exchange, repre-\naentlng 18 building contractors.\n\"Since our last raise the cost of\nliving index Jumped quite a bit,'\"\ncommented Lawrence Ell, newly-elected president of the Carpenters'\nUnion. \"It is still higher than it was\na year ago.\"\n\"However we are not concerned\nabout the cost of living, but with our\nstandard of living,\" he said.\nCLAIM DISMISSED BUT\nCOUNTER-CLAIM GRANTED\nA claim against Mike Siminoff\nwas dismissed by Mr. Justice A. p,\nMacFarlane ln supreme court here\nFriday. A counter claim against the\nplaintiff, D. A. McCoy was allowed.\nD. T. Wetmore. represented the\nplaintiff and H. Mclnnes the defendant\n. The claims resulted from a minor\nautomobile collision.\nDorabestos Roof Shingles\nPmttM-HC- aND beauty ere    fearere m-lrs-s  .!,\u00ab_ >._. .\u201e\nPmOM-HC- _JOT BEAD-TV ere\noo-MH-d-og chatacter-fl-c- of J-M\nDotabestoe Shingles. Their irregular butt line*, attractive\ngrained appearance and appeal-\nlog colours will add luting\ncharm to yoor home. Darabesto.\nSUagles can't bom, roe or curL\nTheir automatic alignment\nfeature makes them easy to\napply. Their cost per year of service is onbeaahly low \u2014 truly\nCanada's finest roofing value!\nFor free folder am Durabeslos Roof\n-hlngles m your Ut stales- or write\nCanadian Johru-M-nvillo, Dopt. 37,\nTO? Boy St- Toronto, Ontario. B-53.\nran in\nAJ-BTOJ\nJohns-Manville\nBUILDING MATERIALS\nNelson Machinery Co. Ltd.\nPhone 1139 Nelson, B. C. 214 Hall St.\nDistributors for .he Interior\nThe Weather\nSince there is no active storm in\nthe offing for today the decrease in\ncloud and rise in temperature\nshould continue with the result that\nalmost all sections should enjoy a\nfair amount of sunshine. However\nthere Is still a considerable amount\nof moisture in the air so it is unlikely that clear skies will develop.\nNELSON       48\nA. J. MaeDOIMALD\n, s . who has been Installed as\npresident ef Nelson Gyro Club\nfor 1952-63, He It alio one of the\nfounders of the newly-Inaugurated Little League Baseball In Nelson.\u2014 Vonue photo.\nKin Bug Race\nEntries lagging\nEntries to the Kinsmen-sponsored\nJuly 1 Bug Race are still scarce\nwith the big event only one week\noff, chairman Walter Duckworth\nsaid Monday. ,\nA scant six entries and only four\njgs are assured for Nelson's\nversion of the famous Soap Box\nDerby of Akron, -Ohio, the chairman disclosed. Many more can be\naccommodated for the three events,\nhe pointed out\nSeparate bug races for lads 10-12\nand. over 12 are planned, together\nwith a novelty event Which will\nfeature bantam-sized bantam cars.\nThe event w)ll be run off a\ndifferent hill this year, Duckworth\nadded. It was felt the Silica street\nslope used last year Is too steep\nand dangerous. Most probable slope\nbeing considered would run down\nFront street starting at City Hall.\n10-Days Prison\nFor Driving While\nAbility Impaired\nFor the second time in Nelson a\nman was sentenced to prison after\nbeing convicted of driving a vehicle\nwhile his ability was impaired by\nthe use of alcohol.\nWilliam Salakin of Vancouver\nwas sentenced to 10 days - in the\nNelson Jail, fined $100 or In default,\nan additional 10 days in prison.\nHe pleaded, guilty before stipendiary . Magistrate William Evans in\nProvincial Court Monday.\nSalakin was apprehended by\nR.C.M.P. on the Southern Trans-\nProvincial Highway near South Slocan early Monday morning.\nArctic Insulating & Roofing Ltd.\nAPPROVED  APPLICATORS FOR  THE   KOOTENAYS\npHONE 953 NELSON, B.C.\nFabro Building & Supply\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nWallinger Ave. KIMBERLEY, B.C. Phone 46\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co. Ltd.\nPhone 444 Trail, B. C. 1080 Spokane St.\nAGENTS\nSt. Johns \t\n46\n65\n\t\nHalifax  \t\n53\n74\n\u2014\nMontreal \t\n55\n80\n\u2014\nOttawa   \t\n52\n75\n-_\nToronto  \t\n55\n76\n\u2014\nNorth Bay  \t\n51\n79\n\u2014\nPort Arthur  \t\n50\n77\n\u2014\n60\n57\n72\n76\n.10\n1.89\nWinnipeg  \t\nBrandon   .._\n60\n76\n.07\nThe Pas  - _\n45\n57\n.04\nRegina  \u2022\n50\n73\n.19\nSaskatoon   \t\n54\n67\n.16\nPrince Albert \t\n54\n67\n.06\nNorth Battleford ....\n49\n63\n.22\nSwift Current  _\n42\n80\n.10\nMedicine Hat \t\n46\n63\n.40\nLethbridge    \t\n48\n61\n.03\nCalgary  \t\n44\n58\n.15\nEdmonton  \t\n51\n84\n.33\nKamloops    \t\n53\n74\n\u2014\nPenticton  _   _\n50\n69\n\u2014\nVancouver \t\n52\n66\n\u2014\nVictoria    _   ..\n46\n69\n\u2014\nKimberley  \t\n45\n63\n\u2014\nCrescent Valley\t\n47\n66\n\u2014\nKaslo               _\n\u202247\n62\n\u2014\nPrince Rupert \t\n43\n80\n\u2014\nGrand Forks  \t\n44\n74'\n\u2014\nSeattle     \u2014\n40\n69\nT\nPortland'  '.\n47\n71\n\u2014\n43\n73\n\u25a0   \u2014\nChicago _\n61\n85\n.24\nSan Francisco \t\n56\n62\n\u2014\nLos Angeles \t\n61\n70\n\u2014\nNew York \t\n60\n84\n.18\nWhltehorse   \t\n46\n72\n\u2014\nUNIVERSE \"EXPRESSION\nOF GOD, SPIRIT\"\nThe Lesson-Sermon entitled \"Is\nthe Universe, Including Man,\nEvolved by Atomic Force?\" which\nwas read in all Churches of Christ,\nScientist, Sunday, \"reveals the universe to be spiritual, constituted pf\ngood only, the expression of God,\nSpirit, and of nothing else.\"\nThe Golden Text was: \"Lo, he that\nformeth the mountains, ahd cre-\nateth the wind, and declared unto\nman what is his thought, that mak-\neth the morning darkness, and\ntreadeth upon the high places of\nthe earth, The Lord, the God of\nhosts, is his name.\u2014Amos 4: 13.\n\"Ale Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"In tbe beginning God created the\nheaven and the earth. And God\nsaw everything that he had made,\nand, behold, it was very good.\n\u2014Genesis 1: 1, 31.\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science and Health With Key to the\nScriptures\", by Mary Baker Eddy,\nwas the following: \"In the universe\nof Truth, matter is unknown. No\nsupposition of error enters there.\nDivine Science, the Word of God,\nsaith to the darkness upon the faqe\nof error, \"God is All-in-all,\" and\nthe light of ever-present Love illumines the universe.\"\nNelson Gyros lo\nHpsf District\nConvention in July\nNelson Gyro Club will be host, to\ntho annual Gyro District 8 convention next month, with the three-day\ngathering scheduled for July 17-19.\nH. (Nap) Lup ton hia been named\nconvention chairman for-the meet\nat which 12 clubs will be represent.\ned. District S covers Alberta, North-\nera Idaho and Eastern British Columbia. \u25a0 -\u2022\u25a0'\nConvention plana were discussed\nat the regular club meeting Monday, following which Gyros heard\na short talk by Bill Jackson, Nelson\ndistrict Probation Officer, Mr. Jack-\nSon discussed juvenile delinquency\nand the duties of a probation\nofficer.\nJackson Basin\nReadies (amp\nRETAIJ-ACK, B.C.-Work is progressing well on the Jackson Basin\nMine camp.\nThe millaite has been cleared, and\nfoundations are being prepared following plans recently completed by\nWright Brothers engineers, who are\nresponsible for the design of the\nfifty ton per day mill, reports President B. J. Nesbitt.\nSlashing out of number five level\nand relaying of track has proceeded beyond the shaft. A cross-cut\ntunnel has been driven to service\nan ore storage pocket above number five level. On completion of\nthis pocket drifting will start on the\nnew number six level, 125 feet be\nlow.\nHead frame and hoist building\nwere completed recently, and the\nhoist Is now in operation.\nThe three new eight men bunkhouses have been completed, and\nthe old bunk-house has been rehabilitated to house a further 13\nmen. A new dry or change house\nis under construction, and soon will\nbe completed.\nConsiderable work is being done\nto put the six mile road from mine\nto railway at Retallack, B.C., in\nfirst class condition for haulage of\nconcentrates and' supplies.\nAssay results Just received of five\nchannel samples taken ln the raise\ndriven between number five level\nand surface, says Mr. Nesbitt, have\ngiven an average of $170 per ton\nacross a true width of 2.6 feet of\nthe high grade portion of the vein.\nChannel samples were taken across\na great enough width to allow for\n60 per cent dilution. These average\n$104.52 across a true width of 4.2\nfeet with the toll width of high\ngrade ore not always exposed for\nsampling due to angling of the vein\ninto the floor) of the raise.     . *\n\"Raiders\" Seal\nHook of Holland\nPORTSMOUTH, England, June\n23 (Reuters)M-anadian and British planes combined with warships\ntoday to mine the entrances to\nthree Netherlands ports in the latest phase of the Atlantic Treaty\nnaval exercise.\nSignals received here reported\nthat \"heavy mining\" by \"Redland\"\nraiders ' had sealed the ports ' of\nHook of Holland, Den Helder and\nIjmuiden.\nExercise \"Castanets,\" in which\nthe United States and eight other\ncountries are taking part, now is\nIn its fifth day. It will end 'Thursday.\nNaval and air operations were\ndirected against a big concentration of \"Red\" submarines and\nplanes ln the Atlantic approaches\nto Europe today.        '\nThe Canadian aircraft carrier\nMagnificent is taking part in the\nmanoeuvres.\nThe liner Queen Elizabeth, on\nits run from New York to Southampton, has reported sighting a\nperiscope and a flare, the recognized attack signal from a submarine.\nQldtimer Passes\nJOHN T. SINDEL\n... resident of Nelson since 1911,\ndied at tha age of 82. A retired\nmachinist, he was employed by\nthe C.P.R. at Tadanac and here\nfor many years. Funeral services\nare to be held here Wednesday.\nTrail Nan\nDies af 24\n'TRAIL, B. C\u2014Ronald Ian Ross,\nage 24. died Monday at Trail-Tadanac Hospital. ,\nA resident, here at 1075 Tamarac\nAvenue for only one year, he had\nbeen employed in the chemical department of the CM. & S. Company. He was born Feb. 7, 1928, at\nTacoma, Wash.\nHe is survived by his wife, Lois\nIsabel at Trail, and his father, William Ross at Vancouver;, a brother,\nWilliam James ,a U.B.C. student.\nFuneral services will be held at\nVancouver.\nHouse Approves\nRenewal of\nlax Agreements\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP) \u2014 The\nCommons today approved renewal\nof federal taxation-agreements w*fb\nthe provinces. .\nIn debate preceding adoption ef\nthe bill, George Drew, Progressive\nConservative leader, suggested that\na royal commission be established\nto recommend ways to realocale\ntaxing powers among the federal\nand\" provincial governments.\nMr. Abbott indicated eight of the\n10 provinces \u2014 all except Ontario\nand Quebec \u2014 will renew their\nagreements. -Tie eight provinces had\nagreements which expired March\n31 last.\nAt tbe house opening, Mr.- Abbott tabled supplementary estimates\ntotalling $82,732,188. They brought\nthe federal government's estimated\nexpenditures for 19S2-53 to $4,418,-\n528,997.\nThe following figures show what\nthe provinces will receive in the\nfirst year of the new agreement\u2014\nwith figures for the last year of\nthe old agreements in brackets:\nNewfoundland $12,291,593 ($9,-\n651,000); Prince Edward Island $3,-\n915,671 ($3,057,000); Nova Scotia\n$20,150,413 ($16,503,000); Manitoba\n$24,760,084 ($20,035,000); New Brunswick $16,624,628 ($13,490,000); Saskatchewan $25,570,643 ($20,747,000);\nAlberta $29,358,527 ($21,578,000);\nBritish Columbia $41,376,383 ($32,-\n155,000.)\nDR. H. SMYTHE\nDEPUTY CORONER\nThe current issue of the B.C.\nGazette reports that Dr. Harold\nSmythe of Nelson has been appointed to act as Deputy Coroner to\nDr. F. M. Auld. H- will act during\nillness or absence' of the coroner, or\nupon his written request.\nAppointed to act as deputy collectors for districts in and around\nNelson were William Lewis Draper\nof Rossland, deputy collector for\nNelson Collection District; Frank\nBroughton of New Denver, deputy\ncollector for the Slocan Collection\nDistrict; William Elliot McLean of\nGrand Forks, and John Wright\nDobbie of Greenwood, are to be\ndeputy collectors, for. .the- Kettle\nRiver Collecfioni.Dis'trict. All appointments' were effective June 14\nALD. WALLACH\nFIRST WOMAN IN\nMAYOR'S CHAIR\nFor the first time In history, a\nwoman mayor presided over City\nof Nelson's affairs Monday night.\nWith Mayor Joseph Kary away on\nhis holidays and Acting Mayor W.\nS. Smith ill. Alderman Elizabeth\nWallach was the unanimous choice\nof her fellow councillors to take the\nchair.\nA'bare quorum was achieved, as\nAid. Arthur Fosjer was also ill.\nAlderman J. H. Coventry, T. H.\nBourque and George Eckmier were\nthe only other aldermen' present.\nActing city clerk was D. L. Ure,\nwho took the place of Reeve Harper,\nalso away on his holidays.\nIn 1920 Mrs. Garland Foster\nserved as Nelson's only previous\nwoman alderman.\nLobster larvae need about six\nweeks to grow to a Jength of half\nan Inch.\nLONDON June 23 (AP) - Lord\nHamilton of Dalzell, known ln Britain as the \"Father of the Tote\n(pari-mutuel betting),\" died today\nat his home In Lanarkshire, Scotland. He was 70.\nProbation Officer Says Treatment\nMore Effective Than Punishment\nProbation Is constructive discipline carried out by means of a\nfriendly relationship, H. W. Jackson told members of the Nelson\nKiwanis Club at a dinner ln the\nHume.\nMr. Jackspn, Kootenay-Boundary\nprobation officer outlined the formation and growth of the B.C. provincial probation branch. The function of the probation branch was to\nmake reports t'o the courts and to\nsupervise probationers. The reports, he said, \"consist of social\nbackground, family setting, community environment, education and\nemployment of the person charged\nwith a crime.\" It also includes\nevaluation of personality and a recommendation to the magistrate or\njudge with whom the final decision\nrests. -\nProbation, Mr. Jackson pointed\nout, is designed to redirect the offender's footsteps into socially accepted channels and to enable him\nto \"stand on his own two feet.\" It\nis a process that takes \"time,\npatience and understanding.\"\nPunishment has not proven an\neffeotlve treatment, he said, because four out of five Inmates of\npenitentiaries have been there\npreviously.\n\"The eoming trend in dealing with\noffenders is \"treatment\" .which is a\npositive method. Probation is a\nform of treatment not suitable for\neveryone, he said, some need institutional treatment including vocational training, academic instruction, recreation, case work service,\ngroup therapy and psychiatric treatment.\nHe pointed out how the system\ncould be integrated under an administrative director of correction,\nIn this ideal system various types\nof institutions would range from\nminimum to maximum security. He\nsaid this would provide opportuni.\nties for segregation. Indeterminate\nsentences would be levied rather\nthan definite sentence! and release\nwould   be  dependent   entirely  on\nprogress made by the offender..\nAn Adult and-Youth Authority\nwould classify offenders, diagnose\ncases and outline type of treatment needed ..for each individual.\nParole would be oarrled out by\nprobation officers.\nThis entire system would depend\non the attitude of the general public in- willingness  to finance the\nscheme.  There  would  be no immediate return from the money Invested but over a period of years,\nreductions' In   Institutional,   social\nand health costs would be noticeable.\nToronto Star Writer\nWins Scholarship\nCAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 23\n(AP)\u2014Robert Nielson of the Toronto Daily Star today was named\nas one of 15 United States and\nCommonwealth newspaper men\nawarded Nieman fellowships entitling them to study for a year at\nHarvard University starting in\nSeptember.\nTwelve U, S. newspaper men\nhave been awarded fellowships\nunder the Niemap. -Foundation, established \"to. promote and elevate\nthe standards of journalism in the\nUnited States.\"\nNielsen, an Australian, and a\nNew Zealand newspaper man have\nbeen awarded associate Nieman\nfellowships, supported by the Carnegie Foundation.\n176,000 RED CASUALTIES\nTOKYO, June 23 (AP) - The\nUnited States Air Force summed\nup two years war Iri Korea today\nwith the* announcement that Allied\nland-based planes have killed or\nwounded 176,000 Communist soldiers, s\n\u2022jLCEr \u2022 \u2022 <utd\n<ma4e IQefaAsicd\nIf you t|on't sleep well\n\u2014if night* are interrupted by rettlesineu\n\u2014look to your kidney*. If your kidneys\nare out of order and\nfailing to cleanse tha\nblood of poisons and\nexcess adds\u2014your rest U likely suffering\ntoo. Then ia tha timo to use Dodd'a\nKidney Pills. Dodd'ahelp your kidneys get\nrid of trouble-making poisons and acids\u2014>\nhelp restore them to normal action. See\nbow much, better you rest at night\u2014how\nmucR brighter you feel in the morning. Get\nand use Dodd'* Kidney Pills today,    us\nDodd's KsdneyPills\nO^RITZ\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT8\nA COMPLETE CHOICE OF\nWEIL-APPOINTED AND FULLY\nSERVICED APARTMENTS AND.\nHOTEL ROOMS \u00abt MODERATE\nJohitH.Cmte RATES Manager\nVANCOUVER BC\nCOMBUSTIONEiR'S\nMomm\nCMOM\nmem\nGets A Hand From Grandma\nThe whole family, Including\nOrandma, will give Combustioneer a hand because this revolutionary coal stoker gives much\nmore than automatic heat. It\ngives AUTOMATIC COM-\nFORT the winter through.\nUnlike other fuels which give\na \"thin\" heat that is on and off\n\u2014Combustioneer's coal heat-ia\n\"full-bodied\" and constant. Thia\nmeans AUTOMATIC COM-\nFORT around the clock.\n\"Breathing\" Fire-Bed\nCombustioneer measures out the\ncorrect amount of air for efficient combustion. It \"pokes-up\"\nthe fire so that the fire-bed\n\"Breathes,\" extracting all the\nheat from every pound of coat\nFktl BOOK\u2014Phono or willo (ot Freo '\nBook which tell, about tho comfort,\nlabor-saving and economy of Combui-\nflonesr. Modoli Include tho Bln-.cod\nwhich foods coal directly from bin les\nfire-bed. All modoli can bo quickly\nand easily Installed In your furnace.\nGmhstmsm\nAUTOMATIC C0AI STOKER\nlOR.HOMt..' AMTONrj AHD UUOIWS\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nY    Phone HfiQ Nelson\n? .'526 Stanley Street\nBus advert-sement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\nby the Government of British Columbia.\n^^^^^_^_^_^^^^^.    ^^ \u25a0     .\u2014^- \u2014 .-n \u2022 '        '\n ' Get Your\nTHE SHOE\n;:z^fWz -\n833 BAKER ST. PHONE 896\nBaseball Jel for\nNakusp Jubilee\nNAKUSP, B.C. \u2014 The Recreation\nI Association reported that Nakusp is\nI (o see three ball games with.teams\nfrom Nelson, Edgewood ahd Burton, at the Jubilee celebratipn Sun-\n\\ \u00ab.ay.ChlIdj;en's sports will highlight\nI the Monday afternoon festivities and\n[ water sports are to take place from\n| fj to 0 p.m. An oldtimers dance will\nfollow the Pageant of Progress.\n-Many oldtimers from throughout\nthe district will be present at the\nI two'day celebration. On July 1, the\nday's festivities will start with a\nI gala ; parade, featuring horse and\nbuggy   days.; Later,   be-whiskered\nI ttsett and \"Old-Fashioned\" women\n[will depict days of the early '90's.\nVmul henki leads prayer\nNAKUSP. B.C. \u2014 Paul R. Henki\nled devotional readings and prayers\nI \u00bbt * meeting of the United Church\nJ Missionary Society, held at the home\nlet Mrs. B. McRobert His subject\n1 waa \"Loye.\"\nEdgewood Fire Levels\niisV> Convent\nEDGEWOQD, B.C.-A fire\nof undetermined origin raced\nthrough a blacksmith shop, a\nfarm, and a convent here Friday night levelling buildings\nbefore the 'blaze could be\nbrought under, control.\nMen from the Edgewood\nforest service battled the\nblaze for over an hour, but\nfailed to keep.flAmes from\ndestroying the buildings. Exploding gas drums in the\nblacksmith shop added to the\nspectacularity of the fire.\n\u2022 Loss included logging\nequipment, tools and a valuable pumping unit which was\nto have been installed this\nweek to provide irrigation.\nThe property was owned by\na Mr. Slick of Snoeshoe\nRanch.\nNatal-Michel Cancels\nJuly T Celebration\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Natal-Michel will\nnot stage a celebration Dominion\nDay.this year the acting committee\ndecided. Lack of public support was\nthe main reason-given for cancellation of the.celebration. \"The group\nalso lamented the fact that no bingo games and draws could be held\nbecause of recently enforced laws.\nKimberley Gets\nNew Garbage\nDiposalUnil\nKIMBERLEY, B. C-Modernl-\naatloh of the olty't garbage eel-\n\u25a0\u25a0 lection system was approved by\nCity .Council when they.author-\nlied .purchase of a 12-cublo yard\npaokmaater at cost; of $6203 plus\ntax. Also ordered was a $4000\nstuck to which tha machine\nwould be attached. Present,cost\nof garbage contract la $1000 a\nmonth and council felt that by\ntaking over the eolleotlorfs there\nwould be considerable saving In\ntime and money, The present\ncontract will be continued on a\nweekly basis until the city's\nequipment Is ready for use.\nNATAL-MICHEL FUND\nINCORPORATED\n' NATAL, B, C. \u2014The Natal-Michel\nCommunity Fund has been incorporated under the Societies Act. At\na public meeting Wednesday, citi-\nztns will hear of the effect of the\nIncorporation on the community .\nThe group will discuss borrowing\nof money for the purpose of repairing dressing rooms, installing\na forced air heating plant and general completion ot the new arena,\nOfe.\n,;v-.. \u2022;**,\nv    .\nIOO* :*-        - -\nJUST OUT8IDE THE MAIN GATE of the\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting plant at Trail,\nworkmen bring to life a 30-year-old water main\nwhich had not been In use for many years. The\n\u25a0HRBi\npipe.Is being removed before general road construction continues. Blacktopplng the final, portion\nshould be under way within two weeks.\n       \u2014Louis Fryllng photo.\nCranbrook Award Winners\nShare $1000 Scholarships\n^SitV^?V%stMM\u00b0ll rt?*1 f0r *\u2022 Bew to^.t\u00abey iotet'on.Ca.tle-\nhti main t*reet. Th. 28-room hotel,will be one et thi firs, to be built in the West\nkootenay for years and will be one of the most up-tto-date in the area. The buildinB\nwin-Measure 45 by 108 feet and will be-finished wilt rtucco and JStUim, *\n* INDUSTRIAL\n* CfMMERCIAL\n* RESIDENTIAL   WIRIN8\n. and\nCOMMERCIAL\nREFRIGERATION\nTREE ESTIMATES.\nTED HILL ELECTRICAL\nCONSTRUCTION LTD.\nPhono 4947 P.O. Box 13S\nCartle.ar, B.C.\nTfce world's *\nfinest tobaccos\nEstella Reports\nNew Discovery\nK-MBEBLEY, B. C. - Istelle\nMines, Ltd., claims a new ore discovery ta the Northwest of ite main\nworkings In entirely new ground,\nreporte aald.\nPreviously, aU exploration had\nbeen to the Southeaat Where encountered, the ore .ia reported to\nbe over two feet ln width and of\nvery high grade.\nThe company's mill ia presently\nhandling 185 tone dally and the\nfeed ia reported averaging around\nld.per cent combined lead and itae.\nBAND TO RODEO\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Tha Natal-M-chel\nband under the direction of Bernard\nKeeing will play at the Coleman\nRodeo July 5.\nmost pleasing\ncigarette\nyon can smoke!\nAnother\ndistinguished\nproduct of\nThe BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA\nDISTILLERY\nCo. Ltd.\nI. Hussey Named\nTo Fair Board\nraOTTALE, B. ft\u2014Ivan Hussey waa appointed aa the Beaver\nTallt representative to the Fruitvale\nFair Board at a meeting of the\nBoard at the home of Mrs. Charles\nPaterson. Jack Fargeter, leader of\nthe Calf Club, reconsidered, his decision and will assume an active\npost on the Board.\nSeveral changes to the fair book\nwere considered. Among them was\nthe decision to allow any women's\ngroup, church, legion or club, to\ncompete in the section reservedpre-\nviobsly for Women's Institutes.\nBoys and girls competing for the\nP.-T.A. eup will have an equal\nchoice of entries in their respective\nage groups, instead of a \"Bouquet\nof Wild Flowers\", thla year's con-\nteat will call for \"A collection of\npressed wild flowers, not less than\nIO.\"\nIt Is hoped to have books distributed within two weeks.\nPEACE CONFERENCE TALKS\nNATAL, B.C. \u2014 A delegate who\nattended the Canadian Peace Conference at Toronto, outlined conference discussions at a meeting in\nthe Union Hall here. A film,\n'Young Guards\" was shown.\n\u00a9\nBC\nRESERVE\nTho Dri.l.l, Columbia Dlstlllny C\u00ab. Ltd.\nKIW WWTMINIT-II. B.C.\n'   This odvortisomont\nIs not published or displayed by\nihe Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia.\nCLASSIFIED ADS SET RESULTS\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - Nearly\n91000 in scholarships and bursaries\nin addition to several gift prizes\nwere presented to winners at the\nHigh School graduation ceremonies\nFriday at. Mount Baker School\nwhen 38 students received diplomas.\nMarguerette Moan received the\n$100 H. A. McKowan Memorial\nscholarship for senior matriculation presented by Mrs. H. A.\nMcKowan. Gordon Laurie was\nwinner of the school board Junior\nmatriculation trophy and $100 or\nfees for senior matriculation If he\ncontinues high school. The $100\nCity Memorial Trophy for school\ncitizenship went to Grant Hln-\nchey. The Kuskanook Chapter\nI.O.D.E, annual $100 bursary went\nto Marlene Erlck.on.\nGeraldine Johnson won the Rotary $50 award for proficiency in\ncommercial studies, and Bob Meredith the Kiwanis award for proficiency in Grade 10.\nLargest single award, the newly\ncreated Scandinavian Sisters and\nBrothers bursary of $150 for proficiency in English went'to Noreen\nGordon. Marianne King won the\n$100 Gyro Club scholarship for a\nstudent   continuing   to   Normal\nSchool, and Joan Barber the $100\nParent-Teachers' Association scholarship for the same purpose.\nI.O.D.E. gift prizes for proficiency\nin social studies were presented to\nLorna Lum, Janice Jacobsen, Shirley McDonald and William Benson,\nand Canadian Daughters prizes for\nproficiency in Grade 0 and 11 went\nto Patricia Brown, and Mary Jean\nLevirs.\nR is M Sport Shop athletic award\nwent to Robert DeBuysscher, and\nthe R. B. Mitchell athletic award\nto Veronica Chlopan. Drama certificates were presented to Joan Barber\nand Mary Jean Levirs.\nWinners of the three $50 prizes\ngiven by the Canadian Legion for\npractical arts were Larry Bouchard\nfor woodwork, Douglas Alkman for\nmetalwork, and Shirley Lang for\nsewing.\nErnest Ford as student council\npresident,    Larry    Bouchard* as\ntlon. Principal L. G. Truscott was\nchairman and presented diplomas,\nMarianne King was valedictorian,\nand Gordon Laurie class historian.\nFarewell to graduates was given by\nMichael Falkins, new student coun\ncil president. Also speaking briefly\nwere Mayor R. E. Sang and school\nboard chairman M. L. MacFarlane.\nTeh academic crests' each in\ncitizenship, academic and fine arts\nin senior high school were also pre.\nsented. Each member of the grad\nuating class received a gift from\nCranbrook Mercantile.\nReceiving diplomas were: Fred\nAnderson, Joan Barber, Faith Barnhardt, Darryl Barrett, Morley Bayes,\nClarke Blysak, Eleanor Boyda, Geraldine Davidson, Robert Debuyss-\ncher, Anita Dodd, Robert Donaldson,\nRita Dorey, Patrick Dunn, Marlene\nErickson, Ernest Ford, Robert\nFrame, Agatha George, Noreen Gor\ndon, Iris Hall, Grant Hinchey, Ger\nathletic council president, Bernie. ^i.nn^.rf\u00a3!?\u201e*\u00a3%,^7\n!.-..\u201e .. \u00bbi\u201e. .rt.__,.nnii .\u00bb.i. Kennemann, Marianne King, Ber-\nnice Larsen, Gordon Laurie, Lyn\nLarsen as fine arts counoil preii\ndent and Mary Jean Levirs ai\nViewpoint editor each received\nhonorary awards.\nH. R. Banks of Chapman Camp\naddressed the graduates, with Rev.\nW. H. McDannold giving the invoca-\nMitchell, Betty Ann Newman, Flora\nPaul, Louis Savarie, Lois Stokes,\nJames Tattrie, Charlotte Townsend,\nJohn Ward, Mervin Welsh, Donna\nWheeler, Gary Wile and Robert\nWills.\nROTARY OFFERS\nBUILDING SITE\n$80,000 Housing\nScheme Planned\nFor Senior Citizens\nTRAIL, B.C.\u2014Tho Trail Rotary\nClub has offered the Jubilee\nSociety a gift of nine lota on\nShavers Bench as site for their\nprojected $80,000 senior citizens\nhousing scheme.\nThe society hat authorized a\napeclal committee to carry out\ndevelopment including construction of low rental villas and furnishing them. They are expected\nto house about 26 couples.\nSponsors of the scheme expect\nthe Provincial Government to advance one-third of the cost of the\nproject\nThe plan It to construct a series\nof tmall units linked like an auto\ncourt Hubert Tutt, Rotary president It chairman of the new\naction committee and tervlng with\nhim are. Mrt. C. H. Jeffarlet, Mrt,\nL. J, Morris, Rev. J. Rogers, M.\nC. Monkhoute, Paul Peeke, Mrt.\nJ. V. B. Nelton and Erie Frost\nFREDERICTON, June 23 (CP)\u2014\nR.C.M.P. divisional headquarters\nhere reported tonight that wreckage of a small United States civilian aircraft, missing with its single\noccupant, had been sighted from\nthe air about seven miles from\nMoose Lake, which is some 65 miles\nWest of Chatham, N.B.\nThere was no sign of the pilot,\nReno J. Cormier, of Van Buren,\nMaine.\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII\nN. Denver School\nWins Special Prize\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 The\nElementary school has been\nawarded a three-year subscription to \"Forest and Outdoors\"\nand a forest conservation certificate when they were announced special winners in the\nSchool Conservation Week contest\nillllll.llllllllllllf.llllllllllllllllllllllllll\nKaslo May Reserve\nBlock for School\nKASLO, B. C.-A $200 grant to\nthe Kaslo Recreation Association\nwas approved by City Council. The\nmoney will aid In furnishing a life\nguard for the swimming beach during Summer months.\nAt request of the Board of School\nTrustees of School District No. 6,\napplication will be made to close\npart of C Avenue, and to set aside\na section of Block 13 for educational purposes.\nTenders are being called for re-\nahingllng of the city hall roof, the\nsheeting of the exterior walls and\nfor purchase of. debentures for a\nschool building program,\netf        por-thet\nThe city has been informed that\noperators of the Cork Province\nmine are studying a possible auxiliary water supply for the city.\nNAKUSP, B.C. - Grade eight\nstudents held a farewell picnic at\nBox Lake Thursday where games\nand swimming highlighted the afternoon's activities.\nTeacBers at the picnic included\nMiss B. White, Miss M. Kirk, Miss\nV. Doerkson, Miss R. Ulme, Miss\nS. Stewart and H. Leonard.\nDriver Held\nBlameless in\nYouth's Death\nROSSLAND, B. C. \u2014 A coroner's\njury decided Monday that 10-year-\nold John Duncan Adaire Osborne\nof Rossland \"came to his death at\nRossland Hospital at 4:20 p.m. Friday. Death resulted from injuries\nreceived when in collision with a\ncar driven by W. H. Reeves of Nelson, approximately three-quarters\nof a mile West of Rossland on June\n19 at 7:80 p.m. The cause of death\nwas due to fracture of the base of\nthe skull and severe brain injury.\nNb blame Is attached to anyone.\"\nPolice say the lad was killed\nwhen he dashed from behind a\nparked car while playing ball,\nThe jury was comprised of. Gordon McTeer, foreman; Robert Van,\nNeil Sutherland, Bud Alrich, Jack\nBrian and Leslie Treverton.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952 \u2014 3\nKaslo To Get\nNew Bank\nKASLO, B.C. - City Council last\nweek granted a building permit to\nW. V. Drayton for construction of a\n$12,000 bank building, The building, to house a Bank of Montreal\nbranch Is located on Front Street.\nExcavating for the 50 by 22 foot,\none storey structure has been completed and pouring of foundations\nis expected to start today.\nAccording to schedule, the bank\nshould be completed in August and\nopened for business about September 1.\nto KOOTENAY BAY O\nBALFOUR, B.C. - Balfour students participated in the annual\nDicnic and swimming jaunt at Kootenay Bay. Teacher, Miss Jean Muir\nand parents attended the picnic.\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF\nHEALTH\"\nInvites You to Listen\nTonight to\nDrama of Medicine\nOVER CKLN AT*6:00\nPHONE RES.\n1203 894-L\n433 Josephine St.\n600-Foot Tunnel\nAt Tye Completed\nTYE, B. C\u2014Construction of the\nTye tunnel has been completed.\nComplete reinforcement of the 800\nfoot railway tunnel included timbering and cementing.\nLoose rocks proved a constant hazard, work foreman J. Trozzo said.\nBRANTFORD, Ont (CP)\u2014Four\nBrant County men, found with 42\nspeckled trout less thah the regulation seven-Inch size, paid a total of\n$60 in fines. A provincial game inspector said some of the fish were\nnot much bigger than good-sized\nbait minnows,\nTravel EAST the RAIL-WATER Way\nBreak your rail trip with aa invigorating two-day\nGreat lakes Cruise, between Fort William and\nPort McNicolL Only meals and berth are <\nyoor first class fare! Or enjoy a 5-day n\ncruise for as little as $80,001\nFor the rail part of you* journey,\nCanadian Pacific trains mean air-\nconditioned comfort, wonderful meals\nand service, Sleepy Hollow Chairs and\nPicture Window views.\nI tmi nnryations from ony Canadian Podfk office,\n\u2022 age* or ;   J. G. WATSON,\nCity Tlck.l Agent,\nlekw-t, Word SI,., N-lioti\nQaggjfegjNfe\nHARRY\nJAMES\n\u2022 IN PERSON*\nCominco Arena\nPhona Trail 887\nFor Tickets June 23 On\nFRIDAY\nNIGJ..T\nJUNE 27\nCONCERT AND DANCE:\nadmission:    ,\n$2.50 and $2 (Tax Included) I\nGraduation\nIs Bicycle Time\nRaleigh Bicycles\nNothing could be a better reward for diligence in studies\nand good passing marks than a Raleigh bicycle! Quality mad*\nin every detail to give years of trouble-free service. New\nfeatures make this the kind of bike any boy or girl would be\nproud to own, proud to care fori\nSports Racer with 3-Spoed Hub \u2014 $73.78\nModel 22 Sports Light Roadster\nwith Sfurmey-Archer 3-Speed \u2014 $73.78\nWith Dyna .Hub Lighting Set- \u2014 $83.73\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n\"FRIENDLY SERVICE\"\nPhone 21 446 Baker St.\nWednesday Morning\nSpecials\nPersonal Shopping Only\nReg. 6.95\nWomen's Crepe Soles\nOdds and  ends from regular Summer stock of    \u00bb__.-_,\ncrepe soles. Loafer and lace styles. Most sizes. jL  QO\nWednesday Morning Special      -.'77\nJust Arrived . . . 600 Yards\nCotton Print Mill Ends\nEnds from the ever popular Glenwood prints in\nstripes, dots, florals and checks. A A\nWednesday Morning Special      \u2022\u25a0#\u25a0\u00a7\nReg. .59\nCups and Saucers\nMade   in   England.   White   with   gold    at.   ff^___     gums,\nbands. Wednesday Morning Special  ....    _\u00a3 XO-T t07\nReg. $1\nMen's Ankle Sox\n100% all wool ankle sox for men in plain and striped\npatterns.  Sizes 10%  to 12. Half price. Wednesday       CA\nMorning Special  ; *     \u00bb^\"\nReg. 1.98\nCrepe Slips\nStraight cut crepe slips with lace trim in white or\ntearose. Sizes 32 to 38. Wednesday Morning Special ....\nReg. 2.39\nGirls' Pyjamas\nFancy Krinkle Crepe girls' pyjamas in a good\nchoice of colors and patterns. Sizes 8 to 14.\nWednesday Morning Special\n.99\n1^59\nfyti.ftitfl'Bftg (fttttjuttg\n 4\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952\nClaim Uranium Ore Found in Alberta\nEDMONTON, June 23 (CP)\u2014Discovery for the first time of indications of uranium ore ln Northern\nAlberta was reported here today.\nThe report said the find has been\nmade by a party of Edmonton prospectors, operating In an undisclosed area North of Lake Athabasca,\nabout 460 miles North of Edmonton.\nIn the group are Sydney Thibeault,\nMelton Johnson and Henry -Dre-\nver.\nSAMPLES, TO A-BOARD\nSamples obtained in the area have\nbeen forwarded to the Atomic Energy Control Board ln Ottawa and\nreports of tests'are expected shortly.\nThe group staked claims over an\narea two miles in length and will-\nreturn to obtain larger holdings as\nit Is hoped to obtain even better in\ndications of the presence of radioactive ore.\nFor some time, mining men have\nsuggested the possibility that Alberta has deposits of uranium, particularly in view of the large deposits Just across .the Saskatchewan\nborder at Beaverlodge.\nCoast Man Heads\nB. C. Credit Union\nNANAIMO, B. C, June 23 (CP)\u2014\nParley Dickinson of Vancouver was\nelected President of the B. C, Credit\nUnion League at the annual convention here Saturday. Gerry Lundy, also of Vancouver, is retiring\nPresident.\nBuy, Sell, Trade tha Classified Way\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40o line black faoe type; larger type ratet on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nBingo Tomorrow Night,\nCathedral Hall.\nMAC'8 COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\n.Beat material! only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nJJ When it's Flowers \u2014 Say it\n* with ours. - VALENTINE'S.\n1T8H-NO LICENCES.\n-JACK BOYCE MENS SHOP.\nWe have  a smart selection\nSummer Rats.\nADRIAN MILLINERY,\nof\nSlacks,   Shorts,   Jeans   and   T-\nthlrta. \u2014 Sizes 2 to 16.\nTOT-N-TEEN 8H0P.\nJust received! Another ahigment\nof sweet-pea netting; 66e per ball.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nOirla' full circle skirt dresses-\nsizes 12-18\u2014each. $3.05.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nFor Freshness and Goodness, try\nOR AY'S Chocolates.. Phone 1347,\n934 Josephine. Street,\nWATCH REPAIRS\nFor reliable repairs at moderate\nprices try COLLINSON'S JEWEL-\nLERY STORE, 661 Baker Street\n\"Rexoleum, Congoleum, and Inlaid Linoleum-, several colors to\nChoose from in 6' and 0' widths at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nIf BUTTERFIELD oan't llx it,\nthrow it away. Watch work prompt.\nly done and fully guaranteed al\nreasonable prices.\nClear Sheet Plastic,  1\/16\",   \".\",\n!\/16\", Vt\" Lucite, 36\" x 48\" sheets,\npr out sizes at\ni   T. H. WATER8 A CO. LTD.\nErasco Paint Remover \u2014 Leaves\n\u00aburface ready for refinlshlng \u2014\nI\/16's, 95c \u2014 %'s, $1.50.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nL.A. TO B, OF R.T.\nRegular meeting tonight, 8 p.m.\n'Those Improvements to your\nproperty\u2014are they covered by insurance? If not, see BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY today.\nBE ON TIME\nSee our displays of Westclox\nClocks and Watches.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nDecorative card tables. \u2014 When\nfolded,  they become fireplaee\nscreens or just a pretty picture. In\nlight and dark wood. \u2014 $5.85.\nMe & Mo (NEL80N) LTD.\nYOU ARE INVITED to attend a\npublic meeting In Memorial Hall,\nWednesday evening at 7:30. Films\nwill be shown. No charge. Canadian\nArthritis and Rheumatism Society.\nEverything for the Bride \u2014 from\nShower and Wedding Gifts to beautifully arranged Wedding and\nChurch Flowers.\nCOVENTRY8' FLOWER SHOP\nYoungstown all-steel kitchen cupboards .are now. available, tailor-\nbuilt to your exact needs, skillfully\nand ruggedly built by the world's\nlargest makers of steel kitchens.\nSee the model kitchen of these\nmodern units at\nHIPPERSON'S.\nNew Empire Oil Range, complete\nwith Kemac burner \u2014 $263.00.\n.6 niece dlnetter suite. Spec. $59.90.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nal] mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n41S HALL ST. PHONE 1560\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSINDEL \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late John Thomas Sindei will\nbe held from the Thompson Funeral\nHome Wednesday at 2 p.m. The\nVery Rev. T. L. Leadbeater will\nofficiate and Interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park.\nWooisL. SoAdUft.\nRealistic Films Poor Propaganda\nFor America in Occupied Europe\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, June 28 (AP)-\nFilms that paint an unfavorable\npicture of American life are draw-\ning crowds in Germany, two Hollywood film-makers reported today.\nThe movie men are producer Richard Goldstone and director Andrew Marton,, recently returned\nfrom filming \"The Devil Makei\nThree\" in Germany.\n\"We had a good chance to observe\nthe movie habits of tbe Germans,\"\nremarked Goldstone. \"One of the\ndisturbing things-wat that pictures,\nwhich hold America ln a bad light\nare doing big business over there.\nFor Instance, 'The Big ' Carnival'\ndrew big crowds because oi Ita\ntreatment of fhe American public'\"\nFLOP IN U.S.\nOddly enough, the film, which\nwas originally called \"Ace In the\nHole\", wat considered a flop in the\nUnited States. It starred Kirk Douglas and Jan Sterling.\n\"'A Streetcar Named Desire' is\nanother big hit in Germany,' Goldstone added. \"It Is admired not\nmerely for its drama, but because of\nits social Implications. The Germans\ndon't think of it as a story which\ncould happen in any country, but\none which is native to America.\"\n\"Also,\" Marton remarked, \"they\npoint to it as proof that not all\nAmericana own cars and other luxuries.\" *\nWhat is the reason for the popularity of such films?\n\"There Is nothing'In the booki\nthat says an occupying, power\nshould be liked,\" Marton explained.\nNATURAL REACTION\nIt is the reaction of those who\nhave been conquered, Goldstone\nadded. \"They are always complaining about the Americans. They constantly blame General Eisenhower\nfor stopping at tthe Elbe\nfor stopping at the Elbe and not\ngoing on to Berlin, You can't explain to them that he.was acting\nunder Orders, even though the Germans have been noted for following\norders themselves.''\nBoth movie men agreed that U.S.\nfilms which paint a bad picture of\nAmerican life should be withheld\nfrom Germany.\nThey explained that the Germans\ngrudgingly gave permission for the\nmaking of \"The Devil Makes\nThree\", which concerns the smuggling of gold by Nazis in postwar\nGermany.\nPARIS, June JS (AP)-Premier\nAntoine Flnay, after les* than four\nmontha in office, hai dealt heavy\nblows at the twin threats of Communism and Inflation ln France.\nThe imall-town business man,\nwho gave France her first Conservative\" government since the\nSecond World War, hat alternately\ncajoled and threatened a fractious\nParliament to let him stay In power\nwhile be gingerly tried out his\nown kind of new deal for the\ncountry.\nEach successful atep on thlt difficult way has brought him n wider\npopularity with .\"Monsieur duPont\"\n\u2014the French John K. Public, who\ntttt things ai he does himself. And\nPinay's confidence in himself has\n'grown along, with Increased confidence in \"the Pinay experiment.\"\nHe started with a modest program\u2014to give France a long, overdue budget so she could meet her\ndaily bills, to hold wages at their\nexisting level, to try and force soaring prices'down.\nHe succeeded completely on the\nNorth America's Firsl Atomic\nPower Plan! Under Consfruclion\nCALGARY, June 23 (CP) \u2014 Carl\nO. Nickle, Progressive Conservative member of parliament for Calgary West, arrived in Calgary today\nen route for Banff where he will\naddress the annual convention of\nthe Junior Chamber of Commerce\nof Canada tomorrow. He will return immediately after his speech\nto Ottawa.\nSpeaking at Sarnie, Ont., last\nTuesday, Mr. Nickle revealed that\nNorth America's first atomic power\nplant was under construction in\nMichigan. On its completion a similar plant would be built ln Texas\nby the same \"private company.\"\nWhen interviewed here today Mr.\nNickle said that his information\nwas confidential and that he did not\nwish to reveal any further details\nof the project at this stage.\nHe did say, however, that the\nplant was designed to supply electricity to an entire city by supplying\nheat for steam-power. Tha companies concerned were the Dow Chemical Company and the Consolidated\nEdison Company and the first plant\nwas located in North Michigan.\nThe scheme waa not state-sponsored and was a product of private\nenterprise. The U. S. Atomic Energy\nCommission revealed last April that\nit had been in negotiation with the\ntwo flrma named regarding joint-\nresearch into the application of atomic energy to industrial use.\nMr. Nickle said that he had disclosed this information \"from a re\nliable source\" at Sarnie to stress the\nimportance of speed in reaching a\ndecision on Canada's national natu\nral gas policy. Far from the estimate of C. D. Howe, federal minister\nof trade and commerce, that atom-\nic energy would not be a competitor in the industrial fuel field for\nten years, it would be, a serious\ncompetitor by 1953.\nScottish Games Big\nDraw for July 1st\nVICTORIA, July 23 (CP) - Competitors from many points in the\nUnited States as wall as the Western provinces are expected to head\nfor Victoria July 12 for the 15th annual Scottish games slated for MacDonald Park.\nA highlight of the Summer tourist season, the gathering thit year\nwill include a march past ot massed\npipe bands.\nIt will be in addition to the individual competitions in piping by\nleading pipers of the West coast\nHighland dancing, track events,\ntossing the cabre and bicycle races\nwill be among the many events.\nENGINEERING\nMANAGEMENT\nFORESTRY\njtffi**\nc&ma'mm\nLIMITED\nFORESTERS \u2022  ENGINEERS\n81! We$H<rftiHq$, Vancouver I, B,\nIf. 5, Favorable\nTo U. K. General\nWASHINGTON, June 23 (Reuters)\u2014The United States is looking\nfavorably on a proposal to appoint\na British genefaj to the United\nNations high command in the Korean war, it was learned today.\nThe proposal has been given provisional approval by the United\nNations Supreme Commander, Gen.\nMark Clark, during the visit to\nTokyo of Britain's Defence Minister, Earl Alexander.\nUnder the plan, a Briton would\nbe appointed deputy to Clark's\npresent chief of staff.\nFor the last two years the U. N\ntop command hi Tokyo has been\nexclusively American following the\ndecision of the U. N. to ask the U.S.\nto assume the command. The British general in charge of the Commonwealth division has only divisional responsibilities.\nAcheson in London\nFor Vital Meetings\nLONDON, June 23 (AP)\u20148tate\nSecretary Dean Acheson of the\nUnited States arrived here today\nfor vital three-power talks.\nHit missions It expected te\ncentra around problems In Europe and the Middle Eatt He\nplant to visit London, Berlin, VI\nanna, and\u2014on hit way home\u2014\nBraall.\nHit mott Important conferences\nare expected to be In London,\nwith Foreign 8eoretary Anthony\nEden and Foreign Minister Robert\nSchuman of France,\nFLYING CLUB AT\nMEDICINE HAT\nLETHBRIDGE, June 23 (CP) \u2014\nManager Ronald Watts of the Lethbridge Flying Club announced Saturday that the group has established\na satellite flying club in Medicine\nHat.\nEleven members, nine men and\ntwo women, joined the new club at a\nrecent meeting in Medicine Hat. A\ntraining plane and a flying instruc.\ntor from Lethbridge will be sent to\nthe new group, which will use the\nMedicine Hat airport. A second\nplane will be sent when the need\narises.\nALBERTA ELECTION 800N\nEDMONTON, June 23 (CP)\nVarious political parties had nominated 101 candidates by Saturday\nfor the next Alberta general elee\ntion, date of which has not yet been\nannounced. Sixty-one seats will be\nat stake.\nSocail Credit leads with 33 candidates chosen, including six cabinet\nministers. The Liberals follow with\n28, C.C.F. 21, Progressive Conservatives 13, Labor-Progressives 2, Labor\n1, and Independent Social Credit\nMore nominating conventions are\nscheduled.\nQUEBEC, June 23 (CP)\u2014Laval\nUniversity Saturday awarded honorary degrees to 24 Canadians and\nsix Americans for services made in\nadvancement of French language\nand culture. The awards were\nmade at a special ceremony in con.\nnectlon with the third French\nLanguage Congress.\nPremier Duplessis of Quebeo received Laval's top honor, a university doctorate established this year\nto mark the university's centenary.\nPinay, Small-Town Business Man,\nBrings StrengthJo Tired France\nfirst point and, with some sue\ncesa also on the others, his program\nsteadily grew bolder.\nCAUGHT BY SURPRISE\nHis most spectacular success to\ndate has beep his bold onslaught on\nthe Communists.\nWith a series of swift moves\nwhich hardly left them time for\nbreath, he seized their leader,\nJacques Duclos, and clapped him in\njail en charges of plotting against\nthe state, had' police raid Communist headquarters through the\ncountry,' and firmly broke\u2014with\nnon-Communist workers' aid\u2014the\nresulting wavo of Red strikes and\ndemonstration.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B- C, June\n23 (CP)\u2014Three firemen arid a club\nsteward were overcome by smoke\nSaturday night when a $19,000 fire\ndamaged -the Elks Club Hall,\nThe Czechs and Slovaks firit\nsettled in the fifth century in the\nEuropean territory they still occupy.\nFor Canada's Hotel Operators\nBANFF, Alta., June 2S <CP) \u2014\nDelegates to the Hotel Association\nof Canada convention hare have\ndecided that Individual hotel operators will have to determine how\nthey value the United States dollar ln Canada.\nDalton J. Caswell of Sundrldge,\nOnt., chairman of the board, said\nif not handled properly, the problem of whether to accept the American dollar at par with Canadian\nmoney or at a discount could cause\na great deal of embarrassment to\nfhe Hotel Association.\n'.'If we were crude with the situation, lt would create a lotof ill-\nwill,\" Mr. Caswell said. \"We have\nto handle this thing fairly.\"\nSome of the delegates said they\nalready were charging two per cent\ndiscounts while others accepted the\nU. S, currency at par.\nSeveral said they charged tha\ndiscount only on the hotel's facilities, such as room reservations\nand in beverage rooms.\nVISITOR AGAINST L088\nAn American visitor to the con\nvention said he did not tee why\nthe hotels should take a loss.\nDlwood Ingledue of Hollywood,\npublisher of two hotel trade magi\nazines, said Americans would find\ntheir new situation peculiar, but\nCanadian hotel operators should\nnot take a loss just to satisfy a few\n\"ruffled patrons.\"\nMr. Caswell aald some Canadian\nhotels are losing at much as $1600\nto $1700 a month by operating telephone switchboards. He recommended that charges be increased\nfrom 10 to 19 cents a call.\nMr. Caswell-said high waget \u00bbre |\ncausing telephone companies ' to.\ncharge more for the service!. I\nFrank Jeckell, general manager\nof the- Hotel Association said tho ,\nhotel  itidustry should follow th* |\nexample of the Dominion Brewers Association which pays $190,-\n000,000 yearly ln taxes.\nThe Soviet Union declared war\non Japan on August 8, 194$, just\none week before the Japanese surrendered to the Allies.\nOperational Alrtraft\nF-86\nssm\nAdvanced Flying\nT-33\n<*  \u25a0*!\nPrimary Trainet\nHARVARD\nNew RfiflF aircrew courses enaUe\nHIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES\nfesterta\nPROFESSIONAL CAREER IMMEDIATELY\nWith frfesh courses about to begin, you can\nstart to earn $200 a month within a matter\nof weeks, in training for Pilot, Radio Officer\nor Navigation Officer.\nYou will get a thorough training in all the\ntechniques of modern aviation and flying\noperations.\nWhatfs, more, you'll get valuable administration, public relations and leadership\nexperience.\nThroughout your training, you will get   .\nFor full information, see the Career Counsellor.at the ^\naddress in fhe coupon \u2014 or mail the coupon today! i\nfood, living accommodation, flying kit and\nclothing provided free.\nOn winning your Wings, you will have\nfull-fledged Officer rank on a Short Service\nCommission basis, with the opportunity to\nbuild for yourself a permanent, professional\ncareer as a member of the RCAF.\nTo qualify, you must have the equivalent of Junior\nor Senior Matriculation or Collego oducatlon...\nyou must bo 17 but not yet 25... and you must\nbe physically fit according to Air Force Air Cxtm\nstandards.\nRCAF\nROYAl CANADIAN AIR FORCE\nR.C.A.F.   RECRUITING   UNIT\nPott Office Building,   Lethbridge, Alta.,   Phone 6145\nPlease null le me, witboul obligation, lull particular, regarding\nemolmtsst requirements end openings now available its lie JlCjW.\nNAME d-euePrint) ...... \u201e\t\n(Surname)\n(Chriitsin Niw)\nSTREET ADDRESS.\nCITY\t\n...PROVINCB;\nBDUCATION (by grade and province) .\n..AGB\t\n..... CA1.14JJ\n,:-M'\/.J.ri-\u00ab_;s.ji_.\n^^^mnt ' .MMiSi\nI\n r\nYM.W.iHaw?\nSADDLE\nOXFORDS\nTe Fit Infanta te Women\n\u2022 Brown   ond   White\n\u2022 Blue ond White\nNEOLITE SOLES\nSize Range and Prices from\n$3.95 to $7.95\nR. ANDREW\n&co.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASH-ON\nEstablished 1002\nNelson Social\nA Nelson couple has returned from a Regina wedding\nand a bride was honored at a shower to provide highlights\nto the social news, i : t\nREGINA HOLIDAY . .'. Mr. and Contest winners were Miss Valen-\nMrs. W. C. Wicken of Carbonate'tlnB an* T ~\nStreet, have returned after spending the past two weeks guests of\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Berthiaume, of\nRegina. While in Regina they attended the wedding of Mrs. Wick-\nen's brother, Constable E. A, Berthiaume of the R.C.M.P.\nRETURN HOME ... Mr. and\n'Mrs. A. Jullien and son returned\nto Calgary last weekend after holidaying in Nelson and Penticton\nMrs. Jullien is a niece of M. J\n   ,....,._*_ w_re J\n'tine and Lorna Lewis.\nss    *    \u2022\nFROM VANCOUVER ... Mr.\n'and Mrs. John McKay of Vancouver are city visitors\nBUSINESS TRIP . .\u25a0. Miss Susan\nTawse of Cedar Point, returned by\n' air on Saturday from a business\ntrip to Vancouver.\nWomen in North\nExpert Workers\n_, ... .._\u00ab__, ... s-aumer Stree\n| Friday evening at a shower honor\ning   Miss   Marguerltte   Valentine\nwhose marriage takes place Mon\nday. The guest of honor was pre-\n\u2022 sented with a hostess glass-set and\nYELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T. (CP) \u2014 lunpheon set by Miss Neta Waters.\nWomen in 'civlli-ed\" parts of Can-\t\nPRAIRIE TRIP ... Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. R. Andrews, Granite Road, returned   Sunday   from   Hlverhurst,\nI Sask., where they went to attend\n,        - j the funeral of three family friends\nHONOR  BRIDE   . . .   Mrs.   Les who were killed in an automobile'\nPiatt was co-hostess at the home of accident on June 14.'\nMrs. A. Waters, 524 Latimer Street |\nFrlrissss _\u201e_-)-- -s _    \u25a0\n. 516 Mill Street.\n \u2014 ... -s.sss_.u parts ol Canada would be hard put to match the\ninitiative of the wives living in this\nFar North .mining town. The women here demonstrated their ability\nto produce professional examples of\nsuch handicrafts as leather work,\nrugs, tray and textile painting and\nother articles.\n\"Living in the North certainly\nhelps people to find out what they\ncan do.\" said a visitor to the recent j\nexhibition of the Yellowknife handicrafts Guild, one of the largest in\nCanada. It had a .membership of\n115 in the past year.\nThe display showed results of\nspare hours profitably spent ln\n\" weaving materials for handbags\nand belts, towels and original clothing, hooking rugs and creating\ndelicate ornaments from clay. Artists showed landscapes and portraits\nand a feature was the exhibit of\nbronze and wood carvings.\nGray Creek\nGRAY CREEK, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMra. Norris from Stockholm, Sask.\nare holidaying here.\nMax Benthlen has sold his ranch\nand house to Oscar Kirschner of\nSundre. Alta.\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Wirslg have-\nreturned from Sundre, where theyj\nattended the graduation of their\nson Claus. j\nMr. and Mrs. Raymond King from\nTrail are visiting Mrs. Stewart.\nMrs. Preece has as -guests her]\nmother, Mrs. Gray and her sister\nfrom Vancouver.\nMrs. Sommerville and son Darrel\nhave come.from Kelowna to join\nher husband here.\nHousewife Is\nPicked for Beatify\nLONDON CP) \u2014 In a subway\nstation In Oxford Circus, In the\nheart of downtown London, pretty\nDoris Bartrlpp works as a porter\nsweeping the station platform,\nIn a new book soon to be published, entitled \"Forty-Eight Beautiful Women of Our Time,\" a\npicture of Mrs. Bartrlpp appears\na few pages away from that of\nQueen  Frederlka of Greece.\n\"But I don't think I'm anything very much,\" says Doris, 24,\nwho lives In a working-class\napartment In Hackney with her\ntruck-driver husband. \"You ought\nto see my sister Betty.\"\nThe 48 women whose portraits\nappear In the book were drawn\nby  Nicholas  Egan, a 30-year-old\nartist'who   specializes   In   head\nand-ihoulders drawings\nMr. ond Mrs. McEwen\nTo Celebrate 25th\nWedding Anniversary\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. (Mickey) McEwen will celebrate their 25th wed-,\nding anniversary Wednesday when\nthey will be at home to their friends\nin the evening at 515 Fourth Street.\nThey were married in Nelson ln\n1927 at the Church of the Redeemer\nand have lived here since that time.\nTO CRESTON . . . Three Nelson\noptometrists, J. A. C. Laughton,\nD. G. Littlewood and D. E. Hunter,\ntravelled to Creston Saturday to\nattend the semi-annual meeting of\nthe Kootenay Optometrists 'Association. Also attending were two\nTrail optometrists and two from\nEast Kootenay.\n*    \u00ab    ss\nHOME AGAIN ... Mr. and Mrs.\n'jack Wood, Gore Street, have returned from the East where they\nwere visiting their son and daugh-\nter-ln-Iaw.' Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nWood of Hamilton, Ont.\n... j\n'IN HOSPITAL ... J. A. Wilson,\nHendryx Street, is a patient in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\n...\nBACK TO U.S Mr. and Mrs.\nWilfred   (Bill)   Wilson,  who  have\nbeen visiting with Mr. and Mrs. J.\nA. Wilson, Hendryx Street, have re-1\nturned to Virginia where Mr. Wil-1\nson  is  stationed.  Mr.  Wilson  has\njust returned from service ln Korea.\n*    .    ss\nVISITOR . . . Munroe McRae of\nVancouver is visiting at the home\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A.\nCuster.\n-794\nPottery, China Attracts\nCanucks at British Fair\nLONDON (CP)\u2014By the time the British Industries\nFair closed its doors this month, many of the 300 visiting\n, Canadian buyers had stopped for a chat with rosy-cheeked,\nwhite-haired Dulcie Vaughan, owner of a pottery and china\nexhibit. . I\nBlack and white, always a favorite with chic women,\nappears today in a breath-taking feminine version.\nHere we have it in a really dreamy evening gown\nthat is forever young and gay and perfect for girls of all\nagds. Mqde of black and white organdy, the print is of\nlarge black trees etched on a ground of white. The entire\nfront of the dress, from the pointed bodice top to the\nfloor, is a flurry of organdy ruffles. A gloriously full\nskirt completes this entrancing picture.\nFor Mrs. Vaughan has more than\n- trade interest in Canada this\nyear. Her 21-year-old daughter\nCarol recently emigrated to Canada\nand settled in Victoria.\nMrs. Vaughan button-holed visitors with North American accents at\nevery opportunity. Another incentive for this plump, competent\nwoman, who runs a pottery and\nchina works in London's Chelsea\narea and in South Devon, is the\nknowledge that her hand-painted\nchina sells well in Canadian mar-\n[kets.\nSPORTS'DESIQN8\nHer tea, coffee and breakfast\nsets sport hunting and racing\nscenes, gun dogs, game birds, fish\nand fly designs. And there are\nspecial, skiing numbers for the\nCanadian market.\nMrs. Vaughan's stand, with white\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952\n11111111111n1111111111111111111111111111m1.il\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\nFreeman Furniture Co;]\nPHONE 118 - NELSON\nThe House ot Furniture Valuer\n11111111 -11111111111 n 111111111 ^\nTrinity LA. Sends\nParcel to Europe       m\nFRUITVALE, B.C. - The TrlnlU. 1\nLutheran Ladies Aid authorized I\nshipment of another parcel to their I\nadopted family in Europe. Tho |\ngroup met at the home ot Mrs,\nWilliam Callaghan. \"I\nReverend Frick led members In a I\ndiscussion on the Gospel according I\nI to St. Luke. I\nRefreshments were served by the I\nhostess at the end of the business |\nI meeting.\na banquet given on opening'day,\n1 Britain's treasury chief, Richard\nButler, said \"an Immense D-Day\ninvasion*' of foreign markets was\nnecessary.\nIn most cases, stall-holders found\nthat whereas buyers last year came\nwith more orders than'they could\nhandle, this year things had to be\n\"sold.\"\nThere are, of course, firms who\nexhibit more from courtesy than\nnecessity, already having established good markets,in Canada and\nthe United States. One such is a\ncash register firm whose representatives say that no less than 90 per\ncent of last*\" year's production went\nto Canadian. and American markets.\nTARTAN CLAD\nCanadians are also the chief\nbuyers of bone china figures dres-\n!sed in seven different Scottish tar.\ntans\u2014nnr-o-S    I.    \t\nWoman Successful as Burner Salesman\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 An at-\nnr.H...  s.1\u2014.s.   >-   '-\u2022\nNew Denver\n\u2014 -.\u00ab-._. wr; \u2014 An attractive blonde In her early 20s\nIs setting the pace for Montreal\nsalesmen, Ann Pitt has sold\n$160,000 worth of Industrial oil\nburners, of all things,\n'Between appointments, she\nstudied at McGIII University for\nher arts degree,'graduating recently with second class honors\nIn French, and English.\nShe said her parents \"at first\nwere flabbergasted about my\nIndustrial oil burners, but now\nthey're quite accustomed to the\nwhole thing. My clients are Invariably surprised, too, I usually\nhave to spend half my selling\ntime explaining how I got Into\nthe business.\"\nMiss Pitt got her Job by answering a classified newspaper\nadvertisement. Her employer,\nStanley McGee, said \"only one\ngirl out of a thousand could\nmake a success of what Ann's\ndoing.\"\nAnn's . highest expression of\nsatisfaction Is: \"I've never been\nthrown out of an office yet.\"\nPresbyterian Guild\nHold Tea, Bake Sale\nNEW DENVER, B.C. - Mr. and\nMrs. ft. W. Gillett of Brandon, Man.,\nare the 'guests of the former's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr, 'and\nMrs. Joseph* Depretto. '\nI Mrs. G. Ronald Nelson returned\nto her home in Calgary after visiting relatives\nPEN PAL MOVES TO.\nJOB IN CANADA\nLONDON, June 23 (CP)\u2014Sylvia\nColato, an English girl who learned\nabout Canada largely from a pen\npal, leaves shortly to settle in Montreal. |\nJ Or's-inOdT W Clarke have     Miss Colat\u00b0. \u00ab ground hostess for I    Mr. and Mrs. G. Cormier and fa-\nli.\u00bbt7'.tSf7rf_i.L.Tth.rMn5 Trans-Canada  Air Lines,  flew  to I mily returned to their home in Spo-\nK._   _H^?\\K To\u2122*0 last February to meet Mary j kane, after visiting friends and rel\nLodge convention A.F. and A.M. at McIi(!oA .he-Canadian girI who had  atives throughout the Pass.\nnanaimo. been her pen friend for 11 v..-. \u00abl    r.- r,\t\nClarence Scatchard of Patt\u00bb\u2122ns,\nNatal Notes\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Mrs. W. Stephenson and Mrs. R. Carusoe, R.N., nurses on the Michel Hospital staff left\nMichel for the coast where they will\nattend a nurses convention at Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Cormier and fa-\nilv rssf,.\u2014j '- \"-   \u25a0    \u25a0\nBALFOUR, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nW. H. Saunders have had as guests\ntheir son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\n,  - -\u2014-, _-~>v        and Mrs. H. Saunders, and grand-\nThe   Young   Women's   Guild   of daughter Jo-Anne of Vancouver.\n.First Presbyterial. Church  held  a     Mr- and Mr\u00ab- J- R\"\"hl hav<* re-\nsuccessful tea and bake sale at the tur?ed to Vancouver.\nIhomeof Mrs. J. B. H-s-ri. aw \u25a0*-'\u25a0       M'\"\"\t\nBalfour Notes\n  .-_ <\u00bb,-. ussste sale at tht\nhome of Mrs. J. B. Harris, 424 Latimer Street.- Mrs. W. A. Manson and\nthe hostess received the guests.\nThe tea table, decked with a\ndainty Jace cloth and centred with\n[a shallow bowl of roses was presided over by Mrs. L, S. Van Mossel\nand Mrs. W. R. Jeffs.\nMrs. H. Speers and Mrs. J. Willy\nwere in charge of the bake table.\nMrs. E. McBean, Mrs. Shumaker,\n[Mrs. A. McKay and Miss S. Togami\nassisted with serving,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Oakley of Vancouver are guests of their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Hudson Oakley.\nCOA\nl\nTOWLER\nFuel A  Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\nMRS. VYSE HONORED AT\nFRIENDLY CLUB MEETING  (th. past moVthTri\nFRUITVALE, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. Robert home in Vancouver.\nyse^.was honored at a mssss\u00abss\u00bb \u2022\u00ab!   \u00bb\u00bb\u25a0-   \u00ab   -  -   \u25a0\u25a0\n \u201e    .-  ......  SSSSSSJ.\n. ' \"\"I McLeod, the-Canadian girl who had\n[anairao. beenherpenfriendforllyears.lt\n^\".T* !Lca<chard oi Pattwson was just a brief visit, but Sylvia\n'sited New Denver. I uked wh_t Ap M-. _nd decid_d to\n-.\u2014_- ,sss_s _>.-. \u2014 Mrs. Robert\nVyse was honored at a meeting of\nthe Friendly Club at the home of\nMrs. Thomas Moon. Highlight of\nthe evening was a presentation to\nMrs. Vyse in honor of her birthday.\nMrs. Len Wade won the hostesss\npri.e.\n\u2014_,__,--   _>-ssss;si_j\nvisited New Denver.\nMrs. Oswald Wyeberley and her\ntwo children who visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Broughton for\nI the past month, returned to their\nMrs. A, E. Latto who visited her\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. James Latto, has returned to\nher home in Winnipeg, Manitoba.\nMiss Elsie Sundby of Penticton\n.. is visiting at the home of Mr. and\nI Mrs. Andy Anderson.\nemigrate.\nIn Montreal Miss Colato will\nwork as a T.C.A. passenger agent.\nShe is 22, and speaks four languages, English, French, German\nand Italian.\nQueen's Bay\n\u25a0.TTYntni......     -__._.-_\nQUEEN'S BAY, B.C. v\u2014 Private\nB. McDonald has returne'd to Currie\nBarracks, Calgary, after spending\nhis furlough here with his wife and\nfamily.\nMr. and Mrs. Quentin G. Whishaw\nspent a few days at Metaline Falls,\nWash., where she visited Mr. and\nMrs. R. Stebbins.\nMrs. George Porteous left this\nweek to visit her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Colgur\nat Fernie, B.C.\n(Dabal 74ft. UMl\nDr. R. R. Glasgow has retunrned |\nto Natal after attending a doctor's\nconvention at Banff. Alta.\nMiss Irene Mannion of Calgary J\nwas a visitor to the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Mannion. |\n%udtecAa#L       f\nfty. tXauAa, (tfhask\/L]\nJAM ori\nJELLY\nPrices like these prove\nyou can save af SAFEWAY\nCheck in tha Us-aMow.atypic-Uipttup of .tenia y^\n, ihopping trip. Add tho pricM. Then compare the total with whit yen would\npay elsewhere. See hart Sofewiy'i polity of low prices on off iUmi on s*vo\nyou money. Don't judge livings on \"speciali*' alone. Comparo oU pricca-\nand wi bclimre you will tgm yea get mo\u00bb for your money nt 8afew\u00abs;\na \u00ab m      ^ttt \u2014. \u2014.- -\nMAKE SURE THOSE PRECIOUS\nVACATION DAYS ARE COMPLETE ,\nHave the Nelson Daily News\ngo- right along with you I\nITS SO EASY TO ARRANGE!\nJust see your news dealer, carrier, postmaster,\nor drop a card or letter fo our\nCirculation Department.\nENQUIRE TODAY!\nRates by mail 250 per week \u2014 $1.00 per month\nJfelamt iatlg 2fowa\nPHOME 144\n_ . . _. -\u2014\u201e _,vU mn \u00abgrw yen get\nAIRWAY COFFEE\nMARGARINE K\nFROZEN PEAS\nMild, mellow. Ground fresh\nwhen you buy. 16 or. bog\nAylmer.\n'2 or. carton\nhway Standard.\nSunhy Dawn, fancy.\n48 or. can\t\nTownhouse, natural.\n48 or. can\t\nR9164   \\l-K:*>\n4-DRE8SES-IN-ONE\nONE dress to sew, TOUB dresses\nto wear when you make this magic\nbudget-saver! Count the combinations! First, it's t princess sundress.\nAdd the bright white pique collar\nand look! It's a date dress! Switch\nbolero and capelet for two more\ndresses)\nPattern R01S4: Misses' sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 18 takes 4%\nyards 35-lneh; H yard contrast.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS. STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily |\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson, B. C.\nTROU88EA0 TRs-ASUflt\nBRIDES! This pattern is for you!\nEmbroider these lovely motifs on\npillowcases, towels, or scarfs for.\nyour trousseau. Add eyelet ruffling.\nSo beautiful!\nEasy embroidery plus ready-made\neyelet. Pattern 604: transfer 6 motifs\nI about 4\"sixl3 inches.\nSend.TWENTY FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept,, Nelson,\nB. C. Print plainly P\/.TTERN number, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nSuch a colorful roundup of handiwork ideas! Send twenty-five cents\nnow for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalogue. Choose your patterns from our gaily illustrated toys, I\ndolls, household and personal acces- j\nsories. A pattern for a handbag is\nprinted right In the book.\nWoman Escapes i\nfrom laxative lialii. I\n\"After trying many kinds of remedies   to   relieve   constipation,   I\nfinally turned to 0 daily helping of\nall-bran. No constipation now!\"\nconfides happy Montreal woman.1\nAnd delicious Kellogg's all-bran\nmay bring back your youthful regularity if your suffering has beet due\nto lack of bulk in your diet. It's the\nonly type ready-to-egt cereal that\nsupplies all the bulk you may need.\nall-bran is high in iron and protein\n\u2014not; Habit-forming. Eat H cupful\nof Kellogg's all-bran dally; drink\nplenty of liquids. Kellogg's is so .\nowe you'll like all-bran that if\nyou're not completely satisfied after\n10 days,  send empty carton  to\nKellogg's London, Ont., and get\nDOUBLE VOira UONBV BACK I\nGrapefruit Segments K\nTOMATO JUICE \u00ab\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nVEGETABLE SOUP .\u00ab\u00a3_\nCORNED BEEF LOAF -\"\" \"\"\",\"ta\"\nPORK and BEANS -f\nC0H0E SALMON ..._\nGRANULATED SUGAR\n\u2014 \u2014-\u00bb\u2014\u25a0-\u25a0   \\t-t%i\n12 or. can .\nTaite felli.\n\" \"> ox. can\t\nMoonlight, fancy.\nT3A or. can\t\nRINS0G,OBt,i\"\nt. C. fine.\n3 Ib. bag .\n-jAtuk. pAoduat\nCANTALOUPE\nWATERMELON\nHothouse Tomatoes \u00a3\"\u00ab,. __\n\u2014 SutvtantwL Tnsaii.\n91c\n35c\n25c\n19c\n35c\n29c\n13c\n38c\n12c\n29c\n59c\n73c\nImported, Jumbo.\nServe with ice cream\t\nCalifornia Klondykes.\nSweet - _^^\n-lb. 18c\nlb. lie\nlb. 39c\n^k T-Bone Steak\nT-r Ground Beef\n* Spare Ribs\nor ROAST.\nBlue Brand\nfrom\nBlue Brand \t\nSide ,fresh\nPrices Effective June 23rd and 24th\nAFFWAV\nlb.89c\nlb. 55c\nlb. 35c\n\u25a0i  __\u25a0\n Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson.  British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost Office .Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n\u2022THB AUDIT: BUR-JAU OF CffiCUl-ATlONS\nrue-day, June 24,1952 \u25a0\ni \u25a0 \u2014\u2014\nNew Approach\nIn Korea Desireable\nLord Alexander, Britain's Minister\nof Defence, has made a three-day tour\n;: of Korea without disclosing whether\nhis visit had any other purpose than to\ninspect a battlefront where British\ntroops are engaged. Recently in Britain\nand ih other countries there has been\ncriticism of American conduct of the\ncease-fire talks, management of prison\n> camps and handling of the Korean political situation. Before Lord Alexan-\n| der leit London it was widely believed,\n1 though never officially stated, that his\nmission was to discuss these complaints\nwith American com'anders and to ask\nfor British representation on the\nUnited Nations negotiating team.\nThere is no evidence that he did these\nthings. In fact the evidence is the other\n'\u25a0way.\nM On his arrival in Korea Lord Alex-\nbander said that he would leave it entirely to General Mark Clark, the U.N.\nCommander-in-Chief, to decide whe-\nj ther   a ( Commonwealth   spokesman\n\" should be brought into the armistice\ndiscussions. The British people, he said\nlater, would be pleased by such an appointment, but he would not ask for\n\u25a0 it. This was a polite acknowledgment,\n- the Toronto Globe and Mail points out,\nthat Korea has been mainly an American responsibility and that the auxiliary Powers are not in a position to\npress for a voice in Korean affairs. But\n'Lord Alexander bent over backward\nin making this point as he ended his\nKorean trip. He said nomination of a\nBritish delegate would be Inadvisable\nr because it might give the Communists\n:: a false impression of a change in Allied\ntactics.\nThe Communists have shown little\nif any respect for the. tactics employed\nup till now by the U.N. representatives.\nFor 11 months the cease-fire talks have\nhobbled from one deadlock to another.\nIn that time U.N. has completely lost\nthe military initiative it held last Summer. The Communists, according to the\nmilitary critic'of the New York Times,\nnow have air superiority, equality or\nperhaps superiority in artillery, and\nn'early three times as many armed men\nas U.N. and South Koreans together.\n, In short, remarked the Toronto paper, they have used the cease-fire talks\n\u25a0 as a blind for reinforcement on a scale\nthat makes a U.N. victory next to impossible. It can hardly be supposed, in\nthese circumstances, that the Communists have been deeply impressed by\nthe skill or firmness shown by the U.N.\nnegotiators since last July. It is much\nmore likely that General Nam II and\n\u25a0his friends in Peiping and Moscow are\ncongratulating themselves on having\nout-manoeuvred UN. at all points.\nU.N. has not merely failed up till\nnow to win either a clean-cut victory\nor a workable draw. It has fallen down\nbadly in its .promise to bring democracy and prosperity to the Koreans.\nThe Korean peasant knows very little\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may bt published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual signature ot the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as\nevidence ot good faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In the waste paper basket\nParent Thanks\nSchool Drivers\nTo the \"Editor:\nSir\u2014I think the bus drivers of the Nelson\nschool buses deserve a big \"Thank you\" for the\nsafe driving of the school pupils during the\nyear, especially in the Winter time, when the\nroads were so slippery.\nWe certainly appreciate It.\nA PARENT.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Nemes ot persons\nliking questions Will not'bo published,\nThar* io no charge for this tervloe.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBV MAIL except whero there Is obvious\nnecessity -fpr privacy.\nInterested, Trill\u2014I notice you sometimes print\nwine recipes to be made at home. How\ndoes one make gooseberry wine?\nTo one gallon of water allow three pounds\nof gooseberries, and to each gallon of resulting\nliquor allow four poundi of sugar. Take well,\ngrown bttt green .gooseberries, top ind tail\nthem, ind wash, Put them Into i tub with \u25a0\nUttle of the water and mash thoroughly, then\nadd tha rest. of the water ind stir briskly.\nCover with cloth ind leave four or five days,\nstirring frequently, then drain off, measure,\nand idd sugar in above proportion. Pour mix\nture Into a barrel, bung lightly, and let f er-\n'ment for about three weeks.Keep ln cool, dry\nplace. When absolutely all fermentation' has\ndefinitely ceased, bottle and cork securely.\nLay bottles on their aides. In about eight\nmonths wine will be ready to serve.\nK. J., Castlegar\u2014Where is the nearest Central\n. Mortgage and Housing Corporation office?\n973 Eldorado Street, Trail.\nMrs. T. L\u201e Nakusp\u2014A short time ago you published the address of a B, C. herbalist. I\nmislaid it. Would you mind repeating?\nBeverley   Herbal   Dispensary,   6$2   Ellis\nStreet, Penticton, B. C.\nD. R., Nelson\u2014Wj>lt is the best way to clean\nvery dirty brass?\n1 Boil ln strong solution of caustic soda,\nrinse in hot water, then dip in.hot pickle of\nsulphuric acid one part, water four parts, then\nrinse again ln hot water.\nabout ihternational politics, but he\nknows, that, since fhe liberators arrived, his house has been destroyed and\nhis land is devastated. He is also aware\nthat the reactionary Premier Syngman\nRhee, who is anathema to progressive\nAsians, is still in power. All in all, the\nU.N. adventures can hardly look like\n\"a good show\" from the Korean point\nof view.\nIt would be a great disaster, of\ncourse, if the leading Western Powers\nshould split on the Korean question.\nThe British-American alliance must be\npreserved In spite of differences, and\n\u2022 no doubt Lord Alexander had this\nparamount necessity in mind in everything he said to the reporters. Behind\nthe scenes, it may be hoped, there was\nsome plainer speaking, for it is evident\nthat some change in UN. tactics, far\nfnpm being a calamity, might be productive of good.. That the British\nshould be associated with the Americans in working out a new approach is\nhighly desirable.\nPress Comment\nFOWL TACTIC8 \u2022\nDuring a hockey game In Victoria, B. C,\nsomeone threw a dead duck at the referee.\nFowl tactics like that, of course, must be\nstopped.\u2014Brockville Recorder and J-mes.\nLooking Backward\n. 1Q YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, June 24, 1.42\nA purse and framed Soroptimist pledge\nwere, presented by the Soroptimist Club to\nMiss Vera Eidt, an active member of the Club,\nwho leaves Nelson shortly. The presentation-\nwas made by Mrs. C. W. Tyler, President, and\nMrs. J. H,'. Coventry, convener of the Courtesy\nCommittee. The pledge was hand painted by\nMiss Ruby Young.\nDr. and Mrs. F. M. Auld returned from\nJasper National Park, where they attended\nthe Canadian Medical Association convention.\nPRICE OF NEWSPAPER8 UP\nIn Victoria, B. C, the two newspapers\nhave set their prices at seven cents daily. This\nis the first breach in the five-cent ceiling in\nCanada. Across the United States, one newspaper after another has been moving from\nfive to seven cents. At their recent meeting In\nSan Francisco, Associated Press editors declared the seven-cent price for daily newspapers Is only transitional. The price of all dailies\nwould soon be 10* cents, as it already Is for the\nmajor Los Angeles newspapers\u2014Port Arthur\nNews-Chronicle.\nMEANE8T PREJUDICE\nOf all prejudice, that against race is the\nsilliest and meanest. There is no evidence that\n-any one race is superior or Inferior to any\nother. British Columbia has come a long way\nin downing race prejudice since the anti-Orient riots of 45 years ago or so. The reason for\nthe prejudice in those days was economic. That\nreason has faded with the years and is practically gone. But in some quarters prejudice on\nthe ground of race or creed or color persists.\nA Vancouver joint labor committee has been\ncampaigning to have an anti-discrimination\nbylaw passed, and in its effort It has the support of more than 20 organizations. A proper\naltitude to those who differ from us in color,\ncreed or race ban be conditioned effectively\nonly by education. But a bylaw may have the\neffect of a lesson in good manners.\u2014Vancouver\nProvince.\n25 YEARS AQO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, June 24,1927\nMrs. W. 0. Rose entertained al a tea In\nhonor of Mrs. George MacKenzie of Vancouver\nand Mrs. I. K. Poole, who Is leaving Nelson to\nreside in Calgary. Flowers attractively decorated the dining room, where Mrs. G. B.\nMatthew was in charge. Mrs. W. S. King and\nMrs. H. H. Pitts poured tea and cut the ices.\nThe guests were served by Mrs, W. A. Curran\nand Miss Jean Gilker. The putting contest on\nthe lawn, under the direction of Mrs. W. E.\nWasson and Mrs. John Gansner, was won by\nMrs. G. N. Douglas.\n60 YEARS AQO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, June 24, 1902\nAt the Opera House last evening a large\naudience assembled to hear the Clara Mathes\nCompany present \"Nell Gwynne\". The company Is undoubtedly one of the best that has\nappeared at Nelson, and the audience was well\npleased.\nW. HIgglns and Howard Busch, while\ntrolling on Sunday between Nelson and the\nNarrows; took 18 trout, all ranging ln weight\nfrom two to three pounds each. '\nIt's Been Said\nReckon the days on which you have not\nbeen angry. I used to be angry every day;\nnow every other day; then every third and\nfourth day; and if you miss it so long as 30\ndays, offer a sacrifice of thanksgiving to God.\n\u2014Eplctetus.\nYour Horoscope\n* Keep your nose to the grindstone if you\nhope to accomplish the maximum amount of\nwork while these configurations prevail. More\n' than average good fortune is likely.. Today's\nchild may have a quick temper and be somewhat impulsive, but good fortune may be\nexpected If these are controlled.\nGems of Thought\nEXAMPLE\nTo set a lofty example is the richest bequest a man can leave behind him.     '   \u00ab\n\u2014Samuel Smiles.\n* \u00ab     *\nExample is always more efficacious than\nprecept.\u2014Samuel Johnson.\n* *      \u2666\nNo reproof Is so potent as the silent lesson\nsof a good example.\u2014Mary Baker. Eddy.\n* *      *\nNo life can be pure In Its purpose, and\nstrong in its strife, and all life not be purer\nand stronger thereby.\u2014Owen Meredith.\n* *      t\nPut ,your creed into your deed,\n. Nor speak with double tongue.\n\u2014Ralph Waldo Emerson.\nIn language clearness Is everything.\u2014Confucius.\nTheyll Do It Every Time\nitgiii.n-J u. t Ntm O-La\n\\WdAAPA AH0\nIVySMAMA eoT\n\"[\u00bbWU OM THEIR\nKNEES TO MAI.E\nWHrTESTDME.THE\nWB3AX. &AS1-E,\nTAKE 1T-JE1R SDrJ'S\nCASE-PRICE MO\nOB.TECT\u2014.\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nJUNIOR IS\nSPRUNSJHey-RE\nOFF THEIR KNEES\nAto UP list ARMS'\nToday's Bible Thought\nConscience speaks constantly to\nthose who heed. But they who violate the warriings of conscience will\nfinally heir no voice it ill.\nA still small volee,\u2014I Kings 19112.\nCbwl dist\n'AHEM-AZoinMY\n-Se_rI,\"W'N<oiJg ,\nWOJS4UD CDLWRS\nIS FAR ENOUGH\nFa**. BEAVtJs \u2022\n,THIS ONB'-~>\n,,   A TrrOUSAH^t\n> you ON_y wemtV\nTOojijrtpwe.\nM\/Sl THE CASE,\n, *WS-<iP(JSH-\nZoysRtooi!\\\nJPKfi\nrA grand;\n^SOME CRUST,\nyjcu. SAy\u00bb-\n_*\u2022*.\n? y-Mjy\n_   IHHUMArl\nfSWNRlHTJj.\nIt's no wonder new babies' .eyes\nare blue. They're entitled to look\nblue when they first see the kind o'\nworld they've got into.\nThe first Olympic Games were\nstaged on Mount Olympus, the\nsacred mountain of rGeece.-in 776\nB.C.\nViews\n**\u2022'\u25a0\"\u25a0 .''?.\"  .';:\nFrom' the\nsNews Fronts\nBy J. M. ROBERTS, JR.\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nState Secretary Dean Acheson of\nthe United States arrives In Europe\nit a time when Western policy on\ndefence, hangs together by even\nmore tenuous threads than it did\nwhen he was there a month ago.\n- When they signed arrangements\nbringing West'Germany into the\nEuropean defence community, diplomats expected Russia to create a\nnew period of extremely high tension. That has happened but in a\nway that was not entirely expected.\nRussian measures designed' to\ncreate disunity ln Germany and ta\nheigheen it between France and\nGermany, have not turned out to be\nso horrendous as expected. Indications are this campaign has just\nabout cancelled Itself out. The threat\nof war because of allied preparedness has been just' about equalized\nin European minds by the threat of\nwar if a united front for defence is\nnot carried through.\nThis leaves the French aad German parliaments divided over what\nto do and how to do it, and has\nbrought the actual threat of a non-\nratification of the new treaties upon\nwhich the whole United States policy is based. .\n> This, more than anythlti_ else, Is\nbelieved responsible for shifting the\nemphasis on Acheson's trip from a\nmere degree-receiving visit to Oxford to high-level allied conferences.\nOne of the chief matters to come\nup will be the next allied step in\nthe discussion with Russia of a possible four-power conference on Germany. Such a conference could der\nlay Implementation of the treaties.\n\u2022 In the meantime, reports from\nRussia have introduced a new factor into allied thinking. There is an\nintensified \"hate America\" campaign there.\nObservers have always taken into\nconsideration the danger that, as\nRussia saw the world being consolidated against her, saw her hopes\nof conquest dwindling, that she\nmight strike out in last-minute desperation rather than see these hopes\nkilled.\nThe \"hate\" campaign may, of\ncourse, be a Russian effort to make\nthe Europeans believe they should\nnot be interested in wh?t actually\nis only a conflict between the U. S.\nand Russia. But observers must\nwonder, too, whether the Kremlin\nbelieves the crucial moment Is arriving for which the Russian people must be prepared up to.the hilt.\nB. C. Electric fo\nKeep High Fares\nVANCOUVER, B. C, June 23 \u2014\n(CP) \u2014 The British Columbia Electric today refused to reduce transit\nfares.\nPresident A, E. Grauer said in a\nstatement to a special City Council\nCommittee the company will \"have\nits work cut out in the next year or\nso to hold rates at present levels,\"\nand still raise capital needed for a\ndevelopment program)\nThe special committee was formed\nto inquire into the possibility of the\ncompany reducing transit fares on\nthe lower mainland.\nBasis of the inquiry was an apparent $4,100,000 income tax saving\nfrom tax concessions granted gas\nand electric utilities by the Federal\nGovernment.\nMr. Grauer said the Public Utilities Commission has already rejected the suggestion, and said the\nsuggestion was \"grabbing at an isolated factor.\"\nHe said it may even be necessary\nto increase rates.\n\"There are definite cost Increases\nwe can see now,\" he said. He mentioned several wage increases due\nto employees in various B. C. Electric divisions.\nUNION A BUSINESS\nPARTNER, MEET TOLD\nBANFF, Alta. (CP) \u2014 \"Once a\nlabor union gets in with you, you\nhave another partner in your business,\" George Wilson, treasurer of\nthe Hotel Association of Canada,\ntold delegates to the Association's\nconvention here.\nMr. Wilson was commenting on a\nreport by W. Smith of the Vancouver Hotel Association, In which he\ndescribed the \"peaceful picketing\"\nof a restaurant in Vancouver recently. Smith said that the picketing\nstarted after employees of the restaurant refused to Join the International Bartenders' Union. He said\nthe union men walked up and down\nin front of the restaurant with signs\nreading, \"This restaurant hasn't an\nagreement with the. International\nBartenders' Union.\"\nThe restaurant sued and the case\nwent to three different courts, with\nthe appeal court ruling ln favor of\nthe restaurant and supreme court\ndeciding In favor of the union.\nHe said the B. C. committee had\ncircularized all hotels ln B. C, asking for information on room accommodation, food supplies on hand,\nwhether they had storerooms, portable light.plant Ind other facilities.\nR. D. MoLein, of the Provincial\nDepartment of Economic Affairs,\nsaid lt wu the Intention,of the Department to make the tourist industry the third largest in the province, second only to agriculture and\npetroleum.-\nJASPER, Alta, June 22 (CP. -\nAustin. E. Bridges, Alberti Fire\nCommissioner, was elected Saturday as President of the Association\nof Canadian Fire Marshals at the\nannual meeting here. He succeeds\nW. A. \"^alker, British Columbia\nFire Marshal, retlririg after two\nterms of office.\nBoss Swifzer. Deputy Fire Com-\nmlsaioner of- Saskatchewan, was\nelected vice-president..\nPerlecl Torpedo\nFor Merchantmen\n^TASHINPTON. June 38 (AP)-\nNew American merchant ships now\ngoing into operation will ba able to\nfight' submarines with the submarine's ojvn most deadly weipon, the\ntorpedo.\nThll torpedo apparently will be\nof the ultra-modern \"target-seeking\" type which leeks out, tracks\ndown and blasts in enemy vessel\neither on or below the surface.'\nThe plan for self-defence of the\nhitherto helpless merchantman\ncame to light today Jn a shipbuilding company's description of the\nnew md fast Mariner clan vessels.\nThey will have reinforced deck\nsections for gun platforms, in area\nfrom which lubmarine-spottlng hel-\nicppters can be launched and recovered, enij provision for the installation of torpedo - launching\nequipment,    *\nAt present, the only Americin\nnaval surface ships to Use torpedoes\nare those tn the destroyer md de-\nitroyer-escort class.\n$6.4 BILLION AID\n\" WASHINGTON, June 22 (API-\nPresident*Truman signed the foreign aid bill today, luthorlzini M,.\n447,000,000 to bolster Allied coun-\ntries against aggression. Truman\noriginally asked for \u00bb7,9W,00O,00-,\nbut the election-year Congress cut\nthis figure more than 18 per* cent\nbefore approving the program.\nTO  RECEIVE. HONORARY       '\nDOCTORATE\nEDMONTON, June 22 (CP)\u2014Dr.\nL. P. Moussesu of Edmonton, Alberto President of the French Ci-\nnadian Association for the list\nseven years, will, receive an honorary doctorate of liwi Wednesdiy\nfrom the University of Montreil,\nDr. Mousseau, who graduated In\nmedicine from the same university\nin 1932, will receive the iwird in\nrecognitlon of his work In aid of\nthe French language md the diffusion of French culture in Western\nCanada. He has been a member of\nthe Board of Governors of the University of Alberta since 1648.\nOn at least 300 days of the year\na rodeo will be found operating in\neither the United States. Canada or\nMexico. '\nLUTHER RALLY SACRAMENT\nLETHBRIDGE, June 22 (CP) -\nHighlight of the Alberta district\nLuther League Billy held her*\nduring the weekend was i service\ntoday of warship with holy communion.\nRev. G. Senft ot'Medicine Hit\ngave the morning sermon and Rev.\nR. Mohr of Edmonton the confessional.\nThe theme of the roily was \"Read\nthe Wdrd.\" Youth of the church\nwere present from as for North aa\nEdmonton md East to Burstal 1,\nSask.\nthlt salesman toos TRAVEILERS CHEQUES\nFor ai ho tells his bets,\n\"I have *tfw Ixutk. Old MUXMliUfc'\nMake my fundi safe from loss.\"\nAlways be sure of fast, courteous service\nBank at\nIMPERIAL\nUttPEMAl BAJVK OF CANADA\nWHERE'S MY MONEY?\nIfs i good question \u2014 bnt hard to msw-r it the list\nmoment. Miybe bird to answer liter on, too. Cash that's\nlost or stolen Is not -srtty often regained. That's why die\nultimate snswer js the B of M Travellers Cheque, when it\ncomes to peace of mind while travelling.\nShould yon lose your BofM Travellers Cheques, or\nhive them stolen, they are without wine to anyone cite.\nAnd you an claim a refund If they are not recovered.\nYon see \u2014a Travellers Cheque becomes TaBd only\nwhen you sign it a second rime in front of the person\nwho cashes it for you.\n. So why take a chance? Why spoil jooj trip with wonyf\nChanging cash into BofM Travellers Cheques\nbefore yon start costs you so little, and there's ap \u25a0\nbatter protection.\nBank of Montreax\n' BRANCHES in NELSON *nd DISTRICT to serve you\n!?-.En,-*,_?-1\"    . .UQHBBU--NH.MtM._-\nJ&il-<5-_-,-M_er>i Op_. rnw.1-iii JPrssI-y\nNiw D.nv\u00ab lSu--A\u00bbttcy) s     Opw Mondijr ___IWI.;\nStar* to^sP^mk\u00bb.\"\nI, Rowland Branch i & p. BARNES. Manager\nWO.ICING    WITH     CANADIANS    IN    ! V11Y    WAl|(    OF    LIFE    SINCE   1117\n dkoimd ihsL\nut\nLEN   WALKER :\t\nCASTLEOAR\u2014The failure last week to form a Castlegar Amateur\nAthletic Association leaves the sports organizations of this town with\na tough problem. Without an organization of this kind, they will have\na tough row to hoe if.they are to meet expenses. The association was\nto be formed for the purpose of handling, allocating and distributing\nfunds for all sports.\n',- \u2022 In the past few years this has been done by a sports committee\ncomprised of two men, Cliff Wanless and Freddy Fomenoff, who have\ndone their utmost to satisfy, the public but in doing so they have taken\n' a lot of unnecessary rebuffs from a good many who, if they wished,\ncould help instead of sitting on the sidelines criticizing, it is'hoped\nthat when and if another meeting is called that more than four people\nwill turn out. In order to keep pace with the growth of the district\nit la essential that vie, have this association, and the sooner the better.\n* *      *\nI would like to dwell this week a little on the West Kootenay\nwomen's fastball playoffs which, according to Mr. Murdoch, will take\nplace in early July, and yet according to the constitution, must be\nitaged after the meeting which is to be held on or about July 25th. Also\naccording to the constitution, the member from Nelson, P. L. Kanak,\nJs supposed to be the chairman until the meeting and yet Mr. Murdoch\nseems to be running the whole show, as he is also doing in the Trail\nLeague.\nWhen one man'who is a manager of a club can cancel or postpone\ngames that are of no concern to his club over the head of the league\npresident, then I say lt is time that action was taken. The constitution\nclearly states that the object of the West Kootenay playoffs is to foster\nand improve 'ladies' softball, also to protect and promote the mutual\nInterest of the ladies' teams, ond,yet Mr. Murdoch puts in a residential\nrule so as to stop Castlegar from using players from Kinnaird. who played\nfor the Kats last season.\nHe also made a statement that he would make it stick and yet\nI Have talked with Al.HaU, president of the Trail league, and he tells\nme that as far as he knows this constitution has never been passed' by\n. th ecommittee. I also talked with Evelyn Burrows and she told me\nthat she had resigned as secretary-treasurer of the committee bebause\nof the unfairness of the residential rule.\nIf the organization is to lose a good worker such as Mrs. Burrows,\njust through one man's wish to rule the roost, then I believe it is time\nthat things were brought out into the open and straightened out.\n* *      *\nAROUND AND ABOUT . . . Johnny Strelieff, who in past years\nplayed ball for the Cubs, came up with a gem of a pitching chore lass\nWednesday when he went 15 innings for the Kilowatts of the Cominco\nLeague but lost 4-3. Johnny gave up 10 hits and struck out eight S.0.2\nplayers . . . Lome Marshall, another Cub castoff, has signed with the\nKilowatts . . . Latest word out of Nelson has it that only three teams,\nKamloops, Castlegar and Nelson have so far stated they will compete\nin the women's fastball tournament to be held July 1 and 2. . . . 'Tis\nrumored that the Cubs are expecting to have Eddy Foychuk in camp\nand signed soon . .. The Cubs nave signed Ray Hamilton to play third\nbase and If he continues like he started off, then the Cubs will have\na good hitter for Ray collected 2 hits in two appearances at the plate . ..\nEocky Plotnikoff was the hero of Wednesday's game when he hit a\nthree-run homer which won the game. On top of that, when Rennie\nMitchell got into trouble in the ninth, Rocky came onto the mound\nto retire'the side and save the win for Rennie, who up to the ninth\npitched a fine game ... Carl Loeblick said last week that he definitely\nwould not be coaching ball out'In Kinnaird this year. \t\nSENATORS COOL SOARING SOX\nCanadian Pri.ni nmnm   \u2666\u00ab-.!*   kt*   _t__-.A_._a   j_.j_.___. *_> _.__ ...___   _\u25a0.?. ..   .  : _l_.A   .__\u25a0\"\u25a0_?_.._\nRoyals Play First Againsf Kats Wed.\nKelson Royals, Nelson's women's\nfastball team, make their season\ndebut here Wednesday night when\nthey take on Castlegar Kats ln an\nexhibition game.\nTie Royals, West Kootenay\nChamps from 1949 to 1990, lost the\ntitle last season to the Castlegar\ngirls and will be eager to help\nsquare things with a victory Wednesday. ,\nMeanwhile, plans for the July 1\ntournament have fallen through because of lack of entries. Invitations\nwere sent to lone, Wash., Kamloops,\nTrail, Rossland and Castlegar, but\nonly Kamloops and Castlegar replied, secretary Marie Stangherlin\nreports.\nInstead, the Royals will play an\nexhibition doubleheader with the\nKamloops team as part of the Kinsmen Dominion Day program..\nAlberta Hamlet\nTo Stage $3800\nBall Tournament\n..ST. PAUL, Alta., June'23 (CP)\u2014\nEight of this Northeastern Alberta\ndistrict's top amateur teams will\ncompete ln the annual St. Paul\nbaseball tournament July 1 and. 2.\nPrize money totals $3800 with the\nwinner to get $2000.\nTeams entered are Two Hills,\nBrosseau, Heinsburg, St. Lina, VH-\nna, Djrwent, St. Brides and St.\nPaul. The tournament is sponsored\nby the St. Paul Junior Chamber of\nCommerce.\nBy The Canadian Press\nChicago White SOx' hopes of finding a soft touch in Washington\nSenators fizzled Monday and the\nSenators' 6-4 victory dropped Chicago, three games behind the\nAmerican- League-leading New.\nYork Yankees who outlasted St.\nLouis' Browns 14-10 in a slugfest.\nThe 8ox, winner of six of their\n\u2022even games with Washington as\nthey took the field, hid banked\non Improving their reoord of 13\nwins In their last 17 games. They\nstarted the contest In second\nplace, a half game ahead of Boston. Red Sox,\nTwo three-run innings \u2014 the\nsecond and fifth\u2014were all the\nSenators needed. Frank Shea, although requiring help from Joe\nHaynes, won his fifth game as\nagainst two defeats. The Sox' Hal\nBrown took bis second defeat is\n\u25a0gainst ono win.\nBoston Red Sox, happily slapping\nsingles through Detroit Tiger Infield, scored 11 runs in a wild\nfourth inning to crush the Tigers\n12-0 and slip Into second place,\nahead of the White Sox,\nBookie righthander Ivan Delock\niri 8 2\/3 Innings gave up a homer to\nWalt Dropo and\/ seven other hits in\nhurling his fourth victory against\nthree defeats,1\nSammy White's homer and two\nsingles drove in four runs and\nthird baseman Oeorge Kell, former\nTiger making his first appearance\nhere in Boston, uniform, singled\nthree times and scored two runs.\nBosox patched together eight\nsingles, a double, three walks and\ntwo Tiger errors to score all their\nEDDIE STANKY\n. . has Cardinals rolling.\nGattada's\nNUMBER^\nrm\nFIRST FOR...\nMILEAGE 1\nSAFETY\nECONOMY,\n\/hat a\nSCOTCH \\\nWhite Horse...\nofcourxc!\nDistilled, Blended and Bottled\n       in Scotland   m oz<\n|Ts.is advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nKiwanians (lose\nTo loop Leader\nKiwanians served notice they're\nvery much in the running for the\nBank of \"Montreal Trophy and the\nNelson Little League baseball\nchampionship last night by shading\nKinsmen 2-1.\nIt was the third straight win for\nthe runnersup and fourth in five\nstarts, drawing them to within half\na game of the league-leading Rotarians.\nIt was one of the best-played\ngames of the season. Eugene Kraft\nhurled his third victory\" against one\nloss, striking out seven and allowing Just two hits.\nSuccessive safeties by - Ken\nBlakeman and Gordon Jeffs In the\nfourth innfng provided the lone\nKinsmen run.\nKiwanians won lt In the first inning, scoring both their runs on a\nhit batsman, two singles and two\nerrors. Ken Moffatt was the loser.\nA disputed play accounted for\nthe final out of the game. With\ntwo out, Kin batter Ken  Blakeman popped up In front of the\nplate and catcher Grundy charged the ball, getting hli mitt to It\nbefore It skidded foul.    '\nUmpire Frank Pitt called lt foul,\nthen  reversed  the  decision  after\nconsultation  with  the  first  base\nump.    Meanwhile,    Grundy    had\nmade the play to first and the batter was ruled out.\nOUTLAWS SPLIT;\nBEAT NORTHPORT,\nLOSE 4-3 TO FORKS\nNelson Outlaws earned an even\nsplit in their weekend road trip,\ndropping a close 4-3 decision to\nGrand Forks Sunday after downing\nNorthport 4-1 Saturday.\nFormer Nelson chucker Jack Mathers showed he has lost none of his\nold skill by whiffing 11 Outlaws\nIn the Grand Forks victory.\nA double and an overthrow in the\nninth inning broke a 3-3 tie in favor of the Forks squad.\nLefty Stan Grill pitched the Outlaws to their Saturday victory, scattering five hits and striking out\nnine.\nNelson   000 003 1\u2014   4   9   2\nNorthport     000 100 0\u2014   1   9   1\nGrill and K. White; Nash (3), Wei-\nlip and Mattson.\nNelson   010 000 020\u2014   3   8   4\nGr. Forks  . 010 200 001\u2014   4   3   2\nClark, Brown (5), and Nash; Mathers and Chernoff.\nTed Krall Ousts\nFavored Middlecoff;\nIn P.G.A. Finals\nLOUISVILLE, June 23 (AP) -\nTed Kroll, gritty little war veteran,\nchopped down the favored Cary\nMiddlecoff in a dramatic 38-hole\nmatch today and strode into the\nsemi-finals of the P.G.A. golf championship with three tournament-\ntested professionals\u2014Jim Turnesa,\nBob Hamilton and Chick Harbert.\nfourth inning rum between  the\nfirst and second outs.\nBoston Braves broke a close\nNational League hall game wide\n' open In the eighth Inning when,\naided by three Pittsburgh errors,\nthe Braves scored five times and\nemerged with a 9-3 vlefory over\nthe last-place Pirates, The game\nwas played under the lights.\nGus Bell's eighth homer in the\nopening inning accounted for all\nthe Pittsburgh runs, which were\ncharged against starter Dave Cole.\nBell's clout scored rookie Dick\nGroat and veteran Ralph Kiner\nwho had walked.\nA walk, two sacrifices, each of\nwhich was followed by a Pittsburgh error ,two singles, a double\nsteal accompanied by a third error\nand a base on balls accounted for\nthe five Boston runs in the eighth.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiim\nNight in Guest\nRoom Too Much for\nBritish Runner\nLONDON, June 23 (AP) \u2014\nGordon Pirie, one of Britain's\nleading Olympic track hopes,\nwithdrew from a three-mile\nnational title race Saturday because he was too sleepy to run.\nHe told track officials that\novernight guests popped ln at\nHis home and he had a restless night in the spare room's\nlumpy bed.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimn\nKimberley, Fernie\nStill Unbeaten\nIn Crow Soccer\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-A 1-1 tie\nbetween Fernie United and Kimberley Canadians at Chapman\nCamp green Saturday left Crow's\nNest Pass Football League standings unchanged, with both teams\nstill undefeated.\nAfter elimination of Blalrmore\ngames,   washed   out   when   the\nteam withdrew from the league,\nFernie has a win and three ties,\nKimberley two wins and two ties,\nand  It was the  second tie  between Fernie and  Kimberley In\ntheir two scheduled meetings.\nFernie's singleton was scored at\nabout 30 minutes of,the first half\nby Mike Cairns after tremendous\npressure on Kimberley goalie Don-\nny Swann almost continuously.\nThe team then fell back to 'defensive play successfully maintained'\nuntil about 30 minutes of the second half when George McFarland's\ncorner kick was booted by Andy\nNelson to centre forward Harry\nBrown who scored.\"       *'      **'\nBoth Brown and Cairns suffered\nminor head cuts in later stages of\nthe game as both teams struggled\ndesperately to break the tie.\nWind, cold and rain failed to discourage attendance of a substantial crowd.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh     300 000 000\u20143 8 5\nBoston 000 202 05x\u20149 0 0\nFriend, Lipalm (8) and McCullough, Oinglola (8); Cole, Johnson (9) and Burris,\nAMERIOAN LEAGUE\nBoston    ..   001 (11)00 000\u201412 12 0\nDetroit   ,..:   010      100 022*- 8   8 3\nDelock, Scarborough (9) and\nWhite; Gfay, Hoeft (4) White (4)\nJohnson (8) and Swift, Ginsberg\n(8).\nWashington    .   030 030 000\u20146* 11 0\nChicago     300 000 100\u20144 10 1\nShea,  Haynes   (7)   and   Grasso;\nBrown,  Kennedy   (5)   Dorlsh '(9)\nand Lollar, Sheely (8).\nNew York .     040 023 401\u201414 17 3\nSt. Louis  .       401 200 2107-10 16 0\nSain, Ostrowskl (4), Hogue (8)\nand Berra; Cain, Harrlst (2V Madison (8), Overmire (7). Holcombe\n(8), Bearden (-1) and Johnson.\nTransfer Drops\nTo Second After\nKings' 5-0 Win\nNelson  Kings  downed  Transfer\nfor the second time  in as many\nmeetings   this   season   last   night,\nblanking  them   5-0.   Aa   a   result\nTransfer slumped to second- place\nin the league standings behind Kinnaird.\nDenny   Coleman   scattered   five\nhits while hli mates played errorless ball to chalk up the win at\nthe   expense  of  newcomer  Don\nYoung, making hli first start for\nthe Xransfermen.\nYoung   allowed   only   five   hits\nbut most were bunched in the fifth\ninning which pitcher Coleman climaxed with a two-run homer.\nNext action is Thursday when\nKings play host to Kinnaird.\nKings   010 040 0\u20149  6  0\nTransfer     000 000 0\u20140   3   4\nColeman and McClelland; Young\nand Zebroff.\n8TANDING W _, Pet.\nKinnaird      2   1   .667\nTransfer     6   3   .625\nKings       4   4   .500\nQueen's _._..   3   4   .429\nSouth  Slocan       3   5 ..375\nTORONTO. June 23 (CP) - Toronto Argonauts football team, in a\ndeal with Montreal ^.louettes, have\nsigned Ken Wagner, a former back-\nfielder with McGill University. Both\nArgos and Alouettes are in the interprovincial Rugby Football Union.\nWagner was awarded to Alouettes\nin a college draft and Argos got Ray\nPuller, another backfielder from\nMcGill. Argos turned Puller over\nto Alouettes and Wagner came to\nToronto.\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK, June 23 (AP) -\nSugar Ray Robinson took over the\nfavorite's role today as light rain\nforced a two-day postponement of\nhis light-heavyweight title fight\nwith champion Joey Maxim until\nWednesday at Yankee Stadium.\nStrong support for tbe middleweight king developed after the\nweigh-in and there were indications\nthe washout would drive the price\nhigher, past 18 to 10.\nRobinson would have given\naway 14% poundi to Maxim had\nthey fought tonight Now they\nhave to do It all over again Wednesday with a second official\nweigh-In.\nThe fight could not be held Tuesday night because New York Giants\nplay a night doubleheader with\nCincinnati. Giants and Yanks have\nreciprocal no-conflict agreement\nCleveland's Joey, his swarthy\nface shadowed by a bristle of\nwhiskers, came in just under the\nclass limit at 174% pounds. The\nsleek Robinson, sporting a thin\nmoustache, weighed 160. They shook\nhands, grinned and exchanged small\ntalk as they posed for photographers\nin the lobby of Madison Square\nGarden.\nJack (Doc) Kearns, Maxim's manager, said Joey will take road work\nin Central Park tomorrow morning\nand loosen up with a brief drill at\nthe New York Athletic Club later.\nRobinson worked out at the uptown gymnasium late today. His\nplans for tomorrow depend on his\nweight He doesn't want to stray\ntoo far over 160 pounds.\nJim Norris, president of the International Boxing Club, postponed\nthe fight about two hours after the\nweigh-in, in time to give \"out-of-\ntowners a break.\n\"We checked all the forecasters\naround,\" he said, \"and nobody gave\nus any hope of a break in the\nweather. If it should rain Wednesday, we will run Thursday. We've\ngot about $250,000 in advance sales\"\nOWN COMPETITION\nIf they go Wednesday, the I.B.C.\nYour Dealer\nfor\nDUNLOP TIRES\nii\nPeebles Motors Ltd.\n153 Baker St. Nelton, B. C. Phone T090\nMaxim Has 15-Pound Edge ...\nRobinson Now Favored\nIn Postponed Title Go\nBig Four Expands\nCollege Draft\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP) \u2014 The\nInterprovincial Rugby Football\nUnion Saturday widened its college\ndraft to allow each Big Four club\nto pick two additional players from\nthose graduating from Canadian\nuniversities. 8\nThe draft, launched after a special Big Four meeting April 5, allowed the four clubs to pick In rotation players for whose services\nthe club had exclusive right to negotiate.\nThe limit was raised to nine players from seven at Saturday's meeting.\nUnder the draft extension, Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton and Ottawa in that order will name one\nmore player each.\nwill be running In competition with\nitself, for it is staging tha Chuck\nDavey-Chico Vejar rematch at Detroit Wednesday over a countrywide TV network.\nThere will be no home television or radio of the Robln.on-\nMaxlm bout In the United States,\nbut the CBC'i Dominion network\nwill carry It on radio and a network of 39 theatrei In 26 cities\nwill carry the show on a theatre-\nTV doled circuit\nGeorge Galnford, Robinson's manager, hinted what might be expected from Robinson If he wins.\n\"Is there any chance Ray might\ngive up the light-heavy title, if he\nwins it?\" he was asked.\n\"He might retire and give them\nboth up,\" said \"Emperor\" George.\n\"Then they could run two tournaments.\"\nLeft-ridge Eleven\nEdges Michel 2-1\nMICHEL, B. C. - Playing\nthroughout a drizzling rainfall and\non a rain-soaked field in a regular\ngame in the Crow's Nest Pass\nFootball League, the highly touted\nLethbridge Legion eked out a narrow 2-1 over the Natal-Michel Buffaloes at the Natal ball park Sunday afternoon.\nThe Buffaloes took the lead lit\nthe first half on a goal soored by\njCentre-forward Archie Bltura In\nthe opening mlnutet of the game.\nLethbridge tied the icore near\nthe end of the first half on a goal\nby outside right Ron Legge who\ncame In fast to take fhe ball away\nafter the Michel backs had failed\nto elear the ball.\nHis bullet-like shot gave goalie\nFergotti no chance to save. Spectacular plays were impossible due\nto the heavy ball and bad playing\nconditions. Lethbridge scored - the\nwinning goal well on ln the second\nhalf on a gift goal when outside\nleft Steve Mezei scored when\ngoalie Fergotti failed to hold the\nslippery ball on a rather soft shot\nRegulation time was not played as\neach half consisted of only 30 minutes, players on both teams were\ndog tired as the game ended, all\nsoaked and blackened by the steady\nploughing _ through the mud puddles that 'prevailed all over the\nplaying field.\nThe loss sent the Michel Eleven\ninto fourth place while the win\nmoved the Lethbridge Legion Into\nsole possession of third place, ln\nthe league standing. The game was\nrefereed by veteran Andrew. Mc-\nGovern of Michel. \"Next weekend\nwill see the Fernie United travel\nto Lethbridge to play the Legion\nwhile the next day Michel will\nplay host to Fernie.\nJoO^I\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24,1 Ml - 7\nBIG SUGAR AHEAD   -   \u00ab  ..\nJOEY\nftlAX\/M,\nWHO\nDeF\u00a3Aip<S>\nHIS\nLIOHT-HSAKy\nT'TIB i\\\nA<SAIA\"5r     I\nStVGAA?    J\nROB\/NSON \u2022\n\/\/\/\nrtev\/\nYORK\nori\njam\n25 \/\nmby, oeepire\nDte FACT THAtr\nm POHcmm\n\/leveR MAC*\nAtacrl of a pertr\nA0A\/M&T r\/tg\nAveekR feuottfi,\n.  steveRrmesti\nFA9Me* rr mL 9t\\\nmo*t BFFecr\/Yt\n\u25a0 oh rm\n\"ifr-reft M\/opteneisHr\nRoom for Lots More,\n2 Nelson Rowing Club\nCrews Ready to Qo\nNelson's Rowing Club Is back in\nbusiness after a lapse of several\nyears.\nOrganizer Bud Greenwood has\ntwo full crews, eight rowers, lined\nup and ready to start workouts this\nweak.\nGreenwood, who with Roy Sharp\nwill undertake coaching of the\ncrews, is optimistic about his team's\npotential since two crew members\nhave top-notch Intercollegiate experience.\nThey are Ray Johnson, member\nof the U.B.C. Thunderblrd crew\nwhich pulled a major upset earlier\nthis year by whipping -highly-\ntouted University of California\nand Bruce McLean, member of\nUniversity of Washington's team\nwhich managed to down U.B.C. In\nthe Coast Conference meet after\na close struggle. Both are Nelaon\nboyi home for the 8ummer.\nEven though he now has two full\ncrews, it's only a start .Greenwood\npoints out. \"With all the equipment\navailable at the Rowing Club, wa\ncan accommodate 60 to 70 rowers,\"\nhe said.\nON THE MOVE AGAIN\n....PITTSBURGH, June 23 (AP) -\nPittsburgh Pirates announced today\nthat catcher Jim Mangan, under option to Toronto of the International\nLeague, has been transferred to Hollywood of the Pacific Coast League\nunder the same option.\nBOYS-Hurry! - Hurry!\nand enter for the\nKINSMEN'S JULY lst\nBUG RACE\nClip and Mail the Attached Form to\nDILLS SERVICE STATION\n401 VICTORIA ST., NELSON\nENTRY FORM\nNAME\nWHEELSET:\nAGE\nOrdinary   fj\nCheck Which Applies\nSpecial   \u25a1\nDON'T DELAY \u2014 START TODAY\nMAIL YOUR ENTRY AT ONCE\nBUS-TRUCK TIRES\n-3> p\n.\u25a0\u25a0\/.  -\u25a0    .-'.'.\u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0\n vz\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nG\nG\nS\nD-oocron\/*ywA'--|\"r's a mishtv sick ham\nisVIU. TH'   ^CrBUT AH THINKS TH'CRISIB\n0oQFftTs-\u00ab WmXmB^smsL is past\/\/-\nNOT A NIBBLE,\nFO'AT LEAST A YAPIfJ\n-1HET HAM NEEDS A\nA LONQ REST, IM SOME J\nQUIET HAMATARIUM, y\nTsSir SOME FLESH\nON ITS BOlME\/y,\nME?-W3BK?.\nBUTTHEfll. \u25a0\nkJAKs-TsOOMUCH\nTiTIMEAWAV\n>PUMbort\nMAPtPtlAQEf\/\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\ns&i^\n-^__\nW ii\n^ ^\n\/a* \/\n[LaterW \u2014 THE DICTIONARY 'SALE' HASN'T\n'      DRAWN AW *JSPICI0l\u00bb .(.sWA-TEUS.,,\nTHERES THUNDERBOLT,\nPURE POISONrKILLEB; -\nAND'OLD \u2014\"\"'\u25a0'\nWHICH C...\ny'WANTp\n _^^\nMISSIN3 A NISHT'S SLEEP S\nWONT DO HIM AMY HAPM.f\nALL HE PIP HERE YESTERDAY\nWAS SLEEP IM MY FAVORffiS\nEASY CHAU.\/GUESS IU.\nTAKE A NAP-MYSELF\/\nRecalled to Russia In a surprising diplomatic shuffle, Georgl\n'Zarubin, former ambassador to\nLondon, Is shown waving good-\nby from ths gangway of the\nRussian timber ship Beloostrov\nas he left Surrey, England, for\nMoscow and reassignment to the\nU.S., where he will replace Alexander 8. Panyushkin, who In turn\nwill become envoy to Peking,\nChina, U.S. government officials\nview the appointment of Zarubin\nwith mixed feelings, for he wai\nenvoy to Canada In 1946 when\nlarge-scale Russian spy ring was\nuncovered. However, Zarubin\nwas subsequently cleared of \"Improper activities\" by the royal\ncommission. \u2014 Central Press Canadian.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES:\nAkaitcho .,.; __..;_, ^_, .-.j 1,45\nAmal Larder ....... _, *   ;ig\nAnjerican' y K;!;...\u2014_-_.__     ,45\nAnacon ..,..:....,.,.,......._.__._,_ . ,3,30\nApglo Huronian ,..___.._\u201e_.  12.50 '\nAiikeno :...;\u201e fc_.-^_;     ,33\nA-3<m .:. ___. u ___ .  44%\nAumaque .i...._.\u201e;__-i.l^___.     ,u\nAuhor; ;.....\u201e..__.\u201e.^_._____, .3,15  \u25a0\nBagamac          ,15\nBase Metals -  ^_,    ,38\nBevcoiirt  r\u201e _.._    1.14\nBobio. ......        .27\nBoymar Gold ..-.\u2014       ,12\nBralorne Z .    8,15\nBroulan ..: , \u201e  ' i.75\nBuffadison       .13\nBuff Can       33.\nCalliman- :. ..     .21\nCampbell K L -., __,.._    8.29\nCariboo Gold      1.86\nCentral I atricia        .70\nCochenour _.-..._.    1.55\nCoin Lake   13%\nCons Mln & Smelt     84.35\nConwest . '..      3.75\nDelnite        1.50\nDome        19.50\nDonalda  u      .40\nDuvSy 80\nEast Amphl         .10\nEaSst Malartic  :....    2,21\nEast Sullivan      8.20\nElder Gold 62\nEldona  -..._        30\nEstella  -     1.87\nEureka  - _.     1.76\nFalconbridge      12.15\nFrobisher _     6.85\nGiant Yel       10.35\nGod's Lake 43\nGoldale   \u2014      .25\nGlod Arrow _ 15\nGolden Manitou      6.00\nHardrock  _ 12%\nHasaga  \u2014       .18\nHeath       3tV\/t\nHomer Y K  __.'. 14\nHudson Bay      53.25\nInspiration  36\nInt-Nickel    43.00\nJollet Quebec   41   .\nKayrand \u201e. _      .10%\nICelore 16\nKenville  25\nGrimacing In pain, Charles White, C.P.R. fireman, lies pinned\nagainst the boiler of his locomotive after It had been crushed between two other locomotives In Toronto. Police and railway workers\ncut him out with acetylene torches and said he survived 10O0-to-one\nodds. He suffered severe burns and a broken leg. Englneman Joseph\nGrant Jumped clear of the cab Just before the collision.\u2014Central\nPress Canadian.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nUAMpIs-KWI.TJ\nn.VtMtot -3.Turkfehtf-le\nweight of nobility\nft To twinkle' J*. Bone\n7. Musical (anat)\ninstrument 25. Stinging\n9. Undressed        Insect\nkM 2*. Daisy\n\u00bb. Title (Eng.)\nof Persian ST. Not good\n.  ruler 28. A pin In\n12. Metal a gunwale\nU. Equal 29. A seasoning\nH. Humble 31. Ascend\n19. Greek letter 32. River (Gor.)\n20. Music note 3d. Cross-bar\n21. Color, supporting\naa fabric wheels\nciHraifira u'*jr-'_i.<\n'-\u25a0-I.    -1,7,3   HH0\na ana a\n:_w..i_ia*:i _._.__b\nHHEHG.   SHE-GIB\nsar-iHa\n-*1!H__   Bil'H   HHH\n=iaiai.i3 niaeiigs\njnatiu HHs.ur.'\nKi-'inai*! r.nr.iHH\nYesterday'. Antswet\nM. Conuneal\nbread\n37. At odd*\n39. Queen\nof fairies\nACROSS\nLA marble\n-.Arch\n7. Chrysalis\n8. Man's name\n(Sp.)\nM. Begot\n11. Boredom\n18. An ape's\nfoot\n14. Device AM\"\npacking\n15. Indefinite\narticle\n16. Body\nof water\nIT. Accomplish\n18. Dread\n21. Lair\n22. Cut, as wood\n23. Male child\n\u00abS. Court\n27. Harasses\n30. Hewing tool\n31. Absent\n33. Exclamation\n34. Scorched S\n36. Body\nof water\n88. A jewel,\ncase\n39. Shed, aa\nfur (var.)\n40. Otherwise\n41. Poker stake\n42. Ever (poet)\n43. God of\npleasure\nDOWN\n1. Revolve\n2. Mimicked\n3. Roll of\nmoney\n(slang)\n*. Dreary\nDAILY CJBWTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXB\nlisLONGFEIsLOW\nOne letter atmply stands for another: In this example A is naea\nfor the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the wortta ate all hinta\nBach day the code lettera are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nRKO TBTIFr.JD.GW PZ EHXXFQ MDH\nOF ORBKN NMH SHRGFQW QBNM G'H-\nX BV M N-W M R t H W; O H R C H?\nYesterday's Cryptoquete: BRAND HIM WHO WILL WITR\nBASE REPORT,\u2014HE SHALL BE FREE FROM MINE-SCOTT\nCi-ts-ibuttd ky Kiss rtuura SmkIImu\n^\n1\n2\n3\nVA\n\u00ab\n5    -\n*\n%\n%\n'4,\n7\ni<\n\u2022\n9\ni\nso\n%\n\u00ab\n12\n13\n^\nw-\nIS\n%\n^\n16\n^\n1?\n18\nn\nZO\n%\n'^\n21\n%\n^\n__\n%\nS3\nt*\n^A\n^\n25\nSt\n^A\n^\n28\n29\n30\n%\n31\n32\nW\n'^\n33\nM\n35\n^\n36\n37\n38\n%\nS\u00bb\nt\n40\n%\n41\n%\n^\n4\n42\n4\n4\u00bb\ni\n%.\nKerr Addison ..___;  19.00\nKirk Townsite ,:. .14\nLake Default .. ~...  9.55\nLakeshore  _-_._^ -....10.50\nLeltch -..'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0' __--..,_,...,. 1,10\nLIngman (new) ..^ .  .26\nLittle Long Lac ,.  .71\nMacDonald  __.  ,97\nMacassa. -'.,....;\u201e \\ ;_.,. 2.05\nMacLeod Cock  3.50\nMadsen B:L j,   -'?,\" 1,50\nMagnet ~\u2122~\u201e._-._.__ .15\nMalartic G F . _\u201e 1,93\nMclntyre   ,73  .\nMcKenzie R L . s  .43\nNegus   \u201e-.   .44\nNew Calumet   1.95\nNew Lund ...: i  1.69\nNipissing ....  2.10\nNoranda _. '___ 78.00\nNormetals ....  5.00\nO'Brien    1.50\nPamour  ........_-_-..-.._.__ .82\nPaymaster  .68\nPickle Crow  1.60\nPioneer .  __... 2.00\nPlacer Development  49.25\nPreston 15 D ...r.   1.35\nQuebec Lab    .28%\nQuebec Man  2.47\nQuemont   21.00\nSan Antonio :  2.45\nSen. Bouyn    .15\nSherrltt Gordon _..:  4.25\nSilver-miller      1.88\nSilanco  ,   .42  ,\nSiscoe      .50\nStarratt Olsen   33%\nSteep Rock !. \u2014.-_.. 6.50\nSudbury Cont \u201e 12\nSylvanite   ..... 1.37\nTeck Hughes _;..*  .39\nTombill \u201e  32\nTrans' Cont Res  .51\nUnited Keno      10.75\ntipper Canada ...  1.88\nVentures    \u201e_ \u201e 16.25\nWaite Amulet   '.  12.75\nOILS\nAnglo Can   7.90\nA P Consolidated  .50\nB.A. OU    21.50\nCalgary and Edmonton  13.75\nCalmont _. 1,55\nCentral Leduc    4.65\nChemical Research   1.25\nCommonwealth Pete _.__ 4.50\nDecalta    4.50\nDel Rio    3.90,\nEastcrest   \u2022 .16\nFederated Pete   10.25\nImperial Oil    34.50\nInter Pete   32.00\nKroy     2.28.\nMacDongal Segur  ..27\nMid Cont   .40\nNat. Pete    2.56\nOkalta    4.10\nPacific Pete  11.50\nRoyalite    17.50\nRoxana   \u25a0.  .25\nTower Pete  .44\nUnited Oils    2.30\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbl   16\nAlgoma Steel  45\nAluminum   101\nArgus   11V4\nAtlas St   21%\nBell Telephone  35*\nBrazilian      10H\nB.C. Forest   _._.  5%\nB.C. packers A  13%\nB.C. Paekers B  10%\nB.C. Power A           \u201e ., 81%\nB.C. Power B -_.  7%\nBrown Co           - 11\nBrown Co. pfd  ....-s___ 101%\nBuilding Products  33\nBurl. Steel _..; _-___, 20\nBurns A.   28%\nCan. Cement   87\nCan. Packers B  L 27%\nCanadian Breweries __.__ 16\nCanadian Canners   30%\nCanadian Car & Fdy  12%\nCanadian Car & Fdy A  15%\nCan. Oil    26\nCanadian Celanese     41%\nCanadian Marconi    5.00\nCanadian Pacific Hly  34%\nCanadian West Lmbr . 8%\nCockshutt    \u201e 16%\nCons. Mining & Smelting . 34%\nCons. Paper  _. 38%\nDist. Seagram    24\nDom. Foundries    11%\nDom. Steel & Coal B ......  13%\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nDom, Textiles\nFamous. Players\nFanny Farmer .\nFleet Air '\nF6ri.;A\nGatipeau :....\nGatineau 5% ptd -.\nGehi.Steel V\/areii .\nGoodyear''---....-':..\nGoodyear pfd .\nGfeat Lakes i\t\nGreat Laki-   pfd ....\nGypsum Lima'..-......\nH. R.MacMlUanB,\nImperial Oil ....\u201e..._\nImp. Tobacco .\u201e\t\nInt Nickel ___,\nInt Pete\nLoblaw A\t\nMaple Leaf Milling\nMassey Harris .......,_\nMont Loco ..\u201e.,...___\nMcColl Frontenac _\nPowell River\t\nRuss. Industries .\nSimpsons A\"\t\nSimpsons pfd\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada\t\nStandard Paving\t\nUnion Gas of .Can\t\nUnited Corp\"; B  \t\nWeston George. \t\nWinnipeg Electric  \t\nWinnipeg Electric pfd \t\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge ._...\t\nBralorne  ^,__.\nCariboo Gold\t\nGiant Mascot. ,__.\nHighland Bell\t\nKootenay Belle\t\nPend Oreille ......\t\nPioneer Gold\n\u25a0-;  :\n38%\n10%\n16%\n24%\n1.55\n\u2022   87%\n:   18.\n. 101\n'   ?'\n94\n'48''-  E\n1.\n48%\n. 29%:\n18%\n34%\n.-\u00ab!\n43\n3*'\n30%\nill\nIS\n36\n24\n21%\n38\n95%\n18% J\n31\n14%\n24\n\u00abP\n22%\n33% 1\n95%\nVancouver Stocks\nPremier Border.._.\t\nQufitsino \t\nReeves MacDonald\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSliver Ridge \t\nSilver Standard\t\nVan Roi \u201e.\nWestern Exploration _:\nWestern Uranium\t\nWestern Mines .\nOILS\nAnaconda   \t\nAnglo Canrdlan\t\nCalgary lc Edmonton .\nHome  \t\nMercury  .\u201e\nNational Peta\t\nOkalta Com ...\t\nPacific Pete\t\nVanalta  \u201e_\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta j\",is*       \t\nAlberta Dist. V.T. r\nCapital Estates  \t\nInter. Brew _\n1.70\n6.20\n1.40\n.95\n.67\n.34\n6.10'\n2.10\n.25\n.48\n3.75\n,1.45\n4.30\n.29\n2.10\n.24\n1.03\n4.00\n30\n.18\n8.00\n14.00\n14.13\n.25\n2.65\n4.25\n7.50\n.47\n1.15\n3.1-\n16.50\n4.50\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, June 28 (CP) J- Tha ]\nCalgary livestock market was active\ntoday with prices' steady to strong.\nOfferings continued light, 405 rattle\nand calves.\nGood.butcher,steers and heifers\nwere showing better action at\nsteady prices^Cows wart to foot\ndemand at Steady to strong prices,\nodd tops.bringing $20. Bulls wera\nsteady to a shade firmer. Good,\nlight stocker and feeder steers wera\nln strong demand at steady prices.\nVeal calves were generally steady..!\nHogs dosed steady last week, at\n$25,50, sows at $14.50. No sheep market was established. '\"\nGood to choice butcher steers\n23.50-26.00;   common   to   medium |\n18.00-23.00. Good to choice butcher I\nheifers 23.50-25.50; common to me- 1\ndium 18.00-23.00. Good.cows 1800- 1\n19.50;  common to medium  15.50, |\n17.50,  canners  and  cutters  12.00-\n15,00. Good bulls 16.50-17.50; com- ]\nmon to medium 13.00-16.00. Good I\nstocker and feeder steer.- 22.50-24.00; j\ncommon.' to   medium   18.00-22,00.\nGood to 'choice veal calves 26.00-\n29.00;  eommon to medium  20.00- |\n25.00.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\nUM ON THI MAI\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT 1_ME\nTUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952\n7:00\u2014News               ,\n3:15\u2014Famous Voices\n7:05\u2014Morning Revue\n8:30\u2014Party Line\n3:45\u2014Novel Time\n7:35\u2014Morning Revue\n4:0O\u2014Easy Listening\n4:30\u2014Arctic Adventure\n8:00\u2014News\n4:45\u2014Pacific News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament 1\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n5:00\u2014Evelyn Gould\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n5:15\u2014JohnFisher\n8:55\u2014Consumer's Corner\n5:20\u2014International Commentary\nOrtO'-Western Tunes\nSi-O-i-The Musie Box\n9:30\u2014Morning Devotions\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n9:45\u2014Musical Varieties\n5:50\u2014News                  ' -\n10:00\u2014Riders of the Purple Saga\n6:00\u2014Drama of Medieina\n10:15\u2014Picnic With Pat\n6:15\u2014Conservation Calling\n10:45\u2014Guest in' With Kcstin\n6:30-Cavalcade et Melody\n11:00\u2014News\n7:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Music\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n11:15\u2014Date With D'Arcy\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n8:00\u2014Nation's Business\n12:20\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Club Date\n12:25\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Jazz  With Jim\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Sweet and Lively\n12:55\u2014Behind the News\n9:30\u2014The Ed McCurdy Show\n1:00\u2014Concert Hour\n10:00\u2014News\n2:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n10:15\u2014Talk\n2:45\u2014Women's Programs\n10:30\u2014Musical Program\n3:00\u2014Forbidden Diary\n11:00-\"NEWS\" Night Cap\nGBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1952\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Musical Varieties\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014Program Resume\n2:45\u2014Women's I^orgrams\n3:00-s-Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Famous Voices\n3:30\u2014So You Want To Write\n3:45\u2014Novel Time\n4:00\u2014Opera Stars\n4:15\u2014Piano Pops \u25a0'\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45\u2014Donna and Joy\n5:00\u2014Music Won't Hurt You... __\n5:20\u2014International Commentary\n5:30\u2014Question Box\n5:45\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Neighborly News\n6:15\u2014Introduction to Wad.\n6:30\u2014The Christian Hope\n7:00\u2014News -\n7:15\u2014CBC News-Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014Nicholas Goldschmldt\n11:00\u2014UN. Today\n11:15\u2014Miisicland\nll:45-Night Cap\nll:57-News\n ,1 PiRSQN-WmSON WANMS\n[)    FOR QU\/CK MSUlfS \/\nPhone 144\nDeadlino for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\n'JlMlftjfTOffl\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nH?IGHTON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Heighten, 121 Union Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJune 23, a daughter, Sheila May.\nMlCHIELS\u2014To  Mr.  and   Mrs.\n! A. Mlchiels of Slocan City at the\n| Slocan Community Hospital June\n19, a son. '\nNYERS\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. C. H.\n' Nyers of Silverton at Slocan Com-\n, munity Hospital June 19, a son.\nMCCORMACK- To Mr. and Mrs,\nI.J. McCormspk  of Burton  at the\nArrow Lakes Hospital June 14, a son\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nHELP WANTED\nSTENOGRAPHER GRADE 2\nfor the\n| British Columbia Civil Service\n\u2022 ' Social Welfare Branch\nNelson.\nSalary: $165 rising to $203 per\nmonth. Qualifications: Must be\nable to type at the rate of 50\nwords per minute net, and to take\nshorthand at the rate of 100 words\nper minute, with 2 years' satisfactory stenographic experience.\nCandidates must be British subjects, not over 40 years of age,'\nexcept in the case of ex-service\nwomen who are given preference.\nApplication forms, obtainable\nfrom the Government Agent, Nelson, or the Civil Service Commission, 636 Burrard Street, Vancouver, to be completed and returned\nto the Chairman, Civil Service\nCommission, Victoria, not later\nthan June 30, 1952.\nI WANTED-2ND COOK, SUITABLE\nfor relieving lst cooE, for crew\nof 100 men. Good living accommodations. Apply .Reeves MacDonald Mine, Remac, B.C. '\n) WANTED\u2014THREE PICKERS FOR\nstrawberries and raspberries. \u2014\nGood living quarters. Apply Box\n1788, Daily News.\nI WANTED - SMART GIRL FOR\ngrocery dept. Must be willing to\nwork. Reply giving age and experience to Box 2153, Daily News.\n[WANTED \u2014 FEMALE CLERK\nMust have cash register experience. Apply C.P.R. Lunch Counter\n| S WA_TRES\"SE-TWANTED~-\"AP-\nply Armson's Cafe at the Bus\n\u25a0 Depot- \u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0\t\nI EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES\nwanted. Apply Bowl-drome.\n| EXPEJtlENCED PAINTER WANT-\ned. Phone 750-R.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n' IT ANY 'PLACE IS AVAILABLE\n\"'Jo. ._'}o1f .foY tSarrtfltls \u25a0.951 1-toh\nChevrolet pickup, kindly contact\nNicholas    Davldoff,    Tarrysi or\n.. Thrums P.O.   :\t\n| WE BUILD THE NEW AND RE~\nbuild the old houses to your requirements. General Contracting.\nApply Box 2438, Daily News.\n(Wanted - work  for~E_\nangledozer. Also for rent new 125\nportable compressor with equip-\nment A Bedwell. Kaslo. B.C.\n| Wanted\u2014position as book-\nk^eper Experienced; references.\nApply Boat. 1795, Daily News.\nSEALED TENDERS FOR THE\nGENERAL  CONTRACT\nINCLUDING ALL TRADES\nENDORSED.\nTENDERS FOR RETALLACK\nELEMENTARY SCHOOL for the\nerection and completion of a ONE\nCLASSROOM SCHOOL at Retallack, B.C., wil] be received by the\nSecretary-Treasurer of School District No. 6 (Kootenay Lake), on or\nbefore 5 p.m. Monday, July 14th,\n1952, at the office of the Secretary,\nKaslo, B.C.\nWorking drawings and specifications will be available at the office\nof the Secretary, Kaslo, B.C. A Certified cheque of 5% of the tender\nmust accompany each and every\ntender and shall be forfeited if the\nparty tendering declines to enter\ninto contract when called upon to\ndo so. On award and signing of the\ncontract the successful tenderer\nshall furnish to the Board of School\nTrustees a Security Bond equal to\n50% of the contract price. On receipt of this bond the certified\ncheque submitted. with the tender\nwill be returned. The Board of\nSchool Trustees and the Department of Education reserve the right\nto reject any or all tenders without\nexplanation. No tenders having\nqualifying clauses will be considered. A deposit of $10 is requested for\neach set of plans and specifications\nand will be returned upon receipt\nof the same in good condition.\nDated as Kaslo this 23rd day of\nJune, 1952, and signed\nJ- J. Clark,\nSecretary-Treasurer,\n- Kootenay Lake School District\nKaslo, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n[GOOD OPPORTUNITY \u2014 NEW\nbusiness, built and priced to sell.\nAcross street from high school,\nswimming pool, Civic Centre and\ncurling rink. Groceries, fountain\nand coffee bar. All new equip\nment, Box 857, Creston, B.C.\n|l*OR SALE OR RENT \u2014 GOOD\nestablished business. Grocery\nmeat and confectionery with modem home. Apply Hilltop Store,\nNelson, B.C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nI LOST - BROWN   BALL   POINT\nShaeffer pen. Return Cabinet Cl-\n^ gar Store. Reward.\t\n[Lost at playmor sat.\u2014ear-\nring with 3 blue stones. Apply\nP.O. Box 47, Nelson. B.C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAUCTIONEER\nI AUCTIONEER - REEVE PAXSoN,\"\nBox 497. Fernie. Anywhere in B.C.\nASSAYERS  AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nIt. W   WIDDOWSON Ss O\nNT\n  ..\u2014vs.     i_     -._>.,     s-VO-\nsavers  301 Josephine St.. Nelson\nS    ELMES.   ROSSLAND.   B.\"C\nAssayer, Chemist. Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKER8\nSEALED TENDERS FOR THE\nGENERAL CONTRACT\nINCLUDING ALL TRADES\nENDORSED.\nANDERS FOR AINSWORTH\nELEMENTARY SCHOOL for the\nerection and comoletion of a ONE\nCLASSROOM SCHOOL at AINS-\nworth.,B.C. will be received by\nthe Secretary-Treasurer of School\nDistrict No. 6 fKootenay Lake), on\nor before 5 p.m. Monday, July 14th\n1952. at the office of the .Secretary,'\nKaslo, B.C.\nWorking drawings and specifications will be available at the office\nof the Secretary. Kaslo, B.C. A Certified cheque df 5% of the tender\nmust accompany each and every\ntender and shall be forfeited If the\nparty tendering declines to enter\nWto contract when called upon to\ndo so. On award and signing of the\ncontract the successful' tenderer\nshall furnish to the Board ot School\nTrustees a Security Bond equal to\n50% of the contract price. On receipt of this bond the certified\ncheque submitted with the tender\n-__I ?e returned. The Board of\nSchool Trustees and the Department of Education reserve the right\nto reject any or all tenders without\nexpanation. No tenders, having\nqualifying clauses will be considered. A deposit of $10 is requested\nfor each set fo plans and specifications and will be returned upon\nreceipt 0I the same in good condition. \"\nDated at Kasfcj this 23rd day of\nJune, 1952, and signed\n.      J. J. Clark,\nSecretary-Treasurer,\nKootenay Lake School District\nNo. 6. Kaslo, B.C.\nNew 1952 Austin Pickup\nNew 1952 Austin ,\nCountryman\nNew 195) Austin Panel\nNew 1951 Austin\nCountrymen\n1951 Austin Sedan\n1951 Henry \"J\" Coach\n1951 Chevrolet Deluxe\nSedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Pontiae Coach\n1950 Pontiae Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Coach\n1950 Austin'Sedan\n1940 Ford Coach\n1936 Ford Coach\n1935 Dodge Sedan\nDAILY DOUBLE\n1940 Hudson Sedan $395\n1934 Plymouth Sedan $265\n1951 Austin Countryman\n1950 Dodge Pickup\n1949 Ford Light Pelivery\n1948 G.M.C. 34-Ton\nPickup\n1946 Chevrolet- Panel\n1943 Ford 3-Ton\nNEW PONY TRACTOR\nNEW FERGUSON TRACTOR\nSPOT CASH FC)R\nLATE MODEL CARS\nIN GOOD CONDITION\nREMEMBER\u2014No   Payments\n^Onti] August 8th\nTERMS and TRADES\nEMPIRE\n803 Baker St. Phone 1135\nNelson, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR   SALE - 4    MONTH   OLJJ\ncross   bred   pullets,   $1.90-  each\nAlso JjoIIing fowl, 35c per lb. live\nweight. Phone 206-L-3.\nCREAM SEPARATOR FO-fSALl\n\u20141- or 2-cow capacity. Just hew.\nJ. Hood. Creek St., or ph. 602-Y.\nFOR SALE\u2014COW; JUST FRESIP\nened. Quiet, good milker. F. Sav.-\ninkoff, Winlaw, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 3  YOUNG  SHEEP\nand 2 old sheep. Apply N. Kab-\natoff, Thrums, B.C.\nWANTED- --EARL.NG   BUiX\nHolsteln  or  beef breed.  Quinn\nHarrop, B.C.   ,.\n*'6k SALE-. titioD CC-Wg, TO\nfreshen   soon.   Box  2089,   Daily\nNews.\n-\u25a0Ok sale - yoiriJG itnsFS\ncow. Apply p. J. Lebedoff, Glade.\nMEAT  FOR  YOUR  LOCKER\"^\nPork or steer beef. H. Harrop.\nI&AVIES TRANSFER AND AtTQ\nWrecking   Phone Rossland,  171.\nCARPENTER8\nIBOUG GALLAHER, GENERAL\nCarpentry Phone 873-L evenings.\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYOR8\nk  W   HAGGEN.Land  Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Engineer.     -\n,      Grand Forks and Rossland\nl-JOYD'C AFFLE<_K,'218 C-6R-, ST.\nNelson. B.C Surveyor, Engineer\n|llM8URANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nImchahdy AiiiMiES lib W-\nsurance. Real Estate.-Phone 138.\nUVE8TOCK   PEALER8\n|We,bu.y OR .'SE-A','Ll'v-E.-T6c...-\n\"\"Cant-ct H  Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINI8T8\n\" IM-WEttS L.M.TE-)\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric 'welding, motor rewind-\nIng Phone 593 324 Vernon Street.\nI PAINTING  AND. DECORATING\n|ART COOK FOR PROMPT SERV-\nIce. - Phone 591-X.\nTIMBER  CRUISING, ETC.\ntimber CRUlt-iissC. XRVWHS8HE\nIn B.C  E. H Hird, Slocan City.\nNHaott Batlg Sfottm\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive   insertions.\nHe line per consecutive Insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line for 8 consecutive Insertions.\n$158 line per month (28 consec-\n.utive  Insertions)   Box  numbers   lie  extra   Covers any\nnumber of Insertions\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICEa\nTENDERS. Ete.-20c per line,\nfirst  insertion.   18c per  line\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week.\nIn advance .39\nBy carrier, per year 15.80\nUnited States. United Kingdom:\nOne month     .\u201e _... | 1.25\nThree months 3.75\nSix  months      \/    759\nOne year \u2022  1599\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne  month            100\nThree months          275\nSix  months'    ._      850\nOne  year 1900\nWhere extrs pottage li required,\nabove rates plus pottage.\nJust Arrived .\nCARLOAD\nPickups\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nUSED CARS\n1951 Austin Sedon'\n1950 Dodge Sedon\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1949* Mercury Sedon\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Mercury Coupe\n1946 Plymouth Sedon\n1946 Chevrolet Sedon\nTHESE MUST GO!\n1938 Nash Sedan $300\n1940 International Pickup\n1939 Plymouth Sedan $150.\n1936 Ford Coach $200\nPICKUPS!\n3 NEW FORD PICKUPS\n1950 Fargo Pickup $1350\n1949 Ford Pickup $1306\n1947 Chevrolet Pickup $950\nMel Buerge\nPhone 74 and 428 \u2014 Varaon St.\nNelson, B.C.\nHOLT'S PISTON-SEAL-RESTORE\ncompression and engine power,\nreduce oi) consumption and stop\npiston slap. Simply remove plugs\nand squeeze Piston Seal into plugholes. For tree details write Major Distributors. Room 027, Dept.\n3, 738 Granville St., Vancouver 2.\n(Continued m Next Column)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE-1942 DODGE DELUXE\nsedan. Good tires, motor recently\noverhauled, new battery\u2014$400.00.\nWrite or apply Blewett Store.\nBlewett, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., fOR SALE\n(Conuruedi\nFOR SALE-i-THRIjE-APARTMENT\nhouse on two lots. 20 lots with\nbuilding under construction. Ap-\nply Box 51, Rossland, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u20148-ROOMED HOUSE;\n5 bedrooms; centrally locsted.\nIdeal for roioming house. Box\n1935, Daily News.\nHOUSE FOR SALE - 3 CORNER\nlots planted in garden; drive-in\ngarage. Phone 619-Y\n\/or\" SAL-i - id5i.3-T(5N fiflHF\ntruck, complete; law. mileage\n(around 6000), 7 good tires, one\nowner. Sell cheap for cash. Lee\nCarpenter, Arrow Park, B.C.\nFOR SALE-250 C& B.S.A. ROT\norcycle; excellent condition, reasonably priced. Owner leaving dis-\ntrict. Contact A. W. Doyle. Ymlr.\n1949 CUSTOM DELUXE DODGE-\nRadio and heater; excellent condition. Priced at 41650.00. Phone\n1102-R or 272;\n1937 PLYMOUTH; (-60D C_)N_)I-\ntion for age. Five good tires. J.\nL. Canty, South Slocan, evenings\nor weekends only\nTRAILER FOR SALE - 2*3-FD5t\ngrey and maroon aluminum, fully\nfurnished; sleeps 4. Apply Roy\nBrown. Montrose, B.C.\nMODEL A '31 FORD COUPE IN\ngood runniag shape. Call at Stevenson's Machine Shop or phone\n199-X2.    .\nWANTED\u2014SMALL COTTAGE OR\nlot. Prefer Fairview. Cesh. Box\n1794, Daily News.\n5 ROOMED HOUSE FOR SALE -\n3 bedrooms; 8 lots; on bus line.\nPhone 792-L.\nHAVE \u00bb1000 CASH FOR TWO\nbedroom house. State price and\nlocation. Box 2289 Dally News.\n*7000 CASH FOR 2-BEDROOM\nhouse; bungalow type preferred.\nApply Box 1928, Daily News.\nTwo COTS .'{.k SALE - BASS:,\nment excavated  Phone 91.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952 - 6\nHoliday Haunts\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nCRANBROOK\nGATEWAY AUTO COURT\nCoffee Shop\u2014Groceries\u2014Gas \u25a0\n.Just outside East gate.\n\"Mwt vraw uont\u2014\nFully modern,-Automatic Heating\nWest gate, entering Cranbrook.\nBfM\"_.' WHITE AUTO COCfif\nModern - Gas Stoves - Oil Heat\nLiz and Lew   - Phone 201.\nWEt-f .tftlOtENAY\nNEU80N\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO COURT\n19 Furnished Cabins\u2014Boats, Fishing\nOn highway 10 miles East of Nelson\non Lake Ph 471-YI for reservations\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT, BY C.PJl.\nswitchman, wife and 3 children-\nUnfurnished house within 5 or 8\nmiles of Nelson. This is an urgent\nappeal. Please contact Don Sims,\nNorth Shore Motel, or ph. 387-L4.\n1938 FORD -.-TON-IN RUNNING\norder Snap $175  Phone 451-Y.\nPROPERTY,  HOUSES,  FARM\nETC., FOR SALE\nVALUABLE\nBAKER STREET\nPROPERTY\n300 BLOCK\n50, foot frontage. Fifst floor\nrevenue producing Second\nfloor easily adapted to office\nspace.\nACREAGE WITH\nLAKE FRONTAGE\nAt Balfour, one mile West of\nferry. 5*4 acres. 4 acres cultivated, with 25 fruit trees and\nhay. Water rights \u00ab\">R9(.\nand 4\" pipe line. ..    <P*W*\u00ab>\nUPHILL PROPERTY\nNeW home, fully modern, five-\nrooms and bath, full cement\nbasement, fully insulated, heavy\nwiring, built .last year. Lot\n42'.'xl40\\ Some <K7.l_.__\nfruit, trees. Price. \u00abP\u00abUUU\n- -.$3900 will handle.     \u2014\nOLDER TYPE HOUSE\nLot 42t_'xl40'. 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath.\nNew Gyproc throughout, new\ncedar shingle roof. Some fruit\nFuTprice $4000\n$1800 mortgage can be assumed.\nOLDER TYPE HOUSE\nOn Carbonate St. Vacant Sept.\nlst. Five room with bath and\nutility room. Garage. Partial\ncement basement. An old house\nbut ln a good location, adjacent\nto bus line and all tS\/f^nfi\nschools. Price -JWOUU\n$2000 will handle.\nCOUPLE WITH ONE CHILD RE-\nquire three-room furnished suite\nor house. Will cere for. Phone\n1198-L after five.\nURGENT - WILL MCCHANC.., T-\nroom suite downtown for 4-room\nsuite or house or what have yout\n- Phone 85-R.\nKofi RENT - 3-R6bM '<!.FF.<._,\nspace, best location; Hughes Blk.,\nTrail. Call Camera Crafts, Trail,\nor phone 334-R, Nelson.\nvvAKtUd fOrTuM TOP? ANtt\nAugust, furnished house or apartment, preferably in Fairview. J.\nM. Cormie, Hume Hotel.\nCHRISTIAN MAlS A-to Wtf-J,\ngrown daughter want apartment\nby July 15. Apply Box 1171 Daily\nNews,\nWANTED\u2014HouSfe 6r riOttAffl,\nto rent for Summer. Apply 205\nChatham St. or phone 802-R.\nV.f.R ENGlN-JEH WITH ClilL-\ndren. requires 4 or 5 room house\nto rent Box No 9798 Daily News.\nKOOM VACANT JULY lst *\u25a0<__.\nyoung business man. Apply 501\nCedar Street.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron is Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone\nPacific 6357.\nLORAINE TAPESTRY CHBSHIS\nfield and chair, Chippendale china\ncabinet, end table, lawn mower,\nlamps, dishes, etc. Box 1067 Dally\nNews.\nMOYIg VALLEY\nSOCIETY 6lRL CAFi,\nEsso Products, Modern Cabins\nMain highway entering Moyle. B.C.\nrliAWATHA' MOTl-_--.vlOD-.HsM'\nGas and Oil - Coffee Shop\n8 miles East <Sf Moyie. B.C.\nLAKEV1EW BUNGALOWS\"\nFully modern   Gas. oil. groceries\n}* mile East of Moyle. B.C.\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE \u2014 1 .SI-totE BB,D\ncouch, chest of drawers, dresser,\nrocking chair. $90 for the lot. Mrs.\nD. Bolton, 313 High Street.\nFOR SALE - CREAM ENAS-EE\nSpencer Adanac coal and wood\nrange. Water front, new grates\nand firebox. Phone 1447-L.\nOIL COOK SlWE, AS ' NEW;\nalso oil heater. Leaving city. What\noffers? Box 1926, Daily News.\n(-Riiss War* _-.__A.bv_.ir:*.\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS\nKPpRdx. 30 kOtiS S-H-SC nas\nfencing: also 1 home can sealer\ncomplete. Attree, Queen's Bay,\nWANTED TO RENT - .-ROOM\nhouse, July 1st Adults only\nPhone 804-R3.  Urgent\nApartment bv\/EllMS WAKf\n2-bedroom  home.  Phone 855-R\nwANt_b-2.Bo_)M UNFUSN.SHT\ned suite. Phone 86 or 444.\nMsbDL_%A<5_-]? L-JOMj? w-trcc\nlike suite or house. Phone 797-X.\nPERSONAL\nRAWLEIGH PRODUCTS-NICK N\nKozakoff. Gen'l Dellvety, Nelson.\nAlcohollli:& ANdmUoVIS\nP.O BOX 388, NELSON, B.C.\naZmeS t-o.'EL, oppoSilt 6_pjk\nDepot Clean-rooms and moderate\nrates $150 to $2.00 single. $2.50 to\n-3 00 doubles   Vancouver   B   C\nArTEnTtM sChc-c-LbGkSb\nSecretaries, We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept.. Nelson, British Columbis.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - ft}_l_j_l gflj.\ndo' low prices Active Trading Co\n935 E Cordova St.. Vancouver.\nift-iMdh sUCtiptm, ie vf.-\nWrlte Box 1786, Daily News.\nPhil Wood\nLOG LOADERS\nEasily Installed, fits any\ntruck or semi-trailer. Log\nyp to 1 ton.\n, Write or Phone\nRamp Body  '\nand Fender Works\n666 Josephine St., Nelson, B.C.\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS  FOR:  MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUJPMENT\nEnquiries Invited.\nGranville island. Vancouver 1, B C.\nTRUCK, TRAdtOR AND LOAD\"\nIng winches available from stock\nLeRol 103 Compressor for rent.\nBsyes Equipment Co. Cranbrook.\nB.C.\nF<5ir\nSALti\u2014Mtrt-L J-tiAN pow*:\ner saw; 38-lnch blade. Weight 60\nlbs. Model No. II. Call Don Ger-\now, McNabb's Cabins, Ymir Rd.,\nafter 5:30 p.m. Reasonable price.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MEDALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B C\nM IC R O N I C HEARiNt. AlBS.-\nWrlte PO   Hox 39   Nelson.  B.C\nBOATS, ENGINES, ETC.\nFOR SALE-OUTBOARD MOTOR\nand boat Phone 548-R.\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\nDOUBLE\nVALUE\n^SI000\nBtthtsCKf\nBmJftt\nuit\nlitttnjttet\ntitst\nextra cost\n4 loan plant\nat reiiombl. rates\nIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LfO\n^JJ   nmimur or mm mix tccrrwa\ntVWMITtW LT*\nSUITE 1\nPhona 1095    560 Baker St.\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASS4S\nand lengths Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co.. Box 450. Nelson. B C\nWANT-J_*s-5.rta_. dltR6l--. BUr-\netta suite. Corner legs. Ph. 688-Y.\nA fcAla 6^ SfRO. p6s*s. write\nBox 1351, Dally News, Nelson.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWAOTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nfor young man commencing July\n2. Apply Box 1773, Dally News.\nSEVENTY HEAD\nof\n836 Ward St.\nPhone 99\nFOR SALE\u2014DAIRY FARM, 2-ML\nfrom Rossland. 20 cows, 3 milking machines and engines. Good\ndairy, cow, barn, 3 horses, horse\nbarn, garage, blacksmith shop,\nnumerous tools, sawing machine,\nsleighs, wagons, spring, .disc and\nlever harrows, plows; chicken\nhouse. Seven roomed dwelling,\nabout 400 acres of land, \"70 in hay;\nplenty good Umber and grazing.\nWill accept some terms. Apply\nP-lresoll Drake, Box 27, Rossland\nFOR SALE \u2014 BALFOUR HOUSE\non six lots. 2 bedrooms, large flr-\nvetieered living room, dinette snd\nkitchen, 3-piece bathroom, utility\nroom, glassed-in front porch,\nlandscaped lawns, flower beds.\nAdequate water. Furniture if de-\nsired. Apply Mann, Balfour, B.C.\nFOR SALE - WELL \u2022 BUILf DU-\nplex home In Nelson. Convenient\nlocation with an excellent view.\nFive- and six-room suites. Insulated. Automatic stoker. Early occupancy. Phone 167-R or write\nA. A. Lambert, South Slocan, B.C.\n11-RM. REVENUE HOME IN VAN:\ncouver; 3 corner lots. Garden,\nfruit trees. Trade for Nelson\nproperty. Phone 396-Y after 5 p.m.\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n15 REGISTERED\nALL FROM R.O.P. STOCK\"\n15 REGISTERED\nBeautiful to look af and profitable to own\n40 HEAD OF\nNothing better In the Interior\n25 SOWS\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, June 23 (AP) -\nRailroads made progress.\n' Csnadlan issues were mostly higher. Hiram Walker galntd %, Inter-\nnationai Nickel was up Vt and Canadian Pacific and Dome Mines each\nadded *_. Mclntyre dropped V, and\nDistillers Seagrams remained unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014' Base metals'\nstaged a slow advance toward the\nclose but other sections msde little\nheadway.\nTwo metal Issues, Eureks snd\nMackeno, pushed upward ln turnovers of about 50,000 and 70,000\nshsres. A few secondary golds and\nlower priced oils also attracted speculative interest but turnovers were-\nmoderate. Volume for the session\ntotalled about 1,700,000 shsres.\nMONTREAL (CP)'\u2014 Prices continued slightly higher near tha end\nof trading.\nBeverages and miscellaneous Industrials maintained their progress\nand were Joined by senior metals,\nsenior oils, steels snd bank?.' Carriers held steady while papers snd\nutilities were fractions lower.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Quiet trading wss again tha rule. Most activity was centred In foreign bonds.\nGerman Issues moved ln sympathy with the Japanese but values\nfinished more or less unchanged on\nthe day.\nGilt-edged issues turned essier\nand closed around U lower.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, June 23 (CP) -Winnipeg grain cash prices;\nOats, No. 1 feed, 73%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.16%.\nIn July\nPHONE 117      WRITE\n(Continued in Next Column)\nLATEST REPORT\nCALVIN BOLLOCK\nto\/sa&fo! fayfioe^mmim\nGnpe-Nuts Flakes\nare extrts delicious\nbecause they're\nS_-GA.-OAST-D.And\nthey provide the\nnourishment of\nsun-ripened wheat\n\u2022nd malted barley\n..of TWO v**<\"<\nnotoiflTtyGttoe.\nNuts Flakes today.\nKOr ROGERS. Xing af tbe Cowboys\nOne In every package ef\nPOST'S GRAPE-HUTS FLAKES\nimirfui. eo tbe front \"Roy Rogers WESTERN RING\"\n\"Krall want them all\u2014TWELVE splendid\npicture tings featuring Roy Rogers, Trigger,\nBullet and other exciting Western subjects. In\nbright colon\u2014 fit any finger. Get them at\nMom's favorite grocery store.\ncouut'w! mea'eM! 6\u20acTAuaf\not General FeetU _   m '1 GF-212\nNelson\nMachinery\nColumn\nii \u25a0 \u25a0\nBULLDOG\nHOISTS\nwith a reputation for\npower and service.\n\\ \u2022 Rugged\n\u2022 Compact j\n\u2022 Light\n\u2022 Unbreakable   '\nAll Cast Steel\n5 TONS and 1 TOM\nMODELS IN STOCK\n\u2022    \u2022\nyisiw and. Was\/L\nELECTRIC\nMOTORS\nand. aaMA&UBd,\n\u2022 Motor  Control*\n\u2022 Transformers\n\u2022 Switche.\n\u2022 Generators\n\u2022 Pulleys\n(CAST IRON AND I\nSTEEL SPLIT.)'\n\u2022 Shafting\n\u2022 Bearings\n\u2022 Collari\n\u2022 Belting\nALL SIZES AND TYPES\nIN STOCK\n\u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0\nOpAaL\nSTEEL\nPRODUCTS\nFor Mining\nand Logging\nALL SIZES AND TYPES\nIN STOCK\n,    \u2022 CHOKER BITS\n\u2022 LINE HOOKS\n\u2022 DRAW BAR HOOKS\n\u2022 LOADING HOOKS\n\u2022 SWIVELS\n\u2022 CLEVISES\n\u2022 TAG LINE PLATES\n\u2022 LOADING TONGS\n\u2022   \u2022\nTHE NEW\nHORNET\n.   ONE AND TWO-MAN\nPOWER\nCHAIN 6AW\n\u2022 Dependable\n\u2022 Powerful\n\u2022 Rugged\n\u2022 Compact\n\u2022 Light\nor\nTHE DISSTON\nMODEL DO-101\nrVJSBYTHINC. YOU WANT -\"\nIN A POWER SAW\n\u2022 FARMERS v*\n\u2022 INDUSTRY\n\u2022 SAWMILLS\n\u2022 LOGGERS\n\u2022 PULPWOOD CUTTERS\nwill find a Disston to suit\ntheir requirements.\nSEE THEM TODAY IN OUR\nSHOWROOMS\n\u2022    \u2022\nCALL or PHONE\n18\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\nIi It's Machinery You Need,\nConsult Us\"\n214 Hall St.     Nelson, B. C.\n:\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, J^NE 24,1952\nBack\nwith VACATIONS AHEAD\nand CAMERA FANS on the LOOSE. . ?\nWE MAKE\nTHIS OFFER:\nBefore you leave Nelson buy all your film needs,\n1 roll or 20 rolls ... Wo will.refund your money\non all unexposed film you wish to return to us,\n(providing you bought them from us) and your\n' camera will be loaded for the best action and\nholiday shots during your whole vacation period.\nORUC. STORE\nSquare Dancing Opens Up New Life\nfor Orphan Youngsters in Alberta\n\"\"CALGARY, June 23 (CP)-Sixty\nfare-dancing  orphans  from  the\ngary district have won  them-\n' Have the Job Done R'ght\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 YEAR5 EXPERIENCE\nNELSON, B.C.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 227\n(71 Baker 8t\n9\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n'\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n815 Kootenay St       Phone 361\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\nft IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n.   876 Bsker 8t Phone 23B\ni. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANtD A REPAIRED\n11 RECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n.*>1 Ward St Phone > 63\nWe Carry Full  Line of\nGARDEN SEEDS\n'In stock for Immediate delivery.\n.Bulk Lawn Grass, Red Clover,\n\u2022Alfalfa,   and   all   Grass   Seeds.\nELLISON MILLING\nI        A ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPhone 238 Nelson, B.C.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES IINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\n,*.?\nWIGINTON\n?MOTORS LTD.\nI   PONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nJ?      G.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nselves a spot among Canada's most\ncolorful entertainers.\nThey are called the \"Do-Si-Ettes,\"\na new twist to the familiar square\ndance step, \"do-si-do and away we\ngo.\" All are from the Woods Christian Home at Calgary or the La-\ncombe Home, six miles outside the\ncity.\nThe Do-Si-Ettes have shot to fame\nln their own locality. Since their\nfirst appearance at the Calgary\nStampede in 1951. they have been\nin demand for' private appearances\nat banquets, conventions ahd similar functions.   \"\nTheir greatest triumph to date\nwas a performance Before Queen\nElizabeth snd the Duke of Edinburgh during the Royal tour last\nyear.\nSTARTED IN 1880\nThe Do-Si-Ettes are the brainchildren of Mike Hussey and Phillip Bourque of Calgary. In 1980 Mr.\nBourque, then an executive of tbe\nCanadian Shoe Retailers' Association, was asked to organize a Western train for a convention in Montreal.\nAll the delegates dressed Western\nstyle and learned to square dance.\nIn Montreal they stole the convention. When they returned Mike\nHussey, a veteran dance-caller, saw\nthem. He and Mr. Bourque decided\nto teach the same thing to children.\nFaced with a shortage of youngsters, they turned to the .Woods\nChristian Home, where they found\n30 willing recruits. Bourque and\nHussey then decided they could\nraise money for the home through\npublic appearances of the Do-Si-\nEttes. '     .'\nThe venture was successful from\nthe beginning. After the children's\nfirst appearance at the Calgary\nStampede last year the home was\nricher by more than 82000.\nCalgary businessmen gave a hand.\nThey donated or drastically reduced\nprices for the colorful old-time\nWestern costumes which the children wear when -they dance.\nFORM ANOTHER GROUP\nThe sponsors decided it wouldn't\nbe fair to give their attention only\nto the Woods Home, so last Fall\nthe Do-Si-Ettes were moved to the\nLacombe Home and 30 new dancers\nchosen. The plan is to alternate be-\ntwen homes each year.\nAlready the second group of Do-\nSi-Ettes has raised enough money\nto furnish a classroom and provide\na new truck for the home. But\nthe material gains are not the most\nimportant thing.\nThe chance to square dance opens\nup a whole new world for them. It\nallows them to meet people and\ntravel\u2014things they were unable to\ndo before.\nNow with the 1952 stampede approaching, the Do-Si-Ettes are busy\nrehearsing for their Summer program.\nBOGOTALN, Colombia, June 23\n(AP)\u2014The government announced\nSaturday night armed bandits ambushed a military patrol 170 miles\nEast of Bogota Wednesday, killing\n13 soldiers before they were beaten\noff. (In Colombia where Conservatives rule, the word bandit is often\nused to describe militant members\nof the Opposition Liberal party).\nFire Marshall\nFavorSchool fo\nSuppress Arson\nedmonton; font a .cp* - Alberta tire commissioner Austin E.\nBridges ssid today that the Association ot Canadian Fire Marshals\nfavors.establishment of n Canadian\narson school with special Instruction\nfor personnel charged with suppressing deliberately set fires.    '\nMr. Bridges, elected president of\nthe association at Its annual meeting\nSaturday in Jasper, Alta., said arson schools already are .well established ln the' United States. Large\nnumbers of Canadian fire-fighting\nofficials hsd gone there for instruction.\nPSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES\nThe schools provide Instruction\nIn ths pschology of the arsonist and\nin wsys snd means of bringing successful prosecution of such persons\nabout\nThe Jasper convention also passed\na resolution Urging the out-lawing\nof all unapproved fire-fighting appliances.\nMr. Bridges said the fire marshals believed that fires In, the initial\nstagss could be fought more effectively by privste citizens It they\nused nothing but certnfled equipment of th'etype kept readily available ln business establishments.\nEDMONTON, Junt 23 (CP)-\nCapt. Wilfred Bald (Wop) May,\nlamed flier and First World War\ncombat ace, who died Saturday in\nUtah, will ba' burled in Edmonton,\nthe city.from which he flew. North\n.to write air history In .'the ban-\nstorming days of the. bush pilot,\nThe 67-ye_rH.ld, ..ayiatpr, who\nmanaged a Canadian Pacific Airlines repair depot in. Calgary tor\nthe list year, was stricken with a\nheart attack ot Provo, Utah, while\nhe was On a vacation hiking trip\nwith his son, Dehny, 17.-,'\u25a0\u25a0. ';.,.?\n' A C.P.A. transport was sent'from\nVancouver to Salt Lake City and\nflew to Edmonton with, the body of\nthe famed, pilot, .lie funeral will be\nheld Wednesday, and May will be\nburied in the family plot here. Air\nForce headquarters has not yet announced whether there will be a\nmilitary observance of his death.\n. Born in Carberry, Man., In 1896,\nCommons Session\nle in Year Seen\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP)\u2014Another session of Parliament, possibly\nthe last before a general election,\nmay. be called late this -year.\nThere is no indication that lt will\nbe a special session, but the regular\n1953 session\u2014seventh of the 21st\nParliament\u2014called early to permit\nCabinet Ministers and Parliamentarians to attend the Queen's coronation in London next June. Ordinarily the 1953 meeting would not\nstart until January or February.\nStrengthening belief ot- early resumption of business Is a Government decision not to proceed immediately with several pieces Of legislation, Including important'amendments to the. Criminal Code.\nThe current session is expected to\nfinlsfi this month, possibly Monday,\nJune 90. To meet this target the\nCommons Is sitting mornings, afternoons and evening. including Saturday.\nIt is anticipated that when current business is completed, Parliament will be ndjourrted until* late\nNovember or early December. It\nthen would-be prorogued and a new\nsession started, last until May, with\na brief break tor Christmas.\nPioneer Railroad\nEnds Smoky Life\nCANTERBURY, England, June 23\n(Reuters)\u2014The venerable Canterbury and Whitstable Railroad is\ngoing out of business, but its \"horrible\" lOO-year-old tunnel will live\non as an air raid shelter.\nThe pld railroad, which in 1S30\nprovided the world's first regular\nsteam train service, hss been condemned as \"uneconomical\" by the\nagency running Britain's nationalized railways.\nThe early locomotives were.unable to pull the trains over a hill\non the six-mile route of the C. and\nW. So the coaches were hauled to\nthe top by ropes and then allowed\nto coast down the other side at a\n\"frightful velocity which, became\nnearly a mile a minute in places.\"\nThe line's only tunnel, now a.\nprospective air raid shelter, caused\nthe early-day passengers even more\ntrouble than the downhill speed.\nSmoke and fumes played such\nhavoc with the travellers when the\ntrain was in the tunnel that, on\nseeing how black their faces were\nat the end of the journey, they often\npreferred to walk back.\nAlberni Strikers\nLift \"Hot\" Label\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C, June 23\n(CP)\u2014The Port Alberni Local of\nthe striking International Woodworkers of America (C.I.O.-C.CL.)\ntoday lifted the \"hot\" label from\npulp on the Government assembly\ndock here.\nAt the same time the union said\nthe \"hot\" label remains on lumber\non the wharf and on a boom of logs\nreported bound for the pulp mill at\nPort Alice.\nThe pulp on the dock had been\ntied . up since the strike, started.\nThree of four ships awaiting shipments now have cleared the harbor\nwithout cargoes.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government ol British Columbia.\nC. M. & S. Puts Up\nCarload Lead Price\nMONTREAL, June 23 (CP) \u2014\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany of Canada Limited today\nraised its carload price of lead by\n2-5 of a cent a'pound at 15.2' cents\nfollowing an increase of V, cent to\n15\". cents a pound in the United\nStates.\nZinc was reduced r_y 1-10 of a\ncent a' pound to 14.7 cents, while\ncopper remained unchanged at 29,5\ncents.\n8 KILLED, 20 INJURED\nMANILA, June 23 (AP) - Two\npassengers, swinging bolo knives,\nran amok aboard the inter-island\nmotorship Grayling in Zamboanga.\nThey slashed to death six women\nand children and wounded 20\nothers, the Philippines News Service reported today. One of the\nberserk attackers was killed by a\nship security officer. The other was\nsubdued.\nWop May, Famed Canada Pilot,\nDies ^\nhe moved with his family to Edmonton in 1002..Capt. May was educated it Edmonton and Calgary\nschools, and at tbe sgt of 20 Joined\nthe 202hd Battalion ahd went overseas in 1918, where he transferred\nto the* Royal Flying Corps. '\n. May Went-on to ihoot down is\nGerman ;alrcraft, win. the- Distinguished Flying Cross, and gain promotion to the rank of captain. Following'the war He returned to* Canada, and a few years later organized\nthe first sir line operating out bf\nEdmonton.\nIn 1919 he made the first non-stop\nflight from Edmonton to Winnipeg,\ncovering the 800-mile flight at an\naverage speed -of 112 miles an hour.\nThat year hew* awarded the McKee Trophy for having contributed\nthe most to aviation In the country\nin 19-9. .\nIn 1935 he was awarded the O.B.E.\nThe' nickname^ \"Wop\" was  ac\nquired when a lisping baby girl\ncalled him \"Woppie\" while trying\nto pronounce Wilfred.\nBut Capt May was soon to be\ngrounded. In 1038 he was given in\nexecutive post by Canadian Airlines\nLtd., later absorbed by Canadian\nPacific Airlines. .\"  _ '.\nWhen the Second World War.\nbroke out, May returned to military\nduty. He operated this No. 2 Air\nObserver School at Edmonton, and\nwas supervisor for No. 7 Air Observer, School at Winnipeg ahd No.\n8 at Portage >1.<. Prairtf.:-.'.:;\nAfter the war' he returned to\nC.P.A. ind became director df development until, he was appointed\nhead of the repair depot at Calgary,\nwhich services R.CA.TI.aircraft '\nBesides his son, Denny, he is survived by his widow; a daughter,\nJoyce May,' all living ln Calgary;\nand a sister, Mrs. Walter Fife, of\nBoston, Mass. i\nBusiness Spotlight ...\nSpeedy Decision on U.S. Strike\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nThe United States steel strike, entering its fourth week, will cause\nproduction - line slowdowns and\nstoppages in Canada \"In a week or\ntwo\" unless the strike ends before\nthen, says Dr. H. H. Sanderson, ma'\nterlals co-ordinator of the Defence\nProduction Department, .\n\"Some of the companies are beginning to feel the pinch now,\" he\nsaid \"in a recent interview.\nHowever, production lines In most\nplants relying on imported steel and\npartly-fabricated steel parts, would\nnot begin to slow down unless the\nstrike, continues another week.\nAlthough steel imports are only\nabout one - quarter \u25a0 ot Canada's\nneeds, they consist in part of steel\ntypes not made In this countrywide rolled plates, certain wide-\nflanged beams and other special\ntypes.\nCanadian mills were unable to\ntake up the extra demand after the\nstrike.\n\"Canadian mills hive been working top-speed right along,\" said Dr.\nSaunderson. \"When we lost our\nU.S. supply there was no slack in\nCanadian mills to fall back on. They\ndidn't have any slack in their program.\"\nSteel Is the backbone, of all Industrial development, and a crisis\nin steel usually spreads to other\nfields. In Canada, automobile factories have usually been the first\nhit\nCanada's own steel industry has\nbeen gradually expanding. Forecasts have said lt may be able to\nmeet this country's needs for most\ntypes of steel within 18 months.\nThere are a few types such as wide-\nrolled steel, however, for which the\ndemand does not warrant expenditure on the heavy machinery to\nproduce it - \/\nMalcolm MacDonald favors Ease\nBefore Fashion in Hof Climates\nSINGAPORE, June 23 (AP) \u2014\nMalcolm Macdonald, top British\ndiplomat ln South Asia, said today\nit is time to break the tyranny of\nthe dinner jacket in this sweltering\nclimate.\nMacdonald, Commissioner General for Southeast Asia, showed up\nlast week at a concert by opera\nsinger Helen Troubel In his shirt\nsleeves, but wearing a black tie.\nA letter in a newspaper signed\n\"Disgusted\" interpreted such attire\nby Macdonald as disrespectful to\nMiss Traubcl. In an answering letter ln the Straits Times today, Macdonald said that Miss Traubel knew\nin advance and approved of his appearance. He added:\n\"You\u00bb correspondent seems to\nthink  the  wearing  of  masculine\nevening dress without a coat is i\ncrude Innovation; buit it is of course\nnothing of th..kind. For long In\nvarious sunhy parts of the British\nCommonwealth the accepted evening dress for (nan hai;been.the\nblack tie, white shirt, black cummerbund, black or white trousers,\nand\u2014no coat.\"    \u2022\nMacdonald said he didnt favor\ncostless appearances for State occasions, \"but I do suggest that for\nmany functions, and for those who\nlike lt, it is a good alternative to\nthe fuggier (stuffier) costume, and\nthat In Malaya we now break the\ntyranny Of the dinner Jacket just as\nIt was broken In India and elsewhere by fine Imperial statesmen\nand shining aristocrats who happened also to be sensible men in\nsplendid days of yore.\"\nRadio, TV Talks\nHeld in London\nLONDON, June 23 (Reuters)\u2014The\ndevelopment of television and the\nexchange of radio programs and\nnews services between the state\nradio services of Commonwealth\nnations is being discussed at a conference which opened today in\nLondon,\nProspects of staff exchanges,\ntraining and other relative matters\nwill also be studied at the conference, first of its kind to be held for\nseven years.\nRepresenting the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation are five delegates headed by A. D. Dunton,\nchairman. Other countries represented are Australia, New Zealand,\nSouth Africa, India, Pakistan, and\nIndia.\nThe conference will meet dally ln\nLondon for the first two weeks.\nDelegates will later visit Oxford\nUniversity and inspect broadcasting\nand television centres in the North\nof England and in. Scotland.\nTel Aviv Men Held\nOn Bqmb Charges\nTEL AVIV, June 23 (AP)\u2014Police\nhave arrested a prominent Jewish\nnewspaper man and one other man\nfollowing , bomb blasts Saturday\nnight at the.home of Israel's Minister of Communications, David\nPinkas.\nThe explosions caused only slight\nproperty. damage, and injured no\none.\nPolice said the paalr being held\nwefe seen leaving Pinkas' home\njust before the explosions'. They\nare Mos Canaa, a columnist for Libera) newspapers, and Ben Yair\nShaltlal. *   \".\nThey are members of the Union\nof Cana'anites, extremists who oppose making ancient Hebrew religious laws part of the Government's\ncivil code. The organization opposes\na recent Ministry of Communications ban on motor traffic on Saturday, the.Jewish Sabbath. The\nGovernment says the ban alms to\nconserve the nation's short fuel\nsupply.      j\nFRACTURES SKULL\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., June\n23 (CP) \u2014 M\u00bbs. Cora Thwaltes, 28,\ndied in hospital here Saturday night\nseven hours after she collapsed and\nstruck her head on the sidewalk.\nShe suffered \u25a0 fractured skull.\nMenzies Asks for\nTrade Conference\nOTTAWA, June 23 (CP)-Prlme\nMinister Menzies ef Australia told\nl press conference today that he\nthinks the time Is rips for a\nCommonwealth conference on financial and trade matters,\nHers on a four-day visit for\ntalks with Cabinet members, Mr,\nMenzies said the subject of such\na conference may crop up In his\ndiscussions, but that no agenda\nhas been laid down.\nThe Commons recently rejected\na Progressive Conservative mo\ntlon calling for a Commonwealth\nconference.\nMystery of Ihe\nLost Equipment\nFORT'FRANCES, Ont, June 23\n(CP)\u2014This Northwestern Ontario\ntown has a mystery on Its hands\u2014\nthe disappearance of $95,000 worth\nof municipal equipment.\nIn a radio address Saturday over\nCKFI, Mayor Joseph T. Livingstone\nsaid about $155,000 worth of equipment was taken from the town yard\nlast year but only $60,000 worth can\nbe accounted for,\n\"The remaining $95,000 is cloaked\nln mystery,\" he said.\nThe mayor said there is a \"possibility\" that some or all of the\nsupplies were used for town purposes. But the fact remained that\n\"thieving, methodical removal and\nwell-known borrowing could hav e\nbeen carried out.\"\nMayor Livingstone said he had\nlearned a petition was being circulated among residents to stop\ntown plans for building a store\nhouse for civic materials. The building would be supervised to prevent\nthieving.'   -,-'   .\nPLANE STRIKES FENCE .\nBROOKS, Alta., JUne 22'..(CP) >\u2022\nDavid Panar of Edmonton was inf-\njured Saturday when the ligh,t\nplane he was. piloting crashed Into\n'a fence oh take-off near Brooks,\nabout .150 miles East of Calgary.   :\nPanar, an inspector to* the Provincial Public Works Department\nhad visited the horticultural station at Brooks just before the\ncrash.\nHe was taken to Brooks hospital\nsuffering minor cuts and bruises.\nThe'plane, a.light Cessna belong-\nig to the Edmonton Flying Club,\n\u25a0as wrecked.-*\nGrandraa'Carried\nA Lot of Weight ?\nLONDON, Jtine 23 (CP) \u2014 The.\n\"weight'! of being fashionable Is a\nlot jess than it Used to be in grandmother's day.   ,'        ';\u25a0*' ,\nIn Edwardian days, a light-weight\nsummer outfit for women weighed\nmore than seven pounds. Now it's\njust slightly more than one- pound.\nThese figures come from Doris\nLangley Moore, one of Britain's\nbest-known historians on women's\nstyles through the ages. She gives\nthese cotnrasts:   :   .\nDress and two petticoats lour\npounds.' seven ounces in 1902, five\nounces in 1952; combinations - and\nchemise, 65. ounces, slip and panties six ounces';, corset with 40\nbones, ono pound two' ounces, roll-\nons, two ounces; shoes and stockings, one pound compared with 4\".\nounces.\nPolio Outbreak\nSpreads in Sask.\nREGINA, June 23 (CP)-Saskat-\nchewan's (^.-season poliomyelitis\nepidemic continued today, with 18\ncases receiving treatment in hospital here.\nSix more victims from the Hague-\nHepburn-Waldhelm area, 30 miles\nNorth of Saskatoon, were brought\nto Regina by air Saturday.\nMOst of the 16 victims have been\nchlldr.n, and- there have been no\ndeaths. \u25a0' '-*. .'-. ';\u25a0. ....\n. Polid Usually, cache? its \u00a3eak ln\nAugust and early September, and\ntbe June outbreak is somewhat out\nof season, i   .\" \"\nMay Have F-M\nOutbreak ticked\nREGINA, June 23. (CP) - Saskatchewan's foot and mouth diseae\npicture is brightening as test animals remain .free of signs of the\nmalady after a week off running on\nformer infected or contact premises.* '      \u25a0\nDr. E. E. Carlson, federal assistant chief veterinarian for Saskatchewan, said today that the disease has not been rediscovered on\nany of the premises.\nTest animals, 213 jilgs, and 97 cattle, were, placed oh farms last week\nand have been testeS periodically\nby federal veterinarians. The test\nperiod will end 30 days after animals were placed on suspect farms.\nJapan Grave on\nAllied Bombing\nTOKYO, June 2_' (AP)\u2014Japanese\nnews editors took a grave view of\nthe Allied bombing today of Suiho\npower project in Korea\u2014Japan's\nengineering triumph, and one of the\nworld's biggest hydro-electric developments.\nChuro Nishimura, Asiatic news\neditor of the big Tokyo newspaper\nYomiuri, expressed belief \"the U.N.\nhas played a trump card and perhaps risked an all-out war with\nCommunist China.\"\nThe bombing will probably slow\nfurther the ! progress .of the deadlocked, truce, talks, said Kelzo No-\nzue, vice.chief of the foreign news\nsection of the big newspaper Asahi.\none of Japan's influential national\ndailies. ' \".'..\u25a0'. \"\n\" \"We understand General MacArthur did not bomb the dam ln the\nearly days of the war because it\nmight bring Chinese Communists'\nintervention. To bomb it now was a\nvery Important step.\"\nJapanese editors generally expressed the belief the bombing was\na \"political\" rather than a strictly\nmilitary assault.\nHEADS SOCIAL WORKERS\nQuebec, Jun* 22 (cp> \u2014 mi_s\nBessie E.- Touzel of Ottawa was\nelected president of' the Canadian\nAssociation of Social Workers to\nsucceed Miss Marjoria^L. Moore.of\nWinnipeg.\nBritish Columbia provincial representatives' are; Mary K. King,\n>-$qiiWr'fc'iipd Harry L. Moijow,\nIsolafionalism\nWill Find U.J.\nEncircled -Ike\n,By DON WHITEHEAD\nDENVER, Colo., Juno 23 (AP) -\nGen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said\ntonight that a retreat into Isolationism will leave \"a gaunt and naked\nAmerica .. , encircled by a savage\nwolf pack\" of Communisni.! \u25a0    -\nHe told i television and radio\naudience this bleak scene will come\nto pass if Americans \"heed the\nfalse prophets of living ilohe.\"\nAnd then he offered his own four.-\npoint program for security and\npeace in a speech billed as an\nattack on the foreign policy views\nof Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio,\nhis chief opponent for the Republican presidential nomination. The\ngeneral has privately called Taft an\n\"isolationist.\"\nEisenhower declared hia own\n\"deep faith\" that we can have peace.\nBut he added there is no easy way\nto peace.\nHe called the force of \"aggressive\nCommunism\" cunning, godless, and\naiming to destroy all freedoms.\nThen he said: ''\u25a0?';\n\"Those who assert that America\ncan retire within its own borders;\nthose who seem to think jve have\nlittle or no stake lh the rest of the\nworld and what happens to It; those\nwho act as though we had no need\nfor friends to share in the defence\nof freedom\u2014those persons are ignorant or irresponsible or they are\ntaking an unjustified gamble with\npeace ...\"\nPOSITIVE PROGRAM\nEisenhower then outlined this\npeace program;\n1. Make sure the whole world understands America's sincere devotion to peace, rejecting all talks and\nproposals for \"preventive war.\"\n2. Support of the United Nations\nas an instrument of peace and the\nNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization\nand other security agreements in\nAsia and the Pacific.\n3. Adopt a positive foreign pro\ngram rather than \"hand to mouth'\noperations with assurance to the\nworld that the United States will\n\"never be indifferent\" to any enslaved-country.\n4. Build up spiritual and military\nstrength behind which \"we will be\nable to present to the masters of the\nKremlin a. Just and practipal plan\nfor freeing the world from the burden of -armaments.''\nDEATHS'\nBy The Canadian Press\nCALGARY - Capt. Wilfred Reid\n(Wop) May, 57, one of Canada's\nmost famous Northern bush pilots\nand an aviation pioneer lh the West\nTORONTO - CpiT Robert Lawrence Junkih, chief Instructor at the\nCanadian Engineers training centre\nat Petawawa during the Second\nWorld War. '\nROCHESTER, Minn. \u2014 ,Dr. Chrla-\n-pher GraHan), 96, last of the grout-\nof doctors who founded the famed\nMayo Clinic.\n.BRANFORjD, Conn. \u2014 Francis Y.\nJoannes, 78, well-known architect\nwho designed Toronto's Union Station and the Halifax ocean terminals. ,\nWASHINGTON-James W. Wads-\n.worth, 74, former United States\n\u25a0senator and representative from\nNew York.\nHafeto_Fogt_\nHEAltH\nwith tha,\noriginal cushion solo.\n\u2022 The ptatented    .\nsoft, ALL-WOOL\nINNER'SOLE\nprovidesa\ncomfortable i, .\ncushion   \u2022\nunexcelled for\nsports arid\nevery-day wear.\nAnkle and\nRegular Length\n' LIMITED.\nThe Man's Store\nSEES IMPORTANT ROLE\nFOR LIBERALISM\nIN CANADA'S FUTURE\nPORTAGE LA PRAIK1B, Ma'n.,1\nJune 23 (CP) \u2014 Resources Min-I\nlster Winters yesterday said he wall\nconfident the Liberal Government!\nwould be re-elected if \"it went to|\n.the country tomorrow.\"\nSpeaking at the annual meetlngl\nof the Manitoba Young Liberator\nAssociation, . he said recent by-L\nelection defeat of Liberals did not]\nindicate a swing from Liberalism!\nin Canada,\nHe said the defeats were \"disJ\nturbapces on the electoral picture,\"!\nDespite a loss of seats In the Junef\n11 Saskatchewan general election!\nhe said the Liberals had actually!\n''gained strength.\"\n\"When we go to the country In!\nah election we will find that -thel\nLiberal Government is going tol\nplay an Important role In the future!\nof the country and will be running]\nthe affairs of Canada for years to]\ncome,\" he said.\nTO PRE8ENT PAPER\nLETHBRIDGE, June 22 (CP) -\nDr. S. B. Slen, wool specialist at\nthe Dominion Experimental - Station here, left by air today for\nDavis, Calif., where he will present\na paper at tbe Western section\nmeetings of the American Society\nof Animal Production..He will return next weekend.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nit thi\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 14>\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts 81k.\nPHONE-1\nAYER MAGIC    O\n1 HARRIET HUBBARD AYER\nIntroduce.1 the First   *'.\"\"\"'\n8HADOW FREE MAKE-UP\nConceals facial lines and shadows which no foundation cream\nwill do.  -\u25a0   7-\n$2.50\nSold Only at Your Rexsll Stan\nCity Drug]\nCOMPANY\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day - 807-R NlgM\nv\\ BOX 460\nNothing* Adds Charm to a Bathroom\nLike a\nBUILT-IN BATH\nThe new patterns ore modernistic in design and finish\nand present a graceful appearance.\nWrite, phone or call us and we will gladly quote\non the installation.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 666\nWe Don't Give Premiums\nBUT...\nWe Do Give Dollar for Dollar Value\nPlus\n6   FREE  DRIVING  LESSONS   6\nNEW NASHES \u2014 NEW HUDSONS\nAnother\n1948 PLYMOUTH DELUXE SEDAN\nHeater, ete. Like new.\n1947 FRAZER DELUXE SEDAN\nOnly 21,000 miles, Air Conditioned, Overdrive, Two-Tone.\nAir Foam  Cushions.  Looks and  runs like new.\nBelow Vancouver Prieei'\nCASH    r-    TERMS    -,    TRADES\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson 1949) Ltd.\n!\u25a0'\u00bb.-? HUDSON   -   NASH   -*  HILTMAN  '\u25a0\nSALE8 AND SERVICE\nPhone 117 -      Baker St.\n\/.:-\u25a0   v:\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1952_06_24","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0426245","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1952-06-24 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1952-06-24 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0426245"}