{"@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":"2023-03-01","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1953-07-08","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427727\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" lltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHr\nTODAY'S BONSPIEL\nPROGRAM\n'3:00 to 5:00.ji.ni.\u2014Afternoon tea for visiting lady\ncurlers.   \u25a0'\u2022 ' ..\u25a0.,-,..-   .\n6:15 p.m.\u2014Senior ladies' fastball,' Ciyic Recreation.\nGrounds. . \u2022 '\n6:30 p.m.\u2014Little League baseball, Queen Elizabeth\nPark.   -7.'7 \" '''iff 'yti    . \u25a0 v\nA      ,9:00 p.m.\u2014.Films in\" Lakeside Park, by Nelson Film\nCouncil\n'illliillllllllllllllililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllililiiiilliiiiiiiinii\nTitle Curlers in\nQuarter Finals\n16 Rinks in Chase for Women's\nCrown; two More Events in Play\nWith the skies overhead cloudless and Sol beaming\nhis powerful fays down on Nelson all day Tuesday jt looked\nanything but good curling weather. Yet Canadian Summer\nBonspiel curlers in their gaily-colored sweaters continued\nto toss 'em down the ice lanes in both the Civic Centre ctftl-\nirig rink'and, the Arena where five additional rinks were\nmade available.\nthe Arena will be used again today in an effort to\nget as far along*in the 'spiel as possible by Thursday, Play\nyesterday saw two more events, the Kootenay Challenge\nand the Queen City competi- ~ \"\"\ntions under way.\nThe ladles also got off te a good\nstart as 16 rinkibegan play for the\nGreenwood Trophy and the Canadian Women's Summer Curling\n\u25a0crown. ,\nThis is the largest entry yet for\nthis event, even though one rink\nthe M. Blundell aggregation from\nKimberley, dropped out at ihe last\nminute. '.- >\nIt was expected earlier that there\nwould be only 12 rinks entered, but\nleveral rinks of visitors from put\nof town, on finding out thire was\na ladles' event, jumped right in to\nhave themselves a time\nPlay In the senior competition\nfor   the- summer   curling   title\nreached' the eights lite Tuesday\n(light Three rounds of the Kort-\n. imy Challenge, secondary ever, j\nwere also played, The third event\nthl Queen City, will get under\n\u2022- way this morning. ''\nFirst round play in the ladies'\nevent was run off and three games\nln the second round finished up\nlast night to send the 'spiel well on\nlti way.\nIN DOUBLE FIGURES\nThe majority of the rinks reaching- the eights in the top event-\nfound the going relatively easy as\nthey topped' their opponents with\ndouble figure, scores ,- \u25a0'\nThe W. W. Adair irtyt; ffe-n\n\u2022JJM-\"'' ^'f^l^JIHHmwiI-fn-^Vlllh\nTOEPftiaOF\n\"GOOD FAITH\"\nJERSEY CITY, ML j. (AP)-\nAn  63-year-old  spinster  went  |\nout tor a dish of ice cream\nMonday, it cost her 116,000.\nHere, said \u2022 police, is what\nhappened to Nellie Drain:\nMiss Drain left her apart:\nment for sortie ice cream at. a\nnearby soda fountain and pas-\nled the time ofll'iy with a woman sitting on the next stool\nuntil a third woman- joined\nthem.\n\"The new arrival breathlessly\ntold of finding a large sum of\nmoney and ot. giving it to her\nboss in a nearby, office building for safe-keeping.\n. The women ottered to share\nthe find with Miss Drain if she\nwould put up money to show\ngood faith.\nThat sounded fair to Miss\nDrain so, accompanied by one\nof her'new acquaintances, she\nwent to' a New York bank,\nwithdrew $18,000 savings and\nhanded it over to her companion.\nWhen they got back to Jersey City the woman said she\nhad to meet her friend at the\nboss' office and complete the\ndeal, The $18,000 went with her,\nMiss Drain waited and waited and waited and then called\npolice.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllilillllllllllllllllllll.il\nHarris, still minus their skip who\nIs reported In hospital, came\nthrough with a rousing 12-4 vie-\ntory over R. Hambley of Benalte,\n\u2022Alta. Wayne Adair, the youngest\ncurler on the Ice again, as In\ntheir opening game, played a\nsteady .lead.\nLen Peerless of Nelson remained\nin the running as he took the measure of the Robertson rink from\nEdmonton by a 10-4 count. E. B.\nOlson's Edmonton rink kept that\ncity ln contention as they disposed\nof the A. Norman rink from Ferin-\ntosh 11-8. Jim Taylor of Portage,\nWis , playing in his ninth straight\n'spiel, came through with an easy\n18-4 win over N. Kulyk of Luscar.\nG. H. Montgomerie of Regina had\nthe roughest time in gaining the\nnext round when Dick Palmer gave\nhim a run for his- money before\nbowing out 9-8.\nSAME 8CORES\nThree late games last night all\nended with the ssme score with the\nwinning dubs doubling the scores\non their opponents.\nB. R. Turner of Kyle dumped R.\nS. Harper out of thi event with a\n12-8 win as did M. D. McCallum of\nEdmonton over C. Esche of Salmo\nand W. Kecnan of Champion ousted thi Bin King rink from Vermillion. S\nAll eight rinks will.hit. tbi ice\nat 1:45 p.m. today for the next stop,\nthe quarter,il-uili. -vinisifefittW\n'\u2022 Throughout, this'day thi lijigS*.\ners were continually in use as\npacked crowds were on hand to\nsee the many fine games. Several\ngames already have bad to be decided by the draw te the button.\nIWAVOTESSOON\nON WAGE DISPUTE\n. VICTORIA \u2014 (CP) \u2014 Thl 82,'000\nBritish Columbia coast members of\nInternational -Woodworkers of America CIO will vote shortly' on a\nunanimous conciliation board\naward that recommended, a basic\nhourly wage of f 1.49; 14 cents, over\nthe current wage.        ..\/\nThe conciliation board award re\nleased here Tuesday recommended\na straight wage increase. of five\ncents an hour and also incorporation of a nine-cent hourly cost of\nliving bonus into the basic pay.\nThe union, B.C.'s biggest, had\nasked a straight 15-cent hourly increase. ''\nThe board also recommended an\nadded increase to engineers but\nmade no recommendation of union\nshop.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Rev. E. i\nBailey of Edmonton, president,\nTuesday night opened a four-day\nconvention of the Baptist Union of\nWestern Canada.\nMore than 800 delegates are attending, and a meeting of the Baptist Federation of Canada will be\nheld July 10-14 with some 400 delegates \u2022\u25a0 present. \".'\n'\/\u00ab?\/\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Clear. Continuing\nwarm. Winds light Low and high\nat Cranbrook 48 and 85, Crescent\nValley 45 and ,90..,      '\n-*:\u00ab*JBfSB\nC, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING. JULY 8, 1953\nNo. 64\nnee\nCoverftge % Be M$er$ed\nREDS ACCEPT\nTftOCfpR\nArmistice td Be v\nSigned Regardless\nOf Rhee _*is$ent     a\n'PANMUNJ6M,TCorea. (AP)-The\nCommunists today, accepted Gen.\nMark W. Clark's proposal of June\n29 to proceed with final arrangements for signing a Korean armistice without South Korea, participating.\nThe acceptance was contained in\na message to the'United Nations\ncommander handed to Allied liaison\nofficers.in reply to Clark's suggestion tor a truce now. ;:A,',\nThe Communist high command\nagreed to permit truce teams to go\nahead with the question of implementing an armistice agreement.\nSatellites Face\nFood Crisis\nBy RICHARD O'REQAN\nVIENNA 4AP) - Widejpread\nhunger in some areas of Communist East Europe was reported\nTuesday as Czechoslovakia eased\nupon the whip to keep sullen\nworkers on the job.    .      '\u2022\u25a0;;\nReports reaching diplomatic\nsources in Vienna said food shortages are affecting millions in Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Albania: and Poland. Ac\ntual death from starvation was\nreported among some of the poor.\nIn East Germany, the harvest was\nexpected.to be poor because many\nexperienced farmers have fled to\nthe West\nThe food crisis and smouldering\nunrest throughout Russia's satellite\nempire appeared to be thi major\nreasons for- conciliatory gestures by\nCommunist governments. -V\nCftT-mA-tCPy \u2014 TSittentyi, unemployment insurance coverage\nfor Canadian workers will go into\neffect AUg. 3, it ii learned. - V';,:\n.'The enlarged benefits, covering\npersons who become ' incapacitated\nafter losing their jobs, were authorized at the last session.of Parliament,, but proclamation of Uie measure was delayed 'while details of\nthe plan were worked out. 7\n-Officials said Tuesday unemployment insurance commission offices\nacross the country now havo been\nequipped with instructions for. applying the legislation- ft will be\nproclaimed July 18, to go into practical operation Aug: 3.\nAt present persons thrown out\nof work receive insursnce benefits\nonly so long as they are available\nto take on other jobs. If sickness\nor other disability bars them from\ncalling personally for their insurance cheques, they do not collect.\nUnder  the. new amendment  te\nthe Unemployment Insurance Ac,t,\nthose becoming incapacitated after\nunemployment starts' will continue\nto receive benefits for as long as\nthey Would be qualified to get uiep\nIf they-were callable if:Working,\n7 Hpwever,: Workers who have--lo\nleave the job in the iirst place because of illness or injury will -not\nbe covered by the federal insurance plan ' tif  '..\nInjury on the job is covered'by\nWorkmen's compensation, ' while\nprovision of coverage for illhess\ngenerally is regarded, by the \/govV\nernment aB in- tho field of health\ninsurance.- '\u25a0\"'\u25a0 V; '\nThe extension will not-Involve\nany increases in ' contributions, to\nthe Unemployment Insurance Fund\nwhich now stands at more than\n$800,000,000. There has been no official estimate of how much additional benefits the new plan will\ndraw from the fund,.but-Unofficial\nestimates are- between $2,000,000\nand $5,000,000 a year.\nLaing Defeats Rolston\nIn Point Grey Riding\nMISSING CHILD\nSTILL SOUGHT\nMINAKI, Ont. (CP) \u2014 About 800\npolice,- forest rangers, Indians,\ncampers and local residents, plowing through forest and muskeg,\nlate Tuesday still had found no\ntrace of a five-year-old Winnipeg\ngirl missing since Sunday in this\nresort area 110 miles East of Winnipeg    .\nThe child, Geraldine Huggan,\nwandered away from her grandparents' summer cottage at Wade,\nsix miles West of here on the CNR\nmain line.\n(000 Reds Storm\niBBasrv*\n;#7'^-?(!p?r*-7\"H&\u00a3\n; \u25a0SfcOUL' am> \u2014 Reiriorced U.S.\nand South Korean 'troops) were reported holding1 grimly tenay while\nmore than 6001) Chinese Reds\nstormed the muddy slopes of Pork-\nchop hill and Arrowhead ridge for\nthe second day.\"\n- The fighting, 40 to 45 miles north\nof Seoul, was the most, violent in\nWeeks on' the western front It wis\nthe first heavy assault ort U.S.\ntroops since the Reds began picking on one South Korean division\nafter another ln grinding assaults\nln mid-June.\nUK. TO STAND\nFIRM IN SUEZ\nLONDON (CP) V Br\/tain will\nstand firm In Washington- on her\npolicy of holding the Suez Canal\nZone pending a wider settlement\nwith Egypt, government officials\nsaid Tuesday night\nTRIAL IN 8ECOND DAY\nVANCOUVER':\u2014 (CP) - Trial\nof Harold Graham, 41,\" deckhand\naboard the tugboat Lapoine, on a\ncharge of murdering Sylvio Cyril\nZanatta, 40, oiler on the vessel,\nwent into its second day Tuesday.\nMr. Justice Clyne is presiding.\nHarold W. Parker,-engineer on the\nvessel, testified that the Lapolnte\nhad reached Belllngham, Wash.,\nMay 9 to pick up a tow and the\ncrew had gone into'town to go. to\ntaverns. ' f\n46 Police Shot\nFor Disobedience\nBERLIN (AP) \u2014 The West Berlin newspaper Telegraf said today\nthat 48 Communist German \"peoples' police\" have been executed by\nRussian firing squads for \"disobeying orders and resisting the Red\nArmy\" during the June 17 workers revolt in East Germany..\nNo source was given for the report, which is considerably higher\nthan iny prsvibu^-estimate ef the\nyarW^^^e^^mmrp-tSai:\nthe Piii German police proved in\nthe . iiprtelng - thit\/* the Russians\ncould not rely upon them against,\ntheir own pebple. They oftenv re-'\nfused to fire on rioters' and sometimes even joined the rebels. Some\n500 have fled to West Berlin in the\nlast month.    .\nDemonstrations in front of empty\nfood stores were reported jn many\nsections of East Germany. The harvest, which began last week,.is expected to bo slim because SO many\nexperienced' farmers' have fled to\ntee Wist, and those remaining have\nbeen hampered-by Communist red\ntope and lack ot equipment.\nSTAMPEDE TO BE\nFILMED IN 3-D\n. CALGARY (CP) \u2014 The first\nShort ever made in cinemascope is\nbeing produced at the Calgary\nStampede by 20th Century Fox\nMovietone cameramen.\nOperating a; 35 mm. Mitchell\ncamera with a special cinemascope\nlens, cameraman Jack Painter and\nan assistant-plan to capture everything from Monday's- big parade\nto the chuckwagon races.\nThe 15-minute short of the\nStampede is expected to open in\nthe Roxy Theatre in New York.''\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK(CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar was 1-18 higher at a\npremium of 13-16 per cent in terms\nof U.S. funds Tuesday. He pound\nsterling was unchanged-at $2.81%.\nSIX DIE AS\nBOMBER BURNS\nCHESTERTOWN, Md. CAP) \u2014 A\nfour-engined United States Navy\nplane crashed In flames on the\nwest bank of the Chester river\nsouth of here Tuesday, killing the\nsix men aboard.\nThe navy In Washington slid the\nplane was a Constellation transport\non a training flight from its base\nat tho Patuxent, Md.. naval station.\nThe burning fuselage landed\nabout 20 feet from five workmen-\nbuilding a new house, stunning\nthem aiid knocking them down but\ninjuring them only superficially.\nRecount Granted\nNANAIMO, B. Q (CP) \u2014 A judicial recount of ballots cast in'the\nJune 9 election in the riding of\nNanaimo and the. Islands was\ngranted Tuesday. If will be held\nJuly 15 before Judge L. Arnold\nHanna ill county court.\nThe check was: asked by Earle C.\nWistwoqd,:'SociaTVCredit candidate\nvibo lost to Dr.\" Laitfy fStoYttdo,\nProgressive-.. C.triSerVfttiV'Jp.'b'j'.AIO\"\nvotes on the fourth count of alternative \u2022 choices.\nIn'the final count;' Dr. Glovondo\ndefeated Dave Stupich, CCF, by 18\nballots.\nManitoba Gov't\nGains Strength\nWINNIPEG, (CPl\u2014Primler.D. L.\nCampbell's Liberal - Progressive\ngovernment, of Manitoba. Tuesday\nnight was guaranteed support from\n35 of the 57 legislature seats with\nthe election of party candidates in\ntwo closely-contested deferred'elections . in . Ste. Rose and Rupert's\nLand. Gildas L. Molgat Ste. Rose\nmerchant, and Roy Brown, pilot,\n\u25a0won seats.\nARTHUR-LAING\n7 Wins in Vancouver-\n', Point Grey Riding\nLiberals Win Fourth Seat; Finals\nSee Two Cabinet Ministers Unseated\nVANCOUVER (GP)\u2014in-Jthe last surpris? of the 1953\nelection in British Columbia, Atthur Laing, new Liberal\nleader, Tuesday'captured; a seat.from Social Credit,    <].\nHe defeated: Education Minister Mrs; Tilly Rolston as\nthe fount was -completed in the' multi-seat ricfing of Vancouver-Point Grey;' '\u25a0.-.\u2022\nEarlier, Attorney-General Robert Bonner- was re--\nelected in the riding.\nLower Milk\nPrices Expected\nVICTORIA (QP) \u2014 A cabinet\nmeeting Friday is expected to do\ncontrol-milk above'',..the pioducer\nlevel, it Was reported heri Tuesday. A\nThe .government's plan \"of decontrol was announced some, months\nago but instigating it was delayed\nuntil after the June 9 election.\nThe decontrol would unfreeze\nmilk prices both delivered tnd\nstore-bought. '.-:'\n..Stares here and on the mainland\nare expected to cut their prices\nfrom .two - to three cents, immediately.        V      , -   ,      .       l'::     ;:\nA spokesman\" for one chain store\n1J^S\u00bb^ata*W*\u00ab4S)r\\VCOUW -CUt\ni^s prices iby two ?ents]bnly tt^thrf\nmilk is packaged in paper Carton;\nand not te glass m|Ut bottlqs as at\nPresent.'. , ..-'-'.'7 7 -\\-     7. .-:\nIn' Vancouver, Canada Safeway\nLtd: will receive' milk packaged in\npaper cartons from Richmond Milk\nProducers? ^Association- antl will\nsel^irin ite stores it two cento;less\nthan tee present price.        --\nSafeway here will use bottles and\nstill, cut- prices bjr. two cents. \u2022 .\nOther large .chain stores indicated\nthey honepV te'.'folibw the Safeway\nlead.,-, ::  'VYY...      .    '\nResearchers Perch\nOn Mountain Top   .\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) - A\ncosmic ray research expedition has\nestablished a. camp .with two huts\nanil .several supply caches atop 14,-\nOOG-foot Mount Wrangell.\nThis was announced Tuesday by\nDr. Serge Kofrff, \"director of the\ncosmic ray project.\nHe said one of the 16-foot-square\nhuts is being used as living quarters and .the other as a laboratory\nhousing equipment tor the joint\nNew York University-University of\nAlaska project.\nRIOT THREATENS\nIN EAST BERLIN\n-BERLIN'- (AEJ). \u2014 East Berlin's\nCommunist police were called, out\nto special duty-on a radioed alert\nTuesday night:to tackle .threatened\nnew dhti-Red uprisings. Russian\ntanks \"were reported rushed in.\nNew strikes and demonstrations\nln outlying cities in the Soviet rone\nwere 'reported meanwhile In the\nUnited States state- department's\nGerman-language newspaper, Neue\nZeitung, \u25a0:-':,\u25a0-v -.\n80APCAU8ES DEATH \u2022->\u25a0-\nVANCOUVER \u2014 (CP) \u2014' -Slipping'on a cake of soap 'Monday\nclaimed the life of Miss Anne Todd,\n75. She died of head'injuries.\niOoia\/i. t&uifdk.\nNelson:\n9.85.\n'Monday\u20149:08,   Tuesday-\nhistory after the 1052 defeat which\nsaw only six Liberal members in\nthe House: -, . 7;'.\u25a0\n.CCF voters put Mr. Laing Into\nthe House, .In the transfer ef ballots, under the alternative choice\nsystini, Mn. Rolston held a slim\nlead until the fifth and final\ncount.\nThe CCF swing to the Liberals\nbrought Mr. Laing more than 3000\nvotes and. victory.\n' Attorney \u2022 General Bonner wai\nelected inV spite of' CCF second\nchoices which went twice as heavily\nfor Liberal candidate Alex W. Fisher os for Social Credit\nMrs. Rolston's defeat brings the\npossibility of two 'by^tectiteu.\nPremier Bennett has asked; both\nMrs. Rolston and Mr, Gunderson to\nremain in 'the cabinet' V . j.A . \u25a0'\nIn an interview, Mrs. Rolston\nsaid she did not give in Immediate\nanswer to the premier but said' she\nwould definitely accept the offer.j'\nFirst elected to the legislature, ia\n1941, Mrs. Rolston, 66, became\nCanada's first woman cabinet minister with portfolio .when Social\nCredit took office, in 1992. -.\nShe was the. second cabinet minister defeated lii the June 9 voting.\nFinance Minister Einar Gunderson\nlost his first bid for election ia\nOak IJay riding.\n.Mr. Gunderson has not yet announced- whether he will\" accept\nPremier Bennett's offer to remain\nin toe cabinet    ' \u2022 \u2022'      '  ;\n. Mr.- Latag!s win gave the Liberals four seats in-the 48-seat legislature. Mrs. Rolston was the second\ncabinet minister. to be defeated.\nFinance Minister Einar Gunderson\nwas toppled earlier in. Oik Bay\nriding. Social Credit, however, will\ngovern with a stout majority, the\nfinal result showing the party with\n28 seats against 14 for the CCF. The\nProgressive Conservatives elected\nonly one candidate and- Labor one.\n.Vancouver-Point Grey, as in the\n1992 election, was the final riding\nto report. A year ago Mr6. \"Rolston,\nont of the most colorful members\nof tbe list Houss, won to break\n'a 17-17 tie with CCF and give\nSocial Credit 18 seats.\nPremier W. A. C. Bennett took\noffice with 18 members against 17\nfor CCF and for seven mqnths\nheaded a minority government. Defeat came on the floor of the House\non an education costs bill Introduced by Mrs. Rolston. ,\nPremier Bennett and. Mre.. Rolston two years ago bolted Coalition\nranks In the House and later joined\nthe growing Social Credit party.\nIt took 28 days, the same as last\nyeari to complete the election count\nunder the alternative voting sys\ntern first used in B.C. ln 1952.\nA three-week delay from election\nday is provided to permit return\nof absentee ballots to home rid\nings. Only first counts ire made\nelection night.\nRevision er scrapping  if the\npresent system may come at a\ntell session of : the legislature\n... tentatively, '\u2022\u2022*; for'llept, IS.\nEremier Bennett lost week said\n'thHr^iiJd'W'P'**^'*1*!\u2122 D'e*\nfor* the House. The.wllter will be\nrevision of rB.C.'s. Liquor-. Act. A\nliquor board Inquiry recommended\ncocktell lounges. ;\nMr. Laing gave up his federal\nseat \u2014 Vancouver South*-a tew\nweeks betoi the .opening-of the\nelection campaign to take the Liberal leadership. He took the leader- of $114,800,000 for the same period\nship at tte low ebb in 'the' party's last year.\n$37 Million Trade\nOTTAWA (CP):Mimports soared\nto'V'-record: ISBn Mftoi.tiay, increasing;. Canaite'*Wif\u00abS_T'V&adi\"\ndeficit another $a7OTO,000. It was\nthe fifth successive monthly deficit\nthis year. * '\u2022\t\nThe bureau of statistics reported\nTuesday that the total deficit for\nthe first five months of 1953 stands\nat 5209,000.000. There was a'surplus\nAn# in This Corner. \u00bbf\nGLAOE BAY, N.8. (CP)\u2014John Christie lost hli Last Chonco\nearly today. The Lost Chance was a tavern. Fire, spreading so quickly\nthat inly, a tew items were salvaged, gutted It.\nBELEN, N.M. (AR),T-It'8 getting.so danged hot In New- Mexico\neven th? snakes'can't stand flv '    [*'\u2022 .'        '  \u2022     -   '-        .\nEppa Lake said he found- a 30-inch rattler in the bed usually\noccupied by his 4-year-old-son. Lake theorized the snake came up\nfrom'his hole to cool off, .:..,... .7.      A.V\"\".    vr..\nDYERSBURO, Tenn, (AP)\u2014When the thermometer hit 98 today\na block-long street burst Into flames. The fire department had to\n> turn out a crew to douse the itreteh of fresh-laid asphalt mix. \"Spontaneous combustion,\" firemen said. \u2022 . \u2022<-..\u25a0\u2022    -\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)\u2014Four indignant pallbearers .were ques-\ntioned.about a bank robbery here today while the real-gunman made\noff with $1623..'-.'. \"'-\"\u25a0 <\u25a0'.-'      \"  ' \"     tiTT,   .-\nThe mixup followed a radio tip that the robber had fled a-9ank\nof America branch in a. \"large black Jimouiine.\"\nPAINE8VILLE, O. (AP)\u2014A lawnmower shot Its'oWrier In the\nbig toe, police reported.today. _,.. ~       '\nThe victim, Robert E. Heinbaugh, said the machine Van' over a\n.22 calibro bullet and exploded It\n'   BOSTON (AP)\u2014A 66-year-old east. Boston man was; convicted i\ntoday of operating his motorized scooter under the influence of\n\u25a0liquor, with such zest that it bounced -a woman passenger right inte\nthe street.        ''    ..-   7V.V   -    \u25a0      \u2022 \u25a0    . . - .:\u25a0\nAlbert Silva was fined.$35 and acquitted of dangerous driving\nThe 49-yaar-eld woman passenger required treatment for minor Injuries.   \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022' \u25a0 \u2022   '. : .-:.':\u25a0;:..\nBelow Freezing iti Curling 1j!^\nMemtsers of tJ-ie Tiny Gunderson ririk of White Bear, Sask., and the B. ^-.Robertson rink from Edmonton looking over an almost full house in the opening draw of the\nCanadian Summer-Bonspiel.     , . Y ^ \"     ^'7\nNorman Fawcett and daughter Shirley shown just\n__rf_e' official -opening of the o'g.evehi that-|or r_n*\nyears has drawn curlers from aoross Canada and the\n-U_iW'.St*_KYf  \u25a0\nT^re7pot)iilat7Il9yal*.\"C____c___\u2014 Air Fbtcie Pipe Band,from Claresholm, Altai, shown\nleading 'uie parade Of curlers as they left the'Civic Centre to parade'dbwn tbvfe. They\nmarched-_i?D-degree sunshine; curling, wa? in below-freezing temperatureiftof the\nCWc:'\u20actmtt4\u00bb-riBkhonrkew-ioe.-^ :.   j:   Y\n\u25a0_.\n W^f^f^^\n, \u25a0   ,..    H-   ,.   ' -\nW1\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NlWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8,1953\nLAST TIMES YODAY-~SHOWS AT 2:00-7:00-9:13\nFUa-tEFTGIK CORONATION FILM\nUEEHJ'\nrUCisissisrCMM\nIS\u2014MliS. tm*,,.*\n\u25a0 >*-\u00bb-.i \u00bb\nSTARTS THURSDAY\nCartoon.\n*\u00a3*\"\ns^rugW\n7 Show Stirti at\n9;1B and 9;'B p.m.\nSHOWING LAST TIME TONIGHT\nTORNADO\"\nStirring Chester Morris\nCARTOON ind SHORT*:\nComing Thursday ind Friday\n\u2022THE FLYING MISSILE\"\n10 MILES EAST OF NELSON\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0g\nCITY PROPANE\nSALES CLIMB\nHeivy increase in doinand for\npropane sold by the city is shown\nin tho June report of F. H. Stringer,\nsuperintendent\nPropane 'sold wis 0454 gallons,\ngain of 8B0S gallons compared to\n5551 gallons sold in June, 1952. Pro-\npine purchased totalled 10,248 gallons compared ot 8358 gallons forthe same period last year. Propana\nused for gas manufacture was 0375\ngallons, compared to 8743 last year,\nGas production was 1,407,000\ncubic feet, compared to 1,527,000\ncubic feet a year ago. '\nTwenty-four services were cut on\nand 16 cut off, while nine appliancei\nwere connected ahd three disconnected.        7. ..-,\".\u25a0'\u25a0-\nTwo Canadiens\nPucksters May\nPlay Saturday\nTwo Montreal Cinidlirii play-\nera miy appear in tho Nelson\nMaple Leaf lineup whin thiy\nengage Penticton Vs In tho annual Summer Boniplel hookey\njimi.\nJaok Margin! Bonspiel lion\ntary, Mid Canadiens' owner\n. Pnnki Sllki telephoned Tues-\ndiy to say thit If he could get\ntwo pliycrs iff their lobs,' he\nwould see that they lift Montreal\nby piano Wednesday.\nThi playeri in dtfinotmin\nDaug Harvey and forward Dlckls\nMaori, Definite word will bi received Wednesday morning. Sol-\nke will permit thl two players\nto tiki part In thl flame If thiy\ncan git time off .from their Jobs.\nJunior Hi^hr High School Tenders\nTo Be Called; Evans Vice-Principal\nEldrcd K. Evans, Nilson High\nSohool teacher was appointed vice-\nprincipal ot Central School for tha\nComing year by the Board of\nTrustees Monday night. ,, \u25a0] \u2022\nEvans has taught In the.Nelson\nJunior and- Senior High Schools\ntor the past 14 years ind Spent\nseveral yean teaching elementary\nind Junior High school In Kelowna\n.before.' '...'' .,'\" \"'\"-.-\nHe has been active in Scouting\ncircles since coming to Nllsin ind\nlb presently assistant district commissioner. Evans has held various\nother executive positions and is\nCubmaster 6f No. 8. Falrview troop.\nHe is a past momber of the Junior\nBoard of Trade and is active Ih the\nNelson Telcfiers' Association. He is\na former president of thit group.\nThe Board of Trustees spproved\nthe action of the property committee In sending bick. 111. tender\nchecks submitted with bids oh\nthe addition to Nelson Junibr High\nSchool All. b|ds were considerably\nabove preliminary estimations Of\nthe Board.  \"'\u2022'.',\u2022'.-.-\nIt was decided to ask for tenders\nagain on thl Junior High along with\ntenders for thi niw high school\nsince thi buildings will be of thl\nlime construction. Plans will bi\nready  for   tenders   on  the' High\nSchool ln September end bids may\nhi,.inade then on the schpofs together or Individually..\nMore Immediate action.wos voted\nin the case of Hume and Salmo\nschool additions, Tenders for these\nbuildings will be called ior Immediately. , -\nThe Board further decided to\nnegotiate i renewal of contract with\nTaylor Bros, of Salmo for tbe school\ntransportation contract' for Salmo\ndlitrlct A\nChairman George Mermet appointed Gordon.. Sargent, Longbeach, is Board representative to\nthe newly formed Selkirk Union\nBoard of Health. A' resolution was\npassed in which the Board of\nTrustees \"agrees-to transfer to the\n(Selkirk Union Bosrd of Health the\nadministration and direction of thi\nSchool Medical Services.\nWhen city councils of NelsOn,\nNew Denver, Kaslo, Silverton, Slocan City, and Salmo plus thi four\nschool bosrds ot thi aria have\npassed the necessary bylaws, the\nSelkirk Union Board ot Health will\nbe officially recognized.\nThe purpose of thi organization\nis to integrate thi area to consolidate benefits and reduce costs.\nA full tlma health, sit-up would\nthtn be provided at no extra cost\nArmond Theatre\n-YYY d_WBROOK, I.C.\nThuriday\/Frltlay, Saturday\u2014July 9\u201410\u2014IT\nMATINH THURSDAY\nSaturday: Showi at T, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m.\nMatinee Prices Utnll S p.m.\nKAYS ORPHEUM THEATRE\u2014KIMBERLEY, B.C.\nMonday, Tuesday, Wednesday\u2014July 13\u201414\u201413\nREX\nDrive-In Theatre\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nShowing Tonight-Thursdiy\n\"THI FIRST LEGION\"\n -: ffiiligious)\n.    ..Chirlli Bpyir \u25a0]': \u2014\nOni Show Only\nApprixlmitely 8:60 p.m,\nThe first airplane -flight by Wilbur and Orville Wright ln 1008 covered only 284 yards.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  OAILV\nMIN.\nSummer Straws\nBy SHUTTLIWORTH\nY    Water-Repellent.. \u25a0\u25a0\".\n>\u25a0 \u25a0 Arldex-Proedssea.   .\nGobd-Lookin^, Practical. \u25a0\nAll bands Interchangeable.\n70 CARS WAIT\nSO HURT TOT CAN\nGET FAST CARE\n, An explanation has -been-found\nto mollify thl drivers snd passengers of some 70 cars lined up on\nthi North Shoro Sunday night who\nwitched thi Ntlson Fifty make i\nspecial trip for a pick-up truck proceeding to Nelson st the expense\nof the other cars.\nLittle Sandra Maureen, three-\nyear-old daughter ot Mr. ind Mrs.\nFred Ozeroff, North Shore residents,, wis playing ln her yard\nwhan she wai accidentally, struck\nin the eye with a stick wielded\nby her pltymatls.- Thjt little girl,\nwho ndrrislly wiirs glissis,-.'was\nluckily.not weiring them it the\ntime. \u25a0   .       \u25a0\u25a0:     \u2022   t  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nShe was knocked unconscious md\nwu immediately rushed to Kootenay Lake General Hospital. Sandra\nsuffered a cut and bad bruises just\nbelow the eye, but was not hospitalized. She w_ taken horns that night\nand Is ricdvtrlng-is'will-is csn bi\nexpected from her accident.\nEmergency Vehicles usually drive\ndown to the ferry ramp and blink\ntheir lights when requiring' such\nservice.   ' ' 77-\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\n. CAOYLEQAH, B.C.\nShewing Tonight ind Thursdiy\n\"MICHAEL 8TR0G0FF\"\nAkin Kimiroff \u2022 Pay, Bilntir\nShows It 7:00 ind 0:00 p.m.\nPAYNITi-VV\u00abtf- 1150,00\nThl. anaconda, - \u25a0 large water\nsnake, lives on thi banks ot rivers\nin'Brazil and Guinea.\nOccupants Uninjured\nIn Taghum Mishap\nAn Appledale mm and his. compulsion went uninjured Monday\nivening fwhen .their cir plunged\nover thi' enbankment at tha west\nside of Ta'ghum'brldge. Car received approximately S'lOO damage.\nThi driver, Fred M,. Reibalklh of\nAppledale and Mick . Fommoff ot\nWinlaw; ware'.travelling, west UP\nthe hill when the car apparently\nwent out of control. \"RCMP are Investigating.:\nThe Weather\nCrews af Work\nOn Picnic Sites\nNELSON .;.,.\t\nSwift Current ....\nLethbridge ..........\nEdmonton\t\nKimberley    \u25a0\nCrescent Villey\nKaslo\t\nGrand Forks \t\nKamloops ..,.._.\nPenticton ......j_...\nVancouver ...\u201e\u201e..\nVictoria  \u201e....\nSeattle .. ..............\n.06\nor\n47\nB0\n477\n45\n45\n49\n44\n58\n52 . 88\n58 .84\n53    88     \u2014\nTwo roadside camps are undir\nconstruction- tn thi Kootenays to\nhilp offset the growing -hortage of\npicnic sites, the B.C, Forest Service\nreports. About ten boys between 16\nmd 18 .years of sgi are working\nwith a 'foreman md cook ln each\ncamp\".\nThe camp at Lockhart Beach ln\nthl Boswell area will to ready in\nibout i month if-progress continues ind thl camp it Wlsi Lake,\nibout 17 miles East of Kimberley\nwill be completed thii summir,\nThe crews, following up i B.C.\nPirks and Recreation Sjervice program throughout the province, will\nclear the sites, Install picnic tables,\nprovide paths to drinking water,\nmd build fireplaces. Tent md\ntrailer areas will also be cleared\nand garbage disposal arrangements\nwill be provided.       ,\nNo sites will be built on the\nWest Ann since' ill property is\nprivitely ownid.       -.\nBIRTH RATI AT\nTWO-YEAR HIGH\nBirths In Nelson during June\nagain exceeded the numbers recorded for. any month in the Tjast\ntwo- -yesrs.\" Fifty -eight \u2022 Were record'\ned, showing in increase of five over\nthl number for May ond eight over\nthe number tor June of last year.\n-. The number of deaths in the city\nshowid a considerable drop from\nthe previous month. Only four\ndeaths wert: recorded tor June as\ncompared to 13 in Miy. 7\nMarriages in the city for June of\nthis year numbered 10, as compared to 11 for May and 13 for June\nlist yesr. .\nIn the district no births were\nregistered, only two deaths, and\none marriage,\nSentencing Delayed\nIn Liquor Theft\nTwo Nelson min, Eir'i Matchltt\nint William Saunders, have bein\nfurther remindld until July 15 for\nsentencing. They pleaded guilty to\nbreaking, entering, end theft ln\nconnection with.thi theft of liquor\nfrom the JCislo liquor itori,\nAmerican blight Is an apple tree\nnest which can be eliminated only\nby spriyltig... \u25a0 \u25a0\nBuy, Sill, Trade the Classified Wiy\n\u00a3W. Miens, Former Regi**l*,sr\nOITille$Kere,DIejal(easl\nALYSE MATHISEN\nDelegate from thi Nelson High\nSchoOl to the United Nations\nseminar it University, of British\nColumbia in August is Miss Alyse\nMathlsen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Mathlsen, 807, Kokanee AiMnue.\nTOT RECOVERING\nFROM LEG-\nCOLLAR INJURY\nSusan Elizabeth Avery Is recovering nicely from Injuries she suffered when struck by a car here\nSaturday.\nThe four-year-old Vmcouyer tot\nIs In Kootenay Liki General Hospltil receiving treatment for l\nbroken collar bone md i brokin\nleft leg. Eirllir It had been reported she had two broken legs.\nShe is the daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. E. C. Avery. Mrs. Aviry and\nthi child were visiting Mr. md Mrs.\nW. R. Procter, 410 .First Street.\nMedical attendants said Tuesday\nthat the child was.not\\in serious\ncondition as reported Monday. It\nhad been stated the child's father\nflew here bicausi of this. Actually, they said, Mr, Avery had\nbeen planning to leave Vancouver\nfor a point that would have been\ndifficult to,reach quickly, and he\ndecided to come to Nelson after\nbeing.advised to remain near his\nhome wblli--progress of ths' ohlld\nwis notid, v\u00bbn'\nThi iccldttit occurred on., First\nStreet whin R. M. Knight wis\nbacking his car. He said that he did\nnbt know the child liid been .hit\nuntil til got out of thi cir to speak\nto a man on the sidewalk.about a\ntrailer parked nearby. Hi hid felt\none -wheel strike something, but\nassumed that it was a rock or some\nother object-on the gravelled road,\nIt was not until he spoke to the\nman standing nearby that the child\nwas noticed lying in a ditch near a\nwooden street drain.1. \u25a0-,\nCastlegar Cubs\nBlank Trailifes\nNew City Bus\nDue Here Soon\nNelson's new bus for. iti. city\ntransportation System wiU. be rolling westward soon, The $18,000 vehicle Is to be driven to Nelson by A\nC. (Les) Hall, transportation superintendent, - and Charles CottirlU,\ncity garage mechanical foreman,\n,who arrived in Windsor, this week.\nRemanded to July 15\nNick Evdokimoff, Freedomite arrested, oy BCMP during Investigations of an outbreak ot fires ln\nKrestova June 28, - appeared before Stipendiary. Magistrate y*il-\nHam Evans Tuesday md was- reminded a further eight days pending advice from the Attorney General's office. Hi his Beeh charged\nwith Illegal possession \u25a0 of- explosives.   -\n.95\n'2'\" *_->80 *3\nGODFREYS'\nPhon*   \u2014   2>0   \u2014    Box\nKOOTENAY WEST\nSOCIAL CREDIT ASSN.\nFederal Nominating\nConvention\nat Canadian Legion Hall, Nelson, B. C.\nSaturday, July 111953\nNOTICE Is hereby given of a FEDERAL NOMINATING CONVENTION to be held en Saturday, July\n11,1953, igt the Canadian Legion Hall, Nelson, B.C.\nGROUP DELEGATE8: The Groups ire requested to select\nthalr delegates li accordance with Stettin 2 (ParaGraph\nD).of the Constitution By-Laws, :\u25a0,.\u25a0\u25a0\nWOMEN'S AUXILIARY DELEGATES: Thl Auxlllify ll requested to send the number of delegates u provided\nby Section 3 (paragraph A) of tho Constitution,\nCREDENTIALS! It li hereby requested thlt ill delegltei bl\nprovided with proper indintllli,\t\nGroup President and Seorotary.\nprovided with proper iridintiili, signed by thi \"Mpertlvo\nREGISTRATION OF DELEGATES! Delegates will bl registered at the Convention Hi|l from 10 a.m, ti *|80 ft.rrj.\non thi diy of thl Convention by thi Credentials Committee. '.-'-\u25a0\u2022 j,1;,;  : \u25a0-;\nThe buslnes of the Convention will begin at 1 p.m-\n.7   E. W. Bourque, President\nAll- Social Credit members ln good standing aro invited to\nattend the convention ind to take part in the discussions.\nAny. member present, In good standing, is eligible tor nomination.    \u25a0-...'-. \"\nHospital No-Parking Area \"Trap\"\nSays Salmoile; Another Irritant\nThat the grounds where motrlsts\nwere once permitted to perk their\ncirs it Kootenay Lake General\nHospital are \"a trap\" ii tht feeling\nof i Salmo motorist.\nB. H. Streot told City Council\nin i letter Monday night thit hi\nhid received l ticket fir parking\non thl grounds while visiting i\nfriend ln the hospital. He hid boen\nparking thin tor IS years Md\nwhile hi admitted then wu i Sign\nat thi entrance to the grounds\nwarning against parking,'ha Said tt\nwas difficult to sis it.\nCouncil flit then was s possibility thit thi warning sign wit not\nadequate and decided to ask olty\npolice to chick it. Whin Other.Cirt\n'\u2022infringe thi byliw lt is difficult\nto sis the sl|(i,\" Aid, J. tt Coventry remarked. . ;. 7\n', Mr. Street, pointing Out that \"Sslmo people ui-.not will.disposed\ntowards Nelson anyway thd thisi\nlittli things idd to thi fuel,\" suggested the city should consider\nleaving couftesy notices In visitors'\ncirs when thiy hivi unwittingly\nviolated pitting liws.\nSuch a pfa'iitiOi isilriiay lh it'\ntict.ln NiMin, but (iOuncil members said thert Is difficulty in telling B.6. ear liOehces spait. Ortly\nMortdiy,'Council wis told; four t&,\nmotion curlers hire for thi Bonspiel thitikid thi City -tOf handing\nthirn I courtesy noti Instead ot ti.\nparking ilckit And: \"wi' wouldn't\nget thst ln )tdmontoh,\"\"tbey claimed. But on the other hand, licences\nttt similar in B.C. and many drivers fill to cirry their regls|ritlon\nslips on the steering posts of their\ncars, so that it Is difficult \"to tell\nwhether a B.C. car Is from.a distant point,   .\nNO TIME TO READ\nJn describing, the'hospital parking station, Mr. Street said the\nStrut in thi vicinity wis busy ind\non hoipltil visiting hours It was\nnecessary to watch for cars and\npedestrians. It wss not safe to stop\narid read signs.\nTie knew it wis not ths intention\nOf Council to \"stt traps,\" but that\n\"you havt no idea of the hird feelings thlt ind other little things\nhave stirred up In Salmo, If there\nWin signs on thl grounds that a\nperson could sis vfhtn he parked\nthan there would be no complaint.\nUii only sign I could see wis one\non the viaduct saying not to' block\nthl roadway. I was not'bloeking\ntha roadway and thought I. 'wis- in\norder.\"-' -  -.-   -     -\u25a0'-.-'\nIn tilling of Silmo'i fellings to\nwlrds Nelson, hi ssld tht ntw. road\nto Tfall Is ntirly completed \u00abnd it\nwOUld not tiki much, to hsvs<the\nbulk Of business from Sslmo go: to\nTtill.' \"In fait, |fis chsnging fast,\"\nMsiidA'\n\"-\u2022-'!'A\"-\nCASTLEGAR' \u2014 Thi stilwsft\nright arm of veteran chucker Reid\nHicken, iided by superb-support by\nhis team mates,' led 'thl Castlegar\nCubs. tO: \u00bb. dicisivi >4-07Whlttwi(h\nof the Trail Motors'Pontlacs in i\nthrilling Trail and district fastball\nevent' played before .some 200 tins\nhere Tuesday higtit.\u25a0\u25a0-.';'\u25a0\u25a0'.- ;\nIn tallying'the shutout, Hicken\ngave up only two hits, both in the\nsixth frame For the ritailndir of\nihe contest, he. faced only thru\nbitters each inning and had a no\nhit; no-run game In tha bag, hid lt\nnot been for the sixth frame when\nJulie Bilesky and Dinny Giraii-\nijzo both singled. In going the dis-\ntance for the Cubs, Hlckm itruck\nout nine batters' arid allowed no\nFor pontlacs, It was lanky EI1S0\nVanelli\" taking the loss with six\nstrikeouts to his'.credit He' slloWid\none wal_ and Cubs gained six bits,\nfrom-his offerings.\nKereiff led in the batting department with three singles followed\nby John Ross and Coach Rennie\nMitchell with two and Gerry Win-\nless, end Bill Plotnikoff one safety\niich.,7 v:        ;-.; \u2022 \" '\u25a0-\nFamous Diamond\nSaid Cut Down\n\u25a0 A_t-I*ri.+PBOVI!N<3-i: Frantl\n(APJrr VA.fPartSv'.dliftioiid .cutter\ntestified -Tuesday that Sit famous\n\"La Marquise\" diamond, stolen from\nthe! geguiii' Aga Khm f,our yisrs\nago, now is on emerald-shaped\nstone, seven carats smaller.\n\"La VMsrdulse,\". ii grut stons\nwhich gave-off l pinkish light, wis\namong $850,000 In Jewels, snatched\nfrom the beautiful wife of the\nfabulously-wealthy Moslem leader\niri a daylight robbery In 1949. Tin\nCorslcans and Fnnchmen Went ori\ntrial Monday for the theft. \"La\nMarquise\" alone was worth $170,000,\nThe diafnond cutter, 69-year-old\nHenri Waffelman,,a defendant, said\nhe reduced it from its original 22\ncarats; to 15 .carats ifter 12 days of\nintinslvi.work early In I860.. \u2022-\nProspect's Dim in\nBus Strike Dispute\nREGINA-r-(dP)\u2014Union and company representatives met Tuesday\nfor the first time, since 220 employees of the Crown-operated Saskatchewan -Transportation Com-\npany went on strike a week ago for\nbitter wigis.\n. The walkout halted 64 company\nbuses on 96 .routes from the United\nStstes border to Lie la Rongi, 180\nmiles north of Prince Albert.\nProspects for a quick settlement\nweren't too bright,   ,\nCould Slash Defence\nBudget Says Drew\nOTTAWA fjCP) \u2014 George Dnw\nssld Tuesday night a Progressive\nConservative government could cut\n$200,000,000 a year from the defence budget alone. lie said Liberal\ngovernment members \"admit, they\nare incapable of tearing down this\nFrankenstein of waste and extfivi-\ngance which thoy havo created.\"\n\"Thl choice li clear,\" hi said,\n\"Then will be no tax reduction\nby this government. .There will bt\nby i Conservitlvi gbvimmint!' \"\n\u25a0 Albert William Idiens, tor 26\nyesrs registrar of pities at the Land\nRegistry Office In Nelson, and an\noutstanding athlete ln his early\n.years th this district, has died at\nResthiven Hospital in Sidney, Vancouver Island He .was in his 70th\nyieir,-.-  A'( \u25a0'-' ':\"''.-\u25a0  \u2022\ni. Funeral service was held Monday at St. Andrew's Church in Sidney, Rev Roy Melville officiating,\nand crematlpn followed\nMr Idiens war registrar of titles\nhere from 1032 until Ills retirement\nfour ind i half years ago. He md\nbis wife moved to Sidney about a\nyear- ago\nBorn in the Cotswold country- of\nEngland, in Wickhimftrd, WorMS;\ntershire, he started his career as a\nlawyer, and was first articled to a\nfirm of solicitors in Bveshi'm, Worcestershire.\nIri his youth, he joined thl\nQueen's Own ,\/orcestafshire Hus-\nsirs, Imperial Yoemanry. In fox\nhunting, he was for many years a\nmembir 6J thi North Cotiwold\nHunt, following I sport If his father\n\u25a0nd forefathers.\nHe came to, Canada in 1912, go-\ning to Victoria, and upon outbreak\northe First World War, he Joined\nthe 30th Battalion in Victoria. In\nFrance he was transferred to the\n16th Canadian Scottish' Regiment,\nand saw action ln France and Bel-\nglum. He took part in the battles\nOf Flindirs, Ypris md Festubirt,\nand wis wounded In the list.\nRemoved to England for hospital\ntreatment  he   was   subsequently\ntransferred -to the legal department .\nof the Canadian Army -in London,\nand was with the department three\nand a halt years, where he was superintending' clerk. In 1010 he was\nbsck In,' Victoria, ond 'Joined the .\nstaff of the Land Registry there,-;\nIn 1922, the sanio yelr that he qualified is a B.C. solicitor, he .was appointed registrar at Nelson.'        f-\nMr Idiens excelled in a number\nof sports, from fishing to badminton, football, shooting ind cricket,\nHi .wis\" captain of a grass hockey\neleven in Victoria before coming\nto Nelson, As a tennis player, he\nwon thi doubles championships for\nWest'VjCootiniy tot torn, years,\npartnered with Major Maltland'\nHarrison, when thit game was at\na popularity peak in this district\nHe was a powerful swimmer, ind ,\nhid spent long hours ln Kootenay\nLake and West Arm waters.    ' '\nDuring thi greater part of his \u25a0\ntime In Nilson, he made his boms\nat 807 Carbonate Strut.\nBesides his wife ln Sidney, he\nis survived by two daughters, Molly\nJean and Nancy, both in Victoria;\ntwo sisters, Mrs, T. Murray at Nanaimo and Mrs. J. Orchard in Victoria, aridV two' brothers, C. W.\nIdiens and S. S. Idiens, both of\nComox.\nSwim Classes\nStart Today\nSwimming instruction begins today In Lakeside Pirk and.Gyro\nPark under instructresses Josin\nStromstead and Donelda,Un,'\nFirst classes at Lakeside Park\nstart under Miss Stromstead at 10:80\nwith junior girls, while tiny tots\nwill get In the swim at Gyro Pirk\nit-10 a.m. undir. Miss Uri.\nAt Lakeside, junior, boyi will\nfollow B 11 o'clock, intermediate\ngirls at 11:50, lntermtdfiti boys at\n12 noon, and seniors at one. Classes\nwill be'Monday through Friday.\nDaily except Friday ind Sunday,\nthin will ba classes at 1:80 for\ngirls six snd under; at 2 o'clock\nfor boys six and under; at 2:30 tor\ngirls 7 to 8; at 3:00.for boys 7 to 8;\nat 8:30 for girls 0 to 10; at 4:00 for\nboys 9 to 10. Monday through Saturday beginners' diving will be held\nit 4:30. \u25a0   :'-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ' :v,i;.-    7.-77\nAt Gyro' boys six ind under tike\ninstruction at 10:80; girls 7 to 8 at\n11; hoys 7 to 8 at-11:30; girls 9, 10\narid 11 at 12 noori ind boys 9, 10\nind li: at 12130;     -.      \u25a0\u2022\"\ni8Antiifctd\nPrisoners Escape\nPUSAN (AP) - Twenty-elght\nNorth Korean intl-Communlst war\nprisoners escaped Monday night\nfrom Camp No. 2 mar Pusari. Two\nwere recaptured, the UN command\nannounced todiy.\nThi command said thi prisoners\ncrawled through holes cut in the\nfence of the compound and slid\npast guards in the dark. Guards\nspotted, a few of the prisoners, but\nwere afraid to fire for tear of hitting U S, personnel sleeping in a\nnearby.hut^.\n-fe-\nrnY AND AUGUST ONLY\nMixed\n$15.00\n1>ERCORD\nPhone 1322-R\nNew, York Cracks\nDown on Gamblers\nN_W YORk-(AP)--New York\nCity suddenly mobilized Its plainclothes policemen todiy and. then\nopened 1 sweeping' crackdown on\ngambling establishments.\nThe plainclothes officeti win\ncalled to duty by special ridlo\nalerts, They were given sealed in-\nvelopes containing lists of suspected\ngambling places. The orders instructed the police to sei If the or-\nrested person still wss operating\nsnd to find out what wis going ori\nit.thi pnrnlses. AY\nSWIMMING\nINSTRUCTION\nSCHEDULE\n(\u2022FMCTIVB JULY I\nLAKESIDE PARK .'..\nInstructress Joan Stromstead\nMONDAY TO FRIDAY (Inoluilvi)\n10:30-rJunlor Olrls\n11-00^-J.Urilir Biyi i>\n11:30\u2014Intermediate Glrli     .\n12:00\u2014Intermediate Boyi\n1:4)0\u20148onlora ,\nDAILY  BXCEPT  FRIDAY ';\nANPSUNDAY    s\n1:30-0 ind Under Qlrls    .\n. 2:00\u20146 ind Under Boys\n2:30\u20147 to 8 Glrli\n-.'\u2022 3:00\u20147 to 8 Boys   \u25a0\n3:30-9 to 10 Girls  '\nv4t00-9 to 10 \"Boyi\nMONDAY TO SATURDAY\n(Inclusive)  :-.\n4:30\u2014Blfllnntrt' Diving\nGYRO PARK\nInstructress Donqlda Un\nDally Excepting Friday and\n.   fiiindiy .-\n10 00\u2014Glrli 6 and Under\n'    10:30-^Boys t and Under\n11;00-\u00ablrli 7 to 8  .\n.:; 1i;80-Boyi.7 to 8 \u25a0\n-' 12:00\u2014G|rli 9, 10, 11..      . ,;\n12:30-Boya 0, 10, 11.\nThire will be chockroom facilities\n\u25a0 ,''- ,        it Gyro Pirk.,  \u201e  iJM\nIf possible, a class of rhythm\nswimming will be organized.:\nJL.\nA TRIAT FOR VOU\nAND YOUR FRIENDS\nCHINES! DISHES\nOUR SPECIAiTV\nOpe*i 4 p.m. to 4. a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St- N\u00abl\u00abon\n'     .. n '.   '\ncee\nThursday, July 9 \u2014 Civic Centre\nf \u00bbi30 P.M. TO 1 kMf\nHARD-TIME DRESS \u2014 IDEAL FOR CURLERS\nMickey MoEwen and Hla Melody Makers\n,  ADMI88lDN60c- ,..-\u25a0'  -,\nStt: US FOR MOniRN\nDeveloping ;.i\ninldfging.ii\nYou'll Ilk* Our work... and our moderate prion, Why not oYd\u00abr Mlra\nprints for Iho folks whin you loOve\nyour fllmi for dovoloplng?\nWe have the NEW Kodak Verlehrome Duo-Pak\n...a roll for your camera\u2014one for a \u00abpara\nWaalso Hoek the finest In BINOCULARS,\nDEVELOPING EQUIPMENT, ENLARGERS,\n\u2022 \u25a0 'a f. -''f '\u2022t*'.-'    f-,',..    '7.''\"':\nATTINTIOHCURLERS I U   ,   ';\u25a0; \u25a0 Z.s\nV\/ei hav* th? !4-r$\u00abt.ar*id rnsst 4-\u00abrripl*ttJ     M\n-ctocH tjf pbotOsrc'phl-, supplies, betw^h\n7  Colgqryg**t*4VoneOMver.        ,-,i   \u25a0\nVV\u00ab af* tt<|(iy to tetye yoHs'\n497 Boker St. Phone 106\n=\n \u25a0 :S\/^0^'!:;'-'\nFOR\/yifN\n\u2022 Built for Service\n\u2022 Designed for Comfort\n\u2022 Styled for Appearance\n$9.95 to $17.95\nExclusive it\nf HE $HOE\n;,; CENTRE^ .\n653.Baker 8t Phom IDS\n$23,200 In New\n(omlradlon\nfor Castlegar\n' CASTLEGAR\u2014Building permits\nIssued here (luring June took a\n$7000 jump in Value over the previous month, according to the\nmonthly report ot building inspector David Seaton to the Castlegar board'of commissioners.\nThere were eight building. permits iBsued for a total value of\n$23,200. Biggest of these was a $13,-\n800 permit to the Shell Oil Company lor a new garage and service\n' station in Castlegar, construction\n.. of which has begun on Columbia\nAvenue just north of the B.C. Forest\nService station.\nAlso included tn the. total was a\npermit to P. Obedkoff for a $5000\nresidence. The remainder were for\n, alterations and repairs to existing\n' residences.\nAmong projects nearlng completion is the B.C. Forest Service office, which-y^ttl: be' reody for ocrai-\n. pancy In the near future. . -, . ,-,'\nLister Area Harvests\nSeason's First Alfalfa\nLISTER\u2014First cutting of alfalfa, the crop thatbrings\nthe district more than $100,000 annually, is in full swing,\nand farmers areri't havijig to look too deeply into the crystal\nball tof-jee-'ttiat it's, agood ~     \"\ncrop.\nA large number of Lister-Hus-\ncroft farmers are using the, new\nsilage cutter, and hauling, the hay\nInto large pits for silage. This saves\nraking and baling, arid makes wonderful green teed, mixed with barley, chop, for milk cows':The barley chop Is put Into thl silage pit\nwith the green alfalfa, 100 pounda\nof barley chop to a load of green\nfeed. -\nThe, new: method of putting up\nhay saves the farmers work and\nthe cost ot building new hay sheds.\nOwing to the mild Winter ot. 1052-\n53, there is a large surplus of baled\nhiy.\nFor thl flnt timo in the history\nof'alfalfa growing In the Lister district,- farmers plowed their fields\nin January, ao Spring-like was the\nweather.\nThi alfalfa Ib marketed through\nthe 60-shlpping-member Litter Cooperative, incorporated In 1847,\nind thi produce bf tbe years since\nthen has made thl aria a contender\ntor a place In.the ranka of major\nB.C. hay producing areas.\n54th Tq Hold Reunion\nMMaski Jubilee Time\nKASLO \u2014 The 54th (Kootenay)\nBattalion will hold its reunion here\nat the time of Kaslo's diamond jub\nilee celebration's August 14-16.\nThe veterans of the First .World\nWar will parade from the King\nGeorgejflfijtel 'August 14. Members\nwill beSHnpr guests at a banquet\nAugust B, and will lay wreaths at\nthe Kaslo cenotaph August 16.,,\nThis is-a major meeting the big\ncelebration has attracted. Plans for\njubilee\/ events are .going ahead\nrapidly in the meantime.\nAt a recent jubilee committee\nmeeting In City hall, Items on the\nlong: and colorful program were\ndiscussed-at length.\nMembers decided to replace the\nhistorical pageant with stage plays,\nand variety shows, within the limit\nof local talent C. C. Halleran agreed\nto take charge of the Sunday program which will include alnglng by\nPal Rebalkin Crowned Queen at\nBig Perry Siding Celebrations\ni I_]ffiY SmOTC^Ifoe smaU community of Perry Siding went all\nout for a fun-packed time at Its\nDominion Day celebration.\nA small parade and the crowning\nof Miss Pat Rebalkin as quieh were\nmain attractions of the day, and\npeople from the entire district joined in congratulating thl queen.\nResults in children's sports follow:\nA. MAtHISEN\nPAINTING AND\nDECORATING\n107 Kokanee Street\nPHONE 1031-1.\nuvtefrd\nM0VIN6\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nPlanning to tnovef Call m\nflnt. Our modem vui and\nikllled mover* una* \u2022 SAT-\nmove wherever yam fa. We\nart agents for North -andean Van Linn, Ai-irtisH\ntending long distene* mortef\n\u2022rganlutton. K costs no mr*\nte iojof **\u2022_\u25a0 flair iin mill\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Boker St.   Nelion, B.C\nPhone 13\n75 Yard Rail\nChildren five and under\u2014Martha\nKalmokoff 7.\nBoys seven and under\u2014Sidney\nReibalkin, first, Fete Perepolkin,\nsecond. ,\nGirls seven and under\u2014Martha\nKalmokoff, firat, Eleen Perepolkin,\nsecohcl. :'\u25a0 .      - \u25a0.-.'\"'   ,-\u25a0\nBoyi nine and under\u2014Walter Ma-\nlokoff, first; Larry Kanigin, aecond,\nGirls nine and under\u2014Mary Kim-\noff, first; Julia Deckkoff and Leona\nPauquette tied tor second.\nBoyi 13 and under\u2014Sid Rebalkin,\nfirst; Pete Perepolkin, second.\nGirls 18 and under-s-Lucy Babakaiff, first; Margret St Thomas,\nsecond. \u25a0 ,., tin..-. -\nBoya IS ind under\u2014Peter Kaba-\ntoff, first; Jim St Thomas\/second.\nGirls 16 and under\u2014Laura Kani-\ngin, first; Lucy Babakaiff, second.\nBroad Jump .' j'-A.'f.   .:..\u25a0''\u25a0\nGirls 15 and under\u2014Anne Relkoff, first; Laura Kanigin, aecond.\nBoys (open)\u2014Peter Kabatoff,\nfirst; Harry Zarchikoff, second.\nHigh Jumping\nGirls 11 and under\u2014Mary Kimoff,\nfirst; Nancy Laktin, second;'\nBoyi 13 and under\u2014\u00a3!d Rebalkin,\nfirst; Billy Zmioff, sceond.\nGlrli 13 and under\u2014Nancy Laktin, flrat; Miry Kimoff, second.\nBoys 15 and under\u2014Peter Kabatoff, first; Jim St Thomas, second.\nMarried men's 100 yard dish \u2014\nB. Bulattett, first; P. Kanigin, sceond. \u25a0\u25a0'. \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0   ,- -..,.\nMarried women's 50 yard dash \u2014\nE. Babakaiff, first; D. Kimoff, second.\nBoyi open 100 yard dash \u2014Pete\nkabatoff, first; Victor Berekoff, second.   \u25a0\nGlrli open 100 yard dash\u2014Alice\nGustafson, first; Laura Kanigin, second.\nWheelbarrow Race\nEleven and under\u2014Peter Perepolkin and Sam Fllipoff, first; Sid Rebalkin and Zacky St. Thomas, second. .\nFifteen and under\u2014Ruth Rebalkin and Nancy Laktin, first; taura\nKanigin and; Lyn Hird, second-\nWomen's nail driving\u2014D, Kimoff,\nfirst; E. Babakaiff, second.\nStake Your Claim\u2014H. Gustafson\nPole height-3 ties. S. M Zmaeff,\nH, Avis and F. Yofonbff,.\nLog sawing contest\u2014Henry Gustafson and Emil Gustafson, first;\nFred Rlebalkin and Nick L. Verigin, second ,\nto fait ball the Perry's Juniors\nbeat Appledale Juniors 0-8, and in\na senior baseball game Winslow defeated Perrys 18-15 to advance\nnow to play Slocan City.\nTo windup the day a large crowd\nturned out for a dance at Apple-\ndale ball .where strawberry supper\nwas served,\na mass choir, and in address by a\nprominent speaker. At night there\nwill be community singing around\na huge bonfire, imong other attractions.. '\nBonner's Ferry Sheriff Riders\nplan to bring 25 horses for their\nmusical rides August 14 and 15.\nFrom now until jubilee time, the\ncommittee will hold weekly meetings in IOOF hall.\nDam Worker\nInjured In\n85-Foof fall\nWANETA\u2014A ja-year-old Wanete\nDam worker was still alive ind In\n'surprisingly good shape\" Tuesday\nafter an 83-foot fall onto solid concrete from a scaffolding near thi\ntop of the Waneta Dam powerhouse\nMonday \u00ab_tornoon. *        7'.'...\nRoy Booth of Vancouver wu\ntoken to thi Trail-Tadanac Hospital by ambulance after the tumble\nIn which his body hit a pump on\nthe ground before bouncing against\nthe concrete.   *\nBooth and three other men were\nlifting a- 300-pound steel cable when\na plank of thi scaffolding they wire\nstanding on collapsed.\nBooth and George Prossick, also\nof Vancouver, were :\u25a0' standing on\nthe plank when it gave way.\nNO WARNING\nProssick said he managed to jump\nback to safety but could not nvi\nBooth.\n: \"If we had heard a crock when\nthe plant broke, we miy. hivi saved\nhim,\" said Prossick. \"But there was\nno noise ind I had no time to grab\nhim.'* '_  j   '\u25a0'\u25a0:.\nThi scaffolding was on the draft\ntube dick of the -powerhouse,\nstraddling a gate dot It \/ wai\nthrough thi gate dot that Booth\ntoll. AA\nInjuries Booth suffered were a\nfractured skull, a fractured leg and\nsevere bruises. 7\nAn Investigation in which all witnesses were Interviewed vis completed by Stone and Webster Canada Ltd., construction company\nworking on the dam, Tuesday\nmorning,\nTOURIST MECCAS abound in the scenic Kootenay-\nBoundafy country of B.C., spots like this valley in the\nRocky Mountains 32 miles Southeast of Golden, where\nthe Kootenay River has its start. While .the district is\nattracting more and more holiday ers from outside points\neach year, Kootenay-Boundary people themselves are\nspending more time exploring their home territory on\nSummer vacations.\u2014Dick Spurway photo.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nWE5., JULY 8, 19S3 \u2014j\na B. Manners,\nLong Cranbrook\nResident, Passes\nCRANBROOK\u2014Arthur Itennett\n(Bin) Manners, 62, resident here\ntor marty years, died suddenly nt\nhll home Sunday,\nYounger son of Mr and Mrs.\nCharles Manners, hi was born in,\nSaltcoats, Sask., and his parents\nbrought their family here In 1904-\nand operated a ranch south of city .\nlimits tor man? years, Ben Manners\nmoved to ihb United States for\nseveral years, then returned here\nlit 1981, For the past 12 years lie\nwas employed, at Cominco concentrator at Chapman Gamp, commuting daily.\n\u2022He is survived\"l>y hi! wlfe.-Lll-\nHan, in Cranbrook, a son, Charles,\nin ' Cranbrook, a , daughter,. Mra,\nDora Ryder, R.N., two granddaughters ln Kimberley, and a sister, Mrs,\nPeter Matheson, .Cranbrook. Funeral services tike place Wednesday.\nAntiguia, now.capital of the Leeward . Island,-\" was \"dlspovered by\nChristopher Columbus in 1493. \u2022    .\nnew! ',7'Yf\nsiftgle-sudstng    , :\nMARVELOUS\nPlayground\n\"Should Consider Helping Ourselves. . .\"\nDistrict Taxes Have Helped Build\nHospitals for Others, Meet Shown\nTRAIL-With the addition of i\nplayground on B, Street and one\non Austad Lane, ten playgrounds\nwill be operated this year in. Trail\nand District by, the Trail AthleUc\nAssociation.        -.'\u2022.'\nSupervisors of the grounds have'\ncompleted a three and one-half day\ntraining course under TAA. Director Dmitri Goloubeff. The course\ndealt with organization of tournaments, program planning, functions\nand objectives of, tho playground,\nand activities for varloui age\ngroups.    ,\nThis grounds are supervised six\ndays a Week, seven hours a day,\nand are .a\u00bbiply; equipped tor * toll\nprogram including handicraft training. It is hoped that dull tournament! may be arranged between\nInter-city groups.  ;\nSupervisors and parka in their\ncare are Maureen Marshall, Shavers\nBench; Drusllla Babuln, Butler\nPark; Lorna Swsinsoh, Gyro Park;:\nOene Kennedy, Sunningdale; Doreen Davidson, Jubilee and Central;\nBlaine LeRose, Byers Lane; Suzzane\nThompson, Tadanac; Maureen Calder, Warfield; Carol Bingham, Annable, and Loretta Tambellini, B.\nStreet ahd Auated Lane.'\"      ,'.-<:\u2022-.:\nPHONB  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nFernie J?wsfe Plans\nFor Ice Installation\nF__NUi \u2014 Fernie City' Council\ntook quick action at a special meeting Monday night to Implement tbe\ncitizens' wishes tor tho installation\nof artificial ice in the new Fernie\narena. Last week- Fernie citizens\nsignified their approval to spend\ncertain civic reserve funds for toe\npurpose by. a 372 for, 99 against,\nvote.\nA letter of Intent, to enter Into\na contract for such installation is\nbeing sent to John Inglis tympany,\nsubject to satisfactory financial and\nother arrangements being made.\nThe letter will in no way .Obligate\nthi city, but it does give the com-,\npany the opportunity to proceed\nwith the manufacture' of necessary\nmachinery which will then be reserved for the Fernie arena. Bylaws\nto use certain civic reserve funds\nfor the purpose were given first,\nsecond and third reidlngs, It is\nexpected that the final reading will\nbe given at the regular council\nmelting July 18.    --.;-. . **\"     ,7\nJiff Pridehard and Clarence\nGreenwood of the John Inglis Company attended the meeting to explain the artificial Ice system recommended for installation in the\narena. The tender submitted was\n$55,220 to cover machinery, equip-\nRETAIL LUMBER\nSPECIALS\n\u2022 Good supplies on hand, 2x4 to 2x12 dimension, all\nlengths and grades.\n\u2022 Special pric* on cedar anil spruce paneling to clear.\n\u2022 Sheeting, shiplap, boards, etc.\nKootenay Forest Products\nRETAIL DEPT.\nPHONE 1200\nment, plans ind installation. In\naddition, other required equipment\nand installations are estimated at\n$7700. It would take about tour\nmonths to complete the ^ork, 7\n\\ Council also passed a motion to\napprove the proposed merger of\nthe Kootenay Telephone Company\nand the B.C. Telephone Company,\nThis follows similar Action taken\ntry. other centres in the East Kootenay.\nWeekend Traffic\nAl Nelway Heavy\nNELWAY -4 Independence Day\nweekend traffic through thla customs port Wu heavy, but not as\nheavy aa it was at the same time\nlast year.\nUnited States cars entering Canada here Saturday totalled' 110,\ndown by 37 care from tha same\ndiy ta.1952. A,\nOn .Friday a- total of 63 United\nStates cars came through, compared\nWith 60 on July 3, 1952, and on\nSunday the figure was 25, compared\nwith 75 last year.\nTRAIL TO SPUR\nGAGLARDI\nON BRIDGE VISIT\nTRAIL\u2014City council plans^to remind Public Works Minister Hon.\nP. A. Gaglardi of his promise te\nvisit the city and discuss building\n> new Columbia river bridge here,\nIt instructed city clerk' L. S. Anderson to write Mr. Gaglardi ind\nHon. R. E. Sommers, MLA tor Rossland-Trall. \\        -\nMr. Gaglardi twice promised to\ncome to Trail last year but he was\nforced to postpone.the visits.\n15-Year-Old\nDrowns in Fraser\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B-. C\n(CP) \u2014 A lB-year-old-hoy was\ndrowned in the Fraaer River near\nhere Monday when he Waded over\nhis depth.\nPolice said thi victim, Henry Van\nDer Woude, of'Ladner; was unable\nto swim. It was the fifth drowning\nfatality in,the river- in' the list\nmonth.. ':' '\ns; New Supply Source\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\u2014The village of\nCastlegar is making application tor\nwater rights to the entire Blueberry\nCreek, Sheep Like Basin, west of\nKinnaird, it. was revealed at\nmeeting of the board oi commissioners,. here.        i\nThe application follows a survey\nof the Sheep Lake aria by Boyd\nC. Affleck Of.Nelson to determine\nwhether the Sheep Lake'area could\nserve as a water supply source for\nCastlegar and Kinnaird in thp event\nthat the proposed Celgar Development Company plant, three miles\nwest of Castlegar, renders the Columbia River useless as such a\nsupply source., t '.'\nThe survey report assured that\nSheep Lake could readily become\nan ample source tor a gravity water\nsystem to serve Castlegar and Kinnaird.'   ';\u2022\nFavorable progress Was reported\non the installation of the 2700 feet\nof drainage pipe from Bloomer\nCreek to the Columbia River. -The\nproject, which will drain\" thi\ncreek's flood waters and eliminate\ntheir flooding the Castlegar No. 1\nelementary school grounds during\nthe spring runoff, should be completed shortly, it was reported..\nAlso decided at the meeting was\nthat a conciliation officer-will be\nbrought in to clarify matters relative, to the proposed bargaining\nagreement between thi Trill and\nDistrict Civic Workers Union and\nthe village, for Village of Castlegar\nemployees. ;\nWater works commission Harry\nSommers advised that the installation of some 1500 feet of new pipe\non the Mlscaviteh subdivision to\nbring.water service to ten or more\nhouse's there, is almost completed.\n,. Village inspector David Seaton in\nhis monthly report, stated that 14\nbusiness films and1 private individuals transacting business within\nthe village limits without, a trades\nlicence, had been contacted and\nadvised they must have a licence,\nMost of them have purchased\nlicences as a result and the others\nare \"being watched tor any further\ninfringement, of the bylaw\".\nMr. Seaton also reported that a\ndoor to door \"canvass had been made\namong all. known dog owners in\nthe village to insure they hivi\nlicences for their animals.\nParks commissioner David Campbell announced that a thorough\nrenovation - of . the Castlegar ball\npark is in lull swing. Fifteen now\nbleachers,to accommodate 800 fans\nhave been constructed and the\ngrounds are being graded and\nlevelled, Mr. Canmbell said he is\nplanning a full scale cleanup campaign of tha grounds Thursday\nevening and wants the assistance\nof as many volunteers aa possible.\nSOUTH SL6CAN \u2014 Approval oi\nthe work of an organization committee and endorsatlon ot the principle of a hospital Improvement\ndistrict was given by a meeting of\nSouth Slocan area property owners.\nThe endorsation came after the\ngathering heard A. K. McAdams,\nDr. N. E. Morrison, J. W. Graham\nand R. H. Procter explain the existing: conditions at the condemned\nKootenay Lake General  Hospital,\nneed tor a new district hospital\nand tha procedure for organizing a\nhospital improvement district,.\nTaxpayer!  of  this  aria,   Dr.\nMorrison   pointed, out,. through\n- their contributions to;thl provincial treasury had already-assisted\n. a number of centre! elsewhere In\nthl province to have modern hospitals. Niw. hospital! or additions\nIn recent yeari hid been built, or\nare In the course of construction\nat   Burnaby,   Fornl{, '-Penticton,\ntrill, Creston and district hospitals or enlargements were contemplated  at  Quesnelj  Williams\nLake,  Windermere J and > Castle-\n\u25a0 gar. For all then, residents here\nhad contributed, or would - contribute  through: thi  provincial\nhealth department grants for construction, 'We have helped build\nhospitals for other districts, and\n' under ypresent   conditions   wi\nshould seriously consider building one for ourselves.''\nOvercrowding wis  one of the\nworst features at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, he said. Fifty per\ncent overcrowding of wards -was\neveryday: practice. Space between\nbeds was actually insufficient, to\nprovide working room,  qnd  the\nonly semblance of privacy -regardless of the condition of the patient\nwas achieved only by draw curtains\nbetween beds.\n, Conditions resulting from the\novercrowding, he illustrated from\nactual experiences On. an occasion\nwhen the hospital was phoned tor\na. bed tor a woman who bad suffered a broken leg, the reply was\naccommodation was available;\nthat there was only one woman's\nbed and that had \"to be kept for\nan emergency.\" That was how difficult conditions became at times,\nhe said.' '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMEDICAL, SURGICAL\nTOGETHER\nOnly one ward existed on toe\nwomen'i floor, and medical and\nsurgical patients had to be cared\ntor together with the constant danger of-cross-infection, Three and\nfour-bed wards were \"crowded with\nsix and seven patients. On one floor\nthere existed only two toilets and\nbaths for 42 patients.\nFrequently there were not luf-\nficlent^beds available oh maternity\nfloor tor the number of cases.\nNO REFINEMENTS\nThe existing hospital was practically without the refinements (if\nmodern patient care. There was no\nanaesthetic room, and no recovery\nwards. When a North wind blows\nlt takes heating equipment two days\nto catch up to the temperature\nchange and after the weather\nwarms it takes an additional two\ndays for Inside temperatures to be\nbrought down to comfortable levels\nagain. The building was absolutely\nwithout staff ' conveniences; ..there\nwas u6 nurses room, no maintenance staff room or other accommodations. Staff members,\"must love\ntheir work to stay with us.\"' '\np. H. Bland, meeting chairman,\ndeclared the time had come for\ndistrict residents to face realities.\nHe bad seen, he said, as many as\n20 people of South Slocan in the\nhospital at one time,'7 and. this illustrated the interest the district\nhad in the Kootenay Like General\nHospital. Situation,had.been reached where \"we must have a new hospital and the district must, have i\nshore.in it if we are to have facilities of modern patient care.\"\nMr. David Bell and J. D, Kelt-\nman proposed the resolution endorsing the principle of a hospital\nimprovement' district, snd George\nPennikct offered to assist the. org-\nonization committee.\nFormer Creston\nResident Passes\n' Funeral services were held yesterday' in .'New Westminster for\nIsabel Eddy,' late of Creston, who\ndied at the age of 88 July 1. Shi is\nsurvived by her sister, Mrs. B. J.\nPrice of Creston.\nSome osk trees are known to he\n14)00 yeiri oiar'\nOUR SPECIALTY\n\u2022'\u2022 ANY WHERE\n\u2022 ANY PUCE\n\u2022 ANY TIME    \u2022\n-    ;All0\nDally Freight ftervlM\nNelson \u2022 Trill \u2022 Castlegar\nRossland \u2022 Frultvalo \u2022 8almo ,\nUNITED TRUCKING\n& STORAGE LTD.\nStanley Street, Nelion\n'    PHONi 1108\n_J_M____A_S.    _____S___U*\ns\u00ab8mpco specrany\nmade to preserve\nyour permanent\namTpotefetyoNrM\nby RtCRARD WDDOT\nof Fifth Avenue\n\"YOUR FORTRESS Of\nHEALTH\"\nNelson\nPharmacy\nPhon* 1_01      Re*. 3944.\n433 JotepMns Street\nOPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY\nMonday's Winnow of\n\"LAST ROCK\" Gonteitl\nPETE REIBIN\nLOUIS CHAM\n,\u2666\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022#\u2022<\n,............t**t\u00bb**t,\ntot live Paint Protection and Beauty\nThe famous Sun-Proof Two-Coat House -Paint give* you\nlong-term properly insurance that you can't afford'to overlook. No longer is it necessary to spend extra money for\nthat third .wat of paint\u2014yeu save cost of paint and\nlabor. You need have no fear of results when you\nredecorate witn Pittsburgh Paints, In many ways Ihey aro\nbetter than pre-war quality.\nNelson Woodwork\n273  BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1180\n '-:\nEstablished April 22. 11)03\nBrlllnh Columblo'd\nMOal Interesting Newspaper\nPubluhod every morning ixcipt Sundiy by tht\nMEWS PUBLISHING COMPANV LIMITED,\n208 Bikir Strut,   Nelson,   British Columbls,\n\u2022Authorised is 8loond Oliss Mill..\nPost Ottlci. Dipirtmint, Ottawa,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE A06IT BUREAU OF CQICtrLATIONt,\n', .- ivu  T  I\",   ilii.i i|.n f\";    f   t *   B\"l \u00bb, I .(   I qi\u00bbM. ,\n<    ',, r^*a^ff-y, \/--iy 9< 1663\n. ^nsc^rnb Heavily\n':\u25a0\"\u25a0 overtoxecl; Qrlve Now\nfFbr Auxiliary:Craft '\nIf Nelson- Chamber of Commerce\nroads and bridges committee sticks to\niti guns and keeps firing it will be\nable to obtain an auxiliary craft for\nthe Kootenay Lake ferfy service. It\nhas plenty of ammunition.\nFirst there is the need, all too.evident, to accommodate Southern Transprovincial Highway traffic. And Hugh\nW. Robertson has provided fi$ur*g 6n<'\nmonthly revenue from MV Anscomb\nand oij, increases In ferry trafflq;that\nare impressive. He told the; last meeting \"of jthe Chamber' th,at Anscomb\ntraffcSadl'-increased by 1000 cars iti'\nMay, over the same month last year.\nThe Anscomb in that month carried\nover 5600 cars, In May a year previous\nit ci(rr^.4\"580 cars and in May, 1981,\n3069.7:S|_gf.represent* the;car ftavef\nincrease alone, and does not touch\ntruck, trailer and bus traffic which\nadd another 1000 to 2000 vehicles\nraoiitjjljr.f\n\u25a0\u25a0..-: C6^\u00ab\u00abrtlan: at the Kootenay Biy-\nBalfoiir bottleneck is never more eyi-\n' dent, than during this season-of the\nyear, and this is the time for'the\nChamber to push the effort for an\nauxiliary craft. It will have the support, of every lake conanflnity. The\ndemand exists; it needs only a concerted effort to rally the support.\nThe \"facts1 and figures of the ferry\ntraffic had Victoria convinced of the\nneed for an additional craft last year.\nThis -;year4'iHose figures are even\ngreater. THe improvement that means\nso much to the entire Southern half\nOf the proylhqe should not be difficult\n;t6:galn.\"r\"\"'[f Mv.'-'-'X.      \u25a0 -tiff'\nmssm  \u2022 ' -;\nf''''^:-Y;-j^\u00ab!^e^t(B*;'.\nCanada's foiir-fcent letter rate, a\nwartime carryover, appears to be with\nus to stay, and few Canadians raise\nvoice agatast it.\nIt may have company shortly, however, In the.form of a four-cent American rate. ;|h-the light of postal operations ~ hv both' countries, -the - United\nStates has greater needs of a four-cent\nrate than Canada. This country has\nbeen showing comfortable postal surpluses in recent years, whereas American postal deficits have run-into hundreds of millions..\nNot only \"does the four-cent Canadian rate seem to be-here to stay, there\nis no strong demand for a reduction.\nAs a great deal of lettet*.mail is carried\nby air within Canada for that ptfce'fa\ngood avferlgeisstruc^. The threatened\nfour-cent-rate across the border does\nnot promise so. much.\nShannfc Industry's v\nGains\ntht innusl productivity increase for im-:\nployees, first,pioneered on a largo scsle by\nGeneral Motors, his iroused much favorabli\nInterest In \"liberal\" managomont circles. Now,\nhowever, more conservative employors Mint\nto bt mobilising tholr opposition;\nIf this li opposition to a formula whloh\nmight become saddled upon moro and mors of'\nIndustry, Minor ehlno, the conservatives'\nwould sum right, If theirs Is endorsement ot\nI general approach, not a formuli, tlien tlie\nliberals, consciously or Intuitively, iri Hiding signs of thi times.\n\u25a0'..', for It Is i quits tenable theory thlt oni\nof tho great reasons why tht United States\nhll try-passed socialism, pBrhepS (ss Frederick\nLowls Allen says) svoldod hard stratification\nInto classes, md thus escaped tho porlls Of\nboth communism ind a plutocratic tyranny, Is\n'thit thl fruits of increasing productivity hivt\nbeen shared for down through thi economic\npyramid. ',- -\nWhy thll hll como to. piss tin bo variously explained. It -.Implicit In t working\ndomocricy (and an essential in making a\ndemocracy work), It li because labor has or-\nganlred and can mike Its Interests felt (someone his Slid thlt labor unions constitute western capitalism's, especial antidote to communism). It Is hocauso, particularly in thi list\nhilt, century, of enlightened self-interest\namong managers and capitalists\u2014because bt\nmen like the elder Henry Ford, who began\nto in thit lt Industry did not ihiri its prosperity widely its prosperity would wlthor for\n'\u25a0\" 'lick' of roirkit*. -   .\" \u25a0\u2022', \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0 ''v'\n. \"'Thi \"productivityfiotor\" how ippiirlng\nin labor contracts Is of great significance\nlimply because great corporations iri giving\nformal recognition to a value essential to a\nnation's economic and social well-being. Row\nthlt value ll utilized\u2014whether spelled out in\npercentages or simply translated Into wage's,\nhours and prices\u2014Is of less Importance so long\n' - is lt refleots equitably till progress of the eco-\n'  nomlc system.\u2014Christian Science Monitor,   v\nON THE SIDE\nBy B. V. DURLIN43\nFORECAaTINa HIIOHT\n' At birth, thi weight of i child is always\n\u25a0 reported. Height Ib not mentioned. However,\ndon't forget to determine the height at birth\nof your next child. By that, you can determine\nwhether or not thi youngster will be. short or\ntell upon becoming on adult. The height at\nbirth ii about 30 per cent of what lt will bo\nwhin tht infant becomes in adult. As tor example, If lt Is a boy and measures between 21\nind 22 Inches it birth, hi will bt i six-footer\n.itie.   '.'       [f-i   .   ';---['     \u25a0':\n* -'\u25a0*. .-\u2022 , -\n-'\u00abrTOt\u00abN BROTHSfUr-A\n,.   ' Have been looking; at a news picture ot a\n1 younger brother greeting an older brother on ,\nthi letter's return trom Korea. A very touching ' scsm. Tht divotlon between brothers\nseems greater than that between sisters. Espe-\n7 clally in cases where one brother is (Our or\n-  five years older thin tha othtr. Dates bick to.\n>   childhood. Qulckerf^riy^ou cSuld get into i\ntight in many neighborhoods is to do some-\n. thing wrong to some other fellow's-kid brother.\n'\"-.-.*'     *'\"'\u25a0\u201e*\nMONOPOLY Old COflVBIttATION    f\n-   Let's be fair.   Womon do not monopolize\ntho. non-stop: talking field. Many men. aro\nguilty of endless one-sided conversations. Not\nlong ago on a plane trip, I noted that the man\nin thi seat.In front of me talked steadily for\nan hour and a - quarter. His feminine companion coilld not get a word ln edgewise. That\nman certainly was -fasdnated with' himself and.\n- his activities as 'subjects of conversation.  A\n^\u2022Victory'   '':   y '\nThe way to win an atomic war Is to\nmake sure that it never starts.\u2014General Omar.Bradley. a  -Y:-\"\nWhat the vacuum cleaner did to the moth,\nthi motor cu la doing to the pedestrian.    -,\ny -, \u2014London Fm Briii.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpln ti My mdir. Nimii if persons\nliking QUeltleni will not bs puhllihid.\nrnin It no chirm \u2022 fir, this ur-vlu,\nQueitloni WILL NOT BI ANSWERED\nBV MAIL iMMPt whirl there'll obvioui\nnUiiiity fill privily.\nX. M., Rosillnd\u2014Would you be good enough\n. to ripiit'thl littiryou lint ui recently,\ncontilnlng   information   referring   to   a\ngidget? Wi iri tnxloTu to git some Information to you.\n'     'A \" '.'\u25a0   \u25a0 ..\/     \\ : AM'\nheader, Wycllffo\u2014In reply to question iskid\nA by F. H., Robson, regarding contest organization mngarlnos, there is a book sold\nand publlshid by Research Book Company, 30-Church Street, Now York 1, entitled \"Unicorn Contestants, With Exclusive\nFeatures\"\u2014price $10. On whit days of tho\nweik did thi following dotes fill; uno s.\n1805; Oct. -B, 191-| Nov. 13, 1018; Sept. 8,\n' UWi.Mirch 14, IBM?     Z\nThink you fob supplying address of con-,\ntest book, June 5, 1803, fell on Wedneiday;\nOct. 28,1912 (Leap Year), on Monday; Nov. 13,\n.1018, Wednesday: Sept, 8, 1800, Monday,\n\u25a0 D. R, 8\u201e Nakuip\u2014Oover.nmont regulations rt-\nquiro thit l. dog be vaccinated igilnst\n-   rabies before being allowed into a National Pirk, Could you Hit names and .addresses of llconsed veterinarians in West\n. .Kooteniy?  Also, Is  suoh vaccination  a\niirlii^of two or thni oyir i,pirlod-pf\n,'diyi or'wiikit               \u2022', '-A  \u25a0_:\u25a0..'\nWrite to pr, J. J. Cirniy, HR 1, Nelson, or\nto George Clerihew, Eighth Street, Ntlson, for\nfull particulars about vaccination and period\nof tlmi for triitmwls.\"            '\u2022 \u25a0'  ''\nA  '-\u2022 \u25a0'\"'   '..-; r\u2014~  -i\nLookiiifc Backward ,\n7:-7v:-;iB'VIA,R\u00bb'AGlO ' i\nFrom thi Nilson Dally Niwi, July 8,1043\n7 Mrs. G. S, Macintosh, secretary of the\nNelson War Finance Committee, itited thlt\nthe Nelson public schools, Hume,- Central, Junior High and-High, purchisid i total of\n$584.75 in War Savings Stamps during thi .list\ntwo moiithi.of thi ichool term. \u00bb-.-\nConstruction of s cement sidewalk on loi\nNorth.ildl of thl 900 blqek, Carbonate Street,\nIs .cut thi proifrMh of thi City Public Worki\n-Drv-i-thiiiit, jjiati- J. Ji.'McKinzli, ohilrmifi,\nstaled Widnisdiy.-\n'' \u201etY\u00abAR8'AQQ\nFrom thl Nelion Dilly Newi, July 8,, 1028\nCaptain _. C. W. Dobbin, pilot of the forest\nbranch patrol seaplane, said j yesterday hi\ncould see no reason why Nelson could not\nhivi a suitable airport lt thiy could clear i\nrunway of 2000 tut   '\nYoiur Hospital\n. Your hospital is a hotel where you get 24\nhours ot personal.attention. It Is a restaurant\nwhen you get the kind of food suited to your\"\nspecial needs. It Is In thi liundry business:\nbed linen miy need to bi changed om or\nmoro times dally. It is a stand-by power plant\nthat can go Into action In caso emergency\nlighting la needed if the, regular source of\npower should fall.\n. Your, hospital Is also a pharmacy with at\nlust as many drugs as ths drugstore on thi\ncorner. It Is a laboratory when X-ray, pathological and other diagnostic services iri carried on by highly trained technicians supervised by medical specialists. '\nIt may: also be in; educational Institution,\n' training doctors, hursts ind other personnel.\n\"Z   Your Hproscope    -   .\nStellar portents seem divided, but Indications are that new friendships will be formed\nand life should be interesting, ind, on the\nwholo, successful for you.. Born on this date,\nn child will probably be fanciful ond ambitions\nshould bo aroused early. .\u2022\u2022\u25a0     \"\nCapital Memo\n-r- BY JAMES K. NESBITT'\u25a0'. \u2022 [**\nVICTORIA\u2014Few political leaders ln our history have\nhad the astonishing success of Premier W. A; O. Bennett.\nResults of the June 9 election are a. tremendous tribute to\nhim and his Social Crediters. There's no other Way of looking\nat it. There's no use-saying they sneaked in; that the whole\nmovement's just a flash in the pan. It's none of these things,\nSocial Crediters didn't sneak in; they were elected by more\npeople than.ever elected 'a B, C. government before; the\nmovement is.nb longer, a flash\nln tho pah; it's here, In government, for eight or 10 years.\nOur sour cherry ln tho beautiful,\nbeautiful Social Credit pll ll Oak\nBay, whirt. Minister of FlnifuSi IMr.\nGunderson lost to Llboral P, A.\nGibbs. Mr. Bennott wants Mr, F.\nGundorson to contlnuo ob Minister\nof Finance. Hi.no doubt will, thire\nii no ruli to say i cabinet minister\nmust. also bl an MLA,- It's customary, of count, but i min cm\ncarry along In tht cabinet, but con-\nnot tiki i mt In thi House,;\nThe Premier doubtless knows It\nwould bi unpopular with tho public\nto hivo a Soclat Creditor resign his\n\u2022lit io-thit Mr. Gunderson could\nrun. This happened twice lilt year,\nWhin Mr, Gunderson-ond Attorney-\ngeneral .Bonner win flrat seated.\nHowever, a little of this goes a long\nwiy.....-\u25a0'.- - -.-: v.-\n;\u25a0' At tho Autumn itsilon of the\nLegislature, thl Premier could hive\ntwo or thrco extra leits added to\nB, C.'s 48\u2014and could havo by-elec-\ntloni In' thi mw seats beforo the\nSpring session. In this wiy ho could\neasily get Mr. Gunderson into the\nHouse.\nOak Bay's Mr. Gibbs has a high\nploco'in B. C. political history. He's\na giant-killer if ever 'there was one.\nHe his now beaten two Ministers\nof Finance\u2014Mr, Anicomb In 1952,\nMr.' Gunderson thisiyiii, .Hi his\nbeaten two Conservative chieftains\n\u2014Mr. Anscomb last year, Mr.' Deane\nFinlayson this year. Thus, diminutive Mr. Gibbi ii a man of vast political'accomplishment. -   -\nSo far, of thoae leading on thi\nfirst count, all ore making it, with\nthe exception of four,.-Mrs. Tilly\nRolston could lose in Point Grey to\nLiberal, leader Arthur Laing. And\nof the tour, so far, who lost out on\nsecond ind third counts, two win\nCCF'ers\u2014in Prince Rupert end LII-\nj TheyllDoItE\n8UY*fAR8 AOO.\nV   From the Nelion Dally Newi, July 8,1003 '\nA   handsomely   illustrated   testimonial,\nwhich the celebration .committee at Ymir on\n7 Victoria Day. hll drawn up, has been received\n; by F, L, Irwlh, bandmaster of tha city bind.\nThl semi-annual Installation of officers of\nNelson Lodgle, No. 25, Knights ot Pythias.\n\u25a0'\u25a0 took plici at Fratijnlty Hill, with R..0. Joy\nofficiating. Installed is-officer's were Qui\n.' Erickion, j7L.Pirks., XL.-Porter, L. Thelln,\n\u25a0 VJ.'jhilln, Lj.tarssh, GVN. Gunn, I. 0, Nilson,\n; '. J.VHi,Viastotn, \u00bb\u2022 0. Joy. n\nZZ Montreal Gazette\n;v7 This Wiek, one ol^inidi's greit nswi-\n.papers, the Montreal Gazette, celebrated thl\n176th ihnlvifsiry of! Ite -first lssiii, indii\nreceiving congratulation! from ill over tho\ncontinent t-  a..;     a\nIt is a long way .from the huge, high-speed\n* presses of i modirn newlpsper to the handworked press, and candlelight that helped produce the first copies of tho Gazette. \u25a0\nBut the competence, the integrity ind thi\nhigh prlnclplis are the simi, They in thi In-\nV gredients that makl newspapers great ond\nkeep for them- a special place in publlo confidence.   .\nIn thi foriwofd of i bpautifully pnpired\ncommimonttyi, brochuri thi Gizilti'i prill-\n\u25a0 dint ind dlnctdrs point out that i niwspl-\npir, la'i viry humih things\n'It Is imlrror hold up to thi living, ft li i\nrecord of sctloh'.'.. M ls'the Wti at i niwi-\npipir to dli dilly. But It is Its f ite to bi born\niich diy ihiw . .. The Gantte Is moved to\nV nek thi newest and provide the best;\"\nHere is the Creed ind thi formuli of i\n!  great inwspiper,' oni tfiit hli brought disfln6-\ntlon ind success ind guarantees many more\nyein of the hl^ieit kind of public servlce,-\n'   There heVer wis s bid man that hid ability lor good lervlce^Ttdmund Burki.\ntoday's Bible Thought\n\"\u2022A For mon thin twO thousmdyian\nevil rulers\" hiVi tried to exterminate thi Jews,' and of course thi\n.Christians. Their persecutors have\nifor the most jiirt sunk into obscurity or.(fiilun.\u00bb. . i, . '\u2022 '-.'.\n', As for Ood ,. Vi Hi li ivbuok-\ni lor to ill them thit truit Him,\nII 8imuil 22:31.\nOuntttsL\n1tta.tM6B9taiyvvM0'\nHITSR4RI4EDC4RSIS-4\nfVVtW-^AWK*-.\nlooot, whore thi Llberola won; Nanaimo, whero Conservative Dr, Lorry Glovando won, though he could\nbi topplid on a recount, ind In\nOik Biy, where Mr. Gunderio'n loll,\n- Thll column till mentioned before tho extraordinarily methodical\nway thi publlo hos bain eliminating\nLiberal and Conservative parties.\nIn the 1892 election four Conservatives were elected, and six Liberals.\nThll year ono Conservative ond\nthree. Liberals, though Mr. Laing\ncould make lt four. Thus, the determination would appear to ba first\nto eliminate thl Conservatives, then\nthi Liberate. This year tht Constrv-\nntlvcs took i 75 per cent-cut in\nHoiisl representation, tho Liberals\na 50 per c\u00abnt cut. AndMf Dr. Glovando should finally lose out ln\nNanaimo, that's thl \u25a0 ind Of thl\nTorlis In the B., C. HOule, -\n'':'{?\u25a0 \u25a0' .7*  ''\u25a0   \u25a0\u2022''*.-..   ': '\u25a0\nI went to a muting hero for Conservative loader. Giorgi. Drew,\nThin was something very sad, ind\nvery grand, about thl people who\nsat on the platform. If ever a plot.\nform ncmboliud political defeat it\nwas that platform\u2014and yet, then\nthey sat, defiantly, courageously; no\n.deserting of thi linking shin for\nthem, no fleeing to Social Credit in\nthe Tor|es' hour of need. .\ni Mont conspicuous among the defeated ones wis Herbert, Anscomb.\nThe thought flashed through. this\nreporter's mind thit what i shimi\nlt la- that gambits of political lift\nhavo silenced this finest political\nspeaker In B. C<\u2014yei,-thi very f In-\nlit, even if you can't agree with\nwhit hi says. Thin ht sit, mutely,\nIn thl shadows, white others spoke,\nmd It they wen good, Herb Anscomb oould have been far, far better\u2014and this. Includes polished political orator Drew himself. I^hit \u25a0\nshame, and all'beoauso Hirb Anscomb Is a Conservative.\nDeane Finlayson, defeated Con-\n\u25a0I\u2014\"\nPravda Editorial\nNol Fooling Many\n\u2022y aTANLIV >R|&-JL\u00ab\nLONDON (Reuters) - Russia's\nCommunist party . nOwapapir,\nPravda, hll launched \u2022 cold-war\nrockit arid West Kiiropian leaders\nagree It was i skilful piece of\npropaganda art. .\"-''-'\nPravdi Monday pllyid up rill\nand imagined differences among\nthi Western powers and repeated\nlta thomo long thit \"foreign hirelings\" hod cruted the satellite revolts In East Germany,\n, Ont of Pravda's objects clearly\nwu to moko up for tho loss of\ntici from thi uprisings In East\n'Germany and' Czechoslovakia md\nfrom.lilt week's astonishing confessions of errors by Hungary's niw\nriBime. .-'\nBut only thl most ardent Communists belicyo the rebellions wore\nnot rill ones, British govornmont\nleaden say. Pravda's effort to pin\ntho blame on Western agents Is\nonly bririrdng laughter, they claim.\nAU the Western leaders agree that\nthe Pravda editorial wii aiming to\ndrive i wedge between the United\nStates and, lti European alliei. Some\nof them tilt tho Russians feared\nntw-.VlOtlng, ind wtrt trying to\nprepare people's minds beforehand\ntor thl Inevitable \u2022charges ot \"American provocateurs\"       Ax\nCHROMITg rOUND     it     .\nKARACHI, Piklstan (cM-Lirgl\ndeposits of chrOmlti have bun'\nfound in Kharan, In tho ,'Baluohl*\n\u25a0teh area, The area Is believed to\nContiln mon thin 8300 tons of exposed ore.  -\nUnion Against\nQuota Incrtaiti\nBERLIN (AP)-The East German\nFederation of Trada Unions served\nnotice today it will not permit even\n\"volunteflr\".-, lncrialli of workers*\nproduction iCjuotii. '-.'), \u2022\nOne of the major causes of the\nJuno  17 workers' revolt was thi\nquite Increase forcod upon thorn-\nby tht Communist govirnment. Thii \u2022\nattempt to squeeze more work out ;\nof tbi people\u2014for th\u00ab limi wiges\u2014\nwas abandoned In tha govornment'a\nfruntlo attempt to ploeato tht'work'- :.\ners ittir thllr uprising, 'iyf.,\nTho trade, union federation\nCharged, *owevir, that i-iony- plant .\ndlrectori in trying to git around\nthi niw ruli by, inducing workers\nto igrii \"voluntarily\" to boost their\noutput, So the federation's board\nof directors madt Its poiltion dear :\nin today's issue of,lti official newspaper. , '\"\u25a0    \u25a0 -ti .'\"''\u2022\u25a0\"\u2022\u00ab'\"\"\"  \u25a0 -'\nThere still wa( no move by tha\nSoviets to lift the martial law they\nclamped on East German Industrial\ncentres\" 10 days ago whin Russian\ntanks and troops hod to,bo called .\nout to suppress thi workers' uprising,   .   ,\u25a0:'\u2022    ;,:- A'.-:'   . ,     ..\nCommunist officials admittid\nSunday that thl Spirit of revolt is\nstill alive. New Industrial strikes\nand unrest among t[ie farmers wen\nnported.    .-, v;f. y,. \u25a0;.).\u25a0- .\u2022-.\nIXPgrtHNCBP MOTORIST\n\u2022-DONCASam vingland (CP1 *\nDr. Walter Wilson, a brisk and -\nbustling 79, has bun driving a car\n51 years. Hi keeps his 1035 sporti\nmodel\u2014fitted with antl-thcft trips,\n14 lights tnd 10 dashboard switches\n\u2014because It would taki too long to\ntransfer th* gadgeti to a new cir,\n\" '-'- *i .\"\u25a0   .\u25a0:. -   r:' .-! ,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0',:. 'V ..\nsirvitlvi loader In B. C\u201e waa on\nthi platform too, He's a pleaiant\nyoung man, and ovoryone but the\nImpersonal voteri likes him. Chairman Haldini, Introducing Mr, Fln-\nii\u2014\u00ab*>. s\u00bbW; \"Perhipi ht'i not sO\nwill known to you now, but In a\nfiw years you will know him as thi\nPrime Mlnlitir of British .Columbia.\" Will, now, there's optimism\nfor you.\nYoung Mr. Finlayson blinked it\nthis, md wu no doubt astonished.\nThen, his hopes soaring once more,\nhe said, md qulti modestly: \"I\nwould be hesitant to make any prediction, but I know\u2014indeed, I fill\nih my bones\u2014thot lt will bt in due\ntime.\"\nPOWER STEERING...POWER BRAKES\nNow teamed with\n':f,-f.Mimu9X'-r':\nV-8 performance!\n,, 'tti . . .\", ,'a*..-:\",: \u2022 ;.-\u25a0 -  -'.' - -\nMercury presents all-new steering ease\u2014\nall-new feather-light stopping, teamed with,\n' smooth V-8 performances Mercury with -\nnaw Power Steering* responds more gently\n, \u2014more surely than ever beforfl. Morcury\nwith now Power Brakes* eaBes up to safo,\nsilkon-smooth straight line stops. Mercury\nwith Merc-O-Matic Drive* makes driving\nalmost effortless\u2014utterly smooth in all\nip\u00abd ringei. 7 \u2022 7 \u25a0'\u2022\n- Road Teat Mercury\u2014easier handling,\nsmoother riding and livelier performance\nwill win^your praiaeB, too. You 11 enjoy the\nfeel of smooth powor as tho 125 Hp. engine\n\u2014V-8, ai alwayivwhiipera along\u2014\u00bbo\n, economically. After a Road Test\u2014you'll\nagree 'S3 Mercury-ia the greateit yet).\nMIRiURY wllh MERC-O-MATIC ORIVIf-IO oasy to\nhandle\u2014driving ii almost effortleii\u2014utterly\nBinooth in all ipeed ranges. Mero-O-Motic Drivo'\nthe almplcat, smoothest, molt efficient automatic\ntransmission, is, avoiloblo on all models. Thrifty\nTouch-0-Matio Overdrive*, also available at oxtra\ncost, \u00bbav\u00abi up to 15% on fuel. Sllen,t\u00abue \u00bbyn-\nchroniiiod transmission is itnndard. '7\n\u2666Clpllonolatctrrocoil\n\u00bb   \u00ab\nAll-new. optional rowia\ndrakes* require little more\npressure than the accelerator.\nAssure \u00bbmooth,quiot,Btrnipht-\nlino itopping\u2014np to 50%\nenter,* ind filter, too; With\nMercury power muxes thl\nweight of your foot holds car\non i hill. Mercury rorria\nbrakes combine vacuum-\nhydraulic operation with suspended pedal action. You can\npivot foot from gaa pedal to\nbrake to cut reaction time.\nmERCURY vs\nas always I\nI declare-1 believe Hinry li\nSlid to get old, White hqir\nmakes him look so harmless he\ncan Pit girls without, gettln'\nilipped. \u25a0\u25a0 ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0; -.\nMERCURY MONTEREY CUSTOMJlCOUPE\nWhltnvsU tlm. rarMdir ihlttS, mi.\n'(Jl? ti    \u25a0  , bumper-frill, (uanli at. optimal at txtrotmt.\n' \u25a0-',\u2022---.- '  'I '    \u25a0;.,      ' ,  ,-,   --\u25a0''  ,.y        .;\u25a0-.' ' 'ti1''  '--,'\u25a0.' \u25a0 -A-       \u25a0'\u25a0    r-7-      ''\nBEfORE YOU BUY ANY NEW CAR f. \"ROAD TEST  MERCURY\"\nBEACON MOTORS\n,901 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 378\nFOR   A    SAFE-BUY'   IN   A   USED   CAR . . . SEE   YOUR   MERCURY   DEALER\n ^\u2022^ppplpi\n\/%ss\nIt Pays to Buy Quality\nSUMMER\nWHITES\nNylon Mesh, Open Heel, Strap,\n-   Wafer Platform, Open Toe,\nCuban Heel.   \u25a0\nAA-B Width!\n-    Slies 4'\/- to 9.\n-Iffpi\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nLister Notes\nMrs. W. Mitchel and Mrs. Morrison of Vancouver, visited Mr, and\nMrs. John Huscroft. While here\nthey. attended the funeral - of: the\nformer's brother,,Elmer. W. Hui-\ncroft\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nIt the\nButcherteria\nPHONE 627\nBEST:\nFOR       \u2022\nCOOKWG--\nPacific Milk idd*  ixtri    *\nflivor ind neuriihment to    I\nreelptiV;:        '.'\/\u00ab\nBOY B.C. PRODUCTS !\n\u2022   A -I\nThey're Out for Fun,\nInexperience No Bar\nInWomenrs Bonspiel\nThere are greenhorns galore in\nthe ranks of women curlers In the\ncurrent Midsummer Bonspiel, but\ninexperience doesn't stop these\nPrairie ind B.C. visitors from having a bang-up time on Civic ice.\nTake the case of Mrs. Evelyn\nHeald from Hay Lakes, Alta., for\nInstance. She had mver curled before shi stepped onto thi rink In\nTuesday's opening women's as\nlead player. Her rlnkmates: Mrs.\nC. Nordin, skip; Mrs. E. Kreamer,\nthird and Mrs. Anne Aspell, second, admitted they were fairly new\nto the game, but thit \"we're going\nto have fun inywiy.\"\nIt's this attitude which has made\nthe women's event such i hit with\nwives of the more serious male\ncurlers. Aa long as they can get in\na few games with a congenial group\nof women from other places, they're\nhappy as clams.\n-Two as enthusiastic rock-iossers\nas you could find anywhere are\nMrs. Eleanor Tabler and Mrs. Verna\nPalechek from Ponoka, in their\nthird year ot curling at the eight-\nteam indoor club in that Alberta\ntown. The Midsummer Bonspiel\nvisit Is their first\u2014their husbands\ncottoned' onto thi attraction after\nhearing Midsummer. Bonspiel tales\nfrom Ponoka men.\nThe Ponokans are members ot\na rink, headed by. two Nelson\nwohien.'Mrs. Vlnce Killeen and Mrs.\nJean Chandler.\nA foursome from Edmonton,\nskipped by Mrs. Mabel McCloy,\nwith- Mrs. Irene McMurray as\nthird, Mri, Elsie Marlsr is lecond\nand Mrs, Mary McLeod as lead,\ncan wax eloquent on'the Boniplel ind Nelson.\n\"We're loving every minute of\nIt\u2014the roiee, the hospitality \u2014\nJust   avirythlngl\"   thi   timmlid\ngang declared Tuesday.   They're\nall   members   of  thl   Edmonton\nThistle Club, of which Mri. McCloy Is *i past president.\nLeaving their children it home,\nthese four from Canada's oil capital\npacked their bags and their husbands', and headed for Nelson. Now\nthey want to coma back tor their\nholidays,  ind If you ask them if\nIt isn't a holiday they're on now,\nthey   say   it's   just   a   \"pleasure\njaunt.\" | -,\nTwo lilonde \"youngsters\" in the\nwomen's section are Eunice Nordvie\nand Kathleen Legg from Stettler,\nwho have'been learning their curling ABCs In high school rinks.\nThey are second and lead respectively'on a rink skipped by Mrs, A.\nThlessen of Vancouver, three years\nat the game,.and entered by Mrs.\nEd. McCurdy of Stettler, playing\nthird.\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nf -''v 8ell. Trade the Classified Way\nJaycettes Show\nBonspiel Spirit\n. Nelson Jaycettes undertook ai\ntheir firs) project this teason one\not hospitality and goodwill.\nClub members, In \u25a0 the spirit of\nMidsummer Bonspiel Week, tied on\ntheir gingham aprons, got out their\nimagination and arranged tables\nand prepared the canopies for the\nBonspiel mixer Monday night\nEight members, headed by Presi\ndent Mrs. Earl Wilson began their\npreparations Sunday evening apd.\nworked through from' 10 a.m. to\nafternoon on Monday without time\nout for lunch, to make the Civic\nCentre badminton hall. attractive\nand the mixer a sincere welcome to\ncurlers; The mixer, part of opening day entertainment, was sponsored by Nelson Hotelmen'i Association.\nMembers, who, is their president\ntold them, \"worked only for glory\nto show Nelson's spirit goodwill\nspirit\", were Mrs. Jsck Morgan,\nMrs. John Hogg, Mrs. Ted Allen\nMrs. Don\u25a0 Porteous, Mrs. .George\nKaiway, Mrs, Irwin. Black, Mrs.\nAdam Doyle and Mrs. Richard\nCoatesV .,  .\nATTEND WEDDING     .\nPROCTER \u2014 Out-of-town guests\nattending the recent McMullin\nFitchett wedding in Procter were\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Maze of Kinnaird; Mr. and Mrs. Len Brown of\nRiondel; E. Colman of Salmo; Mr.\nand Mrs. Robert Hong of Willow\nPoint; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Neale of\nNelson; Mr. and Mrs, M. Mikkel-\nson of Nelson; and Mr. and Mrs.\nCyril Joyce, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nQuin, Ralph Redding, Miss. Jean\nMonaldi, Miss Ruby Fox, Mrs. S.\nAntosik, Mrs. Gladys Sargeant, Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Salsiccioli, Mr.. and\nMrs. G. Stewart, Donald MacLeod,\nand Allan Donaldson, all ot Trail.\n950 Register for\nSummer School\n-VANCOUVER \u2014 4CP) \u2014 Some\n950 students have registered tor\ncredit courses at the University of\nB.C. Summer School which opened\nMonday, registrar'! office announced today.-\nEnrollment is approximately the\nsane as last year's session and stu\ndents, many of them teachers, have\ncome from as far as California and\nNew Brunswick.\nMount Ararat, Biblical resting\nplace ot Noih's Ark, Is the highest\npoint of land in Armenia*: \u2022\nStop...shop atthesiqn\nof Coke and Fbod\nH4Jt-W43a_er meals perk right up\n\u2022   with ice-cold Coke.\nYour family and friends welcome\nBus fcunous coi__biD_tio_u\nAuthorlxid boHlir ef Coco-Colo mitt contract with Coco-Cola ltd.\nMcDonald Jam Go. Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\n\"Colta\"r*\u00abr\u00bb\u00bbh4ar\u00bbi trail \u00bb\u25a0_\nPHONE 1055\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 8,1953 \u2014 5\n'\"BEGENT NEWLYWEDS are Allan Russell MacDonaE, son of Mrs. Margaret\nMacPonald.-arid ,Mary aairt;Caru\"ii;;dau2hter -of Mr. -and. Mrs.'-Nick-Caruk,.'wh9\nwere'married'in thie. Cathedral of Mary 11 imm_ul6te;Left-to right are J6hh;Misuraca,\nMrs.'George Madelung, '\u25a0 tiie flower girl,\u2022'\u2022 Arlene Ridge, Mr. and Mrs. MacDonald, Cjrril!\nRogers' and- MissYPat.Sohwarok.. The'..coiiple ar? makingftheir home.in- TXeispnii ,\n\u25a0 \u25a0-'-'-\u25a0 .'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0 ---..\u25a0 -\"'--' \u25a0    ':..:\u25a0, .-\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0','...'.,- ..\u25a0::.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.[:'], \"ti [ vYRenwiekphoto.I\n;Prpt^f,f;Ni_i|i?8^\nPROCTER'^- Mr. and Mrs.' J*d-\nwird Dosenberger and their three\nchildren frotfi Vancouver are visiting Mr. and Mrs.' Nick Dosenberg--\ner7 7 77V \u2022   ' -' A-\nPete Gretchen is home from\nGrand.Forks.-;'-   .'\u2022 - \u25a0'-;,.   sja. '\nMr.'-Bergstorm of Granite ..Road\nIs residing at his summer home in\nProcter.' fv\nBill \u2022 Lepitski 'has .returned 'from\nCalgary.-' . ' \u25a0   ,   A ''\n- Miss, Marge. Major, is on holidays from Vancouver' visiting Mr.\nand'Mrs.-Maiirici'Major.  ','\nMiss. Joan Ferguson is. visiting\nCarstairs, Alta.-   ) .' \\\nMiss Grace Pye from Moose Jaw,\nSask:,. was. a weekend visitor at\nthe Holiday Inn before taking up\"\nresidence at Crescent Bay..-\nMrs. M. Smith has gone to the\nUnited States for a visit. .\nMrs. Fred Sokoloski has return\ned from a month's visit in Fort Ar.\nthur,:\"Oht.: \u2022\u25a0:':'\u25a0. '.-'   \u25a0 ti-'-if;'\u25a0'\nREAD THB  C_A'S8lf IE_  DAILY\n% _____t Whssfai\nBLUEBIRD CHAIR-8LT\nSomething to sing about! A\nlucky bluebird .chair-set! Crochet\nit ever, so.easily, in .your favorite\nstitches. Keeps furniture clean.\nNew -and, popular'. \u2022 decorating\ntouch in, your favorite 'pineapple\ndesign. Pattern 886 has crochet directions.. \" .\nSend .TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, in\ncorns (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this,pattern' tb Nelson' Dally\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, 266 Baker\nSt, Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME anS ADDRESS. '      -'\u2022 . \"iti. ' \".''\nEXCITING VALUE! Ten, yes TEN'\npopular, new designs . to \u25a0 crochet,\nsew,.embroider; knit-sprinted right\nin the^Laura: Wheeler- Needlecraft\nBook. Plus'many more patterns to\nsend for \u2014 ideas for gifts', bazaar\nmoney-makers, fashions! Send 25\ncents for your Copy!,\nRecjpes... .\nPresent No Problems\n\u25a0lytllkpitlfoifGk&K.i;-.'\n7'Before the advent of the more\nrecent types bfcook'ihg, refrigerating and freezing equipment, it was\nusual fpr the.homemaker to spend\nlong hours in the kitchen\" on the\nday guests were ta arrive \u2014 only\nto spend additional time during\ntheir visit.' in frantic,, list-minute\npreparaUtafof'food: .A\n\u25a0. Today's -hostess,, however, with\nthe help of modern kjUchen equip-.\nment, is in complete. command of\nany situation, whether spur-of-the-\nmoment picnic,, planned dinner\npar'y.'.or the Impromptu arrival of\nunexpected'Sunday; night 'supper\nSUests. \u25a0 Present'day; cooking ranjses,\nrefrigerators-, and: hoine- ffeeae'rs\nmake it possible for her to.prepare\ntempting dishes at her leisure, store\nor frieze -. t)ie*n,}r and ihjoy: her\nguests \u2014 rather -than slave: for\nthem. Two such dishes we are.offering tbday, \u25a0\u2022 \u2022-.'-' -.' 7 \u25a0.\nVEAL. 8AUD SUPREME ',\nTwo ^pounds lean\" veaj, pepper\ncorns, -bajr 'leaf,: sliced onion and\ncelery top's, 76 tablespoons French-\ndressing, 1 tablespoon grated ottion,;\n4 hird-copked, eggs, 1 cup,, broken\npecans,'% iup diced green pepper,\n1 cup. diced celery, Vt cup stuffed,\nolives, sliced, salt and pepper, 3\ntablespoons mayonnaise.       s.'.'\nPlaca, vial in- pan $ with wafer\nbarely covering. Add pepper corns,\nscrap of bay,leaf, sliced onion and\ncelery topi: &lng;to bpil, then cook\nslowly uritil tender. Drain ind Cool\nWith scissors cut' veal into bite-size\ncubes. Marinate with French dressing and grated onion for 12 hours.\nGently toss in cut-up hard-cooked\neggs, broken -pecans, diced green\npeppers, dic-d celery, sliced stuffed\nolives'and seasoning to taste. Toss\nin 3 tablespoons .mayonnaise (or\nenough to m6isten). Chill in ypur\nrefrigerator and- serve on bed of\nsalad greens. Makes 8 servings.\nALMOND AND HONEY PUDDING\nOne and a half tablespoons gelatin, _ cup cold wafer, 2' cups rich\nmilk,' 3 egg yolks, % cup honey, H:\nteaspoon salt, - teaspooj*. vanilla,\nVt teaspoon almond extract, Vs cup\nchopped blanched almonds, -1 cup\nwhippingVcreani, coMei'jelly,.   \u25a0:\nSoften gelatin in water. Scald\nmilk. Beat egg yolks with, homy\nand add to milk. Cook until-mixture coats spoon. Add- silt ind\nsoftened gelatin ind stir until gelatin is-dissolved. Cool until thick\nand syrupy. Add flavorings ind nut\niheats.7 Fold In stiffly- whipped\n'cream.' Pour into.bl^iidf l%-<iuart\nring^. mould and'.chill' In your re-\n;frigeratoruntil firm. To Berve\/un\nmould and fill centre with cubes\nof coffee jelly. Makes 6 to 8 servings. .-. 'titi ' \u25a0-\u2022-,'\nCOFFEE JELLY\/\n| Two .tablespoons gelatin, 'A cup\n.cold water; Vi'ciip boiling water, 1\ncup sugar, 3 epos strong coffee. ,\n. Soften gelatin \u25a0in, cold lyator. Add\npolling wafer and stir until gelatin\nis dissolved. Stir in sugar. Add\ncoffee and, pour into oiled shallow\npan, Chill In jrojir refrigirator: until-\nfirm.: Cut into inch cubes to fill\ncentre ofrWgof ahnbndanH honey\npudding:    \u2022\nH\u00a3VtC\/DS-HER?$\nJUWIVEmATlS\nkeasAnt,\nTOTAfCeJ\n\\ JLister Notes\nLISTER \u2014 Tom Krannabetter of\nIhe RCAF, North Bay, Ont., is visiting .his- parerita In HuBcroft, Mr.\nand, Mrs. Jl-KriWiibetter.   A\nMiss Eva-Domke, nufse-ln-train-\ning at thi Royal- Jubilee Hospital\nin Victoria, is a iguest' of her parents, Mr. and: Mrs: Adolph Domke.\nV;Miss-Anita Riehl and Miss Elizabeth Millner. are -.v|sltii\u00ab'sit their\nhomes iti Lister. They: were attehd-\ning normal school in Victoria.\nHelson '\nSoeial ^\n.,\u2022\u2022.:...-.:.\u25a0_, PHONE 144\n, FORMER. RESIDENTS ... Mr.\nand Mrs.. M. Tully and son and\ndaughter, Craig; and .Marylin, of\nLodl, Calif., are visiting Mr, and\nMrs, James Young and other Nelson friends. They are former residents of Nelson. -\n' \u25a0  i,;.-....'a: .   a  ,-             \u25a0 .'-\nHOME AGAIN .... Mr, end Mrs.\nJ, A. Bracken have returned from\na five-week motor trip in Eastern\nCanada and the United States. >\n\u25a0-   V '. '\u2022'   a Va\nFROM: PRINCE GEORGIA . ..\nMrs. S. Madeley and daughter of\nPrince George are visiting Mrs.\nMadeley's mother, Mrs. Gordon\nHallett, North Shore.\n, .- *   \u2022\nTO WINNIPEG ... Mr. and Mrs.\nN. MV Thompson and Mrs. G. E.\nThompson, 817 Victoria Street, leave\ntoday tor a: holiday in Winnipeg.\nThey will travel by car through\nthe United State).\n-.        \u201e.--. \u2022  \u2022\n. TO SPOKANE ... Mr. and Mri;\nJ. F. Jamleson and family left Tues-\nday for a holiday ln Spokane.\n.-.,..,-\u25a0-   ..\u00ab-,\u00bb   \u00ab\nRETURN... Mr. and Mri. George\nEckmier, Nelson Avenue, have returned from a three-week holiday\nin High Prairie, Alta., with their\nson-in-law and'daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. G.-LVBerry. '\u2022.\".-'\n--,: . \u2022   a   \u2022 \\\n: FOR; SUMMER . .. G. M. Willis-\ncroft of Edmonton returned yesterday after spending \"he past week\nat his Summer home on the North\nShore. Mrs. WilllscrSft, Claire and\nGeorgeA will remain here for the\nSummer.\n:;\u2022\u25a0'* \u2022,\nCOAST HOLIDAY . . . Philip\nBailey and Frank Turner left Tuesday on a motor trip to the Coast\nand will return via- Seattle and\nSpokane..      .\n.   i ' \u25a0 a. *   a\nFROM REGINA . . . Miss Mar-\ngaret .Brown of Reglna, who has\nbeen visiting Miss Twyla Walton\nat Crescent Beach, is now staying\nwith her uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. Robert Walton, Gyro Park\nRoad.\nEngagements\nMr. and'Mrs: D. M. Miller, 424\nNelson Avenue, Nelson, wish to\nannounce the engagement of their\ndaughter, Margaret Williamson, to\nMr. D.avld.Robert Morrison son .of\n.,..-,    Watch for Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET - Phom 131\nINLAID\nLINO\nNUED\nPATTERNS,\nRegular to $2.95 Sq. Yd.\nSPECIAl\n$1.79\nSQ. YD;,\nMrs. J. S. Morrison and the late Mr.\nJ. S. Morrison of Montreal.\nThe -wedding will take placi kt\nSt Andrew's Presbyterian Church\nin Victoria B.C. August 11th. 1863,\nat 8 p.m. Reception following it\nthe home of her brothcr-in-law.and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. P. Cook, 2769\nSomass Drive,\nLONDON (CP)-Nurses who quit\nto become air hostesses an causing\nshortages ln hospitals. A Britiih\nEuropean Airways official said an\nair hostess earns almost twice as\nmuch is a hospltil nurse.    ,\nM^z\nMS\n.mux- \u25a0trawa.apwia: too, Maq\u00ab\nits, too. Made by the:\n\"\u2014   T-hfeli \u2014jrotir\n*J\"      Get e\nTABLETS\nNew Vanishing Cream Deodorant\nwith Non-Stalnlng CHLOROPHYLL\nRUB IT IN!\nRUB ODOR OUT!\nEvery day-rub it in-rub odor out!\nWhen the'gnen color vanishes, die odor\nis gone. New Arrld with Chlorophyll deodorizes insemdf on contact... gives yon\nlubbed-ls protection. Stops uajeiarm\npetspiratioo 1 to 3 days-keeps under-\nirms dry and odorless.\n' New Arrld with Chlorophyll is safe fbr\n\u2022clothing. Antiseptic. A smooth, plcisaot\nvanishing cteua. Preferred by 2 oat of 3\nwomen over their regular deodorant <3\u00ab\ntutu Arrid with non^caining.chloioph^l!   ,\nApproved\nAmirlc\u00abs-'>\nWhon Iho flreon color vanish..     Isnllliite    -\n\/lUOnORISpOt4EI 1-JUwii-leHsn\nNFW ARRI0 WITH M0N-STAINING CHLOROPHYLL\n3-DAY OFFER!\nFULL PRICE\nREBUILT     $AJFV50\nElectric Portable\nSewing Machines\nCASH\nTRADI\nTERMS\nREG. $69.60\n\u2022 GUARANTEED\n\u2022 NEW MOTOR\n\u2022 SMART CARRYING BASE\n\u2022 NEW FOOT CONTROL\nWRITE TO\nYour Choice ..,'\n\u2022SINGER\n\u2022 WHITE\n\u2022 ETC.\nBOX 3823\nNelson\nDaily News\nATTENTION\nyou write our local representative will call. For your free home trill fill In this coupon.\nIf NAME\n1Y7\nF\nADDRESS\nend mail to BOX 3823, NELSON DAILY NEWS\ngELLMAN*S\nJ\nmmma\n\t\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0   '\u25a0\u2022-.\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0-\u25a0:.\n SI.PI?\nT^\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY; JULY 8,1953\n>QROgP CAPTAIN Piter Town-\nsend, former equerry to the\nQueen, whose name and thit of\nPrlnceii Mirjirit, hive been\n, linked romantically, enteri car it\nLondon airport on return from\nNorthern Ireland with royil'\nparty. Hi hai been named ii ilr\nattache to thi Brltllh Embany In\nBrum I si MalutHi Towniend,\nwho obtained i divorce from thi\nmother of hla two children on\nthi ground! of adultery, leiii hli\nclose connection with thl royal\nfamily through hli new aiilgn-\nment,-AP Wlrephoto.\nTwo Indians Face\nMurder Charge\nMBBBITr, B.C, (CM \u2014 Hli\nRCMP slid todiy two Metrltt In-\ndlins will be charged with the murder of in elderly Chinese Irrigation\nworker, found hacked to death and\nrobbed ln his shack it Nicola Lake\nMondiy night \"\nBeaten ibout thl face and neck\nwith in ax, thi body of Chung Fuk\nSing, 70-year-old employee ot the\nNiCola Liki Stock Firm, was discovered ibout 6:30 p.m., police said.\nA bloodstained tut was found niir\nthi body. ,'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022*'\u25a0 i     :        -'-\nChung is believed to have htm\nattacked about I p.m. Sunday.\nRCMP officials Slid Francis Joo\nand Johnny Sampson will appear\nin fiCMP' court here todiy .on a\ncharge of murder.\nFarmers (him\nHall Damage\nCALGARY - (CP) \u2014 Hill insurance adjusters from the Alberta\nhall insurance board are Investigating claims in a 15-mlle wide iwath\nfrom Okotoks to thi Saskatchewan\nborder, damaged' by hall in thi\nStorms Friday and Saturday. Assessment, of damage will' not be complete' until the end of this week,\nbut preliminary estimates indicate\ndamage wu spotty. Some areas suffered almost 100 per cent damage,\nwhile -others within thi 15-milO\nswath escaped without damige.\ni Heaviest dwiage occurred In the\nBrant, Brooks ind. eastern irrigi-\ntion districts, whm damage ln\niomi oiiib ringed from 50 per cent\ndimige to total low.   . ti'\nSpring crops likely will recover\nto some extent from thi dimage.\nFill rye in thi path ot thi hall\ndamige, however, will ihow a serious loss.\nKorean Casualties\nOTTAWA (CP) sr An sriny enmity list, todiy included threp\nwounded in ictlon md thru mm\nInjured in action, Tbi list list was\nIssued July 3.        >      A      \" :\nTha six uri numbers ot thi 3rd\nbattalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry,\nThe army list brought to 1443\ntotal casualties so far suffered by\nCanadian troops In Korea, Including 385 dead; 14)43 wounded, 25\nmilting, 05 injured and 18 prisoners.\nIn addition thi nivy his reported\nthree dead ind thru Injured in\naction, ind thi ilr force oni miss-\nThi\n;\u2022 list (No. 189):\nINJURED IN ACTION\nLiclilr, Hlchird,- Pti, PPCLI;\nSiult Ste. Mine, Ont\nMcPhee, Clarence, Cpl, PPCLI;\nKingston, Ont.\nMurray, EirVPta, PPCLI; Niw.\ncastla, Ont\nWOUNPID IN AOTION\nRochon, Rlohird, Pti., PPCLI;\nCumberland, Ont\nSchofleld, Murriy, Pti., PPCTJ;\nPortigi li Pnlrli, Mm.; Hirbirt\nSchoflild (fathir), ' c-o Mm. H.\nDomino, Geraldton, Ont.\nl'hicklr.Hirry, Pti., PPCLI;\nMirlini thicker (ilster), Ponoki,\nAlta.\nThe agouti, a South American\nrodint rilatid to thl guinea pig,\ncauses much damage ln sugar plantations.  \u25a0\u25a0'    A .  .\nKoolaree Echoes...\nj HAPPY DAY No. 8\nBverybOdy was up, in tima for\ncampfire\u2014Wait\/a minute; not camp-\nfire, lt wai morning Jerks. Even\nLittle was there, with Doubt end\"\nMOLuckle, to greet the boys and\nmake sure thiy were Completely\niwike. Thi Polar Bare boys are\nfetching tbi diesel calls is the trains\nroll by it that iirly hOdf. *Who ire\nthese Bares? Dick Fraser, Denis\nStanley, Fudd (Elmes) Wilks, Service, and niturally,' French\u2014is then\nany place.hadn't?   .'\nRev. G. W, Piyne Kis been i welcome visitor to the camp to tiki\nover the study group of Rev. Mr.\nMore, who departed for higher education at UBC.\nWhere on forth\nAn The \"Satnt VenWIoqulsti?\nWHEN ASKED the above qutatloa.\nmany people would probably name\nsome stage Or radio performer aa\nthe world'* grist**. vefttrUoqulat.\nThat la. unless the; vera tattUiir\n\u00abith the man> welrl sounds and\ncalls made by certain Jungle eAl.\nmala\u2014tor ln the wilds ot Central\nahd south America, In this writer's\nopinion, roam aome of the greateit\ni \"ventriloquists\" of all time.\nTlie uttle howler monkey, for instance, la so versatile thit he can\nreadily lmltnto tho roar it a lion\nor the bWk of a dog\u2014while a young\nalligator eomotlmoo deceives even\nthe moat experienced obsorvor with\nhis humon-like Uujh. A bib* tapir\nemits a whistle, not unlike o sme.ll\nboy's, and a oat-likt crot(turo\u2014the\nyaguarundl\u2014makes, of alt things,\na soft, low bird-lUta call!\nBut of all tha ventrUoquiota la\nthe animal kingdom, probably ona\nof the flncst\u2014and certainly tha\nmost deceptive\u2014la \u2022 email tailless\nanimal about T inches long which\ninhabits the Rooky Mountains la\nthese Uqttad States.\nCalled the Pits, thla Uttla creature looks ilka a cross between a\nguinea pig and t rabbit. Ho hides\nIn tho deep, rooky crevices of tho .\nmountains, where, la squeaking\ntones, tie practices the fins art of\n\"voico-throwing\" with such *4U1\nthat he can drlvo Is eagle half mad\ntrying to locate him; The eagle\nhunts la vain for hts prey, whUo\nthi Plka's cry penetrates the\nRockies again and again etch time\nseeming to como from * different\nplace. Most startling of oU, thla\nUttla critter is shy and nolsel-M\u2014\nUntU be spots a predator. Thon,\neven though out of sight and perfectly safe, ha will begin hll von-\n' triloqulem\u2014 seemingly Just-for thl\nsport of lti\nOwrlaM, US], i. T. BtnlS Tribune Im.\nTHANKS!   Porry   Williams,   WO-\nllamiport,   Ponnp. .\nilM'ta wtr fesh le \"Where On Eorlh,\"\nlavs of tills newspaper,      -\nmZfy;ti, ,7 7a \u25a0\nLionel McLuckie is now Choo-\nChoo McL. He has gathered in ill\nthe trains out of thi cracker jack\nand is how collictlng 10-rcint cir-\ntlfiCites from thl Crispies. So far\nhe hasn't heard about the bird cirds\nin the ihreddid wheat.\nCfifts ire moving right along.\nFred Doubfs Art group iri excelling themselves. Outstanding in this\nHeld gri Roil Erickson ind WIS\nvia., These lids are On pencil\nsketches, while J6hn Ralph li busy,\nwith in Oil painting Ot thl beach\nand wharf. The plaster boyi ot\nNorm McLuckie have advanced to\ntha painting stage, with Fudd, Art\nMore and Bob Van (riot North,\nVan), working on Wolfhegd, Indian\nhead. In the irchery group thi boys\nan now on thi target, ind evify\ndly is Showing marked improvement. \u25a0-- \u25a0 . a,,.... .-'\n, Ninoties are appearing on the rifle\nrange now, with Ron Erickson Scoring a 88, Freddy a 83, Alfred Know-\nler 88, Lome Mr-shall 87 and Kin\nPeerless 8J, Jim \"Wilks and David-\nHon'ey both got 80.\nThi practical group about camp\ndivided in two section! wofkld Oh\nthe pipe line ind thi cabin con*\nstruction. Thi-JluttibMslearned thi\nart of threading pipe under Allan\nLittle's leadership, his plumbers being Alex McLelland, Bill Gibbon,\nBob Harrison, l\u00bbd lipki Hprawill.\nOn thi Cgbin construction: Aviry,\nDolsin, HamtOri, Wilks, Peerless,\nAhdifiOn arid ErickiiOri.\nThi afternoon-was spent in *\ncleanup, Sesiiofi' ind much debris\nwas gathered from hithir arid yon\nto add to thi campfire and kitchen\nfin supply. Thi gang.arourid thi\nnew cabin havi done wonders. Thi\nroot is half on and ttt ground surrounding has bein clianid ind will\nbl ready for occupancy by thi Juniors next Fridiy.   \/\nThl sun Ib high in the sky md\nthe sky is clear, so the plcniq it on.\nThe boys ore hiking the track to\nRussell's; tha food is loaded aboard\nthe launch, md overything ll undir\ncontrol. Russell's beach the , next\nscene; the boys hiYi. arrived, tha\nlaunch has arrived, thi food ii being unloaded\u2014but whin Is thit\nclear sky and sun? You guessed it;\nit has been replaced with the blackest clouds you ever saw, and Uie\nhills across the lake are really being soaked, and it's coming our\nway. You never saw 50 kids served\nhot dogs, cake, milk and watermelon so fast; one thing we have is\nco-operation, and the Older chaps,\nWally Anderson, ROh Aviry md\nKen Stanley, hive blin invaluable\nto thi stiff in pinches liki this, Thi\nrain did como, ind the fellows took\nshelter under thi trees till it blew\nover in very shortordir. Bock came\nthe clear iky, back cam! the sup,\nand back caipe the boys to camp\nfor their evening games.\nCampfire tonight was i nil do;\nsomething that hasn't biin dorii\nfor a long time. Cabin 5 took all thi.\nresponsibility of an Indian council.\nAll little chiefs presented their\ntribes to the Greet Chief, told stories of greet deeds ln thl form of\nballads. Fred D. read tbe ballads,\nthe Wilier Lot, md the Gnat Indian Minion,, ' while thi Rid\nClouds acted them out, Thi tribes'\nikrlbe report! were a masterpiece\nof hilarity. We ill went to bed very\ntired ind full of cocoa and cookies\nI MUST CLEAN OUT THE BALANCE\nOF THIS STOCK BY SAT. AT 6:00\nand HERE ARE THE PRICES to DO IT!\nTHE STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY\nWEDNESDAY TO REMARK STOCK\nIRISH LINEN\nHANDKERCHIEFS\nTo First 50 .Customers\nTHURSDAY MORNING\nFREE!\nI will give a pair of large lixo Iriih Linen Hondkor-\nehiefi for men, value 91-BO, to the first 50 customers\nattending thii tale en Thursday at 9 a.m.\nMens Merino\nShirts and\nDrawers, $1.00\nPenman'i famous 71 Brand, too.\nThin li no good reason for i\ntremendous bargain IlKi thl* except I want to git you and everyone else I ein down hero'to\nset Just how I hivi out pricei for\ntht final wlndup of thii sale.\nCLOSE OUT SALE PRICE FOR\nPENMAN'S MERINO, l.OO.\nMen's $1.25 and\n$1.50 Dress Sox\n5$c\nAnkle Itngth as will n longir\nityloi, In pun wool and wool\n\u2022nd nylon, Hiri li i vilui yeu\nwill probably ntvir \u2022\u2022\u2022 it lint\nfor a. number ef years. Out thiy\ngo niw fir inly S9-.\nMen's Cord Shirts\nfor $3.99\nThill in the regular 6.05 gride\nof smooth Canadian corduroy In\n\u25a0 lovely deep blue er brown.\nThi sires are imall, medium and\nlarge, tnd thl quantities in vtry\nlimited, ia early ihopplng Is\nclearly Indicated, Close Out Sale\nPrloi li 3.99.\nRed Strop\nBib Overalls\nfot $330\nThll ll the regular t.95 grade,\nroomy out from flno quality 8-\noi. blui denim. Urge pockets\u2014\ntriple stitched\u2014bar tacked ind\nreinforced it strain points. Thlt\nfamoui mako Is ilwayi popular,\n\u25a0nd I would suggest you make\n\u2022ure of youn lirly en Thursday.\nSilt prfOi ll $,MO. V S\nI Will Give a BELT\nABSOLUTELY FREE\nWith Every Pair of Pants\nfor the Next Three Days\nAit 10 o'clock Thursday\nMen's DRESS SOCKS ?9c\nj will pbl en sale Thursday morning at 10 o'eloek, 10\npair ef men's fine drew io* lit value $1.00 a pair for\nonly 39\u00a3. I must limit 2 pairs to a customer.\nBoys' Woven\nCotton Pullovers\n89c\nTWO shidil only, blue ind wine,\nnnd the ilisi in for the lads\n*i> P \u00bbhd thl prlee wai. 2,66.\n\u25a0Ling ilnvi itylli with a smart\ni... oiid tney are just right for\nsohool   wear.  Out they  go  it\nonly S94C,\nBoy*'\nWinter Weight\nGob Jackets\nHere Is i big barflaln If you\nwint to Invest a little now- to\nsivi i lot laUr. These Jacketi\nart latin quilted In a wlndproof\nsmoothly woveir gabardine with\n\u25a0 full ripper foitener. The regular price wai 8,05 md thiy'go\nnow for only BsOO. \"\n\"\u25a0\u2022\n$2.00 in MERCHANDISE\nFREE\nON THURSDAY WHEN\nTHE ALARM RINGS\nEvery so often during the day on Thursday an alarm will ring in the store. To\nthe lucky purchaser whose transaction\nwai completed immediately prior to the\nalarm, we will give $2,00 worth of\nmerchandise of their choice.\nMen's Flannelette\nPyjamas Less Than\nHalf\nSplendid quality flinneliHe \u2014\nout full ind roomy In sizes from\nA to D. These jarmenti sell always for 4.60 and they muit be\ngood vilue it thit price because\nthiy an viry popular. My tleii\nout prloi li on,|y 2,19,    ',\u25a0\nMen's Cotton Work\nGloves for 25c\nflrown checked cotton work\nglavei in i rool bargain ind\nthin in only about 4J4 dozen\nlift new. Regular value wos 60a\ntt pair but out they go it a low.\nMen's Cotton\nKhaki Pants\nSale Priced\nThen in will finished ind will\n\u2022: tailored, md a good iturdy gride\nif cotton  pmtlng,. They  comi\n' with belt loopi, ouffa and the\nvllkl, and tht only thing mort, I\nbiin ny ibeut theip li thiy'art,\na  darn   good- bargain   because\nthey in \u2022 regular 6.76 value for\nonly 3.89.\nMen's Fine\nWork Shirts\nfor Only $2.00\nThis represent! \u25a0 half-price\nvalue here and more because\nmany of these shirts -are normally $4.60 value. Plain greyi\nand greeni and reds and blues-\nsome checks ip'both winter arid\nsummir weights. Out thiy go it\noniya.00.'''    .      \u25a0' Z\n,     '   I \".''.'\u25a0'\nWoollen Scarves\nAre Half Price\nSmart plaids, checks ind thi\nliki In pun woollen silrvii.\nThin II \u25a0 huge group for your\nselection from theio 4.00 vilun\nand you will likely wint several\nfor your gift Hat, Tiki them it\nhalf-price for only 2,00.\nBpys'\nSport Shirts\n. for Only\n30c\nSun, It'i I giveaway prloi \u2014\nbut whit can I do whan tlmo\nrum, out on me. They come In\nplain fawn and plain blui and\nthiy in Juit right for hot lummer dlyi fir klokabout purpoiei.\nReg, value 1.85 for only 80#.\nLimit 2 Shirts to Customer, '\nMen's; 22.50\nGabardine Pants\nfor $10.00\nI have taken tha final dmtle\nmarkdown on every pair ef them\niplendldly tailored pnnti ind you\n,iave In v-'g wiy whin you fit.\nyourself with a pair. All pun-\nwool\u2014ill perfectly tailored ind\nIn the very latest ityllng. Whit\ncan I tay moro than thlt, Clou\nout price 1Q.OO.\nSmart Cord\nSlacks Are Down\nTo $5.00\nThen ire the 9,96 grade and thiy\nin perfect In quality\u2014 ind perfect In tailoring. Browni, blues,\ngreens and wines are the ihadei\nand tht sizes run to 32. Here Is\na bin bargain Indeed and they\nwon't be here half an hour after\nthe doom open'Thursday. Better\nbe down good ind early to git\ni pair at only 5.00.\nBoys'\nDress Shirts\nfor$l;00\nHero li another grouping of\nsmart dnn shirts that will move\nout quickly, A much better grade\nOf shirt than wo hid. op last\nweekend, priced down from 2.60\nind 3.00 to go out. flit it only\nl.OO.\nBARGAINS\nGALORE!\nAS THE DOORS SWING\nOPEN AGAIN THURSDAY\nAT 9-00 FOR THE\nFINAL 3-DAY DRIVE\n1.85 and 2.25   Men's Rib Wool\nDress Sox Go    Sox in $1.65\nfor\n$1.00\nHero li \u25a0 grind irny af dren\nitx In the imarteit pittirni ind\nmelt comfortable itylti, Thl\nbrindi in thi onei you'knew\n\u25a0nd thi quality li thi gridi yiu\nlike ti wear. It li \u25a0 big clou out\nbirgaln it l.OO.\nValue (or\n99c\nIn thii grouping in thi higher\npriced grey wool iox In thi 3-4\nmd V\/t lb. weights. We cannot\nfool around any longer wondering whether we can git thll\nprice er thit price for them\u2014\nthty muit go In tht next ftw\ndiyi it vtry low 99(S.\nm\nI Shall Give a\nTIE HOLDER Absolutely\nFREE with every necktie\nSold Until Saturday\nBoys' $4.50 Iron\nMon Ponts for $2,69\nThll Is the famous Inn Man pant\nthat standi up so will. Finished\nwith euff, belt loops ind 6 pockets. There li no sense to telling\nthii kind of merchandlie it \u2022\nprice like this but I hivt to git\nthll itock out regardless of price,\nbj taki them away on Thursday\nit only 2.69.\nBoys' Blue Denim\nRider Pants Below\nCost\nHm It in 8-oi. denim pint thit\nwill give plenty ef weir ind\n100k Juit like ill rider pants do.\nMade by Caribou, It. Is triple\nstitched, riveted at points of\nstrain, In fact i well mado good\nvalue 4.35 pint thlt li being\nclosed out fer 2.99.\nIT'S CHRISTMAS GIFT\nBUYING TIME\nIF YOU WANT TO SAVE\nBoys'Rubberized\nRaincoats\nfor $3.00\nJuit the thing fir thi rainy fall\ndays (who uld rain Ih Ntlion?)\n\u2014ind mighty good buying now.\nThin in only i fow.of thim\nlift ind thi rigulir price'wii\n6,60 but out thoy go at only\nS.0O.\nAt 2:00 Thursday MENS BRACES 15c\n3 dozen pair of men's braces go on sale at 2 O'CLOCK Thursday afternoon.\nFine quality and regular $1.00 PAIR.\ni    ^\nNELSON\n547 BAKER ST.\n\"So Mtiny Free Qifts, You'll Think It's Christmas''\nW\nWhite Silk Scarves\nfor$1.49\nFashioned by Currle for the man\nwho wants to look imirt when\nhi driliil up, Dtip fringe lets\noff tht lovely sheen of thi scarf\nmd they, como boxed reidy to\nput away .ind bring out for *\ngift. Rigulir vilui 2.00 for a\nclose out prloi of 1.49.\nBoys'\nTweed Pants\nfor Only $1.00\nThill in perfect sohool pants\nand they sold for 6.60.. Good\nquality, believe me, for thi lid\nup to alio 12. \u2014 Tweed pants\nare maybe net Juit thl height if\nfashion now but for odder days\nthiy in mighty comfortable.\nGrab off i pair for your bey\n'\u00bb1.00.\nSome Old Timers\nThat Are Cheap\nA ' big group if scarves that,\nwhile they ire In perfect shape,\nhave been In iteok several years.\nI won't fool around with them\nand In spite of, thl fact they an\nin values to 3.00, I am letting\nthtm go for only 49^.\n..ttt.,\n______\n \/S57\nYoungest Curler Wayne Adair\nCaptures Heart of Spectators\nBy LEN WALKER\nEach yeir with .the running ot\nthe Midsummer Bonspiel, at least\none story with a heart warming\ntinge comes to the tore. This year\n1 j no exception,\nChitting with Mrs, W, W. Adair\nof Harris, Sask., on Tuesday. I discovered thit the Adalrs.llke showmen, firmly believe thit It all\ncos- thl show must go pn.A\nIt seems thit Mr. Adair alter being all lit to make the trip to Nelson, waa called to I funeral ol a\nrelative. Alter performing hi! duties\nas a pallbearer and With little sleep,\n' he and his family set out tor the\ntrip to Nelson. Starting out early\nOn Saturday thoy travelled ill day\ntnd wbm darkness began to roll\nln over the hills of B.C. they prepared to stop tor tbi night, but\nthey couldn't find in auto court\nthat wisn't already filled to thl\nbrim with tourists. With nothing\nelse U do.but contlnuo on their\nwiy thiy travelled through tbi\nnight arriving it thi Main Kootenay Laki firry it three o'clock lh\nthe morning. Then, with many\nmore, they were held up tor five\nhours before tbe MV Anscomb\ncould accommodate them.\nSON (TIPS UP\nArriving in Nilson lite Sunday\nmorning, and with the driving over\nthe B.C. roads,with their corners\nand hills Mr. Adair was \u25a0 \"but\nmin.\"\nWhin thi rink was ready te bit\nthe ice tor their flrit gimi ln the\n'spiel, Monday evening, Mr. Adair\nwis ill ind unable to play, thus\nletting thi stage tor thii yiar's\nyoungest curler to step into thi\nbreech.\nWayne Adair. 14-yur-oU ion of\nskip Adair ot tha Harris crow, performed 10 will thit tbi packed\nbleachers had nothing but praise.\nHe sent his lead rocks down with I\nstyle that hid even thl veteran\ncurlers watching.\nWayne performed like a veteran\nhimself ln helping his team cop tha\nwin over the John Kubasek rink\nfrom Vauxball, Sask., by a narrow\n8-7 score. Kubasek, Incidentally, Is\nhockey scout for the Cleveland\nBarons.\nI Inquired about thi youngster's\nexperience. Mrs. Adair smiled: \"Oh\nhe's been-curling since ha was 11\nyears old.\nThis la just one of the  many\nstories .of determination to ploy in\nthis 'spiel, thit hive been unfolded\nsince the 'spiels origin ln 1845.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nlie mixer party held on Monday\nproved iti vilue again. It brought\ntogether two mm who hid not sien\neich othir for many-yeara. Mike\nBuurs ot the Ponoki rink ind Bill\nPeterson hid themselves a good\nchat over old times. They have\n\u25a0 been acquaintances, since meeting\n\u25a0t a ball tourney several years back,\nflorm Fawcett of Wartime, Sask.,\nwho it seems finds Nelson more\nbeautiful with aviry year, was telling me that hla oldest daughter\nDoreen would have loved to make\nthe trip but because of work she\nhad to remain behind. Next year\nihe'll be here, .\n\u25a0' Norm, talking about Doreen, was\nall smiles. He is proud of her as a\neurler. Last year she was a member\n\u25a0of the rink that captured thi wo-\nmen's Saskatchewan curling crown.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Middlesex\nstrengthened its position it the\nhead of the English county trlcket\nchampionship table Tuesday, belting Warwickshire, 1851 champions,\n'by 148 runs.\n: It won mainly through the dominance of its spin bowlers, Jack;\nYoung and Fred Titmus, whose\ncontrol bad the batsmen guessing\non a well-worn pitch  A\nAinsworth Hotspringi\nSwimming Pool\nOpen 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dally\nClosed  on Mondays,   .\nExcept on a Holiday\nDressen Names Seven\nAll-Star Pitchers\n' By HARQLD HARRISON\nCINCINNATI (AP) - Manager\nCharlie Dressen ot- tbi Brooklyn\nDodgers dipped into till ranks ot\nseven ball cluba TuoEday to fill\nout thi 28-min National League\nall-star team which will melt the\nAmerican League all-stars In the\nannual garni bin. next Tuesday.\nHe named seven pitchers with\na combined record of 84 won ind\n33 lost up to games of Tuesday to\nsupport an array ot power hitters\nwhich Includes the major league\nleaden In' home runs ind runs\nbitted ln.\nThis li the burling - crew thi\nDodger pilot will hove available:\nRobin .Roberts (13-6) ot the\nPhils, wfio has pitched In two previous all-star games; Gerry Staley\n(12-3) of the St. LOuil Cardinals;\nHoyt Wllhelm (5-4^ thi New York\nGiants' great reliefer; Murry Dickson, who has a 7-8 record with\nPittsburgh's list place Pirates; Curt\nSimmons (7-5) bick ln action for\nthi Phlli after a layoff btoimt of\na foot injury; Warren Spahn (10-3)\nof the Milwaukee Braves who will\nbi making bli sixth appearance on\nan all-star squad; Harvey Haddix\n(10-3) of th| St. Louis Cardinals.\nTht rest ot thi squid named by\nDressen fo go with thi light starters picked by a vote ot the fins\nwill bi:    .   \u2022   .\nInfleldert; OU Hodges and Jack\nRobinson of Brooklyn. Davey Williams of Naw York, arid Granny\nHamner ot thi Phils.\nOutfieldors:   Duke   Snider   ind\nCarl Furillo of thl Dodgers, Ralph\nKlner of Chicago Cubs-and Richie\nAshburn of the PhllB.\nCatchers: Del Crandall of thi\nMilwaukee Braves, and Del Rice ot\nthe Cardinals.\nCoaches will be.Jake PItlcr and\nBilly, Herman ot Dressen's own\nDodger staff. Wayne Anderson ot\nCincinnati will be trainer and Lea\nScott.of Brooklyn will be club\nsecretory.\nThis array \\ylll go with a starting\nlineup made up of Ted Kluszewskl\not Cincinnati, 1st base; Rid Schoen-\ndlenit of St Louis. 2nd base; Pee\nWii Reese of. Brooklyn, shortstop:\nEddie Mathews of Milwaukee, 3rd\nbase; Stan Musial of St. Loull, left\nfield; Gus Bell of Cincinnati, centre\nfield; Enos Slaughter bt St. Louis,\nright field, and, Roy Campanella of\nBrooklyn, catcher.\nKluszewskl 'led all players ln\nvotes cast by fans.\nMusial and Slaughter in the \"old\nmen.\" Each Is miking his 10th\nappearance on in all-star team,\nReese will- be a nine-timer md this\nis Schoendienst's seventh time to\nshow up on an all-star squad.\nFifteen of the National Leaguers\nare repeaters from - last year's\nsquad which won a rain-shortened\n3-2 decision for the senior loop's\nthird consecutive victory.\nMore than half tha anthracite\nproduced in Walls Is exported tor\nsteamship bunkers.\nNelson Eleven\nTo Set Up Slumps\nIn Tadanac\nWhit might be Called the longest\ngame ln tha world Is about to moke\ni comeback In Nelson, A cricket\nclub has been reformed ind tbi\nfirst gome for thi Nelson 11 will\nbe played against Trail Sunday at\n2 p.m. on the Tadanao pilch.\nA management committee was\nchosen it a nccnt. meeting madl\nup of Charles Rushby, chairmen;\nBernle Ford, secretory-treasurer!\nTed Young, captain; T. C. Middle-\nton, vice-captain; and John Glea-\nson. This committee will bo responsible tor arranging all gnpts and\nwill bo charged with the management of the club.\nDonations wero received it thl\nmeeting from Walter'Bailey, Walter Wait, and Bob Main, ond will\nbo used to purchase new bate uni\nbatting pads,\nClub officials say tha' present\nequipment is playable and has bun\nused ln practise, but new equipment should be iddid,  .\nLineups for the Trill game Will\nbe chosen Thursdiy. '\nCARNOUSTIE, Scotland (AP) -\nBen Hogan ind Carnoustie's soggy\n'championship \u25a0 course ran head-on\nIn the British Open Tuesday tnd\nthl course came out best. Stesldt\nlayout's slow and shaggy greens\nlofted, the U.S. .open champion's\n(icon to, \u2022 \"78,.\u25a0\u25a0'-.': \u25a0\nTbi 75,. along with a'70 Monday\non the easier Burnside course,\ngave the Texan a 148 total \u2014 easily\nlow enough'to qualify hit, tor tbi\ntourhamantjproper,\nDefending .champion- Bobby\nLocke of South Africa rustled .up\nI brilliant 71, one under thi unofficial par at Championship for a\ntwo-day 188 and the medal honors,\nBonspiel Results\nTough Day For\nCatchers*\nSouth Slocan scraped up' three\nrum on tour hits while thl Transfer hid I field diy with nine runs\non seven hits In a senior men's fist-\nball game it thi Recreation\nGrounds, Monday, : \"'\u25a0.,\nSouth Slocan pitchers aided tha\nenemy cause by offering 10 fret\nrides, to first base while Forworn\nwalked three in serving them up\ntor the. Trinsfir.\nPlutlcoff homered tor the visiters\nto the eighth, but tbi Transfer hid\nthi game'on Ice In the flrit toning\nas .they scored tour runs:\nThe casualty list had Ball, Trans-\nfir catcher, out of the game tn tbe\nthird with a badly puffed  right\nWORLD SUMMER\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nRound two:\nR. Hambly, Benalto, Alta., 10, C.\nHodgson, Chllliwack, 8.\nJ. Frizzley, Treherne, Mah., t, B.\nR. Turner, Kyle, Sask;, 7.7\nR, S, Harper, Duncan, B.C., 18, E.\n0. Parry, Morrin, Altai 8. -\nJ. Smith, Calgary, 8, M. D. McCallum, Edmonton, 12,\nN. R. Sardlch, Nelson, 6, C, Esche,\nSalmo, 11.\nC. Mitchell, Vancouver, 8, Len\nPeerless, Nelson, 10.\nV. H. Nelson, Comrose, Alto., 5,\nB. F. Robertson, Edmonton, 9.\nE. B. Olsin, Edmonton, 8, N. Fawcett, Wartime, Sask., 8.\nA. Norman, Ferlntosh, Alta., 12,\nJ. E. Simpson, Edmonton, 8.\n-^ R, Palmer, Nelson, 8, A. Bissilllon,\nCalgary, 7.   7 \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0;\u2022   \u25a0_,..,\nI. Staples, Creston, 4, G. p. Montgomery, Reglna, 13,       A\nF. Palechek, Fonoko, Alta., 8, W.\nKeenan, Champion, Alta., 8.   ;\u2022>\nBin King, Vermilion, Alta., 10,\nW.'Peterson, Bentley, Alte,, 8.\nA. Thelssen, Vancouver, 8, N,\nKulyk, Luscar, Alta., 1.        ..;\u00ab.\nJim Taylor, Portege, Wise, 14, H.\nStewart, Black.Diamond, Alta., 7.\nRound Threi: ii\nW. Adair, Harris, Sask., 12, R.\nHambly, Benalto, Alta., 4.\nBv R. Turner, Kyle, \"Sask, 12, R.\nS. Harper, Duncan, 6.\nM. D.. McCallum, Edmonton, 17,\nC. Esche, .Salmo, 6.\nLen Peerless, Nelson; 10, B. F.\nRobertson, Edmonton, 4,\nE. B, Olson, Edmonton, 11, A,\nNorman, Ferlntosh, Alta., 6..\nR. Palmer, Nelson, 8, G. H. Montgomery, Reglna, 8,\nW. Keenan, Champion, Alta.. 12,\nBen King,. Vermilion, 8,\nN..Kulyk,'Luscir, AHi.; 4,   Jim\n\u2014\u25a0\nBASEBALL\nTOURNAMENT\nJULY 10-11-12\nReserved Tournament Tickets on Silt Now \u2014 Kooteniy\nStationer!, GelInas'  Recreations, Walt's  Nows,  Bowlod\/omo.\nAll\n(Reserved Sent for 6 Games: 83.00)\nProceed! From Thii Tournament Will , Go Toward tho\nPurchase of Night-Lights.\nMid-Summer\nHOCKEY\nSATURDAY, JULY 11\nTickets on Sole Civic Centra Office\nWednesday, July 8, 7 p.m.   ,\nPenticton\n'7   vi.   ti\nNelson Maple Leafs\nTaylor, Portage, Wise.,- 18,\nKOOTENAY CHALLENGE\nRound Ont:\nJ. Relneke, Carmel, Sask., 8, G.\nMoir, Sslmo, .7. '\n' A. L. Myhre,. Innlstree, Alta., 6, B,\nGold, Nelson, 8.\nL. Legg, Stettler, Alta., 8, R.\nHeald, Hay Lakes, Sask,, 8.\nE. Hunt,.Nelson, 17, A. J.. McLeod,\nBlack Diamond, Alta., 4.\n' Porrlsh, Nelson, 7, E. Aviry, Salmo, 10.\nA. Meier, Redwater, Alta., 11, L.\nKnudtson, Calgary, 3.\nRound Two:\nJ. Kubasek, Vouxhall, Alta., 8, C.\nHodgson, Chllliwack, 7.\nJ. Frizzley, Treherne, Man., 4, E.\n0. Parry, Morrin, Alta., 6.\nJ. Smith, Calgary, 10, N, Sardlch,\nNelson, 7.  A,\nC. Mltehill,. Vancouvir, 8, V. H.\nNelson, Camrose, Alta., 7.\nP, Komonlsky, Holden, Alte., 8,\nH, p. Richie, Edmonton, 11.\nJ. Hingwing, Nelson, 8, G, Souter,\nGleichen, Alte., 6.\nG. Moir, Salmo, 5, B, Gold, Nelion,',It-\nL. Legg, Stettler, Alte., 8, E. C.\nHunt, Wilson, Hi:'-   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0',\n. Ed Avery, Salmo, 8,  A.  Meter,\nRedwater, Alta., 5. A ...\nL. Casey, Wartime, Sask., 5, L.E,\nNortticbtt, Mllo, Alte;, 7.\n... E. Ramsay, Fillmore, Sask., 8, K.\nSamis, Edmonton, .i.\nH. Cummings, Nelson, 8, V. Smith,\nBurr, Sask., 0.\nNi Fawcett, Wartime, Sask., 8, J.\nE. Simpson, Edmonton, 7.\nA.: Bissilllon, Calgary, 10, I.\nStaples, Cristpn, 7A\nF. Palechek, Ponoka, Alta., 0, W.\nPeterson, Bentley, Alta., 8.\nA. Thelssen, Vancouver,  5,   H.\nStuart, Black Diamond, Alte., 10.\n\u2022Round Thru:\nA. Norman, Ferlntosh, Alta., 8, D.\nPalmer, Wilson, 12.\nW. Peterson, Bentley, Alta., 10,\nH. Stuart, Block Diamond, Alta., 11.\nN. Fawcett, Wartime, Sask., 10, A.\nBissilllon, Ciliary, 9.7-.\n:  V. Smith, Burr, Sask., 8, E, Ramsay, Fillmore, Sask., 4.\n. LADIES' WORLD\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nRound One!\nC. Nordin, Hay Lakes, Alta., 7,\nK. Smith, Leduc, Alto., 10.     .\nM. McCIoy, Edmonton, 10 V.\nSmith, Burr, disk., 5.\nG. R. Parry, Morrin, Alta., 10, M.\nCraig, Nelson, 0.\nO. McCurdys, Stettler, Alte., 2, D.\nFrizzley, Treherne, Man., 12;\nR. McKenzle, Princeton, 13, I.\nGunderson, White Bear, Sask., 5.\nKeenen, Champion, Alta., 18, D.\nBishop, Olds; Alta, 7;  :\nV. Killeen, Nilson, 3, B. F. Robertson, Edriiobten, It\nI    G. Forbes, Salmo, 4, J. M, Nelion, Camrose, Alte, 8, '.\nRound Two*       A\nI    C. Nordin, Hay Lakes, Alta,, 7,'V.\n'(Villein, Nelson, 8. \u2022 .-'.\";\u2022*\" ,\".\n; 0. McCurdy, Stettler, Alta, 4, G.\nX Parry, MbrTln; Alte, 7v '\nI ' I. Gundersop,. White Bear, Sask,\n14, Keenan, Chimplon, Alte,, 9.\nTight Games\nA( Bonnets\nNilson Outlaws loat:- two close\nball -games to the Bonners Ferry\nLeglonaires 5-4 and 3-2 as'they\nplayed their first games under thi\nlights during tbi Bonners Firry\nIndependence Day celebrations.\nOutlaw manager Ron Nash got the\nblunt end of American - hospitality\nand waa thrown out ot the first\ngame attar strenuously protesting!\ncall at home plate which forced the\ngarni Into extra innings.\nNick\" Zaltsoff struck out eight,\nwalked two ond gave up five hits.\nHe assisted on 10 put-outs, forcing\nBonners botsmpn to groundno the\nmound. Bob Davis of Bonners\nfanned seven,.walked one and gave\nup six hits. The Leglonaires won\nthe first game in tha tenth Inning\non a long fly ball and a double.\nBonners Ferry won the second\ngamt on a \"hit and two errors ln\nthe seventh to breik up i 2-2 score'.\nThi game was called at thi tnd of\nseven Innings to enable the Outlaws to catch thi terry. Ray Driver\nstruck out eight Americans and'\ngave two bits, walking none.\nPlay For 'Spiel\nCrowd Tonight\nNelsOn \/Royals, winners ot the\nwomen's, fastball tournament at\nSalmo July 1, will tangle with the\nteam they beat out In thi finals\nwhan thiy,host the Shavers Bench\nReps, at thi ' Clvlo Recreation\nGrounds tonight at 8:15 lh a Bonspiel Week exhibition.\nThe Royals have three wins\nagainst no defeats in competition\nthis year, but' will have to be\nsharper afield than thiy, wore laat\nouting if they hope to keep 'their\nrecord intact. The. Nilson team\ncommitted nine errors against one\nfor Shavers Bench In the Salmo\ntourney final, but three booming\nhome runs gave them a 6-4 victory.\nThe Royals won the West Kooteniy\nchampionship list year.       .\nTentative lineups tor tonight's\ngome: Elsie Appol, catching; Verda\nPratt, pitching; Chris Chapman,\nfirst base; Miry McGinn, second\nbase; Marie Stangherlln, shortstop,\nand Geordle Procter, third base.\nFielders will bi chosen from Jem\nMcDonald, Marg Schrier, Ruth\nBambrlck, Eunice Chase, Maureen\nKennedy, and Helen Kanlgan.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014A piano accordionist visited thl zoo and proved\nthit music hath charms to soothe\nthe savage beast. Chimpanzees belt\ntime,. sea lions stood With\" eyes\nclosed ln rapture, and i lion did a\nfour-footed version of t quick-step.\nband. A foul tip caught him on tha\nmd ot the fingers,-Dunsmore, visiting' catcher, left thl game to thi\nseventh with a twisted ankle.\nf.COMPLm\nMECHANICAL\nREPAIRS\nBy   Fiptory  Tnlned\nMlchinlM\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nYour Dodrjo De Site Dealer\n' Opposite Pott Office\non Vernon Strut    V   .\nBudget Plan available on all\n8alei and 8erv!ei\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8,1953 \u2014 7\nPorteous Homers, Standings Change\nDon Porteou3 clobbered I homo a run'In the fourth ond thi fifth\nrun with one on in the top' of the\nninth to give the Maddens a 7-5 win\novir thl Transfers In a mer's faBt-\nball clash at tho Recreation\nGrounds, Tuesday night.\n\u25a0' Thl win caused 1-switch in team\nstandings, boosting the Maddens to\nfourth place ind dropping - tho\nGaragemen to fifth. ,,\n1 Everybody had their hitting pants\non, the Transfer Sitting sjven and\nthi Maddens collecting nine. The\nMaddens moved but In front with\nTORONTO (CP) - Don't figure\non a card of less than 274 is thi\nwinning icore ln thi tour-day, 72-\nhole Canadian open golf champion-'\nship starting today. That's tbi considered opinion of the 188 professional ind amateur golfers who\nwill sprav the Scarboro Golf club\nfairways with balls tor the remainder of thl week.\nbut proceeded to treat the ball like\nit wos too hot to- handle In tht\nTransfer half of tho fifth.\nIt might well have been a little\nwarm as the Transfer crew began\nto tag Malcolm at will and went\nahead 5-2.   ,'\nMalcolm closed the doors' after '\nthat   whlli   hli   men hopped on -\nJones for five runi In the list three\nInnings to wrap it up.\n7\nMen's Fastball League standings:'\nP\nW\nL\nD\nPet\nPassmore\t\n:. 14\n11\n3\n0\n.784)\nHume ..1\t\n...18\n9\n4\n0\n.892\nSo. Slocan ....\n... 14\n8\n7\n1\n.465\nMgdden ....\n... IS\n5.\n7\n1\n.423\nTransfer \t\n... 12\n5\n7\n0\n.417\nSalmo \t\n... 12,\n1\n9\n2\n.187\nNext   game\nis   scheduled\nfor\n\u25a0'-\nThursday night whin Maddens and\nSalmo square off it thi Recreation\nGrounds.   Game time Is 6:15.\nARE YOU\nLOOKING AHEAD?\nTHERE IS A FUTURE IN THE R.CA.F.\nFOR YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN\nVisit the R.C.A.F. Career Counsellor\nAT-''\"\nTHE CANADIAN LEGION\nNELSON, B.C.\nThursday, July 9 \u2014 Friday, July 10\nModel by model.mile by mile\nthriftiest moms of them all\n\\imm\nYOUR LIVER\nIf life's not worth living       *\n,   it may be your llvorl\nIt', a f.ctl It take, up ta two pint, of Uwr\nfalls m day to KMp yqur digoaUve tract in f\n_<SffiV\ndl tha \u2014a and aparkla so out of iff.. That'll\nwhon you need mild sentlo Carta-'. Llltl.\nl.ivor Pill.. Then fomoun vogotnbio pitta\nhelp Btimulato tho flow of Hvor bi].. Boras\n\u2022your digCBtti    \"\nond you fool i\nBjn t1 iw eta;\ntt|aU<\nGENERAL MQTORI\n7VAIUI\nPowsred by ths famous 235,5 oil. In.\nLosdmsster engino, this truck has pulling\npowsr to match lis lead carrying ability.\nWilli msny outstanding failures. 9500\nSeries Chjsiia md Cab Mat Q.V.W,\nAn Ideal truck lor heavy hauling up lo 16,000\npounds O.V.W., Ihl 0?M Sarins OpUoVlVHI\nprovides a wldo range ol whsslbases. Faster\nread schedules et Fop economy-are mad.\npossible by ths proven 248 cu. In. Torque-\nmatter engine.\nA wicTa variety ol ipedsrl body\ncenbeusedtoedvanlajaonthesi.-\n' series Ceb-Oyer-Englne models. Power-\nplant 4* thi husky IMC 235.5 load-\nmssUt engine.\nThe big, rUgga-l, 15,000 ftmtiS run- mta teams\nop w.lf insToollenal WortmesM wsjofa ISO\nhp. to bilni youe true* thai t m an miUti\u00bb\u00abei\nA-'';   \u25a0'\/\":\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 X   \u25a0     \u2022'\u25a0 -\nMODEL for model, feature for feature, these 1953 trucks are\nthe greatest GMC trucks ever built They bring you new\nstaying power and new safety with Heavier, more rigid and\ndurable construction. All 1953 models provide increased horsepower ind higher compression ratio. These thrifty valve-in-head\nengines give you faster acceleration, greater hill-climbing ability\n\u2014and even greater economy than ever before. \u25a0\"> f\nV\nBuf there's only one way to really know what advantages ars\nwaiting for you in these new GMC's\u2014      \u25a0\".\/.'\nDrive one yourself\/ \u25a0 \u25a0 Y..'Y\nYour GMC dealer will put you behind the wheel of one of the\nwide variety of models available. You'll thrill to the drive of\nsparkling horsepower\u2014the lift of responsive high compression\n\u2014the solidity and stamina which will enable you to save mote\nand make more on every hauling job\u2014with GMC.\nWIGINTON MOTORS LTD.\n206 Baker St.\nPhone 122\n\u25a0    '   \u25a0   \u25a0      \t\nvjYv-Y-vY -.-.:-..\n ,\n*WMmm*W\n\u25a0\nm-\nL\nV\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nK\nI\nN\nG\nO\nF\nR.\nC.\nM.\nP.\n4\n%$>\n8\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS\/WEDNESDAY, JULY 8,1953\nmi\n.1 PERSON-TO     ' ON WANTAd'S\n'.    FOR QUICK RESULTS I\nPhone 144\nDeadline tor Claitified Adi\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\n*+\u2022\u2022*+\u25a0++$*+***+++*\nWANTED\nIMMEDIATELY\nFully Qualified Mole\nState qualifications and ,\nsolar\/ expected. i?ipply in\nwriting! to  BOX   4029,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS.;\nAll, applications\nconfidential.\nStenographer Grade 2\nB; C. Civil Service   \u2022   -\nDepartment of Public Works\n' Nelson\nSalary: $185-$203 .'per month.\nTyping speed SO, shorthand 110\nwords per minute; a minimum of\n2 years' experience. Must be British subject, under 40, except in\nthe. case of. ex-service 'women.\nApplication forms obtainable\nfrom the District Enijineer, Court\nHouse, Nelson, (IMMEDIATELY,\nWANTED - BOYS AND GIRLS\nfrom 17 yeara: ahd up to learn\nhairdressing. Classes starting immediately. Write for particulars\nto O. K. Valley Hairdressing\nSchool, 453 \u25a0 Lawrenco Ave.,\nKelowna, B.C., or phone 3414.\nWAto*_B - CAmp BoH-Cfifik\nwith some experience. Feat ind\nefficient -Worker. For more de-\ntails write W. A, Wengryn, Tye\n'B.C.-\nWANTED - STEAM ENGINEER\nwith 4th' class ticket. Rite 184.\nApply Box 44, Salmo, B.C.\nu>AM_ii -tiha, et.6k '__\u25a0\nmala).   Greyhound   Bus   Depot\nCafi.   ti.  \u25a0 --\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n- WANTED IMMEDIATELY\nExperienced woman cook for\nsmall but busy resort near Nelion during July and August,\" to\ntake care of short orders and regular dinner meals. Good salary.\nNon-drinkers apply only. \u2014, Box\nS842, Nelson Dally News.\n\"\u2014*,fi\u00bb\nWANTED, ABOUT THE END OF\nJuly\u20142 girls for raspberry picking. Apply W. S. Course, R.R. 1,\nNilson, B.C.\nHOUSEKEEPER  WANTED  AT\nonce. 812. Carbonate St., Nelson.\nWANTED - HOUS\u2014\u2014EP\u2014T\"--\nlook alter elderly lady. Ph. 400-L.\nAQENT8 WANTED\nEARN MONEY-MAKE FRIENDS,\nselling blouses, skirts, shirts,\nslacks. Highest quality, rock' bottom prices. Samples loaned. Good\ncommission. Stenber Distributing\nCo., 30 McRoberts Ave., Toronto.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n\"DRESSMAKER\" -ALTERATIONS\n. a. specialty.   Reasonable.   Phone\n_______________ V' \u25a0\nWANTED \u25a0\u2014   POSITION\"JXS\nbutcher. Phone 1575-L.\nMACHINERY\nFARMERS\u2014\n'   ''!', SEETH-NEW .--'\n.fl McCormick     -\nFarm\nTractors\nFarmali \"Ciib\" Tractors\nHydraulic. Control $1144,00\nir'Plow' $72,20\n5'Side Mower $120.00\n4'Tandem Disc $17j6.65\nRpw,Cultivator . $78,00\nSpring-Tooth 7 -.\nCultivator  * $78.00\nGrading ond    '.\n.   Levelling Blade   $70 20\nFarrtidll f\"A\" Tractor\nHydraulic Control   $1725.00\nW-4 Standard       ti       -\nf;'Tractor $2250,00\nNew Pickup Hay Baler\nP.T.O.-Drive    $1588.00\n10'Hay Rakes\nPower Lift.        $152.00\n2J4 H.P, Stationary   7-\n\u2022 Engines $186.00\n5 H.P. Stationary\n. Engines     ;   , $260.00\nall Items in Stock\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co..\nPHONE 1400      NELSON, B.C.\n-ti,,;ti-: \u25a0  .   -.._-',;Y-7 7\" \u25a0\u2022-\u2022'\u25a0\nFOR SALE OR MINT - LAW-\nrehce Model '1052 10-10 yarder,\ncomplete with ill lines and rigging. Pile-drivor with 50 foot adjustable leads with Lawrence 5-6\nwinch and rigging. H. S. Murphy,\nNakusp, B.C.       -.-. A .*\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\n'   LIMITED   '\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: WMWO,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AMD\nCONTRACTORS' EQtflPMlKT\n'...\"   Enquiries Invited   .,7\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1, B.C.\nFOR SALE-ALCO PLANER, 4x12.\nComplete with Chrysler Power\nUnit; also 8-foot trim saw, excellent condition; reasonable. Apply\nW. L. Belcher, Canal-Flat, B.C\n(Continued in'Next Column)\nOAILY CROSSWORD\nt.Russiin\nrlvir\nIvAfruK\n4. Music note\n5. Wear by\n' rubbing\n6. A vandal\n7. Aged\n8.South\nAitierican\ni river \u2022\u25a0\n(fat..\n11. Point on t\nfishhook   '\nII. Serpent.\n' liiird\n13. Furnished\ntemporarily\n15, Parts of\nlocks    .\n18. Forays\n\u00bb; Veinlike\ndeposits\nit Pale\n24. Sum up\nMVPc*.\nMSBM\nST. Caliber\n28. A wild\n'-   Mi\n(Asia)\n\u2022ftKnlghW' \u00bb\u00ab*\u2022\u00ab*\u00bb\"\u2022 *\u00bb!\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\ntitles\n80.Tos!Ipby\n31. Organ\nof smell\nM, Crown*,\nofhtidi\n88. Choklnj\n'-to tiy- j\niO.Nirrow\ninlet\n(giol.)\n4t.Unltof\nwork\n42. Breach\n44.Excla.\nmitloa\nACROSS\nt Kind of\nleather\no.Cutupfln\u00ab*.v\nROperatic\nmelody\nlO.Huak\nll.Boast\n12. Kind of tight\n\u2022Upper...\n14. Entire\namount\n15.,Languor\nU, Tellurium\n(eynut\nIT. Music note\n18, Drive back\nSO, Indefinite\narticle\ntl. Secluded, '\nprivate\nroads  V\nSS. Milt kiln\n25.Sloths  7\nJ6. Strang!\ntt. A tti\nSO.KIngdom   -\n(N.Eur.)\n32.Ahead\nSS.Rivolvea\n35. Behold!\n86. Sun god\nST.Uuid-\nmtasurii\n38, Fuel\n80. Wading\nbirds\nO.Qase open-\nmouthed\n43.1reland.\n44. Ugly old    \"\n- women\n45. Tatters\n46. Projecting\nendofa '\u2022'\u25a0'\u2022\n' church\nDOWN\n1. A cereal\nA'.(rain   ,7':\nDAILYCRYPIOQUOIB-Here'showtowori-It:\nv  -', \u25a0- AXYDLBAAXB   '-\nI      . kLOWOF--LOW\nV Oni litter limply stands for another. In, thla ixampli A li user)\nfor thi three L'a, X for thi two O's, etc. Single letters, ap-.ai\ntrophies, the length and formation of the wordi are ill hint*\nEach day the code letter* are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nD AH08K VVAf  PNI P D tt A t   ARO\nOH ZKLK AG-LHLK.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: FROM MANY A OAtt*NI6HED\nNICHE AROUND, STERN SAINTS AND TORTURED MAIte\nTYR8 FROWNED-SCOTT.     V\n7     7, jminbuim ny Kin* KiMint tnjietit\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\naU-G SERIES'D7 CAT\nWith - new type angledozer ind\ndouble rear P.C.U., recently rebuilt\nI\u2014CAT DIESEL \"50\"\nWith dozer and belt pulley, In\ngood shape.'\n1\u2014U2 iNTERNATIONAL\nPOWER UNIT\nWith clutch and-pulley, ni niw.\nALL PRICED LOW. Con tiki ln\ntrade late model %-ton ptckrup,\ncar. houii trailer or machinery\n, trailer.\nBAYES\nEQUIPMENT GO.\nCRANBROOK, B.C\nr6a^_A_it- _ouv_ft 1'WUt\ncylinder \u2022 hoist, heavy duty tub\nframe. Phone 1841-Y.\nKjft SA-J_Y;-6S\u00bbW.Q6li SAW,\ncomplete .with engine, on wheels,\nas is. Cheap. P. jPopotf,, Blewett.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nRENTALS\nLAROE 3-ROOM OFFICE FOR\nrent at 660 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nAdjacent to Dr. Relbln's office:\nIn naw | building, automatic heat.\nApply to Dr. Reibin; phone 320.\nWANTED - VANCOUVER Business man transferred to Nelson\nurgently requires two-bedroom\nhouse by July 18th. Box 305T,\nDally Ndws.\nWAN'1__ \u00a56'ftjJN* - 4 Ott *\nroom unfurnished apartment by\nyoung couple; no children, Phoni\n466 between 9 and 5.\nHOUSE WANTib Ai OR N-ift\nNelson by man with two school-\n.age ctiildren. Best of references.\nBox 3840, Dally News.\nOFFICE AND WAREri6U-f\nspace for rent Apply Central\nTruck and Equipment Co.\n1 ROOM SUITE ('OR \u201eENT\" -\nPartly .furnished. Apply T23 Silica Street   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nTHREE OF FOUR ROOM APART-\nment desired by young couple.\nPhone 1T90-L.\nYOUNG MARRIED COUPLE, NO\nchildren, desire to rent 1 or t\nbedroom apartment Phona 204.\nWANTED TO MINT-FURNISHED\nor unfurnished apartment or\nhousi. Phone 1302.\nFOR SALE\u2014 SltrOLT, 1500 WATT\nOnin lighting -plant, complete\nwith 16 Globolite glass jir batteries \u2014 used only 4 years. Alto Vt\nhorse, fridge 1T25 r.p.m. motor\nand Vt horse motor tor washing\nmachine. '2 large switch boxes, 1\nupright Premier 32 volt vacuum\ncleaner, 1-12\" fin. About 3 dozen\nlight bulbs. AU tor $450. Write or\nphoni Mrs. Hornseth, Sirdar, B.C.\nPEAi-M m.all *n*H*jr-OT\nused equipment mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope; pipe ind UttlngB;\nchain, steel plate nad shapes. Atlas Iron _ Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phoni Pacific 635T.        \u2022 ' -\u201e .   ',,\nFOR QUICK SALE-FAIRBANKS-\nMorse automatic stoker; .excellent\ncondition. Complete with furnace\npipe, thermostat,' etc. Write Box\n492, Castlegar, or phoni 333-1.\ngurney coAl, tro6b ANb _XS\nrange. Ivory and black. Gboi\ncondition'. 024 Front St or Phone\n811-L.\nt>b>_ - M'Jtt__> - f-_M -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trid-\ntag Co., 835 E. Cordovi St, Tin-\ncouver.\nis ton. 6r \u00abA. (W WU HOOT.\nSelling cheap. Apply Jim J. Poz-\nnikoff, Appledale, B.C.\nTHREE QUARTER BED, SPpJMlS\nand mattress, whit offer? Phoni\n520-R\nirolt _A_b - 4._tiRN_R _l__:\ntrie range, scarcely used. Apply\n428 Carbonate Strait\nSTRAWBERRIES FOR SALE -\nApply Pete Lebedoff, Glade, B.C.\nCRESS CORN>ALVE-FOft SURfe\nrelief. Your Druggist Sills Oess.\nUld__NJC H_A)rtlN6 AHA-\nWrite PO Box 39. Nilson. B.C\nCLASSIFIED ADt 0_T RESULTS\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014FURNISHED\napartment' tor. business woman.\nApply Bo* 1439, Dally Newi.\nFORRENT-SMAW' HOUSE JUST\nright for couple. Box .4044, Dilly\n\u25a0'Niwi,\ni 6ft s ftdittl AM: WASfWtB'.TO\nrent. Centrally located. Phona Q.\nA. Williams, Royal Hotel.\nS-E-HN6 tWtii - HA-, WIMK\nor monthly. Alia Hotel. ITI\nBaker.      '  . ,\nBEDROOM-FOR'REtlT-GENTLE:\nman'preferred. 510 Silica Street\nFOR RENT-\u2014 1 LKitiT H6^E-\nkeeping room, close in. Ph. 1494-Y.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOS^-*\nPhont 16T8-Y.-017; Vtrntm Strait\nROOM FOR ft^ilW At Hi OrV\n,Sirvitory St  -,.V.      '.i '\u25a0'\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyoar from thl Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C.' Wi hivi\nover T000 extremely healthy,and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm. Our. baby chichi\nare produced only from our own\nItock in White Leghorns, White\n, Rocks, New Hampshire! and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request.\nK5S SALE-2 'HEAVY HORSEC\nGood for farm or logging. Phom\nSalmo, 40. R. Dauphlnais.\nVr.6   GObD   HOLSTEIN   BULL\ncalves, of heavy milking dams.\nRegist'd sire. MacKinnon. Procter.\nfro sale - yowa' mm\ncow. See P. K. Zoobkoff, Brilliant:\nROOM AND IQARD\nYOUNG   BUSINESS   MAN   RS*\nquires nice, bright, large, room\nand good board, in Nelson. Bos\n3841 Daily Niwr-. ..\nfc_6_ ANb ._.AR-.. t-cift 45njfC::\ntleman. Box 4042, DaUy Nawi.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS... an on-SHua\n(Pacific Daylight Time)'\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1953\n7:00\u2014Newi\n7:05-Yawn With Young\n7:15\u2014Sporti Niwi'\n7:?0-Yawn With Young\nT:S0\u2014Niwi\n7:35\u2014Yawn With Young .\n7:45-Rlsa If Shino\n8:00\u2014Niwi.\n8:10\u2014Sporti Niwi \u25a0'\u25a0'.'\u25a0\n8:15\u2014Briakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sporti News\n8:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade.\n9:45\u2014Clean-Up Time\n10:00\u2014Record Album\n10:15-News\n10:20-Moming VWt\n\u202210:30\u2014Story Parade - A\n10:45-Invltation To the Walte\nll:00-Shut-In Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00-Llberly, Speclel        ,\n12:15\u2014Sporti Niwi  ' \"\n12:20-Niws   \u2022\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast ,\n12:55\u2014Chatting.With thi Listeners\nl-OO-Spotlfte on Melody\nl:15-Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Fairview Shopping Quid*\n2:00\u2014The Record'Album\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n8:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:80\u2014Burns' BonBplel Broadcast\n4:15\u2014Fmcy Frie\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45-Pacific News\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament M\n5:00\u2014Music From the Fiimi\n5:25\u2014Int. Commentary\n5:30-rBohind thl News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight On I Stir\n5:45\u2014Sporti Niwi\n5:50-Nows\n6:00\u2014Musical Progrim\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014Newi\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014Niwi\n10:15-Piano Recital - , - A\n10:30\u2014Hawaiian Holiday\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:0O-NEWS Night Cap.\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY,\nT:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Mlnutei\n7:30\u2014Niwa.\n-.7:85\u2014Musical Mlnutea\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotion!\n.7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014Nowi\n8:10\u2014Hire's BUI Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\nt\u00bb:00-BBC Newa\n8:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Famoui Voices\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45-Invltation to thl Wilts\n11:00-A Man and His Music\nL:15\u2014News   :,\" \u25a0\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast    \u2014\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n1:45\u2014Today\"! Guest \u2022\n3:00\u2014Easy Listening\nJULY 9, 1953\n2:80\u2014Trans-Canada Mattel*\n8:15\u2014Brave Voyigi      :\n3:80\u2014Program Resume\n3:45-Hit Parade\n4:15\u2014As Tunes Go By\n4:30\u2014Children'! Progrim\n4:45\u2014Music for Children\n5:00\u2014At\/Home With the Lennicki\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\n5:80-UN Today\n5:45\u2014News ind Weather\n8:55\u2014Hivi You Heard?. ,\n6:00\u2014To Bt Announced\n6:15\u2014British Empire Games Report\n(iSO\u2014Wayne and Sinister\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Newi Roundup\n7:30\u2014Eventide\n8:00\u2014The. Ways of Mankind\n8:30\u2014Homer's Odyssey\n9:00\u2014Thursday Playhouse\n9:30\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n\u20220:00-News-\n10:15\u2014Mid-Week Review\n1C:30\u2014Parade of Choira\nfit) if)\n___.\n  \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\/ss?\nI PERSON TO PERSON WANT ADS\nFOP QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeodllni ffoi Claiillied Adi -S n,m,\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nCLEARANCE SALE\nSTILL IN  EFFECT!\nBARGAINS!\nBARGAINS!\nBARGAINS!\nH52 Austin Somerset\nWas $1750.00\nNOW $1395.\n!!   1952 Vouxhall Sedan\nI Wis $1760.04)\nNOW $1395'.\n\u20221950 Austin Devon\nWas $1100.00\n. NOW $875\n1951 Ford Prefect\nWas $1250.00\nNOW $995 A\n-1948 Anglla Tudor\nWai $780.00\n\u2022NOW $545.\n1952 Chevrolet Power\nGlide -- $2395.\nWis $2600.00,\n1951 Studebaker Sedan\nWas $2000.00 \"\u25a0:\n-.* NOW $1795-\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\nWasSlBOO.OO\nNOW $1595\n1950 Pontlac Sedan.\nWas$175O.0O\nNOW $1495\n1937 Ford Coupe\nWll $300.00   .\nI      ,   NOW $125\nP1936 Pontiac Sedah\nWas $500.00\nNOW $250\nI     1951 Studebaker Pickup\nWas $1750.00\nj NOW *'2?5\n.1951 Mercury Pickup\n1 \u25a0-.... Was $154)0.00,\nA- .    cNOW$1295\n1950 Austin Pickup'\n'\u25a0\u2022'.\u25a0 Wis $1100.00\nNOW $875,\n! 1949 Austin Panei.\nWis$iioo;oo\n^yy^mHM^y^yiyti\n.1946 Chevrolet. Pickup\nWai $1000.00'*\n7  NOW$695     Y\n: 1941 Ford Panel    '\nBE: wu $500.00   A:\nM        NOW $250\nAustin Service and Sales\nf TERMS and TRADES\n! EMPIRE\nTORS.\n803 Baker St.   Phone T135\nNelson, B.C.\nS\u20acOlTS\nTIRE SHOP\nTht One Tire Shop hi  Nelson\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ' Dealing in Tlrei Only\nVULCANIZING -RETREADING\nNEW AND USED TIRES\nWHEEL BALANCING\nPlenty ot Parking Space\nNeat My Door\n' Trade-In Your Old Tires\n809LakoSt Pbone 1121\nIT-.HEREI THE NORTON TEA'\n, therbed\" Domlhitor Come in ind\nill thlt famous motorcycle, the\nholder of thl Isli of Man T.T it\n:., Kootenay Motorcycle Sales ind\n: Servlcf, Box 310, Castlegar; phone\n2101 \"The Shop of Friendly Service.\"\nK* _A_IWl948 flteV. 1-TtM*.\nLow mileage. All new tires. No\nreasonable offer refused. Phone\n1623-L-2 evenings, or csn in.Con\nCummins at Post Office before\n.9:00 a.m.\nLin thtn 2000 mllra. Take older\ncar'or L.D as. part payment,\nBalanco can bt financed Phono\n'443-R, \u25a0   r .       ..-titi..':,.\nFOE SALK^S<^yLT*fl(Il_S_~.\n3 rooms; 20-ft, tandem i*rti. Factory built, for yiir 'round living.\nLiki new, H. Reese, phdni 1797-L,\n(24 Carbonate Street; Nelson,\nI BE ^Alt-AttMNUM HtJUIft\n'triller, T x 18', equipped, Neir\ncrusher. Waneta road. $900.00. \u2014\nApply Stive Prytuli Bex IM,\nTrill, B.C\n..'.., AUTOMOTIVI 7\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n. :'-'   IContuiuedl\n. p*?,m* nf\u00bb * -> *\u2022 ...\nOUR OVERHEAD\n.-\u2022;\u25a0  .     IS SMALL\nOur Prices\nLowr\n^ OUR'CARS ARE PRICED\nTO SELL AT    ',\na? !\u00a7Y\n1952 AUSTIN\n1952 FORD FORDOR\n1952 VANGUARD\n1951 CHEVROLET TUDOR\n1951 HILLMAN -\u2022\n2000 Miles.  ..-'\n1951* A-40 AUSTIN    \u2022\nSEDAN. \u2022'\n1951 HU&SON SEDAN    ,\n1950, HILLMAN\n1950 VANGUARD\n\"Rl(}lo.\n1950 FORD TUDOR\n1950 PREFECT SEDAN\n1949 HILOMN SEDAN\n19497+IILLMAN SEDAN\n1948 PONTIAC      -\n1948 CHEVROLET\n1942 DODGE\n1927 DODGE SEDAN    Y\nTRUCKS\n1953 CHEVROLET 3-TON\n1953 LAND ROVER\n195Q A-40 AUSTIN\nCOUNTRYMAN      J\n1950 VANGUARD    \u25a0\nESTATE\" WAGON\n1947 3-TON FORD\nHydnullc Bolrt.\n1943 3-TON\"FbftD\nAHydrtuIte Hol-t.\n1940 INTERNATIONAL\nZ'.ti *4-T0N A     \u25a0\u2022\u25a0' ;:\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nmCT CHEVROLET' PICKUP\nGiye-Avvdy Prit^s!\nOne Old Panel   .-\u2022\u2022\n1937. ChevrblW\n1936 Packard    . \"\nMotors\n, 508 Josephine. Street\nNext Door to\nRimp Body. & Fender Works\nIfWT-XLb -<5tfSWiM.-BUHt*\nI   aluminum cabin cat trillsr. Sleeps\ntwo grown-ups and two children,\ntdial for vacations. Weight: 70S\n, lbs. Phot-i 1766.\ntdR \u00a7ALE-'38' cHevT^OUPE.\nA No, reasonable offer refused. \u00ab-\n'   Phbni'101-L-8,\n:POR\"SALE - \"S I_61B3,'BIKBS\n. ' In good condition. Phoni 8841.\n1*47  bEl.tixE  FflRB   4  DOOS\ni  Priced lo sell  Phone 161 L-2\nFOR SALE-^-CAR TOP BOAT AND\n2>h h.p. outboard; $70. Ph. 1547-L.\n(Continued In \\<exl Columni\nNEED A\nDEPENDABLE\nTRUCK?\nEXCELLENTSUPPLYf\nON HAND AT    Y.'\nVERNON STREET MOTORS!\n1951 Studebqker.J^-Ton\n1951 G.M.C,'\/i-ton '   .'\/ti\n1950 Austin Panel\n1949 Ford Ji-Ton     '\n1948 Mercury Vi-Ton\n7J948 thevrolet %-Ton\n1946 G.M.C. Panel\n19.40 ChiwrtJlW \u00bb4-Ton - - ,\n1940 Fargo Express  \u25a0\u2022\n1935. |nternot|6nal Vfj-Ton\nTHESE TRUCKS MUST GO\nAT SACRIFICE PRICES!\nDEPENDABLE CARS!\n1952 Austin, Somerset\n1948 Plymouth\\Sea<in\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1947 Pontlac Sedan\n1946 Pontlae Sedan r      ' \u25a0-,\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1940 Mereijry Fordor\ni 938 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1937 Ford Fordor\n1934 Ford Fordor\n1934 Dodge See|pi*i\n.'1 TERMS end TRADES   -,\n518 Vernon St., Phone 1661\nVernon Street\nMotors\nKelson, bl c.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n4Contlriued)  - -\nSCOTT'S\nTIRE SHOP\nVULCANIZING - RETREADING\n509 Lake St.      7    Phone 1122\nUSED TIRE SALE\nat bargain prices'\nIN ALL SIZES'\nIncluding Several  \u2022\n800-16 tires In good shape\n650-18 tlrei In good shape\n670-15 tlrtt In good shape\nTha Ope Tire Shop in Nelson   '\n1    Dealing in Tires Only ,    \u2022\nFOR' BALE - 1938 DESOTO IN\nrunning order. Price $400.00, ${25\nwill handle tile. Car can bi sun\nat Scott's Tire Shop, 509 Like St.\nFOR7SALE -\"1951  *___\"', WM\nMercury pickup. Good condition.\nApply __ Montcalm St., TrilL\n1 AU_TJN P*_-W,','!J!,'i60TWI_L\nhandle. Phone 260, or Box 359,\nNelion, B.C.\nWAiVi-Li-CAB  TO  FIT  MERC-\nury pickup. O. A. Haglund, Erie.\nPROPr-RTV, HOUSES, CARMi\nETC. FOR SALB\nGreetings,\nCurlers'and\nVisitors\nMake Your Home\"',\nin the Y\nGloriouS Kootenay\nWe- have an e>*cellen]t selection pf lakefront properties ranging from $6000 to\n$19,500, mostly all year\nhomes.\nWe also have a few modern\nCity.dwellings,., 7\n, \u25a0 ,.- -a .;.,, and.y'.;.\u25a0\u25a0.-,\na good selection of businesses for sale, auto coCirts,\nresorts,' bakery,. cafe, and\nmany others.        '  '\u2022\nDrop in for a chat about the\nmany opportunities In the\nKootenay area.,\ntape Rosling\nReal Estate _ Insurance '\n568'wirf'St, \u25a0' Phom 717\nNew Listing\nExclusive to This Agency ..;\n, BEVENUE PROPERTY on High\nStmt On, a corner two-lot site,\nwell landscaped grounds.\u201eThere\nia a modern self-contained suite\nupstairs. Good, spacious owner'a\nsuite on ground floor. Bachelor\nsuite contained In separate\nbuilding at back. It owner lives\nin ground floor suite, the other\ntwo rentals will produce $90.00.\nM&t ;.;  $iQ,ooo\nTerms can be arranged.\nA|$o Exclusive\n810 MILL STREET. \u2014 Threi-\nbadrooro bungalow. Modern\nkitchen, good bathroom, living\nroom, dining room, lull concrete\nbasement Which can easily be\nconverted to revenui lulti. Niw\nwi ft*Wv<~mney;^ $6750\nHalt cash will handle.   .\nFor These ind Other Builniw\nWd Dwelling Offers Sll\nTHi GILDAY\nAlGIN\u20actES\n542 Bikir St ' -'.-A Ph'oni:1460\nRial Estate and Insuranco\nAgipti, \u25a0\u25a0:\nMODERN   SIX   ROOMS   AND\nbath, plaster and. stucco, electric\n- hot water and cobklrig. Large half\nacre lot, located in. main business\nsection of Kinnaird, with bearing\nfruit trees, lawns, and shrubbery,\nNear post office arid bus depot.\nFull priCI $12,600.00. Some tirms\nivallable. For appointment to\nInspect phoni ditligar 2848, or\nwrite S. C. WitsOn, Kinnaird.\nl'6\u201egAt_W6ttEt--^-H*rI7o-5m\nsuites,' 1364.1 hOine with good\nrevenue, excellent location. Ap-\npolAtnient only, Pnprfi'JSS-XV For\nrent 2 room cabin on highway 8\n-ntlii Wilt 01 Nelsoh, ?20. Phone\n2647 COsUegot.\nsuMM_R: ktJM-l'fotf.MtiE -\nSandy beach frontage, Chotco Io,-\ncation^ Apply Immediately |o'. C.\nR  Brown. Christina Lake, B.C.\ntaopiiwv B'dh Ial_!6M qkkii.\nIt| Rood, |>r\\prie 3(|9*R-2.   7\n(Continued in Next Columni\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, fARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\n4 BEPRGOM\nHOME\nIdeal set-up for duplex\nor   ..ti  .   :.\nfamily home.\nA-l basement.\n\u25a0 Furnace.\nLocation Corner of Kobtenpy\nand Vernon_\nAcross froittirvfferrace ,\n,       Apattments .\n...  Lot85'x 120'  ','\nfrice $6500    \/\nAnd $300O:60 Cash Will Handle\nC.W.Appieyard\n& Co.^_tdi\nEstablished 40 Years\nLOVELY 8-R00MED HOUSE ON\none block of land, uphill section\nbetween Stanley and Ward, Barn,\netc, Can be used as farm or subdivided lots; Lights, city witer.\ntelephone, etc. $8000. Half cosh\nwill handle. PH. 008-R-3 or 1081\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n;.\".,:. Fine,..:\nDppo.'tuility\nTo get Into business with light\nlunch, confectionery, pop; pool\nand billiards. - A ((.room house\ncheap. 1-3 cash, the balance on\nterms. Phuno 4071, or call it)\nFRED'S; '\u2022  ;\nBILLIARDS     \u2022\nCAStaUCOAR, B.Ci 7\nFOR BALE '\u25a0\u2014 BARBER $H0J\u00bb.\ntwo chairs. Oood business., Write\nto Box 1138 Kimberley, B.C;\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nWAfl*n\"I> - HAY BALING MACH-\nine. Slate condition and price\nwanted. Andrew, Mikonin, \\J\\fi.\nShoreacres, B.C.\"\nWANTED -54-lKfcli (JORDWOOb\nheater. Must be in good condition.\n. State price and location. Box 303,\nNelson.\nu-Mtb FUttMUftd _d._i_ m>\nsold at J. P. Morgan.Store, 301\nBaker St., Phone 47.\nCfcbXH' P6U5S'.- aLC 4JMU\nind lengtha Kooteniy Form\nProducts'Ltd,.      '\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST t- AT .VLITTLE LEABUE\nStadium July 6\u201418\" boy's bicycle,\nred ind cream; pump horn, niw\nplastic seat \/Please phone sad\nboy 1610-L.\nLOST - MA^'S OVAL LOft'tE\nwrlrt witch vicinity Cidar, Silica\nor'Baker Sti. Raward. Phoni\n1327-B.   V . S ,\nLOST - RING OF KjSYS WM-\ntown. Box 4127 Dally Niws.\nPERSONAL\nTOR' BALE -1 ftoOM BOUSE OK\n3 comer lots, good location Flu*.\nvltw, immediate possession, also\nsummer camp with sandy belch.\nNorth Shore, Nelson, Box 4039\n, Dilly Niiws.\nMOtiW.. 'Kvf6 t&VMT ' 4S6J*-\nslstlng of. 8 bungllowl. Store,\noffice, and living quarters combined. Service ititton, Juat outside the city limits, very high returns on investment. See P. E.\nPoulin, 582 Ward St. Phone 70.\nFOR SALE - Otf KOOTENAY\nLake and mlln highway \u2014 4\nroom modebn home, fireplace,\nwinteriied. For particulars write\nBox 3858 Daily7Ne#t.\" A\nfor-saLe -,gV*CRttS.' LAKE\nfrontage, best site on Wilt Arm\non paved rOad,' view unexcelled,\ngood beach. $3500 cash. J. Middle.\nton, R.R. 1 Longbeaclj'Njlion.\nSAVE $1000 - REPOSSESSED\"!*'.'\nbedroom house. Was $2000; now\n$1600.. Termi. Apply R. Schuster.\nHouii 23, Can.-Ex., Salmo; B.C.\nBIG REVENUE AND GOOD HOME\nSmall down payment,' A<-1 ahape.\nOwner only. Reply 1032( Cranbrook,\nFOR SALE-TWO GOOft BUlLD-\nIng lots; also boat, Apply 824\nSixth Street Phone 502-L-2.\nWANTED TO BUY FOR CASH,\nsmall form in vicinity of Salmo.\nBox 3970, Daily :NewiV  *   .\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR QUICK SALE-24-FT. CABIN\ncruller. S-ft. beam; aa new; sleeps\n3 for fishing, etc, Could be moved\nto Robson for ipprox. $50. Apply\n323 Nilson Avenue.\nFOR 'SALE - 8-FT. RbWBOAT,\nideal for camp or play boat, with\nor without Outboard motor; boys'\nbicycle, in good condition. 351\nBaker St., or phone 668.\nSNAP - A 14 FT. SPEED BOAT.\nWillys  conversion  motor,  Only\n.24 hrs. use. Complete with trailer\n$575. Phone 1086-L-l Trail or\nwrite S. Pearce, 93 Rossland Ave.\nROOFING OR ROOFERS  V\nBBHek Jtib V&& LESS MtiNEY.\nPhone. H, Pedersen, 176KR-1\n16-FT. V-B43TTOM BOAT, \"_WLY\npainted, good condition, and\nEvinrude 714 h.p, motor, ai new,\nand accessories, $300.00 caah. Fred\nHamer Signs,'509 Kootenay St,\nFOR SALE -16-FT. V.-BOTTOM\nrunabout and 10 h.p. Johnson out-\n' board In good condition. Price:\n$285.00. Apply L, A. Hanic, 12)\nNelson Ave, Phone 818-R.\nFOR,SALE \u2014 7'\/4 HORSEPOWER\nEvinrude. outboard. Excellent\ncondition, few running hours. $175\ncash. Phoni 1399- Y..\n.\"\u25a0:      .. '\u25a0 1 .     ' 1    \u2014\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER  CAN   REPAIR   YOUR\npresent   machine   at   reasonable\ncist For tree estimates Phone 41\nStNGER SEWING CENTRE   1'\n33\u00bb, BAKER, ST\"- NELSON. B.C\n7   Clinlfled Advirtl|lng Ritii:* \u25a0\n15o per line first Iniertion ind\n. nOn-consecutivo  Insertions\n1 lie lino per consecutive Inser-  \u2022\ntion after first Insertion\n48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions\n$1.56 lino for month ttt consecutive Insertions)   Box numbers  110 extra   Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.    7'        '\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS itc.^20c,pir Uni,\nfirst insertion.   16c per  lino\neach subsequent insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10*;*fOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Raten\n.   (Not Moro Than Listed Hero)\nBy, c)irr|ir, pir week,\u25a0;'..\nin idvanco .30\nBy Carrier. [>er year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOni month . .      $ 1.25\nThree montha  .......\u00ab..,...'  8.75\nSix months 7      7.5.0\nOne year        \u2022 1S.Q0-\nM'ill ln Canada; Outside Nelson'\nQhi month;     ;       \u2022.  -  L60\n.ITirie mO'nthi.    .....,:     2,78\nSIX months '8.50\nOne voor V lO.Ofl\nWhirl extra postage Is required\nIbpye ratet plus postage.\nWAWANE3A MUTUAL FIRE IN\nlunnce Co., 0. U Kirr, Agmt\nMJHER HOTEL, OPPOSITE CPU\nDepot Clean roomi ind reason.\ntbli rttei Vinconver, BC ....\u25a0\nALANCf CLUB ALCOHOLICS\n' Anonymoun meet Tuts ind Frl.\n42P Baker St. Nilson. Write P.O.\nBox 388.\nSUMMER RESORTS\n\u25a0EDGEWOOD\"\nCASA VISTA CABINS (8 STAR)\nVacation  or  overnight  They're\ndifferent\nlamb windErMerE Lodge\nand Cabins. Safe, sandy beach\nlyarm water. T. Dickinioj);. In-\nvermere.'B.Cr       *     '\"'\u2022..\u00bb ..''7\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nALL BLACK, HEALTHY AND\n\\vlgdroui, 8-week-old Lib. puppies.: W. Muir, North; Shore,\nPhone 1627-R-3. R.R^t'p,;}-\n*\u201e I. .7 .?v*h,AW...^ ...:...\nFOR SAIIS-COCKER WTeSj \u25a0&\nmonths. Phone 7I4-R-3.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8 AND MINE\nREPREaENTAT^VEg\ne. w wiDnoWs6iif>.;45b;.As-\nsiyers 301 Josephine St., Helton\nH, S ELMES. ROSSLAND.'BC\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Rip',\nEN0INEER8 AND SURVEYORS\nR. K COATES, STE. \u201e6i''^'.ii'TJt'\nBaker St., Nelson Ph,oni ffift\nB.C Landa Surveyor.\"\nBOYD.C AFFLMlt, 218 AOrE fflU\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer,\nMACHINISTS\n\u2022 BENNETTSUMITfilP\"\nMachine   Shop.   Acetyleno   and\nilectrlo wilding, motor rewinding   Phone 593 '324  Vernon St\nCANADA'S FISH\nCATCH FALLS\nOTTAWA (CP)T-Canada'i total\nfish catch.for'the firat five montha\nof thii year dropped 43.7 per cent\ncompared with the catch during the\nsame period in 1952, the bureau of\nstatistics retorted today: The figure\ndoes not include Newfoundland's\ncatch\nTotal catch to the end of May\nwas 270,402,000 pounds, .valued at\n$15,406,000. Last year's catch-was\n480,381,000 pounds, valued at $18!\n888,000. Value wu 7.8 per 'cent\nlower this Viir.\nPacific coast .catch in May wa\u00bb\n14,271,000 pounds, valued at $1,'646,<\n000; ' ....\nThe export of Pacific canned\nsalmon jumped during the first four\nmonths of thii year to 14,872.000\npounds from 5,255,000 pounda lost\nyear. Value also; climbed, from $1,-\n592,000 in 1052 to $4,250,00 this ycir,\n>t*oi*Si-i'>\"v*r Stocks    * \u25a0'\n'. 7   (Closing\"Prion)\nMINES\nBralorne \u2022 \u25a0 .\u2022.'...\u25a0.-...\u2022..;.;.::\u25a0.\nCariboo-Gold , ;......:\nEstllli..'..    ,..._......'.\nGiant Mascot .,.\u201e.\t\nHighland Bell\t\nPioneer Gold mi^\nQuititaO,. V... ..........^,\nSheep Creik :.;,.,;...\u2122i\nSil'ver.Rldge ......' ,\nSilver Standard :\t\nWestern Urinium ......\nSill \u2022;.. -,.;.\u201e:...,.._...7.-..\nOILS N \u2022'<\nAnglo, Can.\nA PConi. u....,\u201e 7\t\nCal & JW7;.Y.:;;...;7..\u201e\nCalmont    .    .1. ..._\nCimmohwealth;*Vj.,\u201e\nHohie.   7 ,..7,..,:j;.\t\nMercury .7',...\".jt\nNational-Pile ,.._(!,-;..\nOkalti Com  ':*...\nPaclfid Pitb .;.--....\t\nRoyalite    :.....\nVanaltav ....;....,';;\t\nVulcan \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0;.\u25a0\t\nCapital Estates ..._\t\nInt Brew B ....:.;.....\n4.00\n1.05\n.57\n.45\n.33\n1.90\n'.20 '\n;  .68\n; ;.n\n\u2022 1.0,0\n2.18\ntiitt -\n'75.75 V.\n10.00\n1.22\n4.00\n' 8.00\n\".14\n-1.85\n2.50\n10.35 ,\n15.25\n.26\n\u25a036-'\n19.50\n4.65\nMay Imports Boost\nTrade Deficit\nOTTAWA \u00ab3P)\u2014CinidiV Miy\nImport total set an all-time monthly\nrecord ond further boosted the\ncountry's foreign.trade dificlt -this\nyear, thi bureau of statistics reported todiy.-   '..->, A     '\u25a0\nFor. the firat five months of this\nyear,' imports ouhyelghed exports\nby $200,000,000. There wm in export surplus, ot $114,800,000 for. thl\nBorne period ln 1962,      \u2022 - '\u25a0\nExports for the January-May period this year ware valued at $1,-\n003,800,4)00 compared with $1,740,-\n000,000 for thi first flyi motiths list\nyesr. At thi same time, Import! rose\ntrom $1,629,100,000 to $1,813,600,000.\n- .'May imports rose to $422,200,000\ncompared with $393,100,000 the pre-\nvious month and $386,000,000 in Miy\nof 1932. Previous monthly high was\n$408,100,000 In May, 1931.\nExport! for Mty stood it $388.-\n000,000 compared with $888,900,600\na year earlier. Thtre was an import surplus of $37,200,000 in Miy\ncompared with 1 May, 1982, export\nlUtplil! of $1,000,000;     .      \u25a0     '.\nTORONtO STOCkS\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, WEPN|SDAY, JUIY 8,1*>S \u2014 1\nis\ni (Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium .;.:_\nAkaltcho\nArjon, .....\nArmistice\nAunor  ..,;.\"..;,..\nBivcourt, ...*....v.\nBobjo ....;;....,,\t\nBralorne . .....\u201e,i.\nBrewls R L.\t\nBroultn .............\nBuffalo Ank .-.-\nCillimin ...,.;..'.'....\nCampbell R L .\nCentral Patricia\nCentral Pore \t\nChesti'rvllle .......\nChimb G , \u201e....\nCochenour  \u201e...\nCons M & 8\t\nConwest\t\nDome ,...;\t\nDonalda\t\nDuvay-\u201e..r\u00bb;...~.\nEast Amphi\t\nEast Malartic ....\nEast Sullivan\t\nEstella .................\nEureka .....V',.- \u201e.\nFaiconbridge  .....\nFrobish\u00a3r7)s. ^.\nGod's Likif\t\nGoldali '\u2022,___'.\nGoldcresf  ,\nGold Eagle \u201e\t\nHardrock \t\nms\nHoUlnger, .....^.\nHornet Y'K .....A\nHudson Bay.._...\nInspiration  :..\nInt Nickel V.\nJacknife ..\u201e ....;\nKilon \u201e...:....;..:\t\nK*W Addison ..;\u25a0.\nLake Dufault\t\nLakeshore ...........\nLike Wasi-..77,..\nLlngmtn (new).\nMacDonald \u25a0......'.,\nMacassa   .....;;..\u201e\nMadSen vft L _...\nMagnet ....\nMalartic G F,\t\nMarcus-G ...'.:;..:..\nMclntyre :.:..,.:,....\nMcKenrii H L;,.'.\nMcMarinac '.;.\u201e;..\nMining'Corp -. i\nMbhita ,..- ,..\u2022..;..a.\nWiguiV:\nNew Alger, ;.:.\nNew Btdlimiiiui .\nNew (3alutnet r7..\nNew Goldvlue ..'..\u201e\nNew Lund .;..'.....\u201e\nNoranda 7  .\nNornsetali'\".\".'.,....'.\u2122..,\nNorthv'Can ...._.\u201e\nrJorth. Inci -.......\nOslsko . '-, ,..,. .7\nPamour    .u.^,\nPaymaster ......_._.,\nPickle trow    _\u201e\n<'Pionier. \\ v\u00ab _,;;.\u00bb;\u201e\nftreston E D,'_..'...\nCjuebiciab.-AV,,.\nQuemont ,;.;,.7.;\u00bbr,\u201e\nRbclie L L .7.,';....,\nSan Antonio ...;...._.\nShawkey',\nSherritt Gordon .....7\nSilvermlller'A'\u2122:....\nSiscoe! :..;...._.\nStadaconi  \t\nSteep Rock-;. -..:.s...\nSudbury Cont .....\nSurf Inlet \t\nSylvanite\t\nTeck Hughes 7\t\nThompson-Lund -..,1.\nTrans Cont, Res .....\nUnion Mining\t\nUniteeJ ,Keno ..._'._.\nUppir7Ca'nadi-.....;.\u201e\nVentures V ....!:;\t\nWaltiVAmuiet\t\nOILS'\/- -\nAtlantic Oil\t\nB A OU :.:...,...',...\u201e.,\nCentral Ledub'\t\nChemical Resear*,\nDalhOualir ;.;::,,.,\nDei Rio.......'..-.:..:.,.;\t\nFederaied Pete \u201e\nHomi ...,!.....,,.,:.\u201e...\nImperial 6il'...._.,\u201e\nInte\/Pete __ii_\nMid'. Cpnt. ...;.....'...\u201e.\u201e\nOkalta .:.'.. .;...\nPacific Peti ....\u00bb.,.._\nRoxana \t\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\"\nAbltlbl __\nAluminum\t\nArgus .,...:..:..-.\u201e. :\nAtlas St V\n.20\n1.00\" \u2022\n.12\n.22\n1.39\n.40\n.87\n4.00\n\u25a0lAVt\n2.35\n.65\niityt\n8.80\n.99\n1.217\nMi\n1.80\n1.12\n28.00\n4.45\n17.00\n.73\nM \u25a0'-\n.10H\n2.05\n5:25\n.    .60\n'. .78\n16.75\n5.70\n.28%\n.11\n.15\n'     .18\n.uii\n12.85\n. .19\n45.50\n2.25\n42.00\n' .18\n.33\n- lB.7Bf\n\u2022   ,98\n6.05\nJl\n.28\n.85\n1.80\n1.40\n.18\n1.60\n42\u00bb\n. 58.50\n-. -.35-\n'741\n12.00\n- ' 7,49\n.It\n'    iti. ,\n.16\n.85\n.   .23\n.29\n67.00\n2.90.\n.86\n,21\n.55 .\n.98 i\n.48\n' 1.22:\n1.98\nj.82\n.17  ,\n18.00\n.14\n1.75\"\n.10M\n4.85\n.70\n.42\n.     .33\n6.80\n.48\n40\n1.29\n2.18\n.12%\n.42\n.22\n8.40\n1.25\n18.00\n.   10.18\n,- -A40-V\n.'\u25a0\u25a0' 18.85 '\u25a0]\n\u25a0\u25a0 -3,00''\n1.34\n\u2022 V'..i9\n: 2.45\n5.55 >\n8.10 i\n,30.35\n,-23.65: ''\n, .,18'Vi\n. 3.70\n10.75  .\n.     .19\n. 1.00\nCzechs Fifth Satellite    ;\nTo Modify Workers Pol(cy\nVIENNA (AP)-Pragua ridlo an-\nnouncid Tuesdiy thit thi Ctecho.\nslovik government his decided tq\nannul a decree that made lt i criminal offence for workers to stay\nawiy. from their Jobi without good\nreason. ,\nnil- law .hid ,been enacted because. o$ widespread absenteeism\nfollowing riots .ind disturbances In\nthe country last -month. ,\nTl*e annulment mode Chechoslovakia the fifth East European Soviet satellite to modify its policy on\nthe handling ot Iti restless working\nmillloni.-\nEast Germany ahd Hungary hivi\nannounced i slowdown I of agricultural collectivization, less police\nterror and a return to some degree\not private enterprise.\nRomania hat dipped Into Hood\nreserves and announced new increases   In 'food   rations.   Albania\nlate In June wrote 'off charges\nagainst peasants who-failed to fill\nthtlr quotas of grain, eggs, Wool\nand meat In thi 1949-53 period, i\n, Only. Poland and-Bulgaria hive\n.|\u00bbt to,take rtipfw^eouuttr thi\npublic unrest which.hu erDptad in\nopiq rebellion in East \u2022 Germany\nand Czechoslovakia, and has produced rumors of similar unrest in\nthe other Red-ruled countries.\nTh; Prague broadcast slid thi\nCOmmunlst cabinet abolished the\nlaw against absentee workors Monday after the central committee of\nthe Czech Trade Union Federation\ndeclared the law was \"unnecessary\" and'ssld it^wbuicf taki over\nresponsibility for ending absenteeism.  - ' '\nUnder the decree, workers who\nstayed away from theft jobs four\ntimes received terms in forced-\nlabor camps. \u25a0   \u25a0..,?..'\u2022 '*\u25a0-\" 'A  \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0;\nTourist AssocfOtLon Ee<ftl$.v \u25a0\u25a0\u2022.\".'.;: :~z. f \u2022,:....\nMenus Featuring Wholly Canadian\nFoodWould Be Lure To Tourist!\nBy Thl Canadian Prtit'\u25a0'\u25a0\nTbe: 'Canadian Tourist Association prepared I shot in tht arm for\nrestaurateurs-in this country, ind\nia administering it In booklet* form\nunder the title, \"Guide to Canadian\nCuisine\";'   ':     ,' '.;?\"::-     ti^y\nThe idea is to develop a 'truly\nCanadian cuisine along with \\ a\nstandardization of recipes and qualities' in basic foods served in restaurants\u2014with thl emphasis on thl\nnllill mort. ,   '\u2022'\nResult! io fir. hivi biin iivor-\nable, and a supplement to the booklet li planned to stress best region,\nal dishes.\n' Thi project Is tided. by \u2022 cpm_-\nmittee of women who tour ixtenr\nslvely ind come into dally contact\nwith travellers. They hope to git\nbetter meals for holiday travellers\nand touriBts in Canada.\nCANADIAN NAMES' f\n- Thi booklet suggests using Canadian terminology wherever possible\nIn preference to United States or\nEuropean names: It also advocates\nfeaturing foods from the locale of\nthe restaurant, particularly fresh\nfruit! ind vegetibM-V'\nA ipeclil minlTw children, or\nmain dishes provided-for- children\nin smaller portion! it reduced rate,\nare alio.mintlonid.'\"..\n' Patrons ion special diets shouldn't\nbe forgotten. Thi association urges\ninclusion ot meals without fats,\nfried'food ind rich psstrles, ind,\n!\u00abttr*)ir \"Avoid # .mfWlivthit lliti\nmany Items md ..specializes -lit\nnoni.'' \u2022\u25a0\u2022 .   '- , 'yti''^'rii-\nAs Canada product! good ind\nvaried cheeses, \u25a0 th\u00ab.booklet notes\nthit it Is t good IdeaV.to specify\n\u2022the type rather; than just putting\n\"cheese and crackers\" ona manU.\n; Anclpi for. the WUlbitty growing . province! 'ii \"bluibirjfy crisp\"\ntnd. in old favorite breakfast dish\nln New .Brunswick, buckwheat\ncokes, is also offered.    , 7]\nMAPLB CREAM' f\n' Fir provinces producing maple\nlyrup thi booklet includes \"mtplt\nlyrupi cnam\". ,     ; \u2022;\" .\n,.Cpmbini ind..Jst^itand, for _vi\nminutes: 2 teas'poorii 'gelatine, one-\nquarter cup' plur t\\So tablespoons\ncold water. Combine ind hut Juit\nto boiling point: Three-quarters of\na cup maple syrup, one-quarter cup\nviiff,, ,. A; ';\n. Remove from heat, add gelatine\nind stir until dissolved. Stir in one\nteaspoon lemon. Juice, one-quarter\nteaspoon vanilla. V.\nChill,- stirring .occasionally, until\nvery softly set. 7 - ;\u00bb\n. Whip until stiff, three-quarten\ncujL whipping :;*keim.vBiit maple\nlyrup, mlxturi^-iuntlh'vfltjfty; idd\nwhl-ipid cteam-i^II'b'ilit'UntU Juit\ncombined. Turn into Individual dessert glasses ind chill until set.\nSprinkle with chopped walnuts or\npecans before serving. Should serve\nilx.\n.1\nLONDON. (ReutinVHThi Tlm**'\nin ah editorial commenting on the\napproaching'and of American dollar aid to Europe, said Tuesday the\nresulting gap in European dollar\nholdings will hive to be \"bridged by\noth'wfniiini.\" jjjsga\nIt urged a. liberalization of the,\nUnited states import policy to permit freer entry of non-dollar goods\nIn the American market and a pro-'\ngram of United States Investment\nin the non-dollar world. '\nTht Times, which paid tribute to\nthe Uhtttd Statu for-.'-'oni of..the\ngreatest and n^ost sustained constructive porgrams in. all economic\nhistory,\" warned that 'thi Western\ndefence program Would inevitably\nsuffer without dollir aid.\n\"The free. countrliV will not repine at the approaching end of this\nremarkable program,\" it said. \"If to\nstand on their own. feet Is to be=\ncome a necessity, lt is. ilso't virtue in itsilf.\" \u25a0,.\u2022\".\nLord Beaverbrook's empire-minded Dally Express slid thl British\ngovernment ihould glvi.up Uriltid\n\u25a0States financial aid immediately.\u2014;\n\"This country should not wait for\nCongress fo  shut its purse;\"  the\npaper slid. \"Shi should declare that\nfrom this day. onwarda Britain, with\nthe Empire, will depend on her own\nresources and hot iny longer on\nAmirlci'i issistanci.\".;\nBill Tiliplibni ...\u201e\u201e_.'.....\nBrazilian i.. _;.^.^\nR C Forest: .;:.i....;\u201e; \u201e\u201e\u201e\nB C Pbvfei.A ..-'y  \u25a0\nCan Brewiriii \u201e;.\u2122..^.\u201e_\nCm Cmmn\t\nCanadian Car & Fdy A\nCm OUr,....'...;......;.........'.,,.,.\nCan Celmiii ......._.;\u201e.\u201e\"\u201e.\nCan' Pac Riy.\nCookshutt .\u201ei\u00bb^..\nCofts-M - S ^\u201e.\nDist -Seagram ....\nDom Foundries .....\nDom Tar & Chim .\nDom Textiles\t\nFamous, Playeri .....\n\"T\"\u2122\n13'\/.\n48%\n1194\nISH\n39H\n10\nm\n29H\n28\n\u00bb\n26 \u00ab\n27\n12%\n28\n27H\n....  14 :\n.... \u25a0 H\n....    8V4\n.\u00ab:' 21V4\nim\n:.. \u25a0 \u25a0: .~f'~\nMarket Trends\nNEW Y4DRK (APJ^PrlceiT! M-\nproved today ln thi. stock market\nin the midst of i modest buying\nflurry. Gains ran to around a point,\nbut over-all the advance was rather\nlimited.' '\u25a0- ' . .     <\u25a0\u2022' [yj.,;\nCanadian issues were higher. Mclntyre wis up U, Dome MintsVind\nDistillers Seagram Vt: and International Nickel Vs. Canadian Pacific\nWll Off Vt. . A\":V\n.TORONTO fCP)y**i Prldi ea'red\ngently toward the stock market's\nclose today.    V      ' V\nIn golds, seniors reversed their\nweaker trend In\" recent sessions\nand turned In gains ranging to the\n$1.50 picked up by Malartic. Juniors'\n-were mixed, while holding-'compile! eased. \u25a0 ' V- - -'\nBase metali showed a small edge\nof losses over gains. Higher-priced\nissuis were geher\"rtl**'4owJ*-..;. 7 .,\nWestern oils, .experienced their,\nthird day of index losses is such\nleaden arCalvm, Calgary ind Ed-\ninonton indiCinidlin WpiTtyiri\nl'owirv   .,'       .   '       ,-.   : ' '   ''\nFord A ,\u00bb...-\nGatlneau -\nImperiil OH ;\nImp Tobacco..\nIntNickel\t\nInt Pete .\nMont Loco' _f.\u2122~-~_'-\nNat Steel Car .'.\u2014,\u2014._....'\nPage Hershey ....._i,.,..w!.\nPower Corp ;.\nRuss Industries .... ,\u2014...,_...\nSicks. Brew .....................\nSimpsons A .\"....\u201e......\nSteel,of Cinida\t\nUnion Gas of Can- \t\n61%\n''21%\nsow\n., XI-''\n'-Hi''\n23\u00ab'\n25\n:2514\n.68-\n140 ~\niou\n.24,.\n14Ui\n31*4\n29\napan\nTOKVO - (AP) - Floods, combined with an aftermath of'dysentery,''took a toll of 710 f'livei in\nsouthern Japan during the list two\nweeks, Japanese\/police and health\nofficials said .Tuesday,\n...The floods, which followed a record rain, drove: 1,258*911 persons\nfrom their homes,\" injured 1748, ahd\n.washed out or buried 60,000 acres\nof farmland.. ' YyS^\n; In addition,,446 persons: are still\nmissing -after: the flood that swept\noyer northern .Kyu^h^ Island and\nsouthwest-MonshU, .7):.,\nNavy Awards 6 Ship-\nBuilding Contracts\nOTTAWA - (CP) - Contracts\nto six Canadiah shipbuilding companies for construction of six minesweepers for .the-Royal Canadian\nNayy Were; announced Tuesday by\nthe production department.\n,7The vessels are;in addition to 14\nmiheswiipers now Unde*1,,construe- -\ntlon, ind. will' \u00abpISbf> ilx being\ntransferred ;to the ''^wteAAtlantlc\nTreaty Organization as. part ot Canada's- mutual aid program.\nVictoria Machinery\" Depot Co.\nLtd.; and Yarrows,,Ltd;,..both* of\nVictoria,, received: ooBtracts.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY ,(CPVY \"With 1235\ncattle an#'calves ohbffer.the Calgary livestock- marke\": was mod-\nerit.ily': ec'tlve ^.SjrSjyy'; receipts\ntoday.'       '\u25a0'     .\"'        \u2022\n' Hogs sojd Monday at $30; sows\n25-cents lower at $16.50, and good\nlambs $25.\ni..-(3ood- to choice..Jlght.j-butcher\nsteers, $18 tb $19.50.\n.Good to choice heavy , butcher\n.itiirs, $16.50 to $1'8; common to medium,: $12 to $17.50, ,'S'ti \u25a0 . .,'\n. Good to choice light butcher heifers,' $17 to $18.50; comtnbh to fni-\ndium, $11 to$16;507't:n;'\nGood to cHoice fed calves, $18.50\nto.$10.50; common to-medium, $17\ntO'.$18. ,,'\"--\nGood light ,c6wi,'$lj tyvijlS; common to medium,$9 t<r$lO50; cin-\nners ind cutters,.$6 to $8.50,\n;' Good bulls, $lf.ib'|12;50; common\nto medium, $9 to $10.SO\n' DHdd stocker and feeder. steers,\n$19 to $18.50; common to medium,\n$13.to,$15.50.   , .;\u25a0;,',...... ,..\u25a0\nGood to choice y.eai calves. $20 to\n$23: common to medium, $15 to\n$19.50.     ..'\u25a0'' ,\n\u25a0 ti\n\u25a0\u25a0 z'Wi\nti[:\nMM\n___\n\u2014\nA_^.\nV\n'\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\"'    ''\u25a0 \u2022\n' Y.      \u201e     '. -'.'       '.'     \u25a0'      --     :-\t\n mmm^wmm^m^\ni i \u25a0 \u00bb\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8,19S3\nXftfli\nf MPS*   ^..^..X\n\\\\fomyojm\/um*\/:       i^\u00b0^f0^i%\\H\nONLY   TON!   Gives   VOO   A   CU8TQM-MiPt   HWMANEHT\nBlAff ff\nDRUGS LTD.\n\t\nDreom Gome True..,...\nQueen Molher To Lay. Foundation\nSfone of Inter-Racial University\nBy A8TLEY HAWKIN8\n! SALISBURY < (Reuters) \u2014 When\nQueen Mother Elizabeth leys thi\nfoundation stone ot thi niw Rhodesia university next Mondiy the\ndream ot i tew far-sighted idealists\nintir-raelil university will become\n1 iMllty.\n: Africans will be admitted alongside Europeans, the only qualification tor entry being educational attainment.\ntiti Soon after Hie Second World War\na group started collecting funds to\nbuild the university on a site made\navailable by Salisbury city council. '... ' ' \u25a0'\"'.\u201e\nToday classes are in operation'for\neommerce and accountancy and an\nambitious program of development\n\"le planned lor the next live years.\n1st IN CBNTRAL.AFRICA    Y\nSponsors and supporters of the\nUniversity, the first in central Africa, feel that the centenary year\nof Cecil Rhodes, founder ot the two\nRhodesios, md patron of tho\nRhodes scholarships to Oxford uni-\nw\nIGINTON\n*7 MOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nQ.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\n3pOVa*lN03_\nBRICKLAYING\n(Fire Brick Work)\n(Fireplaces)\n(Brick Veneer)\n\u2022 Woeltf tdy.ig    i\n\u2022 Tile Setting\n\u2022 Glass Blbck SeAing\n\u2022 Cement   Contractors\n'\" \"fH\"*\"*~\u00bb        it\n1553 and 104B\nFAME\nBRICK\nConstruction\nCo., Ltd.\n458 Buckna St.\n<tmM,b:c.v\nversity, Is in especially appropriate\ntime for the placing bt the foundation stone.\nOne ot the first objectives li thi\nestablishment of classes in liberal\narts. Appointments will be msdi\nfor professors in English., Latin md\nhistory as WiU is. geography,\nFrench, Afrikaans thl dialet developed by thl early Dutch settlers\nmathematics, economics, physics,\nchemistry, botany and zoology.\nThese appointments with a dean\nand a secretary-treasurer, involve\n$58,000 annually beyond the Untoer-\nslty'i present income, now. birily\nsufficient for instructors and the\n84) part-ttaie students now 'tilting\ncommercial ahd accountancy\ncourses.\nThe French government hu offered to help found a chair of\nFrihch. The Greek cimmunlty have\nsuggested help fbr a cHalr of\nclassics. V \u25a0\u25a0'.      ;.   titi :' iti  .    ,\nThe university's flva'.yiar' plan\nestimates i a sutdent population of\nnearly 300 by 1858,\nLiberals Creating\n2nd Class Canadians\nPC Tells Meeting\nALUSTON, Ont. (CP)\u2014Gordon\nGraydon, Progressive Conservative\nmember of the list Parliament for\nPeel, said Monday night the Liberal government, \"that greedy giant\nfamily monopoly,' has created a\ngreat group of second-class Canadians.     7 .  '  t    .\nMr. Graydon defined \"second-\nclass Canadians' as those who, disagreeing with some government\npolicies, are not allowedj tb take\npart in running the country because only government supporters\nare\" named to the Senate, federal\nboards and commissions.\nHe said:\n,\"*ha Libiral administration, a\ncolossus criited by 18 , years of\npower; is eating like a cancer at\nthi, vitals of Canada >tsal\u00a3. And\neven some.-members of the government realize \u00abhd are. ready to\nadmit that thi attitude of the ad-\nmiiilstrat- \"institutes a real danger to the ry,\"\nl^IiAGrayi.,..; said that.a Conserv-\native government that, has bein in\npower thit' lbftg would ' bi just\nis bad in spite ot itself.\n'' -    '.'      '\u25a0'  '    '';    - '\nGOODWILL AMBA88ADOR\nWASHINGTON - (AP) \u2014 President Eisenhower is contemplating\nsending Vice President Nixon on a\ntrip to Asia as a goodwill ambassador tor the United States after\nCongress adjourns. Plans still are\nin- the formative stage.   .  .\nFLEURY'S   Phormacy\n503 Baker 81\nMed. Art! Blk.\nPHONE 214\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nPhoni 25\nTru-A\u00abt\nBeauty\n\"Salon ,\nPhono 827\n876 Baker 8t\n.'. \/.\n1\nA Complete Line for\nEvery Requirement\nY CLOSETS, ONE OR fwO-Plt-CE Y\n;   BATHS ON LEGS OR BU|LT-IN\nv SINKS OPEN OR CABINET STYLE 7 ':'\".\nBASINS ON LEGS OR; WALL-HUNG Z'y.:\n\u25a0;..;  We carry a selected itock of first-grade fixtures,\n.    brass goods, pipe and fittings, and can supply all  7\nyour needs.   , .\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\na-'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0* HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST.        T.S.JEMSON PHONE 666\nQuack dt a Qoslmg and\nYou've a Friend for\u00a3$\u00a3\nBy ARTHUR ED80N\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 TJ\u00abJ\ntrouble with some silly -geese his\nbeen diagnosed at last. The poor\ncreatures mty think, (A) that they\nare human beings, Of (B) that hu-.\nman beings are geese.\n: Thii Nitlonil Geographic Society\nhas been looking Into the goose situation, and its report Ib surprising\nindeed. '-\u25a0..\u25a0\u2022-     -.,.\u25a0,.'\nIt seems goslings are extremely\nimpressionable little rascals, so tin.-,\npressibnible thet the first thing\nfieri' or heard by'. them' miy ' be\nidentified forever after as one of\ntheir own species.\nSo if a human being \"quacks\naround a day-old gosling, that gosling may go through life.convinced\nhi ind thi human are from thi\nsama nist. \" .'\u25a0<\u00a3 \u2022\nThis is known as Imprinting, and\nis explained this way in the National Geographic news release:     '\n\"Thl Austrian naturalist, Konrad\nLorenz,   studying   bird \u25a0\u25a0 behavior.\nfound thit most birds \"do not Recognize thiir own species by Instinct,\nbut rather -by some definite early\ncontact-7 . :' '\u2022\u2022'\u25a0 \u2022\nLOVE AT FIRST SI-HT \u00ab\n\u2022'\u25a0'A newly-hatched goose, for. example, looks upward when it first\nsees the light bf day. Anything that\nmoves and then draws away Irt 6\ncertain manner will Imprint the gosling, be it bird, beait, or human\nkind.\"    -.;    -v. iv.',   ;-;.,\n\u2022 Fortunately, the first thing seen\nby most geese is their ma or pa.\nOtherwise, things would como to a\npretty pass.\n' For once a goose is deluded, tt Is\ndeluded for keeps. It ignores its\nown species, ind liter falls In love\nwith members ot the. family to\nWhich it thinks it belongs.\n' There even have been cases, the\nNational Geographic' says, of ducks\nwho thought thiy were motorboats,\nand then tried to carry oh whit\nmust have been among the most\ndiscouraging love affairs ot ill time.\n241 Mau Mau\nKilled in\nAll-Ouf Offensive\nNAIROBI - (AP) .\u25a0*\u25a0 Brltllh. of-\nficlils reported Tutsdiy .their forces\nkilled 241 native-terrorists and captured 198 suspects In'an all-out offensive against the Mau Mau deathmen seeking to drive white settlers\nfrom Kenyi colony.   \u2022\nThi operation, from June 23 to\nJuly 5, was thi biggest staged by\nBritish ind supporting-native troops\nand police since i state ot emergency wes dec_ied-ln-Vthi'v Eiit\nAfrican colony nine months ago.\nTwerity-eight ot the security forces\nwere killed.\nThe operation's big brought to\nmore thin 1100 thi number of Miu\nMiui claimed dead since the\nemergency's itirt. 77\".'..7. .7\nChinese End\n4-Day Silence\nBy ROBERT GIBSON      i\nSEOUL (AP) \u2014 Chines!-troop's\nSnipped four days oi rainy silence\non the Korean battlefront Tuesday\nwith attacks against American and\nSouth Korean hill positions on thl\nmuddled western mint'- i. .--\nInfantrymen bt 0 If,'., itpTtJIy*\nls|oh clung grimly to. tisaV'-tfa of\nPork Chop hill after more than\n1000 Communists seized the flanks\nof the outpost in savage hand-to-\nhand fighting. 'A A\n.. Five miles to thi southwest, another 1000 Reds smashed sgainst\nArrowhead ridge, but the South Korean held their ground.\nAttacking behind a 15,000-round\nartilelry and mortar barrage, the\nReds pushed .through ankle-deep\nmud eirly todiy ,md liipid into\nAmerican trenches oiijPorfc <2hop.\n. Both sides called for reinforcements. Alter eight houri of, heavy\nfighting; the 7th reported it was\nholding the outpost's central position... >\u25a0\nThl South Korean 2nd division,\nbattered by 6800 rounds of Rid\nartillery and mortars, threw off the\nCommunist attack after'hours ot\nbitter fighting. In tho afternoon,\nthe RoKs reported thi Reds hid\nwithdrawn somi ilimints.\nA tapering otf of hiavy rains that\nall but grounded Allied planes the\nlast three days allowed the 5th air\nforce to send some fighter bombers\nover front lines.\nTwenty F-84 \u2022 Thunderje'ta swept\nlow over Red positions in the Kumsong sector in the west, dropping\nnapalm and high explosives.      '.'\nNight-flying B-26 bombers, aided\nby two C47s lightlngup the battle-\nlines with flares, bombed Red positions near Pork <2hop';afid Arroy*-\nhiad. Results of the bombings .were\nnot evaluated. \u2022   '   ti\u00ab'+  -.-\u201e'\nMinor ground action: was reported southeast of. the Kumhwa-\nKumsong road, where Allied guns\ndispersed a Red attack.\nThe Korean government- estimated that 15,000 persons were temporarily homeless, 72228 houses\nflooded, 430 others destroyed, mostly- in the provinces southwest of\nTaegu in southeast'Korea, in floods\nfollowing recent \"rains.\nSixteen Koreans were reported\ndeid.-   .   \u25a0 .\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0'. A ,\nBooks Returned to\nOverseas Libraries\nWASHINGTON -, (AP) -Thl\nstate department,.his-:directed its-\noverseas libraries, to put back oh\nthe shelves many, volumes removed\nduring the. recent purge ot books\nwritten, by. Communist and controversial authors.       \\ A .\u2022\u25a0-\nOfficials who disclosed this today\nsaid: thi'books still binnid. wire\nnamed ln two master lists, the latest\not which wis dispatched' last week\nto the approximately 189 libraries\nln foreign cities, instructions were\nto restore volumes not specifically\nnamed. \u25a0'.\"\u25a0,        .' V'-,-:'\nAlthough thi lists have hot bun\nmade public informants who may\nnot bl named indicated they' included more than 50 titles. That\nwould mean the restoration of per'\nhaps 250 titles. Officials have said\nall copies of '300. or more books by\nabout 18 authors hid been removed. Eleven are reported to have\nbiin litirilly burnid.\nThe state department hts bun; l\ntarget for criticism, because,of thi\nremoval of some books not specifically named In,iny directives.\nSenator Joseph McCarthy, Rep.,\nWis,, assailed. particularly the removal of !\"Wi_.iis,\".life story7of\nWhittaker Chambers, avowed reformed Communist \u2022\"\nFormer Air Commodor\nLiberal Candidate\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Air Com-\nmodore R. C. (Bus) Gordon, who\nretired from the RCAF in Febrmry\nand accepted i position, with Canadian Pacific Airlines, wis nominated Mondiy night as Liberal candidate In Vancouver-Quadra in thi\nfederal election..-\nDuring his-air force career, Mr.\nGordon served is air attache to tht\nCanadian embassy at Washington\nfor a time.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GIT RESULTS\nAirlines Take Him\nLong Way Home\njNEW YORK- (API-Tills Is the\nodyssey of Juan Martinet who\nstarted out tor Puerto.Rico and\nlanded ln Newfoundland, who repeated hlsnimi thru tlnw ind\ngot three martinis, ind who Is finally on hli wiy bick home with \u25a0\ngood-natured view of hls.adventure.\nMartinez, a one-legged man of\n84, started his wanderings Sundiy.\nHi mistakenly boarded a Pan-\nAmerican World Airwsys plini\nbound for Germany from Idlewild\nairport. -..?\nHe had been scheduled to depart\nat the same hour' on a. Pin-American flight for San Juan.\nThe big airliner winged its wiy\neast on the 4%-hour hop to Gander,'\nNfId., as, Martinez settled into his\nSlit..,,,,       .-';' \u25a0\u25a0;.;\u25a0<\u25a0. v..\nSoon a stewardess came along\nand asked:       \u25a0;.'-,,       \u25a0,\/'.! 77\n\"Manhattan or tnartihj?\". ,-,'-.'\nThe Puerto Rican, who speaks\nonly Spanish, thought she'was\nchicking his name, ip. he replied:\n'.'Martta-*,**:,. ,;.-.:        ' ..: \u25a0.\"-',\nHe was handed a dry martini.\n.Twice more hi \\0as asked the\nsame question, gave the same reply\nand received the sami refreshment.\nWhen the plane landed at Gander.\nMartinez, noticed that be was In a\ncooler clime than San Juan.\nHe made inquiries, and the. mistake was uncovered.  .\nAirline officials put him up overnight at Gander, and lent him back\nto New Vork on the firat available\nflight Monday.\n- Then, just .before midnight, he\nwas put aboard a non-stop flight to\nSan. Juan.' A\n7 Martinez,:who has two sons In\nthe Army in Korea, quipped-as he\nboarded the plana:\n''This time they'll Jrpbibly srad\nme to Korei.\".'.'\nTreatment With\nChemicals May\nCure Cancer\nLONDON (AP)-A leidlng Brlt-\nish researcher said today doctors\nmay eventually be able to prevent\n.cancer through chemical treatment\nalone. ,\nAddressing the annual meeting of\nthe British Empire Cancer Campaign, Professor Alexander Had-\ndow, director ot the Chester Beatty\nResearch Institute, sold \"cancer\nprevention which some years ago\nseemed utterly beyond our hopes\nmiy yet prove to be within our\nultimata powirs.\"V_\nMuch of present-day cancer research was Inspired by the increasingly conlident belief that the effective control of thi disease would\nultimately be by-chemical treatment alone.\nHeddow slid researchers now are\nfamiliar with hundreds of chemical\nagent! capable of Inducing cancer\nand how thiy work.  ,\nEnglish Peer Asks.\nCanada Remove\nInvestment Blocks\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Lord Barnby, a\nConservative peer, today - pressed\nthe government to remove obstacles\nto Britiih''Investment In Csnsdi\nraised by the 1046 Canadian loan\nagreement\nThe Earl of Selkirk, replying, on\nbehalf of tbe treasury, told the\nHouse of Lords the government li\naware of the Importance of the Issue but does not propose to make \u25a0\nstatement now.     %\nLorn Barnby, a wool textile manufacturer with Interests ih Toronto,\nhid asked whether thl government\nIntend! to frame proposals to fund\nthe remaining unpaid balance of\nthe 1046 loan.\nOutside the House, he explained\nhis point is that United Kingdom\nholders of Canadian securities how\nare obliged to'repatrlate their earnings, 'nils prevented them from using these funds to invest in Canada.\nThis was done, he said, on the\nground the 1848 - igreement stipulated- that any disposal ot United\nKingdom-held Canadian securities\nmust be Used for repayment bt the\nloan. .7.77 .'\u25a0'-'-\u25a0 ..- '.' S\n-Lorri BaWlbJf: iild- prlvitely hi\nthinks it thi Cahadian government\nwire' approached' this requirement\nwould bempdltled. A\nThe loan agreement was announced Mirch 7, 1848. It' provided\nfor a Canadian loan to Britain of\n\u00ab4HO,opo,ooo. '\u25a0':..\nJAKARTA, Indomsli \u2014 (AP). -\nPresident Soekarno said hi would\nmake another attempt soon to pick\ni prime minlpter to ind thl 33-day\ngovernment: crisis. Foreign. Minister Mukarto, whose Indonesian Nationalist party caused the resignation of Prtmi Minister Wilopo's\ngovernment June 8, said last week\nhe was unable to get the Nationalists, Moslem Masjumi and\" other\nparties to agree on cabinet posts,\nNews of the Day\nRATES! 80o lino, 40o llni block face type; larger, type rates en\nrequest. Minimum two linos. 10% discount for prompt payment\n-  Flni supply of Mrs. Gray's and\nMotr's-Chocolates at WAIT'S.\/\nRichard Lino Knives, 00c.\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\nL.A. TO >,O.B.\nMeet Tonight at 8:00 P.M.\n- Tony's   Shoe   Repairs   will   be\nclosed Saturday, 11:00 A.M.\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyca Men's Shop.\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\n,, .Phone 1B41.-L.\nFor Sale---Used coal and wood\nfurnace, with casings. A-l shape. V\nHIPPERSON'S>\nIt BUTTERFIELD can;t flic it,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\n' reasonable prices.   A\n\u2022 Dont' throw iwiy your old tires\nTridi them it.- - 7.      v.A, ..A, ;\"\nSUPERIOR   MOTORS'\nTire Department\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nInvestors' Syndicate of Can. Ltd.\nJan. S. M, Harts,\nR.R. 1 Y Phona 289-X-3 \u2014, Nelson\niF VOU HAVE SCRAP, M*TAL\nTO SELL, COLUMBIA TRADING\nCO. IS THE, PLACE; 902 FRONT\nSTREET. '\n' Special service of quick pressing\nand repairs -to out- of town curlers.\nTICKNER TAILORS, 461 JOSEPHINE ST., PHONB?107. ':.'(\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0.;.;\u25a0\u25a0\n' Don't get caught out, without a\nflashlite.'Burgess.flashlites, Burgess\nbatteries .-ind bulbUVa't   \"'-. v   .\n'.:.--\/\u25a0:-..\u2022 HIPPERSON'S - ;\n, Ju6t. arrived  niw  shipment  of\nbedspreads.   Beautiful   colors'  to\nchoose from. Priced from $4.05 Uj\nSTERLING HOME     '\nBINQO TONIQHT     s\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8:00 P.M.\nFor camp wear -\u2014Jims, shirts,\nall accessories.\nTHE CHILDREN'S 8H0P\nthe: TILLICUM\nInvites you for lunches and dinners\n, In their scenic dining room.\nOpen every diy,\n-Balfour, RC.\nPatients In Kootonay Lake General Hospital can have the Dally\nNew(s sent to them every morning.\nPhone. 144) Circulation Department,\nDally Newt. A \u25a0\nLarge . selection  ot used  stoves\nand baby buijglei,,.; ,'   ;.\nWe buy'ind sill new and used\nfurniturevA\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 Hall St.\n.We are prepared to take on my\nbuilt-up or asphalt roofing Job.\nSide will shingles and shakos. All\nInquiries promptly itiended to,\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co., nil.\nAPPLICATOR8   \u25a0',.'.\n'\u25a0'\u25a0'titi.     VENTILATORS '\nAluminum ventilators for gable\nand eave ventilation. Four sizes md\ntwo styles to choose from. Also\naluminum eave sheeting at   '\nt. H. WAtERS d CO. LTD.\nPhent 156-101 Hill St - Nilson\nCARD OF THANK8\nThi niwlyyformid Pirry's Sports\nCommittee wish to think,ill thoso\nwho helped make Dominion Diy\nof: Firry'f a success. Also _ special\nthanks, to the citizens of Slocan\nCity for their cooperation.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMAY\u2014Funiral services for the\nlite Mrs. James May will be held\nfrom the Fir6t Presbyterian Church\nThursday at 2 p.m. The Rev. D. A.\nMcKeUar will officiate and interment will bi in the lamily plot\nClin McLeary section, Nelson Mi-\nmorial Park.\nAirlines Expanding With\nGrowth in' Popularity\nBy BOB JOYCE\nCinidlin Pnsi Staff Writer.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The. world's\nscheduled airlines *are growing bigger, better and faster.every year\nA, report on civilian aviation In\n1952 by Dr. Edward Warner,-president of thi.International Civil Aviation Organization'! council, shows\nthat civilian airliners flew farther,\ncarried more passengers and cargo,\nind touched higher speeds ln 1952\nthan ever before: '\u25a0\u25a0'\nThe report an appraisal ot progress made In civil aviation since\n1944, was published In the current\nIssue of the ICAO Bulletin.\nDuring 1052, despite an-oil strike\nIn Uie spring which curtailed airline operations in North America,\nscheduled airlines carried 13 per\ncent more freight-miles than - in\n1951;   .-\"-; .\nThe passenger - movement aloni\nWIS equivalent to transporting thl\npopulation of Greater London or\nGreater New York from Montreal\nto Europe. .' '  \u2022 \u2022\nLast year airlines carried 2*4\ntimes is' mmy pissengers snd five\ntimes is much freight is In '1948. In\n1937 freight operations wire so\nnegligible'that no accurate figures\niri available, but the number of\npassengers today Is 17 times is\ngreet as then. \\\nBETTER METHODS\n' Dr. Warner, exploring the reisons\nfor the increase In traffic, listed\nImproved equipment better navi\ngation aids and operating methods,\nall ot which contributed to regularity, Increase In speed and in economy. .7; 7-.'\n. But, he said, \"the largest single\nfactor. has undoubtedly been the\nsimple, gradual habituation of travellers and traders to the novelty of\ntravelling ind shipping by air.\"\nAirlines also havi attracted new\ncustomers by off-season reductions,\nexcursion rites, ind tourist fares,\ntht latter being introduced on\nNorth Atlantic services during 1952.\nTodiy in the United States one\nof every three nersons travailing\nmora than 120 miles by paid transport goes by air, and airline piss-\nenger-mileage.is 20 per cent higher\nthan that of Pullman rail service.\nIn 1948.it was only one-third the\nPullman mileage.\nElsewhere In thi underdeveloped\nareas the airplane, the report says,\nhi!'opened new wsys ln world\ntrade, permitting goods to movt\nwhere slowness, hazard, cost! or\nsheer awkwordnc- of transport In\nthl past virtually prohibited their\nshipment\nFIRST JET AIRLINE\nThe yeir saw the start bf thl\nworld's, first scheduled jet. operation, British- Overseas Airways\nComet service between London,\nJohannesburg, India ind ' Singapore, md trans-Arctic flights by\nScandinavian Airlines between Los\nAngeles nnd Copenhagen.,\nGov't Official Says. . .\nAlberta Gov't Not Asked to Approve\nSaskatchewan River Power Project\nEDMONTON \u00ab*0?) - An Alberta\ngovernment official said today that\nthe provincial government Was not\nasked to approve water rights for\nthi power necessary to thl South\nSaskatchewan river power md irrigation project.   .-\u25a0    ',\nAsked'to comment on an Ottawa\nreport Monday In which Prime\nMinister St. Laurent slid Uie federal cabinet would pot give full\napproval to thi project until Alberta approved thi water needed\nfor. power, the official said the\nPrairie governments that water\nrights of 960,000 acres-feet of water\nbe approved, butt only for irrigation,       r\nHe said thi board, which gave\napproval to the water rights- after\nthe fourth request from the Saskatchewan government had never\nentered into the discussion of power\nnecessary to the project.\nFollowing thl board's, approval,\nratification was left tb the governments . bf Alberta, Saskatchewan\nahd Manitoba, and finally the federal government.\nThe Alberta- government approved only what was asked for by\nthi water board'and the Saskatchewan government. -\nHe nid Alberta's refusal to grant\nthi water rights for power indicated\nAlberta would not sign away waters\nwhich might be later used for\npower developments within Alberto. A . \u2022- -\u25a0- \u25a0-'\u2022'\u25a0'\nIt such whole approval ( was\ngiven, he said, the Saskatchewan\ngovernment could sue for damages\nIf the rate of flow of the rivers\nflowing   into   Saskatchewan   were\nPearson Urges\nGeneral Assembly\nMeet on Korea\nGORE BAY, Ont. (CP)-Externil\nAffairs Minister Pearson, president\nof the United Nations general assembly, sild Mondiy night that the\nassembly must meet eventually to\ndiscuss thi Korean situation.   .\nMr. Pearson, -who has kept in\nclose touch with international developments while campaigning for\nthe Aug. 10 federal election, told\na Liberal party rally ln this Mani-\ntoulin island community that the\nassembly must hold the session to\ndiscuss an armistice in Korea It\none.is signed, or whst to do if one\nis not signed. He mentioned no\ndates.\nThe melting- would. be \"thi testing time of our unity snd co-operation in tha interests of world\n-peaci.\" 7\nMr, Pearson was speaking In his\nhorns riding of Algomi East\nMew Paving Process\nReceiving Tryour\nFltEDERICTON - (CP) \u2014 Aniiv\nGerman-discovered piving process\nthat, its sponsors claim will keep\nroads free of- Ice is being-given it?\nfirst NorthiAmericm-try-oUt bjf.thi'\nNew Bruhswlck;givirhment Act*\ning Works Minister Mclnerney said\nthe speclel asphalt mixture, is being\ntried on an eighth, of i mile stretch\nof the Trans-Canada highway between Jemseg ind Young's I Cove.;'\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILV\n1  '\nHavt the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\n,:.'.;,;,   PHONI 815 .!'-.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n* IMRII\nChartered Accountants\n\u25a0'] Audita-*,\n878 Biker St \u25a0,'\u25a0-\u25a0'\u2022\u2022     Phono SSB\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\u25a0Distinctive Funeral Service\"\n'     AMBULANCE 8ERVICE\nMl Kooteniy St       Phoni S81\n\u25a0r-\nivir decreased by Alberta power\nlirojicts.     .,'\"\nBecause Manitoba was far downstream from the proposed Saskatchewan project, the question of\npower did not affect the Manitoba\ngovernment - i-\nThe power md Irrigation project\ninvolves the building of a 250-foot\ndam it Outlook, Sask. A huge'\nartificial lake would irrigate thousands of acres of dry land.\nREGINA (CP)-Federal Agriculture Minister Gardiner conferred\nwith Premier Douglas for a halt-\nhour Tuesday oh Alberta's action In\nwithholding approval of Water from\nthe South Saskatchewan river protect for power use.\nThey declined to elaborate, on the\nnature of their discussions, 'other;\nthan to indicate thiy hid conslder-\ned the 'Alberta action.       \u25a0       A\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n'\",: .'\u00ab'_\u2022' ;';.'\u2022\u25a0'\nNelson Upholstery\n\u2666W IHill Street-.-,   j\u00bbtioni I4f\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMikei delicious bread thi easy\n-      and quick wiy. ,   ,\nTry a packige today   ...    -\nELLISON  MILUNO\n7 -7 .;*,'E|.EV7c6i-:ttD.7-\nl^0\nSwim\nTrunks\nThe water, fine \u2014 to\nare our swim suits...\nThe new styles in Lai-\ntex, Nylon and Wool\nmixtures, by Jantzen\nand Catalina.\n$2.95 \u2014 $5,95\nEmory's\nLIMITED\nTHE (MAN'S STORE\nBOX 100\nPHONE 31\nTWO POLIO VICTIMS TO\nBE FLOWN TO COAST\nVANCOUVEJfi-(CP)-An RCAF\nDakota aircraft lift hire todiy for\nWhitehorse, Y.T.MO pick up two\npolio victims.\nTht patients, whoso names havi\nnot been released, will be flown to\nVancouver for treatment They are\nreported to be women.   - .:   <\nThe plane took oft at 7:34 a.m.\nand will stay overnight and makl\nthl return flight Wednesday.\nRADIATORS\nCleaned * repaired\nrecqrino\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT ST PHONE St\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nyi^uAt TR*\/i*yiN<\u00bb\nMedical Arts Bulldlnq     '\nSuite 204 Phone 141\nFor Your Vacation Needs\nWe Hivi .\nSUNGLASSES-BEACH BAGS\n7SUN TAN L4jT(dN\nbAtHINO 45AP4\n. For thi Beiih\nA Full Assortment of\nbeach balls - boats\nwater wings\n\u25a0 -  \u25a0' \".M'Attres^es '\nPrint ()9i to $7.80 '\u2022\u25a0\u2022'-'\nCity Drug\n'  'YCOMPANY 7\n\"Nilion'i Mbairn' Phirmaejr '\u25a0\nPhono 34. Day - 807-R flight\n'   BOX4M\nYou'll Find That\nCO. m>.\nARE\nwhen it comes to\nanalyzing your\ncar troubles.\ndrive in today\nXnpgeta\npersonalized job\ndone on your car\nBEING THE LARGEST AND MOST\nCOMPLETELY EQUIPPED GARAGE\nIN THE INTERIOR OF BRITISH COL-\nUMBIA ASSURES YOU OF THE UTMOST IN AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES.\nPHONE 35\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany. Limited\n__.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_07_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427727","@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":"1953-07-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-07-08 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\/1.0427727"}