{"@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":"1953-08-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427730\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" ppppiF\nIfft^w'lPflPiP^\nRye Rescued From\n-\u25a0\u25a0 v      ' ^   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  . , -    -  \u25a0,-..(\u2022' .,'...'.-,-.   '.-..-,   ;.   ..-\u25a0  .:\u25a0'  '- \u25a0\u25a0 tt ' .*;,.   7\nAtlantic After\nBomber Crashes  :\n-..', LONDON v(_P)---Five survivors from a United States\nAir :Porce RB-36 * which -crashed ihto the st6fftiy Atlantic\n: Weilnesday have been picked-up. . \u25a0.,\n\"Search-Ves$eis also recovered a number-of bodies\nbefore .night clrae.d down. \u2022!,.'.- .\"\u2022      f f .-,'.,*\nThe!giaiit lO-engiried plane, withv.two motors ablaze,\nditched in the ocean at dawn. Some of the 23 men aboard\nWere able to parachute before the plane hit the water, 300\nmiles awby from lslrid\/ ?\"' -f\nThe surviv(*)rs? dinging to liferafte or hjts 6i wreckage,\nwere in the: water for hours. Rescue planes spotte4l some\nof them during the day, bobbing like specks on waves ,15\nfeet high. The search planes also saw several overturned,\nrafts.\n'PROVINCIAL\nLibrary\n'\u00ab-c:t0RiA-\n.f^-tf\nVol. &\n....     \" ir \/'-?\u00bb:,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nv Kootenayr-Sunny.Vpattly. cloudy, t\nNot much change in temperature. \u25a0'\nThe 7686-ton .Manchester Ship-\n\u2022 per was one of the first vessels]\non the scene. .It picked up one'survivor; then three more; one, was\nin good condition but the\" others\nwere, suffering from shock, It also\ndragged at least two bodies out of\nthe sea.      ' .\u2022 ' '>..\u25a0-\u25a0'\n, iThe 1805-ton Manchester Pioneer\nresoued a fifth man and* took\naboard several men' who did not\nlive through the crash or the long\nhours in the heaving seas. \u25a0\nThe plane,  carrying 23 men to\nBritain from Travis air force base,\n-California,' was   stricken   before\ndawn.\nAIR-8EA ARMADA\nA vast air-sea : armada raced\nthrough mounting seas to a point\n477 miles west of Shannon, Ireland, after American search planes\nhad reported earlier- sighting a raft\nwith five men.\nAs the day drew on, seas grew\n.higher, py nightfall, hear-gale\nwinds whipped waves high as a\nhouse. \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0',\nv The Manchester Shipper, a veteran of other: daring sea rescues,\nradioed that' one of the' survivors\nwas in fairly good \"condition; al*\nthough suffering from exposure. :A\nsecond was* suffering from shock\nand? a damaged arm and a third\nairman was reported \"badly\nshocked.\"-\nThe' air force said no names\ncould be released yet' Maj. Arthur\nBeam, 80, was in command of the\nflight, on the' way to Lakenheath\nair base, England, for 30 days'\ntraining.    \u201e   ,\n.'It? radioed at 3.:38 a.m. that two\nof Its five engines on the right side\nwere afire \u25a0....' '7 :...   *\nLater messages 1 said all five\nright-side engines, were out and\nthe plane losing-altitude rapidly.\nA* 4:40 a.m., Kevlavik, airfield iii\nIceland picked up an S O S. Thei\nonly words it could hear were|\n\"bailing out.\"\nCapt. William Vinyard, who was\nflying a DCr6B. off Ireland at the\ntime, said hie was in contact with\nthe Stricken craft at* the'end.\n\"We heard ?one spoken word \u2014\n'jump,'\" he said. \"Then the radio\nwent dead. We knew the plane had\nditched.\" .   '.' ;..\nN-l-GN'fl,;C.,CANAPA-THDR$pAY I0RNm<3, AUGUSTJ^SlT\nNo. 89\nManslaughter Charges Laid\nAgainst Bus, Truck Drivers\nT43R4JNT6: 4CP)7- Manslaugh-\n' ter charges   vyere laid Wednesday\nagainst the drivers of a bus and\ntruck which careened into a .St.\nLawrence river canal near Morris-\nburg, Ont? last yrlday with' a- loss\notSOllves..\" \u2022\"\u00bb'\u2022\u2022'    i'titi;:\"'-':::. .\nC. P..Hope ot the Ontario attorney-general's department ? said: the\n. charges   were   laid, against Lorrie\n\u2014   Chesebrough   of   Kingston   and\nK^jfdaX'Hopdman of Toronto.\u25a0\"*.:\u25a0'\n\u25a0\u00bb, CMwferatuffl *'*aa thf *:driver -,'of\na Colonial Coach 'Lines bus which\nplunged   into   the   canal with 37\n.aboard, and Roodman the owner ofl\na parked half-ton truck \"which the\nbua struck and. knocked into: the\nwater. 'Police \"'aald. the truck, was\n; stalled on or near the highway before the accident.\nHope said no inquest into the accident will be held because it might\nprejudice the. oUtconw of the jnan-\nalaughter trials. .Previously Inspector Robert Wannell of the provin-\ncial police had announced an inquest would be held next Friday.\nj? No date was given, for hearing\n\u25a0 the manslaughter charges.\nChesebrough talked to reporters\nWednesday for .the first time since\nUie accident; Previously he had\nbeen in a state of shock.\nI Vancouver Asks\n[Enquiry Into\nBread Price Hike\nVANCOUVER (bR)* \u2014 City\ncouncil will-. \u00abk Attorney-General Bonner to enquire Into the\nrecent one-cent Increase In the\nprice of bread. The decision waa\nreached after council received\nsubmissions from city bakeries\nIn defence of the Increase\ntueiday. -    . .\nI DOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK \u2014 (CP) - The\nCanadian dollar was higher at a\npremium in terms of U.S. funds\nWednesday. Pound sterling up\n.1-16 cent at $2.81 11-16.\nMONTREAL - (CP)**- The U.S.\ndollar .closed at a discount of 11-1(5\nper. cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, off 1-16. Pound sterling\n\u2022I2.78H,. off Vt.\nBennett Scores\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier W.\nA. C.   Bennett   has-  teehdeivas\n\"linear'jtaeUss?fub'BftK.Sod'^^uef\naft.article on.Social Credit,in', the\ncurrent issue of New Liberty\nmagazine. \u25a0\nThe: Social Credit premier, commenting at a-press conference-Wed-,\nnesday on an article by-Leslie Roberts which .said that if seated - se-\n2ly in Ottawa Social Credit\nv. .ild abolish all other political\nparties and general elections and\n\"rub out\" the secret 'balTotyaaid:\n\"This is a continuation\" of the\nsmear campaign launched against\nSocial Credit \"during\/the recent\nprovincial campaign by our political opponents .7 .   ,'\n\"All these statements of Roberts are untrue ana* false.\"  '\nDOGSNI\nPOSSIBLE EVIDENCE\nVANCOUVfifoiicP) _ Bobby's\neducated nose may have turned up\nthe first con'cretl clue in the $15,-\n006 safecracking of a Maillardville\nhotel Sunday! \u2022\nBobby is a star RCMP police dog.\nHe'was allowed to sniff around, a\nstolen trjick discovered in suburban Burnaby and a few m|nutes\nlater turned up a cache of guns and\nsome mutilated money.\nPolice hid nearby and captured\ntwo men who appeared on the\nscene and began to look around.\nj The men were questioned for\nseveral hours but were released for\nlack of evidence.\nPolice are investigating whether\nthe torji money, found in a paper\nbag, is part of the safecracking\nloot. The guns, all automatics, are\nbeing traced.\n(jJaisJt f&paliu\nNelson:     ?\nTuesday \u2014 4.75,'\nWedhesday \u2014 4.60.\n*     BiqYCLE BUILT FOR TWO was all the transforation Mr. arid IJsIrs. Weiyell of Manchester, England,'\nneeded for a cross-Canada trip. The newlyweds of fCitfi.\nmonths, who left LiverpoolMay 12 and started across-\nCanada from Quebec May 26, are on their Way throtigK \u25a0\nthe Kootenays, and are,shownhere at Crest?oh. Afrlwd,\nH.- S- Harvey of Vancbuv6r,;who *met-tj\u00abmvih Gotland\nin 1949,'flew tty Cranbrook to meet *toem7and cycte'tjp\nVancouver witli them. The.icouple'S: best.daily mileage\nhas been 108, but the average is 39 miles including stops.\n. \u25a0,\u25a0'... jti; \u25a0 ' ti.   \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0?-      \u2014H,M;Buckna'J)hot)Oi1\nEvdokimoff Committed for Trial\nAiler 9-Hour Hearing; Bail Refused\nNick Evdokimoff,,55-year-old Son\nof freedom, whs committed for trial\nWednesday. \u25a0 after!' nihe?'*%itnesses\nWere heard and seven exhibits introduced. An application for- bail\nwas rejected by Stipendiary Magistrate William Si^ans, \u25a0\ngassing an explosive.substance .with\nmtent to wilfully: cause property\ndamage.\n\"The gas and oil,\" defence counsel J.' A. MacDonald charged, \"was\nS*t the very utmost intended to be\n[used to light a fire, not aa .an explosive. Lightipg a fire is hot ah\noffence.\" He charged that' the\nCrown's evidence was \"flimsy\" and\nrecapitulated events stating that\nEvdokimoff had..not been found in\npossession of the.gas and oil jug.\n\"At the very most, Mis-MacDonald\nsaid, \"he was at the lame vicinity\nwhere the bottle was found by the\nofficer.\" Constable Harry Chornon;\ndyz testified earlier he found the\njug near a spot where the Crown's\nkey witness, Alec Popoff,'allegedly\nsaw Evdokimoff hiding.\nCrown Counsel D. S. Wetmore, In\nsumming up, told the .court the\ndefence's; \"alibi evidence'! did j not\nCover the time in question,\nEvidence given by Mr? and Mrs.\nPeter Markin during the morning\nsession, was that Evdokimoff had\nspent the evening and night at their\nhouse. He allegedly went to bed\nshortly after II and, to their knowledge, did not *get up again until\nafter' several fires were reported\nin the Krestova-Goose .Creek- area,\nThe defence contended that 98\nper cent of the fires In Krestova\nare not caused by explosion but by\nspreading, gasoline and igniting it.\nCrown counsel pointed out that\nthere had been no evidence to sup.\nport this statement and that as far\nas he knew,- \"most fires are originally explosions.\"\nCorporal Stewart Rammage,\nRCMP dog master, told the court\nhis dog followed, a trail from where\nthe gasoline-oil mixture was found,\nto the, rear of Pete Markln's home.\nHe compared Evdokimoff's- shoe\nprint to one followed by the dog\nand found .jt-to be, similar.?Footprints of others in the area were\ncompared, but did not match, Cpl.\nFifth of\nBudget\nReturrimg fyltiiers\nBear PiiismSkcks\nINDIANS HOLD\nPOW-WOW\nf Handicraft Display,,\n'pahcing Featured ,:\nAtConvention\nHURON VILLAGE, Que.\n\u2022ppfr-woiws,   Indian   ritual\n<CP)-\ndances\nRammage stated. Other witters\nheard were, Ben Land's of Paul\nCteek, \u25a0 Peter ^lanHenpf- krestova?.\nwho Save a geographical outline of\nKrestovaVand- tjoose- Creek, and\nWilliam Grimankin, also of Krestova. .'\u25a0   . '   ti,. .     ~M-i\u00bb\nti, ^t;4s.not W-piece\u00bbhai*^'!iJ*|jiS|tf\n:remtir&,\" -Magistrate.' Evans said\nWforei bommitttng Eydokllft'off for\nTrial. \"It la enough for me to say\nthat I find: sufficient' evidence to\nsend the accused for trial to a\nhigher court of jurisdiction,\"\"'.\nUBC OFFICIAL\nEXPLAINS 5TUDY\nOF MARXISM\n\u25a0 '.ti. VAN06uvpR   (CP)   \u2014    Uni\nversity of Brltllh. Columbia official has made clear the acade-\n. mic position on: \"communism'*' on\nthe curriculum In Institutions of\nhigher learning.    .,. v\nDean C. G. Andrew, acting president, uld Wedneiday that:      \u25a0\n\"There li all the difference) In\nthe world, between a thing being\nexplained and a thing being ad-\n\u25a0 vacated.?'\n\"Explanation, of Marxism Is a\nnormal, part : of ttudy In ouch\nfield! at political lolence and\neconomlca.\" 7   ,-'.',-\u25a0 , .\nHe wai replying tb reportora'\nquestions In connection with\nitatementi made, by varlbui\nipeakers In the current political\ncampaign.\nSTILL NO TRACE\nOF LOST CLIMBI*\nJASPER; Alti, (CP) \u2014. No further word was received here Wednesday? of the Intensive afearch for\n32-year-old mountaineer Alex: A.\nMcCoubrey of Winnipeg.. ,    -.'\nMcCoubrey, on experienced\nclimber attending an annual' camp\nof the Alpine Club of Canada, has\nbeen missing since July 28. First\nreports indicated7 he had: turned\nback down'Browne peak after\nreaching the- 6,000-foot point.with\nai} assault party,. .\nA later > unconfirmed' -report\nquoted menjbers of the original\nclimbing' party as saying the missing man disappeared when the entire party was making the descent?\n' The report said several Climbers:\nhad gone to the help of a man Who\nHad stumbled and tell, and .when\nthey attempted to locate McCoubrey immediately after; found only\nfresh footprints in new show. The\ntracks were followed, but no. trace.\nof McCoubrey was found.\nand' handicraft displays feature\nthree-day Homemaker! Club convention being held at this Indian]\nreserve nenr Quebec. City.\n\u2022 The Hontemakers Club draws its\nmembership from Indian reserves\nin Quebec and the Maritime! and\nits purpose is to acquaint the Indians\nwith Uie different arts and crafts\npractised in tha scattered reserves.\nIndians from tribes including the\nIroquois, Micmac, Montagnais, Bull-\nheed, Huron and Abenakis art at.\ntending the convention and nave,\nbrought with them samples of handicraft to-'be put on exhibition and\njudged? .ytiy'ti \".    \u25a0'\u25a0 ti\nA pow-wow, complete with saga-\nmite\u2014an Indian torn soup cooked\non an open fire and associated with\ndanclng'>and hierry-making\u2014In ta-\ncluded: iri the official convention\nprogra'ttt \u25a0>,.\n' Business.meetings of ihe convjtn-\ntioh'ii-alield In a community ball\ndecorated for the occasion with balsam and pine, simulating' the sue-\nroundirigs of open-air tribe meetings1 many years ago. ,: . ,f 7\n?' Rev. .M,,Jao6ba,,\u00abn;lt|d|taji priest,\ncelebrated.fliass.in,the:Huron lan-\n_^  j^P&^i-^-iiftiJwsi^a^a'1\naotivitie9,'\"arid' many hymns were\n'^hgij)?;jne:ianie.twgue.. '.V\n(Some delegates to the convention\nhave outfitted themselves. in regal-,\nia of their, ahcestors and on occasion tbey cohyerse. in the lang-\nguages of their forebearers.      . 7\nSome Wheats Found\nMore Rust-Resistant\nW1NNIPE6 (CP) \u2014 Cereal sclen7\ntists at the Dominion rust tfesearch\nlaboratory In Winnipeg are\/convinced that such varieties of commercial wheat as Lee, Redman and\nThatcher have partial resistance to\nrace 15B item rust.\nThey, base their Conclusions oh\nthe slow development of the 15B\nstrain on Manitoba wheat crops\nOil! year. It now is mote thah: six\nweeks since th.e first strains of\nrust were found in Manitoba: The'\ndevelopment still is: slow enough\non common wheat for Dr. T. Johnson of the laboratory to predict,\nWednesday that most of the early-\nsown grain .will escape severe damage? .    7 ;\"  \u25a0'.',-   ti\nHe -defined the present.area of\nmost severe stem-rust infection as\nextending from the^Red river wist\nto Killarney and Wawanesa and\nextending north from the U.S,\nboundary almost to the Assiniboine\nriver. V    ?\nIn this area, pr. Johnson said,\ninfection on Common wheat ranges\nfrom two to 20 per cent on all\nstems. Harvesting is from two to\nfour weeks away.\nNorth of the Assiniboine river\nand west of the Killarney-Wawan-\ncsa area the degree of infection\ndiminishes rapidly, and? Dr. Vohn-\nson aald it unlikely there will be\nmuch damage to common wheat.\nGovY Return*\nSoles Tax f \u25a0\u2022*;.-\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The federal government has agreed to return sales tax paid on structural\nsteel in the new Granville street\nbridge with a resultant saving to\nthe city add contractors of $317,333,\ncity officials announced Wednesday.    \u25a0\u25a0)  \u25a0 : ...\nWaiving of the 10 per cent tax\nWill mean a saving of $253,866 to\nthe city and $68,467 to the contractors, officials said.\nBy QEOROE At McARTHUR\nPANMUNJOM --. (AP) -Another 392 Allied prisoners ,\u2014 none ef\nthem Canadians,\u2014 came backjfiito\nfreedom today amid mounting fears\nfor thlt health and safety of \"thousands still in Red compounds;-?\nThe second exchange of prisoners\nin operation Big Switch was set\nfor 9 a.m. at thla truce town.\n'. The COnununlsts*promised to 'deliver 250 South Koreans,. 70 Americans, 26 Britons, 2!^ Turks, 10\nFilipinos, seven Colombians and\nfive Australians\u2014eight fewer than\nthe daily 400 quota the Reds\nagreed to,send back. There was\nno explanation tor the shortage;\n.', The United Nations commend\nhad 2768 more Chinese and. North,\nKoreane ready for repatriation,\nfour fewer than promised.    .,'\nWithin the next five weeks about\n87,000 men\u201412,4)00 Allied and 74,000\nCommunist \u2014 will return to their\nown aides -ff-'\nThe first .400 freej. Wednesday\nin the initial exchange included\nmany' in poor' physical condition.\nYet many Waved, grinned broadly,\ngave loud:shouts and'evon wept\nwith joy as Communist trucks and\nambulances, brought them within\nsight of freedom..- '    :   -\nOthers were too, sick to care,.\nThe stamp of prison ordeal hung\nheavily over those returned to the\nfirst exchange.- All looked tired and\nhungry? About half were listed by\nthe Communists as sick or\nwounded. Eight - Americans -were\n'stretcher eaaSaf''.;'\u25a0,'',.' \"ti\nAh Am'erloa-i Senior medical officer, aald about 20 per cent'of the\n, rejurned men aufjered 'from tub-\nTftey brought, restrained but dfS-\nquieiing accounts, from Red, Korea, including word of a Commun-.\nist trial in which an American\nlieutenant-colonel was sentenced a\nfew days ago to another year\nof imprisonment' tor \"instlgittlng\nagainst peace\" and Other' high officers were given sentences on the\nsame .charge. ,'\nIt was apparent that Allied censors, had cautioned the first\nturned prisoners, not to discuss\ncase! of mistreatment. Prisoners\nwere forbidden to discuss waiter\ndeath marches \"except , th o s e\ndeaths you^actually saw yourself.\"\nThe censor-was quoted as Baying the'': \"war department caught\nhell\" three months. ago at'atrocity\nstories reported-, during, the pre.\narmistice? exchange of 'stole anc'\nwounded.. ,     \u25a0''?,: .... \u00ae .    \u25a0 tif\nOutlay for Armed Forces Cut by  .\n$900 Million Compared to Last Year\n'\/,  ti ti. \u25a0 7. . y ':.   ' .-i  .    : - \u25a0,        ' - 7 ,. V     :...; \"\u25a0:   ; '.'*     -      ,\\.'\u00bb\nMOSGOW^^^ (AP) W Piremier Malenkov's f^ov^nimrot-\npi?4e8m'^ito-*lhe.:Swpr^ (Pfwliamierit) Wednesday\nnight'tfie biggest budget in the history of 'the U.S.S;!?.J_or\u00ab,\nthan one-fifth of the half-trillion ruble budget is earmarkeii\ns*DJBcifically for. t$e. itrm?d forces. \u25a0*>\nFinantje, Minister; Arseni 'Zverev told a j oint session\nof the ,Sijpr4nne -Soyiet?-1953 j expejidi*toes, wb***tld be-MC,-*\n'56b,000iO00 frubleis,'OjE:;tl*i^s.armed- f-oriies expenditures. ar\u00abt;\nlisted aCiii'Q,20d;opOiaoprubIesiiTh'is would indic-ite a de9re-ii3\u00ab\nof 3,6pb;d80j,d0Q frtibfes *:fto*m' -the ,1952 armed fo?ces7outlayf\n!The?'St^i6t iWnion- ivajijies the-7- ruble al'.fojir.-' tofliha\ndoflar.7T^iif'WquM jiie\nARMED SERVICE\nVOTES COME FROM\nSCATTERED POINTS\n\u2022 OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Groups of\nRCAF personnel scattered through\nthe Canadian Arctic probably qualify astheVoters'furthestnorth during this week's voting in the fed'\neral election by members of the\narmed forces.\nNavy men voting at Aklavik,\nN.W.T., 125 miles inside the Arctic\nCircle near the mouth of the Mackenzie river, are almost in the\nbalmy south compared to RCAF\nvoters at Resolute?\nThis far northern outpost of\nCanada's defences is on Coronation\nIsland, 600 miles inside the Arctic\nCircle and hardly 1,000 miles from\nthe North pole. It is almost 2,000\nmiles north' of, Winnipeg. Ballots\nfrom the small detachment there\nwill'be flown out:.        1\n1 The navy can claim to.have voters further south than any of the\nestimated 105,000 eligible service\nvoters. Men aboard the* cruiser Ontario? homeward bOund to the West\nCoast from Britain, will vote at\nBermuda or at sea. Ballots cast at\nsea will' be flown to Halifax from\nBalboa lit* the Panama canal zone.\nThe ship's company of the destroyer escort Algonquin is voting\nat Key West, .Fla.,;where.the ship\nis undergoing trials.\n$i8%508MW(W^rffiffi'i&rfa-ibatf' $27,50b,000;0()0. wo^\nbe;fpr-f-ihf .arme'diforce*s.'.\"IWiaf-is'irot *h(s4\u00bbSsarily:the'who}'*\nSoviet defence*budget pitAtise;',\nhowever,' '\n\u25a0 .Western ..authorities' say Soviet\nofficial budgetary expenditures for\nthe military do-not include all mill-\nRHee-Dultes Talks\nMark Progress\n' By ROBERT TUCKMAM     7\nSEOUL (AP)i\u2014State * Secretary\nDulles and President Rhee! expected\nto tackle the difficult problem of\nunification- for Korea today after\na harmonious first meeting Wednesday. ' :* .'\u25a0;. \u25a0' ..*:\u25a0\u2022\":   .\nThk talks alreaiiy \"\"'ere: reported\nto have-produced \"considerable\nprogress\" toward a security treaty.\nSuch a treaty, subject 'to .ratlfiea-'\ntion by' the United States Senate,\ncould -well be agreed upon before\nDulles d_eparts Saturday.\nThe American? state. Secretary\nnow jniist take up with the strong-\nwilled South Korean leader the\npcdhlems of unification of -North\nand (South' KoreivThis^long-soili *'\nin^tlj^C'.opetdhi\t\nIn '.Wedneiday'!. 'session, uohlch\nlasted alriidst two hours, Dulles and\nRhee were said.ti> have agreed to\nseek the opgning.of the Korean\npeace 4phfefrence ,spine .tinus. In \"the\nflrit half of October. They, turtied\nover to a* special \"working committee\" of American. and South\nKorean officials the-problems\"of\nnegotiating- details of the security\npaet.   V,\nOBSTACLE COURSE\nCONTRIBUTED TO\nSOLDIER'S DEATHS\n\u25a0PBMBROKE, OntV-TCP-)\u2014Detention punishment consisting of navigating an bbstacle course caused\nthe death of Pte,'Frederick Joseph\nBurke- of Rpgina by aggravating a\nprevjona illness, a coroner'a Jury\nruled Wedhesday night\nThe five-niah.tui^^said the sd-\ndier's previous illnesa should have\nbeeheCnaidered before the punishment wos ordered by army officers.\nThe jury,, under Chief Coroner\nSmirle tawson,. with? Bruce Macdonald of Windsor, Out., as special\ncounsel, held that pneumonia-' and\npleurisy suffered By'Burke in February and March, 1953, caused a\ncondition which over-exertion aggravated, resulting in death July 18.\nThe jury recommended that\nmore-thorough medical examinations be given all men in detention,\ntheir medical records be carefully\nexamined and any, uncertain conditions reported to officers.sentencing them to punishment. The jury\nalso suggested that henceforth medical authorities be'available at the\nobstacle course when trainees are\nSent oVer it. \"     ;\nBurke's case aroused public attention when he died .within two\nhours. of completing, a, 45-mihute\ntour of obitacle course as punishment for having overstayed a leave\nperiod.\ntary expenses. Many such:expense*\nnormally .Hated ln other coun*\ntrierf \u25a0'\u25a0liderK defehoa ;\u25a0 \"ivould -: ->Ji4\nplaced). in> other oategoriei fet wit\nSoviet estimataa. There-is ndindH\ncation,, for .exampl'e,.. how njjj'c h\ninohey under-, tbe heading .of oap.\nital. investment, gqes for7todtHtrlal\ndeveiopment'required by' tho' mill*\ntary or into other essentially military programs. United State: \u00abe\u00bb ''\npert!? estimate -that.: at; Jeast ?hall\nthe7 total Soviet budget : 'msttt\ndirectly' or indi\u00bbet!** for miMta--i*\npurposes. ..\n\u25a0\u00ab.i|._0.PW|it- \u25a0\"' f v.f.\n\u2022As revised last Maisr, ttia ?-fe>iasf'\nUnited States budget w\u00bbf VHflM.*\n00fi;00O, of- which .ip,-W.IM!\".0I\u00bb.\n-Waa for defence.. TlmitM?- *\u00bb)_\u25a0,.\nspending in.the'period ended Jiima\nSO totalled just-oyer tW4,B4i,O,OOO,O0().\nHowever, congressional paring'ha^\nahaved.the defence spendtag' eetti\nmate '.toe' ihe nwi :itioai'yttS)'::tti\n$34,500:000,000. .Comparison* ' bei\ntween Soviet and American bu*.\nget*'i'tia' dtifiiivtlt'h'ecaueil dt' di*i\nferepees in the'-tiperatioil of *\u2022\ntwo Sf\/stems.    7\nHowl  aabnoiini! <-^;\nculture,\"\" teafMtee -8' eur^us > ot\n12,800,000,000 rabies. Soviet goW\nernment income 'comes-from vari\nlona tases, .including, turnover\ntaxes?- ' state-operated' errterpriBea-\nand- various types of state loansi. ]\nSoldier_v Police Hee East Germany\nWHITE FLAGS mark Jeeps of the U.N.\nItory Armistice Commission Joint observer team\nas |hey stand it the roadilde before entering the\nKorean  demilitarized  zone.  The  meeting  with\ntheir Communist counterpart* wai cancelled when\nthe Redi failed to arrive bepauie of their Inability\nto clear rained roads In time to meet at YoncHon\non tho weitern front\u2014AP Wlrephoto.    r\nBy DANIEL DE LUCE\nBERLIN ,tAF>. \u2014 A wave of mass\ndesertions has. hit East Germany's\nRed Wehrmacht and thousands ot\nSoviet zone . railwayman have\nstarted to sabotage the Communist\nblockade of American food relief.\nTwenty armed soldiers \u25a0 and 17\npeople's police escaped to West\nBerlin Wednesday from the duty,\nof enforcing a government ban ori\nfree United States food for East\nGermans.  ...    .     ,  ',...-,.\nRailwaymen in Russian-occupied\nBrandenburg engaged in wholesale\nviolation of the' decree against relief travel to Berlin, allowing 40,-\n000 to slip Into the city. -V\nThe total 'of U.S.-tinahced food\npackages 'given away in 10 days\nreached 1,570,000. There wer* 125,-'\n000 handed out Wednesday.\nThe rush of Brandenburgers\nevading the Red railway, ban nearly equalled the number coming\ndaily before the travel ban was imposed laat Saturday night. But in\nSaxony, Thuringla, Saxony-An-\nhalt and Mecklenburg, Communist\nArmy and police patrols,still sealed off moat, trains from relief applicants.      ,7    I ,7 .\nThe deserting soldiers and police\nturned in their uniforms to Western\nauthorities. They-were given civilian dress, and a- promise of resettlement in the Bonn republic.\nThey told Allied Intelligence officers of widespread discontent in\ntha East German - armed forces,\ngrowing doily u they had to' carry\non   with    repressive   measures\nagainst the hungry people.\nIt was the largest mass flight\nsince June 24, when 46 soldiers and\npolicemen asked for political refuge in a single ' day. A total of\n2,555 troops and police haye deserted to West Berlin since Jan. 1.\nThis railway ban sabotage Was\ncarried but virtually under the hose\nof PremleV Gttd Grptewohl'a, gov-\nwhich continued to brand\nall   .relief   applicants    ''Western\nspies\" and to stage scare trials of\n|-those caught last week..\n\u25a0 The U.S. state department's German-language newspaper, Neue\nZeitung, . reported that \"Soviet\ntroops with tanks have again been\nstationed in several large East German cit)es to stamp down another\nJane 17 by torte of arm!.\"\nATTILIO PICCIONI, 81, (above)'\nli Interviewed in Rome, after conferring with President Lulgl Ein-'\naudi and agreeing to attempt to\nform a new Italian government.;\nHe told newsmen he would start:\na round of discussions aimed at;\nputting together a cabinet to \u00bbuc-\nceed that, of former Premier AI--\nelde de Gasperl, who lost a vote I\nof confidence. Piccioni ii leader J\nof the right wing of. the centre;\nChristian Democrat party. \u2014 AP\nWlrephoto via radio from Roma.\nAnd in This Comer...\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Dallas Anderton hai lost hla ducki and $100\nte boot,       : * . \u25a0-,..-. y\nThe 20-year-old Vancouver youth wai.fined $100 In .police court\ntoday for deliberately damaging the hedge of hli neighbor,.Roderick -\nMcKenzlei\nAnderton told the court the trouble started when hla family disposed of hit ducki following complaints from McKenzle that the\nb|rd\u00bb were* damaging hie hedge. ' ' '\n'The more. I thought about It the madder I got, ae I did It,\"\nAnderton laid.-\n. COLEMAN, Alta. (CP)\u2014Steve Bacovski of East Coleiiian caught\n\u00bb fish Tuesday that was worth about 30 cents an inch.\n7    Fishing in Elk Valley. B.C., he pulled in a 16-inch bull trout. H*\nftShed a while lortger and then took his catch home to clean it.    :'\n* When he cut open the trout, he found inside three $1 bills and on*\n$2 bill with an elastic band wrapped neatly around them. . :.\n\u25a0|Ie thinks the money might be a little fishy, but he's hot going\ntowasteahytimespending.it. -:\nHAZELTON, B.C. (OP)\u2014Five Hazelton Indiana hava crime up\nwith the flah itory of-the year. And what's more thev have, th>\nfish to prove It\u2014a 102-pound beauty hauled from the Skeena river\".\nDepartment of fisheries officials, ronortlnq the catch Wedheidav?-\nsald five Indiana were required to haul the big sprlna salmon from,\nthe river. It la one of the lamest catchei ever recorded. ;\nAccordlno to dooartment records, the record for a Pacific Cowt\naeltnon It 1Q^.p0iJndi, . r -\u2022    \u25a0'.'\u25a0:\u2022'\u25a0'\n*   ' titi      '\u25a0:'\u25a0 ' . -. '    ': , '        I\nVANCOTTVER (CP*!\u2014Jean-Paul S.t. Laurent, Liberal, camogi^in?\nson of the-prime minister, just can't seem to get away from opposition *\nspeakers. ,-*!*   '\u25a0.:... ''   I\nTuesday Mr.'St.'Laurent returned to his room in the.Hotel\n\u25a0 Vancouvervto finds ft-an tryina to ooen the rtoor of his room. It\nturned out to'be-CCP leader M. J. Coldwell. Mr.\" Coldwell's rnoi^\nwa! next to the'Liberal campaigner and the former had made \u25a0\nmistake in the number. :\u25a0'.'\u25a0\nLast Friday a similar misteVe happened In Grand Prairie. That\ntime it was national Social Credit leader Solon Low who was rattling\nthe St. Laurent doorknob.  ' \u2022 - \u2022\n WJs-MJlKlIMHWMilMllll\nJiW\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NRWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1933\nTONIGHT-FRI.\n_____\u00ab\nComplete Showi 7.00-9.00\n4 .^TT<\nkCOUI\n\"*\"-nc\u00ab.eoioi   .\n\/(duffs 75*\nChildren 35*\nTales of yXe0ryem Snapped\nBy 60 Pioneers at Annual Picnic\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nShowing Lott Tlm* 7\nTonight'    , .  . -\ntUitt \u00bb!45 p.m. \u2022 10145 p.m.\niimm-tmiMmmM. Iff\nJ FRIDAY arid SATURDAY ]\nNew Mliilsfer.\nHere lo Jew;\nBaptist Church\nR\u00abv. A, J. Bewbrlck'li nbw<ierv.\nlog aa First Baptist Church iplnister\nin Nelion. Tbe Nelion' Baptist congregation have bean without a.mlnliter since tbe departure of Rev.\nTheo Gibson who left jait month\nfor Medicine Hat\nMr. Bowbrlck has bean a Baptist\nmlnliter'for over, 50 years, and he\nserved on the prairies from 1868 to'\n1824. Since that time he has been\npreaching ln B. C. He hai bean\ntaking Interim pastorates since his\nretirement In 1048 and is on the active retired lilt <\n\u2022He apent four yean at Penticton,\nnine years at Nanaimo, and 12 yean\nat Burnaby. One of the highlights\nof his career, hoibellevei, wai during hla tenure at Ala Vista Church\nin South Burnaby. The Church was\nopened In 1047 and was completely\npaid for in 1848. The last MOO was\nturned In the night.of Mr. Bow-\nbrlck'a'farewej}.    7   ' \u25a0?\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022 ,'l\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nA widower, he hai three children.\nOne son ia a doctor ln Emett, Idaho?\nanother a school principal on Vancouver Island and a daughter Is\nliving lh Vancouver. *\nGILPIN HOME\nDESTROYED\nQRAND FORKS \u2014 A homo\nowned by William Jmaoff of 011-\npln wai burned te the ground\nearl**.-Wedneiday. morning. The\nblue, believed to be of Inoend-\nlery origin caused iome 41600\n- damage. Tha blare ocourred about\n6:80 a.m.\nVV'-K-W\nCastle Theatre\n\u00a3   ., CAITUI\u00abAR,''vti,ia<\nV^DNIfiHT ONLY^ AUO. 6 7\nSong of Youth\nPrfie winning color film from tho Youth Festival\nIn Berlin.\n>     (HOWS AT 7:00 AND 9:00 P.M.\n\\ .!..:.j. .    ; - '\u25a0\nNIW ARRIVAL\nLONDON - 4CP) - Another\nking penguin chick has been hatched at London roo\u2014two daya after\npenguin man Bert Jones received a\nKtologieal ioclety medal tor bringing up Prince, the -rat king penguin reared there.\nJduihmwt\n100%,Quallty7\\Vo4>l,\nPerfectly Jaijored*\n.    Jlxot 29 to 44.\n$21.50 and\n$23.50\nGODFREYS'\nPHONI\n-TO \u2014 BOX\nMrs. H. Bartlett\nRequiem Mas! was aiing at the\nCathedral of Mary\/ Immaculate\nWednesday morning lor Mri. Han-\nnan Bartlett, resident of Nelaon 'for\nthe past 81 yeara .Who died Sunday\nIn, Kootenay Lake General Hoapltal. Many old friends attended the\nfinal rlteB fqr which Hev, Father F,\nMonaban was the celebrant\nPallbearers were A. Gv Gelinas,\nGeorge Gelinas, Marshall Severyn,\nBud Godderis, L. K. Gorman and\nFrank Morrison. Interment waa ln\nthe family plot at the Nelaon Memorial Park? Rosary waa recited- by\nRey. Father Monahan Tueiday evening at the \u2022 Thompson Funeral\nHome.      '.. f\n.Mrs. Bartlett, 85 years of age, wai\nborn lh j Wotercrest, County ef\nCork, Ireland, coming to Canada In\n1880 and Britiih Columbia in 1699.\nShe Waa predeceaiec by her huiband,' George William Bartlett  In\npit,;\nMr. and Mrs. Bartlett once operated a hotel known ai the Bartlett\nHouie On Josephine Street where\nth \u2022 Ramp Garage ls.now located;\nDON'T BE LATE!\nPHONE 1518\nWHY PUT IT OFF?    ,\nBUY YOUR WINTER'S      f\nCOAL NOW and SAVE\nPAY ON EASY BUDS-T TERMS   \u2022'-.\nQUEEN CITY FUEL\nMike Fraier\nWins Third\nScholarship\nMichael Fraier. Nelion.\" High\nSchool graduate of thla year, has\nbeen awarded tbe University of\nBritish Columbia . Alumni Society\nScholarship ot $250. The scholarship\nli awarded annually on the basis\nof citizenship, athletic ability and\nscholarship and may be accepted\nwithout postponement for a registered ,year's course and the follow\nup of. a degree:\n' Thi! is tho third provincial scholarship won by Fraaer thi! year and\nis hi? ninth local, district or provincial awird thla year, a total of $650,\nHe was winner of tbe University of\nB. C. $175 award for the highest\nscholastic average (00,4 per cent) lh\nthe provincial school district! one\nta 10, winning a $275 Chris Spencer\nFoundation A ward,, awarded auto,\nmatically with the tiniveralty loho-\nlarshap. Ha wai ca-wlhner .with\nFrank Elaenar, of the Nelion High\nSchool major award last June and\nreceived Jhe \u25a0 H. W.. Butterfield\nAward (or. achieving the highest\ngrades in tha Nelaon High School\ntor tha 105?-88 school year. He alio\nwon three major awards for athletic!, social participation and' academic standard!.\nMichael Wai alio winner ot tha\nTrail Kiwanli Music Feitlval Scholarship of S60 in Mayof tbli-.year.\n300 al Knigtils'\nKinnaird Picnic\nSoma 800 Knights of Columbua,\ntheir families and friends gathered\nat Klnnalrd Park Sunday for the\nannual picnic ot the Nelsen, Trail\nand Rossland Councils. A packed\nprogram kept Both young and eld\nhighly entertained.\nHighlight of the day was the\ndousing ot the Grand Knight of the\nlosing tug-of-wor team by an In-\ngeniui device rigged up by Dr. W.\nC. Murphy of Nelion. Geoff Hartrldge ot the Nelion Council wai\nthe unfortunate one?\nThe winners of the races were:\nGlrla, 5 and 6\u2014Eileen Hartrldge,\nLinda Barefoot    \u2022   ...\nGlrli,.7 and 8-fBonnle Whltua,\nJoan Guido and Roxana -Kinahan.\nGlrla, 0 ahd 10\u2014toma Dlllnger,\nYvonne wandler, Sandra Gray.\nGlrli, 15 and 16-Carol FlrSuni.\nCarol TVemblay.\nBoyi, 8 and 6\u2014Jimmy Kinahan,\nRicky Cameron, Gary Wandler.\nBoys. T and 8 \u2014 Donnle Orsy,\nRicky Ryaon. Leo Courvllle.\nBoys, \u00bb, ind 10 \u2014 Gary Whitus.\nMickey Guido, Edmund Brandel.\nBoyi, 11 to l-t-Tomy Wurs, Clif-\nford Oagnon, Freddy Taaban.\nBoya' whe4\u00bbbarrow race, 7 to, 10\u2014\nHoward Thomas and Leonard Galla,\nJUpmy Kaufman and Mickey Guido,\nGary Whitus and J. Haley.\n,Bbya' wheelborrow.race, 11 to 14\n\u2014Dickie Gelinas ahd James Kaufman; LvGalk) and H. Thomas.\nThe ladles' egg and spoon race\nwas won by Mrs. Wi C. Murphy of\nNelson, while Mrs. ,J. A. Kinahan\nof Trail easily, won tha rolling pin\nthrow. .-.' ' \u25a0\u25a0   ,,\nTha rivalry between the Castlegar and Kinnaird C.W.L. softball\nteami was renewed ahd Caitlegar\ntook the game. -       *       -'       \u25a0\nNelson men-took the men'i lolt-\nball game .from Trail, by a more\nof 24-13. The pitching'ot George\nBriefobt and Pete Gorman for Nelaon waa the deciding factor. Father!\nTrainor and Tllrle hurled a good\ngame for Trail.\nPlenty of pop and ice cream was\navailable* for all and families took\ntheir own picnic lunches.\n\"Laugh   and   the world laughs'\nyrtth you,\nWeep, and you sorrow alone,\nA cheerful grin will let you In,\nWhere   the   kickers are never\n; known.\"\nAt least that's thb way one 60-\nyear-old summed up hli philosophy\nof life at the annual Oldtlmer's\npicnic held ln Lakeside Park Wednesday afternoon.' Over 60 pioneers\nwho lived ln Nalion near the turn\nof tha century gathered to awap\ntales and brush away the cobwebs\nfront a dim post. ,     '\nThe spry and the net ao spry, a\nfew from Mount St. Francis, but\nthe majority from their own homes,\nin Nelson, contrasted 'with tti!\nshouts and antic! of the youngiters\nwho galloped over the park like\nyoung colts, v\n- Old time tunes were played aver,'\nla small loudipeaker.\nOrie elderly gentleman who jovially demonstrated Ml footwork\nand tbe stance he had perfected\nwhllo assistant Instructor ln a famous London gymnasium remarked\nhow thing! had changed- \u2014 there\nwas no road to'- South Slocan in\nhis time, and rock! In scones he used to photograph on Cottonwood\nCreek, upstream from Nelson, era\nnow replaced by homei.\nThe talk drifted around, the early smelter in Nelson, a brick factory in Caitlegar .\u2014 one fellow\naald ha cut 22 cords of wood hli\nflrat w|nter here for thot factory,\nahd he left an office job hi London to doit He'd never seen a\ncrois-cut law before,    .7    -   V\nIt seemed hard to Imagine that\nthese, people were here lit the days\nof gold and bar-rooms and the lusty\nbrawling life of .a new town. But\none signature on tha book read,\n\"George Main! Trail et '08 to the\nKlondike. 1887\". That'i history,\nand these people were part of It-\nPack mules, Indian squawi, hotels that are now no more than a\nname, and the flrit newspaper are\nbrought to mind. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0   .\nLOTS Of VIM .\"\u2022\nAjllttlo. of the early history of\nNelion wu told by William Symms,\nwho left here In 1617 and now lives\nln Santa Maria, California. He was\nassistant instructor In what he\noolled the \"second largest gymnasium in the world\" and cheerfully\nwanted to know if the newspaper\nrepresentatives would \"like to\nwreitle or go a few rounde \" .\nHe recalled putting hla gym\ntraining to good use in Nelson\nWhen he drove No. I fire department team. \"He arid assistant chief\nBoyd were putting but a fire on\nVictoria Street and Ware standing\non the verandah hosing down thes\nburning kitchen. The verandah!\ngave way after unseen flames had\neaten the supports and Boyd fell\nthrough. Symms* ipulled hWi tip'oh'\nthe fire hose, but no sooner had\nBoyd reached safety than another\nportion collapsed and Symms\n\"dropped 80 feet to the granite\nrocks below.\" He only broke a bone\nln his foot, thanks to hla training\nin how to fall, but waa in bed for\nweek! after.\"\nHe want up ts look at the alte\nwhile in Nelson and doesn't know\nhow he lived through It\nAnother time he and his partner\ncame tearing down Stanley Street\nto answer a false alarm at the\nDally Newa when the wagon hit an\nicy spot, as they swung onto Baker\nStreet His partner waa thrown\nthrough a store Window and Symms\nlanded on hla head and wai only\nsemi conscious tor levari hour!.\nSymms muit have been* a pretty\nfair, fireman because,-he says, \"I've\nseen the time we'd beat No. '1 to\ntheir own fire arid we had seven\nblocks further to go\". At that time\nthere was a firehsll on Observatory Street and one on the corner\nof Josephine \u00bbnd Victoria. , , v \u25a0]\nCURIOUS HORSE\nHe chuckled when mentioning\none horse they had \"who had to\nbe cured of turning around in tht\nstall to look kt the bell whan It\nrang\",   i   \"\nHis wife won the mixed doubles\nIn a racing shell here in 1912, The\nrowing contest was sponsored by\nthe Nelson Yacht Club; \"She could\npull a mean oar\", he says, but he\nremember! the bathing suits ot\nthose days as considerably more\nmodest than tho preaent day attire.\nHe\"- spent 14: yeara In Nelaon,\nseven on the fire department The\nfire department watched the\nIparka fly from tbe blare that consumed the .old. Nelson smelter,\n\"There Was nothing wa could' do\nbut protect the town, from sparks\",\nhe aald, and mentioned that a firebug waa believed responsible for\nfires at that time, He also remembered the tire iri the old brewery,\n: When he posed for a picture with\nR O. Joy, Nelson HIstoflan, it was\nsuggeited he strike a pugilistic\npose. \"He's got ilx yean on me\",\nquipped Symms, \"I have to say.\n\"Hello, Pop'when I sea hlmi'.'\nJim Fowles, who came here in\nSeptember,: i860, told bt being th*\nfirst policeman in Nelson with\nJohn Scoley. \"We took it In turns,\"\nhe laid. \"I wai policeman one day\nand he wa! policeman tha next',' ,\n- Fowlei was a champion rook\ndriller back ln 1906. He and bli\nbrother George, uied the double\nJack method, one holding the iteel\nand tha other swinging the sledge.\nFowlei camo to Nelaon from\nGrey County, Ontario, about alx\nmllos from Owen Sound.\nRois Fleming let up a loudspeaker to provide recorded old-time\nmusic and wai alio used to amplify\nan interesting reading given by Mr.\nJoy. tt was taken trom the diary\not Robert Yulll, and it appeared in\nthe Dally Newi June 10, 1985, The\nitory told of the early daya of Nation arid you could see .the head!\nnodding as name! and plaoei were\nbrought:again to mind. Joy, who\ncollaborated with Walter Walt tn\nwriting tha (itory, gave, a number\nof Interesting onocdoles not mentioned in the narrative.'   '   \"   V\n'RiaiiTiR'\n.Old' tlmen who registered the\ndate of their arrivals ln the district\nare Joseph J. Foulds, 1890; Tho.\nWilkinson, 1899: H. Roper, 1906;\nFred Moore, 190$; S. L. O'Nell, 1904;\nJ. T. Price, 1885; David Robertson,\n1896; Charles Stark, 1911; James\nHeld, 1912; Ross Fleming, 1887; Mrs.\nMinnie Flaming, 1900; Mri: M. t.\nBishop, 19191 Robert Main, 1908;\nMrs. Marie Goodwin, 19il; H. J.Godwin, 1\u00bb1\u00bb; D. H. Proudfoot\n1897; Ruth H. Proudfoot, 1897; W.\nH. Duhwobdy, 1907; Wm. Forrest,\n1902; W.'A? Blanchard, 1604; A' W.\nClark, 1907; C. H. G. Lomex, 1910;\nMrs. B. Waldie, 1912; A. S. Hon-\nwill, 1998; A, G. Moley, 1907;, J.\nBowln, 1000; H. A. Burns, 1901; Mildred Burns, 1906; Mrs. A. Leap, 1896;\nBoyd C, Affleck, 1907; Mrs. Boyd\nC. Affleck, 1907; Mrs. Agnes Renwick, 1020; John H. A. Applowhalte,\n1910; Mrs. C. Heddle, 1906; S.\nFisher, 1866; George BlrUes, 1607;\nSobert Jardine, 1911; Mrs. Marcus\n[artik 1915; J, Foggo, 1907; Wm.\nThompson, 1005; Alfred Tregillus,\n1883; George Moir, Trail bt '88 to\nthe Klondike, 1667; W. J. Brodie,\n1897; W. H. Oliver, 1908; Herbert\nEner, 1012; Mrs. W. H. Marver,\n1910; R. G. White, 1907; Reg Howe,\n1906; Charlei Morrli, 1905; Mrs.\nCharles Morrli, 1895; R. R, McCandlish, 1880; Mri, R. McCandlish,\n1800; A Kirby, 1908; Mri. J. J.\nFrench, 1900; Norman C. Stibbs,\n1907; Mn. N. C. Stibbs, 1907; Mrs.\nC. V. Gagnon, 1885; Mrs. John.McPhail, 1900; Mri: T. E, Morris, (pee\nMabel.Steele) 1696.   '\nSranifeRoad\nLeadbeoters Return\nFrom Hollywood\nVery Rev. and Mra. T. L. Lead\nbeater and their two children re\nturned to Nelson Wedneiday from\nHollywood, where Dean Leadbeater\nhas been preaching tor the past\nmonth. ,.'\u25a0\nDean Leadbeater conducted ser-'|..| >\u2022 \u25a0 , lk,\nvices at St. Stephen's, Church,1 WUl HaIHC Dim I*\nwhose vicar, Rev. C. H. Perry, has VII llVltl} TIVlllt\nbeen preaching at St. Saviour's Pro-\\ ..'  v-'i.\nCathedral during'the dean's   absence.\nEn route home, Dean Leadbeater\nwaa a guest pre*acher at St' Luke'J,\nCedar Hill, in Victoria.\n'\"   \u25a0Aalc'ro-f,\/\nStar bAkery\nWdU KNOW THEY ARE\n\u25a0' FRESH\"\nStar Bakary Product! Are\nDelivered Every Tu*-aday,\nThursday and Saturday to. Your\nLocal Nelaon Merchant!.\nNaw Equipment and Our\nRenovated Premises Are  Vour\nGuarantees of (5ua|ity\n'ztoM \u25a0:\"\nBAKER?\n476 Rossland Ave.   Ph. 50\ntroll, I.C.\nIiliilllllliillllllllililllilllillliilliiiiiliii\nSixty memberi of the  Granite.\n| Road and Nelson W6meri'e Institute\nThe Weather\n\u25a0     ;.. '\u25a0   Mln. Max. Ptat\nNELSON    47      73\nKimberley,\t\nCrescent Valley\nKailo\t\nGrand Forks \t\nSpokane\t\n54 '  81 .    .07\n51 83       \u2014\n56 76      .06\n48 85\n57 85\nMidsummer Clearance\nSALE Continues\nLast Three Days for Great Savings\nTHURSDAY i FRIDAY ^SATURDAY\nif\nand their families took cart IA the\nannual picnic of the Grariite Road\nWomen'i. wstitute Wednesday afternoon at.Lakeilde Park. Picnickers enjbyed various contests, games,\nand races throughout the afternoon\narid sat down to a basket, picnic iri\nthe evening, Ice cream and soft\ndrinks being supplied by the Women's Institute. ' i\nE. Cook stole the show from tha\nladles when he won uniabelled can\ncontest; in which the contestant attempts to name the food within an\nuniabelled can. Tommy Farenholtz\nand Brian Ronmark tied for, first\nplace fn the baby contest A large\nnumber of races were he|d for the\nkiddies, including dashes, three-\nlegged, sack and wheelbarrow races.\n. General convener was Mri. C.\nJohnson and was'assisted by Mn.\nM. ROAttark with thb contest* arid\nraces, and Mrs. W. C, Leihy handl-\nlng theiice; praam arid aoft-drhtki.\n^OfEfiPltMS\nAT LAKESIDE\nAbout 250 perions saw moving\nSlctures shown by Nelson Film\nbuncil members at Lakeside Park\nWednesday-jlght Fijms \u00bbra ahown\nevery Wednesday night and The\nshowings will continue until the\nend of August, weather permitting.\nSeveral pictures were shown, but\ndrawing most interest was a Newfoundland picture, showing har-\npoonlng of whales and Seal hunting,\nand another showing Canadian\ndelta wing type jet aircraft.\nEver\/one Agrees the\nUI.RALS Will Form the\nNext Government.\nSplinter 43*oup Representation\nWould Be Dliaatroui for\nKootenay Weit\n\u2022 Ufa Get In SUp\n'      Vo*\u00ab Ulbaral\n.    Von\nIAN \"CURLY)?\nSOMERVILLE\nYour Liberal Candidate\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'\nmmsBammssmm\nDo Not CKeck These Prices\nUnless You Want to\nSAVE at LIBERTY\n\u25a0;-..\u25a0\".   Foney Rod\nSOCKEYE\nSALMON\n,.:  Sllvorllne,   Vis\ntin\n34c\"\nDELMAR\nMARGARINE\nBurn'i\n2^67c\ni j.i   i-a4SM<--_\nLICORICE\nALLSORTS\n\u2022\u25a0-\"     English\n\u00bb> 37c\nHeinz White\nVINEGAR\nGo Hon\njMfll -.-'-\n$1.19\nCoffee\n-\u2022\u25a0-'      \u25a0\u2022':\u00bb'\u25a0' **.\nTea\nLibert\/' for flovbr, aroma.\nFactory freih ground ____\nMalkin's Beit Orange Pekoe.\nSave 34e lb. SPECIAL\t\nib-93c\nib. 85c\n24 lb. bag $1 :\/5\nWewMolesiiKotexlpk 79c\nRegular . Teg. pk.\nLIMA BEANS\nFrosty; Pkg. ........I,.\nSQUASH\nfiird's Eye; Pltg. ,'..\u201e\u201e.....\nPEAS\nAylmer; I-kg\t\nASPARAGUS\nFraier Vale; PJtg. \t\n43^\n36*\n26*\n59*\nPalm Ice Cream pt. 25c\nVlgal. size'---'''\u25a0\"- :     '\u25a0 .9S\nI gol. siM__ ...\u2014: $1.85\n39*\n53*\nSTRAWBERRIES\nCedargreen;VPkg. ;......\t\nCHOP SUEY\nOr Chow Meln; Pkg \u201e\nMEATS tiMd* jaA&- ^uwieudsed.\nInformation     lean hamburger\nLli\u00bbjt to Earl Warren to\ntell you the latest.\n12:00 NOON DAILY\n':-. Aprleoti\n. ;Uit{.VVeial<'   \u25a0     ,\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0if Chortles   *'\n' La\u00ab Week\nRaspberries\n*2 baskets 3Me)\nCose 94-00\n\u2022   Peak Over   .\nPeaches In Two Weeks\nHuckleberries Arriving\n?d|y^Lbra7\u00ab\nTomatoes\nOkanagan Field\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE\nWIENERS:....\u201e f......\nLb. 35c\nLb. 35c\nLb. 39c\nFRONTS OF VEAL\nlb. 30c\nCut, wrapped and froien fer\nyour lockers ond freezers.......\nHere'e an Example of What You Receive \u2014\n33 LBS. FRONT AT 30c LB.\nTOTAL COST \u2014$9.90\nVA lbs. Veal Shoulder     v We lbs. Round Steak\nSteak\n4     Ibi. lied* Steik\n\\Vt lbs. Veal Chops\n3>\/4 lbs. Rib* to boil or\n\/-,;.: MYt    \u25a0\nIVt lbs. Chuck Steak\nWx lbs. Soup Bene; f\n7>4 lbs. looeless Roll (2\nRacists)\n2     lbs. Boneless Vea)\n.\"\u2022'Stew.  -     '\n1V_ lbs; waste or fat\nTHIS IS CHOICE VEAL; FULLY GUARANTEED AS TO\nQUALITY, FLAVOR AND TENDERNESS\nBe Sure \u2014 Shop Liberty\n\u25a0\"*   -   tor Be,st Values     *\nSelling Thursday, Friday\nand Saturday\nFOOD STORE\n c#si\nTc\nSHOE SALE\nContinues'-\nwith now lines added.\nBuy dne pair ot the regular\nprice, then choose another\npair of equal value and pay'\nonly one cont\nat     ' \u25a0' '7'...\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n653 Baiter 6t Phone IDS\nCOMMUNITY LIVING\nCARDIFF, Wale! - (CP) f A\nrural housa of a type becoming extinct In Wales is to appear in the,\nWelsh folk museum. ..Main distinguishing feature of the dwelling is\n<that cowhouse, stable ahd living\nrooms all are under the same root\nNn. Wallner\nDies al Fernie\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Burial service\nwill bo hold at Wostlnwn Cemetery\nhere today for Mrs, Andrew Wall-\nnet-, district resident tor 46 years\nwho died at Fernie Memorial Hospital Monday. Rev. S. H. Irving officiated at,funeral services at Fernie\nFuneral Home' Wednesday.\nMrs. Wollner waa born Judith El-\nnora Johnson in Jomtland, Sweden,1\nin 1000, and came to Canada and\nthis district as a child in 1007, She\nwas the wife of Andrew Wollner\nof Fernie, who survives\" her at home\nthere, and a daughter, Betty? survives her at Castlegar. She also\nleaves five brothers: William at\nGalloway, Gus at Jaffray,. Ben at\nCanal Fiat, Tennis at Yahk, and\nPetqr at Rocky Mountain House,\nAJta.      '      *     -   ?''\u25a0'.'_\n\u2022 ,'\u25a0\nSpokone to Procter\nMail Goes Vio Japan\nPROCTER\u2014Mrs. Arnold Cron-\nlund of Spokane was a guest of her\nparents, Mr. ond Mrs. Alec J. Garner ,of Procter, two. weeks ago to\nattend the diamond wedding anniversary of her grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. William Garner.\n. After her return to Spokane, she\nSent a letter to her parents. It arrived via Japan, and postmarked\nTokyo. \u2022 ..\u2022\nA World on Wheels\nHOW ABOUT THE YOUNGSTERS?\nRIDE A\nRALEIGH\nAND YOU RIDE THE BEST\nPriced from $59.50\nJ-Speed Model Slightly Higher  -\n\u25a0Z   '--\"   Pplt THE YOUNB-R YOUNGSTER\nFamoui Suhihint Tricycles, all lizes and models\nf 16.95 to $28.95. Trlkt Trallera, each $9.50.\n--:\u2022.-\"-' \u25a0 Wagons, all sizes, fram |3.25,-,-^\"f-\u00ab\nV tlrop In andChooie Pirom Our Larue Selection\n:.. .(\u2022\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nFRI\u00a3NDLY   SERVICE\n446 Baker S'\nHardware Store\nChanges Hands\nINVERMERE-Sale of the, Invermere Hardware by William Bond\nto C. E. Osterloh and M. *_. Tunna-\ncliffe, Invermere merchants, Is one\nof the largest business deals to\ntranspire ln this district in recent\nyears., '''.'\u25a0\"'  '\u25a0'  V-   :.':','\nThe business changed hands August i: ?Mr. and Mrs, Bond took\nover tlie business, from ..Frank\nStockdale In 1945. Mr. Stockdale\nhad been well known throughout\nthe Kootenays for many, jfears\" as\nhe was a pioneer resident. He died\nlh J947..\n: The-business was originally\nknown as the Invermere Construction and Supplies when it was first\noperated by Stockdale .and George\nBennett. In 1911 Stockdale; took\nover the business and'changed'the\nname to Invermere Hardware.\nSO BELOVED by members of its cori?gregation wsis the church' above that it\nwas, spirited away from Donald',to Windermere.many years ago. It is St. Peter's\nAnglican Church, the Vcelebrated \"Stolen Church.\" \u2014-J. M. Cummings phbtb.\nIt*s St; Inter's at Home\nBy WINNIFRED WEIR\nTMere are stories, of stolen jewels\nand silver plate, stories of stolen\npictures, coins, automobiles and\nother men's wives, but this is the\nstory of a stolen church.\nIt is a little church, simple in der\nsign, small Indeed beside the nearby\ntowering Rockies, but it is a little\nchurch with a past. It'is called the\n\"Stolen Church\" in the many-stories\nwritten pt its unique history, but to\ntha people of Windermere who\nkneel reverently within lta-walls\neach Sunday it Is simply, \"St.\nPaters\".  '\nSt. Peter's Anglican Church-was\nbuilt in Donald,'B.C., in 1887, the\nfirst ohurch of any denomination in\nthis hitherto churehless wilderness.\nA few years later it disappeared\nfrom Donald, disappeared ' almost\novernight as if it had been spirited\naway.    .J,,-,: i \u25a0' ,\nOf course its disappearance waa\nreported immediately to the, proper\nchurch authorities. .Many letters\nwere written, soma irate in tone.\nBut there are none ao deaf aa thoae\nwho do,not wish to hear.\niNot 'long, after a ..-.church.,..took\nshape on a grassy hillside overlooking \"Lake Windermere; a little\nchurch ao like in design and structure the Donald church that it\nmight have been ihe same. This\nwas scarcely odd because it was\nthe same even to the boards, the\nbell tower, the pews, the Bible and\nthe hymn books. But, alas, tbe\nbell was missing.\nIt all happened becauae a zealous\nSMOKED PICNICS\nSmoked,\nTenderized\nlb. 50c\nVeal Roast\nCholet young veal. P%     M _\u25a0\nShoulder t IL       1 # 1\nIb.\nVEAL RIB STEW ks.\u2014-lb.35c\nGround Beef\nLean\nand\nfreshly \u2022\nminced\n3 lbs.\n$1.00\nman and hla devout wife loved\ntheir church too much to leave it.\nSo they stole it and took it more\nthan a hundred miles away. To say\nstole it is a romantic exaggeration\nof the truth, but actually the\nchurch waa taken from Donald to\nLake Windermere while church\ndignitaries debated on itp removal\nto Revelstoke. ' '\nFATHER PAT'S CHURCH\n1 Donald, the first divisional headquarters of the newly completed\nCPR through the Selkirk Moun\ntains waa the economic, social and\nreligious centre of the district Due\nto the efforts of -Rev. Henry Irwin,\nihe beloved \"Father Pat\" of whoin\nmuch haa, been written, St. Peter's\nwas built. It was consecrated February 24, 1889 by Bishop Shillltoeand\nits worshippers were- justly proud\nof the beautiful 600 pounds silver-\ntoned bell given by the Baroness\nBurdette-Coutts and V beautltully-\nbound Bible, the gift of the Theological College ot Lichfield, England.- \u25a0' v\\ \u25a0\nTen years later commercial development and .location caused the\nCPR to change their divisional\nheadquarters to Revelstoke. Every\nfacility waa given to railway employees to move their homes: mid\nhousehold belongings to tbe larger\ntown. Even the Odd Fellows Hall\nwaa knocked down and transported\nto Revelstoke and the church waa\nto go too for it waa required as a\nchancel to the inadequate church\nthere. -.-\u2022'\u25a0\nIn fact it hod been presented to\nRevelstoke by the Synod of New\nWestminster under whose jurisdiction the church was.\n' Rufus A. Kimpton, a prosperous\nDonald merchant and-a devoted follower of Father \u25a0 Pat, decided to\nmove to Windermere when the\ndemolition orders came. They were\ndevout worshippers at the little\nSt Peter's and they had labored\nhard to establish the ohurch. They\ntook down .their own home and\nmoved, it to Windermere and they\nlooked   longingly at their church\nwhich they knew was destined to\ntravel in the opposite direction.\nThe pioneer spirit in. Rufus\nKimpton had a large measure of\ndaring. And there-were others eager\nto be in bn the adventure. Without\necclesiastic Authority Mr. Kimpton\nhad the church, .carefully dismantled and moved by barge ind\nSteamer 100 miles up the Columbia\nt, Windermere. There it was re-\nerected.\nBELL NABBED   \u25a0\".   .\nWhile it lay at 43olden awaitnig\na barge to transport it to Invermere\narnne respected Golden citizens, well\naware,of what waa transpiring, took\nthe silver-toned bell of the Baroness fihrdett-Couttes for their own\nchurch. And although high indignation was expressed at their action\nwho was to say who stole what\nand so the matter had to rest\nAhd Rufus Kimpton and his wife\nworshipped again from their church\nand now their son and their grand-\nSon Carry on the family tradition;\nAnd.a few years ago their son\nplaced in their beloved church i\nstained glass memorial window sacred W the memory of the woman\nwho so loved her church that- aha\nallowed it to be stolen.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST^, 1953 ~ 3\nS1200 Raised To Send\nYoungster to Rod-ester\n; FRUITVALE-More than $120.0\nhas been raised through donations\nfrom1 'Fruitvale and other Kootenay\ntowns to send a 10-yoar-old local\nbv to Rochestet ior' treatment for\na rare heart condition.\nThe rooney has been placed In a\ntrust fund' which will be administered by the Fruitvale, Community\nBill\nmm,\n111\niiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui|iii\nBUDGIE'\/MUM\"   \u25a0'.-\u25a0\nOM ITSTRfP\nTHROUGH STORM\nPROCTER\u2014A. budgie-naihed\nPeter and owned by Mr. and\nMrs. D. H. Butler of Prbcter, ,\nescaped from his cage one after-\u201e\nnoon, .\nThatnlght this district experienced one of the worst electrical storms in some jiears, but\nPeter, survived the elements.\nThe. next .afternoon Mrs'. Roc.\nMaida of Horrop, five miles\naway) caught him hi her rose\nbushes. She sent word of her\nfind to the general store in\nProcter and there the Butlers\nlearned that their pet was safe.\nPeter seemed glad to return\nto his diet of budgie food in\npreference to ohick \u25a0 tarter,\nwhich was all Mrs. Molda had\nto offer him. He is learning to\ntalk but has made no comment\non hla 'adventure, v\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHtlllHHHHfmi\n1\nlliMlllillillllliiiiiiiii\nCHOSEN: to attend \"United\nNations seminar at UBC in\nVanc&uver next week an\nNakusp's representative is\nDouglas Horrey, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. C. H. Horrey, and\na student at Nakusp High\nSchool. He was promoted to\nGrade XI at the end of the\nterm. His trip will be sponsored by Nakusp Rotary\nClub.\nChest The organization estimates\nthe sum will allow tor normal hospitalization' tone month) and* for\nhis mother staying with him.,::\nA reserve fuhd, It more money is\nneeded, has;' been made available\nthrough Trail Rotary Club.\nContributions have come In from\nmany outside groups as well as from\nlocal organizations, including $227\nfrom Ladles' Auxiliary'to Fruitvale\nbranch of the Canadian Legion, $50\nfrom Fruitvale' Women'a Institute,\nand 410 from Pythian Sisters, The\nlast two. organizations have offered\nmore money if it is needed.\n, The lad la the son ot Mr. and\nMra. William Wii on, and was born\nin Saskatchewan. His ailment was\ndiscovered ln recent months.. ,\nDoctors are expecting ,word any\nday as to when the bey should be\nat Rochester.,.\nARE YOU\nMOVING?\nTwo Fires Quelled\nIn Invermere Area\nINVERMERE\u2014Two fireB'in the\nInvermere area occurred Monday\nnight. One near Goldie Creek was\nreported to.the Forest Service by\nL. A. Kelly of Windermere and was\nextinguished promptly by E. M.\nKelly of Windermere and was extinguished promptly by E. M.\nGoodwin and his son. Origin ofthe\nfire il unknown. Assistant Ranger\nAnderson -was in charge.\nThe second fire was reported by\nSwansea lookout man, N. Vernon\nWood. It was in the Frances Creek\narea -ind resulted from a lightning\nstrike in the afternoon. Suppression\naction was taken under Assistant\nRanger Frank Old. It was still\nI burning Tuesday morning with a\namall crew emlpoyed,\nNe<ws of the Day\nRATES: tOo line, 40o line black face type; larger type ratei on\nrequeat Minimum two linos. 10% discount for prompt paymont\nSummer Handbags in white and\nnatural. ADRIAN MILLINERY.\nCANOE LIKE NEW. .APPLY 306\nVICTORIA ST. \u2014 PHONE 563-X.\n\u2022arenadera at the Playmor\n.    Saturday, 9 to 1.\nHunting and Fishing Licencei\nJack Boyca Men's Shop.     .\nORDER YOUR FIREWOOD NOW.\n4-FT. SLAB OR CUT TO ORDER.\nPHONE S80-L,\nFLOWERS* THE  PERFECT 61FT\nFOR ANY OCCASION.\nCOVENTRYS' FLOWER SHOP\nQuilted plastic fabric bridge table\ncovers.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nRaspberries, gooseberries and\nblack currants for sale. Phone Mrs.\nBecker.\nMystlk Self-stlk cloth tape \u2014 all\nshades, %\" 80s; :W,60c.ti...\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nt04X> credit note on GMC truck or\nPontlae  car   at   dlacount.  Phone\n685-X-l. ;:'\u25a0';;.-\u25a0'\u25a0\nH BUTTERFIELD can't fix tt,\nthrow it away. Watek work pewtspt-\nly d6ne and. fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prieos.\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\nWash your ear, windows, outside\nfurniture, etc., with a Dixon Auto\nWasher. Screw! on garden hose,\ncleans quickly and easily.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nSlocan Hospital\nGefs $200 Grant\n..,. . .. . ,-, y?i^y \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 \\ \u25a0\nHEW DENVER\u2014fee Slocan Community Hospital hen has received a\n$200 grant from the provincitl government to aid in the purchase of\n$600 worth of sundry equipment.\nThe sum waa part of $16,300 in\ngrants-in-aid recently approved by\nthe B, C. government for 21 hospitals |n the province. All constituted\none-third of the purchase price.\nINCH OF RAIN\nWELCOMED IN\nCRANBROOK AREA\nCRANBROOK\u2014Nearly ona inch\nof rain fell in a five-hour period\nhere which followed a doubleheader thunderstorm. It wai the firat\nappreciable precipitation of the\nmonth and moisture was .urgently\nneeded through the whole district.\nOnly one lightning strike in\nwood land waa reported by lookout\nstations and the long rain after the\nstorm extinguished this without\nforest branch assistance. \u2022\n-Haying was fairly well completed and under cover, nnd the rain\nwill add appreciably to the second\ncut later this month. '\nFOR ELECTION INFORMATION\n. PHONE 169S\nLIBERAL HEADQUARTERS\n426 BAKER ST, NELSON\nVOTE FOR CURLY SOMERVILLE\nCold Pack Canners, Presto Cookers, Canning Cans,  Can Sealers,\nCherry   Httera,   Wood   Spoons,\nStrainers, etc.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nWa are prepared to Ms* an aay\nbuilt-up or asphalt no*** frb.\nSide wall akl-glea mi aMaee. Al\ninquiries promptly ottnislid ta.\nD. B. Keny Lumber Ot. flnrit\nAPPLICATORS\nBicycle accessories! Bells, horns,\nkick-stands, delivery baskets, lighting sets, padlocks, tires and tubes,\netc. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.' if;?\nMidsummer Clearance, Sale\u2014See\nour   window  for   specials.   Other\nItems too numerous to Include.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nDont threw away yaw old Une\nTrade them at\nSUPERIOR, MOTORS*\nTire Department\n*' \u25a0\u2022   '\u00bb'.,:\u25a0[\nNine piece walnut bedroom suite,\nwith swing back mirrors, Sacrifice\nat $174.95. '\"-\nWe buy and eeH sew and vied\nfurniture.   \"\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 Hail St\nInjured While\nRepairing Chain\nKASLO - A. E. War-lie of Kai.\nlo badly injured his left arm on\nhii ranch early thii week, while\nattempting to repair a tow chain,\nThe battery ot his truck haVingrun\ndown, Mr, Wardle attached the\ntruck to a imall cultivator, hoping\nit would pull the truck to the nearest incline. The towing chain came\nloose and white adjusting the chain\nthe cultivator engine slipped into\ngear, catching Mr. Wardle's left arm\nand badly lacerating it, almost to\ntha shoulder. His right hand received minor injuries.\nAltar Bound?\nif Wedding Gowns\n\u2022\u2022Ir Bridesmaid Dresses\nEverything for the Bridal Party\nHas Been Personally Chosen\nby Mrs. Arthur of\ne^RTHUR'S\nBRIDAL SALON '\nKuhn Bldg., Spokane\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND, WALL\nALL NEWLY DECORATED\nAn ideal family hotel right down town.\nReasonable rates.\nUNDER NEW  MANAGEMENT\nTO SMOOTH\nGOH-WWHIN If\n60B WITH UI - , .\nOut -4Mt a\u00abt sputa By\ncushioned to toko eveny\nbump with ease, give fuH\nprotection to your farm,\nture. Gall today for our\nPhone 889\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\nREAD' THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY |\n\u2022 Strongbarn is 56% stronger than i\ntional materials by actual test!\n\u2022 Strongbarn is ap to 21 lbs. tighter, ymt\nlabor, money and materials by spacing\nrafters and, studding farther apart!\n\u2022 Strongbarn fits tight... stetya flat and even,\nmakes snug joints, won't tear or sag ttndei \u25a0['\nheavy wind and snow loads! 7\n\u2022 Strongbarn k easy to put up \u00bb-, stoonft\nlight sheets are nailed in a jifly!        >\nSlop In and see Ihk modem roofing tmdtMHrmi)\nWe'll be happy lo chow you how to MM with\nStrongbarn. \" f'-\nStrength and economy om youH with\nSTRONGBARN\nPriced at $16.50 per 100 sq. ft.\nCONGOWALL\nThe perfect answer fo all your kitchen\nand bathroom , renovating problems.\n34\" high, per Hn. ft. _ 81*\nA New Stock of Famous Name\nLINOLEUMS\nIn light ond:heavy weights to enhance\nyour floors. Drop, in to see our new\ndisplay room.      '\nFor All Your Pointing and Building Needs\nBURNS\nLumber Company\nPHONE\n1180\n602 Baker Si.    Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE\n1181\n \u25a0^^\u2022^w\nB#\n77-\nititi\n[\u25a0' Established April 52, 1003 V\n.-\"[\u25a0:    British CoIumbfcrV -\nMosl \/nferesffng Newspaper\nPublllhed every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITEP,\n286 Baker Streot,   Nelion,   British Columbia.\nAuthorised as Seoond Clais Mall,\nPoil Office Department, Ottawa.\nMBMBBB OF tlOD CANADIAJN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF. CIRCULATIONS.\n***laateat**a**\u2014+aami\u2014i im h>mm**'*iaei\u2014mit+*^*ft,t*e'i  I \u25a0 .\u2014\u25a0_. ,\"-\ni Thursday, August B, 1953\niWyswpiiit>Hsi\u00absisss^n,_sissss<s\u00bb|i__^  lisi   Si    mn  |l,*\u25a0\u25a0'!\u25a0\u25a0 ip isn'inisne-\nNeed of Compromise\n'\u25a0'.   In Chlnq Dispute.\nf. It is increasingly apparent a difference of opinion exists as to, how the\nfree world should treat Communist\nChina, and, unless compromises are\nobtained-between the two viewpoints,\nthe division may become even greater.\nIt's Just as well to recognize this situation and to have it discussed openly\nrather than let it magnify behind the\n; scenes. '!.'\nThei United Kingdom, which had\nrecognized Communist China prier to\nthe Korean conflict, Is inclined to the\nadmittance of that state to the United\nNations, though perhaps not in the\nimmediate* future. The United-States\nis much against it. The United Kingdom also is in favor of enlarging trade\nwith Chin*, except for strategic materials, and the United States; is pp-\nIf and when the issue arises in the\nUnited Nations, the United Kingdom\nis likely to find considerable support,\nfeels the Windsor Star. The obdurate\nattitude and statements of Secretary\nof State Mn Poster Dunes may alienate iome :iupport from the? United\nStates. There are those who believe if\ni ,the*re is to \"be any possibiliftr of a.real\n.'peace, there\"must be ah effort to find\nsome common ground between the two\nworlds. An obstinate refusal to seek\njgny common ground could have repercussions. -\nOn the trade aspect also the United\n\u25a0Kingdom,probably-will find some support. Many nations are dependent upon\nan enlarged foreign'trade if they are\nto have any hope of a solid prosperity.\n[The United States dpes not have to\ndepend much on foreign trade because\nall but about 10 per. cent of her production is consumed ln her great home\n! market That fortunate fact'makes-'it\nsomewhat difficult for her to understand that trade is virtually a ipatter\n\u25a0of life or death for some other countries. ',\u25a0 ' \u25a0\nIf there is a sincere'effort to reconcile the United Kingdom and United\nStates viewpoints, it can perhaps, be\ndone. But it cannot be. done if one side'\nor the other is adamant.\nElection Confusion\nCoincidence has provided more\nconfusion than usual for the electorate\nof Grenville-Dundas rifling in Ontario.\n. .The sitting member, Aria C. Casselman, is being opposed by Arthur C.\nCasselman, as he was in the 1949 election. They are the only two in the\nrunning. Both have the same initials,\nA.C.C. . '\nNot only do we understand the\nquandary the voters in Grenville-Dundas must be in, but we feel absolutely\nsick about those poor fellows who must\nbe going crazy running the publicity\nfor the two Casselmans? Imagine not\n-being able to pi^t a simple slogan like\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0Vote foy Casselman\" in an advertisement, or ''Casselman is the Man\" on a\nINTERS TO\nTm: EDITOR\nLetteri to the editor on any toplo ol\n'   genuine Intoreat are welcome If thty are '\nbrief, accurate snd fair, No letter will ba\nInsertee) in whala, or In part, exoept ever\n, the ilgnature and addren at the-writer. '\nUntolloltod correspondence cannot ba re-\nv .'turned..\nThought. Responsibility\nShould Be Voter's Guide\n-. to ti\u00bb-Editors   '     -\nSir\u2014Tho day of tho federal election fait\napproaches. Thii fact ihould be viewed with\na great deal of thought anil responsibility, and,\n, I might soy, keen interest, by all classes and\nmembers of society. The (act of an, eloctlon\nsuch ai ours Is the hallmark ot a democratic\npeople, It ahould be accepted with thanksgiving, as a privilege, and therefore as a responsibility..;\nThe thing that concern! me is that,' apar-J\ntrom the responsive party candidates themselves, and a few of their stauncheat support-\n\u2022 ers, the general public appears; to ba completely oblivious and indifferent to the momentous nature of a general election. Is this\nthe result ot prpsperlty snd self-satisfaction?\nIn the lo-called \"hungry thirties\" people wera\nnot indifferent to elections and the destiny ot\nsociety. Now lt doesn't seam to matter who Is\nsent, to Ottawa, or what they may do when\nthey arrive. I sometiinei think that people\ntreat democracy like they do a car\u2014It's only\nwhen the thing breaks down.that they wake\nup to the tact that the ratties and squeaks\nhave; been accumulating without their being\naware of it until too late. Of democracy and\nthe Christian way of lite, like of so many\nthings, it may be said; \"Use lt, er lose lti\"\nAgain, when an election approaches,\npeople are urged to get out and vote. It has\nbeen said: \"It doesn't matter how you vote,\nbut vote.\" I feel that this is the wrong emphasis altogether, much as I agree with the ballet\nthat everyone should exercise their franchise.\nBut I believe it far more Important that people\nahould .vote with some degree of knowledge\nand understanding of what they aro doing,\nBetter not to vote at all thah ta vote India-!\ncrimlhetely..\nin fact, some of us ln conversation came\n. to the conclusion that lt might ba well If only\n'  those who had studied the election issues, the\nneedi of their community and country, etc.,\nand then achieved a good mark ln aa examination, be allowed to vote. If aome restriction!\nof thll nature, or shall I say requirement!,\nwere placed on the matter of casting a ballot,\npeople might appreciate the privilege a little\nmore, and, at any rate, our representatives\nwould be chosen in a wiser and more cbnici-'\nentloui manner, even though there might be\n-\u2022far fewer voteri. ii,  ' \u25a0\u25a0 ,\nPerhaps our representative whoever that\nma** happen to be in the hext Parliament,, may\nintroduce aome legislation to this effect!.\n'\u25a0\u25a0;\"      y[    . ,}?ALLANDIX^rj;' ,\"\nFor Safer Crossing\nOnce again the suggestion hai been made\nthat freight cars should carry aome sort of reflectors to warn motorists approaching railway\ncrossings at night, This time the proposal came\nbefore Parliament Just before.it adjourned. It'i\nto be hoped it will get attention.      \".->\nSomething like thla could be done at very\nlittle expense. Simple and cheap glass reflec-\n. tora or epecial paint would be all that ii necei-\naary.\nIn a large number of crowing accident!, it\nIi not the train that hlta the motor vehicle, but\nthe other way around. And when one comei.\nsuddenly on a long freight sliding across a\nlonely road on a dark night, it ia easy to un-\nderstsnd why. After the engine hu paued\nthere ia uaually no more light at all until the\ncaboosa comes along, sometimes a mile behind. Painted in dark and' neutral colon, lt ii\ndifficult for headlight! to pick up the moving\nfreight'ears, eapeclally when the railway ii a\nfew feet ebove the normal level of the road.\n\u25a0..   ...,'.   . \u2014financial Port.\nbillboard, or \"A.*C. CasBelman\u2014x\" in\ncampaign literature. '\n\" The Liberals, however, probably\naren't as upset over the situation as\nthe Conservatives. After allj the Lib-\n, erals and Arthur C. Casselman lost\nthe last election in Grenville-Dundas,\nwhereas Arza C. Casselman won it for\nthe Conservatives. The Conservatives\nthus have to worry about the supporters of Am C. in the 1949 election voting for Arthur C, by mistake, of^\ncourse, in the 1953 election.\nConfu\u00abingr isn't it?\n^Questions ?\nANSWERS\n: Open to any reader. Names ol persona\nuklng queitloni will not bs published.\n,   There   li   no   ohai-fle   for  thii   lervloe.\ntjueitloni  WILL  NOT   BB  ANSWBBBD\nBY MAll. exoept where there U ebyleui\n* ntaeiilty far privacy.      *\nC. B., boswell\u2014Is there a Spiritualistic Group\nin NelBon?\nPerhaps othor readers can help?\nMrs. R\u201e Cranbrook\u2014Can you please give me\n. tha names of iome hotels not too-far from\nrailway depots in Penticton ond Nelson7\nPenticton: Incola, Oreen Gables, Cosmopolitan. Nelson; Hume, Savoy, Royal, Madden,\nNew Grand, plvlc, Stirling.      I\nG. 0\u201e Kimberley\u2014I remember bearing ovar\nthe radio: oi, the University Extension\nClasses.   Could   you   give   ma  -correct\n\u25a0'\"address? .-\u2022''.*'     V ' \u2022  \/'\u25a0:\u25a0\nWrite to the Director, University Exten-\n, lion Classes, U.B.C., Vancouver, B.C.\nIntareited, SaBca\u2014What ii the number of\nregistered voters In B.C. and how many\nvoted in last Provincial election?\n740,207 men .and women were eligible to\nvote ln B.C. and over 600,000 voted.\nV. S\u201e Kimberley\u2014What w.as the population\nof B.C. at last census? What was the\nnumber ot registered voters in B,C. at\ntha  1649 Federal >lectlbn?' How many\nvoted in B.C, in the last Federal election?\nPopulation of B.C., according to last figures: 1,165,210. There were 7,803,628 eligible\nvoteri in 1040, 673,732 in B.C. (This does not\ninclude spoiled ballots.)\nLooking Backward\n40 YIARS AQO\nFrom the Nelion Dally Nawi, August S, 1943\n'  Forty-one men have registered at-Nelson\nunder orders' for compulsory transfer to ei-\nlentlal industry.\nConstruction of a new 300-yard rifle\nradge,, at which rifles, machine' guns and submachine gum may be uied, ii under way by\nNelion platoon of the Rocky Mountain\nEangeri. ,\n28 YBAR8 AGO i\nFrom the Nelion Dally Newi, August 0,1928\nNorman Slader and John Bliss ol Nelion\nand Ralph Chalmeri of Thrum! will represent\nWert Kootenay in boys' judging contests, at\nthe Pacific Exposition at Vancouver.\n- 7 Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cuthbert, Victoria\nStreet, have left for a holiday to bo spent' in\nVancouver..\n,7, BO YEARS AQO\nFroth the Nelion Dally Newa, Auguat 6? 1003\nThe lite for the Kootenay Launch Club\nboathouse will be at the foot of Park Street, to\nthe eastward of Kootenay Lumber Company's\nboom.. -,..'\u25a0       '.\nThe Chinamen are gathering a large harvest of raspberries and blackberries along the\nSilver King and Athabasca wagon roads.\nCity Engineer McCulloch la at Cottonwood Lake directing the work of strengthening the dam and the outlet of the creek from\nthe lake.\nArrow and Bow\n(Stratford Beacon-Herald)\nThe Hunting and Field Archers' Association of Ontario has requested the Legislature'\nfor a special open season for bow and arrow\ndeer hunters ln advance of the regular season.\nThe reason given is that of safety. Bow and\narrow hunters do not wear bright colored\nclothes such as gun-toting hunters wear;\nrather ia camouflage essential for the bow and\narrow technique.\n, The sport has become popular ln the\nUnited States, and ia gradually, making its way'\ninto favor with Canadian sportsmen. Especially in populated areaa it li much safer,'but\nwith ao many hunters with firearms skulking\nabout ih wooda and pastures, there, is danger\nthat these sombre-suited bow and arrow men\n\"will be jtaken for deer.\nIt's Been Said\nA very great part of the mischiefs that\nvex thii world arise! from word!.\u2014Edmund\nBurke.\nYour Horoscope\nExcellent portents are ln evidence, favoring business activities and other, excellent\nopportunitiea. it ihould be a happy year: Born\nunder these portents, a child may be exceptionally lucky, btit ahould not be extravagant.\nToday's Bible Thought\nThere is healing power in sunlight, in water, but faith has a rejuvenating quality greater than-any\nmaterial element.\nThey that wait for Jehovah shall\nrenew thalr strength.\u2014Isaiah 40:31.\nQimt2{pL_\nI knew ahe waa a widow or some-\nthin'. When a woman gropes around\nhalf-blind because she's too vain to\nwear glasses, I figure she's still\nhuntln'.''\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\nPHONE  144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nWhere on Earth\n\u25a0'-    : M Tlia S*lia Itatyt\n^-3SS-''v7<5^j,:''  '.\n***\u25a0*.'\nCONIIUBY to anyone's |ue_, thi\nSwlaa naty doea not belong to thai\ntlme-wom category of aowca Itomi\nlit* hitt'a Math .and blui moons,\nFor eren though the Btrtaa \u00abr\u00ab land-\nbound and ringed with mountains.\nt*noj do pouau \u2022 fleet of merohunt'\n'nipSi.-.'..\nTheir navy bad itar itart In the\nearly daya Of World Wir II. Baton\nthat time, Swltserlsnd had hired\nforeign Ships to carry lta Import!\nand MporU, But, with the outbreak;\nof. hoatutlea, the neutral' nation\nI dlieovmd that It eould beat safeguard Ha own cargo! aksinit aa*\nattack trom belligerent powers by\nrunning thom to\/ships under the\nSwiss flag. The eame eipedlent alio\nguaranteed raidy aeoesa to foreign\nports of discharge. In time, other\nihlpi were added to the. new mar-\nchant fleet to transport \"ft\u00ab_, Oram.\nsupplies. :\u25a0\u25a0*\u2022':''\u2022'.'\n\u25a0 today tteflHt li Wied bj'lprt-\nTate companies and numbers twenty vessels In a|l. Under the Barcelona Convention tif 1981 which decreed that countries ' iithout a\ncoastline could operate their own\nships, the Swiss \"port\" of registry'\u25a0\nla Balle, and the Officii for Maritime Navigation in that Mme.dty\noversees all Ma-goUg operations.\nTho latest addition! to tha fleet\nWen sent down the ways a taw\nyears ago by British shipbuilder!\nWllllsm Dray, Ltd.. The launching!\nIncluded -the 9100-ton. General\nOulMn, w well is two omsller motor ships with a weight ot 3,000\ntons eaoh.\nSo, if you should sight the Swlis\nflag flying ovor thl ocean at any\ntime, don't rub your eyes In disbelief. The Swiss fleet la \"the real\nkfcOoy.\" I\noontutii. mi. n. T. BaraM mtm ma.\nTHANKSt Jeremy Ulllo, Ce*-\nbrldgrt, England.\n\u25a0ml 1st m locti Is \"Whan 0* lottti,\"\nrata M tela \u2022\u00ab\nWith Einstein\nBLOOMINGTON, Ind. - (AP) -\nA Czech refugee mathematician haa\ncome up with the \"next to impossible\", solutions of Albert Ein''\nstein's latest theory of the uni.\nverse... 7 . --, >\n! i Until experiments provide actual\ntests, Prof, Vaclav Hlavaty of Indiana University is not fully ready\nto 7 accept Einstein's. theory that\nthe universe is well-ordered.\nBut, If Einstein Is right, Hlavaty\naald his .complicated mathematical\nspadework will prove that electro,\nmagnetism rules, the universe, the\nbasis of .all matter,\" energy and\ngrayity. ? . , ,\nMost atomic scientist! believe ln\nthe quantum theory that everything is baaed on dunce. Einstein,\nwhen he proposed his unified field\ntheory three years ago, said:,\ncannot believe that God ploys dice\nwith the cosmos.\"\nNd. SOLUTION, '\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0   '\u25a0'\nEinstein said the mathematical\nequations of his new theory' were\n\"gropings In, tha dark.',' -He had\nno solution for them himself,, and\nthe Austrian scientists Schrodlnger\nsaid the solutions would be \"next\nto Impossible.\" I,       \u00bb'7  .\nHlavaty, who began applying his\nmathematics to physios, problems\nonly three years ago, arrived \u25a0'. at\nhis solutions with equations involving 64 unknown quantities. A colleague said. the problems were ! sc\ninvolved they were far beyond the\ncapacity of mechanical' brain machines.\nBoth Einstein and Schrodlnger\nhave-commended Hlavaty On his\naceompllsbment,\nHlavaty considers his mathematical work on the cosmic theories\nunfinished. He said further work\nneeds to be done before his solutions may be compared -with results of physics experiments,* and\nhe added: . \u00ab\nThe crucial experiment has yet\nto be devised.\"\nHlavaty believes his work on the\nEinstein's law\u2014and\u2014order . theory,\nwith the atomic scneptlsts' theory\nof happenstance. '    \u25a0\nIN OTTAWA. .\"'-Ml . .?. Molt\nRev. Maurloe J. Lemleux, formerly Blihop of aravalbetlrg,\nSask., wai appointed Arohblahop\nof Ottawa In July, 10B3, luoceed-\ning tha lata Archblihop Alexandre ^aahoh who died Maroh 80,\n1962. Born at Quebeo city May 10,\n1002, Arohblihop Lemleux itudled\nthere at the College Ste, Anne de\nla Pbcatere. He entered the Do-\nmlnlban Order In 1923 at St,\nHyaclnthe, Qua. He did postgraduate work ln< theology lii\nRome, and at 34 wai appointed\nBishop of Sendal, Japan, at that\n'time the youngeit blihop of tho\nRoman Catholic Church In the\nworld. He returned to Canada at\nthe outbreak of the Second World\nWar. He wai appointed Blihop of\nOravelbo'urg In 1938 (CP photo)\nThanks U.S. But\nRegrets Grant\nMANCHESTER (Reuters) - The\nManchester Guardian in\" an editor\nlal says Britain should hove refused to accept a United States\ngrant' to remedy \"the deficiencies\nof British capitalists and of the\nBritish government.\" 7\n\"Unlpls we,haVe become a nation\not mendicants, we should blush at\nthe thought\" of accepting a grant\nol ...3,000,000 to' be spent during\nthe.next three years on Increasing\nBritish productivity, the editorial\n.addi.    .\nCommenting on a government\npolicy, statement on the disposal\nof the aid,*the Guardian empha-\nizlei that \"toward! the United\nStatei there Will :be pothlng but\nappreciation qfe rare act of gen'\neroslty. ?      .?:\u2022\u2022,\n',Tn allotting money tor the improvement, of the economic, condi:\ntion! of another country; the\nUnited States is showing a splendltj\na'.trulsm. But must British industry\nbe educated, and bribed, at Amerl-\ncan expense lijto efficiency?\n\"Naarly '\u00a3800,000 is for advisor*?\nservice, the bringing to,the notice\nof. individual flrflis of improve-\nmenta ln^ modem technique. The\ncynic will wonder whether, Tjnleai\nthe profit, motive' haa ceased ', to\noperate or the British character\nhas* gravely (deteriorated, lt really\nneeds all tiilsrpropaganda to make\nthis business, system work.\"\n'AIDS'FARMERS\n'* NEW DELHI (CP)\u2014More than\n460 \"filter points\", each capable of\nIrrigating about. 10 acres of farmland, have been Installed ln coastal\ndelta area's of Madras in recent\nweeks. The filter points provide\nwafer supply during montha when\nthe regular* irrigation canals are\ndry.\nPig Whir0 To Stticty Mote\nftr^Tfaspoiv mJ$6etwg\nBy JOHN M. HIQHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Britain,\nthe United States, and France are\nexpected to consult promptly on\nRussia's acceptance ot thalr bid\ntor a Big Four meeting on German\nunification this fall.   '  ** - - '\u2022\nSoviet objections to Joint action\namong the? Western powers, as sat\nforth ln a note releaiad by Moscow\n^Tuesday night, were regarded here\naa mainly propaganda.\nThey did rtSt appear to make the\nslightest difference ln tho thinking\nof Western diplomats,? who, were\ndue' to go ahead with proposal!\nfairly soon for a data and place\nfor the Big Four foreign ministers,\nmeeting...' ...v.,-'. - 7 ,' .\u25a0''; \"\nTAKING LONG LOOK    :\nThe three Western governments\nseemed certain, however, to take\na long and. careful look at l3ovlet\nsuggestions for including Red China\nin a! possible' co'nfererioe later on\ndecreasing world tension generally.\nFlrsLthe., Western powera uaually\nhave Insisted that tension! can best\nbe removed by solving specific\nproblems such as the unification of\n43armahf  \u25a0\u25a0 .-*'\u2022'\"\"'., *\nSecondly, all three V\/estern governments aro keenly sensitive to\nKremlin .efforts to exploit the 'differences ln their approach to Communist China, which Britain recognizes and the United States and\nFranoe.do not,    ,   -..\nThe Mo.scow note was due for\ncareful study here, U.S. officials\nsaid. Initial reaction- waa that tho\nRussians? appeared to have accepted the* meeting proposal in) a\nmanner which made further nego.\ntlatlona dealrable, \u25a0  \u2022 ':\nMAY ;AWAIT DULLES\nDecisions on a forihallreply may\nawait this return ot State Secretary\nDulles, now conferring in Korea\nwith, President Syngipan Rhee.\nWestern, officials ate determined\nthat polltloal freedom throughout\nGermany bis an essential step ln\nthe process of, setting up on all-\nGerman government and that such\na government must be created before a peace treaty con bo signed.\nTheir argument has bean that a\ntreaty drafted by the big powers\nln tho absence of a representative\nGerman regime would be a dictated\ntreaty, rather than i a negotiated\none\", - ' 7   ' 7, ,    ' . :\u25a0'   *-.\nSome authorities considered that\nthe*'Soviet note left the way open\nfor. proceeding along this line,\nsince, in referring to discussion of\nthe German problem, it mentioned\nflrat Uie establishment of German\nunity, ahd second tha conclusion\nOf a peace treaty.\nEssentially? there are only three\npossible solutions to, the. problem\nOf (Jermany: \u25a0'.:\n1. That'.the Russians agree to let\nthe whole country bo unified under\na pro-Western government;\n2. That the Western powera agree\nto let'the Reda take aver the whole\ncountry;..   .       ',\"'\u25a0. .::.       .-'\n3. That all of Germany be \"neutralized\" 'under a government Independent ot tie! with either East\n'or'Wait'-7, :'\u25a0'\u25a0.'\u25a0-'\u25a0: \u25a0-.\"\n60 EVANGELISTS\nTO JAPAN MEET\n.: VANCOUVER \u2014* A group of 00\nEvangelists including three Canadiana took off for Tokyo this afternoon In the first of two chartered\naircraft destined for the sixth world\ncongress on evangelism to be held\nin the Japanese capital August 0-10.\nTlie second contingent ot 60 Youth\ntor Christ delegates Is scheduled to\nmake the 5000-mile air journey to\nNippon on Thursday.\nFifteen hundred delegates from\nall parts of the world will attend\nthe congress.\nORIENTAL VISITORS ,\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Mayors of JB\nleading Japanese cities will spend a\nday in Vancouver in August as'the\nguests of the city. A series of luncheons, industrial and scenic tours are\nplanned fpr the visitors who, will\ncome here following visits to San\nFrancisco and Seattle. ?>\nBring the\nChildren...\n(jGinyou'r..-\/lilts'to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFrisndly Hotel Spokans.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstoy fres with their\nj parents.\n.BrlnQthe children to\nsee the heart of    .\nthe Inland Empire. . .\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Porfctno at our Front\npoor!\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\n[SiivtftiGrill  . \u25a0\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   OAILV\nWELLINGTON (Heuters) - New-\nZealand upholstery workers here\nsay they prefer Canadian to British\ntacks. Season: Canadian tacks are\nsterilized. British ones are rusty\nand dirty. This is unsanitary tor upholsterers who hoi* the tacks ln the\nmouth while working. '\nEverything Is J\nyours to enjoy In air conditioned comfort \u2014i convenient to the shopping and\ntheatre dlstrlots. Dellcloui I\nmeals In the Coffee Shop I\n..or Dining  Roomi, spark- J\nling  refreshment!   In  the\ni Donkey Room, gay, nlfiht-1\nl.ly dancing In the Pioneer I\nI loom, your own TV set]\n\u25a0 for your own .room-.\n- the Cordial\n\"     COEUR D'fiLENE\n' HOTEL_\n228 N. Howard al Trent Ave.\nHELPFUL\nHINTS\nYou can keep\ncut-flowers\nfresh much\nlonger by pulling g little .'\n\"SIFTO\" Sail In the woler;\n'\u2022'\u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0''     \u25a0*\u25a0\n     Isllsii'i I\nFishes rkKh your tibl* I- o\\...\nfrish snd crisp. Thiy't, taiitid\nfrsih dilly In on plint il lortdon\nOnttrls\u2014rlihl hm Is C-ui\nTHE CRISP, CRISP FLAKES WITH\nTHE DEEP, DEEP FLAVOR\nWhen you open e package of Kellogg's Corn '\nFlakes you catch a hint of fl* tantalizing aroma\nthat aayi \"These golden flakes are just baked*.\n... fresh from our radiont ovens.\" o\nThis freshness is a good reason why millions .\nof. folio will\u2014MSlrt tplnorfov mornlh-i--;\nenjoy Kellogg's Corn Flakes for breakfait, la\nthere a boa in your kitchen now, or should  '\nyou lee your grocer today? . M\nOopi. . . Soj-ry!\nSo many people sent for Kellogg's \"Even-Heat\"\nFrying Pans that we couldn't keep up with tho sudden tremendous demand. Plaase.be patient.'Wo are\ndoing everything possible to got them to you\nquickly. .][] . i:\u25a0.'\nP. O. BOX 1822, TORONTO, ONTARIO.\n\"\u25a0-\" '\u25a0    - , \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'        P; *   y..\n\u2022\u25a0-Mi.iiTii'w-'\".'afii  iiMi I, ,. ii \u25a0_ ,,.,,'   t '-ii i I,'  ir\/  ;  i ii-'    \u25a0;\n \u2014,\u2014__\nM<M\n\"It 0ays To Buy' Quality\"\nBoltir Grade Children*!\nWHITE (SHOES\n.7 Regular to $4.7S ,'.'-\"\nSALE $3.85\n\" SANDALS '.;\n\u2022Regular |4.2II\nSALE $2.95 i\n'        Regular'stool* of\nWOMEN'S   GOLDEN\nPHEASANT\nRegular to $14.05 '\u25a0'\"  '\nSALE $0.95\nR, ANDREW\n.  & &>.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n.';,.    Eatabllihed 1901!\n- The pulp* of baiadita, fruit of the\npommegronate, Is Uied In tho manufacture of cooling.drinks.\n$alctci| Sandwich Plate\nFor Easy Entertaining\nBy MAR4JARET CARR\nThe salad and landwloh plate today li just a little bit special\u2014helps\nmake summer entertaining pleasant and eaay.\nMOULDED QINOER ALE\n8ALAD\n.  1% cup! ginger ale\n\u25a0 1 package lemon flavored gelatin.\nVt cup cubed canned pineapple\n. V\u00ab cup broken walnut moats.   ,'\nVt cup dates, cut Into placet\nLettuce .'        *'< \"\nBeat one cup ginger ale and pour\novar gelatin, Stir until completely\ndissolved. Add remaining ginger\nale (cold); cool In refrigerator until\nconsistency of molasses. Add fruits\nand nuti and spoon Into Individual\nEveryone entitled to VOTE\nshould-do so Aug, 10th\nmALAUA\nTEA\nFIRST FOR FALL\n' Fall'! newest knits are pencil-\nilim ... and brightly colored!\nSpice your wardrobe with at\nleast one of these flattering\nLddy Anne\nKnits\nr  **'    price6 at\nf    $39.95\n[JjQSuL,  Ladies' Apparel\nTHE FASHION CENTRE^\nPHONE 775\n535 BAKER ST.\nRUTCHERTERIA\nw-\nChoice Young Mutton\nLegs, half br whole, per lb  59c\nShoulders, half or whole, per Ib..... 25c\nLean Breast, for stewing, per Ib..... 19c\nBRISKET\nBOIL\n-Per Ib.\n21*\nBREAKFAST\nSAUSAGE\n3 \u00a7 T\u00b0\nMILD CURED\nCORNED BEEF\nRolled.'\"      '''\u2022\u2022'__'ft\u00ab<\nPer Ib  Sy\nROLLED VEAL\nSHOULDER\nPerlb.::  OZ\nGOOD\nHAMBURGER\n3fi.0o,\nlbs,    T\nFRESH\nCODFISH\nPelb. . L_ Z 9\nPrime Red Label Steer Beef\nBlade Pot Roasts \u201e\u201e__.. ..... lb. 49c\nPrime Rib Rddsts,'L. : :... lb. 62c\nChoice Rump Roasts.'u. ..,.. lb. 63c\nFresh\nRENDERED\nDRIPPING\nU 25*\nPer Ib.\nBOILING\nFOWL\nA COMPLETE LINE OF DELICATESSEN\nPREPARED EVERY DAY\nPhones 527-528\nFree Delivery\nmould! (2-3 oup aire). Place, ln refrigerator to let (about three hours)\nUnmduld- Into lettuce cups. Serve\nwith plnoapplc cream dressing.\nPineapple cream\ndressing\n!, egg yolki '\nVt cup sugar\n3. tbsps, lemon Juice\nVt cup pineapple Juice       ,\nVt ttpialt  .\nVs cup heavy cream, whipped\nBeat  egg  yolki  and  sugar together, stir in fruit Juices and salt.\nStirring constantly, cook ovar medium heat until mixture coats a silver\nspoon. Let cool to room temperature\nthen chill. Fold ln whipped cream.\nRIBBON 8ANDWICHES\nCheiae Pilling\n2-3 cup grated cheese       ',  ;   .\n2 tbsp tomato ketchup\n2 dropi tabasco -   \u2022 ,\nVt tap grated onion\n2 tip cream\nCorned Beef Filling\n2-3 cup minced  cooked  corned\nbeet\n3 tbsp. finely diced sour pickle.\n1 tbsp salad dressing\nVt tbsp sour pickle juice\nVt tsp salt\nPepper\nBlend, ingredient! thoroughly.\nSandwlcl-ea\n4 slices white bread, %-lnch thick\n5 slices whole wheat bread, H\ninch thick.\nSoftened butter\nSpread three slices whole wheat\nbread and three slices white bread\nwith softened butter. Spread cheeie\nmixture on two slices whole wheat\nbread and one slice. white bread.\nPlace bread of opposite color over\nfilling. Spread with corned beef\nmixture. Top with unbuttered slices\nof bread of same color as bottom\nslice. Press each sandwich lightly\nao It will hold together. Wrap In\nwax paper and place In refrigerator\nto chill; To serve: Cut each sandwich Into four itrlps.\nIF BABY\nIS CROSS\nFIND OUT WHY\nHEALTHY BADlES art not cross. Youi\nbaby should not bo cross. If lie la, then\n\u2022ornithine* in bli little intern miy be \"out\nof order. Probt*w\u00bb iuh*-*- rvmm T.vt.t.\nean promptly \"i\nef order\/' Probably Baby'i Own T-btati\nean promptly \"put It right\" One Quote*\nMother had this experience. She writes!\n\"My little girl wu irritable, feverish and\nsometimes sick at her stomach \u2014 what a\nrelief It was, after giving her Baby's Own\n1-bleta, to see how much better sho was.\"\n8wFct.ttiflting-no \"sleepy\" stuff -ni\ndulling effect Promptly effective In simple\nfever, constipation, restlessness anil\nfretfulncfis resulting from irregularity ai\nteething time, and other minor Ills. Novel\n, be without a foil box ot Baby's Own\n\u25a0Tablets. Slokness so often strikes Id tht\nnight Get a package today st your druggist\nMoney back if you ars not aattifled.\nA SPANISH flavor is given some of the most flattering footwear being shown for late-Summer'and early\nFalL These shoes' ai;e very' important for this: transition\nperiod and are perfect for'dark cool costumes. The pair\nselected haye a slender tapered, pointed look, prophetic\nof the styles which will.be news next Winter. They\nfeature a narrow silhouette of suede with an insert of\nlace over the toes. A suede strap holds the pumps firmly,.\nin place but allows for a becoming open back.\nEdward ,G. Robinson's Paintings\nTurn Out To Be Good Investments\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) \u2014 \"theie\nare my children, but they rule me.\nI've hsd to make over th. whole\nhouie juit to please them.\"\nEdward G. Robinson gestured\naround hli spacious Beverly Hills\nhome. The walls were covered with\npaintings by the great name! of\nmodern art. These wer. hla children.\nFolk! sometime! find lt hard to\npicture Robinson as an trt fancier,\nlince he haa specialized In playing\nTIVlad^L FASHIONS\n\u2022 (LOCAL MANAGEMENT)\nTHE\nCLASSIC\nBLOUSE\n\"NY-RON\"    7\nPerfect for Suit or Skirt\n$3.05-$5.93\nCOTTON BARGAINS\nTo Clear $6.95\nJhsi. Stout, oft. jAwulty. S&swioL\nWHERE YOUR CLOTHING $ GOES FARTHER v\n449 BAKER ST.     , PHONE 874\nSIZES 2 -12\n\u2022 DRESSES\n$U9 - $1.98 - $3.$r\n\u2022 SKIRTS $2.98\n\u2022 BLOUSES\nf'ti'    $U9;-$1.98\nyowL Smt\nmugi ln the movies ior 30 yean.\nHli   latest   adventure  into   film\ncrime ii to play I murderer  in\nThe Glass Web.\nFOREMOST COLLECTOR\nDespite his career tendencies,\nhe is one of the foremost private\ncollectors of art ln the world. The\nhalls of every room in hli house\nare adorned with rare ond beautiful paintings),   , .    --_\u201e.'.', ;\n\"Do you even hav.'them lii the\nbathroom?\" I asked.\n\"Come and see,\"?\n.   Stu-. enough, there  were' three\nsketches and an oil. if. ,  I\n\u2022 Robinson exhibited . famous\nportrait by Van Gogh,. t gorgeous\nscene ot Tahltlan horse rider*- on\na pink beach by Gauguin and\niome poiten by Toulouse-Lautrec.\nH. then led the way to the gallery, which adjoin! hll house. Inside was a feat of ut. \u25a0     +\u25a0\nDuring tho tour, th. actor explained how he had started with\nhi! art collection. '.-,*'\u2022*'\u25a0'\n. \"I had always loved art ill kid,\"\nhe sold. \"I would haunt the museums and galleries and read everything I could find on art. Of course,\nJ.never dreamed tltat I would be\nable to buy some great paintings\niome day.     a 'ti\n\"But along cam. th. movies ind\nmade it all possible. I started with\nthree paintings, a Monet,' Degas\nand Plssaro. They were magnlfl.\ndent, thing!, and It was well I\nstarted out with g6bd art. Then\nfi. dealers'realize that you don't\nwant anything second-rate.\"\nGOOO INVESTMENT    .\nRs tlm. went on, Roblnion kept\nplunking out his film lolary for\nrare paintings, picking: them up,\nfrom dealers in New York and'\nEurope. Hi! specialty ii French\nimpressionism. Aside from pleasing his aesthetic sense, the venture\nhai proven a good investment.\n\"It ii true,\", ho admitted, \"th.\npainting! have greatly appreciated\nln'Value since I bought them. It\nla now very difficult to. pick up\nreally great paintings. Thb museums have bought them up. There\nare few big private collections any\nmore; they've run out \"of luekeri\nilk. m*.\" \u25a0\n\u25a0 With $1,000,000 or mor. of art\nwork around the houie, doesnt he\nworry!\n' 'My only worry *li fire. I doji't\nworty about ateallng. It'i virtuilly\nImpossible to iteal palntlnjrs and\nsell them. Believe me, I've thought\nabout it and given up the idea.\"\nUBC Social Worker\nLeaves for Alaska\nVANCOUVER (CPV \u2014 Mirg.ret\nJohnson, assistant professor it the\nschool of social work, University ot\nBritish Columbia, 11 leaving to take\nup a position, with the United States\nChildren's. Bureau ln Alaska.\nMlu Johnson, a leading figure in\nCanadian social work and'a mem\nber ot the UBC faculty for eight\nyeara, will be chief medical-social\nconsultant for Alaska with headquarters ln Juneau, Her work will\nbe with social workera and public\nhealth nurses. .\nShe was national chairman ot th.\ncommittee on standard! in medical\nand psychiatric social worker! in\n1046-1050 ind li I former provincial supervisor ot the B. C board\nol health, department of tuberculosis control.     ::    V\nFAMILY REUNION\nSARNIA, Ont. (CP) - The Laur\nfamily held their 11th annual reunion here,'recently. More than 70\nmember! from Gntjrld and Mlchl*-,\nguv turned up and presented prizes\nto the oldest end youngest visitors.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6,1953 U\"5 *\u25a0 \u25a0 \u00ab \u2022 \u25a0\nAimworth Dance\nAldi Kailo Jublloo\nAINSWORTH - Proceed! ot *ZB.\nrecllved it a well-attended dance\nIn the community hall hare, Will\n(\u00ab to the Kailo diamond Jubilee.\nMusicians from Xiilo ind Ain't\nworth played for thi dine, ana\nirringementi iwfrt In th. hind,\nof Mrs. ,H. S, Currle.  - \">'\n7 PROCTER \u2014 Among the guesti\non the register at Holiday Inn here\nlie Mr, and Mri,, W. Pool, ind\ntheir daughter Ellrabeth of Medl-\ncine Hat. They \u00abre ipendlng thrco\nwe'eki ln the dlitrlct visiting old\nfrleridi j ind renewing acqualnt-\nmcei.'They visited Mr,; and Mri.\nR. Ii, Stevenson of Procter who\ncomo hero trom Medicine Hat, ind\nthey spent.. weekend with Mr.\nand Mrs. Roc Malda of Harrop,\nMri? POolc is -the former Mil!\nEvelyn Whlteman of Hirrop.\n0\/eUL.fMp. Wiik\nTntvdatt WtcuditL\nIron-on\nPARASOLS\nto Color \/\nB\n9365\n10-20\nIRON-ON PARASOLS\nA itrolfe-'of yoiir'iron. \u2014 preito!\nPink ind blue pareaoli iparkle on\nthii smart wrap-tie blouse that'i a\ncinch to sow. Twd-in-one value \u2014\nyou get the blouse pattern plui 24\nlron-on paraiols. Use a dozen on\nthe blouse the other 12 on accessories, linens. Color! stay \u2014 washing\nifter washing.\nPattern 036*8: Missel' lizes 10,12,\n14,16,'lb, 20. Size IS takes 1 Mi Tarda\nSB-inch. 24 iron-on parasol! in color Included. Washable!\nThll eaay-to-uso pattern givei\nperfect fit Complete, Illustrated\nSew Chut show! you every itep.\nSendTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS I35e)\nIn colni litunpi cinnot be icc.pt-\ned). for thll pattern, Print plilnly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\n.NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelion Newi, Pattern Dept, Nelson.    *\nCOAL\n?*\u25a0       mv\nPhent to\nPui|\n\"FOWLER\n\u00abV Tranifer\nNolion, B.C.\nPROCTER COUPLE\nWED 25 YEARS\n. PROCTER - Mr. and Mrs. R. L.\nStevenson ot Procter recently celebrated their i silver wedding anniversary. Membors ot the family and\nrelatives presented them with I\npollshod chest of flatware illver\nplate! and message! ond cards were\nreceived from many Alberta,\nfriends ind one from their\ndaughter, AW2 Mary Stevenson of\nthe RCAF at Uplands, Ont. They\nhave two other children, Barbara\nand Roy both at home. ' .\n\"Mr. and' Mrs. Stevenson Wer.\nmarried la Medicine .Hat, Mri?\nStovenson being the former Myrle\nOwen, daughter of thi late' Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Owen of Medicine Hat.\nMr. StevenSon served ai a Flight\nSergeant ln '111. RCAF trom 1941\nto 1046.-After Ml discharge he\nsettled In.the Procter dlitrlct where\nhe operates a dairy farm featuring\nJeriey-'oowi..     ' ' '',   ' y\n1   '   ' \u25a0   i   f ' \u25a0\n\u2022 Nina Bang, appointed education\nMlnliter in 1824,-wai tha first woman to hold cabinet rank In Den-\nmirk. \u2022\u25a0,        \u2022 ';\u2022.!'\nact \u00ab.\u2022\nTOFNAMVsIN FURNITURE\nAre   Featured  at   FREEMAN'S\n. \u2022 Pepplers ,*,<\n\u2022 Coolerator\nDeilcrafr\nCrosly\nParkhill\n\"J ..',': \u25a0'\nTynant\nSnyder\n, For quality furnituro and\n:  housphold appliances visit\nEARLY FALL HATS\nYou May Chooie\n\u2022\" Volvet with\nexqulille\n.*\u25a0   jewel trim.\n\u2022 Taffetai\n\u2022 Piwtol \"> .\nV*y-'' yil4\u00bburi.\nInvest in the\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nat IRENE'S\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT   MARKET\nLOW WEEKEND SPECIALS\n* Veal - Pork - Beef\n_&_ 3 lbs.     I\nMinced, nice for\nmoot lonf \"\n\u2022 Salmon Trout\nliiii __'   ' ji _i_   V* *\nHalf or wholo.v\nLb;\n#FQWl\nFresh dressed.\nLb. i_i\t\nw\n49'\nJt Veal Steaks - Roasts\n: \u25a0V-f*'.'.: Should-tr. CC*\n.'\u00bb\u201e; u>z yti; '^ \u25a0\u2666\u2022- -\u25a0\".- \u2022\u2014-,V->\n# Breast Veal\n\u25a0ti,.ff   \"f-    _y\nit Pot Roasts-Boneless\n m\nRound bone.\nLb.\nm\n\u25a0\u25a0:';\"\u25a0 V4i*p: \u2022:?\nRADIO-PHONOGRAPH\n^M'.'.H.v-'v\n3-Speed Record Changer\nUre 3-ip\u00abd chongar to gl\u00ab tqually\nsuswrb S^ray p.rfermonc\u00ab \u2014fp* your\n\u2022\u00ab\",\u2022*_\u00bb\" rntSyt- ncords. rs lh.\ntlAOw WPQ*  WIQv9.\nMagic Eye Tuning   \u201e'\u2022\u00a3*\nh,\u00ab4-Ja ot fi, id. _t.il yon lunlna\nMs pln-pohftt) lh. slollon y\u00bb\u00bb wont.\nN. mOrt fuzzy .ofl-stallon runlngl   .'\nSuperb Cabinet Styling\nth, grodow dignity rf Chlpfv-ndoM\nExqulslt. tUtall and1 Irlml Richly patM-l\nConvenient\nBudget Terms\nAvailable\nJprW*\nStandard and Shortwovo 10*\ntubo radio. \"Goldan Throat\"\nton*.   12-Inch  ipoalter.  Two\n.'\u201e   record compartmonti. .\n\u00abCAV1et6rV^lb~ r\\\n'.\u25a0\u2022\u25a0    :   in walnut    .\n$395.00\n1\nSIIoMy hlghor ia mahogany \u2022 s\n7    *     orllmodoak\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nm BAKER ST.  y\nYour Home Planning Ceintre\nPHONE 1555\n iffpipe^pfii)^^\nw\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEVff, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6,19S3\nMalenkov Watches Proceedings ... .*\u25a0'*\n600 Deputies Pack Kremlin Seats\nAf Soviet's 5lh Session Opening\nBy SIDNEY WEILAND\nMOSCOW (Reiitere) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Malenkov, flanked by six\nof Russia's top leaders, Wednesday\nattended ' the opening of the fifth\nsession of the .Supreme Soviet \u2014\nRussia's, parliament. ; \/\nHe watched 64)0 deputies packing\nthe benches'of the Kremlin grand\npalace agree to a two-point agenda\nfor discussion at the extraordinary\nsession, the second this year. \u2022\nDeputies will confirm the atate\nbudget tor 1053, crowded off the\nftr perfect\npfcWes\np'ekthe perfeet\ntfieaqpr\nagenda at the Supreme Soviet\nmeeting last' March after', Stalin's\ndeath, add the report on the 1951-52\nbudget.*  \u2022'.-,    ti-~yp\nSecondly, the. Supreme Soviet\nWill ratify decisions made by the\npraesidium of the Supreme Soviet,\nsince the March session.\nTO DISCUSS BERIA\nDominating . this item\" of the\nagenda will be the downfoll.of Lav-\nrent!. Beria,* a vice-premier, and\nformer interior minister ouBted almost a month ago. -.;',-_  \u2022\nMalenkov sat on a' raised- dais\noverlooking the deputies with 'the\nCommunist party secretary - f\neral, Nicolal Kruschev, on his right\nand President Klimenti Yoroshilov\non his left   '\u2022*. iiyZ:\n\u25a0 With them were .Lazar Kagano.\nvich, a first deputy prime min'\nister; Vyocheslav Molotov, another\nfirst, deputy premier and 'foreign\nminister; M. Z., Saburov, minister\nof machine building, \u25a0 and M. G.\nPervukhin, minister ot electric\nstations and electric industry,\nHie present session is expeoted\nto last three or four days.\nIZVESTIA DROPS.HINTS'     '__.\u2022'\u25a0'-\nIzvestia,,official organ of the government, has hinted at the tone\nof the decisions to be taken in an\neditorial on the extraordinary session,    \u00ab, '\u2022*\"\u2022 ife-'\nThe Supreme Soviet, it aald, \"will\ntake decisions intended to assist\nthe achievement of new successes\nln the building of communism and\nto' ensure the further 'development\nof every Soviet republic and of the\nSoviet multi-national atate.\"\nOn foreign affairs, Izvestia declared: \"Brought up in the spirit\nof proletarian internationalism, the\npeoples of the Soviet Union respect\nthe rights and-independence of the\npeoples ot all other countries end\nhave always shown their readiness\nto live at peace with them.\"\nLONDON \u2014<CP) \u2014\u2022 The air min-\nistry meteorological oflioe aald-. an\nexhauited racing - pigeon, destination unknown, landed on the deck\nof a weather ship- 270 miles from\nthe Isle of Lewis and 300 miles\nsouth ot Iceland. '\u25a0';'\nRuss To Spend\nLess On Forces\nMOSCOW' (Reuters) \u2014 Russia Is\nto spend HO,2OD,00O:0OO rubles ($27,-\n650,000,0.00 at the Russian Exchange\nrate on her' armed forces in 1058, it\nwas announced Wednesday at the\nSupreme Soviet session*.\nThe announcement was majjo by\nFinance Minister Arscnl Zverey.\nThe defence appropriation has\nshown a slight reduction over last\nyear's .record peace time figure of\n113,000,000,000 rubles ($26,450,000,\nWW.)   :\nV The draft of the Soviet budget\nprovided for a 1953 expenditure of\n'880,5(10,000,000 rubles ($132,628,000,-\n'0000.1\n-The defence appropriation figure\nout at about 21 per cent of the\ntotal budget, compared to 23.9 last\nyear. .\nNEIGHBORHOOD CHILDREN want to wada\nand iwlm In the water works pool and are picketing the locked gatei to dramatize their troubles.\nTha park, wai dosed for \"security reasons\" after\nthe start of the Korean war, beoauie in the park\nlathe largest water supply for the olty of Detroit\nThe city council closed the park for fear of\nsabotage which would cripple the clty'e water\naupply system. The olty fathers have promised\nto take under consideration the reopening of the\npark and.pool to the youngsters.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nMoat United . States natural gas\nreserve! are located in Louisiana,\nTexas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and\nKansas.\nS^m BuYS WHYS\ntjtil&fitCJ    :,    wfEK 11     IN FOR MA      ON    S 1 8 V I C !\nMONTREAL, August \u00ablb\u2014It's pickling time again\n--...' time to gather all those good-vegetables irom\nyour garden or the market .... and high, time to\nstock up on HEINZ WHITE VINEGAR. Buy it\nin the gallon jug\u2014it saves you up. to 2Wcon every\ncup sa compared with smaller containers. And ol\ncourse you get more than economy when you buy\nthis vinegar made by the. folks who made pickles .\nfamous! Crystal clear, full-bodied, uniform in\n(strength\u2014it preserves the crisp texture and colour of 'your picklee to\nperfection, And, by the mty, if the tation tug you buy iotm't have\nthe free recipe booklet, \"Pickling- SuceeuM,\\aUachai,\u2014 write io\nmo for It . . . Barbara Brent, 1411 Crescent St., Montreal, P.Q.\nBoliJays Are Par Fun ... so plan them for enjoyment. Often it's the\ndetails that make all the difference between fun\nand worry. For instance, it bothers me to' carry\ncash when I'm travelling, so I-oarry BofM\nTravellers Cheques. If they're stolen, they're no\ngood to the thief\/because ii takes the owner's\nsignature  to make  them good. Yes, BofM\nTravellers Cheques are \"foolproof ... they're a,\npractical guarantee of a carefree vacation. So\nwhen you're making up your list of things to\ntake on your holiday -.. . you'll do well to put Travellers Cheques at\nthe top. They come in convenient amounts of 410, $20, $60 and $100\u2014\nand you can buy them at any branch of the BANK OF, MONTREAL.\nYou'll find them easy to.caah wherever you go\u2014but only ypu'can\ncash them. '. .  v...v     \u2022'..'-.-..     .-,,   .,\nSomething Eoay\u2014something, good\nfor lunch or\nsupper? 'My'\nfavourite summer-treat ia; a >\nlight and tasty\nmeal   of   soup\nand salad. But\ndefinitely one\nof the HEINZ\nSOUPS\u2014they're the .pick of tho\nlot. Hundreds' of people ill dosens\nof? taste -testa haye tasted and\n1 agreed. Yes, tho whole family of\nHeinS Soups rated top marks with\ndieticians; young folks; men factory workers and housewives\/And\nI'm sure a taste-test in your own\nhome will bring a similar verdict.\nSimply heat a tin of say, the-new.\nHeins Chicken Consomme or that\ndelicious new Heinz Split Pea with\nBacon and* a, tin of any other\nbrand. Serve half-helpings of each\nand- take a vote. Bet it will be\nHeins, 2 to 11* '\u2022 \u2022\nPeach Jam Is Such A' Favourite,\nien't it*** Of\ncourse, not to\nbe ignored\neither are those\ntempting cherries, currants\nand plums.\nTh'ejrrei all\ngood for jam...\n, done'the 'CERTO FRUIT PECS'\n-7TIN way. With Certo\" you need\n'only a one-minute full rolling\nboil. Results are. grand I You get\na perfect set every time it you\nfollow the (jlerto recipes exactly.\nYou'll find recipes for jams and\njellies in the booklet under tho\nlabel of each bottle.,, of Certo.\nWith these recipes, you'll get up\nto 50% more, jam or jelly from\nthe same amount of fruit. And\nyou'll save yourself 2\/3 of the\ntime of the former long-boil\nmethod. \u25a0 I ,! '\u25a0-.'\u25a0\u25a0\nTalk About Hot Weather! . .,\nthen   think   ol\nthei coolest\nthing you know.\nFor me, it's, a\n. frosty,  refresh-\ning glass of\nNEW   IN-.\n8 T A  N T\nCHASE   Jk\nSANBORN COFFEE.  New In-\n\u2022 Btant Chase _ Sanborn is even*\ncool.to iiwl-i .. . it's so easy. It\ndissolves like magic in cold (or\nhot) water\u2014and here's all you do\nto make iced coffee\u2014        \u2022'*  i   %\nPlace*one heaping teaspoon bt\nNew Instant Chase & Sanborn\nIn a tall glass.   HaU ful with\nUnwater and stir, then add Ice. .\nAnd just wait 'til you taste that\nreal cojJVee flavour I You see, New\nInstant Chase & Sanborn is 100%\nreal cbfiee, made by a new exclusive process that keeps the flavour'\nand   aroma   of   freshly   ground\ncoffee. 'V.\nSalad! ere only as good as their\ndressing. I'm sure you know that\n;-.-.. but did you know that lemons I\n- are perfect for bringing out tlfe\nsubtle good-flavour of your salads?\n\u2014and of course they add their own\nfresh flavour as well. Bui be sure\nthe lemons you use aro trie finest\nto   be   had ... use   6UNKIST\nLEMONS   in   this   recipe   for\n'\u25a0 Lemon French Drcislng-*-\nV, cup Sunklst lemon juice\nJ,e cup salad oil\n\u25a0 - 1 teaspoon each of salt and\npaprika\n2 tablespoons sugar or honey\n.Shake well before serving. Add 44,\nteaspoon celery seed and clove ox\ngarlic If desired:  (Mokes 1 cup.)\n}iui Betumm V, Women ... here's a dish to please the whole family\n\u25a0 I.-' -tijtk .-!\u00bb       \u2014and it takes just one minute to greparo.   It's\nmaahed potatoes, believe it or not I:.. .but made\n.with FRENCH'S INSTANT POTATO-and how\n\\fpfspoi they are I Creamy-smooth and delioious . . .\nyou'll never again want to make mashed potatoes\nany other nay. There's no washing\u2014no peeling-\nno boiling\u2014no mashing ... and ski vtute. Just\nfollow the directions on the package. Every package contains enough\nfor ten eerringe, (he lest aa sweet and fresli-teetiog as the first. You,\n\u2022eeo, French's Instant Potato ia made Stem top-quality; potatoes, pre-\n\u2022 cooked by a special proceea that preserves important nutriments and\ndelicious flavour I\nChief Vetoes\nBoastful Signs\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 TWa city can't\nboast it is the biggest in Canada. At\nleast not as far as the department\nof highways is concerned. .     ,-   \u25a0\nJ. D. Millar, deputy minister of\nhighways said Tuesday his department would put up the usual signs\non roads leading into the city. But\nhe vetoed a .suggestion by Toronto's\nmetropolitan executive committee\nthat the signs read: \"Welcome to\nmetropolitan Toronto\u2014the largest\ncity to- Clanada.\" -...',*\u2022\u25a0 :\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\n\"Other' cities will want to be\nmarked as second, third or fourth\nand so on down the line,\" Mr. Millar sa|d. He added there were 'too\nmany glaring and unsightly signs,\nall considered essential to the well\nbeing and progress of our eity,\":now\non the outskirts.,   i\nPlant Breeders\nWinRusl Race\nEDMONTON \u2014 (CP)-,\u2014 Canada'a\nplant breeder's - say tbey' are win\nning the tight against rust but even\nas'they, work their, bid. enemy is\nright oh their back*.. ' *\nThe 'never-ehdtott tight - test\ntubes and patience lined up against\nnature \u2014 haa entered a new phase\nwith nature scoring the opening\nblow.\nRust, a fungus much like yeast\nor common athlete's foot, has been\nthreatening' grain fields of Western Canada and the United States\nfor as long aa farmers can remember. '\nAa federal government, cereal\nlaboratories? such as that in Edmonton, developed stronger wheats\nto withstand rust, nature in its hit-\nand-miss fashion developed stronger rust. ,v . .7 77 : \u25a0'.**\nNEWEST, THREAT\nThe latest, is Race 15B3, a. hardier cousin ot Race. l'SB.? It...\" was\nfirst found in the Regina -district,\nJust'a few yeart1,after- the-- Winnl:.\npeg laboratory bred an answer to\nBafteibH. t.i ,.;v. ';. '*.-.:   \u25a0.,   ',\nNow the fight goeB on, in the\nlaboratories and in small plots on\nprivate farms where growers donate their time in a common cause.\nThe grower knows what damage\nrust can do. About 37 years ago it\ndestroyed\" an. estimated 100,000,000\nbushels of grain on the Canadian;\nPrairie.. \", \u25a0\u25a0 .-' '\u2022?\u2022 '7 -'-.\u25a0'\u25a0 ? -\u2022'\u25a0:\n\u25a0 Rust showed up at the' earliest\nrecorded date lit Manitoba- this\nyear and the danger waa increased\nbecause, of late crops. Eating\nquickly into Wheat stalks and\nleaves, the. 230 known races take\na yearly toll in poor yields and\ndamaged kernels. '?'\nTACKLE OVER TASKS\nTo the laboratories has fallen\nthe t ask of finding new -wheat\nstrains capable of resisting the\nblihgt. But- their work doesn't end\nthere.    .\nThe Winnipeg laboratory developed a new potato. The Edmonton\nlab has come up with a more convenient method ot combatting loose\nbarley smut. ti\nThe, smut, another fungus, turns\nkernels Into fine. brown'- powder.\nThe old method of fighting it called\nfor the. soaking of. seed to hot\nWater which had to be kept at a\nconstant temperature, a difficult\nprocedure onithe farm. *\"\"\u2022'   :.\nThe new method uses water and\na fungicide called spergoh and the\nwater doesn't have to be hot\nNew Appointments\nIn CPS Department\nUiONTREAt,'\u2014 The appointment\nof J. Roy Ross of Toronto, to be\nassistant Steamship General Passenger agent for the Canadian Pacific\nRailways steamship passenger traffic department,,'with headquarters\nat Montreal, was announced here\nTuesday by G. T. Frayne, steamship general passenger agent.\nW. L. Cottrell, assistant steamship\ngeneral agent at Toronto, succeeds\nMr. Ross as steamship general agent\nfor the Ontario district. He, too, is a\nveteran of Canadian Pacific service,\nhaving joined the company ln 1019.\nHe became assistant steamship general agent in 1050.\nSome 1161 seal pelts worth $70,-\n564 were exported from Canada during the 1951-52 saasoq,\nSumatra Titers\nIn Calgary Zoo\nCALGARY \u2014 (OP) \u2014 Calgary'a\nzoo has acquired a, pair of 400-\npound Sumatra tigers, the Only ones\nto Canada. \u2022'\nThe 'handsome gold-and-b 1 a c k\nstriped animals came from Rotterdam zoo in Holland and are valued\nat about 55000. Both were bom in\ncaptivity.* The male is 22' months\nold, the female 18 months.\n\" Their diet? Instructions from F.\nSiewertsz van Reesma, curator of\nthe Rotterdam Zoo, call for a dally\nmeal* of about 17 pounds of fresh\nhorse or cow meat, complete with\nbones.\nOnce a week they are supposed\nto lunch on a whole animal such\nas a goat, hide and all. The hair,,\nattendants Bay, is necessary, for\nthe tigers' digestive systems.\nA. M. van Ostrand, president of\nthe Zoological Society here, is enthusiastic about the tigers. How-\never, somewhat annoyed waa Rex\nII, lion king of the Calgary zoo.\nHis mate had just had three young\ncubs. He was fully prepared to do\nbattle with the tigers when,they\nwere put in an adjacent cage.\nClaims Students\nChloroformed\nCRANBROOK, Eng. (Reuters) -\nSchool teacher Donald Pankhurst,\n25, Wednesday was accused of\ncommitting what others to his profession may have felt urged to do,\nin impulsive moments \u2014 chloroforming his pupils.\nHe pleaded guilty to giving' a\nchloroform-like fluid to both boy\nand girl students under the pretext\nit was smelling salts. Police testified the students become \"drowsy?\npartly unconscious and, to all\ncases, ill,\"    \u25a0 ,.\nPankhurst was freed on ball until\nj3ept:7V: \u2022\u00bb,:'??\u2022\nMan. Death Toll\nClimbs toTen\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014Manitoba's\ndeath toll: from poliomyelitis'Wednesday climbed- to 10 as health\nauthorities reported, two more\ndeaths and 31 new cases. The case\ntotal, for' 1953 now stands at 544\nas five previous cases reported to\nbe -polio were token off the list as\nwrongly diagnosed.\nTlie latest deaths were that of a\n42-year-old suburban West Kil-\nonan woman ahd a three-year-old\nWinnipeg boy., .\/\nNineteen of the 31 new cases\nshowed ' paralysis. Winnipeg\ncounted for 12 of the total, the\nsuburbs 10 and scattered areas,\nStokers Not Wanted\nIn Canada's NaVy\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The- Royrd. Canadian Navy has no-more stokers.\nIt doesn't do any stoking any more.\nThe navy's last coal-burners were\nretired after the Second World\nWdr, a navy announcement said today, and the .universal naval fuel'\nis oil. Consequently the, trade, of\n\"stoker mechanic\" has been replaced by \"engineering mechanic'\nand an engine-room artificer is to\nbe known as engineering artificer.\nThe change in classification is\nmore than a mere - change - to\nnames, the navy said..\n\"It also'provides for a more\nequitable distribution of responsibility within the engineering trades\nThe reorganization means that all\nmen Of the engineering branch will\nbecome, in -due course, maintainors\nas well as operators of ships!? mach\ntoery and that new avenues are\nopened to commissioned rank.\" .\nHAYWARD'S HEATH, England\n\u2014(CP)\u2014Two Sussex men's clubs\ndebated whether Mrs. Beeton, famed for her cooking recipes, would\nbe preferred asa wife, over screen\nstar   Jane- Russell.    Mrs.   Beetbn\nAnchovy and sardine fisheries\nare the chief industries ot the Balearic Islands in the. Mediterranean.\nThe ballad, which achieved Its\ngreatest popularity and distinction\nin northern Europe, originated in\nItaly.'\nThough uaually silent, the porcupine csn grunt, chatter and even\ncry like a child. , \u2022\nDept. Store Makes\nBargaining News\nMONTREAL: (CP)\u2014Several precedents arc believed to have been\naet in.a collective;bargaining agreement signed' today by, Dupuls\nFreres department .store end the\nNational Syndicate of. Trade Employees (CCCU. The store has\n1800 employees.\nThe company agreed to pay family allowances to children of employees still attending school at IS\nwhen government payment of the\nallowance stops..\nThe contract provides for addition of a $25 bonus to regular holt-\nday cheques and for a cumulative\nsick-leave system. Employees will\nbe allowed to. carry over from one\nyear to another daya they have not\nused for sick'leave? - . \\\n' Sighed for ai period of 2Vt years,\nthe contract, provides for salary increases, for' a STU-hour week for,\nstore clerks* and a 40-hour week\nfor mail order clerks. '\u2022-.','\u201e\nLONDON\u2022\u2014(CP) \u2014 One of four\nNorth American garter snakes sent\nto the London zoo from Canada as\na Coronation :gift haa: had a family?\nof 14. The baby snakes, being fed\non small earthworms and tadpoles,\nlater will be sent to other zoos in\nBritain? -..:..-..'    -    \/'   -,-\nREAD  TJ-E CLASSIFIED DAILY\nFor Friendly and Efflolent\nPlumbing and\nHeating Service\nCall\nFRED WELSH\n&SON LTD.   -\nPhOne 1748   \u2022    \u2022   321 Bakor St\n , \"    ti-tiy'    -.   ;.\"\n\u25a0HH\n<S>\/9f\n  r\"\"P\". .i \u00ab,.-\u00ab\u00ab-\u2014-~~    11 ii  \u25a0\u25a0 I   i jjiji    i      ..^''Jiinnfjplmmir*^^ ,*'* _-_!:' .iv..\n?\u00a7S;iif*M\n'\u25a0fi'\"H-SJKi- \"> , F \u00a9 M&'MU \u00abTp- Anil^deckWcar^\nr er tJSS Antletam, seen plowing: through: English Channel, Is de-\nI limed to pemilt landings and takeoff! on fore-att axis or on anglk,:\nM U In the^iDlafbLfinilh6 thA-wT. A.i!r?.,',.\"'t^?* Z?'\u25a0$* '$\u00a3$& B\u00ab\u00bbi*ii* ^^\na me ipiasning a-usb, the hones, all but obK;tired by \u00ab***\u25a0 from tbe mrf, had to Thi,distinguished TS^driiTO'*-*** > <>\"^\nCOM MA N DO B I R D - Looking deflint, * blg-bUled.\negret perches on arm of Indochlni commando. Egret ts tfliMOt of\n* commando unit manning the outpOst In northern Thinh Bli* \u25a0\n\u25a0T H E ,:.'D UT-V It  COT  * EM \u2014_aaiesgeri oil \"Ooiliim,\" *New Tork sightseeing erlft, had\nextra time,to study scenery aa ship grounded in Spuyten Duyvll, Dutch for Yin spite ot the devil.\"\nCAR NO U ST I iP-CX*'!.\n\u2014Mrs. Molly fcullum? of Miami,\nFla., shows her gblT education oil\ncardigan Jacket the Wore It Cir*\nnoustlc, Scotland, daring British\n\u25a0 Open golf tournament.\n\"f E N CI N C   WI THS 01 C I b E _ Edition; to fence\nenclosing wall* atop Hamburg's famous church inire, \"Michel,\" Is\n^designed to prevent suicides from jumping from 433-foot tower.\nBl\n\u25a0fflP^*\n\u25a0f^^l____l  v\nw\n1 _H    *Jn '*\"'\n\u00a7P^3jJf''i\n1 ____B -\nr.'c      ^'**'\u00ab'   ['\ni v.';.\u00abB_B\n_w\n1      p&f     Ij\nWv?***9*astf:   >'.'i_Nl\nI\nliwNHl\nVACATIONING LADDS-ScreeniotorAilnLadd,\nright, takes his children for a boat ride at Eden Roe, near Cannes\nen tbe French Riviera, wher* th* -add family Is vicatlonlng.\nfOP TAKES BACK SEAT -Prof. Ernst Helnkel,\nGerman aircraft designer, rides behind ion,'Karl, 14, for whom he\nbuilt scooter which lias maximum speed of-54 miles per hout.\nSWEET   CATCH-Thad.\ndeui (Rod) Sweet, of Glen Head,\nN, Y\u201e proudly displays the 43*H-\npound striped bass he caught In\nLong Island Sonnd off Motlne-\ncock Point, Glen Cove, N. X.\nRASMUS   T E S T S   LEGS \u2014 Rasmus, 15-day-oId hippopotamus in the1 Copenhagen, Denmark Zoo, t\u00abkes first walk on ilubby legs. Maren, the cub's mother, stands solidly behind,\nMOO EL MOD E LS-a bnddlng *rt rtudeat mike, a day\ncopy of the head of a bronte sea nymph by Ammanatl, put el the\nFountain of Neptune in Plana delto Signorii, Florem* Itajf,\n.'')\nICG CAM |   FIR ST \u2014 Bitty Smith and Dolores Nicholas of Philadelphia look on as baby\nduck emerge! from egg which they found, then placed In glove compartment of Nicholas car. : .\nLATVIAN DANCERS- Vita Kutie, left and IVara\nClflmouB awing Into exhibition they staged with Latvian folk\ndancers tor 1053 loifnailonal Eisteddfod it Llangollen, Wales.,\nFLIC H T   OF   FASHION \u2014 Lacking commercial plane, Frankfurt, Germany, fashion designers Died V. S. Air Force plane M dressing room for model! showing summer lines at airport.'\n f-. NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1953\nDEATHS\n\u2022 \u25a0\nNew York \u2014 Perclval Farquhar,\n88, internationally-known financier?\nwho had large financial Interests in\nSouth American railroads.   .\nToronto\u2014Hillyard Lang, 87,- superintendent of Toronto's harbor, po-\nUce.' \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0*.\u25a0.\u25a0,**\nOttawa \u2014 Lt Joseph Henry Hogan, SB, a former commanding officer of the 2nd battalion, Governor-\nGeneral's Foot Guards, and director\nof war service grants, department .of\nveterans affairs.\nPROSPECTIVE HEIR\nVICTORIA - (CP) - Buster, 11-\nyisar-old mongrel, may Inherit $500\nliorn hit late master, 108-year-old\nJohn Parker.   The money ia to go\n> the dog if no relatives turn lift\n*****\nMeet Me ot       '\nPHIL'S\nFINE FOOD\n\"THE FINEST IN FOOD\nAND COCKTAILS\"\nv  .110 North Howard   -\n(2 doors south of   7 ,.<\nOrphoUm Theatre)\n8POKANE. WASH.\nf    OUR VlUA\n|;        MOTEL\nChsi. E, Signs. Prop.\n8 nsw and itiodorn cabins\n';. Clean and comfortable\nkitchenettei\nOne mile' weit of Spokane\nCity Limits on Highway No. 2\n\u2022\u2022'\u25a0 Route 1, Box 28\n\"\u25a0ii\nWE INVITI YOU\nCOTTAGE\nGRdVE\nMOTEL\nLocated at the Cdge of Spokane\nOn Highways 2. 10, 395\n14 unifa, 10 with\nkitchenettes.   \u2022\nAll modern eonvoniencea\n'LESTER AND RUTH\n8AWTELL8\nPHONE RI-6492\n304)4 West 8th Ave.\nSpokane, Wash.\nEVERY DAY Is\nFUR DAY\nAT\nNat. Park\nWOO BLOCK, WEST BOONE ST., SPOKANE, WASH.\n*   \u2022   *\nSEA  LIONS,  RIDES,  ZOO,  FREE   PARKING,\nFREE PICNIC GROUNDS, ROLLER COASTER,\nDANCING, GAMES.\nI .... ;        -      .\u25a0*'..!\u25a0\nPLAN TO VISIT NAT. PARK THIS WEEKEND\n_^\/^\/s#^#^\/^^^^y^^^l^^^\/^^_^\/^\/^y^^^,\nFUN \"*\u00a3?\n_M^f*^*liP>^^i^s^s\u00ab*^^^\u00bbi_'N^^^A*tl^,\ntempler Wanls\nAction, Malaya\nKUALA LUMPUR, Malaya r-\n(AP)\u2014Troopi' and police surrOundr\ned toe Village of Sungel Pelek in\nSouth- Selnngor state nt dusk Tues-\ndoy while loudspeakers blared' an\nultuaatum giving tli.4000. villagers\nuntil - Aug. 17 to co-operate with\nthe government against Communist\nguerrillas.? ' V'....--7      *,,.'\ntea ultimatum' was first' delivered to the village by the British\nhigh commissioner, Oen. Sir Gerald Templer, when he, visited there\nJuly,. 17. He told the people he\nwould \"put their farmlands out: of\nbounds if they did not give in\nformation about guerrilla move\nments to the area,',\"- '\u25a0''\u2022' \" > .-,'.''\nSEALED' QUESTIONAIRES , '\n, Questionnaires distributed' to the\nvillagers .earlier were brought, to\nTempler at, Kuala Lumpur Wednes- J\nday. The villagers were' kept indoors until the forms wer\u00a3 collected and stropped info sealed boxes.'\nVillage leaders - who took\" the\nsealed boxes to the commissioner,!\ntold him they had made resolutions\nto help the war against the guerrillas ,7\nBut Templer replied: \"resolutions are pot enough. It is action\nthat T want.\" \u25a0 it \u25a0\u25a0\nBank Bandit\nFormerly Convicted\nOn Murder Charge\nVANCOUVER (CP).-A man once\nconvictefl? of murder in connection\nwith a holdup pleaded guilty in\nVancouver police coutt today to a\ncharge bt attempted armed robbery\nand waa remanded to Friday for\nsentence.\nHe was 29-year-old John Petryk,\ncaptured Monday by bank employees who pursued him from the Imperial Bank of Canada main branch-\nin Vancouver after his attempt to\nhold up a paying-teller failed.V\nPetryk admitted, in court to his\nprevious recoid including the mtir-\nder conviction following the death\not a Japanese storekeeper, shot\nduring a holdup to 1042.\nThe murder -conviction was reduced to rnanslaughter on appeal\nto the Supreme Court of Canada\nand Petryk waa sentenced to nine\nyeari. 'He was released on parole,\nbut later returned to penitentiary\nfor violation of the. parole conditions when found in possession of\nnarcotics.\nPetryk told Magistrate Oscar Orr\ntoday that.he had a ''pretty rough\ntime\" trying to find work, and that\nhe bought a fancy toy \"sixgun\"\nwhen he failed to get a job. \u2022\nThe magistrate asked for a complete, history on Petryk pending\npassing.;pf sentence,,. ..        .,-   ._\nCAHPIEP, Wales - (CP) - A\nCardiff ophthalmic surgeon, Dr. J.\nW. Thomas, said in his presidential\naddress to the : 'British Medical\nAssociation thot about half 'the\nchildren today eari expect to live\ntill 70.   .\nFather Falls To\nFind lost Girl\n\u202231\\ BONIFACll, Man. (CP) \u2014 A\ntwo-day search of Reglna cafes,\nstreets, and rooming houses, failed\nto. yield any clue to the whereabouts of 13-year-old Joyce Singleton of St. Boniface, missing alnce\nlast Thursday..\nThe girl's father, George Singleton, and* a friend drove to Reglna\nMonday after a bu: .company official told him he had sold a ticket\nto Reglna to - a girl. answering\nJoyce's description.\nThe girl was last seen by her\n14-year-old , girl friend .after the\ntwo bad been to a show.\n..India manufactured 230,500,000\nphonograph needles in 1032, almost\nfour times as many ss in 1951?-.\nSays New Aggression\nThreatens Israel\nGENEVA (AP) - Israeli President Izhak Beh-Zvi told the Jewish\nCongress Wednesday Israel's neighbor's threaten new aggression \"Intended to wipe our atate off the face\nof the earth.\" \"titi\nDespite the progres made by Israel, (he nation IS only at. the beginning of its \"great historical task,\",\nhe said In a message. '., *v\n.Dr. Noah Barou of London,, banker and economist, told the 300 delegates to the congress that anti-semi-\ntlsm, fostered by, surviving Fascist\nand Nazi remnants ln various countries, \"is again reviving as an international movement.\"\nLONDON \u2014 (CP) \u2014 AWo-year-\nold British racehorse hos Just bean\nre-christened Surely. Its Old name:\nCertain.,*'*\u25a0' '..\u2022.*\u2022 \u2022 \u25a0'.,\nIBAD  THE  I2LAS8IFIED  DAILV\nWZyZ'-'gi^\nChiang Offers\nHaven To POWs\nTAIPEH, Formosa (AP) - Chin?\nese Nationalist\" President Chiang\nKai-shek Tuesday promised entry\ninto Formosa to tho 14,500 Allied-\nheld Chinese prisoners of the Korean war who refuse to return-to\nthe Communists.    . v i\nIn a printed message distributed\nto the PoWs- and broadcast by the\nUN command in Korea', CJihng\nurged the prisoners to \"stand firm\n. . V in your choice for freedom.\"\n. By terms of Ihe armistice, anti-\nRed Chinese will be Interviewed\nby Red\" persuasion teams trying\nto get them to return to Communist\nChina. If they refuse, they eventually may go to any country which\naccepts'<\u00abiem. \u2022   f ti.\nNAVY DOCT9RW. William Rldoway of 8an Francliooworkk\non a seriously, wodnded marine who was cut dcjwn while fighting\noh Korea's western front only a few hours before signing of the\narmistice at Panmunjom. Hospital Corpsman Stanley Baker of\nLoi Angeles (right) administers albumen and plasma to the wounded\nLeatherneok^-'AP-Wlrephoto. '\nStaff Doubtful\nBRITANNIA** CAMP, Korea1-**\n(CP) \u2014Canadian staff officers\nWednesday were.trylng to' reconcile\nChinese arithmetic, on* just ihow\nmany Canadians still ere in Red\nhands: ?'?.'\nThe Chinese say thoy have- --'.\nCanadian's. TVtet Ptei Joseph feUe-\ntier, first Canadian returned in the\npost-armistice exchange, said that\nnine others were captured with\nhim. ...\nLast April 20, L.CpI. Paul Dugsl\nof Quebec City listed 15 Canadians\nhe had talked to and later identified . others he had seen from,\nphotographs. '        ?.'.:.\nThat totals at least* 24 seen, in\nForth Korea by Canadian eyes.    ,\nThe question is: Where are the\nother 11 or more? \u2022      ;\u00ab\n, The Canadian Arrhy lists 18 men\nas prisoners of war and 27 missing in action. Pelletier bad been\nlisted as missing in action.   ,..,,,ti\nLOIP.ON -plCPf\u00b1- The chair;\nman of a Brtiish cement company,\nGeorge Earle,. suggested .in. a letter\nto a. newspaper that businesses devote' 10 \"per eentSot-.'their \u25a0Welfare\nexpenditure to raising the salaries\nof clergymen of all denominations!\nHERTFORD? England \u2014i(CP) .\u2014\nHertfordshire Boy Spout groups did\n71,700 odd jobs in their annual\n\"bob-a-job\" week, raising \u00a3*3583 for\nthe movement, '\nIN SPOKANE VISIT\nGARAGE\n\u2022 Aororli. fromfthe\nSpokane and Hal llday Hotels\n\"...   24-HOUR SERVICE\nMotorola Radios\nLubrication\nAtlasTiiies\nand Batteries\nMechanical Repain   *'\nChevron Gas and\nbii Products\n- tii' X..::<   yy.\nCLASSIFIED  ADS GET   RE8ULT8\nOur Social Credit\nCandidate\n' By electing Social Credit members to represent\nB.C. in Ottawa, we will ensure action and cooperation in Dominion-Provincial matters in\nthe House of Commons. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\u25a0 ;       i|\nIN KOOTENAY WEST RIDING\nINKUUItNAIWUI   KlUIWl '.., -^     mmm\nBATES. John 0. A\nSocial Credit is the answer to excessive taxation, extravagant government spending, and\n4    ,  '   the fears of boom-bust economy. Social Credit\nwill abolish waste in Ottawa as it has in Bid\nVOTE FOR THE PEOPLE'S GOVERNMENT\nSOCIAL CREDIT\n'?..\/'.    .'{     .,'  '    f'?'* {'      '    \" \"V\" \u20227:\":;,    ? \u25a0'-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0     '  \"'\n-l \u2022**> %. \" .-*\u25a0* Thll advertisement issued by.the B.C. Social Credit Campaign Committee      ,\nSTYLING\u2014 For FEATURE \u2014 For VALUE\nlor August\n'53-\nHigh Styled\nDaVenettes\n\u25a0 Ond': ,\nMatching Chairs\nDavenette has steel folding mechanism, tapestry\nand frieze coverings\nReg. $189.50 \u2014Reg. $184.50-7- Reg. $179,50\nifcwOiiiy $1695a\niSWlWteSiSS\nES^wks?\n#\u25a0:\n-wBllll\n4-Pieeo. Vanity, Bench, Bed, Chiffonier\nOnly ^145\u00b0\u00b0\nOr if yeu prefer a Radio Bed \u2014 $157.00\nMantel and Combination\nRADIOS\nCrosley Mantels\n.             Reg.    .        SALE\nM            $54.95         $49.45\n$39.95,        $35.95\n$67.00         $60.30\n' *       $39.95         $3195\n'   $40.95   \"'      $36,85\nW \u25a0.   :Zy $21:95,   yf. $19.75\n\u00ab*.'    \u2022* \u25a0' '' - \u25a0',\u25a0\" , '     '.\u00ab .\u25a0'''.'l''   ' y f. .\u25a0, \u25a0\nCombination Radios\n$?39.00       $209.00\n'\"'\u25a0'['\u25a0\"'\"'-    $229.50     ^1*5^.00\n,$299.50   -   $279.00\nk-fl\nLAMPS\nCOFFEE TABLES\nTo' Complete Your Living '\nRoom Ensemble\n10% OFF\nPARKHILL\nCHESTERFIELDS\nReg. $99.50 .*\u25a0'\nOnly$79.50\n' 3-Pieee Plaatie\nVANITY SET\n.'Res. $88;85   -.-'\u25a0\u2022''\nOnly $59.50\nColonial Style 39\"   7\nBUNK BEDS\n...:-,.       IM.50-V;;\n2-Piece Kroehler\nCHESTERFIELD SUITES $279.50\nSimpson's-Sears Guarantee.\nSatisfaction or Money Refunded\/\nRegular $300 Value\nBEDROOM SUITE\nOnly $239.50\nBUY HOW  ON SIMPSON'S-SEARS\n7 EASY TERMS\nRetail Store - 556 Baker St\nPHONI 1490\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 19S3 \u2014 9\nQ>S*\nWEARING hlaprejorlntlon tun\nRlaiiai, \"Shorty\" feels like a new\norae again. The 20-year-old veteran of the Baltimore, Md., police traffic - division had weak\neyes, which were aggravated by\n-tha glare of the tun, ao the doctor prescribed the ipecially-made\nipectaolei.\nRavens High in\nEDMONTON\"(CP) - Proof that\nravens are among the more intelligent members, of the bird kingdom\nIs expected to result from experiments being carried Out by Pr. William Bowan, professor of zoology at\nthe University of Alberta.\nSix of the big, black birds\u2014larger eouslnei of the common crow-\nwere obtained by Dr. Rowan and\nAl Oemtng, a zoology atudent\nAmong other thing!, they hope to.\nduplicate an experiment carried\nout by a German animal psychologist named Kohler who proved the\nraven could be taught to count up\nto ieven. '  *      . >,\n'Other intelligence testa also may\n1 be carried out ai tha birds mature,\nsays Dr. Rowan. He hope! to find\nout lt the birds can develop the\n.same homing instinct as the pigeon.\nThe ravens Aow. are fully grown.\nFive were sent to Edmonton from\nYellowknife. The other came from\nWatson take, Yukon. Once. com.\nmon throughout Canada, ravens\nhave retreated to isolated northern\nsections with the encroachment of\ncivilization, although some are still\n.found in wilder section! ot the\n'\u2022fipixih. .. .,,_ r...\nRON AT tABGk-f  ?:'\nThe birds, fire permitted to run\nat large .and although they fly oft\nevery day, they alwaya return for\nfeeding and roost nearby at night.\nDr. Rowan says the birds like\nmeat and they always take more\nthan,they can eat They bury it under sticks and stones throughout\n.the yard and retrieve it later when\n7hungry.\n7: Dr, Rowan says one proof of the\nbirds' intelligence is that they can\nremember where they've hidden\ntheir food caches. They also have\nj a passion for bright,' shiny. objects\nand hide them if they can,\nMr*. Oeniing says ravens probably\nare the world's expert atunt fliers,\n: Hi!{.four bird! while away the\nhours with loops,, sideslips, flying\n.uoside down and power dives. They\n, also play tag and leapfrog in the\nyard while on tha ground.\nRAVENS CAN COUNT\nDr. Rowan\u2014who once proved the\nprocess of migration could be reversed and had crows flying north\nto the fall\u2014sajp the Kohler experiments were done with a number of small boxes from which ravens had to take their food.\nOn the top of each box, which\nhad to be opened by the bird,\nthere was a number of dots. The\nbird was shown a box with a certain number of dots, then confronted, with other boxea with different\ncombinations.-    -\n: In Kohler'! experiments, the bird\nwent unerringly to the box which\nbore the same number of dots on\ntop as the original box it had seen.\nThe pattern of dots was not'the\nsame, proving the bird judged by\nnumber! only. ,\n' 7LEICESTER, England - (CP) -\nPolice here will test car brakes\nfree of charge and -give only\n'^lendly advice\" afterward! to\neut down accident!.\nRegents (an Be\nGood and Bad\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 England\nhaa seen a number of regents since\nthe Norman conquest in 1086, many\nof them, powerful, over-ambitious\nmen. '\nTheir control of the throne' be-,\ncause' ot the Sovereign's youth- or,\nInsanity often produced bloodshed\nand a bitter struggle tor power\namong rival dynasties. '\u25a0',\nA few regents, most of them in-\nthe early days', honestly upheld the\nCrown as \"protectors of the realm.\"\nInterest In England's good and\nbad regents has been revived since\nthe government's announcement\nthat the. 1937 Regency. Act will be\namended 'later thii year. The\nchange would make the Duke of\nEdinburgh regent if, for any reason,\nQueen Elizabeth II could'not perform the Sovereign's function!\nFIRST ONE GOOD\nEngland's first regents, known as\n\"justiclans\", were comparatively\ngood sulers who wielded considerable power. William the Conqueror\nintroduced the system aa a convenience so that he could spend\npart of each yean in his beloved\nNormandy. .\nDuring his. absence, Odo of\nBayeux established a high reputation for handling of the throne.\nThe Norman king's son? William\nII who succeeded his father in M87,\nadopted a similar system. Regent\nRanulf Flambord held supreme\npowers when the king was abroad\nand maintained complete control of\njudicial and financial matters when\nthe Monarch was at home.\nBut trouble flared up in the kingdom about 100 years later when\nRichard I, known as the lion-\nhearted, went off to fight In, the\nCrusades. He left the government\nid the control of two men, the\nBishop of Durharh for North Eng-,\nland and the Earl of Essex for the\nSouth.  <   \u25a0   .   '\nNOT 80 GOOD\nRichard asked his chancellor\nWilliam de LongcHamps to supervise the arrangement. Longchamps\npromptly installed himself as supreme ruler of both church and\nstate. His reign was sd unpopular\nthat Richard'a jealous brother, John,\nwho signed the Magna Carta \"in\n1215, had no trouble in starting a\nrebellion and seizing the throne.\nHenry VI, gr'andson of the hero\nof Aglncourt, caused two regencies,\nfirst because he inherited the\nthrone as an infant in* 1422. and\nsecond because of his temporary\nImbecility 80 years later.\nDuring the flfst of these regencies,\/his uncle John, Duke of Bed-\nfordVruled England and the freshly?\nconquered duchy of Normandy. !\u25a0\"\nWhen Henry lost his mind, the\nDuke* of York became regenfand\nwas prevented from realizing,Ibis\nown ambition to become king only\nby his death 1n battle ln 1480.       \u2022\nBearded Henry Vni's sickly son\nEdward VI iph'er'ted the throne In\n1547 at the age of 10 to art off\na stormy period in the Royal accession. He was the son,of Jane\nSeymour,   third   of   Henry's   six\nmerset, Jane Soy-\nilled as regent to\ni. He was ousted\nwives.\nThe Duke of !\nmour's brother,\nprevent a re\"bel\nin 1522 and beheaded by the Duke\nof Northumberland who nurtured a\npet scheme for his.son's?advancement. \u201e\u25a0;\u25a0',.\u25a0   .'    ,.'-\",.'\nNorthumberland's son wed Lady\nJane  prey,   Edjgard'a  cousin,,-to\nwhom the sickjBmonarch left his\ncrown upon hifileath at 18.\nBut the riifjHil heiress to the\ncrown (was Wky, daughter \"of\nHenry vm and Catherine* of Ara-\ngon, an -ardent Roman Catholic.\nShe soon deposed Lady Jahe, executed her and bajjan her1 ruthless\npersecution of Protestants which\nearned her the name Bloody Mary.\nVICTORIA'8 EXAMPLE\nGeorge,m, whosuffefed In late\nlife from insanity, made his frivolous son regent in 1811:\nThe ion, who ascended the throne\nas 43eorge IV upon his father's\ndeath in 1820, is chiefly remembered\nfor the fantastic and extravagant\npavilion he built at Brighton and\nfor his many mistresses .and cronies. \/   .     '.       *.,\u2022;.      ',\nQueen Victoria named her husband, Prince Consort Albert, regent\nfor fear she would die before her\nson, Edward VII, came of age.   >\nNEW GAME BIRD    -\nFREDERICTON \u2014 (CP) \u2014. Hun,\ngarian partridge, introduced into\nNew Brunswick some years ago by\nprivate individuals and fish and\ngame clubs, have become sufficient\nly plentiful for the first open season to be declared this year. The\nbag limit is four a day.\nS.,' squares   chocolate;\nwater; 1 ctipjraMf\nM \u00ab\u00ab> SOGERS' GOWEN\nSYRtfP; 1 clip etoaporaled milk;\n1 teaspoon-vanilla.\nMelt chocolate in top of double boiler.\nGradually add water, stirring until smooth. Add sugar and\nR4X3ERS' GOLDEN SYRUP. Cvk mixture over direct heat until\nlittle of mixture forms, \"aoft ball'.' when teated.ia eoWwater (234-\n236\u00b0F). Remove from heat, add milk and vanilla. Serve hot or cold.\nFor Free Recipe Boat, Write\u2014        ;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;..   t .\nTbe B.C. Sugar Refinins; Co.,Ltd., P.<**vBox 069, Vaneoover, .B.C\nas\nTree-Ripened\nAPRICOTS\nYou know summer's really hit its slrido when you loe apricots like these.\nAll plump and-golden-vpllow . . . with juiceful \"aunny\" flavor. You'll find\nboth \"finger7dent\" apricots for eating fresh. . .and tho illghtly firmer fruit\nthat's ideal for canning ... at Safeway now.   .....\nMark (lown oprlcots pn your shopping list today, and romombdr. . . Safe-\nway's the place to get'oml        , '\nPer\nPound\n141b.\nCase\n1.95\nPink flesh\nCANTALOUP\nFrom Sunny California.'Serve IL     10-\nfilled with ico cream  |Q#    | J\\\nSlicing\nPEACHES\n8weet \u25a0\n.Serve with cream.\nIb. 18c\nis lb.\nease   .\n$2.75\n* WATERMELON\nCrunchy crisp and\njuicy to bite into;\naervo lea cold\nfor'o    7\nrefreshing dessert\nlb 6c\n* C0RN-0N-C0B\nLocally grown.\nSelected ears\nof fresh corn.\nGolden.' sweet\nand tender _\nIb. 19c\n* CUCUMBERS\nIdeal for\n- slicing for\nsalads . . .or\nbuy them now\nfor pickling\t\nlb 14c\nPrices .Effective\nAUGUST 6th to 8th\nLocal Lettuce LuWi s^ j^ ib. .;.\u201e:; !$#''\nBunch-Cor^-^to^^^...^,.. JO*\nCrisp Celery fJSU -4\" ^ ^ ,.:|||\nGreen Peppers tog,, ^-.j^ ^ ,Tf$5$\nDanich Sfltwrt^*^ to \u00b1-.  J9$;\nSunklst OrangesSweet -*,\u201e\u201e\u2022\u00ab \u00ab,..-,11<*.,\nSunkist: L6moni'M^i.iMeei m>  19* \u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0i-i-i-^iriii \u2022\"\u25a0! ' \u2022' ,: ' \"'\"-'\" i\n-iwsetiiTs Wtommo juice\nSweet bleculta ... eleven varieties . , ,\nperfect far that holiday trip or plonlc . . .\nCheck the varieties... Coco Flngari,' Sandwich. Hoateai, Black and White, Parlalen,\nVanilla, Toasted Cocoa, Marshmallow, Modern, Rex and Strawberry Tarta.\nFull 16 oi. bog ..\u201e._:. _\nLibby'i fancy.\nA meal time\nappetizer. :\n48 ore. ean\t\n35c\n\u2022 SWIFTS PREM\nFor snack* or\nsandwiches. Handy for\nlummer camp or picnics.\n12 oi. round can\t\n32c\nSulrori or Opew^torMrMow'47\u00ab\nClover .Leaf\nCheck Theie Values In Clover Leaf Seafoods . , , Topi fer\nQuality and Flavor . . . Buy B.C. Product!,: \u25a0._,.'-.  ,,\nSockeye Salmon, Fancy, 73A oz. can \u00abW#\"-,\nI Pink Salmon, Fancy 73A oz. can     *      :      ; \" 22t>\nCohoe Salmon, Fancy, 73A oz. can .\n, Wet Shrimp, small, 5 oz. cap ____.\ni Flakes, fancy light, 6 pi: can?\n29*\n58(6\n\u2022JtW\n\u2022 SUGAR\nFancy\nquality.     :\ni.ieyi'^ff\n\u25a015 <*. ean\n~~ CiiMUL $IUCBA.\nServe Healthful Fruit Juices on That Picnic !\nSUNKIST ORANGE\nConcentrated; 6 oz; can ...'.....\t\nAPPLE JUICE\nVitaminized; 48 oz. can ...\nLEMONADE. BASE\nSunklst; 6pj\". can ..?..-  _;.\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nTownhouie; 48 pz. can\t\nPINEAPPLE JUICE\nDole's Hawaiian; 20 oz. can \t\nTOMATO JUICE\nSunny Dawn Fancy; 48 oz. can .\nPineapple Sliees?.^^^ ^f$j$.\nPrune Plums Monica, .Choice; IB ba? cm .,..........:.*, 12*\nGolden Com Bute Telh, ra^ice; 15 or. can .:-.....   14*\nLynn Valley POOS standard; W oa. can,6for 73*\nGordenside Tomatoes standard; 23 oz ean 25*\nMushroom SOUP Campbells; 14) ta can 18*\nHalf Chicken park Lane; 2 lb., 2 oz. can ...... $1.19\nPork and Beans Ta^ *&:*?<\u00ab.:\u201e*,,, 6ter,'69#;-:\nSpiced Bieef-M-^-'f^j-^'j.\u00bb'b_!W*,'.M-\u201e_!\u201e''-2Sf.:\n: Irish $t*v Puritaiar w -oi :ea*; 'ifZ-Z. ....: \"3,4^ \u25a0\nMiracle Whip ^.mm; jer.' _. \" : \u00bb:;T9#.-;\nJelly Powders -smpreia Aiat; 8% oa .pkg., 6f lor 47*?\nStrawberry Jirtn awr\u00ab!.:ihiw\u00ab.oz.:ek':$l>04'\n?!>Ut-Butter fBomojenlzeirs M oa. Jar  39*\n21*\n35*\n22*\n33*\n15^\n34*\n\"5*!\\\nRich, Satisfying\nNOB HILL\nCOFFEE\ne who prefer anharp, treat*, vigorous, fun.      ,~,      iw\ncoffee. _b|b'    _^\n98c ---'.' $1,930\niiffl\n16 oz.\npkg.\nRich, Robust\nCANTERBURY\nTEA\nA  luxury blend  In\neverjf. rai|>e(>t ,;. . yet.\nIt'a economically\nSmoked\n* HAMS *\nTenderized. For delicious cold plates\n* or sandwiches.  Perfect for summer   IL\n,\u00ab-\u25a0..-..-. ID-\nmeals. Whole, hblf or piece ______\n69c\nRUMP ROAST VEAL Nb. 72c\nROUND STEAK\nVeal Shoulder Roast Cholce! Lb  \t\nStewing Veal Breajti' and Shanica; Lh, -.,-.\n:j9ologn\u00abl Fancy, No. li tb. .'\u201e; ..'. ;...\u201e......\nOR ROAST BEEF,\nAll cuts. Red\nor Blue Brand _.\n45*   . -fry'\"* Chick\u00abing^^\u00a3_toff; u,,\n25*      Standing Rib Roast^ Brand; ii\t\n35*   :    ^* 8-HCOnLean, Layer SUct-dirLb.\t\n16 oz.\npkt. ...\nSic\n\u25a0I priced.\nTea Bags\nPkg. of\n60 bags\t\nffl\ni% SAFEWftY\nWEINERS\n[No. 1 quality for picnics',\nIsnacks, etc. _.,....:..._. \u2014\n'.'\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\nm\n_________\n-\t\n WaWrfMBBSM\nlO\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1953\n-\u2014 !\u2014.-\u25a0 \u25a0 .    . \" . :. ..', ...  ..   i... ,', .   ,.   .,|!.111\nsM\n'BusinessSpotljghti'',... \u25a0       'fy.fi-f.- .\u25a0.;\u25a0-.:\nNew Brunswick Ore, Long Ignored,\nTurns Out To Be Rich Proposiffon\nBATHURST, N.B. (CP) -Many\npeople are probably wondering why\nIt hii taken 10 long to discover\nNew? Brunswick's mineral potential.\nAfter all, the Iron ore In Labrador md uranium deposits ln Sas-\nkitchOwin were far less accessible\nthin the ban metala find in the\nnortheaitern part of this province,\nThe truth il New Brunswlckers\nhive been claiming a great mineral potentl.l for nearly two dee\nI \u2022 ?.\nM\nENOUGH?\ntl yon. hav. hid enough ol\nLlbirilwiile ind oviMiMtlon-\nII you hive hid enough of\nLlbeiil eonlimpt for Parllamintj\nM vou ajr\u00abt that 10 ytara of\neni-p*rty |ovimi-iii)l iia.nol\ngood for Ihe country or that\nparty Itself; end that It Is lime\nfor* dungs-...     ' ' ..?.'.'\nRimimb\u00abr-*only Ihe Connrva-.\nIlvu can forr- iholhii sown-\nmini. A Vole for Iny oth-r\nWity will only divide th.\neppoilljofl \u00abnd \u00bbtum lh. Llbarali -\n-power, ' ;\nHialsiiolf   T\nYOUR MONEY!\n?.. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<**m&mept*ttmpttiim    .\ntiy'WK.y':ti\nMtRAE\nthot. AlexandUr\n, Jumnm by ttf ProiriHivt\nConiirviUva P#rty of Canada .\nrnittirw^sfisfi\nties Their difficulty wii In convincing Ihe mining companies.\nTh'. companies were wory became th* province's mining history\nhu been virtually ono of small operations which soon petered out\nAnd gll the talk In those daye Wll\nIbout .tton'or*.' t\nIt turned out that \"base metals\"\nwer* thl magic words,\nAn IrHh prospector named Plddy\nMeahan of. West Bathurst was oh*\nfellow. who aisoclated bli* metal!\nwith, iron br*. Uilng, biiemetols\nll 'bli irgument, hei .tried \u25a0 to . at:\ntract investment capital to thll dlitrlct 17 3t*i|rif\u00bb|0.'  '*'\u2022;   7?,\nBut .the expert! turned him down.\nMeihln twt mining in New Brum-\nwick ,WH retarded. bec\u00bbuse Quebec\/ and Ontario : interests believed\nthit only, the old. pre-Cambrlan\nshield carried ore in large' enough\nquantities to ensure successful operation!,- New Srunawlck il in thl\nAppiliehlin, region...   .\nA lot of proppectoraihave scoured\ntb* ruMed district ilnpe then, ind\nthe Bathurst iron mine opened and\nclosed almost In ths niilddle of. today's mining activity, without discovering* biia metali ini th* ore\nLut lummer, however, Andrew\nBaldwin, a University of New\nBrunswick ; geology student nOw\nworking* in Alberta? detected mineral indication while' comparing\nBathurst ore \u2022 with Labrador iron\nOr*:   \"\u2022\u2022.;'\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0  \"\u25a0 \u25a0 A      ti,\n. Labratory? examinations by Dr,\nGraham MacKenr,le, ,U. of N.B.\ngeology professor; turned- up base\nmetalj -i illver, lead, tine and\nsome copper.. Dr. MacKenzie Informed * Montreal company for\n\u25a0which he had been doing research.\nIhe company passed on tit*\ninformation to mining interests\nheaded by Si J,tnoytan of Toronto.\nThii time drilling equipment wis\nriished to the area. Brunswick\nMining and' Smelting Corporation\nwii formed, i, ihift itarted, ind\nloon nimli like 'New Larder U.\nind' Bathurst began, appearing on\n| financial pages, :;\u25a0\u201e' \u25a0.:-.\u2666 ti'-,\nThese names sparked the heaviest tridlng In thi 100-year history\nrf, thii Toronto iteek market  -\nAnd thW town, which once looked\nto shipbuilding \u25a0 for prosperity, KM\nturned Its oyei toward mining \u2014\nandtjjf fnwi'* ''\u25a0'.'    7'W \"-?'-'\u25a0'\n...   i'..' '\"*,'i ';!\u25a0\u00ab',,,-'   \u2022 H \u25a0)\u25a0.\u25a0'\n; Thi 'flrit luctlon-'tsjie machine\nfor milking .'cowl wu made1 in New\ni*ttiiy.'g|\u00bbut;.l$T^. \u201e.v ',.' \u2022\u2022''.'?\nHEADQUARTERS of a renefjlde not of .\u00abh<* Mormon churoh.,\nthe deiert town of Short Creek, Arl\u00abohi, w*fi rlldid by U.S. polio,\nind the entire community placed In-ouatody. The *lden of the\n.town wore leeuild of polygamy ind of forcing young girls tf mar-\nrlaoi, tproy t, Johnaon, 64, centre, wai named \u25a0\u2022 tho leader of tho\nloot ind li acquiod of having ilx wlvei ringing In age from 80 to\n20 yean, Ho told reporters thot the ('ground will drip with our\nbleed haferi wi give up our religion.\" ti-wSH'-.-'\u25a0'?.'' '--Wii\nAward Contract for\nDredging. Harbor     *;\nOTtA^A (OP) - ftheptiblle\nworfca department'announced Wed-\nneiday thit a contract for dredging\nthe Entrance to Vancouver harbor\nhu been awarded to B. C. Bridge\nond Dredging Co., and [the Western\nDriditfiit, Co., . -   ?.''>:'.:';-..\nThe dredging will be carried out\nalong a %-mlIe stretch of tha First\nNarrows which form'i th* intrinoi\nto the. harbor., It. will permit large\ndeep-sea ihlpi to enter or Je\u00a7vi\nthe harbor at low tide.  '\nTO CREATE CHANNEL'\nv Ih* work, expected tb start Immediately, Will coat about $1,000,-\n000 ind .wll| take from? 10 to 12\nmontha to complete, the department\noW,.'. :..'.,...,...., ,.'...'.,..,,...,..\u2022..\nUnder the contract the two companies will remove approximately\n710,0110 yards of material from.the\nbed of tho Narrows with hydraulic\nand dipper dredges. Thii will create\ni channel with n minimum' width\nof 800 feet-and a depth of S7t4 feet\nIt ltjw tide     v.\/...\nMain purpose of the dredging Is\nto enable big tankers to leave the\nharbbr at low tide after loading: up\nAlberta oil moved to Vancouver by\npipeline. Itieiplpiline, built by tho\nTrans-Mountain, Pipelines, 11 eg.\npebted to be In full-operation late\n\u25a0WTta.' \u25a0?\"\"'',.'\nCabinetMeets\nBefore Election\nOTTAWA CCP)-,-- Seven Liberal\ngovernment'minister! turned up _t\nthe East Block Wednesday to attend what may be'the final cabinet\nmeeting before t|ie Aw 10 voting.\nWith' Prime Mlnlater, St. Laurent\nwar*, TVad* Mlnlater Howe, de-\nferice Mlnliter Claxton, Revenue\nMlnliter McCann, Transport Mlnlitir- Chevrier, postmaster-general\nCote and State Secretary Pickeri-\ngill.\nOfficials said the meeting Wll\n\"purely routine\" It started at 10:30\na.m. ind wai to deal with several\nt-ilnor external affairs appointments and a few other Items Including iome relating to .the Colombo. Plan operation!. V '\nThe ministers also were expected\nto review the Liberal party campaigning acrosithe cbuntry hut no\nlilt minute changes in itrategy\nwere expected.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Rev.' Marcui\nPalloon, 80-year-old rector.'tompor-\nIrily in a London hospltil, mlisea\nhli - water-lily sandwiches. For \"U\nyears the rector has rworn by water\nlily petalB between slices ot bread\nand butter, sometimes topped with\nJim.\nRT. HON. LOUIS S. ST. LAURENT\nPRIME MINISTER OF CANADA\nMorePeople are earning More\n1^      ever bifore J\nAcross Canada it's Liberal!\nVOTE LIBERAL\n\"'fi \"Tbi.' ad'vertl'iittient II publlih.4 br ti. 8.0. \u25a0f-dor-J-MbaraJ \"Simplign CommlttM'1.\neasjs\u2014sess;^\u00bbi   ii.i.iii.1111,1,1 J   tiiiu.t 'i,HAi..tisxxaa=3Bmszz=tk\nVOTE FOR JAM {CURLY) S0MERVIlLf\nLiberal Candidate for Kootenay West\nShort Creek Cuf\nOff From World\n'\u25a0 \u25a0'a *Z4*tot$ aAfii titi SHORT CREEK, Ar!t -r 4AP) -\nTrees lining th* lone itreet droop\nin ib* heit.\"v7'7i7; ':-. ''.:' ,\n. Dirty, ramshackle building!, Hark\nigalnit the laded red backdrop ot\ntho vermllllon olitti, cluster along\nthii duity''rbid;-'7' ..',''.\u201e\nHordes ol children ploy quietly\nIn the pink sand thit atretohei over\nthe*dreary, monotonoui waiteland.\n:. Tho stamp ot poverty la every.\n.ijrMr'*,-.*. '\u25a0 iti-\nThis li Short Creek, tiny village\nnear the Utah border where polygamy hll flourished for 20 yean;\n'.where time:.seoms to hove been\nturned bock three-quarters ot I\ncentury to. a rude'frontier culture,\n19TH CENTURY DRE88E8\nThe women wear long, 19th century dresses. \u2022 Ther** is practically\nno electricity, \"and plumbing ll i\nluxury not  all oan afford\nIt *Wli 'thll remote settlement,\nalmOBt lost in the Isolated viitnifl\nnorth ot the Grand Canyon, that\nwas the scene recently; of the\nlargest poli'ce lotion in Arlaono'i\nWrtO-'y'., :\u2022\/:\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nOne hundred . ind two .officers\ndescended on tho community before dawr! July 20 ond seined virtually tb* entire populace, 91 men,\nSO women and 208 children.\nFrom that date a running argument began. Som* uld thl state\nwai wrong In taking iuoh drastic\naction.  .Others said lt was' right,.\n|iiroy Johnson, OS, , purported\nleader of the colony, said ln the\nearly light of thit fateful diy* <.\n? \"We have done no wrong.: We\nJupt pnotise our religion accord'\nlrg to our beliefs. We believe in\nth* original tenets of the Mormon\nchurch,.,    ''*\n\"The women, dont hive to\nmerry it th*y don't want to. I defy\nanyone to prove thit my girl wa;\never forced into I marriage. The\ncomtltutlon permits ui to worshlb\naa we please and the stato would\ntry to take that *way from u|.\"\n8TATB ATTIJ-UDB OIPfeRINT\nThe. attitude of the state' con-\ntraiti pharply. Governor Howard\nPyl* expressed lt In I radio ad-\ndren following the raid.\nHi Mid the operation wai\nlaunched to suppress an \"Insurrection within o\\ir own borderi,\" ind\nto protect children who \"ore tho\nproduct and victim Af the foulest\nconspiracy you could poislbly lm-\n\u2022glne.\"  \u25a0 '       '.-',   i-v\nHe said th| town was dedicated\n\"to the production of white ilaves\nwho are without?hope ot escaping ...\"   .      . \u2022';:'. :        '[...: \u25a0\nThe adult! were occuseo of a\nwide range, ot' crimes, including\nbigamy, open and notorious cohabitation, statutory rape and adultery,       .'i .:\u25a0' ti. \u25a0 \u25a0\nThe polygamlati, defiant and\nangry, reject thll view,.\n\"We ire\" not lmmoril,\" llld,\nSpencer Johnaon, 12, \"Eyery woman\nli soiled to a elnglo man by thi\nehiirehA. -\nOtheri pointed out that the Bible\ntelle of both David and Abraham\nhaving ntultlpli w'lv*!.* .-\n: In 1890 tho, MOrmon ohurch outlawed polygamy and In that action\nthe icedi of the Short Creek colony\nwere lown. The \"fundamentalists\"\nwho dlaugreed with the ruling\ndrifted south: 0| Wtah .'tfito 'the\n\"Arizona strip\" country, isolated\nfrom the rest pf the state by thl\nGrand Canyon., In 1083 they began\nmoving into Short Creek, 7\nuNiT\u00abD eiFOM*?   \"\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0 i, yy,\nAttempts to root them out in\n1935 and 1044 failed, Now tho state\nll determined to crush the group.\n\"Every adult will be prosecuted\nto the fullest extent of the law,\"\na Id Ross Jones, Arizona attorney-\ngeneral.' \" -'.-\"i' '. '\n. His. plan calli tor breaking up\nth* cflmmun*l,\"untt\u00abd *ffort\" fund\nInto whloh *U assets of thl town\nin poured, for stripping tbi eult-\ni|U Ot their property rights In. thl\narea and sending the participants\nin thi: \"eowpiwey'V' both mm\nahd women,'to jail;      \u2022\nMeanwhile the state ii miking\nexhaustive effort! to teed - ind\ncloth* the mother! and children\npending the day when, their fote\nwill be dec|d*di:    '   |\nDenationalization One of\nBritain's Biggest Selling Jobs\nLONDON (Heutera) \u2022- Ono bt,\nBritain's blggeit lolling Jobs II. under way, behind' the icenei In London'! financial world-rreturnlng the\ndenatlonallzad atoel iriduitry to prl-\nvkta ownirihi*i>.'7-f.y.',..:;.^,''., '\u25a0\u25a0; *\n.. Somi _ 240,000.000 of eiourltlei\ncovering 800 nitloni,llMd eompin-\nliivin up? for?uli, \u25a0 Tlmnolil \u00ab*\u2022\nperti figure thi deal will Involve\nib much a j \u00a3380,000,000 before It\nuahiSbd, :.   -: -i'ti., \u25a0\u00bb :;\n: It probably will b| iome year!\nbefore the entire nrooeii la com-.\npleted, by whleh tint* the Labor,|\nparty, which recently reaffllrmed lti\ndecision to \"rcnatlonallie\" tho In-\nduatry na loon, n possible, mt)V- be\nback '\u2022 in office. But tho City* doea\nnot seem worried at the prospect.\nMany of the eompanlea and financial houses ire known to be, negotiating with the government tor\nshares, Including Colvllles, Dorman\nLong,   Lancashire,   Stewarts   md\nLloydi, United Still ind Vlckers,\nActual lob ot lining tho govern-\nmen''! Interests hl| been given to\nthe Iron and stool holding ind real-\nIntloh igenoy, specially set up {or\nthepurpoio\niWftj'rM'WON-.--- ' yyr    ''.'\u25a0\nThe igancy, hOaded by chairman\nSir John MorrUon, haa bun dicker-\nIng with thl companies and financial housei for aome time, Thi first\noffer, -expected tb hi taken up by\nInsunnoo componlia and almllar\nInstitution*, is expeoted toon,\nOrdlnery aHorii for. thl public\nare ichiduled to ippeir on the mir-\nkit Ibout Septamblr.        . ,, ;\nThl igejacy took over thi iMett\nof tho Iron and Stool Corporation\nJuly 13. The corporation now la\ndefunct, Its ]0b of admtnliterlng\nthe induitry ind forming over-all\nSalem To Cheek Fast\nDrivers With Radar\nSALEM (AP)-Snlom polio*, wll\nstart using tholr ridir devlci\nThursday to catch apeedlng motor\nint*.   \/*..-;\u25a0\nTho police havo been expert\nmontlng with It tor two months.\nLarge signs.were erected It th\nentrances to tho city to warn mot\norlati that radar la being,uied. -\nAgnea  MacPhill   waa  the  firs\n8\" oman member of the Canadioi\nommons as formor MP for Gre; -\nSoutheaat, Ont,, in 1921,  ' ,,'\u25a0\npolicy bilng taken over by the Iroi\nind (Mil board,   .\nDuring nitlonallzatlon - whlcl\nitarted Pebruiry 1051, ml* Midi'\nMiy 14, thii year, whin th* Con\nlervatlve government'! denitlonal\nlaatlon bill received royal ament- .\nthe >00 member eompanlea wer\nlift almoit Intiot md given * tre\nhand is fir aa management am\nproduction ' were concerned. Th\nIron ind iteol corporation manlgci |\npolity, flmnoe md development  A\nTropical Hsd\nMoving North\nHALIFAX (CP) - Tropical fish\nhav* appeared off'Novi Scotia almost every day thii lummer. Marine scientists soy It's another lign\nthe ocean* waters on Canada'! ealt\npoast are getting warmer.\nTwo tarpon were caught off\nHalifax Harbor and i ray in St.\nAnn's Biy thll week, Sharks, including 1 man-eater that terrorized Cape Breton fishermen, have\nbeen reported along the coast from\nGlace Bay to ,the Boy of Fundy.\nAll ore normally found ln water!\nfir louth of here.\nFisherman Charllo GHkle of.Sam-\nbro . caught o . 1011-pound tarpon\nMonday and in 80-pounder Tuesday. '\nThe ray,, whose tall Is known for\nIts dangerous sting, was killed by\n\u25a010-year-old Alex' Finlayson ot Sydney. It was about four flit in,\ncircumference, \u25a0\u25a0-.',:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022' 1 ';\nBIGOE8T TARPON      '\nSambro fi\u00bbh deilir Riy Piitor,\n* Cuban, slid the larger tarpon\nwai \"ii bl( il any I ever law in\nthe Gulf ot Mexico.\"  ,    '\nDr. S. A, Beatty, director of the\nAtlantie fIfhorlea station here, says\n\"there .is definite evidence the\nwitiri off *4ovi Scotia have been\ngetting a bit warmer nob year\nIlKI 1MT.,\" ' . ;   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0,. ,       ... ' 7 r\nijONDON-tCPI-Aiiiw blook\nof council-sponsored apartments In\nth* borough Of Poplar li to bi\nnamed Hilary. House after Sir Edmund Hillary, who -'reached the\nsummit of Mount Everest.\nFOR FUN ?\nStart your day with\nNABISCO\nSHREDDED WHEAT!\n'     \u25a0;\u2022':\"\u25a0    '\u2022.'\u25a0'\"'    1,'''\u2022J','   \u25a0''\u25a0.\"_.',. f     *    ; \":'\u2022 ''\"\u2022'\u25a0\nYou get satisfying noarisfment\n.;';\u2022:;\u25a0', Jot fat aftw tents!\n, A nouilsriing breakfast helps you brette\nthrougli your day's work-with plenty\nof energy left for fun In the evenlngl\n: That's why you'll want tor start your day\nwith wholesome NABISCO SHREPDED,\nVraEAT. Maijfe fiscim put 1^ wboltr\nwheat, high in protein, it even includes\nthe bran uni wheat germ! Gives you\nsolid rood nourishment when you need it\nmost - -W the morning, Tomorrow, i\ndelicibus, hearty NABISCO SHREDI\nWiiMt.. itoMp '^'MtihtiMi,'\n' finishitronger!   .*:\u25a0     f\"ti--;ti Z'%ti\"\n\"\" \u25a0'\u25a0' \u25a0 Z -'-'-'ti \"Z't.     ,'ti'ZZf^f\nMother, You Can Sava Morw\t\n:*'   at Family Braakfastt -. -,,.;\nWITH THIS LOW-PRICE CERE*\n. I--    ,    .   . .     -)\nBreakfast need not be an expensive i\nif you do as thousands of budget-consdous\nwomen are doing, Serve your family nourishing NABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT.\nThis famous Canadian cereal costs let*\nthan2itaMr-_ig!\nPrefer a hot cereal f Just pour Oft boiling water, drain off quickly tod serve. So\n. delicious, so easy!\n1\nfl.\n.\u25a0\u25a0yr~^^\nKffi\nmm\nW'\n.Sjujiscd\nSHREDDED\n9WHI\u00abr\nWii\n\u00bb   yW   ;.     7,i;::-.J .';'.'k   v   1,1-1^4' '#\nHi_______i__ii^^\nFOOD ESSENTIALS IN\n;   NABISCO     7\nshredded Wheat\nCARBOHYDRATES - fer food |\n\u2022Biriy, v .'..'.; ;\u25a0' .,.\u201e\nPROTEIN -II help d.v-lop j\nmuselM ond otbir llnvii. *\nTAT *\u2022 MSOrlllql IO \u25a0 well-\nbnlohaw- dial.\nIRON-oa miWlol ilamaal bl\nih\u00bb blood..\nCAWIMM i PHOtPHORU\u00bb-fo- i\nnormal bonos pad lo\u00ablh.\nVITAMIN Bt - aonlrlbem \u00bb '\nIhl molnlanpntt of normol\nIPPItlll.\nIW-jKU\n\\\n ,i,iu%;^ji,u,jii4LiJiiiiji!\u00bbiipj|iiiij m*m\u00bbn< -\nTherms Fim for All\nOni&otewy Holiday\n*:'\u25a0*' \u25a0. \u2022\n\u25a0  ' \u2022\u2022-.\"\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 y   * .*.'\u25a0*..\n.' i\nThis month the vacation season-will be at a peak in\nthe Kootenays. .\n: \": And what better part of the West for a holiday? South- 7 *\neastern B.C. has for years been the hot-weather playground\nfor care-free Canaclian and American tourists. Whether their\nstoppingpoint has been in the Boundary, the scenic Slocan,\noff the beaten-path in' the Lardeau, or in the Windermere,\nthe majority have gone home \"sold\" on the Kootenays. Many\nsome back year after Jrear. \u25a0 . .-.''-.\n' i. -. As for Kootenaians themselves, the slogan of national\ntourist iriikistry promoters \"See Canada First\" might well\nbe paraphrased to \"See the Kootenays First.\" Thousands of\n'them take 'frips, to. district places for outdoor recreation, * '.-\njaunts to points of historical-or present-day interest or \\\n.irfi^^JB_*r. \u00ab*f!U^i\"jW?i^i*^iJi'.at'.-Uie beach. And there's,no\n,age.limit for fun in the Kootenays.\nWe picture here -some of the'major attractions, f .{'--:\ntmrn\n<\u00bb\u00a7\n\"WW* | MM'\n,   B^?OT? '&- K\u00b0<>t-NAYf LAKE, -MtlKits superb mountain setting, be ckons hbiidayers feom, eaily Spring uritii late Teill. Pye_-in-l_e-wool\nalong its shores can t imagine why anybody would want to go further t p relent on a sunny Summer day. and strangers are more than\nI campers -\nin \u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e ,\u201e,-\u00bb\u25a0, \u00bbi.\u201e.    u- i \" t-~  , \"    .\",,'\"'\" \"\"r \",' ~J~ \" ,*\" --*\u2014\u25a0 ***\u2022 \u00ab- \"-\"\"i \"\"\u25a0\"\"\u25a0\u00bb> \u00ab\"j, \"\"u DuuiKjuiu m\u00ab iuuio   nan inclined\nto agree with them. Fishermen, boaters, sight-seers and the person, who is merely Wanting to get away from the bustle of tows life, take hH\nadvantage ot the pleasure it offers each year. Highways vastly improved in recent years make.Kootenay Lake and most other Kootenay-Boim.\naary lakes readily accessible, and excellent motel and auto court accommodation awaits the visitor. Sportsmen, awHiv of them \"\nbeen flying to lakeB less easily reached.\u20141953 B.C. Travel Bureau photo. '\nAmeH6tms,-h\u00ab\u00a3V9\nfc)Y RIDES'ON the Kootenays* colorful sternwheelere\nare popular with district residents and tourists alike.\nSS. Minto. shown here atbacts.hundreds of holidayers each\nSummer on its Andw Lakes runs, like the Albeitg visitors\nstanding on foredeck in this picture. Jloyie on'Kootenay\nLake is. also faviwite.^-Gordon PetBtt \"photo. *\nUNLESS YOU'RE A MOUNTAHBKR, one of the. best ways to s ee the Kootenay's most magnificent scenery is on a trail ride. The\nparty here is on Its way to the B.C. Forest Service lookout high on Idqho Peak in the Slocan country Horses are among services\nr>fi \u2022? ._f n,?w,?lac!or Vir\u00bbAute Covliai New Denver, and their mounts are, left to'right, Raymond Gordon of Calgary, Len\nGrodski, Trail school-teacher; Bill Rowe, the resort's oWner, and Miss Margaret Phillips, New Denver school teacher who is heloine\n,Mr. Ilowe eondu4* Ms-traMd*^^ \"-'Br?\nIT'S A HECK of a life now that the\nC\" 'tc is prohibited from feeding us, this\nin Kootenay National Park seems to\nsay; He looks harmless, bust those paws\n\u25a0erne pewk a -_9-t*f waUqp.\n, -H. M. CumisHngs photo.\n'*1\niii ; 1\n 12\u2014NELSON bAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST a, 1M3\nCana^iati Geologists Foresaw\nCanada's Century, Alberta Oil\n:' By Tha Canadian Preaa\nTho name ol Joseph Burr Tyrrell,\nexplorer, geologist and engineer became n byword In Canadian scientific circles when settlement ln\nWeatern Canada waa In the pioneer sttge.-'v ... ' \u2022 ,\n7'SO accurate wai 'Dr.*' Tyrrell'!\nwork in early surveys bt .western\nCahadia that tha saying w\u00abb coined\n\"aJ'gdbd Bi7Tyrrell.\" ,fte icored\nfirst, alter, first-in Important mineral findings, travelling previously\nuncharted parts of the country with\nnothing more than hli geologist's\nhammer,',: ;\u2022.:'!.?: .. ' ?\u25a0\"\u2022\"\u25a0\u2022..\u25a0\u25a0:;\u25a0\nSocial Credit\nI. C Need! Social Cre*t\nRepresentation in Ottawa\nIf teolal Cnedll .1*. not to ba\nhampered In the governing of.\nB.C. With federal co-operation, B. C.\" authorltlei con\n\u2022peed thii province*! Ueyelopr\nma-it,' encourage Industrial\noxpanalon, eliminate waite\nand extravagance, and give\nB.C. people a better dealt\n.'Only Social'Cradlt members,\nanawerablo only to their oan-\nitltuenti, ean obtain tha required co-Operatlonl\nVote\ni    ,    FOR YOUR\nSocial Credit\nCANDIDATE\nShew Ottawa That B. C.\nI* Looking to a Better\nf Future!'\nThis advertisement Issued by\nthe B.C. Social Credit .\nCampaign Committee\nin 11101, iome month! before Sir\nWilfrid,; Laurler's prediction that\n\"the lost century belonged to tha\nUnited Statea; the* next one belongs\nlo Canada,'.' Dr. Tyrrell made the\nsome prediction In on- Interview In\nthe Dawson City Dally News.\nA half-century before oil brought\na wave of prosperity to Alberta IA\nthe late 1840a Dr. Tyrrell had reported the presence ol oil of strong\nintensity, in the Edmonton area.\nOther discoveries resulted In' tha\ndevelopment of rich coalfields In\nthe Drumheller, Alta., area and he\nsatisfactorily determined the origin\nof the gold ln the- Saskatchewan\nRiver sandi.   7\/\n\u25a0INTERNA+lpNAL FIOURI,,,.\nHonor*,vwere ihowered on him\nduring a long and active career In\nWhich he became ah -international\nfigure In his field. In hla 90th year\nhe received the Woolaaton Medal,\nthe highest award given by the\nRoyal-Geological Society.\nDr. Tyrrell wai also the recipient\nat the Back Award ol the Royal\nGeographical Society, the' Murchl-\naoh Medal of the American Geolog.\nleal.Society, a medallion from the\nAmerican Institute of Mining Engineers, the Fl^avelle Medal of the\nRoyal Society of Canada and life\nmembership ln t|jo National Geographic Society. He has beert-hon-\norory' president of the Canadian\nGeographical .Society since iti in-\nception in 1030. . .?,',.\nHe himself established the Tyrrell Award to enable British geologists to visit Canada'as'well as\nthe Tyrrell Gold Medal of the\nRoyal Society ot Canada.\nWhen he was 84 Dr. Tyrrell atm\nretained the presidency ol Kirkland\nLake Mining Company. He retired\nIrom active exploring ln 1925 and\nin later yean divided hla time be.\ntween his Toronto home, and hla\n'farm some 19 miles eaat ol the city,\nPIONEER  EXPLORER    V\nTyrrell was out on the prairies\nbefore the Indiana were put on\nreservations. He* made discoveries\nln Manitoba and Alberta before the\nRlel rebellion. The archives of the\ngeographical survey contain , many\not hla report!, one of which,helped\nstart a man influx into the Oau.\npljin, Manitoba, country, now a\nprosperous agricultural region. Dr.\nTyrrell was a great believer in Can.\nada. In 1948, he laid in an Interview that only five per cant of tha\npotential ore-bearing  ground had\nJEUIEP SALMON\nTo 2 cupa of flaked Clover Leaf salmon add juice of 1\nlelnon, % tsp. of salt, dash of red pepper, 1 ot 2 sliced\nhard cooked eggs and 2 tbsp. of green peai. Dissolve\n1 tbip. of gelatin to make 1 pint of liquid (use water\u2014\n\\i cup of cold to soak it in and the r'epainder hot.)\nPour over first mixture in small or large moulds. Chill\nand serve on lettuce. Serves 6. A gelatin mixture, flavoured\nwith lemon, plua 2 tbsp. of vinegar and silt to season,\nmay be used instead of plain gelatin.\nbaan developed, \"and the leaat productive five per cent, at that.\"\nBorn ln Weston, Ont, a Toronto\nsuburb, Nov. 1, 1898, Joseph Burr\nTyrrell waa- educated at Upper\nCanada Collego and the University\nof Toronto. He graduated Irom university, in 188C and entered a law\noffice. But the law waa not to hold\nhtm. Shortly after, .he waa advised\nby doctors to look for outdoor work\nbecauae of lung trouble; >7 r\n7 young Tyrrell jvaa appolntad to\nthe Canadian geological survey at\nOttawa in 1881 and two yqar! later\nsaw him in the Rocky mountains,\non an exploration tour with the\nlata Dr. G. M. Dawson, v 7\n' Ha spent the yeara between 1884\nand 1888 exploring country north\nof Calgary between the Bow and\nSaskatchewan rivers, and the following year hla report, with three\nfnBps, was published by the'geological survey.\nWO-MIUI HIKf    \/ ,  [\u25a0'--.[''[[.'\nIn 1890, he travelled the'regions\naround Lake Winnipeg, and two\nyears later explored the previously\nuncharted territory southwest of\nLake Athabaska. In '03, he crossed\nfrom Lake Athabaska to Chesterfield- Inlet. He travailed down tha\nwest shore of Hudson Bay, with hli\nparty in canoes, going some 3200\nmile! in all, more than holf of\nwhich waa previously uncharted.\nTyrrell, finished off this trip with\na 800-mile hike on anowahoei from\nChurchill* to Winnipeg. \u2022\nThe following year he crossed the\n\"barren lands\" travelling from the\n.north end of Reindeer'lake to the\nwest coast of Hudson Boy. In 1895\nhe explored iome of tho rivers to\nthe northeast of Lake Winnipeg,\nThree years later he left tha Canadian geological survey,'\nHe went to Dawaon, Yukon Territories, as a mining engineer,\nwhere he reported on some of the\nlargest Klondike mining properties.    7   \u25a0  ,     ...      -   ti\"       '\":\u25a0-\n.' Dr. Tyrrell practised his profession in Toronto from 1908 to 1929,\nexcept, for one Interruption. In 1912\nhe conducted an expedition on be\nhalt of the Ontario government to\ntha mouth of the Nelion' river on\nHudson Bay. from there the party\ntravelled through tha district of\nPatricia on hitherto uncharted\nroutes.\nGOLD VEIN TIP\nOn one occasion whan he wii being taken on a tour of the Kirkland\nLake Lakeshore Mines by the late\nSir Harry Oakes, Dr. Tyrrell nO'\nticad a crack in the mine wall ahd\nsaid:. \"I think there'! a vein there,\n\"Nothing of the sort,\" scoffed Sir\n\u25a0Harry...   .   -.-.'\u2022 -:,V-.V- \u25a0.< \u25a0\u2022'(*?'\nBut Tyrrell insisted anetvblaiti\nwere aet off, The upshot was tha\nUncovering of a large vein which\nnetted around 1200 a ton. Others\nWere to be lorry, they failed to take\nTyrrell'a advice.\nOn his return from the Klondike,\nTyrrell was hired as a consultant\nand representative' by a group of\nBritish investors. But they refused to listen to hll arguments, as\ntime after time he tried to interest\nthem in .what now li the. Teck-\nHughes Gold Mine in Northern On\ntario. During the years that follow,\ned, almost $50,000,000 wea taken out\nof Teck-Hughes.\nDr. Tyrrell waa the author of\n\"David Thompaon, Explorer,\" pub'\nllihed in 1910, and haa written\nmany reports on exploration!. Pap-\nefs on geological, mining -ind historical subjects have been publish,\ned in varloui Journal! and magazines.\nDr, Tyrrell received hla B.A.\nfrom the Univenity of Toronto in\n1880, hi! M.Auln 1889 and B.Sc. the\nsame year. Honorary degree! of\ndoctor of lawa wera conferred on\nhim by the Unlveralty of Toronto\nln 1930 gnd by Queen's Unlveralty\n10 yeara later. ,\nIn 1894 he married Mary Edith\nCarey of Saint John, N.B. and they\nnad three children, two sons and a\ndaughter. Mra. Tyrrell died ih 1949.\nPWAL Applies For\nPrairie Flights\nVANCOUVER ICP>\u2014Application\nfor a new Vancouver-Winnipeg air-\nservice hai been made by Pacific\nWestern Airline! Ltd.       ,    ,'\nT. Ruiiell -Baker, PWA vice-\npresident and general manager,\nlaid Wedneiday the company, has\napplied to the air transport board\nIn Ottawa for a \"Clasi 2, non-\nscheduled coach-type\" service between the two point!,\nThe airline proposes to touch\ndown at Calgary, -Edmonton, Reglna and Saskatoon en route.\nLOWER FARES ,\nMr. Baker laid fare! were expected to, be 30 per cent lower\nthan thoae in existing carrier! beeauie the firm wai \"not interested\nln competing with TCA and CPA\nor in becoming i luxury type of\nairline.\": -7\n- \"We believe our future lie! in\nthe movement' of passengers and\ngood! . .. without the fancy! trimmings and frills.\"\nHe.tald the firm proposes to\nstart service with two 48-paitenger\nBristol Wayfarer aircraft ln dally\nflight!. I..,,-\nThe, airline'now operate! one of\nthe largest non-scheduled contract\nand charter flying servicer In Canada. It operate! it aircraft.    .\nRATAL MISTAKE,\nCHANCE HARBOR, N.B.-4CP)\n\u2014A 530-pound tuna which blundered into a fisherman's weir had lta\nseafaring days ended by a rifle\nbullet fired from close range. The\nnine-foot fish waB put oh display\nat a fish market.\nIN CENTRAL COMMAND ...\nCol. R. L. Purvei, 40, of Victoria,\nwu promoted to brigadier and\nnamed chlaf of itaff to the Canadian army'a eantral command In\nJuna, effeotlve In September. Ha\nprevloualy had larved for two\nv yean ai chief of itaff and aiilit*\nant military attache at Washington. He wai born and' educated\nIn VIctorlaMCP photo.)\nSite Chosen for\nCoast Auditorium\nVANCOUVER 4CP).-A, site in\ndowntown Vancouver' Immediately\nwait of the Cambie Street bui depot, hai been selected as the site for\nthe proposed $2,790,000 auditorium,\nChoice ot the site wai announced\nTuesday by tha special auditorium\nadvisory committee. City council\nwill study, the committee'! choice\nand plana for tho structure when\nlorting out- project! under the proposed $30,000,000 five-year civic development schente.     !.'..';\n _ _\nProducers Low\nOn Pork, Beefr\nSays Gardiner\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Canadian pro-\nducera are not meeting the Canadian demand for pork and beef and\ncurrently do not need a British\nmarket for \u2022 these products, Agriculture Minister Gardiner laid\nrecently. \u2022   ; ..\u2022*.-    ..' \u25a0'\nAddressing an audience of more\nthan 2000 In Victoria Hall, Mr.\nGardiner aald Canadiana are eating- 90,000,000 poundi of pork a\nweek while 76,000,000 pounds are\nbeing 'delivered to meet tlje demand.     ' .\". '    .\nProduceri were' delivering 14,-\n000,000 poundi less. than people\nware, eating. Storage supplies had\nto be drained to make up the difference. Beet waa in about the\nsame poiltloh.-\nYet there were those who said\nIhe British market! had been lost.\nThere waa a Britiih market If producers were prepared to take the\nlower price.\nMr. Gardiner spoke briefly before Hying to Yorkton to address\nanother public meeting.\n' Mr. Gardiner ipoke in support\nof Dr. E. A. McCuiker, seeking reelection ln Reglna ln the Aug. it)\nelection.       -        '\u25a0-,..\n\u25a0____\u25a0__\u2022\u25a0_-\nOSLO (CP)\u2014Five hundred of\nNorway's voluntary Women'a Army\nServlcaa membera attended the national convention of their association here. The organization has\niome 13,000 memberi, of whom\nabout half serve actively in various\nnon-cpmbatlve defence capacities.\nThey participate ln regular, exercises of national guard units.\nMore Desertions From M forces\n-EltUN - (AP) - Thlrty-iavan\nEaat German soldlen and police.\nmen fled to Wast Berlin Wednesday\nin the second largest mail desertion\not Red armed forces thla' year.\nThe fugitive!, including one officer, deserted from the food blockade which the Soviet zone government set- up around Berlin laat\nSaturday to kill off American relief for 18,000,000 Eaat Germans.\nThe record for one day'! flight\nwas set June 24, a week after .the\nEaat German revolt, when 40 soldiers and policemen applied here\nfor political asylum. The total for\n1981. la 2999\u2014two-thlrdi   of   them\narmy troops.\nTha Communlat hunger blockade\nand a rash of terror trial! sharply\nreduced the rush of EaatOfermana\nto receive tree American food packages In West Berlin Wednesday.\nMIRACLE-PLANT\n, KAMLOOPS, B.C. \u2014 (CP) - A\nmiracle .tomato plant over 40 feet\nlong hos produced over 800 tomatoes\nln Cecil Le Podvin's greenhouse\nhere., He credit! a home-made\nheating ayatem whloh worms the\ntoll for the man production.\nAn icon \u00ab\\ici.jotiis.s\nMeet in Oregon\nPORTLAND (AP). - The 82nd\nconference it the Puget Sound African Methodilt Episcopal Church,\ncomprising unite in Oregon, Wash- -\nIngton, Idaho,'Montana, and Britiih\nColumbia, opened a four-day session Wednesday.\nPrince Edward Island waa a separate colony from 1770 until lt entered\nConfederation In 1873. i\nWE CANt..WE WILL\nCKLN 1240 on your dial.8:00 p.m.\nPubllahed by thi Progroaalye Caniervatlve Party of Canada\n'\u25a0 I    \" '   ' '   -Ta\u2014\u00bb-\u2014immmi     n      \u00bb \u2014\u2014i\t\nThis advertiaement ia not published\nor displayed by. The Liquor Control ,\nBoard or by the Government of    fi\nBritish Columbia.\nYOU CANT BEAT WANT ADS FOR\nFAST RESULTS\nFor real action, results, and profits at low cost \u2014 read\nand use the Want Ads in this paper regularly. It's the\nDistrict's biggest marketplace'\u2014 with hundreds ahd\nhundreds of buyers and sellers \u2014 all ready to go to work\nto serve you quickly, efficiently, economically.\n'\u25a0 \\ ''\n'I   - * *   :\u25a0 tiff,'-\n\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0* -   \u25a0:)'\u25a0:-.  '\u25a0   \u25a0-..\u25a0'       '\u2022\u25a0\nMfion Sa% %m&z\ndo a WHALE of a job!\nTht BIGGEST idling job In the District. . . Hon In tho classified icclion of\nyour nowspapcr. . . you meot personally thot* people who ort really In tht\nmarket for what you havo to offer. Thty road your message because thty.\nwant to hire or bo hirod, to buy, soil, to rent, or to do you ii service. YOU GET\nRESULTS THROUGH THE WANT ADS!, -\nNefson Daily News\n P^pPP^S?pPP5\nwmtfim^^\n*** : ~*\u2014. . ' '      ' '   \"\n.\nv'aVSa\n(foowuL ihsL\n^p^^^-^^f^\nBy Len V\/alker\nif the executive memberi and th.\nplayeri on ths varloui \"clubs ot the\n. Nelion and District Fastball League\naccomplish llttlo elso this .season,\nthey pin still teal proud ol themselves. The reason ii that they have\ncompleted their league in (the ityle\nsomething that has not been done\nhere for some time.\nWhen tbey .held (heir opening\nmeeting, lt wai said the league\ncould be ieen through If'everyone\ntvorlcod to that end. Thll they have\ndone ind the closeness ot tho tint\nlive teams will hire out thll leal-\n\"' on'! good record.\nIt was disappointing that more\nfan! did not..take In the gomes.\nMany tine contests were performed,\nwith excitement galore.\n. With the playoffs only a matter\nof daya away, fans will be ln for a\ntreat If the \u25a0 league gamei played\nwero any Indication of what to expect ih the playoffs. .\nWith the recent upsurge qt the\nHume! In the latter part ot the\nseaaon, that taw them come tram\nnear the bottom ot the heap to cop\nthe league championship, the odds\nwill definitely be. on them, but any\none ot the four teams ln the playoffs could come out on top,\n\u2022 \u25a0*\u2022  *\nIn'the wbtnen's league the Nelion Royal! have como through their\nflrit round agalnat Salmo. They\nwill wait to meet either Rossland,\nKinnaird, Shaven or Castlegar'In\nthefinals.    \u2022'-.-\u25a0\u25a0\n<When the'West Kootenay conitl-\n* tutlon.wai,drawn up several, yean\nago, lt stated that the team that won\nthe Sparling trophy .drew the bye\nthe following year. Apparently In\none centre' ln the Kootenays this\ndoei not hold true. Thll year they\ntook it on their own to change the\nrulei with the coniequence that Nelion W\u00bbi forced to play Salmo. .\nFrom thii ariiei the question\n\"how raw can iome deal! get?'' Nelion never bicjced down from the\nruling, but iti my eitlmation ihould\nhave, lor I happen to be t member\not the Weit Kooteniy executive\nind two yeara ago I fought thii\nsame tying'when' I wai with the\nCastlegar Kate.\nYea, the Royal! . have come\nthrough their flrit Vtest and now\nihould wait un\u00ab:i ftnallit ii aiiur-\ned from ihe'other four teami.\nOne other question that arises li\nthe fact that the head oir headi of\nthe committee ihould have Issued\n\u25a0 Hit Of playeri eligible (fo-play for\nAinsworth. Hofiprlngi\nSwimming Pool\nOpen 9 a.m. to 10 pm  Dally\nClosed  on  Mondays, \u2022\n.   Except on a Holiday  ..\nSuper-keen,\nthe cup. Thii wu not done and the\nteam! ln the competition are still at\nlogger heads alto who ihould be\nout there and who ahould not,    '-\n,'iti,     ,\nTurning to hookey, we hear .that\nPenticton'! fight with the rink management li lettlod and th'at they will\ncontinue thii winter. Alio, lt li ru.\nmored thit little Grant Warwlok\nmay be leen ln Smoke Eater colors\nthll next season. I am not laying\nthat thii rumor li correct but about\ni month'ago we did hit ihe nail on\nth. head when we had Soflak going to Vernon.\n\/tif.;*-:\n. We have It from good euthorlty\nthat Penticton hai I 17-year-old\nyoungster who average! IB itrlke-\nouti a game and had.he performed\nhere In the tournament against Kimberley he would have mad. them\nlook lick. * \u2022'\u2022\"\u2022\nBob Morton, who *nOW apendi his\ntime behind the plate for the Humes\nln the Nelson Fastball loop, tells me\nthit When he waa ln the Okanagan\ncentre he thought highly ot a\nyoungiter, Ted Boweitield. He laid\nthat,with I change, of pace and a\ncurve, he would be one of the beat.\n$36,000 Added lo\nBE Gamei Fund\nVANCOUVER - 4CP) - Brltllh\nColumbia turfdom tossed another\n$36,000 Wednesday Into the pot for\nthe 1954 Brltllh Empire gamei here,\n\u25a0 Some 8000 fans turned out in a\nmiserable drizzle Tuesday7 to play\ntlie pottles at a special diy of racing at Hastings Park.\nWith ill government taxes\nwaived, proceed! from the eight-\nrice cud were turned? over to the\ngamei.\nEarlier In the year, $58,000 was\nrailed at Lansdpwne's mile-oval on\n\"Coronation Day at the races.\" .\nThui racing hai turned over almost $100,000 to thi gamei;\nB6th racing daya were arranged\nby the games special event! committee, under chairman Jaok Diamond, Who li alio vlce-preildent\nof B.C. Turf, operator! ot Lans-\ndowne. .\u25a0'\u2022''.\n\u2022Included In the five purses\ndonated for Tuesday's racing was\none from Max Bell, Calgary sportsman and owner of Alberta\nRanches.\nmmffm;\nGiVeTde\nSiWes Ever!\nFain Out When\nMost Needed\n;, SHI-ADELftHA - (AP) - Chi-\ncago White Sox, clinging bitterly td\nhopea.' of overtaking New York\nYankee! in the American League\njiennant we, have loit the ler-\nvices of their prize first-baseman,\nPerrii Tain, for 10 dayi to , two\nweeki. \u25a0 j* \u25a0'\n'\/'The lou oljithe llery, two-time\nleague battlng^champlon Carrie u\nthe Sox prepped tor their weekend\n\"muit\" leriei at Yankee Stadium.\nThey play four gamei'there and\non the. outcome of those contests\ncould rest the pennant.\nManager Taul Rlchardi confirmed Wedneiday that Fain luf-\nfered a \"green^tlck\" fracture of\nthe ring flngenspf hli left \u2014 hii\nthrowing-hand?>The fracture, while\nnot a complete'.break of the ,bone,\nil bad enoug*^ to prevent Fain\nfrom batting or,*; throwing until it\nll healed,        7 ,\nA darkling\"' delemlve player,\nFain has always been known as\ni fierce competitor, but the cause\nof the hand Injury \u2014 a brawl ln a\nMaryland tavern\u2014Is the. flrit off.\nthe-field report of iti type.     :\nFain was dancing -with a girl\nSunday night when he became involved in a fight James. Judge of\nWashington filed a $90,000 dam\nage luit.\nAnd Wednesday the word ipread\nthat Richard! li deducting from\nFain'! ralary, rumored at ibout\n$30,000 a year, a day'! pay for,\neach day he nilwei from playing.\nSo far it's estimated to hove cost\nFain about 1600. .\nConey Island, Brooklyn's crowded\nbeach Ind amusement park,, wis\nonce Inhabited only by rabbits.\nNext Trip-FLY\n. When you go by air you reach your destination\nfaiter and more conveniently. Flying tlm. from\nCASTLEGAR to\nVancouver 2 hrs. 28.05\nSan Francisco 63\/n hrs. 79.50\nToronto 9    hrs. 151.75\nHonolulu      12    hrs. 196.05\n\"Let the Canadian Pacific Airlines'agent help\nyou plan your entire trip,-He will gladly make'\nall arrangements, provide complete through\nticket urvlee no matter where you wint to go.\nPhone 204, Nelion, for Information and. reservation!.\n\/Wm\/uJIsOM (PacUic\nAIRLINES\n.GOOD MAN f3!? RBD.80): \u2022 ty Afcn ft^-ar\nBitty\nGOODMAN*\n0OOP\/HAH\n0O9rott\nMP SO*\nWflO'e BpBH\nUlAKMOA\n... 9BBAT.\n&MEBACK\nAFreft..\nAimsik*'\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a029'iSAf*e9.\nBECAME\nOF A BIB\ntJiJiik\/**jie\nFIGURES ,\npnaMM\/ntir.\nirtfHtti*\ntor p\/visior.\nHOP\u00bb9fWl0\nfMMLL\nZfimioH \u25a0\u25a0-'\nWIS MS ,\n\u25a0'WAS\nour.\n\/F MB COULD AU\/Nttlfl -\u25a0\nrHi BArr\/f\/s facb tie\neerori ms bbtum\nto Action He'p\nPROBABLY BeeoMB\"\nV\/E LEAGUE'S  \/\/ait\nMMm i\/rer\/Me\nBATT\/AlS AVeftASB'Me\nHAP A .91,> AI\/eKAOS\nBEFORE THli SEASOH.,\nIbrou tho   country for posting.'\nThe 1953 rul&i, let after study\nof migratory .bird population! end\nconsultation with United States authorities . under - on ' International\nconvention, establish open seasons\nthroughout Canada, the first of\nwhich becomes etteclly* Sept. 17'\nThii fall, beeauie of a modernization of the bulky rules which\neliminates 25 per cent? ot . thalr\nusually - heavy, Wordlgl. ind because of on improvement in -the\nduck population in the Weat, duck\nhunters should have their belt season in years. \u25a0\",. '.\nThe season! vary by districts,\nbut Weatern hunters get a special\nbreak, partly because ot the' increase In population and partly because of the damage ducki have\nciuied to cropi, '\nManitoba'! season Jumps to 65\ndays' from 57, Saskatchewan's to\nTO from 69, Alberta'i \u25a0 to 70? from\n\")\" and Brltllh Columbia's to SO\nIrom'JO, 7.   7. iti;.   \u25a0'--,- 'titi 'ti\nWhere fl hunter could shoot eight\nw*Ttit,i\u00abhnvrnumfirtiHii\nYanks Clip Tigers 5*4\nBy The Canadian-Press\nYogi Berra drove home Mickey.\nMantle-with a tic-breaking double\nln the seventh for a 5-4 New York\nYankee win over Detroit Tigers on\nWedneiday.\nThe Berra blow came after Johnny Sain, who came to the rescue of\nJim McDonald in the third Inning,\nhad skirted 'disaster as the Tigers\nsought to avenge Tuesday'! 15-0\npasting at Yankee Stadium,. But\nSain held them to ieven hits ai the\nYank! finally caught up with young\nBilly Hoeft, who had let them down\nwith three hits in their last meet--\ning.\nIn the other American League\nday game, right-hander Ben Flowers, making hli tint start, kept eight\nSt. Louis Browns hits well scattered for a 5-0 shutout for the Red Sox\nat Boiton.\nIn the National.League, Milwaukee Bravei finally snapped a six-\ngame home losing streak to Brooklyn as they came out ahead 5-3 before 30,741, largest week day afternoon crowd of the year in Milwaukee. 'V\nWalker Cooper lashed a pinch\nsingle behind back-to-back: doubles\nby Joe Adcock and Del Cranda.ll in\nthe eighth for the\" winning margin.\nThat left the; Braves 7% gamei behind the leading Dodgeri.\nThe lowly Pittsburgh Pirates,\ndowned Cincinnati Redlegi 8-4 in a\nday-game despite three Redleg home\nrum, two by. Ted Kluszewskl and\none by Gui Bell.\nNew York Glanta continued their\ndismal stand at Chicago, losing\nboth endi of a day double-header to\nthe Cubi, 9-6 and 7-6. Tommy\nBrown'i one-out single in the 10th\nscored the winner ln the nightcap\nafter Chicago took the opener. The\nlosses were the Giants' fifth and\nilxth straight.\nPhiladelphia Phil! extended their\nthird-place margin over St Louis\nCard! to 2Vt games as Bob Miller\npitched them to a 7r3 victory in a:\nnight game at St. Louis. Miller gave\nup a two run homer to Stan Musial\nin the first, but slammed the door\nbn the Cards from there in.\nIn the American League'!? other\nnight affair, Bob Portfleld pitched\nhis second successive shutout and\nhii seventh euch of the season as the\nSenators mauled Cleveland 11-0 at\nWashington. The defeat left the\nthird-place Indians 8% games behind\nthe Yankees.\nBritons Gel Good\nStart on Aussies\nLONDON IReuferi) \u2014 An opening . partnership of 143 by T.V.C,\nGardner and N. F. Horner got, Warwickshire off to a good start against\nthe Australian! Wedneiday ahd\nwhen rain halted play the! home\nteam had 228 for tbe loss of four\nwickets.    '\u25a0\u25a0..'\nLed by schoolmaster Michael Walford, who hit 21 foun in his tint\nappearance of the season, Somerset\nscored 387 for seven in.a county\nmatch against .Glamorgan.\u201e        \u201e\nSussex, challenging for its first\nchampionship, gambled agalnat Derbyshire and lost. \u2022\u2022''\nClose of play scores;     ... .\nWarwickshire 225 for four vs Aus<\ntrallan Tourists, rain restricted play.\n\u2022 Leicestershire 251 for nine Vs\nyorklhlre...\nSomerset 387 for seven vs Glamorgan.\nMiddlesex 147 for two vi Kent.\nGloucestershire 269, Northamptonshire 65 for two. \u2022   ,\nDerbyshire 368 for seven declared,\nSussex 17 for no wieket.      .\nNottinghamshire 361 for eight vs\nLancashire.\nBASE-AM-. SCORES\nNATIONAL* LEAGUE. .        '\nBrooklyn      100 011 000-S ,\u00bb\nMilwaukee ....   000.000 23x-5 ll\nErskine, Palica, Mllliken (8) and\nCampanella; Surmont, Johnson (8)\nBurdette 19) and Crandall. W -\nJohnson. L \u2014 Erskine\nPittsburgh .... 100 S2070OO-8 9 *1\nCincinnati   ....   200 020 000-4   6   1\nWaugh, Hetki (8) and Atwell;\nPodblelan, Smith (4) Kl\u00bbg 45)\nKelly 47) and Semlnlck. \u25a0W 7\u2014\nWaugh, L \u2014 Podblelan.\nFlrit  '\u25a0'\".' \"'' *\nNew York v..   001 000 050-6 12   1\nChicago   ....   ....105 200 Hx-912. 1\nJansen, Hearn, (3) Kennedy? (7)\nand Calderbne; Klippstein, Leonard. (8) and McCullough, -W \u2014\nKlippstein, L \u2014 Jansen.'\nSecond \\      '**\u25a0''\nNew York     100 001 211 0-8,10   0\nChicago     102 000 03 :1\u20147 14\nWorthlngton, Wllhelm'.(71 Koslo\n(10) and Westrum, Noble'(7) Cel-\nderone (10); Lown, Church 7) Leo.\nnard (9) Hacker (9) and Garaglola, McCullough (9). W \u2014 Hacker,\nL \u2014 Koalo. .7\nPhiladelphia  .. 030 000 103-7 \u2022 8   1\nSt Loull     200 000 001-3   I'l\nR. Miller and Burgess; Schmidt,\nBrazle'(9) and Rice.\nAMERICAN LEAQUE\nCleveland V..   000 000 000\u20140   6   4\nWashington     020 040 23x\u2014U 17* 0\nHosklng, Wright (7) Hooper 47)\nWilks (8) and Ginsberg; Porter-\nleld and Fitzgerald. L \u2014 Hoskins.\nDetroit    003 000 100\u20144 13   2\nNew York ...   100 210 lOx\u20145 10   0\nHoeft and Batts, Bucha (8)'; McDonald, Sain (3) and Berra. W \u2014\nBain.' \u2022 _ ,. 7>  '\nSt Jiouli    oob 000 000\u20140  8\nBoiton     200*021 OOx\u20145   9  3\nLarlen and Courtney; Flowers\nand White.\nChicago 110 800 200 000 02\u20149 12\nPhila, '   031 100 020 000O4H-7 11\nDobson, Dorish  44)    Pierce   (8)\nand Lollar; Fricano, Martin (8) and\nMurray. W \u2014 Pierce, L \u2014 Martin.\n\u25a0I, i ''  .\u2014       '.*..'    \u2014;\nGyros Squeeze\nWin Over Lions\nIn Little League actlon,,VTednes-.\nday night the Gyroi won a close\n4-3 'decision over the Lions in a\nwell played game.       \u201er?h   \u25a0-,\"\u25a0':\nDon Stevenson, as well as aiding\nhis own cause with a triple, allowed\nthe Lions but.five hit!. He struck\nout seven and walked four. Don McLean ln his stint on tho mound\nfound hlmielt In troubJe'Md wae\naided by Ernie Wah, Both gave up.\nseven hjlts, walked two and itruck\nout five.  '' v ..:>\u2022\u25a0 v\nr The only other.long hl\\ wii i\ndouble by Mike LaughtOli*.-    -   u.\nGyros'in the j>ecbho\\: took a tiyd-\nrun,leatl only to have.Iidni.4ut lt\nln Hit in their'tlnie-\u00ab-bit |jut\nGyros in their half of the fourth\nsewed up the game with two more\nruns. The* Lions olso .came up with\ntwo lp Uie fourth, but steady'pltch-\ning blanked them the rest of the\nway.\"\nLonger Season, Bigger\nBag Limits on Ducks\nOTTAWA \u2014 (CP) - Extendrt\nshooting season! and. bigger bag\nllmiti tor duck hunter! In mott\nparti of Canada were announced\nWedneiday by the resources department. ., '    ';'. '\"...;\nStreamlined regulations whloh\nIhould enliven the. duck mirihei\nthll fall were approved by tho\"fed-\neral jcoblnet nnd are being lent out\nto post offices, other government\nbuildings nnd enforcement officer! \"eUmliiatlon of ' season\nduoki a diy last year In Manitoba,\nhe now will be ollowod 10, with a\npossession limit of 30 compared\nwith 16 In 1953,    \u25a0 \u2022 '\u25a0;\",. .\nIn Saskatchewan the dally bag\nll rilled to 10 from, eight, the possession limit to 410 from 20. Alberta\nand Britiih Columbia bags remain\nbnchonged it eight a day, but possession limits double to 32.\nAnother Important change Is the\nbag Jlmlti,\nFor mony years tho , rogulatlpm\nhave limited the number ol ducks\nwhich could be taken ln a season\nto 100 or 100, but experience\n'ihowed thll rule wu unenforceable. \" -\u25a0-<\u2022\n\u2022AMR.FOB GEESE \"-; \u25a0'.\nSeason limits on geese are the\nsame as for ducks, but the dally\nbig limit tit five and the possession\nlimit? of 10 remain unchanged.\nThere are iome extensions In. the\nseason tor the less-popular rails,\ncoots and gnlllnulis, and minor,\nalterations ln tho season for woodcock and Wilson's inipe. Bag limits\nremain the same,      \u25a0\nIncorporated ll i section dealing\nwith crop damage., making it legal\nfor .farmer! plagued by birds to\nscare them away or\u2014with game officials' permission \u2014 to! shoot .the\nblrdi under certain circumstance.\nThe crop - damage -..rules Were\npassed by \u25a0 order-in-council July 16\nand announced at the time. Their\nearly passage waa necessary because off damage already '.being\ndone to: Crop! in the Prairies.' ;\nPCt STANDINGS\nBy thl Canadian Preii\n'\u25a0'-.' '\"\u25a0*. '\u25a0 .W'L\nHollywood -..*.  837 51\nSeattl. ,.., ;.....\u201e..\u201e\u2122\u201e'. 77  \u00bb7\nPy ARTHUR  ROW80N\nLONG BRANCH, Ont. (CP) -\nCanada's top cadet marksman, 18-\nyear-old R. M. Crossan 'oj Hoijill-\nton, Wedneiday tied in two matches at* the Oritirlo Rifle Association's annual, shoot here. \u25a0\nCrossan, who \"took cadet honors\nit the Dominion of'Canada Rifle\nAssociation shoot at Ottawa -laat\nyear, icored 102 of a possible 105 ln\nthe. Talt-Brasiey match. Other!\nequalling his performance were\nMaj. W. P. McBean, London, Ont;\nSqdrn. Ldr. P. S. Shepherd, Camp\nBorden, and Sgt. R. B. Catbllne,\nCamp Borden.\nThe four will ahoot off today for\nthe silver medal emblematic of the\nTalt-Brasaey title.   V\nCrossan has a chance at another\nlllver medal today in the C|ty of,\nToronto competition when he shooti\noff against.another Hamilton cadet, P. ti, F. Ford, and Capt. Jv O.\nKirk, Llstowel, Ont They notched\n73 each,lii the' 15-round OOOiyard\ncontest.\u25a0,\u2022: '\u25a0,'.':\u25a0'       v     'ti'-tif\nAll four .memben of the Spencer family of Ottawa won prliei in\nWednesday'! Toronto match. Mn.\nT. M. Spencer icored a Wj Maj.\nC; W. Spencer 167,19-year-old Patricia a 64 and Cadet Sgt C. D,\nSpencer a 63.   ,    '   \u25a0 7. ;\u2022'\u25a0 _\nThe trophy for the City of Tor-\nonito tei\u00bbm*mitch ww won lor the\nsecond year in. mcceiilon by the\nRoyal Hamilton Light Infantry.\nTh. Banker! match tie ehoot resulted In Sgt R. S. Potter ol Hamilton winning agalnit Fit. Sgt J.\nV? Martin,' RCAF, Camp Borden, on\nthe seventh round at 500 yards.\nMartin,\". who eirller this week\nprotested that a Held telephone\nwasn't working during the open'\ntag .round df the Banker!, preventing him from' checking shots, com.\npeted with Potter and four others,\nill.,ot: whom ih6t 99 ln the flrat\nround: \u2022   \/ '\nA start wai made Wednesday On\nthe Lieutenant-Governor's match,\nthe moit Important competition In\nthe shoot, and It will be completed\ntoday..' ,     \u2022 \u2022-      ,\n- | .' . \u25a0        >*\u00bb.'\nNakusp Drops Game\nTo Combined Team\nNAKUSPr-New Denver and Sll.\nvertoh teami combined' their\nitrength over \"the weekend to down\nthe Nakusp nine 9-8?\nAMhough Nakusp ,ipor\u00bbd new\nuniforms they were itpjt to get only\nseven hits off Ken Gordon, the Denver ' chucker. Nakusp edllected 14\nhits off Hale and Desrochers, who\nshared the mound duties for Denver.\nNakusp itarted the scoring in the\nfirst frame with one rub and then\nwere held icoreleis until' the ilv-\nenthi when they counted one .mor*.\nThey finished off their scoring in\nthe ninth with another tally.\nDenver icored three runi In each\ncf thf-lecon-r, ,tifU>. ind eighth\nframes.' ., .        . , \u00b0 .'   . <.\\\"\nKen Gordon went the distance,\nitrlklhg but ilx wh|l\u00bb wilWngtwe,\nf CALGARY 4Cft \u2014 Fiv** motion\npictures ire being made by Hollywood eompanlea thla summer lit\nJasper and Bonlf National Parks.\nThe atari Include Marllyh Monroe,\n?pbert Mltchum; 7 Jamei, Stewart\nand Ruth Roman;    J\".f:|t  \u2022\nLos Angeles ...\nSan Francisco.\nPortland ...........\nSan Diego\t\nOakland^.....\t\nSacramento .....\nTHREE-WAY TIE\nFORSECONDIN\nCRESTON LEAGUE\nCRESTON - In tbe final gam. ot\nthe league Riondel Giants Jumped\ninto a 3-woy He for runner-up ipot\nos they defeated Kiwanis 5-2.\nYoung Bill Huth itarted for Kiwanls and pitched effective* ball but\nwas inclined to be wild. In the\nfirst inning, Riondel loaded-tho bases on a' walk and two bunts. Huth\nthrilled tbe crowd ii he itruck'out\nthe next, two batten before he\nweikenld tp.wilk'In I runi' * , ' j:\nKiwanls tied the icore In their\nhalf of the first and ln the second\neach team scored again. In the third\nSutcliffe wrapped up, the game Uil\nthe mining boyi ii be slammed out\ntremendous home run with' two\nmatei aboard;    ,?>\u2022,'\nBishop shut out the leaguo titliitl\n\u25a0tier'the second as he hung up the\nvictory, also maintaining hii mastery over them   fi-   \u2022 \u2022  :\u25a0\nRiondel collected only four hits\nla running up five runs whll. Kl-\nwonls hit. safely eight \u25a0 times for\ntheir two runs. Paige and Armitrong\neach had a two for three while Kiwanls' \u25a0 leading batter, Waller, was\nheld hltleu lor the second tlmA this\nyeir, the first time being the first\ngame of the season.\nQUICK TO LEARN \u25a0   '\nSASKATOON 4CP) - E. Q. (Ed)-\nGroat, 65, who started flying only\ntwo yeara ago, now owns and pilot!\nhis own plane. He plans to travel\neast to buy a new pontoon-equip\nped aircraft for northern fishing\nand prospecting excursions.     V\nFights\nLos Angeles\u2014Phil Kim, 143, Honolulu, stopped Elmer Beltz, 143%,\nLos Angeles, 1.\n'Brooklyn\u2014Heln Teli Hoff, 226ft,\nGermany, stopped Bill. Wilson,\n225%, Charlotte, N. C, (1).\nButte, Mont.\u2014Freddie Herman,\n136, Los Angeles, and Bobby Woods,\n134, Spokane, drew, (10), '\nD. c Murphy, jr.     dr. r. a. gray\nDR. O. C. MURPHY\n;Own\u00abr  ' .\n\u2022 HOURS: 8J0-A.M. TO. \u00bb:30 tfltiy   *\nDr. D. C. NWRPHY\nand ^SOGli^\nPHOHE MAIN 3337\nLICENSED BV\nSTATE EXAMINATION\n43 Yean In Spokane .\nCorner Spragu. ind WaU\nSPOKANE 8, WASH.\nPel\n.810\n.576\n.50*1\n.493\n.477\n.463\n.432\n75 7432\nNELSON, DAILY NIWI, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1951\u201413\nmamT^^cmipfirQ\n-ByMCKSORDS\nID B4K6 SMALL riSM\n4?K*MTAT*TH6ST--RA*4-*\nC^AljUMIMUWI-ai..\nAMDPOLPAUpNa\n.< oariSptiNE&\nPlay Game Out\n\u2022 VAN-^UVl\u00bb,;(CP) - OikiHi\nCuba lost 16-0 to Veterani In i city\nsoftball playoff her. Tuesday night,\npossibly because they were nervous.\nIt was' their first night out in\nsom. tlm., line, they're prisoneri\nat the Oakalla.1 prlion farm.\nAll regular leagu. gamei Involving Oakalla had been played strictly on th* prison \"home\" grounds.\nOfficials tald lt .wai thi tint time\nOakalla prlloniri wer. illbwed out\nin such 1 manner. Many spectators\nwatched th* game without knowing\nlti' significance until RCMP official! permitted on. announcement\nover the public addresi syitem at\nthe start of the last Inning. >\nFirst gome of th* leagu* playoffs\nin the four-team Junior iflen'i circuit lt wai tha 25th victory for the\nVeterani. . ' v -.\u25a0'\u2022'\u25a0'\nIt wii the .Wont drubbing Oubi\nreceived all year, but all th* run-.\nnlng was strictly legitimate.\nDUKe WIN8 $2.80\nCOWES, Me. of Wight (AP) -'\nTh. Duke of Edinburgh won * third\nprize of \u00a31 ($2.80) at the Cowei regatta Wednosdoy. 'ti.\nSilling Bluebottle, whleh We owns\nJointly with the Queen, th* duke\nfinished third ln the race for Dragon\nclaa. yachts. Th. Brltllh yacht Gan-\nnymede won.    V ,\ncoMPtrri\nMECHANICAL\nREPAIRS '\nBy   F.otory  Trained\n> \u2022   M.chinlci\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nYour Dodge be- Solo Dealer\n\u2022 *   Oppoilte Post Office\non Vernon Strut\nBudget Plan ivillibl. on ill\n8alei ind S.rvle.\nMAJORS WERE\nFIRST WINNERS\nOF CHESSER CUP\nTh. Chime Cup, .rablematta'o*\nth. Wm* Kootenay doublw championship ln tennli. will ono* again\nb* up for competition Sundiy when\nparticipants from Trail, Tadanac,\nCaitlegar, Rossland and Nelion will\ncompete.\nThe cup wai flnt put up for competition ln 1040 ind wa\u00bb*0n by Mr.\nand Mri. A. M. Major. Th. following-year uw 'the lame couple win\nthe cup for the second \u25a0 successive\nyear. Mr\/Major was ln the services\ntor a few years, then tho coupl*\nagain copped tb. trophy in 1952.\nThey ore expected to be strong contenders again this yoar.\nEXPORT\nGo by Train\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022'\nand get all these extra comforts\n\u2022 Delidoua meali, nerved olwcird trcdn.\n\u2022 Large, picture windows \u2014 comfortable\n.   reclining ueats.\n\u2022 Room to move around, strotch your legs,\nvisit with frlendo.\n\u2022 Wide choice ol sleeping accommoda-\n.' tionfl\u2014berths, sections, roomettes, drawing rooms, compartments.\n:\u00bb' \u2022*' * Wlen you (ravel, oo by frato\u2014\nCANADIAN NATIONAL\n\u2022 Dependable, safe travel in all kinds of\nweather.\n\u2022 Air-conditioning, Convenient test rooms.\n\u2022 Free baggage checking to your destination (up to 150 lbs.).\n\u2022 Drlve-yours-slf car service dt major\npoints.\n.     t f  \u2022\nyou SAVE on low-cost round trip fares'\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\n L\nr\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\n-k:\nI\nN\nG\nI\nR.\nC\niVU\nP.\nB\nL\nO\niN\nD\nI\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nD\nO\n*N\nA\ntt_\nm\nD\nW<**?W -     -\u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0 \t\nSfPPf\nJ.JONES HI  II\nK.\n__jrg&r\\Pl*S>tJ\n.Jfcv   .\ns\n} ____J>S!Jr*^\n-\njJis^-^T\n1 v    ,'rPp*;;\n' -W.i \u25a0' \"\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 -\n14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1953\n1 PERSOR-TO-PERSOH WANT APS\n\\    FOR QUICK RESULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Adi\u2014S p.m.\nPhohe 144\nBIRTHS\nBUTT \u2014 T4> MT,- and Mra?- A'i J.\"\nButt of Nakusp, at the Arrow Lakea\nHoapltal, In Nakuap July 36, a son,\nH!:LP WANTED,\ni      CITY OF NELSON\nFIRE DEPARTMENT\nAPPLICATIONS will be received\nby the undersigned up to August\n12th, 1993, for tbe poiltion of\nFIREMAN  ,:\nApplicants must be physically fit\nand between the ages of 21 and 30.\nPrevious experience preferable\nbut not compulsory. Application\nforms may be obtained from the\nCity Hall. V'v     V \"-'\u25a0,-.\n\u25a0titi.'  C. W. R. HARPER,\nV     >     City,Clerk.\no*m-mm\u00bb....0^w\u00bb\u00bb*~-\u00bb*:\u00bb-**-.\nmm ELECTRICIAN REQUIRED.\nSingle' status; wages $ir.52 per\nshift; board and room $2.20 per\nday. Send application or apply in\nperron to* Kelowna Mlnei Hed-\nley Limited, Hedley, B.C., or\nRoom 705,-402'West Pender St.,\nVaiicouyer, B.C. >\"\nHEJiP   WANTED \u2014 RELIABLE\nman with car to manage established Fuller Brush business. Permanent. .Above average earnings.\nCall or write S. F. Thompson, 307\nRobson Street, Nelson;\nHELP WANTED^-FEMALE\nDOMESTIC HELP. ALL THE CON-\nv'eniences. Live in. 3 small children. Standard wage, Character\nreference!. Apply Mrs, Yeatman,\nSouth Slocan,\nHOUSEKEEPER FOR LADY DOC:\ntor, Victoria. Two children, one\nat school. Apply evening, Cookei,\nBluetop Bungalowi, Nelion.\nWANTED\u2014MIDDLE-AGED LADY\nto care for 2-yr.-old child while\nmother works. Box 4576, .Daily\nNewa,\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTEp-- EVENING WORK AS\n.typist,' bookkeeper,   cashier   or\n\u2022  clerk. Phone 9B9-R aft^r 8 p.m.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear, from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\ni properly conditioned Breeders on\nout: own'farm. Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our owh\nitock in White Leghorn!,' White\nRocks,;. New Hampshires and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request\n100-2 MONTH OLD WEANER\npigs at $12.50 each. These are\nreally, choice and can be seen at\nCrawford Bay. H. Harrop, 514\nVictoria St,       \u25a0*\u25a0\n1 LOGGING HORSE FOR SALE-\nApply Box 4571, Daily News.\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER  CAN   REPAIR   YOUR\npresent   (machine   at   reasonable\ncost. For free estimate! Phone 41.\nSINGER SEWING CENTRE\n339 BAKER ST. - NELSON. B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nLAND REGISTRY AC*\n. (Section 161) V;\nV IN THE MATTER OF Lots 23\nand 24 in Block 24 of Lot 206A,\nKootenay District, Plan 622A.\nProof having been tiled in my\noffice of the losa of Certificate of\nTitle No. 90647-1 to the above mentioned land! in the names of Walter\nWilliam Hansen and Doris Hansen\nand bearing date the 13th of June,\n1652, I HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of\nmy intention at the expiration of\none calendar month .from the first\npublication hereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu ot\nsuch lost Certificate. Any person\nhaving any information with reference to such lost Certificate of Title\nis requested to communicate with\nthe undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C., this.\n4th dBy of August, 1953;   -\nG, A, STEWART,\nDEPUTY REGISTRAR.\nDATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION\nAug. 6i 1953.\nPOUND, DISTRICT ACT\nPursuant to the provision! of Section II of the \"Pound Dletrlct Act,\"\nChapter 259, R.S.B.C., 1948, notice-is\nhereby given of the appointment of\nCHAS. A, KOCH, Sanca, B. C, as\npound-keeper of the SANCA\nPOUND DISTRICT.\nThe location of the\/Pound premises la on Block 12 of District Lot\n914, Map 1599, Kootenay Land District'-; * \u00bb    \u25a0 '\nW. H. Robertson,\nDeputy Minister of Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture,\nVictoria, B.C.,   : \" -     i        .\nJuly 3, 1953.\nTO-CLOSE ESTATE\nOffers will be received until\nAugust 15th, 1953 for the purchase\nof Lot 3, Block 9? Plan 2405, Village\nof Kinnaird. nie highest; or any\noffer ? not necessarily accepted.\nWrite or phone A. R. Dahlstrom,\nSolicitor, \u25a0 1412 Bay Avenue, Trail,\nB.C Phone 870.\nNOTICE\nAs my wife left me, I will not\nbe responsible for any debts incurred by her or anybody else in\nmy name after this date.\nAngelo Milja, Salmo, B.C,\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE .ON KOOTENAY LAKE\n\u2014Store building with living quarters.' Light and water, Good opportunity for butcher shop and\n'store. Apply F. Bonacci, Procter,\nB.C.\nWELLCOME INN - GROCERY\nand confectionery. Modern five\nroom living quarters attached.\nSteady business, ideal for couple.\nTerms. Apply 1570 2nd Avenue,\nTrail, B.C.\nSTANGJHERLIN GROCERY FOR,\nsale, including living quarters. 112\nSilica St\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\n5 ACRES LAND, HOUSE AND\nother buildings; large garden; 60\nfruit trees, strawberries, raspberries, ' uncultivated land ready\nto plow.; 1400 feet pipe, water\npiped from main, 50 lbs. pressure,\nsprinkler irrigation, garden 'tractor, with reverse, D attachments;\n2 brooders, wheeled sprayer,\nwood saw, hand garden tool!.\nElectricity. Close to highway,\nitore and P.O. Level land can ba\nsubdivided. $6000.00. Hy Stlckley,\nBlueberry Creek, B.C,    7\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR .SALE\n4Continued)\nIDEAL FAMILY , HOME, 607\nBaker St. Large living room, open\nfireplace, dining room, hardwood\nfloors, kitchen wired for electric\nrange, 2 bedrooms ond bathroom\ndown 2 bedrooms and sewing\nroom up, full cement basement,\nhot water, automatic pil heat,\ndrive-ill garage. Call 3S4-R for\nappointment:\nfcOooto)\u2014#\u00bb\u25a0 tik&H 66*WN, fN\n' city of Kaslo. Approximately 11\n. acres. 4 shingled outbuildings and\nconvenient log house over cement\nwalled basement Full plumbing.\nAbout 100 cherry, 25 apple, 3 pear\ntrees. Equipment, tools, furniture,\nhay, 300 poles, standing. G. W.\nDanson, owner.'\nTHREE-BEPROOM HOME. JTRE-\nplace, polished \u25a0' oak floor!\nthroughout \u25a0'. storm and screen\nsash, modern kitchen,, range wired\nand gas piped in, automatic-heating; full cement basement, garage; 8 lots In lawn. Apply W. W.\nFerguson, 373 Baker St, Nelaon,\nB.C.\n\u2022rooMIWJ ftSdpf-5 \u25a0____\"_*\u2022\nYmir, including complete furnishings. Seven sleeping rooms,\n. two showers, link* on second floor.\nSmall store In'front, living quarters bock bn first floor; all modern. Apply MTs, Martha Wyman,\nYmir, B.C-.\nLAKE FRONTAGE. PROPERTY,\nwith 4-room modern cabin, on\nmain highway at Balfour. Ideal\ntor Summer home. Fireplace; also\nInsulated and built tor all-year\nliving: Price: $4250. Box -4713,\nDally News,\nFOR SALE OR RllNT \u2014 20 ACRES\npart' cleared, on main highway\nWest of Nelson. Good location for\nauto court or roadside business.\n2 rm. dwelling, good water. $3200,\nsome terms. Rent $20. A. A. Lam-\nbert, Kinnaird, B.C.\nS*Oh SALE - UNFINISHED TWO\nbedroom house, and one* room\nshack. Lots 95x200. Near high\nichool. Write Mrs; W. Oglow.iBox\n. 419 or Phone 3326 Castlegar.\nFOR SALE - REVENUE PROP,\nerty, uphill; Now' vacant Will\nbring in $75,00' per piphth; for\nonly $5500.00 cash, or $5800.00\nterms. Phone 135'or 1790-R?'\n2 BEDROOM MODERN HOME\ntor sale. Terms. WIU consider\nrent to, party with good references and deposit, Furnished or\nunfurnished. Box 4281 Daily Newa\nPOft SALE - NEW'FIVE-ROOM\nhome, on s,i Acre of land. J mile\nfrom Nelson. Phone 476-H-l or\naply 60 Ymir Roast. Price $4800.\nFOR SALE; CHOICE LOTS OVER-\nlooklng Columbia River. Limited\nnumber. See Guy Guido, lower\n' Dumont subdivision, Klimalrd,\nfob sAt^-Wb H<!>tnSlE_. ON\"1\nacres, 1 mile ori Ymir Rd. Good\nplace for tourist camp. J. Point-\nkoff, Ymir Road,\nfOS SAW-* BEDROOM HOUSE.\nNorth Shore. Will take late model\n? car as part down payment Phone\n816-R-8,\nFOR SALE -1-4 ROOM HOUSli,\nfully modern; 4-8 room house,\nfully modern. Apply Wm. A\nHenke,, Proctarv i'i'ti' .   \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0'     \u25a0\nFairview. Unfinished but liveable,\n. Bal|y :Newa Box 12417 v.\nF<ift SALE - l^b'LdTS, NBA*\nschools. Fair price. Phone 185-R-l.\nerty. Rhone 200.      :\u2022 '\"\u2022;:.\u25a0;\/\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nppop-niRT- i-ksAL. OWflBAiT-\nHe Road, Pbone 869-R-j,'?    .-,\n'7;''!\"7fPtR^6NAlvf \u25a0' \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nWAWANESA MUTUAL miFBP\nlurance Co., D. L. Ken, Agent\naTJBK BoTBC ottosm ctx.\nDepot Clean rooms and reeaoa-\n-, able ratea Vancouver. \u2022 B.C\nTOBACCO ia___NATl0R \"=~K.\nselentiflc remedy tor*cigarette\naddiction. For free booklet, write\nC. W. King Pharmacai Corporation Ltd?, Box 303, WalWvllle,\nOnt--;   - \u25a0' ,\u2022\u2022\u25a0*.   -..-7 77\n7       BUSINESS Al*0\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA8SAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES.\nE W WIDDOWSON & CO, AS-\nlayers '301 Josephine St, Nelaon.\nH S   ELMES. ROSSLAND, B, C\nAsaayer. Chemist' Mine Rep.\n BOOKS      \t\n_6MJ*r>i6'k BOOK, BIBLE\nHouse, Toronto. Books by mall\norder, tor religious and non religious people, reference, booki\nfor office, church, home. Contact\nMr. George Elsey, 1312 Robertson\"\nAve. Pfrone 210-R-l after 6 p.m.\nENGINEERS' AND SURVEYOR*\nFOR SALE \u2014 20-FOOT LAUNCH,\npowered by 4-cylinder S t a r\nmotor; also boathouse; to be sold\ntogether, Any reasonable offer\naccepted. Phone 376-X.      .\nFOR SALE \u2014 1952 EVINRUDElS\nH.P. moton Run approx. 40 hrs.\n$375. Phone 125. or 652-X.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS.\n1. Bee shelter\n5. Agreement\n9. Mediums of\nrevelation\n(Bible)\n10. Smell   i\n11. Not forming\nan angle\n13. Wild ox\n(Celebes)\nIS. City on\n3. Ancient\nHlnduharp\n4. Arabian\nchieftain\n6. River (It.)\n6. Girl's name\n7.Admtt\na fault  ;\n8. Game flak\n11. The White\npoplar   .\n12.Afood.Aar.\nGanges river 14. Land-\nIT. Animal gelt       measures\n18, Goddesi\nof dawn\n19. Sets again\n21. Lutecium\n(aim.)\n32; Decays\n24. Literary\ncomposition\n'SS.'Bird'S,   \u2022'*.\nshelters   *\nSS. Chattered\nSl.EXClti-' '    ;\nmotion '\n32. Kind of oil\n..'V used for\nbuma-\n34.Wino\n7   rcceptdclo   -\n35.43ohstcl.   i\n. ti latlon '-\u25a0(- ,\n86. Of a wood ,\n39. Fermented\nJuice of\n' ...-'grapes V ,\n41.'Carefully\n42.Aohlol'd\n\u25a0?(var;),:v\n44. Merriment\n45. Wither\n' \u00ab6.L*unpreye\nti.   DOWN\ntHuge\n\"*   (eoUoa.)-\n2. Manacles\n16. River (Fr.\n2p. Vehicle\nwith     7\nrunners\n22. River (Fr.)\n--.Agate-\nway\n25. Odd\n27. Mexican   :.\ndish\n' (pl.>\n28. Covered\n'with\n'   shale\n30. Recog.   '\nnlsed\n32. Cry, at\nacrow\n33. A constellation\n34. Sprite\n37.A\nmagician\nYtiteri.y't Aw-\u00ab\n38. Voided\nescutcheon\n40. Goddess of\nheallfig\n(Norse)'  *\n48. Southeast\n-    (abbr.)\ni 2 5 *w *\n7\na .\ni\nI91   'JlW^\n%\nr  .   \u25a0 tw\u00bb\n14\nlISllr.^1\n1?\nmmwt\nii         oy ti   u\n%\n^\/l\nm      . ^T          ^ JT\nu\nav\nil37          \"  *,\u201e\n^1\nsi\n** mr^M\nSt\n\u00bb,- , .. _:. 55 Bv *~ ii? \u00bb*\n\"   ^mW~\n'\nwt   \u00b0 w\n1\n&*   3r\nt\n9*6\nVia\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Heres how to I\nax.dlbaAxb\nIsLONGFELLOW -\nOne letter simply atands tor another. In this example A ia need\nfor the three Va, X for the two O'o, etc. single letter*, npoo-\ntrophles, the length and formation of the words ace *R hints.\n' Each day the code letters are different\n\u25a0 \\       \u2022   A Cryptogram (flotation\nRVAL-AIVL    VTDBLD    OHIO\nVSb    KZVA    RWAL \u2014 RVVV.\nYXTKL\nTeaterday**\nAS MUCH AN\nSTONE.     .\nite: DECISION BT MAJORITIES 18\nAS MQi-triMO BT HAM \u25a0 \u00ab_,fc_.\nFOR SALE \u2014 5-ROOM MODERN\nhome. Drive-In basement: Kootenay Lake boat; livery optional.\nW. Kline, R.R. 1, -Nelson. Phone\n3-G, Balfour.\nPROPERTY FOR., SALE' \u2014 40\nacres of land at Park Siding. Good\ntimber. Pleaie.phone 1577-LI Trail,\nor call at 1450 J>arl-.St Trail, after\n4:00 pjn.\n4Contlhued in jfloxt Column)\nR. tC. COAXES, STE. NO. 8. 171\nBaiter St, Nelson. Phone Hit.\nB.C. ti(arids. Surveyor. ' -'\nBOYb \u00ab' AFFtliik, 1ft mat 8E.\nNelson, B,Q. Surveyor, Engineer.'-\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop: Acetylene ant\nelectric welding, * motor rewind-'\nIng   Phone* 593 .324' Vernon St\nROOFING OR R06FER8\n-lyiTiiR |6ti VOA -Vm MON-T.\nPhono H. Pedersen, 1761-R-l\n\u00a7N THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE littAL\n. 4Paclfio Daylight Time)\nTHURSDAY, AUGUST 6,1953 '   .\n| 1:30\u2014Fairview Shopping Guide    .\n2:00\u2014Family Theatre?\n2!30r-Trans-Canada Matinee '\n*3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varieties   -\n4:15\u2014As Tunei Go By ' -\u00ab ;\n4:30\u2014The Magic Kayak\n4:45\u2014Pacific Newa. .ti, \\   y\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n8:0Or-At Home With the Lcnnicka\n5:25\u2014International Commentary     .\n5:30\u2014Behind the Newi\n5:35-Spotlight On a.Star\n5:50\u2014News        ' '*\n6:00-Hit Parade\n8:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00r-News . \/\nTcllr^News Roundup',\n7:30\u2014Salvation Army\n8:0O-PoliticaI Talk\n8:30r-Honfer'a Odyasey \u25a0 |\n9:00\u2014Thursday7 Playhouse  .\n9:30\u2014Popular Organ Music\n9:45-This 'N That\n10.-00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Midweek Review  . M\n10:30\u2014Sports'Roundup .;\u25a0 V , V-S\n10:45-Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Arouhd the Town\n12:0O-NEWS Night 4^p\n7:00\u2014Newa >\n7:05\u2014Wake up, Nelson \"-\n7:15\u2014Sports News I\n7:20\u2014Wake* up,-Nelson\n7:80\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake up, Nelson\n7:45\u2014Rise'N Shine\n8:00\u2014News,'.*'\n8:10\u2014Sporta- News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sport News\n9:00\u2014Morning Devotion!\nSil&^-Earl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Rldera ot the Purple Sage\n10:15\u2014News'\n10:20-Morning Visit\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Invitation To The Walts\n11:00\u2014MusicalMinute!\n11:16\u2014Homemaker Harmoniei   \u25a0\n11:45\u2014Consumers Corner ,\n12:00-Liberty Special *.\n12:15-CIty Tire Sporti\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcait    *\n12:55\u2014Chatting With the Listeners\n1:4)0\u2014Spotlite on Melody\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\nQBC PROGRAMS\n4Mountain Standard Time)\nFRIDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's   Broadcast\nMarine Weather\n7:15\u2014Musical Mlnutea\n7:30HNewB   ;        7 '\u2022'.*'\n7:85\u2014Musical Minutes?\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014Newa\n8;10-Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\n8:45\u2014Anything (Joes\n9:00\u2014BBC Newi\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Famous Vojces\n10:00-Moming Visit\n10:15-H1\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n11:00\u2014A Men and Hla Magic\n12:15-rNewi   ..\n12:25\u2014ShoWcaea\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast   ,\n12:55\u2014Behind tha News\nl:on\u2014Afternoon Concert\nAUGUST 7, 1-953\nand   2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\nSiiS-^Brave Voyage-    .\n3:30\u2014Prograihe *ResiHne\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup f     .\n4:15\u2014A Trip to the Moon\n4:30\u2014Sleepyttme Storyteller\n4:45\u2014Music .for Children\n6:00-Sottler'a Choice     ' v. *\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\nSao^-UN Today\n5:45\u2014News and Weather\n5:55\u2014Have Yoti .Heard?        *\\\n6:00\u2014Bill Goou Sporta\n6:15\u2014Barney Petts Show '\n6:30\u2014Ballad Time\n7:00-Newa?\n7:15\u2014News. Roundup\n7:30\u2014Walteea \" '\u25a0,.\n8:00-Bob McMullin Show\n8:30-_ongs of My People\n9:00\u2014International Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-PoUtical Talk\n10:80\u2014Sport* Page\n\u25a0    i. .      \u25a0)   . \u25a0  :\n \"^\"^^\n'7.\noV.S>?\nfor Qu\/amvirs\/ :\nPhone 144\nOoadlino tor Claiiitled Ad* -S p.m.\nPhone 144\nautomotive   ,\nmotorcycles, bicycles\nr\u00a3m\n1952 Ford Fordor, $2245, .\n\u2022; )        With radio\n1951 Studebaker Sedan,\nv . $1795\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan \u25a0\n$1800\n1950 Austin Devon $875\n195) Ford Prefect $995\nLow Mileage, like^New,\n1950 Studebaker, Sedari\n'ti'\":' $1595.   f\n1948 Angl'ia Tudor $545\n|949:Aus*lin'Panel $845.'.'\"\u25a0\n'1952' Studebaker Pickup\n. ;  ' $1695 .   \"j \"?*.,\n:i'95l Fargo Plckup.$139?\"\n* PRICES THAT,(3AN*T BE BEAT\n:    MANY TO <*?HOOSE FROM\nAUSTIN SERVICE AND SALES\n\u2022' \\ ',''.**'''''\n* MOTORS ;;\nPhone 1135    803 Baker St,\nNelson, B.C.   \u25a0\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\na*...' MONITOR TOP REraiGER.\nator, 7 cubic ft.!* McCIary Simplex\n'. jias and coal .combination, with\ngal water heater; square waah\ntuba and stand, as new, Ph, 208 *\nFOR ihlOSE'WHO WISH A GOOD\nused washing machine, gasoline\nor electric, at a better than reasonable' price (they must go), It\nlow'as ,$15, call in or phone 1303,\nTOR SAfi^-tWoiS TBAILERj\ninboard boat, I' h.p. engine. Sell\nboat separate. Apply C. D. Burns,\nAifliworth, BC,\nBEDS, DRESSERS, CAST IRO*N\nlink with: drain board, one link\ncomplete with taps, 1 and 9 Inch\npipes. Phone aW-Y.\nMACHljMjtljVf\nPIPE '.-  t'lTTlNGS  -TUBIS\nSpecial low pricei Active Trading Co,. 035 E Cordova St. Van.\n. couver    ....? y:'\nCMSB-BUWON SKVfi -.'KMt\namazing relief. Your druggist sells\nCRHJSS.\npres_-He ereateitt. '\u201ee>tDS 7\nquarts-or 18 |0i, New condition.\nPhone 773-Y-S.\nGQQD USED LADIES' PHILIPS\nbicycle for sale. Suite.84, Strath-\ncona. after 5 p.m\n*~^~~.^^^*,**.,mm*w\nprop In and HaVe a Look\nat Our Selection of Good\nCars & Trucks\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 'Plymouth Sedan\".'[\u25a0\n1949 Ford Fordor\n1947 Pontiac Sedan\n,1938 Oldmobile Sedan\n1933 White 1 Ton Pane!\n$75\n1950 Ford Piekup -\n1949 GMC Pickup\n*vii 194ftMercury,Pickyp.\n.1946 Chevrolet Pickup\n\u201e    TIRMS AND TRADES\nVernon Street\"\nMotors   -\nPhone 1661, 51i3 Vernon St.\ni Nelsoo,B. C,-.\n..OR.$AtlB:-'lM9 FORD S-TON\ntrucls. Long wheelbase, equipped\n- with, dump lift, dual tires and\nspare; heater in cab. \u2014 1047 Ford\n.. S.-ton> lame equipment as above.\nTrucks In good shape, ready for\nwork. Some financing may be\narranged. Apply, K. w.\" Jensen,\n831 Oordon Road, Phone Nelson,\n1609,\nIT'S HERfcl THE NORTON \"PEA-\ntherbod\" Dominator Coma ln tni\ns\u00abe thll famous motorcycle, the\nholder of the Isle of Man TT at\nKootenay Motorcycle Sale! and\nService, Box 350. Caitlegar; phone\n2601. The Shop of Friendly Ser\n*i vice.1*       \u2022\nFOR SALE - 1040 PCSStOUTH.\nGood engine, transmission, and\nrear end. Can be seen at Nelson\nTransfer. License 2T-304. Goes to\nthe. highest bidder. Apply Box\n4691 Dally Newi.;\nFOR SALE-POWER WRECKER;\nlicenced and ready for the.road.\n\u2022'\u25a0 Mounted on 1037 International..A\nserviceable unit. Priced for quick\nsale. Apply Fruitvale Auto>\nWreckers.\nTHRSB ROOM S43HULT.TRAILER\nlike, now, fully furnished. Hilltop\nCoffee Shop,'Taghum,. .*.'\n*0*E.' FAN $10.00,1 SOT'lftiri'iO.OO,\nchrome. canopy .table *M.0t). Ap-\nply 621 Becopd St, '\nbrx BAI&4 ffSfjKSI MiLtffNG\nmachine, in good condition. Write\nBox. 17, Trail, B.C,\n\u00a7H5*_\"* EQtitPMENT tfOR SALE,\nShoe shop for rent. W. Zonailo,\ny Caitlegar, B.C.   J\nBElrtY~50PPER' TUB 'WASH-\ning machine, good condition, $39.\n624 Carbonate Street,\nRASPBERRIES F6R SALE. PICK\nyour own. 10c per pound. Flaher'i,\nUpper Road, Longbeach.\n\u2022reR'sAcr^bREifcto'tTwrfiBh\n3x4s and other 'sizes. S. P. Pond,\nBox 364, Nelson.\nmrzmM=ffiikmmffim.\nshotgun. Good condition, Ph. 820L.\nWrite PO,Bn\u00bb 3D Nelion BC\nRENTALS\nFOR   RENT - LARGE   FAMILY\n' home,  924  Robson   St.,   Nelson,\nB.C.  Phone  Mn.: Terilan,  Euphrates' Mine.\nTRACTORS     ?\nFOR^Al-E\nTD14W International Dieiel\nwith 'Dozer end Wlnoh, olmint new,\n.',- Q Se'rieg D7 Cat      ,\nwith 'Doier-Puiiiy or wnwh.\nEQUIPMENT. FOR RENT '\u25a0\n08 Bulldoritt im Shbvlll \u2014 Com-\npressors \u2014 Crahli \u2014 Dragline *-\nWater Pumps, cto,\nBAYES\nEQUIPMENT CQ,\nCranbrook, B.C,\nFcee Copper On\nRamp Body, and\nFender Works\nDHALBR8 FOR\nBRADEN qnd TUlSA\nTRUCK WINCHES'\nFOR EVERY APPLICATION\n-3 to UO Tom Cipaelty\n-   Nolaon, B.C.\nPhone 199 \u2014 999 Joiephlne St.\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nNATIONAL MAUHINERV CO.\n\u2022      ,  '.'\u2022    LIMIT***!!)\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR, MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS  EQUII'MINI\nEnquirin Invited\njrinviUl illand, Vanoouvet 1, B.C\nfOR  SALS - HooVfltt  TWW\ncylinder  hoist,  heavy duty sub\nframe Phono 1941-Y.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 2 OR 3\nyoung gentlemen. Phone BOO-Y.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nReliablB ' TtoKXW'Wlttf'Rl!*\neroncos requires houie to rent\nSept, 1 or before. Box 4974, Daily\nNews.\nM6[' c t - An ,JW lOtrS tf _ B\nhousekeeping, roomi for quiet\nbusiness woman. Available im\nmediately, Phone 889-X,\noff 1 ce and 7 Warehouse\nspace   tor ''.'fent   Apply   Central\nTruck and Equipment Co\nFOR RENT -!TWO ROOM PART-\nly furnlphedi-suite. Phone 1239.\nApply 10)1, Front Street.\nDR RENT-^S-BEDROOIt HOUSE.\nNo,children.\u00bbPhone 733-y or call\nat 014 Stanley.Street,\nHOUSBtUIBPI^G RpOM, ALSO\none' btdroom. for. rent. Phone\nJ9B.Y,'\n8ife55iO#Tiliif^_lN?LE.\nthan. 823 Vernon Street.\ntHR'EE'-K_6W Office siJitE d*N\nBaker St. Ajiply 204 Medical Arts.\nBEDROOM V FOR   RENT,   CLOSE\nin. Phone SBJlR,\"\nSUMMER RESORTS\nFOR SALE-1050 FORD CUSTOM\nsedan. New engine, re-condition\ned throughout; Excellent; condi\ntlon. Terms can be arranged. 601\nSilica St., phone 1682-R.\nFOR SALE-1050 AUSTIN 4-DOOR\naedan. 1 owner, Jow mileage;\nguaranteed A-l condition. Priced\nlow at $1050. See it at Star Grocery, Nolson,\nrOR SALE-'40 FORD CONVERT-\nIble. Reconditioned motor, very\ngood tires. Can be seen at 908\nSilica St., or nhone 734-R:\nfdR SAW - 1950 FARGO V, *ON\nfluid drive, heater, radio and spotlight. Apply E. L. flarrli, R. R.\nNo. 1, Phone 401-L-3.\n1948 PONTIAC FOR SALE, WITH\nnew motor. Fred Reibalkln, Perry\nSiding, B.C.\nFOR SALE-1050 CHEV. SEDAN.\nExcellent condition. Phone 573:Y\nor apply 808 Third St. after 8 p.m.\n1ACRIFICE   '47, FORD   FORDOR\n$200.00 below going price Can be\nfinanced Phone 161-L-2\nMR'SAfE - M'OBEL BTBitD\n%-ton, in good shape. Apply Jim\nMflltr, Kaslo, B.C. '\nLOST AND POUND\nX.6ST MONDAY - BROWN ZIP.\nper wallet, vicinity Nllion Newi\nand telephone office. Ph. 809-Y,\nPETS. CANARIES, 061$, ETC.\nFOR SALE\u20141 PUREBRED AIRE,\ndale male dog, 15 months; $30,00.\nApply T. Goranson, Box 112,\nSalmo, B.C.\n\u2022 . Compulsory  education In- Russia\nstart! at the age of 7.\n.ti-ti-ti-\n  .\nCRESCENT BEACH\nAUTO COURTS\nAll ideal holiday resort Modern\nfurnlihed ' cabins. Sand . beach,\nboats, fishing, Tent and trailer\n' accommodation. On Kootenay\nLake 10 miles East of Nelion on\nHighway J, Write R,R, 1 or phone\n471-Y-l.      . '   \u2022\nEDGEWOOD '\nCasa Vista Cabins (3 Star)\n: Vacation or overnight\n\"They're Different,\".   '\u2022\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nacrap iron, steel,  brass, copper,\n; lead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made, Atlas Iron'& Ml'\ntals Ltd., 2S0 Prior St\u201e Vancou-\n' ver, B.C Phone Pacific 6397.\n;W4NTED-A TIRE TRACTIOtf-\n\u25a0lier.'.Must be In good condition.\nBox, 4703, Daily Newl.\npmmmmmte -   '    \" i\"\nManti'SaUif Nrwa\nClaaalfled Advirtlllng Ratea:   \u2022\n' ISc per line flrit* Insertion ind\n.     non-consecutive   Insertions\nlie Une per consecutive Inser-\n.   tlon after flrit Iniertion.\n48c line tor t consecutive Insertions .. ' \u25a0 - \u2022' .\n$1.59. line for month (26 consecutive insertions!   Box num-'\nberi  lie extra   Coven any\n'  number of iniertloni. -\nPUBLIC  (LEOAt' ' NOTICE'S,\n,TENDERS, etc\u201420\u00ab per line,,\nfirst Insertion   16c, per  Une\neach subsequent insertion\nall Above rates.less\n10\u00bb for prompt payment\nOubaorlptlon Raten\n(Not Mora Than tilted Here)\nBy carrier, per week.\nIn advance .30\nBy carrier, per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOno month      $ 129\nThree monthi    375\nSix monthi  _...._    750\n. One year 1500\nMail In Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     100\nThree month!  ... .     2.75\nSix months      9.50\n\u2022 Om yeir 1000\nWhere extra pottage It required.\nabove ratei plua poatage.\nMINES\nAmerican Y. K, ,\t\nAnglo Huronian ,\t\nArjon  ....: ....,\u201e.,\nArmiitico    : \u201e,.\nAtlai Y. K :\t\nBevcourt  \u201e .:...\u201e,\u201e\u201e.,\u201e\nfloblo ..- ,.\u201e\u201e...*\u201e\u201e ,..,\nBralorne ..-\u201e.,\u201e\u201e.\u201e\nBrewli R. L.\t\nBroulan  \u201e\u201e..:\u201e\t\nBuff, Can\t\n|.CaUlman -\nCampbell R. L ......\nCirlboo Gold , ...; ,.\t\nCaltle Treth. ..,, ,\t\nCentremaque\t\nCons,. Golden Arrow  ,.\nChesterville \t\nChlmo G....,...:\t\nCoohenour :.....\t\nCoin Lake-\t\nCons Mining tt Smelting ..\nConwest\t\nCrestaurum \t\nDuvay, ,\t\nEast Malartic -......,\t\nEast Sullivan ,',:\u201e*.\u201e..\u201e.,.',.\u201e..'\nEastern 'Metali\t\nEitella  \t\nEureka ;.\u201e.,\u201e,\u201e,\u201e*\u201e.^\nFaloo bridge  ,\u201e,.\nFrol .,ier   i,,,^^-^. ^\nGiant Yel. .:.,'\u201e\u201e.-.\u201e,\u201e \u201e\u201e\nGod's Lake ....,.\u201e....,\u201e\u201e\u201e..\u201e..\u201e\nGoldale   \u201e. ,\nGoldcrest  \t\nGold Eagle\t\nHarricana  \t\nHeath\t\nHolllnger .,\u00bb..,.\t\nHomer Y. K ,\t\nHudion Bay \u201e......\u201e ,, \t\nKelore   7 ,..,.,;'..^ .\u201e\t\nKerr Addison  _.,....,...\nKirkland Lake  \u201e_.\u201e,\u201e\u201e.\nLouvlcourt   .._.._.;_\nLynx  \u201e...,.'.\u2014\nMacassa ......\nMacDonald\nMaol eod COek ...,.,\u201e.,\u201e....\nMagnet \u201e\u201e\t\nMalartic G. F. ..*.... \u201e\t\nMcMarmec  *,.,.\u201e*\nNev; Alger , ..,..\u201e\u201e\nNew Jason  , ...........\nNew Xund \t\nPaymaiter ,\t\n\u25a0San Antonio\t\nShawkey S   . J ,\t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nS'scoe  .'.\t\nSurf Inlet,\t\nTorbrit\t\nOIL!\nAnglo c\u00bbn. - -\nChemical Research\t\nCentral Explorers ........-.,\u201e..\nDel Rio   .        \u201e\u201e\u201e,.....,\u201e.\nFederated Pete .....\nImperial Oil  ,\u2022\u201e\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nKroy  :.    ......:\u201e_\u201e\u201e__._.\u201e. .\nMid Cont , \u201e.,...\nNat. Pete \u201e,...\nINDUSTRIAL*\nAbltlbl   \u201e\u201e \u201e ;\nArgus ~\t\nAtlas.St,  _\t\nBell'Telephone\t\nBrazilian\t\nCanadian Breweries  .,\nCanadian Celanege\t\nCanadian Pacific Hly\t\nDiit. Seagram    \t\nFrmoui PlayeM i ,\nImperial Oil  ,....r,,\u201e'.^...\nMoore Corp, , .\u2022.\u201e..\u201e\u201e.,.,\nPowell River   '*-.-\nH. Walker ;,\t\n.98\n13.1)5\n- .11\n.24\n.16\n.43\n\\8J\n4.18\n3.18\n3.40\n.2014\n\u202219H\n9.10\n1.12\n4.69\n.10\n1.03\n,61\n1.39\n1,15\n.11\n26.65\n4.55 '\n,11\n.46\n2.02\n4,60\n1.14\n,58 '\n7.74\n18.50\n9.59\n9.?5\n.85.\n.34\n.26\nMV,\n.16\n.12\n13.75\n.22\n44.50\n'.27\n21.25 .\n.53\n.14\n.10\n1.70 \u2022\n.75\n1.90\n,16\n1.52\n.10\n.13\n.07\n.29\n.45**\n1.78 *\n.11\n4,35\n. .41\n,n%\n1.18\n8.98\n1.34\n4,65\nv2,49\n5.15\n31.25\n1.60\n.19\n2.52\n1414\nU\u00ab\n17\nSDH\nW'i\n20W\n29%\n29\"4\n. 27\u00a5a\n21>A\n31V\u00ab\n2li\nWt\n49 V-\nImperial Oil Net\nEarnings Higher\nTORONTO ICP) - Net earning!\nof Impirlil Oil Limited for \u2022 the\nfirst six month! Of this year are\nestimated at $20,005,098 or 97.0\ncents a shire. This ts an increase of\n$901,777 or 4.1 per cent over the\nnet profit' In ,the first half of 1962\nwhich wai $19,203,021 or 64.3 cents\na share.\nLONDON (AP) - Copper came\nback bn the London freo market!\nWednesday for the first time In ft\n\"*\u2022\u00ab\u00bb,   y.: \u25a0:,-,   , ..;\u25a0\u25a0;. \u25a0   .:..;..\nClosing quotitloni on the London\nmetal exchange were \u00a3215 to\n\u00a3217H \u25a0 ton ipot-*-\u00bb big drop from\nthe \u00a3232 which ruled until Tuesday\nundir government control.\nThe quotation! ot -118 to C217H\nwera thl equivalent^ ol 29,87 to\n97JO cent! a pound, At \u00a3252 0 ton,\nthl price was about 31,99 centi 1\npound, '\u2022'\":'*;\nIn thl U.S., domestic copper 1}\navailable at between 21.80 and 36\ncents a pound. .\nThi government took over all\ndealings In non-ferrous metals in\n1889 at tho start of. tho Second\nWorld Wir. Tin Was handed back\nto tha free market In 1949, laid\nin 1952 and lino In January thll\ny\u00abr. *\nRECORD 8T00K8\nAuthoritative sources say, thi\ngovernment now' holds a record\n240,909 tons of copper stocks. Tho\ngovernment announced last week.lt\nwill release copper from these\nstocks ai necessary to keep thl\n.trii.mirkit~full,7\nTbr-.govirnmint now eontrois\nonly two jt0n*ferroui Hiitali\u2014tun>\niten and magneilum, Theie were\nnever dealt with, however, oh the\nLondon metal exchange ev^n bitori thl war.  vf \u25a0'  '\nMountain Tunnel\n% To Highway\nBy J. C. GRAHAM '\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nDUI^EDIN, N.Z. r--4CP)-Tour'\nlata will drive comfortably this\nsummer by road and tunnel to New\nZealand's wild Fiordland, the almost uninhabited wonderland ef\nmountain, forest and'iei ln the ex\ntreme loiithwest of the country,. -\n' The building; o<. a road to thla\nrugged region |i in epic ol-- 18\nyuui-i struggle against some ofthe\nmost terrifying avalancheB known\nanywhere in thi-world, 7\nTlie struggle eoit the Uviiof\nseveral workers, Important parti\not the work were wrecked by\navalanches and by the ..terrific\nblasts ot air forced out by blankets\nof snow dropping over iheer precipices trom the snowflolds.\n8AVI8 THRBI DAYS\nKey te the whole project wai\nthe driving of a tunnel through the\n6000-foot high Homer Saddle which\ncuts off the fforda of the west-\ncoast from the settled part of the\ncountry.- Hitherto, the only access\nto Milford Sound on .the far ilde\nof the saddle has bean by a three-\nday trek across the mountain!.   ,\nWork von the iconic approaches\nto the tunnel started in 1939. Next\nyear a tunnel worker wai caught\nby on avalanche blast at the.entrance ajid WW, \" ' '\nIn the oarly stages .a zigzag\ntrench was 'built to the tunnel\nface along which worker! crept to\ngain the working! In comparative\nsafety. Liter I reinforced concrete\navalanche shelter Waa built at the\nfunnel entrance and thla Was confidently expected to end the danger. But Jt was no match for the\nforce of tha avalanche blasts. It\ntell twisted and shattered in one\nSeason.\nAlavanches buried, the 'tunnel\nportal three times tn 1937 and sudden death overtook more Of the\nworkers, Including the engineer\nIn charge and the chief tunnel engineer.\nIn 1945 the avalanche portil and\nfitting ihops wire demoHihed by a\nhuge fall whloh overwhelmed even\nthe heavy structure built after the\nlessons of earlier setback!.\nPROGRESS (LOW\nRestricted working time hai\nslowed progress, but the 4000-foot\ntunnel through the approach roads\non both sides now are virtually\ncompleted. In about six months\ntraffic will bl flowing to what has\nuntil pow been ono of the molt inaccessible parts of New 'Zllllnd. .\n\u2022 The new road will open up re-1\ngions thit are confidently expected\nto be top tourist attractions. They\ninclude ths 1904-foot Sutherland\nFalls and the spectacular arms of\ntha. sea, Milford Sound, running inland for miles between steep pioun-\nftln Willi, A comfortable modern\nhotel li being built at tho aound,\nbut tho road will be Open only in\nthe lumrrWr,\nEven if the road could be kept\nclear Of mow during thl winter\nthere would be no protection for\ntravellers against the tremendous\nair bllltl from thl,avalanches.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - Trg'dl wll\nfairly active on the Ctlgiry livestock market Wednesday, with'the\nbulk-of reo\u00bb|pti medium quility\ngrass cattle, On offir win 1950\ncattla ind calves of whleh 849\nwere holdovwi,'\nHogs sold Tuesday at 33.80; sows\n19,50 and good lambs at 28-24.\nGood to cholco dry rtd butcher\nsteers 18,50.20; common to medium 11-18; good to choice dry fed\nbutcher heiferi,-17,80-19,90; common td medium 10-17; good to\nchoice fed calves 10-20; common\nto medium J7.B0-18.SO; good cows\n10-11,29| common to medium 8-\n9,75;   canners   and   cutters   5-7,90;\nflood bull* 12-13;-common to mid-\nurn 9-11,80; good itocker and\nfeeder steers 15.50-171 common to\nmediupi 10-14.50; good to choice\nveal calves 17-20; common to medium 14-18.75.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST >S, 195S~11\nGrain Exchange\nOfficial Has\nViews On Skirts\n.' WINNIPEG\", <CP) - A* Winnipeg ,*\ngrain exchange executive has entered the battle for the 17-Inch\nDiorhimilni.'    7   '*'.' *f (.,,\nStanley N. Jones, president of\nthe ww-ww, aayj M'the worl-)*\nwheit m$rfi\u00abt, fi my Indication,.\n\"the connection between the .skirt\nI lengths and market trends since\n1947, thi year of, thi' Now Look,\nwould Indicate the lower the skirt,\nthe higher the market. The-higher\nthe skirt, the lower the matket.\"\nThe 17-lnch hemline w\u00bbs lntrjj-i\nduced in Paris recently by (3irliV\ntian Dior, who brought ln the New\nLook in 1947.\nTHI BIO AND THI SMALL . , . Cadet Art\nJewell of Toronto' doesn't have to look far to\nfind out what's up. Tha ilx, feet, four Inches bolono\nto Cadet Cpl' Harvey: Spaveri of Hamilton. Jewell,\na plpir With ihl 48th Hlohlinden, atanda four flit.\nieven Inchea. Both in In \"C\" Company at Iptjlr-\nwaah Army Cadet Camp where thiy ire under-\ngoing annual aummer training In ihl field,\n, \u2022     ' 7     --Natloni! Dcfenoi photo.\nX\n'ti   \u00bby j. ,45. ORAHAM\nCanadian  Preaa; Correapondent .\nAUCKLAND, \u00bb.Z. (CP)i-Ae'rial\nfarming didn't exist in New Zealand five years ago. Today nearly\n50 per gent' of civil aircraft registered in the country li enga|S;ed in\nspreading' fertilizer from. the air.\n'The business gives an outlet for\nthe ikill- Ind spirit of adventure\not scores 0' wartime pilots who\nfound other civil jobs tame-after\nIhglr discharge from the air force.\nPastoral New Zealand depends\nfor prosperity on the quality of the\npasture! which feed iti sheep and\nd-ilry cattle, ,maih loijrces of,:the\noountry'i ..wealth. .\nMUST BE KJTOLIMq'.'\nIntenaive 'farming method! demand that pastures bo topdressed\nregularly \u25a0 with, fertlllzera.7 Five\nyesri. .\u25a0\u25a0ago,\",fertl)l\u00aberi 'ward'.111\nspread Jaborlously by' farm gang!\non the-lrounej. \u25a0     .''   \u25a0\nHugo tracts of upland hill country, far frorn- ;r(iads, were top*,\ndressed, infrequently ,ai ' .trjipkl,\ncoi*ld not regchv'themi.oyer 'Jagged\nridges .and 'deep valleys, anctihahd\nspreading waB costly atid'alow? ' \u2022 I\nThen In 1948 the Royal-New Zea-\nland.'Alr Force carried out tests of\nspreading fertilizer'from-the air,\nThe results were excellent,   '\nGroups of wartime pilots spent\ntheir war gratuities buying ' De\nHavlllahd Tiger Woths, elementary\ntrainers being sold cheap as war\nsurplus.'   \u2022 .\nBy trial and error they developed a hopper ter fitting to the planes\nto hold fertilizer which could be\ndropped evenly.' 7: \u25a0 7- \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\nIn' the fint^year of operation!,\naeri|l, farming, companies dropped\n5000 tons of fertilizer. The industry\nhas mushroomed'until today about\n20 per cant of all the fertilizer used\nln New Zealand is spread from the\nair.  Last Tyear   144,802  tons  were\nAIM PR'ODllOffo.N \"\nAlready the new industry Is making a significant.contribution to.the\ncountry's production.' Large rugged\nareas which formerly could support\nonly,'\"Small: numbers.. of v animals;\nnow are able to feed large flocks\nand herds, \u25a0\n.The, Job Is nothing if not adventurous. Usually tbevfileri Operate in.*, rough . country 0' \u2022 steep\nrldgB8\"'lhd' narrow, valleys,, Airfields are normally just a farm.\nfield cleared of major obstructions,\nPlanes fly at about. 80 miles an\nhour it heights of only ao to 109\nfeet to ensure an even spread.\nFirm airfield!, ire springing up\nall oyer the' Oountry. Uaually in\nairstrip serves a, group dt farmss\nDuring the peak period, from January to March, the planes fly from\ndaylight to dark, returning every\ntew mlnotei to reload. :,\n.Tho imall plinia uied oirry only\nabout five hundredweight of. fertll-\niter lh their*- hopper!. Mechanical\nloaders enable pilots to make about\n12 flights an hour. Some pilots\nmoire as many,as 120 or 130 flights\na day.   <   .\n,\\ Except In rugged country the,\nnew method ll still more expensive'\nthan .band spreading, but PIans\nare being made to reduce costs\ndrastically, One company is experimenting with the establishment of\nairfields at fertilize^: works tor\ndirect loading.   .-' '.'. ,\nAircraft btiilder'i in mini? countries have boon approached in. an:\neffort to find more suitable planes\nfor local condition!.\"     ..      ..'\nVancouver Stocks\n-MINES?- '..titi.'\u25a0>'\"\u25a0\u25a0''     \u25a0'.'\u25a0\u2022?\n..1.09-\n4,05\n),10 V\n.88\n.60 -\nHighland, Bell :,.: \u201e\n.34\n4.25\n.28\n1.70\n' .83-. \u25a0\nWestern. Exploration .....\n.   .48\n-1,85\nOJL8                                ;..?\n*A P Consolidated  -..,.....\n7 ;93\n.39\n7.80 :\n.lQ 7\n1.90 j\n2,60\n.14\nINPUSTRIAI-S   '\n18.78\nBest natural source of vitamin D\nIs the liver of such a'alt-wajer fish\nas cod.and halibut. ?\ni   ' *\nN|IW YORK (AW-Copperi wen\ndepresiVd   In   Irregularly   lower\nsales.    \u2022 '      ' '\u2022*>':'\nCanadian Pacific led on the\ndownside, off tf, It was followed\nby Dome MWei end International\nNickel, both down H, Hlrim\nWalker and \u2022Dlitllleri Seagram\nwore unchanged,'' \"\u2022   --\u25a0-\u25a0'\u2022 -\nTORONTO (CP) - Prleei had\nan irregularly mixed look toward\nthe itoolj, markefi,' close today.   \u2022 \u2022\nJbe groupi wore ipllt'evinly\nwith Industrials and golds up and\nbase metals ond'western oil! down.\nUrgnluma ind New 'Brunswick\nbast metal! showed a small 'majority, of losses.  .....\n\u25a0 MbNTREAt ICP) -..Prtoii eon-\ntlnued narrow, mined and quiet *in\nafternoon deillngi.\nVPapert,' bank! and beverages\nshowed a stronger .undertone with\nAbltlbl, Bank of Montreal, Bank of\nToronto, Canadian Breweries ind\nConsolidated Papefr. acquiring plua\nalgni.'  \u25a0     ...\nLbNpON (Reuters)\u2014The better-\nthan-expected gold and dollar re-\nservo figure! of the sterling area\nlast month,, together with Russian\nacceptance of a Big-Four meeting,\ngave prices a good start to the\nnew trading account.\nWinnipeg Grain      '. f4\n\u2022WINNIPEG   (CP) -*\u2022 \u25a0 W|n\u00bbipii\ngrain caah prices;\nOatil No, 1 feed, 1i%' *\n, Barley: No. 1 teed, 1,18*4,\nEXETER, England -(CP) \u00ab A '\nmilk-train engine took over after *\nbig passenger locomotive broke\ndown midway on iti 'journey\u2014and\npulled tho heavy train safely Into\nthll Devon town, \"7 ti,\n..Ipswich, England - (W)-*\u00abbc\nSuffolk men,.: including 1 grocer,\na poitltry keeper and an agricultural student, plan a 16,000-mile\ntruck drive through Africa with\na view to settling there,.    :  ;\u2022?\u2022-\nSPECIAL\nCLEARANCE\nSALE\nGUDDfeN PAINTS\nPAINT BRUSHES\nROOFING .\nSHINGLES\nRQUED ROOFING\nSIDING SHINGLES!\nMASONlfk    ]\n\u00a7   t\n\u25a0*.j\nChain Saws\n1 ONLY I.I.L S H.P.   I\n1 ONLY DIJSTON 11 H.P.\n\u2022\u2022\nPhoni 18     7\nNilson\nMachi\nComporty Ltd.\n\"\u00bb It'i Machinery Yon Nie4\nConsult Ui Flrit7' -\n214 Hall St.    Naiifln.l.C\nwomen\ngain 5,jOtJ5 lbs.\nQat HetrtrPeii,J|[nj, Vigor?      !\nWbu b ttaffll Bw.1 -,_.,\u201e \u2122\u201e\nThousandi of alrll,* women, men, who ntjver\nIts Ionics,' stlniiiUnli, itjvlffl\nSilo \u00bbi. (alclOta, B-iols bl5i\nto aid dllestton so food\nsirenitlviBid mwistawli.]\nbonos, Dont lew mtt'\" *J\nynu'va gained I\nhut Im Bo-oial.. \u201e,\u201e.\u201e.\u201e.\n\u2022oaiwtato.cl ,a&\u00bb anWIjOoi\nTonlo TableHs for naw\nt\u00bbn\u00abs7bS5 tm isiBS 'tiatti.\"Stop\"\u00abS!n\n  *,*-\u00bb-mr\n|00i Wl-oiaiis Ostrei\n..\u201e., Tt,1v.- .-..-\u00bbPf\u00bbi,Vlj4\u00ab ind (addad\npounds, this van' day. At all diugglits. -'\n.'., ' .      .. I .,,   171\nEXECUTORS ANB TIUITIII 'Ol OVER HAI' A CENTURY      '\n0W1 '\n thospti\nMo, Oitrtt,\nfltor(, jroo, Wtt.\nad, lauwnvo appe-\nImmwt noro\nput flosji on bsro\n1 ttt'lbs. vol\ntla.Now'Vt\nI Ostrex\n8-foof Froit \u00abV Wood horie drawn by hay rake, vary\ngood condition -\u2014$7S.OO.\n4-Vi fcof Money HaVrli harta drawn Mower w\/traetor\nhitch, ytry goad condition \u2022\u2014 $75.^0\nS-foet Oliver, horio drown mower w\/traetor hitch, good\ncondition \u00ab\u2022 $121.00\nliiftl Comproiior 210 CFM, iteel whaeli, mechanically\ngood. $1,800.00\nFINNING TRACTOR\nNelion, B.C. Phene MO\nV      & EQUIPMENT ,6. LTD.-\nA competent legal nuthorlty has laid that\nconaidcrorily. moro tlinn half tho'people who\n: leave estates neglect to make a will directing\nthe dietrlbutlon of their assets.\n:   If a win dies without making a Will, the law steps In\nand designates those ytbb ire to receive his property, and\n. says what shores will go to each. Thll rigid law, which ia\ndesigned tor \"average caaeB\", does not suit every family.\n. If yon biv* no WiUiiee yotir lawyer. We believe that\nthe drafting of this important document requires hii pro-\n. feisional knowledge (tnd. skill. We would be glad (to cooperate witli you and yonr lawyer in pUnningyiiiir Will.\nOur long experience in dealing with the problems of\ntaxation, succession duties, investments, estate administration and distribution qualifies us to Offer valuable\npraotioil advice. .'\u2022   .\n, With a. sound Will driwn it)j your latvyer, and with\nThe Royal Truilt Company named aa your executor, you.\nmay bo suro your family will receive the, maximum com-.\nfort and security to be obtained from your eitite.7\nYou are welcome to consult our officers\nwithout obligation.\nti ti--..       \"-''\"\u25a0' -' 'The' .'\nROYAL TRUST\n'\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0]    ,'\u25a0    ,.'''7'OOMPAMY   ?\n424 WEST PINDH ST., VANCOUVER   \u2022   MA. 8411\n. GEORGE a VAIE, MANAGER\n 14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,1953\n1\nNelson, B. C.\nAug. 3,1953\nDear Questions ond Answerer '..*':\u2022\n* I oni bewildered and -confused.. Is Smavqrmt\nsomething to wear, something to make the gross\ngrow greener, of something to eat?\nj'Yours truly,\n... *   .   , '. '   Curious.\n- Dear Curious:\nSmavarmt It a Swedish word meaning \"little\nwarm dishes\" ond Is the ultimate in Smorgasbord\neookery. Ypu. will find this described with many\nrecipes in'tho Smorgasbord Cook Book by Anno\nOlsion Coombs which is sold at Mann's Drug\nStore oh.Baker St., for $3.25. It it a delightful\nbook and we heartily recommend It.     -\n-' Yours truly,\nQuestions ond Answers\nDRUGS LTD.\nJCoolarae Echoes...\nImpressive, An Education Stibbs\nSays of Four-Month Europe Tour\n.KOOLAREE \u2014 Sunday morning\niterted quietly I?) with an extra\nhoul: ot sleep. There was a special\ntreat at chapel that morning. We\nh\u00abd * choir Which sang an anthem.\nIn the eholr .were Leslie Hammond,\nfttsy Houie, Susan Keys, Brenda\nPalmer, Paulette Gavrillk, Sheila\nWait, Judy FOster,' Sharon- Stra-\nthtn, J.eanle Campion, Marilyn\nCary,, Ann Marie Endicott, Tahnis\nFoxall, p'aylene -Parker, Kay Stewart, Carol Dahlstrom, ,Lynn Robertson, Kathy Hallam, Jane Ham-\nSon, Bonnie Hughes, Sieglinda\nWirsig and Nita Webber.\n'\u2022;. Alter church we had an hour ot\niwlmming before our simply wonderful lunch of roast, pels and1\nMspberry. shortcake. , \u2022\n: A \"fastball\" game wai put on\nbetween , the junior leaders, the\nDarkies and file senior leaders, the\nIndians.\n,: Our ump was Mr. McMynn, who\ntjecided that the score at the end\nof tSe game Was 14-7 in favor Of\nUie Darkles. There ha! been a\njjilggestion that a collection be\ntaken up for a new pair of glasses\n(Or'the limp.\nThat 'night at campfire, the skit\nsm presented by the drama group,\nit was called the \"Fairy\" Hatshop.\nIn the leading role wai Sonja Oets,\nwho waa Madame Pompador, and\nNita Webber, who wai her helper\n... to 'the Shop. -The first -pair ot\ncustomers was Lynn Robertson\nand Kathleen Nash. The little rainbow elf Was Sejgllnd Wirsig: The\nsecond (roup of customers was\nLoreen Webster, Sheila Webster\nand Sheila Wait\nVThe fairy queen- was Gretchen\nKlce and the announcer was Peggy\n'Wnllon.\n, KOOLAREE \u2014 Yesterday we\n.spent our full two hours in the\nwater. It even seems to be warming, up. Perhaps we're just getting\nused to it. Everyone ii learning to\nswim and dive and we're all acquiring stars. - i\nAt campfire the young fry presented Goldilocks. Janet McMynn\nand Caldie were the curtains. The\nthree bears were Jeanette Archibald, Diane Caldwell anfl Barbara\nForrest, ,'\u2022 f >' ',\u2022'\n' A special: treat was enjoyed by\n'the campers provided by Bev from\nKelson, She provided marshmallows\nior everyeme to'roast over the camp-\n\u00abr*   .-....'.-'\u2022\nA special choir has been practis-\n. tog for the service on Sunday. They-).\nere all excited and Marilyn from\nCabin I* is to be the soloist. The\nether entertainment presented at the\ncampfire was a skit put on by Cabin\nFor All Vour Baking Needs Try\n7    VITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe flavor le right. On Sale at\nI Your Grocers, or Phone 238.\n,      ELLISON MILLING\nELLISON'S\n!     A ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\n\u25a0II.      . \u25a0 ..,'\u25a0 I \u25a0 .' -\nLift U! Dlaponae Your\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nRELIABLE SERVICE\n:    Save With Safety at Your\nRexall Store\nI. \"Try Ui for Lower Prleei\"\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n| \"Nelion'i Modern Pharmacy\"\nPHONE 34\ni( It wai called \"The Tu-rtle-Tmat\nCouldn't Stop Talking.\" I, think it\nwos a satire ol the camp, only In\nplace of the turtle Was each cabin\nwhich all seem to.be having trouble\nstopping from talking.    *\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0!.\u25a0\nThe turtle was Sieglinda and the\nlittle children were Nita; Leona,\nErnestine, Joan and Norma? The\nherooine was Loreen; the monkey\nKathy, and the geese were Bonny\nand Tina, This play was under the\nable direction of Mhoira (Ricky)\nand Caldie helped with the promoting.\nWe're sorry that Beverly Ward!\nof Cabin 5 had to leave. We hope\nwe see you here next year, Bev.\nThere has been a group formed\nthat is known as the \"band-aid\nkids\". These ire the three leaders\nwho do thl potatoes every day with\nth* cabins. It hli been quite t chore\nto do the potatoes li the peelers, are\ndull. Wt hop! to get some new\npeelers on the train tonight\nDuring rest hour yesterday there\nwas a short shower, ..but it cleared\nup quickly in time for swimming.\nAt noon the kitchen staff, to a\ngreat (Banging of pans, challenged\nthe Indians (the senior leaders) to\na baseball game. It. was noticed by\neveryone that they did not challenge the junior leaders, the \"Alabama Babel,\"\nThe supper was a backwards\nparty. Everyone wore their clothes\nbackwards. It was agreed that\nChimple (Connie BrOe) would have\nwon the prize -among the leader's.\nAs well as being the backward\nparty it was'also the camp birthday\nparty, Jackie Brokenshire was guest\nof honor.\nThat evening at campfire Cabin\n3 j entertained us with a \"Camp\"\nproduction of Little Black Sambo.\nThe curtain seems to be Important\nthese days. For quite a while there\nhas been a fight 'for the \"part.\"\n. The curtain this time was Barb\nMcMynn- and Gail Nystrom The\nCharacters in the play were, leading man, Kay Stewart, the mamma\nand pappa were Gaylene Parker\nand Wendy Seaton, respectively.\n\u25a0Hie three tigers who took Little\nBlack Sambo's clothes and turned\nto butter were MaUreen Kelly, Patricia Kempstbn and Carol Dahlstrom. The announcer was Nancy\nRogers who then .produced a majorette, Joan Haymond, who put on a\nsplendid display..-      \" \u2022\n\"A most impressive trip; ar\neducation in Itself,\" was the com.\nment of N. C. Stibbs, former mayor\nof.Nelson, on his recent four month\ntrip to Europe. Mr? Stibbs told of\nthe trip with his wife and son. Dr.\nGerald Stibbs of Seatle, Washington, ; which took them to the\nCoronation in England; Scotland,\nWales, Holland, Belgium, West\nGermany, Italy, Switzerland, and,\naccidentally,, to Iceland and Labrador..? . - ., '\"\u2022\u25a0\nyvu vet a7jrani'.trip and,the\n-time 'Went all too fast,-\" he said.\nThe. party left'Nelson. April 5,\ntravelled across Canada to Montreal from where they flew by TCA\nexpecting to arrive in Puis. However, storms prevented the ..crossing and they were routed through\nGoose Bay and -Labrador,, being\ngrounded there for 12 hours. Finally the waft reached Brussels, in\nBelgium and the threesome began\ntheir tour of European countries:\nThey first visited Holland and\nAmsterdam, Its 'capital .city., At\nHarlam they witnessed the annual\ntulip show which Mr, Stibbs described as \"beautiful and colorful.\"\nIhe show featured many different\ntypes of tulip beds. \"The hospitality pt the Dutch was, wonderful,*\nMr. Stibbs'commented, \"Very much\nto line with that of the English.\"\nFrom Holland they journeyed to\nWest Germany and down the Rhine\nRiver to Switzerland. \"It was a\nbeautiful trip down, the Rhine\nwhere <we saw one of the ancient\nGerman castles* Mr. Stibbs, said.:\nIn Switzerland: they climbed by\nrail to one of Ijte high mountain\npasses. The houses were scattered\nthroughout the hills. \"I have never\nseen such hills,\" he exclaimed.\nFlorence was the southern extremity of their Journey In Ital#.\nWhile in Italy they visited the\nVatican and St Peter's Cathedral.\nThey attended a special ceremony\nthere, along with a crowd of 16,000.\nHEAR POPE SPEAK\n\"The Pope spoke ln many different languages including English\nand we were very fortunate to be\nseated close to the procession aisle\nwhere we saw the Pope seated in\n^the Papal chair being carried ln\nthe- ceremonial procession,\" Mr.\nStibbs related.' '.'This was perhaps\nthe most impressive sight during\nthe entire trip,\" he said.\nFrance* was the next country they\nvisited, -touring Southern France\nand, later travelling Northward to\nParis, where they attended the\nRotary International \u25a0 Convention.\nWhile in Paris Mr. Stibbs. visited\nA. B, Gilker and C. B. Garland,\ndelegates to the Rotary Convention\nfrom Nelson. \"France is a country\nof Color,\" Mr. Stibbs commented,\n\"but it is not as clean and thrifty\naa the other Europearf countries we\nvisited. The'French.are all out to\nget tourists,\" he exclaimed.   \u25a0\n\"The solemnity and color of the\nCharge Constable\nWith Manslaughter\nTORONTO (CP) - Police Constable Earl Snider Wednesday was\ncharged with manslaughter' in connection with the death of Gordon\nHurst, 19, killed Tuesday night by\nthe second of two \"warning shots\"\nfired bySnider.\nThe youth was hit as he attempted\nto scale a fence behind a residence\nto,- which police bad boen called to\ninvestigate prowlers. Ah older com-,\npanion escaped. 7  7: 7 '>,',\nChief Constable John: Chisholm\nordered Snider renioved-'from. patrol duties, although .he has not suspended the officer: Snider was remanded for a week on.$5000 bail.\n. Six days ago Snider is reported\nto have surprised two Shopbreakers\non the roof of a warehouse and\nshot and wounded Charles Williams,\n,36, in the heel\nThe first Monday ln November\ntraditionally opens the fox-hunting\nseason in Britain :\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Claiilfled Way\nINDELIBLE CLOTH\n\/MARKING PEN\nbif.'CahisA>\nFive Extremely Pine Feature! \u2014\n. a) MARKS  THOUSANDS  OF  GARMENTS\n\u2022 PENETRATES STARCH   AND   SIZING     '\n\u2022 HA8 PRECISION  BALL  POINT        .\n\u2022 EA8Y TO U8E .\n.,       \u2022 FINE, CRISP, LEGIBLE  MARKING8\nONLY $1.15\nREFILLS \u2014BBe\nKOOTENAY STATIONERS\nAND SPORT SHOP\n48* WARD ST. 7 PHONE 362\nDriver Tries To\nRecall Cause\nOf Bus Accident\nCORNWALL\", Ont. (CP) \u2014 Lome\nChesebrough of Kingston? Ont,,\ndriver of the Colonial Coach Lines\nbus that plunged into the St. Lawrence river last Friday with a'loss\nof 20 lives, Tuesday told hOw the,\naccident happened. \" '\n- From, his bed in Cornwall Gen-\nerall hospital, he told reporters in\na, whisper: ''ilk wai lomewhere.\naround 4 a.rrt.*\"       \u25a0 \u2022 -.' .     -   7 :\n\"Traffic was comparatively light:\nIt was stffl dark and there wore\nlots of stars ... '\u25a0-',:..\n.'. \"1 met'a westbound car just before the accident. I snapped my\nlights down as I came around a\ncurve. Then I threw my lights up.\n\"There was something in the\nroad right in front of me.        \u2022\n\"I didn't know just what it was,\nalthough I knew, it was a vehicle\nof some kind. It appeared to.be\nangling across in front of me.\n\"I hit the brakes. and at the\nsame time, pulled to the centre of\nthe road to try to miss it, I hoped\nthe bus Would stay on the.road, but\nI didn't think I- had room td go by.\n\"Then we hit. The .bus went out\nof control. We started going down\na*'bank into the'water, . , f:\nVI don't know what ejse happened. I don't remember. I don't\nknow how I got but. I don't remember getting to shore,, t can't\nremember.? ?.?': \u2022.,..;.\nHe said he didn't remember telling the passengers to be calm, although some of the passengers\nheard him fay ' so as' the bus\nentered the. witer.\nHe said he.had no. recollection\nof, having forced open the front\ndoor, but passengers credited him\nwith providing the escape route,\nCoronation was breathtaking,\" Mr.\nStibbs said. They arrived ln England from France a week before\nthe Coronation. Mr. and Mrs. Stibbs\nand their son'acquired seats be-1\nside the Tomb of the \u2022 Unknown\nSoldier ,ond. were able to see the\nprocession to and from the Abbey.\n\"It wos a very impressive sight to'\nsee dignitaries from all. Over the\nworld attending the ceremony. I\ndidn't think Premier... Malan of\nSouth Africa could ever go back\nto his 'country after such a ceremony and make a proposal to break\naway from the Empire. It was not\nlong afterward that the Union ot\nSouth Africa abandoned the idea.\"\nMr. Stibbs expressed his belief that\nthe Coronation tended to hold the\nCommonwealth family, together. \"It\nhad a wonderful effect on the countries of the Commonwealth that\nthink they can do better against the\ntide than with It,\" he stated.\nVISIT NEL80N, LANC.\nA welcoming reception at Nelson,\nLancashire, awaited Mr. Stibbs and\nbis wife and son, highlighting theh;\ntravels in England. Mr. Stibbs\ncarried b message \u2022 from Mayor\nJoseph Kary to the mayor of that\nIndustrial Lancashire city, A civic\ninspection and tour ot one of the'\ntextile factories was arranged for\nthe vjsitors and Mr. Stibbs attended\na special meeting in the City Hall\nwith members of .the city council.\nHe' extended art invitation to the\nmayor of Nelson, Lancashire, to)\nvisit Nelson, British: Columbia:\nRaymond Gower, 'member of\nparliament for Lisvane, Wales, took\n.Mrs. Dorothy Stibbs, cousin of, Mr:\nStibbs,. and Mr. Stibbs to witness a'\nsession to England's famous,v Parliament House, There they saw\nPrime Minister Wtoston Churchill,\ndescribed by Mr. Stibbs as \"the\ngreatest man living today,\" in\naction. \"He yias most impressive,\"\nMr. Stibbs. commented, \"and the\npeople of the British Isles'look to\nhim as their saviour;\" 1      '\u2022..\u2022-'\nAnother highlight of their journeys in England was a banquet\ngiven by* the London Council for\nthe mayors and reeves? of Canada\nand the United States attending the\nCoronation.      :*>' '\u25a0'.   \u2022\n\"I liked England so well that I\nstayed another three'weoks while\nmy wife and son returned to Can-\nada,\" he explained,  .\n' Mr. Stibbs. most. Impressed with\nEngland, saw Buckingham Palace\nand Windsor Castle, Scotland Yard,\nthe changing of the guard, the Bank\nof England, the Masonic Temple1,\nwhich he described.as \"one of the\nmost outstanding buildings in England,\" and toured Northern England to Edinburgh and South again\nto Wales, Where he visited many of\nhis relatives, including the home ot\nhi! grandfather .-, ih'- Cowbrldge,\nWales, near Cardiff,\nTouring in, one of Englands\nfamous double-decker buses Mr.\nStibbs' commented, \"I really don't\nknow how they drive them. But\nthere is never any excitement or\nlack of patience among the drivers,\nand they seldom sound their horns.\"\n\"You can scarcely walk two\nblocks without seeing a 'bobby.' be\nexclaimed.. There are 14 to 15\nthousand policemen ln the Metropolitan Police Force ot England.\nLIKED THE PEOPLE   '\u2022>:'\u00bb'\n\"The. English are very much like\nourselves,\" Mr. Stibbs said, \"they\nOffer, much better Service than is\noffered here and they put themselves out to be hospitable.\" s\n' \"W6 were-Very much impressed\nwith Europe as a whole,\" he commented. \"The countrysides in all\nthe countries we visited were\nbreathtaking and we found the\npeople clean, friendly, and thrifty.\"\nMr. Stibbs commented on the good\nhighways, all macadamized, and\nthe tasteful meals served them.\nThe art work Of the cathedrals and\nmuSeums particularly impressed\nMr. Stibbs, \"How 'they* v ever\nachieved such art work in the\ncathedrals Is beyond me,\" he said.\n\"Of all the peoples we saw* I\nthought the Indian .women most\nrefined and .beautiful, They didn't\n.seem to have a worry'in the\nworld,\" Mr.' Stibbs exclaimed.\nOh the\"' trip honieward storms\nagain interfered with the scheduled\nflight and the plane was routed\nthrough Iceland, arriving in. Montreal July 3. Mr. Stibbs visited in\nOhtario, Havelock, Buffalo, Toronto\nand Georgian Bay, before returning by rail tb Nelson oh July 28.\n\"It was a wonderful experience\nto be able to tour .Europe and I\nwould StrOhgly recommend such a\ntrip' to others. It was over much\ntoo, soon, but it's grand to be\nhome,\" he added.\nPOWs To Receive\nBack Pay, Japan\nOTTAWA (CP)-the arihy Said\nWednesday that Canadians listed\nas prisoners and freed by the Communists in Korea will receive their\nback pay as soon as they arrive\nin Japan, \u2022    ';-: 'titi-    \"'\u2022iy\nHowever, there may be a short\ndelay in getting back hay .tojpeli\nlisted as missing who turn up as\nprisoners.\nCanadians released by the Reds\nwill be flown to Kure, Japan, from\nSeoul after passing through , the\nBritish medical centre at Camp\nBritannia, near.Munsan. Until they\narrive in Japan toey will be,.able\n'to buy cigarets and other necessities with pocket money provided\nby the British paymaster at Panmunjom. .\/,       '\u25a0' '\u2022;:\nThere will be Nno delay in turning over back pay to the men\nlisted as prisoners becausefthe pay\nboo*ks of the 14 Canadians so listed\nwere flown to Japan from Ottawa\nlast month.     7 ;_\u2022\u201e'         ':;?.;: \u25a0\n[SOME PAY DELAYED\n'. The Vdelay in turning over back\npay to men released by the Reds\nwho are? not listed as prisoner's\n\u2022will be- only' a few days, The Intention is to fly such a man's pay-\nbook to Japan as -quickly as\npossible.\nThere has already been one case\nof this type. The paybook for Cpl.\nJoseph Pelletier of Chatham, Ont.,\nthe first Canadian released by the\nReds, is still in Ottawa, but should\narrive in Japan? in a day or two.\nHis paybook' was not flown to\nJapan because 'he was 'officially\nlisted as misaing. ,'s.*.. 7\n\"If any more missing jrien turn\nup as prisoners,; their pay books\nwill be flown to Japan as quickly\nas possible,\" the army spokesman\nsaid.      . \u2022'      \u25a0    .      t \u25a0     .?.\n'.'The paybdoks of'men. listed as\n\u25a0missing have .nbt.tbeen sent to\nJapan because there is no guarantee that any of them are alive.\"\n\u25a0   \u2022      - -' 1   .        \u2014\u2014 -; *>\nLONDON T-',<CP), -r- A^survey\nshowed, that to 1991 nearly half of]\nthoSe qualifying for paid holidays\nstayed, at home. One inference*!\ndrawn from the report is .that many\npreferred*, to spend ' money saved\nfrom-vacation trips on a television\nset or a refrigerator.\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLA88IFIED\nKomloops Polio Cose\nFlown to Coast\n' VANC6UV|IR:(CP) -A successful mercy flight was: carried out on\nTuesday afternoon to bring a polio\npatient from Kamloops to hospital\nhere, RCAF search and rescue re\"-\nported Wednesday.\nAn air force Dakota piloted by\nFO? C. Miller carried out the trip\ndespite poor weather conditions to\nbring '85-year-old C. Duncan of\nKamloops to Vancouver General\nHospital for polio treatment. Hospital authorities reported the patient's condition as 'good.' Also taking part in the trip were Fit. Lt.\nE.A.L. Davis and .Nursing Sister M.\nKennedy,\n\u2022\nMilk Distributors\nOffer Price Cut\n7 VANCOUVER'*'\u00a3\u2022\u25a0(CP) \u2014Vancouver milk distributors .Wednesday offered to cut the price of\nhome-delivered milk one cent a\nquart on quantity purchases.    .\nThe offer was .made by John G.\nGould, counsel for 11 major 'lower\nmainland milk distributing systems\nbitfore the B.C. Milk Board now\nhearing evidence for and against\nmilk price decontrol above the producer, level.    ***:'\u2022 , V\nThe olfer made  by   Mr.. Gbuld\n\u2022would not. effect  the  first bottle\np rchased but would   apply   only\nto all 'quart purchases   after   the\nifirst bottle. '      . V\nHe described it as a \"quantity\ndiscount\" and said in his application to the board: \"We hereby\napply to the board for permission\nto inaugurate this system of quantity discount if control at all levels\nis. maintained and if the store differential is not increased:\"\n' The home distribution system, he\nsaid, ''takes the good with the bad\"\nin the matter of profitable and unprofitable routes. In this way house\nwives Who live in sparsely settled\nareas: of the community get the\nsame Service as those living in\nmore densely populated areas,\nHIGHLAND DANCER\nSIDNEY, N.S. - (CP) -'Margaret T. Bell, principal Of the\nSchool of Highland Dancing at\nDumfries, Scotland, is supervising\nexaminations and giving instruction\nin new techniques at the Gaelic Col\nlege here. .7 .\nShip Gives Up\nEffort fo Raise\nTitanic Treasure\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) - A\nBritish salvage vessel Help has\nabandoned its attempts to raise the\ntreasures that went down 'with the\nTitanic,- it was learned in marine\ncircles here Tuesday.     .\nThe vessel apparently found the\nliner that sank ln 1912 with a loss\nof 1500 lives after hitting an iceberg ln the Atlantic. The Titanic,\nthe world's largest ship at the\ntime, sank ln 2800 fathoms.\nNeither the company that operates the Help. or {the admiralty,\nwhich chartered heV to Risdon\nBearley Ltd., of Southampton,\nwould confirm or deny, that the\nvessel wss attempting to salvage\nsome, of the liner's cargo.\nThe cargo was reported to include a fortune in works of art.\nIt is known that the vessel was\nusing explosive! last week roughly\nover the spot where the White Star\nliner went down, about 360 miles\nsouth - southeast of Cape Race,\nNfld.\nRupert Council\nSupports Mayor\nPRINCE RUiPBRT, -B.C. - (CP)\n\u2014City Council Wednesday approved resolutions calling on citizens\nand RCMP to co-ope'ate in putting\nan end to mob demonstrations that\nhave struck this northern coastal\ncity on two successive weekends.\n' The resolutions were passed, at\nan emergency meeting lasting until early Wednesday. The meeting\nwas called by Mayor Harold Whalen afteV unruly Saturday night revellers pelted police and. city officials with stones and broke windows in public buildings here Saturday night and early. Sunday.\nMayor Whalen laid council would\nissue a proclamation on Thursday\nasking co-operation of the public\nin preventing any further disturbances and pointing out the \"serious\nconsequences\" of not co-operating\nwith authorities.\nCouncil also passed a resolution\ncalling on the RCMP to foster\nbetter public relations \"by acting\nin a nlore courteous manner\" with\ncitizens.   ; \u25a0***.\n__H_^___H_____^__\nMade*To*Measure\nSUIT SALE\n20^ DISCOUNT\nNow is your chance to get a suit tailored to your own  *\nmeasurements at :a 'real saving. '\n$4640   $52.80   $58.40 '\nAlso $10 OFF any stock suit in the store.\nEMORY^UTD.\nBox\n100\n\u2022THE MAM'S, STORE\nPhone\n31\nCanada Ships Arms To Europeans\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Additional sup\npiles of Canadian arms will be\nshipped to Italy and'Portugal'this\nmonth under the mutual aid agreement of the North Atlantic Treaty\nOrganization, the defence -department announced Wednesday,\nThe  Italian  army  will  receive\n98 three-ton trucks. They will bt\nshipped to Naples this week from:\nMontreal' and from Hamilton.\nThe Portuguese army will receive 240 military -wireless sett\nwhich will be shipped from Montreal to Lisbon.\nBOY FOUND\nHULL, Que;. (CP) - Nine-year\nold Bobby Rothman,, barefooted\nand wearing .only pyjamas, waa\nfound late Tuesday night under a\nrain-soaked, blanket in a .garage\nless than five blbcka from his\nhome.   .       \"   . '\" ' 5\nBelieved to have, walked in his\nsleep,' Bobby., disappeared from {lis\nhome Monday night He was taken\nto hospital suffering from exposure,\nbut attendant: laid hii condition\nwas not serious. :-titiil '\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n7   tt tot     tiZ'Z.\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street\nPhone 148\nIGINTON\nw\n11      MOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC -BUlCK\nQ.M.C. TRUCKS ,\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nHaigh\nTrii-Ait\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 827\n578 Baiter 8t.\n9\nFLEURY'S\n803 Baker St.\nPharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 214\nAccurately\nCompounded   ,\nPrescriptions\n:'\u25a0', Phone 29\nA FEW HOURS AFTER, the fatal plunge,\nthe bus waa hauled out of the Cornwall canal, still\nholding the bodies of those who were unable to\nbreak through the windows before the vehicle\nsank.\u2014Central Preii Canadian.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service*\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n818 Kootenay St 'ti;   Phone 881\nT\"\nHave the Job Dona Right'\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONI815\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n* IMRIE\n'  Chartered Accountants\nAuditors\n578 Biker St Phone 238\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAu TRAlNINft\nMedical Arta Building\nSuit* 204 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\n.CLEANED (V REPAIRED   '\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n818 FRONT ST. PHONE 88\n^ti-%       AT\n8\n'  \"S\/ioaUiy. (Dapwibmnl\nCoffee   yjtify\nMalkln'a Best; Lb. ..:  \u201e?.....\u21227..-.\u2122?..\n\u25a0Too t\n-Malkin's Best, Red Label; Lb  ...\nTed -\u2022\u2022'\nMalkln'i Best, Blu* Label; Lb. ....:,?..\u201e: L\t\nTea-'V.'\nMalkin's.Best, White Label; Lb.\t\nPork and Beans\nMalkin's Best; 15 oz. tins\t\nPeas\"- \"\u25a0'>\u25a0'\nDewkist, Sieve 3; 15-oz. tins,\nSpinach\nBulman's; 15 oz, tins,  ....'..,\nSockeye Salmon\nMalkln'i Best, Fancy; %s\t\nShrimps 1\nCloverleaf; 5 bt. tint \t\nGrapefruit Juice\nTropical Pride; SO 01. tins, ......r......\nBlended Juice\n- E-A.C; 20 oz.fins,\n99'\n_7-5*\nIT\n83*\n4. W\n2^35'\n2\u201e,33'\nZa-,:P'3'r\n  w\n2, 29>\n2.15*\n2.37*\nZ- 43*\nPineapplf Juice '\nDolejs; '20. os. .tliiS,'\t\nOrange Juice\nMalkin's Bestijioz. 'tins, :.........-....:..:..i....i.\u201et.... .^ foV,\nFRUIT CQRDIALS, MALKIN'S BEST\nLime, Lemon, Orange\nP.int hottjii..-33c   Quart bottles _ 55c\nipwduai. (OspwdmmL\nNew Potatoes\nFresh, Local;*.'..\t\nNew Beets\nNEW CARROTS! Local;\nGreen Onions\nLocal;, ...............:....,.... ..:\t\nNew Cabbage\nSolid, Green Heads; Lb.\nCauliflower\nSnow-White Heads; Lb.\nCucumbers,\nOkanagan, Field; Lb. \t\nGreen Peppers\nOkonagan, Fresh; Lb\t\nSquash\nIndividual; Lb.*   ..:,....-...-.'.;,\nWatermelon\nWhole; Lb.: \t\nRaspberries   .\n2 btiketi.,., \t\nTomatoes\nOkanagan. Field:\n10\n2\nlbs.\nbchs.\n45?\n,19*\n2  \"15*\n\u2022*\u25a0bcl_.*,'\"'\nffzyzry.\n19'\n:zzz. is*\nli. Z 33*\n14*\n24 bikt. crate      \u2022      v\"\n2   49*\nn UK un. .n rein;  ..      .... . gwi  .. ^^ lbs.        \u2122 ^\nAPRICOTS, CHERRIES, BLACK CURRANTS,\n, PlCKtlNG ONIONS, ETC.\nBLUE BRAND BEEF   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\"'\nSTEAKS -ff.. ft 73c\nFowl. 7 \u2022\u25a0'\"-' 7?        Z- '\u00ab:*.\nGrade A;-Lb ,,.. .\u201e. .,...'.  V.\u00ab*.\nBologna s \\K*\n\u2022SUced or in the Piece;: Lb. I:....... '......\u25a0\u201e .\u201e...  \u2022*'\u25a0*  \u2022\nCod Slices 35*\nFreih; Lb. .7        '. ....if. .,  **W\nHomade Sausage   ' > 3Q*\nH.C.; I*. ?..-'. ;...:.,.:.' .,,..:  r.......?,7..:.... \u25a0* \u2022'..,\nPotato Salad, Prepared Fresh Daily\u2014\n.'Also Heme Cooked Roast Beef and Roast Pork '\u201e\u25a0:,'\n\u25a0* STAR *\n488 Baker St.\nGROCERY\nPhone 10\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\nii':..:\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_08_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427730","@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":"1953-08-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-08-06 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\/1.0427730"}