{"@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":"2023-03-02","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1954-07-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427838\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" French Reds Agree\njfe':y.'\\'. \u25a0 v '.;''\"\u2022''\u25a0\u25a0' \u2022' m:.'.-'\nOn Prisoner Exchange\nilu Skw*\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Clear Tuesday. A little\n-warmer. Winds light. Low and high\nat - Cranbrook, Crescent Valley 80 ,\nand 88. ; '\u25a0   . -.-:.   v   (.   .-.' ig\nDelegates Await Word From Geneva\nBefore Marking Out Cease-Fire Line\nragfti\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA \u2014 TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 6, 1954\nNo. 63\n2,000 REDS\nARRESTED\nHANOI, Indo-China\". (Reuters);.'- French ;Uni6ri-and\nSjjmmunlst, Vietminh, officers,, holding, talks ;at the Jncio-\n3hiria truce village of Trung Gig,.Monday,'agreed ion an ex-\ns^apge of. sick and wounded prisoners, of War, thi French\njigh command announced.  ','\n\u2022The agreemeht, which puts- into\n$ect the decision of the military\ninference at Geneva, ordered the\nxchange to begin July 14.\nMonday was the second day of\nnice talks at Trung Gia. [\niClbservers said the truce dele-\njtes will not touch the major\n;sue of marking. out a cease-fire\nme''.without further ^Instructions\ntorn- Geneva. ,-\n\u2022As the. truce talks- went on,\n'rench - .Union troops pulled back\n.their new defence lines south\nt flanot'--\nThe French high command an-\nounced reorganization of its mlli-\ntty, forces in the Red river delta\now is complete and that a strong\nrotective ring has been placed\nround the cities of Hanoi and\niaiphong and the road arid rallied connecting them.\nThe announcement said the re-\nrodping. was carried out with\nsitremely light\" losses. Some 30\nattalions of troops were pulled\nrt of a large area at the southern\nid of the delta and about 30,000\nvlltans were evacuated during the\ni-day operation. ' y '..':\u25a0\nnie Trench high command an-\njunced \"extremely-heavy\" air at-\nnka' against the Vietminh threat-\nling Hanoi. Bombers and fighferr\nrnibers flew more than 150 sorties\n(ainst 30,000 rebels poised for an\ntack on Hanoi, only 25 miles' to\ne southwest.\nloctors Fight .o\naye Boy's Eye\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Eye surg-\n_s at General hospital here today\nere fighting to save the right eye\nl.the son of a Toronto University\n\u2022ofessor who was himself blinded\nthe First World War;\nThe youth, Hugh McDougall, 18,\nn,pf Prof, D, T.-McDougall, pro-\n!&oV.' of -history at the University\n:.T((ro_-o, was flown, here from\nader.on Lake in the Cariboo dis-\nlOt. where he was holidaying, *;\nRCAF officials said McDougall,\n.lie   hiking   with other youths\nGuateitid la Wants\n.. No; Dealings'.With\nISbviet, Satellitfesy\nGUATEMALA (AP) \u2014 Leaders\nbf Guatemala's^ new military government . annou'dced.-' Monday 2000\nsuspected Communists :have beeh\nrounded up-.yiiu.thii..revolt-freed\nCentral Amerirah republic.;'-.\nResults of- the giant -roundup\nwere disclosed at; a heavily yarded press conference in the presidential palace by Col; Elf ego Mon-\nzon and Carlos Castillo- Armas,\nkey figures in the five-man. junta\nthat- finally, took\" control after- the\nouster of Communist-backed president Jacobo Arbenz Guzman.\nOther Important poinft made by\nMonzon and Castillo were:\n1. The hew regime iwlll have\nno dealings with Russia or any\nother Iron Curtain, country, y\n2. Guatemala Will recognize all\nher, previous international commitments, rejoining' the; organization of -Central American states\nand support the United Nations\nand the Organization of American\nStates.       '\n3. The 2000 suspected Communists already in custody fill all the\navailable jails and the government\nis preparing other places of confinement A decree has been prepared freezing the Assets of \"all\nCommunists' and criminals.\"\n4. Application of the country's\nLand Law will be suspended pending the drafting of a new constitution;-\nSunday, found some old blasting\ncaps and filled his pockets with\nthem*-     . ':;\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: -y\nSunday night as he,was examining one, it- went off'in'his band;\nshowering- fragments- into his right\n?ye .a(_d J_ep, \u25a0_!\u00a3\u00a3\"\nF^ITKIN TWO BtOCfeS-bf NeWon'amain strfeSt-is:\nirSceriic spot that altrajts man\/'visiters.'Cottenwood\nmis, still running Sigh after spring\"frefehet,.proyides's\niVely cehtrepietee .to .SportsM'an's Parl{. \u2022 The! Far^vsM\nfedsttyin a, wild state.\/hasyet to be-fully\" developed.' It\nI site; of the fish hatchery, s't'affed Isy. pisheries;(Uyisioii;\njf- the B.C.\u2022 Game;Branch;- and of tjout resting--{jorids.\n\u25a0: ';' -\u25a0' '.'\u25a0 \"\u25a0>''\u25a0'\u2022' !''\u25a0\u2022-' -  :'. '^IJail^Newsphotos.'\nLivmg Costs Soar in\n$138,97* Overhaul for^iyic\nCentre Asked by Commission\nIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nLoan Fund for\nWould-B,e Teachers\nVlfcTORIA (CP) \u2014 Education\nMinister Ray Williston Monday\nannounced the establishment of\na $100,000 loan fund to be used\nIn helping out-of-town students\nenter the teaching  profession.\nLoans will be made Interest-\nfree to rural students, either-at\nthe normal school or university\nlevel.\nFund was set up following an\neducation department survey\nwhich revealed \"a great number\" of young men and woolen\nfrom rural districts would \"go\nto normal school If It were possible for them to do' so,\"\nLoans with an approximate\nmaximum of 3900 annually will\nbe granted upon application by\nthe Individual and'will haye a\nthree-year repayment limit.\nItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nChaos Reigns as\nMeal Derationed\nBy 80NIA YOUNG\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Housewives Monday swamped butcher\nshops to buy their first unrationed\nmeat in 14 years and were shocked\nto find that prices of some choice\ncuts bad doubled and even trebled\nsince rationing ended Saturday\nmidnight.\nAlthough most women failed to\nlet the soaring prices deter them,\nsome customers in the - poorer\nareas of London and ether big\ncltjes refused to buy. Some retail\nbutchers, ahawrefusedto qrAbt'ffbn.\nwholesalers When they heard the\nnew. prices.\nThe steep prices charged at\nSmithfield, London's main wholesale meat market, provoked a Labor\noutcry of protest In the House of\nCommons,..;\nA butcher from a working class\ndistrict' of London said he and\nother, butchers didn't even order\nirom Smithfield when they heard\nhow high the prices .were. \"Our\ncustomers just wouldn't buy it,\" he\nsaid..- ;. '\u2022\u2022\u2022;.'\nThe first day of free trading\ntransformed Smithfield, biggest\nmeat market in the world, into a\nsquare mile of. excitement. Buying\nwas chaotic as buyers rushed to get\nthe best choice of carcasses. '\u2022'\nA request from the Civic Centre-\nCommission for a 3133,979 njone'jl\nbylaw to provide funds for new construction and repairs at the Civic\nCentre is being studied by City\nCouncil; \u25a0.'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0 y\nAdded facilities, Improvements io\npresent opes, and in many cases\ntiew-'building Is planned for every\nsectlSn ot the Civic Centre\u2014focal\npoint\" of Nelson's organized recreation, and home of Canada's Midsummer Bonspiel and the Summer\nSkating School: The Centre was\nopened In 1935, the first of its kind\nin Canada. y .        -J\nAh expenditure of $860 Is planned\nfor the auditorium, which 'houses\nthe movie theatre; $225 for the\namusement hall;. $50,252 for the\narena; $44,009 for the curling rink;\n89 for the recreation grounds;\nand $35,374 for the general building.\nLargest proposed expenditure\nwould be replacement of the heating system at a cost of $35,000. Installation of a permanent floor in\nthe curling rink was estimated at\n$20,000, and in the arena at $23,000.\nReplacement of the curling rlnK|\npipes would cost $12,575. an estimate from the' Commission said,\nwhile completion st the basement\nwalls and floor (in the curling rink)\nwould cost over $4000, It was also\nplanned to straighten the posts and\nreinforce the walls, tor $5000,\nConstruction of a show pit, resurfacing of the roof and a new Hall\nStreet entrance ramp are among the\nimprovements passing the proposed\nbylaw would bring the: arena.\nSports day fans will be In out\nof the weather If the $4500 roof\nla built over the bleachers In the\nrecreation grounds. Two hundred\nmetal chairs are needed for the\nbadminton hall, and construction\nof a tile shower and. installation\nof a public address system Is re\n.. ootnm*h'(ledri.Vi^ \u2022*\u25a0>-&_-^-i-\u00bb.\nPalnUpg 'pt..ttto'-fr_Is;and'teHing-1\nIS planned iO.'the Jheatre, .:\u2022\u25a0;'\nDgPUTYA-G\nPEPLER RESIGNS\n$0ifomA)':XCB) \u2014Brie Pepler,\nBritish Columbia's deputy attorney-\ngeneral for the last 20 years, resigned Monday for \"personal reason's.\"\nMr. Pepler has been with the attorney-general's department for 25\nyears, and was due to retire in\nJanuary, 1955. His place will be\ntoken by assistant deputy attorney-\ngeneral H. Alan MacLean, effective\nAugust L\nW.Germany May\nAssume Control\nBy ARTHUR GAVtiHON\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Britain and the\nUnited States Monday began work\ning on plans to turn'control of\ntheir zones \"back to West Germany\nif France rejects the) project for\na European Defence (fommunity.\nPolitical and legal experts of the\ntwo countries met a. the foreign\noffice ahd studied proposals which,\nif approved and applied, would;\n1. Give almost complete independence toy the federal German\nrepublic Yin the British and American zones,, including powers to\nraise a national army .of defence-\n2. Wind up the Britisli-American-\nFrench high commission in Bonn\nand set up Instead British and\nAmerican embassies.\n3. Leave France alone in her own-\nzone to fa'ce the West Germans.\n'fi^b-inanta stressed that Britain\nand the United States will not .accept any such plan'unless an emergency arises, such as failure of the\nFrench   parliament  to  ratify  the\nEDC treaty,       \u2022'\u2022[.    ,-.-\ntiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCranbrook Band Best\nIn Stampede Parade\n.    CALGARY (CP) \u2014 The Crsn-\n, brook, B.C., bugle band was Judged the best of the 26 bands whloh\nmjrphed In the Calgary*stampede\nparade Monday. It won the T. Eaton Co. (Western) Ltd. Trophy\nand $200.   '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'    '\nFirst prize of $200 In the brass\nsection went to the Swift Current,\nSask., band.\nSeeond, third and fourth In the\nbrail section were bands from\nNorth Battl .ford, 8aik,, Trouchu,\nAlta., and Brooks, Alta., respectively, Second and third In the\nbugle -and pipe band clan were\n.the Poweir River, B.C., bugle\nband and the Vernon pipe band,\n.respectively,      -y\n:illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMilitary Honors\nFor Gen.Keller\nKELOWNA, B.C. (CP)-HSpme of\nCanada's top-ranking military men\nwatched silently Monday as Maj.-\nGen. R. F. L. Keller, the man who\nled the first Canadians ashore in\nNormandy, was buried in his home\ntown. \u2022-..,'\nGen. Keller was stricken with\na heart attack at Caen, en route\nto lOth-onnlversary ceremonies on\nthe Normandy beaches where he\nwent sishore June 6, 1944. He died\nJune 21 ln London. The body was\nflown home.\nA lone bugle and three volleyB\n\u25a0t^^)i'0^glpai^,iAajis^','!tA:^\nivas burled with full military honors:.-     .i '.;      \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0;,.     '\u25a0 ',       -,,;:-..:.,\nThe holder of the Croix de Guerre, Legion of Honor, and a Commander of the British Empire, Gen.\nKeller had been an alderman here\nfor the last four years.\nIn his honor, business halted In\nthis Okanagan valley fruit-shipping\ncentre and thousands lined the\n[-route of the funeral procession to\nwatch the flag-draped gun carriage\n90,1100 Watch\n\u25a0'-.;?\u2022'.' '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- .\u25a0\u25a0..'\u25a0\/\nStampede Parade\nCALGARY (CP) -One of the\ncontinent's greatest old-west spectacles, the annual Calgary Exhibition\nand Stampede, got under way with\na giant downtown parade witnessed by almost 90,000 spectators on\nMonday, \u2022\nCombining a brilliant pageant of\nthe old west with modern-day\nfloats, the parade took up to an\nhour to file past a. given point\nalong Its 2^-mlle route.  '\nA sober pqle was added to the-\nfestivities when one of the stampede's competing cowboys, 20-year-\nold Harold Kenny of Byemoore,\nAlta., was killed a few'hours before the parade. Kenny was practicing at the stampede grounds for\nthe evening chuck-wagon outfit.\nHe was bucked off and trampled\nby his horse,\nThe parade of Indians, cowboys,\nhorses, old-timers, gaily-decorated\nfloats, red-coated Mounties and\nmilitary personnel was paced by 23\nbands, five from the U. S.\nFood* Rent U]p Itidex\nTliree^ftiw of Point\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Living costs made iheir'biggest:\njump in 30 months during May as food prices suddenly,'\ngained new life and power, soaring to a six-month high.   ,\n.The consumer-price index,' yardstick for me'asijriiij\nliving costs, rose by three-fifths of: a point to 1164 . from-\n115.5, the bureau of statistics reported Monday, The only\nprevious .1954 increase Was one-tenth'bf a point in March.-si\nThe \"index, based on 1949 prices equalling iOOyhaxl\nbeen generally-slipping from th'd 1953. high, of 116.7\"ia4|\nSeptember,\nTEACHERS OFF TO\nSCHOOL AGAIN\nVICTORIA , (CP) \u2014 About 1800\nschool teachers started school here\nMonday.\nThey wiil.be attending the 41st\nSession of the British Columbia\nsummer school' of education until\nAug. 8.\nThoy are attending courses for\nelementary teachers wishing permanent teaching certificates, for.\nteachers wishing to specialise and\ntor those wishing to improve their\nacademic and professional education.    \" ' .-'\nAbout 1400 of the record, enrolment are from the B.C. Mainland\nand the rest, with the exception\nof a,few from the prairies, are\nfrom Vancouver island.'- '\u25a0:'\u25a0'\u25a0\n3 Tourists Die\nAt'Jaws of Death'\nVANCOUVER (CP),\u2014i Three unidentified California tourists were\ndrowned July 1 when their car\nswerved from a highway, plunged\ndown a 100-foot bank and sank in\n30 feet, of water, RCMP reported\ntoday. (\nPolice, still dragging the Thompson river nine miles east of Lytton,\nB. C., said the accident occurred\non a stretch of river known locally as'the jaw. of death,\"\nSchool Principal\nKilled in Climb\n' POET-ALBEBNI, \u00bb. C.\"'(<3PV\nRalph Rousseau, principal of Gill\nelementary \u25a0 school'-'at nearby Al->\nKerni was killed during a weekend\nmountain-climbing expedition.\n: Word' oi Mr. Rousseau's death\n.was disclosed here late Sunday\nnight by RCMP after a helicopter\nhad been pressed into service'to\nrescue two Women members of the\nparty. \u25a0\nWith Mr. Rousseau on the ill-\nfated expedition were his wife, and\nMiss Alma Currie and Ulf Vitterlich\nall of Alberni.\nThe party was crossing a portage\nabout 4000 feet up after lunch on\nSaturday when the snow and Ice\ngave way.\nPolice said Rousseau was apparently struck on the head by a rock\nand killed, Mrs, Rousseau and Vitterlich were, not hurt. Miss Currie\nsuffered min'or Injuries. y\nVitterlich hiked 10 miles to the\nnearest phone to call police.       *\nOn Sunday. night, a helicopter\nfrom'Vancouver flew into the area\nand brought the two women to hospital at Port Alberni.\nViterlich remained at the head\nof Great Central Lake and will go\nin with a search party to bring out\nHoUssiau's body Monday.\nThe schoolmaster's death brought\nto eight the number of fatal accidents in British Columbia since\nDominion Day. ;,\nBut the food price reversal,'combined with another sharp jump In\nrents,'boosted the index to its highest point in' seven months. The May\njump of.three-fifths of a point Is\nthe biggest since the rise of four-\nfifths of a point in November,' 1981.\nDuring May, food prices made\ntheir biggest jump In three years\nforcing consumers to dig deeper\ninto their .pocketbookS for such\nthings as meats, fresh vegetables,\nfresh and canned fruit and coffee.\nThese offset declines for such\nother foodstuffs as butter and chicken, pushing the food sub-index up\nby li points to 113- It was the biggest jump-in about three;years. But\nstill is- well below the all-time high,\not 122.5 of November, 1951.\nRENTS RISE      -\nRents also contributed to the May\nrise, forcing the shelter sub-index\nup by three-fifth- of a point'to a re- -\ncord  120.5. The Increase was tlie\nhighest in a- year, just below tho.\nrise of seven-tenths, of a point in\nMay, 1953. \\h\nThe clothing column Slipped by '\na fifth of a point to-109.7, reflecting\nlower prices for nylon hosiery con\u00a3\n,bined with small scattered decreases in other items. Y\n'' Household' operations also eased\nby a fifth of a point to 117.1, jujt\na point belpw the peak of 118.1 last\nMarch. Declining prices tor several\nelectrical appliances, cotton sheets,\ngarbage cans along with seasonal\ndeclines In coal prices offset a rite\nln the cost of some services, cleaqf\nIng supplies and furniture.\nThe' miscellaneous column, other\ncommodities and services, which ln\u00bb\neludes such, things as medical arid\nhealth eare, remained unchanged at\nthe peak pf I17.5..,?, \u25a0:'._\u00bb\nLIQUOR, TOBACCO SALES INCREASE\nOITAWA(CP.\u2014'Canada, food\nbill, rose by' jBo'.OOO.OOO last year;\nIfoe tab for.tobacc'o.and llquprincreased by $38,000,006:\nThe national accounts, measuring\nstatistically the. size.and character\nof the Canadlaii economy, estimated Monday that Canadians boosted\ntheir 'spending oi consumer goods\nand services last year to a record\nfl5,l\u00abK0o6,0'OD.5' ..;|i.,V ' ..: '\u25a0:.\nThis is a jump of $762,000,000 from\nthe previous high of $14,403,000,000\nlni 1952, By far the. largest single\namount was spent on food, but\nthere were Increases.all,along the\nline, from rents to hospital care,\ni.jrhe food bffl rbse-to-___-gh of *3>\n755,000,000, up from $3,665,000,000 In\n1952. The bill for tobacco and liquor Increased to $1,334,000,000 from\n!$1,388,000.000.' -t^O'\u00a3.'\u2022;\nQuesfion of Red China Admission\nHatmted House Surrenders \"(jhos^\nBy FRANK PITMANI\nDENVER (AP)-A ghostly man,\nalmost as frail as the spiders he\ncalled his friends, shadowed Philip\nPeters in his home for a month.\nFinally he clubbed him to death.\nThen he haupted the house for almost a year.   . ,.\nThose are the eerie elements\nwhich spun the web of the spider\ncase, a murder that sent shivers\ndown the spine of many a Denver\nresident in 1941. \u25a0\nIt also sent Theodore Edward\nConey to prison for life, \"I killed\nhim because he caught me robbing\nthe ice box,1' was the only explanation-Coneys gave tor slaying a man\nwho had befriended him 42 years\nearlier.  .'.-       .'\u25a0 .    -'*- , .;\nConeys, now 72, was a sickly 17-\nyear-old when he came to Colorado\nin search of health from Illinois in\n1899. He devoted his time to playing the mandolin, Soon tie. was a\nmember of the West Moncrieff M_v\ndolin Club, which met regularly at\nthe home of Philip Petera, an ambitious young auditor with the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad.\nROAMED COUNTRY\nConeys left Denver in the early\n1990s and roamed around the country, but returned-tor' short periods\ntwice before Ills surreptitious entry\nof the Peters homeJn 1941. On each\nvisit, the first ih 1910 and the second in 1912, he chanced to meet his\nfriend of earlier dtys, On the first\noccasion he was Invited to dinner.\nWhen he returned'in the spring\nof 1941, he did not,renew his contact with Peters, now 73 and retired\nfront the railroad,'.\nHowever, lie became desperate, for\nfood that September and sneaked\nInto Peters' home! No one. was\nthere. Coneys foraged around and\nthen hid in the i attic\u2014a cubby-liole\nreached through a trap door in a\ncloset ceiling.        \u25a0;\nThe attic was too cramped for a\nman to stand. There was no ventil.\nation and the' wo'odeh; shingles provided little''insulation from the hot\nsun or sub-zero cold.\n; Describing the first month of,\nhli attic life;: {ioneys said: \"When\n. I  heard  Peters downstairs,. I'd\nkeep so still I'd almost hold my\nBreaths Then I got bolder.. I used\nto  shadow  him from, room  to\nroom. It was a sort of game.  It\n. gave me a sort of thrill. It was\ntheflrst tlme'lfi my life,I'd evisr\nhad anyone at my mercy.\"\nCRUSHED FRIEND'S SKULL\nPeters,' alone in the house'dnQct,\n17, .196, was nappiiig on 'a couch in:\nthe living room. Coneys, who- had, came too persistent tor police toig-\nbeen in the attic for a month, slipped down to the ice, box to take\nsome food.:,     x ,;'   ' ....\n\u25a0- Something woke peters, who discovered his old friend. Tljeygrap'-\npled in the living room, Coneys\ngrabbed a Stove shaker, weighing\nabout five pounds, and crushed\nPeters' skull with repeated blows.'\nConeys scjirrled back to the; attic\nhideout with his \"friendly spiders^\"\nHours later neighbors discovered\nPeters' body. Detectives swarmed\nthrough the house but none spotted\nthe trap- door leading to the hideaway.   -... \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\n\u25a0 Mrs. Peters, who, was in a hospital with a broken hip at the. time\nof the slaying, returned to their\nhome to live, She was hard ol'hearing and although she lived, there\nseveral months she was unaware of\nConeys' presence; But one housekeeper quit because of \"ghost-like\"\n'poise's. \u25a0 -' , , -,. ' v\"'-.-;\n- In the spring of -1942, Mrs. Peters'\nsop persuaded hSr to move to Grand\nJunction, Colo., to live 'with him.\nThree months later a pair of detectives was assigned to maintain\nan around-the-clock watch: of the\nPeters'- home. Reports' of a haunted\nhouse, strange noises and flickering movements' at the windows be-\nnore. -,\nCATCH LIVING SKELETON\n. On a sizzling July afternoon, two\ndetectives crouched behind a nearby hedge peering. One of them saw\na curtain ipove. *T.\n..Both pulled their guns and started Searching file house. One looked\nin the closet just in tiifle to see a\nr a g g e d, skinny leg slithering\nthrough the celling hole into the\nattic, The officer grabbed, but the\nrotteh cloth ripped away.\nWith a Second grab the detective\ncaught a dirty, bare foot. The scarecrow of a; man gave up and five\nminutes later lay unconscious on\nthe bedroom floor.\nHe had fainted from the excitement. A police ambulance doctor\nput a stethoscope to the almost skeletal chest. \"This is the worst case\nof malnutrition I have ever seen,\nbut he'll-live,\" the dpctdr said.'\nConeys was found to weigh only\ny5:pbunds. j-    \u25a0\u2022-'.'.';\nHe said he'never once left the\nhouse. He scooped snow from the\nroof gutters in the winter for drinking water, and found enough food\n<Sn the premises to keep alive. After\n.Mrs. Peters left, to; jhe spring., of\n.1842; he lived mainly on home-canned jelly. '  i   '..-,\nPETROV says was\nCHARGED LEADER\nMBI__OU_ijE (Reiit^rsj -\u00bb Vladimir Petrov, fugitive Russian diplomat, said Monday he was accused\nin a telegram which reached, the\nlate Josef Stalin of being a supporter of Lavrenti Beria, former Soviet\nsecret police chief who was later\nexecuted for treason.\nPetrov told the fourth day's session of the royal commission on espionage here that the telegram, criticizing him as the alleged leader\nof a pro-Beria group, was sent to\nMoscow by Nikolas M. Llfanov, Soviet minister and ambassador to |\nAustralia from December, 1944, to\nJuly, 1953,'-.., -y y.\n(OaisjL dkv&lA.\nNelson\t\nTrail   ;\t\nRevelstoke\nCreston   .....\nMon.   1953 1948\n13.50   10.01 10.35\n38.37   30.13 32.29\nM.ii  21.25 20.79\n20.49      \u2014 14.94\nTHREE EXPELLED     .\nWASHINGTON :\u25a0'\u00bb. (AP) - The\nUnited States disclosed Monday it\nhas expelled three Russian officials for \"espionage and Improper\nactivities.\"-   .';\n. .XONDON(AP) .T^Brttiah foreign\npolicy still envisages -Communist\nChina's eventual admission to the\nUnited Nations. but:orily'oh certain\nconditions, a foreign'office spokesman said Monday,\nThe conditions Were thai the Pel-,\nping regime, must live up to the\nUN charter and must behave in\nsuch a way as to show it sincerely\nwants peace.     y'\/i ;.'\u25a0\u2022..-'\nSentiment among US, congressional leaders is that 'everything\nshould be done to keep\u25a0 Red China\nout of the UN.- However, while Republican senate leader William\nKnowland favors the U.S. pulling\nout in the event of China's admission, other senators oppose such action, or, at any; rate, tire against\nmaking: an advance .decision on\nwhat the US.wlUdo. , ....    .,,;''..\nPresident Eisenhower and Prime\nMinister Churchill failed in their\nWashington meetings last week to\nreach a common approach towards\nRed China, British ap4 Commonwealth informants say..:   ,\nChurchill, left Washington convinced .that .Brltajh eventually\nwould have to support the Pelplng\nregime's claim tp.UN representa-,\ntion.;,Eisenhower-pledged that tha\nUnited States would work to block .\nRed China's entry. y\nIn This Corner...\n,'\"\u25a0'' FROME, England (Reuters)\u2014At part of a olvll defence exercise\nhere, Elizabeth Shorland, 60, was supposed to have a compound frac-'\ntureof.t|ie 14ft leg.   -.;,. \u25a0:\u25a0 ... \u25a0\nA bone was salvaged from a butcher shop, stuck Into plastic and\nmoulded.onto her leg to look like a wound.-A mixture of syrup,and\nred paint was then sprinkled over It.\n.   She was .carried groaning from a movie theatre \u2014 supposedly hit\nby a.bomb \u2014 on a stretcher. She showed signs of shock \u2014 blue lips\nand fingernails and a grey face \u2014 the result of skilful make-up.    .\nAt a civil defence rest centre.a doptor ordered her removed to a\nhospital; En route, She copfetsed the hoax to attendants, but. they .\nthought She was dellrloiis and refused to listen. i   '\n. At the hospital, a call was put through for a dootor to come and\noperate ort herr v ,.\nBefore anyone Would believe she was just acting, the woman had\nto wag her \"compound fractured\" leg and piill off the lamb chop bone.\nLOS ANGELES (AP)\u2014Mike, a year-old part boxer, likes to lug\nhome bones and old shoes which he offers to his owners, Mr. and\nMrs. William-COlliok.. \u25a0,'.'..'- ;',';,\u2022     .        \"}'\u25a0\nRecently\/the dog carried home.in his mouth a tiny egg from 0>t\nnearby Echo Park lake, Mrs. Collick reported Suricjay.. '       \u25a0 '\n> She ptit the \"egg In a warm box over the water heater. Now the\nhousehold has another pet \u2014 a black and yellotir duckling, tentatively\nnamed either George or Georgette, that poppedout the next day.\n\u25a0 TORONTO (CP)\u2014Guy MaoLellan, 62, charged with having liquor\nIllegally, told magistrate's court Monday he was-Just left holding the\nbottle. Ho said,he was standing on hit front lawn when a passing\nstranger taw police approaching and shoved a'part bottle of wine\nInto his hand, MaoLelland was acquitted.': ' ,\n;COVINGTON, Ky. ,AP)1\u2014Stanley keller of Covtogton .was givta\nvisiting rights tp his fishing worms, nurtured in a pit at the back of\nhis home, whenhis wife, Bernadette, was granted a divorce Saturday.\nCircuit judge'Joseph P. Goodenough approved the worm clause in the\ndivorce'decree.;,.'.y.;.   .   \u25a0'.'\u2022,-   \u25a0\u25a0:'\u25a0>'-.:\u25a0   -M .'..-\u25a0.\u25a0'\u2022 ';.'\u25a0'':. -!'-!\n-'-.\u2022'buRHfl-^Ehg.;.^.';'. :\u25a0..'.-,-\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\". \u25a0:' -I Thomas J.\nAln8ley his second divorce from the ..me woman on grounds of desertion, but warned: , '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0.'      ')'\u25a0\n\"Don't come back a third time;.* wise man dost not get bitten\nthree times by the same serpent\" .?- .\n\"','\u25a0  V;'y'.-'' -y .   \" '''|!;R:v'yy\u00ab\/    ',a at,\nm^A\n'   '   :     -\u25a0:'-' \u2022\u25a0--\u2022'^\n \u2014~\nw\u00b0\ni*-NI_SON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954\nTONIGHT \u2014 WEDNESDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS 7.00 and 9.00\n__XTt|A SPECIAL ATWAOTION -     .Y -,   '..;\n\"The Marciano vs Charles Fight Pictures'\nSEE THIS AMAZING FIGHT\nrarnra\nSTARLIGHT Drive-ln\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nSHOWS* aiid riiM.\nA UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE '\n10 MTLES^Sf 0f NELSON \u25a0,;.';,. \"\u2022\nHolder of TICKET NO. 9574 phbne 471-R-2 after 7:30\nIf number Isn't presented by tonight, another draw\nwilt be made after, the show,\nTONIGHT WE WILL DRAW UNTIL WE HAVE A\nWINNER IN THE AUDIENCE.\nWAYNE\nKIMBERLEY\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"WOMAN THEY ALMOST\nLYNCHED\" (Adult)\nJ. Lund \u2022 Brian Donlevy\nShow Starts at Sundown\n9____\u2122\nIN\nTHE HEART OF CASTLEGAR\nCLOSED\nDue Te High Water\nWATCH POR\nRE-OPENING DATE\nThe true cranes found in Canada\nare distinguished by their\" nearly\nnaked heads.   ,    .\nLA8T TIME8 TONIOHT\n\"RIVER STREET'\n(ADULT)\nJohn Payne \u2022 Evelyn Keyes\nShow Starts at Sundown\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN\n. TRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIOHT\n\"MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER\"\nTyrone Power > Piper Laurie\nJulie, Adams\nShow Starts at 8:15 p.m.\n65 Rinks Now Entered for Spiel;\nChuck Rayner to Play for Leafs\nRiver Crosses\nRobson, Syringa\nCreek Road\nColumbia Rlvar reached Ita highest peak of tho year Monday and\nJumped over a Motion of rood between Robson and Syringa Creek\nThe river rose io 37.37 feet nt Trail,\nbut word from Revelstoke was that\ntha river climb had slowed there.\nAt Trail a large number of basements In the vicinity ot the river\nwere flooded. Some buildings on\nBay Avenue had pumps working ln\ntheir basements. '\nAt Castlegar, the Celgar sawmill,\nWaldie division, was closed because\nhigh water had reached machinery.\nHowever, tho water would have to\nrise mother four or five feet before\nlow-lying houses were endangered,\nit was explained. If it does rise\nmuch further, terry service may be\nhalted,\nRotarians Told\nOf Convention\nSixty Kelson Rotarians,heard\nthe account of Nelson delegates to\nthe' ROtary International Convention In Seattle; W. S. Ramsey and\nD. H. Mollison; at their luncheon In\nthe Hume Monday. ' .[ i    .   \u25a0\n\"It you have never been to a Rotary1 International Convention\u2014go,*'\nPresident p. H, Mollison said, \"You\nwill see whkt I mean when I say\nI believe Rotary International can\nhelp solve the. deadlock between\nth* tree world ind the enslaved\nworld.\"\nMr. 'Mollison ssld a highlight of\nthe convention -was an address by\nCanadian writer, Bruce Hutchison.\n\"When I heard him speak I felt\nvery proufl to be a Canadian,\" Mr.\nMollison stated,\nMr. Ramsay, told the Nelson Rotarians of the settip. and program\not the five-day convention. He gave\na detailed description of the meeting place tor the 8600 ln attendance,\ncoming' from 60 countries, ln the\nSeattle Civic Auditorium.\nThe. highlights of the program\nand enactments affecting the Nel-\n_on club were also explained by\nMr. Ramsay. Herb Taylor of Chi.\ncago was elected president of Rotary International.    ', ,\nMr.. Mollison thanked R. Blake\nAllan, C. B. Mutchler and.C. B.\nGarland, QC for forming a committee to study the enactments and\nexplain them to the delegates for\nguidance in the convention business\nsessions,       \u25a0'\u25a0':\"\n.. Mr. Mollison announced that the\nguest speaker at the installation of\nnfflcers July 12 will be Sidney Her\nmant, assistant to the president of\nthe Imperial Optical Company, of\n\u2666oronto.\nGuests at the luncheon- were R\nW- Alrd of Calgary, and Al Worthlngton of Vancouver. ..'-.\nThe Weather\nWith the Tenth Annual Mid-Summer Bonspiel less* than a week\naway, plans to moke It a bigger\nevent than ever are bolng finalised.\n- Fifty men's rinks are now entered for the ' classic which begins\nMonday morning and which will be\nofficially opened Monday night Entrants include two rinks from, the\nUnited Slates, a foursomo from St.\nPaul, Minnesota, and Jim Taylor.\nrink from PdMage Wisconsin.' Tills\nmarks the tenth time that the Taylor rink has taken part, in the spiel.\nTwo other rinks will also be coming tor the tenth time \u2014 Les Legg's\nrink trom Stottlcr, Alberta and Ivan\nStaples' foursome from Creston.\nSportecsster Bill Good will also ba\nback for his tenth bonspiel visit\nThe ladles' rinks are. tripled over\nlast, year with 15 now entered trom\npoints Including Edmonton and Regina. Draw will likely be made\nWednesday.\nOther\/ than curling events are\ncoming along as scheduled.     '\nThe hockey game on the last day\nof the spiel Saturday will sea\nCharles Rayner, former National\nHockey League Star, in the nets for\nthe Nelson Maple Leafs when they\nplay the Vernon Canadians, The\nbonspiel committee was negotiating\nwith- Detroit Tied: Wing star forward\nGordie Howe, but Howe has Informed them he is unable to come, The\nNelson goal should bo well guarded with Rayner, veteran of 11 years\nin pro .hockey, between the plpei\nRayner tor seven letfeons starred\nwith the NHL New -Yprkftan'gers\nand last year played with the Saskatoon Quakers \"of.-Ihe Western\nHockey -League. With the Rangers\nCHUCK RAYNER\ned yearly to the league's most valuable player. \u2022\u2022',    - ,  .' \u25a0 ' -Vf\nSeason ticket holders will-be given .first, priority tor seats for the\nmid-summer game.\nOpen to tho general public sire all\nactivities except the beach party\nand the Monday night mixer, Lack\nof accommodation makes. it impossible to make these open.\nThe bonsplol committee reports\nthat there la no shortage of accommodation for bonspiel week visitors\nat present.\nj Prior to tro bonspiel, on Saturday and Sunday, the Nelson Garden\nClub will put on a flower Show to\nadd to the festivity of the event. A\n.regatta to have bien held Sunday\nhas been cancelled.\nIt Is also reported that a film may\nFerry Balfour\nAINew Berth;\nTrials Continue\nDefinite word on. when 'this MV i\nBalfour' will commence service\nshould be forthcoming today, provincial department of public works\nofficials said Monday, ''\u2022\"'' '\u25a0'..\n. Tho new terry is now borlhcd at\nBalfour after a trip trom tho Net-\nson shipyards where, ih\u00bb -was\nlaunched a week ago. Tha captains\nwill .go aboard today'and after Initial \"breaking In\" tho ferry will\nlllcoly go into service. The terry has\npasted ail pre-servlce tests to date.\nA local public works official denied tho report that had reached\nthe Chamber of Commerce Information office Monday night that\nthe MV Balfour would not go\nthrough tho Procter narrows. The\nterry did havo \"a little difficulty\"\nhere, but this was due only to the\nstrong current now running on the\nlake.\ntfomM foUmgLL\nA provincial government architect will aurveytfl\nCourt House grounds for possible parking space around tl\nbuilding. Mayor Joseph Kafy told City Council Mondi\nnight he did not know what was planned,, but said it w\npossible a ramp would be built from Ward Street down in\nthe grounds. \u25a0'\u2022:' ,'y iy ,\nProvision for parking cars of government officii\npresiding magistrates and lawyers would relieve a Ion\ntime congestion around the Court House. Action was taki\nby Council following a letter from Mr. Justice C. V. Clyr\nWho Is presiding at the current Court ot Assize, saying 1\nWas unable to find parking space for his car.\nEvery effort will be made not to mar the grow,\nwhich provide an attractive setting for, the turreted, $\ncovered building.\nin the 18.9-80 season ho won the be taken ot the bonspiel tor usd on\nDr. Hart Memorial Trophy, a'ward-\ntelevision.\nFATHER OF TRAILITE\nBURIED AT KELOWNA\nFuneral services were held In'Kelowna for Frank Breckon Lucas,\nfather of William _. Lucas ot Trail-\nFrank Lucas died In Kelowna at the\nage of 78. '\u2022\ni Besides his son, he IS survived by\ntwo daughters, MrS. Dorothy McCann of Victoria, and Mrs. Hilda\nCatherall of Vancouver.\nPH6NE'\"l\u00ab\u00ab FOR CLA88IFISD\nBoy Soil Trade tho Classified Way\nJfily 10th to 24th\nInclusive\nDuring That Period Our Plant and Office\nWILL BE CLOSED\n1  In Order To Giv\u00bb Oiir Employees Their.\nAhnlial Vacation '      -.,.,'\u25a0,\nW.W. Powell Co. Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C\nMil-\nNelson   .\nSt John's  \t\nWinnipeg\nSwift Current \u2022\nMedicine Hat ...'\nLethbridge \t\nCalgary   \t\nEdmonton  _\nKimberley \u2014.\nKaslo  -\n  -83   88   \u2014\nGrand Forks   49   84\nPenticton      a  55   82\nVancouver     \u2014,  54-87\nVictoria ;        ..,_  81   84\nPrince Rupert \t\nWhitehorse   38\nSeattle   .-  60\nPortland       49\nLos Angeles   '1\nSpokano      ,- \u2014 60\nChicago        67\nrow York   62\n.06\n48  81    -\nKIDDIES'CUSSES\n$T*RTTODAT\nAT GYRO PARK\nA program ot play-classes starts\ntoday at-Gyro Park, conducted by\nthe City of Nelson. Children under\neight years can enjoy Instruction-In\nswimming, handicraft; painting, and\nenjoy story-telling sessions, with\nMiss Joyce McEwen in charge. Miss\nShawn Harold will assist on occasions. ' ' ,   .   .        . ;.\nChildren will be enrolled at the\npark this morning and classes start\nimmediately from 10 a.m. to 12 noon\ndally excejjt Friday, Saturday, and\niSu-day-ij, '\u2022*_.. ,;.-' *:\" -jj '.. \u00ab\u25a0\n'\"The fr$,M$lce if conrieKW with, s\nthe swimming classes at Lakeside\nPark. Classes there have 'already\nstarted, with classes to be held on\nthe shore until the lake warms up a\nlittle.\nINFANT PASSES\nFuneral services will take place\nln Vernon for Robert Mallory Call,\ninfant son ot Mr. and Mrs- Robert\nEi Call ot Castlegar, formerly of\nVernon. The infant died Friday in\nCastlegar.\nJ.A.Knauf,\nDistrict\nPioneer, Dies\nA resident of Kootenay district\nfor close to 80 years, Jacob Arthur\nKnauf died at Kootenay Lake General Hospital Sunday night at the\nage of 85 years.\nHe wu born ln Lachute, Quebec,\nand came West to Alberta as a\nyoung man. A atone mason by trade,\nhe came to TraU and Rossland ln\n1895, snd to Nelson at the turn ot\nthe century, marrying here In MA.\nHe later moved to. Lethbridge,\nwhere he lived until 1808, when he\nreturned to th* Kootenay, engaging\nin fruit farming at Harrop, -  ,\nHe retired In 1942 and moved to\nProcter in 1051, living there ever\nsince.,\nHe' was a member ot Nelson\nOrange Lodge and ot the Trail Old-\ntimers' Association.\nHe is survived by two ions, Ar:\nthur Roy of Brlttania Beach, B. C,\nand Harold Grant of Quesnel; tour\ndaughters, Mrs. Kathleen Levlck of\nFawn, B. C, Mrs. Marjorie Gamier\nOf Vancouver) Mrs; Vera Maida of\nHarrop and Mrs. Hazel Tateson of\nKamloops; 14 grandchildren, seven\ngreat-grandchildi'en and two sisters,\nMrs. A.. James ot Dorval, Quebec,\nand Mrs. A. Smith of New Glasgow,\nQuebeO..-'Y-;:.-r.-':-..--_'.-i>:-' \u2022'-.\nFuneral- servi.es v\/IU be;held tn\nNelson.'        \u25a0      -.,-.. >',- '\u2022\u00ab:-\n:ALM,(SHORTY)   CLARKE,\ncommander of .Nelson Power\nBoat Association who have announced cancellation of their annual regatta for, this year. Plans\nare te hold the regatta again In\n1988.\n$ Unearned\nucalion\nStolen Articles  .\nPartly Recovered\nMost of the articles taken from a\ntourist's oar parked-in the 200 block\non Baker- Street Sunday have been\nrecovered.\nCity Police found a vanity case\nand Its contents and a wallet con-,\ntabling some valuable personal\npapers at the rear of a warehouse\non the waterfront The $12 that the\nwallet contained when lt disappeared and a plastic purse were\nnot found.\nThe' car wu driven by D. Gray\nut Vancouver Island, who is travelling with his wife and family.       '\nPostage Revenue\nUp ot Nelson\nTotal transactions at Nelson Post\noffice for the month of June were\n$227,544.58.\nPostage sales were $10,219.83,\nhighest since December, 1958, Postage sales tor June of last year\nwere $7,981.80. Other revenue for\nthe month totalled $488.65, compared to $488.88 in May and $589.91 in\nJune, 1953. Money orders, issued\nwere -32D. snd 6607 were paid .\nThirty-two-year-old Hehry Arthur Carlson can't remember-the\naccident Nov. 5, 1952, ln which his\nwife died and for which he Is being sued, $749.93 special damages\nplus general damages. \u25a0.., >  i\nHe told Supreme court here on\nMonday the last recollection he\nhas nf the day ot the accident is\ncoming home in the afternoon anxious to tell his wife, Se had. seen\nDr. Stockton ln Trail, a doctor\nwho had raved his son's life and\nof whdm they both were fond.\n. From there his mind Is blank\nuntil his sister-in-law tn the hospital \"asked me If I knew my\nwife was dead.\" ',   ','\"\nHe was driver of a car that collided with a -vehicle driven by\nRolland Harry Palsson ot Kinnaird\nnear Blueberry, the evening of\nNov. 5, 1952. TJight were Injured\nln the crash and Mrs. Carlson,\nthrown through the windshield,\ndied,\nPlaint-* Mrs. Stella Fourt,-' t\npassenger In Palsson's car, told, the\ncourt she had suffered.severe.pain\nin her neck and back' since the accident and had been unableto re\nturn to work at a Troll laundry.\nMONEY  FOR  DAUGHTER\nMoney she had been making, she\nsaid,, was going to help put her\n21-year-old daughter through nur-\nsing school at Vancouver.\nShe planned to work for five or\nsix mofe years to help put her\n16-year-old son through college:\nMrs, Fourt, now 81, was sn apprentice presser at the.laundry\nand was expecting a raise to .95\ncent* an hour in the month following'the accident   .\nShe suffered facial . lacerations\nand-'Injuries to her.hip, back and\nlinger.  .\n,. Her doctor, Dr. John Stafanelll,\nsaid Mrs. Fourt wu discharged\ntwo montha after the accident'but\ncome back frequently suffering\nfrom persistent pain in her back\nand\" neck muscles. Muscles in her\nneck, were taut and cord-like; he\nsaid.\nSince May \"I have been' seeing\nher once a week to try and clear the\nache he said, \"but have been unsuccessful.\" The doctor could not\nsay If the condition would ever\nbe cleared up or if she'd ever be\nable to work again at the laundry.\nEarlier' in the assize defence evidence was. heard from Dr. R. B,\nBruinmitt and' Dr,, Henry Arthur\nAlvores, who said Mrs. Fourt's condition now was good arid felt she\ncould-'return to work,on a part-\ntime basis and that loss of memory\nwas consistent with the defendant's\ninjuries.\nFurther evidence for the plaintiff\nwss heard Monday from garageman\nEarl John Fink, who arrived shortly\nafter the accident with his wrecker.\nHe felt,\" from the position of the\ncars, the Carlson car was straddling\nthe white line at the time of tlie\naccident and the Palsson car'in\nwhich Mrs, Fourt rode, was well\non its own side.    -\nTwenty-one-year-old .Holland\nHarry Palsson, driver of the second\ncar, remembered a flash of headlights snd nothing else.\nOther witnesses heard were 3.\nR Kennedy, E. M. Pierpoinl, who\nwas one of the first on the accident\nscene, RCMP Constable R. A.Brett,\nwho took photographs of the scene,\nPublic Works Superintendent G. L.\nHarper, former Constable Kenneth\nJoseph Ritchie, Dr. Jack Beck, who\nfirst attended Mrs. Fourt after the\naccident, and passengers in the car,\nHarry Thomas Waters and Rijhard\nArthur Glranaso.\nOther passengers In the car were\nMrs. J. Palsson, Mrs. A. E. Steange\nand Arthur H. Walters.\n,  M. E. Moran Is solicitor for the\nThree trades licenses were granted. Duncan C, Wing applied for a\nroofing and general repair license\ntor Wing Ding Roofing Ltd. at 1424\nCedar Street. Company has a home\noffice in1 TraU. Men's wear and\nsporting goods licensee were granted F. A. Whltely for a shop at 614\nBaker Street, whUe O. F. Hartrldge\nwas given a license tor insurance\nadjusting   at   214   Medical   Arts\nBuilding.\ni   ___^__,.,\nA heavier coating of calcium\nchloride will be applied to the\n800 Block Vernon Street, In an\neffort to control the dust. If the\nealolum chloride doesn't do the\nJob, the unpaved street will be\n\u2022ml eeated. Publlo Works Department preferred hot to have to\nlay seal coating prior ta a paving\nJob, Works Superintendent Q. C.\nLake told Aid. T. H, Bourque. It\ngra-\n1000 AMERICANS\nCROSS BORDER\nIN 2-DAY PERIOD\nOver 1000 Americans In 224\nears passed through Nelway customs offices July 3 and 4 to celebrate the July 4th weekend In\nBritish' Columbia points this year.\nNelion motels and hotels felt \u25a0\n\"slight surge\" in tourist business,\nbut few reported being \"overly\nbusy.\"\nLast year 147 American ears\ncrossed Into Canada July 4.   ,\nA total of 167 Canadian oai.\ncarrylng 812 passengers crossed\ninto the States, Saturday and\n8undoy.\nSunday Regatta\nCancelled for\nLack of Support\nThe Nelson Regatta to have been\nstaged Sunday, the day before the\nbeginning ot the Tenth Annual\nMid-Summer Bonspiel, hu been\ncancelled.\n-' The principal reason for the cancellation was lack ot financial support, Nelson Power Boat Association commander Alan (Shorty)\nClarke stated. The Power Boat\nAssociation and'the Nelson Uons\nClub were to have sponsored the\nevent. The Association lost over 23\naccounts since last year, Mr. Clarke\n\u25a0aid..   \u25a0\n\"We are sorry we couldnt Stage\nIt,\" he stated, \"but felt a poo? show\nwould be worse than no. show.\" He\nexplained that if the regatta had\nbeen held It would have been on a\nlimited basis because of finances. lp|\nIn view of this the Association\ndecided they \"would let lt rldo for\none year ind double our efforts for\nnext year,\" Mr. Clarke pointed out.\nAnother reason tor the cancellation was that a; regatta is scheduled at Spokaol. the Mme day.\nThla however f4\u00ab not a major\nreason for colllnfoff of the event.\nwas batter to have the\nsurfaoe free of oils     '  v\nBreak tn the retaining wall\nGyro Park was a menace to peo]\nat the Park outlook, Aid. J.\nCoventry said in requesting reps\nto the break. At least two teet v. I\nit wu unlikely the split-\ncaused through wear, Aid. Coven\naaid. He could not Imagine how \u2022\nwall \u2014 which is better than a f\nthick - was broken.\nCity Clerk Reeve Harper'\nauthorized to purchase . ,a ;\ncheck writer for the City Ha:.\ncost of $108.\nFree lighting will be provii\nthe Hampton Gray, V.C., Sea Ca\ncorps for their training quartan\n378 Baker .Street. Lighting will\ntree to a maximum charge\nper year.\nA request from Stevens.\nMachine Shop tor parking space\nfront of their shop at 708 Vett\nStreet was.referred to the Puj\nWorks. Restricted parking fr\n8 a.m. to 12 p.m. was requested\nMRS. E. MeCUAIG\nIS LAID AT REST\nFuneral services were held Monday afternoon for Mrs. Elsie Luclna\nMcCuaig, who died at Nelson July\n1.- Very Rev. T. L. Leadbeater officiated. \u25a0 ,'.'.      \u2022\nHymns sung: were \"He Leadeth\nMe\" and \"Come To .The Saviour.\"\nOrganist was Mrs. W. A. Manson.\nPallbearers were Dewett McCuaig, John McCuaig, John F. Per-\nasso, Fred Perasso, Walter Poole\nand Richard Poole. Interment followed in Nelson Memorial Park.\nMine, Mill\nPresident in .Trail\nTRAIL \u2014 The President of the\nInternational Union of Mine, Mill\nand Smelter Workers, John Clark,\nof Denver, Colorado, pused through\nTrail Monday on a goodwill tour\nof West Kootenay Mine-Mill locals.\nHe is accompanied by Regional\nDirector Harvey Murphy of Vancouver.\nMr. Clark will be back In TraU\nTuesday and \/Will be present at the\nmembership meeting Tuesday et\nRossland.\nplaintiff and Leo S. Gansner tor\nthe' defendant. Mr. Justice 3. V.\nClyne Is presiding.\n, The hearing continues today.\nPHONE   144 POR CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nELECTROLUX\nSALES AND FACTORY SERVICE\nNELSON\nPHONE  '\n1108 or 553\nTRAIL\nPHONE\n1445\nNewStylinj\nNew Units\nNew Freedoi\nin Planning\ncounter surfaces eplenty.rigU\nwhore they save steps anil\ntime. See ail these neir Diana-\nstylo Youngs town Kitchen\nunits on display now .'... let\nus help you start your dream\nkitchen Nowl\ntoo Plannl^ij Strvltfc\nNtW Diane ensom.lt\n\u2022ink, designed to give yoiu\nkitchen the beauty of built-\nin kitchens in ell-steel dio-\nnude construction fo\ndurability. Doublc-t\u00abrr\u00bbci\nsanitary, bowl proven\n'splosh-over. Just one of'tl\nmany all-new Ciono-styli\nYoungitown Kitchens unit)\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd\nYOUR HOME PLANNING CENTRE\n532 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 1555\n\u2022;\n__________\n... \u25a0. \u25a0\u25a0.\n^^^^^^^^\n&u&*i^\n \" .'\u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0\nJOHN QAi\nNIAGARA Y^ f\nTalks about:\nLOWER\nRATES\nON\nNiagara loans\n1 You might think that rates on\nloans are exactly die siune\nfrom 'company to company.\nThis is an idea that could\n.' cost you money, fpr Niagara\nFinance fan a rate structure\n.'that is lower in many cases,\nand here's the reason why.\nIt's a matter of policy with\nNiagara to believe that it is\nno more trouble to make a\nI loan of say, $750 than: It ,1s\n$100.00 .. . and, if the rate\nof charge was exactly j the\nsame on both loans we'd\nobviously make more money\non \u00bb $750.00; loan. So \"we\nwork on the- Idea-that on\nloans for larger amounts, the\nrate should run \"downhill\",\nwhile st the same time rates\nVon smaller amounts are standard. Besides that, we think\nyou'll like our idea of having\nloans to $1500 life-Insured\nI at no extra cost to you. That's\nthe sort of protection that a\nfamily man can appreciate.\n: Come in and see us if you need\nI money; we'd like to meet you.\nI AGARA\nlUIIII \\*2j M__m_n tt Mn\n560 Baker Street\nPhbne 1638\n301 Witnesses\nMeet Here July If\nThe semiannual assembly ot Jehovah's witnesses has been ^arranged to convene in Nelson July\nIG to 18,\nThe three-day Bible conference\nwill draw some 300 delegates from\nEast and West Kootenay. Due to\nthe several attractions that, will be\nbringing visitors to Nelson during\nthat week the convention committee is reserving rooms in private\nhomes as well as. hotels and auto\ncamps. To facilitate the providing\nof meals for the delegates a cafe^\nterla is planned to operate at the\nEagle Lodge hall, Baker Street,\n.manned by a staff. of volunteers.\nThe public sessions are due to open\nJuly 16- at 7 p.m.\n:mf^\nHeads Hospital\nDistrict Trustees\nPass Cpurses in\nMunicipal\nAdministration\n: Three' district people were successful candidates in the examinations of the first year of the Municipal Administration course being\ngiven through the School of Commerce of the University of British\nColumbia on behalf of the Municipal Officers Association and the\nDepartment ot Municipal Affairs.\n'if. W. Evans, Village of War-\nfield; Miss G. A. Sims, Corporation\nof the pity of Kimberley and Donald Torgeson of Kimberley (city\nclerk), have passed the first year\ncourse in Municipal Administration.\nSOUTHSEA, 'England (CP>-\nFerry services from this Hampshire\nport to Ryde, Isle of Wight, were\nresumed after a. lapse of 13 years.\nThe pier was destroyed by German bombs during the Second\nWorld War.\n\"S^H, blended and S8cUled in Scotland\nTMt advertisement h not published by the liquor   -\u25a0\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n:: .-:\u25a0\"'\u25a0   :'i,\u25a0:\":'-\t\nJohns-Manville\nMil EOOKHT-For your copy write j\nCanadian Johns-Manville, Dept. N.413, I\n199 Bay St., Toronto, or see your nearest \\\nJ-M dealer .,     ,,, \\\n1.11\nY  __ yy;\u2014)-|_*52_&__!\nWEATHERPROOF   EX\"\nI0F   INTERIORS\nTRIORS \u2022 1001   OTHER   I\nssi  row*  mitm  j._  guiii\nm. DIXON\n701 FRONT STREET \u2022\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1704\nR. H. MACCO.\nNelson, B.C. 12A K.W.C. Block Phone 1366\nLazareff & Co. Ltd.\n.    * Rossland, B. C.\n\\' ::tt. A. GRIMES\n;:. . choice of, trustees of Kootenay Valley Hospital District as\ntheir chairman\/\nThe trustees Who held their first\nmeetings Saturday and Monday,\nelected C. P. Perry of Emerald- as\nsecretary. Others are C. M. McNown of Kokanee, M. C. Donaldson\nof Salmo, George Penniket of South\nSlocan, Wilbert Anderson of Granite. Road. and C. H. Bland of the\nindustrial sone,,       .* .    .,\nTrustees, were guests of the\nBoard of Directors of Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Society at a\nluncheon meeting following their\nfirst discussions Saturday. Monday\nthey began a survey of their legal\nresponsibilities as a taxation authority and to prepare tor discussions\nwith Nelson city council which will\nformalize the district-city partnership to carry through the project\nfor a new hospital.\u2014Vogue photo.\nMoose Chapter\nInstalls Officers\nKIMBERLEY -. Floral decorations In chapter colors formed e\nbeautiful background fdr the ceremonial Installation of officers for\nthe wopien of the Moose Chapter\nNo. 76*!   ....   .-\nInstalllhg officers were: chairman,\nMrs. Ivy Crossley; regent, Mrs. Mar-\nery Colledgc; chaplain, Mrs\/Harriet Campbell; guide, - Mrs.' Kay\nTherriauit. .\".';\u25a0\nOfficers for 1054-55 term are: junior graduate regent, Mrs, .' Ruby\nWolde, senior regent, Mrs. Joyce\nHolts; Junior, regent, Mrs; Kit Beng-\nston; chaploln, Mrs. Gwen Moan;\nrecorder, Mrs. Florence Montemur-\nrd; treasurer, Mrs. Jessie' White;\nguide, Mrs. Anne Freer; argus, Mrs.\nCarmen' Montemurro; sentinel, Mrs.\nInga Paulson; pianist, Mrs. Ena\nWatson.\nChairmen are Mrs. Irene Port,\nMrs. Margaret - Montemurro, Mrs.\nJune Frockledge, MrS. Olga Hryni-\nuka (proiem), and escorts are Mrs.\nMargaret Turner, Mra. Nellie Kirke\nREM IN, U.S. OUT\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Senator\nWilliam Knowland (Rep-Calif.)\nsaid Mpnday he has received strong\npublic suport for bis statement that\nthe United States should withdraw\nfrom the United Nations if Communist Chlno ia admitted.\n\u25a0 V>NDON(CP) - London Magistrate Basil Henrlques criticized\nsome youth clubs hqro as being\n\"only.patting saloons.\"\n(protein), Mrs. Joale Bova, Mrs.\nIrene Giles, Mrs. Mabel Humphreys, Mrs. Wlnnlfred Allen,-Mrs.\nKay Therriauit and Mrs, Lillian Erickson (proiem). \u201e'   ..   .\nPresentations, were made to the\nretiring officers, the installing officers, and the graduate and senior\nregents.!\nA social hour followed, highlighted by a fashion show and a\ncake-baking contest, A pot luck\nsupper was enjoyed.\nChapter No. 7B8 has received\nword that It l_ the fourth ranking\nhonor chapter in the. province. In\nrecognition of this, senior regent,\nMrs. Ruby Walde will take part ln\nritualistic work at the provincial\nconvention to be held at Powell\nRiver July IS, 16 and 17.\nSpiritual Basis of\nMan's I rdependence\nThe spiritual basis of man's true\nIndependence was' emphasized at\nChristian Science services lh the\nLesson-Sermon .entitled \"God\" on\nSunday..\nMan's God-given freedom was\nbrought out ln readings from \"Science ond Health With Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy,\nincluding the following passage:\n\"Discerning the rights of man, we\ncannot fall to.forjee the doom of\nall oppression. Slavery la not the\nlegitimate state of man .... Citizens\nof the world, accept the 'glorious\nliberty, of tile children of God;' and\nbe tree. This is your- divine right\"\nAmong the passages read from\nthe King James Version of the Bible\nwas the following (Isaiah 33: 22):\n\"For the Lord is our Judge, the Lord\nis our lawgiver, Ihe Lord is our\nkind; he will save us.\" >\u2022-:'\nBRIGHTON, Eng. (CP) - Members of the British Sub-Aqua Cluhj\nln this seaside resort' settled down\nto a game of whist under 10 feet\not water ln the public pool, using\na steel table and metal cards,'\nN-LS6N DAILY 1-.-WS, _ U-i^AY, JULY 6, 19J4 \u2014 A\nSTART CEASE FIRE TALKS\nHANOI, Indo-China1 (AP)-The\nFrench have finally begun ceasefire talks In Indo-China with the\nCommunist-led -Vietminh. But ihe\nFrench Union command made\nclear any final truce, decision lies\nwith  the  Geneva  c.nfe_-enoet. '\nCLASSIFIED AOB GET RESULT*\nC0A\nt\nf hone 889\nTOWLER\n0\nPuSI A Transfer\nNelson  B.O.\nFOR SALE\nFully Equipped\nSAWMILL\n12 MILES SOUTH OF REVELSTOKE\nTimber limit'with two miles of eompleted roord containing\n11-18 million feet of Pine, Fir, Hemlock and Spruce plus\n8000.12*00 Cedar poles. ..-..-.\nMill Is within 200' of good creek and has Planer, Blower TD14\nCat, two logging trucks and 160 H.P. Diesel ready to operate.\nFor Inspection Apply\nHUGH STORR, BOX 90, REVELSTOKE, B.C.\nKoolaree Cabin\n3 Wins Hunt\nRainy weather forced Koolaree\ncampers indoors on their third day\nat the camp and morning sports had\nto be called off.\nMorning devotions, led by Bob\nGray, had to be held in the dining\nhall rather than in the chapel and\nstudy groups were conducted ln the\ncabins, Bob Gray's rifle club' also\nwas forced indoors and time was.\ndevoted to gun care and cleaning\nas well as. a. session on safety in\nhandling guns. -,\nAil Indoors sports jamboree was,\nheld in the afternoon when the\nleadOrs conducted a program of\ngames of skill. .     . :   ',\n. In the pillow fight Derek Fraser\nwaa'the victim ot his younger\nbrother Alllster. Donald Gellatlcy\ndefeated his doubl? ln'size counterpart Hector Stewart.. \u25a0'.        '-:'-,\nIn the Indian leg wrestle McClelland and Hamson fought it but\nto a draw, while Garry Burch overcame numerous contestants.-\nDodge ball, knights and-rooster\nfight were among the mass-games'\nplayed. Larry Schrump was: the\nvictor over Grant John - in the\ncrocodile pull.\nThe rain lifted in the evening\nlong enough for the cabin four\nPolecats to defeat the cabin six\nBrutes by a 7-5 score. The winning\nruns were scored by Van, Fraser,\nStandldge, Burch, Berger, and\nMiller. FOr the losers it was Olmsted, Towson, More, Vaii and\nShellard.\nOne of the highlights < of ' the\ncampfire program was the Polecats\npresentation of a camp event of\nlast year.\nGrand. Opry again appeared on\nthe program as Norm McLuckie\npresented another of his masterpieces, \"The Desert Song.\"\nThe main .vent of the fourth day\nwas the annual treasure hunt,.led\nby Ken Stanley and Ken Rldenour.\nThe event was won by cabin\nthree, gaining five clues, for 13\npoints. Individual clue finders, were-\nCutler, Wilson, Daly, Hamson, Sadler, Draper, Atwell, Olmsted and\nStanley. \u25a0   .\nCabin three Cblnooks again beat\nthe cabin two Okefnagans in a close\ngame.\nIn the rifle club Don' Standldge\nscored a S3 and Joe German got\nInto the bronze class with an 81\nOther scores were: Robert McLean\n84, Lloyd Atwell 86, Barclay\nDraper 88.     '- -\u25a0:;\u25a0,\u25a0\nAlllster Fraser tilled in the\nlines in preparation for Norm Mc-\nLuckie's.version of The Ancient\nMariner, presented at the campfire\nBack to Nature\nLAPRAIRIE, Que. (CP) - Now\nthere are two bear cubs wandering\nloose oh the'south shore of the St.\nLawrence river near Montreal.\nTommy, the second of the 214-\nmonth-old bruins ', brought, from\nCochrane, Ont, to Maurice De-\nlisle's motel here, took a cue Saturday from his brother Teddy and\nbolted'when his owner opened the\ncage briefly to try io put a collar\nOn .htm.'.'',;:.. '. ';\nCash Instead of Trip\nTOKYO','i (APJ-t-Prlme Miniater\nShlgeru Yoshida1 may abandon his\nprojected world tour In favor of a\ntrip to the United States in tho fall\nlit quest of economic aid, Kyodo\nnews service said Monday.  -  \u25a0\u2022\u25a0'-.\nNEW LOW PRICES!\nLOW BUDGET TERMS\n\u25a0\u2022a\n*\n\u25a01\nI\nGleaming New 1954 Refrigerators!\nYet| New low prlcet on famous 1964 refrigerators with exolutlve\n\"Colorama\" styling. Vou save many dollars on these gleaming\nnew models. Use the Bay's convenient budget plan \u2014 pay aa low\n.  as 10 per cent down \u2014 you have up to 24 months te pay. the\n, balance,, The lowest carrying charge In Neltonl\n9 CUBIC FOOT MODEL\n[,   a,; .,. YyWas 369.95\n| Pull width .Super Freezer, full fridth- Hydrator, buttei\nand cheese keeper, -five ^^\u25a0''Mmm;:.'-mm^' g% m\nhandy door racks and con-   ^Twt \u25a0^^m\\ ^mh W5\n\u25a0\u25a0'.t-hieftt-''';'e'g|'''fi-pfenttr.- '\u25a0 f\u2122-    '\u25a0' '  v ~* '\u00b0\n\u25a0^Coloxa^MeiioT.^Npvv    *\n''\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 l ,Pay,is Low as $14 Monthly\n7.6 CUBIC FOOT MODEL\nT\\  Was 319,95\nFull width,freezer chest,.handy door shelves, vegetable\nhydrator, removable plated shelves. |       _I^Q QC\n. \"Colorama\" Interior. NOW    mmiy.Wj\nPay at Low at $12 Monthly\n\u00ab.l CUBIC FOOT MODEL\n''.-:*;' '^'V''''\u25a0'!\"' -*    Was 269.95     \"\" \u2022\n,. Freezer \"chest holds over 15 lbs. of frozen food. Four full\nwidth shelves, large hydrator.\n\"Colorama\" interior. NOW\t\nPay as Low at $10 Monthly\ni \" \u25a0!?\/\/\n249.95\nSPECIAL!\n86 cuft.\nRefrigerator\n\u2022 Family Slxe Refrigerator\n\u2022 Full Width Fseeier\n\u2022 Removable   Plated   Shelves\n\u2022 Handy .Door 8helvet\n\u2022 5 Year Guarantee\n\u2022 Large Hydrator\ns\n279\nPay at Low as $12 Monthly\nLew Carrying Charge\nFRIGIDAIRE\nPorcelain Pair\"  IH\n\"Live-Water\" washing action' that gets elothet really\nolean, FHtramatlo electric drying that drlct elothet eweet-\namelllng and fluffy toft \u2014 both automatically. No extra\nVents or plumbing required,\nWASHER\nDRYER\n4l9\u00bb9J       329.95\nPay at Low at\n$17 Monthly'\nPay at Lew at\n$14 Monthly\nTHRIFTY 30\"\nELECTRIC RANGE\n\"Good cooking\" convenience \u2014 and \"family\ncooking\" capacity at a\nlow, low price. Glint\nThrifty Oven that, for\nall Ita tlie, will bake\nfew potatoes\neconomically. Fjiur\nRadian-tube Surface\nitt, plut a full width\nItorage drawer.\n. - s\n'     1\nm\nI\nPAY AS LOW AS\n$12 MONTHLY\nLOWEST\nCARRYING CHARGES\nIN TOWN\n269\n95\ni>S*\n- - - -   -\n-__ '. !\t\n am\nrP\nJftlam. -Ba% JjfetUB   Random Gonter\nEstablished April 22. 1U02\nBttllehColumbia t    \u25a0\n\u00bb  Most \/nt*re\u00bbJing Newspaper \u2022\nPublished every mornlnR except Bu\/idey bi the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMKANY LlWrtD,\n260 Baker Street, Nelson. British Columbia.\n'.-.\u25a0)-.       Authorized as Second Class Mall.\nPost Office Departmeiit.. Ottawa ;:   .-.\nMEMBER Or I'HE CANAU.AN PRESS,AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTuesday,' ]uly.$19Sf\nW--T-\nPark Primeval\"'\":\"-.\n. Awaits Development\n.    InW. Kootenay\nS Parks providing, outdoor recreation\nand historic sited brought more tourists to Canada last season than any\nother -attraction. Sixteen national\nparks alone \u2014 without .considering the\nHost of provincial parks \u2014had 2,016,707\nvisitors.\n. It would. seenf to follow that an\narea in which a park is located stands\na good chance of attracting more than\nan average share of .the tourist trade,\nGreater interest in the development of\nKokanee Park in the West Kootenay\nby those interested In the visitor in-\ndjistr# would seem to be'warranted. .\n\u25a0 Kokanee Park is an oasis of wilderness that offers' all the attractions- of\nthe outdoors, from primitive appeal of\nrugged 'mountain ridges ranged row on\nrow lfkft wavel'.of .an angry sea to. the\nbeauty of flower-strewn meadows and -\nfishing lakes; -.lie glaciers are, of\ncourse* an attraction to- tnemselves\nand {heir peaks ah everlasting thai-\nlenge to the climber.\nKokanee-has been an established\nA-Class provincial park for,about 30\nyears. Relatively little in the last decade or more has-been done to improve\naccess to this natural recreation land.\nThe-road from No. 3 highway is-in\npoor condition, badly needing ditching\nand drainage particularly, some widening and,->minor bridge work. Main\nbridges -wererebuilt' three years ago,\nbut since IMe^else has been done.\n. Approach? fttm the Kaslo end .is, if\n.anything in worse condition. Trail up\nfrom the Kaslo Creek South Fork road\nis rock and.tree sfrewh.\n\u25a0 In the files of the Parks Division,\nB.C. Forest Service, is a complete re*\nport of the recreational potential of\nthe area and recommendations for\ndevelopment. It is time this survey\nreport i\u00bb?aii\"dusted off and put Into\npractical.u_e.\" -'\u25a0 ..'_.\n}Vi p.c. Challenge\n.There has been much talk in recent\nmonths about leveling business conditions, There has been much lamentation. Much less of the talk has been\nconcerned with what can be done to\nstart the economic curve rising again,\nthough this is the only constructive\napproach and only a slight boost would\nbe needed.\nIn a recent speech, says the Financial Post, W, E. Williams, president and\ngeneral manager of the Procter &\nGamble\" Co. of Canada, decried the\nhand-wringing attitude.\n. To offset the factors such as reductions in defence spending that have\nbrought on much of the wailing, Mr.\nWilliams said, requires only a \\Vi per\ncent increase in our selling jobs'.\nThis is constructive. It also brings\nthe matter into terms easily , understood. More than that, it shows how\nrelatively Insignificant are these factors in our national economy.\n\"There is so little selling in both\nthe U.S. and Canada, despite our\nBy QRBTCHEN GIB60N\nAs 1 read the headlines in tho Dally News,\n\"Tuesday Launching for Balfour Ferry,\" a\nnurnbe\u00bb:_\u00abf lhental pictures unrolled themselves before my mind's oye, liko movies In\nthe \"cinema of my brain, accompanied by\nappropriate background music of whirling\nWheels and banging implements (the percussion Snd wind instrument; of the orchestration belngruseti exclusively). '\n,x, My daughter's kitchen window overlooks\"\nthe shipyard. Beneath this window is the sink\nWhere our dishes are .washed. One morning\nSome weeks', ago, suddenly opt of tha blue,\nmen, automobiles, trucks, a very tall crane\nand a smaller red wrecker, rained down\nuponthe usually quiet and orderly shipyard.\nThere was shouting, and pounding and grind-\ning',, .Mid the ear-splitting clanking of larg*\nsheets of metal being removed from fjltcirs\non tho railway siding. In ho time at all many\nsorts of odd-shaped mttal forms were lying\n'\u2022retold the shipyard or zigzagging through\nthe air from the hooks of ths masterful crane\nand the smaller red wreck*?, \"Cling'.' went\na huge platform of metaf as the crine lowered\nits head, apd shortly after \"Wham-bMg\" went\nanother on top. of the first or beside it, Nov'or\nbefore had so much activity and sound sprung\nup So quickly In my .vicinity;\nFrom then on what a variety of sights\nand soiinds took place in the shipyard! And\nwhit a conglomeration of clamorous articles\ncccumul_ted therel Among which the workers\nseemed to move with expert precision. There\n, were few shouted directions. Every man\nseemed master of his own- field. Apparently\nthe only Idle moments were when the coffet\n' van arrived each morning at ten, and the men\nknocked off to groups, or pairs, or singly, to\npour their own coffee and have a brief chat.\nThey made a colorful and interesting sjght,\nthese men, in bright sweaters and T-shirts,\noveralls, coveralls, suits' and headgear of every\ndescription, ..-.,'\u25a0\n, Gradually a structure commenced to grow\nat -the water's edge, ,ond objects In the yard\nbegan tb disappear only to reappear again\non the ungainly lakeside framework, which\nto the tune of-the resounding sblpysrd symphony was assuming more definite form.\nDuring th* evenings weird scenes were\nenacted both ln the shipyard and on that.\ngrowing structure.' Blue, green end white\nlights- flickered ahd sparkled and hissed\nthrough ths sir. Meteors fhowered from the\ndark waterside hulk- snd across the shipyard.\n.The location was uncanny and eerie with\nfiaihes of ghostly lights unveiling the darkness\u2014now no clanging and banging, only in-\ntegmittent hissings as the sparks rose end fell.\nFrom the arrival on the first day of the\ngreat sheets of metal to the final presence of\nthe motor and propellors (and chrome furnl-\n,ture), there passed through the shipyard such\na variety of puzzling parts as to make tha\nuninitiated wonder how mere man could\npossess the super-Intelligence to fit'them together Into a symmetrical and useful whole'\n... but there a few days ago the achievement\n. loomed, not a collection of miscellaneous parts\nbut a well constructed ferry. Painting, began\nand presto \u2014 lt becamp.a .good-looking f?rry;\nfine black hull below, gleaming white above,\nThen black letters appeared, \"Balfour,\" and\nagain presto\u2014the ferry become an entity, a\npersonality,\nThe scene before the Balfour was sent\ndown the ways was marked by quietness snd\nIsck of outward drama, yet the spectators\nand there was quite a number of them, seemed absorbed ln the occasion. Those with\ncameras wandered about, the others merely\nstood or sat and watched. Even the small\nboys were quiet, The red wrecker was again\non the scene, putting Its high head over the\ndeck and picking up articles, sometimes two\nat a time, sawhorses, ladders, boards. These\nit dangled about in mid-air like a playful\ngiraffe,' before setting them on the ground.\nEventually the quiet workers quickened their\npace. Ladders were pulled away from the side,\nscaffolding removed. An air of expectancy\nprevailed. \"It won't be long now,\", I found\nmyself thinking.\nThe Moyie and Granthall stood by. the\noverwhelming reputation for being\nsalesmen, that it is a rather embarrassing thing.\n\"When yiju stop to think that\n\\Vi per cent increase in business\nwould offset the defence cuts in\nthe U.S. and Canada in 1954, who\nwould admit that he could not\nincrease his business this much if\nhe really went out and tried? Ac.\ntually the population growth alone\nwould give him double the increase required by such defence\ncuts. Any salesman confronted\nwith a#H_ per. cent challenge\nwould laugh at it.\"\n.Questions?\nANSWERS\n',;>, Open to any reader, Ngrnes ot persons\nliking-questions win hot be published.\n\u25a0'. TltlM: Is no choree for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT l| ANSWERED\nBV MAIL except whero there li obvious\n\" niMsslty for privacy; \u2022\nW. V\u201e Nelson\u2014Referring to question on\nchroming parts of cats get in touch with\nNelson Sales ond Service, 743 Baker Street,\nwho bsve 1 spray product for this kind\nof Job.\nInterested, Nelson\u2014A friend ln the Old Country mentions \"marigold- wine\" in a recent\nletter. Have you heard, of It? Could you-\nprint recipe? ,   '.,.    >\nMarigold wine: To each gallon water al-\n_ low two pounds white cane sugar,-one peck\nmarigold flowers, two lemons, ope pint. White\nwine, and a little yeast spread on toast. Boil\nsugar apd water together for one hour, then\npour liquid into crock or barrel apd when\nlukewarm add yeast on toast. Cover and leave\nfor, two days, and during this time.add the\nflowers, slightly crushed, fhen add the lemons\ncut hi thin slices and the white wine. Cover\nagain, end leave two days longer, then strain\ninto second barrel, and bung tightly when all\nfermentation, has completely ceased.\nInglged, Can Hegoi\u2014I understand there is a\ncorrespondence course called \"homemak-\ning\" given by ttib Department of Education, Victoria, what exactly does that\ncover? I have already taken home economics In Grades VII and VIII in Eastern\nCanada.\nThere ate fcta courses, starting with instruction on breakfast foods, sowing, cosmetics, etc, Tho next ono covers.laundry work,\nmore-advanced sewings care of persons! clothing. The third course gives lessons ln planning\nmeals,' how to manage a small Income, child\ncsre and development, canning'fruits, Christ-\nmis cookery, tnd so forth. The fourth- course\nteaches deep freezings making Jellies and\nJims, etc., tho family diet sheet, home nursing, marketing, and more advanced dress-\nmaking and home sewing. If you write to the\nHigh School Correspondence Division, Weller\nBuilding, Victoria, they will send you their\nbooklct.cn regulations and details of courses.\nNot All Suitable\n(Ottawa Journal)\nIf we are going to respect our Parliamentary institutions, going to Insist that Parliament must be supreme ln our government,\nthen we Just can't go on the assumption that\nalmost any man or woman is fit to be, a member of Parliament.\nThat sort of nonsense, born of a crazy\nnotion that all men are equal, is not only silly\nbut dangerous. More and more government\nbecomes complicated, demanding Imperatively\nIn our soil of world that the men we select lo\ngovern us-be not s6'..mu'ch^,t'commc_h'me_,''_s':\nuncommon\u2014men of the best brsln and heart\nand conscience that our country can afford.\nThe notion that any man can be taken off\na load Of hay, or from behind a ribbon counter,\nor out of any lawyer's or doctor's office, and\nmade a useful member of Parliament, is just a\nplain absurdity.\nYour Horoscope\nUnexpected gain may come tolyou In the\nyear.ahead, but tact .and restraint may be\nnecessary to avoid unpleasantness.' A brilliantly clever person is likely to develop as\ntoday's child Brows', and a fair measure of\nsuccess seems assured.\nEvery home where love abides and friendship Is a guest, is surely home, ahd home,\nsweet home;  for there the \u25a0 heart, can rest.\n\u2014Henry Van Dyke.\nlarger boat's deep breathing disturbing the\nquietness of the scene. A man in green sweater\na-.id blue pants hoisted the flag, making a\nstriking picture against the mountain. Jacks\nwere adjusted, a blast went up from the Moyie\nand two mighty whacks from a sledgehammer\nsent the young Balfour .gliding. slowly and\ngracefully Into the caressing waters of the\nlake, as men ran around md around her deck\nas though having suddenly entered a marathon '\n\"Gee, what do you know, she's floating!\"\nshouted a boy. And a man clapped his hands.\nI wondered why we all didn't cheer, but we\ndidn't, we only stared and admired.\nI wondered how the ferry felt, discovering herself to be an Identity and in her proper\nelement and I felt glad for having witnessed\nthe progress and successful completion of a\nwork that surely called for exceptional trustworthiness, industry ahd intelligence on the\npart of the men who created her.\nTW11 Do It Every Time       .\u00ab.    ' By Jimmy Hatlo I     \u2122?y?,B?bl? P?\"8!?1!\n1        -    ;]-, \u25a0t,\u201e     ..I      ,- 1   J, A J        .     .   I The Lord Is my shepherd, I shell\nThe Lord Is my shepherd,\nnot want.\u2014P\u00ab. 23i1.\nOur daily bread is not lacking,\nbut we have too little appetite for\nspiritual food.   -\u25a0\n(hwL tUsL\nI.d.n't know what hel) Is Uke,\nbut the worst torment I could\nImagine would be everWStlh' family\ntrouble.,-,       ''. .'.-'\nl\u00bbIR3T PO8TCARD8    .    \u2022   .  -\nThe  penny  postcard  mall  rate\nItarted in Canada in 1873.\n: TI12 Husband\n.\"   ByVVliXIAM<3. BOGART\n(Copyright,  1984, William 0.\nBogart, Illustrations copyright,  '\n1984. King Features Syndicate, '\nInc.  Distributed by King Features Syndicate.) -,'..:\nSTEVE MORGAN, privolo eye,\nhas. been asked by his ex-sweetheart, LOUELLA, to locate her\nhUsbarid, DAVE - TOWNLEV,\nmissing since \"the weekend before last\". He disappeared from a\nWisconsin lake resort. At an interview with \"LOU\"', STEVE\nlearned that.''DAVE\" wai Insured\nfor (100,000. He picked up\nVELMA DEERINO, 1 singer in\nThe Oiks resort, and drove her\nto it where they got a stormy reception irom her boss and boy\n(rind, TONY VALENTI, who,\nwith two goons, gave STEVE \"a\ngoing-over.\" He woks up in 1\njail cell, but wis released by\nPolice Chief \"BIU,\"BOT-S,\n,Later STEVE drove to the\nTownley cottage near which he\nmet ,\" SsnttDON PATTERSON,\nid e x te ut 1 v 1, ind his wife,\nELSIE, who invite him to\na party they ar<v throwing that\nnight. As STEVE Wives LOU-\nBLLA's, hi sees clarabelle,\nthe maid,' peeking through the\nkitchen ourtains,,...-'\n', '\/CHAPTER IV\nI was drifting along ths highway\n- Ohe' of the pleasures of travel,\nso they tell us, is the delight of discovering new dishes, or. savouring\nthe old, established national cookery of foreign \u25a0 countries; such\nthings as bouiltabaise in Marseilles,\nhaggis in Bonnie Scotland and\nwhelks in the Old Kent Road,\nThese are, no doubt, encltements to\ntravel' ln the aforementioned foreign lands, but what is there to encourage Canadians to travel in\ntheir own land? We have no national dish, if you except the\nFrench-Canadian pea soup and this,\ncharming as It may be, is-unknown\nhere in the West. \u00bb\nBut even ln the West we have\nour traditions. In the good old\ndays when cowboys sang, dolefully\n^\"Bury me not on-the lone prairie,\"\nland .'coyotes: hbwled a requiem, lt\nwas because tlie only implements\nof cookery at a man's disposal were\na coffee pot and a frying pan. In\nthose days, when men were men,\nanyone who could not wrangle a\nhorse was a cook. History does not\nrecord the number vof those who\ndied from acute indigestion, because- it was more fashionable in\nthose days to die from a bullet\nwound, but Indigestion they must\nhave had or why else are all cowboy songs ln a minor key But civilization has swept the . cowboy\naside and only left the frying pan.\nIn an altered form the tradition\npersists. The Chinaman docs the\ncooking. \u25a0,.   \u25a0\u2022\nIn France and other countries\nwhere good cooking is regarded as\nbeing next to godliness, a restaurant smells of wine, oil and spices,\nwhile here, in Western. Canada, It,\ntoo often, has the odor of a burnt\nsacrifice. Western Canada's most\nubiquitous dish is French fried\npotatoes. From morning -to night\nthe restaurants turn out-mountains\nof these alleged \"French\" friends;\nFrench potatoes with bacon and\neggs .for breakfast, FreAch fried\npotatoes for. lunch yv\/lth -'anything\nthat is fried and the' tame for dinner with chicken, fish, hamburger\nor hot dogs. ' .\nWith all this practice one would\nexpect even the most retarded pupil to eventually learn toeo'ok this\neverlasting dish to perfection.:But,\nalas, the number who succeed- is\ninfinitesimal. Our fried potatoes are\ncalculated to make any Frenchman\nweep, Far from being crisp and of\na golden brown, they are, far too\noften, as limp, soggy and appetizing\nas cold boiled macaroni. But let us\npass on. Long after they have gone\nthe smell remains. \" y\nThe English are a much more\ntactful people. They refrain from\ncalling friend potatoes 'French\",\nbut Instead call them \"thlfts\". Fish\nand chips is one of their favorite\nsupper dishes, ranking with bread\nand cheese and onions with bottled\nbeer. Lovers returning' from the\nvillage, stroll arm in arm down\nsweet-smelling country lanes nibbling chips; while in the town's the\neldest girl runs to the corner snd\nfcets the family supply, while\nmother gets a jug of stout from\nthe  off-licence.    '\u25a0'-'\u2022' \u25a0:.\nEven the simplest dishes seem not\nto be transplantable. Fish and chips\nIn our golden West is a parody, a\ncruel mockery bf all that is good\nand beautiful. Vancouver, With all\nits.studied sophistication and Its\nproximity to the great fishing port\nof' New Westminster, knows nothing of fish; To them there is only\none way to serve itr*iertd. Sp they\nfry it, a .couple of small, \"Soggy\ntasteless pieces encased in batter.\nWith the fish, the same sad, disconsolate French fries masquerading as chips,\nFor those of you who wish to enjoy fish and'chips In Vancouver.we\nsuggest a. can of-salmon and a bag\nof packaged potato chips.\nbock to town when I realized, after\na while, that 0 cor hid been follow-,\ning mi. It trolled mo into town.\nI drove to the hotel, parked,\nwent directly up stairs. But before\nI walked down the long bill to my\nroom I stopped to 1 wide, curtained\nwindow at the front, of the hill\nand peered put. The car that hid\nbeen following mc, 1 heavy dork\nsedan, wis parked almost across\nthe street close to \u2022 fire hydrant. I\ncpuldn t mako out who wis at the\nwheel.-1 went downstairs again and\nCrossed the street to ths parked car.\nIt wis the two lugs who worked\nfor Volenti. Tho ex-pug, Oeorge,\nWis it.tbi.tvhiel. The sindy-hilr-\n\u00abd ono with the blue-white eyes\nsat beside him. I put my. hands on\nthe Open widow and bent forward\nto look at them.\nGeorge said, \"Wejl, if it Isn't Mac,\nSmall world!\"\n\"I'm sorry to have to disappoint\nyou gentlemen,\" I said,\nGeorge's dull eyes looked puzzled. \"Come again, Mac?\"\n\"I haven't found him yet. I'll let\nyou know as soon as I do.\"\nN\u00ablther man spoke. Each gave me\nan unblinking store.\nI grinned and went back to, the\nhotel, When 1 got .upstairs' and\npeered out the window again, the\ncar was gone.\nIn the room I found a yellow tele-\nphdne slip, pushed beneath the\ndoor. The writing on the slip said:\n\"Please call Midland 817.\" The\ntime stamp on the message showed\nthat the call had been received only\nfive minutes ago.\nIt was a local exchange and I\ngave the switchboard glrr the\nnumber.\n'You called me,\" I said,\n'Stephen Morgan \"\n\"Right.\"\n\"This is Eljle Patterson.\"-\nI frowned Her voice didh't sound\nexactly as it had back there on\nthe dock.\n\"Yes?\" t ssld;\n\"I've only a moment Sheldon\nwill be right hack.\" Her words\nsounded crowded together like a\nphonograph record-that has been\nspeeded up. \"You knew Dave\nTownley, didn't you?\"\n\"Slightly,\" I:said.\n\"Then you can help me.\"\n\"I don't understand\u2014\"\nShe cut me off. \"You're a private\ndetective, aren't you?\"\n\"Yes?\"\n\"Well, then I've got to tell you.\nIt's terribly important. I'll see you\n,at the party tonight,\"\nI -said, \"Tell -me- -now and we'll\nboth spend a restful -afternoon.\"\n\"I can't. Sheldon's liable to\u2014\"\nThere was a sound as if she had\ncaught her breath, then her voice,\nvery low, finishing ln a rush, \"He's\ncoming-in now. Tonight, then!\"\nThe connection was broken,\nLouella wanted to know whether\nher husband was dead or alive.\nTony Valentl knew some of the\nanswers' and was standing off,\nawaiting developments. And now\nElsie Patterson, ambitious socialite, was Intensely Interested In\nTownley's whereabouts.\nI got on the telephone again and\nmade some calls to Chicago. The\noffice ot Internal revenue was closed for the halt holiday, but I finally located Bill Hendricks at his\nhome in Oak Park. Bill was an\nold friend. He had several brothers, all of them working in various\ncity jobs. One was-connected with\nChief Storm's office, at headquarters.\nI told Bill what I wanted. \"If\nthere's any way possible, I'd like\nto hear before tonight,\" I said, \"I\nknow that's asking a lot, kid.\"\n\"Maybe I can do lt by phone,\"\nhe said., \"I'll try.\"\nI gave him my room number and\nthe hotel name. There Was little to\ndo now but wait. I had a sandwich\nand .beer seht up to the room, ordered some newspapers,' sept the linen suit down to the yalet shop for\na press, then stretched out on the\nbed with the papers. At six that\nHay End Poser\nBy GRAHAM BERRY\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Hen, to\nparaphrase the old saying, everybody talks about tho traffic but nobody doei anything about It. Successfully, It least.\nThis is 1 city with no subways,\nno elevated, Commuter lines largely havo been abandoned. In favor\nof buses, which compete on crowded streets With lutos and trolleys\u2014\nfor spice thit isn't there. New freeways seem only to invite more people, to use tho family car.  '\nBut within five years, Los Angeles may have the first rapid transit\nmonorail < system in the United\nStates! The Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority, j established\nby the 1951 legislature, has the\npowerHo build and operate the line.\nPlans have been drifted.\nMonorail is the most recent of\nmany proposed solutions . to the\ncity's problenis\u2014problems which\n\u25a0rose because Los Angeles grew out\ninstead of up,1 In 25 years, 43 surveys were made to find the answer,\nall because more thin 4,000,000 residents of the metropolitan area prefer yards snd patios to apartments.\nThe city has spread so far that many\nworkers live 20 miles from their\njobs\u2014and drive in preference to using what public transportation there\nis.\nDEATHS\n, By The Canadian Press\nEdmonton\u2014Brig. David Rea, 60,\nof the Salvation Army, superintendent of the Calgary social service centre.\nBoston\u2014E. D. J. Bartholomew,\n60, of Montreal,\/president of the\nWest Indian Cricket Club.\nBonn, Germany \u2014 Dr. Siegfried\nHandloser, former physician of the\nNazi wehrmacht who was convicted of war crimes.\nNew York \u2014 Barbara , Weeks\nFrank, 4?, who for 10 years before\n1952 was' 'Anne Malone\" in the\ndaytime radio serial \"Young Doctor\nMalone.\"\n. Vancouver \u2014 George Irvine, 62,\ncity businessman and sportsman.\nHeat for Prairie\nEDMONTON (CP) - The first\nheat wave of an otherwise cool,\nwet season arrived on the Prairies\nMonday but was confined to Southern Alberta and Saskatchewan.\nThe weather office .,said Swift\nCurrent, in southwest - Saskatchewan, had a good chance of hitting\nthe 100-degree mark while Regina,\nLethbridge and Medicine. Hat..were\nto be in the 90 to 95-degree range.\nTHEODORE HOTEL BURNS\n. THEODORE, Sask. (CP) \u2014' An\neight-room hotel was destroyed by.\nfire here Saturday. The \/hotel, a\nformer public school, building built\nabout 1916, had '-been closed a\nmonth for remodelling. Loss was-\nnot estimated. Theodore is 20\nmiles northwest ofnYorkton.\nin-\nevening .the urgejfl^lnglng of the\ntelephone woke me.up.\nIt was Hendricks \"Calling from\nChicago. \"I got what I could,\" he\nsaid.\n\"I'm not fussy,\" I told him. \"I\ndon't know what's been going on.\nAre you talking about Dave Town-\nley?\"\n\"Yeah ... I reached the right\npeople and I think I've got it\nstraight. The guy's broke, Steve.\nMost of it went down the drain in\nwildcat stocks, He's been putUng\nup a swell front, however.\"\n\"Anyone know where he is?\"\n\"No. But I'll keep working on it\nfor you Steve. Can, I reach .you\nthere over the weekend?\"\n\"Probably. If I'm out, leave word\nand I'll call back. Thanks a lot.\"\nLou and I started for the Patterson place about 9:30 that night.\nI hadn't told her what I'd heard\nfrom Chicago. By the time we\nclimbed into the car she glowed\nlike a beacon. But I needn't have\nworried. They were all whooping\nit up by the time we arrived.\n(To be continued)\n65-MILE-LONG JAA\/\nTORONTO (CP)-A minor a\neldent Sunday on Highway 40\nOntario'! most modern hlahwa\ncaused a lineup of ears U mil\nlong, uld to be the worst tralf\nJam In the province's hlstor\nProvincial police aaid tt took t\nhour and 1 half to get traff\nmoving again. The tie-up ocou\nred when \u00bb car driven by Davi\nZimmerman of Toronto was h\nfrom behind by a car driven \u2022 I\nLillian Poullot of Welland, Ont\nPrices Rocket\nIn Meal Bopni\nLONDON (Reuters). \u2014 Rocketlii\nprices failed to deter British hous\nwives from buying their first ui\nrationed meat in 14 years Monda\nAlthough choice cuts doubled,-?\ntrebled-in Price since rationing em\ned Saturday midnight, butch\nshops throughout the country did\nbooming business, - Some Londi\nstores, which used to close at nbi\non Mondays because of slack trad\nstayed open all day.\nAn official ot a chain of butch\nshops summed up tho first day\n\"free\" meat sales in this way;.'\u2022;\u2022\n. \"Rump steak prices have jumpi\nfrom two shillings and eight pen\n(35 cents) a pound to onywhe\nfrom four shillings (54 cents)?!\npound or even six Shillings';\ncents) a pound. Prices of oth\nmeat have also soared. '\n\"But the women are just accep\nin gthe high prices and buying ;\nmuch best meat as they can.\" V\n$7.5 Million\n,;\nTORONTO (CP)-Mining Cor\noration of Canada Ltd. said Mo\nday it,and two Other mining grou\nhave agreed to supply Geco Mih\nLtd. with just under $7,500,000-\nbring Geco's base metal properti\nin the Manltouwadgo area\nnorthern Ontario into products\nIn a letter to shareholders, Ml\ning Corporation said it and two su\nsidlaries will buy 347,496 shares,;\nGeco; Noranda Mines Ltd. and su\nSidlaries will buy about 350,0\nshares and a third unnamed mini\ncompany will buy another 50,0\nAll shares are to be bought\nMarch 31, 1957 at $10 each. .\nADDED FINANCING >.\n\"This will' leave 200,000 shai\nln the Geco treasury to be availat\nfor future financing,\" the list)\nsaid. \"If it becomes necessary\nborrow additional funds to brii\nthe property into production,: Mi\ning. Corporation has agreed to a\nvance such additional funds\nloans at prevailing interest rat\nto be repaid out of earnings.\n\"Mining Corporation will nai\nthree directors Ho the Geco boa\nand will have control of spend!\nthe money and of management\nthe company until the .property,\nbrought into production.\"     ;;\nGeco's copper-zinc deposits we\ndiscovered less than a year ago.\nNo official estimates of tonna\nhas ben made but unofficial es\nmate put reserves at almost 15,00\n000 tons.\nHIGHWAY TOLL FADES\nREGINA   (CP)-Highway -fata\nties in Saskatchewan dropped\nmost 80 per cent .in the first\nmonths of 1954 compared with t\nsame period of 1953.   .      \u25a0 - -A\n.Chairman J. A; Christie\nthere were -18 deaths reported;;\nthe end of June. There were 32.\nthe same period last year. Tol\nhighway fatalities last .year we\n124.\nBURNED BY BACKFLASH\nYORKTON, Sask. <eP)-W.St(\nozuk, watchman for the Canadi\nPacific Hallway, wis reported,\ngood condition in hospital Sund\nafter he was severely burned\/\nthe backflash from a diesel locori\nlive. Storozuk was .burned from, I\nwaist up as he prepared an engl\nat Sheho, 40 mileS northwest:\nYorkton. -\u25a0 y.\n^.._^s,_._^...^-\n:\u25a0:.\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0 : MMI&\ngraduate's and teabhera'pose duriiig'\ngraduation exercises at Nakusp. Shown in\nthe front row we June Gardner, Yvonne\nGregory, AifyMla Joy and i>. LeLievre.\nStanding in back are (1 to. r) Mr. Cruise,\nP. Underwood, Ken Stanleyj Doug Mole,\nArthur Johnson. Nelson Woldum and H.\n nifi\n| It Pays to Buy Quality\nLW&y&(i\nMoccasin Vamp\n(Inch welt, foam rubber crepe\nlis, for summer comfort, day\ntnlgh- .   , , ,'   ....\nalios ..tell \/'[\nmm\nlEADEHS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902      ,\nlorried in\njuiet Ceremony\nHBW DENVER \u2014' In a-quiet but\nisly.' ceremony, a^.the-'. home :-.of\nElizabeth Simmons in,Silver-\nJessie Elnora Simmons was unit in marriage to William James\nnson., The' young couple were\ninded by Miss Marie Johnson of\nson and Mr. Jack Simmons of\nrerton.   ' '\nhe young bride chose a travel-\nsuit of dove grey with, suitable\nissories and the bridesmaid was\nlomingly attired in a contrasting\nTfe.of light blue. .'..\nlovely luncheon'was served at\nclose of the ceremony. After a\nrt trip to Nelson and district, the\ning couple will make their home\nEtetallack, B. C. The service was,\nformed by Rev. D. A. Mackel-\nof: the Presbyterian Church in\nItada.; .     \u2022\u2022 \u25a0-\u25a0;.\nI  __. s\u2014_    i,    Y -     ., - '\nSlocan City\nteOCAN CITY - Mrs. S. Follis\npdmonton, Alta., is visiting at\nhome of her son-ln-taw and\nfetter, Mr. and Mrs. T. Wilkin-\nIrs. R. Webster and family left\nIMalakawa, B, C, to spend a\nnth'S vacation at the home of\nImottier, ilrs. M: Barnes,\nfc Lloyd Shervjpod is relieving\nneer for six weeks on the Nara-\na'at Kelowna, B.C.\nrs. J. Tokida and Mrs. A. Kami-\nil of Midway, B. C, and their\ndren are the guests of their par-\nMr. .and Mrs. S. Murikamt.\nr. and Mrs. D. McFarlane and\nlly have sold their house to Mr.\nHicks and have left to reside in\ncouver, B.  C, Mr. McFarlane\ncaptain on the SS. Rosebery fori\n(jmber of years.\nNewlyweds' R#$i(le in NeHlHV\nFollowing Banff Honeymoon\nBaskets of' white stalks, yellow,\nand mauve Iris, and deep pink carnations provided a' lovely setting\nfpr the wedding in St. Paul's United\nChurch, -when Isabel Patricia.\nyoungest daughter of Mrs. Rose Davison, 320 Fourth Street and the\nlate George Davison of Nakusp, became the bride of-Richard Anthony\nAnderson, only son of Mr. and Mrs.\n0 L. Anderson, .104 Union Street.\nRev. G. W. Payne officiated at the\ndouble rln_ ceremottyi.' ,,\n[\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Ttit -bridei given In marriage by\nher'. brother-in-law, Joseph R.\nMiller, chose a floor-length gown of\nChantllly lace- over nylon net and\nwhite satin. The dress featured a\nhigh neckline\/ Illy point Sleeves and\nfull-gathered skirt Tiny seed pearls\nand sequins adorned both neck and\nwaistline.;. !i|er, full length veil'\/of\nIllusion net; with four corner .floral\nmotif embroidery, was held in place\nby a coronet, also studded with seed\npearls.'\u2022\u25a0 Her bouquet was a -cascade\nof red roses, ijlth small- red buds\nuppn white satin streamers.\nAttending the brlde'Were Mrs.\nLouis Boudreau, matron of honor;\nMiss Gay Bailey of Nakusp, cousin\nof the bride, as bridesmaid, and\nMisses Linda and Judy Miller,\nnieces of the bride, as flower girls.\nMrs. Boudreau was gowned in\nmauve taffeta interlaced with gold.\nMiSa Gay Bailey wore a gown of\nyellow nylon net over taffeta! Both\ndresses Were ballerina length. Their\nmauve and yellow hfeaddresses\nwere of ruffled net trimmed with\nsmall flowers. They wore fingerless\ngloves of matching net and carried\nbouquets ofyello wand mauve carnations to. harmonize with their\ngowns.   \u2022\nMisses Linda and. Judy Miller\nwere tracked alike in apple green\nfloor-length dresses of basket\nweave everglaze. '.Tie gowns were\nfashioned with puff sleeves, full-\ntiered skirts, and peter-pan collars.\nThey wore matching net and flower\nheaddresses  and  carried  colonial\nnosegays of sweetpeas and 'carnations,\n; Attending the groom was Martin\nGelzinls; Harold Casempre and\nGrahath Walls acted. h| ushers.',':\nDuring; the signing of, the register, Misses \/q.Ann and Sbelagh\nHopwood, accompanied by Mrs; T.\nJ. S. Ferguson, sang \"0 Perfect\n.Love,\"',      '\/''\"'\u25a0\u25a0'.-      .'  '''.'\u25a0\"'\nAbout 100 relatives \\and friends\nattended the reception in.the flower\ndecorated Legion Hall>      y'j\nThe bride's table, covered with a\nhatld crocheted lace cloth and heavy\ndSmask linen, was centred with a\nthree-tier wedding cake, embedded\nin pink .tulle and pansies, and\nflanked by four white lighted tapers In crystal sconces, Bowls, of\npink and yellow, roses also adorned\ntbe.table. :.-.-.. \u25a0;,\"\u25a0.;\u25a0\"''.\u25a0'-'.','.\".','y,\"\n.,Mra. C, E. Clark slid. Mrsyp.\nMeakips poured. Hev.ypsyhe prp?\nppsed the, (oast to the. bride to\n, which the 'groom responded. Telegrams, from Vancouver were read\nby thei-besttaan. ''\u25a0'-,-''\ni.The bride's mother wore a pbwr\ndor blue sheer dress with ,navy\nblue accessories. Her corsage was\nof deep pink.j'oses.        .,''\"..    '..\nMother of the. groom chose a wine\ncrepe dress with grey and White\naccessories, and a white carnation\ncorsage, >   '\nFor their honeymoon to Banff\nand Calgary the bride chose a light\nblue'suit with pink and white accessories and a pink carnation corsage. The couple are residing at\n921, Davies Street,.NislSoh. *\u2022\u2022',''\u25a0; .-\u25a0\n>Out-of-t6wri' quests' present 'for\nthe wedding were Mrs, J. W. Bailey\nof Nakusp, aunt of the bride; Mrs,\nG. Groenhuysen of Silverton, cousin bf the bride; Mrs.' O. Brandvoll\nand daughter, Merleen of Vancouver, aunt and niece of the groom;\nMiss Eleanor Anderson of Vancouver, cousin of the groom;.and.Mr.\nand Mrs. Ray Clarke and son Greg\nof Vancouver, brother-in-law, sister\nand nephew of the bride.-\nMother's Pearls \"Somelhing Old,\nrr\nR(3SSLAND\u2014A lovely afternoon\nwedding was solemnized at St. Andrew's United Church in Rossland\nwhen Constance Anne, only daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Chamberlain, and Sidney James Parsons,\nSame Price ai \/n U.S.\/\nONLY'100 BUYS THE SMALLEST,\n;     LIGHTEST HEARING AID\nIN ZENITH'S HISTORY!\n- .-   .'-,-\u25a0 \u25a0-\u2022       \u2022         .-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-,\nTubolosi,3-li_nsis\u00bborZenlthi\"Royal-M\"\nis-ai powerful as some hearing aids\naf loast t*ieo lis slio...smalior than\nmany selling at twice lit prl$l\nOperateB for only 1W a week on-one tiny battery! No \"B\"\nbattery I No tubea! Remarkable clarity, comfort, convenience.\n(Bone conduction acceaaory available at moderate^extra cost.)\nEASY TIME PAYMENTS \u2022 10-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE\nSee your nearby Zenith Hearing\nAid Sealer or write for free\n. literature and local dealer list.\nHEARING AIDS\nZENITH  RADIO CORPORATION\nof-Canada, ltd., 1165 Tocumi.h\nRoad, Eail, Wlndior, Onlaiio    \u25a0'\n ,-\u25a0-..   ;ff\u00ab       ~\n|0S HENDRYX ST.\nNELSON\nDirtSoDnbCirtti\u00abCo\u00abBK4toLife!\nDont gamWe vith yoat deSwrte _______ ; i:\n.   tenet them to us! Oar new secret method mtket   \u25a0\n: <^liiiofcii^is_l.':\u00bbww:--^llto-n\u00abwif|ji-s'- -\u25a0\n',\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   Sec far yoacseK CaS todey.\nKOOT _NAY LAUNDRY*\nand CLEANERS\n|82 BAKER STREET PHONE 1175\nonly son of Mrs. W. Parsons of Williams Lake and the late Mr. Parsons, were united in marriage by\nEev. A. J. Lawton. The ohiirch was\ndecorated with baskets of pink'peo-\nnies and honeksuckle for the occasion. Mrs. A. R. Dahlstrom was organist for the occasion, while Mrs.\nW. S. Potter sang \"Love's Coronation.\"       __   . S :.,    ,\/.,',;   f<1]\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher father, chose for her wedding\na regal gown of starched net over\ntaffeta. The fitted bodice had Illy\npoint sleeves and a portrait neckline, accented at the shoulders with\na cluster of appli qued roses, which\nwere also in the narrow peplum below the waistline.-The full double\nskirt was ot ice-white pet over taffeta. A beaded coronet secured her\nscalloped finger-tip. length, veil of\nillusion net The bride wore her\nmother's pearls as \"something old\nand something borrowed,\" and she\ncarried a bouquet of pink roses and\nstephanotis, with cascading streamers tied in lovers' knots.\nMiSS Fatty Telfer, as maid ef\nhonor, with Miss Laila Kalhovd and\nMiss Gunhild Rosland as bridesmaids wore identical frocks of\nnylon embossed organza, with Miss\nTelfer wearing primrose yellow,\nand the bridesmaids,- pale blue.\nThese were fashioned with sweetheart necklines, short sleeves and\nbouffant skirts ovef- crinoline, with J\nthe maid-of-honor's frock featuring\na scooped neckline and cap sleeves.\nA bandeau of white daisies, formed\ntheir headdress and they carried\ncascading bouquets of Ester Reed\ndaisies.\nPat Krebs of Vancouver was best\nman, with Bob and Donald Chamberlain, brothers of the bride, as\nushers. ,    '\"\u2022\nA reception was held at the Rossland-Trall Country Club where the\nyoung couple were assisted by their\nmothers in receiving the guests.\nMrs. Chamberlain was attired in\na smoky blue dressmaker suit -of\nsilk crepe, with navy hat and accessories, and a corsage of pink\nroses. Mrs- Parsons chose a blue\nsuit, with a blue hat and accessories en tone, with a corsage-of\npink roses, .'..'\u25a0.\nThe tea-table was covered with\nan ecru lace cloth, centred with a\ncrystal bowl of peach geraniums,\nflanked by Ivory tapers in crystal\nsconces. , ,-' '\nThe three-tiered wedding cake\non an individual table, was topped\nwith a miniature white swan and\ntiny forget-me-nots. Mrs. L. E. Gilmour and Mrs. E. E. Morrison pro-\nsided at the silver services\/Arthur\nTurner proposed the toast to the\nbride. '''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_,,.\nMr. and Mrs. Parsons left, on a\nhoneymoon trip to Victoria,; where\nthey will later attend .summer\nSchool sessions. For going awayi\nthe bride changed into a navy linen\ndressmaker suit accented with.\nWhite piping on they, collar and\ncuffs, white hat and accessories and\na corsage of pink rosesi He newly-\nweds will make their home'in\nPrince George, where they Ire both\nmembers of the teaching staff..\nOut-of-town- guests at the wed-\nwedding were Mrs, W. Parsons of\nWilliams Lake; the bride's aunt,\nMrs. _. R. Chamberlain of North\n\u25a0'\u2022'\" ^'\u25a0'.i1<^^3,:\u2022'F(>r_B\u25a0\u25a0;'';\u25a0Biia_ato,';\u25a0^aridi\n.ffesSion'a.-^\ntipnal;''pt^siderit, Mi;s; Margaret Campbell .at a party., Shown inyfront row are\n:v(l to. f)vJfiss:,Grace {D'Aojigtj South ;OJ__aio>-\nagan Regional Representative; Mrs.\nGfjadjis- Puddyj president of;, PeittMon\nii::_Slfefe, ^cCleaye; pisi proving\n'; cj^|)j;es|clfetat; Mrs. Barbkra Whately, Tpast1.\npresident of Grand Styles Clvb; Mrs.\nCampbell; Mis. Sylvia.,Allan, president of\n, Qraiid fbir)\u00ae Club; Mrs \u2022 R.. W.-Haggen\naridiMrs. jBetty Vipbnd, president of .-tSier\n. Trail Club.\nOr^^ordon Double Ring\nCerdmmy % Can^kligftt\nROSSLAND \u2014 St; Andrew's tfni-\nted.;churijh, decorated with flbw-\ners and: white. satin, bows marking\nthei. pews,' was the setting of a\ncandlelight,' double.ring,.ceremony\nwhen Rev, A.'3. Lawton united In\nmarriage, Aliqe Mary., younger\ndaugh^r ..of' Mr. apd, Mrs.;. John ;E;\nGdrdon. andtpeter Willi-m, Son- of\n-fr..a>id;(!Mjfs: J.;Chliii'o-of Victoria.\nMrs.- A. \"R; Dahlstrom presided, at\nthe organ while Kirs,. S. Potter, sang\n\"6 :Pjomise 'Me\" durinjg the signing'\nol the'.register.   '.\nFor her wedding, the.bride chqse\na ballerina-length gown- of nylon\ntulle, with a circular lace peplum\ndipping to points,' set. between- the\ntwo skirts. Her brief bolero, of chan-\n,tilly-lace buttone'didowh Utelfrbht,.\nfeaturing ai.P?ter Fan collar and\nlily-point sleeves. Her chapel veil\nwas held <ln. place by a coronet at\nseed pearls, and;she carried a bouquet of. American beauty roses and\nwhite-ciirnatlons. y     . .'-'-.'\u25a0\u25a0 . i' . \u2022\nMiss Carol Martin, as maid ..of\nhonor, :Miss Lita Catnozzi' and- Miss\nMary Wrinch as bridesmaids, wore\nidentical costumes ir) pale blue, yellow and \"mauve, respectively. These\nviftafi. of^embroldered'o.gandyi;bal-\nlerina length;, fqllskirted over; crinoline, with brief sleeves and Peter\nPan collars. .For headdresses, they\nwoi-e-'-bandeaus trimmed with flowers, and they carried colonial'bouquets; of white carnations arid. pas-\ntel sweet peas. ' \u25a0,'\u2022'\u25a0\n\u25a0 MiSs^ilOlly-Apn'LePage, hiece of\nthe bride, frocked in pink embroidered. organdy, carried a basket of\nsweet peas, and margu6rites.     -\n'Terry.'d!Neil; brother-in-law of\n-the. groom,-acted as best man, while\nClyde Gordon and -^Arthur Chlkp,\nthe groom's brother, were ushers\nAt the reception In the IOD^.hall,\nthe young couple .were, assisted- id\nreceiving the 78. guestsJby;Oielr paf-\nents. For her daughter's wedding,\nMrs.. Gordon wore a gold lace afternoon dress .with black accessories\nand a corsage of.yellowroses.-.whlle\nMrs. Chiko was frocked In a grey\nfigured silk dress with white.accessories, and a corsage of red roses.\nThe,.three-tiered wedding, cake\nwas-'topped'.withya: pair of \\jihlt*\nwedding bells adorned with a pink\ntulle bow, arid was embedded In\nwhite tulle, on which nestled 'pink\nrosebuds. Mrs..J. Shearer and- Mrs.\nChess Edwards, presided at the tea\ntable, while Mrs, K 'Martin; cut\nthe cake. Chess. Edwards' proposed\nthe; toast to the bride. During the\nj-eception BertJamOs. bf.'Yaniouv'er\nrendered several-vocal solos.\n\u00ab Mr. and Mrs.- Chiko left-on a\ntwo-week honeymoon and willthen\ntravel through -0. S.'points to Port\nAlberni, where : they will . make\ntheir home.\nFor travelling, -the, bride; changed\nto a fine wool suit bt dusty rose,\nwith, navy -blue accessories -and a\nbaby orchid corsage. '... .' '\n.Y'Ouf-df-town guests for the wedding were the grOom'S parents, Mr.\n-'and Mrs. J.- Chiko, Mr, and, Mrs. S.\n\u25a0\u00a5.! O'Neil .of Victoria,J,Mr, and Mrsl\nPert James, Miss Betty James, Larry .Walker, all \"of Vancouver, Miss\nRilth Strong and Miss Goldio Gudal\nof Chemainiis, Miss Shirley Leath-\nwood- of; Ladysmith and Mrs. B.\nCondy, of -Kinnaird.\n)epi* Pai?k Notesi\n-iss Ruth Williamson, who Ms\nbeen': attending Stanley Humphries\nHigh School,at Gaatlegarr-has returned to berh.mefOr the -summer\nvacation. She waa accompanied by\nher sister Joyce and Odd Aaslarid\nof Castlegar.        . -\nMr.- and-Mrs. CM. Kirkendall\nand j sons :'-have.'.returned to' thlar\nhome'in ft-octer after spending the\npast week at the home of Mr. and\n'Mrs..'C. S.-.PhMp_s..-...\nMr. ahd Mrs. Wilson of Rossland\npurchased the Jacobson estate,\nwhOre'they will' spend the surpiner\nholidays..       .     ,.\non\nMrs. H.'E.-Ward, who has been a\nresident of Nelson for 43- years, cel-\nebrated her ninety-first birthday on\nJuly 4, at the home of her daughter,\nMrs.- S. P. Bostock, 715 .Latimer\nStreet. She had many relatives-and\nfriends'call; on her'during the afternoon and evening.\n.'Mrs,;.'Barbara, ^V\/liately,\nRN, who after, five, years\nas:matron*, of \u2022. Grand,-Forts\nCommunity Hospital, , has\nleft for Victoria.' She-com-.\nmences July\/lO in the Obstetrical Department of Royal\nJubilee Hospital.\nyA'\u25a0';.graduate .of .St. ilo-\nseph'isy in,.Victoriia, . Mrs;\nWhately was; in England\nfor; ten' years .\"previous 'to\ncbmirig to Grand Forks.\nVancouver, Mr. and Mrs. F. Hoff-\nmeister of Vancouver, Bob Chamberlain and Miss Ellen Mlcheluk\nof Calgary,   y\n'\u25a0\u25a0':'\u25a0 [\u25a0:\u25a0<#:'[''\u25a0'. h iy '..'. .  -..:y\nNAKJUSP -: A wedding of Interest to Nakusp, Trail and Fort Francis, Ontario, was solemnized in Robertson Memorial. CHiircb when ^Bernice Aivern, only daughter of .Mr,\nand, Mrs. E R. Donnelly was united\nin marriage to Lloyd Bert COoper\nof Fruitvale. Rev. D. Stone officiated and' Miss R. Hamer played\nthe wedding music.\nThe bride,, given, in marriage by\nbpr father, was lovely In, a ballerina\nhi}. &UlMLHtfh\u00a3AQjbfo\nMIXER COVER!\nPOP her on, top of your electric\nmixer\u2014her full skirt will iprctoot it\nfrom dust! So gay, she's _ conversation piece in your kitchen. A bazaar\nbest-seller!     .' ...\u201e ... f..,.,\nPattern 872: embroidery transfers,\npattern pieces for novelty-electric-\nmixer cover.- Use scraps!- '\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0''\"'\"\n\u25a0Send TW-NTy-FIVB dBNTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfOr this, patte^j to Nelson', Daily\nNews) Needlecraft. Debt;,. Nelson,\nB.: C Print .plainly-,-A-TEHN\nNUMBER,.your NAME, and' AD-\nDRE-S; .  .     ..;   -\nDon't miss our:. Laura ; Wheeler\n1054 Needlecraft Catalog! 79 embroidery, crochet, color-transfer Snd\nembroidery patterns to send fpr-\"'\ntlus 4 complete patterns: printed to'\nbook. Send 25 cents tor your copy j\ntoday! ideas for gifts, bazaar sellers,\nfashions.\n. m\t\nI*tOM VANG6UV_S   ...   Mr.\naiid'Mrs. A'.'- Worthlh-ton.of Vahr\n<*0UV\u00ab, are vlslUhg\/Sirs; --Worthing-\nton's parents, Mr and Mrs, E J\nL0yeiiW,.?()9 Victoria-Street Mrs.\nWorthington-is the former Marian\nLeveque.\nTO RESIDE-Hl-Rl! (.*. ,Mr; and\nMrs, Gordon Burgess have as their\nguests their son-iri _aw and daughter, Mr, and, Mrs. Grant and, children Patsy and David irom Houston,\nB C Mr. Gradt has been appointed to the senior high teaching stiff\nand will shortly take up residence\nat 707'Hoover Street;\n' - \u25a0        -'-,' ,:\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0 '-*' \u2022\n, .TO ;VicTOftiA \u2022 1}\u25a0. Mrs. H a* r y\nHouston-leaves today by plane for\nVictoria. ..-\u25a0,'.--.-\n,.,-,;\u25a0\u25a0   -,\u2022;, .'.'-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0;*.\u25a0\u00ab\"',,._'\u2022    ,'.,'.\n[.:PR01S! i'Kl-fNEWICK;' ,WASH,\ny;. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Gleason of\nKennewick, Washington, visited, at\nthe.h'ome of the latter'a'parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. E. Doelle, 507 Fourth\nStreet.\nv-BOM,RIONDEL ,. _ Mr.' aiid\nMrs. R. j'ardine have as; their guests\ntheir j son-ln Jaw, Richard Dirivllle,\nand his daughter, Joyce; from' Riondel, who will visit in Nelson -for\na>weelc.\n-,,.-    .-\u25a0' ;\u2022    \u25a0* -'.* - *\nAT;yiicfORIAi.'.'.-Mlss''Jan'le\nStevenson, drama teacher ot Nelson\nand. Trail,: has' jkff \u25a0forWictoria\nwhere .she will .spend, six, weeks\nteaching at the Department of Education Summer School...\n1 '\u25a0.\"'.*.'': *'*'.'\u2022    -\u25a0 : ;\n. FROJI <COAST ,-... Mr: and Mrs.\nP.. O., Bjrd, have as their guests their\nson-in-law and daiigh'ttr, Dr, and\nMrs. Don Kettyls and -wee'son of\nVhncouyer.,-.\n\u2022TO-,NA,It:AM''A;TA ..-..Miss\nShirley IJIae Smith, Cottonwood\nStreet, left' Friday for Narjmata\nwhere she will spend two weeks at J\nthe Ohrlstian Leadership Training\nSchool.\"\nBoswell jJ^otes\nBPSWEI^s. -r Dr. and Mrs.. M\nBach, .acooippanioi. .by \u25a0 J_-s. . W\nThompson have left to spend a holiday in Spokane and other V.'S.\n'Cities.- ,-'!- '.-\u2022';\n. - Mr. -!H. jWebb and daughter, Dl\nane,. with Mr. W. Thompson, are op\na fishing trip to La.deau' and other\npoints.' <V \u25a0- >,     ,\n'-.'ISr. and^MTs. W- Pococh of Vancouver are spending a holiday ln\nBoswell, guests of' Mrs. E.'- John\nstone.. ' ,..,.. ';'\nMr. and Mrs. Albert MSckie and\nfamily haye arrived 'from RedOnda\nBay, B. C, to spend their summer\nvacation with Mr. ahd Mrs. A: Mac-\n,kie.   :,\u25a0  ,   ,.    '     \u25a0     \u25a0      ..   .,.'-..\nlength- gown of white nylon sheer\nover taffeta with scallop trimmed\nhemline and-bodice with net yolk\nand a waist length veil. She wore\nelbow length white lace gloves and\ncarried a colonial bouquet of yellow tea roses centered with pink\nrose buds, fern and ribbon streamers. The groom's gift to the1 bride\nwas a silver locket.\nThe bride was attended by Miss\nEva Robson, who was gowned'in\nblue nylon sheer over taffeta with\nmatching net stole and blue ribbon\n-headdress. She carried a nosegay of\nyellow tea roses,; red; rose buds* and\nfern.\n. The groom was attended by Glen\nDonnelly, brother of the bride. Ushers were. Jimmy Donnelly and Garry Cooper, brothers of the bride\nand groom.\nFollowing the ceremony a buffet\nsupper was served for the. Immediate famlly.and relatives at the home\nof the-bfide'siparents. The table 'was\ncentered,.by -a beautiful three-tier\nwedding bake made by the bride's\ngrandmother,.. Mrs. J. Gawley. of\nTrail, and decorated' by Mrs. R. Eaton of Nakusp,\n\u2022 iThe^liride's mother wore', havy\nflowered crepe with a white picture\nhat'and accessories'. She, wore a corsage of,, blue, iris; and yellow lilies.\nThe groom's .mother, wore turquoise\nlace over crepe with matching accessories. Her corsage was also blue\niris, and yellow: lilies.\nA reception was jield in the evening when the happy couple.rocoived\nthe- best1- -wishes' of &elr many\nfriends. They will reside; jn_Nakusp.\nOut-of-town guests -Included- flie\nbride's graridparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Gowley, and aunt,- Mrs.. Herb\nGowleyi\"all \u2022 of Trail! ^the groom's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Cooper\naiad family, Ga'rry, Dan, Mavis and\n'Darlene, all\/^of. Frultvale;' Mr. and\nMrs. Allan Lins, Mr. and Mrs Robert Miller and daughter, Margaret,\nall^pf. Trait '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 6,1954 \u2014 S\nFive pieces, table ond four chain, available In\ncolors, similar to illustration.\nSoi^h Slocan\nSOUTH'SLpCAN\u2014Mr.andMri\n3. Nixon and family, Verle, Heather\nand . Tommy, residents of many\nyears, have moved to make their\nhom. at Osoyoos, B. C.\nMn and Mrs. W. W. Cohkln have\nmoved to the hou|e vacated by Mr.\nand Mrs. Nixon,\nMr. and' MrS. Jack Parker and\nsons have left to reside In Waneta\nwherecMr. Parjterls onthe StaH of\nthe\"'>West >Kootenay Power and\nLight'Co: j.    .\nJ. D. Yeatman, postmaster, left\nfor Vancouver to attend the postmasters' coiivention. I\nMr. and Mrs. A. Patterson of Naramata; havo; been the guests of their\nson-in-law and daughter Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Hawkins at South Slocan\nand have how left to reside at Crescent Valley.\nMr. arid Mrs. A. Sinclair and children-Helen and Roberta are visitors\nto the Okanagan to spend a few\ndays in Oliver and to visit Mr. Sin\nSQUARE DANCE,\nCAKKrAT        ' y-r\nBOSWELL HALL\n1 BOSWELL \u2014 Sojiiare-, .dancing\nhighlighted activities in the Boswell'\nMemorial Hall as a card evening,\nand dance was held.   '-.  -\u2022\u2022;,'.; ,d. i\nWinners at cards ,were Mrs. E.\nSaxbey-Hawklngs of Sanca arid\nNorman Bainbridge, with consolations going to Mrs. Paul L. O'Sulli-\nvan and Ken Wallasei       :     'v   ',\nSuppfer was served by the hall\ncommittee. Music for 'Square dancing was supplied by J. Webber, Vie,\nJohnson and H. BelL Charles-Koch,\ncslled the Squares' *ahd; G,. fty\\ia~-\nacted as master of ceremonies.\nClair's mother at Okanagan Falls.\nEdwin. Warner, who' has\/joined'\nthe navy, has left fto-Vahejiuver.:\nGeorge McDougall, sOp of lib. and.\nMrs. Harry McDougall, left for' the\nCoast where he is joining the navy.'\nThe Misses Yvoiine,. Cecllle and\nGloria Clairemonte have left,for a,\nvisit with Mrs. McCready.at Blay-\nlock In Kaslo. \u25a0 \u2022 y , .*   '   , >'  a\nStrawberries\nBeginning\nThii Week\nat\nIt's peak for canning, freezing or jam molting. Order\ntoday and avoid disappointment. All our fruits are guar-;\nanteed. Also available for shipping to Prairie.'\nPicked and rushed ta our\nstore daily\t\n|| Watermelons  lb. Ift^t\nWATERMELONS .. .Just unloaded another carload of these\n, . red; luscious Melons from Imperial Valley,,, Serve Ice cold.\n\u2022       Lm.Ia_.    B'C' Hothouse. -    i'.fi*'\nI PUlatOeS    Firm and tasty. Lb.\nAre tasfier.j\nJ New Potatoes '\\f&n^\nFull supply Freezer Container!, Jen, Lids, Rubber Rings\nand Certo.\nFROM NALLEY'S WE BRING YOU THE FINEST\nPRODUCTS FEATURED THIS WEEK AT LIBERTY\nTAWd:\nFor salads, cold meats. 18 oz.\nSweet Mixed Pickles:\nLarge 48 02. jar .. \t\n45*\n79*\n32 01.     *, + \u25a0\n _ 98*\nSweet Mixed Pickles: ACf 7Q*\n28}4 bz. jar .....:   .           \u00ab **   12 01.  \". fW# '\nSweet Cucumber Chips: 54.*\n'12 o^. ; -. mf*?\nCucumber Slices: 7Q*\nPickles by Nalley's. 12 02  m'W\nSweet Green Relish: ;3H,\nOr Hamburger Relish: For hamburgers, hotdogs. 12 62.   \u25a0*'\u25a0\"'\nGarlic Dill Pickles: 49*\n.^y.Nalley's. For picnics. 28 oz     \u25a0 r 'rt.\nSweet Mustord Pickles:\nBy Nalley's. It's delicious. 16 oz\t\n-   \u25a0 \u2022 - ; \u25a0        -'. .-,' \/\nMammoth Ripe Olives:\nU.oi.-tins- -\u2022\n39*\nSolo Margarine\n3 lbs. 95c\nGood Luck\n2 Ibs. 75c\nLUX SOAP\n3 Bath and 1 Reg A'^t\nfor Tdt  -\nBREEZE\nWith tea towel        Q|\u00ab\nGiant pkt. _..__.... Ol\nSURF\nNew Blue. giant: 'tJ'Jt\n.    pko.  _.__-____.-,\u25a0#;'.#\u25a0\nShop Liberty-Everyday low prices this wk.\n,.!.,, ::.       :\n Prices Effective JULY 6 to 12\nAirway COFFEE\n1 lb.\nbag .\nA Mild and Mellow Blend.\n3.29 Lib-_$3.83\nNob Hill COFFEE\nRleh Hearty Flavor\n1 lb.\nbag .\n_1.35   bag'-_ 2.68\nEdwards COFFEE\nAlways Fresh. Drip or Regular Grind\n16 oz. vacuum tin Xtmt^f\nSpecial Offer\nEDWARD'S\nSAVE 10c\noz. jar 67c\nKitchen Craft\nFLOUR\nGuaranteed to work wonders with eny recipe\nWjJ3 Zt.'3A5\nSunny Dev\nFancy.\n48 oz, tin .\nSnewflake.\n1)b.\npackage \t\nLuncheon-Meat St: 3 for 89c\n2 for 63c\n__ 24c\n2for49c\n2for45c\n$2.49\nLittle Dipper.\nAssorted.\n15 ei. pkg. \u2014...\nPURE LARD\nBurns'.\n16 oi.\npaokage\nNo. 1 Granulated,\nfor canning.\n26 lb. big _.\t\nPiCK-GS   Nalley's Dills,' 26\"V4 oz. jor\nSockeye Salmon \u00b0\nSalad Dressing\nJelly\nitation, fey. red. ^\nWa oz. tin <L\n__47<\nfor 69\nMiracle Whip.\n16. oz. jor \t\nEmpress. Assorted Flavors.\nChoice Peaches -\"_\"_\u25a0__.\nDog Food\nTops. 16 oz. tin\n 49*\n_6-49*\n_4-65*\n101095*\nNew 1954 Pack Strawberry.\nEmpress Pure.\n4 lb. tin\t\nPineapple\nLalanl Fancy\nHawaiian Chunks.\n20 oi. tin _,\t\n2\nfor\nSpaghetti\nLlbby'i.\n\u2022In Tomato Sauee.\nIS ei. tin t\t\nmt 35'\nSunrype Blue Label.\n48 oz. fin\t\n>ize 5's.\n15 oz. tin .\nTaste Tells.\n15 oz. tin _\nApple Juice\nSugar Belle Peas\nCream Style Corn\nDavid's Biscuits BMSt\nFrozen Pees >\"<\u00ab' p\u00b0\u00b0tw\u2014-\nIce Cream\n3-,95'\n4,.,59*\n3o,39*\n__35*\n2,-39*\nParty Pride. Assorted flavors. Quarts   *af\nPolly Ann\nBREAD\nGuaranteed fresh by 8afeway ...\nWhite or Brown. Siloed er Umlleed.\n16 oz. wrapped loaf Sm forma I\nBeverly\nPeanut BUTTER\nMade from freshly roaster* eeanuts.\n__49*\n24 oz. Mason jar.\nCALIFORNIA.\nVINE-RIPENED. Lb.\nJuicy Crisp.\nWhole or Piece\n2 lbs. lie\nTOMATOESS*0\"1'''\nCUCUMBERS LTbop.-0.'.th,Cr.op:..\nCABBAGE ^olid (rMn heads.\nGolden yellow.\nLb.\nPOTATOES fTeX\u2122-.\n33*  APPLES OKANAGAN $5KJ*5L 2** 37*\n 24*\n 23*\n 29*\n190  BANANAS \u00a3\n9*  LEMONS ft\u2122hMlthtoL     -\n43*  PEACHES \u25a0\u00a3\u2022* ^*\"*\nImported.\nFor Salads.\n14 oz. tube\nCORN ON COB\nCalifornia.\nSweet.,1''\"\nTender Ian\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\nSMOKED, TENDERIZED.\nWHOLE HALF OR PIECE. Lb. _v\nOr Roast Beef.\nAll Cuts.\nGrade Red \"A\"\nLb.\nVeal Shoulder Roast S'de out\nLoin Rib Chops E.01^\"1\nSide Bacon f$ \u2122 pictu\" p,ck'\nBlade Rib Roast ^out\n49* Smoked Shoulders .gT**^. ^\"^    , \u00a7.\n\u25a0 79* Pheasant Chicken \u00ab\u00a3****>\u25a0\u2122\u00bb>ta\u00ab?*|\n49* Chicken Loaf \u00ab*> *\u00bb \u00ab*h**-\n55* pb,k Liver Ebced'Serv,withoniOM'  .2'\nCROSS RIB ROAST\nBoe.f.\nAll Cuts.\nGrade \"A\" Red\n.5\n\\\\ 1 \/\/\nA\" FOWL\nAverage\n4 lbs. and up.\nHead and Feet Off\nJK\niMiiiii\n;\"' Y\n^ ' \u2022 ' \u25a0\u2022'  _ ' \u25a0\u25a0\u2022--^\n ^r\n\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I\n'fV\u00b0t i\nCVWUJttL   IaVUL IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIII\",\"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||':\nlllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|IIIIIIIIIHII..IHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIr\nBy LEI. WALKER\nWord out oi tho Okanagan seems\nto put squash to the rumor that Nelson Msple Leafs boy Willie Schmidt\nwas going to ele up with another\n[outfit next semester. Witness tbis\nnews dispatch:\nKELOWNA - Alex Shlblcky,\nformer coach of. New Westmlnsttr\nRoyals, has signed a three-year contract to coach Kelowna Packers ln\n'the Okanagan Senior Hockey League, Kelowna officials reported today. '\nThe ex big leaguer. Is expected to\nopen a business and make his home\n?here.\nA good thing never goes without\n-takers. Victoria, apparently not\nfinding its bluebirds enough to lure\nthe tourlsti that way, are planning\na grab at Summer Bonspiel thunder. Nelson', home of this noted *v-\n!ent, will just have to keep hopping\nto make Its own sunshine 'spiel the\nbestest snd the biggest\nThe new Midsummer Bonspiel\nAssociation should definitely see\nthat It Is. In the records with the\nDominion Curling Association that\n\u2022our own\" event has been going the\nJrpunds for a decade. Last year,, for\ninstance, we had Calgary claiming\nto be the first ever to stage a summer 'spiel.\nFOR PICNIC GROUNDS\nOutdoorsmen are   looking\nfor\nTOUR ENGINE MAY BE\nP MORE POWERFUL\nTHAN YOU THINK\nShell Premium Gasoline with TCP\ntets free captive power formerly\nlocked-in by lead deposits\n6000 guessers on the time It will\nUke a barrel to travel the West\nArm from Procter to Nelson.\n. Nelson Pish and Wildlife Pro*\ntectlve Association will etnjjo Its\nannual Barrel Derby on July 14\nthis year, turning the barrel loose\n11 miles uprlver at Procter.\nIt It sponsoring the Derby In\nan.effort to raise funds to develop\n\u25a0 family plonlo grounds at Cottonwood Lake. Three aorei of\nground, at tho North end of the\nlake, were donated by George\nMunori. \u2022 ..\nLast year the barrel made the\ntrip froni Five-Mile to the Tag-\nhum bridge In 10 hours, B1i_ minutes.\nCOCKELL TO MEET\nMATTHEWS, JULY\nSEATTLE (Ai>) \u2014 Arrangements\nhave been completed for a July, 30\nbout-hore between British Empire\nheavyweight champion Don Cock'\nell and Seattle's Harry'(Kld) Matthews, their third meeting ih less\nthan e year.\nIn their two previous bouts, ln\nSeattle, last August and in London June 1. Cockell outpointed\nMatthews each time.\nCockell is ranked No. 3, Matthews No. 9 among the contenders\nfor Rocky Marcisno's world championship crown.\n\u2022 I . .-': '.'     ,\\ _\u2022 ' A .'.<,--\u25a0!\n35 Hpniers \\^lloped ia^ 8\nBig teague DbiibleKeadeirs\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY,'JULY 6,19S4 \u2014 7\nBaseball Scores\nNo matter if your car is a current model driven only a few\nthousand miles or an \"old faithful,\" you can enjoy up to 15%\nmore power. This extra power ia\nIn your engine right now but it'a\ncaptive power, trapped by the\nsteady accumulation of lead deposits.\n* Deposits glow red hot\nIn the combustion chamber,\nthey glow red hot, igniting the\ngasoline mixture ahead of time.\"\n. Power works against you and not\nfor you. Thit condition la called,.\npre-ignition and ia responsible *'\nfor \"wild ping,\" a moat severe\nkind of knock. - ,\nWhen the deposit* build up on\nyour spark plugs, sometimes in aa\nlittle as 2,000 miles, they Cause\nthe plugs to short-circuit. This\nmakes your angina, mias at the\nvery time you don't want it to\nmiss\u2014such as when climbing a\nhill or passing another car.\nCaptive power eet free\nBut now there is a way to cancel out the trouble these deposits\ncause, a way that sets free- this ,\ncaptive power. Shell scientists\nt have discovered the unique fuel\ntj\u00ab_ditlve,TCP.\n1 Blended into Shell Premium\n\u25a0Gasoline, it does two things for\nJyou. First, it \"fire proofs\" the de-\n'posits in the combustion chambers so they can't cause pre-ignition. Power works for you and\nnot against you.\nSecond, it modifies the deposits on your spark plugs so'\nthey can fin aa they should, fully\nand on time.\nThe greatest gasoline\ndevelopment tn 31 years\nI Called the greatest gasoline\ndevelopment since the introduo-\n' tion of tetraethyl lead, Shell Premium with TCP additive is th*\nbiggest sales success in petroleum history. It is available only\nJat Shell Dealers.\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nFirst\nMilwaukee     070 000 100\u20148 10 0\nSt Louis ..   .     110 001 012-6 16 2\nWilson, Buhl (8) and Crandall;\nLawrence, Deal (3) Brazle (9) and\nSarni. W\u2014Wilson; L\u2014Lawrence.\nSeeond\nMilwaukee,  310 300 102\u201410 IT 0\nSt Louis      000 002 20x\u2014 4   7 0\n' Spahn snd White; Raichl, Beard\n(41, Presko (8) and Yvars. L\u2014Raichl.\nFirst\nChicago   010 101 101 0\u2014J 15 0\nCincinnati   .   000 102 011 1\u20146 12-\nDavis, Brosnan (6), Tremel (01,\nHacker (9) and Tappe; Fowler, Collum (6), Smith (9) and Seminick,\nBailey (6), Landrith (10). W-\nSmith; L\u2014Hacker.\nSecond\nChicago  000'002 203-7 l\\ 0\nCincinnati   014 100 llx\u2014810 2\nRush,  Tremel   (8),  Brosnan   (7)\nand McCullough; Drews,'Valentine\n(9) and Landrith. W\u2014Drews;- _r-\nRush.    -\nFirst \u201e \u25a0' * , :--. ,\nPhiladelphia^. HMO 000 ODORS' _ 2\nNew Vork     ... 206 200 OOx\u201410 12 0\nWehmeier, Konstanty (3), Greenwood (3) and Lopata; Antonelll and\nWestrum. L\u2014Wehmeier.\n\u2022eoono^\nPhiladelphia  ... 120 000 000\u20143   8 0\nNew York ....... 010 030 OOx\u20144 11 1\nDickson, Ridzlk (8) and Burgess,\nLopata   (7);   Gomez,  McCall   (2),\nMonzont (9) Wilhelm (7) and Westrum. W\u2014Wilhelm, L\u2014Dickson.\nFirst .     .\nBrooklyn  200 100 005\u20148 17 0\nPittsburgh  001 000 014-6 18 0\nMeyer, Wade (3), Hughes (9) add\nCampanella;    Law,    Purkey    (1),\nO'Donnell (7), Hetki (9) and Atwell\nW\u2014Wade, L\u2014Law.\nSeeond\nBrooklyn 001 201 030\u20147 7 1\nPittsburgh   200 000 000\u20142 8 0\nLoes and Walker; Thels, Law (8)\nand Atwell. L\u2014Thels.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nFirst\nBaltimore  000 000 000\u20140   4 1\nChicago     100 000 02x\u20144 10 0\nLarsen   and   Moss;   Pierce   and\nBatts.\nSeeond\nBaltimore  A. 000 000 001\u20141 7 1\nChicago  000 000 llx-2 7 0\nPillette, Chakales (8) and Courtney; Dorlsh, Consuegra (9) Martin\n(9) nad Lollar. W\u2014Dorlsh; L\u2014Pllr\nlette.\nFirst\nNew York  101 010 031\u20147 16 0\nPhiladelphia   ... 000 000 Q40\u20144   8 0\nByrd, Sain (8) and Berra; POrto-\ncarrero, Romberger (8) and Astroth.\nW\u2014Byrd, L\u2014Portocarrero.\nSeoond\nNew York  000 205 018-11 13 0\nPhiladelphia '.. 000 011 000\u2014 2 11 1\nMorgan, Gorman (7) and Berra,\nSilvera (9); Fricano, Burtschy (6),\nDixon (8) and Robertson. W\u2014Morgan, L\u2014Fricano.\nFirst\nBoston   OU 028 200\u20141 15 0\nWashington   000 000 000\u20140   6 2\nNixon and White: Marrero, Steward (6), Pascual (6), Kereazakos\n(6) and Fltsgerald. L\u2014Marrero,\nSeoond\nBoston   010 000 000\u20141   5 3\nWashington  000 050 20x-7 12 0\nHenry, Kinder (5) Brown (7) and\nWhite; Stobbs end Tipton. L\u2014Henry\nFirst\nCleveland   206 020 120\u201413 14 3\nDetroit 000 300 021- 6 11 1\nHostklns, Houtteman (4) and\nNaragon, Hegan (6); Garver, Branca\n(3), Miller (4), Gray IS), Walk (7),\nMarlowe (8) ahd House. VJ-ry.tff.tta-\nman; L\u2014darner.\nSecond\nCleveland   000 000 000 00-fl 3 0\nDetroit  000 000 001 00-1 4 0\nMossi and Hegan; Zuverink and\nWilson.\n8UNDAY NIGHT\nVictoria 8-11, Trl-Clty 4-4\nVancouver 3-1, Salem 9-8'\nEdmonton 7-13, Lewiston 8-6\nWenatchee 4, Yakima 22\nNelson Wins\nSoccer Game\nNelson Soccer Club got Into the\nwis column Sunday with a 2-1 decision over the Rossland team at\nRossland. This victory, come after\ntwo losses and a tie In three previous games this season.  '\nRossland took; the lead early In\nthe gems on a goal by Bud {fend\nerson and held the 1-0 lead at half\ntime. Nelson won the game in the\nsecond half on goals by Steve\nCameron snd Jim Christie Sr,\nArrangements are being made\nto play a soccer game here during\nthe. Summer Bonspiel.\nGIRLS READY FOR\nSWIM FINALS\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Two of\nCanada's top Junior girl swimmers\nVirginia Grant of Toronto and\nGladys Priestley of Verdun, Que\nqualified handily Monday in their\nheats as a prelude to the finals of\nthe Canadian swimming championships.   '\nBoth girls won their heats ln\nthe 110-yard backstroke event tor\nJunior women in preparing for\nMonday night's final, which promised to be a rousing finish.'\nMiss1 Priestley, Just passed her\n16th birthday, also qualified for the\n110-yard backstroke by placing\nsecond in her heat to Sara Barber,\npetite Swimmer' from Brantford,\nOnt. ,\nIn the men's division, George\nPark of Hamilton led the qualifiers\ninthe 110-yard free style, w'th *be\ngood time of 1.00.2\u2014only two-\ntenths of a second away from the\ntime, of the winner in that event ln\nthe '1950 British Empire Games.\nPeter Salmon of Victoria.;\nBy\" THe Canadian Press\nBaseball had Its own fireworks\nMonday. Tho 18 major league teams\nexploded 35 homo runs lot day of\ndoubleheaders. that saw the Cleveland Indians' American League\nlead shrink to thread and. a halt\ngames while the New.York Giants\nmaintained their three and a half\ngame margin ih the National\nLeague,  ,.-(\u2022;\u2022\nWhile Cleveland \\<>as held to a\nsplit by Detroit, the New York\nYankees won their first twin bill ot\nthe season to gain a full gamo on\nthe Indians, Home runs, the order\nof the day, helped the Yankees to\neach victory.'Successive four-bag.\ngers by Joe Collins .and Mickey\nMantle and Gene Woodling's run-\nscoring double proved the margin\nof victory Iri the opener. Irv Iforert\ndrove in five runs with a p\u00ab_lt :^I\nhomers |n the nightcap.\nGeorge Zuverink, who once\npitched for Cleveland, blanked his\nformer mates with three hits over\n11. Innings as the Tigers won the\nsecond game 1-0 after | the Indians\nhad waltzed to a 13-0 first game\ntriumph. Bill Glynn,' now playing\nfirst base for the Indians, slammed\nthree successive homers In the\nopener and drove in eight runs. One\nof his blows was a grand slammer.\nHarvey Kuenn's llth Inning homer\noft rookie Ron Mossi decided the\nsecond game.\nJohnny Antonelll won his 12th\ngame of the season with a'three-hit\nshutout as the Giants swept a pair\nof games from Philadelphia 10-0\nand 4-3. Dusty Rhodes homered, In\neach.game for the Giants, his second game homer coming wtlh two\nmates aboard.\nRookie putflelder Walter Moryn\ncollected toflr hits Including a two-\nrun homer in tpe first gamo add\nCarl Furlllo Batted ln five runs lo\nthe second game as the Dodgers\ntrounced .the' Pittsburgh Pirates\ntwlco 8-0 and 7-2. The twin triumphs enabled tht) Dodgers to ttljf\nwithin 3H games of the Giants. '\u25a0\n; Ted- Lopclo blasted a grand slam\nhomer for Boston In the first game\nahd Roy Sleve'rs smashed one,for\nWashington in the second as the\nRed SoX and. Senators divided a\ndoubleheader. Willard, Nixon pitched a six-hitter-in Boston'A14-0 triumph In the opener -and Chuck\nStobbs three, a five-hitter in Washington's 7-1 success ln the nightcap.\nThe Chicago White Sox ended a\nfive-gam*-losing streak by taking\na pair from Baltimore 3-0 and 2-1.\nBilly Pierce shut out the'Orioles\nwith four hits for his first complete,\ngam* since May 19. Ron Jackson,\n20 -year-old bonus rookie, subbing\nfor the Injured Ferris Fainand Phil\nCavarretta at first base, homered Iri\nthe seventh Inning to provide the\nSox margin of victory ln the second\ngame.\nCincinnati took two from Chicago\nCubs 0-5 in 10 innings and 8-7, Bobby Adams' single drove in tho winning run ln the opener. Karl Drews\nwon his first' game tor Cincinnati\nbut needed help in tho nightcap.\nMilwaukee's Braves walloped\nIhe St. Louis Cardinals twice, 8-8\nand' 1.0-4, banging tour homers in\nthe first game, two by Eddie\nMathews. They collected 17 hits in\nthe second game as. Warren Spahn\nregistered his eighth victory. Red\nSchoendlenst, Card second baseman,\nhit safely In His 23rd'and 24th successive,games,\nBuhe Wepres^\nCanadian Davis Cup\nTeam Appointed\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW    L\nPet.\nGBL\nCleveland \t\n....   53   23\n.697\n\u2014\nMew York \t\n  51   28\n.646\n3V4\n....   48   30\n.615\n8\nDetroit \t\n....   32   41\n.438\n19 Vi\nWashington ...\n....   31   44\n.413\n2U4\nBaltimore \t\n....   30   46\n-93\n23\nPhiladelphia .\n... .29   45\n.392\n23\nBoston    .-.\n....   28   45\n.384\n23 Vt\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNew York ..\n....   52   25\n.873\n\u2014\nBrooklyn \t\n....   48   28\n.632\n3V4\nPhiladelphia .\n....   86 84\n.528\n11H\nMilwaukee ...\n....   38   37\n.807\n13\nCincinnati .....\n....   88   88\n,500\n13%\nSt. Louis \t\n...   85,  41\n,461\n16V4\n...   27   48\n.370\n.323\n28\nPittsburgh  ._\n25   52\n27\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) - Cricket\nscores in Britain today:\nPakistan 157 and 272, England 558\nfor six declared, England won second test match by an Innings and\n129 runs. ,\nOxford University 401 for three\ndeclared, Cambridge University 281\nfor four (varsity match).\nYorkshire 361 for five declared\nand 60 for four, Surrey 210.\nKent 353, Essex 196 for seven.\nGlamorgan 232 for eight declared\nand 212 for tour, Northamptonshire\n127.\nDerbyshire 213 and 58 tor five,\nSussex 148, rain curtailed play.\nHampshire 239, Lancashire 179\nfor five, rain curtailed play.\nNottinghamshire 130 and 120 for\ntwo, Gloucestershire 174.\nSomerset 360 and 17, for no wlc\nket Worcestershire 453.\nTORONTO (CP) - Lorne Main,\nBob Bedard, Paul Willey and Don\nPiatt Monday were named to represent Canada In t_e Davis Cup\nten-Is tie against Chile July 15-17\nat Toronto, Laird Watt of Montreal\nwas appointed non-pioying captain.      -     '\nPiatt, 25, of Toronto Is the only\nnewcomer to the teem. The 24-\nyear-old Main of Vancouver and\nToronto, has beta on every\" Canadian Davis Cup team since 1949\nWilley, 24, of Vancouver and -Bedard, 23, of Sherbrooko, Que., were\nnamed to the tearf) for the 1 first\ntin\\e last year.\nSelection of the team was announced by Dr. Georges Leclerc,\nchairman of the Canadian Lawn\nTennis Association's Davis Cup\nselection committee. Players were\nchosen on the basis of their Canadian ranking last year and their\nperformance in major tournaments\nthis season.\nMain was ranked Canada's No. 1\nplayer with Bedard runner-up,\nWilley fourth and Piatt fifth.\nDr. Leclerc said Jim Macken of\nVancouver, No. 3 player, was not\nchosen to play in tba first round\nNorth American zona match\nagainst Chile because he lost to\ncomparative unknowns ln two west\ncoast tournaments early, this year.\nHenri ROchon, 31-year-old Montreal southpaw who has been a fixture-on Canada's squad since 1946,\nlost his chance to make the team\nwhen Piatt beat him in the semifinals of the recent Mont Gabriel\ninvitation tournament\nDr. Leclerc said' the committee\nrated Lawrence Barclay of Vancouver, Jim Bentley of Toronto,\nand 18-year-old John Swann of\nVancouver good prospects tor the\nit)5S Davis Cup team.\nKiwanis Wins\nFrom Gyro Team\nKiwanians trimmed Gyros 7-4 ln\na close, well played- Little League\ngame at Queen Elizabeth Park Monday night.\nWinning pitcher Vernon Goldsbury gave up three hits, walked\ntwo and struck out eight, while\nHerbert Rodgera tor Gyros gave up\nfive hits, walked four and struck out\nfive.\nSaturday's games resulted In a big\n17-1 win for Lions over Kinsmen in\nLittle League play and a bigger\n20-1 win for Legion over Knights of\nColumbus ln the Pony League.\nVICTORIA (CP) - BUI Rogers\ndidn't find a giant pearl when he\ngot an oyster at a downtown cafe.\nHe got a mouthful of 37 tiny, pearls.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\ns \u25a0\u00bb IIGC _________ , '  '\nBs\/ttCKSQ-DS*\nFUSTIC _,_\numk\nKActltWCFA\niinetor\u2014\u25a0--\nee tonsE\nSeCOHO WHEM TWINS10 SET lU*\n\u2014x. IT COULD bs tens E\u00abM\nTO CMSB A MISS\nSchoendienst\nOn Way lo Top\nNEW YORK (AP) -Red Schoendlenst of St. Loult- Cardinals, currently major league baseball's hottest hitter, is moving swiftly to the\ntop of the National League batting\nparade, as he seeks the title which\nbarely eluded him in 1953.\nThe aggressive second baseman\nranks'sixth at present but at the\nrate he's'going he appears headed\nfor better things.\nSchoendlenst had a consecutive\nhitting streak of 22 games, the best\nstring ln either league this season,\nthrough Sunday's games. In that\nspan he collected 38 hits in 98 at\nbats and lifted bis average from .313\nto .335.\nSIX FOR 14\nLast year Red wu edged out tor\nthe batting title by Brooklyn's Carl\nFurlllo, .342 to .344. .\nSchoendlenst still has a long way\nto go to the top, for Duke Snider\nof the Dodgers, the leader, shows\nlittle signs of slumping,\nSnider, sidelined briefly last week\nwith' a bruised elbow, 'cracked out\nsix hits in 14 trips and gained six\npoints to .374.\nDon Mueller of the Giants dropped 12 points but remained ln second place at 1358. Re's followed by\nGranny Hamner of Philadelphia,\n.3411 '\nIn the American League, Bobby\nAvila ot Cleveland held onto the\nlead despite a drop of 22 points to\n.349. Bobby only had tour hits ln\n25-trlpi. .1\n1 Al Rosen ot Cleveland tailed off\neight points to .332 and remained in\nthe runner-up slot Nellie Fox of\nChicago and Jim Busby of Washington are deadlocked for, third at\n.819.\nStan Musial. the No. 7 batter ia\nthe National League with .882, rev\ngained'the lead ln hem* runs. The\nslugging Cardinal hit three last\nweak to taint bis total to 26, one\nmore than\" tho Giants'Willie Mays.\nMusial Still leads ill runs batted ln\nwith it. .\u25a0''\u25a0\nMickey Mantle of the Yankees,\nalso, With threo homers last, week,\ntook over the top spot In th* Amor,\nlean Loaguo With 16. .\nBy WILL BRIM3LEV\nNEW YORK (AP) - She'a tho\nsame old Babe.\n. The grim battle with cancer has\ntailed to chill Bab* Zoharlas' flaming competitive spirit It has tailed\nto dull her wild flair for showmanship. The Babe Is still the supreme\nshowman of sports\u2014a natural, lovr\nable clown on the athletic stage.\nTho raw-boned Texas girl, who\nastounded fans at the 1932 Olympics\nIn Los Angeles; who danced rt Jig ln\nScottish kilts after winning th*\nBritish golf championship ln 1947\nand who once \"pitched to Jimmy\nFoxx and Joe DIMagglo, was at hor\nbest at the Salem, Wass, country\nolub' last week-end where she won\nher third women's national- oped.\n\"Georgo ain't mad at me, so I'm\nplaying real good)\" she commented.\nAnother time she Bald; \"I'm playldg\nso. feood George is 'tipping his hat\nwhen he sees me.% '\u2022\u25a0-...\nFORMER WRESTLER'\nGeorge is the Babe's husband, a\ngreek \u2022 descended behemoth who\nonce was a star attraction on the\nheavyweight wrestling circuit\nOn doctor's orders, George has\nreduced to a svelte 310 pounds and\nhe must have, shed an added 20 by\nfollowing the illustrious Babe every\nStep of the way in her three-day,\n72-hole championship.\nOnce tho Babe nailed a beautiful,\ntee shot ahd far back in the gallery\ndf 3,000 came a hoarse Indian war\nWhoop. The Babe,' .never looking\nback, raised her right hand ln recognition. It could have come only\nfrom George.\nThe Babe gavo a good show. She\nwore a broad-brimmed' straw,\nwhich she doffered with a flourish\non every good (hot She quipped as\nshe chipped around the fairways.\nThe crowd loved it\nREMOVED SLIP\nThis Is th* Babe who one* stopped in the midst of a championship\nmatch and removed a. silk slip on\nthe' fairway, tossing it to a companion.\nFor two decades the world has\nbeen marvelling at th* athletic\nfeats and antics,of this afhazlng female. In 1637 ah* pitched in an exhibition game with Bt Louis Cardinals against Philadelphia Athletics\nat Bradentown, Fla.       ,    \u25a0     \/\n\"I pitched against 3b. DIMagglo\nonce, too, st Yankeo Stadium \u2014 almost killed him with a pitched ball\n\u2014but my greatest embarrassment\ncame another time at tha stadium.\n\"I was th^re for a golf ejthibitidp\nand warming up with' the team. I\nwent wide to field a grounder and\nmy dress \u2014it was on* of those tight,\ngreen jobs \u2014 welT, it split all the\nway to the waist. And 72,000 ln tho\nstands.\n\"I dovo into tho dugout I wasn't\ngoing to give a strip tease for three\ndollar topf\"\n1    - -\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014\u2022 Lawn Bowl\nera from the British. Isles won .six\nrinks and tied th* other Monday\nas thoy defeated teams made up\nof officials of the Canadian Lawn\nBowling Council and Provincial\nLawn Bowling Association ln a 21-\nend match, 168 to 112,. -\n1 It was the second match tot the\nBritish bowlers, who are touring\nCanada and who will represent\ntheir respective countries at the\nBritish Empire Games at Vancouver, ,\nA VICTORY SMILE tells the story\nBabe Zaharlai holds cup after winning Fa \t\nOpen Golf Championship by 12 strokes July 3 at Paabody, Mass.\nof a groat, eomebaek as\nilrd Women's National\nNearly counted out by oancer a year ago, the Babe led the three-\nday touunament all the Way for a 291 total-over the rugged 6898-\nyard Salem Country Club course,\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nDavies Declared\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Jim Day-\nles of Vancouver was declared 1954\nCanadian cycle champion Monday\nnight when he racked up his fifth'\nwin ln the two-day Canadian cycle\nchampionships here. ,\nDavids , had compiled enough\npoints \u2014 28 \u2014 at the official end ot\nthe meet Saturday, but still had to\n'complete the 1,000 metre match,\nsprint, postponed through an accident until Monday.\nDavies bested.Terry .Gamble of\nVancouver for the win; recording\na sizzling 12.3 for the last. 200\nmetres..    >'\u25a0' %\u2022'*\nPrince Rupert in British Colum-.\nbla is 55 miles nearer the Orient\nthan any other railway terminus\non tho Pacific coast.\nMra. C. Locatelli\nWins Golf Cup\nMrs. Carl Locatelli was the winner of tb* Blanch* Pollard Cup in\na-ladles' golf tournament here Sunday. Five contestants participated\nIn th* annual event originally slated for July 1 but postponed du* to\nrain. Mrs. G. W. Cameron was runner-up.\n'i\nSMASHES RECORD\nWIND-PR, Ont (CP) - Donald 1\nArmitage, representing the Saskatchewan Amateur Athletic Union,\nraced through the rain to a new:'\nrecord in tho midget 880-yard dash\nat tha Canadian junior, Juvenile\nand midget track1 and field championships today.\nThe Prairie cinder star won the\nevent ln 2:06.4 to wipe out the record of 2:00.8 set by Don Aitkena\nbf tha Toronto Track Club'in 1950.\nFOR MMR-TMe-BCrTOW ASM- WITH A BU 88LI.\nChampion Malabar's Cold Cash, sen of a Champion sir* and Champion dan.\nBred and ownod by Sl W. Scarpa, Point Fortune, Ova.\n.0ounce for ounee!\nlo IHe best dog goes the judge's award that makes him a\nch_mpion.__^rdC_dvertCiffla_ia_Whiskyisachampkmtoo.\nIfs judged best by those who know it. clean, mellow'taste and\ndelightful bouquet Ounce for otmoe\nthere's no finer whisky than Lord Calvert.\n .-.--.    .-,,   \"V,-.,*f?^^^\u2122\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUL. 6, 1954\nt   '\nA\np .\nN\nm'\np\nN\nR\nN\nN\n^R\nII'-\nii\nj\nS\nE\nC\ni\nA\nI\nI\nN\nf\nif\nIf\nN\nA\nII\n' D\nD\nU\n.6.\nK\ni-y\nB\nU\nz\ns\nA\nY\nw\nE\nR\nJ\n\u25a0I\nG\nG\nS\nI WANT VOU TO LOOK\nYOUR 6EST.CHIUIREN-\n0A0OV IS BRINGING HIS\n80SS HOME TO\nDINNER\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prlees)   ,\n.MINES    '\nAmal Larder\nArea\nST0CK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News does not hold Itselt responsible In the\nef-en error in the following lists,\nAunor       ..._.'_*.\nBagamac  ..~......_\nBarymln  ... _\u201e_.\nBralorne  ...._\u00bb._._.,\nBroulan    ..~j-_.\nBuff Can! ..\u201e--_._\nCalllfan ..-i.....\u201e.\nCampbell R L ...\nCentral Patricia ..\nChostervlllb ,,','JSZ\nChlmo G '.........._\nCochenour     ~.\nCons M .. S .:.._._.\nConwest   ....__.-..\u201e\u201e;\nProinor '.'.  ,.\nDetta R L \t\nDome     _ \t\nDiivay     ...._.,...\nEast Malartic\t\nEast, Sullivan \t\nEastern Metals......\nElder Gold \t\nEstella   '     ', ._\nSalconbridge \t\nFrobish'er- .:\t\nGeco     \t\nGiant Yel   ......\t\nGod's Lake ..........\nGold Hawk ..' .\nGoldrcest  \t\nGold Hawk ,:'\t\nHasaga \u25a0..... .',\t\nBollinger \"2 \t\nHomer Y K\t\nHudson Bay,..:\t\nInspiration   ....\t\nInt Nickel \t\nJplllcoe   ..- \u2014\nJoiiet Que  \u2014\nKayrand   .    _..\nKerr Addison \t\nKlrkland Lake \t\nKlrfc Townsite.\t\nLabrador   .   .........\nLake Dufault \t\nLexlndln.     .   ....\nLingman (new) ..\nLouvicdurt- -\nMacLeod   Cock\nMadsen-R L ...\nMalartic G F .\nMarciis G\nMclntyre Port\nMcWatters   \t\nMining Corp\nMoneta\n.13\n.30   '\n' .12.\n.13%\n1.81\n3.25   I\n1.50\n,   '.W j\n.13\n7.25\n.70V4\n31\n1.35\n-. .88'\n28.00\n3.30\n,  .19\n.14'\n14.75\n.18\n2.23\n4.20\n.75;\n\u25a0: .64\n.15%\n18.00\n4,10\n10.35\n8.10\n.72%\n-.11%\n.13%\n.11%\nSi-\n.15.65\n.15\n48.35\n2.25\n41.75\n.24\n.41\n-   .12\n18.00\n.85%\n-.16%\n.10\n.13\n,10\n1.60\n2.10\n1.63\n1.41\n.11\n80.75\n.14\n15.00\n.51\nNew Larder U,...\nNew Mylamaque\nNoranda   ...\u00ab...\t\nNormotala ... _*.\nO'Brien'''. .-:. .:.\u201e\nPaymaster,..._--w\u00bb.\nPickle Crop  \t\nPioneer        \t\nPlacer Develop ..\nPreston E D \\.... ...\nQuebec Lab' ........\nQuqmont '...'.i'~.\u2122\nRadlore   .....\u201e.,._\nRoche L L  -\nSan Antonio  .......\nSherritt Gordon ..\nSilvormlller  .,....-.\nSlianeo   .-'..:\u2022 -.\nSteep Rock\t\nSudbury .Cont ....\nSylvanite   ...  -\nTomblU '-.\t\nTorbrlt '      '. .;.\nUnion Mining  \t\nUpper 'Canada  ....\nVentures  :.-.\nVIcoUr . :....,....\nViolamac . .;....\nWaite Amulet ...\nOILS. ' ,v'\u25a0''.\nAnglo Can .-. ......\nB A Oil\n.....\n.Central  Leduc\t\nChemical  Research  \t\nDecalta     , \t\nDel-'Rio'.         ___\nFederated pete i.-\t\nImpkial Oil ...'. ......\nInter Pete\" ,-_._\u2014\nKroy  \u2014,\u2014\nNat .Pete  _____\nPac Pete ,\".' ......\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibl    i     ;', \t\nAluminum \t\nBell; Telephone \t\nBrazilian       . .,\nB C Elec 4s \t\nB.C Elec 4?4s :...-\t\nB C Power A ...a ~~\nCan Packers B-.., ,\t\nCan Breweries \u2014, _....\nCan Capners  ._^..\nCan Car &! Fdy .....:..\t\nCan Ca\u00bb & Fdy A      \t\nCanadian Pacific Railway\nCons M & S -i... \u25a0\u25a0 .'.\t\nDlst Seagram   \t\nDom Foundries   *   ..\nDom Steel & Coal B -\nDom Stores \t\nDom Tar Is Chem -.\nDom-Magnesium\t\nFamous Players \t\nFord A  \t\nGypsum Lime \/\t\nImperial Oil -\u2014:\t\nInt Nickel \t\nInt Pete ....J.\t\nKelvlnator   \t\nLoblaw A   \t\nLoblaw B    .\u2014_....;.._..\nMassey Harris  ...........\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMoore C,orp\t\nPage Hershey .\u00a3.'.:\u2014\nPowell: River \t\nPower Corp' \u2014\nRuss Industries \t\nSh'awlnigan   .,........\u2014...\nSicks Brew   \u2014\nSimpsons A\t\nevent   '\n.      .91\n:    .28\n. 73.60\n. 3.00'\n- .72\n.. * .88\n.:  1.07\n. 1.78\n; -29.15-\n. -,70:.\n. .11%\na 18.00\"\nA 1.00\n. \u2022 .18  '\n. 1.38\n.. 4.00\n.. 1.10\n:   .12%\n.. 7.65\n.' .15\n..' 1.10\n. .44\n. 1.54\n. \u25a0 \u2022\u2022 .17\n.. 1.08\n> 17.35\n., 1.79\n. 1.79\n.. 13,15\n.. 4.75\n. 25.50\n. 1.50\n.. 2.17\n. .64\n... 1.28\n. 3.60\n. .    .33\n. .21\n.. 1.08\n. 1.75\n.. 7.66\n.v.., - 22%'\n......   62%\n    43%\n......    8%\n-.!... ;-92%\n 101%\n....... 22%\n,    87\n    26%\n\u25a0r\n19%\n22\n25%\n28\n29%\n15\n11%\n27%\n8%\n14%\n24\n89%\n40%\n.33\n41%\n31\n21\n44%\n55%\n7%\n32%\n29%\n.... 35\n_.\u201e 39%\n.,.. 15%\n...... 48\n...... 28%\n  20\nkeep a package hiindy\nIn purge or pocket\nWBIGlivT\nIffanttoMl.Wff?\nOx* Wri^ey'* Spearmint Gum!\n'  Gives you* nice littlelift.\nHdp\u00bb time pa\u00ab P1\"'*ntly-\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS .', ,,  uio on the, dial\nTUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954\n(Pacific DayUght tTlme)\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014The Early Bird\n7:81}\u2014iNews\n7:35\u2014Rise 'n Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n_a:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Woman'S World\n8:i)0\u2014Warren's Wigwam.,\n10:00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n10:15\u2014Elwood Glover\n10:45\u2014News. \u25a0\n10:50\u2014Morning Music\nll:00-(3abrlel Heater\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11.-45\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00\u2014Kitchen Karnival\n12: |5\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Today In History     -\n1:00\u2014Tops and Pops\n1:15- Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Specialty Shop   ^,\n1:45\u2014Musicalei V'\n2:00-7-Paciflc News\n2:15\u2014Musical Matinee\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Siesta Time\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45--New8 .      .\" ;\nS^e-^-Yesterday's Favorites\n4:15^-Barney Potts Show\n4:S0-rMustc Picture Lady\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime Story feller\n5:00\u2014Story Parade\n\"5:15\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n5:20\u2014The Lighter Side\n5:25\u2014Road .and Weather Report\n5:30\u2014Supper Club\n5:45\u2014Sports   News\n5:50\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Here's Health\n0:15\u2014Coleman Concert Hall\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7|00\u2014News\n7:15^News Roundup\n7.30\u2014Musio flail\n8:00\u2014Nation's Business\n8:15\u2014Coke Time   \" '\n8:30\u2014We're Travellln' Light\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30-Chilcotln Trails\nlOiOO-^-News    -   ,\n10:15\u2014People of the MacKenzie\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Devotions\nll:00-rAround the Jown\n12:0O^NEWS Night Cap\nCBC  PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1954\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nOO^Fishermen's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes v ,\n30\u2014Newa\n35\u2014M'lsical Minutes      ...\n40\u2014Moi'il-i, Devotions\n65\u2014Musical Warch Past\n00\u2014News  .     \u2022\u25a0  \u25a0\n10\u2014Bill. Good      \"-'--i.\n15\u2014Breakfa-it  Club\n45\u2014AnsihiBg Goes      . ' . ' \u2022\n00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n16\u2014Aunt Lucy.   . , ','-.\u25a0\n:30\u2014Laura Limited\n;46\u2014Music Shop    \u25a0:.''\n-O-^Mornrng Visit    , ,'\n15\u2014Elwood Glover\n45\u2014Musical Program '\n00\u2014A.Man and His Musio\n18-43BC News ',.'.','\u2022'    '\n25\u2014Showcase. ,' \u25a0 .'\n:30\u2014 Farm  Broadcast ,    .\n55\u2014 FI\"B to One\n:00\u2014Afte noon Concert\n2:30\u2014Trans.-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Siesta Time   .\n8-30\u2014Program Resume\nS:45-News Bulletin\n3:48-;:B. C Roundup\n4:15\u2014Piano Pops\n4:30-.ubtlee Roid\n4:45-raty Under the Ice\n5:00\u2014Howdy Doody   .\n5:15\u2014Continental Carousel\n5:40-rInter.. Commentary\n5;45--News' and Weather   .\n5:55\u2014Have - IfoU Heard,-\n8.00\u2014Neighbourly Newa\n6:15\u2014Stars from Paris .  ,\n6:45\u2014Intra s to Wednesday\n(:00\u2014News V   .\n1:15\u2014Nows Roundup\n7:SO\u2014Trial of Lord Byron\n9:00-rCBC Symphony   :\n10:00\u2014News    , *\n10:15\u2014Korean Experience\n10:30\u2014Musloa Antica a Nuova\nNight\nMID-WEEK RAIL\nRATE BARGAINS\nMONTREAL (CP), -*- Reduced\ncoach fares will be offered by the\nmajor railways starting in mid-July\nand ending Oct. 31, J. A. Brass,\nchairman of the Canadian Passenger, Association, announced here.\nThe return tickets, reduced to\n1.1-10 the cost'pf\u2022 the- regular oneway fares, will-be honored going\non Tuesdays or Wednesdays and returning witnib. a seven-day period\nin eastern Canada and a 10-day period in western Canada, not including the day of departure.\nA modification of the low midweek excursion rates adopted last\nyear, the new plants being1 offered\nby Canadian Pacific and Canadian\nNational Railways In eastern, western and central Canada..The fares\nwill come Into application July 13\nand July 14. '   \u2022\nAirlines Lose\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada's airlines operated at a loss of $1,182,540\nlast February, more thin doubling\nthe, operating loss of $563,063 ln\nFebruary, 1953.'..'   .\nThe bureau of statistics said-Monday ..operating revenues were up\nfive per 6ent to $6,551,865 but operating expenses jumped more than\n13 per cent to $7,734,405 from $6,-\n821,753.      . .......\nThe, number of passengers increased to 143,931 from 138,366 and\nthe amount of mail rose to 1,684,638\npounds from 1,410,120. The amount\nof; goods transported decreased to\n8,481,429 pounds from .9,413,668.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver  Lodge  \t\nBralorne   \t\nCanusa        \t\nCariboo Gold ...\t\nGiant Mascot    \t\nGolconda \t\nGrandview ., :\nHighland  Bell\t\nPioneer Gold    ...\nPremier Bidder \t\nQuatsino\t\nReeves Mac \t\nSheep Creek   \t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSilver Standard \t\nVananda   _,,\t\nVan Roi     \t\nWestern Tungsten  ...\nYale   \t\nOIL8\nAnglo   Can   \t\nA P Cons   \t\nCal & Ed\t\nCan Anaconda \t\nCommonwealth    ...\nHome\t\nMercury\nOkalta Cont\t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite\t\nVanalta\t\nVulcan   \u2022.\t\nJNDU8THIAL8    ,\nCapital .'Estates  1_.\nInt Brew B     I.\nMid-West Gas\t\nMarket Trends\n' TORONTO   (CP)   - taduatrial*;J\nshowed the only strength. In slow\ntrading toward the session's close.\nGolds and -base metals were off\nslightly and Western oils were\nweak.\nMONTREAL (CP)-A mixed tona,-j\nruled after.weaker tendencies had;'\nprevailed   eprllcr   ln   the   session;\nVolume was light. '\nCole.on. Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u25a0-. Cattle .aflCf\ncalyes 475; trade very light; dry-fed\nbutcher .steers 50 cents to $1 higher;\ngood to choice butcher heifers 60\nor more higher; cows steady at last\nweek's strong close; bulls steady to\nstrong; all replacement cattle,\nsteady. - \u25a0\nGood to choice butcher steers,-:\n19.50-21, common to medium - 18-ia\n19.25 good to choice butcher helff|\ners, 17.50-18-TS, common to medium |\n14-17.25; good cows 10.50.11.50, comil\nmon to medium 9.25-10.25; canneri..\nand cutters 8-9;-good bulls 12-18!|\nCommon to medium .8-11.50; g,ob4f-\nstocker and feeder steers 16-lf,!-\ncommon to medium 14-15,75; no VealJ\ncalves offered.\nOne load of hogs sold Saturday,'\nat 23 llveweight for export The balance was unsold. Grade A hogs were\nbid at 29, sows 14 llveweight and\n18.20 dressed.\n.45\n3.30\n.04%\n.65\n.44\n.23\n' .18\n.36\n1.73\n.03%\n.14\n1.40\n.76 ,\n\u2022   3.90\n.74\n.02\n.03\n.62\n.32\n4.70   ;\n29    |\n10.50    I\n-   .06    !\n3.85    .\n7.50 , \u25a0\n'.07%\n1.30\n4.30\n10.25\n.18\n.28\n4.50\n4.85\n1.65\nDRILL 31 WELLS\nREGINA (CP) - Thirty-ona;\nwells were drilling in Saskatchewan ln the week ended Juno 23,\nthe department of mineral resource!:\nannounced in its oil and gas report.\nFive new oil producers were listed,;\nSeven wells were completed and'\nnine abandoned. \\\nCNR APPOINTMENT\nMONTREAL (CP) -Andrew;;\nClarke of Montreal has been appointed (assistant comptroller in\ncharge of revenues for .the Canadian National Railways. He succeeds J. H. Spence, retiring after\nmore than 50 years service. Mr.\nClarke joined the CNR in 1911.\nSteel of Can \t\nStandard Paving ..\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Corp. B   .. .\n38\n23%\n41\nIATEST REPORT\nAA your Invutmi nt OmIm\nfor Hi* latest Riport\nam) Praipacl-i ef\nCAM IN BULLOCK\nw\nDAILY CROSSWORD-^ffl\nACROSS\n1. Information\n10. A story\n11\/Unit of\nweight\nM. Girl'b\n,  nickname\n14. Lawn\n15. Biblical\nname\n16. Elevated\n'   train\nlT.Steel\nsplint of\nshort skirt\nof armor\n(var.)\n19. Erbium\n(sym.)\n20. Looks\n23. Winked\n(colloq.)    \u25a0\n25. Guldo'a\nhighest\nnote\n27. Falsehood\n28. Esteem\n31. Speak    -\nloudly\n34. Father\n35. Stones of\nfruit\n37. Hawaiian\nbird\n38. Thin,\n,   brittle\ncookies\n40. Head of a\nn2. Book by\ni   Zola '\n3. Grampuses\n4. Take\naway\nby force\n5. Music note\n6. Moral\n7. Per. to diet\n8. One of a\nTeutonic\n9. Dish\nserved\nbefore\n,   main\ncourse\n11. S-shaped\nmolding\n13. Measure\nof length\n18. Jewish\nmonth\n21. River\n(Neth.)\n22. Light\n\u2022 '\u25a0 shoes\n24. Bever- j\n- age- \u25a0:.\n26. Beards\nof rye\n28. Projecting\nend\neta\nchurch\n29. Hazard\n30. And (L.)\n32. Unusually\nhandsome\nperson\n(slang)\n33. Plots,\nof J\nland\nanna aasryy\nHanmay\n_____  @@___IE\nfeiUrd-r's Ani-Mr\n36. Santa -\nClaus \u25a0\n(shortened ),-.\n39. River (It.)\n41. Trial ot\nstrength\n42. Caliber\n46. Prisoner\nofwar\n(abbr.) ,\n43. Wading\nbird\n44. Sheltered\ncorners\n45. Delight\nbeyond\nmeasure'\n.47. Tragranl\nablution\nDOWN\n1: Gnarled\n1\n1-\nZ\n3\n4\ns-\n6\n7\nT\n9.\nI\n\"a\njO\n1\n%\nII\nl\nli\n\\T\ni4-\n^A\n.5\n16\n^A\n^\n1-\n18\n%\nV\n20\n31\n22\n^\n*?\nMr\n^\n^A\n3s\ni\n2C\n^A\n37\n,\n%\n^\n28\nJ9\nV>\n%\n-l\"\n33\nu\ns4\n%\nis\n3-\n%\n^\nif\n38\n39\n^\n'aV\nAl\n43\n43\n^\/A\nAA\nii\n^i\nAS\n46\nOJ\n^\nAl\n__.\n7-*\nDAILY CRYPXOQUOTE-Here's how te work itt\n;..'.''      A-TDLBAAXR   .     ':\u25a0'.\" ;\n. I     Is LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for'another. In this example A is used\ntor the three1 L's, X for the two O's, etc.  Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\nEach day the code letters are different.\n0 \u25a0. A Cryptogram Quotation\ny_'d    TWS    JVRR    XL    W    HWVRDO    JH.tt '\nN WH     KDSCG VQ WSKL    LSDBMK    CT>\nMLC      NVTHtRP      V8CD      W      O W V R\u2014.\nODNSHP S. '\n^yesterday's Cryptoquotes FAIR MELODY! KIND SIREN!\nI'VE NQ CHOICE; I MUST BE THY SAD SERVANT EVER*\nMORE\u2014KEATS,\n,Y\n-i&i\nmm*\n'\u25a0';\u25a0\n J.llJii'lJUMjlpi|]UI-l!i-,i,'ii'.  .ina miii\t\nm\nClean Money From Yottf\nNILSON DAILY NJWS, TUISDAY, JULY 6,1954 \u2014 9\nWith Want AM\nHELP WANTED\nm     -\u25a0    HELP WANTED\nCITY OF NELSON\nI Applications will be received by\nthe undersigned up to July 19th,\n1964, at 5 pin, for the position of\nFIRE CHIEF, Personnel of Dept.\nconsists of 8 paid firemen, 1 paid\nlecretary and 36 volunteer-\nApply giving age, qualifications,\nsalary expected, together with references,\nC, W. R. HARPER\nCity Clerk,\n5.1.  ' Nelson, B. C.\nWANTED FOR  INTERIOR SAW-\n-..   mill cutting, 40,000 f.b.m. per shift.\nOne experienced setter. Mill is\n' equipped with electric setworks.\n..Apply Sox 4048, Nelson Daily\nJews.\n6o6D SAWYER, MltST BE ABLE\n';.' to do own mlllwrlghting. Portable\n! mill capacity 20 M. per day.\n\u25a0' Wages $1.75 per M\u201e year round\n;' Work. Appl,\" to D. W. Walker,\n\u25a0c\/o M. Rodgers, 430 Seymour St.,\nKamloops, B, C,\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n'BENCH MACHINIST WISHES\nwork as motor mechanic helper\nor similar engineering Job. Good\nreferences, own tools. Write A.\nLenow, 140 Baker Street.\n:|-_?aiUl_Nfcl!-ilPAlitrtlER'BY THE\n' - hour, brushes and equipment sup-\n. plied. Box 4400.\ng 6UILPW- a mw Bsmrga\nI   remodeling then .phone 434-X-2.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n1 MAHOGANY DRESSER, PLATE\nglass mirror, $29.50. Walnut van-\n.   ity and bench, $37.50. Porcelain\ntop kitchen  table,  $7,50.  Silver\n'grey upholstered rocker,' bsdly\nsoiled, |88.  Studio  lounge, 835\n-  Guitar, $20. Trumpet and case,\n. $30, Inglis electrlo \u25a0 washing ma-\n. chine, $75.. Cutler's New and Used\n. Furniture, Phone 47, 801 Baker\nSt.\nI tort. -Li-Lb': \u00ab-_L_____t\" LIMit, eooT-\ny   000 tt logs, also poles, pilings.\nposts, cordwood, sawmill, planer\n' and   necessary   tools.   Lawrence\njammer mounted on truck. IEL\n\u25a0'.   power saw. 1947 Ford, long-wheel\nbase truck with steel bunks. Sit-\n\"' uated 6 miles north of Kaslo, B.C.,\nI   on Lardeau road. Riley, Hoey It\nMcKinnon, Box 348, Kaslo, B.C.\nIf-l SA-E: 1 id-'Tdfi'-ETl'LAT-\nI form scales. One factory-built\nI tread mill with wood sawing at-\nI tachment, In good.-shspe. One\n| sulky plow, IB-inch shear. One\nI   12-lnch   walking . plow.    Apply\n\";   Frank \"Abey, Lardeau, B; C.\t\n;!_i_-____te-W\"lLE T'YPES bt\n| used equipment, mill, mine and\nI logging supplies; new. and used\n'\u25a05. wire' r'bpe; \"pipe and fittings:\nI chain.' steel plate and shapes. At-\nI Us Iron tt Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\n| ' St,  Vancouver, B.C  Phone  Pa\nciflo 6357\nP-l SALE: DRY MIXED WOOD,\nI   $15 per cord. Fir and tamarac $17.\n~   Immediate delivery. Phohe 604-R\nor write S. A. Myers, Box 367, Nelson, B. C.\nTitC-V TO_-<.& RADIO AND 1\nnew 600x16 Goodyear tire. Both\nj 183- Write Box 9020. Nelson Daily\nNews. \u25a0'\ntt-Wblb And studio por-\n- traits. Everything Photographic.\nPettlt Photos,- Castlegar, B.C.\n\u25a0 .-M&..-.- .'ITTINGS \u2014 TlttES -\nI  special low. prices. Active Trading\n'.Co. 935 E. Cordova St Vancouver\nRAILS: A-.L SIZES, 2\"-4'. P_R\n. hundred keg, $11.95, at Columbia\nTrading, 902 Front Street.\n\u25a0JEEP CANS, 4%  GAL. WHILE\nI    they last.  Each $2.50.  Columbia\nTrading, 902 Front Street,\n, FOR SALE: NORGE REFRIGER-\nI - ator. Excellent condition, $75.\n'.*\u25a0 Jack Boyce, phone 160.\n10 ACRES. MIXED STANDING\nhay. Your offers. Sam. Zmaeff,\nAppledale, B. C.\nFOR SALE: 4-SIDE BUNG. BAR-\nrels, also one G.E. washing machine. Ph. 392-Y.\nFOR SALE: BEDROOM FURNI-\nture and miscellaneous. Ph. 1152\nevenings.\nGOOD TOP SOIL. NO ROCKS OR\n.'-. soda. Hand-loaded. Ph. 794-R-l.\nM1CR ON IC HEARING AIDS -\n-    Write PO Box 39. Nelson. B.C\nFOR SALE: 5 H.P. ELTO. RUN 15\nhours. Phone 782-R-2.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n; LIVESTPCK  auction, thurs-\n1    day, June 24, at 1 p.m. Regular\n.    sale held every other Thursday\nat Hunt's Spallumcheen Auction\nMart near Vernon. Gov't tested\n'   scales  tor  fat  stock.   Always  a\n\u25a0   good assortment of livestock at\nall sales. Livestock of any kind\naccepted,   up   to   start   of   sale.\n,    Write P.O. Box 393, Vernon, B.C.\n'    Phone 3120, Stan Hunt, Auctioneer. \"Sales Held Anywhere.\"\nWE HAVE A QUANTITY OF\n. partly grown cockerels to be\nraised for meat Heavy or light\nbreeds. Also pullets of all ages in\nwhite rocks, white leghorns, new\nHampshires and crosses. The\nAppleby Poultry Breeding Farm.\nMission City, B. C.\nTOfcEE HUAVY W6ftK HbftSES,\n1 real tine saddle horse and broke\nI to harness. 1 set heavy logging\nharness, 1 set farm harness. Frank\nAbey, Lardeau, B.C.\nFOR SALE: 6 MILK COWS, FRESH\nI and due to freshen soon. W. P.\nI   Sheloff, P.O. Box 247, Salmo, B.C.\n,ryflWflc&r_fl\u00bb-A-k.tt_i.\n|   oently freshened. Apply Nick\n|   Verlgln, Ymir, B. C.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nSEALED TENDERS, endorsed.\n\"Tender tor the Castlegar Co-Opor-\natlve Transport Society Garage,\nCastlegar, B. C, will be received\nby the Architect up to 5:00 p.m.\nJulj. 16th. \u2022\nPlana, specifications and conditions ot contract may be obtained\nfrom the Architect at 378 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C, on deposit of Twenty-\nfive Dollars ($25,00) for eooh set\nwhich will be refunded upon return\nof the documents In good condition\nby August 15th.\nEach tender must be accompanied\nby an accepted bank cheque on a\nchartered bank of Canada, made\npayable to The, Castlegar Co-Oper-\natlve Transportation'Society for ten\nper cent (10%) of the tender which\nshall be forfeited If the,party tendering declines to enter into the contract when called upon,to do so:\nTenders must be made out on the\nforms supplied. No tender will be\nconsidered having any qualifying\nolauses whatsoever, and the lowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted. \u25a0\nOn Behalf of the Director,\nlis* J. C. Williams,.     .\nArchitect,\n373 Baker St.,\n- Nelson, B, C,\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\nCHANG*! OF NAME, ACT, -\nREVISED STATUTES OF\nONTARIO, 1950, CHAPTER 47\nTAKE NOTICE that the application ot Anatoly Bojmuk residing at\nthe Village of Enterprise, in the\nTownship of Camden, County of\nLennox and Addington, in the\nProvince of Ontario, to change his\nname to Tollo Albert Boymer will\nbe heard by the presiding Judge of\nthe County Court of the County of\nLennox and Addington in his chambers at the Court House, Napanee,\nOntario, on Friday, the 23rd day ot\nJuly, 1954, at the hour ot eleven\no'clock in the forenoon.\nDATED at Kingston, this 24th day\nof June, A.D. 1954. - %\nRANKIN AND WRIGHT,\n71 Clarence Street,\nKingston, Ontario,   '\n\"\u00bb1800 FULL PRICH, 6-ROOM\nhouse. New. roof. Five lots. Garden, fruit trees. Apply A. Jeffrey.\nKaslo. .:'\u25a0\u25a0:'.\nIN THE MATTER OF\nTHE CHANGE OF NAME ACT,\nREVISED STATUTES OF\nONTARIO, 1950, CHAPTER 47\nTAKE NOTICE that the application ot Anatoly Bojmuk residing at\nthe Village ot Enterprise, in the\nTownship of Camdeh, County of\nLennox and Addington,' in. the\nProvince of Ontario, to change his\nname to Tollo Albert Boymer, will\nbe heard by the presiding Judge of\nthe County Court of the County ut\nLennox and Addington ln his chambers at the Court House, Napanee,\nOntario, on Friday,\"th-'2jMNa:rBf\nJuly, 1954, at the hour of eleven\no'clock In the\" forenoon.\nDATED at Kingston, this-24th\nday of June, A.D. 1954.\nRANKIN AND WRIGHT,\n71 Clarence Street,\nKingston, Ontario. \t\nMACHINERY\nTT\n.BONDED\n-     USlSD EQUIPMENT\n\u25a0 From Your\n\"CATERPILLAR\"\nDEALER\nGUARANTEED PERFORMANCE\non all Finning used equipment\nDon't guess . . . don't gamble , . .\nget full details from your nearest\nWinning atore nowl\n\"Cat\" D6 Tractor, hydraulic\nangledozer, Hyster winch,\nlights, guards. Bonded Buy, 30-\nday warranty, Vancouver\nFT-2169. PRICE ON REQUEST.\n\"Cat\" D7 Tractor, 3T series with\n7A dorer. Hyster winch and all\nguards. Just rebuilt Bonded\nBuy, 30-day Warranty Vancouver. FT-.143,\n$15,500\nInt. TD9 Tractor  (1953)  com-\ntlete with. Bucyrus-Erie Dozer\nhovel, machine like new. Buy\nand Try, Vancouver FT-2133.\n$8750\n\"Cat\" No. li Motor Grader\nwith 12 ft. blade scarifier,\nbumper, drawbar and lights,\ngood road maintainer. Buy and\nTry, Cranbrook, FT-1417.\n$5250\nWrite fdr Free, Illustrated\nUsed Equipment Bulletin\nBUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT\n' FINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\nPhone 930 - Nelson\nPhone 61 \u2014 Cranbrook\nFOR SALE NEAR PROCTER,\nabout 600 tt. black steel pipe, 3\"\ndiam. with heavy flanges welded\non. Approximately 1000 ft of 1%\"\ndiam. black pipe with standard\nscrewed ends and couplings.\nAbout 600 ft. of standard one-inch\ngalvanized pipe. Large quantity\n: of fittings and valves for above,\nOne good  sprlhg tooth harrow.\n< Smith's Hearth and Anvil. Three\nlarge field sprays with stands\nand inch and half hose, 50-ft.\nlengths for same. Apply Box 7107,\nDally News.\nFOR SALE: % VARD -H6VEL,\nsuitable tor (ravel pit also Diesel\npower units, oats, winches, etc.\nBayes Ltd-, 1016 S.W Marine\nDrive, Vancouver, or Cranbrook.\nB..C.   '\nWktsklM i 1.1.1 Jbffl BB$E\ncrawler tractor. A-1 shape. Hydraulic blade and winch. No reasonable offer refused. Box 4060,\nDaily News for particulars.\nWANTED MATCHED SET OF\nlady's golf clubs with club bag.\nPhone 527 or 703-R\n\u00bb^.:.j.Y:.,'i-.,\u25a0',\u25a0,.',.-\u25a0 :.\u25a0;\/'.    \u25a0 '.\nSMALL AMiflBtY AnB \u00abWF__6-\ntlonary business for sale. Good\nlocation. Apply 1103, Hall Mines\nRoad.       ______\u25a0\n'OR RENT- D-2 CAT AND FR-Nt\nend loader Basements and back\nfill. Write box 7674. DaUy News\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC, FOR SALE\nATTRACTIVE STUCCO HOME\nat 807 Bttker St Living room,\nfireplace, dining room, kitchen, 8\nbedrooms and bathroom, down, t\nbedrooms up. Hot water, automatic oil heat full basement drive -In\ngarage. Phone 487-R.\n2-BEDROOM BOMB WHle'tfttE-\nquires some finishing on 2.31\nacres with fruit trees and 268 ft\nlike frontage, Apply N. Pochay,\nnext to Johnstone Home,* North\nShore, West of ferry.   '\nNEW 4-ROOM MODERN-STUCCO\nhouse. Hardwood floors, electrlo\nhot water, wired tor electric\nrange, full basement. Apply Carl\nStensel,, Frultvale. B. C, after\n6 o'clock, .\nFOR SALE: FIVE-ROOM UN-\nfurnished houBo, on upper bench,\nKinnaird, B. C, For full particulars write Box 12, Kinnaird, B.\nor phone 8844,\nCHEAP FOR QUICK SALE: MOD-\nem 8-roomed house, 7 lots, close\nin. 210 Mill St., turn left Carbonate and Kootenay.\nFOR SALE! PARTLY FURNISHEO\nrooming house or will lease, at-,\ntractive location, good terms. Ph.\nS28-L. ' . '. -\nSMALL FARM .FOR SALE, ALSO\nsuitable tor tourist cabins. Close\nto highway. Box No. 7358, Dally\nNews. .     y   , \u2022\u25a0\u25a0.-,\u25a0\nFOR SALE: 2-BEDROOM HOUSE\non aero of land with fruit trees\nand gardens, Very reasonable,\nwith some terms. Ph. 241-L-3.\nFOB SALE FAIRVIIW DISTRICT,\n2-bedroom home, basement, now\nfurnace and unfinished- upstairs\nOn a 60x90 lot, Phone 972-X.\nHOUSE FOR, SALE \u2022<. 120-FOOT\nbeach, on North Shore at 0-Mile.\nPhone 318-L-l.\n0-ROOM HOUSE ON 7 ACRES OF\nland, View Street, Fairview. Box\n208, Nelson.\nMODERN HOME, FIVE  ROOMS.\nF.A. Baker, phone 10 or 1044-L.\nRENTALS\nURGENTLY WANTED TO RENT:\nhouse, 2 bedrooms. Apply R, G.\nScott Blue Top Auto Court or\nSelkirk Health Unit\nFOR RENT: ].0rtN__-___>, -N'E\n2-room apt, and 1 single. Hot and\ncold water.'Strathcona Hotel, Ph.\n197-X,\nWAOTEft._ tff \"ftlNT BY BOv-\nertimeht employee, a 2. bedroom\nhouse by Sept 1. Phone 570-X.\nFOR RENT: UNFURNISHED 3-\nroom apartment, close in. Suitable\nfor business couple, Box No. 7108.\nWANTED TO; RENT BY GOV-\nernment employee, a 2-bedroom\nhouse by Sept, 1 P>one 670-34.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nUphill District. $40 per month.\nBox 43j8, Dally News.\n3-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT,\nfurnished or unfurnished. Call\nat'614 Josephine St'\nFOR  RENT:  CEMfcfa. BL'OCK\n.building on Front Street. Apply\nJim's Radiator Shop.\nWANTED~BA-E-_-NT~H\"b\"U SI-\nkeeping room for two, or space to\nerect tentt Phone 1884.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM. FOR\nrent. Pleasant, newly decorated\nroom. 708 Victoria.\nALLEN    HOTEL:    HOUSEKEEP-\ning or sleeping rooms. Day, week.\nor month, 171 Baker Street\nFOR RENt-SMALTTSUlTErTWO\nrooms with shower.' Phone 381-R\nmornings.\n4-ROOM DUPLEX, UPHILL DIS-\ntrict. Wired for electric range.\nPh. 133.\n2-ROOM   UNFURNISHED   SUITE,\ndownstairs. Phone 1511 or 386-Y.\nWAltM,  HMUMMifl   IWSm\napt. Phone 650-X. Adults only.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM. FOR\nworking girl. 719 Stanley St.\n-trt-BX -,Ab-t,lltl-\"6riLY. 409\nSilica Street .     v\nCABII? f(.R H-N-.' AWLY 5i\nYmir Road.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST '41 STUDEBAKER HUB\ncap. Possibly t around Queen's\nBay. 306 Victoria St.. or ph. 563-X.\nK>__: LlQHW, 'IfflWALS. C. J.\n(Bpny). Please phone 954-X.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nABSAYIRS ANO  MINE\nREPRfc6ENtATIVE8\nl W  witoow-ON\"i. CO.. AS\nsayers 301 Josephine St.  Nelson\na a __!___ no-flumj ac\nAssayer Chemist YMine Rep\nENOINfBRS AND SURVEYORS\nB6Y6C A^UWR.'MI.A\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St; Nelson   Phone 1288.\nR K pSKWSi\nSuite No 8. 873 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1118  B.C   Land Surveyor\n_. <i SttAVt_tt Pb  6-oK 252\nKimberley   Phone 64\nBC Land Surveyor  Engineer\n.,\",:;GRAVEL.v;.,.,\/ .:\nfLW-Wih'.! \u00a35AND AMP ifiRtiSI.\ned Gravel Wholesale and dollv-\nered Phohe 1197.L' \u25a0': y ','\u201e\n-MACHINISTS\n\u25a0'  \\     \u25a0' \u25a0'   ;    -\nBENNETTS LIMTTEB\nMaenine   Shop    Acetylene,  and\nelectric  weldinR   nissioi   i-i*wind\nina   Phone 693. 324   Veroun St\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES\nCAR CERTIFICATE FOR SALE,\nDealer will honor full face' value\nof $500. Owner will sell same for\n$400. No trade-in will be considered and salo must be on new ear.\n\u2022 Box 4389, Nelson News.   .\n1038-.0 FORD SEDAN. CHASSIS\n1988. in 1950 new motor, new\nhydraulic brakes installed, com\nPlate rewiring dona. Price $268.\nBox 4108, Dslly News. >\nWtf'8A_jS Oft P-BCTCT UT_\nmodel car. Fargo Del., 8000 careful miles. A-1 condition. Ph. 270-X\nor call at. 818 Observatory St,\n, after 6 p.m.\nfda -Airi imi mSs&m\ntruck, Good motor. Very food\ntires. Flat deck. $1400. Box 4061,\nDaily News,\ntm sa'ls mt. pTOWwra.\nlet truck. Low mileage, Good\ncondition, Rivervlew Service, ph.\n189-L-l.\n*mS .\u2022WUKBLTrAII-Er F09\nsale. Price $206, Apply Oo Van-\nin, Shoreacres.\nKrit\"_A--- CBSv'.-.'-lteLtriUi. .\ndoor sedan, Seat covers and\nheater, $1150. Ph. 1221-R.\nFOR SALB: '\u00ab SfBtlfe. %-_6N\ntruck in A-1 shape. Full price\n$475. R. Dnuphlnals, Salmo.\nWR''-A_\u00bbrf5t4\"*B-_-V;'' TUDbR\nGood conditions price $690. Phone\nYmir, l-Y-l\nreS'SAtl.: 19116 i-fifl.Ok i-b6-ft\nexcellent condition. Ph. 1223-X.\nl656'Ba_vT'SBl5A_'fil!L in Gd-b\n; condlUon. Ph. 678-L-2. :\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR  SALE:   16-FT.   MAHOGANY\n. oak   ribbed. constructed   boat\nNfowly finished inside and, put\nApply 788 6th Street, evenings,\nWAMMfr-U -ft 1\u00bb-W,'!_6W-\nboat wltb or without outboard.\nApply Box 7892, Dally Naws:\n45*66. 'Ikmm VbR  SAl,_.\nExcellent sea boat, E. C. Wraggs,\nNelson, ;' '-' '\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES'\nONLY $2000 bOWN: BUSY.ClAFE\nwith rooms above all rented\nSuite for owner. Lease and option. Home taken In trade. P.O.\nBox 109, Salmo, or ph. 26, Salmo.\nFOR SALE-LIGHT LUNCH AND\ncoffee counter; confectionery -\nDowntown Trail Box 4318, Daily\nNews. .        , ;\u2022, \u25a0. .\n'Classified    Adve'rtlsliia'   Rates:\nj 16c, per line first msertion.and\n. non-cohsecutive (hs5rtfons\nlie Une pet consecutive insertion  after  first  Insertion\n48c line (or 6 consecutive Insertions. .'-'I\n$156 Une fpr month (26 Consecutive lnsortlonj)   Box numbers llo extra- Cover*, any\nnumber ot insertions,\nPUBLIC   iLFUAL.   NOTICES,\nTENDER, etc - 20c per line\nfirst  insertion    16c  per  line\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscriptions Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Hera)\nBy carSiei  per week,\nin advance 'id\n. By carrier \":        $1500\nUnited. States. United Kingdom\nOne month         ; 1.25\nThree months   -....\u00bb      375\nSix months _      7.50\nOne year      , 1500\nMail hi Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month      $1.00\nThree months         2.75\nSix months  ._..:_      6.50\nOne year -. 10.00\nWhero extra pottage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nSlow Drop In Some Prices Raises\nHope of Easing U.S.Pockelbooks\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'..   By SAM DAWSON      .\nNEW YORK (AP)~In the United States pressure on tho pbekct-\nbook is easing a. little here and\nthere as summer comes. There's\nhops that before tht hot weather\nio over, prices may be still lower.\nCompetition among salesmen,\nand a growing abundance of raw\nmaterials and mamifactured goods,\nare tha underlying causes.\nWholesale food prlees havt dropped. Talk of lower prices for still\nmort foodstuffs is being heard.\nMORE BARGAIN8\nBargains appear .mora frequently\nat the clothing counters. Gasoline\ncuts appear in scattered areas\u2014despite tha Insistent! of oil industry\nspokesmen that general price -cuts\nare unlikely. Prloss of a number\nof building materials art a little\nlower than' a. year ago.'   y -\nCounter to all this good news for\nthe consumer, however, is a good\ndeal of talk of higher prices for tht\nbasic commodity, steel. Much of tht\ntalk it based on tht bargaining Just\nnow between management and labor over ntw pay. contracts.\nSHOPPERS DO WELL   \"-'-.\nThe carpet makers art beginning\nto raise thoir prices. Thoy cite an\nIncrease in tht cost ot carpet wool.\nBut thrltfy shopeprs have been\ndoing pretty well for some time\nnow' ln the stores ih many, lints-\nfood, apparel, household appliances.       \u25a0    . -J        '.\u2022'.'...\nSome of the lower, prices in. the\nshops aren't reflected In the factory .trice lists. Merchants have\nshaved retail prices tor promotion\npurposes, or granted discounts or\ngenerous trade-in allowances.\n4'\/a PER CENT OUT ,\nSome merchants sty they art\nlooking forward to seeing these\nunofficial lower prices openly listed by some factories this fall.\nMail order houses, whose sales\nhave been trailing last year by a\ngreater margin than retailors in\ngeneral, are starting to lower thett\nprices ln the catalogues,\nPrices ln the,new fall book of\nSears, Roebuck, for example, average out 8% per cent below its\nlast fall catalogue. Sears says its\nprices this fall will bo the lowest,\non average, since 1050.\nBen . Johnson,; the English poet\ntnd dramatist who died ih 1637, was\nthe posthumous son of a clergy-\nLighthouse Life\nKeeps Folks Busy\nPORT.MEN1ER, Anticostl Island\n(CP)-On a bleak, wind-furrowad\npoint of Anttcost island, stands a\nwhite tower surrounded by a number of small buildings, This is tht\nworld of J. M. Duguay lighthouse-\nkteper.,N \u2022 \u2022 ..\nj Tho department of transport boa-\ncon, nine miles over a bump rood\ntrom Port Mounter. Antlcostl's only\nsettlement has been .tht borne for\nthree, generations of the Duguay\nfamily; '\"...,..     ..'     \u2022\" \u2022 S.\nTht light that Duguay's father\ntended, until ho died' at 71 flicks\nout over'ont ot the country's busiest shipipng routes\u2014tho St Lawrence. His grandfather, too, climbed the long stairs, to the tower loft\nto light tht lamp at dusk and extinguish lt at dawn.. \u2022 ''.   y.\nLife around', the lamp is sli-plc\nbut hard for spare, tanned Duguay,\nhis wife and'the three, of .their\neight children who have not yet\ngone off to school, \u2022\u25a0\n. Everything revolves around their\noym' tight little community \u25a0 \u2014the\nbarns, the. Duguay home, tho boat\nhouses, tho buildings housing the\ntog and radio equipment and, overlooking, it all, the slender tower\nhousing the light\nBetween-late November and early\nMarch, while winter stops shipping\ntnd the light stands idle, Duguay\noverhauls the lamps, tht radio beacon an aothsr equipment. In odd\nmoments he hunts for squaw duck\nor deer tnd* rabbit. '\nMrs. Duguay cant the meat to\nprovide variety to the supplies\nbrought twice a yeor by a transport department supply vessel. She\nalso looks after a cow and bull,\npoultry and hogs to keep her family in fresh milk and eggs, pork\nand occasionally veal. ; ,\n.Their'home Is modern, with a\nUrge refrigerator - and \u25a0 running\nwater from a stream Duguay. traced,\ndammed and then\" tapped\/\n--When the shipping season starts,\nDuguay rises before dawn. He joins\nan assistant, an islander whose salary ho hlmse-.'payssv'itt'the light\nchamber where they check Instruments and extinguish the- light.\nThe light itself is virtually a huge\nCinodrt -Tfiifd in\n'53 WM Trade\n3\nOTTAWA (CP) -t, Canada again\nranked third, among \"tht world's\ntrading powers ln 1058. .\n'The United States was flfSt, Britain second and Canada, third ln\ntotal -trade, the bureau of statistics\nreported.;. , \u2022;- .,'.,'\u2022',?\nCanada has held the third spot aU\nthrough the post-war years with the\nexception of 1951 when she was\nbeaten out for - the;-position by\nIWnOt^.    (;Y \u25a0   .;,;*.'_-\nIn 1953 U. S. Imports and exports\ntotalled $27,604,000,000; Britain, $10,-\n890,000,000; Canada, $9,458,000,000^\nWest Germany $6,160,000,0.0; France\n$7,793,000,000; Belgium and Luxembourg combined, $4,883,000,000.\nLast year Canada accounted, Wri\n0.3 per cent of the trade in the nod-\nSoviet world, the bureau- estlmiald.\nSmall Scottish Town Thrives on\nWorld Trade in Knitwear\nY'M\n, By RON 8VAN6   .\n- Canadian Preii Sth.f Writer\nHAWICK, Scotland (CP) - This\nlittle \"boom town o'\"tho border,\" in\nthe. Cheviot hills,'84 miles, southeast\nof Edinburgh, is teaching Britain a\nlesson in economics.\nFor Hawick (pronounced hoik)\nis noted for cashmere and knitwear garments and it's proving that\nquality craftmanship, 'plus modern\nselling and production; methods,\ncan pull In thousands of dollars\nfrom txporta., \u25a0  . '\nThe 26 Hawick knitwear and\nhosiery firms pmploy only 3500 of\ntha town's 17,000 citl.cns, but ln\nths last flvt years thoy have earned almost \u00a310,000,000 in exports to\nCanada and the United States. - .\nNOTABLE RECORD   .\nAs Sir Norman Kipping, director\ngeneral ot tht Federation of British Industries; said recently:\n\"Hawick, in relation to Its.jlst,\nis responsible tor the great volume\nof exports -of any town in the United Kingdom.\" ,;.i'\u2022...'. .\" ;\nLast year Hawick -firms posted\nrecord -overseas sales'of ''13,844,-\n141, a 17.3 per cent inrcease _ver\nthe previous mark. Each Hawick\ncoal-oil laipp,: revolving, fejttrt\nsteady click-clack of 'bearings\nevery 18 seconds. It Is rated at 56,-\n000 candlepower and it lit with a\nibatoh. -.'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ..- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\n':\u25a0_ With the light out, Duguay returns to _ed for an hour's sleep-and\nis up again at.six o'clock_tp^wo.k\nar6upd\"the~lis.uSe a&cRJo oatrjobs\nuntil early evening when it is\nagain time to light the lamp.\nworker accounts annually for. production \u25a0 worth \u25a0 \u00a31400 tnd earns\nabout \u00a3870 in export sales.\nQuality it a tradition in Hawick,\nwhere the knitting Industry is some\n180 years old. ..\"'.'' .        jjf\nB068 GOE8TOO M\n\"Wt tend our salesmen out;* (MV,\nOlivor,  chairman  of  ont  of 'the\nbiggest firms' explained, \"but wa''_\u00bb !\nnot Jeavo it all to them when ffl\nobmea  to : (dolltr < markets.' $_ht:\ntimes out of 10 the bolts goes'Joo,\nto meet the customers and wake\nsurt that th^yi.|'satisfied.\" ;|*T.\n. The Hawick-jbotn txtcutlvt \u00bbhtaS\ntravelled 60,00o miles since 1048 to'\ncheek ..pytreta's mirkta andTRia':\nust  returned from y a   16,000-mile\ntoiir through Cahada-and tht Wit-\n,ed.-;Syittt,-;.:r- ;\u25a0>'  '.\nAlthough' ''flgiires 'en Caitda'tJ\nshare In the Hawick sales aro not\navailable, Canadian traders are\nwell known in the little town that\nlies ,at the l_JCtion'})f the Teviotj?\nand Slitrig rivers.    \u2022<        S_j\nCanadians generally come Kok-|\ning for the fine'teshlnere 4wln|\nsweater Bets which are Hawlck.\nbiggest dollar winners. Almost 100\nper cent of the cashmere prcSuQta.'\nmade here ore sold in the U. SJand\nCantdt., .'  .    ><-'r-:,'       ;\u25a0   . -\"-;\nOUVer .and-Jhle^Salesmen ^at\u00ab'|\nlooking for even better tales s.on\nIn North Ameries.-: The: Hawiclt\nfirm r^rtijtly Signed Christian Dior,;V\nfamed. Parish fashion designer to\ncreatt;.-;. JhlgK-fashiih cashmere'\n. yaatera li>t ..t_ .Ca.na-lan and U. S.\nmarkets. So far,the only information available on these heir creations is their price\u2014$50 each. Sv'7:\nNet Navigation\nHazard Found\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. (CP)-If a\nship's compass acts up.it may be\nbecause someone on the bridge is\nwearing an orlbn shirt.\nA report issued to shipowners and\nharbor boards by the New Zealand,\npoints to this new navigational\nhazard.\nA ship's officer reported recently\nthat the compasses were oscillating in a queer way. On investigation it was found that they behaved ln this manner only when this\nparticular officer was in the vicinity,       v v \u25a0.-\u2022'\u2022:.->.'\nIt was found that ht was wearing an orlon shirt. Whan he wore\nit the compasses oscillated, but he\nChanged to a shirt of other material they behaved in an exemplary mtnner. '   ,.   '\u25a0\nIt is considered that static electricity may have been responsible,\nbecause it was noted that when\nht pulled oft tilt shirt it gtvt off\nsparks and attracted .mall pieces\nof paper. _j\nThe' news hits mariners who have\nprofited by tho easy laundering Of\nsynthetic fabrics. ......        . ..at[ ;\nOCT. 15 DEADLINE\nOTTAWA.(CP) \u2014 A royjl commission established to investigate\ncopyright trade marks and patent\nlawS has set Oct.* 15 as the deadline\nfor tiling representations from Individuals and organisations.'\nOILY FISH _\nOil pressed from the Oollchan\na smelt-like,fish,.was once. an.Important trade article among British Columbia Indians.   . >\nBuying-Selling-Renti\nMAU\nYour Classified Want Ad on ^is Hand\nORDER FORM   \u25a0\n\u25a0 1    1 11    \u25a0 in 11 -,--_s \u25a0       \u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0*\u25a0usmammmm\n1 \u25a0\n.    \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 'ss       s '     .    1 \\\n  1   11      ' . ii  1 i  '   11 '.\"}' I\n _____ -\u2014 i -_ '.'\u2022      f    :,r\".   ''.\\.\npi^\u00bb^itJL-_______l____________^_M\nFIRST LINI\n. ,V.   ,\u201e.\"^ ...... ..   .....\nSECOND LINK\nTHIRD LINE'\nFOURTH'UNlf '\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word ih each space\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words .,\n(Box 00 Nslsoh News.). '... \u25a0. .':\u2022,.\"    \u2022   ;  '.'. . ::; ;,-J -. ,..'^;,\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\n3 TIMES\n!\nt\nLiNir\n\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0y a\\\n3'lr\n4 , .\n..   \u201e   ,V.    J   .\n6\n7\n8\nYOUR NAME\n< TIMf*\n\u25a088\n1.44\nm\n8.36\n3.84\na Minimum chorgo is two lines\n0 Add He for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 1ty% from above rates If poymont Is\n'-''. Slttlfllll^''- '\n\u2022 Toko advantage ef the low six time rate\nQ\nADDRESS.\nNa';<rf Days Ad Is To Run:.\nPayment Enclosed _____\n:*miku.y.' '-y-.' '\u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\n\u25a0    ';    \u25a0'\u25a0',.-..-   ' y.   . \u2022\u2022.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,.\u25a0,    ;.'\u25a0>.,.  ..-'   .;''     -. .   >-'\"y,> '    r* -.'   \u2022''\u00bb\u2022_,;; \u25a0       -y-^    \u25a0\nNelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, 6. C. -\n:,:,'\u25a0\u25a0       -\u25a0\nm^SSmWS\n '\t\n ffl:\nPfPPP\n1   '        '\n0^4\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954\nSomething NEW In\n\"Keep-Them-Hot-or-C6ld-Bottles\"\nAladdin's\nNEW\nFEATURE\n:'       -\u25a0        \u25a0 \/' ... '\nMakes Old-Style Vacuumware. Obsolete.\nThtrt  Is  an   ALADDIN   VACUUM   BOTTLE\nFor .EVERY USE\n$1.85-$2.75-$3.95\nMANN\nan*\n,___&__\u00a3_3fl_IM___E__I\nWIGINTON\n> MOTORS LTD.\nj ' ftONTIAO - BUItsK\nil; . :.- G.M.C. TRUCK* .\n-iKt* *bb P\u00ab'ht,;Wnrii a Soaolalty\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\n-Phono 8W\n676 Bak.r Street'\niCAMPBEtl. SHANKLAND\nMS       -;^\u00ab;.Cjfc; \u25a0-     -.\nChartered Accountants\nI ,    Auditors\n.||fs'Btker.8t.:' . ,   ', -Phone 238\nm\nGovernment Licenced\ncwi\nElectrical Contractor\nllrtli Short' -ifhoija 17M-L-2\n?\"\"\u25a0   :   ' Nelson SjBL   .\ntCMtstMI-ED ADS (JET RESULTS\nFIVE; MINING\nCLAIMS STAKED\nFive mineral'claims were recorded and - two work certificates were\nissued at the Nelson City Court\nHouse during the month ot June.\nAlfred Endersby, Jr.; received\ntWJ certificates :oi -work tor \"Snovy\nBird, yractional\" and. \"Snow,Bird.1'\nMining claims were issued to\nF. W. Cartwright; Jr. ol Nelsbn tor\n\"Spring Fractional\", located in the\nSheep Creek district and bordering on the Creek tnd government\nroad. Two; mining claims were issued to Floyd Magnuson. Of Seattle, Wash., for his two claims\n\"Floyd NO, 1\" ind \"Floyd No. 2\";\nldljated nesr Fruitvale in the Nel-\nson mining district. M. M. Butorae\nof Trail received, a mining claim\nJ6r '__4'. located On th* North .side\not tlie S.lrtio River; approximately\ntwo mljen from its corifluto.t) With,\ntfie., Wn4-',Or*illt ;Riv\u00abi',';-J4ns*?\nBuchanan.ot.Trail. tlsKrecilved 1\nBlSint' Jor \"Eileen\", Maithis, site ot\n^p4>;;;a!di!.V'::\\v'     \u25a0'>-\u2022- ''\n*YGMY oWl? .\nSmallest of Canadian owl species, the pyghiy owl of British Col-\numbla i|| only' about six inches\nlong.-.y\"^ -'\"'\u25a0',.' u.\"?'),'\" \u25a0 -.'\u2022'\u25a0\nNelson Building\nPermits Total\nMin June\nBuilding permits Issued by.the\ncity of Nelson in June numbered 29\nfor . Work estimated at $32,470,\nLargest item was a permit Issued\nto J. W. Gowan of 808 Sixth Street\nto build a house at on estimated\ncost of $0000. Next largest was a\npermit issued .to .the Civic. Centre\ntor $4800 tor construction .'of a\nramp.    '_ .\nDetailed:, list df. permits issued\nIncluded: John; Towler of 211 Silica\nStreet to renew rooting on kitchen\nand porch at $50; T. A. Spelrs' of\n1324 Falls Street to remove sun\nporch 'and extend living room at\n$300; Bank of Montreal to level up\nand strsigten - verandah and concrete footings under posts on house\non Hondryx Street at $250.\nH. C. Elser ot 1022 Hall MineB\nRoad to build a chimney and other\nrepairs' at $175; Guy E. Mayo of\n619 Mill Street to re-roof house at\n$300; B. R. Metcalfe of HO Nelson\nAvenue to apply a duroid roof on\nhouse' at $250; Winnlfred U Lyon\nof 310 Second Street, to-re:s!de front\npt hojise, alter; window and, build\nfoundation under sun por.ch at $400;\nMra.! F^FerassO; of 1323<Wt__t4 Street\ntb>; repair \"toundatrdn -'tt'' $150;;\nHughes and Stuart to erect \u00bb wooden, t^lng \u00abt \u2022 |150^ oijd to J '*'\n6rah|m; of1 424 Bobsoij' Street': to\n_\\illd 'a\u25a0', 80-fddt'.-concrete retaining\nw__it'ai-$2so>:        \/ :[i.'i. l.y.\nOther permits were issued to:\nJames F. Smith of 124 High Street\nto shingle roof, take out. partition\nin basement and Insulate and\" line\nwith insul board at $300, S, Cle-\nchler of 1404 Mines Road to.;bulld\nstepS from house to road, and par-\ntial basement foundation at $35;\npeor'ge S. MUJlgeri.df' 723 Latimer\nto build chimney and close in front\nverandah, at,$300. \u2022' ,,- -.,...'-. ',.\n- E. .Pipplot 508 Davies Street to\nextend house and build concrete\nfoundation -at $3000; _t. W. Wilkinson of 912 Silica Street to- remove\nold woodshed and construct a new\n-nt-4t r$150:, B, J; Kelly;.to'dismantle a' building, belonging to\n.Nelson SchoolVblstrlct at '324 Nelson-Avenue tt $50; John A.,Piters\not 307 Delbruck Street to alter\nfront and .back porches end Jlut siding on house at $400. Roy ,S, Olson\ndf .'.lSyer'ndn Street to ,re. ilr fldbr\nat $50; Mrs, 'Agnes M. Skliiner of\n904 .Fourth.-Street;, to;re-shingle\nhouse, roof.at.,$100; FVH;:.Sttinger.\nofr-tat Carbonate, Street, to rertibye\nutility.:shed :t\u00bbid .rebjiild at 'fc-O;\nand to F. Stenson of 1334 Falls\nStreet tb shingle side of house at\n$33> ,'--. y; ..    \u25a0 \u25a0'''.','\nBuilding permits were issued to\nHERBERT  CHALUK\n\u201e-'. .In training as an RCAF mechanic at, Edmontonf hat\" JUst\nspent a two-weeks leave with his\nparSntt, Mr. and Mrs, George\nChaluk, 714 Silica Street    -\n-Qtf<J   TOW\nXBOON^ Scotland (CD^The, forward Section' Of an 800-foot war:\ntime;;foisting dock;arrived at this\nScottish ^brt \u25a0 for fireakini up, after a 15-month voyage in tow from\nSJnitpArp.' ''\"'''\nHistoric copper mines at Butte.\nMontana, have a total of more than'\n2,700 miles] of'tunnels. ,v\nE.-C. Douglas of 1124 Stanley Street\nto tear, out old piaster and replace\nwith wall board at $75; Palm Dairies at 686 Baker Street to hang- a\nhedn sign at *450;'Vic 'Graves of\n702 Baker Street tb move, partition,\nput veneer on floors and build\n;k_tchen cupboards at $1000; Stan'\ndard Oil Company of 95 Government Road to remove partition of\ndyke wall at. Standard Oil plant,\ninstall fuel tank and continue dyke\naround same; anil to the Canadian\nLegion to move particition, build a\nnew. ont, make reading room and\nstorage room, coyer celling Of bowling alley with fibre board, put\nhardboard on -floor and, relocate\n.door to storage roOm.1    ,\nNews^ of the I)av\n-HATES: SOo line, 40o lint blacn ftee type; larger typo rates on\n' regueit Minimum two Unas. 10% discount for prompt payment\nFuller Brush Representative,   j   I light  housekeeping room \\ for\nDon E. Sergent - Phono 1335     rent. Phone 1546-X.\nHunting and Fishing Licences\n...'..      JACK BOYCE\nNeed a watch repair? Call\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY, 611 Baker\nWest Lake Cottages FI8H DERBY\nMay 1 to Nov, 1..Ph. 3-W, Balfour\nSTRAWBERRIES  FOR   SALE.\nP. J. Lebadoff, Glade, B. C.\nFOR SALE - BOATHOUSE WITH\n22-FT.  PRONTAQE.   PHONE   902.\nWanted immediately, housekeeper\nto look after two small children.\nApply 75 High St.\nThe-drawing for honorary president ot the A.C.T. 83 Club, will be\nheld Saturday, July 10.\nAnother. shipment of Austrian\nScythe Blades just received. Get\n\u25a0 yours today at HIPPERSON'S.\nBub-bub-bubbly Qurds \u2014 A teal\nparty drink.'     y\" f\nCOLUMBIA BOTTLING WORKS.\nJockey Shorts,;Shirts, .T;Shlrts,\nSummer Weight Combinations.\n,    '-, tt WADE'S   ..;        >\n.  Garden Hats, children's 99c;\n.-' >   vladies'168a ''at.'\"\"'-.'\"'\nTOT-N-TEE(. SHOP\nWe doctor shoes, heel,them; attend\ntheir dyeing sind Save .their soles!\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP\nEXTRA PANTS FRE?\nOn made-to-measure clothing\nduring. July tt G-D-REY'S\nGrey Blankets \u2014 Sturdy, warm.\nPriced frOtti $14.95 pair,\nSTEALING HOME FURNISHERS,\ntOt EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone fc. J. Kelly, 378-R-3  .. .\nYOUR MIMEOGRAPH SERVICE\nPrinted cotton waffle, in .smill\nplaids. Very new. 36\" wide; Yd. $1.19\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOODS  ,\nk' \"   Y (. 'l'      \u25a0'''\nLarge Beach Towels in beautiful\nacquatlc designs! Size 36\"x60\". Bach\n$3.50. TAYLOR'S DAY 00661\n,...t \",, ,   \u25a0\nWe have three floor model chest-\nitt ield sifltds, 1 red, 1 green, 1 bilge.\nReduced to clear at .\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS.\nFLOWER- FOR EVERY '\u25a0,'\u25a0\u25a0'\nOCCASION      '\nPHONE 187      .\"\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\n.    GRIZZELLES' FLORI8T8\nPrepare- for canhlngl Buy your\ncold-pack canner now. Blue-speck\nenamelled canners, 1 quart jar capacity with wire rack now in stock\nHIPPEHSON'S\nChina Cups and Saucers, Pixie\nPlanters and Ornaments of all kinds\nat \u2022'\nKOOTENAY  8TATIONER8\n,.;.ANO .8PORT8 8HOP\nPOTATO DUST\nCOMPLETE CONTROL OF\nIN8ECT8 AND  BLIGHTS ON\n\u2022    POTATOES\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nRubber and Plastic Garden Hose,\nSprinklers, Ideal Heads, Blake\nand Ideal Wings, Screws and Pel\nlets, Lawn Soakers, Hose Nozzles,\nCouplings, Clamps, Menders, etc,\nWOOD  VALLANCE  HARDWARE\nGLASS SHELVES and BRACKETS\nPlate and Crystal glass shelves\nfor homes, stores or cafes. Chrome\nand cadmium plated brackets and\nother fittings at\nTi H.: WATERS A CO. LTD.\nPhone-166 101 Hall Street\n- FUNERAL NOTICE\n, KNAUF \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe. late Jacob. Arthur Knauf of\nProcter will be. held on Friday at\n2 p.m., from the Thompson Funeral\nPome. Rev, Allan Dixon will officiate and Interment will follow ln\nNelson Memorial Park,\n' FUNERAL NOTICE\nLECKETT \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe.late -Mrs. -Bslph Leckett (nee\nJane Sinclair), will be held Wednesday, July 7, 1954, at 2 p.m\u201e from\nSt Paul's United Church in Fruit-\nva'.e. Rev. T. M. Karpoff will officiate and interment will be in toe\nfijj-ly plot, Frultvale Memorial\nCemetery, Clark's Funeral .Chapel\nin charge.      '\nPlastic Auto\nGOTHENBURG.: Sweden (CP)-\nThe first passenger car with a\nplastic body .built in Sweden has\nbeen' produced here. The sleek vehicle Is. a twO-seater with removable top. powerdd with a 70-horse-\npower engine capable of more than\n1)0 miles an hour..\nLONDON (CP)-rC. E. Carrfng-\nton, educational' secretary to the\nCambridge University Press, has\nbeen appointed research professor\nof Commonwealth,relations by the\nRoyal Institute df international Affairs.\nPrepare for First\nDive of Nautilus\nWASHINGTON (Ap).- Sailors\nof the first U. S. fission fleet are\npolishing off the training they need\nto-operate the world's first atomic\nsubmarine.\nDuring much of the last three\nyears, the men have lived and\nworked on tn arid plain in Idaho,\nwhile they helped, to build, and\nlearned to operate the. original,\nland-based prototype ot the nuolear\npovyer plant that will drive the USS\nNautilus.. '\u25a0\",    \u25a0  '\u25a0 \u25a0\nThe Nautilus will ba ready tor\nth\" big day probably sometime later\nthit summer or early fall when she\nbeads down tho Thames river for\nLong Island sound where tht Initial\ntrials will be run.\nBEVAN PLANS\nREP CHINA VISIT\n\" IPSWICH, England (Reuters) -s-\nAneurin Bevan, leader of the Labor\nParty's left wing, declared he and\nother Labor Party leaders are going to visit Communist China\nln AuguSt to avoid the \"great\nmistake ot isolating China the way\nRussia was after the Russian revolution.\"\nThe Labor Party delegation,\nheaded by Clement Attlee, fill seek\nto develop friendship between the\ntwo countries and develop trade\nand commerce, ho added.\nCAP DAMAGES EYE    .\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two city\neye specialists were, rushad by air\nMonday'to the ald: of an unidentified 18-year-old youth who suffered a badly; damaged eye when a\ndynamite cap\" exploded, at - Anderson lake, near LiUooet, B. C.\nFIELD, Ont, (CP)-A $100,000\nfire Sunday night demolished the\nQueenneville garage block in this\nNorth Bay district community.\n__\nTHOMPSON .\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service*\n'. AMBULANCE SERVICE\nMS Knntenny St-       Phone 881\nHove His Job Don* Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE BIS\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED '\n\u25a0 trait'<\nNelson Upholstery\n..     Phono 14*\nPRO\nSlacks\nBy Warron K. Cook\nA very important contribution .to your appear-\nonce. ' They streamline\nthe middle. No bulging -\nwaist bond; no extra belt,\npleats lie. flat, hips are\ntrim.\nIn a variety of materials\nand shades.\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE    .\nBox 100 < Phont SI\nThe' first white traders reached\nthe   Peace   river   tertitory about'.\n1788.  .; \u25a0\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED 4 REPAIRED        ,\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n618 I--RONT ST. PHONE 88\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMake Your Own Home-Made\nBread With ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nPull Instructions on Evtry. Ptekigt\nPhont 838 or Call\n9. ELEVATOR CO. LTD,    .\nELLISON MILLING\nFILM, KODAK,\nCAMERAS\nC-meras $4.76 -$67.00\nFor Best Results\nFrom Your Exposed Film\nLeave or Mail To\nCity Drug\n' Your Rexall Pharmacy\nPhono 34, Day - 807-R Night\n'    , \" '   BOX 480\n:\n\u00a7\nPROGRAMS\nJULY 7, WEDNESDAY   \u2014\"SEASONS\",   \"NEWFOUNDLAND   SCENE\", \"THE   SERGEANT SEES IT THROUGH\",   \"WHEELS ACROSS INDIA\"\nJULY   IT,   SUNDAY\nJULY 14, WEDNESDAY\nJULY   16,   FRIDAY\nJULY   18,   SUNDAY\nJULY 21, WEDNESDAY\n\u2014\"AWAY WITH THE WIND\", \"WARNING TO SAJL\"\n\u2014\"BRIAR CUP PLAYDOWNS\", \"TH|S IS NYLON\", \"AIM\nFOR SAFETY\", \"UNDERGROUND EAST\"\n\u2014\"BRIAR CUP PLAYDOWNS\" y'\"\n-r=\"THE LOON'S NECKLACE\" , '\n\u2014\"SHOOTING IS FUN\", \"WINGED HORIZON\", \"SEARCH\nUNENDING\", \"MARX BROTHERS AT THE CIRCUS\"\nJULY   25,   SUNDAY   \u2014\"EAST AND WEST KOOTENAYS\", \"WEB OF LIFE\",\nJULY 28, WEDNESDAY\nA U G.   1,   SUNDAY\nAUG. 4, WEDNESDAY\nAUG. 11,.WEDNESDAY\nAUG. 18, WEDNESDAY\nAUG. 25, WEDNESDAY\n\u2014\"EAST OF RftMBAY\". \"H\u00ab?HI IC\u00abTS OF INTERNATIONAL\nGOLF RULES\", \"BLASTING CAPS\"\n\u2014\"^YSTERTpFTHEINCAS'', \"PIN HIGH\" :\n\u2014\"WHEELS ACROSS THE ANDES\", \"ARIZONA STORY\"\n\u2014\"NORTHWARD TO NOME'V\"THE LIVE GHOST\"\n\u2014\"VALLEY OF TRIUMPH\"    .\n\u2014\"RUBBER RIVER\", \"STRATEGIC MATERIALS\"     ?\n1954 Summer Season Opens\nWednesday, July 7th at 8:30 p. m.\n\/\nv \u2022\nOfficial Opening by Mayor Joseph Kary\nM.C.   MR. GIL MILLER\nFILMS-PROGRAM I: July 7, Wednesday -\n-      \"THE SEASONS\", \"NEWFOUNDLAND SCENE\", \"THE SERGEANT SEES IT THROUGH\"\n\"WHEELS ACROSS INDIA\"       *'\nFILMS WILL RE SHOWN EVERT WEDNESDAY\nand SUNDAY Throughout JULY and AUGUST\nFREE     Evenings 8:30 p*nt.     FREE        council will be appreciated\n\u2014*\u2014\u2022.\u2014\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT IS SPONSORED BY\n- Imperial Oil Ltd. -\nme\n.: .':..-.:,\u25a0\u25a0'..'.'. .,. ..:.-.:\n,., -,_;,;..'.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1954_07_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427838","@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":"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"}],"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":"1954-07-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1954-07-06 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\/1.0427838"}