{"@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":"1954-07-30","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427839\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Red Rejection of\nAttacks Protest\nAngers U.S.\nEisenhower Sees .Red Action as\nMethod of Dividing Britain, U.S.\nBH JOHN ti. HIGHTOVIER\n\u25a0 i    . WASHINGTON (AP)\u2014Red Cflina has rejected Amer-\nJfean protests against Communist fighter plane attacks on\n| British apd American aircraft over the South China Sea,\n|' lt was announced Thursday.\nThe state department, noting that the Reds had re-\nteed even to- consider Hie protests, said the matter \"will\nMot lie   permitted   to   rest\n\u25a0there,\"\nB .It-did not.say. what new ste.s\ni Blight be taken. One possible coiirse\nI might be .in the United Nations.\n; There the U. S. might use Red China's conduct in the whole affair to\nsupport   the   American   argument\nithat Communist China does not de-\n, serve UN membership.\nThe latest turn of events ap\npeared to bear out President Elsen\n;hower's view, expressed1 at his\npress conference Wednesday, that\nthe Chinese Reds are trying to play\nthe clashes in such a way as to di-\n. vide Britain and the United States.\n, For while Pelplng refused to accept the American protests, it apologized promptly to Britain for destruction of the British plane Involved.\nBritain protested  last Saturday,\nthe day after Red Chinese fighters\n, shot down a Cathay Pacific airliner\noff Hainan Island with loss of 10\n7Uves, including three Americans.\nEight persons were saved by a U.S.\nNavy amphibian ln a daring rescue\noperation.\nLast weekend, two American carrier-based planes shot, down two\nRed Chinese aircraft over the area.\nThe American planes said they\nopened' fire after being attacked.\nTliey were hunting for possible survivor's of the airliner.\nRED PROTEST TO UN\nPelplng radio Thursday reported\nrejection of the American protests\nand said Red China had protested\nto the United Nations over the\nshooting down of the two Communist planes.\nAt United Nations headquarters\nIn New, York, it was announced\nthat the Chinese protest had been\nreceived and copies had been distributed to member delegations.\nPeiping radio,' in announcing rejection of the protests,' said they\nwere lodged \"after the shooting\ndown of two Chinese aircraft in order to falsify the facts and conceal\nthe realities of the case.\"\n$1&qm\nLIBRARY\nVICTORl\no>607\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with a few\nlight showers in afternoon, clearing\nln the evening. A little warmer.\nLight north winds. Low-high at\nCranbrook and Crescent Valley 39\nand 80. ft\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 30, 1954\nNo. 84\nBOUL\nDOWN SHAFT\ntoMMoiJlWM\nm\nTwo Miners Killed,\n14 Hurt by Giant\nCannonball\nSPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) \u2014 Two\nminers were killed and 14 injured\nThursday when a four-ton boulder\nthundered like a cannonball down\na mine shaft here and smashed into a \"rake\" carrying off-shift men\nto the surface.\nThe boulder killed Russell Gil-\nroy, 39, on the rake at the 4,400-\nfoot level of the Cumberland Railway and Coal Company mine, and\nEverett Knowlton, 52, about 1,000\nfeet farther down as the missile\nrlchocheted the lengtH\" of the shaft.\nOn the danger list in hospital\nhere are Arlle Smith and Leo\nWhite. The others received minor\ninjuries. All are from Springhlll.\nKnowlton was the father of five\nchildren.\nNobody so far knows what ldos-\nened the boulder.\nThe Sprlnghill colliery, located in\nthe provincial border county of\nCumberland near the isthmus of\nChignecto, was the scene of the\nMarltlmes' worst mine disaster\nwhen 125 men were killed in. 1891.\nNo Law Against\n\/ Jaywalking!\n\/ LONDON, Ont, (CP)-Pollce\nThursday gave up their campaign against Jaywalkers on the\nstreets of thla city.' \"We've had\nto give It up,\", traffic officer I\nWilfred Llnder said. \"Wa oan j\ntell pedestrians what thay ara\ndoing wrong, but there's no law\nto back us up. It has made some\nof the police look ridiculous.\"\nSWP\nFive Freedomites Face\nExplosives Charges\nJamming Is Costly\nBONN (Reuters) \u2014 Russia is\nspending more money to jam the\n.Voice of America broadcasts than\n,'ihe entire Voice costs the United\nStates, Theodore Streibert, chief of\nthe U.S. information agency, told\na press conference. Thursday. Despite Russian jamming \"we have\nconclusive evidence  that a  great\n'AJgyntt B$8M^i?lr^\u00a3\u00bb?-s3i\u00bbM\nSoup Strainer*\nAll the Rage . '\nLONDON jCReuters) \u2014 The\nfashionable British male has\nsuddenly gone in for artificial\n- shrubbery on his stiff upper lip,\na firm of moustache makers disclosed Thursday.\n\"Don't ask me why,\" said\nmanufacturer Bert Godwin.\n\"Quite suddenly, the bulk of\nbur trade has shifted from stage\nand film business.\"\nThe favorite growth, he said,\nIs the \"dashing major\"  with\n\"twirled ends. A close second is\n' a giant \"handlebar.\"\nGodwin said the Up \"falsies\"\nare  made  partly  of  specially\n.treated hair from a girls' convent in Italy.\nThe fashion fad fits the trend'\n' here for Edwardian suits, feat-\n\u25a0 'uring the tight coats, flamboy-\nI ant vests and pipe-stem trous-\n[ ers popular  in  the  reign of.\nEdward VII SO years ago.\nRCMP have arrested five Sons of\nFreedom and charged them with\nbeing in unlawful possession of explosives.\nCharges arose from an attempt to\ndynamite West Kootenay Power and\nLight Company poles ln the area\nSaturday night. Two poles were\nblasted from their bases at Beasley\nBluffs the same night\nThe\" five, Paul Perepolkin and\nWilltani Pereversoff of Shoreacres\nahd- Sam-A, Koakin-,- Alest ^A. -Kon-\nk}nvsnd Joe Gevalketa of Krestova\n*ere arrested Wednesday, bf MM?,\nappeared before a Stipendiary Magistrate-Thursday and were remanded pending further investigation by\nRCMP.\nThe blasting Saturday night was\nthe first such outbreak since May\nwhen five powerline poles-were dynamited near Brilliant and CPR\ntracks damaged in the Slocan\nValley.\nBALL CLOSES ELK\nCONVENTION\nPENTICTON, B. C. (CP) \u2014 Combined Dominion-wide conventions\nof Elks and Ladles of the Order of\nRoyal Purple ended here with\nball Wednesday night. The sessions\nwere attended by more than 1000\nvisitors.\nMEMBER OF BAR DIES\nVANCOUVER (CP) - George F.\nCameron, member of the B. C. bar\nfor 43 years, died at his home here\nWednesday. Actively associated\nwith the Conservative Pafty for\nmany years, he stood as a candidate\nfor Skeena federal riding in 1940.\nALLIED AUTHORITIES are\nshunting for.-further clues which\nmight tell them If ,Dr. Otto John,\nthe Evanished chief of the West\nGerman- Intelligence; service, vssas:\nkidnapped by the Reds or went\nto East Berlin voluntarily.. The\nonly evidence-\u2014which could have,\nbeen planted\u2014was a note Indls\neating that Dr. John crossed the\nborder Into the Soviet sector of\nhis own free will. The note, written by a friend who was described as a \"militant\" .Communist\nsaid John \"does not want to return to the west.\" John's wife told\npolice her husband had \"enemies\"\nIn his own offices- and flatly labeled the disappearance \"a despicable case of kidnapping.\"\n\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nColdwell...\nUN Only \\\nPeace Hope,\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 M. J.,told-1\nwell, CC\u00a3 leader, called Wednesday upon Canadians and the Members of his party to remain faithful to the United Nations qB.the\nonly hope for a true world peace.\nIf there were no United Nations\ntoday, he told opening sessions of\nthe CCF national convention, the\nworld would have to invent one because it provided the only International forum for discussion of\nworld problems. While its discussions often were bitter, they were\nbetter,than,open, shooting war.\nReporting to the 20 delegates on\ninternational affairs, he said lt. generally was agreed that world ten-\neion has eased during file last year.\nDespite th.at easing, it was essential that the democratic world keep\nup   itsmilitary strength.       *\n\"We must remain strong so that\nwe can talk to strong people,\" he\nadded.\nBut if the peace -of the world\nwere to be won, it would not be\nwon on the battlefield. It would\nbe won by removing starvation and\nv\/ant. Canada, as a. Christian nation, could do much more to use\nher surpluses of food to bring relief to starving peoples.\n\"That is the only way we will\never conquer totalitarian . movements, whether of Communist or\nFascist origin,\" he said.\nMr. Coldweell reiterated the CC-\n. F stand that Canada should reeog\nnlze the government of Red Chi\nna and said she   should   remain\naloof from a    Southeast   Asian\npact unless It was Instigated by\nsome of the great Asian countries,\ni >j\u00bb4n,A.s!.an.pact which:Inpj^ded.ory,\n* ly' the Western ebrorttal \"powers\n'   led  by the United  States would\nalienate the millions of Asia.\nB.C. Labor Act\nHas Wide Interest\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Labor Minister\nLyle Wicks gave partial credit to\nBritish Columbia's new Labor Relations Act for the apparently successful negotiations with Frobisher\nLtd.\n\"It isn't beyond the realm of\npossibility the Frobisher people\nstepped up. their plans because\nthere is now more chance of industrial peace,\" he said.\nMr. Wicks said other firms In\nthe past have turned aside from\nB.C. because of large-scale work\nstoppages, and said their rejection\nof  B.C. at a  plant  location  has\nbeen \"heartbreaking.\"\nThe Labor Relations Act has now\nbeen in force -for almost two\nmonths.\nThe labor minister said other\nprovinces have expressed great interest in the act, and that it is being\nwatched \"throughout the whole of\nCanada, and even in the States.\"\nMr. Wicks said the act, in addition to giving industry more assurance of labor peace, \"will not hurt\nthe unions.\"\nHe said it will \"encourage more\nkeenness in unions to do a good\njob.\"\nPLANE CRASHES\nINTO BUILDING\n13* Killed In\nIsraeli Settlement,\n25 Injured\nTEL AVIV. Israel (Reuters)\u2014A\nsmall civilian plane crashed Into1\na crowded building at the Israeli\nsettlement of Maagan Thursday,\nkilling 13 persons and injuring 25\nothers attending the uveilnig of *\nmemorial.'\nThe disaster occurred shortly before Israeli Premier moshe Uharett\nwas due to open the memorial\nmeeting. The meeting was called\noff .and Sharett himself supervised\nrescue operations.\nOne of the dead is Mrs. Yon'a\nKesseh, wife of a labor member bf\nparliament. i        :-.\nThe plane, a Piper Cub, crashed\nas a pilot circled a crowded plat-;\nform to drop a message from Pres-'\nident Yitzhak Ben Zvl. j j\nEye-witnesses said the pilot appeared to fumble with the message\nand the low-flying plane struck this;\nbuilding.\nThe memorial honors Peretz\nGoldstein, a Palestine Jew who\nserved with British paratroops in.\nthe Second World War. He- was\ndropped behind German lines, captured, and executed for espionage.\nGets House\non Suez Deal\nAttlee Criticizes Two-Year Delay;\nEden LoOks to Arab, Israel Friendship\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Prime Minister Chyichill, over\nriding a rebellion within .his. own.party, won. an oserwhelm\ning. vote-of approval in the Gonvnons Thursday on hi\ngovernment's decision to pull British, troops .out of th\nSuez Canal Zone. \u2022       \\~'     '       ~\"        ~\n. The House supported Churchill's\nevacuation policy by a. vote bf 267\nto, 26 after' hearing a government\ndeclaration that the'possibility of\nan H-bomb war bas made the Suez\nbase obsolete.      \" . \u2022>-'\nChurchill staked the life of his\ngovernment on a motion demanding approval of the agreement'with\nEgypt initialled Tuesday which calls\nfor transfer.of the 80,000-man Brit-\nSwim Refreshes\nTHE BOEING 707, new let transport, soars majestically over\nsnow-capped Mt. Rainier, 14,408-foot peak, near Seattle, Wash., In\nrecent test flight. The new plane Is powered by four Pratt A Whitney JT-3L Jet engines, each rated at 10,000 pounds of thrust. As a\nmilitary plane the new Boeing would be called the Jet 8trato-.\ntanker; the Jet Stratollner as a commercial transport. Plane has\nbeen tested at altitudes above 42,000 feet and at speeds of more\nthan 660 miles par hour\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nSome Not Content\nWith Plain Tabby\nSOUTHPORT, England (AP)\n\u2014A full-grown Abyssinian lion\nloping along a street touched\noff frantic phone calls Wednesday which sent policemen racing to the scene.\nHelena Farrar, 16, got there\nfirst. Seizing the lion by the\near, she said:\n\"Simba, you naughty boy,\ncome home immediately.\" The\nlion submitted meekly.\nSimba, she explained, ls one\nof the animals lh her father's\nprivate zoo.\n\"He's c(uite harmless, really,\"\nshe said.\n\"Occasionally he takes a nibble at you, but It's all in fun.\"\nCCF Would Boost\nForeign Aid\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 The CCF\nparty called upon Canada Thursday\nto boost Its contributions for tech-,\nnical assistance to under-developed\ncountries to a whopping $1,000,000,-\n000 a year.        t   '\nThe 200 delegates went on record\nas favoring the increase after hearing party spokesmen suggest the\ncountry's economy could handle a\npayment' of that magnitude for\nCanadian good-\nOne delegate described Canada's\npresent contribution of $25,000,000\nyearly under the Colombo Plan as\n\"measly\" while' another expressed\nfear \"big shots\" abroad might use\nthe money to exploit their people.\n>yr\nBy DAVE MclNTOSH\nCanadian Press\" Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Duke of\n\u2022Edinburgh Thursday stepped into\nthe heat-^-O degrees and more\u2014ot\na Canadian summer. He promptly\nshed his liniform of a marshal of\nthe IJAF jnd went for a swim in\nthe hippy Waters of an outdoor pool.\nThe duke, 33,' and Mr. Massey,\n67, swam and then sat in the sun\ntalking about some aspects of Canada.\nPhilip said he was enjoying the\nhot weather after England's cold\nsummer... ,.''\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\niv^er.-tiMlp, (hers.Mas.a'roas^;\nS_9-\u00absWW^ffliy___i___CT    \"\"\ngbestSs r     '   .\nThe only formal dinner will be\nheld Saturday night when 40. guests\nwllIN attend, including the prime\nminister and Trade Minister Howe.\nThe duke will continue to wear\ncivvies throughput his visit .with\ntwo -exceptions, at Esquimau, B.C.,\nand later\/at Quebec City,\nToAay. Philip will put in most\nof,the flay witha visit to Canada's\natomic energy, Plant at Chalk River,\nOnt, 120 miles northwest of here;\nhUish. -2G_-\u00bbfi__-\nNelson, Thursday 8.75;  Wednesday 8.15.\nEXTERNAL Affairs Mlhlster\nLetter B\/Pearson, past-president\nof the United Nations General\nAssembly, -will visit Cranbrook\nand Kimberley today on hit way\nto the British Empire .Garnet In\nVancouver. (See ttory on page 3.)\nPC LEADER'S\nWIFE KILLED IN\nHIGHWAY MISHAP\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 The wife of\nRobert I.. Stanfield, Nova Scotia's\nProgressive Conservative leader,\nwas killed Thursday night in a\nhighway accident nearhere. She\nwas 39.\nThree of the four Stanfield children were injured when Mrs. Stan-\nfield's car left the road near Shad\nBay. They are reported in good\ncondition ln Children's Hospital\nhere.\nMrs. Stanfield was the former\nJoyce J. razee, daughter of Mr., and\nMrs. C. W. Frazee of Vancouver.\nThey were married in 1940.\nYears Old Found\nCORNWALL, Ont. (CP) \u2014 The\nfirst evidence of-prehistoric habitation of the St. Lawrence valley has\nbeeij- jetyjTjed by archaeological\nsurvey groups from the University\nof Tbrqntp \"working, near here.\n. Preliminary excavations last week\nuncovered 2000-year-old pottery,\nhousehold and. daily living utensils,\nMany of the excavations show pat;\nterns and styles'never before un-\nc6vete:d:ib::North 'AeoxiiAi.-yX.' i\ntribes that roamed'Ontario about\n.U-S\"-me iff triS'blrtfi' of -Christ\nArchaeologists hope the new eXca;\nvations will shed light on the period.\n- The excavations, under the direction of R-. Dailey and 3. Wright\nof the University of Toronto, are the\nfirst of. a systematic'series of attacks on the buried history in\nsoutheastern Ontario. Although\nsome of the land where work is\nbeing, done will be flooded by the\nSt.', Lawrence seaway, archaeologists say it is the least valuable\nland from their scientific viewpoint.\nUnique pottery designs, rows -Of\ndots followed in some cases by'in-\ntricate scallops, have been unearthed. Arrow heads and pipe stems\nhave,also-been found.\nWorkers, are also uncovering\nmany evidences of pioneer life, including coins, farm implements -and\nweapons.\nish garrison, from Suez in 20 months,\nChurchill, trying to' rally the\nbacking of 40 Tory rebels,, argued\nin a voice,! ,ti\u00a3i-J>lihg^ with emotion\nithat the Whole British,position, in\nSuez has been outdated by \"the appalling developments, and the appalling spectacles., which imagination raises before-us.\"\nThe official Labor party policy\nwas to abstain from the voting, but\nfive members broke this ruling to\nvote with the government\nIn abstaining, the socialists, who\nhave long urged Churchill to get\nout of Egypt, skipped a chance to\noverturn the government by. team\nIng up with the 26 Conservative rebels led by Capt Charles Water\nhouse.\nThe final voting tally showed that\nmore then half of the Commons abstained.\nDEPLORES DELAY\nLabor leader Clement Attlee lambasted Churchill personally for\nspurning pleas made by Labor-more\nthan Wo.'yiea'rs ago for a British\nagreement with Egypt.\n\"The priiiie, minister knows that\nthis could, have been, Settled on better- terms, in fact; on-these very\nterms^two.aiears.ago,'!    ''\"\"\n^eAqlajiA from doing Wb-f7wis\nright and how hid'to'eat hujnbie\n?,*:  ''.\".'-     .'' ,   \".:':,'.   ....   [ '\n'\"We-\u00abil' hope that this may'be\na new and better era in the Middle\nEast: but iVdoes very little ci-eijlt'to\nthe government.\"\nThe Ernpire-Iovihg Cburcbill'who\nfor years hurled the taunt of \"scuttle\" at socialists demanding evacuation from Suez, sat listening to\nWeather Not Even Fit for\nBritish Let Alone Tourists\nBy JEFF RYAN\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Weather-weary\nBritons are calling it the \"summer\nthat never was.\" In a country where\nthe climate is always cantankerous,\nthe procession of gales, chill winds,\nshowers and sunless days is just too\nmuch.\n\"This summer seems like an undeserved 'slap in the face,\" comments one newspaper as stores on\nOxford Street sorrowfully display\nsales of summer rainwear.\nWith rainfall in July already an\ninch more.than the average and the\nsun virtually blacked out, the British Travel and Holidays Association\nreports that the hardest hit areas\nare Cornwall, North Wales, Devon,\nthe lake district and Lancashire.\nBut it added that Britons appear te\nbe carrying on doggedly with holiday plans despite the elements.\nResort towns, with understand,\nable reticence, say there have been\nfewer- cancellations of bookings\nthan expected. The Daily Sketch,\nhowever, had a front-page story\nabout airlines being swamped with\nNdTth American visitors trying to\nget home\u2014pr anywhere away itrom\nBritain\u2014ahead of schedule.\nCricket ba* been hard hit at &e\ngate. Amateur clubs dependent on\nthe \"take\" have lost thousands of\npounds. International gliding championships in Derbyshire have been\npostponed day after day, with a loss\nestimated at \u00a37000.\nCartoonists are having . a field\nday. A Daily Mirror drawing depicts drenched natives panicking\nas an \"unknown ball of fire\" \u2014 the\nsun\u2014shows up in a clear blue sky.\nThe old one about the man who\nmissed the summer by having a\nhaircut was also trotted out\nVAPOR TRAILS BLAMED\nTongue in cheek, The News\nChronicle attributes the 2.79 inches\nof rainfall this month to aircraft\nvapor trails. The wettest weekend,\nit adds,, coincided with the largest\nhome defence air exercise ever\nheld.\nAt the races, gales blew impartially on bookmakers and. bettors\nbut the decision was' clear-cut as\nlongshots were blown home at grotesque prices. At Chatham, Kent,\nwhere Uie Canadian'cricket team\nplayed, extra heavy bails were used\non the stumps for the first time ih\nBritain to defy gale-force winds.\nWith typical understatement, The\nEvening News concludes: \"Ours is,\nafter aU, a ehtnoy eUmate.\"\nPERCE, Que. (CP) \u2014 Contradictory statements allegedly made by\nWllbert Coffin to police were introduced Thursday as the murder\ntrial of the 43-year-old, prospector\nmoved, through its 13th day' with\nStill more Crown witnesses to be\nheard.\nThe Crown was expected to wind\nup its case Thursday but lengthy\ntestimony by Sgt. Henri Doyon of\nthe provincial police forced its\ncontinuation today.\nDoypn, head of the Gaspe detachment of the provincial police\nat the time three American hunters\nwere killed, disclosed details of bis\nquestioning of - Coffin while -Hie\nsearch was going on for the missing melt.'\nHe said Coflin told him during\nthe search that he had never gone\nis far-into the Gasp'e bush as Camp\n24, where the body of Eugene i-ind;\nsey was found. Later Coffin revised the statement and said-he recognized the camp and had spent some\ntime.there, Doyon -tiptUUd'.     ''\nDOLLAR LOWER\nNEW YORK <CP) \u2014The Canadian dollar was dowo.1-32 bf a cerit\nat a premium of 2% of a cent to\nterms of' U. S. funds Thursday.\nPound sterling unchanged at $2.81%.\nMONTREAL <CP) - Th? V. ,S:\ndollar closed ai a discount of)2 11-32\nper cent ih terms of Canadian funds\nup 1-16. It tpok7 97 21-32 cents Canadian to-buy $1 American. Pound\nsterling $$.74W, unchanged.\nU. S. dollar, bid 97 9-32; asked\n97 11-32.\n.,\nAttlee's criticism silently and wil i\nbowed head.\nBut he cams charging into ,tha\ndebate when Labor member RI T.\nPaget accused him of giving \"under the table support\" to the Suoi\nrebels in defiance of recommendations of his own cabinet\n\"That  is  an  absolute  untruth,\" \/\nChurchill growled, and then pounded the dispatch box before him and\ndeclared:\n\"I have not in the slightest degree'\nconcealed the fact in public speech\n\u25a0how much I regretted the courte of\neverits In Egypt. .'X,\n\"But I have not held my mlnB !\nclosed fo the tremendous changes\nthat have tSken place in.the whole\nstrategic position: in the world.\"   |\nBELIEVES AGREEMENT SOUND\nForeign - Secretary Eden,' wh? .\nspoke later, said he believes this\nAnglo-Egyptian agreement oh the\nSuez canal base is militarily anji\npolitically sound because \"it en;\"\nables us to re-establish conditions\nof friendship with all. the ])Ara!\u00bb\nlands while improving our trlend- '\nship with Israel.\" \u25a0 ' . \u25a0 i\nCORESPONDENTS\nPROTEST DELAY     j;\nHONG KONG (Reuters) - For*\neign correspondents hsre have prq\u00ab.\ntested to United States and British\nauthorities that they were dellber-)\nately hindered from-obtaining tha'\nfacts of the shooting' down' of a\nBritish airliner by Chinese Com?\nmunlsts last Friday.\nCorrespondents-from Britain, tht '\nUnited ..States,. France and Aufr;\nSilla^Votetif';^s_-mpUsJy'.'W\"th\u00ab'\nCo-respondent*\" Club here thesday\nto make the protest, and send \u00bb\ncopy of it to the secretary-general\nof the United Nations. \"    .\nThe protest note said the policy\nof hinderance held ..the correspondents for 20 hours'from learning\nfrom \"reliable and- attributable\nsources\" that the: plane had been\nshot down and was not simply the\nvictim of an operational, accident.\"\nSMALL JAPANESE BOYS ,l\u00bbther and scrub each others baek\nto the tiihe't of an morgan' at they are taught \"public bath hoilte\netiquette\" by'Instructors from a parent-teacher's association of a\nTokyo- elementary school.,The boyt eoisiprfte 'the first children's\nbath club in Japan.\u2014AP Wlrephoto. \u25a0-- < -.\ntV\nAnd in This Corner... \u2022\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A. thief who may be seeking a ration to'\nchange hit ways wont'to the right source In the Wrong way Wednesday. Hd stole a $60<Blbla from St. Andrew's Wesley United Church\nhere.       ,   ' '     \";'. '\u25a0 -T.'. .\u2022*\u00bb-.\n, DBS MOINES, la. (AP)\u2014Once upon a time, says Mrs. Burza\nJones, clerk in the Iowa state division of vital statistics, there lived\n> in Iowa a boy by'the named: > '\n\"Through Much Trial and Tribulation We Enter \u00abie Kingdom\nof Heaven\" Lindloff. ; \\* '\n.Mrs. Jones found the record of his birth on a routine check\nthrough the file^. He was born Aug. 21j 1880.\nMINEOLA, N.Y. (AP)\u2014Al Davit hat hlmtelf.* contract\u2014for one*\ncent he's going to excavate 60,000 yardt of earth to form a sump,\na huge hole In the ground where run-off Miter Is edllected and\nreturned to the toll.    \\\n;.-,   The Nassau county board: iff-supervisors, which had atked bldt\nan the excavation, had been ready to go at high as $25,000. :\nNaturally the board wat delighted by Davit' penny bid but asked\n\"How come?\" .\nReplied  Davlsl ,. - -,5\n'  \"Where else can a guy get 50,000 yardt of high grade sell; sand\nand gravel for a penny..\" i\nTAIPEH, Formosa (AP)\u2014Chances are these two Formosan farm\"\nhands will think twice before again' attempting to hitch a ride on'\n.a helicopter. -      '-,,. '-\u25a0\u25a0\nThe Chinese Nationalist air force said one of its pilots set his,\n'copter down.in a field for emergency repairs. ,   ,\nTwo farm hands who had, been watching ran to the craft and\nclung, to its framework when he departed. ' :.\nAs the 'copter gained altitude the two became terrified and.,\nscreamed. ,\nThe pilot, only then aware he had passengers, began a gentle\ndescent- \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'..-.\u25a0\u25a0   . \u25a0 y. .--'\u25a0\nPanic-stricken, one farm' hand let go, dropping a few feet to\nthe ground, .-_.-..'\nThis caused the plane to lose balance and it crashed. Nobody\nwaa hurt X;\n\u25a0':'\u2022\u25a0 '\u25a0' Y'Y: \/ \u25a0',-- \u25a0\u25a0    '\u25a0\u25a0.;:. \u25a0 Y.' ,.'\u25a0;,.::\u201e\n\u25a0yxXy,.x     \u25a0.   .  -.     ..,.. ,        .,     ,.,.- ;:\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 30,1954\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 7:00-9:00\nIU22YEARS0HLYTW0L\nTiun mrmt tiin miimnr\u00bb eittr.\nCIVIC\nLATE NEW8\nCARTOON\n\u25a0PORT\nW. M. (Scslly) Harr Retires After\n30 Years Service With Breweries\nSTARLIGHT Drive-In\nTONIGHT arid SATURDAY\n.    .,, 9 and 11 P.M.\n\"WAKE OF THE RID WITCH\"\nA million copies of the book were said,\nAnd. now, in all it's glory\nWe bring it to thl Starlight Screen,-\nIf you miss if> you'llbe sorry.\nTONIQHT and SATURDAY\n\"ARROW\nIN THE DUST\"\nSterling Hayden - Coleen Gray\nShow Starts at Sundown\nau.\"    -x\nIN\nTHE HEART OF CASTLEGAR\n\"Gala\"\nReopening\nTONIGHT\nL Kiwanians Discuss\n^Children's Day\nI NeWKtoahi\u00ab,Club will endeav-\n|or to do something towards spon-\n| soring a Children's Day here In the\n1 latter part of S.eptember. This is an\nrannual undertaking for Kiwanis\njj Clubs although the Nelson club. 1\nSnot carried out this activity since\nil-SO.\n|   President K. W, Kopeckl rejjortei)\n2 that a kit which contains sugges-\n|tions for children's day activitijf\n\u00a3 and publicity suggestions has been\nj received by the club. Arrang&if:;<-.\nI the day's program will be made'by\nI the children's committee ot which\n3 D. E. Hunter-is chairman.\nSaturday July 31\nWILLOW POINT\n1 Miles East  of Nelson Ferry\nMusic by MELODY PALS\nAdmission: $1.00 Each\nIncludes Refrethmentt\n_-_____---_--_________\u00bbgB\nWAYNE\nKIMBERLEY\nTONIQHT'and SATURDAY\n\"GREAT SIOUX\nUPRISING\"\nJeff Chandler, F. Domcrquo\n- sShow Starts at Sundown\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTONIQHT  and   SATURDAY\nf \"ABBOT AND COSTELLO\nGO TO MARS\"\n* ALSO\n\"MAN WITH A CLOAK\"\nWith\nJoieph Cotten - Barba\/a Stanwyck\nPlus CARTOONS\nShow Starts at Approx. 8:45 p.m.\nAfter 30 years of handling and\ntossing beer ke^s for Kootenay\nBreweries Ltd.', William M. (Scot-\nty) Marr will today retire from the\nservice of the company\" to a quiet\nlife of gardening, fishing and the\nodd game of 'curling,\n\"Scotty\", as he tt knowt. to his\nmany frlendi in the Kootenays, will\nno doubt miss the surroundings of\nthe plant in Nelson which for the\npast 30 years hai been home, to him.\nAnd to his many frlendi, the plant\nwill miss him, for at any time that\npeople visited the establishment\nthey could always be assured of\nbeing greeted by his Scotch brogue\nHli friendliness and good humor ls\nknown throughout the district\nAlthough he came to Canada ln\n1910, he has never lost hli Scotch\naccent, which enrjches his fund of\nstories on fishing and curling.\nBorn ln Fifeshire, Scotland, Mr.\nMarr came to Canada in 1910 to reside 'in Winnipeg, but ln a short\n\u25a0time he moved to Vancouver because he liked the Coast which had\nbeen hojne to him for many years.\nAfter residing in Vancouver s\nyear, he decided to move to Frank\nln the Crow's Nest Pass,-where he\nwas hired to make lime barrels.\nGOES OVERSKAS\nAfter a short time he went to the\nbreweries for the first time when\nhe travelled to Calgary to work fpr\nthe Mountain Springs Breweries. In\nISIS 'he Joined the Canadian Army\nwith the 81st Battalion, which went\nto France. -\nAfter leaving the army in 1010,\nMr. Mat. returned to Calgary to\nwork for the lame company which\nby this time had changed Its name\nto the Silver Springs, from there\nhe went to Lethbridge, working in\nthe breweries there until Decern\nber 1023 when he came to Nelson to\nwork for Kootenay Brewerlei in\nJanuary 1024.\nHe has been an ardent curler and\nan active player throughout his\nyears ln Nelson. Last season he dislocated his shoulder and had to give\nup steady play but still got his Jicks\nln against the Trail oldtimers, and,\nas he puts it. \"Ill be ln there agalh\nthis year to play them.\"\nMr. Marr ls also an ardent fisherman and- will talk for hours on\nthis pastime. In hli early days he\nplayed a great deal of soccer and\ngave a hand In organizing loccer\nln Nelson.\nWhen asked what he intended to\ndo after retirement, he said he\nhoped to get some work ln on- his\ngarden, and also do some work on\nhis boat so he can get out and catch\nthe many fish that have eluded him\nln the past.\nHe stated ht would stay here in\nNelson for It has been home to him\nfor manV years and he loves lt\u00bb'climate and the people.\nBaldwin Eliminated\nVANCOUVER (CP) -.-Canadian\ncurling champion Matt Baldwin of\nEdmonton was eliminated from the\nBritish Empire Games summer\nbonspiel late Thursday, (ensuring an\nall-Vancouver final. ,X\n(See also story page p.).\nThe Baldwin rink Was defeated\n9-7 by Fred Hiding's Vancouver\nsquad who went on to defeat Sick\nTopping of Oliver, B.C., 11-7.\nTinllng was' to meet Roily David\nof Vancouver late Thursday ln the\n12-end final.\nDrive lo Save As\nHear Collapse\nPHILADEtsPHIA (AP) \u2014 The\nmayor's committee to keep Philadelphia Athletics In Philadelphia is\non the verge of collapse, the Philadelphia Bulletin reported on Thurt-\nday. \"       .\nThe newspaper tayi a report to\nthll effect, was drafted Thursday by\nthe three staff members of the committee who have been most active\nin the campaign.\nIn Its efforts to stimulate attendance at Athletics' games, the committee was said to have encountered\napathy and some outright resistance from the public as well at\nfarm business, leaders.\nHoy Mack, executive vice-president of the Athletics, appealed to\nthe mayor and city leaders in early\nJuly to help the club draw at least\n400,000 more fans to the park this\nseason. Mack told the mayor at that\ntime that he and his brother. Earle,\nwho with their father, Connie Mack,\nown the majority Interest, could\nnot carry on otherwise. Roy indicated the club would have to be\ndisposed of, possibly to another city.\nNearly 800 See\nKootenay Film\nA crowd of close to 800 saw one\nof the- feature Nelson Film Council\npresentations Wednesday night\nwhen the color film \"Kootenay\nWest\" was presented at Lakeside\nPark. Released by the B.C. government, the film covered West Kootenay scenery and industry from\nGrand Forks, through to Trail, with\na 12-mlnute section on Nelson, to\nthe Anscomb Ferry at Balfour.\n\u2022Floor show feature of the evening was the Scottish dancing duet\n'ai' seven-year-old Pam Clark and\n11-year-old Doreen Spiers, accompanied on the bagpipes by George\nMilne..\n' Others on the show, conducted by\nmaster . oi. ceremonies Gil Miller.\nwere Colin Baker and Don Wilson.\nPiano accompanist was Douglas\nSkilton.\nThe fldbr show opened with a\ntalk by film council member Gil\nJohnson, who explained the new\ncompound diffraction projector\nspeaker which is to be installed at\nLakeside Park for tht film program\nSunday night. The speaker is the\nonly one of its kind in the district.\nOther films presented on the\nWednesday night program were\n\"East   of   Bombay,\"   an   American\nCHUCKERS HIT\nHARD IN PONY\nLEAGUE GAME\nTwo chuckers, Ken Blakeman and\nFred' Nudd, led the hitters as the\nKnights of Columbus defeated thf\nfront running Legion club 10-6 ln I\nPony League encounter at Queen\nElizabeth Park Thursday night'\nH. Kraft got credit for tne victory,\nalthough he needed help from Ken\nBlakeman in the seventh inning.\nThe two gave up six hits, struck\nout five and walked nine, while\nFred Nudd on the mound for the\nLegion gave up five hits, struck\nout nine and walked a like number.\nNudd had a field day at the plate\nas he picked up half his. team's hits\nwith a homer, double and a single.\nBla-eman also hit for the circuit\nand banged out a single besides.\nThe Legion took the Jead ln the\nfirst frome when they crossed the\nplate four times, but after the\nKnights had picked up two runs in\nthe first they took the lead in the\nsecond with three more. To close\nout their scoring they added a run\nIn the fourth, three ln the.slxth and\none ln the seventh, while 'the Legion were held scoreless until the\nseventh when they rallied -to count\ntwo runs.\nHOSPITALITY OF\nDEEP SOUTH\nJARS NELSONITE\nA one-dollar fine for speeding lit\nthe state of North Carolina is pretty expensive, former Nelsonlte\nWarren J. Edwards has learned.\nVarious court costs ranging from\n10 cents to $6 sent his total bill to\n$21.05.\nSon of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Edwards.- 413 Gore Street, he was driving his new car on a straight\nstretch when a state trooper intervened. Apparently he ran afoul of\nthe new radar system of trapping\nspeedsters.\nIn recorder's court he was ordered to post a cash bond of $25 before he could leave the state. This\nhe did.\nA staement of fssts has Just been\nreceived by hit father, to be sent\noh to Warren, who now lives ln Toronto. It included a check for $3.95\nall that was left of his $25. The\nrest went like this:\nFine $1; docketing warrant 35\ncents; filing papers 10 cents; docketing Judgment 25 cento; .indexing\nJudgment 10 cents; preparing bill\nof costs 29 cents; recording in minutes 50 cents; special tax $2; sheriff $2; recorder's court tax $6; law\nlibrary \u00bb1;- magistrate *5; clerk's\ncommission 10 cents; state tax *2;\nwitness $1.50. Total $21.05.\nThe sheriff and the witness were\none and the same \u2014 the man who\npinched him.\nNONE HURT A\u00a7\nTRAINS CRASH\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)\u2014A passenger train collided head-on with,\na lumber train Thursday night in'\ncentral Newfoundland but there\nwere no fatalities, a Canadian National Railways official said here:\nThe CNR express, carrying about\n60 passengers from Corner Brook\nto St John's, plowed Into the\n\"wood\" train believed owned by\nthe Anglo-Newfoundland Development Company.\nVancouver To\nPress for More\nFederal Aid\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Three aldermen will take Vancouver's case\nfor increased financial aid from the\nfederal government to a convention\nof the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities.\nAldermen J. W. Cornett, Earle\nAdams .and Syd Bowman will go\nto Windsor for the Aug. 29 to Sept\n2 meeting to enlist support for %\ndrive to pressure Ottawa into grants\nin lieu of taxes on federal property\nholdings ln Canadian municipalities. s .\nVancouver claims the federal\ngovernment should there the same\nliability as an ordinary taxpayer\non itt holdings, assessed at more\nthan $42,000,000, ln the city.\nGrants are given by Ottawa to\nmuniclpaliti|i where Crown property represents at leasj; four per\ncent of the total taxable assessment.\nThe Weather\nNELSON  M\nKimberley  35\nCrescent Valley   85\nGrand Forks _ _.. 41\nKamloops    46\nPenticton    48\nVancouver    52\nVictoria    50\nPrince Rupert   51\nPrince Oeorge   40\nWhltehorse  50\nSpokane     53\nSt John's  _  64'\nHalifax  _  59\nMontreal   63\nOttawa  \u201e  61\nToronto     63\nNorth Bay  61\nPort Arthur .-._.  57\nKenora   '  59\nCalgary   _  39\nEdmonton   44\n76 .01\n75 \u2014\n74 -\n88 ,\u2014\n81 \u2014\n78 \u2014\n70 \u2014\n66 -\n55 \u2014\n72 \u2014\n66 .01\n84 \u2014\n65 -\n72 -\n83 -\n85 \u2014\n73\n77\n83\n71\n67\nAussie Sculling\nChamp Withdraws\nBy PETER MURRAY\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nVSDDER CANAL, B.C. (CP)' -\nThe withdrawal of Mervyn Wood,\nAustralia's champion sculler, has\nleft the singles event of the British\nEmpire Games rowing a wide-open\naffair between four entries.\nWood, who at 37 says he's \"too\nold for that kind of competition\nnow.\" has entered the double sculls\nwith Murray Rlelly and will also\nrace in the fours.\nHe won both the singles and\ndoubles championships at the\nGames In New Zealand and has\nalso won two Olympic gold medals.\nWood first represented Australia tn\nthe Olympics In 1936 when he was\nID.\nEntered ln the singles here are\nDon Rowlands. New Zealand, Peter\nEvatt, Australia, Bobby Williams,\nCanada, and Sidney Rand, England.\nWatching them work out on the\ncanal Thursday, Wood said any one\nof the four is capable of taking\nthe race.     *\nFAVOR ROWLANDS\n.Given a slight nod by some is\nNew Zealand's Rowlands, a 28-\nyear-old production engineer from\nAuckland who was a member of\nhis country's eights team In the\n1950 Games and has been sculling\nfor just three seasons.\n\"The strongest and fittest will\nwin the race,\" was his only prediction of the outcome.\nHe will race ln the heats next\nTuesday against Williams, 22, of\nHamilton, who picks Rowlands as\nhis toughest opposition.\nThe other heat will be between\nEvatt, 31, and Rand, 19. The winners ot the two heats and the second\nscull with the fastest time will be\nin the finals Wednesday.\nRand, a member of the RAF from\nLondon, said he \"hadn't been feeling comfortable\" with his oars and\nhad exchanged them for another\npair.\nMost of the competitors, including the English and Canadian\neights, worked out on the course\nln the morning.\nJoe Blallk of St. Catharines, Ont.,\nCanada's stroke in the fours, spent\nthe morning coaching his team\nfrom a launch after a two-day session in hospital with a throat infection.\nFLOODS DEMOLISH\n2000 HOMES\nPATNA, India (Reuters) \u2014 Two\nthousand house! have collapsed and\n100 square miles of land have become an \"Inland sea\" by flood-\nwaters ln northern India, lt was\nreported here Thursday.\nThe turbulent waters of nine\nswollen- rivers are still rising,\nsweeping away standing crops and\nsubmerging hundreds of villages.\nIn Darbhangda district alone,\nmore than 100,000 persons have been\ndriven from their homes.\nKimberley Tol\nKilled al Regina\nREGINA (CP) - Four-year-old\nGregory Fabro of Kimberley, B.C.,\nwas killed Thursday when he was\nrun over by a truck, while watching a street excavation. The truck\ndriver, Allan Livingstone, said he\ndidn't see the child as he drove--\nup to take on a load of earth. The,:\nboy and his parents were visiting\nin\" Regina. ,    \\\nFrobisher Decision\nExpected Monday\nVICTORIA   -  Decision   is   expected Monday on Frobisher Llm-'\nited's application for the water shed\nof the Yukon river in British Columbia.\nThe giant enterprise proposes to\nharness the vast watershed to power\na metallurgical industry. Plans call\nfor the spending of $270,000,000 by\n1996.\nFOR A PERFECT COLLINS\nThsj advertisement is not published or Y\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor  by  tht  Government  of  British\nColumbia.\nMERGER IN OPFINO\nNEW YORK (AP)-Board chair-\nman Eugene G. Grace of Bethlehem\nSteel Corporation Thursday con-\nfirmed published reports that his\ncoinpany ^negotiating for{4mirg-\n-   \"-\"'\u25a0    \"\"' '\"--   Shlet\"'  '\net   with   YoU-gitown\nTube Comt*njr .\nand\nDON'T MISS\nAND HIS ISLANDERS\nMONDAY\nAugust 2-9 p.m.\nCivic Centre\nBadminton Hall\n\u2022\nDANCE TO THE MUSIC OF DON MESSER\nAdmission $1.00 Per Person   .   v\nPLANT RAZED\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)\u2014Fire\ndestroyed the Hamelin Sash and\nDoor factory at Whalley, about five\nmiles south of here, Thursday. Owner Alf Hamelin estimated the loss\nat $9000. The plant was Insured.\ncolor film, \"Highlights of International Golf Rules\" and National\nFilm Council picture, 'The Photographer.\" ,\nProjectionist was A. H. Stevens,\nassisted by R. Dennison, W. Leahy\nand W. Orr.\niM KITCHEN-PLANNING SERVICE!\nJust the dimensions of your kitchen . . . that's aU\nit takes! And we will snow you how to plan your\ndream kitchen for perfect convenience, efficiency and\nbeauty . . . absolutely free!\nWe will show you how to save steps, save work\nwith Youngstown Kitchens uni___n sturdy steel, how\nto get\" storage space galore; Work surfaces aplenty\nand how to decorate your dream kitchen for new,\ncolorful beauty with exciting Controlled Color\nKitchen .Decorating.\nContact us today. Let our free kitchen-planning\nservice help you realize the kitchen of your dreams\n. \u25a0:\u25a0 . and see how we can save you money on\nInstallation.\n& Siretfon Ltd\n532 BA!<_r. STREET\nYOUR HOME PLANNING .CENTRE\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1555\nPHONE\n1707\nfor\nFree\nDelivery\nOver $5.00\nAnywhere In the City\nA Full Line\nOf Groceries,\nFruits, Vegetables,\nFresh and Cooked\nMeats\nThe Some Day\nEnsure Delivery\n3y Collins Before Noon\nBitkerton's\nStore\nComer ot Cedar and Observatory\nCLOSE OUT SALE\nHURRY\u2014 OUR TIME IS SHORT\nEVERYTHING\nMUST GO\nNo Reasonable Offer Refused\nAND WE MEAN JUST THAT\nThis Includes Our Complete Stock of\nNew Luggage ~ Bedroom Sets\nChrome Kitchen Sets -\u25a0 Coffee Tables\nHUNDREDS ol BARGAINS\nIN USED FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS\nCUTLER'S\nNEW and USED FURNITURE\n301 BAKER    j,      -.<  %        (.Formerly J. P. Morgan)\nPHONE 47\nmx^^^^js^.\n-  ;Y       '   \u25a0 ..    :   . . . - .... . \u25a0' ,\u25a0\n:\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   '\u25a0'\u25a0  '   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0Xji^y,\n '\nJl\n'...\u25a0\nmw^^^\nyX. . :\u2022\u2022 '      \u25a0;-     \".   \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0      '    '\u25a0\"\"\" \u25a0''\"-.        ;-''\u25a0\u25a0\nQffidak Seek Big Entry\nWtir Wre^ori^s FcM Fair^\numvii\nCHESTON\u2014Residents of Creston\nand surrounding districts, whether\nthey are full-time farmers, part-\ntime farmers, back-yard farmers, or\nnot-in-the-lcast farmers, are being\nPILES that\nItch and Burn\nIf you 'now. suffer from  tht itching\n.onmei- ind burning pain of.  \"\ncan ^e helped.\n' Mreneu and burning pain of piles you\nT\u00abh>b\u00bblu_lpiid. \u25a0-,'. \u25a0', .-' -;'i-0-'..V.*'\n.. Just got a package of Hcm-Rold, u\nfclternol pile trettmapt, at any drug\n\u2022torn and uae m directed. You will b\u00bb\nleased at how quickly your pile,trouble\nt,relieved, Orily..$1.59 for the big 60\nEleased at how quickly your pile,trouble\nrelieved. Only $1.59 for tho big 6\"\n.{tablet ^package. If you- are not  1009\n.., ,    -0%\n'pleased, after using  Hom-Rold  2  or S\n; day\u00bb, m a test, ask for your moh'oy back.\nRefund agreement by all drug stores..\n!\nAre Specialists\nAt Their Trade\nElectrical\nContracting\nIN PARTICULAR:\nBoth Commercial\nand   -\nPrivate Residence\nI COAT\n!N0M\n'i\ncOAr'\u00bb\"\nANEW\nREPAINT WHITE TO\nSAVE TIME I\nSAVE MONEY I\nfust once over with SWP One-\nJCoat Repaint White and those\nild painted surfaces look brand\new again! One-Coat Repaint\n\u25a0White  has  tnlice   the hiding\nfcower of ordinary house paint\nS-is self-cleansing and mildew\nresistant. New toning additive\nives deeper warmth of tone,\ntliminates glare \u2014new  alkyd\nontent facilitates ease of ap-\njication and adds longer life\nthe film. *\nCome In today for\nfoMer\n\"HOUSE OF COLOR\"\n1.5 Baker, St.        Phona 1713\nInvltgd to exhibit in the Creston\nValley Fall Fair to be held September 17 and 18.\nPrize lists have been printed, and\nare available at most district stores.\nLast year's exhibitors will receive\na copy in the mail.\nFrom section A (fruit) to section\nO. (grain , crops), there are 270\ndosses! so that every fair supporter\nwill have at least one article to\nenter, whether it be a book-end,\napple pie, or Ayrshire cow.\nFor amateur photographers, five\nclasses for photography have been\nincluded in the hobbies section,\nThis may be extended another year\nif the number of exhibits is as high\nas expected.\nIn section P (district exhibit),\nthe various district organizations\nare being invited to set up an\nexhibit at the.fair and to compete\nfor the district exhibit shield and\nthe accompanying cash prizes\nThe younger fold have not been\noverlooked, and a section for students is again included in the prize\nlist. Officials hope that every student will make an attempt to exhibit\nin at least ohe of the 68 'classes\nset up exclusively for the students.\nStudents may also enter thb'open\nclasses. . ;\nSome changes have been made\nIn the rules and regulations and\nentry fees must be submitted with\nentry forms this year. Entry forms.|\nmust be in the hands of thesecre-\ntary by September '14.\nOfficials are J. Verkerk, president and manager; A. J. Allan, vice-\npresident; J.(E.\u00ab Swales, secretary,\nand C. B. Twigg, treasurer.\nNakusp Pioneer Is 86 Today ... ' \u2022\nE. Plcard Learned English Trapping,\nProspecting on Columbia in 1880s\nNewPoslior\nW. E. Lucas,\nTrail Inspector\nTRAIL \u2014 W. E. Lucas, provincial\ninspector for Trail school district\nNo. 11, has been appointed assistant municipal inspector for the\nschool districts of West and North\nVancouver. In Trail for nine years\nhe will leave for his new post in\nSeptember.\nMr. Lucas came to Trail as provincial inspector in January 1946,\nat a time when the school situation\nwas in a state of disorganisation due\nto the Cameron report, a study of\na royal commission recommending\nlarger school units in the province.\nHis first task was to weld the\nmany school districts In Trail and\nRossland and the rural areas Into\nthe Trail school  district  No. 11.\nMr. Lucat has been inspector of\nthe district since that time.\nBesides his educational work, Mr.\nLucas has been active in community\naffairs in Trail. He is a past president and director of the Kiwanis\nClub of Trail, director of the Trail\nWelfsye Society, a member of the\nboard of stewards of the Knox United Church, charter member of the\nFriendship Lodge of the Masonic\nLodge, member of the executive of\nthe Trail Red Cross, and director of\nthe West Kootenay branch of the\nCanadian National Institute for the\nBlind.\nHe is also active in sports, being\npresident of the Kootenay Basketball Association.\nBefore his appointment as inspector for the^Trail district, Mr. Lucas\nwas supervising principal of the\nCranbrook system for three years,\nPrior to that he was supervising\nprincipal of the Princeton schools.\nMr. Lucas was born in Toronto,\nbut was raised in the B. C. interior.\nHe attended schools in Needles,\nVernon, Kelowna, Grand Forks and\nPenticton before going to the Victoria normal school. He graduated\nfrom UBC in 1933 with a BA and\ninterrupted his teaching career for\na post-graduate course in pedagogy,\ncompleting that in 1939.\nMarried in 1940, he has two\ndaughters attending school in Trail.\nJAMES  PEARCE\nPoplar Man Found\nDead in Tunnel\nKASLO\u2014Stanley R. Gabel, 67.\nwas found dead at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday in the tunnel of his mine at\nPoplar.\nBorn in Osccolo, Mich., he had\nlived in Poplar for many years.\nHe was found by Eric E. Peterson and Edward L. Gorman.\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Grand Forks\nHigh School Year Book \"The Periscope,\" has been printed and orders\nmade during the school year are\nbeing filled. It is published by the\nHigh School Journalism club with\neditor-in-chief Mary Rezanoff and\nbusiness manager Kaz Sugimoto.\nMiss S. Aral was the sponsor.\nThe book contains activities of\nthe school year, and personals of\nstudents and staff and pictures\ntaken by the school photography\nclub.\nALF CROMPTON\n0FFICER3 of the Fernie United Football Club which has been\nundefeated In every Crow's Nest\nPass League game this season\nand which carried off major\nhonors last year, are James\nPearce, president, and Alf Cromp-\nton, secretary.\nNAKUSP \u2014 One of the first white\nmen to land at Nakusp\u2014with the\nexception of Hudson's Bay trappers\nand prospectors\u2014celebrates his 86th\nbirthday today.\nHe ls E. A. Plcard, wno has made\nhis home here since 1912, but whose\nrecollections of Nakusp go back to\nthe mists of its first days ln Western civilization.\nWork on the CPR snowsheds in\nRoger's Pass lured Mr.'Plcard from\nQuebec City ln 1886, and he first\nlanded at Farwell, now Revelstoke,\nat the age of 18. He could not speak\na word of English, but after four\nyears of trapping and prospecting\nup and down the Columbia River\nbetween the Big Bend and Washington with no French-speaking\npeople, he soon learned English and\nin fact, almost forgot his French.\nHe found a new olass of men who\nwith their food and beds on their\nbacks, were able to eat and sleep\nanywhere, Summer or Winter. It\nwas during this period of prospecting on the Columbia that he first\nlanded at Nakusp and was so Impressed by its location that he determined to settle here in 1912.\nThe woman who was to become\nhis bride was hardly less of. a pioneer of this area than Mr. Picard\nHer father, Francis H. Needham\nhad landed in Winnipeg from Leeds,\nEngland, in 1885, and followed CPR\nconstruction until It arrived at Revelstoke in 1888, His wife had experienced many a hardship before they\nreached Revelstoke.\nMr. Picard met their daughter In\nthe Spring of 1890, and they were\nmarried on October 13 by RSv.\nJames Turner, a Methodist missionary from a small settlement known\nas Bytown\u2014the site of Vancouver.\nRevelstoke had no church at that\ntime, so the ceremony was perform\ned in the Revelstoke smelter board\ning house.\nWhen  they moved from  Revel\nstoke to Nakusp in 1912 they had'\nthree boys and three girls. A_iother\nboy and girl were born in Nakusp.\nA son and a daughter died some\nyears ago, and Mrs. Plcard died two\nyears ago. There are now six children, 24 grandchildren, and 31 great\ngrandchildren, all in B. C, except\nfor one family of two grandchildren\nand five great grandchildren who\nlive In the United States. In'\u2022the\nlast war one son Clarence, 10 grandsons and one son-in-law were overseas.\nMr. Picard has been in business\nhere for many years. He took an\nactive part in community organizations,, particularly in the development of the recreation ground and\nsports.   %\nToday he enjoys a well-earned retirement,, and loves to talk of the\nearly days on the Columbia River,\nand younger generations and old\npeople are equally pleased to hear\nhis stories of the days when life\nwas simple, rugged and full of adventure.\nTrail Scout Wins\nRockies' Trip\nTRAIL\u2014A reward for diligejrt\napplication to Scout training has\ncome to Patrol Leader Clifford\nAllan Grandison, of the Third Trail\nTroop in the Trall-Rossland Scout\ndistrict.\nScout Grandison has been selected as one of two B.C. Scouts who\nwill spend a week in a national\npark in the Rockies the first week\nof August as guest of the Canadian\nForestry Association and the Canadian Tourist Association. His fellow\nBoy Scout on the adventure will\nbe Patrol Leader Harold L. Steves\nof the Fourth Richmond Troop in\nthe Vancouver Scout district.\nScouts Grandison and Steves were\nchosen to represent rural B.C. and\nthe metropolitan areas for the Scout\nmovement. Two members of the\nJunior Forest Wardens organization, Bruce Nicols of Rusfcin and\nJohn Harris of Vancouver, will also\nparticipate in the trip.\nThe boys will leave Vancouver\nSunday and will camp out en route\nto Banff at Forest Service campsites through the interior. From\nAugust 5 to 12 they will spend time\nwith National Parks rangers riding\n620\/\/\nv \u25a0 \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 30,1934 -\nEtist Kootenay iqXfreet\nLester Pearson Today\nDo You Need\nA LINE OF TOP QUALITY\nBathroom\nFixtures\nIn White or Color?\nWe\nHave Them!\nKootenay\nPlumbing\nAND   HEATING   CO.  LTD.\n351 Baker St.\nPhone 666\nCRESTON MAN IN\nGUARD FOR DUKE\nCRESTON\u2014LAC J. A. Davis, 20,\npt Creston, was one of 13 RCAF\nmen from this province who wert\nincluded in the 100-men RCAF\nguard of honor that met His Royal\nHighness Philip, duke at Edinburgh\nupon his arrival at Ottawa's Uplands Airport Thursday.\nThe men were picked from RCAF\nunits stationed in the Ottawa area.\ntrails on horseback, touring the\nBanff tourist facilities, climbing\nMount Temple under the guidance\nof a Swiss guide and participating\nin real-life forest ranger activities.\nOn the return trip they will make\nan overnight stop at <he Badium\nPark ranger station. The lads wil!\ndo their own cooking throughout\nthe week-long trip and will have\nan opportunity to put into practice\nthe training in outdoor activities\ngained from their Scouting and\nJunior Forest Wardens work.\nHow .Christian  Science  Heals\n\"THE KEY\nTO\nHEALING\"\nCKLN, 1240 kc, Friday, 6:16 p.m.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n\u2022 CRANBROOK,-Hon. Lester B.\nPearson, Canada's external affairs\nminister and past president of the\nGeneral Assembly of the United\nNations, ia due to arrive here this\nmorning for a two-day stay here\nand ln Kimberley before going tb\nthe BE Games in Vancouver.\nCranbrook Mayor R. E. Sang, and\nJ. A. Byrne, MP for Kootenay East\nwill greet Mr. Pearson, at the municipal airport and a luncheon will\nbe given in his honor by the Cranbrook Chamber of Commerce. In\nthe afternoon he will go to Kimberley where a dinner will be held\nby the Kimberley Liberal Association.\nAn inspection tour of tht Sullivan\nmine, concentrator' and fertilizer\nplant is scheduled for the afternoon. Saturday morning Mr. Pearson will fly to Vancouver.\nMITCHELL\nTRAN8FER  AND  FUEL LTD.\nBooker J. urnaces Sales and Service\nTrail\u20141198 Pine. Phone 62 and 1321\nCastlegar\u2014Box 668. Phone 3663\nHillcrest Motors Ltd.\nTrail's Car Accessory House\nFirestone Home and Auto Supply\nRadiator Specialists\n2795 Highway Drive \u2014 Glonmerry\nPHONE 1556\nThere are more than 50 varieties\nof the tobacco plant but only .,\nfew are used for smoking purposes..\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\n3 - tra nsistor \"ROYAL- M\"\n, Tiny but mighty,..sir powerful is\nsome htirstii slsli it least .twice Itt\nsize... smaller than many heating\nalsis se ling at twice its price! Operate \u2022\nfor 10* a week on one tiny battery!\nWear and compart... On our 10-day\nmoney-bast Guarantee.\nJ|#\u00bbAao\"\u00bbCos,_\u00abslo^*aas,e^<K\nModerate Esstro Cart\njASY TIMI-MYMINT KAN\n5'-'\"\u2022,\"'.,   . '.. \u25a0*.\nSold by        \u25a0 \u2022   -.   -\u00bb\u2022\nOptical  prescription\nc.t>.\"   -:   -\"1-\nPhone 600   Associate Med Wai Bldq.\n406 HENDRYX 8T.\nNELSON, B.C. I\nSOMMERS TO BE\nAT CELEBRATION\nOF TRAIL SOCREDS\nTRAIL \u2014 The executive of the!\nRossland-Trail Social Credit Lea- \\\ngue has completed plans for a celebration of Social Credit Day Monday.\nHon. R. E. Sommers, minister of\nmines, lands and forests and Rossland-Trail \u2022 MLA. along with Mrs;\nSommers, will meet friends informally at a garden social in the\nevening at the home of Mrs. M.\nMcMillen. Prescott Road, Trail.\nA variety of festivities are being\nplanned to mark Social Credit\nDay, with some constituencies iri\nthe province holding their own\nshows, while in the more populated\nareas several ridings will join forces to.put on a single affair.\nThe first Social Credit government in B.C. was sworn in at 9:3C\np.m. August 1, 1952, and began operations on the following day. The\nnew government came into being\nas a result of the general provincial\nelection held June 12 of that year,\nwhen Social Credit emerged with\n18 members and thus held a slight\nedge over every other single party.\nA second general election on June\n9, 1954, saw the Social Credit Movement come back with 28 members,\nwhich constituted a clear majority\nover the combined membership of\nthe rest of the House.\nIt is expected that Social Credit\nDay in B.C. will become an annual\naffair.\nVACATION TIME\nis\nPICTURE TIME\nFRIGIDAIRE\nat NEW REDUCED PRICES\nA special offer on a 1954 7.6 cubic foot Frigidaire refrigerator with new interior coloring, pantry door, dulux\nfinish, plus many other deluxe features and priced exceptionally low.\nGet your\nKODAK FILM\nCINDER BLOCKS\n\u00bb Concrete Blocks\n\u00bb Chimney Blocks\nSTEAM CURED\nGovernment, tested products. Steam'cured. Production\n4000 units per eight hour shift. We deliver anywhere.\nKORPAK Cement Products\n154 Wellington Street     Trail, B.C.\nPhone 991-L-l\nDistributors for Our Products In Nelson\nK. W. DIXON CO. - 701 Front St.. Nelson. B.C.\nRAMSAY'S Camera Store\n497 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nTOWN-LINE\nSPORT SHIRTS\nIn many various colors and\nnew delightful styles.\n$5.95 to $9.95\nSYMPHONY\nSUCKS\nGrey flannel, wool and nylon gabardine in your favorite styles.\n$8.95 to   19.95\nFrank-N-Stan\n647 BAKER'.ST. PHONE 1717\nNELSON, B.C,\n1954 MODEL\nBuilt and jotkoj\nBy General Motors\nit pwi widni \u2022wpesjsTi'eeeer wiesr\nit Rust-resistant bar-type Shakes\n* FuH-widfl. ChHI Drawer\nir S Shelves in Door\nit Meter-Miser Mechanism - 5-Yeor Warranty\nNew\u2014and made fer compact kttchonsl It's only _MX\nInches wide, yet has a big interior with room galore for\nfroien foods, fresh foods and left-overs. Hydrator holds\na week's supply of fruits'and vegetables.\nSeveral Other Models to Choose From\nAT PRICES THAT HAVE BEEN SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCER.\n9.1 Cubic Foot Size Deluxe Model . .  $329.95\n11 Cubic Foot Size Deluxe Model  $369.95\n8.4 Cubic Foot Size Cyclamatic Model  $409.95\nMay Be Purchased With Very Low Down Payment and Special Low Cost\nEasy Payment Terms.\nMcLennan, McFeely & Prior Ltd.\n476 Baker St.\n(Nelson Branch)\nPhono 1300\n\u25a0I-.'\nyy- .r-'-'y-i'i\n^iiiiiiiiiigi^ '-.^^^^^^\n-\"\u2022   \"''7'77Y'    \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0;A\u00abft\n\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 ' \" '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0 \u25a0-\u25a0\n vmmwimvv'ww\"^'^'\nkimxt Sailll NetUB Library Notes\n:.+-?\u25a0. crr.TinM   .\nBsiuiiiished April 22  1U02\nBrilisfi Columbia s\nAJpsi Interesting. Newspaper\nubltsht \u2022.! eVnry morning except Sunday by the\n.c.EwS .UBUSHING COMPANY J_1MITE_D,\n2011 Un nor  Street   Nelson   British Columbia\nAuthorized as Seeond CIdbs Mall,\nPost Office Department Ottawa.\n^MEMBER OF IHE CANADIAN *PRESS AND\n(THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nFriday. July 30, 1954\nWest Kootenay Also\n. Would Have Liked to\n, Welcome Mr. Pearson\n:The Kootenay today is host to an\nimportant personage, but once again\nthe- visitor's itinerary fail.?, to include\nI the West Kootenay area.\nj.i   Hon. Lester Bowles Pearson, Secre-\n\u25a0'\u00abUry of State for External Affairs, is\n'jjW* of- the most prominent and highly\n'Respected Canadians in the world and\ndihere aire maHy in the Kootenays who\n^fWould have been delighted' to have\ntji\u00abid the opportunity of meeting him\nsipr hearing him in person.\nl*i.   Conversely, this being such an im-\n\"-Sportant area in the overall economy\n*f'Canada, it seems a shame that Mr.\njJPearson is not to have the opportunity\n\u25a0%l seeing it while in such close prox^\nHjinity.   -\nu| Seeing East Kootenay and not West\nSootenay is much like seeing the first\npart of a serial story and missing the\nrial half.\n,,;   In any event, we wish Mr. Pearson\n^vell and hope his visit to East Koote-\njjnay.-and.to'.the West toast and the\n\u25a0 %rltisH. Empire Games, is a most pleas-\n;:-\\j__nt one.\nWt\" \u25a0 .\t\n|     The Defence Budget\n: jj: Canada's new defence minister,\n$Hon. Ralph 0. Campney, has said\nsomething calculated to make the taxpayer sit up and blink. He has prom-\nMised to review the\" whole defence pro-\nugram, with the intent of making economies'wherever possible.\n$ \"Every dollar is a dollar,\" a West\nJJCoast interviewer quotes him as say-\n|'ing, \"and it is also someone's tax\n^dollar.\"\nHE This not only is noble talk, but Mr.\nIjCampney has a fine field to work in.\n|A defenpe budget approximating $2,-\n1500,000,000 a year is an enormous load\nSon our 15,000,000 population, and no\none will say every dollar of it is justi-\nMilitary ihen are not notable for\ntheir practice of economy, even  in\n'^\u00bbBcetime,  points  out  the   Windsor\nStar. Little inquiries from time to time,\n\u2022;-Btich as we have in Canada, unfailingly\nofen. up examples of sheer wastefulness.\ny,ni:r Purchasing errors, excessive outlays for quarters, and related instances\nI ^carelessness or mismanagement, are\nproduced. Each may be small in itself,\nI and minute in relation to the whole\n.gigantic defence .program, but altogether they represent cold cash that\n..'t^n be put to better use in the tax-\n' flyers' behalf. . <\u25a0\n' .y If Mr. Campney can eliminate that\nexcessive spending, or even- the major\n|TSrt of it, he'll earn the taxpayers'\ngratitude. He can even be commended\nfor trying.\nFfCTION\nCOLES, MANNINQi Net for Export.\nIt all sounded so extraordinarily restful\nand pleasant. There wasn't even the mildest\nhint of any danger. But Tommy Hampleton\nhad only been ln Germany for a few hours\nwhen he had a faint suspicion that he was\ngoing to find something more to do than admire the scenery.\nEU8TIS, HELEN: The'Fool Killer.\nThe time was shortly after the Clv(l War.\nThe place was rural America, so naturally\nGeorge started West to seek his fortune. But\nstrange people and strange events kept him\nfrom getting there.\nHOWARTH, DAVID: One Nlaht In 8tyrl\u00ab.\nThe story of a single eventful Christina.\nEve ln the forest of Eastern Austria; ot a\nman's search for forgiveness for a past wrong;\nof a battle of wits and ingenuity fought across\nthe river frontier between the British and\nRussian zones of occupation; and of love which\nreached perfection in the dawn of Christmas\nDay.\nLINDSAY, PHILIP: An Artist In Love.\nOne man and three women . .\u25a0. a great\nartist, a great actress and that actress' two\ndaughters, Sally and Maria. These are the\nmain characters in this tragic novel of love.\nSCOTT, J. D.: The End of an Old Song.\nThis book holds the reader not only by\nIts story and its people, but by broaching\nuniversal feeling and values. It is In his power\nto do this that J. D.- Scott's new book \"will\nconfirm the remarkable impression left by his\nearlier work.\n8EIFERT, ELIZABETH; The Doctor Takes a\nWife.\nWith this new book Elizabeth Seifert enriches the long list of \"Doctor\" stories for\nwhich she is affectionately known throughout\nthe country..\nWALLACE, DOREEN\u2014The Younger Son.\nThe Younger Son will Join Barnham Eec-\ntorey and Latter Howe, among the most enjoyable novels of country life.   . '\n*    ' *      *\nNON-FICTION\nCHERRIL, FRED: Cherrll of the Yard.\nThe fingerprint man, as he has long been\nknown in and out of police circles, recently\nretired from the force after 40 years' service.\nHe joined the force in his teens, and ended his\ncareer as chief superintendent of the fingerprint bureau of New Scotland Yard.\nCRONIN, VINCENT: The Golden Honeycomb.\nThis is the first work of a young writer\nin whom learning, imagination, a feeling for\nbeauty and a high grace of style are remarkably combined.\nDUQAN, JAMES: The Great Iron Ship.\nThis Is the ship that killed her designer,\ndrowned her first captain, logged four mutinies, killed 35 men, survived the Atlantic's\nweirdest storm, laid the Atlantic cable, sank\nfour ships, made six knights, caused 13 lawsuits, was six times at auction, boarded two '\nmillion sightseers, ended as a floating circus.\nDURANT, WIU.: Our Oriental Heritage.\nThis book deals with the establishment of\ncivilization and then takes up, not in rapid\nreview b'uj in rich and fascinating detail, the\ncolorful, complex dramas of the Near East,\nIndia and her neighbors and the Far East. The\nstory is carried up to the present time.\nHOBSON, RICHMOND P., JR.: Grass Beyond\nthe Mountains.\nHere. IS a combination \"Western\" travel\ntale, adventure novel, and homespun yarn\nabout home folk. This is an amazing and dramatic chronicle of exploration, deftly told\nwith humor and human interest.\n. MOORHEAD, ALAN: Rum Jungle.\nMr. Moorhead writes of an Australia and\nof things that few Australians themselves have\nseen; A rocket range In the deserted interior\nwhere guided missiles are shot into -the stratosphere; country where wild buffalo roam on\nthe Arafura Sea; the bush fires, the floods and\nthe droughts which sometimes devastate areas\nhalf the size of England.\nMUNTHE,   GUSTAF:   The   Story   of   Axel\nMunthe.\nReaders who have long felt that they\nknew the author from his book \"San Michele\"\nwould be more than human if they could\nresist this opportunity of hearing from his\nfriends how the man appeared to them\u2014they\nhave illuminating things to^ay of his character.\nSIMPSON, ALYSE: Red Dust In Africa.\nLife and color fill the pages of this book\nwith a sensitivity to atmosphere which throws\nInto strong contrast a Swiss mountain village\nand a Kenya farm.\nThese and many more new and Interesting\nbooks are In Nelson Municipal Library.\nPro-Comniunist President Arbenz\nof Guatemala quits in the middle of a\n. revolution in this country and hightails\nit for Argentina\u2014which, you'll note if\nyou look at the map, is '2000 miles\nfarther away from Moscow.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nSnowman Again\nA Himalayan mountain climber claims he\nsighted the \"Abominable Snowman\". Now\nwe're waiting to hear if that elusive fellow\nwiped his dripping face and asked, \"Is this\nhot enough for you?\"\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this' service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE AN8WERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nStudent, Nelson\u2014Please, tell me v. aat planets\ncan be seen by the naked eye in August?\nVenus, for an hour or more after sunset;\nMars, ln the south at sunset and prominent ln\nsouth and southwest until midnight; Jupiter, a\nmornlpg star rising about two hours before\nthe sun; Saturn, low in southwest by sunset.\n\"Ham\", Fruitvale\u2014Will you please tell me how\nmany radio stations there are ln Edmonton, their call letters, and power voltage?\nCHFA, operating on frequency 680, 5000\nwatts,  with directional antenna;  CBX, frequency 1010, 5000 watts, with directional antenna; CFRN,  1260, 5000  watts;  CJCA, frequency 030, 5000 watts, directional antenna,\noperates night only; CKUA, frequency 580,\n1000 watts.\nK. K., Nelson\u2014What is the address of the\nYoung Women's Christian Association in\nMontreal?   . ,\n1124 Dorchester Street West, Montreal.\nRestless, Trail\u2014What are the air routes\ncovered by Trans-Canada Airlines?.\nSt. John, Nfld., to Victoria, B. C.; Victoria\nto Seattle; Toronto, Windsor, Chicago, Cleveland; Toronto and New York City; Montreal\nto New York City; Toronto to Kapuskaslng;\nHalifax and Boston; Montreal and Prestwick,\nShannon, London, Paris, and Dusseldorf;\nMbntreal, Toronto, Bermuda, and West Indies.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, July 30, 1944\nEvacuation of German troops from Finland to Estonia was reported, and Finland's\nnew President, Marshal Baron Carl Gustav\nMannerheim, has received assurance from\nRussia of an application for an armistice which\nwould guarantee Finland's independence.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, July 30, 1929\nH. R. Younger, Revelstoke roadmaster for\nseveral years, has become divisional engineer\nat Nelson.\nNelson continues to lead the Kootenays\nand the Boundary districts in the number of\ntelephones installed.\n50 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, July 30, 1904\nCaptain Gore, superintendent of steamers\nln inland waters for the Canadian Pacific,\nhas returned from the North, where he successfully accomplished the task of taking the\ntug Procter from Kootenay Lake and .placing\nher in Trout Lake.\nHurrying, to Fires\nWindsor is putting it up to the Attorney-\nGeneral of Ontario to find a way out of the\ndifficulty presented by fire departments going through traffic lights and stop streets.\nEver since a fireman was fined following a\ncrash when he was going through a red light,\nthere has been argument and uncertainty.\nThe fireman was not fined for going\nthrough the light against hirp. He was fined\nfor not showing proper caution when driving\nthe fire truck to the fire. There is a technical\ndifference, even if the firemen find it difficult\nto make any differentiation.\nIt has always been the custom of firemen\nto go lickety-split to a fire. People expected\nthem to do so. A minute lost can mean the\nfire might get out of control and what would\nhave been an ordinary blaze turns into disaster.\nThere should not be too much difficulty\ngetting it all straightened out. Motorists\nshould know enough to pull into the side and\nstop as soon as they hear the fire sirens. If\neverydriver would do that, the firemen would\nhave a clear and fast track right to the scene.\n\u2014Windsor Daily Stat.\nYour Horoscope\nA year of moderate fortune ls envisioned\nfor you, so translate all plans into actipn. A\npositive, determined character is prophesied\nfor today's child, with some decided special\ntalent.\nCapital Mqotq\n-BY JAMES K. NESBITT-\nBy JAMES K. NESBITT\nVICTORIA - Each 'month' B.C.\nSocial Credit Leag\u00abe, which Insists\nit's not a political party, publishes\na bulletin of quite fascinating,\nmysterious political reading.    ' \u2022\nThe latest bulletin ls a piece\ncalled \"The Enemy Within.\" Here's\nthe opening paragraph: \"Among the\nworst enemies of Social Credit are\nthose within the movement who, by\npresenting utterly fantastic estimates of the deficiency of purchasing-power and the amount of new\nmoney, which can be Issued, repeatedly put us into the hands of\nthe enemy without.\"\nNow. what does this mean? Who\nls the enemy within, and who is\nthe enemy without? It doesn't say!\nAnd what, pray does this, the next\nsentence, mean: \"These monumental boners sometimes appear\ndangerously close to official quarters, the latest being a flat declaration that the shortage of money in\nCanada lor 1953 was six billion\ndollars.\"\nAnd is this part of Social Credit\nfinancial theory: \"The total quantity of money in use ahd in existence in Canada ln that year was\nless than ten billion, so that adding\nanother six billion it would have\ncut the value of the 1953 dollar to\n40 cents and raised the general\nprice level 120 per cent. It is this\nkind of thing which gives the\nenemy in press, politics, and professional economic circles the' opportunity to say that 'If the Social\nCredit theories are Introduced in\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nSo VERY MANY FLAVORS UPJjERE, | JgPJFTBR HE HAS HEARD 'EM IH\nOH THE WALL-EVEN SO\/MS OJSTOWER M \u2122&MDAlso RH\/me-VOUKNOW WHAT\nU1KESTO HEAR THEM AU--    |;| HEORDERS-^,yUCO rr EVERYTOE \u00bb\nfc^  \u2014\nWMAT\nKlNDA\n. ICE\nCREAM\nYtear?,\nVANILU,CMCCOUTE,FCACM^j| tf\n- '\/MAPl\u00a3,\u00ab\nAVOCADakllWT AUONDsL^OU,1 \/ f'\u2122Jf\nSJ^MPK3l4'^braCE,LIME. Jf \\ VANILLA\n\u2122 PISTACHIO AMD EeePlAMT-yB VCOME.1\nIt's Been. Said\nA well bred man is always sociable and\ncomplaisant.\u2014Montaigne.\nToday's Bible Thought\nThe delusion of the super man is\nrather well exploded. Great men\nmake great mistakes, little men\nmake little mistakes, but we all\nmake them. Some have learned to\navoid mistakes by accepting the\nguidance of the voice of conscience.\nWe should pray without ceasing,\nbut listen as well as talk.\nThe   Lord  is  the   maker  of\nthem all.\u2014Pr. 22:2..\nir*-*5\n\"SS-A, em rrtAtsi.n trntctrt, is..\n >.s.S\u00bb\u00abSJ\u00bb\u00bbSCHT.\u00abMI\u00abVMs.\n\/?\"*\u00a3\u25a0 dbt\nThe Kokanee\nMonster\nF. B. Pearce\nYs.^\" . ^.ay young by doin' new\nthings like youhguns do, but at my\nage you don't feel orderly unless\nyou do the same old things In the\n\u00ab__._   _s_   .......\nlama fsls.  u\/av\nThe Military and the Monster\nNelson, Aug. 8th\u2014The Kraken\nExtermination Expedition today\ntook up positions some three miles\neast of the Kokanee Glacier. Despite the hazardous condition of\nthe road at Coffee Creek all equipment was safely emplaced at dawn\nthis morning. Forward observation\nposts have been established, but so\nfar the kraken has not been sighted.\nNelson, Aug. 8th \u2014 There was\njubilation when the F.O.O. reported\nthat the kraken had beetTsighted.\nAt 11:45 p.m. the gun was laid on\nthe target and turned over to automatic fire. Unfortunately after only\none shot the gun jammed and as\nyet has not been cleared, -he F.O.O.\nreported that the kraken appeared\nto have been hit for it lost altitude\nrapidly and disappeared behind\nthe mountain.\nInjunction Sought In Kraken Case\nNelson, Aug. 9th \u2014 A group of\ncitizens    calling    themselves    the\nKokanee Kraken Brotectlon Society\ntoday sought and obtained 'an injunction against the commander of\nthe Kraken Extermination Exptdi\ntion. Under the injunction he was\nordered to cease and desist until\nsuch time as rights of ownership\nof the kraken were established. A'\nmuch disappointed expedition has\nnow returned to its base.\nSensational Developments\nIn the Kraken Case\nNelson, Aug. 11th \u2014 it was\nlearned today that the commander\nof the Kraken Extermination Expedition will be tried by court-\nmartial for his part in the recent\naction against the kraken. The\nspecific charges will be 0) unauthorized use of military equipment for private purposes, I.e.\nkraken hunting. (2) unauthorized\nexpenditure of ammunition for purposes bther than practice, i.e.\nkraken hunting. In addition he will\nface charges in the local court for\ncarrying firearms in a game reserve and of shooting kraken out\nof season.\nla the Kraken Dead?\nNelson, Sept. 8th \u2014 School opens\ntoday and parents here ape asking\nfor. special protection for the children. They point out, that despite\nclaims that the kraken was badly\nwounded, reports persist that it is\nstill alive. Leading authorities state,\nhowever, that with the coming of\ncooler weather its actviities should\nlessen. It is- believed that kraken\nhibernate during the winter months.\nDime Magazine and the Kraken\nNelson, Sept 9th \u2014 In a recent\nissue df Dime Magazine Professor\nI. Tellit, of the Yonkers School of\nFalaentonology discusses the origin\nof the kraken. In the article, which\nis illustrated with. photograph; of\nKokanee Park, he expresses the\nopinion that the receding glacier\nuncovered an egg laid during the\nsub-tertiary period and that the hot\nJune weather hatched the egg.'\nAll this of course is fantasy, but\nsuch is the power of the press that\nit would not surprise me, if, in the\nnext few weeks, reports of the\nkraken do not actually come In.\nAll 'unwittingly my. casual reference, to-Porcupine Creek set off a\nminor stampede. They teU me that\non Sunday cars were thicker in\nthat area than \u2022 huckleberries, and\nthe number of people who assure\nme that they too have picked a\nwashboller full ls remarkable.\nNonsense it may be, but think\nhow much pleasure it would bring\nif others decided to enter into the\nspirit of the thing, \"if, say, one of\nour local artists - decide to' paint a\nseries of th* Monster, or someone\nskilled in ceramics made miniatures\nof the Kokanee Kraken.\nCanada, your savings will be destroyed in -24 hours.\"\n, Who Is thla enemy?. Why won't\nS..C,yslteJi us?\n; As to the financial theories ln\nthe S.C. bulletin, perhaps Mr. Bennett, os Minister of Finance, will\nexplain lh detail at the next session\nof the Legislature.\nOne of Social Credit's enemies\n\"within the movement\" ls evidently\nAttorney-General Maynard of Alberta. Well, ow, of aU things! Isn't\nthat interesting; has the time come\nwhen S.C.'ers of Alberta and B.C.\nare disagreeing among themselves\nCould be, for the bulletin says\nthis: \"... without malice, we would\nlike to warn again of the dangers\nof 'political money power' and to\ndissociate ourselves from the proposals of Hon. Liiclen Maynard, in\nhis 1954 submission to the House\nof Commons committee on banking\nand finance, to use the national\ncredit for other than measured consumer dividends (except in an\nemergency, and we don't mean a\npolitical emergency.) The principle\nto which we hold is honored ln\nPremier Manning's proposal for 'a\nnatural resources participation dividend' to all Alberta citizens\/,'\nWhat fine ammunition this whack\nat Mr. Maynard is for S.C.'ers\npolitical enemies in B.C.\nThe bulletin Is all-encompassing.\nIt dips thusly into international\ntrade: \"We must also oppose the\nfrequently - heard suggestion that\nCanada sell her wheat by accepting sterling. To make this proposal\neffective would require a vist\ninterference with export - import\ntrade and consumer preference,\notherwise the sterling would be\nlargely valueless. It would be\nnecessary to compel Canadians to\nuse British goods, assuming what\nis unlikely, that Britain can supply\nthem.\n\"The only sound procedure ls to\nequate consumer purchasing-power\nwith expanding wanted production\nand let the British scramble for\ntheir normal share of the increasing\nbusiness,\"\nWonder who writes this bulletin.\nThe editor's name ls not given.\nS.C:'ers always say they're not\npoliticians. They seem to believe\nthere's something sinister about a\npolitician. There's only something\nsinister and shameful about a dishonest politician. Politics can be\nan honorable profession!\nPoliticians who insist they're not\npoliticians inevitably come to grief.\nThe public doesn't like such\ndouble-talk for political reasons.\nThere's a story about that smartest'politician of our history, Mr.\nAmor de Cosmos, and a politician\nwho said he wasn't a politician, Mr.\nJudah Philip Davies.\nMr, Davies, running fo\/ the House\nof Commons in the 70's told a public meeting he did not profess to\nbe' \"a learned politician such as\nMr. de Cosmos.\"\nMr. de Cosmos said he thought it\nstrange that Mr. Davies \"should\nplead ignorance of politics and expect to get elected.\"\nThis gave Mr. Davies food for\nthought. He pondered overnight on\nthe successful political career of\nMr. de Cosmos. Ne_t day he said\nhe was \"a pretty good businessman\nand in a short time wbuld.make a\nsuccessful politician.\"\nBut it was too late!\nMr. Davies was defeated by Mr.\nde Cosmos who Was not ashamed\nto call himself a politician; indeed,\nhe boasted of it.\nB. C\/s Bag of Ducks Extended by\nOHawa lo Ten From Eight Daily\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The government has decided to extend ihe\nduck-hunting season in most parts\nof central and western Canada this\nyear tq chase lingering birds out of\nnorthern areas before the winter\nfreeze-up.\nNew regulations, outlining the\n1954 shooting dates along with a\nnumber of other changes, were announced by the resources department Thursday. For the most part,\nwith the exception of season dates,\nthey follow the 1953 rules.\nHowever, ln British Columbia,\nbecause of an abundance of the\nspecies, a bonus of two birds,\neither pintails or baldpates, will\nbe allowed ln. the daily bag of\nducks, increased to 10 from eight.\nThe maximum number of ducks\na hunter can have ln his possession\nWarns Against\nDisarming\nCity Policemen\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. (CP)\n\u2014A police constable warned Thursday that New Westminster policemen would .resign from the force\nrather than go on duty unarmed.\nThe constable, who asked that his\nname be withheld, was commenting\non a suggestion by Mayor F. H.\nJackson that police officers be disarmed. The suggestion followed the\nwounding of a young airman by police who fired at a car that attempted to crash through a roadblock.\nThe unidentified constable, a veteran of nine years' service with the\nRoyal City police force, said \"an\norder sending police On duty unarmed would be simply asking them\nto commit suicide.\"\nThe wounded airman\", Aircraftsman Ronald Byers, 22, is recovering In hospital from a bullet wound\nih the chest, suffered earlier this\nweek when police fired at a car In\nwhich he was a passenger.\nHope Duke Will\nUnite Canada\nind Gl. Britain\nLONDON (CP)\u2014A British newspaper expressed hope Thursday\nthat the Duke of Edinburgh's visit\nto Canada will mark the beginning\nof warmer and more intimate contacts between the two countries.\n\"Britain and Canada have drifted\ntoo far away from each other in the\npost-war years.\" says the News\nChronicle; a Liberal newspaper.\nOfficially relationships were never\nbetter. But there is not enough intimate contact at the roots.\"\n\"8ERIOUS STAG PARTY\"\nA phrase coined in Canada, describing the duke's visit as a \"stag\nparty with a serious purpose,\" has\ncaught the fancy here, and the\nNews Chronicle, along with other\nnewspapers, quotes'it approvingly\nin voicing the hope that royal contacts with Canada are going to become more informal and more fre-:\nquent.\nThe Daily Sketch' predicts that\nthe duke's Canadian tour will mark\nthe end Of long, carefully-organized\nroyal join-leys \"like the marathon\nto Australia and, back last winter,\"\nNiagara Slide\nImproves Falls\nNIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)\nThe American falls presented its\nnew face Thursday to thousands of\ntourists\u2014a face strangely distorted\nby the collapse into the Niagara\nriver gorge of tons of rock that\nmade up the popular observation\narea, Prospect point.\nIt was the worst rockfall here\nsince Jan. 17, 1931, when a huge\nsection of the American falls rumbled into the gorge.\nThe sudden and spectacular facelifting ripped away a major portion of Prospect point and carved\nout a tremendous pie-shaped hunk\nof the American falls itself.\nA. M. Anderson, chief engineer\nand executive secretary of the commission, said his immediate reaction was\" that the fall will result -in\nimproved appearance of the falls.\nVisitors now will be able to get a\nhead-on view of the American falls\nbecause of th deep \"V\" carved In\nits flank.\nKeith Hopkins, principal superintendent of the park, said erosion\nof shale beneath a 60-foot thick cap\nrock apparently was the cause of\nthe fall.\nat one time ln B.C. ls increased to\n40 from 82, provided no more.than\n32 of the birds are species other\nthan baldpates or pintails.\nSome zoning changes have been\nmade ln Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan and B.C. and\nthe department suggested hunters\nshould scrutinize the new regulations which have been shipped out\nto post offices, other government\nbuildings and enforcement buildings across the country for bulletin'\nboard posting.\nHere are the duck season dates\nfor Alberta and B.C.:\nAlberta \u2014 The three former dls-.\ntrlcts of northern, Edmonton and\nsouthern will be combined into one\nfor ducks, geese, rails and coots,\nthe season running from Sept, 18\nto Dec. 4, longer than in all last\nyear's time limits. The season for .\nWilson's snipe. will be Sept. 18-\nOct 16.\nBsC. DATES\nBritish Columbia\u2014District No. 1, \\\nducks, geese, coots, Oct. 18-Jan. 13, .'\ncompared to Oct. 24-Jan. 11 last\nyear; black brant, Dec. 11-Feb. 28; ]\nWilson's snipe, Oct. 16-Nov. 15.\nDistrict 'No. 2, Sept. 1-Oct. 31 for\nducks and geese, the same as the\n1953 season; and Sept., 1-Sept. 80\nfor Wilson's snipe; no open season\nfor black brant.\nDistrict No. 3, Sept. 15-Dec. IS\nfor ducks and geese, extended from\nlast year's Dec. 3 closing date; and\nSept. 16-Oct. 14 for Wilson's snipe.\nNo open season for black brant.\nJOHN\nNIAGARA\nTalks about:\nNIAGARA\nLOANS\nFor Farmers\n'Farmers have unusual money\u00ab\nproblems.   In   the   Spring,\nmoney is needed for seed\nand for equipment, yet, his\n\"payday\" doesn't come until\nhis nop is harvested and\nsold. Most people have regular salaries and paydays but\nfarmers ... no sir, they havt j\na very .different problem.\nThat's why Niagara loans\nfor farmers, take into account .\nthe farmer's seasonal needs\n.-and income. Money borrowed- in the spring can be\nrepaid whan crop monies\ncome in. Niagara loans to\n$1900 are life-insured at no\nextra cost ... a peace-of-\nmind feature'which farmers i\nappreciate. And if you check\nJ'ou'll find our rates are often\nover. We do a lot of business\nwith farmers and we'd certainly like to see you if yon\nfeel our services would be\nof value to ygu. Just drop in\nforrfull information.\njIACAHA\nti.\n560 Baker Street\nPhone 1638\n'.\nLoyalty Clearance\nFor U.S. Militdry\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Army\nSecretary Robert Stevens has ordered a top' level national agency\nloyalty clearance before any individual is given an officer or warrant dfflcer commission in the regular army or reserves.\nA circular issued July 8 signed\nby Stevens and -Gen. Matthew B.\nRldgway, army chief of 6taff, Informed commanders the order was\neffective July 1.\nInterest Free bans\nFOR\nTEACHER TRAINING\nEach year 1400 new teachers are required in\nBritish Columbia \u2014 young men and women\nof good scholarship, character, and personality who are intereited in making teaching\ntheir profession!\nIf you would like to become a teacher and\nneed some financial-assistance for teacher\ntra.ninq, the De->nrtment of Edu-ation can\nnow assist you through its new loan fund.\nYOU MAY SECURE IN INTEREST-FREE LOAN\nUNDER THE FOLLOWING CONDITIONS:\n1. If you have financial need the government will loan you\nmoney free of Interest to supplement your own resourcas,\nwhatever they may be.\n2. You must rana)\u00bb the loan wlthhi four years of the date\nof Issue, at a minimum rate of $30.00 per teachlno month.\n3. Vou must give evidence of good scholarship and be Judged\nto have aptitude for teaching.\n4. 'You mu.t agree to teach for three years after graduation\nfrom teacher training, In a rural area of British Columbia.\nIF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN FINANCIAL\nASSISTANCE FOR TEACHER EDUCATION WRITE\nFOR APPLICATION FORMS TO THE DEPARTMENT\nOF EDUCATION, VICTORIA, B.C.    s\n\u2014\ni '     -    :\u25a0\u25a0      '   : '\n\u00a3>\u00a3\u00a3___.\n^\/;.,^,-Y.',.:^-,V'    '\".-:\u25a0.: X.-.y.   '.-.     .\n.   \u201eU     s ,     ,yh>   \u201ew    ,\n\u25a0\"\n\u25a0'..,..   .   \u25a0   .   .   \u25a0 ,...;   ..,..-\u25a0,   .',..,.,.,    .,.'-'  ',.   .\n__\n\u25a0\n It Pays to Buy Quality\nHay Days\nLog-Rollers\nBy' FRANK HATCH\nTan \u2014 Brown \u2014 Red\nf'X Glove Leathers.\n.Low and Medium Wedge Heels.\n$8.95\n\u25a0    >    Sizes S to 9.    AA-B.\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS  IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n$80.\nYOUR BIST BUY\nAny way you look at It\u2014*\nbeauty, quality. value-\nBridal Hell give you more for\nyour money. See our fino\n\u2022election.\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY\nNelson's\nDiamond\nieadquarters\nNelson-Born Aclress Praised as\nNew American Play Opens in London\nLONDON (CP1 \u2014 Joan Miller,\nCanadian-born stage Veteran, won\ntempered praise today from London\ncritics for her unsympathetic role\nIn a new American play by Edmund Morris. '\n\"The Wooden Dish\" opened Tuesday night at the Phoenix Theatre\nwith Miss Miller and Wilfrid Law-\nson ln the lead roles, and critics\npredict a long run.\nThe Daily Mall says the play, \"a\nblend of treacle and vinegar,\" owes\nmuch of its success to Miss Miller's\n\"blazing vitality,\" while The\nSketch calls lt \"a triumph\" for Miss\nMiller and Lawson.\nMilton Shulman of The Evening\nStandard says Miss Miller handles\nher difficult roles with \"so sure a\nskill that she has our sympathy\neven when we are most resenting\niiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWeekend\nSpecial\nPEANUT\nBRITTLE\nThe Butter Kind\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nONLY\n29cthe V_ Ib.\nALWAYS A FAVORITE\nMIDGET GUM DROPS\nFresh and Delicious\n35c the V% Ib.\nFRESHLY MADE\nCOCONUT ICE\n45c the <4 lb.\nCandy Is a Delicious Food \u2014\nEnjoy Some Every Day\nRANNLGER'S\nCandles Ltd.\nPHONE 237\n466 BAKER ST.\nllllllllllliliiilililllililliiilllliniiiiliii\nher.\"        ,-,' '.       '.'.   ,\nThe Financial Times, however,\ncomplains that the Canadian actreBS\nspoils \"her more powerful effects\nby making us so conscious7 of-the\nmechanics of her art\"\nMiss Miller, 44-year-old jvlfe of\nBritish producer Peter Cotes, was\nborn In Nelson, grew up In- V-h.\ncouver, and made her first London\nstage appearance 20 years ago.\nMustard Pickles\nFamily Favorites\n- No home pickling session would\nbe complete without a large batch\nof sweet mixed mustard pickles.\nGolden mustard sauce blends together a crisp vegetable quartette\n\u2014cucumber -slices, tiny white onions, cauliflower chunks and colorful slivers of green pepper. This\nparticular recipe will win you many\ncompliments for yqur pickle-making prowess, yet the method Ib simple, the pickles wonderful.\nSWEET MIXED MUSTARD\nPICKLES\n1 qt. sliced cucumbers, 1 qt. small\ntfhite onions, 2 med. heads cauliflower, 2 sweet green peppers,\nshredded; coarse salt, water, 4\ntbsp. dry mustard, 2 tbsp. tumeric,\n4 tbsp. flour, 4 cups vinegar\nWash, slice cucumbers Vt inch to\nVt inch slices, peel onions, break\ncauliflower Into flowerets. Halve\npeppers, remove seeds and membranes then shred. Place vegetables in crock, cover with brine\nmade in the proportions of 1 cup\ncoarse salt to 8 cups water. Let\nstand overnight In morning drain\nthoroughly. Cover with fresh water,\nthen drain again. Simmer vegetables in half vinegar and, half\nwater until barely tender. Meanwhile, prepare a mustard sauce by\nblending mustard, flour and tumeric with a-little of the cold vinegar;\ngradually blend in remaining vinegar heated. Cook until thickened.\nAdd drained, partly cooked vegetables, heat until boiling. Pour into\nhot sterile sealers. Seal. Store in\ncool, dry, dark place.\nKaslo Notes\nMrs. J. R. Tlnkess of New Westminster was a visitor here for a few\ndays. Ori'her return to the Coast\nshe was accompanied by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Billings,\nwho' have spent a few weeks here.\nScampers\nFor Summer\nWear Try a\nPair of These\nLight\nFlexible\nOxfords.\nFOAM CREPE OR\nCLEATED 80LE8\nYouths', 9  ftC\nSizes 11 to 18  3.WJ\nBoys', A QC\nSizes 1 to 6  t.WJ\nMen's, r\"  Cf\\\nSizes 6 to 11  J.jyJ\nPhone 1114 411 Baker St.\nI^atal Notes\nNATAL f Mr, and Mrs,llf. UA-\nkea and family returned to their\nhomo in Lulu Island at the Coast\naft or spending their holidayshere\nWith Mr. and Mrs. J. Volpatti.\n- Mr. and Mrs. T. Owen left Natal\nrecently to sporid an extended Stay\non Vancouver Island at the home of\ntheir son 'and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand7 Mrs! T, Owen, Jr., of Victoria.\n.Mr. and Mrs. E. Bafass, Sr., of\nVancouver Island, formerly of Michel, are staying with their sons.\n! Mr. ahd Mrs, George fallal and\nfamily df Chicago, spent a' few days\nrenewing acquaintances with relatives at Natal. This was the first\nvisit of Mrs. Kallal, who left Mi'\nchel wheii 10 years of age, for 31\nyears. <   '\u2022,\nAlex Schiffo iof Princeton, has\nJoined his wife and family on an extended visit W-th Mr. and Mrs. A.\nLant of Natal.\nMr. and Mrs. Stan Gamble and\nfamily of Natal are Spending their\nSummer vacation with relatives in\nSaskatchewan.\nMr. and Mrs. .Harry Lowe and\nfamily, accompanied by Mr. and\nMrs. Dave Slalne of Hamilton, Ont,\nare spending tlyeir holidays at Natal at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nL., Lowe. They held a family reunion with the\" arrival of Derek\nLowe of Calgary. Mrs. Slalne Is the\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs, L. Lowe.\n0WA. lip. ititek\nTthwtuL VftaAtui\n14!-\u201424J.\n8CALL0PED FLATTERY\nATonderfully slimming frock designed especially for the shorter,\nfuller, half-size figure \u2014 simply\nframed about the bosom by the\nscallops you adore! Slenderizing\npaneled skirt spells added height\nfor you! Choose voile, nylon, or\nacetate. Sew now and save!\n. Pattern 8022: Half Sizes WA,\n1SK, 18*4, 20*4, 22*4, 24*4. Size\n16*4 takes 3*4 yards 39-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, Illustrated\nsSew Chart Bhows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nIn coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRE83, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMAHTIN care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson.\nGrandma's Corncob Popular\nIn U.S. as Result of Cancer Scare\n,.    i\/By CYNTHIA LOWRY\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Of course it\nmay take'a little time before men\nget the hang of loving a girl who\nsmokes.a pipe.\nBut there's every Indication that\nthe gentle sex ln some numbers is\nlearning to puff, ream, tamp and\ndottle-knock. For the benefit of yoii\nfellows who have been smoking\npipes for years and didn't know\nwhat dottle ls\u2014it's that black stuff\nthat collects in the bottom of the\nbowl.\nThe fire responsible for all this\nsmoke was the recent survey reported to the American Cancer Society, which heard that cigarets may\nbe a, good dealv more hazardous to\nhealth than.pipes pr cigars.\nNOTABLE CONVERT\nOne notable,, if pot wholehearted\nconvert, is Mrs. E, Cuyler 'Hammond. Her husband, a Yale professor, is director of statistical research\nfor the cancer society, and one of\nthe men who made the report. Mrs.\nHammond is taking up pipe smoking, but says she still puffs a few\ncigarets a day\u2014a big reduction from\nher three-packs-a-day consumption\nbefore the survey..\nFrom La Jolla, Calif', where the\nHammonds are vacationing, to New\nYork the pipe companies are pitching for the feminine trade. One re-\ntaller here offers adorable \"purse-\nsized pipes for the lady smoker\"\nand reports selling-more than 100\na day. He stocks them in red, blue,\nmaize and green, In six shapes. He\nalso reports big business in. \"Milady\" tobacco, a mild blend put up\nNelson Social\nSHOWERED . . . Two showery\nhave been given recently for Miss\nMaureen Smuin, whose marriage to\nEarl Mason takes place Monday in\nthe United Churel^ at Penticton.\nThe first' shower was held at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. John\nTaylor at which Mrs. Gamble and\nMrs. Taylor were co-hostesses. The\nTaylors showed films of thdr wed-\ndlng. Many guests at the shower\nhad attended the Taylor wedding\nand were Interested in the films.\nRefreshments were served and the\n'presentation of gifts to the bride\ntook place.\nThe second shower was held at\nthe home of Mrs. J. Gamble when\na number of her friends from the\nChurch gathered to wish fier happiness. Two amusing contests had\nevery one in laughter and after\nrefreshments, the bride-to-be was\nshowered with many useful household jjiHs.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBACK.HOME ... Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. T. Duffy and son Jimmy have\nreturned to their home to New\nWestminster after visiting Mr. and\nMrs. D. MacDougall of 411 Carbonate Street.\n\u2022 *   *\nTO REVELSTOKE ... Mr. and\nMrs. W. M. Wallace and Brian and\nRosalee have returned to their home\nin Revelstoke after'spending a fortnight with Mrs. Wallace's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. H. B. Penny, 224 Robson Street\nSouth Slocan Woman\nEnters Work in PNE\n\"SOUTH SLOCAN\u2014A South Slocan woman, Mrs. Winnifred Jones,\nis among Kootenay residents entering exhibits in the Pacific National\nExhibition to be held in Vancouver\nAugust 25.to September 6.\nThe PNE has announced that Mrs.\nJones has entered an embroidered\npillow slip and embroidered table\ncloth in the textile section of the'\nhome arts show.  '\nIn' tin humidors wrapped in baby\nplnk.\\ ..' *y\n. One of the city's biggest department stores ,1s advertising ladies'\npipes ond mild, mild, mild tobacco.\nOne of the largest manufacturer;\n\u2014stuck with a load of girl-sized\n.briars after' the wartime cigaret\nshortages-says he's getting \"inquiries ahd hurry-up orders for them\nagain. ,\nSOME HESITANCY\nBut a casual survey among feminine leaders who often jump a\nfashion gun indicates some hesitancy in accepting this new trend.\nHere is some sample comment:\n\"The more that women copy\nmen's habits, the less attractive they\nbecome to men.\"\u2014Ann Miller, actress.\n\"Pipes and pretties. Oh, No!\" \u2014\nDonna Reed, actress.\n\"When they start making pipes\nout of chlorophyll I may have some\nInterest\"\u2014Rosemary Glooney, singer.\nThere ls, however, a strong, if\nsmall, pro-pipe contingent among\nthe ladles. Outstanding.ls Mrs. Hugo\nGnam. of Jefferson Valley, N. Y.\nwife of an Interior decorator, mother\nof two, who Is the international\nchampion woman pipe smoker, duly\ncrowned last summer after she won\na contest with 118 other lady puffers by keeping her briar bowl\nalight for one hour, 29 minutes, six\nseconds.      ,\n\"It's very relaxing,\" she explained. \"The idea is to puff slowly\u2014\nit's a knack. And it beats anything\nelse to do while watching television.\"\nAlthough some women maintain\nthat a woman can smoke a pipe as\ngracefully as she can do anything\nelse, other broad-minded women\naren't so sure. Take, for example,\nIlka Chase, actress and writer.\n\"Personally, I'm a cigar smoker,\"\nshe explained. \"I tried pipes, because it seemed to me that men always looked so contented with them\npolishing them against their noses,\nand fussing with them. But I discovered that it's a life's work-just\nkeeping them  lighted.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 30,1954\u20145\nby. aCauAcL Idlwd&h,\n658\nSIZES\nS-10-12\nM\u201414\u201414\nL\u201418\u201420\nJ.I-F-F-YI\nFrosting of flowers is delicious\ntouch on this jiffy-wrap halter' that\ntops shorts, slacks, skirtsl Easy to\nsew\u2014easier to embroider. Little\nyardage, use remnants.\nPattern 658 comes in sizes: Small\n(10, 12); Medium (14,-16); Large\n(18, 20). -Tissue, pattern; embroidery\ntransfer. State size.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Baker St.,\nNelson. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nDon't miss our Laura Wheeler\n.854 Needlecraft Catalog! 79 embroidery, crochet, color-transfer and\nembroidery patterns to send for \u2014\nplus 4 complete patterns printed in\nbook. Send 25 cents for your copy\ntoday! Ideas for gifts, bazaar sellers,\nfashions.\nFREEMAN'S Semi-Annual\nCLEARANCE\nSALE\nContinues\nEVERY ITEM IN THE STORE HAS BEEN  REDUCED-\nFOR THIS CLEARANCE. COME  IN AND SEE THE\nVALUES. HERE ARE JUST A FEW SAMPLE VALUES.\nOCCASIONAL FURNITURE\nBY DEILCRAFT\n1 Nest of 3 Tables In walnut\nWere $59.50 - __\n1 Coffee Table mahogany.\nWas $42.50  \t\n2 Only Coffee Tables walnut\nWere $42.50\t\n4 Only Step-Tables walnut.    -\nWere $34.50  ..\u2014 -\n1 Only Book Case limed oak,\nsliding gloss doors.'Was $83.50\n1 Only Corner Cabinet\nmahogany. Was $136.50\t\n1 Only 4-Drawer Chest\nAutumn leaf mahogany. Wa? $125.95 .\n1 Only Desk Autumn Leaf mahogany\nWas $146.50  ,\t\n4 Only End or Step Tables\nAutumn Leaf mahogany. Were $41.75 ..\n1 Only Cocktail Table\nMahogany with leather top. Was $114.95\nBYSNYDERS\n1 Only Wedge Step Table .   '\nVista finish. Was $52.95\t\n4 Only Book Shelfs\nopen style, vista finish. Were $37.95\n1 Only Cocktail Table\nebony. Was $26.95\t\n2 Only Cocktail Tables\nWere $25.95 \t\n2 Only End Tables\nvista finish. Were $24.95\t\n1 Only Triangular Coffee Table\nWas $32.95 .\t\n'47.77\n\u202237.77\n*34.7l\n'27.77\n'64.77\n'97.77\n*94.77\n'117.77\n'32.77\n'84.77\n'37.77\n'29.77\n19,77\n'19.77\n'18.77\n'27.77\n*l\n;ts\n9\nFrance's Leading lady Gay, Genuine\nBy l*EGGY MA8SIN\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014The homage\nwhich French queens.once imperiously accepted as their birthright\nhas pome naturally to Madame\nRene Coty, wife of the president of\nthe French Republic.\nAs chatelaine of the Elysee Palace, Mme. Coty has retained a\nfrankness and simplicity which impresses everyone from visiting royalty to her domestic staff.\nShe knows the name of each\nmember of {he staff of 24 at the\nElysee Palace. Many of her own\nservants have been with her for\nmore than 25 years.\nIf there has ever been any criticism of Madame Coty, it is that\nshe is too genuine and spontaneous\na person to live in a goldfish bowl,\nwhere privacy ls a rare luxury.  \u25a0..\nEvery thought, act and hourrjflf\nthis woman's day are semi-public\nknowledge. Her views on everything are discussed in detail, .and\nlt has taken rare courage to make\na real home within fhe Elysee\nPalace.    \u2022 * \u2022''?'\nMadame Coty recently asked that\non the few occasions when she a^A\nthe president leave the palace unofficially they might do so witho'lit\nthe customary group of bodyguards\nand motorized escort. , f.\n\"After all,\" she explained tb her\nhusband, \"you may be the president but we are pot in Jail . erf\nA mark of Madame Coty's gay\npersonality is her love of floweri\nPlants and seasonal cut flowers are\nseen in profusion everywhere in\nthe Elysee.\n PlfSI\n\"\n^j^EUON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 30,1954\nMust Learn to live Wllh H-Bombs\nAs Forbears Did With Printed Bomb\n.AM-ON PARK, Mass-Readers\nhave' been disturbed  by  General\nLindbergh's Important article in the\nJuly'17 Issue of tt>e Saturday Evening Post The gist of the Lindbergh\n;y,-article is that the H-bomb ls bring,\n':' .ing Shout a new era in world his-\n!K tory Against which lt.wlU be almost\n.'.' Impossible for any country to pro-\nI teet Hself. This means that unless\nthe United States is willing to start\nI \u25a0 a surprise World War III, our only\nchance is to have such elaborate\npowers for retaliation that no other\ncounty will dare start one. This\nwiU mesn continued high taxes until a revolution ln Russia or some-\n\\thlng unforeseen happens.\nAlthough my Organizations are\nnot authorities on military affairs,\nwe do k_ow-world history. Certainly conditions today are very\nsimilar to What they were 500 years\nago. Any reader can check this by\natudylng H. G. Well's Outline of\nHistory, or Munro's The Middle\nAges, or books on the Reformation\nand European Revolutions.\nAs was the case around 1490, the\npower of the established churches\ntoday has 'distinctly weakened, The\nrulers of the .western nations have\nThis week\npressed pork\n^ham loafs\nMRS. R. A. DENNY,\nHeod, Food Service\nTraining Deportment,\nProvincial Institute of\nTechnology, Calgory\nIfnioif\n^8lE-R6PW MSA?*\/\nMore-than 21 Variafiti\nINCLUDING: Frankfurt); Macaroni\nCheese Loaf; Barbecue Loaf; Cook.\nHam; Bologna; Pork, Ham & Cheese Lo-.\nbecome timid, while the Russians\nare trying to absorb other nations\n\u2014repeating the pattern of 500 years\nsin-\nHistory shows similar conditions\nexisted when printing became pow-.\nerful in 1450. This, like the H-bomb,\nbecame a threat to the entrenched\nrich political kingdoms. The church\nand kings fought by legislation,\npersecution and wars; but the rise\nof the masses could not be stopped.\nThe printed word became more\npowerful than the iword. Reformations, revolutions, and beheadings followed. The discovery of the\nH-bomb is unsettling civilization\ntoday as did the birth of printing ln\n1450.\nABOUT CAPITALISM\nNaturally we do not want to see\nentrenched captalism collapse as\ndid. entrenched monarchism, We\nnow use legislation, submit to high\ntaxes, and endure ' small wars to\nprotect our way of life, as these\nsame methods were practiced. 500\nyears ago to protect established\nmonarchism. Could It be that the\nfear bf the H-bomb will become as\npowerful a_ was the tear of printed\nbooks 500 yesus ago?\nFor the long pull, I am an optimist I don't believe ln the Lindbergh\nRetaliation Theory. I, however, do\nbelieve that the sfear of the H-\n\u25a0bomb (like the fear of printing 500\nyears ago) could handicap our\nwestern democracies with a blow\nto the capitalistic'system.\nLindbergh's only hope of preventing our big cities from being\ndestroyed is by constant threat of\nretaliation. Such will retard the\nforces of Communism, but it will\nnot accord with Christian teachings.\nWill the threat of retaliation save\ncapitalism as we now know it?\nThe Communists will not ever\nwin a Third -World War; but they\nmay gradually increase their power\n| and Influence by constantly threatening to start such a war. Surely,\nwe may expect . continual small\nwars, big military preparations and\nhigh taxes.\nPREPARING POR WORST\nMy grandchildren agree with me\nthat security cannot be obtained in-1\ndefinitely by legislation, pensions\nand tariffs. As our ancestors learned\nto live with \"printed bombs,\" we\nmust be prepared to' live with H-\nbombs. Jailing Communists today\nmay be no more effective than was\nbeheading or burning heretics 500\nyears ago. One of my own ancestors,\nRev. John Rogers, was so burned\n\"at'-the-stake\" for translating and\nprinting the Bible ln 1555.\nHence, I urge my grandchildren;\n(1) To develop a strong and sane\nspiritual faith; (2) to acquire robust health and good habits; (3) to\nbecome an expert in some useful\nIndustry; (4) to own a home and\nraise a family in an agricultural\ncefitre; (5) to have investments\nwidely diversified both geographically and industrially, avoiding\nlarge cities.\nJamaica Makes War\nOn Crime Comics\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) \u2014 The\nJamaica Booksellers Association has\nbarred more than 90 sex, horror\nand crime comics from this British\nWest Indian island, officials disclosed Thursday.\n\"You're too late, Daddy P\n*. Little teases with big bowlfula don't give a pig-\ntailed whoop that more families ran out of Corn Flakes\nthis morning than any other cereal. But it does happen,\nbemuse Kellogg's Corn Flakes just naturally taste best-\nto more people. Always have. Still do. No wonder bo\nmany women pick up a spare package of Kellogg's\nCorn Flakes every time they buy any cereal of any kind.\nIt's real good \"tomorrow-morning insurance.\"\nFRESH from *j2%?fr\nOur Low Budget Terms Cannot Be Beaten!\nTHRIFTY 30\"\nCanada's most popular range at a budget'price! Compact\n30 inch width fits into different kitchen corners-yet it has\nan oven big enough to hold six 8 inch pies! Cooks with\namazing economy with four \"Radiantube\" suface elements. Automatic oven control and 'signal light, appliance outlet, full width utensil drawer.\n\u2022 GENEROUS\nTRADE-IN\nALLOWANCE\n\u2022 UP TO  .\n24 MONTHS\nTO PAY\nSUPER FREEZER\nCHEST\nURGE\nHYDRATOR\nFULL 5-YEAR\nGUARANTEE\nWash and dry clothes faster than ever I\nFRIGIDAIRE \"PORCELAIN PAIR\"\nAutomatic Washer\nElectric Dryer\nWith ths Porcelain Pair you'\ngtt Ijvo - Water Washing\nthat gets clothes really\nclean) Flltra - malic Electric\nDrying that dries clothes\nsweet-smelling and fluffy-\nsoft . . . without extra vents\nor plumbing.\nThe perfect refrigerator for the smaller home\nwhere space is at a premium1! Compact design\nholds all your family's refrigeration needs. Complete with frozen food chest, four full-width\nshelves, cold storage tray, hydrator for fruit and\nvegetables.\nWASHER\n419.95\n$17 Monthly\nDRYER\n329.95\n$14 Monthly\nONLY 10% DOWN!\nSALE! CHROME SETS\nA special purchase for our August Home Furnishings Sale! Modern styling with arborite table top\nwith extension leaf, stain- ^^_ .^^ _ _\nless steel table edges, com- jm \u00a3\"%   S Q\nfortable,   padded,   plastic-        \"   m^^aC^VJ\ncovered   chairs.   Beautiful\ndecorator colors\t\n79\nWABASSO SHEETS\nSeconds: with very slight flaws\u2014\nat savings of almost one-half the\nusual price! Snowy white. Size\n81 x 100\t\n5\n.99\nCOME IN I\nThe Bay's  \/ Check List of\nOutstanding Savings for YOU!\n\"4\nif\n\/\nSAVE$10!\nSPRING-FILLED MATTRESS\nLimited quantity only, at this super low price.\nFirm 180 coil construction, sturdy ^A Crt\ncovering. Reg. 34.50  __\/t.2U\nSAVE $10! REG. 22.50\nTORCHIERE LAMPS\nA value that can't be beaten! Modern metal\nstyling with frosted torchiere- | n C A\nstyle glass shade     \\m\\s.j\\J\nREG. 1.98\nPINWALE CORDUROY\nA big saving on first quality miltehds! All\ncolors in fine pinwale. 36\" Wide.\nYard.\t\nREG. 2.98. CHILD'S 2-PIECE\nSUMMER SUITS\nFine' quality cotton plisse \u2014 gaily patterned\nshirt, plain shade shorts. 1  QQ\nSizes 2 to 6x      IeOO\nREG. 2.98. MAKER'S CLEARANCE!\nCHILD'S SUNDRESSES\nSkirt and halter top of gaily printed krinkle\ncotton; under pan tie to match. 1 QQ\nSizes 2 to 6x     I \u2022 3*0\n$1\n\u2022\nSAVE $1! REG. 5.99\nBOYS' SUMMER JACKETS\nSpecial purchase! Plain shade nylo-gab with\nsmart contrast trim. Satin lined. \u25a0\u25a0 t\\ QQ\nSizes 6 to ^6  T\"\u00bb>3P\nSAVE$1!\nMEN'S T-SHIRTS\nA famous maker's special! Regular 2.95. Fancy\nknit two-tone styles. 1  QC\nSizes S, M; L     1.9 J\nSAVE 20%! REG. 69.50\nMEN'S SUITS\nTop quality \"Fashion Craft\" worsteds in single\nand double breasted styles. Sizes 38 flJC I?\nto 44. Budget terms available \u00abP_\/_\/\nSAVE $4!\nReg. 18.95 DACRON DRESSES\nThe \"pick of the season.\" \u2014 Beautiful styles J\nwith permanent pleats. Pink, blue, \\A  QC\nwhite, in sizes 14 to 20     \\^.<r& .\nBIG SAVING!\nReg. .98 CHECKED DENIM\nJust arrived! Gay checks in firsf quality denim} j\nideal for summer wear. TO I\n38\" wide. Yard  . # ^ I\nUSE YOUR CREDIT AT HBO\nCHARGE NOW-YOU HAVE UP TO\nSEPT. 10th TO PAY\nY.\n\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\"-\u25a0; \u2022\u25a0'<\u25a0\u25a0\"-  \u25a0    '     \"     \u2022  '\u2022\u25a0'-    \u25a0   : '\u2022\u25a0 '    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0y-^A\n-_\u2014\u25a0 s  y.;.\u201ey,y.\n \u25a0yy\n'.'.i>i. .M.\nDuke fo Honor Canadian Navy\nCadefs During Victoria Visit\nVICTORM (CP) - Ab outaUtwl-\nlng Canadian navy cadet who is tha\ngrandson ot a retired Royal Navy\nadmiral will be prosentod with tho\nQueen's Canadian Dirk by the\nDuke oi Edinburgh during his visit\nhere Monday.\nHa ls Charlou Theodore Gunning,\n19, son of Mr. and Mrs.. Robert\nGunning ol Peace River, Alta., and\ngrandson of Vice-Admiral Sir T. J.\nHallett, KBB, CB, RN (retired).\nCadet Gunning is one of six\ncadets of the Royal Canadian Navy\nand reserve who will receive\nawards for outstanding achievement during their summer training.\nThe Queen's Canadian Dirk Is\nawarded annually to the best all-\nround cadet completing his final\nprofessional training period. Selection li bated on officer-like qualities, academic and athletic ability\n\u2022\nValdmanis Case\nTo Open Monday\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) - The\npreliminary hearing Into fraud\ncharges against Dr. Alfred A. Valdmanis will probably open next\nMonday, a spokesman for the attorney-general's department said\nWednesday. ,\nSolicitor-General Myles Murray\n\u25a0aid ha Is \"almost certain\" the at-\ntorrtey-general's department will be\nready to open the preliminary hear\nlng Monday with the expected ar\nrival of a key German witness.\nValdmanis, former director of\nNewfoundland's economic develop\nment,' chsrged with defrauding the\nNewfoundland government and a\nGerman machine company of $420,.\n000 ,has been on a weekly remand\nfor the past two months. Mr. Murray said the remands were due to\nthe Illness of the unidentified key\nwitness who was unable to come to\nNewfoundland.\nand sportsmanship.\nOTHER AWARDS\nTha duke will also present\nawards to the following B.C. cadet\nofficers: ! \u25a0\u2022.'.'\u2022' IX\nCadet Captain Russell' I James\nVolker, it, son ef Mr, ind Mra.\nRobert I\/. Volker, Whonnook, B.C.,\nwho has been awarded the department ol national defence Officer of\nthe Watch Telescope for aftainlnf\nthe highest standing in academic\nstudies and for officer-like qualities.\nChief Cadet Captain George P.\nCassad\/, 22, son 61 Mr. and M's.\nGeorge L, Cassady, New Westminster, B.C., who revives the\ndepartment of national defence\nUniversity Naval Training Division\nSword as the best all-round cadet\nof UNTD members who have completed two years of required training.\nChief Cadet Captain Peter R.\nGrantham, 21, son of Dr. and Mrs.\nHerbert H. Grantham, Vancouver,\nwho will receive the department of\nnational defence UNTD Telescope\nawarded to the cadet selected as\nrunner-up to the winner .ol t_\\e\nUNTD Sword.\nREOINT GRADUATES are 8t. Clair Duffy (left) and Earl\nDuffy (right). Graduating from O.goodo Hall In law, St. Clair was\noalled to the Ontario Bar tha same day. He received hla B.A.\nfrom  University of Toronto In  1950.  Earl, hli younger brother,\nreceived hla Bachelor of Commerce degree on May 87th from tha\nUniversity of Toronto. \u00bboth boys, 'sow of M\u00abV and Mm, Ji ft,.\nDuffy, long-time retldenti of Nelson, now of New MA\/eitmlniter,\nreoelved all their early eduoatlon at St Joseph's Academy In Nelson.\nSt. Clair reoelved hit senior matrlc at Nelton High School. They,\nwere members of the Sodality and Student cetlnolli of St. JOstph's,\nand active In sports, especially hockey. Bt. Clair will praotloe law \u2022\nin Toronto, and lerl It employed In Toronto.      .\nDaring Canadian Naval Officers\nRemove Esther From U.S. Balaam\nABOARD CRUSADER (CP) -\nThey're Hying a yellow'\u25a0 pennant\non. this Canadian destroyer during\nUt latest patrol to Korean waters,\nlt could moan trouble,\nfor ...the present, however, it\nmeans Esther Williams la t rest,\ndent In th* wardrooms Md a contested one, despite tht (tot ahe\nwai. kidnapped by th* destroyer's\ncaptain and: oxotmtlvo officer.\n:Kot the nil Iflath. and -blood\nawlmmlng star ot the movies, ol\ndourso t luit hor photograph. Bui\nwhat a photogrephl\nTho Australians itarted all this\njsadk ln 194., Either, ploture wai\nBonn Agrees lo\nPay Allied Cosls\nBONN (AP) \u2014 The West Oar\nman government hes agreed to\ncontinue paying 800,000,000 marks\n($142,600,600)' a month in occupation costs until Sept. 30, 1954, the\nAllied high commission announces.\nThe agreement ended a long dispute ln which the'Germans called\non the Allies to reduce these payments, which help support British,\nU.S. and French defence forces In\nWest Germany. They were refused.\nThe Allies will set aside at least\n18,000,000 marks a month.for the\nliquidation of occupation damages\nunder the new agreement.\nDemonstrations\nBanned In Egypt\nCAIRO (Reutersi - The Egypt\nIan government Thursday banned\ndemonstrations welcoming the new\nAnglo-Egyptian, agrement on the\nwithdrawal of British troops from\nthe Suez canal zone.\nA ministry of the interior communique, Issued after a number of\ndemonstrations said: \"We share\nwith all classes of the nation their\nJoy at the victory achieved by the\nRevolutionary government.\n\"But since the people have ex\npressed their feelings towards the\nevacuation lt has been decided to\nban demonstrations as from tO'\nday.\"\nPrivate TV Station\nApproved, Victoria\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The gove'rnfnlnt\nThursday announced approval 'for\nthe establishment of four new privately-owned television stations at\nPeterborough and Sault Ste, .Merits\nOnt.; Moncton, ft, b\u201e and Brandon,\nMan.\nTransport Minister Marler alio\nannounced the government's approval ot three new privately*\nowned radlp stations at Gilt, Ont.;\nPeace River, Alta., and Victoria.\nBUSY 8TATION.\nL6NH0N (CP)-A new bus sta<\ntion at London's King's Cross sta<\ntion will handle more than 1000\nvehicles a week and more than V\n000,000 passengers a year.\nWINNIPEG-(CP) -A Winnipeg\ngolfer foil with a bullot in hit chart\nWednesday as he- teed off at the\nsocond hole at the suburban Tuxedo golf course.       , >\nTwo other shots earn* oloia to\nhitting hla two companions, \u2022 but\npolice don't know who did tha\nshooting.\nTho condition of th*. wounded\ngolfert Aian Opleta, 33, wai do-\nsorlbed Thursday ai good. Th* bul>\nlet lodged near hli heart.\nThe golf course ii ln t gam* preserve, and RCMP lay many per-\nnone sneak in with .firearms to\npoach tor small gam*.\nDISMANTLIVILUfll\nSEOUL (Art-Freedom Village\nlh* first stop for nearly 8000 tjnlted\nNations prisoner! of war repatriated last year, loon will disappear\nfrom the.Korean acene. Th* (th\nArmy ordsrsd dismantling ot tha\nhug* warehouse building used to\nprocess tha 4909 ex-POWS in th*\nrepatriation whloh itarted lost August at Mundan.\n - ___\nchosen trom dozeni ot ptn-upa\naboard th* Australian destroyer\nNepal as the officeri' favorite, tnd\nbefore long tho troublo started.\n-YANK* lilllD I.IR\nAt tho ond of the Second World\nWar, the crew Ot th* United States\ndestroyer Batoan mid* oft with\ntht AuisIob' prlied photo. The\nAussies lamented!\n\"A rusty old Yankee destroyer\nWm rotting In Sasebo bur,\nWhen by low tnd underhand\n. tunning\nThey otmt and stole Either   .\nY*wty,^\n.\" So she left htr Australian lovers,\n.   .tad became an American's dear,\nWith ooffeo and doughnuts for\nbreakfast\nInitead of her usual beer.\"\nOTHER CAPTURES\nSomehow, however, she . wound\nup aboard th* U.S. destroyer\nOeorge and early ont recent morning, while thtt vessel wsB in dry-\ndock at Saiabo,, Japan, tht Crusader took Esther over.\nTht captain, Lt.-Cmdr. W. H.\nWllls'on of Calgary and the executive officer, l_t.-Cmdr. H, H, Smith\nof Vtotorio stole aboard the\nGeorge and abducted htr.\nTht' Crusader isn't ihe first Canadian destroyer Esther.hai tailed\nwith, Back ln 1080, during tht ttriy\ndayi of the Korean War, ahe\ngraded tho.wardrooms ot tht Sioux\ntnd Cayuga.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 195\nFINID$250 FOR\n\"MA* DRIVING\"\ni^WMmtmsTMi (W) -\nRonald McDonald, 21, was fined\n\u2666260 todtX for \"the mad driving\"\nwhich totaOhed eft t police chaie\nTuesday and the shooting Of Ronald Byers, 12.\nByers waa shot by a police bullet during the chaie. He was a pai-\nKnrfer ln the car.\n\"litis li mad driving,\" Magistrate George, CasSady told McDonald. \"You haven't much respect tor\nthe law to Jeopardize the lives of\nyour passengers and police officers.\"\nMcDonald pleaded guilty to dangerous driving and driving without\nt licence.' On the teoond count he\nMILITARY. MOTTO\n\"Serve to lead\" li the motto of the\nRoyal Military*. Academy, Sand-\nhunt, England, -\nwai fined lit. Hit right to drlvt ttO-\nsuspended to' one yetr.\nREADER'S DlOISt\n$9,000 COHTEST\nNothing 16 write or buyl\ntAnWfoCcmoAieoV\/       A\nHow wtll do you know human na-' \\\ntuns? Hero's a ohanco to find out\u2014,,\nand you. way win $3,000 cash first\nprko or one of 1,000 other prints!|\nThe official entry blank Is FREE;'\nat your un dealer'*. Just chooto\"\nin order, the 6 articles in Augurt\nReader's Digest you think MOBt I\nreadewwiUlBtebest.dfyouwlah,0'\nread tht complete articles in the\nReader's Digest, now on oalo. But:\nvou need not buy it to get an entetfj\nblank, or win A priee,) AU ehtrlei\"\nmust be postmarked by midnight)\nAugust M. O0t free entry 1\"\nTODAY at your newsstand.\nWtaom will bo neu_ed by matt.\n,::\u25a0::\u25a0. \/\u25a0:>. -..ixi-y\n31\nWONDERFUL\nMODELS\nWant a car that's styled exactly to your Individual tastes 1 With 81\nmodels, Pontile gives yon * choice.tinequalled by any other ear\nline.  And every on* offers you exquisite styling, dramatic color\n, harmonies and tasteful, luxurious, appointments, inside and out.\nGREAT\n.\u00ab._\u2022\u00ab.-\n .SERIES     .\nWant a proud possession which It somehow Inst a little mora\nexclusive? Somewhere in Poaliac's six great serial) there't a car to\nplease the most exacting driver\u2014a ear to please you! 'And each\nand every Pontiac carries the prestige of being the belt of ltl type,\nanywhere. '\nFAMOUS HIGH\nCOMPRESSION ENGINES\nWant high-compression power? Pontiac offers you a choice of two\nfamous engines. Both the \"6\" and the \"8\" are without peer In their\nclass for til 'round performance. Pontiac engines just go on and\non\u2014mile after mile and year after year\u2014responding with quiet,\neffortless alertness to your touch.\nmom\nFULLY AUTOMATIC\nTRANSMISSIONS\nWant the effortless ease and silk-smooth performance of perfected,\nfolly automalio truunliilon. Poutlao's famous Duil-Rnngo Hydra.\nMade Drive it an extra-cost option on all Chieftains, ta automatic\noption on die Star Chief. Powerglide ii optional at sjxtra cott eA\nall other terles. \u25a0\nPOWER STEERING\nYou'll drlTC farther\u2014more lafeJywand arrive\nrefreshed with Pontine Power Steering! It\nrelieve* yon of ap to 80% of flteering effort,\nyet leti yon retain the all-Important \"feel\" of\nthe road. Available at extra cO\u00bbt on -ill models *\nCOMFORT CONTROL SEAT\n\"Custom tailor\" your driving comfort with \u25a0\nPontiac'\u25a0 exclmtvo Comfort-Control front\n\u25a0eat. An extra-cost option on Chieftain and\nStar Chief models, It aire* yon a choice of 360\ndifferent teat positions I EUetrie window lift*\nere alio available in these series.\nPOWER BRAKES\nThanks to Pontiac't Power Brakes* yon\ncan stop smoothly and quickly with\n.about as much pedal pressure as yon\nekert on the accelerator in normal\ndriving! Tiring foot and leg movements .ire greatly reduced. Optional\nat \u00abxirn cost\nAUTOMATIC FRONT\nWINDOW & SEAT CONTROLS\nEnjoy finger-Up front window and teat\ncontrol with thlt wonderful combined\noption, available on Pontiac Path,\nflnderi and La-realisms, at extra coit.\nniuttratd\u2014Pontlto \"Linrentlssn\" 4-Door Maa\nA Oontral Meiers Valut\nPONTIAC AIR CONDITIONING\nAnother POnUae Mcluilvo I Thl. completely new\ntype of automobile air eonsllllonl|i\u00abs optional at\nextra com on certain Pontiac ata.lt, keeps the ear\ninterior deliehUnlly cool on even tho hotteit tnmmer\nda;>. The entire lyiteroi-located forward of tho\ndaihboard, leaving the trunk k<* and turiJutlcred.\nPLUS a Wealth of Other Standard s\nand Optional Features      ..\nDon't delay. \u2022 \u2022 iee your Pontiac dealer right away,\nand leam Ihe facts about to^ay'a molt (Urtllna\n. antomotlve value.\n.;\u25a0\u2022.\u2022;. ;\u25a0 :\u25a0 yyX r\nThis advertisement Is not published or dliplttyed by tho\nliquor Control Board or by the Govornmont of B.lfl_h CelumbTa.\n ! f i ,,\u2014: .   siiiiri\nRe-powers\nTCP,* a Shell-discovered fuel additive now\nblended into both Shell Gasolines, sets\nfree the captive power formerly locked\nin by lead and carbon deposits. It's the\n, greatest gasoline development in 31 years.\nActs so fast it repowers your engine before\nyou've finished your second tankfuL\ni\nTHE MOST TROUBLE-FREE CAS JN THE INDUSTRY\np-ais.o\nWIGINTON MOTORS LTD.\n281 Baker St. ,   Nelson B.C. Phone 122\n.Did ybu know that up to 15% of\nyour engine's power Is actually trapped .. \u2022 that you ere payini for\npower ybu aren't jetting?\nThe reason tt thlat Every gasoline\nsold today contains deposit-forming\ncompounds. And, as gasoline li burned,\nlead and carbon deposits form on the\nwalls of the combustion chamber and\non the tips of the spark plugs. In the\ncombustion chamber these deposits be.\ncome red hot, especially when you are\naccelerating, and set off the gasoline-air\nmixture before the piston reaches' its\nproper firing position. Power works\nagainst you, no.t for you. This condition\nis called pre-ignition and it not only\nwastes power and fuel\u2014it Is also responsible for a most severe kind of\nknock\u2014engineers call It \"wild ping.\"\nThese deposits also cause power lees\nby short-circuiting spark plugs, causing\nthem to misfire when you need power\nmost.\nNow, however, there ls a way to release the imprisoned power in your\nengine\u2014an^i quickly I\nIt'i TCP, the greatest gasoline develop,\nment since the discovery of tetraethyl\nlead, TCP additive actually repowera\nyour engine by changing the character\nof the engine deposits. In the combustion\nchamber It \"flreproofs\" them so they\ncannot glow and'cause pre-lgnltlon.\nAnd, because it makes the deposits nonconductors of electricity, spark plugs no\nlonger ahort-clrcuit\u2014they fire on\ntime. Power works for you\u2014not\nagainst you.\nBy the time you have finished, your\nsecond tankful, you'll be getting up to\n15% more power. But remember\u2014\nbecause these deposits are constantly\nbuilding up, continued use of Shell\nGasolines with TCP Is essential to retain\nfull benefits.\nShed Gasolinei with TCP are available only at Shell dealers.\n\u2666Shell\". Trademark tor Dili unlnue ftioltan addltlvo\ndeveloped by Shell Reinrch. Patent applied for.\nWITH\nThe Greatest Casotine Development in 3fr yean\nw\nmmmrnmm\n_ '_'__.      .   \u2022 .   \u25a0      ,.     ' '   \u25a0 ' .- .' ^^\nm:   '       . t \u25a0 '       '   : .. ' :   ' ' _\n I\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS. FRIDAY. J'.IY ?\u00ab.,; 1?S4\nJiidge Scales Mountain of Evidence\nIn Montreal's Secret Vice Inquiry\nAt Kiwberley.Ball Tournament\nit\nBy JOE MncSWEEN\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 A Judicial\nreport on the extent of vice and\ncorruption in gay Montreal may be\nIssued soon\u2014possibly this, month.\nCharges of widespread corruption.\n[tin high places came under judicial\nscrutiny In a 31-month Inquiry that\nended April 2, 1953. Since then Mr.\nJustice Francois Caron of Quebec\n.Superior Court who conducted the\n(500.000 investigation has been scaling a mountain of evidence in addi-\ntion to performing routine judicial\n\u00a34utjes.\nHis judgment\u2014and  he has un-\nt-iual powers  for   the  task\u2014may\nlave repercussions in administra-\n;ive and police circles.\nJSTAflTEDIN 1960\nThe so-called vice probe began\nSept. 11, 1950, in an excited atmosphere) watched by a tense public.\nBut it eventually .dragged Into te\ndloits hearings with few spectators.\nFeelings ran high at times and\n.many resented that the name of\n'^Montreal,  One  of the  continent's\n' most colorful and cosmopolitan cities, with a population of 1,500,000,\nwas being besmirched.\nDespite the sensational nature of\nthe evidence\u2014that disorderly hous-\noperated with impunity for years\n\u2014the. hearings did not react the\n\"circus\" proportions of somewhat\n'similar probes ln the United States.\nThere was no television.\nThe petition for the inquiry \u2014 a\n12-pound, 1500-page document \u2014\neharged that between January and\nMay, 1950, city administrators and\nmembers of the police department\nwere guilty of corruption. The inquiry was based on Chapter 214 of\nthe Revised. Statutes of Quebec,\n1925.\nAccusations against the city officials ahd -police were:\n'_ 1, Thatitjore than 400 disorderly\nlouses and gambling establishments\niperated ,fr0m 1941 to 1950, to the\nsnowledge of the city executive\ncommittee, Montreal's top administrative body which is responsible\n'for'the police department.\n2. The real keepers of such establishments were never arrested and\nkeepers were warned in advance\nif police raids.\nRaiding officers made false\ndeclarations In court by inserting\nfalse civic numbers in warrants for\narrest of the accused.\n4.-Padlocks .were not placed according to law. In Montreal, a special bylaw provides that after two\nconvictions, premises, be padlocked.\n5. The criminal record of keepers\narrested were not produced in\nGourt This, may have resulted in\njudges not sentencing keepers to\njail terms after two convlcUons, as\nprovided by law. \u2022\n\u25a06. The owners of the buildings\nsheltering skullduggery were never\nprosecuted as provided by law.\nAlmost all high-ranking police officers were named, Including director J. Albert'Langlots and former\ndirector Fernand'Duiresne. In all,\n62 persons were named in the petition, aiid at least 10 of these have\ndied.\nMr. Justice Caron\" has the task\nof determining th^'degree of guilt\nor innocence of the accused, as well\nas deciding on points.of law raised\nby-the defence during the hearings.\n\"He'll be handing some 100 judgments when his judgment is rendered,\" said one legal source.\nTestifying in Montreal were:\nHundreds of. former keepers and\nemployees of, disorderly houses!\nnine former employees of gambling\nplaces; seven attorneys, 18 city\ncouncillors, 19 \u2022 city officials, 25\nnewspaper men and 31 police off!\ncers. \u25a0','.'\nNewspaper men testified regarding stories and surveys.written\nvice conditions in, Montreal during\nthe ldyyear period under review.\nMr. Justice Caron is not authorized to cancel pensions of police officers and city officials accused, who\nhave been retired. He may, now-\never, levy a portion of the inquiry's\ncosts against them.\nOne objection he will have to\nrule on was raised by defence lawyers in their final pleas. They submitted the judge could not find any\nof the respondents guilty under\nChapter 214 since it is claimed this\nlaw concerned only cases where\nmoney is involved. There was no\nchaVge of payoffs in the petition.\nInvestigate Loss\nOf Jewelry Parcels\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Policy are\nInvestigating the disappearance of\ntwo parcels containing $940 worth\nof jewelery.\nInspector George Keep of the Canadian National Railways said the\ntwo small parcels disappeared 'en\nroute to Edmonton by air express.\nOne of the parcels left here June\n17 and the second left Winnipeg\nfor Edmontdh six days later, Inspector Keep said.\nEXPERT ADVICE Is given Allen Fabro, left,\nand Colin Fabro, right, Kimberley twin brothers,\nby Bruce Campbell of 8pokano, who wat umpire\nin   Kimberley's. $2200  baseball' tournament last\nweekend. He alio gave the twins some tips for\ntheir Little League tournament thlt weekend,\nwhere ensh.brother plays the tame position on\ndifferent teams.\nSPOKANE BOUTENS won the tournament and here Johnny\nAchtzener of Kimberley congratulates Gus J. Bouten of Spokane\non winning of the tournament by his team.\n\u2014C. Wormlngton  photos.\nB.C. Highway Signs Attract Attention\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 In more than\nin Orange-Crush\nHere's a way lo win oxtra money\n\u2014and provide oxtra fun-^for your\nholidays! Every week the\nOrange-Crush \"Holiday Money\"\nContest offers flvo $100 cash\nprizes, ono each to the flvo bast .\nontriesl $500 In all evory wookl\nMalt* sure you gal your share\nef this \"holiday money\"\nby onlering right away I Tha\nOrange-Crush \"Holiday Money\"\nContest is easy...and it's funl\nHow-to\nEnter...\n\u00ab\u00ab ( WisHls. ____7p_t tort.ji of\ndellltout Orange-Crush, whleh tonlatn,\nat entry farm with Ih. lollowlng un-\nIwlihti haiKkla-'\n\"k bu-gst-wiso housewife named lee\nSaid 'I'd liko a holiday froo'\nSo I'll win thi ink\nWith \u2022 'Crash' hudlpe...\nHtl writs \u25a0 Iftt lint, then Ml aal lh. entry,\n.farm with year nam. and address, md IMS. for-\n'{HANOI-CRUSH \"HOUMY MONEY\" CONTEST\n1590 O'Connor Drive, Teronto 14, Ontario.\nNatur%\n.ft tastes\nbete!\nCONTEST RULES\nOrange-Crash is made with natural orange Juice\nso naturally it fastet better. For convenience,\neconomy and extra-delicious natural refreshment\/\nget Orange-Crush in the Contest handipak today I\np 1   Yoa nwy Mitd a* many antrln ot you Ilka, provldH\nBoth it accompanied with thai official entry form or \u2022\nceaionable fceilmHe oMhe tome, fciti.mlloi prepared\nby any mulllple proem not eligible. \\\nO All enfriet become tha property of Oranao Crush\nllmllod end muit bt poilmoiktd not later nan mld-\nnlBhf, Saturday, at fhli week. ContOit will eonllnuo\nweekly, until further notice..\nt Winner, will bo notified by mail and will olio bo\n\u2022___________\u25a0\n.1   The1 declilon of tho |udgai wtll bo final and  no\n' correipondenee will bo anterod Into (oncoming tho\nContest.\nC   How your lott lino muit and. Th* frit and teeond\n* lin.i end with tho sound \"m\". Tho fifth lino {which\nyaw oo fo wiltej muil ond with tht iamo lovnd..\nBOTTLED BY ^\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nk.\nrmmmmmm -----.\n\"MOKTANT!\n\"\u25a0\u2022\u25a0- \u2014....\n-1\ni\ni\nI\nl\nI\nI\nl\nl\nl\nl.\n_.\u00ab\nColumbia Bottling\n409 WARD ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 412\nhalf-mile long signs, drivers on\nBritish Columbia highways are being asked to:\n\"Keep B.C. Green \u2014 use your\nash tray.\"\nThe signs are painted in seven-\ntoot letters with'the words 100 feet\napart. The whole sign takes up\nfive-eights of a mile. \u00bb\nThe signs are the first of their\ntype to be used in B.C.\nTrinidad Flyer\nFears No Rival\nBy W.  R.  WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Mike Ago-\nstini, Trinidad's 19-year-old \u2022 flyer,\nhas no fear of Hector Hogan of\nAustralia, co - holder of the world's\nrecord of 9.3 for 100 yards.\nThe two are virtually unanimous\nchoices to fight it out in the sprint,\nat the British Empire Games.\n\"If Hogan isn't more than a yard\nin front of me at 30 or even 50 yards\nhe will be beaten,\" said Agostini\njust after he had worked out at the\nUniversity of British Columbia Stadium.\nFULL OF CONFIDENCE\nHe sad it without .any cockiness\nbut as a plain statement and with\nconfidence In his ability.\nThe Canadian trfick and field\nteam had a long workout Wednesday but took things * easy. There\nwas a general tendency among all\nt$ams to. taper off. 'Teams frpm\nNew Zealand, Uganda,. Nigeria, Jamaica, India 'and other countries,\nalong with a cood section of fhei\nAustralian-team, also worked out\nat UBC Stadium.\nLANDY ABSENT\nThe English team, with the great\nmiler Roger Bannister and thfee-\nmiler Chris Chataway,.-practised at\nBalaclava Park. Bannister worked\neasily, and \u25a0officials at- the English\nheadquarters said he has not yet\ngone the full .mile. \u25a0       '\u25a0\nJohn Landy of Australia, whose\n3:58 bettered Bannister's 3:59.4 as\nthe second man to break' through\nthe four-minute mile, was an absentee ftom. workouts.:\n\"He works out when he feels he\nshould,\" said coach Theo Tracy.\nFiremen Fieht 21\nFires ih 24 Hours..\n' VANCOUVER (CP)'\u2014Six .persons\nv\/ere forced from their living,apartments early Thursday .when fire,\nspread from a 16th avenue meat\nmarket smoke: house.\nOwner Paul Retilaff, his wife,\ndaughter and son-in-law and their\ntwo children fled from their Buite\non the second floor of7 the market.\nIn the last 24 hours firemen were\ncalled to 21 fires ln Vancouver,\none taking the lives of three young\ngirls.\nChurchill Keeps\nthem Guessing\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Prime Minister\nChurchill parried an attempt ln\nthe House of Commons today to find\nout whether he intends to resign\nand if so, when.\nIt was all In good fun and Church-\nIll seemed to enjoy keeping everyone guessing.  I\nLt.-Col. Marcus Lipton, a Labor\nmember, led up to the question\nslyly by asking Churchill on how\nmany days of the'week he will answer oral questions in the House\nafter the summer recess.\nTWINKLING  EYES\nWith a twinkling in his eyes,\nChurchill said Tuesdays and Thursdays were   the most convenient to\nWicks Considers\nIntervention in\nBakeries Strike\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Labor Minister Lyle-Wicks said Thursday he\nis considering a union request for\ngovernment intervention in Vancouver's three - week - old bakery\nstrike-lockout ,'\u25a0\u25a0':\nInternational Battery and Confectionery Workers' Union (TLC)' requested mediation or the formation\nof an Industrial commission in order\nto end. the dispute which lifts tied\nup production at six major bakeries.\nHOPEFUL OF MEET -,-\nMeanwhile Tom' Alsbury, president of the Vancouver Trades snd\nLabor Council, said he is \"quite\nhopeful\" that a meeting between\nunion representatives and employers could be arranged to end the\ndispute before the start of the British Empire Games Saturday.\nAnother appeal for government\nintervention' has been made by the\nbakery salesmen's union, which has\n273 members out of work because\nof the tie-up.\nThe strike-lockout, involving some\n400 employees, centres around the\nunion's demand for a 33-hour work\nweek in-lead of the present 38.\nOver 11 Years In\nJail For Serbian     v\nBELGRADE (AP.-The Serbian\nOrthodox Church leader of M o h -\ntenegro was convicted Thursday of\nanti-Yugoslav activities, and - sentenced to 11 years and six months\nin prison. .\nThe district court of Cetlrtje, historical capital of Montenegro\nwhich now is part of Yugoslavia,\nhanded down the sentence against\n72-year-old Metropolitan Arsenije\nBradvavevlc after a two-day trial.\nThe sentence was reported here\nby telephone frbm the court clerk.\n* ..\u2014;  ,     . \u25a0\" -.-...\nSays BE Games\nSwiss Feel Tremor\nGENEVA (AP)\u2014A strong earth\ntremor shook Switzerland early\nThursday, but no damage was reported immediately. Centre of the\ntremor was reported to be Southern\nSwitzerland near Sion. The shock\nwas felt as far away as Zurich.\nhim but any day would be all right\n\u2014except Friday.\nParliament is quitting Friday for\nthe summer recess until October\u2014\nand there's been plenty of lobby\ntalk that Churchill may resign as\nprime minister before then or shortly after.\nLipton, a frequent critic of the\nChurchill government, drew laughter in the House when he remarked, \"We are all very much interested in your future movements.\"\nSYDNEY, Australia (AP)\u2014Ernie\nE. Chrlstensen, Sydney Sun staff\ncorrespondent now in Vancouver,\nsaid Thursday that \"the Empire\nGames will develop into a gigantic\nmuddle unless there is a marked\nimprovement in organization before the first event on Saturday.\"\nChristenscn wrote in the lead\nposition on page one:\n\"The position .today can be described only as chaotic with program changes being made almost\nhourly, ticket sales out of control\nand many athletes not even sure\nwhen their events fake place. \u25a0\nBLAMES INEXPERIENCE\n\"To cap it all, Australian mile\nchampion John Landy was billed\nto appear Saturday In the 880 yards\n--a race in which he has no intention of starting.\n\"The trouble seems to be that\nofficials inexperienced in staging\nbig sporting carnivals have' failed\nto heed the lessons learned in previous Games . ...\n\"How the officials are going to\nget out of the. ticket mix-up has\neverybody including themselves\nbaffled. The organizers have made\navailable tickets for sections of\nwrestling where no seats exist.\"\nMOBILE CLINIC\nA mobile children's clinic is operated in New South Wales, Australia, with specially equipped railway coaches attached to regular\ntrains.\nChild's Death\nleadsjo '\nMother's Arrest\n-BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) -\nThree hours after a nine-year-old\ngirl died of a beating and poisoning\nThursday, first-degree murder\ncharges were filed in superior court\nagainst her rnothe., Mrs, Regina\nDykstra, 47.\nThe Whatcom County farm\nwoman was 'accused in an information filed by Prosecutor Tom Durham with the willful slaying of hei\ndaughter, Ruth Carol.\nThe child was found beaten with\nan ax handle Sunday morning and\nshe was later discovered to be suffering from poisoning from a caustic\nantiseptic she had swallowed.\nThe husband and father Ben Dykstra, was in the barn milking at the\ntime of the Incident. Three other\nchildren were ln the house.\nBE Goodrich\nTUBELESS\nTIRE\nMEL BUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\nFORD-MONARCH\n608 Vernon St. Phone 1744\nNelson. B.C.\nBuy. 8ell. Trade the Classified Way\n\u25a0w^^ii-m^m\nI * ^* y\nMmESTING  WADES. Oss*. of ffadsw MT\nheon wlo-sws.  to-tocluo. training for unfa\nwills (ha Itoyei CsjmWiWAitlls-rjs.\nHR YOUNG\nMED\/CAt CARE.Thifin erf madltai and denial \u25a0\nan* ensures that tha young man ara kept io\ngood health,\nEXPERT INSTRUCTION. A civilian academic In-\n\u2022frucfor axp\/aini fo tiudonit an oxpor'ment io\n\u25a0Mc\/ianfut\nOF 16\n-\n\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0'\u2014   -; -\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0     - -\nMILITARY TRAINING \u2022 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES\nTRADES APPRENTICESHIP*FORMAL SCHOOLING\nIn Ih vital job of guarding Canadian freodom, the Army hen a continuing need for highly qualified soldiers and soldier tradesmen. Ta\nhelp meet this requirement, tho Soldier Apprentice Plan was established.\nCombine thorough trades training, schooling, sound discipline, with\nan understanding af the spirit of youth and you have the elements\nof this training plan for young men ef li. The .Soldier Apprentice\ntraining is designed to enable capable young men to gain promotion\nto higher ranks In the Army.\nThe young men who aw accepted for Soldier Apprentice training receives\n\u2022 A thorough trades training ta on* of 19 military trades\n\u2022 Tho academic training necessary fo learn a trade and\nto gain promotion\n\u2022 The general military training of th. Canadian soldier.\nSoldier Apprentices are eligible for all Army benefits. Including'30\n\u2022days annual leave. They receive half pay af a prlyato'soldier recruit\nwhile 16 and on their 17th birthday they receive the full pay.\nTo be eligible, the young man must be qualified at least for high\nschool entrance. He must have attained his sixteenth but not hit\nseventeenth birthday. ' x\nTraining begins In September and applications should be made now.\nAfter interviews, suitable applicants will be enrolled with Instructions\nto report for training on September 12th.\n P-MWHMMHH\n.'<36 'lf|\n(bwiiwil tJUL\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiii!.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilHIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n\u2022    By LEN WALKER *\nRecently while visiting the vll\nlage ot   Creston   I had my eyes\nI opened at the amount of sport tak-\ning place ln that growing community.\nOn an afternoon at the swimming\nI pool you can count hundreds ot\nyoungsters taking advantage of the\ncool, refreshing waters of the $9000\nI pool\u2014built to Olympic regulations.\nCreston is also busily engaged in\nI fastball and baseball and, of course,\ni fishing.\nThe. swimming classes at the pool\nunder.the guidance of Les Lund\nand his assistants, Miss V. Leavitt\nand Miss S. McKelvey, have proved\npopular and one day last week 52\nyoungsters turned out for instructions. Although  this number was\nS the high for the season, every day\n'has seen a good number on hand\nfor the instructions.\n\"\u2022'.' The classes have only been under\nway a little over a week yet already some, youngsters have learned to swim. The groups are divided\naccording to their abilities and capabilities and when they have mastered certain techniques they are\ngraduated to a higher class and another instructor.\n|   This Idea xnoy be useful to other\n'\u2022 Oenfers interested in giving instructions to the youngsters in the\nI art of swimming.\ng HELPS SAVE LIVE8\n-v. The people of Oeston responsible\n, for starting .this school in swimming\nI are doinfe something which' may\nsave lives in future years, and they\n. ire to be commended on their move\nto teach swimming and safety.\n\u25a0 Those in charge of the pool are\n^strict when it comes to preventing\nactivities that may be dangerous or\nout of line. Whatever it may be it's\nstopped* immediately and the offenders given stiff warnings.\nOn the baseball front the Creston\n3 team are not burning up the Idaho-\nWashtngton-B.C. League, but they\n'are giving the fans some fine ball,\nwin, lose or draw, and that's what\nI counts.\n\u25a0 They are tied with Newport for\nfourth place and unfortunately\nhave been suffering whet the New\nYork Giants did as they \"dropped\ntheir fourth straight game, but the\n. fans are still behind them 100 percent. This sort of support will def-\nBring the\nChildren...\nOn ypur visits to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire . . .\n'  they're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoor! *\nt Air Conditioned\n%   Silver Grill\ninltely p\u00aby off,   y\nIn fastball the' Legion team ls\ngoing great guns due mainly to the\nefforts of star chucker Jim .Faulkner, a young fellow from .the east,\nIn a game against Crawford Bay,\nFaulkner reached the height!; a,s he\nchucked a no^hlter In winning 7-0,\nAlthough he missed a perfect game'\nby walking four batters, Faylkner's\nperformance proved that people ln\nCreston ^are also seeing top notch\nfastball.' >'\",.'\nHow good is the flshinjj In Creston ' district? We. doftt' know, but\nstories are told of both fine catches and disappointing trips into the\ncreeks and rivers around thereT\nHowever,. Kldd Creek seems to\nbe the best spot for fishing as several fishermen have reported fine\ncatches. But another angler was\nheard to remark after hearing this,\n\u25a0whoever stated that sure never\nconsulted me before doing so.\"\nOther fishermen have reported\ngood fishing in various places as\nthe sesson improves.\nAll ln all the sport picture in\nCreston is a bright one.\nANNUAL TENNIS\nTOURNEY TO BE\nHELD SUNDAY\nThe annual round robin tennis\ntournament of the Nelson Tennis\nClub will' be staged'Sunday at the\ncourts near the Nelson Golf and\nCountry Club course.\nBob Thompson, tournament chairman said that play will.get under\nway at 10 a.m. and it is hoped to\nget all the 30 to 40 members interested ln entering the day long\nevent.\nTwo Golf Teams\nTie in Two-Ball .,\nFoursome Event V\nMrs. R, R. Brown and L.S. Bradley along, with Mrs. Bernice Hesketh and A. Miller tied, in the two-\nball foursome golf event at Nelson\nGolf and Country Club Wednesday\nafternoon. .      '\u2022'.'\".\nA good turnout of entrants made\nthe evpit one of the best this season as 30 golfers toilred the course\nin the nine-hole event...    t\nThe hidden hole prize was won\nby Mrs. H. Peacock and A. tfrde-\nman. '      '\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\nAt the conclusion of the jsvent 22\nsat down to a dinner for-She entrants.\nBritish Three Mtle\nRecord Approved\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The British\namateur athletic board Wednesday\napproved Fred Green and .Chris\nChataway's time of 13:32.2 for the\nthree miles as a British record.\nGreen won the race by Inches\nJuly 10, but both were credited\nwith the same time.' .\"'\nBoth times have;been submitted to\nthe International Amateur Athletic\nFederation for ratification a\\ joint\nworld records. The present listed\nthree-mile world recoil is punder\nHaegg's 13:32.4 set in 1941. }:'\n \u25a0 .   ft I. - \u25a0   .\nOrioles Release j r\nMele to Red SojI f.\nBALTIMORE,. (AP) T-_3a|timore\nOrioles announced Thursday they\nhad released outfielder, s^ant. Mele\nto the Boston Red Sox oft wjjiyers.\nMele came to the Orioles from\nChicago White Sox earlier in the\nseason and has been batting .239,\ncompared with his .274 average in\nChicago, last season. He was with\nthe Red Sox previously from 1947\nto 1949. '     ' :,'\ni__a___a_gs__3_.\nVancouver Islam\nSs SIMM BAL\n5Trip.D<xV-Hoo.J1o.B0yfW.\u00abtV'oncouverjfoN\u00bb\nRETURN VIA THE SCENIC CIRCLE\nTHROUGH THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA ;\n4 Tript Dally\u2014Victoria io Port Angelas\nIf\ni4\nADAMS ANTIQUE\nADAMS EXP0RT\nADAMS PRIVATE STOCK\nADAMS OlD\/Rtt\nADAMS SILVER FIZZ GIN\nSSMSStSUTlsjSSO, ONT. VAHCOSflftS.. \u25a0\u25a0 Cs\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe liquor Control Board or by the Government ol British Columbia\n\u25a0\u25a0 Little League Rotarians and Kt-\nw&nis walked away with wins In a\ndoubleheader Wednesday j night at\nQueen Elizabeth Park when the\nRotarians pulled out ahead of, the\nKinsmen by a 13-10 score and Kiwanis edged the Lions, 7-6.\nIn the' first game Jim Carter\npitched a victory for the Rotarians\nafter'' he relieved McLeod ln the\nfirst inning, Together they gave up\nsix hits, allowed six walks and\nstruck out nine.\nGelinas, pitching for the Kinsmen,\ngave nine hits, four walks and\nclaimed five strikeouts.\nRotarians started off the, first inning with a 10-run rally and completed their scoring when they\nbrought iri thrqe'runs, led by Ingle,\ndew who tripled lh toe third.\nSecond, third and'fourth frames\nwere the big, ones for the Kinsmen\nwho drove in four runs in the second, three in the third, and three In\nthe fourth. Noel Cutler was the big\nhitter for the Kinsmen as he tripled\nin the second and fourth.\nKiwapls, led by pitcher Florio,\nmanaged to squeeze a 7-8 win from\nthe Lions in the second game of the\nnight.' Florio gave nine hits, one\nwalk and struck out seven and was\nreplaced by Easy in the sixth.\nLions pitchers Bob Molsey, Jim\nCain and Don McLean brought their\nteam within one run of the victors\nas together they gave three hits,\nwalked five and struck out 10.\nThe fourth inning waa the biggesf\nfor Kiwanis when they brought ln\nfour runs, followed ln the fifth by\ntwo.\nLions led by a 5-0 score after\nemerging from the second frame\nwith five runs for five hits, and\ntied the score in the top of the sixth\nKeith Acres saved the day for the\nKiwanis when he blasted a.strong\nsingle in the bottom half of the\nsixth to bring home Easy for the\nwhining run.\nBaseball Scores\nBy, The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nWashington  .... 400 010 010-6 12\nBaltimore .'.  000 000 OOO-O   5\n, Stdbbs and FitzGerald; Odell,\nKretlow (1), Blyzka (9) and MurT\nrays L\u2014Odell. .\nPhiladelphia!. .,,010 olo OOOr-2 7 0\n000 030 lOx\u20144 . 3 0\nRobertson;  Zuverink\nDetroit ........\nGray' and\nand Wilson.\nBoston .:\t\nCle'evland ...\nKlely and\n320 003 110-10 14 0\n000 010 010- 2 7! 1\nWlltsefc Feller, Hoskins (2J,'Narleski.'(3),1 Newhouser.\n(ft),-Hoopers (71 and Hegan, Nara-N\ngoh (6). L\u2014Feller.\nNew York ... 040 030 003\u201410 13 0\nChicago   000 000 000- 0   4   1\nFord, apd Berra; Harshman, Jphn-\nson (2), Dorlsh (3), Strsihs (6) and\nBatts. L\u2014Harshman.\nPhiladelphia  .. 021 000 000\u20143   8   I,\nDetroit   :.. 005 101 OOx\u20147 12   1\nDixon, S|ma (3), Romberger (4),\nBurtschy (7) and W. Shantz; Hoeft\nand House. L\u2014Dixon.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis  '' 200 040 101\u20148 14   3\nNew York  000 000 OOO-O   3   0\nRaschi and Sarni; Llddle, Worthlngton (5), Corwln (6), Giel (7),\nKonikowski (9) and Katt. L \u2014\nLlddle.\nChicago  Q21- 300 000-8   8   2\nBrooklyn  101 020 001-5 11   1\nRush, Davis (9), Tremel (9), Jeffcoat (9) and Tappe; Palica, Lablne\n(4), Milliken (5), Loes (7), Hughes\n(9) and Campanella. W\u2014Rush; L\u2014\nPalica.\nMilwaukee .. 200 000.001 2\u20145 13. 1\nPittsburgh ... 000 D21 0000-3   9. 0\nSpahn, Johnson (7), Nichols \u25a0 (9)\nand Crandall; Friend, Hetki (9) and\nSheppard. W\u2014Nichols; L\u2014Hetki.\nCincinnati    001 010 001\u20143 12   0\nPhiladelphia  .. 000 000 000-0   4   2\nValentine   and  Bailey;  Dickson,\nRidzik (9) and Burgess.\nWESTERN   INTERNATIONAL\nWednesday night:\nEdmonton 4, Victoria 5\nVancouver 19, Yakima 5\nWenatchee 0, Tri-City 10\nSalem 5, Lewiston 0\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Cricket\nscores' in Britain Thursday:\nCombined Services 320 for 3 declared, and 150 for 9 declared, Canadian touring team 292.and 41 for\none; two-day match drawn.\nPakistan 287 for 9 declared and\n26 for 4.    ' -\n1 Sussex  105,   Lancashire. 123  for\nWarwickshire 261 fflr 6 declared,\nScotland 116 for 6..\nHampshire 224 for 8 declared,\nGlamorgan 172 for 6.\nDerbyshire 272, Yorkshire 119\nand 190 for 4.\nWorcestershire 323, Middlesex 226\nfor 4.-\nKent '238 and 7 for 0, Northamptonshire' 159\/for 9 declared.   -\nKeeps Two Trophies\n3 Years Straight\nVANCOUVER <:CP)4joan pese.\nof Montreal; retained two tfophlet\nfor the third straight year -at th^\nCanadian Invitational synchronized\nswimming championships her..\nThe' 19-year-old McGill University swim-club ace Wednesday\nnight captured the Brennan Trophy\nfbr figures and the Seller Trophy\nfor solo routine, beating out Ella\nLlndell of Legion Club, Montreal,\nln both events.\n\u00ab\/;,\". j'fjly\"The -Canadian Pfess '\u25a0\n,iThe'\"Boston Red. Sox .finally\ncahght up with Cleveland .Thw^-\ndeyphd reaped their vengeance\nWjth a 10-2 vlbtw-y that cut the\nIndians' American League lead over\nNew York to a game and' a half.'\nCleveland had scalped 'tl)e Red\nSox 15 times in 16. decisions, but\nBoston, pounced Bobby Feller for\nfive runs In the first two innings\nan\/1 never locked back. Ted Wil-:\nllams drove ih the.first tWo. Red\nSox runs with a homer and Jackie\nJensen drove in slit; runs witii a\npair of homejfeftfti iand a .single,\nThe'-loss Was; Fejler's second'of\nthe season.and-came after'he had\nwon eight in a row. Thursday 'he\nlasted only 1 2:3 innings. , \u2022\u2022\u25a0   fy-\nThe loss, hurt the-Indlahs. since\ntye' second., place New YorkfYan^\ntyres' whipped the slipping Chicago\nWhite So* 10-0 behind the fbut-hit\npitching of Whitey Ford-Hie Yank*\nfcored in bunches, getting'four iri\nthe second off Jack Harshman,\nthree in. the fifth off Harry Dorlsh\nand three more in the ninth off\nrookie Dick Strahs. 'n\nThe two top teams in the7* National League both lost. First place\nNew York was shelled,8-0 by the\nSt. Louis Cardinals as Vie Raschi\npitched a three-hitter. Brooklyn\nbowed to' the Chicago Cubs 6-5,\nleaving the bases loaded in the\nlast of the ninth. .;-\nThe Cardinals pounded Don-Lid-\ndie and four relief pitchers for 13\nhits  with  Ray  Jablonski's  bases-\nloaded double ln - the fifth the most\ntelling blow.-For1 a' change in the\nPolo. Growjds Jhere.: were no home\nruns. .* jfc\nHal Jeffcoat disposed -of pinch,\nhitter George ShubY'in th. nip*\nat Brooklyn' tfnave the Cubs' vicj,\ntory after Brooklyn-fiad, copje w|th?\nin one run of tying thevsco-e.7Iftnk\nSauer hit his 30th liome run apd\nErnie Banks hit one' with,'two-\naboard; .,' ,*,. ; .'n -.'\u25a0 '(\"    f\nThird.-plaije .'itilwjiuk-e jtiuuia\nwlthlri n(ne 'Capita oil the to'pA<Wtii\na $-3, victory hirer ^tlg^itg^ in\n10 innings.' Hank i^arpp holered; ip\nthe! 10th! aftfe- singles 'by Johnny\nLogan, Charley White'ahd Bill Brii-\nlon enabled Milwaukee to tie the\nscore in the, ninth. '\u25a0'       ' \u25a0 I\nOKfROITyWlN^tW.Ci\nBaltimore's-- -bbnusY lefty, Bill\nOBell, m-dehii,'fir.t start but .failed\nto, finish the first inning against\nWashington; The Senators pounded\nhim for two'.doubles and a single\narid were .given''.'*- b^se on balls\nbefol.- Lou Kretlpw came tptho\nrasmje. The-flnal\"score'.was 6-0 with\nChpcV St6J)bs4g(v_h_--iip fiV\u00bb hits,\nfor .his sixth victory. -\nDetroit won a pair from Philadelphia, 4-2 aqd 7*3.7 Frank, Boll*\ning's twbTrui\u00bb |riple and a squjeere\nbuht by-GeorgeZtiverink produced\nthree run* in the fifth inning;of\nthe first \u201egame.- Bob Rlemari got\nthe Tigers out.in\/ront Ip ihe nightcap with a;grahd slam homefin\nthe third ipnirig..        t     XXX' \"I\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Kimberley Dynamos and Spokane Gieger Field Air\nForce split a mid-week baseball\ndoubleheader at Coronation Park.\nGieger trounced Kimberley 14-4 in\nthe first game with Dynamos coming back to square the count with a\nconvincing 13r2 victory.\nPete Bqlsvert gained weak support-frbm his teammates in the\nInitial game and. tired in .the.late\nstages to allow the Alt Force team\n13. hits. Bill Kopf held Dyntin$r\nto eight hits with .Bolsvert getting\nthree of them..' \u25a0 ;T \u2022',*\n7i>lek Gab-urel.was Gieger. chief\nirilot wlth^tKr^hits. '.\n\",Gordon-, Tijitih'\u25a0 pitched superb\nball'in the.aebop^eme. rationing\nthe -Spokane'creW to7 six scattered-\nhits' while JCImberley got' to three\nSpokane chuckers for 15 safe blows\nin racking up the 13-2' triumph.\nTench registered 13 strikeouts\narid worked, himself out qf'trpubl?\nin the sevehtl}. inning when'wifli\nthe bases loaded apd none, out he\ncame througli in grand fashion to\nstrike out tjvo and force Hob Morris\nto ground but. ! \u2022\nTony Brumett arid. Red Mellor\nhomered for Kimberley. with Ted\nRobb and Jim McDonald collecting\ntriples. Ted Robb had a good evening at' the plate with two doubles\nand a triple. Buzz Mellor drove in\nfour runs on two consecutive\ndoubles. Alex Causleji was the only\nSpokane hitter to get an extra-base\nhit off Tench with a triple in the\nsixth frame.\nIt was Kimberley's seventh con\nsecutive split In the Northwest International League and leaves them\nin. third spot in. the six-toam\nleague. ; \u2022\/,','\u2022\n... Gordori Tench will pftUclpate In\nthe- $4200 Lethbridge tournament\nwith the SpoTtane Builders.\n-\u2022;\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN, LEAGUE\n;'\u2022'   \"'.- W L   Pct'GBL\nCleveland\t\n.. 67 30\n'.691.\nN6w York ,-...\n.. 67 33\n.670\nIH\nCSiicago   \t\n.. 62 39\n.614-\n,7\nDetroit'\"\t\n.44 54\n.449\n23V4\nWashington\t\n.. 42 52\n.447\n23H\nBoston\t\n.. 39 57\n.406\n21%\nPhiladelphia ......\n. 35 62\n.361\n32\nBaltlffibre .-. .\n35 64\n.354\n33\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\n\\    '\nW LPct.\nGBL\nNew York \t\n. 63 37,\n.630\nBrooklyn  !.......\n. 61 39\n.6)0\n2\nMilwaukee ....\t\n. 53 45\n.541\n9\nSt.' Louis\t\n.48 49\n.495\nim\nCincinnati :\t\n.50 51\n.495\n13W\nPfilladelphia ._..\u201e\n. 47.49\n.490.\n14\nChicago  ,:.\t\n. 41 56\n..423\n20W\nPittsburgh.\t\n. 31\". 88\n.313\n31 &\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nCharlottetown-\n-RCN  T.. O'Hara\n83,. of Otta*a;\na  former  deputy\nminister  of  trade  and\ncommerce\nfor 40 years.\nCllffslde Park,\nN.J.\u2014Italo\nMar-\nchieny, 88, .said to have originated\nthe ice crearri cone.\nVANCOUVER (CP)-^ Canadian\ncurling champion Matt Baldwin of\nEdmonton ensured his berth in the\nseml-fihala of the British Empire\nGanies bonspiel in Vancouver Wednesday,' winning both his matches\nfor-a sparkling record of five wins\napdippelqss* * .\u2022>\n('He'wilt tneet JVed.Tinling's Vancouver rink this afterpoon to-decide section B finalists. Tinllng also\ntook, two wins. Wednesday to tie\nBaldwin's five wins and \u2022 one loss,\nFipilist' in .section A 'wasi still\nundecidetl Iwith\" rinks sklppejl by\nRsKDavld: and, Bob; N\u00abH, b'oih of\nVancouver, tied With five wins and\ntwo losses. There still was a'chance\nBayrie Secord's Canadian schoolboy champions from Saskatoon\nwould'gaitl a semi-final bertlft\nSecord's rink had five wins and\nthree losses at the end bf play Wednesday ana Pat .Paterson ;,bf Vatt-\ncouver had (our wins and three\nlosses.    . \"'\u25a0,'\u25a0    ,-\nIn Women's play, Mrs, Doro|hy\n- Sawyer's7 rink from Foxwarren,\nMan., was tied with Lll  Lyon's\nfrail,'. B.C., squad with three wins\nand one loss. '   ,\n\"Ifa, Dorothy Thompson of DA-\nra6_tai_T;tied!';Mrs. Rose GbOflei.. of\nVancouver fbr second place i with\n^o-wWaPd two losses,'.'\nDfck'TIoppthg bf pitver, B.C;, tied\nwith' Glen Richardson of Saskatoon\nfor second, place In section JB'with\nfour wins and two losses.\nMeet iri September\n%mmr.\nAteoui custt k.\nCfiCWM M 1MB WATER\nCOmV USB A flMBlsM&SR\nfOBtOO UJNSATOA6.IT\n\u00ab\u00abAy BREAK At ACSOCIAL\nMOMEMT. WLOH tBAPERS\n6iye\u00bbiowARMiMagp\n ariwi.iHey\n*mym&\nTMglROONOITlWI.'\nBB\ndSSKSff\"*\nmm*\nCIVIC ARENA\nCRESTON CHUCKER\nJIM FAULKNER\nfctTS NO-HITTER\nLeague Standing:\n\"'--.' ,      P W L Pt\nRiondel \u201e...:    11   9   2   18\nIseglon\u25a0-.    11 .9   2   18\nCanyon. ...:    10   2 .8    '4\nCrawford Bay    10   1   9    2\nCRESTON\u2014 Jim Faulkner, first\nstring pitcher for Canadian Legion\nsoftball team, hurled the first no-\nhit no-run' game for several seasons here, against Crawford fi_y\nSunday. Ifaulkner, a Queen's UniT\nversity student visiting here for\nthe summer, has, had the odd tiff\nwith local umpires at Various times\nduring the season, but on Sunday\nsettled down and pitched ball,\n,'_ In hurling his perfect g_ame, Faulkner issued four free passes. Two\nmen got on via errors, but no Crawford* Bay runner got farther than\nsecond. Final score was 7-0. for the\nveterans, who now sve tied with\nRiondel for top honors. A double-\nheader this Sunday closes league\nplay. Playoffs start first week in\nAugust i '   *-\nSunday's s other games saw Can-\nyqn defeat Crawford Bay 9-4.\nNEW'YORK (AP)-Rocky Marciano, his eye-cut completely healed,\nwill give ex-champ Ezzard Charles\nanother, chalice at.his_wbrld heavyweight boxing title'ip ji New York-\nbopt that prbbablSr VUl he held-\nSept 15 at, Yankee Stadium.:' I.    '\nPromoter1 Jim Nortis'of the International Boxing CJub Thursday\nannounced two tentative dates,\nSept, 15 at the stadiutn or Sept. 21\nat the. Polo Grounds. Noftls prefers\nthe earlier date.\nThe  bronzed   champion,   rested\nTrail Playground\n. A%ndance el. the playgrounds in\ntrail t&der the supbrvijIjOP'. ofijhe\ntrail Athletic Assoctytjori. has :gone,\nahead.1 by-leaps and bounds statist\ntics,for the period between! July 3\nand July 24 can show.\nIn that period\" of time 25,848 chU-\ndren enjoyed taking part.lp the di^\nversified programs that the playground directors plan, organize and\nput Into effect Programs consist, bf\nathletics, swimming,, hikes, special\nevents, off-the-playground trips,\nroller skating and a full rounded\non-the-playgrounds program^,..\nAt the Jubilee Swimming\" J'ool,\nlessons are continuing al0ng.fa.yor-\nably with all the children, getting\nready .for. their Retl-Cross Swimming and Water'.Safety'.Tpsts next\nmonth. In connection \\Wth the pool,\na local swim meet will be staged\nFriday, August g. This will be the\nfirst meet, of such a nature, for, six\nyears. The meet, will be highlighted\nby fancy, and clown diving and\nmany novelty events..    .\nTrack and Field under the direction of Joe Haley, Is progressing\nnicely, with all' participants gaining much valued information'and\npractice ln all phases of Track and\nField events.\nafter   a   six-v>eek  vacation,  wu,\nexamined in Norrla' office .by Br. S\nVincent Nnrdiello, acting as Marclano. personal physician, ond Dr.\nAlexander Schlff of the New York\nState Athletic  Commission., They\nfound the cut. which required'10\nstitches and an - operation for removal of scar tissue after the Jdne\n17 bout, heiled completely,     .\u00ab   j\nAs In their rousing first boitt,:\nMarclano* will'7 get ;4d per cent 'of.\nall receipts and Charles 20 per cent.\nThe pride scale again will run from\n\u00bb5 to $40;        '.::.- \u25a0-.\nNorrls said the television' question ls \"wide open\" but'if ls believed there is little ihance of ai_y\nhome TV. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022\u2022    .\nCOCKEtt MIETS :l\nMATTHEWS\n7 ,'SEAJTLi;. (AP)'3 Rbhujd Don-\nCockeU of London is. nottall Ijut\nhe was looking, byej- the' top 'lot\nHarry \"Kid\" ..Jlatftews Thursifay\nand what he envisioned was a shot\nat the world's heavyweight championship.   '   ..'\"..\"' .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nCockell tangles here tonight with\nthe Seattle kid for the third time\nand was confident he could make, it\nthree straight. They'll go 10. rounds\nand Cockell will have, a weight\nbulge of around 23 or 30 pounds,\nas he did in his two previous decisions, j .-.\ntfSAtfUftBAY\n1\n5000 miles.\nJust like new\n\u00ae0\u00b0*\u00a7mm3M-\n213 Baker it\nPhone 1234\n',\n'I\ni\n1\n\u25a07i\nX\n.::\u25a0\nNEW JOHNSON'S\nfights colour-killing road .\nfilm 5 ways... outlasts any\n\u25a0\"\".''.-.' au*o polish known!\nWhen you apply Johnson's Deep Gloss Cartra,\n6 deep-cleaning agents go to work fast, dissolving\nand absorbing all the road Urn that dulls colour.\nIt dries to a light powder that wipes off so easily\nwithout hard rubbing. Then look at the result! The deep-down colour that caught your\neye in the showroom has come back! What's\nmore, Deep Gloss Carnu's tough mirror glaze\n' will stay weeks on end!\nS. C JOHNSON iM SON, lOT, fcwM, (Mil\nBIO 20 OX. TIM\n\t\n',..: ._._.:;   :\n ',  .';;...'\n\u2014\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1954\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\n.The Pally Nows does not hold Itself' responsible in Uie event\nof an error In the following lists. '\nMcKenzie R L .\nMcWatters\n       .40\n \u25a0     .15'\nMining Corp _   15.15\nMonet a .. .- \u00bb.\u201e\u201e,..;...      .45\nNew Bldlamaquo 34\n-Hew- Ooldvue ...:'.___ :!.      .16\nNew .Larder U.        ' .90\"\nNew' Myiamaque \u201e:.:..:..        '.25\nNoranda' \u201e_    72.00\nNormetals  ,     2.75\n\u201e 44\n       .72\nNorth. Can.\nO'Brien\t\nOslsko   \t\nPamdur   \t\nPaymaster   :\t\nPickle Crop .. i\nPlacer Devel \t\nPowell Rouyn ....\nPreston E. D\t\nQuebec Lab \t\nQuemont  \t\nRadiore\t\nRoche L. L. ........\nSherritt Gordon\nSigma M.   \t\nSllvermiller   \t\nSteep Rock  \t\nSudbury Cont ...\nSylvanlte        ......\nTeck Hughes \t\nThompson-Lund\nTorbrit \t\nVlolamac\n.75\n.49\n1.09\n27.25\n.63\n3.80\n.11\n18.50\n- .94\n.11\n4.25\n5.65\n1.05\n7.70\n.16 r\n1.18\n2.12.\n\u25a0 .12<A\n1.48\n1.60\n\u2022Waite, Amulet     12.75\nOILS\nAnglo Can. .,....;.._     4.60\nB. A. Oil    24.75\nCalgary and Edmonton  ' 11.75\nCdn Atlantic\nCentral Explorers'..\nChemical Research\nDel Rio *\nFederated  Pete  \t\nHome      \t\nInter Pete .,\t\nKrby  \t\nMid Cont\t\nOkalta       \t\nPacific Pete \t\nRoxana \u2022     \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAluminum  _..\nArgus '\t\nAtlas St\t\nBeattie Bros\t\nBell  Telephone  ....\nBrazilian    \t\nB.C. Electric 4%s\nB.C. Packers B \t\nB.C. Pdwer A \t\nBurns A\nCan. Steamships \t\nCanadian Breweries \t\nCanadian Canners    ..,.\nCanadian Car & Fdy ....\nCanadian Car & Fdy A .\nCanadian Celanese \t\nCanadian Dredge   \t\nCan Oil\t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Steel and Coal B :.\nDom. Stores ...        . .....\nDom. Tar & Chemcial ...\nDom. Textiles     \t\nDom. Magnesium  _,..\nFamous Players ....a\t\nFanny Farmer  \t\nFleet Air -. .-.\nFord A    :.\t\nGatineau    \t\nGatineau 5% pfd-.\t\nGpi. Steel Wares..., a\t\nGoodyear ...*...A....X.\t\nGreat Lakes  .'.\t\n.Imperial Oil  \t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInt. Metals    _.\nInt Nickel\t\n3.40\n4.75\n2.68\n1.15\n3.25\n7.25\n21.50\n1.05\n.51\n1.20\n7.20\n.11\n66\ni8y4\n12%\nm\nav,\n\u25a0     8\n102\n11%\n22%\n65\n24%\n26\u00ab\n26%\n23%\n23%\n18%\n69%\n15\n15%\n11%\n,     28\n8%\n7\n14%\n24%\n25%\n'   200\n93%\n. 26%\ns 108\n11%\n138\n27\n33%.\n9%\n35\n43%\nCflilfliflrv Livestock\nCALGARY\" (CP) - Trade was\nonly -moderately at five.'on offerings of 900 cattle and calves on the\nlivestock market. Cattle on offer\nWere mainly of plain quality. Good\nto choice grain-fed butcher steers\nwere steady at Wednesday's decline\nof around 50 cents.\nCommon to medium kinds were\nslow and barely steady at the\nweek's lower levels; gobd butcher\nheifers generally steady; fair to\nmedium jcows were under pressure\nwhile goad cows showed, a little\nbetter feotion at steady rotes; bulls\nsteady; good, stocker and feeder\nl^teers were njoVing qut at steady\n'rates; common to medium classes\nslow and draggy; veal calves steady,.\nHogs Sold steady Wednesday at\n$8.50; sows dropped $1 to $2, at 13;\ngood lambs at 19-20 were $3 lower,\ngood ewes brought 6-7. 1\nGood tp choice grain-fed butcher\nsteers 19.50-21.50; common to medium 13-19; good to choice butcher\nheifers 17.50-19.50; common to'medium 11-17; good cows 9-10; common\nto medium 7.25-8.75; canners and\ncutters 5-7; good bulls 11.50-12.60;\ncommon to medium 9-11; good stocker and feeder steers 15.50-17; common to medium 12-15; good to choice\nveal calves 18-20; common to medium 13-17.50.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES . ,\nHeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne    t\nCariboo Gold .. .\nEstella\nGiant Mascot\nGrandview\n.47\n3.70\n.67\n.14%\n.44\n.18\nHighland Bell  40\nPac Eastern Qbld  :..      .14\nPend Oreille      4.75\nPioneer Gold       2.06\nQuatsino    izVs\nReeves \u25a0 MacDonald      1.50\n.65\n4.15\n.73\n-.46\nSheep Creek\nSherritt  Gordon   \t\nSilver Standard\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Tungsten ....\nYale   \t\nOIL8\nAnglo  Canadian  \t\nA P-Consolidated   ...\nCaigary.'& Edmonton    11.00\nCommonwealth      3.85\nHome  .;     7.00\nMid West Gas _.     1.87\nOkalta Coni  _ ,.'.    1.20\n.40\n4.50\n.25\nThe delicious flavour of Wrigley's Spearmint Gum\nbrightens your day\u2014gives you a little lift . . . while\nIne pleasant chewing brightens your teeth. Keep a\npackage handy in your purse or pocket.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... 1240 on the uial\nFRIDAY, JULY 30, 1954\n7:00\u2014News\n7:157-The. Early Bird\n7:16r-Rise n'Shine\n7:80^News\n7:35\u2014Rise n'phine'\n8:00r-tfews\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade'\n8:55-:Women's World\n9:00\u2014W.arren's Wigwam\n10:00\u2014Western Tunes\n10.15\u2014Elwood Glover\n10:45r-News\n10:50\u2014Morning Music\n11:00\u2014Shut-to Show\n11:15\u2014Shopping Guide\n11:45\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:<J0\u2014Swap and Shop\n12:15\u2014Sports News _,\n12:20r-News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Today In History\n1:00\u2014Tops and Pops\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Specialty Shop\n1:45\u2014Musicale\n2:00\u2014Pacific News-\n2:15\u2014Musical Matinee\n(Pacific Daylight Timp)\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Afternoon Visit\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45^-News\n3:48\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:15\u2014Fred Hill tenor\n4:30\u2014My Shipmate Jimmy\n4:45\u2014Wake of the West Wind\n5:00-rStory Parade\n5:15\u2014Report from Pari Hill\n5:20\u2014Musical\n5:25\u2014Road and Weather Report\n5:30\u2014Swap and Shop\n5:45\u2014Sports News.\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Sports Commentary\n6:15\u2014Christian Science Program\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of NUuody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Curtain Time Melodies\n8:00\u2014BEG Opening Ceremonies\n9:15\u2014Win Renworth\n9:30-^Sports Page\n10:00\u2014News\nlOilS^-The Rhythm Pals\n10-30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Devotions\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nPacific Pete\nPeace River Gas .\nRoyalite '\t\nVanalta \t\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates ...\nInt Brew; B '...'\t\n7.10\n4.05\n10.50\n.18%\n.25\n5.05\n'   4.70\n\u201e -Hli.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORk ;<CP) t- Prices weife\na little higher .in the late afternoon\nfor the third rti-aight. sessions <M. n\nDemand swung from-, one group\nto another during the day in a mod-1\nerate manner, and there was a high\ndegree^of selection* among buyers, .'y7\nCanadian issues were mostly up. 'i\nMclntyre gained, Dome Mines add- ;\ned and ' International Nickel war.}\nup, Canadian Pacific was Off,       \"if\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock'.i\nmarket advanced slightly within. :\ndustrials. . touching their highest -\npoint since October, 1951..\nPapers,   steels  and   manufacturing featured the industrial advance;,'\nwestern oils were.a little higher,-;',\nsenior base metals were stronger\nand Juniors a little lower.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 London con-,;\ntinued In a buoyant mood despite\nthe nearness of the bank holiday\nwhen business is usually light.\nIndustrials were in selective de-\nmand.\nPaper shares, textiles and elec- ,\ntrical equipments were all favored. |\nGold shares continued to enjoy firm\nconditions although the best pricer\nwere not always maintained.\nSummons Issued\nTo (oast Stores\nVANCOUVER (CP) .\u2014 Arthu\nMoore, city licence inspector, announced Thursday that the number,\nof summonses to be Issued to store\nowners charged with violating closing regulations on July 21 has been\ncut from 31 to 27.    .\nHe said four operators have been\ndropped from the list because of\ninsufficient evidence. Mr. Moore\nadded that necessary documents;\nwill be turned over to the prosecutor Friday and that surpmonsei\nwill be issued by him.\nThe inspector said about 15 other\nshops will also be summonsed for.\nstaying open, July 21.\nA  large  number  of  Vancouver':'\nstores stayed open Wednesday 'in ,\ndefiance of the six-day shopping,\nregulations, but the Inspector said\nIt would be some time before he\ncould estimate the number of new\nviolators.\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw 8\t\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMassey Harris \t\nMont.  Loco  \t\nMoore Cdfp\t\nNat. Steel Car \t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp  \t\nHu6s. Industries \t\nShawinigan'\t\nSicks Brew _\t\nSimpsons A ...;\t\nSoutham\t\nSteel of Canada \t\nStandard' Paving \t\nUnion Gas of Can \t\nUnited Steel \t\nWeston George \t\nWinnipeg  Gas\t\n16%\n44%\n60\n9V\u00ab\n8%\n16%\n29%\n24%\n36%\n42%\n15%\n49%\n30\n21%\n35\n37\n23%\n41%\n13%\n46%\n10\nBuy. 8ell. Trade the Classified Way\nGeneral Motors Net\nProfits Soar   '\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The huge7\nGeneral Motors Corp. had net profits of $425,250,383 in the first half\nof this year for a 36 per cent gain\nover the corresponding month.\nThe first half's net income.wai\nequivalent to $4.79 a common share,\nand compared with $312,845,787, or\n$3.51 a share, in the first half of\nlast year, both pre-share figures;\nbeing after $6,484,000 in preferred\ndividends.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nMetal Prices\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLead\u2014New York, .14.\nZinc\u2014East St. Louis, .11.\n2. Knife hilt\n3. Fuss\n4. President of\nArgentine\n5. Jewish\nmonth\nt. Cuts oft\nthe top\nT. Sticky\nsubstance\n(slang)\n8. Punish\nby fine\n9. Flagrant\n11. Marks to\nlet stand\n(print.)\nIS. Like    '\nmarble\n17. Terminal\npart of leg\n20. Mis.\nchtev-\nous\npersons\n21. ASh-\ncolored\n13. Biblical\nname\n25. Scrutinize\n17. For\nfear\nthat\n88. Geological\nridge\n29. Lived in a of Rome\nrented room 41. Girl's name\nUPC.   SB.\nHHaraHB Hi-nEi\nsfflaiiisaEE.\nHHESB   EUSEEEl\nBEnaaaanaa\nhsbiu aaansE\nIH     HGH   C-HR,\nignanaii! HEa&j\nHEESa   IMHIHi--'\nS!r__l._   l_t!_JW\nYeiterslay's Answer\n35. Inscribe\n38. Animal fat\nJl. Not so\ndifficult\n32. To slip\neasily\n43. A church\nbench\n45. Sign of\nInfinitive\n'7:00\u2014News and Weather\n7:-5\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014fUewA     '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0,\n1:85\u2014Musical  Minute-\n110\u2014Morning Devotions\n1:55\u2014Musical   March  Past\n8:00\u2014News       - '    ,\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sports\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Closed Circuit '\n9:0O-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stomp Club -\n9:45\u2014Sty Davis '.  r\n10:00-Who's Herb Gott\n10:30\u2014World' Church News\n10:45\u2014News and Weather\nll:00-Ope-a\n* CBC PROGRAMS\nSAtURDAY, JULY 31,1954\n(Mountain Standard Time)\n12:30\u2014A Touch of Grease Paint\n1:00\u2014Portraits in Sound\n1:30\u2014Musical Program\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10   Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014British Umpire Games\n6:30-^News.,\n6:35\u2014Musical Progranj\n7:00-\"\"Prairie Schooner\n7:30\u2014Saturday Playhouse\n8:00\u2014Serenade  for Strings\n8:8tf\u2014BEG Report\n9:00\u2014Post Mark U. K.\n9:30\u2014Canadian Symphonies\nI0:00-News  \u2022\n10:15\u2014Dance Time\n10:30\u2014Rendezvous\nACROSS\n1. Crack\n5. Seaweed\n9. Classify\n10. Cries, aa\na bittern\n12. Better\n14. Bard\n15. Cereal grain\n16. Simpletons\n18. Music note\n19. Steamship\n(abbr.)\n20. Set of\nJapanese\nboxes\n21. Perform\n22. Appear\n^3A. Bryophytic\nplants\n26.Blp.ch\n28, Rubber end\nof a pencil\n30. Affirmative\nvotes\n33.Coin (Fri)   '\n34. Stitched\n36. Mulberry\n(Ind.)\n37. Knockout\n(abbr.)\n88. Leading\nperformer\n19. Greek letter\n40. Ostrich-like\nbird (var.)\n42. Fatlike\n44. Face with\nmasonry, \u2022'-\nasan\nembank- \u2022\nment\n46. Tent (Am.\nInd.)\n47. Native chief\n(Phil. Is.)\n48. Pitcher\nwith a lid\nDOWN\n1. Wrinkle\nDAILY CKYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to wort. Itt\nAXYDLBAAXR    *\nto   LONOFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another, In thla example A ia used\nfor the.three L'syX for the two O's, ete. Single letters, apos.\ntrdphlcs, tho length and formation of the words are aU hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\n'\u25a0\u25a0-'.\n\u25a0\u25a0 A Cryptogram Quotation\nO'BO 2PRS ZPGC O.B.C BNKVCBMQB\nAKO NRQS NSC OBC BNZC\u2014QNUCQQ\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: FORGOTTEN\u2014LIKE A MAIDEN\nSPEECH, WHICH ALL MEN PRAISE, BUT NON8 RBMEM-\nBER-rttAED. '\n.  e___.uud by Kins fauns lyniHests,\nli\n\u00ab\n%\n1\nZ\n1\nfT\n6\n7\n8\n%\n9\n%\nIO\nII\na\n\u25a0\n13\ni\nisr\n'\nir\n^\/\/l\n\u25a0It,\n17\n^t\niff\"\n19\n%\nIO\n'\n%\n31.\nli.\n23\n^\/l\nJS\nA\n%\nsi\n\u25a0\n\u00bb7\n%\n(Yt\n2ft\n*}\n^\/l\n1\u00b0\n31\nti.\n33\n%\n34\n35\"\n^\/l\n-\"\n-'\n37\n^\n38\n%\n39\nBo\n41\nb\nA-1.\n45\n\u25a044\n45-\nl\n4b\n%\n47\nYa\n38\"\n>Y(\ni-v\n ki\t\n;Mbtkmimti&\n .u \u25a0\u25a0 k\nc^O\/.C)\n\u2022Of.\nQoods Exchanged fm Vacation Money Were\nBIRTHS\nFERWORN - Td Mr. and Mrs.\nAlex Ferworn of Ymir, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, on July\n25, a son.\n' BATURIN - To Mr. and Mrs.\nAlex Baturin of Salmo at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, on July 29,\na daughter.\nCANDY - To Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nCandy (nee Sheila Dawson of Nelson) of Ottawa, on July 28, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS rnhh BE Accepted by well-established company tor neat-appearing man with\ncar to service customers in organ-\n' ized district. Above average earnings year round. State'qualifications, age, and marital status In\nfirst letter. Apply Box 7015, Nelson News.\nWANTED: STENOGRAPHER FOR\n1 or 2 weeks, preferably with legal experience, to work part time\nat Balfour, in exchange, for use\nof fully modern, completely\nequipped cottage at Rainbow Re-\n\u25a0  sort. Phone Balfour 13.\t\nDUE TO INCREASED BUSINESS,\nthe Fuller Brush Company requires two full-timt men in East\nKootenay Districts. Married men\npreferred. Apply , D. E. Sergent.\n206 Morgan St; Nelson.\nMAN WITH TRUCK WANTED, TO\nhaul lumber by contract. Apply\n-    Box 2132, Dally News.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nFor\nYOUNG WOMEN\nFORMAL TRAINING AND\nCAREER OPPORTUNITIES\nIN NURSING\nThe Canadian Army now offers\nyou training as Nursing Assistants,\ncovering such subjects as physiology, anatomy, nursing procedures,\ncare and treatment of the sick-\nAfter your training, you will work\nln one of the military hospitals\nacross Canada or In Europe. If in\ngood standing during your third\nyear of service, you become eligible\nto qualify as a Certified Nursing\nAssistant _bu receive the same\npay, pension rights, leave and other\nbenefits that are given to men in\nthe Canadian Army.\nCLASSES commence September\n1954 at Camp Borden, Ontario.\nIF you are 19 to 29, single, have\ngrade 10 or the equivalent, write\nto the Command Headquarters, Personnel Depot or Recruiting Station\nnearest your home.\nHeadquarters Western Command,\nKIngsway Ave., Edmonton, Alta.\nAtt: Assistant Adjutant General\n(Manning).\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot,      \u25a0 .\n4201 West 3rd Avenue,\nVancouver, B. C. \u2014 Telephone\nCHerry 2111.\nCLERK- STENOGRAPHER, Experienced in general office routine, initiative very essential. Duties to commence Immediately.\nSalary based on experience. Apply In wirtlng, giving references,\nto Secretary-Treasurer, School\nDistrict No. 1, Fernie, B. C.\n\"ITUATIONS WANTED\nBON S FT EL VISITOR WOULD\nlike to settle In Nelson or vicinity\nif suitable position may be obtained. Reasonable appearance\nand education, 35, family of four.'\nThoroughly experienced in public\nand general accounting, some experience and a liking for wholesale selling. Would appreciate opportunity for interview with any\ninterested parties when in Nelson,\nFriday, July 30. N.D.N. Box 2093. j\nEXPERIENCED CARPENTER^DE-l\nsires work. Own tools. Will take\n' contract or day work. Repairs or\n- new. Can give satisfactory estimating. Phone 465-L.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNAVIGABLE WATERS\nPROTECTION ACT\nR.S C. 192J CHAPTER 14b\nPROPOSED FERRY MOORING\nBERTHS AT BALFOUR, B. C.\nThe Minister ot Public Works,\nGovernment of the Province of British Columbia, hereby glyes notice\nthat'he has, under Section 7 of the\nabove act, deposited With the Min-\nIsetr of Public Works at Ottawa,\nand ln the office of th'e District\nRegistrar of the Land Registry District at .Nelson, B. C, a description\nof site and plans of Ferry Mooring\nBerths proposed to be built ln the\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake, adjacent to the existing terry landing\nat Balfour, B. C, and In tront of\nLot 184. v\nAnd take notice that' after the\nexpiration of one month trom the\ndate of the first publication of this\nnotice, the Minister of Public\nWorks, Government of the Province of British Columbia, wtll,\nunder Section 7 of the said Act,\napply, to the Minister of Public\nWorks at his office In the City of\nOttawa, for approval of the said\nplan.\nDated this 8th day of July, 1954.\nE. S. JONES.\nDeputy Minister.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nDouglas Building,\nVictoria, B. C.\nSALE OF CROWN TIMBER\nSealed tenders will be received by\nthe District Forester at Nelson, B.C.,\nnot later than ll:00'a.m. on the 11th\nday of August, 1954, for the purchase of approximately 1000 f.b.m.\nof cottonwood lumber and approximately 6000 f.b.m. spruce lumber,\nall rough, as is and Where is, field\nat Kettle Valley Ranger, Station..\nAll tenders must be accompanied\nby certified cheque or money order\ncovering the full amount bid.\nThe highest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nFurther particulars and tender\nforms may be obtained from the\nDistrict Forester. Nelson. Bs C. or\nfrom the Forest Ranger, Kettle Valley, B. C.\nNOTICE   TO   CREDITORS\nPAUL M. ZAITSOFF\n(deceased)\nAll persons having claims against\nthe estate of the above named, deceased, late of Castlegar, B. C. are\nrequired to forthwith forward particulars of the same, duly verified,\nto the undersigned exequtors.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, this 23rd\nday of July. 1954.\nMIKE and  WILLIAM  ZAITSOFF.\nBox 453,\nCastlegar, B. C.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nCLOSE-OUT SALE\n1 oak desk, drop-front, $15; 1 occasional chair, wine, $9; Cbleman gas\nradiant; 1 Renown oil range, $99;\n1 hall table, $7; 1 3-shelf natural\nend table, $5; solid manle kitchen\ntable, porcelain top, $7.50; 1 studio\nlouneg, $25; 1 guitar, $15; 2 canvas\ndeck chairs, $175 each; 1 sewing\nstool, $5; electric kettle, $7.50:\nkitchen scale, $2.75; table lamps, $1\nup; complete aluminum camp kit,\n$4.50; Coleman 2-burner camp stove.\n$9.95: oil heater. $25: Fawcett oil\nheater, $35; Winnipeg couch, $5;\nclothes drying racks, $2.95; breakfast nook set. $9; outboard motor.\n880; camp cot, $3; spring-filled mattress, $12; camp stoves, $10: wooden\nbunk beds. $9.95 set; canner $1.00:\nIce-boxes. $10. ,\nCUTLER'S\nNew and Used Furniture\n305 BAKER ST. PHONE 47\nLOG OR POLE MAULING, BY\ncontract. John Evin, Brilliant, B.C.\nODD JOBS .DONE IN SPARE\ntime and weekends. Ph. 1442-R.\nIF BUILDING A NEW HOME OR\nremodeling  then   phone 434-X-2\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\t\nWE HAVE' A QUANTITY OF\npartly grown cockerels to be\nraised for meat. Heavy or light\nbreeds. Also pullets of all ages in\nwhite rocks, white leghorns, new\nHampshlres and crosses. . The\nAppleby Poultry Breeding Farm.\nMission City. B   C.\nplann latlg Neroa\n'Classified    Advertising    Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions.\n$1.56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers  lie  extra.  Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc. - 20c per line\nfirst insertion.  16c  per  line\neach subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE , RATES   LESS\n10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSubscriptions  Rates:\n(Net More Than Lifted Here)\nBy carrier per wtek\nln advance  , .   .30\nBy carrier . $15.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month        $ 1.25\nliree months      $ 3.75\nSix months    $ 7.50\nOne year         $15.W)\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month       $ 1.00\nThree months        $ 2.75\nsix months $ 5.50\nOne year $10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus pottage.\nDEALERS IN ALL TtfPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\n\u25a0 chain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron it Metals Ltd.,| 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B. C. I\u00bbhone PA\nclfic 6337.\nWARDROBE TRUNK, EASY SPIN\ndry, Sealers. Smsll Oil Steve, Coal\noil stove with oven, Electric and\ngas irons, Camp Stove, Books.\nSell or trade on frig or livestock\nBox 2243, Nelson Dally News.\nM.A.G. PINCUSHIONS (MOTHER.\nAuntie and Grandma), with special \"name\" and color. Phone\n1235-R mornings.\nFOR SALE: CHESTERFIELD\nCJjilr In ^-ood condition. Color,\nmaroon, price $15. Apply 317 2nd\nSt.\nSTORE EQUIPMENT. REASON-\nable. Apply L. W. Embree, Kinnaird, B. C.\nWObD AND COAL STOVE FOR\nsale, good condition. 610 Mill St.,\nphone 386-X.\nWESTINGHOUSE ROASTER\noven and small, dresser. Call\n436-L-3.        \t\nRASPBERRIES. PICK Y\"\"oO\"R\nown, 15c per lb. Apply Serres,\nHarrop.\nUTILITY TABLES, PRESSURE\ncooker, canary cage. Apply 807\nBaker.St., or ph. 487-R.\nALUMINUM BABY CARRIAGE.\nnew, and  boy's tractor to ride\nB'ox 7231, Dally News.\nCANDID    AND    S-UT-RTT'OR \u2022\ntraits   Everything  Photographic.\nPettlt Photos, Castlegar, B.C.\nPIPE - FITTINGS  - TUBES\nspecial low prices Active Trading\nCo 935 E Cordova St Vaneouver\n_0!f.dS_.j;_ AfcPR!6fittAT6ft-reyft\nsale,   $259.80.   Apply   Box   7495.\nDally News.        \t\nTEtaT. ab6uT . I2X14, In good\nshape, $20, Phone 981-L,\t\nUSED 9X12 RUG FOR SALE, $2'fl\nPhone 380-L.\nGOOD TOP SOUTno-ROCKS OR\nsods   Hand-loaded   Ph,  1474-Y\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES.     BICYCLES\n+<mmmm*^+mm^mm<^mm*a*&1\u00bbmiai*tti\nNew\nSomersets\nIMMEDIATE.\nDELIVERY\n1954 Meteor Fordor\n1954 Chevrolet Bel Air\nPower Glide\nWith Radio\n1953 Zephyr Sedan\n1953 Austin ,A-70 Sedan\n1953 Austin Somerset\n1953 Ford Custom Tudor -\nWith Radio\n1952 Che\u00abrolet Sedan\nWith Radio\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1951 Meteor Fordor\n1951 Austin Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Meteor Fordor\n1950 Ford Fordor\nSPECIAL SPECIAL SPECIAL\n1950 Pontiac Sedan $575\n1950 Vanguard Sedan $575\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1949 Vanguard Sedan\n1948 Ford Coupe\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1946 Mercury Tudor\n1941 Ford Coupe\n1941 Chevrolet Sedan\n1940 Chevrolet Sedan\nCOMMERCIALS\n1954 Chevrolet Pickup\n1952 Mercury Pickup\n1952 Fargo Pickup\n1952 Pontiac'Sedan Diy.\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1949 Ford Pickup\nCASH    TERMS    TRADES\nSpot Cash for Late Model Cars\nAUSTIN SERVICE and SALES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\nPh. 1661    600 Blk.. Vemon\nPh. 1135 803 Baker\nNelson, B.C.\nl938-'50 FORD SEDAN CHASSIS\n1938 In 1950 new motor, new\nhydraulic brakes Installed, complete rewiring done Price $265\nBox 4108. Dally News\n1951 PONISAC 4-DOOR SEDAN\nExcellent condition. One owner\nMust be seen, to be appreciated\nSacrifice. Phone Ned 1035-L.\nIF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A\ngood buy ln '36 Chev. Delivery,\nphone 443-R.\nFOR SALE: 19il PLYMOUTH\nCoupe, (5-passenger), $450. Phone\n694-L.\nF5R SALE: i*50 ta6foAR5ft,' AVl\ncondltlon. 5.good tires. Snap for\ncash. Phohe 727-Y.\nPROPERTY, HOUSfiS, FARMS\ntTC, FOR SALE\nA SPLENDID\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE\nIn Foirvlow. Brand new. Landscaped grounds,''oil heat and\nivc-ln garage in basement.\n_ 11 the' latest type of electrical\nwiring,   Mahogany   finish   ln\nB\ntype of electrical\n..\u201e.   \u2014agany  finish   in\nrooms, H,W. floors, etc. Must be\nSt'AS $14,000\nReasonable Terms,\nAN OLDER TYPE HOME\nUphill district. In very good\ncondition, A good.slted L.R,,\nA bedrooms, large kitchen and\ngood bathroom, Full basement\nand hot water heating, Price\nIncludes almost new refrigerator and gas stove. Owner leav,\nIng city and will <tfi .Aft\nsaori_.ee for ?DOUU\nSome Terms,\nWe need more listings, as sales\nhave been good. Try us for\nquick snd satisfactory results.'\nHerb Peacock\n532 Ward St.\nPhone 68\nFOR SALE OR TRADE FOR LATE\nmodel car, one bush farm, 240\nacres, near Castlegar; 5-room\nhouse, running water, barn, chicken coop, approx. two acres under\nirrigation. Apply Box 4879, Dally\nNews.\nMSTSMAJ:  SMA4.L 4.fe0flM\nhouse. Living room, kitchen,'two\nbedrooms, Pembrook bath. New\nroof and siding, ii blocks trom\n\u2022 Baker St., $3500. Phone 1254-L ev-\nv enings, or apply No, 8 Govern-\nment Road.\nA REALLY NICE 6-ROOM HOUSE\nrecently built, 207 High St. Double\nplumbing, hot water heating, oak\nfloors, fireplace, full basement\nAttached garage. Phone 338-Y\nevenings. \u2022\nFOR SALE: APPROX. 214 ACRES\nwith building suitable for duplex\ncabin or 4-room home on No. 3\nhighway, 6 miles'west of Nelson.\nLights, water and propane gas.\nApply 2262, Dally News.\nRENTALS\nFOR M_\u00abT: OTCBLY FURNISHED\nfamily home, central location.\nBox 11087, Dally Nawi.\nBusies mmm wm wt\nlng, quarters, In Castlegar, central\nlopatlon, Box 246, Cutlegm-,\ni-BBbRS.lH H0U3E fOft MiNf\nUphill District |40 par month.\nBox 4838, Dslly News.\nW6M -wwa. wm Emm\nfor small family, electricity, at\nBealby Point. P.O. Box 816.\nmm gays; mmm-\nlng or sleeping rooms. Day, Week,\nor month. 171 Baker Street\n1 6ft\"i\"et8AW'\"rtmi\u00ab8B-t)\n, nousekeeplng rooms suitable for\nquiet employed couple, Ph, 335-X,\nItNiskEb i-ftb&M SUW__, aL-\nso furnished single room with gas.\n140 Baker Street, ph. 491-L.\nB0U8-_ai-\u00bbmO-.B,6'6Kl'f6fr\nrent on Baker St. .Phone 5B6-X.\nS-ft-bM'TOTrtSlfA 'Mfttttff\nAdults, 311 Vernon Street,\n-THTNISHEb HOUSEKEEPING\nroom for rent, 914 Stanley St,\nrsoEsWccraai; h60_i__5_f.\nlng room. 917 Vernon St, Ph, 964-X\nP6r fEfij-JT: WRfcrtsifo-ti HBtjgfr\nkeeping room, $22 month. Ph. 405L\nFOR RENT\u2014SMALL SUITE WITH\nverandah Phone 343-Y.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nCOFFEE ,SHOP FOR SALE. BB>\nside government-maintained View\nPoint. Beautifully decorated.\nIdeal for liquor licence, Cabins,\ndancehali. For further informa-\ntioi., write Box 291, Nelson, or\nphone 694-L.'\nSMALL GROCERY AND COWfe-\ntionary business for sale. Good\nlocation. Apply 1103 Hall Mihes\nRoad.\nFOR SALE: WfeLL ESTABLISHED\nmillinery and accessories business\ndowntown location, Nelson. Apply\n7089, Daily News.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n4-ROOM, UNFINISHED HOUSE\",\nfull basement, on 7th Avenue,\n\u25a0Castlegar, $2500. Terms can be\narranged. Apply P. Gretchln, Box\n354, Castlegar, or for appointment,\nphone Thrums 4-D.\nNEW LAND IN SECOND GROWTH\ntimber. Good for wood business.\n68 acres at Bonnlfston, good road.\nCheap for cash. 801 6th Street, or\nphone 1273-R, Nelson.\nFOR SALE: SMALL ALUMINUM\nsleeper trailer, factory-made. A.-'\ncommotlatlons for four. Just the\nthing for your holidays. Phone\n694-L or aoply 206 High St,\n4-ROOM HOUSE  ON  17  ACRES.\nOutbuildings, garden and orchard.\nPrice $2400, terms. Apply Mrs. W\n'. Vance. Crawford Bay.\nFARM FOR SALE: CHEAP FOR\ncash. A. Harmotney. Aoply at\nPete Rezansoff'5 place, Glade.\nB, C.\nFOR SALE: ATTR-CTfVE MO D \u2022\nernlzed home on North Shore\nBeautiful view, suitable for veteran's holding. Phone 1740.\nFOR SAEP-5-ROO'M~COTTAGE\nat Balfour. Choice beach frontage\n' Price $4200. Apply Mrs. J. M. Pol\nloch, East of Balfour Wharf.\nHOUSE-TRAILER, 8X18, FULLY\nequipped, propane gas. Sleeps 3\nc\/o H. Trembly, Ross Spur. $860\ncash.\nFOR SALE: LOVELY FAMILY\nhome, central location. Box 2036.\nDaily News.\nHOUSE AND TWO LOTS IN YMIR\nfor sale or trade for property near\nNelson. Box 2121. Nelson News.\n4-ROOM COTTAGE FOlt\"S A L'_.\n, Phone 214-R.\nRENTALS\nFOR SALE:   1938 CHEV. COtlPlS,\n$75. Phone 694-L,\nFOR  SALE:   1950   >_-TON G.M.C.\nNice shape', $750, Phone 694-L.\nFOR SALE-LADY'S BlCYCLfe $25.\nBox 2120 Nelson News.\nRAMBLER tttAi__R, $.450. _50X\n2241, Nelson Dally News,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\n ASSAYS Ml Wm\nREPRESENTATIVES\nfe. w. Wtbb-W--iv\"_rc!o.\"\"'\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St. Nelson,\nH.   S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND,   B...\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep.\nBUILDING and CONTRACTING\nGEORGE   FETTES\nSash Frames and Cabinet Making\nPhone 2566\nHillcrest Ave. Fruitvale, B, C.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\n_.<_\u25a0_ b'c. Attlttt, M.E.I.Cf\nB.C Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore-fit.,   Nelson   Phone 1288\nR. K. COATES\nSui.   No. 8. 373 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone HIS   B. C. Land Surveyor\ns. VSSHAYIsBft P,0, BSX Hi\nKimberley, Phone 84\nB C. Land Surveyor, Engineer\nGRAVEL\ned Gravel. Wholesale and delivered  Phone 1497-L.\nMiiBfiNir i.FARirJr. <\\ins\nWrite PO  Box _a, Nelsun, B.C.\nMACHINISTS\nBtUOTTT-   LIMITED    '\nMachine  Shop   Acetylene and\nelectric weH'no. motor rewinding. Photfe 593, 324 Vernon St.\nWANTED: SELF-CONTAINED 1\nor 2-bedroom apartment, oil or\nelectric heat. Furnished Or partly\nfurnished. State terms. Apply\nBox 2246, Dally News.\nSLEEPING ACCOMMODATIONS\nfor 2, with bath and private entrance. Rent lowered if desired.\nPh. 718-Y.\nWANTED TO RENT: 3 OR 4-ROOM\nunfurnished house or apartment,\nby couple without children. Box\n2129. Daily News\nFURNISHED TWO-BEDROOM\napartment Modern, heated. Apply Kootenay Plumbing and Heating or phone \"\"\"\nJ-ROOM APARTMENT WITH GAS\nstove, Unfurnished, 2 blocks from\nBaker St., heated, $65 per month.\nApply Box 2251, Dally News.\nh-af.'--.-}' 3-S6b\"M\"\"si)Trt   m.\neluding new electric range. Box\n7274, Dslly News.\nModern 4-room apartment\nfor rent. Available Aug. 1. Phohe\n879-L.\nrSSOMS FOR RENT. PH. 476-X-l\nApply 52 Ymir Road\nWANTED TO RENT-2-BEDROOM\nhouse. Phone 467-Y. L. P. Chatfield.\n(Continued In next column)\n1949 Dodge f Ton\nFlat Deck. 126\" W B. Good rubber, new paint, 4-speed transmission\n1951 Chevrolet\n1 Ton Panel-\n12 Passenger\nEquipped to meet P.U.C. regula-.\ntlons. In excellent condition.\nPerfect for a contractor or a\nlogging company.\n1*946 Fargo 3 Ton\n;jwp\u00abed axle, 8 25 x 20 rubber,\n'88\" W.B. with hoist and steel\nflht deck. Nice looking unit ahd\nready to go.\n1947 Mercury\n2\/2 Ton Dump \u2022\n8.25 x 20 rubber duals. 2-speed\naxle. New motor. Equipped with\na Brantford-Anthony steel box,\n7\" hoist with cab guard. Short\nwheelbsse makes truck a natural for a coal or gravel haul\n1947 Studebaker\n3 Ton Long W.B.\n2-speed axle. Booster brakes,\n8.25 x 20 rubber. Truck has been\nshop checked and is all ready\nfor a lumber or log contract.\n1950 International\n4 Ton Dump\nModel L182. 2-speed axle. 9.00 x\n20 rubber. H.D. - springs; motor\nreconditioned. Equipped with\n6-yard Brantford-Anthony steel\nbox with 8\" Hoist. Has cab\nguard and gravel chains; fully\nequipped unit including tach.\n\"SEE US BEFORE\nYOU DEAL\"\nMACHINERY\noynes\n\u00a9tors\n1205 Boy Ave.   Trail, B.C.\n\u2022Phon* 1580\nALUMINUM WINDOWS \u2014.DOORS\nDEALERS DEALER SALESMEN\nARE YOU INTERESTED IN A BETTER DEAL? If ?ou can sell\nor have a SELLING ORGANIZATION, wa have a complete line\nof aluminum Prime and \u2022 Storm Windows. Self storing Double\nand Triple Track combinations, N.H.A. approved, Ottawa. Commercial and Residential. Doors, plus direct method of DISTRIBUTION that gives you a tremendous advantage to offer is QUALITY. 'DELIVERY AND PRICE. . .\"\u25a0\nWe furnish lineal stock,and everything but glass. With small\nInvestment you can fabricate your own windows and doors by\nsimple cut-off and assembly operations. LOW. COST, LARGE\nPROFITS. Wrltp today for prompt personal interview and full\ndetails about our franchise and direct method7of distribution.\nRun  your own   Wholesale - and   Retail ' business.\nBOX NO. 7290, NELSON DAILY NEWS.\n'\u25a0FORSALE : V\nCONCRETE BLOCK\nMACH_NKIX.;V,:.   ..\nAt 1 Fraction of the Cost of\nHew Machinery    : \u25a0 \u25a0' ,\n(1) Semi-automatic Vibration. Pack\nBlock Machine and pallets.'\nProduction Capacity: 4000-4800\n8\" blocks per day. Equipped to\nmake 4\"-8,v-12\" Building. Blocks\ngnd Chimney Blocks, Tn first\nclass condition.\n(2) One manually operated Multi.\nplex Combination Machine and\npallets, Produces two 8\" blocks\nper cycle or ofle chimney block.\nAn Ideal machine for a small\ntown operator.\n(3) Three manually operated Multiplex Chimney Block Machines.\n(4) -20-Volt. 60-cycle Electrlo Motors end other miscellaneous\nequipment.\nAddress Enquiries to\nBox 7233 Dally News\nDIESEL-GENERATOR SETS\nRebuilt and Guaranteed\n11 -15 KW, 1 or 3 phase ....   $1550 .\n7-20 KW, 1 or 3 phase     .2000\n26-80 KW, 8\/60.127.220\nor 440   2860\n2-50 KW, 3 phase,\n220 or ,440   3800\n1-60.KW. 3 phase.\n220 or 440     4500\n1 \u2022 300 KW, 3 phase 15,500\n'   STAR\nMACHINERY COMPANY '\n241 Lander Street\nSeattle. Washington\n.     - EL-0760.\nFOR SALE!- <4 YARD SHOVEL,\n-suitable for gravel pit. also Diesel\npower units, cats, winches, etc\nBaye. Ltd. 1016 SW Marine\nDrive. Vancouver, or Cranbrook;.\nBC\nFOR SALE: SAWMILL, EDGAR\nDiesel Power Unit. Thirty thousand capacity. Come and give an\noffer. No more timber. J. P. Low\nenberp. Box 18, Slocan City.\nWANTED     MISCELLANEOUS\nWASTED 2 CU\" FT~CONCRETE\nmixer and wheelbarrow rubber\nwheel. Box 22), Nelson.\nWANTED: 1 214-CU. FT. CON-\ncrete mixer with or without motor. Apply Box 2083. Daily News.\nLOST AND FOUND_\nLOST- GREEN\"BUDGIE~BIRD.\nAnswers to name Polly, 807 Carbonate St Phone 615-L.\nLOST\" -\" a'^MQNTH-OLD PIG*\nPlec- ict Clerihew Kennels\nor ph. 1640.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1\u00bb34\u20141j>\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n18-ft. row H0Atr._yn.j_w2 tt>.\nh.p. Johnson, in excellent condition, $400. Can be. seen and tried\nout; at Rainbow Resort, Balfour.\n14-FOO, f'tTfwOOft-^B-'Oft\n\u2022 sale, excellent for outfebird. Ph,\n\u25a0,\u00ab3V .      if?   \u25a0;\nA\nCALGARY -'N. _. Tanner, president of Trans-Canada Pipe Lines\nLtd., today announced that a newly\nformed company, Bechtel-Mannlx-\nHester, will be ln charge of design\nengineering and construction of the\n2200-mile natural gaS pipeline. \u25a0\nThe new company represents the\npooling of resources and experience\not three of the lending pipeline\nBeehtel Ltd., Toronto; Mahnlx Ltd.,\nCalgary and Oklahoma Contracting\nCompany, Dallas.\nCanadian Beehtel, backed by one\nof the largest pipeline construction-\ncompanies ln the world, managed\ndesign, engineering and construction ot the Interprovlnclal and the\nTrans-Mountain oil. pipelines. Man-\nriix Ltd., was responsible for.building an appreciable portlon;Bf th*\nTrans-Mountain line, has. th'e7 contract .for the new Pembina pipeline,\nand, In addition to being one of the\nlarger general contractors iq,Western Canada, Has been aijtiy* tn.\nconstructing oil.and gas. pipelines\nin Alberta, Oklahoma Contracting,\none of. the top U. S. firms in the\nfield, has participated, ln the buU--\nding of thousands.of miles Of pipelines' in the U. S. and abroad,. ..'\u25a0\n\"Granting of the permit to Trans-\nCanada by the Transport Board-this,\nweek is the. signal, we. have beeh\nawaiting to get started on the Alberta-Montreal line,\" said Mr. Tur-\nner. \"Our contract with Bechtel-\nMannix-Hester calls for completion of the project by the end of\n1956. We will be selling natural\ngas in Saskatchewan, as far east\nas Winnipeg and to the Minnesota\narea next Fall, and service from\nthe line will be available ln Toronto\nand Montreal a year later.\"\nMr. Tanner said Trans-Canada ls\nnow in a position to finales purchase contracts With the owners, of\nthe gas ln Western Canada and\npsales agreements with the public\nand private utilities which will die-\nAmerican Metal\nToOpenMine\nNear Hope, B.C.\n. VANCOUVER (CW-The Amet}-\ncan Metal Co. Ltd. of New York;7\n\u2022Will: start Work at once to bi;lng the,\nCanam Copper Co. Ltd. mine, near ^\nHope, B. C, Into production, it was\nreported here following a special'\ngeneral meeting of Canam shareholders.\nThe   shareholders   approved   an\nagreement calling for expenditures\nup to $5,000,000 with construction\nof n mill. It changes a former agree--\nment with The Consolidated Minii^\nand' Smelting Company of Canadaf\nUnder  It,  Cominco  receives 3n\nper cent of the authorized capital,\nstock of Canam, placing lt on ill e\nsame bash as other shareholders^\n-The agreement was announsad .\n-here by 3. W.Hpffernan', Carifav.\nsolicitor.       . ...aSi \"\nRembrandt, the_...an_ous Dutch 'I\npainter, died forgotten ln poverty,, |\nin 1669.\ntribute the fuel In.tbtj.munlclpalUles\nalong the rOutft-Ofith* line. Finalising of the $30ff million project tij$t'\nwill follow the negotiation ot purchase and sMe|;'iibn<racts, wUlijhji\nundertaken this jail. \u00a3'\u25a0\nWhile tha actual laying ot plpe\"o_.\nthe line will not get started until\nnext .Spring, - surveying,, right 1\nWay negotiations and clearance i\nbe started immediately,\n,; W? CARRY A^COMPLITI:\n.  -'    RANGE OF |\nGENERi. TIRES'\nFor.Trucks and Oars\nFas* Service\nOn Our Famous Recaps\nV S\nFree Delivery Service     3\nI\nO.K. RUBBER   J\nWELDERS     1.\n(Kootehai.iW'est) Ltd.      J\nPH0>^1486        i\nGlonmefry, Trail      -^\n\u25a0   .' .       '\n >\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.    r :    -v.,    Y:\/ '\"'\n\u2014^-\u2014.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\/\u2022:\u25a0 \u2022'--..\".\u2022: \u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0V-,-    9.       -i-1\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MUDAY> JULT30\/1954\nMr:\n:JhifTING' of a\\V|SB.:W\nof'liornet br, bee or even that -. -.\u2022'.\u25a0\n'*\u25a0'.'.   \"K of the ever \"unpopular mosquitoe\n---\u2022 can producejjreat discomfort.'\nI'oWtiW TH* MOSf E^ijCIENr LipifieNS\nFOR QUICK RELIEF IS\nCALADRYL\n85c\nrtMXX'XiX:'\/.\n:   '\u25a0\u25a0 >-\n\"fflmmm&mwmtmwiMmri&ireiii- \u25a0\nm.\nDenies Reports\nOf Dissension\n> DOMJON,\u2022(Reuters) \u2014 A foreign\noffice spokesman Thursday denied\n\u00bb,],;;,-\"JMSs reports of differences- be-.\ntween Britain and the United States\n|| Over :the shooting down of a British\nqlrliner   by   Chinese   Communist\nHAIGH\nfRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827\n676 Baker Street\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\n. y     ,      Auditon\n676 Boker St Phone 235\nfighters last week'.\nThe spokesman denied:\n'l. That Foreign Secretary Eden\nrefused a request from State Secretary Dulles thpt Britain; should\nJojflJA a public denunciation of\nCommunist China.\n' 2. !Phat Britain requested the U.S.\n\u25a0government \"to move slowly\" on\nthe matter.\n3. That Britain assisted in urging calm on the U. S. government.\nAsked whether these denials\nmean that Britain was In full\nagreement with the American action In dispatching a naval force\nto the scene of the Incident, the\nspokesman said: :\"Thl\u00bb prompt action by the United States government resulted In the. saving of a\nnumber of lives.\"\nHove the Job Don* Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8T6R PLUMBER\n..\u25a0,,.\u25a0... , PHbNfii*\nIT'S\nWITH THE NEW\nBLEND-AIR by\nCENTRAL HEATING\nTkli floor pton ihowt how you con completely\nand scientifically heat a five-room homo\nwith only tix magie Blenders.\nEVEN COMFORT FLOOR TO CEILING-LESS\nHEAT WASTE WITH NEW \u00bb\u2022\/_\" DUCT SYSTEM'\nBLEND-AIR eirculatei and RE-eiicglates warm air in each\nroom! The magic Blewler In each room auto-\n: matically sticks cool air out;of the room, heats.lt\nwith fresh warm air from furnace, RE-clrculates\nlt through the room. No packing of hot air at\nceiling. Constant circulation keeps room;temperature uniform, iSom floor to celling. Automatically .controlled! It means more comfort \u2014a\nbetter heated'homeI \u25a0\/'.\nNEWI Monoy-iaving advance in automatic healing! it's the\nnew scientific .way, to heat every room'evenly I\nBig savings in (1) new lpw-cost ducts, (2) new\nstandardized fittings that save on installation.\nBLEND-AIR fits any home\u2014old or new, big or\nlittle, with or without basement. All parts factory-\nmade to assemble easier, and cost you lessl\nNEW! Sara space, saves work,Mm coil! Put the space-\nsaving BLEND-AIR f unlace any where\u2014basement,\nkitchen, or utility room. It's tidy, quie't, automatic.\nMade by Coleman; world's largest manufacturer\nof home heating equipment. A new way to give\nyour home even ctrculflted warmth!\n... Payi for Itiall In tomfort and economy\nJVi\" WARM AIB DUCTS ,\n-.    Heating mask takes) place In\nthe Blender.  Hot air from\n. .': furnace blenda with room\n>   air, then circulates It through\ntoft.   '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0-,\nMARSHALL-WELLS    STORES\nHipperson Hdwe.\n;.-.             \u2022.-. .      (Owners) \u2014    .   . s-. \u25a0'.. ,-,\n395 BAKER ST. PHONE 497\nClaims Biggest\nWapiti Found\nInNew Zealand\n; \/,.6y J. Ci QRAHAM \"'\"'\nCanadian  Preiii Correspondent\nAUCKLAND, N.Z, (CB)-liv.the\nwild \u2022 Fiordland of southern New\nZealand,.-fleet-footed' wapiti have\nfound a home even more inaccessible . to hunters, than their native\nCanadian - Ropkies. - In this remotq\narea,: the wapiti, sometimes called\nAmerican elk, growftp a size ^approaching that of a moose. V   \u2022\nFiordland is the only place bui-\n9id6i the Rockies where wapiti can\nbe shot. It is claimed lh New Zealand that the best heads-token excel the finest ever shot in Canada.\nSo that Canadian sportsmen may\ndispute the claim if they wish, New\nZealand wapiti hunters, report that\nthey are bagging heads with 17-\nand 18-point antlers. The length of\nsdme exceeds 60 inches and the\ngreatest spread has also been\nmore than 60 inches.'\nThe nine-week stalking,'season\nextends from March.to May. punters travel to the outskirts of their\nblocks by ladnch or amphibian aircraft, but after that they are on\ntheir oWn. There Sre no inhabitants\nand the hunters must take all they\nneed with them.,\nThe wapiti have lived in Fiord-!\nland for nearly 50 years.'An Eng-!\nlishman, George Littledale, con-!\nsldered it would be an ideal place]\nto release them- He was a friend\nof President Theodore Roosevelt\nof the United States and with his\nassistance three young bulls' and\nseven cows were sent for release\nin the George sound area. Ten\nmore wapiti were sent sojne years\nlater. The first animals were shot\nin 1923.\nToday they are thriving, but still\nhave not spread throughout the\"\nwhole of Fiordland because of the\ndifficulty of moving from one part\nto another. Some herds have\nsprung from animals which strayed\ninto valleys and were unable to\nleave so that their descendants are\nconfined in these valleys forever.\nMEMBERS of the strong Fernie United soccer club which thla\nseason have gone undefeated In league play and last year's champions\nof the leauge and playoffs are, front row: J. Pearce, president; T.\ntaurman, M. Calrni, J. Ewanlck, T. Lockhart, j. Savage, A. Beaatal.\nStanding: J. Sweeney, K. Whltelaw, W. Atherton, '31 Kuinlr, F,\nSopko, J. White, K. Burt, D. Hasting, J. Sneddon, G. Sohye.       -\nSouth Viel Nam\nSeeks Freedom\nHANOI, Indo-Chlna. (Reuters.\u2014\nMayor Do Quang Gial of Hanoi has\nappealed to \"all the great cities of\nthe Free World!' to help his people\nflee Communism.\n-Hanoi is to be handed over to\nthe Communist'Vietminh regime in\nOctober under the Geneva ceasefire agreement a week ago.\nThe mayor asked for funds and\nmaterial aid \"to transfer to the\nland of freedom the population and\nits administration.\" He said citizens\ncould not leave for South Viet Nam\nunless there would be somewhere\"\nto live, something to eat, and work\nto do.\nDo Quang Gial said his people\nand those of the whole Red River\ndelta needed capital from the outside world to set themselves up as\nfarmers or artisans.\nInto Cause of\nHuman Cancers\nBy ALTON L. (BLAKESLE_\nSAO PAULO, Brazil (AP)\u2014Some\nof the things we eat, , drink or\nbreathe are going to be studied\nthroughout the. world as possible\ncriminals causing human cancer.\nThe experts find two reasons to\nsuspect that certain chemicals people are exposed to may be cancer\nhazards. Some chemicals produce\ncancers of one or more types in\nanimals under laboratory conditions. Industrial and other studies\nfind a high incidence of particular\ntypes of cancer among certain\ngroups of humans,\nNOT ONLY CAUSE\nRegarding smoking, the resolution said studies give evidence of\nsome association between lung cancer and degrees of tobacco smoking, possibly of a causative nature,\nthough it is not possible to accept\nsmoking. as the only cause of lung\ncancer.\nSECOND CASE OF MUMPS\n'VANCOUVER (CP) - A second\nathlete in Vancouver for the British Empire Games has beeh sent\nfrom Empire Village to hospital\nwith the mumps.\nGames officials announced Wednesday that Nigerian boxer A. Gar-\nuba was admitted to hospital with\nthe disease five days ago.\nQuarantined earlier with the\nmumps was 26-year-old English\ndiving champion Frank Mercer.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nHousehold furniture for sale. 108\nMorgan St., Phone 8.0-R.\nEAGI.E8   SOCIAL   MEMBERSHIP\nCLUB MEET8 TONIGHT\nHunting  and  Fishing  Licences\nJACK BOYCE\nMore miles per. foot on shoe re\npairs at TONY'S REPAIR SHOP.\nWett Lake Cottages FISH  DERBY\nMay 1 to Nov. 1. Ph. 3-yv, Balfour.\nFully  guaranteed repair  service.\nCUTLER'S-Jewellery, 1511 Baker St.\nFuller Brusn  Representative.\nDon E. Sergent - Phone 1335\nRegular meeting of-Beverage Dispenser? Union, Local Iff], will be\nheld Sunday, Aug, 1;- Important.\nDavid Nystrom, in , Snd outside\npainting, paper hanging. Phone\n792-X.\n8LABWOOD FOR 8ALE. LONG\nC0RD8 OR CUT TO STOVE\nLENGTH. \u2014 PHONE 330-L.\nRaspberries. Gooseberries and\nBlack Currants for sale. Mrs. C.\nBecker, Vancouver Street.\nLeather  Baby  Harness.  Pink,\nBlue  and Natural. $1.69.\nTOT-N-TEEN\nTRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nComplete Secretarial Course\nFall Term, Begins Sept. 7\n625 Victoria'-St.,,Trail. Tel. 84\nClearance Sale Continues.\nSun  Presses.  Values  up  to $3.95.\nClearance price, $1.89 each.\nEBERLE'8.JUNIOR SHOP\nTerrs?\" towel Special. High quality V novelty towels in high colors\nReg. $1.35 each, ,95c.\nTAYLOR'S PRY GOOD8\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, staves cleaned by vacuum\nPounder's Chimney Service\nPhone UU-fc\nMax Kaaper\nShoe Repairs\n350 Baker Street \u2014 Nelson\nFOR SALE \u2014 1951PontiAc 4-door\nsedan, Excellent car at a sacrifice.\nPhone 1035-L or see at 806 Baker\nSt. .    \u2022.-\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0,\n'For your canning needs \u2014 7 quart\ncold pack canners in aluminum and\nenamel. Also No. i;artd No;. 2 cans\nand lids. - HIPPERSON'S.\nMotors, radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh   pressure   Jenny   Service\nSHORTY'S REPAIR 8HOP\n714 BAKER ST. \"\nWe, have three, floor rnodel chesterfield suites, 1 red, 1 green, 1 beige.\nReduced to clear1 at    ;. ', '.'\u25a0',.,-\nSTERLING  HOME. FURNISHERS\nALL  SPORT  JACKETS\nONE PRICE CLEARANCE\n $29,001   ';',\nGODFREY'S LTD..\nGalvanized and copper' b o i 1 e r!s\nwith wire racks \\6hold eight-quart\njars.. Strawberry, hullers,'\": cherry\nstoners, wooden spoons, jelly strainers, etc. -HIPPERSON'S.   '\nFly Rods, Spinning Reels', Flys,\nLures, Lines. Everything In the way\nof fishing supplies at    . ,\\    ' j-\nKOOTfcNAY  STATIONERS\nAND SP.ORXS' SHOP ...\n\u25a0 Wicker Chair.and Settee,; suitable,\nfor'summer home, also -one-5-piece\nchrome set, like new, $40.50, We buy\nand sell new' and' used' furniture.\nHOME   FURNlYURE' EXCHANGE\nFor the newest. in styles....\nCoverings .and Lightweight' \"\nAeroplane Ltiggaie.,7'\nSee our selection ofi MeBrjrie\/; -\nCarson and' Skyway Luggage\n' at WApS'8..: \"\u2122; , .\n.    CHIMNEX ANfa FIREPtiACB ' -\n\u2022-.' 'MATEfelAL''.;\" '-\u2022'    , \"'..\nBricks, flue lining, I lime, cement,\nchimneys tops; and fireplace.bricks;.\nalso thimbles and cleanouts, at\nTi H. WATER8'*?efO,<LTD.' >\nPhone 166 - 101 Hall-8t - Nolson!\nGRANDMEW\nSTRIKE IN 3RD DAY\nMETAUNE -FALLS, Wash. (AP)\n\u2014The. walkout of 44 men at the\nGrandvlew rnihe .and mill entered\nits third day.'Thursday'but there\nwere reports of negotiations to settle the dispute.\nPatrick F. Powers, of Spokane,1 a\nrepresentative :bf' the International\nUnion of Mine, Mill and Smelter-\nWorkers (Ind.) came here for talks\nwith the'American Zinc, Lead and\nSirtelting Co., which operates the\nGrandview property.\nJ. L. Dougherty, an international\nMine-Mill representative, said at\nKellogg, Ida., the union wants a\n25-ceht hourly national pattern\nwage.7 increase, upgrading of job\nclassifications . and settlement of\ntwo cases of alleged contract. violations.\nGov't Employees\nMedical Service\nMarks lOlh Year\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 The B. C.\nGovernment Employees Medical\nServices marked its 10th anniversary Thursday and a financial\nstatement released by its directors\nshows an astonishing record for this\nco-operative venture. -\n_he medical services were organized by a few civil servants who\ndecided in 1944 that some form of\nmedical insurance was needed by\nthe men and women of the provincial government staff.\nThey found $500 ln borrowed capital, and soon signed 400 charter\nmembers. Today, 6500 civil servants\nand their dependents are covered\nby the scheme, for a total of 16,-\n350; premium receipts have reached\na total of $1,805,000; and claims have\nbeen paid out amounting to $1,565,-\n000.\nWIDE BENEFITS\nIn the past\" 12 months, the wide\nrange : of -benefits has . been increased without increasing premiums, which are now7 $2.75 a month\nfor single persons; $5.25 for couples;\n$6.25 for married couples With one\nchild,,and $7.20.for larger families.\nJail British Writer       |\nMAIDSTONE, England (Reuters)?\nKindergarten teacher George Bellt]\n32, was jailed for six months for\nwriting three obscene books, en*;\ntitled \"My Cutie Is a Corpse,*;\n\"Honey, Don't Dare\" and. \"Murder;;\nin Mink.\" London publisher Edwin*\nSelf, 56, was sentenced to nine\nmonths.\nParly Honoring China's Premier\nBy RICHARD  KA8I8CHKE\nMOSCOW.JAP) \u2014The Kremlin\nchiefs uncorked their choicest\nvodka Wednesday to honor Premier Chou Eh-lai of China and'the\nVietminh ^eputy premier, Pham\nVan Dong, triumphally touring\nhomeward from the Geneva conference.\nToasts by the dozen to peace and\ncoexistence were hoisted at a gala\nreception given by Foreign Minister Molotov fOr about 1000 persons,\nincluding Western diplomats and\ncorrespondents.\nThe get-friendly theme appeared\naimed mainly at British ambassador Sir William Hayter, who sat\nat the head table with gueBts of\nhonor and top Russian officials.\nIn a jovial 'moment toward the\nend of the party, the Soviet Communist party secretary, Nikita S.\nKrushchev, raised his glass to the\nBritish diplomat, \"You British\ndon't want to capture Leningrad,\"\nKhrushchev said, \"and we don't\nwant to take Glasgow.\"\n\"Leningrad is a very nice town,\nprettier than Glasgow,\" Hayter\nsmilingly replied.\nU.S. embassy officials passed up\ntheir. invitation to the reception.\nThe U.S. does not recognize Chou's\nPeiping regime.\nPremier Malenkov topped the\nguest list. The Soviet premier was\namiable and all smiles, but he offered no toasts.\nAs, the vodka compliments\nmounted- toward half a hundred\naround the head table, Khrushchev\nand the internal trade minister,\nAnastase I. Mikoyan, grew especially animated and high-spirited.\nEven after all the guests rose to\nleave, Khrushchev kept tipping his\nglass with the British ambassador\nin an exchange heard by reporters\nnearby.\n\"Now we don't want any _ war.\nand we are not afraid of each\nother,\" the party chief said.\nLinking his arm witlTChou's, he\nadded:\n\u25a0.\"Now here's a good example of\nfriendship \u2014 the Soviet Union and\nChina. That's how we all should\nbe' friends.\"\n\"I'm the secretary of the Soviet\nCommunist party,\" Krushchev continued, \"but in this question of coexistence Prime Minister Churchill\nof Great Britain is in complete\nagreement' with me. Lenin laid\ndown this principle \u2014 and very\nrightly.\"\nHOP STRINGING\nA hop stringer ln an ordinary\nday's work covers abduf 16 acres\nand uses about 16 miles of string.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arte Building\nSuite 206        ,   Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED _ REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT  ST. PHONE 68\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n'Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n615 Kqjji'r-'iiav St Phone 361\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C.  TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a 8peolalty   |\nGovernment Licenced\nCW. HOUSE\nElectrical Contractor\nNorth Shore - Phone 1724-L-2\nNelton   B.C.\nA\u00bbk Vour Grocer For\nEllison's\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX   I\nMajteo delicious bread the easy\nand quick way. :_\nTry a package today\nELLISON   MILLING      .\nA ELEV  CO. LTD.\ns3uy  Sell  Trade the Classified way |\nGive Yourself a\nHOME PERMANENT    i\nTONI - RICHARD HUDNUT\nBOBBI \u2014 PROM \u2014 RAYVE\nELIZABETH ARDEN   .\nComplete Kits and' Refills\nAlso for Children\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCOMPANY     \u25a0'\u25a0-\u25a0\"!'\n\"Nelson _ Modern  Pharmacy\"\nBOX 460\nPhone 34, Day - 807-R, Night\nSee ys before you buy\na new refrigerator!\nXjjtyy\nin mm\nill\nMTKENT     '\nIII\n-UtrHIKI  .\n\"SKSsr\nYou owe it to yourtetl to get tho Und ol\nvilli* that only International Harvester\ncan give you. So come in and oca us and\nwe'll help you nuke thow refrigerator\ndollars go much, much farther I i\nOnly International Harvester\ngives you Ml this...\nir Push-button automatic dafroitwg\nit Big, full-wldlh fiwier ehert\nie Super Pontry-Dor with Boeon*\nCheeie-Bulter Keeper\n* Adjustable ihell and olide-out shell\nir ExtrO'!nrge\"tallboltlo\"ipaco\nit Sunshine Yellow Interior\nit Automatic oH-Wofhf temperature\ncontrol\nip Famous \"TlgM-Wad\"* compressor\nunit with 5*yeor warranty\nAND APPLIANCES\n\u25a0 '4r4o*WoroiS*\u00bb,i'\nPhone 1302.\nWERE NEVER LOWER!\nCheck These Prlcet ond Units Before You Buy\n1952 BUICK SEDAN\nDynaflow Transmission, Radio, Conditionaire,\nSeat Covers. Only\t\n1952 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR SEDAN\nConditionaire, Seat' Covers.\nPrice    :\t\n1951 PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN .\nConditionaire, Radio, Seat Covers.\nNew Paint Job \u201e .'\t\n1951 CHEVROLET SEDAN ,\nGood Rubber, Engine Overhauled.\nPrice i :\t\n1*51 PONTIAC TUDOR SEDAN\nRadio, Conditionaire, Seat Covers.\nExcellent Shape'.  Price''.'.\t\n$2450\n$1650\n$1500\n$1450\n$1400\n\u2014 SATURDAY SP1CIAL    ~\n1952 Dodge Sedan\nConditionaire \u2014 Good Tires\nOnly $1450.00\nTRUCKS\n1952 FORD 1\/2 TON PICK UP\nExcellent Shape,\nPrice    -.\t\n1952 GMC Vi TON PICK UP\nPriee _\u2022._.*..,.',..:...,.\u25a0....'. :..- ,\t\n1951 GMC'\/\u00bb TON PICK UP\nPrii;e \u25a0 \/...,; :..;..,\t\n1949 MERCURY '\/_ TON PICKUP\nPrice   \u201e '........,..,..., : :\n$1250\n$1150\n$1050\n$900\nrfito\nCOMPANY  LIMITED\nmm^i\nLOCATED \/T 323 VERNON STREET\nmnm\nfet\n^mmmmmm\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1954_07_30","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427839","@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":"1954-07-30 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1954-07-30 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\/1.0427839"}