{"@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":"2023-03-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1956-08-13","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429327\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" c?cn^\nWEATHER   FORECAST     \u25a0\nKootenay: Clear. Not much\nchange in temperature. Light\nwinds. Low high at Cranbrook\nand Crescent Valley 40 and 85.\nVol. 55\nAlmost Hah. enough for a very small woman to pick up Is\nthis three-wheeled Japanese automobile. It weighs but 300 pounds,\nhas Its engine In thei.ear and can travel at about 40 mph. It will be\nmass-produced In Yokohama.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nEngineer Killed\nIn Train Crash\nDiesel, Freight Collide; Five CPR\nEmployees Injured; 17 Cars Derailed\nBREDENBURY, Sask. (CP) \u2014 An engineer was\nkilled and five other Canadian Pacific Railway employees\nwere injured Sunday when a switch engine and diesel engine hauling a 40-car freight crashed near here.\nLouis Kerr of Wynward, Sask., engineer of the\nswitch engine, .died in the wreckage and parts of the locomotive had to be cut to free his body. An inquest opened at\nthe scene and was adjourn\ned indefinitely.\nInjured men who were taken 25\nmiles by ambulance to Yorkton\nGeneral Hospital were W. Stef-\nanuk, Sutherland, Sask., fireman\non the switch engine; G. Stone,\nfireman of the freight; I. C. Lee,\nfreight engineer; Arthur Grant,\ntravelling engineer, and Bob Ma-\nr\/1 lie. Khrushchev, daughter\nof Soviet party boss Nikita\nKhrushchev, proved to be a shy\ntourist on her way to Athens,\nGreece. She was recognized\nwhile taking in the lights with a\nparty of Russian visitors. When\ntoo late. The photographer had\nshe realized what had happened\n\u2022he tried to hide her face. It was\nalready managed to get this revealing picture of her.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\ndill, head brakeman of the freight\nall from Minnedosa, Man.\nNone was reported seriously injured and Mr. Grant and Mr.\nMadill were released from hospital after treatment.\nDuring wreck clearing operations, Jack Calli, 36-year-old CPR\ncarman from Bredenbury, was\nseriously injured when a 60-ton\ncapacity crane toppled over. He\nwas pinned by a Steel bar inside\nthe crane and it tool, more than\nan hour to free him. He suffered\na crushed leg.\nSeventeen cars were derailed\nWhen the .backing switch engine\n<_Bd th^-fres-l aoliidea.\"*.\"\" '\nThe two-unit diesel was telescoped as it plowed into the tender of the steam engine, lifting\nttie tender and forcing huge\npieces of steel into the cab of the\nswitcher. The front of the diesel\nwas folded back to the engineer's\nseat.\nFourteen of the derailed boxcars were crumpled like cardboard toys, with merchandise\nstrewn along the track.\nAbout 1500 feet of track was\nripped up.\nThe track was expected to be\nblocked at least until tonight.\nKASLO BOY DIES\nOF INJURIES\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Stanley\n.Sasaki, 16, of Kaslo, B.C., died\nin hospital Sunday from injuries\nsuffered Aug. 7 when he was\nthrown from a bicycle after It\nwas struck by a car at nearby\nPickering.\nSasaki had been visiting relatives irt the Toronto area.\n(jJoisA. rl&vsdA.\nNELSON\nSun. Sat.\n3.75   3.75\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1956\nNot  More Than 6o Dally,  10c  Saturday\nNo. 95\nNO HOPE FOR'\n260 MINERS\nRescuers Find\nCave-in When\nFire Subsides\nMARC1NELLE, Belgium (API-\nRescuers trying to reach about\nmen trapped in a blazing coal\nmine since Wednesday sealed off\nthe underground gallery Sunday\nnight in an effort to lower the\ntemperature,\nEarlier in the day flames and\nsmoke 3000 feet down in the Bois\nde Casier mine subsided enough\nto let rescuers penetrate 50 yards.\nThere they found a cave-in, said\nAndre Van Den Heuvel, chief of\nBelgium's mine administration.\nA German expert said Saturday\nthere is no hope of finding any\nof the trapped men alive.\nRejects West Invitation\nOffers To Sponsor Conference\nOf Powers Concerned With Suez\n,\nTen Weekend\nFatalities In B.C.\nBy The Canadian Press\nTen persons were reported Sunday night to have died accidentally in British Columbia during the\nweekend, five of them in traffic\naccidents.\nTwo others were drowned and\nthree died in miscellaneous mishaps.\nA 23-year-old man whose identity was withheld by RCMP was\ndrowned Sunday in Lake Skaha,\nnear Penticton, when he dived\ninto the water apd disappeared\nwhile swimming with friends.\nThe body was recovered.\nA man and woman were killed\nearly Sunday when their car\nwent out of control in Burtiaby.\nTheir names have not yet been\nreleased.\nAn unidentified man was killed\nin a two-car colUsion,,nea., L^dv-\nsmith and ' another uh-dentmea'\nman died at Mineral King Mine,\n26 miles from Invermere Saturday.\nWilliam Blane of Port Alberni\nwas killed when his car missed a\ncurve on the Island highway\nnorth of Nanaimo.-\nPaul Nielson of Vancouver was\nkilled Saturday when his car\nplunged over a 200-foot embankment on the Hope-Princeton highway near Princeton.   .\nAdam Stevens, 57, was killed\nSaturday in a logging accident at\nPitt Lake.\nThomas Lecky, 21 months, of\nDuncan, was drowned .Friday\nnight at a beach supper party in\nWest Vancouver.\nElsie Begley, 21, died from\ndomestic gas poisoning in Vancouver.\nAt least 39 persons were killed\naccidentally in Canada during the\nweekend. Highway crashes\ncounted for 24 of the deaths.\nOntario led the list with 12\nfatalities.\nDEFENCE CUT8\n'VIENNA (Reuters) \u2014 Hungary\nwill cut her defence expenditure\nby 35 pe rcent and reduce her\narmy by 35,000 men, Budapest ra\ndio reported Sunday.\nTruman Backs Harriman\nSheep Creek Mirier\nKilled) Two Missing\nINVERMERE \u2014 One man is known dead and two\nare missing in an accident at Sheep Creek Mines Ltd.'s\nMineral King Mine, 26 miles west pf Invermere.\nJhe accident occurred abolit 1:30 p.m. Saturday\nand around-the-clock shifts have worked since with\nRCMP to find the other two i_fen, trapped, dead or\naljve, by fallen rock within the shaft. The accident occurred at the No. 2 level.\nRCMP and mine officials would release no other\ndetails late Sunday night, including the identity of the\nthree men involved. The dead man was reported to be\nof Italian origin and single.\nMineral King is a zinc, lead and silver producer.\nCongress\nBacks U.S.\nSuez Policy\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014In an extraordinary Sunday meeting at\nthe White House, President Eisenhower apparently won substantial bi-partisan backing among\nU. S. congressional leaders for his\npolicy of settling the Suez Canal\ncrisis by peaceful compromise.\nA statement issued immediately\nafter the 80-minute session ended\nsaid the 22 Senate and House of\nRepresentatives leaders and the\n15 administration officials present\nhad \"recognized the importance\nof dependable operation of the\ncanal as a major artery of world\ntraffic.\"\nThat covered a cardinal point\nof Eisenhower policy.\nEisenhower and Dulles told the\ncongressional leaders that they\nhope for a peaceful solution of\nthe Suez situation but that it still\npresents; a ;grave problem.\nT_h<-' i, White House statement\nindicated both Democrats and Republicans haj supported the administration's, policy of seeking\n.peaceful internationalization of\nthe, great Middle East\" waterway.\nEGYPT SCORNS\nLOAN OFFER\n<. 1111111111111. \u25a0 1111 t e \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 i \u25a0 i r 11 r i r 1111.\nAdroitly Put\nNEW DELHI (AP) \u2014 The\nLondon conference without\nEgypt \"will be like a wedding\nwithout the bride\"\u2014that wai\nthe Initial comment for a senior Indian foreign ministry\nofficial on hearing of President Nasser's refusal to attend\nthe parley.\niiKiuiniiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiimii!\nBy TOME MASTERSON\nCAIRO (AP) \u2014 Gamal Abdel Nasser gave an,emphatic \"no\" Sunday to the British-proposed London conference on the Suez Canal. But he left the door open for\nnegotiation by proposing another conference to guarantee\nfreedom of the canal.\nSeated on the Speaker's rostrum in Parliament directly in front of the spot where King Parouk once sat, the\npresident quietly pleaded Egypt's case for nationalization\nof .the canal to more than 300 newspapermen from all parts\nof the world.\nUnsmiling, Nasser-read in clear'English a 12-page\nstatement comprising the Egyptian reply to the British\nconference invitation. i         '\nWhen   he   finished   the   state_ I Powers concerned in the free use I\nment, however, he pushed aside  * the 103-\u2122le waterway. j HI      j B-^-^--!-\nhis prepared text, looked at the This   would   include   all   go     HR}|  rTQOUjfl-J  \u25a0\nvernments that signed the Con* \u25a0\nstantlnople treaty of 1888, The [ MOSCOW (AP) \u2014 Russia's dy-\n.treaty, ratified- by Egypt and' namic foreign minister, Dmitri\nnine other countries, guaranteed I Shepilov, will personally lead a\nfree movement of ships of all j drive at the forthcoming London\ncountries through Suez In peace: conference to thwart Western\not. War. i plans   for   internationalizing   the\nSuez Canal.\nIt will be his first appearance\nRuss To Balk\ncrowd and began an off-the-cuff'\ncomment on what he called the,\nCAIRO (AP) - President Nas-! background to. this statement.      ;\nser tol'd the Egyptian people Sun-' ALWAYS OWNED CANAL ;\nday night the World Bank had of-      \"The British press says 'Nasser i\nfered Egypt a billion dollar loan\nto enlarge the Suez Canal but he\nrejected it.\nNasser made the statement in a\nspeech. He said he was offered\nthe money \"even to build a new\ncanal.\"\nHe s_fld he rejected the offer\nwith the statement \"we have,\nenough troubles with the canal wej\nhave.\nNasser said World Bank president Eugene Black made the offer at a time Egypt was facing\ninternational manoeuvres aimed | * British-French | at their meeting in Londpn last\nat extending international controx ^^ ^ uge force against Egypt| week Wfld to produce a pretext\nover the canal. ,       (I|n  wap n(jbody knQws who, \"for   interference  in   matters  of\nwill win,\" he said, \"Those who j Egyptian Sovereignty.\ngrabbed the canal,' 'Nasser seized\nthe canal' or that 'Nasser nationalized the canal,'\" he said. \"But\nthis is all untrue because Egypt\nalways has owned the canal. It!\nis part of our territory. We na- \u25a0\ntionalized the canal company j\nwhich is an Egyptian company \\\nunder Egyptian law.\"\nNo date or place was suggested \u25a0\nfor this meeting. j   , . ,       ,.      . .\nat   an   international   conference\nThe government statement con-, since he succeeded V. M. Molotov\ndemned the action of Britain and\nFrance in mobilized reserves and\nmoving troops and naval forces\nin the Mediterranean area since\nHe ridiculed the idea that the1 ^P\u00bb nationalized the canal July\nNasser also charged the big\nthree foreign ministers of the\nUnited States, Britain and France\n| old canal company guaranteed\nI freedom of navigation in the\n: canal.\nNasser grew deadly serious on\nUPS PIPELINE COST\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 An official of Defence Production Minister Howe's department Is reported to have estimated that\nsteel price boosts In both the\nUnited State, and Canada are\nexpected to Increase the cost of\nthe controversial cross-Canada\npipe line by about $5,000,000.\nA high official of the bank in\nWashington said \"we have never\noffered him any such loan and\nthere has been no discussion of\nthe Suez Canal.\"\n!\nas foreign minister.\nShepilov has applied for a British visa to attend the conference\nstarting next Tuesday. The talks\nwill be under Britain's own terms,\nwhich she declined to alter despite\nSoviet  counter-proposals.\nNeither the Soviet government\nnor Russian press have made any\nsecret of the fact Russia will\nback Egypt to the hilt at the conference and oppose proposals by\ni the Western powers.\nTwo-Killed in\nHead-on Crash\nGLADSTONE, Man. CCIJ)'-V\nTw*, persons were killed and five\nothers injured Saturday in a two-\ncar head-on collision 12 miles eastj\nof here. \u2022    I\nKilled were Henry Delorme, 26,'\nof Transcona, Man., and hi^ two- j\nyear-old  daughter  Linda.\nIn hospital are his wife, Peggy,!\ntwo other passengers i\u201e the car. e ._     United Nations\nand .Tame, Smith and John Sin- j guaraI)tee ol {reedom oi naviga.\ntion of the canal.\nbegin wars do not know where j \"As to the invitation to the con-\nthey will end. We are only a j ference,. the Egyptian government\nsmall country but we are de- j noticed to its complete surprise\ntermlned to defend our rights i that the British government ex-\nto the last drop of our blood. ! tended the invitations for a con-\n\"If we lose this struggle It j ference to consider matters con-\nwill mean that no small nations j cerning the Suez Canal, which is\nare free. It will mean, that <\">-' I an integral part of Egypt, without\ntime small nations art against j any consultation with Egypt, the\n'the wishes of big nations there j country whom \u25a0the7'qtattfjr con*-\nwlll be mobilization threatsand j cerns,\" the government statement\neconomic pressure, This is not i said.\nEgypt's case alone but the case ] \t\nof all small countries every-1 LONfiON (AP) \u2014 Against the\nwhere. We are struggling to I background for position the bit\nhelp them keep their dignity, |British build-up of strenght went\nrights and sovereignty.\"\nNasser was asked whether he\nclair, both of Winnipeg, occupants\nof the other car.\nTWINING... .   ,\nSoviet Beating U*SL\nIn Jet Production\nBy DOUGLAS 8. CORNELL\n'CHICAGO   (AP)  \u2014    Harry S.\nTruman   Saturday   gave his un-\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAnyone Need a\nFrench Chateau?\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 The\nFrench government is offering\nmansions and houses for sale\nand rent at rock-bottom prices\nin deserted southern France\nmountain villages in a bid to\nopen up new vacation resorts.\nThe public works and tourist ministry, sponsored of the\nprogram are handling a daily\ndeluge of inquiries from prospective buyers who now can\npick from a chateau with\nwater and electricity going\nfor 1,000,000 ($2800) to a two-\nstorey house with a garden nad\nfield for 350,000 francs ($980).\nSmaller properties are also\noffered for as little as 150,000\n($420).\nThe ministry started by offering 1000 houses for rent or\nsale in 50 deserted villages in\nthree departments counties\nand they are listing abandoned\nproperty in four other departments.\nIIJIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nqualified support to Governor\nAverell Harriman of New York\nwas the best man for president of\nthe United States in what he called these time of \"mounting crisis\nin the world.\"\nThe fofmer president said the\nDemocrats at their national convention opening Monday must\npick a man with experience and\nability to act as president \"immediately upon assuming office without risking a period of^costly and\ndangerous trial and error.\"\nTruman noted that Harriman\nhas had long experience in top\ngovernment positions under his\nown and the Roosevelt administrations. He will \"make a fighting\nand successful candidate,\" Truman saic!.\nThe reaction of Adlai E. Stevenson, still the man to beat for the\nnomination, was: \"I expect to be\nthe Democratic candidate.\"\nTruman, reading a statement he\nhad written in pen and ink to the\npress and the country via television and radio, did not even\nmention Stevenson, though he did\nperhaps include him in the remark\nthat the party has \"many qualified men to choose from,\"-\nIn making up his mind to support his old friend, Truman said,\nlie had talked with many people\nin many parts of the country from\nall walks of life and had read\nthousands of letters from friends\nand fellow .citizens.\nHarriman has served in such\ncapacities as U.S. ambassador to\nRussia and England and secretary\nof commerce.\nThe former president said he\nrealized his remarks would cause\ndisappointment among some and\nresentment among others.\nINDIRECT SLAP\nStevenson's supporters have\nclaimed 630 of the necessary 686%\nvotes necessary for the nomination and have been driving for a\nfirst-ballot victory.\nTruman said he was no believer\nin bandwagon movements and had\nno faith in polls. This was taken\nas an indirect slap at Stevenson,\nwhose backers have been attempting to create a bandwagon atmosphere and whose supporters have\ncontended he is far and away the\nchoice in the polls.\nOne result of Truman's action\nmay be -to solidify anti-Harriman\nsentiment in the South and an intention of some Southern delegation to stop, look and listen before\nlining up definitely with any\nbody. There is more of a chance\nnow that the convention in the end\ncould turn to some darkhorse possibility.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Gen.\nNathan F. Twining says Russia has\n\"thousands more jet combat\nplanes in operation units\" than\nthe U.S. air forcfe and navy combined.\nThe Air Force Chief of Staff reports, however, the United States,\nstill holds an advantage in aerial\n\"striking power,\" but could lose\nthat edge unless it starts next year\nthe stepped up multi-billion dollar research and production program he had advocated before.\nIn appraising Soviet ability to\ndesign and mass produce top quality planes and other weapons,\nTwining told a Senate armed services subcommittee July 19 \"'we\nshould not ever downgrade them\"\nThe testimnoy was taken at a secret session and a censored version\nmade public Saturday.\nTwining said \"I was quite shocked\" by the speed with which Russia has produced MiG fighter\nplanes. He said he has not changed his estimate that they produce\n10 times as many all-weather\nfighters a month as the United\nStates.\nOn the subject of plane numbers\nTwining stressed one point \u2014 a\nbelief that if war should come\nRussia would need more bombers\nthan the United States because\nthere are more target areas in the\nU.S. than in the Soviet Union.\n\"The most effective and important guarantee is that given by\nthe Egyptian government and the\nEgyptian people,\" he replied.\nNasser aSid, however, that \"being retermined to spare no effort\nin preserving international\npeace,\" his government is willing\nto  sponsor  a  conference   of  all\nii..ii.i..iimiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiimii\nFiremen Watered\nThe Flowers\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Seven\nfire engines were called out\nSunday to water some flower*,\nA passer-by threw a lighted cigaret butt into the flower\nbox In front of a mldtown\nbuilding and some drlcd-out\npeat in the box caught fire.\nAlarms from the area automatically call for.seven pieces\nof equipment. Said a fire dep-\npartment official: \"We water*\ned the flowers.\"\nliiiitiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniir\nBesides the airlift of troops,\nfour big troopships, packed with\ntanks, guns and men, are on their\nway to the Middle East. Scores of\nh a s 11 y requisitioned merchant\nships also took on stores at ports\nthroughout the country.\nDestination of the troops remains a military secret, but observers speculated most would be\nlanded at Britain's two island bastions in the Mediterranean-Malta\nand Cyprus.\nPrime Minister Eden has repeatedly declared Britain intends\nto solve the dispute by peaceful\nmeans, but that full military preparedness must be maintained as\na necessary precaution.\nHurricane Whips\nPuerto Rico\nSAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)\u2014\nHurricane Betsy smashed across\nPuerto Rico Sunday with winds-\nup to 100 miles an hour.\nOne death was attributed to the\nstorm that flattened wooden\nbuildings, flooded some areas, and\nsevered San Juan's power and\ntransportation systems.\nThe hurricane struck the island\non the southeast coast at Maun-\nabo about 8 a.m. EDT, crossed diagonally, and blew out over the\nAtlantic from the northwest coast.\nCommunications were down between San Juan and most points\non the island.\nThe centre of the storm hit the\nU.S. Air Force base at Ramey, on\nthe northwest corner of the island\nnear Aguadilia. Winds there\nreached 100 miles an hour. There\nwere no detailed reports of damage.\nSan Juan, in northeastern Puerto Rico, escaped the brunt of\nthe blow, reporting winds up to 80\nmiles an hour. Many trees were\nblown across the capital's streets\nhampering transportation.\nTHE TOWERING BUILDIftes of Manhattan's lower east side skyline appear -to rest\non the hugs flight deck of tho USS Saratoga,\nworfd's largest and most powerful aircraft carrier, as the 60,000-ton warship heads down the\nEast River In New York In the first stage of her\nshakedown cruise. The Brooklyn Bridge provides an overhead frame for the giant fighting\ncraft In this view from the Brooklyn shore.,\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nLavish Gov't Spending To Blame\nFor Inflation Factors-Fleming\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Donald Fleming said Saturday the federal government's swollen expenditures\nare the biggest and strongest inflationary factors in Canada's\neconomy.\nHe made the statement in the\nCommons as he criticized Finance Minister Harris for not giving what he termed a lucid explanation for the increase in the\nBank' of Canada interest rate to a\nrecord ZVt per cent.\nMr. Fleming said If the threat\nof inflation had led the bank to\nincrease the rate \"then I suggest\nthere are responsibilities falling\ndirectly upon the government.\"\n\"Let the government begin at\nhome,\" lie said. \"Let the government clean its own house. Let it\nlook at its own swollen expenditures which represent one of the\nbiggest and strongest inflationary\nfactors in our economy today.\"\nIf the ..government would look\naround for ways and means\nof restraining inflationary factors\n\"I submit that it first ought to\npluck the beam out of its own\neye.\"\nIt should not be forgotten that\ninflationary factors often had the\nsubtle support and exercised a\nsiren attraction upon ministers of\nfinance. This was because tiie\ngovernment always shared\nthrough taxes \"in the benefits of\ninflation through swollen returns\nof income tax, corporation tax,\nsales tax and other impositions.\"\nFive increases ln the bank rate\nin a year had resulted in a tremendous increase in the financial\nburdens of provincial and municipal governments, business and\nbond holders.\n\"What the government should\nbe directing its efforts toward in\nfacing the threat of inflation is to\nseek an Increase in productivity\"\nhe said.\nAnd in This Corner...\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 One of the most-optimistic men In Britain\n8unday night was Khalld Azmy, tourist attache at the Egyptian\nEmbassy He was working as usual.\nWhile British firms In Egypt prepared airlifts to bring home\nwives and children of employees. Azmy said he had been Instructed by Cairo to tell any Interested tourists:\n\"There Is no reason whatsoever for anyone cancelling their\nvisit to Egypt.\"\nThe Egyptian gave no hint what business he's doing\u2014If any.\nSLOUGH, England (AP) \u2014 Nicholas Smith told a magistrate's\ncourt he had reasons for carrying a nine-inch long bayonet,\n\"1 was going .to London,\" he said, \"and you know what life's\nlike up there.\"\nFined \u00a33 Saturday, Smith said he had been reading about gang\nwars in London's Sono district.\n! \u25a0 \u25a0  ' '\n ^TT .\n' i\n\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   ','\u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nI\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1956\nM-G-M\npresent, in\nCOLOR\nCINEmaScoPE\nSTARRIW .\nANNBLYTH\nEDMUND PURDOM\nDAVID NIVEN\nGEORGE SANDERS\n\u00ab_. ROGER MOORE\nTonight \u2022 Tuesday\nShows at 7:00-9:00\n&&\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nShowing TONIGHT and TUESDAY\nShow 8:45 p.m.      Feature 9:20 p.m.\nCARTOON and SHORTS\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nCary Grant, Ingrid Bergman\nAlfred Hitchcock's\n\"NOTORIOUS\"\n8ho'ws at 7 and 9 p.m.\nNELSON MAN'S\nMOTHER DIES\nFuneral services were held at\nVancouver Saturday for Mrs.\nMaude Harriet Carruthers. mother\nof John Carruthers of Nelson and\nMrs. Irene Cake of Trail. Mrs.\nCarruthers died Wednesday at the\nage of 55.\nShe was a member of' the Princess Patricia Lodge. No. 9. OES.\nShe is also survived by her bus-\nband. Frank; one brother, W.\nBrock, of Vancouver and two sisters, Mrs. R. McCutcheon of Victoria and Mrs. F. Allen of Edmonton.\nService Held\nFor Mrs. Seaman\nGraveside services were held\nSaturday morning at Nelson Memorial Park for the late Mrs. Catherine Seaman, who died last Monday at Vancouver. Funeral service\nwas held a Vancouver Thursday.\n\u2022Hev. Canon W. J. Silverwood\nofficiated at the service here and\npallbearers were W. Thompson,\nDr. C. E. Bradshaw, Donald\nGrant and R. A. Horswill.\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL. B.C.\nShowing  Tonight and Tuesday\nShow approximately 8:30 p.m.\n\"APACHE\" (Technicolor)\nBurt Lancaster, Jean Peters\nFeaturette and  Cartoon  -\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Cricket\nclose-of-play scores in Britain:\nAustralians 134 for 6 vs Derbyshire,\nMiddlesex 69, Surrey 83 for 2.\nEssex 98 for 4 vs Kent.\nSussex 237 for 9 vs Gloucestershire.\nSomerset 241, Glamorgan 1 for\n0 wicket.\nLeicestershire vs Hampshire\nand Yorkshire vs Worcestershire.\nNo play today, rain.\nWarwickshire 159 for 4 vs Nottinghamshire.\nRoyal Navy 190 and 76 for 5 declared, Royal Air Force 118 for 8\ndeclared and 152 for 5. Royal Air\nForce won by 5 wickets.\nWe carry the popular\nof Cosmetics.\nlines\nDorothy  Gray\u2014Super\nHypo-Allergenic\nLIPSTICK\nStay\n$1.60\nDUBARRV   COLOR  GLIDE\nHypo-Allergenic\nLIPSTICK                     $1.60\nNelson Pharm\nacy\n'Your   Fortress   of   H\nealth\"\n433 Josephine St\nPhone 1_1_3       Nights:\n394 L   1\nThe Weather\nNELSON    ...._   Sun. 53 89 -\nSat. 52 87 \u2014\nSt. Johns  _ 58 71 \u2014\nHalifax      59 75 .04\nMontreal   63 78 \u2014\nOttawa    60 77 \u2014\nToronto     61 78' .02\nNorth Bay   54 74 \u2014\nPort Arthur   44 77 \u2014\nKenora     56 75 .03\nWinnipeg     _ 56 79 .28\nBrandon  _  52 75 .25\nThe Pas    54' 75 \u2014\nRegina    51 74 \u2014\nSaskatoon      54 77 \u2014\nPrince Albert     51 78 \u2014\nN. Battleford __  54 76 -\nSwift Current     52 75 \u2014\nMedicine Hat  57 77 \u2014\nLethbridge   56 75 \u2014\nCalgary     54 75 \u2014\nEdmonton   _  53 78 \u2014\nKimberley    44 85 \u2014\nKamloops      61 91 \u2014\nPenticton      54 88 \u2014\nVancouver   56 78 \u2014\nVictoria    _  51 81 \u2014\nPrince Rupert    _ 45 62 \u2014\nPrince George   48 84 \u2014\nWhitehorse  55 66 .03\nSeattle     56 87 \u2014\nPortland __   53 92 \u2014\nSan Francisco     55 66 \u2014\nLos Angeles    _  62 75 \u2014\nSpokane     57 87 \u2014\nChicago       65 91 \u2014\nNew York  _  73 87 \u2014\nChimney Fire\nExtinguished\nA chimney fire which spread to\nthe roof of the building' was\nquickly extinguished with a garden hose by Nelson Fire Department at Apex Saturday afternoon.\nThe home belonged to E, O'Gens-\nki.\nYmir Infant Dies\nFern Phyllis Elida Fields, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nMarvin Fields of Ymir, died Sunday in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital at the age of one month.\nBesides her parents she is survived by one brother, William\nFrederick, and two sisters, Margaret Frances and Catherine Lillian.\nARCTIC  MAKEUP\nThe Arctic Ocean consists of a\nsea 2000 fathoms deep, a broad\ncontinental shelf and numerous\nislands.\nMaurice VanSacker Awarded $400\nScholarship; To Attend UBC\nL. V. Rogers High School stud-\nent Maurice VanSacker has been\nawarded the $400 Pacific Brewers\nAgents Ltd., scholarship for this\ndistrict.\nSon of Mr. and Mrs. A. C.VanSacker, Maurice received the\nscholarship for his 85 per cent\naverage In his final junior matriculation exams, and also on leadership qualities, and participation in\nextra-curricular actlvitea.\nMaurice receved word that he\nwas winner of the scholarship at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nPolice Arrest'\nSlaying Suspect\nMONTREAL (CP) - Police\nSaturday night arrested a second\nsuspect sought for questioning in\nconnection with the gun-slaying\nof a police captain in the Laurentian resort town of Ste. Agathe,\nQue., last Tuesday.\nThe suspect, identified by police\nas Bernard Landry, 32, was picked up while walking near St.\nCatherine street and St. Lawrence\nBoulevard, one of Montreal's busiest intersections.\nPolice said Landry, who also\nused the name of Roland Champagne, offered no resistance when\nspotted in a thick Saturday night\ncrowd by a traffic officer. He was\nunarmed.\nThe man was one of two persons sought for questioning in\nshooting of Captain Ernest Chalifoux, 51, following a pre-dawn\ngun-battle in Ste. Agathe, about\n60 miles north of Montreal.\nHis arrest was made about 36\nhours after another suspect, identified as Michel Benoit, a 33-year-\nold Montreal seaman, was captured when he staggered from bush-\nland north of Ste. Agathe.\nSIX SHAKEN UP\nAS CAR HITS BANK\nIN TRAIL DISTRICT\nTRAIL \u2014 Six people escaped\nserious injury in a car accident\nnear Blueberry, between Trail\nand Castlegar, Sunday afternoon.\nA late model car reported driven by Raymond Petty of Burn- j\naby, B.C., went out of control as^\nit rounded a curve and ran into\na railway bank. About $1100 dam-,\nages were sustained. .    j\nMike Negraiff of Grand Forks,'\nowner of the car, and his wife\nreceived minor facial injuries.\nThe other passengers were badly\nshaken.\nwhere he was hospitalized a week\nago with a fractured vertebrae.\nThe Injury, which will keep him\nIn hospital for possibly a month\nand in a cast for two months, oc-\ncured when he took a running\ndive into a shallow part of the\nlake at Lakeside Park and hit his\nhead on the lake'bottom. However,\ndoctors state that he will be able\nto accept the scholarship to attend the University of British Columbia this Fall.\nBorn in Fernie, Maurice moved\nwith his family to Nelson eight\nyears ago and attended elemnetary\nand high schools here. Justice W.\nA. MacDonald Scholarship winner\nin Nelson Junior High School, he\nwas active in high school activities,\nhaving served last year as minister\nof finance on the school cabinet.\nHe was also business manager for\nthe school newspaper aftd was\nactive in athletics throughout his\nhigh school years. Maurice is also\na curling enthusiast and an active\nmember of the Nelson sea cadets,\nhaving won top marks at HMCS\nSherwater sea cadet camp in Halifax last Summer.\nHe intends to study chemical\nengineering at UBC. *\nCtimp Lourdes Closing *\nToday> 370 Attended\nThree Divide\n$1000 Al\nCastlegar Bingo\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Three persons\ndivided $1000 top prize In the\nbingo game staged Saturday night oeen of 10 days duration,\nCamp Lourdes will close for the\n1956 season today after four sessions each for boys and girls. A\ntotal of 370 attended the camp this\nyear.\nThe Catholic youth camp on the\nsouth shore of the West Arm of\nKootenay Lake this year has been\nunder the direction of Rev. Father\nL. J. Smith of Nakusp and Rev\nFather J. Postma of Notre Dame\nCollege, Nelson. Each session has\nby the Castlegar Kiwanis-Club.\nRather than risk losing out on\nthe big money in eliminations, the\nthree tying for the final game\nagreed to settle for the three-way\nsplit. Winners were Mrs. C. Woodford of Brilliant, Mr. G. McCreight of Oasis, l and ^Miss H.\nKuntz of Regina, Sask.\nKiwanis bingo night, staged in\nthe all-purpose room and the\ngymnasium of Stanley Hunlphries\nhigh school in Castlegar, was stag-'\ned to raise funds for the construe- j\ntion of the ice arena being erected!\nby the project society to serve1\nCastlegar and sthe surrounding!\nareas.\nKiwanis   president   M.\nNelson and East Kootenay girls\nare at the camp now. Girl leaders\nare Miss Frances Urben of Nakusp,\nhead leader; and Misses P. DeFerro and F. Marin of Nelson, M.\nBell of Rossland, Anne and\nBlanche MacAstocker of Penticton, J. Mawson of Abbotsford and\nR. Guido of Kinnaird.\nLawn Bowlers\n?la_i Tourney\n. C. t^^mber?- Retiring Postal\nrkik Honored At Annual Picnic\nAbout 100 Nelson post office\nemployees, their wives and children, said an official farewell to\nJ. C. Chambers, postal registration clerk, at the third anual Nelson Post Office picnic at Taghum\nSunday. Mr. Chambers is retiring;\nin September after 18 years with\nthe postal service.\nPostmaster W. G. Hall presented Mr. Chambers with a car rack\nand Mrs. Chambers with a folding\ncar wardrobe bag and flowers, on\nbehalf of the employees.\nIn making the presentations,\nMr. Hall recalled that Mr Chambers, or \"J.C.\" as he was familiarly known, joined the postal ser\nmen's and men's races and women's rolling pin throw contest.\nIn charge of the picnic were\nFred Walgren, Walter Bailey,\nStanley Piotrofsky and Morgan\nJones. i\nRon Stuart On\nOlympic Team\nA former Nelson boy and active\nsports enthusiast, Ronald Stuart,\nis a member of the Canadian Olympic Basketball team which will\ncompete in the Olympic Games\nvice over 18 years ago and was! |n Australia this winter,\npromoted to superintendent ofj The son of Mrs. J. Sjostrom of\nletter carriers nine years later., Nelson. Ron came to Nelson from\nHe worked in that capacity until fcdmonton at the age of 14 years '\n1951 when, due to an accident and attended Junior and Senior\nhigh schools here, graduating in\n1947 from Nelson High. He was\nactive in almost all fields of sport\nincluding basketball, hockey, baseball,   badminton,   track,   curling,\nTHREE DISTRICT\nPUPILS WIN\nSCHOLARSHIPS\nVANCOUVER (CP)\nwhile delivering mail, he was\nforced to take an inside post office position. He has since been\nemployed as a registration clerk.\nMr. Hall spoke of Mr. Chambers\nas \"a very conscientious employee golf and tennis.\nin every position he has heldM' A member of the C-FUN bas-\nLakeside   Park   Lawn   Bowling' He wished Mr. and Mrs. Chambers   ketball squad which defeated the\nDalton   club plans to open a tournamenti \"much  happiness in  the future\", | 7TT^ ,,,L \u2022- \u25a0 - \u2014 :\nsaid results were \"quite gratify-   Wednesday with four teams chos-!ant* in particular on an extended;\nvill wind up September 2.\nTeams are:\nEastern Canada.\nGames and races for young and\ntatively placed at around 1300 to\n1400.\nMr. Dalton  praised  fellow  Ki-[     F.   Priestly,  D.   T.  UnderwoodJ olcI were heId throughout the day\nwanis and the members and di-   Frank   Holt,   E.   Penwill   and   gJ before  supper   when  tea,   coffee,\nWinners! rectors of for project society for  Strong.\nI nylk, soft drinks and tee cream\ntheir help.\nOther winners were Mrs. A.\nHendy, M. Verzuh, Kinnaird, P.\nGavrilik, Robson, Mrs.. Nancy\nSherstibitoff, Castlegar, Rodney and Mrs. Rushby\"\nBrown, Robson; Dawn Waldie, | m. A. Streat, A. V. Rowley, R\nRobson; Mrs, H. Kalek, Trail; | Thompson, K. Adcock and H\nLome Kavic,  Castlegar;  Mrs.  A.  Hesse.\nC. Swanson, R. Pickering, T. R.\nLewis, C. Rushby and G. Mossey.\nMrs. A. Hesse, Mrs. Priestly,\nMrs. R. Pickering, Mrs. \"\u00a3. Clem\nof 12 UBC Alumni Association\nregional scholarships have been\nannounced by committee chairman Dean Walter Gage.\nThose who will receive $250 university entrance scholarships are\nJudith Allen, Nelson; Rumiko Iri-\nzana, Kelowna; Phyllis Bafird,\nVictoria; Stanley Fukawa, Lehman; Ruth Senz, Fort St. John;\nEleanor Hewlett, Kamloops; Barry Hagen, Kimberley; Marie Tou-\nzeau, Nanoose Bay; David Berg,\nWest Vancouver; Raymond Cren-\nosky, Kitimat; Michael Brown,\nVancouver; Catherine Pellegrin,\nCastlegar.\nThese   awards   are   made* possible through contributions to the\nUniversity     Development\nmade mainly by alumni. j \u2022*-     \u2122      (,-        \u201e,     \u00ab\nWinners are  selected  by local1  IO t>6 -Mlid.ed\ncommittees   and   the   University \\     OTTAWA (CP) -Federal and  st^gTpWJll \u00ab Strong.\nSunday, Sept. 2 \u2014 Underwood\nArchibald, Robson; Mrs. Pat Kin\nakin, Brilliant; J. Logelin, kinnaird; Mrs. Laura Bridgeman,\nCastlegar; Nick Sookachoff, Castlegar; Leo Franco, Castlegar.\nChairman of the steering committee in charge of the program\nwas M. E. Moran of Castlegar.\nChanges in Justice\nfund Administration\nwere seryed along with the basket liinches. One of the day's\nhighlights was the softball game\nin which men and women participated. The children also clamored\naround for the peanut scrambles.\nAmong the varied games and\nevents for the youngsters and the\nadults were foot races, balloon\nraces, wheelbarrow races,\nrace, shoe race, egg race,\nlegged races, softball throw, wo-\nUBC Thunderbirds in the Canadian Olympic Basketball trials in\nVancouver this spring, Ron is now\nmanager of Spruce Specialties in\nVancouver. He graduated from\nUBC in 1952 with a degree in\nchemical engineering\nRon  is  married   and has  two\nSpares are Fred Wah and Mrs.\nStreat.\nThe draw:\nWednesday \u2014 Priestly vs Pen-\nwill; Underwood vs Holt. I\nFriday   -   Priestly   vs   Under-1 SMALL FIRE\nSunday, Aug. 19 --Underwood! REPORTED  IN\nvs Penwill; Holt vs Strong. i PROCTER   AREA\nMonday, Aug. 20 \u2014 Priestly vs'\nHolt\nWednesday, Aug. 22 \u2014 Holt vs\nPenwill.\nSunday, Aug. 26 \u2014 Priestly vs\nScholarship Committee. Ten stu- j provincial   legal   experts   face   a\ndents  received   the  awards   last | series    of    weighty    conferences < v5\"stror_g\nyear. j starting   next   fall   on   proposed i   '       ]\nAll  winners  are students  who  changes in the administration of I\ngraduated from B. C. high schools   justice in Canada,\nthis year and will be  attending |    The federal-provincial talks will!\nuniversity  for the first time in' be based on four voluminous re- i\nSeptember.\nSailor Fails\nIn Attempt to\n! Swim Lake Ontario\nj TORONTO (CP) - Radio sta-\n| tion CKFH reported early today\n| that Billy (Windmill) Connor, 20-\nj year-old Royal Canadian Navy\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Eighteen ! sailor from Magog, Que., was tak-\nhigh-ranking British and Com- \u25a0 en from the water after setting a\nmonwealth army officers will ar- \\ furious pace in an attempt to\nrive In Vancouver today as part ' swim across Lake Ontario. He\nof a tour of Western Canada. I had covered an estimated  19 of\nThe men have already inspected j 'he 32 miles from Niagara-in-the-\noil   fields   in  Southern   Alberta i Lake, Ont., to Toronto.\nports tabled in Parliament in\nJune and July by a joint Senate-\nCommons committee and a spe-\nMarilyn to Hurl\nFirst Ball at\nBenefit Game\nVICTORIA  (CP)   - The \"left-\nA small forest fire spotted by a\nTrans-Canada Airlines crew is being checked by B. C. Forest Service crews in the Procter area.\nThe fire, apparently one of a number of fires started by lightning\nlast week, is in a rugged area\nhigh in the ridges between Procter and Sunshine Bay.\nMen sent, to the scene Friday\nand Saturday returned when they\nwere unable to locate the fire, and\na third fully-equipped party went\nin Sunday after ttie fire's  loca\nJUMBO PASS,\nSOMMERS CHARGE,\nCCF ISSUES\nKAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) - Harold E. Thayer, provincial secre-\nhoUfer tary o\u00a3 tlle CCF-party says his\nthree- part^ w'^ make an Issue of the\ncharges against former Larfcls\nMinister R. E. Sommers if the\ncharges are not cleared before a\nprovincial election is called.\nMr. Thayer said here that premier Bennett showed pcontempt oi\nother members of the legislature\nin his disregard of charges against\nMr. Sommers, who resigned his\nportfolio earlier this year.\nHe also said highways ministei\nGaglardi has shown deception in\nhis decision in the Rogers Pass-\nJumbo Pass controversy in connection with the Trans-Canada\nHighway.\ntion was pin-pointed by the for- before.\nMORE  BUILDING\nCanadian production of portland\ncement in 1955 reached 25,184,000\nbarrels, against 22,357,000 the year\ncia] committee appointed by the   overs\" from Vancouver Mounties  estry plane piloted by D. J. Thorn-\nTOP ARMY BRASS\nTO VANCOUVER\ngovernment.\nThe recommendations in the reports now are being studied by\nthe provinces which are responsible for the administration of\njustice. Many oflhem could not\nbe implemented without the approval and co-operation of provincial governments.\nWANT CHECK ON\nFOOD HANDLERS\nand visited the holiday resort at\nBanff.\nSponsored by the United King.\nForest Closure\ndom's Imperial  Defence  College, | May Be  NeCeSSO.y\ntHe tour is   concerned   primarily j    VANCOUVER (CUP) \u2014 Forest\nwith industrial operations. I closure  in  the  Vancouver  forest\nFrom   Vancouver   the   officers' district will be \"seriously consid-\nwill visit military installations at'ered\" today if the weather fore-|\nWhitehorse, the Yukon, and Fort   cast   indicates\nChurchill, Man., before moving to ! spell,\nthe United States for 10 days.\nMarlene Stewart\nSets Course Mark\nBy AL VICKERY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG \u00ab_P) - Marlene\nStewart of Fonthill, Ont., captured her sixth straight Canadian\nWomen's Close Golf Champion-\nship Saturday with a 54-hole total\nof 226, capped off by a record-\nsmashing women's course record\nof five-under-par 72 which erased\na three-stroke lead held by Rae\nMilligan of Jasper, Alta.\nCombinning rounds of 79-75-72\nfor her five-under-par 226 over\nNiakwa Country Club, Miss Stewart finished five strokes up on\nMiss Milligan.\nRoma Neund6rf of Toronto\ncame in with a final round of par\n77 to take third place with a 238\ntotal, one better than Montreal's\nJanet MacWha.\nWith Ontario annexing the\ninterprovincial team matches\nQuebec taking the two-player junior team contest, Betty Stanhope\nof Edmonton winning the junior\nsingles title and the windup of the\nexciting close tournament, the\nstage was set for the qualifying\nround Monday pf the week-long\nCanadian Open match, play. Miss\nStewart also will be, defending\nthat title.\nKAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP)-South\ncentral health unit endorsed a\nresolution during the weekend\ncalling for a system of examinations and permits for food handlers in B.C.\nDr. D. M, Black, medical health\ndirector, told the group's quarter-\n,\u201e,.       ,    ,    i'y meeting that several tests in\ncontinued   dry, th. are_ re__ntly have shown ^\nChief Forester D. B. Taylor l\u00b0 ^bflow standard. He said this\nsaid Sunday the forests are be-1; pr(>bab J d\"* t0 P00' \u00ab\u00bb*.\"*\ncoming dangerously dry again \u00b0' \"W \"\"'* rath\" than ha_nd\"ng'\nand a third closure may be neces-      .\nsary. Identify Dead\nWeather forecasts indicated no   ai__ __, \\u    DI\nimmediate let-up in the hot wea-j rnatl as   \" \u2022 Diane\nther. 1    NANAIMO (CP) \u2014 Police have\nNo new fires of consequence' identified as William Blane of\nwere reported during the weekend i Port Alberni a man killed when\nand only two large fires were | thrown from his car on the 1s-\nburning in the district and both i land highway near here Saturday,\nwere reported under control, j Another man, whose name has\nThey are at Port Elizabeth, 180 not been released, is reported to\nmiles north of Vancouver and have been seriously injured.\nRadonda Island, just north of, RCMP said the car rolled over\nPowell River. after missing a curve.\nand Portland Beavers of the Pa- j son- The 'ire is partly accessible\ncific Coast League will meet here; \u00b0y way of a new forest service\ntonight in an exhibition baseball j tr.s\"; but is st'U further on in\ngame for a cancer fund campaign, j vir-'n country.\nMarilyn   Bell,   18-year-old  Tor-1 \t\nonto girl who failed Friday in | v\/\u00bbl I -. irCTFn ,,,,\u201e,\nher attempt to swim the Juan del \u25a0\u2022 vUNW I SR HURT\nFuca strait, will, throw the.first   IM  30-FOOT  FALL\nball. Both Vancouver and Portland\nhave placed players on the north\nteam that meets a south team tonight in a PCL all-star game at\nPortland.\nWhile the all-star selections\nplay in Portland, the remaining\nplayers from both teams will meet\nhere.\nSTREAK COMES TO END\nCHICAGO (AP) - Chicago\nCubs' shortstop Ernie Banks'\nstring of 424 consecutive games\ncame to a close Saturday when he\nwas taken to a hospital with t severe infection of his left hand.\nBanks, the Cubs' leading hitter\nwith a .307 average highlighted\nby 25 homers and 69 runs batted\nin, had not missed a game since\njoining the team ln September,\n1953.\nDecathlon Record\nSet by Student\nVANCOUVER (CP) -, Don\nSteen of Vancouver, 21-year-old\nstudent at the University of Oregon, broke the Canadian decathlon record Sunday as he walked\naway with the British Columbia\ndecathlon championships here.,\nSteen, a slxfoot four-inch mem-\nBobby Mason six-year-old son\nof Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Mason, is\nreported in good condition in Kootenay Lake General Hospital after\nsuffering bruises and internal injuries when he fell 30 feet off a\nverandah.\nThe lad was taken to hospital\nThursday morning after he fell off\nhis home verandah while playing\nwith his dog at 615 Victoria Street,\nhit a fence and bounced onto a\npile of lumber.\nRovers Clinch\nSecond With Win\nCRANBROOK - Cranbrook\nRovers, new entry in the Crowsnest Pass Football League wound\nber of the Vancouver Olympic I up their schedule Saturd witn .\nClub, piled up a total of 5M7, M vict ver Fernie United on\npoints in the two-day, 10-division\ntrack event. The previous record\nwas 5771 points set by Bob Adams\nof Saskatoon in the 1952 Canadian\nOlympic trials at Hamilton.\nOFF ONeMARITA_.CRU.SE_ Greek artist\nSavaa Georglou and bride, former Mary Susan Perry of Yonnga-\n(own, O., pose on sailboat before starting voyage  to Gftecr.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Presi\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nW L Pet. Gbl i\nNew York     73 38 .658  j\nCleveland     63 45 .583   8%\nBoston      62 47 .569 10\nChicago     56 50 .528 14%\nDetroit     52 58 .473 20%\nBaltimore     48 62 .436 24%\nWashinton    45 64 .413 27\nKansas City ....      37 72 .340 35\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nMilwaukee     65 42 .607 \t\nBrooklyn      64 44 .593   1%\nCincinnati     63 46 .578   3\nSt. Louis    55 54 .505 11\nPhiladelphia   52 55 .486 13\nPittsburgh    48 61 .440 18\nChicago-     44 62 .415 20%\nNew York   39 65 .371 25\nhome ground.\nThe Rovers finished behind\nLethbridge Army. Navy and Air\nForce in the standings. Lethbridge\nLegion is in first place, followed\nby Michel, Kimberley and Fernie\nSUMMER\nWORK\nSHIRTS\nfor the rrtan who wants\nstrength without weight,\nplus comfort and a good\nappearance.\n]'\nCHAMBRAY\nond COVERT\n$2.50\nDENIMS\n$2.95\nDRILLS\n$2.95\n'LAIDS \u2022 SUNTANS\n$3.50\nAll sanforized\u2014all fast\ncolor.\nGodfreys'\nPHONE _W*270*\u00a5I BOX\n*_\u00bb-*-\u00bb-*-*_\u00bb\nELDERLY WRESTLER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A 102-\nyear-old man won a wrestling\ncompetition at a \u25a0machine and\ntractor uxation in the Soviet republic of Kazakhstan .by defeating a young soldier recently demobilized from the Russian Army,\nMoscow radio said Sunday. The\nelderly wrestler, Kai Baizer, has\neight sons and a daughter and 30\ngrandchildren.\nAUSTRALIAN RIVER\nSteamers can navigate the Fitz-\nroy River in Western Australia up\nto 100 miles from its mouth.\n\u25a0\nI\nI\nI\n\u2022 Dry Cleaning        \u2022  Repairs [   |\n\u2022 Alterations n\n\u2022 Convenient Drive-ln\n' \u2022 Cash and Carry. Save 10% j\nNelson's Only Drive-ln Cleaners B\nJONELLA CLEANERS I\nJust Behind Safeway\nKEEP YOUR CLEANING DOLLAR IN NELSON f\n $011\nFernie About To Become Another\nGateway To B.C.\/ Bonner Says\nLog Stacker Does Qiant'SizedJob\nFERNIE \u2014 A'policy of \"continued progress\" wa\u00ab outlined to\na meeting in the Catholic school\nauditorium here Friday night\nwhen Hon. W. D. Black, provincial\nsecretary, and Hon. R. W. Bonner,\nprovincial attorney general, addressed a fair sized crowd.\nMr. Black stated the purpose of\nthe meeting was to keep the public informed, on provincial affairs\nand1 to outline the progress,.made\nsince the first Social Credit government came into power as a\nminority in 1952. In the six-week's\nlife of that government, much important legislation had been passed. When the government was defeated on the floor of the house,\nit went to the people and was\nreturned with a majority, \"giving\nB.C. stable government after some\nsad years with a coalition.\"\nAmong the problems solved by\nthe present government, said Mr.\nBlack, was the hospital insurance\nscheme. The provincial debt had\nbeen reduced. 'Grants to municipal governments have been increased  by 50  per  cent.\nMr. Black claimed the British\nColumbia government is the only\nprovincial government to add 50\nper cent to the federal old age\npension, bringing it to a total of\n$60 per month. He did not con\nsider this amount adequate, however, and hoped the federal auth\norities would see fit to give an\nincrease.\nThe speaker predicted that in\n25 years B.C. would be the ir-.dus-\nRoosville Road\nStart By Fall\nCRANBROOK ^F. C. Ingram,\nEast Kootenay secretary of the\nHighway 95 International Committee which is promoting a north-\nsouth tourist road from Panama\nto Alaska, reports the survey of\nthe Roosville-Elko section of the\nroute is now complete and that\ntenders will be called with the objective of a start this Fall.\nThe section is about 30 miles\nlong and links -Roosville on the\nMontana boundary with the Southern Transprovincial Highway at\n. Elko. There are' already two existing gravel roads between the\ntwo points, though a demolished\nbridge across the Kootenay River\non one of these has reduced it to\nthe status of a \"local\" road. The\nother has been experiencing steadily increasing tourist traffic from\nthe U. S. for the past several\nyears. ,\ntrial capital cf Canada and Its government must always look toward\nfurther and greater progress.\nDO   PROBLEM\nMr. Bonner, in tracing the history of British Columbia since\nits founding to the present day,\nsaid the greatest difficulty to contend with had been and still is\nthe problem of transportation.\nHowever, the present government\nwas making great strides in providing the province with a reasonable network of highways. He was\nhappy to see the call for tenders\nfor the completion of the highway\nfrom Fernie to Roosville on the\nMontana border.\nThe speaker claimed one-\nthird of the hardtop In the province had been laid since the\nSocial Credit came Into power.\nOne of the great problems fac-\nJaycees Back\nCranbrook\nFall Projects\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Promotion\ncampaign in advance for the semi\nannual Red Cross blood donoV\nclinic here Thursday, Sept. 6, was\naccepted by the Cranbrook Jun\nior Chamber of Commerce at its\nAugust meeting. Mobile clinic has\nCalgary headquarters and blood\nplasma supplies and whole blood\nwhen needed are constantly supplied without charge to St. Eugene Hospital here as part of the\nSouthsrn Alberta territory, of the\nblood bank,\nPromotion program for the Dr.\nF. W. Green Memorial Home Society will be continued by Jaycees and the meeting named William Hume Jr., as new chairman\nfor this committee. Its immediate\nproject will be urging public support of the blitz drive for donations to the project planned for\nSeptember 14 by the Society.\nFred Anderson has been ap'\npointed new chairman of the\nJaycee government affairs committee.\nEntry of about 60 Jaycees from\nCreston, Kimberley and Cran\nbrook Is expected for the initial\nEast Kootenay Jaycee golf tournament to be played here Sept.\n16. Tournament will be Atlantic\nhandicap medal play, and is planned to be continued annually.\nRay Rawson, now of Vancou\nver, who was initial president of\nCranbrook Jaycees was a spec\nial guest at the meeting.\ning the province today, said Mr.\nBonner, is tho tremendous Increase in population. Since 19^9\nthe increase had been 02 per cent\nto 1,359,000. It i? expected to pass\nthe 3,000.000 mark within 20 years.\nThis will necessitate an investment of about $3,000,000,000 in\nschools, hospitals, roads, jails,\npublic buildings and other necessary improvements.\nThe attorney general was enthusiastic about the present system of tax grants to municipalities. Th.s is now being done on\na per capita basis and communities depend on these grants fof\nlocal improvements had develop\nments.\nPER CAPITA INCOME\nBritish Columbia's economic\nhealth is reflected on its per capita\nincome which, at $1400 is only\nslightly below that of Ontario\nwhich has the highest of all the\nprovinces, said Mr. Bonner. He\nexpected B.C. to take the lead\nwithin a year or two.\nMr. Bonner' said the tourist\nbusiness was becoming a major\nIndustry and that Fernie, about\nto become a gateway to the\nprovince and having the finest\nfacilities should reap the benefits of this new-found wealth,\nThe provincial government\nwould assist in fostering this\nIndustry.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1956\u20143\nPower Cable Stretches\nAcross Qeorgia Strait\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The British cable ship Ocean Layer has\ncompleted the job of laying a\nsubmarine power cable across the\nStrait  of   Georgia   between   the\nYou Can Finish\nHIGH SCHOOL\nAT HOME\nAi fast as you can do the\nwork. If you are between the\nages of 16 and 60 and have\nleft school, write for free\nsample lesson and 55-page\nhigh school book.    -\nAMERICAN SCHOOL,\nDept. NE-1.\n6381 Hollywood  Blvd.\nHollywood 28, Cal.\nNAME   \t\nADDRESS   \t\nCITY   STATE  \t\nBritish   Columbia   mainland   and\nVancouver Island.\nThe ship, brought here from\nManchester to lay a total of some\n100 miles of cable, finished the\njob Friday. Testing across the entire line is expected to begin today\nincluding overhead lines across\nGaliano, Parker and Saltspring\nIslands.\nThe cable is linked on land to\na 132,000-volt power line. Individual testing has been completed of\nthe five 16Vi - mile submarine\nlengths between nearby JDelta and\nGaliano Island as well as four\nshorter cables between Parker\nand Saltsprings Islands-\nElectricity from mainland\npbwer supplies to southern Van-\nI (.ouver Island homes and industries is due to start flowing in late\nI September,\nFor Service...\nCALL\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCO., LTD.\n351 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C.       Phone 666\nA  Complete  Plumbing and  Heating Service\nGrass Discussed\nIn Article\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Have you\never stopped to think about grass?\nIf you're wearing leather shoes,\ngrass, in a roundabout way, provided them. The wool in your\nsocks or sweater came from\ngrass, indirectly. So did the milk\nyou drink and the steak you eat.\nIn fact, it's hard, if you stop to\nthink about it, to see just how\nman. could survive on the earth\nif there wasn't any grass.\nThe versatility and importance\nof grass in Canada's, or any country's, economy is thoroughly discussed in the August issue of the\nCanadian Geographical Journal\nby T. M. Stevenson, an expert on\nthe green stuff. He's chief of the\nagriculture department's forage\ncrops division.\n\"It has been said that grass is\nso important in the life of man\nthat if it were to disappear from\nthe face of the earth, man could\nnot long survive,\" he writes. Not\none to be carried away by such\nstatements, however, he adds:\nGROW ALMOST ANWHERYE\n\"Our supply of meat, milk, wool\nand leather is provided almost\nwholly by animals that feed\nchiefly on grass in the forms of\npasture, hay and silage,\" says Mr.\nStevenson. \"Likewise the great\ncereal crops, all of which are bo-\ntanically true grasses, provide the\nbasic food for nearly all of the\nearth's people.\"\n\"Viewed in the light of these\nfacts, it is little wonder that grass\nis regarded as the Indispensible\nform of plant life.\"\nIt's chief importance lies in the\nfact it can grow almost anywhere\nunder a wide range of soil and\nclimatic conditions. And. wherever it grows, it is high in food\nvalue.\nGrass, like most othere green\nplants, also possesses a secret\nmanufacturing process that scientists have been trying for years\nto uncover. This process is called\nphotosynthesis. It is the way in\nwhich the substance that gives\ngrass, jind most other plants, the\ngreen color \u2014, chlorophyll \u2014 converts light into chemical energy.\nBy taking nothing but light,\nchlorophyll provides the power\nfor the miniature factory in grass\nwhich converts materials taken\nfrom the soil by the grass roots\ninto food substances like fats, proteins and so on.\nCranbrook Mayor\nNamed SC Candidate\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Mayor R. E.\nSang was named by the Cranbrook district 'Social Credit Association convention here as its candidate ln the next provincial election. Seat is currently held by I_.\nT. Nimsick of the CCF.\nH. C. King, unsuccessful Socred\ncandidate in the last provincial\nelection, put Mr. Sang's name before the convention citing his\nmany terms as mayor of Cranbrook and his record as president\nof the union of B.C. Municipalities.\nAlso nominated were Douglas\nSadler and J. T. Roksoh, both of\nKimberley, but the nomination required a single ballot in which Mr.\nSang received more than 50 per\ncent of the votes of the 39 accredited delegates from the two cities\nand Marysville, Moyie, Yahk, Ta\nTa Creek and Newgate.\nSpeakers at the convention included Hon. Wesley Black, provincial secretary, and Attorney-\nGeneral Robert Bonner who commented on Mr. Sang's valuable\nservices to the provincial government in serving on arbitration\nboard.\nW. B. Fairclough of Kimberley\nwas chairman of the meeting with\nMr. Black presiding during the\nnomination. Cake honoring the\nfourth birthday of Socred goverfi-\nment in British Columbia \u2022 was\nraffled during the evening, and a\nmessage was read from provincial\nparty chairman Noel Murphy.\nMr. Sang has been head of the\nMAYOR R. E. SANG\ncity government for several terms,\nand is a past president of the\nCranbrook Progressive Conservative Association.\nBIG LOGS are picked up like matchsticki\nby the $50,000 electric stacker Imported from\nTexas by Creston Sawmills Ltd. The 35-ton\nmachine, which takes 25 gallons of water for It-\ncooling system and hat 1000-pound tubeless tires\nhigher than the average man, Is capable of lifting\na flat car of logs and conveying them to any de\nsignated spot In a single movement. Top picture\nihows the steel monster grappling a load of logs.\nIn bottom picture the logs have been removed\nand are being taken off to a pile elsewhere \u2014 a\nsaving In manpower and small machinery.\n\u2014H. M. Buckna photos.\n$50 Grant Made\nTo Kaslo Board\nWindermere Woman\nJoins School Board\nINVERMERE - Mrs. Adolphe\nSattmann of Windermere has been\nappointed to the board of trustees\nfor No. 4 School District to fill the\nunexpired term of Mrs. V. Starke\nof the Giant Mascot mine.\nMrs. Starke spends considerable\ntime at the Coast now and resigned as she was not available for\nschool board duties.\nMrs. Sattmann has been a representative on the school board\nthrough this year.\nThinks Industries\nTake \"Rakeoff\"\nAbove Wage Hikes\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Jc\/nn Black-\nmore. Social Credit member for\nLethbridge, said Saturday he suspects that most industries take\n\"a rake-off\" when they pass on\nto consumer prices the cost of\nwage increases.\n\"It is iniquitous,\" he said during Commons study of labor department estimates.\nMr. Blackmore singled wit the\nrailways which, he said, charge\nhigher freight rates than necessary to meet increased wage demand by labor unions.\nHe asked Labor Minister Gregg\nto investigate industries to ensure\nthaf they do not charge the public-\nmore than necessary to cover additional benefits they give their\nemployees.\nRev. E. G. Hansell (SC-Mac-\nleod) said the government should\nwork out a system to balance industrial wages with prices so that\npurchasing power will be equal to\nthe total production of goods.\nPolitical Convention Not Part\nOf U.S. Constitutional Structure\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) - The\nAmerican , political convention,\nthat mid-summer madness which\nstrikes these United States when\nthe presidential election rolls\naround every four years, has no\nofficial standing in the country's\npolitical or constitutional structure.\nThere ls not a word ..about political conventions ln the U. S.\nconstitution. The founding fathers who drafted that document following the revolutionary war and\nthe break with Britain never foresaw political parties, much less\nnominating conventions.\nThere are no laws on the books\nthat say a candidate for the presidency must be picked. Yet, for\n124 years the leading political parties\u2014the Democrats and the Re-\nViews From the Newsfronts\n...LIKE A\nBEAUTIFUL\nHOME?\n3968-5\nBurns Lumber Co.\n602 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1180\nMemorial Centre\nRepairs Okayed\nINVERMERE - Much needed\nrepairs for. the Lake Windermere\nMemorial Centre at Invermere\nwere voted for at a public meeting\nheld Thursday.\nUrgent need for repairs to the\nroof, which leaks seriously, and\nequally urgent need ot an adequate heating system faced the\nsmall group of people who responded to the call of the Board\nof Management of the centre for\nassistance in making the decision\non what should be done and what\nmeans of financing should be used.\nCost of roof repairs will \u2022 approximately $1000 and a new heating system, including an automatic\nunit, wil) cost close to $4000. Fin\nancing will have to be covered on\na \"beg or borrow\" principle and\nresidents of the district will be\nasked to rally to the cause.\nA heating expert was present at\nthe meeting with estimates and\nthe Board of Management reviewed his specifications thoroughly.\nFriday a further meeting was held\nby the Finance committee of the\ncentre.\nBy WILLIAM L, RYAN\nAP Foreign News Analyst\nA 38-year-old soldier named\nNasser by seizing the Suez Canal\nCompany has manoeuvred the\nWest into a terrible dilemma.\nOne way or the other \u2014 barring\na miracle of negotiation \u2014 the\nWest stand to lose. If it uses force,\nan eruption in the Middle East\nmight deal a tremendous economic\nblow to Europe. If Nasser successfully stands his ground, his al-\nready great prestige among the\nArabs would soar even higher. The\nWest would be defied and defeated.\nNaser's powerful Saut al Arab\n(Voice of Arabs) has implied that\nthe Middle East's oil-key to any\nstruggle for mastery \u2014 would feed\na flame searing the Arab world\nand promising economic havoc for\nEurope. Perhaps even the seeds of\na third world war lie beneath the\nharsh desert soil of a vast area of\n100,000,000 Arabic-speak ing\npeople. They inhabit a dozen nations stretching from the Atlantic\nto the Persian Gulf, but Nasser's\nVoice of Arabs constantly refers\nto them as a single nation, led and\ninspired by Egypt.\nPOTENT THREAT\nThe Voice warned that if the\nWest attempted to use force, \"the\nworkers of Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain\nand Aden stand side by side with\nthe Arabs against the imperialists\"\nand \"Arab oil workers everywhere are prepared to inflict\nharm on whoever attacks Egypt.\"\nThe threat is a potent one. A\nshot fired by a Briton or a Frenchman could start a jihad \u2014 a holy\nwar y In which Arabs with suicidal emotion might sweep over\nforeigners In charge of the oil production of the Middle East. No\nlonger 'checked by their own quarrels and intrigue, no longer reined\n. f M\npublicans\u2014have chosen their candidates in the same way.\nFOLLOW TRADITION\nThey will follow that tradition\nwhen the Democrats meet in Chicago next Monday and the Republicans in San Francisco the\nfollowing week, both to select\ntheir presidential candidates for\nthe Nov. 6 election.\nIn the nation's earliest years,\nthe congressmen of a particular\nparty would meet in a caucus,\nor secret meeting, in the early\nmonths of an election year and\nchoose the party's ticket.\nIn 1832, President Andrew Jackson balked at the caucus and insisted that the rank - and - file\nparty members have a say in the\nselection. His party, the old Democratic Republican party, summoned the first political convention in the U.S.\nThe pattern set in Jackson's\nday\u2014its   procedures,   style,   flair\nKASLO - A grant of $50 to\nthe Ka_.lo Board of Trade was ap\nproved by the City Council at a\nrecent meeting.\nTwo applications were presented for the purchase of two city\nlots and the'tender of George\nMichel was accepted.\nA carload of oil has been ship-,\nped for laying dust on the city!\nstreets.\nA letter from the Kaslo and Dis- j\nIrict Womens Institute requesting\nfinancial assistance for the recently purchased \"Old People's Club\"\nwas referred  to the  commitee.\nAid. H. Carlson reported a balance ia the bank and Aid. Ralph\nPatterson reported that the cleanup of-the-sawmill site was well\nunder way and .that repairs were\nbeing made to Kemp creek water\nsupply. Aid. Hand suggested that\nthe transformer be moved to provide greater power for the lower\nsection of the city, and also reported that the electric plant is\noperating satisfactorily. Aid E G.\nAugustine reported that the ceme-\ntary clean-up was completed and\nthat work is being done on the\npipeline from Jardine Creek.\nGLIDER RECORD\nLONDON (Reuters) - A Polish\ni woman pilot has flown 324 miles\nin a single-seater glider setting a\nworld record, the Polish news\nagency PAP announced Sunday.\nThe record outdistances the 304-\nmile mark made by a French\nwoman,\n-!.-i-...-t-ii.ii...j!ii-_.mm.iiiiifmii\nZEEEE\nCall us anytime for local\nor long-distance moving.\nWe quickly and carefully pack and cover all\nyour furnishings. Our\nrates are moderate.\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFuel and Transfer\nM|l.l1..m.l__,l_HUII-)--ll-..IIII.IIII.JI\nby wary Arab rulers, Moslems\nmight burst into Israel\u2014 an island\nof 2,000,000 in a hostile sea of 40.-\n000,000 people \u2014 and crush it by\nsheer force of numbers.\nWould the West then face a\nprospect of active military intervention? A British-French-American declaration of 1950 guarantees\nboth Arab states and Israel against\naggression. Beyond that, the oil\nstakes are so high that Britain\nand France might feel impelled to\narmed action on the very t doorstep of the Soviet Union. They\nmight consider it the only way to\nsave Europe from economic chaos\nand communism.\nThese seemed to be the consid-\ne r a t i o n s behind the second\nthoughts in London and Paris \u2014\nconsiderations which could produce a paralysis of Western action. Britain.^while sending warships to the Middle East, vowed to\nseek a peaceful solution.\nDoubts rose in France about the\nwisdom of the \"energetic riposte\"\ndemanded by France's premier\nwhen the crisis burst suddenly.\nEgypt's Nasser, though he had\nmuch to gain, had much to lose,\nand' he marked time. He was on\nbis way to great power or oblivion, depending upon the way the\ncards were played in this game of\ninternational power politics. He\ncould not back down.\nThe future of the Suez Canal is\na matter of deep concern for all\ncountries. Even the Soviet Union\nhas a big stake in the outcome oi\nthe crisis. It could mean a general\nweakening of the West \u2014.but\nwould that entail the threat of\nwar the Soviet leaders obviously\nfear?\nWith all its worldwide implications, all its widespread ramifications, all its potentialities, the Suez\n1 crisis is the most difficult and dangerous since Korea,\nfor color and action\u2014has charged\nlittle since then,\nPARTIES GATHER\nParty representatives, from the\nstates and U.S. territories, will\ngather to nominate presidential\nand vice - presidential candidates,\nadopt a platform, elect a new national committee to guide the par-;\nty for the next four years, and set\nthe ground rules for calling the\nnext convention.\nThe Democrats meeting in Chicago will include 2744 delegates\nand 1896 alternatives. Not all delegates will have a full vote. Some\ncast only a half-vote or less, based on rules worked out by the\nnational and state committees,\nThe total vote will be 1372. To\nwin, a candidate must poll 686'^\nvotes.\nThe Republicans convening in\nSan Francisco expect 1323 delegates and as many alternates.\nEach delegate has one vote, with\na candidate needing 662 to win.\nSwAga Urn!\nSlocan Kinsmen\ne Steak Fry\nStage\nNEW DENVER - Fourteen\nKinsmen and ten guests gatherer!\non the beach at the north end of\nSlocan Lake and enjoyed a Steak\nFry put on by the Kinsmen CIud\nof New Denver-Silverton.\nThe evening's activities started\nwith the playing of a \"crazy\" soft-\nball game in which the Kinsmen\ntook on the guests. The crazy part\nof the game was that the Kinsmen\nhad 14 men out on the field against\n10 for the guests, but still ended\nup on the short end of a 14-5 seore.\nThe game was highlighted by\nsome of the most spectacular errors ever committed on a ball\ndiamond.\nThe men then sat down to fried\nsteak, potato salad, sliced tomato,\nbread rolls and various relishes,\nthen all gathered around a camp\nfire and enjoyed an evening of\nsong and merriment.\n\u25ba\nYou're always welcome at NIAGARA\nAt Niagara we have the money you noatl in the\namount you want. You may borrow up to $1500\nor mare and take up ta 24 monthi to repay . . .\nwith payment, arranged on a monthly date solo-tod\nby you. Loon, up to $1500 are lifo-in.urod at ns\nextra cost to you\u2014and on many amount, rales at\nNiagara are lower than elsewhere. Convenient way,\nfor you ta borrow will be discussed privately so, II\nyou nood money promptly\u2014coma in anytime.\n\"\/\/ore art just a hw of our many loan plant\"\nYOU\nGET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n12\nIS\n20\n24\n$300\n661.10*\n800\nISOO\n( 20.37\n74.90\n139.80\n} 23.3S\n6I.SS\n114.50\n.40'\n48.0$\n88.SS\n$41.40\n73.90\n'Ona of many of our convon.on. ovon-dolhr paymtiif plant\nKTOC_v___nTnn\t\nIAGARA\nLOANS\n\\ffiS--l BRANCHES FB0M COASMOCOAST\n560 BAKER ST. PHONE  1636\n ^^ \u2014       ' :\u25a0\u2022.-_,.\n' \u25a0   ' \"\nNd_u.n Satly Nftiia\n,     .. Established AprU 22  11)02\n(n.e.ioi British Co\/umbio s Largest Da._y Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and stututory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Bake. Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as second Clast Mail Host Ottice Department. Ottawa\nMEMBliH  UK   _____  AUDI!   UUK-SAU Of  <J--.L'UL_A-'1<J_.S\nMtMBlSH O-   -HI- CANADIAN  PK-S-SS\nrhe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use (oi republication ot all newi\ndispatches credited to il oi to lhe Associated Press oi Reuters in thin paper.\nand also tne local news published therein. \t\nMonday, August 13, 1956\nRussia Loses Initiative in Suez Issue\nall dictators, he is not sure of the present and hopes that the future will\nstrengthen his position and that the\nresolution of Britain and France will\nbecome weaker. Russia knows this\nand her attenipts at delay are perhaps designed to carry him past the\ncrisis and leave him in control of the\ncanal. Certainly it would be in her interest if this happened. It might not,\nultimately, be for Egypt.\nRussia, which must have a special\ndepartment for turning out resounding phrases, declares that the only\nreason she will attend the conference\nis because she is a \"champion of the\npeaceful settlement of international\nissues.\" Now that she* has cast out\nStalin and all his works we are expected to believe that she is always\nactuated by a sublime and high moral\npurposes, but there is nothing in her\nactions so far which lead to the belief\nthat she wishes this dispute settled.\nAs ofie of the signatories of the\noriginal canal charter, Russia was invited to-be present at the conference.\nThe terms of reference are narrow;\nthe discussion of arrangements for an\ninternational system of operation of\nthe canal. They give little scope for\nthe usual communist discursiveness\nand from .present indications Russia\nshows little enthusiasm to join in this\nopportunity for peaceful settlement\nof an international issue.\nIt would seem that Russia has\nbeen taken aback by Mr. Eden's invitation to attend the conference on\nthe future of the Suez Canal for her\nreply is neither direct nor simple, but\ngrudging. It looks as if she feels she\nhas lost the initiative and finds herself in a position which she cannot\ndominate, but is just one of a number\nof nations.\nThe conference invitations sent\nout by Mr. Eden went out to those nations which were affected by the\nEgyptian nationalization, but the\nRussians would enlarge it by the addition of all her friends, some of\nwhom, like Communist China,\nscarcely know the canal exists. Her\nstatement declares that the nations\noriginally invited were not competent to settle the future of the canal,\nbut how it would become more competent if it included all Russia's nominees it is difficult to see. It may be of\ncourse that she needs moral support\nof all her satellites because she fears\nto make decisions of her own in the\nconference room. On the\" other hand\nshe may be playing for time. The United Nations, plus her twenty-two\nother nominees, would form an unwieldy and time-consuming body and\nher delaying tactics appear in the request that the conference date be\npostponed to the end of August.\nTime is what Nasser needs. Like\nVoting for Dollars\n\u2022Is there any real, and essential, difference between Canada's four political parties? A person who had been through this\nyear's three Provincial election campaigns-\nQuebec, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick \u2014\nmight be excused for wondering. Political\nprinciples, which once sharply separated\nparty from party, played no visible role in\nthese campaigns; what everybody talked\nabout was money \u2014 money to be spent,\nmoney to be invested, money to be made.\nIt is not easy to distinguish between a\nLiberal who promises to make everybody\nprosperous and a Conservative who promises, to make everybody prosperous. One,\nof course, claims he is better able to do it\nthan the other; but since the other makes\nprecisely the same claim, the similarity remains. Nor is 14 easy to distinguish between\nSocialists and Social Crediters when both\nconjure up visions of mighty dams and\nsmooth highways. Make a few modest\nchanges, and they could trade speeches.\nIn the New Brunswick campaign, the issue was hydro-electric power as the key to\nindustrial development, but since the\nConservatives and Liberals both said they\nwere all for it, there was really no issue at\nall. It was simply a matter, for the voters, of\ndeciding which group was the more likely\nto produce the expansion of work and wages\neach had promised. Conservative principles,\nLiberal principles, were drowned out by the\nhum of theoretical turbines.\nPremier Douglas called the tune for the\nSaskatchewan campaign when, last April,\nhe held out the prospect of a $100 million\nhighway program  if his Socialist Govern-\nWatch Your Language\nILLICIT (il-LISS-it; i-LISS-it); Adjective; not permitted; improper; unlawful\nOrigin: French\u2014Illicite, from Latin\u2014Illlcl-\ntus, from 11, not, plus licitus, past participle\nof Licere, to be permitted.\nicere, to oe permitted.\nThcyTl Do It Ev$ry Time\nment were returned. Broader health services, natural gas for all cities, and the addition of 25,000 farms to the rural power grid.\nalso were promised by him. The other\nparties came a-running to offer more of\nthe same. They urged Saskatchewan voters\nto get rid of socialist^ not because it was a\nwrong and wicked thing; but because, by\nscaring off private capital, it was holding\nback the Province's material progress. To\nwhich, Mr. Douglas replied by pulling out\nof thin air \u2014 very thing air some claimed \u2014\na $60 million pulp mill,\nWith all parties agreed that Saskatchewan needs, deserves and can have more\nmaterial benefits (including, by unanimous\nconsent, the South Saskatchewan power and\nirrigation scheme), it scarcely seems lo\nmatter how the people of that Province vote\ntomorrow. However they vote, they are > voting for dollars. The highest bidder may well\nget their nod.\nIn Quebec, campaign orators have been\nholding forth on. the price of butter today\nand the price of eggs five years ago. The\nLiberals are offering to abolish double taxation, attract more industries, and get back\nfrom Ottawa the $300 million Quebec has\nlost by'failing to sign tax rental agreements\nwith it. Premiei Duplessis, in reply, envisions new highways and bridges (if the\ncommunities concerned vote for him); and\npredicts industrial developments running\ninto the hundreds of millions. Quebec's\nrights, as discussed in the campaign, were\npre-eminently its fiscal and economic ones.\nWhat is Liberalism? What is Conservatism? What are Socialism and Social Credit?\nYou pay your money, and you take your\nchoice. Or, to put it more accurately, you\ntake your choice, and then wait for them to\npay you \u2014 in wages, profits, utilities, welfare services, or whatever it may be.\nPolitics, in Canada, has come more and\nmore to resemble a lottery. Perhaps that is\nwhy   so   many   Canadians  shun   the  polls.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail,\n^Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Names ot\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished There is no charge tor this\nservice QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BV MAIL except where\nthere is obvious necessity for privacy\nA, W., Cranbrook - Could you tell mfe if\nveterans who are receiving veteran's\nallowance have $41) deducted from jthis\nallowance in order to receive the $40\nold-age pension at the age of 70?\nYetf, the $40 received from the old-age\npension will be deluded from the veteran's\nallowance.\nDaily Reader, Cranbrook \u2014 Could you tell\nme how to get rid of a nest of wasps?\nSpray nest and rafters heavily with\nDDT solution after dark (when insects are\nquiet), using caution. Blow dust into nest\nopening with bellows.\nA, A\u201e Nelson \u2014 How do you make cherry\nwine?\nSteam and place six pounds of cherrjes\nin a crock. Add one pint of alcohol and five\npounds of sugar (ten cups). This measurement is for acid cherrjes; use less, if the\ncherries are not acid. Cover the crock. Stir\nthe cherries twice a day until the sugar is\ndissolved, about three days. Cover the crock\ntightly. After five months add one, pint of\ndistilled water. Strain the liquid and bottle\nit.\nG. P., Nelson \u2014 Would you please tell me\nthe-address of the U.S.A. patent office,\nalso what are the fees for the protection\nof an invention?\nUnited Slates Patent Office, Department\nof Commerce, Washington, D.C. The filing\nfee is $30, with $1 additional for each claim\nin excess of 20. Fees for design patents vary\ndepending upon the term elected by the\napplicant, $10 for three and one-half years,\n$15 for seven years and $30 for 14 years,\nTo Coin a Phrase\nWhen he was recently given an hpnor-\nary degree by Britain's most famous university, Harry S. Truman said he had never\nexpected to be a \"Yank at Oxford.\" Maybe\nit's another new experience for him to set\nOxford right on a point of English history\u2014\na small point but one bearing on the interesting theme of Chbrchillian originality.\nNew edition of the Oxford Dictionary\nof Quotations gives \"an iron curtain has\ndescended across the continent\" from Sir\nWinston Churchill's famous speech at Fulton, Missouri, on March 5, 1946.\nBut the same dictionary quotes \"there\nis an iron curtain across Europe\" from an\narticle in a London newspaper, dated October 21, l!)45, by one Vincent Troubridge.\nThe implication seems to be that the world's\nmost famous phrase-maker borrowed this\none.\nBut along comes Mr. Truman to get it\nstraight. In the first volume of his memoirs,\nat page 301, the former-President quotes a\nChurchill message he received. The Prime\nMinister, as he then was, was discussing the\nproposed withdrawal of U.S. troops to the\nWestern part of Germany. He viewed \"with\ndismay the retreat of the American army to\n'our line :.f occupation . . . bringing Soviet\npower to the heart of Western Eur6pe aid\nthe descent of an iron curtain between us\nand everything to the eastward.\" Date of the\nmessage: June 4. 1945.\u2014Financial Post.\n'Spare Paris- for Human Beings\nBy FRANKLIN JOHN80N\nCorrespondent for\nCentral Press Canadian\nCHICAGO - \"Spare parts\" for\nhuman beings whose organs are\nworn out, tlamaged, or were defective from, the start are, be*\ncoming one of the hottest new\nfields in medicine, and medical\nresearchers are predicting that\nin a few years successful transplants may be commonplace.\nA new branch of law also is\nbeing developed whereby people\nmay include in their wills provisions \"bequeating\" h e a -11 h y\nparts of their bodies to the ailing,\nwhere they may continue to give\nyears of useful service.\nCorneas\u2014the covers of the eye\n\u2014at present are the most usual\ngifts from the dying or dead to\nthe living, but doctors who specialize in skin and bone grafts are\nurging that these be made increasingly available also.\nDr. James B. Brown, clinical\nsurgery processor at Washington\nUniversity Medical School, St.\nLouis, recently told a medical\nclinic conference here that \"if\npeople could see what we have\nbeen able to do for some severely\nburned youngsters, they would\nreadily agree to use of Lheii\nskins.\" Il is estimated that one\nsuch donation of skin is equal to\nmore than 30 tedious grafts from\nliving donors. \u25a0\nSkin lives for from a month\nto a year in the preservatives\nthat have been developed at the\ntwo skin banks riow operating in\nthe U.S., at the Barnes hospital\nin St. Louis, Mo., and the U.S.\nKaval hospital in Bethesda, Md.\nThe plastic surgeons also are\npleading for more skin.\nSome of the most spectacular\ntransplants now involve bones.\nA patient in Chicago, Clifford W.\nLoitz, literally is living on a dead\nman's chest, since the successful\ngrafting into him last spring of\nan entire left upper chest wail\nconsisting of four ribs, the\nclavicle and sternum of a person\nwho had perished in an automobile accident.\nBONE TRANSPLANT\nLiving transplants of bone\ntissue were among the first successful grafting operations, and\nnew horizons are developing in\nthat direction.\nRandy Fleming, three, of\nEvanston, 111., proudly shows off\nhis operation, consisting of the\ngraft of more than four inches\nof the bone from his father's\nright leg to provide him with a\nsternum, or breast bone, which\nsomehow had been omitted from\nhis    original . equipment.    Dad\nMore Grain Goes\nCost of Government\nIn the last year, says a report of a Senate\ncommittee, the average Canadian paid 31\ncents in taxes out of every dollar of income,\nOn average, therefore, we are working\nnearly a third of our time, about two days\na week, for the state. People in the higMBi\nincome brackets are working more than\nthat for the state and British Columbians\nmust work more than the average Canadian\nsince provincial taxes here are far above\nthe Canadian average.\nThe Senate committee estimates the expenditures of all governments, federal, provincial and municipal, at $7.1 billion in 1955,\nas against $1.1 hillion in 1939. They have thus\nrisen about 61)0%.\n. More surprising is the fact that they\nhave increased steadily since the last war\nPeace brought no reduction in the total.\nWhile the national government spent almost\nexactly the same in 1955 as in 1945, the last\nwar year, the provinces raised their budgets\nfrom $355 million to $1.4 billion, and the\nmunicipalities from $305 million to $1.1\nbillion in-this postwar decade.\nThe tax burden of Canadians, though\nhigh by the standards of the '.ast, is about\nthe same as that of Britain and the United\nS'ates. In Britain about 36% of the national\nincome goes into taxes; in the United States\n30,7%. - Victoria Times.\n\"Part of a bone bank,\" these containers of live bone tissue \u2014\nheld here by a University of Michigan school of medicine radiation expert\u2014 have been sterilized by the medium of atomic rays,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\ndoesn't miss the  bone as father i sions to be replaced rather than\nenaircd, giving the meehanicm a\nnew lease on life.\nSimilarly, damaged or worn\nhuman organs simply will be replaced with spare parts stored in\ntissue banks without the long and\nsometimes only fairly successful\nattempts to regenerate them in\nplace.\nArmy Neglect\nFound In Death\nREGINA (Cf*) - A coroner's\nWy has found evidence of negligence on the part of the army in\nthe death of Art Lean Yee. 21,\nkilled in the accidental discharge\ncf a bazooka July 31 at the Regina Exhibition.\nThe young man, known in Regina as Roriie M. Yee, was decapitated by the back blast of a\nrocket fired from the 3.5 inch\nweapon on display in an army\nbootn.\nThe verdict said:\n\"Death was due to severe injuries which Included decapitation.\n\"We attach no blame to any individual but we do find negligence on the part of the Canadian\nArmy in the enforcement of iti\nsafety regulations pertaining to\nthe handling and issuance of arms\nand ammunition.\"\nU. S. Lifts Ban on\nSalk Vaccine Exports\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 The\nU.S. government has lifted restrictions on, export of Salk anti-\npolio vaccine to permit shipment\nof 1,000,000 does abroad from now\nuntil October 1.\nCommerce Secretary Sinclair\nWeeks said the export quota for\nthe rest of the third quarter\namounts to about 2.5 per cent of\ntotal U.S. production of the vaccine during the last three months.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Harbor\nofficials reported that 162,000\nbushels of grain have parsed\nthrough Montreal this season, an\nincrease oi 22,000,000 bushels over\nshipments in the corresponding\nperiod of 1955.\nOfficials said this year 81,500,-\n000 bushels have been received\nand 80,500,000 bushels have been\nshipped overseas. About 80 per\ncent of the shipments were wheat\nand the remainde. chiefly barley,\nflax and rye.\nEven heavier activity can be\nexpected when the grain elevators\nin the port at Uiurchill, Man.,\nhave been stocked, officials said,\nsince the opening of the Churchill! repair, where it has been found.:\nport normally causes a slight lull economical for such parts as gen-\n! in \u201e grain  movements  here. |erators, carburetors and transmis-\nand son romp together.\nStoring -spare human parts has\nbeen one of the riddles the scientists had to solve. Deep freezing\nis one answer, and at the University of Michigan atomic radiation is being used .for sterilization of bones, blood vessels and\ncartilage.\nGetting the body to adopt the\nstrange tissue is another problem\nthat finally is yielding, Some\n\"parts,\" suchs as bone, seem to\ntake fairly readily to the new\nenvironment, but it is in the\ngrafts of the larger organs that\nthe medical scientists seek the\nbiggest advances, and it has not\nbeen so easy.\nAt the American College of\nSurgeons meeting, recently in\nChicago, a trio of doctors from\nPeter Bent Brigham hospital,\nHarvard Medical school, reported\nsuccessful transplants of major\norgans between identical twins,\nindicating that close similarity of\ntissue is a key.\nOther scentists are on the trail\nof whatever natural processes in\nthe body' tend to destroy the\ntransplants, and it is believed that\nthe substance now may be identified and neutralized.\nAkin to transplants of living\ntissue are an increasing-number\nof installations of substitute organs. New scienthetic materials\nare being used to replace damaged arteries.\n\"ASA PIPE FITTING\"\nDr. Henry T. Bahnson-of Johns\nHopkins university, Baltimore,\npredicited recently at a convention of the American Roentgen Ray\nsociety here that surgeons using\nnylon or some similar material \"in\nthe near future may order a new\nfitting for any portion of the vascular tree, much as a pipe fitting\nis ordered now.\"\nThe ultimate, of course, will be\nthe replacement of whole organs\nof the body, such as the heart. Dr.\nCharles A. Hufnagel of Georgetown university recently expressed the hope at a meeting of the\nKentucky Academy' of General\nPractice in Louisville that recent\nsuch transplants successfully made\nin animal may indicate that in the\nnear future the use of complete\nspare human parts may be feas-j    Th|8    new    method    of   homa  chologist   make5   no   charge   for\nlble' [treatment for saving  and  grow-  this examination and no appoint-\nThe doctors compare this with..,      thjckep ha(f wj\u201e be demon.  ment is necessary. After the ex-\nLhe modern  trend  in automobile] ......\nFamous Trichologist Will\nDemonstrate How To\nGrow Thicker Hair\nAnd Guarantees It!\nDEMONSTRATION   TO   BE   HELD   HERE\nMOM CAH R4TT-.E THE DISHES ALL\nNISMT.\/IND POP WONT T4KE THE\nHINT TO LEND A W4SHINS H4ND--\nBy Jimmy Hado\nglJT L4TEF? WHEN THE LITTLE\nWOMAN M4KES HERSELF 4 VERy QUIET\nLEMON4DE-W3W\/DOES HE COME TO LIFE.'\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThe Lord Is wlth^you, while ye\nbe with Hiiji- \u2014 2 Chronicles 15:2.\nIt takes two to make a bargain,\nbut we can depend on God. He wil\nbe ever present so long as we seek\nHim. But we fail to seek Him save\nas a last resort.\nim Of Wealthy Italian Woman's\nCitizenship Application Debated\nOTTAWA     fCPJ     \u2014    William, ada  before  obtaining  citizenship\nHamilton   said   Saturday   in   the\n(hint tKsL\nI could tell Joe how to make\n'his wife stop naggin' at. him for\nmoney all the time. He could try\ngivin' her some.\nCommons that the disputed citi\nzenihip application of wealthy\nMadame Giovanna Elisa Felt-i-\nnelli of Rome was handled by Paui\nF. Renault of Montreal who, he\nsaid, is a nephew of Prime Minister St. Laurent.\nThe Progressive Conservative\nmember for Montreal Notre-\nDame-de-Grace has protested\ngranting of Canadian citizenship\nto the woman because she lived\non a yacht in the Mediterranean\nfor seven months immediately\npreceding the date of application\nfor citizenship.\nMr. St. Laurent, in the House\nat the time, did not dispute Mr\nHamilton's statement.\nMr. Hamilton said he _tid not\nwish to draw any Inferences but\nhe believed it was an \"interesting\nfact\" which indicated Mr. Renault\n\"was in a position to obtain this\nparticular type of treatment.\"\nMENTIONS FOUR POINTS\nMr. Hamilton said he wanted to\nmake these four points concerning the case:\n1. The Montreal court which\ngranted Mme Feltrinelli oitizen-\nship refused to allow opponents\nof her application to hear the evidence presented.\n2. The sase was processed with\n\"amazing expediency and speed.\"\n3. Mme. Feltrinelli lacked desire or any intention of living ln\nCanada. Sh,e did not livefin Can-\nstrated In Nelson, B.C-., on Wed- amination the person is told the\nnesday ONLY, August 15. required length of treatment and\nThese private demonstrations how much it will cost,\nwill be held at the Hume Hotel on After starting treatment, thus\nWednesday ONLY\u201412 noon to'9 person makes regular reports to\np.m. the Keele firm in London to check\nLondon, Ont. \u2014 In an interview the progress ol the home treat-\nhere today William L, Keele, in- ment.\nternationally famous trichologist To spread the opportunity of\nand Director of the Keele Hair normal healthy hair to the thou-\nExperts, Ltd.; said: \"There are 18 sands who are desperately look-\ndifferent Scalp disorders that ing for help, independent Trl-\ndid not live here now and there; cause most men and women to chologists are visiting varloui\nwas no indication she ever would I lose hair. Using common sense., a cities to conduct examination!\nlive in Canada. It was improper to person must realize no one tonic and start home treatments,\ngrant Canadian citizenship to or so-called cure-all could cor- NO CURE-ALL\nanyone who did not expect to j rect all the disorders,\" he explain- \u201ew_ h_v_ __ CUI.e.all jor sll_],\nresume his or her responsibilities., ed. shiny baldness,\" Keele empha-\n4. Immigration Minister Pick-' GUARANTEED _lze_ \u201eH there js Juzz. th- r0_|\nersgill had  brushed  off evidence      \"The   Keele   firm,   recognizing is stm  capable  ot creating hail\nagainst granting the woman citizenship    and    had   \"washed    his\nhands\" of the case thought it was\npossible to revoke his action.\nMINISTER REPLIES\nMr. Pickersgill said it was not\ntrue that Mme. Foltrinelli's application was processed in the fastest possible time. Other applications had been handled more\nspeedily.\nHe said Mr. Hamilton was ignorant of the \"true facts\" ln tho\ncase or of the proceeding of citizenship courts. Citizenship hearings were not held in public be-\nthat   most   people   are   skeptical  _n(. w_ c__ perform what seeml\nof claims that hair can be grown  (_ b_ _ m[raciei\non  balding heads, offer a guar-     --^^ ,s o__ thi_g Keel_ w_nt|\nantee,\" Keele said. t0   be   certain   every   man   and\nOnce a person avails himself wom__ kn0JV_ -f _ recession ap.\nof the Keele treatment his skep- pears _. th_ templM or a sp0,\nticism immediately disappears. begin_Vshow up on the crowr\nTo insure this we offer this of the head] there ,, somethinj\nguarantee: \"If you are not completely satisfied with your hair -,;diaV_ttenUon!\nprogress at the end of 30.days\nyour money will be refunded.\"\n'-HOPELESS CASES\nDISCOURAGED\n> First, the Trichologist is quick\nto  tell  hopeless cases  that they\nwrong, and it should be given'im-\ncause some questions by the court j cannot be nelpe(1 But the \"hope-\nwere of a very personal nature, i less\u201e   case5  are   few   0nly   if  a\nMr. Pickersgill said there is pro-1 ,_ complMelVi shiny baid is\nvision that representations can be h_ ,_ this ,_.,. category.\nmade in writing to the court from\nopponents of an application. He\nsaid \"certain representations\"\nwere considered.\nMr. Hamilton said it was \"highly improper\" that attorneys for\nthose opposing Mme. Peltrinelli's\napplication for citizenship were\nbarred from taking a stenographic\nreport of the evidence. After the\ncourt had recommended citizenship, Mr. Pickersgill had \"rushed\nthe   application   through.\"\nHAIR FOR LIFETIME\n\"If clients follow our directioni\nduring treatment and after the)\nfinish the course, there is nc\nreason why they will not havi\nhair all the rest of their lives,'\nKeele said. \"Our firm Is definitely behind this treatment, it al\ndepends on the individual cllent'i\nfaithful   observance    of   a   fey\nIf there is fuzz, no matter how \u201e\nlight, thin or colorless, the Keele slmple rales'\nTreatment can perform wonders. HOW'S YOUR HAIR7\nA complete, private- examina- If It worries you call Trlcholo-\ntion is given by a Trichologist gist Dana McGlnnis at the Humt\nto determine the condition of his Hotel in Nelson, B.C., on Wednes\nscalp and cause for his hair day ONLY, August 15, 12 noon tl\ntrouble. 9 p.m. The public Is Invited. Yo.\nFREE EXAMINATION do not need an appointment. T.h(\nThis examination is very thor- examinations are private and yoi\nough and highly technical, it re- will not be embarrassed In an)\nquires 20 to 30 minutes.. The Tri- way. *5\"\n,\n\u25a0\n About the Town\n\u25a0\u2014 By Alice Stevens\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nMr. and Mrs. Jim Reid have returned to their home in Boise\nIdaho, after visiting Mrs, Reid's\nbrother and sister-in-law. Mr. and\nMrs. Kelly Ozelle, Nelson Avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. J. F. Hogg and\nsons, North Shore, have returned\nfrom a visit to Mrs. Hogg's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. C. Romance of Calgary.\n\u2022 _   \u2022\nMiss Theresa Poje, who has\nbeen teaching at Prince George,\nis visiting her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. John Poje, 222 Houston\nStreet West. Miss Poje will leave\nin about two weeks for Montreal\nwhere she has accepted a teaching position.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. Norman O'Neill and son\nChristopher, who have been visit-\nting Mrs. O'Neill's mother, Mrs.\nK. P. Coates, Rosemont, have\nbeen joined by Mr. O'Neill and\nwill return to their home in Windsor.\n\u2022 _   ,\nA. Matassa, Nelson Avenue, has\nreturned from a lengthy trip\nabroad.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Bert Marshall and daughters, Nora Lee and Teresa, Miss\nJoyce Stuart, Mrs. Charles Bland\nand Mrs. F. Garrett motored to\nSouth Slocan Friday evening to\nattend a shower in honor of Miss\nJoan Mulloy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Pisto of\nCourtney are visiting relatives,\nMr. and Mrs. Ben Sutherland and\nMr. and Mrs. H. H. Hinitt. Mrs\nPisto is the former Beverley Irwin of Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nHerb Klein, who has been attending summer school at Victoria.\nis spending his vacation with his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Klein,\nRosemont.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Randolph Harding\nand family of Silverton were Nelson visitors Thursday. Mr. Hard\ning is MLA for Kaslo-Slocan.\n\u2022 *   *\nAmong those from Nelson attending the shower for Miss Joan\nMulloy at South Slocan Friday\nevening were Miss Joy McEwen,\nMrs. A. J. Kennedy and daughter.\nMaureen, Mrs. Jack Gilker and\nMrs. Art Stevens.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Helen Maras has returned\nto her home on Taghum Hill after\nattending summer school at Victoria.\n\u2022 _   _\nMrs. Gordon Hempseed of Nakusp was a guest at the home of\nMrs. R. Kelley. 273 Baker Street.\n_   .   .\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Worsfold,\nwho have been staying at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Olson.\nVernon Street, left Sunday for\nCosta Rica, Mr. Worsfold is a former Nelson resident.\n_   \u2022   _\nMiss June Kelley, Baker Street,\nIs vacationing ln Calgary and\nWinnipeg.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. H. R. Abey, of\nKootenay Bay, B.C., announce the\nengagement of their third daughter, Kathleen Roberta, to Mr.\nLaurence Riedel, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Paul Riedel, of Kimberley,\nB.C., the marriage to take place\nat Sacred Heart Mission Church\nat Riondel, B.C., on Saturday\nSeptember 8th, 1956, at 12:00\no'clock noon.\nVfljDVmUL ^OmUlfL...\nTV Won't Let You Kiss the Way\nMovies Do, TV Personalities Find\nBy JAMES BACON\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Why\nhasn't television developed any\ngreat lover like the Valentinos,\nthe John Gilberts, the Frank Sinatras and the Bill Holdens of the\nmovies?\nThe answer ls simple. TV just\nwon't let you kiss the way the\nmovies do.\nAs one CBS executive summed\n\"You Just can't get torrid In the\nliving room even in this air-conditioned age.\"\n-foBm Cassavetes, a veteran of\nmany TV kissing scenes, and Terry\nMoore, who has been kissed often\nand long in the movies, found this\nout in rehearsing for the television\nshow Climax.\n\"I never kissed a girl ln the\nmovies,\" commented Cassavetes,\n\"But I'm looking forward to it.\"\nTOO-TORRID APPROACH\nThe young Broadway actor\nmade only one movie, Crime in\nthe Streets, wherein he played a\njuvenile delinquent. Miss Moore\nhas done little television. Last\nThursday night the two appeared\nin The Right to Kill, adapted from\nDostoyevsky's classic Crime and\nPunishment.\nIt was Cassevetes' job, during\nrehearsals, to coach Miss Moore\nin the kissing scenes, to slow down\nher too-torrid movie approach.\nFor instance, Terry found that\nTV will stand neither for wide\npating of the lips nor scenes where\nshe is pulled too close to the man\nShe suggested that one scene be\nbest played by Cassavetes kissing\nthe back of *her ear. That was\ntaboo.\nInstead, Cassavetes suggested\nthe scene be played with Terry\nsitting down, his head in her lap\nand kissing her hand instead of\nher ear.   .:\nShe agreed happily. \"My husband will be watching this show,\"\nshe laughed,\nFEET HURT? \u00a7\nDR. SCHOLL'S\nFoot-Eazer $7.00 pr.\nS  All   arch   fitting   done   by =\n% expert  personnel ^\nI ANDREW'S |\nS       Leaders ln Footfashlon      5\n= Established 1902 =\n.iimMmnmmiiiiimmmiiiiiiiiiii.\nGIRLS BRING\nCALYPSO, MUSIC\nBy   CAROLYN   WILLETT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Bouncy rock\nnf roll may be the newest rage but\nat least three young women here\ngive first place to the tangy tunes\nof home \u2014 calypso music.\n\"Ah. girl,\"' says 25-year-old\nViola Brown of Kingston, Jamai\nca, with an impetuous clap of her\nhands at the mention of calypso\n\"Ah, that is music,\" agreed\nPhyllis' Heron, 30 and Lucille\nSmall, 26, who also hail from the\nKingston area.\nSuddenly a hummed and rhythmic bit of the West Indies invaded the pleasant lounge of the\nOttawa YWCA. It has been happening here at least one day a\nweek, well interspersed with\nother YWCA activities.\nThese girls are among the 100\nyoung women who entered Canada last year from the West Indies  as  domestic   workers.\nFATHER KNOWS BEST\nBRIGHTON, Eng.(CP) - When\nMrs. Kathleen Townsend's 14-\nmonth-old baby swallowed his\nrattle, she telephoned police for\nadvice. \"Hold him upside down\nuntil we get there,\" they said. Constable Roy Storey, father of two\nchildren, removed the rattle.\nListen to a Special Message\nfrom\nPremier W.A.C.i\nBENNETT\nCKLN\nTonight\n10:15 p.m.\nThe Doctor...\nII Nay Help\nTo Walk On\nSprained Ankle\nBy Dr, Herman N. Bundeeen\nIt may be better to walk on a\nsprained ankle than to immobilize it In a plaster cast for three\nto six weeks.\nIt all depends, of course, on\nhow bad the sprain is. And only\nyour doctor can judge which\nmethod \u2014 immobilizatibn or exercise \u2014 is best for your particular Injury,\nStrictly speaking, a. sprain consists of the tearing of only a few\nfibers of a ligament. Most of the\nligament remains intact.\nShould the ligament be completely torn, the injury actually is\na rupture and needs much different treatment than the minor injury. Even doctors, however, frequently refer to such a rupture as\na severe sprain. And so a sprained\nankle can be either a minor or\nserious injury.\nGenerally, when ! you stumble\nand twist your ankle, the sprain\nis a minor one. However, the\nusual swelling around the ankle\njoint sometimes make it difficult\nfor a doctor to determine whether\nit's a sprain or fracture,\nTYPE OF SPRAIN\nA little pressure above the area\nof the swelling usually answers\nthe question. If a bone is broken\nthe pain will be great. If not, n\nwill be relatively slight.\nIn this type of strain, and in\nmost other minor sprains, I think\nyour doctor will strap the ankle\nto give a feeling of support and\nto help curb swelling and then\nadvise you to exercise the ankle\ntiy walking.\nSuch activity might bring about\na cure within five days, although\nsome cases require three weeks or\neven longer.\nDANGER OF ADHESIONS\nIf the ankle is immobilized for\nany length of time, there's some\ndanger of adhesions forming between the ligament and the capsule. When walking Is resumed,\nthis might cause irritation whicfh\nin turn can cause swelling of the\njoint and pain.\nAs for 'preliminary treatment\nof a sprain\u2014before you can see\nyour doctor\u2014administer cold applications. Cold, it seems, diminishes the amount of swelling and\nbleeding into the tissues.\nSOI0?\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nDRESSES designed for today's younger generation manage to\nbe fresh, beguiling, simple, delightfully young and yet reflect can-\nnlly current fashion trends, so long as the trend Ib not extreme.\nSo we do think that children'6 clothes have a right to representation In a fashion feature. Well, anyway, we lead off with a\ncharming little dress designed In various sizes for small fry up\nand through to size twelve. Yolande does this charmer in fine\nrose or aqua broadcloth with a scalloped Dutch effect self collar\ndecorated with a hand-embroldered, bowknot trim on cuffed\npockets and a white pique collar should meet with the approval\nof both mother and daughter.\nYoung New Zealand Couple Give\nCountry National Theatre Nucleus\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. M. K\nTrevithick and daughter Leona,\nalso Mr. Frank Lehrman and son\nof Chewelah, Wash., were guests\nat the Grandview Hotel. Mrs. Tre-\nvitheck is a sister of Mrs. A. Jardine.\nMrs. M. L. Alexander of Cooper\nCreek returned to her home from\na few weeks camping in the Pang-\nburn cabin while visiting her\ndaughters, Mrs. Pangburn and\nMrs, A. Jardine.\nMr. and Mrs. J. R. Brandon and\nson of Victoria visited friends in\nKaslo on their return from Gerrard where they have been visiting Mrs.  Ester Brandon.\nBy J. C. GRAHAM\nAUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) \u2014\nThrough the talent and generosity\nof a young New Zealand couple\nthe country has been presented\nwith the nucleus of a national\ntheatre. They have handed over\ntheir creation, the New Zealand\nplayers, as a girt to the control\nof a trust.\nIn giving New Zealand a permanent professional company, t h e\nenterprising founders, Mr. and\nMrs. Richard Campion, have succeeded where far more weighty\norganizations failed. For more\nthan a generation there has not\nbeen a professional or fulltime\nrepertory 'company in New Zealand.\nThe Campion venture was\nlaunched with slender resources.\nAfter stage training in England,\nRichard and Enid Campion decided to try to form a touring\ncompany in New Zealand. They\nassembled a nucleus of acting and\nstaging experience from New Zea-\nlanders who had trained overseas\nand provided all the finance themselves. Leaking surplus army huts\nwere the first home of the company.\nFOUNDED 1953\nThe first plays were presented\nin 1953 and the company has been\ntouring the country ever since. It\nplays for a couple of weeks in\nthe larger centres, but considers\nit a duty to go also to smaller\ntowns  which  have  never before\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0 By Frances Drake-\nFOR TUESDAY, AUGUST 14,1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Tries)\n\u2014You are aided by a favorable\nposition of the planet Mars now.\nWork quietly, but with fervor, and\nresults will be forthcoming. Extra\ngood rays for outdoor activities,\nsports, promotion stunts.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Clear and effective thinking\nand planning is the keynote to\nsuccess in any undertaking now.\nFashion your successes in this\nmanner. Don't overstrain, become\nemotionally overwrought; keep\ncalm.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) \u2014\nAcquire a sense of awareness toward world trends now; don't let\ntrue opportunity pass you by.\nImprove education.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nA slightly inauspicious position\nof the moon can be offset by directing energies at necessities, the\nspecifics. Reduce needless time-\nabsorbing oprations to a minimum.  Complete  unfinished  jobs.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nInspire others with a respect for\nyour innate abilities by setting a\ngood example in all fields of endeavor. Don't let extravagance get\nthe better of you; realize the\nworth of all assets.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Develop your inborn\nqualities (especially perceptive\nand imaginative faculties). Do all\nto the best of 'your ability. Resourcefulness is a good byword\nGood advice in Gemini for you.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Venus is in an extremely favorable sphere of influence. Don't pass up this chance\nto make advances though new\nmethods, the social sciences, youi\noccupation,  and  future planning\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Exercise your God-\ngiven gift of free speech to ex\npound good ideas, wise criticisms\n\u2014but not at the exclusion of\nothers. An open, constructive\nmind is best.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 The inauspicious position of Jupiter at this\ntime advises against acting with\nhaste or indecision. Deal with\nproblems temperately, conclusively. Avoid extremes.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Now is the time to\nmake headway, utilizing all the\norganizational and managerial talent at your command. Beneficial\nresults will depend on forethought. Maintain a cheerful, happy attitude.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 The fine position of\nUranus portends accomplishment\nif a conscientious and straight\ncourse is pursued. Take care not\nto fall into ruts, however.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Your latent talent and\nability should be brought to the\nfore. Never leave the potential\nundeveloped. Be neither passive\nnor vindictive but, with logic follow the path of the \"happy\nmedium.\"\nYOU BORN TODAY are a combination of wit, enthusiasm, buoyant-hope, moodiness and supersensitivity. You can be the life\nof the party, or the down-hearted\none, depending on your moods.\nAim at steadiness, ambition, faith\nin yourself, your project, work\nor hobby. Don't squabble with\nloved ones for while you. do not\nmean to cause differences, you can\nprovoke them unintentionally\nYour talents fit you for a wide\nvariety of occupations, escepially\nfor the military, law, entertainment, writing, public speaking.\nBirthdate of: John Galsworthy,\nSir Walter Besant, noted English\nauthors.\nknown professional theatre. So it\nmoves in its own vehicles, playing many one-night stands.\nThe growth of public support\nwarranted the purchase of headquarters for administration, workshops, wardrobe, and training\ngroups. Stars have been brought\nfrom abroad to give extra strength\nfor particular plays and to set a\nstandard for \"the rest of the company. Productions have varied\nfrom Shakespeare to musical comedy and the standard has risen\nall the time. So had the size of\nthe audiences.\nThe enterprise outgrew the resources of a single family. Now a\nmove is being made to establish\nit on a truly national basis by giving the public the opportunity to\ntake a part in its expansion and\ndevelopment.\nThe Campions, who held all the\nshares, now representing substantial assets, handed them over to\na trust headed by the speaker of\nthe House of Representatives, Sir\nMatthew Oram. Other members\ninclude the governor of the re-\nbank, E. C. Fussell.\nTo provide working capital for\ncontinued expansidh, some $60,-\n000 in debentures is to be offered\nto the public. The government, recognizing that a real national theatre is in the making, has offered\na grant of $15,000 when half the\ndebentures are subscribed.\nNELSON DAIIY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1936\u20143\nViruses Cause Cancer)\nUS. Researcher Says\nBy  RENNIE TAYLOR\nBERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - A\nnew theory pointing to viruses\nThe Doctor. . .\nSevere Heal\nMay Rob Body\nOf Salt Content\nBy Dr, Herman N. Bundesen\nIs the hot weather getting you\ndown? Then watch your salt\nsupply. Maybe you're not getting\nenough.\nIt's more important than ever\nduring the hot summer months\nfor you to guard against salt deficiency. Excessive sweating robs\nyour body of needed salt.\nPerspiration contains sodium\nchloride\u2014or saft. \/\nIf your salt supply Is inadequate, or has become severely\ndepleted, the blood volume is\nreduced. This means interference\nwith the supply of oxygen and\nother elements essential to the\nbody tissues.\nYour body doesn't give up easily. It makes strenuous efforts to\nremain alive. It may even release\nvital substances from the cells in\nan attempt to replace the normal\nbalance in the fluids.\nWhen this is necessary, your\nhealth is damaged and your life\nmight be in danger.\nUSUAL SYMPTOMS\nSymptoms of salt deficiency\nusually are loss of the will to\nwork, weariness, dizziness, heat\ncramps or prostration. In some\nextreme cases, death might even\nresult.\nUnless y o'u r doctor advises\notherwise, it's a good idea to salt\nyour foods liberally during hot\nweather. ,\nAbove all, don't try any self-\nimposed salt-free or salt-restricted\ndiets this time of the year. Of\ncourse, it's never a good idea to\ntry any such diets without the\nadvice of your physician.\nIf he has already placed you\non a limited salt diet because of\nkidney, heart or liver disease,\nbetter check with him again to\nsee whether he wants you to\nmaintain it over the summer\nmonths.\nIn extremely hot weather, a\ndaily ration of salt as high as\nthree-quarters of an ounce might\nbe needed to keep you comfortable. It may be pretty difficult to\nuse that much on your foods and\nmaybe a couple of salt tablets\neach day will help.\nIn addition to salt, you also lose\na great deal of fluid through per\nspiration. So drink plenty of\nwater and other fluids. You might\nneed as many as eight glasses a\nday if, the weather is really hot\nPattern A 593\nby Isabel Dobson\nPROMINENT DESIGNER\nNicest form of flattery \u2014 the dress that, defines a pretty waistline,\nthen bells out dramatically! Isabel Dobson, talented American\nDesigner, pay* you this graceful compliment in her newest sun-\nand-danCe fashion (neckline given a chic new twist to reveal a\nbeautiful summer tan). If you've ever owned an exclusive \"Dob-\nby\" original, you know the figure magic of her designs! Now in\npattern form, A593 is a cinch for sewing honors \u2014 in polished\ncotton, tissue shantung, or one of the many smart fabric mixtures.\n\"And don't be tiftiid about colors,\" adds Miss Dobson. \"Rich tropic\nhues, splashy prints are making fashion history this season \u2014 the\ngayer, the prettier!\" Pattern A593 is available in Misses' Sizes 10,\n12, 14,16, la and 20, Size 16 dress requires A% yards 35-inch fabric;\nbodice lining % yard. Send FIFTY CENTS (in coins) plus three\ncents tax for Pattern A59._ to N.D.N. Prominent Designer Pattern\nDepartment. 60 Front St. W.. Toronio. Ont. Please print plainly\nYOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE NUMBER and\nSIZE.\nas the cause of cancer has set In\nmotion research projects with\nrevolutionary  possibilities,\nBehind the idea are recent\nfindings about the chemistry of\nIncredibly tiny particles of matter which go into the makeup of\nliving things. These particles,\nalthough not living In the usual\nsense, have the power to repro\nduce themselves and latent ability to work great changes in\ncells.\nInside the cell they form proteins and other substances which\nallow the cell to live, function and\nmultiply. They play a major role\nin virus formation and they are\nimportant in the life of a cancerous cell.\nSome of the intracellular things\nthey form or promote apparently\nare not strictly normal parts of\nthe cell, but rather things which\nresemble viruses, or even genes,\nthe governors of heredity. Apparently they can lie dormant in a\ncell for generation after generation, causing no sign of abnormality or disease. Some multiply at\nthe same rate as the cell itself, so\nthat each new cell has the same\nquota of these objects as the ancestor cell, A single cell may have\nonly one of them, a few or many.\nSEE MYSTERY FACTOR\nBut sometimes something unusual happens. Just what is not\nyet fully understood. It may be\na shock of some kind, or exposure\nto radiation, a change in temperature or cell nutrition or even an\nevolutionary change. Whatever it\nis. the vims-like particles go on\na rampage.\nWhat they do may depend upon\nseveral things: the age of their\nhost, his nutritional status or his\nhormone balance, the number of\nparticles, present, and possibly\nwhether rival particles may exist\nto check or otherwise influence\nthe result of the uprising.\nThe   insurgent\" particles   may\ntake over the cell's activity. Sometimes  they  destroy   the  cell.  At\nother   times   they   may   let   the\ncell live and multiply but it will\nbe different  from  before  \u2014  abnormal or perhaps cancerous.\nThis virus-cancer  hypothesis\nIs advanced by Dr. Wendell M.\nStanley, Nobel Prize winner and\nhead of the University of California's  virus   research   laboratory.\nVIRUS ROLE HAZY\nHeretofore the virus theoy of\ncancer has been a nebulous thing\nin the minds of researchers. They\nhad known for a long time that\nsome viruses could produce can\ncer in certain animals and could\ncombat a few kinds ,of malignancy\nin other animals and one variety\nin humans.\nBut the other known causes of\ncancer, such as radiation, coal \"tar\ncompounds and other chemicals,\nmechanical irritation, seemed far\nfrom the virus concept.\nRecent work by Dr. Stanley and\nhis colleagues as well as by researchers elsewhere has changed\nthe picture.\nMIIIIIIIM!-I!I.II..!11IMI.!_.!II_M_IIIII!\nONLY\n6 MORE DAYS LEFT\nIn  Our  2nd  Annual\nBEDDING SALE\nat\njjx&jm^\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nNOVEL SHOWER\nHELD FOR\nS. SLOCAN GIRL\nSOUTH SLOCAN - A novel\nshower was held at No. 3 Plant\nHall honoring Miss Joan Mulloy,\nwhose marriage to Ronald Marshall will take place August 18.\nAs the groom-to-be is employed\nwith the department of Indian\naffairs, the theme throughout was\nIndian. On the stage an Indian\nvillage was depicted where two\nteepees hid gifts for Miss Mulloy\nMore gifts were brought in in a\nrustic travois drawn by Mrs. Ivor\nJones who was appropriately\ngarbed in a magnificent Indian\ncostume.'\nMrs, Jones, upon placing a colorful feathered headdress on the\nbride-to-be, deolared her \"Princess Joan of the Kootenays.\" and\ngave her advice on how to be a\ngood \"squaw.\"\nA poem appropriate to the oc-'\ncasion and in keeping with the\nIndian theme was read by its\nauthor, Mrs. Robert Kennedy.\nGames were conducted by Mrs.\nGeorge Penniket and Mrs. James\nStreet. Miss Mulloy was assisted\nin opening her gifts by her mother\nand sister, Mrs. R. J. Mulloy and\nKay.\nGuests were served refreshments at tables centred with\ndainty vases of nasturtiums. The\npouring table held a lovely arrangement of roses while vases\nof dahlias and gladioli enhanced\nthe hall decorations. The flowers\nwere arranged by Mrs. Street.\nHostesses for the occasion were\nMrs. C. H. Bland, Mrs. Bert Marshall, Mrs, J. Gilker and Miss\nMaureen Kennedy of Nelson, Mrs.\nR. Elsdon, Mrs. W. P. Rogers,\nMrs. G. Pernket and Mrs. J. Street\nof South Slocan.\nABSENT-MINDED\nHEYWOOD, England (CP) - A\nwoman chased a bus in this Lancashire town shouting: \"Stop! I've\nleft my umbrella.\" A passer-by\npointed out that she was waving\nit\n'MM... wy\u00bbwq\nGet Ready for Fall With a\nSWIFKNlT\nHOME     KNITTING\nMACHINE\n$49.95\nLovely Lavenda English\nWools\u2014Knitting   and   Crochet  Accessories.\nHobby Shop\nOp. Bus Depot\nPh. 1703\nMoney on terms\nyou select\nWhen a custqmer borrows from HFC, he is shown what\nwe call a payment table. This table (sample below) shows\nexactly how much you may borrow, how many months\nyou may take to repay, and the exact amount you pay\neach month. You select your own repayment plan, to\nmake repaying your loan as convenient as possible.\nThis dependable service is available to you whenever\na prompt loan is needed for any worthwhile purpose.\nBorrow with\nconfidence from Canada's\nfirst and foremost\nconsumer finance\ncompany\nHOUSEHOLD FINAHCE\nG. A_ Owl\/on, Manager\n60S Bnkor Street, second floor, phone 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nKIMBEiUEV OBANCH. 420 Howard 5tr__l, phono LU 2-22.\nSAMPLE TABLE\nCftSH\nVOU RECEIVE\nMONTHLY\nPAYMENTS\nNUMBER OF\nMONTHS\n$105.75\n300.30\n510.60\n756.56   .\n$10.00\n24.00\n27.00\n'  40.00\n12\n15\n24\n.      24\n.\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. ,13, 1956\nSPORTS\nSURPRISE OF '56\nFRANK\nROBINSON,\nCINCINNATf\nIEFT\nFlELPEft,\nWHO'S BEEM\nCOOKlrfCr\nUKBT\/\/B\nftOOKIE     M\nOF       \/\nBy Alan Mover\nmm\n\u25a0MH Hr -In. rielM _\u00bb____!.\nBATED OHe Of BASEBALL'S\nhottest prospects\nthis 20-year-olp\nIS MORE THA\/i H0LPIH6\nHIS OHM tNITH Clflcy'S\nvauhtep slugging\nIMEUP THAT'S THREATeHiiK,\nTHE TEAM HoHIER\nRECORP-HlT\/6 \/Al\nHIS FIRST tSO GAMES.\n\\\nWoman's Dash Records Fall\nLONDON   (CP)   \u2014 A London seconds three weeks ago and that\nhousewife and a young commercial artist broke the recognized\nworld records for the 220 and 440-\nyard dashes Saturday in the British women's amateur athletic\nchampionships at White City Stadium.\nJune Paul, 24-year-old housewife, ran the 220 yards in 23.8\nseconds\u20142-10th of a second fast-\ntime awaits ratification.  \u2022\nJanet Ruff, 19-year-old artist,\nran the 440 in 56.S seconds to clip\nl-10th of a second from the previous mark shared by Diane Leather of Britain and Pauline Bryant of Australia.\nThe world mark for the 440 actually is an unofficial one since\nthe International Federation does\nnot recognize it in its list of of-\nRed Publications\nArgue On Sports\nMOSCOW CAP. - Amidst ah\nthe Soviet-style hapiness and\nglory of the Spartakiad sports\nfestival, a sharp disagreement\nboiled up Saturday between Communist publications on just what\nsports are for.\nOgonyok, a magazine, got a\nblistering halfway through the 11-\nday program by Pravda, the day-\nto-day Bible of communism, for\na picture-story layout on sports.\nThe magazine seems to have\njumped the current Communist\ntrack by saying:\n\"Participate in sports and\nawards await you; also riches,\nfame and the acknowledgement\nof admirers.\"\nThat sounds like normal advice\nathletes get every day in Western\ncountries and the basis for many\nbeople to participate in sports.\nNOT RIGHT ATTITUDE\nBut, according to Pravda, that's\nnot the right attitude.\nSaid the big newspaper: .\n\"The Ogonyok article was\nrotten.\"\nIt called for the \"legitimate disgust of readers.\" 'It added that\nsuch advice smells of \"vulgarity\nand c y n i c i s m.\" \"The advice\nwhich is presented is insulting to\nour sportsmen to whom the chase\nfor riches and acknowledgement\nof admirers is foreign, that which\nleaders of sport in bourgeois\ncountries cultivate strongly.\"        |\nThe Pravda article neglected tol\ngb into the matter of the Soviet!\ngovernment awarding high-flown\ntitles as \"merited master of\nsports\" to men and women for\nproficiency,\nSovet athletic winners also\nmarch out ceremoniously and receive awards while crowds cheer\njust like in the rest of the world.\nIn adidtion, they usually get a\nbig bouquet from pretty little\ngirls.\nThat lays them in the aisles and\nthoroughly glorifies the winners.\ner than the listed world mark of ficial records and the distance is\n24 seconds set by Marjorie Jack-i not included in the Olympic\naon   of  Australia   at  the   British' Games.\nEmpire  Games  in  Vancouver in; \u2014, . ,\t\n1A54. | NEW CLASS\nBut Mrs. Paul's time will not | Sweden's new destroyer Oster-\ngo forward as a world mark. Ma- j gotland is the _\u2022< *t of four 2500-ton\nria Itkina of Russia clocked 23.61 ships of her class. . *4J\nMontreal Girl\nSets New Mark\n-TORONTO (CP) - Diane\nMatheson, 19, of Montreal broke\nthe Canadian native women's record for the 20 metres in a qualifying heat at the eastern Canadian\ntrack and field championships\nSaturday.\nShe.clocked the distance in 25.1\nseconds clipping 1-10 of a second\noff the old time.\nThe meet is a warm-up for the\nOlympic trials in Hamilton Aug.\n24 and 25.\nTORONTO or MONTREAL\n. just three\ndays away!'\nIn just three days Canadian Pacific's record-breaking\n\"Canadian\" can speed you across the nation to Toronto\nor Montreal. You travel in comfort in modern,\nair-c<Tnditibned, all stainless steel coaches and sleeping cars\n.. . view Canada's most spectacular scenery from your vantage\npoint in an urmer-level \"Dome.\"\n\u25a0A- A Canadian Pacific train connecting with me eastbounu   Canadian\"\nleaves Nelson at 4:40 p.m. daily, Standard Time.\nHALFBACK CARL TASEFF Jogs across the finish line a step\nahead of We- Santee to prove that even a top miler il no match\nfor six football players. A half-dozen Colts formed a relay team\nwhich raced Santee In a mile exhibition prior to the annual Police\nBoys Club charity Intrasquad football game at Baltimore, The\nColts, who did 176 yards each, led the miler at one point by 50\nyards AP Wlrephoto.\nSmokies, Parks Board Happy\nOver New Rental Arrangements\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail Smoke Eaters; mean   that   although   the   arena\nHockey  Club society and Trail- j staff will continue to sell tickets\nTadanac parks board have reach-1 _l*l??\u201e\u2122SM\u201ef...ockey ClUb wU1\ned a new agreement on rink rent\nal for the 1956-57 season.\nthe announcement, said: \"We have\ncome to an agreement. with the\nparks board which we feel to be\nfair and equitable to all concerned.\"\nMarilyn Scoffs at Reports She\nNearly Drowned Before Removed\nnow bear the cost.\nFinal agreement was reached at\na meeting of the hockey club's ex-\nArnold   Lauriente,   in   making ecutive and parks board member5<\n_*   4nniMinnomanl    hoi..*   uTXTo   It ntrts\nI    Mr.   Lauriente   felt   that   with\nI \"adequate   public   support,   good-\nI will from the players themselves,\nj and a lot of hard work from the\nj executive of the hockey and\nSmoke Eaters are to pay rink  booster   ciubS)   x^ can  be   \u201e.\nrental of $325 per game and will  sured   of  a   hockey   organization\nbe   responsible   for   advertising, of which it can be proud\u00bb\nticket taking and selling, In past      ._.\u00bb., , __.    \u25a0\n-,     , .     ,        , .-J    Mr. Lauriente expressed thanks\nyears Smokies have been working'\non a 65-35 gate split basis with the\nparks  board  responsible  for  advertising, ticket taking and selling.\nThe    new    arrangement    will\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nNew York Madison, Square Garden   \u2014   Ludwig  Lightburn,    141\nBritish Honduras, outpointed Orlando Zuleta, 135V-1, Cuba, 10.\nBahia Blanca-, Argentina \u2014 An\ndres Selpa, 159. Argentina, outpointed Eduarrio Lausse, 160,\nBuenos Aires. 10.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON  (Reuters)  \u2014 Results\nof Scottish League Cup matches:\nAberdeen 1 Celtic 2\nAlbion R 2 Arbroath 1\nAlloa A 3 Hamilton A 1\nCowdenbeath 1 Stranraer 1\nClyde 2 Stirling A 1\nDundee U 8 Ayr U 1\nFalkirk 0 Partick T 2\nHearts 6 Hibernian 1\nKilmarnock 0 Dunfermline A 0\nMontrose 2 Forfar A 3\nMotherwell 0 Dundee 1\nMorton 1 Berwick R 1\nQueen of the South 0 St. Mirren\nRaith 3 Airdrieonlans 2\nRangers 3 East Fife 0\nSt. Johnstone 2 Queen's Park 1\nThird Lanark 8 Stenhousemuir\nthe wec_therm(sn helps deliver your\nfurnace oil\nEsso Furnace Oil Weather-Controlled Delivery\nAnticipates Extra Demand... Protects You from Shortage\nYou can rely on the sure delivery of clean-burning Esso Furnace Oil\nthanks to Weather-Controlled Delivery. This is another service you\nget with Esso Furnace Oil that helps lo make your heating sofe, clean,\ntrouble-free and convenient.\nGuarantee your reliable supply and delivery of top-quality Esso\nFurnace Oil wilh an Imperial Oil \"Evergreen Contract.\" Phone or\nwrite: IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED.\nUSE THE CONVENIENT ESSO BUDGET PLAN\n\"Buy Your Fuel With 12 Easy Mon.hly Payments\"\nAUSTIN W. MOORE\nto the members of the parks board\nfor their attitude of co-operation\nand the goodwill evidenced during the recent discussions.\nGlenn Mason, the hockey club's\npublicity director, declared before\nthe negotiations were completed\nthat the club was \"very happy\nwith the whole thing.\"\nEarlier in the summer the hockey club had approached the\nparks board with wrhat it declared\nwas a final ultimatum. Either\nSmokies get an 80-20 gate split or\nrental for a flat \"fee of $300 per\ngame or the club would discontinue operation.\nThe hockey club stated it would\nbe foolish to operate if it knew\nat the start of the season It would\nbe in the \"red\" at the close.\nSmoke Eaters had been holding\noff rebuilding for the coming season due to the unsettled rental\nsituation but now expect to move\ninto high gear immediately assembling a team.\nBy AL MARKLE\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer   '\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014    Marilyn\nBell,  defeated  In  her first attempt to swim the strait of Juan\nda FUoa, vows she will conquer\n. the    turbulent    channel    next\ntime.\nThe 18-year-old Toronto swimmer, apparently recovered from\nthe ordeal which ended in defeat\nFriday when she was within 5^\nmiles of her goal, said Saturday:\n\"I learned a lot out of the swim\nand I am more determined than\never to do it.\"\nEven as It became official that\nthe youthful swimmer will challenge Juan de Fuca's 18.3 miles of\nrip tides and currents again, controversy developed over whether\nshe was allowed to stay in the\nwater too long Friday.\n\"MARILYN WAS DROWNING\"\nPat Russell, Vancouver girl\nmarathon distance swimmer who\nhelped pace Marilyn during part\nof her nine hours and 50 minutes\nin the water, said:\n\"Marilyn was drowning. Why\ndidn't they take her out?\"\nThe Vancouver Sun said the\ncries of an enraged group of reporters and spectators aboard accompanying boats saved Marilyn\nfrom possibly drowning.\nThe account said Marilyn was\ncaught between \"two hysterical\ncamps,\" one of which kept urging\nher on while the other \u2014 including members of the press corps \u2014\nyelled, \"You fools, take her out\n. . . she's drowning.\"\nRyder denied that Marilyn had\nbeen left to long in the water.\n\"When she asked to come out\nwe got her out,\" he said.\nRyder  said  that half  an  hour\nafter she was dragged from the\nwater.    Marilyn    was    \"up    and\nabout.\"\n\"NONSEN8E\"'SAYS DOCTOR\nDr. R. J. Wride of Victoria, said\nany suggestion that she was in\ndanger of drowning \"is ridiculous,\"\nMarilyn herself scoffed at the\nreports she was in peril. \"I knew\nthat Cliff was right there beside\nme to help me if I needed him,\"\nshe said. \"Gus knows how much I\ncan take and he knows when I\nhave had enough. He certainly\nwouldn't have left me in the water\nif there was any danger.\"\nThere was no official word of\nwhen Marilyn will make her second try. Reports were circulated\nthat it would take place Monday,\nbut these were quickly discounted\nby swim sponsors.\nThe Victoria Times, one of her\nthree sponsors \u2014 the others were\nthe Toronto Telegram and Canada\nWide Feature Service Ltd. of\nMontreal \u2014 Baid she probably will\ngo again before the end of August\nif weather conditions are right.\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Beamlna\nand In high spirits at her hotel\nheadquarters here Saturday\nmorning Marilyn Bell Joined\nother members of her camp In\nscoffing at reports that she was\n'close to drowning\" when her\nJuan de Fuca swim attempt\nended.\nMarilyn said: \"All of a sudden\nmy strength drained away and I\nknew I couldn't swim any more.\nI knew that Cliff Lumsdon was\nright there beside me to help me\nif I needed him. Gus (coach Gus\nNashua Hit By\nColic, Scratched\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Mighty\nNashua was stricken by a sudden\nattack of colic just two hours before he was to go to the post In\nthe $100,000 Atlantic City handicap Saturday and had to be\nscratched. In the absence of Mr.\nWilliams, a 10-to-l longshot, Blue\nSparkler, won the first - place\njackpot of $65,000 by half a\nlength.\nAt Saratoga, Vancouver - born\nHedley Woodhouse gave Oh\nJohnny a clever ride to win the\n86th running of the $47,700 Trav-\ners Stakes. Woodhouse found an\nopening along the rail at the top\nof the stretch'and went through\nto save enough yardage and win\nthe IVi-mile race by almost two\nlengths.\nNashua's withdrawal was ordered by two veterinarians who\nfound the great thoroughbred to\nbe running a high \"temperature\nand administered a 5-dative.\nSARATOGA NEXT STOP\nHis owner, Lesie Combs II,\nsaid: \"Nashua was running a 103\ntemperature and was given a\nsedative called paperine. He\ncooled off in a few minutes and 1\nwe don't think he'll have any ]\nmore attacks. We plan to let him\nrest here (Atlantic City) two or\nthree days then ship him to Saratoga.\"\nWhen Nashua was*the two-year-\nold champion of 1954 he had an\nattack of colic in October that\nknocked him out of the $100,000-1\nadded Garden State Stakes.\nNashua definitely will not start l\nnext Saturday in the $40,000 Whit- j\nney at Saratoga, but has been\nnominated for the $50,000 Sar-j\natoga handicap Aug. 23,\nRyder) knows how much I can\ntake and he knows when I have\nhad enough. He certainly wouldn't\nhave left me In the water if there\nwas any danger In my Lake Ontario swim I swam for 22 houra\nand there were many times when\n1 thought I wanted to quit but Gus\nasked me to keep trying and 1\nmade it.\n\"I know I can swim the distance\nand the water was fine for me. I\nam sorry that I had to come out,\nnot for myself but for all the other\npeople connected with the swim.\nFor myself, I learned a lot out of\nthe swim and I am more determined than ever to do it. I am\nmaking no excuses.\"\nRyder added: \"Marilyn doesn't\nhave to make excuses. She made\na gallant try and we have never\nboasted that we were going to\nmake it on our first try.\"\nThe veteran coach said: \"Marilyn didn't swim h$r best form\nFriday. I don't know why. It's just\nlike in any sport \u2014 sometimes an\nathlete is on and sharp and sometimes they are off-form.\nLumsdon, who was beside Marilyn through the last two hours of\nher swim, said: \"I grabbed her\nwhen Gus told me to. But if I\nhadn't done that, she wouldn't\nhave gone under \u2014 she would\nhave swum over to Gus' boat under her own power.\"\nEgyptian Swimmers\nYanked From Swim\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The Syrian embassy announced two Syrian swimmers in an English channel race Sunday were withdrawn\nbecause Egyptian swljnmers have \u25a0\nbeen banned.\nOrganizers of the swim banned\nthree Egyptian swimmers after\nthe Egyptian government nationalized the Suez Canal. Twenty-\nthree swimmers from 13 countries\nincluding Toitj Park, formerly of\nHamilton, are taking part in the\nrace.\nF\nRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFer Bills. Fuel, Repairs, Cd*s,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nQuito 212, Medical Art\u00ab Bldg.\nPHONE 1780\nPhone 133\nIMPERIAL OIL AGENT\nNelton, B. C.\n45 Government Rd.\n=__\nBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nPhila     .. 000 000 200\u2014 2   2\nBrooklyn   .  400 000 Olx\u2014 5   9\nR. Miller, Flowers (8), and Lo\npata; Newcombe and Howell. L\nR. Miller. HRs: Pha-Lopata; Bkn-\nJackson, Snider. \u25a0\nNew York .. 101 001 010\u2014 4 8 2\nPitts .. 000 002 000\u2014 2   6   3\nAnteonelli. Hearn (6), and Sarni; Kline, Face (7) and Shepard.\nW_Anteonelli; L-Kline.\nSt. Louis ...   000 000 300\u2014 3   8   1\nChicago 000 000 001\u2014 1   4   0\nSchmidt, Collum (9) and Cooper, Jones, Lown (9) and Landrith.\nW-Schmidt; I_-Jones.\nCincinnati .  001 000 002\u2014 3 10   0\nMilwaukee   202\" 010 lOx\u2014 6 110\nJeffcoat, Acker (4) Black (5)\nFowler (7) and Bailey; Spahn and\nCrandall. L-Jeffeoat. HRs: Mil-\nMathews. Adcock; Cin-Post.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBaltimore 301 031 020\u201410 11 1\nNew York .  000 000 401\u2014 5   7   4\nBrown and Triandos; Terry R.\nColeman (51 McDermott (8) and\nBerra, Howard (7). L-Terry. HRs:!\nBait-Francona; NY-Mantle. i\nChicago       . 000 000 001\u2014 1   7   1 j\nDetroit 103 000 lOx\u2014 5   9   3\nWilson, Keegan (5) Kinder (7)\nand Lollar; Lary and House. W-\nLary; L-Wilson. HRs: Det-Torge-\nson, Bopne, Maxwell.\nBoston     000 001 000-^ 1   7   1\nWash 021 030 OOx\u2014 6   6   0\nSisler, Susce (5. Hurd (7) and\nWhite; Ramos and Courtney. L-\nSisler. HRs: Bos-Williams; Wash-\nLemon 2.\nCleveland  .  131 000 102\u2014 8   7   0\nKansas City 100 040 000\u2014 5   9   0\nGarcia, Mossi (6) Wynn (7) Naragon; Crimign, Gorman (9) and\nThompson. W-Mossi; L-Crimian.\nHRs: Cle-Wooding; Busby; Kan.\nCity-Simpson,\nPACIFIC  COAST   LEAGUE\nHollywood 3. San Francisco 2\nSacramento 1, Los Angeles 5.\nVancouver 7, Seattle 13.\nSan Diego 0, Portland 1.\nFor a light smoke\nand a pleasing taste\nmake friends with\nPHILIP MORRIS\n.\n I$5i\nNef Champions\nDecided After\nAge Hissle\nOTTAWA (CP) t- The Canadian junior tennis championships\npicked winners in six closed\nevents Saturday.\nTournament officials found Guy\nSt. Pierre of Cap de la Madeline.\nQue., to old to compete bo. not\nbefore he had reached the third\nround of both the boys and junior\nmen's singles.\nAs it turned out St. Pierre defeated the new boys champion in\nthe' second round and had won\nfirst and second round junior\nmen's singles matches. However,\nhe lost in the third round of both\nevents.\nChampions were also crowrted\nln the junior men's and women's\nsingles, girls and juvenile girls\nand boys singles. No doubles\nevents  were  played this year.\nThe new junior men's singles\nchampion is 18-year-old Francois\nGodbout of Waterloo, Que., who\ncame through with a crowd pleasing 6-3, 2-6, 6-2, 8-6 decision over\nsecond-seeded -John Bassett of\nToronto.\nThe top - rahked Godbout, loser\nIn the open singles last year to\nMontreal's Smith Chapman, will\nnot take part in the open today\nas he has to resume studies.\nAnn Barclay of Vancouver lived\nup to her advance notices by capturing the junior women's singles\nbut not before she was given a\nterrific scare by third - seeded\nJoan O'Brien.\nDENY PREVALENT\nRUMORS PFEIFFER\nDUE TO BE LOPPED\nVANCOUVER (CP) - General\nManager Bill Earley of Toronto\nArgonauts said Saturday there is\nno basis for reports that Al Pfei-\n_er, import 'end who caught 15\ntouchdown passes in 1955, is about\nto be cut from the team.\nHe said the reports probably\nstarted because PfeifeT only took\npart in six plays at Calgary Wednesday.\nHAM RICHARDSON\nCOPS TOURNEY\nSOUTH ORANGE, N.J. (API-\nHam Richardson whipped Neale\nFraser of Australia, 6-3, 6-3, 6-2,\nSunday in the finals of the Eastern grass court championships for\nhis fourth straight victory over\nthe Aussie tennis tourists.\nIn winning the title for the first\ntime, Richardson mowed down\nAussies Roy Emerson, Ken Rosewall and Ashley Cooper prior to\nhis triumph over Fraser.\nRichardson, the No. 7 ranking\nAmerican, thus moved up as the\nchief U.S. Davis Cup hope in the\nUpcoming interzone final with\nj^JSfcltaly and the anticipated chal-\n| 'lenge round with the Australians\nIn Adelaide Dec. 26-28.\nGilmour Boa\nRetains Crown\nSOUTH MARCH, Ont. (CP) -\nToronto's ace marksman, Gil Boa,\nafter a shaky start in the three-\nday national smallbore rifle championships here, steadied his aim\nin the last two days to retain his\nCanadian title.\nBoa emerged from final shooting competition Sunday with not\nonly his retained Canadian closed\ntitle but also the Canadian open\nand the iron sights aggregate.\nOnly major victory to elude the\nToronto sharpshooter was the, aggregate championship for rifles\nwith any type of sight. That title\nwas won by Larry Moore of Aberdeen, Md.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nBatteries\nMINING  - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to Al!   Types\n809 Lake St Phone 898\nARROW BATTERIES\nSOYALS SWEEP\nWOMEN'S BILL\nNelson Royals Sunday afternoon\nswept the final doubleheader of\nthe regular West Kootenay Senior Women's Softball League season, winning over Riondel Blue\nBelles 20-4 and 17-1.\nJoan Widener pitched all the\nway in both games, running her\npersonal streak to four victories in\nthe last five games. Since other\nRoyal hurler Ruth Bambrick has\nbeen on vacation, Widener has\ndone 'all the pitching.\nRoyals collected 10 runs in the\nbig fourth inning, running their\nmargin to 17-2 at that stage. Royals scored three in the fifth and\nBlue.Belles added two in their\nhalf of the seventh.'\nThe second game was even more\none-sided. Royals scored in every\ninning, holding Riondel to one\nrun in the first. Four runs in the\nfirst, four in the second, three in\nthe third, two in the fourth, three\nin the fifth and one in the sixth\ncompleted Nelson's total.\nFirst-baseman Mermet slammed\na double for Nelson in the opener,\nwith Riondel's Gazola clouting a\ntriple, Myrna Cain clouted a Nelson double in the nightcap, with\nMermet and Gail Christopherson\nadding triples and Widener a\nhomer.\nSOCCER PLAY\nUNDER WAY\nLONDON (Reuters) ,\u2014 First-\nclass soccer got under way in Britain Saturday with 18 matches in\nthe Scottish League,\nMain honors went to two of the\nlesser-known clubs from the Scottish second division, Brechin City\nand Third Lanark. Each scored\neight goals in the first round of\ncup play.\nThird Lanark supporters went\nwild with delight at the showing\nof their new player signed from\nPartick Thistle, winger Joe Mclnnes, who scored five goals in\ntheir 8-2 win over Stenhousemuir.\nAberdeen, holders,of the league\ncup, lost 2-1 at'home to Glasgow\nCeltic. Aberdeen goalkeeper Reg\nMorrison injured a finger and had\nto receive treatment before the\nteams could kick off.\nThe two teams promoted this\nseason to the first division, Queens\nPark and Ayr United,, lost their\nopening matches. Dundee beat\nAyr United, 6-1, and the amateur\nQueen's Park team was beaten\n2-1 by St. Johnstone.\nThe English season opens next\nSaturday.\nMASS SWIM POSTPONED\nFOLKESTONE, Eng. (AP) \u2014\nThe mass English channel swimming race has been postponed\nfor 24 hours because of weather\nconditions.\nA total of 27 swimmers from 19\ncountries have entered. They will\ncompete against each other in a\nmass start. The first man and woman across will each receive\n\u00a3500.\nThe perfect host\nintakes it a point to serve\na good Scotch Whisky\nand there's no finer\nScotch Whisky than\nJ0HNMIE WALKER\nAvailable in\n40 oz., '26H ot.4 and\n13H 02. bottles\nBorn 1820\u2014\nstill going strong\nDISTILLED,   BL.NDtD   AND    BOTTLED    IN   SCOTLAND  ,  Mfi\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liqu\noi Control Board oi by the Government ot British Columbia\nAvis, Lefty Gould Brilliant\nAs Nelson Outlaws Win Two\nMounties Sweep\nDouble-Header\nFrom Rainiers\nSEATTLE (AP) \u2014 Vancouver\nMountie. defeated Seattle in both\nends of a Pacific Coast Lveague\ndoubleheader Sunday, taking a\n3-2 victory in the seven - inning\nsecond game after smashing out\na 15-7 win in the three-hour opener.\nThe double loss left the Hain-\niers 12.4 games behind league-\nleading Los Angeles and only\nfour games ahead of third - place\nHollywood.\nFirst game:\nVancouver   .  121 400 115\u2014IS 19 1\nSeattle .  103 101 010\u2014 7 13 2\nBesana, Drummond (3) and Romano; Podbielan, Schallock (4),\nBrenner (5) and Orteig.\nSecon game1 (seven innings):\nVancouver .   .  120 000 0\u2014390\nSeattle ...   000 002 0\u2014 2   7 1\nBeamon and Neal; Fracchia,\nScantlebury 13) and Aylward.\nSparked by the brilliant strikeout performances of\nWalt Avis and Lefty Gould, Nelson Outlaws Sunday swept\na baseball doubleheader at Civic Recreation Grounds. Deer\nPark-Clayton bowed 17-5 in the opener, while New Denver-Silverton went down 5-2 in the nightcap.\n,, The two visiting squads gained a tital of seven hits,\nfour off Avis. Walt, a lanky righthander with^t least four\nmethods of delivering the ball, struck out 13j_n. the first\ngamei Gould, after solving the control problem that haunted him for the first few innings of the second game, fanned\n18, including seven in sue-\n\"World\" Title\nGoes To Kroll\nCHICAGO CAP)\u2014Ted Kroll won\nthe $50,000 first prize in the Tam\no'Shanter \"world\" tournament\nSunday by firing a six-under-par\n66 in the final round. A crowd\nestimated at 61,000 jammed the\ncourse to see the finale.\nWhile other front-runners folded under the pressure of trying for\ngolfs most fabulous jackpot the\n-steady, 36-year-old Kroll hammered out his fourth sub - par\nround, 32-34 for a 72-hole7 total of\n273\u201415 under regulation.\nIt matched the lowest winning\ntally in the \"worid\" extravangaza\nscored by Ben Hogan in 1951.\nKroll, who was in contention on\nthe final round the last two years\nat Tam only to collapse, finally\ncollected his first major win in\n18 -years as a pro.\ncess. on.\nGould's performance elicited\nmore comment than did that of\nhis counterpart, but only because\n.it was-so unexpected.\nLefty, while effective, had\nnever been undeniably brilliant\nsince joining Outlaws early this\nsummer. But Sunday l>e stepped\nover the dividing line between\nacceptability and brilliance.\nHe struck out at least one man\nin every inning but the third,\nstriking out lhe side in the sixth,\nseventh and ninth innings. One\nNew Denver - Silverton batter\nwent down in the first, another\nin the second, two in the fourth,\none in the fifth and one in the\neighth.\nNot only were his strikeouts interesting to the spectators, but\nIhey were vital to the cause, especially those that cam\u00a7 'in the\nninth.\nErrors by Ken White and\nGeorge Benwell and a sigle by\nTom Ida when Al McDonald fell\nchasing his fly ball, narrowed the\nmargin to three runs. B.ut Gould,\ndeparting from his script of four\nspeeds\u2014slow, slower, slowest and\n: stop\u2014fired a fastball past Art\nAvison, then returned to his curve\nball collection to strike out pinch-\nhitter Walt Thring.\nHAYASAl TOPS\nOnly member of the losing team\nHall of Famer\nRests Comfortably\nNEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP) -\nFrankie Frisch, Hall of Famer and\nformer major league manager, was\nreported resting comfortably Sunday in New Rochelle Hospital. He\nsuffered a heart attack last Thursday.\n\"His condition is satisfactory\nand he spent a restful night,\" a\nhospital announcement said.\nBALL SCORES\nSUNDAY\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNew York . 000 000 101\u2014 2   6   0\nPittsburgh    030 000 OOx\u2014 3   5   2\nGomez, Ridzik (2) Wilhelm (6)\nGrissom (8) and Sarni; Law and\nFoiles. L-Gomez.\nNew York .. 001 001 100\u2014 3 11   3\nPittsburgh .. 021 412 Olx\u201411 17   1\nMcCall, Ridzik (5), Wilhelm (8)\nand Westrum; Waters, Face (6)\nand Foiles. W.-Waters; L-McCall.\nHR; \"NY-Mays.\nPhila     100 000 011\u2014 3 10   0\nBrooklyn   _ 003 102 Olx\u20147   9   1\nRoberts, Flowers (8) and Lopata; Craig, Labine (9) and Howell.\nW-Craig; L-Roberts. HRs: Bkn-\nFurillo 2, Reese, Jackson.\nCincinnati .. 000 100 100\u2014 2 5 1\nMilwaukee 303 002 OOx\u2014 8 8 0\nLawrence, Gross' (3) Fowler (5)\nAcker (6) Black (7) and Bailey;\nBurdette and Rice. L-Lawrence.\nHR: Cin-Post.\nSt. Louis    .. 000 002 000\u2014 2   9   0\nChicago        013 011 OOx\u2014 6 13   0\nBlaylock, McDaniel (3) Liddle\n(5) Konstanty (7) and Cooper;\nRush and Chiti. L-Blaylock. HRs:\nChi-King, Irvin.\nSt. Louis .     000 000 000\u2014 0   7    1\nChicago    .. 000 000 000\u2014 0   5   0\nWehmeier and Katt, Cooper' (7);\nDavis and Chiti, Landrith (9).\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nBaltimore   .  000 001 010\u2014 2   6   0\nNew York .. 330 000 OOx\u2014 6   6   0\nFerrarese, Palica (2) and Triandos, Smith (3); Larsen and\nBerra. L-Ferrarese. HRs: Bal-Nie-\nman; NY-Mantle.\nBaltimore . 000 020 000\u2014 2 11 1\nNew York .. 002 101 OOx\u2014 4   7   2\nWight and Triandos, Smith (5)\nTurley, Byrne 15) Morgan .5),\nand Berra. W-Morgan.\nBoston      000 001 010\u2014 2   7   0\nWash   202 013 OOx\u2014 8 14   2\nNixon. Porterfield (1) Hurd (5)\nDorish (7) and White; Stone, By-\nerly (1) Pascual (6) and Berberet.\nW-Byerly; L-Nixon. HRs; Wash.-\nLemon.\nChicago    .... 101 000 000\u2014 2   8   0\nDetroit       .100 301 OOx\u2014 5   8   0\nPierce, Lapalme (7) and Lollar;\nHoeft and Wilson. L_Pierce. HR:\nDet-Bolling\nCleveland  . 000 021 012\u2014 6   8   0\nKansas C      101 001 000\u2014 3   7   1\nScore and Hegan; Kretlow .and\nGinsberg. HRs: Cle-Avila, Smith:\nColavito.\nSunday\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nHollywood 6-5 San Francisco 0-3\nB.C. Sends 10\nAgainst Reds\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Ten British Columbia players have been\nselected as the nucleus of the Canada all - star soccer 'team which\nwill meet Moscow Lokomotiv in\nToronto Saturday night.\nPlayers representing this province will be: Ken Pears, goal;\nJack Cowan, captain and left\nback; Jack Steele, right back; Pat\nPhilley, centre half; Doug Greig,\nleft half; John Clifford, right wing;\nJoe Johnson, inside right; Brian\nPhilley, centre forward; Gogie\nStewart, inside left; Reg Chapman, outside left.\nEastern Aquamen\nPlan Strait Attack\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Toronto\nswim coach Pat Roach arrived\nhere Saturday to launch a double\nattempt on Juan de Fuca strait,\nfrom Victoria to Port Angeles,\nWash. \u2022\nWith him were two eastern\nswimmers, John Jaremy, 36, Toronto steamfitter who earlier.this\nsummer became the second person to conquer Lake Ontario, and\nBill Sadlo, 56, veteran New York\nmarathoner who has swum\naround Manhattan island four\ntimeB.\nRoach hopes to put both swimmers in the water Sunday, make\nthe crossing, and return east\n\"We don't want to waste any\ntime,\" he said. \"It costs money\nto stay here, and we have other\ncommittments.\" Failing a Sunday\nswim, Jaremy and Sadlo will go\nMonday or Tuesday,\nto escape going down on strikes\nwas Nobby Hayashi; who did as\nmuch as any twb team-mates to\ntry to prevent the loss. Nobby\ntook over the pitching chores in\nthe fifth inning after starter Bill\nHarcus had put himself in a hole\nwith his generosity.\nHayashi retired the side with\nno damage due to a base-running\nblunder by Ed Isaakson1\u2014his second in two innings\u2014then held\nOutlaws scoreless until Gould's\nwalk. Earl Lobb's single, a bunt\nbase hit by Tom Marshall and\nGeorge Benwell's mammoth sacrifice fly to centre field scored\nNelson's fifth run.\nIsaakson allowed for a few mental blunders by slapping a double\nin the fifth, driving home two\nruns and moving the game out of\nreach of the visitors.\nWhile the ninth-inning errors\nadded to the excitement of the\noccasion, Earl Lobb's earlier blunder gave New Denver its opening\nrun. Len Erickson slapped a single\nto left after Lobb dropped his pop\nfoul and scored after a wild pitch\nand a single by Ken Hayashi.\nHEAVY HITTING\nAvis' performance, while bordering on the fantastic, was dominated by two things\u2014the active\nbats of his mates and the sloppy\nfielding of his rivals.\nOutlaws had constructed a 7-1\nlead with two runs in the first,\nthree in the fifth and two in the\nsixth when the American aggregation fell apart at the well-\nknown seams. When the smoke\nhad cleared, t)eer Park-Clayton\nhad committed six errors, allowed three Nelson safeties to bounce\noff shoulders or off gloves and\ngenerally made it simple for Outlaws to tally 10 times. A three-run\ntriple by Bernie Monteieone in\nthe seventh inning was the biggest\nsingle blow.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSTAMPS REBOUND\nFROM ARGO LOSS\nTO EDGE TICATS\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Calgary\nStampeders, beaten 28-13 by\nToronto Argonauts Wednesday, rebounded to a 7-0 victory over Hamilton Tiger-\nCats in an exhibition football\ngame here Saturday.\nBoth clubs played it close\nto the vest, battling through\na scoreless first half. Stamps\npushed across a converted\ntouchdown in the third quarter.\nBaz Nagle capped a brilliant\nStampeder march in the third\nframe when he crashed over\ntackle for a touchdown which\nhe converted.\nIn the second half, a good\nrun by Earl Lunsford brought\nthe ball to the Hamilton 11-\nyard line. Three plunges advanced the ball only to the\nfour and Stampeders lost possession.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nShreveport Slugger\nSets Homer Record\nSHREVEPORT, La. (AP)\u2014Ken\nGuettler, Shreveport outfielder,\nbroke the Texas League record\nhome runs Sunday when he\nblasted his 56th in the fourth inning against Houston.\nThe former record was 55 set\nby Clarence Kraft of Fort Worth\nin 1924. Guettler tied the record\nSaturday night.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1956\u20147\nLokomotiv Conditioning Leads\nTo 5-2 Triumph In Vancouver\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Moscow\nLokomotivs were scored .on Saturday for the first time ln its Canadian tour, but showed superior\nconditioning and speed fo outlast\nBritish Columbia All-Stars\" 5-2.\nThe 20,500 fans who attended the\nmatch in Empire Stadium set a\nWestern Canada record for soccer.\nCentre forward Brian Philley\nscored both B.C. goals, while his\noposition number, Victor Sokolov\nchalked up three goals . for the\nwinners,\nB.C. held the Lokomotiv to a 2-1\nlead at the half, but Russian speed,\nstamina and condition paid off in\nthe final 45 minutes.\nSokolov opened the scoring, left-\nfooting a cross from right winger\nGerman Apukhtin.\nLokomotiv made it 2-0 seven\nminutes later when outside left\nYuri Koyalyov beat Ken Pears on'\na pass from Apukhtin.\nPears robbed the visitors of a\ngoal a few minutes later with a\ndiving save outside of the penalty\narea.\nPhilley scored the all-star's first\ngoal on a picture play from inside right Joe Johnson of Nelson\nand centre  half  Pat Philley.  It\n[ came at 43 minutes and ended the\nI first-half scoring,\n|    Four minutes into the half, Phil\nley got his second goal, tying th.\nscore at 2-2. Then the Russian\nspeed and stamina began to show.\nSokolov got the winner at 31\nminutes, scoring on an open net\nafter Bubukin's shot had rebounded off the goal post,\nBubukin made it 4-2 six minutes\nlater and Sokolov ended the scoring with his third goal at the 40-\nminute mark.\nRussia used only one substitute\nand B.C. two, John Halley and\nBob Lewis.\nNewspaperman\nWidens Lead\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Montreal\nnewspaper man Bruce Kirby widened his lead Sunday in the ninth\nof 12 races to decide who will represent Canada in one-man dinghies at this fall's Olympics,\nDon Burwash won Sunday's six-\nmile race on Lake Deschenes.\nBut Kirby's second-place finish\nincreased his total points to 29%,\ngiving him a three-point lead over\nToronto's Bud Whittaker. The\nRoyal Canadian Yacht Club sailor\nfinished last in Sunday's race to\ntrail Kirby with 26% points.\nStrait Defeats\nAnother Challenger\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 The strait\nof Juan de Fyca defeated another\nchallenger Saturday,\nBill Muir, Saanich, B.C., surveyor making his 10th attempt to\nswim from Victoria to Port Angeles, Wash., climbed out of the\nwater into his pilot boat at 11.04\na.m. PDT, five hours and 21 minutes after starting the swim at\nthe Esquimalt Harbor mouth.\nAn adverse flood tide had prevented the, challenger from making any headway in the final\nstages, He had covered only three\nmiles of the 18.3 miles across the\nstrait.\nFernie, Kimberley\nSurvive Tournament\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Fernie Falcons\nand Kimberley Dynamos were\nsole survivors Sunday in the East\nKootenay rbund-robin, four-team\nbaseball tournament for the East\nKotenay senior championship.\nThe Falcons beat Cranbrook\n15-6 at Cranbrook Sunday to\neliminate the home team, which\nwon only one game in three. Dynamos went through their three\ngames without a loss. Kimberley\nHobos were eliminated earlier.\nMilwaukee Braves\nMaintain Margin\nMilwaukee Braves continued to\nwithstand the ever-mounting pressure Sunday, defeating Cincinnati\nB-2 for the second straight day to\nretain their game and a half advantage over Brooklyn Dodgers.\nThe defeat dropped Redlegs\nthree games behind Braves in the\ntight three-team National League\npennant race.\nNew York Yankees rebounded\nfrom Saturday's loss with a sweep,\nof the Sunday doubleheader from\nOrioles 6-2 and 4-2 to increase\ntheir first. place margin over\nCleveland in the American League\nto 8V_ games.\nIndians walloped Kansas City*\n6-3. Washington made it two ln\na row over Boston, handing Red\nSox an 8-2 loss that dropped them\n10 games off the pace. Detroit\nthrashed Chicago's White Sox 6-2.\nDodgers kept pace with Braves,\nbouncing Philadelphia Phillies 7-3\nin the rubber of their three-game\nseries. Pittsburgh swept a double-\nheader from New York Giants 3-2\nand 11-3.\nChicago Cubs played a scoreless\nnine-inning tie with SJ. Louis af-\nVancouver 15-3 Seattle 7-2\nSan Diego 8-10 Portland 4-8\n11,8 Angeles, 4-7 Sacrarnento 3-1\nter defeating Cardinals 6-2 in the\nopener of their doubleheader.\nLew  Burdette posted  his 14th\nvictory for Braves, permitting .the\nRedlegs only five hits, Including\nWally Post's 21st home run.\nPOUND FOUR HOMERS\nDodgers pounded four home\nruns, as seven of their nine hits\nwent for extra bases.\nMickey Mantle slammed hif\n41st home run and drove in three\nruns in the first game. The slugger\nwas held, to two singles in the\nnightcap but Yogi Berra provided\nthe key blow with a two-run\ntriple. Mickey now is 13 games\nahead of the pace set by Babe\nRuth when he slammed 60 homers\nin 1927.   ,\nHerb Score struck out 14 as\nIndians backed him up with an\nattack that included homers by\nBobby Avila, Rocky Colavito and\nAl Smith. Score'recorded his 12th\nvictory.\nLim Lemon paced a Washington\nattack with his 20th homer as\nSenators won their ninth game in\n13 meetings with Red Sox.\nFrank Boiling blasted a three-\nrun horher and double to provide\nthe offensive thrust in, Detroit's\nsecond straight victory over White\n[Sox. Bill Hoeft bested Bill Pierce\nI in a southpaw hurling duel.\nTRAIN IOR MODERN WORK...\non aircraft and aviation equipment\nIf you are an ambitious young man with an eye to your own future\n, success\u2014and have what it takes in aptitude and intelligence\u2014\nRCAF training will make you a skilled technician in radio-radar\nor other important aviation trades.\nTake advantage of the courses starting now\nto train as:\nAERO-ENGINE TECHNICIANS . RADIO-RADAR TECHNICIANS\nELECTRICAL TECHNICIANS . AIRFRAME TECHNICIANS\nARMAMENT TECHNICIANS-.   INSTRUMENT TECHNICIANS\nYou earn while you learn\u2014get regular service pay from the start\nYou have permanent employment, enjoy good living and working\nconditions, ample opportunities for advancement, and the pride\nand satisfaction of serving your country.\n\u00a9\nAct now! For full information, see, write or telephone\nThe RCAF CAREER COUNSELLOR\nR.C.A.F.  Recruiting  Unit, _-6-8.h  Avenue  East,\nCalgary,   Alberta.   Phone   6,-3688.\n_fiPoyer# Camacti**n Air Force\n_____\n-_-__________________\u25a0\n1\n...--....\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 195$\nEXTRA.\nM-'---Av, 2SS3EH3\nBULUMOOSE FOR PRESIDENT\nON THE DEEP FREEZE TICKET\nBeloved billionaire responding to cheers of.\n\u25a0 admirers,while leaving television studio\nTHE-V CANY ASK ^ROUGHl-V\nME TO SERVE MORE I S5.4 \u2022\nTHAN ONE TERM.'.'' SBILUON.\nFIGURE WHAT THAT'LL JDOLLAR^\nCOST ME\u2014ATA ^GENERAL.\nMILLION A\nBUST IT.?\nrr WOULD HAVE\nbeen cheaper\nto buv the\ncountrv\/:'\nBUT VOU MUST\nRdNFOR     .\nPRESICiEMT, '\nSIR. VOU\nPROMISED?.'\nWhy is sue so anxious? her\nSECRET REVEALED TOMORROW.\nT\/tEN TELL OS MtEfiE WE'LL\nEMP 7W\u00a3V.O\/\/ESANGER\/\nHOWlL VOU MAZE WEBB 7HMT\n#E5 BEEN POUBLE-C\nSrBlS\/PATEp \u2022\nI'LL WS\/rMM \/WP2\/SQV\nG\/IS&7\u00bbE\/\/\/P\/?ESSIC!t\nMS WEE'S \/Al MEEP.\nI JUST GAVE YOU A PENNy\n( AND SAID I ONLV WANTED\nI THE SECOND TUBE,\n(.WHAT WOULD\nYOU DO?\nLOOK WHAT)\nWE FOUNP *      .,\nWHERE THEy'RE)\nPIGGINSTHE      <.\nNEW PgEEWK\/l)\n>HQ, SON .'A 6TANDIN&\nRIB ROAST FROM THE '\nSAF.-B-Q ERA, 19561 j\nVALUABLE POTTERY\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 A blue and\nwhite Chinese bowl measuring\nnine inches in diameter was sold\nfor \u00a3870 at an auction sale. The\nbowl was made in the 15th century and bears the six-character\nmark of Emperor Hsuan Te of the\nMing dynasty.\nIT'S A PITY TO SPOIL YOUR\nTHRILL, BUT I GIVE YOU UH\nWORD WE'RE NOT .AHK\nROBBERS. BELIEVE ME?\n\u2022YES,\nT-t\nGUESS\nSO,\n'ATTA&IRL! THEN YOU WON'T )\nmm MY CUTTING THESE\n..TELEPHONE WIRES.\nTax Agreements\nGet Senate Okay\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Senate\nSaturday ratified without opposition two .tax agreements between\nCanada.and the United States and\nWest Germany to avoid double\ntaxation in cases of citizens of\none country doing business In the\nother.\n, The agreement with the U.S.\ncontains changes to widen the\nscope of the Canada-U.S. tax convention of ,1943. One change is designed to encourage Canadian Investment In Canadian subsidalr-\nles of parent U.S. companies.\nMINERAL SOURCES\nCyprus, in tha Mediterranean,\nlargely agricultural, also produces\nlarge quantities of asbestos and\niron pyrites.\nchewing\nseems to make your work\ngo quicker^easier\nSPBARMMT\n71NG GV,,V*ssis\u00abSw\n's Spearmint every day!\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n3. Satisfied\n4. Goddess of\nharvests\n5. Expression\nof sorrow\n6. Hindu god\nof love\n7. Nonsense!\n8. Dull pain\n10. Kind of\ncandy\n11. Drawing\nrooms\n1%. Skill\n19. Exhibition\nropms \u25a0\n21. Grampus\n22. Property\n(L.)\n23. Whether\n24. Frightens\n25. Irish\n26. United\nNations\nI abbr. I\n29. Islet\nin\nM____i_l Ur_!__[_)\nBfflSHB _a___.HH\n___J1_T_H  HlfcJHBH\n______ HBoanrja\nNl-__\u00bb,\n_____!_.  ___.__.I1_.\nE-iHiraEii immnn\n______ an r.HBia\nsustain\nutaauHHH m\u00ae\n-JHHSH   HBIIHC\nnaaniia bh____i_i\nsiDaa . ansa\nriver Riturday'- Aniw.r\nI Eng. I 37. Dollar\n32. Affirms (Mex.)\n33. Smooth 39. Constella-1\n(Phon.) tion\n34. Internal de- 41. Sheep en-\ncay of fruit       closure\n36. Close        ' (Scot.)\nACROSS\n1. Doctor I affectionate\nterm)\n4. Tree\n7. Slow (mus.)\n9. Schemes\n12. Body of    ,\nwater\n13. Pacific island\n14. Kind of\n\u2022daisy\n16. Man's\nname\n17. Bottom of a\ngarment\n18. Unit of\nwork\n20. Proceed\n21. Native of\nOntario\n24. To gush out\n27. Political   \u25a0\ngroups\n(Eur.)\n,28. Hides\n30. Close to\n31. Perish\n32. While linen\nvestment\n(Eccl.)\n35. Grate\n38.Journey\n10. Anesthetic\n42. Girl's name\n43. Drench\n44. Long-leg.\nged bird\n45. Digit\n46. Distress\nsignal\nDOWN\n1. Indulge In\nreverie\n2. Harem i \u00b0\"\nrooms\nDAILY CEYPTOQPOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLB'AAXR\nIs  LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nA NMB  I UG KTHES  AN  ETDGEB\nMCS IUMI ETDGEACGNN AN GCTOPU\n\u2014 w o y u m cm c .\nSaturday's Cryptoljuote: HAPPINESS  IS  ADDED LIFE,\nAND THE GIVER OF LIFE\u2014SPENSER.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\n%\n%\nI\n1\n3\nf>\n-.\nS\n6\n^\n%\n7\n_\u2022\n^\nt\nIO\n11\nii\n'^\/l\ni\u00bb\n14\n\\ST\n%\nlb\n17\n%\n^A\nIS\nV\/A\nVA\n2o\ni\n%\n4\n.'\n21\n13\nIA\nS5\nIts\n%\n-7\naa\n\u25a0>\u25a0)\nVA\n%\n%\n30\nf\/it\n(ft\n31\n%\n32\nss\n94\n35\n1.\nn\ni\n_6\n39\n40\nA\\\n1\nAs.\nb\n1\nAA\nw\n^A\nAS\n%\nAb\n%\n%\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\n(Pacific\nSATURDAY,\n6:30-Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:0&-March ot Truth\n7:10\u2014 Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel tn the Sky\n7:30\u2014News \u2022'\n735\u2014 Sports News ,\n7:40\u2014Wake-up Time\n7:45\u2014Roads and Weather,\n7:50\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n8:00-NewS,      '\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n8:30\u2014Home Gardening\n8:35\u2014Musicale\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Entertainment   World\n9:00-Ne#s   .\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide    '\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:15\u2014Musical Holidays\n10:45\u2014Memo From UN\nll:00-News\n11:05\u2014Story Parade\n11:15\u2014Two for a Quarter\n11:30\u2014Morning Melodies*\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12: IS\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n1240 ON  THE DIAL\nDaylight Time)\nAUGUST ft, 1956   ,\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:15\u2014Prtirle News\n1:_0\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:45\u2014Western Serenade\n2:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:15\u2014Pacific News\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada HJatinee\n3:30\u2014Woman's World\n3:4b\u2014B C Roundup\n4:30\u2014Fable Time\n4:45\u2014Hidden Pages of the Air\n5:00\u2014Summer Skies\n5:30\u2014Closing Markets\n5:35\u2014Musicale\n5:40\u2014Sport News\n5:45\u2014Strikes and .Spares\n5:50^News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Report from Pari. Hill\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade ol Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014The Problem of\nFarm Surpluses\n8:30\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Monday Melodies\n10;00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial  Affairs\n10:30\u2014Dance with Harry Boon\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1956\n7:00\u2014B.C. Fishermen's Broadcast 2:15\u2014Today's Guest.\n7.15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News   .\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Morning Music\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Composers' Corner\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Holiday With Music\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n11:00\u2014Melodic Moods\n11:15\u2014Two for a Quartere\nll:30-Personal Choice\n12:15-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Playing Favoritei\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014The Magic Carpet\n4:45\u2014Story Man\n5:00\u2014Summer Skies\n5:30-Traffic Jamboree\n5.45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014Byline\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6..0\u2014T-Canada Sports Review\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square to\nBroadway\n8:00\u2014Music by McMullin\n8:80\u2014June Eyre\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30\u2014Canadian Symphonies\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Critics at Large\n10:30\u2014James Duncan Chorus\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n00\u2014Sign On\n8:10\u2014Test Pattern\n30\u2014Democratic Convention *\n8:25\u2014Bible Reading\n00\u2014The Big Payoff \u2022\n8:15\u2014Color Test Pattern\n30\u2014Bob Crosby *\n8:30\u2014It Could Be You \u2022\n45\u2014Bob Crosby *\n9:00\u2014Democratic Convention \u2022\n00\u2014The Brighter Day \u2022\n11:00\u2014Matinee Theatre *\n15\u2014Secret Storm '\n12:00\u2014Queen for a Day \u2022\n30-Edge of Night\n12:45\u2014Modern Romances \u2022\nO0-Valiant Lady\n1:00\u2014It's Always Jan \u2022\n15\u2014Love of Life\n1:30\u2014Band Stand *\n30\u2014Search For Tomorrow\n2:00\u2014My Little Margie\n45\u2014Guiding Light\n00\u2014OflAll Things \u2022\n2:30-My Hero\n3:00\u2014Women\n15\u2014Of All Things \u2022\n4:00\u2014Mr. Engineer\n30\u2014Peter Lind Hayes\n45\u2014What's Cookin1\n5:00\u2014Little Rascals\n5:25\u2014Newspaper of the Air-\n30\u2014Strike It Rich \u2022\n5:30\u2014Democratic Convention \u2022\n00\u2014Western  Roundup\n9:00\u2014All Star Theatre\n00\u2014Weather Vane\n9:30\u2014Waterfront\n05\u2014News\n10:00\u2014People's Choice\n15\u2014Doug Edwards \u2022\n10:30\u2014Boston Blackie\n30\u2014Talent Scouts \u2022\n11:00\u2014Secret File USA\n30\u2014Democratic Convention *\n00\u2014Starlinght Theater\n00\u2014Susie\n30\u2014Fabian of Scotland Yard\n00\u2014Doug Fairbanks\/ Jr.\n30\u2014Famous Fights\n45\u2014The Late Show\n\u2022 Means live line from network\nKREM TV\n\u2014 Channel 2\n2:15\u2014Test Pattern\n8:00\u2014Monday Evening Film Fair\n2:30\u2014Glamour Girl\n9:00\u2014News\n3:00\u2014Movietime On Two\n9:05\u2014Weather Reporter\n4:00\u2014Tic Tac Toe\n9:10\u2014Monday Evening Film Fair\n4:15\u2014The Ruggles\n(Cont)\n4:45\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n10:00\u2014Famous Playhouse\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n10:30\u2014News\n6:D0-Sky King\n10:35\u2014Sleepy Time Gal\n6:30\u2014Bold Journey\n10:50\u2014Weather Reporter\n10:55\u2014Curtain 'Call\n7:00\u2014Dottie Mack\n7:30\u2014Voice Of Firestone\niProgram'  suhi-ri   to change  by  statluns  without  notice I\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nEXPERI    TELEVISION\nSERVICE\nOn All Makes ot Sets.\nPnone 1300 Days   1033 R Nlghti\nExcept Sundays and Holiday!.\nMc and Mc\n_^G?MiS^\nA-n-ry\nIf BLONDIE-WHATS)\n\\ THE MATTER\n( WITH ELMER?.,\nV.WHY ALL THE\n7 BARKING ? j\n.    \u25a0    \u25a0 .     --;,\n-\u25a0\"...';\n,\n .   ... \u2014\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \u2022\u25a0',' \u25a0- \u25a0 : !\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story   -   PHONE   1844\nBIRIHS\nVERIGIN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nAndrew Verigin, Vallican, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nAug. 11. a son.\nJONES - To Mr. and Mrs. Glen\nJones, 1520 Ward Street, at Kootenay Lake .General Hospital,\nAug. 12, a son.\nKINAKIN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Kinakin, Crescent Valley,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Aug. 12, a son.\nARLIDGE - To Mr. and Mrs.\nBruce K. Arlidge, R.R. No. 1, Nelson, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Aug. 12, a daughter.\t\nHELP WANTED\nMILITARY  POLICE\nCAREER\nYoung men of above average\nmentality and physical fitness\nmay train in such exciting subjects as\n\u2022 CRIMINAL  INVESTIGATION.\n\u2022 PHOTOGRAPHY\n\u2022 MOTORCYCLE RIDING\n\u2022 TRAFFIC CONTROL\n\u2022 UNARMED COMBAT\nBy joining the Canadian Provost\nCorps\u2014the Military Police of\nthe Canadian Army\u2014you'll embark on 3 years you'll always\nremember proudly. You will\nenjoy . . .\no LIFE LONG FRIENDS\n> CHARACTER BUILDING\nPATRIOTIC SERVICE\n\u00ab NEW INCREASED\nRATES OF PAY\na SERVICE THROUGHOUT\nCANADA-PERHAPS\nOVERSEAS\nO FINEST MEDICAL AND\nDENTAL CARE\n\u2022 30 DAYS PAID\nHOLIDAYS A YEAR\nAfter these 3 great years, choose\na lifetime Army career, or return better prepared, to civilion\nlife.\nTo be eligible you must be between 17 and 40 years of age and\nhave at least Grade 8 education.\nMail the coupon below, 'phone\nor visit your nearest Army Recruiting Station.\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot.\n4201 West 3rd Ave.\nVancouver, B.C,\nPlease send me. without obligation, full information on Army\ncareers.\nNAME     \t\nADDRESS \t\nCITY. TOWN  -\nPROV --\u2022\u2022\nTELEPHONE \t\nJANITOR - ENGINEERS, STA-\ntionary Heating Class \"A\" and\n\"B\", in School District No. 3\n(Kimberley) B.C. Duties to start\nSeptember 1st, and to include\njanitor work in addition to\ntending school boilers (low\npressure steami.\nClass \"B\" Salary - $280.00\nper month; Class \"A\" Salary\u2014\n$290.00 per month; Chief Engineer\u2014$15.00 per month additional.\nMunicipal superannuation\nplan In effect\u2014applicants must\nnot be over 40 years of age.\nApply to: J. R. Pearse, Secretary-Treasurer, School District No. 3 (Kimberley), Box\n1329, Kimberley, B.C.\ngiving full details of experience\nand qualification, plus at least\none- recent testimonial letter\nfrom a former employer.\nAPPLICATIONS FOR THE Position of school bus driver and\nmaintenance man will be accepted by the undersigned up\nto 5 p.m., August 10th. 1956. Applicants must have class \"A\"\ndirver's licence. Preference will\nbe given to one having carpentry experience and living in, or\nwilling to move to Balfour area\nMust be available for work immediately\nJ   S  Livingstone,\nSecretary-Treasurer\nSchool District No. 7,\n554 Stanley St., Nelson, B.C.\nLEADING SALES ORGANIZA-\ntion requires 2 ful time and 3\npart time dealers in West Kootenay. Annual earnings from\n$5000 to $8000. Car required.\nBox 9512 Nelson Daily News.\nSCALERS AND BULL TRUCK-\ners required for logging opera\ntions on Kootenay Lake. Top\nwages. Good working conditions Kootenay Forest Products\nLtd., phone 1200, Nelson.\nEXPERIENCED LUMBER\ngrader and tally man required\nfor Cedar Mill Write Box 718.\nRevelstoke, or Phone 3-X-l Revelstoke, B.C\nMAN WITH CAR' TO-DISTRI-\nbut and pickup catalogue and\ntake orders. $80 to $100 per\nweek. Box 9520, Nelson Daily\nNews, or phone eve. 1335.\nR E C E PTIONlST. USED' TO\ndealing with public, filiiig ex\nperlence Apply Box 10794, N\u00abJ\nson .Daily News, giving details\nof experience \u00bbnd references.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\ndrill runner. Apply National\nDiamond Drilling Co. Ltd., ph\n6-4787, Rossland, B.C\nWANTED, EXPERIENCED SAW\nyer for portable Sawmill. Phone\n180-Y, W T. Arishenkoff, Box\n680^ Grand Forks, B.C.\nOFFERS\" wrNTEDTolfBUILD\ning to be demolished Apply\nBox  11)880. Nelson  Dally News\nHELP  WANTED - FEMALE\n$100 MONTHLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given you as bonus. Just show North American\nFashion Frocks to friends. No\ncanvassing, investment or experience necessary. North American Fashion Frocks Ltd., 2163\nParthenais St., Dept. W 1972,\nMontreal, P.Q.\nTRUSTWORTHY, MATURE Woman to represent Ronald-Parties demonstrating (party-plan)\n' Car an asset Ronald Parties\nLtd., 2605 Marlborough Ave., S.\nBurnaby, B.C.\nHOUSEKEEPER FOR ELDERLY\ncouple. 612 Carbonate St.\nWANTED - WAITRESSES. PH.\n391, Bus Depot Cafe.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNOTICE\nCesspools and septic tanks cleaned with modern equipment. Free\ninspection and estimates on ail\njobs. Fred Weyrick, Box 78, Trail.\nH.- ZYLSTRA\n1ST CLASS CEMENT WORK\nup-to-date methods, old country\nstyle. Specialty: Floors, walks,\ndriveways, wet basements and\nfireplaces. Phone 1364-R.\nFOR   HANDYMAN   AND   ODD\njobs, phone 256-R. \t\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nACROSS THE LAKE\nQuarter mile East of Ferry\n1.8 acres with a really nice 2-\nbedroom home which could be\na four B. room home. Full\nbasement, oil furnace, 600-gal.\ntank, wired for range. TV\navailable. Fully insulated. 200\nft. highway and 500 ft. lake\nfrontage. Great possibilities\nfor auto court or subdivision.\nGarden and fruit. Today's best\nToL,  .        $'2,500\nTerms.\nALSO C> VSE IN\nFOUR ROOMS  AND BATH.\nBasement  and $7500\nlarge lot\nTerms.\ncHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\n_ Real Estate and Insurance\nPhone 135 or EVES. 10.5-X\n2 BEDROOM HOME ON 4 LOTS,\nwired for range, plumbing for\nautomatic washer, new coal and\nwood furnace Tiled and lino\nfloors, lawns, garden and fruit\ntrees. $7800.00   Phone 1978-R.\n$2500 CASH OR $2750 TERMS\nbuys small 5-room house. Bath\nand utility. 3 blocks from busline Available Sept 1. Apply\nBox 8346, Daily News.\n160 ACRES FARM AND BUSH\nland, Arrow Lakes in Celgar\ndistrict Will trade for house in\nCastlegar or Nelson. Apply 924\nLatimer St.\n2 BR HOUSE, FULL BASEMENT\nand furnace. 4Vt acres cleared.\n^4-stall barn. 200-hen house, city\nwater Price $9950.00. Terms. A\nBorsato, Fruitvale, B.C.\nFAIRVIEW 2 - BEDROOM HOME\nand furn. cabin on 2 lots, lake\nfrontage, wall to wall rug. Ph\n1520-R evenings.\n6 ROOM HOUSE, CENTRST,\ngood buy for quick sale. Phone\n1558-X.\nWANTED\u20143-BEDROOM   HOUSE\nin or near Balfour. Phone 760\nNelson.\n12 ACRES OF LAND, 5 CULTI-\nvated, reasonable. Pete Rezans\noff, Tarrys P.O., Thrums, B.C.\nCASTLEGAR 6 ROOM HOUSE\n$400 down, $60 monthly Ander\nson Ag or Kirby __ Brown\n2 FARMS WITH BUILDINGS\nand equipment. W. N. Shukin,\nPassmore. B.C.\nNEAR KOKANEE N. SHORE.\nGood bldgs., cleared property.\nBox 9812, Nelson  Daily  News.\nCORNER LOT, 50x60. CONSID\ner 1948 car 1950 as part pay\nment. Phone  1083-L.\nCORNER   LOT,   60x120,   UPPER\nFairview. Phone 816-X-l.\nPERSONAL\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Of\nu.-d equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchjin. steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St, Vancouver. B. C Ph\nPAcific 6357\n4 SAW SCRAG MILL, 2 Movable saws complete and ready,\nin new condition. Will produce\nup to 80M per day from logs-.\"\nto 20\" with three men. Paxport\nMills Inc., 900 Milwaukee Wa-\nterway, Tacoma, Washington.\nBUY DIRECT FROM THE~MILL.\nLutnber, plywood, doors, build\ning supplies. Write for complete\ncatalog. Vancouver Sawmills\nLimited, 1111 E 7th Ave., Vancouver 12, B.C,\nDRY PLANER ENDS FOR KIT-\nchen range, fireplace or furnace\n$10.00 a cord. Fir slabs and edging, long lengths, 2 large c,ords\n$15.00. Phone 1757-R.\n1 NEARLY NEW 120 BASS Accordion; 1 garden cultivator\nwith attachments. Ph. 1478-L-l.\nONE COMPLETE SAWMILL PH\n629-R-2 Trail or write Box' 179.\nTrail.\nAPPROX. 40,000 B.M. 2x4, 2x6,\n1x8, 1x6 lumber, $30 per 1000 S.\nKudra, phone 1757-R,\nTOP GRADE GEIGER COUNf-\ners for sale. S. K. Metcalfe, 471\nWellington St., Trail, B.C.\nTWENTY-FOUR FOOT STEEL\ncoal shute for culvert or shute.\nPhone 1198-X.\nRENTALS\nWANTED - SMALL \"APT.\" IN\nFairview. for middle aged lady\nApply Box 10792, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nUPSTAIRS APT, 3 ROOMS AND\nbath. High Street, immediate\noccupancy. $45 month. Apply\nSuite 1-373. Baker St\nWANTED TO RENf - 2 BED-\nroom home vicinity between\nNelson and Castlegar. Write\nBox 10973, Nelson  Daily News\nHOUSEKEEPING. TWO ROOM-\ned suite, unfurnished, clean and\nwell heated, $40.00 per month\nPhone 135 or 1065-X.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, fully furnished with frig\nday week or monthly rate Allen Hotel, 171 Baker St\nCOMFORTABLE MODERN 3 -\nroom suite, good location, available Sept. 1. Fleming Apart-\nmens., phone 130.\nATTRACTIVE 5 ROOM APT.,\nheated, working people preferred. Box 9623, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nMODERN, HEATED U N F U finished 3-room suite, plus laundry and storage rooms. Phone\n1715-Y.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity ol\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News\nCASH PAID FOR SCRAP MET-\nal, targe or small amounts Box\n10812, Nelson Daily News.\nURGENTLY' REQUIRED -SAW-\nlogs, all species, top prices Ph\n1200   Kootenay Forest Products\nWANTED - DIRT FILL. APPLY\n709 Eighth Street.\nWANTED - 1 LARGE LOAD OF\ntop soil. Phone 1468-L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC\nFOR SALE \u2014 COW JUST\nfreshened, first calf. Apply Wm.\nG. Kinakin, P.O. Box 27, Brilliant, B.C.\nFOR  SALE   -   4  COWS   2  JUST\nfreshened    Apply   W    A   Pere\nver_nft.  Brilliant\nFOR\"SALE - FRESH HOLSTEIN\ncow. first calf. Phone 249-L-2\n40 YEARLING HEIFERS MOST-\nly Holstem. H. Harrop, ph. 1278.\nCOW FOR SALE. JUST FRESH\nened. L. Facchina. Shoreacres,\nSNOOKER TABLE, 6x12, GOOD\ncondition. Apply Creston Billiards, Creston, B.C.\nCHROME SET, PIANO, STUDIO\nlouhge, mattress, sewing machine, etc. Phone 872-Y.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE, OPEN\nday and eve. 924 Davies St.\nFOR SALE\u2014DAVENPORT AND\nchair. Phone 1074-X.\nELECTRIC IRONER, ABC CAB-\ninet model, $50.00. Phone 2008-L.\nMcCLARY DELUXE \"WASHER.\nLike new. $60.00. Phone 44-X-l.\nOLD   NEWSPAPER   BUNDLES,\n10c. Nelson Daily News.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nRESTAURANT\n.   SACRIFICE\nTwo-storey building on the\nmain street of Kaslo containing five rooms upstairs and a\nfully equipped restaurant on\nthe main floor. Propane cooking, electric steam table, re\nfrigeration,. utensils, etc.\nOwner has left for the States.\nFor quick sale the price has\nbeen lowered to $4900!! Ph.\nEric Halskov at Cranbrook\nAgencies Ltd., Cranbrook,\nB. C, for details and appointment to inspect!\nRESPONSIBLE FAMILY DE-\nsires 2-3 bedroom house Sept\nPhone 816-X-l.\nFOR RENT \u2014\" lZ^ BEDROOM\nhouse, $60.00 Available Sept. 1 j\nBox 9619, Nelson Daily News.\nFOTfRENT\u2014ROOMING HOUSE.:\ncentrally located. Box 10894.\nNelson Daily News.\n4 BEDROOM HOME FOR\" SALE\nor rent at Harrop, Lake frontage, L. P. Pond, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR RENT-FURN-BED ~SIT-\nting room. Dishes, linens and\nfrig. Apply Stirling Hotel.\n\"WANTED TO RENT - 2 Ofi\"_\nbedroom house. 3 adults, R. A\nPaterson. phone 1151-R.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n4~ONLY\"i6\"FT~ WOODEN DOU\nble ended life boats Safe and\nseaworthy good condition $10(1\neach Columbia Trading. 902\nFront -St\nFO\"R~SALE - 19 FT~CA~B.N\ncruiser, marine engine, good\nprice for quick sale. Phone 752.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n(Continued)\nSee\nH   \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC   Ross or Alex McDonald\nAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO   LTD\n814 Railway St Nelson   BC\nPHONE   1402\nNelson\nREADY MIX ,\nCONCRETE LTD\nPHONE 871\n\u2014\u2014\u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u25a0  z      \u25a0    &*a\n_ NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1956\u20149\nExtensive Search for\nCopper in B.C. Areas\nBy   BRUCE   LEVETT\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Major\nexploration is under way at two\npoints in British Columbia for\ncopper \u2014 the red metal which is\nplaying an increasing part in Canada's expanding economy.\nUnder private development is\nthe Granduc location, 25 miles\nnorthwest of Stewart, and only\nfour miles from the Alaska border.\nHighland Valley, 300 miles\nnortheast of Vancouver, is the\nscene of development work by a\ndozen companies.\nBEAUTIFUL   AREAS\nBoth are renowned for their\nbeauty\u2014Granduc is named for a\nglacier 3200 feet up between the\nLeduc and Unuk rivers; Highland\nValley is a fishing paradise of\nlakes and streams.\nSmall mines have produced in\nHighland Valley, but Granduc is\nvirgin territory, _       \u00bb\nThe copper showings on the\nLeduc River were located in 1931\nbut the claims were allowed to\nlapse. They were picked up again\nin 1048. Development was begun\nin 1953.\nFor the venture, Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting and\nPower Co., Ltd., joined with the\nNewmont Mining Corporation of\nNew York.\nGranduc   officials  L.  T.   Postle\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n7*w\"\nliK WW\nWANTED   TO   RENT   BY   SEPT\n15,   3   bedroom   house.   Urgent.\nPhone 1305-Y^\nSUITE    FOR \" RENT.     PHONE\n316.\nUNFURNISHED   3   ROOM~APT\nPhone 697-X before 3 p.m.\nlow\nloader\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nFOR~SALE~ - PU R E B R E D\nspringer spaniel pups. Phone\n98-R, Box 152, Leo Bourdon,\nSatmo,  B.C., on  Salmo-Nelway\nPURE BRED GERMAN SHEP-\nherd police puppies. Mrs. H.\nBird, Blueberry Creek, B.C.\nWANTED - A HOME FOR TWO\nkittens. Phone 872-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM- FOR\nrent. Phone 1564-X.    '\nFOR   RENT   -   CABIN   AFTER\nAug. 15. Phone 1685-Y-l.\n2 ROOM HEATED  FURNISHED\nsuite. 823 Vernon. Adults\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. Phone 1353-L.\nFOR RENT - 1 ROOM COT-\ntage, no bachelors. Ph   582-L-2\nURGENTLY NEED 3 BEDROOM\nhome. Phone 783-R\nSUMMER RESORTS\n\"~_THE ANTLERS LODGE\nFormerly Queen's Bay Lodge under    new    management    Caoins,\nstore and rooms, warm swimming,\nboats and fishing.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST -RED CHANGE PURSE,\nHall Mine Road. Phone 1250-R.\nRefugees From\nIce Age Shown\nBy University\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Fifty refugees from the Ice Age will be\namong exhibits at the International Congress of Entomology meeting here August 17-25. They'll be\non ice, naturally,\nThe refugees are Insects called\ngiylloblatta, slender and relatives\nof the grasshopper and edekroach.\nThey are found at the edges of\nglaciers in British Columbia and\nAlberta.\nThe grylloblatto, scientists say,\nhas survived unchanged from the\ndinosaur's day.\nDr. John Stanley, chairman of\nthe JVlaiitreal conyniUee.oi th&in^\nlernatfonal insect convention, says\nthe three-quarter-inch long insect\ncan live only in melting ice or\nsimilar habitat and dies quickly\nif held in the hand. Specimens of\nthe rare insect are kept in special\nrefrigerators at the University of\nToronto.\nMore than 1500 scientists from\n60 countries will attend the conference being held af, the universities of McGill and Montreal.\nand J. J. Crowhurst say exploration indicated 25.600,000 tons oi\nore with an average copper content of 1.62 per cent. So far. $851.-\n342 has been spent in driving a\ntunnel 2000 feet from .which crops-\ncuts advanced to known ore areas\nwhere 24,000 .feet of expluratory\ndrilling has been done, disclosing\ntwo main ore bodies.\nMr. Crowhurst, in an address to\nthe Vancouver branch of the Canadian Institute of Mining, said\nthe firm would have to tunnel 20\nmiles through the mountainside\nbefore it could put its property\ninto production \u2014 at a cost estimated by engineers at $1,000,000\na mile.\nThere has been no decision on\nbuilding the-tunnel.\nTWO ORE BODIES\nOf the two ore bodies, company\nfigures state the west one was\ntraced 970 feet with an average\nwjdth of 27.8 feet and copper content of 2.03 per cent. The eastern\nbody was traced 900 feet with an\naverage of four-foot width and a\n1.77 percentage.\nAlmost inaccessible, the company has been forced to build an\nair strip and buy aircraft to fly\npersonnel to the property. Air\nfreight is flown in from Alaska to\navoid high mountains between the\nproperty and Stewart. Other materials are brought overland\nacross snow fields and the glacier\nby tractor-drawn sleds. More than\n2000 tons of supplies' have been\nbrought in this-way.  '\nIn Highland Valley, bounded by\nMerritt. Ashcroft and Kamloops,\ndifferent companies are carrying\nout exploration and development\nwork on the sites of mines and\nshafts sunk nearly 40 years ago.\n*The deposits were discovered\nbetween 1899 and 1905.\nShowing interest in the valley\nproperties are Kennecott Copper,\nAmerican Smelting and Refining,\nChimo, Mogul and Draper Dobie,\nNo regular reports of drilling\nprogress have been released because, A. S. and\/R. spokesmen say,\nthere is nothing to announce.\nRCAF in Navy\nDay Display\nVICTORIA (CP) - The RCAF\nwill take part In Navy Day here\nWednesday with two fly-pasts\nover Beacon Hill Park.\n'Airmen from Comox will pilot\nseven Lancasters of the 407 (Maritime) Squadron and four CF-100\njets from 409 Squadron.\nThe jets will also engage ln a\n20-minute aerobatic display.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFOR SALE - 1952 PLYMOUTH\nCambridge 4-door sedan, good\ncondition, must be seen to be\nappreciated, $975.00 cash Phone\n1734.\nFOR SALE - 1951 FORD COUN-\ntry Squire 8 passenger station\nwagon, excellent condition, new\ntires, radio, heater, $1200. Phone\n804-Y-3.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE, '47 MER-\ncury 2 ton flat deck. Phone 91-R\nSalmo, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 16 FT HOUSE\ntrailer, vacuum brakes, $450 00\nNorman Dinney, New Denver.\n1951 AUSTIN, GOOD CONDI-\ntion. Sacrifice price. $225 00.\nPhone Ron. 1090 \u2014 8 to 5 p.m\n19 4 8 STUDEBAKER SPECIAL\nDeluxe sedan, overdrive, radio,\nheater, good rubber Ph. 1428-L\n1956 HARDTOP OLDSMOBILE\n88, 8000 mites, $2800. Oswald\nMotors, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE - 1 9 5 1\nThames pickup. Phone 1841.\nI960   HUDSON   SEDAN.   WHAT\noffers? Phone 3107, Castlegar.\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 or Phone 368-R\nINVISIBLE MENDlM MATlY\nWard, 209 Victoria Street.\nLEARN TlWlSIBLE MENDING j\nBox 9729, Nelson Daily News.\nfamily Security plans ok\n$10. $20 $30 olus pei month with ]\noptional low cosl insurance nro i\ntertion al Hall Secuntie. Ltd '\nStrand Building Trail Se. Max\nIenenbein in Kimberley |\nROOM AND BOARD\nFREE- ROOm7~ BOARD ~ A N'b\nsewing Mother's helper on farm\nurgently needed at once Capable to take full charge during\nconfinement Near bus \u2014 15\nminutes from Nelspn Continue\nall winter if satisfactory Box\n1.966.  Nelson   Daily   News\n14 YR OLD GIRL WANTS\nroom and board in exchange\nfor mother's help. Working\nmother requires room and board\nfor solr and 2 yr. old daughter\nBox 9559, Nelson Daily News.\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.\n718 Observatory.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE~ W   W.DDO WSON~&\" CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St  Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND. \"EC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nCABINET   MAKERS\n,J   C. MERMET\nSpecialteing   in   fine   wood   work\nand indoor repairs.  Ph. 311 after\n3 p.m.\nENGINEERS   AND   8URVEYORS\nG   W   BAERG. B.C.\nLAND SURVEYOR\nBox 34. Fruitvale, and\n373 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, M E I C ~\nBC Land Surveyor. P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nS. V SHAYLER. PC Box 252\nKimberley Ludlow 2-2136\nB.C Land Surveyor Civil Eng.\nMACHINISTS\n\"BENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine    Shop    Acetylene    and\nelectric   welding,   motor   rewinding  Phone 593      324 Vernon St\nTIMBER CRUISING\nFOREST RECONNAISSANCE\nCo.. Box 666 Castlegar, ph. 3266\nTimber listings wanted.\nNds.m. Uatht Nrma\nCirculation Dept Phone 1844.\nSubscription Rates\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .35\nBy Mail ln Canada outside Nelson\nOne month      $ 125\nThree months \u2022     $3 50\nSix months      '.      $ 6.50\nOne year,         _ ...    $12.00\nBy   mail  to  United   Kingdom  or\nthe United States\nOne month $ 1 75\nThree months   '. \u201e._....     $ 5.00\nSix  months             $ 9 50\nOne   year   $18.00\nWI^pih  pxli_   onstage  ts  required,\naoove rates plus postage.\n\u2022 Vi-cu. yd. power bucket\n\u2022 36.5 hp gasoline engine\n\u2022 fl'2\" dumping clearance-\n\u2022 All-weather crawler\ntraction and flotation\n\u2022 Turns with full power\non BOTH tracks\n\u2022 16\" ground clearance\n\u2022 Weighs only 6670 Ibs.\n\u2022 Optional rear-mounted\nscarifier, 3-point hitch,\nwinch\nCalf vt for details\nBENNETTS\nLIMITED\nPhone 593      324 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C\nGrouse Season-\nOpens in Scotland\nLONDON   (AP)   -   \"Anybody\ndear, who is anybody at all,\" said j\nthe debutante, \"wouldn't be caught,\ndead in London after Sunday.\"\nThe reason London's social sea-,\nson that.begins in May and ends j\nat midnight tonight shifts to the :\nhighlands and lowlands of Scot- j\nland for what is known as the glor-.\nious 12th.\nI\nThe glorious 12th means Aug. j\n12 \u2014 the opening of the grouse\nshooting season\u2014but it's also the\nsignal for the beginning of hundreds of house parties in the land ]\nof the heather,\nBut because the glorious 12th '\nfalls on a Sunday, the grouse'\nslaughter won't commence until j\nMonday. After three disappointing\nseason in a row the Scots this !\nyear have sober hopes for something better in the way of birds\nto shoot at.\nBRIDEGROOM'S PROPERTY\nLLANELLY, Wales (CP)- Best\nman Tony Williams hurried from\nhis brother's wedding to play football in Ireland. He arrived at the\nplaying field to find he had\nbrought the groom's suitcase, instead ot his own football kit.\nChicken Cornea\nGives Man Sight\nCALCUTTA, India (AP) - Doctors Saturday announced the graft\ning of a chicken cornea nestored\nsight to a man blind for six years.\nThe patient was Manlck Gomez,\n55, of Dacca. After failing to obtain a human cornea, doctors said\nthey decided to attempt the operation with a chicken cornea. When\nthe bandages were removed Saturday Gomez was able to see.\n^+^   Buy, Sell, Trade the Want Ad Way\n-A\"\n. _\u00bb    HUB I APK\nMAY\nJUKI\nJULY 1 AUO\nJUT\nOCT\nNOV\nMC\nIFFH\nV_K0_YIR SlOOt !-(_-N\u00ab\nw\nsiATtsnai\nWAS THIN\nK\u00bb.\n1\n1\n\"V\n\u25a0H___\n1\nin\n\/vv\n\/\\\n>*A\n-\n<-v\n_\/ Tt\nf\\^\nf* *\nV\nV\"v\n_\u2014-'\nit*\n\u201e,\nli-\n\t\n'i\nin.\nI3g^\n11\n1 1\n'56 Dodge 4-Dr. V8\nWas    $3200\nNow $2700\n'48 Monarch Sedan\nWas    $700\nNow   $475\n40 OLDS. SEDAN\nWas $200\nNow - $95\n'47 Pontiac Sedan\nWas $425\nNow   $375\n'40 Ford Sedan\nWas    ,  $150\nNow _. : $75\n'52 Morris Sedan\nWas   $500\nNow   $300\n'53 Chev. Coupe\nWas   $1650\nNow   $1295\n'53 Austin Sedan\nWas      $1200\nNow   $975\n'50 Austin Sedan\nWas $395\nNow  $250\n'51 Vanguard Sdn.\nWas $600\nNow $395\n'56 Meteor Hardtop\nWas $3680\nNow $3295\nWHIZZERBIKE\nWas $125\nNow   $45\n'54 Austin Stn. Wg.\nWas      $1450\nNow   ,-  $1195\n'54 Ford Crestline\nAutomatic, Radio.\nPower Steering\nWas        $2295\nNow   $1995\n'52 Chev. Coach\nWas $1450\nNow - $1200\n'50 Chev.  1-Ton\nWas  $975\nNow $750\n'49 Chev. Sedan'\nWas   __:.__....  $850\nNow   $600\n'55 Plymouth\nWas     $2450\nNow   $2175\n'54 Chev. Sedan\nBrand  New  Engine\nWas    $2200\nNow   $1995\nWe are reducing our used\ncar stock so drop in to see\nus before you deal. We\nhave many more to choose\nfrom.\nBUERGE MOTORS LTD.\nVour Chevrolet Oldsmobile Dealer *\n323 VERNON STREET '(Formerly Nelson Transfer)\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 1?, 1956\n\"Writing Well Still a Need\"\n(F, B, Pearce In Dally News, August 10th)\nThe tools for  'writing well\" are contained .in\nWATERMAN'S FREE OFFER\n1 Skywriter Pen   $1.95\nSturdy for School Use and School Abuse.\nWith a 25s bottle of Waterman's ink free.\n$1.95 FOR THE TWO\n#\nM ANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: SOo lino, 40o Una black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nDON  ELDER  8TUDIO\n403 Hall St Phone 1205\n, Rotary Luncheon Monday 12:15\np.m. Hume Hotel\nPolished Statin Cottons, 36\", reg-\n' tilar $1.65, to clear, yd. $1.19.\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOODS\nMAKE IT A DATE1\nSERENADER8 DANCE PLAY-\nMOR 8ATURDAY.\nCrisp, boufiant crinolines \u2014 all\n|      sizes for girls and ladies.\n,    EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST,\nCHERRIE8 FOR 8ALE\n! Pick your own. Silver Heights\ncherry orchard, Kaslo. Bings and\nLamberts, 15c lb.; Royal Anns,\n12c; Republicans 10c\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   and   REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\nS16 Front St Phone 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVI8UAL   TRAINING\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nWabasso Sheeting, 81\" wide, unbleached, per yd. $1.39; bleached\nper yd. $1.55.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nAttic Ventilators lor gables and\neaves. Aluminum eave sheeting.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156\n7 piece golden oak dining suite,\n$49.50.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES\nFOR   U8ED   FURNITURE.\nHOME  FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, PH. 1560.\nChest of Drawers, $8.50 and up\ncoal and wood ranges, $18.50 and\nup.\nWE PAY CA8H FOR USED\nFURNITURE  AND  ANTIQUES\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST, \u2014 PH. 47\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nFIELDS \u2014 Funeral service for\nthe late Fern Phyllis Elida Fields,\ninfant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nMarvin Fields of Ymir will be\nheld on Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. at\nThompson Funeral Home. Rev. W.\nEdington will officiate and inter\nment in Nelson Memorial Park.\nHOME FREEZER8\nCanadian production of home\nand. farm freezers reached 11,992\nunits last year, \u25a0 up from 9090 in\n1954,\nCanada's Giant Turtles More\nVicious Than U.S. Yarifies\nBy ROY LaBERGE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada,\nwhere snapping turtles are usually caught accidentally by anglers,\nproduces bigger snappers than the\nUnited States where they are\ncaught commercially, says a Federal government scientist.\nSherman Bleakney, zoologist at\nthe National Museum here, adds\nthat Canada's snappers also lay\nmore eggs than, their American\ncousins.\nOne was caught   in   Quebec's\neastern townships with  83 eggs,\nlikely a record. The U.S. high is\nabout 60, the zoologist said.\nGIANT SNAPPER8\nBleakney began a study of the\nrecords after two whoppers \u2014 believed amomj the largest snappers\nevei caught\u2014were pulled from\nConstance Lake, about 1^ miles\nwest of Ottawa, within three days.\nThe 16-inch-long shell of one \u2014\na 32-pound, yard-long monster \u2014\nwas dried out and now hangs ln\nhis office. Its head was sent to\njoin a big collection of vertebrates' skulls at the University of\nMontreal.\nThe big turtle was presented to\nthe museum by Marcel Racette of\nHull, Que., who hooked it July 13.\nHe shot it three times with a .22-\ncalibre rifle before it died.\nThe other \u2014 a 34-pound, 42-inch\nreptile \u2014 was tmried in the countryside a few miles west of Ottawa\nby Charles R. Dickson who had\nkept it alive in his bathtub for\nseveral days after he hooked it\nJuly 16. It died and Mr. Dickson\nburied it \"because I didn't know\nwhat to do with it and it was beginning to get'a little high.\"\nBOTTLE BATTLE\nHe had knocked it unconscious with a bottle in a rowboat\nbattle during which he said he\nfeared for the safety of his 10-\nyear-old son who was with him.\nBoth are non-swimmers.\nMr. Dickson said the turtle\nwouldn't eat in captivity, but Mr.\nBleakney-said the blow, and not\nstarvation, probably caused Its\ndeath. Snappers can live for\nmonths wtihout food.\nThe museum scientist calculated\nthe turtles' age at about 50 years\nand said they are among the largest ever caught.\nHe described Constance Lake,\nwhere they were found, as ideal\nfor the reptiles. It is a small lake\nfed by weed-choked, shallow\ncreeks that slowly wind through\nswamp and bush. The creeks are\nalmost impenetrable, which leaves\nthe turtles unmolested.\nOnce the snappers reach the age\nof three years, mankind is virtually their only enemy, apart from\ninternal parasites like worms or\nexternal ones such as leeches.\nVICIOUS CREATURE8   .\n\"The snappers can pretty well\ntake care of themselves against\nanything else,\" the'zoologist said.\n\"They are so vicious that even the\nnewly-hatched will grab at\nman's finger.\"\nWhen they are a. few years older\nthe heavy-legged reptiles can take\noff a finger with a ,quick flick of\ntheir big heads.\nThey eat both vegetable and\nanimal life. Carrion in the water-\nsuch as dead fish\u2014is a special\ntreat. Lily pads, buds, worms,\nsmall fish \u2014 but not game fish\nwhich are to fast to be caught\u2014\nfrogs and even young turtles are\na reguiarpart of their diet.\n\"In Canada, ' turtles serve as\nscavengers, keeping our waters\nclean, and play their proper 'role\nin the balance of nature,\" Mr.\nBleakney said.\nIn the U.S. they are fished commercially with good markets in\nChicago and Detroit,\nHarris Warns Canadians\nOf Risk of Inflation\nOTTAWA CCF)\u2014 Finance Minister Harris warned Saturday that\nthere is a risk of inflation ir\nCanada.\nlooks like being the most prosper\nous year in Canadian history for\nmost industries and people.\nBut the principal risk was that\nthe spirit of optimism might give\nrise to Canadians spending more\non goods and services than the\neconomy was capable of producing. If this occurred, the entire\neconomy would be jeopardized.\nHe said government fiscal policy is aimed at moderating the\nexpansion of credit. There would\nhave to be self-discipline among\nall Canadians in spending to avoid\ninflation.\nDoll Up\nYour\nPrinting\nWhen we say \"Doll Up\" your Printing we mean\nit . . . Printing, like most other businesses, is\nchanging ... the same as styles in men's suits\nand ladies' dresses, furniture and furnishings\nfor the home . . . Printing, by that we mean\nletterheads and office stationery, the style of\nwhich has been in use for years, needs changing to meet modern trends . . . that's what we\nmean when we say \"Doll Up\" your Printing ...\nLet us \"Doll Up\" your office stationery.\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.,\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\n1 Mr. Harris explained this as\nthe background for the increase in\nthe Bank of Canada interest rate\nto a record 3Va per cent.\n-. He said it is better to have rising' rates of interest than \"skyrocketing prices.\"\nCanadian industries were even\nbusier than had been anticipated\nearlier this year.\n\"There were plans for a capital\ninvestment outlay of $8,000,000,000\nthis year, 28 per cent above last\nyear's figure. B,ut it was doubtful that Canada had the plant,\nraw materials and manpower to\nachieve this amount.\nThere was \"some danger'' in\nthe months immediately ahead\nthat the total rate of spending\nwould run ahead of the ability to\nproduce. In other words, there\nwould be too much money chasing too few goods and services.\nMr. Harris said the government,\nforeseeing this possibility, had cut\nits capital .expenditures to essentials.\nThe increased demand for credit\nhad been the outstanding feature\nof the last 15 months. The increase in the supply of loanable\nfunds had not kept pace with the\ndemand. Thus there was an increasing tightness of money and\ngreater difficulty in obtaining\nmoney.\nA maximum rate of savings is\nrequired, Mr, Harris said. There\nwould be too much money competing for goods if there were no\nincrease in the bank interest rate.\nMr. Harris said he will announce issue of a new series of\nCanada Savings Bonds as a means\nto increase savings.\nOdds,..\nand Ends\n,.byM. D. B.\n(\nMarler Rejects Demands Others\nBe Allowed lo Compete with TCA\nThe profusion of Gladioli in\nMr. Eckmier's garden on Nelson\nAvenue is drawing many \"oh's\"\nand \"ah's\" these days. It's worth\na trip past there to see them.\n* *   \u2022\nSeeing those big logging trucks\ngoing down Nelson's hills makes\nme hold my breath. I realize they\nhave probably traversed steeper\nhills on their way down mountain\nsides but I can never help think\ning, \"What if the brakes gave\nway\". Perhaps if I had a better\nknowledge of brakes and truck\nconstruction it wouldn't faze me,\nbut __ll I see is that mountain of\nlogs on a much smaller vehicle,\nand I watch it out of sight with\ntrepidation.\n* \u2022   *\nIn to the Library the other day\nand the librarian was saying it\nis surprising how many children\nhave continued coming for\nbook's during the holidays\u2014more\nthan usual, she believed. She said\nshe was always sorry when children brought their books back\nand didn't take more out, i\nplaining that they \"had television\nnow.\" Just to keep them coming\nto the Library is about the most\nimportant thing in the world to\nher, for she knows how much\nbooks can mean to one and how\nimportant.it is to get the reading\nhabit during younger years.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nOne of the more observant\nmembers of our staff has noticed\nthe lack of pigeons around these\nparts, recalling that there used\nto be numbers of them around\nthe CP telegraph corner and the\npost office.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nAnd now that she mentions it,\nI realize I too haven't seen i\npigeon since I saw those poor bewildered ones being ousted from\ntheir living quarters at the old\nhigh school. Do you suppose they\ngathered up all their Baker\nStreet relatives and hied them\noff to some more hospitable\nplace?   I  believe   some  used  to\nj roost   in   that   cupola   atop   the\n[ Madden block.\n* \u2666   \u2022\nHas someone been having\npigeon pie, have they been poisoned or did the tearing down of\nthe building next to the telegraph\noffice get on their nerves, making them decide to move away?\nIt used to be that every time the\nbus docked at the telegraph corner it invariably flushed a dozen\nor so to the ledges above.\nThoughtful souls used to scatter\ncrumbs, popcorn, etc., for them.\nTheir colors were a joy to the eye,\ntheir funny strut was laughable\nand I loved their gently cooing\ntalk. It's a shame if they have departed for good.\nTot's Body Found\nWEST VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014\nPolice in West Vancouver reported today the body of a 21-month-\nold boy was found in the water\n20 feet offshore late Friday night\nThe boy was identified as\nThomas James Leckie. Three fire\ndepartment inhalator crews, called to the scene after the discovery\nat 11 p.m., failed to revive the\nchild.\nThe Reekie family, from Dun- |\ncan, was staying with friends inj\nWest Vancouver.\nTunisia Changes\nMarriage Laws\nTUNIS (Reuters) \u2014 Premier\nHabib Bourguiba has announced\nthat Tunisia will abolish polygamy and make 15 the minimum\nage for a woman to marry. The\nBey of Tunis will fix his seal to\nnew marriage and divorce laws\nnext week and they will come into force January 1.\nTunisian men will lose their\n\"arbitrary right\" to leave their\nwives by \"repudiating\" them officially before two lawyers. In\nfuture only courts of law will\ngive judgment on divorce.\nMP Tom Gbode's\nCondition Fair\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The condition\nof Tom Goode, Liberal member\nof the Commons for Burnaby-\nRichmond, was reported as fair\nSaturday following an operation.\nMr. Goode entered Civic Hospital here on Wednesday and was\noperated on Thursday. The hospital declined to give the nature of\nthe operatipon.\nPeach Festival\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP) - The\nannual peach festival opens here\nThusday evening with a future\nfarmers' display as well as art\nand photography shows.\nThe agricultural display includes flower and fruit exhibitions as\nwell as a model airplane demonstration and other hobby displays.\nThe fair lasts three days.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Transport\nMinister Marler says he doubts\nCanadian Pacific Airlines would\nwant to make a new application\nto the government to run a transcontinental air-cargo     service.\nHe added Friday in the Commons that CPA would have been\n\"very sorry\" if its 1953 application had been granted by the cabinet because there is barely\nbusiness' enough now for Trans-\nCanada Air Lines' Montreal-Vancouver freight service.\nMr. Marler a|#o rejected opposition demands that other airlines\nbe allowed to compete with the\ncrown-owned TCA in transcontinental and transatlanticvpassen-\nger service. He said competition\nfor TCA would result in higher\nfares to the Canadian traveller\nor government subsidies.\nMAY GO LONGER\nThe Commons spent the entire\nday discussing spending estimates\nof the transport .department. The\nMetals Market\nTone Firmer\nNEW YORK (AP) - Prices for\naluminum and custom smelter\ncopper were raised last week, giving a firm tone to the non-ferrous\nmetals market.\nThe custom smelter boost for\ncopper totalled lVt cents and\nbrought the price to Vt of a cent\nbelow the 40 cents charged by\nmajor U.S. producers since early\nJuly. Early in July custom smelter\ncopper had dropped to a low for\nthe year of 37% cents a pound.\nFirmness in U.S. copper prices\nreflected a rise In demand from\nproducers and higher prices on\nthe London metal exchange early,\nin the week.\nWhen trading resumed Tuesday\nfollowing the British bank holiday, copper sold as high as about\n40% cents a pound. By the end of\nthe week.however, it had slipped\noff to about 39 cents a pound.\nAn improved demand for copper\nwas reported by sellers in the\nUnited States.\nLead prices were steady. Demand for the metal was reported\ngood.\nZinc traders reported steel mills\nare placing new orders now that\nsteel production has been resumed. The effect of the steel strike\non zinc sales was mirrored in\nindustry figures which showed\nshipments to domestic consumers\nin July totalled 34,219 tons, off\n18.484 tons from June and the\nsmallest monthly deliveries since\n1938.\nMajor metals prices:\nCopper \u2014 393A-40 cents a pound,\ndelivered. Foreign 37% cents,\nnominal, New York.\nLead\u201416 cents a pound, New\nYork; 15.8 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc\u201413.5 cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis; 14 cents. New York.\nSilver \u2014 903\/4 cents an ounce,\nNew York; 78% pence, London.\ngovernment hopes the House will\nwind up its business late today\u2014\n150th day of the session, second\nlongest in history\u2014but there were\nindications from the opposition\nthat it will carry into next week.\nEstimates of several departments\nstill have to be approved.\nMr. Marler said he can find no\nreal merit in arguments that TCA\nshould have competition. The\nvolume of traffic alone precluded\nthis. In 1954, TCA carried 101,000\npassengers between Toronto and\nMontreal while four airlines shared carrying of 541,600 passengers\nbetween New York and Chicago.\nJ. . H. Harrison (L-Meadoy\nLake) asked the government to\nreconsider its policy of granting\nCPA a monopoly between Edmonton and the uranium fields\nof northern Saskatchewan. CPA\nfreight rates were double those\nof airlines run by the mining\ncompanies.\nAPPROVES EQUAL PAY\nAt another point, Mr. Marler\nannounced modifications in federal shipping policies in favor of\ndeepsea shipowners. The modifications amount to a complicated\nseries of changes easing terms for\nthe disposal of vessels bought by\nprivate operators from the government after the Second World\nWar.\nHowever, Howard Green (PC\nVancouver Quadra) said the new\nplan will not help bring about re\nestablishment of a Canadian merchant marine.\nThe Senate gave final approval\nto government legislation provid\ning equal pay for women doing\nthe same work as men in industry\nunder federal jurisdiction.\nThe upper House with little debate also approved a government\nbill enabling the provinces to apply their white man's liquor laws\nto Indians. Under the legislation\nIndian reserves would be given\nlocal option to bring liquor on the\nreserves if the provinces approved\nliquor sales to Indians.\nCHICAGO POLIO\nBATTLE RESTS\nWITH PARENTS\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Parents have\nbeen handed the final responsibility for helping stem Chicago's\ncritical polio situation.\nDr. Herman N. Bundeson, the\npresident of the board of health\nreported that what the city has\ndone and is doing to avert the\npossibility of an epidemic. Then\nhe said:\n\"The board of health has done\neverything possible; now it's up\nto the parents.\"\nBundesen, along with other officials, has been urging widespread\nInoculation against the diseases.\nFree centres administering Salk\nvaccine have been set up around\nthe city.\nIn his report on the number of\npolio cases, Bundesen said there\nwere 676 cases, including 18\ndeaths, up to Friday.\nFinancial Times Questions Wisdom\nOf Raising Canada's Bank Rate\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The Financial\nTimes questions whether the orthodox bank rate weapon against\ninflation is most suited to Canada's peculiar needs.\nIn an editorial on Thursday's decision in Canada to raise the bank\nrate from'3 to 3Y4 per.cent, the\nnewspaper sees Canada in an odd\nmonetary position.\nWhenever   Canada   seeks   to\ncurtail money supply by raising\nthe bank rate, the higher interest rates entice Investment capl-\n.   tal   from   abroad,   particularly\nfrom the United States.\n\"Certainly the pace of expansion   looks   like   getting   out   of\nhand,\" says the Financial Times.\n\"Labor and materials are becoming  scarce,   and   it  is  generally\nagreed that the 21 per cent increase  in  capital   spending  proposed for this year cannot be put\nthrough without a serious effect\non the price level or the import\nbill.\"\nEither way, the .newspaper Sees\nCanada  caught.\n\"Short of an inconceivably\nabrupt check to the pace of expansion, the Canadian authorities\ncan exercise only a limited and\ntentative control over the situation. It may be questioned whether\nthe orthodox bank rate weapon\nis that most suited to their needs.\"\nValuable Documents of Former\nNelson Doctor Handed to Qov't\nOTTAWA (CP) - The federal\ngovernment   Saturday   was   presented with the only known documents proving that Canada definitely has taken possession of Arctic regions to which it lays claijii.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF\u2014Koote-.\nnay  West)   handed  the   documents over to  Mines  Minister\nPrudham   In  the  Commons  on\nbehalf of Dr. L. E. Borden of\nVictoria,   formerly   of   Nelson.\nMr. Prudham turned them over\nto Citizenship Minister Picker-..\ngill who laid they will be deposited In the archives ef Canada.\nMr. Herridge disclosed the ex\nistence of the documents in the\nCommons July 5. He brought to\nlight long-forgoten reports, of the\nfirst Canadian Arctic expedition\nin 1903-04 when official possession\nof Ellesmere and Southampton\nIslands was taken on behalf of the\ngovernment.\nSOLE SURVIVING MEMBER\nDr. Borden; believed to be the\nsole surviving member of the expedition, informed\" Mr. Herridge\nof the existence of the documents\nlast year.\nDr. Berden, botanist and doctor\non the expedition, had the historic\npapers stored in a trunk in his\nattic. The copies he had kept for\nyears were signed in his presence\naboard the vessel Neptune by\nCommander A. P. Low, leader of\nthe expedition. Copies also were\nplaced in cairns on the two\nislands.\nEllesmere is the northernmost\nisland in the Arctic. Southampton\nIsland is just south' of the Arctic\nCircle, at the northern end of\nHudson Bay.\nCanadai regards its Canadian\nArctic as all the land area lying\nbetween two geographic lines\ndrawn from the western end eastern ends of- Canada and meeting\nat the North Pole.\nTwo South Koreans\nGet Life Sentences\nSEOUL (AP) \u2014 Two South Korean civilians have received life\nsentences for the assissination of\nLt.-Gen. Kim Chang Yong, counter-intelligence chief of the Korean army.\nThey ambushed the general last\nJanuary as he rode along a street\nin a jeep. The prosecutor had* demanded death penalties.\nWesjt Germany Buys\nBritish Planes\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 West Germany plans to buy \u00a35,000,000\nworth of British airplanes.\nThe Armstrong-Whltworth Aircraft Co. said it has been notified\nby the German federal republic\nthat it plans to place an order\nwith them for 68 Sea Hawk planes\nplus spares and equipment.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 238\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone  827\n676 Baker Street\nSpring and\nSummer\nJackets\nComplete Stock\n25% OFF\nReg.\n$11.95\n$13.95\n$16.95\nSale\n$ 8.9S\n$10.50\n$13.75\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\n*\nNew Bonds Pay\nHigher Interest\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Finance Minister Harris Saturday announced\nthat a ne wseries of Canada Sav-\nthat a new series of Canada Sav-\nwill pay higher average interest\nrates to Canadians who retain\nthem for long periods.\nThe bonds, dated Nov. 1, 1958,\nwill mature 12Vt years later on\nMay 1, 1969, and will be offered\nfor sale up to Nov. 15, 1956.\nA new feature is that the bonds\nwill carry 13 coupons, the first\ncovering a six-monms period and\nthe remaining 12 a one-year period each.\nThe first two coupons will pay\ninterest at an annual rate of ZVt\nper cent, the next two at ZVs per\ncent, the next two at 3% per cent\nand the remaining seven at 4 per\ncent. The average interest yield\nto maturity is 3.76 per cent I\nyear.\nThe interest rates for the new\nseries\u2014the 11th since the end of\nthe Second World War\u2014compare\nwith a flat Interest rate of 3Vi\nper cent in last year's issue.\nMr. Harris said the decision to\noffer the new series reflects the\nstrong public response to the 10th\nseries which resulted in sales of\nabout $725,000,000 to 1,176,589 buyers.\nThe new bonds will be available\nin coupon form In denominations\nof $50, $100, $500, $1000 and $5000.\nLimit for any one purchaser is\n$5000.\nMajor-General\nNewburn Dies, 93\nHAMILTON (CP) \u2014 Maj.-Gen.\nSydney C. Mewburn, 93, Canada's\nminister of militia and defence\nlate in the First World War, died\nat his home here today.\nRetired from active public life\nfor several years, he was one of\nHamilton's top lawyers before entering the House of Commons in\n1917. He retired from parliamentary life in 1925.\nMaj. - Gen. Mewburn was defence minister from 1917 to 1920\nduring the Canadian Corps' march\nto victories with the Allies in the\nFirst World War. He directed\nthe department in the ticklish\ndays of conscription and the vital\nperiod of demobilization and reconstruction.\nHe represented East Hamilton\nin the House of Commons from\n1917 to 1-925. It one time a Liberal in politics, he ran as a Unionist when conscription was the\nbig issue in the \"khaki electon\"\nof 1917.\nHe was elected and taken into\nthe cabinet of Sir Robert Borden\nimmediately. He was re - elected\nas a Conservative in the general\nelections of 1921 and 1925, retiring on the eve of the 1926 campaign.\nHe is survived by a son and t\ndaughter.\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty   Culture\nand Cold Wave*\nMedical  Arts. Bldg.\n'hone   1922 Ste.  211\nHelen McCallum. Prop.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome Made Bread\nPHONE 238\nELLISON   MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\"YOUR REXALL PHARMACY\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1956_08_13","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429327","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1956-08-13 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1956-08-13 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\/1.0429327"}