{"@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":"2023-04-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1957-08-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430293\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" WEATHER FORECAST\n, Kootenay: Sunny with a few\nclouds and scattered showers.\nWinds IJgbL Low-high at Craribroox\nand Crescent Valley 45 and 80. Sunday outlook increasing cloud.\n\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0 B,~\"' \u25a0>,\t\n5 Oa\/,  \"   0\nSATURDAY EDITION\nwith COMICS - 10c\nVol. 55\n.^LSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 3, 1957\nNot mora Than 6c  Dally,  lOo Saturday\nNo.' 81\nKit Record High\nindex 2.9 Higher Then July, 1956;\nMarks Fourth Consecutive Advance\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Living costs in Canada hit record\nlevels in June, the bureau of statistics reported Friday, with\nthe consumer price index rising for the fourth consecutive\nmonth to 121.9.\nThe June rise of three-tenths of\na point, mainly due to higher food\ncosts, capped a 12-month increase\nof 2.9 per cent from. July 1 of last\nyear.\nThe index is based on 1949\nprices equalling 100.\nThe index had advanced by relatively small steps in the eight\nmonths after July of 1956, rising\nfrom 118.5 to 120.5 at March 1.\nThen, in thefollowing four months,\nit jumped successively to 120.9,\n121.1, 121.6 and now to 121.9.\nSOME CUTS\nAlthough in June there were\nprice declines for some food items,\nlike canned vegetables, sugar, coffee and jam, these were offset by\nrises in seasonal food items,\nchiefly eggs, potatoes, most other\nfresh vegetables and fruits, and\nRecord High\nOTTAWA (CP) - Average\nweekly wages, and salary earned\nby Canadians \u25a0 rose to a record\n$67.78 a June 1, the bureau of statistics said Friday.\nThe June 1 figure compares with\nthe previous high of $67.36 at May\n1 and $63.93 at June 1 of last year.\nWorkers in British Columbia\nearned the highest weekly wages\nat $74.54. Ontario followed with\n$70.33, Alberta with $69.22, Quebec\nwith $65.04, Saskatchewan with\n$64.21, Manitoba with $63.21, Newfoundland with $62.79, Nova Scotia\n$56, New Brunswick $55.56 and\nPrince Edward Island with-$52.89.\nThe general payroll index, based\non 1949 equalling. 100, rose four\nper cent to 195.3 at June 1 from\n187.8 at May 1. The figure was\n9.1 per cent above the June 1,1956\nindex.\nAt June 1 the industrial employment index, also based on 1949\nequalling 100, stand at 123.4, a new\nhigh 'for this time of the year.\nThe figure was 3.4 per cent above\nMay's 119.4 and 3.1 per cent higher\nthan 119.7 at June 1,1956.\nimuiiiiiiiitiimiiiiimiiiiiiiimimiii\nBritain, Land\nOf Venuses?\nLONDON (AP) - The vital\nstatistics of the average British\nwoman are almost the same\nas those of the Venus de Milo.\nAfter a six-year study the\nboard of trade reports the av-\n'erage British, woman measures 37-28-39. The Venus de\nmilo statue in the Paris Louvre\nMuseum: 37-26-39.\nBritain's average woman is\njust under 5-3 tall. Venus de\nMilo is 5-4.\nBritain's living Venus weighs\n1S6, The armless Venus de Mi-\nlo's poundage is not calculated.\nBoard of trade representatives measured more than 5000\nwomen to help manufacturers .\nand retailers of women's\nclothes as well as the lady customers.\nfiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiii\npork. The food sub-index rose to\n118.2 from 117.7. ,\nThere were also rises in the\nindexes for shelter and for household operations, but no changes in\nthe figures fqr clothing and for\nother commodities and services.\nThe shelter sub-index moved to\n135.1 from 134.8 on the strength\nof higher costs for both rents and\nhome ownership. There were continued price increases in residential building materials and wage\nrates.\nThe index for household operation costs moved upwards to\n119.6 from 119.1 because of higher\ncosts for' appliances, furniture,\nhousehold equipment and domes\ntic help.\nThe index for clothing, which\nhas shown little movement for\nmore than a year, remained at\n108.4 compared with 108.6 a year\nearlier. Price increases were reported for women's hosiery but\nthere were reductions in\nitems of children's wear.\nCosts of other commodities and\nservices, which had advanced\nsteadily each month for the previous 18 months, held firm in June\nwith the July l index unchanged\nat 126.5. A year earlier the index\nwas 121.1.\nSmall price increases for newspapers, prepaid health care and\nsome .personal care items were\nbalanced by lower prices for new\npassenger cars and gasoline.\nThe bureau's announcement also\nreported on movements of some\nwholesale price indexes, based on\n1935-39 prices equalling 100.\nINDEX DECLINES '\nthe wholesale index for 30 industrial materials declined'\nslightly to 240,3 in the week end'\ning July 26,jMmpared.to 240.9,for-\nthe\" weeTiT'endirig June 28.\nRaw sugar registered a major\ndecline but there were price increases for .structural steel shapes\nhogs and steers.\nThe wholesale index of Canadian\nfarm products, also on.the: 1935-39\nbase, advanced 2.9 per cent in the\nsame period to 213.9 from 207.8.\nThe sub-index for animal products\nrose,4.3 per cent to 273.6 from\n262.3, while that for field products\nrose slightly to 154.2 from 153.2.\nProposes Peace Inspectors\nPower Comes to Slocan\nPeer\nCriticizes\nQueen\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Britain's\ntwo largest circulation daily newspapers today prominently feature\nwhat they describe as an \"astonishing attack\" on Queen Elizabeth\nby a young Conservative peer.\nThe papers, The Daily Mirror\nand The Daily Express, which between them have-a combined sale\nof nearly 10,000,000, printed extracts of comments on the Queen\nmade in a small monthly magazine with.a circulation of only a\nfew thousand.\nThe right-wing Express devoted\nmuch of its front page to extracts\nfrom the article, written in this\nmonth's issue of the National and\nEnglish Review by Lord Altrin-\ncham, 33. He is the son of the first\nbaron, who as Sir Edward Grigg\nwas Britain's war minister during\nthe: Second World War.\nThe Express headlined its report Peer Attacks the Queen with\nthe subheading \"he says her\nspeaking is 'a pain in the neck'\nand her utterances convey 'a priggish schoolgirl'.\"\nCNR Plans\nNo Action\nWINNIPEG (CP) - The Canadian National Railways plan no\nfurther j action concerning two\nyoung boys who admitted in statements to RCMP that they tampered with a switch before derailment\nof a passenger train 36 miles east\nof here July 28. '' \u25a0 \u25a0 ' \u2022 .\n-.-She-continental, ;Train 'Ntf\/13\nbound from Montreal and Toronto\nto Vancouver, had 16 cars derailed\nwhen the' switch opened under it.\nEighty-six persons were injured.\nJ. R. McMillan, CNR, western\nregion vice-president, wasa s k e d\nFriday if further action was planned. He replied: \"No.\"\nThe boys said they found the\nswitch unlocked, moved it and\nwere unable to return it to its\noriginal position before the train\narrived.\n(By Start Reporter)\nPower cams to the lower Slocan Friday: afternoon,\nfulfilling a dream that began with the earliest settlers in this\nlovely farming-valley.\nThree customers at Slocan-Park got.\u00able.ctrical service\nfor the first time\u2014the first-of 300 consumers along the West\nKootenay Power and Light: Company's $252,000 line from\nCrescent Valley to Slocan City. V\nWith a command frorn Eric Coleman, the company's\nsuperintendent of distribution and transmission, given over\ntwo-way radio at 4:20 p.m.: \"Make the substation alive! -\npower surged into transformers mounted;on a hummock at\nSouth Slocan overlooking the Kootenay River plants where\nthat  si\nU.S* Soil Bank Plan\nTo Curb Crop Surplus\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The agriculture department Friday^ announced a $500,000,000 soil bank\nprogram for 1958, carrying a new\nregulation designed to- tighten\ncurbs on surplus crop production.\nUnder the major acreage reserve pha se of the program,\nwhich has been in effect for the\n1956 and .1957 crops, the depaft-'\nment makes payments to farmers\nfor planting less than their allotted acres of such surplus crops\nas cotton, wheat, corn, rice and\ntobacco.\nFinancial provisions for the program were contained in an agriculture department appropriation\nbill passed by Congress Thursday.\nFarmers who agree to' retire\nland from these crops will be required to limit their total harvested acreage of all crops. Those\nwho fail to abide by such agreements would lose payments, and\nbe subject to \"civil penalties\"\nequal to half of the payment they\notherwise would have earned.\nThis requirement, set up for the\nfirst time, is designed to prevent\nshifting of land from the major\nsurplus crops to other crop \u2014 a\npractice which, if continued,\nwould create other surpluses and\nadd to the total over-supply of\nfarm products, the department\nsaid.\n.e power is generated.\nTen minutes later power was\nflowing northward for eight miles\ninto Slocan Park, the humming\ntransformers haying reduced the\nvoltage from 60,000 to ihe 12,000\nvolts required for the Slocan line.\nIt was the culmination of hours\nof testing at the substation \u2014 of\nground-tests, voltage'tests, all. of\nthem successful. Smiles of. satisfaction passed around the cqin^\npany crew and officials. Amojig\nthose on hand were J. D,.McMynn,\nrate and contract engineer; Walter\nThorpe, supervisor of communications! David G. Bell, superintendent of generating plants; Kenneth\nRoss, the assistant superintendent\nsucceeding W. Rogers who recently, retired, and Louis Shutty, provincial electrical inspector. Hon. W.\nD. Black, Nelson-Creston MLA,\nwho had been invited to be present,\nwas unable to attend.\nThen the cavalcade of company\ntrucks and private cars moved up\nthe valley to make connections at\nSlocan Park for one home and\ntwo stores and residences.\nFirst to be tied in on the line\nwas the newly-wired home of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Holubowick. The\nstores of Paul Markoff, one of the\ninstigators of the movement for\npower for the lower valley,'and of\nSam Conkin, also got electricity'before the crew ended its day's work.\nWEEK EARLY\nIt-was,\"an exciting; _day,.fqr:.a!i\nth'tle ^nouselioTds. Each family expressed .- delight with the service,\nwhich.came a week before it had\nbeen expected; each was vociferous in its praise of the company.\nFor the advent of hydro-electric\npower means more than just a\ncheaper, reliable source to lower\nSlocan Valley residents. Most of\nthem have had \"to draw water' by\nhand pumps or by the bucketful\nfrom the river.-At night they have\nlighted kerosene or coal oil lamps.\nNow they can splurge for electric irons, toasters, refrigerators,\nhot water tanks, electric pumps \u2014\nall the conveniences city dwellers\ntake for granted. And for farm\nfolk, there are a lot more labor-\nsaving uses to which electricity\ncan be put.\n\"This is what we^ been waiting\nfor,\" said genial storekeeper Mark-\noff as linemen connected his busi*\nness and home.\nMarkoff, who has done more\nthan anyone to promote the venture at the local level, recalled:\n\"Five years ago we began organizing committees and writing letters about the possibility of obtaining power.\" The nucleus organization, the Lower Slocan Power\nCommittee, gradually, made its\nvoice heard. It got the support of\nthe Slocan District Board of Trade,\nthe Nelson Chamber of Commerce,\npolitical organizations and the\nWest Kootenay Power and Light\nCompany.\nThe company's part of the story\nbegan last year with a survey of\nprospective customers. When it\nwas found that there would be\nenough subscribers, construction\nbegan later that year;, The cost,\non the basis of the present number\nof customers, is high\u2014almost $1000\nper customer. Yet rates are as\nlow: as prepaid by Vancouver consumers.  -   - -\nThe. story hasn't been written\nyet. Fifteen miles of line to Appledale are complete, and it Is\nalong this stretch that the company began making connections\nFriday.\nThe remaining 15 miles into Slocan- City will be.built when the\ncompany finishes its w\u00b0rk oh :the\n45-mile, 138,000, volt line from\nSouth \u25a0 Slocan to, Whatshan over\nthe mountains in the middle of October. On this, the West Kootenay\ncompany is building 24,5 miles of\nline, and the B.C. Power Commission, the remainder. This system\nwill carry power \"from the Kootenay River, plants ,to the Okanagan Valley, from j Karnloops to\nOsoyoos, tb augment B.C. Power\nCommission supplies in the north\nend of the'Valley'and additionally\nto .serve the, company's own customers in , the j south', end. \u25a0\u25a0'...-'\nThis line originates side by side\nwith the company's Lower Slocafl\nValley line, then, branches westward up the Little Slocan itiver.\nPLANT TO CLOSE   \u00a7   ;\nLargest concentration. of, cus-\n^ers,.drawing:b*^e-5iwer'glb'\ncan line will be in Slocan City.it-\nself, which h&s,been served, by\na small, inadequate municipally-\nowned plant. After the company\nhas installed new pole Mines and\ntransformers, the city, will, abandon its plant and distribution system. '\nBecause of the scattered locations of farms on both sides of\nthe Slocan River, this rural extension project actually involves\nthe stringing of close to 60 miles\nof line.\nSumming up his company's .role\nin this phase of Slocan development, Mr. McMynn said: \"Power\nwill make a great difference. It\nwill make the valley more attractive to people coming into it, and\nmake life easier for the existing\npeople. Moreover, they will be\nable to develop their places to a\nmuch greater extent. After all,,\nwith the old hand pumps which\nwere common equipment on farmyards in the old days and are still\nused here, it took a man 10 hours\na day for two days to pump water\nwhich could be pumped .with five\ncents' worth of electricity.\"\nSo the Slocan, with its lengthening ribbon of paved highway and\nits newiy-gained power, got a new\nperspective on the future Friday.\nGround, Air Observers Would\nGuard Against Sneak Attacks\nTUNA BACK\nVICTORIA (CP) -The fisheries\npatrol cruiser Howay flashed an\nexciting message .at noon today:\nThe tuna are back.\nCanadians\nInvited To\nNew Zealand\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Lord\nNorrie, retiring governor general\nof New Zealand, Friday invited\nyoung Canadians to migrate\n\"down under.\"\n\"Everybody, wants to come to\nCanada\u2014maybe Canadians would\nlike', to turn the tables and see a\nlittle of the rest of the Commonwealth,\" he said.\n\"New Zealand has only 2,250,000\npeople. We heed to increase our\npopulation \u2014 even perhaps double\nit within the next 20 years.\"    '\nLord Norrie, who was made a\nBaron in the Queen's ; birthday\nhonors list, is returning to his native England after five year's service as New Zealand's governor-\ngeneral and eight years as.govert\nnor of-South Australia. '.\n\u25a0 He said there are 19,000 jobs\navailable in New Zealand, \"skilled,\nsemi-skilled and unskilled; for anyone who wants to work.\" \u25a0\n\"It's an ideal country for young\nCanadians to' get a start.' They\nare more than' welcome.\"\ne\nSaid Major\nAccident Causes\nSpeeding \"down a highway may\nbe some drivers' idea of' getting\nfun'out.of life, but all too often it\nputs a stop to their fun\u2014and'their\nlife, Chief Robert Harshaw stated\nFriday .in va-warnjng-.to-wacatidn'\nihg motorists.\n. As lethal as excessive, speeding\nis the, fatigue. Which.'.overcomes\nthe, driver after hours .behind the\nwheel'\"without a break, the Chief\nadded. Fatigue breeds boredom\nand drowsiness, causing.even.the\nskilled driver to doze at the wheel\nfor a few deadly seconds..\nThe fact that so many accidents\noccur on dry and straight pave:\nments, and.in clear weather, shows\nthat \"highway hypnosis\" is something more than coroner's, mumbo-\njumbo, he explains., ....'\nChief Harshaw offers a few simple and effective rules to protect\ndrivers against fatigue and road\nmonotony: ,\n1. Whenever you travel long distances, try not to travel alone.\nHave as relief driver, a friend\nwho will talk to you.     -\n2. Be sure of a good night's rest,\nand leave early in the morning.\nNever travel at night, unless you\nhave to;    I\n3. Every two hours, make It a\nh'abit to stop for an alertness beverage. Walk around .to - stretch\nyour muscles and pep up circulation.\n4.1 Keep fresh air circulating in\nyour car at all times, and! if you\nmust travel alone, and have a radio, tune into a lively broadcast.\n\\ 5. B'or safety's sake, stay within speed limits, and obey to the\nletter all traffic laws. They exist\nto protect you.\nand aerial inspection provided the\nsame facilities were available all\nover the Soviet Union.\n2. If Russia objected to this,\nhuge areas of the Arctic could be\nexchanged   for'  inspection   pur-\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The West proposed Friday that world\npeace inspectors roam Russia, Canada, the United States\nand most of Europe by plans and aground to guard against\na sneak H-bomb attack.\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles presented this major plan\nfor the North. Atlantic allies in a'two-part proposal before the\nUN sub-committee on disarmament.\nIf Russia rejects it, he suggested there could be this\nalternative: Inspection of Arctic Circle territories plus most\nof the European land mass from Ireland to the Urals, and\nPacific territory covering the southern sections of Alaska, the\nSoviet Kamchatka Peninsula and all the Aleutian and Kur-\nile Islands.\nDulles, who flew off for Washington Friday night, broadened\nPresident Eisenhower's \"open\nskies\" plan in a bid to break the\ndeadlock in disarmament negotiations which opened here iVt\nmonths ago.\nCHALLENGE TO RUSSIA\n\"If we can eliminate the threat\nof surprise attacks,. I don't think\nwe will have war,\" he said later\nin a British TV broadcast. \". . .\nwe have nothing to conceal. If Russia has nothing to conceal, she\nwill accept the plan. If she has\nsomething to hide, she will refuse\nit.\"\nSoviet delegate Valerian Zorin\ntold the subcommittee Russia will\nstudy the plan carefully. He suggested, however, that the plan is\nunfair, to Russia and favored the\nWest in that it did not allow for\nSoviet -inspection of American,\nNATO and SEATO bases in Japan,\nNorth Africa, the Middle East\nand-elsewhere. \u2022\nBritish sources . described Zorin's off-the-cuff' comment as un-\nfavorable with his immediate reaction as that of \"surprise and\nmisgiving.\"      ,    ,\nA Soviet. informant; said later\nthe main threat to Russian security -rests'. in bases '\u25a0 which would\nnot be \u25a0 open to Soviet inspection\nunder, rthe_ plan, -this informant\nalso said Russia is disappointed\nbecause Dulles' concentrated on\nmethods of' controlling disarmament rather than on cutting down\non' arms.' He said control was\nmeaningless - without substantial\ndisarmament.\nFOUR-POINT. PLAN\nDulles .unfolded what, in effect\nwas a Jour-point plan.\n1. He offered-to open Canada\nand. the United States to- ground\n3. If Russia agreed to either\nproposal, and subject to the approval of the countries concerned,\nthe inspection system could be extended to an area stretching from\nthe Atlantic to the Ural Mountains, natural barrier between European and Asiatic Russia.\n4. If this European area was\ntoo sweeping for Russia, a more\nlimited zone could be worked out,\nproviding it was shared equally\nbetween the West and the Communist bloc countries.\nEXPERT STUDY URGED\nDulles, who spoke on behalf of\nthe United States and other Western members of the subcommittee\u2014Canada, Britain and France\n\u2014urged that a committee of experts be set up at once to study\nthe technical problems involved.\nThe three'other Western delegates all spoke in support of Dulles', plan, which has been the subject of almost non-stop conferences since he arrived.here last\nMonday.  ' -.; '\u2022'\u25a0\u2022\nMost Western capitals, hailed\nthe'Western plan as a major step\ntoward world disarmament.\nBut a sour note was struck; is\nBritain. Diplomatic observers said, a. world disarmament\nagreement appears so nearer.\nVANCOUVER (CP) --The Province says an announcement is ez-\npected'at the end on this month on\nwhether th'e Lower Mainland area\nof British Columbia will get a basie\nsteel industry in the near future.\nENERGIZING of the West Kootenay Power and'Light.\nCompany's new power line into the lower Slocan Valley\nwas effected Friday for eight miles from South Slocan\nto Slocan Park. Above line foreman R. J. Kennedy is\nshown in front of the new substation at South, Slocan\npointing down the valley that the power will serve..Also\nin picture.are:linemen lack Gilker, Art Stack.gnd Stan\nBaker. Others in crew were linemen Harold Ridge, Doug-\n, las James and Joe Dowes, .truck man Joe Bourgeois and\ngroundman Bill Vlahovich. Valuable instrument in energizing, 15 KV voltmeter is read in picture at right by\n'Kenneth Ross, cssistcnt superintendent. In background\nare line foreman Kennedy and Eric Pullman,'! superintendent of transmission, and at right is electrical supervisor\nNorman Roberta who directed cut in at the substation.\nThey are checking the line voltage of the transformer\nafter energizing it for the first time.\u2014Daily News photos.\nMOSCOW (AP) - A Sdviet\nspokesman charged Friday night\nthat the West! by pledging to reject any disarmament agreement\nwhich would hinder the reunification of Germany, was-attempting\nto break up the London arms\ntalks.'\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Personal intervention by Labor Minister Stan-\nwas unsuccessful Friday in bringing about resumption of negotiations between the Canadian National (West Indies) Steamships\nand the union that has tied up its\neight-ship fleet for two months.\n'OTTAWA (CP)\u2014A specially-designed apparatus has been developed by Canadian scientists to\nincrease the speed at which the\naircraft carrier Bonaventure can\nget its firepower airborne.\nThe device, known as a jet blast\ndeflector, has been built-by the\ngas dynamics section of the engineering division' of the National\nResearch Council at the request\nof the navy. It is expected to be\ninstalled on the 19,000-ton carrier\nnext spring.\nTORONTO (CP) - Girl. Guides\nfrom 38 countries are giving Malton   Airport   a   United   Nations\n\"look\" ,as-they- arrive here daily\nfor the world centenary camp to\nbe held at -Doe Lake, near Hunts-\nviile, Ont., Aug. 8-19.\nThe camp is one of four being\nheld this year in various parts of\nthe world to mark the centenary of\nthe birth of Lprd Baden-Powell,\nfounder of the Guide and Scout\nmovements.\nKUALA LUMPUR, Malay*\n(Reuters) \u2014Oriental pomp mixes\nwith the democratic ballot box\nhere Friday when Malaya's hereditary state rulers meet to choose\na constitutional monarch.\nClad in the costly, glittering\ndress of their respective states,-\nnine local sultans will vote by ballot among themselves for a Yang\nDi-Pertuan Agong\u2014Malaya's paramount ruler.\nMalaya, due to gain independence from Britain Aug. 31, has\na draft constitution which provides\nfor a monarch as titular head.\nOTTAWA (CP)-Army recruit-,\ning increased sharply in the last\ntwo weeks of July, apparently as\na direct result of boosts in armed-\nforce's pay. '\nMore important to the army, the\nnumber of soldiers leaving the\nservice dropped.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nGREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)\u2014Dr. Bill Ditto, Greensboro orthodontist, rested In hospital today with a broken leg. His father,\nA. Y. Ditto of Charlotte, ditto.\nDr. Ditto broke his left leg while on an outing Monday. Father\nDitto came to help In the crisis and Wednesday morning ditto,\nexcept It was hit right leg, while he was shopping.\nThat wasn't the first ditto In the lives of the Dittos.\nIn the First World War Father Ditto entered the U.S. Marine\nCorps as a private and emerged a lieutenant, In the Second World-\nWar son Ditto ditto.\nFather Ditto suffered a fractured nose and ribs In military\nservice. Son Ditto ditto.\nTAMPA, Fla. (AP)\u2014The family of Joseph Morningstar lives\nIn a moon trailer at the Silver Star trailer court. Mrs. Morningstar\nsays her favorite song is Stardust.\nLOS ANGELES (AP)\u2014In the not-too-distant future your fa-'\nvorlte newspaper may not only read well but smell good, too.\nThe Printing Industries Association of Los Angeles says It now\nIs possible to print food ads that smell like fried chicken and wedding announcements that have a scent of orange blossoms.\nThe organliatlon predicts-that \"sell through smell\" may soon\nbo the advertising watchword.\nThe PIA said Thursday that more than 120 distinct aromas\nnow can bo Incorporated in modern .printing procedures.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 3, 1957\nPRQU0.Y PRESENT TJE\nENEJGEMEKT OF\nLAST DAY\u2014Complete Shows 2:00 - 7:00 - 9:20\nINGRID &>\nBERGMAN tf\n6ARY\nj\/MMy PIERSALL\n'tJostWlW Sox Star Ouff.eJ.Ji\n1 . . ii portrayed on the suei\nby. lhat explosive new guy\nTONY PERKINS   .\nSTARTS  .\nMONDAY\nTHE JIM PIERSALL STORY\nAHTHONY       HAM\nPERKINS-MAIDEN\nTtuj oxeStlng reaWtlfi \u00bbtofy of iho\ntens rati ono I all-star bolt playar m reported\nU the Saturday Evening Pott and\nReader's D)geit(\nPARAMOUNT   PICTURE\nIN VtSTAVlSION*\nSTARTS TODAY\nCIVIC\nSTARLIGHT\nI DRIVE-IN\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n9 and 10:30 p.m.\nAdult\" Entertainment\nI\nStarting   Monday:   Walt   Disney's    \"Cinderella\".    Children\nadmission 26 cents, T yrs. old\nand under free.     *\u25a0\nELK DRIVE-IN    '\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT.\nOne Showing at 9:05 p.m.\n\"KENTUCKY\" (Color)\ni \u2014 Plus \u2014\n\"THE WILD ONE\"\nMarlon Brando, Mary Murphy\nSPEEDING FINE ty>\n\u25a0 S. E. Fyfe of Nelson was fined\n$10 and oosts Friday when he\npleaded guilty before provincial\ncourt Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans' to speeding on the\nNorth Shore.\nJohn Stoochsoff of Crescent Valley pleaded not guilty to driving\nwithout due care and attention.\nCase was adjourned to August 7.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nANNOUNCEMENT of establishment of an office in Toronto\neoon by O'Brien Advertising\nAgency, Vancouver, is made by\nM. J. O'Brien, above, president.\nCompany policy will be under\ndirection of Hie agency's seven-\nman plaii3 board headed by Mr.\nO'Brien. Representation In Regina and Winnipeg is under review,\nand the agency expects to open\nin Montreal as well, Mr. O'Brien\nsaid. The agency Is already represented in Edmonton and Calgary.\nYOUR\nCOMPOUNDED\nPromptly   Carefully\nAt Moderate Prices\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress ol Health\"\n\u25a0i?,3 Josephine St,\nPhone 1203     NisJlits: 394-1\nrr tt-t- -T~T-7rrT-Trr-r~ aassEaar,\nCASTLE  THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n% Shows Nightly Starting at 6:45\n\"REACH FOR THE SKY\"\nKenneth Moore, Muriel Povlow\n- NEWS -\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"HIGH  SOCIETY\"\nBlng Crosby, Grace Kelly\nSHORTS \u2014 CARTOONS\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B. C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n'STORM OVER THE NILE\"\ntech - cine\nLawrence Harvey, Anthony\nSteele, Jan. Robertson Justice\nEuropeans Like\nCanadian Army\nMONTREAL (CP)-An RCAF\nchaplain -credits \"the Canadian\nway of life\" for the high regard\nin which Canadian forces are\nheld by Europeans.\nRev. Norman Watson of Montreal, protestant chaplain of the\nRCAF's NATO air division headquarters at Metz, France, arrived\nhere on the liner Ivernia.\nAcoompanied by his wife and\nfour children! he was returning\nfrom a three-year tour of duty\noverseas. He will become senior\nstation chaplain at the RCAF station at St. Johns, Que.\nGENERAL COURTESY\nSuccess of the majority of Canadian service personnel in Europe,\nhe said, may be attributed to general Canadian upbringing, interest\nin the host country, efforts to\nlearn the language of the host\ncountry, subtle methods of lending a helping hand and general\ncourtesy.\n. \"Canada's double culture is popular in France,\" he said.\nRev. Mr. Watson took part in\nthe first international Christmas\nservice held by Canada, the\nUnited States and France in 1955.\nand in the Reformation Day service at Temple Neuf in Metz. He\nwas also active in orphanage and\nrefugee work.\nDuring Iheir stay in Europe.\nMr. and Mrs. Watson visited the\nBenelux countries\u2014Belgium, the\nNetherlands and Liixembourg-\nand also Austria, Switzerland,\nItaly, Spain, Malta, Gibraltar,\nNorway and the United Kingdom.\nWorm Situation\nUnder Control\nEarthworms have been causing\ntrouble at the Nelson Golf and\nCountry Club, but officials said\nFriday they feel they have the situation under control.\nA dousing with chemicals resulted in a harvest of 70 pounds of\ndead worms recently off No. 9\ngreen. Threatment of No. 1 green\nproduced a similar catch.\nOfficials pointed out ground at\nIhe course is rich, lending itself\nto accumulation of worms.\ni Young to Royals\n|    QUEBEC (CP) - The Montreal\nj Royal of the International Baseball League Thursday announced\n'.he. signing   of second   baseman\nDick Young, aca.uired in a straight\nj !rade with the St. Paul Saints of\n; :h6 American Association.   \/\ni    The Royal's gave up utility in-\n1 fielder Lacey Curry, 25.\nihed \"Me Too\" Gov't\ned dpeajcer\nThe time has come when Canada\nmust stop having a \"me too\" government which is often influenced\nby wishes of British, United States\nand other governments, and \"stand\nup and say, 'This is our country',\"\nHerbert J. Bruch, MLA for Esquimalt, Vancouver Island, told a\nSocial Credit \"birthday party\"\nFriday night in Church of the Redeemer hall.\nThe party, which took the form\nof a pot-luck supper, was one of\nsimilar celebrations throughout\nthe province to commemorate Social Credit Day, the fifth anniversary of the party's taking power\nin B.C. About 80 members and\nworkers came from Trail, Rossland, Castlegar, Burton, Nakusp,\nKaslo ahd Nelson.\nMr. Bruch termed it \"an honor\nand a privilege\" to be guest at\nthe party, and hoped it \"will not\nbe too far distant\" when Social\nCredit would come to power in Ottawa. He said the occasion was\n\"wishing a happy birthday to\nyourself,\" since Social Credit was\nactually a \"grass roots\" movement.\nHe brought greeting' from Premier W. A. C. Bennett, Noel\nMurphy of Vancouver, president\nof the B.C. Social Credit League,\nand Hon. W. D. Black,.MLA for\nNelson-Creston, provincial secretary, and minister of municipal affairs.\n\"Our cabinet ministers are under a severe pressure and strain,\"\nhe said, mentioning the death last\nyear of Hon. Ralph Chetwynd.\n\"Such devotion,\" Mr. Bruch\nthought, is \"something to be thankful for.\"\nMr. Bruch reminded those who\nfound it difficult to have \"sufficient patience\" the party must be\nevolutionary, not revolutionary.\nWISHES PM WELL\nIt is good to \"just take stock of\nourselves,\" Mr. Bruch continued.\nThis \"Follow John,\" slogan of new\nConservative Prime Minister John\nDiefenbaker, \"is something we can\ntake heed of. We wish him well.\"\nMr. Bruch said Social Credit was\nnot so much interested in achieving power as in establishing principles and policies. Freedom of\nthe individual is, he thought,\n\"dwindling day by day.\"\nIf the Canadian people band to-\nOnf. Optimistic\nOn Polio Decline\nTORONTO (CP)-Ontario medical officials are hopeful that the\npoliomyelitis season will not be\nnoticed this year.\n\"Our polio season does not get\nrolling until mid-August and we\ndon't expect it to roll at all this\nyear,\" said Dr. John T. Phair,\nOntario deputy health minister.\n\"At least we hope it won't in the\nage-group that has received its\nthree vaccinations of salk serum.\"\nThere have been no cases of\npotto in Toronto in the past three\nyears among persons who have received their three vaccinations of\nthe serum.\nBIG IMPROVEMENT\nThe few cases of polio which\noccurred in Ontario and Canada\nduring 1956 have strengthened\nhopes for a decrease in polio attacks this year. In Ontario last\nyear there were only five cases\nof polio among 840,000 children\nup to 19 years old who had been\nvaccinated. In all Canada a total\nof 4,000,000 then had been vaccinated under the federal-provincial program that started in\nApril, 1955. In this age group, up\nto the late teens, there were no\npotto deaths.\nThe record for number of polio\ncases in Canada -was during the\nepidemic year of 1953, when the\ntotal reached -8,878. Last year\nCanada had 600 cases, the lowest\nnumber since 1945. The Dominion\nBureau of Statistics reported 83\ncases so far this year across Canr\nada.\ni\nCpl.-Rogers\ngether they can get the results\nthey want irom the management\nof their affairs, according to Mr.\nBruch. On the principle of security with freedom, Social Credit\nbelieves, he stated, \"that which is\nphysically possible ' and desirable\ncan and must be made financially\npossible,\"\nOn the national field, he said\nSocial Crediters \"know what our\nintentions are,\" and are waiting to\nsee the government's intentions.\nThere are many people who\nwould like to come to Canada,\nMr. Bruch said, adding the necessity of a \"proper immigration policy.\" He quoted from several American publications telling, about\nCanada's natural resources.\nWithin B. C, he pointed out,\nthere are three damsites larger\nthan the largest two American\ndams combined. Mr. Bruch reminded his listeners that northern\nAlberta contains more oil than\nanywhere else. In spite of these\nand-other facts, he charged Canadians are \"sitting back and prepared to play second fiddle to someone else.\" He said Canada must be I\nprepared to distribute its excessive |\nwealth, abundance and knowledge\nwith other less fortunate nations.\nTRADE DEFICIT UP\nCanada's trade deficit is increas\ning \"year after year,\" Mr. Bruch\nsaid, while other nations are crying for goods of which this country has an abundance, such\nfarm products. He said B. C. had\nfound a way to do business with\nthese people. Other countries had\nto go behind the iron curtain to\nbuy wheat they normally buy from\nCanada, when, he said, wheat\nis rotting on the prairies. He\nthought it little wonder that Canadians rose in arms against, the\nformer national administration,\nOutlining some ways in which\nthe U. S. was making profits on\nCanadian raw products, Mr. Bruch\nsaid, \"we don't mind helping other\nnations out\" but must protect the\nproud heritage given to Canadian\ncitizens.\nMr. Bruch- wondered why on\nearth Canada has to beg on world\nmoney markets and supply United\nStates markets with metals at a\nloss to Canada.\nMr. Bruch expressed the hope\nmatters on which the Liberals failed to act will be looked after by\ntheir successors in Ottawa. In\n1939, he said, 48 cents of every tax\ndollar went to the federal govern\nment, leaving 52 cents for the provincial and municipal governments.\nNow the federal government takes\n77 cents, leaving only 23 cents for\nthe other two governments. It is\ntime for a \"decent deal\" on tax\nsharing, ,the speaker commented\nsince the \"bulk of what you and I\nneed\" comes from the municipal\nand provincial governments.\nCONVENTION SOON\nJ. L. Hobson of Nelson, a Social\nCredit organizer, introduced Mr,\nBruch. D. L. Brothers of Trail,\nwho ran second in the four-way\nKootenay-West federal riding in\nJune, thanked the speaker and the\nNelson-Creston Social Crediters.\nChairman Mrs. W. J. VanMaa-\nrion, president of the West Kootenay federal and Nelson-Creston\nprovincial organizations, was chairman. Mr. Black, she said, was\nspeaking at Creston, and R. E.\nSommers, MLA for Rossland-Trail,\nwas gues^ at a similar function\nelsewhere in B.C.\nMrs. VanMaarion said Mr. Black\nwill arrive here August 14, staying\nfour days to talk over local pro,\nblems. She also reminded fellow\nSocreds about the provincial convention October 24 to 26 in Vancouver.\nA singsong was led by Colin\nBaker and J. A. Wilson, .with accompanist Frank Lowe, all of Nelson. Mr. Baker song two solos.\nCorporal James Rogers, member of RCMP Nelson subdivision\nstaff for seven years, leaves today with his wife and family for\nVancbuver, where he will join their\nRCMP headquarters staff.\nVeteran of 17 years' service in\nthe RCMP, the officer came here\nin 1950 from Lethbridge. At that\ntime he was a constable, and was\npromoted to corporal in 1952.. After training at the Regina Police\nColjege, he was kept on there\nas first aid and boxing1 instructor,\nthen posted to Whitehorse, Yukon.\nMrs. Rogers was associated with\na women's group at First Presbyterian Church. Their two sons are\nRandy, four, and Pat, seven.\nBRITISH ENGINEER\nLIKES NORTHWEST\nFORT ST. JOHN, B.C. (CP)-\n\"It was a great deal better out\nhere than I had expected,\" said\nRoy Gittins, who less than a year\nago was supervising construction\nof a $5,000,000 chocolate factory\nat Liverpool, England.\n\u25a0The graduate of London University now is district engineer\nfor the highways department in1\nthis northeastern B.C. community\njust inside the Alberta-B.C. boundary, 350 miles northwest of Edmonton.\n\"I had heard many, wonderfuj\nthings back east about the tremendous Peace River development, and>I wasn't disappointed,\"\nhe said.   -\nBorn 30 years ago in Leeds,\nYorkshire, Mr. Gittins arrived in\nCanada last January to take up\na position with a Toronto firm of\nconsulting engineers. Some weeks\nlater he answered a newspaper\nadvertisement for the district engineer's position' here.\nADVENTUROUS TRIP\nRecalling his trip into the northwest, He, said, \"to get here I\nthink I travelled by every me-\nAMMAN, Jordan (Reuters) \u2014\nAlong the road the Good Samaritan once walked, King Hussein of\nJordan Friday whizzed in his automobile.\nThere he witnessed an accident\nbetween a truck and an automobile.\nHe stopped, saw that members\nof an Arab family were injured,\nhelped them into his own car and\ndrove them to hospital.\nchanical means possible, except a\nbicycle.\n\"I travelled by train from Toronto to Vancouver, then by boat\n.to Victoria, plane to Prince Rupert, and to conclude the journey\nwe drove here,\" he said.\nMarried, with a baby daughter,\nhe served with the intelligence\ncorps of the British Army In the\nMiddle East and Europe for 2 Vt\nyears since the Second World\nWar:\nHe was surprised to find modern\nand fairly large buildings at this\ntown at mile 38 of the Alaska\nHighway.\n\"The only resemblance Fort St.\nJohn bears to an English village\nis in name,\" he added. \"English\nvillages are placid and settled,\nand you don't see any developments like this.\"\nHe said he had been prompted\nto move to Canada because of the\nEnglish weather. But he reserved\ncomment on the Fort St. John\nweather until he ' goes through\n\"the Initiation of a northern winter.\"\nNELSON COUPLE\nATTEND DANCE\nINSTITUTE IN U.S.\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. James, Nelson square dancing enthusiasts,\nhave just returned from a week-\nlong square dance institute at Golden, Colorado, where the latest\ntechniques and fundamentals were\ntaught by leading callers from th'e\nUnited States.\nMr. and Mrs. James were the\nonly Canadians at the institute,\nand they mingled with square\ndancers from Texas and other\nstates. As an example of the desire\nsquare dancers have to help each\nother, the Nelson couple helped\nteach a Pennsylvania couple who\nhad not even heard of Nelson.\nWhen Mr. and Mrs. James returned home from their vacation, they\nfound a note from the couple they\nhad assisted thanking them for\ntheir kindness.\nMr. James tape-recorded some\nof the instructions to refresh his\nmemory and play to local square\ndance groups.\nPleads Guilty to\nContributing; Case\nAdjourned 60 Days\nCase of John Paul Ross of Nelson was adjourned to October 1\nwhen he pleaded guilty Thursday\nto contributing to juvenile delinquency. The case, which involved\na young girl, was heard by Juvenile Court Judge William Evans.\nJubilation in Lower Slocan\nAs Electricity Turned on\nW. H. Crossley\nMoving To Coast\nAfter four years here, William\nH. Crossley, district supervisor\nfor the B.C. department of welfare,\nis being transferred to Vancouver effective August 10.\nMr. Crossley's successor, Warner Sanderman of Victoria, is expected here by Monday, and Mr.\nCrossley will be with him for a\nweek. \u2022\nFollowing completion of school\nhere, Mr. Crossley entered in-service training with the welfare department, spending one year in\nVictoria and two years covering\nthe West Coast via a department\nboat. He took a welfare course in\n1951 at University of British Columbia on a bursary.\nHe spent four months in Haney,\nthey went to Cranbrook. After two\nyears there he came to Nelson,\nsucceeding Douglas Fowler, who\nwas appointed student supervisor\nof the UBC faculty. His transfer\nto Nelson was partly because of\nbis familiarity with the Doukhobor problems and the district.\nSnapped Cable\nKills One, Whips\nFive Over Cliff\nVANCOUVER (CP) - One man\nwas killed and five others were\nthrown 35 feet over a cliff when a\nsteel cable snapped and lashed\ninto them at D'Arcy, 120 miles\niiorth of here. Friday.\nDead is Roy Woodrow, 46, of\nNorth Burnaby, who fell against\na stump at the foot of the cliff.\nThe men were stringing the cable\nthrough a to\\?er, using a tractor\nto pull it through, when it broke\nwithout warning.\nThe backlash knocked the men\noff the cliff.\nThe  injured  were   flown  to\nVancouver hospital.\nThey were Lou Marcellus, 29, of\nSurrey, chest and head injuries\nHerbert Oesrosier, 26, Birken, leg\ninjuries; Nick Kovich, 56, Vancouver, leg injuries; Tom Messenger, 26, Vancouver, hand injuries.\nCoast Relatives Seek Custody\nOf Orphaned Freedomite Children\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Vancouver student nurse is seeking custody of two nieces and a nephew\norphaned last week when their\nSons of Freedom Doukhobor\nmother committed suicide.\nHilda Gienger 'has made legal\napplication for the three children\nof Mrs. Mary Gienger on behalf\nof Miss Gienger's parents and\nbrother, who have neighboring\nfarms in the Rosedale area of the\nFraser Valley. The application\nlikely will be heard August 23 at\nNelson.\nThe application is opposed by\nHelen Antifaev of Penticton, whose\nelderlv parents at present are caring for the children of Krestova\nwhere their widowed mother lived\nuntil her death July 24.\nthe eldest child, Patsy, 12, was\na student at the government-operated New Denver dormitory school\nuntil Mrs. Gienger's death. Police\ndiscounted a contention of Freedomite leaders that the woman,\nwho was found hanged in an outside toilet, was despondent about\nPatsy's absence.\nTAKEN TO SCHOOL\n\u25a0 The girl was one of 89 Doukhobor children taken to New Denver when their parents refused to\nsend them to day schools.\nMiss iGenger said Thursday the\nother two children, Shirley, 7, and\nFreddy, 5. who have never been\nto school, speak Russian and apparently are unable to understand\nEnglish. \u2022\nShe   said   the   children   were\nbrought up in a normal Canadian\nmanner until five years ago when\nFred Geinger, their- father and her\nbrother, was killed in a crossing\naccident at Karnloops. Until that\ntime the family lived in Hope.\nAfter her husband's death, Mrs.\nGienger moved to the Krestova\nDoukhobor community, where her\nrelatives live.\n\"I'm so excited that I haven't\ndone my dinner dishes today.\"\nWith those words, Mrs. W. Holu-\nbowick, who lives at the south\nend of Slocan Park, greeted West\nKootenay Power and Light Company crew members who had\ncome to bring electricity to her\nhome for the first time.\nTo the Holubowlck family went\nthe distinction of being the first\ncustomers to be cut In Friday on\nthe  company's  $252,000 hydroelectric line from Crescent Valley to Slocan City.\nOne by one, each customer along\nthe 30-mile line and its 20 to 30\nmiles of branch line will be, connected.\nMrs. Holubowick's' reaction to\nthe arrival of power was typical\nof the welcome that will be given\nby other customers along the scenic lower Slocan Valley in succeeding weeks. i\nSince moving to Slocan Park\nthree years ago from Vancouver,\nMrs. Holubowick has had to put\nup with a number of inconveniences, all because of lack of electricity.\nShe and her husband, a CPR\nlocomotive engineer, have had to\npump water or carry it from the\nriver. She has had to heat it on\na coal and wood stove. They've\nread and worked by coal oil lamps,\nand they've tuned in on a battery\nradio.\nAFFECTS LIVELIHOODS\nFriday everything changed in\nthe Holubowick house. Mrs. Holubowick happily switched on her\ntrilight lamp, although it was\nbroad daylight inside. She turned\non their combination radio-phonograph which had been unused for\nthree years. And she prepared to\nput into operation their electric\npump and hot water heater. As for\nthe coal oil lamps, they would be\ndiscarded.\n\"I still can't believ it,\" the\npretty housewife said as the crew\nleft after making the connection\nond checking her meter box.\nAt the neighboring stores of\nPaul Markoff and Sam Conkin\nthere also was jubilation when the\npower came on. It affects their\nlivelihoods as well as the daily\nlives of themselves and their families.\nMarkoff, who has operated a gas\nplant for the store \"but couldn't\nrun any appliances on it,\" changed\n\u2022 AINSWORTH\nHOT SPRINGS\nOPEN\n10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.\nExcept -Mondays\nClosed All Day\nDINING ROOM HOURS\n7 TO 9 A.M.\n11 TO 1 P.M.\n5 TO 7 P.M.\nover to the new power for his recently installed $2000 gasoll+o\npumps.\nHis first customers on the iwv\nsystem were Mr. and Mrs. Wi -\nliam Macenko of Calgary, wr-o\nstopped to fill up the tank' of thoir\ncar on a holiday trip to Penticton.\n. For 17 years Markoff has be\u00bbn\nmaking the best of a gas plant\nthat customarily failed at the m\u00abt\nawkward times\u2014\"when business\nwas heaviest\"\u2014and with kerosi ie\nrefrigeration.\nFriday Markoff, his wife Wd\ntheir three children talked of noli -\ning but the arrival of electrtoi 1\nenergy.\n\"I didn't know whether I Whs\ncoming or going,\" Markoff Mid\nlaughingly. \"1 was giving tie\nwrong change . . . handing lut\nbills instead of silver.\"\nMr. and Mrs. Sam Conkin wfia\nhave operated their store for II\nyears, said: \"We've sure own\nlooking forward to getting el\u00ab5-\ntricity.\"\nThey have been renting a aimll\nelectric plant at a cost of nearly\n$75 a month for the store aide.\nNINE KOOTENAY\nTRAFFIC DEATHS\nIN 7 MONTHS\nThere were the same number of\nKootenay traffic deaths up to July\n31 this year as last year, according\nto Nelson RCMP detachment.\nScore both years was nine, \u00bbnd\nthere were 34 traffic deaths during\nthe whoje of last year. The Nelson\nsubdivision covers the Southeastern B.C. area, including Trail,\nCreston, Cranbrook, Nelson, and\nother points.\nBOY ADMITS THEFT\nA Nelson juvenile was placed or\n12 months' probation Friday by\nJuvenile Court Judge William\nEvans after the boy admitted thell\nof groceries from a local store.\nRestitution has been made.\nA Complete  New\nType of\nWork Boot\n\"CAT-TREADS\"\nBy GREB ...\nLeather   uppers   vulcanized\nto the sole for amazing new\nefficiency!\nA Boot in one complete unit\nlight-flexible non-slip.\nPair    $9.95\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\nLATE SPORT\nExhibition football at Portland,\nOregon: Edmonton Eskimos 29,\nB.C. Lions 8 (final).\nThe Weather\nNELSON  45 73   .05\nToronto   59 90\nPenticton   1  47 18\nVancouver  49 69\nVictoria    50 68\nWhitehorse  \u201e  53 77  .01\nSan Francisco   55 - 79\nSpokane     48 77\n^_\nAn emergent communication of Sentinel Lodge No.\n146, AF and AM, will be\nheld In Twin Rivers Hall,\nCastlegar. Monday, August\n6, at 12:30 p.m. for the purpose of attending the funeral of Our late Brother, Ar.\nchlo Ferguson.\nVisiting brethren are rt.\nquested to attend.\nBy order of the Secretary.\n_\u00a3\nINSTALL YOUR\nGas Furnace\nNOW\n'BtJY ON OUR BUDGET PLAN\nNO PAYMENTS UNTIL OCTOBER\nNever Before So Much for So Little\nHERE'S WHAT YOU  GET:\n\u2022 T957 Automatic forced Air Gas Furnace and Controls\n\u2022 85,000  BTU  Input\n\u2022 20 Year Guarantee on Heat Exchanger\n\u2022 5 New Warm-Air Ducts To Existing Registers\n\u2022 All Necessary Gas Piping From Meter To Furnace\n\u2022 All Electrical Wiring To Existing Circuit\n\u2022 All Necessary Permits and Labor To Install\nFurnaces Installed by\nGovernment .Licenced\nGas Fitters\nAct Now \u2014 Avoid the\nFall .Rush \u2014 Don't\nBe Disappointed Later\nCome In Today for\nFREE ESTIMATES\nAs Described Above\n\u00b0* $49 5\n\u25a0\". *   \u25a0\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nPHONE 1555\nNelson's Oldest Gas Heating Firm\n532 BAKER ST.\n <p\/35\nFor Big Contest\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Prizes totalling\nover $4500 in retail value Ior the\nstation wagon bingo on behalf of\nthe Dr. F. W. Green Memorial\nHome Society the evening of Saturday, August 10, have been delivered and are on display. The\nblue station wagon is in the yard\nat a garage,, and unoccupied\npremises at 1011 Baker Street is\ndisplaying the camping outfit of\ntent, sleeping bags and beds,\ntable model sewing machine,\npower lawn mower, and fibreglass\nboat. The sixth prize, a 20-foot\nplastic swimming pool, is too\nlarge to display.\nRobert Willis, general, chairman\nfor the bingo, reports arrangements well in hand for the event,\nand Lions, Rotary, Gyros, Kinsmen, Kiwanis and other organizations have submitted the names of\ntheir volunteers to help.\nVolunteers who helped prepare\ncards were H. C. King, equipment\nchairman, Derry Appleton,. Ing\nGrant, Louis Holmes, Ray Meredith, Merrill Sproule, Cece Tiller1.\nBob Wheeler, Ron Bailey, Roy\nLittle, Bob Barr, Norman Floen,\nBill Reilly, Bob Laurie and Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles Rosevear.\nThe party has been called by\nArena chairman George Jealous\nto prepare the rink Wednesday for\nsetting up benches. Assigned from\nthe general list of volunteer helpers for that night are Archie\nKary, Harold Kniess, R. Watson,\nC. Weir, Dave Reekie, Murray\nWheaton, Joe Downey, All ie\nHughes, Jack Walkley, Dick Light-\nburn, Fred Large, Ernie Basso,\nBen Parker, L. G. Truscott, Bill\nHume, Dave Frame, Bill MacDonald, Barry Swinton, Cam Ferguson and Dr. Laird Wylie. This\ncrew is also expected to turn up\nagain the night of the Bingo to\nundertake posts assigned them\nduring play and for admission of\nthe players.\nAssigned volunteers to work additionally the night of the bingo,\nare Bill Atkinson, Bruce Smith,\nKen Brown, Allan Dick, Grant\nJackson, Albert Holmes, Glen\nCockwell, Reef MacFarlane, Bob\nCockwell, Gordon Lyons, Glen\nSmith, Ted Hardy, Joe Proven-\nzano, Jim Dunn, Ed Hedley, Cliff\nAikman and George Dougall:\nCanada Packers Net\nProfit Declines\nTORONTO (CP)-Canada Pack-\n#rs Ltd. reports net profit of $4,-\n506,506 for the year ended March\n31. This compares with $4,745,533\nIn the preceding year.      \/\nIn contrast to the decrease in\nnet profit, the company reports,\ndollar sales this year hit a record\n$467,188,000\u2014an increase of 7.6 per\ncent\u2014compared with last year's\nsales of $434,221,000.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 3, 1957 \u2014 3\nSlocan Residents Elated Over Power\nELECTRICAL SERVICE came to the Slocan Friday when West\nKootenay' Power and Light Company power surged into the transformers at South Slocan. Power was realized as result of the work\nof many. Picture at left shows lineman Harold Ridge working on\nthe line. Centre photo shows storekeeper Paul Markoff using an.\nelectric power-operated gasoline pump, a job which formerly had\nto be done by hand. Looking on, as pleased as their father, are\nsons Anthony and Phillip Markoff. Obviously delighted over power\nto operate household fixtures is Mrs. W. Holubowick, shown just\nafter turning on a lamp. (See stories Front Page and Page 2).\n\u2014Daily News photos.\nLittle League Field\nOpens At Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY - The new Little\nLeague baseball field above Mark\nCreek along Rotary Drive, financ;\ned and constructed mostly by work\nparties ot Rotary Club as a community project, was formally opened Wednesday evening as an expansion of Rotary Park, and was\nalso presented immediately to the\ncity for administration by the city\nparks board.\nIt is a turf ball field to be reserv-\nHeavy Prison\nTerms in\nNegro Slaying\nCHICAGO (AP) - Five white,\nteen-agers charged with murder in\nthe hammer slaying of a 17-year-\nold Negro received prison terms\nThursday ranging from 14 to 20\nyears. Two others were granted\nnew trials.\nThe youths were among 15 orig-\ninaly named in an indictment as\nthe slayers of Alvin Palmer, struck\ndown March 11 as he stood at a\nsouth side corner waiting for a bus.\nOne of the pack, Joseph-\nSchwartz,. 18, admitted wielding\nthe hammer and earlier received\na 50-year prison sentence.\nMuseum visits are a travel must. You can't always take pictures\ninside, but don't forget the outside.\nTravelling With Cameras\nIt's safe to say that travel and\npictures go together just as surely\nas the \"love and marriage\" popular singers .sing about.\nNo, we aren't referring to the\nEicture postcards we all ,send\n6me to \"wish you were here.\"\nWe mean pictures that you take\nWith your own camera\u2014snapshots,\ncolor slides, and\/or movies\u2014that\nrecord your travels and keep your\nImpressions vividly alive for many\nyears to come.\nNote that we say \"snapshots,\ncolor slides, and\/or movies\"\u2014because all three kinds of cameras\nmake equally good traveling companions whether you're off on a\nweekend junket or setting out\non a long jaunt around the world.\nAnd more and more travelers to-\n;day like.to be armed with at least\ntwo cameras to preserve on lilm\nthe complete story of their travel\nexperiences. Movie and stereo\ncameras \u2014 light in weight, compact, easy-to-operate \u2014 have become especially popular with the\nvacation traveler because they\nassure him such a true-to-life\nrecord of his trip.\nWhether your picture - taking\nactivities are limited to snapshots\nor include the extra dimension of\nItereo and the full sweep of\nmovies, you'll want to be prepared to take lots of pictures. Be\nsure to keep plenty of film on\nhand and have your camera\nloaded and set for approximately\nthe lighting conditions that prevail. That way, you won't miss\nany of the countless picture possibilities confronting you at every\nturn.\nThe seasoned travelers we know\ntell us it's a mistake to become\na slave to equipment. Camera and\nfilm are the only items you really\nneed\u2014and a lot of extra gadgets\ncan. become more of a hindrance\nthan a help on a trip.\nTo capture truly memorable\npictures of your travels, you don't\nhave to have professional skill\nor be' a born artist, either. Surrounded by Interesting people and\npicturesque places, you can hardly-\nmiss coming up with some pretty\nwonderful shots. Always impressive is a lively image of human\nactivity set against a striking\nman-made or natural background\n\u2014 imposing architecture, landscaped gardens, carefully tended\nfarmland, or perhaps just the\nsheer majesty of mountains, sea\nand sky.\nMovmg in close to your subject\nwill help you catch with your\ncamera what you see with your\neye. By excluding all unnecessary\ndetail, you'll be abje to fill the\nviewfinder with the particular\nscene you have in mind.\n655 \u2014John Van Guilder\ned for exclusive use of kid baseball teams, and required a year to\nconstruct starting with hauling of\nbase rock, sand and loam to make\nthe necessary fill; then cultivation\nand planting of lawn. Rotary Park,\nof which it is an extension, was\nsimilarly provided by the community in Kimberley's pre-municipal\ndays, equipped as a children's\nplayground, and was presented to\nthe city in 1947 when it was extended, additional facilities installed and it was formally opened by\nthe governor-general, Viscount Alexander of Tunis. i\nKimberley's widespread' area\nformerly offered a wide choice of\nvacant locations for baseball, but\ngradual building up eliminated\nthese and reduced possible ball\nfields to a minimum. With around\n300 boys registered in Kid Baseball Leageus here the new field\nwill go into almost full-time use.\nHistoric Aufos\nKept on View\nCALGARY (CP) - Two historic\nautomobiles repose in antiquated\nsplendor at the Provincial Institute of Technology and Art here.\nOne is a Locomobile steam car\nof 1900 vintage, a car made from\na Stanley Steamer patent sold out\nand built under the name Locomobile. Steam cars were first\nbuilt by the Stanley brothers, and\nthe patent on this particular car\nwas sold and built under a different name.   \u25a0\nThe other is a Maxwell of unknown origin and ownership. In\nfact, recent housecleaning in old\nstorerooms at Tech unearthed the\nfusty old relic that no one had\nremembered was there.\nThe Maxwell is a mystery, for\nall records concerning the old auto\nseem to 'have been lost. Charles\nCoate, former head of Tech's auto\ndepartment, who died in 1952, left\nno information about the Maxwell.\n- The Locomobile has been a curiosity at Tech for at least 25 years.\nIt was owned by a man named\nJackson and became part of the\nestate when he died..\nStan Green, supervisor of the\nAeronautics department, is putting\nit into running order. It has a gasoline vaporizing burner and will\nbe more or less operable once a\nnew boiler is installed.\nMacmiilan Defends\nMinister's Action\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The House\nof Commons Thursday rejected an\nopposition Labor motion calling\nfor the resignation of a junior\nCabinet minister because a complaint by him led to a Scottish\nnewspaper editor being dismissed.\nThe voting was 293 to .233 for the\ngovernment.\nPrime Minister Macmiilan said\nthat interference with the liberty\nof the press by members of the\ngovernment was \"very difficult or\nvirtually impossible.\"\nDuring the Suez crisis, the editor condemned the government's\naction and MacPherson complained to him and to the directors of the newspaper. The editor\nwas fired.\nElaho River Power\nDevelopmeht Looms\nVANCOUVER (CP) - B.C. Electric Company has applied to the\nprovincial government -for a licence to develop the Elaho River,\n80 miles Northeast of here, for possible use-as a. power source.\nChief Engineer Tom Ingledow\nsaid no detailed plans have yet\nbeen drawn up and the application\nhas been made in order to facili\ntate investigation of power potential. The application seeks permission to build a dam for storage of\n600,000 acre feet of water a year\nand to divert 1,900,000 acre feet\nof water yearly for electric power.\nTourists Flock\nInfo Manitoba\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Manitoba\nthis year is experiencing an unprecedented tourist boom.\nAmong visitors, those from the\nUnited States are expected to pour\n$28,00l),00fl into the province this\nyear, while visitors from other\nprovinces and from overseas will\nbring the tourist income total to\nnew .heights.\nTourist traffic for the first\nquarter of 1957 was 21 per cent\nhigher than a year ago. The Manitoba department of industry and\ncommerce believes the second\nquarter, when figures are complete, will show a 30-per cent increase.\nThe- Manitoba tourist industry\nhas bounded ahead since 1950, but\nthe increase this year is bigger\nthan ever.\nMORE ACCOMMODATION\nJust seven years ago the prov-\nince had only four motels. It now\nhas 65, with'more going up.\nTourist authorities say that\nAmericans visit Manitoba for\ncooler weather, simply to see a\nnew place or to enjoy some good\nfishing. One tourist, asked why he\nvisited Manitoba, said he was just\ncurious to see what Canadians\nlooked like. >(\nDo the tourists enjoy Manitoba?\nMost of them do, says motel operator Mrs. George Quinn. Rut a\nstandard complaint was lack of\nroad signs, and another was of\ninadequate facilities at some\nnorthern camping spots.\nA survey among motel operators\nshowed that a large factor in the\ntourist boom is the province's advertising and promotion work in\nthe United States, and particularly\nthe \"pine to palm\" tour by a\ngroup of Manitobans, sponsored\nby Winnipeg Mayor Stephen Juba,\nwho went through the central\nUnited States earlier this year.\nMany visitors to Manitoba had\nbeen influenced by this tour, said\nmotel operatdrs. 1\nMrs. Alec Dugalle, another motel operator, said they still get the\noccasional tourist who expects to\nsee nothing but snow and ice,\nMounties and Indians this far\nnorth.\nMODEL FLIES 21 MILES\nLONG BEACH, Calif. (AP)-A\nsmall radio-controlled model plane\nhas- flown 21 miles from the mainland to Santa Cafalina island. It\nis believed to be a \"first\" in\nmodel plane history. Its builder,\nKenneth A. Willard, 45, said the\ncraft flew at an average speed of\n27 miles an hour. Willard piloted\nthe model with a radio transmitter from an accompanying speedboat..\nJ. HAROLD NPOIER DSC)BCP.\nDOCTOR OF SURGICAL CHIROPODY\nFOOT SPECIALIST\n,    Will Be In TRAIL At The\nCROWN   POINT  HOTEL\nWednesday \u2014 August 14th\nFor Appointments, Phone 103-R between 0 and 12 a.m.\nFarmers'Co-Op at Cranbrook\nGrows lo S8M00 Business\nCRANBROOK - Now in its 12th\nyear of successful operation, Cranbrook Farmers' Cooperative recently distributed $1236.26 among\nits 140 members as three per\ncent dividend on paid-up shares\nand four 'per cent patronage refund to members. This action was\nratified at the anual general membership meeting in the spring when\nthe audited financial report for\n1956 was presented.\nThe report showed volume of\nbusiness done through the Cooperative's store on Ninth Avenue during the year was $87,019.09. H. C.\nKing has been manager ever since\nthe business was started. The store\ndeals in public sales of irrigation\nsystems, farm implements, fertilizer, pumps, hardware and work\nclothing, and is agency for sale\nand shipment of livestock and produce to the open market. .\nAudited balance sheet showed\nCooperative assets of $46,823.25,\nconsisting of value of $22,953.83 in\nits four year old store building,\nfixtures, equipment, land and truck\nafter depreciation, merchandise\ninventory of $22,805, and advance\non hay delivery. Listed as capital\nand surplus was $19,365.31.\nAt the annual meeting where the\nreport was presented members\nnamed officers for 1957 as L. G.\nPipen, president, John Clark of\nWycliffe, George Creelman of\nMayook, and Max Bidder ofWard-\nner, directors, and J. W. Awmack\nof, Cranbrook, secretary. Auditors\nfor the Cooperative are Campbell,\nShangland and Company.\nHUGE IRON DEPOSITS\nHONG KONG (Reuters)-Com-\nmunist China has 11,000,000,000\ntons of known iron ore deposits\nand possibly more that is still undiscovered, the Communist New\nChina news agency said.\nBig deposits found in Szechwan\nand Hupeh provinces, it said, warranted the setting up of new iron\nand steel centres there.\nTRAIL MAN'S SISTER DIES, 74\nTRAIL \u2014 Agnes Isabel Wardell,\n74, of Victoria, wife of the late\nGeorge Wardell and sister of\nDonald Wardell of Trail, died recently. Burial took place Wednesday. Also surviving are three,\ndaughters, Mrs. R. W. (Gladys)\nTomlinson and Mrs. C. R. (Ber-i\nnice) Wight.of Victoria, also Mrs.\nT.  J.   (Josephine)   Longman  of\nHUDSON BAY\nThe average depth of Hudson\nBay is 70 fathoms, or 420 feet.\nNorth Vancouver; three sons Wilfred V. and W. Raymond Wardell\nof Victoria, also Herbert A. Wardell of Vancouver; 17 grandchildren; one brother, Samuel\nWalker Forteath of New Westminster.\nBIG\nWEEK-END\nAHEAD\nYOUR  HEADQUARTERS\nFOR...\nCAMERAS      \u2022 FILM      \u2022 PHOTO SUPPLIES\nAND INFORMATION\nCAMERA  STORE\n497   BAKER  ST.\nTlsd&jwL\nDE\nPARK\nFUN AND FOOD FOR ALL\nFeaturing...\nGIGANTIC\nBEEF\n*n\nand\nCoffee\nAnd Foot L-o-n-g'Hot Dogs\n\u25bc    DANCING    in the, Evening on the Tennis Court\nit SPECIAL BINGO GAMES\nFor the KIDDIES \u2022\n\"j{    BINGO $1000 in Priies\nROTARY DAY\nIN CONJUNCTION WITH THE\nOfficial Opening of the New Rotary\nSwimming Pool\nMonday, August 5, Starting at 2:30 p.m.\nBarbecue: Adults $1.25; Children 75c\nAdmission: FREE\n\u25a0v.\n Nflgmt Daily Nrata\nEstablished   April   22    1903\ninterior British Columbia's Larejest baily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory .\nholidays   by    the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY    '\u2022\u25a0\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Uttice,Department. Ottawa\nMEMBER Ot   1'HE  AUUl't   BUREAU  (J? CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBEH Ob   IHE CANADIAN  PRESS   '\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use foi republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to l'he Associated Pi-ess oi Reuters'in this paper,\nand also the local news published, therein.\nSalurday, August 3, 1957 \\\nThe Hospital Bylaw\nTime is an important factor in many\nhuman undertakings, and the Kootenay Lake General Hospital Board\nfinds itself with seven weeks in which\nto prepare a bylaw authorizing additional expenditure on the new hospital.\nThat they are preparing such a bylaw on short notice is occasioned by\ntheir belief that the fourth floor should\nbe constructed at this time and not leit\nto a later period. Most people will\nagree that this is a sensible thing to do.\nHowever, the funds which they\nhoped to use ior this purpose have\nbeen dissipated by the rising costs of\nconstruction, and since the costs show\nno signs of remaining stable but of\ncontinuing to rise, this itself constitutes\na good argument for completing the\nlourth floor now.\nThe committee members do not,\nand neither do many other people,\nsubscribe to the belief that the new\nCastlegar hospital will draw off many\npatients. They believe that the high\nreputation of Nelson as a medical\ncentre will always cause many people\nto choose this hospital, and they see\nno signs that the growth of the immediate neighborhood, of Nelson is slackening. There is a strong presumption\nthat the fourth iloor will soon be in\nuse.\nWe have become accustomed to\nhospitals which are overcrowded, but\nthis should not be regarded as either\nthe normal or the right and proper\nthing. There should always be some\nvacant beds in hospitals to accommodate the victims of accident or disaster.\nIn these days multiple car' crashes\nalone are common.\nIn the end the matter becomes one\nof dollars and cents to be paid by taxpayers, but the fact remains that\nthough taxpayers object strongly to\nincreased expenditures on other things\nthey demand the best in matters concerning their health. They also look\nwith a sympathetic eye on anything\nwhich contributes to the welfare of the\nsick, and pay cheerfully for their\ncomfort.\nFrom all this it looks as if the Hospital Board is well advised to go ahead\nwith the preparation of the bylaw.\nThey have many sound arguments on\ntheir side, and they have the good will\nof the people. The outcome should be\na hospital of which everyone should\nbe proud.\"*\nPress Comment\nA FACT OF CANADIAN POLITICS\nTradition has it that the person chosen\nto move the address in reply to the Speech\nfrom the Throne in Parliament shall be an\nEnglish-speaker member at one session and\na French-speaking member the next. This\nyear it is the turn ot the French-speaking\nCanadians to receive this honor. Prime Minister John G. Diefenbaker must choose the\nperson for the job.\nThis recalls a similar tradition which Mr.\nDiefenbaker smashed with unfortunate results for his party. When he was' nominated\nBack Seat Drivers\nIf any Canadian newspaper took to advising, say, the Australian Government whom\nto appoint as that country's next Governor-\nGeneral, it would deserve to be told t6 mind\nits own business. That bit of obvious protocol\nseems not to bother some London flews-\npapers, which have been advocating that the\nQueen Mother be the next Governor-General\nof Canada. The Sunday Express, for example, said \"it would be a fine notion.\"\nNo one holds a more secure and lasting\nplace in Canadian hearts than the gracious\nlady who was our Queen during the direst\nyears, in modern world history. But that is\nnot the point. The point is that such random\nspeculation about the Royal Family creates\nembarrassment no matter what the outcome.\nIf, with the Canadian Government's approval\nand her own, the Queen Mother were appointed to the office, it might look\u2014at least\nto those readers (there must be' at least\nsome) who take The Sunday Express seriously)\u2014as if London had been suggesting\nCanadian policy. On the other hand, if the\nCanadian Government should for any of a\nnumber of reasons express a- preference for\nsomeone else, it would look to those same\nreaders like a snub to Royalty.\nLong accustomed to Lord Beaverbrook in\ntheir midst, certain London editors may\nshare his fatherly (and in view of his investments, natural) interest in his native land;\nbut they do his adopted country a dubious\nservice by presuming to auction Royalty like\nsome export commodity. And the local press\nwhich followed up the faux pas with its own\nstreet-corner poll ought to be ashamed of\nitself\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nfor the party leadership at the Progressive\nConservative convention in Ottawa last December, Mr. Diefenbaker cast aside the tradition of having a French-speaking member\nsecond his nomination. He choose English-\nspeaking delegates to both move and second\nhis nomination.\nResults of this short-sighted policy were\nwhen the party's victorious comeback\npainfully evident to the Tories ,on June 10,\nground to a dead stop at the borders of\nQuebec Province.\nMr. Diefenbaker appears to many Quebec residents to have gone out of his way\non more than one occasion to slight them\nand insult them.\nIf he wants to make up with Quebec, as\na good federal politician should, the Prime\nMinister had better go along with tradition\nthis time and choose a French-speaking\nmember to move the address in reply to\nthe Speech from the Throne this fall. -\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nWatch Your Language\nEQUINOX (E-kwi-nok's, or EK-wi-noks):\nNoun\u2014 The time ' when ' the \"sun's centre\ncrosses the equator and day and night are\neverywhere of equal length;, that is, about\nMarch 21 (vernal equinox),'or September 23\n(autumnal equinox); either of the two points\n(equinoctial points) where the celestial .equator intersects the ecliptic. Origin: French\u2014\nEquinoxe, from Latin\u2014Aequinoctuim, from\nAequus, equal, plus nox, noctis, night.\nFACILITY (fa-SIL-i-ti): Noun-Quality of\nbeing easily performed; ease; readiness\nfrom skill or use; dexterity; easiness to be\npersuaded\u2014usually in a bad sense; pliancy;\na thing that promotes the ease of any action,\noperation, or course of action, usually in\nplural, as, facilities for study.\nHONEST (ON-est); Adjective\u2014Characterized by integrity and straightforwardness\nir^ conduct, thought, speech, etc.; free from\nfraud; genuine, full, unadulterated,- or the\nlike, as honest goods; open, 'frank, as an\nhonest countenance. Orisin;. Old French\u2014\nHoncste. Oneste, from Latin\u2014Honestus, from\nHonos,, Honor, honorable.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLotton to tne Editor on any topic ot\ngenuine interest are welcome It they are\nbrief accurate and fair No letter will be\nInserted In whole oi in part except over\nthe slanature and adrliesa ot the writer\nUnsolicited correspondence emmet be\nreturned.\nScientists Saddled\nWith Forces of'\nAtom Says Writer\nTo the Editor;\nSir\u2014Your correspondent D. Broster's\nrecent letter made interesting reading. If\none accepts the theory of evolution, the material development of mankind had precedence over the emotional, and only the fit\nsurvived. From the Mediterranean basin\nsouth, into what is now Africa, and northeas't\nthrough Europe, Asia and Alaska, into\nthe American continents, the materialistic\nprocess continued, language gradually\nevolved, then a breakup into tribes, with\nvaried customs and creeds, and eventually\nclass distinction, according to the degree of\nintelligence attained.\nPresumably those of a lower mentality\n\u25a0remained in a state of subjection enforced\nby the overlords, as a measure of self.preservation. This process ot materialism appears to have carried on down the ages to\nthe present stage, and now psycho-analysis\nbased on the researches of Freud and Jung\nis receiving attention.\nThe results, however, are not likely lo\nbecome common knowledge, unless some genius invents a time machine similar to the\ntype that Mr. H. G. Wells described back\nin 1895 in a book he wrote entitled \"The Time\nMachine\". The inventor is supposed to have\ntravelled through millions of time years, into\nthe future or fourth dimension, where he discovers that future civilizations will also rise\nand fall as the result of \"abundance and\nidleness\", and so \"ad infinitum\". Presumably the emotional phase sfet ih, as the customary vicissitudes of life took place, giving\nvent to moods and passion.\nHumanity enjoys thrills of any type, and\nliterature brings both thrills and \"thrillers\"\nto our easy chairs. On the roads and rivers\n\"speeding\" provides the thrill, and people\njust take a chance to flirt with death or serious injury. How many, for instance, heed\nmedical advice regarding excessive smoking,\n\u25a0 eating, or alcoholic drink? Habits of long\nstanding are difficult to break, when once\nacquired.\nPast civilizations appear to have attained\nSir Thomas Moor's ideal state of Utopia, but\nonly for periods, and then the rot set in.\nPresent Day science decided to line up with\nthe warmongers, rather than the pacificts,\nand instead of gaining \"technical control of\nthe forces of the atom\", they appear to have\nsaddled themselves with an element they are\nunable to either dispose of or destroy! If\nthey bury it underground, an earth tremor\ncould disseminate it with tragic results. The\nadvisability ot dropping it into the sea is\ncountered by the fact that very little is known\n.regarding deep sea currents, until \u2022 oceanog-\nraphists investigate, as these also could disturb the atomic force, and so destroy 'he,\nfishing industry, which is something of an\nunderstatement, as nothing could prevent it\nreaching the rivers, and furthermore, could\nships sail with safety on atomic seas, and\nwould the sea breezes have the same salty\ntang, or atomic?\nHowever, as that wistful little chorus\nsays:\n\"Che sara sara.\"\nF. MARTIN.\nCastlegar.\nBlood Donors Thanked\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The B. C. Division, Blood Donor\nCommittee desire to express their personal\nthanks to the citizens, business firms and\nother organizations who cooperated in making our recent Nelson Blood Donor Clinic\nsuch a success.\nTo the 658 Nelson citizens who-gave their\nblood we are especially grateful, as by their\npriceless gilt and thouThtfulness we have\nbeen able to bring new life to many of their\nfellow citizens.\nThe co-operation by the business firms\nand other organizations was a fine gesture\nand example of public spirit. It is only by\nco-operation such as this that we are able lo\nmaintain this most vital public service.\nW. A. FREEMAN,\nActing Blood Donor Panel Director,\nB. C. Division,\nCanadian Red Cross Society.\nVancouver, B. C.\nU.S. and Russia Unite\nIn Fighting \/Flu Germ\nLONDON (Reuters)-The Soviet\nUnion and the United States Friday prepared to battle a common\nforeign opponent, Asiatic influenza.\n\"Asiatic influenza has come to\nthis country,\" Soviet Health Minister Maria^ Kovrigna said Thursday in Moscow. \"We have had\nsome outbreaks in some of our cities. We are aware of the grave\ndanger presented by this.\"\nU.S. Surgeon - General Leroy\nBurney said the epidemic will\ncause serious economic disruption\nwhen it reaches the United States\nCoolidoe Home\nTo Be Museum\nWritten For\nThe Associated Press\nBy JOE FOUNTAIN\nPLYMOUTH, Vt. (AP) - This\ntiny hamlet, almost lost in the\ngreen Vermont Hills, will relive its\nbig moment in American history\ntoday. \u25a0\nIt was 2:47 a.m., during the\nsultry summer night of Aug. 2t3,'\n1923, that Calvin Coolidge, vice-\npresident of the United States,\nstood in the lamplit parlor of his\nfamily's 'homestead' while his\nfather, a notary public, swore\nhim in as president.\nOnly a few hours before President Warren G. Harding had died\nin San Francisco.\nIn today's ceremony, John\nCoolidge, son of the 30th U-S. president, will hand to Governor Joseph B. Johnson a deed giving\nVermont state title to the house\nfor a museum.\nWIDOW DIED\nMrs. Grace Coolidge, the president's widow, agreed last year to\ngive the little white house on a\nPlymouth side street to the state.\nBut Mrs. Coolidge did not live to\nsee the presentation. She died\nJuly 8 this year.\nOnly three persons are still alive\nwho saw Col. Joh*n C. Coolidge\nadminister the oath of office to\nhis son. They are Herbert P.\nThompson of Pittsfield, Mass., Joseph Mclnerny of Washington,\nand this writer.\nSeveral days later I interviewed\nthe new president's father and\nasked him how he knew he had\nthe necessary constitutional authority to swear in his son\u2014a\nceremony usually reserved for the\nchief justice of the United States.\nHe was as sparing of speech as\nhis son, and replied: \"I didn't\nknow that I couldn't.'.'\nAnd he didn't know, because\nwhile the U.S. constitution outlines\nthe form .of the oath, it does not\nspecify who should administer it.\nCalvin Coolidge, who died in 1932,\nhas become a somewhat legendary\ncharacter. Popular opinion links\nhim to economy, sly.wit, shrewdness, and above all, honesty.\nMany stories have been written\nand told about this man\u2014sallow,\nginger-haired, slender in build and\nof medium height, with pallid,\ncold blue eyes.\n\"Did you ever hear what Cal\nsaid (the time he got his first pay\ncheque as president?\" a local\nschoolmate of Coolidge once asked\nme.\n\"A messenger handed him the\n.cheque and the president looked\nit over quite carefully, folded it\nand put it in his pocket.\n\"Then,  without a trace\nsmile, he said:\n'\"Call again'.\"\nthis fall or winter. He said in\nWashington : Thursday night the\nflu might affect 10 per cent or\nmore ot the population in -*ix\nweeks even with maximum use ol\nvaccine.\nWhat now is known as Asiatic\ninfluenza was first reported in Japan last December. R spread rapidly among Asia's, millions, lt hit\nPeiping in March, Hong Kong in\nApril and then spread to Australia\nand many other parts of the world\nin May and June.\n' It is, caused by a flu virus which'\nhas mutated or changed. It sidesteps natural body resistance to\nnormal flu virus. This makes it\ndifficult to halt even with mass\nvaccines. British biochemist Norman Pirie said the new strain\nmight have been born under the\ninfluence of nuclear radiation fallout from test explosions conducted\nthroughout the world.\nThe World Health Organization\nhas consistently stressed the \"very\nmild\" nature of the flu. But other\nscientists point out that flu epidemics often start mildly enough\nbut that second and third waves of\nthe epidemics carry high incidents\nof death. The great flu epidemic\nof 1918-1919 started as a mild form\nbut eventually killed an estimated\n20,000,000 persons throughout the\nworld.\nThe symptoms of the disease\nare hi\"h temperature, headache,\nsore throat cough and muscle\naches. The fever lasts from three\nto five days, followed by weakness for several more days.\nDr. Burney said three deaths\nhave-been reported so far among\n11,000 cases of Asian flu in the\nUnited States.\nLatest outbreaks include those\nat Santiago, Chile, where more\nthan 25 per cent of the city's population of 1,100,000 are reported to\nbe affected; at Khartoum, Sudan,\nwith 42,000 caSes, and in South\nAfrica and Malaya. At Penang,\nNortH Malaya, a whooping cough\nedpidomic followed the Asian flu,\naffected several thousand persons,\nmainly children.\nMines Dept. Book Tells\nStory of Oil Expansion\n\u2022 OTTAWA (CP) - Canadian oil\nwells which supplied only one-\ntenth of the. country's petroleum\nrequirements 10 years ago now\nsimply nearly two-thirds.\nThe mines department said, Friday that in 1946 Canada imported\n90 per cent ot its oil requirements. At the end of 1956 only\n35 per cent was imported despite\na threefold growth in domestic\ndemand, including a ;harp , advance last year.\nThe story of Canada's expanding oil production is told in a departmental publication entitled \"a\nsurvey ot the petroleum industry\nin Canada during 1956.\"\n\"Increasingly large supplies of\nwestern crude oil. have, enabled\nthis country to improve Us oil\nself-sufficiency position during the\nlast 10 years from less than 10\nper cent to over 65 per cent,\" the\ndepartment said. \"This indicates\nan average .yearly advance of\nabout five per. cent.\"\nDEMAND GREATER\nThis meant .that Canada's oil\nself-sufficiency had increased by\nmore than 55 per cent in the 10\nyear period although domestic demand had tripled.\nOil production in 1956 was almost\n25 times greater than in 1946. From\na meagre 19,000 barrels a day, production in 1956. rose to a record\nof nearly 470,000 barrels daily,\nOutput last year showed an increase of 31 per cent over 1955.\nBefore the uncapping of western\noil wells in 1947, Canadian oil consumption amounted to 222,000 barrels a day. Last year's consumption totalled nearly 720,000 barrels\ndaily. Demand in 1956 alone was\nup 13 per cent over the previous\nyear.\nThe survey shows that Canada\nnow is the world's third largest\nconsumer of petroleum produces\nand is second only to the United\nStates on a per capita basis, i\nMANY CARS\nCanada's position as a leading\nconsumer of petroleum products\nresults from a large motor car\npopulation, extensive use of oil\nfor heating, railway dieselization\nMuch To Be Said About\nCreeping Inflation\nof a\nFight Anthrax\nIn Oklahoma\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\u00ab-,      By Jimmy Hatlo\nMr.bebe, the\nOUT-OF-TOWN\nBIG SHOT, M4KES\nA GR4NDST\/WD\nPL4y OF BUyi'MO\nTHE BAUD SOME\nREFRESHMENTS-\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\n( And when the blood of the martyr Steven was shed, I was standing by. Acts 22:20.\n.. Some think that this memory\nwas what Paul had in his mind\nin saving who will deliver me from\nthe body of this death. Others\nthink there was some internal lesion resulting from his beating\nwith rods or stoning.\na,w* ml\nThen comes\nthe time to\nR4Y THE\nbilly-due-\nwhere's bebe?\nTirMHtMOATPOf\n\u25a0n-'E H4TLO H4T TO\nAl fcTiOEMDEL,\ntTtfTiiHTy-eiarwK\nIUJKC-i\nI used to wonder what they had\nin common to set and talk about,\nbut that was before I learned about\ntheir blood pressure.\nWELCH, Okla. (API-Authorities sought to tighten their quarantine of a two-county area in the\nnortheastern corner of Oklahoma\ntoday in an effort to contain an\noutbreak of anthrax, a killer disease which hits cattle and swine.\nAbout 200 animals already have\ndied, federal veterinarians estimated. Dr. L. C. Crow called it\nthe worst outbreak in the area in\nthe last 25 to 30 years.\nThey sought to vaccinate alt of\nthe estimated 70,000 cattle and\nhogs in the area and are approaching the halfway mark.\nThe quarantine is on- all of\nCraig county and a 60-square mile\nsection of Ottaway County, which\nadjoins, it on the east and lies\nagainst Kansas and Missouri,\nNational guardsmen manned\nroadblocks which turned back\nfarmers headed to market with\nlivestock and produce. Farm and\nhealth department officials sought\nto block the movement of all meat\nand dairy products from the area.\nThe state , highway patrol, Oklahoma,crime bureau agents, game\nand fish department wardens, and\nlocal law enforcement officers\njoined in.\nAnthrax is highly infectious In\nanimals, affects the spleen, and\nis usually fatal within 24 hours.\nIts spores reside in rich pasture\nsoil, sometimes for as long as 40\nyears.\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nTo what extent can people and\nan economy absorb price increases\nwithout upsetting their way of\nlife?\nAdvocates of a \"creeping inflation\" say that price increases of\ntwo to three per cent a year can\nbe taken in stride, providing wage\nrates are adjusted to meet the\nrise.\nOpponents of this view point out\nwith alarm.that a two-per-cent Increase a year would double prices\nin 35 years; and they say that if\npeople come to believe that sucn\na process is inevitable they will\nlose faith in money.\nVALUE CUT IN TWO\nAt this point some one may ask:\n\"If that is so, why haven't\npeople lost faith in money already?\" For the value of money\nhas been cut iri two, not in 35\nyears, but in little more thaii 20\nyears.\nThis is Indicated by comparing\nthe consumer price index for June\n\u2014which was 121.6\u2014with the comparative figures for 1936 and 1935\n\u2014which were 61.1 and 59.9 respectively. '   ,\nFurther, close to three-quarters\nof this loss has occurred in about\n10 years, for the average 1946 index was 77.5.'\nCompared with this record, especially the post-war part of it,\ndoubling of prices in 35 years may\nnot be so frightening.\nPRESSURE BUILD UP\nIt is not equitable, however, to\nassess the price rises of the list\n10 years against that period alone;\nbecause the period had to absotb\nthe tremendous inflationary forces\nbuilt up during the war which\nwere held, in artificial check by\ncontrols.\nAlso, if we go back more than\n20 years, today's inflation won't\nlook so bad.\nIn 1930, for instance\u2014just before\nprices broke in' the face of the depression\u2014the index was 75.3, or\ncldse to the 1946 level.\nAnd 37 years ago, in 1920\u2014in\nthe severe inflation resulting from\nthe First World War-it was 90.5.\nThat inflation was perhaps tougher\nin its impact upon people than the\npresent one, because incomes were\nso very much lower then.\nIndeed, in one component of the\nindex\u2014clothing\u2014we are still below\nthe prices of 1920, when the clothing index was 116.1 compared with\ntoday's 108.4. The food index ih\n1920 was 94.4 compared with to\nday's 117.7. Shelter, however, was\nvery much lower\u201481.5 compared\nwith today's 134,8.\nLONG-TERM FORCES\nThese more remote figures may\nsupport those who' hold that today's inflation, while a matter for\nconcern, probably will not follow\nan uninterrupted path upward.\nNevertheless, many see today's\ndynamic economy as having longer\nterm inflationary pushes than anything in the past.\nOpponents of any kind of inflation fear for the stability of the\ncurrency, They say, in effect;\n\"People so far have accepted\nthe decrease in the value of money\nwithout any great loss of faith in\nit because they have not regarded\nthe process as an indefinite one.\nBut they will lose faith if it continues.\"\n' To which advocates of \"creeping inflation\" may reply:\n\"Full employment and the desire of people for better standards\nof living, makes some inflation inevitable. Anything else will mean\nrecession and unemployment.\n\"Anyway, what does it matter\nhow many units of money it takes\nto buy an article, providing people\nhave the units, and providing the\nchange in value of the units is\ngradual enough 'so that people and\nthe economy can adjust to it.\"\nand the increasing use of heavy\nfuel oil in industry.\nFuel oil now heats more than\n1,800,000 Canadian homes. Oil products flow through the engines of\nmore than 4,200,000 automobiles,\npower more than half of Canada's\nrailway locomotives and feed, the\n-furances of an increasing number\nof industries.        f\nThe publication says that expanded air travel and the development of jet and turbo-jet aircraft\nhave pushed the rate of Increase\nin demand for turbo fuels beyond\nthat of ordinary aviation gasoline.\nThe heavier demand for oil products is being naced by rapid expansion of 'known Canadian petroleum reserves. Scores of exploration companies have probed Canadian oil structures to swell reserves at the end of 1956 to nearly\n3,130,000,000 barrels.\nCanada in 1956 was eighth\namong world oil producers. However, on the basis of world production Canada still is a relatively\nminor contributor, accounting for\nless than three per cent of-world\noutput.\nCons Dennison\nWages Highest\nTORONTO (CP)-Wililam Long-\nridge, secretary-treasurer of the\nInternational Union of Mine, Mill\nand Smelter Workers (Ind.), has\nannounced the union has signed an\nagreement with Consolidated Dennison Mines Limited providing for\nthe highest wage rates in the Ca-\nnadain industry.\nThe company operates a big\nuranium mine near Elliot Lake in\nthe Blind River area.\nThe agreemnt\u2014effective June 30\n\u2014provides for an average immediate increase of 11 cents an hour\nwith a reduction of hours to 40\na week from the present 48 in M\nmonths. There will also be an average over-all wage increase in\nthe 14-month period exceeding 5(1\ncents hourly.    \u2022     '\nUnder the agreement journeymen tradesmen wil Iget $2.68,\nminers $2.20, surface labor $1.91,\nand mill operators $2.44\nIn addition to wage. increases,\nthe agreement provides for silt\npaid statutory holidays, a comprehensive health and welfare plan\u2014\n50 per cent paid by the company\n\u2014shift differentials, effective seniority, grievance procedure and\nunion rights.\nCanada Trades More\nWith Czechoslovakia\nVIENNA (AP)\u2014Trade between\nCanada and Czechoslovakia in 1956\nshowed the biggest gain of any of\nthe countries dealing with the\nCommunist satellite, it was officially reported in Prague newspapers received here Friday.\nCanada purchased Czech products worth 40,400,000 crowns ($5,-\n600,000) and sold Czechoslovakia\n200,300,000 crowns (nearly $28,-\n000,000), almost entirely grains.\nComparative figures for 1958\nwere not listed.\nScouts Look Forward\nTo Queen's Visit\nBy KEN METHERAt\nConadlan Press Staff Writer\nSUTTON PARK, England (CP)\nThe Canadian section of this jamboree camp was almost deserted\nFriday as its inhabitants piled into\nscores of chartered buses for a\nday's -sight-seeing.\nThe tours are a popular fea'ure\nof the jamboree. Each of the 34,-\n000 Boy Scouts from 82 countries\ngets the opportunity of taking two\nof them during the two-week 'session.\nThe Canadians Friday had their\nchoice of a visit to the cutlery\ncentre of Sheffield or an automotive plant in Coventry a barge trip\non England's inland canal or a 130-\nmile journey to Windsor castle.\nSKILLS ON DISPLAY\nThe highlight of the jamboree\nfor Uie 1,500-strong Canadian contingent comes today when their\nhalf-hour display of scouting skills\ncoincides with the Queen's visit\nto the camp.\nThe display under the direction\nof W. A. Speed of Halifax and J\nV. Scrivener of Penticton, B.C,\nincludes demonstrations of knot-\ntying by Saskatchewan and Manitoba scouts, lumbering activity by\nBritish 'Columbia representatives\nand bridge-building by a French-\nCanadian group.\nMaritimers will present a typical winter camp scene, complete\nwith synthetic snow. They'll tramp\ndown the snow with snowshoes,\npitch a tent, bank snow around it\nand start a reflector fire.\nWild west atmosphere will be\nsupplied by Albertans with a'chuck\nwagon, rope-spinning and Indian\nwar dances.!\nTORCHLIGHT PARADE\nThursday right's program included an impressive torchlight\nprocession by Swiss scouts, who\nparaded through the camp carrying paper lanterns. Many Cana\ndians attended a moVie biography\nof the late Lord Baden-Powell,\nfounder of the scout movement,\nwhose 100th anniversary is being\nobserved at the jamboree.\nThere were red faces 'among\nsome of the troops later when the\ncamp fine department had to answer more than a score of minor\ncalls as strong winds blew life\ninto the ashes, of camp fires which\nunder basic scouting law, should\nhave been thoroughly extinguished. There were no guilty parties in the Canadian camp.\nSIU to Discuss\nWages Dispute\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canadian\nchief Hal C. Banks of the Seafarers' International Union (CLC)\nsaid Friday the union is prepared\nlo negotiate \"without qualifications\" on the wages of dispute\nwhich has tied up the eight-ship\nWest Indies fleet of Canadian National Steamships.\nBut at the same time, he indicated that the union is not inter-.\nested in the company's standing\noffer of a 10- per -cent increase\nrecdmmended by a federal, conciliation board. The' union seeks 30\nper cent.\n\"We aren't interested in 10 per\ncent of nothing,\" he said, referring to the union's claim that\nwage rates are $100 a month below those existing elsewhere in\nCanadian marine operations.\nMr. Banks was commenting on\nOttawa developments in\nwhich Labor Minister Starr first\nexpressed the hope negotiations\nwould resume Friday and then said\nhe failed in a personal intervention.\n About the-Town\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nMr. and Mrs. C. R. Mattice and\ndaughter Myrna of West Vancouver, formerly of Nelson, are visiting Mrs. E. H. Simpson, 1213\nStanley Street. i\nBy Alice Stevens\nBake Sale Aids\nDr. Green Home\nCRANBROOK - Ladies* Auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railway\nTrainmen ,with Mrs. W. D. Smith\nas general convener, held a bake\nsale recently to net a total. of\nslightly over $50.\nThis was on behalf of the Dr.\nF. W. Green Memorial Home Society and was the first sponsored\nevent of the summer to qualify for\nthe Canadian Legion offer of\nmatching proceeds of such events,\nwith the sale adding over $100 to\nthe treasury as a result.\nMr. and Mrs. Colin A. Moir of\nMedicine Hat are visiting in the\ncity as guests' of Mrs. Moir's sisters, Mrs. R. L.-McBride, Mrs.\nW. Allan and Mrs. A. E. Murphy.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY - A miscellaneous baby shower was held for\nMrs. Russell Sanders at the home\nof Mrs. Roy Eddy. Mrs. Sanders\nwas presented with her gifts by\nlittle Carl Eddy who pulled them\nto her in a large decorated dish-\npan. Mrs. H. MacKinnon and Mrs.\nEcjdy were co-hostesses.\nLarry and Billie Halliday celebrated a. joint birthday party at\ntheir home. Larry was six and\nBillie was five on this occasion.\nThey were both showered with\ngifts from their young friends.\nConn >o Chufd\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nRector: REV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG, B.A., L.Th.\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 4TH 1957\nSEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY\n8:00 a.m.-HOLY COMMUNION.\n9:15 a.m.-MATTINS AT ST ANDREW'S, WILLOW POINT\n(Mr. H. Hankin, Lay Reader.)\n11:00 a.m.-CHORAL EUCHARIST.\nPreacher: The Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood.\n7:30 p.m.-EVENSONG.\nOfficiant: Mr. Cecil Burgess, Lay Reader.\nCorner of Stanley and Silica\nRev. H. R. Whitmore, Minister\nOrganist: Mr. Angji Fraser\nWILL JOIN WITH FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH\n4th St. and.Cottonwood\nSERVICES IN BAPTIST CHURCH\nat 11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nKOOTENAY PENTECOSTAL CAMP\nf Be sure to attend closing day services at\n10 a.m., 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nBETHEL   TABERNACLE\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 fi.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.\nNO EVENING SERVICE\nTUESDAY -\nFRIDAY\nBible Study and Prayer.\n\u2014 Young Peoples.\nfirst\nPresbyterian\njurrij\nJoint Services With\n. Paul's-Trinity^ll:00 a.m.\nSunday School\nin Summer Recess.\nOpening in September.\nI\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\n\/    FAIRVIEW\nCanon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B. Sc.\nRector\n..Services During August...\n at 9:30 a.m. only.\t\n...South Slocan \u2014 7:30...\ni\nCHURCH  OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF LATTER DAY SAINT8\n(Mormon)\nS:20 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\nBagles Hall   841  Baker St.\nPor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President Phone 762-R\n\u00a7aloatum Anmj\n513 Victoria St\nLieut and Mrs. G. Grlce\nSUNDAX\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m-\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:3Q p.m-\u2014Evening Service\n9t ilnJjn'a\nSlirtljprati (Eljttrrf}\nComer Stanley and Silica Sts.\nREV.   CARL  J.   HENNIG\nRm. 317 Silica St    Phone 729-X\n'AUGUST 4th\nOutdoor Service and\nSunday School.\nPicnic Taghum Beach\nat 11:00 a.m.\nAll children and parents\ninvited I\nSALMO\nHILLCREST\nPENTECOSTAL CHURCH\n10:00 a m -Sunday School\n7:30 p.m.-Evening Service.\nPastor:  Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\nCookery Column\nMary Moore Offers\nEasy Pickle Recipes\nPEPPY FRENCH DRESSING with plenty of onion, vinegar\nand garlic in it is recommended by Daily News cookery columnist\nMary Moore for summer salads. Putting finishing touch to his\nfavorite, hearty salad here is H. J. Maybee, chief of the livestock\nproducts division, marketing service, Canada department of agriculture. \/\\\nin 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111\nRECIPE OF THE WEEK\nBy MARY MOORE\nThere are some Canadian men who avoid salads, calling them\n\"rabbit food\", \"cattle fodder\" etc. Yet they would like to have\nthe shiny and abundant hair of these animals,1 I'lr wager.\nOne way you can interest Dad in salads is to encourage him to\nmake them. A new idea in salads is:\nSALAD WITH BACON AND RICE\nTwo cups water, VA teaspoons salt, Vs teaspoon black pepper,\n1 cup uncooked long grain white rice, 6 strips bacon, Vi cup mayonnaise, Vt cup chopped sweet pickles, Vt pound sharp cheese cut\nin %-inch cubes, 1 cup thinly sliced radishes, salad greens. Put\nwater; salt, black pepper and rice in a 2-quart saucepan. Bring\nto a vigorous boil over nigh heat. Turn heat low as possible. Cover\nand simmer over low heat 15 minutes. Remove from heat, but\nleave lid on for 10 minutes.\nWhile rice cooks, place bacon in cold frying-pan and cook\nslowly until crisp, pouring off fat as bacon cooks. After rice cooks\nstir in mayonnaise, 2 tablespoons bacon fat and the pickles.\nCoarsely chop the bacon and stir in. After the rice cooks stir in the\ncheese and radishes. Cover well and store in the refrigerator until\ntime to serve. Turn out into salad bowl on to bed of shredded\ngreens .or tender lettuce leaves. Garnish with additional radishes,\nhard-cooked eggs, green pepper rings or bacon curls\u2014much as\nyou would a potato salad. Indeed, this salad serves the purnoses of\na potato salad, and will be popular with the family. Pass additional\nmayonnaise or French dressing if desired.\n:iiiiiilllllllllllllllliiiillll!liillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllii!llllliiilllllllilllil\nCalifornia Brush Fire\nDestroys 12 Homes\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - A leapfrogging brush fire believed started\nby juveniles burned 12 homes and\nblackened 500 acres in the Mount\nWashington area of suburban Highland Park.\nThe fire, one of three in southern California, was brought under\ncontrol late Thursday.\nItrat Baptist\n(Eiiitrrii\nCottonwood and Fourth Sts.\nMinister: REV, K. IMAYOSHI\nM6 Stanley St. - Phone 1420-L\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Welcome to Sunday\nSchool. Joint services with Fairview\nUnited Church at\nFirst Baptist\nChurch.\ni\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Worship.\nTHURSDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible S.tudy\n\u25a0    and Prayer.\nRev. H. R. Whitmore\nin charge during August.\nBoswell Notes\nMr. and Mrs. H. Morley have\nas their guests Mr. and Mrs. Kelly\nRobinson of Owen Sound, Ont.\nMr. and Mrs. Whitmore and\ntwo children of Calgary are'staying in Boswell. Mrs. Whitmore is\nthe daughter of Roy Purser.\nMr. and Mrs. Wilfred Bainbridge\nof Willow Point and their three\nchildren are guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Norman Bainbridge for a\nfew days.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBy MARY MOORE\nWe had a hard night. Gary, 15\nmonths worth of ingratitude, instead of saying \"Thank you, Mum\"\nwhen Marianne went in to cover\nhim up at midnight, started to\nwhimper, then cry, then yell with\nheartbreaking sobs. After two\nhours of various attempts, by\nnightclad women to quiet him with\ndiaper changes, walking, humming,\nsinging opera, a graham cracker,\nmilk, playing with him on our bed\nin the pitch dark, he subsided and\nthe house was dark and still at\nlast. It seemed like an eternity.\nThis morning do I care if you\nmake pickles? Not much. It is a\nblessing that my habits are so\nold and strong for I automatically\ngo through the motions.\nDon't be dubious about these\nrecipes though. They were tried\nand tested when the old gal was\nfull of vim and vigor yesterday\nand earlier in the week. They are\nnotable for their new slant \u2014 old\nfavorites with changes that you\nwill welcome.\nNEW ENGLAND\nMUSTARD PICKLE\nOne quart small whole onions, 1\nquart smalk. wiioIp cucumbers, 2\nmedium heads of cauliflower\nbroken into small flowerets, about\n2 quarts brine (1% cups salt to\n10 cups cold water stirred until\nsalt dissolve^). Wash and prepare\nthe vegetables and allow them to\nstand in the brine overnight\nthey must be covered with it. In\nthe morning bring them to boil in\nthe same brine, using a large preserving kettle. As soon as they\nreach boiling point remove from,\nheat and drain. Make a mustard\nsauce of the following:\nTwo cups sugar, 1 cup flour, 6>\ntablespons dry mustard, 1 tablespoon turmeric, 8 clips vinegar.\nThoroughly mix together the dry\ningredients, then add a little vinegar to make a smooth paste, then\nstir in remaining vinegar. Cook,\nstirring constantly, over low heat\nuntil sauce thickens. Add the\ndrained vegetables, mix well, heat\nto just below boiling point and\nimmediately pour into sterile jars\nand seal.\nNOTE:   Above   mustard   sauce\nmay   be   used   in   making   any\nmustard pickle. It is excellent.\nDIXIE RELISH\nTwo cups, each chopped sweet\ngreen peppers, chopped sweet red\npeppers, 4 cups chopped new\ngreen cabbage, 2 or 3 cups small\nwhite onions, 2 tablespoons each\nsalt, celery seed, 4 tablespoons\nmustard seed, 3 or 4 whole hot red\npeppers are optional, % cup white\nsugar, 4 cups vinegar. Soak the\nwhole green and red peppers in a\nbrine overnight using 1 cup salt\nto 3V4 quarts water. Ih the morning drain, cover with cold water\nand let stand 2 hours. Drain, cut\nopen, remove seeds and white\npith. Chop peppers. Put onions\nand cabbage through coarse knife\nof grinder separately. Measure\nthem before mixing, then add to\nthe chopped peppers. Add the salt,\nspices, whole red peppers if used,\nsugar and vinegar. Allow to stand\ncovered overnight. Drain off the\nliquid and heat it just to boiling,\n,then add the drained vegetables'\n\u2022and boil gently 10 minutes. Pour\ninto sterile jars and seal at once,\nThis amount makes about 5 pints.\nSPICED  GOOSEBERRIES\nThis is easily made and delicious\nwith cold meats.\nSix cups gooseberries, picked\nover and washed, 6 cups white\nsugar, Vi cup spirit vinegar, 1 teaspoon (or less) ground cloves, %\nteaspoon each cinnamon, allspice,\nVt teaspoon mace. Mix all ingredients in preserving kettle and bring\nslowly to boiling point, stirring\ncarefully occasionally. Cook gently\nuntil . it thickens, leaving the\nwooden spoon in the kettle so that\nmixture may be moved about from\nthe bottom occasionally. Pack into\nsterile jars and seal.\nCRAWFORD BAY\nBROWNIES GO\nON CAMP TRIP,\nCRAWFORD BAY - The Crawford Bay Brownies and their leaders went on a five-day camping\ntrip to Camp Rory near Patterson.\nThey went with Riondel Brownies\nand their leaders as a joint camping party. There were nine Brownies from Crawford Bay. They were\nDiane Spence, Joy Ed*dy, Lynn\nOliver, Cynthia Oste, Jevine\nDraper, Karen Baker, Georgina\nGreece andsJanet and Julia Willis.\nTwo Girl Guides, Marilyn Adams\nand Josephine Miller, were the hut\nleaders. Mrs. Haverstock and Mrs.\nHeighten led the entire group.\nThere was group singing at night\nfolowed by a snack. Josephine and\nMarilyn received a small gift from\ntheir respective Brownies for their\nhelp. Prize for neatest hut was won\nby Eleanor Shannon and her group\nfrom Riondel.,\nJJELSON rifa.Vy NEW* <\\TURDAY. A\"P. 1. '937 _ 3\n\"You Wanted\nTo Know...\"\nDepartment\nConducted by MARY MOORE\nQUESTION:   I  would  Uke  a\nlarge quantity recipe for pickled\ncucumber .relish ,... I read your\ncolumn  and  have  seen  many\nlovely  recipes  there, and  was\nwondering if you could help me\nout.. . Mm. H. G.\nANSWER:   The   following\namounts make 8 pints of relish. I\nhave given this amount because it\nwill be useful to more of our\nreaders than a larger quantity. For\n8 quarts double this recipe.\nCUCUMBER RELISH\n(8 Imperial pints)\nSix and one-half quarts (about\n24 large) chopped cucumbers, 2\ncups chopped onion (4 large), Vi\nAUGUST SALE\n190 Coil Inner Spring\nMattresses\n$24.99\njA&mcwl.\nfirst (Eltttrrti of\nCHljnat \u00a7ri*ttttal\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ\nScientist in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"LOVE\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m.    .\nReading Room 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily from\n2:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m.\n'ALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nfltasum\nGtcrtumattt .GUfitrrf}\n803 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\"\n7:30 p.m.-Evening Service.\nTHURSDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting.\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n44. Coarsely\nground\n\u25a0grain\nDOWN\n1. A frying\npan\nJ. Wan\n3. Sacred\npicture\n(Gr. Ch.)\n4. Snare\n5. Inundation\n6. Yearn\nT. Open\n(poet.)\n8. Having\npegs\n9. Exhausted\n11. Every day\n15. Indicated\nauau tiuaa\nrjtiuia rnmau\nuiHiaaia  KHHBB\nBHHH   HHHHBg\nsiHH hub mmvs\nBEKIHHH   HMIJil\nurauiHH\n3HEira iiaoiaaa\naaa hsih aciu\naaiunraa Hiaaa\nUUHE1M   HHHHH\nBciim ghbb\nuaais aaaa\n18. Cooling\ndevice\n19. Sir ,\nArthur-\nIan\nknight\n21. The.\nBuckeye state\n!2. Girl's\nnickname\n23. Man's\nnickname\n25. Letter of the 36. Take out\nYsitefdsy's Aiswsl-<\n32. Fetters\n35. Fastened\nalphabet\n26. Fastener\n27. Not solid\n29. Famous\ntower (Fr.)\n30. Half-witted\n(print.)\n37. Girl's\nname  '\n39. Malt\nbeverage\n40. Millpond\nACROSS\n1. Revolve\n5. Failure\n(slang)\n9. Room\n10. Canter**\n12. Helmsman\n,13. Lake\n(Soy.\nRussia)\n14. Eve's\ngarden\n16. Boy's belt\nfriend\nW.Gill   (abbr.)\n17. Northeast\n(abbr.)\n18.*Nourished\n19. Chief\ndeity\n(Babyl.)\nJo. Fifth\ncolumn\nhorse  .\n23. Substance\n24. New\nHampshire\ntown,\nM. Lower part\nof face\n28. Tightened\n31. Gams at\ncard*\n31. Honey\ninsect -\n33. Moth\n34. Man's\nnickname\n85. Old weight\n(wool)\n36. Skillful\n38. Killed\n40. Commune\n(Neth.)\n41. Propelled,\nat a boat\n41 Bowline;\nlane\n43. Marries\nDAILY CRYNOQUOTE\u2014Here'* how to work Itt\n4IY5LBA.1IS\nli LONGFELLOW\nOne letter limply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L'\u00ab, X for the two O's, ate.   Single letters, apoa-\ntrophes, the length and formation of tha word! art all hint*.\nBach day the code letters ar\u00ab different,\nA Cryptogram Quotation \u25a0 -\\.\nBGP   BKW.G   1MB   WBQWG   LJJIT   LJB\nWSQWG   ZKTYRS J J t \u2014 USIBLKLR.\nYesterday1* Cryptoouots: THE MDLACLB TO-DAY IB\nTHAT WB FIND A LOVER TRUE: NOT THAT A WOM-\nAN'S KIND\u2014CONGRBVB.\nBUtrlbutod by Kins natures Eyadlwts\nRAIGS MOVING\nTO VICTORIA\nMembers and friends of First\nBaptist Church said farewell this\nweek to Mr. and Mrs. H. Raig,\nwho are leaving shortly for Victoria.\nA social hour was held in the\nChurch, at which a \"lazy susan\"\nwas presented to the couple and\na corsage of sweet peas to Mrs.\nRaig. Rev. Kutch Imayoshi spoke\nof her \"untiring devotion and tremendous amount of work for the\nChurch and Sunday School,\" and\nof Mr. Raig's'help with finishing\nthe basement.\n.Gifts were presented by Mrs.\nNorman Gibson. Mrs. Raig thanked those present.\nA sing-song, featuring well-\nknown choruses, was led by Norman Gibson, with Mrs. Fred Joyce\nat the piano. Refreshments were\nserved by Mrs. W. Ogden, Mrs. L.\nMacLeod, and Mrs. F. Aikins.\n%\ni\ni\n2.\nr*\n\\\n^\/A\n5-\n4,\n7\n8\n^\n9\nI\nIO\n'I\n12\n'\n^\n13\n1*\n^A\nIS\n^\n16\n17\n^\n%\nIS\n|\nre\n2*\n21\nit\n^\n23\n^\/A\n%\n1*\n\u25a0ts\n^\n%\n7b\n27\n%\n28\n29\n30\n31\n%\n32\nI\n|\nii\nz\\\n^\nIS\nf\n36\n37\n36\n39\ni\n-to\n41\n1\n*2.\ni\nAS\n%\n44\n?\/\/A\nSMART,   PRACTICAL\nThe pretty and practical\u2014combined in this apron pattern! Applique tulips give it gay color;\nhanging from waistband at each\nside\u2014a protective potholder 1\nPattern 838: Transfer of tulip\napplique, embroidery; directions\nfor apron and 2 potholders^\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENT8 In'\ncoins... (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to (Name\nof Your Newspaper), Needlecraft\nDept, Address. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nbur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book .'.. Plus dozens\nof other new designs to Order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, arnbroidery\niro-dns, novelties. Send 25 cents\nfor your.copy of this book NOW\n-with gift pattern printed In it!\ncup salt, 5 cups spirit vinegar,'\ncup water, 2 2-3 cups sugar, 2 tea\nspoons white pepper. Peel cucunv.\nbers and cut into quarter's lengthwise and remove seeds. Chop\nfinely or put through coarse knife\nor food chopper. Add chopped\nonions and salt. Mix well. Allow\nto stand and drain thoroughly. (It\nmay be drained through colander\nif desired.) Bring vinegar, water\nand sugar to boiling point and stir\nuntil sugar is dissolved. Remove\nfrom heat, add pepper and drained\nvegetables and mix well. Pour\ninto sterile jars without bringing\nto boiling, and seal. This should\nnot' be used for 4 weeks. It Is crisp\nand delicious and makes a good\nall-purpose relish for hot dogs\nhamburgs, etc.\nQUESTION: My .daughter Is\nplanning on a September wed-\n' ding. We would appreciate any\nhelp on proper procedure, church\narrangements, seating bridal\nparty and guests at reception.\nMenu will be salad plate but\nany suggestions for menu and\ntable arrangements would be\nmore than appreciated .. . Mrs.\nJ. S.\nANSWER: One thing that you\nwill disebver that will hearten you\nis that weddings are so common\nin churches and the routine is so\nwell established that the minister\nwill tell you what to do as. far as\nyou and his church is concerned.\nAt the wedding rehearsal all of\nthe little details of timing and entrances are arranged. The sexton\nor church officer cooperates wonderfully here too.\nThe florists arrange flower\nstandards and candelabra and pew\nmarkers without directions if\nnecessary \u2014 but will do exactly\nas you suggest.   \u2022\nAt the seating of the bride's\nmother the organist plays the first\nnotes of the wedding march which\nare the cue for the minister and\nbridegroom and best man to enter\nfrom a side door and stand at the\naltar. The bride's procession is led\nby the ushers arranged according\nto height, two by two, shorter men\nleading; bridesmaids, maid ot\nhonor, flower girl, bride and her\nfather.\nThe receiving line is. formed\nthus: bride's mother, groom's\nfather, groom's mother, bride's\nfather, bride, groom, maid of\nhonor, bridesmaids.\nSeat the wedding party in this\norder: bride on groom's right; on\n-bride's right in this order: best\nman, bridesmaid, usher, bridesmaid, relatives and friends increasing in age, wife of clergyman. On groom's left in this order:\nmaid of honor, usher, bridesmaid,\nusher, relatives and friends increasing in age, groom's father,\nbride's mother, clergyman. At\nfoot of table father of bride, mother\nof groom.\nIf you are having a buffet type\nof reception I would suggest that\nchairs be available for at least 75\nper cent of the guests. If chairs\nare there you will, find they are\noccupied. I have mailed to you the\nseries of 8 installments of wedding\nreception releases I gave here in\nthe spring of 1955 which, will be\ngood solid help to you. I wrote\nthem during and after my daughter's wedding so they.wereJ,hlpr.n of\npersonal experiences. Gbod lucki\nHarrop Holds\nWeiner Roast\nHARROP \u2014 A weiner roast and\nbingo party was held in Harrop on\nthe sports ground, sponsored by the\nHarrop and District Community\nCentre. A fairly large crowd turned out.\nW. McNown, vice-president of\nthe Centre, presented Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Peipitzki with a gift of a deep-\nfat fryer, from the residents of\nHarrop and Longbeach. The young\ncouple are newlyweds, and reside\nin Edmonton.\nA free weiner wa$ given to each\nchild but additional ones were sold..\nCoffee was sold for the adults.\nThe sum of $19 was raised towards the Community Centre now.\nin the process of being erected as\nthe district's centennial project.\n(Bmm, lAft With.\nWlcuaan. WlaJiiht\nPrinted Pattern\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Surgeoht\nGeneral Leroy E. Burney said\nThursday \"there is a very definite probability\" the U.S. will have\na large outbreak of Asian influenza this fall or winter. Burney\nsaid . experience suggests there\nmay be serious epidemics despite\na new vaccine due in September.\n.For summer's active life, this\nprinted pattern is ideal! Shirt,\nshorts, cover-up jacket \u2014 a teener \u2022\ncan mix-match colors and fabrics,\nmake a whole wardrobe of play-\nseparates, sew-easily!\nPrinted Pattern 9175: Teenage\nsizes 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 shirt\ntakes VA yards 35-inch; shorts, VA\nyards; jacket 2Vs yards. .\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, faster, accurate.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nBetter Homes & Gardens\nGet it today,\nwherever magazines at sold\nCROFTON HOUSE SCHOOL\nRESIDENT AND DAY PUPILS\nFounded by the Misses Gordon, 1898\nP3IMARY CLASSES TO MATRICULATION\nMysue\nGYMNASTICS     <\nDRAMATICS      \u2022\nART   \u2022   HOME ECONOMICS\nGAMES    \u2022     DANCING     \u2022     RIDING\nGIRL GUIDES      \u2022      BROWNIE PACK\nApply to the Headmistress\nMISS ELLEN K. BRYAN, M.A.\n3200 W. 41st Ava., Vancouver \u2022 Telephone KErr. 4380\n\"A CITT SCHOOL IH A COUNTRT SETTING\"\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 3, 1957\nAnti-Red Organization\nDiscovered In Tahsien\nHONG KONG (Reuters) - The\nNew China (Communist) News\nAgency reported Friday that security police in Tahsien, southwest\nChina, have unearthed a counterrevolutionary religious organization called the \"Sword Society\"\nwho aim was to stir up anti-Communist riots.\nThe society spread rumors that\n. \"the people will rise against the\ngovernment in the month of August this year and a king will\nemerge from the strife,\" the\nagency said. It was uncovered in\nJune.\nSecurity police were said to\nhave arrested the society's leader,\nKan Tsai Yung, and his lieutenants,'Yao Tse Wen, Kan tsai Ta\nand Wang Tsung Hsiao.\nThe agency said the society had,\ntaken advantage of local unrest\nover the removal of several homes\nto make way for a new reservoir\nproject.\nAGAINST TAX\nThey put up slogans opposing\nthe project \"and promised that\nwhen the \"Sword Society\" took\nover there would be no forced\nsales of grain and no grain tax\nfor three yearsi\nBut the society also used threats\nof force to enlist- support, the\nagency said, telling whole families they would be killed if they did\nnot enlist in the movement.\u25a0-\u2022\n\"To* carry out. their plot they\nhad held several secret meetings\nto draft plans to sabotage reservoirs and seize weapons so that\nthey could further attack the\ncounty governments and rob banks\nand warehouses before attacking\nLiangping and Tahsien cities,\" the\nreport said. - -     .\u25a0\u25a0\n\"They planned to kill (Communist) parly members and members of the . (Communist) youth\nleague, and then slaughter directors of agricultural co - operatives.\" .\nSEVERAL REPORTS\nThis was the latest of several\nreports'of political unrest in China.\nNine days ago Peiping radio announced that security police had\nsmashed an attempt to oust the\nCommunists and establish \"government by all the people\" in remote Tsinghai province bordering\nTibet.\nThe broadcast said the attempt\nwas led by a small group of intellectuals and financed by capit-\nMysterious Object\nLights Western Sky\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)-From\nSouthern California to Portland,\nOre., from Salt Lake City to the\ncoast, western - skies Thursday\nnight glowed to the light of a hurtling object or objects.\nThe main one\u2014if there was more\nthan one\u2014appeared to disintegrate\nover Yreka, Calif., near the Oregon border. It made an explosion\nheard all over Eiskiyou County.\nMost observers thought it was\na meteor. It was-seen about 9:30\np.m.\nIn Eureka, Calif., 250 miles\nnorth of here, amateur astronomer William Abbey'said the brilliant bluish - green - object was\ntravelling north when it disintegrated, in the northeast section ot\nthe.sky. That would place it near\nYreka, 56 miles in that direction.\nAbbey said the object was trailing fragments from its red and\nyellow tail which dropped straight\ndown. Other reports agreed that\npieces appeared to fall off and\ndrop straight to earth.\nalists in other parts of China.\nJuly 30 the semi-official New\nChina News Agency said that\nleaders of a secret \"China liberal\nparty\" had been arrested June 15\nin the Yellow Sea port of Tsingtao\nand accused of planning to build\nup anti-Communist armed forces\nin China.\nMhslie Unionists Puts \"Crooked\nManagement as Worst ot All Evils\"\nBy NORMAN WALKER\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen\nate rackets' investigating committee developed testimony Friday\nhoodlum \u2022 controlled labor unions\nand employers have conspired to\nexploit nearly 1,000,000 Puerto Ri\ncan and Negro workers in New\nYork City.\nJohn McNiff, executive secretary of the Association of Catholic Trade Unionists, said \"the\nworst evil of all in the trade-union\npicture today is collusion between\ncrooked management and crooked\nunionism.\"\nMcNiff named 22 New York local unions which he said co-operate with companies to \"exploit\nPuerto Rican workers and other\nunskilled or semi-skilled workers\nin the metropolitan New York\narea.\" He said this is only a partial list.\nLOW RATES\nHe said the unions in co-operation with firms enter into contracts\nwhich are often only verbal agreements and often fix wages at the\n$40-a-week legal federal minimum\nwage for a 40-hour week, or rates\nonly slightly above that figure.\nA standard practice, McNiff\nsaid, even among\" \"the more respected industrial unions in New\nPark it With pride on the city streets\nDrive it with confidence on the roughest road\nThe n\u00a9w INTERNATIONAL\nTRAVELALL\nis backed by 50 years of truck leadership\nStyling, comfort and convenience... plus dependable truck performance \u2014 that's the amazing new\nInternational Travelall! The low and modern si!- ~\nhouette, the Sweep-Around Windshield and handsome interior finish add up to streamlined beauty\nyou'll be proud to'drive in the best of company!\nAnd you'iTfind that the Travelall's ease of handling\nand riding comfort make driving it a pleasure!\nMore room inside ... more clearance tool\nThe roomy Travelall carries 8 people in comfort and\nthe load capacity dwarfs comparable vehicles.\nBecause of its ample clearance, you can drive the\nrugged Travelall over the roughest road with confidence. Available too with 4-whool drive.\nSee your International dealer or branch soon, and\ntest driy$ the new Travelall for yourself.\nIDEAL FOR the salesman   .   ,   ,   the farmer   ,   .   \u2022   the sportsman\nthe construction man\nft\nINTERNATIOPjIAL TRUCKS\nINT\u00a3KNATIONAl     HiUVtSTEB     COM\"'\nOF     CANADA     IIMTED    (Moillu llirt ond Sal Diilmt Offiii snil Addranl\nINTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF CANADA LTD.\n305 9th St. North Lethbridge, Alberta\nCentral Truck & Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Fronr St.\nPhone 1810\nYork,\" Is to refuse to give workers copies of the contract that are\nput in writing. Thus, he said, the\nworkers seldom know even the\nminimum benefits to which they\nare entitled.       '\nChairman John McClellan\n(Dem. Ark.) said in advance it\nwould be shown that \"sweetheart\ncontracts\" between the unions and\nemployers gave the workers only\nthe legal minimum wage.\nToday's hearings are a'new\nphase of the committee's Investigation intp New York area unions dominated by labor racketeer\nJohnny Dio, described as a close\nfriend of James R. Hoffa, Teamsters nion boss.\nSWITCHED TO TEAMSTERS\nPrevious testimony has brought\nout that Dio got the unions started\nas part of the old AFL United\nAuto Workers Union, but since\nhas switched them into the Teamsters Union.\nMcClellan said Wednesday that\nHoffa used Dio to help gain labor\ndomination over New York and\nthe eastern seaboard. In that\nstatement,  McClellan  also said:\n\"It will be shown that the illiterate Puerto Rican and Negro laborer was misused by both management and labor.   .\n\"The racketeers, in ..effect, sold\nout the union members and gained\nthe co-operation of management\nin organizing plants by giving\nthem easy, or so-called 'sweetheart\ncontracts,' which contained little\nor no benefits to employees.\"\nDulles Proposals\nNo Surprise\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 State Secretary Dulles' proposals for mutual\ninspection as a step toward disarmament, expressed Friday in\nLondon, caused no surprise in Ottawa, where they were discussed\nlast weekend with Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nMr. Dulles offered at the London\ndisarmament conference to open\nCanada and the United States to\nSoviet aerial and ground inspection\nprovided the same facilities were\nmade available throughout the\nwhole Soviet Union.\nThe state secretary was in Ottawa last Saturday and Sunday,\nhad three meetings with Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker and took off\nfrom here for the London talks.\nInformed sources here reported\nSunday night that the two foreign-\nservice heads \u2014 Mr. Diefenbaker\ndoubles as Canada's secretary of\nstate for external affairs\u2014discussed possible aerial inspection of\nArctic' areas, including some in\nCanada.\nIn a statement issued after the\nmeetings Mr. Dulles said:\n\"We particularly discussed the\nprospective zone of inspection in\nthe western hemisphere which,\nwith a reciprocal zone of\ninspection in the Soviet Union,\nwould be designed to reduce the\npossibility of surprise attack.\"\nIt was understood here lhat Mr.\nDulles carried Canada's support\nfor his proposals when he went'\nto London.\nMarilyn Monroe\nloses Baby\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Marilyn\nMonroe lost her baby by an operation, a medical source close to the\ncase said Friday.\nThe 31-year-old blonde movie\nstar was taken to Doctors hospital\nThursday for treatment of a threatened miscarriage. She was brought\nby ambulance 106 miles from her\nLong Island-summer home.\nWith her was her husband, play-\nmight Arthur Miller.\nAfter she was admitted to the\nhospital, one of Miss Monroe's\ndoctors said she was \"five or six\nweeks pregnant and is expecting\nher child at the end of March.\"\nThe medical source told a reporter an hour-long operation was performed on the actress Thursday\nnight.\n\"The baby was unsavable\" and it\nwas urgent to \"protect the life of\nthe mother,\" the source added.\nU.K. Favors\nMissile Ban\nLONDON (Reuters) - Allan\nNoble, government minister who\nfrequently leads Britain's delegation at the disarmament talks here,\nsaid Friday Britain would support\nany proposals for banning guided\nmissiles.\nHe was answering a Labor member in the House of Commons who\nasked whether Russia had propos-\nthe abolition of all guided missiles\nand rockets.\nNoble, minister of state for foreign affairs, said there had been a\ndiscussion of missiles in the five-\nnation disarmament subcommittee\nlast week but it still was confidential.\nPressed for an assurance that\nthe British government agreed to\nsuch proposals, he said he would\n\"certainly support\" them.\nNlfd. Musi Gel\nFederal Aid\nFor Ihe Needy\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-New-\nfoundland must have federal financial aid if it is to support\naged, disabled and needy people,\na three-man royal commission investigating the province's financial position was told Thursday.\nR. L. Andrews of the Newfoundland welfare department said that\nthe province needs more than $5,-\n000,000 for a home for delinquent\nboys and a new home for the\naged.\nAssistance was also needed\neither to make provincial payments to schools for the blind and\ndeaf in Halifax or to establish\nsimilar institutions in Newfoundland.\n\"It is -impossible to care for all\nthe needy people \"unless special\nassistance Is forthcoming in one\nform or another from the federal\ngovernment,\" he said.\nMr. Andrews said the province\nhas \"the lowest per capita Income\nin Canada.\"\nHis department was set up after\nConfederation in 1949 by \"improvising and making changes from\nday to day\" while other provinces\ndeveloped their public- services\nover the years, he said.\nArraign Mother\nFor Taking Baby\nMONTREAL (CP) - Germaine\nSt. Amour, 32, a waitress, was\narraigned Thursday on a charge\nof kidnapping her four-year-old\ndaughter from the foster parents\nwho adopted the child in 1953.\nShe was freed on $950 bail on\ncondition she would present the\nchild at her preliminary hearing\nAug.. 8.\nThe warrant for the woman's\narrest was sworn out two days\nago on the complaint of Mrs. Oscar Beauchamp, who tearfully recounted that Miss Amour had begun dropping in to visit her daughter about a year ago and finally\ndisappeared'with her.\nMrs. Beauchamp said she didn't\nknow how the natural mother\nlearned the whereabouts of her\nchild, legally adopted shortly after\nher birth. Mrs. Beaucharop said\nshe had permitted the natural\nmother's visits because Miss\nAmour said she had not long to\nlive. She. had agreed to let her\ntake the tot away last weekend\nfor a visit to Miss Amour's parents at Rouyn, Que., but the child\nhad been left there.\nWednesday, Miss Amour filed\na petition in Superior Court to\nhave the adoption annulled, contending proper consent never had\nbeen obtained from her for the\nadoption.\n100 Soldiers Coming\nBack From Germany\nSOEST, Germany (AP) \u2014 About\n100 Canadian soldiers and their\nfamilies left for home Friday after\ntwo years' service with Canada's\nNATO forces in West Germany.\nThey are the first contingent of\n2nd Infantry Brigade soldiers to\nleave under a rotation plan that\nwill bring replacements from Can-\nGerman Airforee Officers\nTo Be Trained in Canada\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Canada has\nbeen selected as the training\nground for new German air force\nofficers \"because of the Canadian\nspirit and military efficiency,\" the\nWest German ambassador to Canada said Friday.\nAmbassador Hasso von Etzdorf,\nhere for German Day celebra-\nions, said in an interview that\n\"Canada was singled out to ensure our men get the right skill\nand the right military philosophy.\"\nWhil6 some officers are to be\ntrained in the United States, he\nsaid, Canada was chosen when\nconsideration was given to other\ncountries  which  might help in\nfluence young German military\nthought along the proper and\nmost desirable lines.\n\"We \"feel to have our boys\ntrained here is a great help forward in relations between the two\ncountries because these men will\nbe in Canada over two years and\ngo back and train others in the\nCanadian military way.\"\nAbout 360 German airmen .will\ncome to Canada. The first group\nof cadets is expected to arrive in\nSeptember.\nThe German Day celebrations\nin which Dr. von Etzdorf will take\npart, mark the 205th anniversary\nof the landing of German settlers\nat Lunenburg, N.S.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nrtit. Daily News does not hold itself responsible in the event\nof in error In the following lists.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n.  (Closing Prices)\nMINES   '\nAlgom Uranium  _\t\nAmal Larder  \t\nAnacon Lead ~_\t\nAnglo Rouen -\t\nAtlin Ruff _ __\nAubelle  - .....\nAumacho  - _\t\nAumaque   - -\nBase Metals\t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBlbis Yukon\t\nBoymar .\t\nBrilund  _\t\nBroulan\t\nBrunswick  ~\t\nBuff Can\n20.25\n.29\n1.20\n' .53,\n..57\n,08V\n.20\n.09\n.69\n.29\n.07\n.06\nBuff Red Lake .\nCampbell C  \t\nCampbell R I\t\nCan Met \t\nCassiar \t\nCentral Patricia\nChimo\t\nCoin Lake \t\nCons Denison \t\nCons Discovery\nCons Halliwell ....\nCons Howe \t\nCons M & S\t\nCons Sanorm\t\nCon Sub \t\nConwest   '.\t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man\t\nD'Aragon \t\nDonalda\t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nFalconbridge \t\nFaraday  \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel \t\nGlen Uranium\t\nGoldcrest \t\nGrandines  \t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerals \t\nHeadway  \t\nHollinger\t\nHudson Bay .'.\t\nInspiration  -\t\nInt Nickel\t\nIron Bay\t\nJoliet Que\t\nJonsmith\t\nR J Jowsey \t\nKenville\t\nKerr Addison\t\nLabrador  _.\nLake Lingman\t\nLexindin \t\nLittle Long Lac ....\nLorado \t\nLouvic't\t\nMacassa  ,.\nMacDonald  \t\nMadsen R L\t\nMalartic G F\t\nManeast \t\nMaritime Mining ..\nMart McNeely \t\nMcMarmac    \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMilliken ._\nMining Corp _..\nMogul .: \t\nMulti Mins '.\t\nNew Alger\t\nNew Bidiamaque\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Fortune\t\nNew Harricana _.\nNew Jason  _.\nNew Lund\t\nNipissing\t\nNisto _.\nNoranda New _.\nNorgold \t\nNormetals  :.....\nNorpax  \t\nNorth Can ,\nNorth Rankin\t\nOpemiska ,\nPickle Crow'.\nPlacer Develop\t\nQuebec Lab \t\nQuebec Lithium ... \t\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont \t\nRadiore , \t\nRayrock\t\nSan Antonio\t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSilver Miller... \u201e\t\nStadacona ....\nSteep Rock -\t\nSullivan Con _.\nSylvanite  _\t\nTeck Hughes -\t\nTemagami\t\nThomp-Lund \t\nTombill\nTrans Cont Res\t\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Canada \t\nVentures \t\nVicour \t\nViolamac \t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWiltsey Goglin\t\nWright Hargreaves\nYale  _\t\nYukeno \t\n6.10\n.12\n.07V4\n9.50\n5.05\n3.20\n7.05\n1.71\n.93\n.14%\n17.25\n2.75\n.70\n2.35\n22.50\n.03\n1.22\n5.00\n.38\n.11\n.21 Vt\n.16\n1.30\n2.80\n31.75\n2.16\n2.35\n13.00\n3.85\n.31\n.09\n.10\n17.8714\n.19\n,50\n31.87%\n58.62%\n.65\n87.00\n3.75\n.35\n.14\n.65\n.07\n14.25\n22.50\nMVt\n.16\n2.70\n.60\n.12\n2.10\n.43\n1.45\n1.60\n.1514\n1.29\n.14\n.09\n.21\n2.B0\n15.00\n1.20\n.75\n.10\n.08\n.80\n.WA\n.23%\n.WA\n.37\n1.95\n.08\n45.00\n.21%\n3.20\n.87\n1.40\n1.31\n10.50\n1.05\n10.25\n.10 Vt\n7.25\n1.93\n11.75\n.80\n1.41\n.53\n5.00\n.68\n.31%\n18.50\n2.55\n1.55\n2.15\n2.75\n.78\n.71\n.28\n4.35\n\u2022.86\n35.50\n.1214\n1.45\n7.50\n.31\n1.35\n.19\n.07\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc\t\nBanff Oils        3.\nBailey Selburn   15.\nBata Petroleum\t\nCal & Ed   33.\nCan Admiral\t\nCdn Atlantic      8.\nCan Devonian .'.     8.\nCan Decalta    '1.\nCommonwealth Pete     7,\nCon East Crest\t\nCons.Peak \t\nDevon Leduc     2.\nHome A     5.\nLiberal Pete     2.\nLong Island Pete     ' .\nMidcon     1.\nNat Pete     4.\nNew Continental\t\nNew Gas Ex     2.\nOkalta       2.\nPac Pete      32.\nPetrol\t\nPonder \t\nProv Gas      4.\nRoyalite    19.\nSpooner\t\nStanwell Oil     1.\nTrans Era\t\nUnited Oils\nWespac\nYank Canuck ...\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi . ' \t\nAlgoma Steel ....\nAluminum\nArgus 2nd pfd....\nAtlas St\t\n32\n35\n87%\n10\n00\n50\n90\n25\n05\n.50\n45\n13\n15\n00\n35\n18\n19\n30\n51\n55\n40\n50\n83\n60\n10\n.00\n.40%\n.47\n,29\n3.60\n.27\n.12\n30%\n34\n45\n47%\n24%\nB A Oil \t\nS3\n6\nBell Telephone ..........\n40%\nBrazilian              .........\nm\nB C Elec 4%s \t\n93\nB C Forest\t\n11 %\nB C Power A \t\n49\n49\nBurns A \t\n11\nCanadian Brew \u25a0.\t\n26%\nCan Cahners  ..\n14%\nCan Celanese\t\n16\nCan Cement   \t\n28\nCan Chem Co \t\n6%\nCart Pac Rly _ ___\t\n32V.\nCockshutt  \t\n8%\nCons Gas\t\n37%\nDist Seagram \t\n28\nDom Foundries _\u201e ...\n32%\nDom Magnesium\t\n13%\nDom Steel Ord\t\n29\nDom Stores  \t\n52%\nDom Tar & Chem \t\n11\nDom Textiles\t\n8%\n47%\nFamous Players\t\n17H\nFord A \t\n100\nGatineau \t\n30%\nGatineau 5% pfd\t\n95\nGoodyear _\t\n190\nGypsum' Lime _\u201e \t\n\u25a0 30\n30%\nImperial Oil \t\n51%\nImp Tobacco\t\n10%\nInt Pete  :  \t\n51\nLaura Secord\t\n19%\nLoblaw A\t\n-24\nLoblaw B\t\n23%\nMasse'y Harris \t\nm\nMcColl  Frontenac  1\n77%\nMont Loco\t\n17%\nMoore Corp\t\n69%\nPage Hershey   \t\n125%\nPowell River\t\n39%\nRuss Industries  ....\n11\n87\nSicks Brew \t\n22\nSimpsons A _\t\n18%\nStandard Paving  _\n40%\nSteel of Can    ....\n67%\nTaylor Pearson \t\n9%\nUnion Gas of Can \t\n77\nUnited Steel \t\n15\nWeston George\t\n24\nWinnipeg Gas  _    \t\n14%\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge J\t\nBralorne \t\n       .20\n     4.00\nCariboo Gold \t\n._ 50\nGiant Mascot\t\n_ 10%\nGranduc \t\n     2.15\nGrandview \t\n.07-\nHamil Sil  ,\n       .04%\nHighland Bell\t\n1.41\nKootenay Base Metals .\u00bb..     .01 ,\nNational Ex _.     .26\nPend Oreille\t\n  .    2.25\nPioneer Gold \t\n     1.35\nPremier Border ....\nQuatsino  _.\n       .08\n-   .40\nReeves Mac _.  ._\n     1.01\nRexspar \t\nu\nSheep Creek\t\n_,       .50\nSherritt Gordon\t\n.\u201e   ._.    5,05\nSilback Premier ...\n.08\nSilver Ridge ....\nSilver Standard\t\n j,      .05\n3-5\nSunshine Lardeau...\n.14\nTaylor\t\n.07\nTrojan  \t\n.61\nWestern Ex\t\n       .30\nA P Cons \u201e.  \t\n 62\nOILS\nAltex   \t\n       .21\nCal & Ed\t\n       32.75\nCharter  _.\n     3.45\nHome  _\n.   ..   18.50\nNew.Gas Ex \t\n.   ..       2.50\nPac Pete\t\nPeace River Gas ..\n    30.00\n    13.00\nRoyal Can\t\n       ,65\nSparmac\t\nVanalta  :\t\nVantor ....\n.26%\n       .27\n     2.35\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta 'njst \t\n...     1.50\nAlberta Dist Vt _\nB C Forest\t\nB C Power\t\n     1.45\n11.00\n48.00\nB C Telephone\t\n    41.00\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B  \t\nInland Nat \"Gas\t\n17.50\n     4.00\n      15.00\nLucky Lager \t\n l_    4.10\nMacM Ji Bloedel B\nMid Western\t\nPowel River\t\n L. \"28.25\n     3.35\n    38.25\nTrans Mtn\t\n101.00\nWestminster Paper\nUNLISTED\nFUNDSr\t\nTranscana  C\nTr.ans Mtn \t\n25.00\nBid     Ask\n36.50   37.00\n101.00 102 00\nWoodbury \t\nBANKS\nBank of 'Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can\nRoy Bank of Can ....\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund .. '-,..\nCommonwealth Int\nGrouped Income ....\nInvestors Mutual ....\nLeverage \t\nTrans Canada \"C\"\n.02      .02M\n46.00   47.00\n48.00   49.00\n53.50   54.50\n71.50   72.50\n8.88    9.74\n7.56    8.31\n6.25    6.85\n10.47   11.32\n5.47    6.01\n6.25    6.85\nAll Accidents Not\nDmb To Recklessness\nTORONTO    (CP)  - Highways\nMinister Allan said here statistics\nshow the so-called average driver\nis usually the one involved in fatal\naccidents. ,\nIn a release giving statistics of\nfatal accidents in Ontario the minister said 500 of the 738 drivers\ninvolved in fatal accidents during\na six-month period had no previous\nconviction for traffic offences.\n'\"There is a misconception that\nfatal accidents usually Involve\nwild, reckless or drunken driving:.\nor accident, repeaters or chronic\nviolators of traffic laws or otherwise abnormal types,\" Mr. Allan\nsaid.\n\"The faot that some drivers keep\nfree of accidents may be due to\nthe alertness of other drivers o*i\nbecause their actions are not ot'^\nserved by Ihe police,\" Mr. Allan\nsaid. \"For these reasons, a clear\nrecord is not necessarily the sigr\nof a good and skillful driver.\"\nClassified Ads Bring Returns I\n Ml-\nSPORTS\nMarlene in Front\n^At Halfway Point\nMONTREAL (CP) - Marlene\nStewart Streit shot a one-under-par\n76 Friday and took the lead in the\nCanadian ladles' closed golf championship.\nWith 36 holes of the 54-hole title\naffair completed, Marlene had a\ntotal of 153, two strokes better\nthan Rae Milligan of Calgary and\nfour better than Mary Ellen Driscoll of Saint John, N, B., and little Judy Darling of Montreal.\nThe would-be throne usurpers,\nwho had a held day Thursday in\nCOMMITTEE\nPRIMES SELF\nFOR TWO MORE\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nHouse anti \u2022 trust subcommittee\nturns its pro sports investigation\nto basketball and ice hockey next\nweek.\nMaurice Podoloff, president of\nthe National Basketball Association, is scheduled to testify when\nhearings resume Wednesday.\nThree player spokesmen \u2014 Bob\nCousy, Ed MacAuley and Bob\nPettit\u2014are down for questioning\nthe same day.\nClarence Campbell, president of\nthe National Hockey League, has\nbeen called for Thursday. The\nsubcommittee also will hear then\nfrom James Durante, hockey players' attorney, and player representatives Ted Lindsay and Doug\nHarvey.\nBROOKS BEANED\nBY NED GARVER\nBALTIMORE (AP) \u2014 Brooks\nRobinson, third baseman for Bal\ntimore Orioles, was struck on the\nhead by a pitched ball Friday\nnight in the second game of the\nOriole-Kansas City doubleheader,\nThe ball, thrown by Ned Garver\nin the fourth inning, split Robinson's plastic protective helmet.\nRobinson was removed from the\nfield on a stretcher and taken to\nhospital.\nSplit in Cup Tie\nBRUSSELS (AP)-Italy and Belgium broke even Friday in the\nopening singles matches of the\nfinal round in European zone\nDavis Cup competition.\nNicola Pietrangeli of Italy mastered Jack Brichant In the first\nmatch, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 but Belgium\ndrew even when Philippe Washer\nconquered Giuseppe Merlo 6-2, 8-6,\n6-2 in the second.\nGilchrist's Service\nAinsworth,  B.C.\nIMPERIAL GAS AN OILS\nATLAS   TIRES\nOpen Sunday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn   Nelson-Kaslo   Highway\nLike having\nan extra\nhired hand!\nsnatching at the crown of Marlene\u2014six times champion\u2014wilted\nunder her merciless steadiness as\nwell as the heat,\nJudy Darling, who set up\nfour-stroke lead over the field on\nThursday with a startling 73, saw\nher game all but collapse, The 19-\nyear-old Quebec champion was\naway to a poor start but rallied\nbriefly on the back nine to finish\nwith 84.\nCALGARY GIRL\nRECOVERS\nRae Milligan made a remarkable\ncomeback after almost blowing\nherself right out oi ttie tournament\nat the first two holes, taking a\nseven at each\u2014two and three over\npar\u2014and finished her round with a\n78 to go with Thursday's par 77.\nRae came down the back nine in\n38, three under par and the hottest\nnine pf the day.\nMafy Ellen Driscoll with a 77\nThursday, had a' touch of putting\ntrouble Friday but still finished\nwith an \"80.\nFive started Friday's round with\na par 77, including the defending\nchampion from Fonthlll, Ont. They\nwere Misses Milligan and Driscoll\nand Janet MacWha of nearby St.\nLambert and Donna Patton of Winnipeg.\nThird Round of Tournament\nWill Decide Team Champion\nWomen's Play\nStarts Monday\nPlay begins Monday at Lakeside\nPark in a women's singles tournament for members of Nelson Lawn\nBowling Club. Dates for the byes\nwill be arranged Immediately after\nthe first-round games have been\ncompleted.\nDraw follows:\nFirst round\u2014Mrs. Webb vs. Mrs\nCone; Miss Smith vs. Mrs. Rovers;\nMrs. Blakeman vs. Mrs. Hesse,\nByes will go to Mrs. Openshaw,\nMrs. Priestley, Mrs. Ward, Miss\nCowan afid Mrs. Schurek.\nG. A. Massey, club secretary,\ndisclosed the draw for the remainder of men's singles first round\nmatches is as follows:\nN. Bradley vs. J. Draper; J.\nDawson vs. A. Lane.\nSecond-round matches will be as\nfollows:\nA. Farrow vs. winner of Dawson-\n[Xane game; J. Penwill vs. A;\nHesse; J. Cone vs. R. Thompson;\nB. Rowley vs. F. Wah; H. Smith\nvs'. C. Rushby; G. Massey vs. C,\nKeal; F. Priestley vs. F. Hold; G.\nStrong vs. winner of Bradley-\nDraper game.\nSecond-round matches, according\nto Mr. Massey, must be completed\nas quickly as possible after their\nstarting date of Aug. 6, Tuesday\nnight.\nPlayers concerned must arrange\ntheir own starting times and fix\ntheir own playing-dates.\nMounties Buy Bob\nFrom Baltimore\nBALTIMORE (AP)-Bob Hale,\n24-year-old first baseman, was\nsold outright by Baltimore Orioles\nFriday to Vancouver, their affiliate in the Pacific Coast League.\nHale, a Chicagoan who hit .357\nin -05 games for the Orioles in\n1955, saw action this year in 42\ngames, 40 of them as a pinch-\nhitter, and batted .250. Last season he hit .237 for the Orioles in\n95 games and .304 for Montreal\nof the International League in 23\ngames.\nHfifflKB.\nlightweight RA\nBring on your tough cutting jobs! Lightweight RA\nchain saw cuts timber, firewood, fenceposts \u2014 good\nfor pruning trees and fixing farm buildings! Let us\ngive you an on-the-spot\ndemonstration!\nArrow Park Garage\n'ARROW  PARK,  B.C.\nPhone 2-N\ntermt availablt\nIHDIISTRinl\n7\/1   iUeiUEIIIHI\ni-j UMiriD\nV1HUUVU.UXU1\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results of\nFriday's cricket matches:\nGloucestershire 318 and 209 for\n5 declared, Glamorgan 178 and 83.\nGloucestershire won by 266 runs.\n(Gloucestershire 14 points),\nNorthamptonshire 287 for 7 declared and 180 for 6 declared, Lancashire 163 and 92. Northamptonshire won by 212 runs. (Northamptonshire. 12 points).\nWarwickshire 225 and 178,\nHampshire 253 and 151 for 1.\nHampshire won ' by 9 wickets.\n(Hampshire 14 points I.Sussex 243 and 164, Yorkshire\n374 and 34 for 1. Yorkshire won\nby 9 wickets. (Yorkshire 14\npoints).\nSurrey 210- and 199 for 3> declared, West Indies 140 and 270 for\n3. West Indies won by 7 wickets.\nNottinghamshire 265 and 184,\nKent 337 and 114 for 2. Kent won\nby 8 wickets. (Kent, 12 points).\nSomerset 364 for 7 declared and\n161 for 9 declared, Worcestershire 252 and 216. Somerset won\nby 57 runs. (Somerset 14 points).\nEssex 115 and 377 for 6 declared, Middlesex 274 and 144.\nEssex won by 74 runs. (Essex 12\npoints, Middlesex 4 points).\nCOAST ISLAND\nGraham Island, largest and\nmost northern of the Queen Charlotte Islands off British Columbia,\nhas an area of 2485 miles.\nMONTREAL (CF)-Quebec and\nOntario tied Friday for the Canadian ladies' interprovincial team\nchampionship and the title will be\ndecided today In the third and\nfinal round of the Canadian ladies' close golf title event.\nThe four-member teams were\ndeadlocked with aggregate medal\nscores of 661 after completion of\nthe 36-hole team matches. Alberta\nwas in third place with 664, three\nstrokes away.\nThe situation was unprecedented for the Canadian Ladles'\nGolf Union and a committee. discussed the situation Friday night.\nThey decided to leave the issue\nto the third round of the women's\nnational close. If the' tie persists,\nmm INTERCEPT SIX STAMP\nPASSES FOR 23-fl VICTORY\nOTTAWA (CP)-Ottawa Rough\nRiders, intercepting enemy passes\nright and left, took a 23-14 victory\nfrom Calgary Stampeders Friday\nnight in an exhibition football\ngame at Lansdowne Park.\nQuarterback Hal Ledyard, end\nBobby Simpson and end Tom\nAdams scored the Ottawa touch-\nList Draw for\nChampionship\nFollowing is the draw for the\nfirst round of the annual Nelson\nGolf and Country .Club championship match-play tournament, that\nbegins Sunday.\n8 a.m.\u2014Jack Stewart vs Charlie Blunt; Ed McGregor vs Walt\nApostoliuk, '\n8:10 a.m.\u2014Arnold Sherwood vs\nBob Patterson; Terry Panton vs\nGren Bill.\nB:20 a.m. \u2014 Bill Haldane vs\nGeorge Barefoot; Bob McDonald\nvs Mickey Maglio.\n8:30 a.m.\u2014Bill Wicken vs Al\nFreeman; Graeme Steed vs Gord\nSmith.\n8:40 a.m.\u2014Gus Adams vs Carl\nLocatelli; Harold Mayo vs Bruce\nLatremoullle.\n8:50 a.m.\u2014Fred MacKay vs Al\nMores; Dune Jamieson vs Red\nKoehle.\n9 a.m.\u2014Bill Vickers vs Vern\nMiller; Ode Odegaard vs Bill Day,\n9:10 a.m.\u2014Leo Atwell vs Ivan\nLaughton; Gord Olson vs Al Koe\nnig.\nBRITISH AWAIT\nGOLF INVASION\nLINDRICK, England (API-Britain's best amateur and professional golfers turned out here Frl-\n.' in a curtain raiser to this\nyear's major tournaments against\nthe United States..\nAfter five foursomes over 36\nholes, the professionals led by\nthree matches to one with one\nmatch halved. Ten singles will be\nplayed today.\nThe teams played over the\n6541-yard course chosen for this\nyear's Ryder Cup clash Oct. 4-5.\nBut the limelight was on the amateurs, who will meet the United\nStates for the Walker Cup at Minneapolis, Aug. 30-31.\nReid Jack, the British amateur\nchampion teaming with young\nDouglas Sewell, did the best. They\nhad an 8 and 7 w i n over Ryder\nCup men Harry Bradshaw and\nPeter Mills.\nPhil Scurtton and Alan Bussell\nhalved their match against professionals Eric Lasterd and John\nJacobs. The other six, Walker\nCup men Involved all lost their\nmatches.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nCharlottetown \u2014 Dick Hall, 148,\nBoston, outpointed Cobey McClus-\nkey, 143, Charlottetown, 10.\nLos Angeles\u2014Howard King, J88,\nReno, Nev., outpointed Bob Albright, 218, Los Angeles, 10.\nWest 'Jordan, Utah\u2014Don Fullmer, 162, \u2022 West Jordan, stopped\nJoe Mortenson, 158, Salt Lake\nCity, 3.\nProbable Pitchers\nNew York  (AP)   \u2014 Probable\npitchers for today's games, with\nwon and Ibst percentages in parentheses:\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDetroit at Washington \u2014 Hoeft\n(3-6) vs Kemmerer (5-7).\nCleveland at New York \u2014 Wynn\n(13-11) vs Sturdivant (8-5).    ,\nChicago at Boston\u2014Pierce (15-\n7) vs Brewer 13-8).\nKansas City at Baltimore (6) \u2014\nTerry (3-5) vs Brown (3-6).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh at Chicago \u2014 Friend\n(7-13) vs Elston (3-5).\nNew York at Cincinnati\u2014Gomez\n(11-9) vs Fowler (3-0).\nBrooklyn at Milwaukee \u2014 Burdette (9-6) vs Newcombe (9-9).\nPhiladelphia at St. Louis\u2014Roberts (8-13) vs V. McDaniel (5-2);\nBOYD WHIPS WILLIE\nNEW YORIC (AP) -Bobby\nBoyd won his second split decision\nFriday night over Willie Vaughn\nin their 10-round main event at St.\nNicholas Arena.\nThe ninth-rated Boyd came from\nbehind to grit the votes of both\nreferee Harry Kessler and judge\nArthur Aidala by a 5-4-1 margin.\nJudge 'Frank Fullman called it a\ndraw.\ndowns. Gary Schreider converted\nCalgary's first point came In the\nall three of the Big Four team's\nTDs.\nsecond quarter when Don Pinhey\nconceded a single behind the Ottawa goal line on a kick by Art\nDuncan.\nThe Western Interprovincial\nFootball' Union team didn't, get\nback into the scoring again until\nthe final quarter when it picked\nup both its touchdowns.\nJim Morse, formerly of Notre\nDame, scored the first TD and Al\nPollard the second. Pollard converted Morse's but missed on his\nown.\nOTTAWA INTERCEPTIONS\nThe Riders pulled In six Stam-\npeder passes and went on from two\nof the interceptions to get touchdowns.   -\nCalgary quarters threw 25\npasses, completed 12 for 241 yards.\nOttawa signal callers heaved 20,\ncompleting five for 179 yards.\nRumor Bragan\nTo Be Dropped\nPITTSBURGH (AP) - The\nPittsburgh Post-Gazette says it has\nlearned from a reliable source that\nBobby Bragan will be fired Friday\nas manager of the National League\nPittsburgh Pirates. '\nThe newspaper quoted the unnamed source as saying Pirate\ngeneral manager Joe L. Brown\nwill announce Bragan's firing at\na press conference in Chicago\nwhere the Pittsburgh club is playing the Cubs.\nDanny Murtaugh, present Pirate\ncoach^'and former Infielder, will\nsucceed Bragan for the balance\nof the season, it said.\nBrown was reported to have\nflown to Chicago Friday to see the\nPirates play. Pittsburgh lost its\nsixth straight game 6-4. .\nThe Post-Gazette story says\nBrown \"reportedly had Bragan's\nfiring'in mind for more than a\nweek.\"\nBrown hired Bragan Nov. 2,\n1955, and rehired him for another\nseason last Nov. 20.\nDutchmen Welcome\nFive New. Players\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP)-Five\nnew players\u2014two of them Imports\nfrom Detroit Lions \u2014 joined the\nKitchener \u2022 Waterloo Dutchmen\nfootball camp here Friday.\nThe United States newcomers to\nthe Ontario Rugby Football Union\nentry are 230-pound halfback Dick\nReinking from Kansas and halfback Carl Johnson from South\nDakota.\nHalfbacks Ron Bush and John\nHrycho, both Of Hamilton, and\nguard Earl Ford are Canadian arrivals. Bush stuck, with Montreal\nAlouettes for five'weeks in training camp before being dropped.\nFord, recently moved to Kitchener by his company, played\nguard for Toronto Beaches last\nseason.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAb R H Pet.\nWilliams, Boston . 312 73 119 .382\nMantle, New York .. 329 94 118 .359\nWoodling, Cleve  251 47 84 .335\nBoyd, Baltimore .... 314 52 103 .328\nSkowron,  NY   323 48 105 .325\nRuns \u2014 Manlte, 94. \u2022\nRuns batted in\u2014Sievers, Washington, 77.\nHits\u2014Malzone, Boston and Fox,\nChicago, 125.\nDoubles \u2014 Gardner, Baltimore,\n25.\nTriples \u2014 McDougald and Simpson, New York, 7.\nHome runs \u2014 Williams,.29.\nStolen bases \u2014 Aparicio, Chicago, 14.\nPitching   \u2014   Bunning,   Detroit,\n13-3, .813.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Wynn,   Cleveland,\n131.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAb R H Pet.\nAaron, Milwaukee 404 77 137 .339\nMusial, St. Louis . 388 63 130 .335\nGroat, Pittsburgh .. 305 35 101 .331\nMays, New York .... 375 70 120 .320\nSchoendienst, Mil.   421 55 134 .318\nRuns \u2014 Aaron, and Blaslngame,\nSt. Louis, 77.\nRuns batted in \u2014 Musial, 83,\nHits \u2014 Aaron, 137.\nDoubles \u2014 Musial, 28,\nTriples \u2014 Mays, 12.\nHome runs \u2014 Aaron, 30.\nStolen bases \u2014 Mays, 30.\nPitching \u2014 Schmidt, St. Louis,\n9-1, .900.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Sanford, Philadelphia, 125.\nthe championship will be decided\non sudden - death extra hole-by-\nhole play. Ontario is the defending champion.\nManitoba finished in fourth\nplace with an aggregate 701. British Columbia was next with 709,\nfollowed by New Brunswick with\n720, Saskatchewan with 746 and\nNova Scotia with 768.\nONTARIO TAKES JUNIOR\nThe Interprovincial junior team\nchampionship, governed by n e t\nscores instead bf gross, went to\nOntario with a net of 318 for the\ntwo-player team. New Brunswick\nwas second with 326 and Quebec,\nthe defending champion, third\nwith 335.\nIn the senior division, Quebec\nall but lost, then pulled into a\ntie, when the province's last\nplayer \u2014 Teddy Berube of the\nMontreal Islemere Club \u2014 came\nhome.\nIt was anti-climax that Miss\nBerube's 175 for the two rounds\nwas the highest of the Quebec\nteam. Judy Darling was low with\n157 and Janet MacWha was next\nwith 159.     v\nDe Vicenzo\nMisses Mark;\nLeads By Two\nCHICAGO (AP) - Roberto De\nVicenzo, 34, handsome South American, missed- the course record\nby only a stroke Friday with an\neight-uhder-par 64 for the halfway lead in the, $25,000 ail-American golf tourney.\nDe Vicenzo fired an opening 69\nThursday for a 133 total. That was\n11 under Tam O'Shanter's par\nand two strokes ahead of Bill Cas\nper, Jr., who tacked a 68 onto his\nopening 67 for 135.\nStan Leonard of Lachute, Que.\nand Vancouver, was tied with four\nother players at 141 after hitting\n71-70.\nAl Balding of Toronto had 74-69\nfor a 143 total.\nDe Vicenzo, a native of Buenos\nAires i :i now a pro at Mexico\nCity, raked Tam O'Shanter's par\n36-36\u201472 layout for rounds of 33\nand 31. The record is held by\nLloyd Mangrum 32-31\u201463, set in\n1948 \"world\" tourney. The field\nof 160 was trimmed in half for\nthe remaining two rounds, today\nand Sunday.,\nBaseball Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh   .. 000 300 010- 4  8  5\nChicago  200 001 03x\u2014 6  8   1\nLaw and Foiles; Drott, Hillman\n(8) and Neeman. W: Hillman.\nHRs: Pittsburgh \u2014 Groat, Skinner,\nFreese;  Chicago\u2014Neeman.\nPhil   \u2022\u2022 200 200 000 0- 4  9   2\nSt. Louis .... 200 010 100 1- 5 12 .0\nSanford, Farrel (7), Morehead\n(9) B. Miller (9) and Lopata; Jackson, Schmidt (10) and Landrith,\nH. Smith (9). W: Schmidt. L: B.\nMiller. HRs: Philadelhpia \u2014 Lopata, Anderson. St. Louis\u2014Cunningham.\nNew York .... 031 000 011- 6 11 0\nCincinnati .... 200 001 123\u2014 9 12 0\nBarclay, Grissom (7), Worthington (9) and Thomas, Katt (9);\nJeffcoat, Sanchez (3), Klippstein\nSUSPENDED GAME\nTO BE COMPLETED\nSecond game of the Babe Ruth\nplayoffs between K.C.s and Mc\nand Mcs will be completed this\nevening at Queen Elizabeth Park.\nThe second game was started\nThursday evening but. was called\nat the end of three complete innings due to heavy rain, with K.C.s\nleading 5-0,\nThird game of the best of five\nwill be played next Tuesday.\nEARLY SINGLES\nTO U.S. CUPPERS\nBROOKLINE, Mass (AP)-Vic\nSeixas of Philadelphia had a comparatively easy time scoring a\nstraight-set victory over Carlos\nFernandes of Brazil Friday to\ngive the United States a clean\nsweep of the two opening singles\nmatches of the American zone\nDavis Cup finals. The scores were\n6-3, 6-3, 6-2.\nIn the opening match Sammy\nGiammalva, Houston, Tex., defeated Armando Vielfa, 4-6, 7-5,\n6-4, 4-0, 64.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW L Pet Gbl\nNew York 66 34 .660\nChicago  .'..... 61 39 .610   5\nBoston   55 46 .545 llVt\nCleveland 50 50 .500 16\nDetroit  50 50 .500 16\nBaltimore  48 53 .475 VaVt\nWashington 37 11 .359 WVt\nKansas City 36 65 .356 30W\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis  60.40 .600\nMilwaukee  61 41 .598\nBrooklyn  :....; 58 43 .574   2Vt\nCincinnati  57 44 .564  3Vt\nPhiladelphia   56 46 .549  5\nNew York  43 59 .422 18\nPittsburgh 36 66 .353 25\nChicago     34 66 .340 26\n(8), Nuxhall (9); Freeman (9) and\nBailey. W: Freeman. L: Worthington. HRs: New York\u2014Thomson,\nMays; Cincinnati \u2014 Kluszewski,\nBurgess, Post.\nBrooklyn  000 000 00O- 0  4  1\nMilwaukee .. 000 010 OOx\u2014 16  0\nPodres, Labine (71  land Campanella; Conley and Crandall. L:\nPodres.,\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nKan   200 Oil 000 000 0\u2014 4  9 2\nBait  010 800 000 000 1- 5 11 3\nKellner, Coleman (4), Urban\n(5) Gorman (9) and Thompson,\nSmith (9); Walker, Odell (1), Zuverink (13th) and Triandos, Gins-\nberk 11. W: Zuverink; L: Gorman.\nHRs: Kansas City\u2014Lopez, Held;\nBaltimore\u2014Durham, Boyd.\nKansas City 000 002 000- 2 7 2\nBaltimore .... 100 104 40X-10 11   1\nGarver\/ Morgan (6), Coleman\n(6), Burnette (7), Urban (7) and\nThompson; Johnson, Lehman (7)\nand Ginsberg, Zupo (8), W: Johnson. L: Garver.\nCleveland .... 001 000 100-2 7 0\nNew York .. 000 000 21x\u20143  4  2\nMossi, McLish (8) and Nixon;\nSturdivant, Grim (8) and Berra,\nW: Sturdiyant, L: Mossi. HRs:\nNew York\u2014McDougald, Mantle.\nDetroit  ;'... 010 000 000- 1  5  1\nWashington .. 010 000 001- 2  6  2\nFoytack and House;. Pascual and\nBerberet. HR: Washington\u2014Sievers.\nChicago .... 200 000 002 0-4 7 1\nBoston   000 040 000 1- 5 12  1\nWilson, Staley (7), La Palme\n(8), Fischer (9) and Batey, Moss\n(7), Lollar (9); Sullivan, Delock\n(9), Susce (10) and White, Daley\n(10). W: Susce. L: Fischer. HRs:\nChicago\u2014Rivera. Boston \u2014 Williams.\nPool Cuts Five\nFrom Argo Squad\nTORONTO (CP) - Coach Hamp\nPool of Toronto Argonauts cut five\nplayers, including one American,\nas the Big Four football club resumed practices Friday following\ntheir- 30-9 defeat by Saskatchewan\nRoughriders in an exhibition game\nWednesday night.\nPool, expressing concern that\nmany of his players weren't getting enough drill because the\nsq'uad ' was too large, dropped\nthree rookie linemen and two halfbacks.\nThe Halves are backfielder Ron\nKing from Fforida State and Don\nHollingworth, who played last season with British Columbia Lions\nof the Western Interprovincial\nFoobtall Union. The linemen are\ntackles Walt Nichols and Jim\nChristoff, up from junior ranks,\nand Mike Donnelly, with Toronto\nBeaches of the Ontario Rugby\nFootball Union last year.\n1958 Tourney at Saskatoon\nMONTREAL (CP) r The Canadian ladies' golf union confirmed\nFriday the venue for the 1958\nchampionships \u2014 the Saskatoon\nGolf and Country Club\u2014and fixed\nJuly 31-Aug. 10 as the dates.\nThe annual championships embrace the Canadian ladies' close\nand open and the interprovincial\nsenior and junior .titles.\nhe CLGU also announced that\nan invitation has been received\nfrom the Ladies' Golf Union in\nGreat Britain to participate in\nthe proposed Commonwealth team\ntournament.\nThe overseas body proposes that\nthe tournament be held every four\nyears among the Commonwealth\ncountries of Great Britain, Canada, South Africa and Australia.\nThe first tournament would be\nheld in Great Britain in 1959 and\nteams would consist of six players, including a reserve and captain.   ..\nThe CLGU named a committee\nto investigate ways and means of\nparticipating in the Commonwealth tournament. It will report\nat the next meeting, in November, of the CLGU national executive.\nBASEBALL\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 4\n1:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.\nNorthport,  Wash.\nvs\nNelson Outlaws\nCivic Centre  Grounds\nDOUBLEHEADER  LEAGUE\n'       GAMES\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG, 3, 1957 \u2014 7\nMounties Face Five\nCharges in Court\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Professional baseball would be a financial failure without Sunday\ngames, the president of the Vancouver Mounties Pacific Coast\nLeague club\" said Friday.\nThe ball club, Vancouver Mounties Holdings Limited, was charged\nwith five violations of The .Lord's\nDay Act following two Sunday\nbaseball games May 5 and 12 at\nCapilano Stadium here,\nAlso charged were general man-'\nager Cedric Tallis and his assistant, William Sayles. They are accused of unlawfully carrying on\nthe business of professional baseball on Sunday and unlawfully employing persons to work on Sunday.\nOutlaws Prep\nFor Northport\nDouble-Header\nStaggering after a 12-5 defeat at\nthe hands of Trail Smoke Eaters\nin Trail Thursday night, Nelson\nOutlaws are making ready to afford Northport, Wash., a hot welcome in an International Border\nBaseball League double-header at\nCivic Recreation Grounds Sunday.\nSince picking up seven players\nwho formerly toiled for Rossland\nCapilanos, Northport has become\nthe league's dark horse and has\nmoved into a position to challenge\nColville Eagles for the third playoff\nspot.\nBob Weilip, Northport product\nwho last summer pitched occasionally \u2014 and effectively \u2014 for Trail\nand Kimberley, will start one game\nwith lefty Irv Lavarato due to\noperate in the other.\nOutlaws' starters will be chosen\nfrom Les Hufty, Walt Avis and\nLefty Gould.\nOutlaws and Northport tangled\nin a dandy twin-bill in Northport\na short while ago and Outlaws\nsplit by winning the opener and\nbowing in the nightcap. Last week\nagainst 760th Air Force Base Ra-\nDarts, Hufty bowed 1-0 and his\nmates collected an 8-5 victory for\nanother split.\nVictories Sunday will put Outlaws in a solid position in regard\nto the playoffs, which are due to\nstart almost momentarily.\nLONGEST RANGE\nThe Andes Mountains, stretching 4400 miles of the South American continent are the longest\nmountain chain in the world.\nin police court the Mounties were\norganized after city voters approved a plebiscite seeking commercial sport on Sunday afternoons. The 'club expected the provincial government would subsequently make legal provision for\nSunday sport, Bailey said.\n*\"We wouldn't get enough money\nwithout Sunday ball.\"\nThe trial was adjourned until\nnext Friday.\nSenator J. W. Deb, Farris, defence lawyer, said he did not propose to call evidence.\nSUNDAY GATE DOUBLE\nBailey, called* as a Crown witness, said average attendance at\nweekday games was 3,000 and at\nSunday games 6,000.\nHe said he knew of only one\nmajor city \u2014 Philadelphia\u2014where\nSunday baseball was forbidden\nand \"they have lost one major\nleague club and I understand the\nother is in dire circumstances.\"\nBailey said the Mounties op-,\nerated at a loss for the first half\nof this year. \"I don't think there's,\na chance in a million of making\nany money but we hope to break\neven one season and maybe lose\na little the next,\"\nThe Sunday games were played\nbetween, 1:30' and 6 p.m. and were\ncalled if not completed within that\ntime. These are the same hours\nallowed in Montreal and Toronto,\nBailey said. Tickets were also sold\nbefore game time. *\nThe case is continuing.\nTaylor Moves\nUp To Redlegs\nSEATTLE (AP) - Joe Taylor,\npower-packed right fielder, was\nsold outright Thursday by-the Seattle Ralniers to 'Cincinnati of the\nNational League. He will report\nimmediately to the Redlegs.\nDey\/ey Soriano, general manager, said the deal involved an undisclosed bundle of cash and a\nleft-handed hitting outfielder,\nTaylor boosted his home run total to 22 Thursday night in the\nRainiers' game at Los Angeles\nagainst the Angels. He is second\nin this department behind the Angels' Steve Bilko.\nThe 31-year-old ex-Rainier clout-\ner also leads the league in runs\nscored with 70, is third in runs\nbatted in with 72, eighth in hits\nand 10th in batting. His .305 average is second high for Seattle..\nPark Predicts Order of Finish\nOWEN SOUND, Ont. (CD-\nTom Park of Belleflower, Calif.,\none of the favorites for today's international marathon swim at this\nGeorgian Bay city, predicts that\none woman and three men will\nlead the pack in the 15-mile race.\nPark, formerly of Hamilton,\nOnt., predicted that Greta Andersen of Long Beach, Calif., Cliff\nLumsden of Toronto, Steve Woz-\nniak of Buffalo and Johnny La-\ncoursiere of Montreal will battle\nit out for first place.\nPark did not rate his own\nchances but said he is anxious to\nbeat Lumsden.\nThe swim will be officially\nstarted at 9 a.m. EDT by Marilyn\nBell of'Toronto, first woman to\nswim Lake Ontario. The race is\nbeing held as part of Owen\nSound's centennial celebrations.\nTO TAKE SEVEN HOURS\nThe winning time is expected to\nbe. between seven and eight hours.\nThe 34 entrants will be competing for $12,000 in prize money\ndonated by the Owen Sound Chamber of Commerce,. First prize is\n$5,000.       ,$ff    \\\nIn addition to seyen prizes in\nthe sjMim proper ranging down to\n$100, there are five additional\nprizes for the eight women entered; including a $2,000 prize for\nthe first   woman to fish.   If a\nwoman wins, she will receive $7,-\n000.\nThe swimmers will cover a five-\nmile triangular course in Owen\nSound Bay three times.\nTWO-WAY DUEL\nObservers say the race may\ndevelop into a two-way duel between Lumsden arid Park. The 25-\nyear-old Lumsden beat Park, S3,\nby a fraction of a second in last\nyear's 25-mile Atlantic City swim.\nWin or lose, Park says that this\nwill be his last professional swim.\nHe said he will devote his time\nin the future to his California\nswimming school.\nThe oldest competitor is William Sadlo, 55, of Whitestone,\nN.Y., and the youngest is Aloma\nKeen, 15, of Montreal.\nGOOD USED\nMACHINERY\nChampion.\nTwo Diesel-Powered Road Graderi\nModel 404 Rome-Model D494\nHP\nSENIOR     \u2022\n8 p.m. TONIGHT\nat the\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTRAIL\nCUBS\nNELSON\nKOKANEES\nAdults 50c\nCHILDREN -  FREE\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 3, 1957\nThe explosion of tha volcanic 11SSS produced tidal waves felt\nisland of Krakatoa near Java in | more than 8000 miles away.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS -1IMO>ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1957\n: 55\u2014Farm Fare\n: 00\u2014Wake Up Time\n: 25\u2014Sports News\n: 35\u2014Wake Up Time\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Market Review\n:2ft\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n: 00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Musicale\n: 15\u2014Story. Parade\n: 30\u2014Stamp Club\n: 45\u2014Outdoors\n: 00\u2014Post Mark U.K.\n30\u2014Juke Box\n:55\u2014Weather\n: 00\u2014News\n02\u2014Juke Box\n: 30\u2014Rhythm Pals\n: 00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n: 15\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014Dancetime\n: 00\u2014Jazz Special\n2:00\u2014Dancetime\n2:30\u2014Don Messer\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Can..Weekly News Review\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30\u2014Can. Symphonies\n4:00\u2014Bill McAuley Sextet\n4:30\u2014Old Country Sports\n4:45-Sports College\n5:00\u2014Drive-in\n5:30\u2014Footloose\n6:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Musicale\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Couchiching Conf.\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Standard Jazz Festival\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:30-Sign Off\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 1957\n45\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n00\u2014Overseas News\n:15\u2014News\n:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n;00\u2014B.C. Gardener\n: 15\u2014Just Mary  '\n:30\u2014In His Service\n: 00\u2014This Is My Story\n: 30\u2014Religious Period\n: 00\u2014Chapel Royal\n30\u2014Capital Report\n:57\u2014B.C. Weather\n00\u2014International Geophysical\nYear\n:30\u2014Critically- Speaking\n: 00\u2014World Music Festivals\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Weatherman\n3:45\u2014Musical Program\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Summer Stage\n9:00\u2014Summertime\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15-Horizons' '57\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n<PACD?IC     iYUGHT SAVING TIME)\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 1957\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Theme\u2014 and Variations\n55\u2014Weather\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014The Answer Man\n30\u2014The Concerto\n00\u2014B.C. Gardener & Weather\n15-Just Mary\n30\u2014In His Service\n00\u2014Chamber Music\n30\u2014Religious Period\n00\u2014Songs of Gabriel Faure\n30\u2014Capital Report\n57\u2014Weather Forecast\n:00\u2014International Geo. Year\n: 30\u2014Critically Speaking\n: 00\u2014World Musical Festival\n: 30\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:42\u2014Weather Report\n3:45\u2014Musical Program\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Music for a Summer Sunday\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News    .\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Summer Stage\n9:00\u2014Summertime\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-The Crash of '29\n10:30\u2014The Sacrament\nMONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1957\n00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n40\u2014Morning Devotions *>\n55\u2014Musical March Past\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014Morning Concert\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014Western Roundup\n30\u2014Laura Limited <\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014Holiday in 'Music\n45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n00\u2014Intermission\n:15^-Songs in the Morning\n:30\u2014Through the Listening Glass\n: 15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014BIC. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u201420th Century Masterpiece\n2:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014BX!. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Adventure Ahoy\n4:45\u2014Smugglers' Cove\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n5:45\u2014Rawhide\n6:00\u2014Gabby's Barn Dance\n6:30\u2014Music for Strings\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Lorna Doone\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00-CBC Strings\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Oriental Interlude\n10:30\u2014Dream Street\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\n9:15 Good Morning\n9:45 Dizzy Dean Show *\n9:55 Baseball Game of Week\n1:30 Western Roundup\n2:30 Lone Ranger\n3:00 Western Roundup\n4:30 Wild Bill Hickock\n5:00 Western Roundup       '\n6:00 Jimmy Durante *\n6:30 Two For The Money *\n7:00 Gale Storm Show \u00bb\n7:30 SRO Playhouse *\n8:00 Gunsmoke *\nJimmy Dean Show *\n9:00 The Buccaneers\n9:30 The Lone Wolf\n10:00 The Late Show\nSUNDAY\n12:00 Good Afternoon\n12:30 Oral Roberts\n1:00 Pro Tennis\n3:00 This Is The Life\n3:30 Variety Time\n4:00 Face The Nation \u2022\n4:30 World News Roundup *\n5:00 Annie Oakley\n5:30 You Are There *\n6:00 Lassie *\n6:30 My Favorite Husband *\n7:00 Ed Sullivan *\n8:00 G. E. Theater \u2022\n8:30 Alfred Hitchcock \u2022\n9:00 $64,000 Challenge\n9:30 Errol Flynn Theatre \"\n10:00 The News Commentary\n10:30 What's My Line\nKHQ TV - Channel I\nSATURDAY\n10 Test Pattern\n15 Color Test Pattern\n25 Bible Reading\n30 Gumby *\n00 Fiiry \u2022\n30 Howdy Doody *\n00 Short Subjects\n15 Leo Durocher's Warmup\n3Q, Major League Baseball *\n(Brooklyn at Milwaukee)\n00 Western Theatre\n:00 True Story *\n:30 Detectives Diary *\n00 Hopalong Cassidy\n:00 Western Theatre\n00 Trouble With Father\n30 People Are Funny *\n:00 Julius La Rosa (C) \u2022\n:O0 George Sanders\nMystery Theatre *\n:30 Dollar a Second *\n:00 Encore Theatre *\n:30 Adventure Theatre *\n:00 Frontier\n:30 Late Movie\n\"Paris Underground\"\nCLASSIFIED\nBIRTHS\nJOHNSON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nR. E. Johnson (nee Peggy Smith)\nat Seattle, July 27, a son.\t\nHELP WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS ARE INVITED\nby the undersigned for the position of village clerk. Applicants\nstate qualifications 'and salary\nexpected. At present five days\nper week. Application to be in\nthe hands of the acting village\nclerk by 5 p.m., Aug. 6, 1957.\nVillage Municipality of Salmo,\nG. D. Christie, Acting Clerk.\nDEALER FOR WELL ESTAB-\nlished household product needed\nfor Nelson, Nakusp, Creston or\nGrand Forks. No investment necessary. We set up shop, supply\nstock and do the financing. Applicant has to have good sales\nrecord, car and be bondable. Ap\nply Box 9870, Nelson Daily News\nWANTED-MAN OR WOMAN TO\nsell Rawleigh Products in Nelson. Either part-time or full-\ntime appiicants considered. For\nfull details, write to W. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd., Dept. GG-72,\nWinnipeg 2, Man. '\nYOUNG MAN 18. TO 20 YEARS\nold for retail store. Apply in person at T. Eaton Co. Canada Ltd.,\nNelson, B.C.\nLOGGING T R U C K S WANTED\nfor short logs. 7 mile haul, Apply\nJ. Poji, Silver King Rd;i Nel-\nHELP WANTED -r FEMALE\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING\nWomen wanted,\" greater opportunity. - Better   pay.   Pleasant\nwork. Catalogue free \u2014 Write\nMARVEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n326 8th Avenue, Calgary.\nBranches: Winnipeg, Regina,\nSaskatoon ahd Edmonton.\nCanada's National System.\nNEAT, RELIABLE PERSON FOR\nswitchboard receptionist. Duties\nentail meeting public, typing\nand patient admission. Duties on\nshift basis. Apply to KLG Hospital, Nelson.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWOMAN DESIRES ROOM AND\nboard in exchange for housekeeping duties for working\ncouple. Box 9721, Nelson Daily\nNews.\n59 YEAR OLD NON-DRINKER OR\nsmoker desires janitor duties or\nkitchen help. Will go anywhere.\nApply box 9738, Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED S T E N O G RA -\npher (25) requires part time\nsituation. Ph. 1076-Y. ,\nWANTED '-. ANY ODD JOBS -\ncarpenter or roofing. Ph. 585-L-2,\nWANTED - HOUSEWORK BY\nthe hour. Ph. 1724-R-l.\nHANDYMAN WANTS ODD JOBS,\nPhone 256-R.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nToday's\n.at\ncElroy's\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLEJ\n(Continued)\nEconomy\nPerformance\nTest Drive the Amazing\nVOLKSWAGEN\nThe  Economical\nRAMBLER\nHave a free vacation on u\u00bb\nwith the money you wiH\nsave driving either of thesi\u00bb\nfine cars. Come in today.\n1957 Plymouth Plaza\n1955 Chev Deluxe Sedan\n1955 Chev Sedan\n1955 Anglia 2-Dr. Sedan\n1954 Plymouth  Sedan\n1953 Pontiac  Chieftan\n1952 Austin Station Wagon\n1951 Pontiac  Coupe\n1950 Chev Coupe\n1949 Meteor Sedan\n1949 Mercury Sedan\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1947 Chev Sedan\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n323   Nelson  Ave.\nFOR SALE - 1956 NASH RAM-\nbier station wagon, 4-door, 3-\ntone, backup lights, turn signals,\nreclining seats. Box 252, Kim-\nberley, Phone 2-2136.\nB.S.A. MOTORCYCLE, 2500\nmiles. $175.00 for quick sale. 618\nSilica. Ph. 1210-Y. \"\u25a0\u00bb\n'51 MERCURY SPORTS SEDAN,\nfully equipped, overdrive, new\npaint. Ph. 1179-Y.\n\"49 CHEV Vt TON - CHEAP. PH.\n980-L-l.\nRENTALS\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARB-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in Truck Terminus\nBldg. on ground floor. Phone 77\nfor particulars.           .\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly rates. Allen Hotel, 171\nBaker Street.\n3 BR. HEATED SUITE, $80; 1 BR.\ndeluxe, $90; 1 BR. cottage, $40.\nPhone 1627-R-l.\nFOR RENT-2 BEDROOM HOUSE\nnear ferry, waterfront. Phoflt\n1095-L.\n1953 .Plymouth 2-Door\n1095\n1952 Meteor 2-Door\n$1095\n1951 Austin\nStation Wagon\n$175\n1950 Willys Panel\n$125\nSUNDAY\n2:00 Christopher Program\n2:30 This Is The Answer\n3:00 Travel Film \"Off the Beaten\nTrack in Israel\"\n3:30 Hopalong Cassidy\n4:00 Impact\n5:00 Meet the Press *    '\n5:30 Cowboy Theatre *\n6:30 Circus Boy *\n7:00 Steve Allen *\n8:00 Goodyear Playhouse (C) *\n9:00.The Web *\n9:30 Front Page\n9:40 Molly\n10:05 Stars On Six \"Gun Job\"\n10:30, O'Henry Playhouse\n11:00 Cross Current\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n3:00\n4:00\n4:30\n5:00\n6:00\n6:30\n8:00\n9:00\n9:30\n10:30\nSATURDAY\nRoy Rogers Roundup\nSpace Ranger\nKREM Cartoons\nRenfrew of Mounted Police\nHollywood Offbeat\nFamous Film Festival\nLawrence Welk *\nOzark Jubilee *\nChampionship Bowling\nMillion $ Theatre\n(Warner Bros. Features)\nSUNDAY\n12:55 News\n1:00 Cartoons\n1:30 Gene Autry\n2:30 Faith For' Today    \u2022\n3:00 Wild West Theatre\n4:00 College Press Conference '\n4:30 Open Hearing *\n5:00 Circus Time \u00bb\n6:00 You Asked For It\n6:30 Hollywood Film Theatre\n8:00 Where Were you?\n8:30 Polka Time\n9:00 Mike Wallace Interview \u2022\n9:30 Sunday Spectacular\n(Program! subject to change by ctntlono without notice.)\nComplete -Line of\nChevron   Products\nWE PAY CASH\nFOR YOUR LATE\nMODEL CAR\nAustin\u2014Morris\nSales & Service\nBaiter and Hendryx\nPhone 2000\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice - Used parts for '47 Olds,\n'47 Chev, '49 Meteor, Mercury,\n'37 Ford, '46 Plymouth, '47'49-\n'50-'51 Austin, Hillman, Prefect,\nVanguard, Morris Minor cars.\nFor Sale, '42 Dodge sedan, '49\nAustin, 26-ft. cabin cruiser. Ph.\n1363-L-2 or write Box 382, 24\nYmir Road, Nelson.\t\nROOM FOR GENTLEMAN - KIT-\nchen facilities and fridge. Ph.\n321-R, 576 Baker Street, Apt. B.\nAVAILABLE SEPT. 1. MODERN\n3 rm. apt. Heat and hot water\nsupplied. Ph. 2079;\nMODERN 3 - BEDROOM HOUSE\nat Balfour. Unfurn. $50.00 per\nmonth. Ph. Balfour 10-X.\nBEDROOM-GENTLEMAN ONLY\nApply 410 Victoria Street.\n3 ROOM FURN. APT. 311 VER-\nnon St. Adults.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS FOR\nrent,-606 Front Street.\t\nFOUR ROOM FURNISHED APT.\nfor quiet couple. 409 Silica St.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. CALL AT\n923 Vernon Street.    .\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM    FOR\nrent. 914 Stanley St. Ph. 1329-Y..\n3 RM. UNFURN. SUITE HEATED\nin apt, blk. Ph. 2075.\n1 OR 2 SLEEPING ROOMS - 711\nJosephine St.\t\nFOR RENT - 2 B.R. HOUSE,\ncentral, partly furn. Ph. 1421-Y.\nFOR    RENT-2  ROOM    FURN.\napt. Ph. 890-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM.   CALL\nat 140 Baker or Ph. 491-L.\nTRAILERS\n1956 33-FT. YELLOW AND WHITE\nhouse trailer,    fully furnished.\n, Whitewood interior. 4-wheel el-\n. ectric brakes. Will sell reasonable. Apply R. Zeer, Sunnyside\nTrailer Court, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nFINANCING A CAK? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late.model\ncar see us about bur low post\nfinancing service with complete\nInsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at_ 1777 and save\nmoney.\nFOR SALE-'42 FORD WITH '54\nmotor, in very good condition.\nCheap for cash. Ph. 2028-R.\nNelson iatht. Wmhb\nCirculation Dtpt Phone 1844   t\nPrice per single copy 6c Mondaj\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday\nBy carrier per wees\nJn advance J*\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson'\nOne month $ L2!\nThree months     $ 3.5(1\nSix months   ','    ,,,.\u201e.,........   $ 6.50\nOne year        $12.01\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month       $ 1.7)\nThree months $ 5.0(\nSix months \u201e$ 9.5'\nOne year       ' $18.01\nSubscription Rates\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor Delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook phone Mrs. Wm Stevely;\nIn Kimberley Mr. G A Bate;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs, Ross Saundr,\n $W(\nSMALL INVESTMENT  -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story -PHONE   1844\nPROPERTY. HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n1, New Duplex, ground floor, 2\nbedroom modern- suite. Base-\nrJ^W $12,600\nTerms $6000 down and $100\nper month, A Very attractive home, well built.\nSome terms.\n2. 3 Bedroom House. %^f)00\nFruit trees, etc. .  N'*\u00bb\"\u00abu\nSome term's.\nJ\u2014FAMILY RESIDENCE OR\n. DUPLEX, Union St. and\nDouglas Rd. 2-storey home,\nautomatic oil heat, 3 bedrooms and bathroom upstairs; one bedroom and\nbathroom on ground floor,\nmodern kitchen and nook.\nIncludes 2 extra <tQ7Aft\nbuilding sites . -Pi\"\"\"\n$3815 down and $71.93 per\nmonth\n4-BUNGALOW. \u2014 2 large bedrooms, Livingroom and Din-\ningroom, Oak Floors, Fireplace,  Good Kitchen,  wired\nfcaUoT' G\u00b0\u00b0d . $\u00bb500\n$3500 Cash will handle.\nJ\u2014A GOOD OLDER HOME\u2014\nVery close in, 4 bedrooms,\nlt0\u2122 ,. $5500 \u25a0\nFoundation     *y\"\nWith $3500 Cash or $6000 with\n$1500 down and monthly payments.\nf\u2014UP THE HILL. Yes, but a\nnice little bunaglow, 2 bedrooms, attractive livingroom\n\u2014Hardwood floors, lovely kitchen with dining space. Good\nbasement. Floor oil furnace.\nLot 50 x 120 \" $7500\nSome Terms   v'\nT\u2014BUILT 1956\u2014Lovely home.\n2 Bedroom        $H,000\nHome           ^      T\nAnd $3500 cash will handle.\nBalance  monthly.   Or  will\ntrade for suitable Edmonton\nproperty.\nCar Insurance and Package\nPolicies a Specialty\nC. W. APPLEYARD & CO. LTD.\nEstablished 45 Years\nBox 26 Phone 269\nNelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY-,   HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPRICED RIGHT\nPROPERTIES\nThree bedroom home on two\n-lots, convenient 3rd street lo-\ncation. Older style $6600\nfamily home. Cash v\"\"\"\nOr $6900 with $2000 down.\nThree bedrooms on three lots\nVancouver $3600\nSt.\nOr(\n100 on terms to be\narranged.\nInvestment property, Silica St.,\npartly converted to three suites,\nbathrooms and alarm $4900\nsystem Installed     T\nOlder style 3 bedroom family\nhome, 900 block Silica, close to\nnew hospital. Wired for range,\nitiudef  $4850\nSeven room on 5 lots, corner location, a real family home, large\nattractive rooms, furnace, fire:\ncash'garage'     $13,500\nOr $14,500 on terms with $4500\ndown.\n8 acres near city, fruit trees,\ngarden, four room bungalow,\nmodern. Also outbuildings,\nwatCT .   $9500\nsystem      \t\nWith $5000 down.\nNorth Shore, 2 bedroom, new\nbungalow on app. Vt acre. Full\nfoundation, furnace,   $7900\nlevel land ^\nWill consider trade.\n.TJX Rosling\n& Son Ltd.\nM. (Trader) Parker, Salesman\n868 WARD ST.      PHONE 717\nBUSINESSES  AND\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\n1\u2014Store, gas station, cabins,\ndwelling at natural stopping\nspot highway No, 3, gross\nsales '$60,000, and rentals\n$1200. Owner's dwelling 4\nbedrooms, modern kitchen,\nbathroom. Stock app. $7000.\ng?ee $32,000\nAnd stock at inventory.\nWe have full particulars.\n2\u2014Hotel with beer parlor on\nNo. 3 highway, sales over\n.$25,000. 5 rooms and two cabins. Man and wife can op-\nS\u00a3 $39,800\nPlus stock.\n3\u2014Men's clothing store in\nSouthern interior city, 25x80\n, with full basement, excellent location, lease 4 years.\nAnnual sales $52,000, low\nexpenses, excel- $\u00a3\u00a300\nlent profit. Price **>\u00ab>U\"\nPlus stock app. $23,000.\nt\u2014And others. Let us know\nyour requirements.\nT.D.\n& Son Ltd.\n568 Ward Street Phone 717\n$3300 DOWN\nGives you large, gracious\nhome with 3 bedrooms, extra\nlarge living room with fireplace, dining room, etc. Very\nSCpr7ceCentre'$10,500,\nBalance as rent. Phone for an\nappointment to view.\n\u2022     $3500 DOWN\nBrand new, N.H.A. 6% interest, quality constructed, outstanding modern design, exceptional view, owner transferred, Three bedrooms, gracious living room, kitchen,\ndining room, open staircase\nleading to full basement.  \u2014\npie  $14,000\nNORTH   SHORE   LOT\n70 x 210 feet with water and\nelectricity, level, good access, above new Nelson bridge.\n\u00a32. $1250\nN.H.A. APPROVED LOTS\nPrices\nfrom\nEach. Vera easy terms.\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nService Business, well estab-\needprice...      $15,000\nHalf down.\nApartment house showing excellent return. CO I con\nFull Price   <MI\u00bbOUU\nWJLLIAM\nKALYNIUK\nAGENCIES\nLow Cost Auto Financing,\n' Real Estate and Insurance\n534 Josephine St. Nelson\n,      PHONE 1777\nMACHINERY\n$1600 t0$I 100\nINCOME PROPERTY\n4 units completely' furnished.\nIncome $2233 per year. Net\nprofit $1722 per year. Appoint-\nment to view. $8900\nOr $7000 cash.\nc. d.\nAgency\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS\nPhone 99 Eves., 1821-L\nMULTIPLE  LISTING\nFinest type of family home,\ncorner, 60x150 with most attractive grounds all improved. View\nL.R., 3-4 bedrooms, attractive,\nmodern kitchen, 2 bedrooms and\nbathroom down. Full basement,\noil fired furnace, glass lined\ntank. All the lux- J J2 750\nunes at only  _N\"\u2014,\" \"\"\nTerms to be arranged.\nTV\n& .Son ..Ltd.\n568 Ward St.\nPhone 717\nList Your House\nFunds on Hand to Get the\nDeals Closed\nMANY BUYERS\nWAITING\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& Co. Ltd.\nPhone 269\nFOR SALE - WELL KEPT 4-\nbedroom home, stoker furnace,\nwired for range, fireplace. Low\ndown payment. Central. Phone\n692-R-4 after 6 p.m. All day Sat.\nand Sun.\nRESTAURANT IN FRUITVALE.\nVery reasonable. Will sell complete, or any part of the equipment thereof. Must be sold by\nend of August, Apply Bryan's\nCafe, Fruitvale.\nGROCERY STORE AND Fixtures, with living quarters. Located on main highway west\nof Castlegar. For information ph.\n3911, Castlegar.\nCHOICE LOTS FOR SALE -\nFairview Hgts. Approx. 80 ft.\nwide by 180 ft. long. Ph. 230-R.\n2 HOUSES ON 2 ACRES, 1 MILE\nout Ymir Rd. John K. Posnikoff, Gen. Del., Nelson.\nLOTS FOR SALE IN FAIRVIEW,\n60 x 120. Phone 1272-L.\nPERSONAL\nALASKA WORK AND LIVE-FOR\ninformation regarding employ\nment, homesteadlng, commercial\nfishing, trapping, farming, mining and living conditions, send\nself-addressed envelope to North\nern Service Co., P.O. Box- 40B\nFairbanks, Alaska.\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nFridays. Box 493. Phone 3S6-R or\n433-R.\nt Money\nwith\nMen- and Machines\nIdle\nLOGGING OPERATORS\nROAD CONTRACTORS\nMINING\nWe  Specialize   In\nRUSH JOBS\nFAST SERVICE\nTo Put You Back\nIn Operation. \u25a0    ,\nLargest, and most completely equipped machine\nshop in East and West\nKootenay.\nALSO\nMagneto Repair with\nReplacement Mag's\nin stock.\nGenerator and Starter\nRepairs\nCall\n593, 1858, 989-Y, 1840-R\nFOR FAST SERVICE\nLtd.\nFlexible,   Lightweight\nHIGHEST   QUALITY\nPLASTIC\nand Fittings\nROT PROOF \u2014 RUST PROOF\nCORROSION  PROOF\nEconomical for\nFarming\nMining\nWater Systems\nIrrigation, Etc.\nSizes Vt\" to 4\"\nConsult Us for Your Requirement*\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nCall or Phone 18 Days.\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If It's Machinery You Need,\nConsult Us First\"\n214 Hall St.      Nelson, BC.\nSprockets, Sheaves,\nCouplings\nMany Industries Are Standardizing on Browning On Account\nof the Versatile Bushing System.\nWe carry complete stocks\nof Bearings, Roller Chain\nand Industrial Transmission Supplies and\nEquipment.\nStevenson\nMACHINERY  LIMITED\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nCustom Machine Shop\nWelding - Steel Fabricating\nWelding Supplies\nFOR LOW COST SKIDDING, BUY\nthis reasonably priced jour-wheel\ndrive skldder. Can be seen on\nthe job. Also have log cut-off\nsaw, band resaw and edger [or\nsale. Ph., Creston 462-K, evenings; \u25a0\"\nFOR SALE - YATES 341' VER-\ntical band resaw. Ball bearing,\n2 brand new saws 6\". Easy\nterms. Pawluk Bros., Wynndel.\nPh! Creston 462-K, after 8 p.m.\nDEISEL 40 CATIPILLAR WITH 9'\nhydraulic angle and tilt dozer, 12'\nsnow blade. $1500.00. Box 271 or\nPh. 9S-G Salmo.\nNew.Zealand S!iiye\"s\nIn Record 10-\"Vow-\nWELLINGTON ( Re'ii.tets )-\nI The lowest temperatures In New\nZealand's history were reported\nFriday from its southern areas,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. SATURDAY, AIT-. 3, 1957 <- 9\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nNOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS-\nEffective Wednesday, August 14,\nKelowna Branch of Pacific Tractor & Equipment Ltd., will remain open from 8 a.m. to S p.m.,\nand commencing Saturday, August 17, will close at 12 noon Saturdays. Our records show that\ncalls for parts and service on\nWednesday afternoon are more\nfrequent than Saturday afternoon. We hope to be able to\ngive our customers better service by this change. PACIFIC\nTRACTOR & EQUIPMENT\nLIMITED, 1647 Water Street,\nPhone 4240, KELOWNA, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - YOUNG COW,\nfreshened 6 weeks. Good milker.\nApply Pete L. Rilkoff, Thrums,\nB.C. .\nGOAT FOR SALE. WILL FREStf-\nen In Sept. Mrs. A. Letkemann,\nRenata, B.C.\nRABBITS FOR SALE - PHONE\n611-L-2.\nFOR SALE - MUST BE SOLD-\n1956 model TO-35 Ferguson tractor, with Davis front end loader\nand dozer. Like new, 97 hours. A\nsacrifice price. Phone Ludlow\n24474 or write Mrs. George Roberts, Marysville, B.C.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd,\nPhone 871\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & \u2022 Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph\nPAcific 6357.\nLUMBER FOR SALE - 2x4, 2x6,\n2x8, 1x6, 1x8, $35 per thousand\nover 4000 ft. free delivery. Ph.\n1757-R or apply Box 2581, Nelson\nDaily News,\nELECTRIC SINGER SEWING MA-\nchine, portable featherweight,\nflexible foot, reverse stitch. Ex-\ncellent condition. Ph.'1087-Y.\n21\" G-E TELEVISION - WILL\nsell or trade for 120 base accordion. Ph. Salmo 31, or write\nBox 128, Salmo, B.C,\nSERVER \"KEROSENE REFRIG-\nerator, nearly new, $250.00.\nPaul Markolf, Slocan Park,\nB.C.\n2 USED DOORS-10 LIGHTS IN\neach. Lock and hinges. Each\ndoor 24\" by 6' 5Vt\". Ph. 208-L.\nCHERRIES FOR SALE-8 CENTS\nper lb. Pick your own. Phone\n188-L-3.\nCOW, TO FRESHEN SOON; -\nhorse; horse mower; hay rack;\nplow; harrow. Phone 249-Y-3,\nYOUR J. R. WATKINS REPRE-\nsentative is A. E. Aldous, Box\n370, Fruitvale, B.C,\nNORGE OIL HEATER - LIKE\nnew. Phone 494-L.\nIRON FIREMAN STOKER. VERY\ngood condition. Phone 474-L.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies St\nLOST AND FOUND\nREWARD\n$200.00 \u2014 will be paid by the\nundersigned for information\nleading to the recovery, and\nsubsequent arrest, and conviction, regarding following, stolen\nvehicle:\n1952 Fargo Pickup (Green)\nLicense No. \u2014 C8-188\nMotor No. \u2014 C-30724436\nSerial No. \u2014 90523990\nOwner:\nMr. J. Sawada,\n308 Hall St.,   .\nNelson,  B.C.\nPlease contact Nelson Police.\nDOMINION\nAUTOMOBILE   ASSOCIATION,\nLONDON,  CANADA.\nLOST - BLACK KITTEN FROM\n918 Victoria. Child's only pet. Ph.\n617-X.\nWANTED   TO   RENT\nWANTED TO RENT-FURNISH-\ned batchelor apt. Call room 110\nNelson Hotel or ph. 2045-L,\nWANTED TO RENT - 2 TO 4\nbedroom house by responsible\ncouple. Phone 1765-X.\t\nURGENTLY NEEDED BY FAM-\nily of four\u20142 or 3 bedroom home,\nclose in. Ph. 1438-L.\nWANTED - FAMILY HOME BY\nresponsible party. Ph. 1336-R. \u25a0'\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 2 OR 3\nbedroom house. Ph. 1743-R-2.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS   AND   MINE,\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W  WTDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St.. Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND.  BC\nAssayei Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P Eng (Civlll\n218 Gore St    Nelson,   Phone 1238\nG.  W.   BAERG,  B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.. Nelson   Phone 1118\nM C. McCORQUODALE. B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail, Ph 2752 Office Mgr\u201e Ray Johnson. B A.Sc,\nI015-8th St., Nelson, Ph   144;R.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nVI 4 .-0   n [\u25a0   Sliup   Ai-otyli-rie  and\nelecti-lc welding  motor   rewind\ning, Phune 593      324 Vernon St\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nHAVE BREAKFAST ON US -\nwith the money you save at low\nsummer rates. Canadian money\naccepted. Exchange rate. Colonial Hotel, Spokane, Wash.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 16 H.P. ELGIN\noutboard, gearshift model with\ncruisaday tank. $200.00. In A-l\nshape. Phone 1481 days, 875-L\nevenings. '\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts incurred in my\nname by anyone but myself.\nJohn Waselenko.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBD.  AND  RM.  FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone 1179-X.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nFOR SALE - PUREBRED BOS-\nton terrier puppies. Do not\nphone. Come see. Mrs. D. Howe,\nFruitvale.\nROSEMARY HAS BABY\nSANTA MONICA, Calif. (API-\nSinger Rosemary Clooney gave\nbirth prematurely Thursday to a\nfour-pound boy, Gabriel Vincente.\nThe baby was placed in an incubator and his condition was considered hopeful. She had expected\nher third child in October.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBefore You Buy,    -   '\nSee the New\nSCOTT-AtWATER\n'3.6; mCC- 5 H>.'\u25a0'\"\n7j| H.P.\u201416 H.P.\u2014 40 H.P.\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.,  LTD.\n614 Railway. St.     Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nwhich have suffered three days\nof frost following violent snowstorms last weekend.\nThe inland sheep-farming center of Waikaia reported 10 below\nzero reading;. The previous low\nwas five below ir. 1943.\nWinnipeg was incorporated as a\ncity in 1873.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nCAR'LOT\nOpposite Medical Clinic\n1957 CHEV. SEDAN - Positraction, Automatic\n1957 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN\n1957 CHEVROLET HARDTOP\n1955 CHEVROLET HALF-TON\n1954 CHEVROLET HALF-TON\n1954 FORD SEDAN, Custom\t\n1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN   .  .     .\t\n1952 FORD CUSTOMLINE SEDAN '.\t\n$1150\n$1395\n$1245\n$ 945\nSpecial\nHUDSON HORNET\nLuxury Car, Radio, Heater, Signals.\n$765\nReuben Emerge. Car Lot\nBERT STEPHENSON, (Manager)\nHaldane \u25a0 Motors\nNew & Used Cars\n301 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone\n136\n>7\nmm* t?m>+0m0\n1956 Chev. Station Wagon\n1955 Buick Hardtop\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Vi-Tpn\nWE  PAY  CASH   FOR  GOOD   USED   CARS\nCASH TERMS\nLOCATED IN THE FORMER SUPERIOR MOTORS BUILDING\nPEEBLES  I PEEBLES      PEEBLES I  PEEBLES\nft\ns \u00ab\nHere Is an Example of PEEBLES Bargains\nCompare.      Compare       Compare    !\n1953 Pontiac\n4-Door' Deluxe Sedan\nAC  unit,  good  rubber,  two-tone,\ngreen and ivory. Seat covers.\nTODAY ONLY   '\n53 Ford\n4-Door Deluxe Sedan\nt\nNew paint, seat covers, good\nrubber. AC unit.\nTODAY ONLY\n$119\n1954 Hillman\nHardtop\nRed leather trim. AC unit. Beautiful two-tone. White  walls. Directional signals. Show room condition.\nGood rubber. Low mileage.\nTODAY ONLY\nCASH\nTERMS\nTRADES\nREMEMBER: IT'S THE AFTER-PURCHASE SERVICE THAT COUNTS !\nSales\nDepartment\nOpen\nTill\n9 p.m.\nCHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH - FARED - DUNLORTiRES\n\u25a0<7,\/u\u00bb<s?090 \u2022 Ouju^RC \u2014-r\u2014\u2014\nSAVE\nSAFELY\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS\/SATURDAY, AUG. 3, 1957\nPRESCRIPTION\ni3 E, l\\ V 1 viE\nat\nMANN'S\nCLINIC PHARMACY\nMedical Building,\nHendryx at Vernon St.\nPhone 1505\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nK.W.C. Block,\nBaker at Ward St.\nPhone 81\nWE DELIVER\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nTrail Business College\noffice reopens August 19\nFor a varied menu try\nTULICUM INN - BALFOUR\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. R.R. 1\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nBINGO, BARBECUE, DANCING,\nGAMES.   DON'T MISS ROTARY\nBARBECUE AUGUST 5TH.\nSUMMER CABIN FOR SALE,\nNORTH SHORE. 1 MI. FROM\nNELSON. PH. 14 OE 84-M, KASLO.\nBeautiful Wedding Flowers\nFashioned-styled at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nGyproc Plasterboard in all sizes.\nJoint Tape, Fillers and Corners.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD,\n101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156\nThe Cutest Souvenirs, Novelties at\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nI\nTemporary Inspector for WAA\nOTTAWA (CP)-Acting Agriculture Minister Harkness said Friday-\nhe has asked all Prairie members\nof the Commons to submit nomina-\n\u25a0ions of men for jobs as temporary\ninspectors under the Prairie Farm\nAssistance'Act..\n\u25a0 Mr.-; Harkness: said there have\nbeen complaints in past years\nthat appointments under the act,\nwhich provides aid in crop-failure\nareas, have been used for political\npurposes.\n\"I don't want to be accused of\nthe same thing.\"\n\"Elected MPs regardless of party\nshould have the right to nominate\nmen for the jobs, although not\nnecessarily all those nominated\nwould be hired. The temporary inspectors, who, carry out work in\nPhone 77 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing. .\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nLadies'Dresses, smart new styles\nin all sizes, including outsizes and\nhalf sizes.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nPRENATAL CLASSES\nThe course will commence on\nMonday, Aug. 19. For further details and to enroll phone Selkirk\nHealth Unit.,Phone 435.;\nWALL TO  WALL  CARPET\nCLEARANCE.   ENGLISH   RAY-\nMAS, 9' WIDE, REG. $5.95 SQ.\nYD., T OCLEAR, $3.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n& permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 211. Phone 1922.\nCamp cots, mattress and cots\nSDecia! $7.95 each\nWE PAY CASH\nFOR USED FURNITURE\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE \u2014 PH. 47\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED mf\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nSale of Summer Prints and Cottons\nReg. 79c and 89c fabrics, clearing\nat 63c yd. at\nYOUR CUSTOM\nSEWING CENTRE\nJORDAN'S LIMITED\nWestern Canada's largest distributors of high styled, fine furniture, oriental rugs and broadlooms.\nTake advantage of Gordon's August sale, by- phoning: .your Jor-\ndon's carpet specialist Keith McDougald, phone 2057-R or 842.\nCARD dF THANKS\nI wish to express my sincere\nthanks to. Rev. Silverwood, the Redeemer W.A., the Odd Fellows,\nand many friends and neighbors\nfor their kindness and sympathy\nin the loss of my dear mother,\nMrs. F. Rixen.\nRuth M. Rixen \u2022\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&  CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n376 Baker St Phone 235\nAmong The Pines Where It's\nCool. An ideal spot for your\nout-of-town Summer\n, dancing pleasure.\nFor More Fun Join the Gala\nWeekend Crowd..\nTO.NITE\nDDIKE\nTo Music Styled by\nROC-O-TONES\nCOMING! AUG.  17\nGENEDLOUHY\nAnd His CBC Network Orch.\nOne of Canada's smartest dance\nbands whose recent appearance set a new high .for enthusiastic acclaim here. '.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank all our friends\nfor their kind expressions of sympathy during our recent.bereavement.\nBill Donaldson,\n\\ Peggy and Shirley.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFERGUSON - Funeral service\nfor the late Archie Ferguson of\nCastlegar will be held on Monday\nat 2:30 p.m. at the Thompson Funeral Home and interment will be\nin Masonic Plot, Nelson Memorial\nPark. .\nCeylonese Paper\nReplies to Gluck\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) - Friday's Ceylonese newspaper comment on Max Gluck, President Eisenhower's appointee, to be U.S.\nambassador to Ceylon:\n\"Incomparable Max \u2014 the man\nwho knew too little,\" wrote \"Daedalus,\" columnist of the Colombo\nDaily News.\n\"Max Gluck's mind is- so exquisitely blank and pure on Asian\naffairs that even the water that\nsenatorial brainwashers pumped\ninto his think tank' came back\ncrystal clear and absolutely unadulterated by any grey matter,\"\nthe columnist added! \"If-Max\nwere asked the price of sarsapar-\nilla in Boston, Mass., or the per\ncapita consumption of bubble gum\nin Oaf, Pal, his answers would\nhave undoubtedly come-out pat.\nHe' has nothing to sell save his ignorance.\"\nGluck, a chain store tycoon,\ncame under fire after it was disclosed that he told a secret meet:\ning of the U.S. Senate foreign relations committee July 2 that he\nwas not familiar with the names of\nthe prime ministers of Ceylonr or\nIndia\u2014at least, not enough to pronounce them.\nOdds...\n** Ends\nbyM.D.B,\nHad an interesting note from\nMrs. Fink who, with her family,\nis holidaying \u25a0 in London, England,\nat present. Knowing how I 'ike\nto get variety in the column she\nwrote the following which should\nbe of interest to many Nelsonites,\nIncidentally, she posted the letter\nJuly 28th and it arrived at my\ndesk July 31st \u2014 not bad as the\ncrow flies. I think I shall just\nquote her interesting letter verba-\ntum, for it is so like her.\n*  *  *\n\"While riding on one of London's\n6000 taxis we caught sight of Mr,\nand .Mrs.. George Lee-Warner,\nformerly of Nejson. Mrs. Lee-\nWarner will be remembered as\nMiss Jean Hunter, daughter of a\nwell-known Nelson family and a\nsister of Mrs. Reginald Dill. We\nhailed them and managed to shriek\nout the name of dur hotel \u2014 we\nwere then whisked on in the dense\ntraffic, but our cabbie found an\nopening and .we managed to have\na few words with our Nelson\nfriends! Out of 8% million Londoners- it was amazing to see\nthem, particularly as they _ had\njust arrived one hour before I .\n. .' *  * '\nThen on to our hotel where a\nphone call was waiting from- Miss\nMaude Dolphin, who is en route\nto Mauritius \u2014 then who should\nwe see but Miss Gladys Ewing\nand Mrs. Gilbert Arnesen of Nelson. Next a phone call to Miss\nDoreen Dunnett, daughter of Mrs.\nA. , J. Dunnett of Nelson, and\namong friends she was entertaining was Donald Bunyan, formerly\nof Nelson I All in all we -felt it\nwas 'Nelson's Day.'\"\n$96,000 FOR PONIES\nCLEVELAND (AP)-Mrs. Louise Madigan, 46, bookkeeper for a\nlarge law firm, signed a state-,\nment. Thursday that in the last\nfour years she took. $96,000 to bet\non the horses. Her husband re-\nI cently became a deputy sheriff.\nRuss Leading\nIn Engineers\nTORONTO \\(CP) -Russia this\nyear will graduate more engineers\nthan the United States, Britain and\nCanada combined, Finance Minister Fleming said Friday^\nHe said Canada's flow of graduates is breaking records for this\ncountry but still is inadequate to\nmeet, the need created by the development of Canadian resources,\nRussia, the minister said, will\ngraduate 60,000 this year, against\n1,800 for Canada, 3,000 for Britain\nand 22,000 in the United States.\nTo meet the demand; Canada\nneeded more technical institutes\nand 'university facilities. Most of\nall, she needed good teachers.\n' Mr. Fleming spoke at the Ryer-\nson Institute of Technology in presenting certificates to graduates\nof a summer course sponsored bv\nthe Canadian government for instructors in trades institutes.\nthe fall, usually are retired farmers, he said, and the government\nwanted men of integrity who know\nthe farming business.\n-Mr. Harkness, who represents\nCalgary North constituency, is one\nof 14 Progressive . Conservatives\nelected June 10 in the Prairie provinces. There also are 15 CCF members, 13 Social Creditors and six\nLiberals elected from Prairie rid-,\nings.\nAppointments of temporary-inspectors in recent years have Var-\nried ' between about 200 to 950' s\nyear.\nMr. Harkness said he will not\nknow how many are needed this\nfall until more exact information\non the crop picture is known. But\nbecause of drought this year,\nmore likely would be heeded- than\nlast year.\nChief task of the temporary, inspectors is to determine acreage\nyields of. Prairie wheat farms.\nPayments under the assistance\nact are based on that factor.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The remains of a balloon bomb device,\nprobably one sent from Japan\nduring the Second World War to\nset fire to British Columbia forests, has been found in the woods\n80 miles north of here.\nThe bombs were unexploded and\na demolition squad from the Canadian Army is expected to neutralize them today. The paper balloon bag had disintegrated.\nR. W. Edwards, timber cruiser\nfor West Bank Logging Company,,\nlocated the bomb in the bush 5l\"\nmiles north of Squamish.\nThe machines consisted of a\n20-foot paper balloon tied to a\nplatform which carried the\nbombs.\nExperts said that in 1944 only\nwet weather prevented the ouf-\nbreak of serious forest fires in\nB.C. Many of the bombs were\nfound in'subsequent years;\nIdentify'Chuff\nFined $100 For\nCareless Driving\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A man\nwhose car rammed a police cruiser, setting it afire and pushing it\ninto a woman pedestrian, was\nfined $100 Thursday for careless\ndriving..\nPolice said Ralph Paxton was\ndriver of a car which hit the back\nof a police car driven by Constable\nJoe Perci\u00bbal while it was stopped\nat. a pedestrian crosswalk. 'The\ncruiser struck and injured Mrs.\nSing Wong Lee, dragging her 30\nfeet.\nConstable Al Moodyi, who was\nriding in the police car, said he\nextinguished a blaze which started\nin its gas tank.\nB.C. Phone Reports\nSix Months'  Income\nVANCOUVER' (CP).-The-. British Columbia Telephone Company\nhas reported a net income of $2,-\n359,865 for the six months ended\nJune 30 this year, compared with\n$2,353,360 for the same period in\n1956.\nA. balance of $1,594,865 Is shown\nafter providing for dividends on\npreference -and preferred --\u00abhar.*f\nThe corresponding figure for 19561\nwas $1,766,485.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 An open\nparachute identified as belonging\nto the navigator of a missing CF-\n100 jet interceptor was discovered\nThursday seven miles from the\niron-ore port of Sept-Iles, Que., Air\nDefence Command headquarters\nreported here Friday.\nThe CF-100 disappeared in the\nrugged north shore area of the\nSt. Lawrence Gulf Thursday with\ntwo men aboard. En route to Europe with 419 Squadron, the plane\ncarried'Fit. Lt. K. P. McNulty of\nThorold, Ont., the pilot, and FO\nW. Wilding, 20, of Kingston,\nOnt., navigator.\nA spokesman for the RCAF said\nthe open parachute was found by\na groun search party but no trace\nof plane or crew was seen. Indifferent weather was hampering an\nair search by RCAF planes from\nGoose Bay, Labrador, Greenwood,\nN.S., and Trenton, Ont. An RCMP\ncutter also was involved plus\nground parties.\nThe planes left North, Bay, Ont.,\nThursday on the first leg of their\nphased flight to Europe. Accompanying pilots said the stricken\nplane had shed its crew hatch,\nindicating the men could have\nleaped to safety.\n\"Former Child Actor Learnt From Own\nExperience How To Direct Kiddies\nlions of dollars. The cut little kid,\nof course, was Shirley Temple.\n\"It takes a lot of patience to be\na director of child actors,\" Miller\nsays, \"I don't think I would have\nthat patience if I hadn't gone\nthrough it all myself.\"\nPUBLICITY CHARGE\nANGERS SKELTO.N\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Comedian\nRed Skelton, angry at suggestions\nhe is using his leukemia-stricken\nson as a publicity gimmick, Friday\ncut short his tour of England.\n\"Actors do not publicize on\ndeath,\" the comedian said. \"And\nI don't believe my son is going to\ndie.\"\nHis son, Richard, 9, has leukemia, a blood disease that is\nusually fatal. His parents are\nshowing him many parts of the\nworld so that he can see as much\nof life as. possible.\nRichard received a gracious\nwelcome in Denmark, Italy, Spain\nand. France.\nBut some sectors of the British\npress have been hostile.,\nDaily Sketch columnist Simon\nWard complained Thursday Richard .was being involved in a\n'.'three-ring circus of publicity and\nballyhoo.\" Ward said Skelton replied with a bunch of lillies\nand a card that said: \"Sorry that\nyou are sick mentally, and phys-i\nically.\" .  .\n. Ward said he sent the flowers\nto a hospital where they have\nsick children but \"no publicity\nthen,, no preSs conferences,-no TV,\ncameras.\".     ' '* ,\nOne critic on television called\nSkelton's sightseeing tour a \"publicity jamboree.\"\nSkelton then decided to cut\nshort his visit to England because\nsome persons have been \"very unkind.\" He said he would visit\nScotland, Denmark and then head j\nI for horn* \u25a0 J\nBy, JAMES BACON\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)-One of the\nbest directors of children in the\nbusslness today is a onetime child\nstar\u2014Sidney Miller.\nSidney, now'directing for Walt\nDisney on both movies and TV, appeared in better than 300 movies.\nBefore that, he had worked on\nthe Children's Hour, a well-known\nradio program, in New York City.\n'My mother and I used to take\nthe train every Sunday from our\nhome town of Shenandoah, Pa., to\nNew York. One day a Warner's talent scout said Hollywood was looking for young boys for Penrod and\nSam.\nCLICKED IMMEDIATELY\n\"So mother and I came out on\nthe train to Hollywood. I carried\nmy guitar all the way. We arrived\nhere and I went to the casting office myself. I can remember the\ncasting director asking nie what\nmy name was.\n\"Instead of answering, I whipped out the guitar and started singing. For some strange reason, she\nsaid she had a part for me. It was\nas a Catholic altar boy in a religious procession scene.\"\nHe got the part in Penrod and\nSam too, and from there went into\nmany notable pictures, such as the\nMickey McGuire series with Mickey Rooney and later Boys' Town\nwith Rooney.\nGUESSED WRONGLY\nSidney also recalls another series he played in for Educational\nPictures, a studio no longer in existence.\n\"The stars were Junior Cough-\nlin and me. Then they added a cute\nthree-year-old girl as Junior's kid\nsister. She was really cute and I\ncan remember the director and the\nproducer arguing.\n\"The director wanted to put the\nkid under contract at $50 a week.\nThe producer couldn't see it. He\nsaid: 'Another year and the kid\nwill grow out of that cuteness.' \"\nBefore she had grown out of it\nsome 10 years later, she had made\nherself and the old Fox studio mil-\nirrai\ntllofs Charge\nMONTREAL (CP) - Warrants\nhave been issued for the arrest of\nfour Montreal men in connection with the theft of ballots, impersonation at the polls and acts\nof intimidation in Longueuil constituency during the federal election June 10.\nThe warrants were signed 'jte\nThursday by Judge T. A. Fontaine\nand covered a total of 28 charges,\nseven against each of the four\nmen, sought.\n1. Intimidation of the constituency's returning officer.\n2. .Intimidation of the scrutineer\nof Auguste Vincent, the Liberal\ncandidate.\n3. Intimidation of the scrutineer\nof Pierre Sevigny, the Progressive Conservative candidate.\n4. Intimidation of a poll clerk.\n5. Illegal manipulation of ballots.\n6. Illegal manipulation of ballot\nboxes.\n7. Voting illegally in constituency in which they were not registered.\nMr. Vincent was re-elected in\nthe constituency. Besides Mr Sevigny he was opposed by Oliva\nBedard, independent Progressive\nConservative^ and Michel Chart-\nrand, CCF.\nThe warrants were issued following a lengthy investigation by\nthe RCMP.\nMede-to-Measurs\nSUIT SALI\n20% Discount\n$72 Values\n$57.60\n$80 Values\n$63.80\n$85 Values\n$68.00\nThe entire range of Samples to pick from.\nOrder that New Suit for Fall now.\nEMORY'S LTD,\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nWoodpulp Output\nDecreased, June\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canadian\nwoodpulp production during the\nfirst six months of 1957 totalled 5,-\n296,962 tons, up from 5,250,504 tons\nin the first half of 1956, the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association\nannounced Friday.\nOutput during June declined to\n861,889 tons from 897,823 tons in\nJune, 1956.\nIncluded in the six months' out-,\nput were 2,389,936 tons of chemical pulp and #865,558 tons of\nmechanical pulp, compared with\n2,385,991 tons of chemical and 2,\n815,585 tons of mechanical produced in the corresponding period\nlast year.\nPulp consumption in Canada in\nthe first half was 4,110,976 tons\ncompared with 4,020,516 last year.\nConsumption during June totalled\n670,086 tons this year and 678,724\nin 1956.\nExports for the first half were\n1,130,974 tons, down from 1,186,-\n697 last year. June exports were\n175,689 tons this year compared\nwith 213,223 in 1956.   '\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nCNR Announces Net\nOperating Deficit.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canadian\nNational Railways Friday announced a net operating deficit for\nJune, 1957, of $791,000.\nIn June, 1956, the railway showed an operating profit of $6,075,000.\nNet operating profit for the first\nsix months of this year totalled\n$9,976,000, less than half the $20,-\n695,000 profit shown in the first\nhalf of 1956.\nRevenues for the first six months\nof 1957 increased by $11,949,000\nbut expenses leaped by $22,668,-\n000, causing the $10,719,000 decrease in profits.\nEVERYTHING\nFOR BABY!\no Soap - Oil - Powder -\nShampoo\no Bottles - Nipples - Training\nCups\n\u2022 Baby Pants - Disposable\nDiapers\nO Rattles - Teddy Bears -\nTerry Toys\n|   at\nCity Drug\nYOUR  REXALL PHARMACY\nThe Word of a Lubrication Specialist...\n\"The Right Motor Oil\nCan cut Motoring Costs\"\n\"Whether you drive a new car\nwith a high compression engine,\na car with high mileage,\nor a small economy car,\nyour nearest ROYALITE dealer has\na motor oil that is specifically compounded\nto meet your needs.\nDifferent engines with varied compression\nratios and stages of wear, need a properly\nspecified motor oil to operate economically.\nThat Is why your ROYALITE dealer has such\na wide range of motor oil grades In stock.\nAsk him about the best motor oil\nfor your particular car... a few minutes\nof your time can save you money\nand result in much better performance.\"\nROYALITE\nPREMIER & REGULAR Gasolines\nROYALITE &\nROYAL TRITON Motor Oils\nThe Hallmark of Motoring Satisfaction\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_08_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430293","@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":"1957-08-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-08-03 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\/1.0430293"}